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                    <text>Tht! 1980 frosh:
why they're here
By lOYCE BUCHNOWSKJ
RqKN16SI4ff

They're here- almost 3400 of them, the
1980 freshman class.
The reasons why they picked U/ B
seem as varied as they do. But while interviewin&amp; the newcomers during orien·

t4tion sessions this summer, the
Reportu did discover a thread of commonality: pragmatism.
The majority of reasons given were
practical ones, whether they coneerned
money, academic offerings or a location
just close enough to or far enough away

from home to make life a bit more uncomplicated. One thing was certain, no
one came solely because of the social
life.
For instance, Mark Buchholz of East
Northport, Long Island, originally
wanted to go to a private school with a
good engineering curriculum . But
~se he had _lo pay the freight, he
opted to go state. • .When it came dOwn to a toss up between U/ B and Stony Brook, Mark
decided to go with U/ B. Stony Brook

was just too close to home for comforl,
plus be wasn' t thrilled with its "beat"
reputation. Besides, his friends (and his
brother who almost came here) assured
him U/ B was a "good school."
During his summer preview, Mark
tiked what be saw about the University,
even though be was "go ing crazy"
maneuvering around Ellicott.
Mark's orientation l&amp;&gt;mmate, Mike
Murphy, who also- hails from Northport, said much the same thing. His
friends recommended U/B for engineering, and not wanting a "second rate .
school," he came.

Affordable
Bob Givens from Williamsville, who
may have earned enough advance placement credits to have sophomore status,
says he chose U/ B mostly because of its
affordable tuition . The University of
Rochester, his first choice, didn'l come
up with enough financial aid.
Bob, who wants to be a research
biologist, says he heard " good and bad
things" ahout U/ B, " but mostly good."
Both he and his parents think we're
" pretty good academically."
Asked if he tiked the Amherst Campus, Bob responded with a grin that he
found the buildings "unique." As far as
his reactions to the split campuses, Bob
(who also would havt a great career as a
diplomat) thinks the situation .. might
not be so bad' ' because of the change in
scenery involved in commuting from a
•• futuristic .. to an .. old cot\ege" setting.
Cosmopoliraa
George Borkowski. another local stu·
dent from Cheektowaga, who hopes one
day to enter law school , says he picked
U/ 8 because it seems the most

.. cosmopolitan.. of the area colleges.
George was considering Canisius but
nixed the idea because of a "limited
choice of courses.' '
Calling the Amherst Campus a ·~mini­
city," George says he hopes all its diversions don't result in a low grade point
for him. He'll be majoring in EngliSh
and political science and is crossing his
fingers he "doesn't get stuck in huge
classes."
Sft . . ,,..._ ~ 1.

:ot. 1

22,746 had registered
as fall classes began;
housing said 'tight'
Officials are calling it one of the
smoothest fall registrations ever.
When classes began Tuesday morning, a total of 22,746 students had completed the registration process and were
ready to study.
According to Ellen McNamara,
associate director of Admissions &amp;
Records, the figure is weU ahead of last

year's first-day totals, and renects the
fact that approximately 8SO new
students were able to register over Labor
Day weekend. [Registration and dropadd have been goinp ~ - •'- · last spring,
easing things fu.- : ••• •J
The special weekend hours, Ms.
McNamara said, served to take some of
tbe stina out of fCiistra.tion for tbe rest
of this week. Ordinarily, tbe students
handled this weetend would be standina
in liDe DOW.

up..-._ ........
Reports are that

rea!Rration and drop-

and-ad·d lines over the weekend were of
manageable size and" caused no special

frustrations. Monday was ·~eavy.'" Ms.
McNamara said, but the only major problems resulted from lightning which at
several points knocked out computer
operations.
Students may coritinue t.o ini tially
register through ~ptember 12 . Whilo
she would not predict how many will
sign up before that deadline, Ms.
McNamara noted that graduate students
traditionally don't complete registration
until some time during the fq.st two
weeks of classes. She expects registration
pbints to be busy tbrouabout this week
_ and Dc:xt. altboltgb proopects
that
liDes will ranaiD "reuonable...
"We judac tbe severity of liDes by
how many cor-. !bey make around in
Squire," Ms. McNamara said- As tbe
R~ went to .,._, only a f"" cornas bad to be turued.
Admiaiona and Records bad this

.re

breakdown of enrollment by divisions as
of tbe close of registration on Monday
afternoon:
Division of Undergraduate Education, 13,709; Millard Fillmore College,
3,S68; G....Suate 3, 721, and Professional
Schools, 1,748.

Hoasmabqaboos
Wbile registration

was running
faU bugaboo,
Housing, was doing less weU.
What are believed to be record
numbers of fresbmesl and new foreign
S..U.746,-Il,wl. t

smoothlY; -that other

�Volumell, No. I, Sep'-ber4, 1910

Page 2

Architecture,
computing careers
becoming glamorous

r..- ... l,N. 4

The '80 frosh
- wby U/B?
A loot a.-loer?
People warned Lauric Groff of Attica
that if sbe came to U/8 for pbarmac:y
sbe mi&amp;bt "&amp;d lost" in !be crowd and
''become a numbc&lt;." Considcrina bcr
sraduatina class contained 1111 of 120
senion, one can understand !be c:onc::em.
But Lauric, who "wanted to stay
away from .....U schools where everyone
knows your busQiess," decided she'd
tate a clwlce. Sbe does hope, tbouih.
that ber !-=ben will tate !be time to
Jearn ber name.
ComiD&amp; rroin a rural area, Lauric says
she lites !be 1J111SY settina of the
Ambent Campus. If time permits, sbe
says she'd lite to &amp;d involved in U/8
sports.
Her friend Laurie Werner wbo went
to tbe same hiab school came to UIB for
nunin&amp;. but now is thinkina about
medicine. Lauric said sbe beard UIB
"was a really aood scbool;" ber decision
was cliDcbed when ber school nurse

recom-'ed iL
MUch lite ber friend, Lauric Werner
also doesn't want to be treated as put of
a facdea crowd and expressed c:onc::em
about talcin&amp; bqillllina chemistry
.....,_ in c:lll.- wbidl she beard enroll
~ JOO studcats.
"Wbat do )'Oil do if )'Oil have a question, submit it in writina?" sbe
woodered .Joud.
Alfyway, ber d8ll is happy with ber
choice because she can come ' weelceDds.
Glen Haun from
says
1111 be beard about Buft 11 that "It's
lOin&amp; to be cold. ..
A saa'ble mm~~ -.~or. Glen 1ay1 be
really waled to ., to a ...U. prMie
Mid-Western ICbooJ, but "CODidll't afford !be plue rue" bact and forlh.

P'"!f:teepde

TbetbeU~,
that
Glen Oil
about
81so-bim.eff:
its li2e and its variety of people• •

...........

. . . . --·It
Welldlcllcr

CGa11cJ J'llidelll

MidldiDa .-.... ·UIB -

Computing and architecture are rapid!Y
developing as "glamour .. career areas m
the eyes of U/ B freshmen .
.
.
This year, 132 (of 2616 mcommg
. frosh who responded to a "career mterest" survey from University Pl'acement and· Career Guidance during summer orientation) said they are interested
in architecture; two years ago, only 39 of
1809 freshmen responding were drawn
to that field .
"Computer Science/ Math / Stat"
careers have captured the fancy of 169
- members of the 1980 freshman class, the
survey results show. Only 72 freshmen
expressed a preference for these fields in
1978.
Engineeering was the most popular
career choice in both years: 643
freshmen this year indicated that's
where they're headed, compared to 324
in the 1978 survey.
Health Science remains popular also:
302 of this year's freshmen respondents
iderJtified the area as their future career
field; 216 did so two years ago.
Business-and-management is still
another career sector which continues to
interest large numbers of students, ac- ·
cording to survey results. 345 of the 1980
freshmen said they have selected this
field, compared to 226 two years ago.
Other career choices indicated by 1980
freshmen (followed by comparable 1978
figures where available) include:
physical science, elected by 63 1980
frosh (67 in 1978); pre-med, 107 (116 in
1978); pre-law 102 (82 in 1978); predent, 2S (37 in 1978); and pre-vet, 13 (17
in 1978). The pre-professional numbers;
while relatively constant, reflect a
also liked what sbe heard about the high
decrease in the perr:t!ntage of freshmen
job placement rate for acx:Ounting mainterested in these areas because the 1980
. jOI$ here.
sample is mucb larger.
"Heard any negatives?" the Reporter
1980 freshmen are also appuen!ly
asked.
more interested in social sciences, and
. "Besides the food, DO."
the liberal and fme arts than their 1978
Jani&lt;:e Landes, who comes from
counterparts. This year, 2.20 freshmen
Bellmore, Loaa IJWid, decided to apply
expressed interest in this combined
here after thumbina throuah Barrons
category of areas. In 1978, S9 students
lootin&amp; for c:oDcses that offer business
majors. Her pliclaDI:c counselor recomwere !ootiD&amp; toward "social sciences
careen;., 64 were interested in the
mended it, too.
"arts."
Both Sharon and Jani&lt;:e thint U/8 is
Only 14 or the 2616 1980 freshmen
edcina in on lliqhamtoo and Albany as
far as bavin&amp; tbe distinction or beiDa !be
~ndents have in mind to enter the
teaching field. This represents an 1111lwdest SUNY units to aet into, but they
thint tbe other two still-,..;p supreme.
time low in this catqory, probably acFmlllly, Robert Lain&amp; of Snyder chose
curately rdlecting the job market.
UIB because be thints "it's tbe best
kical school;' and "didn't want !be ex'I"M'UMedded'
pense of soina away." He tnew plenty
Fmlllly. 49S of the 1980 freshmen - just
about tbe University COIIJiderins his
UDder 20 per cent or the total - reported
brother plldualed from b&amp;e last yexr
beiDa "undecided" about a career
and his motber is also IIJII'ilumna..
choice. In 1978, 410 were undecided, 23
1bouah be's Jeanins towards math, per cent .of the total.
Robert is still undecided about a major.
Gene Martdl, director or Plaoement
Whatever it will be, be's been warned to and Career Guidance (whicb has offlCCS
stay away from instructors with heavy in Hayes C at Main Street and in the
foreip .....,ts wbo can mate life more Capen lobby at Amberst), and Pat
diflil:ult.
Hayes, an associate for career plannina,
As far as tbe Ambent Campus soes.
note that it's that aroup of 49S
Robert bas no &lt;OagJiaints except that be
"undecided" individuals in whom their
bas spent a Jot or time .......clerins offace is primarily interested. These
throusb partins lots searchins for his fresbmen wbo are still "up in the air"
car. •
0
about career plans will be ursed to attend Career Horizons Week presentations in late September. and to tate put
in indMdual career worbbopo and
other JIIOII'&amp;nll held throaabout tbe year
in c:oajunction with academic depw .

Rare books

panel Dallied

--

PIMaDeut and Career Ouidance also
ltaDds radY to aslilt thole so per celll
or 1111 frelbmcD who will cbanae their
JU,jon and/or career intaat fields at
~ clariDc tbeir' lllllleqnduate
c:armn and tbe lldditloaU 2S per ceDI
who'D c:banee twice, Haya -·Thole
who. will be c;loled Pill or their ~
~ - and wiD ba~ to eitber ·mate
ott. c:baioes here c. IOCic. - other col-

,_ad-be....-.

. ~ and,lllliwnltles- wdc!ame. !PO-

. bbvioas!Y: alP 643

....., . . . tD~.iD .........

Slw'Oil

far Iller

_.....,...._of_, SUNY wit,

1111111 ........., . .

.-.-. • .....-mar: -•

:=..!:::.,..0:.,~~=

-==~,,~
.• ,..............1PIIt1Pie--ID-

&lt;·

terest figures areD't the same as the intended major statistics whicb A&amp;:R compiles. For example, an "intended"
engineering major may have ctiTeD" interests in the technical aspects of theatre
production, to cite but one recent example of that kind of crossing-over with
whi:h Martell is personally acquainted.
So, departments should consider the
results aS neither good nor bad news for
them .
What departJDellts aoipt do
What departments migbt do, Martell
suggests, is work with Pla=nent-Career
Guidance to identify undecided students
whom they may interest in their programs.
A closer look at the data indicates ·
plenty
of
room
for
such
"proselytifing."
It's not only the 495 "undecided majors" who could use guidance.
For example, 2.20 of the 643 would-be
engineers don 't know what fldd of
engineering they want. Cbances are, says
Hayes, that these are students who performed well in math and sciena: during
high school and have been told by others
that they should be "engineers." They
could definitely use some help. 1be same
can be said for the 172 freshmen who
want u business" careers but couldn' t
identify what area of management they
are interested in.
Without furtber guidance from
faculty, staff or someone, this tind of
uncertainty can COIDe to have a
debilitating effect on students' academic
careers, Hayes and Martell caution. 0

Credit-Free
retrenched
The eliminatioo ~ tbe IIWIIIIIel' or tbe
University's Credit Fn:c Proarams
represc:nts tbe flrlt time in UIB's ra:ent

history that a IJI'Oir&amp;ID and Its employees
were subject to , ............_._
Two full..time staff and oae put-time
employeewanffected.bytbemove. To
date, """of tbe three,
tbe
professional
bas - ,
employment. The .other· full-time
employee toot a 'job dlewbere and a
haff-tlme clerical staff employee
relocated to Uotber Ullftality area.
Under tcn111 of tbe aaioa CIOIIIr8t:l.
retreDcbed ~are If- ''lpecial
CODiideratioa" for SUNY-wide
jobs for
'I1IIa that a
job vacancy lilt is to tbe iDdividual
and ~tiom receiwd from !'-'
must
IICted 011 before any others.
Also, tbe inltitutioD retrcDcllina is oblised to pve an adtlilioul II 1110111111 or
special CODiideratioa to tbe irldiYidu8ls
. in question and
if
position becomes IMiiPable wbidl bas
equivalent duties, reapoaaibilities,
contcat, etc.
Aa:orcliq to J...... ~ ....
of Coatinainl EdacaliOD, ....,.
Credit Free's salolllllllioe c:oanes
will DOW fall Ullllcr other •5 ' • Illite
umbrell8s. UIB'a Me 1
• Dewclupmaat Cc:Dter, for irll1aDce, wiD offer tbe
Tax IDitltute and c:oanes Ia ial and inluruace.
In an article wbidl ....,_ed Ia tbe
Slmurwr ~ ( J - 19), tbe Dan
noted that m its pnv1oaa f - . Credit
Fne did - rdlect
"quality or competaace" ol UIB r-Jty. .Aconrdirra tol
tb.: clean, ~ 90 per ceDI ol t b e ..,., WIJbt by r-lty oatlide tbe
Unhawity.ID~ llricetbe-

. ,_.,...or
rowad

starr.

m ---

offer,_,..,_ a
or

me

. ... -

..... with.,~

~-,::.;::;+.W"':*~
that tbe . . . . . . .

of ()edil-Fiee Pro-

. ar!u!as·...-. ... ~......... Pal!les..
:···
_ -~
... , .~..............
- .fl!*,...,
dalu

ae.,....,

· 19~ . . . . . . . . . .........

for'*" . . . . . . . . .
-....a.
. --

ill

0

�Pagel

New VPAA begins by listening,
hopes to end dislocation of spirit
How do you begin being academic vice
president?
"By listening," smiles Dr. Robert
Rossberg, looking already very much at
borne in his fifth floor corner office in
Capen HaiL
He's made one major appointment
[William Greiner of the Law School as
associate VPAA] , in addition to mulling
over possible changes in office organization . And be's decided to take out a wall
here and add a conference room there.

Mainly, though, he's been listening.
When you take on a job like this, he
recalls from his earlier experience as
dean of Educational Studies, "people
want to tell you things."
Ultimately, this initially discomfiting
information overload gets sorted out.
"You try to find the critical areas and
put them into the context of divisional
and institutional goals, '' Rossberg
President Robert L. Ketter has
explains.
It's like listening · to strange and
recommended to Chancellor Clifton R.
Wharton, Jr., and the SUNY Board of
unusual musical sounds, suggests the
Trustees that Dr. Robert H . Rossberg be
VPAA, himself a music buff who hosts
appointed vice president for academic
a weekly big bands broadcast on WBFO.
affaira. effective September I.
"They're rather incomprehensible at
Dr. llossberg, 54, has served as dean
first, but as you hear them again and
of the Faculty of Educational Studies
again the sounds become clarified and
since July I, 1978. The vice president for · · crystallized." Connections and a sort'of
academic affairs post bad been held
order emerge.
Rossberg will eventually do more than
since 1976 by Dr. Ronald F . Bunn, who
)eft this summer to become provost at
just listen, of course. Action and
the University of Missouri at Columbia.
response will follow - but "slowly at
"Bob Rossberg has been here since
first ."
1956," President Ketter comm~ed .
Every time you make a decision, he
"He brings a sense of institutional nsays cautiously, "the ripple effect is
tinuity to the office. He knowsthe pro always broader than you think." So
lems faced by public higher education in
look Tor no " precipitous decisionmaking."
New York State and can make a significant contribution in dealing with them at
this university."
Tbe " bot seat"
Dr. Rossberg offered, "Our most
Aware that he is the seventh·incumbent
in 12 years in what has become an adsignificant task at this time in the history
of this university is to reexamine our inminjstcative " hot seat," Rossberg will
stitutional values and to establish the
emphasize a cooperative approach to
priorities relevant to those values for the
academic decisiOn-making. The collegial
next decade and beyond .
effort will begin in his own office and
"I look forward to participating in
extend outward to the r various constit.his process,'' he added.
tuencies within academic affairs, laterally to the offices of the Health Sciences
. Rossberg, a professor of education
and psychology, has held several posts
division a nd upward to the President.
and served on more than a dozen univerTo the staff of the VPAA's office, he
sity committees since he joined the faculintends to add anoth ~ professional to
ty here. Prior to his apPointment as dean
be drawn from the ranks of the core
of Educational Studies two years ago, he _ faculty. Historically, the person in Prof.
had served as acting chafrman of the
Greiner's slot has been responsible for
Department of Counselor Education
personnel and program matters, and an
(1970), associate dean of the School of
assistant vice president (Valdemar lnnus
Education (1965 to 1967), and director
is the incumbent here) has handled
of three counseling training programs
budget development and monitoring.
(1956 to 1965).
" That's the way it's been, but we may
Dr. Rossberg has also been a member
change it" after the learning process is
of several presidential advisory aJUI
over, Rossberg notes. Decis ~ns to alter
search committees.
the office organization wilJI'be "poup"
He currently serves as a consultant to
ones, he promises. And, whatever the
the Council of Graduate Schools and is a
final table of organization, defined
member of the American Psychological
responsibility will exist within a context
of constant communication. Ross berg
Association's visiting ·panel on graduate
psychology.
wants all members of the staff to be atThe author of Youth: Myths and
tuned to everything the office is inRmlity published in 1972, Dr. Rossberg
terested in.
:
. .
.
has contributed chapters to four other
Long-range planrung declSions which
books on counseling and has written a
the VP AA must make [and take the heat
number of articles for professional
for] will fully involve deans and
journals. ·
·
directors of core campus divisions,
A native of Brooklyn, Dr. Rossberg
Rossberg pledges.
has a B.S. from the City University of
· "Many people have expressed interest
New York, an M.A. from Teachers Colin supporting and working with the
lege, Columbia, and a Ph.D. from
office," be reports. "I intend to take
NYU.
advantage of these offers of help. This
offi~ can function only as a coo_
p erative
Before coming to U/B, Rossberg was
an intern psychologist at New York
acttvtly With the deans and dirCC\ors.
University Medicai ·Center (1949-SO), a
For the more-the planning is ~bared, the
counseljng psychologist for tbe Federaeasier the .decision-making will be."
tion of the Handicapped, New York
Tile job lias eate- ,people ap
City (1~51), and later an assistant
The post has "-.,ten up~ lot of people, "
chief psychologist at the NYU Medical
Rossberg says with characteristic canCenter (1951-56).
·
0
'd or. ,That's .a majGr concern he bad
when considering tUi!ag it - a concern
shared by individljals clooe to him.
He t&gt;as great n!spoict for the "bright
and C:ompetent" peo'ple . wtio have held
_the pbst i~ the past - espeCially for the
r=irtly-dCpUted · Ron · Bunn · and · for
Bob Fist [who .fint bi1JIIIlit RossbCrj to
'Buff&amp;lot,- •iu:lial ,VPAA when · SOllie
to'liBh"fuCal d'ecisiolis bad to' be-riwle in
19'7'6:·,A ....,. ·; ..•r··'. ' · : . . . • .. . ·~·- ·
,· ',~TI&gt;~Y. , ~oJk~ - .11!1~~.'1. r~alls ·

Ross berg
nominated
as VPAA .

Rossberg. As for himself, though , he's
" unwilling to carry the burden alone. It
has to be shared."
Rossberg senses he's beginning his
tenure with "a large reservoir of good
will, " which be hopes to use to advantage. People are aware of the oftenintense level of feeling that has
historjcally ' been heaped on the incumbent in the post, and seem willing to
reduce that intensity.
If the good feeling can be sustained,
Rossberg says, "it may be possible to
transform the office from a hot seat to a
place of stability."
Ross berg won't comment on past ten sions, real or imagined, between the
VPAA and the Vice President for
Health Scien.ces. As for now, he reporr s
he has had cordial conversations with
the top administration in that division.
They have agreed to re-in stitute biweekly meetings on a reas of mutual
concern .
The new VPAA intends to "reachout" as welJ to student government
representatives, the Faculty Senate and
other constituent groups on campus.
"Whatever history" may have taken
place between the VPAA's office and
these others concerns him only in that
he'll have to work to overcome any barriers which may exist.
One place where he expects no such
barriers is between himself a nd the
President. Of course, they may disagree
from time to time, · but he intends to
work "in tandem" with Ketter. "My
goals are synonymous with the President's.'' he emphasizes.
'E•Pectalions di.scnpancy'
Reality is, ackn owledges Rossberg, that
budgetary resources for higher education are diminishing. But , he observes.
"there are in place within this institution
considerable human resources that can
be redirected and mined in a different
way to maintain the quality we've

achieved ."
U/ B, he feels, has been suffering from
an "expectations discrepancy" e9er
since the day in the mid 60s when
someone first use&lt;! the phrase "Berkeley
of the East" as a glib description of institutional aspirations.
"The idea of a Berkeley of the East is
dysfunctional, •• Ros s berg asserts.
" Berkeley is the wrong model for Bu ffalo, from educational, historical and
politica1 points of view.
"This institution has matured without being aware of it - to the point
of not having to look elsewhere for
models. It should develop its own. "
U/ B, assesses Ross berg, is a first
class, quality universi ty . " It may n6t be
Harvard, Berkeley or Stanford, but it
never intended to be.
"There are many fine universi ties
which serv• their regions, their communities and the nation " which don ' t
have these overblown expectations.
"The quality of graduate programs
here is exceUent ," Rossberg believes,
"and that quality can be maintained .
" In terms of undergraduate education, we need to improve not the quality,
but the cohesiveness of our effons."
Dislocation of spirit
What needs to be done, in Rossberg's
view, "is to reduce the fragmentation
and isolation that have evolved through no one's fault ." We have to
Work to cure a " dislocation of spirit"
that has resulted from physical dislocation and growth. We need to identify
and refocus that spirit "especially
through recapturing the interest of some
critical members of the campus community who have moved to the fringes"
of University life.
This University has existing traditions
and values which need to be .. restated,"
Rossberg maintains.
That's what President Ketter has in
mind a nd that's what he's committed to
aswell.
C

Several ~ppointments
announced for fall ·

..

Several ad ministrative appointments
• Dr. Stanley Bruckenstein as chairwere announced officially during the
man of the Department of Chemistry for
a second three-year term;
past few weeks. They include the naming
e Dr. Claude E. Welch, former
of:
associate vice president for academic
• Dr. Peter H . Hare of Philosophy,
affairs, as chairman of the Department
who is chairman of the General Educa. tion Committee, as associate dean of
of Politica) Science, effective September
I;
Undergraduate Education;
e Dr. Gideon Frieder as chairman of , e Mr. William Greiner, professor of
law, a veteran Law School administhe Department of Computer Science
trator, as associate vice president for
for a three-year term, effective
academic affairs;
September I (Frieder was also appointed
to full professor recently);
. e Dr. Ross MacKinnon to a secona
e Dr. Merle Hoyte, assistant director three-year
term as chairman of the
of the Educational Opportunity ProDepartment of Geography; and •
gram, as a staff associate in the Office of
• Dr. Wolfgang Wolck to another
the Vice President for Academic Affairs
three-year stay as chairman of the
(Hoyte will divide her time between EOP
Department
of Linguistics, effective
and Academic Affairs where she will
September I.
examine relationships among several
0
campus program s working with
minorities);
e Mr. Robert J . Wagner as acting
director of University Computing
SCrvices until a permanent director is
appointed (the searcti for that director is
Monte Blau and Merrill A. Bender were
said to be "well along");
joint recipients of the Nuclear Medicine &gt;
Pioneer Award of the Society of Nuclear
• Mr. George Anselevicius to a
Medicine at the group's annual meeting
second five-year term as the holder of
in Detroit on June 24.
the SUNY !:hair in Architecture
Dr. Blau is professor and chairman of
(An~evicius has been actiYC in program
the U/B Department of Nuclear'
development, program enrichment and
Medicine and Dr. Bender is clinical proscholarship actiVities since -coming here
fessor of nuclear medicine at U/B and
from Harvard in 1976);
chief of nuclear medicine at Roswell
• Ms. Jane Matthews as: chairman of
Park Memorial Institute.
- . the Department o( Physical Therapy in
The award is presented annually in
. the School .of Health Related Profesr6:ognition of major contributions to
si_OII$ for a three-year term-effective JUly
the · clevdopment of nuclear medicine .
. 31; .
.
. .
_· .
'
e ,Dr, J...,es.W., McKinnon asZiegele ·.Several previous· =ipients baw: been
·
-, &lt;'Nobel Prize.willnen. ,
• 0
Professor o( Music for 1980-111;·

Blau, Bender
are honored

�Volume ll, No. I, September 4, 1980

Page4

U/B physician who volunteered to help
.f~nds Cuban refugees bored, frustrated
u.s .. Those who chose or were forced 10
em;irate were thoro\llhiY. . ~ched .
before leaving tbe Commurust lslaad,
' ·
.
·
.,. ''· allowed to keeP only .th~ clo~bes they
F(U•tration ~ obor~om are probably · . .wore. Stripped ot thetr tdenufi_~tlOD, , .
.'tbe mljor cause$ of SI\Jch.ohbe.•untest ·. :e)'CB!assei, bel~nslt18s ·ana,.,.,. liteded
.medications, they were set afloat for a
, reponed amona Cuban rerugces at f\.
Ianjl which lhiOly belieyed ~ould' ~ve
lndiantown qap, i'a.; ' be!'evc5 .a UIB
streets paved with gold. • ·
··
· ·
· physician who SCfVJ:d · with the U.S.
·Public 'Health Ser ;ce~re. ·
· · •• "In li&amp;ht of some of these~- ·
·D'r. Carl J. Ben.t.el recently returned
lions ;the situation ott the camp did little
.from a two-week voi..:ntary tour of duty
to gi;e them a true picture of life in the
. in the USPHS clini~ at the pfugee
U.S.•," Dr. Bentzel noted w,y1y.
.
He'said thosa 'be had the qppc)rturuty
.ceilter. The USPHS is tbe governmental
to treat at tbe clinic which SCfVed the
agency assigned responliibility ror pro:
·viding health care for the refugees. Chie[ ' single males were ap)lreciative of the
of U/B's Renal Division and a professor
medical attention and the genuine conof medicine, Dr. Bentzel is head of
cern of the staff for their welfare. Some
Nephrology at the Veterans Administraof the refugees, despite their lack of
lion Medical Center.
ability to speak or understand Enghsh,
On the whole, be said, the refugees
offered to help clean and perform other
conducted themselves well, despite
chores and were welcomed by the staff.
•' I think in some cases, we were
boredom, frustration, poor commu!'ica'adopted' by some of these Cubans who
tions and lack of planned letSure
activities.
volunteered to help us m any way posst' 'Confinement to a barracks area with
ble ' ' Dr. Bentzel said .
little to do but wait without knowing
The vast majority of nurses, physiwhat was 10 happen produced a great
cians, nurse practitioners and
deal of frustr~tion for the _Cu~~s- _as
physician' s assistants who _manned the
clinics were sincerely motivated by a
well it would for anyone m stmtlar car· cumstances," Dr. Bentzel pointed out.
desire to help the refugees, assessed
Single men were co~fined to one
Bentzel. Many carne from places far
group of barracks; smgle .women,
from Ft. Indiantown Gap to bell'.
families and unaccompamed children to
Others came from nearby Pennsylvama
another. Each area was surrounded by
communities.
Army perSonnel and barricades. Later,
"During the highly publicized uprising, in which one refugee . d~aed , the
Dr. Bentzel noted, ~he una~mpan!ed
children and teens were placed m a third
Cubans protected our two climes from
area which was surrounded by a 10-foot
destruction ,' ~ Bentzel noted.
fence topped with conceni_na wire. .
No activities, save a mghtly mov1e,
Uke tbe 'War of tbe Worlds'
were planned for the refugees desP.ite the
The first indication of trouble came
fact that several baseball diamonds
when he and the staff observed a large
stood nearby, unused. There were. no
group of refugees_, .arme~ With
television sets, only a couple of radtos,
homemade knives, swmgmg sucks C!-Dd
and no newspapers to provide contact
throwing stones, shouting _loudly a.nd
with the outside world. A memo
coming down one of the mam roads mdistributed by those in charge was largeside the camp:
ly the extent· of mass commumcauons .
.. I was treating a patient who had a
within the camp.
.
bacterial skin infection when I looked
Living in this virtual state of hmbo,
out the window and saw and heard the
the refugees, most of whom would ~e­
crowd. 1 got the patient and myself out
main at Ft. Indiantown Gap for several
along with others on the staff, escapmg
months were not allowed outside their
amid great confusion and panic to the
confined areas. Their only respite from
emergency room and infmn!ry in ~he
tedium consisted of visits to the mess
old field hospital about two mtles
halls or clinics within their zones.
away."
·
Over a radio in the hospital, Bentzel
Tiley served them tacos
heard reports from a station in nearby
"Food service personnel, who mistakenLebanon, Pa., that the Cubans had acly believed Cuban and Mexican foods to
tuaUy crashed through the camp gates
be identical, initially dished out tacos
and were marChing tol"ard The small
an!l other spicy fare. As a result, many
communities nearby.
of the Cubans, apparently uDused to the
"This report was false," Dr. !k'ptul
highly seasoned food, .bad sto~ach proempbasized, "but not unlike the ~ous
-blems which cleared up when the menu
Orson WeHes broadcast, 'War of the
was changed," Dr. Bentzel said.
Wodds,' It succeeded in terrifying
.. · Despite outside temperatureS of·sBS. many. Some or the nearby reliidents, .te'
.and higher, none of the areas - such·as ·beard later, guarded their property with
. - balb, barracks and clinics ·- were· loaded shotguns, . armed for , a battle
· -&lt;:OIIditioaed. Mess hall windoW$ w.-e
hjlll 'lJeen created by the news
·~ dosed 'at mealtime, ~yw: which
m~a ."
··
prevent neruaees ITom 'pas5UII salt tmd ·
pepper packets andoespeci8lly liilv~~e
·A -~~IJ llospltat ,..;. neooj,enu...
outside 10 friends. Temper\ltm;es mfide
Altlitlllah generally hospitals and health
the clinics to which Br. Bentzel was
.professionals in the surrounding area
assigned would often be in the 90's.
were cooperative with those working in
• Although there were reports that
the clinics at Ft. Indiantown Gap, such
many of the latter· waves of refugees
was .not always the case.
were common criminals and mental
" One young man I saw was suffering
patients loosed upon the U.S. by Castro,
from traumatic glaucoma, the result of
Dr. Bentul said he believed only a small
being struck in the eye by a Cuban
percentage of either category were in the
soldier,'' Bentzel recalled. "Since we
camp while he was there in August.
didn't have the facilities to provide more
"Most of those I treated or heard
than essential primary care, I thought he
abQut were political prisoners who
should be seen by an ophthalmologist. "
publicly had disagreed with Ca~tro. or
Calling an eye clinic at a nearby
been uncooperative about paructpatmg
university hospital, Dr. Bentzel satd he
in government-sponsored programs.
was treated rather coldly by the phySIThe rest were predominantly unskilled
cian in cbarge who said the ~linic already
laborers- with or without their fantilies
had a three-week waitinl! list. Further
- who were fed up with the lack of
explanation of the relative uriiCRcy of
freedom and the poor economic condit}le matter failed to help.
tions in Cuba,'' he added. At no time
"Finally, I contacted tbe U .S. Public
did he hear any Cuban indicate he or she
Health Service Hospital in Baltimore
wanted to go back; nor were any symwhich a&lt;:cepiCd the patient the next
pathetic to the Castro government.
day," said Dr. Bentzel. Although the majority or the more
/'1
.
than 100 paticms _, in e.ch of the
No-orpW
clioics in which Dr. Bentzel served reThere
IIGries or Cubana, IDa1ched ·•quiNd for llimp1c cutS and'
from their families in fhe middle or the scratches, upper respiratorY infections
'Dicbt and put on boats bo~ : ~~
aJid otomach dlll.-,- dlere-.oeca.BJ MARY BETH.SPINA

B4jloritzl A.ssecWt&lt;, ·Hatlo &amp;d&lt;ftoes

were

and compassion," he said.
sional cases of hypertension, broken
bones, and ulcers and tw.o of meningitis.
Diabetk:s'·and asthmatics who ~uired
He'd ·• olut-eplll
.,
'
daily follow-up and care were seen as
Although Dr. Bentul, who specia1ir.es in
weUib~t most of the treatment di~ · kidney diseases, -was called 'Updn to prO:.
was fBirly rqutine.
· ·
'vide only routine treatment,"be s8id he
would be willing to sen-e ~n in a
clinic was.staffed wiih' a physi, ·
.
.clan, three to fivt'physiclan's assistants . similar situation.
· "I felt as if I were a pai't of :history
or'(lurse practitioners and volunteer or
beiJw made, but even. more, I was alad·
pliid interpreters," Dr. Bentul'explained. A pharmacy was located in each of ·to have the opportunity to treat people
who sorely needed help. And the others
.the clinics and after the uprising, one or
felt the same way; that we~ as citizens,
two guards , were assigned to ·these
facilities.
were helPing !he refugees wbo for
whatever reasons or circumstances v.:,ere
"The nurse practitioners and physiin this country with no access to thesimclan's assistants were given a great deal
ple necessities of life, such as medical
of responsibility for primary care duties
care. And certainly, the political ramifand those with whom L worked respondications were intrigui ng as well .''
D
ed with both professional enthusiasm

"Each

Machine banking
comes to campus
Two area fmancial institutions are now
campus debuts, both banks are conductoffering banking services at locations at
ing demonstrations on the "bow ~o's"
Amherst and Main Street.
.
of operating their terminals. Marine's
Marine Midland and M&amp;T ;have inrun-!"'tii ,September 10, and.M&amp;T'.s until
stalled MoneyMatic and QuickBank
September 30.
•
machines (respectively) on the .around
AI; part of the promotional actlvjty,
floor or Capen and the first .(loor of
anyone 'f'illing out an MAT account liPSquire, malting it possible for CUJtomers . plication before the end or the month
to conduct routine banlring traDIIICtions.
will receive a sift.
Both .banking 1 terminals · can · ·.,Marine will be giving out a total of
theoretically be used 24-hours a day, · 1. SOO free frisbees to those wa1cllina Itt·
seven days a week. Since they are I~
minaldemonstrations onQIII(Hls.
[]
indoors, however, they can be tlSed only
when buildings are open.
.
By using the machines with special
coded cards, one can. deposit, withdraw,
make utility payments, transfer money
between accounts and get cash in hand.
Account balance information is also
Leo Richardson , associate for com
available with the touch of a few butmunity relations in the Di'(ision of
tons. Both terminals allow withdrawals
Public Affairs, is serving as chairman of
of up to $200 a day, with a minimum of
the 1980 campus United Way Cam$5 per withdrawal. In addition, a
paign .
.
customer can deposit a check, perform a
According to Richardson , the p1lot
withdrawal transaction and get up to
division of the drive, which will include
$100 back in cash .
the SChool of Medicine and the Division
Monitors instruct customers how to
of Finance and Management, will get
make transactions as weU as note when a
underway on September 20. The general
transaction has been invalidated because
campaign opens as usual on October I
of an improper entry.
and runs through the end of the month.
M&amp;T is a local bank which has 20
The University goal for this year IS
QuickBank terminals in the area.
$135,000, an increase of $5,000 over last
Marine Midland has 300 branches acr~
year.
0
the state and over 80 MoneyMatic
•
machines.
ON ltEADING PANEL
Marine's marketing representAtives
0aJ Aa M~lllu, a.oc:lale proemphasize that puenu or out-of-town
studcuu can depQsit money for them in , _ or ......._ .... CM!drft'•
a nearby terminal, and a day later, the . ......_.._, . . . . . . . . . . . lollle
......... 111e AN c-.taee or 111e
otudent can access the machine for a
wiibdrawal.
lldenaiJoal ...... Aloadadolo.
· ·Jn •conjllJICtion with the macltjnes'

·Richardson
is heading .
United Way drive

�Volume 12, No. I, Seplemb~ 4, 1980

Backs
fascinate
Breverman

Sultz gets
grant for
nurse study

By MILT CARLIN

A $330,000 grant to identify changes occurring nationally in nurse practitioner .
practice, education and employment has
been awarded to Dr. Harry A. Sultz,
nationally known epidemiologist and
dean of the University's School of
Health Related Professions.
Co-investigator of the 2 V: -ye3r study
sponsored by the Health Resources Ad·
ministration's Division of Nursing is Dr.
Bonnie Bullough, dean of Nursing.
Two earlier, national s1udies conducted by Dr. Sultz were used to plan
and budget support and regulation of
nurse praclitioner education program ~.
Results of these studies appeared in
three government publications, including one text, Nurse Practitioners:

N.ws-St4/f

Artistically, tJbe "new" Harvey
Breverman envisions the world around
him through a person's back. He also
thinks "bia."
A professor of an here, !he internationally-known Breverman is up to his
old, enismatic tricks, but wilh a new
twist. He believes his newest "pictorial
strategy" is unique in its combination of
method, expression and size.
At any rate, !he Research Foundation
of State University liked what it saw in
Breverman's latest artistic riddles and
awarded him a $3,306 research
fellowship as a token of appreciation for
his never-endins creativeness.
"It is !he sincere hope of the "foundation and the University," the foundation's Joint Awards Council wrote,
"that these funds will Contribute
sipificantly to !he progress of your
research activities."
A frequent prize winner for his artistry, Breverman is no stranger to
research foundation awards, having
received several over !he years.
Breverman said be planned to use !he
latest srant-in-aid funds lO hire two U/B
students to assist him in his work,
!hereby providina a learning opportunity.
UfHizeolbKb
His latest foundation award relates to
life-size drawings - some are even bigger- which feature a figure, or a sroup
of figures, generally viewed from !he
back, situated in what Breverman
describes as 4 •artistically-invented
environments."
As usual, he leaves it to the viewer to
decide what he or she sees. But Breverman is clever, as critics have pointed
out, and in his own subtle way tends to
challenge the viewer of his "artistic
map" to find the highways. That's his
''trademark.''
The method used in his "king size"
drawings calls for pulverizing chalk and
pastels and combining !he powders for
color.
Breverman applies the pulverized
material wilh a damp brush, or a rag, or
"sometimes I use my fingers," he said in
an iqterview.
He noted that the chalk-pastel
medium can be erased easily during the
creative process. The finished an work is
ultimately sprayed with a fixative. ·
What Breverman expresses in lhese
works, which generally measure 7 or 8
feet in lenglh and about 4 feet in widlh,
is an "orchestrated arrangement that is
artistically chaUengins. This evolves
from interaction between !he figures in
the drawing and their environment," he
explained.
Here, Breverman interrupted himself
to point out that "there is really no verbal equivalent" to fully explain visual
an and its effects on !he viewer.
"There are always elusive elements in
~
visual matter," he added.
Brevemtan plans to create a series of
three to six "large, complex, mixedmedia drawings" using his fellowship
stipend.
Stimlllalloa, aot sbock
The inventive environment that surrounds his fJgUres is "derived from
situations and circumstances seen and
experienced" by Brevennan himself. His
purpose is to "stimulate the emotions of
the viewer." No shock; just challenge.
Breverman places his works in the
realm of "realistic art ,' ' but gives them
the more specific label of "figurative
expression."
The 46-year-old Breverman, who
maintains his own art studio, also
revealed that be recently received notice
of . a fellowship from !he National
Endowment for the Arts with which to
punue his ''flaurativc expression" wor.k

in~~---------·-··---·

USA .

rse practitioners," explains Dr.
Sultz, " are educated to take patients'
histories and give them physical examinations, order laboratory tests and
assume responsibility for medical
management of selected cases ...
Nurse practitioners may be employed
in various health care settings and
specialize in such areas as pediatrics,
geriatrics, adult and family health .
Dr. Sultz says the earlier, national
studies focused on whether nurse practitioner programs adequately prepared
their graduates to function in the various
health care settings in which they were
employed. The studies also assessed the
impact of these practitioners in the
delivery of health care nationally.
In the current siUdy, Dr. Sultz will
identify changes which have ocCurred in
nurse practitioner skills in various
specialty areas.
0
Br~vennan 's

back. by Brrvft'man .
' -~-- ·-,..

Two one-man exhibits featuring
works by Breverman are scheduled later
this year. A Nardin Galleries Show in
New York City, September 23 to
October 25, will display both paintings
and drawings. "the Gadatsy Gallery in
Toronto plans to exhibit his drawings
and pastels, November 8 to 27.
Breverman, a native of Pittsburgh,
received his master of fine artS degree
from Obio University in 1960 and his
bachelor of fine arts from Carnegie Tech

in 1956. He taught at Ohio Universit y
and Carnegie Tech before coming to
U/ 8 in 1961 , rising in rank from instructor to full professor. Since joining the
U/ 8 faculty, he has taught at Ulinois
State and Oxford University in England.
A prolific producer of art works,
Breve;man is represented through his
paintings and drawings in numerous
public and private coiJections both in the
United Stales and abroad.
0

GE paftel' needs
more theme proposals
''Theme'' courses are in short supply,
but 445 sections of courses have been
proposed for-inclusion under the seven
knowledge area divisions of the General
Education (GE) prosram, now slated to
begin in earnest in !he ran of 1981. This
fall, only !he English skills component
of the program is being implemented.
According to a report of the GE Commince prepared for the Faculty Senate
this month, a little more than half the
knowledge area course proposals had
been reviewed by the committee as of
August 19. Of lhese, 149 had been
approved, 43 deferred, and 34 disap·
proved.
·
The 149 approvals represent 71
courses or sections in historical and
philosophical studies; 29 in physical
sciences, technology and mathematics; 3
ln lif~ and health ~iences; ~in literature;
3 in arts; 24 in social and behavioral
sciences; and 17 in foreign languages or
cross-cultural studies.
Total numbers of courses submitted in
each of !he fields as of !he report date
were: historical and philosophical
studies, 146; physical sciencestechnology-math, 66; life-health
- sciences, 10; literature; 68; ans, 21;

w.ffl~ ~'ii~&gt;!Jl ~'i'J!rnl"l~; ""d

Two new members have been appointed
to the University Council by Governor
Hugh Carey.
Joining the Council for the first time
when the body holds its initial meeting
for 1980-81 [Thursday, September 4, a.t
3 p.m. in the Council Conference Room,
Capen-5] will be Dr. Philip Wets and
Mr. John Walsh, bolh Carey appointees.
Also new to the Council this fall is
Mr. Chris Jasen, thor student representative elected last spring.

Wets

foreign languages/ cross-cultural studies,
S6.
Only 20 "Theme Course" proposals
had been forlhcoming as of August 19,
GE Committee Chair Peter Hare noted
in the repon - II under the ''Ethics' '
theme; 1 under ••order and Disorder" ; S
under "Stigma," and 3 under .. How
Living Systems Develop." All but one of
these had been reviewed. or those
reviewed, only one failed to win
approval and that one was '"deferred"
rather than rejected .
"The number of theme course proposals has been disappointingly small,'"
Hare complained.
"Even v.rithout the report expected
from the Task Force on lmplementalion
of General Education."' he went on, '' it
is clear that we are far from having
sufficient theme course proposals to implement that aspect of the program.
Urge.nt published requests for
more .. . have so far elicited little
response. We hope that many prospettive teachers of theme courses are
desisninll new courses and consequently
eJ&lt;p!:Ct to submit their proposals before
lltF,~)q,d~"., , •• ,..._,

Carey appoints
2 newcomers
to U /B Council

,):;1,

Dr. Wels is a U/ B alumnus (B.A., 1937;
M.A., 1939; M.D., 1941) who has long
been active in Medical School ad."
ministration and teaching. He was assistant dean and chairman of the Medical
Admissions Committee rrom 1965-70
and is currently assistant to the dean and
director of academic affairs, SUNY AB·
Millard Fillmore Hospital. A trustee of
the U/ B Foundation, Inc., Wets receiv·
ed a Distinguished Alumni award from
the University in 1979. The chairman. of
the Depanment of Surgery at Millard
Fillmore Hospital, he holds four other
local hospital appointments and is a
diplomate of the National Board of
Medical Examiners. He is a member of
the U/ B Athletic Hall of Fame. and
founded the first fencing team here, servi ng as its coach in the 1930's.
Walsh
Mr. Walsh is a graduate of Yale and
ichols School who holds a law degree
from Harvard. He is secretary of the
Walsh Duffield Companies, tnc., a
Buffalo-based insurance operation. He
serves as director of a number o f
organizations. including the American
Red Cross, !he Boys Clubs, the Buffalo
Philharmonic, Children' s Hospital,
Niagara Envelope Company, the
Western New York Foundation, and the
Yale University Council. He has been involved in several facets of Yale alumni
.,;tl~\!Y- u· o•_.. •... ~

•.: &amp;. "-''-'

.._• ._,

ol..! '...t

t..• . t..

'".:J:J

�PHILOSOPHY SEMINARI
IUPb ud Oal•, Professor Alan White,
University of Hull (Ensland) . 684 Baldy. 3:.30 p.m.

• Thursday - 4
PEDIATRICS RESEARCH SEMINARI
UV M...... of rk Tralbtl"'pdoll U_,tcs or
~ n , Alan Brautipn, M.D., Ph.D.,
Uniyersity of California/San Diego, Division of
Radiation Bjology . Board Room, Children 's
Hospital . 12 noon.

AUDITIONS FOR WIND ENSEMBLE AND
SYMPHONY BAND• ·
Auditions will be held in Room 48, Baird Hall,
from 3-5 p.m. Also at the same times on
SeptemOO S. Open to all undcrsri.duate and
graduate students. For further information, contact Frank_ Cipolla in Room 4 Foster Annex,
831-3414.

U/ B COUNCIL MEETING
Conference Room , 5th Ooor Capen. 3 p .m.
DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM#
Ekcrrons on Sur/tl" of Liquid Helium - An
Almost /dftJI Two-.Dim~ns/(}IM/ World. Dr. P.M.
Plalzman, Btll Telephone Laboratories. 454
Fronczak . 3:30p.m.
UUAB FILM•

Bruldnc Awa)' (1979) . Waldman Theatre.
Am hers!. 3:30. 5:30, 7:30-and 10 p. m. General admission S2. 10, all "&gt;hows. Students Sl fi rst show
only; Sk_60 ot her ti mes.
St'e ' ' This Week 's Featur~" for dt:tails.
U/ B JAZZ ENSEMBLE AUDITIONS
The Oepanmenl of Music invites students interested in performing with tht: Jazz. EnSt:mblt: to
audition/ rehearsals at 6 p .m. in 155 Goodyear.
Available positions include alto sax, tenor sax,
trumpet, trombone, French horn, drums and bas.s.
For further information, contact Lee Bash at
831-3411 or 885-4389.
·
JUST BUFFALO WORKSHOPS IN WRITING
REGISTRATION•
Registration for Just Buffalo's fall workshops in
writing will be held at the Allentown Communit y
Center, II I Elmwood Avenue at 7 p.m. Assistant
Coordinator/Writer-in-Residence Allen Dt:Loach
will conduct the workshops. Tht:y art: free and
open to tht: public.
Tht: workshop!&gt; art: designed to concentrate on
individual skills and developments in poetics and
methodologies.
nuscripts will be critiqued both
in workshop sessio a nd during individual conferen ces. For more in
ation. call 885-6400.

'THEATRE AUDITIONS
AudiLions for the upcomin Theatre Departmen t production s o f Eug e l on esco" s
"R hinoceros" and " Homeland" (to be staged t his
fall at the Center Theatre downtown) will be held:
today (Thursday, Scp!. 4) from 7-11 p.m., and Friday, Sept. 5, from 3-6 p. m., in Harriman Theatre
Studio, Main Street.
Saul Elkin and Ed Smi th a re directing. "'

Friday- 5
PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNDSI
Thro.boeylope:nla, Dr . John G.
Kelton, associate professor, Departments of
Pathology and Medicine, McMaster. University
Center, Hamilton , Ontario. Kinch Auditorium,
Childrt:n's Hospital. II a.m.

1••--

ORAL BIOLOGY SEMINARI

~·· l...t.dioe of E'.az)t..a Ia
t1hrolllaAI - eel c.lblft ud A .._. StMiel,
Moaa Marie Everett, Department of Oral BiolOBY.
Room 107, 4510 Main St . 12 noon .
UIB WIND ENSEMBLE•
Free concert at noon in front of the M&amp;.T Plaza
in downtown Buffalo.
SHENANIGANS•
A new, aClivt!, energizina, and fun way to make
new friends . In front of Clark HaD, Main Street
Campus; 3:30 - S:30 p .m. See "This Week 's
Features" for details.

To 11t1 eYOollla lloe "Caleoodar, .. call
..... Slonoler •• 636-:16:16.
llef: I 0,.,. OIIIJ to . . _ wiilo

a,....

, ...... · - · lloe IDjed; • ()pelt
IO 1Joe ...llllr; ** 0,.,. to -lien of lloe
V.mn!IJ. V.._ ........., ....,..,...,
tldlell , .. ~ ......... ........

-

loe ............ doe

~~

UUABnLM•
Brakl. . AWIIJ (1979). Conference Theatu,
Squire. 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 10 and 12 midnisht .
General admiuion S2. 10. Students, Sl fmt show
only; $1 .60 other times.

Saturday- 6
SECOND ANNUAL PLAY FOR THE UNITED
WAY•
Farber and Michael parking lotst Main Street
Campus from I~ p.m. See "This Week's
Features" for detaill'"
UUAB FILM•
The Kids Art Alriaht (1979). Conference
Theatre. Squire. 4:30, 7, 9:30 and 12 midnight .
General admission S2. 10, ·all shows. Students, Sl
fi rst show o nly; Sl.60 other times.
Directed by Jeff Stei n, with the Who, Ringo
Starr. the Smothers Brothers and Steve Martin. A
look at 15 years of Who-history misses almost
nothing, from .orgies of guitar smashing to the
band's earliest performance dips.

FACULTY REOTAL•
Ronald Richards, oboe. Baird Rttital Hall . 8
p.m . S3 general admission; S2 faculty, staff and
senior citizens; Sl students. Sponsored by tht:
Department of Music.

Sunday- 7
UUABflLM"
The Khts Are Alri&amp;bl (1979). Woldman Theatrt:,
Amherst . 4:30, 7 and 9:30. General admission
S2.10. Students Sl first show only; Sl.60 all other
times.
SOUL EXPERIENCE MI~I STRY•
Services will be held\.i n th~ Jane Keeler Room.
Ellicon Complex, from 5-6 p. m. This week's sermon. given by Daryl Smith, is tit led "Boy Plus
Girl Minus God."

Monday- 8
BIOCHEMISTRY SEM INA RI
Lipid Transfer Proteins: Their Use As Probe!.:
and Modifiers of Mrmbn1ne Structure, Or.
Donald Zih•ersmit, Cornell tlniversi ty. 134 Cary.
3:30p.m. Coff~ at 3:15 .
FILMS•
Th~ t"irst T¥ft.nty Years (Pan I &amp; II): Lumierr
Reel. 146 Diefendorr. 7-9 p.m. Sponsored by
Center for Media Stud)'.
JOHN WAYNE AND THE MYTH OF THE
AMERICAN HERO•
J
-Stagecoach (1939) , 7 p.m.: Th~ Long wf'"yag~
Home.(l940), 8:50p.m. 170 MFAC, Ellicott. Free
admission . Part of a series. Sponsored by UUAB.
Stageroac::h is Joh n Ford 's vision of the beginning of the young West. In dealing with the
psychological makeup of the diverse people
aboard a stagecoach, it creates a dream landscape
of the American past.
TM Lotta Voyaae Homt is a beautifully expressionistic film which was based on short plays by
Eugene O'Neill about a group of seafaring friends
on a munitions ship during the war. Wayne portrays a Swedish sailor.

Weilnesday - 10

Man, Dr. Lars Hanson , professor of clinical immuDOIO&amp;Y, Institute of Medical Microbiology.
Univenity of Goteburs, Sweden. Board Room ,
C hildren's Hospital. 12 noon .

WOMEN FOR DOWNTOWN FORUM•
A representative of Sasaki Associates, the city's
consultants for downtown revitalization (a firm
also i'nvolved in U/ 8 planning}, will discuss Lhe
proposed Main Street Mall and Lafayette Square
projects . Terrace Room, Statler Hotel. 12 noon .
Coinciding will be a major exhibit " Buffalo of
the Future," compiled by the:: Revitalization Committee of Women for DowntowQ. The display will
be located in the Courtyard Mall, 466 Main Street,

UUABflLM•
Luna (Italy, 1979). Woldman Theatre, Amhem .
3:15, 6 and 9 p.m.
ln~t in widescreen. Luna is directed by Bernardo Benolucci and stars Jill Clayburgh-as a slight!)
neurotic opera singer \l,"ho carries on an imenSt:.
tortured relationship with her son. The dominant
visual fixture is the moon; it is the film' s metaphor
for characters whose mysterious dark sides only
graduaJiy reYeal themselves:

~~~:a~~e ~c;~~p~~~~r2 ~.Ex:~~it ~~:s:;:

September 9 through Priday, September 12, 10
a. m. tO 4 p.m.
This wil! be the first ti me that models, renderings, plans. and other visual materials on various
renewal projects will be displayed in a cent,..! location.
PEDIATRIC SPECIAL RESEARCH
SEMINARI
Aad-Tumor Activity of Coryaebac.lcrium pat¥a
Ia llw R~jection of Sarcoma, Z. Mazurek, Ph.D.,
Sorbonne Institute, Paris , France:. Board Room,
Children's Hospital. 12:30 p.m.
flLMS•
~ flnt Tweaty Yean (Pt. XXII); Wlasor
Macc8J RHI; Coiii-Durud Reel. 146 Diefendorf.
7-9 p.m. Sponsored by the Center for Media
Study.
GSA SENATE MEETING
233 Squire Hall , Main Street Campus. 7 p.m.

Tuesday

9

FACULTY SENATE•
The fmt mcetina of the Faculty Senate for
1980-81 is scheduled for 2 p.m. in G-26 Farber.
On the qenda are: a report from the President
and committee progress rcporu: admissions,
academic plaJmin&amp;, and
education.

-al

UUO nJDDAY nlMS•
'l'lloFioolouolllwo..tl(l927), 71J.m.;AGIII'Io
E_,. r.t (1928). 9 p.m.; 170 MFAC, j;Uicon.
Fret .tmislion.
1k t'llolluol 11w o..t1 IW1 Greu Garbo and
)oha Gil6erl ..., kisses in • linale sce0e" thot"s bow MOM billed this silmt sc:orcber.
A Gill t. E..., POI1 -Howard Hawks" nnt
"'buddy"' r11m.
Louioe llroob, YJCtOr
M~ and Myn~~~ Loy, llboul two Ailon who
...... t b c - ptfricsldl.la-- o( &lt;all.

ALFRED HITCHCOCK - THE;;;rH

PERIOD•
Fay VlrtH (Great Britain,
27), 7 p.m.;
....._.. (Great Britain, 1929), 8.
.m. Conference Theatre, Squire. Free Admission. Sponsored by UUAB.
Eay vlrllle wu one of
first true "Hitchcock .. films, and is considerCd one of his rarest
and most curious worts. It tells of a rich artist
whose DOtorious and disreputable past leads to
trqedy when she tric:5 to marry inlo an artistic
f..Wy.
....,... was the first British souod film ever
made and displays an intenstina aruy of experiments with the new medium. It is aiUSpCIIIe{ul
film or • airl who kills a rapist in self defense.

tt.e

-.ma

bulftaoll)'--lllld..,.,........,.

s.atre .... .· Tlslo_ .... _ _ _ ialla(ldo-lUia'

The U/ 8 Wind Ensemble is conducti
today and tomorrow. Directed by I
downtown at M&amp;T Plaza Friday at n

idalr*-riD,l921. Smd~.""'

Thursday - 1!
· nDIATIIIC IIIKAIICR IIDIINAIU
'
Q I C ell.JIIMrrTnd....._ ..

Notices
BUFFALO ENERGY PROJECT
CONFERENCE
"Energy Education and the Future,'' a community conference, will be held on September 13 in
Room 10 Capen HaJI on the Amherst Campus
from 10 a. m.-3 p.m . Topics to be discussed are:
Energy Education Curricula, Buffalo Energy Project's Energy Education facilities, Buffalo City
Futures School, Vocational Trainina and Energy
Education, Career Counselins in Energy, and
CommUnity Wide Energy Education Planning.
Anyone interested in attc:ndina may call the Project at 881 -5150, ext. 260.
DEPARTMENT OF IDSTORY CONFERENCE
"Nr:w Directions in Historical Studies.. wiU take
place October 3-4. Tdephont: 636-2181, 2, 3 for a
program. Speakers wiU be Charles TiDy, Robert
Oarnton, Theodore Hershbera aod Bernard
Marlin.
IN MEMORY OF AUDREY IIENZIGER
In t.bc Sprina of 1981 a tree will be planted on
the Main Street Campus in Audrey's memory,
alone with an identifyina marker. In response to
her many friends wbo have wished co be a part of
this memorial, a contribution can now be made
toward this end. Checks may be made payable to
Sunshioc Fund - Student Acc:ounts, Abbott An·
nex, c/o Oifford Wilson.
· MANAGEMENT snJDENTS
8oth u.ndetp'aduate and paduate students in
tbe Sc:bool of Maaqemcnt have mailftlcs on the
first floor of Crolby Hall. Advisor appointments
may be made by callia&amp; 131-n.t6' or comina to 151
Crosby.
•
OPEN HOOSE PLANNED

Furnas MemoriaL. Room. fifth floor, Capen
Hall. from Octobor 19 ll1roual&gt; Octobor 2.5. 9 a .m.
- 5 p.m. to C08mlaiKJr8tc the 10th birthday or Or.

�This Week's Features
Footbtlll opeas - al Brockport
U/ B's homc:-arown, no-scholanhip brand of
football has won over scores of fans the past few
yean with iu hd ter-skc:her c:xcitc:mc:nt and rip~ roarina come-from -behind bravado . This season
shoukl be no different.
If you can't wait for the: September 20 home
opener with Grove City (Rotary F"tdd , I :30
p .m.), why noc make: the jaunt to Brockport for
the season's opmc:r Saturday (kickoff: I :30
p.m.). It's a short, pleasaru drive throucb farms
and rtdds &amp;Dd will Jive you a chance to cbcc:k
out still anotbc:r SUNY u.nit.
Bulls' Coocb Bill Oando says the l 1-pme
1980 sebeduk il his touchcst ycr, but U/ B (4-5
last year) has 34 kttmoc:o rc:turnin&amp;. indudina:
QB Jim Rodriauc:z wbo hu puscd for llll
yards aod I 5 touchdowns dwiftc his U / 8 career;
and reoeiven Frank Pric:lt wbo's c:au&amp;tn 79 panes
for 1, 110 Yards ud 10 sc:orcs, and Gary
Quatraai (SI c:arur rca:ptioral for IU yarc::b and
6 TDs). Dudo's defc:aJc: will be much improved,
but iook for a flub:y pusiD&amp; pme as tM Bulls'.

tradcmart .

Brockport likcloothina betta than to beat iu
wttic::h it did last year, 32-ll, but
not before: Rod.riaucz and Co. nqed a cliff·

bia brotbcr-

hanger of a comeback which found them a bout
two yards away from tht tyinJ 5C(')fC at the: final
whistle.
•
See you a1 the p.mc:.

Sbeaaaigans - A Playfrd Kick Off
For Fall '80

g auditions (as is the Symphony Band)
rank Cipolla, the Ensemble will play
KJ n.

Clifford C. Furnas, former U/ 8 chan«llor. All

guC$tS are v.·rlcome.
UNIVERSITY C HORUS REH E~ RSA LS
The Uni\·ersity Chorus is open .... ithout a udition
facu lt)' and staff as \r.:ell as studenu. It meets
t'\'try Monday a nd Wednesday cvenina at 7 p .m. in
Room 155 Goodyear HaJJ, Main Str«t Campus .
Works to bt performed in the fa ll semester include
Odes to St. Cecilia by Henr)' Pur«ll a nd Norman
Odlo Joio. Dr. Harriet Simons is the conductor .

Show up for Shc:nanigaru, a "new, active , energiz·
ing, and fun way to make new friends at the
Univm:ity. Scheduled for Friday, 5q)tc:mber S,
from 3:30 - 5:30 p.m. on the fidd in from of
Oark Hall on the: Main Street Campus .
Shftlui&amp;us will gather hundred.s-of students
together in play experiences especially de:si&amp;ned
for adults. These noncompc:titive: games aim at
building supportive rapport and frkndsh ip
• among participanu . Bea.use the aames create a
comfortable environment in which strangers can
relax, release inhibitions, and have a good time
while bcc:oming acquainted , they provide a
means for students quickly to tum a sea of un·
familiar faces into potential friends .
will be led by Prof~r Jack
Baker of the Department of P hystcal Education
wilb the: assistance: of several senior physical
education majors . Using a sound system and
Sl.a8e, Dr. Bater will lead hundreds of students
through a variety of antics, one of which includes fittiOJ a group into a hoola hoop (a
·
group?) .
Show up yourself and you' ll mate some
friends . Brin&amp; people you t now and &amp;tt to knO\It"
them better and make MW friends . But do show
up at sa.taaai&amp;aas, you·~ sure to ha e fun . And
it'sF,..
SIIH.aaiaus is jointly sponsored by Orientation, SIUdnu Association Commuter Affairs,
Sub-Board I, Inc .. UUAB Coffee House, the
Dept. of Physical Education, and the Student
Development Proaram Ofrlce.

s-.......

10

U/ 8 WOMEN' S C LUB MEMBERSHIP TEA
The Membership Tea will bt the first C\'Cnt of
tM year, to bt held Septcmbtr 13 at the Faculty
Club on Main Suet:t Campus from 2~ p .m . Reser·
ntions should bt sent to Mrs. Cynthia Hagerman
b)' Septembtr 6 . For fun her information, call
Joan R)·an at 688-1065.
NEED BASIC DENTAL CARE! WELL. TEAM
NEEDS YOU
TEAM is a special program at the School of
Dentistry which gives ~n~Jor delltal st•dents the
opponunity to work in a simulated oflict St'lting.
HaYing just staned for the semester, TEAM is acti\·ely seekina those: persons from the University
community whose specific needs a re for oral uaaiadH, cle:uap ud 11111..,. Thest' routine
dental scrviccs can be performed in the TEAM
clinic with a minimal waitins period a nd a t
minimal cost. In addition, we at TEAM o perate in
such a fuhioo u to make all routine dental care as
comfortable and as stress-fee as possible. So, if
you do need basic dental carc ... why wait? Call us
at 831-2213 aay day between 9 and 4:30 and we
will be aJad to uraoae a scremina appointment for
YOU .

Play Day Fo r United Wa)'
The School of Dentistry will hold its Second

Annual "' Play for the United Way"' t'\'ent from
J-6 p .m. in Farber a nd Michael parking lOIS,
Main Street Cam pus, Saturday. September 6 .
Teams from the Schools o f Denti51ry, 1'\ursing
and Health Related Profeuions will compete for
"'golden tooth"' awards in tug-o-\loar , stretcher
and potato sack rela)'S and the rubber bowl mixing contest .
The Big "E" Balloon "'ill be on hand , weather
permitting, alo n&amp; \loith clowns furnished by the .
Master Mason Clowns Association .
Visitors and participanu can purchase hot
doas. hamburac:rs , beer and ~ft drinks at a
Food Tent . Rafned off will be free pizzas, mo\i e
pas.sc:s, gasoline and other prizes donated by
Universit \·-area merchants and restaurant.s. •
Last year, the "Play for the United Way" net·
ted some $2000 for the community fund.
Dr. William Feqans, dean of the School of
Dentistry, said the Play Day was initially
orpniz.ed last year to help kick o ff the United
Wa y d rive .
" We '~ pleased the Schools of Nursin&amp; and
Hc:alth Related Professions are joining us in t he
cOmpc:tition and fu n this year to hdp raise
money for this wonhwhile cause:," he said.

Movie of llle Week- Brealdaa Away

Exhibits
.4,L.\MO G.uu:IIY
ADcxbibitoftbeworts oflil: of this area's best
malt anisu. 11ec1t HaU (Main SU&lt;ctJ. orr...
boun. '!broulh Sepccmbor 19.
Anthoay 11uu&gt;oa of tbe &amp;if/olo Nows dacribcd
- tbc show u ··bold, uscrtive, pballic, i.atdleaual,

even muscular."

"" JDCblded ~ Mart DeDais Zahm's

Someone once: suuested that U/ B shows so
many movies , we nc:cd a ntm aisis center tO hdp
us de:c:idc: what to sec. There's a free or cheap
movie most every niahL
The University Union Activities Board be&amp;ins
its fall film season this wce:keod with that
" litt.k'' movie wbich bc:camt ODC: or Lase year's
bigcst hiu (ud will sire: ooe: of this year's DeW
TV series if the: actors' strike: i.s ever scttJedl -

lllwlkU.,

AMt)'.

Playiaa today and tomorrow, BINk.Urz A . .y

is • touc:hina and funny story abou1 Ute transi-

clrawinas of

body bulldcn; Denais llonodoulll'• phallic
........; ADdtow Topobtl's iatdlectual puzzles;
Robert F1oct's mWd media aitsnctioas; James.
AileD's fuciful clrawil&gt;p; ond J . WU...'!umiaouodlliws.
Lma.uty~

,._ .....Jioolp ~by Ricordo Morino
.. "' .... boob. Sepccmbor 2
lJuouah :Ill. F.,_. "' ~ Memorial
Ubrwy, Ullnty houn..

tion from a DOt·SO iuoc::eet adolcsceooe to • jad·
ed adulthood iD BJoominat.oa, IDdiua. Dennis
· Ouistopbcr &amp;oQ11 to be Italian and • bike racer,
drivin4 his parenu &amp;oc:o in Ute process.

Rising
questions
Schwartz
Editor:
In a review of one of Konrad Lorenz'
books Ernst Mayr teUs bow be found all
of the book acceptable except for those
portions which referred to his own
&lt;pecialty, ornithology. Those references
he found quite simply wrong. His experience led him to check his reaction
with his colleagues in other biological
specialties and to his dismay he found
that thei r response to the book was '
essentially the same as his own.
Mayr's episode is instructive in its
similarity to my own with the representations of MurriY Schwanz, Dean o f the
Colleges, in the July 31 Reporter.
Several of his statemen ts refer to events
a bo ut which I have firSt han d
knowledge. In these cases I found
serious distortions. This led me to check
with colleagues involved in other events
on which Dean Schwanz reponed. As
did Mayr, I fo und their experience
exactly paral lel to my own.
This is my fi rst encounter in my fourteen years at this university with this
level of faculty d iscourse. l have participated in serio us and direct confrontations in matters like general education
and the choice o f a bargaining agent,
anci-although we have disagreed deeply
and directly l have always felt that my
opponents were sincere, open and fair.
It is because l see here a quite different
type of argum ent that I write this letter
• in response.
Misrepresentations
Here are SOJlle of the misrepresentations
lmown to me: (I) In th e Reporter Dean
Schwartz responds to "secretive 'overthrow' of key starr• in the Colleges as
reponed by John Lipiana in the J uly 23
Spectrum. But the Spectrum anicle
never mentions or implies secrecy.
Instead it refers to the dean's firings carried out in late May when st uden ts,
fac ulty, and staff were away. To this accusation Dean Schwartz does nor speak.
(2) Then Dean Schwanz responds that
the firings were the resuh oLa collective
decision-making process. In the College
of Mathematical Sciences (CMS) this
meant fait accompli notificatiOO of the
CMS master an d through him the CMS
board of the CMS executive officer being fired . (3) The dean tells how the
master, AI Fadell, and three other
members of the CMS board resigned.
This is his way o f understating the
resignation o f the full board .
(4) Despite this loss of its full faculty
leadership and in the summer absence of
CMS students, Dean Schwartz foresees
operation of the imponant CMS tutorial
program ••at or near past levels." We
will have the opportunity to monitor this
cfaim in September with Dick Orr, the
prime mover, constant participant, and
supervisor or this program, rued and
gone (happily for him to the Rocbesler
Institute of Technology mathematics
department). The dean appears to take
no note here of the student petition currently being circulated in CMS against
his actions. (5) Dean Schwartz lakes exception to the claim that the rtring
decision was h.is unilaterally, but in the
same defense he speaks of his unwillingness even to respond to the CMS
board's requests (before his Council
meeting) as his refusal to abdicate his
personal responsibility. (6) He also indicates thai he could not justify such
negotiation on organizational and
budgetary grounds, yet at the lime be
mel with the CMS board no budget cut
was involved whatsoever .
Statements by coUeaaues I truSt lead,
me to submit the followina questions to·
fuller investiption: (7) Was Mr. Acker
rued? Note here the differcna: between
Dean Schwartz' Sp«ttvm comment that
Mr. Acker was "brouiht back" and his ·

-------s-.... - I I.... 3

�Volumell, No. I , September4, 1980

PageS

~!!!~~;~;s!!~~~·~·~··=·

ec·utive vice president.
President Roben L. Ketter informed
the Faculty Senate Executive Committee
last week that the number two spot held
for eight years by Alben Somit (who left
to assume the presidency of Southe!"' IIlinois University - Carbondale) will be
eliminated. Taking up some of the administrative slack wiU be the individual
selected to fill a newly-creal~ positi!'n:
vice president for administration.
According to the President , ~he new
vice president will be responsible _ for
monitoring University support services ,
such as A&amp;R, Scheduling, the Computing Center aQd the Educational Communications Center, amon11, others.
Renecting on the responstbtlilles, Ketter-said the job would be a ·:hard" one
which would take a " particular personality" to master.
Ketter said SUNY is considering combining the offices/ &amp; president of the
Research Foundation an~ vtce
chancellor for graduate education and
research. Negotiations are now underwaywith Jay L. Katz of RPI. The catch,
however, is that Katz currently earns
ll was only a drill, but there were enough
$63 000 and wouldn't consider a move
screams, bloody injuries and emergency
unJ~ he receives a substantial pay inequipment at Amherst on July 29 to turn • crease.
The President pointed out that while
the placid campus into a nightmare viKatz is excellent at his job, his salary, if
sion. Fourteen Amherst area volunteer
hired, would exceed anyone else's in
fire companies responded to a pretended
SUNY, including the Chancellor's.
explosion on the first noor of CookeHochstetter with more than SO firemen
As for fall U/ B enrolhnent, the President said he has been assured quotas will
and 28 pieces of rescue equipment, including the Utll snorkle which, yes, did
be met for incoming freshmen. No final
reach to the top noor . Twenty
registration numbers were available, but
Ketter said that, in terms of processed
.,victims" f.f'om the Erie County FAST
Team simulated injuries ranging from · applications received by Albany, SUNY
severe shock to horrible burns, radiation
Centers are four per cent up from last
exposure and impalement. The drill
year. Also ahead, by 4.2 per cent are the
drew more than 100 spectators, rt)Ostly
colleges of arts and sciences. Health
summer students, staff and nearby
science centers, by contrast, are down
residents, who seemed as fascinated and
7.4 per cenl. Agricultural and technical
schools and community colJeges are also
shocked as if the whole thing were real.
behind, though not as much as the
And two l-ocal TV news shows gave
health science centers.
prime coverage to the drill, with emphasis on scenes of bloody .. students"
Both Erie and Niagara counties, congroaning with .. pain." The crowd loved
tinued Ketter. experienced a drop in apitall.
0
plication rates "to SUNY units. Erie was
down by 273 and Niagara by a whopping
931 individuals.
U/ B received 14,015 applications for
freshman admission this year. Including
grad students, transfers, EOP and
foreign students, total new student applications amounted to I g,577.

Emergency drill

Ratios and cost effectiveness data
The President also presented some information, ti)Dugh not .,hard data," comparing U/ B with other institutions, particularly the other SUNY university
centers, on a number of points, such as
student-faculty ratios. The information
was generated for internal purposes, the
President said, specifically to assist planning committees and help him defend
the final budget next month in Albany.
The completed data concern ordy
Academic Affairs: comparable figures
for Health Sciences are currently being
developed.
The figures show that in the fall of
1975, 28.85 per cent of course offerings
in Academic Affairs had fewer than ten
students. By comparison, ordy 14.19 per
cent of Stony Brook's classes had fewer
than 10 enrolled. Dividing undergraduate FTE students by toUtl undergraduate FTE faculty, Ketter said that in the
same year, U/ B's student-faculty ratio
in Academic Affairs was 24.38. Stony
Brook's was 19.34.
Summing up, Ketter said the 1975
figures indicate that U/ B taught mor~
students per faculty even though we had
more smaller classes. U/ 8 was also the
most cost effective of the Uni.versity
of the Springer
reversed.
In 1979, Stony Brook was
most cost
effective at $61.69 per student cre&lt;!it
hour- (dividing total undergraduate
faculty salaries by toUtl undergraduate
credit hours); U/ B's rate was $68.23 .
The student-faculty ratio at Buffalo in
1979 was 21.91 vs. Albany's 23.72.
What this s«ms to indicate, conclud-

•.llom!:i

ing large teachm~ loads ~h1le others are
doing comparatively little .. B~! the
"numbers don't prove anythmg, cautioned Ketter, except to "raise flags" so
questions can be asked and answered.
Quizzed about the type of questions
Albany might ask, Kett~r responded that
officials might wonder if this is a "conscious system" or one we "drift~' into
because of prevailing circumstances.
Also Ketter said Albany might check to
see if graduate and teaching assistants
teach classes. If graduate assistants are
used to teach classes when a large
number of faculty don't carry sufficient
teaching loads, then ''certain questions' '
will likely be asked, he suggested.
Although the Chancellor has stated
that the heads of SUNY units will be
consulted regarding the new Five-Year
Plan Ketter told the group that to date
no o~e from SUNY has asked him for
any input. Consel(uently, Ketter said he
can' t give any assurances regarding what
it will or won't contain .
A De" honors proposal
The President also reported that Barbara Howell, vice chair of the Faculty
Senate, has agreed to chair a new
University Honors Committee. Ketter
called the proposed Honors Program
"one of the most exciting things •-• now
being explored at the University. The
program will offer special instruction to
a select group of highly advanced
students, as a means of enticing them to
enroll here.
Senate Chairman Norman Solkoff informed the group he is investigating a
process by which the University of
Maryland expeditiously handles ins tances of student cheating or
plagiarism . Hopefully, he submitted, at
least part of their system can be adopted
here tO make grievance procedures less
complex.
Also being explored is a new procedure used in the California system in
which tenured faculty are evaluated by
their peers every five years.
In addition, Solkoff asked Continuing
Education Dean James Blackhurst to
look into the possibility of establishing
an Elder Hostel Program at the University. Such programs for older citizens
are generally held from 4 to IP weeks
during the summer and combine
academic and recreational activities.
Usually those enrolled live on campus
during the programs.
RedaciD&amp;

del1ft reqalraaeats

Solkoff relayed also that DUE. Dean
John Peradotto bas asked the Senate to
consider reducing degree requirements
from a 128 credit-hour minimum. The
State requires 120.
After reviewing notes from the GE
Committee, Solkoff expressed concern
that in some inStances, a small number
of people, some of whom aren't faculty,
are making academic decisions regarding the acceptability or nonacceptability
of GE courses.
He noted that when action is deferred
on courses or when they are rejected, little, if any, explanation for the decisions
is given in the minutes of the Committee's deliberation.
0

A campw community newspaper published each
Thursday by the Division of Public Affairs, State

Uniycnity of New York at Buffalo. Editorial
offiCeS are located in 136 Crofts Hall, Amherst.
Telephone 636-2626.
Actina Director of Public Affairs
HAf&lt;RYJACKSON
Editor-in-Chief
ROBERT T . MARLElT

An and Production
JOHN A. CLOUTIER
Assistant Editor
JOYCE BUCHNOWSKI

�~Volume

12, No. I, September

Pa~e9

Solkoff said the group, now called the ·
· Liaison Committee of SUNY Centers
discussed: the development of generai
principles of academic planning for the
four oenters; how SUNY Central could
be "convinced" to take a "constant
position on academic planning;" how
faculty could play a "more influential
role" with central administration, and
bow ''more productive relationships"
could be developed berween SUNY
· Senators and linion agents.

~

sidered "administrators" and Jose their
right to be represented by a bargaining
agent. Solkoff noted the coun ruling in
question concerneil faculty at Yeshiva
University, a private institution.
The next meeting of the SUNY
Centers Liaison Committee is scheduled
for mid-October at Binghamton.

...........

:-

.• o........._/'

Jn

addition to reYiving the ad~strative review rommittee, Solkoff
said !be .-Executive Committee reoeiltly
as cmtnl ·Pwd&gt;aslnc. computer ser· ,gav~ liS &amp;PPIOVal tot bucJaet rommittee.
The main charge of the committee wiD
¥ioes, library acquisitions, and in deal·
be to help faculty understand and
ings 'with the 'Research Foundation.
critically evaluate budgetary decisions as
Solkoff explained that each SUNY
well as gain input into the decisionCenter, along with the campuses near it,
making ~prOcess.
could, for example, join league to bid
and purchase supplies from local ven- · . Solkoff also plans to ask tbe Exdors inaead of through oentral supply. ecutJye Committee to review and modify
charges of existing committees where
Such a move would not only be good for
they deem necessary.
l_ocal businesses, he concluded, but
He has already asked each committee
would also be a more efficient way of
getting supplies and avoiding th e chainnan to prepare a synopsis and
abstraa of the committee's reportS to
bureaucracy of SUNY Central.
the Senate. These will be mailed to
_ The idea of regionalizing such services
was proposed several years ago, Solkoff Senator two to three weeks before being
placed . on the agenda. Hopefully,
relayed, but was nixed by Albany .
shortenmg the reports will enable mOre
The unions are hesitant to support the
idea of regionalism, he said, because Senators lO read and digest them and
will also allow for discussion and a vote
the)' think the Universi ty centers are setat the same meeting.
ting themselves up as "elitist" instituSolkoff wants all final committee
tions and will wotk in concert (on such
reports and recommendat ions in before
issues as academic planning, etc.) to the
the
end of the 1981 academic year.
detriment of the four-year and com·
ThiS year, Senate meetings will be held
munity colleges.
at
the
Talben Banquet Hall and will run
In fact, Solkoff recei ved corfrom 2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. The firs t
respondence from a union official at
Binghamton who charged it was "inap· meeting, however, is scheduled for 144
Farber, next Tuesday.
propriate" for union leaders to attend
Solkoff says he'd like to try running
the U/ B meeting of SUNY Centers
the meetings wit hou t Roberts Rules of
because all SUNY units hadn't been in·
vited. To boot, State UUP Chief Sam Or,der, but if this proves too confusing.
Wakshull refused to allocate funds for· he II be forced to use parliamentary prothem to travel to Buffalo for the gather- cedure. He'd also like to reintroduce an
amenity which made Senate meetings
ing. ·
Union officials here, especially in~ight m_ore bearable several years ago: serving
of a recent Supreme Court ruling, are wme and/ o r coffee. Since the Senate's
also fearful that if faculty become too budget doesn' t allow for the expeninvolved in planning and administrative duure, he' ll ask Senators if they mind
2
aspecrs of goveinance, they will be con· being assessed a SIO fee.- JB.
Also ~ · was the concept of
"rqi.onalization" in specific areas such

Solkoff

Solkoff
New Senate chairman will promote
better communication, be a stickler
about attendance at meetings
TJ:tis promises to be no easy year for the
Fat ulty Senate. Complicated, pressing
issues must be debated and resolved:
issues that have the potential to either
enhance or disrupt the academic and collegial environment here.
While most members of the University
community were enjoying the summer
respite, Norman Solkoff, new chair of
the Faculty Senate, was setting wheels in
motion to help _guarantee a productive
year for the group.
Solkoff, who previously served for a
tenn as a Senator and for one year on
the Senate Executive Committee, has
already managed to meet with most
deans and other administrative ofrtcials,
rtnt to open lines ofqmununic:ation and
secoodly to discuss tbe Senate's aaenda.
.Perhaps because o( his professional
fllterests (psycboiOIY-JISYchlatry) and
basic person8lity, foaerina opea communication il important to Solkoff..
His feelinp rcpl!:liJII . the 'lleCCSSity
for better commllllic:ations are evideoced
iu hil move to invite the campi.s press to
Executive Committee oessions. While
the meetinas weren't previously offlimits, they were more difficult to cover
because quotes could not be printed
without advance permission. frOJD
speakers. The press can now report what
it wishes, except when specifically asked
to go off record.
While the situation is still less than
ideal, it will ensure that members of the
~niversity community are privy to more
mfonnation on pertinent campus issues.
The communications effort will also be
assisted, says Solkoff, by establishing a
working relationship with the Buffalo
press and by giving the Senate and Executive Committee minutes a "'more
readable" format.
Orieootalloa meellq
To hdp maximize participation in
Senate activities, Solkoff has also
orpnized an orientation meeting today
for newly appointed Senators and alternates. The meeting will be attended by
former chair Newton ~ and by

President Ketter'.
At tbe seaion, Solkoff hopes Senators
william DOl only about the structure of
the poup, but also about thdr respon-

si bilities as representatives. Like former
chair (1976-78) Jonathan Re ichert
(whose style seems to be more similar to
Solkoff's than his immediate
predecessor, Newton Garver), he intends
to be a stickler about attendance at
meetings and will dismiss Senators who
miss more than two consecutive sessions
without sending an alternate. He also
plans to be acoessible throughout the
year to any Senator who wishes to speak
to him privately regarding Senate matters.
Partially in response to a survey and
foUow-up interviews he conducted last .
year with 58 per oent of the Senators,
Solkoff has asked the President to announce in advance wbJt he will &lt;liscuss
at each Senate meetiaf. The reason is to
give Senators an OJ&gt;POrtunity to formulate petinent questions regarding the
·topic or topics to be aired. For the
Senate' s rust meeting, September 9, Ketter has announced plans to. discuss the
·current status of general education.
'lllty doa't tnul tilt lllerardly
The same survey indicated a need to
reestablish an administrative rev:ew
committee, noted Solkoff. "Faculty
don't trust the administrative
hierarchy," he offered. They also doubt
the " reliability" of information relayed
to them by administrative officials.
(Solkoff hopes that giving Senators time
to prepare questions for the President
will help improve the Administration's
credibility.) What would also help, the
survey revealed, is for the Administration to "implement Senate recommendations without delay."
As far as the major challenges facing
the Senate this year, Solkoff lists them
(not necessarily in order of importance)
as: general education- logistics and implementation; leaching quality ;
academic planning and reallocation of
resouroes; recruitment and quality of life

jssues.

To bdp gain more input into the
academic planning process, Solkoff invited representatives rrom each SUNY
Center Faculty Senate .and UUP union
chapter to \JIB this summer. A second
· meeting was held in AliiUst at Stony
Brook.

Pet1oaael llew1
GHI Booklets
The 7/ 31 / 80 issue of the Summer Reporter alerted employees enrolled in the
GAl program that Personne.l would be. dist ributing new health insurand
b~~lets _ in late August. Printing delays have caused a moruh's delay in the
d1stnbuuon. Look for your new booklet to be delivered to your campus
address during the third week of September.
Healt~

...... nee Co... ltallons
Health lpouranoe Representati ves will, for the first time, join N. Y .S .
EmJ?Ioyees' R~l i rement S~stem tnformation RepresentatiVes .to provide inform_a uon on _vanous health msurance matters for retirees and f)re-retirees. They
will be available at the Gen. Donovan State Office Building, llS Main Street,
Buffalo, NY on fhifl/'$1 WMnesday of each month to discuss health insurance
benefits coverage during ret:i~ent, claims difficulties and ~Med1care as j r
relates to the State Health Insurance Program.
Ne" HMO
. A new hea_lth insurance program (option), the Independent Heallh Association, Inc., will be offered to an state employees during the month of October.
Th~ Personnel Depanm.~nt is presently making final arrangements to present a
senes of employee onentations (Amherst . Main·Bailey and Ridge Lea
campuses). Watch ·for more details in future issues of the Reporter.

U/BF sets a record
The U/ B Foundation reportS total income o f S4,262,574 for the fiscal year
ended June 30, 1980, a new record for its 18-year history.
According to Foundation President John M. Carter, the $4.2 million surpassed last year's actual income by Sl ,090,849, or 34.40Jo, and the previous
record year of 1977-78 by $580,204, or 15.80Jo.
INCOME BY QUARTER

Quarter
July-September

lncom~

Comments
Record income for the quarter and
the second highest quaner in the
Foundation•s history.
October-December
1,310,299
Highest income quarter in the
-history of the Foundation.
Jan~ary-March
890,SS8
Record income for tbe quaner.
April-June
1,085,873
Record income for the quarter.
As usual, Carter said, a complete report of U/BF activities by calendar year
will be distributed in early 1981.

s

975,845

�Volame 12, No. I, Seplember 4, 1980

Pa~IO

$100 million rehab
is in the works for
Main Street Campus
EDITOR'S NOTE: Oloe of tile major
stories of tile .....,. was tile
of tile Master Plaa for tile
rebabUitBtloa of tile Mala Slfttt Cam·
pas. For lbose wbo mlsaed II, bert's tile
story:
lltWS

•••elll•c

Climaxing several years of preliminary
s1udies, President Robert L. Ketter on
June 16 unveiled the long.awaited
Master Plan for the Main Street Campus
which calls for $52.5 million to be spent
on renovation and demolition of existing
buildings and SS0.9 million for new
construction.
The President told an obviously
gratified crowd of Health Sciences
faculty and administrators at Farber
Hall• that. . .if events go as anticipated,
architecls can be named by early fall for
the first phase of construction and
renovation of the Cary-Farber-Sherman
Medical Complex, for an addition to
Crosby, and for a clinical facility for the
School of Dentistry.
Once architects are named, he said,
the design phase, depending on com·
plexity of the structure, can take be·
tween 16 to 30 months to complete.
Given this timetable, the President
predicted that some construction should
begin in about a year and a half from
this August.
Biddable packqes

To ensure that area construction
workers benefit from the planned pro·
jects, Ketter noted that the Consiruction
Fund and the University have agreed to
divide the work into biddable packages
within the capabilities of Western New
York construction firm s. These
. packages will range from $2 million ·
----s 15 million in size.
Before using slides and drawings to illustrate the construction and renovation
plans, Ketter emphasized that all costs
quoted are in terms of .. non-escalated"
1980 dollars and do not include money
for planning and equipment. Depending
on the type of facility, he said, equipment totals can range from S to 35 per
cent of const ructi c5n costs; and planning,
from 10 to IS per cent. He also noted
that equipment costs are generally "formalized,. when construction is about a
year from completio n and ordering
begins.
A common core
According to the Master Plan devised by
Cannon Design Inc., Graod Island, the
center portion of the campus - that is,
the area encompassed by Abbott,
Diefendorf and Crosby - is to be a
common, uinteractive space" containing central facilities to be shared by
Health Sciences Schools - such as a
library, student activities center and
classrooms.
More specificaUy, Abbott, ·already
· adorned with chandeliers and rich wood
paneling, will be converted to use as a
student activities center; Diefendorf,
with a major addition. will remain
primarily a classroom facility, and an
expanded Crosby wiU become the hofne
of the Health Sciences Library/Biomedical Information Center. Actually, a
new building will be constructed to the
rear of Crosby which is larger in size
• than the present structure, and will be
joined to it. Likewise, a new building
will be constructed in front (toward
Main Street) of Diefendorf which approximates its present size.

llldiYidai....As anlic:ipated, Squire, with a major addition to tbe east toward Bailey A venue,
will house tbe Scbool of Dentistry as wiU
a renovated Foster Hall.
•
The Medical School and the basic
ICieDcel will eD&lt;OIIIpass tbe eillire Cary• SbermaJ&gt;.Parber complex, ~ with
major renovations to tbe current llrUc:·
ture alona with new, adjoining
buildinp.
.
.. "
Putler, plua a ~ addllloa-to
iu .... 1rill be~ ~
for tbe
Scbools .~f ~"l
..~Jr. Relaled

=

Professions.
.
Returning to the Main Street Campus, ·
Pharinacy will occupy a modified
Acheson . Chemistry, in turn, will move
into Pharmacy' &lt;s present facilities aJ
Amherst.
The President noted that all present
dorm facilities will remain as housing
units and that Kimball Tower will be
converted back to living space. Married
students will probably be accommodated in one of the units.
Scheduled for demolition are all an·
nexes and temporary buildings, part of
Wende, Harriman and Townsend Halls,
the greenhouses, the condemned stands
in Rotary Field (west side), and the concrete structures to the rear of Parker
now-containing laboratories.
Not included in tire Health Sciences
scheme are Hayes Hall, wh ich will re·
main the headquarters of the School of
Architecture and Environmental Design,
and Baird, which will house offices of
the Division of Continuing Education.
Beck Hall is expected to remain as is.
Also to remain are the Nuclear
Research Center and an upgraded Clark
Hall.
•
In order to preserve the buildings as
community landmarks, the facades of
Hayes, Foster and Crosby (facing Main
Street) will be left intact. Any new con·
struction will go behind them.
In a change from the original proposal, he said, the NFT A Transit Station
facing Main St. will be much smaller in
dimension, (one story high), and will
feature a glassed-in middle~section which
will give a view of Abbott .

Architccc:'s sketch of •urban cou' &amp;"visaged for Squire- Abbou- Fosttt area .

En~er to bead

Architecture unit
By LINDA GRACE-KOBAS
News Burrou Sttiff

b.enefits of the new li~ rail/ rapid tran·
sit system .
He's served as
consultant ~ on

transportation planning for, among
others, the City of Buffalo, Erie Count y
and the State Energy Research and
Development Agency.
Paaswell feels that the current
undergraduate program in environmental design is "very healthy and good"
and he wiU ensure that it continues to be
Walkways and roads
so. He also plans an · expansion of its
Those who cannot become accustomed
" That's why announcing this appointgraduate program that will offer both
to Buffalo's winter chill, will be pleased
ment is such a great 'delight for us," AI
full- ~ nd part-time studies.
to discover that the plan calls for all
Price, acting dean of the School of Ar·
" Because so much of planning is in
major buildings to be co nnected by a
chitecture and Env.i ronmental Design
dealing with resources and chan.&amp;,ing
second-level, glass-enclosed Pedestrian
during Harold Coheil' s leave of absence,
regulations,
it's important fo r proTescorridor.
commented in introducing Robert
sionals to have continuing education and
For au to traffic, th e campus will have
Paaswell o f Civil Engineering as
will develop a professional
training.
We
a major new entrance across from
SAE D's new chairman of Environmen- •
outreach program to reach area planNiagara Falls Boulevard along with
Lal Design and Planning, effective
ners,"
he
said.
other entrance s on Bailey and
September I.
.. Our st udent s need a $trong
Parkridge.
" He has both a broad view and a
theoretical background but also specific
An inner ring road will hopefully be
specific set of concerns, " Price added.
skills. They need an understanding of
more lightly trafficked and basically
Paaswell himself said, " This is a very
fina nce, population and economic·
limited to visitors and faculty . The entire
challenging opportunity to help shape a
trends and computer planning," he add·
center section of campus - the "urban
prograln at a time when the urban plan·
core" - will contain only pedestrian
ed .
ning profession is begiOning to undergo
walkways with no intruding streets.
What It's aU aboat
a change. Today, the delivery of wellPaasweU also emphasizes the need for
Costs
planned and managed services is para·
to understand exactly what the
students
Cost breakdowns for .the buildings are:
mount, but public budgets are"lower and
profession of planning is aU about.
• Medical School ~c Science Com·
needs
are
increasing.
plex with modificatitfn, new Construc" A lot of students thislk they want to
go into planning to 'get' someone, such
tion and connecting bridges - $36.5
Housia&amp; and revitalization
as the government, or Hooker Chemi·
million.
" The real problems facing us in this area
cal. We don' t want to train them to 'get'
• Renovation and addition to Squire,
are housing, revitalization of the core cirenovation of Foster and connecting
anybody, but to understand issues, with
t y, development of local water
the best interests of society in mind.
bridges - $20.6 million.
resources, delivery· of public services,
''Other misconceptions are wide• Addition to Diefendorf - $3 .8
energy planni ng. and ·air qua lity
million.
spread aboul tbe role of the planner. It is
monitoring," he continued.
• Modification and addition to Abbott
not to be a public relations person for a
Paaswell feels a comprehensive look
- $2 .9 million.
client, whether that client is a govern·
at all areas of potential physical change
• New building paralleling Crosby plus
in a region is essential for planners.
menl qency or private conoern. Plan·
its own modifications - $5.7 miUion.
" In our cities, we are seeing a whole
ners must develop a strong sense of pro• Upgrading utility facilities - $19
fessionalism that will allow them to tB~e
shift of the economic base.'' he said,
million.
"caused by population changes. Buffalo
-honest and objective looks at situa·
• Modifications to Acheson and relocais-reaching the point where a lot of hous·
tions," PaasweU said.
tion of Chemistry and Pharmacy - $8 .I
ing slock musl be changed. We have to
"That includes being able to inmillion.
look at the · possibilities of reusing
vestigate a certain problem and give the
• Parker's addition - plus its renovabuildings, such as old schools; we need
best analytical approach 10 solutions,"
lion - $6.8 million.
rehabilitation and renewal programs.''
he went on. "It's knowing the limits of
Of all the projects, the President
Planning now involves law, managewhat your own contributions can be.''
relayed, the library design will be done
ment and engineering disciplil)es, and
Noting thai in many cases plaaners
ftrst, then the Dental facility and the
Paaswell hopes to develop strong rela·
are caUed in to develop solutions for
Medical SchooVBasic Science Complex.
problems caused by a previous lack of
Lions with those areas in the University.
Wilhin two years, Ketter said he hopes
He wants to see graduales come out of
planning, such as urban decay or polluto have tbe ftrst appropriation for conhis program at the "cutting edge" of the
tion problems, PaasweU pointed out that
struction. Once construction begins, be
planning profession.
they must be able to "go in with a cool
estimated, about S40 million per year in
head and son out tbe pieces of an j ssue.
new contracts can be let. Academic units
'Roal'lona
"Integrity, and not the mere represen·
displaced by the plan will be relocated in . A main thrust of the program in en·
tation of a client, is crucial," he. says.
Amhent as new buHdings there become
vironmental design and plaaning will be
available.
involvement of students in ureal" urban
Here li..:e 1964
Because of an arrangemenl he made
and reaional issues, Paaswell said,
A native of Redwing, Minne59ta,
with DOB and tbe Construction Fund,
noting that he will be active in getting.
Paaswell is a graduate of Columbia
tbe President ·also reported that if aby
Uni.a.;iy who received biS Ph.D, in
student- prcijects in tbe collllliunity
Pedaal dollars 01' ouYide ·revenues are
started-and ful!ded. He-llimself has been
civll ·.eJIIiDeerina from Rutaer5 in 1"965.
alailled; die ~· will be ll4d«J to active i 1floc:al issues and is author of . He joiDed tbe UIB faculty d ali aiiis-Btller tliall··· .ubuacted . from
spedal'l'ej!orts"Ob poteatlal de¥do1jimcal
taat profeuor
1964 and was named
.P,.OiwlatedSiale1DoneJ:! · "'~"0 onlle-'Pon or Blif1'1111t and . .mllllilv 0 !_'!D~.~!t!~~in ,t'¥76. 0
v_ .. .,.~ ·:--- trt. •"':.a."'"~ ·;,;:,;·~l~ ::·.· ·11 ~·· ;
-":.!':.. -.;...lo,~ .l.i.;..l~ -··!&amp;:• ..
Thirty years ago, urban planners con·
cerned themselves primarily with prob·
!ems of zoning and subdivision. Today,
their profession has a much wider scope
and must deal with complex issues of environmental quality, energy problems
and other aspects of urban and suburban growth and decay.

in

�v.,.._ u, No. I, Sepre.ber 4,1910

Page 11

Signs

tain.
A tall order, but one which the two
students refined and worked out with
other commiuee members.
Wilson notes that alternative ways
were considered tO fulfill the criteria. A
temporary system just for orientation

Ellicott now
has basic set
of directions

was one. Another was a complete system
which would include f ignage within the
dorm quads themselves, but would cost
more and take longer to produce. The
broader system remains a definite need,
both Wilson and Ms. Jo nes agree.
Maybe next year.

"A freshman coming in from a familiar
place where be knows exactly where
c:verythin&amp; tbat be wants is located, has a
hard time .-Ijustin&amp; to the Ellicott maze.
He doesn'tlrnow wbat is available in the
complex or bow to get there once he bas
been m.de aware of the resources the
oomplcx contains. He is trapped in a
maze of , UJIIIIarked tunnels. Many
studc:ats are embarrassed to admit they
bave no c:oac:cptioo of their location in
the buiJdin&amp;, and are afraid to ask for
assistance. Tbe ~oqer· a student goes on
in such a IIWIIICI", the greater his
negative attitude towards the complex
and the university becomes ...

Once a basic permanent system was
agreed upon, the students pu t up a temporary, experimental version of it which
was used and stud ied last spring
semester. One of the studies involved
eight high school seniors who had never
before been to Ellicott. They were asked
to find several rooms in the Complex
before the experimental system went up
and another set of locations after it was ,...
installed . The difference in time needed
was cons·iderable, notes Wilson. Other
kinds of walk-throughs, questionnaires
and surveys, and critiques by students
and other desi8Jlers were also used to
evaluate and sharpen the system.

Perhaps more seriously, Security
sometimes can't set from students an
aa:urate dc:scriptjon of where to come in
case of an aJ1C111CDCY.

All members of the committee were
extremely helpful in developing lhe final
version, Ms. Jones notes.

lbat's why Rowena Adams Jones,
assisWittO the vice president for student
affain, ad UIB Environmental Design
Studalt Doll Wilson dispatcbcd a proposal to the FSA Programming Committee last year. "The Ellicott Complex
desperaldy oecds a signage system,"
they wrote.

Good for 10 years

Wilson emphasizes that making the wallmaps "vandaJ-proor• was a major concern . In the event, however, that his
"vandal-proor• screws and shields fail,
Maintenance has a sufficient supply of
replacement pans. " The system should
he self-sufficient for 10 years." he
predicts.
Wilson is a " 9th semester" senior who
may ·go into either advertising, management or politics as a career. Ciminelli,
who completed bachelor' s requirements
Jast spring, will eventually work on a
master's in architecture.

This past weekend - thanks to a
SISOO pa111 from the committee and
much w..-k 011 the pmt of students and
other members of the U/8 cotnmunity
-those ............ tbere. Those arriving
at Ellicoa for the 6rst time bad hdp in
fiDdiDg their -Y through the lll:&amp;demic
core to such fllcilities as the Pizza Shop,
the Sub Shop, the Game Room,
- · a n d the various quadrangle

• c:Jeo.~on.

Some c:uly arrivals may bave even
noa:at JPW1uatc Gloria Ciminelli
peialiJw the liost few dcYator identification lips 011 aeartJy

SCCD

...ns.

their proposal.

system which would get people around
and could survive vandalism. They also ·

v......... ,....._f

Once funds wa'C committed, Wilson and

CimiDdli worked up a problem statement, establishing design criteria.
Buically, says Wilson, they wanted a

wanted it to: be resistant to manipulation for purposes of pranks; give the individual a sense of where he or she is in
relation with the environment; look
good; cost little, and be easy to main-

Both have praise £or their
undergraduate program in Environmental Design which gave them this handson opportunity to solve a real environmental problem.
8iU Conroy of the Housing Office
feds more than an environmental problem bas been solved by the effort:
"A directional sign says an institution
is concerned about people and is signalling that conc:crn. Tbe absence of sipls
communicates only indifference," be
notes.
0

13 U/B physicians are among 'the
~ed

Thirteen physicians
with
UIB's School of Medicine bave been ineluded in the recent hook, Tlte &amp;st DoclOIS illtlw U.S. by John Pekkanen.

More than SOO physicians and
surgeons were surveyed by Pekkanen,
wbo compiled a listing of 2,SOO physicians and medical specialists.
The U/8 physicians cited are: ·
Qudiologists: Dr. David G. Greene,
of medicine.
Co/011 and R«&lt;lll Surreolls: Dr. Bertram A. Portia, bead of the Division of
~fessor

Colorcctal

SuraaY.

Ort/ttJp«lic Slureofls: Dr.

Euaeoe

Minddl, chairman of the Departmen.t of

Stony Brook
tests seaweed
Two Stony Brook marine scientists are
tes1iaa nine species of seaweed COIIIIIIOD
to East Cout waten to detelininc which
will provide the best source of "seaweed
power." Dr. Boudewija llrillkbuis and
Dr. Orville Terry are lfOWiDI the
~ _
a s put of a fcdcnlly-fuadcd
haDaa studJ. Tbdr ultilule aoel is to
Cl'lllle
•bel! _.... can be
, _ . ud hanaa.d f« lrUiport to
lbare fec:llidel_where die .......will be

-c.,_

__...to_.._ ... ......0
-of-.1....

best~

Orthopedics.
Alf6ry: Dr., Robert E. Reisman,
associate clinieal professor of medicine
and pediatrics.
Gotetic COIUISielOtS: Dr. kobin M.
Bannerman, professor of medicine.
Pediatric Efldocrinologists: Dr.
Margaret H. MacGillivray, professor of
pediatrics.
Juwtnik Dillbetes Sp«iillists: Dr.
Alfred R. Lenmer, assistant clinical professor of medicine.
Pedi11tric Allergists and lmmunologists: Dr. EUiot F. Ellis, chair-

man of the Department of Pediatrics
and Dr. Elliott Middleton, professor of
medicine and pediatrics.
Pedullric RtlllioiOIJI: Dr. Jerald P.
Kuhn, professor of radiology and
associate professor of pediatrics.
Adult Hmu~tologyandOMolou: Dr.
Richard Cooper, associate clinical profes$or of medicine, and Dr. Edward
Henderson, research professor of
medicine.
Pediatric HmltlloiOIJI alfli OMO/ogy:
Dr. Arnold I. Freeman, research
associate professor of pediatrics.
0

--7.&lt;01.4

the COueaes, bow can staff be retained
with DO coostituency whatsoever? (12)
Wbat will a policY of assigning to
departments the right to select Collqes'
gr.-luate assistants do to morale in the
Collqes?
Tbe Co1Jeaes are, I believe in contradictioa to many colleagues, an important put of this institution. They make
~or contributions for very tittle cost
to increasingly basic survival concerns
such as the battle apiast student attritioa. It is this context tbat makes the
issues raised by tbese Sp«trum and
R_.w, representations of coooern to
us all. I urae' the rcceDtly raaivated
FacUlty Soule CoUeaes Committee -Lo

Rising questions
Dean Schwartz
R~ claim of transfer. (8) Was the
Council's "colledive deci5ion making
process'' and ''strooa CODiellSUii'' in fact
a S-4 vote to .a:cpt informatioa about
the reoqanizalioo alrady &amp;IIIIOUDCed
by Dean Schwutz? (9) Is the realignof staff a ...-ious response to Collqcs' prohlaus or is it a furtber .a:nW
of clam's office staff and bud&amp;et,
u..dJ about half of tbat for the entire
Colleea' opcnlioa? (10) Wbat are the
leU
· for 1m1n ttppllilltfor tbole Colleea' staff -.ben
..... llt8II!CIIt Dean Scltwutz bas
CIIICII*d by~ sat~ cillldlllldau?
(II) If tile tladpt__,.cra.:ll is -ao p.- ill

.,...,...lities

ex.uniDe~ ...ncn ill this

--GI:aAI.D

liaht.

a. lUlliNG

~til-

.,

�Volume 12, No. 1, Septtmber 4, 1980

Page 12

,,..p8pi,C'OI .•

actually here and have contacted Hous-'
ing. Boyce said he had no idea at this
point how many might be on that list.
Students with reservations have until
Friday, September 5, to claim their
students have combined to cause a housspaces in the dorms. After that, they will
ing crunch somewhat greater than usual.
be declared "no shows" and will forfeit
By tripling 248 rooms on a temporary
their deposits. The rooms will be assignbasis (as it does every fall), the
ed to tho&lt;e who are waiting.
University Housing Office came up with
The Off-Campus Housing Office on
a total of 5,379 so-called "check-in
Tuesday morning reported their
spaces" for the semester. These had all
workload has quieted down recently.
been spoken for by the end of June, and
Pat Marrett, director of the Offi.ce, said
out-&lt;&gt;f-town freshmen who had not obthat about 30 people a day are still seek· tained definite on..campus housing com·
ing help. This is down from an average
mitm~nts by that date were informed
of about 60 who came through each day
during Orientation that they were on
during the summer.
But, added Marrett, while numbers
their own. To help the situation as much
as possible, Orientation worked closelY
are down, urgency is up. Those people
,.ith the Off-Campus Housing Office in
without a place to stay at this point are
"desperate." While the situation is not a
helping homeless freshmen and their
parents fmd suitable non-University ac- ""'- "panic one," Marrett urged members of
commodations.
the University community who bave

22,746 registered
as classes begin

Orientation
estimates
that Director
perhaps Joe
up toKrakowiak
300 new
freshmen were affected. Of these,
maybe 30 per oent decided not to come
here at all and another 20 per cent
dected to postpone entering until dorm
accommodations are available. The
other SO per oent took advantage of tl!e
services offered by Off-Campus
Housing.
By late August, Housing had a
waiting list of 580 non-local students
wbo bad indicau:d they would like dorm
spiiCCS. Another 172 students from
within a 30-mile radius of Buffalo were
on a seoood list. These local students are
not servioed until all out-&lt;&gt;f-towners are

taken care of.
University offiCials dealing with housing uniformly report that the idea that
out-&lt;&gt;f-town freshmen could not be
guaranteed rooms on campus annoyed
the parents of those closed out. Parents
argued that freshmen should bave
priority in the dorms, and feeling is that
in future years such a priority system
may be established.

WaUl-aHousing Director Madison Boyce told
the Reporter Tuesday that the waiting
list of out-&lt;&gt;f-towners built up over the
' summer was used to contact J00 or so in·
dividuals about spaces that unexpectedly
opened up in late August.
A new waiting list has now been
started for out-&lt;&gt;f-towners who are

housing aocommodations available to
contact her at g3l-2S82. Especially
needed are places where individuals may
stay for a few days while fmding permsnent quarters. Marrett estimated that
Off-Campus Housing has helped in the
neighborhood of 2,000 students find
places to stay for the fall . Close to 300
apartments were rented through the office in June and July, and another ISO in
August, she approximates.
Fomga stodeats
Foreign students' housing problems are
exacerbated by these newcomers'
troubles with English and unfamiliarity
with the U.S. Orientation Director
Krakowiak expects that up to 3SO new
foreign students will likely arrive here
this fall. Some l&lt;la-150 residence hall
spaces had been reserved for them, but
those among the overflow are again on
their own- although Orientation is try-

ing to assist them in any way possible.
As of last Friday 175 new foreign
students had made their presence
known. Of these, Krakowiak said, about
40 had no place to stay, a number that
will be increased this week.
Some temporary measures have been
taken. A handful of students have been
housed at Daemen CoUege, and there
are up to 30 spaces available at
•D'Youville (for either American or
foreign students). The D'Youville spaces
have the disadvantage of being far
removed from campus, but Krakowiak
praised both institutions . for their
"graciousness" in offering assistance.
Also helpful have been the two
Newman Centers and Resurrection
House which have agreed to provide
temporary accommodations for a total
of 60 foreign students still in search of
places to stay.
D

~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~
=

College B becomes 'Black Mountain II,'
sets concerts, has 2-groups in residence
College B has re-named itself Black
Mountain CoUege 11, ~P an expanded artist-in-residence rogram
featuring new music
, theatre
and ballet performances, and
workshops.
Aocording to coUege officials, the
name was chosen as a tribute to the artistic contributions and educational
philosophy of North Carolina's original
"Black Mountain CoUege.
Many celebrated figures in the
vanguard of arts and letters were
associated with Black Mountain in the
23 years it existed, from 1933-56.
Among the most notable were John
Cage, Merce Cunningham, Bucld:ninster
FuUer, Willem de Kooning, Franz Kline,
Charles Olson, Robert Creeley, Josef
· Albers, Paul Goodman- and Robert
Rauschenberg.
Black Mountain II, officials say,
doesn't intend to pattern itself after the
original, but rather will carry on its
"spirit" by strengthening uexisting
creative and educational programs"
which will benefit both the University
and the Buffalo community.
Through an NEA grant, administered
Non-Profit Org.
U.S. Pootage
PAID
Buffalo, N.Y.
Permit No. 311

by Morton Fddman with matching
the "angry young man" seore . in
funds (and services) from Black MounEngland, roles that were cbaraclerized in
tain 11 and tbe Music Department, five
America by James Dean filura.
new music conoerts will be performed by
In addition to performances, the individuals in the company will - Jive
Aki Takahashi, a gifted pianist who was
worksbops on different, thouah related,
a Creative Associate last year.
subjects.
Takahashi, who will be an artist-inresidence at Black Mountain 11, will perWohl will use physical, mental and
form one concen at Baird Hall, two at
sensory exercises to teach a theory and
the Katherine ComeU Theatre, and two' · practice workshop in experimental
at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. Dates
theatre. Fendrick will teach one on creation of a character; Lewis, on tbc
have not as yet been fmalized .
Besides Takahashi, the Buffalo City
psychology of comedy and Doran, on
Lights Theatre Company and the Buftheatre eriticism. The workshops are
falo Regional Ballet will also be in
credit-free and open to the University
residence.
and Buffalo community.
' City J.Jaltts'
The producers of Buffalo City
Lights-Terry Doran, Tony Lewis and
David Fendrick-are all weU known
local thespians.
Doran, Boiffa/o News _theatre critic _
and "Gusto" editor. and Lewis were
both previously affiliated with the Buffalo Comedy Workshop. Fendrick has .
received both local and national recognition for his one-man presentation of
Albert Einstein. He has also charmed
Buffalo audiences with his very popular
renditions of Brendan Behan and
Clarence Darrow.
Erica Wobl is the Company's general
manqer.
lbcir first perforrnanoe, "The Enter-

tainer."

by

contemQ:Orary Britiab

playwriahl Jobn Osborne, is scbeduled

to open Sepccmber 12 at tbe U/B Center
Tbcatrc,~

Many CRdit Osborne witb bqinni.na

Tbe • - ltl
Finall), sharing the spoilight at Black
Mountain ll, is the newly-formed Buffalo Regional BaUet. The company is
directed by Ginger Burke and Olga
Kostritzlcy, who both performed widely
with the Royal Ac•demy in Buffalo.
her students
Kostritzky and a grOUJ.o
recently returned from a two-month
engagement in Venezuela with Nina
Novak's ballet company. This was their
second visit.
Skilled dancers and technicians, both
women will teach workshops which
sbould inter~t dancers and non-&lt;lancers
alike. Topics will range from basic &amp;a;;,
movement to lecture-demonstrations on
tbe art of ballet.
8lklt Mountain 11 is also sponsoring
a aeries of ODDCCrU that will ltlct off
September 12 _with tbe "Bialcr Woocjwind Quintet." Tbe free concert will be
held at 8 p.m. in the Comdl Theatre. D

v:

�-ELCOME
TO
-

BUFFAL-O

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\.
Welcome to Buffalo.
Committing suicide here is not redundant -despite what's professed by one of
the characters in the Broadway musical , A
Chorus Line.
Johnny Carson 's one-liners and Saturda y Night Live jokes aside , Buffalo is a
good place to live, and most area residents
are pretty bullish about it.
It snows, sure. But if you think going to
college in Buffalo is tantamount to a fouryear trek to the Antarctic, then, someone
has given you a real snow job.
Buffalo Mayor James Griffin has complained heatedly to Carson p.bout his barbs
about Buffalo, especia1191after the famous
Blizzard of '77. He pointed out in a letter
that found its way to the NBC studios in
California , that the " City of Good
Neighbors" has a great deal going for it including the only company that manufactures Carson 's line of clothes. Unfortunately, that reminder didn't stifle the Buffalo jokes for long.
Buffalo is also indirectly responsible for
that wry, acerbic humor that makes Saturday Night Live so delightfully brutal. One of
the show's main comedy writers, Alan
Zweibel , is a product of U/B. At least no
one can accuse University officials of lacking a good sense of humor: They recently
presented the '72 grad with an Outstanding Young Alumnus Award .
Since you 've likely heard all the rumor-s ,
now is the time for some facts about Buffalo, its history and its people, along with
information about what it offers in the way
of cultural and recreational activities.
For more on the University's facilities.
consult your student handbook or other
guide.
Buffalo, l ik~ any city, is prt!ltY much
what you make it. There's a lot here to
choose from . If Buffalo's unique brand of
chicken wings doesn't win your heart, the
beef on week will. Start choosing.
2

e

A Brief History
Back in 1790. the Holland Company bought four
large tracts of land in Western New York and sent
its surveyor, Joseph Ellicott (as in Ellicott Complex).
to draw up plans for a settlement. He called it New
Amsterdam .
Though Ellicott is generally credited with being
father and founder of the city, some historians think
the honor should go to Paul Busti (as in Busti
Avenue). the general agent for the company. Busti
was the first to appreciate the great natural
resources of the area; he sent Ellicott here to
survey the l~n .
In any ev t, it was .Ellicott's plan to have the
main street of the village radiate from a center
and go off in different directions, much like a cart·
wheel; the center was, and still is, Niagara Square .
Part of the rationale for the plan was that, in case
of war, a cannon could be placed in the center and
be used in any direction against advancing troops.
The idea bombed. At least it didn 't prevent the
village from being attacked and set ablaze by the
British and mercenary Indians during the War of
1812. Only seven of the 20 homes which lined Main
Street survived.
.
The attack was supposedly a retaliatory act for
the burning of Niagara-on-the-Lake, Canada, by
American troops evacuating_Fort George.
There is still a shroud of mystery concerning the
origin of the name "'Buffalo."' Some claim the city
was first called Beau Fleuve (Beautiful River) by the
French, a name mispronounced by the Indians.
who called it "'booflo."'
Others speculate that the name resulted from an
error made by an Indian interpreter. During a
meeting in 1784 between Federal officials and six
Indian chiefs, the inter-preter mistakenly called
Beaver Creek. Buffalo Creek. An early map of the
area shows what we now caii .Buffalo River, referred to as Beaver Creek.
On a map dating 20 years earlier than that 1784
get-together. however, the name Buffalo was
used; and supposedly Indian council fires as far
back as 1698 were lighted on a site known as Buffalo.
.
Whatever the origin, one thing is certain. Buffalo
wasn 't named after the bison (the city symbol).

None ever roamed the area.
At the time of the War of 1812, Buffalo had a
population of about 1500. By 1820 the number had
almost doubled , and by the time the city was incor·
porated in 1832, the number had mushroomed to
10,000.
At least part of that growth is attributable to the
Erie Canal , which officially opened in 1825. Since
Buffalo is the western terminus of Governor DeWitt
Clinton 's "" Big Ditch."' many Irish , Italian and Ger·
man immigrants who helped build it settled in the
area and greatly influenced its development.
By 1850, the city ranked as one oUhe&lt;Oation 's
largest grain distributing ports.
Buffalo resident William G. Fargo (as in Fargo
Quadrangle) is the individual most responsible for
the city's first success as a transportation center.
In 1844, Fargo and Harry Wells borrowe&lt;l $100 to
establish an express service to and from the West.
The Wells Fargo Co. later .merged with other
couriers and became American Express.
About the same time the canal opened, a young
attorney from East Aurora named Millard Fillmore
moved to Buffalo. He helped draft the city charter
and served as State Comptroller. congressman,
and vice president of the U.S. When Zachary Taylor
died, Fillmore succeeded him as the 13th U.S.
President. Fillmore, as you'll hear rn.ore often_than
you ·might like, was the first chancellOr of the
University [1 846).
Fillmore, together with his Secretary of State,
Daniel Webster, is generally credited with forestall·
ing the hostilities between North and South, which
eventuallY erupted as the Civil War. Some
historians believe the delay was cri tical to the outcome of the war since it provided the North with an
additional
decade
in
which
to
prosper economically.
Another U.S. President , Grover Cleveland, was a
celebrated Buffalonian . He served as the city's
mayor in 1882, as Erie County Sheriff and as Gover·
nor before assuming the Presidency in 1885. Seven
years later, he was again elected President, the on·
ly one to serve two non-consecutive terms.
Famous politicians weren't Buffalo's only.
historical celebrities. Samuel Clemens (Mark
Twain) worked for a time in Buffalo as a newspaper
man. His former residence on Delaware and
Virginia ·is now the site of the Cloister Restaurant.
ThoSe especially interested in Ciemens can find his
original " Huckleberry Finn" manuscript in the
downtown Buffalo &amp; Erie County Library .

Welcome insert/Reporter/September 4/ 1980

· Jae•,,.

1 sdm:tJ Q sZh l1 1 loq~~\J l~· &lt;'&lt;l'lOOt!J

�~

F. sCan' Fitzgerald attended grammar and high
school here before he went on to Princeton and
wrote his fir~t novel in 1920.

Current Facts
Figures !;om the 1980 Census are not yet final
but metroPolitan Buffalo has reportedly dipped in
population to just under one million.· According to
the·Olamber of· Commerce, in 1978, the city was
the 30thJargest In the country.
The counties of Erie and Niagara which make up
the metro area, extend more thaX 30-' miles from
Buffalo, covering 1,600 square miles.
Within a SQO.mile radius are 55 per cent of the
total U.S. population; 60 per cent of the total per·
sonal income of the U.S.; 62 per cent of Canada's
population, and 85 per cent ot that nation's
manufacturing activity.
. Buffalo. ·has a reputation as a, heavy in·
dustriaVmanufacturing · center rather than a:
technological one. Uke many other older cities in
the Northeast, over the last decade, Buffalo has
lost" a gOod number of these firms to the Sunbelt,
where.· cheaper taxes and lower wages are more
conducive to higher profits.
Fortunately, the relocations seem to have
,plateaUQd. This is due largely to recog~ition. of the
'\ ~ probfam by elected officials and~ ~vefopment
. .. of JOcar ta~ incentive programs lor new and ex·
pending businesses and industries. . •
Among the area's leading induslfie.s are steel ,
chemicals. automotive, machinery. food and paper
products. ns real claim to fame, however. (ac·
cording to the Chamber of Commerce) is that Buf·
falo is the flour milling capital of the world.
Research and development also play an impor·
tant role in the employment profile. More than t50
private, commercial or institutional research Jabs
employ over 11,000 area residents.
Buffalo's location. adjacent to the tip of the On·
tario Peninsula. has caused it to become lhe prin·
cipal gateway for the enormous volume of freight"
that moves between the U.S. and its northern
neighbor. The Pprt of Buffalo ranks 37th in the U.S.
and eighth in cargo . volume among Great Lakes
ports.

en

mate
The Chamber of Commerce likes to emphasize
that Buffalo is "'air conditioned" by breezes from
Lakes Erie and Ontario-breezes which minimize
air pollution. temper the winter chill and ward off
Welcome insertiAeporler/September 4/ 1980

. .

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dry, scorching summers.
The truth is a shade less rosy. While Buffalo.
definitely gets hit with blasts of frigid air during the
winter. it's far from the tundra it's reputed to be.
And. though the city experieoces a good numberof
cloudy days-227 last year-it still gets a higher
percentage of summer sunstune than any ·other
section in the State. That fact comes troll) the Buf·
falo Division. of the U.S. Weathec Bureau,
- ·'·
The Bureau also points out that the sub-zero ai&lt;·
from Canada is generally raised between 10 to 30 :·
degrees while passing over the Lake. often taking
the bite out of cold fronts before they hit the cily.
But Miami it's no!. Average temperature is 47, and
last year. Buffalo had 122 days when the minimum
temperature fell below 32 degrees . and" 58 days
when the maximum didn't break freezing. It" also
had 68.4)1nches of snow and 43.74 inches of total"
precipillftion. The annual average for both Qver a
40-year period (from 1940.1980} is 9~. 7 and ·35.58o.
respecti119ly.
.
. . -.
;. ·•
Because of the moderating force of the Lak'es. '""
Buffalo has only 2 or . 3 days a year with
temperatures. over 90". In · July, the · mercury
generally hovers around 70. During the summer:
Buffalo averages 10 hours of sunshine a day, com·
pared with 9 in New Yo&lt;k City.
·• ·
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~-u~~he~ ./t~ur-page

Atiairs. office
insert. in the
Reporter. The magnet gives limes. dates and
places ot cultoral actiVities coming to or sponsored
by the University. plus offers inform&lt;)tion on visiti~ .
artists. •
.
..
•
Buffalo has five TIL statiOns: WKBW·TV. Channel
·
7, affiliatedwith ABc; WIVB. Olannei4.-CBS; WGR· ,
, • TV; Olannel2. NBC; Wf&gt;IED. Channenr; PBS; and
, .. WUlV. Olannel 29. an independem ••Thre&amp; €ana· ·
dian- statio!\&amp; can also be recei~
.
• Music aficionados of almost any VBJiety can find "
their favorite kind: of music on area airwaves. ·
Besides the usual ··top 40" sounds-Which can be
·heard on any number of ouUets-classical music is
featu&lt;ed on WNED·FM (94.5) and UIB"s own NationaLPublic Radio affiliate, WBFO (FM88). WBFO P,
aJso· offers opera, jazz, folk and electronic musio(
and. two excellent daily news magazine programs • from t.IPR-"'Moming_.: Edition ," 7·9 a .m .•.
: weekdays; and "All Things· Coftsidered," · 5 p.m.··
daily. ··
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· One of the most attractive features about Buffalo ·
·.Is the ricb ethnic.. he'iitage.. of ~s people; a force
' wnieh.lmpacts in a very pos~ive. way·on tne qual it)'
· ·. . •
·
, •. •
· ·· ·ar1119'.11er~ .' • ·
Com~nli:edoiw. :~
_ ."'. :~ :
: . Fdr'.lelialnP.&amp;-•. uie Buffalo, cOnvention ceiilef!
hostS: an annual Ettmic festival which ·last spring
Until just a few years ago, both cfl&gt;/ PaPerS. tile·
· attracted over 60,000 people. The festival. offers
Buffalo Evening News and the. Courier-Express, ,
appetizing.·tooct. d~plays and entertainment from
were owned and operatecl by prominent area
most or Buffalo's ethnic groups. Orily two' words of ·
families. Both have now been sold to farge mUlti·
• " advice· here: go hungry! ·
operational co&lt;poralions, but the papers' political: • •,
· you should also watch for the. Hellenic .Festival, .
orientations have remained fairly constant: The
held on. the premises of tli"e- Hellenic Orthodox
. News is still considereG Republican/Conservative
Church· of the Annunciation on Delaware at West
in its editorial stances while the Courier tends to be
Utica. Besides taklng tours-of the church 's magnifi·
Democrat in persuasion. Both papers are publish·
cent Iconic interiol . visitors can eat, drink. enjoy
ed daily. The Courier is a morning paper and the
music, and learn Greek folk dances.
News· early edition hits the streets at about noon.
If your plans include"staying in the city over the
except _for saturdays, Sunda~s~nd Holidays when
summer. you might also visit the West Side's an·
11, too, IS a mormng paper.
nual five-day Italian Festival where you'll find plen·
Newcomers to the area shoulq keep an eye out
ty of pasta and amusements.
for the " Gusto" supplement in Friday's News or for .
For the record, Jhe dominant ethnic groups in
the "things to do" section in Saturday's Courier.
Buffalo are the Poles. Italians. Germans. Irish and
BQth g1ve a decent rundown on what's happening
blacks. According to the 1970 census . 27.3 per
in town as far as entertainment and cultural ac·
cent of the population in Buffalo grew up in a
tivities ~
household where another language was spoken .
The best way to keep abreast of University ac·
besides EngJish. Polish and Italian were the two
tivities (lectures. movies. special evenls. etc.) is by
foreign languages reported with the most Ire·
quency. •
reading the Calendar section each week in the
Reporter. In addition, each month, U/B's Cultural
On the f!nancial side, the median effective buy·

t'

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3

�ing income (after taxes) per household in metro
Buffalo is $15,947. This is a 1979 estimate from
Sales and Marketing Management , New York City.
The. average weekly salary for employees of
manufacturing firms-who compose over a
quarter of the labor force-is $347 .

Buffalo Today and Tomorrow
Buffalo is currently experiencing what some like
to call a "renaissance." The born-again feeling is
attributable to (and punctuated by) current plans to
revitalize downtown, develop a Theatre District and
build a waterfront - commercial and residential
project.
Over the years, the look of downtown has changed considerably, the improvement comparable to
an expensive face lift . New buildings such as the
40-floor Marine Midland Center, the City Court
Building, the News Plaza, the sleek. energyeffi~ient WKBW-TV headquarters. the Convention
Cenler, the Metropolitan Transportation Center and
the Buffalo Hilton. have given the city and its people a shot of adrenalin.
The improvement. however. is more than
cosmetic: it has ted to a change in attitude and selfconcept. Buffalonians are now exhibiting greater
oride in their city and teet an urge to recaptu re the
grandeur ol earlier era. over 50--years ago, when
celebrities of national reputation regularly entertained in local theatres, and llashy patrons with top
hats and capes would tine-up bus boys at the
renowned Statler Hilton to present tips. These were
the years when Canadians flocked !O Bullato, not
Toronto, for a jaunt to "the big city." Though the
city may never know such grandiose times again it
is on the move . .
Plans for the Theatre District (a $200 million
restoration project formulated by UIB's School of
Architecture and Environmental Design) and waterfront developments are being spurred by current
construction of a light-rail rapid transit line which
will facilitate travel from various points in the city to
downtown. A major rapid rail station is now being
built on the Main St. Campus. in front of Abbott.
Downtown revitalization will also be 'bolstered by
construction of a $55 million compl(!x to house the
corporate headquarters of Buffalo Savings Bank .
Construction on the 10-story office tower. and fqurstory connecting building to the bank 's present
landmark Gold Dome will be developed in three
phases, the last to be completed in 1984.
Down the block, on the opposite side of Main

4

Slr-eet. a Hyatt Hotel with adjoining retail operations is scheduled for construction . The site is now
partially 9ccupied by the Genesee Building . A proposed pedestrian bridge will connect the bank and
hotel , making it a multi-purpose complex easily accessible and attractive to downtown shoppers,
especially in winter. A new liberty Bank building is
also proposed for this " City Center," and a series
of enclosed second-level " skywalks" is proposed
to connect existing office and retail spaces.

Getting To Know Buffalo
If you really want to get to know .Buffalo, you
should put ojl your walking shoes. grab your
10-speed or.oj(Jmp in a car, and take a good look
around .
A good way to start a sightseeing venture is by
first examining Delaware Avenue-one of the
city's most prestigious and visually-appealing
arteries.

Traveling south on Delaware (toward downtown),
your first stop, at the corner of Delavan , is a-spot of
undeniable historical interest-Forest Lawn
Cemetary.
Don't laugh . Dating back to Hl50, the cemetary,
with its lush rolling hills and impressive shade
trees. is famous for the majestic tombs and
monuments which mark graves of famous
historical personages: Red Jacket, a tribal leader of
the Seneca Indian Nation who supported
Americans during the Revolutionary War and was
decorated by George Washington; General Ely
Parker. another Seneca Indian, who served under
Ulysses S. Grant and penned the terms of Robert E.
Lee's surrender at Appomattox; Millard Fillmore;
Elbridge Gerry Spaulding , the "Father of the U.S.
Greenback;" Sam Wilkeson, a self-made lake skip·
per who built the Buffalo Harbor in 1822; Dr . Albert
J. Meyer, founder of the U.S. Weather Bureau, and
William Fargo, who, as mentioned earlier, started
Wells-Fargo.
Proceeding down Delaware , past Millard
Fillmoce Hospital, the character of the street
changes dramatically. The graG:ious houses that
border the Avenue in this section were built by prominent Buffalo families but are now occupied by
non-profit organizations or businesses.
For. a time about five years ago, it looked a,_
though city politicians were going to buckle under"
the demands of big-name businesses interested in

razing some of the mansions to construct new office buildings. After protests by area residents ,
however, the area was abandoned.
Now local businessmen-such as UIB graduate
Paul Snyder-have refurbished the exteriors of
many of the properties , preserving the architectural integrity of the Avenue, while modifying interiors where necessary to make them functional
offices.
•
- Besides being an integral part of Buffalo's
· histo,Y, the mansions are noteworthy from an architectural point-of-view . Butler Hall (672
Delaware) was designed shortly_ before the turn of
the century by Stanford White, one of America's
outstanding architects.
For over 75 years the mansion was tne family
preserve of the publishers of the Buffalo Evening
News . It is now in the process of being refurbished
and made into offices for the Delaware-North Corporation.
The English Tudor Clement mansion, donated by
the family to the Red Cross, was designed by E. B.
Green, a local architect who left an indelible im·
print on Buffalo. Green, recipient of the University's
Chancellor's Medal in 1938, also designed, among
others, the Katherine Pratt Horton House (477
Delaware), the Albright Art Gallery, the gotd·domed
neo-classic Buffalo Savings Bank, the Buffalo
Athletic Club and Abbott and Harriman Halls on
·
UIB's Main Street Campus.
Aside from the mansions, houses of worship on
Delaware also merit close examination .
.
The striking contemporary elegance of Temple
Beth Zion (805 Delaware) is a case in point. Designed by Max Abramowitz, the Temple has a
10-scallop-fold exterior which symbolizes the commandments. The folds become increasingly taller,
resembling arms extended upward in prayer. A Ben
Shahn stained glass window further distinguishes
the facility .
Also of note is Trinity Episcopal Church, 371
Delaware . Erected in 1886, the church boasts Tif·
fany and LaFarge stained glass windows.
lllear Delaware and North is the restored Wilcox
Mansion where Teddy Roosevelt was inaugurated
the 26th U.S. President after McKinley's lileath in
Buffalo in 1901. The Greek revival mansion has
been designated a National Historic Site and is
open to the public. Every Sunday at 1:30 from May
through September, a two-hour guided wa l~ing tour
of Delaware Avenue and Victorian " Allentown "
departs from the Wilcox Mansion . [Maps for do•it·

Welcome mseri/ReporteriSeptember 411980

�Contemporary wortcs In one of the lower galleries at the Albt"f9hl..f&lt;:nox

yourself tours are available there as is information
on other tours conducted by the Landmark
Society.)
Roughly bounded by Main, Virginia , College and
North Streets, Allentown is reputed to be one of the
•largest Historic Preservation Districts in the coun· ·
try. Within its borders are plenty of arts and crafts
shops, along with boutiques, antique shops,
galleries and eating establishments. Each June,
Allentown is the site of an outdoor art festival on
Delaware and surrounding streets which attracts
over a half million visitors.
South of Allentown, Delaware assumes a more
commercial ambience. Exclusive clothing and mer·
chandise shops line the Avenue. If you can 't afford
to buy, it's still fun to browse .
Niagara Square marks the end of Delaware
Avenue. The White obelisk which dominates the
area was erected in honor of President William
McKinley who was assassinated at the PanAmerican Exhibition (1901).
Around the rotary to the right is Buffalo's City
Hall. An Observation Tower located on the 28th
floor gives you a panoramic view of the area-on
clear days. [9 a.m. · 3 p.m. Monday-Friday and 9
a.m. · 5 p.m., Saturdays; free admission].
B!!fore heading back into the city via Elmwood.
detours to the Erie Basin Marina and the·Naval and
Servicemen's Park are two musts. Located at the
foot of Main Street on the Buffalo River. the Naval·
Park has already proved a popular attra~tion for
both visitors and area residents alike. It is'home for
the World War II destroyer " USS Sullivans " (nam·
ed after the five heroic brothers who died on the
USS Juneau ; the heillly cruiser "Little Rock." and a
PT Boat which also saw battle in Korea and Viet·
nam .•

A museum located on the site exhibits pictures
and war memorabilia .
Just a short jaunt from the Naval Park is the
Marina. Situated at the foot of Erie Street (follow
the signs downtown), the Marina is a popular spot
to lounge, walk, read or picnic.
If you get hungry, a small restaurant serves
delectable fried baloney sandwiches and ice
cream at moderate prices . The restaurant ,
however. is seasonal . mid-May to October' 1.
Now it's time to head back into the city via
Elmwood Avenue. The section roughly between
Bryant and Forest offers an array of boutiques .
eateries', hair salons and specialty shops which
feature items such as wicker , plants, fabric . books.

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Welcome mseri/Reporrer,SeP!emoer 4 11980

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cards. neon art, used records, 1950's clothes,
leotards, and jewelry, among others.
Those young at heart (if not in age) know that the
best thing about Elmwood is that it has its own
beat; a rhythm that comes alive with each young
person who whiues by on roller skates and every
mother trying to window shop while pacifying a
screaming toddler.
What this beat gives the Elmwood community is
personality, and a dash of charm .
At night-much to the dismay of some of the
area's more established. retiring /esidents-this
tempo goes berserk as cabaret-goers from across
·
:he city invade "the Strip."
For those who haven't as yet heard, " the Strip"
includes a section o~lmwood bordered by Bidwell
ses a multitude of drinking
and Forest, which
establishments-at either within walking distance
from each other or just a short ride down the street.
Among the most popular, depending on your age
and "thing," are No Name, Casey's Nickelodeon ,
Mr . Goodbar, Bullfeathers , and Coles . Around the
block on Forest stands Fingers.
Typical of the hundreds of good Buffalo bars.
they serve food. This summer, Goodbar even tried
a sidewalk cafe .
After exploring Delaware Avenue and experiencing Elmwood , you 'll want to familiarize yourself
with some of the cultural and recreational
resources of the area . Here 's at least a partial list
of places and things to do to get you started.

Cul~ral

Resources

Albright-Knox Art Gallery
"I nch for inch and painting for painting, no _
museum in this country can better the Albright·
Knox in Buffalo when it comes to the art of the second half of this century:· the Smithsonian
magazine reportell recently.
That's quite an accolade. especially when the
writer is John Russell . author and art critic for The
New York Times. Russell went on at length to
praise the panorama ot art " housed in the Immaculate surroundings" of the gallery, a c u lt u r;~ l
landmark made possible through its mam benefactor, Woolworth he1r Seymour H. Knox, Jr.
In addition to its contemporary art collec t1on.

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Pettormrng arrrsr at Anpatk

which include works by Picasso. Matisse. Mon·
drian, Rothko and Warhol, the gallery also owns a
select ion of 18th and 19th century European and
American works .

The eras of art represented range from Cycladic
sculpture from 3000 B.C. to photographic realism
paintings of the 1970s.
Located on Elmwood Avenue, between
Delaware Park and Buffalo State College . • the
gallery is composed of two buildings. The older
structure, opened in 1905, is considered a fine e~
ample of neoclassic architecture. The new wing
(1962) is its antithesis, done in dark glass with
modern, simple lines. An outdoor sculpture garden
joins the two.
The Albright -Knox offers educational programs .
which include lectures, films, slides. guided tours
and occasional dramatic productions. During the
year, creative art workshops are held for children
·
and adults.
The gallery is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tues·
day through Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. on Sunday. A suggested voluntary admission fee of $1 is
requested.
Shea ·s Buffalo
The recently refurbished Shea ·s Buffalo Theatre,
once slated for demolition, plays a central role m
the Theatre D1strict revitalization downtown.
Built in 1926. ihe 3,000-seat facility is fitted with
European c ryst al chandeliers, 1ntncate hand·
crafted woodwork and one of the largest Wurlitzer
pipe organs ever built.
Since_its reopening. Shea's has been the scene
of a spectrum of entertainment, from the New York
C1ty Ballet to the State beauty pagean
Studio Arena Theatre
Just north of Shea's is the Buffalo "instituuon"
widely acclaimed fO"ffesenting some of the best
regional theatre in the/country: the Studio Arena.
Under almost two decades of leadership by its
former executive producer Neil DuBrec k, Studio
Arena premiered several productions wh1ch afterwards played Broadway.
The season runs from October to May. Spec1al
prev1ews and matmees are offered to students and
semor citizens at discount prices The theatre also
has a "singles mght " on Monday.
U/8 Center Theatre
Now getting a new bnck and glass facade. u. B s

�• '· -· .
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• ' ' ·:
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Center ·Theatre-on Main· Street between Shea's
and the,Studio-Arena-seNes as a visible cultural
link between the University and tl)e urban
.
community.
Its productiOIIsl more experimental than tradi·
' tiona! in- nature ' and approach. are generally
directed, by the&lt;rtie faculty . including the
celebrated !lrecbt scholar. Eric Bentley.
,
· Acl9fS Bf&lt;i l5tten- theatre majors or' fellows.
· This year. the T~atre and Dance Departmen~
plans let open.;a:-cabaret-style nightclub in&gt; the
theatre's old cocktail lounge. If all goes as planned,
the cab~ret. will be something like New York's
"Catch a !'!ising Star" where local talent can come
to test the waters of show business .
Artpark

.

.

Located in Lewiston on 200 acr~ along the
Niagar\1 Go&lt;ge, Artpark mounts.a tO-wee)&lt; SUil\mer
seB$011 running frO!T\ the eoo of June lo around
• •
·
·
·
Labor Day.
Each year. noteworthy performances in opera. ·
thaatre. jazz, ballet,.arid modern dance are offered·
at reasonable (bordering on cheap) prices. This
past summer, for: example. the Joffrey Ballet, the
National .Ballet 6!· Canada. productions of "The
. King and t,' ' "Godspell," " Madame Butterfly,"and
Sarah, Vaughtlfwett' among the season 's features. :
The $7 mjnion. Artpark ll)eatre seats 2,324 and.
up to 1500 or more on the lawn outside. Tickets for ·
most perfor(Tl8nces a&lt;e in the $4-6 range, but if
you're on a tight budget-and don 't mind roughing it.
•• lawn seats go for $1 .50: Where the visual element
is important, however. inside seats are preferable.
BesideS' a theatre. Artpark offers an ArtEI-a
partially-roofed elevated platform in the shape of
an " L" -where craftsmen, sculpJors, and visual
and performing artists gather &lt;luring the day to
work andlor entertain the public.
The gr6unds are also home to a video theatre ,
gallery and store. amphitheatre. marked nature and
geological trails . a picnic area and interesting
pieces of touchable and mountable impressionistic
sculpture.
_ Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra

The celebrated 87-piece Philharmonic has a
repertoire which includes classical, contemporary
and " pops" music.
The orchestra has enjoyed a long line of
distinguished musical directors. Among them we.re

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ing area is loca!ed ·off Elmwooct at Nottingham
William Steinbe-rg.,' Lukas Foss. and Michael Tilson
· · .• Court. tt can be .reached by taking the Elmwood •
Thomas . Currently: Julius Rudel. the gray-haired
North·exit.olf'the Scajacquad:t Expressway. ' .
maestro who conducted the New' York City Opera
for over 20 years. fills the. post:
·
.
Buffsfo ..Museum·ot:Sci91lCil
Most concerts are presented at Kleinhans Music
· If yoo are interested in eyebal~ng an- Egyptian
Hall. on · the city's West Side. For the past lew
mummy or -seeing the only dinosaur (skeleloo) inyears, however, orchestra members . have made
IJ\e area. heact.lorth$: Museum of Science. · :· ..'
their music more accessible by presenting ~r·
· Open daily'' free . of' Cilarge. the museum offers
formances at area parks and mens. - " ·
permanent,d(splays. on invef'tebr4tei and vertebrat!J
A 50 per cent student discount is available for
zoolog~;
b~oldgy, • geoloW·.' and paleontology,
the 16·COncert Symphony se'ries each year. Adults
astronomy and anthropology.
•
can' enjoy a 25 per cent discount by purchasing
· Currently, in its Hall o~ Civilization, the museum •
season tickets. and additional " early bird " savings ·
he§ on display a study collection ol Chinese
by paying before a particula( date. Also. if students
ceramics a.nd an exhibit of Egypflan artifacts. '
come (with ID) a h~!jhour before arly symphony, ·
To capture the imagination. ol youngsters. the'
jazz or pops conce ~ they !Jlay be able to secure
museum also · has' ·a, Discovery Room. Here. ·
•
.tick.ets lor $3 or 4 .
children. ca~ gaiR hands-on experienc~ with ~
· skallltbnS. ctical~. ShellS. snct. snakeskins. White· .
U/8 Music Department
,.
.
.
.
In 1979-80; the University's Music Departtnent
• . fhey.'~at· it, they Qltn al~.look at an a~tbyst.
. thro~c a magnitylng gla$s,• test the power of a
presented more than 200 concerts, includiifg' the ·
al)lgaf!:~r's 9I!'P.l'\ . .
- '··
Slee Beetnoven String Quartet Cycle, a Visiti~~Q,Af· ·. ~ ·pulley o~ feet
~ Star-gazers . Cll!l' lltew-·~t~e&lt; ,.heavens thrawgh a . ·
. tist Series and recitals by distingulsl]ed faculty:
Concerts are cheap; $tor $2 for membe-rs. of the·
. . telescope atthe Kellogg.Observatory. Waather per· .
University community. Watch the Calendar. section
, mltting, tha telesqcpa can be used on Fridays,
of the Reporter for this ye.ar's schedule.·
•
, • beginning ant~ . ~ture$ In the auditorium
.
,
~
••• '1·
1 • ·• .
. precllda ~rvatr~~- .' ·· •' . .
• .; .
Duriog· July and. ~st;:tfu, IJI\J86Um hold;s.SUh
8~ff8~0'
Erie County :.
~ ' ~. .' ) t 1 - . :~J ~ ·•~ln
. Its selar lallDratory. D'ei'IIOilstralion!J and ·
Historical Museum
·
·· 't
viewing of tl)e surtii'I/OUQh solar telescopes takeS. ,
Often toe easiest way to be-tter understand and
place !rom noon to 1:,p, m. &gt; '
·
·
appreciate an area is through an examination ollts..
,
Thtoughou~the year, the.(Jlus&amp;um schedules an .
past.
.
a
fray
of
•.
~cariOIIal progrS(llS' for adu"s and . :·'
. The best and most obVious place- to gain this ,
cnildren. ~ndf~ on the season. thase range .
historical perspective is at Buffalo's Historical
from speciat· fitmif or, lect.ures to guided nature ·
Museum.
·
•
walks or bicycle hikes.
Permanent exhibits. such as a turn-&lt;*theHours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.. Sunday through
century street. replete with an outdoor German·
Thursday, and Saturday. On Fridays , from
American restaurant. trolley. cigar store and"
Septembe-r to May: doors stay open until tO p.m.
grocery, help recreate the city's past and chronicle
The best way to get there. is to take Route 33
its growth as a metropolitan area.
West (the Kensington Expressway) and exit at
The museum building ,itself, located at 25 Not·
~
Humboldt.
tin~ham Court near Delaware Park. is the only surMore lnterestin9 Architecture
viving structure !Tom the city's world-renowned
Pan-American Exposition (1901).
You don't have to be an art .historian to ap- .
The museum's reference library con1ains many
preciate the fine architectural design of many Buf·
of Millard Fillmore's Presidential papers and
falo buildings and homes. ..
microfilm otthe Grover Cleveland papers.
·
Among a lew of particular note (that weren't
There is no admission charge to the·museum or
previously mentioned) are the Prudential Building,
!he Ellicott Square Building and the Darwin Martin
library. Hours are: 10 a.m. · 5 p.m .• Monday · Fri·
day, and noon to 5 p.m. on weekends and holidays.
House.·
The library is cJosed on Sunday. A large, free park·
The Prudential. 28 Church Street, was designed

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Welcome inserVRepo"rter/Septembe r 4/ 1980

�and stoves . &amp;nd concession stands which sell light
food. souvemrs and film (many camera buffs may
be found at th e zoo).
Youngsters can pet and feed smaller, more
docile · an1mals at 'the Children's Zoo, located off
Gate 6.
Feeding times are subject to change , so call
ahead. The Reptile House closes from 2om. Tuesday to noon Wednesda y for feedrna
The zoo is currently 1n the m•ds -of a redevelopment program which should prov1de more up-to·
da te, roomier livmg ouarters for the an1mals.
Adm1ssion is $5 per family; $1 50 for tnose 17
years and over , .75 for those 11 -16. and 25 for
children 4-10
Summer nours are 10 a m. · 5 30 p m . buildrngs
clos~ at 6 p.m and grounds at 6 30 p.m During the
wmter, the ga es and bUIIdrngs are closed one our
earlier . and grounds close at 6.
Parks
In c1ty, county a'ld state parks. cne can frnd a
wtde vanety of poSSJO!llttes for outdoor ac tlvttt es

The c1ty system offers swr mm 1 ~g pools. baseball
diamonds , 21 tenms courts four got courses as
well as football ano soccer f etds
County parks have facrtr t1es or prcnrckmg
boatmg , campmg . and sparling actovrues
Perhaps the two loveliest State parks m Western
New York are Allegany and Letchworth . Particularly m the fall. the trees that lme Letchwor h's
17-mile, 600-foot gorge are breathtakmg . Try the
Glen lr~s Inn there for more formal d1nmg
Allegany , on the other hand . has a clean lake
with a beach and a rustic lodge where you can eat
1n very mformal alllre . It's the t ar~est of the State
parks w1th over 60.000 acres.
Both are excellen t for camping and both rent
clean cabins. Make your reservations far m
advance .
Closer to home are these state and county parks·

FACILITIES/ACTIVITIES

Wend! Beach Park

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by American architect Louis Sullivan and was one
of America's first " skyscrapers."
The Ellicott Square Building , 295 Main Street,
was erected by DanieL H. Burnham in 1896 as the
world 's largest office building . The buildingfeatures rTjarble floors, an elegant mezzanine and a
large skylight which illuminates the main floor.
Another famous American architect, Frank Lloyd
Wright, designed several homes here. Probably the
, fi nest example of his " prai rie house design" is
found in the Darwin Martin House (123 Jewett
Parkway) with its low horizontal lines and projecting eaves. Tours are held at 10 a.m. on the 3rd
Saturday of each month . A donation of $1 is requested
President Robert L. Ketter recently proposed
that the house (which belongs to SUNY) be used as
a Canadian-American Studies Center.
Other Wright houses are located at: 118 Summit
Avenue, 285 Woodward, 57 Tillinghast Place and .
76 Soldiers Place. These are private residences
and tours are not available.

Recreation. Etc.
Botanical Gardens
Located in South Buffalo on South Park Avenue
and McKinley Parkway, the over BQ.year-old conservatory building contains a wide-ranging collection of exotic plants, fruit trees, cactus and flowers.
Each year, the Gardens feature a special fall and
spring display. The spring show is especially lovely
and is traditionally visited by thousands of people
during Easter week. Hours are 9 a.m.· 4 p.m. daily.
Broadway Market
About the closest thing the city has to Boston 's
Quincy Market or Faneuil Hall is the Br.oadway
Market.
Located in the 900-block of Broadway. deep in
the heart of the Polish East Side, the market is a
bazaar of smells and sights-from pigs knuckles to
calf Drains and hanging sausages.
Also to be found are scrumptious pastries (Polish
and otherwise), and an array of fresh fruits and
vegetables. The best time to shop- is Saturday
morning .
Buffalo Zoological Gardens
Situated on 23 acres in the northea,st cor(ler of
Delaware Park, the Buffalo Zoo has nearly 40 major animal exhibits, and more than 850' animals
representing over 300 species.
The grounds contain a picnic area with tables

Welcome .nsert/Reporter/September 4/ l 980
(JIWf\t. 1Fdn'lf'; J f.'•("":\'tii".C.:J-34' 1 ' ~1 I 'lrl..J'•U \ V

_ __,

Chestnur Ridge Park
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''-------·---·- 4 ~ -- --~-·Como Lal..e Pa rY

•

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Hunte··s

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~e!.!.~ A !.-~C"

c::atts Par h _ _

·-·

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.• •

NI.A GAR~J.l _NT Y

_F.:.:o::.rt:..:N.:.:•:o
ag&lt;:a.:.:••:..:S::'"::;':..
' -:P::;&gt;•~'--- ·- -~ ·- ·- ......-Joseoh Dav1s State Par.-.
• • • • •
-----------·-• ·----·- -Earl W Brydges Artoark
•
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Dev•l s Ho!e State Parlo;
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N•

rrt

t

Slate Park

ara Reservat•on St Pk

FoUl Mtle Creek State Park
Reservou State Park

Wilson-Tusca rora State Park
Canal West Park
Krull Pa rk
County Golf Course Park
Royallon Ravme Pa ri!:

Goloen H11l State Park
Canal East Park
ERIE COUNTY PARK INFORMATION:
Pa rl-. mc

Ca-not~ Fee
Tenn•s• -season pass

Free

S3 oe· mgn·
S 50

Sneltef rental {\•ar tes accordmg to tne oa rli: fac11nv chosen) S?O
toSt OO
Golt Cn ~ q;es S4 weel-..days $5 ..-.-ee ends and hOhdavs. $1 00
sea&amp;on oe rm11
$2 se1'0r clllz.en (Mon-Fu )

Ski Facilities
Many Western New Yorkers make the most out
of winter by heading for the slopes .
Though the local hills aren't the Rockies (a
500-foot vertical is the highest drop). there is a
choice of terrain, presenting challenges to
neophytes and expert skiers alike .
The two largest resorts in the area are Kissing
Bridge and Holiday Valley. Located in Glenwood,
Kissing Bridge, with 700 acres of skiing, is about an
hour's drive from Buffalo. Holiday Valley, with its

7

.;

�3t runs. is located about 90 minutes away in
~ Ellicottville .

/

c

Both get a good amount of snowfal l, are well
groomed. and have decent snow-making equip·
ment Kissing Bridge, however, has 75 per cent of
its runs lit and offers better night skiing .
Th'&gt; major difference between the two resorts is
m their patrons and ambience. Kissmg Bridge
generally attracts h1gh schoolers and other
younger people who like to whoop i.l up after skiing.
Holiday is more laid-back. and wh1le it still has its
d1e-hard pa rtiers. they are generally older-in their
mid·20s and up. Also. more people at Holiday drive
or bus in from Canada and bordering states. mak·
ing the crowd more Interesting. Ellicottville has
many more quaint . ·good restaurants that enjoy
catering to the ski crowd.
Wan t to ski, but have a transportation problem?
Your answer might be to join UIB's Schussmeisters
Ski Club, open to members of the University com·
munity. Call them for more information.
Cross-country skiers should try the Alpine
Recreation Area near Glenwood which has t2
miles of scenic trails or Allegany State Park with
t5.
Many cross-country devotees also enjoy treking
about the Amherst Campus. Check with Dusty
Miller at the Student Affairs Recreation Office
(basement of Squire} for current information on
campus trails and ski rentals .
Spectator sports
For those who 'd rather watch than participate,
-tiuffalo has NHL hockey (the-Sabres} and NFL foot·
ball (the Bills}. In addition , the Bisons of the Eastern
Baseball League and the Stallions of the Major In·
door Soccer League call Buffalo home. If the
horses interest you, Buffalo Raceway and Batavia
Downs have harness racing. Thoroughbreds race
at Fort Erie, Ontario.
And let's not forget U/B athletics. The University
has 10 men's varsity athletic teams (all nicknamed
the Bulls}, including football , baseball , wrestling ,
baskelball, and hockey. Women athletes (the
Royals} compete in 7 varsity sports, including softball, bOWling and volleyball.

·-Niagara Falls
No stay in Buffalo, however short, would be com·
plete without seeing Niagara Falls and some of the
other points of interest arour&gt;d .the "Cataract City"
to the north . .

-8

While at the Falls. take a walk to Prospect Point
at its brink, then over to Goat Island. which divides
the Niagara River into the Horseshoe and
American Falls. Jump on the Maid of the Mist boat
tour which passes directly in front of the American
and Bridal Veil Falls and into th e Horseshoe Basin .
Another way of seeing !he Bfldal Veil is by going on
the popular Cave of the Wmds tour. Elevators are
also ava ila ble at Prospect Pomt that can take you
to the American Falls' base.
Other points of interest are: the Wint ergarden
(near the Convention Center}, a glass-enclosed
tropical park containing over 7,000 plants
representing 180 varieties; the Niagara Falls
Aquarium. 1701 Whirlpool St .. where sea lions and
dolphins cavort during reg ularly-scheduled shows ;
the turtle-shaped Native AmJrican Center, 25 Rain·
bow Mall , which houses..,e native American art
gallery, historical museum, craft shop, library and
resource room, and the Power Vista, 5777
Lewiston Road, where animated displays can be
viewed which explain how energy is produced for
the Niagara Frontier.

Canada
Our Canadian neighbors provide area residents
with much in the way of culture and entertainment .
At Niagara Falls, the Canadian view, quite
truthfully, is much more spectacular. The area
around the Canadian Falls is also better developed
and maintained.
Not too far away is the relatively new Maple Leaf
Village , an amusement park and mall which has an
enormous Ferris Wheel tha~ives a great aerial
view of the cataract, and small shops that contain
imported items, some of good quality and some
junk. The mall also has a series of food boutiques,
each specializing in one thing, such as salad ,
dessert, coffee, etc.
·
Only 14 miles north via the Niagara Parkway is
Williamsburg~ike Niag&lt;!•a-o'l-the-lake, home of the
Shaw Festival. The festival is the only one of its
scope primarily devot!!d to George .Bernard Shaw
and his contemporaries. ·
•
Tickets for producliomr In three theatres can be
ordered via phone if you have a major cred~ card.
Another distinguished Ganadian thtlatre f_estlval ,
this one honoring Shakespeare, is ICICated in Stratford, Ontario, a three and one-half hour drive,trom
Buffalo. Here, three theatres stage perfbrman.ces
from around the first week in June through Op•
toi:Jer. Stratford audiences can see many actors of

international repute. This year, for example , the
Academy Award-winning Maggie Smith and Peter
Ustinov had major performing roles .
You can also phone in ticket orders to Stratford,
but your check must be received by the box office
within two weeks. No phone orders are taken after
April 30.
If you prefer cosmooolitan with a capital " C,"
visit Toronto. Many say it's comparable to New •
York City except that it's cleaner and safer.
Toronto offers theatre , unbelievable shopping
malls (some underground}. restaurants whose
menus reflect the cultural diversity of the city, and
a night life that could exhaust the most intense
cabaret-goer.
On your visi t, make sure to stop in at the Ontario
Science Center, 770 Don Mills Road , Eglinton.
Here, you can play tic-tac-toe with a computer,
view science experiments (that make sense}, or
"play" with scores of other displays. If nothing
else, it's a fun way to learn. Chances are you won 't
be able to see all the Center in one day. A repeat
visit is rea lly necessary.
Ontario Place, on Lakeshore Boulevard, is
another tourist favorite. The 90-acre park has paddle boats, restaurants, . shops and a special
Children's section filled with progressive play
equipment Ontario Place also features a giant
theatre with a 360-degree screen that shows
special films. This attraction alone is worth the ad·
mission .
In Northeast Tqronto is the Metro Zoo. As at the
Science Center, you can forget about catching
everything in one visit Natural habitats for animals
are maintained as much as possible.
A walk to Yonge Street or through Yo[kville is
worth your while before you leave, at least to say
you've been there. Yonge Street isn't as X-rated as
Buffalo's Chippewa, but it's getting there. Yorkville
is a half-bohemian, half-chic section that offers exclusive boutiques, craft shops, antiques, galleries
and cafes.

Compled and~ by~o~ _Bu~ ,
of the Reporter Staff.
.
... ... .

Welcome insert/Reporter/September 4/1980

�Fall 1980

KS

IFE

ll

n

Registration Begins Monday, September 8
About LIFE WORKSHOPS

Please Help Us

REALITIES OF REAL ESTATE

LIFE WORKSHOPS bring the
University closer together by
enabling people to share information, skills, interests. and ideas.
The workshops oHer you the
chance to learn something new,
make friends, and become
involved. The settincs are informal, and the atmosphere is relaxed and friendly. The workshops
are not-for&lt;redit, senerally freeof&lt;harse. and open to students,
faculty, staff, alumni and spouses.
Workshop leaders are all
volunteers from the University
and local cornmnity.

Help us ensure that par·
ticipants and leaders will have as
rewarding. an experience as poss i·
ble. Let us know if you are not

Thorscbys/Odober 2-1617:80-9:00
p.m.JM.J.in St. Campus

planning to attend a workshop

you have registered for. Please
call 63&amp;-2608 or come by 110 Norton to cancel your registration for
workshops you cannot attend, or
cannot continue attending after it

has started.

TAKING
CARE OF
BUSINESS

Volunteer to be a Leader!
leaders usually find their
experience with LIFE

PIRie Rqister
You must register to participate
in a workshop. Unless a fee is
involved, you may register by
phone or in person. If a fee is
involved, please bring payment to
the office when you register.
When you register, we will inform
you of the workshop location,
supplies, reading materials. or
other items you may need. Please
inform us at registration if you
need any special assistance due
to ' handicap. Campus maps are
available on request.
Please register for only those
workshops you are sure you can
attend. Space will be reserved for
you until you notify us that you
cannot attend a workshop. Many
workshops have a waiting list. so
there may be someone who could ·
join the workshop if you let us
know your registration is
cancelled. We would also appreciate your registering for no
more than four workshops on a

single day.

Where to Rqimr

Visit or phone
110 Norton Hall, Amherst
636-2808
When to Resister

September 8-10
8:30 a.m. - 7:00 p.m.
Begining September 11
8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday
For announcements of other
workshops, watch the Spectrum or call the office for
further information
(636-2808).

WORKSHOPS reward ing. It's a
relaxed, fun and friendly way to
develop •teaching and leadership
skills. Proposals on any topic are
welcome and will be considered

FINDING SOURCES OF
SUPPORT FOR YOUR
RESEARCH
Mondayi/Odober f&gt;.2CI/2.ii0-4:0Cr
p.mJAmhersl C..mpus
Leader. Shirley Stout, Assistant to
the Vice President for Research.
Worbhop Description:
This workshop is a general
introduction tO the process of
finding and applying for sources
of support for research or projects. The first session will focus
on what to put in a proposal. The
second session will deal with
locating sources for funding . The
third session will be optional for
those who wish to try writing a
proposal. Beginning faculty
. members and those involved in
social services, educational, or
.,l.ommunity groups should find
this workshop e;pecially helpful.

for the Spring 1981 program. We

also welcome your suggestions
for topics and leaders, and invite
you to come by 110 Norton and
discuss serving on our Advisory

Board, which is currently in need
of new members.
No person in whatever relationship with SUNY/BuHalo shall be
subject to discrimination on the
basis of race, ethnic background,
national origin, religion, color,
age, sex or condition of handicap.
Many thanks to all the volunteer
leaders who give generously of
their time, energy, and talent, and
to the participants whose
enthusiasm and cooperation make
the program successful . Thanks
also to the many clerical and
maintenance staff who help the
program operate smoothly. The
LIFE WORKSHOPS Advisory Committee supports the program by
recru iting leaders, acting as
liaisons, and by offering suggestions and advice. Members are ·
Paul Allaire, Kathy DesSoye,
Dawn Ferrara, Karen Finger, linda
Glick, Ann Hicks, Mary Jacobsen,
Dorothy Gajer, Nancy Marmaros,
Mary Jane von Volkenburg, Karen
Whitney, Sinette Winfield, Helen
Wyant and Stephanie Zuckerman.
Special thanks to Karen Fine,.er,
Secretary to life Workshops and
Mary Jacobsen, Program .
Coordinator. Thanks also to Peggy
Dundon who served on the
Advisory Committee while this
fall's prpgram was being
developed.

MONEY MANAGEMENT:
LEARN-BY-DOING

Leaders: Terry and George Allen,
who have years of experiencf in
real estate and currently operate
their own Century 21 office
Worbhop Description:
This woricshop will acquaint you
with three aspects of real estate.
buying, selli ng, and the real
estate business. We hope to
eliminate numerou s fallacies so
that you will know what to look
for, what to expect, and what
questions to ask in any or all
three of these areas. The first
session will focus on purchasing.
the second on selling, and the
third on rea l estate as a business.
You are welcome to attend one
or all of the ~si ons .
RUNNING A SELF-

SUPORTING BUSINESS:
A WAY TO MEET SOCIAL,
FINANCIAL, AND
CREATIVE NEEDS
Tuesdoy/Odober 14/7:80-10:00
p . mJM~in SL C..mpus
l eader: Audrey Trojner, owner
and operator of an antique
jewelry business
Worbhop Description:
If you've ever thought of turning
an interest or hobby into a s fsupporting business. but have had
little or no business experience,
this workshop is for you. We will
discuss what is involved in
starting a small business, ways to
use your intuition and imagina- tion, and how operating your own
business can help you meet
social, financial , and creative

needs.

Tuesclayo/Sepknobe&lt; 30 ~ncl

Oc:lober 7/7:80-10:e0 p.-JA~t

c.-

•

leader. Audrose Mackel Banks
has had 26 years experience in
adult home economics education.
Workshop Descriptioft:
learn a new approach to personal
and family money manaaement.
Participants will leam how to
analyze expenses, schedule
monthly payments. monitor their
use of credit. and organize savings. We will use the ~ve and
Spend A~ (av~ilable at the
first session; cost is 53.00). You
should bring cancelled checks,
bills. and receipts for the last 12
months, as well as a calculator (if
possible) to the first session.

TAPPING SPECIAL
PROGRAM RESOURCES
FOR STAFF EXPANSION
Wednescbys/October -o.-.ber
S(u~ October 29)112:80-1:00
p.m./A""-st C..-•
leader: Sinette Winfield, Manager

of Employment. U/B
Workshop Descriptioft:
Participants will receive an
introduction to existing program
resources in the area and outside
the University which might be
potential sources for gaining su~

plemental staH. The workshop.
designed primarily for University
staff and faculty, will identify
programs, explain the requirements and procedures. point
_ out possible limitations andobstacles and oHer guidelines for
developing a proposal .

�:~
\rJ CREATIVE
~ARTS

ACTING WORKSHOP METHOD NOT MADNESS
W~yt/Octoloer 1-Nowelllber

517,....JI p.tii./Maln SL Ca-o
leader: Mary Brown, prominent
local actress.
w.......... Deocrlptlon:
A little Slolr(islavskij, a little
Brecht. a little Brown, a lot of
fun, leamina and work ... on "how
to find "the personal truth in the
creation of a character." Exercises
in concentation, relaxation, imqinatio!l. creativity and emotion
memory... plus use of the voice
and body in the creative process
in the theatre.

w........... Deocriptlon:
- Experience the joy of drawing!
-

Become aware of your

creative abilities!
- Get•ad~ ice in developin&amp; your
skill!
You will be introduced to basic
design theory and techniques
which will be demonstrated by '
the leader. Encourqernent will be
provided to practice drawina a
wide ranae of subject matter (portraits, landscapes, animals, cartoons} using various media includina pencil, Charcoal. markers
and crayola. Materials will be
provided at the first session.
however, you will need to purchase supplies for the" remaining
sessions.

PSYCHOLOGY &amp; COM-

MUNICA·
TION

ter, Know Where You Are Coin&amp;
and How to Get There, Take
Charae of Your Hurts-WorryDiscouraaement. Develop lasting
Relationships with Family,
Friends, Colleagues, Tum Your
Problems in to Assets! Be the
Best you can be. Do more,
achieve more, and enjoy more.

COMMUNICATION AND
THE DEAF
ThundaytiSepteMber 2S-October
914:304:30 p.tii./Maln St. Campus
leader: Sister Vjrginia, Principal,
St. Mary's School for the Deaf
w........... Deocriptlon:
The three sessions will cover
lan&amp;uaae and speech problems of
the deaf, basic use of the manual
alphabet and a minimum
introduction to Sign language
with deaf children; interactions
with deaf individuals and discussion of the educational. social
and vocational implications of
deafness.

COPING WITH LOSS,
CHANCE AND GRIEF

BEGINNING GUITAR
.,.,_.ytiSep._._ ~

TueodaytiSeptember 30-Novernloer

Jlf7=-a1S p ~herat C.IIIPUs

leader: David Bryman, has been
playina &amp;uilolr for 10 years, and
has been teaching for 5 years.
w.......... Deocrlptlon:
This workshop will teach you the
fundamentals you nl'ed to learn
auitar on your own. We'll get into
some basic theories for different
styles of playina. including lead
guitar, back up, country, and
jazz. You should bring a gu itar
and a blank sheet music
notebook to the first session.

FINDING YOUR OWN
VOICE: CREATIVE
WRITING WORKSHOP
W. . . . . .ytiSepleMber

17.octoloer 2217-p.tii./AMentC.leitder: Carole Sineni, has an
M.A.H. in Creative Writing.

w.......... Deocrlptlon:
fte&amp;inners or experienced writers
of poems or prose are welcome
to share and leam together. We
will discuss writin&amp; as a way to
clarify perceptions and to
discover or refine our individual
voices. The format will be informal. relaxed sharing of interests
and concerns. Whether you've
already written sornethin&amp; or if
you simply have ideas for things
you'd like to write but haven't
known how to be&amp;in, join us for
writin1 and sharin&amp;.

MIDDlf EASTERN DANCE
W1d J•JIII.. hn l1r
MOctaloer ~1IIULIMaln SL ~
leader: Carol Stephenson, professional Middle Eastern dancer

w.......... .,......_

Hete Is YD!'r opportunity to leam
the ancient art of Middle. Eastem
clanci.,._ Cain an appreciation of
this fine dance form and smy in
shape at the same time.

4/7.._ p.mJAmhent Campus
ASSERTIVE BEHAVIOR
SKILLS
Monday/September 29/1 :Q0-4:00
p.mJMain SL Campus
leader: Beatrice Roth, University
Counseling Center, and Amy Pitt,
Warsaw Counseling Services
Worbhop Description:
You have a right to your feelings,
beliefs, and opinion\! learn to accept this and-pr-actice.:lx#pressingthem through discussion and exercises.

CAREERS FOR THE 21st
CENTURY:
UNDERSTANDING JOB
TRENDS
Tuesday and Thunday/September
30 and Odoe&lt; :114,_:30
p.mJAIIIhent Ca-1
leader: E.J. Martell, Director,
University Placement and Career
Guidance, SUNY/Buffalo
. w........... Deocrlptlon:
This workshop will give a quick
overvtew of current career fields
and job pros~ts and then
"crysul ball" the future, exploring career change dynamics and
their relationship with a collqe
education, and discussina ways individuals can plan on and prepare
for chance in their working lives.
Students, faculty, and smff
should find this workshop helpfu(
in plannina the!r future careers.

COMMON SENSE
APPitOACH TO SELF-·
IMPROVEMENT

,

. . . . . . .. , ,

I

I

DOc:toller

14IJIII.MI ~ .. ~
Leacler: Joe M. Fiocher, Director
of Crutlw! Craft c-r

w.......... .,_...... ,

DEMYSTIFY THE LIBRARY

•

Tueodayl/()ctobe&lt; 21 and
21/7:00-lilo p.mJAIIIherst Campus
leaders: Gemma DeVinney,
Reference librarian at UGl. and
Pat Tegler, library Studies
librarian.
Worbhop DescriptiDiscover the world of library
z..oorces and services for
pursuing academic and personal
interests. Become more
comfortable and confident workina in a library setting. D~elop
efficient search strategies. Format
will be informal lecture and
discussion with some media
presentation; tours of campus
libraries or of special services (i.e .
computer searchina) will be
arranaed accordina to participant
interest.

EXPLORING MEN'S ROLES·

Tooeoda)'IISer• I"~
p.tii./AMent
leader: Clayt Suhlka. founder
and developer of Successful SelfManqement self-improvement .

21"...,.

seminan.

· clEATM DRAWING

leader: Deborah E. Wilkinson, has
worked ~ith the Center for life
and Death in Transition.
W«&gt;&lt;bhop Description:
life is a continual process of
saying good-bye to family,
friends, lovers, places, things, or
stages in your own life. Recognizing types of loss. stages of grieving and becoming aware of your
own values and methods for coping with transitions can help you
develop more effective ways to
deaf with various kinds of foss
and change, whether death,
divorce, moving. leaving your
parents, sudden lo7s of material
possessions. or l~ng a job.

ea.;..
,,

Build you. self-confidence, selfimqe, end discover your creative ·
possibilities. This 4-session
workshop will cover the fdll-in&amp; topics: Undersmnd Yourself Bet-

MondaytiSeptu•• 2t:0cto1ter
2M- . . p.tii./Ma.. SL C . leaden: Chuck Piazza and Nick
Millernaci, helped orpnize the
University Men's Center.

w........,.,_....,

For men interested In self• discovery •nd ,hanna with other
men. Th1s workshop alms at providin&amp; an irlformal atmosphere
where men can _explore
sterotyped images of their roles
and discuss ways to break away

from them. Participants will
.spend time aettu to know one
another and will share resources,
strengths, and growina expriences,
as well as problems and conflicts.
Nick and Chuck plan to respond
to the interests and needs of
participants in topics such as
male sexualitY, machismo,
monogamy, intimacy, job
pressures, aging. social roles, men
and children, men's health,
violence. anger and others.

FEAR OF FIGURES:
UNDERSTANDING MATH
ANXIETY
Tuesday/September 3015:11&amp;-7:00
p.mJMain SL Campuo
leader: Dr. David Blaeuer teaches
math at SUC/Buffalo.
Worbhop Deocrlptlon: ·
For anyone who feels ill at ease
or inadequate with math. If
you've been avoiding multiplication and division for years, those
days can be numbered. ·This
workshop will explore the causes
of math anxiety and increase your
awareness of possible remedies .
Whether you' re a student worried
about taking a math course or
you 're tired of spending frustrated
hours counting on your fingers
when adding up your phone bill,
this workshop should help you.

MEN AND WOMEN IN
TRANSITION: HOW TO
COPE WITH CHANCING
SEX ROLES

Thunday~tetnber 25-0ctober

3017.._ p.mJMain St. Campuo
leader: Stephen Novick, has
researched and lectured on .\.1en's
Studies at various colleges and
has organized numerous
workshops for area organizations.
w........... Deocrlption:
Explore the changes currently
uking place in male/female roles
and discover ways to create
personal, interpersonal, and social
chanae. Hopefully, we will find
non-oppressive, non-sterotyp ical,
and mutually beneficial ways for
men and women to relate. Issues
discussed will include men's and
women's role binds. anger, needs
for intimacy, affection, and
sexuality. Format will include
lectures, films, exercises. role
plays, and some fun. Men and
women of all aaes are welcome.

HOW TO BAlANCE THREE
LIVES: SCHOOL, WORK,
AND FAMILY ·
M......ytiSepe..ller 2Mktober
2115:»6:JJ p.tii./Maln St.
leader: An&amp;ie Janeukos, former
President of the Millard Fillmore
Collqe Student Association, who
has successfully balanced
fulltime work and school throu&amp;h
an under&amp;raduate dqree, and
who is now focusina her energies
on an M.B.A.

c.-

W.......... o-.1~

Retumina adult students (nontraditional students) are faced
· with unique situations. Balancirlfl ·
your family life, yOur work life ·.~
and your 'acaderriic -life can be •
clernandina, and frustratin&amp; as
well as rewardin&amp;- Findina w.,s
to focus your ener&amp;Y can lessen
frustrations ·and anltieties and _

�make your life peaceful rather
than chaotic. This workshop will
aim at helping you find your own
personal balance. The format will
be open sharina of questions,
answers, problem solvin&amp;. and

resources. If participants want.
we can schedule additional

meetings.

THE JEWISH HOUDAYS:
A GUIDE FOR THE
PERPLEXED
MondaJI/September 29-0ctober
27/7:J0.9-.l0 p.mJAnohent Campus
Leader: Rabbi David Pape.
w ........... Deocripllon:
The workshop will provide an
introduction to the Jewish
hoi idays and explore the
sianificance of certain customs

and practices of the Jewish
people. We will examine some of
the special traditions integral to
various holidays and informally
discuss the meaning of the sym·
bois and practices associated with
these occasions.

THE EXPERIENCE OF
MEDITATION

BLACK AND WHITE
PHE&gt;TO PROCESSING

n..ndayoSep!eto~Mr ZS-N__._
1 - - 7 - p .... JMaln St. Ca-s
Leader: Bhai Oyal Sinah Khalsa
w........... Description:
By listenina to your inner-self you
come to have a more positive
feelina about your life. who you
are and what you are doing.
Meditatio• helps you to
understand your behavior, and
also makes you relax. Bring a
blanket or cushion to sit on and
wear loose. comfortable clothing.

fridayiOclaber 314~
p.MJAIIihent C . leaders: Takaka Michii, Coordinator of Japanese Studies Program, SUNYAB. and Keith Walker,
U/B grad student and experienced
paper folder.
Worbhop Description:
Expand your understand ing of
Oriental art as you lea.,.; the skill
of Japanese Paper Fold ina.
Registration will be confirmed
upon the payment of 51 .00 (cash
only) to cover cost of paper.

n....S.yiiSepteoober
..,_.lO
p.IIIJMaln St. Campus
Leader: James DiVincenzo, photo
25-0clober

buff with teachina expertence
Worbhop Description:

Learn basic development and
printing processes·for black arid
white film, as well as special
effects in the camera and
darkroom . Participants must have
/access to camera (other than a
110 pocket type) and provide
their own film and paper.
Registration is limited and will be
confirmed upon payment of 57.50
(cash only) to cover the cost of
chemicals. The fee includes
membership in the U/B Photo
Club which entitles you to the
use of the darkroom in add ition
to workshop time.

a

KUNDALINI YOGA
TuesdaJI/Seplelllber 2J-Nowmber
11,._7:GO p.mJMaln SL Campus
Leader: Bhai Oyal Sinah Khalsa.

w........... Detcripton:
Improve your general health and
feeling of well beina. Yoaa exercises increase 6ody flexibility,
strengthen nerves, relieve tension.
and help you to be more relaxed
in everyday situations. P~rticipants should bring a blanket
to el'ercise on, and wear
comfortable, loose clothing.

INTRODUCTION TO
ASTRONOMY
Mondayi/Odober . 2 7 / 7 p.mJMain SL C . Leaders: Keneth Kimble, Alphonse
Kolodziejczak. and larry Carl ino,
of the Buffalo Astronomic.al
Assoc iation
Worbhop Deoc:ription:

This workshop will introduce
astronomy to beginners. We will
explain wha t amateur
astronomers do, what flc:ilities
are available in the Buffalo area.
and will briefly survey the ge neral
areas of astronomy including
planets. stars, the moon, t he sun,
and galaxies.

CALLIGRAPHY
Wednesdaytoctober 116~:00
p.mJMaln St. Campus
Leader: Lynne Bankert, has taught
calligraphy for S years and
operates "The Hired Scribe"
lettering company
W ........... Description:
learn lettering for the fun of it!
This workshop will cover the
fundamentals of basic lettering,
designing with the pen, and ideas
for projects. Although aimed
primarily at beginners, ad vanced
students are welcome. too.
Re gistation co nfi rmed upon pa yment of S2.00 (cash onl y) to co ver
the cost of pen, ink, and paper.

BACKGAMMON
TuesdaJI/September U.October

HEALTH
NUTRITION

1417- p.mJMain St. Campus
Leader: Steve Shavel, has been
playina at the tournament level
for 21h years.
W ........... Description:
learn about varioU"s playing

techniques and tournament play.
This workshop is intended for
those who already know the basic
rules of the game.

CREATIVE PLAY FOR FUN
AND FITNESS
Wedneoclaytl()ctober
22-Noweonber 12/7-..:JO
p.111JMaln St. Campus
Leaders: Sue Braun and Andrea
Foster.
W........... Deocrlpllon:
Stayina in aood physical
condition doesn't have to mean
boring work-outs. Playing noncompetitive aames can achieve
the same aoal in an atmosphere
of fun. cooperation. and
closeness with others. We'll also
par our -roach to leamina
how to teach other noncompetitive aames- for teachers,
· counselor!' coaches, or aroup
leaders of any kind. Find out how
to play Prui. Human Knot, and
Orqon's Tail. Participants should
wear comfortable clothes and
sneakers.

»~

MEDITATION

Wednesdayi/September
2~ 29/7:00-9:00
p.mJArnhent Campus
Leader: Glenn Ceponis, avid
juaaler
Worbhop Description:
Through demonstrations by
Glenn, supervision and practice,
you too can learn to juale with
relative ease. Bring juaaling balls
to the first session. Three tennis
balls will suffice.

BASIC MASSAGE FOR
RELAXATION: A
BEGINNER'S COURSE
Saturdaytoctober 25110:00-4:00
p.mJMaih St. Campus
Leader.: Holy Coiner, is an
experienced masseuse.
Worbhop Description:

Learn the fundamentals of
massage, incluo;ling the basic
strokes for each part of the body,
their purposes and techniques.
Format will include lecture.
demonstrition, and practice by
' participants on one another. Bring
oil and a sleepina baa or some
sort of paddin&amp; to lie on. Wear
shorts and halters.

BEGINNING KNITTING
T.....Uytl()ctober 7~
1111-1• 11.aJMilln St. .
~

Leaders: Rita Walter and Josie Ca· •
puarb.
w........... Oeoalptiooo:
The workshop will aim a teachinc
beainnen the basics, but more
advanced knitters may come if
there is space available.

]/Reporter/Life WOrltstiefis/5epf.o'4. I"WO - •'• ,.,.,

• · -·

BASIC 'NUTRITION: AN
INVESTMENT IN HEALTH

HOW TO USE
PROGRAMMABLE
CALCULATORS

ANYONE CAN JUGGLE

Wednesdays/Odober 1-15112
.....,...1:00 p.mJM~in St. ea_..,
Leader: Deborah 0 . Morales.
. Ass istant Director of the Dairy
Council of the Niagara Frontier
Area, Inc., has had extensive experience in teaching foods and
nutrition and nutrition education
techniques to health professionals
and educators.
w........... Description:
An activity-oriented workshop
designed to involve participants
in learning more about bask
nutrition and its practical applica-.
tion to healthful. everyday living.
What are leader nutrients? What
are their functions and food
sources? What is a so-called
" balanced" diet! What·are the
concepts used in veaetarian dietsl
These questions alone wih product labelina inform~tion. fad
diets and weight control options
will be discussed in the workshop.
What better way to invest a lunch
houri

Saturday/October 419:00
a.m.-Noon/Amherst Campus
Leader: Gerald Rising, Professor,
Department of Instruction.

w........... Description:

/

This workshop will help you
become familiar with and learn to
solve problems with a programmable calculator. You will learn
calculator languages (Reverse
Polish and Algebraic Hierarchy).
become familiar.with differenct
kinds of calculators, and learn the
advantaaes and disadvantages of
calculators in comparison with
computers and microprocessors.
Anyone interested in calculators
is welcome. No math-is required.
· Apjiications will be simple in
order to display calculator use,
not mathematical ideas.
Calculators will be provided at
the workshop.

JEWELitY MAKING

-

T.....UJI/Seplelllber »&gt;ctober
14/7_1._ .,... JAnohenl ea ....

CANCER AWARENESS

Leader: James Pualisi, Assistant
Director of Creative Craft Center
w........... Deocri!lllon:
You will pin a basic
understandina ol the possibilities
and properties of a precious
metal. Each person will desian
and create their own project
(rinas, pim, pendants .. . ). Purchase
of neCessary materials will be ,....
quired.

4 1 7 - p.aJAIIIIoent C . -

T.....UJI/Septeoobeo _

__._

Leaders: Jennifer Heslop,
Doctoral candidate in Pharmacol&lt;&gt;tiY, Roswell Parlt Memorial
lmtitute, and Russell Sciandra,
Director of Cancer lnfOf'IN.tion ·.
Services. Roswell P~rk Memorial
lmtitute

w....... Deoaillllac

ORIGAMI

"'--

How much do you undeistand ' &gt;
and how much 11&lt;&gt; you
misunderstand about c:ancerl This
workshop will pn&gt;vide ·facts and
aer-ate discussion about the
nature and ca~ses of cancer.
Each session will fe~ture a cuest
speaker who is an expert in their
foeld.

�FOOD FOR THE MORROW
AND TODAY

SHOPPING GUIDE FOR
FOREIGN STUDENTS

Mon&lt;byl/()ctober (&gt;.November
1011:00-4:10 p.m4nur Moin St.
Umpus
leader: Jean Schultz, home
econom ist
Workshop Deteription:
Ms. Schultz discusses the

Mon&lt;by/September 29/1:00-1:00
p.m4neor Moin St. Co ~s
Leader: jean Schultz, home

importance of grain s. vegeta bles

and fiber foods for better nutrition and the implications of nutri· tional hab its on energy resources
and personal health. Le.arn to
make whole gra in, yeast, and
quick breads and how to cook
nutritionally without meal A free
copy of the cookbook, Food for
the Morrow and Today, will be
give n to all partici pants. Registralion will be confirmed upon the
payment of two dolla rs (cash
only, please) to cover food costs.

FOOD YOUR CHOICE: A
WAY TO TEACH
NUTRITION
Thursday/September 25112
Noo,..1:10 p.m4Moin St. C.mpus
leader: Deborah D. Morales ..
Assistant Director of the Dairy
Council of the Niagara Frontier
Area, Inc.
Workshop Description:
This workshop will familiarize
you with the FOOD... Your Choice
Nutrition Education learning
System available from the Dairy
Council. What should c hildren or
other students know about nutrition and why? How can you use
these mate rials to develop a
nutrition education curriculum,
and how can you construc t your
own visuals?

MAkEUP AND SkiN CARE

('

Wednesdoyi/Seplember 24 ond
October 115:]0.7:10 p.m4Amherst
C.mpus
Leader: Dorothy H. Smith. Skin
Care Consultant
Workshop Deocription:
le~ rn how to take proper ca re of
your skin and to
apply makeup. Participants will
actually go through the procedures for cleansing and
moisturizing the skin and applying their own makeup so the
glamorous results can be
reproduced! Supplies will be
provided.

SEXUALITY: FEELINGS,
PHYSIOLOGY, AND MEN'S
AND WOMEN'S HEALTH •

I

Tuescloyi/September 2:J.Oclober
2117:00-9:00 p.mJMoin SL C.mpus
Coordinator: Lynne Foster
Leaders: Directors of Sexuality
Education Center
Workshop Description:
He re is your chance to become
better informed· about emotional
and physiological aspects of
human sexuality, including
individual similarities and
d iffe rences. We will talk a bout
sexual feelings and present a wide
variety of information on the
anatomy and physiology of
reproduction and sexual response
foqnales and females. learn
about birth control, steriliza tion.
abort ion, diseases and their
prevention. homosexuality, rape
and other topics. Satisfy your
curiosity and get the chance to
discuss sexuality in an informal,
open setting.

4/Reporter/Sept. 4, 1980

economist

Worbhop DHCription:
This workshop will include a visit
to a grocery store, and should
help foreign students or anyone
unfamiliar with U.S. food

marketi ng to shop more wisely
and economically. We'll discuss
how to shop, where to shop, how
to identify foods, give suggestions
on preparing basic American
foods , and other topics as
requested.

YOUR IDEAL DIET FOR
HEALTH: THE DINE SYSTEM
Mon&lt;by/October 27n2:00-1:10
St. C.11mpus
Leaders: Darwin Dennison, Ed.D..
Associate Professor, and Kathryn
Frauenheim, Research Assistant,
Department of Health Education
Professions
Workshop Description:
Using the DINE System, participants will rate their curre nt
nutritional status and calculate
their ideal caloric intake in ten
nutrient categories. Too many
calories ca n lead to overweight,
which ca n be a major risk factor
in many diseases. Use of the
DINE syste m can provide slow.
contin uous weight loss until ideal
body weig ht is reached.
p . m.IM~~;in

CPR
D~tes and Times to be arrart~ed
Leader: David Hoffman, who has
taught CPR for College H
Workshop Descriptio•:
How prepa red are you for
emergencies? This workshop will
teach American Red Cross
cardiopulminary resusitation
techniques. learn the symptoms
of heart attack, practice
techn iques for... mouth to mouth
resus itation, and learn what to do
for obstructed airways in conscious and unconscious persons.

PHYSICAL
FITNESS &amp;
RECREATION
BASIC BACKPACKING AND
SURVIVAL
TECHNIQUES
Times ond Dotes to be Arroflled
Leader: Michael Cantwell,
Philosophy/Biology major, is an
experienced backpacker and
workshop leader.
Workshop Desciplion:
learn the esse.rtials of backpacking, what to take and what not to
take, where to go and how to survive. Participants should emerge
with a view of backpacking as
more than exercise, as a way of
understanding our relationship
with Nature. We may try planning
an excursion together.

BICYCLING
Will meet on 2 S.turdays (euct
doteo and loc.ation to be
•rraflledj
Leade~: Kent Lieber, former
bicycle mechanic.
Workshop Description:
learn basic maintenance and
repair plus how to ride a 10-speed
correctly. On the seoond Satur-

day, enjoy your new-found skills

on the road I A short ride will be
arranged at the first session.

INTRODUCTION TO THE
LAKE LASALLE FITNESS
COURSE
Wednesdoy/Seplember
2414:00-5:00 p.m4Amherst Compus
leader: Dusty Miller, Director,
Recreational Programming

Workshop Description:
Discover the unive rs ity's new
fitness course. A progressioa of
exercises at various stations
builds good fitness practices into
the cou rse. This workshop will
explain the purpose and how to
use the course. Participants will
then go around the course once
at their own pace and level
(beginner, inte rmed iate, and
advanced). Maps of the course
available at registration.

RUNNING AND OTHER
SPORTS INJURIES:
RECOGNITION,
PREVENTION, TREATMENT
· Wednesdoy/Seplember
24/12:]0.2:00 p.m4Moin St.
Compus
Leadef:_J'hillip C. Culli ton, D.P.M.
worbhor Description:
Runners and other athletes can
learn how to avoid injuries,
minimize thei r effects, and
shorten the amount of time it
takes to get back into activitY.
The works hop will reView the
major sources of injury, acquaint
you with self-help techn iques (e.g.
taping tec hn iques). and teach
recognition of problems requiring
treatment by a doctor. For beginning and advanced athletes/runners.

SAFETY ON THE SKI
SLOPES
Tuescloy ond Thursday/November
18 ond 20/7:00-8:10 p.m4Moin St.
Campus
Leaders: Phillip C. Cull iton.
D.P.M.. and Stephen Rycyna,
M.D.
Workshop Description:
Increase your skiing pleasure by
increasing yo-ur safety on the
slopes. Learn what the common
ski injuries are, how they occur,
and what protective measures
}ou can take to avoid them. We'll
ver both cross country and
downhill skii ng.

SELF DEFENSE
Wednesdoyf()clober 1/7:00-9:00
p.m4Moin SL Campus
leader: Dave Chernega. nationally
certified Defensive Tactics
Instructor
Workshop Deocription:
Basic self defense techniques may
help you or a friend in a future
life threatening situation. Participants-men and women-will
be instructed and practice ways
to' deJ~nd themselves.

UNDERSTANDING SCUBA
DIVING
Wednesdayl/()ctober 1 ond
117:00-9:00 p.m4Moln SL C.mpus
... Leader: Howard Tieckelmann,
Certified Scuba Instructor and
• Professor of Chemistry
Workshop Deocriplion:
If you've ever thought you might
want to learn scuba diving. this
workshop will help v.ou
understand the costs, the time

involved. equ,ipment needed,
certification requ irements, skills,
and oooortunities. The worbhop
will be geared for those interested

"

in diving but with no experience.

This is a dry land introduction to
scuba diving; we will not be doing
any work in a swimming pool.

WINE AND
COOKING
FIRST AND LAST:
APPETIZERS AND
DESSERTS*
Thursday/October 2/7-.30
p.m4Amhent C . Leader. Robin Bernhard.
accomplished chef
Workshop Description:
learn to prepare some dishes that
will whet the appetite and some
that will give a rou~ng sinfully
satisfying finish to a meal.

FRENCH CUISINE*
Tuescloy/Seplembe&lt; 2 1 / 7 p.m4Arnhent C . Leader: Robin Bernhard.
accomplished chef
Workshop Deocriplion:
Expand your cooking repertoire
with an evening of coolc:ing and
dining on famous French dishes.

ITAllAN EDIBLES*
Thursday/Septenober 1117-.30
p.m4Anohent C......
Leader. Robin Bernhard,
accomplished chef
Workshop Deocripiion:
Enjoy an evening of coolc:ing and
eating- Italian style!

JAPANESE COOKING*
Fridoy/Novenober 7/4~
p.m./OHC.mpus
Leader: Takako Michii,
Coordinator of Japanese Studies
Program. U/8, and Kazumi Vagi, a
student assistant from Japan.
Workshop Deocrip~
Expand your cultural awareness
and-learn S9ffie of the secrets of
cooking Japa,.,....tyle.

SCANDINAVIAN COOKING
TuescloyiC&gt;ctobe&lt; 7/7-.3e
p.m4Anohent C . Leader: Donald Larson, an
accomplished Scondinavian Chef
Workshop o-rip~
Learn recipes and coolc:ina
techniques ·for Scandinavian
dishes.

THE STAFF OF UFE*
W~yiOc:taloer ~
p.JII./near Mala~

Leader. Jean Schultz, home
economist
Worbhop Deoaiptiooo:
Learn to bake nutritious yeast
breads frorn whole srain flours.
The workshop will involve the
making and sampling of breads
and a discussion of the imporlance of whole groins in the dieL

VINES, VINTAGES AND
VINEY~DS

Thurwcloys/()ctoMr 2 2 ] 1 i - p.mJMoin SL ~
Leader: Geoffrey Schall, a wine
connoisseur
Workshop o-ripllooo:
Sessions will be conducted in the
style of a professionol loslifll.
Registration will be confirmed by
to cover wine costs.
"""'"'""d"~''""''""~

* RegiStration will be confirmed upon the payment of 52 00 (cash only) to cover food costs.

~

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>13,000
·have now
registered
_Total may
reach 25,000
With more than a month remalmng
before the start of the fall semester . just
under 13.000 students have already
completed registration for the session
whiCh begins on Tuesday. September 2
Accord ing to Ellen McNam a r a .
associate director ol Admisstons &amp;
Records . the figure ,rellecls very few
enrollees lor MiUard Fillmore College.
and the Graduate School . rwo large
groups for whom registration has "Oiy
just slarted Nor does it include sizeable
numbers of freshmen who have not yet
been here for orientation . For example .
an ex·tremely large one:ntatlon group of

some 450 freshmen arrived just yesterday for a 2· 1h-day session . They won 't

register until neftr the ck#qt ?f that

ses ~

sion .

There Is no way for A &amp; R to make any
meaningful projections or to draw any

All-University spectac ular may be
the beginning of a campbs traditt·o n
Sooa4llr .. llalni.Polld
Sunday,~ 28. the focus will
-'1 to Baird Point at Amherst where

an MTay of events wiD be .._.s from 1
p .m . until aiWr dark . lnclud&lt;td wiD be
~ mulkal performances. excetpls
from the Theatre Dopartmenl's record·
wllering production of "A Mldsumnwr
Night's Dream, • moclcm dance praentallono, -and crafts displays , canoe races
and ott- wala -.nlleo. Also: a mtniMdh IM; children's gol)'la and a puppet show, and lnlcmallonal and Naltve

"II ~ 10 be the ~ event
oflhe yeeo.• Mill~. one of the
.,....., _ . . . . oflhe planning........
Wlih a IIIIo ludo, I wll be lhe - of an
_....,

~-

.,.IO.........

T - plano cp1 for "CeWnnlon
~.~'Z'T.

... a .......................... ~
Flold .. Moln 5lrwt.

Coloto .. "--I

~ ...............

...,...... In the

S..,. , _ - · ....,......t by SA
•_. UUAB, Ia odleduled.

American lolo dances.
Ptecedlng the aflernoon's ewnls wiD
be the 11m annual "Baird Point Run ," a
race around campus beginning and ending at the amphitheatre, oanclloned by
the Amateur Athlellc Union . A "fun" race
II also scheduled as are ouc.h spoots
evcnll ao' volleybal and tug-of-war. Food ·
Serviu will operate a food .. nt
~tlhe day.
E"""lo wtl culminale with a con&lt;lert by
the U/8 Phllhermonla and a fireworks
opedloculw l.lling Baird Point as a
t.dodiop .
"SSudenno, t.cully and ...s ...., their
frionclo . . lnYIIed 10 p.r1lr::tpMo In lhlo
OPia&gt;dld weekend ........,.,..,. aaye
£nnanoub. He'l haw moN dalello

'-r.

o women named
to administrative slots
Haowy. a lacully mcmba In the

Sd&gt;ool of Social Work *'&lt;:c 1964. has
been the ochoal's ...cllole dean

c.lone Heach«r Polle, an ...cllole
~ of E,.w., has ......

"""*'

~ oflhe ~ntof American
for a
•11M' lam beginning
~1

Mo. Polle II a _ .... whooc worlu
haw won -........... -nllon Her
noW!, n.. ~. -pui~Wwd
1967 Sloler X and lite \lldlnv o/ FoW
,..,., -

SlrMa
da

published In 197S by F'arrar ,
a. Ghua Inc.
joiMd
In 1971 when she and lwr two
retutned from Peril.

To help get the project off the ground ,
the coordinating committee has received
contributions from tlvu agencies on
campus: $300 from the FSA Program
Committee; $250 from United University
Professions (UUP) ; and $500 from the
local CSEA. Efforts will be made to get
Additional funding . Ermanovlcs In·
dicated.

E_.,....le_te.l
The main thing to be emphasized now.
Ermanc&gt;Yia report~. 1o that the weekend
1o going to be held and that everyone lo
Invited .
Helping put togetht1 the event are
repreantallvcs of jUst about everyone:
The Graduale Student Asooclation . lntt1·
Greek Council. Student Auoclation .
Commula Affairs, Public Safety. Food
and Vending. Sub-Board . The Colleges.
CSEA. UUAB. Environmental Health
and Safety, the Mlllai-d Fillmore College
Student Asooclation. Orientation. UUP.
Maintenance. Facllltla Planning , Sludent
Allan, Rac:reallon , the Craft Center. and
the FSA' Program Committee.
For lhe ~ of the crush ol
~ expected at B.ird Point. shuttle
bu.O. • II be NR &amp;om one ol the InteriOr.
campus pelidng lots, and Johnnyo-&lt;&gt;n·
the-Spot wll be prOIII&lt;Wd .

conclusions concerning fall enrollment
totals from the numbers who have
registered to date. The very simple
reason is that registration has never
before bee_n handled on-line this early In
the year. nor have freshmen been able In
previous years lo complete registration
during orientation . Tht1e are no parallel
ligures against which to make comparisons.
The University's budget for the coming
year Is predlceled on a total head count
flgiM' ol 24.966. Unofficial Informed
"guessa" are thai about 25.565 wiD like·
ly enroD.
Ms McNamara noted that t mail
registnltion for continuing graduate and
MFC students went out only a few days
ago, so returns are nowhere yet near the
level they will probably reach . Registra·
lion for new MFC studenls opened on
July 14. These registrations and that for
Incoming fres~men are the only ones be·
ing handi!!d at this point , she said .
Everything opens up .,gain on August
25 and wm continue stnllghl through the
following weekend and on labor Day
flseH In an anempl to expedite registration
and courM changes In lime lor the begin·
ning of classei.
Students with drop/add problems can
consuh the computer In Room 240
Squire . or 200 Fronczak beginning Aug.
25. New students. transft11 and re ·
entering studenls wiD be able to regislu at
Hayes B.
Hours -win be: August 25 through
. Augus128. 9 · 8 :30p.m.: Friday. August
29: Saturday. August 30. Sunday.
August 3i ·and Monday. September 1
(Labor Dey) . 9 · 4 :30. On davo on which
regll!ntllon wll continue after. 4 :30p.m ..

those houn are rftt1ved strictly for

graduate and MFC studants only.
Undt1gradua... must complde their
lranoKIIons ·prior to 4 ,30.

�l

o secret plot,
College dean assures
Dcpmdlng on the r.pulallon _,II to cuny, being touted • a
"buldodng ~ In hacDna of a
campus paper may not be c:onoldcred
altogether off-. But when the - ln!l article lmplla "\\la a ooun:c who atkecf not to be I&lt;Mnllfled" that recent percull _,. ol_.t • part of a
. . . . - "owrthrow" of key otaff, that
cau- Murrey Schwartz some consterna-

"""'*

tion .
Fnt of aD, Schwartz recalls that when
he asaumed the poolllon of dun of the
Colleges last !aU. he made no bona
about the fact that he Intended to reevaluate and -mllnethem. At lust he
thought he made thai clear In lntavlews
with the campus press. So. if that's the
crlrt&gt;e. he pleads guilty. What he takes
ocep11on to, Is the strong Insinuation that
the decision to dmina three poolllons
was made unllatmiOy.

focuo." In llhoot, It felt !hal oiUdenl
..... would be bder--' lthe " Colega woot.ed "c:oopa.awly"ln ......

- ' a ! -"'*"

ocxlng _ ..... and

Aioo, the Dean
In ...........
report , that Urban Sludleo and Cora P.
Maloney limply didn't ' - enough
rnemben (a total of 100-1251 to julllfy
two lui-time resi&lt;Mntial eoonllnalon.
Becaua resldentlel coordinators tend
to view their )ob ~In leiTns of
their respective colloges Instead of the
system as a whole, Schwartz feels the
quabty of. life lor students hes eroded.
HopdiiDy, • head of the c~
Reoldenllal Committee, the activities
c:oordtnator can address some of the ·
m&lt;n praolng needs and eoneems surlacing In Ellicott.

Reetpa- .. CMS
Following the declsk&gt;n to eliminate_
Orr's ·poolllon , the Dun relayed that Dr.
AI Fedeli, master of CMS, resigned . So
did three other members of CMS's Faculty Board .
Schwartz said the Board wanted to
delay the decision for a year and then In•
vestlgate the matter and make their
recommendation . But that would have
been tantamount to an "abdication of
responsibility" on h is part , says
Schwartz; one that he just couldn't justify
on organizational and budgetary
grounds.
The Dean emphasized that he "has the
greatest respect" lor FadeD , but felt he
had to regretfuly accept his resignation .
FadeD. on the other hand , fe~ he
· wouldn~ be able to function as effoctively
without an assistant who had Orr's "expertise and experience ."
Schwartz has proposed to replace Orr
with two graduate assistants to the
master and a residential coordinator.
CMS's central programs (tutorial .
residential and academic) v.iU "continue
to op6&lt;1te at or near past levels" unHI a
new master Is appointed and faculty
replacements are made In the · Board ,
notes the Dun.
Schwartz credits the Colleges spring
planning process with giving them the
ability to absorb their portion of University
cu , with a ..strong consensus" u to
what had to be sacr1flced. If the Colleges
receive
cuts In the faU ,
Schwartz predicted that some of them will
have to go.
Contrary to the SUNY Central
philosophy. Schwartz vowed that further
budget reducllons for the Colleges "won't
be abooo1&gt;ed In a general binding of the
system . ~-, ...

add._,..

Law seeks
Jaeckle fellow
The Law School has announced the
av.a.blltty of the flrsl Edwin F. Jackie
for an attorney with opeciallnterat In laws that llffed and local
gowmment.
The ldowshlp program was created to
help carry 0111 the m11a1on of the new Edwin F. JMckle CAnter for State and Local
Govanrnent Law.
&amp;tabllohment of the oenter wu made
poaotie by a ""'--or gilt" &amp;om Mr. and
Mrs Edwin F. Jackie, which hes been
· clac:rt.ecl • the largest alumni oontrbltlon . - - 1 by the School.
~of t h e - - anouncf~

ed In March.

The avallabla JMckle f~ II for a
IO.month J*tod and carrla a ~ of
$18,000. wllh one pclOIItie ...-..1.
The fdowlhlp .... be .......ted for the
1980-81 ochoal ~. wllh ........ beginnIng
tlw&gt; Nowmber 1. Appllc:anb
ihould be , _ , . ochoal IJllduatn
wllh _....,. In pubk Cit private prac-

no.._

....

.....,....... regarding the fdowtNp
may be obtained by ~
Dr. Wade J. Newhouee, ..,._of the
, _ -. 412 O'Brien Hal; leMphone,
pi'OIII'8Ift

636-2071.
Sill an adl¥e -.mey In 8uflaiD at the
of 15, ..... Ja.:klo, . . known -

. . . --'*'.

- Coolnly
~~·
·
tlw\

New Vorl! Slue

~~. He~blo

law ..... lrom U/ 8 In 1915.

Mo e y -isn't everything,
Seymour Sarason argues
~ ~ Bucbnowald
ReporWStoff

In order to function more effectively
during an extended .-loci of restrlded
raoun:es, human servtcc profesaionals
must "deal with the startling conflict and
contrast" between current American attitudes ~ resouron and those
which sfuiped the country's colleCtive
psyche during the years following World
WarD .
By viewing actions from a historical
penpecllve, "we can learn fr9m mistakes
and abandon the lnldlllonal definition
of ~resourct for one which more accurately reflects the reabty of the 1980s."
Vale psychologist Seymour B. Sarason
offered this advice during an FES Summer Forum presentation last week on
" Human Services In an Era of Umlted

Resources."

smora o1 tiM -w

Founder and lint director of Vale's
Psycho-Educational Clinic , Sarason

. characterized the post-war .-loci as one
of "g,eat optlmlsm" In which Americans
envisioned themselves as "savlon of the
world," and the U.S . as a vast "raource
anenar capable of rebuilding nations.

Aloo entrenched In the American
psyehe , recalled Saruon, was the nollon
that oclence and .technology had the
pocential to tackle any problem Impeding
~·

era

Other charactGistlcs of the
Included an "aa:entuatad" governmental role
tn the clcwloprnent of human and an ernJ'ha* on profeooionallzetlon
and opciallzatlon.

Unfortu=,

lamented Saruon, the
to lnc:ralln!l numben of
profeulonals remained "unsolvable"
becaua the oolutlons were often baed
on "the myth of unlmlled raources, •
and lll1lllly Involved aut1on of man
speclallsls In yet other underexplored

problema

---

Educators fell to the ....... faulty
reaoonlog and are now suffGing the con.aquencaa, he - - . d. The educational
•uper~~• led the pubic to ~&gt;dew that ad-

dllloMI- would"'"'......... their
c:hlldnn Into the produdl"lhey wanllid.
What hoppenad, he wntured, 1o that

...n.n
began Ill '*""'~
for ~ problema lotlllly unntlatad

..wc..on--..

~ . drug
....... and the ... _ _ ~ they
leckad ihe ........v bedqJound.
"N- thara's anver and '-tllfty

lo

'**-...,

......s -.~-~' .w- .. they

lllld they

R.leftaltloa ...sed
Sarason caDed for a redefinition of
"resource" that seven Its umbilical connection to money. "fm ~against a
5lancc that says If you don t have money,
you don' have resources."
One way educators can accomplish
this, be noted, Is by re-evaluallng the
capabilities of their students Instead of
viewing them merely as "passive receptacles."
For example, Saruon relayed that a
colleague taught a group of high school
students hOw to collect and analyze Information which he needed for a research
projod. In return for his efforts, the
school superintendent gave him free access to several schools In the district' for
data retrieval. Such a "resource exchange rationale" can satisfy the needs of
both parties, he obtaved .
Human resouroe profeulonals should
be aware, Saruon warned, that their
definition of "reooun:e" could be un oonoclously linked to ~ attitudes about
their clients. For 15 years, he huffed,
Medicare off~ financial Incentives for
families to put their relatives :n nurolng
homes. This was baed on the ...........,...
notion that the elderly _,. llebdltles Instead of valuable members of oodcly and
oonlrt&gt;utlng members of the family unit.

._....._
...................
Seruon, •
education

opeclal
apat,
Indicated that formal boundaries
separating community and ochoal must
be dluolved If both are to fuJy ullbo each
other as potential . . -. ~
with the current ~ on ..,_,_
tlonalization In the realm of human - vtca, Saruon many comm~ntty
agency pn9ams .. prima (and lo!iocall
_ , . for aducallonal endeavon.
But, he said, Pl"9'- hes been slow In
this ..... Due to the "myopic penpec:- · of higher educators r.gording what
qualtfla .. a reooun:c, Saruon concluded that too often community~ are
overlool&lt;ed In a futile eaambl. to find additional cash.

Headed for Iowa
Dr. W..m N. Gil hes been

_.,.,tad

to a two-veer le'm • the lint ~nn Murphy Prof- of ~ In 1..St.it.o UIWeslly's Collge of~.

beginning~

1, 19110•

&lt;::un.ntly a ......,. of chemk;.al
engiMelng .....,, Gil 11M an ...,__
donal Npulallon In that ~ .....
ticuiMty In the llold of . _ and -

.........._

�.1u1v 31 , 19eo

....... .tuc:.aon.

He't oloo trying lo
obiMn "A Ploa In the Sun." a Brttloh TV
producllon which he calo • "rnorwlous
on lm1119ant ~ In the

u.s.·

hdiu'oll'lla....._......_

Wolck hos&gt;a that tha coww will In·
trocluce otucients to ·~ development and cultural-aocletafchlnct.doaco,
through a good oornpfe ola wodcing ...
vlronmenl." And, though no foreltpl
language training Is required, he expca
the coww to dernonolrate tha ~
ol foreign language proficiency.
"So many lludents .,. 10 cfooe to
learn~ a language ... they just need a
launch .
Also, Wolck hopa some students will
use the oourse as a springboard for rno&lt;e
advanced studies In lingulstlcs, Including
more theoretical ........
Wolck muoes that many "monoflnqulstlc" Individuals. who are otharwiM
motivated to study the use ol language.
simply "don't realiae how easy hIs to gel
Information

from

their

own

environment." A situation. he feels. that
can be remedied by "on-the-job training"
courses such as Ungulstlcs 100.

Shames' text
is reissued

city has quadrupled In the lui 30 yeAr$."
Wolck repol1o. He adds that the area's
Puerto Ricans liN also quKe eslllblished
and "poooobby the only true billngualo In
the city."
Also, Buffalo ._ -~ small but often
~ esiMIIIohed Ewopean and Middle
~~ -· The city's Uknlinlans
are "ubiquitous;" not as obvious until
"you start looldng at nama" lll'e the city's
l.eb.MM dlbans. Anally, there.,.., the
new arrivals, the Yemenllu, the Mex·
leans, rcfugea from Southeast Aola and
Cubans.
Wolck rnarwlo at the warm reccpllon
traditionally accorded new arrivals In Buf.
falo.
"Why doCs a city as Nlatively srnaU as
Buffalo have an almoot International
reputation for accornmoclating new Ill'·
rtvolsr It's dubbed tha "City of Good
Nelghbon" wllh .......,.,, be conlalds.
Then .,. ochol.rlv advanteges · to ttus
recoptlvlly, too. In the C8M of """' ethnic
~. the U/ 8 profeaor contends one
can study and clacrl&gt;e whafs t._,lng
from • langwogo -..!point. "This Is our
focus to """" extent .•

a - a _ .... . _ _ _
AddJIIonal ...-1aJ fOr the

COWM

..,.,._ from .-.:h on loeal ·languoge
-by clepartment .t.culty and students.
n.... inelucle .........s
and projects such .. the "Community Profile," a
sarnpllnt~ technique developed for
Walck's 1972 "Soc:iollngulst Survey of
B8nguallom In Buffalo.. The ldenllllad by census "'nnd" the city's rna·
jar ethnlt ~. I.e . , ~which OC·
cuplad rno&lt;e than 10 pa cenl of a given
_ , of tha city. Walck adds that the
~ ledmlque has been lnUtatad by

u..-

.-chen~ .

Whal'o Buffalo ... now?
Fnl of al, 11 II one of few c111n "wllh a
mocW l6&gt;guel ~ -. _acconllng to
Walck. Andthough~ ed\IQ!Ion In
Bullalo has, unlll r~. been c:onflned
10 Spanioh.Englllh,

thaN'• now a Kenan

......, oc:hool .. _. .. a ........... for
chi&amp;.. of RUIIIan-Jewllh lrnrn~grants.

Vllioul d&gt;anga In the clty'o ethnlt
toneentntlon haw ocxurred OYer tha
~

The Germans, Wolck st.w. slarted off
In the Black Rock section; they then
began to concentrate around Schiller
Park. Wolck notes that this group later
moved Into Cheektowaga and the
Tonowandas. Germans, however, are no
concentrated In any one area .
By contrast, the city's Poles. after an
early 1970. rplit. chlefly along genera·
ttonal lines, .,. now "very strong." Like
the Germans, they hove Increasingly
moved to Cheektowaga and the
Tonawandas. And Buffalo's Italians. after
years of maintaining a fairly low profile.
are lncrusingly concerned wKh matters
of ethnic pride and language prea~Va ·
lion. Previously . Wolck repo11o , there
was oorne ernbarruoment attached to the
fact that they were . for the most part.
Sldllan . Ala resuk. they were not aD that
c:onc:aned wKh speaking standard Italian .
be sayo.

a-

c...............-

Wolck points out that the Buffalo area
still has a large number ol Canadlail lrn·
migrants or flnt geneRtion Cane·
dlan-Amerlcano (56,985 In 1970. .,.
cording to a 1972 Buffalo Area Charnb«r
ol Commerce .-arch report) . This fact
along wllh tha city's JXOxlrnlly to "an olflclofly bilingual country" wiD be used to
advantage, In llnguisllcs 100.
The Intent II to Nlate (developments
beN) to tha rat ol the U.S . as well as
Canada . One lludent did hll dissertation
on Niagara Foils. Canada, wheN there's
a felrly new French-Canadian population; he adds that the -v large mnch·
Canadian community In neiU'by Weiland .
Ontario, .. -v old, doting bedc lo early
..alen from Qu.bec's ~ Peninsula.
"Wa'N fairly lnteruted In the
hlnlalando-lAdrow8nna ...! Nl8gara
F. .. New York." The latter, he repo11o,
._ a ~ large llallan populotlon. The
Poleo In Buffalo haw "a -v 11rong connactlon with Dftoolt ," Walck adds.
"We1 oloo tal&lt; about !IMdla, radio and
chwd&gt;a," Walck ad
. Reference will
be rnod&lt;t. lOG, to prdrntn.y ftgura from
tha 1980 u.s. Canouo.
Walck plano ln-c:fa. lactww by Invited
authortaa from "ethnic and prof.......,
cornrnunlllel,• lnc:looding flguras In local

The Ptentlce-HaU, Inc.. publishing'
company has released the third edition of
an engineering textbook written by living
H. Shames. a distinguished JXOlessor
here.
The text. Engineering Mechanics:
Statutlcs ond Dynomicl. was published In
Its lint edition In 1958. This and other
texts authored by Dr. Shames ore IN&lt;ing
used In more than 100 Institutions In the
U.S . and abroad.
The SUNY Board ol Trustees conferred the Distinguished Professorship upon
Shames. who joined the U/8 lacuky In
1962. In April of thll year, citing his contributions which Include "an lll&gt;l&gt;f08C/&gt; to
tcKhing certain subjects Which has
~neraf model In engineering

=:::.:.

sNomes Is also the recipient of the
1973 Chancellor's Award for Excellence
In Teaching, a Distinguished Proleuor
Award In 1972 and the Facuky of
Engineering's Teacher of the Year dta·
lion In 1964.

Crofts workeJs
protest prices
The people who work In Crolts Hoff
don 't like the recent Increase In colfee
prices Instituted by Food Service.
The price ol coffee wenl up earlier this
summer from '1:1 cents to .30 lor o small
cup. and from 43 to 50 cents for a large.
Machine colfee acafaled from .20 to
25.
A petition being circulated In Crofts
calls the Increase "exorlJitant and not
ref1ecttve of the current st.ble market
price lor colfee." The Individuals lignl"l!
the petition request thai the "15"' -plus ·
Increase be canceDed.
No way. said Food Service. The price
hike has nothing to do with lhe cost ol
coffee. a Food Service representative told
the Reporlf!r Monday. Price jumps for
sugar. whitener and cups cioused the
ncalalion.

But even ~ you drink It block and bring
your own cup, you 1111 have to pay the
new rate

New coach
Paul Tzlnlais, 21 . has been named
head coach ol women '• vonlty "--ing, a
one -year , part -time appointment .
Ath1dc Olnctor Betty Dlmrnid&lt; an-

nounced thio ......,._

He replace JaM Poland , who resign ·
ad alter 10 ~ as coach.of tha Royals.
Tzlnlorll II a ten1or at U/B rnejorlng In
ec:onorn1co and has COKhod tt.. U/ 8
men's club bowling lelll'n for the put
three ~- Hlt 1979-80 learn won
Watem New York Conference and
ACUI Regional c:harnpionohlpo and was
ranked as high oe 12111 In tiMi nation .

�4

July 31 , 1980

VIEWPOI
SUNY's academic climate -sunny?
EDITOR'S NOTE: The foil_,.
dllclalelootle~Jr-o,..er ....
-~lc

Clllncrtt! ..... ""' , . _ . ,
tl SVNY' ddl..-ed., U/B'e Dr. W..
,.,., H. 1 " ' - ol o C...._,..., tl
~ Foadty,

Nay%. JMO, Ill

.u-,. n - .. """""""' tl ,.
clulfrW~~

The 1980's demand new thinking.
Replaying the 1960 record. no matter
how loud the volume , will noe suffioe.
Clearly there Is ~t polt!nu.l In this
11\11fem of ours but we must act carefully
and with ~t thought to realize II. I
would like to share with !IOU s6me of my
thoughts . .
In many respects, the academic climate
at Buffalo Is not much wane nor better
then thet in our peer Institutions. The
grau on the oCher side of the fence Is
about the oamc shade of ~n .
However. the.ri: are some untquenesMS tn our climate that others seem
to be spared. I' m relaTing most opeclflcal·
1y to the lncrediJie
tn which
- try to funcllon . "Ahny, and our
local campus' readlon to • • Imposes so
many forms, opprovals and processing
steps that I ~ tmpoaible to be
timely. Why must we undergo the ember·
.--mcnt of paying our visitor hls or her
honorarium months after the lllslt, why
do our newly ..,pointed TA's or faculty
have to walt 10 loni for their much need·
ed tnt paycheck, why must our facully
_.., loni for travel ~nt that
lht!y have foivottan the 11'1&gt;. why mull
OUI: suppliers WallO loni to be paid that
oomc now refuM to sell us anything oCher
than~ caoh? The system MCIIII to be Ml
up to be en obolac:lc 11111&gt;. than a
fKilllator. The faculty - more often told
what lht!y can~ do rail&gt;. than given help
tn doing what lht!y need to do.

t.uruuaaex

s.-

polldee . . .'t . . . . Pollcla are sometimes Ml which, while
easy to implement, don't make-·
One with Which I am palnfu~!i;.lliar Is
the policy of the Division of
con·
...,.lng acqullltlon of computer·rdated
equipment on CeRHal Construc:tlon
·Funds ICCFI . Becaute this 11sue 1s 10
MriOus to our sucxet~ , 10 clooe to me per·
aonally, and possiJiy symplornalc of our
pooblm&gt;s, I wanl to take a minute to ex·

plain.
In rec&lt;J!Inl!lon of the rapid obooleocencc tn the dlgltel computer lleld, a
policy had qullc propaiv been Ml to prohl&gt;tt the UJe of CCF furids4or acquisition
of computers for larve central data pro·
Cllllng and general purpote c:omputtng
centers. In recent yurw In the develop·
ment of. Int. mini-computers and , more
NClmtly, mk:iop......,.., - have Men
the COtl and - of computers drop while
~ .... expanded to hig'- and

'"T;'..;""'~ IM&gt;oralory, data must
be acquired and exper1menlt or procontrolcd . In the pall, each piece
of equlpmtnt ttood alone being intemelly
controlcd wtlh lmltcd daU·
capablllty . However , today In

...a.c-

llbcnl&lt;xla
~.
well
•Industry,
the , _ .....
computers
being atcNively u...s 10 control ...
per1mcnta and to rcord ...... In realtime .
The bcnellls ol e. tocbnology 10

-

__
. . . . . _..,. polllnllally be ....,..

our -

"' ._

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

,.._...,

~.,

......

-~·
.
. . . , _ - -v
.. ll6Coallo tw. -

""'*'t_ol......,_

T.......... 636--

HAIUtY .IACII50N
~

....a.~

""'--

IIOIIlJIT f MARL£TT
.IOHH A (1.()VTI[I

-e..

.wa;~'""''IW&gt;"'

Woololr c;loMoo
lENI

~

Uo-..y. Being a thcirough IOit of per·

oon, he ~ about the SUNY
1!/*m. His ,...,.,._ cleahs how -

-..-...

ding studcnlt-1'1 just that In moot ~
lht!y have loladed SUNY primarily for

Second, It Is my exp.itlnoe that the
- *'-I: "Unbtunaaoo!!. """ _ , . . j
great slate u"'-ttlla ol It* ooumry al·
to oonllnn . lha wldapoud bcW ~
tract • sludent populallon from bcpond
academic elida that the compially, lm·
moblllly and .,..._ of ihe SUNY
the bord.n of ihi - · Of ......... .
. IUCIC8IIful now In aar-. out·
buNaucrKv · Is one , of '!;'- major
clnonces o£ parbmence. Whet Is &amp;e· . -.ding out-«- . - - lludcnls.
quendy blamed on SUNY, of ooura,
But I would ... 10 • laaot our four
lhould be piK..t al the door of oCher •
15 pergont out-«SCatc9f'dcs ....
&amp;cbiJng Jn--..1 ........ I c:an't
The quality 01 ow academic c:lrnate Is
r...,.mber anp out-of·statc under·
too often achieved ~ .... of, ...... then
!Pduata student ~ etlgll-'oog .. Buf.
bccauM of, the buNeucracy ~ which we
work. If there _,.. Cllldenco lhal the
falo. I would ... to - this llluallon
hurdles end checks In oomc way ackl to
changed-we wtl be far richer tf - are
the .quality of decisions, I might feel dlf.
Men • aar.c11ve 10 the bcllllr slud-* no
fcnmtly .
tn which lht!y rftidc. After
aD, why should - continue to supply
some ol our bcllllr talettt to the public In·
AUW.of'stitutlons of " " - without at least
Ncxt I would like to dilcull what • might caD the crlols. of trnege-bolh ..
allempllns to oomc of their
studcnlt to SUNY? The net flow Is un·
ochcn- us and .. - ounelvco.
quallonabJy out of,........ then into New
PerhaPs our ~test problem Is thai - 300 mila too far MOt. As I travel Yorlc State.
throughout
the
midwest,
,_the
pride
mous. We ~ c:ollect data at acqulstilon
that the - . of Michigan have in their
~ ... aar.ctllle .........
mtes and at volumes unheard of before.
I am conoemed that wtthout Cli&gt;NCious ·
slate unlYe'llllcs .. The ...... Is true In
We can at diffcnmt times conned the

'*'·

..__,....,....,..many
UJ..... •. ay,
I

Ohio, Indiana, ....... lowe and 10
same smaft general purpose compula to
on,out to California. In New Yorlc, the
many different expertmenlt. ~ 1&gt;etng
private unlverstilcs wem In place before
rcpr&lt;9ammcd , the computer Cl[liii.~
a ~~ variety of needs and thus femaln · the Morrill Ad of 1862 c:rcalld the great
lend-want phllooophy, To the west of us,
productive for many yurw.
prlvalll unlvenlllcs had not aiNady
We have contended that such equip·
atablllhed
a foolhold . Not only had fhe
mcnt should be considered, justlflcd and
budgeted In precioely the ...... mar&gt;.private Institutions In our alrudy
been atablllhed by the mid 1800's, but II
- any oCher laboratory equlpmtnt. In
fact, wtlhout labels on the equipment, Ills
OIIOth. 86 yean before the Scale
Unlvcnlly of New Yorlc ..,. atablllhed
usually lmpoatic to distinguish theM
laboratory computers from the eledronlc
In 1948. Thet have come 10 far
In only 32 ~ Is Indeed r,markeb(e,
clcvlca to which lht!y are conMCIA!d.
~In light of the akcady entrench·
The current policy of the Division of
Budget Is to consider such real lime
ed
prlv&amp;tc · SUNY Is en over·
whelming IUOCCSI with one third of a
monitoring and control computers In the
million studcnlt enrolled on 64 different
same cat.gory as central computing
center machines mlht!r than ·being
campuja. However, - leek the cadre
gJOUpCd wtlh the oCher electronlc com·
of parenlt and oCher role rnodeJ ll&lt;lults
whose persona( allegianco Is to a SUNY
ponenlt of which lht!y are a part.
unit. This Is · particularly true In the
Academic units arc totaly pnvcnted
from acquiring any computing or com·
Un~ Centers which came even
later-the Buflalo Ccnta datb back only
puler related equipment on CCF funds
no matter how justified the acquisition .
18 yeaR.
All too often the outllanding high
ochooi!J'8(1uate Is enoou.._t by family.
" . . . . t.Kiullcal . . . .
friends and oounsclan to go to one of the
This Is a major Issue for technical
"prestigious" schools, en adiactlve which
depaltJMnts such as ours. I personally
too often Is meant to ududc SUNY.
have been attempting to overcome this
And students outside the Stale pracllca(ly
archaic policy for the pall six yean. My
departrrient has a new Human Perfa· never consider our unlvcnlly. Yes, we
have an t,._ problem.
manco Laboratory oystem that Is unsur·
pasoed by any Industrial Eoginceing
department in the country. This suppons
Howtotw.lt.......S
an Internationally-known Human Facton
There •e several things that I would
Englnaring/Ergonomlc:s prowam. It Is
like to - happ.n to tum this situation
wound.
frustrating for our faadly to the
polt!ntlal of this Laboratory eroded by the
Fnt, should yVorously recruit
leek of the computer control wound outstanding undagraduate students.
which the entire Laboratory ..,. dalgn·
Scholonhtp funds - needed for aloca·
ed.
lion slltctly on the bask of merit wllhout
ragMd for nocd. So too do - nocd a
Whereas icwral years 1180 • «My
lllrong campaign 1o Instil in tiMM pollen·
to new Human fec:IQn ~
llal ocholan, and In the general cllllerwy
who could - such phyolca( evidenCe of
of lhe..Staa, the pride that, 1n the Slata
an academic c:lmaae that enoou..... tnt
....., ea.chlr!g ...t .--h. now facully
Unlvcnlty of New Yorlc, there- oppor·
1unllla equal to ""- at the bal . . -.
- looldng ~ where such • problem docs not cxllt. It 11 now dar to
~ the country. If lcholonhlp funds
help us attract oomc ou-..dlng IIIUdcnts
ochcn that the Slate of New Yorlc Is
unyloldlng on this potnt. It Is ...t to wakh
then our tmoogc wtl c::harlg. ., tf.at ochcn
wtl .... UI· OUI. I don't-"' Imply
- begin to " - In the ...,.,wide
oompctlllon for lludcnls, faaalt)l and
that- don't haw a nUITib.r of oulltan·
' - - " funcllr1g wtlh no rdef In IIQht. ...

. . . ..

c:ommttmenl toward ~. or at
least malntalnlng, the quality of our stu·
dent p.&gt;pU)allon, our Dndards could
slip. With a decreasing pool of 18 to
24-ycar-olcls, - will be In lnaeaslng
oompellllon with oCher tnstitutlons for this
traditional population. While oompetlllon
could spur quality, H could also be
dalrucllve tf H leads to false 11&lt;1-.g,
relaxed adm-. and retention llan·
dards, grade lnflalton, soft .......... If this
~bile oonfldcnco will drop and
our
will be ..-baled.
e should attaCk this problem from
two directions. On one hand, we should
seck ways to lncraM our mention
without lowering standards ....
On the oCher hand, - nocd to ....
actively new populations of studanlt. The
non·tradlllonal student must be _ , as
normal, not just a group to be tolerated.
We nocd to after opportunllla for mean·
lngful continuing, tn-.ervlcc and mid·
career education . It Is insufficient for us
simply to IICimH tiMM non·ll;adlllonal
studenlt to our traditional prowams
tcught In tradttlonal ways and a1 traditional limes. Our facully nocd to be open
to teaching In ever&gt;lngs, on ~ or
dwtng Intensive .,......,.. periOds; to
teaching students whose~­
different from the IIIUdcnts we nonnaly
taW; to teaching more bwlependent
study or sma.l group~. We nocd to
create the altitude that what ..,. sue·
caslul in the pall two decada may no
longer be the moot llppiOjWialll.
I have for oomc lime bcon conoemed
wllh Aha larga number of .,.._..
employed by ~ in ..... communities throughout the Stcte-ln
Wadlcld, . - . - , W........ C!&gt;m·
ing, *- Many of theM ....,_. would
bcnGit from .-duale llducallon - would
their cmp(oj.oon. Aaualy. the oppoo1unl·
ty for further education might help ........
come the proWoma ......,.._ In tiMM
smaler loeala "-ntly have In
rcndllng ~'II talent. Unfor·
tunotely, moot of theM
beyond normal CIOIIIIIIUIIng ~ .• .•

·-·----·-.......

Notice

ro.:-.. ..

a-

In accordance with ~ of the lJnJtcd Scaaes federal gov.nment you ·
are hereby noll6ed that no parson In wha- rela~ wtlh SUNYAB' shall
be subiact to clloairn-.. on the bask of 111CC, clhnlc badfaround, national
origin, r•liglon. color, age, MX , c:ondlllon of handicap, or llaiUs •
of
Unttcd Scaaes ~ .-vice. This statement lfPP(Ics 10 prowams and ac:tMtlcs
Nladvc to education and employment wtlhtn this Uni\ICnlty.
Any q - . . or c:omplalnls litvolvtng any of the above should be addrcsecd
to:
Dr. Malcolm 1L ...,..,.
Allrmattve Adlon Ol6ciOr
..
548 Capen Hal

=~260
Phone: 636-2266

�July 31 . 1980

___ ........

• Acaclemlc clhDate
would join wtth the unfwnlly 1o

lollhM 1 -II that- racllcaDy alter

the ~

~-

IOI'IIC

of our lniCNctlon II

Spec:lflcaly, I - thatproytdc a ct.. IChedule that enables

" - remotclv located students to travel

to the campus. I envlolon Intensive

..........S., aay once evay three or four

_ . , coupled with lnteMve one and
'two ...- MIOionl In the .......,.... and In
the January I n - lnak. Thase
would be augmented by student-faculty
Interaction via cone.spondence or
teleplione. Given the Infrequency with
which the student would ec:tually have to
travel to the campus, such a program
could altract students from as far as 150
milesaway....
·

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

co.- .............. ._._

_.,ntee summer consulting opportunities for a new faculty member or
raearch funding, thus encouraging some
of our better PhD's to tab on fac:ullv
roles. Thus indl&lt;slry would be joining with
us to lnsune that - will continue to have
an -nding faculty and thus the long
term quality of OUT academic J1f&lt;91UM
wiD be aosured . There Is much room for a
mutuallv bencllciaJ partnership of in·
dustry and education.
·
,Cooperation II naded also among
disciplines .... Can' - .move from an attitude of comJWII!Ion to one of coopera-

_

............ ........ ....
tion?

~

I believe there ara enormous benefits
that can be ..atlzed, both by students and
faculty, &amp;om a~ degree of cooperation between ~ and the .,.
lla( that COuld be realized with a ~ter
and humanllles. It II c:rtacaUy Important to
fallng of ~ between buolnas
those of us In the _IX?f-. thet there
and aducallon . To compete sucxaoluly
exist a healthy lbiral arts environment.
In the international market place,
After
engineers and ldentlsts must
buslnao and industry nad trained manfirst of aU be 'qtalllled and responsible
the fndls of research, both
dtizens. But we must _realize that
products of our colleges and u - .
engineers don't just make thingo they
So too do they need the "products" of
want to make: rather, they create oolueducation as they improve procluc1Mty
llans to the problems of people . As long
and _solve their energy problems.
as
- expect to travel in automobiles, fly
Tha untvenHy , on the other hand . . In airplanes, have ptctures on televlolon
needs placement for Its graduates,
sets. have permanent prao clothes, etc ..
funding fOI' Its raearch . a. strong lnthere wUI be technology . What l would
dustrtafii()Q,\1/.,Provlcle political clout, in·
like to see woull! be a greater marrt.ge of
ternshlp traiRI!&gt;v opportunities for Its
the arts and humanities and technology.
students.
.
It nads to go both ways. Enginftn clarIt is 1tme that - recognized the muiUal
ly nad a greater understanding and
responsibility- have to each other. Too
respect lor the liberal arts-but also the
often industry has failed to acx:ept a long
liberal arts student needs an awareness of
term commitmen\ to educatlonthe role of technology and ~ who
rnanif-'&gt;9 their concern oolely In wandevelop H. For example, I think students
ling to hire the right !J'aduate now . Too
In aD fields should have an appreciation
many of our faculty , similarly, fad to acof the computer which Is Invading aD
cept any commitment to the succeso of
areas of our lives ....
industry, too often suing such concerns
This interaction , however. needs to be
as "non academic" and thereby Inapbetween ao -11 as within our institutions.
propriate to the university ....
I. for one, would like to see, for example,
more 3-2 programs where students
a...tlta to boda ~
spend three yearo In a li&gt;eral arts progra,m
An opm mlnd oould devise d.,._. of
before tranSferring to U/8 for thelr
wayo for better unlverolty-lnduslry
spedalized engineering training.
cooperatton . Some that come to mind
I am convinced that the SUNY oysl&amp;m ,
are the benefits to both partlu ~ industry
of which - are eaCh vltallv a part, lo a
would fund research efforts and
university· of great potential. It has been
laboratory equipment. The improved
my altempt to Identify specific areas that
capabllltla of the unlversily benefit inwe might addrao to further Improve oUt
dustry by thC quality of s:uates and
acadell)ic climate oo that we might better
by the expertise of fac:u
and their
achieve the highest potential of our in·
laboratories to attack
industrial
divklual lnstltullans and the larger SUNY
problems.
system . I pledge my enthusiastic suport.
Industry could be helpful in Identifying
-w-H. .....__
potential ~ts In their employ who
~
T~....,.__
could benefit from a college education
.
U/8
but who have never seen any reason to
go. So too could industry fund scholarohips to enable the best students to C817Y
Dr. Stephen C . Dunnett, director of
out their studla.
the lntenslv!t Englioh languag. Institute.
On the other hand, a would benefit
has
been selected to _.,.. on the Slete
themselves as well at Ul ~ thay would
Unlversily of New Yen's China
tab some raponolbillly for the qualty of
dlnallng Comml!la by SUNY Chanoolo&lt;
our faculties .... Industry often salarln to
Clifton R. Wharton, Jr.
our new PhD's that an so hlgh that The first meeting of the c:ommlltee wiD
an loolng our bat !Pduates from a
convene in the fall of 1980.
tuchlng car-... . !&gt;ern.p. industry
Concern for the non-traditional
students loads me to consider the potcn·

an,,

-

Bikeway gets backing
heW

II,Ealll!H.~

to them personaDy: One staff
member said, "I would be lor It, because I
think It would help a lot of students." A
graduate student otated, "In general I
think lt'o a fantastic Idea ," and expressed
the hope that bikewayo would extend to
hlo neighborhood in the Town ol
Tonawanda: " I would like 10 take advan. _ ~that, too, when there~ oomethlng

Oepertmcnt of Tranrportallan's proposal
1o build a bicyda path connecting the
Main StrHI Campus wllh the Amherst
Campus of the Unlversily. An lnfcwmal
survey conducted In the c:efeterla of Nor·

safe.

"'TMI would be great." " /lj. very good
Ida ." "A grut Ida ." "A noAIIu wonderful thing." "A fantastic lei~ "I dOn't
know how helpful ltwould be"to me pereonaly. but I would support H." "'h, my
God, I wllh there was a bike path,"
n- were among the reactions of
people on campus to the New Vorl&lt; Slate

Hal showed a considerable degra of
enthusil¥0 fo&lt; the project, even among
penon~ who do not opec~ to use the
. . _ y. It sams that at preMnt few
people blcvcle to the Amhent campus on
a twgular buk. Not one of~ lnter\llewed doa 00 . Out of 30 peao!ll q .......
lloned. onlv ocven have even tried it.
When ulced if she had """' bicyded to
IDn

the

AmMnl campus,

one

student

- . d. "Once. but I . almost got
....d ." Her concern with Sllfety was
shared by many. Support lor the bikeway
-mo to rest primarily on the beW thet It
would mMc bk:yclng bet-.. c:ampuMS
much Mlet. As one woman lludent said ,
'1 tlmk I would be a rallv wonderful
lhlng. Maybe If It - - .... to 111M ~
lllce here , """"- I would mon often.

Tha 30 persons lnter\llewed included
17 u~uate students, six graduate
students, four Unlveuity sWf memben.
011f employee of a
Involved in
- campus c:onslrudlon, and two visitors
(the son of a student and a recent law
graduate studying for the ber examina llan) . Just over half were male. Of this
sample, inter\llewed during July 1980,
' 18 (60'1.) were -aDyfavorablotJo the
project, two expraMCI mbted falings ,
two e&gt;q&gt;reaed ._live .feeHngs, and
eight showed little or 1&gt;0 Interest In the
subject.

-

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

When ..... wlwthe a bicyda path
" " ' - ' the two ~ Would be
hclplulto them ~- 12 of thooc
In~~ olllr1naCiwly. AI of
them .... In 8uftlilo or· ~ ~­
S!Inder tedlon of the Town oiAmhent,
"""' the meJoorllll ....... In Na.th Buft.lo. Of ... 16 .,.._,. Who .... In that
- · 75 {*' c;ent Mid that they would
. . . . . ........., 01

Jll')bablv -

the

~- F1w of lhem do not own
llqdoS, but two akudy ..... lo obUin
blcydeo, two
~ them II a
~ - . built, and one would bor- a blq,de. An older woman oludcnl
Mid, '11 theN one Ia blcewevl. I
buv a . . .. Bull don'_.. 10 111M

~~~~~-

14o«ofthooc~-ln­

llhldalla. 8ul .,
olcs. - .....,lin
· ~by
a buldlng con...,.,.
eamput _..._.,.. ,
cMdrnd, "'I would be hallplul. ll--.1

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

1o ~raw~ and

""'monev -IIQIIt. rd get

ldd'• ........... .... bltvc:lo
out-·I don't he - .-...· The·
of .._ who do not apect 10

... ' * - .... •

---m

c:onMerablot

&amp;om both~
lor the project. . . - ! " ' _ . . o f tt....io who ...

... '*Ide

a•

.......Wnotbe~

,

60 ... c . t - fa-.ble

con-

Wloo'll-.;iltl
The

negative

feelings

reflected

legitimate concems. A campus pollee of-

fleer asked , 'Who would r.lalntain liT A
student who wort.. as a truck driver felt
that the blteway would be "hhndrous (lkl

lo me. 0rMng a truck ('U Nn a few of
~ (bicycla) over some day." Among
~ who thought • might be helpful to
them, two cxp-aMCI mbted leelings. ~
~ .....

and

.......

Dunnett on panel

c.--

Softball results .

liudcnt ....... usualy drives to

campus and wlaha "" owned a bicycle
said, '11 they did It wd. I couldn '1- H as '

being non-helpful. H they did It poorly, M
would got In the w.y ~ motorilll." He
ad&lt;Md. 1'hay thoulcl ho!ve kind of

&lt;o.- thnl ~ 24)

cool off."

Oenllllry 4
Student Allain 14

at...- fdtles out
An

here for people to

undergraduate ,

when

asked
bicyded to the

wlwthe she had Amhent caq&gt;US. clod.ted dramallcaly,
'1 thlnlc I would dic- 11'1 too far from my
houM, And I don' 111M M (the· ~I
that afton, oo I would be ~~tenuous. But

liMn ot. -..od the In~ • ..,. thae.
bleydrr IOIId here?" When lold of the
DOT praposal, sbe Mid that 1 would be
helplul to her. A bikeway might load to
changoo In~.

On the ...... of thtl lrrlir.d ...-vcy, II
-~that asyllan of '*!de paths
~ the Bulfalo .-..would ccm-..fwide liiiPPCJII among lludcnts and
~of the u.-y. As one 1111·
c1oerrt iraplalned, "ThM £the ~I
be ..,... That II one of the main
" - - people don' lllce ...und Buf·
t.lo. w. don' lo got k-.d r1dlng In

the ......

~~ Soft~~.~

'-lue R....ata

Pro Staff Senate 3
Health Related Profetliono 12
Malnl.enance 14
Public Affairs 10
Studant Alloclallan~'• KJowns • ppd. (damp groundo)

~

W

L

3

0

Malntena.-

2

1

Oenllllry

2

.2

I

2

Student Alloclallan

Student AffU. .

3

Pro SUrlf Sanata
Kette's KJowns
Health Relaled Pro
Pubic Allah

1

I · 2
1
3
0

FROM 1HE LEAGUE eFFICE:

4

(Good tpeed and egllity.Quick)
(lncluda tome r1ngers)
(Solid and young)
(Peppy, pesky and has depth)
(Solid c:llizef!l. Stable)
(Tallng off ahor AI·Sier brokl
(Talented and oound)
(Sporllmanship and better than
rec:r;lldl

�•Here'

July 31 , 1980

~led--- Unit

you

· .et.schedule
for the fall

to measure your 'Big Band' quotient

The ~

.__forthaW..,..., Joh.

&amp; . w.n.lft, the t.dllly's founcle and

___ a.a...a-

..................... ..............t.

_ _ _ C.So &lt;
,..,....,
--· D....... ,.,_

On T..-Mv, ~ 16 .t2 p .m.,
Dr. R.-1 5k&gt;ne ol the l&gt;olllal Science

___ Es-t...._.

~ wtl Jive • leduN on
"AIMIDn . , _ In Nddle E:.l

___ F.c--

__ ,H.,_..,_
___
......

_ _ G. ~tl/,._.

..
_ _ _ IC. Trw..,... Y• s-.4 F•
)L
1'-t..,
1'-t
___ • . a.......
- 1.~,.,...

~~~~

__ Q.-

""**

s.~

___ T.c.ra-

ANSWERS: 1-/11, I ·K. 3-L. 4-5. 5-P. 6-0, 7·N, &amp;-Q, IJ..T, 1o-F, U-E. JI-B,
13-C, 14-H, 15-G, 16-D, 17-ll, 18-A. 1fol, and 1.0-1.

BONUS #IIATCH- FOR THOSE W1J1f AN EXCEUENT BIG BAND
MEMORY JRACIC, #IIATOI THE u;.,r,DER WlTH HIS VOCAUST(a)
_ _ _ A. Dld: -H-/Hdftt Fanat
_ _ _ B. Sanall Vaug~ Ecbtlrte
- - - C. E1Jo FIDfle'ald
_ _ _ D. Bob ~ekrt O'Coot""ll
- - - £. Prny Como
_ _ _ F. IWy Berfe/Morion Hutlotl/ Tu
Bmeb

--G.,._,_
_ _ _ H . .lode

7. Hany .lonta
B. ChickWdh

~rank

Sinatra

.lo~Pipen

ANSWERS: 1·H, Z·£. 3-F. f-G. 5-D. 6-B, 7·A. and 8-c.

Roclcy. It's ful value. as a production
piece, however, received little attenllon
from record .._... In Pf'91UTIInlng
rwlio outlm.

11w•mnn_.ra . . . . . . .
There would be more liw bends In e&lt;:·
lion , localv. If the econornla ol the
busiMu wae more worlcable for spon·
lOring_.-,., clubo or rooms. Billy
M.y out ol LA In 1952. ' - bend In
the l.nd .t thai lime, got $3,200 for a
night's sllond. Hal the ~ might show
up for thal-&amp;gur. loclay.
On 1hat Kenton night In

Fah, .. .I silo\lid until the end. When Stan
.....Joed bed. .., the bu. (ohufllod rullv
wllh ...........). Ions ol muolc and
memoria got abo.rcl wllh him. For 11\e
final lime .
To opur 11-. memoria, pluM find
anolhor match ICIIon to end the sum·
mer. The lnlllal big bend quiz (match)
(Reporter,

,..SG

as

UlW

1000 M .SI

-

-...-.

(llloooc.-t

......

lon,

INO

FAM

IHO.

FAM

M216

$13.45

10.00 13 90

10.00

13.65

f.()C)S8.

.

1

Lolt T--l!iod*"'*Y. R-oo:l7.

-

s--,-~ . R-0038.
- T.... -~ Sdonoo, R-0039.

~CIVIL ..viCE
T....t SG·S-Untvonlty Ubml01 CTS·
~O.,O. C2l . "2ltiS36ond"26342: '--·

~

13 25 $11.51

_,_--High.
. F-0056.

---~~&amp;tuao&gt;

F-00!17.

IIEIEAIK:H

.....

CCSEAI

STATEWIDE PLAN

JOBS

~·

"-"'l e-I.

FAM

s.m.

--~·HumonS. ·

--

...

INO

mlllees.

In acldltlon to Its own progi'llftll, the
Center has been used by the Personnel
Department for-pre-rcttremcnl planning
-..s. by the Weslem N- York Pre-'
r - t Planning Aaaoclallon and by
the U/8 Alumni Asaoclallon' a;;J Univer1
slly .Women's Club .
The cummt members ol the Emeritus
Center executive comm- we: Mn.•
Anlonlna S. Vella , chairman ; Dr. Harold
Brody; Mr. Roger Smith; Dr. Nicholas!
Kloh ; Mr. Charles Fogel; Mn. Ntna
Trellok-Shlelds; Mn. A. Homburger;
Mn. Florence Bender; Mn. Jamas
and Ms. Harold Shook.

FACU.TY

c:ovcr-

13 25 $12 12

and the Unlverilly, wllh which many ol
tt.n have been _,.u,led for decades.
Ms. Welnstioln noled that while allen,
danca at !Mdngl.- from k&gt;
good, the Ccntor has alilbllshad • """"
Of loyal and lntcrated ..gular manben
who allend I!Yenll and on Its com·

-

Elfccllw wllh the ~received on Wednesday. 7/16/8/J. rates lor
health lnsuranca
changed for N. V. Slate eme~oYea . The new b4·
weekly rates (payrol deductions) are as follows :

HEAL'IH CARE
1'\.AN tiMOI

v.- It-..,.

events olin- k&gt; tt.n.
as
a way to ollcr a ~c:em.rollden·
llflcallon and contacl ~ . -

an eclvanc:ed COWMin more ol the-·
maybe ..,.... decuJt "'*'-· but ~
memories . Whether you like
swing, . ~ or Mlcby
MeuM, J1'\llke a malch.

....... . _ _ . Roo.. ~

-

~c-.- founded In 1975
. . . place NIINd members ol the facully
and rllllf and their ....,._.could uae for
- . g . and for
~and

Dec. 13)- 88 101. Here is

...._. _
N._.

Bu1181o;

on T.....S.V, ~ 9, lit 1:30

p.m. , Ms . . . ~ Buet. .... .,. •
concart ol . and ......

- - B. Doooo8e r - ,._
___

J. Tommy ()or_,
2.TetiW«tU

E-*"; · T....t.v. o.:.ot. 14, .t 2
p.m., Dr. Anna K. Frence and Ms.
Ellal*ll . Holt a.-n will perform
and . . . . from Shaloelpaow;
~ 6, • 2, Adina .
o.n
Pta ol An:~-... and
Environmental Dalgn will dlecuss
~ ..............111n

- - - N. " - ' . . ,
_ _ _ O. NWofT.....
- - - p; C«ww R-f

3. Glenn Miller
4. &amp;My Goodman
5. Jimmy ()or_,
6. &amp;rf""-

c.- locMid In tt.r·

.... tW ....... Slr..t ... edwduW

_ _ _ A.Y______ A,_,

. INO

FAM.

13.25 11212

-a.
--.........
fiG.5--... "2M22; Olvi·

oily....,._ CTS-Selok
0..,0.. - "30678.
-·
so..-~.

-

ol

Contlnuine ~- '2lli002: ~

~ . "25174 .

10.00

MSI

&amp; . Cork ........ SG-7- P'¥01. "30667.

H..... Tech. SG-t-Oral Patholotw.
'%7447

·- -~---...... '27956; Hoallll
Ed-..cetioft PTolations. '27649; Penonnel,
"29113

=

s. . -a..l(l.J--~

.y ....... '30781

c 151
-. ...-40462,
- SG-11
oe- 32239"""
·-32221, 32229.
......... -- a. SG-14-Gotwal ........

-........ "303211•

• . ,.,....SG-7--. '24119.

~CMLIDYICE

..__, c--.

SG--4-F.n...

10,

."21249

More lnformallon on )obi Is ove.llaiM
on oelocwd buldln booords around cam·
puo ond from the Ptii'IOI'Incl Olflcc

�..,........,_.,.,...~

-

works.
Hclwy

-~al

..

s.-. ....... ...........
...... ..._In
............,.,.._,
.............

AU/8 ........ "--....Ianellonlll _..t ... furdw .. . . - d l -

...-ylllodry

s. s-..n. -.c:iale ~

al ~ .......... pleno IDfocuo
on the argumentative strategies
developed and UMd by German
pi ........... G.W.F . . . ..

-

Hlo

., . . Nabll Noa for ............

llllldv.

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

pealod, and,.how

phlloaophtc.l operations beeotraooafoomad -lllodry f9-.• He ...

....... the lludy - • · - al
=~the clevelopNn of modem

s.-n.n looks .. "-"• enlgmalk:
Dr.
grant &amp;om the
and cllvewlflod
mellpbon
Neaon.l Endowment for the Humanllla, • and ad.- ftgurea alapaec:h, or"'-· •
which C8lriOa a allpcnd al $18,218. will belnt "aJmo.t the wound ndes tor
INc him from leaching dulla for the OM·
modem lilenlure.•
"HeveJ's olrudures af _ . - , • K·
period beginning Scpliember 1 and
ending August 31, 1981.
c:ordlnil to Suaman, .,_._ mocWo lor
The argumentative procedures
literary wrllen, resulllng In • rldlinlerplay
~ by Georg Wllhelm Friedrich
between philosophical dloc:oma and
.
Hegel unG-18311. Su.man aplalned, ~~mature . "
are exnmely evident In the wooka of
Sussman, who has been studying the
such wr~~eno · aa Jamaa J¥C, Soren .Influence al Hegelian phJiosophy on
Klorbgurd, Sigmund Freud, Marcel
literature for
yean, said his
Proust and William Buder Yeats, 1923 reaeareh ,..m wtll take him to Europe .

_.men_

s.-n.n·. -.:n

sevaal

•Calendar
..__
.. -..,

IIW&gt;d, l.lllloJoolvlnHYC. «.)Mdthoft...._lilo

........

-·
""'-"'
\lllo. One.,""'-~·
noed
Port
Ito ..-..t

-.

no&lt;'-_.

-

Port D

Taeeday-12
1\JESDAY NnE LI\IE'

--- ~--Squh.

7 p m. In .,_ d - · llw ~ .... UUAII.

Room Frw

PEDIATmC GIIAND IIOUNOS•

eo.-aldoolo.ona, Or.L. Gined
l&lt;lndi,_, Otiwn'o . . . . . llo.m

Thursday - 14
UUAIIFUI'

UUAIIFIUI'

/

Squh.

-,._,__,.
___33-.__
-

119751. Dorm ond - .
·
4. 6:30""" 9
o . - . 1 - $2.10; suo

ftldon. CoNor.noo -

p ..

Frlday-22

-

..... 0 11974), Conf...,..od·

Squire. 3::10 .-1 7:30 p.m. Gone.!

U . IO: -.S1.60.

A "'Mhlnd·tN...ctna.. look at a beauty

.,

"'Phonon

...-v..... - -- .. . , . -......

::'!.I':::

::!::~!':.::~.!".

Tlaanday-28

Football bargain

PEDIA'IIIICS -.viOl SEIUNAII•
GoNokaai-~O.. FNd S .

R-...

tblol d Immunology OMolon . Tlw
Otiwn'• ....... Sdloal.- Room. Otiwn'• ........

_ __

F.,Way-1.5

Conlor. -

12 noon

I'IDIA1111C GaAND ~·

, . _ . . . _ ~: MurroyY. ..

,_...,...._,
"' .MD_,
.__, dndar:Rholngold . ...
Frlday-29
oldl'lonnodP.-I&lt;Indl,._,
a..tr.n·s Halpll.l. 11 a.m

PEDIA1111C GIIAND IIOU8IS•

UUAIINM'

S ~ . "--d .
~. u

_ . , Stoeo*

...

119751. Dono """ - .
· CoNor.noo · Squh
4, I
6:30"""
P'"
Gon.oi-UIO.
- . .S
6 0. 9

0. flood
l&lt;lndl ....-..... Chlclroft's

Notleee

-CEXIEII-- =

What single event brings together for the rnos1 talented U/B team yet
6 ,000 m£mbers of the University Com- 10981nst the toughaltlote oflnlerMdional
munity in a common cause?
foes, ·- are offering you two options If
Verslty Footbal at Rawy Field on !he ~'b:.:'vantage of !he JpOCial offer
Main Street Campus!
What better way to spend a a1sp fal
1. A Regular Reserved Seat Season
afternoon than with your friends , old and
new, enjoying the excitement generated Ticket thet sells for $14.00 Is being of.
by the 8ulls, ihe U/B a-leaders, the lered to the faeulty and staff for $13.00.
color and pagunlr)l of college loolbal?
2. A Genaal Admission Seat Season
You ean share In that cxpalenc:e on
five Saturdays In 1980 at JpOCial ticket Ticket that sells for $10.00. Is being of.
r.ta. To allow you to show your support fered to the fac:ulty and staff for $9.00
REMEMBER -YOU MUST PURCHASE.lltE t1CK£T PACKAGE
OF YOUR OtOICE PRIOR TO AUGUST !9. 1910

..........

. - ~ ~ Rd.l . Solunlo,l. 5
. ..... Suftdov, 10.30"""
~

' Frlllotl. 8:30.-1 -

· .......... .....-. ........
- o o l l - 2 1 2 3.
.
-5o.~ (IS 1-.oy Aw .l · Sun·
do!~. 9.30 """ 11 1134-2297

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

. . ..

*I
~-­

Saturday - 16

Pn'OIOLOGY W

'

UUAIINM'
, _ .._ Ill ~. I
1'10
MFAC.Eaoo&amp;. 4.6:10_,9pa. Gon.ol-.

~-­

.. _____
--.-~-&amp;m
Frillotl ..... _.._.

-.....-·---·.............
._
..
.. _...._.._
-..
·---

l -.

ooiiiDI~I-10.-15. ~-..,

YB.LOW_,--AL
.,..""'
,...,....,.._...........,._"""_
--~~~----~-,_,.......,......,..
.... _,..-. v_._.
.. _ _ _ , ....
-

S2 1 0 : - S1 10.

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

...._

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

p _a

1)-.Hy at Bo6lo Special
Faculty and Scalf
Footbell Ticket Onle&lt;

s.-

1980 HO~ SCHEDUl£
Sepaember 10 • 1:30 p.m.
Sepeember r7 - 1:30 _p.m.
October II
- 1:30 p.m.
N-w I
- 1:00 p .m.
N - ' - 15 - 1:00 p .m .
Simply fill out the application '"-low:

.-15

Enter number of tickets you wish to purehaae
RESERVED GEN . ADMISSION

, IDI.f721i. ~·-~----·

$13.00

~-

$9.00

AMOUNT

Add $.50 for poot.1go and t..ndlinj

$.50
TOTAL

UUAIII'UI"
-

MF
-

PluM encbe checio or money order.
Maloe checks pay.bll to: U/.S Foundation, Inc. (FOOTBAU.)
Mall to: Mr. Arthur Walphall, Ticket Manager, Room 113 Clark Hal,
SUNY/Buffalo, Buffalo 14214
AI horne goma are played on Roeovy Field. Main Sired C.rnp~~~. ·
FREE PARKING., . '

Ill U... I
1'10
-•. 6:JOOftlll••~1 . -SiiO

Oan..Air
M.YI

-- ....

_.,_a..-_._.,
- •
.....
--.
-~~~~-

c;
....
-..,._,
_
_

~c-.nct

'

------------------------------------

~
ADOR£SS
aTY

--------------- STATE ---- ZIP-----

�•
Godfather U

the........,.. .......

Robert DeNiro t. tba ~ VIla Car'-'e lll
of God-

fatiMr D which dDees UUAB'a....,. ~.,. """""' 11 ....S ZZ.
Foryour~ al-lor

the rauolndu of the IJsted In today'• Calendar-

are

CALE DA

w.cta..day. 6

DNICE a SONGS FIIOM U#NC "
. . _ Folo s..., · ...... I&lt;Hie&gt;Roam . Ellcact. 7 p .m. Slngor AUio
bo
..,.,.,._- "" ~ Uiod. A d - ......
s,...-.d bv tho Coundl on 1 - 5ludlos
Fot more ~ . cal Tabko Michl. coor·
....... • " - ' - l'&gt;ogrom. 636-2075

a-.,.

- v.. - v..

~,....-

(1977} eon.......
3. 5.45 ond 8 30 p m

n.Jbould---·-··--

n -. 5coo*e
.. s-- ............... blebond ... _
Uoo -

~ o.Noo. -

ond

-....ono~M.yKo,rPiooo

......... .. . .. ~ ....- -

Uonol
-·ond·
........

a. -

""

o.r.t.
Nur
the ROM c;.d.tn . O...W..
ParkC.mpbd.
ll p .m Ft.
Pmontodt.,tho~oln-t.c

V

you_,..................... ..............
I

liw tlno- -...!. &lt;*I&gt; I

- I H n t E P -"

n.-"'-·-.. ......- ........
·_,. .
.,.__., ....
llw- -

.. - o.to...
"" o.r.t.
Gonloso.
1'01\Caropbd
8 p m n.

- " " " " ' l:lopomnm ol '"-'"

lend _....

., ""' -........
1dnd
ol """"""'
...........
o.. -.
bullhc

.._..

UUM -IIIUIICAL DOUaE FEAlUIE '
0.. thc T119491: Tile - - U9Sll

170 MFAC. Ellcact 4 ond 8 p '"· Gcnor.t-.
-$2. 10: - . . . $1.60

•n In·

-lhc
.... . - ... _.. ~.......
~-c--

-~
....... . . . t _
l_
....
_ _ .,....._ ..........
., o
.....
Koly.

-.
.
,
.
o-.t.-.-•

- - .-.. ....I ....- ... -..
Nftl~. -

"-ossl&gt;

Ao.-10
tlldwdW.,.•Richosd .lomoJMcG.ih•

ve.o..w- ..

Kov ..... o..ctw. ol
Ye. E _ P _ • - . . .. andMsri.

... Qo.on -

~---

IJUM(Ift]f _ _ _

..... .._Sip... ........... 73Dp ..

0.. the TSlonloy eo-.. -

-

they meet e.r,.. f11r11 end •.

"''I'• e...t..ncr. inwn·

..... -

- - . 1&lt;1.- CoiHmlco
p .... Spoo-.d "" tho

n. ". . . .

· .._. Ptodud!YII!I CcniJo.

Clly; and Jojl w_._,o.c.

Idol ..... -

•.-

- I N 1 1 e P -·

- .. -""Doni.

. ... -

Gosdin.

_ b v ...

o.to...

POl\.Compbol.
I p.m. Rw

~oln-.

-Engllslol.o--.

-IHntEPAD'

- - (19731. -......~~m~ - . Eo!&lt;

a..-&gt;andi'.-T-.~ n-... .

Squn. 8 p.m.

n. -

·

..«&gt;&gt;LlJ::=:::.·~=.::
=
. - - .. . .....,. ...........
~oltho

_

_

'-----·----CU.JUIAL~- -

~ - li:Fioo
""
a......10 30 ....
Spooo__,bvlhoU/11_..__,.._

.- - u•

-

~andn.o...to

-lllntEPAD'

I'

_IOJ_
_

...., _

u

lho- -

1 0 : - suo

.. "" DoNit
Gonloso.
OolooiooN
1'01\Compbol.I p ot. flM

-""""'~"'-

~---·~­

T r - Dr. Emcnucl Lcloonthol. Klneh
AudMortura. CNdren's Holplel. 11 Lm.
UUM ......
Tul . , _ 119761.

~

Sqotrc. 4. 6:30 ond 9 p .m . -

, _,
-

$2.10: - $ 1 .60.

-INIHEPAD'
•• "" Donk
Compbd.
tho- R- Gonloso.
o.to...
1'01\.
8 p .m. F-.

UUM,._..
~ (Englond,

.._._..,._

19661.

~-

5. 7 and 9 p.m. Gcnorol- 12.10:--• I
11.60.
Oloodod bv R - PolonJid, ~
Donouw, ton HondJy ond w,m.ll . A

_ . __

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

... - f a r a n d - - - -·
TfiiJIJ-· ... bllllh~- ...

ll oClooMGo!Fal......,ol-••1111 ......
odt.,-~·'*''·

.

_._....._.t.,Dosoll~ . ­

- ....

bvtho . ,.. _
.._
Gonion,
..-, _ · I p_.... flM.

............
27. 1n-O&gt;tho
......... and. . . ..........
tho ...

Saaday;.3
UUM- Mulac:A&amp;. DOUaE FEAlUIE'
0.. . . T_ 119491. Tile - - 119531.
1'1'11 MfAC. · 4 and I p .IO Goncul-

'PEDIADICa.AND--•
""""""·

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�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>The 80s are the decade of the student,
and U I B has. to move fast, ~en panel says
A rnassM&lt; lo~m report on U/ 8 ad mission• and recruiting processes clr·
culated this wuk calls for "signHtcantly
more attention" to student recruitment

a nd retention on the part of.all conceme.d
with the University, and for an end to "Internal dissensions and disputes" which
find various offices on campus pushing
lor their own , rather than students
Interests.
.
T he 1980s must be the :·- decade ."
rather than the "me decade ." as lor as
Unlve~ity offices ore coocemed . the
report of the Committee to Study Operational Processes (The Jen Commi«ee)
urges. There's optimism that senk&gt;r ad ministrators. faculty and stall "have both
the will and the ability to meet this
challenge In a most determined and successful manner_··
The "stoke lor U/ 8 In this endeavor in
the 19805 and 1990s os very high ," the
report notes. "Success .. will help U/ B
maintain its momentum r~me an excellent education lnstHution foUure .. will
lead to contraction In budgets. functions .
and pr05pects. These controctlons will
most probably also lead to o significant
and permanent deterto.otlon ol U/ B"s
stature as a major pubhc university in the
natk&gt;n and In the state."
Students, in short . are the name of the
game

We're 'late' realizing It!
U/B Is late In realizing this. the report
notes, and the Impending shrinkage of
the college age pool wiD not allow "any
room for mistake ...
So vita1ls the pressure . summarius the
report. thai '11 1:1 better llO'M to ~r ­
defJO~ efforts to student r-ecruiting and

retention through the Improvement ol
recruiting processes, academic programs.
student life and support service
programs "
.
To put ot "bbuntly." the report ollorms.
administrators, fBCuky and staff have to
renounce the idea that there's .. no time to
meet 5tudent needs ••
The 18-membeT Comml«ee chaored by
Prof. Frank Jen of Management . was
charged by President Ke«er In February

Program with 'Eubi·e '
wins prize for FM 88

*'

1979 with analyZing all aspects of the student admission and enrollment systems
o4 the University so the Institution can
prepare ltseH lor the anticipated dechne m
the pool o4 traditional college-age youth
The task was divided In two. I admissions and recruiting. and 2 . the
enrollment system (including a syS1em for
forecasting enrollment)
The two and one-hall pounds of
reports being circulated now are the result
of phase one. [The overall Interim report
Is accompanied by seven task Ioree
reports on specHic issues .)
The interim report looks at enrollment
trends .here. and analrze5 and evaluates
current processes o admissions and
recruitment before coming up with 30
pages of recommendations for ad·
ministrative and faculty action . Further
work for .phase two of the committee's
deliberations Is also outlined .
The vanishing of excess demand for
higher education . the mas ive Invasion of
non -educotionallnstotu llonsln the field ol
continuing education . shrinking JOb opportunities lor Ph .D.'s. and "limited at tention" paid to student needs by U/ B
faculty and staff have·coused the insUtu tion ''for the first lime to face enrollment
problems Uke many other respected
pubUc and private universities. ·• the
report notes .

An- ball game
· Add that to the fact that SUNY
budgets are enrollment-driven and that
fiscal hard times ore the order of the day
· and it's a brand new ball game. the committee: says. Among even the "most
respected universities, .. a new com~
tion lor students Is unavoidable.
Many instilulions are devising more ef·
ficient and effective ways to send out information and attract students . New
academic and student life programs are
being mounted And "d~ facto price cutting" by private universities (through
scholarship and federal and state grantsIn-old) is foreseen
U/ B has to keep pace
How?
• ... ·~·· ·a ..,.n: ...,. a. coL s

residual honor for Hunt, a jazz pianist and
one o4 the clly'o most enthusiastic jaZz

promotero.
Hunt, who managed to snag an interview wtlh Blake In Toronto, dtuthe personal salilfactiOn galned from the expctlence.

u..---.-'tw

Some juzy 11'1"'" from 97 -yar-old
- . . . . - plallill Eubio

aw...... aired In

1979 on Nation.! l'lllllc Radio'• Op6ono
program. The lhow, "A eon-..uon
INiih Euble Blake.. procluced and
'-'-! by John H. Hunt, dlnclor d jaZz
provrlllllll'ling fer FM
IWBFOI , U/ 8 's
pubic
~.
.-.dlo -Hunl't· production won a

t.oc.l R.dio A.-I , _
Cooporation
for Plllbllc Bo~ Hit eX
lhows llllectood from 400
-' - -·- • - t h e naaon.l
~.
--.1 -only a

"I wulnloroiStecf In Eub;. u a musician
and would haw gone to Toronto jUIIIo
-him . For me h wulfkc medng royalty," h e - . addWig that Blake - . key
flgUTe tn
dewloprn«nt &lt;X Harlem
olrlde plano, In whlc:h the right hand j:&gt;!Ays
the melody, the left a "roang" be..
Early In 197 , when the Broadway
mutlcal "Euble" was only In the taldng
~~ages, Hunt, u Buffalo connpondent
lor Dooonbeol magazine, ..... Invited 10
Toronto by proc~uccn
the -x~y
CHO-t -JV jazz ahow "P«ter Appleyacd
Pl-. " to watch Blake tapa a program.
"I aoked II I could bring a . _ ~
and~ MY hdo 10 Euble. Thafa
al" Toronto procluccra - . ~~grHable,
but empbulaod thet Hunt would haw to
....., hit commmts brlft, thet Eubio
r-*1
The ln~CN~ew, they ln*ed .
could only lui 5 lo I 0
To Hunl'o IIWprloc, Blake td&lt;ed lor a

·w

m

...,u

, hit wonk~
lor1h ....
d rm Juot
Wid About
•• "The 8lrtwoocl Rag ,"
or numa-ouo oct... COfiiPOIIIIont
B!!
, o4 COUrM. Hunt had
ueady watct..d !llak go ttwoo..gh four
.......,.,..,. 4S ~

· -

· -~.-1.1

Th• louraom drank a 1 1 to the
, hot ....,ather at th
mmeoot, Friclay. S.... other plcn""· pa 4.

�l

doily 24, 1980

. ....·

---··-·

no ~ In 8lolr.e'a profeaaion
.._In any oil.. ... of work. in fact, the

'*"" ........

._.of .............
of the tlmli. ., dan't .,_, how . . to
daalbe hta Mndl ...,. to -v thev

......,. neglect of Blaloa'a mualc until re·
cent mey be ~ more to
......,..., fal from laahlon than any . - I
cooll6derellou. R.gllme ..ached Ill peak
around 1915, !Mer ......-glng Into Jazz- Its

. . a bebv'•· t...a hood C&lt;JIIIIIIdo
oonlrol ........ .,._, plooytng. w

n._.
.. ..
So-""- a

main........, - a allglit rhythmic: complexlly which produced simple effects of

dlgnlled 8IMe llloled In
ann.! In a amolcing
jKbl (he pulh unflllend Camela), Hunt
- ' t -.1\1 t.lum llbldt by an obvtouaij,ln-conlrol ~.
Thought H.n: 1llia guy'a on fire ."
a.dt In Bulfalo, Hunt took the
45--mlnut. tapa he hood made wilt&amp; Ed
Smith (an FM 88 aWfer and U/8 Black
Sludiea fKIII!y mcmbor who had accompanied Hunt to Toronto) , and liNd li as a
bella for the "'Con11U18tlon" I'I09'll"' .
Hunt promptly got hold of old and new
recardlnga £rom Blab'• rec:Ord company,
along wtlh RDnlnloclng IIIIth Slale and
Blab, a book put out by Blake's own
publlahing company. Hunt wori&lt;ed Into
the .,_ houn one night making a rough
cut; another llx houn were spent in ·pro-

fVO!COPIItlon, according to the Harvmd

for the -

duction.
The ruult Is a laadnating glimpse of
Euble BW&lt;e: hla lllruggla In early
vaudt!llllle, the ever-present racism of the
dme, fMndshlpo with the blggla In jazz
plano, hla lmporta""" to the davalopmant of atrldc plano. The latter; alales
Hunt, "was one of the moot aledrlfying
momen In music. •
Although the hour-long show seems
chock.fulf of c:alchy , _, oongallke ''Kitchan Tom" (1907) , "Chevy Chase"
(1914) , and a lilting medlqr from the
1921 musical "Shuffle Along," Hunt used the music as aubtle dluslratlon only'
He alio kept hla adllorial comments to a
minimum , giving only ab•olutely
necauary historical ~ .
What about Eubla?"

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

James Hubert (Euble) Blake was born
In Baltimore on February 7 , 1883. In
July, 1901 , Blake began hla show
bualrwu canter as an 18-yor-old - former · In "Doctor Frazier'a Touring
Medicine Show." The plac:a: Fairlleld ,
Pennsylvania.
Following an lntroducUon by a
"sp~Nr" (M.C .), Blake and hla partnen
'would perfonn some 10ft shoe on the
back of a "mcdk:tne truck ," filled with
"llnimants and
kinds of weird things ,"
· as Hunt puts H. AnotNr duty: After
someone hood rubbed liniment on the legs
of an oolcnol&gt;ly aJiing hone , Blake and
hta would walk the hone,
damonslratlnll the "miraculous cure• that
hood been achieved .
•
"We gal $3 a v.iftk, room and board.
fm tha boot. I gal $3 too, evwybody got
t h e - -" 8laka worUcl with "Siewfoot"
Neloon, " a great plano player," "Yelow"
Neloon , and "Nolty" Bakeman . He alao
worUcl wtlh Praton Jackoon, hla putner
bdore he met iha lata Noble Slule , hla
t:Oiabontoo for owr 60 yean.

'sa..Me,......

In 1921 , Blab and Siule. who hood
tamed up aa .a vaudeville duo In 1915,
made I to Broedway when thalr musical
"Shuffle Along" debuled on May 23. It

Dldlon.v of

NUOic. R.gllmc probably
detlved from the early mtnstrel show
tuMS of iha 1840s and from rnarcha,
apecillly thoae lmproviled lor New
Orluna RMI peradea. Even now, Hunt
aaya, "there aren't too many plac:as
where you can hear regllma , although H's
a pafec:t bridge between daasical music
and Jazz-"
In iha atruggle foo radal equality, Blake
choee to keep a fairly low proNe. "He
could !&gt;ave !.en In the forefront of
dvll rl!zhts movements," lily&amp;
Hunt. "lnJtac:: , he preferred to make his
commHmanl to art and life. He used his
Intelligence and common sense rather
than doing thtnga that would not have

varloul

.loha-.tFMII.

had a book (an election plot: two crooks
are running loo mayor) , and was written
wtlh the comedy team of Flournoy Mlfler
and Aubry Lvlea. "Shuffle Along" was
the lint true black musical on Broadway.
(Previous black showo were of the
slapstick variety, reports Hunt.) And H
was the lint musical to portray a black

love Interest.
"They never had a thread of love In a
colored show befooe," aaya Blake. "We
weren' aura H would be acoepted ."
"Shuffle Along" contains some wellknown tunes: "I'm Just Wild About
Harry" -used In Harry Truman's 1948
prealdanllal campaign-and " Love WID
Find a Way."
Blake recounts ooma fuclnating anecdotes about life In Harlem , circa 1920.

Beat putlee

"Dicl you ever hear of

the

house rent

~? WeU, James P. Johown. Willy
~he

Uon' SmHh, Fats WaDer, w,te ihe
kings of the house rent parties."
·
At iha time, whites In Harlem would
keep raising the rent In order to force
black residents to move ou.t of tha area .
Hunt nota that iha best musicians In jazz
plano were -.nng within a few blocks of
nch other. Some of them banded together to combat the rent-raising practice
by throwing iha now legendary "house
rent" parties. Somaone's wife would be
raponsl&gt;le lor preparing chittetlings or
putry. And on the music would go, far
Into tha night.
"They played -'-they were kida-ihay
played hOus.i- rent parties $2 a night. But
H ain't every night . You play one night , I
play another. But In a week , you make
$8-$10. week."
James P . Jolmaon was the best of the
lot . " Willy 'the Uon' was a ~odo
but he could do K. And Fats Waller was a
we-t plano player. But neHher one of
them c:c&gt;fni*Cd with Jamca P.. Jolmaon _
He was so cnatfve."
~

,Radam

W81 •

fact of life for paformers

-.e Blaka. But Hunt contends that It was

been produc:tlva."
Hunt emphasizes that Euble did not acqulace to mistreatment of blaclcs, citing a
radal Incident which Blake desaibes In
the bcoadcast.
After World War I, Blake and Slule
were playing In Hartford, ConneCticut,
when l9mCOfM! stole Sissie's coat. Blake
and
promptly went across iha street
to a gruay spoon" to Investigate. "What
can I do lor yO.., boy," waa the response
of iha proprietor who sported a ~
apron. "We don't serve your kind .
Retootad Blake: "I've been thrown 9111 of
better joints than thla."
Soma propitious events followed . A
newspaper reporter followed them
home , asking details of the Incident and
then wrote a story. And the great AI
Joloon , who had heard about the Insult,
offered to put Blake up In a "fine hotel"
ape! \O ) alae up heD If they won't serve
you.".!IU! Blake dodlnec;l ; he felt this partiCular ~ would only )nVJte inare
dl-iteatlnailt. T9 wH,Iils' niel)1ooablecOm~nt on fhe biting rabbit.· '
'

Budget
issues aire d
in Albany
AI a prelminary
Al&gt;any last -k.
Robert L.
taluld
the Olancdor
budget mMIIng with

Pmldent

Ketler
at length to
and moot of hil top admlnilblllhle llllif
about aome campua ....._ which may
Impact on both thla year'a budget and
next year'a budget requat.
_
According to Atalltant Executive Vice

w..-.

President Robert
Ketler relayed
that ea a reoult of thla faD's Medical School
aa:redltation, addlaonal , _ may
have to41e alloC:ated ....... _ In adclillon .
the Praldent remlndad the SUNY admlnlstnltors that Federal capllatlon funds
foo health ldenca progmma
iha
nation have been neduc:ed. SUNY, he Indicated, should be pNpllned to aupplemant some of the lost dolan to their lour
medical centers.
A$ far as next year'a budget, SUNY offlc:lals were told lo no uncertain terms that
further neducllonsln the Academic Affairs
budget here would erode iha fled&gt;Wty of
administrators to the point where H. may
bec:oma lmpoosible lor iham to make

"""*

ac:ademlcaUy aound decisions. A$ a
reauk, retendon could be advenely affected along wtlh U/ B's ability to allract
transfer students.
The Pruldent also noted, Wagner
said , that problems could develop If the
Unlv£r$11y 1sn 'I allowed to Ina-ease the
amount of money II can olfer lor
graduate and teaching assistantships and
If H continues to have to olfer noncompeddve salaries to faculty In hlgh demand areas.

IDc:reulatiiP dlfBctllt to recndt
U/ Bis fllidlng It "Increasingly mpre d~­
ficult" to reault lop faculty In thae areas
because of the higher salaries olfered by
other (non-SUNY) Institutions, Wagner

explalnad . What Ketter suggested to
avert an exodus of faculty, Is lnaeaslng
the maximum &amp;ala'\' range at the lisslstant
prole.SOr k!Vel, h4r·added. •· : · · ·
Dwing'•"the '-meel!ng; ' W8grier 'said
SUNY officials Indicated that U/B "probably won't be able to rely on turnovers"
to provide management flulblllty or
The Moden 'Euble'
The modern musk:al, "Euble," opened
resolve budget aDoc:ation prd&gt;lems, and
on Broadway In the faD of 1978, followmay be fOfOed to retrench.
Ins several months at Philadelphia's
No further dlacusslon occurred on the
Walnut S t. Theatre. "Euble," Hunt notes ,
possib!IHy of closing one SUNY campus
features the dancing and singing of
to offset reductions at others. In earlier
brothers Maurice ancf Gregory Hines In
conversations, Wagner saki he was told
an aHempt to revive many of the Blake
that auch a move would save only about
originals from "Shuffle Along." Because
$10 millton (out of an approximately
of. soma legal dl!flc:ultiea with release of
$900 million budget) and that the
resulting pollllcal ramifications just
"The Shuffle
book, however,
" Euble" contains on Blake's music from
wouldn't be WOflh the savings.
the show, along
other of his comGiven the country's current economic
positions .
malalae, the somber nawa that the State Is
How has Blake stayed so young? It's
now behind In Ill projected revenues and
an Interesting, d Inevitable , question.
the fact that contractualaalary Increments
Blake teDs the story of a woman with
are due In 1981 , Wagner llgurea SUNY
"milk legs" (will there ever a better
wiU have to use aD Its pobtic:al muscle to
metaphoo lor cold, vertiginous lear?) who
get next year's budget through the
Will afraid to go out on stage. Even with
legislature.
aU the aylng and protcalatlons, when the
Before the six-hour session concluded,
music started , out aha went.
W-sner said U/8 representadvea were
And that, aaya Euble Blake, Is the . asked to gather Information on current
secret.
salary achedulea lor fac:ultv teaching In
"When they -..rt tha.t music, I go right
MJIIard Almooa College and to prepare a
on out."
new achedule propoaal. Si""" MFC facul·
ty haven't received a pay boosl In six
yean, Wagner IUspecls the adlustment
wll be "significant." Hopefully, the Increment will aloo act as an Inducement lor
other faculty to teach In MFC, he added .
8icyde traffic between the two campusea Ia already heavy , Taylor lndir:ated . M_d_bede ........
The bikeway wiD make H safer.
SUNY also gave the go-ahead foo a
The pr~llor the project Ia strongly
lan to provide mooa dorm beda for the
supported by blc:vde travel experta within
aU of 1981. Bac:a.... of a declining pool
the Niagara f'ronder Transportation of high school grads from the Eighth
Committee . Wori&lt; on K could begin 6s Judldal Dlslrld, Wagner said mooe ouiearly as next sp&lt;lng, Taylor suggested .
of-town students will be accepted and additional beds are nMdad to accom·
modate iham.

:a

·Hearing slated on U / 8 bikeway plan
PlAne foo • PI'OI&gt;OIIId 3.2-mlle ba.ev..ay
thit Main Str- and Amhast

connecting

will be aiNd by the State
Department of T raNpO&lt;tation at •
mMIIng Thundalf, July 31 , at 7 :30p.m .
In the Amherst Town Hall, 5583 Main
Str'HI
The DOT has to dale cboculled plana
for the project wilt&amp; the Town of Amherst,
Erie County, U/ 8 and the iagora Fron~~ Corntr-.'• Bkyde

c:ampuMS

,_

Accordirlll to Alan E. T..,...., aenior
deolgn ....,_
DOT, thr• routa
un&lt;Hr conaldaraaon OM would
I*
h =ou
n for a lhort
dlalantot, folow
Highway as

••
-

lo

·from

..

anO tberi 1011

to Hendrtdca Slnct,
Anolher

-w ....

to ~. tum -

'that
on

Longmeadow

to

Roaadale,

which

becOIMI Sweet Home at Eggert. A third
route would follow Swut Home to
Rooedale wlh a jog aaou Mlllenport to
Hendricks.
Coots loo iha project could range up to
$250,000, aaicl Taylor, ~ on
what roule II eventudy Mleatd .-The
Mllenport rout , foo example, would requn ODnllrUc:llon of a c:lua one bl&lt;eway
pGhaps tn the median, Of on a poved
_ , between and the cwb.
Some of the olher rouMI on leal weltrafllc:ked retldcntlal would limply
.... exlatlng roadways; the only wOdt
necaaary would
daignatlnll

be polling ligna
. . . blbway.

r.

Chairman-elect

Dr. ~ A. Katz, UIOdate dean
foo lludent and cunlc:ular al!aln, School
of Medldno, fo c:halrman'-aloc:t of the
AModatlon of Amarlc:an Medk:al Colloges' Northaaat Group on Medk:al

Ecluc:atlon_

Katz, U/8 ....ate dean Iince 19.75,
waa named to iha position at the Group's
annual ~ r-.tly In Baltimore .
The Group II ....._.t of represen tallvea from 30 medal ochoola In the

Northolt

No final dec:lllon has been made on

where academic offlon now occupying
dorm specc may be relocated , but
Wagner indlc4tcd Rld111 La II a poatMIIty.
Normaly at a prdmlnary budget
maallnll a full budget Ia praMDtad. This
year, however, due to lengthy
Ilona and the late acceptance of the
198()..81 budget, U/8 offlc:lalt were asked to give only hlghlighb of Mid year's
request. Wagner lilt dial ~ had no
negaUve Impact on the JlrOC*Idlngs.

d...,.

�July Z4, 1980

....e hn
_.....,

POeuy

Report

American aUenation from it
is attributable to how
it's taught, Koch contends

the npart ...... theM :
eSenlor ~ ' - to set a
priority on allrKtiDg and boldtng
......,Is, !11'*1"'* and uncler!vaduate ,
and mUll bed&lt; lhat c:ommttment wllh
11J51MY and human ,_,..,.,.._
e ln....,.. where U/ 8 has comparatiVe
academic and flnandel advantages, a
~ effort Is needed to develop and
ddvtr quality academic and student life
programs.
• A modem and cohesive recruiting
and admissions program has to be
developed to Identify the students we
want, to Inform them of what we have to
offer, and ·~o flldlllate their application .
admission and ultimate enrollment.•

hllh

Bp~~
Ropooooo Siol

Poetry Is "'ovable," mnarked poet,
playwrjght and educator Kenneth Koch .
h ........ unconoc:lous yeamlngs and
folgolten emollons; II makes one feel.
Why oomethlng.., "'ovable".ls so alen.lo • large oegment of American IOdcly,
he lheorioed lui week at the FES Summer Forum, Is, dlrecdy atllt&gt;utable to the
way It's Initially taught In gra~
ochools. The problem Is later compounded, he lamented, by high school and college lnJirudlon .
I&lt;Dch, a prnl....- of English and com~ llleratwe at Columbia, where he
received his M.A. and Ph.D., complained that the selection of poems normally
presented lo omentary school students
Is too "Innocuous" lo e&gt;ee11e their Interest.
To boot, when good poems ore
pruented, passages are often taken out
of context so the rul meaning becomes

obtcwed.
But selection Is only part of the p(Oblem. The method ol teaching poetry.
paJ1k;u)atly at the high school and college
levels,
furiher mlsundentandlng
and fru.olratlon .

aw.a...
n..,-·t ......

Students tum off lo poetry because
they are compelled to look for symbols 'or
"hidden meanings" which frequently just
don'I exist. Only a small &amp;-. of poets
~used them. And, lnslsts)b:h, even
thole who did, such as Yea , can be enjoyed wtlhout a clear understanding of
their meaning. Often, noted Koch, only
the poets therrwclva realy lmow the
precise lnlei'J&gt;I:elation. The l"'!Onlno
given by One lodMdual ti ProbablY ..;
~ as li!al,adyiii&gt;Ced.by """"-"Whv can't red just mean r~ ouked
the author of Rose, WMre Did Yot.o Gel
Thai &amp;d? He satdontcely vowed that
the word red doesn't always have lo
llgnfy tomething aloe, 8ke the "circulatory l!l*m -or bleeding."
Becauoe students are taught to look for
such · meanings , they become
"humilated" and "feel stupid" when they
e.n't dedpher what'• tuppOMd to be the

·rear
,_ge. n. OOYiouo '" Ignored
far "somelhlng deeper.•

Koch, w h o - 14 boolls and oucceufuly taught poetry lo disadvantaged
youngAttl tn New Yori&lt; Cl1y as ....U aslo
cllillenl tn a Lower East Side
nunlng home, blamed the lnlecuJ1ty of

~ny-=...

think that when they
leach poetry, they are UMiat." But If
they can tall llbout symbolo - "that's
hard." il'• liM "doing oomethlng," he
ICoffed .. But "you can't teach poetry •e

..__ ....
phyolca."

Kocft ~ that It's "never loo late to
IMm 1o rud and wr1le poetrY,• al&gt;elt the
younper the
. "'t 1 a nallnl talent
people have, though f - have wat
talenl," he oflored.
U.. the llbllty 1o draw, Koch be.kws
one's poeUc tllicnll can be developed and
become ,..,.. IICphilllcaltd wlh pnctlce.
In order noc 1o ll)lmle the crutMty of
-"vva, Koch rec:omnwnded lhat
llaChon tel lludanto
opelling. , _
and punctuation, "don't

that..,..,...,

....aser.~

He ..... feelo lnchen should . . poetry .. be cdtlcal of anyiiUdenl'•
Ewn "' n dednu wlh ClGiogo
INdents, - allldam should 6e
paolllw," he - - . I.
~ of hit c:oleaaue
......,_., Koch rnHIIatnold ihat "\'ou
can't apect lo ploont . . - one day and
the ,_. eome wlh pnu-jng
."
Eve~
- . he arguod, don~
IMm from alllclom .. much .. from the

won

leedbedt and

lnlilllld.._

of

of recommendallon$,

• •Aalang -

Wlletdo....,_?

KofiMIII

the opposite for the tyro by Inhibiting
creativity.
The last lmperati_ve, Koch cited, Is for
teachers to Insist that their students be
"aazy, nutty, sUiy and stupid" when they
write poetry. "For adults It's c;alled being
lma9lnative," he added wryly.
The point here Is to dlocot.orage "conventional solutions." Unfortunatley, he
lamented, too often teachers encurage
conventionally and by doing so thwart
the creative process.
To help students along, Koch said he
generally gives sugestions on what to
Write abciu! and J&gt;WPC!llely _~ "lri·
splrln9'rather than Umlflt&gt;g topics." For Instance:
woulr;l~'t as 11--. k' write
aiX&gt;ut aorn..lhtng ... nebulOus .. 1\ winter
scene; Instead. he would ask them to Imagine they were snowflakes wllh the
capability of landing wherever they
wanted.
He also tells his young poets to use
tlYCryday words and phraseology In a
way that conforms lo natural speech. In
other words, they should avoid starting
their sentences wllh "Love Is ... " or
~would that.. .. "

,J¥

s.cnrt••·

.

Because Koch believes words have a
"secret life" of which W.. are not always
consciously aware, he often does exercises wllh his students to facllitate this
discovery. For example, he may have
(as he did with
students close their
the audience) , them clap or whistle, and
ask what color they "saw.• Suddenly the
color yellow aseuma a new definition;
one lrnposd&gt;le 1o find In Webster.
·
Koch moves abot.ot his room while
teaching poetry and reads exampla of
stude.n ts' wortc's. Again , he never
criticizes. Once the example Is set. Koch
finds that students foUow suM and refrain
1rotn negative comments.
Eventually, he gets his students to read
their own work "In a natural voice" and
cadence, and recommends they read
other poets for pracllce .
Koch suggested the IUmtng of definition• (onomatopoeia or alliteration, for
oumple) be kept separate from the actual wr11tng procao. As far as he'• concerned, they're "generalzed terms" that
newr realy help poets 1o lmpn&gt;ve their
. .rill. He conceda, though , that since
they'r&amp;.dl asked on standardized IHII,
they should be taught.

eva

Esposito renamed
as head of RARI
pi-. Salvatore R. Elpooito has been appolnt.d lo hltt MCOnd three-year term as

chairman ol the Oap.rtment of R«reatlon, Athldcs and ~ lnstructton
(RARI) . elf
September 1, 1980.
E.postto joined the faculty In 1973 ..
II .....:late ~ In I
School of
Hu.llh Education end awotnl..t
RARI chairmen
the department
was eoubllthed In {977 He alooM hod &lt;:Oidl of vonlly -

The committee report emphasizes that
such an effort does not mean dUutlon of
quality or abandonment of excellence. It
notes the complaints of "some faculty
and staff ... that for various reasons U/ 8
cann,ot· attract a large enough number of
graduate and undergraduate students to
maintain a quality standard acceptable to
them ." but Insists that these people have
to more precisely define what they're
talking abot.ot.
The panel "invites these faculty and
staff to make objective comparisons of
the quality of !lj'B students with those attracted by
.large publlcly-rupported
universities, W ore taking action which
may bring consequences the entire faculty and staff have to live to regTet."
The report sees "no reason" to change
current procedures for developing admis sions po/ldU. but calls for Implementation of a reaulting planning system as
soon as possible. A University-wide President's Enrollment Board with extensive
administrative representation should be
the prtndpa] consuhatlve body for the
system, the report recommends.
Two faculty should be named to serve
as special counsels to the Presldmtln this
are1r, ahch small taslc Ioree estal)ltshed to
~~ate meaningful Implementation ·of
pbltcies.

-

After c:onsuhation beginning at the
department level and continuing through
the President's Enrollment Board . target
numbeB of new students to be enrolled
each year · by DUE and each faculty
shot.old be developed and used for budge!
purposes. the panel urga.
This should be eot.op(ed with regular
monitoring of external factors affecting
enroOment .
These steps wiD cauoe units to ap proach recruiting more seriously and
deia&gt;erat,.ly, the panel contendo.
The report cautions that when the
President and the President's EnroUment
Board have set such recruiting targets for
a few years. they will have also
simultaneously decided the approximate
student compositions of U/ 8 . "Because
of the current faculty compositions, lacul·
ty resources will not be easily
shiftable ... during the nat lew years; "so
"'Improper stude:nt composftion can cause
ligniflc:ant dlsparlt\l ln faculty loads and,
thus. affeet significantly facuky and stu-.
dent mcnles. Further. the student composition so reached may not be a
dalrable one In the long run . The Committee urges , therefore, the President and
the President's Enrollment Board keep
these Implications In mind when settl.ng
student re&lt;:n~Hlng targds ."

Re-caaiM.-ydolae

The report calls for re-examination of
current recrultlng procedures and
publications to se K they're the best
pood&gt;le. The same Is urged for orientAtion , advising, registration, student billIng , and career planning systems. Procedures and programs for facllitating
llUdents trantlerring from DUE to other
academic un
as majors have to be
developed 1o help cut atll1tlon, the panel
nota. And Intellectual and IOdal activities should -be encouraged · by
academic units.
The Ofllcc of Admllsk&gt;nl and Records.
the panel report .-..:ommendt, should be
, _ . . . . for attr-.g and ...,...ng
undergraduate. at al lewlo. (Gteduate
~ should continue handling
own.J To fdtAote this. the commMtee calls for :
• chenglng Mr.R'• name to the Ofllcc
of Adm-.o for .dded ~ on
that function;

• ~ Ill recruitment staff &amp;om
live lo a minimum of eight:
A~ Admissions to Capen HaD at

• and atablishlng within Admllslons a
Recruiting Center to "hq&gt; Identify and
develop modern recruiting methodo."
Formal feeder school .amongements
should be established and alumni and the
MORE IN 11tE FALL
TIM lengthy and lnYolved report of the
Jen· Committee • • -.-.......1 bv the

R-'*" late Monct.y........... ....., •
""" ........ for prepanitlon ... the ac:cotDpanylnsj lkdc:hy ~- An ln-

clepch ~ of ... .........,. ....
I'KOIIllllelld.- wiD be preeentad In
the laB.
Public Affairs division more closely
aligned with the effori . the report goes
on .
Terrible prob.._.'
The "terrible coordination proS ms
between the large number of units whose
actions or decisions affed the ability of
U/ 8 to attract students [Financial Ald.
Housing, Student Accounts. the Computer Center, DUE advisors, and A&amp;R)
should be worked out through an Admissions System Board, the report suggests.
FlnaUy. a monitoring system should be
established. to review the entire process
and ensure its smooth operations, ex·
tending to a formal audit every three
years by the VIce President lor Academic
Affairs.
'"Tile reason for recommending such a
monitoring system Is that the Committee
wants an early warning system established. Such a system will give U/8 senior ,
administrators some advance warning on
what wiD likely go wrong Insofar as stu dent recruiting Is concerned . The warning
will enable (them) to devise ways and
means to rrevent the worst from happen·
lng. It wll also enable U/ 8 to avoid the
repetition of such errors In the future ,
thus. leading In a long run to a more effective student reaultlng system ."
In addition to Jen , members of the
Comm!Hee to Study Operational Processes are : Gale Carrflhers . Sara
CtcereUI , Richard Dremuk. Catherine
Alcklnger. Benjamin Gebhart. George
Hochfield. Leonard A. Katz. Mary Mann ,
Joel Mayersohn, Ann Piech. Joyce Plnn,
Brian Ratchford . Richard Stggelkow.
Robert Stern. Eric Streiff, Robert Wagner
and Claude E. Welch Jr.
The report Is advisory to the President.

DIAL project
expanding
Does the name DIAL ring a bell? DIAL
(Direct Information Access Une) began
operation last March at U/ 8 and Is the
only campus telephone Information service In New York State offering students
a selection of tapes on .a variety of rele·
vant conc:ans.
It was Instituted last term by Student
Affairs on an experimental basis to ddermlne the ntent of the need for and uoe of
such a system . Evaluations Indicated an
expanded venlon would be welcome.
The all-new DIAL will consist of tapes
from every Interested department, Olfice
and service on campus. Students will be
able to caD for information on health concerns, academic or personal Issues. campus acttvltles. etc. The system will
operate six ev...Ungs a week from 5 -11
p.m. Trained operators will answer
phones which handle up to four caDs at

once.
The advantages of a program such as
DIAL are numerous, Student Affairs ol.flclals offer. Students are provided a one-

stop Information source as convenient as
their telephones. Telephone conlad
auur a ealer's anonymity. This wiD be
apedaly Important when c:akn seek Information on delicate ltfueo.
•
DIAL Is funded under an Income offset
format. All partlctpants are asked to pay
$20 per tape per academic year. If you
are Interested In tndudlng yot.or offlcc or
department In the DIAL prognom . con·
tAct Sue Bdckman , Student Affairs. at

636-2259

�4

July 24. 1980

'

�July 24. 1980

31 foreign executives here for
6 weeks work in English &amp; business
n..

A slx ~week educational apeience
ilrst $Oclal event for the visitors was
combining studies In business managea reception Sunday.July 13. hosted by
ment and English language p(Oficiency Is
Dean Joseph A . Alutto of the School of
taking place on campus this sum..- for
Management and his wife . Rosemary. at
their horne in Eggerisvtlie.
31 high-lew~ business executives and
unlv&lt;!nlly profe5$01'$ !rom 13 nations.
Dr. and Mrs . Robert L. Ketter also had
The' International Executive Program
a ...-.:ej,tlon for the group.
in Management and English Language.
in Its third year. is jointly sponsored by _ ,.... loob at Aaatcae
the School of Management and the
University's Intensive English Language
One of the highlights of the program, a
Institute (lEU) .
panel discussion on • Japanese PercepThe program . which began with
tion of American Management .~ will be
registration on July 10 and ends August
open to the public. It is ocheduled &amp;om
22 . includes classroom instruCtion. visits
2-5 p .m ., Wednesday. August 6, at the
to industrial plants and business organizaKraus Conference Center, Crosby Hall.
tions on an internship basis. a two-day
l1le panelists will be Jo~ Aral of the
stay at the homes of area famdies. and
Japan Productivity Center In
recreational trips .
Washington, D.C .; Yoshiyald Kawokatsu
Courses relating to both private and
of Nippon Steel, New Vorl&lt; City; and
public sector administration wiU be conKenneth Suzuki of Mitsubishl lnternaducted at the School of Management .
ttonal , New York City.
language studies will take place at the
Usted as special guest lecturers are
lEU at EDicott .
Sally O'Roark , a vice president of Erie
Savings Bank , and S~san Stevens, a
When they're &amp;om
Ph .D graduate of U/ B who teaches at
l1le 31 persons already enrolled are
Nichols School, who gave their respec·
from Mexico. Spain . Haiti. Japan .
tive views on · American Women in
Taiwan . Korea . Denmark . France. Togo.
Business;" History Professor Milton
Colombia. Indonesia . Nigeria and Hong
Plesur, "American History and Culture;"
Kong
Erie County Executive Edward
An August 9- 10 weekend stay with
Rutk ' , "Buffalo and Western New
area families is being arranged by the BufY
. Henry Coords, president of
falo World Hospitality Association .
~er-Price . "American Management ,"
Inte rnship opportun ities are being of.
and James Michaels. editor of Forbes
fered by the new Buffalo Hilton Hotel.
magazine , "Future Challenge to
Marine Midland Bank. Bethlehem Steel.
American Mangement ."
Erie Savings Bank . Fisher-Price Toys and
Four of the lectures wdl be given at 7
the Erie County Industrial Development
p .m . In 352 MFAC, EDicott . These in·
Agency
dude Rutkowski, July 29, and Coords.

-- .....

July 30.
l1le Michaels lecture Is scheduled !rom
2-5 p .m .. August 1, in the Kraus Center.
Recreational activities will include two
picnics, sports activities on campus, trips
to Niagara Falls, Toronto, Artparlc, and
the Albright Knox Ari Gallery, and even·
ing movies.

Bhatt aaciO.-

Program dtrectors are Dr. Bhal J .
Bhatt. director of the International
Management and Policy Analysis Project
in the School of Management, and Or.
Stephen C . Dunnett, director of the lEU .
Assisting in the sponsorship are the
Council on International Studies, and the
OffiCe of Summer Sessions.
The visltcm Uve at Amherst and "commute" to Main Street by bus for management classes. All communication will be
in English.
The objectives of the program are to
provide an overview of the various

disciphnes in the American management
f~eld. to serve as a 50undlng board for the
exchange of ideas and sharing of
management expertise, and to improve
verbal and written communk:atton skills

in English. The program also Is designed
to provide an academk: orientatton for

foreign executives planning to begin
studies for a Master of Business Ad minlstratic.o (MBA) degree in this
country .

Upon successlul completion of the
program . participants will be awarded
certificates by the University.

Community Adviso ry group seeks nominees
for 1980 'O utsta nd ing Women' awards
A nominating campaign has been
launched to ftnd Western New York 's

The reoogntlion luncti~on Is sponsored
on an a UemaHng year schedule The Oct .

seven most ...Outstanding Women·· for

8 luncheon will be the second under this

(G N S .H .).

education : Gladys

K

com munity servtce . Dr Jean Northco« .

Drewelow. communications: Ma xin~ N
Brandenburg . art s. a nd Marie V
Richard son . government
"'Outstanding Wo men" nominat ion~
will be accepted from throughout th'
eight&lt;ounty Western
ew York area

professions. Sister Mary Charlotte Barton

Manch said

1980

format

l1le Outstanding Women awards pro·
gram , begun in 1971. is sponsored by the
U/ B Community Advisory Council Win·
ners will be honored at the eighth

The 1978 "Outstandmg Women" were
Mary L. Herman . business; He len Urban .

Communlly -Un lver sity Recognition

Luncheon ocheduled for Wednesday.
October 8. In the Ballroom of the new
Hilton Hotel on the waterfront
Chotoes lor "Outstanding Women"
may be made In any or ali of the seven
categories listed Of) the nominating form
The categories are : arts , business, com-

$2 million U.S. grant
funds U I 8 cancer study

munkattons. Community service. educa -

A $2 million, five-year National Cancer virus and cervical and penis cancers
Institute grant almed primarily at ""-Pior- Large numbers of social factors Involve&lt;'
ing benefldal effects some nutrients ap· in cancer of the testes will also be lookeo
pear to have against cancer has been at , 'Graham said .
awarded to Sociology Professor Dr. SaxHe added that the role many Roswell
Park Memorial Institute personnel wil
on Graham.
Graham, who is also a professor of play in these studies and have played ir
social and preventive medicine, has con- his earlier ones cannot be mlnimiz£&lt;1.
duded ~ipidemlology studies for the past
Grant co-Investigators include Drs
ten years on !acton which may contribute James Marshall, U/ B assistant profeaor
to or helP prevent cer1aln types of cancer. . of oociology; Curtis Mettlin , chief of
Some a( his studies suggest that adequate epidemiology at RPM! ; Edwin Mb-and .
amounts of VItamins A and C and other associate directbr of RPMI ; Peter Green
nutrien may be protective. l1le new wald , director of epidemiology for the
grant will allow continuance of one of New York State Health Department ;
tt- studies and implementation of two John Gentry, Erie County health comothers.
missioner, and Roger Priore, head of
"Certain nutrients, notably_V'rtamins A computer services, RPMI .
and C , as well as fiber and oertaln
Othe to be Involved include Drs Archemicals In crudferous vegetables such nold Mittelman , RPMI . gastrointestinal
as cabbege and Brus.ls sprouts appear canc:er; Stuari Fischman , U/ S professor
to reduce the risk of oome cancers," of oral medicine, oral cancer: Donald
Graham said . Tissue culture and animal Shedd , RPMI. head and neck ; Howard
studla by other
have sug· Stoll , RPMI , melanoma ; Takuma
gesled this .. well.
Nemoto, RPMI. breast cancer; William
Dr. Graham said , however, that more Dugg]eby , RPMI . human genetics ;
delinit!ve information muot be obtained Wlllilm Rawls. Ur)lversity of Western Onby furthc 'reaarch to cHtermine to what tario (London) . Herpes II uuys; and
extent tt- and other nulrlerlts may help Marcia RUSMII of the lnsl!tute for
Rewarch on Alcoholism.
prol«&lt;llgiiiNI cancer.
.
One study will focus on evaluating in·
formatlol) on dlcWy hablla (or vitamin
usooge) and tnddence of cancer In
240,000 New Yod&lt;ers who volunla111y
compldod
during the past
Jer my able an auoc t professor
few months. Arlolh. wll foeut more In·
of mu .
be•n a"'arded·• fellowshop
lenolwlv on the nUII1tlonallntake tlwough from til&lt;- American Council of I earned
cliol .,.. vltamino of 2000 cance- patients
~
and 2000 others who have nol had the
Noble wUI uw th• f
htp tu study
dloeMe.
" Lot Med-al Uturg ofth&lt;- C
""
A thkd otudy will ~ate on
Churches of the Low Countrtft and or
poeolble reJ.tionshlp "-'-" Herpa D thern Franc• "

tion , government and the professions .

Nominating forms have been mailed
this month to various Institutions and
organlz.ations, but also may be obtained
by writing to· 1980 Women s Recognition
Luncheon , Office of Public Affairs. 516
Capen HaD. State University at Buffalo.
Amherst , N. Y 14260 The t lephone
number is 636-2925.
Co·Chalrs of the recognition luncheon
are Allalec A Babbidge. community rela·
- · director. Delaware North Com·
panics, Inc., and Dr. J . Warren Perry.
profi!Hor, health oclences administration .
at the Unlverslty. They point out that
tickets for the Oct. 8 luncheon may be
oblained through the U/ B Office of
Public Affairs or from members of the
Community Advisory Council .
Dr. Jooeph Mench, chalrrnan of the
Council and fonmer superintendent of
ochools. City of Buffalo, said that
nominations mUll be received by Aug. 15
to rec«&lt;vc proper consideration.
• Addltonol nomination padtages are
avallablc." he further advised , "and will
be forwarded on request •
'"Thlo Ill your oppor1unity," Manch
said. "to recognize outotanding women In
out Western 1\1...., York community .
"Selocltlon of t"'- for citation wll be
hued 011 prof-..! accomplishment,
comm""!!Y tnvol\lement and lud«nhlp
.,.._. award reclplonts ar

ineligi-

Aloo t~ • • curTtnl U/ B
~NcMnts. and U/ B I
and staff

ble

me
In addlllon, the N
nole that
wll nol be~ in aboentlo
.,.. I)QIIhumoutly Al:t!ve candlda
for
public
... nol ~

•-archers

q-

Noble receives
ACLS fellows hip

�•

July 24, 1980

VIE

OINTS

Does ·a usterity rule out excellence?'
EDrrOR'S NOT£: The 1oUowtnti ed·

The chaBeogc which we face II to ftnd
appropdale ways of building upon and
uUIIdng " - for the furth.
enrtchment and ~ting ol our

d..._: "Eac:tiMnee and the New
Au.terity: .........,lnary R~ on
5yolem Opportunities ..... glwn by
SUNY Chancdlor 0111
R. Wharton
at a convocation of dhtinguished
SUNY faculty at SUNY/ Albany, May

2.

academic J1"9"1'111
achieving even
gruW excelence. In teaching, -.:h.

.

Moe! admlnlstraton ere, after all,
former facultv members. They begin thetr
carwn as acholars, committed to the life
of the mind . So&lt;n«how they ftnd
themselves with growing oulside responslbllltla: commlllee won. first, perhaps,
later departmental chairs. They become

deans, directors , provosts , vtcepresideniS, presidents, somellma even
chanc:cllors.' In the process they gain
somethrng and they lose something ....
Adrntnlstraton Inevitably adminlsier
... . and that, to our sorrow, Is frequently
mon a matter of bureaucracy and
management than of intellectual Inquiry,
academic probing. and the cooperative
Speald"'J for mysd, I
find the trade'911 melanclloly, however
necessary H may be . A unlvers·
lly, after all, is not just another ooganlzallon. If public, the university is not merely
an IICJP8IIdage of government; II private,
II is not merely a purveyor of educatiOnal
"Ml'Yic:a" for a rnarl&lt;et of "consumer
dlenb.• In hod, H might be a good thing
to think about getting rid of that currently .
prevaier)t terminology, to say n6thlng of
the attitudes H bnplies.
For a university is, In Its essence, a
_,sal and Inimitable ~tk&gt;n . Unique
In Its lragilltla as wd as Its strengths, H
traces ~ . , . _ back at least to class;cal
antiquity, Its futura at least forward to the
rntllennium. Complex in Its c:hanglng mls·
slono and evolving roles, H nevertheless
founds Itself upon a single overriding
value, without which Its Inherent nature
mull dlulpate.
1hc value is exullence .
To be sure, excellence is a multifaceted
concept. As I have wggested many times
before, H requln!s one kind of excellence .
to open a path for the gifted , highly
motivated student, who needs not so
much to be taught as to be helped to
learn. It requires another sort of CX·
oellenc:c to awaken and expand the world
of the great majority of av..-- students,
prepM1ng them not only to functiOn in the
wort...day ~ but also to ~ and
fu
themaelves amid the cultural
l'll:hMa of our civilization. And yet a dllfemnt sort of cxoeDence II needed to
reach out to the culturally, economically.
and academlcaly lmpoverlohed, to help
tham oven:omc disadvantages incurred
~ no faub of their own , and to
restore to them the measure of equHy
and opportunfty prornloed in both the
writlc1 and unwrillcn charters of our
punull of truth .

...lion.

political life 'that will for years-to-come
shape both the overall State budgets and
the level of State support we can expect
for operatiOns within the University.
In the context of the New Austerity,
will excellence at the State University of
New York be an unavoidable casualty?
I am convinced that Hneed not. Indeed
M must not-provided that we read with
courage, vigor. and Imagination. 1hc
New Austerity calls not for ostrichism,
burying our Individual and collective
heads In the sand while leaving our flanks
open to allacks. Neither does II call for
bu'!lness-as· usual, nor cet:lalnly for
hoPeleso resignatiOn to a~
- · -dctwJ&gt;
process that could aD """
..,.,.
no lea than the dlsri\antlii.g a( llie
nallon'slargest and most dlverx networi&lt;
of educatiOnal ~ and fadllties .
Rather, the New Austerlly caDs for InIllatives and lnvemnents, for an ac:tivisl
strategy lor change aimed at preserving
and even enhancing the vlebllltv, ..Jfecllveness and, above all, the excellence of
the entire State Unlverslty. As an
economlsl, I am Nmlnded of the fad that
the best lima for lr)dlvldual and corporate tnvemnent ere in fact hard times. I
believe hard times can also be the best
time for InstitutiOnal tnvemnents-so
long as they . ""' thoughtful, wellplanned, and appropriate to the rullties
of our circumstances. If they meet such
crHeria, invemnents and tnlllattves now
will more dian return their coots In terms
of " bolghter future for the State Unlvenlty.

, . .............. lloltla. . . .
What ere the investments 'and In·
llla11ves I propoee to """""""'"' the
New AusterHy? I deresay you have heard
or read about them aD aftady , butiRt me
briefl9 lisl them again .
Flnt is public Mnllce, an adlvtty I cornmended for highe JXIorily _Immediately
after aMUmlng ihe SUNY Chancdonhlp
almost two-and .... half . years "'I"· In
esaence, pubk SBvlce II the llppbllon
of the oystem's raourea and cxpat1oe to
the ldenllllcatlon and tolullon of Important public problems, " IM)I be providing
technical .-qnoe to local or State
goyernment, prornotlniJ and lourlsm
In the Slate. conducting coni.........,.. or
In--we tralnlng for .,.... ~.
deYeloplng youth programs, or """"'"ding to the .--arch· ....to of a INjOI' ..,...
porallon. SUNY II heavllv involved In
public SBvlce aftady, and the ln\lolvement is wowing. 1hc net ..!feet,
. , . . _ , II not merely one of the
Univlnlty providing • eodaly-deslrllble
SBvlce. Bv participating In such dlorts,
- aloo -.;then our abaly to conduct
tradllanal J1"9"1'111 lor our dear- and
aedl-ttd llludenll. Above al, we
C&lt;&gt;l\lrtlule to the . - tiCOnOmlc wei-

~ - State upon"""--

s.cond II --.11. AI pnMnl, SUNY
hae ~ 3 ,000 adlw -m. ad .....
lion, and lnlnlrog prq.cto under -.y on

29 ~- Supported by alm&lt;ist $180
milllori' liom federal, state, and private
sources, these · projects Involve over
16,500 people on a fuD- or part-time
basis. Yet 1n compa11son to many other
colleges and universities, the SUNY campuses ere not receiving their fatr share of
funds. In 1977, for example, New York
State ranked a poor fourth behind
California. Maryland, and MassachU5etls
In the dlstrtlullon of federal research and
development dollaB.... Even more Important, SUNY NSeaR:h Involvement Is
underdeveloped In relation to our own
IJ}stltutk&gt;nal capacllles. We can do more,
al1&lt;l "!" should dp. more. . , •
• , • •
Third is·lntemational program•. SUNY
has a respectable level of effort In such
things as exchange prt&gt;Wilms for students
and scholars, and I anticipate !his will
continue and grow. At many other major
U.S . universities, however, InternatiOnal
activtlles go much further, as knowledge
resotirca are deployed to assist ln
economic, ~f. and cultural ad vancement In developing nations
throughout the world. SUNY has yet to
move subetantially into the latter kind of
piOg!'ammlng, but our potential for H Is
~ - New Vorlc State Is a world
center lor finance , commerce, the arts,
communications and ethnk: diverIlly-our State University should also be
corr_..tingly InternatiOnal.
Fourth Is lnsllttJ-.aJ deueloprnent and
p r f - fund rolling. Of .. the initiatives
we can undertake, voluntary financial
support from private oowces has the
!J'Utesl potential for assisting the University's excellence. Privata fund raising provtcles flcxllle dollars .for such things as
student ocholanhlps, endowed faculty
chan, lb-ary support, lnslrudlonal In·
nov~Uon ,

1neenUve

~rograms

for

research, and cultural prt&gt;Wilm advancement. While SUNY does not have an
established tradition of private fund railIng, a lew campuses do have experience
In the area. We also have 705,000 alumni, a relatively young but numerltally formidable body of _,sal friends with
whom to begin .

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

Overen:hing and yet permeating each
of the four II " fifth Initiative: building
upon the SUNY ll!*m asaO)IIIem. The
oppattunllla to capllabe upon our
reoourca as • oyttlam are most cxdtlng.
Every eoncelvable field of human
knowledge II taught somewhere In our
l!/lkm. 1hc technical, ldentlllc, and
ocholetl)l c:ompetencla of oyz faculty
who teach " - fields ""' even broader.
Just r.n.:t • moment. In the 11!9'eg.Bte,
In any field or cJu.- ol ~. our
total !.culty in quabty and
quantity cannot be malched by .,Y other ·
untve.lly. Whether ll II art restoration or
faohlon , ~ or model building
p/&gt;yllca or millie-the c:olecave lntcllac:
tual ........._ locallld on our various

:---lfvlewedaea

and pubk SBvlce, our ¥fernwide
c:apabihes, If ll&lt;dP8IIv cxplolttd, wll, I
believe, enable die State Uniwnlty of
New Yort. to~ a level of erntnence
•nd excellence that would be unmatched
in higher aducallon .
•
In teaching, we need to explore and
experiment with ways of ullklng our
diverM oystemwide competencies. Faculty cxchanga, visiting semes$ers for
students, oystem dialogue: or seminars in
a dioclpllne, InstructiOnal TV tapes by
master SUNY teachers In highly specialized areas to supplement regular Instruc tiOn - an Honors College and Honors
Scholarships- these and rllany others of.
fer cxdtlng opportunities.
In NSeaR:h we have already begun-to
build systemwide task fort:;!S and consortia devoted to key areas- energy, health
odences, urban affairs, the environment.
Sbnllarly, In public service, we ere
building a capability to access and Identify
required talent available on our campuses. Building a profile of faculty talent or
Interest is only a first step in the creation
of a networi&lt; able to respond to ever
~ public 'Service demands.
1hc State University of New York Is
more than the largest stale oystem In the
nation-It is also the most diverse-l!mbraclng a heterogeneous collection of lnstHullonal type$ and missions. Many of
4
your ideas and suggestions on how we
might build even further upon SUNY as a
oystem emerged In your deliberatiOns this

"."'!o. more 5!'!1·
.w•.~.
•'•
. .

~-

.

·~-,- .

~

Thne c:noclal poboU
let me conclude , by stressing three
crucial points.

Fnt, each of the Initiatives I propose
must be undertaken as systemwide InIllatives . An uncoordinated. piecemeal
approach will be fer less ..Jiective than a
cooperative . interactive ImplementatiOn
that makes use of sharing campus
facilities and expertiR, e hmlnation of
duplicatiOn of ..!fort, multlcampus and
IJlUitldloctplinary task groups, and all of
the unique modes of operation to which a
system is so weD suHed.
Second, aD of the proposed lnlllatives
have the potential for providing the
Unlvo;rsJty wHh substantial addHional
financial JUpporl or savings. In hard
times, this is obviously no small advantage . Nonetheless, we must be sure that
the leadership of the State realizes any
seK-generated support is complementary
to State support, not a replacement for H.
New Yort. State appropriatiOns will continue to provide the largest portion of our
ongoing funding, as is appropriate to our
public mandate and mlsolon .
AnaOy, each olthe proposed lnlllaUves
Is not merely an expedimt, conceived to
mlligale the -WOfSI ..Jiects ol a period of
fiscal stringency. Rather, they ere aU
legitimate academic diNcllons tn and of
themselves; designed to build upon the
greatest strengths of the St.re University
of New York . These are the dlreetions in
which I believe SUNY should move
regordless of our budgetary situation.
They ere the directions that•will lead the
Unlvenlty Into the future that 11 best far
the Institution and best lor the dttzens H

was aeated to aerve .

- catto. R. Wbrtoa, h .

Practicing law
Charles E. Donegan , the first black to
on the faculty ol the U/ B School of
Law, 1970-1973, and a former assistant
regional toutsel and minority- business
entetprlse repr-ntative with the U.S
Environmental Protection Agency in
Chicago, has recently entered die private
practice of law In that dty At U/ B. he
taught eontrac:ts. corporate, conslttu ·
tiooal , employment diJcrtmlnallon, In·
surance ond consumer law.
setW

�7

,..., 24,1980

GeaEd

Personnel sponsoring
workshops for professionals

Implementation committee ponders
whether there are enough courses
for faU 1981 inception
A 19-memt.r llllk farce for Implementation ol the General Educ:allon l'n9am
II now lllldng a 1-..d look Ill lwo - -

- · Dr. Robert Cerwny ol ~

-..t. c:t..lnn.l ol the pu&gt;el, rwports:

1. c.n the lmowlldge Mllq) by
the IIIJIItO'I'ICi F..ullv s.n.te report on
GeNnl Educallorl be lmpl.menled In
their
form?
2. If .,, can they be Implemented by
the W ol 1981, or should they be ddured -or II -..c olher phasing oc:heme In
order?
"We .,. gathering the cl.la," Cerwny
Al/1. "illld hope to come llP With rea&gt;mmencW!ons for the Senate In a report
which should be ready by August 31 _" .

..-t

Not__..,.,..._,
At . . - t , explained the Marw~gement
prof-. be ' - the jMkng that hoculty
~mbers may not have submitted
enough cou,... lor knowledge area requnmcnb. He II wre not, enough
"theme" c:OurMs have been propooed.
New coune proposals have to be submHted to the Genenl Educallorl panel by
September L June 30 was the deadline
lor exllllng .,.,..,__
Under the General Education proopectuo, a theme cou,. Is one which looks at
a certain unifying lsaue from a vmlety ol
academic perspectives. An aamj&gt;le
would be "ethics" which eQUid concern
such diva'M fields ao butlness marw~ge­
ment and leboretorv,rnun:h. A aeries ol
theme areas have 1leen approved by the
General Education CommHtee, and
others are pending. Faculty havtng al\jl
questions should contact the chairman ol
General Education , Dr. Peter Hare. (A
luU dllcuulon ol this phase ol the
Ge""'al Educallorl Program was · cone
talned In . the Novtomber 1, • f 9'7~
Rq&gt;&lt;&gt;rkr.J 'T'Mrnes such as ethics, order
and claonla, stigma, oclentlfic thought
and method , how living systems develop
new~ and directions, and "Man
' and the Transcendent" have been 'approved to &lt;We.
In their repoot ol lasl November, the
General Education CommHtee added this
further explanation ol themes and theme
couna: "A theme coune should nol , ln·
deed could nol , adclr.a encylopaedlcall
al the dimentiono ol a theme. In fact . U
would be dalnble to have a wide range ·
ol qulle dlllerenl couna offered under
the Arne theme, each taking a dllferent
lntegretlw approach . Superficiality Is to
be avoided. For aample, under the
theme, Elhics, a course on lying, could
draw on many soun:a In presenting a
penetrating analylls ol the
Without
mllewlng .. ethDI theorln.

'&lt;fie

~~who emphuiza hil commit ·

1ng deualopu""t
the _ _on~
......_
..........
the Amlwnt Campus over

The ,_

Voldemar lnnus,

Academic Affairs;

Lawrence KOjaku,

~Studios;

Rlcl-..d Menn, the Cole!Jea; !Mnlel M~­
ray, Pharmacy; Detold Nyberg, Educational Studios; John Peradollo. DUE
Dan ; lauren Shapiro, ~uate
Student Assoclalion; Robert Springer,
• EngiMering and Applied Sciences; Eric
Strdl, MFC; Helen Slrlckland. EOP.
and Myron Thompoon , Na!Ural Sciences
and Mathematics.

EOP running
U/8 preview
For the lint Hme. the Educational Opportunity Program Is offering this summer
a credH-free program geared to ease the
academk: and JOcial transitlon from high

school to college lor Its commuter
students.
The comprehensive six-week se.sion,
which meets during the week from 9 a.m.
to 5 p . m ., provides courses In
English/ WT!t!ng, reading, JOcial science,
math and natural sdence concepts. Most
ol the couraes are given on the Amherst
Campus and are taught by learning
Center 5taff. JnC!ivtdual tutoring is
available, too.
In addition to academk: worl&lt;. the
5tudenb are taking soci4l development
sessions taught by EOP and learning
Center in51ructors. According to EOP
Director Ed Jenkins, the purpose here Is
to help studenllloster a better seH-Image
as well as understand their roles as
members ol the University community.
To enrtch the eXpeilence : field trips are

-

... being offeNd

1n1orm.J n...Js 1WW11

conducllod 1wo months ago by P..-nel
In which .,...,_... . . . aoloed to
ldentfy the types ol prilgraml they
thought would be mool beneficial to their
~ development.
5esolons being offered are: Undenlan·
ding illld ~"11 Conlkt, Report
Wrllng, R.pd Reading, Oral Plaenta- · Supervisory Case Shartng,lncruslng Analytical Sldlls Through Quantitative
Analysis, and Marwlgement by Objec-

--

MOst ol the workshops will be con·
ducted by University faculty and stall and
will last between two and three hours.
Three
the -.s. Report Wrtting,
Raold Reading and Oral Presentations,
will be conducted In lwo parts, the second scheduled about a week after the
lint. The purpose, Is to give participants a
chance to do a~menb and/or lest
new skills In an oflloe situation and report
back on any difficulties enc"!'nlered .
Reglslrants lor these three worl&lt;shops are
expected to attend both sessions.

or

·. . ..

Each d the 26 ~nts 'tn the ex:
pertmental-am receives a $10 week·
ly 511pend and $15 for food and wpplies.
Bus passes are provided at no cost .
Jenkin• hopes that by assl•tlng
.tudcnb to overcome any academic and
JOcial adjustments before they lormaUy
enter U/ B this September, the retention
factor can be improved .
The JXO!Fam, one ol 12 receiVIng a
subsidy from the State's Special Program• unK , Is aJoo being sponsored by
U/ B'• Special Services Project and the
Learning Center. Coordinators are :
Helen Strickland , Irma Torres and
Marcelle McVorran .

~ing to the results ol the survey,
prof-..! staff, across aU PR ranks , Indicated the strongest lntere•t In
Understanding and Managing Conflict.
noted Rosalyn Willdruon , manager of
Human Resouru Development and
Training.
Since attendance lor each workshop Is
limited, those Interested should complete

'Sluggers' win as
Marauders wilt
With a ""'"'*'"lion ol what

they

s.n.ta

.......

--__
---·;\

,.5..-_
,.

-DooM!~

z
I
I
I
I

I

Q

a0
I

I

z
I
z
s

MHchel L. Zolcr. who recctved his
Ph .D. from U/B In~ urtler
this year, Is one ol211*11cfpants • advanced levels In the ICienoos In the 1980
Mass Media Scienca Fdows ~m
sponsored by the American Asoodatlon
lor the

(MAS) .

Advancement

of Science

His major raearch Interest is virology ,
studying the mechaniam
v1ra1 Infections.
Alter a three-day orientation sesolon In
Washington , D.C ., In June, Zolcr began
his fellowship at NeunUH!elc In New Vorl&lt;.
The 10-weelc MAS Mass Media
Science Fellows Progam, supported In
part by the National Science Foundation,
enabla fellows to function as reporters,
researchers, or production . - n t s wHh
newtp&lt;lpei'S, magazines, and radio and
television stations across the counlly. It_is
designed to provide fellows With an
understanding ol proceues Involved in
communicating oclentlfic and technical Information , to develop greater Interest In
and understanding
science and
technology on the part ol media penon·
nel and lay people , and to lacWt61e wider
coverage olsclentlfic topics.

or

or

lfw-_ ........,

PAIIt1aPANTS NEEDED FOil

Edaifltt. .··

PSYCHOLOGY EliPEIIIIIEMT
Partic:lpaots .,. needed for • ptyddogy npaimonl ("""' ond _ _ ., Eom cooh . H ... . . -.
... 831 -3 0 7 1 - 10 ond 5, ""'"""""'""""'
Fn!oy to. on oppoinlmlml

LOCXWOOD EIIHIBIT
UOY_ol ......... l o - - Y o f t :
Momlholnt_/ .,.-...lboolcooleonlho

YEU.OW.IACIIET IIIEMOYAL
Pooplo who how~ · - ond would

-----_,tot--.....-.......

... !hom ~- one! .........! should .......
V.nom Lib .c M.ln Stra! between 9 a.m Wid 5
p .m., 831-2726. Thon It no~ lor lho ·

I ! - . -.............. -

· Collodmtol

pu-.s
hom
......
-- ..- one!
.... -..............
l.od&lt;woocl
MornarW Unoy fooor 9 o.m ., II p m through

T--

........ 31.

PaOFESIIONAL STAfF,
Ofllco·FEAS. 8.()030.

Noticea

!AooL to Dooo), 0...'•

FACtA.TV'

fiiEE SOCCDI11CX£n FOil STUDENTS

...__lorlhollulloloato.n' mooeh"""'

---

Hoi 'Tld!al Ollco. ..-JD.
l4oolo ....... bvllullolo Bto.n one! FSAO&gt;m·

daat&gt;e as ·~ pitching, tight
defenoe and ailp hitting," Slggd&lt;ow's
~ (the Student Affairs team! rolled
to IIi* 6th win In 1 by trouncing
the formerly hlgh-flytng Maintenance
Marauders, 13-2, 1n the Praldenrs Softbel Lague lasl week.
Student AffUI accomplished this feat ,
a team spolcapeuou Indicated, "despite
the tlvut ol aevere offlee temperature
changes by the Amherst Campus

U/8 grad is
AAAS Jntem

• Calendar

ltomo,
Sunctov.
2 p.m ., ~
_
_ _ .July
-%7,
................
Squn

ment to iond high hopes lor the U/ B
General Education Program, nonethelao
~ remind facully thai a broad spectrum ol counn II ~ to make the
program wori&lt;, and that I II up to faculty
tt.en-IYe 1o come up wtth the .,.,...__
He grants thai January or F~ mVht
be a bell« time to cal for proposals from
faculty, ..-y ol whom.,. now acattered
for the aummer, but the period Ml aside
• malnt.nanoe crww."
for developing such proposals II now
Resl!b ol games pia)*! ~ July
Cerwny llld hil report ol Augus1 31
17folow:
wll pinpoint Jwl how many couna will
Stucknt ABalrs 23. Oentlltzv IS; Stube needed lo make the program vieblo
dent Asooclation 12, Public Alfalrs 3; Pro
for the fal ol 1981 and what the proSial[ s.n.te 14, Haith·Related Profalplds ... lor ad*""'~~ that vlabillly
siOnl 7 ; Oenlillry 23. Public ABeln 11 ;
.._by,_. tal or late&lt;
Student Asooclatlon 16, Pro Stall
The Genenl Eduaollan pion II weD
11; Haith Relat.d Pro 12, ~s
thoughl-oul acaclemblv. he llld. but
Klowns
11 ; Student Allo lro 13 ,
...... • Into actual ~ oiMously
....... problemo ol .,.,_..
Malntawloe 2 .

......

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IEALTH CAllE PLAif Of'EJI HOU&amp;U
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313811
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c -. 34658. Hollo F..-y, No 34667, 40402.

In the -c.looldu, • caD
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To llot -

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the

u.t...,..lty. uu-

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�July 24, 1980

Richard

w_, II the ..........,., ol the tia - '"

tle """ EllmiMth
the Qooen
In "RRchard u,· the ........ U / B
~e In the...,..

ol the oummer, _ . , .

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ALENDAR
Thanday - 24

Satanlay - 26

UUIIII FIUI'

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0., ... NWol "'""". 19721 Conlew-nce
· 5q&lt;ft 3 30. ~ •nd 8 30 p m. o.n-1

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A .M . in\oiOkla a..pbn In a tolo~-- a
dnonlo••-WOhthowoddol-oiJ;ecto.

BAND OIII£CTOIIS WOIIKSHOP
CONCEIIT'

a.v.

P.t., Klo&lt;n Rood . Town ol Amhont
7!10pm IUo
f.-..g tho AI Eno Counoy HW&gt; School Bond
Guc$1 conduc:tor / composoers arc: Rober1

...... and

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~APANESE

IOUndcom&lt;dios

CUl.naAL LECT1JIIE 5DUES'

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p .... Spoo-.d

!iOCIAI, TllANSFOIUIAnOHS

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LECTURE

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Sw..... oo.- ol tho Bk o.ct ond ~In
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TUESDAY NITE LIVE'
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Part ol • te'ia of ewnts pMnned tow IOfM 35

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�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>·.
The Slone CountJy Band-which
upolaged Faron Young at a hard core
countJy g~~tlwring at the Niagara Falls
Convention Center a few yean back: the
Polndns Brolhen. a bluegrass group
who more frequently on campus
than some people ca!'Tytng a fuH load.
and the Henry Paul Band are among
groups who will perlorm ..it the annual
U/ B Summerfesl. wt for the Squire
Fountain area. Friday (July 18). begin·
nlng at noon. and going on until at least
8.
Given the recent warm weather (which
Of"ganiz.ers hope they will be( . the beer.
ice cold Bud 13 for $1 from 3-8). wm
likely be the star.
A similar combinallon of music and
brew brought thousands to Fountain
Square for the recent Springiest. so sum·
mer Ol"gllniz.ers expect people g~~lore and
plenty of action.
Sq11ue dancing and children'•
eventa .
Also on the schedule for the event .
which SA . GSA and UUAB are co·
sponsoring. are square &lt;lancing 112·2) .
arts and crafts demonstrations. children's
workshops. and sports and recreation
programs . Possibly . musical numbers
from the Paul . Robeson Company's
''Raisin." recendy staged at the U/ B
Center Theatre by the African Cuhural
Center. wiD be presented . too. "Negotia ·
Hons. about that were still going on at
Reporter press Hme.
The program for children wUI include
puppet shows. a chlldren"s con~r1 .
storytemng and clowns. The&lt;\! events will
be Interspersed with b~ Pointless
Brothers who will perform . off and on .
from noon lo 4 .
From 4 to 8. the other bands take over:
Stone Country and Henry Paul - and
perhaps pne more Again . lasl minute
details were still being Ironed out Monday
afternoon .
'Chall- Cup' eventa
A Challenge Cup sports event - sort of
a plain folks' version of The Battle of the
Network Stars - will lind up to 20 five·
person teams (three men and two
women) com peting . Such campus

Of"ganlzations as NVPIRG. The Spec ·

STATEI.NVERSITY AT BUFFALO

s-c-,-.
trum . Su'nshlne House and the !rater·
nittes ar~ e:Kpected to clash in ftve events:
an obstacle course. a three-legged race. a
frisbee or beer can toss. and a beer chug·
ging competition. among others.
T -shirts and tickets to such upcoming
concerts as Rachel Sweet. Ted Nugent
and YES will be aw~rded . The big payoff.
though. wrll be the Mark Moore
"Memorial" Trophy. reporis Michael
Breene. an SA coordinator for Sum·
merfesl .
Mark Moore?
Yes. grins Breene. "ft's sort o! a joke.
He's the head ol Sub-Board. Everything
around here Is named for people nobody
ever heard ol. We thought we'd name
this after someone who is still here and
nobody ever heard of! ..
Other coordinators for Summerfest are
Robin Shiskrr and Stephen Krown of
UUAB. Lauren Shapiro of SA is handling
publiclly. ·
Announcements have been sent all
over. Shaph'"o says. Posters ore up on the
Elmwood strip and va rious chUdren ·s
camps have been contacted about that
portion of the day's events
If a \itde cold beer and some musk:
would top off your week . drop by the
Fountain Area tomonow ahernoon . and
share in the fun

JULY 17, 1980

lion of.llf rather than the denial ol ~ ." he

..m~ .

.

Lb Freud, Lema IUbmlbed that the
lllrllggle belwoHn life denial.and life affw·

,.lion II the "c:rudal. angullhed siJu9ll)e
In a culliano, In people and wilhln UJ as in·

dMduala .

'Though Ametca may be -'*ndn!l
• malalM. Lema lnllll«&lt; !hera " ....
allwldant hope for • Nllon c:onc:.rMd

about aploring man '• 1n1n and IJ¥he.

freedom , enterprise, equity. ~ .. almost
to his own surprise, l..erneT said. he ut·
tered , "- ." 1lrio It the MCOnd conH·
nulng revolution: a move toward "equal
...,.,... IO equal !if d&gt;anut."
The fact Is , he - e d. over. and
above tuun ol race~
· or socioeconomic status.
are "born un·
aqua/" beauw each
d
enl lew
ol abllty and ~nt . The Idee cefllral lo
thlo m&gt;Oiullon. however. " the notion
that och person born unequal should
ha•e the. opportunity to reach hr. or her
Individual

pocenllal

Today a "crucial problem" exists that
can lllynllo any progr .toward thltl end·
the *"'I!JJe for acrlftl, partlr.vr.ly by
hislotlcaly oppr.-.1 peopift, dMhn

with the concept ol meritocracy. For the
good olthe country. l..erneT ~~
Americans not think In terms ol choosing
one or the other. but ol effecti\lely balanc·
lng 'the two .
A socle1y cannot function K U views the
outcome of suc:h conflicts •• a ..zero sum
Qllme." lns!ead . he olfered. "each group
must yield In order to Win more t.h an K .
has given." LikewlM. l..erneT added . a
".oero sum" stllnce won 't won. in global
affain, but a "nde-olf game" at ~ast ha
a chanca.
"I think ft may be the only chance we
have ol aiiOidlng a nuelo!ar thowclown ..
and, Indeed. M may be the only chance
we have ol avokllng vloWnt Internal.

._.._,. _._ __ ,

�.........
l

j

~

.lulv 17, 198)

' I

.._r...m._,.tw....,..wlha
................. "Pcclsw end a-·:

, "£..,.........,....
.... _., ....

upon our coiK......,_end our c;aladlw wll."

.........................
-

Toldng ~ &amp;om the audience,

r...m.
- - - . s o n:
, _ _ ............ cf 0 , . , . . . . , .
c~w

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

'From 1111 "cultural hero," William
Ja!MI, lAmer Mid he 9aJned a paspec·
t1w on how to lll«w f1&lt; nol lll«w dlf.
fercnc:a which separata men. He now
beliewo then Is one a1tiea1 dlffuenc:e
which undercuts aD other$, the difference
~

a "tough mind and a tender
mind.
"A tough-minded person oees the ruli·
ty," he explained, while the tender·
minded lndMdual oees not "the reality
that's there but a picture of It which he
UMS to console hlrmel." For that reason ,
Lener Mid he no longer flnda terms such
u IJberal and eonMrVa!IY\I or Republican
and Democrat very "useful." If forced to
make a choice between a tough-minded
conMrVatlw, or a tender-minded lt&gt;eral,
"Lerner Mid he'd opl for the .former,
"although rd prder, of courM , to haYC a
tough-minded lberal."
Hlrtorlcally , he contended, · the
weaknea ofllberalr hu been ihelr tender
mind and the 6ownfaD of eonMrVallYCS ,
their "hard nus o(_ heart." On the positive
slde, the rtrtngtlr"of lt&gt;erals Is •generortty
o( view," and their desire "to care and
shan " ConMrVatiYel are bolstered by
their •oente of tradition , consistency of
valuer, and wlnerability."

A-powecJ..

Lerner ,
who
received
hls
undergraduat and law degrees from
Yale and a Ph .D. Irom the Rabat Brook·
ingl Gradua School of Eoonomlcs and
Governmenl ,ddecas the ernervenc;e of a
new power dasa which, as a whole , hu
the ilblbty to rhape the climate of opinion
In our counlry. This power group In·
dudes professionals In all areas
(medicine, tu.:hlng , law, media ,
*'&gt;nlcal groups. otudents, ek.) .
8«auac of this class phenorncne (particulwty d to a highly Intelligent faculty.
otudent and media WOUJ&gt;) , political eamI*DN are now waged In a new way.
"One eannoC UI&gt;Ckrsland the growth In
popu1attty of John Anderaon without It,
nor the-y In which the po~....- run."
Thlllo . . U.d "revooution .•

Elode ........._
The · revolution," II Lener's
fourlh . This c:oncoms ~ o( attitudes
and behevlor, nol only Obout - · but

Mo

~to......,., thefamlly

and pneratlonlil relatlonlhtpo.
With thlo revolution hcs come rcacareh
and .,. a
o( the tOial .e q,dc,
and our place In 1t. New sludla are being
done llndudln!l one )ult publlohad by
on the l{.,nedy men) which can
...,.
t lnliO one's behavior and think-

r...m.

Inti

llol cancldolllc: Ha (or she) m1111 ~ :
aei.Jmowlodge, tnkllgen&amp;:e end • CfPBC·
lly for (which c - lades) ;
&lt;apeelly for g,owth and dialogue with ....
people; CI1IOIIonal maturity (Ted Kennedy lslmproYing on this one and John,

"Who .would haYC been a great praident
If he had lived," reached matwlty after
the Cuban Mlalle Crisis); the eapadty for
struggle, and an abiltty to command.
("Only after FOR learned how to com·
mand hlo d - did he learn to command the counlry.")
Public Schools: They are under attack
now because parents lnststed they ~pe
their children's valuer and character. The
achoofs, however, were noe prepared to
assume this area of raponslblllty from
parents, and at the same lime deal with
complicatlonr brought on by detericmotlng
generational relationships and media In·
Ouence . Too, the achoofs did nol haYC
the resourea to gtve a top-notch education to each child . The "immensity of the
task" brought on a " dilution of
standards."
Reogon : !&gt;Its "Intellectual depth" and
his rtgldity on lsoues are suspect. As
governor, however, he dld exhibit a
eapadty for compromise. People tend to
oee Reagan as a way of moving away
from a "liberal ...dare state and sodely ."
Lerner noted . Very little has been written
on the man because those who do the
writing are generally liberals who refwed
to acknowledge that he could be a se-..
candidate.
PWmaries: He would like to see
regional rather than state primaries.
Anderson: Lerner believes he has an
extremely keen mind but is bothered by
his propoolng (three lima) a "Chn.tian
Amendment" to the Conslltution which
would have "ovenldden the separation
between church and state."
The Praldenllal Condldofa os o
group: "They are aD ilble and decent men
but there Is no Supreme figure among
them ."

SUNY names
5-year planner
Dr. lllornM M. Freeman, 42. wtJI
become Slate Unlvenlty of New York's
vice c:hancdor for policy
analysis, AU$IIISI 1, following hlo appoint·
rMrit to the S44 ,000-a"11Uf pool by the
Univenlty's Board of Trustea.
Dr. Fncman, praently director o( ....
Office of lnsttiutlonaf Raureh at
Michigan Slate Unlvenlly. hu published
alenllw:ly In the field of higher educe·
lion admlnlslrallon and on illues dallng
..... .-.dl, the analysis o( Unlvenlly
q&gt;port. .....,..,..,. allocation, budgeting
and planning.
The app&lt;&gt;k&gt;t;ment of an uaoclate vice
chanc:elar for poky analysis Is a key one
In .... d.wloprnent o(. llve"11Uf Untverllly enrolment and l'aOUitll plan to
which SUNY 1o commltt.ad, Olanoelor
CWian Whanon Mid. The uaoclate vice
chano:dor also clewlops analytical
Nlated to enrolment, lnotNc:·
tlonlil end &lt;--" produc:llvlly. and
budgot. He as a dcartnghouoe lor
............. Information In .... Untw:nlty
¥ldl and ......... 64 Slate UNverwlty
~ln~.coordlnMing . and
oucullng llaaseeaii!Uf'I'IYI and rwporta.
Other~ changa ~to
Boarcl--.:
AppolnlnMnt of Dr. Paul H. sa-"*'• J)NIIdenl of the R--=h Foundation o( Slate Unlvwolly. .. adlng vice
c:hanclh for reMarC:h and graduate

..,.,._

""*"'"

....... ~Julv15.

T~ ......,..._of

D. O'Dowd,

Dr. Donald

SONY ......,
vice
c:hanoolor, .. acllne J)NIIdenl o( ....
~ Foundollon, In addlllon to . .
dollas.
,.. part ol ................ Boarcl o(
oftt. "-dd ~
,__. .lahn F. ......... Jr. as acllne
. . . . . vice

.

Socialization found
not a one-way street
Several decades ago, sodal scientists
erroneously believed sodallzatlon was a
kind ol unilateral process through which
parents Influenced their children, noted
Professor Gunhlld . ~. of Penn
State's College of Human Development.
Since the 19501, however, the prooeso
hcs been proved to be a "two way llreet."
Influence Is nol exclusively wielded by the
parents.
During an address Monday on "Patterns of lnOuenc:e Aaoss Three Genera·
· !Ions In Urban Families," ~sored
by the Colleges and U/B s Multi·
clisdpllnary Center for the Study of Aglng, the Norwegian-born researcher
reported that her 111Cent research realfirms then II a considerable amount of
aoos1J"ner8tional tnlluenc:e ocewriAg
between parent and child, Influence
which does nol CUM with ~ or
birth of third generation ollspmg, but
continua through the entire life cVCie.
Hagestad's study Involved" 148
Chicago-area families with at least one
child and a grandparent living In the same
metropolitan area.
It specl8caJiy focuaed on Influence belntergenerational pain, such ..
g,andfather to ~ SinJ:c people norrna1y do no1 like to
rewal that they attempt to Influence the
thinking of olhcn, or haYC been lnfluenced ihcmsclva, Hagestad put 11 topic:
arau 0.e ., hulth, work, education, perM&gt;nalllle llylc, life phlloeophy, etc.) on
lip cards and c:asuaJiy asked respondents
with whom they st... convenatlons on
the subjec:ls . If K wu Indicated that such

:'.ct-:~·

respondents wen
l n - - . looked for tnOu.._,
clepcndtng on the number of ..-ega
acnt and .-...1, and changa which
oa:urnad due 10 the lhnlmllltona.
Reopoodcnts &amp;om three generations
concurred overwhelrninlllv that the
~ IPOUII ....,.._ iM moot lnfor.
rnatlon, with the parent gener.uon placlng - . d and ~Jandparents lut,

~':":· o1 ~ ....,..
work, jMnOI\IIIIIfellylc; money management and hMI!h. Bodt parents and
they ....... .....,.,.,.. In
time.. 11rac:t1ono about SO P. oent of the

r.:= ,. .

~. the hi! .,...u0n In·
c11c:....s they ~ more In·
...._ froin . . . . . . . . tt- the
podpw•• . _ . . . . . , - g~v~ng.

:x...·..:::-..-:..u::=

_,!1
....,.,. nat .......-cl "' .......... but

also because of a "symmelry ~m ."
In other words, one would expect a
grandehlld to remember more detail from
a coversatlon with a grandparent,
whereas the grandparent may have six
children and 20 grandchildren with
whom he or she con-.
It was also cllscove:red that while fathers
and molhen discussad the same types of
subject areas with children, the grandparents didn't. The Grandfathers tended
to broach only certain "men's lsauel,"
such as money and work , with their
grandoons and telclom discussed feeling
or emollons. The grandfather group also
indleated balling much more difficulty
finding arau about which they could tal
to their granddaughters. In general,
grandfathers stayed away &amp;om areas of
c:onllicl with !hell' grandehJidren and
grandehtldren maintained "demllltartzed
zones" with them, so u not to "rock the
boat."
. Parents, lheotudy ""'-d, were more
Influenced by thew parents than thew

c:hilclren.

Hegat.d Mid she 1o now running a
family- toIf her llndJngo change.
.
8«auac !J'Bndparents Influence tha
srandc:hiclren to a much wutei degree
ihan realiood, H--.1 . . _ - t that
perhapo- shoulcf "rethink l!ietr role ."
On the other hcnd, the young had In·
fluenco with the '*I only In more In·
nocuous areas, like money rnenagement.
Farnllv and lifestyle "Were no1 a
matter of negollation."
~ tat agU&gt;st

ATIEN110N FACULTY
The propoeed General Educatlon program neechl your help.
Proposala for new General
Education courau and .for
"theme" ~ must be ..,bmltted by September 30. To
date, wry few theme c::oune
Ideas, eapeclally, have been propoMCI. "'f- don't get them, we
could be In dllk:ulty," advlla
Dr. Robert Cerveny, chairman
of the lmplenientatlon .ub-group
of the General ~ucatlon panel.
For Information on how to go
about IUbmlttlng your c::oune
Ideas, c:oatact .tther c.wny at
~~1-2338 cw Dr. Peter Hare,
~~of General Education,
..._._636-.,.._U03_.._._ _ _ _ _ _.J

�July 17, 1980

e test 99 per cent
sure in paternity cases
By Muy Bdh Splaa ·

~-A teat UMd to-s.:..oblaln better "malches"
between potential human organ
transplant donon and recipients Is rapidly
gaining popularity among lawyers for Its
accuracy In resolving some 90-99 per
cent o( paternity cases In which " li UMd .
Dr. Paul I. Teraoakl, UCLA odenlisl
who perfected the HLA (Human
Leukocyte Antigen) identification test,
said u doesn'.spedllcaly point the finger
at the father In a disputed """', but does
exclude almost 100 per cent o( putative
fathen who are wrongly ac:cused . The
rncxe commonly UMd red blood c:ell test ,
on the other hand. raolves 'only about
I 0 per cent of paternity cases .by exclu ·

ston .
.
Spuklng aJ the Seventh International
lrnmunolo!W, Convocation sponsored by

Pharmaceutics
conferei)ce will
be a reunion
An atlmated. 100 present and former
graduate students, postdoctoral research
associates, and laeuky members of the
l&gt;epartment o( Pharmaceutics of the
School o( Pharmacy wiD attend the fii"SI o(
what Is planned to be a bi-yearly research
symposium and reunion here neJtt week.
Some o( the participants are coming from
foreign CQuntrlel, Including Sweden,
~nd and West Germany, -and
many ore bringing their families.
The Symposium will open Thursday,
July 24. with a reccptlb,t and dJnner lor
200 partldpants, ~t o( Phar·
maceutics employees, and thdr families
at the Grand. lsiand Holiday Inn. Tha
Amherst Campus
be the site for the
first day o( the ~ntlflc Symposium on
July 25: the second day's meeting wiD be
held at the Holiday Inn. Tha IOdal pro·
gram con. . . o( IN rec:epllon and dJn.
ner, a picnic. and a riwr cruise luncheon.
Thirty present and former students and
members of the Department art ochedul·
ed to report on their nocent research fin.
dings conc:enlng the .boorption, distrt&gt;ution, metabolism. excretion and pharmacologic activity of drugs and on the
physical chtinlstrv of pharmaceutical
aystems.
Dr. H .L. Fung, chairman of the
Department o( Ph.rmaotutics. pointed
out that "the uallent attendance at the
lll"'poolum by former !P"aduale udents
and ..-an:h aaoclata, reflects · the
11r011g bonds that eJtlsl between tt..
Oepaltm«nt and Us former doctoral and
polldoctoral students. Tha larve number
o( Important research reports -ocheduled
for pnMntation. lndlcaJes the compelimec and sustamed oc:lo-ntlflc produc·
ttvtty o( our graduates."
Tha Department has an International
repu..,tion lor the acellencc of Its
research , It attracts graduate and
pootdoctoral stull.n &amp;om al 011er the
world Current annual research grant
IUpPorl ol the Department average~
about 5100.000-per faculty member. Dr

F.ung noled

U I 8 prof produces
library care program

Tha Ernest Wlteboky Center, Terasakl
said the HLA teat Involves Identifying
antigen combinations found on lour sites
o( wblte blood ceO leukocytes 'In child.
mother and possible father(sl:-' Since
antigen combinations on specific sites are
ln.herited, four pain from each parent, it
Is highly unlikely that two putative fathers
In a specific case would have Identical an ·
ligen pain Inherited by the child.
Tha more commonly used red blood
cell test, on the other hand , relies on the
ABO, Rh and several other blood groups
o( dtlld , mother and putative father(s) .
Combinations of these 9JOUP' are found
frequently among non-re.lated in divldU.Is. however. so the test olteo tums
up lnconduslve results.
lt c:oeu more
Although the HLA test costs $375.
compared to $100 for the red
test ,
the man who feels fairly certain t.. Is not
the father In a disputed case may con·
slder additional money for the more
sophisticated technique well worth the

c:en

e~&lt;pense.

A men ac:cused of fathering a set of
fraternal twins, for Instance , was found to
have fathered only one of them In a
highly publicized court case In Europe
several years ago based on HLA test
results.
"He malntalned he wasn't the father of
twins ," T&lt;ra$ald chuckled . "and he was
haH right. Another man was found to be
the father o( the second. twin , conceived
one hour later than ~ first child ."
Matemlty - I t
While most lawyers wan! to use the

Terasakl method In paternity cases. the
test was also Instrumental In settling a suit
to establish identity o( a child's mother.
Based upon HLA test results, a woman
sua:essfully sued the hospital at which
she delivered two years earlier. She was
sent home with an Infant which was not
hers, so the test showed .
Although the HLA tesl Is accepted as
being more accurate than the red cell test ,
It Is •till not routinely used In
paternity suits.
Tha cost Is enormous to equip a
laboratory where reagents , not yet
available commercially . must be
prepared. And many scientists feel the
predous amounts o( reagents which are
produced should more appropriately be
UMd In tissue-typing of transplant donors
and redplents.
If, however, high quality reagents can
be produced and made available to
laboratories whose personnel can con·
duct the sophisticated HLA test, there's
little doubl H will be more widely UMd In
U.S . COW1rOoms In the future.

Wi~ebsky

center
icated at meeting

d

U/ B's Center for Immunology was
dedicated as The Ernest Witebsky Center
July 7 In honor of the late ,
intemabonaUy·known immunologtst.
In dedication ceremonies at the open·
lng of the Center's Seventh International
Convocation held at the Niagara HUton ,
Dr F. Carter PanniU, Jr. called the name
change a "bvtng memorial" to Dr. Witebsky. first director of the Center In the
1960s and former chairman o( U/B's
Department o( Bacteriology and lm·
munology . He died In DeCember. 1969.

F-•tucleau
"Although tt.. approval to change the
Center's name to honor Dr. Wltebsky
was officially apprOIIed by the U/B
Council earlier this iprtng. ft was ap·
proprlate that the public announcement
be delayed until today ," PanniU told
those attending the ceremonies. The
U/ B vice president for heakh sciences
noted that In the audience there were
many former students and colleagues o(
Dr. Wllebsky's .
Pannlll noted that while Witebsky Is
widely-known for his own research contributions to the growing field o( lm·
munology , t.. Inspired students and colleagues to conduct creative research by
being a good teacher and serving as an
eJtample. (For a brief biography ofWlteb·

sky. see story below.(
Under Witebsky's leadership , the
Center came Into being to foster , en·
courage and support Immunological
research at U/B but has achieved Inter·

national status. Every other year ~ the
Cen1er sponsors an International Convoca'lion which focuses on a specifK area
of immunology. On ahemate years, sum·
mer programs on methods of immunologic research and diagnosis are of.
lered to sdentlsts from around tlw world .

Source of prtcle
"The Center is certainly something of
which the University can be proud," Pan·
niU pointed out, "and we are happy that
many o( you who knew or worked with
Dr. WHebsky could be here today on this
occasion."

Dr. James F. Mohn , current director of
the Center, and hl5 wile presented Dr
Pannlll with a large, framed photograph
o( Witebsky which will hang In the
Center's offices. Mohn was associated
With Witebsky for some 27 years at U/ B
and his wile worked with the scientist In
the laboratories at Buffalo General
Hospl..,l.
More than 200 scientists from 15 na·
lions attended the Convocation held In
N-.agara Falls.

Dr. Witebsky knew Schweitzer, fle'*d
Nazis, founded center at Buffalo
EDITOR'S NOTE: Who -

Dr.

ErrwM WlteiMky /« whom U/B'a
Center/« lmmwoolotw IKia bem .....,.

ftl7 Dr. Joma Jlfoltn, , _ , , Mod &lt;1/
the omU o"" o jomler .,.,.,, &lt;1/ Wltd&gt;aly'a. , _ , . In thla .,..,.,ch .,_. In
J 961 ot o bonqud '"""""'e ltla mm·
lor.

Had ErMst Wltebsky se'-cted the alternative pathway at that moment o( crudal

d«:tooon In his teen yean, we lm·
munologlols would not be -mbled
'-e to honor him. IM!e&lt;ttd. this pthertng
might be composed o( distinguished
murlclans.
Perhaps his early, In tens&amp; Interest In
plevlnQ the lilolln. at which t.. became"'

ildled~ - . J y cawed him to conolder a
mUIIcal career, and may ha~~e been
direct result o( a wry outstanding, Indeed

u

m...-callnlluencc

As • conacquenao o(
geographic
portlllon ..,...,_.. made • the c:ondu·

*"'
mans

o( the Ani World W•, many Ger·
mV.ted from Slratbourg to
Franldurt am MWt . Dr. w.btky'a!JOiher,
Or Mk:haal Wllloboky, an . - . -:

•nd '*uncle, an ~. who
~.. o(

Fraftldurt. -._..,.

phY*Jano to lhll group. Moal prornNnt

among

these

refugees

was

the

magnanimous, noble, late Dr. Abert

Sell--..
Since tt.. famiUes developed social and
pro(OIIIonal contacts, this friendship af.,
forded young ~st Wltebsky the rare
privilege of privately listening to·
Schweitzer as t.. practiced on the organ .
Later, In a Heldeberg church, young
Witebsky had tt.. signaT honor o( turning
the music pages for Schweitzer durtng a

recital
Many years later, alter completing
medical tra ining , Ernest Wltebsky
journeyed to Lausanne In 1933to discuss
with Schweitzer the possibi ties o( joining
htm In Lambercne.

Sdtwet- ........ .,..,._.....

me

But as t.. told
penonallil, t.. quickly dittc.OYered during the cllacussions that
~ daperately needed phvslclans who were .Joo carpenters; and br.
Wlloboky ~ rio dcxlerily what·
In such manual - - MOll fortunately lor us In Buffalo. t.. decided to
.....,..... to the
inl&amp;ud.
To 1J0 t..ckward In lime once again ,
Emetl Wllobokv gJ"aduated from the
Go.tNI Gyrnnllilum In Frankfurt and

u.s.

matriculated In the University of Frankfurt
Medical School . During these years , he
became an avid skiing enthusiast and was
among tt.. forst students o( th. lnterna·
tionally famous Au trion ski inJiructor.
Hannes Schneider, who later founded
skiing schools In this country.
Dr. Wltebsky, who ahcrrtate.d (a was
customary In Germany) his medlcal traln·
lng between Frankfurt and Hcldeberg ,
received it.. Doctor of Medicine degree
from the University o( Heldeberg In
1926. Dunng these years. t.. was pro·.
foundly Influenced to pursue tt.. study o(
human blood groups by tt.. lat Dr Lud·
wig Hlnzfeld during the latter's working
visit to Hcldeberg In 1922-23.
As a senior medical student_, young
Wkbsky -nted a student seminar on
blood group antigens and antibodies
which were to play a very prominent role
in his lnveJti!lations for the no1 30 or so
yon
From 1925·33, he w an.ii::hed to the
R~ Dtvloion of the University of
Heldeberg Medical Schoofs Canclft ln llilute t..aded by Dr Hans Sachs !the
famous pupd of Paul Ehrlich) first .. ass1s
Wot and then as Prtvat Do.nt un 1933

--- -·.--·

.

.

�July 17, 1980

4

S akespeare
goes Holly.,oocl
Any coincidence between Shakespeare and what the Thea~ Department
is presenting In Delaware Park this month
is purely coincidentaL
And that's predsely the way largerthan-usual audiences at the fifth season
of free theatre In the park like il.
The play. olfldally. is ShaKespeare's
" A Mldsummer Night's Dream ." As it un folds. though . the resemblance unravels.
Fairyland. the setting for most of the
actlon in the .&amp;rd"• classic comedy of
love and dreamdust. has. been transformed by Director Saul Elkin Into a Peter
Max -llke land "ovei the rainbow ·· The
"real world" is represenkd in stark blackand-whit • but when the fairies fly in
(enveloped in brilliant stretch hlbnc cocoons of evety hue of the rainbow). the
mood turns echnicolor ... You could be
watching

one , of

those sumptuous

musicals of the i&lt;lte·30s-mid-40s when
Hollywood tested the limits of chroma
and audience credulhy.
Oberon. King of the Falnes. does a
song-and-dance. "I Know a Bank ." lhal
Fred Aslaire could well have done for
Busby Berkeley- probably did . When
Thanla. Queen of the Fairies. demands a
Lullaby. the fairies · oblige with a
wldescreen . Dolby-sound rendhlon of
"Lullaby of Broadway." an update
of"9J&gt;'ddiggers of 1936 ··
Cherrlee end chirping
Later. Titania takes a turn .. Carmen
Mhanda - bananas .cherrles . maracas
and aD - for a first iKt curtain song featurIng mor~ Latin chtrping than an av\ary in

Rio
J1m McGuire's .. Puck .. ts reminitce.nt of
the stylized bellboy-page who moved
pdes of elegant luggage tnto elegant
staterooms in eveTy elegant. fuzzy·
.focused Myrna Loy pulse movie He
-doubles as "Groucho :· played on with
the "You Bet Your Life" theme for as
nonsenlikal a bit of digression .. you can
tmaglne . Then triples as "Chico.''
quadruples as "Harpo ."
Saul Elkin prances and dances tn an
a ·s head . and Kristin Norton -a less
than demure Helena - tosses BID Gonta"s
Demetnu about like a bea"bag· applying .
haM-nelsons. flying camels and step-over
toeholds ""'h the grace of a GorUI&lt;I Mon ·
1000.

Jeannl'l.te Macdonald and a "Moun1ie"
appear gratuUowly
This "Dream" funny . frenetic and ln vtmtive

Bob Groves of the Co.;Mr applauded
the " off 1he waD" concep1. the athletic
lawn' quan I. the sheer energy
In the News . Margaret Sullivan quoted
a member of the eudienc. who found the
shenanigans "amusing. but 1'101 exactly
what..,.. came for." while giving Elktn the
Uut star for "show ste.allng "
She It ed Richerd Wesp's campy
Southern lle in the pi&lt;ly wuhtn the pi&lt;ly
Ray Leslft's , musk: (renglng from a
oprigh
Ae~~ean Sea selling air to Latin
and country) is lntt'lp&lt;l'l.ed by a combo
loaturinv Bobbv Ptevtt.. Rick Strauss and
Peter Pltclrilli. In addition to h head bobbing. fooc-tllomplng od Hannah
ft
n ·, choreogrephy for falrin fairly
According ID the prognom not . this.
S.ul Elkin lbty IAolec cooc:epl Is con
ed from the stuff drum er made
ol bill ..-.d pieces, glimpoa and glim
""'"'· c t - and chlm«no

"""c:rowo~·.

S..Nnv

Isolated by our peculiar . personal
mysteries. to members of a band united
In the pleasure of theatrical ritual. sharing
the spiritual power of Oberon and
Titania . JOintng ourselves and being joined by joiners. weavers , tinkers . menders,
and carpenters. on•stage and off. Uke
them we are actors in a play that is the
ntual of hvtng ... :·
At Sunday's luU-park performance, at
least . McGuire was nght about the crowd :
they were as varigated as the colors of the
rainbow stage : Lovers with picnics.
sprawled on blankets. nuzzling. Bluehaired matrons in black stockings, whne pleated skirts and fur-trimmed sweakrs
sealed primly in lawn chairs. sipping
wine The bike brigade . Young men in
ocanty cut-offs, flamboyantly flashing
summa tbns . Young women. mostly

dressed more Sl'nslbly to ward off mosquhoes and the summer crun Dog.. Peo1* passing out draft resistance handbills,
making airpi&lt;lnes of Theatre Department
recruitment literature. Fal me.n on
mopeds. Pseudo-Intellectuals . loudly
engrossed In their own repariee . disturbIng other viewers. paying absolutely no
anentlon to anything but themselves. yet
laughing ~artily on cue with the rest of
the audlo:nce . Others, hanging on every
word; thoroughly enjoying the pi&lt;ly and
the diamond-clear BuffalO summer eve·
mng. Kick chasing one another and
tcr amlng n...... who could paos for
adu chasln!l one another and tcr am lng

A show on~ and off .
w nmight members of the crowd "turn
to one a"""- end "Kdolm with Tltanie,
"My Oberon , what v!sloml have lfttll"
Performances contlnu nightly et 8
nat
Delaware Park R.ooe G.rden ,
through Sunday.
For Sha dpC
purists, a novenlon ol "RRchard n· • due
July 29- Augull 10

�July 17, 1980

• Wltebsky

........

~h llsigntllcant that his public adcbea in
1929 as J&gt;ll:f-ol the ceremony In connection wlh hiS promotion to Prlvat Oozent
dealt wtlh his preliminary experiments on
.organ ~ ol extracts ol the thyroid
gland· wh ich he attributed to
thyroglobubn .

T - CMIMd -ble
Dr. Wtleboky m.cle an auspicious, or
lnaulplclous, envy-depending upon the
eternal dlfferenca In viewpoints between
the .-arch hierarchy and the

young , ~ Investigators-Into Jden -_
llfic meetings with his first presentation.of
a paper on his own lnvestigallve studies
In 1926.
In 1927, young Witebsky debvered an
addreu on the validity ol blood group
determinations In cases ol disputed paterdistinguished assembly of
nity before
·lawyers and judges in the court house at
Frankfurt. Far too few blood group
genetidots and immunologists are aware
Dr. Wltebsky published one of the earliest
and best monographs on the existing
knowledge ol human blood groups in
1932.
By 1933, dar!&lt; clouds of hate had
thk:kened In the skles over Germany and
especially over the academic halls with
ther concentrations of superior Intellects,
such as the _University ol Heldelberg,
always a
t to the survival of any
political de~ . The final Impetus to
a decisiOn to leave Germany came when
Dr. Witebsky could not exclude a prominent , local member of the Nazi party from
the paternity ol an illegitimate child on
basis ol his blood group examination .

a

0.. toGeaewa
Since the Witebskys-lather and
son - possessed dual dtizenshlps (Germany and Swtizerland}. they went on to
Geneva .
Where, however , would Ernest WHeb sky continue his research and how would
it be supported? No doon were opened
to him in any ol the departments to which
a bacteriologist and Immunologist would
naturally gravilate . F inally , Dr .

Franceschett l,

professo r

of

ophthalmology at the University of
Geneva , gave him a laboratory In his
depaftm¥nt ol cbnical ophthalmology
Perhaps this explains the sort of soft spot
Ernest Witebsky had in his heart for
ophthalmologists!
The laboratory, however, could hardly
be properly referred to as a laboratory,
since It was In a dar!&lt; comer ol the basement , devoid of furniture , laboratory
glassware a. other supplies. This Dr
Witebsky proceeded to furnish In a makeshift fashion , buying a lew pipettes and
test tubes with hll own money. Yet
despite these physical limitations , and the
obvious inadequacy of such a research

environment ,

his lnvestlgallons

here - from 1933-34 - resulted In lour
publications which dealt with his studies
on the Fon.sman antigen and with his
demonstration of so-=lled primary
serum toxicity .•

To N- Yodt aDcl U / B
In 1934 , Dr. Wltebsky emigrated from
Geneva to New YO&lt;k City to become
research I Uow at Mt. Sinal Hospital
There, he was joined by a fanner student
at the University ol Heidel&gt;erg, Dr. Erwin
Neter, In 1935, Dr. Paul Klemperer , the
em._t pathologist, brought U/ B's Dr
Kornel Taplan to - Witebsky's chick
~mbryo--For-..nan anti&gt;ody serum toxicity eJ&lt;pCrllnen .
This led to an Invitation to jOin Dr
Terplan's Department at U/ B as
. - a profesoor ol bacteriology, a post
Wltabokv held from 1936-1940
In 1940, he was promoted to professor
ol bacteriology and immunology. One
year laler, he was named head of the
newly -created
department
of
badenology and Immunology (now
10daobio6ogy) .

.

As • young, olightly overwhelmed
medical student In the spring of
1942, I waa lnvbd by Dr. W~y to
join
In a .-arch prlljlcl.
ex·
tr.ordlrwy olfe, from my hurnblo poollion and frahman vlewpok11 , beceme the
turning point ol my profCIIIonal Clllftf
The new o.p.rtment ~ ol one
room 14' a 20' which , during the
tuching portion ollhe I'M' , was uoed for
~rahmen

'*"

n.

making media , cultures and adler student
materials. Much ol the .-arch was ac·
tuaJiy c:anled out In the Baclerlology and
Serology LaboratO&lt;Ies ol Buffalo General
Hospllil, made possible because ol Dr.
Witeb•ky's appo intment there as
bacteriologist and serologist In 1936.
This was a tangi&gt;le expression to me of
one of hls most fundamental
phllosophies- that successful teaching of
medical mlc:robiology and immunology
was dependent on the triad of teaching.
research and service:
'COMCieDce dpn'

My indoctrination Into thll field as a

student was to serve as a routine.
diagnostic bacteriology technician trainee
after successful completion of adequate

probationary periods in glassware
washing and media preparation . Again
this approach reflected Witebsky's strong
luling that successful administration of
such a diagnoSnc laboratory service at the
post-doctoral period required personal
familiarity with each aspect of the operation.
The entire lull-time stall of the Medical
School department at that time consisted
of a devoted technician , Miss Anne
Heide , and what we then referred to as a
laboratory diener , Mr. Augu st Fischer.
The tolal budget lor supplies required to
teach about 70 medical students and 50
dental students was roughly $500 per an num.
Things were tight In other ways , too.
This was the period of the "conscience
cigars."
I couldn't believe he had really said that
the first time I heard it so I begged his pardon whereupon to my disbelieving ears I
heard again "conscience cigars." He must
have appreciated I wore a most confuse(!
countenance because he promptly pro·

ceeded to demonstrate what he meant.
One of his real pleasures he told me
was smoking cigars. instantly addmg that
this was a foul habit. Every tirrie he puDed
out his desk drawer he was consdence
smitten over what his children , Frank and
Grace, were being denied IO&lt; him to alford this personal pleasure. To salve his
consdence, therefore. he kept in a
drawer right below the more expensive
ones, a box of nickel cigars- yes, live
cents bought a Wh ite Owl cigar

then - wh ich were

his "conscience

ctgars ... ones he could smoke on such occasions joyfully. The better ones were
saved to celebrate successful experiments
at which time conscience did nor e:nter
rhe.picture

Dr Witebsky won many honors In h tS
careers but Hhe had the choice, I seriously believe deep in his heart he coveted
most the Chancellor's Medal from U/ B
Upon Its presentation to Dr Witebsky,
the late , great ChanceUor Samuel Paul
Capen In 1950 said .
"HIS University which now honors him
has still another reason for bestOWing
upon him Its accolade . Throughout the
prooecutlon of his work he has ex·
emplilied the highest standards of the ·
unilierslty scientist. He has been at pains
to see that the associates who have
assisted him should share with him
whatever professional a-edit might come
as a consequence of their joint labors. He
has insisted that any prolits denved from
patents on his dlocoverles should go to
the support ol further research and not to
hll personal gain . Despite his constantly
growing reputation and the reCognition
he has received from aU over the acientillc
WO&lt;Id , he has remained the simple,
modest scholar .... "

_,.__,.......

INDIRECT COST RATES CHANGE

Ellective July I, new lndtrec:t cost ratn
are 1ft dJeet lot- nsurch p r -J.. the
SUNY Researc h Foundation .hat
notified the local r-arch o e. Ac·
cording to Mrs. Shirley Stout of that of·
flee, the following rat now applv: oo·
cam - rete, 48.5 per c"n t: otl--c:ampus
rate, !1.6 per cent: edUCAtional_ agr. mcnt rat on--cam-. 53.5 per ttnt:
~duc:atlon._l

agre•ment

ra1e.

off·

cam-. $9.9 per cent . The- utn
ohoodd be wed In aU grant p r - l a
aubm!Ued from now on, Mn. s - a d-

vloed.

.

"·

�.

.i

i
~

i

July 17, 1980

Connie Schulz, enigma and paradox,
will 'perform' poem in an alley way
She's a thapian but notforinaUy train·
ed In theatre. She memorizes Nietzsche
but lays claim to being • high school
drop-out who took an equlvale&lt;ocy exam
to puate. She's lnhmse, soiHary and
dacr1bes ~lend as reserved . Yd with a
child-like cando&lt;, this pig-tailed young
woman freely reveals the complexJties of
her thought and opirll, almost as a
graOOut overture o( friendship .
En
and paradolt. Connie Schulz Is
a b4t of both . But what she Is un·
ly, Is Interesting.
Visitors to her rather spacious Buffalo
flat ar
at once greeted by emp·
~i~Ma-througl) design (not destitution) .
Schulz, a stenographer lor the past. 18
months In the Facuky of Engineering and
Appkd Sciences, prefers no furniture .
Seated on her backyard sunporch, on
which rests a worn but comfortable couch
and chair, she uplalns why: Furniture,
she reasons, would "obsiruct the energy"
she needs to aplo.e sound; the sound
she ultimately translotes to Images, then
body movement.
Tomorrow at 9 :30p .m will marie the
second Ume Schulz has performed
"publicly," that Is, not eltdusively for In·
lilted guests or In the homes of friends, as ·
she has done for the past few year:..
Draaed In a white, Isadora Duncanstyled gown, Schulz wl11 do a dramatic
presentallon .of the poem "Renaissance"
by Edna 51. Vincent Mlllay.

,. ...... ,.._
opal

Cumenlly, her rf!Jl'!rtOire cons1o1s of
about a ~ poems. Some . like

" R--.nce," are lmgthy and talcc at
..... .,......... hour to perform; olhers,
jUst • lew - In each pie&lt;le ,
'-'-wr, sound and ~I we used

Courl.,r.
They noted.

however, that State
Budget Director Howard F. Miller said
the plan still has to undergo close scrutiny
by OOB before spending can be authorized on most aspects ol it. Earlier this summer, President Keller indicated that OOB
had no objections to the broad oudine ol
the $103 miDion plan . (See Reporter,
June 19.)

Better 0. Dftclecl
Miller told the Courier that OOB need·
ed a "better lilt" on what SUNY wants to
do at Main Street. He said he had not
seen the prehmlnary plans advanced by
' the Cannon Design Arm of Grand Island
and that SUNY had "not demonstrated
to us yet that they need all that
renovation ...

Schulz ..... . . . , _ ..............

to solidify rapport with her audience.
Bocause each poem has Hs own emollonal framework, pressure and energy
!..:tor, Schulz performs only pieces with
whidl she "feels a communion." Alter
memorizing, then CJtpiorlng the sounds In
"Eleclra" - a two-year process In which
she broke down words Into abstract component sounds-she performed K only
once . The reason : the emotional
machinery needed to resurrect U simply
wasn' '1P'!I'alive, she says:
Schuli, the eldest of seven children
whoM lather Is a noted area choral director, calls her soliloquy a "reaction" to not
being able to "lloiO&lt;k In the complexities ol
theatre." She confessed to being "un~ · and lor now , rejects the
slructural and " mundane reality" of tradl·
llonal theatre because she fears "entrap·
men!."
The 26-year..oJd actress doesn't consider her art form Interpretive In nature ,
claiming she doesn 't possess the "facuHy"
lor lnterprelallon . Instead. she f Is Ills a
culmlnallon o( her "attentive rather than
coooeptual" abihty The "power o(
oound" conveys the meaning , she notes

Rec:e.t rolee meant nothi"S
.
Although Schulz clolms to lock the

dlsc:lpline lor traditional theatre, she has
ac1ed in the past, most recently at the
U/ B Center Theatre in Eric Bentley's
"Fall ol the Amazons" and In Artparl&lt;'s
"Fiddler on ihe roof." But such roles only
offered "superficial proof" the! she could
act and "meant nothing spiritually."
The "seeds" o( her Interest In theatre
were planted at age 15 through her
association with the Buffalo Theatre
workshop.
" II changed my perspective on
everything," she recalls. "It opened up
the world ol the abstract and
eJtploration ."
Over the past lew years, Schulz has
been artistically assisted by local
choreographer Steve Porter. At first , she
remembers, he was her "sole suppor1."
Now, however, she worl&lt;s with two
"tutors" and also seeks advice from local
ac!Of'S and directon whooe work she ad mires and whooe opinions she trusts.
For the future , Schulz sees heJKH con:
tinulng to lloiOik at the University while
developing her talent as an actras. She Is
hopeful that the ~raw material" she Is
garnering from her prewnl art form can
one day be used In more tradltlonal
th atre.-nl.
·

~STAff

--c.--~.c.- to.

. . . . _ _ ~. Pll 3-8-0029

5I

Matlrine•c• Aut . . SG~I . full -lime · 8 "-'" -4 ·ll0p.m. - . "31411 , - .

c.np. .

P1••.M r/ tcaaflucr. SG..t. fuU -Hme-

· 8 .... -4:30 p .. - . "31411 , ~
s.c-

- - . SG-4-F- tw. "34791
· SG-4-Eiocoa c--. . .............
c -. 311p .. - · -

_

_,...,

Meanwhile , Oscar E. Lanford ,
manager ol the SUNY Con51ruclion
Fund , said Cannon's plans lor Main
Street have been approved by President
Ketter, SUNY Chancellor Wharton , and
hhrueK. These approvals, he said, are the
only ones needed within SUNY. The
Board ol Trustees Is not normally con·
suhed lor approval of master planning,
Lanford Indicated . Donald M. Blinken ,
chairman ol the Trustees. told the
Courier that the Board has not dlsc:ussed
the Maln Street project. The Trustees
would be Involved In okaying a new cam·
pus at a new location , he sold. "But for
re~onfiguration or a new desjgn. our ap·
provalls not needed ."
Backbone p&lt;oject8

Construction lund manager Lanford
sold he has gone so far as to ask OOB for
approval to hire architects to prepare
detailed designs lor Improvements proposed at the Cary-Sherman-Farber complelt , and Cro.by, Squire and Abbott
halls. These are the "backbone" o( the
plan , .Lanford sold . Cary-ShermanFarber Is to be renovated and greatly eJt·
paneled to accommodate the School ol
Medicine; Squire HaD Is to be redone and
enlarged to provide room for the dental
chnlcs: C~ HaD, with a major new ad dillon , Is to house the Health Sciences
Library, and Abbott Is to be converted to
u.se as a student activfties ce.nter.
While most of the plan continues to
rec~ve scruUny. Albany sources said
construction could start within the nex1
two m~nths on renovation and expansion of Foster Han for use by the Dental
School. That project Is already planned
and ready to go. The State was to seD
bonds to cover that lloiOik (and a facility
for

the

Instructional

communication

center at Amherst) on July 15. Bidding
by contractors could follow almost Im-

mediately.

CSEA deadline

JOBS

,..

for Main St.
Wha(s the Status o( the Main Street
rehab project?
One campus newspaper announced
last Wednesday that approval for "Presl·
dent Ketter's" pion to rehabilitate the
Main Street Campus would be delayed
until aftet the Board of Trustees meets In
September.
Thursday morning's Courier Express.
however, contradicted that. The Main
Street plan had been accepted by SUNY
without review by the BOord, sold the

Tlletheatnlaaa.U.,

The free performance Is being staged Jn
an alley-two and one-hall feet
wide-located on Main Street between
the Marine Midland Bank and.._the North
Buffalo Food Cooperative. Slllh leading
to a second floor ~t will double as
Mall for the audlmc:e. In fact, the only
vlsllle theatrical accou"'""""t wl11 be
lighting, ably (and voluntarily) done by
John i yre, who's associated with a local
dance group.
.
The sounds o( each'wonlln the poem,
Schulz explains, originate In an emotion .
The emotion elldled during u-ance Is
then spontaneously trantformed to lm·
prOIIIoed rnc&gt;llftnCJlt. She views the an:hlledural ~ o( the aley. with lis high ,
weathered, red brick wah . .,. a "po~Wr
condudol" whidl be-. quality to
sound, ·and as an m&gt;OCional and sen·
...al bridge between ~lend ana the audience. As f n were anolhet ..:tor, her
brick co-pal1ner ~ her &lt;!lq&gt;ress a spec:tru.m o( I
, from the oolannlty of
dapeir to the cuphoo1a o( low.
Schulz's lint pubic ~nee . an
edapcallon of "Eleclra by Hugo Van
Hofmannsthal, - st_.t lest year on a
loeding dock In downtown Buffalo. While
olher 11&lt;:t0n would ocoll at such accommodations, Schulz thought I a peifact

SUNY has
okayed plan

~CLMIUIIL

~.

-

p ... -

SG-4. ~--a. ra-4 .30

· -

. . . '40216

~QIIL

• .-

a.t.. SG-9-~ ._..._,

c-.1 T - . t - . . .. .....,_

.

c.np.,

Application deadline lor tuition support
money lor Summer Session Is July 24 lor
most Civil Service workers.
University employees represented by
the lnslllutlonal , Administrative or
Operalional negotiating units can apply
lor tuition support In the Human
Resources and Development Training
Ofllcc, John Beane Center, Amherst . R lmburMrnenl lor up to 50 per cent
of the COUrM cost Is made only after the
courM Is SI.ICClelllully completed and an
original receipt It presented.
July 25 Is the d adline lor aPPJicallons
(Qr Employee Bcnefd Training Cour.s
for I all Mmester. These COUIWI are free
and the majority carry college aedn
Employees In the """"' three biorgalnlng
unlls are eligible .
For addllional information
both program&amp;, call Patrick Young. at 636-2754.

on

�.lulr 17.

1980

7

Lone Ranger's early hlstoqr is at U/8
...........

~.

"HH yo," had

....,.,_ - - - "HH yl••

E-.T-

who II .-.g to ct.lh In a burning
~- n.. LaM Ranear a.plluluao
only .... the ...-oo. .......... lo the
..... a forged~- In c.. anyone
In the ....... m-.1 the JIC*II, Sda
.,mmart.d the plot In ~ '-1!. "Wlwat
fields . . aot on In and It Is found that
the In duns the"soul ol the o1mlnal."

WIIh ~ •12 the ...., edded
the . . . _ . t!&gt;at elchemtoed *"'I Into
myth. A mine aploda, end from the
rubble coma a ~- Enter Tonlo,
dallned to be the bat~ Whla
man's c:ompullon slnca the last ol the
A-s...W
An lntaatlng ClCIII1p8l1lor1 piece lo the
Mohicans. Sder Is fuly ol the
ol the occasion . a-- c:ollocted radio ~ In the Archl- Is a
the hool-beatl end """--lion ol the · volume ol corrapondcnot, ochedules,
fade-out, the announcer promises: "A
rnemoo. and a shooting """" documen cloud ol dust In the dlslance, that Is the ting the making ol Republic Plctura'
. last to be seen ol the Lone Ranger, until 1938 serial adwnhlfc, "The Lone
that dust cloud again heralds the l1ylng
Ranger ... ." Tho! movie venion WM boffo,
approach ol the great horse Silver, with
as Striker acknowledges In • letter pithe mystery rider. Tonto seemingly born
quant with the u - ol an -tier day:
with a great blast of high exploswes
"We've just seen the first episode ol the
seems to be the only one that knows
Lone Ranger , and I thoroughly agree
anything concemlng this lone rider, and
:
with you that Il ls a ·how much does he know? We shall hur
"If the Mmalnlng episodes are on a par
more of Tonto In other -.!ventures ol the
with the first, public demand should keep
Lone Ranger."
the Lone Ranger and Tonto on the
To a contemporary ear, attuned to the
screen lor quite some time. It seems to
sour sound of racial d iscrimination, Tonto
me too bad that such a sweU show must
Is the most blatant kind ol stereotype, an
be confined to Saturday afternoon show·
Uno» Tom In war·palnt. A hall'-breed,
ings only.
and one can't help feeling that N's that
"Tho! thought came to me that II might
pint or two of paldace blood that makes
be big enough In some commu nltle$ to
him a 8t com
for super-hero, Tonwarra nt showing a s pan ol the regular
program . It Is certainly out of a class with
to speaks the~rnti51 God-awful pidgin.
And saying " h" to a lauh Is not the
the usual run of serials. If this happens
worst of his ha Its. His first public utyou may be able to buildup a dand y
terance Is "Whlte man ... help ," and the
feature story abou t 'the story that made
general tone of his subsequent relations
the serial a feature .' I'D bet you Tonto
with the Masked man reinforces the
steals the show ."
suspicion that "Kemo sabe" is Cree lor
"Tho! Lone Ranger" was a · - · aU
"Massa ." But remember these are the
right. It survived the laD of raolo, the
"thirties. " Amos &amp; Andy" are kings of the
decline ol movies In the '50s, the end of
vacuum tube . Bojangles acknowledges
lVs Golden Age . Tho! Masked Man and
cute little Shirley Temple with pop-eyed
his faithful Indian companion endured
watermelon grins. " Poil" peels that grape
long alter the last string was p ulled on
for Mae West, and movie audiences howl
"Howdy Doody."
when W .C . Fields complains that there's
Now they're headed back.
a "Ubangl ln the fuel supply." By 'thirties
sta ndards the show Is far from racist (or
did Striker know that "Tonto" means
"stupid" In Spanish?). EventuaOy, "Tho!
Lone Ra nger" went so far as 10 Integrate
and a real Redman , Jay SUverheels, a
Mohawk from the Six Nations ReseJV&amp;·
ern-_ ......,
lion In nearby Ontario, took a still unparallelled step toward Indian visibility bv
9.30 and 11 Phone 834-22'17.
playing the role . Any Indians In the radio
audience were either not offended bv
OFF.cAIIPUS HOUSING
Striker's charactertzation or they lorgoi ,
Off-CAmpus
all...t.o
. &amp;.c........ _ _
focully
... -Houalng
. .....
because the year before Striker died , he
was adopted by the Seneca tribe at a
....,_
..
loaldne
""
'-*Ill '"'"" ...
locaood ln 343 Squire Hoi. Houn . . '""" 9 o.m -8
powwow on their Tonawanda Reserve·
p m. ~ -W~; 9 a...m . ~ .30 p .m.,
lion .
Thunciov- frldovs, and tO o.ra.-3 p.ra. '"'Solw-

rnometl-

"From hJihel1o unp ublished records,
we have another strange and thrilling
stcly ol the mosl coloriul and mysterioul
o1 a1 chanoctm o1 the early West. Tho!
Lone Ranger. This man , whOM face was
never seen , whOM Identity was never
known , rode In the-early dayo when the
West was young, blood was rich and life·
was cheap. Throughout the length and
bre-.lth ol the Golden sUtes In the time
when men QITied their ~ their
sleeves and W&lt;n tha guns low, the
name ol the Lone Ranger and his wonder
horse Sliver was one that was admired
and respected . No one knew from where
this strange lone ranger came, and none
knew where he went •.. . "
Where ha wenfwas deep Into then&amp;·
tlonal conldooll\f!SS. And we can also
up the mystery ol origin.
Tho! Lone Ranger was born In Buf.
lalo- 10 the music ol gypsy violins.
Sacrilegious !Niybe, but documented

c»ar

fad .

•

.

Fran Striker, a U/ B drop-&lt;&gt;u.t working
u a sourid effects !Nin at WEBR radio,
fathend the Masked Man while making
like hoofs lor a program ol Hungarian
fiiiPOY music hurd over the Niagara air·
- - In the early t1W11es.
Tho! tellol's crillcal flnt live _yean haw
bftn prueved In 44 volumes ol vintage
"Lone Ranger" ocrlpll gtwn to the
Unlwnity lbarlcs alter Mr. Strlket's
&lt;Math In an automobile aocklent In 1962.
No ~ttlng your ur aD po1cldy from trying
to hear 01/er the a-tic, just clmb the Slain
to the fourth floor ol Capen and Univeni·
ty ArcNvlot Shonnie Finnegan wllle! you
anjoy the -.1-m.ra ol the Masbcl Man.
1932-19371ndusive.

"--

..... _

,... -

the

&amp;nnoutle:etnent m.clc

O...mt. 1932 over WXYl o.trolt that

w•-

to -.bloh the ,III1INcy ol the Mlllk·
can .. - If we

-

eel Man in that
dooeOI&amp;'eya;

"'Ledleo end ~ :
"The Jewel pley.n dhded bv James
.Hwel now .,._.... the llnl al a , _
...... ol .......... that ... tlwilend hold
you

sear.. ....... netuN II - ....In the

Maintenance

cruabn Klowns
n..

........... aollball

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

CXJft..-1

olthe

split second's notice .

11uoughout the entire west , In those
twbulent dayo, were crculated stories ol
a masked rider, a picturesque f'!lllfe that
performed deeds ol the greatest daring .
A modem ·Robin Hood ... seen bv lew,
known bv none . Whence he came and
where he went, no one ever knew. Few
men had dared to defy this Lone Ranger ,
and !h.- that had, were found de-.! .
Tho! daring -.!ventures ol the Lone
Ranger, the mystery rider , will be
p ruented in this new series of
prc9ams."
From 1932 until his last TV adventure
W&amp;l fflmed In 1961, the lone Ranger
righted more wrongs than anybody ex·
cepl Mary Worth . lnflnHc In variety, his
adventures were also remarkably
unoriginal; this flnt talc was a verlant ol
the jumped dalm gambit Ucady familiar
to readers ol dime Westerns. But ~
Slrb's ploa were IItie, he showed a
vertleblc genius for memorable detail.
H istory of a oort was m-.lc toward the
end ol that same first broadcast with this
bit ol dlaloguc:
" S herlff ... The buUet went clean
through Pete's forehc-.lr
"G-s-s"&lt;&gt;Sh .. .l ... reckon .. .l .. .l never
seen such a lui draw.... "
"An' 11'1 • sliver bulct tool"

--·--

• Calendar

-.go""-

Sold a lot of cereal
Writing for radio In thOM dayo was bold
outllne work, the heavy strokes of the
plot fleshed out with bumps, groans,
grunts, gun-shots, ax-blows, yawns, ap·
plausc, cheers, "night noises," "room
noises," "aowd noises," musical In·
terludes, and commerc:lals. And you
dldn ~ dare tum off the sound 10 ovoid the
sales pitch because! you couldn't see
when the huckster went off end the
masked man came back on . ..,.. Lone
Ranger" IOid a heU ol a lot ol shredded
wheat.
I
Slrlka aankcd out the plots lor the
endlao Westen, as weD ulor two other
equally
memonoble
· "Sgt.Hornet."
Prestoo
o(
the -Yukon"
a nd "The..Grccn
bv formula. He called hio t.echnlquc the
morphological method ol plotting and
after hio nrtlremcnl he g&amp;IIC up lis t«rCts
In TV wrtt1ng counes at the frank)n

_..

cWm

-

oppoMI'ICI bally - -

they coollod I quill llw only ~

a

p-. -"".
___

do!lo.Tho.phono • . . - .. 831-2583

PAitnCIPANrl NEEDED FOil

I'SYatOLOGY-

P¥foolow OIIPC'I·

_..(men and__, , Ewn cooh. W·
... 831 -3 0 7 1 - 10 and 5. Moncloy tlwough

Frido!lfooM-.

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

........ ...,..,.... ,...by"'

.....-.c-~-

a n d - .loodon Wol,

POElltY~

~ -

-·

306- a..- Hoi.

YELLOW~-AL
.
. . _ _ _ _ _ ... tho

PeoPo """' ..... ,....,..,.....- .... -

v-l..ob• - - -9• "'·"""5
p .wo •• 831 -27216
~lono cf-. blho-

EdaiWta .

~ YWCA. A f&lt;&gt;I'TMf slu&lt;Mot ol
Strtbr's who has long s1nca abandoned
the ~ method, rcmcmbcn

that he

ol

c-. - - - - ..-.

""'
proudlvItNpOrt they cWaeted the ~...-...d ~. KJowno
during their

have clllllen their

Raw, and the lowest srade ol manhood
lva a ltfe ol utler lawlessness and
reddessness. Stories ol a land where life
Is held cheap and where the only law that
Is regarded Is the law"of the gun.
"In the smaD communities of the West,
gambling and gun lighting was an evey
day affair, and a man never left his howe
without going prepared to shoot In
defense ol his life at a momenrs, yes, at a

..

I

-v ..-touoiy....

"Lone Ranger" plots ... .. old ..

melodrama - a - maidens arc com.·
pdcd to choooc bclwecn the vtlloln . obviously Italian , .o r loolng Pope's
~ ; cattle ruotlers tamper wtth
the herd's bar Z to make It look Ilk a
double J (no -..y IMk) ; en
man
barelv- hanging for. oVM he did
noc com.mll lAdna the lam lltoryiMo
II•....,. . . . ol,.._,t
•
Noon• •
· The LaM Ranear. who II ao
pure ..... .....,..,.. that h e - hurt In the
- . ~the ...... wllh . . . . end

..,_.,t

.-.l!lbend. blone~ ...,tllc

........ ol lhe MMUd ...... - c.Mnlol,
lind him Nfuolng to • bcdrnan

.-

...

�•

j

July 17, 1980 .

j ! I

Sarason

v•··

s.,-.r s....... _. ...

about ........ ...,...._ In • lime ol
limited . - c a . Wednaday at the
Summer Forum.

CALE DAR
Tlaanday • 17

Friday ·18

PEDIA1111C / ADUI.T Al.LDIGY a

~~c=g~:n

w-

Pediolrii:/ Mul Alo!gy and Olrolooll~
1111on H&lt;*l s..~ons .,. ,_ ~ 30
• m · 5 p "'· C&lt;Jntlnu&amp;&gt;~~ tlwough July 19.
Sowrol hund&lt;od phytidono ond wll ...
lend lho - . . t o y - _ _ . , ! bv lho U/ 8
Schoolm-... end lho ~eo..,

J •

. WESTEllN NEW YORK CONFERENCE ON

lAW AND nt£ PUIIUC SCHOOLS•
R...,. end ledorol logidoJm ond court
doc:iolono ........ IOplaol logo! ....... , .
....... tchoolo ... bo ... - O'BrianHol8·30
•m 10~pm
Spanooood by "'" w-... Now von. Educo ·
Council ot U/ 8 . dw U/8 lAw
School. •nd dM: tchool bawd ..n.tiOn$ from

...... s..-

......... -....-..-ad

·
- -· "'" . . . . . - . . . &amp;eimed
~
~. dOrntyS~ and ~ tn&amp;«ra~ed ..,

""""pobloA.--- ... lndudo-- ~G.
oducMKin

Kunot. OOYid E. Hoi, ond Jll Lo.... ~ .
lionnM H Go. ond Hoowy Nonddoom.
- - b dw Now Yortc S&lt;o10 School Boonh
; Flannoe E Bough, .....- m dw
Bullolo ol EducMKin . ClwiH L looooy .
E-' ()pportunJy Spot;ollso, u s tquol Employ
- - ()pportunJy Commotaon. ond ""-"" s
MottiN .
5upmno c""". s.... of

JU...C•"'"'"

Nto:w~~

lftl6on:l W11 deal with recmt stale
.-nd f&lt;tdotrel aatutes and dec:ilions ""the vww from
"'"bon&lt;h;" " ' " - " " " .... rjghts• • ........,
mrmc ~ - •nd ~UCMion ~ the han·
dlt&gt;ppod
A fft of $25 (.'(Wift1l lunch . insttudion . and
metmM. Fur1hoer lnf~fion t'.An be~ by
co1!on9 d w - Now Vortc EduaJ.,.... SeMce

Coundl • 636 2460

UUAII FUM '
O..W. ~ U.JNn 1969) Conterenc.Ttw.fte. s.qw.~ 5 tS. 8 15 p m Genna! ~ITII5
S! IO. IIudon,.$160
and~ boautilul folm.

A-·.._

~ 5Mk::t* IJ praenwd M a &amp;.nraku pupprt
ploy --.IAiklngdwploceof- The
~ ~.,. rwr·prewnl during rN ct.ram..

__
.,tlw....,...
c.hongong
.........
""" ...................... "'"

.---Campus
.....
.........

~·
"'*"~

In

-

-lhe

Buffolo, ~ .. 12 . - ..

At... Squn. In cooo of - · -

-

~~~by lhe l'c&lt;n­

R--.
--·
-

; -•ndaallo--= -

dandng; -

-.nap.; -

··

ond ...,.

_....., end produdlono. """""'""tlwtiewyPaui Bond . ~4p.m ..

the

-

....

Spanooood by
~
ond G r AoooclotiOno ond lhe W All Sludonl A&lt;.-

.IAPANESE CUI.lUIAL
LECl\JRE SERIES '
Lectu~

Mo4ra-alty aftd Traditloa;

lAm :

~ ........ 218 a.m.n.. 2:30 p m .
Pan ol riw Summer Institute of Japanese
l.Angu..tge . Culture .nd Thoughl.

UUAB FUM '
"'-"·
Coni........
Tho
..• . Squwe.
5.15.
8 : 1~ p 19691
m Genaal
ad""'·
$2 10 . .. ud&lt;nts $1 60
CAPTIVE NATIONS IIElG!F1T IIAHQUET"
- . , I ; Gil, noood outhcw. Washlngoon jaw·
- a n d - - " " " " " " " ' · ... b o - - atlhe 21• onnual ~ - ~- 6.30 p .m. Tolbort Hall~ Room
o..n.-: $12 CJnd.dn din...,. F.. lurdwr Info&lt;·
· cal 636-2800 .. 837 ·1748
n......,. "....-..1 by thew.-.. Now Yortc
ea,o.. No.... CommidH - - oflhe national

-.,..,.. .. -c.,.o...- w...... prodolmod
bv lho PreoidonL

~ ....- Gil "• waduato oflho ~.JnwcnJy
o f - School o f - whot..c:ove&lt;od
lho
D.C. political oceno hw """

w--.

-

Gelde1 Qull

He .. - · .. -

-

...

~ joumohm. Tho ..-

of

no. o.dfti·o(Oflo Oorpb, he'- boon publ;shod

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

ln l'omnwondHollonol~- .

"Cao&gt;tiw
c.....
·

-

- .,. -

behind '1'hc Iron

-

~ .,. S4

Col

Si&gt;a-nd by"'" lnt&lt;n
Enalloh ' - -

-.cTOIII-.sttOP
COfiCEIIT
•
a..- y_, ..... 7.30 p .IO . Rain"'-'-'

.'

a, _
. .,- Htal&gt; School . ... AI. Erte Coooni!IHW&gt; School Bond.

A M- - NilhJ'o - · d&lt;&lt;dod by Saul
dw R.- Gonion of o.to-. Pwk 8
pm " -

Eldn -

n. COfiiQifl • • t.etut. of lhe ~~Ow«:

-

Wodoohop- bv the D&lt;podmont cj Muooc

...r.the-mr.-J

~ond­

- . L.,.._ and MchMI Rled

t

Sattuday - 19
Lo {Gonnonv. 1977) and F...
- - (11oo , . _, {Gonnonv. 1971). Con·

· Squn. 4:30, 7, ond 9 p .m.
Geowal- $!.1 0 ; - St .60 .
' " - fllmo ... """' di&lt;ectod "" .... Gnmon

....,_ -

...._

Tho AI. £no c.unty Htal&gt;
dlooc_
.......
_
....._/
-

School Bond ......

.........

...t s.. . - -

..._., ....... -...UClA

...

· ...t w- ~. PGt"5outherft
""""-n.

...........

--·'*--

-..-----cltlwE.no

~,...E-._ha...-

c-..
-_
" ", "
... y_,
,. _
..........

-~

of -

H«rq. .... So.lrtee is •

.non

-·

~--blhovobnooo- :

F- --&lt;&gt;HIIonmyth..,lnanllllbn""·
~~~. o­
...............

'""""'-'

....... - ..-

,. _ _ ,.,.,..,_ __ bys.. t

..... o n d - -

24

Eldn - t h e - Gwden cl Oelo-. Pwk. 8
pmm.

·Dr--bys...t

M W::wtEAIIE IN TIE P - '

UUAa DOU8LE FEATUI£ '
Lo {Gonnonv . 1977) ...S F- - (11oo ...._, {Gonnonv. 1971) Con-

=!!':;..s:':b::.;:;.:it'~. 9

Coli-.. c.m..-

.. -AIIolro .. _ohil

c-....

AlllPAIIIl Ella.s!ON'
_ . , .. """'"' nct..ls . . S4. Buo
lllthmond Quod, - . al 7 p.m. Sponia..d by ....
Enalloh language - . ..
-

-h-Gonlooltolo.-.Pod&lt;

p ...

n.. _ _ _ _ ....

- - I N TIE PAliK'
~

-tlw-Gonlenolo.-.Pwk 8

pmm.

~-n.

~o. -

~

TI.JEIO,ti;Y

LIVE

s.7p• a--.. -_ Jiloa.F--.
... _
.. __
EA-

..... --Sqoooo ,__
~_

s..--llljiWAII

Notices

"*""'"

IH'IBINATION,\L EliECUmiE PllOGIIAII
IN 11/!!"M'iDENT ~' - - ............. ~ Pral .
P!.uo. U/8 .-y
352
MFAC. · 7 p.m. s,.c.-.d by the Scbool of

-----·

o..--.

~.

Portcl a - o l - p l o n n o d b - 3 5

HEALnt CAll£ ......
OPEN HOUSES
. Tho Healrh C... Plan. lho HMO ........_ 1n
"'" u...-.y hnllh. bonefloo ......... will bo
hold&amp;&gt;~~ .... Medical c.no., 120

S&lt;au.

~P.oo.loy. ~ . W.............
" - ,_""""""' Sopoombo. 24. 6-8 p.m .. and on
Jul]! 'rl , h-om 1·3 p.m.
The ..,_ """- ,.. gJvo new
dw

. "NowYcw\"-loundl"..............

.c.no..
- ~
· -· end.
......,...,,--lhomln
moklngon~-

logondooy oodo ~ ........ "" Boo

T h e - Doad, HalT_ and_

-·

Su....,,

........... - . _.,oy lo

~-.- .... - . - ... _ _ ond

...._,......
c-- , . -,........ -.-""s...t
~·...............
--- .....
.TlaiiiWday • 24
......
...
-~
...,...__.
,.....,_....
.... r.,....
.....
~

r....

m...al at Foundon' Ploza.
lunhonl
Ndl Wadnoodoy ............ bo·
,_12and2p.m. Talonl..,._cl_,.
and lotolperbmon. Food ... b o _ ·
AJ . . -.,comc)olntheluo.

WAll IIOCII WIIOU. n.a·
. , _, Contos...,. - · Squn. 8 p.m.
"'-"•-offwlaoo _ _ .. the

Saaday • 2e

- . __
-___
___

,., _

n....~ay

w,...,.,

clocu--. lilmed on the c..t.boan Joland c1

~INJHEPAIIK '

- , . _ • • . _ _ ... Belwyn . -

-....~

gmluti

--

BAND DIRECTORS
WORJISHOP C&amp;NCERT '
8auen Parle.. ~n R06d. Town of Amherst.

F..Owtng lho All Erte Counoy H;gh Schucj Bond.
oo Yolo ond loundor cl
Guu1 conducaor/composers are Robert
Yolo's l'oyct.&gt; • Educotionol Cllnl&lt;, s.-. hos Washburn, Soots Unlv&lt;nly Collego ol POIIdam.
wrlt«n widely on aspeets of ed\Qtional and com- and V.d.v Nd'lybel, e Mtlw of CNchoNoy.td., a
munly ~ . Ho 1 1 - 1 of.-ds&amp;om forrMf mualcal director of R.dlo FroM Europe.
lho 1\matcon Poychclogtcal and lho
1\matcon on Menial o.tlclenq, .
UUAII OPEN MIKE SERIES'
Squn Fountoln · 1\ru, Moi n - 8 · 10:30
SIDE DISH '
p .m. In c.. of rMn tNt event wi&amp;l be mc:J'\Ied inside
The UUAB
and the IO Hooo Loungo . Sign-up"-! will bo avoiloblo
~

UUAa DOUBLE FEATUI£'

__
-. -·sue-.__ . . ,,
----~ondShamon

l,j1loo

WEDNESDAY SUNNEII FORUM '
Seymour Seruon. Humaa s..n4c:a in an Ere of

Um.Jted Rf'IOUI'Cft. Moot Court. O'Brian. lei a .m
QuaHon ..nct..nswer M'Wion . The Kiva. 101
Baldy , 2 p m Spon.o..od bv the F.... lly cj Educo·

fllmed In brood daylighl, 10 ..... boon "'""
ao night by u10 cl _,w tuteo.. Tho Nc.. Yorlr
7lma lound • "hhlar1ous," "wile" ond "mmving,"
Ttuflaut's "'fondest, most com~ce'" fBm.

-of~

~INlliEPARK '

Alm'AIIIl fJla.510N"
~ .. Anpel1t Bus luws 7 p m from

Rl&lt;'-'d Quod. 636-2077 ... -

Wedaesday • 23

ol hMIIh ta.

"""*-'

bring "'*to....., to dw Medkal

OI:JYrW. ..

ltDJ' WANTED
-

-

-

.... Malh!CabWo.

s.-.

T~
ond - · ~. Biolotall
bSpodols...tcooT-""'wom.Maxlmum 15
- , . . -. - S p.m, unll8p."'
I\Pf'lv 10 Spodols...tcoo Olttco. 311 T-..nd
Hoi, ,.._, Mo. 1mw1 N TOI1ft, .,_ •

.

MEWJWII a:N1'tJIICAISQ
~ , _ Rd) • Saturday. 5
p .. . s.ndo,, 10·30 -s -

Mon4oy ...........

Rldoojl, 8.3 0 - s - . .............- . " " ....

- a o l - 2 1 2 3.

_.,_ . . .

- lt. ~!15~A..

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�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Fog ]ifts on '80-81 budget: 87 lines gone;
cut _of $2 1/2-3 million projected for '81-82
Units get
job ceUings,
can hire

Guidelines
for '81-82
are tight

The fog which has shrouded the
198().81 budget scene lifted lest week to

reduction 1oorm for the fiscal year begin·

An additional $2'h - $3 rnlll!on budget

rcw.J the following flocal landocape to.

ning next April 1.
The first budget hearing for tho
1981-82 fiscal year will be held In
Albany, Monday , July 14 . Robert
Wagner. assistant executive vice president , told the Reporter this week.
Because preparation of this 1981-82
budget was delayed untU final word was
received on the budge! plclure for this
year (see separate storyl. whet U/ B ad·
mlnlstrators are taking to Albany is a
" highlight" document rather than the
~lied breakdown usually prepared for
the first round of hearings with SUNY
Central.
Wagner said the local administration
has received specHic guidelines on
preparation' of the document from
SUNY's vice chancellor for finance and
business. Harry K. Spindler. Spindler
directed 1/lal any Increases buestricled to
three major categories. and that a
sizeable portion of these Increases should
be offset by cuts In presently authorized
levels of npendhures. At first . Wagner
said . speculation was thai the directed
reductions would have to be of the
magnitude of $5 million or more . Liller
last wuk. however,
t:a'llle
Albany that cuts of somewhere between
$2'h and $3 miUion lOOuld suffice.

U/8:.
1. Eighty_, FTE poslllons -will
have to be abolished .
2. A tolal of $1 ,109,000 In operating
funds will ac:oornpeny the reductions.
3. Sixty-tlx additional positions (in
housing ........ lnduding both custodial
MrVico and .dminlslrallve staff) will be
taken oft the State budgd and paJd out of
dorm 1nc:ome funds. [Similar-actions are
being !Men on al SUNY campuses.f
4 . A hiring ceiling of 3,958 Statefunded FTE has been ""-&lt;!. and,
simultaneouslv, the hiring f r - has
been lifted. Current~)~ , only 3,871 lines
are filed UnJverstty-widc.
5. On the positive side, $1 ,355,000ln
additional funding will be ...,..;dec~ for
ullllty payments; $200,000 In' additional
money Is to be made availat* for bu.-.g,
and the Dental_ School will get a
$600,000, 12 ~ bonus as the first
P'- of a three-year plan to upgrade
facillttes, faculty numbers, salary and
equipment as mandated by the School's
accredlling agency.
The Dental allocation , explained
Rebert Wagner, ..-nt axacullve viol
preSident; li&gt;dudes: $65,000 for two new
lnilrudiOnal positions; $48,000 for five
ouppor1 pooitions; $200.000 to. faculty
Mlary ad)uslments: $50,000 for supplies,
and $150,000 to. equipment. Also, the
Dental Clinic Is authorioad five addltional
support pOsitions ($44 ,000) . and
$42,900 for oupplles.

All...:a•tlt.a

The 87 FTE lines which will be abolish·
ed are al vacanl lnes "at this po4nl,"
W~~QJW:r Aid Monday. A share of the cuts
has been alocated to each of U/ B's vice
preSidential ar as, the - . n r executive
viol pretident explained . At the begin·
nmg of the week, al but one area had In·
dbted that 5nes icMnllfled to. the cuts
_,. unflled. The remaining unh had not
yet reported wher I will be pruning.
~-wide. W~~QJW:r Aid , there are
currenlly

350 unfiUed lines.

The $1 109 million cut Includes
$892,000 In salaries to. the 87 lnes and
$217 .000 In OTPS funds. W~~QJW:r
reported.

Hldlot

The I
1 hiriog c:eiling- cwn wtlh
loa of "the 7 lina-ls
lao than
the lOCAl of remelning authorlz.ed positions. Wogner Aid . AI 3 ,958. I Is.
t-ver . ..,..,.. 30 poolllons more than
tarvetad celloni impooed for the nd
of f-..1 1979-(March 311 It is aloo
.t&gt;out 87 higher than tha number of jobs

1

currenlly filled

w.,._

, know."
Aid. that tho 12
I 0 new jobo In
tho Phyoocal Plant
be filled oul of
toc.l that can
lured
Beyond that, each vioo pr
tlal
....., may cl«&gt;de wlwa and how Mwill ·
vacanclel up 110 lhe .,......,.. ceiling be·
lng
foo each. The u
r
new dental pooit&gt;ons and

·-........·-··--·

K....

Sblrl.y Chlohol"'

White Dlen

They hold all the power
and won't share it joyfully,
Congresswoman Chisholm asserts

Shirley Chisholm seems fragile and
blrd·llke in he&lt; pastel suit. She walks
primly to the podium, clutching a leather
binder- madam chairwoman about lo
address th PTA.
She pw.s he&lt; lips, and 5larls to
speak. Only she doesn't just speak , she
thunders, her voice rising and falling ,
seething with emotion at mes, always
fuU of conviction .
ll10M who have power In this country
aim to keep it, she submits. They're not
goln!j to sflar ft joyfully.
They are the whit
males, the
designers and defenders of the flatus
qi'O. They are the arbit rs and Ullgners.
To themHiv • they auign the jobs of
president, lndustrtallst, professor ,and
policymakaor. To -whit women. they
grant roles a . housewives. secretaries.
and «hooo tuchcrs Black women may
be~ . lhenk you And blacl&lt; men ,
you must have noticed , make exceknt
poown, valets and bus driwn
-oh. M's changing, Chisholm wan
But not fMI nough or far enough
A
t .a...d
On campus Tuesday lo pal1lclpate In
tho Ccloga' aummar on "Soc::.J
T......t
•" O&gt;ioholm lookad at
future of mlnorilla and women , and
-aflghlahcad
In ""'*'ca, - "'-ldn' _, lurvc to
t.a. .t&gt;out ••
nallon•• fW blod&lt; Congrei....Omall Mid. But the realty Is that

-"""!·

All Americans must have equal opportunity to education. equal access to posi·
lions of power and authority, based solely
on m~t. That's all women and mlnorit~
are looking for. she reassure&lt;:! the
uneasy
.
,
The lact is, though , that mediocre
whit men who have ltitz~d up the
economy and the govemme.nt don '1 want
the competition-are afraid olll. in truth
A ma]OI' weapon used 10 keep the
"poachers" off the white "male preserve .
Chisholm suggested . is to a511\ln certain
cheroc:terlslics to the ".nlerior · groups.
and then cement these stereotypes In to
the very foundation of society
Thus , women and blacks are
" und-ood" to be more childish. more
emotional They lack int lligence . n ed
protection . in the popular view AmbotJOn
and e:k'eCUllve abiJtry su.rely are.n't the.rr
bng su , -we're told WOf'l"tCn , m par ~
tlcular. ar "weak , seH-ellacing. recep·
live, - ·

homebOdies ..

Hollvwood Is a ma)OI' -=comptice In the
plot. Chisholm cha!Jied Think of Lucy.
Edith Bunker and al the bubble-headed
blondes.
The woman wt&gt;o struggles against the
~eotypes Is "unfeminine " "She,. proboobly a Lesbian ." men whisper as they
ach other in the rl&gt;o Both men
and women who don't kowtow are

br-.....s.dao
•
_By now, OW/Iolrn was in ful fltuht.

·----·-··--·

Tbr- ldacla of lacreua
3The three categories of Increases In·
elude: (I) mandated price and wage in ·
creases which Wagner estimates to be In
the "neighborhood" of a whopping S 13
million : (2) lunds for the second year of
the three-year plan to upgrade the
School of Dentistry- a $725,000 approprlatk&gt;n request to cover an additional

26 FTE facuky ; and (3) funds and positions for operating new physical
facibties - $250.000 and 22 poshlons to
staff some 305.000 outer gross square
feet of facilhles scheduled to open during
1981-82.
While the area of Increased appropria tions have been fairly well Identified ,
Wagner said , the Univenlty Budge!
Comminee (made up of the Dean~
Council and the Academic Cabinet) is
spendong this week Identifying wbich programs and activities we can reduce .

eliminat . 0&lt; shill to otheo- income
50Urces lo oH.sel some of the increases.
Obviously, said Wagner, such cuts
could mean a reduction in enroUmenl

target for 1981 -82
Each vice president has been goven a
rough dollar target for reduction as part
of tl)e overa U cut. Wegner noted. lnfor·
mation on how these assigned dollar
fogures might be met was submlu d 10 the
Budget Comminee Monday The r t of
the week 11 being devoted to puttong
together a final plan , a plan which must
be on the hands of SUNY Central by
tomOI'Tow (friday. July I I)

J ... t the llnot•'Thcse developments are. of course.
somply the first steps toward puttJng
togEther a budget plan for the fiscal year
which starts next April I SUNY Central
must determine how much of the U/8 re·
quest It will support before th Oivoslon of
the Budget ge Into the act on behiiW of
the Governor And once 1 Governor's
recomiMndatlons are In . they will be IUbj«tto claba • cornprornlsa. and chenge
by the Legillature. That's whv campu
~~that (iguresbe·
ing toooad around now . . strictly
pr mlnary. It could very well be thlo lime
nelll year t..for• the final ouk:.,..... Is
known

�.ldjtlO, 1980

s fOunding .prof
.for new school in Chin~
.,._._,.. ................ tD
.. ..-far-.,...,..,..,_
a..""*" .,..
A lVB

.,..._b...._,~

~

Ill lllllltlhe ......... RepuWcof ChN In

The paljed,
far ........
of • ochool of .........,_, In
China Is being opor..-1 by the u.s.

~ of Commeclt and the
a-gowmment.
-Dr. fUnic c. Jen. proleoeor of benldng
and finance In the SchooJ of ~ ­
TIWII here, Is one of cJilht American
facuky members daignated by the Com·
mes&lt;:e Oepor1ment lo .. "founcclng
prolesoon" of the new achool, tentatively
named the National Center for Industrial
Sdence and Technology Management
Development.
The new center, the 49-year-old Jen

related, will be sftuated at Tallen (Dalren)
- In the lndUJII'Iabed northeastern pro-

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

• Chisholm
~~tokenism, she

5P'anted. But there's no woman on the
Supreme Court or even on the council of
the AFL..OO . There's one woman In the
Senate; one In the Cabinet . A:;::;L'!:

Houoe of Rapreoentallves' 475
,
are 17 blacks and 17 women. This, In a
counby where there are 4 .2 million ·more
women than men.
"It's outrageous," O.lsholm auessed .
W09_&gt;en haw been programmed to be
dependent and , . _. but the time has
come for them to fight "No one gh&gt;ea
you anything," the Congresswoman said
something blacks learned In' the

19601.
The slnlggle of blacks and women Is
the ume ~~Juggle , she emPbasb&gt;ed. It's aD

one fight agalnsl •nil-human behavior.
and for the proposition that "AD
Americans should be permil1ed to compel&lt;r lor the top jobs and policy-making
pooltlons .•
Slupldlty and bo1lllanee know no sex or
raoe . Ability Isn 't roaocullne or feminine .
"We need the collective talents of aD
those with abl~. men and women ,
wh
and black, the Congresswoman
utged

Wlotf ~tloel

In America today. O.lsholm noled , 79
per cent of al employed women
In
clerical, ales, factory, or Mrvlcc jobs.
Only nine per cent are In medicine, law
and other proleulonal fleldo . And jusl a
~Unt aght per cent are managers, of.
fiCialo and proprietors.
Yet , Department of Labor stallstlcs
rq&gt;ort that women are more reliable , less
kely to miss
than men
Why, then , boomed O.lsholm, are
women ~ at the low end of the

won.

won.

pa~~llon."

Why are there only 400 women
among the 10,000 dvll .-vice worl&lt;en
who make mor than $26,000 per year?
("Don't even by to count the blacks,· ohe
added I
S..~ a wo&lt;rWt who weighs 275
pounds _,.. 1o
on the docks
where ohe ~ make $400 a week.
Chlohob poeid Shouldn'
have the
""'" lo be there that • 1.2$-pound
m.)e with ._ tl.an'llna does? Not now.
Now, ohe'l probably end up on welfare
...._she can't get • job.
'
" People should have complete
freedom lo make
cholc:a," she In·

won.

-..!.

The top policy-making positions In the
American ftubliohment are · In the
handt of ....... maleo who · not
r_.,......e or anuned 10 the needs of

andm' - no way 1o replace them.
\Mini

on ...u

we can com·

schools to get an Inferior education In
segn!gated classrooms. Headlines scream
that Bakke was denied Med oc:hool ad·
mission In CaDfornla because "he's
while ." But where Is the story t!lat his
a-edentlals were so poor that he was
denied admlsolon to seven other medical
schools even thougH 70 per cent of the
places In most such schools are reserved
lor wh e men?
Instead, said Chisholm , the press
reports over and. over again the false lm·
pression that blacks and women are
somehow after something they shouldn't
have. Tensions mount.
·"Let's face H." ohe said , "If the people
In power In this counby today had the
morabty , the conscience, the plain old
backbone to do what's right , we wouldn't
have the polarization that we have ."
Whatever you may thlnk about Harry
Truman or FDR , she said , at least they
had backbone. That can't be said about
anyone on the ocene today.
In response to questions, Cht.hofm
noted that:
• The ERA looks to be a dead duck
because anti-ratification groups are
strongu In terms of finances . (Strangely,
ohe said, the Issue has come to be a raDyjng point for a coalition of groups whlch
don't necessarily have a direct Interest In
K. the r1ght-to-llfers, for example .(

$5,000 for
Shakesp~are
A' $5.000 grant -has been awarded to
the ~e In Delaware Park program by the City of Buffalo, Mayor
James Griffl11 and Controller Robert
Whelan have announced .
Bolh thls grant and an earlier $5,000
award from Erie County were secured by
the University at Buffalo Foundation , Inc.
The City has for four years_ now
donated a variety of services to
Shakespeare In the Park as wei as per·
mission 1o use the Delaware Park area
and Casino. This Is the flnt time City and
County' haw pallidpated In providing
direct support.
Shakespeare In Delaware Park began
July 8 with "Midsummer Night's Dream"
which runs through July 20 and will be
followed by Richard II from July 29
throu!Jh August 10, nightly , except Mondays, at 8 p m AD performances are
free .

Promoted
John C Woods of Lockport, a
member of the U/ 8 security forw for the
pas1 lix yean, has been promoted to the
rank of lieutenant
Woods , who joined the U/ 8 Depart,_, of Publoc s.!ety u • patrolman In
1974, II also acbve In oportJ 8ctlda - ·
Wig u oports director for the lagaro
F...,.,
Pollee Aasoclation , the 32-year·
old pollee olfar 11 captain of the U/8
Public s.tcty eoll&gt;al te m In the ntOCio·
lion ....... Addttionallv, he was o golf
.._ rnedallol In the 1979 New York
I

Police Olympics

Woods amcd e boochelar of 11111
In oodology at Nott'- Loul·
lJruverslty. Monroe. u

vince of Liaoning, across the bay from
North Korea .
There, at the Tallen Institute of
T~ology , he and hJs cohorts will
establish tlie center by conducting Its 6rst
courw of study from August 18 to
December 19.

Tile flnt projolct of Ita kind
.
Jen said the center's uniqueness hinges
on the fact that H will be the flnt such project und
s of science-technology
agreemen jtgned last year by President
Carter and ChineN VIce Premier Oeng
Xlaoptng.
Jen, a native of Ollna who speaks "at
least 50" Chinese dialects, views the
educational endeavor as a logical slePP·
lng stone to enhance China's cultural
revolution .
China "needs good management,"
Jen observed, to fultlD the potenHal of Its
cultural revolution and thereby raise the
nation's standard of living.
Noting that Chinese industry Is
government-owned, he explained that
the center's mlsolon will be ·to develop
modern management methods compatible with the nation 's "existing polttJcal
structure.

"The Chinese," he added , "want to
raise themselves beyond the subsistence
level."
President Robert L. Kener views Jen 's
appointment as " highly deserved
recognition for a dedicated School of
Management faculty member who has
consistently served with dlsnnctlon ."
Jen was notVled of his appointment by
Jordan J . Baruch, assistant oeaetary for
productivity, technology and Innovation
In the Commerce ()epartment.
Serving as dean of the eight-member
American teaching staff Is Widlam R. DUI,
dean of the Gradua School of Business
Administration at New York University.
The other faculty members, besides
Jen , are Dr. Alok K. Chalaabarti,
Rensselaer Polvtechntc lnstllul&lt;r; Dr.
William A . Ascher, University of North
Carolina ; Dr. Leon S . Graubard ,
Worceoter (Mass.) Polytechnic lnstltuie;
Dr. Richard Hollon , University of California at Berkeley; Dr. Undo Sprague ,
University of New Hampshire.a! Durham ,
and Dr. i .e . Ting, lnstltute for Computer
Science and Technology, National
Bureau of Standards. Washington, D .C .
Jen pointed out that ony Ttng and
hlmself speak O.ineoe. He exr.,~ ·

~~~~~...w~·= lo~

mount any language banter, and that
English reading material will be translated

to &lt;::htnesc.
UOwiU

..,ou

EnroDment for the 18-week course be·
1ng tali9ht by the American faculty will be
about 120. the enrollees, In the :!5--to-50

age lnckcl , Include about 40 mid-level
man_. of Industrial operations;- 40
represen ng government ministries and
Institutes of sclltnce and technology , and
40 management prolaoon from Chineoe
collcga and unlversiUcs
Mcmbcn of the acadernic WOUP are
expected to return lo their respedlve In- ullons ond dev lop management
COW'MI bued on their experiences at the

new01-nt•
.
As explained by Jen ,
in-..1 course
both the OO&lt;OIIed case-study
method of teaching- and lecnmes The

C0U1W will be dMded Into three ...........
..,_.., ..tvanc:tag front the._ pm-

ctples of.......-nt to~ of

-..1 .,.. lludla NIMed lo both
Arnertam and
lnduollrleo.
Duma the final .......... Jen said,
"trenlor execu-lrom the United Slates
will be comlng In to talc to us..
.
Jen, """-~lies In the fleldo of

banking and financial rnan.gernent, said
case studies ~ lo 0.... Industrial establishments wtl be oct up by a
five-member Alnerlan computer task
fon:e Mrving as COM analysts and writers.
The !JOUP ueady hal vloltad -a1
Chlneoe Industrial plants to gather
material for the case studlft.
While Jen believes the Chinese
economy needs 4 more effective
management system to lnaase productivity , he emphasized that the 18-week
course would serve primarily to sllmulate
thought, study and adaptAtion by the
O.incse themselves.

N o t _ . . . u "--c:aa .,.tem
'We are not bylng to export an
American system to them ."
In that context, he said he believes in·
centive programs lor worl&lt;ers, such as
bonuses and other rewards for superior
performance, would help eliminate some
of the production problems plaguing
Chinese Industry. He also noted that
government and Industrial leaders need
to lind ways to accumulate cepHal faster
for Industrial growth and a bener stan·
dard of living.
He Ukened tha present Chinese
outlook to that diciated by the old Chris;
tlan church, whereby the downtrodden
accepted hardship on earth In anticlpa·
lion of rewards aher death.
The Chineoe government realizes it has
a "big problem" In management, Jen
observed, and decisions need to be made
on "how modern technology can be
used , whether H should be used , or
whether cheap labor should persist ."
Jen , whose chair In the U/ 8 School of
Management Is endowed by the
Manufacturers &amp; Traders Trust Co. of
Buffalo, vlsHed China In early June to
help finalize arrangements for the new

cenler.

Upward Bound
funding renewed
The Upward Bound l'r09r•m spon·
sored by the Olvtslon of Sludent Affairs
has again been funded for three years ,
that division reports .
Dr. Robert Palmer, director of the pro·
gram , saJd that the exacl amount of
money for the first year has not been
deflnHely decided , but that K will be between $120,000 and $140,000.
Palmer notes tha.t the Unlve1'5ity was
competing for a lesser pool of funds and
that seven schools In New York State ·
were not refunded for the next three
years.

Student group
urges resistance
The U.S . Student Association said In
Washington this week It Is organizing a
campaign to urge young men to 'refuse to
register with tha Selective Service System
and lo d..teat Congressmen who voted
for the registration funds .
"We believe registration Is just the first
step before the U .S . federal gov..-nmen!
decides to bring back the draft and
prepares for military intervention
abroad." the association said . "We are Is·
suing a caD to aD young men of the ages
19 and 20 to seriously conikler ref11slng
to COO')ply With military draft registration.
The masotve failure to register for the
draft by patriollc youth of our country Is
necessary to prevent this unjust law from
being enacted "
·
The .uaodatlon aid voter regiStration
· drives will be concentrated In 100 dlstricts
In which -n-e are more sluden In
residence than the margin of vtctory the
Incumbent won by In 1978 " It said
"t~ and other members of Congrere vulnerable to the youth vot "

�Julv 10,

19110

....• -..atlladg8t
_.... .,

ed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . mid__..,
w..-~ .

to w...-

the 198().81

*'-·

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

and, onoe

conduded: "Wew ...... our .
...tucllono. W.'rw In the .,...... ol

thM's done, un111 _.. JIIQC8ad with hlril!g
lot the poolllons that ·•

......,._,._ d:'Obud!lct

tor:

In Mndlng out
word
- '80-81. Chancdor C1lhon il. Wb.nori
noted off~
that - -cuts
rrlop118P 10
w.d
SUNY-wide ~

"merely ~ us time to cany out our
live-yea- planning effort."
A Mt ol procedures and timetables for
~ long range pion Is now being
developed, he said.
Explaining tha 1980-81 situation ,
Wbarton . made several general comments:

.._ ..-... aota nolded
"Finl, the magnHude ol the prospective budget difficulty was consid..,abiy
greater than the original reduction of S27
milllon . Unanticipated developments
such as the failure to pass the deficiency
biD which contained our $7.8 million utiUty deficiency lor 1979-80, drops in expected hospital Income of over . $10
million, and failure to ·fund some $3.5
million In minor rehabilitation meant that
the lrifll'l octual budget problem totalled
some tM million.
"In addition, there was a projected
utility deflclency for 1980-8 1 ol some $8
million plus a few minor items that were
pre-commlned lor the supplemental. The
successful effort ihat led to the
Governor's concurrence on the $22.3
million restoration helped to reduce what
turned out to be somewhat over a $60
million problem . The balance of the problem was handled by a variety of actions
such as delays in bonding a few construc-

Macdonald changes
topic
to himself!
Chucldng the~e general !Mme ol

"Soda) Transformations" In 1M 1980s,
aulhor, magaz;ne writer and fUm o1tic

Dwight Macdonald, appearing on camP&lt;/1 Monday, d~ed to speak on

~

ol CQnsiderably more interest-to him ; namely, his IKe and his
own social transformations.
A se¥-proclalmed "admirable intellectual snob," 1M 74-year-old former F&lt;xtune magaz;ne writer began his address.
lj)OI'll&lt;lred by 1M Colleges, by recalling
that he was an Intellectual by age 10
He tMn reponed .that 1M lint ol the
two blggal "transformations" In his life
came as an ..dolesc:ent at Phillips Exet"r
Academy where he was introduced to
'1 Dow spirit. • Edgar AUan Poe. The second came in the !at 19301 with his in·
IIOiwrTMtnt in the T rollkyile Movement
and as a co-editor ol Partlson Reuot. .
[)unng these years, Macdonald said he
t.c.me engroued "' Manusm, lllhic:h,
lAtin, is good training lor the mind
t.c.use It glva an artk:ulaled sys;Wm ol
thought one can· push against ·

va~e .... -

H und4or!lradua educallon at Yale
didn't cut the mUilard as lar as any raJ
CXJIAftllon, he oftered . CaBing
yale • "big ITllllab.. he cstlmaled that
"no more than I 0 per ta~l ol the slydent
body ever """" 10 the Unry lor other
than required books I should ha gone
to Harvard : he qulpped But, unfortunalely, his lather went 10 Yale and he
ar1giNIIy thought following suN would be
a good ida
Alter oolage, M«.donaad landed a job
• a den~ at
's E.,.., !hough he was
a lilerary
at Yale, they r used to let
him near .._ adwtlillng dapartment
Knowing he didn't want lo ael lin for
the
ol ihls Ill • he left during the ......
ol the ~ and took a job with
r - Inc.. • COfl'll*'ll -..tad by two

r•

Y••acl-.
II

Uon pro)ects. the dormitory room rate in-

lion .
He "should have" stayed there lour
years , but Instead stayed six . Finally, he
resigned when the magazine balked at a
rather uncomplimentary, lour-part article
he wrote on U.S. Steel.
When he told his mother he was bored
with his $10.000-a-year job and had
quH,he fondly remembers that she said ,
" Dwight, you 're crazy."

Rnolatloaary IMidalift
In 1937, Macdonald and three oth"'
friends from Yale took OV&lt;Zf' the Partilon
Reulew , lllhic:h· was "anti-Stalinist" and
"revolutionary socialist" In philosophy.
When World War II broke out , however,
his colleagues' political philosophy
changed regarding American Involvement. His remained the same ; that of
"non -support."
So he left the group in 1943 and
started his own magazine, Poliba. which
he deocribes as a "Mantis! , paiSMst ,
anarchist" publioation .
Aft"' the war ( 1950-65) , Macdonald
worked as a staff writer lor the New
Yorker and also as a film critic lor Er·
quire . He also took villdng professor
positions (In English or history of dnema)
at ebout a dozen leadang unlver itles, in·
eluding U/ B in 1975
Plloey .....
Macdonald, who received an honorary
doctoral from Wesleyan an 1964 , thinks
the Ide, ol "arelltng out" to make money Is
a "phony !Kue •
During hll years as an active writer, he
said he always worked lor money and
"didn't have 10 wntc bad" or "writ
down" to sell his copy. What's more, he
suspecu that those who did "go
HoDywood " -re " hacks anyway."
Aulhors ouch as Faulkner and fitzgerald
merely "uMd the establishment to get
money 10 they could contln~ota their work
" lt't just a matter ol who ..... whom,"
he conc:luded _ , .

-- --"" _

Nowm.
to

Tho&lt;llaoiSoodont_ ...... _ , .
in 1Wboll AnMx
~ 17

a.,..........,

on

..........
..... , _ . ....,.....21_,.....
.... __
-.n....._-. ...
_ltw

crease , lnaeased Interest income . proceeding with the orginaUy·planned reduc tion of 475 positions and an other than
personal services base cut."
Second , the Chancellor continued , "a
critical element in the success ol the plan
was the willingness of the Budget Division
to accept the personnel conversion in the
dormitories associated with the rent in aease as our share of a second phase
3,000 reduction in total stale payroll "

"'=·ret::::-::.rthat

the
Budget Division acceplad most of
SUNY's proposals for management filler: _ , __ "We be1ieiM that " - tonptoved procedures wtl provide plelidents
with adclltional managerial Q,xlbillty to
live with the - " " llscal cohstralnts of
the next several years and also provide
Improved Incentives lor lntenlal campus
reallocations," he commented .

su~u_:~in ":.~ngu~fon:Uot~
redistribute and spend 100 per cent of
any "planned" savings H makes over and
above expenditure celtangs and personnel
targets Imposed by the DOS, and a portion of "unplanned" savings .
Planned savings can be redistributed
only If: expressed Executive and
Legislative policy is not violated; no com·
mltments are made which have the effect
of increasing requited funding in sub5e·
quent years: no major policy changes are
Initiated : statutory Umlts on Interchanges
are not exceeded ; and lull descriptions of
the reasons for and Impact of the savings
and transfers ollunds are submined .
"Unplanned" savings are defined as
those resuhing from external events: inability to hire resulting from marketplace
conditions ; workload reductions such as
shortfalls in enrollment or hospital bed
occu'Pllncy: and miki winters resultir.g in
lower malntenonce (not utility) costs .
Up to 35 per cent of these savings may

~'h..~,~~ddlh;B!~:r¥-:::.~~~~

order

to

protect

programmalic

reduction .''
The remaining 65 per cent may be

used In the last quarter to meet any additional savif115 required by a State-wide
worsening of the fiscal situation , or to ac·
celerate completion of the bonding program , sub)Od to DOS approval.

Price acts as SAED dean
while Cohen is in Venezuela
11&gt;e School ol Architecture and Environmental Design will operate und"'
the guidance of an octmg dean during the
one•year sabbatical of Dean Harold L
Cohen
U/ B President Robert L Keller has an nounced that Assistant Dean AKred D
Pnce , Jr w;U serve as acting dean during
Cohen's absence. Cohen . who was reappointed dean shortly before he began his
leave, will return neKI Jufy to continue m
that post
In a lett r advising Price of his appoint ment. Ketter commented .
"You have served the school well an
your capadty as assistant dean over the
pastlhr years, and the community pro)«15 In which you have been Involved
have contributed Jignahcantly to the
University's public service lunctaon
"I am confident that , under your darec·
tion , the school wl~ continue to enpy Its
reputaUon as a cent r for 1nnovahve ln
structlon and servace ac!Mtaes
"'n behaW ol the Unlv..Wy as a
whole. may I thank you lor your W\11angness to unclertaka this major academic
respon · ly "
Ra
tr....u
. who oboerved his J:l&lt;d birthday
July 6 , has been invohled With Dun
Cof.m In developu19 plans lor Buffalo's
reborn The Ire Oiitnot One ol Price's
pnrne In
Is the crty's light r
rapt(!
tran rayot m , now uncle constru&lt;:tlon.
as Mr lotesto commercial and resid ntial
developrTMtnt
Before coming to U/ B In 1977 .. a · tant d n ol AEO, Pnce serv d a auls
a.nt dean of the School of Archucture 61

the New Jersey Institute of Technology at
Newark.
Minority Involvement
Following graduation from Prtnceton
wath a bachelor's degree In sociology and
a ma ter's degree in architecture and advanced planning, he became a to·
·founder of the Alro ·Am.,ricans lor
Educational Opportunities. a d ar·
inghouse based at Harvard to aid manorl·
ty soud n In quest of a cpllege educatton . He spent two years at Harvard as an
offacer ol the Facuhy of Arts and
Sciences, and studied at Harvord's
Gradual School ol Desagn He It a Bulralo native
Dean Cohen is spending· the larst part
of his sabbatical at the Universaty of
Maracay in Venezuela , where h wall partacrpate In a 5peeial environmental deJign
seminar Wlth facuky members there
In addation , he will serve as a consultant to the Venezuelan and Costa Racan
Mims1nes of Environment on the
development ol new towns in tropacal
chrnes. ancluding selection of potential
s•tes
.
Both Dean Cohen and ha v.ae. Mary,
ar entymologiSts, and plan to collect In·
sects dunng their tay abroad lor th Buffalo Museum of Science

~-to. Foil b~""t

woyJ..... I4 Col
~ ...-.

a.-- .....

12202·.-d ..._to.•ctuo

or .,.,_ to

tnef(

~- C...... ad..-

•

Ma..nt

�July 10, 1980

4

10,2 and 8
New Vortc4Med , _ "--do KGdl

... ....... t h r e e - - - - ..... _

Wedneeday.-.net
rud
., 10, 2.nct8
· - - " ' · See ...... below.
to ............ • ...,__

hlo~

CALENDAR

UllAII FRJI '
- - (19731 Cont.....,. l'huin .
Squn 4. 6·30 ond 9 p m Gme-ol o d -

Thanday-10
PEDIA11UC UliiG DISEASE SYlG'OSIUM•
.....-. F. . lntem.tion.IIJ ConwnbOn &lt;Abter
830 am - Spm ContwnAn.luly 11
CuMnt........,.. d tho,_,., c( svdden intono
elM., tynd&lt;omo l&lt;;tOS) lung dloo
ond ioohmo
I n - ... be..,_ leoound
Tho - m lo ~btl tho U/ 8 ond
Ollclnn'o H&lt;&gt;opllol Doporomcn10 d Pod.a""" imd
lht American Luf\9 ~ ol New York State
P\Mrnon.vy diM"aM! and lnfll!l'lhl..l lung danw
wiD bt dilcuJ5ed at I'TlOI"Nf''l and afternoon ses.sions
~ Spo
... be On Lynne M Roid
Haovood Mednl School. fit-my t...koon . Un,.,..,.
1y d
Arnold
Un_...y d
Souohom Colifom" al School. ond TheodoR
~"~her Un•wr!ly of ~ ~alth Scwra

T""""".

Plo-.

c.n...

UUAII FilM'
~·

Gralkl (1973)

Conf~enc:e Ttw:atr~

Squh 4 630.00 9 pm ~ ad~TUSS~Dn
S2 10. otudon. Sl 60
O.tected by ~ Luas. wtth Rctuud
Orwyfu
Ron Howard and Ctndy W.."" thtt ll
poobobly tho f., I _...,. booftt folm"""' modo
h • a ~MCWMtint ~ ol• group of gr-.duabng tugh
achool ~~~of the Turbulent SUU. ~•tang
the. laM ntght of .ummct ~tton

S2 10; """""" Sl 60
SHAKESP£ARE fH THE PARK '
A Mldoum- H .h~o 0..., d......S b\1 Soul
Elun Nor tlw ROM Garden of DNw.r~ Park. 8
pm Free
·

Saturday - 12
UUAII FD..M'
My Nlfht at Maud's · (France, 1969) 170
MFAC. Elicool 5. 7 and 9 p m &lt;ion«al o d S210 - 1 $ SI 60
An unconv~ntklnaJ low ~tory about a Cathobc
~ngrneer who leads • well orMred life until he
mM1i Maud . a woman who tria to seduce him A
charming n'KM'abty taW thai lWftPI OM aktng in o
e~he momentum With M1l'priAng tWIAI and
turm abng the way

SHAKESPEARE IH THE PARK '
A ~mmer Night's DruM, directed by s.ul
Elun Near lh. Row Garden ol Delewan! Park ~
p m Free

SHAKESPEARE fH THE PARK'
A NW.U.auner NJebf• Or.:am. dtreded by Saul
EIOn
• tht ROM" G.den of Odii"Wa"e P..-k 8
pmfrH
·
Zony. clocriMd ond mUJical

Tho - . .

~-

Sunday - 13

F.&lt;d ..._. ond Connon
Mnndo JIOPI!Io'&lt; tho end&gt;ono&lt;d ,....,
E.ld't • using tMck and whk 10IWI fOf dw oswn
W'ISII twbtn al i5 norrnaO and ""techNC.Okw.. for tClena
.., in Fot&lt;ylond Shodes d "The W,_d d 0. "
R..y LAUM't a\waYf IAnt.ulle mUSk bWnds
c:t..lc.J LAtin , rod~ . And counlry western

UUAII FilM'
M~ Night at Maud's (Frana , )969)
170
MFAC. Elicotl 5. 7 and 9 p m Gene &amp;I adrniHKM'!
S2 10. olu&lt;kniS Sl 60

tJtJAII OPEN MIKE SEJUES'
Squire FC!UN61n An.a. Main StrHt 8 - JO 30
p m In UH of rH'I ihe ewnt W1l M mowd lf'tilde
to H.- loungt Sign· up shftt wil ~ a\&lt;ailai:M
boafnnong .. 7 30

pm F~

S~IH

THE PARK'
A NldM&amp;M,_.. Nltlbt'• Dr...a. dnded by s.uJ
Elun
• ohe Rooc Gonion ol o.r.-. P.n. 8

Friday- 11

SOCIAL TKANSFOIUlAnONs

PEDIATKIC UliiG DISEASE SYJtPOSIUit•
~·F. . eon- Cantor

-

-

Jo,.,...,. -

r.-

ThoM1clo!l-- ... - -

... t. ~ btl U/B ~oao~~y, On

-a...-..--..-'"

o1
nw.. Go-nool lltlau F..-, ltolowod b\1 • ,_.t

···---lional

- '"Orloa!
- ~
.., . pool.-'" In·
l.umlng"f
Gunhotd

dMd..Z ond ,....., IJIUdlos, Cologo c( Humon

Dowtopmono. Pen....,._ SUoo ~ 112
O'llrion Hoi 2 p m s,.,.-.d b\1 Tho Colegft

.,..,_,.
-om wll lool&lt; ohe Sud ·
__ ,,..,._.,,....._,twv.d

_

01

ONoh ~- -Or Donlol

... -

c

School. ond &lt;Mol s.hap . ...... _ . . . .

...........

.. - - ........... Hoopoot. -

-~-"'~-Dick

PI&gt;D . ~- ·
~nt

l...ooHiv lllht- Juz FounYotn

."!t~~!l!;~

or.wCllv S... 2pm

At a. Squ.t 7
evmc wt1 bl twtd in the

ar\d

~a'otbal

5ooncft

c.-.

SHAKESPEARE IH THE PARK •
AM ......., Ntpts Dr«... directed by s...uJ
Eldn ... ~ Gordon '" Dolowo&lt;o p.n. 8

pm Iff&lt;

.._.. 1021 -

AN-,.,......,

d..

0..•. eco&lt;d b\1 Soul
Elun Nu. tho R.- Gonion d Dolowo&lt;o P.n. 8
pmf'"
·
UllAII ROCK 'N' ROlL FRJI'

Rolllatl

s -.

DAY SUNioiEII RltiUM'

T-wo.

CWW.... to r-y, K.nnooh
t&lt;odo . pool.- '" [o,gloh. ColuCoun O'&amp;w. 10 • m tnlonnol .-...
.,..., .....,._ • .,......,..tolll .. 2p .. inTl.
Kl¥o, 101 Baldy s,.o.-.d b\1 ohe Foc.dy d

A IH d S2S &lt;OY&lt;R lunch. in$1ruction . ond
rNterlaJs Further infonnation e~~n be obcalned by
coDing tho w...... Now von. Educolional ~
Council •• 6J6.2460.
ARTPARK EXCURSION '
Godopoll o1 Mpod&lt;. au. luwo 7 p.m. from
Rlctvnond Quod. EIOcoa. TlckeiO ... S4 . Cal
6J6.20n to.,....,.• ...,., ~b\1 tho,• ...,.
SHAKESP£ARE IN THE PARK·
A ..- . _ ......~, 0..., d..-.1 b\1 Soul
Eldn Nu. tho Rooc Gooden d
P.n.. 8
p m. fTH

Deiaw••

Conft'ftt'IC:e Thutre . Squire. 8 p m Free admiJ..

tJtJAII OPel MIKE SEJUES •
Squire Founooln Aru. Moin Sor..o 8 • 10.30
p m . In taw ol rein the ew.nt wil be tr'IOWd lnJide
10 HM5 Lounge. Stgn...., " - will bo ovalloblo

c.n'

w... -

beginning .. 7,30

UUAII FD..M '

- Squ- ... 5' 15,w-n.
Coni.r.nce
n-...
8 .15 p 1969)
m. Gme-ol .......

..., 12.10, ........ $1.60.
A ~

Tharsday-17
PEDIATRIC / ADULT AUniGY

a

~ Koch'• moll reaenl ~ of

-

pony •
..._.........,'"- .. 1951 . He ....

- . , . f r o m 8.30
.luJv 19

WESTBIH NEW YOIIK OONFEIIENCE ON
LAW AHD THE PUIUC SCHOOI..S•
- - - ond _ ... ~ ond ......

----·-""*"'logol-al·
leding ............. . . . . - O'&amp;w.Hol 8.30
~m toSp.m
s,.o.-..t btl "'" w....... Now
Educo·

von.

lSchool.
ional -

Counctt oo U!B. ... U/ B t.w.
o n d - - - f r o m .....

.......................
........... logol..-....
...
-~

· - o n d - - ..

DI$H'

Tho l.l.IAB

~

c--

ond ...

.............
- - - .. ,_.,.!'
__lou.
-~- w....,..

... T_,._'"_
_ _ ...,._.Food
.............. _
-

-1zon&lt;~z

Al--to..-J*olwlwo

-

... lndudo _....,.. fl¥nand G
KunR. Dovld E Hoi. ond M ~ Goocto-.

::::.:-...a.:..-;'..,.'=="~
&amp;ua~o. -dotw ·
llo6lo ol u -. a..to. L l..oanoy.
Equ.t ~

s.--. u

tum.

............. '" ... ployon

Notices ·
lfDJ' WAHTED
Advonc.d - I n Mooh
T~l

-·----.. -·--- ----E
u.-...

·

· • •· ond phyUcoly booulllul

SWdclc tl praent.d • • Bannaku puppet

ploy
, - mastcrJ
......art
lolclng
tho plocodurinQ
'"·
Tho,
puppet
eYer-pt'netll
thedr..,.
chonging ocencoy. ond _...,. montpulating ohe

a..IHICAL 001UN0L0GY OONFDlENCE•
Third NaUonal Buffalo Conference on
P -/ Adul AJoow ~ Onitall...............
w-...-~

WEDN

tho bond&gt;". t h o - and&lt;MI righiO. unomploy·
han-

nwnt compenatiOn ; and education and the

"""'Thl5"""'"" film Oaken from ohe greool972 v.s

• m • 5 p m Con- through

Wednesday· 16

NewVori&lt; .

Fi\le separ-ate iesNons d dul with recent IUile
and federal statutes and ckcilions ; ~view from

.we Englnh ~ lmoitulc

SHAK£SPEARE fH THE PAliK'

lonnong 15 '" tho · ..... ondudJng
"'loown ~ -- • Jumpn' Jock Fluh." "Gonmo
Sh&lt;toe.." ond "You
Alwoys Goo Whoo You

TUESDAY MITE UVE '
p m In caw of rain h

English··

Room. Squn F . e c - Spono.x&lt;d
btiUUAB

ALOOHOUSit &amp;EIOHAII •

- . - . OloWiOmo -

Ooportmeno d

"""d ohe Roling SOona luaua Modo"-.,... .

Tuesday- 15

·

RERAoRCtl IHS11TUTE ON

., .....,. ol Mentl.l•

b\1 tho

McNullyChoo

~.-.._.~Tho

,.-..,.. SoonloyJ. ·- - .....
. ........... ~ond--.
ond , . . _ , _, ond Gonl J A c._ ond Elioo
F EAo, ,.-.d,.........

fftdov

35

POETRY READING'
K - Koch, Now Yori&lt; pool . 233 Squn. 8
~

nwnt Opportunity Commiilion ;. and Joseph S
MattiN . Justioe ol. the Supreme Court . Slat« of

docoppod .

p .m frM

~SEJUES·

· Spm

__.......

Part of a 5eria of events p&amp;.nned for tome
vi5mng tnwmational execu!Na

Monday -14

1..30a..~n

IHTERNAnQHAL EXECU1lVE PROGRAM
IH JtAHAGEMEIIT AHD ENGLISH
IAHGUAGE LECTURE•
-..... w - 1o - · Mn. s.1y
O'R...r...
- . . - '" Erie Counly Sovlngo
Bonk, ond Mn . Susan - . , 352 MFAC .
EIOcoa 7 p m Spono.x&lt;d b\1 tho School d

Equ.t ~-

ond Sdcnco

tColculuo. _,.,._

ta..-y. 8iologyl

to. SpoclotSoMoeoTviOriall'rogrom Moxlmum IS

houn . . . hounSpm unllf8pm
"""""' .. Spoclot 5oMoeo Ollico. 3 11 Townocnd
Hall, con&amp;lcl pe10n · Mt Irma N Torr-e. . c:oor·

...

HEWMAH CEHTEII AHNUAL
CHICKDI IIAIIIIECUE

n.--.p....... _

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

a..t.on - . . . , ond ..-&amp;. JuJv IS, I 5
-

p m •

Adulio S3 50.
Fa.-·Rood
coi61J8.2123

Owopot, -

dlldrcn S2.

�July 10, 1980

PARnCJPAHTS NEEDED FOil
PSYOIOLOGY ElO'EIIJJ(EM"

.-c-ond
pn. c..n H .....
p-·--""·~-­
wunon~ .

-.~.

col 831 3 0 7 1 - 10 ond

s. ~ dvough

~....S.,kwon-

POETRY MANUSCIUP1'S
&amp;carpme~tt

magazJne •

acceptmg poetry

manutenl* for lb win1er hlu« Smd tubmlulonl to
t.'O edltorl ~ Simeni ..-.d JNntw Jordan Wolf,
306 Somuel Clemen~ Hoi

SUN HINE 'N' liUOS: PSS PICNIC
TN: ~ Stillf s.naw • ipOnSOmQ •
suMnt and tuds" pcntc on July 22 et 4 .30 p m
nur dw limml COW'tl M e.cou

- ......... ~one!"'"""'

ol _.. ..

'"51· the pcnlc wil lature a rrwnu of munetun as
. _ . .. hooclogs, .............. Nlodund , ol couno .
beer end ~ Tlw CIC»t • $3. penon
In CMI o{ rain , lhc- pcnic, w.th lrvc enwn..,.
ment .,. bt: held .-a TaiJert', Sui P.-n
IWMfvnon and peynwnt ~ be ..,. and
544

~
~loll~

llingledcy,'

~

&amp;hibits

Sc:hm.id

By Ann Whitcher
"Ltsten up. please ." Conductor Paul
Schmid calls the orchestra's attention to
the key and meter of Mozart's R~quiem .

a stirring work for chorus and orchestra
composed In 1791 At U/ B's Goodyear
HaD . the Metropolitan Repertoire Orchestra . Buffalo's only "reading" orchestra . IS set to play the sacred WO&lt;k
without audience or pnor rehearsaL
According to the 27-year-old Schmid .
who founded the orchestra In June
1978. the sight reading group bri~
1oge1her musicians who wish 10 improve
sight reading skills. solo with an orchestra
or just make music wath affable
associates Previously independent of
U/ 8 . the orchestra Is now part ol the
UniveTS~ty ' s Music Department It has 30
.. hard core .. parUcipants who meet each

-

Two prinoples d15bngu"h a reading or
chestra session from a convenuonaJ
rehearsal. Schmtd notes There IS . of
course . no audMmee except for students
or cunous onkJoken who wander '" .
More amportantty. since tt's a "one -shot ~
alfarr: "the players have to keep goong no
matter how lost they get "
Hokhng up a score ol Pelleos and
MeRi...,nde (a 1903 tone poem by Ar
nold Schoenberg) . Schmtd Qlustrates:
"The muliiCWins have to get K right the hrst
flme That IS . they moil get the key
s.gnature slratght. along wtlh the
dynamo. change in :gears· (meter) . etc
In lohort . they have to keep everythu&gt;g
moving ..
Th kmd ol razor-shMp stght readtng
abdtty I• essential to a suocessful orchestra
audtUon . he notes. addmg that "anyone
udtiiOning for an orchestra wtll Simply be
:;:n.d:!d a score and told . 'here . play

£Jon"""

"-of""'
tb-ooy
ltlnoy ......

v...,. ......

n.o..,;."""' 15

L0CXW00o EXH1111T

u. v...... ~ .. w-- voo~c

""""tho fnr -

=

1..-....1~""'-

on tho

.._.Colocriono.ol
- . . . .. -ond-pultiicollonofromtmOI
-'"' pubtlcohono.
Pl'nln -. the communly Lockwood Mcmort.l

~';""' h m

10

11 p m , July 1611vough

Oa The Air
ALYII ·
c-..-tollooAno: _ F_ .
Wl~fkM'wlly known

~c..iel

erehK«t , Ch.nMI

I0

8pm

dM Mdropolitan

Tuesday evening in Goodyear Band Hall
at Main Street

woman . ··an excellent asset to the or
ts a grad uate of the Juilliard
Prep . a dtvtstOn of New York's famou"
Jutlhard School ol MusiC which trains ad
vanced h~gh school mustc srudenb
Schmid. who has a M F A in bass per formance !TOm U/ B. is especially enthusiastic about the Metropolttan's work
with high school students
.. I'm real~ exdted about breaking into
the high schools." he says . addmg that a
reading orchestra gives high schoolers a
rare opportunity to work with sen\or
musioans "OUr concer'tma51ft" fs an
Eastman. (School of Music) grad who is
taking lessons at U/ B If some high
school student wants help with the violin .
he's there to assist Another ~yer IS a
graduate ~ssistant in percussion ar
Fredonia . so he's there to help a begin·
mng percussion student And I would M
happy to help conducting students ··
The orthestra has a dectdedly
egalitarian flllvor . Solo oppot1unlties are
extended to all "A high school girl who
wants to play Mozart's Fifth Piano Con ·
ar1o can do
Schmid pomts O!JI
The Metropolitan Repenoore Orchestra
oilers addlllonai opportumlies to those
asptring to a major symphony orchestra
chair
ch~rra ."

so:·

a..-ItO 6p., - - " " " ' " " " '

-kwc--

For Aula Gonloa fa . .
-o..-~-u.w... . •
1%.,._......,...._,
.. bo_.ood

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

-·

Soloriool
....,_.. ... ~ 12- ........... Avr"'
16,
I
Tlw_ . . bo._to._~
. ...... - . . .. 11•"'

no. .. _ _ _ .. ..__. ...

--

...........

From B•ch to Prokofiev
The repe:rtotre . wtuch extends from
n111e Bach works wntten in the v&lt;...ory early
lKth century to Sergei Prokortev·
1'.11(&gt; 19 17 Clossteol Symphony, u
eludes masterworks that are famihar co1
cert hall far• . "These are all pieces the
can elCpect to see in an audition .. CTh•
orchestra has played all mne Beethove'
symphomes fWlCe )
The tradllional repertoare · a matter 01
personal taste·'
No. says the hkeab&amp;e young cond udot
who has played nightdub JaU a&gt; well '
dassteal musiC with the St Catherine·
Symphony and the Bvffalo Philha•
monic "Although some modern m uste
10 the public doma1n . most scores tor
contemporary musac have to be rented
Also. Stn&lt;:e the group obta10s much o f
tis matena1 from the Buffalo and Erie
County Pubhc Library's colk.-cbon ol
score• used -between 1'.137- 1954 by
Arturo Toscantm and the NBC Sym ·
phony . a tr4d1tional reperto1re is quilt&gt;
und~rstandable "Toscamnl wa a verv
conservauve kmd of guy ..
The re~rtoire . whteh mclu.des work '
by 27 composers. necessanly broaden ~
the mus~eal experwnc~ of ordwstr~
member~

Gtven the keen competrbon lor most
orchestra posts. the person with the best
sight reading
may captor what's
u ually an utremely coveted posihon.
"For Instance . about 70 people
ohowed up for a recent operung in the
Buff•lo Phillarmonte . h (the selecbon
procas) goo down to sight reading "
The orcheslra. although mostly made
up ol aocompli§hed U/8 muSIC students.
•ttracts h o u - . from Canada . area
high school t achers and students, adwr·
t!orng oecullWI. Fredonia StAt College
MUSIC Department auoda ..&gt;d !acuity
and lludents from other U/ 8 depan·

man

..................
-

Orc:hntta.

"You can't just aud ition a nd ... 1. ·1 can
play the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto·.
You have to be able to play it with an orchestra "

- A player can get a taste of ~tbehus . for
what Stbehu!. makes a vtOitm.. t
do ..
.
Xhm.cfs orch.e)-rra has no a udattOOs .
Nor ar~ there regt traHon proced ures or
due In add1hon to th downlo'An hbrary
score collection. !&gt;chmtd u!le the ex
cellent ~~Core colk?cttons of th U B M u~ ,,..
Ltbrarv and th• hedont&lt;1 ' tate Mu ·
Lrbrary
In the future . Schmu:l. who tS tudyulJ
.wtth former Mtlwaukee Symphony con
doctor Harry John Brm•m . hopes 10 do
lllOfe th1ng wtth choru:. and to e)(pant.f
the reJ"'rtowe . pecdtcally. he hopes 1 '
"read " all four Schumann symphon~
along wllh vart O U !r. works h v
Mendelssohn
lnteresttngly. the group avotd pot~ n
ttal problems wtlh 1.-. than overwhelm
tngly talented playen. "TIM' selec11v pr•
cess ,. •ntn&gt;ly natural The players tak
care of ll themselves I ve nev~ had •
probk&gt;m wtth deadwood .. He odds th. ,
enthusoasm Is high for thiS trlctly vofu,.
Utry adMty (mu.iic students receive n&lt;.,
credrt for the• partrCtpallon) and auen
dance IS • u u.lly e&gt;«:ellent "
R19ht now. Schmtd ,. o n the lookout
for
tnng players Thow tnterftled
ohould mply ohow up "'''h theO' mstru ·
ment at Goodyear &amp;nd Hal o n Tuesday
-n•ngs at 7 30 p m Scor aro prOVIJ
ed and Schmid announcft the ne 1
Wftk's rej)C'tlo•e at och
n
1nstance

ALYI4

c - - .. .... """' Soorl - - -"'--o..--"f'ddlr-ol
.. -.!'or\ --.otc:..le.

R~oire

Buffalo,s only reading orchestra
has but one ~hance to get it right

LOCKWOOD EXH111rT
n..~ato .. w-:Somehitlhl&gt;sth""'

""''-~~"'""',.....
""··--·~«~­
..... l..odooood u..y ltv M-v

~

foe-

Go.wo ....... , _ , _ ....... -

,.,.., .....

__

�•
The Morlon
r.- SliM
F.-..
&lt;&gt;edll IJnbl which end Bo6olo SlaW has $1,381,000

UnMnlly

To F. . . . . . MS,CIOO 1rt uncolec1tio
bol(, . debls II the- thing • tWt- ol the
poc:MII ol ...tit , . - ........... A
~ Dr. Geh.rd CNOIII union, lftor ... he poillls out, II a
F. . ,told lhe ~ Mond.oy.
rnuiiYI aid ~. bodJt on the ol
..._ aJ¥IM cbw ......_ condu· lis .............. In lhlsc:.e, - " " " - " ' ..
lions from a &amp;/1M&gt; Ne... _,on Sun· lewll on lhe oWls ol Bulf.lo St.- and
dll\l which IIWIIIoNd of looMt $45,000 In U/B. The cndlt union is not a bank, nor
cMfaulla on loens In _ . yean, F. . Is I a rich - . . - which can llfford a
~ lhola cndlt union wllh such
looge nurnbcn ol lawyen and accoun~ .,. no4 goi!lg .., go
to pollee bad debls. "We just have
broloo" becauM ol t..d debls In !hoi oursclws 1o rely on." Aid F... 'Thafs
""'&lt;&gt;&lt;inl
why -he "'llft stronger Federal _ . ..
It II true that the aedll unioll did not lions on bahaf ol credM unions. The bor·
,...... any loans wha....._ lor a period , _ arc prolccted by Insurance con ac·
ol line 1n0nths Ul1ler this yar. Fait counts 'and by bankruptcy, but !he aedlt
said. but !hoi was lied lo spiraling 1n1era1 union , ttsclf, has no protection, he said.
rata and Nd nolblng to do wllh the
Dr. Fait rcHerated examples ol dcfauHs
solvency nf the oogonlza-..
he had given to the f'WIJ1S. People who
As Falk explained K, becauoe savings do these things should be tatu.n to task In
banks and OCher lnlbtullons were paying public, he said.
up 1o 17 per cent Interest at the peak of
tte.Matl_...
the Interest rate tpiral, people were taking
One eumplc Involved a professor
their money out ol the credK union and
lrom the U/B Medical SchOiol who came
Investing at higher lnterut rates
Into
the credH union with tolid references
elsewhere . The credH union's board of
testlfying to the fact that he had tenure
dlroctors decided M would do the same
and
made a good salary. The tndlvidual
thing. Instead of continuing to loan out
was granttd a loan ol $3,000. A -.1&lt;
money at 12 per cent (!he highest ~ate
later,
he moved toTe,... where State law
lederal regulations aOow) , !he board took
does not perm« t«izure ol assets or at·
• chunk ol $200,000 ol memben'•money
tachments ol wages. Goodbye $3,000.
and Invested K In I 7 per cent certificata
In another caoe, a woman cleric:al
ol deposrts with a bank. This way, credU
worker at Buffalo Scale borrowed a "con·
union members earned 5 per cent more
slderable sum". and arranged for payment
interest on their money.
lo be deducted from her wages. She later
Now that Interest rates are down . !he
declared bankruptcy but the credM union
credK union has cashed on the certificates
of deposit and Is u ng that princ:ipal end ·erroneously kept deduCting payments.
She sued for rec:o\lery of S1 I 00 coDected
the Interest which H earned to once again
alter her bankruptcy. The C0&lt;!f1 ordered
make loans to memben.
the credit union to pay the $1100 plus
costs and a penalty.
court
T1oc defatalta • - a t o 'tloeft'
In a third case, a Buffalo State
None of this tempers the fact that !he
sociology
professor borrowed money,
811Holo New• was quite right In reporting
declared bankruptcy, and then moved to
that Falk has contacted Representative
Berlin
.
Falk
called him about the $600 he
John J . LaFalce , who Is a member of the
sUD owes when he was back In Buffalo for
House Banking Committ , to urge
a
visit,
only
to be denounced as a
legislation crac:kl"!! down on bonowers
"capitalist e&gt;&lt;ploiter "
from Federal credK unions who default.
Fa , a proleuo&lt; at Buffalo Sta , feels
Falk had one major correction to the
strongly that credit union loans should be
Sunday /1/eiJlJ article. concerning an
&gt;tempted lrom bankruptcy proceedings
anecdote about a sludent In U/ B law
jusl .as some student loans have been . . sdlool who moved to Mlsslss;ppi and fail .
The Federal government took that slep In
ed to repay a loan . That was an anecdote
connection With student loans alter
about a defauk on a /ed&lt;rol student loan .
thousand~ ol studen declared bankrupt·
The State University Federal Credit
cy oolely ID escape having to repay
Union serves member employees and
Some credit union members seem to be
does not make loans to students, he e m·
doing the sama .
phaslzed
pt,

In-· ..
U/B

Personnei News
tate Ret:lna: tau uecl Earm,.. Bcaeflt
On Monday. 6 / 30/ 80. Gov Carey SJgned Into law a bib that permits retirees
public employe penSIOfliln New York Statt to retum to publtc servoce
and rn up to $5.000 annuaDy wrthou t alfectmg their pensions (previously the
arm
bmltalion wa $3.000 Anything earned above that amou nt
automat
dominkhed pension paymen J 1lus law. which brings State law
onto conformity w th Social Secuny PfOYISIOfli. also permtts retJTees, age 72 or
older to urn a ny amount ol """"''' m &gt;Ia or loca l government Wit hout affec·
h"!! thew r
ment a Oowance
rec~IYong

9 :lO a m II 30 a m Room • 150 Falber Han Main Street Campu
I 30 p m • 3 30 p m Woldman Theatre . Room I 12 Norton HaU. Amher
to

Campus
io not neensary Supervtoon ar a uthorized to gran t re lease
d.-ong to artend eother

Human 'know-what'
makes the difference
What really separates humans from
other living creatures, detlared Kenneth
Boulding, the man the Chriot#on Science
Monitor recently dubbed a "one·man
think tank." Is "man's capacity to have an
awareness or Image ol something without
directly experiencing H "
Boulding spoke at an Educational
Studie-s '

summe.r

forum

program ,

Wednesday. July 2 .
Although humans have undergone little biogenetic evolution since the ap·
pearance ol homo sapfeno, Boulding
believes that, particular)y over the last
500 years, man has undergone an -.....
traordlnary upansion ol human know·
what," that Is, ol the "Images In the mind
which corrupond to structures outside."
T wtrling his glasses, the shaggy whitehatred septuagenarian who has written
over 30 books, credHed the growth to
past cu~wes which placed a high priority
on curiosity , ~eracUy and "testing the real
world ," as opposed to accepting the con·
ven!ional wisdom ol the day. This in ·
telledual atmoopherc, together with In·
strumentation which allowed man to "test
fantasies" and . "upand his capacily to
perceive images," was and still Is the
Ioree which propel1s scio&lt;nttfoc advance·
ment, he asserted .

T h e . , . _ ... t h e -

complex the system, the harder ills to get

to know.
On the other hand , experimental
sciences with easily reprnducible total
systems and rich samples are secure , but
are few in number. Because most
sciences are observational, Boulding
claimed , the popular view of "science as
experiment" is "nonsense ...
"Social psychologjsts are discovering In
a ·large and complex field , that experi·
ment just gives you Ph .D.s. It doesn't
lead to a secure understanding," he
joked, then asserted In a rather high·
pitched English accent.
Bouldlng , now the program director ol
research In general and social and
economic dynamics at the University ol
Colorado's Institute on Behavioral
Science and board chairman ol the
American Association for the Advance·
ment ol Science, warned against using
methodologies appropriate for one field
In 'another. Typically, he saki, the social
sciences have been guilty of this. par·
ticularly In their use of COrTelation
statistics .

U Ire dar, _.,,. .,...,.
"It makes one think that science
depend~ on laws, when what It really
consists of Is studying tho real world . The
real world Is a mess," he scoffed , " so ff
you're clear about ll, you're wrong."
Ukewlsc, Boulding complained that In
numerology (and to some extent, In
statistics) numbero are treated as if they
"belong to the real world ." In actuality,
however, he continued , there are only a
handful ol numben (such as pi) that do.
The rest are "all figments ol the h~man
Imagination "

The proc- which provide and
direct man'slmaga ol the world arc the
same in al ftelda ollcholar$hlp, Boulding
conttnded, whether ll be the humantties
or the sciences. But while there is no dWference In proi:e., there Is a distinction
~ oecurc and inMcurc Images In
the disclplna. Ha liltcned the ln*cure
ona lo unstable valua. which arc more
IUtl&lt;lq)llble IQ chango than those which
arc liable or true.
All historical sclcnc:cs, concluded
Ac:notdl
Boulding, uelrutecur becauoe. relatively
The "real world Is t~ ralher
speaking, only a smal ""'&lt;&gt;&lt;int ollnfor·
than quantitat161c," he - . d: bocauoe
matlon can ba nlraded lrom records, · I consists ol shapes and staes
which may ba biaMd And the lnforma·
"QuanllflcatJon Is • crutch ol the
lion may chang. with
dioc:ovay of
human mind, ahhough a uMful one," he
naw tachnology, such as carbon-14
declar d What Is significant about
testing
maasur mcnt, 8ouldlr'li ·concluded, Ia
Aloo, he con liCe!, «&gt;rnpioJty con- that H enables one to compare the real
10 -....y, beta- the more
world's " " - ' and

"*"'

�' .

July 10, 1~

7

Once. above It, SUNY now Sets advertising·policies
..._._on....-.·
-or......._...,._,.
_,..ell.,... ........... ..._sa.-........
--s.. .... =lunda.--stor
-""""' _..._ .........................
Alnant
....,........
pl.dag
"Fu-u-u-u-tr-u..-1 YKNtr'
If f.-.~MV ~ hadn't Mwady dllm• .
.tlac- .
live CIOfM-Oll far II ado, no doubt •

ed ....

~:::::tr;*~

...,. lhunnad by "pnoolggouo," oald In·
IIIIlCh t h e - - - .
lllilht wold • . . _ _ porlor now~ a pivotal role in moot u..-y

~In

reau-

dcaoon

eflons.
SUNY. -once one of the sysll!mo moot
llbly to blanch at the thought of spendlng
money far~. has come so far as
to nead guJdellneo "on the propriety of
student reaullment advertising .•

v......,. .... .,..,_._
In

a

recent

memo

to

campus

~

•

~

.

-.---.~-.........

sized that media . . . _ _ . conducted
up to the praent lime has been largely
meant to inform~ non-aed.H
students in their' areas of educational opportunllles or to Invite local cornmunllles
to attend the annual campus open house.
However. the vice chanceDor noted,
"as admissions pools decline and traditional students take !FUier lime In finally
selecting the college of their choice. campuses frankly admH to becoming IncreasIngly Interested In media advertising aimed spedlically at bolstering the applications rate.
"There is also a deflnHe trend toward
greater use of State appropriated funds to
support increased advertising, tempered
somewhat by the conc.em that such action might be considered improper. At
one campus there was discussion of the
possible expenditure of as much as
$25,000 in State funds to support competitive advertising lor students."

SUNY.

officiaL

'-

;:=~~~~"':'.:=,
......... o...... o/J&gt;.- Allah
HARRY

.IAO&lt;.SON

Edoco--tn..a..l

ROBERT T. MARLETT
MondP&gt;oductoon
JOHN A. CLOUl1ER

-~

JOYC£ I!UOINOWSKI '

w......
Co1ondar Edlloo
J£AH SHRADER

bill "odzlng the and ~

ad-'lllng outlets
the ... me -genei-al

Advattslng
should
meet ethical
ge&lt;9llllhic
-"
-...ds and ikanlely . . - the
- - or serv1on being olerad. ~

Allr.-

"C.mpuoeo should consider the
eftecllveness and economies of a Ngional
approach to ad--.g In which . - . I
cempusei could join In praenllng to pro·
specllvc students the wide range of
SUNY academic programs available In a
particular geowaphical area."
All advertising should Indicate that the
campus is part of the State University of
New York :

••

--

Information on tie line calls
to be recorded starting
July 16
.

- clopl&gt;orw
... T
636 "
2626 136 c.oru lUI. """"'"'

plio perwnnel. C.lllpUM5 may retain
cornmerdal ·advertising agencies under
established procedures, many of which
mandate c:ompelll!ve screening.
"Colleges wtll give continuing attention
to lair and c:ollegial Lonslderation of ·
·

_

pr..-s.at .... llMallly ~.
lho. mejaf matropohu1

~ In

......

"Academic and non-employmentAdministration of the campus advertisrelated advertising at the State-operated
Ing campaign, Perrin said, is "the responcampuses of State University ol New
sibUity of the community or publk: relations offices. l-lqwever •- -' _tv.!&lt;&gt; q&gt;ajor ~ YOI"k ~ be cqnduc:ted to Inform P'9specllve studenls ollormaf degree . career
metropolitan inslllulloris, advertising is
advancement and seH enrichment oppordirected out of the Office of the Dean of
tunities; to Invite the general public to the
Continuing Education, with community
various cultural programs which are ofor public relations ollk:es providing profered as part of the college calendar; and
fessional asststance as required. At
to Invite the local community to paranother camp\15. the publk: relations ofticipate in such vearlv traditional events ·
lice acted · as· a broker lor the various
as the campus oPen house , commence·
academic departments, designing and

publoh&lt;d

With

"..,._looi.

~
Perrin proposed the following
guidelines, among others, to assure
unifOrmity, effecllveness and responsibility In University advertising. Alter campus
presidents have reacted. Chancellor
Wharton Is expected to make the rules

. .aaJra
to .._.. ............ -

funded~

,..,.,
lng .................... ,_.$3,008 a lho. ldltanCII ..._ a dear ....t II
we- ... nnl .......,... ... - eolllbllllwd.
165,000 by • ~- In • maCoaperallon with 1111 -advMioiag pro_.....,.., • not U/111. - !P1D hondod II, a Ut-..y . , . , . __
~. Perin
•
c:y. tueh- the fatuity-· 11-pennll-inclucle
~---~
"poovtdlng the abjeclw II to proc.- of .-m adwr&amp;lng
eftorb. ' led,
mole • better -unclenlandlng of the
tueh .. dnct ..... Jlft98'DI, - wei .. Unlwnlly and .. bleath of educallonal.
media ""-tising. wtiile olhers lnducle c:ullunl and pubic service opportunllles."
only the adual c.- of ads and air opals."
- Where resources are adequate, adverNcarly el c:ampuoes queried empha- t1s1ng ahould be c:onducted utilizing cam -

presidents. Robert Perrin, vice chancellor
for U-..ly allalrs ..nd development,
noted "that In the absence of Universitywide guidelines or policy. Individual campus procedures vary considerably. and
there is confusion as to what pradlces are
allowable."
Most often. Perrin said, campuses pay
for ads through Income Fund Reimbursable Accounts set up &amp;om Continuing
Education or Summer Session tuition Income . ..In at least one instance, however,
State-appropriated - funds were used to
sponsor a local campaign aimed exclusively at student recruitment."
Several campuses -use commercial
advertising agencies. And one Unlvenity
Center (not U/B) which has had a Stateapproved contract lor the past several
years, selects the firm of Its choice on the
basis of competitive, on~mpus presentations.
.
Another lour campuses said they were
considering use of ad agencies, Penin
reporled,but were unsure whether such
action would ~ allowed by Audit and
Control and/ or Cenlrlll Admlnlslra.tion of

l1le Centrex telephone system serving
the Amherst Campus (636 exchange
fines) has been upgraded to provide caU
details on all Intercity (ITS) Tie Une calls
(those dlaled with . the prefix 195) .
Richard Zehler. head of the campus
Telecommunlcations Office, announced
this week.
Beginning July 16, Zehler saki, a Station Message Detailed Recording
(SMOR) device wiD record complete Information on aD tie line calls made from
Amherst: including the number celled ,·
length of call. etc .
l"ehler: said the SMOR wiD · enable
University managers to learn more about
calling pallerns and volume .
This Is the lrst s1ep toward what Zehler
desat&gt;es as "usage sensitive pricing"
which wiD be Instituted early next year at
both local and State levels. LocaDy, he
saki. this means that Instead of being

thil'ba

charged a monthly Oat rate lor tie llne service lor each telephone Instrument . Individual offices wiD be billed on • per
minute basts lor cells made . Eventually.
each ollk:e unH will receive a printout of
recorded information on each tie Une cell
as is now the case with long distance btU-

Football bargain
event brings together

yet against the toughest slate of inter·

6.000 members of the University

sectional foes . we are offering you two

What

sing~

Community in a common cause?

Varsity Football at Rotary Field on
the Main Street Campus!
What bener way to spend a crisp fall
afternoon than with your friend s. old
and new . enjoying the excitement

generated by the Bulls. the U/ B
Cheerleaders . the color and pageantry
of college football?
.
You can share in that experience on

live Saturdays in 1980 at special ticket
111tes. To allow you to show your support lor the most talented U/ B team

options if you take advantage of the
special offer listed belo"! before
Augusl 15. 1980:
I. A Regular Reserved Seal Season
Ticket that sells lor $14 .00 is being of(ered to lhe faculty and stall lor
$13 .00.

2. A General Admission Seat
Season Ticket thai sells for $10.00 is
being offered to the faculty and stall
lor $9.00.

REMEMBER - YOU MUST PURCHASE THE TICKET PACKAGE OF
YOUR CHOICE PRIOR TO AUGUST 29, 1980

mg.

In llne with the new information re cording system. Zehler reminded Individuals on campus that the intercity tie
line network Is lor o{fidol business only
and should be used only lor caDs at a
distance of more than 40 miles &amp;om Buffalo . Personal calls are expressly prohibited on these lines.

Sirianni

to head

Furnas College
Or. Joyce Sirianni has been appointed
master of Ollford Furnas College by
President Robert l. Ketter.
Her appointment wiD become effec:llve
September 1. 1980.
Sirianni, who Is an associate professor
of anthropology. was named a fellow of
the College In 1976. In 1978. she was
presented the Chancellor's Award lor Excellence In Teaching.
A native of Niagara Falls, Sirianni
re.:elved her B.A. and M.A. degrees
&amp;om U/ B and a doctorate In physical anthropology from the University of
Washington, Seattle,ln 1974. She joined
the U/ B !acuity In 1972.
Sirianni has been a visiting sderilisl at
the Unlvenily of Washington's Regional
Primate Research Center and has served
as chair of the educational committee of
the American Socie1y of Primatologlsts.

University at Buffalo Special
Faculty and S!Jlll Season Football Tlck ..l Order
1980 HOME SCHEDULE
September 20 - 1:30 p.m.
September 27 - 1:30 p.m .
October 11
- 1:30 p.m .
November 1
• 1:00 p.m .
N"""mber 15 - 1:00 p.m .

-

Grove City (Pa) College
Hobart
Albany State (Homecoming)
Edinboro (Pa) Stat.. CoUege
AHred

S•mply fill out the application below:
Enter number of tickets you wish to purchase

RESERVED
$13.00

GEN . ADMISSION
$9.00

Season tickets (live games)
Add $.50 lor postage and handling

AMOUNT
$.50

TOTAL
Please enclose che!;k or money order.
Make checks payable to: U/ B Foundation . Inc. (FOOTBALL)
MaU to: Mr. Arthur Westphall . Ticket Manager. Room 113 Clark Hall .
SUNY/Buffalo, Buffalo 14214
All home games are played on Rotary P~eld . Mam Street CampJJs
FREE PARKING.
NAME - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ADDRESS
STATE-------=-- - ZIP - - - - - - - - -

CITY _ _ _ __

..

.

�There are a handful of surgeons whose
procedures lie plainly In the realm of
saence fiebon Among the handful is Or
- Patrick KeHy . a cbnical associate pro,.,...,. ol neurosurgery and an attending
physician at the Erie County Medical
Center Kelly a 51ereotaclic: surgeon
Unlike trad1tional brain surgery where
the ul IS opened to view the bra1n. he
uses X ray films to gain three dunensional control OY&lt;" a needle-siZe
probe diroct d through a very smaU hole
1n the
I to po~n deep within the
tum
Usmg this I hmqu . he 11 able to produce lesions to ue.al movement
d110rd • to tr at chronic: paln by placing
slimulatmg electrodet 1n the bram . or to
&lt;hagnose and treat moperable . deepted Intracranial tum&lt;n

Wa•u to -bluh a regional center
Recently amved ftom Galve51on.
Texas. wher he ~shed a center for
rri"""""nt oft 20 year-old techn~qu .
Kely
excited about the pos luy of
malung Buffalo a regional centn for the
proces .

known

at stereotaclic

·neurosurgery H se 11 offermg hop.p to
pa""n whow medic.~ condJhon are m operable by conventional procedur
Kely
a U B M
SdlOol alumnu
l&lt; la
19661 He completed
•I&lt;'UrOOU
rnidency at North
n
and .......,.. on the, facuh of th Un1ver
of T
Galvl'tlon . before commg

._

H
The

51ereolaclic apparatus.
Then . by using mlcroelectrode recording techniques whicll he studied in
Paris and Edinburgh, Scotland . he is able
to record brain cefl activity _
In this way . he ach1eves un precedented accuracy In pladng the
stereotacUc apparatus and in guiding the
probe
No« only does he v~ew the activity on
an oscilloscope , he also ljears it over a
loudspeaker in the operating room . The
sound. he says. is much like static: ftom a
radio. with different parts ol the brain
producing different sounds.
So logical IS the structure of the brain .
KeUy adds. that specific: regions - of its
sensory thalamus ventralis posteiior correspo!Od to parts of the body .By way of IUustraticm . he taps a part of
the body such as the flnger lips. setting off
enhanced ceDular act1v1ty In a matching
part of the brain.
Using this topographic inf""""ticm . he
then calculat
with plnpo~nt precision
the proper laion site to treat a variety ol
movement diSorders He produces a lesion by he ting the end of the probe with
radio-frequency current. and is able to
stop tremor from Parkinson's Disease and
intenticm tremor due to multiple sclerosis

Not • c ure, but a majOr treatment
aid
Ahhough qoick to no«e the lesion procedure does

not

cure Parkinson's. a

chronic: . progressive and debilitating
d a . he does claim to create plateaus
m the functional levels of the patient . and
10 lmprov the quality olthe patient'slff
Sleteotaclic: surgery feU out of favor in
the
I . he says. due 10 its sometimes
d vaotaung Side effect• when the lesion
"'" no« placed wdh pinpoint accuracy
"'As there Is variation among person• .
ther 1 variation in the bra10.- he ex plam
W~h th .nlroduchon of L-Oopa m
1968. that drug became the treatment ol
c:holce Subsequent slud s. """""'"'.
point to a thr&lt;te -to ftve -year drug effec·

SILS assistantship

tiveness. That is why KeUy opts for the
to stop Parkinson's
tremors. This is followed by treatment of
the patient with L· Oopa and &lt;&gt;«her anti Parkinson drugs by a neurologist for end·
stage symptoms of the disease _
Another area in which KeUy is find1ng
the stereotaclic: technique to be effective
Is m treatment of selected patients with
chronic: pain . In the two per .cent of cases
he treats. he places an electrode per·
manently into a specii'IC site in the brain _II
is then connected to a reoelving coil lm·
planted under the collar-bone of the patient. An antenna Is then placed f&gt;Ver the
skin . and a current which stimulates the
brain electrode will block pain for up to
12 hours

reconstruction .

stere()laclic procedure

II is in the area of tumors deep within
the brain that KeDy is most excited over
the application of the technique . " It is the
future ol stereotactic procedure.- he
says Here. he combines the modem
techniqiH! ol C·T scanning with 51ereo-

Two approac:.ha
He outlines two major treatment approaches.
One is by so-called interstitial irrodia tion. By relying on a lhree.-dimensional
reconstruction of the location ol the
tumor . the surgeon is able to place on orray of radioactive sources in a nd around
the tumor.
"While a radiation field lethal to the
tumor is created . His relatively harmless
to the surrounding brain . Then. after the
desired dosage of radiation Is deJivered ,"
Kelly said. "the radioactive sources are
removed."
The other approach combines laser
technology with the stereotactic method
to vaporize tissue and thus destroy deep·
seated b&lt;ain tumoro.
_
Kelly's use of the carbon dioxide laser
to voponze such a tumor wa• the lim
operaticm ol ils kind .- Reprinted from
'The Buffalo Physician'.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>FaD
frosh

loo
a
U/B exp«ts to enroll at least 3150
freshmen this
repmsenting the largest
entering class of any lour-year Institution ,
public or pnvate, In New YOO. State.
Richard Dremuk, diredor of Adrmssions
and Records, said this week .
Some 2800 of those freshmen ""' getting a preview ollife here during a series
of orientetlon sesoions which began last
week and will continue through July 30.

ran.

Eadt

5eSSIOn runs

2'/t days; one begins

on Monday morning of each _.,k and
the second on Wedneodays.
·
This year, ~ Orientation Dnctor
Joe KnokowWt, the freshmen are getting
the opportunlly ' to participate In on-nne
registration lor faD and will have In hand a
linal dua ochedule before leaVing here.
Seven computer terminals Ml up in .
Ekotl'o South Ltnry make this posolble. 10 Ql'do and foolballlickds for tal
Krakowlalc nola . Almost ltJ of aD
are aloo being luuad duting ~ new
freshmen parents will be attending.
mini-registration.
..?
The perent orientation Is held the first
The lnoomlng lluden are being tested
day of each freshman oesa1on and uouaUy
lor boch M61g prollciency ...d math
lncludeo a welcome and 0\ICI'VIew of the
. . .. Ave Englloh ~ad sluden1s f#ve
Unlvenily given bv Vice President for
.,_,ight evaluationo of the writing
Student Affairo Richard Stggelkow .
oampla, ao a student tested on Monday,
"""dlviskm Is responsible for the enoay, ' - his or her raulto In time for
tire orlenJalk&gt;n ~atlon .
acadernk: advisernei&gt;l on TUaday.
Parento hear aJoo ln&gt;m a faculty
member who comments on ilferences
between high school and college: on
Monday of this week that speaker was
Aloo on the paperwork front. each
Profaoor Newton Garver. The nuts and
group olotudenls lo particlpaling In a nabolts of how to deal with the University
tionwide IUIW)I ol &amp;eshmen a udeo
and aoplnlliono oonducted out ol UCLA system are covered elsewhere. Parents
tour the Ellicott Complex and eat lunch
for 1M Amlrican Council on Education.
They aloo get brteflngs on: ~uatlon
requlrements , dauroom f!!Otocol ,
reglllratlon , and 1M Collegu. 1llcy tour
.., "ac.demic ~- .. Main
Sere.~ where more than 40 depertmenls
cliopl.y their w.a, and hear · a lecture
from a 1-=ulty mcmbor on what pror-on Gped from ...........
A recently-approved University agreeA r.mble along 1M ac.demic opine at
ment on academic and ocholarty ex·
Amhenl indudes a llop at 1M Woldman
changes with Be1iin!1 Polylechnlc Untver·
~lor.-- c:aled "Acllon
oily may be ~ to include other
on c.mpu.• wNch oftes an lnlrodiOCiion
educational units administered by the
10 1M ou
for boCh recrullon and
Bureau of Higher Education In the
more Mriouo ~von proyicled by otu·
Chtnew~.
clenl dubo -and organlzationo. Minorily
Dr. Cloude E. Welch, acting academic
liucMnlS gel • tpedal tntrocludlon to
......
president, broached the possibility
groupa ollnterar to than . .
during " lntenoe dlocuworis" with
The oodal lllde ol things .. nol
memben ol 'the Bureau and chief
owrtooked, dher. Sludenls coming
llwo..9l on Monday.lNaclnaclav of this acadet1)1c olfleen of four ol nine "unlverollln" which ~ to that agency during
...... lor ........... ~ ....... and
a vislllo ~ . June 13-16.
Mldlon ol Ur-...y _moo..,. which
Whle there are -a1 one-on-one af.
t.g.n et 10 p m. T.....,. Falot""""'''
lillalions between U.S . and Chtnew lri•........t• by
paople stilutlono this would be one of the first
logal ....S. lor uae In lhe bidding.
with a oystem ol Institutions, Welch
lgnon advice 10
noled .
bring an . . . , dock along lor
camThe villi 10 BeiJing wu part of • Jala
pus. Iiiii! . Ortenullon potl'tOI'VIOi blut •
of academic and admlnlolratlvc actlvtlieo
bugle ca11n10 their rooma et Eacolt each
""'"*'8 via a PA I)ISiem In a .......,.,.tng In CNna, Kor , Japan and the PhilipQuad . The PA alao pnMcla
which Welc:b ..,. lnYolved In durIng alhr -week Asian tour (June 1:20) ,

-

r-....._ .... ._....._

,_

- ..-_....

there . Alter lunch, they oelecl from a
series of workshops on special Interest
oubjects, such llS financial aid , commuter
problemo, student government, placement , etc .
1he last thing on the parents' agenda 1s
a program Krakowlak refero to as "video
vignettes." Several videotllped enactmenlo of problems •e~v to crop up betwe«n pwento and lltudenb during the
university yearo are screened . Six of
theoe were purchaoed from anolher
university. but four were produced locally. 1he tepa are otopped at otrategic
points so peren'to can discuu l55ueo posed . Covered are such thlngo as what happens when a otudent caDs home to say

. _ .........

he / she can't otand it here and wants to
drop out ; how to listen when a student is
trying to tell about a problem wtth sex or
drugs , or poost11y one u mundane .,.
trouble with the ever-praent computer.
Parents are served wine and cheeoe to
break the ice and footer candid dioc:usslon.
Denilc Jeckoon is acting director of the
_.rno' _ _ . .
~.,._. to...,

Anolher

riew feature for Orientetlon

'80 deals with housing , or the lack of H.
This faD. the aunch In residence haU

·--.-.·- .......

availabilities lo expected to be more

U / 8 eyes additional ties with
universities in the People's Republic

-.a .......

s.nc. -

&amp;.....,_

...

-and·---~
..__..._.._
a . . - ........ b

...... t.en. pert ol

I*Wftll, which
pnYiew

lor . . .,..
· . . ~­
. . . 10 .,. cml In Nglllratlon
1umrner, Orienr.tlon Dlrectot'

~ ...

.., 0.0.... ' -

, . ~ Polyt«hntc •
ment ,
negotlalad by Englr-.1ing Dean George
t . on a villi lo the People'o Republic ol
China the
ol March 10, c.lo for·
~ ol-..g ~~uate
lludenta, and Information;
jolrU
r-.dt .,....,...., advice from U/ B on
~t ol mode-n laboratorla at
the
lion , and ..........

-a

In ident1ylng "olher cietlrable
tlolw" In -.h country for further

toward a Ph .D. tn mathematlc:s.
TheM faculty , Welch explained , had to
their ~uate otudles becauoe
of a general policy emphasizing practical
poslpone

rather

than

academic experience

raultlng from the Cuhural Revolution
which swepl Chino In the 1960s.
Reciprocal agreements with a hoot of
American Institutions are now being
welcomed bv the Chtnew In an effort to
"make up lor lost time." Welch · suggeoted . Obviously. the exchanga are a
part of the general, extenolve and rapid
opening ol China to the U.S .
Further o.changa with Institutions In
Beijing are of Interest to U/B becauoe a

No1-..1...w.a•
1he oeveral "unlversitieo" oupervlsed
by the Bureau of Higher Education ore
admlltedly 1101 u highly ,._ded u
Beijing U .. nor 11re they "unlversltieo" In
the American senoe. Welch clarified.
Thev are primarily lingle purpooe schoolo
(arcliltedure. economlco. and medldna .
for example) , but there Is also a normal
·eollege which hu a range of academic
departments.
Welch lo In the proceu of drawing up a
oerln of recommendation~ to President
Ketter on areas In which exchange
agreements might be mutually berwflclal
· and feasible .

~

number of faculty here , both
Chinae and Western, would like the opportunity to do work there , Welch noled .
The city lo of particular lnteresl to
hlslorlano, for example, becauoe of ito archiva of the Mtng and Ch 'lng dynutia.
lingulsto, muJicologlou, ocholooro ol the
humanitin, and social- Jdentlsts - as
wei as Jelen
- could benefit.
Already, Welch noled , Charles Kri of ·
American Studieo lo In the ChlneM
capllal otudving drumming ' lechniqua :
Prof. C .P . Yu ol E.ngjneerlng hao rt!Ciently

returned And Dr . f"rank Jeii o1 Manage·
ment will spend ne1&lt;1 year helping
academicians In the People·, R'epubloc
develop that nation'• lint unlv«siiy proIn hlo opeclally. operallonunalytlo.
SUNY hal • oyslem-wlde ~

••m

~.~=-~
learning; which,
Uon ol higher

~.

11on

In·

wao fQUndad an Chrlltian In·
w-..~""""'11

A ......

tos.-1

The acting astodate vice president
beg&amp;n his Far Eatern mlsoion In the
R«pubbic of Korea where he served as a
conoultant at the InvitAtion o1 the Mlnlslry
of Foreign Alloirs. His oponsor wao the
Mlnlslry's "think-tank." the lnotltute of
For«ign All
and National Securily. He
prepared lor that agency a _ , . on the
foreign policies ol Wna African otata
(one ol his major ac.demlc concentratlonsl and their lmpllc.tions lor conomic
and political rel.tlons w tlo South Kor a ,
A oaoond _... on civil- 'llilotary rNUons
in developing countl'ln (an eop«iolly
relevant loplc In Korea today)· was
ddwred at 1M National Defenw Cof:
lege . .
"Becauoe a8 ~ In the country
had betn doaed In mid-MAy under a
rnartlel law
diocutolono wnh
Korean a&lt;adernlcs ..,... dfiicult. but
Welch did manage
with
dean ol
Women's Unlvenily, .wllh

'*"-·•

....._._ .... _.......
a.-

�July3, 1980

l

• 1980 Freshmen
..,.._
.........
sewre than eter , lOtting many new
IIIKients ITorn out-of-town to seek. ac-

mlttee and the
Krakowiak noted .

Orientation

Staff,

a-&amp;oaQ.M.e

commodations oft-ampuo. In ~
To assist the many lreshmen lrom
yon, housing needs were not oovered In . Metropolitan New Vori&lt; In making the 11'1&gt;
orientAtion. Someti~NS a S«X&gt;nd or third
to Buffalo at minimum coot, spKial
1f1&gt; to Buffalo by parents and otudcnts buses, coordinated by the Or\enlallon Of.
was required. or worse. a dedslon not to lice. Me ferrying otudents directly to
c:&lt;&gt;nW here alter' al resulted. This year,
Fargo Quad ITorn In lront ol Alexander's
stud«nls wt.o did not oend In housing
Department Store on Queens Boulevard
reMtV lions bdore June 1 arc being told
in Rego Park. About 16 buses wiD come
they ~'lio a uey slrm c:hencc of securing
and go during 10 orientalk&gt;n sessions.
on-a~s accommodations. They wil.
Commuters are being matched up lor
however. haw the opportunity to look
car pools. Almost 300 wiD be sharing the
ride with a friend .
lor oft-campus q..-s wilhln the IAbon framework . A iipCdal 011-Canlpus
Studer~ts ITorn both in town and out.are
Howlng branch oftlce Is lu~ In
__.,tlng \WO nights ... .fJii&lt;:oll.' • . . ~­
Ellcott on Monday and Weclnetdioy so ·
'TN spljt ~ _ w~ ·. l'tol
.bod&gt; ,_er~ts and otucWnls c.n get a listing
Vort.ers' and those ITorn the rest ol the
ol availollililia. U/8 Is also making
state is about
again this year.
availoble a van service to tAke people
wt.o don't have " - own trar1$p&lt;Xlallon
to look at
oft-campus posot,illlios .
lncruoses In lreshmen declaring majors
The Off-Campus HouF~g Ollice hat
Glcnded ils hours in ils ........ q~ In
In bod&gt; Arts and Ldten and Social
Squire tW ... Main Slreet. v.oherc k Is
Sciences are slgn~ocant percentage-wise,

v-

now open longer on Mondays .
T ueoclays, and Wednesdays. The oftice Is
open on Saturday and wil be open on
Sundays In Auguol .
These~ services •e underwrit·
- by ,.,.a.l lJniveriiiY fundlng . whictl
wil
the ruMlng ol ads
in loaol media to oolidt oft-campus

alioo..,..,.,....

The Oncn..ed ~on oft-campus
houting raulled ITorn recommendacionS
made by
Allrillon/RNnllon Com-

-.......

so:so

.......

Admissions and

Records

Dir~ctor

Dremuk says. Declared Arts and Ldten
ma,cn wt.o haw pHI deposits number
145. compared to 85 at this time last
year.

Also. Dremuk nota. our "yields" ...e
up ("yields" means the ratio ol pHI
depooots to the number granted admls·
lion) While he'd like to think that's oolely
anrt.utablo to the wori&lt; ol the A&amp;R stat{,
Oremuk nota that the same trend Is be·
lng evidenced a1 odwr universllles.

ap ..

~·
tloaafly . , • ' '
The Chronicle of Higher Eaucation this
week reported that "yields" are up at
nearly half ol the public universities and
colleges contacted In a random sample .
Overal, The Chronicle reported , the
number of lreshman applicants at public
lnstitulk&gt;ns Is up 4 per cent over last year,
dapKe the fact that the weD-advertised
decline in 18-year-olds hat set In . Only
14 per cent ol private colleges and 23 per
cent ol public institutions note a drop .
Large public Institutions In The Chronl·
de survey, however. report' a smaller
percentage of lncreas4! In applicants than
smaller public Institutions.

-ms

,.. . . . . . . _ . . .. .-ell
U/8

unaffected by that .

Why?
·., • • · •
Alumnus ADen Zweibel, now a script·
writer lor "Saturday Night Live ," put It
quke simply as part of a comedy routine
on his trials and tribulations as a U/8 ilu·
dent during a recent conference of SUNY
admissions officers at Lake P1acid .

Apoplay
Buffalo Is a great university , despite Its
location , he saki , uslng one of those
body-part deocriptions ol the City which
give the Chamber ol Commerce
apoplexy·.
Wrong as he may be about the _.,nd
half of that llatement, he's right about the
first , at least In the view of A8cR . "A
Great University Within Your Reach" hat
been the theme of the recruitment effort
lor the past NVerai years.

• Additional ties with Asian unlvenlties
2.000. 55 per acnl female.
In &amp;tjlng, Welch
slruck by how·
the ow- outlook hat chanved In reoenl years. In the eM~!~ 70s. he recalled ,
!heir ..,.,....... to Amalaono was one of
T __.. pride In what they had ac·

w•

~ ..... ilolaled lrorn the Wet~. .

Whk that pride II ... there , toeS.., there's
...... tl¥e-and.uloe. • rullration that
much .....,...;,. to be done In per·
'-Ill lho revolution (.nd that the Wet~.
...d ihe U.S . haw oomethlng to ofter

- . 1 that clevelopmenl) .

Welch - wt.o wu first taken with
OUna wheo enrolled In - H...vard
.-a~ education alledlonalely
called "R1!:e J&gt;.dclles" - w•free lo roam
&amp;tjlng on hil own and also addraaed
pollticelldenct students at the University
an African fonlgn policy.

"What Is Reagan's lland on Taiwan,"
otudents asked him; concerned over that
leading preSidential candidate's caD lor a
pro-Taiwan U.S . foreign policy.

Even a Ronald Reagan elected In a
landslide would be Nrd-put to change
the r..,_.,t COUIM of relations between the
U.S and the People's

.......... T..._

I t - u.s. foreign policy that- upq.-.s. though.

permoolln their

Re!&gt;ubllc. Weich

aaured. The lpir1l ol the Shanghai Com·
munlque wUI continue In effact, ho ventured. whatewr the outcome of the
November election.

Dr. Mohn chairs State's blood council
Or. .,.,_ F. Mohn, dirwclor of the .

en- WW&gt;olcy c.nw lor Immunology

hat to.n ~chairman of
lho
Yori&lt; SU. Council an Humoon
Blood ...d
SoMc:es by
Goolernor H.q, CoNy.
.
The Courd. ~In 1'174, Is
d\arved wtlh r
blood and
~-In New Vorl&lt; Scat. . b
.... lho ~ to ...... ~ and
............. ...d
_ . , . lor lho 11"01* cck:tlon, pro-

11 U/8,

T..............

regulollons..........,

=~· ~
Or

•

~~~ai ... U/ 8

School of Medicine and a fecully member
on lho Council
.... ils lncoption . He Is ..... director of
the Blood Bank el 8ulfalo General
tiotpiUII and ils Ducone. DMsion and
1s - a consultant to the
Ad. . . _ _ Medlc.ol Center Blood Bank.
lnlernallonaly·known In ""' field ol
lmmunohernllciogy, Mohn hat been a
member of the Nallonal Academy ol
Sdalceo' Hallonal R&amp;turch Counct

* - 1945, hat-.-!

v-ans

SubciOmmll»e an Tl'llfltiiUan Ptobleins,
• member ol _ . . ~ of the
....__. Blood Commioslon and
Red c.... ........... Blood

ec....-.

s--

He hat __..... for many years as chair· ·
man ol the Medicai/Scientlllc: Advllory
Commlllee lor the American Red CroN
Blood Servlc:a-8uffalo Region and was
pr-nted a 30-year serv1c: award by tho
organization this tpring .
Aclive at tho Unlvcnlly, ho founded

tho M.A. and Ph.D. programs In
rnlc:robio1ogv and was lnllrumentalin Ml·
11r111 up the 'Central Animal F
at the
School ol Medldne.

Mohn has 50 prolaolonal publications
to Ilk credit and Is editor of /m·
'""~ pul
by the
~ WW&gt;olcy-c.Ner lor Immunology

�July3. 1980

Lecture center will
honor Grace M. Knox
The Council ol the UnlYenlly has
YOicd uiWirllmously to recommend to the
Board ol T, _ that the Eao1 Lecture
Halls .now under construcllon et Amherst
be named the &lt;nee M. Knox Lecture
Center, Council Chairman Robert I.
MJIIonzJ Informed SUNY Chancellor
Olton R. Wharton lost wok.
"We believe the Knox name Is
espedaDy appropriate," Mlllonzi told
Wharton, "for II was the gift of Mn. Knox
that provided In 1916 lor the creabon
and sustenance ol the University's
College of Arts and Sciences ."
That gill was In memory of her late
husband, Seymour H . Knox.
"My children and myself," Mn. Knox
Informed the Unlt.rerslty at that lime, "can
think of no hner purpose in creating a
memorial in memory of Mr Knox than to
be permitted' to assist in the upbuilding
and dewlopment ol an Institution of
learning such as the City of Buffalo

ohould-.-

n.. coiJete- 011 this fou.ndatlon

Her family's gill, known as the
Seymour H . Knox Foundation, ev.e ntual·
ly amounted t~ almost $500.000. A
University spokesperson of the World
War I era noted that whatever the arts
college at U/ B might become, " it will
always rat upon the foundation laid by
this gill ,''
Grace M. Knox (1862-1936) Is the
mother of Seymour H. Knox. Jr .. chairman ernerkus of the U/B CouncO and an
arts patron dvc in the affairs' of the
Ab1ght-Knox Gallery. She is the grand·
mother of Seymour H . Knox Ill and
Northrup Knox , ""'""'*&gt;of the Buffalo
s.bru. She was a distin§uished citizen of
Western New Vork in her own righl .
Her obituary In the Buffalo Evening
News, August 31 , 1936. provided this
account of her activities:
FTo.New~

"Mn. Knox was descended from old
American stock, which traced its lineage
to original Millen of New England . Her
AMeStry was related to the EdWards and
5ciiQ' families which. occupled significant
roles In the hislory ol Massachusetts.
"A dauqhter of Charles A. and Sarah
A~ Mlilard. Mrs. Knox was born In
Port Chester. New Vork, but as a small
child was takan by her parents to Ionia.
Michigan and later to Detroit .
"Her education was achieved In the
ochoolo of that vldnWy where she made
her hc&gt;rne until her m...,. on June 11 .
1890, to Mr Knox who subsequently
was to become an lnternelional figure In
the bu*- worid.
. .
'"The death ol Mr , Knox occurred on
May 16, 1915, three ycers alter his chain
ol five and ten cent stores had been
meged wKh Woolworth lntcrnts.
"'Intern! ol her husbend In civic enter·
prlota- carried on by lob. Knox In ad·
dillon to ancoureglng IN chanties In
which she alto was interaa.d .
"She stwad
her husband an in·
tera1 In .n and music and at the time ol
her death shf was a member ol the Buf.
lalo Fine ArtS "Fcl1ow and Perpetuity' and
Ill . member ol the Buff.lo An Ar11
~ and Buffalo Soaety ol atural
"Sublantial clonatlom were made' at
10 the Buff.&amp;o Museum ol
Scl.nce and Ab1ght ""' G.lle-y.
"Eattcme Interest was shown by Mrs.
Knox In the UnlYenlly ol
and
d""''! the cndowrncnt campeign In
1929, she p rsonally contributed
S50,000, IN .,.,.....,..lion being made ..
p.n of a $150.000 donation on behelf of
the family Thio danebon added 10
Knoot Foundedon
votlouo -

Buff-"

"SSnce the new Knox residence at 806
Delewarc Avenue was opened )it 1918.
many of the oocial functions - . . held ·
there. Celebrations of holidays, p.tlcularly the Chriotmas season, were ~
occasions In the Delaware Avenue man-

sion . As the famlly widened through the
years, Mn. Knox made H a spcdal point
to have al her children and grandchildren
at her hc&gt;rne each Christmas .. ..
"Considerable pride was taken by Mrs.
Knox In the ,polo skills of her son who
becOme one of the nation's _ranking
players. He was captain of the Aurora
Polo team partldpaHng In the International matches in England in 1934 and
Mrs. Knox made the trip to watch the
game .
"She was a fancier ol fine horses, this ·
traH being inherited from her father who
had a number of horses at his MiChigan
home. In later life. her husband maintain·
ed a stable of horws. an interat
subsequently taken up by her son ."
The bulldlng
11&gt;e East Lecture HaD is a two-story
project being constructed between
Norton and O'Brian Halls in the shal"' of
four octagons . It will contain six latge
lecture halls fuUy equipped with sound
5ystem5, There will be one large hall with
a seaHng capacity of 450. three at 225.
and two at 90. When completed . the
faciiWy Wl11 provkle space in which to
schedule approximately 100 lecture
. courses per week at the Amherst
Campus.
The exterior walls consist of pre-&lt;:asl
concrete panels erected In conjunction
with structural steel framing . A pedeslnan
bo1dge wiD connect the project with
O'Brian and Norton at the second level
so that students. faculty . and staff will be
able. to travel the entire length of the spine
without going outside .
The East Lecture Halls were designed
by Hamilton ,· Hblli1~ih . ' Letwni"e
ArchHects. P .C of Buffalo and are being
constructed by the LeCase Construction
Company o( Rochatcr at a cost of
$3.474.000. plus $161.000 for the
pedestrian bridge The anticipated
completion date is July I. 1981

Course covers
diagnostic aids
A u'*luc c:oUrw for health professionals foc:wlng on the capabilllla and
Mmitat!ons ol sophisticated rncdtcal tests
and equlpri&gt;ent used In diagnosis and
treatment lo being olfcred this summer.
Qa9&gt;ed to taach IN undalytng prln·
dpla of instrumentation and tests as wd
as their...,.. and~. the coww
Is open to ~ ranging from
physicians to paramedics.
Or. Michael Anber. chairman ol the
Oepwtmcnt ol Bioph)lllcal Sciences. 1o
the counc 1ns1ruc1or.
"Many In the health field simply
haven't had the oppmtunlly to lum as
m.u ch about the new Instrumentation and
tats as they should; says 1\nbw. Yct
iheM •• olten the very people pallmts
tum lo when they have questions about
CAT Kan~ , ultrMOUnd lmeglng, and
oiNs lcchnlques.
"Sinc:e many health profCIIIonals
graduated before some ol t t - newer
~ ....... In routine ..... they
hevcn' had a chara '10 learn • about
INm," ~adds .
The COIIfN ...... 10 &lt;;vc pat1ldpanls •
bro.de- unden&amp;andlng ol the lcchnlqua
and undatylng prindpla ol ~­
ad uial 1.omc91Phy (CAT ICM), ImagIng by nodloltolopn and ullraoound ,

~and

blophyoic.alln~~ol
lion
he.n, mUlde and lnln lundlona.
The-. Clnlcal &amp;ophjllla, authored

bv Ora. ~ and U/8 ~ manbcn
Robert s.-ulor and . , _ Scoa, II being
uaad . p~ ......llllllirl¥ BufLtlo
Ger.nl and o..~nn·. ~and
Erie .~::'J and v-- ~..
lion

................. _the
-and l n t t l r v - uaad In dnbl

Carrick .appointed
head of Law Library
Kathleen Carrick has been appointed
l.exis computer now employed in the
director of the law li&gt;rary and assistant
Law Library. She helped coordinate
professor ol law. 11&gt;e appointment was
library participation In the legal Racan:h
jointly announced by Saktidas Roy.
and Writing course olfered by the Law
director of University U.aries, and
School. She coordinated a highly sucThomas E. Headrick, dean of the Facuky
cessful Institute on Legal Research. a prool law and JurioprudencA!. Bolh expressgram olthe American Association of Law
ed enthusiasm over the results ol the ex·
l,.ibraries held here In 1978. In addJtlon,
tenslvc national search which recomshe has served on a variety of committees
mended Ms. Carrick's candidacy.
and organizations, Including the Li&gt;rRoy noted Ms. Carrick's ahady lm·
Public Services Cornmiltee. the Unry
pres5iYe service record and expressed
Faculty Program Corn-. for which
confidence In her ability to effectively ad she was chairperson. the Faculty Senate,
minister the Law linry. Ms. Carrick.
nd tlic Law School Appointments Compresently auoclate director of that
mittee . She is a member ol the American
U.ary, assumed her new title and
Association of Law Li&gt;riorles. the Scale
reponsl)ililia on July I , taking over from
Univenity of New York U.arians
Wade Newhouse. Newhouse wil be
Association. and the American 0.
returning fuD lime to tuchlng and adAssociation .
ministrative actiVilln In the Law School
following whet a Li&gt;r- spol&lt;aman
caled "three ycers ol dedlcaled and
deeply - - t e d MrYicc."
As director ol the Law U.ary. Carrick
wtl be one ol the ocnJor admlnlslrators In
Problems asM&gt;Ciated wjlh matching
the Univenity li&gt;raries system. head ol a
human organ donors with redplcnls and
major library Mrving the lacully and
studenls ol the Law School wKh ,a collie·
control ol the Immune rapont~e wtl be
tion ol over W,OOO volumes and a toeal . among topb presented et the 7th Interprolaoional and clfttcal steff ol 26. Con·
national Convocallon on Immunology
currently, she w11- as a member ol
July 7 to 10 at the Nlagora F. . Hllton

International
Conference set

thelawf~

Haec! .

Ms. Carrick holds a B.A. from Duquesne . She rec:ciYed her M .L.S. In 1973
froln .the Unlvci-sllv oll'lllabwit&gt; loac-.1
by a J .D. In 1917 from the Cleveland
Marshal Col!9 of Law of Clorwland
Scale Unlwnly. She was admitted to the
Ohio a- "' November 1m.
Pric:w to }olnln!j the Unlwnly . l b f-=ultv she - a r-..rch
lor
1M Ploln lleoln and the Ohio·Pubk In·
Campaign. H«f first poollion ..
SUNY/Buflalo- ..,.. as head rcfe..libr.nan and itdlng public · - al the Law l.kary, • poolllon
held from August 1m 10 ~uogus~ ·
1978 She p-omotad 10 -.elate
dlrwcoor. Pubk
u-w. and
has held that poollon lor the . - ......
_. s..... ,...... the lAnry lacully,
the has Joe!r! ~Jrla v~ ol pro)odl. Slic lnihrncnllilln otilalnlng •

Scientists from around the worid are
expecsed 10 attend the convocation,

.......,t

s.-

sp&lt;&gt;nJOI'ed by the Ernnt Wilcblky Center
for Immunology al U/8.
Previously callod .the U/ B Center for
Immunology, the unll wtl be dadlcatad In
hono. ol the lata Dr, Wllebelty during
opening ccrnnonln et IN Hillon at 9
a .m. on July 7 . Dr. Wllcboliy. an
lnlernallonllly-l&lt;nown lmmunologlttt, the ftnl dhdor of the center and chair·
man of the U/B D.partmcnt of
Microbiology.
The Emal WitaWcy Nernot1ll Lectuo-e
wtl be prCMfllad al 2 p.m. Jufv 7 by Dr.
D. ~ ""'-· .,..,_ d lm·
munology et Dulte ~- Hla 11op1t
wll be "E~ ol the
ot..rva11ons on the ,....... .........._..

s.--:

·~ ~~ s-- ""'*'·

�Jl.lly 3. 1980

Shakespeare
•rn c U/a..t,le . . - to
~l'llrltT............ wllhlhe
......... el •A .....__ Nltlht"o
Sb+

o.-: N..a. w-.w lrlgbtl ..
...... Krtdll Nortoo M Helena and
the ......... .,... ... •e~v play to the

. ._

,..._

. . In previous

~

,an.

CALE DA

-·

Role of Wo•••· Congresswoman Shirley
Orooholrn. 121h Congo-.- DIArlcl . N V Mooc
Coun. O"Brian 10 """ S,.....O..ed bv 11w Col·

....

c..- n-•. 681

Sc
ss~cw""'*wM ~cw .......
s,.o.-.1 bv ... Alrioon Culounl c.m..

- . UIB

... -

..

-

. ~-_ ,•••,.~ ..... Sun-

ol

Tlwblllod&lt;._,oloclodrolhoU.S House
R - . Chiohdm ~ hot poill&lt;ol

foo ...

-

.. 1964- • ........tul ampolgn
~ ....... Democ:n1lc . - fNc I'""
iMn. the \loW ~ to Conwnl .M now lfi'WS

... .___

•·~-ollho.,.,.....tui RulosCom­

· In 1972. .... mode., .............. bkf""

bur""'
,...,.,., ..........
.,.,...,.
-

compolgn bn&gt;usthr

lho Pmidency.

-·
-·

Friday- 4
p

-

1ft

-

TUESDAY NIT£ UVE CONCERT"

U!B c.n... Tlw01n. 681 Sc 8
'fk::Mta • ._ $5 fc. ecfub Md $4 for M!fUOf
~ bv"'"""""" Culuo-ol c.n...

pmFrH

c.m.. n-o... 681 - . Sc 8
b -sub wtd S41or lt'IUOr
s,.o.-.1 bv ... Nncato c..ll.... c.n...

- . U/B

_,..

bpm
-

/

· UIB c.m..n....... 681 - . Sc 2 and
.for.su-...-t S4 1orsentot
S,.....O..od"" ... Mican eu-..a~ c.n ...

r~~

SOCL\1. ~TIONS
ed

• - .5odllll and

P.-k 8

f..,Mnd.._......,. _ _

f-•

c.,

of cnzy m.t-aden no • iend of c&amp;.nce .net
......... ..,.,. Andd...)be~VIholn ·
.tw.biiants remind you ot liiCIIfM old rncMftand ~
..dt es Ne&amp;ion Eddy and Jeanrne MacOronald
F'" Asteh and Grouc:no Mer. k's al in fun and
low 11'1 thti meny •nd mad Midsummer N•ghfs
O.eom
1lw mutit is compowd by Ray l.HAft . w11h
~opily by Hannoh Rolken and Janone Pnr
1lw cast 11'\dud.n Mark [)ron.,hu. es Thaeln, Julw
~·BI.eke M TKaniA . John Emmert u Oberon
Jerry Annegen H Qulf'IC~ . 841 Goota as DPmetnus
Amy tioffmwl es H~. Jemu McGuire es
Puck M.a. w_..nf.tfd u twrm... KnSftn New1on
.s Hdma . E11en PMTy a~o; Lywndef . •nd S.ul Clun

-

PeriOfTTWle:n win

~ u.-

through J uty 20

ni!Jhdy eiiU'J)I Monday.

I.£CilME SEIUES •

y,....

Oe~~iw«e

'

Elan . &lt;NirrMn ol dw Orp.rtrnent ol Theatre
.nd o.na.. wll d:W«S • ZAny . el«:trfitd and
mu*-1 \olltf'I10n of ~ Sh.kape«nn ""'BtborM
lkelhls

..

Moadily...;. 7
~

A-

4'.-lld-~bvWAB

Eldn Nor dw ROM Gwc:kn

pm TlcMtl aR

s-day- 6

FAille H.Mkall - ~ Wew . FounLein area.
SQuWt , .....,StrHtCampus 7p m , ll)caMofr..., ,
lh&lt; .....,, will be held .. lh&lt; Al1mo&lt;e Room . Squ ..
SHAKESP£AIIE IN THE PARK •
HW&gt;f• Dnuo. d•ecred by Soul

Satuday- 5
-

...,10 lho

Otbenri...

..s...- and
-~ - 1120- -2p ... """'
~byllw
~

• • bnwt ..,. --.er b Fotfurw
n.
y~ •
cntiC lor &amp;qurr .nd ~
.,., .-.d c:onrilubng ~ lor fJ.t- ~Itt

'*""

and-

,. 1928 v• ..-~.... - - '"'"""" ..,
.._..,o.c-.,.....,_._w.......,.,
1%4

Mid .... - . _ . . , ........... £nolooh and "'
tt...ory cJ ~ .. ~~bout a eben le.t.lng UnMef

-

JOdo&gt;doot u

8 .. 1975

HiOboolooondude

-

a..;.-..,

""""".._.,..
" Eo..,.
-· -~
- -.... , . _ " " "Eo..,.
ond
o1 co~~- and - • •

"" , . (Jodo

Wedaesday -

9

WEDNESDAY SUMMER FOliUM •
11w ....._..., Polltlc.l SaM. Ma• t..m..
noted column.a pcM.tieal KOOOml$1 author and
educ.uw Moot Court. O'Bnan Hea 10 • m lnfOf
.,.,_.. decu:HIOn f QUnliOO end aMWf'T penod et 2 "'

11w Kwo. Boldy tW
l...e'Mr-, tyndc*&lt;l wUc.WI. on MhonaJ and tnter
NlltOfWII aH.n he.. been reed throughout the
wortd Among h books .,.. the datsic: Ammco cu
• ~ And va~w, ., Educot;on SponiO«".d
"" .... FO&lt;Ully .. Educo&lt;ionol Scudin Hlhelhord In
its Summet" FoNm wrin

Thursday- 10

DE IMSH "

11w UUA8 ~ Comm- ond lhe
OW....oiScudenoNt..--lha
- - - .. foundon" Plua .
"""-'C.... uch
Wedneodoybe
-12and2pm
r .........
_.,. _ _

andlo&lt;ol....,._. food ... be ..olllirloC&gt;UUode
AI .,. wft::orne eo mtnc p.n lhl tun
-INTHEP.o\IIX"
, . _ , . . . . ,... O....direcredbyS...
a... ,._ ,... - Gooden .,. Dolo-. Pn 8
p m F- St&gt;on-ed bv rt.. Dop.0rtmmr ol

--

......,_. • new~

-

-

ol....,.

,. IW4
.n

o.,r• ......~

r-..r:ton 10 lhe

'""""-comed!lllwBullosbocomo ..
_
_ ....., ..............
and
... ,.........,.._-·. ...,a...

..._. ol dw IJ,nt 8udn mu-.

CWf W'rlllWn

f...,_ ""•· -

~01730

- - ...... 7.

A-NJoht'oO.- ~bvS.ul
Eb Ne• 1he ROM Gertien of O.t.\liWe P.rk 8

uUAaFn.M"

~ (19731

-

ScouO• 4 . 6..10

eom....... n...••.

ond 9 p m Geneol -

$2 10 •udenra U 60
Dwecred by Goo.go

Lucos . ...U. l!lchwd
o..,.t.• R.. Howon! ..... c..dy w....... ..... .
.,.,boorrvlhel....
mode
h •• - . . . . -.... . _ ....lld.... rnghogh

-.--lim--

..-..-.o~rn.ru.~&gt;u~on~

n.,.

of '"'""'• IIICetlon

..... -.....
•

Notices

-

n.. r...... c-...- o1

Ms. Inn. H

Tenn. mor

NewBaaSavlc:e

A new bus service along Maple Road
Unklng the Bol.llevard and Eastern Hills
Malls - wllh a slop at Arnl loop on
the Amherst Caf"pus - has been
started by lhe Charles R Balsley
Transportation Co&lt;p. o( Buffalo
A company spoknman sald buses
now ~ave Eastern HI at 10 a m. 12
noon , 2 and 4 p.m weekdays. amvong
al Fbnt loop about a quarter alleT the
hour From fllnt. the buses tJavello ttw

Boulevard . loving lher at 10.30.

IIASEIIiW. 11U

CSEA locol 602 •
Tor onto Slue

~ • ~ to Toronto to He

.loyovo M

- -.. -.cc.aa...-Biolowl.

T~ OO)d Sdonco ~-

fooSpoc:W s..-r.......,........, Monnurn iS
hocn per we.lt. hot.n 5 P~m . until8 p m.
1\pply"' Spociol s..- Ollb. 311 T.....-.d

Hal~ ~ JNftOn:

SHAKE5PEAit£ IN THE PARK •

thft '-tl

Lerner

-

liEU' WANJD)

UUA8 0P£N IIOX£ SEIUES •
5qun
s.r- 8 . 10.30
p m In c... of r.- th. wen~ wtl be mowd ~
10 Ho. Lou..,.. Sign-"" ... be -

pm ftM

U UA8 !lOCK "N" IIOU. FILM.
...... ~ ThHtre. Squ.-e 8 p m Frn
Thio . .. ..... -

PEDIA11UC UJNG IMSEASE SYJIPOSIUJI•
N-o F. . I n - Con_,llon c.m.,
8 .30o m ·Sp m.Continua~July II

· and and pop 11w buo ........ rt..
BH-d P~ l..ol • 10 a.m. For tii:Ntl. lend •
check 10 the CSEA Trev.l Corrwnttte.. SUNY ~
&amp;ftolo. p 0 . llotr 16. Hoyos. ......Dono

_ _ .,..,.._12 S18

,.._........_ ............ odroriiOihebol

I 2 30. 2 30 and 4 30. alSo stapprng a t
ern Hdb
Fhnl on the return lo
Fare rs 50 cen . whatever the
d~ bnalron

�Julyl. 1980

H ave a
r i p -ro a r i ng , bl azi ng
lnclepende...,.. Day v.reebncl .

EdllbiU
E10tJ111T Of PIIINTS

-F..-,
•.,.....ty., prinUnaldngb!l
Ron
n. one.man show il c:mrendy on
~
~ ......

galory . . . ol .... c.n... lal&gt;bvMoin St.. llwough July 6

c.n... n-•. 68t

LOCKWOOD EXH1IIfT

w-

,

n.. s,..ctleht ".,.
Some h~g~&gt;loghb ..
dw"-Yollholhoao-• .... - - - &amp;om Lodooood Lb:"'Y· .... 1&gt;11 - .
"Eion Hom. "-&lt; oltho ..... Tlwough July IS
houn ..,"'Y houn

v-

On The Air
~ULY

President's softball league
attracts eight entries
The Presk!ent's Slo-Pitch Co-Ed
Softball League opened officiaUy with a
round of three games July I at the Enicott
Complex Recreational Area (3 foelds) .
Barbara Hubbell . President's Office. is tbe
commissioner and

team

manager of

Ketter's Klowns .
The Klowns started round -robon play tn
May wlth Public Affairs. Student Affarrs.
the ProfessiOnal Staff Senate and the
Undergraduate Student Association
When word spread through the cam puses of ''the torrid competition." four
addntonal teams pehhoned {or member·

s,

c - - ... lho ""'" ~ Rondo
-ollfw-ollhcNowY-S&lt;atoCouft.
colon rho Atto eo..n.. Cable (I OJ 8 p .m
7,
~ .. ttw Ana: s.ut ~·. ch.•
of che Tlw.-:re Orpwtmenll .,v;t d•ec:tc:w of
~·.,ON-. P..t. ln!omatoonal Cable
· 1101 &amp;pm
T'tw lrnift'W!WI'f 11 &amp;tMt Harriott. dRCtof of
Cutlw-.1 Aff_..
~ULY

tNn

ship . accordtng to Dick Baldwrn of Publte
Affairs .

k!:ague

Slaflshci.an

Bakfwin~s

An Atn«"~Yon Counol
on Educahon Rrport

Women and minonty students earned

On-

Two toui"MfNntt.. a hol!l-v -.,
. . . _ ol tho ScaM
eo.w.....c. (51JNYAQ

10 Flond. •nd
ol Now Yorlo

w... DMooon ....

hisNIIII" .... 1981).3t ........ -oehodulo ..,..,..,.,..S bi/Aihlatic Dnoo. Ed Muoo
811 Hoglws. """'guoclod dw Bolo "' • 17-10
...:GOd ond .......t ..... ., tho SUNYAC a-.
.-....r-~ooo-

aJn1!ll
CoiiiCKEN
. - : v iAlftoiUAl.
!

Tho_.._ .. ..,._ ..

~

41h .......

a......-... ••- . .~oo~v 13, 15p .. .
- " " " " ' -IJooi,A.WioS350
S2 Far- - ~ 688-2123

_CURD._
-

c:- .,...._
... , s.o..o.v 5
ond ,_, -.sov .........

s...doov 10
f"'IM!!8
~.

0

...4- .-....-.1&gt;!1...-

-~-2123

-

... c:- 115\-.ty ,..,.,

____

Sun

.. hNd coec:h
U/B ... _.dw . . . Ncw

....-.. ...

"*'1

21 -22a~dw!UIY

~T-

..... Wiha...ldyn&lt;AIColoeo. ond ... ~ .. tho
llooaldjln T - ..oil Clly C..,. dHow
y .... ond 5U'IY/ SIIony . . Doc. 27-28
Tho Florida- ... .... lJrolwnlly ol
c..or.l Florida a1 Orlondo on olan 8 ond s.-.
1--.; a1 OoiMd on olan tO
Iogt o n d -

Noo21
-22. a1Tho
1910-&amp;t

-

~

T_

_ 29

al

c-

doll 9 30 ond II " ' - tl34 2297

Ooc 3. .. Hloeo&lt;•- 9 . .. lln&gt;clq&gt;ort - t2.
F . - S&lt;alo. 13. 1'111-&amp;odbd. 27-28 a1

,........... = .... """"""""'_
__
·........
-,.....
.... _,_,Urn ....-.say

- - 17. ...... S&lt;aloollolwnd. 20. Han
--23 ........ . 27 . .. o..-s...JI.

rA~n~C»Aif'lll IIIEIEDED -

l'nOtOI.OG't

~

F"l

1307t-t0ond5

-......r• a. .. c-•--to. • - .

t6.

,.... 311n&gt;clq&gt;ort5ialo, 7. .. - -. 9.
-~t4. 11U ol
-~S... t2&amp;11oioS&lt;alo

R_

_ 16 AhdU . t8. 0.....05caM- 2t . •

c;;..- s-. 27 28. • !UIYAC a-,..;...
...... lalflloolfaot--1

To 11&amp;1 In the "Calendar." call
olean hraokf at 636-2626.
Key: "'&lt;&gt;1&gt;n Oft~ to thole with a pro'-lotlallnt
In the sub~&lt;¢ • Open
to
public:; • • Open to rMmlwn of
th
Un.iverolty. Unl
oth rwloe
~. 1
4!B lor
charging
adnt
M pu.-chaMd at the

Ofllu.

The eight-team league will play a
round -robin schedule through August 14
with a championship tournament set for
August 19-21 A league banquet wrll be
he:Jd tmmediately aher the champtonship
contest .
Dr. AI Somtt ts umptre-m -chlef vf the
league
Four women must be on each ro 'ter.
t~NC&gt; sn the hne -up at all times. Some of
the women players have shown eKcellent
skills. says Baldwrn
Other teams in the league incl ude
Maintenance . Dentistry. and HRP

Among students, too,
women, blacks earn less
lower hourly wages than the average full -

BaeketbaU

"statistiCs" show him htttlng .620. he

.claims.

tim.e undergraduate students who work·
ed . according to a study conducted by
the Censu• Bureau and released by the
National Center for Education StatiStiCs
NCES said the Cenous Bureau conducted the survey in spring 1976 in Interviews at 150.000 houKhold which
yielded infonnation on 500.000 penon•Aa:ording to the ourvey. which asked
inlonnation •bout the year 1975. almost
four-fifth• of all fuD-llme undergraduate
otudenls worked. whether they were
finandally dependent on their parenls o.not . GentnOy. the study said . dependent studenls worked about 700 houn
per year. In contrast , inckpendent
students worked tWice as long .
Undergraduates who were dependent on
their parents earned an average of
$1 ,673 in 1975 while independent
otudents earned more than double thai $3,758. Independent studenls aho had
higher hou~ wage&lt; than dependent
studenls.
Among dependent men and women
fuD-time undergrads. about lour out of
live had earnings In 1975 Women .
however. earned one-third less than
men. If theM women earned the same
hourly wage&lt; a• men . only half of the dd·
terence in ·yearly earnings would be
wiped out , NCES reported . The other
half ....,. due 1o the 120 !ewe- hours
women worked during the year
Only 59 per cent of black. dependent
undergradaat l'iad earnings compared
to 79 pn- cent of a dq&gt;endent student
BIIICk dependent tudenr arned an
• - • of S1.4151n 1975, rn contrast to
S1.673 for U depenclent studen They
worked 919 houn. "' roughly 25 per
cent mo.- houn than the • - • depen
dent student but earned S258 !no
"'The maJOt reuon for th dtfler nee
• was that t
..,..r_ hou~ w
lor

black dependent students was only
S 1.54. compared to $2 .25 for all
students." NCES said
In 1975. Hispanic dependent students
had a higher yearly tncome ($1.995)
than the average student , although they
- were paid only S1.89 per hour. This was
because Hispanic students worked over
1.000 hours per year. or almost 50 per
cent more than the average dependent
student , the study reporu.
Among mdependent full · ttme
students. three quarters of the women
worked. compared to 82 per cent of the
men . In 1975 women WD&lt;ked 233 hours
le5S than men and earned appro•lmately
75 per cent of what men did becauM they
worked fewer hours at a lower hourly
)'/age.·
Independent studenls who belonged to
minority groups worked longer hours
than the average college student but
earned about the same "' less In 1975
n.e hou~ wage lor black a nd Hispanic
independent students was roooghly 20 per
cent le5S than the average wage lor all independent studenls. Studenls from
homes whe.e a language . other than
English was opoken aho had lower hourly
wage&lt; .

SUNY researcher
studies solar cell
Research which may eventuaUy result
10 an ineKpensave and eihctent mg me
sola• ceU is berng conducted by-SUNY

Brnghamton chemtstry prof sor Allen J
Twarowskt upported by grants from rh
Researrn Cor-poratiOn . a foundahon for
the advancem nt of sctenre and
1 hnology , and th P oleutn Re
rch
Fund . Prof~s or T \l.aro wskl 1 tn
v
lgaung the electncal and photo hat&lt;
p&lt;operttes of organtc
ltd Unttl now
converwon ol .unhght rnto lectnc~y
rn wch
en11 h
b.&lt;: too low for
C&lt;&gt;mJT1et'Ctal ppl altOn

�•

July3. 1980

ygroands
For years, the handicapped
couldn't use them;
help is on the way from SAED
are intentionally ambiguous yet sug-

For years. those who designed
cbildren's ploy equipment unintentionally
~ a type ol soc:ial MgNg~~tion
betWeen the able-bodied and those less
phyoicaly Ill.
· 8ecaUS.. ol the equlprMnt's hmlted

structural

acccssibiiJty .

youngsters

needing \1/Melchairs, crulches or braces
for mobility were forced inlo pasolve
oboetwr roles.
.
But such days are coming to a long
owrdue end . Now, with heightened sen·
sliMly to the .-.Is ol the hand;capped ,
combined with Increased activism ·by ad·
vocacy groups and accompanying
Federal legislation. more play apparatus
Is being designed lor the enjoyment of all
children .
With State funds administered through
the Parks and Recreation (Npartment
and the Governor's Plal/!lf&lt;,&gt;Und For AD
Childrm Task Force. six graduate
student architects from U/ B's School of
ArchHec:ture and Environmental Design
recently completed the research .
. development and conllrucllon of three
ploy units which alow youngoters with
physical, mcmtal, visual and hearing im·
palrments lo interlld at various levels of
partidpation with other chOdren.

0.. ..

la.Dela••• ......

One unit , a ._tified jungle gym , just
made lis clebuVat ~laware Park. adja·
cent to the park's adventure playground
and near the old golf club house. A "dry
pool" - a type of trampoline with thick
rubber mailing covering a net of springs
- is slated for Ellicott Creek Park. and a
·sld«" for a park area In Rochester.
s.-a1
other schools throughout the
State collaborated on the venture, in·
eluding Syracuse and Cornel. It's hoped
that final designs from partidpating
schools wll be made available to State
localttia tr)teresled in upgrading their
recreational weas at a minimum cost.
Scott A. Klnzy, assistant professor ol
design studies and U/B's project director.
relayed that his studmts took a good part
ol spring Mm«SSer researching the type of
design that would besl foster a "supporand In~ ploy atmoopher..."
Attention was also given to the klnd .of
c:onslrUCIIan material most suitable for the
projlct. The IIJOUP consulted with local
egmdn who deal with the handicapped .
dlgesaed avalable lilmlture on the topic .
.....-.! pall designs •.oboervecl children
• ploy In the Cant.liclan Center and at
olher lila, lnteMewed therapists and
cou.....,., and made short field ~ to
namlne and play apparatus at
perkS such as Ollldrm 's Village In Onlario Piece. Toronto.
After synthnD&gt;g al this information.
they - . I the dalgn phase. then madc •
woridng rnbdao. Andy. thre.. of six
...... ~ mutualy selected for protoeype c:onslrUCIIan .

gestive enough to excite the Imagination.
A child , for instance, can gaze at the
tower-like llructure on the jungle -gym
and envision himself as a spaceohip captain or even .the gallant Robin Hood on
his way to rescue Maid Marion .
Units also have a containment area
where kids can toss large, soft balls
without worrying about chasing alter
them . low gradient lnchnes with ropes
and bars lacihtate mobilitY. In addition,
the units feature wheelchair transfet
points where children normaDy confined
to wheelchairs can attempt to stand or
ambulate using bars or ropes to steady
and pull themselves forward .
.
Both the jungle gym and the super
shde. designed by Paul Gladysz · ar~
Richard Carlo. respectively, are considered "hard" equipment , that Is, they
are made with durable material able to
withstand assaults of inclement weather
and vandaflsm . On the other hand . the
dry pool, designed by Rex Simpson. Is
made. of pressuriZed wood and adorned
with foam rubber padding and carpeting.
While this material may be more susceptible to damage, il's a better buffer and
much· kinder to delicate chins and
elbows .
Before any sites \o\l'el'e recommended

for the equipment, Kinzy noted. students
evaluated possibiUtles according to
specifJC criteria . They checked for such
features as proximity to accessible
bathrooms. and parking lots, among
others, he explained .
Evahaatton
Under terms of the grant. members of
Brockport'• Recreation Therapy unit will
evaluate the designs this surRmlrr while
observing handicapped and able-bodied
children at play. Any modifications they
suggest. will be incorporated Into the
design literature and used in future
projects.

AI Price , SAED's acting dean . discussed this unique aspect of the project. He
pointed out that generally. when a design
is completed , no de /octo evaluation
occurs.
Ptlce also proudly reported that U/ B's
designs were highly regarded by State of.
ficials responsible for the project .
The acting dean considers U/ B'• involvement just one more way SAED is
trying to improve the quality ol life for
area r&lt;!lidcnts, and a good example of
hoW one public agency can assist another
to meet a mutuaUy desired objective.

JOBS
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Personnel News
Major Maclk:U Seaalun (7/16/80)
Mr. James R. Young, assistant vice president - group Insurance operations.
NetropoiHan Ufe Insurance Company. will be on campus to present two
se!flinars for employees who have Major Medical coverage under the Statewide
Heakh Insurance Plan.· His scheduled presentations for Wednesday. July 16.
1980. are as fOllows:
9 :30a.m .- 11 :30 a .m .: 150 Farber Hall . Main StrHI Campus .
•1 :30 p :m . - 3 :30 p .m .: Woldman Theatre. 112 Norton Hall . Amhersa
C.mpus.
Mr. Young will detail the various Major Medical health .;,erages explain the
pr"paratlon and submission ol the M/ M claim form for surgicalbenefits
and Major Medical apmse reimbursements. discuss the assignmeht ol benefits
procedure. and respond to employee questions about delays tn their individual
claim processing .
The P...-.onnel !Npartment stated that aU University employees enrolled In the
Statewide Health Insurance Plan are welcome as partictpants. Preregistr•tlon Is
not necessary. Supervison arc authorized to grant relea.., time to •mployees
dairing to attend etther sns1on .
-

medical

c-.. .

l'reec:rtptioa 0..0.
Oort-ef-te
Blue Cross ol NartheJoslern New Yort.. has advised that the Florida Blue Cross
Plan has &lt;9eed to partldpa1 in the New Yort.. State Presciption Drug Program
affec:llvc June I . 19!1Q. This means all·pharmac:ia in Florida which participate In
the preialption dn.ig ptogram ~ed by the Florida Blu.. Croto Plan will
now honor the New Vort.. St.oteldcntilication Cards ol enrollees in the Statewide
Health Insurance Plan who etther ltw ln . or .,. vlsttil)g , Florida. Similar
IOjlfHmen also aodsl With the pr-.1ptlon drug 1&gt;f09&lt;8ms spontored by..u.c Blue
c,_ Plans Qf ~rc , New Jersey and Penrisytvanla .
Enrollees who Incur charges for pr~ dtugs at non-partldpallng pharrn.aet should continue lo filit their daunsiOf rdmbut$cment with the Blue Cross
Plan ol w_... New Yort... If claim forms ar needed . p1aoe order them from
the P...-.onnell:lepartrnent Telephone Operator (636-2650) .

�7

SIDS Is
theme of
.symposium

After ·30 years and 8 children,
Evelyn Adams is going to be ·n. R.N.
Thirty yean ago, Evelyn Adams
wanted to get a callege dewee and go into nursing, but her decision to _start a
family pushed those goals Into the

bad9oundThis .,.-log, Mrs. ~ completed
that dewee. earning a &amp;,5. In nursing at

O'You\lllle. She'l be taking the State
Board uamlnallons for bnsure as an
RN on July 9 and 10.
Don't

mlsundentand , says Mrs.
Adams. who has been on the seaetarlal
llalf at the Unlvwslty b IOINI 12 yean
now. Sbe ' do.on't. '-1 -·"llaw up
anything" by letting her elaht children
delay hU plans . ., wanted ihat family."
she ~ - "I knew ll would take a
lot to rAioc them," and she and her husband , Pet«r, a l«aa Insurance man ,
worbd together to liee that a was done.
"When you bring dllldren Into the world,
yo;, are IIIII a penon, but you have to
puJh bad&lt; your own fedngl to raise
them right,- Mrs. Adams phllooophlzes.
"You have to be lolally unseflsh. I enJo\led ll It was my We. but now rm begin:J.to be •little ........ she adds with.
Her chlldren range in 9 &amp;om 10 to
30. Three ol heuono . . U/8 ~aduates .
and • daughter II
enrolod here
as a junior In
Technology.
Anolhcr aon II In the nursing ~ 101
T~. and a MOOnCI ~II a legal
l«r«Wy. Baldet the 10-year-old.
then's anolhcr not yet ol c:ologe oge. •
daughter who attcncb wmiamsvllle
No.ih. One ol the aons wllh a U/8
dcgr-. -..t on to ..., • doc:lorale In
"""'- at Ohio S... and anocher II
WOiidng on a cloclarate In theatnr a1 the
UnlwnMy ol . . . .. The~ II punulng
• maater'a here In educational

:c:r

~-

lion . Four yeara ago, she started as a
typlal/receptlonlst In the Office of the

. Vice President for Student Affair$.
While woriting here, she continued to
dabble with night eouna, but the goal of
fonlshlng a college education that way
oeemed remote. Oiscour~ . she dropped out for a while.

A dwlce ...art. ........ herOD
Then a chance remark from an
associate In Hayes HaD helped her summon up the motivation to continue. That
auoc:iale was Juanita Monteith, formerlv:
administrative - n t to the vice pres1.'
dent for unlwnily relations , who noticed
Mrs. Adams wasn't studying on her
breaks anymo&lt;e and asked why.
"I told her." Mrs. Adams recalls. "She
-med conccmed that I dldn't have
anything to show for the worit I had done
and asked f I had looked Into applying
my credlts toward an associotc'a dewee.
·rm sure Juanita never gave that convenation a second thought ." Mrs. Adams
musa. "but I did." It turned out she had
almOII enough -aedJts for an IISIOC!atc
dewee , so she finilhed the requirements.
Getting that ~ made ll -m more
likely she oould earn a bachelor's. She
resolved to by In earnest.
Although Mrs . Adams considers
herMif one ol U/B's ITIOIIIoyal boosters.
she admits the Unlvwslty was no1
apaclally helpful In her quest for a nursIng IM}or. An advltcr In the School ol
Nursing was ~- She · might
_,.to try ECC, T . - or O'YouWie.
she was told. She elected O'Youvtlle
baea- ollls .-&gt;ing prowam leading to
the B .S . Th8l- 1975. Flw yean o1
~ e-v aemater. lnc:ludJng tum-

mer. _.. rcqund.

n., ..... .. .............. ...

The ~ ol that long haul promp·
ted a lamly conference. '11lil 11 fiOinlllo
be a -.dous ad~ on the 1*1
ol the entn famllv, Mrs. Adamo Aid to
her hulband. " And I
start unlnl
you're dna to help me ." He was. So
......e the cNdrcn.
.... ochedule hac been . __ For the
poillllwo jiUn, .... . _ had Ia adjust her
worit ochedule and . . V«&lt;ltton time to
!he dcm.nck ol rwqufnd .......
In loa! ............ She would
..... work -'~~· c:horgrng the lime to
V«&lt;ltton. Ia be at the hooptal b a 4 p .m .
lo mldnlght ohill . s.ca....... doctn'
cii1Ye, her ............ had to pick her up Ill
""""· . . her home. gat her Ia !he
......,... on time , end then c.JI b her

won'

~
ohillIlk
.
. . 10lhc
......
.......

· l.ucklv.
he proochedule.
too. end
Int ................

Onlv ...... ln ~~-he~lll
D'Vc
while ohc- ala~. or

...,.

..........
old.-...,.._.....,....
..........
...........
. . ··-·· ..... .,-.
N.hom. ........... ~-·ln

siblllty for the younger ones .
When she graduated this spring, the
entire famOy (whom she credits for much
of her success) was there for a pony. One
of the older sons baked a large graduation cake, and her present was a gilt cerlif~eate for a purse. The children had
given her money before for a purse . but
she had _.,t H on other things. This lime
they dldn 't take any chances.
Graduation was followed by weeks of
review courses for the state . boards from
4 :30 to 8 p .m .. each weekday.

Sbe11 . . _ •P lite . - I wort.
Orice Mrs. Adams passes the boards,
she wants to lind a job as an RN . She has
a "seaet desire" to worit In maternity, but
feels h~ age Is against her. "You have to
be In very good shape physically,'' she
notes.
Her age has been against her through
11'1011 ol her educattonal career. she admits. She has had to worit twice as hard
to keep up with the younger students,
she feels . She has laced classroom pre·
judice because ol her age. And her
~ have limbed the time she
could devote to studies. Oetpite that, she
has maintained a C aver.ge, but thinks
she could have done better than a--ee
worit had she had the time to spend on H.
Mrs. Adams Is both philosophical and
opllmiltlc about the future. H the donn~
pass the boards right away, she frets , she
will keep taking them until she does. And
she can continue to worit at U/8 un~ she
finds just the ilght P,&gt; In nursing. "I'D do
what I haw to do, she notes. "l've been
here so long now that anocher year Or so
won't hurt me."
Baldet. she notes. she feels a tinge ol
'-ancy about leaving. "U/ Bis the only
place I know." she laughs.
Vice Ptaldent Richard A . Siggel&lt;ow
admits to haYing mlud feelings a60ut her
leaving also. But. .. he to her in a
recent nole ol congratulations, "Yout
endeaYon MrVCd ~lly • an example for all ol us. and I want you to
know how proud we ere ol your many
aooomplllhmenta. _ .. Motl ol aD, I love
your temperament." he continued . "No
matter what happens. keep up the good
work."
.
lJndoubtedly. Evelyn Adams will .

Current ~of the caUMS ol sudden Infant death syndrome (SIOS). lung
dileases and asthma In ~ will be
topics featured at a two-day Pedialrlc
Lung Disease Symposium to be held J uly
. 10 and 11 In Niagara F.U..
The symposium. sponsored by the
U/ 8 and Chilc!Ten 's Hospral Oepartlii&lt;!nts of Pediatrics and the American
Lung Assodatton of New York State , will
be held at the Niagara FaDs International
Convention Center. Morning sessions
begin at 8 :30a.m .: afternoon sessions. a t
l :Jop.m .
The Friday ahernoon session will focus
on the Sudden Infant Death Syndrome.
with Or. Daniel C . Shannon . asso..iate
professor of pediatrics. Harvard Med~al
School . and Carol Bishop. nurse
specialist at Massc:husetts General
HospHal. Boston . as speakers.
Pulmonary disease and intentillal lung
disease will be discussed at morning and
afternoon sessions Thumay. Speakers
wnl be Drs. Lynne M. Reid . Harvard
Medical School : Henry Levislon . University of TO&lt;'onto: Arnold Platzker. University(' of Southern California Medical
Scliool, and Theodore l'ysh&lt;.r. University
of Oklahoma Heakh Science Center.
The Friday morning session on reactive
airway disease wiD be presented by U/8
faculty : Drs. Michelle Cloutier. research
assistant professor of pediatrics: Stanley
J . Szefler. research assistant professor .
pediatr ics.
pharmacology and
th~ape_utics .

and pharmaCeutics: and

Gerd J .A. Cropp and EUiot F EDis. professors of ped~a trics .

Wacob is PSS
chair-elect
William Wacob, an active tlvee-year
member of the Professional StaH Senate,
has been elected its new vice ..:hairI chair
elect.
Wacob will assist current PSS chair
Anastasia Johnson In governing the
group until next July when he will
assume the top posl .
Wacob has served on the PSS elections and orientation cornmltlees and has
been a member ol the Executive Cornm!Hee for two yean. He has worbd here
since 1973 as assistant to the chair In the
Muolc Department.
Judith Dlngeldey. an 18-year vet~en
ol University service. has been elected
sea~Otngeldey. who recently served as ·
m Comm- chair, Is a
senior
ic advisor In the OMslon ol
Undergraduate Education .

SUbert fellow

Donald J WhHe. a ~uatc student in
the Department ol Chemistry. has been
awarded the Samuel Silbert Fellowship
for 1980-81 .
White II a student who l)as excded
both In leeching and In retCIIJCh , Or.
David A. Cadenhead. director o(
graduate studies in the Department ,
commented:
"The quality ol hll leeching 'II att.esl&lt;!d
to by respon- from his under9'aduate
students and also by the additional
teaching raponstilttles which he has
assumed in both the freshman chemistry
course and junior ph~ chemtotry. H&lt;o
II extr•mely consciet\IIISUs and goes out
ol hil way to help students In unclcrNnd lng the coune matelal." Cadenhead
observed. White was nominated for an
Excellence In Tuoching Award lor
Graduate Sludents this spring.
.
Cadenhead called White's ~·
talt«hnlque "good."
Or Andrew Holt , ~tc dean .
Whitc completed hil bechelor's dewec
Grad- and Prolaolonal Education .
atU / 8 .
·
hac been ln""-1 to .. chalrpenon
A....-ded b oulslanding achieVement.
ol the SUN\' Smale '• O&gt;mmltlec on - the Samuel Slhtt Fdowoltip
o....tu.te P1owams for the 1980- I ~ by JoMph Silbert end hll
academltyear.
. Oorll Sibert. • a memorial to their
Nell M Gocn. U/8 budget control olbrother. Samuel. a 1911 U/ 8 wa&lt;iuate
ficlr, hu been lllbd to continue •
ln~. Thc-.111
~
SUI'IY
Com- by lhe•UAs Foundation.' -.. end II
d&gt;alrplraon ol
on
llnMt1lly
. ~ted~-·

Head SUNY panels

w•

s.n.·.

�•

j

I

July3, 1980

i

No equity without ERA, Friedan contends
Bv ~ BuchDCJWOid
~Stoll

Calling the Women's Movement the
"most basic revolution__ol all time ," and
"the largest movemel\l'for oodal change

in the last two decades," noted author
and I minlst &amp;tty Frledan warned a
large, receptive aud~nc:e at O'Brian Hall
last week. not to become complacent
over legislation protecting women which
Is already on the books.
Until the ERA actually '-ames law.
Frledan charged, women have "no
asaurance ol equity" and can continue to
be "economically and psyd&gt;ologically
manipulated" by right-wing group$ who
want them "puthed back.·
Although the "first 111age• ol the movement will not conclode until the ERA is
firmly entrenched In the Conslltullon,
Friedan, a founding member ol NOW. in·
slsted the time is opportune to begin
thOiklng about " lllage two": the " probl«ms ol thooc Bvtng under the assumption ol equality.Unlas MI'IOUs conllideration Is ~ to
the next pbuc. Frledan ouopects the in·
Ilia! one will never a&gt;ndude

F..... doe ........ do«taok
The Smllh College •ummo cum loude
graduate who authored 1M ~miniM
M)/Otique and It Cl&gt;anged My ~ em·
phaslad that If poogras is to continue In
the Women's Movement, the more
radbl feminists will have to I~ anti·
ma / marrt"'le /.chtldbearlng Ideology
and rheloric and join wtth men In
" r-..cturlng" work and home en·
VII'Of&gt;men ~o make equably livable "
The "e&gt;qlloo!On ol rl!ll'l • women felt
and eJCP&lt;
0\leJ being thwarted per·
IONIIIv. proleoooonelv and econom~
by MXIIt pradlca"""' "underst.ondable. '
If not ' * - 1 f , t o - consclouJnns.
FriMIAn indicet&lt;od . But now "llmplistic"
rhetoric and "wllfwe mentality" are no
longrr
to deal with economic and
-'olr

Jlonorl...?

Whllofriodon_,lo_.__,
r~ lhort shrift tn the ~ rnw1wt . npedely

during cmc.l economtC pcnods. "'" • •• the UniYtniry. MYing th..t sM w. tokt there
women tacuJiy her. than •
She .._.,..t the..,..... . . . ,.,....
blo-remody .. the .........
Some Unlwnily alfldolo l o o k - IO)&gt;ft

'" curr.,..... B

_

f..,...thc

.,.,.._,. IIActcnllng
................. R.,_w..
po&lt; coni ol 11.. ,,. __

1n

1970Wift' tem.le TodAv. t:Mmunbn hal in·
at.wd to 16.37 pe omt , or 260 out of 1588

,.........

curred, Instead . The reason , she explained . ..,... that the early feminist$ dkln'tln·
tegrate the problems ol the working place
wtth child~ . Consequently. when
women wanted to have lamUies, they
were forced to make the choice: either
family or career. but not both.
Frledan believes: however. that men
and women can create real choices by
working together to redefine oradllional
concepts about child-rearing respon-

sibllJtles. This cooperation can also iead
to removal ol the roadblocks which tradi·
llonaDy Impede women from successfuOy
entering and remaining in the market
place, such as inadequate child-care
facilities, unpaid matemlly leaves and in·
flexible work schedules.

family, they had better rethink the old
male/ female standards ol perfection. If
not, she cautioned , women are bo11nd to
experience Increased frustrations trying to
be "superwomen ;" a myth which . she
Sllid. "victimizes women ."

" - " ' - doe rat raao?
Aloo, new questions
facing women
whlch mUst be ~ tJy ~
ment - ' q\Jestlonl, Indicated Frie&amp;n,
t.hlth Impact on women's physical and
mental weD-being . She wondered aloud
If women r.hould "make themselves W:·
tlms" ol the same rat-race mentallty
which is prematurely killing men &lt;&gt;&lt; If they
should reject the old, narrow male·
achievement model lor one which seems
more amenable to a real sense ol self.
fulfillment.
In her next breath, Frledan, now a
senior research associate at Columbia's
Center lor Social Sciences, objected to
using the oraditional "dras lor SUCCeJ5"
and "female machismo· methods ol
making H proleutonaDy. She also suggested that If women want a car- and a

Men , like women, are also experienc·
lng an "f'!lage problem ," asserted
Friedan, and they, too - especially
younger males - are beginning to question If self-fulllDment should be defined
exclusively through Job success. Polls indk:ate . she continued , that many
younger men are declining transfers and
opportunities for upward Job mobility If
such advancements adversely affect their
family situation .
These redefinitions and restrudurlngs
can "strengthen and renew" lam~~)! lies
and the "American value system. she
assessed . WHh sh.ed power and respon·
'sibllltles, Friedan concluded, "women's
independence" will be viewed less as a
threat to men and more .,. a vehlde for
making possible a " new life affirmation"
lor both men and women.

Mell, -too

are

mow·

Smokers who can't ~kick the habit'
should live and work in clean environment
Bv Mary Bedl SpN
~ " -· -

Scitnca

Smokers who want to reduce their risk
ollung cancer but can't "kick the habit"
should try to live and work In places with

minimal air pollution, according to a U/ 8
r-.-cher.
Dr. John Vena reports that although
cigarette smoking remains · the "most

devastating" cause ol lung cancer. the
risk lor • lncr.,_. among .....oken who
live in areas ol high air pollution or who
work where there ar high levels ol car·
c:lnogens In the a . He aloo found risk ol
lung QnCef
considerably greater
than that lor smoking alone I smoking,
high levels ol a pollutiori , and Inhalation
ol carcinogens at work were combined .
The r search auodat in U/ B's
~rnent ol Social and Prtventtve
Medicine All' hto tiUdy alec&gt; suggetll that
• polkrtton levels alone don) inalu"'l cancer risk among non-smokers •nd
"llghl" .....,...,._ ("Ught" .....,...,. ........
ca~ .. 11-. who
las
than 40 pack-yean A pack~ Is one
pack a day lor one yur .)
"There alec&gt; mdence that rlok ol
lung cancer twice • high among

w•

""'**'

non· and 'llstht' rmokcn Of'C*d to cwal work c:ompar..t to non- and
'WII rmokcn who
nol,. v....
adds The rlok lncnaMd to -

greater If thooe who inhaled carcinogens
in the workplace were heavy smokeR.
In the UIB study, data on residential
and employment histories and iobacco
use were analyzed lor 417 white male
lung cancer patients at Roswel Park
Memorlill Institute and 752 RPM! wNte
male patients wtth non·resplralory, non·
malignant
Those In the lac:onrrol ~ suffered varioUs eonditlonJ, Including those ol the olein and oral

"'*-"·

cavtly.

Regarding air poUution In Erie County,
N.Y .. the t,.;- c:oncentrattona ol tolal
suspended pwticulales, according to extensive quantitative air quallly
measurements.

were

In

Buffalo .

Tonawanda and l..oockawanna . Areas
wtth moderate concentration• went Ken·
more, Amherst, Ole«ktow- and Wat
Seneca The rat ol Erie County has low
levels ol a poUutton. How.Wr, Vena
notes, only after 50 &lt;&gt;&lt; more yeWI olllvlng In either a high or medium pollution
waa did there appear to be an lnaeaMd
rlok ol lung cancer and
rilk -

minimal.

.

Among the )obo otudled, II appun that
the t.w- rlok occupations for lung
~ lndudot thoae ol molder. clec:lr1c:IMI and brld! rnaaon
tlv• occupatlona hlotorlc.alv have Involved
pql«nllai e,J&lt;IIOtUrll to ........... . k""""'
~-

n-

• Although the study shows smokers

can apparendy reduce risk ollung cancer
If they live in an area of minimal air poDullon and work ""-e there Is little or no
exposure to~ In the air, they
cut their risk rnore dramatlcaly by

eliminating cigArettes," Vena em·
phaslzes, Smokers ol 50-69 pack-years
have a ten times greate. risk lor lung
can&lt;er than non -smokers. Those wflh 70
or more pack-years have an lnaeaMd
rilk ol 15 times greater than non·
smokers.
"Therefore," he . says, "those in·
dlvlduals expoeed to high levels ol po8u·
tion in the a or carcinogens in · the
wori&lt;placc coulcl reduce these even
smaller risks If they. quH smoking."
Vena presented his study at the annual
meeting ol the Society lor Epidemiologic
Research In Minneapolis.
.

Acting associate
Slanlcv Cramer. proleuor ol counsel·
lng and human aavtca, has acc&gt;cpled a
aummer II'POintrnent as acting asaoclatc
vice pqlldent for academic al!aln.
Claude Welch, -.g academic allaln
vice prnident, In ~ adminltlraton
ol
appointment, pointed out that
Cramer had I
the ...,. pooillon

~-

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Trustees c·h ange
.rules again for
-presidenti·a l review
Alter a year's trial periOd, the Boerd o(
Trus1Ms o( State UniYenlty voted !lftler·
day to change from a "peer review" o( its
campus presidents and to assume greater
responsibility, with the Chancellor. for
ongoing evaluation of their stewiU"dship .
Convening In New Yori&lt; In II$ regular
monthly meeting, the Board agreed that
Inviting selected college and university
presidents outside the SUNY system to
conduct the review process was time·
consuming, raised unwarranted expecta·
tions and seldom produced new lnforma·
lion .
U/ 8 President Robert L. Ketter went
through such an outside review this past
academic year.
The Board said it would amend Its own
bylaws to provide lor the continuing
review of the campus chief administrative
the Chancellor and the

Public law
Law students finance program
of internships in agencies
harlaling public interest cases
Ralph Nader has urged attorneys to
......, thU social oonsc:iencu 11)1 con·
trbJJing one J'!&lt;f cent o( their annual
_..... to publit.1n- law won..
Somot attorneils already make a prot·
lice o( uslgnlng.
o( their Ume
each year to , _ whict! promote the
greater publt good .
Now, tlvee U/8 lew otudenl$ are in·
YOI"ved in a unlque.summer undertaking
which to oome extent blends bolh ap·
proaches.
Tbe project Is unique because lew
otuden (end tome focully) have put up
thU own money ($4 ,500) to enable
ttw. o( thU number to devote time to
-legal wed&lt; In local public lnteresl

""""'"!age

"'"'Francine
agendn.
Bruno Is an intern on tlw staff
o( lhe Legal Servlca lew the Elderly
Project; o.w! Nebon Is • working with

Pr1oonen l...egal S..VU o( New Yori&lt;,

Inc .; and ~ Edgell Is employed
11)1 the Protec:llon and MvouDJ System
few Developmenlal OINbillllu, Inc.
Eadt ~ received a grant from a
prtvale, no4..for.oprolil student orglllllza·
11oft known .. The Buffalo Public lntcrat
Law ~ . Inc. (BPILP) . The Interns
odKted through an opplicallons
.,...._ open 10 . . lnle"ested law

students here.

(t-ed1Mt--

The1nt~ venture began laol ....,._.
mer when members o( the U.w Review
conbibuted money to spontor two In·
terns, VMan l..azerson and Jane Crosby ,
at Legal Services lor the Elderlv. Ms.
Crosby lo now dlreclor o( the fiPILP ,
which wu lnccxporated In February as a
joint projecl o( tlw U.w Review and the
Student Bar Association . The agency has
a five-member board , lour studenl$ and
one faculty member (Prof. Mar5hall
Breger] .
Ms . Crosb)l , who was continued on
during the regular ~ year 11)1 Legal
Servicu lor the Elderly and Is working
there again this summer. emphasizes that
jobs aren' the main thrust o( the effort .
The point Is to provide studenl$ oppor·
tunlties to get acquainted with public In·
terat lew as a profeuional field and, at
the same lirJ&gt;c, to serve the old, the in·
digent and the disabled who ace the ma·
jar ellen le lor these types o(~ms.
Many lew students, Ms.
ex·
plains, have difficulty gaining pu
In·
teres! uperknce, unless they Me
prepared to work as volunteers,
tom&lt;!lhing mot1
afford to do. These

can'

·----:-a...a.a

Thle wtU be mDI'e 'effec:th&lt;e'
"The Trustees and I believe that this
continuing evaluation will be much more
effedive than formal periodic examinations," Chancellor Clifton R. Wharton,
Jr., said .
He noted that recision o( the peer
review procedure had been unanimously
recommended 11)1 the board o( directors
of the Association of Council Members
and College Trustees. an organization
representing supervisory bodies o( the in·
divldual SUNY campuses .
Affected by the action are the

presidenl$ o( the Univcnlty's 29 St.t.eoperated campuses. During the put
year, three others in addlllon to Ketter
underwent peer review In which teams o(
three non-SUNY college or unlvenlty
praldents were sent to th..ir campuses to
conduct evaluations.
"These brief campus Ylslts, often highly
publicized , sometimes led to unwlll"Fanted
assumptions that a president's reappoiilt·
ment somehow hung In the balance,"
Wharton said. "Actually , a president
serves at tlw pleuure olthe Board rather
than a fixed term, and the evaluation wu
designed to look at the total condltlon'of
the campus and not just at the president.
" Furthermore, on reading the team
reporl$ , we found that they almost In·
variably touched on matters o( which we
already were aware . While the reports
were he)p{ulln reiterating problem Meas,
these usually were already the subjects o(
our ongoing administrative dialogue with
the presidents."
A t...oade penpectl"'
.
Wharton said future evaluations of
presidents and their campuses would
continue to take Into account VIews o(
constituency groups such as college
Councils , admlnlstratoro, faculty ,
studenl$ and alumni but that the overall
penpecllve would be broader than that
afforded by the more restridivc peer
team approoch.
Not included In the Trustees' evalua·
lion prOCtiS are the presldenl$ o( 30
locaDy-sponoored community colleges.

Folletts sets still
another starting date
Construction now Is scheduled to begin sometime this I aU on the long-awaHed
Folletts Bookstore on Parcel B near Lake U.Salle.
Addressing the Prdeuional Staff Senate Tuesday, President Robert L. Ketler
credited an improved bond market with enabling Folletts to arrange a financial
package more to Its liking. Since the bookstore wiD be constructed "with prival
money, Ketter eslimated that the fadlily could be ready as early as next summer.

Gnce Knox Lecture HaD
The President abo announced that the U/ 8 CouncU has unanimously agreed
to recommend to the SUNY Trustees to name the lecture haD now under
construction neM Capen and O'Brian Halls lor Grace Millard Knox, the mother
o( Seymour H . Knox , chairman emerttus o( the U/ 8 Counc:il.
Decades ago Mrs. Knox gave the University $250,000 which wu used to start
the first College o( Arts and Sciences. A building was to have been nemed for
her In the 1960s, but Ketter said U/8's merger with the Stale sldeVacked the
plans.
~updale
·
Reporting on budget updates just received from Al&gt;any, the President said
this yelll" U/ 8 must reduce FTE's 11)187. Of that number, 76 poolllonsl.. under
a general reduction category, and 11 specilicaly under generallnltllutlonal ser·
vices (GIS) . This repraenl$ a total dollar figure o( appro~&lt;irrloMiy $1.132
million .
Ketter said the Unlvenlty must identify 43 new positions in the - a l reduc·
lion Mea and four from the GIS categOry. Previouslv , 34
eac·
marked In the geMFal reduction area and 7 from GIS.
The Prnident said 27 o( the vacant postllons must be off payroll 11)1 July I and
the others before September I .

'"-heel......,

8oDd Sale

Aloo on Tuaday. the Stale Housing Finance Agency announced the sale o(

$145 m.illion in bonds which Includes the long-term financing for lour U/8
projecls.

Roed .
The portion o( campus land ng tum·
edowrto OOT istn the~-­
tlon , oxt&amp;ndJnt from
"-Audubon
Parl&lt;w.y to s..-t Home Roed (
occ:oropan~""'Pl

Included was funding lor an Instructional Communications Center building, at
Amherst, aheratlons and lmproyernents to Foster Hall and remaining financing
.
o( Lockwoocl Lllrary and Furnas
A spolonrnan lor the HFA called the 8 7045 Interest ra "better than
anlldpated.• He added thai In addlllon to tha low U/ 8 projecls the bond sale
Included financing lor 10 other pro)Kis at Stony Brook, Downstat M dlcal
Center. the Agrlcuiuro and Lifo Sdences College at Cornel, Purchase.
PlalUburgh and SUNY Central
•
The bonds •• palil over a 30-year .pmod with student tuition money.
The bookslore construction on Percel 8 has been.off.._u, , o n = n
lew two.
or thr !JIUI'I now Fok announced a tteellng down and r
o( I
original plan laic In the tprlng o( 1979 and hoped to begin construcbon
oum
mer, but that Intent wes thwarted 11)1 rising lnleresl rates Long-r•f9 plans lor
dewloplng Perce! 8
Include other comi'Mrdall
, but no reoent.,_..
"' thel cbrectlori ...... beer&gt; reported

�June 26, 1980

l

• Public Interest Law project
. , . _ , she--·
der111ed,
able to hire
----~.
lludenll dglble for 11M federal
are

only

work·
IIUcly progrun. If you are marned. for ex·
ample, chanca •• you c.,.-t be in
waoWiludy. The umelllluc- you live
Ill home and jiOUr parents. earn above a
certain limit. The rnoptly o( law sludents

don't qualify.

o(

U/8 lAw School alumn111 Larry
Faul&lt;ner, director ol Legal Servic:a for
the Eklcrty' ' - high .,..... for . 11M
sllldent·funded ~m . It's a way o(
proYicllng addltibnal ~ for his
lUll, toM sure,"-" he""" views II as a
vllal laming cxptiience for lawyers-toM, an Important exposure to a field short
on glamour and monetary return but long
on satillacllon.
Fauber helps the Internship program
QO •
lwther. The money the program him 01 11M summe II plowed
t..dllniO his budget and used to hlro slu .
dent inlems during the JChool ye•. 8oth
sludcnts and 11M agency benefit from a
magnifying o( the oldlls plcbd up OYer
11M lMirntner, he says.
Owing the' three months studen ••
employed hil-time, Faulkner pushes
them Into heavy contact wiCtt clients,
a\llblng them to develop bolh Jldll and
confidence In dealing wtth people and an
.t.lllty lo cut·llvough a ""'"' ol detail and
pinpolnl a probWm. They alto learn &lt;Me
tlrategln, that II, how logo .bout toMng
11M poblem, and gain exposure to.~
range ol other oOclal _...xs avallable to
not tlrtdlv legal in nature.
Olher trnportant.__ toM learned,
submits F.,.,_, haw to do wiCtt 11M
rou1lneo ol '--in!!: gelling along wllh a
.u-.. Ml ol
and dealing
wllh 100 dlonts al .,...,. wllh ... opportunlly 10 work-up thct one "bbg CMe," ol
young ~ dream.
"" li true ol public ....... law
egencin, ......, Sorvtca for 11M Eldely
muolllmlt Ill dent tntaloe and concentnote
11a _ _ . . on ..._ ol llgmflcant con·
com lo al or moo1 .mar .-..... "We
"""" .,.,
. . . . IOytlem UlOid In the
MJI!eoy," F...,_ Qlllalno. c - •e
--.1 inlo
........-. ol lmpor·
- · wllh t h e - ........ andmool f•~ ~ lmmedilotelion . , . Clllllgory
~ dal... wllh : Sodof s..curtlv ......... MeclioaR
and Nedbld, lanclanl/- ..........
"'**Il ~ (what ~ ........
... 16 Qn't - poid ., the _ , ' and
......_..., on ......,. ol the
elderly
(1hc.e ..,... 10 .... c:8re ol ~
who mey need pr--.e or ,.,pport - Yiool, or hllp......., Mlng aplaaed ..
- - . 1 bv ~ - Aid ...........
10 eri!ION ........ 60 and • reoldenl

*"

......we-.

a-t c-trol
Intern Bruno'- Men working on rent
control litigation. What ca.-s dlfftculty
here II that landlords In Buffalo
subjed to eontrol ralricllons only on rental
units which have not t..en vacated since
1972. Individuals living In the same
apartment since !;dare that date tend to
be elderty. People in this situation often
report being coen:ed to move out so
landlords can colect faller rents from new
tenants. 'The landlords have to make H
look as though 11M elderly Individuals are
leaving voluntarily, and often go to ex·
tremes with subtle harassment.
Ms. Bruno, who will be entering her
third ve- o( law ochool in the faD;t.. a
s1rong lnt...-estln continuing In this line o(
legal work once she graduates. She's
· Interns at
learning a lot, she 1..-1 Servlca for the Elderly are treated
as prolessionals, not as mee errand run·
nen as II true in oome setllngs. "It II so
motivating to aee your Jldlls develop and
to put Into pradloe what you've le.ned
in JChool," she reports. "It's going to gel
-me tluough my third year."

c:o-w..n..n.

""*"

...................
...........................
............ .__....,
.........
....
.....
..
......
.
_... ........
.....
..............
......... :-.:.';-;-.atN«iE ON OOOOYEM ROAD

~

~

-~

~ :~n:a

~~

name changes, to more serious l:s&amp;ues affecting the prison population at large .
Again, cases are selected wiCtt a view to
making the most of limited resources.
59me o( these broader Issues, Nelson
said specillcally, have to do with the level
• ol medical services provided and dalms
of guard brutality .
Once or twice a week, Nelson and a
member of the full-time legalllafl go out
to the prisons to interview Inmate clients.
Often , tapes of discipbnary proceedings
have to be carefully monitored to see If a
complaint appears justified.
Nelson says he's "interested" In the
area of prisoners' rights and "will pillsuelt
further ," now that he's getting on-the-bne

means - · but moot dlmts-as most
elderty people today-•e not well olf.

•e

....,_..__.._

~

prisoner btlgatlons ranging &amp;om mari!al
matten (separations and divorces) and

Erie County- If 11M poblem II not the

province ol """"- agency. There II no

~...ttlledlaab&amp;ed

Katherine Edgell works out ol an office
In 11M Elicoll Square Building head·

quarters ol Nei9hborhood l.-1 Servlca
(NlS) . Tho "agency" to which she II
alllgned, 1'1..-:tive Servic:a for the
OeYelopnentaly Olsabled, II actually a
one-attorney subunit ol 11M NLS. She's
Men IIOiilllng thct attonwy in a variety ol
cues related to handicapped rights:
~ diocrlmlnatlon , lMIIIs on
behaW o( cllsablecl c:h8dren aeeldng equal
educalional opportunity, and litigation on

exposure .

A double bleeatng
Public Interest project director Jane
Crosby agrees that practical experience Is
a double blessing. " It makes what you've

already learned In class faD In place. And

behalf

11M Institutionalized mentally
retarded. EdgeD, who will alto be enterIng her final year o( Law School In
September, Is doing research , writing
complaints and performing general clerkIng duties. Her major academic focus Is
on labor law, but she's eying public jn,
teres! VoiOCI&lt; as well.
David Nelson, between his first and se·
cond years ol legal studies, shullles between a desk In a roconverted reskl«nce
on NlaQa"a Street and the Attica Correc·
tiona1 Facility m his work with Prisoners
Lagal Servic:a, a five-year-old State-wide
agency with offices near major prisons.
The local office saves bolh Attica and AI·
blon. I two-attonwy llafl II headed by
Ms. Mary Good and II Involved In

.AFT opposes

o(

It helps you sort out what you hear in

class later. •
Ready to enter her last year of Law
School, Ms. Crosby reports that the
BPILP wants to expand Its presence on
campus by presenflng a range o( guest
pr!ldJtloners In public Interest law who
can talk to students about opportunities In
this growing and challenging area.
A major attraction , she suggests, II that
In thllldnd ol legal work , you don 't look
at a client as a "meal ticket," but rather as
someone with a problem that you can
help solve or alleviate,
Indeed , agrees Faulkn...-, In public In·
teres! law, a new case dOIWl't mean more
money, just more VoiOCI&lt;. lbat's what H's ·
aD a~&gt;?ut .

truth~in•testing

formance." Further, 11M union said. the
coots ol constantly having to develop
sound new - . ~would .become prohlllltve and 11M taang process would M
clestroyed, leaving the educational community wiCtt f•las ~indicators o(
sllldent pafonnance.
Ahrt Shanker, AFT praident, addad: 'Tuc:hers nad v.-tous types o( test
inlormation ... guide 10 detenninc what
lludenll •e learning, what education
probioms liMy haw, and how liMy can
bal M lielped . The public aloo needs to

law

tee evidence that ochools are doing lhelr
jobs. Public support for public ochools Is
often directly related to 11M general
pe!Uption o1 how -n oc:hools ••
meeting a broad range of educational
needs." He accwad NEA and others opPOM&lt;I to slandardllad - . o( "tryyng to
bury the evidence."
AFT uld one ol Ill goals 11 "to counter
the erroneous claims cil testing opponents
that SlandardJzed tests ar~ elitist tools
used to stifle the progr- o( educationally
deprived children ."

DenUstry ge~ $600,000 for upgrade
c r -. 'The rnl II e.-marl&lt;ed for faclltty
lmprovemants, renovation, equipment
r.piecemen , and the hi!tng ol two fuJ.
ttme prof-'&lt;&gt;nalt ana ten dental
aMislan and hll!llenlits.
The Newe quolad AMemblyman John
8 . Sbeller 0 ol Williamsville, who an·
nounced the fund tnc::rea , as emphaslz·
tne that hil colleagueo In Al&gt;any mUll
lc.pt--- that thio .. only the flr1t ttep In
• naadad tlwee-year funding pooc:k.oogc

w

�June 26, 1980

?
Hiring falls below estimates
as recession takes toll;
who is being hired not clear
The employmomt oudook for this !lUI"•
cologe w-duata awe- to bot bellllr
INn the year t.fore but not - good projoc:llons made lullal. II&lt;XlOrdlng to a
ttuciY ol !;50 employen In the private teelor conducted bv the coa.g. Pleoement

ownll.

Courd.
Thoee mpondlng to the survey Indie-.! ...
per c:cot ~
In the number ol new coa- w-duatet
hired or apedled to be hired this yur
~wllh 1978-79. Thltwubotlow
the 13 per cent li\aase profecled lui
fal.
A lolal ol 36 per cent ol the employeR
mpondlng expect the economic oudook
for their orgenllallons to lrnptove In the
lui hd ol 1980. Of INN, ?:1 per cent
apect ~ Improvement and nine per
ecnt see substantial Improvement .
Anolher 35 per cent for_. no change,
and 23 per cant predlcl decline. The
mnalnlng lbc percent said they arc uncertain.

.

In the public , federal government hldng he been efl«ted bv a perll8)
hlr1ng IrMa ol inddlnllc duration Imposed bv the Praldent In M8rch . Thlt Is the
pr1ndpal factO. In the profecled ten per
cent decrule In hlr1ng at the bachelor's
level and cl!lht per cent dedne at the
master'• Jewl for llocal year 1980.
.

c.-

"'-**Il Ollloc, c:onlkmo that
localv the 1980 ~ ....,...._

... been much t h e - - the - . . 1
plcluN. Dilling the couna ol the lui
academlt year, there ... ~ ol
21 per cant ave the prwtous year In the
number ol ~ end tndutiJia
recndttng · on canipus. ~ for
graduates looked good - until time
came for the, liollng ol edual Jc!b opesdngs
In the letter part ol the oprtng.
new ·
job llsttngs dropped by 20 per cent from
the spring ol 1979. Martell allrtluta the
slide to the developing recesolon. He
nole!l however. that "most gracluat.et"
have landed jobo or have been able to·
make arrangemenlt to continue wllh the
Qnlduate work ol their choice In the faD.
bact figures on the placement rec:onl ol
the Oass o/1980 will not be available until later. Martell said.
Martell ca~ that national repoo1l
which emphasize growth In hiring only In
the petroleum and ott- technical fields
gtve a false Impression that only
engineers and technical Qnlds are ftndlng
jobo. To the contrary,
pointed out,
many so-called tedmlcal field employer$
hire graduates from· non-technical
An oil company might ..,.0 hire a
psychology major or a history major for a
non -technical vocation wtthln the
· tedmlcal establishment.
We OU!#It to be looking at who Is being
hired, Mart.eD tald, tnst.ead ol concentrating aD reports on the tnduslrtes which
are doing the hiring. That would be a
rnor. aocurate way to get data on what
kinds ol ma)ort are landing jobo. He
hopes nqt year to change hit data
ga"-'- end ~ ~ to reflect
~;"Of In~,.. ,qed the
national data colleciOri 10 'db 'llle· Wne.

n-

nc

am...

Martin House rehab
work to begin soon

A fund-r-*'9 oommlltee appointed bv
• L. Kdler he acquired
PI.-I ol planned
f8Sioratton o1 !he 0oorw1n D. Martin
House dalgned by Frank Uoyd Wright.
Thc Friends of. the Darwin D. Martin
House com- ts chaired by Mrs.
Lorelei
J&lt;dler, who terms 111 purpose
as "the support o1 !he ratorat1on and
prelervatton o1 the Martin H&lt;&gt;uK."
Co-chatrlng the commlttft, which was
formed two months ago, ts Dr. Jack
Quillan assor:lateprolessorol art history.
Serving' as a consultant ts the I)OOinlnent
New Vorit City architect, Edgar Tafel,
whO for nine years was an appnmtlce ol
Ftank Uoyd ~ ·
The tnt phase o1 the restoratiOn ol the
....,._ Involves repe1n on !he front
porch .Thc work It to begin next month.

Praident R

en&lt;&gt;&lt;¥&gt; funds

z.

~ ..... . _ ~

AAUA meets
in Toronto
Educators from U/8, Buffalo Slate,
Canltlus and D'Vouvllle are hosting the
ninth national meeting ol the Amalcan
AIIOdatton ol IJnivcnlly Admtnlttralort
(AAUA) In Toronto this -'&lt;.
Scheduled to run ~ Selurday at
the Inn qn the P..-k, the meeting It focusIng on logal end ethlca1 In higher
educatiOn.
Celelnting Ill lOth . . . . - y this
year, MUA - - founded In 1971 at
U/B end now ha .-nber lnotllullons
from al ave the U.S. and 1*11 ol

Canada.

d!:;7..
~..;~~
Walker, pruldcnt ol Southeastern
Muoach- Unlvclllly; Edlnrd Ftsb,
educatiOn editor for The ,.... Yorlt
nr.-, Ma. . Donna Shad&lt;, _,.;ate
dircloo ol the ollk:e ol Women In Hlghe
Eduaotton, Amalcan Council on Ed...,.
tton, end Dr. Robert O'Nd, c:hanclehol
the Untvcnlly ol Wloeonoln (and • forma
to Preoldent M.tln 'Meyeoon
•here) .
Honorlble Benlon Wioon , deputy ......... ol the Ont..-k&gt; Mlnlllry ol
College and Univenlllea. wll clioculo
"'Agoo ...... In Hlghe Eduaotton: A
c.n.dlan P....,..-." end Dr. John R.
Fango,
dean ol the Valparaloo
~ School ol Law, wtl .......
• An Amalcan VIew ol the Law end
HGI&gt;t&lt; Educatton •
Dr. Andrew w..Holt. a.xlale dean ol
the OMolon ol Graduate end ProMoolonal
Education ail U/8, It _...chairman ol
the """"'-ence.
The Rcvvend Edward Ryan ol
CanloU " preoidcnt ol the nallonal
group.
Ott.. U/ B 111111 on the planning com,_ b
_ . wei: Dr. Carioca
s.c., Dr Ronald s.tn. Dr
, Dr. Mar1lou Healey, Dr Wa/W
Mo. Bemb ..... Dr w.am B.bot,
Edward [)oly and Dr A Waday
R"""-1 Dr Anh" L K.lalr 1o alooo pa~t·
~-

....,.t

w•

·.

"The Friends ol !he Marlin House
raised enough money through private
dorudlont end founclatlont to begin this
fnt ~ o1 retlondton," Mrs. KetB
said. "We w11 continue thio general fund ..-.g campilign end hope to get the tnvo!venent o1 many people In Watan
New

von..

"The Marlin H&lt;&gt;uK 1110 Important as
Watan New
ardllt«turaa
huttage," Mn . Ketter continued .
"Villtors from al ave the world - end
many from cologet end hWI tchoolo In
this ... - '-toured the houoc, which
II ..ott. tndicallon ol tis llgnlllcanca."
, . current goal ol the Uniwnlly,
whk:h acquired the M.tln House In
1967, II the~ ola CanadianArneJIQn Cenw then. Praldenl Kdler
.-.nounced the . . , . ail a May 7 dlnMr
ol the PNIIdenl't ~ -...led by
the Canadlan consul and other
dlollngulthed Canadian and Amalcan .
part o1

~-

von.·.

Quillan on the committee are: George
AnMievtdus. prof...,.- and chairman ol
the [)epllrtrnent ol Architecture; Sandra
Berq, an alumna ol U/B; Dr. Anne Bertholl, grant advisor; Alen Canfield. atllitant dean ol the Faculty ol Law end
Jurltpruclence; Dr. Stephen Dunnett,
director of the Intensive English
language lnslltute; Betty Feagans, vice
president end associate creative dlrector,
Eilts Singer and Webb advcrtltlng; Shonnte An.._.,, UniYawlty archlvltl.
Aloo, Dr. David Hanks, guest curator
ol the Smithsonian lnslltutton; Thomas
Heinz, editor ol the Frank Uovd WYfght
Newsletter; Margaret Holcombe, !Pnddaugbter ol Darwin D. Martin; Robert
end Mary Kay Kilduff, P..-kllda Communlty A.oclatton ; Dr. J . W.ren Pe-r)l,
pro/euor ol health ociencn admlslratton ;
Mrs. George Unger, alflnnatlve action ol- ·
fleer, and Tlrnolhy St-han and Hllah
Hathl ol the U/8 Undergraduate Student

AIIOdatlon .

In addition, Ann W. . Smith, clepu ty
for hlotoric preservatiOn
for New Vorit State P..-kt and Recrutton, an a .officio member ol the commlltee, a technical advisor. o-ne
Moon, cont1ruc11on aaoc~a~e for fadllla
planning at U/B, It a consultant " Goloblewsld o1 the Pretldent's Office
- a tlaff penon to the com-.

comm_,._

lnciMdualt lntere*d In contrtJutlng to
the Ntloratton can do 10 bv rnaldng •
check peyable to the "Frtendt ol the Der-

D.' Mirtln Hou." c/o The I.JrW.Iily
Buffalo Foundation, Inc ., 250
wnpe. Avenue, Bullalo, New Vorit
win

at

14214 .

Screening paoel
named for VPAA

.

UncMr thil ..... a diollngullhed ocho&amp;.
would bot houNd In upotaln living
_..,.., ........ aa:ornmodallons could
also be made .......... for ott- villllng

1111111 end ocho8n- , . downsUirt
would howe I small Canadion-Amalcan
llnry and poWie hlotoltc
for lectures, and __. functions,
Thil ... "phyobblac-. thai could
- the oylnbol ol the ~
and frlondohlp thai It ail the heart ol this
plan," Preoldent ~ ... told .
The Dorwln D. M.tln HouM, conolruded In 1904-1906. II ~ on the
Nallonai!YgloW ol Hlolorlc Placa ol the
Nallonal P..-k s.w.. u.s. Depanrnent
o1 ~- II comrnillloned bv Dor·
win Denlco M.tln (186$-1935) . who
.--t - sec:reWy ol the l....-kln Company, w .
Met .. ~ bv the Unlvcnlty In
1967, the ' - uoecl - the Ptatdenft ~ und 1970 sw. 1971,
• ... " " ' - ' lhe Unlwonlly ~and
Alumni olltoet, - wei - been uoecl for
. . - . ol campus and alumni~­
educational
actlvlltu .

"*'"

end Dr

A oc:reenlng oommiiiM ha been
named for the pool ol vlot pnolcl.nt for
ac.ademlc aftaln, ~t Robet L.
~...-need

I

thlo ~.
The pool t..con. vacant July 1 when
Dr. Ronald Bum lelllla to be provOot ol
the I.JrW.IIIy ol Mlooourl at ColurniM .
Dr. Claude Welch, aaoc1ate vice praldent for academic .&amp;in, wll be adlng
vlca praldent und a ponnanent - .,...,. II named.
On the ocreentng woup . . , Dr. Om
Bah!. Blologtcal Sc::lenca; Mr. Frank COrbett, Office ol Urt&gt;.n Allain; ~
W1llarn ~- Law; Dr. Geoovt
Hoonni, l'hllooophy; Mo. Joyce Ptnn,.
rpduate lludent repnwntallve; Mt. Bernlot ..... .-pr.-ntatlve ol the pro/a...... , . ,: end l)qn Murray Sc:hwartl
ol the Col.ges. The oc:reenlng c:omm11tae
d be ad~ bv Dr. M; Cariota
S.C. ol the Execu
Vtot Pretlden'l't
OffiCe •
Nominations .:.&gt;d appllc:allonl for the

paoilllon

are being tokllad from the cam-

pus community ail tarve end tbould be
lorwwdcd to Mo Sinett.e Wln&amp;.ld 1n the

~)1\11. QIJ&gt;.wt1111111 bv

.Ju"'' 3Q.

�June 26, 1980

-

Ee-ee-owl
.,.,Dr__ A-vlp-1-o-ee-ayl

(Tioo . . . . . . . . . _ _

··---. ... --..-.
O'Onoolr.
- - ......
. . . - c - ..
_c
~.-~

_c-

.. -v.... - .

--.

-s...w~16.)

deed&gt;, the sun projldlng a picture of "the
WilheNd we-• of Iran, reminded me of
~

Blue's lllmmaldng. The ...cia·
lion eloo · I am....,, beca.M.cl.ellh t..d provided some ..ty wrtt·
-., rnalerlak- "The meaning of the dUll
storms was lhat graa was dead" IF«·

his comprehensive lntemallonal
hiotory of film. The Long Vkw (1974),
Wright devoted a chapta to films made

In

about the 'Third World .

tune , Nov~mber , 1935)-fo( Pare
Lorenz's famous 111m on eroolon , The
Plou&gt; Thot Broke the Plalno, the nan'allve
tnck of which James Blue ernulaled in
some of his I"'?' works. Bul It primarily
...,.. because I connected Its rollcaD of

places- Ecbetan, Penia, Kermanshah,
Baghdad, Arabia, Palmyra, IAbanon ,

Crele, Sicily, Spain, Alrica-with the

IPirlt of James Bfue. I had once lold him
!he story of An:ht&gt;ald Macl.eish's final

--..

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

, . _, .. ftftd ...... ,.......,_, """
""'·~~prtx;'illtdfM . Al.-ou ~. mp

-~·--,~·
'-""""*'s
oflltc,....,._,difl,e....,.,a_
...
"'"of""*" ·• - lite
m
·ood-""*"
""'" lite....,_...,.,,.. ..........
,.,. .,.,_,._lite fad

hod-,..,..,........
.,
....."*""'·-·-hod--"""'

----w.--,. . ,. , .

ANAl. .. ,., c:o-

- - · ...... 1.6tsum-.1963)
Atttd tlw lon4 Wit'

land.

~ 10 •

Anct..- we-..·

.-wl!

·&amp;......oe.f A-. ..f~..._.,,

w..... ..,..-..

-v....... - .,..., Oldol&gt;omo!

Otlaftomo. 0 K.r

-0... Hoooo-.. B, OKI.AHOMA (1'1421

v..... ...- B l..

When my frlel!d James Blue died at
Roswell Pari&lt; Jllemorial Hospital on
Saturday morning , I sat there quietly ap·
~ at the thought of a worid without
WMn his brother Richard had tJown .
him home to Buffalo from Unlvenlty Col·
lege Hospital In London lor emergency
tru.t ment iwo
ago, I thought of the
poem Archibald Macl.eish composed as
he flew from Egypt to Illinois to bury his
lather. Richard had been In Indonesia
when the British doctors discovered the
lernunal caJ\c:er In his brother, and his
llighl to LOndon had taken him over
1101'1\C of the same lands above whlc:h
MacLelsh had mourned ·n.e always ris·
ing of the night "

""'"ks

appearance before the otudenll of the
largest public unlvallly In hls home stale,
the Univenlly of llllnolo at Champaign·
Urbana. It was In 1962 lind Macl.elsh
had redled parts from his latest piece, a
•son etlumiere" compoolllon whlc:h was
to be performed al Independence' HaD in
Philadelphia on July 4 ~ John Ken·
nedy would give his speech on the new
American inler-dependence. He then
asked that the audlence pay careful allen·
lion to his final and lasting message to
that school and aD lis future lludenll: "Do
not define America. Definition excludes."
That had become one of James Blue's
favorite stories and he asked me lo repeal
H often .

The boUH that Jama buUt
James

Blue

was born

in

Tulsa,

Oklahoma on October 10, 1930. He
became an independent documentary
fUm maker with few peers in America, and
his radical transformalion of lhe
American herllage whlc:h he cherished
was so quiet and so thorough lhat it went
unnollc:ed . Hls early training gave him

strong commitments to the Protestant
church and the American nation, but he
luUy engaged in our generation's journey
from nationalism to lnte:r~nationalism.
and from the denominational to the interdenominational. His own films increas·
ingly explored new ways of in ter-action
with his subjects and , most recenlly. wilh
his audlenccs His second legacy was a
body of Inter-views with other directors:
he was the best inter-viewer in lhe field of
fUm . His whole mode of l~e was interrogation .

His concerns were ecumenical. His
IUms, on soil eroW&lt;&gt;n in Algeria and,laler,
on the world's food resources , engaged
him first in ecological experimenll and ,

M4 ___ .,_,..,.
M4"-Jeoedown_lltc_
To,.., lite""""""_....,..,
""'""""""-o{lltc.

laler, in the economic means needed to
the world's peoples. Ecumenical,
, economic-all have r - . in
eek OlKOS (housel-aD were
forces foe. hls making of the world a horne
and relocating his religious im)&gt;ulse in
new grounds.

t.looot _ _ _ , . _
""'-dot&gt;-

FU....a...
His first feature , The

v..... ~...._..

of---

r.,..,,._ ,.,.. ._-

___ _
""'---.-....
__
... ,.. __...
M4_..,11tc...,.._._,.
_,.. __ _
01----.
.
_.....,.
.... ._,...
_
n._
.
.
.
.-,.........,.,.. ......
_,.,...._..... ._,...
n.--.
.
s.-.,.--...
0111/
t
'
o
...
...-,....._,......, __ -_
---_....... ....,_......-_

lllo4.--..--

""',_..w,.. _ _

T. . ........
. . . . ~--Alttl

M4 _ _ _ ,.._

OM-oodlltc--

M4 ,.,._....,-.......
M4...,._ ......

__

.

-~jedc--0..

--~
M4
__ .....,._...

01~ Trees of
Jusllt:e (1962), was a senslltve evenhanded treatment of the conflict then ra·
glng between the French ·and Arab communities, and he was aware of the
J)lll'allels between blaclcs and whites In his
own country at that time . It was awarded
the Critics Prize at the Cannes Aim
Festival and the magnitude of that early
Khlewmcnt Is pchaps bat reflected by
the r..ct lhat the -next American to win the
Critics Prize "'"' Francis Ford Coppola
with APocolvpoe Now in 1979.
Hto first professional rums on his own
continent were made in Colombia lor the
United States lnformallon Agency. In
The People 'a Fllnu : A Political Hioloty of
the U S . Gooemment In Motion Pldura
(1973), Richard Dyer McCann concluded hll commentary on James Blue's
.,._. with lhat Agency by ciJocusolng hls
later m on Martin Luther King and the
Ovll Rtgh March on Washlnglon:

___

_,...,.,,___,,..,..
..,.,.
.,,.

~­

a-..-·
......
USIA T h o - (19641

Jiwl

dw
._

... ofdw &lt;pic.....-.. of,_
tor..• The Rlwr• .w ... llw,..
-of,..---

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

-

-- ·~

H

~for

the Agency was yet

c:orne. and Basil Wright, !h. ~­
lnil
maker of John G'*-' 'o BnUoh

to

documentary f

unit, II

witness

A fareweUto
in relation to the people; and you try to
bring out the swprlllng quality of that Jux·
taposlllon" (Aim Comment, 1963) .
II would be false to characlerize his early films as a mixlurO of pr.- and poetry
(like this essay whlc:h Is paying lrt&gt;ute 1o
thai impulse). or even as poetic prose.
Rather, they """" the prosaic (facts,
detalls , evidence) poeticized . The
shadow of the bier on the rocks in Amol
(Hope) Is foe me one of the moot haunting images in the history of cinema,
powerful because II Is the smaller
fragments of those oame rocks whlc:h are
being relied from Algerian planting
ground earlier in the film , and lhat
9'9Und has thus borne the stamp of man,
drawn on Its dry dUll by Amal himtell, a
ground whlc:h can then grow plants-as In·
dicaled by the drawing of a • U'. VIE
(LIFE) • on Its final frame . The documentary , foe,James Blue, was a way of confronting the dead , _ and Issuing a
report that promised new life.

A Few Nota on Our Food Problem
received an Academy Award nomina·
lion.
In 1974 , James Blue went back to
Alrica lor the third lime to make lhe
observational fUm, Kenya Boron, with his
friend David MacDougaD . Its theme was
developmenl, modernization , and en·
won mental equilibrium in a rural soclely.
WMn H wils shown at the Smithsonian
Institution in Washington, D.C. in 1977,
.~ Margarel Mead pronounced II the
~ethnographic fdm thai she had ever

seen .

.

Despite such appreciations, James
Blue's reputation as a filmmaker was
never ,..,.uy acknowledged; in fact, lt was
somewhat obscured . His feature had
been made in a foreign language and
!reeled a problem which had little

resonance at American box offices.
legislation forbids films made lor lhe
United States Information Agency lo be
shown al home: lhey are made solely for
uhibition abroad . That The School of
Rincon Santo won a Sdver Uon Prize al
Venlee. was judged lhe Best Documen·
tary Film al international festivals In
Bilboa and Amsterdam and was
translated into 56 languages. was entirely
irrelevant to lts appreciahOn by the
American publk: at home . His interest In
lhe problem &lt;&gt;I third -world countries
under the pressure of lechnological
· development - lhe bringing of water·

pumps to Kenya , for example-was not

widely shared by many oJ his coun·
trymen .
His most recenl works , Who Killed
Fourth Word? and The Invisible Oty were
ground·breaklng experiments in a form
he was inventing, lhe complex urban
documentary , an audacious mixture of
classic narrative genres with dnema verite
and observallonal aspecls of lhe Sttao "IINAL;" ao tho . . - a1
documentary; they explored the fUm - · ....,.. • .-.. ~ o1tlht ..
maker's lnleracting wilh his subjects
before the camera and his audlence
before the lelevision set in entirely new
ways; they shol with a mixture of f;lflall·
formal equlpmenl · oound-synch super-B
In later years, he would say: "I don'i
film and S,1o inch videotape ; they attemp·
wanl the poetry. If there's any poetry In H
led to 6nk telephones and public televt·
that I'm pulling In, I'm !JOI"'Ito get H out"
s1on to a process of on-going communily
(Lecture at Buffalo, ApriJ 23, 1977) .
education ; they were aired· in Houston ,
Beginning with Kenyo Boron (1972), he
shown at research Conferences In several had begun to look at what he called "the
countries, but had not yel been accepted other side of change." In Who Killed
by a broader public.
Fourth Word? (1978), he railed three
II had gone unnoticed that his career questions aboul what uused the
wu unique in the history of American
disaslrous effects of the city's growth on a
filmmakers in thai he ·had produced olum In Houston : was H a conoplracy of
works of excellence In an unprecedenled the reahon? was H natural forces? would
variety of forms · the lictional feature , the olum'• raidenls organize to save
government
Information
film , themselves? He answered "no" In aD
ethnographic cinema , and the complex cases. In The Invisible Clfv, he showed
documentary .
how 50~ of that same city's housing
stock was deteriorating and prcsenled no
hopeful solution within the picture: His
hope, in lad, had moved oulslde the pic·
Doc:ol-tut...
lure, and located film In a more complex
He rec:ognlzed lhat "documentary does
interac:tion with political cuhure II was In·
not mean clocumenl, bul t~ use of docu- Yelled In promoting community efforts to
ment; the only definition of documentary
examine social and economic lsaues by
Is the use of r allty or aduaiHy or some
presenting and analyzing them through
aspet;l of H lhat goes beYond"· that Inter·
communl!y·based media
He had
prets W" (Lecture at Buffalo, April 23,
transferred his hope to the process
1977), and he was the only documentary
through whic:h a WQrk , by attracting and
lilnunako:r I know . wtth lhe exaptJOn of
holding an audience on lelevlslon, could
the Bunuel of LAo Hurdes (Terre Sans
move Its member$ toward participating on
Palnl (Land Wllhovl Bread) , whieh he
solving lhe problooms presenled
grea.., odmlred, who would ducribe his
filmmaklng Jli'OCOM "It's a SUIT alis
A M... of the World
kind of thinking, V you wanl, wher you
By the tim James Blue came ro But·
l1nd lhlngs lhal are )uxtapooed in nature. falo, he t..d air ady made hlms on all live

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

�•i

June 26, 1980

·-

••••

-

4 I

i

Ee-ee-owl

his ~- His
: : : : _ - loc:Mecl in his mono1 con-

!i

A~p-1-o-ee-ay!

Christi and Delas-Fort Worth and ar
rang1ng for v-.g J.ctures of Woody
His beJid, qulle limply, that· Sldna V-.loa in Houston.
cruton could - I n any town on urth'
a - ole• •
~.infacl, .wasthekt!ythemeoi
H e - raped to the work of the
hls ca-s. For the twelw. years that I
oideT makers, ..nthuslasm to the work of
kMw him, he steadfasdy maintained that
his peen, and .ncouragement to the
dt!mocracy demanded that our public
work of the young. b was a sp«1a1
media be more diverse in giving ac:cet.1 to
pleasuft for m.. to obMrve him over the
a vaiety of new voica~ In his e.ay
years in convasatlon• with Roberto
Super-B and the Communll)l: A
R._aml, Frank Capra and ~Hurwitz.
f!ole for Aim In the Un~. he wrote: H.,__ courleous, he always had a
My "My concept w"' the dt!rnocratizatlon
relentlao OGles of quutlono. He le.med
of medicJ in ternu of promoting ~neral
more by conversation than anyont! 1
awareness and proYid.ing access to the
kMw H• also did lonna! vldeot_,j
.materials of production ." He did not hold
houn long with aD
to this as oorM comfor1ablto kleaJ but
them. His mastery of the lnlervlt!w 1orm
rather fought continually to make, It a
had begun with a Ford Foundation grant
practical rulity ·
in 1964 which aao-d him to travel aD
In Houoton, he teiuned up with Ed
owr the worid to lnlervlt!w 30 fllm diretHugetz of tha SouthWest Ahernate Media . tors who had begun to u... non-actors In
Projod and with KUHT-lV to produce a
their work. Those with Pier Paolo
Wftkly program of work by Independent
Pasolini, Allert -Mayoles, Jon Rouch ,
imagernakers in the-&amp;outhwest, The T.,..
Richard Leacock, Satyajlt Ray, Shirley
rltor)l. He told - thal-Jie had talwl the
Clarke, Cesare Zavalllni, Peter Watldm
name from Oklahoma:
Jean-Luc Godard and Robert~
/olb should oaet _.,..,.,
Rossellini, which have been published in
=:":.c.""'::'!~""~
Rim Comrnt!nt, Cah~ du O""ma and
(;
---·-··
Obj«tif, are widely acknowledged as the
.....me,~...,,
most useful material available in film
In Buffalo, he c:oliaborated with Lynn
couneo about them , and there are tw..nty
more to come . Ht! helped me establish
Corcoran of Media Study/Buffalo and
with WNED-lV to produce a series of
tha Oral History of the Independent
s1xteo!n weeldy programs, The Fronller,
American,..,__
her
d
which featured tw..nty-oeven indepe
'-"' ...ma
e an did extended
dt!nt maken from Western N.,.., y
intervk!ws with documentary filmmakers
and Southern Ontario. Through his ·nsuch as Willard Van Dyke, Robert Gard ner, Ralph Steiner and John MaBhall.
IIOivement with the USIA In tha early
This collection of historical materials is
years of the Kennedy administration, he
critical to a f..Jd which is jUsl beginning to
was aware that tha physical frontiers were
establish a tutorial tradition .
being transmuted Into "new frontiers"
located on the moon and In the urban
Teacher
ghetto.
His teaching ability was almost legendary.
WO!ard Van Dyke who established
HI&amp; love for film
tha film program at Purchase . said that he
Tile range and penetration of his film
was the best teacher of film that he had
knowledge wao quite astonishing . His lUst
ever met and David MacDougall. Direclove, of course , was the documentary,
tor of the F'dm Un it at the Australian Inand that extended from the n.,..,sreeis to
stitute of Aboriginal Studies said , that he
dnerna -verlte, and from ethnographic
did not think that u was possible to teach
cinema to the personal film diary His
film production until he saw James do it
eight lectures on "The Documentary Im oo weU . His colleague, Brian Hendt!rson
pulse," supported by the National Enwho had been educated at John~
dowment for the. Humanities at the
Hopkins, Harvard law School, and tha
Mu...um of Modt!m Art in New York in
University of California at Santa Cruz,
1977, covered the period from 1895
~ that tha course thai he jointly taught
through 1975, and focussed on the
with James Blue was tha single most imgradually narrowing gap between the
porlanl educational experience that he
filmmaker and hiS •ubject and on the inhad had. After James moved north
crea5ing need for the filmmaker to be
George Stoney of tha Institute of F'd.,;
more sell-reflcxlv., in his activity . Tile
and Television at New York University inmaterials which he presented In his
vited him each year to be the lecturer to
courses here were characterized by .his
launch the advanced section ·of his
continual world-wide hunt for ....w direcgraduate course in Tile Docum..ntary
tions, emerging talents, and unlibly •ubTradition, and Frantisek Daniel whom
joclo.
he had joined as a founding' faculty
At the sam.. time, he was one of the
member of tha American Rim Institute's
moot gifted commentators on the dusic
Canter for Advanced Aim Study In L.oo
_narratiw lorm, whether tt be In the 8Jms
Angeles in 1969, invited him to lecture
of John Ford, Howard Hawks, Alfred
eaCh wmester In his n.,.., !Jllduate proHllchc:ock or Jean Renoir. Tile last fUm
gram
at Columbia Univenlty. Last year •
ha ~ for .... In his Buffalo
under the ausplca of the MOYing lmc:la.a was Ford's Slog«ooch . He had a
agt!/The Maker program of the
very opecial ~ to Rouellinl.
NeOnaiom had emerged during his own Uniwnlty-wlde Comrntttu on the Arts
be taught at eight campuon within ~
~ period ao a fUmmaker and ito
State University of N.,.., York oyslim. H.,
inllucnce ada&gt;owlodged In The 01/M
had become a resource for the whole
Trwa of J -. Later, ha admired
northeaot.
.
R.-Ws twelw·pert lor televilng the Albilily of

anci

Ne.;,

-

~ :,.,Y

- ao..
continenb.

He thought of the Ant Se-

cond and Thrd Wodds In the arne' way
that Jean-Luc Godard, whom be admnd, thought ol traditional cinemalk:
""""llrudures.
"AAms said
haw Godard,
a beginning, middle
and end,"

."but necossadly In that order." In
1979, James Blue was the· featured
speaker at the First · International
Ethnographic FUm Conference in
Canberra, Austr... and, at home,
helped to O&lt;ganloo the Ant Conference
on Contemporary Dtrecllons in the Public
Affairs Docum«ntary, Insisting that our
frame of reference be world-wide . We
were cwganlzlng the teeOnd conference as
II« died, and invllati9ns had been extended to fllmmaken in lebanon, Italy, Brazil
and Canada. He had already oet the
5lage for a oet of continuing interactions
with Canada. He was an active member
of the Board of Olrecton of the Toronto
International Super-8 Festival, was showIng the features of Quebecolse !limmakers for the Carde Culturel de Langue
Franc:aise ·in Buffalo, arranging for the
showing "" fllms and videotapes by
young lnd"')endents from Southern Ontario on Channel 17, and Inviting his old
friend, Terence Macartney-Aigate, a producer at the Canadian Broadcasting
Company, to pay regular visits to his
classes at the Ceftter for Media Study.

AMUfoo.U~
For aD that, he WillS more deeply committed to American regionalism than any
lllmmaker of his time . He had directed
what became one of the t'irot regional
media .oenten In the United ' States, the
Media Canter, later the Southwesl Alterna Media Projod in Houston, Texas,
and he played an active role as a member
of the Board of Oirectort of Media
Study/Buffalo, another regional center.
H., had -""" lor tlwH yon as a kt!y
manber of the Comm
on Rim and
T •H.vlslon Ruourc..• and Services
11973-751 which produoed The /ndepen dt!nt ~m Communll)l: A Rt!porl on the
Slotua of....,.,..,., Aim In the Un~
Slota (1977), a document that brought
this mowmenl to the atlerltlon of national and .....k&gt;n. During the
..... he dying, then took piece a
...,.. of ..,....,.. on "'The Advantega
ol DIYeolv" 111
Tenth Put*: TNviolon and ""' ~t Aim Semina
al Arden ~ In New York, a JWO!Pm
whicb ha had CCIOrdln-s for Wa-n.
tlonal Fl1m Seminan. He was • to

.............
- · eiWI&lt;Ied by 100
andthe
public
- the
- cx"P*"'0.....
91
~,
theme
being
pooure of work .....te by Black, li~~p.n~c ,
~ Ran, NaiiYC Amnl&lt;:aon and
Elhnlc: - -- b 1ft&amp;- that
a group of Naaw All&gt;eJbn ~
brouat&amp;
work and phlbophy to the
SeiY*-, and on 11 last day, 1Mry 1..11·
.w.d (Orde Aim, S..le Fe, New Mexll:oi111CXJ1ded on ~ a "Song lor the
birney" (from The ~~ and
that flilt
In
mall when the~

m...._.
.....

*"*

T......,

..............._-the

man""-'",

0.::

.!~

tlolnble"'-..,-

He,..,...,.., d.,, . _ .. hil .,_ .._.,

lbe&lt;omo-.,.- m v - . . --

__ ..v-.lq_,.....,.......,._
hil """an lw aauma «Mlr

T~

,.,.~;

"""""""--..-_,.;,,/q-thc/ocf.
.."'-·,._!he/oct:
~

tlvee~

.• ..__._._,

oion, The SlnP of M011 for his Sur·
uluol, u a revolutionary educational
fon:e .
He was also cornpldely oympathelk: to
and at ho- with tha ~p of "Nt!w
Wave• French directon who subverted
and traMformed the duolc narralivt!
lorrno. He had lived through their otruggjos when ha was at the lnstllut des
Haula ElUdao Clnernatographiqun In
Parfo, and ha wu delign ng • course
which would """ate for our own
otuden hlo Uper;encc of thole years In
the ....
and early lbdla when he
taloed with, read the manlfatoo, &amp;!landed the ocrwningl, and abeooi&gt;ed the rue·
. Ilona to the work of GOO-d, Bnuon,
Truffaut, Chabrol. MarkeT, Ranals,
Danv' t...louc:N, Malvlllt! and Ma .
Wl&gt;en ha fir1l .,. 10 Bullalo, ha had
not yet had the opportunity, at any time
., hio .,.._, to become famlb.r with the
avant-d.. tradilion of film cxptrimentatlon , and I walched as ha bevan 10
probe the e&lt;&gt;ncWpluai!JOUndings. aafto
and commitmen of his colIt was not long bdore ha wasln ·
trodudng
work o( Paul Shatlll and
Helot Frampton in mU~Wms In Corpus

He "quid.

lam ......

At home, he claigned a whole section
of our n..w cwriculum, a sequenc:., of
courses that lntroduet!d students to the
baola of documentary production at the
arne lim.. that they studied the stylistic
d..veloponalt of the various documentary
traditions In his Non Fiction Aim ciaoo.
They went on to daign a shooting IICript
in Complex Docum..ntary Problems and
fin.!ly, in Advanced Rlmmaldng,
duet!d a lllm. The flnt ciau's film,
Unem~d In Buffolo: The Blue Collar
Worker, was recently shown on Chann..l
17 and the oecond _.s film , a study of
the dlslrt&gt;utlon of Community Block
o..velopment Grants, Is in production .
Education was at the very c..n
of his
eJUSienCe and lis &lt;:ore his commitment to the proceD of MmCh When 1
flnt rnd him on the day he finished A
Fe Nola on ""' Food Prohlem in
I 968, ha ll&gt;olc to tha !o1aison des
Cnpa in Waahington , D C . and the
quallonlng began illhat perouaded him
to join me In HOI.IIIon at that time was the
"""""l)t"on that our cun1culum in lmagamakjng would be baaed on • povn by
Roberi Gr. , and I gav h m a copy

pro:

He .. 0

..... ~

ol,.. .....,_,.,

linanew~o/mll'~ ·

He always joked about our ochool of
brobn Images, but I also noted thai he
soon began to refer to the two doctor's offlees which Jean dt!MenU had rented for
us on Montrose Street as "the fUm
school." That phrase had an almost
religious meaning for him and It was how
he referred to the National FUm School of
Great Britain where he was teaching
when he was taken to the hospital some
we..ko ago. For him , it was a phrase like
"the shop" or "tha plant" but " was aJio
"the school" where young people would
get the training that would enable them to
make films that would chan~ tha social
conditions around the world . It was
James Blue who encouraged me to
publish Roberto Rouellini's last pit!ce of
writing, Re/fedlons and Deliberations on
Scientific Data ta Atumpl to Deuiu on
Aooessiblt! Form of /n~gral Educotlon. Its
first sentenoe read : "All the politicians,
the moralists, the idealists who sincerely
propose to carry out social change must
no longer overlook an essential factor :
the conoeptton and promotion of new
forms of ln5truelion , e&lt;lucation and
culture ." Jomes Blue was completely at
home in a large public university with a
special commitment to state service,
located on the border of another country
in a dty going through the prouso; of
rediscovering and rebuilding itself. He
died as the local public television 5tation
was holding its auction and I was remind·
ed of Jud's seUing his saddle and Curly's
selling his gun to bid lor the picnic lunch
that won the winner the right to the girl in
the audlon to build the schoolhouse in
Oklahoma:
Aut~t Elfn Fout~tv-/lw . COtN
gende,.,.,. ~ a~n )
bu1lr Sid Got ro glt o na dtfmWtv

on.

It was the public televisiOn auction of its
day. and James Blue . with RooseDini,
understood that electronic lmagemaklng
had made of the world o claosroom
without walls. James Blue'• first fUm for
the United States Information Agency.

Th.,

School

at

Rincon

Santo,

documented the building of a school in
Colombia.

_., ....
Sdl -

__

"Tho Sdoool .. -

s-to:• ....

11la eplrtt of doe ..,.
I must now inter James Blue (In +
l6rt! (landl) . Ukt! the m..n of all con tinents, he "belong to the land ." To
place man In his countryside was his own
basic operating procedurt! His compassion for the rocks- In tht! Algerian
Ct!melery and his c..t..brohon of the bricks
in the Colombian tchool drew me to him.
I can MVer be conJOied for his lots I shall
tranocend my grief by building "a ochool"
in his Image, brol. '1'1 though K now Is and
ever sha.l be Amen Amal
lA Jo-1 ,_ bocn •.w.lwd Jo&lt; lho , . . , . _

---old&gt;.'*"'- ..... . . . . ,
,--....o~--~-­
............ ~-Me-f_,.W
- d .. lilood•·
ti.4Jolo 207 v..-.
-...... fMiolo
Vori&lt; 11202 I

�•

June 26, 1980

ergency
U/B team developing
supply emergency plan
for State water plants

~

at U/8 we developing a

......w
public supply CIMillftiCll
plw'l forth.State's - - p&amp;.nts

In a piOjact ..,...,.._t by IN New York
~oltlallh .

Four ....,_. from U/B's Depart·
ment ol CMI Englnaelng we putting
lo!lllher IN c:omprehalslye model plan,

wfilch wtl

be UMd by Individual plant
their own con-

opeqton to develop
~ tcenarloo

for the provisiOn ol
...., clrlnldng water In amergency lilwl·
lions.

The State must have such a plan
av.a.ble In order to comply with Its
prtrnwy enforcement raponst,lllly under
Section 1413 ol the federal Saf Drinking
Water Ad. An Interim, lao dctalled plan
II In effect now.
'"The plan will &lt;iYC the State's approx·
imat.ly 1,500 water ulllltla a blueprint by
which to Individual water systems
and develop Individual plans for cleallng
with allll ollualionl." Diane Badorek,
one ol tha U/8 Investigators, explained.
Beolcaly. she added. the plan will &lt;OYer
ahort·tcrm oolullonl to problems which
may need long·term planning for a final
raolution .

.

Wllat .... -.-c•?
The U/8 · which includa Dale
0 . Maadith and Robert E. Paaswcl, pro1.-n ol dvll cngineatng, and Leon T.
Thiem and Badorek, - . n t profasors,

ddlna a water emeigeney as a condition
which has· the potential ol lntmupling a

supply ~ldng water,.,.. eight or more
In which a water supply Is
contam
above the level pennllled
by government guidelines.
Such an crnergency can ocau as a
........ ol: a natural disaster ~.
windstorms and IROWRorms which block
~ to plants are New York's
prtrnwy natural t-dsl; an equipment,
treatment proceM .,.. power supply
!allure; a dlotrt&gt;ution system !allure,

hours .,..

rup~urw: 01" !he In·
trodudlon ol c:hamlcal, ....liologlcal or
mic:roblologlca contamlnentl Into the
waler supply, usually lhrO\lllh a opdl /x
luchlng ol such materials.
The U/8 ..-.chan will - set up
guidelines that will aid plant e&gt;pe~"ators not
only In developing plans to handle a crisis
If one should ocau but aleo to -their
vulnenoblllty to such aloa. In addition ,
they will offer ways to consider how to
bring In emergency water supplies by
tank truck or bottled water, If nec.asary,
and how nollflcallon of the public can be
handled .
.
The plan will aleo proYide an ....,...
mml ol a plant's IUJCel)d&gt;illty to spills of
toxic materials and how the ladlltv can
handle spiJis on a short-term basis. information on types and frequency ol.monllorlng for toxlcl will also be included .
Tha guidelines will be adaptable 10 that
they may be used nol only by oper~lon
ol large-tc:ale water treatment plants
which supply dllel such as New York and
Buffalo but also by those who operate

as a main water h

individually-owned systems which may
supply a single farm .

UUIJU.. wlaenble
"I'm not sure all the ulllities realize how
wlnerable they might be to variOuS types
ol strains on their systems." Prolessor
Badorek "ld . "While most ol the large
water systems In the slate probably have
some tort ol emergency plan already
developed , they might nol be prepared to
handle large-scale or environmental
aloa. Many ol the smaller plants may
have no plans at aU. Thay can gain an ad vantage , however. just by sllllng down
and suing what types ol problems exist."
"New York State Is In the forefront ol
developing a model emergency plan
which will be In compliance with federal
regulations," Prolnsor Thiem noted .

sUch

This summer, the rCIUIChcrs will col·
led Information by means ol: a survey
malled to a repreKnlallve sampbng of the
approximately 1,500 water treatment
plan II In operation throughout the State ,
telephone calls and on-tile visits . Plans
being developed or In effect In other
,..._ lludcnts In the School ol Ar- states will also be ........-chad.
~.. and Envtro:-.mental Oaign
Prolaoor Thiem wtl supervise the
plan's Mdlonl relating to equipment
- d y died In 1111 International ...
~ compet111on held In P-.
lallure and contamination ollualionl; Pro1..ou1oc Woalwk ol D«&lt;mar; Shira ,...,. Badorek will work on distribution
oystem and treatment proc:eN !allures,
RoMn oliN Bconx, ancl Jerzy l'"ankratz
and Dr. Meredith , on hydraulic ,
ol 8uflalo piMd ~ In a com cc:onomlc
and planning aspects. Dr.
pcllllon .,....-d by the French Syndic:at
de L'~ and C01pC)I'\IDniC! by . Pauwell will superv1M overall planning
the
magulne
D ' Arcltllcclure
considerations.
d 'llll}ourd'tuli (~ of Todav}.
Two graduate IIUdcnts arelllli!lned to
the project. Paul Bowen will lOok at
The piOjact ... develop • dalgn lo.
IN -allon ol La Halla, .a l.rge
plants' treatment proceua and how the
,__ mwlratplace In ~ which has
!odlllln should be. equipped; lor example, how many _ . . puts should be
...... Into clac.-y.
The U/8 .....,.. compded against
kept on hand lor emergencies. BID Ring Is
lnYCitigallng potential dislrlbution system
than 1,000 proi-..1 and otudent archlleda from wound !he worki.
problems.
The project Is expected to be com They among • .-.ceMng plat.!
. ~. The chwingo for their projec:l
In November. James Covey, chief
- · ~ wtlh lfiaoc ol olhar com- ol IN planning tedlon ol tha Hallh
pcllllon wtnnen at UNESCO heado.putment's Bureau ol Public Water
quwlan In P-. The colecllon wiD be
Supply. Is projec:l director.
to New York Cly and Waohington ,
0 .C., for ......, thit !/UI'.

3in SAED
win prize

cl--

1--.,ci_Y
...
"---~
1'IMoololl
"' ... Dow-.

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

ol . . . . _

- - · · C....tw. _ _
~Oo.-ci-­

HAIIIIY .lloCXSOII

Officers win medals
U/8 Public SaMty oftlcen won five
meclalo at the New York State Police
held at Wal Point, June 11 to

~

U . Oanicl. Walgale won two gold
medalo at the competition, one for novice
bolctng and the olhar for unlimited weight

da.......clng.
PMrolman Wlllarn Dunford ol Wal
neca ....-ned a gold medal for novice
bolctng In the 20&amp;-pound weight de.
~~ diYWon) . Patrolman Frank
Lawkir ol fb1h Tonawanda won a silv«
medal for tingles honcshoes and •
~!ron. for douQes honcshoes.
Other U/ 8 oftlcen paor11c1pat1ng were
U . John Wooda, who entered tha open
golf cooo.,-,, and P~ M-1&lt;
Frentael. who ,.... 1n
two-man

,_... ..

Final '81-82 Calendar
not all that radical
"'*""'*

The
calendar for 1981-82 approved by Praldent Robert L. ~
thit w . k - IN U/8 Calendar ~·s goal ol two e q u a l - (In
ol iniiNciiDnal length). but does not tncorporate the Idea ol •'oortened
(12.5 week) . . - s wlih longer clea periods, or an alrnoelolx._., mid-term
bruit. , _ ndlcal changes were propooed In the Calendar Comrnltee'sinlllal
report thW IP'1nil·
.
While retaining the preMRtSO.mtnute clea period, the approved calendar lor
year~ next does~ some Innovations: Thanklgtving Reoao 19811s
lenglhened to lnduclc the Wed~ before. Spring Se...- 198211 clcleyed
by about a --from what has been normal a.tlng lime. The 1981 lal
- - bcgN the Tuesday kjote Labor Dey another departule from usual
practice. Labor Dey 1981 Is late, though - as ~teas Labor Dey can be.
The approved calendar for 1981-82 (remember, this Is the academic year
beginning a year from this September) Is as follows :

Flmts.-,1981

T. September 1

lnstrudlon Begins
Labor Dav - Observed Holiday
Rosh Hashana Observance Begins at Sundown
Classes Resumed at Sundown
Yom Kippur Observance Begins at Sundown
Classes Resumed at Sundown
Thanklglvlng Recess Begins at Close ol Classes
Classes Resumed
Instruction Ends at Close of Classes
Semester Examinations

M. Seplember 7
M. September 28
w. September 30

w. October 7

Th. October 8

T. November 24
M. November 30
M. Dooc:embcr14

T. Occ:embcr 15 ·
T. Dccember22

Secoad s.-ter. 1982

M. January 25
M. February 15
F. March 19
M. March 29
W. May 5
Th. May6 .
F . May 14
Sunday, May 16'

lnslrucllon Begins
Washington's Birthday - Observed Holiday
Mid-Semester Recess Begins at Close of Classes

Classes Resumed
lnsirucllon Ends at Close of Classes
Final Examinations
COMMENCEMENT

' Divisional commencements ,

~authorized ,

will be arranged .

lutrucdoaal 0.,.
Fall Semester · 14 Mondays, 14 Tuesdays, 13 Wednesdays, 13 Thursdays, 14
Fridays. 7 examination days equal 75 days TOTAL.
Spring Semester · 13 Mondays, 14 Tuesdays, 14 Wednesdays, 13 Thundays,
13 Fridays, 8 examination days equal 75 days TOTAL.

AAUP at critical juncture,
article in 'Times' reports
The American Asooclation of University Prolusors ftnds Its future Imperiled by
a quallon ol Identity, The New York
nmes repocted from the organization's
annual meeting at George Washington
University this week.
Said the Tlma: "After trying to compete with the National Education
Asaoclatlon and the American Fedcralion

aedlbllity as an advocate lor the professoriate while functioning as a labor
union for a minority ellis members."
Some members charged AAUP has
"mclcd up doing neither effectively."
State uooc:lallons are also fighting the
nallonal ollk:c for more money and
authority. the nma reported.

ol Teachers as a collective bargaining

Concluded reporter Maeroff .
"Delegates here lllid they believed that
the next year or two would be c:ruc:ial lor
the IISIOCiation. Not .. ol them shared
the optimism of the new general
secretary, Irving J . Spitzberv ol the State
Univenlly o1 New
at lSuffalo, who
lllid, 'The future ol this organization Is
bright.' •
.

agent , the profeuon' IISIOdallon Is In
deep financial trouble , and Its membership Is waning , apeclally at the elite In·
stilullons that had formed Its backbone."

Clearly. lllid writer Gene I. Maerolf.
MUP Is at a croooroads. "A primary
1soue Is whether H wll be able to survive
u a profeuional sodety and oetaln

von.

15 Minority faculty members
attending transit workshop
Fllaen faculty members fr9m minority
collega aaoss the country are parlldpatlng In a lrantpprtatlon rCMareh and
training IX"98"' here lpONOI"ed by the
Department ol T rantp001ation (DOT) .
funded by a $186,497 ~~ from
oors Urban Ma. TnonsporiAtion Admtnlslnotion, IN program Is being conducted by the U/ 8-bued SUNY Center
for T.. nsportation Sludla and Raurch
directed by Dr. Robert E. P__.. Its
pul1)0IC II to 1ncr.... opportunities for
n\lnotlly collegct to partlclpate In
n
lion ruurch activities by
the r!'fQidl onanagmenl

5:S
skills

facully.

The eight-week· summer workshop Is
'jointly hooted by U/ 8 and the Transpor·
tation Training and R~ Center ol
the Poll/lechnlc lnslllute ol N- York,
w'- I tN wtl be hooted during the
wcek of July 7.
·
~Is In tha workshop are ·
McKinley Alexander, JackJon (
.)
State Unlvcrwtty; Georgia Bow.-. St.
August~ 'l :~ · ftalefgh , . N;c;.:

Kenneth Cook, TexuSout!&gt;em Unlversl·

ly; Edward Devil, A&amp;T State UnlvenHy,

GrMnsboro, N.C . ; loma Glover, Morris
Brown

Collage ,

Atlanta,

Georgia;

Charles Jones Bethune-Coolunan College, Daytona &amp;ach, Florida; Constance
Jordan , Alabama A&amp;:M Unlvenlty.
Normal, Alabama.
Also, Eric Leung, Phlla.-:der Smith College, Uttle Rock , A.rlcansas;- Deborah
Lyons, University ol the D1stric:1 ol Col·
umbla; William Porter, Elizabeth City
State University , North Carolina ;
Hamenegildo Quinones, Unlvcrllly of
Puerto Rico; Ronald 5.heck. New Mexico
State lJnivcrsltv. Las Cruea; Charles
Smith, Nor1h Carolina Central Unlveni·
ty , Durham; James SmKh, Dillard
University, New Orleans; and Iiana
Walton , Savannah Stat
College ,
Georgia.
•

The workshop will run u ntil Augull 3 .
Participants are reoidlng, some with their
famtla. In tha Ellicott Complex at
Amhenr..

·

·

.

�June 216, 1980

7

Of. lnatl uses moxie and machine
to translate medieval Arable text

INS bends
on rules
for Iranians

S,~"w+

The lmmignotion and Naturalizallon
Service ~ - - said that Iranian
studel'lll who earlier had been given. terminal durallon of My In tho u.s..... be
permlllad to complete their coutMS of

old

~For tho tMxt two yean, Dr. Shams In-

aU, who recolved a doc:toralo &amp;om U/B's
Department of 1'1-Mooophy laot year. wiD
conc:antnrtc her ~ on transiellng,
and Willing nola and an lnlroducllon for
a four-volume medieval Arable text by
Ibn Slna. Her Glorta marl&lt; a lint allempt
at an Englioh translellon; a projld, which
when completed, wiD ocholars In
undenlancllng tho author's Impact on
worlcs of oilier phllooophers, such as
ThomesAqllNs.
Three things . . making tho work
pood&gt;le: a $29,000 NEH ~nt; an Optacon, a machine which traruiorms tho
printed word Into vlnllons which can be
"read" by touch; and, ftnally, ~
moot llgnlllcantly, tho shea moxie and
resolve of a woman who refusa to·let a
visual handicap Impede her ocholariy
endeavors or prolasional attainment.
Bea11ne of an acute love of adventure
and a desire to be exposed to a new
culture and people, .lnau left Lebanon
several yean ago to pursue graduate
.studies In~ &lt;O&lt;IRtry. Her lint tWo years
of r~ academic work ""'e spent at
SUNY Binghamton, but after coming to
U/B on an Intercampus _Fellowship In
1977 and studying clooely with noled
medieval IslamiC scholar Geoogc Hourant
(who chairs tho Philosophy Department) .
she dedded to mak Buffalo her new
~-

study or degree prowarns. O.vtd W.
Crosland, ecting cornmlloloner of INS
sent word of the dedolon June 10 to ;D

the agency's flc!d olllces.
A opokaman allmated the,_ policy
wiD aflect "at moot a few thouuncl" of the
58,000 studenll currently on Arnertc.an

Howewr, an olflclal of the
NaUonal Alsoclation for Fonlgn Student
Affairs said tho ruling ""''!llllect as man11
as one-third of the students. An INS
olflclal said the terminal dates were
imposed for a variety of .....,.,. during
the recent ocreenlng procao. For exam·
pie, he said, some cutoffs were Imposed
to coincide with dates some studento said
they would leave the U.S . to opend the
summer In Iran before returning In the
campuMS.

!aU.

.

N&lt;iw an adjunct assistant prolesoor In
the department, lnaU works In her Baldy
office about eight hours a day on her projed. Within ...........~ lie the devices
which facilitate her task: a braille
typewriter, notes and a recorder. Wtth
eager anticipation, she speaks of another
echnologicalinROYation she'D ooon own
hlch c:an actually read printed material
.
aloud .. The oo.t a l10.000:dou~ lh111· • iilih; ;equest :~~~; ~~~u ; th.;t ;..;,uld
of Its younger cowln , the Optacon.
be an "insuh. •
lnati fondly remembers how her
Eftlcleet _ . . . ,
parents, especiaOy around Christmas,
Ina didn't own an Optacon during her
would
organize contests in extemundcrgrad.ua .years at the American
poraneous speaking. debate. Arabic
• Un-y of Beirut. What she did
history
and
poetry for their nine children .
pouas, was an "cftlclomt memory" (as
Performances were judged by three Im she modestly dacrbes It) which permit·
partial Individuals-who usuaOy were
ted her to aboori&gt; and retain lecture
&amp;lends or neighbors-and prizes were
material without benefit of nota
awarded . Bcc:ausc of such rearing , lnaU
Referring to her memory u a "family
says she has never be"n afraid to assm
troll, • Ina · relayed that bv the time she
herod or comP"te with othl!rs. For that
finished her dlssertallon , she was able to
matter, neither are her brothl!rs or sisters.
recite tt wrl&gt;atim - all 283 pooges. Almost
l11is
Is another lnati family trail.
as a protective mechanism llg8lnsl brain
clutter, she can CO&lt;Tipletely forget onceStiU
c:lNe
memorlzlod Information when tt Is no
Today the lnati children range from 20
longer useful to her. With a llo1de grin that
to 40 years-of-age , and despite different
comes easlly for ~ gregarious, yet alto ge&lt;l!Jeaphlcal locations they remain very
vay private woman, lnati mused that
dose In spirit . Two of her sisters are cur100n after she ,_..&amp;om an apartrnent,
rently IMng In tho Scala and one In
she11keiy fo&lt;vet tho old phone number.
; four other slblir9. and her
What u.p. her going and what gave Canada
..-c In the Middle East.
her the confklenco and determination to paren
Coping with the vlcisaltudes of life
tackle a Ph.D. and a , _ country at the poses no_.. ordeal for lnau. Displaytime-alone- directly ...
Ing a characterisllc optimism, she main·
triJul.t.le to her upbnnglng, and alto to a
talns that ''daUy frustrations" are
luve ~-· her culvral bcrttage.
everybody'• plight and ... perwonally Is
1-*'11
no problem which she fuls "can't
A ............
t
be overcome.•
· All "PPC*d to 11.- country wbere lnall
W..tng a brlghtly"CO!ored, femininely·
a cafoln ........_ In
patterned dress (from her father's
pcrhapo ~ by a preoa:upelfon with
mMe1al
and/ or . . . - objoc·

'*"*·

"'*""""'

peop.~"":":.!:;..':=-.~
~.=~~~

the ckwlopment and .,._vatlon of per·

plo there .,_ ,_. ernoOonl&gt;llv
........ and ... __..Old '"E..., thole
who would ..........., be """'**-'
u,.echio..,., cxhllll conltdence," ohe

t .... ~ .... lnall ot..wd
thoi I.Abonon, would be vay unuoual
for.-...._
twofltendo to
paint,

I

In

~ CGftdude ....... - party
hod to lwnY,. to ....... en~
or ""' en --.1 A hlglw prlorfly II

..._

p~ec..s...,_

u.......,

and alllndlld

..... . -~.... .....
for ........
-poupl • •

_,_. of ~. '

......
llln
1 money or Cllhor·

~_....,.

to

hll ......._

""" - .......,.,

... wood"""""-"

•

clothln'g store In Lebanon) which maka
her diminutive and delicate stature
appear more fragile , lnatl Insists she ex·
peels no "special favors" because of her
visual impairment, or for that matter.
because of her sex or national origin . "I
don't give myself any excu..,.," she

Crosland's directive to field olflcas
states: "Iranian students whose authortz·
ed period ~ has expired or will
expire on a
date c:an be granted .
extensions to complete their current
course of study or degree level , at which
point 'they will be required to leave.
Those Individuals who had already been
accepted to graduate schools, law schools, or medical schools as of June 9
should be P"fmltted to continue with
those studies."
Crosland warned Immigration officers,
however, that they should be "strict In
identifying students eligible for these ex·
tensions" and that any doubts should be
resolved by denying extended stays.
The INS action foUowed an appeal by
eleven higher education associations for
Secretary of State Edmund S . Muskle to
help reverse "the prl!senl policy toward
Iranian students who are attempting to
complete a legitimate course of study In
the U.S ."
The appeal said federal lniHaUva In
checking on the status of Iranian students
seem to have given encouragement for
actions against the students by state

legislatures, 18 of which currently are
considering punitive measura against
lnati's current goals are to complete her
them . " We believe that the net effed of
translation project, then secure a job
these actions will be a lasting legacy of IDteachJng, something she did and enjoyed
wtll between the United States and the
at.SUNY Binghamton as a grad assistant,
future professional , business , and
and In Lebanon . She doesn't expect her
political leaders of Iran," the appeal conhandicap to pose any Insurmountable
cluded.
burdens, although she would not be able
to teach without some secretarial
assistance.
Speaking English as If It were her
native language , lnati says she would like
to continue her career In this country.
While she misses her family , she also
recognizes that opportunities In higher
Dr. Thomas G . Gut!Gidge, asaoc:late
education are greater In the Stata and
dean of the School of Management, will
that phllo.ophy departments In general
receive a special award Thunday (June
are bigget and better staffed here. Also , . 26) In recognition of his conlrtoullons to
at this point In her life. lnatl admits she
the field of personnel~ In In·
enjoys the indel"'ndence afforded to
dustry.
Arnertc.an women anct the lifestyle she
The Robert F. Bettes Awwd for Ex·
has created for herwlf. Bcc:ause of the
cellencc In Personnel Admlnlslrallon/lnsocial slruclurc of her country, she would
dustrlal
RelationS for 1979, wll be
have to relinquish some of her personal
presented to Gutterld!le at a 6 p.m. dinfreedom If she returned , an option she
ner
.
g of the N1!9ra Frontier
doesn't &amp;nd particularly palatable now.
Chapter, American Society for Personnel
Adminlllration, al the Sheraton Inn-East
In Cheektowaga.
The award was IJUiiluted by the
chapter In honor of tho late Robert F.
Bettes, who oerved .. manager of In·
dustrlal relations for Graham ManufacturIng Co., Batavia, and was lniiNmentalln
"Fortunately, Beldon Stolca, late of
founding tho chapter.
Cnylcy. Ga. , has a trailer hitch on his
Gutterldgc, an asaodate prolaoor of
truck. It II ~ that two
hu.m an resourc:es and Industrial relations
whose hardw..-e Is so compattic
at U/ 8 , also II director of the Regjonal
the nucleus of a relallonihtp thet
Eccnomlt A11111anoe Center (REAC) .
flourllh In other ways. 1'bac amiable
Hto llffono as pas1 director of the
youths, cllrect and country-lnd, arc not
Human~ 1.-.. and as dlrec·
OMS to rcjKI the lncvtiMIIc .
tor of REAC haw resultlld In numerous
"It 11 a c.lwmtng love 11ory, Wl1tten In
human ....,.....,. training pr&lt;Jip'atnl and
en ...,..a~nt. guilclal olfle. The few
~-forthe
community.
c:hanclen - wei chwn and uniformly
Soulhom, which II to say their behavior,
In oomrncntlnll on the - . !, Dean
while baled on lunalll: premises, Is
Joeeph A. Alullo of tho School of
l1gon)ully logical. Thio II not limply a
~ nailed that Dr. GutiGidge
IIMnry ccrwwdlan; It's a social principle.
·~ tho CCin'lltN1Icn of public
"-lna Brent 11M accepted "· and .... servlu and profuolonal human
• now! thalli fumy, tender Cld
cocportiM for""'*" tho a-.:li It

asserts.

Gutteridge
to get award

U I 8 grad is author of
'easygoing' Southern novel

9

C'::"&gt;al

.........

.......-

-.

�•

June 26, 19110

Oae ..... thluk-tank

--....................... """""
~E.

.................... "-rrcM
... M

.._, ' r ' r b

crl Sdlace,

3

..,..... .., ... Olrtrllooo .............. - •
S.....F.......,_.,~W'

b y. .

.......

CALENDAR

- __""'=B·
oiF.... ,I'Iov. ... bo _ . . . . bv Raed. C..-

-

nonaJotoo-. . Siw-~boonfnvf&amp;od t.,
dwSiaoa~IO~ In a-ol

Tlaanday - 26

""............
.....
...- ............... -...She ...

lUilE PII£SENTA110N •

· . ~- .. dw Dopon-olli9-~ . ... fliw.atldo. , ()ppooiaon 10 Doalh. ""· Onloo. ~

-

and Humor ~
&amp;om tim . ·
origlllalal1 . od..cationand .................
~- ........ and &lt;OmiO. Baron ...
3

-

own-

- ' ..... ....,._·, etlt:n'll* 10 miiM hla . .

ft'tii.M-

.. dw ... ot ..
~- - Tho.........,.olman'odanto
-'*'·-~-.-. al1ond
~...,_

"""""" ... bo npbod, indudtng., analyolo ol dw
............. .-.y Loanmg c.m... l63
8aldy 10.30 a .m

m..-

~-la-maybooi..,..Wtn-loo

lboec who would h

-

to empb;

~

mat.mah lO

· .. anhancolaachlng.
s,.o.-..s
bv tho Doparunanl
o1 HIQhe EducaU UAIIFIUI '

,._ (19'151 Canle&lt;nw Thoa"!. Squh. 3 30,
6 and 8 .30 p m c.n..1 $2 10.

•

$160
Tho . . . . . . R"'l Schalde, Rabort Shaw ,

Oowylwo and • rnod&gt;anlcal .....
......t .......... - - "" II""- "New
freland ohon
II ...........S bv ohorio a1·
-•dwlocal-. .. ~andaoaily
ohorio ....... oato.diO_tho ....... "AI27,
OiNCio&lt; 5piolboqa
a . - ftoh-·man

comm....,

~and

""*

turned II Into a~ .a.dl on the au·

_-··
.. -· ~'*"·"'"-boy
....__~ ·- nm.

UUA11 OPEN MIKE 5E1UES •
~·- ,.,.. _s.r... 8 . 10.30
p m In caM of rMI the cwnt wll be mowd tntkH

Lounge Sign-up , _ .... bo · · botlnnire .. 7 30
10 -

This ...... " - - . . - - - &amp;om ....
·Soaoa Cound
....... Yaota
Endowmonllor
dw ""tho
...... - .

-

from

on. "'""""'"' Communoy c.n....

___... __ _

Satarclay - 28

...

LACXAWANNA CU.TURAL SuMNat FEST

.....,..,

A IPO'IP ol lalcnlod lndMduolo &lt;cpacnting

eullwco. Thoro ,.. bo ,.n..._., gamoo
and c:onlatl , art, ethnic food , end • mar.lhon
Fru admilllon ll a .m. - 11 p.m Friendship
Hou• Grounds. Rldgc Rood, LAckawanna.
ol -

WAll DOUIILE RATUI£'

u.

o·..

Chlaa Aadolou U9291 and L'"-&lt;
(F....,., 19301. 170 MFAC, Elicoa. 5o30, 7.15

$160
UoOO..Aadolou lo.,...,.., .... . . -

- -........-fllm,_..-,
~
.................
...........
L'"-&lt; o·... • ........,_ __ _
film _
_
ulllrnaloly~

- . ond

d

f

Monany d

NcwYaota Tholllm'oNcwVooiiOiy,....._IOOk

place .... ..,.me

IIDIEFIT MD. CONCERT'

.... 0.... QuiD... and Sltlo ........... wllh
Cu:rtil W..ms. Buffalo Enlatainnwnl 'Theatre ,
284 Frankln 51. 10 p m Spon.ooed bv WBFO (FM
at part ol its fund • r~ weft Bn:t.ck:.Maltw .

-

flnl

DW&gt;otao
r ... 0....,.
y..., aa~co~
~

•-- Tha

1

MD . Wow tn .,..._ ~- Ollolftn'o
Ho.pttal of P11Ub1.1rgh
o.ldnn'•~

- . Sc:roloi111M.and~-

-

m..

... Fnclavo .......... ~ 22,

.. -

-~·
UUAII Fa.ll'
1160

IIENERT 1'01.&amp; CO!tCEirf '
Tile .......... • ..~ · - e-4.

o...

- . . ... ifrioiiW ... .......,_,
•, ..~-.
_
_ .... _.....,.bv
284 -SI

...........
...
WW0tfl4

....

...... ol .. fwlll - . . -

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---~--. ...-u.r.. Eogllolo.
•
.... Cullwc

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. . ...
, _ _ _..__.,
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·-

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PO--.IbvGiaft
~-ol lho Goat~ """"and - · - ol NYI'JRG'o
Sonicw ""--Y T. . . . c-.

_...__._ .
_,_

o..m.hl _. tpllk on how to

oh[oo. -

-

ol _

-

.........

bv _..tlng 20 - - ..._,.tlng 10.

~-- h .. hoped .... "'-lodgo

...

I .....-y 10 adop

--

IUCh a ii..._.IO _h_~­

n.

-.&amp;ma il to pt"'OricM IdeM to ~ -

to

-eon.-.

SVMJIEII 5TUDENT5: NEED HElP?

tw,-

ollomg ,...
-5pftial
. . . ..
........
Malh" . Sdanoo,
Engliohand
oubjoclt 1 0 - - CclogoDrop tn a1 311 T--.1
SorH!Cam..... - . 5 p.m. and 8 p.m. -.toy ..........
Friday

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

and,.__

DIIAIIA '
U/8

WIIFD CI'M Ill UoZZ .IAII'

-

\llc.

.,........ lluflalo'• boot -

te the "Ceeeader,• cell
.. 636-!616.
K.y: 000,.. ....... " ' - ...... pro-

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                    <text>JUNE 19 1980

Ciedit-Free
shifts slated
If program stays,
it will change
Several courses previously taught
through Credit-Free Programs WID
become aedH-bearlng offeringS In Millard
Fillmore College this fall. while others
may be shifted under the academic um·
brella of professional schools.
Although a dedslon to drop the
llnanclally · ailing Credit -Free unit
(reported In the Buffalo press last week)
has not as yet been olfidally made . Con·

tinuing

Education

Dean

James

Blackh~ Indicated that ~ the 15-yearold program does survive , Its format will
likely assume a different , more
academlcally-&lt;&gt;riented character.
Courses being considered for &amp;he
switch to MFC, according to Blackhurst ,
are those which already have a strong
academic dimension . such as foreign
languages, computer science . literature
and possibly tome recreation skills
courses, among others.

SlOO .million Master Plan
for Main Street is unveiled
Bv .... Bood\

..

~-

Omulng _ . . yun of prdrnlnary
studies, "-kkent Robert L: f&lt;der on
Monday . unveiled the long-.walled
~ Plan ""' the Main Street Campus
which celo ""' $52.5 million to be spent

on ienovatlon and demolition of CJtlsting
buildings and SSl&gt;.9 mlllion for new con·
strudiOn.
The Ptaldcnt told an obvlollsly
g1111111cd crowd 01 Health Scknc:eslac:ully
and .mnlnlllrlllors at Farber Hal that the
plan wll be formally prewnted to the
SUNY Board of T,.,_ nat month . H
events go .. anlldpated , Ketler outlined,
archlt«&lt;s ...., be named by August for
the llr1l pt._ of conslnldlon' and
rtriOQIIon of ·the Carcy·Farber·Shennan
Moodlcal Complex, lor an addition to
Ooobv, and for a clnlcal facility for the
Schocil of O...llstry.
Once arch- are named. he said,
the dctlgn pt._, depending on com·
plully ol the IINdllrc, can tab beNiecn
16 to 30 months to compldo. Gillen thio

limelable, the Ptaldent predicted that
oome c:onstrudlo/1 should begin In about
• ye.. and • haM &amp;om this August.
SUNY ...S DOll cooc:u
Ketter admitted to the gathering that
for the llr1l lime he "feels comfortable~
dlllc:usslng the Main Street Pllrn viHh
laadty. Why? He now has "assurances"
&amp;om SUNY &lt;Antral and Al&gt;an~ (even
&amp;om 008 Dlredor Howard "Red Millerl
that the plan W11 not meet with opposl·
lion hom their offices. In fact, the Ptesl·
dent said, the O&gt;ancellor, the SUNY
Con5truc:tlon Fund and the 008 "back"
the~ .

To enswe

that area construction

wort.en benefit &amp;om the planned pro-

)ocb,. Ketter nOted that the Construction
Fund and the Unlvenity have agreed to
dMdc the work Into biddable packages

within the capabdltles Q/ Watem New

YOl'k conslnldlon flrms. These packages
will range from $2 · $15 million In !!Ia! .
Before using slides and drawings to U·
1ustra1e the con5truc:tlon and retlO\Iatlon
plans, Ketter emphaoized the! aU cOSII

quoted are In terms of "non-escalated"
1980 dollaB and do not include money
for planning and equipment. Depending
on ihe type of facillly , he said equipment
totals can range from 5 to 35 per cent of
construction costs: and planning, from 10
to 15 per cent. He also noted that equip·
ment COlli are generally "formalized"
when construction Is about a year . from
completion and or~g begtm.

Aeoaa...,ncore

Ac:cordlng to the Master Plan devised
by Cannon Design Inc., Grand Island.
the center portion ol the campus - that
Is, the area encompassed by Ab6ott ,
Diefendorf and Ciosby - Is designated
as a common, '"interactive space·· con·
talnlng central lacililles to be shared by
Health Sciences Schools - such as a
library, student activilles center and
classrooms .
More specifically, Abbott, already
adorned with chandeliers and rich wood
paneUng, will be converted to use as a
student activities center: Diefendorf. with
o major addition , will remain primarily ·a
claJ51'001T1 lactllty, and an expanded
Crosby will become thot home of the
Health Sciences Ubrary/ Biomedical In·
formation Center. Actually. a new
building will be constructed to the rear of
Crotby which Is larger In size than the
present structure, and will be joined to lt.
Likewise , a new building will be con·
strueled In front (toward Main Street) of
l);d.,ndorf which approximates Ill pres·
ent size .

.........aedooole

As an~ted , Squire , with a !"ajar

addition to the east toward Bailey
Avenue, will house the School of D•m·
11s1ry along with a renovated Foster HaD.

n.e

N011....,.se, _......_ opdoe
Discussion Is underway on aealing a
non-grade, non-degree option for
studenlllnterested In the courses, a prac·
lice common to other major unlvenitles
around the country, the dean relayed .
Courses shifted to professional areas
wiD be offerings which can enhance the
cunent continuing education programs of
those units, such as the Tax Institute
which Is offered annuallv.
What troubles Blackhurst about thepresent Credit-Free structure Is that Its
counes (over 90 per cent o( which are
'-ught by faculty from outside the Unlver·
sity) do not fall under the pun/lew of any
department. Becauoe of this, they have
escaped systematic academic review , the
dean laments.
As 1t stands nOw, Blackhum said, the
prog111m does not reflect the "quality or
competence" of U/ B faculty . He also
personally views some of the course
topics, oUCh as magic. astrology , ESP.
etc. , as being inappropriate to a Unlveni·
ty milieu. Besides, many similar courses
are being given through various social
and church-affiliated groups and depart·
men! stores. These trendy courses. con·
ceived to captt.alize on available au·
dienc:es, lade academic dimension. he ex·
plalned.
H Credlt·Free does undergo structural
transformation, Blackhurst recognizes
there wiD be some "regrettable losses."
He feels, though , that such casualties are
"unavoidable" ~ his office Is to aeate a
mechanism that wiD not only provide a
more dired linkage with the Unlvenlty
but also amplify the competendel of
lacuhy f01 the benefit of the Immediate
community and region.
Bladch~ personally believes the ma·
jor priority should be development of
technological/Industrial ex.tenslon offer·
lngs whiCh can employ the talents and ex·
pertlse of lacuky to benefit area In·
du tries.
Some area bustneua and lndustr!U.
he noted, now send personnel out of '
town lor training or Information that
could easily be oupplled by the Universl·
ty. This Is ihe type of situation Blackhurst
would like to rectify by linking U/ 8
resources to community needs. And con·
trary to the current situation. the faculty
involved would share In the "activity and
reward system of the department, school
and University." he Indicated .

Medical School and the baste
wtl1 encompass the entirl&lt; Carey·
Sherman-Farber complex , again with
,.,.,.. renovations to the eunent structure
along with erection of new, adjoining
Fl.....aaJ ....._..,
buildings
Parl&lt;er, plus a fiw·story addotlon to its · FinanCially opcaklng, Blackhurst said
rear. wiD be the new locale lor the
Credlt·Fr e has been In "jeopardy" (Qr a
Sc:hoolo of Nursing and Health Related number of years.
When the program started , the Slat
PtoiCMiono.
Returning to the Main Street Campus.
paid Its !ldmlnlslntllw and clerical stall.
Pharmacy
occupy a modified
About five vago ,,howewc, this sup·
Acheoon Cl&gt;crnlllry, In rum . will move port was wilhdrawn, and , to boot , the
to · Pharmacy'• PJC1Cnt ladlltles at
program was -...:! lor fringe beMiil$
Amhenl.
of Univerltly faculty who \iiUQht Its
The J'reeiclent notad that aU pr nt
courses ihls , noted Blacknui'lt ,
dorm factlllleo d· r ,..., as housing
d
aged uoe &lt;:A Ur\!VerSily ~"'?'-'
be _,
. unlb..,.d thllt Kifnbal Tower
ICienCel

·---·-a.-.

a·

· ·---'·--·

�• $100 miUion Main Street Master Plat)
----~.
-.
vmed b..:k to

...

living space. Married
students wll pn:&gt;bably be aa:omrnodaled
In of the units.
Sd&gt;ecluled for d molltlon are all an ·
.-es and l«mporary buildings, part of
w.ndc. tiarmw&gt; and T-.uend Halls,
the ~houMs. the c:ondemned llands
In Rewy field (west oidel , and the con·
crate lll'Udurn to the rnr of Parl&lt;er no111

containing loboratories.
Not Included in the Health
ocheme are Hayes Hal, which ...W re ·
....... the ~ of the School of
Alchll«ture and Environmental Design ,
and Baird, which wtll house offlca of the
l)IY-.. of Continuing Education . Beck
tw 1o «Jq)eCCed to rei1Wn as Is.
Aloo to remain are the Nuclear
R~ Cenlcr and an upgraded Clark

s.x...,..

tw.

In order to pc-aeve the buildings as
community lond....-ks, the facades of
Hayes, Footer
Crooby (fectng M-'n
Str
be lirfl Wltact. Any new con·
wtl 8" behind them .
Sine:• the l4as&amp;er Plan - dnlgned for

a"4

approJdmataly 3 , 100 HeAlth Sdenc:es
otudents, Ketter pointed out that sev«al
of the parking lots will go.
In a change from the original proposal,
he said , the NFTA Transit Station fadng
Main St. will be much smaller in dimen·
lion , (one story high) , and will feature a
glas.d-in middle MdiOn which will give
a view of Abbott .
wa~~~w.,_....s..,..

'Thooe who c.anndl become accus·
torned to Buffalo's winter chill, will be
pleased to diJcover that the plan calls for
aD major buildlngs to be connected by a
second-level, glau-&lt;mdosed pedestrian
corridor.
For auto traffic, the campus will have a
major new «ntranoe acroso from Niagara
F . Is Boulevard along with other entrances on Bailey and Parkridge ayenues.
Studen driving to the campus ...W
enter on an outer ring road which will go
along the peritmter and give access to
seveTal pari&lt;ing areas.
An 'Inner ring road ...W hopeluDy be
more lightly tr.Hicked and beslcally

limited to visitors and facully . The entire
center section of campus - the "uben
core" - will .:ontain· only pedestrian
walkw,ys with no intruding streets.
Coeta
CoG breakdowns lor the buildings are:
• Medlcal School Basic Sdenca Complex with modification, new construction
and connec:llng bridges - S36.5 million .
• Renovation and addltlon to Squire,
renovation of Foster and connecting

bridges - $20.6 mJilion.
• Addltlon to Diefendorf -

$3.1!

mll1ion .

• Modification and addition to Abbott

- $2.9 million.
• N«w building paralleling Crosby plus
Its own modifications - $5.7 million.
• Upgrading utility fadlitin - $19
million.
• Mod ifications to Ach«son and
relocation ol Chemistry and Pharmacy -

$8.1 million .
• P.arker' s addltlon -

plus its renova·

lion - $6.8 million .
Of aU the projects,

the Preoident
relayed , the library d«SSQn, wiD be done
first , then the Dental !adUty and the
Medical School/Basic Science Complex.
Within two years, Ketter said he hopes
to have the first appropriation for con·
structlon . Once construction begins, he
estimated, about $40 mllllo!&gt; pu year In
new conlrac:ts can be let. Academic units
displaced by the plan wlll,be relocated In
Amherst as new buildings there become
avaUable .
Because of an arrang«ment he made
with OOB and the Conslructlon Fund,
the President also reported that if any
Federal dollars or outside revenues are
obtained , the money will be odded to
rather than subtracted from appropriated
State money .

U I 8 clinic project aims at
identifying the subtly disabled
Pretchoolers

attending

W

n

Child

Clinics of the EN County Health Department will undetgo screening for subtle
developmental dlsabilltln through a pilot
project which U/ B will undertake this fall .
Kent Tigges, who received Sta fund lng lor the p!'oject , says H will Identify
children through ega five who have subtle
p!'oblems whiCh affect ability to learn and
might otherwise go undetected .
A prot...,. of occupational therapy
here, Tigges says funds_.., provided by
the NewYork Stat Advioory Councillor
Mental Retardation and Developmental
Dlsabilltlu. the EN County · Aealth
Department and the Department of Oc:·
cupatlonal Therapy.
·
Margaret Payne , coordinator of 30
WeD Child county dntcs which -.bout
9,000 children ach year, st&gt; SMS the
n«ed for more soph tk:ated
ng of the.
deV«Iopmental 111&gt;1 ·
of inion
and
P&lt;esthoolers T
cun ntly wed detect
more severe problems but wen't d ~lign ed to ld
y ....,. ona which .Bact

to learn
1\U,..

,.aCtio

andti-

junct dlnlcal nursing Instructor here,
Payne says many of these leu nOik:eable

problems can be conected !&gt;«fore
children enter school-if they are

detected .

·

" Typically , child ren with subtle
disabilities fan In school or become
dlsc:tpbne problems ~ the p!'oblems
haven't been caught and treated." ohe
points out. They may be Inattentive,
un.l&gt;le to abstract Information from
material, or not learn at the pace of their
peen. Some may be enoneously
categorized as slow learners ev"n though
they have normal or above averagt~ IQs.
Nunes at the county's Wei Child
Clinics wUI recelv special tralnlfl!l for the
project
Children requiring more
defmidve evaluation will be referred to a
t am corulsdng of Terri G~ . a
pediatric nurse'J)&lt;ac:tllloner: occupational
therapist "'!ary Jo P Uard, and Beth Con·
nclly, a lpM(h and h rlfl!l therapist ,
under Tigges' directlon Youngtlfts who
need spedal thenpy will be nrolled In a
- • child d veloprnental · mulatlon pro·.
gnom or r ferr d to other rea 'SI&gt;« IISU

�, _ 19. 1980

Fall festival is latest project
funded by $50,000 panel;
1st year emphasized recreation
Cel.lnllon '80, a weeloend "' C8lnpUI
latMIIa to be held In ..ty autumn to
-'&lt; the llllrt ol a new academic: yMr, is

one of the latest projKia to receive fun·
ding &amp;om the Unlvenlty's "$25,000 Pro·
grammlng Commlttee. •
The fAll celebnltion will be centered
around a home foolball game, a long
dislance race sanctioned by the local
Amateur Athletic Union and entertain .
rnent provided by the University
band, the Theatre Department, and inter·
national stu~t clubs. The entire campus
commw\lly will be ,.volved in the event,
which b planners hope wtll booome an
annual tradition .
Traditions are a majotlocus ol the procomml!tec (now more proper·
the "$50,000 commlttee"slnce
by-Student Association has ap·
proved additional funding of $25,000 for
n~_ycarJ .
.
Olllclally known as the Unlvcrslly·wide
Programming Committee, the panel was
cntaled last summer as a subcommittee ol
the FSA, In raponte to recomrnenda·
ttoni for Improving camj&gt;us life made by
the Untvenity"wide Study Group on At·
trillon and Retention .
Made up of seven students, one faculty
member, one profaolonalllaff m"mber.
and Dr. Richard A. Slggclcow, vice presl·
~t for stu~t affairs, the group
authoriaed funds for 11 projedl and ac·
-during Its lint-year.

concert

e

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

In a r~ pnpared at year'• end, the
group daCthd ftMif as being " cipedaDy
receptive to propooals Involving student,
faculty and ll.tflntcractlon ." Projects ap·
IX'O'Ied _,.. c:looely geared to Attrition·
Retention Comrnltlee recommendations
"which COCOIItllged bringing together
rnef!\bers of the academic community In
non-academic Mlllngt, fostering campus
1radltlons by sponoortng even and programo which conlrfbutc to campuo
morale and a tente ol community IJ&gt;iril,
and ln!loMng llu~ts In a tell-help or
pees -..ce man.-."
.
lmprowmcnts In physical environment
_... ol opeciallnterat also, In .... with
the Atlrltlon·Relenllon group'• CJnPIIasis
on "'the need to add finishing toucbcs to
the new Amherst Campuo. .. to over·
come a pervading sense of in ·
eo&lt;nplete.- and to ~ asaeto
(which) .. ~ offcn. .. ."

t t . l f - e. NCO 1\M
Approodmalely hell the tolal alocatlon

WM a-ded to Mr. o..rla Miller, dlret·
IDr of IWCN8Cional programming, for

~aloutdoorNCNIIIIonaiJWO­

gramo at Amhcnt. The ...... lncluda
one and ooe-hal mles al marked and
malnlained =--country tid lrlllls (to be
10 3'ir m'-s neat year), an Ice·
tioMine ... on LIM l..aSale, .,....,._
ol - " ' - and
1 equipment for
.......,, ond an outfitting and mtt.l .,..
c:onoln.ldlld moolly by
• with lltalf
• and .student - Sludenls, .. of
whom . . ld&gt;ecluled to rmam neat year,
wee tnlned 10 Nn thao Ullnt.er recreational prognuna: Campuo Scurlty and
Main.........,. IIIII! - • enlloled t o . with --.g Ice Mlety on the lake and

-*"

c:lunlni

II In preparation for skating.
Funds .,_.ted by equlprMnl rwniAis
wil be woed to maintain cqu~nt and
ClCPar'ld callllng fdllles .
Camping and backpodUng were fund.
ed Mlpring programo. Ten • bac:lopecks,
and coolclne cqulprnenl - · pwdwoaed
• and a .....,..,.,. llnry,
for &lt;

to . . . . IIYIIIablc ouch ......
M Red C... manualo, . . . develop....,., booko , and trip pr_,atlon
A camping
"trip bcwd"
lnolaled and wor1&lt;tbopo -..a-d
atudena In eq101&gt;11&gt;1ft1UM and In organil·
inti camping and bec:kpeddng ~ Next
,...... ~print ....-..~ projod !NV In·
dude
an LIM l..aSale. the
APOfl nolild

conotructed. the Progr.mmtng CommJ.
tee funded a propooal for development ol
a Porco... bated on a daign &amp;om ~

u~ "' Southern IDino~s (CilrbondaleJ . The Pon:oun lnvolued permanent
eslabllshrnent ol a Jogging trail and a
series of Illness exercise stations In a
natural environment to foster individual
~tlon in outdoor physical activily.
Constructed largely by Miller. with stall
and student -..nc.., the Parcours, Is
adjacent to Lake LaSalle.
A project presen~ by a group of
students from the School of Architecture
and Environmental Design was also fund·
ed. This acttvlly locwoed on Improving
the int..mal slngage system · at Ellicott.
After a directional ~..nl was held in
the complex with a group of high school
senlon, a temporary sign system was
developed bated- unlike !h.. nlsllng
one- on !h.. symmetrical nature ol the
facility . Installed on a !rial baois, h Is being
modt!ied after Ill initial uoe, and a penna·
nent ~system will be ready this fall .

~~~wasapeer

c:OunMIIng Alcohol Awareneso
designed to educale otud..nts
•
alcohol abuse and da"!!"f signs ol lm·
pending alcoholism . Peer couruelors,
trained by Gerald Thorner, a counseling
I&gt;OIICholo!llst at the University, developed
informatiOnal pamphlets for disacmlna·
tlon . Because a high percentage of those
who appear before the Student Juclidary
have commltled oHenMS while under the
inlluence ol alcohol, peer countelon ran
workshops with justices al the Judiciary
to alert them to the dangers ol repeated
alcohol abuse . Student&lt;euntdors alto
opoke before campuo groups. They wtll
continue their educational and therapy
worbhops next year.
()the project$, funded wholly or In
part, Included mid-day convenatlon·
colfcc houn where Invited faculty could
meet lnforrnaly with students; dewloprnent ol a brochure by students In the
Communlcallon Ocpartmcnt, used for
promollonaJ purpoMS by the Office .ol
Admiaalono and Record•; a Farm
Cooperative which put to UM an
undcYcloped portion ol campuo land for
student, faculty and llaff gardens, and a
otu~I-&lt;XIOl'dlnated asaauk prevention
program In an area adjacent to the Main
Street Campus.

Course previews
.frosb chemistry
For
f:.c::;:::

the third year, U/ 8 II offering a
"Pre -College Chemlotry

Aimed at giving students who will
begin

collc9o

In the fall a head 1111rt on

one CJI the moot demanding COUIMS they
• will " - to taka , the program will COYft
conc.p~s and calculations which form the
foundation "' chernicaJ principles studied
at the college level. In addition , COUI'M
work will introduce students to study oklls
needed for college .........
be gjvel dally from July 21
to Aueuot 15 at Main Street.
Dr. John W. 8lxlor, prolaoor of

a - """

chemlitry at the Stale College al
Brockport who has "-" a villting profeuor at Purdue . will be counc inllruc·
tor.
Ccet al the four-- k cradlt·fr program 11 $125, which includes iNiructlon ,
tutonng If ~· lcdurc nota,
handouts and .,..mplc problem•.
Advance registration Is required. In·
lcrelled students should &lt;Onlad the Of.
flee for Credit-Free Program• at

831 -3451.

Stress is what you make
of it, ·expert tells physicians

--·-Sdoncn
Bv Mary Beth 5piM

"Fight for your hlghnl allalnable aim
but ncva pul up raitlanceln vain ," ad·
visa the world'•leadlng stress expert and
retearcher, Dr. Hano Sclyc.
Speaking at a llras seminar at Roswell
Parli's Hilleboe Auditorium Saturday,
Sclyc laid that di.King the past 50 yean.
he has developed his own code for living,
aimed at reduc:ing the "dis-stress" which
con1ribules to illncu and disC- .
"Fnl, each al uo ncedo to find his or
her own llress lo&lt;vcl and choose the dircc·
t1on and opeed at which he or she wants
to Nn In llle .
"Some people Nn like turtles ~d
others arc racchones. But If the turtle
tria to NO like the racehorse , he will die.
And If the racehorse attempts to Nn at
the opeed ol the turtle , he will also die.

'Altndlltk:

It · -·

. Selye encouraged " altrul11ic
selfishness," which is not really contradic·
tory.
" Egotism and ahruism exist naturaDy In
nature. Even the lowly amoeba lookl out

for Number One. But In nature, -

can

- thetil one animal is Injured the olhero
will in many cases attempt to protect it or
aid H In tome way . ~
Even when people feed anlmalo In the
zoo, for inslarlcc, M II a act which is
altrutstlcally telfllh.
"We wanllo give the anlmallthe food ,
but al the ~arne time , - want lo have
and expcrlcnce pleasur at feeding
them."
The ttwd ingredient ol Dr. Selye'• code
ol bahcvtor is to act In wayo wfllch earn
one love and retped .
"The Golden Rule commando 'love thy
nolghbar as thyoclf' but In truth - all
know our nelghbon are not aU lovable
· and do little to cain love. " he chuclded .
Thftcforc, people should act In wayo
which will _ , their nelghbon' and
· love and . _ t.
"Nobod9 attacko the penon who is
useful becauoc H lllmpractbt Here is an
~ "' how altruiottc egotllm works .
~people ."

t-

H_,..tabltle ....
"11'11 not what happeN to you In Ill

bul how you talce ll." he continued , "and
In every chain or human or animal body,
there is alwayo a weak link which will be
the one to break down under harmful
stress.
"Marital disagreements, frullrallon at
work and combat fattgue can al be agents
ol disc... and Illness just as can bacteria
and vtnioa. But for t""* flnt ilgenls to
produce disC.... they must do 10
through llral."
Hypertension. some heart d - .
ulcero and nervous disc- . . among
thole which appear to be graady lnllucnced by harmful stre11. And there may be
others.

Seiye, who Is the author ol some 38
books, many of which hevc t-n bat·
sellers among the lay public, noted that
work by liMN Is not harmful. but how one
responds to H may be .
.
"I have retired MVftai lima during my
life, but alwayo I heve ..n.rned to my

work," he noted .
He commented that the lntcrnattonal
lnlllluta al Stress In Montreal, ol which
he II director, is thil WMic relcaoing the
lint isluc ol a journal, "S"-."
"Through this publication - beUev«
more ICienlills and phjlllciano will
become familiar with 1tra1 '*'-'&lt;h and
cffec:tl of

hcrmful llras on varioul

medical problemt •
Sclyc WM introduced by Or. Komcl
Terpian , U/8 prof.....,. ernerltu•, who
was one of Dr. Sclyc '1 prolaaors al the
Unlv~ ol Prague (C.:hoolovaklaJ .

"Dr. Selye alwayo had an un......J
dcgrcc .ol independence in his racarch
and often did his early wort. out ol hll
own pocket," Terpian said . But today,
his work linking harmfulllrftl to disease
is world·rcnowned arfd the honon he has
achieved •• legion.
Dr. Selye'• villi was opontored by the
Hungarian Medica l Auoc atlon ol
Arncrb ol which he is honorary prnl·
dent. Dr. lmre Magooo, profaeor of
urology at U/ B,Is current praident. The
seminar wu co-~ed by U/ 8 '1
Department ol Continuing Medical
Education , The Wnlllrn New
Chapter ol the American Heart Asaocla·
tlon and R
UParle Mamortallnltltule .

von.

�·.I

J:oo_- 19,

1980

Spltzberg ac
bitm t
as AAUP's new general secretary
. belieW II .,._.... bed law

Irving J . Spltarg. Jr, ... ~
.......,.. ...... it.ther.wgonoql...-y
olltoe "'-"- A.ocloollon "' I.JroMnly

"""'-'" (MUP) .

Splbberg, a JS.yur-old fonner dan
.nd ~ of edUC811on .nd polcy
lludla ...... ....:x::.c:~. Mn. Mdoa Fnocf.
man of the Untvcn~ty of ~ who has
.-wei • se-al - . - y llince
the .......- of Or. Monon s.atz in
N&lt;&gt;Yenber, 1979. S!*zberg will-.the raponslb8lty !Of administering the

opedflcally provide NUtA co-.. for
facultv members. Seconcf, I believe !hat
the debate in YnM!o raloes impoilant
questions of unlvenlly govemence which
deserve further -.s atlention. As the
tnt round In a political phllooophlcal
dialogue abouo univenlly gouemanc:e, I
find Yahlvo an Interesting conlrt&gt;utlon. I
hope thai the AAUP can take the lead in
· advancing the public dJscussion of the
proper role of faculty In university gov&lt;!J:
nance by using Its good offices to provide
lnslghlful policy analysls of the issues and
In supporting faculty and university
senates In more active participation in the
governance of colleges and unlvenlties."

A.ocloollon '• actlvltla, July 1.
In accepting the ~tment , Spitzberg said , "hlslorically, the MUP "has
been the PfOI*:IOr of the lnteresls of the

American prole.&gt;nat .nd through Ibis
role a loader In the maintenance of the in·
tegrlly and ucelk!ni:c of Amedcan higher
education,
"We will continue our strong and effective program relating to academic
freedOfn and tenwe, c:ollective· bargain·
lng, the economic status ol the proles·
sian , employment dlsalmlnatlon, finan dal eltlgency, due process, the tenured
professors exemption, and the relation·
.hip beoween academics and the In·
t..Uigence community. We will continue
this mission with distinction and help lead
American higher education through a
period of bmited resources with creativity
and Imagination ." ·
Spltzberg has been an AAUP member
since 1969
Born In Unle Rock, Arkansas , he
received the B.A. from Columbia, the B.
Philosophy from Oxford , and the J .D.
from Yale. He w~ admitted to the
CalifOfOia Bar In I 969. .
He has been an assodal professor of
education aQ_d policy studies here since
1974, and lji6S dean of the Colleges from
1974 to 1978. He Is edltOf and author of
several books, articles, and essays, In·
eluding Unluenllla and the lntemotionol
Distribution of Knowledge (Pr~r .
1980), and The Exchange of Exper1ile:
The CoUnlerpcort System and lhe New In ·
temotlonol Order (Westview Press,
1978)
The appointmenl of Spltzberg Is the
culmination of a five-month nationwide
•arch by an MUP &lt;&gt;Ommltlee chaired
~ Mary Gray of. American
MUP has a membership of approx·
lmataly 70.000. with local chapters at
mOfe !han 1,300 campu... and 44 Slate
conferences. Facullles at 55 colleges and
unlvonllla are repraented by the AAUP
In coll.dlw bargaining.
S!*zberg made a tlvH-&lt;point sta ·
ment on being appolnie4 :

1. 0. ................. . . . _

.-....c ......

..4 c:olledhe

•.fh! W7o. ..,. ... a decade of
............,_ tn the ...tlonshlp be·
-the~~.ndls
............. ~ !&gt;art of !hat tranolor-

rnallafl ......... the . , ............. of col-

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

tn~...-.aa

end~8deby8dewllha_,of

........ ck: . • ...... and a rullly"'
~. T"-ANJPhM~ tn

..........,_,""*h ..... aloo ......
w
......... - - ... the IICIMIIa
of the AAJJr ....
bo4tl A-an
. . . . ~ - • whole and the
A1tU&gt; tn pallleulor, there hM been an In·
........ .......... "--"the~ of

r..

In Is ap-

. _ . o f enlioltiipwtatlolo of~
to ,.-c J tll judgements of hod.
I ..._ wllh the mkloolly. Tbeowfore, I
bellfte IN! the MIJP mllll 11M bolh
1egloldve and judlclal-lo.-mpl
to change the law govanlng c:olooctlw
bargaining tn the prtv* - This II
~tly underwtly- -lotobv the Con·
!P""" to loglolallon which will

collective bargaining and the com·
mltments 10 academic freedom and pro·
cedures of collegial decision-making. Buo
this tension does noo enta il necessary
conflicl. The chaUenge to the AAUP wiU
be 10 use its disllnguohed r«&lt;fd as the
protectOf of academic freedom In the
UAited Stales to maintain and enhance Its
distinctive position In the processes of collective bargaining. The very distinction of
the AAUP depends upon Its commltmenl
to academic freedom through Its Com·
miltee A activities In conjunction with its
role as a representative of the pro·
fessorlale In collective bargaining and in
larger policy settings."

2 . On the recent c:ollectlwe bargaJn·
~CAM

lawol..tng Vahlva Unlvenl·

• • :.he recenl decision of the Supreme
Court in upholding the rlgho of Yeshiva
University not to bargain with Its faculty
union has mixed Implications. Ani , I

3 . On raource nealltlee ud tlaetwo decades:
"Much has been written about the
decline In student enrollments and
available resources In AmeriCan higher
education until the year 2000. The range
of dismal predictions Is from a 15% to a
25% · decline In the age group which
lraditionaUy parlldpates in higher educa·
lion . The broader economic problems
facing aU posl·lndustrial countries are also
relevant. The challenge which these en·
vironmental faciOfS offer us is to develop
crealtve reponses whtcll allow us to do
more with less. Such crealtvlty demands
the broadeso participation by aD of those
with Interests at stake and a flexibility on
all of our parts in thinking abouo realkx:a·
tion or time as weD as money in order to
deal with new constituencies and Ia serve
better ow lradltional audiences. Only a
cooperative approach to the 1980s and
1990s will allow American higher educa·
lion lo emerge with strength Into the
twenty-first century ."

CAEEN
11.000 I'IIEIIUIE &amp;aEBaNG

-

-

c.r..-Squft

IWI, C......
IWI ~..abby

L.oungo: ............ ear.. -~
from 9 a.m.·2 p.m.

- - .... - u . . s...--..__
Nodal
P£DIA1111CSIIEIEAIICH - ·

~,....llougles

Holodow.

~ .D.• Hahncmonn

Cologo and

Hotp~QI ; dlrcdor, Cystk: Abrolls Cuter ,
Ph~ . Boon! Room , ~·,~ - 12

UUAII FILII'

The""•·

....,.. •nd Deooih (19751. Confeoenco
Squ... 3, 5, 7, end 9 p.m Generol odm- - .

S2.10: wdenu S1.60.
A Woody AUrn moYie, with Diar'M; Keaton.
Woody ployo o ~Ru-n lrying to ovoOI IN

droit In lhe ~" w... ....., !llano ... ohe
pnNntious c:ou*' he'5 kwed from ..... nus
con&gt;o&lt;ly Is lui ol mocking....,.. •eferences
to every film r.c rnacM from a RUINn now!. from
'"Tho Brodlon Konmozov" to '"Tho T.,.lw
"-'&lt;~&lt;

Choirs."
UUAII OPEN JiiiK£ SERIES '

Squirt
- of rain ""··
Moonwill- be moved
- 8 . 10
30
p .m.
ln CaM'
the evmts
insdf'
to Haas Lounge. ~ -up lhed d be .vdabW
beginn;ng •• 7:30.
During the fnt f~ weeks, de M .C .1 d vary
For ttw rest of the summer.... Kathy Moriarty will be
lhe ~ c

Friday - 20
PEDIAJRIC GRAND ROUNDS•
., C\IOd&lt;-_ Douglos Hohdaw .
Hoh...,...., Medk:al Colegc ond Hoop;tol.

~D ..

- . Cystit:-Con•.~- Kinch

Audlodu.m. Chadren 'a t-lolipbl. 11 a .m.

Deadline near$ for
tuition-free registration
The deadhne Is rapidly approaching for
facuky and professional staft to apply for
tuition-free cowoo work for the second
OOI5Ion of summer ochool through the
f&gt;lperimental Employee Couroo Reglstra·
lion Program.
The current State-UUP contracl provides ohe opportunity lor these
.employees to enroll in tuition-free credit
bearing cow... on a space available
basis.
Those Interested mutt COfnplete and
return • tultlon ·fr~e application to the

Human Raourca . Development and
Tnolnlng Offtc:e at the John Beane
Center, then a&lt;&gt; to the rpedflc academic
unll on June 25 or June 26 (only) to be
~.

II II now the rapooulblllty of the stu·
dent to talut the ~ form to the
depermMnt, and lOr ~ ~ to
•xc.ptiOnal regiller the studen_t.
Employea who are 111&gt;1 continuing
studenta. INtis, !hoM who did not talut
coune work lui semat.er, must flnl complete liPPiOI)ilate IOfml In Admilllons
and Records to get fonnaly admftted to

the Un!venlty.
Any Individual currently registered for
his "' her d-.1 course, mutt drop H at
A&amp;R before applying fOf the tullton-free
registration. SinCe -enrollees are not
counted as FTE's, oeglstrallon Is con·
tlngent upon class space.
FOf the employee who wanta to ensure
he "' she gets space in a class. a tultlcin
waiver option

II available. .....__,

und~r this separate program, the
employee generally asames a portion of
the tuition coot.
The expeo1mental, tulllon.fr• progrem
Is, confined to ~-bat.! inltrucllon
.nd docs not Include individual PlliUis
such • Independent -lludy, tuloflals,

.
thesis, ck.
FOJ the third.....,., of sumnw school,
~wllforce ........ OIIudanta
on July 16 .nd 17; for fal ·
September 15 and 16 • .nd for eprlng

semester (1981), · January 26-27 .
Quattons .._-ding the · program
ohould be forwarded to Roealyn Wlldnoon, John Beane Center, 636-Z754.

Nixon-Ford cabin et member
will ·~ at Executive Forum
Roy L. Ash , chairman and chid execultvt olllc:er of AM lntanattonal,
be
the guest speaMr at a U/B Execu
Forum Brealclut, Wednesday, June 25.
The ~ at Buffalo Foundation
.nd the School of Management - joint·
ly ~the event, which wll begin
at 8 :30 • m-. at The Buffalo Club,
Delawar Ave~ue
Ash , co-4ounder
dlreciOf of
Litton Ind......... wu a cabinet rnernbt&lt;
in the
on and FOfd Ad-.Hons
and serwd u an
10 the Pr ·
dent and dir«tOf of the Olflcc of
Management and 8udgei frOfn 1973 to

and,_

......,.nl

1975. He was also a member of the
Council on lntarnattonal Economic
Policy, the Council 00) Wage and !"rice
Stability and !he C&lt;lOI ol l..Mng Council.
He wes an execultvt .,.,...,.,_ member
of the Economic Polley Boerd .nd the

Energy Raourca Council.
As head ol AM lnlemallonal he

.,..,.,._ the world's loading suppl;er of

ol!Ml dupliCators, ~ jp'aphics
equipment, mechanclal addressing
machines and claoa Imprinters. An
M B A gradi.Wita of Harvard, he received
· rhelr bUSineu achievement award In

1968

UUAII fWlil '
........... Doodo 119751 . Conltnnoo n...~•.
Squirt. 3, 5, 7 ond 9 p .m. Generol $2.10: $1.60.

BFA IIECITAL •
-~~-, .... .,.,.. Boln!RedooiiWI.
8 p.m. Is &amp;.tend lhe public loin- to
- . ! . Mt. I I - Is • . . - o1 Do.td Kuehn
~

IIUFFALO P0E111Y IIEAIJING•
- " " ' _....., o n d -

o.-.

~~c-.tlle.--IAYO.

8:30 p.m. -

Is S2

.o ... -

· Co-

_...bv,.._...ond~- -

No. ~ ... -

..

,......uo.

-..,._ ·1----

··· ond ... Eoooh's Douoil*n
~
. 11"-td!---lcwT.,.

-

........ end .... _

.. _ " " '

- ---KidLShell . . . . . . . . _
_

_ . _ .. _ _ _ _ Hor

.,_........-. . . . Tail.•wol•-.1
and
-oiOI!oModl's-~

..
. ._
-.
- - ' ..... lwoboiC.--·
_
__,lcw
... 21t&lt;lcwMs.o..n·.

......-.

Satanlay - _21

_.. ______

~IIUfti'ALO_,_._.
A,__Feon..,_ _ _

-..a.-. .... ____ ..

Dwono.-~c-. 3p.• . and- to ..........

-.

.......,
.....,.., _.,._....,.__

--and-tolo!Oiendll•

.... She .................. - o l , _ , ...
duaog I A.. . . . . . el _ , . . -

·,

o...ao- 1197Z. n.. .1M 1Z ~­

(19741. ond ...... ---... """ .... ~
Poft I. Blod Sponow " ' - (19791 A ........... ol
... OI!IE 1967, and o1 ~ . CAPS . rEA

v• .....,.w-·. -c.n..
_.,.._
and

Schqol ol Dromo ................ lion tho

.,NowY..t.Ciiy
UUAIIFIUI'

~ _ , tswoden .
195Z 170 MFAC, ~- 5, 1 end 9 p m
Gon.ol..._ S210. S160

�19, 1980

_.. ____

__

Thoy_.IOIIIorollfy ................ livlng ..

Tho_,of .. -.-~­

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

.. -who--. .. -- ...

----

- b y. _ . . . . . 2 0 _ , _ . . .. .
gsinedbom _ _ _ ... _

...-!
"""· - ........
-.
• - ·
oho!&gt;JIII,
who""'-

Hiny, • -

-

......s . . . - . ~ .. hoped tllolonooolodolo
• - f a r -who lind I _ .. ....

.... ...-- ...............

oudl•._. ............ -~.

'-thoyCOflbo--IO~feclnelhls

-·

A I - 10 t!w _ _ . d

tAJAa FILII'

~ - 1 (Swodon,
1952!. 170 NFAC, · 5, 7 end 9 p.m
Gono&lt;al- $2 10; suo

be can·

lndMduols w;lling to holp should coli 0.. llelt&gt;aro
B.nkor. ~ [)opoft.....,t , 4230 Ridge Lee
Rood . 831-3071
The study hes boon ..,.,..,....1 by t!w Humen

s..t&gt;joctsR_Comm_.
SCHOlAIISHIPS FOR FIIIST·YEAII
STUDEJnS
Applications to par1tdpll~ in !he program of
Scholonhips 1oo Fnt-Y•• Studonts a1 " - ' " I
finendol Need'"' tho 1980-81 ecedemlc yoor haw
been mailed 10 the Coord~n~~tor of Stuc:ten1 Flnandal
Aid ln otdfT so r~ fundi from thii
aDoc.tton. ttw applicatJOn mutt be com~ .
signed. and rdunwd 1o the ()qwtrMrtt of Heekh
arid Human ~ . Bureau of Htelth Ptoln51001. Hyattsvik. Maryland 20782 no Later tNn July I. 19!Kl

Moaday - 2 3
SDUIWI'

ThoPmy,
- 1ormc&lt;tv
"' Sdoololto
• prof...,.-of-., et U/0.B
""",._.,-of
_
_3l6 MFAC. - t!w .-...
llem.·
O. Pmyd
.,.,... t!w locsure- ...... _., eud......
1.,owo1

Yl!'.,·,

-

'"'.,..... _ _ .. - - publtoh&lt;d by
t!w Gnd.- Hlolooy

......... de. ~by

I IIOOHDU5TIIY SDIIMAR'

SUMMBI ST\JOEHTS; NEED HELI'7
Speaol SoMcos _ . Is oll&lt;ring h
tutoriel
eMiseance in al areas ol Melh . Sotnce. English and
.w,.ct. to Nilwd
eoa.,. ttud&lt;nts
Dmp., ot 311 T.....-.d Hoi. N~ so-... C.m
pvs. betwo&lt;n 5 p m . and 8 p.m .. -.doy through

R..--ol~io"'-vc.kw•

"'Ret " - - 0. ......,., Sponco, l!4ci\nll&lt;
Lollooooy ...
Reooird&gt;.· I.JniY«niiy al
l08Siwnnon 12 noon Ccl·
loo 01 11.30 In lOlA Cory

eo.-

w -r-

fll...,.•

&gt;

Friday

&amp;hlbiU

Tuesday- 24
IUCIIOIIKll.OGY &amp;P£aAL SDIINAII'
..,.._ T--.,-._- Thiii"Sday-26
...... ~ .. A-... F.-Col
~

Rlchord B - . DV.M., PliO ..

~·~-- ­
• Squn. 1
.......... - . t ! w - . .
"'"" _ , . - -- M5 Cory 1.30 p.m
FIII'E CONCEIIT'

~ '- RadL-,.,..

bof.oldln . .

-

· - Hulth -..... Lb-ery, -

LACIIAWANNA Cl.LTUIAL SUMJUII FEST

- ' " " " ~ Lb-ery; ocrlpt by Nery
E1on Ho;m foyo&lt; al t!w llnoy Tlvouil1 July IS.
" - houn: ...ery houn

.......... ----·
... SUDE PIIESEifTATION'

- • .-du*. ...........
........ In t!w_ [)opoft·.
-aiHWwEducelloo
_ , '111 ~ 10 Ooelh: M. Onlor.-...

- - - ....,-from lim,- ..

.. -

~- -"""""""'"·
rNM hit ... n.M·
tnglul-int!wlu.olhlo-..._ . , . --Tho.....,..._.,_.,- ..

- """""'

_ . . . . . . . .., ....-npll to

- · Squh . Spcw-.d by UlWI.

HELPWAHTED
- - lludenbln Moth fc.kub. T~ ond 5don&lt;o !Chc-.. Blolowt
larSpecloiSevkeT-~ - m l 5
hcM.np.r ...... howl ~p .m unli 8p m
App1v 10 5pec1o1 5evke OIJ;oo, J II T.....-.d
till. ()OntiCI p.non. Ma. InN N. Torra. L'OOf ·

...... ""

HEAI.nt SCIEJIICE5 IJBRAIIY

-

n......
. , . - _- ... _· . . , _ l a r

IWdy 10&gt;30 ..... -

IU~-·

llolor'-----~­
' - - c - . o - tW. 1o .....

spo....dby . . o.--oiHW-Eclooce·

- - - - - l l t t l d r t W . 2 p....

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- . . - . . . - .. NOW. end
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.. - - - ..,_ ... bo ,..,..._._ e n d -. ... -lood. e n d • n.. adrnilllloa. June 2,8..29. 11 a..m.- 11 P"' ·
Frkndihtp Houtc Grounds. R.... Roed .

o..-....-.....-.cftolo.-

LIFE~

......... - _,_
.,
-....."""-

-=u.~·....... _..._ ...... 1-.Tho---

_....._
_..

-(19'751 . ~-- S..OW - 3:311.

6 ... 1.30 p.... Gonorol -

$2. 10!

~

Oa The Air

..... l,

-~
1
. . . . Artl: Aalla .......... wt
. -t!w"J&gt;todoo81nt"olmodom ....
Counoo Cololo UOI. 8 p m.

ai ................. ........................ W.ol-.....~-......,_

•

E"'loM -.-.ollllio _ . . . , - " "

..,_

lry .. -

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In t!w Hooplo!," ~ 19301

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Kimbol

1.0CXW000 EXHIIIIT

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................... lnelodog ... .....,. . . . .
lundlonof"-ln~. ~c..-.. 363

Weclaeeday - 25

.. w-. rc- voot.. • photogrophlc

r ...... Tlvouil1 June

T

.,

~c.!'~:':::~--

�.Jo.a19,1980

U/B ~ ' - laund__,.
hoy to .,..... theory-that muoc:le ....t
. - i y cleclne
with -'-ldnl ... ....t 11181 w.m-up
. . - may do runners ....,.. ......,
than good .
The surprising rnulb ol 11.- sludles
were pr~ted at the annual c:onflnnce
of the Arne-lean Aooodallon ol Physical
Therapy In Phoenix, Ariz.one, this week.

)c*tl ......... do -

Mucle~

In their muocle strength Investigation,
Drs. Elizabeth !'roles and Christopher
Borl&lt; tested muscles In the dominant
knees of 80 runners who partldpated In
the 1979 Skylon International Marathon .
The runners, whose ages ranged from 18
to 58, had run about 52 miles_per week
for en average ol lour years. They were
divided lor study purposes Into two
groups: those over end those under 40.
Using the CYBEX U, an isoklnetic:
dynamometer which measures muscle
strength, the researchers had each runner
kk:k .. hard .. he could against the
machine and puU back at two machine
speeds, 30 degrees per second end 180
degrees per second. As each runner
kk:ked three limes and pulled back at the
$low and very last speeds, the force produced was registered on a print-out and
analyzed.
~ previous studles ol knee
muocle Slr4ngth using the CYBEX had
showed a decline In strength as age in·
creased but noted these studla were con·
dueled on sedentary indMduals.

Peradotto in -7th year
as marathon runner .

--Sail

a, Mille.-.

Why would enyona want to become a
decticMod rnoralhon runne- who liNg·
.,_ onw.d to the point ol o!xhaus·
lion-and oomellmeo beyond?
Or. John J. Peracloao, clean ol the
DMolooi ol ~- Education,
1111/1 most ~ 1\lnMn ........ the
~ 26.2·"*
to "chalenge
~-· He llhauld know. He) In his
..-.lh yea- as a moralhon runne-. ·
In 1.- own &lt;Me, the 47-yea--old
PendoUo NC8Ied In Ill!. interview, he
......_ up one mcxnirlll.,.nd decided he
"ttored, ~and In need ol a
challonge .• Thill 1974.
Hlaopllons ~to run In
a~ ......... 2,000-iTIGe-long,
m~~ ~n T~ wm
Malrw to Geoop., or p«&lt;ee aaooo the
Unilad SUia on· a l*a.
With due c:oodldeilllloo• for hio dutla at
U/B, Peadolto decided to become a
rnoralhon " ' " -. But hio other options
mnllln.

con-

..r-oelodod

all=

Now, he usueDv runs 10 miles every
day , n1ln or shine-or onow. His
12-week regimen before a marathon caDs
for
dailv runs ol six and 10
mila,
by a :!0-mtle run. He paces
hlmsd at 6 mlnuta, 52 seconds per
mile, the n1te needed lor a 3-hour
marathon performance.
In man~thon running , Peradotto explained, only the "better runne-s ," such
-as Rodgcn, arc competing wtth each
OCher to win .
"The rat ol us are competing with the
clod&lt;, 11y1ng to Improve ~ own

Dllfenace - daat ......,._
In the U/ B study, the flexor and extensor muscle strength In the knees was
nearly Identical In both the younger and
older runners at the speed ol 30 degrees
per wcond . Although there was a slight
lncrusc In Oe&gt;tor strength among the
younger runners at the very last speed,
Protas said the dllfcrence Ia not that lm·

previous ~ time marl&lt;s.•
Pemdoeto 1 ultimata IUIO&lt;I lor com·

=~· Ia to test his body to
lt'a ep

lis "outer

to,.,.

~~ ol both flexor and extensor

Most people, he said, .... Inclined to
occ:ept soclely's diclatas on ph)lllc:al
capacity and effort lor their particular
stage In life but marathon runners
"believe that their phvsical bmlts should
be defined by therrisclvcs.

" It's up to you to beat yoursd.
"Thcnn's no better way ol ftndlng out
what your body Is a about," he added .
The marathon runne- must establish a
steady pace at the outat, Peracloao ad·
vised, but •you can'tlnvat too much ef.
for1 In the beginning .•
AfWr about 15 to 20 miles ol running
comes the "wall .•
."This Is when you fight olf thoughts ol
okspW ."
In the Booton Marathon , the ~
tat coma _., about the 20-mlle mark
when mcny "hi the wall" as they slrlvc to
negotlale "He.tbnak H .•
Peradotto Ia hulthl.r and t-.appicr now
INn before he~ moralhon running.
He's nol bored any more, either.
" I used to be a chronic lnsomnlec ," he
conftded . " Now I sleep like a b.bv. I eat
an~ I want and M doan't affect my

~~lioned beginners to aiiOid over....uon and adVIMcl that they check with
a doctor before - . g.
"But almost anybody can do tt," he In ·
silted.

Club officers
s.r. ..._ Cicarelli, - · · pro' -, School ol Health Rclatad PTolesllons, has been elected praldent ol the
F.ady Club for 1980-81.
Shirley Ahrens, . - n t director,
S..mmcr Se.lons,
• vice
praldent/prnidcnt-elec:l, Robert Hunt,
dhcto&lt;, EnWomncnt.al Health and Safety • ....e~ary; and Diane Parker,
librarian and head ol the
Reference Department , Lockwood
Llnry,
b e -.
The lour olflcers .... rncmbm ol the
Club's
ol dcer:son for 1980 I
A1lo oervtng on the bo.-d ar ; Robert
Brown,
; O..W Fogel, Ovtl
fnuln-lng, Gordon Harrto. Chemiolry;
Anartw ~ Grad..... School, Anthony l..arc.-, Student Affairs. and
c-...-..tne Yer..n, Sociology.

"'*''

1

muscles at the olow speed Ia a better tat
ol absolute strength than at the laster
speeds,.. she explained.
Although only knee muscle strength
was measured In the U/ B study, Protas
said b Ia po55lble muocle strength
elsewhere In the body does not decline
with as long as proper, routine exer·
else Is performed.
"More raearch must be done to deter·
mlne the bat lypcl ol uerdsc for
avoiding the decline In muscle strength
uoociated with aging," she said. "We
believe our otudy SU$I9UlJ this aspect ol
~ may be slowed with proper ncr·
dsc .

y......__....

In a surwy ol the training methods
180 man~thon runners,
Drs. Borl&lt; and Procas found that runne-s

em~ by

who routinely " warm up· wtth legstretching eurdoes may actually Increase
their risk ol running Injuries.
The warm'-up ucrclscs, which usually
emphasize stretching, arc highly touted In
popular jogging and running literatUre as
a way to aYert Injury . Thef1l has,
howevcr, been no ldenllfic basis to sup·
port this theory, only anaodotalevlcl&lt;once .
The two U/ B r~ found that
hall ol 180 Nnners In their study oulfercd
Injuries during the three montht· prior to
runn ing the Skylon International
Marathon . Of the 180, about one-third
did not routinely do "warm-ups.• HaW ol
thoac who dlcl the excrdscs suffered
running-related Injuries, compared to only 28 per cant ol those who did nol do the
cxerdles.
Borl&lt; and !'roles also reported they
found Injuries·related to running leu fre·
qucntly In thoac over rather than under
- 35. There were also fewer Injuria ij
the runne-'s regular course Included at
least 25 per ocnt hilly terrain . Type olsur·
face . however. did nol appear to aflact
riok ollnjurles.
The runncn were asbd to dncrh the
type ol lerf1lln and IU:ffacc on which they
normaly ran; dlotance ol theW normal·
runrW~g ; tpeed, type and frequen•
cy ol ...- a n d when they ..... per·
formed Running....tated Injuries wer
reported only If they had occurnad within

the three-month period prior to the
Skylon Marathon. Runners' general
· health, previous medical history, age.
weight and height were Uo aamlned.
Not suprislngly, the ..-rchers found
knee lnurles the most fr~ucntly reported
(34 .5 per cent), followed by loot and shin
Injuries (14 per cent apiece) . Ankle a nd
AchUies tendon Injuries accounted lor 12
per cent, followed by back Injuries at
nine.

lJtde acletdlftc: nldeDc:e
"Our study very clearly shows more
research is necessary before defln~e ad·
vice on whether to perform or not per·
form the warm-up stretching exercises
can be advocated lor runners," said
Borl&lt;.
He noted there is tittle purely sdentilic
evidence on tralnlng procedures; most
sdentillc studies conducted to date have
focused only on Injured runners.
"In our study, there was a comparisOn
group of runners who had not been in·
jured during the intensive three-month
training period before a major marathon
run ," he pointed out.
Only when other studles are conducted
will ~ be possible to formulate a truly
scientillc training program lor runners
which will minimize virtually aD types of
running Injuries, the U/B researchers
said .
Dr. PrOias is assistant professor of
physical theniP)!I- Dr. Bork, a research
associate In the Department of Social and
Preventive Medicine, will become chair·
man of the Department of !'h)!Sical
Therapy at Booton Bouvc College·
Northea51ern University on July 1.

Big leagues
sign 3 BuDs
Three members of the 1980 U/ B varsity baMball tam were selected In the
free agent major league draft June 3-6

and have oigned contracts to play professional ball, Head Coach Blll Monkarsh

has •nnounced.
Pitcher Joe Hesketh (Blasdell-Frontier)
was dnllted In the second round by the
Montreal Expos (the 50th player selected
overall) ; 1-'dcher·lint baseman Dennis
Howard (West Seneca West), by the
Toronto Blue Jays In the filth round , and
second baseman Pat Raimondo (Buffalo·
Bishop Fallon) , by the Los Angeles
Dodgers In the sixth round.
Hesketh, who was 6-1 wtth a 2.20
earned run average ihis year and 13-6,
1. acrooo three years, will start his professional car- at West Palm Beach,
Fla. , In the Clast A Florida State Lague.
Howard reports to the Expos' ~ at
Utica, N.Y. ; Ratrnonclo to the Doclglr
camp at Calgary, Al&gt;erta, after which
they will be asoigned to teams In their
parent clubs' minor league "1/ssems.
Howard posted a 7·1 mound record
wtth a 2.4S ERA during 1980 and hit
.371 as the Bulls' designated hMtcr.
Raimondo batted .394 this spring, .385
career, and set seven aU-lime U/B
records .
Hesketh was named ECAC New York·
New Jersey Oistr1ct Co-Player ol the y""'
this week, and was jOined on the AU·
District Team by Raimondo and junior
leltftclder Jc&gt;e Ward (ComwaQJ . Ward, a
junior, hH .407 In 1980 and has a career
average of .387 .
The BuBo were 32-13 In 1980 and
finished second In the ECAC Oistr1ct
Tournament.

n

Award winners
The RehabilitatiOn Auoclation ol
'Vatcrn New York wiD re.oogn!M two
U/ B staff members lor their efforts In
r habilitation In the community ; par·
tlcularly In the area ol providing services
to consumers wtth handicaps.
The awards wiD be preMnted to
Madeline M. Wata-s, program coordinator. Offtca.ol Continuing Education ,
School ol Health Related PTolcssions.
and Edward Steinfeld, architact and
asaoclatc prolessor ol architecture, at the
uoodatlon's annual booird Installation.
June 'l7 .

�19, 1980

7:

.

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ond-

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01'11111

..

Ill

3.48

3.46

3.44

3.59

3.44

3.43

3.45

3.44

3.38

3.42

3 .28

3.44

3 31

3.28

338

325

. 3.03

3.02

3.0S

3.02

2.96

3 .0S

2.86

2.89

2.95

3.46

1.38

. 2.40

2.78

2 .76.,.-

2.85

'Quollvcl-

2.78

2.64

2.97

2.79

'A--.1

2.73

2.87

2.62

2.57

-~"'""'""'"

269

2.n

2.80

2.57

2 75

1&lt;.- otudontW -.ding SUNY/B

2.69

2.71

2.65

2.68

A,..-=-r-clc:ompw

2.66

260

2.70

270

2.59

2.72

2.41

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2.52

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261

253

'Culonl and/or_..- .. w-.. New Yori&lt;
~clhil#lochoal--

•Avoloblllv cl clorm tpoCO
'Nao-IOhomc

240

1.74

255

241

'Gortlriond/bc¥riond- SUNY18. or 11.,... 54f'Y/ B ·

229

2 49

202

211

o«tw countrits

221

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/

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199

2.52

2 IS

'I&lt;.- pononW .. SUNY/ B,......,

187

211

1.52

168

'!&lt;.- -~~~ .. SUNYIB * ' -

1.70

192

I 43

160

()rppodunily to mwt lb.M:Ienll from

''--90-"' um-.ov

What's offered and what it costs
are .U/8'~ major lures, survey finds
Why do lludcnll come to U/B?
llocad«mmc: olferlngll, repuiAllon and af.
fordoblo COlli _.e !he moo1 positive at·
lriiCIIons lor frahmcn cnlo~B&gt;g here In
1979. a . _ report from the Student
Tnting and ~ Office of !he Dlvi·
lion of Sludent Alfaln rcvuls.

-a

Bmg daM lo home
-v stgnlfl·
cant fador for frahmcn from !he 8th
JuclltW Dlo1ricl of W - New Vorl&lt;.
Ill 5u,_ Orler-. lat year, 2217
incoming !rahmen mponded to !he

"Colege Slucknt Pm&gt;ep~~ons Survey"
which lnduded a ~ on !he In·
flucnce each of 22 fac:ton heel In !heir
c:hok:e of U/B. Students could rank a lac·
101''1 Influence &amp;om ,_tlvc tllrouih
slightlv, moder-.ly, and -v poolllve .
1933 o~~M~ento who _ . e d and
"""""' placa of re8denoe 11 New Vorl&lt;
could be~ - 47 peri)Cflt were from
.... 8th Judldol Dlolr1c&lt;t.-31 per&lt;:er&gt;t frorr&gt;
the New Yadl Clly melrOpOibn aru,
and 22 percent &amp;om other areu of the

or

-

metro N.Y. &amp;ahmcn were also the mosl
posltlwly Influenced by !he perceived
quality of other U/B students. Local
eruollees were less posltlwly Influenced
by this In their decisions, said Wyant.
')&gt;erilaps because of being privy to problems related to SUNY!8 students and
to c:onczrns expressed tn .!he SUNY/ B
and Buffalo communities."
Cultural and sports events In WNY
wve moot Important for 8th Judic:lal
Oistrlcl enrollees and Of least conclem for
metropolitAn New Vorl&lt; students who
have a lol to choose &amp;orr&gt; in their own
bedcyard. Wyant wondered If en·
courage studen anough. once her•. to
Wee advantage of conorrtl, theater. arts
and sports evenll on and off campus.

person on the faculty or In the admlnlslra·
lion ."
Fac:odty aDd ........,._.ton cao help
In eny event. continued Wyent. hun·
dreds of SUNY /B stud•nts have
reported (In other studies) that !heir U/B
experiance contributed to !heir tnteDec·
tual , social and professional developm&lt;!nt. " U faculty and edmlnistraton com·
municate that to potential (end present)
students end emphasize olher advan·
tages of SUNY/ B, perhaps they can be e
more positive lnfiuence in stud.nts' ded·
lions to attend . or to remain."
Looking more clotely at each of the
three groupo of students. Wyent found
ll)at three-fourths o( lreshm&lt;!n &amp;om the
8th dudlc:lal District indicated that the
recommendation o( !heir high oc,hool
guidance c:ountelor wu e factor In
decldlng to come here . But the a-age
Influence of that recommendation was
only betwHn slightly and moderat ly
positive . "If oomc students- did , indeed.
decide to come to U/B In opfte o(
lu!&lt;.warm. or even negative. recommcn·
datlons , how many students responded
by 1101 wledlng U/ B?." she asked.
" Consld.,allon should be given to further
efforts to acquaint high school guidance
counselors In the &amp;h JD with the
strengths of the Unlvcnity: Wyant
recommended . Improved relations with
counselors might also ·be In ord., In
metropolitan N Y and other regions. she
oald

Heads MDA
~ S M®mlyS~ . pro(
o(
poychlatJy. was efechd pre$1dent of
nation Wide Musculor Dystrophy Jl\ssoc·
lation (MDA) at
orgonlzahon s annual

maetng

""""""v chawman of the U/ B ~
ment of PoychlatJy.
has been act•
'" the MDA for more than 25 vun and
at 01\J poiT\t the ch¥Jtwon ol ~
tJfte ad..oory commi

Jazz worbllop
opena Moaclay

o..--

The
of NuoiC ... offer •
Juz ~ Summer Wadcohop lo be
concltldad by La a.h, U/8 Juz
~~- The.,.,.... .... from 6:30 lo 8:30 .... Monday and

WedModav _... ....... June 23
Augulllln

lo

142A~. IIwlllaaoo

a...

on !he music of Eanglon,
Thad
Jones, Woody Herman, Owtle Parker
and Oilvu Neloon and wll COII .... IIIe..
ellentlon on otyle and lmplovloallon.
· Two aedlls wll be ........... on the
uncler!Pduale or ..-d..... level. High
school students may reglller wtlhout
aedlt through Credit-Free Progr.ms. AI
interesled muslcions who perform on In·
slruments found. In !he llandard big band .
setting .-e tnvtt.d to parllclpllle.
For further Information. phone La
Bash at 831-3411 .

....

• Credit-Free

...__,,
,
slonals.

"For every doDar the program now
spends on faculty and tnmucllon , H musl

generate about $3.70 for lr1nge benefits.
overhead and adminlslralive costs."' he
reported .
Currently. CredH -Free employs 3 ·~
proleulonal and 3 'II clerical ta.l! FTE. H
the program folds. Bladthut$1 pn&gt;mloed
his olflcc would help "'eddrecl .... talents
of !he staff." He ernJ&gt;!tas!ze&lt;!. his office Is
"unusually sensllivt to the situation lac·
lng present llaff members .

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

•Greenland
tha actual age of a given lea layer.

Because of her work. she may -abe the
first person ever to·- evidence" (which
the two-mile deep Dye-3 core Is expected
to provide) of a glacial period prior to the
most recent Ice age.
Drtlbng through !he Ice sheet Will reach
e depth of,l200 meters this summer and
will be c:ompleted to the fuD 21()().-.
depth In !he summer ofl981.
Since surface temperatures at Dye-3
""ar the melting point In sum~Mr, the
U/B raean:hets have to dig trenct.s
under the sudace to eliminate the danger
of the Ice melting when core samples . .
studied on site .

lOaboft

Yet, !he surface weather can alec&gt; tum
cold, blustery. and downright stonny (as
low as 10' F with 60-knot winds). posing
an addHtonal advcnturc for those
ITI&lt;!rl\bers of the U/B grOUP who'l be
staying outdoors In temporary sheltcn.
OtherS wiU be warmer. qualiered In the
massive ""'""~ory radar ladttty building
at the sit . AU are being llowft In and out
o( f)ye -3 vlo an air base at ~om

Fjord.

.

The group will be -bad&lt; in Buffalo by
mld-Augusl.
·
U/ B's Ice core analysis program began
in 1975. It is now part of a n ln..,·fac:ulty
umbrello organization . the Center for
Cold Regions Engineerinq Science and
Technology. Involving both Natural
Sciences and Engjne "ng and ad ·
mtn ered by the Couo ~ on lnlerna·
bona! Studies. Present ' nphasls IS on
eslabltshtng a(ld characteT ~·ng the nature
of Ice during Ill developn •nt In verious
locations on the Grftfllan Ice Sheet . the
R011 Ice SheW and other 'ntarctic: loca·
lions
An mwmationaDvu
~ ized glacial
expert . Geology Cha .sn lan ay
wrv as ldence coord1n .r foraUo(the •
Na tio nal Seience
undallon 's
Greenland Ice Sheet Pro
U/ B is respond&gt;le
ca
ngandd
t
ed tn Antarctica. Gr n
pol4r and su~J-J&gt;OIII\ r
gram ~edbyt

-

�•

June 19, 1980

_____ .... ___ ..
10 from U/ 8 .in-Green and this summer
U/8 sludcnt John Scolleld WllS calling
lrom Gr nland : troubles had dewloped
wtth the drGng epparatus lolllh. which
scienlilll hope to cut through the
centurln· thlck Ice shut In th"
toutheasl«m ~ ol that massive
gledelllland.
Sco6eld was reporting to Or. Michael
Henon, a U/ 8 posldoctoral raean:her
who, with feDow oclmtist Susan Herron,
his wile , WllS to leave Ridge Lea's Ice
Core Lab few GrHnland the next day
(June 10) . . ·
The caD carne frcwn Dye· 3, a ialge
over·the·pole radar traddng site Inland
lrom Sondratrom Fjord, where 10 U/ 8
odenlilll and studen are "' wll be par·
.lidpAdng In 6elcl WO&lt;k this summa. 1'!&gt;e
WO&lt;k II Mnked to the Greenland Ice Sheet
Project , an lntemallonel ellon aimed at
unc:ovaing oecrets ol the earth's climate
and Mmoopheric chemistry locked In
l.yen ol Ice and tnOW lakl down over

.........

The UIB group is joining .-archers
lrom Denrnllril and Swtb&gt;erland at the
6elcl
. A team .lrom the Unlllersity ol
Nebrub II In charge ol iovlsticafsupport
and the New Yoo\ State Air National
Guard provides plana and pilots lor
tranopon1ng people and materiel.

_c:en

tl ...

The opec:lllc object of WO&lt;k at 0ye·3
this summa and next is to drill and study
. ......- !rom an Ice CO&lt;e which Is
~ ciMper (and. thus, older)
ct... • 140().meter CO&lt; clr1led throullh
.... GtMnland'lce "-at Camp Century
1n 1966 TN1 ccwe and enoet- ~
CON $lipid Chrougb the Rooo Ice Shelf In
,....... In ·19611 have pnMded the
- ' d't odenlllla ..... clala Pill bKk
100,000 ~ and COWling the earth'a
moel ,_,t Ice oge. The two CO&lt; are
the ..,...... of moe1 ol our paleOthmnal
............... . 8od1 •• lnduded In the
-.n.y ol 7.000 ........ of Ice CO&lt; ed·
~ by UIB's Oepoo1rnent of
G.ak&gt;glcal Sc.kncn.

The 0.,.·3 aample ohouJd be 2100
In
and
proYide
and
Information dwougto
two
Ice
and
perioda.
Or Ill ...... thel't .... hope
The UIB ...,.,. hat had ....,.q. equip·
rr-.1 lrom Rldgr Lea and """"'
to~....

....~

C· l301 0... • .,.., till up labor- on
alice ownpln rather

.... tPOI lor

local-•-

-.. u

thlpped
(on campua

-- -

10
.. .so--n
.. ~

,.l.;. tWrono. ...,_ U/8 Geplogltal

Co

du.l

-~ ·

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

....

· ,....,.
- ~
lleld leaden
for
wort..

hit Ph D "-

spring, having come to Buffalo in
January, 1975, towcwk with l...angwayon
the Ice CO&lt;e program which the depart·
rnent head brought here that year. Mike
had been associated previously both with
L.angway and wtth Ice research at the Ar·
my's Cold Regions Research and
Engineering L.aboratcwy at Hanover,
N.H.
A greduate ol the Unlvenily of
Callfomle-San Diogo, he nearly _,t to
Saipps Institute few a Ph.D . In chemical
oceanography but elected U/ 8 inslead .
He hat been In the field In Greenland on
live ew six oocasions, and has aloo visited
the Rosa Ice Shd Projed In Antardica.

Ant to perk:lpootc
Susan, who did her ~uate
WO&lt;k at Tufts, also came here in 1975,
receiving a master's1n 1977. Her doc·
tO&lt;al WO&lt;k - now compided except for
her dissertation - dealt wllh aarnples
lrom the deepest pO&lt;IIons ol the Camp
Century Ice ccwe. In the aumma ol 19n,
she was the 6rsl ...,...... ever to par·
tlclpate In the Greenland field WO&lt;k . This
summer, she Is plei&gt;Sed to note, the U/ 8
group Includes three women .
The other two are Roberta T cwnpkina,
also a gieduate student In geology here,
who is alreedy at 0ye·3, and Sherr!
Rumer , a Geology Department staH
member who is a gred student In
oceanography at the Univerlily of
o..laware. Ma. Ruma wll m8ke the trip
later this summer.
Or. Hltothl ShoJ, a research
profnoor In geology; Ron RIWICZYI&lt;. a
gnod student In chemistry; Dave
Saundera, a lab technician from
engineering, and Nten·Tau Taeng, a gred
student In englnMrlng; l..angway and

-.nt

Sco6eld round out the ]().member UIB
expedltion .
The driDtng project Is being dlrected by
a team from the University of
Copenhagen which designed and built
the apparatus being used to extract the
Ice CO&lt;e .
U/ 8 's parllcip6tion is three·phated.
Or. Shoji Is Interested in the mechanical
properties ol the Ice aarnpla; Mike, In
their chemistry, and Susan , In their
physical properties. Sh6jl mede the trip to
the site In early June, (oDowing the first
shipments ol equipment which _,t out
on May 27 . Since then, he'a been setting
up mac:hlnery for his me~&gt;SUrerr&gt;enls , In
advance ot the actual dr1lling operations,
which , .. young Scolleld reported last
week, ran Into clifflcultles In getting
underway.

Helens' eruptions are likely to change
North American weather patterns this
year and next. Alreedy, non·sclenllsts are
pointing to an unusually cool June
throughout the Northeast llS "eyJ4ence"
of a cooling effect bro&lt;.tght on by the
eruptions.
Mike Herron notea that there are no
accurate recorda on weather ell..cts much
beyond the eruption ol Krakatoa In 1883.
Prior to that we have only anecdotal in·
formation . The eruption of Tam bora In
1815 WllS followed by "the year without a
aummer," and fragmenlarJI Information
exists on eruptions In Iceland In 1783.
From before 1500, only scattered
evidence ol uolcanlc activity such llS that
dealing with the destruction ol Pompeii
by MI. Vesuvius survives.
The major period for which we have
accurate weather recordt olfers little In·
sight because H was an era of volcanic
Vo&amp;c:..olc IICthlty
Mlw Herron's project (one he punues quiet and a period during which the
here In the ocrupulously-guarded "clun average temperature WllS approximately
lab" at Ridge Leal Involves studying the . a hall-degree warmer than at p-esent.
For years In which volcanic eruptions
Ice samples 10&lt; what their chernJca1 proare known to have occurred , Ice samples
perties can teD us about past volcanic ac·
have shown higher concentration of cer·
l!vlly and other factors allecting Earth's
lain alrnO!pheric elementa. Pre·hlstorlc
atmosphere.
He exPlains how this Is possible: When eruptions can be expected to have prosnow fads In Greenland, the temperature duced the same higher levels ol these
Is so cold that H doesn't rneb. Since snow elements and can, thus, be ldenllfled
captures within 1 particles o1 whatever 1s frcwn the Ice. The resuhant Impact on
climate can be determined using Ice
in the air at the lime H falls, unmelted
aarnplea frcwn periods Immediately fol·
tnOW dating bade over centuries proYides
a frozll!n recO&lt;d ot atmospheric con· lowing .
Evidence of air poDution can be similar·
dltions. Because a given Ice aarnple can
be dated' to a specific time, ancient at· . ly detected both since the advent ol
modem technology and ln.p-e·lndustrlal
timet with aurprialng
ttmely &lt;:Onlideratlons In ~t ol clft results. In a paper given earlier this year,
p-edlctlont In the popular presa on how for example, Herron noted tl\at many
volcanic clouds _.wd out In the Mt .. Sl. ldenlilll used to believe that high ced·
mlum conc:cntratlont In recent air and a
samplea resubed lrom man·mede po1u.
lion ocqurtng after the Industrial Revolu·
lion . The Ice ccwea have p-oved, though,
that the same levelt ot cedmlum have ex·
!sled few atleatt 1,000 yeara.

~::r~~!e

Datllottloe_,...
Susan Herron 'a WO&lt;k Involves daHn,g
the Ice CO&lt;e aarnplea. Using a knowledge
ot how Icc cryo!als change under the
heavj, load ot ac:cUmulallng anowfaU over
the ye... , she nota, H Is possible to
design models "" determining the of
the Ice at any given depth. Oanllh sden·
lists can date CO&lt;e samples with l!ldrerne
accuracy (within I 0.15 yean) u far bKk
u 10,000 years using measurernen of
oxygen ltolope variations. Beyond that
point, though , the method breaks down .
That's where Susan's woo+. comes In . By
looldng at changes In avota1
and air
volume In the aarnplea, few example, tt is
P&lt;*tie to note the demarcation between
glacial and non.glac:ial periods and thus
determine "tlrne non-is" IO&lt; calculating

· - - .·-'·-'-·

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Soinit selected
for presidency at
SIU - Carbondale
Abert Somlt, 60-year-old executive
vice president here • .has been chosen as

the 14th president of Southern Winols
Univentty (SIU) at Carbondale.
Kenneth A. Shaw, chancellor of the
SIU system, a:nnounced the selection at a
press conference on the Carbondale
campus yesterday. Formal appointment
action Is expected today when the
University's Board of Trustees meets In
Springfield .
SomH, a Chicago-born political scientist with 35 years experience In university
teaching and administration , wiD assume
his new Posttlon. August 15. He wiU
replace Hiram Lesar, SIUC law school
dean who has been acting president since.
June of last year.
End of S.
tb eeareb
The ch
of So!flil ended an eight·
months-long nationwide search that drew
more than 80 candidates. At the end, a
12-member Presidential Search Commit·
tee gave chancellor Shaw a list of three
top-rated nominees: Somit , Robert G.
Quinn , dean of Pennsylvania. State
Umversuy's Community Commonwealth

Campuses , and T Alexander Pond . executive vice president at the State University of New York at Stony Brook
In choosing Somit . the senior member

of the finalists trio, Shaw said , " .. he

comes

to SIUC with an outsllmdtng record of scholanhlp and aclminlstnllw
acxomplishment. He Is a~
leade&lt;. respected by his coleagues, and a
fine person. The SIU system Is fortunate
to have attracted a penon ol his calller."
Shaw said SomH wiD be paid $63,500
per year and will aloo hold an appoint·
ment as professor In SIUC's Political
Science Department. He wiU live In
University House , SIUC's official
residence .

l....,.e hue't ea....t • P
When he a~ared m Carbondale
April 30 lor a public question and answer
session as one of the final candidates,
Somlt stressed the need to tighten rela· ·
tionshlps between SIUC faculty, staff and
administrators. And he said the university
should make a concerted ellori to promote Itself. "SIUC's image has not caught
up with the quality of its teachers and the
level of its educational programs," he
said .
"I am confident Dr. Somtfs leadership
will provide a genuine source of genuine
strength for the institution.·· ChanceDor
Shaw said.
Somit was at New York UniverSity
from 1945-1966, in the government
department . the Graduate School of Arts

·--...·-z,cot.z

rferon

Music Center
closing down·

U/ B-Toronto research
may lead to mass production
of promising anti-cancer agent

Redial Hall as weD as In avant-garde
salons In France . Italy , Germany ,
Polaod , Australia and elsewhere .

By Mary Beth Spina

FIKaJ,......

A technique which may lead to lnex·
pensive , mau produelion of the promis·
lng anti-cancer &lt;~gent , Interferon , has
been developed by sclenttsts at U/ B and
the University of Toronto.
Produced when human white blood
ceO leukocytes arc "seeded" with certain
viruses, Interferon must be separated
from many other proteins derived from
these leukocyt and further purified .
Some 50 per cent of crude Interferon Is
destroyed by current purification
methods which accomplish siparallon by
using harsh chemical or physical
methods. The U/ 6-U/T technique,
" " - -. allows the Interferon to "float"
undamaged away from ln...,blc bado to
which H attaches Itself, much M dirt iloal$
from clothing In water to which dela-gent
Is added .

But as the halcyon days of the '60s
were res&gt;laced · by the flocal funk of the

70., the money dried-up and the
a-alive associates dwindled In number.
Last year, the or1ginal number was haHed
to seven.
The Center. remarks Hamilton.- was
quilt qbviously ruching a "a1tlcal mass"
liluallon . Abe: consultation with the
Dun's olllce and wllh Musk: Department
chair 811 Thornton , M was gmerally
agreed that the operation should ceue .
rather than continue In • haH-beked way.
Rwnon of b clooc -.e reporWd In
lhc Buffa ~ .. ..tv .. 1ao1 Oclobor.
ohortly eltor lhc Center's former ""*.......,.. Monlta Polowy, loft for • com1*-* porlllon at UC-San DlegQ. The
~ lnlertlon w• not to 611 that line. It
to bocome • cuually of • vacancy
pool NqUinmenl tcn:.d on Arts and Let·
ters Dan Gecrge l...evlnc .
But ..-.g.red at what he t.ormed lhc
")nrneture" pr- reports oflhc Center's
demloe, l...evlnc told the #Wponer that he
Intended to aornehow Ill lhc line - at
,._ unlll lhc end of the academic ye.- ............ aplortng opdons which
~ looop the CAnter fundlonlng, at

.....on..........,
_..,.._

.......,., Nla)led that I.Avlne (who lo
and Thomoan -ad
of the .......... daMg juol that, but

now

motl

l h c = : ; . :~:::.... ....
could ~ o1er lhc ecn... lhc
continued IOipiiOft they .-..v.cl wllhln
lhc fiMndal c:ontiiiVa h e - under.

·----..........
diet

C..Wihe

~

that wllhln ._ •yeAn,

~l\teodllw ,

HullhSdonces

Searce...t.,....,

The t.c:hnlquc Involves pl.odng lhc

prolelns, lnducling Interferon , Into a container of tnoolublc beads and liquid.
When the ~ lentlon of lhc liquid
racha • point betwHn that oflhc bacia
and the lmolfeon. the normaly """"""
ven der W.... forces whk:ll bind them
logelhcr become negailw, aflowlrig lhcm

... Dr.
_....
c..l

-t

J. Van 0., a U/8

rnlaobiulogy proM.or who heeded the

.....-ch tMm , "'*' that Interferon to a
ocan:e, ...,.,..... commodlly. II to not

u.ncommon for • clap's
for one
patient to COli ~ of $1000.
"lliting our lechniqoM. the yield of
tnt«rfcrorr . per q_uantlly of
· may~ 100 per cent,"
. ·a~ow~ng w- quantllla to
... ~ ..... &lt;XNIL.

•

Although ~ Is not known how In·
terferon halts production of malignant
cells, Swedish studies suggest K Is a
potentially useful treatment In juvenile
laryngeal papiUoma , osteosara&gt;ma and
myeloma . Other studies In the U.S . ore
focusing on Its potential usefulness In
treatment of cancer of the breast,
melanoma , lymphoma and myeloma.

P-del .0. . . , _ celle
Van Oss says lhc new lec:hnique may ·
aloo · bot used to harvest granulocyles,
white blood cell ·~· whk:ll are
often needed by cancer patlenl$.
Cherrl&lt;llt-apy and r..t1ro11on often supreu function of the bone mar·
row, lhc lilt of w-nuloc:yle produdlon,
leavlr!g patlenl5 unable to liFt awn ~

lnfecllons .
The granulbcytes, ....... &amp;om donor
whole blood . ... dllllcull to ""'**&amp;om
other blood ..... Thus, ..-ms who ...
q'*e only grenulocyles may be tnnolused wllh other types of blood cds, .. - ' ·
which can be undesirable . Th~
grenulocyles can be _.ted from other
cells by • pumping the whole blood
through plutlc fibers . But while
IJWlulocyles stldc to lhc fliers. M's dllllcull
lo . ....... lhcm Joc.e.
Uolng the new technique , . the
wanulocyles can be .....s. 1o 11oe1 &amp;om
lhc Ibn. vWdina • much.- harvest
of lhc cell. wt..a. • the ...
...., functlonaly adlw ahcl to1a1v un·

damaQed .

.

•

Olhers In""'-! In lhc - " " wl1i&lt;.h
'-1 lo development of the IChnlque ...
Drs. A.W. Neumann , ...,._,.. of
medlanlc.al eng~r-.g • U/T; 0 .R.
Aboolom , fonnerly of U/B: S .N.
Omalyl, ~ U/B. and now of
l4alh.ll
Cen!::r,Hu....,..,
t.la., and
.L. G.-ooeberg of U/ B
and Ro.wd Park Memoot.ll-.

s.r:-.

�June 12, 1980

• Mualc Center
. . , _ _ ...... IQ
Arts and IAtlen has loti 25 knes, 12 last
II'* and 13 to far this year, to there was
limply "nochlng that a&gt;uld gtvc• lit terms

ol eeldng out money lor the Center.
Theomk:ally, the money cnuld 1\ave
come from departments giving up TA's or
aorne other aftlcal needs, but, adVIsed
H.mllton, that option didn't seem leas!·
ble given lnslruclional commitments.
When resoun:es are that tight,
"something has to give," concluded
Hamlllon . "It's just too close to the

bone."

The same type ol constraints , he con·
tinued, have made it impossible lor Rus·
sian to continue as an offlcla1 program
here . Slarting In September It gets
demoted to special major status.

s- coetla.... actlwlty
Thomson, who recently resigned as

cbaJrman of Music to become director of
the School of Music at Southern Cal, said
he expects U/81Q continue Its activity In
the contemporary muolc area through Its
eslablished ensembles and "June in Buffalo." But H won't, he concedes, "be as
glamorous an operallon ."
Thomson also lsn't convinced loss of
the Center will deter top music students
from coming to Buffalo. He noted that lntemallonally celebrated musicians/composen Morton Feldman and l.ejaren
Hiller will maintain their coveted Varese
and Slee chairs, repedlvely , and wiD continue to attracts .students. So will other
Nnowned luD-and part-time lacuhy.
Because ol the reputaiJon of remaining
llalf and because lnstitullons have a way
ol malnta nlng their miiJonal otatus-even
alter a decline, Thomson doesn't think
U/B's reputaiJon in contemporary music
will take a real dtv - at least notiRjtially.
Thomwn confirmed that ~vera!
possibilities lor continued existence of
the Center were explored , but concurred
with Harnibon that rather than keep a
t.all-baked operation going, it was beHer
to simply can u a day .
Regarding the argument that the
Center could have remaned open lfCA's
taught part-time, Thomson responded
that doing so would have dirupted the
contlnully of the program, since established musicians from the Buffalo PhUhar·
monk:
these positions . It would
be bad pobcy, he said, to hire a CA to
t ach for "· seme&gt;ter or year, and then .
when he or she leaves. to rehire a
member fo the Philharrnomc .
Besides, added Thomson, teachmg Is
not paramount among the CAs profes .
--..1 goals, nor is it the Center's misslon
The problo!m , assessed Thomson, is
that the Uruver ity never gave adequate
funding to the Center, and without it ,
matching foundabon money 15 almost impo ·
to get
What they did gJVe Ire dom to its
dtredO&lt;. Morton Feldman . space , and a
for Its bu ness manager, ju t wasn't
enough 10 k ep lt viable over the longheul

assume

decnMe the diet. One day,

oo--.

Carpool project
being $tarted here

he
found the enlinal dutcl.
"I can always~ to .........-pastures; I
can leed myoelf, Feldm.n - - . !. "It's
~ may•become an accepted
the ttudents who have lo t.. led."
mode o1 commuting to campus for scores
Asked I( that meant he might leave the · bf U/8 lt\ldents, llalf and faculty d a new
UniWrsity, Feldman responded that the
effort bCtng organlz;ed by a.n od hoc com"difference• Is that now he 'U "11sten" to'
mittee of the Professional Staff Senate
olher offers whereas before, he really
gains support.
didn't.
And in the fate ol lno-Uslng cosis of
A 'ft.w' Ill thlllkJDs?
gasoline and malntalnlng a car, that supSara Hombacher, who has served as
port may just be there, committee
the Center's business manager for the
members believe.
past several months - a Une which will
Joseph Krakowlak ol , 1e Olv.,:on of
be given up to the Arts and Letters pool
Student Affairs reports tht. the campus
- caRed It "the mosi outstanding center
" Share the Ride with a Friend"
for new musk! perlomiance for the past . campaign is part of an effort being
decade and a half."
supported by .federal and state govern"Tllat this Ur)lversity could fail to see
ments. On campus, the Personn"l and
this mosi significant contribution to the 20
Public Safety offices are cooperating with
the century contemporary arts and
the PSS committee. The effort is
philosophy, exemplllies an incredible
physically centered . at Public Safety
flaw In the fabric of current thinking ; a
where supervising security officer Jim Utretrenchment in quality."
tle is the coordinator.
Hornbacher relayed that Thomson was
unable to gel a leHer of Intent from the
Staff and &amp;abmea are first
University regarding Its comm~ment to
Staff members and incoming freshmen
the Center - flnanctal and otherwise attending orientation sessions this sum·
before February I 5, the NEA grant
mer are being asked to get the effort
deadline .
started .
But even without the letter, HomAll freshmen from the Eighth Judldal
bacher said the NEA Panel (composed of
District who registered lor orientation
pl!rforming musicians and composer~
were: queried about their interest,
familiar with the Center's reputation and
Krakowiak , who runs the program, said ;
history) said they would give the Center
and about 25 of~ attending each of
$7,500 In support money for the coming
the several orienta~ sessions slated for
year .
summer will be carpooUng ·u here. The
A leHer confirming that information is
enll5tment effort wiD be continued during
now being held-up In Albany, she said .
orientation, with the hope being that
many freshmen commuters from the area
will sign up for fall . This fall , ~ all goes
well, the freshmen will be put into one
University-wide pool along with · inand Sciences, and Washington Square
terested faculty and staff.
College . He directed doctoral programs
Staff membe~ (both professional and
in the Graduate School of Public Ad clerical) will receive carpool data forms
ministration for four years .
late this week or early next week ,
He came to Buffalo in 1966 as chairKrakowiak said. A civil engineering
man of the Political Science Department
graduate oludent , Steve V"""'Y· who has
He become executive vice president in
worked on car pooling efforts with some
1970 and served f111e monl\ls as acting
15 local industries, is in charge of the
·preside!\! in. l976· 7;7. .
,
.
comp~ter:lf)alc~ing which will be , ba'i"d
Som~ was Nimltz Professor of political
on
this' data. lnterested individuals will
phUosophy at the Naval War College in
complete forms . giving their addresses .
1961-62 and served as an Army in ·
the
closest major intersection to their
telligence officer during the Korean War
homes , where they work on campus,
He ~ author or co~ author of eight
their
work hours.and phone numbers . In ·
books and monographs and 40 articles in.
divlduals living in the same geographical
professional JOUrnals
grid
area
will be matched according to
He grew up In Coundl Bluffs, Iowa ,
campus destinations Those who
and earned a bachelor's (1941) and a
··match'' wilt receive a prmt -out of their
Ph D (194 7) at the University of
neighbor's names and campus phone
Chteag&lt;&gt;
numbers It will be up to the individuals to
He Is married to Nora Post , a profes work out actual arrangements, said
sional obotst on the NYU mu!'ic faculty
Krakowiak. Surveys have shown that
who IS a member of the Br«&lt;klyn Philharpools work best when individuals take the
monic
responsibiltty for seHing them up , rather
Ketter offer• pralH
than relying on a company or
"I believe that all of us who have workbureaucratic organizabon to do it for
ed wtth AI Somit 1\ave known all along
them . They also seem to work out better
that he would someday step up to the
when organized on a butldtng-by-buildtng
Presidency of a ma)OI' university," Presibasis as is e{'visaged here
dent Robert L. Ketter said . "I am
deltghted for him that the time has come
He has the mteUect . the talent , and the
1()-day tum around
sen bvoty to do the )Ob exce dongly well.
There will be an approximate 10-day
he ·has proved that as Executive Vice
tum -around from the time individuals
President here at Buffalo I am confident
return their date forms to the time the lists
that he will continu to demonstrate th
of matches are sent out from Pubhc: Saft!abiltty at Southern illinois; and I am pro·
ty Car pools could be operating before
ud to jOin aQ ol his colleagues here on
July I. Krakowlak guessed .
wishing him the greateol success."
The ad hoc PSS committee will
evaluate the summer experience before
extending the effort to faculty and
students in the fall. The group may even
sponsor workohops on rules and etiqueHe
for car pools, 'Krakowiak indtcated
"Some people like to talk. some want to
read; others are grumpy. Some have to
Sll by a window How to deal successfulJy
Edward l Wright has been appointed
with aU this 1\as been worked out In
d1Tector of tntramurals and recreation , efoludles of car pools nationally," he said .
fec:ttve immediately, by Dr. Salvatore R.
A wrvey taken on campus last fall In·
" - o. c:halrman of the Department of dicated that a slgndicant number of peo·
Recreatton , Athletics and Related ln5trucpie would like to be offered a carpool optlon (RARf)
.
IJon Yet, Krakowiak acknowledged, ride
He fllla a position vacated by the
ohartng means giving up some of the
of Bill Monkaroh , who WID rereslgn
freedom which the private car makes ·
main on the RARJ faculty ..00 as head
possible "and that's nol easy for us "
COKh of vwlllty basebal
Carpooling In winter, espedally, offers
Wnght Is an lltOistant profnaor In the
compensating advantages, 01her than
d«partmcnt and head COKh of.-y ice
monetary ones You're no1 alone 'in fac~
Ing the challenges of ice and snow, fatlure
Tho Untve-sity, lhrough the Student
to slart, elc
•
cor&gt;ducu OM ol the largesl
The Peroonnel Office here attempted
nd moot comprohenllve ~· in ·
to seD the carpool Ide - a l yean back
tramural and &lt;
programs In
In the wake of the Ar~ oil embugo The
country
effort failed .then,· bul the trme may t..

.e Somit

th--··-- •1

Wright is
new head of
intramurals

right now., Krakowlak feels .
He noted that natlonel slatlslics reflect
that the further an Individual lives from
his or her job, the more Interested he or
she wiD be in sharing rides. Thus, people
in W!Uiamsville may not tie as receptive as
those from Hamburg. Only time will tell.

StartiDe .._.,
Admlltedly the U/B effort is $1art!ng
slowly; but, again, said Krakowlak, the
data nationally Indicate that those efforts
which start small and build are healthier
in the long run than those which start with
a big bang and face the risk ol flzzltng .
The three-mile-square geographic
grids being used lor matching purposes
will be a shortcoming in the lnJtlal effort,
Krakowlak said . The computet, programmed to hunt for matches In these arbitrary
squares, wUI fail .to lind a person who
lives close to another, yet just over the
line in another grid. By fall , the campus
pool planners will be able to substitute
more realistic census tracts lor these grids
and thus Increase the posslbillties lor ride·
sharing matches.
Members of the carpooling committee
are /{rakowlak, Steve Verney, Jim UHie,
Erleen Anton , Personnel ; Jim Tllayer,
Health Sciences; Tom Hurley, PSS; and
Rita Upschutz, English .

Management
ranks 21st
in publishing
U/ 8 's School of Management ranked
21st nationally in the number of articles
published by its faculty in the top
academic ·journals in business fields between 1972 and I 978.
According to a \urvey by Lawrence V.
Moore and Bernard W . Taylor Ill, ap pearing in the Spring I 980 Issue of the
Quarterly Reaiew of Economics and
Business, published by the University of
IUinois, U/ B faculty were responsible for
74 articles in selected leading journals in
live fields during the six·year span . Stan·
ford ranked 1st with 197 articles; Pennsylvania. 2nd with 194 articles; and Columbia , 3rd with 138.
The Moore -Taylor survey also provided institutioilal ranklngs in each of the in·
dividual fields - finance , marketing,
management science. behavioral
management , and general business.
U/ B was second in the nation in
publications in behavioral management
journals, just behind the University of Illinois. Twenty-four U/ 8 facuky articles
appeared In the lop journals In this fteld .
llltnois professors had 26. Penn State was
thtrd, Houston and Wisconsin, lourth.
In markeling area journals, U/ B
ranked 16th. Faculty contributed 14 ar ticles to these publications across the six·
year time span . Pennsylvania was first In
this category with 45; Ulinois, second,
with 37 , followed by Columbia, Purdue
and Texas.
U/ B was 21st In numbers of contributions to general business journals, but did
not place in the finance and management
science rankings. Only 10 schools
achieved rankings in aU five categories:
Stanford, Columbia , Wisconsin , lhinois,
Penn State , UCLA, Indiana, Florida ,
Harvard and CorneD. (Cornell, incidentally, was l&amp;h overall .)
Management Dean Joseph Alul!o said
the U/8 ranklngs are quit .significant
because the School has a much smaller
number ol faculty than many of the other
schools surveyed.

OVERDUE BOOKS
.
Lod&lt;Wood Ubrary wtlJ .bet1n cbarglng •
accouo.t s at !he Olllc:e ol Student Ac·
counts loo- owrdue·boob no1 returned
or~~ by .lui,II5. If !IOU have any
overduC boob, be oure to get th~m to
the Circulation Department at
Loclcwood by .lul,l15.

�June 12, 1980

OCR -certifies
U I 8 in compliance
in student areas

Playing fields
under construction
A $1.519 m!lllon playing fields project
Is now under conslrudiOn near the
northeast boundary of the Amherst Campus, roughly between the fi!!W Millersport
Highway and the field house construction
site .
_Contractor for the extensive recreational facility Is the Losson Excavating
and Trucking Company, which, accord ing to a Facilities Planning spokesman, is
"going like heD" on the wori&lt;. olfidally
sdieduled to be completed by Docember
1, 1981. Losson offldals, however, are
bent on finishing -&lt;~,~&gt; before the end of
1980.
y'
Included are a beseball diamond , ten
tennis courts, two basketbell courts, two
hancball courts, two volleyball courts, an
an:hety range and seven mulll-purpose
fields. The completed complex w1ll pro-

vide the University with outdoor recrea tional facUlties , the equal of which the
campus has never known.

The project site Is bordered on the east
and south by the relocated Millersport
Highway; and on the west by the field
house and the old Millersport roadbed.
The northern boundary will be a new
campus entrance road , the contract for
which will be let in August of this year A
parking lot for the playing fields area will
be located off that inlet , IO be known as
the Webster Entrance (for a member of
the originallaculty of the Medical School
one of whose names designates each
camp us entrance) _
Architect for the project is Hideo

~~~~
Dllc:l!*&gt;e" wll be 1he focus of a three-

.,..... 1n111ute from June 23 to July 11,
led by Dr. twt.rt L. Footer, author of
Ribllln •• JioM. ond Ploym. the o.-n.
who II wldelv known lor hi&amp; lllews on
tchool suopcNions and dlldpliM. Fost.er
... provided conJUIIIng and tachnical
.........,.. on tchool violence, dilrupllon
and dioclpllne to IICbool cliolrlds as a
trainer will. 1he N.aloNI School Raourc;e
Newodl'o ~ R.glonal Cent• .
inslllula, dncted to lachen,
school admtnlstuton , guidance
counoe1ors and !P*I,..... IIIUdenu, wll
.,.,.,... """"' .. tchool dilrupllon ,
~Nancy, hyjleqctlvc children, corporal
purilllhoMnt, - - and "bumout ••
The,
Will Nil from 8 :30a.m. to
4 p .m. on Mon&lt;Uvs, Tuesdays, lliund.yo and M1days during the tlwee-wea.
period

n.

S t - beiatl taileD

developing ethnic studies programs, is

slated for June 23 to July 11 . The
coune, In Its second year, will examine
the Buffalo Polish-American heritage
whllo incorponting study of other ethnic

~- year's program carries three
graduate credlls with tuition waivers
avalloblo tp qualified candidates. For
more Information , call th
Polish
Community Center at 893-7222 or the
~ment of Curriculum at 636-2484 .
T~wrttllle

A worj&lt;shop to develop slr. . .s for
teaching writing In wben secondary
tchoolo and colleges will be olfered June
23to~ 1.
Pr_..ted by Dr. James Collins of the
Faculty ol. !Oduutlonal Studies. the
workshop IMII give particular allention to
1he relationship betwftn dialed vartation
and writing and IO the teaching of writing
to cuhurally and linguisllcAIIy diverse
Utben populatiom.
More lnformallon can be oblained by
calling Collins at 636-2451

QIW . . .

A on "Chiid Abuse and the
Schoolo" .... be offered June 23 to 'n .
ccwertnQ 1op1ca ouch as • Aid to Parenu,"
"Community ~· and "Under·
Dndlng 1he Abuoed Child .•
Colloen t.l!l ol.
S...le Education
o.p.unent will ...,_ tchool cliolrlds'
r...,.,.,..,...in child 8buN . IWprHCO·
o1. Par- Anonymouo, PACE
and 1he Commut*y AcMoary Council on
Child AlMa
~The coune II opm to
genenl
p4jiJk ......... lachen. co.. ..........
ndn
lnlormalionll
lrom Dr Richlord SaiMr of
l'llp-ocnl !ol.~ _IElonMnUofy and Remedial
2455
•

'-"-

another area of the review . OCR
disiillssed a. complaint filed with it by the
Black Student Union alleging that the
Student Association and The Spectrum
"were discriminating in minority student
representation on the basis of race."
According to Tejada's letter to Ketter ,
University officials mel with OCR
repr-ntatives on February 15, 1980. to
discuss issues of concern raised by the indepth review which Mr. Jesse Nash.
assistant vice president for affirmative action, called one of the most extensive of
lis kind ever earned out.

Sasaki, landscape archited with the firm
of Sasaki Associates, Inc.

Series of education seminars
scheduled for June ·and July _
Four op«iaa workshops and lnsltiuta
duMng wllh educatlon.l- and a filth
fOCUJing on communlc.ollon wtl bogtn on

Following an agreemcnt ' between the
University and federal representatives
concerning certain questions raised during a recent review, U/ B has been .certilied as being in compliance with Title IX
of the Education Amendments of 1972.
Title VI of the CivU Rights Act of 1964
and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act
of 1973, "in regard to studen't organizations and job placement ."
Charles J _ Tejada, director. Office of
CivU Rights. Region II, Department of
Education, nolifoed President Robert L.
Ketter of the certification In a letter from
New York on May 23.
The notification culmineted a review
which began on May 7 , 1979. OCR . Tejada said, "Is now prepared to certlfy
U/ B's eligibility for federal financial
assistance and will continue the University In that status as ldng as U/ B carries out
Its obligations" under the agreement for
satisfactory adjustment of some compliance questions, "and does not otherwise violate the relevant civil rights
regulations."

c--....-

......t
Dr_ Gerald M. Goldhaber, one of the
nction's leading experll on communication, and Dr. Oomo A. W&amp;o, chairman of
1he Department of Communication at the
UniYcrsily of Helsinki , Finland , will
conduct a training program on "The
Communication Audh," June 30 - July
2

The worbhop will provide dJagnostic
lnslruc:lion In the analyois of company
eommunicatkln

procet~e~ ,

procedures

and
The f Is $250
Wllo hM wrllten 28 books about
communication , organlz&amp;IJonal theory ,
t.chnology and politico Goldhaber ha
oawd as v1co pr-s.nt oflhe lntnnallonal Communication AMocllotlon and
dJr.aor of Its Communication Audot
Project, inii&lt;&gt;Mng awr 100 r -et-a In
- Fn ' ill'ther
n .,formation , cal the Off
31 4 I
for &lt;..t •• F• Program

At that meeting , the University agreed
to review its procedures and practices
"and, when appropriate , to voluntarily
resolve pertinent civil righll issues."
These steps being taken to "assure
equal treatment of students" were detaUed In a May 7 follow-up letter to OCR :
• The University has reviewed the offcampus job placement process to assure
that student employment opportunHies
are made available without dbcrimination
on the basis of sex, race, color, national
origin , or handicap. In addition to requiring potential employers to file an equal
employment opportunity statement, the
Placement Office has conspicuously
posted a notice explaining that listings are
available to aU penons. Another statement will be posted requesting that any
Instances of alleged discrimination be Immediately ncported. Subsequent appropria action may include automatic
removal of the firm's name and refenal of
the complaint to an appropriate invesllgaloly agency.
• Policies concerning on-campus stu'
dent en-.ployment , including graduate
assistantship - appoUitmenu, have been
reviewed to ensure that student employment acllvilies are free of dlocrlmi(lallon .
"Specifically ," OCR reported " the
University has reviewed WoriVStudy appointmenll and can certify· that W/S opportunities are available on a r\00 disc:rimlnalory basis. •

......

Gncluate ...t tudooiDt -lal&amp;nt·
A ser1e$ of act1on1 with respect to
greduat and I aching assistantships has
been implemented:
• Data wiD be collect d and made
aval!.oblc annually concerning the
number of women and minorittes in
gradual programo by leVel and departmenu, well as tho nurober In assistant ship pOoilions
• Coruolderations for appoontmenll.
ruppolntmenll, and lev I of assiJiant
ship funding will 1110 made ondependenlly
ol. sex , natlonallly, or race, and any fundlng lmbAianceo from departme ntal
polic10 wll be rldlfwd
• Each deparlment
prepar' a wnt
t. n 11a menl indicating how its udent
and -nuhop rocrurtrMnl program
encourageo appl 11001 fr om and ...

tion of qualified women and minority
students, and how each department aids
in their advisement and retention .
• Special efforts will be made to encourage graduating women and minority
students, who show promise for graduate
work , in going on to graduate wori&lt;.
• The Graduate School Bulletin will
include pertinent federal guidelines
relative to affirmative action as well as
notification of university and federal
grievance procedures.

The University pledged to further
examine

OCR's

recommendation

of

developing an informat ion syslem
designed to .centralize data collection on
on -cam pu s student em ployment .
including data breakdowns by
race / eth nicity ,

sex ,

handicap ,

job

category and / or level and rate of earn·
lngs; the Division of Student Affaors has
recommended to Sub-Board I, Inc ._ that
the Off-Campus Housing Office require a
nondiscrimination statement on all of its
forms ; and physical obstacles identified as
Umiting accessibility lo student activities
have been mod~ied , specifocally Talben
and Michael halls.
OCR considen these steps a "satisfactory adjustment" of the questions raised
during the compliance review and will
continue to monitor these acti 1ities.

SA aDd Spectrum complaint&amp;
On the complaints against The Spectrum and SA, OCR found "that the
restruduring of the Student Association
In the Spring of 1979 was accomplished
in

conformance

with

the

Student

Association Constitution . AD senators,
not only the mlnortly senalon, lost their
senatortal positions on the former ~nate .
Akhough mlnortly group membero failed
to oblaln election to the new senate, they
were eligible for election and such elec- .
tion followed the democratic prO&lt;less of
majority vote ." Because an senatorial
positions were similarly affected by the
amendment

and

refer~ndum .

OCR

determined that "the restruduring of the
senate did not violate Title VI."
The second issue involved a cartoon
printed In the December II , 1978 issue
of The Sprdnlm, which showed a
number of monke)is swinging on tree
Umbs with one monkey In tho foreground
holding a microphone In front ol. a cauasian male . "BSU alleged that this cartoon
depicted a racial stereotype In vtolallon of
Title VI." OCR c:onduded that "there Is
lnsuff.Xnt evidence to support a finding
of violation of Title VI because II cannol
be Inferred that the cartoon was directed
specilically al the 17 minority ICMiorl." ·
OCR praised President Ketter and his
Nff, "espedall~ Mr. Jesse Nash and Ms.
George Unger, for oooperation extended to Investigators during the o n - investigation and the cbllection of data .
"Because of the spirit of oooperation a tended at the presidential level, the
University has been able to reoolvc the
pertinent is ueo resulting from the
review ," the OCR letter concluded.
Unlverstty admlnislra on whooc areas
of responsibility were Involved ill the
review process. expressed sallofactlon
over the oulcom . Nash was "gratified ,"
after "a year of hard wori&lt;." The head of
the Division of Finance and Manage·
ment , VIce President E.W . Doly, was
"not surprised" at the outc:ome which
reflects the fad that "we're doing a good
job" In these areas Vice Preoident for
Student Affairs Rochard Siggelkow was
especiaUy pi ased thai Placement and
other areas of his dovlsoon "carne out with
th stamp of approval "

CHICKEN BARBECUE
The N-man Pariah lo ~ lao
4th ....,ua) Chlc:kco Bart.cc:ue and reffie, .luly 13, 1-S p .ra. , Newman
Chapel, Frontier Road. Adu
$3.SO;
children, S:l. For
for-:&gt;atlon, aU
611&amp;-1123.

�June 12, 1980

4

Alcohol just as toxic as
chemical wastes, Block contends
2. Is there a need for a drink at a c:er·
time of the day, with the emphasis
hereon ,_lf?.
3. Is ther7antlclpation of drinking in

How Ironic, . - O M o( the country'•
leading ~ on alcoholiom, that
W......, New Yorlwn almotl dally- or
read about
Canal raldents pro-

talri

u-

the evening, as the day wears on?
4 . Is alcohol used to help sleep?
S. Does frequent drinking go beyond
'Jitual soetalizlng?
6. Is there a desire to get "high" and
thereafter to maintain. that plateau
through more drinking?
7. Is there disappointment when drinks
are not served at a restaurant or a private

lating In ....... fashion OWf chemical
c o n - which lhralen their health,
when -v little Is heard &amp;om or about the
"*'!' . . . rnlcknls who habitually con·
......... insidious toxic ldllor: alcohol.
Thlrty-ftve yean ago those between the
. . o( 45 ....t 55 made up the bul&lt; o(
tt.. ~ lmbbm, but today that

dublow dlsllncllon goa to young adults
In the 20-30 .ge group, reports Or. Mar·
vln Block .All aner1tus faculty rMmber·
who . _
the lett. 32 yaro opecializlng In the o( alcoholics.
Block, a pduate o( U/B Medical
School who c:heired the flnt AMA Com·'
on Alcoholism almOII 25 yearo
080 I s - - hls alma mater has 115 share
o1
~· both students and
~- Lately, " " ' - -· the opo\light
hM turned to students who, In an in·
ebrw.l ...... have been InvOlved in
neW Incidents and wanton vandalism,
rNodeeds which h.dly enhance the
QUIIIItv olllfc here.
· . Ill's .,y conoolation , U/B Is not uni·
que Except for tchools such as Brigham
Y~. ~religious -llltion and
dlodpllne t.:ton worit to sualeSSfully
......_-drinking.- most other col·
lege CAJI1PUMS haw their share of problems wllh olcohol .,._, and have had
·them for yean, notes Block.

~~ there c:rlticlsm of one'~ drinking by

oi-nt

i-"l!

own frailties and those of others. The

problem . warns Block, Is "excess." that
Is, the manUestation of patholog;cal as
opposed to controlled behavior. ,
While he doesn't rage agalnot the use
of alcoholic beverages and Is no teetotaler
(or prohibitionist) himsd, Block em·

phaslzes that moderation Is the key .
No cone "type" of individual, he points
out, is more susceptib&amp;e to ak:ohors en·
................. ellec:t
licements: theTe Is no "alcoholic per·
The ~ today , he explain•. Is sonality" as such. Instead . compulsive
that more students drink 1or a "drug ef.
drinkers come from "a broad penonaUty
fact." not ju5t .bee&amp;- •·s a --......:ho" spectrwn ." U&lt;ewise, there Is no one kind
thing to do or as a warped upnwlon of
of intoxicant that chronic Imbibers take .
adulthood . Wl)at precipitated the
Alcoholics drink cheap draft beer as wen
chlongc, Block b'Qeva, II that now more
.. martinis.
Because no phyoiOioglcal changes are
tt- ewr, llUdents don' know how to
sua:aofuly deal with the vicissitudes of gencraDy evidenced during the Incipient
life In their early matunotional yearo. stageo of alcoholism . the dloease ft olte?.,..
Combine INs with the dea~ In·
difflcuh for physicians to ~ tlf!l~,
........,. ol porents, a deemphuis ool In· • than likely. however. a lOved'
or
divld..-1 diq&gt;llne, the socW acceptabilii,Y friend wiD complain or show .conc:em
about
the
behavior
This
Is
a
"valuable
and av.a.blllly of alcohol. and people s
IDionnce ol clrunbn behavior and ft add• oignal" that a problem with alcohol may
be developing , adds Block - one that
up to dooJble trouble.
~ show that around 50 peroent
hopefuDy the problem drinker will heed .
ol .acoholcs had OM or both p,arents
who a1oo - · Blod&lt; rdayad. And , con·
trary to populor bdof, woman aren't any
If a person can answer "yes" to one or
las .......... ; they cornpoM about haH
more of these questions. Blod&lt; advises
the .acoholcs. Under stress, young adults
that a review of drinking habits Is in order.
whoM ponn11 - . , lnfkted with the
along with a consuhation with a physician
Block~ thai i l l
or counselor.
a c11oease - have a
ta lendency to
1. Is the desire lor a drink a frequent
the problem~ lechnlques
oa:urtence, with emphasis on dwre?
uoed by the pwents.
In the majortly of caoa. alcohol
clependancy IMn ye.s to develop. but
t.:.uM of a pN11c fiiCior In 10 peroent
o1 .acoholcs.
Initial drink Is enough to

one

c.n---7

...._ - and

w..

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

-

them hoobd.

anyone who cares?
9. Is there a resort to a drink or more
when there Is discomfort of any kind , as a
means of relief from tension or from
phySical or psychologieal problems?
10. Is care always taken to have a su~­
ply of alcohol on hand just in case . or as
there more than slight preoccupation with
this consideratio~?
11. Does one seek out individuals who
drink In the same pattern and avoid nondrinkers as companions?
12. Does the Individual resent
anyone's comment on his drinking

~

white-haired congenial' specialist
whoM library uhlblts trophies of his
-'&lt;!-wide travels and lectures on
~ol abuse relayed that about 95 per·
cent of his patients are college wads. He
also noted that 99 peroent are "puohed"
to seek his service by either family
members or employers.

70 perceot cure rate
Proud of his 70 percent cure rate .
Block says his treatment approach Is

"eclectic" and Lugely depends on In·
dklidual needs. Only about live peroent

of his patients have to be hospftaliz.ed .
The thrust of the program Is ~eeduca.:

tton'o;;'.

11· ~t

of,
the , R19'1:·sua:eul'.ft.
alcohol rehabitltation programs In the
country Is managed by Con Edison of
New Y ark City for fts employee•.
Alcoholics stand a better chance of
recovering U their jobs are on the Une.

. Block concluded .

Alcohollcl Anonymouo, while a good
organlzatton , does not work foi
everyone. It has a distinct "spiritual ap·
proach ," Blod&lt; explained , and If one
doesn't believe in a power greater than
hlmseH, the treatment probably won't be
•uecessful.

-a

Westerns coming back;
Fiedler tells 'Times' why

who achieve. his goals or dies trying.
WeslenU are riding Into favor In the
What ....... M:ohollsm 10 ln*lious
Redler said film otorla about "the
mov!aonc:e more. The Nn1 York nmes
(boto6da Its prosp-eooive nalure which
good flUY with the gun" are "one of the
reporled
this
Sunday.
- . - l y ~ ..._... dllmage to
r~ uniquely American myths. for they
In
addition
to
~The Long Riders." curthe bnln, t-1, ....! -._, ....! ohortens
provide a common , albeit 1antasy,'
rently playing In Buffalo. the paper
tha • """ ~ al a... • doeen yean) , Is , ealalogued a number o( westerns due to
htsto&lt;y that all Am«iam• ohare. They
.. "oeducllve quality, Block.
alto serve as a Unk to a fondly
open In coming weeks and months:
T...... ln model'........ alcohol aids shy.
remembered past, a means of reaching
Michael Clmlno's " Heaven's Gate ,"
ln..,..... penonalllles to transform
and touching the 'bask: values' of
cxtrovcrts. In· about wars between cat!lernen and back
years ago ."
hornaleaden: "The Legend of the Lone
~ ~. judgem«nn 1m·
Ranger," coming from Warner Bros.:
pond; tha body ....... a¥ often the
Hom," starTing Steve McQueen :
lew!. o1 IDionnce mer- for both our "Torn
"The Cioc:o Kid." for which MGM hopes
to 11gn ErG&lt; Estrada : "The Tuans," from
Sam Pecidnpah; and "Cattle Annie and
Dr . Elliot F. Ellis, chairman of the
Department of Pediatrics, has been
Little B&lt;ttd&gt;a." about two teenagers who
named the Clemens von Piquet Award
join up with tha Oellon gang.
Lecturer lor his contributions to the ~ld
In a stocy datelined Los Angeles, west
coast writar Miles· Beller uked U/ B's
of allergy and Immunology .
!..ale Fiedler the llgnlflcance of aU this
The .hOnor Is glven annually by the In·
Fiedler responded, Beller para ternatlonal Center of lnterdlsdplinary
phrated, that "the ree~e of the
Studies of Immunology, the Padlatr1c
- . n can be traud in part to the Pulmonary Center and · f)i,partrnent of
...._of dma that have fostered a need
Pediatrics at Georgetown UnlveTslty
for ats clear-cut, uncomplicated heroes ,
School of Medicine and 'the Washington ,
flgllf who ad rather than brood "
D.C .. Allergy Society
c wani to see protagonllls take
Or. Ellis was cited May 16 at
Georgetown during the Eighth Annual
deollny Into t'- own hands." Fiedler
Mid In contrul to the 1970s, "which
Clemens von Pique-t Lecture Prpgn.m
were ~ by an atmoopherc of
which focusad on reunt developments In
rl!lljp\ation ," AmericanS today -m to
the pharmacologic management of
hun to have wearied ol pasav. aa:epl· ..uthma As keynol -aker. Ellis
ance The qwnt-ntlal We emar. dlocusaed Theophylline . a drug often
Fiedler noted, II "a do«"_..,..,_, ..
used In~ of asthma

........._Into,....._

Ellis honored

Jacobs heads
U I BF Trustees
Jeremy M. Jacobs, chairman and chief
executive offlcer o( Delaware North
Companies, Inc ., was elected chairman
of the Board of Trustees of the University
at Bufialo Foundation, Inc., for a twoyear term at the June meeting of the
Trustees.
Jacobs becomes the seventh chairman
In the history of the U/B Foundation,
established In 1962 to encour.ge private
support for the UT)Iverslty. and sua:eeds
Louis R. Rd, president and chief ex·
ecuUve offlc:er o( National Fuel.
Jacobs, a Buffalo native, began his
business career by working as a vendor in
his family-owned concession business
while attending Mount St~ Joseph
Primary School and Amherst Central
High . He earned an A .B. from U/B and
Is a graduate o( the Harvard SChool of
Business Advanced Management Proin 196J,_he 111as 1&gt;4ad.&lt;&gt;f Qo«pinton
, U!f;. Jhe:~~oy's. ~a ­
ncesston affiliate, and In 1966
assumed reopons1billty for the company's
part-mutuel interests throughout the U.S .
and Canada.
He became president o( what Is now
known as Delaware North Companies in
1968 following the death o( his lather
who , with his two brothers, founded the
company in 1915. Delaware North Com·
ponies Is a holding company for bu.slness
conducted In the conUnomllll Unfted
States, Canada and England, and has
annual sales In exeeso of S400 million . Its
•ubsidlaries, of which Sportsavice Cor·
poratton Is perhaps· the largest and besl
known, employ over 30,00b people and
are widely diversified In sports-related
and Industrial fields . The NatiOnal
Hockey League Boston Brulrts and their
home , the Boston Gardens, •e part o(
the Delaware North Companies.
Jacobs Is on the Board ol Directors o(
the Buffalo Area Chamber of Commerce.
Elmwood-Franklin School, The Nichols '
School, Greater Buffalo Development
Foundation and the National Conference
o( Christians and Jews, Buffalo and Erie
County, and was the 1977 United Way
General Campaign Chairman.

B

Christman will
coach Jayvees
Mike

Christman ,

a

graduate of

Kenmore East High School and U/8, has
been named head coech of the junior
v~ f~ program by Coach Bill
Dando.

The BuDs wiD play a four-game jayvee
tchedule In 1980, including Rotary -Reid
contests agalnot Colgate University on
Oct. 3 and Ithaca College on Oct. 24.
Christman was a member o( the
Amherst Central High School staff last
year and has also c:oac:hed at Kenmore
East and Clarence Central . A 1970 Ken
East grad, he played fullbac:k at Cortland
for two yean, then transferred to U/ B,

a- of '74.

Coach Dando alto {lnnounced that
another Kenmore East wadua • Rick

~ms, who played center at Lehigh
University, Class of '79, will join the staff
as an offensive line coach . He Is the son
of Buls' off ns1ve coordinator Dick
Adams (Brockport' Sta '52)

�June 12, 19110

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�June 12, 1980

Audrey
Benziger
mourned
The Unlvenity community WM saddened this week by the dea'!l. J une 6 , of
Audrey Beruiger, after a brief illness.
Ms. 8enzlger. whose vigor and cheerful disposition became her haUmark ,
started her career at U/8 In 1962 as a
member of the clerical staff In Admissions
and Records.
After working there for six years, she
transferred to the BuBM's Office, where
she ·was secreloty to WUiiam Calhoun ,
retired director of Student Accounts. AI
the time of her death, she worked In the
degree evaluation unit of Student Accounts.

In her mid 40's , Ms. Benziger returned
to college to receive her associate degree
here . A decode later. she again returned
to get a BA in history In 1976. and an MA
in history and speech communkaUon in

No •.2
in the
nation

Members of the U/ 8 women's vanity bowling team that placed oecond In
the Pabst National Collegiate Bowling Championships on May ·1-3 at
MUwaukee were, left to right: sitting - Head Coach .lane Poland, holding a
reoolution by the Leglolature of Erie County in recognition of the accompU.hment, and Co-Captains Lori MostoUer and GaU Simmono, holding
the oecond place trophy: badt row - Barb Irwin, Pam Detig and Terty
Strassel. Mlooing for the photo wu M.,Y f/lr;one Buboltz. Mostoller and Simmono were oelected to the All-Tournament Team. The Royalo ouoted delending champion Penn State, 183-162, in the Rml-llnalo, then fell to Erie
Community College by the margin of a mlued spare in the title match,
182-170. Both matcheo were televised by WUTV, Channel29, Oft May 31.

Teenage ·unemployment may not
be as devastating as most t hink
Teenage unemployment may be less of
a lOng-range national problem than most
people believe, a U/ B profeoso&lt; contends.

noted , racial differences are more
dramatic, with white youths benefiting
olighUy. but with black youths facing a
19.8 percent decline In future wagco.
For both blacks and whites , very shoct
perloclo of teenage unemployment were
associated with hlghe. wages of abou~ 20
to 30 percent u theoe individuals entered
the aduk labor rnarl&lt;et.
Fprtunately, Bod&lt;et' observed , the
long-run unemployed youth is usually
eligible lor public training p&lt;ograms, such
ao that provided by the Comprehensive
Employment Training Ad (CETAI .

Dr. Brian E. Bod&lt;et', an .-nt prolaoor 1n the Department ol Olganlzallon
and )iuman Reoourceo, · School of
Management, baMs his findings on a national ~ ol out..X-ochool mala In
the 16 to 19 age bradtet who
"graduated" to the adult labor maritet .
The labor Ioree aperlencle ol theoe
young men wu monllored ONeZ a nineye.- period In a p&lt;ojed funded by the
U.S . Oopwtrnent ol Labor.
Gcneially, Bod&lt;et' pointed out, the
unemployment rate for this age group
When the long-term unemployed parruno .OOUt 18 porcent, or triple the natldpate In such p&lt;ograms, Bod&lt;et' found ,
tional jablno rate . For non-white mala In · part ol their wage loss is offset . While
thk ogc group, he sold, the jobless rate is
theoe - - bendlt youths ol both
In the nelghboohood ol 40 percent.
races, he added, blacks derived greater
But Becket hM ditcoYered what might
relative wage gains.
be daatled as a ray ol hope In an other·
But, he emphasbed that "a great deal
gloomy picture. Hil reoearch ohows
ol additional
is needed to more
luUy
understand the long term consethat - - unemployment- up to •
poolllvely to higher wages
quences of teenage unemployment for
the purpoM ol establishing national
In
policy."
The results ol his studies suggest ,

..... -.do_.....

point-.-...

·-arch

'-111•

however. that the costs of teenage
unemployment may be largely borne by
the long-term unemployed , especially
black youths.
Becker pointed out that while 'these
youths rep&lt;esent a relatively smaU part of
the total teenage population , their p&lt;oblems cannot be lgno&lt;ed .
Future studies, he added , should also
focus on In-school teens afid the labor
rnarl&lt;et experiences of young women .
The slalls1lcal sampling analyzed by
Beci&lt;er rep&lt;esents the labor maritet experiences ol 5,000 males from 1967.
when they were teenagers , to 1975. The
stalls1lcal results were based on eight sets
ollntetvlews over the nine year period ,
with a completion rate ol 76 percenL
Becker's observations are contained in
a research paper p&lt;oduced In association
with Dr. Stephen M. HUis, assistant p&lt;olessor ol labor and human raouroes In
the College of Administrative Science,
Ohio State lJnlwnity.
· The report wao prepared under a contracl with the U.S . Employment and
Training Administration under CETA
authoNation .

County okays $5,000 grant
for cShakespeare in the ·Park'
Erie County &amp;ecutive Edward · J .
Rutkowlld has announced ~approval by
the County Leglolature ol o SS.OOO grant
to help continue U/ B's free summer program ol Shakespeare In the Pari&lt;. The
annual evenl, held In Delaware Park , is
p&lt;esented by the Theatre ()epMtment
and is now about to open Ill flfth season
The p&lt;ogram ran Into financial problems when .. change In policy by the
New Yorit St.t Arts Cou ridl "imina · d
• bloc ellis suppon Efforts by the U/8
FoundatiOfl, Inc ., to ro
funds lor the
product&gt;on led to the grant request supported by Rutkowski
The County Eucu
said he pro
gram oil rs • 1r
gilt ol theatr to our
community and gf- the ara • much
needed bool1 In tourism promotion "
About 50,
~ have lllltnded
pe'forrnanca .....,. 1976

1978.
Ms. Benziger was died by several
Unlvenity officials as always ready to perform duties which lor exceeded her job
requirements as senior typist . And what
she did , she did well .
Because of her amicable per'sonality
and patience with students, those who
came to her office with financial COg'\ ·
plaints almost invariably leh less disgruntled and well assisted . Calhoun
described her work as "invaluable" to
him .
"She was one of the few people here
whom students come back to thank ,"
noted CUff WUson . director of Student
Accounts.

Friends of Ms. Benzinger ore considerIng several memorials. Among them are
a scholarship lund, donations to the
Cancer Fund or planllpg a tree In her

~~:'n°~1sQ~;::~ns bere?,::'~;d~d ·~~
WUson .
Ms. Benzinger is survived by two
sisters, a brother and several nieces and
nephews.

New surgery
wins acclaim
Dr .

Russell Bessette's use of
to remove a maUgnant

ayosurgery

parotid tumor from a Buffalo woman
nearly two years ago was listed In the
/lfedJco/ Tribune·· recent Issue featuring
advances In medicine during the past 20

years.
A clinical associate professor of oral
pathology and clinical inslrudor of
surgery here, Bessette used ayosurgery
(a "freezing" technlquel on the tumor
only after the patient refused to have K
removed using traditional surgical
methods. She would have required extensive facial and neck surgery which carried the .W. that the oeventh facial nerve
which controls facial expresolon might
have been permanenUy damaged,

-.......-

.

The patient, according to Bessette. had
a malignant, baseball- parotid tumor
and was expected to live only a few mon·
ths unless surgery was performed.
He agreed to use ayosurgery only
because animal studies by U/8 researchers Drs. Joseph Natiella, Michael
Meenaghan and Andrew Gage had
showed that the parotid gland could be
destroyed without permanent damage to
the facial nerve. Those three had used
multiple freeze/ thaw cycles ol •quid
nitrogen cooled to -40C to destroy the
parotid of Rhesus mon!&lt;eys. ln. the
monkeys, the facial nerv recovered normal range of function within month of
the procedure.

Dr. Saul El&lt;in , chairman of the U/ 8
()epMtment ol Theatre and originator of
the ~e p&lt;ogram , sold, "1 am
delighted thet the County &amp;ecullve and
County Leglolature have made this
generous gesture of support for a pro·
gram that hM become so Important a part
of the Buffalo cukural scene ."
Doins-11
Legislator Richard R. Anderson
Today , nearly two years alter
(R· Amherst-C iar.,nee-Chettktowagal,
ayosurgery was performed on the
chairman olthe Community Enrichment
human patient, she Is alive, active and
.Committee, said.· his e mergency fun ·
has not suffered residual nerve damage
ding lor the summer p&lt;ogram will p&lt;ovide
Usi09_ayosurgery on parotid tu mon,
the U/8 Theatre ()epMtment With bme to
especially benign ones, has obvious ad·
re -eotal&gt;lish permanent fu ture fund ing lor
vantages, Beisehe ,!&gt;Oied . There Is llttle or
Shabspeare In the Pari&lt; and wlllncr ase
minimal dlshgurem nt to the lace. risk of
the cultural. Image of the COunty to the
necve damage is reduced , and less time is
Slate and country "
· n eded in th operating room and post·
The oeria opens In Deleware Patk
operatlvtly He cautioned, however, that
TuescS.y, J uly a t 8 p .m with "A Mid
more r arch needs to be done on use
summer lght'o Dream "
ol ay&lt;&gt;ourgeiy on the tumon

a

�June12, 1980

7

History professor warns electorate:
'Beware_contrived political lm_a ges,

An archMologlcal adv~tnture and
learning experience In Israel for both
graduate students and undergraduates is
baing ollened this summer through the
Council on International Studies.
11le program calls for excavation at
Emeq Heier In the lower Alexander River
·Basin, north of the modern resort town of
Netanya. 11le digging site is Tel el llshar,
often identified with Biblical Heier.
During 1979, students woridng at Tel
el Jfshar uncovered remnants of RomanByzantine, Iron Age and Middle Bronze
Age settlements as weD as a Chalcol«hlc:
burial site at a nearby kibbutz. The
findings were dated from about4,000 BC
to600AD.
This summer there will be further
digging at Tel el lfshar, visits to other ar ·
chaeological sites and weekend tours to
other parts of Israel.
Two course., each offering both
graduate and undergraduate credits , are
available . One is "The Historical

So you want to run for praldent of the

UnJted Stela. Before you throw your hat

In the ring, advises a U/B professor, be

sure your "'mage" appeals to the voeers.
Or. John D. ~n. a professor of
American history, Is among those who
-believe • candidate's inwoge, u portrayed
to the public by political hucksters is a
major factor In determining the ou~
of a presidential eleclion .
"We liw In an advertising society."
Mi119an obsaved In an Interview, "and
we sell praidential candidates the same
way we sell products. 11le voting public
seldom is given a clear-&lt;:ut asseosment of
a candidate's ablhty to serve as
president."
As Milllgan' sees H. the average
American voler - the buyer - wants to
cast his baDot "for someone with ideal
American characteristics.•
Enter the Image-maker.
"Right or wrong," he Insisted, "image
is importanl. It boils down to portrayal of
a candidate on television and radio and In
newspapers as a person worthy of the
presidency .•

u..c:oa..

eo.Jcl
be elected today?
Raising the question of whether
Abraham Uncoln could be elected today
Milligan · speculated : "Abe Uncol~
wouldn't come across on television . He
was considered ugly and had a squeaky
IIOice. But who's to say whether a bighly
trained campaign manager couldn't giVe
l.Jnooln IIOler appeal in today's consumer
society?"
What are some
the " ideal"
characteristics that presidential imagemakers try to "seD" the public?
A prime consideration, Milligan said, is
a candidate's private life, morality,
religion and family.
"Even thQugh priyat moraUty may,be
declining." he naled, "we generaUy lnsisl
that our candidates for president be
Simon Purt. 11le indiscretions of Warren
Harding, Frankhn Roosevelt and John
Kennedy only came to light in later
yearS"
.
But there are exceptions, Milligan
pointed out For Instance , Grover
Cleveland won election In 1884 "alter it
wu divulged he had admitted lathering a
child out of wedlocl&lt;. For good measure .
he was elected again In 1892 "
By contrast, M
observed. public
mltbehavlor seems to be more acceptable
to the average \100!'1' than misbehaVior in
prwat life.
• He pointed out that Richard M. Nixon
elected president on 1972 even
though I Watergal scandal became a
public
pnor to the election.
" It took the public a long ume to censur-e NtXon ;· Milligan commented
"Public immorahty may cause a stir but,
unln k's notoriously blatant, It's !Jfnerally overlooked •

oV

The caadldate •Ut beline ID God
M
ln-.aed !hot an American
prftldentlal atndida "must beliew In

God "

Bach Lyndon Johnoon and Dwight
were portrayed as "chwdl_.,.. when M seemed they mig\11
~

beeom

pr sid ntial candi&lt;Uta, h

obteved. dhouQh both prevk&gt;usly had
$hown ·

public Interest in religion He

aiJo ated the TV •~mag~~• of N on and
evang li 1 Bolly Graham kneeling
t&lt;9thcr m prayer before

Anolher id

1972 ler:-

Israeli
adventure
being offered

bo aloctolllo !Odoy.
~:p!l:.:~d• .t't~~~notie'i.f·~~:
that the once-popular image of humility
chaeology and Soils Interpretation ."
In the area of personal trails, Milligan
and modesty has vanished . He attributes
Enrollees can earn five credit hours lor
rated patriotism as extremely Important .
this to the advent of the primary election
each .
system which, he said, "has forced can11le June 27 to August 10 program
11le holding of the American hoslloges
didates to
11 their pobtical ambitions.
caDs for a five-day workweek schedule lor
in Iran and the Soviet Invasion of
Afghanisian are seen by Milligan as hav "11lere aia no walll1owers." today, he'
six weeks, With weekends devoted to
lng affected President Carter's Image In
added .
planned classes, tours and free time .
the current campaign , with both siluaLincoln'• apparent modesty, Milligan
There will be no planned activities on the
lions having become local points in a
pointed out, was reflected In the fact that
Jewish Sabbath .
he never made a single campaign
Dormitory-style hving wiD be the rule .
surge of palriotlc fervor.
speech . He added : • ActuaUy. the ideal
with two or lour participants assigned to a
· Successful presidential candidates cited
by Milligan as having had a high level of
candidate was expected to play humble
single room . AD meals wiD be cafeteriapatriotic appeal include . George
In the days before media saturation . The
style and in accordance with Jewish
Washington, Revolutionary War hero;
office supposedly sought the man , not
dietary laws.
'
Andrew Jackson , War of 1812 hero;
themantheoffice."
Dr. SamuelM . Paley,programdlrector
Ulysses S . Grant , CivU War hero: Teddy
Modesty . he explained , also was
for the U / B Council on International
reflected In the established practice of
Studies, noted that physical stamina will
Rooseveh , Spanish-American 'Mor hero:
and Eisenhower, World War II hero .
candidatesstayingawayfrompresldential
be a factor, In that participants wiU perBut there are two sides to the coin ,
conventions and only later "being officialform some pock-and-shov~l work on opMUiigan said. noUng that"il a candidate is
ly ad_viSf4" t~at Jhey had been
presstve heat. Hiking with hght packs also
auor:iated with an u,_.i!a ..,.:
h .•~ ~rQi?" ..~ •
• ; . -::. ·: • · ,• - , • : . ••.~ the agenda .
.
..
as Vietnam, the candidate could be In
1=ranklin Delano l{oosevl!ll' •'\,;oke the
The ~.hysical condollons,
Paley
observed . could be conslc_!ered challengtrouble."
ice ." M~ligan said . by appearing at the
On the hghler side , Milligan sees the
1932 Democratic convention to per·
lng but not unreasonable .
"sports image" as highly valuable for win sonaUy accept his nomination .
Cos! of the program Is about $850.
.nlng a presidential election .
Not eftll/OM to .--.Uy eligible
which covers room and board , tours and
"An avid viewer of professional
While the U S
Constitution
other transportation In Israel. In addnion.
sports." he said, "is a plus In the omageguarantees that any native -born
participants must pay the State Unlvers~ty
making business. And ~a candidate parAmencan at least 35 years of age and a
of New York !~ilion rangong from $25 to
tiapates In sports, aU the bener.
U.S . resident for atleast14 years can run
$75 per credit hour. round -trip trans"One thinks of Dwight Eisenhower and
lor president , MUiigan cauoons that only
Atlantic air fare , and lees for incidental
a relatively small segment of the populaexpenses. Paley. estimated that total cost
Gerald Ford as golfers, and the Ken nedys
as playing touch foolbaD •
bon "qualifoes pohtically •
per indovidual wdl be ~pwards of S2,000
"Notwithstanding that this nation is • The P"':!Jram Is JOmtly sponsored by
ethnocally
and
racoally
the
most
the
Counal on lntemaloonal Studies; th
Herlta!lf! and background
heterogeneous society In the world ."
Departments of Classics (Judaic Studies
What about a candidate's heritage and
MUI.gan
observed
,
the
political
ground
Program)
.
Anthropology _an&lt;'
background?
rules call for the "ideal candidate" lobe a
Geography : the Summer SesSions
AI one time. said MUitgan , the "ideal"
white male of Anglo-Saxon ancestry , a
Rockland Community College and tho
presidential caOdidate was portrayed as a
Protestant , "not too old" and someone
Center lor Study In Israel
.
self-made man wtth humble, rural begmwho can proJeCt an appealing image
Further mformaiK&gt;n may be obta1nec
ntngs. Lincoln , w1th his log-cabin
He
sees
John
F.
Kennedy's
personal
by
conlacllng
Paley,
an
associate
probackground . fh the pattern nocely
charm - real o r manufa ct ured lessor of classics. or Or A •rt L
Originally . starting wllh _ George
outwetghlng
the
fact
that
he
was
a
Michaels.
dorector
of
the
Council
on
Inter
Washington, successlul presidential can
national Studies , at the Counc;l,
Roman Cathohc- the only Cathohc ever
d&gt;rla o1t n were - a-to-do arisiocrats.
elected pre.stdent.
.
Rtehmond Quadrangle. EDocott 1 aley
"A turning point from aristocrabc to
He doubts that a woman . g1ven the
phone .number Is 636 2154 an~
rural seemed to occur in the 1840 elecaverage VOl r's VN!WS of the acceptable
Mochaels • 636-2075
tion." Molligan suggested "That's when
roles for the two sexes, will ever be
Whig candldat W.Jiiam Henry Hamson .
eJected pre.s1dent , at leasl in the
who was sold to the volers as a Iron·
foreseeable future
bonmiln who drank hard cider In h11 log
cabin , del ated Democrat Marton Van
t... a are allunned
Bur n , portrayed by HAmiOO's people as
Image-budding is so important pohtical
an ariltocral . Four ye~n earlier. Van
ly, said Milligan , that presidential
A facu~y member here h bc~n ap
Buren defeated Harrison "
challengers, •n some Instances , are · well
poonted to a key post In a · na.tlonal
Sometimes the image-making process
advised to avoid taktng a stand on crucial
organization dedicated to lmpro ~9 the
beeomeo more obvious than Intended
Issues because "1hey could jeopardize
effectiveness of government agencies by
Onc.o such eumplo cHed by Mffi~gan was
their chances of election
upgradmg educational efforts in th ~ stud y
"A challenger doesn '1 have to come to
• piCiur of Calvin Coolidge dressed in
of urban affairs.
owralls and seated on the back of a farm
gnps with the nahonal or lnternauonal
William C. Lobbins Jr , assoclal~ dtrec
wagon to display h New En!lland rural
problems lacing the incumbent ." Milltgan
tor of the Offoce of Urban Affau s. wa•
heritage 11le teD-tale ligns.ln the picture,
noted . On the ofher hand . he added , the
recently selected to serve as cha rperson
M
added, were Cooliclgf's patent
incumbent has bnle choice but to tackle
of the Task force on Urban Affain
~ather shoes and • limousine , comple
ues as they arise, thereby taking •
Academic Programs w1thln the Council of
wlih chauffeur, In the '-'&lt;ground
chance on abenating at lust soma voters
UmverSlty lnotitutes for Urban Affairs.
ow, tn
's opinion, the emHow do we "beat" lha image-makmg
More than 170 Institution• of h;{Jh
phasis h. shifted from "ruraa" to " unaD
oystem?
.
learning In the U S and Canada belong
town "
Milligan favors a ~ SIX or seven·
Lobbins. both a U/ B law and busm
" Today' s imag makert try . to
ye• presidential term to elom.,.t the
admonistralion gradual , oerved as a
....a.lish , tf they can , that their candidate
amount of bme the incumbent opends In
member of the tasl&lt; force lasl year
11 a Mil made, .._
middle-dMo
"beeng ~ for reoole In the next
One of the purposes of th4' n1ne ..tlh a smal-town " - - - In
election instead of davo4ing lui lime to . member group, he explainad, Is to ex-~candida
praidentlalr~
• mine cUrrent gradu••• •nd
from whal it eonticlered a higher
Other than thaot , IIOlen ar ~
undergradua urban ttudies programo to
Jew) of IOdlly •
to tool! at the ectual "pall performance
asc:ertaln tha llr ngths and wealtn.eues.
r...,.d" of a candidale - fl they can lind
Lobblns noted that the taslt force is par K- r her . than accept a "contrived
lleularly concerned with whet appears to
it
"""!'- •
be a lack of on the job training

-

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

~

....

127

Lobbins chairs.
urban group

-

�•An ho·ur late and ·a lot older,
Lindsay fields questions

Junf 12, 19110

at ~ Capen

U/ B raearc:hen ere examining 1,000
Low Canal chlldnn and teens to determine If their tPOWfh, matundlon or dentel
development differs &amp;om youngoters liv-

John Undsay wu an hour late and a
lot older-looking than he I1IOd to be:
more~than_... .

Tall and 1111 elegantly slim, the ~ng.
former New Yoric mayor - wlriclbloWn
from a rushed day on the husllngs drded the crowd o( about 40 which had
wa-..1 pallently for him In 10 e - n last
Friday altemoon, shaking hands with
MCh o( them. Students (Including the
praldent o( SA and other ollk:lals), faculty (with a heavy concentration &amp;om
economics, the social and natural
~elencu). ataff members and the
polillcally-curioua made up the waiting

Ing eleewhere.
The examtnationt and suboequent
studies are being conducled by......,...
chen In the School o( Dentistry and the
Department Of Anthropology'
Approxlmalely 600 youngslers who
were conceived and lived near the tile of
the former chemical dump In Niagara
Fallt as well as 400 otheR who moved to
the Canal tile In childhood will be ex. amlned. Also to be studied ere 500

others of similar •oclo-economlc

group.
'
Local AtMmblyman William Hoyt. a

back!Jounds who live ...._.,_
Homeowners'

~.

Democratic

primar y

shown

that excessive amo unts of
naturaUy-occurTing Ouoride in the water

in

t.e~t!d'e~1rlk:n~ ~~:.::tY·
.. Now let's have quesuons ··

Lo ... Canal
What about love Canal? came the
·
love Canal 5hould be made the "sym·
bol" of what's happening with 'the
nation's growing. major problems of toxic
waste dlsposal replied Undsay, echoing
· every other ~candidate but Jlm'my
Carter . "'The president should do the obv~ouo : Lindsay counseled , by taking the
Initiative "to take care of the deeply
wounded , damaged and frightened
families there ."
Does he support federal research and
development expenditures?
Yes. and the universities and the
prlva
lndustrlai sector are the but
places for contracti"!! out this work. The
U.S . Is "out of condition" In terms of uslniJ Its resourcu to develop new
te::hnologla and energy breakthroughs,
he -.sed.
What would he do about the economic
tlluation In Wntcm New York?
Push for creation of a Job Oewlopment Au!hority which could do lor the
~ economy and Industrial
sMn1 oboolaunce o( the Northeasl whal
T . . . . - Valey Authonty did for an
even-rnor. Impoverished South In the
1930s. New York Scale'a u.t..n o.wlopCc.!:loration - whether or nol you

"*"
-wee

with _,.

o( b

projects -

II

.,..,.,. .-nple o( how c:on&lt;:CI1ed
government •elton c.an •ddrcu
eocloeconomlc .-cis. l..lndoay offered.

..

Center,

Ant of Ita lr.IDd
"While there's little data linking dental
abnormalities with chemicals, H has been

September and Is pleased to be in the
poliiical ba
The N n Is his eighth . he
added. poinung to his "experience and
professiOnalism ... -.,
The 80s prom;;o( to be an Important

flrsl.

Community

Colvin Boulevard, Niagara Falls.
Dr. Salt K. Seyrek, associate prolaoor
of restorative dentistry, wiD condact dental examinations to determine ~ there Is
any difference In type or number of ab·
normalities of the oral cavity between the
love Canal group and the youngsters
who live elsewhere .

"Queenor· Undsay mock-co;mplalned
In responoci ro Hoyt's mention of pro·
blems In the Oty. "No politician ever had
as much trouble with Queens since Henry
vm: he joked, repeating a rematk which
ha claimed landed him In hot water with
Gay U&gt;eration in ew York .
Jokes aside. he said he "expects to
the

In

Western New York. Most o( the examtna·
tiont wiD be conducted at the Low Canal

staunch supporter o( Lindsay's attempt to
snare the Democratic endorsement lor
the U.S. Senate race again• Incumbent
Jacob Javlts this November. mused that a
Lindsay election would be good lor Buf.
lelo. The former mayor Is a "scarred and
battered veteran" o( dealing with Big City
problema. Hoyt suggested.

w in"

U/8 profs
doing studies
at Love Canal

"destabilization" In the region . The road
to peace there, he ventured , "Is not
through an Independent Palestinian state
on the borders of Israel."
· Would he support American military
Intervention?
He's "chary" of intervention anywhere,
lindsay began In answer to this
"somewhat hypothetical question ." But ,
·~ the Middle East were crumbling and It
appeared that another Afghanistan were
In the making In Syria or Saudi Arabia ,
we'd have no choice . The destruction of
the Middle East, the deslruction of Israel
would be the break lOll pOint : he said ,
adding that the U .S . military unfortunate·
ly Is llQI " in training" lor a conventional,
non -nuclur action anywhere In the

world.
The Sovlds have problems of their
own In the so-&lt;:alled "arc o( crisis" area of
the Mid -East, Peralan Gull , and
Southeast Asia , Undsay noted. They are
nol on good terms wlih their neighbors
and have ~ . costly troop commitments, l)8f1lcularlv along the owborder. The u.s.. he advlled . should
play Its diplomatic cards tlvewdly 10 K
does no1 have to gob "alone" tn any crisis
In the region .

,..

..

What about the draft?
He'a oppooed. But he cloan' object to
"N!!IIIrlltion." Any country has a rtght to
find out "whaft out there" In tams of
manpower potential, he aplalned . If •
coma to a draft, he went on, there
should be · , ~ c:olleljOI education" for !hoM who have to go, Uld also
an opllon for "community wodt" rather
than rnlllllry ........
How does he - the Job of a u.s.

SeNior?
To and for prlnclpl. (In lllluationt
ttdl - Vlotnam) , to bulcl c:odtlons wllh
oCher regioN for the good o( hil own
~. end, more apectllcaly, to
~ lo ~ ouppoo1 for
1tew Yoric end the entire Nortbeatt In
ot energy pollcillo, oudned Unci·
""' He'a oplmilllc that lha can be
...-..1 "'o lnall~ the hltlhWev tr\111
fund (wNch ......... S2 ....... a
ve-l Uld get ot thoM lunda

diY.1IICI to -

-

·

Federal funding here and there costs
money . a student said . Since Undsay
had expressed opposition to deficit spen·

ding , how could he caU also lor new
federal spending in times of no economic

growth?
By reassessing priorities , the senatorial
hopeful answered , and redistributing
money .

can .ca use tooth discolora tion in
chUdren : Seyrek notes. He believes this
Is the first study to survey the oral health
of children who have been conceived or
lived near a chemical dump.
Asslsled by dental seniors James Oliver
and Samir EI·Chehabi and part-time U/ B
dental assistant Joanne Taylor, Seyrek Is
looking at shape of teeth and denial
arches, presence of extra teeth , quality of
enamel and caktfic.ation as well as any
evidence of eKce.ssi ve decay and
periodontal disease .
"Some dental abnormalities are tinked
to environmental Influences while others
may be familial ," Seyrek, an
.epidemiologist, points out . II, lor
instance, a population group shows
con51derably higher lncldence of deft
lip and/ or palate than the normal two per
cent In the general population, H would
be statistically significant.

Studlee of ...,.til
.lolm 11 Canon?
.
"What would you do about Johnny
Carson knocking Buffalo? ," a
photographer In the crowd demanded .
"live wtth tt," responded the ex-mayor
who used to •ppear on the "Tonight
Show" to take Canon to task about his
New York Oty crime jokes.
"It's counter·produdlve" to complain ,
groaned Lindsay. He admitted, though ,
that appearing with Canon had made
him somethl"!! of a c:elebrtty during his IDIated Presidential campaign In 1972 althougli not In his own right.
·
~ever I went." he recalled, "peo·
pie said they had seen me on the Carson
Show.
" 'Good.' I'd say, but how did you lilur
my speech?
• 'OK,' they'd ~· Indifferently. 'So
what'a Canon like.
.

Hunter wins

McGrorey award
JuanHa Hunter, a U/B - n t
prolaaor o( nUlling, has been praent.ed
the Ruth T . McGrorey Award by Dislr1cl
I, ltew Yoric SC... NWMS Ataoclelion .
Profeuor Hunter, who teaches
community holth nUlling, recolved the
-.1 for
ou-..llng c:ontrb.ttlons
- . ! ~ ... tha nursing
proMoo~on 1n
ttew Y.-l. 01a1r1c:t
llnc:ludios the eight wea coun .
The pubic hallh
~Ill

'*

n-

w-..

8ulf.lo v...... Adrnlnlllrallon J1o4ecllc.l
Ccn1er before joining U/B two v-i -so.
the "- done exlenllve - . : l r on
dlacharge l)iwlnlng end rudmloolon o(
palients. She II on the boerd oflha Jcae
N.h Health &lt;Ant.r end • member o(
TIOCUe Colega'a School ot Nuning ed·
vlaQrJI c:ouncl. She recolved .,_ M.S. tn
~ ..... Auning from U/B.

Graduate a nthropology student Mary
Magnant Is studying tlie love Canal
youngsters and those In the control group
to determine If there are a ny significant
differences in their growth compared to
national standards. She and 14 students,
lliorldng under rhe direction of U/B An·
thropology Department chairman Dr.
A.T . Steegmann Jr., are measuring
height, weight, skin fold a nd upper arm
circumference .
Also betng taken are finger a nd hand
prints which will later be evaluated by Dr.
Chris Plato , a genetlcltt and nationally
recognlzlld specialist In dermatoglyphics
&amp;om Baltimore. Ms. ~t uys certain patterns In finger and handprints
have been IIUOcloot.ed with oomc genetic •
dlseues. Patterns are fixed lhr• months
&amp;om c:onccpllon and can be a UMful -.1junct to diagnosis o( theM condlllons•
"HqJht and ~ . ..ocillled with
!J'OWih and - o( the parents, wtl be f t ·
.mined In the Low c.n.l ~ end
thoM lYing outside the area, M.gn.m
nola. Data wll laler be evalualed with
the eae1stance o( Dr. S1an1ev Roche ol

Fn Racarch " - ' - and w.,.,.. sc...

Unlvenlty. Dr. Roche Is nalioNIIIy known
In the llek:l of growth and maturallon
development .
In • d d ltlon , U/B me d ical an ·
tlvopoJogisl Arlnc l.ahner ~~o'!ll cond..ct
.............. Interviews with the participants

=~ls~~
--..
.
Results o( the aNdla ... expect..t later
thla so-. The aNdla ... beL"'D~ducted under the •""*'- o( Dr .
' - been kUIIId lo holth Uld diseMo.
The -..g wtl continue for ..-.1

lclenllat Ill R....... P
Memorial lnelltute. ' They ... ~
funded by the EnWorlmentel l:lcfcnM

Pllgon, •
Fund.

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>JUNE 5, 1980

Dorms shifted to
Student Affairs
Quality of Life will be
stressed , says Siggelkow
Bv .lo!lce Buchnowskl
Ropone- Slolf

Responsibility for operation of Univer-sity Residence Halls and their programs
was transferred this we"k to the OIJice ol
the Vice Pruldent lor Student Affairs.
PreviOusly, the responsibility resled
with the Ofllce ol Anance and Management headed by Vice Presiilent E.W.
Doty. The custodial component ol the
stall, however, will continue to report to
Doly , who Is responsible lor aD oth"r such
units throughout the University. Thil
should etiminate any administrative gap
in the dorms' custodial and maintenance
operations, olficlals said.
The transfer of responsibility WjiS on
;a... tossed about lor several years, noted
Student• .Affairs Vice President Richard
. Doly's office has a budget approldr~Wely teQ times the sllle of Student
Affairs, so, explains Siggelkow. the
changes can be viewed in terms of "admlnlstratlve equity."

With the swltcli. Slggelkow wiD be
responsible lor 10 more luU-time professional 5tall. lour additional clerical
workers. and a number of par1-time
employees. Including head residents.
Residence halls In most SUNY units I aU
under the jUrildiclion of Student Affairs
offices. but aaoss the country. Siggelkow
guesses the responsibiUty falls abclut
equally to the Student Affairs and
business offiCes. Many lnstltutions also
opt to share responsibility lor aspects ol
:.':t~:f"'a~ . as Is now the case here. _he

Bedeltona.-

Aithough the SUNY Board of Trustees
last wee~ unexpectedly decided to raise
dorm rates 19'1. lor aD units, an
unwelcome move which Slggelkow lambasts as coming "deplorably late." he
doesn 't believe K will signal a mass ex-

·- - ·- a...a.•

Carey signs

b udget bill, but .

Reagan will win,
predicts Goldhaber
.
.

.

Ronald ~n will be our next president. Ger.ld ~- c:hainnlln ol the
U/8 Dopartment ol Communication and
president ol the consulting fWm ol
Mcl..uhen . Goldhebcr and Williams,
- I n the cowr otory ol the June ls$uc
ol Uedlo People ,_.m.
lololhy~?

Olatttma. widely-known
........ polllk:al oomullanl Olatttma ..
the on
factor which datermlna
""'-"- elecliono. A&amp; !he New Yort
POI/I 1-...d
otory on Golclheber's
propollllbn, on May 19, 'V-. don'
. ..,..., • luckr-lhey _,, .. cherilmallc
horo .
And
)IQ&lt;. lrlcnck, lhlot horo .. the

"*

,.,._ w.,.. aro.

tlol-

.._ ~to Goldhober
~~~~would
the . . . . ~ lo beat this
November " IIJlder .. tlmates or
ml underrta'lda the Influence of
chartoma," the U/8 prolaoor contcndo.

people as wei as the good ." The "Ken nedys," he oubmlts, are charismatic
"becau.oa they rdlect the heroic features
desired by the American masses.'' but so
was Hiller who "displayed trolls desired
by· most Germans In his time." Today,
Goldhober- on, "'The Ayatollah Khomml has charisma . . . .H ellen the
Iranian people what they want mostdeliverance and mmal salvation ."
l..adng his dlocoune with a heavy dose
ol _quotes from his partner, media guru
ManhaU Mcluhen, Goldhebcr aedlts
~ with great power ln helping
_ . . . cheriunatlc wheat from the
chell: "Gearge Bush II a petfed example ... !he same has been tr:ue with John
Andenon ." Both were "nOncharismollc
'""n, running -nllallv negative campaigns," and alter an Initial flirtation , "the
public waMI't fooled •

• •

Governor Hugh L. Carey signed SUNY's $22 .340 miUion budget restoration
lntoiaw , ~ l~, but not wllhout..c.ollllo&lt;.~ved productivitJI..
and a re-eunllnatlon olfull.lre directions.
"Succeeding filcaJ years are expected to be extremely difficult ," the Governor
warned . lest too much champagne be quaffed In celebration .
Later that same week in May, President Robert L. Ketm speaking ala U/ B
Council meeting echoed that SUNY wiD continue to undergo severe budgetary
and staff cutbacks lor many years Into the future . despite the restored $22
'million .
Campus celebr-ations over the restoration ollunds may heve been premature ,
Kelter added . "The degree of euphoria on the campus suggests the problem has
gone away. But that Is anything but true. There will be major reductions by the
budget people over the next two years."
The President noted that a hlnng freeze Is stiU on this year. causing a severe
pinch In high demand areas especially . SUNY stlD has a $17 mUiion-$18 million
utility biD that the State has to pay. and other unpaid biDs nearing $50 million .
the President said , sharing Carey s concerns .
The luU tex1 of Carey's "restoration" message follows :
"Several weeks ago. I disapproved a similar appropriation contained In the
State Purposes Budget BU1 (Chapter 50 ol the Laws of 19801 in accordance with
Article IV, section 7 and Article VII, section 4 of the Constitution . That action
was necessitat d by the demands ol the financial community for a balanced
financial plan before access to the mark~ at a premium rating could be obtained .
A worthy program
"As. part ol the negotiations which led to the successful Spring borrow!~
however. I Indicated to the legislatiVe leaders that I would make available lor the
most worthy Stal programs a portion ol the res&lt;m~es contained i') the Executive
Budget . The Legislature has now Indicated that this new Stat University appropriation Is one ellis highest priorities, and I endorse that determination .
"In approving this measure, I would point out that k Is nol Intended In any
sense to rel;eve the Stolt Unlver$ity of the obligation to conduct Its operations
during the remainder ol this foscal year 1n the most elfldent and economical manner and to inslltute - r e s lor Improvement In productlvKy. E.xlsbng
budgetary conlrols over the rote and mathod of spmdtng by the Universiry and
aD State~ - which remain unaltered by this legislalion. W!U ensure that the
University 1 operations are conducted In such fashion Enactment of this
measure don not relieve the University ol the need to t1gorously examine Its
programs and priorilia lor the future, Including the further development of Hs
own rcwnues - a chaDenge which the ChanceDor and the Tru ees heve
.Ueadylndicat d they will meet . Succeeding hoal .years are expected to be extremely difficult. Productivity Improvement and program reuamlnation are
-~ V
are to meet the challenges ahead . My approval re upon these
expectations

Not ae .-.1 to .-....
"In ..tdltl!&gt;n, I want. to expr
caution concerning lntcrprc~llon ol the
langu9 In the bll ~-.g the University to maintain Its curr nt level ollnstltu
tional and pr&lt;9arn oll«nr9 While I would 8llfft that the resulting toc.l appropn.oon lor the Univenlty • sulficknt to avoid the n« lty Ql p~matrc
'tetrcnchment' • that le'm lo d lned In tb&lt;o Univenlty'a c~e
tng
agrMrMnt, uid loongu.ge ohould no1 be Interpreted u
stJng an
to the
ongoing, contlnuout proc:ea within the Un~ty ol program lnltla
, revloion
and ebmlnatlon unrelated to llocal exigency A gr at unlwnlty II not a
body Cheng« and clevtlopmcnt are - n
elemen of
natur I do not
bdeve
~lure lniA!I&gt;ded to Int..,...,_ In the nonNI, ongoing proc
ol
""*"'*tional.change and thereby f r - the Un~~~«nlly's prowam offerings. Carey
concluded

�June 5. 1980

l

Com unlcatlon woes
hit General Education

_

• Reagan

..... .. -. ..
H.oe,...w-.. ... ....Galdhol.r the IIMjor 191Kl
~ hopGulo 8IXlOidlng "' •
model of chanorna whk:b
hal

deYIMd. , _ . . tine

'* ....

~

-=-~~~~:

bold, aggr.-vc Ideal of the - -·
looks lib -·d lib to, says what we wish
had said. The anti-hero. who
Goldhaber reports II typi6ed by Waller
Cronkk. looks and acts 11M the rest of
us: our uncle and father. Then "'ere's the
"mystic," a Ia Hervy Klulnger. "We can't
understand how such a fill , balding dumpY man can ""l""endy hold attraction for

ma~ihe tlvee charismatic
Goldheber's research has found , are five
majo&lt; elements: appearance; sexuality
(how sexualy active a the person
~to be? li he or she "bold" or
"normal1;
similarity(~ he or
she say what we wish we could say?) : action (how decisive is the person?; and lm·
agery.
Charisma lies In people's perceptions
of these traits, Goldhaber observes. And
tlme and place can change these perceptions. For eomple , Jimmy Carter In
1976 would ha
oc:ored high on the
mystical side of five e~ments of charioma
(unknown politician , strange family .
hard to pin down on issues, strange
southern eccent) . :roday. though. In
Goldhaber's view. he fits in with what
most of us want, and has become the
antl·hero . Deftly u~he Iranian aisis,
he "cunendy rides
robes of Khomeini , communie
g pres!dential
stature as desired
the masses. But he
may be too much
us.
·
Kennedy is the "hero." In Goldhaber's
book He's handsome and his sexual ac·
llvlties lntJi!llae. He has the legacy of
"Camelot"~ for him . What he Sftms
to have underestimated, accord1ng to the
U/ 8 professor, is "that the public. while
expecting Its heroes to be $00&gt;4!What flaw ·
ed.
no1 tolerate excasiuely flawed
heroes "

tYPe..

m-

KU,aa•a dlartsma coepla
Reagan's charisma is complex to ex·
plain, according to the McLuhan ·
Goldhaber-Williams model. Despite
questions about his hair (does he or
doan'~ he?), he's considered handsome.
~ divoroe, he is oeen as family·
~nted . He taka on mystical qualities
with his stat.,ments and actions. perceJV·
ed by most as too far right . He calls for
the unexpected, does the unapected
H bold move for the presidency. despite
his age . makes him herorc. again . And he
knows how to
the medla
According to Goldhaber's research. the
public thlo year wan a "hero.• Since
R - has eWn&gt;ents of both the hero
end the mystic , he must move more Into
the hero mold. advises Goldheber. But
that "'-ld be relativeJv easy
Concludes Goldhaber:

TV.W.Reepa
"
to uy. ~ perlonns
q
wd on tekvioion . Carter~ not.
He's 100 'hoc' a candida for televWon
becaUM of hilsouthem accent. his sloonlng of words, hlo pale and gaunt ap' perance. physlc:dy, he's nOC a good
v111on CM~didale. II they clebllle (and
rm confident they wtl) ~ will
outpoaform the pmii:Mnt.
"'The lnteraling poinl about Carter ..
that he actualy has a higher c:harisrna
rating than Raoogan (43 to 36) Unlortunatclv for him, .. hli c:harisrna a ..,o.
heroic. which may have bnn what the
wanted In 1976 elter•the turmoil of
VIOI'Inam end Wa~ .The , _
....,. a hero
time around, and, oome
Novembe. the wll perczive
Raoogan • mor ~ chanomatic
than Carter That '-:1 - end that fact
alone- wll cl.clde the eladion "

22,000 foreigners
study ln State

Peradotto will meet with deans;
says writing phase ready to go
DUE Dean John Peradolto piMs to
ohot1lv wllh a ~ of'duno from
the cere campus end Health Sciences,
~ Educ.ation Chairman Peler Hare
end Faculty Senate Chairman NewtOn
Garver to try to Iron out some com·
munlcallon problems which seem to have
developed between the GE Committee .
deans and other lne officers.
The meeting Is being planned In direct
response to complaints voiced by several
arunlnlstnstors, incluc!in9 Health Sciences
V'a President F. Carter PanniO and
Jooeph Alutto, dean of the School of
Management, at a speOal meeting of the
Senate's Executive Committee In late
May. At least eight deans and as many
administrative offlda1s were present
Alutto and PanniD, who both ex pressed support for the GE program.
nonetheless charged that the "process"
by which the Committee has made Its
decisions leaves much to be desired . Pan·
nilllllso complained that present GE re·
quirements are in "direct confrontation"
with accreditation mandates of al least
three of his schools.
Ead...toa c:Jlarwed

Alutto told the Committee there has
been a "clear and ccmstant exclusion of
the deans as academic officers" In the
planning process. Pannill shared those
sentiments and added that the GE Committee and Senate have acted "unilateral·
ly" by neglecting to include In thetr
delibei-ations those who will be ultimately
accountable for implementation . Thus
far . Pannill said , communication between
him and the Committee has been confined to a ~voluminous torrent of Xeroxed material."
Several Health Sciences deans noted
that some of their representatives to the
GE Committee decided to stop attending
because they were "ignored" at meetings
and were .. unable to penetrate the discus·
sk&gt;n ...

Obviously surprised at the comments.
Hare and Garver responded that Law
School Dean Tom Headrick has. from
the onset . served on the Committee
Headrick. however, relayed he was
never Informed of his responsbiltty to
serve as a liai90n with fellow deans about
Committee deliberations.
Hare then emphasized that the Committ never meant to Ignore any Health
Sdencu representatives. but admitted
that some confusion may have resuhed
because these representatives weren't
regularly attending members.
· Hare also insisted he had every "'nten·
lion of Involving the deans and unit
heads" in the Implementation process,
but wanted "concret course proposals"
first so diocusslon would be more mean·
inglul and not entirely In the "abstract."
Eac:eptloa Uk- to .,.,..plalata

GE Committee member Howard
Foster took e&gt;cceptlon to some of the
complaints. poinHng out thlll a subr:om mtit
had mel with repruentatlves of
the H alth Sciences end developed
speaal requirements to accommodate
their .individual needs. He reminded
those present that the ac:cornmodations
wcr widely publiohed on campus, fuDy
debated In the Senate . and finally voted
on by that body
He a1oo relayed that part of the prob·
lem r
with the Task Force on lm·
plerMntation which mel only a few Hmes
during the pn1
montho before IIJ
churnan. Bob Wagner. ruigned The
Task Force wM eontlituted by VPHS
end VPM Bunn .
P
The T
Force WM J'ftP()nllble for
providing dat;o nec:aoary lor GE Implementation. such .. projadJOg
nu
of COUrM .ctiono, teachers and
the amount of capiiJII needed
After Wagner res gned . Hare
uted the T aok Force Bruce Fran
macle chair. but resigned last
MJJt two months. Peradolto
Force lftUII come up &gt;111th

projections on how many coUBes will be
needed In each Knowledge Area to serve
1981 freshmen . Projecliom must also be
made for the three years following. H the
requirements cannot be met, Peradolto
told the Reportc. !lOme adjustments may
have to be made. such as having students
take fewer courses In a limited number of
knowledge areas.
In addition . Peradotto said he thinks K
necessary for the Task FO&lt;Ce to meet with
Health Sdencu representatives to con·
skier any special problems they may still
be having with present GE requirements.
When Peradotto meets wHh the deans.
he hopes t.o work out a formal agreement
regarding the structure and charge of the
Task Force and also to aeate a
mechanism by which the deans can be
more actively Involved in planning and
implementing the program.
Wrttlng akllla ready for f.U
As far as the wriHng skills component
of General Education is concerned .
Peradotto said most students will be
tested during Orientation this summer.
lOose who do not attend will be accommodated by the Student Testing and
Research Office when they arrive here In
September .
The biggest problem will be to ensure
that all students are tested . lhe Dean
relayed. Other than that. he said . the
program is "ready to roll" in September.
As of May I (the deadline for applica·
tions). Hare reported that 180 separate
course proposals across all knowledge
areas had been received by the GE Com·
millee The deadline pertained only to
courses already Incl uded in th~ course
monitor file Deadline for new course
proposals is September 30.

Good news
for Dentistry
1lle Dental School has received some
good news in terms of Its fight for restored
accreditation from the American Dental
Association (ADA). Dean William
Feagans noted late last month .
Last year's supplemental budget appropriation of $100,000 was channeled
Into two postdoctoral programs - oral
surgery and endodontics - which the
ADA had granted only ''provisional" ac·
aeditation In Its May 1979 report. That
same report issued "conditional" ac credHation to the school's major predoctoral teaching program
Feagans told Arthur Page of the Buf·
falo News that some of last year's sup·
plemental money had gone to buy equipment and sul&gt;l)ties and to make available
another faculty bne for endodontics.
As a resuh , Feagans said, the ADA
changed Hs mind about totally withdrawIng accredHation from endodonilcs . It
raised the status of that program to "con·
dltional," one· notdt above provisional.
and fully accredited oral sUrgery.
The problems of the predoctoral program , Feagans said , ntquire lm·
provements In facilities, number of faculty
and faculty pay for their solution .
Meanwhile, Dentistry rece.lved a
special appropriation of $500,000 In the
1981-82 budget. and hopes for another
$119,000 In the supplemental, toward
meeting accreditation requirements.

.

DON"T MISS OUT

A - * ol wort.ahopa In auc:h craft
arotao as phot011raphy, pottery,
calligraph~. )eweliy making and
CMtlnt. ball&lt;, watercolor end dr.wlng, Ira- end " - loom --.g,
lutt-. Cl'llllln!l and IIUOCBme betlln
Mondlly, ;,._ 9, and
at
the ~-- Crefl C..ter, 120 MFAC.
Ellicott. ,., wort.ahopa ,__ ..... - a t
......... c.J 636-1201 lor illformatlon
and ........lion detalk. The Crall
C..ter Ia ope Monday-llwr5day, 1-5
p.m . end 7· 10 p.lll.

all-_..

..__ ..

__

• Dorms

odus &amp;om the dorms. In l.:t, eccording
to current projec:tloos, Siggelkow
. . . , _ 111111 nal ~ beds wll be
........ to .x:omnoocl* .. newlyentemg """"'- who 1111111 them.
At ..,y relit, ·~ who opply for
dorm rooms ....., Mll!l 31, _. JJrObahlv
na1 get them. ,.. many .. 400
may be Involved. T...,.. end waduate
students applying ...... Mlljl31 de/fnllely
wtl not get them, Siggelcow edvlsed .
No lrnm8dlate or major ct..nges are
planned for the dorms, the vlee president
Ooted. Rather, he inlllll, c:hoonge will be
"evolutionary, not revolutionary" in
nature. .
Acknowledging that tn&gt;es are Ire·
quendy heani about dorm livtng, Siggel&lt;ow still ~ that lludents (at
least those he has lnterecled with at
EllicoCtl _ , bMicaly "-v and that, In
general. the "residence ti.ilf experience"
continues to be "valuable" to students. If
not, Siggelww doubts whether so many
students would want to return to campus
living spaces.

freshmen

Sbodr _.-p ...._,..
There are problems, he concedes, and
life In the dorms can certainly be improved . To assist him In this area, Siggelkow Is forming a Unlversity·wkie
Campus Residence Ufe Study Group
which he will CO&lt;halr with Madison
Boyce, director of housing.
According to Siggelkow, the group wUI
include representatives from the faculty .
Public Safety, the Inter-Residence Council, the Office of the DUE Dean, custodial
services, and from minority, handicapped and foreign student groups, among
others .
Chris Jasen . student representative on
the U/ 8 Council, who 11_lso is a resident
advisor In the dorms , has already agreed
to serve, Siggelkow said . At least one·
third of the committee will be composed
of students, he approximates.
Uke his retention and attrition study
group . this one will break up into smaller
sub-groups t&lt;&gt; explore and make recom ·
mendations on spedfic areas. Among
areas under consideration for study are
vandalism, racial relationshir among
students, security, custodia services,
alcoholism, and dorm programs and ac·
tivilies fostering student/faculty involve·
ment.
No.........,tiiOlutiWhile he emphaolzes that problems
won't be solved overnight. Siggelkow
thinks H Imperative that at least in-roads
be made In fostering a greater sense of
community In the dorms. This is no easv
task, since Siggelkow is aware that at·
titudinal changes are involved. But, ~
such a change could be realized. he
believes students would · take more
responsbillly for their own environment .
and Incidents of vandalism would
decrease .
Considering that budget cuts have
eroded the custodial force , and that U/ 8
has the dubious distinction of having the
largest ratio of stu&lt;htnts per dorm stall
member in any SUNY Univenity Center.
Siggel&lt;ow thinks the allltude change Is
fundamental to Improving the quallly of
life In the dorms.

.........
~

................_tobe

Siggelkow plans to go back to the

recommendations of his retention - attrl·
lion study group .and Its sub-committee
on physical environment (chaired by Dr.

William Conroy) to investigate which
recommendations are feast&gt;le.

He also wants to maintain and expand
many of the positive programs already
started which have "humanized" the en·
vtronment, such as the stu&lt;htnt mural
pr&lt;¥am In Ellicott . In addition. Sig·
gel&lt;ow projects, MJVIces such as counsel·
lng, placement and career guldanoe, and
others which could posllively Impact on
students' llvlng and learning may be more
closely asoociated wHh residence haD programs.
"We would .like to try to get students to
do other things thaA go to the Pub," he
- u. Pulling himseW on the line, Slgge•ow a1oo vows that he will consider
shorwnlng hours at the Pub If reportS
continu to Indicate that most of the van·
dalilm OCICUrs.from studen who drink to
- t h e r e.

�JUI&gt;I 5. 1980

Colleges plan talks
on 7ransformations'

oro Ncwla,1'ollb Past, Dlocrirntn-.:
llle Cplega are coordlnallng a summer poowam ol ftve gual opeaken . &amp;oays and Aflerlhoughta. Against the
Amf!rlc:Gn Grain: Eaoys 01'1 the f./lacU of
w"'- .,.-~~on~ ..til NYOive erouocl
N.- Cull&amp;i,. and ""'-cuct ond Hldallt.
lhe theme "ScxW T""'""'"""tlons" tn
Both Macdonald and McCorJkey t.ave
lhe 1980's. Summer courseS oftered
chosen to !&gt;roach lhe theme of "Social
tlwough lhe Colleges ...., foc:uoing on the
through an upforation
Tral)lformatlons"
same !heme.
of Ilia past Instead of ~· lor the
AI' ~. wllh lhe e""epllon of
future
.
Wiks
Macdonald
In a )ettar lo the
ShlrWy Chisholm. will appear at 2 p .m .
Collega: .. ... ('U ...aplatn why rve , _
_ on lhe day ocheduled. In 212 O'Brien.
bean much interested In the future and
Author and lllerary a1t1c J.,.. Mcwt&gt;V'J fl1nk there is only one tense in life.
Conlcey will launch the - ' a June 16
prlodlc:ally~ : past . llle future by
- with a dilcUJiion doling with hterature In
dellnlllon doesn't .uia llfl~ the ~~ is
ooclety. McConkey, a member .of the
a mere wtnlt ol the past'• eye, becom1ng
Cornel Uniwnlty English faculty since
past befQre one is c:onsclooW H Is (wasl
1956, won lhe American Academy of
these."
Ar1s and Sciences and National Institute
of Ar1s and letlen Award In Lil£rature
F-.of .......... ,
lest 1/Uf.
The next day. July 8 . New York (:onAmong his books, which ere largely
gresswoman
Shirley Chisholm will ~~Pt~~k
autobiographical , are : Nlghutond,
on "'The Future ol Mlnorltln and the
Journey to Sahelen ,- Crossroods. and
·
Cha~
Role
ol Women." Her pr-.&gt;The Tre~house Con/aslons.
tatlon begins at 10 a .m . In Moot Court .
O'Brian HaD .
Mec•o old
The lltst BJack woman elected to the
Author. magazine writer and lllm critic
U . S . 'Hou•~ of Representatlvb .
Dwight Macdonald has chosen to perChisholm
began her polkical career in
sonalize hio addrest with a discussion on
1964 with a successful campaign lor the
"M~ T"'noformatlons SodaJ and
State
Assembly
On the Oemocrallc ticl&lt;et .
OtheJwlse," July 7.
F'IYC1f'!"rl later. she was elected to ConMacdonald Is a former 51alf wrtld for
grHS
and
now
lf!TYb as a ranking
Fortune. The Nf!UI Yorlcf!T, a fUm alticfor
member of the powerful Rules CommHEaq
an adllor and contri&gt;utlng
tee. In 1972. she made an unsucces.slul
. :Partilan Rf!vlf!UI and Polilks.
bid lor the Presidency, but her campaign
A 1928 Yale gradua • Macdonald
brought her to the lorelront of national
rf!Celved ·an honorary Doctor ..ol Letters
politics.
&amp;om Wesleyan In 1964, and has been a
Chisholm graduated cum laude from
visiting profeuor of Engllsh and/ or
Columbia
where she also received an MA
history of cinema at about a dozen
In education and a diploma i~ administraleading unlversltles - including U/B In
tion.
She
holds honorary degrees from
1975.
over a dozen colleges and unlveBities ~
His books Include . Dwight Macdonald
The following Wf!ek, on July 14. Or.
Gunhild Hagestad , professor of individual and families studies at the College of Human Development , Penn-

'

Roblin re~ives
Chancellor's Medal

..,...t

a-.., of the Board ol T~ oflhe
Unlvcnlly at Buffalo Foundation, and

serva on the advisory cornmltlec of lhe

School ol ~ In 1976, he
recallled the Walter P. Cooke Award of
the U/8 JIIUmnl Aaodation for unlqUjt
savlce to the Institution by a non alumnus.
Aware of· lhe lrnporlance of higher
f!ducatlon to the community, Roblin has
predlclad that "this area Is going to be
changing from a steel· town to a college
town , &amp;om heavy to light Industry."
A truly "pubbic-splrilad" dllz.en , Ketter
said .

and

;~:~~. S~te ln~~~~'!'tyAaw.! d~~=
Generations In Urban Families." A panel
dlsc:usslon Including teller Smith. the
new direct&lt;&gt;&lt; ol U/ B's Multidisciplinary
Center for lhe Study of Aging . will follow
Hagestad's presentation. The Collegf!s
and thf! Center are co-sponsoring the
day's program .
Carey McWffilams. pohtical science
professor at Rutgers. concludes the summer lineup July 28.
llle Colleges summer lecture program
Is funded through the Division of Continuing Education .

·c hon named to
West Valley panel
Or. Wan Y. Chon. dlrf!d&lt;&gt;&lt; of the
Nuclear 5clf!nce and Technology Fedllty,
has been named chairman ol a senior
technical consulting board which wiD
usilt the ArgonM National Laboratory In
preparing a draft f!nlllronmental impac•
statement on WI!SI Valley for the Department of Energy.
The enlllronmental Impact statement
Will assess the I Mllllity of the solidification of high lewl nuclear wasta now
stored as liquid at West Veley. Scheduled for Issuance by DOE lh December.
1980. lhe draft - n l wil be used to
• aid In lhe selection of a preferred
solidllicatlon method .
consulting board will give parK illneso occurs - to a student . a staff
ticular a~ntlon to matters )Which might
member . or a visitor. he Is there : to treat ,
affect the health and safety of people &amp;v·
to provide adYic&gt;o and assistance . to offer
lng In the West Valley region , e
assurancn. to insure that adequat care
spokaman said, as weD u review proIs provld d."
posed mathods.and techniques
But H doesn't ttop there . Ketter said .
Robert V. Laney. a conoultant tc
Mu-lman II known 'ior the pain51aklng
Argonne. wil sarw as the board's ex
follow-up: the phone call to the home.
ecutivt secretary. Or. Charles Luncr o
the check.lng-u on dietary needs, lhe reArgonne'• Enwoninentallmpac:t Studiat
quat for
ac..J mlc c:onolderaOMolon Is project manager responslbk;
lions H Is among US , ... he .. today .
for final ~lion of the draft Slate
whe,_lar!le numbers of Pf!OPie gather
men!
lor UniWrsity funcllons. for at these lima
Other board memben are Robert A
there 1o a real poeolbillry of tlic need lor
Sweeney. director of lhe Great lAkr.
medlc.ol c.e He lo always these Labontory at the Sea c;oa.ve at Buf
whenav«t and wherever his ~ II
lalo. Richard S. Booth. _prof_ of en
needed "
vtronmental Ia at Cornel: .James K
The Presidf!nt's A...ard, K&amp;n.r uld , "'J
0.\/lf, manager of plAnning at Cornin!,
our way of ntcndin!l our -ognlllon and
Gleu Works. H O.Yid Malllle. director o
walltuda for
example of caring lnthe Health Phylia OMolon. Uruvenily o
YOivament" which M.....,.n oft~
Rocheswr. end Robert M Ryan. dlrecto
"and for
con
lions far beyond
ol th.t Olfl&lt;c of Radlalion and Nuclea
ordinary that he hal mad• 10 lhe quality
Safety at Ran-lee-r Polytechnic In
of
·a~
Un•ver y •

First President's Award
.goes to Dr~ Musselman
Or. M Luther Mu$Mim&amp;n, director of
lJnlvenity Health Service. has re ceowd the Unlvenily'• font President's
Award llle honor wu presented during
the Com-ment Luncheon . May 18.
Thlo

new

award

will

be glv n

periodicalv. PraicKnt 1\obert L . K«tter
said . "1o honor a member oflhe Untvenity community who aumplifin standards
ol ~ and llftVICe to lhe Institution
that I• nceed the ordinary, and who , by
penoN~ n.ornplc. challengn ochers to
riM to ....,....,. "
M....tman. • 1937 wad""tc of the
U/8 School of Madlano, hal bftn on the
facullv her ...... 1947
If he ...... to ask mamben ol lhe
IJfllvandy to daat&gt;c Or MuSMiman In
OM word . K .,
,
folow11\g would be mooa ohen heard
dedlc:atacl. k~. ldnd. compi!IMonatc ,
, oympllth«ftc - or 1
one word that NafTIS to MY K al caring
If an

~nl

happens on campus. or

n..

�June 5, 1980

.

Only students can
·stop the vandalism .
Editor.
The Env!ronmenlal Studies Center is
located In the Wilkeson Q uadrangle o(
ElfiCX&gt;It ComplEx. As Its director, I have
had ocx:aslon over the past three years to
observe dorm life llnthand and have
shaken my head countless times at the
thoughtless vandalism that seems to be
incJbslng with each passing month . I am
told that the vandalism costs at UB c~r­
rently top $14 ,000 a month .
The recent spring exam period fol ·
lowed by the exit !rom the dorms of the
$1udents brought the vandalism orgy to
an al-time high. It seemed that some lew
students were determined to ~ave their
dorms In the greale$1 possible shambles .
The vandalism can be characterized only
as oullighl wanton d~ .
I have puzzled about the motives
behind vandalism lor many years and I
$1iU cannot understand why people do II.
That •nabbl•ty makes It difficuh for me to
suggest remedial polides. I do know that
an effort to control vanda~sm !rom the
lop down can. at be$1 be only pa11iallv
suc:c&lt;!ssful. H vandalism Is to be controlfed , 11 """be controlled-only through peer
prft:SUre . Bu1 how can that peer pressure
be brought about'
One possibility might be to organize the
dorms into WO&lt;k units. perhaps by floors .
Each residential unit could be made
responsible for c~anlng up II• own
quarters daily or atleasl a couple of times
a week . Students would soon ~arn that
the mess they make would have to clean·
ed up by !~selves and their peers
Each $1udellt could be assessed a

/

maintenance lund that would not be
needed ~ the area was kept clean and in
good repair. At the end o( the academic ·
year H could be returned to the students
or ft could be used for a group actlvHy
such as a picnic or a trip to some f avorite
p lace . II would take time and con·
siderable wise guida nce to eslablish such
a system but if II were done well. a nd proper traditions were established, it should
have subslantial impact in reducing van ·
dalism . It would no longer be lhought lo
be easy and expedient ·to dump van ·
dalism c0$1S on the anonymous, faceless
State of New York.
Our quality of life studies suggest that
people are much more likely to lake pride
and satisfaction in som~lhing thai thay

have done for themselves than they. are
about a service that they largely believe
they have paid lor through their taxes.
For example. residents of suburban and
rural areas in

Erie

County were much

more pleased wHh the lire protection pro·
vided by the" volunteer lire depal1ments
than were the residents of the City of Buffalo wtth a tax-suppol1ed, paid. profes·
siorial hre -flghting brigade . I believe
students can be enticed by the proper
leadership to take responsibility for an lm ·
portent part of their lives. Peer pressure

may encourage

vandaliSm but peer
pressure also can be used to bring it
under control.

Sincerely .

- Lester W . Milbrath
Dtrector Environmental
S t udln Cen ter
0

Campus sculpture show
takes more criticism
Editor:
Lohy names do not a sculpture make.
ndther do tinkling cymbals Grandiose or
exaggerated semantic descnptions do not
convay qeative ablbty It is the "medium"
Hself that mU$1 do JUstice to the creative
abollty o( the arti$1 . A great or known artist
does not create a rna erpiece each time
Therefore. H looks like we at the State
University of Buffalo have been caught
unaware by today 's trends In modern
sculpture In additJon , a prom
o( pur·
chase has been exacted .
WhomeVer one turns to on campus for
comment on these sculplures (the large
pieces being shown along the academic
spine aru) , the answer Is negative
Then, does H not appear that these
"pl«a o( art" are being pushed down
our tluoat , whether we e them or not?
Is ft oolely for r atOllS of ovailabiMty?
We even have • "a111que" by a local
prolaoional crilic
eour--E.prus .
May 18. 19801 who Hys these

&lt;-

oculplures, ·~articularly monum&lt;~n·
lal "' context,

mal/be a

very hasptt.ab~ ..,.
b«nlgn." What II thilsup

~

!0 mean' I lhlo what we want as
art on our campus'
Out Unlverllly Is known for

___

hosprlality. deanbneu and Invigorating
'
Why should we not _.... o( sculptures
· o( belonging.
that give one a I

..-.
,..

~

-

..-,-

...... -.,I'IAIII&lt; ......

S....~oi-Yoo\•Bulolo-

- - .. t:l6 ~Hoi """'""' •

.,.._

""""'_ .. I'IAIII&lt;_
.IAO&lt;SOI'i

North.At;neric:a
tomorrow:
friends or-foes?

sculptures that extend warmth and
lnendUness?
We should not cease to seek until we
fmd such expresssions that wtU comph·
ment the .. University community" for Its

constant desire for betterment and
gratifation in achievement .
Until then we should rather enjoy the
spacious lawns and clean sidewalks.

We can afford and are entitled to good
al1 .
Sincerely .

- Ellc Schwanberg

Prof thanked
for kindness
Edl-:
I would like to thank the professor who
took the trouble to return a package he
found In the paridng lot on the Amherst
Campus to the Slore where H was purchased . It was heartwarming to discover
that there are honest people In the communHy and because he didn 'I leave his
name . I wont to pu~
~kS~a-

The future o1 North America could be a lislflght or a love-In, depending on
where you came In on a conference on the topic sponsored ~/B's Center lor
ln~tive Sluclles (CIS] a1 the Grand Island Holiday Inn .
20-22.
Watched carefully by EuroPeans and representatives ol Thlr World Nations,
spokespersons for each of the three nalons of North America presented rather
harsh v1ew5 during the first of three days o( papers Jllnd group d iscussions. Mex·
lean representatives were espedlliDy testy about the U.S .:
U S multinational corporations are trying to stulllrolen 1V dinners down the
thr~~ of Mexican peasants. The U.S . wants everyone's oU. The U.S . exploits
" Illegal" Mexican immigrants. Canada and Mexico mig~t be better oil If the mov ing tectonic plates of Noiili America somehow expelled the United Slates land
mass o ut Into the ocean (See reporis o~ disCussion papers. elsewhere on t~is
pat· b ay 3, howeve r, tbe mood had softened. Alter_arguing and lalking out dil~
ferences In sma ll group sessions, the 60-or-so participants reconvened to express new -found understanding, hope . and agreement atlea$1 on what ought to
be studied to facilitate mutual cooperation In the decades ahead .
first day's omens of d ivorce had turne d to at lea$1 the "beginning of an affair . remark"d U/B ArchHeclure Dean Harold Cohen , whose school houses
the CIS .
The environment. energy, the economy. population lrend5, i~formation
resources. ed ucation, e ntertain ment, the labor force, a ll provide lertUe gro und
for cooperation and condliation. for studies by inte lled uals, and lor concel1ed
action by governments . Sludy teams should be formed , perhaps books written.

T!Je

conference participants recom mended .
Walt. walt

.

WJ&gt;il . wall . wail , cautioned B.F. Osorio-Tafall. d irector genera! of Mexico s
Center for Economic and Social Studies of the Third Wo rld . Don t be too am·
bltious . This is after all . the first encounter of Its kind . His institute is p lann ing a
study of the 'migrant labor problem wtth a nu mber of universities in the
Southwest sometime next year. Even more conferences are necessary pnor to
concrete action .
Th~rd World &lt;epresentatives complained that a "global asped " was absent
!ro m the discussions. but applauded the process .
It was a worthwhile , rich . rewarding process. pal1iclpant after participant
agreed . expressing eagerness for continuing the ~rk .
... .
.
''Many groups are doing work on the future . one man said . at IS· the mtegratnH! aspect of our work here and of Magda M~H ale's center which is the key
to finding solutions." Many academic specialties have to be called on .
"We are very ambitious In a very small way ," said Mrs . M~Hale . "We will proceed seriously but cautiously , the best way we know how.

First confa-ence be-e
Mrs . McHale recently brought the CIS research unit to Buffalo fro m the
Umversity of Houston . The conference was its first public activity since transfer·
nng here . but followed lis traditional pattern of studying th~ long-range social
and cultural implications of change In societies worldwide .
Some 40 invited oal1icipants - lrom Italy. Ghana . Egypt, Trinidad. Kuwait.
Poland and elsewhere-were joined by No11h American members of the World
Future Studies Federation IWFSF) and by representatives of the U/B and Buf·
lalo communilies lor identification and discussion of problems common to North
America .
Co-sponsors were the prestigious Center for Economic and Social S tudies of
the Third World (based in Mexico City) which contributed a delegation of
scholars and the WFSF .
·
The Untted Nations Environment Programme cooperated.

Canada
With a little innovation
it can _e njoy growth
while conserving , says MacDonald
Canada can enjoy economic growth

while alro becoming a .. conserver
society ." If H applies Innovation In plann ·

He's a nurse, too
Ther ·, no evidence he IS about to
make a mld-areer change, but Dr. Vern
L. Bullough . dean of !he Buffalo Stale
Faculty ol Natural and Social Sciences.
was recently IICeJlsed as a registered

nune
H had completed the courH WO&lt;k
before coming t.o Buffalo in January hom
hil former post as prolesoor and director
o( the Cen
for Sex Research at California Slate lJniwnlty at Nonhndge It was
not until recently. however. that he
received word he had paSMd the Na·
tlor\al Board oums and quablled for his
iccnfe
Ahady co-cq_ual_ In academe wHh his
..,., Dr Bonnlol 6ullougl1 . """'preceded
him 10 Buffalo to .-me the post ol dean
o( U/ B'a School o(
ng, he II now
~br....tlonune

Over the yews. the Bulough• have
on n u _ . writing pro·

lng lis economic future , H . ian Mac·
Donald . president of .York Universlly In
Toronto. predicted at the Conference on
the Future ol No11h America .
The 25 yean between 1945 and 1970

were an era of extraordinary, un·
precedented econom\c growth the
0

economist observed The 70s. by con·
trasl , brought chronic lnflai!On. r~tless
unemployment, social dissatisfaction ,
and growing caDs for reduced govern ·
ment expendhures .
Canada Is now In the midst o( a poten ·
tially far-reaching change In the character
of Its economic Ill : lower productivity
and a lower GNP lhsullldent to suslaln
the present high level ol public services
In a phrase, "a major reslrudurlng of
basic economic characteristico."

n...... Canada f a the

sa""' difficu · s ..

other lndustriallziod nations, MacDonald
-.aid But hlo nation hM featu res that
......M thlngl wone: "It Is a amall, open
and balkan1Zed economy that ha

developed a specialization In the export
of raw materials." Its people want lo con·

sume. more and more and to enlarge their
standard of bving while work perfor·
mance . productivily a nd output lag.
More Is asked of !P:'ernment despite a
shrinking production base.
The nation is also becoming more and
more concerned about conservation of

resources and environmental enhance·
menl . Therein, said MacDonald. may "lie
the be$1 hope for reconciliation o( rlsin_g
upectations and slackened econom~
growth - the more efflclent use
resouroes and the wtDingneso to declare a

•war on waste .' ,.
The first !ask for Canada. he said. Is to
decide what H wants. If most Canadians
op1 for continuing growth, he said . free

competition mU$1 be encouraged In the

marketplace . and IUCCUS "reward"';!
rather than oOnslraj_ned or penalized
Productivity Improvement has to be
. championed by labor. government ~nd
bu..--, and the notion rejected that•m·
proved productivity 11 somehow a threat
to Jobo. "The countries wHh the highest
productivity ir\ the world are also t~

•--c-...·- 7,-a.S

�June 5, 1980

.A..

Agriculture looms as key
to· improving trade deficits;
reform likely, not revolution
AgricuMure is the way the U.S . will ftnd
foreign exchanga In the future, Ted Got-·
don, president of the Connecticut-based
Futures Group, predicted .
His was a buoyant, optimiltic picture of
the U.S . In the years ahead, centered on
harnessing science and technology as on·
ly Arnerblns can.
Willis W . Harman of the Educational
Polley Research Center, Stanford
Research Institute, complained that Gor·
don's scenario Ignored forces bent on
lransforming the world by chollengin~ the
muhinatiooal corporations and the large
nation stales. Ignored, too, in Harman's
view , was the "psychosomatic" illness of
American society through which the
Seven Deadly Sins of the Middle Ages
have been transformed into the
desiderata of the consumer society . This
IKestyle now poses more costs than
benefits, he argued .
Lester Mihath of U/ B agreed that the
Gordon scenario Ignored the near cer·
tainty that we will have to "remake"
rather than patch-up soCiety.
Smiling , Gordon· ""',fllphasized the
positive, while acknowledging that ter·
rorism and "single issue" politics pose
threats to future stability.

M~xico

To survive, it needs less,
not more dependence on U.S .
warns Senor Aguilar
1M IO&lt;Iel, political, and economic In·
stitutlons Meded fa. Mexico are nol the
same" as t"'- envisioned fa. the U.S .,
Adolfo AguiAr Zinsa of the Center fa.
Economic and Social Studies of the Third
Worid said bluntly in • paper on MexicO's
futur reletlona wllh
neighbor to the
.

-"'·

"This recognition is crucial," he con·
lcnded .
Futwe IOCiel and economic dewlap·
ment In Mexico will hevc to be addressed
wllh ' - Mpendenc:e on the U.S .
"This II true nol only for a fundamental
change In the sodal slrueture of the c:oun·
tly," ~ .....,..j, "but aloo ""'
rudjuslmcnll wlllm Mftlc.n capitalism .
Clwlga !hoot could tW place In Mexico
lbould nol be tntaprdld In the u s. ..
connry 1o Unltold SC.ta eoonomlc and
pollical .... If !hoM c:hanga
affect U. S . companies. Ranovated
slralegiu of ~tIn conllid wilh
the AmorieMI of We and wllh the
democratic c:onc.p11ons abached to It,
rmght be
fa. the maln~enan&lt;:e
of and the nlolbW!rnent of IOCiel

-v

~ .·

.

flcultles . 'While the highly competitlve In·
du.strial poo..w!rS of Europe and Asia ate
expanding their share of world
lnldc,. .. the United States is losing
ground In ,global lrade due to a faU In effi·
clency of their own Industries." The
weakened dollar and an lnaeasing
dependence on foreign oil have exacer·
bated the situation . Adding to those dK·
ficultles, Aguilar noted, U.S . fa.etgn
economic policy has grutly neglected
latin Arnerbl , its natural lJOne of
Influence.

No..,

In this context, he alleged , "the new in·
terest shown In Mexico is a fortunate
coinddence fa. the U.S , , and on oppor·
tunUy of redlr«:ting its economic, com·
merdal and slrateglc policy" toward the
Walern ~e. and MexiCO In par·
ticular. Powetful economic and polltical
groups ln the American Southwest are
puolring the nollon , according to Aguilar.
'rhus. -the " new vision" of o North
Amencan common matl&lt;et, a vision the
young M«U:an economist does nol buy
Given the peculiarities of relotic:IRs be·
- n the- U.S . and its netghbon, north
and south, he Mid, "a concurrence of
three clllfeent oconomic entllles seeking
mutual benefU could no1 be hoped for . It
would be rather a question of a conoen·
tric link of C.nado, on the one hand . and
MexiCO, on the other, with the U.S , With
Yft\1 different implcatic:IRs lor both those
c:ounlries." The U.S .. the eplcentre of
such a ochernc. would be the big
bencllclary. he said .
lnJiud, propoeed Aguilar, I might be
to the mutual ..tvan._ of Canada and
Mexico to increase preMntly ln51gntficant
trade In bet-. thernselvft, and thus
h4llp each oth r "diversify their
depenciotnce on their powerful neighbor "
R.tlotic:IRs bet-. Canada and
U.S , and
and
U.S . •e fun ·
darnenldy dill ent, Agua.r ..mphaslz
ed
• . . . . burdened With a less
llgnflcanl volume of Amettcan pr..--.
II
more dcp4lndent on
. . , . . _ Ita
the US. Thc conw·
fa.
-clgnty and ....

~ldencc . . Canadamor••
"'much

U

In

and

of per . . . .

..,.tous "
more 4lqu.ol

Aguilar

Farming .tnotesla -ut already
S1rategies already exist to upgrade pro·
ductivity and enable U.S . farmers to pro·
duce far more calories per acre at lower
energy costs, Gordon reported . New in ·
sectides, for e xample , use pheromones
to attract bugs to their demise: human hie
and the ecology are unaffected . There
are ways to Increase the efficiency of
plant photosynthesis, biological method~
to fix nllrogen and improve plants. and
means of using sah water for irrigation , to
mention JUst a few.
Productive acreage can be greatly ex·
panded through irrigating now margtnal
lands and by turning land that can 'I be us·
ed lor aops Into grazing areas lor
livestock which can'provide food sources
F'ISh have been successfuUy domesticated
to Increase supply, and food factories are
now possible in w~ich growing plants can
be moved along "assembly lines"
oimulating ideal climatic conditions
New kinds of food are bkely, satd Got-·
don . "Boston Scrod was a JUnk fish until
someone marketed M under a new
name ." Insects and rodents offer plentiful, nourishing protein sources as do
seeds and seaweed . The science of
llavors. fragrances and textures wm be
b-ought to bear on making them more
palatable .
These strategies are expensive, Got-·
don noted . but they can be used elfec
iively to produce needed food . U most of
the need Is in poorer COijnlries, so be it
These countnes have bonowed money to
get oil and can do the same lor food .

~ Ottdook -~- ~~
Thc energy outlook for the next two
decades Is no1 as bright No matter how
you figure h. Gordon said. domestic
energy production wiD likely faD below
demand Conw.vation , higher prices.
and appeals to public spintedness can
and will help lowe d..mand (as the com·
bination has done already In terms of
gasoline ClOOJUrnptlonl. but nol to the
point wher&lt;r a pinch can be avoided. Gor
don held out hope thet thr
long-shoe
supply strategln may tom4l to the rncua ·
geolhermal energy. geopr.....,..., and
gasohol Gasohol production can be
_.jed up and made rnoo-e cos1 efflclent
!( genetic Kkn
can "produce" new
organisms capable of lransformlng com·
mon tubolaoces Into alcohol. a likely

ever 5ve that way?" We'0 make do with
less and insist h's bener, he predicted .
Thc ck!clning productivity of the
American wa.ker is another issue which
has to be faced . That. producilvity rate
rose sharply (along with wages) .until the
early 1970s when k broke away from its
lradillonally diagonal ascent. The de·
mand for wages didn1 b-eak. Marxists
contend the wa.ker has reached the
6mits, while capitalists blame excessive
government regulation . Gordon sees
hope for a new increase tn output per
hour (the measure of produdivUy) - K
government affords lax b-eaks to C&lt;?m·
panies emphasizing research and
development, provides incentives for
savings (perhaps through removal of
taxes on dividends). and rationalizes its
now ..absurd .. and drawn-out procedures
for patenting Inventions.

•

Birth rate aDd lnOatiAitfiOugh the birth rote has dipped and
is likely to remain low, numbers· of babies
being born in the 1980s will increase as
individuals born during the 60s boom
begin to raise their own famUies.
lnflatton will continue at an average
8· 10 per cent rote , making two wage·
earner families a necessity. This is yet
another way in which the U.S . has
changed dramatocally . said Gordon .
Women used to wa.k only lo provide
..extras.·· but now two breadwinners are
an integral part of the American lifestyle .

Long-life
People will Uve longer (they already are
dOing so). Gordon pointed out. In 1900.
average life expectancy was 48; now It's
69 for men and 78 lor women . The rate
of heart disease deaths has declined
dramatically on recent ye , fa. example.
Mortality assumptions of pensions and
annuity funds are proving wrong and that

threatens the st6bility of these funds . In
fact . said Gordon , the number of people
85 and older has grown 300 per cenl bet·
ween 1950 and 1978.
Job security will become more and
more Important to workers. he sug·
gested , surpassing wages as a pnm"'Y.
concern . Crealion of " Intelligent '
machines able to reason will threaten
many jobs. Others wiU be put in jeopardy
as more and more plants move south
where

so-.calfed

.. undocumented ''

workers (Illegal aliens) who wa.k cheap
are increasingly abundant
Terrorists may become an inaeasing
problem , futurist Gordon feels The
media feed on them and their acttvitles.
and there's really no way to cope elfec·
tovely with them . Trylng lo use military
might again51 terrorists, he said. IS hke
" aiming at a cockroach with a cannon ...
Single -issue· polnlcs ...11 conlln ue to
erode the American notion of consensus,
he ventured Single issues fek deeply
~ave

~ttle

room for compromise or

negoliatic:IR . And we 're going to be laced
with a new series of such concerns. llmM
on government spending, c:MI rights in
the wa.k place. equal pay Ill&lt; equal work ,
bthnguallsm , guesl wa.kers. American
productivUy vs foreign nations. inaeas· ·
ing regionalism. and more and more
pressure to reduce govemmenl progt'ams.

Revolution is unlikely, Gordon I Is.
but "reform" could become a major issue
as the 80s unfpld .
Asked agaon W he hadn 't overlooked
the major question of "transition ." Gor·
dGn wanWd to know "Transtlion to
-what. fa. what?"

~-

Med officers

rtghteouoly ~
automobolos
the- W4l ' - t.gun turning to smaller
foreign can People will usc the · ktmons" method 1o ad.pt to living w1lh

Schun. at965gradi.at ofrhe Schoolof

...-.... wil become "consumers of
conscrvat on ," he predlct&lt;rd, self·

' -· We' already done • to.oome ex
tent Hll wife, he noted , now
al the
50-room man...,. ·b\dt dumg
3011
. and demands to know
did ~

Buffalo nephrologist Dr Robert W

Medicine, has be~n elected prftldent of
the U/ B ~leal Alumni
lion
Othen
d to JCn w&lt;"&lt;e Dr . Nor·
man o.-n, a 1945 UI B medical
ochoolvr..tuate, vice pr
nt . and Dr
Robert Baurnktr, cia of 1952 IT
rcr.

�•

j

June 5;-t'JS()

I I j

CALENDAR
P£DIAT1UC GIIAND ROUNDS•

Thanday- 5

lith-..._...... -

P£DIATIUCS CONFEJIEHC£'

..

- . ~· Hllon. ~ Foh. NY.
Juno 5·7 Thundov ON! frldov'• ........ from 9
am -~ p m • s.turday ~ from 9 i m -4'K:JOn
s,.o.-.d by 1M Dopw1ment ol Pod- and
Oild&gt;on·, Hoopilol
-E I

- · Aid

IIUFI'ALO'
lrom

MTabhothi. p;ono Bwd
R&lt;dlol Hal 8 p m Gonoool ad...- $3 S2 lot
U/ 8 facul!y aftCI ...H. Sl f0&lt; SlUdonu
...t:.ta.ttotl. '"Ju.M "' Buffalo'" il
brlc:k~ b.gger then .wr Thh ynr's fU~NaltniiOto.rft a
....,.,g ~ lwlrido began on Monday
1\lghtl. ~ c:ornposont. and a Wide arr.ty of gun~
and ra.cknt .m.ts M\d mw~
"JUM "' BuffMo"' l)u long bftfl recogruzed •~ a
~ eort\IOCIICIOn whet• fnlior figures in the con·
le'mpotr,tmu* J«ne h.w gJWn and rten:~Ved In ·

"'* • ye.·,

. . . . . ""_. . and_..,._"" .

M.any works Mw
,.._.wd .. pe.tor....- a n d pori..mod -ks "".. . _ Tho

pt'1111WnUbon and inno\o'Pon

conctn•aoon ol conlefnPOt.-y mu.Mc81 thought
evoked by dM fft&amp;tvalhu; bHn a m.,.- .n~nee in
~ the ~~kJprnem IWMi III'UCture of new
mUIOC boohJn lh• covnoy and .troad. tr/ B Dopw1ment . . . , . . _ . . , . , . - h hos, lunhe&lt; .

ploy&lt;d • role., f&lt;x:u""!l publoc - - oo
d:w 51t1ou.s mUll(: of our t~ h¥ broMened
1M- ..... - - - tho d-"" ol aud...... sup·
port lor lhll muSIC~ the evenfs ~ poinl out
PertldpMing c:ompoM:t5 are ~Crumb. MOf ·
- Feldmon. Lo!-cn Hillft , S..... !Wch. Ralpll
st....,. aw-n WOlf and Charin Wuorinen
P.n.o.-n include m. Columbio Stmg Quar1c1
tho 1U&lt;&gt;noo Stmg Quortct S..... Reich ond Mus!
oons. 1M U -' 8 P - tn..ml&gt;lo undo&lt; lh&lt;
.._,.. ol .w. w...... Doo,giH Cone .
flu"" Roborl Dod&lt; , duo,..,..,. Fneda ond Stephen
Marw.s. JUniiiU Yv~ M .hashoff and Akl
T-.t..sb . topft"OO R~ Tr~ Mid percus
..,.,..J.n Wil I'N

PEDIAT111C RESEARCH SEMINAR•
of om Polio v....... ,. • o.-tooMt
c-oy, EJo Uo&lt;h M D chairmen . Ped.otnc S..
vca, NHMr P~1ne Hot;phll DWector of Hukh .
Go.o. ltr..t-.sR- Chld&lt;on'o~l 12

F-.

.,_,

UUAII FILM'
1'1N Goc:MIIthcr 0972) ConferMC:e l"hetttre,
c.l &amp;36 2919 too ..... c;.n...a ad
-1210 b SIIIO
1 lw In&lt; I... ol
FO&lt;d C&lt;&gt;ppolo I epic oo
1M u .. ., Ame.nta Mallon &amp;-.ndo • 1,1~
. - .. ~~w role

Sq\1••

f,.,.,,

friday- 6
CONFOENCE•

_
....
_
... _bndol9
- . . ._
.
,.-.,m.floldoloc
OOCid&lt;nl

-..-,_F_to_
Tho eo.-... - ... ...,
....
from 8l0•"' to 6 30.,"'
put

Oft

lhe

ORAL BIOLOGY SEMINAR•
F-....S~Oiwnltp o.....,~

·----~­

Subgr...... Richard P EJ.n , D D.S • and Edwanl .
D Flllery, Ph D , Foc:ulty of DonOstry, lJniwBity of
T..ooto Room 107. 451 0 Main Street 12 n&lt;""'

INFOIUIAL MEETING AND c:oFFUHOUII'
.lohn l.lntloo,, canddal&lt; I« tlw Domoaao.c
10 Copen 2 p.m
Hoo!Od by AJMmbjyman William Hoyt'o ofloc•
Student.. facuky. 11Aff .nd community invited.

""""""""" "" us. 5cnoto&lt;.

PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR'
Concro1 of Water a.&amp;ana tn thf: Fetal and
Adult Luno, Dr Rochard otv... Oopartment ol
Podoa- . Un-..y College Hoopbl to4cdtcol
School, London . England 5 · 108 Shennan 4 p.m
ALIJJINIINSTAU.AnON AND AWARDS

BANQUET·

Spoulcf"'ii Dlnln!l Room . EJ;con 7 p.m S..
on pagt 11

~tory

. JUNE IN BUFFALO'
Sdtonboro Lied«, Roswitho T.ale . sop&lt;ano.
YWI Mitheshoff. plano S..d Recital Hal 8 p m
AdmiSSion cherge
UUAII FILM '
The Godlathc&lt; (19721 Coote..nc.
Squ'wt Cd 636-2919 for ~how, timu General .d
ml:taon S2 10, Sfudmts $1 60

n.......

Saturday - .7
JUST BUFFALO READINGS AND
WORJ(SHOP '
'WOIIMI'I'• Spect and ttM: Making of a P~ .
Monon PCOT)' , Lyn Uhlun and Joy Walsh . Mparl&lt;.
L~on . NY 1-!tpm
Aloo
ol Youth (TOY) ....,..... Ralpil
W~ wdl prewnt -StoryHour~ and Doc Fin
lu&gt;hcl ol m. Stooy
c.._, ol t1w MIME
w..bhap ln Rochftte. ..,;II pcrlo&lt;m "Tho Moon b
In Tlw Way ..

n....-.

n......

JUNE IN 8UfFALO.
)4UIIIk From Franc«:

...,...c.m

rvana· 119791. Vong

Sot* Won. '1n.e.-ll" il962l. Gibert Am\1. "B
too s.n...- (19791 Betsy ....... .
M.uric•
Olian.. "F""'lun MuK . Eacdt&gt;ra.. (1980) . John
e.g. s..d RicotoiiW 8 p m Adm..- dwg&lt;

-s;g,..:·

UUAII FILMS·
ToH.wandHaw Hoi (1944) , Tr......-eoftM
Slcmo M..... (19481 170 NFAC. E.kott c.l
636-2919 "" ...... Gme.a .a d 52 10. ttudcnlo 51 60
To
How Not liaR Humph&lt;&lt;yllojjart
..... l A - Thilll tlw two to..bodo
8og&lt;y
... to hook Lauren
filhlng""
H..
he m.rwea

How_.

ACcaoen ~TION

end
... - - - .. ~-·cntct.¥""""*

,....,..._ of th&lt; ~ .. · RJchanj
Olver_. MD , MTDor ~In pediatrics., Untwntty
Collog&lt; Hoopltol. London . Enslan~ . Kinch
AudiK:Irium, Chlldrm's Hospital J 1 a.m .

- ·and-

y._., Bogart ....... •"" .....
W._ H\l'lk:N\, wtt.o d..edl ¥., wtl Greed . one of
, _., - ........... .. tpephlcoly ~ ln
""'tJU1 film k'olhc-., olan """""' ....-..l&gt;IP
a~ ...... -olgold

__
IMT. ."
0.
..._
boAS-·
--"

o.o--

ol Ooloo&gt;ooo Coop0&lt;0110n. Dr H H
.,.....,. ., 1M Sololll s....- o;.,
-ofWSAiroc Dr CG Dnny ~"' "'

Calloo&gt; -

.................. wOru:
_.,..._.,....,....._
..

-

oiT-...._.
Tho """'-nee " .. """"' ...........

IIUR'ALO l'tlESENTATION'
and , . _ Cldoooolq,, - Tho

I 5
-~. ·--·and-­
~ . ~NY.

pm

UUAaFILMS'
To

How_. How'""' (19441. T,_oftho

S1cmo -

(19481

631&gt; 2919 "" -

UIO - S l 6 0

IUNe

Col
Gononl a d -

110 MFAC. -

-

IIUR'ALO •

......(19
VleoloM:
""""
(19791.
"'coott"
-v..
""

c-

-s.

--

·'

end · U9791
Quooto&lt;. U/ 8 P,.
.-~. -P- . -Ed

_......,

Fricdrich Schml.or. ,...........,- Honno Etote.
"Kemmmnuoa. IV," Pou! Hftu Dilridl. BUd
R«ooiiW.8pm .
IIEDICAL CONSEIIT CONFEREHC£•
--andt!Mo........,_dod..Cbo
cliocuoMd .. thla con~e..,.., _ . . t by tlw DM·
ol Community~ end tlw New Yoril

. .n.-........ .-and-·
............ __
wtl focus on iiMMll of COftMII\l.

Alleo-.

'-"1. w11 periarm

JUNIE IN BUfFALO'
F""" U. a....,: -v.....m. ~.­

Wedanday

~

11

hold .. liMo
Shoroo.
- To bo
Aoeodelion
"
" -lnn·E'MI.
a.tcnn.liMoIncrnM1in!1

Saaday- 8
~

Moaday- 9

.....rY--HIIYif'loold. _.. . Jooo

" " - - - - H a l 8 p ..

wtl:hholdanJI tre.t ·

-.onwtrictlb9-.C9am durinolhc""'"'"&gt;l&gt;
by H Rulb&lt;tfood TumiMol ID• .,..,._ o1 public

UnMnlotl ol ol Gowmm.m.
MIOIOBIOLOGY liPECIAI. SEMINAR•
Role
C.ll
S•rfa&lt;:e
oo4
M
- lof
ot
ho
_ o ............
l_ _

lew ond - - .. 1M

Corcloo•• -

cw..,.llo IW.a Cdo. Dr e.t. KHorr.....
lloportment of·Ciinocll 'lloaorlolow. u..-..,y ol
Linlooplng , s....t... 223 5/wmwoo 4 p m

Thanday -12

�7

June 5, 191!0

June In Buffalo

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

5 ••

...-.c ....................... ..

........ ........, ............... 14.

ea.-

w--...

a.art.

........ . .

.............
loll). -

ol ...-~.,
- - .. ...........
. .. Mooldl!v- The ...-6c ol

_...
Nt.

(fw

~(at ..... .... . . - - . . .

lhot ......,, ........... s-dav ......
Ill Balrcl. M01t011 F.w- t-lefl) 11
the FatlvaJ director. See detallo In
"""" 5 lilting below.

. Notices
HELP WANTm
l\d¥onoodotudonllln Moiii ~ . - ­

T~ and

Sclonc:e Ia - - ,. lloologyt
bSpocWs..-Tutanal l'rog.am """"""'"'' ~
hours per weD. houn S p m untl8 p .m
Spoao!Seo.- Oftlco , 3 11 T- . 1
tw. ICIOfltlld PftJO't Ms Irma N Ton:n, coor·

-"""""to

LIFE WOliKSitOPS

_ Oonc&lt;n..............
quillon, gonjcncn,
..-.-...........
·· - w

w""""""" "... '"""'"inS

to

.chen: Ule
vo~un~ees
t..d - . _ (or lal 19110 Tho-._.,.
non&lt;tedM, short-wnn , free of chwgco • .00 op«t 1o

--In "'"

Un:-

Stud.ms. J.cuily. -

-

Mamni and ~ &amp;om ttw community •e 1nviled

to ,.... knowlodgc and wllh odwn.
Through lo&gt;Oonga wort&lt;ohop, """con gain valuoblo
~ lUChing and can gd 10 know a Yaddy
of people in a relaxed . lnfortNJ ~~ We of-

(., -.hop. . . ...,.,.. ..... tt..oughout tho
~ . for ~;.yw,g dur-at!Ona. Mild wil try to tcheduW
"""'
to .... """" Who- """"
ski orwort&lt;ohop
In~ . m.nots • e dwnr •e odwrs in the
lln-..y..t.o.n..,... ....... and ... _
the ct..nct lo lnm wilh you We wil bt h.appy 10
~~otto olfft' ....,.nee in p&amp;.nnrtga

.....t.shop Col6362807 or IJv .llO Norton
Pita. contact us • soon .s you can
SOtOI.ARSHIPS FOR F1RST-YEAR
ST\JDEHTS
~IO_.,.te ln lfw-am of
- ~bfno -Y..,S&lt;udenOJal~

FlnandaiN&lt;odforthcl980-81-ic }ICMhove

- . molod to the c-dinalor aiStudam RoondoJ
AW. ......... 10 ,_luoclt fronl .tl.;ynr' s

-....,,the..,..._,...., bo complewd. llgn·

eel, M&gt;d '""'"'"" to "'" !lopamnont al Hnlth one!
HumM S..V... &amp;n-.. ol fiMkh Prof.--or11,
~ - ~ 20782 no lot.. than July I .

19110.

SUMMER STUDENTS: £ED HD.P7
Spoaol So&lt;-. Plojoa • " " - &amp;.a Mona!
"" .. _
.. -Sdanoe. Englloh and
Cologe lludanb
Drop In at 311 T.........S~ . Mains,..., Com
pua• . . . , _ ~ p m and p m Moncloy through

-.....,..to - -....
""'""

HEALTif SCIENcU ~
-..~ow-.-vor~o, a~ophic

-T.,.... Throuslh-.u....y.
June
n..-..--·-~ov­
K., -.....v 01&gt;4 Tony 0..... b -

E:JIIIIoh---· Tho...,._ ......

-

......... ~- " ' - 14 ..... -

MFA5HOW
J .G. \llal, · and Vld Schw.,,
..,....,. ThoMllloGalfty, JOE.u-. Buf·
lolo 1'lwootll&gt; "'- II Galfty houn ... l-4 p m

. . _.............
Bullolo-._
.
___
,.,.....
.......__
--"
-.so, .. 2

•

...

n. ............ - . .... _......, .. _

_

-

--- ---

- · --~.-- -

.. ...dt

-

·-

... c.--1¥ lollorlohlp"" ..

...

._INIIU'FALO '

_ ..

v- r
(197)).

119791. -

0....

~--

U'1721• . __ v..._ •·
to. • .su,...... Evcaant''
• . 19141. ,.,.
-. NOT-..-, ·

·'Mulk

&lt;M

--

-"'-

-

-...-.v-

Weclneoday tlvough Suncl.,

Oa The Air
JUNE • •

c - to ... """ 0.. tc.y c-sa.
o.o--oa~~.
c
- Coblo (lot I p m ---­

,._,,

~ lo doo_: _F

, _ _ Coblo (lOt. 6 p m
UdMs ...... ....... all....

Tho- .

.....
al

- - H o l . l p ..

1'1761 eo.-...
2919b--

To ._ -

Ia lhe "Caaadar," call

hall . . . . at

~1626.

Kev: .oro,- """' ..
wldt'Opn
• ....................
the oubjec:t;
to lbe ~ •
lo _ . , _ ol
the

·aw-

Unlwrtlty.

~

\J•Iea oth«rwwH

.... -

cloatwlet

be purehMe4 •• the
HaiiTlcbt Ollcc.

........... COli

noted 1l1e two have common energy inte..r~sts

and

a

common

European

heritage•

.,.... Oladala
However, deep disdain and lgnoranc.e
about MGito abound in the U.S . , and
MGito resents and dlslrusts lhe U.S .
This obslructs the search for solutions to
' speci&amp; problems betlwen the two .
''What Mexico seek$ Is nol a closer
economic link with the U.S ., bur rather
the neg61iation of the hnk$ already exIsting and a reduction of dependence,"
he asserted.
According to Aguilar. U.S . interests
dominate foreign investments in Mexico .
And foreign-owned industries are on
average 30 times laiger than national
enterprises in the same .c:toro. In 1970,
for. nample , American Investors held
I 00 II\ of foreign investment in rubber.
97 II\ in the paper industry. 88 II\ in food
and drink , 84.3 11\ in metal products.
82 11\ in machinery , nil\ in electronics,
73.4 II\ in chemical products and 70.8 11\
in transport. From January 1971 lo
September 1978. for every dollar invested in MexicO by foreigners, 1.5
dollars were taken out.
In the field of lrade , Mexico's
dependence on the U.S . for imporu and
exports Is more than 6511\ . Yet , only 3 .5
per cenl of the U.S . lrade volume is invee! .
Mlgradoa of w orken
The only place where "a certain compalibility" exists, Aguilar said , "is in the

mobility of the labor force." The migra tion of Mexican workers to the U.S .
benefits both countries, he assessed .
"Mexico witnesses the red uction in
pressures caused by unemployment
wh ile the U.S . gains from these arms
prepared to work in the mosl thankless
tasks in e&gt;tchange for low salaries." This,
however. "does nothing to enhance fair
economic relations ."

On the contrary;"it shapes a system of
exp~lllhon founded , on the one hand ,
on the injustices of Mexican development
and , on the other, on the lnhumanitarian
use made by the United Stales produclive
apparatus of dispossessed workers who
embark upon a legitimate search for opportunities in a country thai lreats them
like 1ran5gresson ol the law by denying
them minimum rights."

Mex~eo's under de......,_. brougtu
"d~n dent ~- IS m·

on by II&gt;

cubaling a social crim a nd lhrutens the
state's pol•llcal viablirty. Agutlar warned .
Tne.-e IS "a n unfatr dJstnbulion of productive resources . a soc.al org.ruation based
on exploilation ··
.
Peasants have been fooad off the~r
lands by low pnces lor whai !hey produce , leav•ng much of the .laJonland lo
major entrepreneul'5 who • .,..,t.~ze cotton for export and high -priced wheat. At
the same lime . industry has become
capital-intensive . unable to -.orb an
abundan t labor pool.
Urba mzatJon has gener.aed W\realistic
consumer expectations. abeUed by the
mass med ia which. Aguilar 111111 . "have
promoted a culture ol unbridled con ·
sumption and Imposed values which are
lotaUy foreign 10 lhe Mexican context and
benefit o nly the private interests of the
manufacturing industry.· 1l1e media has
been used also to undermine public support for govern ment acttOn against
priva te in terests.
In the social sphere , educatiOn has improved lillie since the ~- Calorie a nd
protein deficiency Is suffered by 21
million people . includ ing 90 P4&lt; cenl of
the rural populalion . Inflation hil 29 per
cenl in 1977

Mwco muot Nve ltaaSf
Me&gt;&lt;ico has to as5ert its in&lt;Npende nce
from the U.S . to save ilsell. Agllllar said
There is a "crucial poiJtical ,__;ty" lor
it . he argued
Eve n if actions lhat must be ta ken are
viewed in the U.S . as "negative ... or ··re
jecting." he said . they mtlfl be aooepled
as ..constructive reaffirmations essential
for the preservation of the national
being."
'The most generali.&gt;ed public ..,tnion in
Mexico. "outside the priYal ~r a nd
its links with government bur

uaacy .'

is. according to Aguilar , ''thai social
developmen t

and

eeon o m tc

In

dependence are the lunda!'llllntal politica
ob)eClives of Mexico today. E.wrglng in·
dependent poiJttcal groupo, deopjte their
many ideological differences. are v!glla nl
of government acUons and suepk.ious of

any close association with lhe U.S . This I
an unchangeable pohttcal factor "
ThiS tmplies. he said "that Maxx:o wil'
increasmgly look ouls•de North Americ&lt;
for economK: opportunaue5 ••

• Canada
~--··
""'-·)
countries with the best record of employ-

Exhibits

-

_

• Mexico
.....
.......

ment ." he noted .
Canada's btrth rate and national
population growth have fallen , Mac Donald pointed out. There will be fewer
young workers entering the labor force
(rellecting low birthrates of the late 60s
and 70s) . While more and more women
are taking )Obs. the Impact on the labor
marltet is still uncertain. he said. and im ·
migration is unUkely to have any 9f""l tin pact . To the oonlrary, as populatiOn
levels decline in all watern countries, he
vmtur~ . the resuk could even be
"serious competitiOA" among these counlries for skilled Immigrants from the Third
Worid . "Canada and the U.S . are no
longer intetestlng skilled people from
Europe, as once was the ca • and there
is no indication that this condition Is about
to be revened ."

c-·-

Market cloubtfoot
While a Nor1h American economic
union looks good on paper (and the
European common rnatltet has a tracl&lt;record of sucx:eosl. MacDonald views its
accomplishment .. "doubduf' in the near
future - even though uch a North
American bloc could be enftiiY seH ·
sufficient and would pr&lt;?duce one-qUArter
of Ike world 's grain .
"Canada and Mexico have bHn tradtllonally unwtlling to enter into such
as.-umen with the US : MacDonald
said, becawe the U.S would .
1
domirumt lorco " M tdco lo too prot •
lion IO engage in
trade , he submH
ted Canada I an loomg • major pot'tlon
of its oil -

Canada . s.id Mac Donald . is a
nl hnic groups !101 a
"mouic" 01 d

meiltng pol Ihere ts no trui\1 :.eanadtan
cuhur• The problems betweer&gt; French
and English Canadians. the two ma)Ot'
pat1nel'5 In the Canadian corhederalion
are serious , MacDonald said And
altho ugh Canada Is "one ol the longes
surviving and most successful federation
in the world ," 11 must be " foreve
prepared to develop and 10 illdapt co~
lederaltOn to the requoremenla of th,
day " In his opinion . he llid. ~- hav•
reached the stage where map
redesign of the Canadian conMderalion ~
essential if we ere to survive.'" There mu5t
be a commttrnent lo build Caotada into a
more effective untied natl&lt;&gt;n,
urged •
while allowing Quebec to
sense
of nationhood witlun conioder
Canada's lulu 1 ~~ look lor
bright . MacDonald granlad
movin
from a ..consumpUon.

... ., a ..COt

server" one, Canadlano I
I
near
1mpo55:ble task ollowenng lOP"dallon
for the first lime oince the 1930&lt;. Th·
change r quir a mature and educal
population . a nd "posl·secondary ed uu
tion is more important now thari evt
before •
eeded. too , he said. io a nation.
economk: ltrategy to ~ture restorat
of economic growth , a slral y in wh
the ballet and sclentdiC research ar v\ev.
ed .. just u Important 10 the GNP ,
bricks and trucks

Gas ohol ·s tudy
. A $198 .000 study to det...-mlne th.:
feiJibillly of commt't'cially producing
ethanol to tNnufactu r. gawhol in ev.
York Slat Is und"r way by SU Y Col·
1&lt;tge ol Agrlculiure and LJt• Selene
researcher• at CorneD

'

�Class of '80 hears 'hardline' oratoey
John Wayne, draped In Red,
White and Blue, was on the cover
of &amp;quire a few months back as
that magazine somewhat less,lhan-frivolou.sly procl.aimed the
end of the soft -line era.
The hard line is chiC once more ,
the trendy publication reported:
Jiine Fonda Is discredited; Henry
Kissinger is in .
How true that js w,as
demonstrated by two of the
leading "liberals" in the U.S .
Senate at U/ B Commencement
exercises in May. Daniel Patrick
Moynihan and Jacob Javits bip·
ped over one another in !he rush
to talk tough . ·
Graduates cheer€d .
Where have all the Oowers
gone?

u..a..m the 10.

"We mU$1 unleain the 70s,·· and return
to an alert and aggressive foreign policy:
That was Senator Daniel Patrick
MOI/Ilil:lan's hawkish ad\1\ce to the. Class
of 1980 at General Commencement e•·
erdses. Sunday, May 18, at the Bullalo
Conveniioil Center.
The 70s. as Moynihan reads their
history, were a period of timidity and e.·

cesstve

'~remorse ••

in American for,lgn

policy-a decade in which we apologi&gt;Jed
for OUT power and prestige, and In the
process. began to lose ~
Now. the 80s have bj!ijun on an
"ominouo" note. "The Soviet Invasion of
Alghanlslbn was a curtain raiser of rous ·
ing proportion." Moynihan Insisted .
Thls decade ,
Is now clear WiD ...be
very different from the 70s. Where it
oumed the greet question of our foreign
policy debate in the ·last decade was how
to understand deknle, now our concerns
haw been radically redefined . After a
decade of ai/Oiding clarity about the
characler of our ftes to our allles, - are
sudd.nly obliged to ClOJ\Clentrate on this
qudtion . Where we ha've spent a decade
marking the erosion 'of ties with naoons of
the Th~rd World . we are now suddenly
aw..., that the opportunity lor a real
dialogue has been created . And finally ,
wheN we ha"" allowed more than a
decade of negled of our military
establishment to take a toO on out
capllbilities, now - are aware that a
of the peaa wiD require a
re_,l of, American strength ."
We have beoome aware ol our sliP·
J&gt;8!111, M.,Y..ihan conceded ''but this is a
long way !tom actuaDy solving the problemc" Further revenes "which wiD pro·
duoe lruslralion . conftaion and a loss of
......-..llo" loom ahead.
The ~ ~e tatirlg ol America in the 80s.

"'I

""''"''''"bon

~ed . " wiD be psyehologic.al . How
are ""' yolrlg to deal with the suddenly
llnlb - and, yes - decUne of

he p:ed

owpowerr

0... bfigllt hoture Ia beh!Ad u

Where or.:e the "future seemed so
much ou " lll'ld our • .,.pertmental," bee
ullon$.Meme&lt;l so promlsing. "aD that
• behind us; he venllJTed .
It loa certain . said Moynihan, that the

tn

ynr . 2000
see I~ funclloning
ibetal jns'litu na in the world t.han did
the yur 1900. "What
undet&lt;mnined
11'1'1 low
will nwoke of M,"
We at uncle- oftllck and will co:rtlnue
to be, Moynihan omphallmcL " But how
..., read t
lllgni of
shifting
~ of PQ~"e&lt; "'
world? Will we
!lib it
a Judgment that the world bas
found our lflllli1uftonl un·
WOI'Ihy All&lt;tma
ly.
- - ....
, _ , . . the~w.ldyofo.ond the
eurtlom
w
Willing lo """"' 10

ttwm JtWlWld~"
ltlh 7011, he n&lt;Ud , AITW!I1c:'atll i&gt;pted
-~_,
, ilnot-'-ll'lw·
~- lor reform And """"
IDUCh 10 ~~ he granlld
• "'

·.,

of ""'*'&lt;an lor~~gn policy

111101 llli\lch held lor

1\mmCO h.od

ended the world by

too great an exercise of power. A logical
response was to diminish that power, and
to do so lor many became an object of
principle . It was an object that succeeded.
Or In any event, that which was desired

came to pass.
"As it did, we came lace to lace with
the fact that we had adversarieS in the
world whose purposes toward us could
not possibly be accounted for as
responses to grievances, but looked Vet:Y
much more like plain aggression brought
on by a·percepfton of our weakness.
"Similarly, as our intrusions Into Third
World affaln became fewer , the seeming
rage against us grew."
Take the Yuidla
The V..adls who live in the Syrlan-lraqi
border area provide a clue as to why .
They are dualls1s , aware of both the bad
and the good in the world . Vet, they con·
centrale on seeking the good will of the
bad dietles, "for because they are bad .
they punish those who displease them ."
Similarly, Moynihan projected , as we
have opted out of the Third World , it has
benefitted the nations ia that sphere "to
propitiate the evil totalitarian dletles of
our world, the Soviet Union and their
associated lesser spirits .•
We do need a revolution in our rela·
tlons with the Third World . Moynihan
said. but so far, we have carried out the
...wrong one .
"The right one wiD not be easy," he ad·
mmed, "ewn U we conclude that It is
right , for jU$1 when American leadershlp
has become most needful , we find
ourselves wHh lew resources and httle
lnedorn ol acfton .
"Yet there is room lor hope . fDf the
Soviets do not behave e&gt;&lt;actly in the
fashion of even extremely evil spirits.
Unlike the spirits that the V..adis sought
to keep a1 bay. the SovieU-are dllficuh to
propltlale. A ritual goat lll'ld a sacri6dal
lamb do not satisfy them . They have an
ideology, and now a reach, that make
them gt!nulndy menacing. Indeed their
emph&amp;sis on ideology - with the fearful
lnterfenmc:e In the Internal affairs of
others - may be lnaeaslng along With
tha-' ach.
"This hM created oppol1linltles for a
d logua, and itill
hard and lnvenllve dlplonwoc:y, belween the West and
the thlrd World ." Moynihan said. "But
- cannot hope 10 hold our own In thio
d'Wologue unlea we can command, and
ClOIMI1I., the retOUrCeS that are needed.
l'teslmllng wb6t remains of freedom and
independence in this world cannol be
6anc 'Of\ the dlqp .' Ratlw:r - will need
the NM&gt;&lt;~Ja!ll hi will rtlbulld our miliary
~. thAI Will rol!ldve our cffor1J in
the - ofldtios, !hat .... IUII.IIn lrlomds
wiiOM economlt ~ unde-mina
OUJ _ , o«urity."
llw~~of
BOsmust
liUql(l&lt;f this ww, the S«nator. urged , for

"a new American foreign policy will re ·
quire us lo draw to ,the limit on our
reserves .of seK ..,.,nfidence and initiative .
"We must unlearn the 1970s. II is as
simple as that. ... "

..-e

........ c:oDc:. . .

U.S . Senator Jacob Javits found
himseH agreeing with Moynihan . .Jallits
told those allendlng the Sc:hool of Den·
tistry's Commencement May 25 that 1lme
has come to dispense with rhetoric and
proceed with clearly-defined objectives in
dealing .wlth the SeMel Union .
"U.S . goals, Interests bnd tolerance
lorvels must be made clear 10 the Kremlin
ond the choice clearly pr......ted 10 the
Sovlct loraden, In order to eoexlst, the
rules of the gime must be acx:epted and
consequences for breaking them clearly

understood ."

·

Citing Soviet acftons in Afghanistan ,
Vietnam, Cambodia, Angola , Ethiopia
and Yemen, Javils said th" U .S . must
take concrete, practical measures to in·
sure strategic balance with the Sovieli.
He noted that Congreu has already
begun by substantlally increasing ne.t
year's defense e.pendltures.
The Administration must also define
the U .S.'s posture in the world and take
consistent positions In hne with objectives
and In response to evolving clr·
curnsta.nces, he urged.
"To restl'llln SoViet adventurism," he
prq&gt;osed, "we and our alllei muslattac:k
. sour&lt;es .of locallrimbilfly which open the
way for Soviet e.ploitation ."
Third World nations are facing
economic problems of ll:"meNlous pro·
ponlons which easily trJOslate Into
poliuc:.al discontent. "Therefore, bllatenol
and muhllateral aid f&gt;1'091'1101S are" critical

�JuneS, 1980

bon 1o the health and .{mgt~t of
the worid '• economic and polttical

con

~m ·

No bMleiD fac:t
The SoYiet ·argument that Praldent
Cart.'s dcferr.t of SALT 0 was a Cold
Ww oblllously hu no basis In IIICI ,

Javtel adll«d .
ndeecl , I the T"'a ....,. to be con·
lidered bp the Senate In the p&lt;Hent Inter·
~« k would hltve no
chance ol .,..._ •
Javtts oaid lor
SoMe to urge U.S
.alon on the Tr
now II lo M«k IU
dclut

At other commencements·
H....,fora.._n
eR
Buckm insler
Fuller.
intematlonally· known architect and
thjnker , warned gredUlll s of the School
of Archlttdure and Environmental
Design that human kind Is at a
crossroads We hltve to dedde who and
what we are . and f we wiD continue to
uJot on this planet, he Mkf to a crowd of
some 500 on the Haya HaD lawn , Frt·
day, May 17 " It al depends on your In·
tegrily:
Fvller told the some 80
~ua
of SAED's undergreduate and
··programs (Including the first four
ever to receive the master of urban plan·
nlng from U/ B) Fu
. who received
Arc:hUclur 'a first Dean's Award for "en·
dwtng c:ontrt.utlons" io dftlgn educa·
bon , noled that he hu - n many
changes In h• nearly 8S years. Wlwn he
was • chid, 95 per cent of the worid was
IIMrate ; today , 95 per cent can r eel and
..,... When he was 3, the eloctron hltd
)uti been cllolr:owred . Wlwn he wu 28.
· -only knew of the
y Way. ow.
- know ol two miaon g.olaUts • The
human mind hu the ~
to
"dlaco\c enormous laws which_.,
- . ..· Fuk aald
mutl be
her for an utnordiNr\1 purpoet "

:"A;:_,
~
butlneM and lndutlrial
la..S.. should 11011 "'A!himpering" about

allegedly unfair competibOn from Europe
a nd Japan . Henry H. Coords. president
of PISher·Price Toys. observed as some
650 graduates of the Faculty of Engineer·
lng and Applied Sciences assembled in
front of Parker Hall at Main Street , S.tur·
day . May 17. Coords Sl!id "One has only
to visit a few Japanese factories to realtze
that the reason they can compete o n the1r
sma U, overcrowded islands with no
dom e~otk: supply of raw materials or
energy is that they are willing to work
harder . to work smar1er. to engineer pro·
ducts and processes more tntelhgently
than the peo ple with whom they com ·
pete .'' Americ.l!l can regain it:s supremacy
in many fields. he offered . K "we decide
to gtve more of ourselves by working
harder . by working smarter. and by
retovertng a reasonable share oft he great
potential of our creativity ."
Paul E Mo hn . first dean of the School
of Engineering (in 1946) . was presented
Engineering 's Dean's Medal by Dean
George C . Lee. Now a professor
emerttus. Mohn rellred from active
teaching In 1975. ln presenting the
award , Lee termed Mohn "a man lor his
times. the one who b&lt;ought the englneertng school Into utSience and earned ~
through Its early years "
loft Canal group honored
• The Love Canal homeowners and
the first woman head of the national
allied health professions organization
were honored as 223 graduates receoved
during the School of Health
degr

Related Professions' commencement
program, May 18. at Shea's Buffalo
Cent«r for the Performing Arts Dr J
Warren Perry, former dean of the
School , presented the J . Warren Perry
Ailed Heakh Leedership Award for
ouperior leadership m advancing the
cause of allied health nationally to Helen
K Hickey, assodale daan , Sargen Col·
lege ol Allied H alth Professions at
Booton University. The Love Canal
Homeowners' AIOOCiation was named
roclplent of the Department of Ha th
Education Professions' Community Ser·
llice Award lois Glbbo, prcoident of the

aAOCiation . acc.Cpted

receiving their dip1omas: Rose H .
Sconiers. a member of the U/ B Council
and executive attorney of the Legal· Aid
Bureau of Buffalo, and U.S . District
Court Judge John T. Curtin of Buffalo.
Sconiers was graduated from the U/ B
law School In 1973; Judge Curtin , in
1949. Sconiers. named in 1978 b.,. Gov.
Hugh Carey to serve on the U/ B Council
for a ntne·year term . spoke on the profes·
stanal aspects of practicing law. relating
to work habits, competence. problem·
solving. and ethicS. She told graduates "it
tl!lkes more than a license to become a
good lawyer... Among the 80 women
receiving law degrees was a nun .
33-year -old Sister Kathleen Rlmar. She
became the first nun In the 145-year
history of her order , Sisters of St. Francis
of Penance and Christian Chari~~t . to earn..
a law degree

No decision
on evacuees
U/ B. while prepared to play an ap· c1
propriate role In solving the hoUsing and
other problems of Love Canal
homeowners, has not offered dormitory
space (or evacuees from the area . ·
Because of a large number of rumors
circulating week before last. President
Robert L. Ketter issued the following
statement on May 23:
'The University at Buffalo was ap·
preached by Congresaman Jack Kemp's
office on Wednaday (May 21) and asked
about the availability of dormitory space
to tempor-arily houM r~ldents of the
Love Canal area. Oiocussions about the
availability of space were held with ap·
prOIJrlale olflca on campus and wtth
SUNY officials In Abany.
"The results of those discussions were ..._
conyeyed to Congressman Kemp's of.
floe . It was c arly undentood that , whila
the State Univenity of ew York Is
prepared to play an app&lt;opriate paJt In
facilitating a solution to the Love Canal
problem, the University's role must be In
consonance with Governor Carey's propose] for relocation of aU residents for a
apeclficd and short time u paJt of an
owraU plan for !heir perman nt settle·
ment We would expCI. ttuu'eforw, that
any dedolon lo use SUNY dormitoria
woulcl .be made by the ~ In the
b&lt;oader &lt;'OnleKI cJ his cal for a fedenl
commitment to a total and complete plan
that would resolve this ll"ff liluation "
At Reporter dead . , no word from
the Governor'• office hltd been received ..

�June 5, 1980

Idea from Sun Belt may aJd
DUE In fostering stUdent retention

In one of the riiOit IUCCallful ~
in the history of the sporlet U/B, the varsity bcoeball team establlshad 20 .&amp;-time
records and tied • other rn..u In i 9110.
Eleven of the new -..lards came In
the team CIIIRgory , ~ moll wins
(32) .
.

When the jnsldent of the Uniwnlly of
South Cerolna found himMif t.:rlcaded

In his olllce during en unpoa:edented stu·
dent diolwbence In 1970, ... docided

SCII'MihlniJ had to be done.

"This Is Carolina." ,_.,..j then·
Praident l'llomM f . Jones - not
BetMioy, not the State Untv~ of New
Yorio al Buffalo. Jutt week&amp; befon ,
l'loyl&gt;oso had ranked the caq&gt;US but one
n&lt;*h M&gt;oYe Fundamentalist Bob Jones
~In terms of student aw•eneu.
"Far th1s to hoppen here, something mull
be """"''." the PmicHnt complained'.
Wh.t WM wrong, President Jones
cNclded, wM that the t~~mpus was not
hu,.... .,.,.q,. He turned to his fac:ul··
ty, eoldng them 10 lclok at the ewriculum
and ........_ r«&lt;mmendatlons. He walled
and welted.
. Impatient, Jones, now extcUI!ve vk:e
preolclent a1 MIT, oought out Or. Manning
Hlero of South Catollna 's Social Prob·
lema Raan:h lnllltUte. A weD-known
"ch.lree agent" on the Carolina campus,
Hiers aoked his suggestiOns. The
..-.It was a concept lor a unique threecredit freshman course and related !acuity lnlining program which now enrolls
almoot one-third of Carolina's freshmen
annuaQy and has produced some
remariulble retentiOn iuc:cess statistics apeclally amOng wden wtth lower
than - - - predicted succ:esa rates.
~

...........

'The Idea is to Introduce otudents to the

I:Jnlverllty and Its resQUJCes, to -acquaint
them with a "caring" faculty or staff
member whom they can tum to lor ad vloe, aid a~lrlmdshlp - to produce
enth..- .,.men and survivors.
Taught in
oedions of 20-30,
Unlvmlity 101 aloo provides a freshman
with a ready-made networl&lt; of lrlends ,
something olkn hard to develop even In
a residence hal situation , let alone as a

......,u

commuter on a large , impersonal
campui.
lbere ore lndbtlons that 101 helps
freshmen develop more polltive attitudes
toward the University, and also has a
fallout effect on faculty . Prolesson can
use teaching methods designed for 101
to enriCh cour5et In their home
dlldphs , and have also been known to
develop more poolllve attitudes about the
University themselves.
BecaiJe of Its documented , widely
p_ublldHd WCGCSS , South Carolina's
Untvenlty 101 has been emulated by
dozena o( other colleges and universities
north and aouth.

'B aseball
Bulls break
records

Coach Bill Monlanh's Buh, wllh a
team batlirtg . . _ . of .337, eloo she!·
ter.d ieven one......,.. ~ records:
al'bats U,340), hils (451), cloubla (74),
1Q11a (35), runs (336), runs belted-In
(2'71) and tolalbMes (649).
The pllchlng otllll chalwd up new
far shutouts (10) and complete
garNS (15).
Team records tied _,. for fielding
--season (401) and 1rlpla-gune 13.
In three cllffercnt giiiMS) .
Senior second beoeman Pat Ralmondq_
(Buffalo-Bishop faDon) led the 811auk on
the record book with inciMdual
marks : gllmes-...on (45) , 1 .at-bats

mms

a classroom and exlracunlcular dlmale
which they like . A major aim Is to make
the teacher a penon to his or her students
and to remove banllm be'-&lt;m otudents
and prolesso!$ which often block effedlve
learning.
Foocalty deft!~ tool
'The coww has been II&lt;X&gt;lpled by faaiJ.
ty as a helpful development experlenoe
for themselves. Their participation In 101
entails • 40-hour training wori&lt;shop as a
preparatory exercise. The woricshop
stresses developing "affective skills" for
teachers - and In many cases Is the only
course on how to teach that a professor
has ever taken. The experience llids
faculty In developing their own support
groups within the University just as lt does
for students, Hiers points out . l'rofessor.
are puDed together aoross dioc!plinary
lines and become lrlends. In fact , Jokes.
Hiers, there Is talk on the South Carolina
campus about the " 101 mafia," a supporllve network that develops and Infiltrates
into other areas of University adJVities.
facuJtYtoo leam more about the University, something especially helpful to
newcomers, many of whom may have
the same orientation problems students
do .
Also, reports Hiers. coopeTatlon berween facuhy and staff In ~aching sec·
lions of 101 leads to a softening of often
rigid lines between faculty and non·
teaching professionals . The entire
UniversitY benefits .

••*-

R«eatJon
up
Many of the tec:hniques used in stnoc·
turing the 101 program were developed
in ~ programs on the South Carolina
campus, especially 1o that lnsttlulion's
sua:esoful efforts at assisting and mainlng
high pacen'- of minority otudents.
Blacks have the highest retention rate of
any group at · South Carolina, Hiers
repom. Partldpallon in Univenity lOlls
poslllvely correlated with a significantly
higher re~ntion rate , even when those
taking It are inltlelly less weB-qualified
academically than . those not enrolling.

From 1973 to 1978 the SUTVIval rail! lor
(58).
University 101 participants ranged from
He also tied existing records far hits· •
77.2 to 82.5 per eent, whllo that for non·
season (63) and lr!pla-geme (2, in each
participanls f}ucluated trom'73.2 per cent
game of a doubleheader Ill Buftalo Stale
to 76.9 per cent.
College on May 9) .
National findings Indicate that students
His brother Scolt Raimondo (Buffalo• &gt;ilho have not decided on a major field · . Lafayette) finished a four-year career
have ,; significantly greater risk of not
with the best fielding rriark for an outcontinuing In sehool than those with a
fielder (.\153), and sophomore first
major in mind . In 1978, at South
baseman-shortstop Dave Rosenhahn
Carolina, 38 per cent of participants In
(Well Seneca West) eclipsed the one·
101 were undeclared nuijors. Again,
season standard for RBis (41).
after taking 101 , undeclared '"'!Jor5 had
Junior pitcher -fi rst baseman ·
a stallslically higher survival rate than
deslgneted hitter Dennis ldoward (West
those with majors.
,
Seneca West) equaled the RBI-gorne
Because the course stresses fadhties
record with six agalnll Ithaca College on
available on campus lor both solving
May 3, and junior pHcher Joe Hesketh
problems and enjoying ones seH •.&lt;tls not
(BiesdeU-Frontler) tied the mark for comsurprising that those enrolling lo Unlversl·
plete games&lt;areer (10) .
ty 101 take advantage of these University
U/B's season came to an abrupt and
servloes and opportunities at a significant·
disappointing end when St. John's
ly higher rate than otudents not receiving
University soared three unearned runs in
this orientation exposure.
the bottom ol the ninth inning for a 9-8
further , University 101 students ore
win In the tiDe game of the ECAC N.w
more apt to participate In campus ac·
Yoric-New Jersey District Tournament at
tivities and lend to display a mueh higher
Jamaica, l.l. on May 16.
level ol good feeling toward the Institution and the orientation they have re·
ceived -to It .
Both IIUdents and faculty participants
have evaluated the program as a highly
pos!live experience with over 91 per cent
of lacuhy involved Indicating they would
participate again ~ given the opportunity.
Students reported that the cowx helped
William H . (BiD) Sanford Ill, 61 , lias
them adjust , helped them learn 10 be
announced his retirement as head coech
themselves in a group situation', lnaeas·
ol men's varsity swimming and diving
ed their communlcalions-&lt;lkills. and of.
alter 31 years.
_
fered a good way to make friends .
A 1948 grad"uate of U/ B, he will re·
main on the Department of Recreation,
Athletics and Related Instruction (RARI)
A~
In an era ol dec:lining enroUments pnd
staff as an associate professor, director of
threatened retrenchment, those who run
aquatics and director of facilities at O.rk
the South Carolina program feel they
HaD on the Main Street Campus. .
have achieved a breakthrough in
"It's the toughest decision I've e'"'r had
developing a humane learning environ·
to make," Sanford said . "But, I've been
menl which helps keep enrollment. at a
In n long enO)lgh and H'1 lime to step
steady level.
•
down . No one could ask for a better
U/ B DUE advisor Klithaine Kubala,
vocation or assocloles; the people here
who coordlnalft the lreshman coiJo.
(ai~Bll::n"':,~n.,'!"\~ Stale col·
qulum here , obviously f Is this campu1,
Its students and faculty have a great deal
legiate swim ooaches," Sanford was
10 gain !rom an expanded prOgram of the
U/B's first coach, named to the position
same type .
in 1948, and except for a one-year sab·
batlcal in 1968-69 has been the Unlvenl·
ty's only swim coa&lt;h.
In 31 seasons, lw compiled a record ol
127 wins, 254 lowes and one tie .
Only one other collegiate swimming
free and ppen to the public. These
coach in the East has been at one inslltu ·
general-tnlerell session• include : "Detec:- lion for as many years, and qnly one
tlon of Dental Diseues," June 23 , coach in the nation has served longer.
"WISdom Teeth. Exlradlons and Oral
Sanfarcj also coached men's varsity
Surgery," June 24; "P&lt;ll1rall ol a Prole•·
tennis for 24 years (1949-73) arid had a
slon," June 25; "Fluoridation and
record o1228wtns, 60 looses and one tie .
Periodontal Olseate," Juna 26, "Dental
Edwin D. Mu~~. d ector ol men's
Quesdonna s," Jurie 27. and "Portrait athletics, said , " toW 1\as been a very
ol a Prolesoion," Juna 28. These pro- dedicated coach whose top prlorltie1
warns will be held al 4 p m.
have always been his ~ to the in·
A June 26 day-long sallon, ls aimed
tegr11y of the University and provision for
spec:l{ically at d ntal aux.lllaries and w1ll
the clj!velopment and weUare of his
Include a fashion show.
t ms
•
"We poml Wllh pride to the ac·
Registration f - for the Congress are
either $25 per day or S 125 lor lb&lt; days · compbshmen he has allalned 1n the
and include gale admlosion. !Wgtstration
world ol 1wtmmlng He leaves a Jesiacy of
and rewrvatlons lhould be mallod to Or.
ou-nding IIams and Individual pool
Sebutian G . Ciancio, 240 D. farber
record• fO&lt; futur IIUdenl athletes to
lhool at,"
. H..

Dentists going to Chautauqua
"The Universlly In the Community Cunent Concepts In Dentistry" Is the
theme ol the F.lrll Annual Chautauqua
Dental Congress to be held June 23-28 at
the Chautauq"a lnJtitulion.
'The lb&lt; -day medng II sponoored by
the U/B School of Den~. the Eighth
Dillric:t Dental Soddy and the Chau!MI·
qua County Dental Soddy.
Topit:l Including periodontal disease
and treatment . opera
dantlltry, en·
dodontlcs and cnl awverv, fluoridation ,
cinlcal pharmacology and dental lm·
plam. · be presented by 21 U/B dental
faculty O.llv MlliOns b9t al 9 a .m .
and lind at 4 p m.
Wllllo rnoo11 of the ~ II ol tpedAI
to prKIIdng den
and aUJt·

-

.... lticllnical .............

season (160),\rilln·season (11), triple$·
car.- (19), total .._. ....,., . (98),
runs.....OO (44) and llolen bases-career

Sanford retires
as swim coach

�n

JunaS. 1980

RNs have new option
for- earning a degree
The dun of the School of Nurilng

~

t...

.............. beccalawule
~ lor reglllond who haw

g~M.-.:1

from cllplama or MIOdale
degree n"'*'!! .....-.
Approlled by ihe SIMe Education
Department, the JIIO!P"' io also acaedlled by ihe Nalional ~lor NursIng. Students who jJ'adutlle liom II will be
eiJgibloo 1o tiPPiv lor graduet.e lludy.
the n.d lei such p-ograms t... CO&lt;ne
about primarily because the New Vorl&lt;
State Nurses Alooclatlon lind Its counter·
parts in oCher states are SMking legisletion
which would ONke the B.S . a require·
ment for lioensure, Dr. Bonnie Bullough .
dean of the School of Nursing , explained.

....,....,.....t

Alumni will honor
7 for achievement
The · UIB Alumni Association wiD
seven persons .for distinguished

honor

adUevemenl and SftVice on Friday, June
6. during an officer Installation and

awards banquet at Spaulding Dining
Room, Ellicott.
Receiving the group's highest honors
ar~ PhyUis M. KeUy , weD-known com·
munlty and polltical leader who wiD
r~lve the Samuel P . Capen Award for
ntraordlnary. service to the University ,
and George J~easft, publisher of Bee
Publications, 1hc .. who wiD recelve the
Waker P . Cooke Award for exceptional
contributions by a non -alumnus.
Unda J . Wachncr, p&lt;esldent of Max
Factor's UnHed Slates Division, wiD
receive the George W . Thorn Award for
high aqhieyement by a young grad~te .
Additionally, Distinguished Alumni
Awards will be p&lt;esented to Dr. George
M. Ellis, a 1945 !J'ad~te who Is p&lt;esent·
ly a family physician In Connersville, In·
diana , and Willard A. Genrich •. a 1939
Law School graduate who Is chancellor
of the New Vorl&lt; State Board of Regents.
Also, Dr Girard A. Gugino. a 1961
IRntal School jJ'aduate who Is praldent
of the Eighth Dislrid fRo tal Society. and

State Comptroller Edward V. Hegan . a
1964 graduate of the Law School.
Mrs. Kelly, the lirst woman president of
the U/ B Alumni Association (1977. 78) .
has been deeply involved in politics,
cMcS and university affairs since her
1942 graduation .
Measer wiD be recognized for his efforts
to bring the community and University
closer together. He is a founding member
of the U/ B Community Advisory Coun ·
ol, established In the early 1970s. and a
member of the University Council.
The publisher of six suburban weekly
newspapers. Measer is a directOf of
Millard AUmore Hospital Corporation
and has earned several awards for corn·
munity oervice and newspaper expertise .
A 1966 graduate , Unda Wachner. 33.
Is the youngest divisional president of a
major American corpO&lt;ation, Max Factor
&amp; Co's United Slates Division
At 21, she was the youngest buyer at a
mapr department store in Houston . After
five yearoas senior buyer !Of R H Macy's ·
In New Vorl&lt;. she became the f11s1
WD&lt;nan vice president of Warnco. then
corporate marketing vice president of
Caron International.

New Secretary of State has
an honorary degree from U I 8
Library to meet such emergencies in the

academic robing of U/ B council
members, dt!ans and honorary degree
recipients. quiCkly put in a hem.
"A university offiCial explained: ·we
knew Senator Muskie Is very taU. and we
go1 the biggest gown we could find ."
"Senator M...Jde . agrel!ing he Is tall .
commented : 'The only trouble. was that
the gown given me apparently belongs to
somebody who io 6 feet 7 .' "
AI the 1960 commencement . Muskle
predict&lt;&gt;d t ~ al then Massachusells
Senator John F Kennedy would gel the
(Rmoc:ralic noinlnatlon lor President that
IUmmer at Los Angeles

SUNY prof on
acid rain team
A researd&gt;er at tho SUNY College of
Agricukure and L~e Scknces at CorneD
a member ol a tum which has found that
bedrock veofogy maps can be used lo
help idenlily ~~reams and rivers that
be , . . _ to addilicallon du to Kid

~h ol the team's ud • the
archen have se1 up • compul riled
d..., bonk of polendally
live wa
whlct. to dale
oources In 34 Jtat

The geology ~ studl«s ar I
wool&lt; ol Dr -~Carl L Schofield. MniOr

r

arch

m nelural reou.rcn at

the college. and In I ~ors from
Brookhaven N~ Labontory. the
o1 M ne, and tho Unlvcnl of

.,..._ ........ for
" Ahhough most RN's would be
·~· by a grandlather clause in
future legislation to allow them to con·
tlnue 1o practice wilhoul the bachelor's,
many feel their fut ure career ad·
vancements will hinge on having !his
de!J'ee," BuUough said.
U/B , she pointed out, previously has
offered RN's the opportunitY to earn tbe
BS. But, she added. in the past the cur·
.n.lum included material which diploma
nd associate degree grad uates had
iaken ~here . And they were not
given fuD credit for what they already
knew.
"If took these students longer to
graduate and many fnlnl&lt;ly became
discouraged by the length of time they'd
have to spend as well as the redundancy
in some of the couneo.• she noted. The
new UIB sequence more carefully takes
into account materials covered elsewhere
and gives students credH lor this wort. .
shortening their road to the B.S .
"Students who want to enroll in the
new re-entry program will stiJl have to
!aile some olthe 12 prerequisite courses.
depending upon what they've had
elsewhere But after that . il will take them
less time to complete requirements ...

Bullough said. Eleven of the 12 courses
reqwed are taught In University departments outside the School of Nurslng.
The new program also seeks to in·
tegrale RN students with traditional nurs·
ing stuclents. "While traditional students
have relatively little experience in 'hands·
on · nuroing. diploma school and
associate degree program graduates who
have worked with patients for several
years have much practical expertise and
Insight they can contribute to the tradi·
l!Onal students' education .'' the dean
said .

n-w111....,

Since students may choose to enroll

fuD or part-lime In the new program , the
time It will take to fulfill degree re·
quir«ments will vary. Generally. the
strl!amlined curriculum can be completed
in "' semester or two less than belore:

Dentists on
German TV
Techniques which ease den tal patient
anxiety developed by two U/ B de ntal

~~aw~~at::'.!::=~~~ r.tl~eDrs. Elllol Gale and Norman Ca.ah ,
professors of behavorial sciences, have
found that levels of anxiety can be reduced ij patients listen to relaxation tapes Of
play video ping pong while receiving den·
tal treatment. Their researCh has been
featured In Parade , a S unday supple·
ment , and The New York Times .
September 2
the television segment taped In May at
the School of IRntislry will be aired
September 2 on the ZOF Networl&lt;'s
Heahh Magazine Program. Karyi-Lynn
Stone. American health sciences cor·
respondent for the German networl&lt;. said
between 15 to 20 million people regularly
view the monthly program .

Drs . Gale and Corah and Sail Seyrek .
assistant profesSOf of restoraUve den·

lislry . will appear in a 45 -minute special
on innovative dental therapy and techni ques. Ann Ford -Holevlnskl . U/ B
laboratory technician . was the "patient.''
The program will be aired in conjunction
with the Federation IRnlaire lnlerna·
lional which meets In Hamburg. Germany in September.

•.....,.u_

Most material on Health Program deals
with health care topics of ipedal interest
to West Germans as well as new ad ·
vances in the clinical realm. Most of Ms.
Stone's material !rom the U.S. however.
emphasizes Innovations in diagnosis 'or
treatment . some of which aren 'I available
in Germanv .
·

· Personnel News
~-&amp;-doe

.........,t

of the Ualted Statee
President Jimmy Carter has a penonal policy ol sending birthday Jll'eellngs to
senior dllzens, age 80 and over , and anniversary greetings lor couples
celebrating 50 years or longer of marnage , Requests lor uch presidential
greetings must be received at least one month befOfe the greeting ~ sent . Written
requests lor this service should be addressed to the Greebngs OlfiCle , The White
HOUM, Washington . DC 20500.
...,.._.._ M.... Medical OahD•
The Metropolitan Ule Insurance Company has advised thai due to a heavy
claims workload. reirnbutsement to state employees lor their Major Medical
claims 1o takins longer to process at this time ol the year. As of this wnting,
Metropolilan 1o pror:aslng ciaJms received in their Kingston . NY . olflce during
the 6rsl two -.ks In Apnl For Information regarding the specific delay of
claims. employees are advised lo caD Metropolitan at their toll free telephone
number (1..8()()..94;!-46401
New

-

Bulough antldpMa many RN's · 1n
Walan New Vorl&lt; will be .aracted. ~
ebout 20 per cent of them currently hold
the B.S .
"A ~eat many RN's who return for the
B.S . are interested In gelling the
masla's," she pointed out.
She also noted that numbers of
diploma· programs have shrunk In New
Yorl&lt; State !tom 90 1o only 28 within the
past doien years. Hoopitals, which
primarily operated lhae schools, no
longer can alford the cost of maintaining
them .
..L..
" This laD. we &amp;inl
accept aboul 30 RN's
who have completed the prerequisites into our new program ." Bulough oak! .
"and next year. about 50 more wtll be
ready." Eventually, she believes. about
30 per cent of nurslng students enrolled '
in the undergraduate program wiD be
returning RN's set!king a B.S .

,._.,npu- .... ID cardoo

AI 11a1e employees (exupl lhoM In C EA Bar~tnjng Units 02 · Ad·
minltrativc , ()3. ()per Ilona!, 04 • INiructlonaU enrolled in I S..lewide Heakh
Insurance 1'1-ovram. who "'" ved plaooc JD cards erlier this year will receiv•
tha r .-.1 c.ds during the third WHk of June The Penonnel Dwp.rtment

a.dVIIes that renew.! cwds
be effecltVe 7/ 1/ 'i!t} thru 2/28/ I and
employMs who ha lamlly cover• wiD r«etve two (2) ren wal cards Qun·
lions .._ding tlwH cards, their usage , and •mtU.Ilons .OOUid be referred to
Mrs Clwjs Sune at Amherst Extension 2650 (off campu . cal 636-2646}

-

�j

1

June 5, 1980

I

Hoyt urges incentives
for wind energy_use

Steel work resumes
Contrac10ra began ttec:tlng ateel roof trusHs •t the Alumni Field House site
M.....S.,, ft&gt;dlng _
.. we&amp;a luU In budding work :

U I 8 will aid in international
program at Bennett High
recru~ IOC"eign students and faculty to lecThis fall, Bennett High School will s1art
an lnternallonal StudioS Magnet-Progwn · ture on their respective cultures.
fOC" now, funding will come &amp;om the
which Will UM U/ B as one of Its primary
school's budgd, but Vocolo feels Bennett
community
will
qualify IOC" fedttal money ~ legislation
The font ol Its kln&lt;Nn Western New
Is passed which supports the findings of
York, the program w1J11Ake advantage of
the
President's Commission on FOC"elgn
the city's multl -hngual and cultural
languages and lntemallonaJ StudioS.
herllage M&gt;d assets along with lis position
The 25-membtt Commission . headed
as a trade center, to foster International
by . IOC"mer CorneD UnlVttS~ty President
undentandlng and penpedlves.
James A. Perkins, recommended that
Edw.-d o..dley, chairman of U / B'o
$51 million be given to elementary
Oeparlrnent of Modern languages and
schoolo. high schools and Institutions of
lileratures, is Saving on the program's
hightt
education for loo;eign language
advloofy committ e.
study.
The magnet program , which can lnU/ B's Dudley, who Is strongly suppor11\ADy accept up to 200 students &amp;om
trve of the program, believes ~ will in·
throughout Buffalo and lis metropolltan · aease student awareness at an earlier
area,
offer ·a multi-cultural curage regarding the vocational assets of
riculum , advanced placement college
IOC"eign language skills , as weD as provide
eredit courws, IOC"elgn exchange exa natural recru-t tool for his departperlenoa, preparation IOC" car- opporment.
tunllla •t hOC"ne and abroed, and rein·
Dudley said his faculty , particularly the
forc«ment of nallonaJ value within an inapplied &amp;ngulsts, stand ready to IISSISI
temallonal per1p«&lt;ive .
Bennett with the program . In addition ,
languages offered will depend on
a_rrangements' may be made for the high
preferences of the student population .
school students to take advantage of cerApplicants hav been asked to check
tain University faclhties . such as the
courses ranging &amp;om tradibonal modern language lab
and classic offerings to Mand.rln Chinese

ruourca:

and~ .

'"'"

Medical matches

Among programs under consideration

..-e upended tummer study al hOC"ne

nd abroad fOC" stude.nts and t achtts, an
adult ev ntng component and lludent intemshtpo In busmet6 and _..,ment
Or Jooeph Vocolo, dlredOC" of for-eign
" ' - - •nd bilongual educ.tion IOC" the
Buli•lOPublic Schools, said he would
t o - gra4uatc students at the UnlvttSI!y
hnd •t an hourly rate to tuc:h oome
COUI'MS

!1. Uo hopes

Ia

Some 85 per cent of U/ B's senior
medicalllude.nts received their flr$1 , second , or third choice In the annual National POIIgraduate Matching Program .
MOC"e than one-hal of the 139 llude.nto
were matched with their tnt residency
~ - Thirty-seven students selected
Buffafo..based programs for their residen cy. 29 others will rttnaln in New YOC"k
~ Pennoylvant&amp; was faVOC"ed by 12

VPAA applications
~ "'" ln-d /01 ~ /01 appointment Ia lhe poollion of
Vee Pruldent /01 Academic A/loin. wllh o pro/c..sonol ronk of PR-7
The Voce Ptatdent /01 Acodemlc A/Jon ll the .enlor ocodemJc odmlnlllrafor
/01 the "'Core Com-" wiNdJ onc:ludes - /t&gt;ctJitia (Atu A !Atm.. Soclol
&amp;........ Noturol Sclencu. Ed--..1 Studies, .Engltleerlng, ond l..oUJ) ond o
n.....-. ol
sclooolo (Ho-ment, l.&amp;ary atudia, A~.
ond Sodol Wort) The Ac:odemlc Viol' /W...knr hoo ""~}or noaponolbl/lrv /01
both acockiNc pollov ond budgd He/ P&gt;e report~ Ia the 0/fi« of the P'r-eMcknt.

Q...llllcatloM
The c.tdocl'* .houJd be on e.:perWnced odminllltTolor ond lhould quohfll /0&lt;
o
lor 1/enl.ftd ocockmlc oppoinlmenl
uNih and hndo In Amencon higher educallon
II'NIIW.*&lt;llnodlh of~ of ocodemlc - - ond ocodemoc

Wind energy. used IOC" poWer In earlier ·
days. Is making a comeback ,
Assemblyman William B. Hoyt empha·
sized In opening a campus conference on
lhat subject which the Legislative Commission on Science and Technology held
on campus May 23.
Hoyt urged those attending to focus on.
Issues significant to the commercialization
of wind systems, as a flrsr step toward
building a package of wind -Incentive
legislation.
The general lack of emphasis· being
placed on wind energy concerns blm,
Hoyt said .
Wind systems are getting precious little
attention. The State Energy Master Plan
dism'-s wind as offering only a minimal
Impact on energy needs over the next 15
years.
Oh, some things are happening, Hoyt
conceded : "We see a Gruman unit at a
New York State d.iry farm , the Lebost
Turbine in New York Cltv. a wind
machine in South Bronx. a lliTG Energy
Systems machine on Cutty Hunk Island
off the coast of Massachusetts."
In a period In United Slates history of
rapidly increasing costs. potential supply
shortages and adverse environmental
con
•nces associated ~ the use of
fossil
11uclear fuels , Hoyt went on, "II
Is essential ther o.oe consider akernatlves.
A national effort which focuses on accelerating the development and use of
renewable resource energy technology
such as wind Is necessary. The Federal
Wind Energy Program to designed to do
this through the development and commercialization of ret~able , safe and
e conomically viable wind energy
systems."'
Another federal effort , the Pubhc lJtillly
Regulatory Policy Act (PURPAI . directs
states to develop "lair and equMble" rate
tariffs lor all customers (including wind
system users) by the end of 1980.
Howevu. said Hoyt. federal strategies
are not enough . "I believe that New Yarll
State must establish a much more aggressive program for the commer&lt;.ialization of wind energy systems."
Ho_yt has introduced legislation which
would estabhsh a tax aedil for wind and
solar systems as we.R as energy conservation measures of up to 55 per cent lor the

next 8 yeer&gt;. He has sponsored legislation which would make wind and solar
systems eligible as energy conservation
measures under the Home Insulation a nd
Energy Conservation Acl (HIECA) , and
has sponsored a bill which would exempt

energy conservation measures under
HIECA . including wind · and Solar
systems, from the New York State Sales
and Use Tax.
.
MOC"e can be done , Hoyt said, In such
areas as: information dissemination to In-crease awareness and acceptance of wind
systems by the pubhc and to sell New
York as a good wind resource state for In dustrial and commercial sectors; consumer protection , where there Is a need
for performance, installation and product
qu4lity standards for wind systems via
product warranties; training programs for
manpower needed to install, operate and
maintain wind systems of various sizes
and designs: and econom~ incentives for
using such systems.

SUNY hikes dorm rates
by 19% ; surprises everyone
A 19 per cent increase In dOC"mltory
rental fees was approved by the SUNY
Board of Trustees in a surprise-move at
the Board's May meeting (Wednesd.y,
May 28) .
The hike takes place In the faD .
Under the new rates , a standard double occupancy roorn here and at other
SUNY units will cost $950 in 1980-81.
up from S800 this past academic year.
Rents for other types of accom·mo&amp;tlons , now ranging from SS65 to $1,200,
will be raised proportionately next faU .
The move by the Board brought sharp
critldsm from Ita student member.
Sharon Ward . MI. Ward charged that
the action was "a mOC"al breach of contracl." coming as h did aher many
students had aeady signed housing
-menlo committing them to live In
campus residence hallo IOC" at least one

semester.
The Courier-Expras Insisted that the
hike viola
• pledge made ark this
ye.- by Board Chairman Donald Bllnken
"to maintain· exlsllng c:olege costs" fOC"

1980--81.
_ Harry K Spindler, SUNY vice
chancellco- fOC" finance and ~ . said
no br ach of contract II . involved .
Studento 11/ho don't want to pay the
hlslher r•la. Splndlor said. can cancel
their contracts by contac:llng their housing
ot&amp;e and Mlmg for 11 refund of their
room clepollll.
Blinken maintained there had been a
mllundentanding about hil pledge on
'-Pinfl cosll the . The bo..-d c:hHman said he t h o o q l l - ..,.. talt-

inllabout
~- f

tulllon ,nd "alhlotlc Of tltU&amp;nt
• when they asked the ques-

!1'1",..,..

yMr .

The Trustees voted 10-1 In favor of the
lnaease, and Indicated that further rental
hikes can be expected In each of the next
two or three years to make residence haD•
operations seM-sufflclent.
Vioe ChanceOOC" Spindler said that
about SJ0 miUion was diverted from
academic budgets last year to cover
residence hall costs not provided for by
rentals. The inaeases fOC" 1980--81 are
expected to add $9 million to residence
hall income, cu
the deflcll to $21

million.

Besides chargi a breach of contracl,
Student Trustee
d said she objected
to the manntt In lilhk:h the rate hike was
"whisked through" the Board . The tnt
time the matter \lias even meJl(loned was
at the MaL!.,~· To make an lm·
mediate
on such a matter, she
a d.ngerous precedent.

tald.-

Grant aids
Law recruiting
The law School has received $23,800
to help recruh high quality minority
students fOC" law stucfy. Part of the grant Is
set aside fOC" recru-t, tutortng and
scholastic fe~. ~ding to Alan

Canfield of the law School tlalf.
The awarding "'!"ncy In the Federal
Govttnment II the Graduate and Professional Opportunllla Program. The fill'l'l\t
wu devO&gt;ped under the •uspk:u of the
Graduate School, lhr9ugh Aaaoc:late
Dun Andrew Holt and In
with law Don 100mat Headriclk. Can-

.,.,.,.,...lion

~-·lhe~ .

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

MAY 15, 1980
VOL. 11

e NO. 31

•
5,000 to r~ceive degrees this sprtng
TNt 1&gt;940 MOOCilllold with the conferral ol 5 ,000 degrees thlt spring con ·
llnue t

EXECUTIVE ALUMNA TO SPEAK
Linda J. Wachncr, a U/Balumna whoheoda the U.S . dMsion of Max factor&amp;
Co.. wll deliver the INin eddrna at the 53rd annual commencement
ccrernonia ol the School ol ~-

_...nd and llCJ&lt;t .

FIIIDAY, IIAY 16

1 p .m.

Kleinhans Music HaD

SUNDAY, IIAY I I

BUCKMINSTER FUU.£R TO BE CITED BY SAED
R Budunlnsier Fuller wll ttceive the lint Dean 'a Awud P&lt;eKnt d by lh
Sci-' ol AldlllecW and Envtronmcnlal Dalgn and
ddver an oddress at
c : o m - t aerdMo for the School
5.00 p m
OulJide ol Hayes Hall
·StrMI campus
(Rain location : ClarK Hall)

SENATOR MOYNIHAN TO ADDRESS GENERAL COMMENCEMENT
U.S . Senator Daniel Pall1ck Moynihan wll pt'aent the main oddrea at U/ B's
134th General Cornmenumcnt. PBJtiCipaling VJIII be groduata ol Arts and Lctlcrl, Sodal Sdenca, Natural Sciences and Math , and thole finishing WO&lt;k In the
Dlvltlons ol Groduak and Prof-.1 Education , and Undergr.dua~ Education (Jpedai!Nijon and a.&gt;clolte degrra) .

SA1'1JIIDAY, IIAY 17

Buffalo Convtnlion Center

5 p .m.

PHARMACISTS TO BE GRADUATED
Dr. F. Carter Pannc.lr., vice P&lt;aident clhealtludenca, wtllconfa degr- on

RY COORDS TO GIVE ADDRESS
t-Mnry H
P&lt;
nt ol Flolher-Pricc Toys.
deliver the commcnce..scn. for F
ol
and AppMd Sc:lenca
2. 00 p m
lla..., ol l&gt;i.rbr Eng.~ BuJidlng
(Rain location . Clark Hall)

c-- .

115 grodua~ ol the School ol Pherrnacy •
10:30 a .m.

Nary S...ton Room
Hal

Klclnhens M

SOCIAL WORK IN ntE ElGHTlES
Nancy Humpl:wwyo, P&lt;niclent ol the Nalioo'ial ~lion of Sodal Work

:::==
..

3 p .m

"W!:'t,WO&lt;k at comme.ncem«nt- for 61 waduat

~~

,

ol

Kalhorlne Cornel nwtat.r
Elltott Complex

�~ 15, lgsQ

Legal stUdies

conference
.to meet here

Q GL OR lA

The Fourth Ndonal Confcrcnc:e on
Critical Legal Sludla will conIlene·at the
law SctlOOI Friday through Sunday, May

Victory toast
212 ~urses remi.n ded of pro/e$sion,s
hu!r'ble 0rigins;, SILS graduates 65
4

Nuningls at en Interesting juncture in
b hlliory and Is enlcring a petlod ol rapid
ehoonge. Or. Bonnie &amp;Iough told those
- attmdlng com~ certmonies

and Margaret Sanger. jelled for her slrug·
to break the Comstock Iawo whiCh
pro~ women from learning about
birth control measurn.
1'he sa.tus ol many ol those In nursing
hal nol been high but their nuBing klen·
tilbtlon II"Ye them humdity end &amp;om
this vantage· point. they c:ould """"'
humenldnd," Bullough potntad out.
"We are here to celebrate an occupa·
tlon which Is at last coming into lis
own - skilled , technical , proll!s ·
sionai-Out .,. determined to remember
II$ lowly roots."

fie

f&lt;&gt;&lt; the School ol Nurlin!l. Sunday.
~ al thc Bulfalo Convention
~ . dun ol the School.
said dlangos In the p r o f - are occur·
ring f&lt;&gt;&lt; lhnoe primary reasono.
..,.. are now getting I'TIOft forrnel
educaliOn" .... said. ~ ··
- t and the comPcxJty ol botallh
.,.,
haw been &lt;II'- reason• f&lt;&gt;&lt;
changn." 8ulough noled that the
WOINn'a _ , _ , t hal ~
nWMI to . . for rn&lt;&gt;&lt;e opportunities In
cer.a choca ao well ao bdter pay. lfs
Or. F. c.rter PanniU Jr., vice president
1n.-.g. the .dded, that today more for healrh ldcnc:es. conferred the · BS
men ar entcr1ng the 1\Uriing profusion
degree on 122 and the MS on 90 others.
E!ullough pr-nted the foUowtng
than bcl&lt;&gt;&lt;e.
·
"'The complexlly ol healrh .,.,. today Is awards to students:
aucb that mor IOphllticatlon Is being ex·
The Ruth T. Mc:Grorev Uodcrlhls&gt;
pec:t&gt;ed of 11..- In the heakh profn·
AU&gt;Grd: Sharon Scali Mulen and Susen
tiOna- end npedaDy In nursing."
. Carol Ardlbold; The s. Houchlv Smoll
The c:onoequenc:es ol theM changes AIAQ'd: Karen Ann Schmitt; The Ann
we
t nWMI .,. lfting opportunities
Walker Sengbuach AWOTd: Kimberly
for new mla wilhln their cbooen held Man. Edinger; The Alumni Aaodatlon
MOCh aoln .........."'Y care, public heelth.
............,., and ad.-.,... ol nut$109 .

CAnter.

".......

.......

~
~ nunlng'a

told
audieooe that
linda - . 1 ~
........,, the p r o f -'• humble origins
• thould nol be Ignored '
"Our roo11 unw &amp;om rnolhen. wives,
• toldlon. llllerl&gt;oods. paupers
who nuned the sick f&lt;&gt;&lt;
h
of yean," .... said
She l1!tYiinded the eudlenoe ol
and ·henlo on nursing, tuch u
FlorllOCe N
. en ll!l1llocra1 who
untl 191 90 I1I'IIQIIIild for r arms In pa·
liRnl _ . and . nursing education ; poet
Willi
, who nunod Injured and
dying oak!
on Civil W..- ba

Bergantz Room

Ia dedicated

Award:

Donna Mary Glanfagna .

The School of Information and Ubrary
Stu&amp; (SILS) awarded 65 Master of
U&gt;rary Science degren Sunday in
ceremonies In John Lord O'Brian Hall.
Or. Edward T. O'NeiU. l2·year SILS
f.c:ulty member who wiD leave U/B in
August to become deen ol lhary
oclencn at Catc Western Reserve
Unlvady, delivered the main address,
on "Sell-Service Llnries."
O'Neill also presented candidates to
sn.s Dean George S. Bobinski who con·
!erred c!ewen on IMthalf ol President
Robert L. Ketter .
The Reverend Arlo J . Nau of the
university's Campus Ministries delivered
the invocation and benediction and co·
presidents ol the SILS Alumni Asooclo·
lion , Gayle Ablove and Deborah Buter,
welcomed new members.
A multi-media presentation , "SSLS
1980- A Gallerv ol Li&gt;rarians." was also
shown as part of the ceremony. A recep·
lion I&lt;&gt;&lt; graduates and their guesll was
held immediately alter.

• Commencements .

_ . . . - I. eoL 4)

sotOOL OF MEDIONE EXERCISES

The School ol Medicine will confer M.D. degren on 156 graduates .
7 p .m .
Kleinhans Music Haft

DR. SULTZ TO SPEAK TO HRP GRADS
Or. H..-ry A. Sullz, dean ol the School ol Healrh Related PrOfusions, wiD pre·
~ the commencement addrns to the School'• 250 graduate~.
•
7:30p.m.
Shea's Buffalo

FIUDAY. JIAY 13
EOC STUDENTS TO BE CITED
The EducatioN~ Oppcxtunity &lt;Antcr will hold its MVenth annual Achievement
Dey, honoring 250 otudcnts. New York StAte AIMmblyman Arthur 0 . Eve will
.-1&lt;. The Honorlble Borloara M. Sims will receive the "Friend ol EOC" award.
Buffalo end Erie County U&gt;rary,
1:30 p .m
Downtown

8UNDAY. JIAY•H
l:AWsatOO!..
Allomey R._ Sconlen. a Law SctlOOI alumna and member ol the U/ B Coun·
dl, and Fcd.ral Judge Jobn T. Curlin, who haa P&lt;al!led owr the Buffalo ochool
~ illlgatlon ,
add~-. J .D. degree redpicnts.
.
I p m.
Klelnham Mue Hal

oam&amp;TRY
~ Senetor olacob ...... wll

Sp.m.

the - t acldn..

Klolnhand4ueHal

30toJunel.
.
The aomcwhal unusually atructured In·
vttallonal event opens i'riday evening
with the ocreenlng ol a .Ronald Colman/
Cary Grant movie ol the early 40s, "T.a.
of the Town," In 106 O'Brian. The ldm
will be followod bv a dlocuuion ol the
popular uncientandlng ol Ia¥.• and law
profcioors.
Local organioen, Fred Konefsky and
John Henry SchlogeJ ol the U/B law
School, explained that the rest ol die
conference Is lntpiNd bv the famous
quotation ol architect Mia ven der Rohe:
"Form follows fundlon .• The orgenlzll!rs
believe that panels - "bodng" and that
confaencea of thio type often tend not to
be seo1ous, ao the firll program wiD
feature rio papon, no commentators, no
questions from the audlencc, and no au dience . lnslcad , "Ideas" will be diacussed
at lour oeparate locations on both the
morning and afternoon ol May 31. Each
of eight sessions will dlocUII a book, with
one person having ~~greed to open .a
discussion about each work. "If no one
haa read end/"' wants to talk about the
book being discussed, the Ml5lon wiD be
01/Cf qulc:kly ," point out the organizers.
Books assigned I&lt;&gt;&lt; this exercise range
from Karl Marx's Economic and
Philosot&gt;hical Manuscripts to Michel
Foucault's "Discipline and Punish/The
Birth ol the Clinic." 1bose ~~greelng to
start off discussions include represen·
taUves &amp;om U/B and &amp;om such out.of·
town institutions as Nqrtheastem Har·
vard , Booton University, Michigan ,
Rochester, Minnesota , Yale and

Valparaiso.
On Sunday, June 1. discussion groups
In the morning wiD look at the teaching of

law, including contracts, constitutional
law , aiminal law and torts. ·
To prove the conference organizers
"have nothing against papas," en open
forum for the presentation of 30-minute
papers is being provided Sunday m&lt;&gt;&lt;n·
lng also. "We make no guarantee~ about
an audience and provide no soap bo)&lt;es."
say the organlurs. At press time, only
one paper had been registered lor this
session, a study ol the radical bar by NO&lt;·
ma E. Anderson of the Department ol
Sociology of New Vorl&lt; Univ..,.;.'y.

Hauser is UUP's
president-elect
Prolesaor Ronald Hauser ol Modem
language• was named president-elect of
the Buffalo Center Chapter ol Untted
Unlverstly Professions in recently con·
dueled elections.
Hauser wiD become prelildent-«lect this
July and will take the hehn of the Chapter
at the conclusion of Or. WiUiam Allen's
term , on July I , 1981.
Other ollloen elected for term&gt; beginn·
ing July I , 1980 are : Secretary-Martha
Menning (Health Sciencn Lbary) ; Vice
President, Academic - Stefan Fleischer
(English) ; Membership Co-ChalrpenOO ,
Academic - Paul Diesing (Political
Sci nee) ; Communications Co ·
Chairperson , Academic- Frina Boldt
(Music) : Communications Co ·
Chairperson , Professional-Ellen Pine
(Biological Science) ; Grievance Co·
Chalrpenon, Academic-Marvin Berns·
teln (H istory) ; Grievance C oChairperson , Profeulonai - AI Er·
manovlcs (Student Ac:tlvlties) ; Negotle·
lions Co·Chairperson , Academic- Eric
Carpenter (U&gt;raries) ; Negotiations CoChairperson . Profusionai - Shlrley
Ahrens (Summer Se.lons); Altema
o.legates, Academic, 2-year term Anna K. F..,_ (English) : end Chester
Kiser (Educational Admlnlsl&lt;allon) ; Aller·
nate Delegate , Academic , l · year
term- Kenneth Rasmusscn (Modern
Lang-) ; De
teo, Proleulonal ,
2~ term- Shirley Ahnna (Summer
Seulono). and Stacy Johnson
(Sociology) ; Alternale Delogatea, Prot
slonal, '"2-yur t rm - Sam Crllan
(Social Sclenc.l , and Mary Jane o.y
(Health s..nc- lbwy) .

�""'it 15, 1911!0

Agostini gets
affirmative
action slot

Conference on the futur_e will
attract experts from ar nd the world
The future of Canada. Mexll:o and the
lJnJted Slates wll be the topic for a IN)or
International con!erencoe to be coIJ&gt;O'ISOI'ed and '-ted next · week by the
Center lor IntegratiVe Stuclies which
recently became associated with the
Schoof &lt;&gt;(_Arch ecturc and Environmental Deslgr(.
II the topic sounds ambitious..nd wideranging, it is altog&lt;rther typical of the type
of otuclies conducted by the Center,
which Is directed ~ ~· CordeD
"McHale. Mn. McHale recently brought
the .--arch unit tp Buffalo lmm the
Uniwnlty of H&lt;&gt;ustoo. The CCI&gt;fcrenci'is
b 6nl public edlvfly since tranoferrlr1g
here, but loUows a tladitlonal padern of
llludylng the long-range social and
cultural implications of change In 10c:1et1a

worlilwlde .

Tlie th" -day event wiD convene at
the Holiday Inn oo Grand Island, May
20-22. There, tome 40 Invited partldpants wtl be joined by North-Amcrlcen
members d the World Futu'" Studia
Fedaalion (WFSF) and by ~eoen­
tativa of the U/B and Buffalo communltla lor Identification and 4locutolon
of r;wotilems commoo lo North Anwric:a .
Co-sponaors of the confer....,. - the
pradglous" Center lor EconomiC and
Soclaf !.tudla of the Thlrd World (based rn MexJoo Cly) and the WFSF.
The United Nations En\llronment Programme is &lt;:00pe10dng.
Aoc:ordlng 1o Mn.. McH.Ie, who wu at
the U.N. just lut -'&lt;. worldng out final
details, the coof•ence will InClude both
plenary sessions and ahlrtoluve

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

Day I (Tuaday, May

20) 111111 l(ature

IN)or nallonal "'Nnd

•

papen", on

~~ Mcx1oo and the - U.S. to be

I~ a raponoe '""- •n lntetna-

tlonel

I.
ol the

~
dud*'~~

~

..... lnc:luda:

of population trend&amp;, Invery &amp;lgnlllcant th
rn

dlotrt&gt;ution of peoples wllhin
countrta, an ou
of each country'• kay
pollical, ..-omlc, tcchnic..J and cultural
tr nels. lcla\tillcalion of common prob' &lt;&gt;ppor1U

and Issues (including

the «nlllronmcnl. food , nation I«Uriiy,
ett ) ; and ccch ~ "s pcrupbOnl of
poutic lutwa lor his own and Plhcr
.... of an 1ncr llllngly rntel'depcndent

worlil.

•

len McDonald, praldent of York
lJnMmlly on Toronto, and a -1-known
c.n.dlan eeonomlll,
pr_,t a Vltw
of
...,..,.,., lu ..e , a IOpiC of coosince
opening day
ol the conMnnot
on 1 date of the
Qu.bec .-.leranclum which p-. a great
lrnped lor
~ nal.lon
The
Jor
• being
ancl pr
by Adolfo

line.,

""'
otud
al
EcOfloml&lt; and Soda~

of ..,.,.

c.

lor
of the T!Wd

World. a HMYard-edueated scholar.
Presendng the paper Pn the IJnited
States wiD be Theod&lt;&gt;re Gc&gt;rdPn president of the Futures Group , a
management-consulting organfultion
founded In 197 L Gc&gt;rdoo has been

llSIOdated with futuro research and
policy analysis lor many years and has
participated In development of several
melh&lt;&gt;ds of lonecasting. He has directed
studies on ouch topics as life-extending
technologies , energy , International
development, social changes. new ventures, and Innovations. A frequent lecturer at corporate and university
seminars, be is author of sev~ bo&lt;&gt;ks
and more Chan 100 reports lor g&lt;&gt;vem ment and corporate ck!lls.
RespPnding !rom the World J1'!fiP&lt;!C·
live will bl Andnlej Slclnsky, alodal
tclentlsl lmm the Polish Academy of
Sciences In Wanaw; Robert B. Mabele,
dlreclor of the EconPmic Research
Bureau at the Untvenity ol Oar es
Salaam, Tanzania; I.H. Abele! Rahman ,
a consultant lo the Council of Ministers
and the lnstltute of Nal.lonal Planning.
Cairo; E!NPC: Eleonora Masini, oeaetary
general of the World Futura S!udles
Federation, Italy; Kazan Bchbeham,
deputy dhdor ~. Kuwait lnlllltute
lor Sdenlllc Research; and Herb Addo,
an expert on «nagy and bioraourccs
!rPm Ghana. currently associated lol4h fle
lnstttute of ln~llonal Relations at the
~of the We.J. lnclies In Trinldad.
On Oey-2, these participants and
others lmm Canada, the U.S .• Mexico
and aroul1d the worid (Including possibly
such lumlnarla u A~lio Pecocl, presidentoftheCiubofRome; Shell Lampert.
chief e::onomisl. The Slwll Oil Company;
O.arla Zrakct , executive vice praldent
of • the MITRE Cotpoo-allon. amPng
PtheB) wtl break down Into three omaU
working jJoups to c.on$lder IHues pPSed

th&amp; day before.
The first will look at the changing
nature of planning, assessing 00... plannIng at all levels and In aD sectors may
most ellecllvely Incorporate studies of the
future .
Soclo&lt;ultural futures wW be the topic
lor the secood grOup. They wiD examine
trend&amp; and issues In education, heakh.
social welfare, business, the work Wn:e.
the dties and regiOnal developments.
The third small group will examine the
futures of resources , Including energy
resources, non-fuel mineral resources,
btoresources , the management ol
technical Innovation. sclenttflc research ,
and lnforrnallon and communication
raou.rees .
On Day-3, the working groups wiD
report back In plenary session with
recommendations on 00... to apply their
findings to studies of the future .
Dean Harold Cohen of SAED suggests
that the conference Is one of the most important the Univemty has hosted-ln-&lt;eocnt years. Co-chairing the sessions will
be John E. Fobes, former director
general of UNESCO, who is currently a
visiting echolar at Duke Univenlly and
the Uninnlty of North Carolina: and
B.F. Osorio TalaU, director general of the
Center for EconPmic and SQQal Stud[es
of the Third World.
The ultimate condustons and recPmmendatlons of the coofereooe will be
published, Mrs. McHale promises. "They
woo't just sit and sleep," she assured .
Being rnodeot , Ms. McHale_said the
least the~lerence will do is alert pepple
to problemt and perhaps change ways of
thinking about the future . Looking at
potenllal outcomes las m&lt;&gt;deslly, she
went oo , the results could have an Impact
on governments and planning agencies
around the worid .

Chemistry majors receive
awards for academic work
The lolowlng award&amp; have been made
to )union. and seniors majoring In
chemlsby:

.

Awards; Peter Muehlbauer , David
Scherer, Rein K!r.; and ACS Division of
Analytical Chemistry Award : Robyn Gc&gt;r-

SeniOr A.....-dt
don .
Watern N- York Section• ACS
Ten chemisny majors were nominated
"Outotandlng Senior": .k&gt;seph Minei ,
lor Pill Beta Kappa membership : Dean
Amerlean Institute o f Chemists
Barron. Martin BOoM , Samuel f'.. tnberg,
"Sc:hooatdc Achievement Medal"' Dean
Joseph Mlnei,. Robert Mook, John
Barron ; Merck lnd x Award: Nicholas · Rhoado , Nocholas Saa:amano, AnthPny
Saccamano . Chemistry Department
Otl.ulio, Kurt Rod&gt;enberger, Robert VanNom,.,. lor FNSM Dun's "'utstanding
noul The senior chemlsby majors
Scruor Scud nt" A....,.d. lcholu Sec- nominat4Cf to Pill Beta Kappa ropraent
camano; Chemlsby Depanmcnt Service
30 per cent ol the graduating duo
A....d (oupporled by Allied Chemical
The awards and honoro to
CorporatiOn) O.na Chadwick
undergraduates majoring In chcrnlatry
JWtlor A.- dJ
csented at a special ceremony
Ailed Cl&gt;tnw:al Scholonhtp Kurt
May , tpOniOI'-.1 by the S!udent AI-.
R
• Eutman K&lt;&gt;dak Scholar- I . of the Amcrlcen Chcm
Slloc
ship· Rober1 Vonnozzl. Ailed Chemical
ty

r

Or. Malcolm A. AQooanl , amentlv elftrmatlve action officer at the SIMc
Unlwnlty at Stony Brook, ..... - that pooiltOn at U/B oo Ju1y l.
In announcing Agoollnl'o acx:eplance of
the UJB post, Prcold!mt Robert L K.Dir
noted that he will ~ dtreclly lo the
Office of the President "to Nflect more cfledtwly (his) unlvenlty-wide ruand sphere of~ - "
Agostini amed his undergredua~
degree at U/B fn 1969, was -atded a
master of education degree In 1970. and
In 1972. a doctor of educaUml . He also
has certlfates of education from the ·
University of We« India, Jamaica. and
the Univenlly of London and a teacher•s
certificate (Tom the Government
Teacl)en' College, British Guiana .
Since September 19n. Ag&lt;&gt;stlnl has
served as assistant to the president lor
equal opportunlty/afflrrnadve action at
Stooy Brpok. His responslbffities Include
reviewing compliance with equal Pppor·
tunlty/affirmatlve action regulations . Title
IX and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation
•
Act of 1973.
He seNed as affirmative action officer
at the State Universlty College at
Geneseo !rPm 1974 to 1977. and as an
assistant professor in the Oivlsloo of
Educational Studies there !rom 1972 to
1974.
Ag&lt;&gt;stlnl was a research associate at
U/ B's Center lor Curriculum Planning In
1971. He was director ol ln-seNice
education at the Center lor Teachers In
Bt1t1sh Guiana !rom 1961 to 1965.
He has seNed on several SUNY CPmmlttees. including the 'Committee on Fair
Employment Practices of the SUNY
Faculty Senate., and was regional coordinator lor the Roch.Ster-Anger Lake
Region of the SUNY Affirmative Action
Group.
He Is author of "A Planning MPdel lor
Undertaking SeK-Evaluation under Title
IX of Public Coeducational lnstllul.lons."
an Intra-SUNY publ;cation.
Agostini Is a member of the Buffalo
Chapter ol the National Association lor
the Advancement ol Colored Pepple
(NAACP). the Black Faculty and Staff
Associal.lon of SUNY, the New Covenant
Church of Christ. William Street. Buffalo.
and several professional organizations.

Rowland wins
Beeman Award
Or. A. Westley R&lt;&gt;Wiand, profe&amp;SOI' of
higher education in the Faculty of Educational Studies and formerly vice president
lor unlverolty relations, has been named

the lint recipient of the Allee Beeman
Award by the Council lor Advancement
and Support of Education (CA$E) . The
aware wiD be preoented at the CASE National Assembly in Oeln?it in July .
Rowland served as president of the
American Collage Public Relations
AMoclation (ACPRA) In 1966-67. He Is
general editor of Handbook of lnMilutlonol Aduo.n«ment which was published
In 1977 _ Rowland Is also the edkor·lnchief of a continuing scr1es of quarterly
sourceh&lt;&gt;oks. New Direction fo&lt; /nlfllu tlonol Advancement, published by
JOOMy-Bass. .
In his letter to Rowland, James L.Fisher, president of CASE, saki : "The
Award Comm dee In giving this honor
wants not only 1o recogniZe your great
tPntrtbulions through .your .k&gt;oscy-Bass
publications, and others, but to set a otandard lor achiewrncnt for this recognition .
Indeed , nominee&amp; of the future wtllllnd k
dl!flcuk to measure up , I'm sure I sh.a re
the admiration of the CPmmittee for your
extraordmMY efforts In behalf of our
members and the field of nslitutional advanccnM-nt "

The award ts named lor Aicc Beeman,
the lnt peesidcnt ol CASE. which was
fPUnd d IIYC ycaD ago by the mer~ of
,\CPRA and the Amer1can Afumnl
Council (AAC)
CASE ..tucal.lon through programs In alumni ..tmlnlllration. educa·
bonallund raising, goycmment relations,
tutional f'C!ations, publicatlono and
management of ..tv ncement programs

�I

May 15, 1980

Sexploitatio., all around, Key charges
The nex1 slide, an ad for Chivas Regal ,
added a sacrilegious element, the combination of "the sacred with the divine."
Having been quKe vocal to that point, the
audience stared In amazement as Key
pointed to a blow-up of a Christ figure in
an Ice cube. Near H, a woman could be
seen fondlin\1 the genitalia of a man wearing a bishops garment and head dress.

S,~llcho~

"-SWI

Wthon Bryan Key Is either a man •n·
ulnely ec&gt;n&lt;:erned bv what he dalmt Is
SUtl'eplitlous media exploitation of a
society totaly unpr_.t to aillc.ally
analya and evaluate II, or he'sjust a dirty
old man who ranks second only to Cll(.
lord Irving in perpetrating a giant ,
lucrative hoax on the Ametican public.
\Yhal he said wasn' pretty. But Kdkln'l
prevent him-likely asslsled ~1m-from
holding the attantion of a jammed crowd
of students recently at Squn's Con·
terence lneatre . His _appearance was
sponsored by the SA Speaker's Buruu.
For neariy two and one-half hoUI'I", the
. ex-college prolesoor's slide show, exhor·
lations and oratorical style cajoled, ~ not
forced, the audlooncc Into queotlonin9 the
poool&gt;!lrty that the American cuhure-K
Indeed there Is one anymore - Is the
product of $30 blUion worth of annual
advertising-advertising Injected with
subliminal stimu capable of "modifying
traditional value systems." not to mention
manipulating buying behavior. But the
real honOr. Key suggests, Is not so much
In the deed Itself, as In the way In which H
Is aa:omplisl1ed: at an unconscious level.
sidetracking normal defenw mecha·
_ nlsms, rendmng the masws Incapable of
seW-protection.

lt .......... oellow,... lookatlt

A voluplllous blonde laying seductively
on taD grass was featured In the next
slide. "The young woman In question was
none other than a Plovbov centerfold .
and the picture , one of several
highlighting her "assets." The caption
acro:ss the page read , "Pet's Teacher."
As ~ the audience dldn 't know , Key
relayed that the centerfold Is used as a
sales device. The average budget for
these layouts Is about $25,000.
In one slide . the woman Is shown
(clothed) positioned on her elbows and
knees, nose to nose with a sheep dog in
the same pose. The dog , by the way,
belongs to Hugh Hefner, "which im·
mediately makes him suspect," Key
grinned.
.This Is a sexy pose . admitted Key , but
there's sliD nothing in the copy or picture
to indicate what the woman is trying to
teach the dog , although she is billed as a
dog trainer "learning the tricks of a new
trade."
..
As one flips the page , however. the
light begins to subdy penetrate it . A
superimposed image appears of the
woman (now nude) definitely showing
Hugh's dog a trick, and not how to fl'tch .

"--needed

Only awareneu of such media
ihenanigans CllJ1 arrest "mindless con·
sumerlsm" and prepare the American
people for life in-a "media society." This,
says Key. IS wfi'at his last two booksSubllmfnol Seduc:lion and Media Sexploltmion-try to do , and what his lecture/ prewntations hope to accomplish .
Now It could be. as some contend, that
Key Is )Ust a yl , sell~ media
foWls! whose ohtick coma replete with
polished one-liners and a sarcastic wit,
but If he Is a charlatan, no company has
yet flied suit against him. and Key doesn't
expect any to try. The fact Is , he sorn'ly
admb, that most people simply r&lt;:fuw to
deal with what he has to say, or ra tionalizlr their way around it . Magazlne
publlshen who use subliminally tainted
ads are really adept at It, he notes, not to
mention the people responsible for the art
and technical production of the offending
material.
The lint olide Key used to graphically
unckncore his message was of a Kanon
cologne advertisement found In what he
called
hose great Arnmcan crOICh
mawmnes." Ployboy. Pent/louse and
Oul A quick glance at the ad ohows a
man's left hand gripping a bottle of the
cologne . A knlf Is also pictured In the
othft hand cutting the cologne's cork top.
But look at that hand closely. Key In·
otlce rhe .....,. of fmgers, rhe
presence of a -bruohed hair painted rtght
down to the wmt's end. the dJSprOpOr·
tiona'- length of the side of the hand
compared to the short . cropped thumb.·
.nq finally rhe pronounced tanclotu and

-

"()ooooohhh ." tlghed and Ql9!lled

•ud-What once paswd for • thumb sudden·
lv became

rnetarnorphoaed 'tnto • penis,
• wmt and

and what once looked

_,.,...,.......,
... .,.._.,...,...,.,...
"'---~
...... -...~.,,._v

.. ...
. . . . . 631&gt;-111.26

~Hol.­

_

A&lt;llo'f-"'-IWIRY .IACI&lt;SON

...

~...o-1

R011V1T T MARLETT

,.,.

-IOMI"'

side ol a palm . was magically trans·

formed Into testicles. And let's not forget
that knife. adds Key. Remember. just one
slip and . whoops , so-long penis!
The "ooohh's" and "aaahh's" con·
tinued, only dedbels louder. Some
grunts of disgust could also be heard .

A DOt eo "'mple photograph
The ad , meant to look Hke a simple
photograph. is acluaDy a sophtslicated
composite picture which cost , Key
estimated, about $10,000 to produce . It
appeals. at an unconscious level, to two
" common denominators of the male
psyche." he explained , "castration fear
and latent hOmowxuality."
The h&lt;ind . emphasized the 55-year-old
Ph.D.. was lntentionaDy=awn with
dissonant elements. It pr
ts a synchronistic (or two-sided) Ul
which
the brain can record lnsla~neously at a
subconoctous level.
"Thew artlsll are well-paid . If they
want to paint a hand tq look hke a hand
they can do II . But ~the~ want to paint a
hend so some part of your brain
recognizes U as fake . they can do that .
too." he asserted .
The brain Is capable ol storing informa·
tion at lightning speed, Key relayed .
Retired Tulane medical researcher Louis
Becker, who holds two patents on
sublimlnalinduc;lion devices. has proved .
Key noted . that the brain can absorb In·
formation as quickly as one-twelvethousandth of a second . That's why consumers don~ have to scrutinize an ad In
order for the unconscious memory
system to record ~s mesoage.
The Kanon ad , Key contended, would
newr be placed In a I male-oriented
publiution . Studies he conducted
showed that 24 _per cent of the women
asked immedietaly recognized the picture
as rn.le gerlllalia and couldn't- a hand
8y contrut , lnl than one per cent of the
ma
tn the otudy popul&amp;llon perceved
the picture as anything but • hand . The
ad wu shown tn I original con
and
onf\1 to tndMduals unfamiliar with
aublunlnal -.uti
"This may oonflrm liOn1e of the thJngs
've always heard about women . Men
he
much cleaner minds," he mused
Tbat renwk was grMiad wtlh an outbunl
of wid ~... and a f
..y hlgh~booo

Orvt- Ia Ice c:ul!a

The next slide, an ad for Johnnie

Walker ,scotch. ohowed a glass fdled with
Ice cubes. with one fallen outside , but
nearby. Key approximated that it cost S3
million to place the single-page, color
layout In a spectrum of magazjnes rang·
lng from Time to Pent/louse. The art
work represents from I()0.300 hours of
production time .

If you want to explain how this ad seUs
''in conventional terms of academe,.. you
can't, Key declared . " Alter aD, why
would a company spend $20,000 for a
picture of ice cubes?"
As a blow-up ol the shadowed areas in
the cubes appeared on ocreen, Key
began to answer his own question. The
shadows, he noted , form a circus of surreaUstic images: a Japanese devU's mask,
a snake charmer and cobra. a teddy bear,
sub-human profiles, dangUng extremities,
a tortured-looking "being" more ap·
propriate to " Dante's 'Inferno' than the
back cover of Ploy boy." he mused : a
raven, the archetypal symbol of death or
seH-4estruction . and last but not least, an
"exquisitely detailed" castrated penis,
one so accurate in r~ese:ntatk&gt;n ..It
could be used to iUustrate a text in genital
physiology," he observed .
"This is not a terribly happy ad Is it?
And I know nothing In any psychology
tex1 I've ever looked at that would begin
to explain what the heU Is-going on here ."
But this much Key did know: The lm·
ages are typical of !how experienced by
alcoholics during detoxifiCation. In fact ,
Key relayed that when the Images were
tested several yean back at an AA
meeting, he was told the artist "could
have done his • arch by listening to
testimonials on withdrawal haDudna·
lions .~

The Ice cubes also contain upside
down '"-Y. again _.uve of
nightmare haludnatio!$-, tid(-datruction
and seW~mmolation . Key, who previously worked u a consult.ent for several ma·
jor International ad agendn, speculated
the reason for use of this Is to capblize
on the growing amount of r-.:11 which
Indica
that the brain, at en un consclou level, has the capac11y to
decode ce1aln ocrambled Imagery For
example, patients uncl.r hypnoels can
frequcdy read upllide down, mirror lm·
age tall, he rdayed ;

"See what you've been missing. If they
wanted you to see this consciously. they
could arrange It, but they don't." The
sales gimmick works best when perceived
at a subconscious level, Key theorized .

MargarlDe
But "girlie" magazlnes aren't the only
ones guilty of using sexual stimuU to seD
products, he submitted, so do the
women's and homemakers' magazjnes,
those bastions of middle class morality.
He had slides purporting to show a
flaccid penis hidden In a margarine ad
and "unusuaDy ohaped" flowess In an ad
for Herbal Essence ohampoo.
With pointer In hand, he called attention to the flowers, near a malden's hand,
which just happened to be purple, what
ad agencies Hke to refer to as a "genital
_,
color."
The copy tells the consu mer the proo·
uct will make their halr "very , very ex·
cited," notes Key. "WeD, your hair would
get excited too ~ you were allowed to
place your hand on what ohe is about to
place hers on ."
.

Word-bacia

Subliminal manipulation, Key ·~.
does not just occur through Images or
symbols found In magazines or billboards,
but can also be evidenced In word
"embeds" used on pictures, posten, or
even delicately Imprinted in the molds of
food products. The word "SEX~ Is bv far
the most popular embed , but there are
others, moot of George CarUn 's famous
"SeVen Dirty Words,~ In lad.
Such emotlonally-charlled taboo
words, perceived sublimlnaUy on a pic·
ture or a product, can "fix themselves
and their related content" Into the un·
conscious memory. Then , when H comes
time to make a produd selection a con·
sumer may opt for one brand over the
othe&lt; without even knowing why. he ex·
plained .
In honor of the particularly novel way
Howard Johnson's sublimlna)ly manlpu·
fates Ill customers Into buying dams, Key
said , he Is naming his forthcomlnll third
bool&lt;, The Oom Pial&amp; Ormt.
The way Key says ha ~cfilcovced" k, ls
that one day he and flve graduate
students went to a Howard Johnson'• to
eat . Without really scruttnlzlng the menu .
four of rhe six ordered the clam pla'speclal advertloed on rhe plaoema at the

teble . • _

...;

0

sO

. . . . ...... .

�M.y 15, 1980

Summer Sessions

expect 8,000 to enroll
Celelnled authon, · lrtternalloMiywod&lt;shopo

known ClOIYipOiaS and

..-w

In a v.-ldy of academic ..,.... . . J*t of

• polpOwri of allracdons being off-.!
lhis year through U/B's Summ« S...
lions.
U/8, which has one of the largal sum, _ J1rC9a1115 In the country and the
IM;at In the state, Is eJqiCIIng an enroll. mentof obout8,000. As of MayS, 3,371
had regiolaed.
~

........

After a one-year hlatuo, • June In Buf.
falo" returns 10 the Main Strnt Campus
with a ..... of 12 opedal conc:erll,
dAoytlmc '-:lura, and •mlnaruunnlng
from June 2 10 13.
This __,., particfpallr1g com~
will be George Crumb, Monon Feldman,
l..cjaren Hk. Stew Reich, Ralph
~. Clnllan Wolll and Chades
Wuorlnen. Performing art111s wllllnc:lude
two string~. the Columbia and the
Kronos, the U/B Pen:uoolon Enoemblc,
violinist Douglas Cone: flullst Robert
Dick. hlllband and wife pianists Frieda
and Stephen Manes, Yvar MSchasholf
and Aki Takahaohl.
The Columbia Siring Quarlat will per·
form the opening prl:98l1l June 2 with
the flnt two quariels of Wuonnen . They
will also play a quartet by U/8 composa
Morton ~eld.man the next evening.
The June 4 concert will feature Steve

Reich and Musiclans. Thursday, June 5,
a program of music from Japan with Aki
piano wdl be presented _
All concerts wiD be held In Baird Recital
Hal at 8 p .m . Tickets can be purchased
at the door.
-....
June In Buffalo Is ava!IISble as a aedH
course and also through U/ 8'• CredM·
Free l'rogramo for SSO. The price Include' alf concerts, lectures and open
rehearsals.
Takahashi

on

s.-Fo.-··
The Wednesday Summer Forum,
presented by the Facuby of Educatlonlal
Studies, will provide a platform for a
distinguished guest speAker each week
from"June 25 to July 30.
All lectures are oc:Fieduled lor 10 a .m .
In Moot Court, O'Brian HaD. At 2 p .m .,
lo&amp;Owinv each lecture, the visitors wiD
lead an inlormel dloc:uslion/quesllon·
and-answer period In the Kiva, I0 1

Baldy.
&amp;tty Fnedan, a founding membe&lt; of
NOW and the author of TM F-mrine
My1t&gt;que and II Chonged My Uje, wll
open the program with a cllocualon on
" Men and Women Coming into the 80's:
New

p

Problem• .
lei."

Pattern•

and

Author KenDclh E. Bouldiog, who has
deteri&gt;ed as a "one-man think
tank," 111111 spuk on "The Unity of
~ ." July 2. Bouldlng currently
ao board c:hUman ol the
Amer1CMI Asaoclatlorl lor the Advance·
ment of Science, and program director. of
r......-ch on gene~!~ -"&gt;~ and economic
dynamic~ 11 Jhot Untvenlly of Colorado's
Institute on Bthalllqn&gt;l Science.
New1p1oper columnilt, author and
eduCalof Mu ~ .... "'""' to U/B
July 9
an a ~tatlon on "The
Alnorbn Pollbl Scene." ~- pro. _ .......... e1 Brandolo, II aloo a
Dllllngu.lohed .....,._,. at the Unll-.l
Sta
ln--.1 ~ In s.n
been

~July 16. K.ennclh Koch , wlllooc:turc

£-•

on "Teaching Ollchn to Wrk Poetry."
A poot and
Koch II a pro,_of
and~
el
AJ hit altemoon
.-.iOn, Koch ..a~ hit PBS

"H.

. u. and o-m..-

lind Wlage Vaa, Hentoff ..,. ap1orw
who II to IMme for America's . faully
¥'Om of educallon .. _. .. give suggesllontt for Its .rehabilllallon.

SocWT•wwl ....,._
The Collegos ... offer ClOUfMS and
prognmo this ......,_ focusing on the
social transformations facing Americans
In the coming clecad..
•

..!":="~~=

will ....., offer a oolectlon of courses
related 10 the thcm&gt;e. Amoog them are;
"lmpect of Technology," "Women In
Fam," "Soc::a1 and £itiical Valu~ In
Medicine," "The Political Economy of
Women's Liberation," "Soc.lal
Photowephy," and "lntrodudlon to

Political AdMsm .•
If you find artifacts and digs exdllng,
AntiVopoioglot Ezra Zubrow Is conductIng an eight-week ardlaeology field camp
on Grand Island for undergraduate and
graduate students.
The program Is open to anyone In·
terested In the Interaction ol man with his
eiwlronment.
Students are expected to develop and
execute thu own independent research
p&lt;Ojecll based on foeld data and methods.
The !V""P·, research results will be
published , and students must participate
In writing and i!diting those findings .
Sbabepeate

· l1lose with a Oare for the dramatic can
gain college credH by assisting in produc·
lion of "Shakespeare in the Pari&lt; ." Now
In Its fifth seatel(l , the pr~m offers two
Shakespearean works in a quaint Jelling
near Delaware Parl&lt;"s Rose Garden .
This summer, Theatre and Dance
De.partment Chair Saul Elida will direct a
zany and fun-filled production oi "A Mid·
summer's Night Dream." July 8-20 .
Derek CampbeB, who most recenily
direded "U. Ronde," wiU do RIChard II.'"
July 29-Auguot ID.
This ..,...,.,·s audience Is expected to
top the 20,000 marl&lt;.
·

Healda EdOKalloa
Several two-week workshops featuring
topical Issues in health education are also
part of the summer line-up.
Slras and Its relationship to Wness wiU
be explored June 23-July 7 In a
wori&lt;shop on "SSras and Relaxation
Education." "'-""ms that reduce pro·
blem drinking wli be !lie focus of another
wort.shop, oc:heduled for the same dates.
"Hulth Education in Business and In·
dustry ," to be offered July 14-July 25,
wiU examine · preventive heakh services
provided by prlva
enterprises. Also
oc:heduled for the same data Is a
worlcshop-scmlnar on " Death Education
In HuJth Education l'rosn!n•·"

,....

A Jazt Ensemble Workshop , June
23-Julv 1, Is available to Jludent mull·
dano for two hours credk. High oc:hool
students can register through Credit-Free

~ Band jazZ soundt of Ellngton ,

e-. Oliwr Neloon ,

Thad Jones.

Woody Herman and Charlie Parker will
be latured. At the end of the sation.
studomts
display their talents In an

enoemblo conoort.

A Summer Institute on Group
Dynamics, June 2·July 11 . will offer two

500-level couna to Improve students'
ability

to recogntz. the social and

J»ychoioglcal pr-oceMeS that occur In
groupo. lind develop sldllaln using theory
lind qUM1Ib
mcthodt of analyzing
..,..., dynamlca•

u...v• Minced chicken

s.rvtca ltJ an Era of
t. apioredbv

~._.c:holoQiol
laUnder -of

Seymour s...... The
P¥ho-Edut.alion&lt;ll
Clnll: .
has -.n IOI&lt;Miy on
~ of ~ and commu:nty

v•··

Dewlopment of a 40ih convenience
food derived from poullry prodUCII has
been ad&gt;lowld ~ Dr RaOert
Baker.
n of the poultry ..xnca~ment a1 SUNY's Colooe of
,.,
and UN Sdencel at Cornel
,_
prodlld,
minc:ed c:hicbn. .....
'-"
lesl-madca-tad in the
I
-and ltl rodylor~by

c.

commercial proceyon

·

Key linda oeveral death symbolo In thae Ice cubn; orgy ocenes in othen.

• Sexploitation
(fl-. -

•• coL .,

Determined to lind what W&lt;&gt;uld prompt
'1our otherwise normal and emotionally
well -adjusted Individuals to order
something as revolting as damo," par·
tlcularly when he was one of the four and
doesn't even like them , Key began to
seriously examine the placemats. What
he disCOVered , he claimed , were not only
"SEX" conflgwations In the food (which
he showed In blow-ups). but also
shadows, whldl when outlined, showed
images of eight people (and a donkey)
engaging In an Of!lll.
" Besliallry, group sex, oral sex . homo
sex. M's aD there," he alleged. And to
boot. "it aells clams," he added.

A---."After the laughs

subsided , Key as·
surned a much more seriOus stance . He
warned the audience that the danger In
such subliminal exposure Is that k has the
"polentlal ol actually modifying the nation's .--oducllve behavior." Enough
bombardment ol such stimuli al)d
"orgies, group sex or homo sex can appear quMe rea.onable and rational," he

• maintained .
. .
Key, whose large bald head and solid
build nudes a oerta1n Telly Savalas an·
sualily, reported that as a resub of a 1974
UnMed Nations study on subliminal
stim , member natlonl were adviMcl to
pass legislation prohibiting Its In
media which a~ cultural or na·
tlonlal &amp;ontien." The report, which Key
says was "buried" In the U.S ., received
considerable
attention
from
underdeveloped countries who fek vic·
tlmlzed bv American advertising. Accord·
1ng to Key, the report called attention to
the aclv.tli dlects subliminal stimulation
can have on the tradillonaJ values of a

Muzak aDd lll8lllpodatloo
Key also relayed that , cunently, there
are some supermarkets who use
subliminal audio cuts In Muzak to
dissuade customers from stealing.
Although this doesn't appear
mlschiotvous. he wondered what would
happen If management deckfed to UJe
the technology to persuade customeno to
purchase hl!ih-prolit Items, or If the
system was used to promote the political'
aspirations of a particular candidate .. He
strongly suggested to the students that
~ had beller begin to wonder about It,
too.
Recalling how young men years ago
happened upon their flnt saual encounters, Key said he pities the young
men today who are weaned on
·nes like Pfoyboy, and grow up
or a fantasy woman "with no
blc
and perfect breasts ...
Oapite their content, Key declared
that magazines such as Pfoll4&gt;oy . . · -and deh~ . - "In my a -.
perjence with them, I ve never found
anything that'• of help to anyone. Whet
do they ever teach · you about bonds of
honesty and trust ~ a man and a
woman?" he asked dletorlcaly. ~.
what fhe9,do, he prolested, II - acfver.
tiwmenll evoking oodal tabooo which
capitalize on a people's vu~. The
more vulnent&gt;le the ....,_ ... the
more. susceptible they become to
manipulation . he chcrged.
Now heading a businesa In Reno called
Medlaprobe Inc., Key told the audlanoo
he was ._.tJy asked by ABC-TV to
consuM on a movie In which Robert MJI.
chum plays an allen being bent on corrupting and dalroytng the Amet1can

culture.
·
'*"*'through media manipulation. Key
To proYC he II .-loul about hll media
said when he -..t ...... typa of
sexploitatlorl llgttt, Key told the -'imce
things Mdl an allen could do k! ac·
that three years ago he lallfled before the
complsh his tasks, the director IndiCated
FTC on the subjcc:t. Allhough there Is no
that the public -sci never believe the
spedflc regulallon ~ the UM of
debilbtlng clf«a of subllrnln.r llimuli.
sublimlnals, oomc anorneys argue that
The ochcr ~ the d - aslced
they overtly \ilolale the Trutlltn Advcrlll·
was how ha could portray • people who
LAw.
he releyod.
.
had
been subtoet. OYer a ~ 01 time,
, . , said he off-.! the Com..- a · to suet.
pracllcn. Key told the man to
list
artloaJ and ocher media ...,.........
"JUII open the window and look oul8de.•
t.llves who could eonoborat
hit
Nollng the In the divorce ......
havy drug ...... and the Wowing in·
• and suggellad ochcr easly
~ eYidencc, but that the Com·
c:.tdenoe of rape and ocher ~ ·
mlulon dldn 't ewn bother taldnQ depool~~ eolemnly , "We're alrudy
tlorls

�May 15,-1980

Several departments present
end-of-year awards to
outstanding students

......

-

~
T- tneladnll oen1c1n In 1be Dolpart,_,. .. GecllogiOal sa.nca hew "-'
..,._.-.led _ . _

f&gt;ewum A..-ls, .-..I In honor of
lhe
Dr. ~Yg~Mid Pewum ·Mho found...ed !h. o.p.tment of Geolall!l and
..-I - lis chairman for 38 yell'S. ""'
poaaUed annuaJv. to ~senlcn
In the Department.
Thil year'• winners me Kurt A •
Fromm, East Aurora, and Carol Wad.dell, Angola.
.
Both students lrttend to continue their
studies as rna.ter's d~ candidates
here.

'*

10 ..... etadetlt teadMn dted
The Graduate Student AssociatiOn and
the Graduate School have pre5ented 10
awards to graduate student !"'"'hers. Ave
Excellence in Teaching Awards of $250
and live certificates of honorable mention
were awarded to individuals demonilrallng exceptiOnal competence In teaching.
Recipients of the five awards are : Dip
N. Bhanacharya (Department of ln5tructlon) , Keith Dickson (Classics Depart·
ment), Rosemary Geisdorfer (Modem
Languages) , Paul Kowalewsld (Communication) , and Michael Ma zzeo
(Management) .
Certificates of Honorable Mention
were awarded to James Bilotta (History).
Lyon Evans (English), Dimiel Karin
(History). Eileen Schwab (Psvchology) .
and Marcella Sherman (EngUsh) .
The recipients were selected by a committee composed of former recipients of
the Chancellor's Award lor Excellence In
Teaching. The committee consisted of
Profe sso rs Roberl M . Cooper
(Pharmacy). Richard D. Fly (English).
Ro nald J . Huelner (Management),
James E. McConnell (Geography). and
Catherine Olson (Mathematics) .

FurnuiiCholare
Two senior athletes are recipients of
Clifford C . Furnas Scholar-Athlete
Awards lor the 1979-80 academic year.
John F. Dunbar, Jr. and HoDy B.
Helfrich will receive grants lor $1 ,500
each lor graduate study.
·
Chosen on the basis of academic and
athletic exceHence. they were honored by
M... Furnas and U/ B President Robert L.
Ketter at a luncheon , May 9 , and
recognized during the University's
Athletic Awards Banquet on April 28.
In addition to the two ...nlor winner.,
Anthony C . Palombaro, a previous recipient now In U/ B Dental School, has
been awarded a $1,000 renewal.
The awards were Htabllshed by the
late Dr. Furnas, U/ B president &amp;om
1954 to 1966, "to recognlm outstanding
undergraduate performance in tcholarshlp and athletic proweu .•
Seni&lt;n who plan graduate study are
nominated by head coaches In the men·,
and women·, lntercollegillte athldlc program~ . The C .C . Furnas Scholarship
Committee, chaired by Dr. Andrew W .
Holt, 11510Ciate dean of the OiviAon of
'Gradual and Professional Education
reviews nomlnatlono and recornrneruh
awards recipients.
Dunbar maintained a 3.72 grade point
avenoge In cMI engineering. He was a
three-year membu of the vanity foolball
team, playing dcfm ve end , and 5ei'VIng
as co-aptaln .
A Regents Scholarship winner, he has
been on the Dean:• List every oemater
here, and It • member of the Tau Beta PI
Natlon.J ~ Honoo- Society and
0.1 Epsilon, the National 01111 Engineer·
lng Honor Socio1y
l-iellrich hM • 3 .65 grade point
a-.ge In ""'*'- admlnlllratlon and
plan• to' punue an advanced dego:ft In
.-ptlonal education .
.
A lour-yur member of the varstly field
hocMy learn , lhe- ~ IO&lt; two
and ......ad the MOll

Valuable Pial!"' M a

junior.

- She received the Grace Capen
Memorial Award · for exceDence In
ecademlc studies after her IOPhornore
yur, and Is cwrently oervlng as copresident of the Venity Club .
-Polarilbero
member of the Varsi ·
ty golf IMm whle an undergraduate.

..... .
..,_a

......,

.

The Depemnent of tf!"tory presented
four essay prba to undergracluate and
graduate students tbi5 week:
Awarded the Seltg Adler Prize ($65)
was doctorallludent Iva.-. Jakiic, for his
essay, "The Meaning of Uberalism in
Latin America: The Cases of ChUe .
Argentina , and Me&gt;tlco In the Nineteenth
Century." ·
Another doctoral student , John
Crawford, took the Hlotory Graduate
Student Association Prize ($25) for his
work, "Rufus Dexter: Not Quite So' Able
or Noted a Man ."
For the John T. Horton undergraduate
prizeS ($65 each) , the choices were
Gretchen Bouhane, a junior ; for her work
on "Uonel Groulx:.French Canadian Nationalist and Separatist," and )unior
Douglas Bacon for a piece entitled, "All
Revolu t ions

Devour - Their

Own

Children ."

FNSMawanls
James R. MUdrew of Lancaster was the
recipient of this year's Outstanding Senior
Award presented by the dean of the
Faculty of Natural SCiences and
Mathematics.
Mildrew was presented the award by
Dean Duwayne M. Anderson In a
ceremony on May 12. Consisting of
$100. the award Is presented annually to
an outstanding senior undergraduate
student .
A graduate of West Seneca East .
Mlldrew maintained a 4.0 cumulative
average In his undergraduate studies at
U/B, and plans to continue his education
with graduate study In computer science
at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute .
Other nominees for the Outstanding
Senlot Award were Pocter D. Brodfuehrer, North Tonawanda; Zlna Dmytnjuk, Amherst; Amy K. Schueckler .
Tonawanda ; Anthony Faber, New Y&lt;Xk
City, and Nicholas A. Saccomano, Harrison . N.Y.

PralcleatlaiiD.....
FD&lt; the second year In a row, a U/8 ·
student has been Mlected to~te In
the preotlgiOW l'luldenttal
ment
Internship Program fPO"'C&gt;Nd
the
federal Office cl Personnel ~ment .
Catherine Fon:l Donahue, a graduate
5tudent In applied public alfaln 5tudies In
the Office of Urban Affalrl, was one of
215 penons oelected for the two-year
program. Over 900 lludents &amp;om un!Versltla aD owr the country applied .
The internship prosp-am places participants, who have recent master's
deweesln management or policy 5tudies.
In varloU5 feckral departments and agenciel for tralnln!l In applied management
sklll5. MOll of the lnterml\lp5 will be In
Washington , D.C ., offices.
"We are very pleased that one of our
5tudents Will again sclected ID&lt; this
honor," Frank eort&gt;.tt, director of the OfIlea of Urban Affan, commented . "It certainly rcflecb on the quality of our pro~m ."
A native of North Tonawanda,

Ms.
Donahue.
a gradiiat of North
Tonewanda Senior High School and In
1977 was graduatad &amp;om U/B with
honan with a biodwlor of ICI«nCC d"9'ee
In IOdal ~ - Thil month, she will be
-arded • . . - of ..xnc. ~ In
applied pubic aflalrl $1Ud1u.

�7

The Ooolncl1 on ~ Sludles
has ...... -.Mel • $58,000 ..... from

1he,.,...

•

~.
non-prollt
....-~bvthe~

to-nment.

PNoident Robert L. K bullftnOUnczd.
.
The three-yeM granr will fund the
aiJibllshmenl ol a ful.ame profess« In
,..,.,_ 'Wdles. a pOfl to be filed bv
TahakoMichli.
·
• 1'1-.g 111M this award nwb the 11m
time the prestigiOus foundation bu
- - ' a grant to a public lnolllutlon .
br. Keu. Mid, "'1'bil unlwnlly has bftn
oflortng programs In Japo.- culture
ond lal&gt;gUlllge for a decode and has the
Rnat collection ol Asian fj&gt;edallsts In the
entire SUNY JY*m. We an very
pleMed and honored that our efforts
have been recognized bv the Japan
Foundation ahd the Japanese govern·
ment .••

A .............
Abert Michaels, director of the Council
on lntematlonal Studief (CIS), termed
the award "a l:nakthrough.
...It means we've proven ourselves to
the Japanese government and corpora·
lions." he said . "Hopefully . this will be
just the beginning. "
The award culminates several years of
effort bv a number of units within the
university. Michaels noted . He believes
the turning point in .the development of
relations with the Japanese government
came two yeaB ago when President Ket ter hosled a luncheon for a number ol
Japanese offiCials and businessmen . Including Ambassador Shotaro Takahashi .
Michli . who Is credited with having
played a major role in the acquisition of
the Japan Foundation grant . dted the ef·
forts of Appleton Frya;. who was recently
named honorary consul of Japan In Buf·
falo Fryar Is the former chairman of the
Buffalo/ Kanazawa Sister Cities Commit ·
tee
·
On staff here since 1970 and coordinator of the CIS's Japanese language
and studief program since 1977. Michli
feels the Japanese olferings here are
unique

!-,--.,,__...-loft)
Booon. - . . .. Oowlonl: c-..s "'""ldll
...S
D&lt;. OMic M........ .
loaoloy ,..,.._.,_

wlture ~mpbaalzed
"We emphasize cuhural learning . nol
only ~ngulstla . " she e&lt;plalned . "I believe
that language is culture . without
knowledge of a nation's culture . vou can ·
not really learn its language."
The CIS offers courses in elementary.
Intermediate and advanced levels of the
Japanese language. independent tudy
programs and special semina,. . Through
its Asian Studies Program . established in
1965. students have the opponu~ity to
study overseas and do field work al
U/ B's "sister" JChoot Kanazawa Univer·
sity. and al the f"temational Christlan

Unlwnlly In Tokyo.
In addition, ~ JapancM hlftory .
thropology, l&lt;lCiclloer. a

offered In
...........hy.
an-

mor1lel-.

-.....
.

and

Michll hopes to be ........... " - of.
fenngs together into a formabed
Japanese Studies · .....,_ and to
develop &lt;:OUrla OR • .a.-- cullure
aimed at law and n
a ,......,..,
"to lncN.uo their CG e 1
1n ·
IIQ.nal undentancllng. • . . - . He emphasis will be on a
at
the language,
tlocJushl of

cUJlo-...,.

""*

two cultures.
" Japanue is •o •••nt- from
English." she said . "We- lam dif- ,..
ferences in how things .,. jleroelved .
Students In my claoo are not only learning
a language. but . . , 'poychol&lt;&gt;gical
therapy,' a different valooe onentotlon
than they are used to1"

laterat._.....
MlchU feels there wil be .. lncreued
interesl in JaponeM IIUIIies; both on a
.local and lntematlooeilowlin the f~tU&lt;'l ·
A few area busin~ hove afieady
contacted her for Information, she said ,
their Interest related to the eslablishment
of foreign trade zones h••.
She noted. also , thet another in·
terestlng trend is the aumber of Korean
and Chinese students here •taking
Japanese language courseJ.
"Japan has to take the lud in getting
Asian nations to cooper""' for the peace
ol the world," she believes.
A native of Tokyo. Mlch Kcarne to Buf·
falo l4years ago acc.'ompenying her hu•·
band . who was on a Fulbright music
fellowship . He now plays string bass with
the Buffalo Philharmonic.
Michli did her doctoral work here and
joined the staff as a tutor in 1970. She
has also served as a Joponese language
inslruclor and director of the Asiatic Oub
at Calasandius Schoof. and this year was
a vlsitlng professor at the University of
Rochester.
She has been assi5tad In the language
laboratory bv Yoshiho Shboya, an ex·
change student from Kano&amp;aWa .
This summer. a nin•week ln5tilute of
Japanese Language , Culture and
Thought will be held from June 23 to
August 22, offering inlenolve courses in
Japanese language , a calligraph1·
workshop. lectures and films.
l1le Japan Foundation "'"""established
through ·spedal letlslalion in the
Japanese Diet In 1972. Operaled on In·
come from an endowment contri&gt;uled bv
the Japanese governm«nt aod private
donors, it offers American universitief
fund&gt; for fellowshipJ, vlsitmg proiUIOrJhips, lhary support and instHutlonal
support programs.
...,.,·..

Wind energy event
slated fo·r May 23
A major c:onfera&gt;ca on Wind Energy
Svstems will attrllel representatives from
national. otate and 1ocal governments.
svstemo manufacturers and Inspectors.
members ol the financial cornmunltlf.
engineers and wind advoco
to cam ·
pus, Friday. May 23.
, l1le event is being co..,.,.nsored bv the
University's Facultlf ol Engineering and
Applied Sciences and bv the legislative
Commission on Science and Techn&lt;&gt;logv
chaired bv Buffalo AMemblymon William

Arts and Letters folders take prize
Unlwnlly Public;allono SeMca ._
bftn named a recipient ol a 5peclal Mall
A"""d lot rec:rullment
In a no·
banal corupatilton opon.-1 bv the
Council far A d v - t and Support ol
E.dUQtiOn ICAS
U/B wes one ol only three uniYcnilla
to r
a 1980 CASE opocial award .,
cawgory olllUdant
·
ment comnusnlcaliOns U/ B'• -.nlng
con-.! ol a
ol brochur
ond wraparound folder d JCtiblng
ecademlc: ,......... olfer.a bv the
Focuiy ol Arts ond l.cltes .
"The
.... lmpr
with

""*"'

In
)IOU adheod 10 -&gt;'
objooctMf ond ~ • hand

andcol-.

~~

pu&amp;~IO!'~

d-.

ClO&lt;nfld·

bon panelist, Nancy Smkh , ol Swarthmore~.

Engel&gt;ardt was coordina10r ol the pro-

)ld , along
h Dr. WIIIYm S Hamilton,
acting deon ol the Aru ond l.Aitten !Kul·

ty.
.
John A Cloutier. ol the Publications
otaff, oontrlbuted origtnol artwotk and
detigned the layout ol the colorful
brochura Ann F Whitct-, oloo ol
Publicaltonl. leWd u an editor ol the
~-

.

The text wes pr-ed bv Arts and LAit·
ten •tall ond faculty memben
Pl&gt;ologropht were provided bv E.d-d
Nowak and Daniel
ol the
U/ B
Bureau, es
as al1flude
In o cou
taught bv M Proleooor

Su.......,...

Donald E

ocholf

CASE ioo pr.....,... cqwtlullon ol
unlvcnlty Nlotion ond alumni olflclols

B Hoy«

.

~neral will take place In the
Woldman Theatr In Norton HaD at
Amherfl . Smalle'r workshops wil also be
convening In Nprton .
Keynote speaker will be Ben Wolff, a ecutive director. American W'tnd Energy
"-&gt;daaiort. Wuhlngton , O.C Rucllng
to his pr~lotlon will be Koren Burs!M .
commlooloner. New York Slato Public
Service Commiulon , Robert J .
Buuolajl • .....,_ ol wind energy.
Hamilton Slondord OMolon . UTC: Fnonlt
rnoJbtlng - - for wind .
Gr\tmman Energy Sv*ma: Wllll.m C .

cr-.

Warburton . Altern&amp;Jiwc Energy
Rnoun:es. New Yark City; -.1 Richard
Wood, direclo&lt;, R &amp; 1&gt; llra;ctt. Environmental and R.....,. Ullliutlon .
Niagara-Moha)'llc P - Caop.
lndMdual workshops , slab!d for the
afternoon. wiU consider reliability and
maintenance problems for both large
Jeale and medium rule - . I allflerns. Other MSSions will
to wind
•vstems and the otato ol _..a. and
development in the flold.
Question• to be conaltYNd . . ·

look_........,..

• Who! potential does -..! after in
New York'• enetg9 fu-?
• What ben1ns lnhlbll ..-..! lljlllems as

or........

• vw.~e enervv JOUrOO?

• What legjUotlon
actions con New York laloo te pi'OftiOia wind

enerw JY~lenu?

-

For additional Jnlcrmetlon. oont..c:t
Morilyn DuBob. ~ Cornmileton
on Sdertce and T~. "-mbbv
P.O Boll 167.
~5os~'

~ncy 4 Bldg

y

J31h

12248. 151

....

�May 15, 1980

\ '•

City students exhibit proje~ts at SEL
they found out H was jusl
one o( - . 1 on ampus , "*tt were

ty," Geelon said. "We Intend to ...., the
Center often as a resource In the future. n
Following are the . students' own
descrlpllons o( their projects (photos

r~!"'.-.1 .
wac five students &amp;om• BufHonors School. who were

Mille flak

the . . o( the Science and
Unry tbet amazed them

II -

~

llnl, but when
falo's

here to set up and diot&gt;lay their own
ldence projec:b at the
In honor o(
Eaf1h O.y. Two o( the five students later
won top prizln at Buff~'s Science Con·

sa

gress:
The clioplay -

organlz&gt;l!d by Maria
Hart o( the West«m New Yorit Environmental Raourc:e Center housed In
the
Hart has been woridng wtth
area tudler. In provldlng materials and
Information about environmental subjects.
Tom Geelan o( the Biology Department at City Honors said the students
were ~mos~ appreciaiJYe" o( the oppor·
tunity to dlll&gt;lay their projects at the
University , w'nd that they received "'ots
of" ideas from going through the En·
vironmental Center's materialS.
~It was a great opportunily for the com·
munlty to gellniiOived wHh the Unlversl·

sa..

----

above) .

Gnde:l

Tide: 1-.latJoe: A w- Proepcct

My project was st.~PD&lt;&gt;M&lt;I to discover
which insulation was the best - the way I
dJscovered this was to place the Insulation
around my Insulation testing box . and
then healing the box up. After that the
temperature was taken until the box
temperature was the same as room
temperalure . The insulation1 were
ceDulose. styrofoam . pink fiberglas , and
machine flbergtas The pink fiberglas
was the best,

....... Smitlt
Gnode: 10 City Honon High School
Cheap Eaerp: Hydrogen from
Oeean WatG
My Idea was to convert abundant
ocean water to hydrogen lor use as a

.

. fuel . J didn't want to use any non·
renewable resources in the conV«Sion. \

·

The rMin objective was to peoform
c~ec~ro~yoa· (a process o( running elect1c
currwnt through water, splltting M Into
hydrogen and oxygen) .
To do elldrolysis, you need electrictty
and pure water (plus some eledrolyte) .
For pure water (from ocean water) I
built and designed a solar dlstiller. For
electricity, I conslrucled a windmiD.

·Mira Flak

Gnde:JO
tldc: .Eftecta of Loft CaDal - Mice
Mice were placed in 3 houses In Love
Canal and in 2 Buffalo houses. Two
generations of mice were raised tllere, to·
determine If there were slgnlftcant d" ·
ferences between the experimental and
control groups. 12 measures were con·
ducted on the approximately 900 mice .
These included litter-size , mortality ,
distribution of runts, male -female ratios ,.
weight at 6, 21 and 41 days. Also crown·
rump lengths, a righting response ,
righting response In air, and an activity
lest.
these there. were some. foUfld

or

slgnWicant.

n- suggest thet the 2 e n-

vironments - . dllferent, and Love
Canal had some dfecls on the mice .

Dlodel..._
Gnde: 9
AaAuJ,.IeofiJPtllltlla

C'--

•

For my project I made an analysis o f.
the vartous lighting systems throughout
the Bll,llalo PUblic Schools. The two main
putposes ln. my project were to fin d out If
these schools were conforming to State
· lighting regulations and to ilnd out thee/·
jiclency of the lighting systems. A5 a ma in
result I found many'schools are not conforming to the lighting regulations.

Daorld Stiaater
Grade: I
Baalc Solar Heating
This project basically descrtbes the
principle of solar heating by
demonstrating a combination of liquil!·air
Sy$tertl .

'

.

Too much technology bad, doctors hear
ther, he said , students' inability to tolotrate
any uncertainty In medical matters Is
rewarded bv better grades.
"When they become physicians, they
are uncomfortable wHhoUt reams o(
documentation" lo back-up diagnoses,
he pointed out.
He cited anecdotes about physicians
who haw. ignored obvious clinical symp·
toms and plunged blondly Into remote or
erroneous diagnoses based on machine
Images.
"We should perhaps train more blind
doctors who are dependent upon their
ears and will therefore listen more ~­
ly : he dryly ..,_.ted .
"Technology h&amp;s given physicians vast,
new powers. -But what -this means Is that
we , as physicians, hitw to ask patients

the old questions In often new ways.
"We need a degree o( irreverence for
the 'Images' and need to see ourselves as
what we are - interpreters o( patient complaints and symptoms."

Patrick Kelley won third prtza.
New officers o( the U/B Medical Alum·
nl elected at the business meeting are :
president, Or. Robert Schu~.z; vice pres!·
dent , Or . Norman Chassln ; and
treasurer, Or. Robert Baumler.
Elec:tloM• . . . . . aDd . . .
More then $36,000 was presented to
Spiro's lecture followed a morning of
the School of Medicine by clasaes which
speakers who foc.....d t.~pon drug therapy
held their reunions during the Spring
updates. In addHion, three exhibits won
Cbnical Day. Some of the classes elected
awards. Or. Robert Baumler, chairman o( , to have their gifts help lund the learning
the Exhibits Comml
presented first
Resources Center In Farber Hall; others
pr1za to Drs. L.N . Hopkins, S .S . Shenoy,
elected to support the Physical Diagnosis
and James L. Budny for "Cerebral
learning Center which has been pro·
8ypau In Pre_,tlon o( Stroke and
jected by the School.
Treatment of Anewysms"; and second
Reunion da_, which participated In
place honors to Or. Huuetn M. Abdel·
the giving effort were those of 1930,
Oayem lor " Hepatobiliary Scinllgnlphy."
1935, 1940, 1945, 1950, 1955, 1960,
"Stereotactic Neurosur~ry" by Or.
1965, and 1970.
•

May 23 is date for phone change
The telephone company's plan to In-

stal a new Centrex system on the Main
Street and Ridge Lea~ has been
la'g«&lt;ed to take pli&gt;ot early Friday even·
lng , May 23, U/B'o Office o( Telecommunications has announoed.

The c:hangcover to a new central
switch will ausc some Interruptions in
Mrvlca that evening . but most unlvenlty
offlca are expcded to be dooed at the
time for Itt · three -day Memorial
-"end. New Main Sir
and Ridge
Lea "831 " line numbers
be operational wei befor of&amp;es reopen on Tuesdey morning , May 27. Richard J . Zahler.
U/ B'stelcommunlcallons chief, r~.
To .a:ommodate the c:hangcover, a
~to
~Directory is
being published and training Mlllons
t..w been plonned.
Unlvenily Publications Savtoos reports

the ~-~.J:'~
during the - t . before the May 26
Mcmortill O.y hold.y.

T.......,._._

Training &gt;CSSions on use o( the new
system will be held M.!v 21 and May 22 In
Squire Hal Conference Theater. The
T"lecommunlcatlono Offlca has asked aU
ampus un that will be served by the
new Centrex system to &amp;end represen·
tatlves to the 90-mlnu "hands-on" _.
stons. lnstructiQnal Information wtU be
distrt&gt;uted.
Zahler also reported that callers
not
be able to rcacll Department o( Medicine
units located In the old Meyer Memorial
Hoopital Annex during the afternoon o(
May 23. At tbet 1\me. Meyer Annex
"831" numbers will be repYc.d by new

four-&lt;ligtt number, and vice versa .

.......tcode
To reach the Amherot Campus, Main

Slreet and Ridge Lea callers should dial
" 191" plus the last four digMs of the
desired "636" number. For long distance
tie-line calls, a "192" dial code will replace
the current "77· 195" code .
Amherst Campus callen will continue
to dial " 194" to reach clleniJ on·tha other
two ampuJOS, and "195" for aca!U to

lie-line service
~r added that telephone servloo
onall be lnterrupiAid for up to one hour on
Friday even~ , but that there would be
no lrnpect on .Jarm hnes, data tines or
lines served bv leal ...._ ochanges.
other udlangc lines.
· The new Centra oyotem oilers Main
New line numbers will be asoigned to
Slrwt and Ridge IAa telephone ._.. the
Main Slrftt and Ridge Lea numbers In
same I atures and options as thooe now
the 831 - 1000's, • 831 · 4000'• and
available on Amhcnl Campus Ina.
831·5000'1. Most four digit numbers bel·
After May 23, the tnter-cempus dialing
831-2101 and 831· 3999 will re·
codes "6," "7 ," "76," and "77 ," will no .
maln the same. The Unlv~'s main
longer be used Main
eel Campus
lisled
number
(general lnformallon) will
·~ ..... will be able to conlacl
be changed &amp;om 831-'XlOO to 831 -2000.
Ridge .... CX&gt;IIeegues by simply dialing •

�May 15, 1980

served In various admtnlstrathle
capadlies in the Graduate School, he hao
maintained, through teaching and advisIng , continu ing contact with
undergraduate students.
He Is d~ especially for good
undergraduate teaching In a research
oriented Institution - something often
overlooked and seldom rewarded.

Nell Sch•ltz

&gt;

Recently promoted to tun professor of·
EngUsh , Dr. Schmitz has been with U/ B
since 1966, when he arrived as an aosls·
tant professor. Students and former
students have aHested to Schmitz's Interest in his students years beyond the
classroo m, and there wao wide student
Input In to his promotion considerations In
1971 and again last year.
In a department where close contact
between student and faculty Is crucial,
particularly in the development of writing
and critical skins, Dr . Schmitz stands out
as a superb teacher.

Go&lt;alcl O'Grad!l

Seven faculty &amp; professional staff
win Chancellor,s Award~ for merit
· U/ B 1$ home lor seven of the 70
teaching faculty , librarians and nonteaching professionals on 40 SUNY cam·
puses recognized this week for outsanding job achievement , in the eighth
annual Chancellor's Awards corrq,etltlon .
Forty-four faculty, five bbrarians and
21 other professionals were ctted SUNYwide.
Four faculty and three professionals
make up the U/ B group oi award win·
nero: Dr. Leo C. Curran , associate professor , classics; Dr. Jeannette M. Lud wig, asslotant prolesoor, modem languages and Bteraturei: Dr. Charles R.
Petrie, _Jr ., assoc;late profeooor. com·
murnullon; Dr. Neil Schmitz, profesoor. _
English; Mrs. Arlene BergwaU. psistant
to the dean and director of stuoent af.
Ius, School of Management ; Dr. Gerald
O 'Grady. director , Educ.atlonal Corn·
munlcatlon Center: and Mr . Robert J .
Wagner, asslotant eucul!ve vice presidenl.
Each winner receives a Certificate of
Award (to be presented at the General
Cornmenc«ment Luncheon , Su11day,
May 181 a11d a check for SSOO.
Below are excerpt5 from Statement$ accornpan)ling eech lndMdual's nomiM·
lion lo the Stale-wide Selection CornmK·

tea ·

ing vocatlonaii}H&gt;riented oludent body Is
no eaoy taSk; H takes Imagination , wH ,
and very hard work . Dr. Curran hao proven that he Is more than equal to the
endeavor.

.Jeaanette Ludwig
Dr. Ludwig's nomination proceeded
from the Committee on Teaching Effec·
liveness In her home department and Wa5
subject to department-wide deUberatlon.
That she would be so honored Is
perhaps not too surprising, given her own
dedication to the development of sound
teechlng evaluation pracllces and In·
otrumeniS.
Letters from her cou.,gues were

unKorrnly favorable , and students were
equaUy consistent In their praioe. Much of
their salisfaclion may weU be due to the
fact that Dr. Ludwig took over respon sibility for the undergraduate language
program and !raining of T As In French .

Charla R. Petrie
Here since 1966, Dr. Petne has been
an active faculty member. His research
record is sound and consistent ; his ad m inistrative assignments and committee

appointments over the years account for
the service record equivalent to that of
several profesoors. Finally, there Is his
commitment to teaching. While he hao

Moore fund would
continue syqtposia
A Glhrt Moore Memorial f.und In the
University at Buffalo Foundation has
been crated by hio former associates In
&lt;&gt;&lt;der to underwrite conHnuation of a
series of oyrnposia he began shortly
befa&lt;e hts death on May 6 , 1979.
Moore had bien dean of graduate and

profeulonal edu cation here since
November 15, 1978
Hts acceptance of that Graduate
School post had marked a homecoming
of sorts. after lour years as dean of the
School of Education at SUNY/ AI&gt;any.
For the decade and a half prior to li)at:,.be
had held a 'variety of admlnlslralive and
' feculty pos11 here
·
Moore conceived the ld a for the oyrn·
poole after he ditcovered "how Uttle
many academlt admlni51Tators here
know abbut SUNY a1ld hlgher education
In New York In general.·

T...-

R..,Id tumova and the fact that moot

.dmintsullk&gt;n come from non-1tiated

..-lm&gt;ic bed&lt;grounds mad thts so, he
riOted .
The memorial fund lo continue the
~ ts the work of four of M_...,

colleagues: Dr . lawr&lt;!nce Cappiello. professor of health education: Dr. Andrew
Holt, asoociate dean of the Graduate
School: Dr. Robert Rossberg. dean of the
Faculty of Educational Studies; and Dr.
George Levine . dean of Arts and Letters.
Moore had headed both these faculties
during his tenure here
Individuals directly associated with
Moore, here, at Al&gt;any and elsewhere .
have received letters asking them to contribute to the fund .
Anyone else on campus who Wishes to
be part of the memorial effort may send a
contribution directly to the U/ B Founda.tlon , 250 Wtnspear Ave ., Buffalo,
14214, designating the gilt for the Gilbert
Moore Fund

Gnat Impact
When Moore "died last year, President
Robert L. Kder remarked that, "In a few
lhort months, he had a greater Impact
upon th lnstilulion than most persons
have had' after yqn of lat!or
"He was J*1kularly adept at helping
us &lt;&gt;urMiva In • fresh l!ghl a1ld In
Jllmulattng persons of dtsparat lnternt.
to action toward some joint purpose.•

.

Arlene Bergw.U
Nominated by her supervisor, Dr.
Joseph AluHo, dean of the School of
Management, Ms. Bergwall hao total
responsibility for student services In that
School. This include• the processing of
approximately 2.000 appttcations per
year. and the subseq uent guidance of
1.800 students enrolled In the various
programs. graduate and undergraduate .
The quality of advisement and ,
especially, of admissions processing must
be outstanding in a school, such ao
Manage.mentf where demand runs exceedingly high . That the operation runs
so smoothly Is due, In very large part, to
Ms. Bergwall's outstanding profes·
slonallsm .
Gerald O'Gr•dy
Nominated by the various supervisors
who report to him as director of the
Educational Communications Center,
Dr. O 'Grady's broad range of activity In
the field of educational media Is readily
apparent from the wide range of ECC's
oervices to Its University constituency.
O 'Grady hao had a slgnKicant Impact
on how we view media in an aCademic
selling. . . .(and) Is an _outsta11ding administrator, a skilled grantsman. and a
pioneer in the field of media . He wears
several hats with efficiency and energy.

-·

RobertW.....,.
Wagner was described as "totaDy committed to the University; -on repeated occasions, he hao voluntarily assumed
responsibilities which could have readily
been assigned 1o others and which added
to an already very heavy workload .
''He has a striking ability to work with
others and to get others to cooperate wtth
him . The net result 1$ that he finds himself
called upon to partlclpa'- In , and often to
chair, almost every major committee con·
cemed wtth admlnlslral!ve problems. The
most 'recent instance o( this . . . Is hts
chairmanship of the od hoc CornmiHee
on Registration Procedures.
MHa has the knack, when given a problem , ofSfting both the larger I$SUe and of
grasping the details which are basic to any
satisfactory solution . This 15 patticularly
ref1ected in hts work on the University
budget, where he has noC only 'bottom
line' responsibility but also must strive for
a satisfactory ad)u-t of the components which contribute to that
total - undar sublraetive as -n as ad·
dJtive conditions .... "

-

�May !5, 1980

Eigh

-----ers e.-ding careers
lhe Oop.tment's ololll and P"9"1!1S
- - nopdJy apendcd, with dodonl
~In FNnch and German -.tad

. . . allhe old DMoian al Geneii....S

.....-.......,.dun
al MFC .
T'-'eh ....

T~ Sludies. In 1961, he -

In 1962 and In Spanish In 1964. ~
a&amp;.mgs In Italian and RIDIIIoh wae ex·
pencled Into luD uncierFod- pro!P"''· and the Crillcal l..angulga Program
work In ~-- .iidded. In the c:oune of I%7 he preoidcd
oYer tbe ratrudW1ng of the Dep.rtment
lniD tloree lfll*llle Dopar!Jnents, which
codllld llfllil they -... r-nobled In
1977. In 1967-68 he oerwd - chairmen
al the newly-~dent Fm&gt;ch Oep.rtmmt.
•
Siller t'eceived both his undetsnduate
and greduate training at Princeton, ob·
talnlng the Ph .D. In romance tang._
and litetatures In 1935 c:omblnlng Inter- In both French and Italian .
Eighteenth-century France became his
area of specialiZation, with particl!lar emphasis on French cuhurol influence. on
late eighlaenth..,.-.tury America and on
French Masonic literature . In retirement
he will continue wool&lt; on a deltnWve
bibliography and Index. of eighteenthcentury Masonic verse in French and a ·
series of related studies.
Ptevlous to hts appointment at Buffalo,
Silber taught at Unton College. where he
~ed lor twelve years as chairmen of
the Modem Language Department and
lor three years as chairman of the Division of Humenilies . During Work! War II

yurs, ... reoponli·
blo lor ..................nt ....s
oclo.lulqa
lor ..t.rliement OBVIc:a.
porllc:ulori!lln .... fields al busioWM and

....s

....s

eccountlng.
Kloh Nllred from his iidmlnlstroollve
pool In 1975 and since then has been a
lecture In MFC, teaching aocc&gt;~~nting

courses..

Kloh was ~mployed with the Rudolph
Wurtilzer Company l0&lt; 13 yean in

variouo c:apacllles. FO&lt; 38 months durIng World War II, he was in the U.S .
Navy as a chief speclaljf. spend'ong
moSt of his u- as an tnslruciO&lt; In
mi&amp;Wy sdence and taclics with a V-12
U.S . Navy Officer Training UnH sta·
tioned at the University of Caltlomia et
Bm&lt;eley.
During his yean o~ campus, he has
served on various committees concerned wHh Intercollegiate athletics end
has been odlllsor to several "udent
ooganlzations.
He has been a member ol1.he Board
of Trustees of the U.S . Association of
Evening Students, end an advisor to the
Upstate
ew Yooi&lt; region of !hot
association.
·

he was a civilian employee in inteUigence

Eallp R. Ewald
Emily R . Ewald retired as director of
Alumni Fund Raising in February, ending
a 22.year careft which Jlaried when she
accepted a tm&gt;pol'ary job with the private
UniversHy of Buffalo's Audio Visual
~nt . It became permanent and
Mrs. Ewald transferred 'to the old
[)eveloptMnf (fund-ralsing) office very

early in ' - car'!C'.

She was hdnored last year for her
al the Foundation's Gilt
Renewol Program . The Natlonol Council
for the Advancement and §upport al
Education , the Association 01 Campus
Related Foundations and the College and
Univerolly Relations Coundl (the latter
two SUNY orvanlzationsl all ckd the
Foundation's 86.5 -cent gill renewal
factor and th~ design of Hs renewol direct
ma pi'O!J'am.
Mn. Ewald attended Keuka College.
supervision

Edward H. Mad.t.a
Edward H . Miidden was educated at ·

Oberlin College (A.B., A.M.) and the
University allowa (Ph .D.). In eddition to
r~lar pools at Western Resetve University. the University of Connecucut and
Calilomia Slate University, San Jooe. be.
has heel visiting appointments at Brown

Univer-sity.

Wesleyan

University ,

Amherst College, the University al
Toronto. the American University of
Beirut (as a Fulbright Scholar) , end most
r~ntly at Unacr~ College, OxfordUniversity. He ca- to U/ B as an

established scholar In 1964.

•"'

• 1o, V. McKelvey
Troy V . McKelvey, associate professor
In the Department of Educational AdmiAlslrallon, Faculty of Educational
Studies. retired at the end of the first
semester. HecarnetoU/Bin 196Sasan
associate with the Western New Y or!&lt;
School Development Councd. The next
year he was named assistant professor in
Educational Studies and was promoted
to associate professor in 1969.
McKelvey did both undergroduate and
master's wool&lt; at Western Washington
State College before receiving the Ed.D.
from the Unlv.orslty of California ,
Bm&lt;eley. In the early 1950s and 601, he
was an elementary classrooon teacher
and principol at various schools In the
State of Washington . While at Berkeley,
he was a teaching fellow in the Division o(
Educational Administration .
McKelvey is author of two volumes on
metropolitan school organization and
another on urban school iidmlnlslratlon.
He has written also on urban school
desegregation . He · has been a visiting
proleSIOr at Ohio Slate, the UnlversHy of
Wisconsin and the University of Oregon.
A ~ of various professionol
organizations, he was recipient o( a diamond anniversary Distinguished Alumni
Award from Western Wasloington Slate
University in 1974 . At U/ B he was adVisor to many groduate students In his .
depa~nt . was chairman of his facuhy's
CommHtee on RecruHment al Minorities
and Women , and a -mberol a number
of other commillfts. He was president of
the nallonel University Council for
Educationol-Adminlslratlnn In 1974-75.

Proleuor Modden is widely recognized
for his twelve booko and more than 80 articles In diverse field~ of philosophy:
philosophy and history of sclence, history
al American philosophy. -taphysics,
and philosophy of religion. He haS. for
example , long been recogn!Md as the
luchng authonty on Chauncey Wright
and the foundations of American
pragmatism. Raoently he Is known
especially for his defense of a realistic empiricism against the Humean emplrlc:lsm
prevailing
In ·Angl o -American
philooopby
~• editorial posi!lono have
been held by Prolesoor Modden during
his career. Most notable has been the
post of general edllor lor the American
Philosophocal Asoodatlon and Harvard
University PI-- Source Book Series In
the 1-itotory al Science . H was appointed
to this lrnponant position while
In his
30o and c:ontln
In It today.
At tJ/ B he ha played a key role in
guiding the work o( an exC4!pllonally large
number of Ph D students, many of
whom came to the uouv.,..slly 5peCl&amp;aJiy
to work woth him . H and Mn. Madden
ha c:onsld«red these oludentl OMmbers
ol tha
nded lamlly. His commitment
to ~ua education has been no
Gor.t..
A ~P«II&gt;indlrlsl 1ec:turer who
Gordon SOiber JOined rh University
...., cl«¥eeopo warm p&lt;trJONI
f•culty U- prof•NOr oJ romanc.
-..,.
his lilUdcn , M.odden has also
langu.ga and cha.nnan of tha Oepartpopul.r wuh undargraduat
m nt of Mod rn Laneuagu and
... 196~,
-.ng.M
~~_--!.
. II&gt;-~
· u..der hlrieada.-.hlp

wool&lt; with the Army Signol Corps at Arl Ington. Va .
He has served as an officer or commit·
tee member of a number of professionol
societies, most recently as secretarytreasurer of the National F.ederation of
Modern Language Teachers Association
from 1969-1977. One of his major professional Interests has been fh student exchange and foreign study programs. He
served In 1951-52 as dlrecjor of the
European Office of the Institute of International Education and In 1963-64 as
professor-in-charge of the Sweet Briar
College Junior Year In France. His Interests In the effective teaching of
languages and literature on an curricular
levels and tn promoting the spreiid of
language study have Involved him In a
wide range of activities, including educational television. As early as 1953 he was
co-dev~ of an experimental French
teaching program at WRGB. Schenectady, and In 1959 he direcled the first
phase of the elaborate "Porions Francais"
series telecast by WGBH, Boston , and
distributed nationally . He Is at present a
-mber al the board of directors of the
Buffalo Philharmonic. He has received
two decorations from the FNnch government, as 0/ficler d 'A codemie In 1956
end 0/ficler du Polmes Acodemlques in
196~ .

a

._ stronv

sut.e.-

.

NIAa Tretiak·Shlelc18
Nina Trellak-Shields, · assistant prof ssor of Russian , has been on tho faculty
here sinca 1961 Ptofeuor Tretlak·
Shields did ' - undergroduate wool&lt; In
the Soviet Unl(&gt;n at the Pedogogic:al
Tekhnlcum In Grayvoran and at the State
Unlwirtlty In Kharkov In the UkraiM. She
was 1 tucher In gract. schools in tho
U.S S R and w elso an tnspecsor lor
district boards of education. In tho early
days of World War IJ , she was a Iacher
at Khaoi&lt;ov High School . From 1946-49

�Mll!llS, 1910

Baldy Center,~ Oxford unit plan · .
conference on government regulation_
U/B'o ~C::.':" t...wenct5oo:IM
Polley, In
wilt the Oldani

-

the...,__ proc..; . - ... oi

Engl.nd, II~ a~ lnMr·

........... proc:.duNa ... ........rulemaldng; enhanced ....,._ OV.•
light oi regulelooy cMdolona, and ., on .
The net mull mey be • radical change In
the lhcoe _..,.. openla. Thio wll
be one oi the firol ......_ cl ....,wary
. dedolon-molcing.
Invited pepen wll be ..,_ on .lww 2
by: Kdh Hawldno, ~ cllaw and
almlnology at the Odard (Ann, on
"The
oi Dlotnllarl
Officials : A C.. Sludv al Eaw~cwmWillal
Polutlon In the l"*-1 Kingdom;" Rabat
.... ~.~oi~O..ford c-., on '"BulaucAIIc
and SocW Wdare;" and
~­
~ proiaeor oi law, U/B. " A C..
Study of the Federal Trade

cllodr*&gt;arY atudy oi the topic oi uo-n·
-~~ June 2 end 3.
Portlclp.do will Include faeu1ly from

J.w. SocW Sclencea (Anthropology.
Economlco ,

Pollllcal

Science ,

"-hoooav. and Soc::lolomrl. Manlae·
rnem, E.d.-. and Sociiil wen &amp;om

bach U/B and Oxfcrd, aa wd • prdlloncro from .... local c:ommunlly.
.. ... vwlely oi concenlng J.w In
the modom . reguiMary wll be
probed : (a) the lirntldOna on J.w end
.... ~ .. technique lor controlling
NgUioolory clacioic&gt;n-tnMI: (bJ the In·
IJuence oi organlgllonal ~ . and
lnotnllva on ihe ....- oi cllocrellon by
regulatory egenc:iu; and (c) conlem·
ponuy econonllc: aftlqua oi regu)alory
decision-making.

ralruclurlng. Medical and surgical coverage, formerly provided by Blue Shield,
and the major medical ~ carried by Metropolitan were consoildolled Into
a new medical-surgical coverage underwritten by the Metropolitan Life lns..-ance Company. Blue Croso continued to underwrite hotpitallzallon
.:OVerage. Pracripllon drug beneflta ....,... CMVed out oi the former major
medical coverage and became a new oeparate program (plasllc 1.0. card, $1 copay, e!c.).
In response to numerous employee Inquiries, the Personnel Department has
~epared the foUowlng summary of the new Metropolitan Major Medical Plan :

UI BF halts awards
A morator ium on the U / B
Foundallon'a "'utslandlng A-.11 Ptogram" waa announoed this -'&lt; by John
M. CaJ1cr. U/BF pnsident.
In lellcn to Dr. Newton Garwr, c:hO
oi the Facuily Senale, Dr. Thornaa
Huriay, dwolr oi the "-ol-..1 Staff
, and Mr. Robert C . Smllh, pral·
eM Service Employeu
dent oi
Naoclallon . Caner aald that Prealdenl
Robe-l L Keller lied raquated "a
mor.torium on
program lor one year
Of until audl .. alr.cnuUe plana Of
PIOJ)OMio -.ld

contidaed .•
C..,. Aid K-lled ......tYad "llrOnll
a111c1sm" oi the ~m from various
rnet"llbew oi
~In eddltlon, he ' - - '· "t
10
ow quan. has been leaa
an·
lh
.........,. the conllnuanc:a oi
pnlgi'Wft •

Tho s1.000
~

•
~ andcomm

program,

led

""*

led In 10 the
10
.-viCe
•

c:o.en,. Eftec:ttwe

Meolkai·Stqlcal Beaeftta:

N-

Surgery

Retmburwmenl on reasonable and
customary basis 0 80'1. after deductible
Is met.

l / l / 10:

Anesthesia
Physic:ian's Attendance

In-Hospital
RadiatiOn Therapy
Psychiatric Out-Patten•

Ak:ohollc Rehabilitation

In-Patient Psychiatric Con·
linemenI
Maternity Benefits
Voluntary Sterilization

Newborn Care
Second Surgical Opinion
Rou- Annual Physical
Doctor Office VIsits, Labonotao:y
Wen, X-Rays. Prosthetics, Ther·
IJMUIIc Equipment, Ambulance
Serva , Swglcal ConsultatiOns
Dual Family Enrollment (bod&gt;
spouses/ employees carry oepar·
at family plans)

~

Retmburwmenl 0 80'1. after deductilllt
Reimbursement 0 80'1. oi charge •
maximum payable~ vlsll. Annual
maximum benefit pa
= S1,500
Lifetime (llartlng 1/ / 80) maximum
benefit payable - $3,000
Coverage timlted to 28 days per confine·
menl or 42 days for aU confinements per
year. Out-patient treatments an·
nually c 20
Most hospitals are covered with reim·
bursement 0 80'1. after deduCtible Is
met.
All physlc:lans and laboratao:y charges ere
payeble the same as any other condition .
Relmburwrnen1 on reasonable a nd
cuslomary basis 0 80'1. after deduttible
is met .
Coverage up to $50
Covered 0 100'1. . No dedued&gt;le . when
blUed by the state . surgical intake nurse .
For lnsureda (employees only · not
dependents) age 50 yean and over. $50
maximum • no deductible .
.
Reimbursement 0 80'1. after deductible
is met.
Metropolitan Life allows for r:yment up
to 100'1. oi covered medica expenses
when bolh ~ are sl.\te employees
and covered as Insureds and dependents .

Mecllc:a1 Allow-:

Maximum Per Individual:

Calendar Year. .. .. .. . .. .... $ 25,000
Lifetime .. . . - .............. 250,000
Deductible:
Individual ...................... $ 75
Family .•.. _..

••

Comnlloolon."
On June 3, three worlclhopo wll be of.
fered , on:
"Economic
In . - d l on
conllect J.w ."
pepen by Oon.rd
R . Harris, proiaeor
lew at the Oxfood
Centre, and Kenneth R. Vogel, ~nl
IJIOI..,.. oi economics end adjuncl proleuao: oi lew, U/ B;

s

............ oltlle New~ Hulda---"'Eftec:ilve 1/1/80, the StateWide Heallh Insurance Plan underwent a major

as an uslslant lao: continuing education in
the School oi ~1.
Later he became edminislralor oi the
Center lao: ManagetMnt Oewlopmcnt,
the unK oi the School oi Management
reopond&gt;lo lao: norHocademk: programs
lao: the WNY buslneu community.
Throughout his asoor:iatlon with the
.School he has been called upon to ldcn·
tfy the needs oi the local management
community, to ddermine sped'lc types
oi continuing education that are In de·
mand and then dalgn and evaluate prowarns rap&lt;&gt;r&gt;siw to t"'- I&gt;Hds.
Prior to coming here, he was manager
oi organization planning and training with
Houdalllc , Industries for a decade
(1960-1970) . He· has aho been an ad·
mlnlstrative training manager with the
corpora Iliff oi Mont~ Ward and
Company In Olicago (1957. 1960), aals·
&amp;ant to the director oi lnduJII1al relallons
wllh National Gyps1-1m In Buffalo
(195 I · I 957) , and a vocational advloor
with the Veterans AdministratiOn .
He holds I
B.S . from Buffalo Sta ,
the M.A. In educatiOnal edmi!&gt;lslrallon
and s.._vision from the UniYenlly oi
· Michl!lan, and was a Mval aviator during
WOflcf War U.
•

bv...........,

u..

Personnel ne..,s

N.._K. Uptoe
Neloon K. Upton joined U/8 In 1970

and ........... - . oi ........

Ilona; wbaldleo lor pulllc .......... In

c.- lor Scido-lAgol Sludlea, Oxford,

.. . ... • . . . . . . . 22S

Colmwanoo:

~"f:!.ual~~~ . 'df'. ~~ed . ·..:~

:-"~~:ooo· ;,; ·~- ~~

100'1. oi balance
Annual Out oi Poc:ket Uml :
Individual ..................... S47S

F . -........................... 625
For lnformllllon on ll*lflc c:Wma, ~- adYIMd 10 ull Matropolltan
lM dndly. their tollftee telephone""""* (1-800-942-46401 .

" Oilpule raolutlon ." with a paper by
Maxwell Addnton . profaaO&lt; oi oociology
at the Oxford Centre; and
"Safety regulation and econometrics,w
with a paper by Cento G . Veljanoysld,
proiessor oi lew and economlca, Oxford
Cenlle.
·
The program Is geared to both faculty
and a wide range oi practitioners, policymakers and administrators from local and
municipal govenlmenl agenda who
have responsibility lor implementing lew
or who oversee a bureauaacy which
does so.
.

boteniiKipl...., tluwt
U/ B's Baldy Center was created by the
faculties oi Law and Social Sciences with
the mandate "lo foster lnterdiol:lpllnary
teaching and research and to encourage
the study oi lew In Its s&lt;lCial context." The
program that has been planned wiD consider the r~tlon oi law to social context
through diocusslon o( the application oi
rules an d regulations in vartou1
reguletao:y areas (I.e ., poUutlon, accident·
victim compensatiOn , welfare administra tion) . and from differing ~The problem with much cl the exlallng
research on regulation Is dloclpllnary
cornpartmenlallzallon, ~~ for
the COI)ference em~ : "Lawyers, for
example, lend to consider procedure
apart !rom the political organlzallon and
substantive conlelcl In which regulatory
decisions are made. Economists tend to
focus excl-ly on the results oi regula tiOn a nd the substantive quality o(
regulatory cledsions, without laking ac·
count of the process by which those decl- 5lonl are made. Polillcal oclenlists and
sociologists focus on group and organlza·
tlonal Interactions without edeqll81&amp;
awareness oi the legal COOJiraints or
technical underpinningS oi the decisions
they are studying. An lmpot1anl aspacl oi
the conference Is Ks crosa..tlodplinary
ernphasio and Ks Intermingling oi lewyen.
social oclentisls and praclrllonero."
The program should also provide
models ol good , lnle rdlsclp lln a ry
research pertaining to lew and social
policy- JQmethlng especlaly Important
for sludents jOintly punulng the J .0 . and
Ph.D degrees.
F'anally, the collaboration between the
Baldy Center and the Oxford Centre pro·
vides "a unique QPPO&lt;tunlty lao: com ·
paralive study oi the way regulatory laws
are lmplemenl d and enforced !n
bureaucratic settings. An underl)!lng ob)ldlve Is development ol collaborative
research projeels ~ U/B and the
O..fOrd group," the Baldy Center
~ sugg«ssed .

----------------- ~
· A NAl. ISSUE OF YEAR

...,....,lc

Today'a o( the " - tw 1o the
llo..t ....... 1979-tO
,....,. The
Rq«ff!f' . . ...

so................ ..... .....
n-..a.,
,..,,...,._.
,_ ...

A- .....

�May 15,

nn.r.4av - 15
.................... ,..__ ..

&lt;WEiEHCE ON Alfii.RU5T LAWS
A 4oy-loog .......... on--- - ... bo

__

"""""'"""
...... lAw The -·
......,...s---.,~or-........
ondn·
.io bolng_..t..,,t..NewVori!Oftb

PDIIAl-=a~- ·

_....., o.-, 0.
Room,~·~~

c...a.n-

of .... """"""" ow-. altho u.s Dopenrncnt"'
, _ '" ....,...._. will tho Erie C...nty

a.. -....12noon

a.

- - ond lhe Uf B lAw SctiOOI
School
_ E... _Hudritk,
__ -Ttw....0.. .....
Thorn.
of .... oflhe
lAw

U/ 8 OOUNCIL JUETlNG '
Cound

l980

Room .• FW&gt; 0..0..

IW 3p,.

c-

&lt;Onlaenco .... .,....... lho lundemmtal .........
- . - - y 10 function ....... ................ of

·---The-elmo.....y ..-. . .. ..

.......... ~a.... The &amp;w Coolnty
JIEOtANJCAL ENGINEBING SEIIINAII•
In c:bwgo"'
0....,. ... I 1
"' • T..... dudealunch ... $20 lAw -

-

----~

a. - ; ,

SlO.
T _ . , _ __ ~Soaidbw.3.1S p m BFA RECITI\L '

- · " ' -· Inc . 206 Furnoo

Arthw IN.._, · lW&lt;d Reci&lt;ol Hell. 8·
p . m Adtniu:ioo • free. Mr. WdMp\lln is • student
of Soophon ........

C BJ.lAM
PHY5IOl.OGY - ·
--.....-~~
"'

Jl...a~ .

-l'l&lt;p!wology.
"' -

0. MlchHIJ Dunn , po·

c- w-.
~
ond - ....._
· ~
"'

Ad~alion

VdenM

tiotpl.d Confe-Rrta!

Room. 5Ch tlooo 4 p m

Tuesday- 20
COHfDlEI'ICE FOil R1TURISTS•

BFA ll£aTAl.'
- F...... . . . . , . - S..d 11-.1 Holl
8 p"' f t f t - p.........,.. Rlcbwd Koz.

~toth&lt;Stwljlalthof•IW'o:
~. Mnlc:o, ond UniO&lt;d Sco,... G&lt;end

lolend Ho&amp;doy Inn . May 20-22.

miecalt Mel pt.tnilb Rand.~ KrWMt .wi Mark
VON wtl bt ....aing .n.t1 foigef s a 1980 W1f'l
.... allhelloOdc-~

40 .. ponidpenll .... bo IO'"&lt;d "" Nodh
Ammcen memben of lho Wcwld futul'o Scudin
f&lt;dention
momben of lhe Uf B ond
o i l . _ communlly
~"" .... c.n... "" .._.... ScudWs
"' lho School of ""'"""'""' ond En..............
Da!gn . .... C«nla"" ~ ond Sodel Sludios
of the 1lWd World, Mak:o, and rhtWorid Futu~
Sludiosl'odo&lt;ellon

end....,_

Friday- 16

· IIIOCHEIOSTRY SOUNAR•
WUlDIN NEW YOIIK HIGHEII
~. ond Hma to Moko
EDUCAro.ti liii£AI(FAST SOUNAII '
o. Robod Leon- . ~· of
~ ta lhaiOo.'J o..ld R-. .....
Biology. B,yn ......, Colo9o 134 Ca&lt;y 4 p m
cion&lt;. ~. -,.6.Soroat
SIN Colfft ~ 30'" lOlA

odd-

T..,-"'-Elida-·

-Hoi.

~Cologo•llullolo 8em

Far

.... Oo;&gt;er1

lo;onneoon . -

monlallioghoo~ . 4198oldy Thiallrin l&gt;

moda . . - " " oho ~ fO&lt;&gt;ndetion

I'£DIATIUC GIIAND ROUNDS•

- - ... &amp;-lolha-~
HurMJY , Or Slaven W~at . aiAtlanl pro
felor tcoordrinlilor . Progr-1111'1 in HurN~'tift in
Nedidne, · U/ B Kind! AuditorA~m~ Olldr-en's
t-to.pMJ 11 • m
~ICAL ~GIN£EIIING

SEMINAR•

oo.-- - .T- R_,.... "-

Goa
lo
,._, Jolwl M Smolh. Oo;&gt;ert"""' al 0\ombl
~ T«&lt;nc.ee Un-y of Gelll. The
~. ... o n d - ,.....__ Oo;&gt;ert..... "'
Owaoitol ~ of
206
fyrn.M 2 p m R.tfrnhments d be ..wet at 3

Un- v.,....

•

OI'£H HOUSE SPEEOt-l.ANGUAGE

Wednesday- 21
IIIEDICAL GRAND ROUNDS•
n.. CltNc:ol u.. al ~ ........._• .
Rich...t J . Wudmon, MD .. ,....._ of..,.
c1oo1no1osw ond ...........,, Dopert....,l al Nulrl·
&amp;10ft Md Food Somce , Me..chuMftl lnsadute of
T .......... BuiiM&gt; VA Meditol CAn..,, Room
1104 1230pm
HOIUZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY•
E~oc:tnorec.,- : Whol Hot Thla S twljl al Ex·
F - T_..l Uo About lha 11&lt;.... 0.
Thoodooo H
UnN&lt;nily of Cololomio ao
Son biogo 1348 F - 4 p m Spon10&lt;ed ""lho
In~ G &lt; - ~., Newoocionco

Bu-.

AND HEAIIING a.JNJC '

andlho~cl~

Cololnoint ... 3011&gt; of ... Clnit.
- - "" 0. ~ Thorn 4226 Ridgo

PHA11MAC0L0GY a ntEIIAPE\/TICS

t..C.... 4-6pm

.
---...-end~

_ ...

...

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

'"-.....,. ond dlldrcn. ond ollmlbo only doc·
-~~~ t.wi ~in eot'ftmUnUIM ~ tn
lhoSUNY_ , . ... _ _ .... bo ... onnuol

_..

"*_..,........,

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

Thoms.n-m. _ _

~ K ~ . o -UJII_,.....-,_

_.,

-~-~- Do,llan. Oiw&gt; He ...

"""'

_......,~ . lronol30104pm'"

"-

SPE:OAL SDCINAII•
N•lrtlioMI c-ar.&amp; of c.techoLamMrek:
Tr_,....._, Ric:hMd J Wurtman , M.D .. pro.

--·
0.

Bu-. Oopo.unonl of
· u..-."' Colilomte{ Son Diego

5 · 108 - -· 4.15 ...... Joinlfv ............ ""

Plf\'1IOl.oGY
-·
n. ~-:~.::::-c.::.:
c r., ...

~

.. c

c.- -.atW

- --

cl Plljlliology ond - . ..

~·ystt'IOI,

PEDIATRIC GRAND BOUNDS•

r-

Dt..-1

E.cbocM~ophlc

~ H. .rt o.n.nol RCyonodc
~~ Kind~ Aucbtonum ,

-

E..-.

. ticKpbl 11 • m
R£SEARCH INSTITUTE ON ALCOHOLISM
SEMINAR'
At11nt ond R - to Alcohol: A No,tloc:ud
A&lt;u al . . -. W Gbon Wood . Ph .D ..
dlntcol ....on:h ~ - Gorietric llnno&lt;h
Educ.atton •nd amc.1 &lt;An1C:r. Vewr.ns AdminiA'•tion Medk.al Cenl«t . St. t...ou., Mo
.......... lnttltuiO on Alcoholism, 1021 Mein
Street 2 p m

PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR•
Orioftoo- ColamM In F....l ~CoN&amp;:
Some Now f!oclln8a . 0. &amp;n.c. M 0... S- 108
Shmnon 4:15pm Co/foe wll be ...wei" 4

_..,. T""""' o - -· - .

Repon on

\NNI'a GaMe on '" New Voril Steoe. Goalng

Sll -

.... ...,.._....,_
$10

~

13134341or-

-

,c;..-a1_
_
w- New
y""'

-

-.-a...

U.S. I'OIT

. -. N.Y.

-

.·

IJI

On the Air
.

,__ _

~ Tlw.two~

...

al.-otlond-

. . . . . . l All

'*"' .. -

- - . . . . . . . . , . 2 .._ . . _ . - ....
..,..._, al - - T.... webio The ........

-

of .........

~

-

Ia ....,_, Rabat Dick. 8ulltt

...........

~

1: 0..

~ Mc:Gioo. - " ' -

, _ o f politic:ol-. "lmpoctal P'""lhoocl on
- . . ! P........... INBEN l930I 9 .05 P-"'
~0: 0.. -u.- . .......... -

..-. - Sdonca/,....._
"' ..........
p.,_·, ...... ····"'····
-- . . . Potion One
-

" INBEN (9301 11 05p m

li ._...... - eight

,.,.. ond " - A - - - ' cl

Sl .OOOta-

~"'·--moy~
County.Eaw.,.,....., ....,_
COundl.
95 - 1
- Room
103 -n..
. . . 8ulolo
•....,._
1146 7119

., .,. Elio

_

IIAY I t :

MAY IS:

The Elio C...nty En.....,mcntal ....._...,.
COundlhealwO- _ . . . . . . , . - The
_ _ .. _ _ o n d _ t a l
poowidc .....

and

Mondoy llwough Friday. 9.30·5.

IIAY U:
c - . - ...... Arto: Mi&lt;hoel McCiun.
Boeo ~--pool Cowta Ceblo 1101 8 p m

1!111£ COUNTY SUICMEII
IHlDINSHII' PIIOGIIAM

Schoolol
_
_
_ ~Ollloe
of~~
-

_
-

SPEC111tlll GRAPHICS DISPlAY
A - Alamo Gahoy.
of """""'
•""""'
hom 11w
Spoo.
ttvm.
B.ct.
Holt. Gahoy
houn
,,.

M- .·- •

Notic:e.

-

Go""""',._,
Non-.

~ June

SENIOR GRAPHIC D£SIGN EXHIBIT
Bethune Hoi. 291 7 Mom Sc . Tlvough May 18.
EAAibll moy bo .... Mondoy lhn&gt;ugh Friday between 12 .wt 4 p m.

I n - Ceblo (lllf I; p m.
UltMo "' c.llu&lt;ol Aft-

-of"*-...

.. .-...

-T""""'A ~

s-.o. w-.. - vodl. Heakh Sclonc:..

P'EDIATIUC GRAND ROUNDS•

... . . __ . _ .. Ellod ~ c:;...e~ s . - - y - Do We

-

PHOTOGRAPHIC EXHIBIT

Lba&lt;y. Scoddon Kimball T.,_.

~ U: 0.. ...,....,. of politic:olocimoe . "The RiM of Slnglo In·
. - Croups· INBEN (930) . 11 .05 p m.

Friday- 30

c.. . -.,.~--

Sloded . U.SIA · One~ . -..

•ling

Llbr• rics' Polish Room - Through May 3 1.
l.od&lt;wood Memoo&lt;al l.ltn&lt;y Fay&lt;. V iowmg lme
lib&lt;a&lt;yhoun.

~ l : O.. O..W Z.. .-.1

22

... b o - · · AloooquOol • ............... . - _ . .. G&lt;ond
$dloolor
· Co&lt;oy
..... -Roodo
s.....,
. - ... -· ond .,
.........
· lolend Hollcleo IM. 9 o.m.-4·30 p '"

-

IIAY II:

1 - Sdloololo ....._. ~ . 0.
Beloh. Kinch A - m . Clolld'"'''

a..-. - ·- - a..d
~·
lp• - l o i N e - -· IIDtAM..IJATION
......-LMoe ... _ a l _

GUMPSES INTO THE PAST
" " c ~thibtdon of t 7th untury Polish royal
docunwnts • nd un~ue books and photographs
lhe 25111 ann - al tho U/ B

-- ~--....,.,...~ ­
(9301 . 9:05 p m

~ll•m -

~

&amp;Jaiblts

· 0.

a.adr~'s

Toelle

Tlau.day

- 17

·
- · - ....,nd
Sponocnd
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

VOL

MAY 8,1980
NO. 30

11 e

Ketter proposes Canadian-American unit
U/ 8 probably
best situated
for interaction
U/8 Intends to give "smous eonsldeation to the autlon ol a CanadianAmerican Center," President Robert L
Ke-. revealed at the annual meeting ol
the Praidant's Asoociata In Spaulding
Dining Room last night.
Kea.a told the Asoodata. a group of rNtjo&lt;benefacton ol the University, that
such a Center should be housed in a
physical location "that could serve as the
symbol of the cooperation and friendship
mat Is at the heart ol" the proposed program. Th&lt;l Martin House on Jewell
Parkway could become this symbol, he
said.
The downstairs of the house, an
American landmark designed 'by Frank
Lloyd W11ghl, could accommoslale a
smaD Canadian-American library and
prOYICie "gracious and hlslotlc space for
lectures, sen\lnon and social functions,"

Ketter proposed.

•

l)pstlllrs, IMng quart..... cou)jl be pro- .
vlded ·for a professor ol CaruidianAmericen Studies and for visiting socholars
and artisU.
Th would be a "~d professor$hip
that could be awarded- annually on a
rolating ba
to a dlstlngui$1\ed socholar
whose academic Interests would complement and pmvlde a Canadian perspec ttva" to activities within one olthe Untverlly's ....,_
e nl

cll.:iplinel.

~aDd Kthitl•
Addl!lonally, Ketter outlined . several
outstanding Canadian and American
otudents could be selected as Fellows of

A

,

the Center. Conferences, seminars, colloquia and socholarly publications would
be among the Center's activities.
So would a visiting artists program that
could encompass such events as the
Canadian -American poetry festival that
U/ 8 wiD host this laD .
The President said he would also an ~te a radio series through U/ 8's
public radio station , and social functions
sponsored by both on and off-campus
agencies.
"The unifying element In these
endeaiiOf$ always would be the stimulation ol Canadian-American Interaction
and our desire and commitment to Im prove the quality of Ufe and under standing In both countries.·
The Idea, Ketter said, Is one "whose
lime has come ." He acknowledged .
though , that It wiD no1 be a 51mple matter
to bring II about . The SUNY Trustees will
have to approve the concept ; public and
privet. financial support wiD have to
secured ; and funds for making r&lt;q&gt;ain to

pringl

the house must be obtained . The house
was bought by U/ 8 In the 1960s as a
President's home and has more recently
been
site of the Alumni Office .

occurred In Iran, to remind uo of !he rarity
and strength of our friendship ." He said
the proposed Center could be "a constant
and visible reminder of the remarkable
ties betWeen our two countries."

lt...Utobedone
Ketter said he has faith that the project
can become a reality, and Is convinced
"that H Meds to be done . Canada and
America are not just passengers on the
same Spaceohlp Earth . We are seatmates,"" he lold an audience, whk:h in ·

eluded William R. Van . the Consul of
Canada ; The Honorable C . Girve Fretz.
member of Parliament ; The Honorable
Raymond Haggerty, member of the Ontario Provincial Parliament , and The
Honorable Stella liff. Mayor of Fort Erie,
Ontario .
The entire evenlf!9 centered around
the theme ol Canad.Jin-Amerlcan friendship.
While we are exposed to CanadianAmerican Interaction every day . Ketter
said , "It takes evenl5 such as that which

A history of COOpe&lt;atlon
The Univers"y already has a history of
cooperative interaction with Canadians
and Canadian Institutions, Ketter pointed
out. Problems involving environmental
management , cold regions research .
water resource development, soil cbnser·
vation , and marine transportation have
been addressed cooperatively with Canadians by the Faculty of Engineering and
Applied Sciences and the Faculty ol
Natural Sciences and Mathematlc:o.
"Additionally. the School of Architectu&lt;c and Envtron....,ntal Dulgn has in the
past developed «&gt;urses in comparative
urban planning that have drawn upon the
olmila rll les and dissimilarities In
Canadian-American urban environ ·
ments. Also . a number ol socholars In the

·-

-..

no...nde jamJMd Squlre'o fountain Square IMt fride!l lor UUAB'o
Chap"- and loud rodt""'"" .......
to thlnldftt about .......

. ~· 011. IUftV • " -·

"*tlble aii.M

�May 8, 1980

l

Ketter urges -optimism,' not despair,
despite serious times looming ahead
Altho.q&gt; enrollments end financing
c:onllnue to praent "Mrious dlf.

licullles" In the 1/UR ahead, Praident
Robert L. K-lftlled faculty Tuesday to
look 1o the next ye.- "with high
optimism" rather than despair.

The

Prctldent

reminded

thoac

Qalheed for the Annual Meeting of the

Voang

FKUI!y that U/ 8 and higher
eduaotlon have -atl&gt;ered problems
before. "But even In the wont of times."
he added, "the Univaslty has not been
prevenled from incr aslng lis 51ature. We
wil continue lo do 10. "
Earlier In the meeting. Ketter recaDed
that In lut fal's Campus Review report.
the evaluation tum made nole that the
Unlvenity "had ~t strengths" In .the
quality of lis sh1dents, faculty , and
physical setting, and In .the form of
r~ oupport from the community.
They only thought K unfortunate, Ketter
continued, that "not more people know
about the Institution, • a problem his office
wfll wori&lt; to correct.
Reporting on the budget, Ketter called
unanlmou• passage of the Svlate and
~mbly bills restoring S22 .3 miDion to
SUNY• budget "no smaD feat" lor those
who wori&lt;ed to achieve it . He cautioned,
however, .that individual campuses still
do n01 know the size of thO: budget
aDocallons, nor does SU Y have "ab·
solute assurance" that H can opend aU the
money H gets.
Ketter pointed out that the re5tored
funds do not include money for $7
million worth of outstanding utibty bills for
the ye.- which ended March 31. or for an
$8 million shortfal In projected utility
costs lor this ~ar. NeHher does .the ap·
propiiation proYide money lor a level of
llalfing at Slony Brook's new hospHal
that would bring 1'5'" projected $18-19
million In third-pa payer fee• .
The 008 and
NY administration
have recently been meeting 5everalllmes
a week to come up with an agreement on
an "expendHure plan ." Ketter reported .
When this plan Is achieved . which ohould
be in .,bout a. month , the current hiring
freeze wiU be ended .
Ketter sa.id he has asked that excep·
lions to the freeze be made for TA's and
GA'slor this lal and lor po5illons relating
to health and safety.
Turning to fr~man enroUment for the
fal. the President r&lt;'la~ that. as of May
I, the nwnba of depoolll wa 700 ah.-ad
of lut ~ar at the same lime. Quality of
IIUdants ahould be )WI about on a par
with lut ye.-'s clus, f not somewhat bet·
tct lnclud ng EOP students and
fr man nurses from oeveral programs
In oro hoopilals,
tollll freshman
enrolment should be about 15().200
more than lut year. Ketter estirnaled.
Tranolcrs. though , are down 9 per cent
from lut ye.-. Avallabllity of dorm space
Is alto Cl\l)«ted lo be a problem, Iince
more IIUdents are oornlng who reside out
of the 8lh Judicial Dls1rlct. Last ~· at
this lime. tNt ftgur was 16 per oent ; this
year MIs 21 per cent. Of 1'-e aonepted
laol..vc-lroni the
JO, 42 per cent ac·
tualv cnroled So far this year, 43 per
cent of
offered edmlulon from th.dlolritt have .... In depoolla.

BeceiiM of the projlcled reel~ In
the number of IIUdenll expected to enter
~ In the Nottheasl, and In !h.from
New vortc 1n particular.
K£tter said ....,._ on retcn.tlon factors.
such as the quality of life and the educ.a·
tiona I experience, wiU continue to be
overriding concerns of the Admlnlstra·
tlon ,
The Presid ..nt assessed that the past
two ~ of S..nate activity "have been
the most productive" he's experienced,
Ketter aedKed that accomplishment to
the guliiance of outgoing Svlate Chair·
man Newton Garver.
.
ln his report as !h.- vlce&lt;hairman of
ihc voting faculty, Gatver ev.aluated the
past ~ as "satisfying, though not one
of-great accomplishments."
He went on to highlight issUes being
tackled by four Senat&lt;' commlttHs which
are expected to submH major reporl5 this
fal : continuing education, Inching quaUty. p.-er review , and academic. planning.
Gatver said the ad hoc Committee on
Continuing Education, chaired by Bar·
bara Howell , Incoming vice chair·
person/chair-elect of the Senate , will
continue to work over the summer
months to reline lis r.-port. The r&lt;'COm·
mendallons should be especially signili·
cant. he noted . given the enrollment
shortfaUs of MFC during the past several

w-..

~-

The

Senate

committee

exploring

teaching quality. recently "presented a
long and provocative" report to the Ex·
ecullve Committee which "dr..w sparks,"
r&lt;'rnari&lt;ed Garver . The report focuses on
"lnterperoonal aopects of teachi~ and
student -teacher Telationships ,' he
relayed , but also makes •uggesllons on
ruching evaluation and preparation of
dossiers. Garver noted that the Issue, "in
varlou5 forms." ha• been before the
Senate for the last d&lt;'cade .
The complex subject of peer review is
being handled by two committeeo:
University Governance and Facuhy
Tenure and Prlvliegeo.
"At fnt supporting the principle of
peer review seems as straightforward as
..ndorsing motherhood ," Gatver ob·
served . "but the principle has two
aopects , nch having Its own problems."
The University Governance Commit·
tee Is considering d just prospective
peers ohould vote on proposals of promotion and tmure ." But this stance·.,• .
dudes cmain people from participating,
and raises questions about the rationale
lor ouch exclusion as weD as how linn and
extensive !h.- exclu51on ohould be ," he
rela~ .

The other aspect, that the "peer vote
should genetally determine the ultimate
declston on questions of promotion and
tenure," Is alto being consld&lt;'fed . Th
asppct, .upposedly violated In the recent
d6!Cislon by the President and Chanccllur
to deny tenure 1o Political Sdcnce Professor Daniel Novak, Is "exc:eedlngly dlf.
llcult lo slate." Garver aaessed.
Administrators say they have respected
peer judgments. but dJsagrMd with their
conclusions. noled Garver. ''Is !h.- correct
principle that admlnlslrotors should
•vlshlv follow peer group voteo?" he

• Canadian-American Center
m.jor wben area In this couniJy located

adjacent to Canada Is DetrOit, which Is

further from m.jor Canadian urban areas
and capitols than 1o Buffalo. Also, one

ahould r member that the Unlverlllty Is
lo many Canadians than It Is for
some of our own commuter students In
Erie County,"

'*-&lt;

New ..........
A1lo during the dinner three new
-tlen _ . lnductcd Into the Pral·
dent's AMOCialcl, Or. and Mn. Irwin A.
Gintberg, Mr and Mn. Boris 8 Jolf •
and Mr and Mn Robert l. Millonzi.
'The Prnldent's AMOCia
•
In·
dMduals who II""' a majOr conllt&gt;utton
owr
for the enrichment of
progr- of the lJniver'llly
said the Canedlan, Arnerbn
propooal II one nample of the type of ac,
tMiy "that prlva
conllt&gt;utlons to a

~~ .hq&gt;~ -~ -

uked . This seems "'nllexlble." he
-"'&lt;!, and In "!ruling administrators
as mcr.- pawns. K lacks the respect lor
their' integrity which collegiality requir&lt;'s .

Picking jurors
is an art,
says Lindner
8v Mlll'Y M. Nagle
Repo&lt;lo&lt;lnen

Lawyers are basically "rotten • In jury
" A more reasonable ilpproach," of.
Mlectlon , says Or. Rosalyn Lindner from
'lered Garver, would be that denial or
the
Department of Sociology at Buffalo .
vice-presidential disagreements should be
State College and a member of the Naexplained by reference to agreed-on
crileriiL But this was done In the Novak tional Jury Project.
Lindner gave a lecture on "Postur&lt;'S as
case , he said.
a Clue to Attitud&lt;'lln the Courtroom, • on
Regarding the Issue of academic plan·
campuo
recently and spoke on "voidire,"
nlng, Garver emphasized that drops In
which Is the prebmlnary examination of a
both resources and student enroUments
prospective
juror to determine his or her
wiU plague SUNY over the nexl decade.
competence . ·
"The problem Is to preserve the academic
Undner has been a consultant lor the
quality of the Institution and lis program•"
National Jury Project for the past five
in the lace of these difficulties, he
years and ha5 dealt mostly with criminal
d&lt;!clared .
trtal5 where H Is dllflcuk to select a fair
"'t wiU be dllflcuh If not impossible." he
jury. '"There are pressures on the juror to
continued, "to regain the flexibility need·
be fair and impartial." said Lindner, "and
ed to . nurture quality without cutting
at the same lime there are social
¥'11le areas back from present staffing
levels. It Is from the recognition of this pressures to conform whk:h are rein·
forud by the court system and mainly by
necesoity-an acadeinlc rather than a
tht'judge," she added.
budget necessity-that the Acad&lt;'mlc
The judge 5larts the voldire with
Planning Committee has been develop:
=eenlng questions and then turns the
lng C:U~ and procedures for program
questioning
over to the defense and pro·
selection.
secuting attorneys. Each proopecllve
Garver noted that five Senate commH·
juror Is questioned on background, per,
te&lt;'S did not me&lt;!! this ~ar or have lull
oonal prejudices, the nature of the crime,
membership. a..cause H wao often d~·
knowll!dge of the victim, reactions to the
flcub to get faculty to serve on commit·
publldty
on the case, and various legal
let'S , Gatver concluded that the "commit·
Issues. A good attorney wiU mix up the
tee structure should be simplified," and
questions
lrom the different categories to
wa·
Senators against aeating manmake the juror more comfortable and
datcxy new ones.
enable him or her to talk freely about his
The out-going chair concluded by teD·
or her leeUngs on the case , Undner
ing his coiJeagues that the S..nate is
noted .
"strong and healthy." particularly com·
pared with those found In other SUNY
H - much do they bead to
units which are not as active or orautborltp?
ganized.
As an aid to defense attorneys, Und·
At the Senate meeting that followed ,
ner tries to determine the amount of
Senators passed an amended r&lt;'Com·
authoritarianism
and analytical abUity
mendallon of the Committee on lnlorma·
displa~d by nch juror. There Is an over·
lion and Library Servic&lt;'S which urged the
whelm
ing
amount
of data showing that
director of UnlveBity Ubraries to develop
juror. who defer hlg\lly to authority,
a long-term plan for Libraries' S&lt;'rvices ,
which
In
the
court
sHuallon
Is the state or
aosisted by the Senate committee.
judge , u•uaDy convk:l the defendant, she
After a long and complex debate on
said . Many hold the attHude that, ''the
how Internal computing funds ohould be
law Is the law," and there Is no room for
allocated , the Senate voted to postpone a
vote on a second committee recommen- debate .
On the other hand, a person displaying
dation that callectlor lund. to be allocated
a weak authoritarian attHude doeo not
directly to computer users based on the
blindly
follow what an authority figure
merit of Individual requests. Al•o
says.
postponed to the faD , was a r&lt;'Commen·
An analytical person uoed to be re·
dation to split the library/ computing
jected lor jury duty, Undner said,
commlltee Into two separate on&lt;'l: a
because attorneys feh that th!i type of In·
committee on Library R...ources and Serdlvldual WOttld pick apart every detad and
vices and a commfttee on Computer
would take too long to come up with a
Resources and Service5.
verdict. Today, oo-ver, lawyers view
· Finally. the S..nate voted to accept th.r&lt;'COmmendallon of DUE Dean John · this traH In a different light and d.-pending
on the case see this type of person as able
Peradotto that grading for this fall's ba5ic
skills courses be the regular A,8.C,O and to wori&lt; for or against the defendant.
F Instead of the proposed A,8,C and no
Ere eoatact
a edit.
A non -verbal clue Undner .......,. Is
The Senate's Committee on Grading
e~
contact. She looks lor visual lnterac·
Policy wiD further study the matter and
t1on between juror and defendant, juror
report back D&lt;'Xt yur with spedflc recom·
and the victim, and juror and judge.
mendallons .
Undner pOinted out extreme cases.
Debate recently devt'loped over the
grading system originally desired by !h.noting people who won't look at the
defendant may be fearful of the defen·
General Ed.ucallon Committee . Opponenls ' claimed that the A,8 ,C , no dant or of !h.- charge. The oth&lt;!r atreme
Is when a juror slar&lt;'l at a defendant and
aedK system would throw off the unlfor·
becomes Intrigued by what the defendant
mity and compromise .the Integrity of !h.present system. In addition, It was argued
Is, for example an alleged murderer or
that the computers would not be able to
rapist. Lindner UI&lt;'S both eye contact and
handle the new system by the faD , and
body posture as prime Indicators of par·
that students might no1 be motivated to
llality on !h.- part of a juror.
do the course wori&lt; If a no a~H posslbill.
As a participant In jury selection , Und·
ty existed .
ner Interviews both those who have been
The original recommendation was chos.-n to acrve on a jury end those who
meant to &lt;iecr&lt;'UC 51udent fears of failure
hove been re jected . Interviews
in courses. Studenls who have this f&lt;'M , aomellmu last 4-6 hours and are d.-pen·
howeY"', can opt for an S/ U grade, dent on a person's recaD. After !h.- Inter·
though the Deon noced that H seems to
view, •he compares how a person
work counter to the intent of the GE answered queotion• to how he or she
Commlttee that students not pass without
behaved dur1ng the vOidire.
at least a C.

Fashion

salu~e

SUNY ' s Fash ion l)lltltute of
Technology will be lrrvofved '" "A N..w
Vorl&lt; Salu to !h.- Fashion lndu•tJy." to
take place from May 12 to IS
'The event, spon?CJrcd by the 01y ln
COI1)unc1Jon wllh New Vorl&lt; Slat and{he
federal government.
!liVC specta1
recognition to the fashion lndumy. N..w
Vorl&lt;'• largnt, wtth - t e d
of
more ~n Sl3 ~annually

Skeptical
A few members of the audience _,..,
skeptical about Undn&lt;'f's lnfeiences and
Interpretations. She acknowledged !hue
olways evidence to contradict Inter·
prelallons of human behavior, but added
that from her experience of lnt&lt;'r\llewing
and observing non -verbal dues, she has
had succca In determining juron' com·
,-renee. Her credlbtlity Is streR!Ilhened
by her record : of 5() cases iha has
wori&lt;ed on In !h.- last five ~. she said ,
~ h• lost only two.
.

�M.,8, 1980

Sikorslll
Univers

no

hea_..s
'FM 88'

~to WBFO this
. . barIng a new 10 caleb-line: '"This II FM 88.".
The new ID rdleds the prewnoe a
newgmeralma.._.
" Every FM radio has.lllf prtnted on Ill
dlal," S11J1S Robert Slkonld, now In his
fourth .._.. at the helm of the uru-stty-

or

licented Pl!!&gt;lic radio outlet.

T ,dlnk:ally, WBFO broadcasts at 88. 7
mhL , but dJal calintions aren' that exand the station bas no on-the-air
neighbors un!U you get to 91.
88 is ~ to remember and, Sikorski.
hopes, wiD help build the audience klentlllcation and vislbUlty which the .s1ation

act.

Carey will sign,

but

OWTently lacks.
f'ro!J"ammlng at WBFO Is strong,
the former FCC attorney who
bas wori&lt;ed in radio since he was 15.
-'there are, of course, "a few rough
spotS .• He points with particuiM approval
to the slallon's diversity: jazz, ·progri!S5ive; classical and folk mllsli programming, and the two National Public
Radio (NPR) newsmagazines ("Morning
Edition," 7-9 a .m .; and "AD Things Considered," 5~:30 p .m .) which "FM 88"
cania exclusively In this area. Then there
are WBE:O'• local'news and public alfaln
offerings and its "'ive" musical broadcasts
both from Ill own studios and from concert locations. On tap for tl1o Immediate
future Is more local programming within
· the two newsmaga.lnes, Slkonld indicates.
Alread)l, though, "we do more local
live_brolldcasts dian any two other stations In the area," he contends. ·
-

,..~.~-Now boasting:115 strong a signal as any

In J~mestown , N.Y . The ratings lor
WWSE were so bad , he recalls, that on
the ratings bar graphs lor the four stations
In the market, there were only three bars.
Eighteen months later, "we were a solid
no. 2," Sikonld recalls. And bUbngs wer
up by 400 per ami.
Georgetown Law School was next.
There, a newlywed Sikonkl became
"bored" with fuD-tlme academic work
after a year. In 1975, he took a job as
public allan/audio-visual director lor
Holy Cross Hospitals, based In Silver
Springs, Maryland. Law was relegated to
night work . For the hospital, he
developed and managed a 7 -&lt;lay-a -week
closed-circuli TV opera~on (which
featured about 60 per cent local orlgina·

FM otallon In t&lt;Nm, WBFO is conducting
a "most distant listener" contest to chedt
out just how far Its new strength carries II.
Slkonld displayed a card that had just arrived from Ithaca and volunteered that he
had plciled up the station on his own car
radio ln. Danoville while driving up here
lions) .
from Washington loJt month.
The signal, according to engineering
data , Is excellent across a 25-mile radluo
The FCC
After receMng his law degree In
from the Main Street transmitter (atop
January 1978, Sikorski joined the
Klmballt.,_,-, one of the highest spots In
Federal Communications Commission
the city) . Transmissions also "bo\ince off
the lake" and find their way loud and ....,here his skills were trained on the so·
caDed Fairness Doctrine . A5slgnments In·
clear Into Toronto, Hamilton , St .
duded field lnveoligations, Input Into
Catharines, and Niagara Falls, Ontario ,
policy-making, arguing cases before the
Sikonkl reports
Commlsalon, and making presentations
AD that's lac;king, he oeems to feel, Is
to Congrao-aU having to do with broad·
an advertising effort to alert hundreds of
cast coverage of elections and other con·
thousands of potential 5steners to the
troverslal isSues. Along those lines, he
very real strengths of the schedule . That
feels the potential for coverage of the
will begin 1000 .
controversial Is excellent here .
Slkonld's immediate agenda also In·
Immediately before coming to WBFO.
dudes. planning a lund-raising week,
the- attorney-broadcaster was executive
June 21-29 (a 9-0ay "week"); a com director of the Cable TV. Commission In
munfty needs "asc:ertalnment" pro,ect,
Prince Georges County, Maryland, a
and aeatlon
a community advisory
Waohington suburban area presently
board .
without cable TV JeTVice . He drew up
'F und -raising obviously helps augment
speciflcallons for a syotem to serve the
the budget, making posoible an enrichment of programming and promotional
area .
efforts among other things. And community ~ er lmpor1ant to plnpol&lt;tt
A Buffalo 'Ear'7
For WBFO alop , the new general
bacauS&lt;IIhe very term "publiC radio em- •
bocl the notion an allemallve. "We manager bas something o( a new system
in mlnd. He envisages inception of a sub·
are going to tty to find what oervlta are
carrier llgnal which would air special
lacking In the area , and then oupply
materials for the blind. In the nation's
them-f- can do II wei," Slkonld ex·
capitol, the "Wi.shlngton Ear" broadcasts
pWns. The conecpl of a community
boerd, he I , goes "hand·ln·hand with daily readings of newspapers and other
thh .~
topical j&gt;rlnted materials. Blind ln dMdualo can get special receivers to hear
tha oorvlce which opens up to them a
H11 WBFO Job is • homeo:&gt;ming of !JUl body Information not otherwise
av.tlable. A local adaptation of the con ·
lorta. Having lJ&lt;I"'" up In Buffalo and
apt would have to be wori&lt;ed out
jpduated from Bishop Tamcr High,
Sloonki dcn&lt;led Syr.c.ae Unlvenity carefulv with vllrious organizations lor
1
blind and wtth potential fedeal
...tlere he rNJored In :rv-radiO and
funding IOIIr'Ca, but represen a direc ·
lldvenlllng,
• minor In conomltJ,
lion In which Slkonld I lo the station
Hll
In radio pre-data !hoot,
~ well move in tha future .
" " - - AJ oge IS, he began producing
WBFO. In Sikonld's view, has a "proa ohaw on WK8W for the local Junior
,......,.,. sound of which M can 'be
organi&amp;allon ; ~ laotad lhr•
proud. • h.wd-worklng, talented, pakl
jiiMI .
at 5\ot..._, ha did boolh ...
and volunt-llalf, a.t..rJ) ~nal . and a
paten ·
endlao reoource of faculty
liOUI'ICinll lor 'TV ....t - • radio dlr-. In - -· he held down and others on campus on whom M can
dr- to er~rtch Ill oovcroge But, he
11-ne par1
, }ell», one ot which
.
lnremaics. """' could be broadcaitins the
volvotd
• .w, 3$-mia
Second Coming, and U """'!'dn\ ma!ler
A
._... In
, Sloonld

or

or

eo..........

or

"'*-''

_.,t

Gamble's
Snnd Group In OndnA ..... ha named
of e
F M - t1a11on

to .....to lor Procloo

O..nean

unleoo ......... ~ .·
To Jl!ll ~ of them utad to tuning In
II why_ he's curT tly doina "75 thinglat

once

is there a deal?

:Although Governor Carey lndlc.&gt;ted to
the media loJt week that he would sign
the bill restoring $22.3 mUiion to the
SUNY budget, a spokesperson from
SUNY Central said Monday that ils
Business and Finance Office stiD refuses
to rule out the possibility of cutbacks, or
even comment on the Impact of the biD
on tndivklual campuses before the sign·
lng takes plaCe.
The spokespenon said SUNY Administration and the Executive Office
have maintained "ongoing i!iscusslons"
)!lioutthe budget, but discounted rumors
t!4t a deal was struck between SUNY .
and Carey to head-off another veto.
At a press conference last week , Cll{ey
reportedly Indicated that the unanlmous
passage of the bill In both legislative
houses would make another veto mean·
ingless. Bulin the same breath , he allud ed to the fact that SUNY now

underolands It must keep spending below
$740 mUIIon.
According to the SUNY ollicial, cutbacks may stUI be a possibility because
SUNY Is S4 miOion short of its original
budget request. Last week , UUP Chapter
President Bill Allen told the Reporler that
the S4 million was figured In the elimination of 475 vacant hnes mandated by the
008 . The SUNY spokesperson ,
however, said the vacant lines "relate to
only a portion" of the sum .
ADen said as far as he knows, no deal
was struck between SUNY and the Executive Office. He attributes SUNY's
reticence and talk of cutbacks to the ad·
ministration's " haunting pessimism "
about budget matters .
"SUNY has no objective necessity for
instituting Its own cutbacks," Allen

asserted .

Ishmael Reed to occup_y
Butler Chair in fall semester
Noted writer and author Ishmael S.
Reed has accepted an appointment to the
Edward H . Butler Chalr In Enj!lish.
His residency will begin this September
and run for parts of the faD 1980
semester .
Reed. bom In Chattanooga, Tennessee. was a student at U/ 8 during
1956-60. He has taught at the University
of California at Berkeley and also the
University of Waohlng!on in Seattle .
An independent novelist, Reed is reel·

pient of numerous awards and honors.
He was presented the Richard and Hinda
Rosenthal Foundation Award of the
American Academy
Arts and Letters
and the Natlonallnotilute of Arts and Letters for his Inventive novel. The Last .
Days of Loutsono Red (1974) .
Other wrillngs Include Mumbo Jumbo
1972; CnolrQnoogo, poetty, 1973; and
Conjure, 1972.
In commenting about the appoint·
ment. President Robert L. Ketter saki .
given Mr. Reed's reputation In contem-

or

Porary

poetry

and

literature.

lhe

significance of the prestigious Butler
Chalr Itself wiD be' enhanced .
Reed is expected to arrive &amp;om
Oakland . CaiUornia , In late AugiiSI.

Dean Merle takes
position in ~anada
Dean Sherman Merle of the U/ B

School of Soda! Work wtD beoome dean
of
School of Soda! Work at Wilfrid
Laurter Unlver~ In Waterloo, Ontario,

Canada, on or about August I.
Deon Merle announce&lt;i his leaving to
both his faculty and the U/ 8 admlnlstrotion. oariy this ......... .
Wilfrid Laurier II a unlvcnity with an
enrollment of some 17,000 indMdua ,
and Its Set-' Social Work Is relatively
new. having been opan for on" ten
!I'IMI·
.

or

Merle will be the second dan In the
achoof 1 founding admtnlllratiw olfica, Dr. Francis Turner,
,left loJt year to become vU pr;
ent ol
another Canadian u~ .

hislory or !hoot

Officials at Wilfrid Launer indicated
that they had conducted a fuU riallonal
search for ljle position and judged Dean
Merle to be "the best candidate."
Merle wiD also have the academic rank
of fuU professor In the Faculty of Social
Work there
·
Dean Merle came to U I B In .July 1972
from a position .. aso«&lt;ate dean IOCial
work at Catholic University of America In
Wastrington , DC . H ha• guided the
U/ 8 ochool through· thr • ruc:caoful
reacx:redlllttions. Among his tignillcant
.:cornplishmenrs here are the start-up of
a part-time master's program lut foU and
a maJOr change In the curriculum
organization of tile School
Dean Merle d«lned further comm~nt
on his leaving.

or

�May 8, 1980

VIE
TS
Ludicrous

Teacher testing no
·c ure-all, Heller says

That's what U/B's Milbrath
thinks about those studies
listing Buffalo as 'the worst'

he asked. "Because of formal schooling?
A U/ B professor hils warned a national
Oh, perhaps some, but the real teachers
convention of school olfldals not to jump
are their p8rents who may cheat on their
aboard the "teacher testing" bandwagon
for tbe wrong reasons.
. Income tax mums and then ·make a joke
a, IJooda Grllce-Kob..
weD as hoormlessly-at various ethnic
. Dr. Robert W. Heier, prola.or ol of H. The Ieamer sees parents bring
groups.
educational admlnlllration, wa featured
company-owned tlems home which they
Poor Buffalo!
"This Image gets In the way ola penon
on the program ol the 40th Annual Nadid not buy, yet ratlonalioe to the farntly
This
New York city has ouf·
taking a good hard look at the good
that they were entitled to them. Parents
tional Sdlool Boards Convention at the
wed a lol ol knocb lately. It's been the
things about Buffalo," he sayS . '1 know of
San Franetsco Hilton Hole!, Sunday,
steal at the grocery store and make light
butt ol nallonaly-lelevlscd jokes, enrmmy people who hoove moved here who
Ap1l 20. Also addraolng the topic of
ol M, perhaps even brags;ng that the clerk
dured large layoffs In Its fac:loria, and
hoow been pleasantly surprioed. •
testing teachers _,.. two school t.o.d
gave them too much change and they did
borne the brunt olthe Blizzard ol 77.
Much more Important than the
not return II."
members, one &amp;om T - and the other
which _ , . to hoow solidified Its Image
physical condlllons ol a city ot area are
from . Florida, plus a school super1nt.enWhy do some c:hiidren not read weU
as a snow-bdered &amp;ontier. ·
the more inlangt&gt;le elements that deterdent
from
the
State
ol
~.
aD
ol
and
dlsplay poor study habits? he went
As II that _,.en't enough. a recent
mine a person's satisfaction, Mlbath
whom _,..-.!'tong supporters ol these
study put out by a ~p ol midwestern
on. "They never or rarely their own
states. These elements Include family life,
tesls.
•
.
parents read a book or other matter ol
reMarehcn. just poured sell on the
which has ranked highest In lrnpO&lt;r.nee
Dr . Helfer's posttlori -differed" · subs!Bnce . l1ley do not - their parents
wounds: Mnamed Buffalo the wont o/38
In evey survey he's taken, lifestyle
slgnlflcantly In IIJ:a! he cautioned thai , go off 10 a quiet comer ol the house a nd
dlln In which to llw. a ranldpg
preferences, feeflngo ol securMy, privacy
testing teachers 'With a paper and pencil
~le wMh a dlfficu• problam, concept
dominated by weather !acton.
and opportunMies In jobs and education.
test wiD only provide data related to
or notion and exhtJit good study· habits to
"Ludlcrousr' raponds a U/ B pro"We should not make Inferences on
other members of the farnlly . Sometimes
fa.or. "R~
quality of life based only on qbjectlve data · knowledge ol subject matter depth and
Dr. l..aer Milbrath, who has been In· such as weather, the amount ol money breadth, and not any measure of teacher learning Is very difficult to ""1"8 by and
effecllven-.
parents q111d&lt;ly give up. or avoid 11.
' volwd tn envlrolfrMntal policy and quali- spent on ochools or phyoleal conditions,"
In addition , he caDed for hoord data to
"Parents are prone to teD children, as
ty olllfe raorch for more the!l20 years,
he states. "l believe quality Is a subjective
support the notions that our ochools have
are those caught up In the 'do your own
bdeYa the recent flurry ol "quality ol
experimce and ought to be measured as
any significant numben ol Incompetent
thing movetr)I!Ot,' that lnlerK!ion wMh
life" otudles commissioned and publicized
such. A condition may be examined and
teachers and that the problems presently
by various cilia are "a shoom." ·
people and learning has to be f.m. School
an Inference can be made about it as H
being
In many ol our ochools stem
"In many cases, tt- studies are com- relates to a penon's perception ol the
Is portrayed as one sales after anothft of
from p60rty trained and incompetent
millloned by toc.l Chambers ol Comentertalnlng and fun experiences."
quality of life. but generally these are
teachers.
weak Inferences."
who want their dlln to look
good ," Mlb-ath comrMnts. "These
For example, Milbrath points out, a
TIM cledlcated teecber ,..... !.to
reports are much too supaftcial."
DIKlplhw- wal...t
study conducted In Rochester, N.Y ..
-ble
These problems are not just school·
used public school .expendHures per
Now, though , along come "dedicated,
related , but permeate aD ol society, he
'l..oolllaou' to weiP -tt.er· too · capita to Infer the quality ol education .
talented , aeatlve, hard worldng teac:hen
contended.
"Today,"
Dr.
Heller
sold,
"No
such
ln(erence
Is
sustainable,"
he
eager
to have their charges engaged In
~
"diodpline ol the mind, saa1fice, hard
objects. A high e_...titure. for schools
Take. for 1~!&gt;. the 5tudy that
learning. The Iearnen m~ now haw to
work,
Intellectual
rigor
and
striving
for
ranked Buffalo the ...,... daltable ol 38
may mean a strong, well -paid teachen'
tax their lntellecl: dig down to the deepest
cltia. lllat study wu based on the
academic excellence are not always
union or a great deal of vandalism. In the
depths of their Inner-being to struggle
valued in the home or the larger world of
premise that weathft Is the most lmporsome way. a high crime rate may simply
with a dilflcuh concept, Idea or set of
work . How then can we expect these
r.nt factor In people's choice ol a comreflect more effective crime reporting or
proposltlons. Before the light goes on
munlly With high quality ol life.
values to be Instilled In the learners In
police work , rather than the fact that
a nd learning takes place, a sense of
school?" Through testing ol teacher ap"lllat view Is totally unsustained and
more criminal acts have r.ken place .
frustration and anger may set In . The
plicants? Of course noll
ludk:rous." Mlb-ath charges. In a com"I must point out the wealcness of the
-Ieamer says, This Isn 't entertaining and
Widely known as on expert In the areas
prehensil&gt;c surwy ol ot!Mudes conducted
Inferences that relate quality ol life to
fun . In fact, this Is not relevant to my Imof superintendent selection , ad by U/B's Environmental Studies Center,
such objective data ," he says.
mediate needs. I want Immediate sd·
min istrator / teacher evaluation, and
which Milbrath directs, weathft wu Why ... _ _cliM?
gratification , I've been told that I am enranked 36lh In lrnp&lt;&gt;rr.nce ol 44 upeets
school board actlvMies, HeUer has served
titled
to H.' This teacher then Is viewed as
What aa:ounts for the recent popular!·
as a consuhant 10 numerous boards of
ol quality ollil by raiclents ol Erie and
being mean , unfair, too strict, too oldty ol studies that rank quality of life?
Niagara Counlla.-a finding subolanU..ted
education In New York and New J - y
fashioned , etc."
Milbrath believes part ol the answer is
In the superintendent selection process.
on a national lewl by other social re HeUer continued the scenario: The
found In economics. Cities attempt 10
He also serves as the coordinator of the
oun:hers.
parents complain . The prlnclpaJ gets In·
build
up their images to promote tourism
Not only Is the Inference that weather Is
Western New York School Board Involved, the superintendent of schools,
or incre- buslneu.
stitute and Is the executive director of the
a dominating factor false. Mlhath adds,
yes, even school board members. The
"Part of M also has to do wMh the
but so Is the premise that Buffalo·s
Western New York Educational 5ervlce
teacher ends up saying, "What Is the
natural curiosity people have ," he odds,
Council.
weather Is so much more severe than that
use?"
"but
there
Is
a
deeper
reason
.
ol other dbes . A native ol Minnesota who
. Students , thus , learn that rigorous seM"Many ol us are questioning the way
lived In ChQgo for several years.
Uadi8clpllned .aclety
dlsdpUne Is not valued In lhe classroom ,
ow oodety Is organiZed. the kinds of conMQbQth noiArs that· winters are much
'We are rap~ becoming an un - Heller sold .
ditions under which we hve . We are
wane In tho. areas
diodplined society, Hefter suggested by
Ten years down the pllce, he conrecognl2lng that things don't have to be
mldwatem raorc:hers. even
way ol explaining poor student perfortinued , "the parents are now bitching
this way."
after lstlng cltia wMh lower average
mance In schools . "The learners arrive at
becaUJe
their children are undlsdpUned ,
Milbrath concludes . " People are
tempaatur and higher wind velocities.
school with their at!Mudes , values and
without meaningful goals In life , and not
searching for new and better ways ol nvsed their own al!lorlthm to compenbehavior patterns, not only already performing weD iocademically. Some high
lng . These studies purport to teU local
sata" and make Buffalo COrM out worse
developed , but constantly reenforced In
school students now see the fallacy In the
governments how to make things better,
In the end. Mlbath points out.
the home and In the larger society. In
process and begin caDing for more dllHowever. even he will admM, Buffalo but they are very misleading.
fact , ~ you want to test the effectiveness
flcuh and meaningful c:haJlenges In
"The things that people value most ,
does suffer an lmQge problem. On~ 10
ol the 'real teacher' In the 5tudent's life ,
school. The parents place the blame not
such
u
closeness
of
family
life,
are
things
such far·a-v places a Australia and
you should )hen perhaps test your T .V .
11pon themselves, but rather on the po6r
the government can~ do wry much
.Hpan, people r~ wMh "big snow"
set!! lllat Is an Issue where you ought to quality ol Instruction, dting the poor
about ," he says, adding. "and that In""- he rMnbOns he Is from Buff..lo.
be directing your attention and energies."
training
the teachers must hoove received.
cludes the weather."
Mafbrath coni
Why do some children steal and cheat?
Someone jumps up and suggests that the
"'t's an ter
phenomenon," he
answer to the problem can be oolved by
fHis.
testing teacher applicants to weed out the
incompetents and the cheer heard from
~
the public Is deafening."
Mlba relates the popularity o( Buf.
&amp;Itt.:
Not so, Insisted Heller.
ll'eat
deaf
about
these
studies
li1
English
falo joka to the l«ndency ol people 10
When I lint moved to Buffalo In the
he ll1ed 11 hard u he could to help ~
enjoy joka that poka fun-meanly u
Tuc:ben tid the blame
early sbrtla, I enrolled In a U/B night
get admitted as • part-time graduate stuHeller recalled how so many had
school COUfM In English, which turned
dent. The notion was , ol course,
Jumped on the career education bandout to be given by Willard Bonner. He
outrageous In those days. Forceful as he
wagon a few years back .
wu an uacting and e&gt;cetting teacher, one
wu, Bonner was no match for the ad·
"Salable skills and knowledge that hu
A - lltuooMy"tr
_.....,
...-....
who had • paulon for his •ubJeet matter
... ~
ot , _
mlnlstraton who were protecting the
Immediate utiiMy Is whoot our ochools
-~ot,_v...... _
and conveyed that pu11on to his
urtlversMy from conr.mlnation by that
_ _ .. t c..MtHol. - . .
should be addraoing," those advancing
otuden . He dldn~ go In for fashionable
group that Is now so breo.thlessly purtheories ol 11..-.ry altlclom : Bonner was sued: "the non -traditional otudent." Old career education aled . Today, sold the
.
U/ B educational scholar. "we are now
lnterftted In dnet response to the
guard, Indeed!
facing the reallty that In too many In·
ot,...,.., material. He de!Nnded clarlly and comI took my lut ol four semes!Qn With
HAIUIV
slances many ol our graduates are
prehension, and wu openly lrnpa nt
Willard Bonner In 1964. I remm.ber him
shallowlv prepared, lackln!l brea&lt;lth and
with 1 . . - or pedantry.
vMdly many years (and ~~~Any other
depth ollntellectual pursuits. Oh, I see ,
hard Bonner ~ as " old
English coinwol later, becaUM he WC11
11'
1 the fault ol the poorly trained and In·
III&gt;IIRI " When lint enroled u a student, vivid . I'm angry wMh myself for -.g competent
teachers you say."
r annowlOOd solemnly to him that rd
until he died before publidy upr.-ng
Then the bandwagon· t.ec.me, "Ba&lt;:k
to work on an M.A . tn Englloh . Bonner
my - m and fond._ for him, and my
to
the
Basics."
Now, reminded H ller,
shoo beck . "WaD then , you'd better get
for
enjoy!MOt and sense o1
the drumrMr Is rolling the caD for the
Grand.......
look after your kids,
riCh- that he shared with !hoM ol us
"Test
the
Teacher
Movement."
bcausot J*l ol going to school me.no
who were lucky onoogh to be his
"Who and whoot ar we 10 blame nat
being on
, Wling the .,.._ and
otuden
before
we
realize
thoot
each and every one
•to
.~ · Vet , when
-.,... '"-rlott ..,..., "- •oretpe&gt;nd&gt;illly·u - .U MMQ&lt;-'tly ~ that I cared a
.Cufhu."........ ~to ana-~?" · he ukad .•• u

---

w-..

n...

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

.......

Bonner remembered 'vividly'

-

-.oo......

rw

-.e

w•lltude

�May 8, 19110

Why Is.there
sexism In
health fields?

--&amp;,Nil C..

A t t - ........ - o l ........

Murals are the latest Baldy artworks
Baldy Hal. whow colorful Interior art
wao1c already makes R one ol the moot
vtouaJiy Inviting buildings at Amhent, Is
being further embellished through efforts
ol U/B art students.
Flnlohing tooches .,.. now INllng placed
on ICVtlfal w
murals whicli were
designed, sketched-out and paJnlied by
studerils as part ol a project In a basic
design COWM taughf by Don Robertson.
Each of the 28 studc,nts In the c:ourse's
two oections was rap6nslble for creating
an original dftign, but only the top seven
d&gt;oices-YOied on by the students
themselves-were selected for execution .

Moot of these murals, which decorate
three of Baldy's seven floors , feature
merging geometric shapes wRh a tasteful
distribution of tones and chroma. 1l1e use
of color ar\d design , notes Robertson ,
was chosen wRh particular attention lo
the archHectural vocabulary-· of 1he
building. Robertson approximates that H
took about six class periods for IJTOOP5 of
three to four students to complete each
mural.
Decision on where to locate the art
wori&lt; was made by f'rofessor Eugene
Galer, who Invited Robertson I~ under·

take the. project last year after he noticed
ofessor's students doing similar
wori&lt; a ~n. 1l1e Ioree behind Baldy's
art collection, Gaier made floor plans
available to students to facilitate their
layouts and also arranged lor contribu •
lions from some members ol the faculty
of Educational Studies to cover costs of
art materials.

the

Why do health care providers-such as
doctors, dentists, nur1es, de nt a l
hyglenlsls-seem to Ill Into a ~!&gt;ale or
female mold?
That Is the basic q uestion being
presented 10 . students In a recently
developed sociology course here.
Developed and taught by Dr. Barbara
H.,_, an . . - n t professor In the
Department of Soclo1ogy, the Mmlnar·
type course Is enmled "Women In the
HeaKh Care System : b Sex the Issue?"
1l1e purpose of the c:oune, as ex·
plalned by 32-year-old Or.' H.,_, Is 10
spur further sociological r~ Into the
panerns of sexism associated wKh the
various health care fields . 1l1e ultimate
answer, Howe believes, may eventually
lead to greater sexual equaiHy In all
health care professions.
Presently, Howe pointed out in an In·
terview, the greatest equality exists In the
lield of pharmacy, where men and
women are entering pharmacy schools in
virtually equal numbers.
This came about, In pad, through the
gradual ' restructuring" of drug store
ownership. _she suggested .

Uttle lnc:eathe
In years gone by, she said , women had
llttJe opportunity or Incentive to become

pharmacists because drug stores general·
ly were Independently owned and
operated by men . The woman con·
templatlng pharmacy as a career In that
era, Howe explained , faced stiff tlarriers
Already, Robertson has received an in·
of dlsc:rlmlnation that aU but shut the door
vRalion lor a repeat performance at
on loans and credit . Howe pointed out
Clemens HaU , but that project will have
that few women were enrolled In pharto wait until his nut daa convenes in
macy schools and therefore druggists had
September.
IHtle choice but to hire males.
The tumlng point, she said, came wRh
the 'demise" of the smaU, lndependen'!Y,
owned drugstore In a "sociological trend '
favoring chain operated pharmacies. 1l1e
pharmacist In this new selling, she add·
ed, no longer needs to face the MX·
dtscrtmlnalion problems associated wRh
cessibility lor aU people because barriers
business ownership. ·
such as money, education, geography
"At present," Howe observed , "men
and language "stiU keep too many people
and women are entering the pharrn"'i))
from needed heaKh care." Many rural
job market on a 50·50 basis, sex·wlse.'
and Inner city areas are suD experiendng
1l1e sociology professor eKed nursing
shortages of heahh personnel in spite of
and dentistry as the "extremes" when H
th~ inaeases In supply , the repor1 added .
comes to dominance by one sex or the
Urban areas contain about hall of the . other.
Ten yean ago, she related, males
population considered to Uve In shortage
made up less than 3 per cent of those
areas.
enrolled In nursing schools.
"While more males are now enrolled in
nur.stng than before," H.,_ pointed out,
"the profession still Is dominated by

Oversupply of physicians pre d icted by
the 1990's according to HEW survey
1l1e number of adlve physicians In the
be oclequa In the
1980o and II expected 10 reach an aver·
· supply bv 1990, HEW repor1c&lt;l this week
10 ·PrCsident Carter and Congress.
1l1e loNcast, req(.tr-ed by the Health
ProleuioMI Educational Assistance Act
of 1976, said the number of physicians
(M D. and D.O.) lnaeased by more than
17 per cent betwftn 1970 and 1978 to
379,000. By 1990 physician require·
mants are . predlcted to range from
553,000 10 596,000 Compal' d to an an·
tldpaled supply of 600.000.
The rq&gt;ort, prepared by the Oivts;on of
Heallh Proleuions Analysis, a unK ol the
Public Health Service. said the 1990 midpoint of the ,..qutr-eman range for physlclans-574,500-11 about 24,000 below
the e&gt;cpecled 1990 physician supply.
~ vwy oomewhat In
their eotima 'of ucas physician sup·
lfPPUR that the training capildly Is
lor ,.,.~~ng curr nt and future
• the """'"
eddod.
,...,_
In octheallh professiont

U .5. prcbebly

1970and 1978andeotimalaof
lu
oupplln were reported as ll'llows:
Om
. The aupply Increased by 19
per ocnt &amp;om 102.000 to narly
121 .000. Requlr-emants lor dert
...
apeclad 10 be about 148,000 In 1990.
Thto NprCMnts • •
t" oveoupply of
dena. in 1990 Projedions""' beNd on
, apect.o11on that den
wtl continue
10 hlghtcn produellvlly through ...,poy.
mont of denlJI1 oualllorles and

prodJx:llvtly~
1

...,.. from

~200. o n - of man

Supply Wid nr·
for~-- e&gt;cpecled to

15 I * cent

• be1once

,_, Wid

percentage Increases, rising from 7, 100
to 8,100 for on lnaease of about 14 per
cent. A c:ummtly perceived short laD In
podiatry Is expeded to continue Into the
19901.
Veterinarians: 1l1e supply of thll group
showed the largest percentage Increase,
more than 32 per cent, from 25.900 to

34,200.

1l1e repor1 said an adequate total sup·
ply of personnel does not guarantee ac·

LETTERS

Help offered on draft decision
b_y local Peace Center group
Editor.
Draft logislallon
f'l"lbebby dear the
U.S. Senate .._t month. 1f K, _ - asH
Is now wrttten , aU 19- and 20-year-old
moles will be r~ulred to register for the
chit by the end of June. 1l1e deciolon of
whether or not to register Is not one
which con or ohould be answered without
o great dol of thought. Answers 10
volua q . . - s con only come from
within. R.ptralion Is pr_.llon lor the
droft, droli II preporalion lor war, and
wor could maan anything from another
Vlmom 10 the complete destruction of
tha earih .. - know h. Each lndlvldual,
then , has vllal q . . - s to ask himsdl
about ooldiering Wid war, and what he

thinks of as his role as a dttzen of America
and the world. The potential draftee also
I)Mds to think about the J'I'B"IIcal consequences of registration and non ·
registration. Non -registration has serious
potential legal Implications; regillralion
has ""- obvious potential implications.
Each of us has a great deal to think about
In the neat few weeks. Those who desire
further Information about the conse·
quences of registration and non ·
registration or who wloh 10 tallt over ques·
lions of conJCienc:e should feel free to cal
the Weslen! New York Peace Center at
IJ3S.4073.

Bonner made learning 'joyous'
moollmportanl thing he did lor tnll WMtO

demonotr.te thet lnmln!l need not be •
painful procao, but It joyous~1om sure that ol ol hii f&lt;lr...-lludents

wtl..-mhls~ .

women .

"One reason

-ms

to be that males

traditionally have been regarded by both
and women as deserving of leader·

men

ship roles. lllerefore, many males shun
nunlng. per se, as they tend to mow
· rapidly Into admlnlstraHve poslllons
rather than patient care. Others tend 10
change direction by becoming physicians'
or auodates Instead ."

..-nts
w__ ........,,_

.

H.,_, potntlnQ out thet the woman
dentist Is a rarity, hopes her students will
dllcover ·tha reuon , or reasons, for the
"1adt of structural change~ In the dental
profession . She noted that tha number.of
women enrolled In dental ochoolt runs
only about 1010 15 per cent, whereas the
number of woman studying medicine Is In
the 25 10 40 per c:alt range.
On the other hand, she said, women
out.cflllanco man ·os dental hygienists, a
situation somewhat okln to the
50dologlcaJ paKern of women In the
nursing prof- .
In tha field of heaKh admiRistratton,
Howe-a"ttr~" lor- .

"Un 1 lew years ogo," she pointed
out, "the only women hotPhol ad·
mlnlstroton were the nuna In chorga of
Cotholc hotpltols. Now, ......... -

...,fat)!~ admlnlltraUYe potls. ~.

one of 'lhe Jo.y todologlcal QUIIIIont al·
1-.g women as admlnlolralort . . . _
to their abl1lty 10 ~ onion .tladlvely.•
Howe , a ............ til tho! UIB 1-.:ty

·--·-·. -·

�•

i

CALENDA
l.onl-· '-·-_,_.,En&lt;
~·

Thanday- 8

ec....

a...ley.

n-.. 681 •Main

Gononl -

P£DIA1111CS IIESEAilat SEJUNAII'
llolo of
low RACtiae - . , _ of
~ .. Allda•l••c•l ......,_ Coe·
·Dr. John - · ....._
ol
Clllld&gt;on'o
.._.,. 12
· 1.-..oy
ol ~
w Onlarta -

-

·

liEN'S 1IARIIALL.
FFlold I p '"

s-c.a.. Cdoublobuderl p-

5L 8 P-"'·

M.-....--sz..

ADS---.1 - ~b,lhollopon ·

TH£ATIIE PBifOIDIAI!ICE •
...._..... .. C~oaF. l&lt;olhortno Cor·
..... ,...._. . 8p.m, .....n.
Squh Ticlwl Olice 01 odvonco for SI. « "' lho
door"" Sl.!iO.

Pt:DIATRJC GRAND ROUNDS•
Flshoul. Kinch Audllonum.
Ou&amp;drm'• Ho.pbl 11 a .m.

a. ECONOMICS WOIIK$HOP'

lAW

- - . . . . - . . G&lt;oduoto School o l -.
~vol .~7~0~n3:10pm

_......,_ lo lboS.,ol~ .

Dr ll,lu"'l H P.... . , . -, o.,...u-.o ol
P - 1011 SbonMn 4 P-"' Coi!H.OI 3 .45 .,
15

I'HAIUIIAC£UTICS SOIINNI*
Edooca- lo Poloed. Dr
Mom Donok. _ , ol · Knkow .
Pulond C508Cooloc 4p.m - . . . ......
.....d013!i0
STATI$TJCS COLLOQUIUII'

- " - ' &gt; -· Dr. Rolph R.....,.

Ooportmonl
· SUI&lt;V/
~ ol
R-..A·
I6. 42:10Ridgolo
4p.m
Collooal 3 :lOp .... -11-15

TOPS NIJTIIITION I.E.CtUI£ •

.

-

· Dr. -

567

e-n

12·2 p

m

READING ROOM DEDICATION'
The Doponnwnl ol Cho-.1 [nglnHring wll
dediceW • rMmONI ruding room In ,honor of lhe
lola
Joocph A Bcrgonu. lint ~ ol •he
clopornncnl 207 Fumao I :10 p 01
JIEDICII'IAL CHEJIIST11Y SOIINAR*

· -oiHolmollo...S
c-....-.
"*n.Chon SNh.~--­
,..duo,. Jludcnt ,
U/8 Cl27 Cooke 2 p m Rcfruh.....,IO.

Oopu1mcnloiCMI~ . U/8 . 139P.n... I

4·5pm

Ro&amp;........,. ... bc.....d

- - A p o 1 1 S .... 4.

dle ochool .............,. -

A n - lolt _, t1 . , . • ..., ••
~Iucio

-WWI

~

.... _

.,.-France
de.d . .

10 fftl*l the

......

CUITEil FOIIIIIEDIA STUDY
~ATION '

.
E - o l - bv
ond olu"""
.,. ... c.-"" s..!y Sqoft Cont.......
~7
P"'
v..... bv ........... ond
Emio Golw ... be
...... Shoo .. 1970. s..- v.lodly .. -

v-. -

... -

locull\l.-

-

ol -

· -

· ,.....,... _,

--l.ol

~ pedonnod """""' _, . . . .,._. . . .

Golw'o - . _ -lndudod t1 , _
l h - .. F..-. - . . ....SihoUS
()11,.._ ...... _

o- F • " * - .... " - &lt; " -

""~Sor*Jm . \/Woe--C..

__ ___

_T_ "".._._.T_-..,·, ElK·

.._....

~

ond • . . . , . . _ ,.

... ., ........ s--_.,._,...
4 _ .. .,._v_r_......,_... . .
~ . RijOO--

_of _

.,

GoldlloW
_, ..........

~o..c.._,-- -

doaloi.Jonwa.m..
Donloh JCIIWonG Owiltin&lt; Manlrond " punuOig
on M F.A•• IOUd)llng wlh Hdn&lt; Rchlua. A
grodua,. ollhc Uno..noy ol Copenhagen. oho has
aDo studie'd at the Conwrvalolrt NaGana!
Superieur de Musique In Paris and at the Royal
Donllh eon-vo101y ol Music who&lt;c oho modo h..ciol&gt;ul- Sho ... pedonnod ~ ..
~ q
has lakcnluding rola 01 U/B'o Open
Wori&lt;thop pn&gt;ductiono

a........

Kyle Pctonon. • JIUdonl o l -

PyM , is a junior a1 lhe Univasity which lhe is at lending on on Anna Gonohoe ~ . Sho Is •
member of the Wind Enwmble and -.siltant con-

wmer . . .cnaa, reuon

.. 10 _ . . , .....

qwmtitA~tiw:lv in •

. hio-....

"'"""' Scol! TOincy . • "'""" hom

A-·

~.-oo~

EI..DIENTARY 5CHOOL JIAntDIAnCS /
liP£CIAl. CONSUIIEIIJSJI LECTt.8£.
Thlo 110•'• focuo II ~ ............ and midch.ng·

and ..... - -

... -

w-

Springo . ....

ond ""' ol lhc IIOo altuloaon
Socond F1oo&lt;
Baldy Hal. f&gt;-10 p m Mn -...op. ... be hdd
homf&gt;-7.:10
0.. Blcrodorf hom
Cornd ~ . ... opooll •• 7 :10 on "8« A a...
..,.
• Pro _
...... NqUIIod Sponoo.ed

n.-...-..,.....

Sora-

ol plano JIUdv, having

_folhomWinonoS...
Uno..noy .. - - - ho .................
ol Yvw Ml&lt;heoholl , he t... dotpOo
being.~ to the mulllit worid . lll6utn pen in
nuf'I\II'JOUS chamb.r and ICJk) ~ Moe
com~n~ to Bu.ft.Mo. A 8 F.A in ~ cen·
did.a1c . h«: hopa to punur a~ career .. a

Inti

-

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

Suaday- 11

~

bv ""' Dopo.1mcnl ol ~ .. -

Satarday - ·10

- s2 . .. -...! ""' - · .....
- f« ...
Dr.Blondorit.._....ton-n.
Todov
Momong - .: and Phi
!&gt;on"'- Ho .... "" ~ n-.

~

Educ.-

- ·· "Good

F.... a.do, ....S ,.._,.. " - " '·
F« , _ ,.,...._,, a41 636-2455

UUA8 BONUS FIUI'
Tho a... liT...... 19791 Coni.......
. Squn 515, 7 30ond9 45p m
- S 2 1 o. - . . . s t60

Goner"'

~,......,, ,.._c.~~oww-.

-n.--·
.,_ .. .... -.

£dwwd Folga- to • 1977 woduoJ«
ol ~ C...nl Hlgll School. he
•cco~Yed lho John Pl1llp Sousa Awwd . A ) u -. he
" • ol ""' p...,_, EnMnlblc. ""'
lJniYonlly Phlhonnonlo and lho Boird Contom..,..... Chombo&lt; Enoomblo. He " . ~ JIU·

P ian t•t Joyce Rusln lak rece ived her
·~-- degr.. hom o..m.n College .......
oho won lhc S..,.. Plono ~ 01 1977.
She aho studied , • aiC:holenhip student, for thrM
1Umtnln at O..Utauqu,t AI U / 8 where lhe k a
doublo degrn cond;dola-for on M.F.A 01 plano
............... and on M.A. 01 music hioiCIIy - Mao
R.,...lak lo • plano Jl\l&lt;lcnl ol Stophcn Mann . A
,..duoto - · 01 lhc Music llopar1monj. lho Is
llhoon !he iiOI!olllllo "-tool lolwk:.

OVU. ENGINESUNG SOIINAR'
Tho Doo1p olo Rod! Floa:ulo""". Luls T"""'·

FIFTH ANNUAL CONFfliEHCE ON

11M a... 11- lfqnca, 1979) Waldman
n-.. Amlwnl 515, 7:10 ond 945 pm
G.Mrol o d - S2 10. aluokniO Sl 60

a . - _.....

p~om~~o.a.,co­

Quod3pm

UUAa~FIVI ·

~bvlho~1ol8io·

foleor. -

dud&lt;&gt;&lt; ol !he Symphony Boncl The 1977 ,..dua,.
of W..msvtle North lesl aunmer won a scholar·
..._,to INdy c:h.arnMr music at s.ch Crm ferm in

" ' - l / ....... • ..... hom Topo Fllondly lolariuols

4 pra

....

UNGUimcs cotl.OQUIUII'
0.. .... ~ ol s..-1 . . _ Acquiol·
- · Ullo Wong - .. ~ ol Call«·
nia/84nble:y Ungulsfics Lounge , Spaulding

PHYSIOLOGY SENINAR'
'The ~. . .·, Narda 10 • Dtatana Dnlm .
Dr Bowrtv Bishop 5-108 Shmnon 4 15 p.m
Cofta•t4

- - - -.Dr D A ............
Dlo-. ol Nu.-..1 · Comd. 26F-

.........
BUd

RociloiHoL8p.m. Gononi-S2; oludmto
Sl: d be oold 011hc door onJv.

andScou,_..
P...-..o

Dr.

CEU.l1AII PHYSIOLOGY SEJONAil•

CONCDn'O COMI'£11T10N
CONCBIT'
lltWe'llly and nuol -.! eor-to ~ -

.,.,._ K , W -

U / 11 WOMOI'S CAUCUS MEETlNG'

pral....,. ol

...._..... .. CloaF- l&lt;alhonno Cor..... .. 8p.... 'lldln ..oiWJioallho
5qon Ticlwl 01ice 01 oc1vonco fof St. « a1 lht
door"" $1.50.

-

PHYSICS COUOQUIUII•
0.. R., o.o.lo. Sol «&lt;qJhono ~M&gt;&lt;xooo.y
Ftonaol! J ·:JO p .m Colf•. .•3.15

11M Loeol c - of Fir-= Loeol
0..0, 8 P - PoohigiMI ,

TIIEA111E~'

-~.
-c:onclud.
19110 compotlllon
....... who ........
form • ~with the on::hrr:tiA are; pacullionist

Friday- 9

4S4

MayS, 1980

i

..-ol n.o.. .

AMfliiCAN lmJDIE$ LECTt.a£ '
N«W ~p•e•·.. I• liM Hl• tory of
F -. Elon 0... 1004 a..-..- 2.30
P-"'E.--wtltomo

T

I

I

H

Lcrd-.~ . ---b, Enc

\lwldot&gt;toe o.,..n-- lolho

~homo

ollho

M.Sical Alwnnl Auodatlon's Annual Spring
Hoool ........
Clnicol Dov .. be hdd .. ""' lnga184Sa .m

n. _....- ...

::;:....,.~Inti

Gr--. ... s..a: Pq t I' ... F.Ait.ace....
v.........
- dlntcal
· CcHpooloon
... be
Tom
Malur,
......_.,.
profcUOf
of
I

~.
U/ 8 School ol · ol
~ . . . .. Oolld..... .._., - _,
-Goodman . ~---.~-­
... _...... Ooportmonl .,........_."""' .......
~ ·,

.._., Vorioly Clull. 193 Dolo-.

A~~e
730-930pm
-oobcc......d

-

... _ _ _

-..-.-.- ..-.....poNnl
al-"""*'·

.... -

·· ........ ....,...- . . ol

· _ , - od... Aucllonco

~

. --,_,.,

Tho ""'-' Cirooo4h F -. on · 10 o ..,..,..... .........,

u..M WO¥ -

Ot1•"lt•llon tt.•l '"PPO•b •ed k.al •nd

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

_.,._

l.onl-·
'-·---..
c- ·
M
.-s,..--1""'
.-...1\01-..,...

focuo ... · -

lllhium , bolo blocloon and

Ml

bv Elk
51 8pJO

0...

10--

SIU COIOIENCDIEHT'

0.. -.tT. ~-...- OI Iho

School who loloowing
od&gt;ool ..

ollhc ......
c-.w-. " - "' a...~onc~
....

_
ond _
F"""_
lll-12.:10.
- _
..._
be_ _....,.,.
retut.Uons and medical pr.cHca, canc:er

..,.... 10 .......... ~

Tho 22ncl onnool - . . . , Kimball Momonol
lActure wtl be ddve.d afw a I p m Uncheon
Dr - . t M Spoo, .,.-.,.-...,vo~o
lltWe'llly, ... ..,.,._ ond 1 . . - .
School ol ··
ol 1930 ... be
honcnd • a 50th r«union *"- In the .,.,..

FRIENDS OF VIENNA

n.

a-

Olho.._holdlng_ ...... 1935. 1940.
1945. 1950, 1955. 1960. 1-llnd 1970 lnoddi·
- · · · - o l - -...... ~ .
. A II£CITAL •

.._.
pm
- -

~-

· - -Hall l
8
......
·•
-o

l.onl ,...,.
'-·- _,....,.
, C..-·

_.,._
IJLIIJIA '

GononJ- M . ADS_..,.,.,..

--u

681 -

·
~b,
... Dopon-

- .............. c:ao.-. ....
-. -·.-~
S.0.
&lt;a."'- ..............
s
Cor·

door lar 1.60

Aldon Court

MUSICAL PIIESEHTATION'

-

--.,...,...-and

·· Dov~ ...-- . ........d-Sua.

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

Loolllehluoo.
· .... POliO
.. .... -plano.ln...-..1
ON~ Ave. 3 30 p.m

ln-...

c.1o
864

JUST BUFFALO WIQTING WOIIKSHOf' '
_...., ... be bv pool _ , ...........
Mwvo Piney. ~ · 1802 , . _ . 5I
4 :10p.m
Mo. Piney ... ....... Buffalo . - . ..
........... ....,_ C..llold .... Lomo 0.. C.·

Fno-.

.

Elmwood. .. 8 :lOp ..

c.n.r.
n._.-..
... _
Ill

S2 .. ""' dcior
D A Y - SEIIVIaS '
'"'\
eom,.lox 5-6 p.m

.lono Koot. R-... t_...... ....,..

~b,lholn•·

- . . . . - . . Mio*"ll

ntEA111E~ ·

Tldool

IJoduotoo.

Room, 0 - I W. 3 p .m.

Y_.., a1 lhe Altnlown Cofntnunity

En&lt;

bv
5I 8 p m

IJLIIJIA'

GoNnl-

c.n... n...... 681 51. 3 p.m.
General odM . Jludcnlo, sz:
ADS -.:hero """'''lod. ~by lho Deporl ·
mcntoi "T'hucre
Bondoy.

GAOWTH FOUNDATION

llliCUS$ION

-

DIIJUIA'

.AIOIUAl. llEDICAL SPIUNG
QJMICAL DAY '

lao St . • a1 ...

~~·

0..

--....., de.! ol ... U/8 School
ad

ol N..... _. .,..._. lhe

COl~•_.

..,_, ....,eon-c-

7pm

�May 8, 1980

7
Penltenc:e

::::: •:Ieece
...............
......................
w.
Oecar Wilde (Nul• Maaoadar)

~ ................. Radlootl
He-.___, ... lhe er-. but ....

recaaled lbe recaatatloa. Eric
......... ..., ....... Wilde. "Lard

--··---.....--

Alhcl'• .._,. . . . . lhe

n..re. ~toUy s~.

c- .

-'ohop -~- ...- . . . _
' - and .....

... - . . -. n..y -

· poA~~c .

Far _.. ......._ -

-

Dolloro Doloy.

.. tho _,....._ j::ammunly

c -.

...,""'* ......... .._ ... _ v•-c-.ct ...
8115-6400 T h l t - .. - - , _ ......
tho ....... tho _ . . , £ - . . "" ...

Arll, ondtho~~·

T - A d.
ANNIVDISAIIY OftN IIOIJE
Thlt- Ia tho 30th - a l t h o -...... "" 0.. KoOhortno Thorn al tho Spo.ch ond
Haring Clnlc. Dlpoo1mont ol ~
Dilorders Milt Scimca. In ClCIIInm«niOilldOh, the
Dlpoo1mont ............. a ol _.., during t h o - "'Mev l~ 17. On Mev LS, tho on·
...... Tlndle-Shupo , . . _
bring

o..... ..

_

.....-y .. , _ _ ... _ o l

Tuesday- 13

- - -- Tho &amp;lo County

COHCEKT'

SIO.

v--

.oo

Aid,...........,_
- ""*

s2. ·11udcn,.Sl.

The pi"'C9'am. tided ""Softe-ned Forb· Music of
S.t!o and Cage ," has been devio&lt;d 10 IDullrot&lt; tho

...... from tho c&lt;&gt;mpooerf.
~ . we muse t:.1ng .boul • mUSIC
which IJ like. fumlurt -1 thnk CJ1 II • rnelodioul,
• - &amp;I&lt;
&gt;oltening tho """" ol kno- and -

lolov.&lt;ng _

s.o.

"Why" . -

1 0 - tho-""' al knoond c:onticlmo-7 S.t!o 00 He "
right • - John Cage .
AMAnt .-tis~~ will~ Jamn Cal.abrne , Arthur
w.......n ond Eltoo Alaimo. plono . Thomos
~ - ...... , Dorion&lt; R.oynanl, "-""" Dovld
· doolnot. ond Fariov Puroo. «lo

..-

-~-Gryta. -

Hal. 8 p .m. l\lvw ~ -

...._....
-..-cia-"'"
5uoan
Spool, _

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

Paul-.
conduo;oc. · ....
T-~lto-oiMurloi.-Wol.

porionockloounty _ . , . . . . . . . . . O _ t a l
~ · The two~_.. . . . : I. Art
....._ol_loncl ........... - - ............. 2. 1n..........,_tho
~
al -......... ..,_...,.. . . _

_...,.. .. __

CMIInthcW_,.N.wYOitc.,..andWIIIIal919
_ o l ... lloiodc..-~ .....
~

a-.-

Thiii'Sday- 15

-

..............,._.,_
Claro--

P£DIA1111CS IIESEAIICH 500NA11•
~

~-.
C..
Room , o.adNn'o ~ 12 noon .

..,. ,....,

~.... EHGINEfliiiNG - ·
MECHNIICAI.

Fa&lt; 1""'- , . . . , _, con1act N.. Undo Halt .
....... 831 -160S.

Tho portod al . . . . . - .. ,_..... - ......
- Juno .... - " - " " ol
Sl ,OOOiol.lnd&lt;o..,!.- 0&lt; woo~.may ..,p,
to ... &amp;lo County ~ ....._.....

&amp;hibits

_ .. ..,..._ .. ...,.,,1_ _

GI.IJIPSES llfTO 11tE PAST

-

Councf, 95 - - Room 1103 Raitt
Buldlng. llultolo 14202, ~ 846-7879. 11M

......

Pti010GIIAI'HJC

681-SI. llwthow_al_blodtond
II a 14
and Amortca.

.,._"""'"'England

cwJviNinorda_,~kll'•.-. .

nw....,..,.,_wtth~ Nhl•

FtL8mGHT COM'EIIIKIN FOil
0\/f.:aSEAS mJOY .,.....
Tho-.. a l - ~on ·
......... ... _.,111111-112.......-,klf·

' -·
PHOlOClaAPHIC

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

~...~noy ,

"""""" .... 5 1 9 - .. 50....- . . bo
..-10&lt; ... 111111-112--.

- --and--.
u.s. ......- throl9&gt; ... - -

ond ol . . . -.
- f1ondo . . . . - ..........

...,.,.....fi¥AD.Md""..._ _
"'-Aodgo ond -

Requh.....,ll

indue~&lt;

U.S

-

_

......,ship, a

Sloddon-

~

mutual

10 -

~

-·w--v-..-s....T.-.

....... . ...- .........

The .. undooaond... -

~

~- - -~althoC....- .

........... ..... 23. 1980. So.odcro&gt; ...... bo .... f

.-.u~y

-

An al 17th '""""" ..
cloaomontl ond ...... and .._......
commemo1aling lht 25lh _ _ _ , of the UIB
Ub&lt;aria' Paltoh Room. Tlwoujjh May 31
~ ...................... " -· Viowtng ..,.,

--~ . The-10&lt;-ap­

.........

WA IIEOTAL'
- -. --R&lt;do1Hol8
P
ml I, h
'o
-·o-_ . . t· ..............
alludonc ol ffN
-l
o lI
dt
_ _

""an_.,

Un-

Counclhoo - - ............... . . -. Tht
.,.,._ al thlo _ . . . io 10 ........ pncllcola-

--__ _

-wll
bo tho
ec·
.......... ond

...0 colo; Ranold Richlnb, ..... ,
, -

wtth

~..::::.:
The &amp;lo Cciunay EnwtronmorQI ....._......

FOII£IGII SJU)EHT 1tliT10N WAIYDI
APPUCATIONS
Few s.;,- ond Fal 1980. ""'- _ . , ....
tion W.w.~ . . now•WIIIIWI•theOflicc ol Finandol Ald . Room 6, 8utlor ,...,._ B.

Wedaesday - 14
JIFA IIEOTAL'

s. - - ..

..duda
-.a~--.. The _.liM.""*""'·
lunch. II 120.- L a w - may ...... kif

..,. a CC01Ca1 ol
ol John Cage and
&amp;t&lt; Salio. Bud Redial Hal 8 p m Gon«oo ad ·
$3, U/8 laaolly . otafl. alumni a n d -

-

--dance
.,.._ted""_.._..
......,_a......,.
""*

......_
laaolly
. .....
.......
,_.,
_
. .bo_to
_ond
_
_
kw a
and · ,.. ""' ....
judged 10 bo ou-..&amp;ng ., clnical ..,..,.,..,.,.,
On May 16, tho onnuoiThom ~m ... bo
K. Shupo, lomwrly al
thlolaaolly ........
ol 0.
Thorn'•· 0.. Shupe . . tho
ol ..
theapy ond .....
tho ......... ,..._.., hond;cappod. Thit wll bo fe&gt;lo.ocd
t.....
15-7 p .m.) .. tho Spo.;il ond Haring Clinic, 4226
Rldgo Loa to wl-kh a l - lndlvldualt wttbin
tho
and community.,. lnvt!od .
Mev_
17, tho
_On
aSaturday,
nd _
_ D&lt;ponmont wll hold a
recognMjon cerllmOny end rec«ption for §J"adUIIting

Tlwouglo Juno.

GIIAPttiC DaiGN

Both..,. Hal, 2917- 51. Tlwouglo Mev II.
EJthlol may bo ........., throl9&gt; Frtdov bo·
'-'12and4pm {)ponio'IJ_ . . bohold
CWl M., 9 e1 8 p.m .

5PECl1IUitl a.APitiCS DIIPIAY

A - al ........ ...,.from n. S,..Hal. Golfty ........ -

.......
____ .............
__.. ------- 11lo--.....o.-.,. _
... __ ..
..._...,__
__ ...
_
_
_
_
...... --_
·- ---a.- ___
...
.. . . --...a...
_ -- . . . . . .
---~

,.-~---. _....
........ ""-· Inc. 206 F...,.. 3 IS p m

Moaday- 12

-

-. . . . . . . 0&lt; ..............

ond

.,.-..cy

.. .... """ ...........,...__Eoooptlclf-

..... Pt

-

..

ol -

•

~- c- -

' Or ~, Owm , pro-

ON! -

-

-

~

ol

'-"-"'Y
v.....n.-~Cclftlc&lt;mco

,.__ _,

,. .........

-~.,
~,

~

..._

. . _ . _, u-.IA C.., J. , MD . ~­
ol ~ ...0
U/ll
l:Mf- 4p .. .. 3

'"'"'-'*"·

_.,..

Room, !WhloaJ 4p.m

o.ylhoo ho/ tho ... _..,...._... .. , . _

v...... b o - -

Falgoo •• 191!0 -

":"ollhollwdc--~

-

aJAL'

._- _._
,.....
11-,. " -·
tW ...
I
Notlc:es
_.__.•-C....No l"'E""'- OOI'IRIIIEI'Ia
ON AHTJ.l'IWST lA

...
............... ...
_.,.. --ALO........ - -.-a.a011' POEI'WY '

-

c . - .... ~o..c:..-

2$4~So

•• -

.....

111111-112--.

....

. - .... .-fO&lt;mint - 0&lt; may
....c_.a~,..-...ou~y
. . . . . . . . . . . ..

,._
... _... -...,._
_....-..._......beyond
- - " " .... _ ......... Soctol- ....
t h o -··

......
...... -.,-..- ....... an
~

M.D oOiho- ol..,..._,

WA IIEOTAL'
~F..... , _ , . - lloiodRodtoiHol
8 p m "-ad-.,_,_ lllchanl Kaz-

, . . . . . , . . , . . _ ... _ _ _ . . bo

~

-.
v•

........
_.. ......
~ ...

..... t-Sehoolool4ovl7. 1lw-

.,._-.._.._,.,.,.us
o..o-- ............
_ _ _ .__
w ...
U/ll t
_ ......
.,-.School
. '. . _ _ _ l l w _ a l ...

~Boo0._

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

........., .......... frtdov. 9:30-S.

- condidoon holding pt,,O, ~ .......
oliglblo Acondldaloio....,.,.. IO ..,P,Iclfacoun-tn!O&lt;--.tlwo·-~

_
.... .........,.....,.._..ol
C.
ELLUlAII
rtfV5IOt.OGY
-·

..__ Alamo Galory, -

......,.,._ " " - - .....,..., tlwCouncfon

Far _ _ _ _

..--... -

- Room 124 Rlchmond

Elll. 636 2250
....,._
_ _ _ _ ..

Quad

.

1- .

c••

•••d•• .... AnJ: ..................

....

- -- -oiC*un!Alloh. ..

MAY II :

. _, M

Qooloaoo.- -

. . - .• .,.,_.._ al "'-""''

19301 9;05 p m
~ D: llt(. ' - - ' " - .

Good--. " ~

,_ ..

,._

GIIADUATI!Cia~TI!

.............
... ................... _,__.,
.....

- - . - ..... -loll ... _..... ....
.. Tho w,.. Plooo• • " " " - . . ..

_,....a .... - - alTho

w,.... Plooo and

~ .. 636-Z:JM .

~-AL0111..-nNG

..,Z:S........_ ... .....,. ....__

~
..... ,7. .........
_
__
. . . . , _ _ 7-9

........

MAY9o

Conaclio,&gt; """" ...... pla\lf tho load ... .. Ellt:
llontloy'• - ...... a..- c-... 1101 6.30 p ....

~ ~ Dr. ......

~1

c.:DfT AT ntE ~PlACE

Donlto lloMd .. -

Oatbe.Alr

-~c:-. 111

E-....-~--

lr,

- . . - a l - - . . .. - ·
- o l o . , . . - ol£--....""""'*...0
Pallcy, -u.. al -- ~ 19301 II«&gt;

pm.

· MAY tl:

Cmmnehm • . . Ant: --....rt Oldt,....,
-c-...UOI6p.m

MAY Ilk

---~c:-...11

lp•

�•

Mey8, 1980

Male 'ascendancy'
not 'nature's way'
.;,_.. •

II

"-'"&lt;Sill

Connry k&gt; wl..a IOI'M an~
the -a--old struggle
the
haveascendancy
not unlwnallv
_ . ._·a men
"nalural"
wllh

. . . . .. In

women relogated to suboervlcnce.
Feminist anthro pologist Elea nor
Leacod&lt; underscored this mesoage
.-rtly at a lecture on the Amherst
C.rllp\1$ which disputed the widely-held
belief that women have always been an
oppressed gender.
.
A noted lecturer and author on the
cross-cultural status of women , Leacod&lt; •
poinled out that many early reports
regarding the "Inequality" of women In
egalitartan IOdetles were marred by the
authors' own ethnocenl!ic bias towards
male dominance. Their preconceptions
distorted not only the gathering of lnfor-,
mation but ultimately the fntelpl'ejallons,
drawn from H. Leacod&lt; referred to Jesuit
accoJnts of tile Montagnais-Naskapl Df
Canada as a n obvious case In point.
Victorians were no more profound ,
she assessed. They mostly viewed
women In non-Western IOdetles as
passive, servile "drudges." In fact , she
lamented, until relatively recently, many
anthropologists concurred with the
thi'!lry expressed by researchers such as
Evans-Pritchard , who maintained that
male ascendancy was a characteristic of
more. "dvllized" peoples and that female
subordination was part of a "natural
order."

U/ 8 students found healthy
despite stress of final exams
time . This could indicate that counseling
does nol cany much of a stigma today ,
he 50.Inllised.
Nursing otudents gave on-the-spot
rduallon therapy 10 5 cent of the
population whooe ohowed they were
subjlct to - • 5tras, reported Grimes.
Alter the therapy techniques were
demonllraled and , if necessary, oounse~
ing referrals given , the subjects were
hooked up to • bioi cdback machine
(bon-owed from U/ B's Physical Therapy
Depai1mcnl) so lenlk&gt;n reduc:llon could
be monhorcd.
Grimes, who intends 10 publish the
flndlngs , says the otudy Is significant
because H can help nur1e1 determine an
individual's vulnerability to Illness through
the manKestation of certaln sympcoms.
Once nUr1eJ recogniZA! mess as a factor in
an lllneu, they can begin to teach a pa-!Wnt coping mechanisms to effectively
handle H, he explained.

Stereotype atlU with ua
Although this stance has now waned in
popularity, Leacod&lt; noted that the
stereotype of male domination still, at
least Implic itly . permeates majo r
theorellcal worl&lt;s of the last decade, such
as that by Levi-Strauss .
Anthropologists who argue against the
presence of sexual equality in ~
ega! Harlan soc~tles often counter ~t

!!Ill"'"' · ~: ~ In

-

decisions Involving' "public mailers, but
were hmHed to authority In the "private"
or domestic domain .
For example, In a crtHque of Leacod&lt;'s
\vOrl&lt; , anthropologist Ronald Cohen contends that men of the BambuU (a tribe In
the Congo Basin) have authority over Important collecave action , like the hunt.
Leacod&lt;. however, maintains that In
tribal accounu she has read , such decisions were made by consensus, and, In
fact , women served with men as
"ceremonial leaders" of the hunt.
EgaUtarian relations were common In
most gatherer-hunters and band peoples
because the famUial domain did not take
secondary status to the public, she explained , and female and male tasks
(akhough different) were viewed as
"complementary." Instead of hierarchical
In nature .
Sexual complementarity and female
autono,my are also evidenced In precolonial accounts of the Montagnais, the
Bart of Columbia and the Atlantic Coastal
Algonkians, among others, she noled.
Montagnais women, for example, "ac-

Degree candidate
AI degree candidates who ha"- riiQIIteNd a nd plan to participate In the 134th
General Commencement at the Buf(a lo Convention Center, Sunday, May 18,
at 5 p .m . will march In the proceaional in appropriate academic cootume .
Candidata ohouJd _,.ble In the Banquet Room inside the Fran~ Street
•ntranc:a of the Conwntion Center at 4:30 p .m . Facuhy Marshals will be
available to _.,. In the formation ol the academic procleiSion . Identifying
degree llgol wll c!Wect marchcn to the ~ ....,bly ar.. lnsldc the Banquet
Room.

Robing wll take place In the Banquet Room •n. The [)cpartrnent of Public
SoMty
....... the . . . d...tng the c:cernony In the Main £xhl&gt;lt Hoi to protel penonal propc1y.
.
F*"'Y and friends •• invtted to allcnd the excrdM. n-e •• no attendance
limitations. TlcMis . . nol rwqulrad .
.
Clips and gowns thould be pk:bd up at the Squlr• Hal Boobtore no later
than Mey 13-16. The C&lt;lllurne lo returned immediootcly folowlng the ceremony
to the 8anqual Room , . . . - ..
.
In addlllon to
avaloble on-tlr- porldng In the vldnHy ol the Convention
the eon-.~~on
and eoun.F........,. Parking Rempe •• s~tuater~
on ..._ !Ida ol the N.ln Entr.._ k&gt; the
on F........,. Str t.
AI IIIUd.nta ~In G.neral Commencement.,. requcstad to com. _ ... ............,..
at
Ofllcle o( Public Alfm. Cornmencern.nt Olllce
!&gt;16 Capen Hal

c.n...

c.m.r

v.. .,.... ........

..

c.m.

;: "";

.

.:..:·

.,

..

._

.

lively partidp*d" In colecUw dlocus· .
s1ons on tneldng camp and on -we.
In fact, added l.eacock, any Individual
who tried to lmpoae his or her will
olhen was "subject to ridicule and - -

on

ing."
"lfs difficult for people broUght up in
Western culture to conceive o(relation ships in which you do not have
dominance and submission 111 culturallypatterned roles," she observed .

Flawed tit......
While H may appear inltiallv in-,
nocuous, this kind of thlnldng Is flawed
and can have seriOus Implications on
such current illomen's llsues as child'
care, abor11on rights and job cliscrlmina- ,
tion , Leacod&lt; ,;P&gt;!!Iended . 1t can also
undermine tiH! efforts of Third World'
women In lhetr struggle lor equality.
~
To Ulustrale her point, she cited the ;
controversial report by ~ew Vorl&lt;
Senator Daniel Moynihan as being part of 1
the "ffrst barrage of poiitical attack" on~
women In this country . The report attacks ·
what Moynihan calls the "abnormal
malrian:hy" of the black famUy . In H, 1
Leacod&lt; said, Moynihan contends that 1
black men have difficulties lindlng
employment because many black women.1
act as he8ds of households and thus
deprtve them of "adequate role models."
Moreover, he suggestS the Anny as th~
prime place where black men can go to '
escape female domination , she noted .
The Implication one can draw from the
Moynihan Report, concluded Leacod&lt;, is
that women , regardless of race, had beti
ter "play the game of being secondary, &lt;&gt;! 1
being conciliatory, and tone down the'
battle for equality" or suffer the . conse~
quences.
Leacod&lt;'s reference to Moynihan later
drew a sour comment from a member of
the audience who conwlalned th•
• .$eftalar .ls ~"I.e! .. 11&gt;1 ,War)
m(
menceme~t

speaker.
·
. Leacod&lt; s, ~re -was opoouored--bt

the Anthro po)ogy Department , thf'
Grad uate Anthropology f.ssociation ,
Women's Studies College , and the College Worl&lt;shop In Marxist Studies.

Phone ·training
sessions slated
for Main St.
Nothing can be more aggravating
when trying to reach someone on the

phone than to be exiled "on hold" for
what seems an lntenninable length of
lime.

Vet this Is only one of many
discourtesies people must grin and bear
when forced to lrequenUy use the ·
telephone for business or Informational
purposes.
.
In an effort to make University lacWty
and staff more aware ol effective p hone
conduct, the Personnel Department, In
conjunction will) New Vorl&lt; Telephone, is
organizing lour 90-mlnute trainlnll sea·
sions next week on the Main Street Cam pus.
The sessions are scheduled to precede
the irfstallation at Main ~eet o f the Centrex 0 Telephone System, a more
sophisticated and coct effective set-up ,
scheduled to be put In ~ation May 24.
Seslk&gt;ns are slated for May 21 a nd 22
at 10-11 :30 a .m . and from 1:30-3 p .m .
In Squire Conference Theatre. No preregistration Is necessary.
According to Rosalyn Wilkinson, the
program's coordinator, each seslk&gt;n will
include a fUm on correct telephone
answering r.chniques and tldts that
depk:t how people can be offended when
their caDs are received In a particular
fashion. A short quiz will be given to rein force the "do's and don 'ts" of telephone
behavior.
.
Centru U equipment will also be
available for practice d monllrallons,
along with manual and tochntcallnforrna·
tlon on cal transfer and thne-way con·
terence calls .
Wtlklnton nolad ·t het the 11"'11"*'" was
at the request ol the President's

0/l:lz&gt;td

�MayS. 1980

U I 8 therapy bus
will keep on rolling
Handicapped lMngoton Cou-· - schoolen won't looe vital ~·"•
,...~
oervioa offered by the Mobile
lnaervenllon Protect afler a!, repons
Tigges, profeuor of occupaHonal
theraP!f.
The br1ght. fully eq.q,ped bus and staff
ol thrM spoNOred by the De!&gt;artment ol
Occupallonal Theraw at tf/B was 1n
danger ol ~ Se!&gt;t. 30 because
ol lade ol continuing funcls. The Project
was Initially funded for lhrH lf"88'S by ·a
grant &amp;om the Dei&gt;artment ol Hcallh,
Education and WJ.re.
· "A total ol $132,000 has come
through which wil col\llnue the Krvlce In
lMngston County for two additional
years," Tlgga says. The monleo were
g1wn by IN New York Sta• Advioooy
Could for Menial Retardation and
Developmmlal Dloabilitics, . the Uvinglton County Board ol Supav~~on and
the IPO(IIOring U/8 department. Savlce
will be dlocOOtlrrued In W!fORllng and
Steuben Countia. •
•
The Protect wao deslgnecfand funded
to serve l!lan!f nual pre-oc:hoolen unable
to JUCb needed lha:aw 'Mrvices, which
are often localod 50 or more tnlles &amp;om
their homes. The Ptoje(:t staff consilii ol
an ococu~ lha:apist, a speech and
hearing
and a special education
fUcher who work wtlh the chlldreR In·
dlvldua!y. The range ol dlsabilllles
!Jeated lnckldes mental retardation, birth
defects, cerebral palsy, learning
·disabatles, bbl.-, and deaf.-.
Tigges no4a that I£ lJIOUngsliors with
these and olhc( handicaps fall to receive
special savlcfil' before reaching public
schoolo, H II often dficult for them to
1Uccesofully enter regular cluorooms.
lronicaly, jutlas an end ol funds loom-

ed ahead for the Projeci iMI "'-· I t selected by HEW ao one ol 17 ...aan.J
demonstration projects alutlng the International Vear ol the Ollld .
·
Had new funds not been oblalned, the '
Project would haYe clooed IIIII fal. But,
Tigges says, there was conolderable support for lis continudon ._,wy from
tboM on the livingston County Sevlce
Board and the County's Menial Health
Committee. Thanks also to the per·
ol the lMngston County Board
ol Supervisors, parents, physicians and
U/8 occupational therapy penonnel, the
bus whosa destination" card reads
"Spedal 44" will continue to roll down
rural roads, providing services to
l/OUngAers whoae educational futures de·
pend upon II.

-nee

Fredonia wants
housing regulated
Fredonia's College Council has
unanimously endorsed action o( the Student Asoodatlon there which recom mended that the Village o( Fredonia requlrt an rental unHs be registered with the

VIOage office.

In an area where the high demand and
low supply o( multiple dWellings puts student housing at a premium, both the
Council and the students are urging
village action to discourage the rental o(
substandard living quarters by requiring
their registration and annual Jnspection .
Other recommendetlons Include selling
up a grievance Committee between
landlords and tenants. a renter's checklist
for landlords, and requesting apartment

owners

to maintain rental units at ac·

ceptable standards.

charges.
Below II a list o( commlltns, and the
number ol vacancieS for the 1980-81
academic year. Could !fOU pieaM list in
rank order the three comm
on
whtc:h jiOU would like to wrve Although
ther can be no guarantee that all who
voluntee&lt; Wl1l be appointed, having an
av.w.Je pool o( candidates would be an
ilnponant J1&lt;'p toward revitalizing
comml
Ruclure of the Sena .

tht

(3) ; Academic Planning (2) ; Admissions

(3) ; Bylaws (2) ; Elections (2); Faculty .
Tenure and Privileges (2) ; Governance
(0) ; Research and Creative Activity (2) ;
Teaching Quality (4) .

u......t..,~ eo-m- Wltldt
N-mati-

a.q.Jrw

Academlc

Calendar Committee ;

Alcohol Review Board ; Bookstore; Col·
leges Chartering ;

Faculty

Exchange

SCholar.; Faculty Student Asaociatlon
Assembly; Ananclal

Aid Committee ;
Food Savlces Advtoooy; General Educa·
lion; lndlvlduall.red Admissions; Out·
standing Service Award ; 1'1-uldent's
Board on Faculty Appointments, 1'1-ornotlons, and Tenure; Purchasing Board ;
Unlvenlly Board on· Sporuored Faculty

Activity; Unlverslty-Wtclc CornmHiee on
Academic lnlegrily.
~

to
--to-

brifttl out ltudada being heW

~

~

to

Ina!
-?No. Tbl. acae IMt Friday w.. -.111 lhe antval ola .,_....,_
aecutlw vloldDtllhe
lhe......, ~11oM.

Credit-Free mCJy
have a course /f.Jr you
~/Of"Credlt-Free.....,../Of"IM...,.,_....., Naa!5. ~
tfoft"o/ manbere o/ lite~ ,_,.un~~y 18im11Ut1Jr&gt; doe~ lilt
o/
.._."'~

.........,.._,..,.,__....,,........;-.-to
........,,...,_ltM.
to
..,utlcM

Ullllt . , _ otttl..,ut jlylftf , _ , - pllme. For.,
or
r. .
ltpiiwdlcM, coli the 0/lb of Credit-Free,.,.,.,_. &amp;il..OOJ.

ARTS/CRAFTS
tJte Art atid Cnlft o/ Norw/odvrlltg Ale Fumlture; lllfr'olluc:dM 1r&gt;
~ Generol Art: AN Sedion; Genena1 Art: ~;
~: Tob 8dUr Color Slldeo otttl Print.; Pottery
;
Studio lfoun: .,.,..,.._ Palntfnt" Worbhop.

.

CHILDREN AND FAMILV EDUCATION
Creo!tf..., Dance /Of" Ch/Jdrat: Sec. A; Qmtf...,
/Of" Chllchn: Sec.
8; c:n..a- Dramo lor Chlldrai: Sec. A (7·9 yee~a); a-~..., o.- /Of"
Chlfdrm: Sec. 8 (10-11 yee~a); Eooluotfon
"'~;
G&lt;J¥Jor ChUdrat; lrroprot1e YOUTFamJI)ILfe; Your Chllchn atid T........:
A Po.ltlve Appmodt.

o.-e

Facuity are invited
to serve on Senate committees
Much o( the W&lt;XI&lt; o( the Faculty Senate
io aa:omt&gt;lished by standing commil!ees,
ad hoc cOmmJttees and •advlsoly commHtees. Any faculty member may be
nomlna\4d to serve on a committee of the
Sena . The Faculty Senate &amp;.ecuHve
Committee wishes to lnae- represen t.tlon on cormnlttees and to enc:our"ll"
jiOUng and/ or previously Inactive faculty
members to become more InVolved . In
particul.r, We would like to.ldenltfy those
faculty memben whose particular Jkills
and interests coincide with commit! e

Rescue •lseloa?
w.. It a , _ mleolon.

Maaclated

S..te

a, n.

Admlnlllratlon Review (8) ; Athletics
(3) ; Col1lges (3) ; Fac:llltia Planning (2) ;
GndJng (2). Information and Ulxary
Raoun:a (4) .

""",_ent

COMMUMCATION/~V~

A.mf...,_ Trolnlng Worbhop; Cot&gt;lnll IIIIth Shame ond Guilt;
Neetlng People· Tlte Ant Jlme; Meeting f&gt;eoi&gt;le · Whot Do You Soy Nat7

Com,..,_

COMPUI'ERS
Cerflllcate l'rognrm In 11!/onnotlofl s,.tmu; Co,_. In
lrttenlll..., .BA&amp;Ic-f.ontuoge .f'rognmrmlllfl Techm.-: Worbhop; lrtaoduc&gt;'
11oft to SmoU Computere.

DANCE/ MOVEMENT
Aeroblc:a In llfodon; Beginning Bolld: Section A; &amp;glfililng 8olld: Section 8 ; Bollroom Drmdllfl; Qmtf..., .llfoeemmt /Of" ~ Beptnlng; Oleco; Tol Chi; Top Dottdng; Yogo: Begltuolng.

HOUSE AND GARDEN
Alttlqus ond Collectibles; G""" Non Vegetobles • From o S.....S...
Gorden; Home~ Dalp; Interior Oalgn Jor,....,. Home.
lAW
La.. Eoeryone S,_ld K"""'; Seporatlon ond Dl.-ce: Learn y_. Levo/ ·
Rights.

MUSIC/1lfEA1RE
I'
Acting: ltaolc» /« ·the Beginner ond lhe ~ Bond Dhclr&gt;rw
Worbhop; Com,.,.uuon: Songomtlng ond Arrolifllllfl; ~
Clicrmber Eneemllle; lrttroductJon to ~lc Nu.k; Gollt..- W.....,.,.:
&amp;.k; Jtaa Eneemble Blfl Bond Worbliop; June In lf4#olo; Plono T.....;
Ploy the Plono • &amp;en (f You no..., Hod'-: ~. SM. ond
Company.

REAL ESTATE
Rml &amp;tore; Home Buyfllfl: A NdhodlaJI Approocli too· Complex Jo.iw;
Rail &amp;t4k: ln-ent Reo/ &amp;tote; Reo/ &amp;t4te: l.Jcenw l'h!parotlon Jor

PIMM ran order on the form below the thra commltlea on which l/011
would
to · also Indicate wftlch cornmlltfts l/011 may be qualified to
c:helr E-v effort wt1 be made to make committee appointments bued on the
prHNCitn- ol faculty . PIMM cal the Faculty Senate office at636-2003 f
l/011 ha any quallons.
I would ... to -

on

lolowtng Sen.te committees:

Rankl) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Rank2) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Renk3j _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I could cha the - - - - - - - - - - - "" " ' - ·
~nt

So,.,...,_,
SCIENCE

~y;

"'-tion Jor College Chemletr)l.

SKJU. DEVELOPMENT
Auto .llfalntu•oce: &amp;.k; Core ond Nolntmonce of the J~ IJI.
cyde; / , _ "'-lidooi/Of" Graduate ond f'lo/Lwlonol Sdtool """-oe
~ 69&gt;-La,._: &amp;.k; Speed Reodlng: &amp;dio!t A; Speed
R_.,.: Section .B.

SPORTS/RECREATION
fMrdee """ y - Heollh; Go¥: Begltuolng; lnlrodiH:IIoti to ,.,.,_ Avfnl;,.,.,.,.,. Prloc Gr-...1 Sdiool; Roc:quett;ol/ (81.,.,, Noll Roq. Owb),Jow
. . . . . /Of"~~:
Beginning; &amp;oifMt/Of" ........
.-.; 64-~ /Of" Women; Sllv-Diolllfl; T""'* .........,... A; T""'*
......... 8 .
.

""'*'•

LJTERATUR£/WRmNG

W.....,.,.

~ Mitlllfl; Pro/It ond ,.,.._..from Wrfdnt ~ Wrtterw'
W.....,.,.; Wntllifl
/Of" Hlflli Sdiool &amp;udenta: I'IIWW!f111 y_.

Wrltlllfl.

�May 8.-l980

....

..,.__

........

I

otudy jlf lido oubjec:t. ADiddng f from . . . , _ 1-.
and "*''I the Alib. Hael She and the ...
chives of the American Jewloh tf-.rtcal Society' the
Amerbn Jewllh Aft:hlva, anct .._ olllcl.l rwcords In
the Nallonal An:hMrs and the ~· of Stale,
Adler .......,_. how disir1genuous FOR was on the subjec:l of ARI&gt;-Jewloh lnlerals, how lillie he rally'
uncicnloocl the ArD. and how he received the
Jftlllh vole wtlhout really doing much for them In a
Iangiiie way. Adler c:lemonolraled how the President
mel the ...._ arising out o( homeless Jewish
HolocaUII mugees with mere rhetoric. He aloo
studied the Arnerbr&gt; Jewish opposition to Statehood .
Adler's conlrt!ull!&gt;n to an Important collecllon of
reappra~Ais of Herf.erl Hoover's p!'esklency dwelled
on why and how the coni mporary New Left played
up Hoover as compared to FOR. Hoover's Isola·
tionism, Adler showed , a~ to a group deuoled
to a de-acalation ol American overseas com·
milmenll. ·
Indo O.IN, the 8tlldeftt and Blac:k IDOftlllenbl
Back In I 954, Acller wlltlled against Involvement in
the lndo-Otlna Imbroglio, contending that another
Kaea would be " unthinkable." ln 1968, he called the
Vietnam War the "most egregious blunder of modem
limes.~ the least defend&gt;le war ever. He held that this
was the fnt time since Pearl Harbor that a •tron!r. ar·
llculate, reopec1able body ol opinion was observed as
being aplmt the expansion ol International obligations . At the rlok ol ollending those who continoed to
believe In a Cold War psychosis, Adler noted that
every piece ol real estate In the Communist sphere
was not a threat to American security . ~na. In
1968, at the time of Lyndon Johnson's "abdication,"
he ww clearly that our Vietnam commitment was an
example ol an outmoded policy. Even though Isola·
tionlsm as such was no longer popular, neithl!r was It
P&lt;adical for the Untied States to police the whole

world .

.

Durill!l the era of student unrest , Adler as a wellknown, weD-tasted classroom figure was In great de man¢*&gt; Interpret that sad time to a confused public.
~ .llways lek that each generation of students had Its
own ch.racter and that none monopotJZed vice or vir ·
tue. For him World War ll veterans were the most
serious students and the I 950's students symbolized
an "easy buck" philosophy whereby adolescence was
prolonged and serious Intellectual endeavor often was
· ol lesser priority. On the other hand . the 1960's
generation for many reasons was noted for its ques·
tioning ol establishmentarian values. That In ttseH was

'

grut Wl1ler and dernonolrateo the! there need be no
confllcl between skJIIful leaching and oound ocholar- •
ship. When Jubuo W. Pratt rdred,_Selig Adler re·
called his senoe of lalmess, his ~t ~ en·
lhusiMm In his subjod, and his abllily to trantler that
enthusiasm In that subject to others. There can be no

kne, Adler malntalned, but excesses p!'Ompted him to
accuse leftist students ol neo-Fasclsm, indeed ol a
fascism of the left. While student lawbreakers should
be punished , Adler urged negotiating student
grievances, puftlng their efforts into positive and normal channels. He adiiOCAied giving students more
voice In administrative decision -making. Adler lek that
the greatest threat to the universities was not the acUvlsls themselves ~~ the fad that their actions might
lead to a righ
~eactlon . Campus adlvtsm, he
asserted 1 consti
of .a conflict among the
"Wood51ock nation" of alienated youth who wanted to
transform the campus into a launching pad lor revolu tion. and frustrated Blacks and lower middle class people who lek pushed and alienated . Incidentally, while
suffering class Interruptions and even some abuse, he
remained steadfast and weathered that storm as he did
many others.
Adler spoke out, too, about the Black Revolution .
He maintained that the disordertand riots that marked
Black frustration , were the worst enemies of ctvU
rights. Adler contended that Blacks had been treated
as stepchildren too long and advocated a "MarshaU
Plan"·type aid to assist them educationally and
cukurally In order to enable them to obtain equal opportunity with whlteo.

Teaching and acholarahlp don't have to conflict
Selig Adler exemplifies the great teacher and the

doubl that these words also charactertze.Jhe man who
~ethem .
·
In 1957, a former student who assisted In the
prepagtion of the Index for The loolationlsl lmpulae
wrote Acller, "lt was largely through you that I dec:lcled
to major In· history .. .! always lek the! I gotoo much_
more out of your classes than other students did, portly because of your Interest In me, because you are a
really great teacher, and partly because you always u - '
pected so much of me." Another former student,
himoeli a well-known M&gt;d popular secondary school
social studies teacher, wrote of Adler to the Untversily
at Buffalo Alumni News , "ln aD the years that l spenl
as an Ufldergraduale and graduole student-and later
as a teacher- I never found a more luck! lecturer ... !
still remember those delightful seminars that he con·
ducted at the old.Grosvenor Ubrary ... Historlography
became a happy experience In Intellectual research
under his guidance and, after more than live years ot'
retirement, l still flnd myod reading and rereading
books that he was wont to suggest." One of Adler's
doctoral students recaUed that he w"" fond of telhng
fledgllng graduate students that " many are caDed but
lew are chosen ." But, this student steled he n'l9fected
to mention those students who were not "called" or
"chosen ," but "helped to success through the un ending patience and effort of outstanding teachers •
such as he."
·
Retirement always marks a change and a loss. A
colleague of Adler's noted that he is irreplaceable and
that while the History Department and the Slate
University of New York at Buffalo have been honored
by his service, they can no longer be the same. Of.
liciaOy, Selig Adler has retired, but hopefuOy aU this
means is that he no longer meets classes at this Unlver- I
slty , lor he wUlstill oocupy an olllce , continue to do his ·•
research and writing, and coun'sel his colleagues and '
friends . Thus, retirement for him becomes a new •
beginning in which aD w11t share .

This material Is excerpted from a longer appreda - .
lion of Dr. Adler appearing in a Fe.bochrljt, "An
American Historian : Essov• to Honor SeHg Adler, "
published bv SUNY Buffalo.

Public .Safety
salutes six officers
Six officers from the Department of
Public Safllty have received special
recognitiOn lor outstanding service and
contrbutiono to the Unlvflslly.
Patrolmen Mark J . Fr ntzel, Gary
Polefoky and George N. White have been
named "Officers of the Year" and
Patrolmen Daniel Jay , Joseph McK!ni)On
and Klric R. Wlolset- have receiv d Cer·
llflcata of Award .
Presented by Director ol Public Safely
Lee E. Gnflln , the awards r£P&lt;esenl the
highest honoro which can be given to the
officers.
The Fr ntzel-Polelsky·Wh trio were
ctted lor their utra efforts and time spent
· In ~tr~
Jooeph EScott Complex
"They prided
mselws in ~l!ing to
know the otuden who soon rcaltoed that
· they COI.IId r.l&lt; to these 'cops' when they
had a problem. Very often students
reporting a problem would ask specillcallv for one or t1v ol these ollicers,"
Gnffln noted .
OHlcu J•y was oiled for his service as
doopatcMr In .... Public Safety hodq..-n. Griffin pointed out that he "alto
ond became the editor ol the
lint slatewlcic Public Safety MWS!etter
which It now mailed to other Sla
oct1001o ao an Information exchange on
whlot Is '-ni1ll eloewhcr •
~ ~non was recogruzed for
"" high .Undatd ol liCiivlty •nd worlc
ethic, and for
the department In
communbtlono with rnlnorily oluden .
"He has
rnemal In diffutin!l

many potential problems by accepting the
adaed duties of acting as liaison officer
with campus monorlty groups ," Griffin
said.
Officer Walser was honored for his productoon of a special orientation slide
presentation for new .students, faculty
and steff. "Kirk was responsible for the
coordonallon. photography. processing
and narration of this program and il has
been very weU receJved . ·• according to
Groffin
Officer Fr"'!tzel has been a member ol
the Public Safety unit since September ,
1976.
'
Officer Pole!sky, who recently transferred to Brooklyn . served on th., U/ B
force lor 2'/2 years and Patrolman White
joir&gt;ed U/ B In I 976.
Patrolman Jay has served 6'12 years in
th" d vfslon Officers McKinnon and
Walser joined the U/ B d ivision In I 976.

• Sexism ?

SUMMARY OF PLACEMENT AND SALARY SURVEY
FOR J979 SILS GRADUAT£S

.--•.eea.•l

for the past five years, belleves that sex·
ual equably In the various heakh care
lidds cion be ach~ed through a better

l:~~v: .the

pallernS of social

Ses not tbe problem
As an obotetwr ol · car- ladders" In
the heakh care flotld , Howe has arrlved·at
thlo condutlon.
•tn an~ given heakh car I ld. public

newcomer, whether
rna!. or I male, II not the problem . The
nlns aooeptance by the
problem ill
pradlllot&gt;en the
•
Howe. " 1969 Phi Beca Kappa
grad
of .... Unlwnlly of Connec.·
lieu\, hoWt the Ma*r's aftd Ph 0 !1om
OoCXJCplance ol

Cornel.

.

MLS graduates during 1979 (Jan., June &amp; Sept.)
Responding to Survey (as ol4/18/80)

69

ln library and library related poo111ono
Employed In non-library poslllons but olten deaUng
• with Information management
Conllnlllng !lfaduatc study
Uneftll&gt;lo)led-oetkl!&gt;9 worlc

45

Number ol known oalarla

37

Lowest
Higflest
Average

.

S I 0 ,000
$28,000
$13,934

Number ol pl.eernen by type

Pubk.._

54

6
1
2

Olllbrary or Information center

Elanentaty .. -=onclary oclloollllnry/medla ~leTS
~?*)trary or learning raource center,
-librarleo &amp; inlcrmallon/1'-.rch ~len

8
8
11
16

�n

May 8, 1980

Class runs
recruitment
conference

FSEC hears reports on
Continuing Ed, safety, governance
Mid....,
.- ........... _.,
- . w.
conoldonod--.. - - ............... .....,..-..,
-c-.A,d!U
Tho - . . - &lt;ollod ., ardor .. z,30 p .m. .,

-

-

....... Choir).

-"'o.-'._..

A.I Tho---lono_.......,..

Tho_crl . . . . . . - ... - . _ . . . t
untiMoy 14.

---He . . -._ . . .
-....... ____ ., ___
IIOINI!I--""' - - .. .. ...... ..........
. Tho
. ._
.._
.......
.
hod ._
_
_

-

b-odoool-.lorTAo_.GAo, _ . b

. . . . . . . lf'hR

~~-_.oy ·bolng-lor ... Olllco"' ~ .... Aftlr.

d:.,Hod~~~~~

"' ..._ Onlor, lor odd-..!

-

.. ""' c:c.m-. Thlo ' - - ......

pootlculodvdw-

dolont ond ........ -

dloNptions. Thlo ,._
~---"'lhoFSECb~

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

L.lnry------.
.
- o( ...
._
ThoO...
nwt:Mir
_ _ _ . _ . , ...

Focully

s-- c...-

on . . . , . _ ond

_ o n d _ b _ .....
140!16-.. Ho&lt;ollod_,w- .. '"' 6 oddod 1&gt;11 h FSEC "" Apt 16, lor

ec.r.r-·.

RECOMMENI)A.

110N "2. Jlodo1pound lor RECOMMENOATlON

"2...-.dbv-O'Nell .... lhoChoO .-

.,.._"'n

oloo ...... Moo 6 IIECONNEN!li'.TION
•1 _
- ."'
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MFC-C Wdd&gt; , 0. -Dec. 1979

Com- mcmbcn' S.. ac..ll, a..ln H
V Ebm . Barbwa Moran , Robert O'Shea . Pewr
Regan . lnllng ~ - 8wban Howd - Chato ·
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.cadcmk unb of SUNY/Buff.ao . Tbia recomrnm datton means tn.t wllhtn acadcmk: untts tprowema ,
Oep.rfments, tchook. end ~ teCHt wrttten
....... bo -~&gt;~~ ... faculiy.....,.."'" ....... to
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EDUCA110N

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Faculiy crl fw Soaow
Buflalo. and .... Chan&lt;n
crl SUNY IBuflalo

_,_ w-.,-. a.....-

unique kind

ot ~I c:onfertnce

held on lhe Amherst Campus -11v .
The c:onlerenca lhe product o( a

- - l o n g planning .tbt 1&gt;11• ca.
of organizational communication
students headed 'bv commu.-..
proteuor Linda McCalliller.
Their goal was to undersband
organlzallonal lheooy from a pncllcal
foundation . The besl way to accornplloh
that, they decided , was to form an experimental corporation which would
deal with real life complexltla. The
company, actually an experimental
public relations agency, had one client,
Admissions and Records. The objodlve
was to slage a day-long recruttmenl
conference focusing on IJ/ B's lacultla
ot Arts and Letters and Social 5c:Wnces,
the areas ot academia having lhe most
trouble allrac:tlng students. "
"We chose Arts and l.d8s and
Social Sciences because of the
challenge ," according to a~­
son lor lhe group. "Theoe lecultla grant
degrea tl-!at are just as virile and career·
promising as othcn such as EngineerIng, Computer Science or Manii!ICmenl, but students won't believe II. Our
job was to aeate a message that would
have a positive lmpacl on enrollment
and convince Incoming students of the
validity ot both the departments and a
liberal, broad-based education ."
,
The class eleded olllcen, fanned
departments and began the process ot.
organizational development. Each
department had responsibilities and
deadlines, and each department realized conllicts and problems.
Inter-and inlnl-departmental conllict
was not lhe only problem the class had
to lace . They found public opinion
heavily agalnJI them. Originally, the
event was planned to allract at lust
1,000 people, according to Prolaoor
McCallister. But public: opinion Is a dilllcuk obstacle to overcome. ~ Ume
went on, lhe group realbed their target
number might not be met. "lfwecanget
300 people on campus for Am and l..elten and Social Sciences, we'D have a
successful conference," McCallister was
quoted as saying then.
The day ot lhe program arrived and
less than 100 people showed up.

"Of course we were disappointed ,"
saki M&lt;:Callisler- 'The work and .tbt
that .i.ent Into lhe planning and
organization

was

awesome . The

students did a top-notch job. Expecting
high ochool juniors and Mniors to come
here (to U/8) for lnfonnallon on ·a
liberal education may have been

unrealistic."
OveraU, the clasa Is sallslled . They
discovered problems no lheooy book
could have praented . They dealt wtth
thooe probltms and managed to have a
good lime right along.

'DIAL' service called a s uccess
D.I.A.L. (Direct lnfonnallon Aa:aa
Line), a phone-in service wlwre tapes ar
available on various topics concemlng
studen and student life, Is planning an
expo.nolon for lhe lal.
D.I.A .L. , started bv Jose.ph J .
Krolwwlak, director ol Orlenbollon, wa&gt;l
into service on March 19. During its fnt
two ~Welcs, DI:A.L avmoged 32 calls a
night with ~How to Deal With Depresoion" and "Faibng a CourM? · Your
Alternatives." at lhe most reqUest..!
POIIllve r action from students to lhe initial 58 1apes Is the inatn ruton for the

-w.·s expansion .

N- lapes planned for lhe faD v.illlin·
dude • ot health;telated topicS,
and an lncr-ln tapes duling woth personal &lt;OnC*I'nS and cademlc eMparl-

menu

Along with lhe phone-In __.a for
studenlt,
Ortentallon
wil oller a
sarv!co to Unlwni!Y dopartmen
A
~~ rMV author. a tape's ~

and have Orientation record and advertise K. A I wiD be charged per tape and
lhe money I'1ICleived will sUpply funding
for D.I .A.L.
For more inlonnation , contact the Offlee ot Student Affairs/ Orientation at
636-2259.

Climate study
A clornate modM""'Iion projeCt in
Dayton, Ohio, will measure the effect of
urblln forHtry managem nl on ImprovIng air qualrty, lowering enerw consump
lion. lmJl"'ovlng human comfort, and
reducing noiM lewis as - • u nlj&gt;rovlng
lhe .......1 _quality ot the metropolitan

.......

Urban Fores1ry faculty at SUNY'o Ett
vtronmental Science and Fores~ry Col
loge at Cornel are '"-I"' cooperators irl
lhe landmatk otudy whlth involva
City ol Deyton and )he ~orut

s.va,

...

�D

May 8, 1980

SeUg Adler: An Appreciation
the survey coune in American history. As a matter of
fact, the Univenily of Buffalo has been rather
noteworthy In this resped. Profeu&lt;n Pratt and Hor·

EDITOR'S NOTE;
The /olovlna
-.,. of Dr.
JICIIII
lribute
Jo
caeer
an _
_Sdg
...., Adlor
.........,
hiolorian UJioo c:hanged muc:ll of our "*&gt;tlng Glooul

'*

ton also lectured before freshmen students on a
regular basis. Adler began teaching the survey coune
42 years ago and continued to teach at least one hal
of K almost every semester until hls retirement. His
feeting is that lower-level undergraduates should have
contact with veteran professors and indeed, the U.S .
Survey was always one of the most heavily attended

,..,.....,. .... ,., uho chronlded the~ INndo be·

the """ .-1&lt;1- of t h e _ , cmlury, UJioo
the ,., rtudlcd the evolullon of a local
rdglouo communlly Cll • relaled 1o the nallonal pie·
lure, and, euen more Important, who exp&lt;»ed
~of oludenll lo the Jov• of oludylng the paot.
Dr. AdWr "'"' be retiring June 30, cbolng out a
53·jiCCir - . , o.olth this 1ns11tu11on as both an

-

Jor

courses.

Through most of hls career, Selig Adler en!OYi&lt;l
large class enrollments that numbered many hundreds
even In his · specialized advanced courses. He was
understandab)y proud of these classes because he
regarded htrriseH prtmartly as a teache;. In recom·
mending Adler for a distinguished professorship , G.
Lester Anderson, former Vice President for Academic
Affairs, noted that he belonged in the pantheon of the
great teachers of the Collegeof Arts and Sciences and
stated that he would rather have a child of his in Selig
Adler's class of 100 than in somebody else's class of
between 15·20.
Professor Adler's graduate seminars have consistently been popular though demanding. Once when
asked his motivation in seminar teaching, he ~nd ·
ed simply , "I try to pass on whatever skills I may have
to my students to help them to become useful and
creative teachers of history."

undefvadldc sludent a:"! f~uky ""'m'-.

a, MUton Plaur
--.oiH~

Selig Adler, born in 1909 In Baltimore, Maryland,
was !he. eldest of two children of Joseph and Della
Adler. Joseph was an immigrant from Kltzengen, Ger·
many who made a living as a traveUng salesman
throughout the south. He had received a solid educa·
lion in the old country and being inteUectually curious
he continued to read and to learn. Current events,
history, and especially the Civil War, were his main In·
terests. He began to travel in the south in 1893, a little
more than a generation after the War Between the
States ended and memories were still fresh adding to
Joseph's already considerable knowledge. At times
Selig traveled with his father and always on the
endless train rides, or In lonely hotel rooms, there
were lessons on history given by father to son. And in
the evenings, after the day's sales were done , they
would often visit actual Civtl War battle sites and the
education continued and the son's love 61 history and
the past took shape .
After Selig's father died . the sixteen-year-old son
left high school to take over liis route . Success never
came and he realized he was not destined to become a
commercial entrepreneur! Selig's family dispatched
hfm to New York so as to finish his secular schooling
and at the sam'e time to continue his religious educa·
lion In 1927, he graduated from the New Utrecht
High School in Brooklyn , and the next year brought
him tO:Suffalo. the city of his mother's birth , where he
enrolkd in 11le College of Arts and Sciences of the
University of Buffalo, then a small school of approximately 655 undergraduates and 85 facuhy . The
University atmosphere was a heady one for an in·
quisttive and bright nineteen-year-old . Chancellor
Samuel P. Capen, a creative and active educator, was
. in the process of forging a first class liberal arts college
built around an unusuaUy flne young faculty and an
Honors Plan which offered selected students an op·
portunity to meet with a mentor individuaUy or in small
groups and study intensively a given subject .
Adler's chief mentors in the History Department
were four : Julius W. Pratt instructed in American
dilomatic history and the history of American Expansion John T. Horton was reaDy a .. univenal man,"

-·

teaching Medieval History. American colonial history ,
and American Government. Augustus Shearer and
W&amp;llred B. Kerr were Adler's instructors In European
history.
Selig Adler met Janet Sukernek in 1930. a
freshman student at the Univers~y . Since both were
Jewish community activists. they had thai in common
as weD as Janet's Interest In History. It is unresolved
whether Janet's historical concern was that real , 0&lt;
whether she took such courses to impress Selig. She
admits to a minor in History so she could understand
hfm! Thus began a long courtship that lasted six years.
To this marrtege were born Eaen and Joseph . Today
Janet and Selig are the proud grandparents of five,
ages one to fourteen .

_.t ...._

Eatlre car.· Except for graduate work, Selig Adler's entire col·
legiate career from student to PI'Ofessor was spent In
Buffalo. A summo cum lo!IM graduate of the Univer·
sity of Buffalo In 1931. he received the maslen and
docton degrees from the University of IUinois In
!932 and 1934.
After reccMng the doctorate, Adler returned to Buf·
falo but the Depression precluded a college position .
He received an appointment In the Buffalo school
S)IS!em where he t.aughl from 1934 to 1947. BeginnIng in 1938, Adler taught in the University's extension
and oumrner programs. In 1947. he joined the funday facully as Assistant Professor of History. PrornolionJ came relatively fast , In 1950 to Asoocia ProfHIOI' and two yura later to lui professor.
·
Wrth the r brcm~l in 1959 of Julius W Prall , his
rapected and inllpiring teacher and mentor, Adler
was ac&gt;PO!nted the next yooar the Samuel Paul Capen
Profaoor of American Hostory. It was abogether filling
that Adler
Pratt's sua;essor 11le Proless&lt;nhip was
atabllshed to perpetua Chancelor Capen's love of
Anwrbn democracy and to promote the teaching

·.

'Retirement
marks change
and a loss.'
and interpretation of American history. A Facuhy
Commillee agreed that Adler reflected this charge and
it cited 1-rts reputation as a "revered teacher" of history
to youth, his espousal of the ideals of democracy, his
dedication to research , and both his national repula·
tion as a scholar and his visiting professorships at CorneD University and the UniversHy of Rochester.
Selig Adler's last academic promotion and recogni·
lion came in 1975 with his being named Distinguished
Servtce Professor, The Stale University had only
recently aeated this category and Adler's inclusion in
the fir:sl group so honored is significant . The title of
Distinguished Servtce Professor recognizes "a high
level of performance in teaching and University ac·
tivilies, matched by length of service much above the

norm ...

An elem~t of humor
Student evaluations became popular vehicles in the
wake of the unrest of the 1960's and 1970's. Adler's
regular evaluations and those solicited for the
Distinguished Professorial appointment were uniform·
ly positive. They noted the ever-present element of
humor (who will ever forget Adler as Theodore
Roosevek charging up San Juan Hill . or Adler as a
vicious German U-boal commander?) . his encourage·
ment of critical thinking, hls concerns and offers of ex·
tra help to students, his loyahy to them , his personal
enthusiasm for history which awakened a simUar
response in his classes. One doctoral student
distinguished between two types of. college. pro lesson-those who make an immediate impression
and those who make a lasting impression. When the
professor does !he second he is exceUent, and when
he does both - as Adler did for him-he is distin·
guished . Another graduate student ranked Adler as a
special kind of teacher-diplomat because · in one
seminar he recalled the Professor as balancing sue·
cessluUy a communist, an Air Force colonel, and a
Protestant minister!
Selig Adler's concept of history and of the way H
should be taught is relatively simple and clear. He 1s a
traditionalist, not a faddist . To him history is a
fascinating story that ought to be unfolded
chronologically, and with much joy In de.ocriblng d~­
ferlng inllll'pl'etations of people's lliOHvations. Certain·
ly he does not hold to the erroneous thesis that history
is mere detail and dales. On the other hand , he
believes that the presentation of the discipKne must
begin with the essentials and he feels that eyen mun·
dane facts can be attractWely presented. Adler, unlike
ott- senior prolusors, never shirked from teaching

An expert on l.alatlonlem aDd diplomacy
·
In 1957, a long-standing interest in foreign . policy._
motivation and isolationistn resulted in the publication
of what most historians regarded as Adler's major
work, The /solotionist/mpulse: Its TwenUeth ·Century
Reaction . While he did not write the essay on "Isolationism" In the 1978 publication of the Encyclopedia
of American Foreign Policy , a reviewer asked who
unless it were Selig Adler, could write as authoritative·
ly on that subject as the man who did write it. Thus.
despite all the publications on isolationism that ap·
peared since 1957, Adler'nemains a seminal work .
Adler summarized much of his thinking on
twentieth-century American diR.k&gt;macy in a general
work in 1966 , The Uncertain Giani, 1921 · 1941 :
American Foreign Poficv Between the Wars, a volume
in Macmillan's American_ Diplomatic History series.
This book was intended more for the general reader
and reflects Adler's desire to communicate to the non specialist.
The United Jewish Federation cf Buffalo asked
Selig Adler to undertake the writing of a history of Buf·
falo Jewry. With the assistance of SUNY at Buffalo
EngUsh Professor Thomas E. ConnoUy, From Ararat
to Suburbia: A History of the Jewish Community of
Buffalo, N .Y . was published in 1960. The research for
this volume was a veritable detective story for the
authors and their researchers. Volunteer muster rolls.
draft lists of Civil War regiments, tombstones, old
prayer books, country records, census returns,
synagogue , club , and community organization
records, leiters. family Bibles, scrapbooks, as weU as
interviews with leaders and elderly survivors were only
some of the sources· used . The Buffalo Euenlng News
declared that the history of the Jews in Buffalo was
better documented than any other local immigrant
group and the Adler volume was partial proof of this
assertion.
More thaD 30 artida
Adler's (more than 30) articles were summations of
Important issues, descriptions of contemporary foreign
policy, especially isolationism, and other ground·
breaking contributions to new historical knowledge.
(He) was the flrst historian to gain access to
Woodrow Wilson's Palestine papers.
In 1951 , the Journal of Modem History pubUshed
what was probably Adler's most controversial ar·
ticle-on the War GuUt question and American disUiu·
slonmenl in the Post-World War I decade. It was a
study of how revisionist interpretations of the causes of
World War affected American isolationist thought. As
he did earlier when Adler spoke about this same sub-'
jed at an historical convention, Harry Elmer Barnes
dispute.d him , even wrote a polemical response , and
incidentaUy enhanced Adler's reputation .
Using records kept by Dr. Charles Stockton, grand· 1
father of the late Dean of the University's Medical
School who kept a case·study day-by-day analysis of
his first-hand observations of the McKinley operation
and post-operative period after the Pre~idenl was shot
in Buffalo In 1901 . Adler pieced togetheo ~fascinating
story of l'lat sad episode . The implication was that ·
McKinley might have had a beller chance to survive if
Dr. Roswell Park had been available for the surgery. if
the President had been operated on in the Buffalo
General Hospital's new operating room , and if the
surgeon (incidentally, a gynecologist) had allowed for
drainage of the wound. This article, published in the
prestigious SclenUfic American , was abstracted in the
Journal of the American Medico/ AJsocjotion ,
dramatized on radio, and 'WOO the flrst prize of the
Asoociation of State and Local Historical Societies.
Most of Adler's writings since 1968 have been con·
cerned with foreign policy. He made several studies of
Frankhn D. Roosevek's Middle Eastern policies and In
aU probability. Mler's lllod&lt;s are the mQSt thorough

f

·- ·~: -···--·

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                    <text>MAY 1, 1980

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFA LO

ar?
We may die
of boredom
before it starts

,

HMonday night's cl.bala In Forber Hal
II any Indication, I the cOld ww ever
. _ up, -'D aldie of boredom follow........ lnl..-mlneble barrage of rh«torrc.
Wadel Ww ID? was the topic liS two
,.,._......_of the Sovlot Union and a
U .S . State Department spokesman
endlololy sldrttd qualont p.-1 by four
t.cullv pMellols. l.awr, they fended otf
w....- and dodged accusations from an
audience of las !bon 100 which applauded Sovlot hypeibole and hlaed and
snlc:Mnd 111 a somewhat less than
ton:.ful StMt Oopartmcnt advocate _
lntrmallonal Colege oponsored.
Dr. AndrewTokunov, pennanentcorrespondent fa. Ptaudo at the United Nations Sovlot Mliislon, and Yurt Belobnw,
pr- ~ ,.,. the Sovlot mlssl!&gt;n.
wee the ~athu indlslingulshable Soviet
pair. Belobnw's English was better. Dr .
Wlllam HJD of the Soviet Desk In the
State Department was a pallid
opokesman fa. an agency which just that
I'IIOI1ting had lost Its c:hlcf as a resuh of a
policy dlspult wtthln the Administration.
The faculty questioners were Dr.
Jama Mo.an of the Western New York
P~ Center; Dr. Abdul Raoof, a native
of .Jtaq, who Is an aaodate profaao&lt; of
polltic:aJ ldcnc:e at Buffalo Slate; Dr. He~
ju Bennett, aaodate professor of history.
U/B; and Charles Ha_yn_le, academic
coOrdlnato. at Tolstoy College, also Introduced as a professor of radical politics.
O..dlaace

Each pandst was allowed one question Csubmitterl In advance) . Moran
wanted to know how each nation thinks a
de-escalation In world tensions can be
_ achieved _ Raool accused both powers ol
acting In the Mlddle East In ways not In
harmony with the paoplc there, and Inquired how this situation could be Improved . Bennett asked under what conditions either country would contemplate
oendln!l fon:a Into other nations, In the
Mid-East« dawhent . Haynie requested
an -ment of how lo!)g the panelists
lflought the people In the U.S .S .R. and
the U.S . would put up with the oppres-

·--·-,......

VOL 11

e

NO. 29

Rennie will head Grad School;
Smith appointed to Aging Center
Dr_Donald W _ Rennie will be the new
dean of the DIYiolon of Graduale and
~alional

Education, Praldent Robert

L. Ketter has announced .
Rennie, who Is currently chairman of
the Department of PhYsiolo9Y, wiD
assume hio
dulles on June 1. He
replaca Dr. Andrew W . Holt who has
been -w.g as acting dean since the May
1979 death of Glhit D. Mo«c.
In a letter to students, faculty and staff,
President Ketter noted that the lJniver$lty
was fortunate to have a colleague of such
outstanding qualificatiOns assume this
"m&lt;»t Important position of leedersh!p In
the academic communHy."
Ketter also otfered slnceN gratitude to
Dr. Holt, "for his excellent service as acting dean. He has our deepest appreciation and esteem for his loyalty and commitment to this University."
A native ol Seattle, Rennie ,
ed his B .S .· at the Unlv - tY of
Washington and his M.S . and M.D.degrees from the UnlversHy of Oregon
School of Medicine.
He was an Instructor of physiology at
the University of Wisconsin and served In
the U.S . Alr Force Medical Corps before
joining U/ B In 1958.
He was named associate chairman of
the Physiology Department In 1968 and
served as acting chairman from 1971 to
1973, when he became chairman .
An active researcher, Rennie has most
recently been studying envlronmentallnOuenca on cardiopu)monary and cellular
func!lons with a liVe-year, - S1.9 million
grant.
Author of more than 75 pUblications
and abstrads, Rennie has served on a
number of unlvenlty committees and Is a
member of American Physiological
Society, Sigma XI, the . American
Asaoc:latlon lor the Advancement of
Science and the Undersea Medical

new

but familiar and rewarding terrain of
chairmanship of . a vibrant department
and enter the more murky realm , for me,
of University administration ."
Rennie said he was buoyed In his decision by seve~al audal factors : "the certainty of the continued vitabty of the
department, the knowledge that the Oflice of the G~aduate School Is staffed by
the most competent guides a newcomer
could expect, the lull and enthusiastic
support of the Ptaldcnt to further
strengthen the Graduata School as It
SMks to Identify and tustaln the very
highest standards of scholarship, and the
knowledge that the faculty and students
are as anxious as I to confront and erase
common concerns ...
The dean designata said he has
"always been Impressed by the profound
Influence the Graduata School has had ,
working almOII exdusively through the
this week thanked "the good wiD of the graduate faculty, on the
faculty and admlnlstrallvereview group5. - tone and operation of thil UntversHy-for
who spent a great deal of tha valuable examples, the establishment of a viable
model for UnlversHy faculty and profeslime on this oearch. for the confidence
' they haw cxpoased In me" and extend- llonal staff governance and the Initiation
ed hlo regard to other candidates "who ol a periodic exlemal review process that
helped focus the llsues. For my part," he has become a statewide Institution .
saki, "this was an exlraordinarlly dlfflcuh Equally lmpraotvc have been the high
daclllon - to leave the always demanding quality and dedication of the graduate

~Rennie

students we have encountered In all
phases of our departmental teaching. I
don't sec how this combination of faculty
expertise and student ability can fall if
they are properly harnessed ."
The yean ahead , Rennie predicted,
"may provide some of the most severe
tests on the University In most ol our
memories. But they promise an e1a ol
unprecedented opportunities for higher
education to shape the thought and action of new (and not so new) gcnenotlons.
I hopesomlol my own optimism and en-thusiasm for the task of mHIIng these opportunities wiD be shared by my colleagues-faculty and students alike."
Lester Smith. who served as a found ing staff member of the Nationallnstttute
on Aging, has been appointed director of
the Muhldlsclpllnary Center for the Study
ol Aging, U/ B President Robert L. Ketter
has announced.
He assumes the position May I , also
jolnlr;&gt;g the faculty as clinical assoolate
prolessor of medicine (gerontology) _
Harold Brody. who has served as acting director of the U/ B Center for two

·---·-·......

Comics have a place in American history
~ Hlslory Is more than Paul Revere , the
Bania of Vlcklburg, the New Deal, Pori Harbor and
the Enola Gay.
For iiiUdcnts In
Milton Plesur's History 397 .

or.

"American Popular Cultural History, 1900-1945," H
can also be a .,_ole or a comic strip.
8oth were In evidence last Thursday as the class
convened fa. an llklslrated locture on the American
comic s1rtp given by U/8 Student Allain VIce President Rlchtlrd A. Siggd&lt;ow.
- Before class began, a student was In Plesur's olflce ,
turning In her "project" for the semester. three bags
full of II. The projec:l was to resean:h and prepare typical
AmeriCan foods of the first hall of the century, and
here were the rctults: covered dishes of various
" ' - and llzas; large rectangles tightly wrapped In
fol.
rn&lt;&gt;rMII of ~ on a platter.
AI was being llteraly stuffed Into • •mal desk-top
rclrigenlor Ia. later "evaluation" and grading. Plaur
wanltd
the cake arOund In class: "No," said
the l&gt;Mer-ocholar.
Plauf eysd the "homework" with some sallsfactlon,
nodng that he had supplied apeclaJiy tampilng and
budget~ D.praolon era redpas for the pro-

to-

jec:l

We_..._. _ _._ .... ft!M
PurtAI rn.y tum up tha nc.a, but ,_ would deny
that whal "'-tea
II a slgNficant rcpraentallon of
how Ameolca -...d. A thousand yqn from now a Big
~say- about us u - ... today than the
of the American SOdologicaJ
Alloclatlon

*

So, too, with what we read-and like It Or not,
many, manll_ Americans "read" the comlcl. Great
communications dynutla were built on them, and on
many a Sunday morning In many an ~ fvlng
room , enltre families wouldgathu around to enjoy the
big, colorful Sunday -'Ions.
Sbtty million peop!e still read the Sunday comics,
VIce Praldent Slggd&lt;ow noted as he began hll lecture on what has been a lav«ite allOCation of hll
through the years. Fot1y per cent of al adults read
them, he said; and •the more education you've had,
the more llkalv you are to be a fan . Figures show thct
48 per cent c/ aD college grads read the comics, compared to only 41 per cent of those with a high school
education.
When "Ooonabury" was temporarily dropped from
the Washington papers, one senator had U telexed·ln
to him dally.
And who could forget Mayor Florelo LaGuardia
reading the comics over the radio to ma.a ol New
Yori&lt;cro during a 1940t ,__per strt.e?
The
popular of' modem comics, said Sig!ld&lt;ow. as measured bv total ctrculatlon, are : th«_
domatlc: comedy, "Biondie" Cnow • tottertn91
~) : "Peanuts" Ia 3G-yeat--old liM¥) ; "BaetiO
Bailey," and "Hagar the Hon1blc "
So.popular has the ~comic strip been, said
S~ggo~~ow, that . - y .,_. cxape
c~
Science Non- has Nn at least one. Even the DaiJv
Wcrier had Ill "lAity louie."
He'• wrong !hue, you think. E""'Y"""i knows 1M
New York 1lma has never • . .
Well, said Siggd&lt;ow, ".-yone" II wrong The

""*

n..

·-~· -···--·

�...

May 1, 1980

Activist. retum to scene of rowdy teach-Ins, rambunctious forums

Somehow
it wasn't
like it was
Right outside here, people were b£lng shot, Arnie
Sl4nton, once the president of a very ~Uil4nf U/B
Chapter of Students for a Democratic Society, recalled
almost wistfully as he P'ICf"d out the large plllte win·
dows In Squh's Fillmore Room , conjuring up visions
of a blrdshot pelleting lnddent In the spllng of 1970.
This beautllul spring Saturday. 1980, an Ocx:asional
bicycliot and sauntering undagrads In cutoffs and knee
soclcs were all that were .vtsble.
Tlwy couldn't care less about SDS.
Neither could most of today's students, judging
from the smal turnout for Saturday morning's • Anti·
War Reunion" program. Or maybe the Iitle of the
event made them think they -.en't invited.
The one hundred or so who were there were mostly
panelists and reunionists, their friends and families .
Where hundreds upon hundreds had thrilled to
rowdy tach-Ins rambunctious forums and strident
calls to adion d~rtng the "good old days ," the most
excitement generated Saturday came from a spirited
= e . l row over who could speak when and for

Eve~~n

,...~·-tiM

Impassioned protest of the fact that
leminlsts on campus had been largely ignored by the
evenrs organizers, drew Jttle more than early morning
yawns.

and Uz Kennedy . When the course descriptiOn was
run In the Courier orw$unday, Kennedy was branded
a "bolshevik ," LaWII!&lt;'Umembered.

fla-

,. .....b
The philosophy professor then interjected wtth con·

befweloaDCh

.

Shortly before lunch, some laboo' leaders and
minority spoketpetson Roosevelt Rhodes managed
some fiery rhetoric. But the flame only fkkered .
Clever administrators of' the system have used the
past decade to split asunder those who coalesced to
tnake · the 60's signifiCaflt, Rhodes thundered as
~*'&gt;m a pulpit. We must renew those efforts.
"R"'*. you can go on aD day If you' re gonna
preach Uke that ," Stanton said expansively.
He might not have put It just that way had he been
on time for the program. Admittedly having been
"drinking s1nc1 yesterday ," the feisty Irish welder and
laboo' organizer came In too late to wltnas the squabble that delayed the program's start.
· Sensing that attendance was not going to be suffi·
c:lent to warrant canylng through on three panels set
. for the morning , student organizer Barry Calder and
others from SA decided to 1elnGope the three Into one
seso1on In the FUlmore Room . Seats were re-arranged
frotn a theatre·llyle format Into one large circle . Now,
smiled one of the Dr1JIInizeB, "the panelists can be the
audience, and the audience can be the panelsts."
Everyone would be able to rap.
Gene G.eblner, a Social Foundations faculty
member who had been lnvkd to give a paper for a
panel on "Faculty Involvement," wasn' pleased.
"I worked to prepare iomelhlng,• said Grablner, a
student edivlst In the 60s w~ had been ~ ~&gt;!(
hekcipters at Berkeley. "If I cant give It , I'U go home.
No~,pleMC

Elwin Powell of Sociology was adamant. "Irs not
nce.ary to make speeches," he huffed . " Let those
who want to l41lc go Into another room. Those who
want to make .,eeehes can stay here."
and jeers ensued .
"Why don he Insist on giving a speech asked a
woman one ¥ cocked toward Grablncr.
"I _;. arbd to, that's why," replied Grablner.
. "fd like to hear from Gene," put In Fred Snell, a
prote.or of biochemistry and once dean of the
Gradua School. Later. SncU was the controversial
. . - o f the lightnin!tfOd·Coilegc A which ·eancern·
cd communtly mothers" marched -s~~~inst at the height
of campullurmoilln 1970.
Mor p«JP1t had men to say before the ultimate
d«iooon CAlM that ttK.c aokad ID give papers would
be alowed S mlnuta for a pnods The faculty people
would go finll , to be followed by spobspcnons lor
labor and the duolt reolsl&amp;nce . It was 20 minutn to 11
whan faculty panclot Snel was lnvkd to !;&gt;egln The
had been ocheduled for 10
Sncl gave way to felow dioeuMants, Grablncr and
J.,.. 1..-t.r, a pro1a1or cl phllooophy and one of
the 1Uycs 45, a iJOUP off~ erres'*' In 1970 dur·
1ng a
1n
Praldenrs ol!lce
l.awler, ..... SinCe 1 7. hoped, he said . to show
how w1wot happer...t heN 10 !!U'I ago II
relovant .
Bcfor he go1 to Bullalo. he recounted , the most
daring
he had cwr done WM to attend
•
bv Mohammad ~ a t the lJnlvenity of

o-n

r

pa,..

•-In

~ 111 U/ 8 "Mivc." 1..-t.r went on, he wM
-

up In a

.wtng radical alllquc of the W•

In

of1970 and "Social
........ put logl1hcr bv
In·
·CtwW Haynie, a.., Planck

Then Galllll the ..,.... 302," a

-

· "fronnad

so

cern that Prof. Kennedy and the significant women's
movement on campus had been "excluded" &amp;om par·
tlclpatlon In the "Reunion ," the same Liz Kennedy
who had been at the forefront of that course of 1,000
students 10 years ago. He deplored the snub.
The actual turmoil on campus that spring was set off
when In response to a window-breaking Incident at
Ha~ . pollee rushed tnto Squire and "beat .everyone
they could get hold of," as Lawler recalled n.
At the time , hls wife was addressing 50 pregnant
women at a meeting in the Conference ll&gt;eatre, he
said . Those women were scared, and ....
"You're out of time ," Prof. PoweU Interrupted.
"Five minutes is up ... ."
Lawler, visibly annoyed , sat down .

Good Ole' Boys
Vowing to continue his prepared remarks to the end
whether five minutes elapsed or not , Grabiner com·
plalned that the reunion seemed to be suffering from
the "machismo" that pervaded much of the 60s move·
ment. "White good-ole boys predominate here ," he
pointed out.
Grabiner suggested that today's students have large·
ly forgotten , 19nored or been kept &amp;om understanding
what has gone on before. Students think " nothing
bad" will happen Wthey "mind their own business and
keep their noses clean." "Relevance" Is thought of in
terms of employment rather than seH-fulfillment . 11le
U.S . government thinks H's dealing with another
generation of suckers, he noted .
And they are - If we continue to learn nothing &amp;om
the past, Grabiner went on.
··we•re seeing a new racism, a new sexism , a new
anti-cornmunism"-aD updates of things we've known
ts..fore. Yet, he held out hope: there are some signs of
stirrings, against 1he drab registration and the -draft

lbelf .

To cement the gains of the 60s, he urged , students
have to play a special role; so do faculty. Connections
have to be made among college students, high school
students, faculty , and workers. Faculty should be out
In the union haDs taldng about the anti-democratic ac·
Hv1t1es of the Military-Industrial Complex. "Thars as
lmporl4nt to our Jves today as It was in the 60s."
Grablner concluded.
Sporting the blue jeans suH and mutton chops that
were his hallmarks as a visible activist a decade ago,
Sncl proposed that the enemy Is broader than the
mllitary-industr1al bnk. " Irs the big CO«p&lt;&gt;ratlon·
government aDlance," he expounded . "We're stuck
wtth a consumer society lj&gt;DnSOI'ed and supported by
this alliance which manufactures and lis things we
don't need ."
I

The C5

Lawlor and SneD reminisced about the Hayes 45.
To get us out of the President's olflcc, "we were in·
vitcd for shcrrv al an adtnlnislrator's home;' Lawler
remembered , but none of those prolcuon g~~thered
there to pro1cst the presence of police on campus
"could move."
wogon c.me and took them away.
The caM
on lor two years, he said , as over
SSO,OOO was conllt&gt;utcd for the group's legal defense
The Unlvcnlly puohed the~
tlon , he chargad ,
adding that Mel&gt; cl them could h~ ~ been sentenced

Finally,=

up to 2lfr years In jaU.
Lawler said his Involvement twice caused him trou·
ble with his contracts here, and Snell estimated that
less than 50 per cent of "the 45" are sliD on campus to·
day. Exactly why, he couldn't say.
In the Intervening decade , Lawler emphasized .
faculty have come Into the trade union movement, the
point being that because of the union , that kind of ind·
dent couldn't occur today.
"The myth that nothing has lulppened in the 70s
has to be exposed," he ventured. • A lot has happen·
ed ."
u~amM

.

As the spotlight turned to Laboo', veteran uruon
organizer Joe ScioU (representing longshoremen) ,
Teamsters official Jack Canzoneri, and young Louis
Areti51l of the United Steelworkers (who could pass for
a college student himself) excoriated big government ,
big business and the big mU114ry.
Whars been spent on weapons since World War II,
Scioli claimed, could have rebuUt aD our cities and put
everyone to work. "If you took the profits out of
senseless mUi~ spending," he avowed , "there
wouldn't be any.
.
When "a government falls to serve the people , the
people have a right to change It ," ScioU contended .
Canzoneri agreed: "We need SALT II, not MX
missiles,• he went on . Defense spending creates fewer
jobs per dollar than spending for domestic programs.
Labor's here to be called on , Arcese said , lamenting
that more "student people" weren't there to hear him
and the others. Labor should have been called on In
the 60s, he noted .
Seconding that was Manny Fried, playwright,
laboo'er and professor from Buffalo SlAte. Labor and
the campus peace movement started to get together
here In the late 60s, he told the audience. But, he
believes, the FBI feared that ktnd of coatition and
helped break It up. Why? "Because," said Fried.
"when you move laboo' one inch, It's better than mov·
lng a campus 1 ,000 mU..."
.

. It w:-.;!':~ have done more of that, conceded Stan·
ton , now a rank and !He laboo' organizer. Looking very
middle-class In a fashionable leather jaclcet and a
beret, Sl4nton had the hale and hearty, blustery de·
meanor of an Archie Bunker of the left.
"We couldn't stop the war," Stanton said of the stu·
dent peace movement which he helped spearhead •
"because we dtdn't engage the working class.
"We were running around up here mUltant as hell
and didn't do a damned thing."
Yet, he said , pointing and nodding to eight or ten
his former cohorts present In the room , "H was fun .
As voices continued to rtng out tn the RUmore
Room , along wtth applause by the left for the left, the
campus-at-large seemed even more united than
eerler In Its ufl&lt;lOI)Cern .
Just down the haD whlte·faced mimes were enter·
taining llttle kids at a CAC Carnival. Frisbee and grab·
ass basketball g11mes vlsi&gt;le from Squire had more par·
ood
tlclpants than the conlerence/ niunton .
Across the street, business was brisk at the junk f
stands. At Burger Klng, In fact , three of the morning
panelists were spott d Jned up for shakes and burgers
Boy, this Is 1980, .oboerved one rather cynlca1
veteran of the 60s, himself mouthing denunctaHons
apped
of
CO«p&lt;&gt;rate In ests between bun of a plastlc·wr
Whopper, J r.
You weren't wrong , l1lomas W,.e , You con ~ go

'1

home

.n.

_

RTM

�May 1. 1980-

I

1'

i

l:Jl:JP chapter votes confidence In
B. Allen,s tactics &amp; leader_ship
UUP Chapler President William Allen, -- mation" from his or her ' co~
recenily subject to heavy ctillclsm for his - evay union polc)1 comes under at·
use of unlon rhetoric and tactics to
tadc . Criticism, In fact; goes part and
dlseour'lge faculty Involvement In
paroel with the post, indicated Bernstein.
dtlb!rations on retrend\ment, received a
U o, praldent didn't spark crllldsrii, the
· strong vote of confidence last week aLa
person would be "a •bland individual," he
spanely attended ·rneeung of the union'$
coliCiuded.
general membership. [It has- been erTwenty.seven members voted cOn·
roneouoly reported thet President Ketter
lidence In Allen, two 'abslained, and no
received tl&gt;e , _ of confideQCe; thet is
"*live 1101es ~ cast.
not so.J
·
_
AI the conclusion of the meeting,
the group also overwhelminQiv pas5ed
Bemstein called for a vole of thanks lor
a taolullon which accused CliaixeDor
Allen and other chapter ollidals. He cited
Whal1on and President Ketler of violating Allen lor performam:e "beyond the call of
the principle o(peer review In their denial
duty~ and aedlted the others with perlor·
of !enure to Political &amp;:ienu Pri&gt;feuor, ' mlng their job5 "nobly."
Daniel Novak. It further UJI)ed ~au level!
No debate preceded the Novak vote.
of the administration" to abide by the
Professor Tom Connolly, who briefly
principle ol peer _review "acept In exspoke In 11.\pporl of H, .urged a positive
vote because the case, "strikes at the
tremely rare inslan&lt;les and only lor the
most compelling ruoons !'fhich must be
heart of the coOegial notion of peer
staled In fuD detail."
review." At last month 's ' Faculty Senate
meeting, Allen evoked heated resppnse
Stllte of the chapter
from Senators and other focuby when he
Earlier, In a state of the chapter report,
reported that the union'• exea~llve com- • ADen listed some of Its accomplishments,
mittee had end&lt;&gt;r$ed a plan to solicit
along with ar..as 11eedlng Improvement.
'On the "plus side," he cited \naea$ed
"pledges" from lrlelnbtm ol Ur\lverslly
. commtttees involved ln academic planparticipation ol chapter members in
unlon-rela1ed activities; the Chapter's
ning deliberations not to tmget pecp!e or
progmms for · possible retrenchnlent. - leadership role In SUNY (as weD as 'on
Allen also voiced support. for making
car'(li&gt;U$) In Initialing anU-retre~t
public the names ollhose who refused to
activities, and 115 inaeased efforiS · In
Sign the pledge.
·
Qdefendlng the rights" of U/ 8 faculty and
staff through labor- management
meetings and ouch resolutions as the
No ............. forlt
Union members--Josephine Wise and
ones on Novak and RosweD Park ReoearMarvin Bemsli!ln . oppO.ed the con·
cher, Beverly Paigen .
lldence vole. Wl!ie argued the vote .was
On the "*Uve side, despite efforts to
" aut of order," since there is no provision
lnaease 115 membership, the Buffalo
for It lr1&gt; the chaploor's by~laws. She also
Chapter gained only 27 members this
year lor a total of 930.
• poin~ out there is no provision to in·
Allen hailed a recent deciston by the
dlcate how another president would be
selecled ~ !he rn!!mbers voted no con·
administration to establish a union -sponsored PACE Prqgram at U/ B lhts
fidence In Allen.
Bemsteln 'commented &lt;lhe vOle would
faD. i').CE, an aaonym for ·Project· for
~- 111 bed pr.....dentl' end that·a.chapte- ·Adult College Education , Offlc:lally gbf off
- president lhoula not-ha9e to !J'ZI.-~ealflr·• • the,gro!Jnd a yea'r'ago'as a pliot,PtoJert;ot

Buffalo State .
Its pu~ Is to rnoilce college courses
more available to non-traditional students through use of olk:empus fdties And a
unique delivery sy-.n which includes
weekend lnstrudlon and a teleuls!on"
Cbune. (See March 27
discussion
Repor!U .) Cuirently, the program is
limited to UA)V lind AFL-'CIO members.
Allen lll&gt;rlotJnaJd that Charles Haynie,
acadeQilc program coordinator for
Tolstoy COllege, has been IPJ)Oint8d by •
· the !Inion an&lt;:! ' the --admlnlolralion as
academ~coordlnator ol the program . •
Allen also declared at least partial vic·
tory in the union's effort to block faculty
and staff "from targeting each other for

Both houses
vote for ·
SUNY funding
cJ

Like the Phoenix. the · hopes
SUNY's faculty. students and staff rooe
renewed this week ·• • both l)ouses ol·the
St.te leg!slaturevoted unanimously to
R!SI"!" $22.3 mUiion to the budget and
"!4inlaln current ~ of progoams and
InstructiOn .
·
As the Reporfer went to pre55 Wednes·
-day. the Senate jOined the A-mlily In
agreeing to give back to SUNY most of
what the GovernOI' wanted to take away.
UUP ChapleT Preoident BID Allen oeld
the wording of the bills, which specillcaDy.
note that current levels of program and
inJtrUdloo be maintained, was Inter·
preted by some attorneys as probibiliP9

im....wundme.nt.

"nv Courier·Exp"'ss Tuesday quoted
It's been an extremely difficult
Mark ~. chairman of the Assembly's
Higher Education Committee , M pulling
· struggle," he notad . Allen credHed the
Execullve's Board's "hard-baD pOs;illon" · the Governor's offlce on notice that the
.Assembly did not expect the money to' be
for a recent statement contained In a
prelimlnaryTep&lt;&gt;rt of the Faculty Senate's
sequestered by DOB Director Howard
Academk Planning Committee, which · " Red" Miller .
noted that panel would neither prOJ&gt;O$e
The Courier also said a "bipartiSan
mO!&gt;d of seU congratulations and de·
retrenchment nor Identify units for cuts.
fiance" of the Governor was evident after
retrenchment purposes."

.,:,11~1

Kettet IUlcl Wbartoa

th"r::'",;.....,ils ago , due to some
The UUP leader told members that the
President and Chancellor have · done
strong anning by both the majority and
minority leadership in the Senate , the
"z:llch to defend the University" from the
budget cuts. With the exception o! Nor·
body fell four votes shy of overriding
-man Solkoff, chair-elect of the Faculty
Carey's veto of SUNY budget restora·
Sena1e, ADen Indicated the Senate
lions. Shortly afterwards , however, the
belongs In the ·"$Bme category." He also
Republican-controlled Senate and the
aoserted that the SAVE SUNY campaign
Democratic-controlled Assembly )olned
showed the neces51ty for union affiliates
in an unusual alliance by proposing Idenand aediled UUP at&gt;d SASU )'lith helptical bills to put the money back .
ing bring "pressure to bear" on legislators.
A spokesperson in SUNY's Office of
Many Albany lawmakero commented
University Affairs and Development $Bid,
that SAVE SUNY was the " most effec.tive
"We · are extremely ple.a sed by the
lobbying effort" they had ever experiencunanimous support'"in th e restoration of
ed, he added .
·
State University funds . We hope this will
' If SUNY's budget is restored through
lead to " succe55ful conduslon of this
t;tlls now before the House aftd Senate,
year's ~udgei process."
;Allen ptedkted that If SUNY's money
Allen promlsed he would "Invest" some
. funlls m cihampagne and "throw the big· • is re~or.ed•.~·· mori!!le will go up enormously .. , He adped that he is gratified lhat the
gest damn party thls tlnlverstty has eve&lt;
Seep ~.. ·
~ ~
·
political p.rocess is wol'king for SUNY inAs far as organlz!ng for the long haul,
stead of at Qdds with it.
ADen $Bf&lt;l the motto is "slow but steady."
He reported that Anna K. Ffance wUI
head a sreakers' Bureau whose
(lno• .... l, ......,
members wil go to local civic and social
organizations to talk-up SUNY, and in
years . $aid Smith's appointment Is the
particular, U/ B's contributions to the
culm ination of a two·ye"l!lr search tOT a
community. In addition, position papers
permanent director.
under the general theme ol"The Unluer·
'Th_ere was Mille question that With the
sity as a n i\s$el." wiD be distributed to
commHmenr and responsibility the
leglslatoro on a weekly basis ..Allen Is serCenter has and will have In the future as
-D
ving as the general editor.
the Center on Aging for SUNY . it was
nec.e ssary that a full-time director be
n.a med .to take over admlnistrattve functlons." he said . "I expect that Or. Smith Is
going to expand the concerns of the

• Smith

Believe in Chevy,
U I 8 class suggests

A product and promotion da55 in the
School of Management has come up with
a .plan to help General Motors sell big
cars-something for wh ich the
automotive giant needs all the assistance II can get these days.
The U/ B students, as part of a national
collegiate co mpetition to devise
marketin~la;!,eas for the Chevrolet
Caprice
, have built a $Bles cam·
paign around the tagline, "BeUeue in lt."
According to 5tudionts Interviewed by the
Buffalo New., the Idea is to pHch the
5-passenger, V•6 vehicle to the conservative, patriotic, older (45-64) male with
moderate educatfon who earns $15.000
• $35,000 a vear , is married and has a
small famdy. This buyer places depen dability and safl!ty above gas mileage, ac·
cording lo class research .
t..rvlsh use of TV, radio and print
media Is recommended to reach tballn·
dlvldual. A campaign ol post-purchase
"reassurance" letters Is also $U99Uled.
U/ 8 Is vying wjth 14 other collqes In
the competition. The class, taught by
Professor Stephen A . Goodwin; has use
ol-one of the· caro for the semester and
r elved $600 for expenditum. It was to
outline how M""""ld -nd $6 mllllon to
rnatkel the vehicle .
GM 'cxecullva were .on campuo last
Friday to hew1he U/ B prtsentation . _By
May 28, they'U announce a winner.
l1w: fnt place ochool goots a $7,000
grant: secand prioo Is SS.OOO, and \here
arc tim! honorable m ntlonlo -' $2500

each

center into

newer area.s within

thls

University as well a s with other units of SUNY ."
Aellvti In developing NI H's lntei-e.t
In aging
Smith has oerued · as chief of the
Mo lecular and Biochemical Aging
Program and the Extramural and
CoUaborative Res&lt;&gt;arch Program for the
National Institute on Aging (NIA) since
1977 . Prior to that . he was a health scientist/ad ministrator With the NIA (1975-77)
and with the Aduh Development and
Aging Branch of the National Institute of
Child H.ealt~ and Human Development

(1971 -75) .
Smith has served as a member. of the
advlsory commltl.e e on health affairs for
the National Urban IAague and currently
holds memberships on the same committee for the 'Nallonal Center for the Black
Aged and the NIH 's coordinating com-_
millee for minority research and t111inlng.
He received the Veterans AdmJn1stra·
Uon's Special Research Award for hit:
studies on mitochondrial properties In
1970 and a meritorious achievement
award from the NIA In 1978.

Arlla-•

A nal1" of
A native of McG«hee, Arl&lt;an..s , Smith
Is a graduate of the University of Cabfornla 6t Berkeley. He received his M . In
biochemis!lV from Howard University
Medical School and his Ph.D in
biochemlslry from the University of
CaiJiorn.i . Medical Sci'!ool, S..n 'Fran·
dJco , In 1969.

�May 1, 1980

Support the ERA:
lt~s the American Way·

a Schwanbag struck a responsive
nole when he ..-d - a l Important
quesllons c:oncornin!f the recent acqulsl- .
lions ol major art ol&gt;fedo lor our campus.
I doubt f anyone would object to a program which ~ the rather bleak
phyolcaiiUI1'0Uiidlngs ol thls campus wllh
~ and otF.er worb ol art.
H - . what we haw! so far acquired
.......It&gt; puzzle to some ol us.
Alief. &amp;om supporting Mr. Schwarz.
berg's comment, I should like to add that
a major part ol our artlltlc acquJstllons
should come &amp;om the wr; ~t we
have In thto Untvcnlty. Bv that I mean
student and facully . . -. I am par·
. tic:ularly Inter-.! In displali!ng some ·
frac:llon ol the 118$1 amount ol art that Is
crated ewry year by our students. While
vllillng the campus ol the Unlvenfty ol
Iowa (I was there to giYe • lecture), I was

ERA as weD. All laws which faVor women
now would be terminated or extended to
include men , such as lifting heavy
weights, minimum age laws, maximum
hour working· day. c:hfld custody, etc.
The Supreme Court now glvft widows
an automatic property tax exemption but .
not widowers.

wo-Joa-'t .....
mtcla

~t

Many people believe the myth that the
14th Amendment, the Equal Pay Ad o1
1963 and Tille VII ol the Ovll Rtgfrts Ad
of 1964 protect women's rights. The truth
Is that the 14th Amendment was originally intended to guarantee slaves the rtghts
ol citizenship and the courts feel Ills Inappropriate to apply In women's rtghls. The
Equal Pay Ad Is equally ineffective .
Women have made no significant strides
toward economic and social equahty with
'_ white males. Title VII of the Ovll Rights
Ad of 1964, which forbids discrimlrtation
W o - ...... 59 c:eBia Oil tJoe .......,
on the basis of race, sex or religiOn In
''There Is no way a famlly 'does not face
employment
Is the most helpful, but like
discrimination through a female member.
the 14th Amendment, H suffers &amp;om narWomen eam 59 cents for every dollar
row
Interpretation.
The U.S . Congress,
struck by the magnillcent collectlort,!ll-.art
men earn In the work force , olten In cases
smaU businesses, and the Armed Forces
that was displayed . I discovered thS.I11!e
where they perform the same job," says
are
all
exempt
&amp;om
Title VII.
University had a long standing policy ol
Eleanor Smeal, president ol the National
Passage ol the ERA will stop the waste
purchasing several ol the "best" pieces
Organization for Women , In a quote from
of human resoutces. It will mean a
created by the students each year. The
the New YOI'k Times on April 1S, 1980.
chance for women to reach their full
results were stunning.
Sixty per cent ol women who work , are
potential and contn'bute to society in the
We · live In an artistic desert .
the sole support ol their famUies . accord use of their talents and abilities .
Everywhere we look we see empty
Ing to the Displaced Homemakers Office.
Homemakers would conHnue to have the
opeca and blank walls. (There are some
Eleanor Holmes Norton, head ol the
rtghl
to stay at home; but there would be
exceptions such as Baldy Hall) . We
Equal Employment Opportunity Comno more second-dass citizens. It would
should be filling thls void with crealions ol
mission , says, "While wages lor black
abohsh 800 federal laws which now
our own students, with art that speaks to
women have risen to meet those ol white
them and Is created by them . We should
women , the earnings ol both are still · discriminate against working women and
homemakers In matters bf education .
have secure display cases for potteJy ,
below men of any race .''
employmenl , legal protection , support,
srnaD crafts, and sculpture, we should
The proposed amendment was approperty, credit, housing, child support.
hang paintings In oecure places , and
proved by Congress in 1972. Whh the
pensions and Inheritance . M President
should flU the open aJr spaces with our
measure ratified In 35 states, only three
Carter slated. ''The ERA does not say
own sculpture . I think we would all be
·more are needed by June 30, 1982, for It
that men and women are the same (but) 1
delighted with the results.
to become part of the Constitution . It
do not belleve ,my daughter should have ·
took 73 years for women to get the vote
-.loaatbalo Relc:b«t
fewer rtghts than my sons." ERA means
after II was first prOposed at the .First Na Physics &amp; Astronomy
equal legal rtghts. That Is why aD fairlionel Women's Convention In Seneca
minded American men and womin sup·
Falls , N.Y.In 1849. The ERA was written
port the ERA . It's the American way .
by Alice Paulin 1923.
Here In Buffalo a bus has beo'!O reIllinois, as a populous. industrial stale ,
served for the excursion to Chicago to
has become a focus ol ratification dforts.
partldpale
In the march May 10. The
Illinois is also the home ol a STOP ERA
Buffalo chapter ol NOW and the ERA
organization which advocates a "Wait lor
team
are hoping to lUI more . The
Action
Prince Charmlng"l~e goal lor women, so .
demonstration Is an attempt to show 11lessons for the klddles) : c) faculty-student
there wiU be a struggle.
llnolllegislators and the nation the extent
ratiOs wiD go up In less favored departof support for the ERA. The bus wiD leave
·ments: d) the junior faculty wiD bring
The IQJoltty eu_.t It
at noon May 9 and will return late May
fresh vision and vigor to jobs which, In
According to Gallup and Harris polls.
10. Call 652-5123 or 883-4609 for resersome hands. have become stale and un the majority ol people in Wlnoll favor the
vations. The lrfp costs $45. Those who
profitable : e) these Junior faculty , corning
ERA. This Is also true for the rest ol the
can't
go may contribute to help finance
from departments momentarily on the
nation. our union leaders, six past
others who could . Mail contributions to
presidents, and members ol Congress.
wane '"'"' musl take the long ldew here) ,
National ERA lund , 343 Linwood
will begin to find administrative solutions
Whh so much support, one wonders why
Av.,nue , North Tonawanda, NY 14120.
to the predM problems ol these departh has not been passed . The ERA Is not
- &amp;oily Kellet: Malec
ments (such as making enrollment In
considered a top-priority item . OpERA~ Team, U/B
courses lechnically possible) : f) departing
ponents ol the ERA, especially In the
administrators are bound to feel wermly
South, have bnked the amendment with
controversial Issues such as abortion and
towards these green replacements. so
they wiD coach them before leaving and
hornosu!Wfly. These are separate social
w
Impart their best wisdoms (thls
Issues which have no relation to the ERA .
"leaching" opertence will doubtless be
The National Organization for Women
an effective form ol boning up lor departhas organized a campaign in Winols to
Ing adminlstrotors In preparation lor their
lobby for passage •ol the ERA. The
I'IIOFI!S5IOIIA ITN'F
new jObs) .
organization has been helped by the enSpodolloo ~ Blologioll There ar , doubtless , other lmplica·
dorsem.,nt ol maJor national labor unions
....._.. s...-, PR-2, S.0018.
lions to thts plan , and 1 hope some of my
and their affiliates. Speakers at the May
colleagues will suggest them In these colraUy wlllnclude Douglas A. Fraser. lnter.... c.;,._, w..umns.
nalfonal President ol the UnHed Auto
(Radio/T- ~-- Bwuu,
PR-1, B-0015.
1 have two prediclions to make : 1) this
Workers: Sam Church , President ol the
Todookal $toeclollot-Electrtcol En1Jin-"11 ,
plan wiD prove 10 bendlclalto the unlverUnited Mine Workers. and Lane
PR-2, S.0014
slly that most well -meaning ad Kiridand , National President ol the
ministrators wiD want to leove for the
American Federation ol Labor and Con·
FACULTY
good ol the whole , 2) and , then , after
gr
ollndustr1al Organizations.
lltoltloto- - Polticol Sdonoo •.
they've ~«n the grut university that ·
On May 13 , NOW will begin a series ol
F.oo34.
we've become In their absence, they wiD
weekly lobbying efforts at the Stale
CotologlnQ Dopt.Jwant to return as teachers, memb&amp;rs ol
Capitol In Sprtngf~eld . Mrs. Smeal said
1.-.oty l.bonoo, F-0035.
the junior faculty (aft retoolment), 10
there would be' ciAIIy aclivltles In e.ach ol
IIESEAIIQt
that they will be eligible to become ad the sta 'a 39 t.g!slative distrtcts. A vote in
- - Cioft- Sodoloe o..-rt.....
mln aton tlvough the new system. ·
the legislature could come as early as the
11.-rf.
midd ol May
.......... _ Teduotd. . - Potholotw
-Howud Wolf, English
The ERA is already at work In 14
~R-00211
stat )n Washln!llon . an ERA stale , sur
OONPE1111VE CIW. SDMCE
vlvoro or dependen ol female as well as
GRADUATE SCHOOL FACULTY
male workers
lve death benefits,
SG-S-~ Houoioe (Amhentl ,
The annual gradua faciiJty mHIIng is
such
as
workers
compansallon
Rape
ochedulad lor Tunday, May13, In Room
·~·~
~
a.to SG-5-c-..1-.
"34934
lows have been utended to pro1ec1 both
567 Copen at 2 p m Dr Rennie, the
._....... IG-I-Firlondol Aid, •31130.
man and woman from sexual assauk.
new gradua dean , w!l be lrltroduced .
Offke Of lnatltuUOftal
had"• · •30S.5 ,
.M n
benefh from paasage o1 the
~ . rz7144

Artistic desert
needs our art, too
Ea-.

On May 10, thousands ol ERA supporters, represenHng many national
organizations. plan a march and rally to
Grant Park In Chicago as part of a major
effort to win support for ratification ol the
federal Equal Rights Amendment In 11hnols. Along Chicago's shoreline there
wiD be waving purple, whhe and gold
banners, the sounds ol marching bands
and the chants ol thousands who wiD
declare, "Make IIBnoll No. 36 In '80."
Represented wiD be the American
Msoclallon of Unlverslly Women ,
students from over 45 college campuses,
MEN for ERA, Housewives for ERA.
church groups and labor unions all wearIng white and marching together. The
historical significance ol while clothing
and processtonal style marches dates
back to the demoru1ralions conducted by
the suffragists who marched for the rtght
to vote.

A non-retrenchment plan

for hard times on campus
M I was driving &amp;om the old campus
to the new campus the ~her cfay (a
traniler ol man and materiel that olten
takes the better part ol a normal lunch
hour). h hh me In a flash that there Is a
creative solution to the budgetary crisis
that we face .
Well, as I was unpeddng my car from
one parking lot and making the rounds ol
the curveceous ecxas ramps on the way
to the other parking lots. 1 suddenly saw
the way our: reploce each UPJXI' od·
mlniolrolor who Is leoulng with a junior
focullv memb&amp;r. ducrvlng ~nure , from a
dq&gt;orttMnl u&gt;hlch, for the _ , r, has o
low foa-"v·lludenl rollo.
Th. merits ol
plan ere oiMow · a)
'there wll be a reduction olllnes: b) the
salartes ol the junior faculty can be raised
by live or len thousand dollars and fall
below the salartes ol the
ad ·
mlnillratlons (thus, dolar savings and a
boool to morale, to say nothing ol lllolln

u-

,.,

__

.IOHI&lt; A a.DUT1fJI

-r..

lfYVCE. -..;:111'111115111

JOBS
T........,

-·....._ (Hood,

now""

T-

�May I. 1980

If you can't figure out
what that means, does
Classics have a course for you!
S, ~ S.CDIICII,;-OI*J
..•

the course with being thetJ "1110at

~51111

"SiderqM'IIta" ts nether' • commonly .
heard nor rud word. Bui ll you happan
to be up on Greek And L8lln root words
And the art oi ,dioeedlng ouch multi·
syllabic -tongue '-'""' Into their com·
ponent parts, then you can 9liJre
Webster And tllll come up IIIIth a fall\l ac·

curate deflnlllon.

Condo .&gt;conversions
trouble the elderly
Tile ·~ erl~~ pn;bkm ladng
seill6r dtliens today, especially those. in

large urban areas, Is the rapid conversion
of a pArt ment buildings into con ·
domlnlums, assessed Gray Panthers ac·
tivlst Thelma V. Rutherford.
Rutherford, a "retired" social wori&lt;er, ls
chai rperson of ' the Metropolitan
Wuhinglon D.C ., Netwod&lt; ol Gra y PAn·
thers, a member of the organization's na·
tlonalsleerlng committee, and head ellis
"Mlnorily Outreach" program.
Because mAnY a partment owners do
noc feel they ere gelling sulflcknt returns
from their real estate lnveslr'Mnll, par·
tlculartv If thetr propeity II subject 10 rent
contrail, Rutherford told a gathering In
the FIDmore Room Monday that lnaeas·
lng numbers ol elderly are being foroed
either IQ relocate to much more 4!&gt;\pan·
s1ve apertmen , or to buy thetr unit and
pay cwm\1 aorbllant mot1jjagc rates.
Many older people simply can't afford to
buy, or prefer noc to t..cause they have
no family to whom they could wave the

proporty. she noled.

~ ~ el'e now supporting
a bill t..fOII Colqea that would Pill a

thr~ moratodum on further c:onverokins. In the Interim, a study comm-.
would be lmpaneltd 10 ll)veollga the lm·
pact ol condo conversions on
eloMrly
and ochfts
Alto being clowly monitored by tha
p.,then, add.~ the robust 71-yur-&lt;&gt;1&lt;1
granclrnolher. 11 the PrHd nrs Commit·
lion on Pension Polley. A recl'ntlv luued
prdrnlnary report indica tha Commlo·
lion may recom.mend
;....,..nee for
prlvale , mu -tmployer pensiOns be
reduced from 90 cents on the dollar 1!0 50

oen

economy shoving more com·
ol beni&lt;Nplcy, tt....
counting on paniiOns as their main
oou
of support after mnrnent may

Wi

...... lo the t.lnk

m...-...
hlcal jeopardjl . ...
Llony Feu._,
&amp;It

liNI

In

an

COUnty

aid a orney lor the eldcrlv
nol Wille:lwd c:bely, F..luwr CAU·
lloMd , Coner- may
o!Ance on
•

ol mandatory
for an

In

k1dMd

suppol'tl-eUITilr!ation oi ltNin&lt;ialory retire·
menl, Rutherford tmphasioed · It wants
the ou•~nf Sodal Security' ~lotion lo
stay Intact, particularly Its prOYislon for
early retirement benefits lor those desir·
lng them.
Vet another problem concerning senior
dllzens Is the Food Stamp Program. U
Congress doesn't vote additional ap·
proprietions for the current program by
May 15 , Rutherford warned H will run out
ol funds before being rebudgeted and
thousands ol poor, older Americans may
go hungry.

of..-.-

Rcporta
On the positive side, Rutherford
reported sU&lt;lCtil by the Panthers In Job.
bylng certain Congressmen against sup ·
porting a bill thai would tax 5octal Securi·
ty benefits over $350 a month . The bill
WAS "killed" In the ~~ hearing
stage.
AI her hotne chapter In Washtnglon,
D .C . , Rutherford Slid the organization
wAS also successful In getting a number ol
local bonks to drop their service and
c:h«Jc!ng charges for thoae over 60.
lfs not enough lor those ll5$Umlng An
advocacy poo1t1on 10 merely gather lnfor·
ma~on or monitor the progrna ol
legislative bills or blue ribbon commil·
slons, declared Rutherford . P~ must
"do IOINihtng" to stimulate change . On
tha grua roots wwl, Rutherford urged
thooe tnteruled In issues facing both
young and old alike to pass their sen·
linwnll elong to Congressional repraen·
latives via letters

Butler named
Dr Arthur Buller ha been named
chairman of the Department of
&amp;:onomtcs for a three-yem term effective
in September

In making the appointment, President
Robert l Ketter not that few members
ol thio Untwrslry's faculty can match
Buller·s record ol service " As a faculty
nwmber IInce 1949, .. chairman ol
Economla lor tght years . .. acting dean
ol
School ol a..- Admlnlllrallon
for llvee years. and
provoot ol Soclol
sa.nca for neariy llYe years." Kelt
said 8u
has contrt&gt;urad In a vllllcly ol
ys and umed the rap«! and 'trust ol
hll cole
. .

•

memorable or valuable," Zlrln dectdied to
It lor U/ 8 .
Zlrln views the course-which has no
prerequisites-as containing a rich e w·
~~ ol "humaniltic education" because.
perhaps for tha first ~me . H forces
sllldents to "look at words and language
otp:t1ve1y." Doing this gives one •
"Whole new ~ve ," he~·

done

Here's how II wod&lt;s. "Sider" COCQeS
from the Greek , slderos, whiob meAns. . A pnclk:a1 tool
iron. "Pen-" is from another Greek noun ,-"·
CIMiicsdoctoral candidate Barry RobP"nia , meAnt~ a deficiency or pov~.
blna, who leaches one ol the sections,
F!nplly , tha " Ia ending signifies tt nouh ·' clacrk the course as a "pradlcal fool
form . It doeJt&gt;' take too much tmaglna·
for students In tha sdences." Robbins,
tion to decode the meaning: Iron de·
who likes to use the blackboard to review
flclency.
word exercises assigned In tha wori&lt;
Altllough It had an- InaUSpicious stArt i t
book. also finds II useful to IDustrate to
the University some live yeArs ago, the
students how the words were orlglnaDy
course that teaches these deciphering
used by treeing them In passages of
lechntques-"Greek end latin Terms )n · · Aristotle or H omer.
5dence " - has turned Into the Classics
)1\fthough · there are times when dJs.
Departmenfs most popular offering. The
secting words doesn't render an exact
reason, quite simply, is that lbe' large
meaning, Robbins assesses that An
numbers 01 health Ide~· majors whO • analysis via Greek and laUn deriva~ves
fiD its ...O~ons have rapidly spread the
sliD "gets .you In the some baD park."
word tha the course nol only factUIAtes
Students le$s sdentiltcally oriented will
read ing term-lade n texts. but also pays
also be able 10 bolster their vocabularies
off In higher State board JiCOfes .
through another etymology course which
focuses o n more commontv-used words
A IDA!ked dJffenmce
Instead ol just the technical. The course
The course, in fact. has proven so
wiD be !Aught this feU by Prolessor
veluabW to former enrollees, that many
Madewlne Kaufman . Kaufman says she
health sdences advisors n&lt;&gt;W highly
pla ns to show students how "words have
recommend II as an eWctive. One such
a history" and how language has chang·
person . Sara CleareD!, associate chair of
ed and developed over lime .
Medical Technolo!l)!. says there Is a
"marked difference between students
Meanwhtw, those who have tAken the
who have And haven'IIAken the course .
course caR snicker with delight when
This uncommon ma~ge 'Ill letters
hearing strange sounding diagnoses on
and sdeOces was the ·bmtnChlld of
tewvlslon medical $haws . On a Marcus
~ Profe5sof Ronald' Zlrtn'. While a'
Weby rerun, -Robblnt relayed , a patient
~fsi&amp;ng' prolessor ·at lnclJana University
ol the kindly d octor's was described a s
some years baCk, .Zirill noticed that a
suffeTing fro m what sounded like
similar otlering was so beneficial (which,
an ominous, terminal malady. But when
by the WilY, cames from the latin "bene,"
he finally sloppad to figure out what the
meAning good. and the verb facio , to
sdenllflc description of the d iseAse reeDy
maket. that II was made a requirement
meant, Robbins realized what the poor
for some health sciences majors. When
woman really had was just a bad
faculty relayed that-alu"!nl ofteo credited · 1-teedache.

Islamic 'movement' is
a reawakening, students say
The .. Islamic Movemenf' i5 no .. move·
either. he counseled . "We s ho uld
welcome technology , but rejec t
men!" at all. 5afdar Khwaja. a graduate
engineering student from Pakistan . inIdeology." he advised .
formed the audience at a panel on Islam
Hussein suggested that evenl5 In the
held recently at International College .
Muslim World today a re "not uniq ue . We
What the world Is seeing today. the
-have seen foreign Intervention before ..nd ·
Pakistani student explained, Is a gradual
have seen Muslims reacting AS they a re
"reawakening" on the part of Muslims
today" In Afghanistan and Iran .
who want to gain control ol their own
• Anyone who believes that Iran a nd
destiny.
·
Afghanistan want to go back to the 17th
century Is right," Hu in granted . "For
Islam has been on the decline since the
that was a time of peace ...
fall ol the Ottoman Emplte In the 13th
century. Khwaja sold . The reason . he
The cry for Muslim bro therhood. he
suggesrad . has been "a fundamentAl loss
emphasized . Is a cry for peace. not war.
ol faftb . direction . and will" on the part of
Skirting the hostage Issue entirely.
its peoples
Mirlmiran . the Irania n representAtive .
painted that nation's revolution AS a na ·
Now. he said . their spirit ha been
reklndWd and "the ultimate oolcome
tlona l movement, although led by
can) be predicted "
religious leaders
Communism And Islam are lncompati·
Islam , he noted . Is an Ideology e m ·
ble. Khwaja stressed . Red lite&lt;oture
bracing political and sck&gt;niKic as well a s
makes for appealing reeding , he admit·
spiritual values. Islam to not ega nst
ted , and there ore some In Islamic nations
development. he rt:paaled. M r~jecls the
who have "deviated " Bur Islam remains
West's IIOlu~•- not Its technology
a powerful "barrier" to communist
·•No nation can live without
Ideology. In his view
technology." he sold " II would be dumb
Khwajll exPects Increased physical
to think we could ."
conllicll between communism and Islam
Now a tinge ol mlhiAncy shOW&lt;'&lt;! The
"great" concern In the West for
"We ore seeing sompWs In oertalt! parts ol
the world." he Slid in a noc so oblique
Afghanistan . Mirimlran subml"ed, Is a
reference to. Afghanistan. "We wll see
concem not for the Afghan paople, but
for the lnleTesls ol the West .
more In the """' future.·
Alto on the panel were 8okary Matga.
Alter the r~votution In hn. he cona gradu
student In geology from Mah,
tended , the US paople
m ready to
Hu In Hussein , an . undergraduate
"start another Crusade ."
•
engineering srudent from Somali. and ·
In TesponN to questions from a mall
5eyed Mlrlmiran , an undftlJ&lt;aduate
audience,· panellsla r~jected the notion
er&gt;glnnr from Iran .
thet oil is tha heady fuel which has given
MaiGt noled that Ma•. 95 par cent tha Islamic movement rullmpetus.
Mu
, wished lo be neither communiltic _nor cat*aflotic when • gained Hs
Maiga suggested , """'"-· thai lha
Independence In
196011 It Is a
CI'Mlton ol lslael dellnitotly had IICifMihlng
to do with 11
m,lolake lOT an Islamic nation to mince.

�May 1, 1980

Lord &amp; Lover

Nile (WI) .. IIO"'Ii l.ofd Alfred
DoooiiM _. Muim Mazumclar Is
Philip

o.r.r

Wilde In Eric Bentley's "Lord
Alhd"o ' - ' at the U/ 8 Center
'l'heatn Tbunclay-Sundlly this week

--·

CALENDAR
MDI'S

a.um.W..

c-ec...o c-h..dCf) . P-Podd I

Tbuaday - 1

p.m

PllOfUSIONAL STAFF~

MECHANICAL EHGIHEEJIING SEJIINAII•
The loltlall!l S.......r SoJW-S..tlc ond

COIIJUTTIE IP£CIAL PllOGIIAJI "
_....,..._.._~­

-

~

Ia tho,_

_ Dr. H-. 0 ..

-U/B Tho
· """"'
ond ........ ., ~ &lt;ducollon.
~&lt;!¥., 101 Boldy. 8 .3().10 • m. Con·
-...I bn!ok!Otl included
Adw.nca racn.dons for the brakflsl .,.. r«·
quind F,.. ,_. - -· col Judy o;,g..dey
.. 636-2506
s,.o--1 bv llw ~ Slolf Senate

CIIDIIMAL LAW SEJIJNAII "
- E - o n d " - T -.

o--..tW

-

-n«d .,. ,.

Tho - - · h bmg .,..ngec~ bv tho Sto.. Olv-.
al CrirnNI J...oo. s.n.c.. n.... ... bo ....... al
16 ~oc~u ... tc. tlw bonefh al
teeuton, public d«f&lt;tnte •nomey~ and law enf~

.....

. Spubrs wll tndudc Dr Judldl M ~ .
eNol m&lt;dlcol ......,.. tc. Erie Counoy. R_.
llod....t., tlw ..... pa&amp;c. ~ ............ end
Dr Domol Munho al tlw Erie Counoy CAmel
Polce. y_. ... tndudc · ,....,...
~ . drug ........ IOodcology, 1 . . -

crinwd&gt;gy, ""

c......... onMoy2

DENTAL 5YMPOSIUM•
. Tendo · Annual .lema Englhll

~

Shlralon lnn~Utt. 9 • m 10 4 p m
Ot Robert Coburn , ..soct.le prole-nor .
..-..., chomlslr!l. School al - .. . . ..

noundnt findJr9 .OOUt a

new group of

eorn-

poundh...t.ich ""'~~"'hl&gt;ltw-"cl&lt;-­
.......... ., pmodontol dho- 10 30 • m
Tho s.n-m, - e d bv tlw School d
-Don"'"" , honors Dr Englioh who - . 1 u U!B
cWmal dean from 1970 unalhk rdiremrtnt tn 1975
C......... • ,-..,. al S.n Diogo, Cold . Englioh lo
~ wtlh builcbng lh.r reHMC:h arm ol dw
School .,
00.... from U/ 8 tchcdulcd to tp&lt;ok tndudc On

o.no.v

d.._

Mlch..t
........ d boophytbj
who w- i l -· polw&gt;hoophonolft,
. - oclonca
ho'tdewlao&gt;od...t.ich ...... _...... ....... .
""'- ,Siooo. .,...._ d .... toalogy.
who wil idondly t l w - - which ... tlw ..._
~ .. periodonlol
end Seboodon a.n.
al~ . whowildlK- ....

d-.

do,,...,._
., -

.. ponodonlol -

....-

Others 111110 ~.,.On W..m Bowen. dwf

clhC.O..-ondR--kw
the ~ Carfa Pfowam M dw Nation~~~ ln- c i D m l o i -. J MuGoodoon, aiF"' ·

Dmlol-Un-

¥II Dmlol c.n.... ~ · Anthony~ . _,

lllllillant for l)ft:9•m coordtn.d~Qn . &amp;tramurlll Pro..,... otllw NIOR . ond ..._, y..,_ ,
al
Conaodleut- d

AN UAL ii'IUNG a.DfiC AND
ALUNHJ DAY•
s,.o--1 bv .... d - . Alu ...
M..• 300 phot..-. end thew
~ _. .n.nd the prow-am tO be he6d .t
~.Gnndo- . 750-S. .. a......
~llalllam

n..--

230p .. -·~ .. - . , , ..... """""' Updolo," Mlch..tS..,. dEli IAv Co
J 30 p • - "lv) ...,.._on DES • • drug _ .
WOfMft

to pnwnl

Y_.,..,_

~ ......

~ . t&gt;,Dr

.. - . . .. uiJI

ahown to be

7 30 p .. - Alu
·
Dr s.w-.
~. - alllwU/ll~oll!oau

cOod!,.-........
Ha-.
ow-.y-r- ·
-

_

..... R . - - o n d ......
"Dan' Go...

llw
- ond.....,_
· !he
W.O.
,._
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_._
_.....
..
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.•
.......
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I

a-.-..--.... School .. 1941
I

1'1?0oodl975

1930, 19M

Ftlday- 2 .
~ALD£51GN.AND

I'IAIIIftNG CONfEIIEHCE AND

Dv•••k AppUc.a.dou , Professor HerlH.rt
Rnmonn, Depwtment ol " " ' -• Nucluo &amp;
~Sdonoo . U/8 206Fumos 3o1Spm

~

·

~~Mdl'r-.tT­
~ . . . . .. Tho o:onferen&lt;e

Ioo lot

~.

end -....... .... bring _..... • t&lt;loclcd ol Fubtght Sc:halon end their .....,_.. al

PSYCHOLOGY COlLOQUIUM •
A8oa ond Sodol ~ . Dr Rabeo1 8
~. I.Jnlvft.ov d Mlchigon, .....,.. a1 t1w APA
Oishnguhhcd Sdcntflc Conlrlou- Awonl. 1979
Room C-31. 4230 Ridge Loa. 3·1S p m Co- e d bv tho Deporoment d Pwchol&lt;&gt;gy and
the GOOuate Stu:Xnt Assodation

........-onc~poa~-....&lt;on&lt;m&gt;ec~..ohand

.. dewlopment planning. Tho cxont........
wll ..U .... tn 2011\ Hoya Hal from 9 a.m.-10
p m. and wll continue on May 3rd, from 9 a.m. to

.-..

Orgonloed bv p,f....,. -

Jomrnol, d..edor

PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM•
,...,..-. ol T........ tn Coftdenocd Mott...
Phi'Ob. """"""' N 0 Mmnln. 4S4 Fronaak
3 JO p m Coffee al 3 15

c.n... f&lt;W Con,porat!Ye Sludles ., Dewlapmont Planning, wlh tlw cooper.- olllw Coundl
,,. lntemot!onol Exchonge cl Sc:halon ICIESJ .,
Waohington , 0 C. end llw Coundl on lntemotionaf
Studies. U/8, The confereno.: wiD focus on tnfarm~~tioo tMant to the problems of de:veloplng
c:oun-

TOPS NU1111T10N LECl\JII£ •
Diet, Tho Broio ond - . - . 0. G H
Andcnon . Facuky of M.dianc . Toronto 26
F..t... 4 p m Spon....ed bv mo Doportmenc al
Biochem&amp;b)l v.nth a grant from Tops Friendly
Marl&lt;&lt;U

Tho SA end UUAB .,._.,,- onnuol--end
pwty, luturing- bonds ond- bocn tc. Sl .
100 kegs al , _ wil bo on hond . Squn Fountoln
Am. Noon eo 6 p.m.
On tlw _..,. wil booTho Alu S!l-. ~.
• ......... lo&lt;ol bond which hoo played tn aowds ol
2100 ot Shoo's &amp;llolo; T h o R - . a Dctooilbued MW WIIW ~ wllh power pop sound,
whtdl lo lo bo ...m-.oc ol the uriy Klnlu;
end - - . . 17-y&lt;a'-old- who
~ravft wtth he own rode. b.id·lq) and her parenll
loax&gt;nllng 1o UUAB't Brian Smoolce she h "vay
"""""" .. England , bu• hun' boon diocov&lt;nd

ol the

SPIUNGFEST"

I'HAIIIIIACEUTICS SEJIJNAII•
CIWeal -............. .... Dto-...
t;.

'TMC

...r ott- c-blnold

.,
o.....-.

Dr. loulo lA~ . Lily l.abo..ooo.y to. Oni&lt;ol
R-.urch, lnd .. napolts CS08 Cooke. 4 p .m

..... yet.,

In cue of t11in or b.d weathcr.dM bands wt11 be
b.rtt Gym from 8-11 p .m . \loith a

rttehedu~ for

c'-lleol $1
UUABFlUI'
AlMft (19791 Wo&amp;dm.n Theatre , Amhent 4 30.
7 ~ 9 JO p m General ,dmtsaon $2 10.
lludenb Sl 60
Modem re-woridng ol the clastic horror ltOJY ol a
R'tCINte. trKking rts VICtims down one by one
Olredot" RldWy Scott utiliza to the maxknum a
moody, gochk . spaonhip a!Jnot;plwre: to ante a
......,_, douSb'.,.,_ df&lt;d Tough on &lt;he
ll&lt;&gt;mo&lt;h

MEN'S TENNIS •
~t« Unn.r.tty. Ellk:on Courts 1 p m
MEDICINAL CHEMIS11IY SEMINAR•
lntaftoroe-lnduced Euymn and DoublePaul F TCII'T9nea. The
t....boratOJy ol CMmimy, National lnstitute of
An!.o;,, M . - , &amp; OigatiYe Otsoses. Natlonol
lnstituta of Hulth Cl21 Cook. 2 p m
Rdrntunentl

Stra.cled RNA, 0.

DRAMA"
Lord Alhd"o Lowr, ......., and do&lt;ded b, En&lt;
Bendoy
Thu"•· 681 Moln St 8 p m
Cienerlll.dmiuic:wl 14. Jludent&amp;, seniof dtirJms $2
ADS """"""" oi•:.p&lt;ed Spont..-ed b, tho Deport·
ment ollbeatre
J.ync f~rNn on WEBR Radn ioYed ill . ~
tlw lhl&lt;d od "Cu• &lt;he lhl&lt;d 0&lt;1 , lttc," she advlocd

INTERNAnONAL COlLEGE

FD.LOWS PROGilAM LECT\JRE.
World s,..o... ,..,...,..., Ptof..,.. Rabeo1

c.-

Arnow, Indiana Un-..y/~
O'BNn 3 p m Refrahmenu wt11 be ~

UNGUI5nCS SPRING OOI.LOQUIUM
SERIES"

,...,.,... ., GendeJ .. c-.. DWocta .,
Spanjeh, Profu.clf flora Klein, ~ o(
t....,.._ end l..inguhtb, Gec:oge1own UniwnOy
l..inguhtb loungo , 106 Spouiding Quod 3 p m.

the author
Milxlm Mt.lumd.r IJ an ..inspired chob: ~ to pW.y
o.c., Wilde . said hff Simon in t+w Nc... ~ "ha
enough ponocho to cony &lt;he b;g rolo • IU """""
"Lon! Alocd." Philip Nil&lt; 1o
&lt;onvln&lt;·
ing,. ecxonllne .. Stmon So .. S.ul EliUn .. tlw
Me&lt;qulo d QuHnJbury Aftcnh... though , Mid tlw
fk• crttit, h tat~ il hill and
\What uneven ,
jUdged Stmon. tlw pooductlon ........... ~

.._.

-..uonobly
"*'

a-..

end wtne , _ . lumlobcd b, tho
Gnw:fu.l« l..inguiltics Cub

PHILOSOPHY SEiliNAR•
Oft Gortflu , Of John

-ng

PSYCHOLOGY COI.LOQUIUM •

uol all
• Lord - · Lowr ·· " - oft..........
Lon! .....ed
Doul)iM Rothe&lt; llwn ...........~ ., che o.c..

,..,. +

Womcn'l S&lt;udies Colego, 108 W -. 7o30

p m. "-\\&lt;udlng F... m...hmcnta AI women
wokomceo....t

o-·

Porbo '3 30

CIVIL ENGIHEEIUNG SEiliNAII• A"""'PIMifl&lt;wlllooiiM-aiOrCont---.. . . . . . ~Water u.tne
Ac:llv8tell Carilotl, Dt:nnif wn..

Lord
Lowr, - · ond d - bv En&lt;
c.- Thulf&lt; , 681 - S.. 8 p m
Gene-ol a d - $4 , - . . .... - - $2
ADS oouchcn oec:epo.d ~ b, llw Deport

v.....

eo...-en .....r ,.........._,

Hoboo NASA. Goddard 1-ulo
pm

I~

Dr N

DRAMA"

.. Florido

a.-........

NoRV... a...dRoclooiHol 8pm
bv tlw Depwtment al M- , . . _
... bo Rondoll ~&lt;..m., ....... end Edwonl
.,.. ...t Rd.~ • . . . . . - m. ad

~alo.ti~U/B

s,.o--1

WaNhot.IM . a non..pafil.-oup

WOMEN'S POET1IY WUtlNG
WOIIKSHOP"

DAIIC£"
WOibhop. H""'""'n Thu,.. Stud;o.
Han1mon Lbwy 8 p m Spont..-ed bv tho Deport
rnen1 of nw.tr.. For more Wonnatioft c.a
831 204S

ENGINEEJUNG AND NUCl£4UI
EHGINEEJUNG SEJIJNAII•

MFA II£CITAL •

O ft:N I'OE1'1IY II£ADING •
n..w~ . l67"-"!'•- 8 0 .;.
F- s,.o--1 bv tlw Cold 5ptne

Room C31 . 4230 Ridge La 3 15 p m

ENGINEEIU.NG SCIENCE. AEROSPACE

cw fie¥1 You&amp;. a...?
·
Tlv &lt;Ant. Thutn production II ttw .ra
........... d l..o&lt;d - ..... Lowr, hod ...

-

.,.. ............ 11Mrapy. So-t

~-Dr Poul Wod..c, aJNYG.aduote

c.n...

legeo.t llw piojl •• """'"'" """-'"' oludy
of a m.n ~ to IUI'Ytw in an oppl"ftlllw fQIOe·
ty h de• wlh a men's hMI rMiiullon tt'IIIIO truly
~ . OM tnu:t1 folow CWM!"s own true natvt«
Thio lo • llwme thai Erl&lt; Bentley hu nplond,
MWr.J tlmn in e.t.e p&amp;.ys most ~ The
Rac..talloa ol Gell.o ~ and Ar• YMI Now
-

- · ... -

Robinson , Gilt

- - 6841Wdy 3pm

a-d.., llw ..... ciO.C..Wtldc, I &lt; W -·

-

109

4Spm R - . t a ... bo......r
PKYSIOl.OGY
.

139Parl&lt;.o

INAII•

~-.,

__
.
.... ~­

-~...._s,.

~

a...r.

Bendey

mmt

-cd'•

ol Theatre

NIAGARA FROI'ITIEIIL.I SOCIETY
liEETIHG

Room 330 Squire 8 p m EMth rnourcn
. . . -. - - o n d plano foo nm """'

"'
......
· 0. H--.1
" Cllllo.dMcdl&lt;ol Sdoool
o.p...
,_.
ol - Ph,oiology,
S-108-....., 4pm

UUAII f1U1•

AI!M· ~ ~ . Squn

4 30. 7.;.,

930 ... ~- $210. .......
S160
.

Satarday - 3
BARIIAU."
-..ec...-121 P-Aeld lpm
UUAII FIUI "
Alloa. Conf«oncc Thooh. Sq..n 4 30. 7 and

�May I, 1980

j

i I I

7

---

UUAII -DAY NIGHT f1UIS'

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

(19551. -

.

... Chorles

lAughton , with R-. Mllchum ond Slwloy
7p .m . ShodL~(I963J , 8,SOp.m.

In

,....... ., ... - . ~phcJoographod
blod!ond-.ll lh&lt;~ol·~
pruchor who hoo "Lo.." toloood on ..,. hone! ond
.....U.tc"' on tM ocher.
In Shock Corrtdot, • )ou:r'Mlst en.,_ an Insane
Hylum try6ng to toNe • murder . ~ he Is brule ·
inSI Into ·""' world "' ""' ....... • .. girlrlond . •
nlgludub
bouldng out o1 the.....- o1
.... ~.ntyl&lt;

-

·Is

LECtUlE '

P&lt;-

~ Key.
s..blloalaol - . euthor ol Medle Sap6obtlon. ~. Room,
Squ.. Hoi. 8 p.m. " - o d - 5ponooo-..t by
the ~'llureou A multl· m«&lt;lo
lN! prnentation Is on the wparatil ways .d men
8fOUM your tauality end ntn your doth wilh 1o
M1 .net menipu'-tr COrKUmft'S.
71.- ""' boon ...cheduled &amp;om """" 29

Tue•day- 6
U / 8 alumni and faculty are m ..m~s
of SHANT! , appearing at Kleinhans'

SPECIAL SERIES ON EFFECTIVE
LEARNING fVII UNDEJIGIIADUATES'
How To Tol.&lt; Objocttw .... ~ T -. Ann
AINm . The lJrUwnity lAarnlng Center 202
Baldy 1-2 20 p m
n. MSiiOn d dernonstr.rc how ~ an
prepere and study fcx VWIOUI kinds ol ~JWN
Useful lipoiD&lt; taldng~ond
olf....t

Mary Seaton Room, next Wednesday.

~

_.ntp "' ""' -

-

.-

Flold

... . - .. .tchlnlociOftd-ol

. . - - - . .. DIGio&lt;ooloomodowlh• "' limo &lt;locum&lt;nting the chontlne_
_ _v..._ _1nond
_
"'
Nc.thom
th
e_
- . ._
_ •_ ...

s-.,_. .,

N-Kingdom - O..WO....~

Hllftlmohowwonmony-ondhow-.
fotolurocl ot tho MUNUm ol M, tho

,........
MUSIC '

U/11 Oloir _.

onc1 ..... . . - . . ,

a--, cond.-.1 by Hontot

Simons Works by M r.nd~luohn . Brahms,
T......nn. H...t.r, fliLuoo o.-.l oohon Boinf
Recllol Hal 8 p.m. F.... 5ponooo-..t by the Dopor1montoiM"*.
MUSIC'
SHANT!, wOh Rochol I.Awlo, "''"ono; Rhondo
o.-.l
MoKdo
Klolnhons' ~
~ Room. 8 p.m. ~- o d - 13.50;
otudonto Oftd c111nn1 12.50. ADS ......._
~- 71.IS modo
00" by
""' ""' Dewlopmont s.va. fl9anl "'-"'
wlh public funds &amp;om rho Now Yon 5co10 Council
on the Arts.
Rochol LAwlo r-=.-..d ho&lt; M.F.A . In YOico hom
U/8. Ronold Rk:lwds lo o ...ol rho
foa~lty hen, ond Mon:olo
did ....
,..oduoto ,..dy ho&lt;• with Soymour Ank ond
StophonMona

'*"'·

Sc:hw-. flu,.; Ronold Rlchonh.

a..._.-F..... ......

-om

.-In

s..,...-F....

""'*

..,.....,...,.be Thanday- 8
MEN'S IIASEIIAlL .

N....,..

WOMEN'S SOfTBAlL'

eo....,. eom ..- .

Achfton Fl&lt;ld 2.30 p .m

c..a-

' FncloNoSC... ~

Sanday- 4

Hoi 8 p m

New

M-...1. ..,.....,

Boinf Roclol
5ponooo-..t by lho

n.. -

Ooponmont ol M"*

DANCE'

Ms

Mwt~rand

a • .-..ttw: o1 c~

who

Oeecen' Wotbbott. Han1tn.n Theen Studio,
- . , l..hwy. 3 p m Sponooo-«1 "" rho o.p.".

holds doslr- &amp;om the IJn;wnoty "' eq-"-"
anct 1M Royel O.nlsh ConMrVatory ol Mua: She

For mor• Worrnation Qll

hu also Mudied at the Conwrvatoh National
Superieur 1M Muliqi.H' in Paris Prior to coming to
U/8 dw - « 1 1n conccns 1n Denman..
s-don . Gmnony o.-.l F.-once At the Unlwnity.
dw lo • Olud&lt;nt ol H&lt;inz R.nfuoo o.-.lhoo ~
m Opon Wori&lt;lhop ~ Slw 1o o 1980
....,.,.. ol the Bood Concmo c . . . _

ment of 'Theatre

831·2045
DRAMA'

Lanl-..r. ' -· - ond dnct&lt;d ... Eric
Bontloy c - Thoo!r&lt;, 681 toWn Sc 3 p m
Gen.ral.di'TIIMkJn $4 , studentl ..nkJr dliarns S2
ADS ......._ O&lt;X&lt;pOod 5ponooo-..t ... rho ~­
nwnt oll'hutrc
MUSIC '

Wlool
-~
c-.n.
funl&lt;
J Qpolo
, condUCIO&lt; "M-ol""'
a.:u. Kelhwine Cornel TlM!.a-t 3 p m FrH ~daion
" - ..... o.dlord
LoNn
Googo., .,. . _ . on em.. """" 5ponooo-..t by
rho Oopomnont ol Mu-=
0.0.. numloon wll indudo ~ S.oot-.
G.ond £My .- "'looodwoy' One Seep."
"Junl/lco.-&gt;." "RRjjiO H-.. Man:h ," o.-.l "Tho

Wedauday- 7
MEN'$ IIASEIIAlL'

Pari&lt;--·

__
_
__ __

~~ (2)

P-Flold lpm

BUfFALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUM•
~oiMothcmotics(....... bo ...

nouncodl . WAom u-o. SUNYIIIuflolo 103
Diefendorf 4 p m

0..... 5Mw ... Eanll •

UUAII FIUC'
Allca. Woldman Theatre, Amhent 4 30, 7 and
$ 2 10 . OIUdonto

............
PIIAVEII

An ...... olf,...,.farlheworld---

F-.....,
.......,

.

-K!Sqontw 7~"' AI ...

.,

fVII MEDIA sruov
AJlOI( '

.,.

930 pm ~.. II 60

SUNOAY WOII5HII' SlliVICES'
...... K.lor · ~ ec...pla. !o-6 p m
E - - , _ t o ottond s,o.-..1 by lh&lt; 1 .-.o!Soudonl ......

- ____
...... _.
...... _
--.
GloyHII, _ , . _ . . . . , . _ . , . . . , . , ...
c - far--~ ModioSOocl!ll&amp;ftolo. 207

a.-..A.. lp•

..._
z-, ..

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

--..,_ .... ~

Gooy . .

...

..

ho .,. ...., """"' ""- II . .,
ol

.......

lvt. ............... FhiV

..

ioNowY.... C., -.tw

--.--.,-. . _ _ ..... Dar

.... c--ot,.._
MD

b

........... - .

- s

()gw lloyoolp

. . , _ u.-.oq,, Anl&lt;oo-o

124F- 2p10

CANCfll EDUCATION P110G11AN
MULnDISCIPUNAIIV CONFEJI£NCE•
Sorcoo.o. 0. M- . B S!&gt;ouldJnsl Room 301.
V A Modlcol c.- 4-5 p m

Onelop•e-nts

F - - · Elm 0..00.

In the

H.istory of

1004 Clommo 2:30

p m E~ welcomt

PHYSICS COUOQUIUN•
Dr. Roy Dlnelo. BdT&lt;i&lt;phoneUboo-ctO&lt;y. 454
Frona.k 3 30 p m CoffN al 3 l!t

,__1ft

CELLlJLAR PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR•

Rtlwt S4oc1!1 ol a..-....
0. Byung H Polk , proleaO&lt;. ~,..nt o1
PNW.trics 108 stwrm.n 4 p m Colfft at 3 ,45ln
S-15

TOPS NUT11010N LECTUIIE'
N - ond - . - . . 0. D A IAYilrl&lt;y.
DovWO&lt;I ol Nu--..1 Selmon. Comd 26 F 4 p m SpontorH by dw Drp.rti"Mnt of
Biodwmila'y. with • &amp;J•nt from Topt Frwndly

-·

CEif1"EII fVII MEDIA STUDY

PII£SEHTAJ101('
E...q ol wo.t.. ... foculty , OIUdonto ond olumnl
of""' c.n... "" SOudy Squn eo.w......

v-"-"",. n....-.

- v......, ...
7:10pm

lndopondont ,.,........ Oftd

futut&lt;d Shot 1n 1970.

E.- Golw ..;. tw
s.rv--., " o~oou~

""' ... .pafCJni'IOd
_ _ "'.,;nd,
- ond ....
· - . , _ . ond
..........
tlvough
In •
corridor G.hr's works tt.w been Included tn new

lifm..._.lniT.,...,s-don, ondtheUS.

UUAIIWEDNESDAY NIGHT F1LNS '

Other workt on the ~m . . ~ .........._
lfo M-FwV_
_......, ......... ...

n....-.. 5qutrw

.............
~' """. ~--...
~·-,
n..-~w-.
..-...
.loooooft--.
_., __

sv_.."" AT- (19SIJ . 7 p m . Thucn
. , _ (Englond 19731. 8 S5 p m cont.......
F,.. o d .
dire&lt;tod by ..u..d Hoochcod. 1o..,.
ofl.-bco&lt;. .....,...,thethcm&lt;ofdoulolfto.-.l
,_,....,. Robor1W.... _onooll.-'~ • • ~who wants ton
chongo "'"'don with....,... - Fori&lt;y G..._
~

n-cr.·--

Moadiay- 5

Pna.Flold lp.m

AMERICAN STUDIES LECTUIIE'

MFA RECITAL'

a.-

12l

121

v ....... """"· Dlono
R;gg ond Mcrioy . • " " " - the ..
~--llm-modoTlwln
go-. onc1 .,_ bloody v...- Prico . . . -

.---comoOv
"""-

o n d - .. -

Twiooy

CEif'I"EIIfVII snJDY
L'ti£KinAJ101('
.- . , . ond - o f !WI. ... . -...

--------... ...
-

Koith Sonbom, ....... - - ...

c__.

Tool, ... Joma Hortol; Tcn - · , IEJK.

d . - .. tho~Y-T-P!owom . wlh
Joon Ev.,., ~s.tu..tlt ond H-.. GaldfWd
The Line ~ •the raull ol one and a hal yean•

In--- ·

o.-.l poociudlon
"Comppn Oacu"'""'"'Y , _. -

DILUIA '
IAN

-•!.-, -

ond dOctod by Eric
llontloy C..• , _ c,
I Moln 5c 8 p m
~-M . -. --12
ADS -.elton -...1 Stooo--.~biottw ~

_.,n....-.

-~DIGio&lt;o ~Hollollhe

--

-8 p,. lltMfntl.
-'Stooo--.1- ""' ...Sdoool.
U/11 C...
far

-SOod!l

.-

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

--"'-Nfl-""'""lnlodnelhe

_....,_ ,_.,...,.._
.....m""'...
o..w _ _

DGooo ...........

Notte. .

_......

CAC MOVIE CANCBJAJlOI(

4~""'t.~.!~""-2tlvough
·-~..
,

-

�May I, 1980

Budget process Is bamtng, SUNY Senate hears
a,

Rlcloud A.~

SUHYs.-

"U you unclentard lhc budgollng prothrough thio year, you
can uriclewland anything," was lhc
-.nent ol "-mbbvman Clam&gt;ee D.
Rapplcyea, lhc 122rdl&gt;ialrld ~tor.
dwlng a din.- held for pllflldpants atterdlng lhc 65th regulor ..-tlng (April
2S-26) ol lhc SUNY Faculty Senate at
the Agricukural ard T ethnical College In

._gone

c..-

M~ .

t •

Dacrt&gt;lng lhc cunent budgetary battle
as "the most bimne urderlaking I have
·. he added that "Many ol us
still conterd that there Is anywhere from
$400 millon to S600 million In surplus
ard no need to go through this ardeal."
Rappleyea suggnled that the only way
ultimately to resolve lhc Imminent lmwith the Governor, apd the legality
ol gubernatorial impourdment through
the Division cllhe Budget cllegislatively
a~ funds, may necessarily ba
through the cow1s. ·we wilt owvtve the
rough water, but we must get out ol a
negative syndrome and question why we
cut programs 11M SUNY, one ol our best
resoun:a, that gen..rate doDar&gt;," he said.
On the other hard, the Governor
"cannot be faulted for some ol the things
he doa, since he looks at It as a politician." he explained. The legislator ex·
preued "high hopeS" that the $22.3
million, originaly earmarlted for SUNY,
would ba rein5tated during the following
week.

Wloarta.- •~laty
During his tradlllonal opening session
presentation to lhe Senate, ChanceDor

Clifton R. Wharton , J r. &lt;:On&lt;lentraled
both on the SUNY budget ard lhe nature
ol evolving relationships between SUNY
a rd the !i!ate Education Department.
He r¥ted "a high level ol uncartain·
ty" r"lative to oment legislaltve ..tforts to
relieve the budgelaly situation . "The
longet' lhc uncmainty exists, th" greater
the Impact on morale." he warned.
As on previou1 occasions, the
Chancellor qualtoned achleving s!4
redlK:tions through the proc:etO' ol, attrition, "which doa not alwaysotturwheti
we can affonl it".
•
Moreover, lhe lJnlvasity which 'irequires consld...,ble time to make changes
If K Is· to reduce Its level ol activity. cannot
slmp!'t do so on a rardomized or attrition
basis, he explained.
Dr_ Wharton took exception to the
decision that imposed a $ 14 mi1ion
reduction "In anticipation ol potential

enrollment trends that preceded any actual enrollment declines-which haven't
even happened yet."
He Identified one poslllve result ol recent budgetary developments, "fhe
elevation ol the .Issue ol public higher
education ard lts-meanlng.for the state as
a whole."

Trouble with the SED
.
Dr. Wharton reviewed recently
adopted regulations by lhe State Education Department (which cause " major
concerns, because ol the absence ol appeal factor&gt;") related to cour&gt;e approvals,
and are matter&gt; dlrec:dy related to the
autonomy ol aD college and university
unit$ In New Voli&lt;.
One major Issue relates to constraints
Imposed on SUNY .facuhy who teach at
designated off-&lt;:.ampus sites, including
another SUNY campus. This creates an
lnter&gt;ystem problem, since "SUNY units
should ba able to use a nd capitalize on
each other's resou~ on a system-wide
basis," Dr . Wharton said.
Such opportunities are constr1cted by
the State Education Department's current
posture . "Wh ile th e Commissioner
realizes the nature ol these concerns, he
wants similar options to ba equaUy
available to the private colleges," the
ChanceUor added .
He again advised that faculty must play
a positive role in extolling S1JNY If w&lt;&gt;
hope to solve our problems, ard
"greater faculty Involvement In retentioo
and recruitment efforts" stiD remains
·essential.
The Chancellor's position Is that New
York "Is best served by a strong system of
private and public education ."
Dr. Wharton careluUy noted-with
reference to the Governor's role-that
"one has to be fair," reminding his audience that he had also per&gt;onaUy emphasized fiscal realities at previous
meetings.
In his own jtidgrnent, and "as an
economist," the fiscal 'situation \s real
"We may disagree about priorities,. but
the problem Is real, not a manufactured
one." Resources are constrained and the
Governor. he conceded , is properly
seeking "to address problems and
issues."
Faculty and retenUon
During the afternoon session , SUNY
Associate for Student Services. PhyUis D.
&amp;der. reported that . "As so much reten ·
tion rue-arch has indkated , interection

and relationships of students with faculty

are among lhc most Important factors in
retention o.f students, along with
academic ..-nee. early warning programs, and other more environmental
factors."
·
Other points emphasiud during her
presentation included;
• Faculty can have a decided Impact,
particularly In advisement (choice ol major field) , use of language (as applied to a
spedflc technical c01111e) . concept of
work , long-rarige goals, .a nd even attitud inal problems regard ing real or
perceived lack ol potential, priorities.
sense of responsibility. and quality of
academic work .
• Informal contacts with faculty
member&gt; outside the classroom have
been shown to ba puticularly Importa nt
in freshman year penistence . New ways
need to ba devised to maximize facuhystudent interaction. esplec:lally during the
fiJsl year lor freshmen and transfer
students.
• Greater Involvement ol faculty In
Orientation prOgrams. and more care in
the assignment ol facolty advisor&gt;, a~e
ways of Increasing both the quantity and
qu a~ty of faculty~dent relationships.
• Altitulles of faculty, ad ministratOr&gt;
and 5laff toward "ltudents is slgnillcant in
reten®n. A student's altitude toward the
Institution usually Is not molded by a
single momentous factor In the collegiate
experience . but influenced by a series of
apparently insignificant experiences o r in·
cidents. which. when negative . build up
and lead toward transfer or withdrawal .
• Most negative experiences students
suffer result from a bask: lack of sensitivity. such as abrupt. discotlrteous and condescending treatment In administrative
and faculty offices ; failu re of faculty
members to keep appointments: advisors
and counselors who are uninf·ormed
about lnstituttonal pohcles and procedures . and unwilling to become
knowledgeable about anything but their
ow-!1 '.specialized areas:. unwilltngness on
th~ 'pan ol facuk'y and adminlstratorf to
take time to atscuss studeni problem~ and
oppOrtunitik
Senate actions
In other actions. Senators Barbara
Howell and Albert Ermanovics were
elected to serve as members of the Executive Committee next year . and the
following resolutions were among those
passed during the two-day session
• That the University Faculty &amp;no~
agam urge th~ Boord of Trustees to res cmd its present policv of selediuelv

dulgno~d tdiglouo holidays and rrtum
to the trodlllonal policy of locaf determtnallon In such molters.
• That the Senate communicate Immediately with the Legjslature and
Governor expressing Its urgent concern
that the $22.3 mdllon appropriation for
the Unlver&gt;lty ba restored.
·
• That tlie State Unlvenlty Facuhy
Senate urge the Chancellor and other appropriate officers of the SUNY administration to strive to increase the
nu{Tlber of tuition waiver&gt; available to
graduate students In State University and
to inform the various campus administrations of the number and dollar value of
tuition waiver&gt; In sufflclent time to enable
SUNY units to compete ..tfectlvely for
graduate students with other major
American unlver&gt;ilies.
• That the Faculty Senate recommend
that the Chancellor require the State
University of New Yoli&lt; to review and
modify as necessary admissions procedures and aiterla to insure equal opportun ities for access to educational programs for all: since standardized test
scores may unfairly d iscri minate aga inst
so me groups. graduate admission decl·
sions should ba based on a variety of data
and should not ba limited to standardized
tests. Any tests developed and used· by ·
SUNY units In the graduate admission
p rocess should ba analyzed and judged
appropriate for the purpose for which
they are used .

50-year reunion
slated for 14th
Fifty grad uates of the Class of 1930 are
expected to attend the U/ B Alumni
Association's Fdty-Year Grad uate Re union on Wed nesday. May 1.;. Alumni
predating 1930 graduation will also ba in
atlenda nce .
Registration at 10 a, m. will ba followed
by .reuoloo_portralts at l0:30: a reoeptlon .,
and )!Jncheon &lt;1! IO(hich members of the
Class of 1930 will ba ind ucted and
designated Honorary Ufe Member&gt; of
the Alumni Association .
Guided bus tours of both campuses.
and something different, a screening of a
period fil m. "Twentieth Century" starring
Carole Lombard and John Barrymore ,
will follow the luncheon . The day will
close with a reception in the Emeritus
Center.
Dr . Myron A. Robarts Is chairman of
the Fifty-Year Graduate Reunion .

• Calendar
...__7 , -a.~

EX~
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FIIEE TtJTORING FOR MFC S TUDENTS
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PHOTOGII.YKY EXHIBIT
Alldo Floh . !ioc&lt;&gt;nd Floor Gollooy. llo&lt;huno Hoi

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The photographs ~e takm by Dr. P•ter StapW,
pofeuor of oral bio6ogy at U/8. and !uture a
variety of~ from the Watem New York arn
STtJDENT WORK EXHIBIT
Comntunlcadono ~ Studmto. !iocQnd
Floor Golleoy, lldhu"" Halt Moy.S-Mo, 18

On the Air
MAVI:

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lo the 1\rto: Mattim M.........,.,
C.nodion oc:t&lt;&gt;&lt; who ployo tho load role "' Erk:
a...doy"o ,_ploy Coun.. Coblo 1101 6 30 p .,_
Ai.o on the 6th et 6.30 and the 71h at 7

MAV5 :

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In tho NIO: Mtchoel Mcawe.
Beat G«net"ation poet lntetnatk&gt;nal CabM: (10) 6

pm

MAV4:
~ l, Dr. Stopheo C.

In-

o..-n. d•octor.

English . . _ . _ 1........ / .,...._ al
foooJtlll ~ . --c.lturol ond Linguatoc: Bomon
10 Tra&amp;r .. WBEN t930I 9 (Y., p m
~ U, Dr. H. Lawence R0111, profeuor
ol oociology/ adjund pral...... Low Sthoof.
"'OmiUng ond OoMng oncf tho Low • W8EN 19301

llOSpm

�MAY

•

I, 1980

n er
Dr. Willard H. Bonner is dead
at 80; was a key fi~re in
developing the English Department
Dr. Wllard Hlllam Bon,_, emer11us
proieMO&lt; ol Englioh, died Apnl 22 In a
13Nnswlck, Maine, holpllal. lie was 80,
and had retired In 1968 .,.,.,. for!y-six
van' .-elation wllh the UnivenHy.
Born May 13, 1899, In Lynn, ~ .•
Bonner reoellled a B. A. degrve &amp;om the
Collego ol the Pdic In California, an
M.A. &amp;om Stanford Unlvenity, and the
Ph.D. &amp;om Yale. Aherone~aun tnstructoc at Michigan State he began his
c:arur at Buffalo In 1922, coincident with'
the Inauguration ol Samuel P. Qopen as
chanodor cl.lhe Univenlly.

e World War OJ?

..__L ....

I)

slon he feels both goveT~ments are guilty
of.

""'-n -.e both Jndlctable and
ramblrlg.
.
The - y to de-ecaletlon II through
SALT 0 and further olllpo toward arms
control But the U .S . feels. this lslmpossl·
ble u long as Soviet troops an In
Afghanistan. The Soviet prnence there,
.. said Hill, has "dcslabiloed" the Perslon
Guf era and the relations between the
superj)owers. Tolkunov pictured the
' U.S .S .R. as the onc- to ratify SALT
U and cast the U.S . as the villaJn In the
arms control
espcclalty because o(
the recent Introduction Into Europe of
what the Soviets View as ol(enslve rockets
and missiles. The O.S . Is unwilling to stlck
to the prinqple of parity -tn nuclew armo
agreed on In Vienna, charged Belobrov .
The U.S. II the one stirring up trouble In
the Mid-East and Pcrslon Gulf, he accused .
~

race.

.......... ...--of
~·

Tlwnoo forwarl:l Bo~ became Involved In al aspect~ ol ac'ademic life, and
was a key f9ire Iii fonnula11ng the
p~. and fosierlng the growth and
development, ol the English Department,
the College ol Arts and Sciences, the
Graduate School, and Mlllard Almore
Collego. He was a long-Hme member ol
the f:eculty Senate, and served as
tecretary and president ol the local
AAUP chapter ·In the 1930's.
On the executive comm- ol both
the Arts and Sciences Collage and 11M!
Graduate School, he was also chalnna11
or member ol many Important "worrdng
~· IIICh as that which oversaw
the revision ol the und""!!l"dtJata curric\llwn In 1946. When ihe momentous
decision was being made to shift from
privata uniYcnlty to State Univenlly
centa':::Bon'*' was among the chid con·
sWtarifs for Chancellor Fwnas and the
Faculty Senate In a-..lng and ar·
HculaUng the educational Impact of the
change. In 1965 he was diad for
Oistlnglslshed Scrvloo to the Ails College
and the University. He became the
. James H . McNWiy Profasor ol English In
1955, and held that O&gt;air Wllll retire-

A'frleoodlr'.-....

been a model of enthusiasm and lnlelJri·
ty." And then-President Mcyason · ,
"1ft a brief review ol his academic ~ I
was able to discern the outlines of
something dose to the e&gt;&lt;emplary life."
Elda Baumann Bonner, Willard's wife,
provides anodlcr Insight: "His chlldhood
sumlners In Maine {on Long Island In the
mouth ol the Kennebec Riva) bred in
htm a lifelong lolle ol the sea, reflected In
many of his books and essays. His dream
of returning to the lst.nd was fulilled In
1951 , and at his retirement he moved to
Brunswick, where he could have access
to both Bowdoin's fine lbary and the
sea . Uncompleted at his death was a
book on the mostly f~n maritime
environment ol Thoreau s time, and lis
Influence on the extent and lmportanoo
ol
nauHcal Image and metaphor In
ment.
Thoreau's wrHtng and his thoughts on the
Dr Bonner published books, arttcln. future o( America."
and reviews In several fields of Interest ,
Willard Bonner's quality may perhaps
nolably the literature of. piracy and bucbe fch best in this {19681 r~ of his
canuring ("PPrate Laureate : The Ufe
to the perennial CV-update demand that
and Legends of Captain Kldd" l.
give "other relevant data" about
eighteenth-century literary figures ("Oeourselves as runners In the race-course of
Qulncey At Work"; c:o-edHor of "The
life: "My gueA II that I was the OepartCom!Mt Letters of William Hazlitt"l,
mcnfs public rclaHons man for many
and Henry David Thoreau . He was editor
years, as I was on the job and available
of Buffalo Unlvcnlly PubllcaHons from
and people sought me as the voice ol the
1923 to 1948. and contribut d arttcln
Depart:ment for an enormous number ol
and· monographs 19 the Bu/folo Studia . day-to-day thifl91." Or, -might borrow
as well as other echolarly periodicals such
what Willard's long-time colleague and
as A - . . Utaroture, The Joumof of
friend John Sewall was fond ol ~ng as
Amcrieon Folklore, The NcOM England
one's highest accolade {the epitaph of an
Qu-rlv: he supplied the arttcln on
anonymous Civil Ww soldier) : "He
piracy and bUcaneering for Woric:l Book
- n his duty and he done his damned·
Encyclopedt. and Colllor's ~dlo .
est."
-Lawr...,ceflllcbcl
In addition to Phi Beta ~ - the
Modern Language Association of
America. the ~e Society, and
the Thoreau Society, Dr. Bonner was a
.member of the Scriblcna Club and the
International Torch Oub of Buffalo. He
Dr. Clifton R. Wharton . Jr., chancellor
contributed o wceldy Book ReView colol State Univenlly, has been sworn-In lor
umn to the Buffalo Ewn ng Nc~~n tn
the second term as chairman ol the
"1936-38 and i946-52. and wrot a
Board lor lnternaHonal Food and
number of feature utlda for the Nf!w• '
Agricultural Development {BlFAOI .
Maganne Section. H was an actiw
l'rndent Carter reappointed Wharton
member ol the u - . . y·s Speakers
last month to a second tluft·year term
Bureau, and Is remembered for many
on the Board and redesignated him lis
and po-CMntaHons to ochools. dubs,
chairman.
MrVic:e org.nlutlons. and radlo/lV pro·
BtFAD Is part ol the U.S . International
gr-ams, In the Buffalo acea
Development Coopa&amp;Hon Agency and
advises on federal expenditures under
the lnt.emaHonal B!J'Icultural develop·
ment and food asolstance program.
Wharton has dlreded the Board since

Wharton enters
2nd BIFAD term

H was first utablished
In accepCing reappointment, Wharton

said :
"This program II designed to build
~~rong Indigenous lnslltuHons. gowm·
mental and academic, In the Third World
capable of achieving effective Mnl&lt;agcs
~ tcadllna. research, and ulon·
lion In attacking probie!N of rural poverty or1 a con nu!ng bdl.
"lnllo.Hon, CI'ICfiiY ..,. and other • ol
modem s«kty have
rncanb1g to
...._who
chronic-and
malnulllllon We mUll hq&gt; nallorW buld
a capadlv lo . . . , . . aulfering •

The Soviet representatives assured
Raool that Russian troops were "Invited"
Into Afghanistan lo save a "friendly"
regime from "outside" Interference. Until
the U.S . stops actively backing the rebels
there. they emphasized , the Soviet
milit:arv presence wiD remain . "You
should ask the Amei1cans how sqon th"y
wUI stop meddling In Afghanistan and
Iran and about their tnterlerence with
Patnunlan rights," suggested Belobrov .
·"That's the real issue."
The U.S . categorically d"nles any Involvement In Afghanistan. HIU made
clear. We want only a guarantee of free
shipping and free access to petroleum
s~ In the area, and are not In·
terested eHher In maintaining a military
presence or In domlnaHon. The most lm·
portent factor shaping U.S. policy ln. the
area, he emphasized , Is that "53 of our
citizens are being held there against their
wiU and we want them back ." Then .
"wc'U be wiUing to deal on the basis of
mutual sovereignty and respect ."
•
Raoof accused the Soviets of overkill in
Afghanistan. 100,000 Soviet troops are
pHted against only 10,000 rebels . He
seemed to think this means more than a
temporary presence. "You haven't even
discussed your relations with the slates In
the Middle East," he told the Soviet
delegates. He reminded Hdl that what Is
happening In Iran Is a reflection of the
po-evlous U.S. policy of backing a
perMCUHng regime. "NeHher of your
answers are satisfactory," he complained
to the panclsts.
Neither the U.S ., nor the U.S .S .R. has
any "plans" to "Invade" IOYer«ign nations anywhere In the world . But, said
T olkunov, when "friendly" or ''progressive" regimes "ask" 5oYtet troops to
help them , thafs dfferent . The U.S . has
tried to avoid war, but "wiD defend Itself'
anywhere In the world, HiD informed the
audience. The recent lranlon incursion
was not a mitrtary action , but a
"humanitarian" rescue mission, he ven·
turcd . Tol&lt;unov said he was "sorry"
about the hoo!a90S, but lch ti)e U.S . must
use "peaceful, cllplomaHc means" to gain
their ret\jm . "It's ilot our country which Is
looking to build airstrips for strategic
bombers in the Perslon Gull," the Proud a
representative said .

He · - ... "-crtcuu '"'ftlt'
"Why was I(
for the Soviets
to shoot the head ol a 'friendly' natiOn
who had Invited their troops in to help
him?" Bcnnell queried.
Ah , explained Belobrov, Mr. Amln of
Afghanistan was an • An...rican agent"
who was found out, overthrown and kilt·
ed by hlo own people, "not by us."
Bennett found ft "very Interesting that
we -m to have an American agent who
lnvHcd your troops to help him." Could
there eve&lt; be .a time when genuine
diuldcnts acllilg on tba own might riM
up agal!\11 ,. regime friendly to the
U .S S.R. wllh no oullide Interference In·
valved? she demanded.
"' doubt H very much." raponded
Belob(oy
Turning to Haynlo't question about
human rillhts, the Soviets antWa-.d by
accuang the Amer1ca.. ol violations and
abeolvtng themteJva ol any~­
The Saalo Oepartmenl reprCMntootlvc s
(wply was the Bp side.

nccessarv

~ w_,•t;;;;;::cl. "1..,.. Wlih
the charges you've !brown • .....
other." he Ald. But·~ fcx.the
, _ sub;eaod 1o the - . . . . , . . ol
mtM.rlots and hardlnen In bach ........•

-c.

he wllhed to ~ He .......
Sakarov wHh Eloberg or Ben9n, he
said, end the crimes olSldn wllh the ..,_
ol blac:lca lri the South. TheN,
be added, he once ......-.! In
Mlsollojppl for trying to atlend a trial ol a
"diloiclent who facing trumped-up
chuga." Thet doesn't hapjfen only In
.the O.S .S.R., Haynie argued.
"In the Soviet Onion, then II free
health care, free education, free apert"ments," said 8elobrov In
ol a
"perfect human rillhts" record then.
" Nothing comes without a price,"
countered HllJ.

.w-

n.....,.._ __ ___
*'-

Next came a
ol ~ :
Didn't lAmln say In 1917 that the todallot
countries should cut capttalst nellonl ell
&amp;om !heir energy suppllos? Old not
Carter support the "criminal shah?" Why
docs the U.S . welcome Cuban refugees
but exclude !hoM from Haiti? Didn't
Carter violate the War Powers Act wiJh
the lranlon rescue mlalon? Why has the
U.S. deployed troops here and there?
Wh~ docs H want bases In nations around
the Perslon Guf? Why?
Answers were ol lttle Interest to the
questioners.
The U.S . was attempting to Invade
Iran and ovathrow the goveT~ment IMt
week, someone charged .
"With six helicopters?" Bennett asked
Incredulously.
There has been a lot ol rhctor1c heN
tonight, Belobrov finally said. But there
can and should be ·~&gt;ope .
"We chalenge the O.S. government to
start a dialogue to build-up friendship
rathe~ than enmity."
U thev don't bore each other to death
first, with the same old song In the same
old key, one member ol the audlenca«
muttered on the way out.

4

2 share
Haas award
this· year
Colleen M. McCarthy-Miller and
Douglas Floccare have been named this
year's recipients of the Dorothy M. Haas·
Scholarship award. In recogniHon of their
outstanding contrtbuHons to the Universl·
ty.
Ms . McCarihy-MUier. a sophomore In
the Human Services program , Is po-esl·
dent of the Independents, o handicapped
student group on campus. Her leadership
has brought greater rccognftlon to the
needs and concerns of the handicapped ,
both on campus and in the surrounding
area . She also helped Initiate a Physical
Educatlon/RccrcoHon program which
provided an opportunity for handicapped
students to participate and reulve
academic physical education credit . In
addition . Ms. McCarihy·MIIIer was In·
strumental In the ramping of Clark Hall
which made an ~tquatics program
available to the handicapped.

Jl. •.

Flor:care Is chief of the U/B Volunteer
Rescue Squad , an organluHon of tnolned
students quahlled to assist In medical
emergencies. Through his efforts, and
with the help of Robert Hunt and Dr.
Luther Musselman, the projed was approved late last foD ·by President Ketter.
Akhough the id a of a R'ucue Squad on
th' campus has been discussed for
several years. H was Floccare who gave H
practicality ond continuity. He wro1e the
consHtuHon , the operatir\g procedura,
and organized muti"¥5 of the group.
Floccare Is 1 senior biOlogy major who
wt8 enter medical school In the faD . He "'\
hnsf rred here from the Unlvenlly of
Rochester and II a member of tha
volunteer lire department In h it
hom town of l.Mcwood, N.Y.
The ochofarshlp ow rd was p«sented
to McCarthy-Miller and Floc:carc by
Dorothy M Haat, former d edor of Norton Union, In whoM name the -ard was

established

•

�May 1, 1980

Officers,-poet, designer
: At top left are tile n...., ofllcera of t he U/ 8 Wo....,..'s Cl'lb (oee story boJow):
at. bottom left, junior Kim Fish er dlsplaya ller cover desl gn fo r £1\e S tudent
Handbook (story below): a nd abow Is grad atuden t Grace Am lgone, first
prize winner In this year's Academy o f American PC&gt;4'ts College PC&gt;4'try Prize
Contest at U/8. made possible by the Friends of the University U bra rles.

Women's Club
awards scholarships

' '-

The UIB Women's Oub last Saturday
awarded frvc scl&gt;ola!$1\lp awards IDf
academic nullence Jmong U / B
sophomores
The flv . $500 scholarships were
presented at the dub's annual m lallation .
luncheon In Spaulding O.ning Room at
Ellltott TllC luncheon also featured a
fashion show .
scl&gt;olal$lllp winners are
Laurie A Ambrose, Buffalo. a pllysoeal
therapy major: &amp;th I Hendnduon .
Sc:oc.a. who Is majoring In mechanical
enplneerlng: Michelle A Kamin I. Buffalo. a psychology majof : Bridget A Me·
Canney. Rochester. wl&gt;o Is majoring In
medicinal chemlslry; and O.nlel L
Sdlumacher, Scotia, ma,orlng on elec·
trieal englnftrlng
Club. adJv on the campu SlllClO! 1946. ~ the Grace

The

,

Thew.,_,·.

Whimsical animals
picked for handbook-

For the fnt time , a student has designed the covv for the Student Handbook,
which Is a source of general Information
for new undergraduates,
Kim Fisher, a junior in the Communication Design Program at U/ B,
drew whimsical animal motifs lor the
198(),81 cover of the Student Handbook
which Is put t~ther by the Publications
Office .
Ann F Whitcher of the Publications
staff thought of the idea of tapping U/ B
graphics talent and leh tt might be a way
to improve relations between· students
and the adrnlnlstration.
The cover project was assigned In a
junior design class taught by Anthony
Rozak. associate professor in the ~ ­
ment ol An and Art History. Rozak s 25
students didn 't view the assignment as a
competition , but- Instead helped each
other and did their best , he said .
Ms. Fisher . whq plans a career in
graphic design and especially likes
typography and illustration, thought of
wltll a liol ol penons wl&gt;o had wrltt n
her idea after a comm.,nt made by Dr.
c:hecks whiclt could not be honored at
Wolfgang Wolc:k. chairman of the
banka because ol lnsuffident funds . An
Ungulslies Department
mvallgation showed tlwot many ol these
"He I h U/ B had no... recognizable
were - n by penons who are nol
tradftlons even though n Is an old
logibmate members ol the Univentty
scllool." she said . She then changed her
community Plnn said n Ia belltved that
original Idea ol a design based on type to
the pre-registration proeedu,... will preone with an older and antique apwnt all but legitimate members ol the
pearance
UnlYerllly from 1111ng the aervlce. Folldt .
How did she 'come up with the animal
has lndle.ted lhev would
ID dlaconmObl? "It's herd to explaan ." she said .
11nue the aerv1ce i tlwo problem cannot be
"oome.thlng was lurking, trying ID come to
raolved. ohe said
the ourlace and then I thought of old
etchings 'will\ anthr~lc themes "
Pre·
ation forme
be available
Ms Asher dr w ri&gt;oollV lrom memoo:y
el c:llec:k-easlltng locallons before the nd
but uaed the dictionary for some details
ol
. . . . - Sluden ... wged 10
such a whet direction the ears went and
Oldc up the larm, bout. and return Hto
referred to her high oellool ehemlltry 1ex1
l'olla11 as ooon poastie to avoid delay
for _the periodic table In the Chemlslry

Capen scholarshop awards In memory of
the wlf of former U/ B t:hancellor
Samuel P . Capen . Proceeds from dub
actilnhes help finance the awards .
The dub's new slate of officers was InKetter .
tailed by Mrs Lorelei
honO&lt;ary president of !he organization .
Celeste C . Suftlvan was onstalled as
president . sueoeedong Bealriz M. lsada .
Oth"' officers Installed """e Kathleen
Feliciano. vice president: Cynthia Hagerman. treasurer, Barbara Dumain . re·
cording secretary, and Vonnie Jones .
corresponding secretary.
Women's Club members are U/ B
faculty "' staff members or wives of U/ B
faculty or staff members , and women
mrembers or wives of members of the
Stat University Board of Trustees and
U/ B Counal

z.

Change in check-cashing policy

panel.
The artist hopes no on~ wllf"""take of.
fense at the animal motifs. She chose
many ol them lor their disllngulohed and
scholarly appearance and added her personaltoucil of humor.
AD the drawings were done In lnk and
are original line art . The cover is a 60 per
cent reduction of the original. Ms. Fisher
spent two to three hours on each drawing
and the process was extended over two
weeks.
The young artist Is mt&gt;de$1 about her
work. She simply says. "I had an Idea
and used it. "

Reception will
fete Dr. Adler
Friends , colleague• and former
students of one of the University's most
distinguished prolessors will honor lllm al
an lnvftational 11!C4!ption at 4 p.m . Sunday afternoon, May 5, In Spaulding Din·
lng Room
Being honored Is Dr. Selig Adler.
Samuel Paul Capen Prolenor of
American History, who Ia retiring at the
end ol thla semester after an association
with U/ B spanning more than 50 years.
One highlight Ol the occasion wiD be
the presentation to Dr. Adler ol a
/t!al.ocnrl/t, entitled "An American
Historian; Essays to Honor Selig Adler, •
published by. SUNY Buffalo . A
photograpl\ie portrait ol Dr. Adler will be
In his honor to the Department ol

It:"
lstory

.

Presld nt Robert L Ketter will olfer a
brief
monlal as W1ll Arnold Gardner, a
repraen .. tlve olthe SUNY TruJtees.

�n

May I. 1980

• The comics in American HistorY
( 1 . - - l • ..a.t)

nmes

august
did , indeed, NO a strip , called "The
Roosevelt ScaB," lor six montlu In 1906.
That wu the era In which the comb came Into their
own u circulation weapons In the great New Yorl&lt; Ci·
t y - war between Pulilzer's New York World
and Hearst's Joomal.

The 'YeO- Kid' flnt
The first strip was "The Yellow Kid ," by Oulaluh In
· the World. Its sadistic hero looked like a cross betw&lt;IO!n
a cretin and Mod magazine's Mr. Neuman. Set In the
world ol the poor, the strip had a social dimension, a
biting edge.
Outcauh was soon lured away· from Pulitzer by
Hearst, Siggel&lt;ow n!COUnled. WBliam Rando"h
Hearst, perhaps the most succe.ssful and powerful
newspaper lyCO&lt;)jl ol the first half ol the 20th century,
wu "the beSt ~ the comb ever had ." His papers
and his King Features syndicate were the leading promoters ol the fuMies .
People even called Hearst himself "The Yellow Kid"
In the early days. Tbafs the genesis ol the term
"yellow jOurnalism," eoccordlng to Siggelkow.
The "Yellow Kid" pioneered two vital facets of
modem comia: a "strlking personality" In the lead
role, and the placement ol dialogue within the drawing
Itself rather than outside.
·
After "the Yellow Kid, • Outcauh went on to "Buster
Brown" which had a tremendous Impact on the way
lillie boys were dressed, If nothing else.

A'coaicooldle'
A Ml·styled "comicophile," Slggelkow dipped Into

his store ol comic lore to present a fascinating array ol
Information:
e su- 1913 -·ve had two versions of the
adventures ol "Hans und Fritz.• In some papers.
they've been billed as "llle Katzenjammer Kids," and.
In others as "The Captain a'nd the Kids.• An early
lawsull when the creetor changed newspapers resulted
In this compromiSed oonluilon: one party kept the
original title and the ar1lst got to keep his c:haraCters.
During the height ol anti-German sentiment In World
War I, lnddcntaly, the Katzenjamrners became the
"Shenanigan Kids," and lhft country ol origin was
changed to Holland .
• An early strip, "Utile Nemo In Slumberland."
which plumbed the ckpths ol the uncontdous even

before Freud, Is considered a surrealistic classic and
has been displayed In the Museum of Modem Art.
e " Mutt and Jeff' (1907) is the oldest swviving dai·
ly comic, one which was so popular al its peak that it
fetched lis creaiOt', Bud F'ISher. the handsome fee of
$1.000 a week in 1915.

Thema.tlmafllnatlft
e ''Krazy Kat," by George "tlerrtman, which ran
from 1910-1938, was perhaps the most imaginative
strip In the hlsiOfY of the comb, A blend ol art and
poetry, h was selected, along with the worl&lt; of Charlie
&lt;;:hapbn, as one of the two great American entertain·
ment achievements of the early century . Today's
"Broomhilda"is quite derivative of H In terms of draw·
lng style. Slggelkow assessed . It was a loser ftnanciaOy,
he remembered, but Hearst loved II. "Krazy Kat" died
with its creator. ahhough many strips have passed
through the hands of two or more artists In their day.
Sometimes this worl&lt;s, but more often il doesn't.
• "Bringing Up Father," featuring Maggie and Jiggs
(1913), was the first of the "domestic strips," an idea
still running strong on modem day TV. "Toots and
~followed m1919 (and isUI&gt;Oidallv notable for
its depletion of the dress of the tim*s tt i!Wd throl.lgh) .
The- strip once went on hiatus for six months when
Toots became pregnant. The reigning champion of
this genre, "Blondie," came later. Moet popular In the
1920s was "1lle Gumps," a semi-realistic family strip
In which the first death In the comb was suffered .
• "Gasoline Alley" (1919) by Frank King was
perhaps the most "natural" of all. Its characters grew
older with the passing years. Skeeztx, a baby when the
strip debuted, went to war In World War 11, and is now
nearly 60. "Little happened to anyone growing up In
this era that didn 'I happen to Skeez!x ." Siggelkow sub·
milled . By contrast, the heroine of "Boots and Her
Buddies" and most other strip characters remain
ageless. Boots put on five years over one 35-year
span, and In 55 years, "Smitty" has aged from 12 to
21. Another character. who began life as "Apple
Mary" In the Depression , went Boots and Smitty one
better. She actually got younger over the years as she
was transformed Into today's "Mary Worth ." ·"Apple
Mary, • Incidentally, was the first strip ever to be drawn
by a woman . " Brenda Starr" by Dale Messick is
another ol the very few comics devised by women
which ever made II .

Wo.r klng atria aad aa orplaaa
• Working girls, however, were celebrated In the
comb, perhaps even before the nation fuOy aocepled
the idea . "Tlllie the Toller," who joined the WACA in
World War 11, wu one olthe forst . Another was Dixie
Dugan . "Oh that Dixie," Slggelkow gushed. The slrik·
lng brunette was his first true love. He used to hide pic·
lures of her in his basement, o.ut of sight of his
mother. " Dr. Siggelkow's wife looks a lot like Dixie,"
Prof. Plesur revealed to the class.
• "Little Orphan Annie," a legacy of the Coolidge
era which lasted 45 years, was perhaps the most biting
political satire of Its day. Anti-union , anti-welfare, anti·
communist, anti-Income tax, anti-gas rationing, this
uhra·conservative sbip had a particular vendetta for
FDR . Daddy Warbucks "committed suicide" when
Rooseveh achieved his much-disputed third term, on·
ly to reappear later. Despite Its toptcahty, Annie
unchanging In many ways. "She didn't change 'her
dress fOt' 50 years," remarked Slggelkow. "UT Abner"
was another sbip known for biting satire as Its creator
AI Capp moved from liberal to extreme right-~
across the 30s, 40s and 50s. Wah Kelly's ''POliO, a
prime example of a strip which no one else ~ cony
on after its creator died, presented such a stinging
caricature ol Joe McCarthy, al his red-balling zenith,
that many newspapers were afraid to print H.

was

War and raall• The gangster "era" ol the 1930s and the coming
of World War U brought us the adventure strips with
their macho heroes. super or otherwise: • Joe
Palooka" (who went on lo enlist In the Anny In World
War ll) , "Dick Tracy" (the first realislic police strip, and
J . Edgar Hoover's favorite), "Prince Valiant" (one ol
the rnost skillfuUy-drawn ever) , "Steve Can!:"'" ,"
'1'erry and the !"~rates," and finally "Superman and
his lmhators (a copy ol the issue ol"Action Comics" In
which the Big S made his debut in the late 1930s Is
now worth a cool $4,000, Siggelkow said) .
So aU-pervasive were the comb In the w• years,
Siggelkow related. thai the Anny used questiOns
ba!ed on them lo thwart German soldiers who tried to
Infiltrate U.S . bnes disguised as Americans.
That technique had to be used selectively, though .
The Italian dictator Mussolinl was such a fan of
"Popeye" that he had that strip continued in Italy long
after m~ things American had been baMed·.- a .

Po.s sible preventive for gum disease found

--.- 8v MillY Booth Spina

Someday aoon a good bNohlng with a
....., kind ol toothpast may be aD !Not Is
~to ward off gum dioease .
Dioc:over)l ol a new subdau of com·
pounds which may significantly lower in·
c:ldence ol periodontAl disease n the
futur io being reported today by a U/ B
pharmacy r-.:l&gt;cr
0. Rob.rt Coburn told thooe attending
the Tenth Annu.J .lamn A English Svm·
P"*m opontOred by U/B's School ol

D«nttstry that his dlocove.tles inh:tllt

~ from adhering to dentAl enamel.

In '" "
num

stud , they
overwhelming
of "''Jani.... blamed for
P«ffodontAI diM.... particuloorty • group
known as
yar~e Collum II
aSiodal
P•&lt;&gt;fenor of medicinal
ch.
In the School of
' - hes ~ io ltV lea
known .. an acyl
n
I

Pha3

to determine ~ the compounds are toxic
or carcinogenic . before human atudies
can be done ." Coburn· cautioned . Buill
aD goa ....,u, the compounds may be
ava lable In over·the-&lt;X&gt;Unter prepara·
lions with n the next ftve "' six yearo.
Curr ntly. an unnamed national corpora·
tlon Is negotiating for exclusive rights to
use the agents In oral products.
"Tho:se agents could be Incorporated
into either mouth ·rinse Of toothpaste:·
Coburn ...plains He prefen toothpast
for wveral reasons People brush their
teeth longer than they rinse their mouths
and more brush their I eth •egulariy than
routinely use mouth rinses If the agents
were to be available only In mouth rinses.
he fears many people would erroneously
be e they no longer would have to
brush their I th
Many udief hav" lmplicaled a range
of oral bacterill as the major culprit In
periodontAl dlseate. a condotion which
a mosl aduhs In
most sevt!1'c
form. • ceuses tooth loot
"Sw;f:ry lo oft.tn performed to reduce
the d&lt;lpth of periodontal pocke around

teeth so patients can brush and floss more
effectively to remove 1Tapped food par·
ticles and plaque ." Coburn explained . In
the past few years. other research. much
of which has been conducted in U/ B's
Oral Biology Department . has shown that
tetracychne and mlnocycUne given in pill
(Ot'm can help reduce the harmful oral
bacteria population
A prnentiM and • tratment
"If the acyl compounds prove effective
and non -toxic In the upcoming animal
otud;..s, they could be used. as a preven·
live agalnol periodontal disease as well as
an adjunct treatment ." Coburn be!Wves
He said ·incorporatiOn ol the com·
pounds In dental products routinely used
by the public would enhance the chances
ol their having a significant effect In the
Incidence ol periOdontal dlsea . .
"If, on the other hand. the products are
mad avallable only by pract!ption or
must be applied topically by dent' .
many paben would be cfiocouraged
from u ng the Pfoduc:ts." Coburn

ruoon .

Some salicylanllides are currently used
to treat fungal Infections. Others. which
caused skin sensltlvlly In oome, were
wlth&lt;lrawn as ingredients In certain
deodOt'anl soaps a fe..i years ago.
No -lu.tty rWI
"From the worl&lt; I've done." Coburn
says, "II appears the acyl salicylanlldes,
which are cousins ol aspirin's major In·
gredient, don't carry a senslllvtty risk.
And sllll, the9 are tr"mendously Cfectlvc
In reducing the population ol harmful oral
bacteria ."

4

Coburn says early suggtst the
compounds are more Cflldlvc -lnsl

bactotna implicated In periodontal diocue

than agalnat others ~ In dental
decay (carla)
·
•

."lf aD goa wd, these compounds, or
thooe which prove to be more dfedl_,.
may w Dbe on the rnarto.t wllhln the n«x.l
few years," he predlctl. Coburn'•
...search Is funded by tpnlll from the Ne·
tlonallnstitu for O.nlel R~.

i

�May I , 1980

D

Aspirin's effect In .
heart disease probed

change
Trustees approve rules for
awarding previously banned
honorary degrees
The SUNY Tru- lett -'&lt; approy·
eel gulddncs for the awarding ol
hononuy clewees. a practice which had
~- "-&gt; outlawed by Slate

,__

SorM

the SUNY vice c:Nnoellor for aeadamlc
policy and planning (non·
YOilng) .
Ham. cl"""*-s found qualified by
thll .-.1 wll be ~ to the
~.

Honcnry ~ may be conferred
lor the tnt lime In 1981 , but wtll be
llrt.-.d to a SUNY-wide IolBI ol 50.
The Trustea themselva will award aD
such deg~Ms, In the name ol State
Unlvewlty, not an Individual campus.
The ~ may be given In sbc
a~tegOrla: fine arts, humane leiters,
laws. ~often . mUJic, and lclenc:e. The
1ype lo be conferred must bear a relation·
~ to the nature ol the allalnment being
recognloed.
The Trustea set three "acceptable
criteria" for 1he awards:
!.To recognize excellence and ex!Ror·
dlnary achievement In the fields ol public
affaln, the sciences, humanities and the
arts. ocholarshlp and education , business
and philanthropy. and social services
"which exemplify the mission and pur·
poses" of SUNY.
2. To honor merllorlous and out·
standing service to the Un erslty. the
State ol New York. the United States. or
to humanity at large.
3. To recognize persons whose lives
and significant achievements should
serv as examples ol the University's
aspirations for its students. .
The Trustee guidehnes specify that
nominees for the awards must be
."dlstingulshed , " ~of " recognized
e.minenoe ... ~
tence. even ex·
t. Service or gilts
cellencc." Is not su
to the Un iversity should not "in
themselves" be enough: the recipient
mutt have "demonstrated the humane
valun that are the aim ol education" and
have mede "oignllicant contributions" to
his or her chosen field .
Honorary degrees will be conferred at
commencements and other special
~~~ . but will not be given In absentia.
The Chancellor. the Chairman ol the
Trustees or a Trustee designated by the
Chairman must ' be the ON to make the
presentation. Only in their absence. may
- an Individual a~mpus president be
authorized to do so. "on behaK ol the
Board ol Trustees."

T.,...., with~ r:ecommenda·
lions. The T rus111es wtll make the final

E-.' un _. P"'"'d•• ........

Aller well over a year ol acting ex·
er:uiiYes (and the tum-&lt;lown by the
SUNY Trustees Of OM ol them for the
pannanent lippolntment) . S&lt;ony Brook
thlo - - has • president.
John H. Manbwvor 3d, dean for arts
and aclenccs at tM University of
Southan Celllomia, was mpped for the
prald.ncy ol the Long Island counter·
part ol U!B.
The New York 1lma looked at him
and at the _...,.. In a Sunday article,
"Will Excellence Come After
Adolacenca at Stony &amp;ookT'
Mlnbwger, 39, was asked his views
....t ..pratlons to make' the lnslltutlon
"flnt· rank ," a goal which many
aiiOdalld with the campr.ll have become
diiAIIIoned with In the wake ol the

n.. guldelneo prohtJit conferral ol
~S:Y!r"~-...=-~

IIOIIIIcianl. Banned .,., rnernben ol the

" r . - or local

Coundll during their
ol ..W.; any SUNY~
(tKully or 111111) dwtng hll or her period
ol ~; and ~I holden ol
elec:llw or ~- pubk olllce or K·
IIYe can&lt;lcl-. far eledlw pubk office.
No J*'IOft wtl be ...... to ....,...,.,
"""" tt.n one hononry ciegr•.
The ~ ernphMile conflden.
llollly at .. .,..,. In the Mlec:tlon ol
degree .-.ctplnta. lo ...old .......... 'II
ellfier tt&gt;- ~ or any "penon

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

whom~ ~communlly-

Ncio...,..... _ _ _ .,...._
_ _ _ lie~.............

..,

)

....

~

......... The
earnpu~ pretidenls •• lnllruc:led to name

..........

...... fer:ully ~ lo -

1n
doodeMolop~~""rwntonl cl ~pport .-aio, but
-..,.,.,.._...-~*-•

"...........

~

.........

AI nomN&amp;wll 1o the ~
, 1n tum, torw.:ded 1o a SUNY com·
,...... far evatu.llon, ond cMwloprnent

ol a ...
cl quallllod
- -·
...
haw
mambert
1M Thil.-.1
. _...

r-.lly. on~~-· and

Mlec:tlon.
Abelucele . . . . .
. a.an..Dar Wharton said nominees will
be conoldered In four categories, based
on nominating Institutions: University
centas and medical centers; arts and
sclenc:ea and spectallud coUeges;
agricultural and tedmk:al and community
c:ollegos; and
edmlnlslratlon and
others.
No fbted number ol the annual 50
degree total wiD be assigned to each cam·
pus, Wharton said. The Univer.lty will be
"JCNillve to the lrnportanee of there be·
ing some nominees In each ol the four
a~tegorles each yar,• though not at "the
c~rue ol oystem-wide cornparabiJJty or
the standards ol cxeellena~ .•
Praidents who wish to have a possible
Commencement speaker considered
must also submit a proposal, lo the
SUNY ·wide Committee, Wharton said,
acldlng that "caution should be exercised
to avoid any edvance commitment."
General seleellon a1ter1a will apply In
these eases as weD, Wharton saki.- The Chancellor set a deadline of
Oc:tobcr 15, 1980, for receipt ol nominations for 1981 awards.
U/ B routinely awarded honorary
degrees In its private days, but has con·
land none since merging with the
SUNY system In 1962 _
M&lt;&gt;A American colleges and unlver·
sllles make such awards an annual Gom·
rner~Cler'rMnt practice, citing Individuals
ranging from woric:l statesmen to Fronk
Sinatra.

central

w-.,

100
New Yorkers who
haw suffered single, major heart attacks
wt8 be parllclpetlng In a national study to
determine whether aspirin and another
anti-dotting drug, Persantln, can help
prevent future allacks.
Dr. Robert Kohn said an earlier study
which induded 115 local pallenll who
heel experienc:ed major alladcs suggested
the medications lowered the expecled
death rate and Incidence ol myocanllal
relnfardlon. A clinical profeaor of
rnedldne ....... Kohn said 20.26 patients
at 30 centers around the nation par·
llclpated In the lint study, dubbed PARIS
(Persantin Alplrin Relnfarcllon Study) .
About 3000 wiD parllctpate In PARIS U.
Chief lnvallgator ol the Buffalo PARIS I,
'K ohn Will direct the loc:al PARIS II which
begins this fall .
An organizational meeting ol 100
researchers involved In PARIS U will be
held July 7-9 at the Grand Island Holiday
Inn. Both PARIS studies are financed by
granll from the Maryland Medical
Research lnstltute.
These studies, as weU as othen con·
dueted by the Notional Heart, Lung and
Blood Institute (NHLBI) and
CIBA/ Geigy, are seeking to learn. ~ anti·
clotting drugs can help prevent recurrent
lladcs.
What patlerita took
In PARIS I, patients received: three
aspirin dally; 75 mg. Persantin combined
with three aspirin daUy; or placebos
("dummy" piUs) _
For two years, the groups taking
aspirin or asplrin / Persantin had reduced
incidence of reinfaretlons and lower mor·
tahty rates , compared to those on the
placebos.
Resuhs of the NHLBI study, however.
showed no difference in mortality be·
tween patients taking elther aspirin or
placebos . Those In the CIBA/Gelgy
study who took eHher Anturane (another
anti-dotting drug) or placebos had no d~ ­
ferenc:e In mortality or morbidlty rates
with one exception . Those who began

taldng Anturane within llx months ol

their heart attacks did haw a lcMe-edln·
c:ldcnce ol sudden dulh c:ompantd to the

~!:':i.a aliO - - . d lowered .

Incidence ol mortality arid relnfardlon In

patients who began therapy with
asplrln/P-:unlln wtthln tt&gt;- tnt llx
months following their heart llladcs.
• AD these studies were intli.ted as a
result ol earlier clinical obenvatlons In
Booton and England -which _ . t e d
patients taldng aspirin regularly lOr er·
thrttls or other conditions had ' - heart
alladcs than would be expected," Kohn
explained.
A calltloa
Despite the rather promising r-..lts ol
PARIS I, Kohn ealllioned that no heart
patients should begin taldng &amp;lplrlr1
without supervision by their phyoicians.
Aspirin carries risk for stomach distress
and gas1rlc bleeding. Persantin and An·
turone ere available only py pracrtptlon .
"Many heart allack victims take
medications which they believo; 'thin' their
blood," Kohn said, "but actuaUy these
drugs make blood platelets less capable of
stlc:klng to each other and dolling." Heart
attacks generally ocx:ur when not enough
blood _gets through coronary arteries to
feed the heart muscle. Most heart allack
victims typlcaUy have arteries which are
narrowed from fatly deposit buildup on
arte'rial walls.
Patients selected for PARIS U m\lSI
have had a major heart ollack and cannot
regularly be taking aspirin . As In PARIS I,
they may take Tylenol or ' aspirin
substitutes for minor palns or headaches.
PARIS II parllc:ipants will receive either
asplrin/ Persantln or placebos In the forth coming two-year study.
lf PARIS U again shows aspirin / Per·
santin effec:tively lowers the death rate
and in&lt;:idence of future relnfarctlons,
physictans will have another use for that
old standby, aspirin; and a new use for
Persantln .

Stony Brook raids USC for a leader;
he plans consolidation for excellence

s-·s funding c:runch.

Marsburger, Interviewed from Califor·
nle, said he's nol among the pessimists.
He told the Thna:
"The Idea that the school Is In Its
adolncenee Is apt because adolncents
tend to be unrealistic: about their aspire·
!Ions. Many people at Stony Brook and
In the state government were fixed on a
ochcme that said build all the buildings as
fast as pouillc, hire all the faculty as fast
as poost,le , edrnll students and you'D
haw a tnt-rate unlverslly as long as you
conllnue to pour money Into H. Thafs
beckward•, although In rclrolpect H was
probably a good idea, flnandally , to get
aD the buildings com~e . Now there's a
lot ol consolidation to be done."
Stony Brook's erchJtecturo Is distress·
lng, the 7lma arllde went on . Its campus
Is crowded and oo are Its pariUng lOts.

Fuller to be honored here
Hocrl&gt;v Birthday, Bucky Fulleri
R. -9UduntnstCr Fullu, dac:ribcd by
Manhall Mcluhan as "the laoNrdo da
VInci cl our diM ," wtii be feted at - . 1
wents In Buffalo on May 15 and 16.
Among honors to be bestowed upon
Or. Fuk wll be the fk'lf Dean'a Award
pr--..1 by the School cl Archlletture
and Enwonmcntel Oalgn (SAED) .
w l l - the --.1 from Dean
H.-old L Cohen, who Ia aloo a longtime
friend cl hll, a1 SAED eomrnenc:.ment
_ . . . . on Ft*y, May 16, al 5 p .m .

n.a.

,-

u.s. P....PAID

lklffeiCI. N.Y.

P.-mlt No. J1 1

on the atCJ» ol Abbott Unrv on the U/ B
Main Street campus. He will also debver
the eornmeneemont addraa.
A blr1hday p.ty far FuDer, who will be
85, wll be held on Thuraday, May 15, at
5 :30 p .m . at Computer Task Group
heeclquwwn at 800 Delaware Avenue.
The p.ty will be hooetd by the Friends ol
SAED. Proceeds will go towwd a fund
for the R. Buckmlnsler Fuller Seholarshlp
Award, which will be award.d to a
daervtng stu&lt;!•nt entering SAED'o
MW!y...ocaedlted master ol architecture
poog,am. The award wtii be preMnted for
the tnt diM In 1981.
Buffalo Mayor Jaina Grtiln has alao
declared May 15 • R Budunlnater
Fulor Day and wll preMnt Fu!l.r with a
proclamation at City lUI at 10: 15 a .m .
that day.
Fuler Ia
widely known for his
creation cl the' IJ'IC)dootllc dorna

""*

Fac11lty and staff complain about the ap-pearance of tho campus and Its
remot.nesa. It hasn~ met lb enrollment
largellln recent years.
Manbwgcr said he bellews enrollment
has not grown quickly becauae little allen·
lion has t.e.n paid to "campus coametlcs"
and the kinds ol support MrVIc:cs thet
build morale.
Despite a galaxy ol "big" f..:ully
names, many ol the best students c:on·
llnue to regard Stony Brook as a "safety
tohool," a place that will edrnlt you If
others reject you. The Ked.mlc: vice
prastdent told the 1lma that.
M&lt;&gt;A ol the paalmlsm about Stony
· Brook relates "to what was hoped for, In
such a bdol period ol arne, and what has
been achieved," Marsburger said .
He told the nma udonn't bother hlm
because he can - "that what has "-&gt;
ac:hicve!lls very good.• He "kn&lt;&gt;IAII," he
said , "that Stony Brook can become a
great unlvenlty .
FACULTY MEETINGS
The ....,uaJ meeting of the Voting
Fec:ulty will be held 011 May6, 19110, at
l! p.m. In Woldman Theatre. Sewral
repora are llated for that _....,, the
- ' 1/UT...wl otatemenu by PtCIIdmt
Robert L KcttCI' ....t tha Fec:ulty
Senate chair, N.wton GArver; repora
on the UDiveralty Calendar for
1981-82, and on thelrnplemenhltlon of
the College Sklllo portion of t.h e
Gcacral Education f'rotlram llated for
thia faU. Updat• 011 -rt. of Senate
commJttc.. will eloo be o&amp;red, . . well
as a ~ 011 Senate electlona.
Thll meeting will be followed by the
revodar May JDH11at1 of the Senate, to
eonaldcr, primarily, recomm...claof tiM Coaomlltn on Information ud
UbraryR~ .

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

APRIL 24, 1980

VOL 11 e NO. 28

New bills
seek aid
for SUNY
Voting will
come Monday ;
rally ·set

Acupuncture may be an ancient 'art,'
.b.u t if has 'very modern' applications
;?

Richard Nixon did not "discovc:r"
acupuncture during his jaunts to China,
BufQio physician Dr. William James
uoured a fuD house at the CorneD
Theatre, April 15.

Acupuncture pre-dated Nixon by
ilbooorS;(JOO'-pnrs, he~ . ellhough It
wes lergeJy Ignored In North America and
to some extent by the "modem" Chinese
1henuelvcs folowlng lntroducllon of
Watem Medlc:lne. Under the Ching
Dynasly, the last befc&gt;&lt;e eslablishment of
the Republic, H was, In fad , outlawed .
James provided historical background
on the practice of acupuncture to a mixed
audleooe : doctors, med students end
others, lndudlng people who came
becauoe they were In physical pain.
Then an acupuncturlol, Dr. King Ju
Un, demonsttated his technique on people with headache, l!od&lt;ache. sciatica, .
you name ft , with Jarna explaining what
...... being done . 1M event was part of
the month-long "Chinese Experience • on
campus.

In a ' fast dJich effort to help "iawe"
SUNY after a Senate attempt to ovenide
Governor Carey's veto failed last Thursday , both legislative Houses Monday introduced bUis that would fuOy restore
funding to the State University system
and maintain current levels of tnstructlon
and program offerings.
According to UUP Chapter President
Bill Allen , the two bUis wilt probably be
voted on Apr. 28. To drum into
legislators how much this means to
SUNY. Allen said aU UUP chapters will
send lobbyists to Albany that day.
1M Senate bill (S-9360). according to
Allen . is sponoored by Majority Leader
Warren Anderson and Kenneth LaValle.
Marl&lt; Siegel, chairman of the Assembly's
Higher Education Committee , and
Assembly Speaker Stanley Fink are spon·
soring the bill (A- 11582) there.
Allen said he received assurances from
the focal AFL-00 Council that they will
"lean on" local Democratic Senata&lt;s
Joseph Taurlello and Raymond
GaUagher who voted against the override
last week . The override measure was
defeated by four votes.
E&gt;cplaining the defeat , Allen uld some
Senata&lt;s acfiiallil- indicated that they .
thought money (a&lt; SUNY was Included
In the successful override vote which
returned funding to CUNY, communfty

the technique In combatting a cholera
outbreak there In 1901 , published the
first book on the subject In the wesl in
1934 , a translation from the Chinese . AI
last count, said James, there were In
France 800 Western-trained physicians
'Who practiot acupuncture. Tltl! procedure II recognized end reimbursed by
that nation's soc:ial aecurtty organization .
In Paris, the Institute on Acupuncture offers a three·year course.

England , too , has Its Medical
Acupuncture Society, James said . Its
leader, Dr. Felix Mann, authO&lt; of 15
books on the subject, recently told an
American audience, "I cannot teD you
how acupuncture works. All I know is
tfult I practice lt Wllh my palknl$, and an
astonishing number get better. •
In China Itself, a recent surge of Interest in acupuncture reflects economic

Leaving

Elected

Honored

Thomson takes
new position
in California

Howell will
head Senate
in '81-'82

Shames gets
new title
from Trustees

Ballots for Faculty Senate elections
t - finely bftrl tabulated . The new
vice-c:halrper$0n / c.hair-elect for the
1980-81 academic year Is Dr. Barbara
~ ol Ph\ISIOfogy. Dr. Gerald Rising
ol the Facuhy· of EdUcatlon•l Studies will
MIW u the Scnale's new -=retary.
Ms Ekn
IIIOCia direc,tor ol the Olflce of Admloslont and
R«.ords , .Jeded SUNY Senate
repreMntallw tn an election open to both
faculty end prol-..1 llalf. Dr Stel•n
flelocher ol Englioh II the allernate .
Howell, who MrYed •two-yor term ..

1M State University of New York
Board ol Trustees Wednesday conferred
• Distinguished Tuching ProiHSouhip
upon Dr. Irving H . Shames, profesoor of
engineering tclolnce here.
Shames, who joined the U/ B faculty~
1962. w recognized for teaching contri&gt;utlons which Include the authorship ol
lelclboob now In use by mor than 1()()
ochools and "on -o.ch to teaching
oertaln subjects which .... become •
gener.l model in e~ education. •
1M lrullaa ailo named Dr. S.mu I
11011 Winbush, prof- of ICiance and
technology at the SUNY Colego a1 Old

. . _ ••

0

....... 2.ce&amp;.l

· - -, ......... _ 3

No -.k. )lollt Nllef
No magic cures were .uggated, but In
uch '*"• aha five minutes of silting 0&lt;
lying clown with the nMdla applied to
the·~ point, volunlftr "patients reported c:omplet.t rdef of pain .
Dr. Jarna, born In st..nghai, took his

M.D. In Pn and II~ pathologist
at t&lt;.nmore Macy end • cMnlcal a.&gt;da
prolaoor at U/B Med School. Dr. King
.-1...-d from Shen!l&gt;al Medical Coflege (lalpundure and herbel medlc:lne)
and II • bnMd IICUJ)UnCiurill In New
y .... Sl.le. widl clnics In Hatnburv end

T---s..

Jarna aplmed that, loClCOr'dlng to
lradillon, acupuncture deJa 10 t7oo
B.C . dUftr18 the reign ol the legendary
Emperor
the V8Y first
, _ . . uoed In halng were made of
-~.
· 8!1 the
800 B.C ., the ol the
oldal ullllng texlbook ol
liMINI medicine,
pnctlca ~ Ourina the Tang [)ynMiy
~900 A .O ), cupundln • an art
II
In a.- medical ochook.

y......

""'*'

()Oft-....._ .

Although

relatively

ntw on

the

Amtrlcln
J - Aid , ~
II moody pr...-1 IUb-rooa~ In_ .~
~. acupuntiUn .... In Europe. 1M R-.o t - laUn a
b !/HI'S. end . _ done con-

n.. ....
flolhor •ol

lnlo It
IICUpunctwtol -

..,...known com•
. noe.d Ge«ge
de
lfll, the f're!ldl
In p

l...t...--1

--a

Dr. willian\ E. Thomson , cham\an of
the Departmenl of Mwic end Zlegele
Ptofcuor of Mwic, announced Wednaday he II loving the UniYenlty to
become dlreclor ol the Sc:hool of Mwic at
the Unlwnfty of Southern Cdfcimill . In
l..oo Angeles.
ohllt
be df41C11w poobebly
around July 1, Mid Thomson, who ....
not yet offidelv suboninad
Alllgnalion
to the U/ B adminlotratlon . Thomoon Aid

n..

'*

that he hed lftbtncd the ~ .
' -· and hed dloa.-d the chango
aloo ...... the uecutl\le ~ In hil

........

~~-,_

-..

McNamer•.

Scnale ~In 1976-78, wll....,me
the poot ol W&gt;t-dlalrpofnon July 1.

.

·---·-.

-.·

.

�April 24, 1980

Lilli ILIA

l

----·.......,

•Thomson
Thomson noled that Southern Califor.
nla's Is the music tchool In the western
part of the Unhed States. "I certainly
don't have to Justify a decision to go
there," he said; addtng that "these are
not the mosl beautifUl limes In New York
State."
1be music tchool at USC has an
enrollment ol approximately 750, half of
whom are at the graduate level. It Is the
typical large music tchool, noted Thorn·
son, with a wide range of programs In
performance, theory and composition.
As to the future o( the U/B ~rt·
ment, Thomson said he -.omes that an
Interim chairman will be named and that
some sort of search wiD follow. The latter,
however, he noled, will depend on the
funding shuation In New York State.
Thomson said he feels the greatest
hope for the future of the Music Depart.
ment here lies In hs capttalizing on the
support ol the many avid music afi·
don ados In the Western New York area .
Asked ~ he had any additional com·
m"nts on his reaJ&lt;&gt;ns for leaving, Thorn·
son declined, suggesting that sometimes
"less is more."

Here •lnc:e 1975

• Acupuncture
jill.- -

l, - - I)

necusity. There simply are not enough
Westem·trained physicians for a popula·
1lon ol almost one billion . 1be govern ·
ment had no choice but to revitalize tradl·
tlonal medicine and ln~ate h with
weslern practice, JO that In a single
hOII)llal, bolh co-exist under the same
rool. ·l'h4 younger generation ol physi:
dans are trained In both , said James. "It
Is not extraordinary to see a patient with
---, angina pectoris being worked up with an
v EKG and being administered an herb po·
tion Instead ol nitroglycerine."
It Is estimated, he went on, that 80%
ol all patients In the Chinese countryside
are treated to some degree with acupuncture , olttn combined with other modes ol
therapy, such as massage, exercises, herbal medla&gt;e, etc.
"Thus, from prehistoric times to the
present, ecupuncture has been and Is a
mode ol therapy In one ol the most
populous cou~trla of the earth •

by James Reston of the New York Times.
"lbey teD us how Intricate surgery was
being performed on pa
who were
fully alert, fully able to COOperate and
communicate with the surgeons, often
smiling and waving at visitors; and all of
this because some smaD needles were be·

~·-

What truly fired the Imagination ,
.lama continued, were glowing reports
ol ano4her application ol ecupuncture
flied from China by the late Or. Paul
Dudley WhKe and other physicians and

ing inserted In their extremities or
earlobes!" This "acupuncture analgesia" ,
James explained , is not the traditional
therapy but is the resuh ol experlmenta·
tion for the past 30 years. He sees it as "a
direct consequence of the country's
political isolation, and resulting lack of
anesthetic equipment and supplies as
weD as medical personnel."
Working on the weD-known premise
that acupuncture needles relieve and at·
tenuate post-operative pain, some
surgeons In Shanghai, by sustained need·
~ng of a certain point , notioed that In ad·
dltion to calming toothaches, they could
produce oufflclent analgesia ol the throat,
vocal cords and neck to perrnh surgery.
This observation , James said , reoulted
In tooth extractions and proceeded timidly to tonsiledomles and finally to
thyroidectomies . Accord ing to the
Chinese pre55, "one half million opera·
tions have been performed under the effects of acupuncture, embracing over 100
different procedures. They claim a sueCO$$ rate o( 85 to 90% ."
According to the journal, MD, ched by
Or. James: one theory ol the reported
analgesic action o( acupuncture is that It
stimulales the r"lease of the brain's own
pain-killers, endocphlns.

Thomson became chabman ot the
D&lt;!partment of Music on ..July 1, 1975 .
Before coming here , he was professor
of music and director of graduate studies
In music at the University of Arizona . A
former pro(e55ional musician, he has
published works for orcheotra, wind
band , chamber and choral groups.
A 1948 graduate of North Texas State
University, Thomson received his degree
with honors in composition. 1be foUow·
ing year he earned a master's In composi·
tton from the the same Institution . He
holds the Ph.D. In muolc theory from In·
diana University .
Taught Ia Tau
Thomson has been on th" music
facultieo of Sui Ross State CoUege in
Texas, Yale University and Indiana
Untverstty where he was chairman of the
Department of Music Th..ory.
One of his most recent pro)ects in the
U/ B Department was organization of a
communhy-campus group, the "Baird
Hall Friends• which will provide extra
support for departmental activities.
He presided over a department with an
"almost extravagantly varied" concert
program , as H has been described , and
strengthened hs ties with the Buffalo
Philharmonic and with the Buffalo
Chamber Music Society .

•Shames

5 women receive awards for service
IIOived In the Companlon5hlp lberapy
program ol the VA Medical Center. 1be
program encourages veterans who live in
penonal care homes to engage In reaea·
1lon 8c:llvtties and other IOdal con~ .
Thae individuals have long psychlab1c
hlstorln and/ or memory prObkms which
require that lhRir buic needs be provided
for them ~ they are to continue to func·
bon In the community.
Active In the same VA effort ,
tophomore USa ThorMS has been
assoc:iated with what is conridered the
most challmgjng ol 19 homes In the program . one whoM population Is generally
more Infirm, older and presents more
problems. Without waiting for a general
onentatton 1«sslon, she visited the faciMty , and became acquainted with several
o( the rerid ntC. apec:iaDy two older men
who ar legally blind She helped
· establish conlad between them and the
Auodation for the Bind. and Increased
lhRir outsld con~ generanY. She has
also encouraged the men to partidpa In
baking pies and making ClOOkles as well as
In other therapeutic activities
II senior, Dewn L ChrisWlson was
student coordinator o( this year's U/B
dance for Muo&lt;ular Dystrophy
Comm
Th involved r~
for al
of
dance - pr-atton . plannong, phone and leg work . and
tupervlsoon ol volunteen She - . ! as
co "cooed
lui J1Mf. when the ewnt
n ed nearly SIO,OOO for
charily . •
Kar Sutherland, • )Uttlor' 1\asworl&lt;-.

· ed as a volunteer for the Language
Enrichment Program o( Lackawanna's
Friendship House for three years. She
has served as a tutor one day a week, two
hours per session, sometimes working
with several students whose tutors were
absent. She drove the van to transport
tutors to and from the job stie . She also
. helped coordinate field trips .
1be 1980 Selection Commttiee was
composed o( a Community Advisory
Council member (Lawrence E. Baldwin.
director, Crippled Children's Guild) , a
University representative (Or. Anthony F.
Lorenzetti, asooctate vice president for
student allan) and a student represen·
tattve (Ms. Debora K. Lindquist, ex·
ecutive director , Community Action

Corps) .

Senate bead likes
quarters, but ....
Faculty Senat Chair Newton Garver
thinks it quarter oystem would be the best
solution to the University's cunent calen·
dat dilemma
But, said Garver In a letter Informing
Presldotnt Robert L Kettorr ol the Senate's
51rong endonem nt ol the shortened
Mmester plan , he Is not r aDy advocating
whet he thinl&lt;a best .
Garver Mid he Is not cOnvinced that
even "heroic fforts" would "succeed In
getting u from Mre to ther " In terms of
the quarter alternafilljl,

jill.- -

l, - - .,

Westbury, a Distinguished Teaching Pro·
feuor .
Albany Geology Professor John P.
Dewey was appointed Distinguished Pro·
feuor and two College at Geneseo
educators, Bertha V . B. IAderer, director
of the Department bl Ane Arts , and Or.
Gifford P. Orwen, chairman of the
Department' o( For&lt;!lgn Languages, were
named Distinguished Service Professors.
Shames, 56, received the Faculty o(
Engineering'• Teacher o( the Year etta·
tion In 1964, a Distinguished Profe5SOC
Award In 1972, and the ChanceUor's
Award for Excelence In Teaching In
1973.
During the 751h anniversary celebra·
tion at Northeastern University In 1973,
he was presented with an alumni cttation ,
for distinguished attainment.
He received his B.S . from North·
eastern, his M.S . from Harvard and his
Ph.D. from the University o( Maryland.
Prior to joining U/ 8, Shames held
teaching posts at the University of
Maryland , Stevens Institute of
Technology, and Pran Institute.
He Is a member of the American Socle·
ty of. Engineering Education, the
American Society of Mecha nical
Engtneen and a number of ~
sodetles.
This Is the eighth year tn which SUNY
hM.. recognized outstanding classroom
teachtng through 1 DTP program . State
Univershy o( New York was the flrst large
public higMr education S\IStem tn the na·
tion to regularly olf«r gift d reachers the
type of recognition u•ually aSSOCiated on·
ly ..,gh ~ ....ourchl'(ol.-

�Apd24, 1980

l

Theatre sets
ItS schedule
for next year
The~ of

n-. ar!d Donee

... ..-need a 19110-81 _,., -'*"
Will aplare the themes o i - - c:om......_.llnd the......,. d ~"I'm Gda&gt;!l My Act Togoe.llnd Tllklng_lt on the
lOci. 16. Nov. 2111
dac:rt.d .. a ..,.ur,. and lnlillhtfJ,&amp;J
mlllical by the ........, of .....,. Sw.t
Days of laue .• Thla _ . 011-a.o.dway
.U.X.. taka a look 81 the
the
c:onlanponry Mtlst t.cea In wanting to
expreu de.eply·felt polltlul views.
o.p.rtment Ollllrman Saul Eldn wtll
dtnct.
"Homeland" INov. 20 - Dec. 71 II a
MW work by SefMio MaNdJ lind Skve
Friedman. Dlr-.. Ed Smtih deecrt&gt;a It
es a " hardhltllng yet hiJ.rloua domestic
comedy about South Africa and the
U.S.A. , a marvelous piece of political
lhhtre that will make you laugh until H
hurts."

nOild"

.....,rna

o..c. ...s o·c.-,

·New ~spectrum' editor came here
for a semestB, stayed f6r a career
Bv~~

""""""'
SiollBuffalo
Some

studtn
&amp;om small
private schools ean't seem to make H at
U/8. Elena Cacavu, the new edltQr_.,• chief of The Spulrum, dld . •
~. H was a toss-up between CorMI, her mother's alma mater. and U/8.
But EleNI figured U/8 was a beUer bet
.since she could live In North Buffalo with
her J)M"ents and ease the grim transition
from Buffalo Seminary- which had all of
120 '-ale studen -to the rubolanttally
·larger and mor-e tmpenonal selling of a
unlvenily center. Besida, she was just
going to stay for a semester. and then
transfer. Somehow, though, January
came and _,t , and EleNI never p.cked
her bags for lth.a .
. That "somehow" leach us to The Speclnlm. What Elena dldnl want to do was
get loot In the shuffle of life on a large
campus. So the 6nt week of ochool she
stroll&lt;td Into The Speclnlm ollice to lind
her proverb~.~ niche. Luckily, "the Scm"
~. ~ her a good grounding In
English and writing sld&amp; 00 • dldn 't take
long; with the he\&gt; of The" 5pe&lt;:lrum
edMon, for her jOuma
ablllly to

bloooom .

Dkla't ......

It.........,.

Unaw ""'"* students who c:o&lt;l'lplein
about the paper's unfrimdly alrnolphen,
Elena says she •never sensed ft, • or
pert,apa "chote to owriook ft" becauM of
.._:~she found lor the slalf's "effort

ondc:omm-."
. Bv Man:h of her freshman

yeat.

Elena

made c:onlrt&gt;uting editor. In her
oophomore year.
w
gklitn the
rapontlblllty of campt;11 edllor;
yur,
aha worked .. edllor.
The lac:l .that she's come up through
the r.n of t h e - and knows campt;11
. she feels, .Is one of her two
.......... u head honcho of The Speclrum . The act.. II th.l she's made an "effort" .. dcwlop • .roc:oport wllh memba-a
of
AdmlnillrMion. IbN ..... feels •a
good
working
Aioo,
Elena

IIIMuhlp"
her -last
au.....,..

wooidne • ., ......., ""

e- glws hor a

the

coun.r-

bet~-. penpectille

on

""" -able tO ac:quomt
1...-.1
-.ndardl of profaolonell
., the field . In • · lhouah. a.na
..... The ~ proYida a .....
~ For The Spooc.
the~ to conform to
lllandards b
mool
~.
In a proiaiiOnal
· .......... qpet1enoed adb
'-Pin~ Wbl on yow" .-11
u one of
30
for

hor jOb,

-·lop

'*'· ......

-.,.,t

w..,.,._

Potl,
young-

of The Spottrum ... -

. undarsJo
c-......
..

...,_

a~

In

More clhoonlfled and pou.Jied
The paper is more "divenlfled" and
"visually polished, • she assesses. And
ahhough she maintains The Spe&lt;:b-um
"wiD , _ lose its campus focus ," she
doesn't think "It's just a campus
newspa.,.,- anymore." either.
Elena, who appears markedly more
congenial and less affected than her two
predeca10n, credits Jay Rooen with be·
log the "father of commentary and
analysis" b the paper. She has "tremen&lt;lous respect" for Rooen as a writer and
contends he "boosted · the paper's
credbllity" and "brought H to a high point
of resp«t:"
Worldng with Rosen. however, she
concedes, was no picnic. It was difficult
for him to contend with those he felt were
not m-.g his standards. He was the
type. she noted, who "would ponder
over one word of copy.•
Daniel Parker, the current edHor and
chief. maintained The Speclnlm 's " high
standards" plus made It "more lnteresUng
to more people, • Elena observed. Referring to the paper's oulitandlng showing In
Nlllonal competition this year. she ad~
ed. the evaluators thought oo, too.
Wllo_.....,.?
Alkccl who she thought was the bener
of the two, EleNI. hesitatingly but candidly responded, • Jay was a more thorougjl
editor .•
Nat year. What Elena plans to do is
"combine the best features of Danny and
Jay" one! p&lt;Oduce a P'IP"r that has
"deadled" edltortall, more &lt;X&gt;mmentary
one!
of c:.mpus llsueo plus

_

features which tie Into clly issues.
The paper's greatest assets. she submits. are the.dedkaliOn of the staff. their
"sense of responsibility to .s tudents and
the University," and
Spectrums
"heritage of high standards .•
Its weakness is that some students view
the staff as a lightly-knit , arrogant dlque.
Elena hopes to modify these perceptioqj
by making new writers feel more comfortable working In Th" Speclnlm offloo
and by making editors more accessible to
them ,
Now that the University has more than
one student paper. Elena also believes
people's gripes about The Specrrum
wielding "too much power" are subsiding.
As far as the criticism that The Speclnlm does "hatchet" jobs on cerlain
members of the Unlvenily community.
she responded that she "honestly thinks
otaff members try to be as objective and
fair as they possibly can.• EleNI observed
that The Speclnlm '• writers are "always
questioning themselves" about objectlvlty. She asserted: "If the thought was absent. then rd think their Wlffing was 'unfair.'"
Although some day Elena hopes to go
to law .d.ool, she Intends to wad&lt; as a
writer In New York Oty or Washington
after she graduates next May. Meanwhile , beside planning to spend about 70
hours a week at her new post, she11 continue taking her thirteenth year of ballet
lesaons, wrne creative prose In her private
journal, and In batween. keep a medium
flame on a two-year rornanoe she's had
with former Speclnlm Managing Editor
John ReW..

n..,

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

e UUP /Budget
,
collega and · the Bundy Aid program .
$26.3 mlllon reduction in SUNY fund Funds lor SUNY. however, were linked
Ing. but $4 million of that sum requlrad
to local-aid In another vote.
no budgelary oonolderaUon by legislators
AJim Indicated that Andonon refuted
becaUM K was ligured on the elimination
to oplit the two becaUM he wanted to
of 475 v.ant SUNY lines.
~· on the support Senators
Alen said the wording of both bills
Memed to be showing for SUNY.
specifiCally mentions "rnaln..,.,.,. of
~ of funds for aid to localltles II
current Ieveii of Instruction and program
an lmpo(tant political tsoue wllh Anderofferings" as an "'nsurance" that at least
1011, Allen noted. because n would keep . S22.3 miSon gets put back Into the
budget_
ADen noc.d that current levels
"""*'!~ down and hla Republican
could not be maintained wtlhout that
con
holppy.
The Governor Ol'4llnally caled for a
amount being restored .

'*'"

BBC coming to film Kurtz
A c:amen crew for the BBCs NooJo .
.nn (~~&gt;own In country on
PBSI ... be on campus Tuesday, April
29. to
an Interview wllh Dr. Paul
Kunz, prof....,. oi ph4aoophy and chair,_ c4 ttw Cornm
for the Sc:len
In
of
of
p......,..
I
BBC II 6cMg . , how·Jone pro~

a.-

gram""~

In par11eular. the brooodcast will -o-ln
on claims oi two
psychologllts
that the poolbon oi Man at a per-aon'a

F"'"""

blnh ~his or her ability In sports .
Kurtz and oet..s, Including bt. Matvln
z.len, f&lt;&gt;rn&gt;«rry of U/ 8 and now oi Harvard who Will flv In for the fllmlng , have
looUd Ill thll ao-caled "Mart died" and
fOWidft~

_ _

The Zodlaque Dance Company wiD
perform "Horizons." Feb. 12 - March· 1.
1981. Under the guldanoe of Dana. Program Director Undo Swlnluch , the ZDdiaque Company has becorNI one of the
most acUve In the area and will expand its
tcltedule at the
Theatre to ltdude
three full weekends ol performances.·
April16 - May 3, the Department wiD
present Sean O 'Casey's • Juno and the
Paycock ." O 'Casey's most famous and
enduring work Is set against the
bacl&lt;ground of Ireland's troubled 20's .
The play's theme continues to have
relevance and meaning for Ireland In the
80's. Derek Campbc_D, head of the U/ 8
acting program, wiD direct this compelllng
mixture of drama and tears .
All production• -w111 run from
Thursday-Sunday at the Center Thea1re,
681 Main Street, with curtain times al 8
p .m . , Thursday-Saturday and 3 p .m. on
Sund!!\1.
The Department wiD oomplement Its
production season's.schedule with course
offerings that relate directly to the theme.
New courses will Include : " Ir ish
Dramatists," "The Black Experienoe on
the American Stage." and a spring
semester workshop on Bernard Shaw. In
addition, many existing courses will em·
phutu the season's focus".

c..m..,.

Hltlbedoool-u

The Department wiD offer to area high

schools the opportunity to participate In
o;p«1a1 demonstrouon sessions related to
the lour major productions. Students wiD
have the chanoe to see "behind the
scenes" through practical dernonstraUons
and dt.cus.lons with actors, directors,
and designers. These seulons wiD be
planned to enhance the students' ap preciation of a regularly-scheduled performance .
The Center Theatre wiD als9 continUE
to operate as a performing arts center for
local theatre and dance companies durIng 1980-81.

Please explain,
Sheffer asks
Local Assemblyman John B. Sheffer
has written St.te 008 Director Howard
Miller asld~ for "the spedflc authority
upon which . Miller bases his views on lm·
poundrnent of legislative approprlaUons.
Speaking to a SUNY Senate group at
U/8 this winter. Miller threatened to "Impound" any Increased epprapt1aUOns for
SUNY which the l.egislalure might paso_
Sheffer said he II "very-much oppooed
to crttlcal policy decisions being Imposed .
on the State by the Dtvillon of the Budget
or any other ago.ncy within the stat

bwuucracy."
He told Mlller K Is "entirely Inappropriate foi- a non-elected, bud!letarv of.
fldal to blatantly indicate th.l tift will of
N~ York's raidents , as C&gt;&lt;preued by
their elective repr-ntaUves In the
Legialature. Will be Ignored by the Executive branc:h of the S1aJ,e government ·
It io hil finn lntenUon, Shelf"' Mid, "to
punue a remedial courw of actlon ·wllh
.._:~ to ouch
, conslitutlonel
or regulatory bHI upon whdl any such
.,.,..... of Impoundment may 110111 r
•

l

�Aprtl24, 1

4

TIAA official
sees lnOation
as top worry
Inflation is what c:oncems Univ
facully and stMf IT&gt;QII when they thin
about retirement, Douglas Burnett, fie
advlsO&lt;y olflcc fpr flAA-CR EF, h
found - nol surpr1slngly.
Burnett, hen last week to present
series of briefings about TlAA-CR
retirement plans, lpends mool of his lime
on the road, fielding q. - s.
There's no way TlAA-CREF can
reassure anyone about the futu re loll cf
inflation, he said .
The organization is ready to advise on
• various options to be used toward
building a retirement program , he said.
But when the inflation rate is near 18 per
cent and the prime rate is hovering at 20,
well, no one is used to coping with 11.

Soviet weakness has precipitated
·return to 'cold war,' Waltz suggests
for those impons. Acc~ing to CIA
estima1es,·it cannot kmg continue. to ex·
port oil and gas on any signiflc.ant scale .
2 . Politic.ally, the Soviet system doesn 't
function weU. Its agricultural sector fails
year after year, "but they can't do
anything about it . No change comes."
3. ldeologicaUy, the appeal of the
U.S .S .R. is not only at a low ebb, "it's
over." Some countries stiU welcome
Soviet aid , ''but the appeal of com·
munlsm as an ideology is dead ," Wahz

The Soviet Union is weak, and that
weakness is partiaOy responsible for a
new "cold war."
·
Kenneth N. Waltz, Ford Professor of
Political SCience at Berkeley , offered that
assessrne(ll here Thunday, April 17, in·
one of o series of lectures on international
relations organized by the SA Speakers
-, Bureau .
~
Waltz noted that U.S .-Soviet relations
since World War II have fluctuated between bitter hostility without war, and ac·
commodation without a reliable peace .
Between these extremes, we've had 35
years of both cold war and detente, but,
amazingly, no shooting - a "striking" accomplishment In the eyes of the widelyknown exper1 on big power relations.
This ulllmately peaceful balance has
JOmethlng to do with the fact that only
two powers ar, involved, he think,o. Major miscalculations on war decisions are
more ~ to occur In a world wHh a
multlplidty of great powers and coalitions.
Nuclear weapons have also assured
that war does not break out directly between the two great powcrs, Waltz said .
The U.S. and U.S .S .R . have been willing
to flght only when- the vHal interests of
neither were at stake (In Korea and Vietnam, f« example) . Otherwise, inslead of
joining issues, they puD apart. OveraU, he
conduded, the tension betwftn the two
nations Is far superior to the relationships
between European JlO!Nerl early in this
century, or between the world wan.

assessed .
4 . The nation is in trouble
demographically. Moslems and non Russians constitute the fastest growing
portions of its population . Russians ac·
count for only slightly more than haH the
total , but make-up "90 per cent of the
elites." The shifting demographic balance
is of major concern .
5. The U.S .S .R . lags behind the West,
sclentlfically and technologically. A country that doesn't produce the most advanced models of computers can't be in the
forefront. "Irs been said the Soviets can't
do many things weU , but can do anything
weD ," Wahz noted ; yet, he reasoned ,
they can't "moblllz.e" for everything.
6 . The Sovids are encircled by un friendly nations. To Waltz, "It's not
paranoia on their part, but reality ,"
NATO looms on their western flank ;
China to the oouth; Japan stands off·
shore . " H we were the ones surrounded ,"
he reuoned , we 'd 5P"nd a lot more on
defense, too. The 4 .5 per cent real inaease In Soviet milltary $pending strikes
Waltz. not as an "ebulbent, aggressive
strategy" but as a reaction of "despair."
The nine countries of Western Europe
outproduce the U.S .S.R. twice over,
Waltz said. Both West Germany and
Japan have individual GNP's close to that
of the Soviets. NATO as a group
outspends the Warsaw Pact by 10 per
cent .
And China has the world's largest army. Even if His obsolete, Wahz said . "It's
bound to get better."
How do !IOU vcpect the U.S .S .R . . a
lagging, looing couQiry in a two&lt;OUntry
compe!ition , to behave? the Bmc.eley
proleaor aslced . To alternately try ap·
peasemenl and tough talk, he answered

Slz'-'c--Tbc U.S S .R . has moved recendy to a

hostile cold war stance, Wahz sus·
gested, because of a haW-dozen basic
mO&lt;e

........__

I The Soviet economy Is slagnant.
The -=ond nafton of the world : hae trou·
blc feeding Its own people , depends on
Imports lor food and technology, and
relin on oil and gas vcports for 40 per
cent of tbC hord cunency needed to pay

... -"',_,......

" - ~""
- - polollohod

~GINowV014o•-..E-..

- - . 1 "' 136 OGIIt IW "'"'.....,_636:16a

.......

~.,,_

P..tod ol ~-

........

The period of politicaiiUCX:aiion now
going on In both Moscow and
Washinllton ~tes "cold war" tenlions. Anyone out to replace Brczhnev
can't dare be _ , as "toft" on the U.S .,
Waltz oubmlnoed. The Kremlin leader has
tO have the lupporl of his military 0&lt; he
be leader f« long.
In the U.S , teo, presklential can· .
~have to project ... ...._ ofllandlQg "' to the ScMets. No fertile grounds

HAIUIV JII.OISON.
~-01111

""--

tiOII£RT T MII.R1.ETT

won'

~ " a.out1EII

-E-.

IOVCf!IIUI.....,""""""
to:----';;;:;,;;;;.=;~;;;-.......- - . J
0

,-~-

•

for d«WWto ...........
Analv. Web ~ . the behavb
...... hae ~ the -~

of the p .~

.........

Into being more hostile.
Chairma n Deng Xlaoping of China
had just left here in 1979 when the
Chinese invaded' Vietnam . When China
did that , H appeared to the world that the
Soviets couldn't protect a client state. The
U.S . offered o nly a perfunctory objectio n
and at the same lime began selling China
mUitarUy useful merchandise .
The U.S ., task force In the Indian
Ocean is there because of our d ifficulties
with Iran . to be sure, but, said Waltz, the
Soviets see It as an inaease of force in an
area near them , regardless of the reason.
Then , too; three different U.S . administrations were involved in the S ALT
II negotiations, "entitling the Soviets to
believe that the present adminlslrlltlon
ought to be able to deliver on H. But It
can't.''
Given the overaU picture , Wahz said ,
"it's understandable · that the U.S .S .R .
wants a pro-Soviet rather than Moslem
regime in Kabul." It becomes "plausible"
for Foreign Minister Grornyko to depict
the U.S .S .R . as "a little country caught
between East and West."

.Jut like tbe Domlnlcaa affair
The Soviet presence in Afghanistan,
Wahz ventured , is no wone or different
than the U.S . intervention in the
Dominican Republic in 1965. We sent
troops into that region to ward-&lt;&gt;11 "17
su.spected communisls," he laughed .
Wahz sees U.S .-Soviet relations conti·
nuing as they have for the past 35 yean.
His only worry is that more and more
people in the U.S . seem to be embracing
the idea of "counterforce" rather than
"deterrenf' when considering the nuclear
arsenal. Deterrent ·means a stand-&lt;&gt;11,
while counterforce smacks of "war and
-fighting," he feels .
If deterrent is our strategy, H doesn't
metter wHhin wide bmlts which side has
more weapons , as long as each has
enough to damage the other beyond
what would be "acceptable."
, Under the "counterforce" approach ,
It s impossible to relax . Each of our
weapons has to be trained on one of
then. "You never stop," said Waltz.
As Washington thinking moves more
and mO&lt;e to counterforce, he predicted ,
there'D be less chance of controlling
strategic arms.
"The low ebb of U.S .·Sovtet relations
may continue for some lime."

Naylor named
acting dean
Dr John F. Naylor, proleaor of
history, has been named acting dean of
the Faculty of Social Sdencel for the
period, July 1 . December 31 , 1980,
when Dean Kenneth IAvy
be on
leave.
Naylor hae been serving as cWn of 'ltle fact.lty.' • • •
_. ' ~:

Tbe •.,.. ftew
As far as Hs o wn Investment policies
are concerned , Burnell said , TIAA.CREF
has to take a long look.
Even if high inflation is lo be with us.
say for flve years, il wouldn't be signUicant enough to cause the company to
reassess or shift Hs entire Investment ponfollo , Burnett noted . "Our policies have
to lake into consideration the 40-60 years
or more which span any individual's
working and retirement years."
CREF, the variable asset in the )oint
TlAA·CREF retirement constellation ,
grew rapidly in value from 1952 when
the Dow-Jones was at 250 unlll 1969,
when it suffered its first two years of net
decfone . OveraH, though, the a nn ual
return fro m 1952 through 1979 has
averaged 8 -9 per cent, whiCh , Burnett
said , has been the average performance
of common stocks hisloricaUy.
Unfortunately, though , other sectors of
the economy have not performed recently as they have in the past . An 8 per cent
annual increase In CREF used to seem
Impressive when weighed against a 2 per
cent Inflation rate . But 1979's very good
return o f 15.8 per cent 'is overwhelmed
in the face o f the present inflation .
The Dow-Jones, now in the 700's , has
to go up , Burnett is confident , a nd with it,
the worth of an ind ividuars TIM ac·
cumulation units.

Mea nwhile, a give n amount of money
is buying more accumulation units each
year.
Does TlAA-CREF offer a dvloe on how
an ind ividual should aUocate his or her
payme nts between TIM annuities and
the CREF stock portfolio? No, said
Burnett, other than to note that only 3
"per cent of 6 15,000 policyholders put
100 per cent of thu benefits into TlAA.
Forty-five per cent elect the more traditional 50-50 spill.

Unleu tloblee
What about . the organization's recent
decision to adopt unisV&lt; mortality tables.
and th us put an end to the policy of pay·
ing male retirees more each month than
females who have paid in and purchased
the same a mount of total benefits? The
rationale for this was, of course, that the
women would Uve to collect significantly
more total payments.
The shift to a single payment scale,
Burnett said ,.is nol yet effective . It has to
be approved fir$! by the insurance depart·
ments in aDthe states where the company
is licensed to do buslneso. When K is ef·
fedtve, he e mphasized, the new policy
wiD not affect those already retired . Not
wiD II apply to benefits paid into any in·
dividual's account pr1ot to the effective
date.
The company, incidentaDy, moved to
adopt the unisV&lt; tat;les because K saw the
legal handwr111ng on the waU ," Burnett
said.
Retroactive payments are not con·
templated , he added, because court deci·
slons to date have surned to rule them
out . For obvious r uons, TIAA-€li.EF
would put up a saff legal fight bmh lor
itsel •nd Its client instltutlonl against the
· Idea pi retroaction, he indica ed .
.....
TlAA·CREF can point to robust growm
since 1918, Burnell said . In 1979.
TlAA's - were valued at $8.3 billion ;
CREPa •t $6.8 ba&gt;n . Thlrty..four hun·
dred educational inttllullons parlidpat In

. \tt(~~..~· · .:\ .•.·•

�Aprll24, 1980-

LE'I"I'ERS
Campus art selection
left out something·
Editor.
It was with some joy that I read the an·
IIOI.InCeiTICnt In lui -r.•s ReporlD that
at lui the university has cledded to have
a repra«nlallon o! art on this campus.
But, as I read the article and saw that
allhough the oculptwes to be brought
here are by weD· known artists In the
U.S ., H -med to me ltlat something
was missing.
An Important question must be asked :
Are we going to be influenc:eG by deak!B
who have connectiOns, or do we reaDy
want art?
If we are going to be Involved politically, why can we no1 be Idealists for local
artists?
.
If we want art '!&gt;at Is going to speak to
the pubic, the majortly of which are
students, and art which Is going to repre·
sent a communication betwe«n the
aeator and the ge!lRrlll public who are
the students of this university, should this
public no! be involved in making deci·
lions about the art to be displayed here?
Who can make such decislono? Is H a
oornmHtee · which, In aD due respec;t,
means well, but Is not advised by artists
who are sculpton and weD-known and

1'll5peC1ed In this area?
Wouldn't K be great for the generatlons
of students who will come to otudy on this
campus to - sculptw:es that convey the
thoughts and fedngs of artists who represent this communKy? Art should be to us
not the name of the sculptor, but what
the piece says and how H relata to the

environment on this campus.
The pieces that have been selected are
not only no! good representallono of the
artists' best works, but they are cold. they
do not touch the hearts of the sludents.
Student life Is affectionate. This catnpus is
home lor students. who have feelings,
and the art of the campus should reflect
those feelings and speak to the students
in their own language. Campus art
should not represent the tastes of an elite
few.
I suggest we allow local arllsll to exhibit
here . There are artists In this area who
would vie for the prMlege of exhibiting
on this campus. This beautiful place
should be fuD of art, but let H be art that
speaks to Its ooul.

-fllSda~

rant principle . Scm« kind of Institutional
acknowledgement of the legitimacy of
Marxism-In various and sometimes con ·

Workshop In Marxlsl Studies has comllicting formo-is required, I believe, to
pleted Its term of operation under the
maintain a balanced and healthy lnteDecCollege prosp«tus. ~ COQrdlnator of the
tuall~e on this campus . This is necesoary
Workshop In Marxlsl Studies lor the past
to counteract both past and eve.n current
two years, I would like to exptess my appolitical trends which tend to delegtttmize
preciation to the Colleges for their
the study of or Interest In a major lnteUecgenerous support of this project, and also
tual current of our Ume . When this ques·
thank the various Individuals who partion of "lnslitutionallegitimacy" Is settled
ticipated In particular projects and In the
once and for aU on this campus, I think
owraU running of the Workshop .
that a positive lnteDectual ctimate lor
The participation- and cooperation of
everyone will be secured an~ enhanced .
many fine people on this campus have
made my efforts In coordinating the
This is not a spectal plea on behaK of
Workshop personaUv very rewarding. I
any particular proposal that might be
hope that others wilf agree with me that
forthcoming , or an attempt to oubstitute
the Workshop has been a worthwhile
what I think is an Important principle for
undertaking.
careful examination of the effectiveness
There Is a possblity that a proposal for
and contribution• of the Workshop in
a College In Marxlsl Studies will foDow . Marxist Siudles. It is only an asserllon of
the completion of the· Workshop. In
part of a rationale for this kind of effort,
whatever form ; however, I believe that H and a baoic reason why I, for one, have
11 academlcaUy justif&gt;able and desirable
done my best to help make the
that the otudy of Marxism be glwn inslltu ·
Workohop an academicaUy serious con tiona! recognition on this campus
tributor to the intellectual llfe of thiS
University.
The Workshop In Marxlsl Studies has
continued more than len years of effort at
Sincerely.
tlus University to establish a very impor- .lamn IAwlel'

UUP applauds AAUP position,
but contends it was there first
Edlter.
The Buffalo Cen
Chapc.r ol UUP
applauds the decllion of our Joc.l MUP
to speak In ddenre of Dr. Beverly
Paigen , as communicated to the
Rq&gt;Mer, Aprt 3. The uMierllty cornmunKy lhould nole that our Ex..:utlve
!loud pa-.1 the following rnalution
(authored by Prol_.. MwraY and
Adellna levine) .,... Jan. 22, 1980:
'1"ha R_. Pirie Council ol Sden11111
called ai:lenlion to politlcaj In~ wtth
. _ . . ac:tMIIa of
their coiiMgue. Dr. 8cwrty Paigen . The
Bulfalo Cen.t&amp;r Q,.p6or ol WP deplores
In
slrongal lllr1M INM outngoous
polllc-' and eel
..-lcllons on

scientific: and academic freedom to pursue legitime r..-dl, Ideas, or crllldsm
of public officials. Such attempts at Inappropriate and illegitimate restraints. ~ unc:heck«&lt;, threaten the wei-being of a
pubic d«Pendent upon knowledge gain·
ad because of scientific and academic
fre«dom ."
In taking this action the Board fe~ that 11
even thoagh Dr. Patgen is no1 emplOyed
by SUNY BuHalo, a threat to academic:
freadom anywhere should be a mat1er ol
common conc:cm to the entire lntdectual
community ..
Sincerely yours,
-.loMpll S. Rlllda, UUP

~--------------------------------------_J

WHhln the next two years, China wiU
be launching Its llrst American-made
communication sateDHe. This may usher
In a new age for a country which now
uses television primarily to educate the
masses and encourage Increased productivity.
Because

Marxist Studies College would
enhance intellectual climate
~the lecture by anthropologist Dr.
a;".;;;. Leacock on April~. the College

-

Beijing broadcaster
getting master's here

-

no

communications

cur·

rlculum exlsll In China, Mrs. Guang-Yu
Xle , an employee of Radio Beijing-an
International station which broadcasts to
six continents In 38 languages-decided
to come to the UnHed States to get a
good grounding In mass communication
theory.
Mrs. Xle believes she is the llrst woman
from the People's Republic of China to
come to this country to study the field .
Slje chose U/ B's Department of Com·
munk:.aUons because she read

in a

Japanese educational magazine that H
had a good reputation. but also because
her sister, Dr. Tung-Vue Wang, a
research chemist at Veteran'• Hospital
and her brother-In-law, Dr. Kuang Wang ,
a U/ B molecular biologist, convenlendy
Uve In a neighboring suburb.
A graduate of Beijing Normal Unlversi·.
ty where ohe majored In English educe·
tion, Mrs. Xle's llrst encount.,- with
Chinese media came in college when she
worked as director of the sChool's radio
station . Alter graduation , the govern·
ment assigned h.,- to Beijing Radio where
ohe has done a variety of jobs, Including
working as an oral interpreter, news and
commentary edttor and translator .

Two TV atauo...
Mrs. Xle relayed that, currently,
Beijing has two television statlons. one

S40a-tb
Mrs. Xle earns a whopping $40 a
month In China, but she pays no Income
tax and her apartment costs $10 a
month ; $7 dw1ng the oumrner when the
heat is oft. Food is also relatively cheap,
but clothing Is expensive. A pure wool
suit, for example, costs S100.
Thanks to government and factoryowned day-care centers, nearly all
women in China work . Women are entitled to 56 days of maternity leave with luU
pay, and upon return , they are aUowed
to take one hour off each day to nurse the
child .

Chineoe women used to commonly
marry In their late teens or early 20's . But
Mrs. Xle notes that because of China's
population factor, women are being encouraged to delay marriage untd around
25.
Mrs. Xle admits she finds her course
work difficult because of her lack of
background In communication theory,
but ohe is "convinced" she can "catch up"
and hopefully complete her master's In
two yearo.

Because of the help Mrs. Xle has so far
received from her advisor, professors,
and Department Chair Gerald Goldheber, she says she "doesn't feel hke a
stranger here. Everyone has been very
kind and friendly," she grinned.
- .lB.

Garden plots
are available;
call RCC

operated by the cKy and the other by the
state. Educational programs, which
A summer garden Is being f.lanned by
generaUy remain unintenupted by coma sman group of students, acuity and
merctal messages-except for a few from
lamdy grouPO on the outer edge of the
Amherst Campus behind Sweet Home
foreign lnveslors, are scheduled to correspond to shifts of industrial workero.
High School.
Entertainment programming, including
The one-acre garden hasn't been used
news, is confmed to a few hours during
In two years but was planted for three
weekday evenings, but Is offered more
years before that, ac:cording to Susannah
on Sunday, the only day off work for the
Mcloaac, a 27-year-old fralunan who Is
Chinese .
~ng the guidelines lor the garden .
Ahhough only a mlnorHy of Chinese
The acre of land has been divided Into a
own their own televisions, Mrs. Xle
70x904oot plot. From that plot, ten
predicts the number wiD radically Increase
subplotl have been slaked, ranging In size
when the satellites are operative. Most
from 10'x10' to 20'x20' . '
communes and production brigades
Proapecttve gardeners had an
share a television set, she noc.d , and
organizational 1MCting last Saturday
radios are a common commodity.
morning and wiD work together to UN and
AD Chinese wcrlcero, relayed Mrs. Xle,
organicaUy fertilize the 1011 along with
make approximately the Nme salary
other preparatory wcrlc before planting.
despite their particular vocation . Income
Alter the 1011 Is properly belancect, Invaries, however, according to the
dlvldual groups will be rnponstit for
number of dependents and aduh workers
elld&gt; plot and will be fr
to grow
In the famdy· unft. AI people, therefore,
whatcYer they want. The major1ty of peethe« ac.Uy have an opportunity lo purpie,~- seem lnteretted m growing
chase • TV set.
~. laid Ms. Mcisaac .
.--..._
In lnslanca because of overtime
there Is a rental fee of $10 for a 1
pay and lnc:ontlve money lor high quality
10'd0' plot and $15 (or a larger gerden
wcrlc ar high production, induotrial
site · The money vc- lor rental of the
workers we In a betlft potillon to afford
anct other equipment l'lftded to
one.
·
prepar the land . s-Is we no1 includod
~ In thlt country. Mrs Xio says
In the rental fee .
worn«n we -rl rep. nted In The group of~ will mMt every
tiMdla jobo, such as announcen, but
Sunday from 1-4 p .m . at the lib l'lotl
ui\Ciofrepewnted In tj&gt;e .,.,.e tachntc.l
• sill available Far , _ . tnt~--..
·· tldc6fth4
· .t.tneia~. ldr..&amp;- -· - - Ro~e~M~ -- ~........ ~~i

~·

~~19

�•

April24, 1980

Poppea &amp; &amp;lends
of the Open Wort..hw
............. of 'I.1nc:oroeuloae Dl Pop.

The~

· ""'' lor lbe camera. The opera
ruM tonight ~b Sund8y •• Baird.

CALENDAR
•-lnda•tionl

81.000 PIIESSUIIE • Sl'IIESS INDEX
TQ11NG

"""""'a
ond al IN Univ&lt;nlly
wtlBloodbo ovoloblo to
ol me-.
communtty from 9 • tn . lb 2 p m al both the
Amh«&lt;e and MU. ScrHt e~~mpusa The
wtl bo M. .nl - R o o m, Squn, ond Socond
Roo.. t.ou.ge (oulllde Sdonce 6 ~
Un'!ll. Copen
IIIEN'S IIASDIAU. .
lllrod&lt;pon -

~

lpm

c-.. (doubiohodftt

p....

AMERICAN SlJ.IDI£5 PRESeiTATION '
Soclol Cooto ol
G.nnon
Par: 1004Cit.mens 2.30pm E~wtlcomc .

p....,- - - ·

C£NTEJI FOR 1'1t£ STUDY OF CULT\IRAJ.
TRAN MISSION LEC T\IRE •
Poatun A. A CltM to Atdtudn lin ttM Counrooat, Dr ROAJvn Undrwt [)qMrtnwnc ol
Sodalogy at SUC/ 8 and eonsubm 1n F.. Jury
l&gt;nguolia Lounge Spould.,. Quod
Ellcon 3--4 30 p m

IIO'ERNATIONAL COLLEGE
FELLOW'S PROGRAM LECT\IRE ' .
Cooperattoa and Conflict in Global Politia: A
N odd. Pwi._ Rchord Monoboch . Ru~gen
lJniwn.&lt;y 109 O'Bnon 3 p m

CREST LECtull£.
CryoiAI Lonlct Elltcto ol lee. 0. Ai&lt;l-o H.goshi .
Doportmo,. al Appliod Phyoia, H - U......l
!y,

s-o.o. .lopon

254 Frono;Mio 3 30 p m

~od by lho Cold R._,. Engineering
Sdonce ond Tochnoiogy c.n...

Or H~gasN , an lntti"Nbondy rKOgnll.«d
.uthorily on ~froo and a physic~ • Wiling

..... to. two """' He " " ' - conolclmoiM limo
In ltw U S as • .......:h nperinwtUiitt, ~
.teientit• a.1 suc:h indtutionl u the Snow and Ice

w....._,

Pmno&amp;oot Reou.ch lho U.W...., al

... Wilmot!o . II ,

ond tho ~icol
-···llw~ai-

LAW. ECONOMICS WORKSHOI'
PltESOfTATION •

- - o lc-J.o.Siock- -

tho

Tiooool--.0. MMI&lt;W-in. ~ . and Or Trum.n c::l.rk , Ullllant pro'-or . School al M.._.,.,., U/ 8 706 O'llrion
3JOpm

.._...,__.,__.a-.

PHY IC5 COLLOQURJN•

O.. Can-

doce Pen, ~ Wllh
In - • al Monlal H -. Bolhoodo. Md . G-26
Fatbtr. S p m.
Mud. al 0.. Pen'o - " in- ~
.......... inlhobml- mokc~ .. - .. "'" polhwoys !hoy .... . . poln . Whlolho
omt\I.J"'et..ood trutmcnl crt ~ndurt has been
boOtl louo.d •nd booed by , ......., ond phyoldono,
Pm con•nds that a nirnaJ t11Ud5n • ~ as •
......,IIUdy~ lwmon po..o.. lndala tho
tedtnique" rtlnMt pa.in..., manu'-c:tu.red k'l the

body

A IP'Iu* al 0.,... M_, ond John Hapluno. 0.
Pet il a.uthor or eo-author oii"''Kft 1han 60 professional artlda and wu recently on ttw n.tk:JnaJ
w~ program,
ova .. Her fNijof arta~ o4
include lh&lt; ~ .... al opiale ......
and ~I (uncbOn ol end0rphin1 and en·

doo&lt;nou•

mo&lt;phlnos

ASSOCIATION POR WONEN IN SCIENCE
RECEPilON '
Tlw Buffelo chapwr ol the AHoc:ii.tion for
Women ., Sc~tncc wil hold a rectpllon for Dr.
Candace Pert imm~chately ahft her 5 o'clock lee
tu~ . 1n lhe Haymes Dining Room . Squir,. Hal al
6 15 Allar• mvrted
DRAMA'
Lord AlfrN's l.over, wnttcn and directed by Eric
Bcndt'y &lt;Antn Jheatr~ . 681 M.in ~et . 8 p m
~al .diTiimon $4 , stuMnu, MnkJr citizens S2
ADS YOU&lt;hoB oocoptod ~od by lh&lt; Oopo"
nwnt ot Theatre
Baed on
~nals of
Wilde, for "homosa.
ual offftlM$," Lord Alfred'• l..ow:r chronidts
Wikle's low: affair wlh tlw young Lord Aired
Oougitl1 Rahr th.n a mere rtte.lmg of the O.:..r
Wild~ \egend , Lord Alfred'• Lowr il a PJobing
char.Ckr Jtudy of a man learning 10 survivf!o ln an
opprnstw IOdety nw play dull wtrh. man·, fina l
rubttton tNt 10
turvtv« , one rnu.- folow
orw's own lrue n11tww:
II a theme fhat Eric
Bondoy hoo opb-•d timn In oadior pleyo,

o.:.r

me

b'u..,

n.

mooo noiObl\&lt; n.. R..,.,...lloa al Gdl&lt;o Gdtld

and An You Now or tt.w Yo. Ewr Ben?
The CAmet nw.... produc*Jn wtl be dw an.
prunloro al Lonl Al&amp;od'o lAw&lt;, which hod .,
W'Cidd pNmir.fl!' Sua ~ In florida. Au1hor and
d - Eric
from
Conodo to play h -~- al OK. WQdo
When Bondoy...,. hunllng for on "'ocw." o to.g.
nurnbe- of dlltinguilhed p&amp;ayeq from Taronto 10

8ondoy""'-.............

New Yoo!o olfmnl -

-

None a1 lho
~ tHmltd to htm men prom111ng or n ·

dllnfl !hoi -

Moa.mdor, -

Oocar

R--"" hooaulodo___,~,

0.

G.ogory, Comol u...-..ty 454 Frono;..to
3 30 p .m Colfco 01 3
-

CD.UILAII PHYSIOLOGY SDIJN!UI•
0. . ..._.... · .. .,..._
_ Do-

'"'"'-""'*·

al """............ ond
1011
Shaman 4 p .M Cotitc ..wd at 3 4.5 in S-15

-

11w-

~l.Ecn.Ef
~P--Iolho....._

Thanday- 24

tiiOl.OGICAL SCIENCES LEC1\JIIE •

---- --~.,

-~- C.... , 0. Conly L
RlOIIor, ~ al Elocnn ()poles, Now Yoo!o S101o
~aiH- 1 1 4 H - 4·15pm

Coat.et4 pm

Canedo •nd boyond
Tho '"'v&lt; cotllndudn oudl wd-lcoown ........
formers .. R.lchan:l w"P. John Emnwrt, Jc.n
Coldn, Poul 1\owoloo:, ond lho Doportnw,. al
Thutre and Dent. cheltrMn, S..UI Elm.

AIST BUFFALO POEl'llY IIEADIJIIG •
-

~

-

F&lt;nW ond 0.... - - n..
· 1802 N-o SC -.- 1\mhont.

by lho SUC/8 Vlouo!Ms lloonl wtlh • ""'"' from

Endowmom for tho Mo . FrH.

lho -

Friday- 25
ORAL BIOLOGY SENINAII'
- _"' of......_,.lnO..IM,......,
oo.- ..... oot.... Dnoto ...J....r
lh•
_

V -. M.D.• D.D.S .. Ph.D.. N-

Collo!lo- Room 107, 4510 Main

Yoo!o Medal

SC. 12·1 p .m.

lliEDIClNAL CHENISTRY SDIINAII'
Do lllohnu C. Solon, --doetoo41 wdenl,
Doportnwno al Modldnal a....ory. U/ B C-121
Coob 2p.m
HISPANIC MATINEE'
Conference Theatrr:, Squire . 2 30 p .m Contem·
porary one-ect plays and dance performed by
u~uate and high IChool students Spon·
tor~d by tt. Spanish G S A Free admission

UNGUISTICS SPRING 1910 COLLOQUIUM
SERIES '
P~ Proc:asn tn Radins. Peter Hom ·
by, SUNY /Ptattsburgh
lmtuJStlcJ Lounge .
Spouldln!l Quod , EJIJcoct Compin 3 p.m
Co-spon""ed by lh&lt; Ooportmeno al Ungui51la.
Modern L...nguages and lJI.eraturu. the ln&amp;e:nstve
Englilh La.nguage lnsUtute and the- Offk::~ of EducaOOnaiMMca

COJIO'U1EJI SCIENCE COLLOQUIUM·
H umanldng Computn Graphics . Or . NIJII"'tnnln
I &amp;diu , Department ol Computen and (nfot'1T'tol ·
bOn Sdera: , Universlry of Pennsytvania Room 41 .
4226 Ridge Lu 3 p m Cotfn and doughnuts wil
be...wd
CENlER FOR COLD REGIONS
ENGINEERING, SCIENCE A
TECHNOLOGY COLLOQURJN •
n.. Mocbonlcaf ..._,_ al leo, 0. Aldno
Hlgosh;, Ooporlmo,. al Appliod Phyoia, Hokkaldo
llniYonly, Sapporo, J.pon. Room 18, 4 240 Ridge
lAa 3 30 p m. Coffee at 3 .

ENGINEDUHG SCIENCE. AOIOSPACE
EHGINEEJIJNG AND NU&lt;1EAA

-nl .,. ._

ENGIHEEJUNG SENINAR'
Oo Somo
I.-. "' Conllnuum
Modooalao. T. ~ - oq,h,
a1
· lAiligh I.Jnlvonly 104 Pori&lt;•. 3:30
p m. Refrahmenb at 3

eo.-..-

. , _ _ , _ lo -

o-r-. ._
· 0. Fton

--n-...

Gonio. ................. CSOICoaM 4pm

UUo\8,.....

-

- - (19
41!&gt; ond 8 pm Gon.ol10. - . 1160
Tht My alan •nc:to..l c::ornnw'*Ju,._....-d

............. · lho
'"'"
.....,._._.,
... .........
v_ _
- - ond -...., ............
3_allho

_._......,..-_.-ciS

~-

v..

·p-

.... . - w _,H __ d..,_,,,

Qotpomn.noaiCM~ . U/8 139P-'&lt;•4-S p.m. Rmahnwnts.

DANCE'

o_,.•W~ . Hon1mon Tho&amp;"'• SludK&gt;.

PHYSIOLOGY SEJIINAR•
Canlloc

Hon1mon Llw•'ll- 8 p.m. Spoo-.d by lho Deport-

by T.-.to&lt;..... 0. Thomu Colo.... 0..00"·
mo.. al ~ ond lllopbyoico , Com.l

831-2045.

-..c...- .... n . l -

Roodlneo wtl bogln 01 8 p m Dana- n.. ....,.
........ . . . . - In pori """' pubic fvnch from lho
N- Yoo!o Soolo Coundl on lho ""' ond lhc N.

f•.,. be aerwd starting at4

1lonlll &amp;.dowment fOf ht Artl

UUAII fJUI '

ment ol TM.atrt:. For more W onnaloo cal

Modlcol Cologo . S-1011 Shmnon 4 IS p.m. Coi-

Tho -

09781.

--&lt;loy-

od........;

al"'hc good

Today'• opening __,.. a a rec::apl6on In Haas
~. 7-11 p.m . S.., h&lt;.,IO old hlondo. Calc:h
up on whlll"a bem tkl6ng. ,._.._ and e~ the m~

";!'".=locol,__

~

ColiN ond donu10

ADS......_ oocoptod . Spor.orod by lho Deport·
me.nt of Tlwatre.

IRC FIUil'
" - ol ' - - -

f-"'-""" ·

170 MFAC, E11coct 7 ond

:..:,s.::.:..~-

1150. ........ IIOlf

poeudo

""""'*

bl al holwm ..... tho -

OfOEIIA•

c.,.. -

.....

oolglnol -

by

-c--

'1 ..-....

by

g&lt;norol-; $3 focuay , """·
fD

in

::::;: lhc lond al Shongri-Lo, lho ..........

Satarday - 26

CONCan ·
1111!- R'*l aM tho . _ PhilhonDoalc.
G\llft 8 P m Ge-.1 . . . _ ,s, toa.toy
.... 13 so. .......... '2.50 s,.o.-..r by lho
UUAII Cdurol ond Pooi- M one! M"*

CONFDIENCE '10

--- -......."""'-....
·--""""'

Mt Ruolol'o - . I, p u b i c - .,lho
_ond _ _ _ . , - . , .

........

al high

L.,..._ _ D1 p - ("Tho Corona- ol
Mon-..11, .,._nood
lho U!B
0po.. Woofuhop. Boinl R«&lt;ol Hill 8 p.m S4

...- .... _ _ _ ., n...
-

- 146 Dloloftdod. 7 •nd 10

P-"'-"-"' te.poyon: so ...... - ..
F.,.. o....._ ond Tom.., lo&lt; Jona ., •

"-1

CAC FIUil'

IAot- (1937)

a.-.I o d - 1 4: 11Udonb • ....O. .-..u

Coni...... Thooh

' AlfTl-WAII IIEUMON •
~-who ""'-1-ht ...... lho .. rbulo........

:::=·for.

DIIAIIA'
LoniAI&amp;od'o ~. - n ond dncOod by Erl&lt;
Bondoy. Cantu Tho&amp;h, 681 SC. 8 p.m

12 10: lludonb II 60.

T-

Jr., and its ..Gershwin on BrOAdway" recording ,
Woody All&lt;n uood .,..r.~vo~y on lho ooundb'ado to. "- 1979 11m "Monho...."
Tonlgtol'o prognom includes: "'Yaawo 10 Die
M__.- twOli'W'I:
Sule" (Dobuooyl .
"Donee al lho Seven
from 'Solomo' •
!Sb'aUIII : "Sfi"'Phony No. 2S in G . minor, K. 183"
CMooorl) , a nd "Loo Prwludes" (I.Juol .

CIVIL ENGINEEJIJNG SDIINAII•
1"he lJM of AcltvUM Carbo. to Trut

M-.:~pa~

Squh. S.30 ond 9.30. p m G.naol

PHAIIICACEUTICS laCINAil•
.........._ , ,_ r o1 ........_

u he conduc:~~ the orche:t.n In banks, schook , •nd
oullying commu"""Y concmo. N- Ruddbrings lhe
PhJiharmonic 1o Clerk G ym.
The Buftalo Phiharmonlc .. renowned for its n ·
al - . . . .. high qualty ol
b'aordino&gt;y enMmbl. p&amp;eying, and shea brilt.anc:e ol sound . llls
equaly wei-known for lb; national tours , itl a nnual
nallonaly loi&lt;Wod lrl&gt;ule 10 Moolln Lulhcr l&lt;in9.

• dwnce 10 ... ihe .... ~In Ktton

A do..,Iong open houM for hlal&gt; ochool wdoniS
-ln~in--molnMo~
ond lho Soclol s....Amtwnt 9am - 4pm
. R..,.__oo9am •O'IIdonHal
--byiN.........,~-"·'
10•"'

-Spino"'"·

-

n..

-

• doy

n-••

1Ad10que Done.~. IN
ond 1lle U/ B .1.- ~ •••

o.po....,.,

.. . . . - -............. lhe

�Apnl24, 1980

7
Coming to Clark

.,._ Rllllel will conduct the a......
l'bilh8rmoale In • epedaJ performaece
at Oarlt Gvm Fr~My nltht.

DANC£'

o.-n,• Wocbhop. H - Thaah Soudlo.
H - n Lbaty. 3 p m. Sponoo.ad 1'!1 tlw [),port·
mt.nl of Thtatrt. Fu men tnfotm~~lon cal

d-

831 -2045.

0.,...,.•

Lard Allnol'a t . -, -nand
1'!1 Eric
Bendey. Cenlef Thoan , 681 Main St 3 p .m.
Gmlrr.1 edrMIIon $4: lludcnll, Mnlor diMr. $2
ADS YOUdwn accepted Sponocnd 1'!1 tlw Depaot ·
ment ol llwab"~

OPERA'

L-....- D1 P - (Tho eo.on.- al
p_..,

1'!1 Nontevordl, ;&gt;&lt;nented 1'!1 the U/8
Ope.e Worltohop. B.Wd Redial Hal 3 p .m H
ge:nual &amp;dmtuion. S3 f..c:ulty, n.H. ~enior ciliz:e'ftl.
$1 stud«nts wtth 10

SUNDAY WORSHIP SEJIVICES'
Jarw: Kft_, Room , Elic~ CompW• • S-6 p.m
Ewryone tnvtted to at&amp;«nd . Spootored by th&amp; lnte:r·
neOonaiS..dontNnlllry
RECREATION NIGHT'
~

~:&gt;reb

Lambda

and Phi E«a 5.gma are co

spon50f'ln9 a recrution n-vht from 6- 10 p m in the

recrulion area of Squ11e Hal btiemeot . AI
members and fnmd1 Are ~
BFA RECITAL'
ArM Alt~M~ut.l . 'Jtoltnt~t Baird Redial Hal 8
p m F... a d - . Sponocnd "" tlw Depan·
ment of Musk

FIRST ANNUAL COMMUNICATION

. Saturday Is Aslronomy Day on cam pus. In addition to lectures and 111m•.
the Wende Hall telescope will be
available lor star-gazing.

l'\o1 - - 1'!1,_., tlw U/8 Doportment

a(~

AHTl·WAIIIIEUNION '
Dow I.

IOOOam

P.-· O.all-. -

. II0200pM Dooft-nca~ .....
- -; ~Worlt, 3395quft;
flacoonl u-. 240 Squft, Rola al ... Sadalo·

eo.-.-.tto-.

P - l o r lho day lndudo: ffad Snd, ,~a..,
.......... - -· and Gona ~ al
U/8 who we lolt ...... FOc:ulty and Scali ........
..._ntlnth.P. . . ~ .
(llnac&gt;o~andl..any _ _ _ _
~ al
draft-

labor-· ...

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

tchorlla. ~ a1 T*av

W

-

-.~_

we be , _ _ "-1.

at•vtiOI_._..(\..owec.n.l'sl..c*~Uld

-aloba56anaOubandRachoiC..
we a1oo b e - . -.
100 pm A -...... alfvttand
--Squn
r ... Y__
....
Colagol

~

- - . . ... .w .....

A ..... IO .... _
olacllolvand_.ttoa ... _ _ ... _ , ....

SU!fY/- . ,,

SUNY~ Ellcoa

12-

U/ a
Q.Ua- UJNCIEOIC
........ O i r q -. U Tho . . _.. we-..a--._.,!

---"'--·
'
......... __
_...,.a(

acholanitlp- 1 0 -

NAnOICALA&amp;1'aOH&lt;*Y DAY'
T h o -- ,_ .... 10 ...

.. .,.,..

""*·...

taloaplocelotR-114andhUIB~

---Dt

-c..-...-...........
- ......

, _ u..-.ov . ... 0...

...,...

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

&amp;ool-al-

al

•

....... "Thalooi50Y-Ia5oloo--·
-:!.Jp .. . Ot
UJ a ·, Fea.
e1
H•.-.t ScM-.cfl afWI

o.---.-"'

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

-1-4 .... .-"V-~-~..... 0. .............. U/8...,.._
7

...

~- -

- u .....
..,_.._,a
••

4 ...

APPUED MATHDIAnCS DAY&amp;•
11-.
ol il&gt;c New Yorit S&lt;oto

~-Groupwlbmg400&lt; ......
malht.ml6:itl'll from around the - . . .M &amp;om
c.n.da ID t:hra campus For men: Wormlllon, con·

.... ... ., ... -localfacultyhool ...........
Haollngo, 831 -S$58, ....... ~.
831 -380t , "' Nldtctlu ~ . 831 -S50r&gt;
s - I, I.J0.5:30 p m 141 Dlolmdoof
1:30 p.m. -Colloa
1.50-2 p .m . - W~ Roma.b 1'!1
o..w.,... ...,_, dean, F"""lly al Natural
~and Mallwmab. U/ 8
2·3 p m. - a...lcol ~. N oltlple
~ . -·---.0.

0..

Merlin Felnbe:rg , Dep.rtnwnl of Ch«mk.al
~. lJnlwtoly al R""'J · ts-4.15 p .m.- A.._ 01 T- ~

w-

--

· Dr Slmpocft, Dlporta1 Nalho-. llnlwtoly a1
4 J0.5:30 p m - S... . _ Ia - .
C ;I
Dr ~ Hatdo&lt;, Dopan·
raen1 al Malht.matac.el Sdcnca, R.nsMt.er

="'tr.

l'otylocMit . _..

Sotunlay- ~ -

IIE!r$~'

c-..

--day-

NEW YOIIK STATE

R....-Squn. ~·, Rola ., tlw At1N for "-co,
339 Squft. F...., Md U.....0V Sial ..,.__

-...

Tho day .. being coonl&gt;talad "" Stu.an Wlnegon!
•ntl Phi Ctoddol, ol tlw U/ 8 1\otronomy O.b

:r. ...

UUAaFIUI'
1loo 11971!1. Coni.....,. Theatre ,
Squn 1.30. S 30 and 9 30 p m GeovAI -$210, ....-1160

IIAPIQUET '

Spaulding Dining Hal 8 p m S;&gt;onsot-ed 1'!1 tlw .

Sunday- 27

Communic.l;lon Undergr&amp;d StuMnt A.Hodallon
By advance I:IC:k~ u\1 only .

APPLIED NATHDIAnCS DAYS'
s.a.to. It 9 a m.-12.30 p m 148 o.fendorf
· 84!;-Cotfn
9·10-Edttlaa 0t St-' Fla., Dr K. 8
Rang~tr , Dep.rtJ"nent ol Mathemilia, lJnJwrjly ol

lRCFIUC'
Eve- of Uuta Man. Gowmon Raldencc Hal
8 p .m Frtc t10 fftPI!yen: 50 cents , others

r.......,

10 1&gt;11 IS- .......... a.d ... _lor~ Wlch

Tach·
M·

1181-. 0..
0.

thony ~Ia . [)opanriw,. al Nalhomatla .
Clatbon C...,. ol T achnology
II.JO.I230 -~ Thectry,
G S.
S Ludfont . o.,..-.. a( n-dcolantl Appliad
Nalhomatia. Comd

Sooabttu, 2-3pm
2-3 - n.. ........... al Tidal "-w. Ot

Gocoge Duff, o.;...-n. al Nalhomalcs,
o11y a1 r .........

u,w-.

DANC£'
. _ _, WOitlahop. H"""""n Thoan Soudlo.
-nt..ltoaty 8p m Sponoo.adl'!ltlw[),port
-a~n.ana

r.. ...... ......_ ...

831 ·204S

~-s-&amp;

.

...-.--$2

ADS_.......,._

-cln..n

~l'!lhDiport

...170Mf'AC, - 7and
lOp• Foaeta,_,_. 50 ....... - . .

lllC FD..III'

.,_of~aM

-

blu..-.

""'*·

'*'•-

-own

.....- . . .. ·~ ......... and lleld .......
......
ava..,..lnOarkGwm
- - - - and _ , -

Moaday- 28

UUAaf1UI'

IIDrS aAIEMU..

1loo 119781 W.Wman Tlwatre,
AmNm. 12 30, 4·15 and 8 p m Genna! admio-$210. ""'**1160

FWd I p .m

......, Seaoa Cole.- ld........ _ ,. P -

----- . --AHTl·WAIIIIEUNION '

0.,. s.
.
llnocollayeandNichMIFeoborwlhoooclupa

C..W. C.W Ww.
and Feny Slo I p m

~

a...dt, Elmwood

ol-...,.. .. , _ c
- . ' Puonom
W..y., . . . - wth
Wooit • Sponoo.ad
Sot

1'!1 tlw

BUtialo l!qdf Clull £My lao w1 be Sl
Reca wll be one , two cw ......_ ..,_ .-ound Putnam
Way, and wl begin at I p m Tlwtw wl be -

..........,...,.., plooa-="IU/8-...,.1&lt;&gt;&lt;
bolhmaloeandt....loe A l - t h o u t d
bmga .......t n.. _ _ ............ for.ll
and be-awankloreachal
undar. 12"""""" 17. and IS
antl•p
....
_
_ Thmt
_
Thae ~ ewntJ ... pM of • P"9'11"' of us

c..,...-....... day..,.,caa
Come

-... p...,. ...
5

long- 10 30
out lind be •
Or conw
be .. Gowmoto' Raltlenoe Halo

UII51NG 01'£101 HOU

N.......... . . _ _ . . . . . . . . . _ . ,

-IOan-hooM_.di&gt;!lh~

. pm

no.--

339 SqoiN 1-S

_V_Ad_Nadlcolc-.,

Room 1104. 4 p.m.

of ,.._,...._..104

D:ac:na-..

Wllh4rawel "- ..............,_...,.. .....
SltrpltoA G H........n. Ph 0 • . -.. ,...._,
Dcpanmmt ol Pha""""""w. [lnOty lJnlwtoly
S&lt;hool ol Nedldne 124 Fa- 4 p.m

R_...,at345
AIICHI'l'E~

I.LCTUR£'
A - . llcoloo;leal NNel few .......... fan

1o1cHa1w. FASUI.

.., m

H~

FlLA. lantlocapa - .. plan-

S.30 p m Adrni1411on • tr.

FIUI'
~a.W.GoBoalltljj (11.._ , 19741 146
Oiolencktri 7 p m Sponoo.ad 1'!1 lito c.- ;,.

IN1'DINAnOICAI. COLLEGE

P'AIOEL DISCUSSIOIC'

w...w w... m

Anclrcw Tc*utteW• •

_ _.......

.... - ..._
- h t..lniiM
10 llws....,
u..flad
....Soaoo
wl._.t _
_ _.......

""'ne. o1
· ......
~

-

- . . llw ._... coollct ' * - n tlw US

CACFIUI'

I.Got -

-... .......,_G.otic: ,......; ... -

-Soudv

-lnlltoU( 8-'odoo-_.._.,

N - Edo..-o

H-

I..EC1UIIE'

.. -~-·Dr. NlchM w
Soowonl. London School al
and T..,...,

-COI.OGY a T1IEIIAP£U11CS

alll£ RACE·

a m to

DllAIIA'
&amp;..ollllhl'a t . - , -·and dinoc004 1'!1 Eric
11en1tay C.... n.....
I Malo St 8 p.m

s..u -

With ..,.clal ......
Colo- ...,....,lng l!tomba.i. who has
su~ gular accornp.anlmcnt for tt. ~ of.Jeryy
Jeff. Bob Dylan anti "'-be Snow. has bean cdad
lh. "'musidlln'1 mv*:&amp;an •
l!tomba.i'• Wlique perfonning llyle 1o ...,... tilan
a tynthnil of lomw Blues.
country
owing. tel&lt;. jail, .oct. and ri&gt;ythm 6.
al
~heft: ., BtO&lt;ttbo&gt;g'o
ltowewt. tlwy mlk
10glt1her ~OK:opfcallj New petlftnl are con ·
"'""" fomtad wllhoui tlw indMd•al ...._,.n..
loalng
cha-

IHTRAJIUIIAL TRACX MEET
Rowy Add . 11 ·30 a m .

~

CAC .FIUI'
1 M 1 - 119371 146 Dial- 7 and
9 IS p m GeovAI 5I 50. lacultr. otall
--$125

UUAa CONCERT'
De.:d - , .. Cia"' Gym. 8 p.m Ticket"
" ' - . .. S6 gmaoJ ..bile. $7 day a( " -·

Cl931)

~ ,.,_.._,

Squire 2, 6 30 and 8 30 p .. Genoool -

'I 50. laculoy , tiOft a n d - 11 25

... us
......
-

144F...,_ 7p'"

Calato and

·-~

..

and
Co__. .......

llw

eo..ndl ... -

�•

April 24. 1980

Grapes of Wrath
TraooWed T- (HeMy Fooodlo) bWt
....... to Ma (...... o.r-11) In •
.,_. hm lhla Depreuloa era ......,..
cJa.ic beiDa - - * Monday night
to,UUAB . .

•Calendar

---7.-..,

UI.IM ~y NIGHT FlUIS •
_ . . _ 119351 , 7 p.m .. Tho O....eiWtalh
119401. 8.40 p m. 170 MFAC, Elltoft Ft.~

--

... _..__ p - ......... mod_ .. law
wtlh a ~ woman_ A ..._known chArr, ....
........,t.fttondlo~-

c;._. o f - · - H...,. Fondo ond John
~.
lo. _.,tul odoplo- d ··
--on"Oido"foml!l . .,..-b,~
- . - . . _. .......toCollomo .. d
1 h_
e...
_
.._
d _
... d _ f..._ ........
a...t~

-R-.

GIIAY P~ C.O NEETING'

, ....
... --.._....
Aeed .. · ..........
o. y.............
~Soeeringc-mO!ee,

~ Ou1rudl
-Goay ; GoayP.-. -.lloom,
Sq..-e. 7"""
JO

""""*" -

·

pm. Frw~

s,.o-..d b, SA. CAC, Tolotov Cologe.
w......·• Cologe , Block Scudin. ond dw
oe:. al HWNn ~. Funded at a Gnd"*

---'"'"""""'

AMK1AL ATHlD1C AWAIIDS MNQU£T
.. Depew . 7:JO p ...
at dw door ar
..~
.oAlllletlt OOponme.. O..· llorllelo, !100 Clao1&lt; tW. 831 ·293S,
2939
""'uuth ~- ._. ... .. 6 JO
P-"'·
"
.....
.
.
lrdode
O...ndlng
Nolo ond F...... Alhlotn to. 1979-80, Clllonl C
, _
...._,.,._,.,
E.CAC
- E . . Scbolu•Aihlno
P_ _
_
Modol d Mod. M. . . .., C~~p ~- . ond ...

~. al $1-.dt, can be:.pu!dw.ted

""'*

Tloolf79.8Ds.t.era.IA-.d, t o . - .. otw
-~ ....... ..-.,H-.R
Do Sonia, d t-..,. pullllc el
ond- pnolcl.- dTbe- Gooup. ltlc: .• •
cammv- ond
Dr Ed--' J ~ olhlotlt physicton fco
1he~ondoto.n.U/8olhlno . ........

--d- .
,..-,..._,firm

IIFA IIEOTAL •
CofMrwe, ,.._ Bood Rodlol Hoi 8
pm 1o fno s,.o-..d b, dw Oopon·

~

-

fiOFTIIAU..

Stato eau.,.. (doubloheodeoj Ad....

Add 2JOpm
LECTUII£'

E.epert--- .....

Pallcy:
&amp;. ....
d-., Or . Douglet \Utaton of.Abt Aaodetn Kraus
C..o.., Crooby Hoi 3-S:JO p m 5ponKnd by
RE.AC ond the C..&lt;e&lt; f&lt;&gt;&lt; Polley Scudia
Ro&amp;eohmenll ,..,.,-

GEOLOGICAL SCIENa.S liDGNAR•

The.,_,__ of~ Ra... of a.lbe Gola- n..n-1 Area Uolno
Natural R.ectioecttw Nuc:lddft. Kar1 K T~ftian .
o.,-tment d Geology ond Gocphyob . Yolo
~

Room 18, 4240 Rdw- La 3 30 p m

Coffee and doughnutl al 3
IIIOCHDIICAL I'HAJIMACOLOGY

SDIINAII•
""~ .....-• .loHph Bolwlet·
cult. • -...... student 307 Hochnttan 3 45 p m
Colla .. 3 JO

r.- _.

IIUFFALO LOGIC COI.LOQUJUM•
1MGtos of
1MGtos of Ea..e.

- · Pouf Thoon . f&gt;Niooophy ,
Untvenly 119 llaldy. 4 p m

""*...

n Nolional

MentoiMv*

CH£JCJCAL EIIGIN£DUHG SIEJUNAR•
Ciyolal o.-111 r.-- Solo- Dr Wlllom N
Ga. U/8 .107 Ollrion 4 p m Rmnhme"" wt1

be-..d&amp;om3J0«&gt;4

Taesda" - 29
~

ON EFFECnVE

l.E-..o-~A'IU'

- T o ........ - . Sllen)l w...,.: The
202 lloldy 1·2.20

.__..., ..._.... c -

p ... ~b,1het-..,..__,c-...

-llolo-----Rudy~.
··-to. _
_,ca~ogo~_
h ........................ o n d _ t o .

.......__-"'_

fiLMS'
The - . . . -. The ComedleaM .........
. Piap (1965, S...oubl . laod,.d.-1 Quality
(Landlow. 19691 146 Dlofencfcof 7 p.m Spon-..1 by the &lt;:..- fco Modlo Soudy

UUAB 11/EDNESDAY NIGHT fiUIS •
o.- (19461 . 7 p m . NwhllofCablrla (bafv.
1957) , 8 2S p m Conltnnc:o -.~• • Squoe

Ft.-

_ _ . tiiACit A FIELD '

~---~- -~

..

.. .I&gt;JR-..-.onojaumeythel
- . h1o ldenlioy ond h1o ... ond .,., can only
ondinhoodoolh
ffot-lntlw-modfeat . puo.-

"Tbe-d-.-

___ ..
_ ... _.__ ... .....,d ...... Glu---.--... . . . . . . .

• UI.IM ...... .

. . _ , ......

~

. -. 170 MFAC,

.,.,..___~.-.,

7p·--

1*- ..... - " " ....... ond ...

__ '""' ......... .._d ..

_ _ _ ... ..
.-~--...". ---··---"podcmo.............

.r~oo-·

UJa _ _ _
COMC:I!D'

... _ _ dla

~ of Cablrla
.. Fo..... - - .... d.
ond-..y
· -·
- · n d h e t _ . . . . . _........ law

we..._ NtMdeChanoto.
• am"*-'. dkecatd
1oo 11cb F-.calad • 11m wt*:h

FACULTY II£0TAL •
v-M-- ---~be·

..ptoy.db,-·-~· ­
_ . . _ ., ond ..... FodoyP..... Bood
Radial Hal I p m Goo.-af $3, U/8

Advance NtGVf,tkM'il for th&amp; breakfalt &amp;N re.....od. Fa&lt; ..... ..,....._ _cal Judy Dlngeldey

-

.. 636-2506, ....... Apt 2S.
5ponKnd by the Prol.-...1 Slofl Senoto.

p .m .

E.epert T_, _

CIUJIINAL
LAW
SDIINAR'
E...._.
ud

MECHANICAL ENGlNEEJIDIG SEIIINAII•
_

O'Bnon Hoi.
The ...,., Ia being omongod b, the Stole OMolon
oiC-IJ.,....Savloeo. TlooNwtllbeucoiaol
16 ledwti to. the benell d aporienced pn&gt;MCUton., pu~ dcfenM allameya and

me,. dlkn

'-w enforce-

Spuken ... Ona.do Dr. Judilb M. IAhotay.

eNd medal examiner for Erie County: Roger
Bechonl d t h e - ,...odentlflc iaboraiO&lt;y. ond
Dr . Daftlof Munho d the Erie County Cennl
Palco Topicl ... inWdo -.,..,,. , fcwensll:
poydolotry , drug ~ - -icology . ,.,....,
criminology , ""
Continua on May 2

DENTAL SYMPOSIUM•
Tanth Annu.l Jamn Engkh SyrnpoQum
• Shn.ton Inn -Eat, 9 a m to 4 p m.
0t Robert Coburn , auodate proiCUOI' .
medicinof che~ . Schoaj d Phannocy . ... onnounce ftndin,gl .bout • rww WOUP of compounds
wNch may inhlbl ~ of Cft'tllln beaeria tnvolv-

«d In pcrlodont.l diNuc. 10: ~ a m
The Sympooium , .....-.d by the Schoaj ol
DeNiotry . honon Dr E.nghh wfio -...! u U/ 8
dtnlilll dan from 1970 unlllhil: rnmnent 1ft 1975
Cunl!ndy a rnkl«nt ol S.n OWgo, Calif ., Englilh it
aedi&amp;ed wlh buldng the raurch arm of the

School .. De.-y
Othen &amp;om U/ 8 ochoduled to opuk lncludo 0..
Michael Mbat , poo~....,. d '*&gt;phyoical odenoos
who wl dilcu• potypho.phar..m, • dul o1 drug~
he's dcwloped wtEh b.w pc*r:nt.lln or.tdilu.M,
........ Slob , .......... pool- d ..., blolow.
who d idcnlfy the orgaNJms which .,. the fNjcw
&lt;ulpnlo In petlodonlaf
ond - n Cion·
do , profCUOf al periodontia, who wil diladl u.M
ol Mlnodn tn pc.liodont~~t d15ene lrutmcnt..
~ Mt to 5peUl are On W..m Bowen , chirf
ol IN Caria Pr..wnlkw'l and Raeardl Bnitch far
the NaeicJMI c.ta Program at the N.IGNI In·
_,. d Oontol R-rdl. J. Mu Goocbon , ol fa&lt;.
oyth o.-t C..1n. Boo1on. Aftlhony
opocial
.-..nt for prognm coordiMaon, Ea1ramura! Pro.-arn~•t the NlDR. and Juon Tanza, Un~wn~tyol
Connoctiaol School d Dental Modldne

d-.

IIASfliAU..
(d0&lt;1blohoadctl. P..Jo Add. I

~C.,...

Tile ..,u.Dy Stroaood Solid-Slade ....
Draealc Appllcatlo.s. Professor He.rbert
R.......V. , Doputme,.. d " " ' -· Nudut &amp;
~Science , U/ 8 . 206 Fwnu. 3,15 p.m.
Reftalunonll .

PSYCHOLOGY COI.LOQUIUII'

Allact ud 5ocW c...-, Do. Robert 8.
Zojonc, UnMtsay d Mlchigen, wln!Wt d tho APA
Dlollngullhod Sdonlfle Conllt&gt;u- Awanl, 1979.
Room C-31. 4230 Ridge La. 3:15 p.m. Co.,..._ b1J the Oeponmetw d ~ ond
the Gnduaoe Scudent - -·
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM•
l\ptollcatloo ofT........, to Cooohoooocl M ~ . Prol0110&lt; N . D Mmn;n. 454 Fl'OnCZIIk
3 30 p .m . Coffee at 3:15.

I'HAIIMACEIJ11CS SDIINAR•
CIWcal " ' " " " - - .....

Dlo--

of

c-biftold ~.

c. 'TI-!C ..... -

0. Lou• I.e~ . Lily l.oboreloly fa&lt; Clnlcal
R.....-ch. lndianopollo. C508 Cooke. 4 p.m.
UUABFIUI'

Alloft (19791 . Woldmon n....e . Amhetst. 4 ,30,
7 ond 9:30 p.m. Genetol •dmlulon $2.10:
stucknts $1.60.
Modem ,.........lng d the duoic homw 110&lt;y do
mons&amp;ef trackJng 1ts victims down one by OM
Dlr«cklf Ridley Sc&lt;* utSlta to the 1"1\Uirnum •

-

moody , goehlc, ..,..,..tip • .._..... "' .,..... . .
honifylng, doUIOrophoblc effect Tough on the

D RAMA'

Lord Alfrod'o ....._, ..-n ond dhctod by E.ric
8endey Cenln Tbeo~e . 681 Main St. 8 p.m.
Gene.af . . . _ $4, .................. $2.
ADS YOUChen ooceplod 5ponKnd by the Deport.
rn.rntai'Thean

R-.

Notices
AUDmONS FOil 1 - SUMNEll
HAX£5I'£AIIE
The ~nt of. T'hotre •nd Dwa: an·
nouneu auditiON for

ltJ 5th Naton of

~inOolow. . Padt. "~fa&lt; A

....-..IHI'
Nlehf's Dr.a• end Rklaard II d be
held on Sundoy, Moncloy ond Toooday, Apt

,.,
_ ._.,_b!J
... Oopoot
. . .___
~c--11~
. -ec...,.loa

........
- .alwMiond--S2.II s,...-.d 1oo lho Doponme,. d M-

27-29, 1n Room 102 Hammon lbwy on theM..,
SlnetC....,... - -... &amp;-IOpm., Sunday, ood 7-10 p m , Mondoy ...S
Ap-

-of

IIICO &lt;lOU.E

-AudllloMrs
" " "are
....._.
modotobyJ11NPeN
collng 831-3340
two contratllng
Nlec:lonl, two to ltnt mtnuan In '-nglh , hom any

t..ECn.a

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

...... no....

A ~PhD FoaillyQibBiveRooon. -~IP'"

T.-,.

.....

d~'oployo. T_,_.....,_...

Dr Soul

Elm, chormon d 1he . . , _ , . d

-

ond Dance , ond · - d dw
Coftln-.
... dna A--~·
o . -. -_.Jviy8andNno........,;,lo
20
.

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29 o n d ......... " - 10, ...... dO-.d "' Dantk

c:.n.r...... - _.,. .. 8
p m In lha ROM G.-Nn.,.. af o.t.w.. P..tc N
-.. . ~

..........

�•

Apd 24, 1980

DNA. developments .
affect Soviet 'truce'
New ldenllllt developments have call·

eel Into q . - . the "truce" """"-n
poliJia and biology ·woOted OUI In the
U .S.S .R. after the so-ailed Lysenko Af.
lair, Or. Loren Graham, professor of the
history of science at MIT, said here Fri·

cia .

•

~tially. sold Graham, SoYtet pollti·

dans have kept out of biology since T .D.
Lysenko, the "dictator" Ol thai field
under Stalln, was disaedited and reUev·
eel of power in the mkl·l960's. Thai
marked the end of pressures . for
ideological conformlly In science.
Since that time , Soviet science has
managed to be polillcs.free, until ...
until the greal debate In the West con·
cemlng recomQjnant DNA and other
posiible and/or projected genetic
manipulation$, including "test tube"
babies and the use of SWTogate mothers.
Graham nas prepared a fuU discussion
of his thesis as a chapter in the forthcom ·
ing volume. The Sociol Con~xt of
Souiet Science (Lubrano and Solomon.
editors) . In his campus talk, under
auspices of Clifford Fllmas College , he
settled for a hurried overview.

Here on Sunday
Gultarlot David Bromberg Is UUAB's
contribution to your weekend enjoyment -In Clark Gym Suncley night.

CS£A EXa.sJON
1\ doy-11\&gt; to lho CllnOng Glut c - CComlng,
N YJ. S...rdov. Mov 17, -lond&gt;otlhoO'IIrion

~: ~~NY. S2l~pe -ind..de.bos
S....._BolrdPoddnglol, 9am R..._..,.
~

7·1-15 p.m.
Sond checlo payoblo to CSEA Trowl CoonP 0 Boot 16, ATT: Dorio Wille . .. H - Hal,
Dudh dale .. Mov 2.

--Campus.

&amp;.c-..

FR£E TUTOaiNG FOliiiFC STUOEHrS .
Spodal s--l'n&gt;joctlo&lt;lll....

· Engllah ond

-

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c.... ...- Soploos
wll ... ._,......,......,!Hipm.
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Fc.

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Oawl
a..t&gt; Gonion

H-

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~a- me-al Tho W!lllog Place

and

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HEAD II£5IDOIT POSmONS
Tho
Olllco a.....,.,_ lhot a
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kllho~Roa16oncoH . . ~-hal·

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GUMPSES INTO THE PAST
1\n . . - al 171h c:cni\Uy Polish "'1101
doc:u- and "'*!UC IJoolu and phooognophs
· commcmcntlng dw 25illa"""""- allha Polish
R...., Moy I 10 Moy 31. . . _ _ Mamortal
Lilrooy Foyc.. \/lowing Omc: ......, houn

LOCKWOOD JIEJKliiiAl.I.IIIIIAIIY
~n

.

tho -

~
olockct. This display al
ma-lo . ..,.,., the - , ., dowlopmcnt and
prodlcal a - al boalolad&lt;et po'OC(uction and was
-'""by&lt;;..._ v -. T h i s - - we

CII£DIT AT ntE ~NG PU.C£
.. Tho.......
Wriln9 Place....
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aASSICS EXHIIIlT
S4ogo and Caolumc ~ lor M-d'•
- · Tho l:lopamwm al Cia-. and dw
0.... Oub pft:Mnt An a . . . of drawing~ by
Ricanlo Morin. """ 18 . Mov 2 712 Clomc..
Hal Open dail\l. FO&lt; ~ - coi6J6.2153

198(hlil aoadonW-

ba ..... pubic clwlng ....... llwary
hourt .. tho ,_, al Lod&lt;woocl. Thr..... """' 30.

PHOTOGilAPHIC EXHUJmON
D1uo ...._ M• Lobby aldw Comer Thaa...
68JMalnSt. Tho"-"""""'"'-blacl&lt;and
-n.. ........
II • l4 pl-.
shot
kl England
and,..,._
.,....
_
_ l.ot-d-·
~-

PHOTOGIIAI'tfY EXHIIIIT
A1Wo F1o1L Sooond Floof Galey. llethuno Hal.
"""21-Moy4.

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......... "' ..... e&gt;&lt;padonoo .......... tho
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LOaiWOOD: ~n::a fOil
FAClll.JY AND llUIIENT UR

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and pNIOoaphor. C....... C.. IIIII 6'30
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• the Atilt: N.aat. ,..._._..

who Pall' the lnd role .. Enc
new play C....... C.. 1101. 6 30 p.m
Alto on dw 30ih at 7.
a..o~cy·,

Doole

nerywbue
1lle ~I issues of genetic engineer·
ing are ~troversial in every scxiefy,
noted 'Graham . 'i'et for Soviet society.
they pose- unique considerations.
As far back as November 1969,
Graham related. the Soviet Academy of
Sciences encouraged a debate on
genetic engineering Issues, leading lo
hvely discussion and differences of
opinion . One leading scientist went so far
as to recommend that man wou&amp;d be a
worthy •ubject for genetic research . This
horrified the establishment scientist N.P.
Dubenin who argued that such
manipulations would destroy both the
concept of man and the notion of family .
At that point . Graham noted . the
discussion was purely academic. By
1974 , however. the possibilities had
become so real that a voluntary
moratorium on recombinant DNA 'NOt"k
was called wortd -wtde . An International
Confetence in 1975 lifted the ban and
set up guidelines for strict controls (some
of whk:h have now been relaxed as
resull5 of experimentation have proved
benign) .
Soviet scientists participated in this
conference

APIIILI7:

T_b.....,andlludonl- kl

CoD~al

In

California

but

were

privately angered at the Americans for
resunecting the Idea of controls over
research. Having succeeded in gelling
the politicians off their backs ju51 a
decade earlier. the Russians were hesi·
tant to once more promote debate on
who ought to be in control of science .
Returning to the U .S .S .R., one of the
Soviet delegates attempted to dlvert at·
tentlon from the real issue. Graham
recalled. 1lle clear threat of DNA
research . the scientist wrote. was not In
the experiments themselves but in what
might happen because of careless.
thoughtleso, ill·lntentloned individuals.
He was trying to sklr1 ahogether the idea
of internal controls on research. Graham
noted. Pliny the Elder was quoted to the
effect that Iron, that most useful of
melllls. can become dangerous , In the
hand• of man.
·
Since sodalisl man is not evil. this hne
of reasoning went, no controls would be
necesoary in the Soviet Union. Simply a
ploy, said Graham, to keep the politi·
clans out of the labs.

Ad-,boenle
In the U.S . Joday,

both

phllotophers and lay people -

orthlc:lol -.lvisory boards -

moral
on

and !hese
boards, lor example . had t..nn4d work

on In ultro fertlltzallon until just Tetently.
A review board In any todety which
~Nita elhlcal decislonl on sdendlic
reMatch should reflect that IIOdely,

=~~,!~-~

In the U.S .S .R., the~ people
would be M.rxill philotophen, he said.

But thlo ·-the old ~ o( reJa.
lions bet-. Sovt.llc:lenee and ManWI

ldeologywhlcl\~ ~ L~ko

Undastancl..t.ly. sold Graham. Soviet
scien- 1W a dim view of outside lay or
political Input Into their affairs.
1lle relationshlp between sdenttflc
knowledge and social values Is a recur·
rent "tough" pr'lblem for Marxist IIOdely,
he submitted . The Inherent Implication$
of DNA research. however. may prove
too diffk:uh to leave science to the scien·
lists
one reads the debates about tt.es:,
issues in Soviet literature. Graham said ,
one ftnds much !hat Is similar to con·
troversies raging In the West . With some
differences.

As

Surr-te motloen
Take the issue of surrogate mothers.
for example .
Su~ an opera singer or ballef star
in her prime wanted to have a child which
Is genetically both hers and her
husband's, but didn't want to take Ume
oul hom her career.
With already~perfected techniques it
would be possible for an ovum of hers to
be fertilized in a petri dish by her
husband 's sperm and then transplanted
into the womb of another woman who
would carry the fetus fo term .
WoUld it be ethical for the ballerina to
pov another for carrying and giving birth
to her child?
In the U.S .S .R., Graham suggested.
the prevailing answer would be "no."
Bul. ij a close friend of the first woman
would volunteer to carry the embryo for
"love, • lhat would be acceptable because
no money would change hands.

~­

Some runners
shouldn't ....
Many people who try to run marathon•
shouldn~. U/8 physiology profesoor
David Pendergast has found from his
studies of runners.
As reported In a syndicaled medical
column , Dr. Pendergast believes these
poorer performers "should be counseled
into other forms of e&gt;terdse . We don 't
need this wave of people gelling Injured
and turned off," he sold.
1lle so-called "waU" In a marathon the point of psychological heat at which
the runner's resolve melts - is buUt
the minds of people whose bodies aren I
designed lo run 26.2 miles. Pendergast
said .
"A penon Is what he Is and then may
apply that to runni"!l," the physiologist
sold . Each individ uals aerobic (oxygen·
using) power "is genellcaUy determined ."
Some can run well; some can•t.
1lle upectoUon of httting the "waU" Is
what does-in runners, Pendergast ven·
lured . Not the waU itself. "11 you put In a
clause that no one could quh , you'd- a
radical change In the entry lists." he sub·
milled .
The syndicated article notes that professors conducting the study were
"shocked" at the number of prior lnjurle•
repot1ed by runners. More then 200 of
350 marathoners questioned hod had
such Injuries. About40 per cent sold they
had hurt themselves In training within the
previous three months. Knee Injuria
were predominant.
"If Ralph Nader got hold of that, he'd
ban dlslance running. " Pendergast
noted.
&lt;
Some of th
Injuries may be
')&gt;svchosomatic." he suggosted.
"Wilh some runMrs, K -ms to be a
mocha thing. A lot cf them are lnvenung
Injuria becausa M saems more dramatic
to run hurt."

hr.

PR work needed
The General Accounting Olflc:e says
sodallc:lenee reMalch ~ by the
Nallonal &amp;:lance Foundation Is
sornelfrMI. crlllclaod as oily becausa the
......,... lor the ..-...:h . . not made
dur. '"The foundation needs to do. bet·
tcr Job of comm~ to the
and the~ why _ ~ Wanta . .
eworded , GAO Mid tn a "Pon. ;

eor.-

•

I

�Aprll24, 1980

Chancellor's panel endorses Women's Studies B.A.
The propoAI for a Women's Studies
pirl91lm at U/B, submJited In
February, hu . - - 1 the unanimous
enciorMIMnl ·of the Chancdor's Ad·
vleory Gommlllec on Women's Studies.
A1 that commlttft's most recent
meeting in Al&gt;any, CJupenon N.
Schnledewtnd of New Paltz polnfed out
that Women's Studies Is a growlr1g
diodpkle and that the "Women's Studies
Proa&lt;am at the Slate Unlwnity of New
York at BuiiUo hu Palled a vllal role In
providing acedemlc and organizational
~ 10 women's .rudles programs
both In New Vorl&lt; Sla and In the
nation."
The Committee bekYed that tire
Women's Studies B .A. proposal
I«PI-*&lt;1 "ec.demlc excellence" and
'an "'nnovative, landmark program .• The
Ch.oncdo&lt;'s AdvlsoqrCommltlee further
oom~ the Women's Studies Co~
Wg« hete lor creadng a curricular ~I
for~ women's studi« s programs

B.A.

througllout
the -m&lt;!eling
· , the Committee
At the March
discusSed the Impact of the listal crisis on
Women's Studies programs throughout
the · It Issued the following 51&lt;1te·

dent body. This populallon Is pr....dy at
least SO per cent female and Is li&gt;cna*lg
diiR 10 the~ nunrben ·of returning
. _ , .......,.. _ Women:. Studitos pro!PIIlS this population through
specialized programs on career clewlop,_.,t, returning womell's programs,
counseling and oupport services, and
mllment to retain women end minority
~al ~ - These functions not
lacully not only In the Women's Studies
and Minority Studies programs but ' only attract new students to SUNY, but
throughout eU the dlsc:lplines.
"""""'- and enable them 1o remain in

11*\1:

"The Ch.onedor's Adlllsoly Commit·
tee reaffirms Its commitment 10 Women's
Studies and Minority Sll&gt;cliel programs
and their maintenance In the faoe of the
current budget crisis. ,T he - . . a of
these programs Is dependent on a com·

VItal,.._.

.

"Women's Studies programs are vllal
to the SUNY· system for the following
reasons:
L"Wornen's Studies Is cnrclal to the
overeD academic exeellcnce of the
university as a locus of scholarship and
leaching on women Iii eU disciplines. This
conlribuHon cannot be $USialned without
Women's Studies programs as weD as
women scholars and teachers within eU
parts of the SUNY system . Most faculty
teaching In Women's Studies are In the
'risk position' In the university ....
2."Women's Studies and Minority
Studies programs enable SUNY to fulfill
Its mission to serve a heterogeneous stu·

scOOd.

I

3 ."Women's Studies and Mli&gt;orlly
Studies programs play a major role In ser·
\ling peoplor in the community at large
throughout New Vorl&lt; St,ate. Women's
Studies programs support day care
centers, sponsor conferences, provide
career counseling, offer crisis lntervenHon
seivlces, consuh with and advise public..
school systems, support heahh &lt;are ser ·
vices and provide speakers for communi·
ty organizaHons.
Kep to preveatlng -lou
4 . "The maintenance of Women's
Studies and Minority Studies is a key to
preventing further erosion · of the
representation and status of women and
minorities wi~in the SUNY system .

Women's Studies programs ...., a local
point of activity fer necruttlng and main'
lainlng women faculty in the univenlly.
In addltion, these programs provide vllal

role models.....
.
The Ch.onc:ellor's Advisory Committee

also Issued recommendaHons CCJnCel)'llng
the continued erosion in the repraenlaHon of women and minority facully in the
system becauoe of hiring policies
and the promoHon and tenure processes
throughout the &lt;!ate.
The Advisory Committee was formed
in 1977 to prepare plans for the 1980's
which Chancellor Wharton has declared
the "Decade of Women" in the SUNY
system . Current meml&gt;efs olthe group
are, In addiHon to Schneidewind , N.
Lund (SUC/Buffalo), K. March
(CorneD), F. lewis (Tompkins Cortland
CommunitY· College) , S . Ruball (Tornpkins Cortland Community College) , M.
Steams (Suffolk Community College) , S.
Schyfter (Albany), J . Wishnla (Stony
Brook) , E. Scott (Old Westbury) , G . Kel·
ly (SUNY / Buflalo), M . Lunde
(SUC /F redon la) , K . Armstrong
(SUC/P.urchase) , and P. Vlnicombe
(Binghamton) .

SUNY

Administrators run the risk of 'burning out'
Withoui making conscious strides
towards professional and personal
development, admlnlslrators In higher
educallon become acutely susceptible to
a ''bum-out Sllftdrome" or "Inner kdl,"
that Is, the "art of 'dying' without knowing
H or doing tomethln9 abi&gt;ut H." This
malaise Is precipitated by a misuse of
skills. IKk ol ~al and professional
goals and c~, and by a "paradox·
leal combination of overwork and
lethargy."
Dr . Charles. F. Posher, director of the
Office ol l..eadenhlp Development In
Higher Educallon for the Atnerlcan
Council on Education , made this obser·
vaHon · Frida)l whllo addressing higher
educators on the topic of "Administrative
Renewo l. • Fisher's presentation at
O'YO&lt;Ovllle College was the seventh In a
Mries ol brealdast seminors sponsored by
U/ B's Department ol Higher EducaHon .
What c:ontrhr.tes to the necessity of
ckvlsJng a scheme far self-renewal , noted
A.ha, Is that typicalil! admlnistnltors lind
themMives rapond&gt;le for a wid&lt;! variety

of la$ks that lack "a highly stylized reward
system .• They also receive their ad-

j!iduslon. developing relaxation tech ·
nlques to reduce tension , planning time
for pleasure reading, going away with the
late In Jije-ln the early 40s- and ohen
family for a weekend , maintaining a
must manufacture their own "patterns of - cuhural Ule and other outside Interests.
and taking vacaHons.
·
achievement -and bench-marks of suc·
cess.''
Professional renewal strategies includ·
A good number of programs and
ed; reading higher educaHon publicaHons
workshops have recently been establish·
(such as the "Chronicle of Higher Educa·
ed on regional and national levels to help
lion." and "Educational Record "), par·
administrators avoid bum-outs. Among
tldpaHng In regional and naHonal associa·
them are programs offered through the
dons , observing the positive and negative
features of role models, drafting speeches
Center for Creative Leadership in North
Carolina, Learning House In Arizona , the
and reports and publishing articles. keep·
Human Resource Development Division
ing abreast of developments In one's
of the American Society for Training and
dl.sciphne. maintaining communication
Development, the Academic Careers
networks with administrative coDeague:s
Unlim~ed Progrjlm of the American
which provide mutual role reinforcement ,
AssoclaHon for Higher Education and the
visiting other institutions, and undergoing
Human Renewal Associates in Min·
periodk: performance evaluations .
neapolis.
Taking the time to be Introspective
Based on the feedback of participants . regarding Ufe goals is critical, emphasized
in renewal programs, Fisher gave these
Pasher . Some suggest , he added . that ~
"common sense" strategies lor personal
an administrator finds himself In the same
development : spending one day a week
position a~er seven years, "H's time to
outside the office and one hour a day in
move on
ministrative appoinlments comparatively

When trying · to decide -what renewai
program would be most beneficial, one
should consider Its specific purpose and
reputaHon , making certain the content Is
congruent with individual Interests. Also
worth considering, he continued, are the
qualiflcaHons of the resoutal personnel
and the type of teaching 11nd learning
techniques used . A conference design
that provides lor candid interaction, in·
depth discussion , an active learning situ a·
lion (as opposed to a passive audience
formal) , diversity in group composition
and an evaluation' procedure is
preferable.
The enthusiasm gained from renewal

programs "can readily become frustra ·
lion,~ Fisher cautioned, if the participant
does not share his e&gt;&lt;i&gt;erlence with colleagues or if the Institution does not have
a "climate receptive to change ." On·
going, ln·house staff development pro·

grams are one way to encourage such
receptivity, he noted .

Symposium contrasts roles of rabbis &amp; judges
cumstances considered . Compromise
does not merely consist of A wanting
100, B wanting 0 and the judge telling
the pardes to settle on 50."
Justice Jasen , a 1939 graduate of the
U/ B Law School. was elected to the
Court of Appeals In 1967 after serving 10
years on the Slate Supreme Court bench .
From 1946 to 1948, he served as a p.ost·
war U.S . judge for the Third MUiiary
Government .Judicial District In
Heidelberg, Germany.
' Rabbi Greenberg , a rabbinical judge In
Jewish clvll and criminal law, formerly
served on the Board of Regents ol the
Rabbinical College of Australia and lee.
tured on Talmudic and conlef!&gt;porary

Jewish law In Melbourne . He lectures in
the Department of Religious Studies at
U/B, and has written extensively on
Jewish legal subjocls.
Ms. Breger's law school seminar· on
"Authority In Jewish Law" foq.tses on the
structure and development of kwlsh law
as H has been elaborated since Bt&gt;llcal
limes through Rabbinic lnterprelaHon and
declslons. It analyzes the processes of
declslon·maklng In the Jewish legal
system, comparing it with the AngloAtnerlcan legal system as weD as with
other religious legal systems such as
Islamic law and canon law.

Choir plans WNY tour
numaous points ol comparison Including
"a common problem with caoeloads."
The aympoolilm also oonalclered the
crucial role of orbitralkln and mediation in
the Jewish legal ll/IIAml . The rabblnJcal
judge, suggested Rabbi G&lt; nberg,
•wean two boo , that ol Judge and that ol
mediator." An "Hteem..f court," he
noted Is one "In which th.o splr1l ol compromiM Is honored." This IMw was
chcad b ~ Prole..or Hyman , a
nallonaly--known ..tlltrator. who ditcutoed the cooccpt ol oompromiN .. "perfect
Jw1b " In
Hwllh vie , Rabbi

The U/ B Choir under the direction ol
Dr. Hanlet Simona will depart May 1 for
a three-day tour ol Western New Vorl&lt; .
The WOUP will perform and conduct a
worl&lt;shop at the Greece-Olympia High
School on May 2 btlfore travelng to
Ithaca for an evening concert, also on
MaY 2 at St. John's Episcopal Church at

8:15.

On Saturday, May 3 the Choir wlU
perform for raident&amp; ol ih. Homd Nurs·
tng and H
Reloted FacilitY at noon .
Tlieir evening concert wilt be at
J...-own·s Firat United Methodist
Churdlat 7:30.
. On the morning ol May 4, the Choir
G.
II~ . 'the_.., mUJI
will parOdpa 1ft the """""-' Mnlice 11
.
~
Memorial Mathodlal Church in
be " ' u.l!! evW.W and al. dr·

Jamestown before retumlng.to Buffalo.
The Buffalo Spring Coooert by the
Choir wlll .be In Baird Hal at 8 p .m .,
Wednaday, May 7.
Members ol the Choir are: Elizabeth
Abbon, Kathryn Elsnau : James Evans,
David Frtedes, Arthur Gross, Roger

Hooven, Tammie Jordan, Peltr ~1.
Kehh Konopa , Dana KroU, Margrata
Meyer , Jeanie Miller , Dolores
Montholvo, Lori 'Noody , Gabriel
Pellegrino, Peter Pullono , Steven
Quebral, Jooeph Richardton , Eric Roth,
Carla Schiffman, Jeffrey Seeldna. Yuko
Takahashi , Lawrence nmm, Anne
Wheeler, S.. · ~ Wu, N...cy Zll&lt;..- and

Brian Z..nner.

•

�Aid 24,

n

1980

Seasons

-

Each life has its definite
eras and stages, says scholar
whose research influenced 'Passages'
"The challenge of aduhhood It that
there·s no free lunch ;• re.morked
psychologist and author Edward B.
Klein, at the conclusion of a lecture Friday on the Amherst Campus which
highlighted the latest research findings on
aduk development.
Director of clinical training and professor of psychology and psychiatry at the
University of Cincinnati, Klein coauthored Seasons of a Man i U/e. the
book which provided much of the
research material for the best selling

P'-&gt;ge..

Blazing c~isine
accents Chinese meal
It WIIS one Chinese meal that wouldn't
leave you hungry an hour later.
Heaping platters of d!lht of local
restaurateur lee Chu s culinary
apeciahies were served to almost 150
members of the Unlvefslly community.
last Thursday, washed down by several
glasses of a tart, dry Wang Fu wine (lmporll!d from France) , tubs of steaming,
dark tea, and gallons of Ice cold water
(the latter to douse raging fires of the
palate set by two parlic)llarly Incendiary

uampies of Szechuan.culshie) .
The event marked the end of the five .
week "Chin~nce" during which
the Offoce of ,eukural Affan (using a
generous !P'M'I from FSA) treated both

avid Slnophdes and the more moderately
interested among us to an array of art,
film, dancc, sociological. and Intellectual
experiences rich enough to please a Ming

Emperor.

· "In every presentation throughout the
five-week period," notes Festival Impresario Esther Harriort, director of
cukural affairs, -rt was lnteresllng how Integral arc the andmt Chinese phtlotophy
and cukure."
The banquel wliS Integrating In Its own
way, bringing together both an Intriguing
asoortment of la$la and a mix of In-

dividuals narly as varied .
A visiting communications scholar
from the l'eopic's Republic: chatted
animatedly with a biochemical pharmacology student at one table. He Is ,an
accomplished Chinese-style cook, the
otudent ventured . But where to gel fresh
duck In Buffalo? "Try the Broadway
Market," suggested a nearby ad mlnlllrator.
A native of Pcldng Who hed recently
returned there and could "recognlu" only the
of ' - -=-a! home tried
oercnelv but vainly to lnslnld durmy Occkkntalo In the .... of chopsticks.

final dish , a delicate blend of shrimp and
green peas.
A carefully orchestrated let-&lt;lown, the
unschooled might have thought.
Oh no, explained Harriott. You see,
the ffnal two dishes had to be prepared
on sHe; they came last of necessHy, not
through design . The first several counes
were· prepared at Lee Chu's and kept
warm on steam tables, eKplalned Harriott
who still frets that lee Chu was unable to
duplicate his oumptuous Peking duck In a
campuo field kitchen .

A.pplauM for the ehm
Peking Duck or no , lee Chu was summoned from the kitchen for applause His
cook-who had been spotted earlier
smartly allacking the roasl duck with a
gleaming cleaver-took a curtain call,
too.
Platter• of almond cookies and fortune
cookies ended both the meal and the
"Chinese Experience."
Harrioll jokes that she can supply a list
of compliments about the success of the
Festival In either chronological or
alphabetical order.
Perhaps the one she liked best was
from a facuhy member at the opening
reception for artist Zhou Chenguang.
Surveying the mix of students, communi·
ty , faculty and staff watching Mr. Zhou's
demonstration, that professor observed,
"this Is what a University should be ."

Ketter offers

VPAA update

President Robert l. Ketter updated the
Faculty Senate Eucutivc Commllt this
week on what he Is doing to 1111 the postlion of va prnldent for academic affairs
which Or. Ronald F. Bunn will vacate
June 30.
No._. ......
According to the minutes of the Ex·
"'I
the thowand var~ em~r a •
«ullve Commtttce, Ketter "has met with
young women who works 011 campus
the Deans and received advice from
lllkld le(llallvely. !od!-.pearing a dark
them . One quntlon Is whether to conchun of chicken from the cold platter ap~
duct a national search - but the budget Is
aplnst H, and the dm!ng , since an acting
o," emlled the ewr-patlenl woman
VP AA would have to be appointed for at
from Peldng . ..,_ ar no
, here."
loast stx months
The cold pla!lc which beg.n the f "The Deans are unanimous in edhed been blaod .. containing thoM dark
delcades So the q.-~on wesn't quite vocatln!j· (a) that no 'Acang VPAA' be
named, (b) that the Initial term be two
asdumbas•~ years, (c) that no search commHtec be
Thc
of the eiiiJI WIIS the only
named , and (d) that Bunn 's suoccuor be
~I as the cold platter of
urged to work within the framewori&lt; of
aroma
t-1, chlc::Mn , toft·ohea..d
the CWftl\t academic,Plan •
prawns, and hoi and ...,. ~ pve
"'ne b4g question; the FSEC rnlnutu
way tnt to Mou s.t poril wlh C'*reported , "'s the afforma
action r cr«J* Ia rol~-own
lllr) ,
to
quir ment • The President told the FSEC
..-ndt of duck (bod&gt; 01lpY &amp;led and
he
hopa
to
reoolve
th
by
appointing
l, and not to tally OllncM Fried
m01or1ty members to th rating commM·
Rice
poril, chicken and .tv1mp .
,...,, and by emphasillng the n ed for fil·
1ng the vacancy quickly, wtth a national
arch to be conducted In 1982
In . _ to quetllons. the Prald nt
taJd that
optiOn of llppOIRiing a Pro1s being kepi open. although he Is
being urged (sometimes w.rncd ,
ed\lltled)
by several
people Ketter taJd he
ld wtlcomc
corntnenlf In Wl'l&lt;tng !tom mem
of

.-nee

-RJI .

FSEC

'

'

,•

Akhough a good volume of research is
devoted to Infancy, early childhood and
adolescent development, and a growing
body of data Is now being accumulated
on pre-and post-retirement years, Klein
observed that , untU recendy , almost no
research was done on aduks from 20 to
40 years of age .
Since late 1977 , however, three major
books. including his , have been published on the subject. The reason for thlt
sudden outpouring, Klein speculates, Is
~~ the events of the 1950's and 1960's
"J.** a stage • for questioning value• and
the legiumacy of traditional beliefs and In·
slitullons. World demographics also had
an Impact . It's only been relatively recently that a slgn~icant portion of the popula·
lion reached middle and late adulthood
years, he explained .

40 ............ •tudled

Research for Seasons of a Man 's U/e
began In 1967 The Investigation lnvolv·
ed 40 men between the ages of 35 and
45: ten academic biologists, and the
same number of business managers, in ·
dustrlal blue collar workers , and
novelists. Minorities composed 12 1/2 per
cent of the group and aU were drawn
from a corridor between Washington and
Boston
Research findings indicate , Klelr1
relayed , that the life cycle Is composed of
roughly 20· to 25-year "eras": preadulthOod , from birth to around age 20:
early adulthood . from 20 to 40 years:
middle aduhhood from 40 to 60 yearo of
age, and late aduhhood , from 60 up.
The research also suggests, continued
Klein, that these eras are made up of a
"series of stages" which alternate between four· IO five ·year ~ansitional
periods." marked by restructuring and instability , and longer, more stable six-to
eight-year "building periods" which
enhance and enrich one'o elllstence.
The first transition comes around ages
17-22. Here the individual strives toterminate pre-adukhood by becoming more
autonomous and less dependent on the
family .
Ages 22 to 28 are "years of Ollploratlon,:· noted Klein , In which social relationships and oocupallonal goals
tested .
·
The discovery Of the next stage-the
"age 30 transltlon" - came as a surprise
to the researchers. This period Is
charac:t-.1 by developmental crises
which often caUM mo&lt;lificatlonsln the InItial lifo structure.

are

SettllDt dowa, Mttl... for

What Is happening during this "30's
crisis." explained Klein , Is that men are
beginning to realize that their current Ufe
•tructuro " Is somewhat flawed .• Added
to this are the "Imageries of what the 30's
111111 be like. not just In terms of settling
down ; but settling jor. Men begin to quolion what they have done before In anbdpatlon of what coma out," he add ed

The years between 33 and 40 bring the
gr atest eommfiment to family , community and~ - The lat 30's ...-.ally
are characterized by a strong de..-e "to be
one's own man" and to "make it" prof ·

10nally

•

The former v.r. fkUhy member also
rcported that the men "'ho were most
sua:cllful at converung dru
of their
20's and 30's to "redty ," lnd ted they
hed enco.tn ed both a "llpeOIII loving
io.Oman"
ertdonoed those d n11

and assisted In their actualization, and a
mentor figure who "Introduced them to
some aspects of the aduk world" ai&gt;d
fac:iiHated their personal development.
AU of the mentors were male, and the
most successful ones were about eight to
12 years Older.
A major transition occurs around age
40-45, Klein continued. During these
years, early aduhhood Is terminated and
one forms the basis for entry Into middle
l~e . He noted that at this stage, many
men become more "lndlvlduated," ' that
Is, they begin listening to the "vol!:e Inside" Instead of what It dlclated by
others. The period is also marked by less
repression of previously-hidden aspects
of the personality. For e"i'mple, a man
may become more sensltlve or loving,
characteristics he formerly thought of as
too feminine .

30'• traneltloe
Other research suggests that the kind
of 30's transltlon which a woman
undergoes It related to her station in life.
Women who chose the more traditional
role of mother/ housewife face the dilem ma of breaking away from the conflnes of
the family and the "stamp of mother." By
contrast, Klein relayed , career women
are plagued by the possibility of never
having children or the Idea of giving birth
later In life to an unheahhy child.
In addition , evidence lndlqotes that the
"30'• crisis" Is more severe for women
than men, noted Klein. One reason Is
that women fear their physical attractiveness Is on the wane. If both sexes do
an adequate amount of questioning ancl
restructuring during this period, however,
Klein believes the 40's transition can be
less traumatic.
Other research from the University of
Cincinnati seems to show that women
have more of a balance In their lives than
men . The reason , offered Klein, Is that
women alwaxs have "one foot In their
unconsdou5.

For example, when studying the
dreams of men in their 20's and 30's ,
researchers found they tended to el&lt;dude
people and focus on achievements. By
contrast, women , even thoM considered
career-oriented and succeuful, always
envisioned that ~y they wouldhave a family.
As as resuh of Information gained In
ad~ development research , KJetn rnaln tains that Ufe doe• not appear to be as
"Idiosyncratic" as analysts once believed.
Hopefully, he adds , the findings will help
them better understand what can be considered normal as opposed to
pathological behavior.
- ~-

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�AprU 24, 1980

D

-T· e
- oldest
·band

Bv Uncia Gracc-Kobu
- While
a.....Loudon
so.JI
Wainwright Ill

was
enteruoining an amused audience In the
Flllm&lt;xe Room at Friday's session of the
1980 Bullalo Folk Fbtlval, a different
soft of magic was being created in a smaU
drab room backstage
John Fahey had just stumbled off the
stage alter wowing the crowd with his in·
tnca acoustic and slide guitar playing,
despite pfobaems with the sound system
that had him challenging the sound aew
to a flstflght In the middle of his set . He
had calmed down and was )llmmlng with
the remaining members of America's
oldest black string band . Howard Arm·
strong and Ted ~n .
'"Where do you fmd all those chords?"'
Fahey repeatedly asked Bogan , who JUSI
grinned and kept strumming Hawaiian
songs on Fahey's acoustic guilar.
Since the death of Carl Martin last
May, the mustd4ns who formed two·
thirds of "Martin·. Bogan and Armstrong"
have continued touring as the
"Armstrong-Bogan String &amp;nd ." This
was their second U/B appearance. havIng performed here at the 1973 Folk
Festival.

T.,....._b49 ,ean
Bogan and Armstrong have been playIng together (O&lt; 49 years, performing virtualy every style of music from the first
hall of this century. including ragtime .
swlrill, blues, country, jazz and even
ethllk: songs in !O&lt;eign languages .
Martin , Bogan and Armstrong met in
theKnoxviUe , Tennessee, area in the early 1930s. Martin was performing with a

";: =~~

~ :=:.::~

::

.. F•-.

~-----· aa f_R_F

like Bumble Bee SUm and as a group
under the name, Tennessee Chocolate
Drops.
"We renamed the group the WanderTroubadors ,'"
Armstrong
Ing
remembered . .. Bogan and Martin never
found out what 'troubador' meant ; they
JUSI Uked the sound of the word ."
Of their early recordings Armstrong
saki , "We made records \Ue never got to
hear We got ripped off coming and go•ng .
They broke up In the 40s
The group broke up In th
'14Qs,
although the men stiU played occaslonal·
ly. Armstrong got married and worked in
DetroH auto plants. Martin joined the Army and worked in Chicago. and Bogan
w&lt;&gt;O&lt;ed in various plants . He sal in with
different groups. and even "played with
Lawrence Welk be!O&lt;e he got famous.··
he said .
Of this period, Bogan says. '"It was a
mistake.• The group got together again In
1970 and have since gained a new
popularity

and

new

generation

of

loflowers.
The band seems firmly established

now. Bogan and Armstrong travel with a
young bass player. David James of South
he alw-vs wore . Armstrong was playing
Bend
, Ind . Four years ago, the State
violin with his broehers In a band In La
Department sent them on a six-week
Follette . Tennessee , having taught
goodwiU lour of South and Central
himself 1 unique style ol flngerlng based
America .
on the mandolin , making extensive use
'We even played for Somoza . who
.of double and triple st.ops.
was then stiU president of NiCaragua."
· Martin and Armstrong played for Dr.
Armstrong related. "His wile asked me If
Mine's Medlclne Show !0&lt; a while, and
we could play any black blues. I said I
later met Bogan, a Spartanburg, S .C ..
didn't know there was any other color.'"
na · who usuaDy played solo for par' picnicS, medicine shows and radio
broadcasts.
H ud core cllecrlmlDatloaThe three men picked up a bass player
&amp;om Stt- Yodl
and fO&lt;med a group called The Four
. Only when speaking of the dlscriminaKeys. They traveled widely, "puDing . lion he faced as a black man trying to sur·
doors" to get jobs.
vlve In a wh~e man's WO&lt;Id does Arm·
strong lose his dignified calm manner. His
"We played evel'\("'here you can play,
except a jailhouse, Armstrong recaUed
expressive face hardens as he recaUs. "I
was expooed to hard CO&lt;e discrimination
• break In Friday's concert In
home stale. I stood on the outside
hft Chicago in the late 1930s and
mu.siclans f01
:::-....;.;.;.;;;;.;;:..;;in.;;·.A
;.;.;
ny
~
with a white face

Non#~ .~
U.S.Poetqe
PAID

Buffalo, N.Y.
p.....,h No. 311

could gel into places I couldn't get In
dressed in my best clothes...
He noted that while his old string band
was often hired to play at "old-lime picnics

down

South, ·•

the

innovative

musicians weren't allowed to participate
In fiddle and band contests.
Armstrong recalled the lime he met
Sgt. Alvin C . York when the group was
playing at a picnic In Jamestown . Tennessee. " He told me, 'The last time any
of your people came over here. we ran
'em In the river,' while he was twirling his
pearl-handled pistols. I told him . 'I ain 't
running.' He just laughed ."
Jesse Owens was another acquain ·
lance of Armstrong's, who met him while
they both appeared on the radio show
circuit . '"He told me alter he won four
gold medals for the United States, that
people were always asking him about
Hitler rdustng to shake his hand . He
said . 'I didn't feel so bad about Hitler not
acknowledging me, but Roosevek wasn 't
much better. That made it hard .' ..
Armstrong says his three sons don 't
know what "real" discrimination is,
akhough he rders to the Ku Klux Klan as
'"one snake that won 't die ." Ralph , he
said , is "one ol the best bassists in the
WO&lt;Id . • He's been named to the Gibson
Hall of Fame and tours with Jean -Luc
Ponty and John McLaughlin .
Will Armstrong earned his Ph .D.
recendy from Wayne State ("I don't know
what in,'' Armstrong added) . He won a
scholarship . "when Dr. King was march Ing. for the best essay on 'The Black

Man's Progress
Freedom.' •

in

100 Years of

Trying to keep the music all"'
Bogan . who never married , is more
rellcenl than Armstrong. His manner is
very laid-back, until.the band gels really
cooking onstage and then this man, over
70 years old, jumps to his feet and plays
:::.Juilar while holding II bepind his

The two men spent two altemoons
before Friday night's concert rehearsing
with a group of young men they were letling sit in with them . Their love of the
music and wish to keep II alive in the
younger generation kept them from
relaxing instead .
Their back-up group included Billy
Strauss on

harmonica . Strauss,

a

member of the UUAB Folk Concert committee , is a former architectural student
here who's now doing independent study
and ''trying to keep the blues alive in Bul·
falo ."
Others were GeOrge Kobas. a JocaJ
musician who's previously performed
with Bogan and Armstrong and with The
Amazing Dr. Zarcon 's B&lt;eathing ]:lachine
at the 1976 Folk Festival ; John Merino,
who with Kobas has appeared often at
U/B Coffeehouses, and Kim Reeves,
another JocaJ musician .
'"I've played for the highest and the
lowest of many lands,'' Armstrong
repeated a few times Friday night . '"That
doesn't move me as much as meeting the

real people. and playing for them."

Walton-type families
were never the rule
Before the late 19th century, literature
and popular publications olten roman ticized the life of the elderly, frequently
depleting them as cheerful, patient oldfolks -at · home -before - the -hearth .
peacefully passing into the sunset of their
lives.
By the 1880s, however, trends in
lherature turned toward realism regarding
the stale of aging and the elderly , mO&lt;e
often describing the old folks at home in
terms of their poverty, forgetfulness and
bad heakh .
'We can develop better understanding
about our attitudes toward old age and
retirement .• says Dr James Speer, "if we
see how the present policies and altitudes
have developed over the last 200 "'" 300
years." Dr. Speer, an assistant professO&lt;
at the University of Texas Medical Branch
at Galveston, was guest speaker Friday at
the Human Values and Medical Ethics
seminar in Farber HaD.
"The utended family , now that we see
h In penpecllve, was never a dominant
way of life In America,'' Speer pointed
out The Walton family image of the en·
tire family living together and getting
along was Umtted In Its existence to
Iannen In .the U.S . and peasants In
Europe.
" Many Omes, elderly parents would
have to sign contracts wHh their children
to insure they would be able to Mve in
thO home until they cllcd, and the idea
that· elderly parents w;ould be Mm ed to a
back room In the house wu not uncommon cllher,• Speer explained
·
tM told the audience thetc arc 1R1porlantlegallu!&gt;a which should be reoolved
be!O&lt;e the end of the century - a Hme

when there wiU be more people over age
50 in America than under.
In varous areas of law, people may be
considered competent In one situation
and not In others and the elderly with
diminished capacities are often caught
between the aacks.
"In New YO&lt;k State, for instance, there
are about six tests for competency depe.n ding upon whether· you're talking about
dv!l cases, alminal cases, marrloge cases
"'"whatever."
The elderly P*S&lt;&gt;n may be deemed
competent to starld trial for a crime but
not competent to write a valid wiD; competent to care for minor children from a
previous marriage but not competent
enough to enter into a valid marriage
coniTect .
~My hOpes are that physicians, soda]
workers and specialists in human nature
wiU give their expertise to helping formulate a frarneworl&lt; to dow us to deal
with these problems which often end up
In the courts, and which the law cannot
by llsell solve ," Speer said.
He noted that while being free to make
choices is generaDy held to be a right of
personhood , HIs difflcuk to always determine whether .onc'ls really competent.
"You have on the one hand , fO&lt; Instance, people who adamantly rduse to
Mve in a nu111ng home but on the other.
are unable to care IO&lt; themselves 0&lt; to af~- lbmeo!'« to hv« wHh them," Speer

"W
m to have the c:onotllutional
right to be fooflsh at 40 but if we liWU'
foohh at 80, the courts 11«p In and help
"' - etther .a t tha State's behest or our
r lattves:," he •dded, •

l

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

I

APRIL 17, 1980

VOL 11 e NO. 27

Calendar panel
will -m ull the idea
of a quarter - ~ystem
The University Calendar Committee
has been atked to reci&gt;nvene to consider
U.. poaibillly ol a quarter system for U/B
operations, the Reporeer has learned.
At U.. met!Hng ol tha Academic
Cabinet on Monday, tha pant!l was

directed to look at quarters as an alter·
native to the 12.!&gt;-week - r plan for
1981-82 which U ,_,tly proposed. (See
Reporlv, Apri 101. Under 1ttat plan, the
fall and spring semesters would run fewer
weeks, each class period would be
lengthened by l£n minutes, and no
classes would be hald during tha entire
mon1tt ol JanuarJi, 1982.
When U.. Faculty Senate discussed U..
pr&lt;li)OWIIut week, an avalanche ol op·
position hom the Health Sciences was
recorded, In terms ol the dllf&gt;eultles the

revamped ochedule would ~ for

clnical scheduDng.

VIce l'rfttdenl for Health Sciences F.
Carter Pannm has been asl&lt;t!d to provide
the President and the Academic CabiMt
wHh doc:umt!ntation ol the dfl\culties his
unHs might have In adjusting.
The Cabinet wiD continue Its delibera·
Hons on the '81-82 calendar later this
spring, alter U.. Calendar Committee
reports back.

c;-.. s.--·. 'Cooooonl.'

Sculptures now a_rriving
for large Amherst exhibit
The o&lt;ulpcwa ..., coming.
Monwnm~. m~Mtlc. t!ye·poppmg
woot.a ol ..t by flw A""'""n oculplor$
t..w begun to anivt at Atnht!nt and wiD
be lnstaled by U.. artists owr U.. Mxt
IWO weeks.
The flw ,...
n
t!d lor up to a
ynr. lollowtng which OM wll be ~leded
for purchase by U.. Unlwnlly as U.. flnl
111p towvd cle-loping a colection ol
woot.a olsculpture lor public
en.l&lt;&gt;\lmf!nt on tha new c.mpus. ·
Scledcd by a sev..n member c.mpus.,.,....munity panel (lndudlng locel arts
palron St!ymour H. Knox) . tha llve
pleoa to be exhi&gt;IMd ...,, " 109" by
lymen Kipp. "Hammankjold" by Tony
R-1ttal. ~- by Robert Murray.
"A
lit" by a..rln Glnncver. and
"Concord" by &lt;&gt;-g. Suprman.

....«aae

U.. hodq~W~a~ ol Xerox Data Systems
In Callarnia. He has had - . 1 onem11n cxhlbillons In 1ttls country and

abroed, and was included In two JNQor
oculpture shows at U.. WhHMy Museum
In N..w York during
1970..
lyman Klpp's " 109" will be ohlpped In
three parts. for aswmbly and painting on
si . The 51 -year-old Klpp. who has
taught at Bennington. Pran. lehman and
Hunter .. Is represented In tha collections
ol .tha Abight-Knox. tha WhHney
Mu~m . tha filgh Mu~um ol Atlanta.
and several unlvenltln. He was a visiting
artlsl at Artpark In U.. summer ol 19n.
. Klpp wiD lnstaD " 109." on Friday. April
25

u..

'Ha~

The largos~ piece In U.. exhi&gt;ition is
Tony Rosenthal'i "'Hammarskjold.''
which measurn 20'x20'x20'. The
sculptor wiD take four days to -'&lt;1 and
lnstaD H. beginning Tuesday. Aptl129. "It
will be vay complex and lntt!rnting to
watch." a ~ for U.. art scJe.:.

.... - '

· .-~--~

Health ScleoM:a ....,_tatloa
Adlng Graduate School Dean Andr..w
Holt, chairman ol 1ttat comminee, told
the Reporter that It ls .his understanding
1ttat .o1n&lt;:c no' one born Heallb ScleMa
- o n the orlglnel.,....,, "111. VPHS has
been asked to submit U.. name ol an Individual who could rqw~t
faculty
In future dell&gt;erations.
Holt said a firm calendar for 1981-82
ought to be In place no later than U..
beginning ol the 1980-81 academic year
this faD. Ordinarily, ha said, U.. calendar
committee wodcs two yean ahead . Proposing such a radical change for 1981-82
reduced 1ttat lead time, though, ha
noted .
Once a basic panem for futul'll calen·
dan Is decided on . Holt sokl , U.. commit·

u..

tee can onoe men lunc:!ion "nonnaly"
and wiD be a~ again to submit c:alendan
two years at a time.
Slw•u , , . , ... ...._...,.....
The Idea
a q...n.r 1\1111111) has as
many or more shoncomings as U.. calen·
dar revlliort ahaciy ~ . OM Qm·
pus SOUI&lt;!2 suggested Monday following
Cabinet meeting.
Quarters would mean OM or two more
registrations each year. and registration is
already one ol tha ~adachas lac·
lng tha University.
olhars would
simply compound tha d
fly , In this
source's view.
•
/11. c:alendar based on the quarter
system would also throw U/B out of
sync:h with moot other Institutions In tha
area and nation . We nt!t!d to be as com·
patible as poui&gt;le wHh ~ Institutions,
it has been suggested. We should en·
courage, not diSCourage or compound
tha dfl\cultles already fact!d by, In·
dlvlduals Interested In transferring Into
U/8.
Quarters would ~ timing problems,
too, olhar have mgued. lt might be possi·
~ to .qu..... In a fall quartt!f between
~Abo~- Day and Christmas, but that leaves
two to be tak..n care ol alter January. At
bat, U.. Spring quarter would spill owr
Into -what Is now Sum-. Seutons tim4.
Not to mention the fact 1ttat 1tta quarters
would ~to be Dtii.O.. ._._ .,...
wouMl lrnJ)lnge on !liM- tiiiiled !Or ;,a.
mlnlstraHva
tum -around
•nd
matntenance between snslona.

u..

Dl&amp;reat caiR........?
Askt!d about the special cltnic:al re·
qulrt!ments of tha Health Sciences under
any c.lendar plan, Hok s~d that
what we may end up with Is a calendar
under whtch cataln academic areas
begin their lnslrucllon a week or so before
olhars.
"That's not unheard ol In academe,"
ha submine&amp;

Is pendulum swinging
back to the humanities?
Bv . . . ~

U/ B recruKns are able to distrl&gt;ute a
brochure padcage which an relnfon:c
U.. Information 1ttf!y relay verbaly.
Previously, pertinent lac:ts about A a l
majors were oHered only in the
Undergraduate BuDetin , a thick c:al&lt;ologue
containing lisllngs for al Unlwnlly
departmen , their coune olfertngs and
faculty . By contrasl. U.. new recruttmant
tool conmts ol an espcdally-dcsignad
folder conloilnlng """""'te, removable
pamphlets Nghllghtlng each department .
Tha materials, designed by John Cloutier
of Unlvt!f1ity Publications, rely on
photographs ol students engaged In
departmanlal activities • to c.ornmunlcate
an lmprasion ol what unc!e&gt;vaduata lllc
Is like for Arts and le!ten sludents. •
Hamilton rt!layed.
To dalio , A a R has ~nt about 1.600
brochure packages to guidance
eou.n~fors , teachers and "feeder"
ochools.
Whclttt!r or noe tha ·cnrollmant t.oo.t in
A a l will affect Is FTE count Is anolhcr
matter. last ynr, for nampla , English
nperieoc:ed a 15 to 20 p... cant lncruM
In ~- but implm&gt;antation ol the
Springer
Report UUied mool sludents to
mQ!l1t!o .
Bcllh Drcmult and Btl)i Hamillon.
. . fewer hours and conscq_,tly kept
acdng dun ol Arts and l..dan. alllt&gt;ute . FTEs at about the ....,.. level, Hamilton
at .... port ol the lncruM, ' -· to
recalled
dawlop&lt;Mnt ol new, colorful and
Thio Fal, English Compooillon-an
vlsualy --'ina rac:rutlmant materia~~
enrolment
go to thr hours.
for the f.CUity wl*h hiQNoght Its Omnllk noWd thllt "' tho fint
•
a

"-Stoll

. Could the enrollment pendulum
possl&gt;ly be swinging back? It's m..C. too
ear1v to predict, but AdmissiOns and
R...,.ds did olfer Arts and Len.,. ..,.,.,
enc:oung1ng news about freshman ad·
- l a s t week .
As ol Apri 3,
0~ had ac:·
cepled""'" freshman lor Fal 1980 who
tndicaled a preferenca for a major In Arts
and lettan and had TeCAIIwd more
dcpooils from 1ttt!fn than M had at U..
..me point last year.
According to A 8t R Director Richard
Drernuk, 440 freshmen desiring a major
In A 8t l tt.ve bet!n ollt!red adrnlulon, as
oppoMd to 2831ast ynr. Also, U/B has
so t. racctved 58 freshman dcpooils
from IIUdcnts ln&amp;orated In A L majors
~ to 28 last year at this point.
cautioned tNI • ·• f• too ..ty
to
f U.. .....,..._ llgnals •
1n Sl8llin!l anrolrncnts lor A
.L here·and whathar or noe a n..w trend II
cma9lnil. That won't be evident until na·
tlon8l and Slate
are rcpor1ed and
~ dlgnlad . and that eouJd take

u..

a

Drern,_

"""""'*

a

Uple- ..,.

· - - .·-a...&amp;.

�l

April17, 1980

SConiers wants Council
to visit dorm students

• SCulpture 101' AiDbent

----··-·

lion c-poomlen. Thlf • . . _ .
piee.• modlllca·
lion .of • IC\IlpluN originally buill lor

IIQold" Is. lnnd -

Alta louring the Elicolt Complex and
'-lng lludents ~ - about campus
vendalom houting and other Unlverllly·

IUmiNifll9old Plua at !he UN.
~

__... 8,000 ....
and .... requft • .,._ bolh lo unload
ancllo WI MInto plam.
Rooenlhal, 66. If the aeator of the
Holoeautl Memodal In Buffalo. His
public commloolonol date bad&lt; to the Elgin
Wadi ~ at the World'o Fair of
19391n New Yortc. and lodude pieelat
the M...... m of Sdmcc and lnduotry In
ctuc.o. lhi"Southland &lt;Ante In Dalles.
the 18M building and Century City In Los
Angna. His "AI&amp;mo," acquhd by tho
New Yorlc City ~~ of Park.. Is
pamancntly inDkd at Allor Place.
while anocher ol his monumental IIIOI"ks
11""'11 the pedestrien plaza at the New
Pollee Hcedquarten In tho City. He has
ott- pieces at the University of
Michigan, at tho Financial Plaza ol tho
Padflc In Honolulu, and at Connecllcul
College In New London. to mention a
lew.
·
Roaenthal Is rrpraented In collections
of the Guggenheim In New Yorlc. tho
Ablght-Knox . tho Whitney. and the
Museum of Modern Art.
Graduate students In the U /B Art
~t \IIIII 8Miol with the sculpture
lnstalla11ons and will Interact with the ar·
lilts. The pieces wll be placed along the
academic opine. with exact locations to
be determined wtthln the next lew days

For.....,ty'e..a.e

·

The project was proposed las! year by
George R. Levine. dean ol the Faculty of
Arts and Let1ers, Wlllard"R . Hams. chair·
man of the Department ol Art , and Nina
Freudenhelm , director of the local
Freudfnhelm Gallery. In order "to
bcaul!y the campus as ...,g as to provide
both studen and laeulty with the opportunity to appreciate great art ."
The trio pointed out thatoculptors face
unique !Koblems when cr a ng large
ocale IIIOI"ks. Sp.ce and costs are both of
. serious concern as Is the necess11y ol find·
lng a large enough storage spot lor a
finished piece not destined lor a specific
location Becauw of these reasons. the
three drafters of the pypposal sold. costs
ol purc;hasjng ellisling wor1&lt;s are often
c;.onSiderably leso than those lor comm...
oioned works. Also. purcha ng sculpture
through this method makes it possible to
give a piece a "tryout" before a commit·
ment Is made A caoe In point Is the

&amp;aldeMa ........
The oculpture lor Amherst project Is
.... v-.1 .. a way lo Involve el1
students and to enhance and expand the
studio Pft98rn wHhin thci Department of
Art and Art Htotory.
Pieces not oelected lor purchase will re·
main on campus until ouch time as
oculptors wish to have them returned .
They \IIIII be returned at the University's
expense.
The proposal lor the project recom·
mends that If tho Unlvenlty wishes to
purchase additional oculpture. H could
conduct similar r~ms annuaUy. In
fact. the propose concludes. H Is hoped
this \IIIII be the beginning of an on-going
program lor beautification of the Amhersl
Campus.
Other Ideas lor future acquisitions In·
elude commissions from local patrons
and Inviting sculptors 'here to build work$
using materials donated by local
buslneues.

·one:

or

Convention Center now
site of ·commencement
Matlwnarks. and Social Sciences as weD
as on those finishing work In the Divisions
of Graduate and Professional Education
and Undergraduate Education . Including
special majon. and associate degrees.
The University wiD also hold II In·
dJVIdual commenceme.nts : for the
Schools of Information and Library
Studies. and Nursing on May II. the
School of Architecture and Environmen ·
tal Design on May 16: the Faculty of
Engin ering and AppUed Sciences and
the School of Management on May 17.
the IChools of Pharmacy, Social Work.
He.hh Related Proleulons . and
Medtclne on May 18. and the School of
Dent by and the Faculty of Law and
Junoprudence . May 25
Approximat ly 5.000 degrees will be
awarded th' year

Terin extended
for Dryden
Drvden 's term as maste-r of

ColltQe H has ~en xtended for an addl·
banal"-· to npire Augull 31, 1981
AI a result, Ius term and that of the Col
•
ao a whole , through
procedur , will coincld

Robert L

She e1oo recommenclid that new

rnembas of the Couridl go through a
type of orientation eaoion to gel IIC·
quatnted with students and the cam·

P~ that she now "wants to
hear the ott..llde of the story," Sconlen
asked thai Housing Director Maclloon
Bo!lcc be invllad lo the next Council
meeting. Among other thll)gs, Sconlen
wanll to examine how the olllce Is run
and how H responds to stu&lt;Mnt corn·

p~tsher conversations with students,
Sconien sold they expressed "frustration"
over dealing with houJI119 problems
becauw they feel their complaints fall on
"deal earo." She also relayed that
students seem "saddened" about wide·
spread campus vandalism and want to
know wl\at the University Intends to do

about~ -

All .... utouda
Acting Arts and Let1ers Provost amy
Hamlhon said this week that
the
things Arts and Letters has been try.'ng to
do for years Is provide the human touch
to the University. That's the real goal lor
us We've long leh that the new campus
needs more
a sense of humanity and
community to make people feel more at
home. We haven 't got a senoe of focus .
We need something to gather around ....
These scuiptures wiD perform the same
function as a fireplace or TV in a home . A
person feels more comfortable there.
even ~ they're not looking at them .... This
may be the fuming point lor shifting the
University's apbitua.l focus to the: new
campus The exhibition is really lmpor·
tant for our spiritual weH being,··
Hamilton emphasized .
Members of the panel appointed by
President Robcrt L. Kener to select the
works are· Provost Levine: Art Chairman
Harris : Philanthropist Knox : Robert
Buck . director of the Albright-Knox :
Esther Haniolt. presidential assistant for
cuhural affairs. W . Ouayne Hatchen.
Department of Art . and Robcrtl. Millon·
zl. chairman olthe University Council

Ot Le

relaled ~. 1J/B Council member
Role Sc:onlero recommended Tuaday
that the Council hold some open
meetings at Ellcotl to ladlitate corn·
• munlcation with lludento.

chartalnjj
PreSident

oad

Coloue H plays an Important ro1a
lhon tfie ~ system tn extending
the
educatton.,j
opportunilleo
u~aduateo enJOY, K«t:
ld In an·
nounctng the

As far as safety features-or the lack of
them-at Ellicott, Sconiers relayed that
most of the problems (such as brof&lt;en
. windows etc.) stem from acts of van·
dalism .
During her tour, she said students told
her that prior to the fatal laU in February
of two undergraduates from a dorm win·
dow at EUicott. another student had also
fallen out a window but didn't sustain
serious Injury because he landed on a
second floor terrace .
Student Representative Michael Pierce
praised the EUicot1 tour and Sconiers'
recommendation lor open meetings there
as a "great slep lor the CouncU." He an·
nounced that the Inter-Residence Coun·
cU Gameroom was dedicated last month
as a memorial to the two victims of the
faU, Marcy B. Ford and Michael A. Me·
Clendon , and moved that the Coundl
formally recognize the dedication .
The resolution passed unanimously .
To by to curb vandalism In the dorms ,
Pierce suggested that student patrols be
organized and work In conjunction with
Campus Security . "Students should be
given th is form of local sell ·
determination," he asserted . U students
are made to feel more a part of the gov·
emlng situation. Pierce be6eves they will
be less lndined toward property destruc·
tion .

Also advocated by Plerao wao 811ign·
1ng a staff member to act ao. en ornbudman lor otudenll. "lt'o tomethlng this
Unlvenlly realv needs," he - . !.
Plerao Mid he f... tried, on OCCIIIIon 1o
act In an ornbudeman role In praentfng
certain student grievanc:n to the Ad·
ministration, but suggeoted the
mechanism be formalloed .
President Ketler told the ~nctl that
· he hao "no objection" lo the Idea of havIng one Individual act • en ombu~­
son, but noted that the olllce ol Vice
President lor Student Aflm olllcielly has
that charge . He eloo notad that In the
past, when one rMmber of the faculty or
· stall was aooigMd that pclllllon, they
usually found themselves lnfrtngJng on
other paoi&gt;le'o - - of reoponslblllty and
Ullled the positiOn be dlecontlnued .
l&lt;etter said he lllcad the Idea of oludent
patrols, but cautioned that 10111e students
probably IIIOUidn't recogniM them as a
governing Ioree. The Praident then
relayed that one student recently
chopped up some lounge lumHure to
make a stereo. What he couldn't use was
thrown down the elevator shalt. When
asked why he did H, ~student responded that he considered the furniture his
becauoe H'$ State property and paid lor
with taxpayer dollars. But students like
this Me in the mlnorHy, Ketter empha·
sized.
The President also gave the Council a
budget update. DespHe the pessimistic
liocal outlook, Kener Informed the group
that Albany did manage to authorize the
hiring of architects lor Computer Science
and Student Activities buildings here.
Student Affairs preoented the 1980-81
Student Rules and Regulations which
were accepted.
Before the Council adjourned. Pierce
asked the group If the members would
consider presenting an award this May at
General Commencement 1o a graduating
senior In recognition of excellence in cer·
lain areas . Pierce felt the award would
make the ceremony more of a " mean·
lnglul and personal experience" Instead
of like a "General Motors asoembly line."
Several of the members commented
that before the Coundl could even con·
sider the Idea , the suggestion would have
to be "refined" and specifics given on
qualifications and nominating pro·
cedures . Pierce withdrew the recommen dation and sold he would pass the sug·
gestion · on to next year's student
representative to the CouncU.

• Pendulum swinging?

eeL.,

Ctn-- 1,
again preclpHahng an erosion of FTE's.
HamUton mused that every lime the
department thinks It will experience an in·
creaoe in student / lacuhy ratio , "a flying
block of antimatter" destroys Its hopes .
Should faculty -lat In
recruitment?
As far as using A &amp; L faculty lor recruH·
ment purposes (a practice recommended
by the President's Office). HamUton
noted that a good number of faculty have
already participated In such activities
(such as last year's Orientation Program)
Others remain skeptical that their
presence reaDy makes a difference . Some
faculty , he continued. have participated
in even which turned out to be sparoely
anended. and sUU carry a bad ahertaste
from the experience
English Department Chair Gale Carnthers recently sent Executive Vice Prest·
dent Somit a memo giVing the names of
faculty wlllt"9to engage In recruitment ef.
forts , prOV\!Ilng the UntvenHy would
auum• expenses tncu rred . relayed
Hamilton ·
Uting lacuby lor recruttmenl purposes
IS not altogether a new Idea lor A &amp; l
MUSic, !0&lt; lnslance. hastraddtonaDy be n
"aggressive" In this area , both for overaU
enroUment purpoaes and to cnour that
udent body
the make·up of their
..
enwmble needs .
The ac11ng dean acknowleckled that
not aU faculty In A &amp; L feel that
.iiONn
lor recruitm nl ac:tlv ·

"faUs within the parameters of their job
descriptions.• While they realize such ef.
forts"" are common (and reportedly rathe-r
succeuful) In small. independent
schools, they don't believe them to be ~p·
proprtate lor universHy centers, par·
ticularly when their research and teaching
mission has already been thwarted by
budget cuts.

A balance
What HamUton would bke to find Is a
"right balance" bct...,en what some might
view an "arrogant and lazy• anitude and
what might resemble "" undlgnUied
ocramble for students. One school In
Texas. lor example, chose to anach $50
scholarships to balloons ond sent them
lloahng ove-r a target population.
Besides attending two reavtlment
events planned lor this Saturday and
April 26 (organized by A &amp; R and Com:
mun i&lt;:atlons students, respectively) .
HamUton sayo A &amp; L Is not sponsoring
any special actiY!tiel on Its own, because
of budget con tralnts and lack of person·
nel l.asy year. an intern from Higher
Education who worked in the dean's of.
fiCa , inllu.ted 10me recruitment plans , but
this year the bne had to be held vacant so
plans never materlallted .
Otemuk noted he has been talking to
department heads about the possibtbty of
laeuby •ncr asmg contact with oecondary
schools through viSits or throuyh conlacls
wtlh prolesatonal a toelations which have
high school teachers as mecnbers

�Aprt 17(1980

Student of Amer~can pqlftical novels
writes and publishes one of her own ·
Ruth Geller wro1e her English Ph .0 .
.dlsserlallon about ~ American political
novel, proceeded to
just such a
novel, an1:1 then found henell embroiled
1n the politics ol publishing,
Her solution was to incorporate her
own company and publish and market

""*

Miller Imposes
yet another

hiring freeze
Another hiring freeze has been lmpos·
ed on aD State agencies by order of
Howard F. MUier, diredor of the budget.
In what he labelled as "interim fiscal
and personnel guldeUnes for ... 1980-81."
Miller informed all State department and
agency heads this week that In Une with
. Governor Carey's State Workforce
Reduction Plan oudlned In the 1980-81
executive budget . 3.000permanent filled
positions must be eliminated by
September I.
"This goal is to be achieved by attrition
only, not by layoffs." Miller emphasU!ed.
The States entire financial plan for the
year was formulated on the basis of a
reduction of this magnitude. · he In·
d icated.
-..
For the present . Miller directed . •I!
agencies which were at or below their
employee targets as of the last pa y period
of the fiscal year e nding March 31. wUI
use those actual numbers of e mployees

the riovel herself, something she has
done qulte s=essfully. Her Sud of A
Woman, set 1n the women's movvnent
In the late 1960's, Is now In its second
printing and appears to be gathering sales
momentum .

Geller Is also preparing a second
volume bearing the Imprint ol her IJUp
Press, a oollection of her own short
stories. Also In progress Is a new novel,
Trlongle•. the story of three ln$!1vidual5
passing through a "Cultural crisis. •· She
"can't be more spedfic ," the author
notes.
Geller came to Buffalo In 1968 from
the Unlverslty of Connecticut, "on a bel."
Someone' had wagered that she couldn't
get accepted. 'to the contrary, she .landed
a fellowship In English where she began
to look at how l~erature reflects politics.
Deciding to take a decidedly historical
bent, she transferred to American Sturues
where she detved specifically into the
political novels of the late ' i9th Century.
Soon. she discovered ~they were aU lies."
The books w;ue un~onnly radst , sexist.
and "very bourgeois," populated with
''bomb·throwing agitators." ~h no roots
In reaUty. To engage In scholarly study of
them. Geller concluded , would be to
perpetuate untruth. At about the same
time, her own involvement ·in the
wome'h 's movement led her to attempt to
wnte about that poli11cal phenomenon .
"truthluDy." )'

as their interim ceilings. Fo r agendeS

above their April I targets. those targel5
will continue In place ,
Critical need• only
The filling of any pos~lon will require
approval by DOB "on the basis of critical
. needs only." Miller said .
As soon as a final budget Is passed . the
DOS director promised . a budget bulletin
outlining fiscal and personnel controls will
be issued. In the 1ntenm .. he advised. aU
agency heads should begin planning. at
mimmum . a two per cent red uction in

fill -

ed permanent State positions, based on
the last pay period of the liscal year. or
the authorized "loll level" of 1979-80. as
appropriate .

Off to Italy
She headed for Italy where she oould
begin to work on that novel , safely out·
side the political and academic
mainstream .
A year later. tt was bacl&lt; to U/ B and
AmeriCAn Studies, where the novel
became her project for the proposed
Ph .D. In that department - a degree
which never materialized . l..ater, she took
her accumulated credits and her novel to
Engbsh , Where . c:haracterl5tlcally. a decl·
olon was inade that creative work could
not be used as a dissertation project. In·
stead . she hauled out her old notes and
turned In a dlsstrtatlon on "The
American Pootical NOYel, 1871· 1884."
Meanwhile, she had tried unsuccessful·
ly to gel the book published . After rebuffs
from major houses, she slgned a Pf!&gt;IH·
sharing arrangement with a small press in
San Francisco. Two years dragged on as
type was set and design for a cover con·
sklered The publication date was moved
back from the spr1ng ol '71 to the laD of
that year Then the piess was vandalized
and pia
for the nOYei, destroyed. The
publishers promptly brok the conttact.
and returned the manusayt Geller
reca ohe was "heartbroken , with only
a bound •erox copy of the typeset
manwcripl to show lor four years.
extlhe tried to get an agent . One r ·.
,ected the novel as "fascinating hiotorical·
ly .• but dosplaying only first-draft writing
qualitY.• Another pronounced the writing
"professional," but judged "the h torlcal
stuff," to be "boring " AI that was left wa
10 pubiloh l herod
.
In April, 1979. Geller began reading
ev«rythong she could fond on seW·
pu
ng and s;lartlng a smal buoinea
"I tried to folow thetr advice ." she saki.
"but none of the books were vcpildt
~ AI they o.ld, for example. was
get pubjlc y. they didn't 1 I you how "

the world . Thep she had to secure exlen·
sive permissions lor Using passage• from
popular songs. A cover design had to be
selected with an ,eye toward picking one
that could be easily Incorporated into
advertising. A blurb lor the back cover
had to be wrttten . "I wanted it to sound
sociaUst but sleazy." Geller said . "like .
something you would pick up In a
drugstore ... A prtce had to be established .
the usual formula being printing costs
multipUed by live. That would have
brought Seed of a Woman In at $7 .95 a
copy, but Geller reasoned $5.95 would
be more apt to sen .
She designed and had printed a ma il·
ing pi&lt;ice to send to a list of feminist
bookstores and periodicals she also had
to compile for herseH. She had to gamble
to- get reviewed: 00 review copies went
out at no charge to various journals and
to the Buffalo newspapers.
The efforts have begun to pay off. ~h
reviews locally and nationally. most of
which have been favorable . This past
week for example , The Aduocote. a gay·
oriented California journal with a circulation of 70,000, reviewed the novel In
conjunction with a new work by Marge
Piercy. a weU·known writing veteran .

Set on a campua
Sud of a WornQII , set on a college
campus during eight months In 1969 and
1970, revolves around two women
primarily, one a student and one a work·
lng woman - d to a campu radical.
It traces what happens as they come to
grips ~h themselves and with the
e-merging women's liberation l'l't0Vte..l1lent
within the - Ldt
Although Geller wouldn't classtfy •t as a
"lesbian" novel,
lntereSI to gay·

oriented periodiCals stems from Its po&lt;·
trail of the clash and .rensions between
&amp;esbtans and others in the movement.
The book is available locally in an array
of both small and more com mercia I
bookstores
Sales to date have enabled Geller to
recoup her original Investment, and go
into a second printing of 1.000 - en ·
couraglng enough for her to plan two
more releases from Imp Press, but not
enough for her to consider making a
career out of publishing . She's lookong lor
a job In which she can put her Ph .D. to
use . and also hopes to be "discovered"
by a major publishing house. Sadly
enough . though. she remarks, the maJOr
houses are now co·ntrolled by huge conglomerates Interested only in sexy,
violent blockbusters. Geller isn't sure you
can be flashy and tell the truth at the
same time
Stigma
Despite her own success and the grow ing number of books 10 this country thai
are seH-published. there is sUI! a stigma
attached to producing and marketing
one's own work . Geller has found . "People think that i( someone else tsn 't 10 ·
terested enough to publish you , you 'ri
not any good ." she notes
Bul , she doesn't believe it for a minute .

NOT ON 20/ 20 TONIGifT
The segment on aoap opera In th e
c ia sroom which ABC-1V filmed he re
In February with Or. Mary Cauata's
Communications cla u had bee n
acheduled to a k on the news magazine
program. "20/ 20," tonil!ht. C hannel7.
10 p.m . At dudUne. It was cancelled.

Mordl21

.

The aword ,. conferred for "
nc
"' aching. r arch leaderJblp end cur·
r&amp;Uio &lt;Mwlopment n,.
Com

SUNY not certain
In a memo to presldents oJ all Sta te
Unoversity unots. Harry K. Spindler. vice
chancellor for f.inance and business of
SUNY. said that the University is "not
certain of the impact'" on it of these "fur·
ther plans for 1980-81. ..
Spondler indicated that Chancellor Clif·
ton Wharton has been "concerned" a ll'
blong that the SUNY share of the Initial
3 .000 lines would be imposed "even II
the Legislature provided dollar restore ·
tion in Its budget actions."
.
Locally. Assistant Executive Vkle Presl·
dent Robert Wagner said Tu.esday that
··we have no spectfk: information from
SUNY suggesting how long the freeze wiD
last or anything else at this point ."
Wagner said he was certain nothing
will be made any clearer until after the
Legislature and Carey have ironed o ut
their doHerences over the budget, and the
Governor gets a sense of it.
Then , he predicted , new personnel
targets wm hkely be •mposed. and the
freeze lofted.
That's what has happened In th past
Wagner said the administration Qb·
vlously hopes the freeze will be a
"modest" one . lal'tlng for &lt;&gt;nly a few
mon1hs.
·

Completes course

Dr. Rodney Doran named
outstanding science educator
Dr Rodney Doran. 8ISOCia
pro·
fesoor. Department of In uctlon. Faculty
of Eduutional udi . was named lhe
"'uutandong Sclrnce Edua~or of the
Veor" by
A~llon lor the Eduu
lion ofT ochen of Sdcnce al the group's
ano...I
ng n,A~ m. C..lol .

This two per cent reduction by aUrition
must be achieved prior to September I .
Miller reiterated .
Beyond that, the DOB director warn·
ed , it is " pr~" that legislative adlon
on the budget will require red uctlons
sognifican~y higher than contemplated in
the Carey budget. "Accordingly. it Is im·
portant that agency h ads begin now to
review the proced ures involved in im·
plementing a reduction In force ... This ap·
parently alludes to Carey's threat to cut
even more jobs if the Legislature votes to
"over~spend , ·· ln his view.

mlttee praised o;,ran 's scholarly
achtrvem nt and commented that ho
research articles have explofed lmp&lt;&gt;rtant
problem • and. disllnguished them lv
for th•m . '1heor tical bases .· darity.
relevanc&lt;r, appropriateness of desogn ,
validity and reliabillly of In trumentatlon
and crediblhty ol conclusion "
Dr Anthony P paloa, ehaornwon of
Doran's l) / B department said . "W are
· ry proud of h aehleY '"""Is "

Wayne A. Robinson. assistant director
of the Office ol Public Safety , has recenlly
completed a three•month program of
d from the Federal Bureau of In·
lion National Academy In Quan·
tico, irglnla
.
H~ training included courses d aUng
wtth legal problems In pollee adminlstra·
lion, Interpersonal vlolenat and constitu·
tiona! procedure Officer Roblnoon said
the program furthered his Insights Into
ewcyclay policc.problerns and "personal·
ly 110
me 1 beuer .uwssmt.nt of my
own man.ge&lt;Mnl tkll1t •

~

�Apo1l 17. 1980

The Educational Testing Service:
malevolent, benevolent, or benign?
The Educational Tattng SeMce !ETSI

is a ~ul corporation will! mono annual contume conlacls than Ford and
o.-at Malon combined: whether It is

II'WIIeYolmt, bennolent or benign was
the oubjoct of animated debate last Friday
• in O'Brian Hal.
Alan Nairn , dnclor of Ralph Nader's
Learning Raearch Group and author of
The Reign of ETS, and Jenne Brit.eU,
ETS' executive director for program planning , viewed the testing giant as different·
ly .. their .affiliations suggest.
Nairn charged ETS !ells are. racially
biased, daa.dilcriminatory, essentially
lnvabd when it C&lt;lln4!S to predicting future
academic success, aU-too-po-.ful In
detamlnlng the futures of lndn.;auals,
and grouly over-rated .
Brit.eD disagreed - point by point .
ETS each year tests 7 million In·
divlduals In the U .S . , Nairn noted. Over
the history of the organization, I 00
million people have been tested , he said .
"'ne score on an ETS test." he charged. can dortermlne "not only what law
school you can g0 to, but If you'll be a
Ia
at aD."
.
ll/B·s law admissions, lor example,
are based on a formula wh'o::h gives equal
weight to low Y""T5 of college and I 90
test question .
·

...

FalMclal...
ETS also makes false claims, observed
Nairn , whO was chief lobbyist in the light
to paS$ New York's truth-1n -testing law.
The agency claims not rne~Jiy to m""sure
how many questions a stcfdent gets right
or wrong on a gillen test, but also his or
her optllude for coUege or professional
school work . Test scores dortermine col•
cred" , edmluions, tdV&gt;Iarohlps. ac·
cess to jobs and careers - even how a
high school _student.is perceived by hii or

her peer•.
.
The tests abound In cultural and racial
biaseo, Nairn went on .

A study of the National Conference of
Black Lawyers backs him up. Using data
1roni 100 colleges , ~ study paired black
and whlte Sludents !rom the same schools
wrt\l the same grade -point averages
Among these equal pairs . whites scored
an average of 180 points higher on the
LSAT
The bottom hne , Nairn said . is that in
order lor rrunorities to have an equal
chance lor admission to law schools . they
have to laY« hrgher college grades .
Ther ·, alto a torr"lalion between ETS
test tcO&lt; and the soze of family Income.
reprdless of race
ETS holds that 01her types of achieve·
ment also cor-relat with Income, Nairn
pointed out. but an American Council on
EducalK&gt;n study of 35,000 stud.,nts concluded to the contrary. Family income
did hOI c&lt;lrTela With actual grades in the
lnt llh' of colege, tht! ACE study
found And in I 9'79. an ETS-related
project reported that If you loolo at otlt-olclaa KCC&gt;mplishments of indrvldual
studen • im1*1J o! race and soc:lal5tatus

. . . di5B.pPO&lt;.
The conclusion has to be, N..,.n said .
that ifffects of race and de• are impor·
rant only when ~ comei to ETS test
ICOfet (and
the acce to educational
opponun

determined by them) .

do..,......-...,

Wily
Why do col.ga ....t ~
schools rely 10 '-viy on " - ocoreo if
they are. not valid?
For economic and political rasons,
Nairn suggested. They coot the lnstitu·
lions nothing; the consumer pays. And
there's an element of prestige: students
think schools are second·T31e Wthey don't
require SAT scores lor admllolon.
Nairn said attempts to valdat.e use of
ETS scores as predidon have been conducted using tnt year grades only. Th.ere
-have been no long-term siUdleo.
Even on the short-term, he railed , 800
College Board studies over I 0 years have
shown that use of SAT tal scores as
predictors of who will do what In college
are "only 12 per cent better than a roll of
the dice. • A profeuor at Berkeley has
said, moreover. that If there's not at least
a 25 per cent difference between the SAT
and pure change, "you might as weD put
the test on the shell along with the crystal
baD an(l the oulja board."
New York's truth-in -testing law will
help put a stop to false claims to consumers, Nairn wentured . Testing companies now have to disclose specific Information on how weU test scores actuaUy
predict future achievement.

Alterutl"' ......_,o... crtterta
He urged colleges and universities to
shift admission policies away !Tom test
soores to actual performance crite&gt;ia.
Temple University lor one, he said. has
adopted a law school policy which
assesses candidates on the basis of a
bfoad array of talents. This requires a
greater commitment of faculty time.
Naim cautioned .
From th:! experiment , it has been
found that students admitted this way ,
perform just as weU or better than
students selected on the basis of high
LSAT scores. And . th"y represent a
much broader spectrum of society .
Nairn le"ls lluth-in-testing legislation
now in effect in New York and proposed
in other states is a first -step toward breakIng the power of ETS and getting schools
to change admissions policies. He stress·
ed that the legislation goes beyond merely requiring research on vatid ity of the
tests as predictors. ETS must also provide
students copies of the actual test they
too~ . together with an ·answer sheet and
a copy of their owri answers. This is what
has made testing companies particularly
resistant . aim claim.,d . It means they
cannot use the same questions year-in
and year-out.

ETS' illde

1«1,

)IOU

They're. not lddd111

·s. ETS and the sponsors of tests tt administers were not dragged "kicking and
screaming Into the truth-in-te.s tlng
arena." The only thing new that the law
mandates, is the making public of current
tests; this imposes questions of quaUty.
and cost incurred in totaUy reshaping tests
lor each administration.
Nairn
,.tnembers-of the audience
scoffed at ti.ti mention of costs, noting
that ETS profits are healthy and that the
organization enjoys lavish headquarters
in Princeton. New Jorsey . Brit ell
countered that lor each new form of the
SAT. lor example, ETS has to pay bet·
ween $85,000 and $100,000. II 21 d~­
lerent tests are given each year, the total
cost would be $20 million, she said.
Making test forms public ehminates the
advantage """'lthy individuals once had .
Nairn argued . For a high price, these in dividuals could take special coaching
course.$ from private companies , such as

Stanley Kaplan . These companies used
to send "plants" In to take various forms
of various admissions tests , often indiViduals with photographic memories
who could then reproduce a whole exam
for the company . Since tests weren 't
changed that frequently . students coached by Kaplan often found themselves
answering the identical questions they
had been coached to answer . "Truth-intesting now places il all on the table lor

everyone." Nairn contented .
A puiM wUI be enough
As questions and accusations began to
fly about the validity of test scores as
predictors of success. U/ B Admissions
and Records Director Richard Dremuk ,
who chaired the session , defused the
debate .
"The question of validity ," Dremuk
smiled, "is probably moot . In light of the
continuing slump in coUege and universi-

R pondlng lor ETS, Br1teU pictured
the company as welcoming the scrutiny
of Its actlllities which truth-in-IA!sting
legislation imposes. It's "aU to the good ."
she said
She •Ito claimed LSAT scores, lor example , have become more lmpo!'tant in
law admission• because of widespread
gr-ade Inflation In undergraduate schools
It's only natural, she con"'nded . for people to give greater emphasts to. standardized tal scores In the wake of this inflation
BriteU e:mphalized ETS has power over
no one. Venous Institutional governance
HIOCIAtions detillmlnc whattesls are required lor admltolons to-vari&lt;xn types of
institutions. Policln on how t sl· scores
ar to be treated and what II to be made
public alto vary aa:ordlng to the group
which lpOI'IfOrJ a given tal
Conbnulng to refu Nairn 's aocusa·
bons, Br!ld added that:
I Templol Uniwnlly Law School a
...- lSAT ocooa whie alao tMing a
"common · loolo Ill other •arliobla;
2 A Untv.-y of P"""'ylvanla study
rwports that multiple~ uams u
not diocriminatorv to mlnonlln; that, 1n

more
.....
The

choice tests be used lor bar exams In
order to dlmln&lt;* bias.
3. No one knows the long-term
significance of ocore results as in·
dicators of academic performance; this
reljulres cooperative research efforts,
BriteD urged, adding that right now "you
can't get agreement on a delinltion of just
what constitutes the academic success
you are being asked to measure."
·
4 . ETS supports the use of broader ad·
missions criteria but feels H is dlflicult to
know which other factors to consider; the
Buckley amendment has dUuted the
reUabUity of letters of recommendation ,
and most schools do not have the admis·
-sions stalls necessary to look at so-caUed
performance criteria .

can ld the •.,... of a student
OCO&lt;• on e.ay ....

aa:unotely from

Anwric.ln Qvtl l..hnlcs Union .
tile nolild , n. broutht ouil In - . 1

._ndint

_.,.,.

ty enroUments, anyone who has a pulse
will probably be able to gain entrance to
higher educat~n ."

Seek support
for U I 8 sports
A Pep Club is being formed at U/ B to
help generate interest and enthusia~m for
Univenity sports.
U/ B has never had a Pep Club, but at
time cheerleaders, fraternities and
sororities were the enthusiastic audience
at football games _The football Bulls' captain and co-&lt;:aptaln, along with other
students , feel a Pep Club will attract the
community and students to sports ev~tnts .
The Ida lor the Oub came from a lack
of Information among the student body
about when! and when the BuDs' !Jllmei
were to be played, a.a:ordlng tQ Jack
Dunbar. co-captain of the Buls. The low
attendance at games made us ,...a.~~ze that
torMthing had to be done to encourage

on"

school opi'tt, he added.
J&gt;riee and Dunbar !eel the suc:ona of
the Pep Oub Will depend .on the number
of students who beclorM active members
An oovanlta~l me.ttng will be hetd

•t 8 p m. tonight In 334 Squire. J&gt;riee and
Dunbar want al k'tteretled ltudents to

,::t.~~ ~~ula~ ~I~

SA official
explains
a mix-up

all

Was
his
fault, he writes
Editor.

I am writing thJs leller about the appearance of that ilhislrlous gentleman .
Mr. Arthur M. Schlainger on campus
Monday, Man:tt 17. and the complications which arose as a result. It seems that
a certain clarlllcation Is llC".essary regarding this matter. Accordingly;- let me
here state that I alone am luUy responsible lor aU the inconvenience caused that
day. Mr. Schlesinger was scheduled ,
orlginaUy, to make two app..wances on
campus-once In the evening, to engage
in a debate;and once in the afternoon to
lecture about American History.
Since we had only two days to
organize these events. we had received a
conlinnation on Friday the 14th (during
the recess), I caUed upon my frie nds in
the undergraduate History Council to
organize and publicize the lecture. The
Council undertook this labor with en .
thusiasm and did a most th_orough .
credil&lt;lble arid praiseworthy job. For this
effort I shall remain ever in the~ debt.
A change
UnfOrtunately, on Monday morning at
nine o'clock, upon entering the office, I
learned that, due to a series of complications (including the sudden and tragic
death of Mr. Allard Lowenstein) , Mr.
Schlesinger could appear only once on
campus~ln the evening, to debate .
This basicaUy is what happened and I
would like to take this opportunity to
apologize to aU those who were inconvenienced by thJs tum of events. Most
especially I would like to apologize to the
undergraduate History Council and the
Departments of History and Political
Science , who did so much to o.-ganize the
lecture . Further let me express my most
sincere gratitude and acknowledge my
debt to these very groups. Allow me,
again , to state that the above mentioned
parties were in no way responsible lor the
turn of events that day. The responsibility, clearly, was and remains mine.
In releren« to the debate that evening,
which was rather successful, due. no
doubt, in great measure, to the efforts of
those very groups mentioned above , I
would like to thank Dr. Claude E. Welch
who so weU moderated it (on extremelv
short notice) . Also, I would like to thank
the Youth foe- Kennedy movement which
helped bring Mr. Schlesinger here and
helped so greatly in every way.
Finally. I could hardly end this letter
without expressing my most sincere
gratitude to the Reporter lor all the help it
has given me and the excellent coverage
It has provided our events. Most ·
speCifically, I would refer to that recent
article by Ms. Linda Grace-Kobas
("L""ry" Reporter, Marci• 20, 1980)
wherein I was given some prominence.
Ms. Kobas and none other was the rather
mysterious another mentioned in the arti· .
cle who provided so much help so
graciously (and I might add so charming·
ly) . The article was very weU wrjtten and
quite accurate. It has been a source of
mystery lor my friends ever since
A comment
Of course, were I an absolute boor and
had the temerity to venture a criticism of
the article, I might say that pubkity about
my bad karma was the last thlng my
social life needed, indeed . I have been
doing bad enough as It II.
So perhaps, the exclusion of that ele·
ment and the Inclusion of something like,
"and he loondled It of tDfth clooracUrWic
/aire,• though las than aocurat.e.
still would have been of invaluable. servt&lt;:•
to me and acrordtngly apprec~~~ted .
Howewr, I, being a ll""tlcrrwin . am
- not 10 rash as to ventutc any such
criticism and· so I shan't say a word about
M.

Stnca&lt;

- Hlteehh•...,. II. He
s.-Mn 8u w

Olllrmon,

�Apd 17, 1980

l:l/ B rescue squad Is ready
to aid In emergencies at Amherst
·AI first gla.-, Doug Aocxar. resembled one of those peddlers ol anolher era
who used to \QJii the back roads ol
AfMrica . He was llleafirl9 an enormoU5
beclcpoock which lool&lt;ed as if ~ might ac:ex&gt;mmodalc the contents of an entire
sb'e, and was canying a large case. One
dlfterence was immediately apparent,
though, he was also wearing an eJec.
IJOnic beeper.
Floa:are was rnodelliog the compact.
light-weight trauma pack and resusclla·
lion . equipment used bv. the newlyrecognized U/8 Volunteer Rescue
Squad, an organization ol trained
students qualified to assist in medical
ernerg..nc"'s. The beeper was there to
dispaleh him to the slte ol any emergency
caU.

By Mary Beth Spine
Edilonol -

Municipal and tochlng h041pltala
Municipal hospitals. in particular,.pose
other difficulties. Most patients who seek .
care at these institutions have not chosen
to receive care there-they've had it
thrust upon them ol necessity .
'"Often these patients are too poor to
have their own physician. or they're at
the municipal hospital because ol
genuine emergency and it was the closest
facility ," Gordon pointed out. There is
none of the Implied trust on the part o
the patient which is normally found when
one picks his or her own doctor .
"At the munidpal hospital . patients are
usually treated by residents who may be
best described .as young , harned
strangers who will be elsewhere the next
lime the patient seeks care ." said Gor·
don.
The te.ac.h\ng h01p\tal poses vet
another obstacle- its primary purpose is
not to give care but to serve as a place
where knowledge is transmitted to future
doc tors and health care professionals .
"That's not to say the teaching hospital
doesn't give good care worthy ol emu Ia·
tlon ." Gordon added . "but that 's not its

schools.
l'loaoare (eh U/ 8 should have some
sort of student team to assist In handMng
emergencies.

l::je wasn 't the first undergradualli to
the Idea : other plans were ad vanced earlier In the 70's but never went
anywhere . A member of the volunteer
lire departmenJ II\ h'IS home town ol
Lakewood . New York. Floa:are kept at
11 . wo.-ktng with Rob&lt;lrt Hunt, director of
Environmental H ahh and Safety, and
Dr. Luther Musselman , direct&lt;&gt;&lt; ol the
UniverSity H ahh Service Late last !all,
the project was approved by President
Rob&lt;lrt L. Ketter
The squad wasn 't operative until
· February 28 of this year. shortly altei the
· tragedy at Fargo Quad . Some of its
members. though, were on hand to at ttrnpt to MSisl the victims of that fall . At
that point , they were waiting lor all their
equipment to arrive. especlaDy the
trauma pack From that day on. they
start d stashing everything In a tackle box
sou would be ready.

hal'i

pnmary

sewn together by Stephen Dear, a squad

laCied by Campus s.curttv for

cv calt at Amfwtnt. The R

-vm-

u.o Squad.
wt·up, COVGS only lhe new
.,.,.,...., allhough members .........
for ~ ~ at Mldn Street,
ouch • lllal wwkend'a CAC Dance
u .,._n

tbon

\IJiwn Soocunly •
an ~
, Mdllplolc:het two caB. One proceeds
,...r*u!ly to
_,..and
I«&lt;OId
goa to 1 H.alth s.Moa
• nurse
ptdoad &lt;c&gt; The .-.frm.vy al Elli&lt;.on II
ol the ~ Squad
who ... on d
lor call out•
or call
Elocon.

r....,ond on fool

...__, .,.....

eM&gt;

clio.. four ol

..,

unhke

community

Humanity needed
"'For instance, when the medical stu·
dent 0&lt; resident finishes with the patient,
it would take IIHie lime and ellort to ask
the patient K there's anythtng she or .he
needs:· GO&lt;don continued . Maybe the
patient ne-eds someone to fi]J the water
pileher or adjUst the bed-small, rather
insignUicant requests which give students

The beclcpoock, designed and actually

""""'=h eM&gt; be used 10 give 0&gt;1·
ygen to two~ llrrudaneously. Two
• Hllgned .. flo.lcrs In Elicott.
AI four- beepm 110 they can be ron·

purpose

hospitals where care Is the primary goal
··statistically. it's better for a patienl to
be In a teaching hospital. but we need to
cut the odds of the immorality of using
patients as teaching exampies for the pur·
pose .ol education:· he emphasized .

O..ltMd"' s~ o-r

lion .....

... Huloh Scionc:ft

It's Ironic that hospitals , whose
employees and staff are dedicated to glv·
lng care, need patient advocates or ombudsmen, says Dr. Harry Gordon, Bronx
Jacobi Hospital patient advocate and
professor emeritus at Albert Einstein
Medical College.
But the fact is that health care lnstitu·
lions today have structural obstacles
which make it necessary f&lt;X patients to
have advocates to whom they can tum
when they feel mistreated. cheated ,
neglected &lt;&gt;&lt; ignored.
"One ol the primary obstacles is the
curse ol bigness Inherent in medical
centers and large hospitals." Dr. Gordon
explained. It's not that the doctors.
nurses or others working In the healthcare setting deliberately want to be mean.
to patients and their families. It's simplythat the institution has become so large
that people's needs often fall through the
cracks of the system .

Two jiUn Ia die aaald.Dg
A senior biology, major who will enter
medical school In the faD. Floa:are began
his attempts to organize a first responder
assistance team on campus when he
transferred here from the Univenity of
R""'-er in January ol 1978. At UR.
which had only· 6.000 students. "they
had that ldnd o( coverage ," he recalls. At
several major SUNY units (AI&gt;any.
Binghamton, Stony Brook, Oswego and
Buffalo State) , there are fuU-fiedged
student-run ambulance squads. The
same Is IJUe at Syracuse, RP1 and C .W .
Post, to mention a few of the private

member who is also a quahlied
paramedic ·and a senior EMT ln5tructor, Is
made ol canvas wil,h easy-open Velcro
lastenen. It -'9hs about25 pounds. Individual compartments we stuffed with
~mergency eqUipment and supplies,
ranging from an obstetrical kit to a blood
preswre cuff and a variety ol gauu pads
and tapes "We carry everyth~ an
ambulance does. except
•
ding
and ..,antlng," Floa:are, who serws as
chief olthe un" . relates.
Four members olthe squad ar on du·
ty each """'k n.ght frO&lt;n 6 p .m. to 8 a .m .
124 hours on weekends! One is aulgMd
to carry lhe trauma pack. Another ls
rapot'lllble for the Robertshaw resuodta·

•
Patients often
need help in
the hospital

CloM-up of trM~me ~ ­

them are e&amp;rry~ng the pagers at aD times.
But """' calls c:orne during the regularly·
assigned duty hours at night and on
weekends, Floa:are notes.

1'lMt audetoa of • fine
Floccaro

realizes

~wod

that

a

student

organization ol lhls nature has to prove
Itself In &lt;&gt;&lt;der ro be taken serk&gt;usly by
Campus Security and medical olllcials.

But, he says, "we now have an e~~Cellent
group ol people who will be the nucleuo
ol a flne rescue squad which can
perpetua itself In coming years. In the
futur~ . we plan not only on prOVIding
emergency medical care on campus, but
alto on getting involved In flrst -ald train·
lng and _promoting greater safety
ewarmess.
Members ol the squad wer reau~ed
ttvough a series ol newspaper ads. To be
-"'&lt;~.. • student has to be either: ·1 . •
amilied. ernergcncy medical technician ,
or 2 a graduo.le ol an advanced flrst-&lt;tld
and CPR &lt;DUrN . In addition, voluntNTS
mUSI paso a written and practical exam
floocar DOleS th.t the VUI majority at
the .,._nt ~ hoove slgntficant
~ In olhcr , _ squads
Sat
ar
fnt-llid inslrudoB, · and
~ Our. who Is dhctor oltralnlng
for
unit, wort.ad for
)lalt·wllh a

*

commercial ambulance S&lt;irvice.
Oftlc:...-a anchaembera
Officers ol the squad besides f'loaoare
and Dear. are. Michael Schwartz. who
serves as assistant chief: David Hoffman
who holds the rank of captain : and
Marianne Burke (who can point to commercial ambulance experience covertng
baseball games in Yankee Stadium) ; who
serves as lieutenant.
The general membership includes;
Gregory Dressel, Clinton . New York :
Dennis Flynn . David Gordon . Plainview.
Waner Gordon , Whit Plains: Hillary
Hahm, Setauket; Martin Hinch . Plainview. Jeffrey Leibowitz. Aushlng; Wade
Polm&lt;&gt;&lt;e . Woodhaven . Kathy Bailey.
Rochester:: Pat Burke. Bud&lt;hurst.: David
Honig, East Meadow: Linda Kass. Riverbay; Jimmy K. Mul. Bronx ; Stuart
Nlssim, New Roche : John Dougherty.
Summ". N.J .; Andrew Staple , Brooklyn;
Jooeph W Wandr-. Clarence, and
JoAnn Young, East Syracu.e.
Funding lor the activity comes from
Suil-&amp;ard and the Student AMoclalk&gt;n.
Anyone who would Jike IO join shouJd
cAll SA and h.v his or her name added
to a sign-up sheet VoluniNTS
be
noblled &amp;boot
next round ol testing.
The Rescue Squad i Whas an olfJce
tr\ 1()9. Part.!t Ill Elkoll •
•

or

residents

the

opportunity.

to

demonstrate their 1\uman"y.
"It's not enough the doctor is salisfled
he or she is doing right-the patient must
also !eel the doctor is doing right. Physicians and others who have patient contact should be aware patients are jUdging
them and may n01 be happy with their
performance." Gordon emphasized .
The office which Gordon heads at
·Jacobi now has eight patient advocates
who cari handle routtne problems and
complaints and also act as interpreters for
those who don't speak English .
Not only has the advocate program
gtven patients am! their famdits a "friend"
within lhe inllllution who will speak up
for them if necessary. the ollice's efforts
hoove also ptevent d lawsuits agalnsl lh
hospttal. Gordon believes•

No •nolle waoted
While there we no set rules for
teaching future physicians to deal mor~
effectively with patients, one elderly
wklow made a suggestion which Gordon
passels on !O his otudents at Einstein.
"Td them ," the widow urged •. "that
doctOrs shouldn' be onobo (to their pan.nts)"
Gordon's presentation at Erie County
Medical Center Saturday was coaporiiiOred by the Departm nts of
. Medicone at ECMC ar:&gt;&lt;1 U/ B

�•

/

•

•

eanton

Australian official
s~udies unionism here

Old activists never die;
they'll gather here to relive
the good old days of the 60s
Dr fred Snell waa the Man of the U/ B
Grodua~ School In 1967 ond was tht!
found&lt;!! of College Am 1968. In 1971 he
....,nt baclr to lhl!! Biophylla O..partmerit
doing enulronmenl41 worlr. upedo/lv
long-range cNmo~ predictioN. Preuntly,
he Is muolved with the Enulronmt!ntol
Study Cen~B Snell was a leading as:·
tkJill, Instru mental In organizing faculty
and stud&lt;!nto a/1/rt!. HI!! was arrnkd In
1970 01 onl!! of the Faculty 45 who led a
sH -In by U I B faculty;~ the Presidents of·
flu in Hove• Han
As chairman of thl!! U/ B Black
Sludt!nll Union in the /ate '60s.
Rooseueh Rhodt!s led lhl!! fight fot open
admissions for mmoril/a "'to profes·
SIOrlaliChools, hiring of o bloclr basketbaU
coach and increelSed minority enrollm~nt
011 campu1 fV"wo.s o/10 inuolued in local
on~-U!Or e/forto He grodu~d U I B m
1971 and na 19n has bl!!en thl!! d!Tec ·
tor of 11)1!! Office of Minomy Student Affairs · Rooseue/t ran ' for Buffalo
counci/man -at-/ar9'! !~ .1979
In 1970 as a lecturer at UI B. Dr
James LAwler was orresled for crrmmol
and ci&lt;nl lrespassJng and for u/olallng on
rnjuctjon as one of the Faculty 45. As on
uct/u
rn the Angelo DouiS O..fense
Commmee. he translot.d the Fr~h ploy
"Angelo" and produced its •uccasful
ohow1ng m Buffalo He ,. the author of
"/ Q , Heredfiobility and RaciSm · and
"The &amp;.s~n.IWliiSI Mancrom of Jean -Paul
Sartre " LDwll!!r WOI twice refused
renewal of hiS contract by the UnluerJJty
board of ITu tees before recelulng h,.
te.nure Both l"ma lhe: deciRonl were
ouertumed o/ier wldapread atudent and
[acuity fXOil!ll Ptt!oently , he is assodale
pro/uJ« and OSSOCIO~ chOITmon of the
Plulotophy O..portr:'!.nt
O..ne Grabit&gt;eT

first marched ogomst

the wor In 1964 As an ort major. he was
actrue In the Tlurd World Student Strike

at San Fri&gt;nosco Sta~ College m 1969
He IDOl one of thousands teorgOISed In
Bnlrell!!y In 1973 in the ortJv peaceume
oenal gaa~ng in the U S Preoently, he Is
an - n t professor In the O..portmt!nt
of Sodol Foundoi!On• of Education at
UI B, lnvolued in a fight to rearue hiS
lenure . He Is aloo oct~t~e In tht! ~..&lt;&gt;w
Conal Homeowners struggle and in
IChoo/ Integration ~~ '" Buffalo

ll&gt;at's how the brochure for rhe "Buf
lalo Anti-War Reunion " deocribe$ four
currcnl f~~eully and itaff nwmbers who
wQI be on a panel ddcuuing Focuhy and
SWf ltwolvcment tn the PUCA! Move
menr, S.llml.y, April 26. The thr -day
"Reunion • It be ng held on campus, April
25-27. 10 years after the height c( the
Buffalo .an -war dforu
'
Laden ol labor groups, I
draft
reslslanu !Bruce Beyer and L.arTY
F... lkner are too - 1-r.,membued
name
), the eltctoral mcwement
(C.... ~ ol Tolstoy lAIII be
lutwed
I. and envtronmcn
(Low Canal's Loll Galbo •nd Marvin
Ranttoff c( the Siena Club and Rordlef
Colegr)
aloo be f
red on
panelt
According 10 a.ny Calder ol SA.
'
-.
being a chance for old
frlmds to ~ logclhe- once agaon,
bnftg people from fh&lt;oughout Buffalo's
ID "'
our common
dah for world _ . and loiCUr1ly •

c.non

1l&gt;a pn&gt;gram

=~~. 7·11 "··· .. "'lo

old lriendo

Cadi "f'on what'obeen dofne, r
and
loll the
ol John Brady. lacaf

Acting chairman
med acllng
0..*11MIIf vi De11uft
to A

April!?, 1980

. Despite what some may feel about the
Issues now being debated. For example
• impact of budget reductions and union
thtre are no private (as opposed 1~
rhetoric on collegiality here, a · recent
publicly-funded) schools in Australia, and
visitor from the " Land Oown Under feels
the terms and condHions c( employment
collegiality is alive and well at the Univerlor faculty and staff are already stansity.
.
dardized throughout rhe nation . Also, all
Edward D. Johnston , personnel ollicer
workers automatically receive pay Infolksinger." Coffee and donuts will be
creases to ensure that their salaries keep
available .
' at Murdock University In Western
Australia, made this assessment last week
up with the inflation rate . The amount of
near the end of a two-day stay on cam·
increase is determined by a Court of Ar·
S.tlll'da,, Aprtl 26th.
pus as a guest of the Pet$0nnel Departbitration . which meets about every six
10:00 o m. Panels: Draft Reslslana,
ment.
months. In addition to these salary ad·
Pdlmore Room-Squire; Labor's Role in
Johnston Is touring seleded univerjustments, an Academic Salaries Tribunal
the Fight for Peace, 339 Squire ; Faculty
sities in the United States for three
m~ts "every few ye""'" to decide on ~y
and University Staff Involvement, 110
months as a Fulbright scholar, attempting
rarses.
Foster.
.
_
to
gather
Information
on
how
unioniza·
Because of these fixed standards
2 ·00 p.m .Orah Resistance (continued)
lk&gt;n affects the working environment of
salaries and benefits (within a range) ar~
In the Fillmore Room ; Environmental
academic and support personnel . He Is
virtually the same lor every educational
339 Squire ; ElectOral Efforts 240
also examining how declin in g
institution, regardless of size or prestige.
Squire, Role of the Socially-Consdous
enrollments Impact on staffing policies
Artist, 110 Foster.
Tenw:e .,.tern .. differen t
(Including
appointment
levels
and
ctiteria
8 :00p.m Fillmore Room-Squire . Ten
Faculty in Australia also aren't plagued
lor promotion and tenure) , and the pros
Year Celebration A night of fun and exwith the seven-year ''up or out" rule
and
cons
of
computerization
of
records.
dleml!!nl with Jim Santella spinning the
Their first tenure track appointment is lee:
Currently, Johnston reported .
old disco. "A lribure to ten years of activl·
rurer. lor which there is an eight point inAustralian universities are undergoing
ty and maybe a little boost Into the next
cremental scale, starting at about
substantia] pressure from a number of
ten ," says SA's Calder.
$23,000.
(The Austrakan dollar is worth
groups to unionize. Because hundreds of
about 10 per cent more than ours) . In the
Arnericon campuses within the past 15
Sunda,, April 27, I :00 p .m .
year.
a lecturer Is evaluated and
third
years have done so, he thinks his InspecUnitarian Church, Elmwood and
may be granted tenured status. If !enure
tion of the "North American experience"
Fa111Sta.
is denied , Johnston noted . an "elaborate
may bertefft educational institutions in his
BTU&lt;le Beyer and M'ochael Ferber will
appeals mechanism" is available .
country.
head up a program entitled "Resistance:
One step up from there ts ~nlor lecFrom Vtetnam to Carter's Cold War ~
turer. These individuals make around
hie 7th week
$25.000 to $27,000 . The next step is
Just completing the seventh week of
associate professor. Only "distinguished"
his tour. Johnston Indicated that every
scholars make It this far . They earn
teaching and research university he had
bet!'leen $28,000 and $29,000. No provisited so far exhibited a developed sense
visions exist lor promotion lo full proof collegiality . What he found particularly
lessor. Usually, those positions are
interesting, is that when the collegial
reserved for a select few In endowed
model "isn 't working," the reasons why
chairs, relayed Johnston . When such a
not are ~nly di!cussed . SUNY. he
Winners of the sixth annual Academy
chair becomes V"'''nl, and they rarely
pOinted out , Is the ''first organization" he
of American Poets Co/lege l'oefly Prize
do , It is advertised in Europe, the Un'lted
has toured In which reaching and
at SUNY/ Buffalo are : Grace Amigone
Sillies and throughout Australia. The
research units engage In collect1ve
(F'U"St Prize of $1001 . Bill Date tArthur
salary is about $35.000.
bargaining.
Axlerod Memorial Award) , and four
What has " impressed" Johnston the
Ahh&lt;&gt;Ugh Johnston observed that
Honon.ble Mentions-Andrea Abbott,
''pol:arturtk:m" E,enween unlbn 'and non·
most abo~&lt; the Amertcan brand of collecKenneth B&lt;auchler, Karen Peterson, and
tive bargaining is the whole negotiation
union groups exlsts at U/ 8 . he views
Enc Sabinson
and concession pTocess . Because
their deba~&lt;&gt;s , particularly on retrench The winners will pr sent a poefly
ment , as an appropnate and "healthy"
Australian standards are set by the Court
reading. Wednesday , April 23. at8 p .m
way to "test new ldeas." and hopefully to
of Arbitration , which heavily relies on
rn the Rare Book Room (Capen-4) .
d iscover "a measure of accommodation ··
P!ecedent in rendering decisions. the
Groce Amigone, the first place winner
grve-and -take regarding salaries and
Tl!ose opposmg unlonazation in
is a gradual lludent In education .
benefits is limited.
Australia contend it wiD ..centralize
to winning the compehllOn , she had · power" and "diminish the role played by
So why unionize? For protection .
published In oeveral JOUrnals. Her video
collegial and shared governance ," noted
asserted Johnston . Last year, sabbatical
programs called "Poelly Here and Now"
Johnston But what he 's witnessed at
leaves were the subject of government inhave been aired on local cable television
quiry and many fear that tenure is next.
U/ B seems to disprove that argument . he
and she was one c( the participants In th~
offered. Johnston said he would like ro
1979 UnivftSity/ Artpark Poefly Festival
revisit the University in about five years 10
A long-time resident of Buffalo, Ms
see ~ the "collegial model can sustain the
Amigone lJ one of the officers and a
current pressures .. it is undergoing . ·
Sinette J . Winfield. manager of
found i.ng member of Niagara -Erie
employment In the U/ B Personnel
Wnti!!TI, a regional ~Writers' alliance .
Big dlffereoca
Department
. has been selected for listing
Bdl Date . the winner of the Axlerod
Although there are certain lessons to
Prize lor the best undergraduate enfly, is
~n~~s;• Who Among Black Americans.
be learned from higher education's ena 110phomore English major who intends
counter with unionization in the U S
The volume is the primary reference
to pursue a profeoslonal ~Writing career
Johnston explained that big diHere~,.;~
source documenting the · accomplishAndrea Abbot is a graduate student In
exist between the U.S and Australian
ments and background of contemporary
Amerlcan Studie•. with sp«da) expertise
systems which would obviate many of the
Black Amertcans
In Women's Studies. Kenneth Brauc.hler
Eric Sablnton, and Karen Peterson are ari
!J"aduate stud nts In English
Forty-five entries were reulved in th
year's competrtion , ol whiCh 17 qualified
Examtnatlone For Claullk!d, Clerical and
lor the ltnal round ol judging. Professor
Secrelarlal Employeeo c( SUNY / Bullalo
Max Wickert, overaU coordinator of the
contest. comments '"The quality of enApplication Deadline April 28 1980
tries wu, once again, undormly highNew Yori&lt; State announces the follo;.,ing examinations:
the frnal rounds ol judging being par-

won..

6 -winners
announced in
poetry contest

pr;o;

In Who•s Who

!Jeularly diffocuh . Once more we have
evklenc:e c( the continuing abiaty of the
Buffalo c.ampus to attracl gifted ~Writers ."
The Friends of Lockwood l.bary have
made funds available to conrtnue the
compdltion lor at least another lour
years, Wickert said.
Judges for the competilion ..,.,.e Dr .
M llru Banta (rcprewntlng the Friends
ol the l.barieol . Dr Robert Bertholf
(curator ol the University's Poetry and
liM-e Bq,oks Colodlon . and editor ol the
)ournat Cnden«al. and two members c(
the I~ ol tt Department ol English,
WDam Sylwote and Wickert.
The Aalcl&lt;tmy PriM is oponiiOfed an·
nually at over 70 &lt;al'f1PIIMI throughout
the Un 1«1 Sla
"for the bell poem or
group ol pc~&lt;~ms by a Jtudenl • Winners tn
lndMdual campus con
recctve ,..
bONtl
through the autp4ca ol
the .-.c.den:ry ol American Pottt.s, for
tnany paot wlnnes, the pnze hao been a

,....,lion

............ ~........~~~~

Naaabe
00"030

00-052

ntle
Training Aide

Administrative Aide

G-Il
00-047

Qual~ Eaperieece
Three month. Permanent comJ&gt;etitive
servic« In a position at Grado (31 or
higher which is primarily clerical or
seaetarlal In nature .

Two years permanent competitive ser·
vice In a position at ·G rade (3) or
higher which is primarily clerical or
settetarialin nature.
Two years pennanent competillve ser·
vice In a position at Glad" (3) or
higher which It primarily clerical or
l«retarialln nature.

SluMnr Loan Control
R&lt;prewntal!ve
Tralnee Leadlhg to
Grade (l()) .

�Apd 17, 1980

7

SUNY reports millions
in energy cost savings
A .)?tate Universlly of New York com·
mergy..avlngil program has
achieved cost..,votdance economies of
almost S50 million over a live-year period
34 State-operated campuses.
V'~ee Chancellor for Capital Facilities
o-t E. Lanford reports that the SUNY
fuel use monitoring apparatus has proved
so suc:cessful that ...-..1 other State
agencies have plugged Into II. The
Unlvenlty may soon be able to lnvke dty
and county governments and perhaps
even privata Industry to partldpate In the
program , he Sllld .
·
" State University began moving
seriously In the early 70's to save energy
and reduce costs to the State: Lanford
said . "Consequently, during 1978-79.
far example. we effected a reduction In
energy consumption which resuhed in a
cost avoidance of more than $14.5
milllon through the use of our Energy
Management and Budgeting System
(EMSS) at the 34 campuses."

putetlZ..d

Engineers build car
for endurance
race
J105511*,

You may not think n
but In
just one month the hunk of meial shown
above will be transformed Into a floating
race car which a group of U/ B
mechanical engtnHring students hope
win the Mlnl &amp;jo.
.
$inca Nowmber, eight seniors taking
"" ~t study co&lt;ne &amp;om f&gt;ro.
fa.or Andres Soom, ha...ebeftl ordering ·
parts (11011141 of which haven't u y.t or·
rlwdl and bit-by-bit asambllng whet
looks ... a ·fool long,. three-fOOl
wide vchidc far miry Into a wn ewnt collegia meet MXt month all.um's Pond
Stow Pari&lt; ncar ~ Unlvenlty of
Delaware. The race ji' ~e by the
.
Society of Aulomollve
The "boat on wtM.II"
purpooeJy
bun designed by the par1iclpants to be
mare durable than last. The reuon, II
that the tndt- whooe longest run II tan
mlla-meandes through fields and rutty
roods, not to- rtc1tlon about 12 Itt! of
-w.. A propeller tlraleglcdy pieced In
the rar of the car 111111 help them make n
through , they conwnd.
Rula stipulate that the car must : be
lou far under S-1 , 100, be fuel efflclmt,
maneuvaable, vllually appealing,
fJt oomeone 6-3 and 250 pounds, and
· ha\le at INol three a . Other than that,

anything goa. Bec.auoe the only space
av~ for the;r project was the fourth
floor of Furnas HaU, the team aloo had to
design the 450-pound car to lit (minus
wheels) In the building's elevator.
To help defray COlis, the Mechanical
Engineering Department gave the group
$200 and the American Society of
Mechanical Engineas contrlluled $300.
The sponsors provided the engine free of
charge and the students themselves
sprung for the $100 miry fee .·
Since the competition has ten In·
dlvlclual events. each of the students will
get the opportunfty to drive their erea·
lion. Before the big day , they pion to get
the-kinks out of the buggy by test driving
k . Just where. they're not Sllylng. but
the!;• Wfte a few audible gulps when
IIQftiCONI mentioned L..ake LaSalle Md
the dlrt mounds 011 the Amherst Campus.
The students don~ know If they will
eCtualy win anything if they should place
In the competition. and they don 't seem
to care.

"We're doing k lor the glory."
Students Involved are : Bud Rosen burger, Scott Sarine, Bernie Scha\11&gt;,
Tom Bum. Don Mackey. Don Pautler.
Ru11 Kl&gt;k , and Gumter Thiel.

Dr. Lippschutz was
man of faith and dignity
He was a Diplomate of the American
Board of Internal Medlclne and the Board
of Cardlolla.cular Diseases; and a Fellow
of the American College of Physicians
and the CouncS on Clnlcal Cardiology of
the American Heart Ass.xlatlon .
In 1963, he was named professor of
medldne at U/B and three !)eatS later
became adminislra
uooclat chair·
man of the Department of Medlclne . A
respected physician . he was well Uked by
hll colleagues.
Dr. Uppochuu w a member of the
U.S . Navy Raave &amp;om 1937-63 and
Mrved ae c.pta1n during World War II.
Ha II iUIV!ved by his wile . tha former
Myrtle C . Batld; one daughter. Mrs.
Mary Louise Silliman. Shaker Heights.
0 . one Jisrer, Mn. Connie Croc:ken of
Buffalo: and two grandchildren .
Mernorlel donations may bo made to
the Wnaem New York Chapter ol the
American Heart Astodatlon.

Work bepn In 19 71

Two ~QJ re -appointments In
the Health Sclenca _,e announced thll

......

Dr. c.olyn E. Thomu. chairman ol
the ~~of Phytlcaf Education ,
hoe been re.ppoint.cl far a three-year
m So hal Dr John V fopcano .
&lt;:hairman of the Ooopartmcnt of Medical
Ted1nology

Dr Thomae. r~ her Ph 0 from
Ohio

f'Qpuno , who lc*led U/ B In
19!&gt;4 , il laboratory dnc:lor for
Buf

Or

NJfOOII.IIDJn. • • -• •

fe'o Hee"b

()pea to otben
.
John Mather, SUNY's associate.
chancellor lor public service, said the
University would give serious constdera·llon to maklng EMBS available to coun··
lies and municipalities and to private In·~
dustry as part of the State's overall effort
to reduce the consumption of energy. If:
sufficient

State University Facilities Office
spedallsts began work In 1972 on crea·
lion of a computer-based program which
would monkor consumption and cost of
energy. The sophisticated EMBS program which evolved analyzes fuel con·
su~ data on each campus. Short·
falls v.'8re corrected and campus plant
supervis&lt;ln and adminislralors proceed ·
ed to work toward reaching monthly and
annual fuel consumption goals and then
toward Improving on the previous year's
experience .
While the Facilkies 011\ce developed
and phaMd in the system, Lanford
credits the coot-avoidance savlngs$49, 110,197 at the State~aled cam·
puses for the 1974-9 period-to students
and employees who have been con·
slllently -wtlling to Uve In dormitories,
public areu, and claesroomo at lower
tomperatura; to do ..,;th-lao hot water In
dormitory shower~ . get along with la.s air
conditioning. and inlllate dozltns of other
fuel-savings Improvements, such as
keeping some buildings only a few
degrees above freezlnq during vacation

Interest

were

to

Collins named
to national post
Ja~ L. Collins, assistant professor,
Department of Instruction, Facufty of
Educational Studies, has been appointed
to a post with the National Council of
Teachen of English (NCTE) . a profa ·
slonal organization for teacheB and
supervisors of English language arts programs at all levelS of education . In the
u.s. and Canada.
Collins has been named to the NCTE
Standing Committee on Research . The
Committee promotes Interest In and
classroom use of racarch and the find·
lngs of ........,., In the t. .chlng of Englloh
by: (I) publishing annual summaries of
research ; (2) sponsoring publication of a
series of monognophs on reMOJCh slgnlfl·
cant for the teaching of English ; and
(J) sponsoring meetings, conferences.

Personnel news
c-... ,_

lm\i:.'Jf.~.S -

Office of Mental Retardation and Developmental OlsabUlty
at!mates there could be more than 50,000 such children In N.Y. Slaw. State
mental health offlctals at!mate about90,000 New Yorkers (between the ages of
5 and 18) require lntanslve psychiatric help and could one day bene!H &amp;om tho
low's exknslon to include mental illness.
As soon as the Personnel Department recetva further spedflc Information
&amp;om U., Employees' Health Insurance Section In Ahany as to thlllow'o effect ·
on tha N.Y.S . Health Insurance Programs (Statewide. HCP-HMO, and GHI
Plans). K w\1 be published In a future laue of the Re~r.

tt..Jtlo

be-.

demonstrated . This extension would bo
consistent , Mather said. with State ·
University's public service miSsion.

&amp;teiMied Meolloc.l
DIMbW Clllld
Lost week, Governor Carey signed le!llolation which would allow some men·
taUy ID and developmmtaUy disabled cfuldrm to remain covered under their
parent'• medical insurance pions even after th~ 19th birthday. To be eligible lor
Such coverage , the child must be Incapable of "self-sustaining employment" and
must have bun In that condition before turning 19. Previously, such coverage
was mandated only for the mentaUy retarded and physically handicapped . This
change In the law extends medical Insurance prolecllon to other dlsabllltles In·
eluding autism, cereb&lt;al palsy, some forms of epilepsy and certain neurological

c-. ()pea " -

The Health Care Pion hal achedulad a of "open houla" at thft
Medical Center, 120 Gardenville Parkway West, West Seneca, during the
Spring . New stale employees are Invited to bring thft lam!Ia to the Medical
Center for a tour and io have their qOesllons answered.
The following Is the Madlcal Center's Open HOUM Schadulo:
Wednesday, Aprtll6, 23 and 30 &amp;om 5 :30p .m . · 8 :30p.m. ; Wfdnaday,
May 7 &amp;om 5 :30p.m . · 8 :30p.m. ; Saturday, May 10 &amp;om 1 p .m . · 4 p .m .;
Wednesday , May 14 , 21 ~ 28ftom ~: 30p . m . · 8 :30p.m . ; Wednesday. June
4 , 11, 18 and 2S &amp;om 5 .30 p .m . · 8 .30 p .m .

TIM/CREF ~so-

2 appointments

periods.
Two yean ago. four large State agen·
cia - Office ol General Services. the
Oepmment of Co&lt;rec:tional Services, Of.
flee of Mental Retardation and
OevelopmenQJ Otfficulties, and the Of.
Ike of Mental Health-were tied Into the
Universlly'o EMBS. SUNY systematically
turns the resu1ls over to the State Energy
011\ce, which II)OiliiOC$Ihe fuel USIIge pal·
terns of the other agencies.
In addition, . seven State University
communky colleges have become part of
EMBS and it Is anticipated that more will
take advantage of the system In the
future .

Enrolees In the bestc T1AA/CR£F Rdlrernent Pion should have received
their annual conlnld llalemerlt (often refened to as the yarly .,.,.. and yclow"
report) by this lime. Thla stalernent proWia lndMdual conlnld holden with an
annual updale of their TlAA and CREF accumulatlono plus a proJociiOn of thft
retirement annully. If enrolea .Iso had Tu Ooferred Annully (TOAj , prl&lt;&gt;r to
1/ 1/110, theoe contrl&gt;utlono are refleded In the olafcment . Employca
entofled 1n the SuppletMntaJ Retirement Annutty ISRAl prtor to 1/ 11110.
....,.wed • _ . t e •orange and brown" - t covering thft contrl&gt;utlono.
!'jew enrolees after 1/ 1/ 80 In the TOA and SRA will not r«ttve a statement
un next 1/'N&lt;.
·
AI other enroAea (with bestc ERS or TRS Rdrement Plano) recC!ved a
separate "bbue alljl yclow" starcmenl • !hay entOiad In TOA and an • orange
and brown" - n t If they ..uollad In $It\ priOr to 1/1/110. New tnroiiMt
!after 1/ 1I t
not ....,......
until next 11U&lt;
II you are •ilglblo b any of tt- OMual -~~ ae detatoad above and
did not one, pluM cal TlAA/CR£F collkt at: 1·212-490-9000.

�·.
Aprill7:'1980

wht-3:3:

I
I

J

."'1-·---·---·----·--------------------------------------·
P.5

P6

�- Mob IUIW Jogging- fit

pr~y. They ...

yo..-ln&lt;&gt;lti-toqui-1. - - a wodgo solo end 10ft heel .

\

- w- 100M fitting clothing """"""i... 1or tho
- · If cold, • hot end cotton gt.,.. . .
r.c:ommet did.

P4

·-·

- At nltht.- rwftoctivo clothing end run with
- Do not run on howy grovel.
- When running on or nNr roedways, tiWflys face

on-coming traffic.
- Joggers should .... into a running program. Do
not go beyond the limits of comfort for arteral

monthl.
- Alwoyo lncl ude wonn up and cooling down
u:erc:ilft In your pr.-am. Emphasize stretching
leg mutcltt end Adlillos tendons.

P7

Rachel Carson _College
Jogging Map
Syn'bol

-----···-·

..........

Bubble"c.npuaTour

0.9ml
3.1imi

(1 .5kml
(5.7km)

c..kJicle Run
Crofts Loop

2.3ml

(3.7kml

0.9mi

(1.4kml

••••••••••••••

o.,tomRun

(3.9km)

Ellicott loop 1

2.4mi
1.1mi

Ellicott Loop 2

1.6ml

(2.6kml

2.9ml
1.4ml

(4.7kml

000000..···-·-··

f9lre8
0owwnor•aloop

00000000000

a......,.nP•

0.7ml

(1 .1 km)

Mini-M..athon

3.6mi

(5.8kml

Pu-W-rloop

1.2mi • ( 1.9km)

-------------------

./~. A

an

ERST

~~CAMPUS

project

Distence

Name

(1 .8kml

(2.2 kml

A Project of 1he CommUnication o.1tn O•
Sludlrc Credit o.n Phlllpa •. Tom

Epo~~to

a

M8l1l G&lt;ohol

�•

April 17' 1980

CALENDA

by Prof«SMW Jemes H. Bunn and Dean George R,

~- Ptol--. Alon llimhaU and"'""!

Tla....ctay - 17

Hon .,. luchlng "Sclmce In u..,...,. and M
again for~ st.u denu,

11XtH-. 51UA1n VAUGHAN
-

U:C'I\JII£ IN HflilATOLOGY•
lho t.-,. £.dao, Dr Jamri' F

~ •

Holond . ~and- oltho Oopo.1rncn&lt;
ol ON:olotw. Mount Sinal Haopoal and
Sd&gt;ool o1 · New Yort. Clly. O.llutdlng.
floor. ll&lt;dfolo Gono&lt;ol Hooptal 12 noan.
Tholoctur....... hononthc"'""""l/olllf . Stuart
L. V.,._,
-olelnlcol
~ one! '--'logy .. tho llulfolo (;oneql
....... 1936-1966. one! .. lu.o- by """'V .. t.thor o1 Buffalo hematology - Tho BGH
~ Tooo:hOtg labor~ .... n&lt;llnod In his

who- .

miOWnod-

honor- .. - " ' 1972

watd _ _ andtho
on
_ Or...Holond.
_ •_
....,_ .nd Ill treatrnenl . ...... tMI'nber of the
~oiModiclnoolU/Bfrom

1954- 1973

PW. are aho un&amp;trw.~ to maw the procca 10
Arts and L.e.tten students wll be 6bil: to uudy simi&amp;.r
kinds af ~ng COUIWt. :ro th.t end. the first
of theM 'ectum coukt M aled • hlstory of
1~. and dWt second might bot iHn as •
h-ophyol-..ce.
.
I...ECTUIIE'
0... W. . . . M«:1o1ee. Unlwnity ol Rodoosler
Go-od.- Sd&gt;ool ol Monagmwnl. .... gm .......
at tho Low a &amp;onomQ lollooloohop. 706 O'Btlan,
ot 3 :30p.m .. cntitlod "Rights and tho Meanings ol
F.-lorn: booed on • choptft In his lorthcomJng

boolo -

MlchMl ......... .

PHYSICS COLI.OQUIUM•

Sotpodold - . nv.., 0.. Jolon Hoolo. Coo·
nc1 Un~Yoni~Y · 4S4 Fn&gt;naok. 3:30 p m. ColfH at
3 .15.

MEDICAL ETHICS S£1111NAR•
Shoolol lho Bo T,_tod at tho Court·
...._? Or. J....., s,-r. bodu!O for the Moodicol
~. Unlwnity ol Texu Medi&lt;:ol Brondo ~
Gofwen. G-26
4 p .m. Sponocwed by t
~ on Medical Elhia and Humonlom In

-----O.,.IIo
F-.

P HAIIlL\CEl1T1C - ·
tk• . On. P NeotMr llftd G. Faure.
~ Dol!robala. Fnnco C508 Coolooo. 4 p .m .

Rt

01P1.C11CACY IN A Nail EaA'
A - Colli Wor? Dr. KonNtlo N Wob. Foo.t
ol107
0'8Nn 3:30 P·"'· s,.oo-..1 by Sll ~·
- -ondSI\Ac.lomkAIIoira.
Tho· U.S. Gowmmont hoo boon
few
- - b y t h o - u . -·. - odwnturiom-........tho wort.!, lor ....... thoR.- In ·

Sdonco.-.

-·ted

UUAIIFIUI '
·
Rodw a. lolloldmon · Amhont. 4: 15.
6:45 and 9:30 p .m . Gono&lt;ol a d . - $2.10:
$1.60.
e.lolomlng
ol tho ptcor;
-ltleoiRodoyBolboo-byand~ Stollonel from tho - - ol .........
fight oo llod!y 1. tloooogh his monied fllo and
problorno O'Uiod by • · to his r..,.tdo wtlh Apolo

ooquol/--

Cowed

_,........_ .,._,...rSovth v n.
...... ....- .. ~­
lho c...·. . t -. T h o -· ..........
.
.
. . ... u.s.""- policy dool.... _ ... - .. Tho -policy .. ....-.r by

EllA ACTION 1"EAAIl MEETING •
Foo ~- ond tefophoning ., connection
wtlh tho notional ERA , . . , _ campaign .
Amhont Compuo. 6-8 p m Foo locotlcwo col Donna

1 7 - ..... ol
lho U.S S.R. . ond 10 diooontinuc
ol htglo ~
...,..,.,, by ... """""" ol the 1980 Olympic

1liE CHINESe EXP£IIJENCE:

... c....- .............
.--lao
lho-

equ-.-

~--lod-tehcllntobokw

we
....,....
• new
cold..,.
II con·
- -""""be
olth
o_
_
_ Wlllb:
.,thof\oldol
fn......-iol - - .. the

us

IOdoy

ElfGIN£EIIIHG, AIITS MD u::rTOIS
L£CIUIE.S'
.._An_, T..-...., Pr.,;.cto ol tlw
• - • _. - " 1970'o, Ptol .loci&lt; l!wnhom ,

..

330 p m

""'pool . . . _ . . _ ....

diooclplo_,........._

..... Sdooof _....,._......_ ....

ol ~ and tho F...,lly ol Mo

~.-.

ond--the~ol-and

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

Todoy'o _..... il tho oudoor ol

....... -

Sc:ooil!obn and Tlw- ..

-.....,.·Her_ - . -... .

An. Nn1T.....,, .....,.22, olooot3·l0pm In
2t.2
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h
ilw
wthoir_for
_ I O _ __
tho _
_ _
_.....,.

~

Thlo...r"'"-""
· - ...... and -1.01-·
·-- -b y
-fortloo-ol~- . . .

_____

=-~ "'.!"'= ~Toe:..::
.....
.........,.-..-.
_ _ ....... -oo.-y ....

~

friday- 18

.. 6J6.27T3

FIRST AHNUAL WESnliN NEW YORK

Q.OSING IIANQUET.
1\ mulli-couno botoqu.ot ol - . . . . disha,
cotcnd by Loo Chv. lollo"SS Fu (Oo..... ...,.I will
be . . , . - Spoulding Oin1ng Room . Elicott. 7
p m Ad\flnOt purc:t,... o( ticbu at Squire H.l
1ldoo&lt; Offioo ...-.,~ . Goncrol $12.50.
owdonts $7 .50. Spon""ed by tho Offioo ol Cultural
Aff..... with a gr.nt ftom FSA

COIJ..£GE a CONCERT •

T..tlo - . . . . , &lt;:-crt F - lollooiol
, _ won.. by Andr.., Stillor Kottoonno
Con..a
Ellcott 8 p m.

_

-oltholvt~­

u.-.oov 262 ~

On Mldoy, Al)rill8• • ond.boolo olgnlng
will be hold .. J..Wot Fountotn Booko. 532 Ehwood
from S-6 p.m .• and at 8, Rothcrtbwg vAl ...-nt • •
pootry ,.oo~~rog at tho ~ Community
Center, 382 - . - ...... foothe
rud..... $2. Friday'• .......... by •
Nlogon-Erio loll...,. through fundo ouppliod In port
by tho N.tlonol Endcrwmcnt ro. tho .......

Tho..,.,

OIIAIIA '
Lo lleoodo, ~ by 0.. k Campbd. U/ B
......,... ~ of thuh H.mman Theatre
Souollo 8p.m Gono&lt;oiodm......,$3: wdenuond
- - $ 1 . 5 0.

This--_. .

conwdy lo WI ., Vienna
· and tho "&gt;&lt;ondoto

.. tho tum oltho m.n
t h o - o l . . . - o -· A.....,Bwho'o
~to court C . -.cl.o on and 10 on , undll end~
fui&lt;Odo
rIn tbio \lion,_ oon·

-ton---

Tho--- -..

1NF011MAL COUEGE llllOADCAS1EIIS

FACULTY RECITAL •
Ronald Rlchardo, -

and Darlmo R..,..,d,
•busooni5c S.ird Redt.al Hal 8 p.m. G«Mral ad·
. mlssSon S3: U/ B_fac.uhy aaff. alumni and wniOr
dtlzmt $2. "odenll Sl Sponocwcd by tho Oopart.
men1 of Mulic Rhehedulecl from February

NINllt ANNUAL 'BUFFALO FOUl.
FESTTVAL•
M••· Rathskdcr, Squire Hal 8 p.m .

a-

~-~~~~~~ o( a four-day round of
conca11 . folt.Cancing and mulit.
Concoru wt11 be held Friday and Saturday cw·
nlngo tn tho Fllrno&lt;o Room -.1 Clorlo Gym oapcc·
r•...,.. ,.,_ yo• indudo Interlude
nW;glot dlnncr"""'""' In tho ~a., ol Squ....
F~ ond Solludoy .
Tho lativol .. being _ . ...cd by ""' Buffolo
F. . ffttlvol Com ....... • &lt;01cctiw- olIn·
...,_ totud«nto, and ........... ol UUAB Col·
INioouM. Cultu.-.1. Pcoionn... lvto. Film . MUiic •
Publcity and Sound cono-. Fu"'- inlormo·
- .. · · - b y callng 6J6.2957
Diloount tldwts b the ~ ..._ ere avai&amp;lb&amp;e
from Squ.. Hal only. Rogulor ,..... tidocto few .,.
dMdual went~ _. ev.W. at Squlre, fnrhllil.
tiYcly. 1\ddod

Buflolo
Sto&gt;o.
- Food- Co-cpo
· and tho l:codnglon
and
Nonh
o..Jfolo
I

FIFTH AHNUAL U:O IIA£CK I'IIOGIIAJI•
Dowlol F - tn • porlomoonoo ol
· ~- . Squin. 8p m. P,..
- - - b e - ......
oo Sqwo 1ldoo&lt; Offioo for $3, _.&amp; ·
ond$2fao--f0.
Mr .. fcndrldohoo_tbio _ _ _ _ _

-c.n...

- -· --· n d
.. -............
ol
- O ofor
r -...
. . ..
and
Jaw.
.
Fondrldo lo .., who hoo pr.-..., per•
lonood In T.._ -lotoh R.col.tho fllo olll&lt;coo·
o~on·.w-. and

a . . . - -·

In --tho-piO)'Otho
rcodtng
.,_ hil origtnol-- -·

John Brady

.. being porfonnod . . . . . . tho -and ploco.,; T.-.,, ....... 22. ood ..,_
-

dot!• ...,.. 24.

CONFBIENCE •
WRUB. th« campus radio station et U/ 8 . loaltlfd
at 104 Good~ar Hal. wdl host this confrrmce to
be hold on April 18. 19 and 20. Oloc jodooyo and
11aH from 17 loll....., New Vorl. coll&lt;gc and higlo
rchool '"""' wtfl opond the wocloond hero
getting • ..,.. ol Buftolo nlghtlifo. visiting local
record dcala-s. 1ttencUng the BuH-'o Folk FHHY.J.
•nd c.changmglduo With noombon olloi/RUB.

For more Information. contact Gene GennertDI
at 831-4237 .

WESnliN NEW YORK HlGH£11
EDUCATORS IIR£AXFAST SDUNAII•
lloMwel. a...t.. F. Filhor.

d-. -....

ro. Lcodership Dowfopmont,
"""'"'"" Council on Educotion. S4udent Ccnleo'.
D'Youvlllo Collcgo. 8 a.m. Fo&gt;&lt; odd-..1 lnfomoa·
contac:t tho lloponmont ol H;jhcr

Ed-.

tk&gt;n,

479 Boldy, This ........ modo . - by tho

F_..., Foundotion.

NINllt ANNUAL
·BUFFALO FOUl. FESTTVAL •
II o.-. .. 4 P·• ·- O!&gt;on Mioo, Haoo Lounge.
Frae. Tom Fenton ts N.C.
~7 p.• . -fnterlude c,_, Rothokollcr,
Squh . ......rir&gt;e the ~ Cloy Roundon -.1
G..g Hanto. Free.
lp.• . - R-.o. F1rot b i g _ , Loudon
w~ m. ~ - .. John Fahey. and
Bogan and 1\rmotrong String Bond. Tlclooto: $3.50,
..-.... , $5, --oiudonlo: half........ undor 12: chldron undO&lt; 5. he.
AuiOhorpiot 8ryor. - . , . ' - boon widely
horoldod. "'_.. pubboiona •tho v._
•·Jooc~ . hand~-·
JohnFohey'o .... ....,._llyiolo~ko ·
fluoncod by one! rogt!me Bogan and
1\rmotrong . . the roo! thtng

v-..

COMMIT'IEI; ON MEDICAL ETHICS MD
HUMANISM IN JIEDICIN I...ECTUIIE•

ol
s.-rCcroc.rolooe
. .._.. ear.
for tho
~~F:,:u:;

' - ' ..... s-1 ... AeM. Dr , _

:= =-:

-

H OIIIZON 1M Nfl.IIOIIIOl.OGY•

F-

Cor1lce l Vl•••l Ar•u le Prl••tu:

T-""*-' ~- ....

�Apt 17. 1980

'La Ronde'
'lA Ronde' promloea no fewer than 10
locliKrdlons u II unfolds In Harriman,
Thundlly·Sundey. At far left, Shdla
BanSach and O.J. Baker cavort. That's
BUI' Goucbo rubbing Christine Dunford'a
foot.

..... harmonoc;a , .... hormonium. the ........ ....
Jew's harp • ..,. 1u10 • ..,. mandolin. lhc bonJO. and

!he bowouiU He's ...,....,. ol .... Soogmalwn ol
Vwginie Wid t.eaeha foil; instrument~ at Okt
DominiOn Un!Yenity
8 p.m. C1or1&lt; Gym MWni F..... tho Roct&gt;oo and
l.Nftpool Judie~ pertonn "' a conotr:1 dedic-.d to
Simple Gifts. • locol hoven for mernbcn ol ebuMd
farnks Tdocts S4 50 I&lt;&gt;&lt; ri&lt;udents. S6 foo Olhm
Gifts ol food """" and ldodwn
go 10 Sompio
Gifts for UM! of home:lell ~ and chJdten
The l.Mtrpool Jud1a • • • lemaM • ap«b
gn&gt;up. dw R~ ere satet~. Maggie . Ten-e and
St.wy RocN. who deun they N~ ..~yte . 51N1r1J
and Mnsibilrurt:&amp;... and M&amp;ml Fanna II Joan s-.z·s

u-

baby~

WOllEN'S SOfTIIAU.'
R-.u Wcslcyon Colleec
Achaon f'teld I p m

!doubiol&gt;ood&lt;r) .

MUSIC'
.lohn 8ouiOer, formet Cr a!M Asloalt . and
Gr~ .,ercuuao Ape ,.. •

&amp; azilien p«JCuuton
cnwmblo B-d Rcdlal Hoi 3 p m Gancrol ad ·
mtHior'l S4. U 1 B community and HOIOI clllzens 13.
students S I SponiO«'d by the c.-n~er of the
Creab\loe and Pftforming Am
QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS LAII

SHORT COURSE'

Mimi Farina headllneo 'Simple Gifts'
night at the Folk Festival , Saturday at
In Clark Gym.

8

Encuttna Stadldcal ProtJTarns Throuth ln-

l~ecdw Tennlnala, MichHI Wilt.miCM'I 213
Bakfy S-7 p m For furttwr infonNdon c:d

636-2110
CAC FILII'
Andy Warhol"• Fr-ankeMtakt &amp; Honor Cartoon
170 MFAC . Ellicoa 7 30. 9 45 and 12 midn;ght
GeMnl edmiulon Sl 50. lfUd«.niJ Sl 25

hiotory o( odonce . l'ro!J"am aiScknco. T ochnology
and s-ty, MIT 255 Copen 3 p m
P""- tho fan...,. ....., on dw history d
R~ ~lienee in ihe U .S . Gal ham k uthor oi
·s.-t 1\Qdo"''l o( Scknco" •nd "Scknco and
)'hlooophy "' dw 5cMot Union • He hos boon •
Gvggonhclm Fdow •nd a Rockd.... Fdow and
t- a ,_book slaled f&lt;X urly
Cal
uml&gt;la lJnivcnlly ...... "Commng 8o&lt;wHn 5cknco

_.-.-by,

•ndV--"

INlDINAnONAL COIJ.£GE FELLOWS
P'ltOGRAII L£CTUII£'

~,.._lol....,..doNIIP....-·

- . ....._ 0oooo1oo w..dhom. SUNY/ Ahoy
1

Canollo- 0. .1oM M Aloyoon , Callfonw In
uv a1 T~ 1085 Slwrmon I p m
Sc&gt;ontoood bv dw lnwd~ G&lt;- Group

. ......_
1111 '

Ttw~ai-.ISoon&lt;oON!C. . .

al

~

s..- ... be hoobno a ........ ..,..

br tho SUNY u.t.on ~ ..,
' ' ' 1Nf ~.hom 1-4 pm in
Ttw KM 101 IWdy p_. wll be . . - bv

-H

Oonoloi· L C-. Sdoool aiSoool Wol
at
SUNY J ~.-., B&lt;ody. - al

o.... sue,_.,-."""'·SUNY• &amp;tWo
T - . l)opMI.- ol Goography
SUCto.- ~ wll be r...,
ol
dw . - . . c - oloho ~a- and

Tol r

Gooy

Non:-.. . .

-. -. . . .-..
.

SUNYIIW!IIo

C4&gt;logo al

~­

IIIOCitoocN.. PIWIJIACOt,OGY
a-~

" - - AqpdNr, Dt Goronoclo II Eb. . . . -. ........... -~CI21
C..2pM
·be-~

~=· ;~m Gpcl1

on economa
ttw

of

.._ . .,_ ....
t...t........_..,....D
'a ·
_,,

iOCIOLOGY { P5YatOl.OGY L£CTUII£
AJQ) I I O i Q - '

~

.~el~

II

110WAC,
-

2p •

.... _ . .. _

~otw.

... _

.. Uk,

COMPANY CONCmT'
.
lJBda y-.rry, ~ - ~nitd on pi.llno bv
OlaM ~. UnMrilln l.JnwG'Aiilf 0\urch ,
Dmwood at Wftll F.ry 8 p m 1'lckets ~ S5,
a~o~a~ at Emma The lktsy . Ta•lng Luves.
U / 8 and 8uHalo SlAif' Colege lick~ offices Chikt
CAr~ proykted
LJnda TileTy k a Jingcf. tong wnwr and drum
mer Clffic Ptmip Elwood h• Nld . " Tolcry " one d
tN Jtrongftt singm around I mut'l strong in every

way- powatul vc*:e fWm pitCh. rtch tone and wwh
a bluesy, ,.ay. pptti-Mged inflec:tion rhat realy
moYCJ lyrics along "
Oial"'rr! L.ind:My Ia a pYnlilt and tong writer from
L01 Angdn .and alto .,._VS dw elrctric bal;

education and on eduaot.IONII p&amp;.nnng Ht hai
bHn a f«oulty ldowofthe In~ lftltltut« for
EdUQtiorw PL.nning
and ~ lorrMrly
drf!CIOI of the CompwatiYe Educ.Mion &lt;An&amp;er ~ tM

Lo R....S.. d•KI&lt;d by Oorek C.mpbcl U B
...tttant p;ofesJOI' at thutre Harnrn.an Thutte

~;!..O:.. ... _..or-w.a.n

tcniOf~SISO

"' .p.,.

..,...,....,.,... ~ .... dunn{l
Apnl end M.y The ..,.,., an annuAl ptOSPm .,.
dw ~ ond "'--uncle tho doodlOn d P,.,
Philp G Allboch o1 dw Focullv d Educo
-..on.a Stydan, N..tuta '-c1ura on~ tn Inter
........, . . . - . a d.:u-.. ol confkl ond
_......, ., g1o1&gt;o1 poiOiia and an analysis ol
Ttw l«tuns •• _., 10 dw publi&lt;
and - · "" o( &lt;"-11o T'wv •• planned .. be . .

-w _..,.

todwiiiUdcftloand-

tlculoriy

~o( ............... ~. ··-Ww'!l

lo-;:.~ .. dw- wtl 10kc plo&lt;o .

~Apt~ S:: ~~on

"Worid

DRAIIA'
Soudlo 8p m GancrolodrNiiooOn S3. 11udcntsand
EVEHINGS FOR NEW IIUSIC'
Aid 11'obhoehf. - - l n·rftidoncc . Unula
Oppcoe, ,..... pian"' Worl&lt;s by LlgeU and
BUd RociOol tw 8 p m Gancrol ad
""'*&gt;n $3 Sll.Kknb . U/ 8 communtty and wniOr
cii~HM S1 Spontored by the Center oC 1tw
Cnolivc and Perf~ AtU

Cllf'r'l«fa

1090._,.

EJIGIJIIEEJIIMG ICIEJICZ.

o:::::;~ AND NUCUAII

El

--·

- G tw 1 0 4 - 3.30p•

UUA8 FA.II'

-----llwlllldool
··60
..,.,_ ··-·-,

8 1191'91 s.-~­
•• IS, 45 p,. o . . . . . l - 12 10.

avL

-

•

- .o...
o.--., o.&lt;l ~.
018

INnJINATIONAL FIESTA '10
Theu! will be an d~layt. . lood Wlif\9 and
cuhural ~of vario\11 na1aona\ groups At 6 P m
1n Squtrt' South Dining Hal the-re "- J be an Al1
diSplay AI 6 30 m the Squire N0t1h Oming Haft
d1nrwr W\1 ~ wrved . and • ~how "-·• begJn a! 9'"
tlw nDmor• Room
o,ponwrf.*d by 1h.&gt; lnlt'fn&amp;honal Student ASSOCWl
hon

CAC FILII '
Andy Warhol"• Fr•nbNtdn &amp; HOfTOf Cartoon
146 Oocfcndorf 7 30. 9 45 ond 12 midnight
Gancrol ad- S I 50. students Sl 25
LECTURE '

Mwcho.f'cmln_, T"-11 and Procdce.
EJal\e l:.eeder 330 Squ.-e 7 30 p m Child one
... be pr&lt;Widcd .. Room 332 Sponoorcd by
Toktoy Cologo and Womn&gt;• SrudtCS Colog&lt;
IIUSIC'

U/ 8 p.,.a.o~oo Enoemblc, looturing Jan
Wjljoms. - .. and
Kasprowicz. conduc ·
tor Premterc peri~ of "She:·, Down tbe
Road by M• w .. n.. ; by
SimoM. Boird
Roatol Hal 8 p m Gancral admltooon Sl 50.
ltude:ntt. U/ 8 commurnty and yruor cihzcns Sl
Sporuoocd by .... Ccn.., ol lhc Cr .,,... and Pcr-

J•.,..

•uv

fonntng Ans
Lo R. . . . dlrodcd br Derek C.mpbcl . U / B
.,.,..... ol dwatrt ~ Ttwa..
StudiO 8 p m ~ ~ S3 INdents and
Mniot dtlMnl

s 1 sa

"":!:

~·

0..'-TMAT.. a ~ MdiNIS6H&lt;
-~I
· o..--.,
~. t-.ov of Satarday ~-Compln 3pm
col 636-2177.

A fatanating . thoughrtul k:Jok at the ltvet. of hve
hdan pr~~:Anl tamilift at the mel of the 19rh Cl~M­
tury ErrNnno Okni. the d•«:k:M' , edrtor and
photogr-aph.f , demonllr.set 1M tyranny of nature
and the sooal srructure dW:Unng to the pusantt. as
they plant and harvt'il thew crops , many . hllw
chlkhen . \ebof tn a tttXb~ mill. and enjoy life

=· =.,.

UIIGUIST1C5 .aDIG

F« ........ -

admiSSion S2 10. ~ud6\ts 51 60

DRAIIA'

UUAIIIIIDNIGHT FILII'
F.-- {1972) . dndod by Alred • . _.
ConMtmce l'hea• , Squlr&amp;. 11..30 p m Geneal
a d - $2 10. lludents Sl 60
HtiChcoc:k rdWMCI to E.nglltnd .tl• 20 ~.r&amp; 10
dnct . . ....... IAnd&lt;&gt;n .......... and ....

:-~ewe';:',_-=t!
::::~~~~ . control
.nd dw-ada'l

- .... _ -ACE
-- .... __T-W·-··-T-

-brohoo.-ol---... - . . . a - - y

BUFFALO WOMEN'S PIIODOCTlON

UUAII FILII'
Tho Tree ol Woodco Clop (haly. 19781 Con·
~~~ l"heatte . Squre 4 15 and p m Ge:~al

19

GAIIIJflQ AT U / 11

_ . c-on Cofleeo ..... "'"'""""'Y ""'*'

wllhstlc*~fortta. ..mn.,
vou ... in
'lllldl0afftltl!l6ngal9a m . J02~ . Eiia:Nt

Sunday- 20
SUPERSTIUIS'

Ttw V - Clull'o 2nd Annuol s.._... E_,
compdlhon ~ tn~M' Wamt The
8ubb1c . . .. Amhont Campus SUn..... II 30

...

conduncd
"' ..,.fieldon the
' -.,.
&amp;b
·-··"-·
- Ttw...
be
the ewnl of ,..., In 11w 8utlb'l . . .

w. '"

·-~: -···-·

To liot ew111S In the "CaaeNNar." c:aJI
.leaD Shrader at 636-2626. .
K-v; '"()pel ....., to ~ with a pro-

leMioMI ..,........ , ~'()pea
10 the public: · • '()pee to ..........,. of
the U11lveralty . Uol.... otherwiM
opcllad.
lor ........ cMrtiOI
..,..._ cao be purchaMd at the
Halllld&amp;et Ollce.

,. I

�Aprt 17, 1980

-eoa.. -

•Calendar
t l - - u ..... 4)
IIIIOI'W IA5EBAl.l.

p-

Fiold I P-"'·

...

- SI· Sc!-*• ·~
.......
aohon.

c..r.t&gt;my Loi«.
Studonls. 50

p "'

ltiFA RECITAL •

MtoeM T-•.Qyoa. ~·no. Bolnl Roooal
Hal 3pm F - UUABFIUI"
The Trw ol Woo4n 0.., IJ1alv. 19781
Wt*lm.M Thu.trc . Am~ 4 1!) and
p m
Gcnonl- 10. ... . -.. S1 60

u

FliCUL1Y RECITAL •
Squtr11: Hukt., organ

a.ndl . Sym,hony Cadc

~

PrPsbyttnan

flfll

p m F,.. admooslon

SUNDAY WORSKIP SEIIVICES "
~

LECm1E ON HISTOb OF

THE

DEYELOPIIEJIIT OF~ JIEDICIN£"
Fro.doeA!ooo-aodw.._...Pn&gt;-

NIHTH ANPIU.\1. BUFFALO
FOUl FESTIVAL •
eo-try o.,_ Worbhop -

T•..ttay- 22

K - R00n1. E - Complp 5-6

p m
Ewryone: tnvt~lld 10 at\e:nd Sponiored by rtw Inter

.._,..Stodeni M'"""Y

1._ Owuin E Rown&amp;cr!l. U n - ol Pmn·
ll!llv- . cunonlly • !he ltiJiiWie ol Advaneed
Scudla. "'"""""' G-26 F - 12.30 p.m. Span·
...... 1111 1!10 Dcpert.- ol H-v. Clllord Fwnas
Collogo ..., !he SchocC ol Mcdlonc . E. . _ II

-

MEN"Ii GOU' •

Caieoole ~-

Aud ubon

will bo """'""""'

diK machine .....
&lt;Oft&gt;PUiel 1call&lt;d

Cou&lt;oc I p.m

ENGINEDUNG , ARTS AND LETTERS
LECTURES"
The N&lt;utrolfty o/ Sclmce' from \llrtuc IO lo·
DOCftiU. Prof Lorraine J D.H1on. a fdow of ft.
Colu- Soooly of Fellows 262 Capen. 3·30
pm
Sec lllursday 17 lisJsng for background de\aik
LECTURE "
AI the CrourNds: 11M Talmudk V... of fAr.
~ Chrittlanlty, ProfftiOf Lawttna H Schiffman.
pt'olntOr of Hebrf'W and Judak Stvdirt at the
Dtpanmenl of Near EMwm La
and

a

device

Boch locluns thould bo olin- 10 lacuhy and
.,......,. m ·~ · phytta. goolow . and

_..,..

10 .........

Tho llpplc Compu..., Tho
thought to N~~« ~·· ~ b

compu...---

-

- John

ptw\&gt;s . •

dnal-nl prol. - l n Hcoilh Rofa,.d ,....._
lions hmr. • the repr~ coordNtor of this
pro,n::a. He a • rrwmber of the Auociation for
Educ.ationaJ Commuruc.dons and Technotogy

-1

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR•

A Ch&lt;mlcal Aftolotly ao
Kloctlco. Gnhom Andrewo. U/8. 107

~

Ollrion ~~ p m R.&amp;uhmcftls.

ol MechankM Engineering,

Ma~o~. lnJtitute of
4-~ p m R-....nos

Ltler•tun! Ne-w York Unlvett-srty
ofdm.n
Theatre . Norton Hal 4 p m R~rMnts 10 bll!
wrved FrH admiSSk)n Spomored by tlw O.HICS
Club and the- SA Spe•ken· Burt&gt;.au

Technotogy 337 Bel.
folow io The Common

C AC FILN "

MUSICOLOGY LECTIJRE "
The Sacred and Cere:monJ..I Mutk of Johan·
nn Oeonla, MMgarel Ben1 Br•ndetl Un~ry
8atd Hal 4 p m

S..... F..,.. ol ln. Lao (1964). 7 p m • . Sflenl
Runftint, 8 SS p m Confermce Thotre. Squre
F-ree admisskm
Scvm F.ea. Wllh Tony RarwMJI aOO a.-bare

ad,_SISO otucionu$125

~·
.
La 11-. il..ocd!, Dcrft&lt;

~ret

Campbd U 8
...ont profeNOr ol theatre Hamman Tlwatr
Scudio p m Genft.-f admtNietn $3. ~CucHnti and
MniOf

mcnl

UUIUI WEDNESDAY NIGHT ALMS"
.

Andy WWhor-1' FrankeMtdft lr: Honor Cartoon
. Conf~ Thalre, Squwe 7 and 9 p m General

~ ~

dw faculry at

fou.rtNmth and fifteenth «ntury muSIC . largely but
no1 eKC1usrvfty Engltih She studied at Cambndge
Vo~hfte she wro4e ~ d!SSertaOOn on ··The Old H-..1

....,_ -

dtil«nt $\50

Monday- 21
ART HI TORY I.£CTlJR£ •
A...- MW.twt Fr nco Pelftfinl, Ptofeuor
MoN SNw. Unlw&lt;IOili ol TO&lt;onlo ISc.ari&gt;on&gt;uohl
310 fotloB II • m
~COUNCIL ECO D COFFEE
CONVEIISATION •
To Hoi With Woot.. Dr Roy Koplon 242
~

lWnt. a

&amp;.ndeis anu 1975 hti COI'ICftMd herwW With
tource stud.es and ~ional techruqun of

I p m Ewryone welconw Retruhnwnt!
Bnng ..... lunch and bring • triond

l'ttARMACOLOGY AND THEIIAPEUTlCS
SEJUNAR•
-Todoondbllwooa&lt;o&lt;OidoBiock
0..... ol Quo&amp;aJ RftuM at dw
-_
• Dr Mohlon
F Kricbo1
_.......,..
ol .
phyoiology.
SUNY
lJpolow

.,._.Mt

CONCERT"
TM SUNY Singers, ,azz VCJCals K.thanrw Cot
rw:l l'hutr-e. El.coct 8 p m
'The ~~ . a group of U1 B stut:kmts from
va101n Ufth. are unde-r the dW"ection of O.nwl
Bclmondo
•

TENTH ANNUAL ERNEST WITEIISKY
NEMOIUAL LECTUIE•
.............. Producln9 edit' A S..V., ol F""'
Decada of Rt:March. 0. Astnd F19aeus.
Kwolinsb lnltituw School of Medle~ne and the Na
Bacemotog~eal

honat

S1oc-khokn

t....botatory

s-dco G26F..t&gt;e&lt; 8JOpm

Mel

Thl! lectur-e . ~ by U t B'• Center tor lm
· munology
!he Dcpo&lt;tmcnl ol Mooboology
honon IN '-te U B depllrtnwnt c~ and
tnW!'fTWI~-known wnmu~

Eden.

IS

an optlmtibt: fant.ssy / •lleg?ry/ phil ·

0$0phy/ mythoklgy t~~le of a W~m1 lown visrted
by rM mysWrlovs orcus of Or Lito _ Rendell poJ·
treys ~~tYen of ttl. map- charecwr. .n hiS circus
Sh-nt Running is 6 prophellc: drama o4 the ef
forti of one man {Bruce J:)nn) 10 U\lt? thtt leS1 of
E.arth'• f~ whk::h has been O!brted '" spec«
fmgh~en Dem gives an .......,.., pcrl""""""'
1lw hlm JN~rks the d ..ec:IOriel d.but ol special ef
fects wurd Oouglat T rumbuH (2001 . C1oH En·
C)OUfttl!f'SI

FILN"
Le G.f S . - (Jean Luc Godo&lt;d. 1969) 146
{Mftndotf 7 p m Sponsored by the Centft for
Media Sludy
MUSIC"
Ron Kutvh , composer Sound Image perior

rMnee (vdeo computers) Media Study/ 8uffe1o
207 ()rrla\l;are A.w. 8 p m Gomer-.! admission S 1

POETRY READING "
Wrmen of the sixth

•nn~ Ac.demy of
A.meran Poru Colegc Poetry Prize e1 U / 8 :

M&lt;dicol C.... 124 F - 4 p m R.&amp;nhmcniS

•345

Coned

Gna ArifoM. 811 Date.. Andru Atiboct. Kenneth Bra~ . "-rm Pdertoft, aad Eric s.bln·
- - P-v and Rao Book Room.
8
pm
A.-p-dfolow

Wedneaday - 23

Thursday - 24

HEALTH IIELATm l'tiOFEIWONS
COlLOQUIUM lH ALLIED HEALTH•

Nnts IIASEIIALL •

us

c-n-4

IIIOCHDUSTIIY SEMINAR•
_

T -...... oi~II........... Ea·
.. - - - . . v -. D r - M

IW. ~oi~ . OW..~
M&lt;dicol C....
108 Slwnnon 4 p m

Collet .. 3 JO

__ .......

o..m...

AIICHITECT\M£ I.£CTlJR£ "
""""'"' _. 0....,. lo !he ......,..., R ......
~. T - Lee. M IT
........ and

ol

.,._

- - 335.._ 5J0p81

-.&amp;..

-.. _____

WM **DAY NIGHT
(1
.7p•. - - o i A
(19321. 140 pm 170 MFAC • . , _

-Gory~--

~Mid~ ... ~..._........ ... """ ....

--... .-...--.-a..Nonw

_

A_.
"" ..........

Mlllid&gt;"-~on~-"'"-""'*"'..__

-·-

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· · - - o i ... AlCaponc

.-_.,._.,.._us

~..oo~.~or_....,.,..o.o...w.~

....

K_T..__,.,_o_R......._

E.Maobolh -

· _

, prol-. phyolcal

" " " - 124lh
FloO&lt; Con1atnco TOWt!l
QOOf'l

· K

GEOLOGICAL SOEHCES SDONAII•

~ 0 . - Floo4loot leo
0...1o dwY.._ DoYid E. . . - - .. Jet Pn&gt;pvltioa L..bor•tc.y, C.tdornt.

In ®t

of

T-...., R_.t8. 4240RidtotLoo 3.30-4110
p m Colfoo ond .......,.._ d bo _...a 3

____
.
-·A
-Ior.,. . .

......... S_Coifogo _ l P -

Pidd I pm

-

AMEIUCAN STUDIES PRESENTATION"

SocW ~ ollho P..- R - G...
man Pat 1004 a..nco. 2 30 p m Ewryone

MEN"Ii TRACK A FlD.D •
......... -~ . R ~FIIId 3pm

VID£0 DlSC AND EDUCATIO ·
UVE INTDIACT1\IE SOIIHAII"
To b o - .. llw 1Jnlad c.Mnl P*t&lt; ..._
- · 2110 M- . . _ Hleh-Y -_
-_
- F--3-4301'• olA
__

,...,.
.... .,.
P*t&lt;-

I NTEJINAnONAL C0U£GE
FEU.OWS PROGRAM LECTLWE "
llOd eon-.. lo GloMI Politico' A
Rlchonl Mo- .. Rutge-1
~ l0901!ow&gt; 3pm

c-.-

- Noolol. -

CIIEST I.£CTlJR£ •
c.,.-1 Lame.- ol leo. Dr ..Aid&lt;a H;guN.
~of

A.,.,aadl'hyolcs. HofoUidolJruv&lt;nl.

ly.

.!_, 254 Fn&gt;nuok 3 30 p m
Calef " - " ~

s.o-o.

s,.--1 ·~~v

~--~~--a
I

C o n _ o i . . _ _ ... E.d_

c.---..-T~.,-

,.....,
_

..

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

n..

cwoo.-....
Tht

.................... _)'ldao

PHARMACEUTICS SEMINAR•
~ ol M&lt;thldlliA During lhc
T r • - ol Endocordlth "'
Dr Fn.h
Genge . graduate student. C508 c:oob 4 p m

l!a-.

UUIUI FIUI "
The Dftrhunlft' tl978J . Woklmen The.6tte.
Amherst. 4 : 15- .00 8 p .m . General admission
S2 10. SludeniS $1.60 .
• The story of an ~~ community unWuere:Med
In the oulildo world. !he friendship - . . , bv«
men . end how they are al affected when 3 of the:
f!Wnds are drafced in th. Vt.rtnam W¥ Robert
OeN.-o g~ws 6 pdWuful performaru Winner of 5
Academy Awards.

HARRINGTON LECTUIE•
OpM,te-Ergic: P&amp;lhway, ht the 8.-.la. 0. &lt;An·
d.ce Pert. pharmacotogist v.;th the National In·
slJtut• of ~taJ Hea.kh . Betha:da.. Md G-26
Ferber 5 p .m
Much of Or. Pert's raearch involves ide.ntrfyklg
na&amp;rons in the brain whkh make cndorphtns as wei
•s tht? p.Athweystlwy take to re:fieow pain Wh8e 1M
omturiel-dd treatnwnt of .wpundure h. bern
bolh lOUie&lt;! and booed!, pallonll ..., phyofdans .
PM con~ thai animal studta as we:U as •
smaller study in~ing human petie.ntllndcates ttM
t«hn~ t«k&gt;.ates pain-killets manufactured In the

--T~c:.mw.
Dr HoiluN. .. ln1cmollonoly . . . . , . _

A ~adua of Bryn Mawr and John Hopktns. Or
Pert k author or co·•uthor of more than 60 prof •
sionlll arudn and wM reundy Oh th« national
te~n program. "'Nove" Her- m~jof arus of
reward~ ndude the mechanism of opiate actloo
and physiologlcol funclion of

dogonous"""J&gt;hlncs

cndorph"'' ·~·

ASSOCL\nON FOR WONEIWN
SCIENCE RECEPilON •
Tho Bullalo clw;pler .. ... Aloocialfon IO&lt;
Will hold • ~ 1&lt;w Dr
Condaco Pm m mocfla1ely "'"' ' - ~ o'clock lee·
ture, 1ft the Haymes Drling Room, Squft. Hall al
6 1 ~. AI .,. .,vllcd .

W
omen.,-

ERA ACTION TEAM IIEE11NG •
Far ............ and~ .. ~
"""' !he nallonal ERA ,...,.,._ ~
Amhon! C.mpu~ 6·8 p .m . fO&lt; Ioc;o-caii Donna
.. 636-2773
DRAJIA"

""Enc

......, Allrad"• ' -· - a n d dirodcd
n..-. 681 MaO! S.... 8 p m
Gcn«r.f " " - S4; .................. ........ $2
ADS """""""'occoplcd Spontored 1111 lhe Dcpao1Bcndcy C....

mml olllM.atre
BHedon the trlMof O.C. WlkM, for "'homow• ·
ual olfenta.'" Lord Alhcf'• L«IIIIW cbronlda

Wide"• low ... l/OU"'I I.O&lt;d 1\hcd
Douglai Raihft """' ...... lddng .. .,. Doc.
Wide lcgmd . ......, - · ' - " • polling
dwwader study of • 11\M\ '""*'9 ~ ~ .., •n
opprctiiiWe IIOCitty The pa.iy..- wtth a man's fiNI
Ndz..Oon that to tru~ SW\Ii\le. one ~ fob.
one·, own ~ n.ature Thil is tt tMrnc thilt Enc
Bendoy ...........cd _ . , - .. -playa.

-

~--

..-

~
E.::!"::.:-.

o/Golloo

.................................. ...,.._.. -..g

Mel~~~~=.::.

........ two do,.. Ho .... -

""""""'........

, . - . ol IMd Allrad"o ' -· whk:h had "'
world p....,... '-11 .,.. in Aonct. Author Jtnd

p--~~.·
.,.
u..--., ol
~

-Canada Eri&lt;Bendoyhao,_
.. ploy ""' ~ .....·ofDoc.
Wide
......... ......... far .. -&lt;Jocor.- •lwvc
......- ol ~ ...._
" - T..- 10
New Vorit ollcnd None of lho
~ .-.Met \0 hem l'hOfC promillne Of U

... ..........
-- . . .,._.............
-Oftd-_ __w....._..-.... "'"
.._~c..-nily

Or. Marprec Acara. allillanl profeaor .
Dcporonenl of Phalmocology and Therapeutics.
108 Shmnen 4 p .m Coffer served et 3 :45 in

body.

SpontOred by ttw Cenlel" of ~ Cre:M:r\o't end Per
fonn.ng Ani

F-..e:us hes been tn\o'Oiwd tn •n are• of
rflll!.ch 'tlfollhch • looking .t Uw functions ol dlf·
ferent types of whHe blood cell
Tho Nallonal ~ l.obo&lt;alory of
Swrec:kn •
10 N
c~ter b t&gt;tse.se

wna.r

CEU..11A11 PHYSIOLOGY SEJCINAR•

S.IS.
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR•
MHO p_, Gcn«rolfon, J F Louts. o.p.o.

BFA RECITAL •
.ladl ~~ ....,.,.,... Holy T""•Y
lu~ Church , 1080 Mwl Sl 7 p m Ffft ..:1

-

PHYSICS COUOQUJUM•
._..., . . . _ _ .. Adtcwtood ()xygoft. Dr.
51ewn Gftvor\1, Camel U n l -. 454 Monaak.
3:30p.m. Coffee at 3.

··---.-.g
-·--·l
hc-Mdlco
.. .,.u.s

.._~

Ho . . . . . loawnton

Roono1 . 4

Fliolay· ~•

330p

.

Rldgtl.oo. on TheMochoolcol

, _ _ . , l e o.

�Apt 17. 19110

Campus service set for

Dr. W. Leslie Barnette

_____

Dr. W. L.ak

_ _ _ __ _

........w...,_

a.c.
..........,..

Tholoogt _ _ _ _ _ .,.._

~..._. •
~-

lllch.d

John

e-. Joon

,.... Kooooloc. ond obe lloponmom ol
· Soul Don

Tho- .... Donoo OPDA'

cbtl.tho-U/B
"',._
btl - -n..
""
Opon Wort..hap
8olrd

,._ ....____ ,J--Ul

- I W Sp.m M_.. _

_SJfocul.

~- -~onlllo:!!iohond

26111• ...t. - - s..ndoy. l\poil27

~-. I

2~•St.

...... Ambcnl

o..-. Thio....,.

..rw..- ..........
'*' wlih ~funds
-tho
so... c-.ct
tho Mo ond
Van

N•-

on

...,.~bthoMo

-

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not,....

LOCI(1110()0,

AlST
IIUFFAI.O
IIEADIIfG •
_
_ POEnrY
.... G..wo........._
Tho
Rodlngo ... bogln o1 8 p m.

.......

~
rwd.
ln addiliOn. we . . eilo inlrlmNII!ed 1n epplic.wlts

llq,y/ .....U. - for' - . . . ..........
- - col 636-2394.
THE WIIITING PlACE
p_, s*lg up? Tho Wrlllng Ploco can holp
)IOU T•olnod .,_ ... holp )IOU wlih ""Y . _ ol
- Tho Wding - . ..
f&lt;w
poor wnlen, I .. 6or "¥JJ''II who _... 110 \Ade ff~
1oc1iw1!1 k•a..c-dlnlloldytW. R_,.336ond
i l - dolv loom 12-4 ond Mondoy. Wodnctdo\1
.... Thondoy ............ 6 -9

TYP£WRrTfliS FOil

FACU.TY AND S1\JDEHt USE
T~ lew t.a.loy ond otudonl .,.. In
Lockwood MmoiaJ Lb:ary . . now a\'~ in
R"""' 419. occanl;ng 10 0. J Doni&lt;! Venn. hood
o( tho libnry
Akoy~lhcuwoltbo1WO._.,.....

now ...,.._.., can be r~ ~ the Gr.d~
11-.. Oak T - c o n bo UMd to. a period

of two houn ...

Qnw

ft.._.

UGl.: TYP£WRrTfliS AVAilABL£
Two typr;writes .-e
few 11uc:Xnt uw ..

Notlc. .

Lb"l! fa&lt; lu"'- inlonnotion
.. 1ho Qaolollor&gt;- Oak

the~

&amp;000 PIIUilliJE • STII£SS INDElt
TESTDKl

Blood--'""'"'.. indu-

-

... bo ..,.._ ID -.1 . - . . ol tho u.-.Mv

~oot Wodnndoy. l\poil23 ...t Thunocloil.

llpoil24.-9•.m
102pm at-thoAmhonl
....
_ _ ._,n....._
......

Mllood- RO&lt;j'ft. Squn ._~ Se&lt;ond Aocw
l.ounp .....- - .. ~ U."lll

c_.

H..;. blood ~· .-1ect:s one tn . . Amerarns

~we "nc:ommon · the~ wey10~11
~ blood pr. .UN' • high .. to t.v. • cNcked

And
I )IOU do'- I!Vh bloocl - ·· """" con
you do' ln add.Gon to ... 10-*'1 .. . _ t'WO
tho-""'· """"'" ..... c:ond.-.1 btl tho
Schoolol ...... ........ - - ...
. . . on how 10 liiMp yow Wood ,.....,. down
Al ..................... t.a.loyond-and
d.- iMa6e -· .n\Jied to~". Rudy k)
........,. tho .............. . . . . _ ......... hool1h
_ _ _ tbo_al_
l.amyouodoyo

__

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

......... 'atYIII ..... tirM ,.,.,... •llleftd •" jn
~

""'-10 holp,... dul ~- ...

Thio--- - -

&amp;hibits
ALAMO GIW.£IIY
SMale Stick Art:

...-..
_..,_Kemp

o.n Tum._ and Olltk Toole

~-

Apo-ollhe

1800"• brought badt Smal sSihoue.tta of •mmM
"""" blad1 on a ..,.. bodogn&gt;und Alamo
Goley, Bad&lt; tW s..-1 . Mond.. Fnd..
10 • m to !) p m l'hro.gh April 25

MTEXHIIIIT
Eo...ol ..,_btl s-n
Ruth ~ -uno tW Through April 20

My-·..-

c--

,ClASSICS EXHIBIT
Slog. ond
Dnigru too Mll&gt;av&lt;f•
- Tho O..,..U..&lt;d al 0...... and 1h&lt;
a..ic.'l Oub c- nt en exhibit ol drawn~ by
Rkanlo-.. """' as 1o4ov 2 112 ca. .....

. . . t - ..

HMihC...~ols.Ao--.Ilondtho

eo.Pf'C911n11 ol
•

"""'"'"
Olfioo
di:IM- •f*S.ol•
Schoof
of n.
urs
o1 R •
3161
l..,.(oy .....-. OI&gt;Ofclinodnt tho ...
TOih " ' -· ...t .bot Gnmos dnocol
-

. . cou... . - "Pop.Ao-

-...-.

LOCKWOOD ICDIOIIIAL UBRAIIY
EXHIBIT
r,......... 11M - - ..,.. doplay ol
. . - - - 1ho .I"""'Y. dowlopmont ....
.,...,.,.. _ . . ol ~ pn&gt;duello&lt;' •nd ....
_..,btl G&lt;.,...y v.... n. ,.........., wil
.v.a.bll to rtw pvblk. dumg regu1. tibfary
houn., 1ho t_..ol Lockwood T1vough April :lO

_

SpodoiS..W...._._,.._ ..

FIIEE TIJTOIWIG FOil ICfC sruotNTs

s.c-.
t:.,.w. ..-1 -~-

...,. _ _

-

.

col

......

10 . . -

pM oi311T__..t f&lt;w

15614

.. n..w

- . w,...-..w

_..._10

"
' -_
.... tho"
_

olllw

o.- 0.0. ... -

Goodolo..

On the Air
APIULll:

GIIADUAT£ oa ~Tf.
AT TlC WIIITING PlACE
ll it ,........_ 10 r--.
tpdUiJiW or
........
.... - _
w ,..., -"""
wlih
_ _ tho _
__.,

_

10

~-. . - .....
2394

ear.-. Jr., pro(aoor

of psychology. died ..ty Frldey • BuffalO Gen.ral' Hoopltal. He - 69. and
would t..ve retired at the and of this
academlcyor.
Beme!IA! had been _,.,alec! with the
University over a open of ~ hall a
century, having taken his B.A. here In
1932 and his M.A: In 1936.
In the early 1930's , he taughl at Buf·
lalo Slate and worked in the U/B Penon·
nel Office during summers. Ftom 1936to
1950, with time oul lor service In World
War
he was in New York Oty: as an
lnslruclor In psychology at.P""" College

n.

priOr

to the war. and as an instructor at

N.Y .U. in the post-war era. He received
Ph.D . &amp;om the latter ln$tllutlon In
1949.
Barnette returned to Buffalo in 1950 as
a m~mMr of the Department of
Psv&lt;:h&lt;&gt;lc&gt;w and as director of the U/ B
Veterans ·tesUng and Guldanc:e Bureau
(later to become the Vocational CounselIng Center) . His N.Y .U. dissertation had
Involved a study of occupational counselIng for veterans. In the mid-50s. he also
served as director of the Siudent
Counseling GAnter, associaled with the
Office of
Dean of Students.

·ru.

Twlc:e a Fulbrlilbl. ac:holar
Named a lull professor In 1958.
Barnette visited India lwk:e as a Fulbrighl
scholar: finlln 1952-53 as a visiting prolessor In psychology and vocational
guidanc:e at the &lt;Antral Institute of
Education . Delhi : and again in 1964-65
as a consultanl to the U.S . Education
Foundation there.
A fellow of the Americ:an PsychologiCal
Association . Barnette Mlonged to a wide
range of professional organizations and
compiled a lengthy bibliography of articles and invited papers in · counseling
and testing . On campus , he was aclive tn

the Faculty Club and served as secretasy
of Omicron Chapter . Phi Beta Kappa . lor

over a decade
In 1974. he received a Chanc:ellor's
Award lor Excellena&gt; in Teaching For
many years. he taught and coordinated
the Introductory psychology course. In
addition lo his administrative dulles In
Counseling.

Hoi Opon da&lt;ly F.,. hovn call 636-2153

de _ _ ....,. _ _ btltboSchoolol N10

..

c - . - ...... - Cohooa.
-0..0 School
-la-n.llOI
· ond Erwoonmonlal
c.--olc.blo
6 .30 p m

_&lt;hi,._s...........
-·=
APIIIL It:

F-Sorioo .

W.-TM -

U-~Iolluf­

c.1oo

\II-. a-not 17.loonII

p .. ~ "",_,..

E..,. .. .....-.nt edilor ..._

a acw of other

~1: 0.- ~S. -. b"""'

~
~
"""'"'"·
"Do a-r
Eduo
-.1
~
~ Oft
lho
W!lDI (9
9 0!. P-'"
~ U: 0.
_. .__

F.Noy •

Shl11&lt;v L Hotrlotton, -

AOon . Mel H11men

-M - o l
11 O:.,p m

~

tied him to have the run of the kltchen aU
to hlmseK. akhough he often dined in
restaurants offering exquisite cuisine . H is
penchant lor line food and drink was also
satisfied th~ugh membership In Buffalo's
Food and Wine Society plu• many small .
private dinner pa.rtie:s. The gounnet. professor stocked a respectable wine
cellar almost entirely containing French
vlntage5.
Another of Dr. Barnette's "tastes' was
classical music. " I can't conc:e!ve of a
whole man who doesn 't enjoy music :
said the one-Ume plano student. "It's one
of the mosl signifiCant parts of the whole
cuhure and education of man." he added . A strong supporter of music in the
Buffalo area . he was a member of lhe
Boord of Directors of lh ree musical
organlzatlono: the Buffalo Chamber
Music Society. the Communlly Music
School. and Young Aud iences, Inc.
The cosmopoUtan professor also had
deep interests In abstrllct art and the
theatre.
A campus memorial ~rvice for Dr.
Bamehe will be held Monday. April 21.
at 4 p m 1n the Emeritus Center. 161 -B.

Hanimen . Mam Stree1
All his friends and colleagues are invrted to attend

Ke lra....ned the globe

Born In LeRoy. NY ., Barnette tra verMd the globe &amp;om San Anton iO to
Ceylon to Singapore during World War
II. While In T e•a•. he did research lor the
Army Air Force on pilot. bombardier and
navigator aptitudes. later, he was part of
a project involved In counseling early
returnees (psychoneurotic dlschargees) at
base• In Vlrlllnla and Maryland . Ne•t
came the preliminary step to whal was to
become a signifiCant part of his l~e- he
became a member of the Far East Plan ning Stall of Washington . 0 C ·, Office of
Stralegic Servic!es (055) .
Aher 5lx month5. he was auigned to
Kandy. Ceylon . as an assll!lzlnt operallonal planning officer. During this bme .
0.. Carleton Scof~eld , former head oflhe
U/B Psychology Department . was his
bos5 Based In Ceylon and Singapore
dunng his fmalyor of service (1945-46).
Barnette was promoled to chief of the
Research end Analvsis Branch of OSS lor
the lndla-Bunna 'Theatre. This was •
"doal&lt; and dagger" type operahon con·
cerned th the training of agents lo In·
f.Jtra Mhind memy lines to sabotag«.
opread rumon and '"lay lnteUigenc:e
reports via cland'-'Siine radio Bamt!~te
..,.. In charge of lOfn« of this lnl U.gence
reporllng and of the reMarch operations
'"valved In the mamteNince of theM

Bentley gets
a Fulbright
Professor Eric Bentley of the Department of Theatre has Men awarded a
Distinguished Professor position under
the Fulbright PrOgt"am . in Yugoslavia . fie
wiU be lecturing in Belgrade during May
and June of thl5 year.
A renowned ploywnght and ocholar.
Ben~y IS the leading translator of Bertoli ·
8re£hl. and is author of The Theatre of
Commitment He was award d an Oble
for oul5tandlng achievement In Off.
Broadway theatre .
Currently. Bentley Is dlrectlf19 his new
play. I..Md Aljrrd'• Louer, foe the Departmen! of
It WID open at Iha
Center
681 Main Street.
24.

-

agents

APIIJLII :

c - - · ..
- --.
~~tho.. t.tcllonioo•
_...., -&lt;:Mollllt

-·

~pm

. . .__ of . . . ._ _
~velo · through India . Burme .
Thelland, Indonesia, and ~ provid-.1
beginning of hio tnletut In the Fw
En end lmpftd him 1o ai!Piv lor and accepl hio ~Mar Fublghls '" thai ..-g~on
)lilt the·~ pall of the Old
World thai tnteraled Dr Bametle. but
Europe ..
He promiMd hlmMI thill
he would travel to Europe ac loell evey
two I"*" end -~Ill ...

It.....,.,

- - - - . . . : . . . , . . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - -_. • Ko. _ , a..bttdlolb-.

l1lr1uk lii'IG .

-

�.·
Aprill7, 1980

L DESIDERATA
I~}

rei
ar.y
repoJ1 on

criteria for
redacti·o ns
TO: Tile F8codty
FROM: FIIC1dty S...te Acadelak Plaaatng Committee
RE:
llapon of doe Committee
·
The Acaderrilc: Planning Committee Is attempting to dev~ means for the
Fec:ully Senate to advise 'the Presld£nt and Academic Vice-Pr£Sident regarding

Pnli..._,

crlterio and procedures for adopting to budget reductions . Our primary contem
iS the development o( a planning process good for the next three to live years.
Our basic assumption 1\ that , regardless of the outcome on the 1980-1981
budget , we will be required to more carefully manage resources for the
fore-.ble future We also think it quhe likely that the Unlvershy will experience
budget reductions, In real terms ~ not in actual dollar amounts . during that
period . .
Our preliminary report Is concerned primarUy with the problem of budget
reductions. R trenchment , that Is the termination of contracts short of their nor·
mal expiration. Is a means to adopt to budget reductions , but we see that as an
extreme and undesirable practice . We will not propose retrenchments, or iden·
Illy units for retrenchment If that is to be done. the responsibility for that ded·
slon ruts with the President and Vice-Presidents. If a state of retrenchment were
declared , we would review proposed retrenchments and advise the faculty
regarding such proposals. Our particular concern would be to see to it that any
such proposals salisfied cnteria adopted by the Committee or the Senate. We
hope. however. to avoid that und£Sirable state of affairs by pressing for the
adOj)llon and Implementation of longer term planmng and alloCation processes
for t~ campus
W.-have released the preliminary report to the Senate . for advice and com
men! We now submtlthe drah to our colleagues. In both the faculty and professional staff. In hope that we can benefit from your advice. comments and
critlclsm P~ address your comments to the Committee , care of the Faculty
Senate Ofllce . 405 Capen Hall .
INTRODUCTION
The Academic Planning Committee of the Faculty Senate was origtnally
formed four years ago m response to the threat of retrenchment at that tJme In
the mterim It has been established as a standing committee of the Senate. and
ha met with admim5tralors: to review their academic plans For the years in
uestion th Informal consuhation seemed suffiCient to discharge the duties 'of
the committee . and no reports were prHented to the Senate Some months
ago , however , the threat of retrenchment reappeared . coupled with th near
certainty of substantial cutbacks through coming years In this new situation the
Comml11ee anticipat conUnutng to act as a sounding board for the ad mini trative dl!dsion makers. reading from a faculty point of view to thetr pro·
posals as they are being formulated for publication The Committee was ex·
ponded somewhat to be able to play this role .more effectwely In addttion the
Commln feltll desirable to take the lntllaJive by atrempting to spell out critena
and procedures whteh the administratiOn should follow and honor in formulating
its proposal The present report Is our current (third) draft of criteria and procedures Both long-term and short-term problems are addressed .
The overarching aim o( acad mic planntng must be to improve the quahty and
em.tnenc:e of the insbtution a a whole For that purpose we muat move away
from rnouree allocation which Is driven wholly by enrollments and last-minute
politk.a.l actiOn , a we11 a from cutting C05t:s wherever tlw vacancies occur . The
judgment requtred by such Intelligent planntng will be very d~fteult They will be
acceptable only ff they are rationally objective For such ol:ijectivtty. there are at
lea two mncapable prereqw.ites, (i) that the judgments be In accord with a
publ' ed plan , and (li) that the plan be developed . modified . and Implemented
· W&gt;lh regard to "!!I' d desiderata . crltena. and procedures. (0 Is an ad·
mon trattve respon
ty. partially fuKIIled for the core campus by VIce Pres!·
dent Bunn's
takrnenl on Planntng and Development" of April 1979 This
report all mp to rnak progre on (li)
We have organt.Zed to report in th• section The ftrsl section deals with
dalderata to be kept tn mind not only In the formulation ol a plan but also when
l'Niidng t
hard \Udgments required to implement II None of the desiderata Is
lnvtoleble In mes o( cn~nch It
be Impossible fuDy to honor them aU But
none o( them can be neglected. either The second section d als with con tralnts
11n.,._.t on us from . outside th lnshtution We believe that we have to
recogniZe •xpllctty the
to what can be planned and achieved locally by our
own proc
The third section d
with procedures Some o( these are more
d
conumed th r tr nchment than w&gt;th long-term cutbacks . espedaUy
the
o( l«mporizzng meaourn which !NY be worth considering In order to
evoid retr~hm nt
It ahould be noted thai there can be cutbackt without retrenchments. retrenchment Ottun only ~ en employment contrlld 1o "nded short of normal termlna·
(. g
•r
t1 Cu
~r to us Inevitable over corn·
1ng yean,
~""'*trends end the
tive mood . It may well be
poootitt , bowevcr, 10 evoid retrenchments W
ve found that distinction lm·
portal\! for our dellbera
• and K Is lnCO&lt;'pol'ated in the report It should be
noled. - · thet- he avoided duplcallng or ~mpting other documents
Th111 - ...U. no .uempt to
a hnanclal crlolo, • thrut 10 lntbtullonal sur·
u
for r mchment
• or cond toons pr
W do 1101 look lor approyal o( our report at
me ting We ahall in~
hop. to
rnloionl on the bull o( the dltCUNion lwhlc:h may perhapo on·
(loode ..,.,. ed
\IOilal . and to aubrn• a revioecl document 10 tha S.na for
iiPP"'" ... .Wii\lient

Aa:om....,.,_

to long ~nn
T£dudion of T£10Urcel should be mode
pursuonlto on academic plan dalgned to
prom- lhe oueroll wenglh of the
ln..,tion.
COmment Less is not necessarUy
worse: smaller Is not necessarily weaker.
Over the nut several yean. SUNY and
SUNY at Buffalo may experience a
reduction In real resources, Unplanned
responses to annual budget "crises" are
likely to be distributed od hoc and via
easy decision rules (e.g.. across the
board . use the turnover lines) . which can
produce a downward spft'al tor aU units o(
the University. On the other hand. • plan
for adapting to reductions over, say. a
live year period could have the advan·
tage o( preserving balance in academic
programs. I.e .. between graduate and
undergraduate Instruction . and between
disciplines and professions. while allowing for gradual reductions In some units
and without having to subrnll then to the

trauma of retrenchment.
At this point, the University has no of·
ficlal academic plan. A "planning statement"' for the core campus has been

prepare9 . published . and submitted to
the President by Vice President Bunn . To
ou r knowledge. il has not been approved.
or endorsed by the President . nor has II
been considered by the Faculty Senate.
To our knowledge . there Is no published
plan or "planning s:tatemenf' for the
Health Sciences. We urge that these
uncertainties regard ing plans and the
planning process for the University soon
be resolved by the Vice Presidents and
PreSident . in consultation wilh the Facul·
ty Senate .
The academic planning statement for
the core campus states . " Further in·
cremental shifts to professional areas
t&gt;Kause of enrollment pressures should

be expected . but in the aggregate the
change should not exceed three percent
over the next five years without a
thorough reassessment of our purposes
end g&lt;&gt;llls ··We expect that such reassess·
ment will not be neglected . and that it will
tnvolve substantial consuhz.tton with the

Faculty Senate
•
1-b} Reduc11ons in resources should be
accommodated through open publk: pro·
cesses In which focully and staff are af.
forded o meaningful consullatiue role
Comment · Although reductioos in
resources may be mouvated /lmpe.lled by
pure budgetary constraints. and in the
short run may require temporizing solu ttOns. In the longer run our responses Jo

these kinds of political / economic shocks
should be guided by carefully articulated
criteria and accurate data which are
stated and disseminated to the academic
community Moreover. such r~sponses

should be Implemented in a planned and
carefully considered way and des~gned to
minimize harm to Individuals. to morale .

and to the quality of the tnslilutlon Both
the prouss and the results of such

decislon:making can seriously affect the
outcome Results whk.h m;ght kiter be
Judged to be ..conect '" may nevet1heless
be injurious if the process for reaching the
results Is peTJOelved to be -incorrect ..
l·c} Junior faculty should not bear the
•full burden of reductfon• m rt':SOI!roe5 .
Comment : The future of the University

depends h~vily on · the generation of
young scho(ars most recently recruited to
our ranks W ithin that group there are
many whost appomtments ref1ec.t the
Univer lly commitment to aff~rmatlve acHon This is another reason to fmd ways

to protect the )uni6f faculty in a bme of
resource reduction

1-dl IJ&lt;!portments centTal to the long·
term emfnence of the UnluerJily should
not be Wfpped oflheir junior focuhy
Comment A department should be
deemed

central

to

the

long-term

eminence of the University ij It satisfies
these criteria . (I) , II already has national
recognition. (2) It Is preeminent in Its
dtscipline Wtthln SUNY. and 13) its
•trength is tmportanl 10 other depart ments In its

aru ·

There should . be one or two such
· depaitments If' each area. but the total
wilhtn SUNYAB would be o( the order of
10
o( departmen
The cnteria are
conjuncli'(e

rather

than

d isjuncUv~

These departm nts should· not only be
pamaUy protected from retr nchment but
hould also be NSUred the clwtnc to con
oc:casionaiJUnior appoint

1-c} Redudion In raoun:es should be
oa;ompliahed In ways which wold or
limit reductions In enrollments.
Comment: The stale funds for SUNY
are provided to support budgeted
(planned) enrollments. Shortfalls In
enroDments provide a justification for fur.
ther budget cuts. Simply put. the SUNY
budget is "enroDment driven." Thet reaW- ,
ty strongly suggests thet Impact on enrollment Is an important if not overrld!ng foe.
tor in dedsions about how to' adjust to
budget reductions. For example. In re·
cent years we have experienced deep
budget cuts which have been met. In
part, by cuts In student servic:£5 functions
(e.g .. A&amp;R . residence hall staff). If reductions In student services worsen our abili·

ty to attract and hold students. they may
be less d£Sirable than carefully planned
and

executed

reductions

In

som..e

academic programs.
1-f} RetTenchmenl should nol be undertoken except on o clear and conuindng
demonstration that it ~ required in order
to pr£serue and prolect the ln~grily of
the Uniuersity 's ocademk: and serulce
·functions.
Comment: Retrenchment will be in·
jurious to Individuals. and to the morale
of both faculty and staff. and will damage
the reputation o f the University. The
choice o f units for retrenchment is likely

to

be

exlrel1)ely

dilricult.

and

will

engender controversy no matter how
carefully it is done. Once a retrenchnfent
unit is identified . retrenchment must be
done in accordance with the terms of the

State/ UUP collective bargaining agree ment which speclies seniority of appoint·
ment as one of the primary selection
criteria for determining whom to
retrench . The seniority principle means

that the burden of retrenchment will fall
most heavily on the young faculty .
Everyone decries that result . but no one
has yet suggested workable objective
principles. other tha n 'Seniority. to guide
retrenchment decisions . In sum . re trenchment Is a most costly way to adapt

to budget cuts. It may be required ,
however. under extreme circ umstances
where the alternatives are more destructive to the institution .

1-g) If retTenchmenr Is required. no full·
time focultv or professional 5tof/ on term
or continuing contracts should be re ·
leased upon less than one academic
year's notk:e of termlnoUon of con trad .
Comment: The nature of the employ·
ment cycle in higher educlJtion calls for
one year notifk:ations as a simple matter
of fairness

Persons on leave withou t pay are full·
llme employees for purposes of retrench ment

To the extent permitted by Article 35.
persons who opt for part -lime positions in
their final years before retirement should

be deemed to be fuii-Hme faculty .
analogous to !ll'ographic full -time faculty .
as that sta tus Is defined In the policies of
the Trustees.

II. EXTERNIU. CONSTRAINTS
11-ol The slate budget for SUNY and
SUNYAB. appropriated ond ouoiloble for
expenditure
.
11-b} The Sta~ · UUP agreement. and
particularly Article 35 the~eof.
1/ -cllong- term popula llon and
economic trends In New Vork State . and
their related effects on enrollments In
htgher educotfon
11-dl The ooeroU range of programs
and oubjecll which SUNY. as a Sla~
University System. prouldes or may be
obligated ro provide .
Commen t· The forst three Items are.
perhaps. seK-evldenl, but we &gt;tale them
to remind ourselves and colleagues of
these realities. Uke it or not. the state.
through elected officials. umtes our
checks Like it or not. the UUP contract
sets limits to what we can do For example . Arttele 35 concedes much to
"management ." but we may be able to
constrain exerdse o( that power Article
35 also sets one clear guideline for re·
tnrnchment . 1 e . seniority governs
..reductions In force ~ ..
The la$1 Item recognizes what we think

should be a consideration In planning for
the SUNY system and In ils constituent
units If a program at Buffalo Is unique lo
the SUNY system , that may militate In
favor of protecting that program in a
period o( budget reductions If a program
at Buffalo cfuplicated at v«&lt;al SUNY
eampuses, K might yet be protected if rt Is
clur that the prowam horo is pre

�Aprt 17, 1980

emJnenl ~ ......... ~In
SUNY. &amp;uch
our

....,...lhould.........,.

local ......... but, -

.....,.......,
should be -'*" for In long-tam
pla"'*'9 for tha SUNY .......

m. PllOCI'DC -.s AIG) OILIEIC11\IE
CIU11RA FOR ALLOCATING

REDUC110NS

Rcducllono

In jrtculty , projalllonOI . ,, ond IIUpport ll&gt;a/f p&lt;Wtiono

U/-&lt;J )

should be ollocGcd by lhc Praldcnt. with
lhc odllk:e ond -~&gt;« of lhc \lice
Praidenll ond Deans. and after consultalite Foc:u/IJI Senate and/ orcomdeol9n*d by lite FOCIAitp Senate
and Pro#ufionol 514/f Senate. Ap,...,_ lludent orgcmllationo should
alto be aJ1orde4 an apportunll)llo review
and odolle regardJng - d rrduc-

m-

tion...,.

lionl.

•

Comment: Processes of dedslonmaldng for rrdudlons and reailoqllonl

can and should be open , subject to
review and comment. and Implemented
In .ocordance wtlh general principia and
criteria cMwloplod In conoultatlon with

2. 011- a ..,_ ar ....,.._ P&lt;O·
...... a:pllcflr ............, In

,..,._.. o/ SUIIYAB;

ol/ldol

3. " ' - ' • an •"'*II on lhc oflldol
SlRIIYAB . , . . . - . dtart..
com .... nt: These restrictive re qu...-.11 ~ alocatlon of c:uta
below the~ lew!- intetrded to_,. that academic unlloare ldenllfled for pu..-pc)Ms other than the lmplemcnl&amp;tlon of budget c:u'11. We intend
t ' - criteria to ralreln the templlltion to
use the luD "management prerogative",
under Arllcle 35. to define indt\lklue'ls as
retrenchment units.
111-el Reductions should not be
allocoled lo unlll wltc.e focu/lv l otudent
ratio equalo or exceeds either theJr
planned foculty ratio. or lhc planned
focull)l/atudenl rollo for lhctr focWtv or
ldtool. Exapllon, to fhlo dedlion rule
may be maole where there 1o clear and
conulnc:lng evlolen« that:
J. The unn In queitton lo to be reduced
"" a mot1er of acoolemlc policy pursua~
to a plan for the oleuelopment of lhc
Untueroll)l; and
2. No lou o f tol&lt;ll University
enro/lmenlr wrn mull from such reduc-

faculty and llaff bodies. such .. the
Faculty Senate and Profesolonal Staff
Senate. Such decisions /1ft the ulllmate
tion .
raponsiJIIHy of the administrative olfi&lt;:ers
For purposes of th ia decllion R{le. unit
of the Unlvenlty. Faculty should not
faculty/atudent ratios should be comdiredly make such decisions. ~ for no
PIII&lt;td on the balls of positionl committed
other reason than to a void the conflicts of to a unit. and not on the basis of positions
Interest which would permeate a procas
currently deployed In a unit.
In which faculty members attempted to
Comment: This criterion recognizes
decide where to reduce and where to
the "enrollment driven" nature of the
augment programs. lnat Is particularly
SUNY budget. It tends to reward units lor
true as to short -h!rm allocation decisions
carrying lllanned $1udent loads.
which might result In retrenchment. On
allows lor reductions and realloca
the other hand. faculty bodies should
where that is consistent with 10und
clearly play a strong advisory role In long- · academk: planning. and not Inconsistent
term academic planning which might lead
with the teaching and student service misto dedslons to add. augment. reduce or
sions of the University .
ellmlnat academic programs on this
The rule lor computation of
campus
faculty / student ratios is intended to acIt Is lmporlant for the Professional Staff
count lor leaves of absence and other
Senate !'!_ be Involved In this process In
temporary vacancies wh ich may
order tt.,rlaculty viewpoints be balanced
understate the number of faculty posi by the staff perspective. In the past.
tions actually committed to a unit .
reductions may have been allocated
The planned faculty / student ratios In
the "planning statement" lor the core
heallily to professional and support staff
positions. The protection of faculty poolcampus may be used as a gukle to implement reductions and reallocation decilions at the expense of professional and
support staff may proVide a short-term
sions Before that Is done. however . we
beM!it to faculty which Is extremely costurge some rec.onskferation of those ratios
ly to them and the University In the
besed on careful study of actual data
regarding teaching loads and staffing of
longer run.
U/-bl Reducfions should not be ac- courses. For example. departments may
achieve planned faculty/ student ratios by
cornpl hed by pro rata dlllrlbution of a
cut In the Unfuerolty bu.t among all offering a few enormous sections lp m·
troductory courses. but carry light
academic unlr.. nor by ,..-manently
teaching loads in upper division courses
ehmlnol!ng positions from units limply as
~ orile due
to re.tire.ment.l.
Unless such allocation of resources can
_.,~~on. or other coniTad termlna be jtatilled on academic grounds. II may
be appropriat to recompute the planned
lions .
Comment. Our administration has faculty /student ratio for such depart·
crlbc:lmd SUNY Comtral lor mindleuly ments at a higher level than might otherdloDtluting budget cu pro ra~ to each wise be thought appropriate.
·The planned faculty / student ratios
umt In ·the system . It will hardly do for us
to take the same a ppo-oach . A plan . pro- must be reexamined in light of changing
cess. and criteria lor allocating reductions circumstances and the recent return to
In some more rational way must be pulln - the Carnegie Unit for determining credit
lor under-gradual courses. since this
plaoe
Sine turncwe'r in positions occurs ran - change has had very different Impact on
domly. allocation of cu to units q - different academic units.
perienc:lng lurn&lt;&gt;ver Is no better thai-&gt;
fll·fl Redu&lt;:IK&gt;ns may be a/locat.td 10
aloc:ation pro rolo. In the short tenfl.
faculties or Khools whos~ ou~rall
tumowr may be used to avoid retrmch ·
facuJty / otudenl ratios equal or vcoeed
ment In the lon!Kr term. tumover pool·
fhefr planned ratios if there
depart bono must be allocated In aacordance
menu In such faculties which haue
Wllh a rational plan lor t development
focuky l lludent rabOo subalantially lower
of the UnlvtB~ty See aiJO, It m
thon the planned ratio for such faculties
I a_al&gt;c&gt;w
or ochooh
Comment· Where a department Is
chronkally overstaffed relative to
&lt;enrolments In its courses. II should not be
protect d against reductions merely
because u ts within a larger untt which ts
meeting Its planned enrollments If the
department needs 10 be preserved or prolee! d because of some special function II
performs the lacuhy or school should be
able to support that position
In • time .when 50me uni are likely to
be pressed very hard to acxommodat to
budget reductions. other uno should not
ommune to c:loH scruhny mply
becauM they are able to "average out "
their enrol m n Wl hin their faculty or
ochool
Ill gl Rf'dUCIJOns oholl be allacared con
ent With the pnncll*s ltlllf'd on
parograp/11 lbl throu h {e/. ond OCCO&lt;·
d."f to pnon s and crtlVIO pul&gt;ll hed by
th~ Prca•d~nr and Acodt'mK Vtce
Pr-nidentr
CotTUMnt See ms I a . I b . and Ill a
above
Ill hi In the shari run. accommodalton

1D ........ reduc:tiono and ehoulcl be
__,..,..,
., at loaof
.....,..,...,.,
........ _.)"....,ovOid Nllendl-

-

--may

and -

otudent oerulca and

enrolmeta.

Such

ing:
J.

~

lite amount.of "on load"

Re...,., *'fllnl Colo!l'rfrom

, _ In

2.

lnducle the folow.

INiard Filmore College.

lhc
Collogn. ond
cour.a
"on load" uNit facultv from "low
olemand" depamMnll /uhere /eoelble. of
lempoNrJ/ . , . ,

ooone).
3.

33 faculty
retelve grants
&amp;om SUNY
The 5IMo IJnlvawlv of New Yodc
R--*' FoundMion .... -.lid 33
U/8 lacuMy "*""-a 111*1 al $89,460
In 1-.:h fdowlhlpo and . . . .
A-.1 NdpleniJ &amp;om U/8, thft projed IIIIa, and the amount of thft wanto

-

folow•

mcr.a.t119 and/ or redlolributing

teocltlng loads In """"' . ,,
/al ~ lite numbero/lf!dlonlof
high olemand coo.n.a and rrduclng ""-'
DlrO/Iment courwo:
lbl oflmng more .Mdk&gt;no of high demand cou_, by Nelng to II that oil faculty carrv normal t.tochlng loads. except
where _.:1/II:Glfy author!Kd by the appropriate VIce Praldcnt;
{cl rolrlng or retnOC!Ing enrollment cell·
lng~ on cou,.,.
4. Funding aeodemlc year aolaria with
gront funds and other "aoft moneys. ·
where poaible.
5. Encourogtng faculty from low deman d oreao to offer general eduOOtion
courses. ond service courses In high demand areas.
6. Rf!llrictlng sobbot;cals to fu ll year al
half pay {th us encouraging "soft money"
fu nding of aobbotlcollea ues).
7. Tempororlly absorbing reductions
asllgned to ocaolemlc ""'"" by red ucing
the work force within high turnover nonocodemfc oreos unUI &amp;uch time os the
oc:OdemJc ore:os con absorb the reductions
by attrition .
8 . Imposing remporary moratoriums
on t,fte appoinlments of new T.A. 's and
G.A 's in low demand areas thus shlfUng
more reaching food to fuii -Ume faculty.
and releasing T.A. and G .A. FTE for
short rterm position reductions . These
moratoriums con be li~d as turnover
positions become avoiloble In such units .
9 EKplorlng th~ pasllbillty of offering
summer school courses ··on load. ··
10 Redud ng Jummer JChool pro gram• In some: oreal where the
enrollm~nts in 'uch areas would bf!
diuerted to the normal ocodemlc veor.
and rhus be carried "on lood."
Comment : (This section Is incomplete.
Comments will be added later.!
Me mbero of th o Acade m ic Planning
Com mittee are: WUilam Greiner. l.&amp;w.
chair; John Feather, Sociology; Lnlle
Fiedler, Englteh ; Howard Foster,
Manage.ment; Eugene Gater, Educational Psychology; Newton Garver.
Philooophy; Jorge. Gultart, Moolem
l.&amp;nguages and Uteraturn; Susan
Kroll . S cien ce and Engin ee ring
li brary ;
N o rman
Solkoff,
P•yc hology / Pay c hla tr y ; C arolyn
Thomao. Physical Educat ion; .ludlann
Carmack, Student Asaoclatlon; · Joel
Mayeroohn , Student Auoclatlon .
Lowtll Schoenfeld, Mathematics, Is
th o non-wtlng UUP Ualson .

a"'

will not
propose
retrench•ents,
or identify
units for
retrench•ent'
~We

Jim. D. Atwood, -.nt !irofeoaor.
ct.mlllry, Low
lladucllon
at Carbon Monoxide, $3,700; Brian E.
Becker, - . n t prof-. human
reoOurc.o. ~ Prawam Ewluatlon: A l'le-Propoul Study, $3,400;
Manhel J . Breger, - - ...........
law, Ethical ' - -: Alocellon al lAgal
Aid/Public . _ l.&amp;w; Harwy
man, p-alalor, art. Figura Combining
Dloparate , lnterlor-EXt«Tkkr NotUs ,
$3,306: o.w! M. Brophy,
profcoaor. geography, Quantitative
A!IHument of Cartographic Line
Generalization, $3,400; ....._..,. D.
Brown. ..xlale prof-. management, Accrual and Caoh-e..ed Meaoutes
of Earning Power, $3,200; Kueng Fu
Cheng, -~--.-..:.. On
Estimation of
Functionl wtth
Censored Data, $2, 00; James . B ..
Coover, prof...,, musk:. lolentlflcalion
of Musical Materials In Sale Catalogues.
$3,354; Leo C . Curran. asaodate prolessor, classics. Female FantaMs and
OVid. $2,000; w. Davis Dechert, tan! profeuor, economics, Dymanlc Impact of Emission Taxes and Standards on
Technology. $2,000; Stephen J . Free,
assistant po-olessor, biological oclences,
The Mechanisms Involved In Alkaline
Phosphatase Regulation . $3,325.
Cynthla V. Fukaml, assistant professor, organ iza ti on and human
resources. Dual Career Congruity and
Life/Work Outcomes, . $2,000; Peter
Heller. professor. modern languages &amp;
Uterature , Neitzsche's " Memorabilia ,"
$3,310: Brian R. Henderton , associate
professor. Comter For Media Study.
Changing Image of the Family In
American Film. 1910.. 1965, $1 ,727:
Piyare L. J a in , po-olessor, physics. Search
lor Shock Waves In Heavy-Jon ColliJOns.
$3,400; Raymond J . Kelleher. assistant
professor. biological sciences, Effect of
Glucocort icolds on Nuclear Protein
Phosphorylation . $3.800: H&lt;&gt;Ward R.
Lasker. assistant professor. biological
sciences. Nutritional Status and Primary
Production of Reel Corals, $3,790;
Bren d a Major , assistant p rofes10r.
psychology. Factors Affecting Sell-Par or
Women and Men, $2.600: Michae S .
Mam louk. assist ant professor. civil
engineering. Evaluation of Asphak Emulsion Mixt ure Perlormance. $2,750; Ed ward A. Morga n. assistant po-olessor. ceO
and molecular biology, New Approaches
to Aspects to TRNA and RRNA In E.
Colt. $3,400; Michael L. RauHn, 6111stant
professor. psychology. Communication
S~yles In Sch~s: lnterper~on.al
Distance. 3,344 ; Robert W. RICe. usistant professor. psychology. Job Satltfac- ·
lion a nd Life Sallsfactioi'o . $2,050; Moti
L. Ruslgl. professor, physics. Theoretical
Investigation of the 2H (Y. N) P Reaction , $800: Marc Shell. asaodate professor. English. Literature a nd Aa:ou nt lng. $2,000. Danny D. Shen. - nt
profe.uor, pharmacwt1c1, Hepal ic
MetaboHsm of Propranolol In Renal
FaUure, $3,730
Gregory Y Tang. assistant prolesoor,
21ectrical engineering, Development of
Semantic-Syntactic Approach to Image
Creation . $3,400: 0.\lkl W. Tarbet ,
associate po-olessor. English . BooweU as
Criminal l.&amp;wyer, S699. Richard J .
Tobin, assistant professor, polrtocal
science, The Impacts of Regulatoon The
Case· of Consumer PrOiection, $2,950.
Yieh-Hel Wan . associate prole JOr.
mathematiCS, A Dlsequlhbrium Process
For a Productoon_ Economy. $2,000 ,
Wolbam B Wamu. associate professor.
English, Henry James and Monny Tern ·
pie , $2,000. Barbara A White. Mlislant
professor. oconomics, T mporary l.&amp;y
Off Dedskin Wath Corporate Loss CarryOvers, S2.000. C4rol M umel. a
nt
professor. art h ory, Van Gogh 'o Poe·
turn of Workers In Brabant. $2, 5 .
David A Zubon , assistant professor.
lingu
• Communicative Strat · s of
Focut end Delxlt., Gmnan . $2,

T.....,.._

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.....

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·.·
April 17. 1980

Student editor 'reads' people &amp; himself well
defect. We elected Carter ro make this
decision. and I wiD abide by h. I love my

EDITOR'S NOTE: 1M following ortl·
ck ..,... writtvt bv one of UIB.. "non·
uodirionol" sruMI1ta who worb fuU. rfme
and otren&lt;k night cloue• here. 1M name
of rhe inkrvi&lt;'wec hen bun changed lo
b:ep him anonvmo&lt;JS. but. aoy• lhe
oulho&lt;. "all~ Is fO: rNI. ··

cou~~-:boul wo'men being drafted? "At

the risk of sounding chauvlnlstic .. .l don ·,
know ... l hale to say thls ... butlf you're on
the front lines ... would I wan! to pul my
life In a woman·s hands?"
What If they only gave women jobs
they could do equally as weD as men .
e .g .. diive trucks or work in ordnance?
"Equal ty? Then. I'm aU lor II!"
Juan Gomez and I are classmates In a
Thur$day· nighl literary journalism class.
Our May and December friendship has
been wry- brief. just a few conversations
regard ing journalism and campus
newspapers. I'm nor only old enough t~
be Juan's molher. I could even be hiS
grandmother . But today he confirmed
the fact that a generation gap does not
eK.ist between us .
Read-on . I'D prove it

By Mlll)l Ana Schutkacr
"1 feel ~ke l'm In a psychiatrist' • office.·
he sald. sprawled on his couch In a prone
position "I'm a nervous pcroon ." Every
lew minuleo he changed hts posillon. bu!
the converoallon flowed easily. and ol was
actually very pleaoanl
•
I oal across from Juan GoQ'lez In a big
overstuffed chair We were In lhe living
room ol the oecond·floor apartment he
shareo with two other sludenl5. It's a
typical undergraduate living arrange·
rMnl. with lhe usual unexcollng decor
moot furnished apartme-nts have to offer
However. thts one has lwo magn~icent
exceptions
One Is an antique balhtub thai dazzles
and delights-almost overwhelms-the
viewer It's designed 10 accommodate a
painted extenor. which In Ihis case Is a ra·
dianr red. (which must have been a
decoralor's dream . and could be a
t nan·t's n~htmare ?)

-

Rootn wtth a view
11&gt;e 'olher dlstongulshing lealure is a
room· wrlh·a ·vlew al lhe lronl of rhe
house If• an elegant study. separated
from lhe living room by ootid mahogany
qlaso-paned doors A desk with a
rypewnter sils patiendy on one Side . And
a pregnant bay window beckons the OC·
cupanl5 to enjoy the Queen Coty .• activity
along the Main Street thoroughfare
below . The room Is remln scent of the
/ popular sunporches prevalent in Buffalo
during lhe thirties
If• an active n~hborhoocL con·
v niently wHhln walking distance of the
Unlvtnlly of BuHalo campus Juan can
Sit at his desk and fond Inspiration lor hi
journalistiC brain children by observing
Henog Pharmacy's patrons. Marine·
Midland's money changers. and (alter the
sun goeo down) his peers on their way ro
Mickey Ra , lhe comer pub.
Our doocu5sion was e-nhanced wrth am·
pie (and amplif d) background music.
couneoy of the Top SheH Music Store
whtch oa:up·
rhe floor below It
speciahzes in eiectnc guitars
When I decided to do a prolale on the
"typical" college senior. Juan appealed to
""' u the id al oui&gt;Ject He is attractive.
tall. oiender . has long haw . and Is twenty·
two years old Soon to graduate. loolung
lor employmenr . and burdened woth rhe
uoual mr•ed·bag of hOII"S. dreams. lear5.
and uncenaonlles. Juan I my concept of
rhe status-quo perfectly
11&gt;e Kenc set .
Born In Syracuse. New York. Juan ha•
been IMng tn Bull•lo for four years. He
has love si ero. one brother. and is
number
on lhe abling JCale of one-to·
I can't Imagine
seven "I e big !1m
being an only chlld • The flection
toward h fAmily Is evident In the tone ol
his von.
.
Juan consoders Syracuse • hick town .
lacking In cuhure . He likn living In big
Cities He~ Bullalo. 1nd will slay here
to do free-lance WJIIlng d he does not
have • job immediately alter graduarlon

zso,_

-

Mal&lt;&gt;t1nll In English Juan hopes IO&lt; 1
joumallom. and has mailed 250
r mes ro ~ lhr&lt;&gt;ll!lhout the
counlry He hand-pidred rhe papers. taJr.
ln!ll
of the dly •nd the liH of the
,_,/ r adcnhlp Into c&lt;&gt;Nider•t""'
()pemng lhe mail roc 1 "retumt• are
coming In now the high (or low! porn!
ol
d.y If
r~
ar negative. he
to build up • porillve
loRiiclpatiOfl for t
next d.ly't delivery

job "'

It'•

.

~·· aloo

- - ' ng

For 2rh years Juan has been on the
staff of one of the campu• newspapers "I
don 't want to be' a reporter _ I don -, wanl
to write hard news. I don't 1ike pressure
and deadline5 ·· However. he went on to
say . "Working on the paper Is good for
me I houe to mee:l deadline5 .. .1 don 't
have much seK-&lt;Iisdpline " He wonts ro
be a feature wnter and also do profiles for
a newspa!per in a community u.nth a
population of at least 100.000 He hkes
Sunday magazine supplements
Juan is a good writer: rve read man y
of his articles and II Is apparent he gets
"Involved" wlrh his subjects He can
make any topic interesting by finding the
human Interest angle He got the ;ob on
the paper bv just walking In and -.aggeillng a feature article about stu~ts
moving off campus They gave hin&lt;" rhr
assignment. and thai led to his present
posHlon "Now, no maner what I write. I
think about rhe paper •
Old he always aspire to be a journansr?
"No . I carM to college and did what was
easy I alw"Y5 liked English. Penelope
Prenhss. my poelry Instructor . suggesled
I take some JOUrnalism courses She got
m~

star1ed -

He11 wony WHoa he'a 40
By the lime he graduateo. Juan hopes
to have a job. and he wiD ler th~ ;ob
"lead" him As yet he does not conoider
lllmsd a serious wrirer . believing he does
nor yet take himself as seriouoly as he
should . "Maybe ra be more serious In a
strange town where I don't know people
In llve yearo I'd I e to be a damn good
mag_..tne writer . and sliD be single . be
1bie to tak on any assignment I'd like to
have someone to relal to. but marriage
ls not a prlorfly r m 5lillloo lrresponolble
Journalisu don't rna much money If•
hard enough to~ out for •1. much
ie5l •1. •2. and subsequent numbers I
enjoy children . Ihough . and when I'm
40. if I'm sliD ngie. 111 wony •
Juan ha5 o "free $piri1- thal needs to be
fulfi
I aoked how he fell About reglsrratlon
for m tary -vice. and possible dralt · t
haven't -nt a lot of time lbinklng about
h but H H becorM&gt; a r olity. I will not

O!J-

NOft&lt;Proflt
U. Poal8ge
PAID '
lkltt.IQ, N.y .

~No.211

Sldna and Mary .lane
We wound up the Interview and went
to The Library lor lunch . Juan suggested
we stan with "skins.· I said o k .. though I
couldn't Imagine how potalo skins could
warrant his enthusiasm . What a treat!
"Skins" filled with a mi•ture of bacon bits
and potato bits topped with cheddar
cheese melted to taffy·pun consistency.
and accompanied by a blue&lt;heese dip.
proved to be a hearty appetizer thai was
almost a meal in Jtself.
We ordered sandwiches. And then . as
if we had just stoned our in terview. Juan
voluntarily answered questions I was not
even "cool" enough to ask I knew then
that he was no "typical" senior. (In fact . f
am convinced there Is no typical senior .}
"I do what most people do. but I get
caught .. Juan said he has had many
brushes with the law. Including lour or·
rests. but nothing criminal. His most expensive hassle happened righr after high
school. when be bought a van ~nd went
lo Florida with a friend . They were smol&lt;·
;,'g a joinrln the back ollhe van one night
when rhe cops "'l"ned the door and said
In a southern drawl. ·~Is that M·a-a-a-a·ry
J -a-a ·a·o·a ·ne we smell?" They spent the
nighr in the clink Juan ~ired tv..'O lawyers.
on~ in Ft
Lauderdale and one m
Syracuse . and it cost him S600 in atromey lees "'My !other said . 'My son is a
failure · My morher cried ..
Thai's when Juan decided to go to col·

~uan ·s otheT arrests were in tM same

vein . including using "bad language" to a
couple of guys who turned out ro be
plainclorhesmen (they yelled profanities
at him first) . "The charges were dropped.

but I learned mylesoon. I keep my moulh
shut. And I gave up smoldng pot. I don't
m iss

u:·

On the r0114
His travels as a .hHchhiker are even
more interesting. "My fnend and I hitch·
hiked toToronto for a weekend lasl su m·
mer with $50 each. We slept In cof1o.ge •
dorrns - lree. We ate good meals in good
restaurants. AI Ihe first one . lhe waHress •
dldn'l come back with the check . so we
left. Alter lhal we kepi on doing ll ... oat
near the door. learned how to leave un noticed . I carM back to Buffalo with

l

$30."'•
In the summer ol '78 Juan hUchhiked,.
to New Me•lco. He oays K's fun . He
never knows where he 11 be droppe&lt;l off.
or whom he'D rqeet . He's learned to spol
potentially h...rdous situa tions and
knows how to avoid them . although a
couple of times he was in an uncomfor·
table position for awhile.

"Once 1 got proposllloned by a
45-year·old truck driver. I got mad a nd
told him to drop rM off." AnothertirM, a
woman oal between Juan and lhe driver.
She got angry, and turned pll the Ignition
wltlle they were going 60 mph. Al1d k
wasn't until he finaDy got oul ot the cor, In
one grateful piece, lhat he notlc:ed as the
light shone on her: with lhe exception of
a brief top, she was nude.
"Then a nice guy come along a nd
bought me a oandwlch . He took me aU
the way to New Mexico, but first we we-nt
to his apanment so I could lake a shower.
I knew he was o .k."
On another oa:.aslon , a family in a
motor horne took him 1,000 miles. "11&gt;e
mother tudled me In one ol the beds and
let me sleep ."
She hopea ~ fllldeapearl
Juan da!ms moot people are nice. and
aU ol them are Interesting. He M&lt;IS a lot
more hHchhlking In his future , though my
gueos Is that alter he's employed. In lhe
Interest of time, he will haw to succumb
to lhe more conventional modes ollravel
unleu, ol course, he Is l'esearchlng
material lor his arlicles. And thai is a
strong possi&gt;llity .
If's nice lo know lhere are Juan
GorMzes out lhere . He has his feet on
the ground, and has set realistic goals lor
himself. He "reads" people ,well. and
moot importandy, he reads himself with a
high degree of accuracy and reallom. He
has Insight. He has optimism , e-n·
thusiasm, and a zest for life.
11&gt;e world Is his oyster.
I hope he finds a pearl.

Nutrition survey
mailed to 150,000
lakes about four mlnula to cocnplete and
11&gt;e types and amounts of oertaln
comes with a stamped, sd·addreaed
foods eaten are lhe locus of question·
envelope · for easy return to the re·
naires rfClerldy mailed to 150,000 New
searchers.
York residents bv U/ B researchen.
"Responses ,.. be kept confidential,•
· Dr. Saxon Graham oays responses will
Graham nota, • "to no one should be
be a vital component of an up&lt;amlng
fearful of rup&lt;lftding.• And, he adds,
sludy to c:onelate lhe possible protedlve
effects ol oome nutrients -lnst cancer or "we urge lhe ..,.ondents to be honest In .
lhefr answers."
hearl disuse. 11&gt;ey may also help lden·
Those who received quesllonnafra
lily other food oubstances which may
mailed lasl week are loc:ated throughout
conlrt&gt;ute to these medical ·problems.
N.W York Slate, are aver 40, and have
Graham is a profe.soor of sociology and
IOdal and JX«Wnlive medicine at U/B lived In their currenl homes lor more than
18 years.
and a ~ scientist at Roswell Perl&lt;
Memorial Institute.
Gnlham wgn aU who received the '
quatlonnalra to return lhem as IOOf'l u
"ll&gt;ere have been oeveral studies In lhe
past few years which ouggest that diet Is a
possi&gt;le .
"The data we may gain from these
more lrnpol1ant factor In cancer promoreslden pldred at random may jJn&gt;vkle
tion and JXcventlon than had been
us
new Information obout foods." he
believed ." Graham explains. ll&gt;ere '•
says.
oome evld~ that certain nutrients,
AI
raponMI1ts will be Informed of
such as Vitamin A, appear 10 have JXO·
tect1ve effects whlle olbers, certain fa •
sludy results later, he promila.
Olhen involved In the study, a paft..Qf
for oampie. promote tome types of
• the Program lor R-.rch IIi th'e
cancer .
Epidemiology ol Cancer, are Dr . .lama
"The quetllonnafra ask about rpec:lfic
types of loods, how olten they're alen ,
M.enhal, rnearch auociale and - n t
proff&gt;lior of sodology. Dr. Curtis Met1lln .
· and whether respondents have had hearl
chief of epidemiology at RO&amp;Well Pari&lt;:
~ . or c:ancer, and ~~ type of
Ms . Brenda Haugh ey ,, rasurch
canc:M, he con ua.
aaaocia • and Dr. p
Q-eenwald,
Quallont about alcohol and tobaa:o
chid of ~lology at lhe New York
COO'*lmpllon aloo lnduded
s..... tWjl ~t .. Ahoy.
n., brief..
~·

one..,.

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>Paradise , not p ollution was Love's aim
It's an Incredible Irony, An:hltecture
Profeaor David Parry wntures.
William Low was a 11toplan .
Not, mind yoll, to the same degree as
some 19th century romantics who
foresaw lemonade seas once the
goodneso ol man gained &amp;ee n!ln In new
settlemen guided by "right thinlmg."
But a lttopian noMthelao.
Low set oulln the.l890s to dewlap in

Niagara County a "Model City" where
common people woWd prosper, would
soar to new heights of social and
etonomic well-being.
The legacy ol that noble effort, as
know too weD, Is the toxic Love Canal
area In N~ Falls and the SCA
Otemical dump near Youngstown ,
which, Parry fears, Is desllned to become
· one ol the. major chemical waste depots

in New York State. Radioactive material
sits In otil1 another comer of Love's dream
site , at the Lake Ontario Ordnance

Worl&lt;s.
Parry, himself a student ol and planner
Still '"membered through a hotel and a . lor new communities, Is working on a
lew other straggling slructur.. and a
historical biography ol Love .
name on the Niagara Counly map.
Model City, N.Y . , was one of three new
He IObnobled him
dly enterprises wtth which Low was
Formerly associated wtth the Audubon
associated In the late 19th and early 20th

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

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

APRIL 10, 1980
VOL. 11 e NO. 26

Proposed 81 -82 calendar
FIRST SEM£Stal, lMI
lnstructm Begins
Rooh Hashana Obwrvance Begins at Sundown
Classa Resumed at Sundown
Yom Kippur ot.ervance Begins at Sundown
Cluoes Resumed at Sundown
Thanktglvlng Recess Begins at Close ol Classa .

aa- Resumed

'

Instruction Ends at Close ol Clasoes
Semester Examinations

centuries. He was , describes Parry, "an
entrepreneur on a grand scale, a true vi·

slonary."

·

W.

September 9, 1981

M.

September 28

W.

September 30
w. October 7
Th. October 8
T. November 24
M. November 30
T. De&lt;lember 15
W. December 16
w. December 23

Researchers tell
risks and potential
of DNA experiments

--S&lt;ofl

Bv Uoda Grace-Kobaa
The advantages, risks and applications

of recombinant DNA research were
deteribed to more than 100 people at·
tending a special sympoolum on the subject sponsored by the University Blosalety
CommHtee last Wednesday .
Four researchers reviewed their current
work, which ranged from possible
refinements ol dlagnostic techniques lor
JiclcJe ceO anemia to a projecl which Is still

SECOND SEMESTER. 1982
M.
M.

s.

M.

w.

Th.

s.

February 1, 1982
February 15
Malch 13
Malch 22

"hi/I)O(hetlcal. "

May 12
May 13

'

May 22

Sunday, May 23

Radical change would
shorten semesters

Ralc:tloepleut. .

wldapread lhpul on • .
SUNY policy II that " no single
...,._ ..... ~ ol , _ than 14
_ . . . - - wtth a .-1 ol JO _ ...
Instruction for two
ol ~ and narnlnatlons," 00 appft&gt;\1111 ol
c .......... woWd aloo be
required.
Aa:ordlng to the Calendar Commlttft

-

report ,

many

f~y

- odusiv«

rncmben

are

" " " - " with • fal that .. app&lt;Oldmalely 14 _... In IRngth, and •
- .....,.
......
Thll fromtipl1ng
• reluc:lan&lt;&gt;e
to
begin "' lal before Lobor o.y, and
• . - . . to end • boofor• Clwtllmaa. Some

. -·

""*' bod&amp;, ... """" - .
·-~---· -

Recombinant DNA research has been
11nderway on campus sinoe early 1979
and Is slrictly monitored by the Blooalety
Committee , chaired by Joseph Kite ol
Microbiology. Currently , seven faculty
members Whose work has been approved
by the commltt are lnillating or are weD
underway wtth projects.

• -

Klt has been pleased wtth the reaction
ol the Univenlty oommunlty to the an·
nouncernent last November that such
work Is being carried out here. BaslcaDy ,
that reaction Is one oltnternt, rather than
the alreme opposition that surfaced at
Qthcr universities, ..-bly Harvard ,
where not only faculty and otudents but
alto the Camfxldge ctty ooundl passed
raolutlons demandlng Its halt .
"We have attempted to educale the
. community about what the reMan:h en·
tails and the safeguards we have
aYblohed '" Kite oald .
Michael Garrici&lt; ol 8ioclmnllby feels
the raponM here has been "very, very
.,.,....,. ," and alto attrt.ufes It to the
edueattonal effort made by the committee .
and individual r-.rchers.
KJie _,...the eympoolum by reviewIng the commiiiH'• functlono end the
I'll the Naltonall
ol

=-..

"There can be certain risks Involved in
this type of research," he said, but
pointed out that It was a group ol sden·
tlsts who declared a moratorium on It In
the mid -70s, until proper guldeUnes were
established . These rules state that re·
searchers cannot : perform recombinant
DNA technlqurs with pathogenic
organisms or cells that may contain such
organisms; "Instruct" a bacteria to produce a toxin ; "teD" bacteria to be resistant
to certain drugs; deliberately introduce In·
to the environment any .organism that
contains recombinant DNA.

,..., -

caa be deeeol
Jeremy Bruenn ol CeD and Molecular
Biology gave a detailed explanation ol
the proceso lor creating recombinant
DNA, concluding wtth the statement that
almost any gene olinterest to researchers
can now be cloned .
Garrici&lt; deacribed the risks ol and
benefits ol recombinant DNA research.
"The risks are aD hypothetical at this
point." he oald . " AI present, there has
been no demonstrated case ol anybody
getting anything. Whether "'s beca~tse
the technique Itself Is sale or because
people. are adhering to the guidelines. we
don't know ."
The main concern , he went on , Is that,
becaltse the technique involves modify·
1ng lving organisms Capable ol reprodltC·
lng, Jdenlilts w nt to be sure none
acape Into nature and outside ol control
The predlcl«&lt; risks faD Into two bat6c
arus: one; where an unordel-ed or
undetlted gaw IC cloned (reproduced) :
and , two, where there Is "'-opriete
opfUiion ol a dairad gaw, that II,
where an ehrad gena il Introduced Into
an cqanlsm .......,. a ~ doan't
wanll

·--~--.-·

�l

-

I

• Calendar c1umae
..,__
...... .,

gawal pr.ctice tro return .., c:le.a end
eflc Chrlllmes. But. ..,. the
Comrnlllee, "tt.- CIOCIIIiciMd oo """'Y
~. eopecWiy .,_ the COlli ol trawl, !hot II ~­
The -~ apedment wllilouc:h •
calendar (Stony Brook) 10 unplu-

i

April 10, 198()

j

Enrollment for
spring semester
up 3% over '79

-lbel·-not~
.· --.1
·n. calendar panel .............

Enrolment for tpl1ng 1980 is
up elmoollhree per cent over the oping
objedlons .., -.tlng
before labor ol 1979, the Olftce ol Admieolons and
•
0., (which wee railed at SUNY Records ..,.,._
Aa:ording to OAA. 23,663 lndMduaJs
AloenyJ : llucknls who want to work dur·
lng the ............ . . lneonwnlenced;
are enrolled for the cumont ·
c:on_.ect to 22, 9871ast year et this Ume.
la!nly IChedules . . dlorupled; many
AI major categories ol students are up ,
~ . . - y at prof-..! ..-ngo
In .... Auguot and early September; the . with the largest gains occurring In Mlllard
-'&lt; before labor Day is a "loot _.,k" FUlmore College (ilp 8 .5 per cent &amp;om
3199 to 3471) , and In graduate reglslnl·
eclucallonaly because students aren'l set·
lions (5,625 compared to 5 ,318 last
dec! down; more admlnlstrallve tumyear, a jump ol S. 77 per cent).
oround time is needed betWeen summe
Undergraduate day. students number·
and f.a -..s; and an early start makes
12,843 this year (12,8041ast spring), and
the pubic unlvenlty calendar less attracprofessional ochool enrollments have
Uvc than the calendar observed by most
risen &amp;om 1,666to·l,724, with Law acpriYlote schoolo.
counUng for the entire Increase (up from
The Calender Commlttac proposes
723to 789) .
U..t the
be aa:ommodatecl
In fewer U..n lS weeks by converting the
Spring enroUment reflects the usual dip
from faD totals, down 4 . 13 per cent from
p&lt;CMnt SO-minute class to a 60-minute
the FaD '79 figure ol 24,683.
dass hout . A three-aedH courw would
IIIII have the oame 2250 contact houn ,
When dMy came froa
but they would be teleocoped Into fewer
Among dayUme undergraduates, there
were 156 new freshmen the oecond
semester,
402 transfers from other lnMany pollllve results would accrue,
stltutlons, 29 transfers from MFC to ooe,
the Commillee repon suggms:
23S re-cnters, and 11,949 conUnuliig
• Spring and faD oematers would be
. from faU (oll2,804 who attended in that
balanced;
oemester) .
• The time "conslric:tions" now fek In
MFC picked up 303 registrants with no
the fal could be removed: a free day after
previous college experience , SOl
Labor Dey and before~ begin could
transfers,
36 transfers from the day dMbe provided; the Thanksgiving Break
could be expanded to include Wednes- slons, and 482 re-enters. 2 , 149 MFC
students continued from the faD semester
day, "th~ easing the travel situation for
(3,263 were enrolled then) . MFC enroUthose wh6 return home to observe this
ment, incidentally, surpassed last faD ; HIs
holiday."
the only campus unit able to claim that
e tt would be pouible to Increase fall
distinction .
and spring exam periods by one or two
Graduate departments this spring
days, "reducing the number of times a
welcomed : 285 students new to grad
student would have two examinations
school,
191 transfers, 296 re-.nten. and
ocheduled at the oame Ume."
3S "others," and had 4 ,818 students
·e ·Havtng the Spring semester begin
returning from faD [of 59701 .
about February I would help thooe faculty members who faee a February 1 NIH
research deadhne. They could spend the
preceding weeks preparing repons and
proposals fr
from the diStractions ol a
micf:January resumption ol classes."
• "The Unlnrslty could achieve
llgnllicant savings in energy by having
tome ol the residential halls c:looed for an
ex~ period. One esUmate puts tnls
A U/ B graduate will be the first full saving~ al S3000 per day "
time cMI!an faculty member at West
e ·n. shorter oematers .oouJd also Point.
reduce the number ol trips cornmuUng
Reports the St . Louis Globe ·
students would have to make tO the camO.mocrot, "She'D be~ ma'am . That
Pill- Slmdarly, the cost ol bu ng should
much they know . Beyond that , the peoalso be favorably affected."
p~ at West Point sliD aren't swe what to
• "It has also been atimated that the. caD" 27~-old Jan Yoder who'U
board contracts would be slightly reduced
become an assistant professor at the for·
since f - meals would have to be protreso on the Hudson on July 1.
vided. Ther may be ocher ec:onomia
Dr . Yoder now tuches 50Clal
which would be achieved , but which are
psychology at Washington U. , St. Louis.
as yet unldenllfled ."
her first jOb since_ receiving Iter Ph .D. In
• "The ~ngthened class hour v.oould
psychology here In 1979. She was a T A
aloo prollldc an additional ten minutes for
In the Psych Department during her stay ,
travel between campu-. •
at Buffalo.
• "Flnaly, although H cannot easily be
quantfled, the additional Ume ~
~
sematers provides mor opportuntly for
• Appc-ehenllve" Is llow Yoder feels
the Umvently to prepare for the next about Iter tnree-year appointment at
term , to rmovate quarters, and limply to
West Point, she told the St. Louis paper:
caldl up with what -m to be ever- "I've studied tokenism . Everything you
incr-*'11 ~ .
say Is noted and waldled ."
Or Andrew Hok. acting dean ol the
Yoder hopes, though , to become a
Graduate School, chain the Calendar spobspenon for fe~ cadets- who
comm
. Other members •e· James
were first admitted in 1976.
Blackhurot, Richard Oremuk , M11&lt;:hell
As a grad student at U/ B, she was inHarwtz. Arthur L Kaiser, Jooeph
volved in a project which helped anKrakowlak , Joyce !'ron, Erwin Se!laJ, lldpa oome ol the problems I m•
t.aon.d Snyder, G.ny Soeh-. and
cadets might have at the former ~ bas·
BradW~
lion. Congrea had ordered that the only
changes to be alowed were !hoM to
reaofve problems reaultlng from
physiological dlfferenca between men
and women. Boxing r"qulrernents and
oome aercltes were modified, .00 a
llghlar rifle adopted , Yoder oald in her St .
Lou Interview

ca-.

-can

_..._

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

........ ....,... ....t
By faculties, OAR

• DNA research

.._ _

the containment measures being used to prevent
these concerns &amp;om becoming reality. He
noled recent rnodlllcatlons In the NIH
guidelines have removed aD but the first
level ol c:onstnlnts on expe!lmenls done
with E. coli Kl2, which is the organism
being uoed in the U/B projects .
reports

this

breakdown ol approved and intended
majon among_~ : ./1111 and Ut·
ten, 810 (322 men , 488 women) ;
Engineering and Applied Sciences,
2,511 (2,223 men and 288 women) ;
Health Sciences, 2,058 (566 men and
1,492 women) ; Noturol Sciences and
Molh,l , l76(786menand390women) ;
Sodol Scienoes, 1,761 (845 men and
916 women) ; Archltulure, 329 (246
men and 83 women) ; MonCJ!lf''""nt,
1,877 (1 ,236 men and641 women) ; and
misceDaneous, 4.3.
·
Graduate enrollments indude: Arts
and Utters, 532 (31SfuU-Ume, 217 parttime; 269 men , 263 women) ; Educa·
tiona/ Studiea , 1,249 (424 fuU-IIme, 82S
part-time; 63S men, 4).4 women) ;
Engineering and Applied Sciences, 414
(222 fuU-IIme, 192 part-time; 359 men,
SS women); Natural Sciences and
Mathemotks , 406 (293 fuU-time , 113
part-time; 320 men, 86 women) ; Soclal
Sclenca, 867 (429 fuU-time, 438 parttime ; 513 men, 3S4 women) ; Social
Work, 159 (133 fuU-time and 26 part,
time; 44 men , US women); Archl~c­
ture. 84 (74 fuU -time, 10 part-Ume; 60
men, 24 women) ; ManCJ!lf'ment, 775
(329 fuU-time, 446 part-_time; S56 men ,
219 women) ; Information and Librory
Studies , 129 (71 fuU-time, SO part·time ;
37 men , 92 women) ; RosUH!II Park, 100
(68 fuD-time, 32 part-time; 62 men, 38
women) ; Heahh Sciences, 861 (429 fuUtime and 432 part-time ; 437 men and
424 women) .
Professional enroUments are : Law,
789 (530 men and 259 women) ; Dentistry, 353 (;l07 men and 46 women) ;
Medicine, 570 (396 men and 174
women) ; and Pharm . D., 12 (9 men and
3 women) .

U/ 8 psychology Ph.D. will be
West Point's 1st civilian prof

HRP award

Arole ...... lllld...._...,
The U/B wad oald ..... "'
aloo to be
• role model for the 400 women now at
h:ademy
'"They've not aeen women In polllllono
ol authorily AI the prof. . . . . ... .-.

"*'· W

w1111t to thow
women can
proleMional .00 ~nt ·and

......daatJed
.,

. Garrick then

feminine ."
She wants to be an advocate for
changes needed . as well. "The fact that
tltey're hiring me shows a comm~ment to
that role ," she told the G~ ·O.mocrot,
adding, however, tnat West Point was
" required to h ire civilian faculty
members."
tha~e St. Louis paper went on to repon

"Dr. Yoder plans to continue her
reoearch into women in Qdershlp,
studying what makes an effecUve ~ader,
how m&lt;!n react to women in Qdershlp
and the effects ol tokenism . She also
plans to study conllicts women may have
between the mUHary career they choooe
and a tradltlonal family life .
"The pressures on women at West
Point have decreaoed somewhat , she
said . The first women enrolled were so
visible that they often were reluctant to
repon Ulness because ol stereotypical
concl\1$1oos others would reach .. . .Their
classmates at that time also w..re not
prepared to have female classmates.
" But 4fter four years, men 4!ntering
West Point know to expect to see and
.vork with women cadets. Dr . Yoder
Jald
Equality ID the future?
"Site hopes eventuaUy to oee at West
Point 'a very egaUtarian struclure.'
"Dr. Yoder ei&lt;P«ts to make few adjustments In her teaching techniques. She
oald the cadets"place more emphasis on
applying what they ~am , so she plans a
gr ater applied orientation In her
poychology lnsons. But other dlff ences
are minimal.
" 'They- unWorms One! caD their 1!'1·
structon, * • but they're still 18- to
20-year-olds with the same c:oncerns
llley'•• •
mor conoerv.uve ' She
:::::..~ .'And they don't dare f ~

_

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

As little as six months ago, Gan1ck
said 0 most ol the pi*IJie benefits of
rec:Ombinant DNA raean:h were largely
hypolhelical. Today, they 1ft nearer fruition . The technique is being used to produce: Interferon, which has recently been
found to be potlibly useful against oeveral
forms ol c4ncer; hur-. lnsulii!, which
would be ol great benefit to diabetics
allergic to pig lnsuan; oomatootatin , a
growth hormone which prevents action
of the main growth hormone a nd Is used
to treat gigantism, though still on only an
experimental basis with animals; human
Hcg, of primary I n - for use in birth
control, and HB viral vaccine, useful
against serum hepatHis.
Agricultural, che m ical and en ·
vlronmental benefHs are also possible In
the future , Garrick related .
Most of these are 10 to 30 years away ,
he said, one of the main barriers being
economics. The technique Is stiU very ex·
pensive .
A member of the audience asked Gar·
rick what measures were In force to con·
trol Industry's use of the recombinant
·
DNA techniques.
"So far , only moral suasion and the
fear of bad public relations," ne replied .
The large chemical and drug companies
fear that M they go "too far" the federal
government will step In·with strict laws, so
they have used voluntary compliance
with NIH guldetines. Garrick doesn't feel
tnls balance will last, however.

Four brtef ........,._,
Four researchers concluded the sym·
poslum witlt brief overviews ·of their
reoearch .
"Much of the work here, Including
much of my own, Is In the category of
basic science," Garrick said later. "It is
aimed at understanding questions rather
than at particular applications."
Garrick himseH Is working on a
modification of a technique now being
used for prenatal and antenatal diagnosis
of sickle cell anemia . This tecnnlque,
developed elsewhere, can be used to
detect the gene that causes the disease In
about 60 per cent of pregnancies among
the aftected population. Garrick hopes
that his modllications will allow the test to
be used In aD pregnancies, and estimates
that he Is about six months away from his
goal.
S~phen Free ol CeO and Molecular
Biology described his isolation ol genes
wnich code for ribosomal DNA In
neurospora, a bread mold . He Is looking
at how the DNA Is organized, the ''basic
.
rules" of the bacterium.
Edward NUes of Biochemistry Is using
recombinant DNA techniques to produce
large amounts of a particular gene he Is
studying. His larger aim Is to understand
why certain genes are expresoed In dlf·
ferent cells, or how genes are Instructed
to code for , say, mu~ cells, or bone
cells.
Bruenn described his proposed tech·
nique for cloning yeast viral recombinant
DNA He admiHed that his WOric Is still
"hypothetical" and has not yet begun.

William· Hale
dead at 4i
William L. Hale, cOnical assoclat pro·

fesoor of microbiology, died une&gt;opected ·
ly Apr;J 2 at Kenmore Mercy Hospital He
was 41
H. received the M.A. from U/ B and
)olned th faculty in 1965. He reoelved
the A B degree In 1961 from Wilkes
CoUege , Wilkes-Barre, Pa . A devoted
and popular teacher , he taugh t
undergraduat counes in microbiology 10
pharmacy , nursing and m e di~ a l
technology studants at U/ B. ln addition.
he laughJ nurtlng studen at Buffalo
General and Millard FIDmore hotpitals
and the Erie County Medical Center

�Apd 10, 1980

.exchange effort
SchaiiiiJi ......... wllh ... i&gt;.apl.·.
R.puollllc of 0... --.1 about _.tght
years ago when torn- Praldent Nixon

Clainese event
continues••••
Zhang Suchu (right above) of &amp;ljlng,
China, spoke In the Kiva last Thunday
night about her experiences as the
daughter of a prominent family ' In China.
On Tu.aday of last week, James Kuo of
~ College gave a demonmatlon on
~~Approach to Painting" before
a full-house at the Art Department. Both
were part of the ftve-week "Chinese Experlen&lt;:~e" currently being presented by the
Oftlce of Cultural Alfalra and funded by
FSA. The event continues this wftk with
ftlm, acupuncture and a banquet (oee
Calendar).

U/B, ..BeijiJJg are considering

of exchange

possible program
U/ B and ~ Polytechnic Unlversl·
ty In lhe People's Republic of China will
begin a ocholar and academic program
exchange th sumiTM!r, if U!'lvenity of.
fidakapprove
Laot month, Georve Lee, dean of
Engineering and App d Sclencu.
visited China on an lnvllation from a
high-ranking university administrator
there. Befor eondudlng a 5even-day
stay, he dr..tted an agreement for a possible exchange of graduate students, facul·
ty and' Invited ocbolars
As proposed, lhe program would begin
July ' • and , Ill least lnlllally, would be
Urn~ to atolalof JOfaculty and student

exchanges &amp;om both CIOUntril!s. Although

~ II pritnMlly Interested in exchanges th Individuals In engineering
and related ~JC~eRCes , the draft proposal
..,..._
that both unlversillel would
_... each other In eotabllshing exchanges In other academic areas.
Alws • three-year period, the 19U•
meni ca1t for a program rcviNI and
evaluation It also asks lhlll ach lnsl!W·
• lion appoint "" lndMdu.l to t.:llitbt and
maintain communocations bittv.~Un the

._ tchoolo .

FIOC\llty and graduate students from
either lnslilution •e out&gt;Jecl to ~
by the hall tebool. If one institution considers 1 "ex mcly lnlpottant" to Invite •
paoUculer f.cultv rncmbe-,
opecillc
dulles of lhlll ocholar and cosu ln\/Oived
will be negoCIIIIed on an indlvldu.l bull .
T.-1 npenMO of other faculty and
will normally be
raponslblljty either of
Individual or of the home
u
Upon arrtval, facu
jooln the ap~academic ~ to pur·
- ~ ..,...1-upon r~ or
tpedllll tr
Pl'"'l'
Sludenll
to ,...... lor or

won

J)CIIIIblv op (.,. umnatrlculloled I&amp;IIIUs
~ the hnll tebool II under no
.,...._topr
, abe
to - · them for

lor shorter periods, Uke a portion of the
summer.
Ahhough nol sped(lcally mentioned In
lhe proposal, Lee said he will recommend that vishors , when possible . take
EngUsh language courses at U/ B's Intensive Engnsh Language lnotitute when
they lint anive In Buffalo. This will not
only help overcome language berrien, he
offered, but will aho minimize any
"cuhure shock."
A benofrt of having an exchange program With an Institution in China's
capital, noled Lee, Is that more par·
lidpants wiU have facility In English .
Betjlng also has a higher standard of Uv. ing than surrounding areas, 50 adjust·
mo.nt for foreign visltoro will be mlnlmlz-

ed .
Because Beijing's engineering facilities
are not as developed as U/ B's, Lee ad ·
mils the experience will have more
cuhural than scholarly value . Where the
Unlvershy will definitely prof~ is that the
program wiD open up China for foeld
research In the social sciences. Beijing
hopes to use the eJ&lt;pertise of faculty here
to set up laboratory facilities .
Ahhough most Chinese facuhy visiting
U/ B through this program will hove only
junior status. Lee noted they will be
around 40-years-of-age . The reason , he
explained , is thao the Cuhural Revolution
put the clamp on university educations .
and scholars are only now beginning to
make up for lost time .

Are ethnic jokes harmless?
yes and no, says· Stevens
One sura way for a politician to
gu111o&lt;ine his pollllcal ambition Is to teD
an ethnic: joke. Ask Ronald Reagan.
Only .tier he claimed he was quoted
out of context, · then profusely apologo~cd , did Reagan win public
forgiY&lt;
for his faux pos. Even 50 ,
Pollsh and Italian voters aren 't Ukely to
nomlnldo him for Man of the Year.
What Reagan did , In anthropologl&lt;al
tftms,
to cross the bounds of privi~Rg.d f.nlliari!y. That Is, his ethnic joke
was repatedlo a massive audience with
whom he lh.ored
commonalhy. oo
the r
were comidered lnappropriaM . Ragan's pc&gt;lllbl slatus made
the sluro just that much more reprehenS·

ble .
Now, t R~ -.e a Pola or an
I
and told
sarM pke to a group
of .. ethnic cohorts, he prob.bly would
'-«
a big laugh The dlf!o nee,
of
1o context and clew- of
lam
Aa:onl
Philllpo
lift

re&gt;&lt;&gt;'-

to

U/ B anthropologist
• .~hole
- In fad •

~which~

In

tha

Pre -Pietllocen•

had

or

signed the Shanghai Agreement, but only
In the past . _ years have the U:S . and
China moved to rJ~&lt;n "meaningful formats" In exchanges.
Dr. Pierre M. PIIITolle , who for five
years has headed the Committee on
Scholarly Communication with the Peo·
pie's Republic of Chlna and the U.S . Na tional Academy of Sciences, recounted
to an Informal gathering of U/ B faculty
a_nd -administration last week that initially.
such programs were "superflctal" In
nature whh various delegations spendlng
only a few weeks In China.
In 1978. however, ehher In an effort to
speed normalization between the . _
superpowers or to boost Its own re5earch
capabilhy, China agreed to a "more
substantial" mode of exchange, Individuals (as oppo5ed to just delegations)
were perml11ed to stay In the country for
prolonged periods of time (up to two
yean) to study or conduct research .
Moreover, exchanges were opened up to
those In fields other than 5tlence and
angineering, and visitors were allowed
more access to government ogendes and
lnsthullons previously off hmhs.
Currently, the United Slates is sponsoring about 50 exchange participants in
two categories: 20 In advanced training
and 30 In research . Those In re5eareh are
divided about equally among science and
engineering, social sciences and the
humanhles.
Although the Chinese would like to accommodate more Americans and , in ·

fact, send more of their students and
faculty here than to any olher country,
Parrolle predicted Federal funding
shortages will force the number to stay
about the same for at least a few years.
ParroUe noted that Increased numbers
of faculty are expressing "eagemeos"
over short-term (about two months) lee·
ture assignments In China. Faculty who
qualay lor such exchanges, must pay
their own transportation costs. but once
they are there, the Chinese take care of
the rest .
In addition , Parrolle noted . the
Chinese hire American faculty to teach
selected scienllflc areas and English .
These assignments last for six months to a
year. Faculty recruited by China's Bureau
of Foreign Experts have their transportation paid .
Currently, between 700 and 800
Chinese faculty and students are In the
U.S . on exchange programs sponsored
by their government . Some 150 cam·
pu5eS around 'the country host the
visitors , with generally about two or three
p.artldpants at each . Wisconsin and
Berkeley are exceptions, each having
large numbers. About 85 per cent of the
participants have faculty status and 15
pe.r cent are graduate. students. .

8 sides government·sponsored

Pleistooene epoch when group survival
and cohesion depended on an "us versus
them" al1otude . Referring to "them" in
pejorative terms' assisted the group In
maintaining solidarity, he explained .
An interesting footnote.. relayed
Stevens, is that ethnic jokes often are
made between groups that have an
"underlying element of respect" lor each
olher. Not neceuartly love or admiration .
mina you . but a degree of respect for
some aspect or quality of the other
group. Alter aU, he noted , people don't
usually pke about a perc ived enemy or
about those who constitute a threat
Stevens theorizes that one can gain Inlight Into the type of felatlonshlp people
ihare by oboervmg the type of )Oking
.beh.vior permhted , Wllhin tmAln conotrain • the closer the r latlonshtp, the
fr- one lo to joke wrth lmpunhy.
Politicians who pride themselves on
thft - · o f humor can loam a good
laaon from thlo anthropological paspectlve on )Oking. In the long""'· K may coot ·
them a lew laughs, but at least they won '1
ha to deal Wllh trat ethnics and an defamation lcagun

.na.

· t , Parrollesaid, anotl:&gt;er 500 to 600
Chin
•tudenls are being educated
here th
h private funding . These
students are I high school or college age
and are a
ding a wide range of educalions, Including junior col·
tional in
leges .
Parrolle's visit was oponsored by the
Council on International Studies.

Wind energy
event slated
A major conference on wind energy
•ystems sponsored by the New York
Stat L!!gtslaHve Commission on Science
and Technology and the U/B Faculty of
Engineering and Applied Sciences has
been 5theduled lor May 23 at Woldman
Theatre
The public event wiU bring together
r presentaHves of national, state and
loa! govoommcnls,industry, finance . and
education to dltcuss the role of wind
energy In
Stat•• future
Assemblyman William B Hoyt Is chairman of the legjslattw commission and
Dr Dennis Makmc . Electrital Engon-·
lng , U/B . Is coordinating Ulliv&lt;mtty par·

m.

tidpallon

�April 10, 1980

4

......,_

Novak decision called
de facto ·retrenchment

They're used to keep
women in their places;
just ask Tammy Lynn

. , .,.,. 8ooch-.kl
T 11111my Lynn might be a nice name IO&lt;
a buuty conlioUnt, but II doan' exactly
engender aedtllllly IO&lt; a prolaolonal

woman . Jm.glne hearing this ...--over:
"Here II Tammy Lynn Jones wllh the
CBS Evening ~ -· Somehow it just
doanl ftt .
U/ B Clauics Professor Leo C . Curran,
In fad , lheor1za that names giVen
....,.,_.. today, llka those In Ancivlt
Rome, not only reflect women's Inferior
IIOdclal position.
· , but te nd to \&lt;eel&gt; Chern in
"their piKe."
In a lecture sponJOred by the Classics
Club, C urran noted that by the end of the
RO&lt;nan Republic, men-tJpeCially those
from the upper c:laues-1\ad three
names: a penonal name, a second which
lnditatad tr1bal ancestry, and a third
which originated as a nickname, but later
euentialy functioned as an inherited

FMI-.

name but was Identified via her husband
and lather, relleded the - 1 -prac·
lice-at least among the rich - of marryIng not !0&lt; love, but to cement alliances
.,.. consoldate Wealth .,.. power. Women
were appredlltad noi for their indlviduall·
ty but as a means ·to an end.
•

w-eeteo.....-ct

Naming practices lor women in contempO&lt;ary Ama'oca are not so blatantly
chauvtnlslic, but sllllindlcat« that women
are not given "a
measure of
respect," Curran cont«nds.
After examining a list of 780 na mes
from a graduation program of a local
suburbon high school-one which kad no
black seniors and no dominant e thnic
group-Curran found 10 males wllh
names he would consider "remarkable" :
five wllh nidmaines lor first names (Jim ,
Frank, Sam) . two with unusual spelings
(Terrance and Jon) , and three with
family na me, such a s Marcus Tullius
" highly uncommon" names, BreH,
Clcen&gt;.
Lauren and DarreU.
At the tlme , families could choose from
By contrast, 49 females kad nicknlllti8
18 lint names for males.
. lor lint names (Lisa , Cathy, Lynn) , 13
had unusual speDings (Robyn, Cindl),
No doolce f o r and. 31 kad uncommon names, such as
Women, on the OIMr ~. kad only
Shira, J~na , Tamah and Tracey.
one name, and !her• was no choice inSeven females also kad compound
volved : they all kad to have a ferninlne
names (lynanne, JoAnn) , and 28 kad
vcnlon of their father's tribal name. So,
names which...,.,... common nouns or ad ·
Marcus l'ullius Cicero would name his
jedfves In English or In other languages,
daughtft Tullia. If hit kad more than one
like Robin, Colleen and Bonnie. There
female offspring, they would be called
were no male equivalents in these two
Tullia Major and 'Tullia Minor, or
groupings.
numerllls would be used for distinction ,
While women's names show more
Tullia Ill, to. example.
"orjginallty and creatMty, " Cunan nota&lt;! ,
When a woman married, the hus·
men 's are generally more "formal and
band's name (In the postC!SSivc case) was
trad itiona l." The reason for the
added . If Tullia married a man named
diJcrepancy, he suspects, ts that parents
MateBus, she would be known as Tullia
somehow lite! free to give female children
Mat«lli . This gave her the grand distinc·
unconventional names and spellings, but
tion of forever being known as TuDius'
are more cautious with males.
daughter and Matellus' wtfe .
To underscore his point , Curran
The naming system ' could have relayed that In a SltCiion of "The New Age
praent d pr~ms. mused Curran,
Baby Book" which gives parents tech·
apectaly ' when men wrot poems to
nlques lor creating new names for their
their mamed Iewers. But Roman lngenui·
chlldren, 51 of the eKamples listed are lor
ty came to the rescue. To avoid any
female names, but only 10 are for men .
nega
repercussions , they simply
Unfortunately, women with less trad i·
aaatad pel names for their paramours,
tional and formal names are often "not
Cynthia , for example.
taket) as seriously" as they should , Cur·
The fact that a WO&lt;nan kad no personal
rJ~n submits.

proper

r:;

If Profa1or Jerome Slater's NIITallve ,
as repon.d In these
on Mlrch 27,
ts as accurate as it ts
...fit. then the
CAM of Profesoor Danle Novak Is an
ou"-"""• blatant tn)ulllce and one
which must remain central to the Unlver·
illy community's of moral indignation. To judge from past performance,
we seriously &lt;loubt any Administrative of.
licial involved has at his disposal either
the facts to challenge Profeuor Slater's
report , or the conviction to compel« with
his eloquence.
Instead the Administration has sent the
University a blufi t message, which c:arrles
a lesson for faculty that Is both dear and
depressing: In these constrained times ,
the "rule of merit." WO&lt;ds of reason ,
orderly processes of judgment , the
laborious building of democratic equity
and simp le lair play; aU these count for
absolutely tiPthlng. AD that counts these
days Is the iron rule of the Administrator.
The reasons lor denying Professor
Novak tenure , wben comparltd to the
reasons lor granHng him tenure, are film ·
sy evasions. The Admlnlslrallon ts, lor
the sake of Its own convenience,
capriciously reinterpreting criteria for
tenure , callously Interfering In matters
which are primarily a faculty responslbiUty. By every precedent . and academic
custom we know of, the criteria for tenure

as well as the -...1 procesa ;,, tenure
judgments .., both fundamentally faculty
responsibtllties . Ad miniltrators and
Univenlly Boards are bound to heed and
be responsive to facully Judgments,
whether poslllve 01" negative .
Perhaps P resi d en t Ketter and
Chatic:ellor Wharton have been deceived
by a misrepresentation of Professor
Novak's credentials. We "'V" them to
reconsider the C.... In the lght of aU the
evidence, including the luUy detalled
"outside" reviews of Profaooo· Novak's
worit. oo-wloe, we can only concur
with Professor Slater's Inference that
Novak Is the victim of a covert, "&lt;!e Focto
reirenchment," just precisely the sort of
thing the Adminlslralion has russured us
H would never , never do. WeD, It seems
at this point , they've gone and done 11. If
the University community does not protest vigorously and repeatedly , the Ad·
min istration will surely do Jl again and
again and again. We invite otber .
members of the faculty and espediiUy the
Aoculty Senate El&lt;ecullve Committee to
make themselves heard on this maHer.

- Stefaa Flelacber
Associate Prolessor,
English

-Tho-

Professor,
English

Should faculty advise on' cuts?
No, yes and yes, say 2 of them
All OpeD Letter to the FKUity
SeD.ta: .
It Is hlstoricaUy weU-&lt;!Siabllshed: the

members.
The question is: Are members of this
faculty to participate In retrenchment
decisions? If this ca mpus is to do what It Is
by historical mandate oblig•ted to do , the
answer Is dlclatad .
1. By the criterion of student enroU·
ment, NO , we cannot a nd wiD not par·
tlcipate, whateve r versions of that
(whether the Greiner report , o r some
other) is offered .
2 . By the criterion of the q uality of
scholarly and scientilic productivity and
that alone, YES, we can and will par·
tlclpate In luD recognllion o f the substan·
live comple•lty of such judgme nts. For to
apply such criteria, o ur expert judgments
are essential.
3 . By the criterion of seniority, ~driven
to It by our own internal d ivisions or
failure o f nerve, YES, we wiD participate ,
but there "we" will be actin~ not as a
faculty but in terms of the JeSitimate in·
dividual sell-interests of mos1 of us , as
members of a union , which is to say,
prlnclpaUy we will stonewall it. ·

troubles me are some of the methods
which have been used to advance that
position . That was the main point of my
earlier letter to thlt Repot'feT. Your leHer•
does much to aUay my concern In that
r~tgMd . A recent conversation with BiD
Akn also leads me to believe that we can
coot the passions and worit comtrudlvely

overriding moral obligation of · each
member of a faculty of a uniu~ty Is to
produce knowledge or works of art
through science or scholarship or artistic
performance and to tnoin others who will
do likewise.
Retrenchment Is upon us. Decision as
to faculty retrenchment will necessarily
get made by some criterion . Two are be ·
ing earnestly debatad :
1. To members of the State govern·
ment and no doubt to virtuaUy aU tax·
payers, we are a college or trade school
and the basic criterion for retrenchment is
clear: student enroUments.
2. To members of the unions indudlng
our own , the basic criterion Is also dear:
seniority.
It seems sell-evident: If this campus is
to do what It by historical mandate Is
moraUy obligatad to do , both of those
criteria are wrong , the lint being bil.arre ,
the second reasonable but badly flawed ,
and a third criterion Is dlclatad: obvious·
ly, the quality of scientific and scholarly
and artistic productivity, of this campus
relallve to others, of any unit withln the
campus relative to other units , and of any
faculty member of a unit relatlve to other

To the best of my knowledge, n&lt;member of the Sena Planning CornmK

Let e ach do what s I he does best

Open-minded understanding
needed, Greiner suggests

together.

tee favors retrenchment u a means tc

CoaaoUy

Editor.

adapl to budget reductions. Nor do ,
Today I read about Dean Levy'~
bellotve that any number of that commH·
thoughts on tenure and promotion . They
I«« would ICIVC on a commltt to lden·
are the aame things that I have heard
lily retrenchment unlts. On that point,
over and over again. I am not saying that
the enclosed copy of the worldng
I totoUy disagree with Dean levy but I
dr.tt of our propoeed report to the
don 't totally agree with him either My
Senate l'.s you noted in your letter, we
qu ion is: Why can' a teaching stall
do
that the faculty . through the
and a research stall exist together In ead
Senate , should parlidpa In academic · ol a teaching-research staff? Maybe you
planning to. the U""'-\1. Rat auurltd ,
wondering what this statement
'-ve. that our collegial stance toward are
means
our administra
olllcen Is buod on the
It Is obvious ·that a lot ol your better
uoumpllon that lhooe olllc.n
ad In
t achers spend more time with students
good faith toward us and our colleagues
and don't pu
as much or do less
In the faculty and profeMioneJ staff.
research I have seen exee nt teachers
have no rnson to bellotve that uoump· leeve or not get tenure becaOM of an In·
lion to be wrong. II - should be PfOV8n
odequ'll r-.rch ~nd
not be"* . . .
On the other hand . a 1o&lt; of your better
•..,... f&lt;w any Albltrary c..- ol .--hers
are not your better teachers
pow«.
In fac1 . some ar awful but they gei
One. . , ., than you "" your
.
tenure bec:au of research
Y01n alnce'olly,
So~ t~ do both
'!'he. ar
- WU.U..Il.~
ones. accordJng
the Uni-.ity

w.

wrong,' -·-

to

-Freclaick 0 . Gdrllll
Professsor of Anthropology
- Rao.J NaroU
Distinguished Professor of
Anthropology

outlines, that belong here . Unfortunately.
.finding this type ts rare .
My point Is, why can't things be
changed? Why not have your best

teacher, who don 'I research very we.U
teach luU -time and your berter research·

ers with ineffective teaching methods do
the research. This way , both the student
and the University would receive the
most beneiH. The student has to suffer
with an Ineffective teacher and the
Unlv rslty suffers with ineffective re·
searchers. The teachers that do both well
should continue to do so
I think H's Hme for these present at·
liludes to change, becauae the University
loses too -many outstanding leachers as a
rnuh of pres«nt ideologies ond ten ure j
standards After all. what Is a Un ~ven~ty
without ~ood teaching and good
research Why sacrifoce one for the o ther'
Sincerely.
- BIU Chandtan

�Apri 10, 1980

Institutional ·Studies Of/Ice
will be clearlnghou~e for U I B data
Dr. ~K- ~uka~
ericyclopedia on U/8.
· Let the c o n - lapse and he will
produce a chert reflocllng what slice
of the Federal government re.arch pic
U/8 faculty are getting. A rclallvely smaD
.,...., he points out. (Sec box below.)
During anolher peuse, he wtl show
you figures which Indicate that, for lOme
-.on, U/B Is attracting a lower perten·
IBge of Arts and LetteR majors than oc·
curs In the overall college entrance
majon pool.
He has flgura, loo, about clast size
and daoaoom """"' )JtillzAtion . Amazlngly, thoooc stallsllcs show that at this
"'arge, -m.ly Bne" unlvenljy a qu1111er
of undergraduate classes have 10
students
Ins.
These and olher data concerning the
Untventty 1\ave not been readily available
In recent years. Admlnlslrators needing
to develop policies and procedures re·
llect!ng "reality" have aD too often had to
rely on "conventional wisdom" or Intuition, or t.ave bad lo e&gt;q&gt;end staff Hme on
gathering statistics which , In all
likelihood, may 1\ave b«n already
avatlable In another of&amp;e. The Inception
(re-lnception actually) of an Office oflnstilullonal Studln Is designed lo change
allth .

loplco.

'*

WIW doe o8k:e will tlo

Kojalw , who t.as been on campus
ilnce Thanksgiving, most recently - . 1
as . . - n t dlreclor of planning and
research In the State of New Jersey's
Department. of . Higher Education . He
dMdn what Institutional Studies wiD be
dOing inlo two broad categories.
F-qur majo&lt; responslbllities fall under
thw1lrst heading, actlvtlln which lnitllutional Studies itseH Is lnttiaUng: (I) The
Office wtll coa&lt;dlnate aD major data collection efforts on campus; (2) It' will attempi to Inform the U/ 8 Community on
the useo and meaning of these tnstitu ·
tlonal data; (3) It will Issue regular
studies of U/ 8 students, faculty and lnstruc:lional """"', and the Interaction
ar110n9 them; (4) It will identify areas of
$pl!dal concern to the University and
undertake Sl)eCiai studies of them.
In the realm of data colleclion required
or requested from ouiSide. Institutional
Studies will be rnporulble lor compiling
U / 8 '• responses to requests for non·
budgelary Information from governmen·
tal agendn, national organizations and
olher tnstttullons. The office wiU also
handle requesll for opeda) tnsdtutional
Information not proylded !n regular office
reports , at the direction of the President:
Assisllng In developing polides and
procedures for the Mw agency arc a
Bo.-d of Ateoc:lata, tndudlng: Robert J .
WIIQRG, tsSislant executive vice president; Voldemat lnnus. us!slanl vice
prHiidcnt for academic affairs; Frank T .
Schimplha..,_, - n l dean, School of
Medicine; Richard Dremuk, director of
Admlollons and Records; a reprnen·
tallve of computing services; two
repr• nlllllves of the Faculty Senate:
Edward J. HOIIOI'I&lt;a. a.oc:iate prolesaor,
poyc:hology, and Robcl1 C. Nichols. prolet-, educational · Pll,IChology; two
onembtn of the Proleuioiuol Jlalf:'RIIll G .

--

~

""""""'~.........,_
~-

Maldnjaa u.t
In conjunction wilh this Boaril, jrlstitullonal Studies Is now solidting lnlorma- ·
t1on from administrators and academk
units so H can develop an Inventory of
regular and special dalll collection and
reporting efforts which are currendy goIng on . This will enable the offlce lo
devise a procedure by which H can : be
notified In advance of major dalll collec·
Uon efforts, advise and coordinate such
efforts when appropriate , and obtain
copies of 11atruments and reports~.,. tn ·
elusion In an Institutional S!Qdies bt&gt;tary.
To fulfUI its educational mission , Kojaku' Intends to 1\avt the office offer a
series ¢ presentations to academic: and
administrative' units on how report data Is
used and why this Information Is lmpor·
tant. The presentation. will also explain
how his office operates and wiD attempt
to help departmental stall become more
familiar with data reporting forms and
schedulea.
·
To keep the wider campus population
Informed, Kojaku envisages regular articlea In the Reporter on toplci of general
Interest. For example, data will be
presented comparing U/ 8 to peer
universities on a number of ocales, or the
·importance of iludent conlacl·hour/
facilities ulillzallon reports may be expia ned . News 1term willldentMy recently
completed reports 11\at are available from
Institutional Studies.

"-tta for .................
Other short-term reporting objectives
which Kojaku t.as outlined Include. providing lludent FTE workload reports lo
appropriate campus offices, and development of a series ol prolile reports fOI' ad mlnistralors. The latter will Include trend
data , SUNY and national comparative
data , brief commentaries on possible
problems, and a detaiptlon of available
detailed data, conc:etnlng a variely of

- -... - - lf75

T....

Llpslb:, assistant to the chairman, Department of English, and Clifford Wilson ,
director, Student Accounts; and Helen
Wyant, director, Student Testing and
Research , representing Student Affairs.

601l
.341l
24

.on

30Zil
ZSil
121l
1005

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.23

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48

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5

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Zl$
741l
47

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73
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87

1.365

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42
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"Soo«e· N-..1 5denco Founddon. ~- bnce: R4D FU!Hb
F1fo11 y - 19~ •c..--- of 5dence 11-.:at sm... NSF 79-320) .
'"c.:~• .,_.____ "-·-"'-~ ,.,
Waehlnglon, D · .: • - - ..,.,_..,. ,~_.....,, l:r' 7 •

~

from the 1978 ~of the 100 cloc:tani1Pnflnl
...lUll~ ....... ~ ~~ ...:sal 'l deool (ClOfiOinlts,
-

Kojaku and his ~ Wlll. aloe
analyze routine reports to determine units
or procedures on campus which may
mertl ~attention . FO&lt; eurnple, they
may want to study how IIUdent data form
update procedures relate to registration,
or how catalog malerllll may be refined to
more appropriately reflect Instructional
realitiu.
Special studies thai the office will .
handle may Include such topk:s as
undergraduate enrollment !rends ,
measures of raearoh and publk service
ac:tlvltles, and ma.-15 lo be uied for lhe
1982 Middle Sillies Association Accreditation .
Institutional Studies wiU ako develop a
plan for generaling data required by the
SUNY Central Admlnlslratlon . The ob)ectlve here Is lo allow more accurate and
Umely completion of these reports.
A need for the moddication of some
report parameters tn order to "describe
U/8 more accurately and completely" to
SUNY Central may be tn order, Kojaku
submlls.
During 1973-1976, Kojaku was an
assistant professor of higher education at
New York Univel'$lly and in 1972 ierVed
as a rnearch · psychologist with the
American College Testlng program In
Iowa Cny, Iowa .
He holds the Ph .D. and M.A. from
UCLA, and the B.A. from the University
of California, Berkeley.
The Institutional Studies director is
aware that some tndMduals on campus
may find collection and recording of data
extremely tedious and llme-con.umlng,
with no clear Idea of why the information
Is needed and how II is being used . One
of his major concerns is to get the word
out tt.al aU sorts of aitlcal decisions concerning budgets, campus conslruction ,
and the Univenlly's national standing are
made on the basis of such reports. Good
d8ta are essenltal to successful operation
of the University, he stresses.

Research total
at $20 miilion
In the llr$l nine months of the 1979·80
report year, U/ B faculty 1\ave received
300 grant/contract awards totaling
$20,211 ,008, Robert C . Fitzpatrick, actIng vice president for research , noted In
his report for March .
In March, Fitzpatrick said, there were
23 awards, for a total of $1,013,384.
Four hundred and ninety-six proposals
t.ave b«n submitted to prospective sponsors since last July I , F'rtzpa!Jick noted :
33 of them , tn March . These proposals
seek total funding of $48, 784,024 .
Fitzpalrlc:k said research totals for the
first nine months of this year are below
last rar's efforts In every category except
Iota amount of funds received . The
nlliYlM of proposals submitted t.as decreased 9.2 per cent and awards are
down by 5.1. per cent. Dollar value of
proposals is .2 per cent off last year's
pace. The value of awards received is up
by 9 .8 per cent.
Facufly~ new awards in March
include: Dr. R. Yang , Chemical Engineering, .$37, 704 from Brookt.aven
National Laboratory for a projecl entitled ,
"Surlace Diffusions In ·Microporous
Graphite Strvc:turn and the Langmuir·
Hlnshelwood Mechanl•m ;" J . J .
Ulbrechl, Chemical Engineering,
S I 05,000 from the Department of
Energy for studln of the "Rheooogy of
Coal Slurries;" LT. Thiem , Civil
Engineering, $50,000 from the N.Y.
Slate Department of Health , for
"Dev~t of a Model Pubic Water
Supply.~ncy Plan for the State of
New York; L. Farhl, Physiology,
$42,345 from NASA for an "ln-Aght
Stu&lt;!Y of c.diovucular Decondltlonlng ; and S .
skat, Anthropology.
$37 ,181 from NSF for a study of
"Nddhic Sites In Poland .A continuation
In e&gt;u:ao of

want

-..eel by OJ&gt;: Bahl ,
Biological Sdencn, for his studln of
" Human Chorionic and Other
$130,000 -

...,., IOCiaiOsllr, ad.-)~
·
~.-----..,.---------'""':""o:::----::,.,..-;. -. -~---' -~~~1.-.~ NIH .

I
Paul Kurtz is
top skeptic,
magazine says
BUFFALO. N. Y. (UPI}-1/ you think
astro/oglco/ "*fortune It why you dldn ~
qua/lfv /or the Winter Olympia, a team
of scholars and·scientists ha. bod neun for
you. TM fault , they 10y, lies not In your
sims, but In youiV/f.
Their conduslon follows an uru:uc·
cas/ul a1templ to orrl/y the claim o/tU&gt;O
French psychologlr.ts that the position of
Mars at a person's birth Influences his a&lt;
her ability In sports ....
The study came to the attention of the
Committee for the Scientific lnvestlgotlon
of Claims of the Paran01mal. The' group.
headed by Dr. Paul Kum of the Stale
Unlveflltv of New York at Buffalo. Is an
orgonlzollon of 80 scholar$ and scientists
..committed to examining claims of
paranormal or fringe -science phenomena

from on objec:tiue. scientific point of
view . "
.... "We found no evidence of the 'Mar&gt;
effect.··· Kum 101d;;·;

Paul Kurtz. U / B professor of
philosophy and cl&gt;airman of the Commit·
tee for the Scientific: Investigation of
Claims of the Paranorrnal, Is celebrated
as "The No. I Skeptic" In an article with
the same title In the Spring 1980 Science
Digest Special.
Kurtz, according to author Duncan M.
Anderson, is a spoilsport who:
• claims "The Bermuda Triangle is no
more mysterious than Secaucus, New
Jersey;"
'
e ''thraw the astrologers oul of the
Temple" with o manKesto of condemnation published In The Humanist magazine
in 1975, over lhe signatures of 192 sclenlisls-19 Nobel Laureates among them;
• booked a ride on the "Maid of the
Mist" t~ther wilh hts l2·year-old""" at
the very minute a "psychic from
Bridgewater" had predicted Niagara FaDs
would collapse; and
• "thinks most of us are going soft In
the head. "
The 54-year-old Kurtz contends there's
a Psychk Explosion going on . a rebellion
against the rational caused by "TV,
movies and radio ." He's a counterrevolutionary.
Reading and analytical thought are lg·
nored , the article quotes i&lt;urtz as Mying.
He is "sorry for" some of his students:
"Many 1\ave no standard from which to
judge rca lily. Wtth so much emphasis on
subjective thinking. everything is as true
as everything else for them ...
"Kids In my classes really go for the
pseudo sciences," he relates. "Yoo
should see them come tn with their
books ; you know , Von Daniken a.n d his
ancient astronauts. I have lo tell them H'o
hogwash."
Author Anderson notes thai K\!l!z Is
worried 1.1\al science Is in danger. may be
at the end of its rope.
Tt.al's why he Is dedicated to debunk·
ing charlatans.
The article traces Kurtz's career from
his birth In Newark In 1925, through Rir·
tatloni with Catholicism and socialism. t.o
atheism and a 51rong belief that America
is "the hope of the worid ."
He was "fired as edJior of The
Humanist a. tittle over o year ago,- the ar·
licle goes on. "because the magazine's
governing board found the articles he was
printing on abortion , euthanasia, and the
'new' oexual morality loo racy and con·
lroVerslal, and he wouldn't back down ."
Some of his critics are quoted .
MarceUo Truzzl, who quH t.h e Committee
for the Scientific: lnveStigallon of Oatms
of the Paranormal, .. ys Kurtz Is too
dogmatic. "We need the willlngnas to
say don't know," this Eastern
Mlchl!jan U . sociologist . social..
P¥flologiol and magician said.
I
Kurtz, who now edllo a joumal called
the Sftplka/ lnq-. is undaunted .
He telioaulhor ~ = "I wtsh there
weren't any dtonge, but there tl. The
(p'cal ..... of people ......1Jn--.t In
ldencle, they're ln....-..! In loochnology .
Sdence Is a method of thlnldng rationlll·
ly; t:ecbnolo!w .......
~

.

..

�April 10, 1980

)

folk fatival

a.- a-.....,_. .t the UUAB·
Folk F..aw.J a _ . from -.ow.
s..
'lbondltp-17 ........... program
.... .....,_far

tile......,_,_

CALENDA
Chine Conl..-mce Thou•. ~ 5. 7 end 9
p m F'" s,.o.-.d bo; dw Clffic. ol Culbuol AI·
wid\ • want from FSA
~hough Mlln 0..."' IBJ9.1842, tho 11m ...
• lol aboul conWmporiW)I' OliMM etbtUc:ln

Thanday- 10

f•• .

I'E.DIA11UCS II£SEAIICH SOIINAII•

--,...-~--d
I~ n_,

v--

DIA ACTION TEAM MEETING'
For ldlft \llolfUig end t«M!phoning in conn«&lt;ion
wtch tM n.l:ional ERA r•ttftc:ation campeign.
Amhe:nl Campus 6-8 p m For bubon calll:&gt;onnil

11-., CN!doul'o Hoopbl

LUNCIHUI MINI TIIAIMING PIIOGIIANS
~
tz.ts.I24S. '"
T - Dining tW, Amhonl Compuo . Topics w11
lndudoglvlng end

at 636-m3.

r--Io.;_.,..

ing..,. "'""
~
- ondol"""'
c:owrloacn

~-

·

A ...-- o( lu:nch-tmrr , mini

.IOHN W. COWPEJI DISTINGUISHED
VISITING LECTUIER• •
.
The a.....ry &lt;&gt;I .... Bralo, The Curtol R - o o
~ Thor-tic Appllca- ol

pb

...-.-nmg P"C9atns t5

bcw&gt;g.,..-""""" Humon ~ o.v.~op.

nwno ond Trolning- ol dw p...,..nof Oopon
mcm The programs wert requaled ltnd are en
donod bo; d UIB w..._·, C.....
Adm-. " _.. 10 .. Univenlly •mpioyHI.
""""""'c:ho'90 You mey rogille ot dw door Bring

H!lpocbolomk -

Odwr mint tr..... progremt SO wAtch for during
..,. bo..........,..

v- 1'-. ond

T&lt;ehftlq ... l o r l h e -.

AliT HISTORY LECTURE •
VH Gogh'• c - - Grow, Mdwt. Cohen
310Fost.. 730pm

FACULTY·STUDEPIT ASSOCIATION
IIOARD 6F DIII£CTOIJS IIEETING' '

c-.

10
I 30 p m Minu101 from tho pr&lt;VOOUI
med.W\8..... •• ~

FOURT1I ANNUAL SUNSET #&lt;itt·
.
f'&gt;eMnted bo; U/ B'o ROOII ol Rode Mulic Class
KMNrine Cornel ""'-~~"• 7:30 p m. 'TkMt5 are
Sl 50 ond ... bo ovolloblo lhc niQI&gt;t oltho porlormonco
l'n&gt;wom ... lndudo or1glnol mulic ......, and
pabmed bo;tho - . . . ... dooo Tho concm h •
non-poollt...,. which- lludonll a chonco to

AJIIERICAN STUDIES PIIESOfTAnON •
Qvob« -.11w lldor-.., PI&lt;&gt;To Aubfty
1004 a.m.... 2 30 p m E , . _ -~como .
L£CTUI£'

a..-..1 - · ...... """·

c.c.a. llerg,

-tho-~ through""' .......

;c-=:-;!":0:."':..~~=
Bclhuno tW. 2nd floor
... Oopwtrnmt ol Arl.

2,3() p

LAW. ECONOMICS~
MEEIWIG•
l'IJ60'8rlon 330p.lft Tho _ _ ...

.....

too .W.. A Sponoglo ,

.....,
-

Jr .,..,._ ollow. U/ B

$ponoglo ... opo.a.

.... .,.....- ol

PHYSICS COlLOQUI\JM•
-~~-oiDoped
................ 0. Mt..J " -. X..O.C..·
por-. 454 Fn&gt;naolt. 3.30 p ... Coltec .. 3 ,15

IIIOl.OGICAL liCIENCU SOIINAR•

n...

~

of R 1

,.._. to

Calogo, .,

"--'"--a.d~GoolloiT.-, 0.
T.,. 11o!.4or
en

0.. 5unt

~.- . 114-4p.m

CIU.UL.AII
PHYSIOl.OGY
·
Dr. -...; -- - ,..,._

~ ol' ~ end ,..,.,._,....
108--., 4pm c:.t.. ... too-01345
ln-5-lS

~/ DOION5TIIATJON'

............. 1olM........., A SUHYAII.._
jod,A_Io,_~ .. Tol
--lo~- . lorM, O. 5 14 Poley Tho
Kftre . 101 a.ldy 4 p m ffft .dm....,_,

~

...........

s,.o.-.d "" ....

.. bo -

C501c- 4P-"'

POan'-·

LooooO..-- ............c...-.

.. "-'eM
,-. - - - .
lndudo
T11o F...- ol

~

-~ -- IIOiniRodiOIIW 8p.m

~- Sl.SO. U/ BCommunMy, omior
- e n d - $1. s,.o.-.d"" the c..,....
ol _dw en- ond ~ Arls
••
.. Dlck.tn•tlilrtl- . . . ~. .

..

-- ---~.............,
•- lud.ngHohoo
_ol_
CClCIOimparory
_ onflulo&gt;odt·
. . ..

n""*· The

420 ~ CSpmol

0..•,

OtiNr f1ato (197S) end T -

DISCII5AON'

Hontm.n , - - . 5oudlo 8 p.m. Gonorol odmio·

- $ 3. - o n d - - $ 1 5 0.
Lo ~~- ......... ..,. locold&gt;-.g-.. ol

o.r.t. Compbol.
n. _ . _ lftUol ~II ootln Vionno
...... tum al .... cont\ny . ond lhc - - ..ten to
o l " " " " " " ' -· A 1owt Bwho'o
lrylng 1o c:our1 C, .nd to on end 10 on , untl i ends
lui cOde Tho ..... ,..._ "no "-..., mojorlndlocr......,• ., thlo
con·
o.r.t. Compbol. who joined tho Theon
Oopoo1mcnt foculty " " ' - · ... ol Bd.d.
!roland, and ocOod ond dWOCiod I n - lao ton
)~An (one o( hla moll IMrraling Mel unconvrm·

tho . . .

v...._

l l o n o i - - -A - N ; g h t ' o
O..om" Oidw~Foollvolln 197Siboforo
como.g 10 lhc u 5 In
Tho ... ond
_,..,.......,.IIS..WPmy, o-lntho
Oopoo1mcnt ol Theon . ...... ol .................
~ wee seen In "'Kmn.t~·· Chldren'" Mel

the"''" -

_,...... _.A,.... -.ot.....x-at.o·

ing plocod .., ........ ""' pod..-., In·
.
._- _ _
_
-..
. .......
... andol.....
._
undonoaring
....
Tho ploy ... continuo~ dw 13th. and ...
bo - - . 1 - WMioond . 1\prt 17-20

Friday- 11

........ Ekc4
p10W... .... _
. . too
-~-...-Calogo

_.__
. ____
_ ........._
UUAIIRUII '

10-l160

---

. I

._.....,

-lr,.w

....... - . . ........ n..

.....,.._.

STANDAIIDIZED TESTING FORUM '
106 O'Brion. 2 p .m. P-.,11 wil bo Ilion
Nairn , dhctor ol Ralph Nad«'s learning Resean:h
Group, author ol The Rdp ol ETS, formorly ch;d
k:lbbyW in New York's Truth In Testimony Law; Ms.
Jenne Bried , txecutiw dhdor for program planning al lhc Educotlonal
S....U (ETS) .

T-

n..., ... t o o - - tho..-,...s- ...

...
- _ .
ol.lhe
GRE
MeATs,
_
. .SAT,
. . ,LSAT,
._b
oond
_l
o_

-...
eo._od 1&gt;!1 ttw College ol u.ban Stud;...
OMsion of Student Affairs, end NYPIRG

WOMEN II'IIIANAGOIEXT LECTUIE '

~
...... loodoo&amp;ay.
Judy
Jov-&gt; . .....,_
vb ·
praidont,
J. Ms.
M

.tov-&gt; l n -. lnc. Knuoc..d..-mceCente&lt;,

C.O.OV tW. 2-4 p.m.

lounge, Rod Jackot Quad, Elia&gt;l! Complex 7 30
p .m. Refreshments will be seved.

~.

COMP\1IUI SCIEI'ICE COLLOQUIUM•
Ptoce. l..ogk: Eap; awl I I I I I Drec::IMblllty.
Dala Kooon, IBM Thomoo J .
Wotoon Ra.,.rd&gt; Cen..... Room 41 , 4226 R;dgo
Lea 3:30 p.m. Ccfte. and doughnuts wdl be
MrVed et 3 kl Room 61 .

COI&gt;II'OSfJIS FORUM CONCERT '
l'r&lt;Mnted bo; tho ~oduato Jludents In compo,;
tion under the: direcdon of Morton Feldman BUd
Rocttal Hoi. 8 p .m. A d - 11 kH,

I!PIGIHEElUNG SCIENCE, AEROSPACE
I!PIGIHEElUNG AND NUCJ..EAR
EHGINEEIIJNG SEIONAII•

Lo lloado, directed bo; o.r.t. C.mc&gt;bd U/ 8
essistanl profnsor of theatre . Hlinim.n The.trto
Studio 8 p m Gonorol odmlulon $3, otud&lt;n~ ond

-...Sa--olclwN-

UUAII FJUI •

R...... 1&gt;!1 Arlh.. Sc:hnit.t., dWecled bo;
Dont.Compbol, UtB-.,.-oiLo

.
.w.n --...
- · ,...._...
· lor
Corp 3691\od

- -

R- Add""""'-'

a...lolry ond AlltJ.
C..... -"-v. Hcnry D. Coloman, ..-duatc w·
dont. Ooponmont ol Modi&lt;eol ~ - Cl21
Cook.. 2 p.m. Refrnh:mentl

DltAIIA'

,..,. O....rt••fO.. Ia lateraeUo•• l

::::
r. ~~ . =.r:::
.._..._.
... ...

c-.

IIIEDICINAI. CHEIOSTRY SOliNAII•

S...... ...ST--.., Fadllly, L. Hcnrv 104

ond Tllo

" - . " - ' 4p ..

U/ B WOMai'S CAUCUS MEETING'
567
Hal. 12-2 p.m.

~ ' " " - " EotoMotl T~

...,......,~

PHAIUIACIEUtiCS - ·
"-•I
....... Ahda.tn. , . . - - . .

"- -

caEATIVE ASSOCJAn; IIECITAL'

m s,.o.-.d t.;

how--

.. Medlc:.l l'rKtlce),

Dr Andrew V 5chd!&gt; Moot Coun, O'Brion HoB.
1p m
Final lecture in thts MrN!I of t.lks by the wlnMr of
tho 1977 Nobel Prito 1n phyoiology and modme
Dr Sd&gt;olly II hod ol the Endocrlno and Poly·
poptido l.obomoriti at Tulonc Unlwnly

• bog lunch I you """'

Moy •'ld

Htlpochola--

s.....

ot--

Fddo!I_.. _ _ P_pr...,..to·
llonslndwWoldmon-. &amp;om9toS.
Sludcnoo ... topics which they
od on
ochoolo. Judgoo wll too
ol t.culty end locollnd-.
F..W., - Pooty InT.,._ Dining Room for
guests as wd as U/ 8 student$. Continue on Satut·
doy
.

Nobel laureate
AndRw V. Sc:haDy, shown atldt .. he
recftwd
1977 Nobel Prize from
Klntl Kerl GuAev ol Swedno. .-.
dudn h Cowper Lecture Ser1ea

loftlsht.

Parker. 3:30p.m Refrt:lhmenrs al 3

-

Sonota (Swodcn . 19781. Confer•nce
n...... Sq... 3,30, 6, ond 8 .30 p m Gonoral
o d - $2 10. tludenll $1 60

....-~-~-C.­
...s II&amp;~ .. v - lotto &amp;won·

DRAMA'

- - $ 1 5 0.
JUST IIUFFALO PIIESOfTAnON'
N~o~la -~ event featurtng pam Edwerd Oorn
ond Tom Clort.. pool end film......,. J&lt;nnlf., O..n·
bar end wrila'/m widan Dobro Ok::k. Allentown

Communtty CAnt~. 111 Elmwood. 8 p m. AdmiS·
lion S2 Thil event il made pciiiStie in part With
public fundo from tho New York S... Coued on
dw Arlo and dw National Endowmont for the Ms

CJW. ENGIN£EIUNG - ·

_ . , Edmundo Torrudao, Ooponnwno o1 Ovf
Englnoorlng , U/ 8 . 139 Port.a. 4·5 p .m
R&lt;hahmenll..,.bo......t

OFFICER OF 1HE YEAR DINNER
Tho DlvWon ol Public SaNty h ~ • dlnna
to-·outlloncling . . . -.
Boglnning ot 6 p m. In tho Foculty Club. Hammon.

-.lor

a . -.

INTERNATIONAL COU£GE
PANEL DISCUSSION '
Tho-W..W. P - ... b o - . o l
lhc
community 01 Uta Socond floor

"""'*

UUAB MIDNIGHT FIUIS'
Doublo F..our. Night J.- Shop ol Horrun
U960l . llp.m ; O.....IIal3(1963) , 12,10pm
Gonorol odmluion $2.10; """"""' $160
J.- Shop II about • quolnt plant ohop and
Its eocentnc inh.bitants inc:ludlog e lddng . man
utlng pltnt. Attention denl lt\HH:nts JIICk
Nlcholoon , in one ol hio fnt ....., ....._ pia,. •

-who-..,

poln
o . - IS, dlr«:toddmiOI
o n d - . bo; Fr...a.
Ford Coppalo, II hio flrol Mm. a
hono&lt;
~ ...._...,. . - ot ......un~oro In l&lt;olond

.-gory

enddulng-dw~--upoleod&gt;

lamlly...-.,volwd.

·

�Apt! 10, 19!10

7
Flute recital

Dick,- • Cnaltve

Flldlot Robert
"-occa.. Recbl, IOIIIght.

Ta..day- 15
IIUEAIICIIINS11TUIE ON

ALCOHOUIII-•
Conto ....... Plo.D.. _ ,

. , . -.

Medical Un-..oy ol Sovlh CwoiOoo .. a..-..
' E~ For ond Ago;nso doc F.c.l Alcohol S!in·
dromc ' Hv"*' and l'onlmol Stvdta.' Rcwotdoln·
stitute. 1021 Main S.eet. 10:30 a .m
SP£aAL IEaiES ON EFRC11VE
~-~TES'
~ dw Soclol 5 . - T - .

The UniY&lt;nity
-· - Looming
·&lt;Ante
and """
202 Baldy.
Whllchoad
1-2o20
ol
p.m
Thk pnwn~tion wil.show Mudentl how to deal
""h , _ ., l h c - 1 -. T h e d w -

ol oodolldonoc and .,.,...,........
wil bo diocvJMd. Sorotogia too ~ comwil bo dctnonmotcd s,on-cd btl
The UnNcnity Loming

fl"....._,

c.-

U / 8 COUNCIL MEE'I1NG'
Soh Floao
Room. c_., Hoi 3 p.m

eoru.....c.

CHIMA I.ECTUI£"
- - .... _
.. choinnon ollhc
Dcpootmcnt ol H~ ol NaoJng Un-..oy , ...
giYc o

public loctwo on "Recent

~ophy .,

Einstein event
_,_

~

""*"

Pial..... Moo. o - - on lho
Rcbdton , o Owlolion-lnlpOcd , . . raultad .. .... ... ol 20 ....... ...... lll50o

Bulfalo actor David Fndrick wUI
'become" Albert Einstein for three perforrnanc:u on campus, beginning
Tbundey-17.

atarday- 12
I'EDIA1111CS SYIIIPOSIUil•

sn..-.

.... ~ ... 5cholorlv Communtcolion

wilh
doc Pooplo'o Ropublc ol CioN. Ho hM _ . rho
ot Yolo Un-..oy and lo Buf·
folo ... ... 10 Hwvonl.
- - Moo ... .... ,.._...._,

lool,_-

--ary
__
_.._""""'
__
... _.......
t.-Oooy--

lnn-

-,.-. .. a-.
ond
He -... ....... - - ..
................. lightollho .................... ..

6odohly-

oct.dulodoo-...1 " ' · · - - · - lliEDICAI. ETHICS I.ECTUI£•

T1w -

........:

o - - ..

"'"r--.

-~-'TnodiT-.,

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Cologool-. - . . . . - . . . . . .
"&amp;ron.
~&amp;io
Cooonoy-.,. c.m.. 10o30 a m s,..n-..1 btl
o 1 - . .. U/8 and ECMC

M
""""""

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

"""'""' ....

- ·boldly.....-.

_

UUAIIIIIDNIGHT f1UIS '
Doulllo Futu.. Nlgloo· IJnlc Shop .. ._....,
(19601 , II p m . o.-tio I) (19631 . 12.10p.m
Gent&lt;al
$2 .10. ......... $1 60.

-·
Ah ic a ,

_ . . , - - , _ . banquol, Spaulding

bo.....,too_.,

_..tonfricla,r. . . lhoBorwlla l'o......tkwlho
_,_-~.,~m U/8_

_.., -

· Tnp

~flUI'

to~· Falo

O...MIIO.O. b t l - o l l h o e l . . . Piono 0.. ol F - l'ondoonsko Boldt Baird
ll«llooHol3pm

mead-

$2 10.

Wood!~,..,. - .... - · .... - hla
-INww~
• .-...,ao~
._
w ..._
• 16-yow-ald
,...
......
.. __,

_..

. . . ~ . . . . . . . . -Yortol'o
~
a-.~-. "'lhop

........

oody .. -- and-~-..-- .

(liatiOII btl h

cONCUI1'·

__

U /BWiod- vnd&lt;o-lho~ol
F&lt;ri J Opola Kotharino CGmd Thea~• 8 p m
~ .. k .. ~btllho~ol

_ ,. ..
_,_
11-. La

,....

btl Dorfto Compbol U/ 8

Soudio p m Gent&lt;ol- $3 oiUdonb and
--$150

oiCwlo-

-..----DIIAMA'

La-_ -

btl o-lo ~. U/8

8poo&lt;ioftwol--$150

--

~

COUOQCJWJI•

Ootoaol&lt;
.............
- :162
"""" LM*I
. ~ ol -~- llololvaoA&lt;'-'" 2 p ..

Spew-..~

btl ....

o.-- ol

~~- ""'-Field 330pm

...-""~-~c...
_ a , .. ~-u50 .............
. . . _..... . . . . SquaiWT-

.. _

I'o_ .. ..,~_.P

-

...... _...........
,_,.c-_ ........

........

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y

Tho

y

....,...__

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.... CJir, C Rlchonl Hoodo. N J I T .

c.m.... --od et~~o .. -

ol

-

• ·

- ..- a n d . . - - 335 Hoyos 5·30

prn ftaadn"'ffllk)n

fiUl$ (FilM HI5TOIIY).
~- (l'rvll.... 19581 . ._._. (Morloftl ,
L'Opcn- (Vardo) 146 Oiofcnclarf 7 p m

v-v-". .
-

s,o.-.d btl ....

c.-'"' -

S&lt;udy

UU.U -DAY NIGHT f1UIS '
IV-.! !GcnnMy, 19251. 7 p m . 11or
170MFAC, ~

me

1.Mwo 119481 . 8.50p m

-

.-......· -

Bocoll and eo.-! G -

•

· loan .,,.,_

• 3 30"' lOlA Cwy

Shoo,_, 4p,. c:.&amp;o

Hnchof Go-*"!~ on doc )udiciol..._ ..... '"""'·
.loMro. ol ... s- Court ol , _ ., .
and U/8 l A w - Jacob D . ~ , _ . .
. . __.. .... .. ""'lAw School.

,.._.,.....,__,.. .._-'loooi.Aw
School ........... ' Authority .. .lowtolo lAw .•
'*"&lt;aa
)uclgo.lo .........dy
__ _
-~.
a.lowtololowodoolorand...,_

Ooobod .. a.lalo
His , _ wll cowr: -rnoldng ond
........ _
.. .lowtololow. lhc ................
tt. ~ ~~Neturc of Jcwllh courts: lhe opera~
ion ol mocMm (~ courta. end the 1o1M of ....
bilr..... a n d - .. .lowtololow
THECHIN£SE

~

~·

Dr.Dr.K-.... u.. ocupunctu.. -· olido/locturo

and

- -·

CGmd

~•. ~ 8 p m . FrH.~cdbtl lhoOf -

fico ol C..ltwol 1\ff... -

FSio.

• ...,. -

c::.
I

Roblnton
• hcMI durtng •·~
llogwl .....In -~
- - Ter
rifle

_

.. _C...._Gr_ __

___ ___ _

.,..,.. Wrighl, Bryn -

Cologo 335 Hoyos 8

._...

SUOESHOW'

Wednesday - 1'

..,._...!_._,_

MEH"S IIA5EIIIIlL.
~-

Add lpm

IIIOCHDII51'11Y
50QNAII•
_
,__
_ o.lod. Dr
~

_ _ . . . . , .......,_Cologo

.- I

_

bo ..................

....._ .....-.., .. .,. U/ 8 lAw

School.

......... nwlodrl!lfM ..t "' Kay Wd , Aond.

pm

IIIOCHEMISTIIY &amp;DCINAII•
_ __ DrU.IWd~

lor.,._.,,_
... olol'hool•
- • 1970--r...,_..,._..,_
....,....,..

~I.ECTUI£"

-

AliT teSTOIIY I.ECTUI£'

50f'TIIAU.'

UUAa 011AMA '
lorfowllvw-

lhe

WOih ..,.,.,.. btl Jv...,. -

llor LMwo. wilo Hu...,tv., &amp;ooon. Law.n

-UNMII~•c-.....,. oo

a-.y

ol Pha;rrn.co&amp;ogy and
School ol Modiono. U/ 8 124

o1 ~:m~
poo~.,.
~ 'The film • • draa rnetodr'em~ of Mduc
tion and murda

Moaday- 14

- . .......... - .

Dl:pt~ rt mcnt

n..._.ac..

-

a.lalo and h - Yorto-..,

W AIIECITI'oL '

~m

Ph 0 ,

F.- 4pm - • 3 4 5

UU.UFIUI'

- ............. .... - --""'·---....-------Hal8
... (197'JI
) , 5. 7 and 9 · - Gonorol $160.

end

Council. The pui&gt;lc 1o

..... -....-. . .. ..... _.,._
Thai-.., _,..,. .
,._....... ._.._""
....,.. ... logol-?

PIANO CONCERT '

M••h•tt•• ( 1979) Wold man Thutre .
, _ 4. 6 . 8and IOpm c - a l $2 1 0 . - $ 1 .60

c.......c.-.s.n

-

H~

_
_...,..._IOBO'Ilrion
. 7pm.
llnOIII5CIPLII'
-·
c..a.-. "'-)udiciol ... lo"-don-o1.1owto1o 11111ca1 and r.,,.low, ..,.. •

IIEGIOHAL CONfEIIEMCE:

__ _

Inter na tiona l College ,

~....

ad-

-

.uoEXT SECTIONS. AMDIICAN
80CIEIY &lt;W IIECHANICAL ~

.,._

....

~- ~~- ond
Sponocnd btl ""' ,.., eom.r.. ol
lho Council on ln--..! Stvdta. lho Grad.c;..,.,p ... Contlnvlly ond Changt .. ...... and

cunnlng-

lv..........S .-.ng .. -

.. a..--

c.... , _. ...

.... u_
s. _..,...._.. ..

and 1860s... _

Eoollrom 9 ._.._.5 p.m. s,..n-..1 btl""' Oopar1 -W8 and
ol ·a....-.~
and Gynocology/Obololrla
..
The.............,~.~~
.............. - . ... b o . _ o l _
. . . _ -. -150-and~ . .

T-

T,..,... .,

a.....· 262 c_... 3.30 p.m.

CIOioo, 8 ' -·II~

..... .., ... o.--..
u.-

· -

8,p .. -

s.-

• ol &lt;'-

-~and

Hn ,. ,. trn'e Ia . . _ . . ,

~-.
.__..,
26 Fo.o--·-- 3.30 p,. Coloc 01 3~

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

GEOlOGICAL ICIEJtCEI

·-~.--

INIIII•

.. --·

.

�•

Apt 10, 1980

..

___ .

R..w fteKhel ~ (WI) _.
Mtlce Matlhnr ...............
l..al
TwMey, .. 108
O'Brlea, 7 p .m .
•
.

••tt.,.,

•Calendar

..,__7,eool.tl

~.

~

--

--...,.

.... ..........
... .......__. ..
_........._ ..., _"'"'

Jolly, ~~ ol
Geolotai s..-_ ~ - Room 18,
4240 Rldgo La. 33).4.30 p... " " ' " ...,

Woyne T

doughnuto ... bo ........ 3

IIUFFALO LOGIC COIJ..OQURBI•
M~- o l - t l c o ood
,.,._..,, H~ t..!Hnon. ~ . UniYml·
tyol~ 119Boldy 4pm
CHEJOCAL DIGIIEEIIIIIG &amp;DQNAII•
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Ft
ofN.da-

.

---· ..
-

.. , . _ . . .......... -- he
Scrivor hos boon ...
lor ....... ....._

""'*-.

-~­

Conodo ond .... u...d - He " ,..._, ol
podiotta. F...,ky ol 14odic*w: ,..._, al
blolaw. Focuky ol Sdonoo. 01'01 ,..._, ., lho
Ce:n&amp;er fof Humen Gcn«tb It McGil.
YICO COI.1.£GI: ~·
...a ....... II.. c-lo. PhD.

...._.,Art

Focuky CU. Blue Room. I p.m.

-aiG..-Io~-·"""

.._ R. K Pnod-. ~ UnMnlty
1070'11rton 4pm _ts,..,.bo...-1
trom3:J0..4.

-ts

fltt11UCAL EltGDIEEJIIMG SOIDIAII•

llWtol ................. Ot T S H..ng .

Thanclay - 17

.....-..ly--

SOCIOLOGY~'

ol Elodrtcol ~ - Punlue
l-.oy 337 Bd 4-S p m.
folow
.. Tho Common

- . . . . . - aldw EoiFoo Wor, Ot. Jozcl
Gootlnsld,
ol Woold
W• U ond ...nor ol - . I boob on lho subjld.
255 ~ - 3 p.m. " - od~ .

FIUI Cf1UIIUSTOIIY)'

by Ot. Gootlnsld tndodo: SOE- lbe - ' -• 1969: fllh.... - ·
tho~ mowmont., tho
con·
untralion camp . 197S. and HJda"a LMt
W - 1978

~

-~ ~ . 19641~
. . . _ . , 146 ~ - 7 p m Sponoo.ed by

tho c.- .......... 5ludy
n . - -. .... otollclj, p'-oplv&lt;l &lt;pic
... tho'""" o l l h o - .. holy .. tho 1860s
Bun t..ncoowr .. lho potnoo&lt;h ol • loading
Jomily ol Sidly.
UUA11 WEDNESDAY NIGHT FILMS'

Sw1ooo '!-. (1936) . 7 p.m : .._ No lo St.
..... 11944). 8 S5 p m ConlertneC T'hutrt .
Squir " ' " a d .
Swlooo , _ ....... olllw bat ollho Fnd .........
Ginga ........ -

yon ... _....., -

.......... mony hto -

· ............ .. - - .
Fnd ...... onough
· he ....... Ginga

-MoloSI. ~ Ioo...-.loboutolamly

.. s.

l.oulobolonthoWoold'sFolrotlhotumollho
c:onbl!ll Judy Gotlond ................. bat.
bolliMI out 1'ho Toolloy Scw!g,- 1'ho Boy Next
Dooo - "How y ........ Mmy ........ a-........ on .nd on
WHY IQiOOI.IIOAIID INSTT11ITE•
0.0.. M. - · . , . , _ ol oducoond pnsidonl ol tho~ ol " ' " - ol,....,
Yorio. ... 1pH1o &amp;...- Inn. 4243
c;.,... s.r....
7 15 p m
Tho w....... Now Yorio 5choallloord 1-.te to
_ . . t by 11w w.-.. How Yorio Ed..-..&amp;
_ _ ... _ _ mombonond
S.W.Caurd~OIU/B ktoon"'

a--•

'o d - o l s d &gt; o o l _ ............ly
·w-..NowYorlo....,.
A.mbeth hM lltfWCI as comrn.aone ol edua ·
..... July I. 1977 Cnoclol od...-..J llw&lt;hob.~-- .... -

__-_...,_..__- __

...,

...._.
....

· - -· -

... thogolted..., ......led

·· .
......
..
61Spro
. . . .bo
. .pncodod
, _ .. ,by
_•. .- . ......
_ _ _moybo-tromOt

-W

He . . W.-nt&lt;cwYorlo
5choal Boord 37S Boldy Hoi. Now Ycwlo 14260 ....,._ 631&gt;-2460
DIPAII'nEI!Il 01' CONJIUNICA11Y£
~-ICIENCU~ '

,.. -

,. -

s,.llollos, F&lt;on

• . .4226
..._
.. 84
-~90,
Rld8o
La. 7.JG.&amp;
30 5choal
p.m Opm

.....
.....

~_....,.

....... o-; ...... w..... .,....., St.

~-

by ....

_.

- 148 Otolonclorl 7.lOp .. s,...-.d

o..--- .. .-y

..

-~~·
Do. ca.tso · .__...,--

_

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

- - -14&lt;:&lt;»~ .... "'""

1¥ Sdtool " A
• • Hoto"*"" _ _ by . . - . . c - o l
,_ H S PTA. ond ,_ UIB
o..--a~-.. n . - t o - t o l h o

11.-

MECHANICAL ENGINEERING SEMINII.R•
Tr-Wollllntlon .. oShodoT.... Pro·
...... J Gonion Hoi,
Eng;Momg, U/B. 206 Fumu 3
p m.
Rdrahmonll d .-.do llw ........,_

""'*"'-' .. -

PHYSIC&amp; COUOQUIUM•
~- nvw. o. John Hook. c..nel ~ - 4S4 Monaoll . 3:30pm . Celloc ot
3.15

. . ----.0. . . _

lliEDICAl. EtltiCS SDUNAII•
Spooo , .....,.;,. lor tho Madlcal

H""*'-· Uniwr·

sly o1 T. . . Medico~ Bronch ot ~ G-26
4 p m Spomond by tho Comm- on
MedicAl Ethb and Humanilm In Medidnc

F-

PHAIUIAC£UTICS&amp;DQNAII•
......SIIIr'OIIW AMI

I

"'qq

I

_..._.O...P _

Dr-. ..

_,G F...,,

. . _ , Ddlnbois , m.-. C508 CooM 4 p m

UUAII flUI'
Roctq, D. Waldmon Thoo... .............. 4 :15.
6.4S ond 9.30 p m. Gonorol 12.10.
...-1160
Eahllarating Mqual/ conllnuatlol) of the
p t e . _ lie &lt;i Rodcy IW&gt;oo (dir.....S ond ....,..
""'~ Slolonolln&gt;m tho oltonnoth ol his lua
6ghl ., ......... I, through hll .........S W. ond probloms..-.dby•. tohll-wOhApolo

c-d
EllA ACTION TEAM M£E11NG '

. c:on-

Far---~
.....
ltw NbCWt.al ERA r btion

amp.lign

Amherll &lt;Ampus 6 8 p m For location c.al Donna
.. 631&gt;-2773

THE CHINESE EXPl'JUEMC£,
QDSIPIG IIANQUIET .
II. 1«&gt;-bonqooo&lt;aiNcnhomdlshos. .-..1
by lAo 0.. Spouldong Otning Room. ~ 7
p.m ~ purchele M liC:Mtl .t Squn tw
Tidlot Ollico - " " Gononl o d - 112.50.
- . 17 50 ~d by lho Oflocc ol CulU&lt;ol
Allah. wi1t'1 a WMI from FSA
Thkdbo•'"- ...wdoft.. -Tollln
lor 10
Tho ....... plsnnad by lAc Chu ond Ot w.....
---tobo""""""""ond~ ond
......... wOhWongFuta..- ....l
COI..L£(lL •

OOtiCDIT.

r ..... - . . v c-on, F - w...w
, _ _ Worlos by 1\.ndrow SO.. Kslbomo
Camel

'l'hoobt. Eliooa 8 p

m

sdoool. " ,_ ,...._ -

--__..__----·_-----~- o l , _ _ ... bo, You C..

-

y-

a..- _.

c:w.-- . Ot

Y- Olldren'•
.. _ _ . . . . . -

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

lliiii.MII.'
t.. 11..-. diroctod by DoNI&lt;

Como&gt;l&gt;d. UIB
,........
-.u
ond

·I .p.m
.,_
, a( t-tormSoudlo
Gonorol
o·
d$3,

--1150
F1Fn1 ~LEO MEeK I'IIOGIItii.M '

tTH 1\.NNUAL IIU'FALO
FOIJ( FEST1VAL •

~

0,.. ..... - - · Squiro Hoi. 8 p .m .
"'"· Holl: John Bndy .
This 11 t h o - . . . . , &lt;i olour-&lt;loy round ol
""""""'· lolk-doncing ond music.
Cc&gt;nccts ... bo hold Fndoy ond Sotunloy .,...
nlngs ., lho Fillmore Room ond Clori&lt; Gym rape&lt;·
tiYoly Tickets lor thao ovonts ... ovoiloblo through
lho U/ 8 llcMt outloll. Added loa..,.. this yoor in·
dude .,l&lt;rludo ~ dinna concoo1l ., tho
ol Squn. Fridoy. Sotunloy ond S...n-

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

Ro_..,

doy

Tho fativol to being spon110rod by lho Bullolo
Folo FOII!vol Commlneo. • collodlve group ol ...
toratod students. ond mornbor5 &lt;i UUII.B Col·
fnhouso. Cullwal. Performing ll.rtl. F1m. Music.
Publicity ond Sound comm...... Funhor "'"'"'"'·
• avoilablc by &lt;ding 636-2%7.
0. Frldoy, 1\.jri 11. Tho 0pm Millo will con·
tinuc tn the H.us Lounga, from 11 Lm k) 4 _p .m .
IF,..I From !&gt;-7 p.m .. Tho Rocque~ City Rovnd&lt;n
· one! Grog Homo wtll pafonn in • ' "lnkortude.. ~ - At 8 p .m . ln the Filmore

Ro_..,

Room . l.oudon Wolnwrighl Ill , John Fohoy, B&lt;yon
Bowen ond Raga Spring -dll pafonn . Mike
Mddrum • the M.C . T1ckets for thia ..w:nt are
S3 50. studcnis. 15. non-s:tudmb. Hal-pric:c .
chtldrcn under 12; fret:, ~n unc:kr 5
0. So...... 1\.jri 19, Kothy Moriority will
M C on Opon Mike m lho Has Lounge. &amp;om II
• rn t:o4p m BobUntzandllw~nawilpe ­
wnt an "ln\criudlr" tn the R.ethskcler. 5-7 (SO cents
students . Sl. non-ltVdentsJ . At 8 p.m. ~ Oerk
Gym. '!'he Roches. Mimi Fortno. tho Liverpool
Jud.., ond Olhon will pafonn 114.50 IIU&lt;Ionts: $6
non-sludirn!Sl
s-s.,. 1\.jri 20, Cnnbo&lt;ry Lob ...........
~· ~ m ttw F1lmore Room. 1-4 p m. (SO
ce:na students, 51 non-&amp;tudmb) . At 5 p .rn , ln thl
Rathskc&amp;.:r , Roger Spring wil prae:nt tht fmal "Interludes.. c:onurt (50 cents student~ . Sl non·
lludtntl)

Discount tickets for tht: eniD Mria •• av~
from Squ•• Hoi only . Rogulor price lor ...
dMdyal ev«nts arc ava!WM at Squire , Fatival,
Buflolo S..te, Record Thoo... one! lho L..lngton
ond Nor1h Buflolo Food eo._

- :--

PIIOClaAM -.oYIIENT

l.ecMte Fer II. 1980 Sum...-~

•ondS21or--ll
s.un Tidlot ca.. ... .$3,. _- -__
' - _ ·_
MrF&lt;todrlclob._

__ . ......,. ..... .,_.,(1(

~...,---.a.-..01'01

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

......... T. . &lt;IM-"-aa.fwlleal-

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

-

hiW&gt; school.lowf ludltng ........,.,._

-tlol-

T-~~- _,Minimum:

IJppadots unclorto'ods acodemk:
boclqpow1ch .. rudlng. moth , Enghh. - ·

IOdol
·
Room -one! boon!
fl""''dod.
HeM~:

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

_ond,.....,T~ , ,.,..ZZ.ondThtsrt

hoi........,.,._

Gr.duaw wilh ulemiYe RA u -

perionce.

Contoct Upword Bound. 311 Townooncl. MSC.
831·3503. Worlo-Study IIU&lt;Ionll encourogod to "f'·
ply. Doodlno ......... 18.
•

TAX INfOIIIIII.TION FOil fOIIEIGN
STUDENTS AND satOlMS

~~.-~,.,..15.1980.&amp;omlho0111oo

olln ......tionoiScudontll.lloln. 402~. . , ...
-Iv (636·22S8) . Those MOidng
should brtni coplol ol thU 1979 tu
mums ond W-21orms.

poin-t

.....,.nco

TEACHING ASSISTII.NTSHIP
APPUCAnONS
1\.ppbtlons lor Foil 'I 980 ~.... ~e...t.o.g
aMiltln~ ... available: at the Uniwnllty lewn·
ing Center, 364 Boldy. 1\.ppbnts must bo in·
......... luming ·. . - ol · collogo
lludenb. Taching bplf'\«nct or training tn
ruding. """in!i. mothomolb or octenco II pr•·
ferr..:l . In .ddttlon. we are No interated in eppliconll llnry/ modll ·
odd-..! in·
lonnotion , col636-2394.

Far

TYP£WIIITEIIS FOR FACULTY 1\.ND
STUDENT US£
tor 1ocu1ty onc1 IIUdonl .... "'
Lockwood ~ U:nry ere now •~ In
Room 419 oa:ordlng toOt J . Donlol Vonn , hood
of tho llnry
1\.looypmnl!llngthoUMofthotwonow 11.....a.tM can be requested at the Gr.duak
Raorve Dale.
con bo utod lor • period

r_.....

r_..,.

POEtRY
REII.DING _.
1\.ND
'
....., R""'--w.
__ WOIUtSHOP
poe1 ond adilo&lt; .

of two hours at • time

Red Room . Harriman l..llrary 8 p m . Free Sponsored by CEPII.
.
On Fridoy , l\.pftll8. or~ ond book ,;gning
... bo hold .. u,;. Fountoln Books, !&gt;32 Elmwood
from 5-6 p m , onclot 8 , RachonOwg wll .,...., o

THE WRITING PLACE
Popon piling up? Tho Wrfling Ploce con ~
you. T&lt;Oinod IUtors.,. ~you wOh
&lt;i
lho proc. .. Tho Writing Ploce ..
poe. wrilcn; Ill for anyone who w&amp;ntlto wrlc cf.
lo&lt;twoly h to louted in Bolcly Hoi, Room 336 ond
to_,. dolly &amp;om 12-4 ond Moncloy. Wodnadoy
ond Thundoy ........ 6-9.

poetry r~ at

the MHMchuwtts Community
Canter. 382 MoaKI&gt;....,. 1\.ve ~lor lho
rcloding il $2

fnd.v'•

supplool.,-t.J

tw"f111 •• spontored

N - .·EN w..... ~funds
by lho NoliOnol Endowment .............

""!/no&lt;'"" ...

Exhibits
Notices

1\.lAM()

f1l££ TUTORING FOR IIFC STUDENTS
Spodo!S'evtcal'!ojocttoollortrog'-IU_ ..
Sdonoo. English ond Mothemoks .. .. -

.wry--

Colegs - s-8 p m
- - ot311 Townooncl
.... b oF..
more Wllormatlon cal83l ·S614.

GA&amp;U'RY

Sw1u1o Art Don Turnlo ond
dlsploytha-..

Dick Toolo

- b y RIIA Kemp: II. ........ ol lho
18001 broo9'o&lt; bodt. Smol ol . . - .
uq block- on o whlos bockQround ll.lorno
Goltry , Bock Hoi (MoOn s.r..tl. Mondoy-Fricloy .
10 o.m to 5 p.m Through ll.prl ~

LIR II/OIIK5ttOP$
AIICHITECTUIE
1\.potlll ...an-c..o.~oe wotU~oop. Stop.,
""altilon·ol.._..,., by Ludm Horw .
110 Newton t o - · or col631&gt;-2808.
A ........ Udt C..., C11!r. F. . . . . art d
J.qdo, Jim P - hos on odvoncod lle-soving _ run t1vous11&gt; l\.priiS .,lho lobby ol Ho1101 Hoi on
conlond to on~ c..- ();ocovft • . . , .
tho Moln Sltoot c.n..,... ~by tho Sdtool
- .. eniOv ......
&lt;Anoolng
- ...-,g_
fun
o l - . . . 01'01 Environ- Doslgn
_
_
_
ondpooslloly
01'01 ....... ...
bo .......
tt_,;,
-"._
... films.
AliT EltHmiT
"""""" ........ being c:onsldirnd
... . - . - o l _ b y _
RlltllCohoa. llothuno Hoi . T'-'eh,.,.. 20.
NttD IIASIC DENTAL CAllE? WEU.. TEAM
~~~;Eo. YOU
CHINESE EXPEIIIEIICE
TEII.N ... _ , . . , . - .... Sdtool ol DonTho
Clllao, ... ol ....ond

Art ..

co~V..,nybya---Zhu~ond

........
_ . . . .- , _ ... _ .__
lor TEII.Nto
.......

wort.. &amp;om ....... . - o. Mondoy·Fndoy . 9
om ooSpm ~Gaky. llfohflooool~
Hoi (11.-.o! n-.,;, ....... 17

--conbo~.,,_TEII.Nclnit

LOCKWOOo MplOIUAL IJ8RII.II'i

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

.......... ~

-.-.. .... -... n..._
-

.......... - . porlod..., .. _

..... _

In-·
..... TEII.N_
.. ·
_, ____
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.. _melle II 110U1M
......
~
clon · ond
c:a.- - -..-....
·
.....,._
... ......,._

...,.,..:M

.,.,....,

rading. moth. English .... hiW&gt; .._
............
IOdol ond -..:.. - u m: llochoton

-----------.- .........
__
.
- ......... _
_ _ _ b o _ .. _ _ c.n...

Ooololl · ... ....,._,.
a(
-~. Sq.M
8pta, , .,

,.., Upw.d Bound

~ lloa&gt;epling

-

to

C8N" •

- - . . . . ...... ~Col .... 131-2213
- d o y - 9 w 4 iiOondwo.,.botlodto

........

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II

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

- ........,.._
n.
..............
....
dllploy ..

~

..
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produd:oso
.,_..,by~\19n
. . .-...
~~o..ory

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

- . ...... Ioyer (I(~ r-.ll.prl30,

..

�·-

Aprt 10, 1980

I

.

~

I

U/8, FMC
undertake
joint research

__.... _..
"-'·-The

Model Cltr

' - ..... loft ..._

eLo_v e's paradise

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

New Community jUst north of the
Amherst Campus and with the planning
of two adler new communities hatched
by the ·New \'on. State l.hban Development Corporation [Roosevelt Island In
New Yorit Oly and Radisson near
Syracuse), Pany "stumbled across:' Love
In 1975. That's when he began a study of
the World w,. 0 Model Oty TNT works
(now the~ of the SCA dump) .
The location, Pany found, was part of
a gigantic: 20,000-acre tract put together
/

by=w~~:;!~ ~~d what was

he up to?
The question Intrigued the CambridgeHarvard-Columbia-educated architect
and planner.
In his Initial resean:h, Pany has plecec(
together a fasdnatlns s1o&lt;y, one which
rema ns to be fleshed out through more
extenolve field Interviews and "'eg-worit ...
trac:ldng down people who knew people
who knew people who knew Love. "It's
like a clet«tivc sloly," he submits.
By the time he turned the ood for what
Is now known as Love Canal (on May 23,
1894) , William Love was a veteoan of
new town development.
The canal, Incidentally, was to have
run seven miles north from the Niagara
Rtwr, over the escarpment, towlild
lewiston . (I was to oupply water for a
plant that was to have provided free
power to the Industries Love hopOod to
woo to his new dly. Only one-half mile of
tt was evl!f built (the portion wtthln the
prncnt city Umtts of Niagara Falls) .

He wortuod foo: the r ...........
Love, born In 1856. began his career
in the employ of the rapidly-expanding

U S railrOads. as a promoter of settlements along rad lines In the then
nlem frontier" region (the OakoWl.
Later, he was the oupertntendent-lncharge of what was probably the most
widely-hyped "lrulant dly" settlement in
all of AmeriCan history, Guthrie,
Oklahoma. Guthrie became a community of 5,000 people within two-days.
when the U.S . government tnt opened
the OklahOm. land to homesteading, On
April22. 1
, would-be Mtden lined up
on the bordl!t to "tun" Into former Indian
lands there, on otgnal from federal officials
~ pr....:led the "Run."
Mel "hype became one of three boslc r •
em«&lt;\ for aD Love's ventures The
ollie
, ..:cording to Pany, ...,., the
~ of a ~ line end a rapid
r

of~nl.

One.
hubbub a1 Gu
subolded.
Love dactded to combine his pr.ctic:al

-

~-utopian

. . Whee

the ra&amp;-oad with the

ideall In vogue In that
mool ulapWia lllmply

iddling """'nd with ldealilm." Pony
aayo, Love combined
with lljg"'-bn Iron
~
H
aim was to tolve
"labor
poblotrn"
the period . &lt;MfNcl by

..

'"'"'the
....... than
manu • WOI'ken

bit

mean.

would cooperatively own the
of
production-after a time .
Elizabethton, Tenn _, was the llnt experiment. There, Love and several
associates pledged to deva the "PUtsburgh of the South" on 8,(K)If60'es In the
northeastern comer of the state. •
Love left Tennessee In 1893, accordins to Pany, because of disagreements
with his partners there.
At Model Oty, Love was In sole command , even though the 20,000 aaes he
attempted to assemble represented at
thai time the largest parcel of land a
private individual had ever sought to
develop (the entire plan for Audubon , by
contrast , Involves only 2,000 aaes) .
In addition to, free power, industries
settUns In Model City were to get free use
of land . "Momentum was the Important
th!rig," says Pany. The development ol
the co-operatives would come later.

AD Idea that laflueoc:ed the EDgu.b
Under Love's scheme of thlnss. l&gt;any
notes, lndUslrial land was never actuaDy
to be sold, but was to be· held In trust by
the Model Town Co .• to beneftt the entire
community.
The U/B planner finds this especially
diverting because historians have tradi tionally credited this Idea to Ebenezer
Howat!! who later spearheaded development of "garden cities" In England . It's
possible, Parry speculates, that love may
well have met Howard when he went to
England In 1895 to drum up Investments
for Model Oty . " Howard is considered a
god by planners." Pany chortles. "But his
Idea .'!'ay weD have originated with
Love .
Love had other revolutionary notions
for Model City.
11&gt;ete was to be an Industrial univen;ity, "probably alter the Idea ol Roberi
Owen," Pany speculates, where woriten
could be re-educated in "the ideal of
cooperation." llley just couldn't be set
down and expecled to be harmonious .
There were to be no tenements (that Is,
rental untts) . All housing was to be
owner-occupied . Workers would be able
to buy homes at one per cent down .
AnaDy, no alcohol was to pass the lips
of Model City dwellers, nor the Umtts of
the town _
loft . .d the law
Love "a most dynamk penonality"
who held local politic:lans in thrall.
mesmerized the N..w Yorit legislature Into pulling two most "helpful" ~tutea:
The Model City Town Company Act, affording him sweeping authority to "condemn property" for the venture's ,_ d he
oouldn~ buy M amiably; and the Niagara
POIIier and Dewlopment Act, .awarding
him the right to divert as much wa...- as
he wanted from the N~al~Afa River
through his canal.
For the delllgn of Model City, Love
turned to Nathan Blorml . s.n.tt had
tronlcaDy bftn reapond&gt;le for tha
quintal entia( " company town ,"
Pulman, D ,
"hometown" ol
Pulmen Slnptng Car Compeny, where
epet)llhlng was owned by the company
At Mqclcl City. jull the e&gt;ppoeb was to be

true. Barrett's design for the Niagara
County utopia combined the Unear parks
which Frederick Law O lmstead had
designed in the City of Buffalo and
· elsewhere wtth the grand boulevard motif
which the Chicago Exposition of 1893
had popularized.
None of n was ever built, despite the
fact that within nine months of the an nounoernent of the venture Love had optioned almost aU the property and had
sold a staggering S6 miOion of stock.
1895 was a bad year for new towns.
A financial pank made an end to
Model Clty_:and to Elizabethton, Tenn .,
)and Pullman, IU., It should be added) .
Love couldn't seU any more stock and his
options were coming due . Control lapsed
into the hands of some N..w York Oty
financiers soiU,i interested In profi1jng
from the sale of lnduolrial land . They
foreclosed In 1910: In 1942, the last
piece of the land was sold to the U.S .
Army for the TNT plant (which «self was
never completed] .
Par! of that parcel was, In tum, sold to
private investon and the remainder
(2,000 aaes) went through the hands of
a - . of federal agencies-Army,
Navy, Air Force, Atomk Energy Commission - before passing under the aegis
of SCA and others.
Wluot happeaed then?
What became of Love?
He embarked lor Nome, Alaska , in
1896, convinced that there at last was the
perfect spot to "seek the golden future ."
Pany has yet unearihed no record o!
what befeU Love In Alaska . The man
essentially disappeared until 1912 when
he emerged with a new scheme, a new
town venture dwarfing Model Oty, in
Lomax , ID.

A portion of Lomax was finally
developed before L6ve died there In the
mld -1920s. During World War I. the
Ureless schemer testified before the U.S .
Senate, urging that the federal government und,erwrite building ol war Industries In that locale . He achieved a
"modicum of success," says Pany.
The U/ B author will visit that Southern
IDlnofs community this summer In search
of more detad on the extraordinary Love_
He has found already that Love Is
"remembered very fondly In Lomax , not
as a apeculator or fast buck artist "

While most traces of developm nts at
Model Cltv were demolished by the Army
In World War II, one factory which sur-

lllved that era "bbew-up" JUst last year
when_H was being operated by the WhH nor Chemtc.l Co. Earlier, that facility had
been- run as a canning factory by a firm
known as Tugwd and Wiseman The
ton of that T ugwe , Parry has found , was
Rex Tugwd, the New Deal planner who
oversaw dev.-lopment of FbR's "gr n
belt oornmunltib" of tha Oepresoion era,
yet anocl&gt;er !D-Ialed utopian ·e~t.
W m Love Is a "lost and forgottan
flgura" In A .m erk:an h ory, Parry
speculalea, lllnply "becaUM he failed •
History is the story of ....,.,._, he

oubm

U/ B Is one of 75 coiJega &amp;om
throughout the u.s. aelecletJ 'to partldpate In a cooperative JXC~~Pm wllh the
FMC Corporation .
The Company selects u - for
the program baaed on "the qo..tlly of the
curriculum, the company'• i n - In
recruiting students as potential
employees, and a desire to develop lnteoactlon projecls .•
The company recently ..-c1 to sponsor a projecl being carried out by Professor Lawrence Kennedy of the
Mechanical E.ngiMeing Department and
FMC's Agricultural Chemical Division In
Middleport, New York . The jOint study Is
directed towards removal ol hydrocarbons and related chemicals In the
gases resulting from chemical processes.
Kennedy and his colleagues are Involved In rnclilth on catalytic combustion and the OKidation of poUutants. Of
particular lnle&lt;est to FMC were his Investigations Into the use ol !"'?· noble
meiol catalysts. FMC prncntly 'uses a
Process Thermal Oxidizer (!&gt;TO) to
remove and de5b"oy organic contaminants from chemical process waste
air s treams . Operating at h igh
temperatures, the PTO utilizes a considerable amount of energy to perform effectively . Declining ava!labllity and Increasing costs of fuel require looking for
akernative and more effident means ol
meeting and surpassing environmental
goals. Kennedy's won. in employins
catalysts to destroy organk contamination In eKhaust Is an alternate approach to
the process_occurrins within FMC's PTO.
As a result of a seminar on catalytic oxIdation presented by Kennedy to the Mlddlepori Plant -process engineering group
and FMC's desire to deaeese levels ol
contaminants while at the same time
Teduclng fuel costs, the joint research
program w..S Initiated .
Kennedy and staff plan to test various
catalytic: systems at vatylng temperatures
to determine contamination destruction
efticlency. After an apparatus has been
set up, considerable analysis wiD be carried out by FMC pel'$0nnel to measure
performance.

w-

Carey ends
UUP euphoria
UUP last Wednesday claimed victory
In the budget war with Governor Carey,
but the celebration proved somewhat
premature .
As everyone knows by now, Carey, on
Thursday, did exactly what he said he
was going to, and prompdy vetoed $240
mUiion in spending Hems the legislature
had added to his lnitjal budget plan . Included In the veto was the entire restoration of funds for State University .
The action left the State wtthout a
budget, put SUNY and U/ B right back
Into the position o( having to plan lor
maslllve cuts, and dr~w a predictable
response from all concerned.
SUNY spokespersons .-emed ro·
signed. Both Hany Spindler, vice
chanceUor for financial affaiR. and
Donald M. Bllnken, chairman of the
Board of Trustees, said simply that the
UniverSity wiU now have to begin to imp~ment cuts.
The President of the Student Association of State University said she felt hke
screaming. Mark A Siegel, chairman of
the Assembly's Higher Education Committee. m..velled that Carey ."vetoed
every penny of M, every single penny I
can 1 believe lt."
UUP began talking about pushtns for
an override of the veto.
If that happens, Carey blustered, he
will refuse to certify tha budget an8'111e
light could go on for some bme, The
.Governor also threatened to In 5 ,000
empleyees to kftp spending In ftne .

RED CROSS BlOOD ORNE
Cllllonl F.._ Co11eee Ia ..,._.....
• Reel
Blood Dt1w ... tha .,....
. Keeler Root~~, E11k&gt;ou Compla. n.
1•7 p.ID., Fridlotl, ""' 11.

en.

..

�April 10, 1980

Tho-....
"""""*

-c-.-IIi
~_..

,_"J...,._ef_
.. -

_,._,.
nualroport&gt;, lnducling • roc:onl ol . . . . _ - , .

and........_, ......, ..
roc:ord·~

""""'wllb-.. -

....,..d

.. .........._.-- .....

tped&amp;c recomnwndelon1 were tnade f"'llllllddng the

-ullod .. - . 2:210 p.m . ..

19 ... be ............ and ....
26. 1980.

_.,a.-·~

A.Tlw1&lt;-. ......- .... -lolowlng

adcprod

k poiolod our bv Dun M. Sct-rz. rhal
facully In the Cologoo Is _.tly
._load, for ......... Colega 8 . . . . - -

,""""lor--·-

....n • ....._..

.,._._..,..,...............,""
....
_
............lrom ....... c.n.r

-.ld - - b e ...a.bforolhom.

- " " • ..-,pane~ fo&lt; lhcU/8 Foun·
dotion'o o..-ndlng FII&lt;UIIy A_.tol . he ..,Mined

(Prof.- Wntloy Rowland.

l..qunllng

.... dllloronco- .... sw. - a n d
1hrou!;&gt; lhe U/ 8 l'ouncl-.. Tho
---olfundowhlch-•
lonnortv poot ...... .. lhellnowrtily ..
Buflllo...twhlchbocaMSW.funckOIIhelimeol
.......... Thelncomafrom-lvndo n. tlw.........,;. obatlhoy con be ._,.jed
bv l h e - wilhourloglola-."' OMolon ol
lhe l!udget
they
lhe c:ornpen·

!undo -

..,.....,.1.thatbut, .. •n..,funds , they
St.i~M:

Mttng cia.dYM&amp;Igl
oubjocl ., -

Me

pro ....to and poo,..udot and -

SW. · -· Evon """-9&gt; they can be UHd for

any.._ ap....,..d io&lt;SW.fundo, . _ - . . , .
be ...bv anyone •*'"P'the p,.,;.

-

doni Mon.....,t...wolthelncomafrom"-en-

--lunck

.. the •ndowod
.. - .Iundt
. . .-- pro~-.,.
and F-.hipo a._...,. ... ~addod to

Tho lvndo ol lhc U/ 8 Foundollon lndudo •
gn&gt;wtng
ollhe Iundt• maka
......... the UniYenly .... flow-through fvnclt

-

·but.-

fvndo ... ~ for opoc6c
~"'-"\t ~- •nd dollheu·
Many .. -

the . . . -

pondllw&lt;i lhe - - ...... &amp;o..d ..
Dlr-... olthe FoundaOon · thor• II
,_. flexWiy In
lvndo. and they

/::.:=~~~~~!:

pie, lhM can be used for enWrtaw~mern purposa
Tho Oublandintl 5oM&lt;e A,...dt 0/hid\ lhc

Foundollonhot-forlhe ..... rwo,....r.,.e·
M.nt .., •1'111tmP' by the Foundaaon to do .omdhing
lot IN l.kWenly as • wheW. J-.ttwr INn fcx 101M
_ . _ . ... IFSECcannoo-lho

-_.......
.._ _... ....._
_.... -would
__
......
npenc~

T h o - oloo reporWd lllol he il COtlllnuinll

..nt.lblilh
-"".a... for .... ..,....,.,.,_.. ..
W\

honon prow-am

.. Tho Choir
Tho
lalod- ollhe 1.-..ng
I Mldo from Scwnoo. Vol 2107 13/ 4/ 1101 r• -

a... .....

gording facully - - .. oannoc1&gt;&lt;M&gt;
OMB Oculo&lt; 21A
I . . _ . ol 1980/81 l!udget Rodu&lt;lioN "" SUHV / a..&amp;lo 13/ 21/1101
Onl\ from Un-.oy Compuung

12/281

eon...Option .

............ fii&lt;UIIy lle&lt;omnwndoliOn on P/ F .

ol -

·

Unl__,.

~c-

........

Cholrl

Tho Commlne&lt; .... been """"""'"" """' iJala, ttudirnl ~tion tn YOCing Oft deane r«·
qu.W"CfM'Otl, and pe. r.vtew b
k-nUR

promotion Md

deciliofw

·

Rowlond pramted ...,. bec:I&lt;Qround
onrhe~ ...... in-lo&lt;MWFSEC.-.
-~arty Ho rolerrad .. Rlchonl eo.·. ..
-

Aprlll2, 1979. roPoliticol5donceO....regenling
~ .nd right 10 vote on curnc:Wum m.tters, lfdiding MsJet requftments .
Slar.r followed
ol Moy JO.
1979.
agrHd"""'- C.. in his
conc&lt;m .. the pollem ol woo~
tludonto
F""" SIOdying • nu.- ol - . inooMng
lludenls .. _.......... . rheComrnioft hotlound.

studtnt

up"""'""-

'"-he

....

wide ,.,., of opinions and of pncliu currently ••

U/8 k - t h a t l h e - within lhe...,..... •
rdlecotd bv wllhin the COmmill-. ....l
Pn::Uuor Rowland it ~UTe thai
mlltft Clln·
nee M reedy wlh a report and r~ on
thts iMue unti next year
TM Ol:her issue , wht:h ltOM througtl a law
from Profestof L. Sc:~eld . appeMS easia lo
dol wllh ....,._ Rowland ~ the _..
rev.w 111ue • one cennl t.we upc:rt which ttw
-"!~ olrhe mcmben · They o n - the
praentation o( • rnoiurion 10 the $en.atc
~~,....,....,.modo . ond Suwn

Krol -..! ' - brio! "'"' • ~ _
.. for
llUdoniS 10 be memben ollhe Cunlculum Com.,..
tea. bMed on hef ~ as a student
Profaeor Rowland wM lftking intorm.ebon from
the FSEC ret..lng 10 • """"' """' the eor-ua..
lhtl ye.- h was~ 19Md that the staterMnt
on Pnr RC\oTM .emwd to be agreed upon by ~
fNIIOI"11Y ol Comtni&amp;H IMfnben and dUi coukl be
pracn~ IO the Senate in May Tlw \QS ~

Mo a reeommendlltion to expand thil ~rnHf.H
,.., bv addinll ..
mcmben.

1.... ....

prelftobiy "'""" faculty

...... o w -

.
au--.
"""·-ding . . . . c..w..._"" -

Foe.~tJ~ " - ,..,.,..,

A.

IR~ow-nla...,l
There were pro. and cons in

the FSEC I'M'Inber·

------

"""'for lhe "Oulllandlng FII&lt;UIIy Awwd" Selection·

Com- (l..dor .. 3/ 11 / 1101

· -·· ....... - . . , . . . . . , forooluly

S/ U

.., raponM to 1M Sigad&amp;ow prftl'nteb:lln , Ed ·
won! Oudloy •nd Holen 1.--.
ol
• Fecv~ Awwd Proslr•m Aim Kuntz end Dmnb
Melorw.,.....,_..,.F..,..IIyA-dl'to-

a.-.

·em. and

• - - (3/17/ 1101 from lliYioion ol

~Educ-.. ~­

lpOI&lt;c.,-

g,.m The ChU will
-

10

John

ll!rfttMrizc

the diKussion In •

c.n.r

s..- Clolon&lt;a-

Ketter reports

doni~

on searches

"' ~ 13124/ \Ia ......_ ... Stu
lSae- •4 A I o..-iong FII&lt;UIIy
A.... ....,._ IR ~--~
~
.. ~ bv...., Gtft,. .. Sao.- w.....

---_____.....
.. sm.....,.... ... ,...... ••

,_.,~tt_..

A.~~

- a . -. OI.ol

c - - ""'*-

- a - " - &gt; t . a r _ . b v ...........
...... c.....- ... .... -"-Y_,.

..

........ - - t h e
. ..... -.._..
,.._

-

. -

·-·-~

. . . ft'"*On

.........

of Colege

He-the~-- -­

..,_Solon

- 1~8~Mo
... ,..,... &lt;Aiogao
.... C.

, -..t

-. . . . _. . . . . _a-.
-.
.-.-·-----·----·-a-.-.........
-...... .....c-_.llo_
_.._,_...._..,
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2C..P~~~-.,
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J

· - Calop.- by a.-iy

ThoC«aP
~·-·--

-.... Calo!lo .... _,........ ......,_..,

ct.nt-•

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

....

Tho
-··-~-----

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s.rv.c.

IY -andum !3/21/1101 from Dcpar1rnenr ol

""'*
Solety-S..-Dolor v-..

8.

bv the FSEC. and bv """•- R&lt;&gt;Wiand Tt-e ....,

_ , . . . ......... u.-..y ........

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,...~

proctdur.. ' - ""-ly bean

Thls run-down on the status ofpending
admlnistrallve appointments was given lo
the Facuky S..nate Execullve Commiltee
recently by President Robert L. Ketter:
About lhe Graduate School Dean appointment, Ketter slated there were three
candidates cunen~y boring consid6ed
with .one ol !he three an outstanding
potential candidate with whom the
Unlvenlly is In consultation .
For Vkle-Ptesldenl for Research, ftve
or lbt canclidaleo wiD be selected In !he
Immediate future from approldmawly 14
candldateo who wfte chosen from a
much luver applant pool. he said .
. With r._.:t to the Unlvenlty Com·
puler Center, the President
led "a
Man:h
be In laled when aeedemic
and odmlnlstratlve conflicts are
raolved," according to the minutes ol
the Faculty Senak Executive Committee.
For • fourth poslllon, Assillant Vlc:e·
Ptaldent for Alllrmatlv Acllon. Affairs,
- n candidates t..v. been ranlwd .00
Interviews have llarled
Thls ,._t m.dc before the
rnlgnatlon ol Academic Vlc:e President
Ronald F Bunn - announced.
~ IMt
pledged thai • OUC: ·
ceuor to Bunn will be .........t before the
~~ VPM l u - for MIIIOUJIIn July.

Vig~--

with book ahlblt.

History major is
book cover designer
Greg Vlgrass, a senior !TUijoring In
history al U/ B, designs book covm for

the Buffalo-based Prometheus Press, one
of the largest independent publishen 'in
the U.S . (Professor Paul Kurtz ol !he
Philosophy Oepartmenl Is editor-In-chief
of the Publishing House.)
Several of Vigrass books are featured
in a display on cover designs which he
put together for Loekwood Memorial
Llbral)l . The exhibit Is on view
throughout April near Lockwood's Main
Entrance.
Focusing on process, the exhibil indudes samples of _Initial Ideas, rough
sketches, changes and final art, cameraready mechanicals, negatives, and the
finished product. Covers lor three
volumeo are followed from beginning to
end .
Other book samples are Included , il·
lustrating how the concept of cover
design has changed over the years
because ol emphasis on promotion and
so-called ')&gt;oint of Impact sales."
Editions ol Grqpes of Wroth from the
40s and !he 70s are displayed side by side
tq make the point.
Vigrass _explains that at the beginning
ol the 20th Century, book coven were
mft«ly utilitArian. heavier paper wrapped
around a book simply to keep H together.
"'The mall boy In a pr1nllng house was
probably responsible for the-.design."
Now~ys, he nota, a company such as
Simon and Shust£r will publish a paperbeck edition ol The World AOCOI'ding To
Gorp with four tolally different covers, to
be d"J&gt;&gt;ayed side by lide to allract maximum atle:ntion .

Vlgrus hM executed perhaps a doz,en
handles ad
layouts .00 brochures lor the Company .
He hu also deolgned posters lor the
Center For Theatre Rewa.eh.
A graduak of Buffalo's McKinley High
School Vigraso took advmislng art
thfte, ihen s~&lt;oyed out ol. ochool for a few
years, -lrylng to perfect h technique as a
paintft, Later, he tried the Ar1 Department at U/B where his flgurallve, Uluslrallw style "was not popular with In·

covers for Prometheus. and

.&amp;tructors •

After switching to history, his Interest In
flluslratlon pcrslsled and he foUnd hlmseK
allractcd to frM,Iance won. Thafs how
he llln1ed with Ptornctheu whet he
now II a ful-llme, part·~me employee

puUlng in about 25 hours a week . Vigrass
works. too; ln the UIB BOOl&lt;store where
he's usually awash In a sea of colorful
paperback designs.
·
The Loekwood exhlbrt resuked from
some conversations over coffee at the
Mr. Donut on Main Street which Vigrass
frequents . He got to talking to another
regular who turned out lo be Loekwood
Reference Librarian , Manuel Lopez. One
day , the conversation turned to book
covers. and Lopez, intrigued by Vigrass"
vocation lnvHed him lo do the exhibit.

UUP to lobby
for override
UnHed University Professions (UUP) Is
organizing sevftal days ol rallies in
Al&gt;any next week to mu.stft enough support In the Legislature to secure an ewerride of Governor Carey's veto of restored
SUNY funds.
.
According to UUP Chaplft President
Bill Allen, the union will provide buses to
the capital each day for sevftal SUNY
unhs. All units will be involved . It is
hoped lhe ral · will draw a good mixture
of fecultv, staff and students, Allen said .
Localfy, the Buffalo Chapter, the
Heahh Science unit and Buffalo State wiU
target In on already established contaciJ
in the legislature.
•
Undaunted by the unexpected Carey
veto last week. ADen says he Is still"confi·
dent" the union ''will win this one."
Allen urged the University communltv
lo assist the union by writing Assembly
Speaker Stanley Ank at the legislative
Office Building In Al&gt;any, 12248. Since
the Assembly IJ controlled by Deri&gt;ocra
and th&lt;o State has a Demoaatic Governor , Allen concluded that its memben
will facle .Increasing pressure not to go
along with an ovmide attempt .
Alkn also told the f1q&gt;orUr that~
week, the State Court ol Appeals vote&lt;!
that the Governor and the OOB director
do not lurve the "expreued or Inherent
- " lo Impound Iundt appropnaled
by the legislature
This is good news lor SUNY, advised
Alen. What II mans .Is that - SUNY gets
Its money restored , under law, the

Gowmo. or M!Aer cannot Mqual6 H

�n

Apd 10, 1980

Senate endorses new calendar plan
After liYelv clootNne T.-My, the Faculty SenMe ..-1 1o ...done the recom-

.,. the eaa.ncs.r Commlllee .
lor the 1981-82 IICademk: ~(See -.-ytng ar1ldr In ll&gt;&lt;l.y's
Rqotter on the~ c.lend.r revisionS. Laol week. ' - the fuD
Admilolonl Com- Report) .
~ Senators ....-Ung the
Heellh Sc:lenca YOdlerously oppooed
longlheNng dMt time by len mlnules to
all the number o l - --from
about 15 to 12.5.
A ropaenlatlvc from the School ol
Nursing, who Mid her c:olleagua "almoot
unanimously" oppo.. the change,
warned that II would wreak haiiOC wtlh
their pr'O!P'81ft by requiring ~major revl•siOnS" In ocheduq clinical hours and
pract~cums. The propouJ would also
dilute q~ .... Mid.
Norman Sollcolf chalged the reoommenclallons _.e made without adequate
corisubllon from faculty In the School of
Medicine who tach undevaduate basic
JCien&lt;:e ~- He noted 11\at fecully
wtlh whom he rece~ spoke-... "overwhelmingly oppooed .
Anolher Health Sciences r~esen­
tatlvc quipped that "clinics don t open
and close for our students on a schedulot
we set up," then cautioned SenatoR that
any loss ol clinic time could jeopardla accredital!on ol units. He also warned that if
~

dorms.-. cloe.d ....t ""*'a ...W. Mpt

he rnell-..d that advantages ou'-lgh
• .......... Aocommodatlng oCx::nclteqllftmenls ohouldnl be any more difficult than for ochook on a or
qua.- tylllml , he added.
Senator Constan- YenocarS agreed
and lvtng accommodatlolls.
Senators OUIIIde Heelth Sdencet com- with Holt's _ , , and salcf the
pl.ined that ohonened _ . . would calendar reYislon was one ol the moot
make K fTIOft dlfflcult for sludents to pro- • "•tutio" recommendations he's heard
perly ln~te learned conccpta and
Ideas and that Ill... who IUJII'0'1 the In
Kingman from 8iochemlsuy then
1'tVIsloN ere, In effect, Impeding the rosa to say he_ was tired ol hearing Health
maturation experiences ol studants.
Sciences lacully compiU! about the un "Students are not being fattened
worllable nature ol the proposed calenfor the kiD," remarked another.
dar. He ch"'9"d that his c:olleagues lack
Student repreoentallve Brad
the desire to make the necesssal)l
WUlcockson (who lerVed on the CommK- changes.
tee) YOiced concern that the change
Alter the Senate heard a review ol the
would negatively Impact an commuters,
AdmissiOnS Committee report and comsince the wider dlstrbulion ol duMs
ments regarding the staffing and
would mean longer hours on campus and
oriJanlzational problems (In A&amp;R and
less lime for after-school jobs .
other units) whlch hinder the recruKment
Willcockoon also questioned whether effort (see last week's Reporkr), the
sludomts would be able to handle the proPresident took issue wtlh some ol the
jodecl 20 per cent Increase In workload.
Calendar CommKtee Chairman Andrew Holt told Senators that for the first
time, sludomts will actually get the classcontact hours In the faD necessary for a
"bonaffde semester credit." Holt noted
U/ B Is running ahead ol last year In
that Binghamtan and Abany ere using
freshman tuition deposits. President Ketsimilar schedules successlully.
ler told the Facuhy Senate 'tuesday that
While HoK conceded that revising
~ ol April 3. the University had received
clinical ochedules "would not be easy".
609 deposits as opposed to 1.072
'tec:eived last year at this time .
T ransler deposits are down. however.
with 94 in so far compared to 113. By
this time in 1979. Ketter said , admission
had been offered to 1.361 potential
transle .. . Only 1.177 students have been
accepted so far this year. U/ B may still
not make its quota of transfer students.
Ketter warned . despite a lower target ol
1.300 Last year's tar9&lt;'1 was 1.700.
Where the UniversUy stand s o n
gradua te e nro llment is sttll uncertain . Ket·

to • "*''mum during the long -

"'--t from o.c.mber 23 to F~ 1,
HMIIh Sdencet 11uc1en1J would lind
themtelws hlrd . . . . . to flnd transpor-

CS'

complaints.
Ketter Mid what "bochered" htm is that
"faculty _.,. to be looking for oymbols
rather than results." Oapite -....nts
made earlier by Ad..-. Commlttae
Chairman Brian Ratchford that no concerted effort made to oogmtloe
coherent, lndusive recruitment program ,
Ketter claloned the oppoolle.
The Ptaldcnt Mid he asloed A&amp;R to
"beef up" their recruiting efforts and gave
them $10,000 from Endowment I'I'IONY.
doubling the budget. "I've yet to hear the
Faculty SCnate come forwercl to 111'11" thet
University resources be ..-1 In this
effort," h e - . !. What is needed , Kater continued. is more fecully and
students partidpetlng In recruitment.
Ketter ·said he is looking forwercl to
receiving the Jen Committee report
which should be submitted sometime this
semester. The report will recommend
how to establish recruitment goals and
what to do to reach them.

a

,.._

Frosh deposits ahead of 1979
ter relayed , and problems are expected In
meeting projed!ons. The President Indicated that a decrease in Federal money
In health-related areas. non-competitive
(Slate -regulated) graduate sllpends. and
a new lulllon waiver program lor SUNY
employees are aD expected to take their
toll on graduate enrollment .
In an effort to attract top level schola ...
Ketter announced that he has transferred
money frorri the Endowment Fund to Increase the size of the Woodburn
Fellowships. With the Increase. $6,000
wUI be offered to the top' three candidates. The second level ol Woodburn
Fellows will also receive .addlllonal
revenue . Ketter saki

Personnel news
lnc:om~

Tu F....,... SUil Av.U.ble

For the convenience of last minuteJilers, the Personnel Department will keep
Its Benefits Rack (located In the lobby of Crofts HaY, Amherst Campus) supplied

wtlh Federal and State Income Tax Forms (short, long, various schedules and
Instructional booklets) until 5 p .m . nnt Tuesday. April 15.

TIM/CREF Semi...,..: Tuacla,, 4 /1 5 / 80

Swizzle stick art
was born in a barroom
Grobe. "These mobiles are innovative
and different ."
An nht&gt;lt ol silhouettes is also on
display at the Alamo Gallery. Rtia Kemp .
a Gettvllle woman . started making
silhouettes eight months ~ and has a
variety ol her work on display .
Rloman and Grobe hope to bring rno&lt;e
amataur and professional artlsts' work to
the year-old Alamo Gallery.
The IWIUie otlck art and silhouette
show is open to the public , Monday
through Friday, 10 a .m. to 5 p .m .
through April 25.

Henry appointed
Louis G . Henry has been appointed
.-ant director ol the Nuclear Science
and T ethnology Facillty. Dr Wan V
Chon , NSTF d~rector, hat anounc d
H duties wiD nclude admlnlJtra
funcliont and engloe«ring analyseo
A gradual ol U/ 8 , Henry has be~n on
the staff ~ 1975 H has served as a
rUctor operator and was senior radiation
oalef)l monKor wtlh the Rae!- Prot tion D.rparlment &amp;om 197 10 1980

lAST CHANCE
Mem!Mn ol the laocully IIIII encouraeed
to IUbmlt
Faculty R..-.
F.,... 001 SCAT£ to
tudcftt
Aloooc:llatk•
•
• poellole,
D...W
......... .,
........
. lhll ......
Fec:ooky wtth ~ IIIII ....... to cal

636-.2950.

Mr. Douglas Burnett, TIAA/ CREF Advisory Officer, will po !RI three
seminars (10: 15 a .m . session at Amherst and 1:45 p .m . and 3:45 p ..... sessions
at Main/ Bailey) nnt Tuesday. Mr. Joseph E. Lippert, Employee Benefits
Manager, advises over 450 state employees (FacuKy and PR. staff enrolled In the
basic TlAA/ CREF Retirement Plan plus enrollees In the SRA and TDA plans
also administered by TIAA/ CREFl have made reservations to date. He added ,
"due to the large size rooms (Moot Court at Amherst and Lecture Hall •144 In
Farber Hall) , plenty of empty seats are stiD available lor aU of Mr. Bumett's
presentation•." Uppert Invites other state employees (enrolled In the basic ERS
and TRS Retirement Plans) to attend In order to obtain Information on their
eligiblllty to participate In the Supplemental Retlrement AnnuKy (SRAI and the
Tax Deferred Annuily (TOA) Plans. Personnel will continue to accept additional
reservations until aD seats are filled . lnteresied "mployees should telephone Mrs.
Fran Stanton (Amherst Extension 2650: off campus call: 636-2646) to make

reservations.

Healtlo 1..........,. Coverage for ~t Chllclrea
With the adyent ol college and hiiJh school graduations In the May/June
tlmelrame, Personnel advises all employees wtth family coverage to check the
future status ol thelr dependents' health in5urance . FuD-tlme, non-disabled
students are covered under their parent's contract In the NVS Health Insurance
Program only to the last day ol the month ol their graduation .
Since most heaKh Insurance caniers require a 30 to 60 days wailing periOd to
provide a new private Insurance contract, Personnel recommends affect d
employees attend to this matter as soon as pooslble . FaUure to.do 10, alter the
dependent loses coverage under the parent's plan , may resuK in a lapse ol
heaKh Insurance coverage for the youngsler concerned .
For additional Information and assistance , telephone Mrs Chris Sutter at
Amherst Extension 2650; off campus caU: 636-2646

N- Healtlo lllf......,.tl- Booklet
Within the week , Personnel wiD be maU1ng over 3.800 copies ol the new state
health Information booklet entitled "Health Insurance for V ou and Vour
Dependents- New York Stat General Information" to Slate employees
pr-ntly enrolled in the N.Y . Stat Health Insurance Program (Statewide , GHI
and HeaKh C. Plan5) . This booklet includes the many changes that became
effective 1/ 1/
and prOVIdes addibonalinlormation as 10 eligibility, enrolment
Pn&gt;cedures chailga ol coverage. continuation Into retirement. etc
As addllionaJ booldoto deocrtblng the spedflc benefits avallablo under each
component pwt ol this ~am become avaDable (hopefully by mid -May), Per·
oonnel wGI also diltri&gt;u'- the·m on an Individual basis Topics to .be covered In
fUture edKtons lnclu&lt;M • 8lu Oats hotptialization. Statewide (non-CSEA)
Pracr1plions, ~ Madital/Swgk.l - Major Medical portion ol the
Statewide Plan •nd the medic:all~ portion olthe GHl Plan Enrollees In
.the Health Car Plan wll only r-..e the - . 1 booklet cunently belnsl ts.ued
linea the HCP provides them wtlh appropriate ,.teMito detcribe the benef
ol thew. plan

....

�April 10, 191J&gt;

D

·Law student
Is a student of
political assassination
The movie is obviously an amateur effort.
As frame after jerky frame llicken by,
you- the motorcade approach. A~
open lJncoln with motorcycle escort. A
smart-looking. young couple in the back
seat. A grey-hued older man In front .
The young couple smile and wave as
the C A l - behind a sign . When ft rethe younger man's ·wave has
become a clutching at the throat. The
older man In front turns around, recollo
slightly. then slumps
The car nears
a lamp post; the young woman notices
somethlr1g is wrong. She reaches over to
her husband who collapses on her
shoulder: she aadles him .
Blood gusMI..
Suddenlv,. the young woman turns to
the rear ol the CAl. Is she climbing out
aa-0511 the trunk? Is she reaching for
something? We can't teD.
The film , of course, is that taken by Abraham Zapruder in Dealey Plaza In
Dallas, Texas, on November 22. 1962.
It shows John F. Kennedy being
murdered .
"It's not a reenactment : the blood isn't
tomato catsup: this is human . you're
human . React ."
U/ B Law Student Edward Sinker exhorts his usual audi«nce -of college
students to distinguish between realily
and lk:tion bef&lt;we he shows his print of
what 'is probably the most Important .
most analyzed , most debated lew
seconds of film In ceDulokl history.
He then proceeds to analyze and
deba
H once more . as he giv,.. a
lecture-presentation on the Kennedy
assassination .

,.merges.

over.

/

Sec..... to IAary
Sinker's appearance In Diefendorf
HaD, March 27. was second only to
Tlmothlf Leary In drawing power among
even •dleduled by the SA Speakers·
Bureau this year. H•s booked again lor
this faD . Since 1975. In fact . Sinker has
given h rap 20 times. ranging as far wut
as Marquette Unlversfty. The lecture has
evolved m tone . focus and conclusion as
Sinker himself has become more
knowledgeable about events In Dallas
IIOIIK! 1 years ago now.
At flnt . his talk was a " RfOSirlctive
Critiqu of the Wanen Commission
Report .· emphasizing loopholes and real
or imag,ned discrepancies between thai
panel's findings and the evidence at
hand
"I h d a strong be~t toward
conspira , " Sinker r members.
After the House Select Committee on
AloasiiMtiona last year legitimized the
idea of conspinocy, though . Sinker. oddly
enough. "- had second thoughts.
He was .an "Informal staff consultant"
for that comm
during a leave of
.t.enc. from Law School in 1978-79.
asolgned to delving Into the events of
November 22-23 In I&gt;Uas. That meant
alltopov maiCrlals lind the Zapruder film ,
primarily

-

panel's report found : the first was the

"magic" single bullet; the second . a miss;

and the third, the fatal shot which blew
off 5'1• Inches of JFK's skull. AD came
from behind. H was decided .
The House paneJ (relying heavily on a
re-enactment keyed to what is pmported
to be a recording of an open police radio
transmisskm from Dealey Plaza at the
time of the shooting) theorized there were
four sho4s In slightly more than seven
seconds. The flrsl came from behind and
missed; • sec:ond shot from behind was
the "busy" buDet: a third, from in front,
also missed: and a ·fourth · shot., from
behind, was the fatal one. They concluded "conspiracy."
Sinker disagrees.
ll&gt;ere's no evidence of the true legal
definition of "conspiracy," he points out,
even W you accept that one shot came
from the grassy knoll ahead of the President. Legally, the word means "cooperative effort." No one has iniroduced
anything to substantiate that.
Even If there were two people
shooting, Sinker says, It's not "altogether
Implausible" they were
r;eparately. Dealey Plaza was "ar. jlocellent site"
for an assassination, a perlect "10 ,"11 you
want to rank H.

Ewtdetoc:e .. Oawed
Sinker thinks the evidence leading to
the two assassin theory is flawed . Fnt of
aD, beDs can be heard on the critical radio
transmissiOn recording and there are no
bells In the Plaza. Then , too, the firm
which did the analysis at first claimed only
50'1&gt; probebillty for four shots (based on
Hs re-enactment) . The night before the
results were to be published, though ,
they dalmed that after "eliminating
varillbles," they could now guarantee
95 'I&gt; accuracy. "No one knows how they
did this," Sinker argu....
What about the very definite backward
movement of Kennedy's head discemble
In the Zapruder film? Doesn't that proue
that a shot came from the front?
Only d a human skuD reacts like a
"biiliard bal" when struck by a speeding
buDet, Sinker answers. It doesn't.
Kennedy's head goes forward In one
frame , too, at a laster rat&lt;' than H faDs
back, he points out.
"To a r...archer or a doctor, the
Zapruder film is consistent with a shot
from behind . Maybe not to Dick Gregory
or Mark Lane ."
Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone.
Sinker concludes.
SUited at Hualltoa
Sinker became Interested In the Kennedy assassination while an
undet:graduate at Hamilton College In·
1975. He had seen the Zapruder film on
1V lind- "faoclnated" by.what appeared to be "obvious evidence" of a
bulet from the front . He determined to
pu,...... Mas a "research project." Trouble
was, no l..:ully member would agree to
act as sponoor.
F1na1y a profeuor of art and music at
nearby Klrl&lt;land College (whose only
quatillcation was a "Boslon accent")
elected to go along with H. P~
dlocouraged him from -king funding ,
but he penlsted there, too , r..aay receivIng money from the Educational Opportunlly~m

Once In Washington , he wangled an
lniroduction 10 Tecf Kennedy tlvough a
· Hamilton alumnus. M-.g the Senator
on the capitol steps, Sinker blur1ed out ,
~I'm here 10 do r-..dl on the assassination of your brother."
Kennedy turned qulclly and inqured ,
"which one?"
Thill Jolt..l SW.... He walced on In
lllence lo. ..,.... time . That demonaara-

u.s. ........

Ofv,ll'

PAID
N-"'offt
l4lffalo.N.Y.
l'amllt No. a1 1

lion of sincere regret for his tactlessness
seemed to Impress the Senator who
"opened doors" for the young researcher.
Back at Hamilton, Sinker gave a lecture lor academic aedH, instead ollillng a
paper. The nearby Utica newspaper
picked H up and several clubs and service
organizations were on .the phone. Finally,
a lecture booking fnn offered him a contracl .

This visibility won him the opportunfty
10 work on the House Commftlee project
(thanks to his hometown Congressman) .
At flrsl, Sinker recalls, he was welcomed by the Committee - until he
"started raising some qu...OOns they were
not Interested In ." ·
He unearthed a previously unreported
autopsy sketch showing what might have
been a wound on the left of John Kennedy's skuD. Was k a wound from a buDet
fired from the front? Or· a repr...entation
of a piece of brain matter that had lodged
there? An Ink blot only? "No one ever
looked at H," sighs Sinker. After his
6ndings, k became "lnaeaslngly difficult"
for him to contact his boss.
Funny, he muses. They're the on...
who wound up thinking c:onspncy, not
him .
·
Conspiracy is what most of his college

audiences tend to belleve, too, Sinker
says-&amp;.,fore his presentation .
When they leave, "they're not so
sure.''

n.e ..., tile ..... etood 8lllJ
Students-at-large -m to have a mor-

bid fascination for the Kennedy Legend:
clasoical sense.

a true high tragedy In the

Sinker says they are awed by "the day the
earth stood stilt' as November 22, 1962,
is somellmn referred to.
A young man wHh political aspirations
of his own, Sinker has also studied the
McKinley assassination which took place
in Buffalo. In another winter research
project at Hamilton, he examined the
_railroading of the alleged conspirators in
the Uncoln assassination . Later, he
assisted Dr. Richard Mudd, a now-&lt;!lderly
Mid-Western physician, who was trying
to win a Presidential exoneration for his
ancestor, Samuel Ale~~ander Mudd, who
was dlsgnoced and Imprisoned for setting
the broken leg of John Wilkes Booth,
Uncoln's assassin.
·

PofHical assassln~tlon is always a
threat, Sinker suggests as a reason for his
deep Interest in the subject . Look al what
happened to Alard Lowenstein just last
month.

Strassel: third best in U.S.
U/B's Tary SlrasMI, a jUnior from
North Tonawanda, finished third In the
Unions International (ACUI) National Individual Cham-

Astoc:latlon ol College

pionahlpa at Seattle Monday alter being

tied for flrsl place going Into the finals .
5trasMI roBed a 502 set Monday night
on games of 171-181-150 for a ninegame total of 1,673.
Ten1 Yoahlhara of Hllhborough, Fla.
Comrmlnlly College won the title wlth a
613 8nel block and 1, 784 total.
~ lind Ya.hlhara wee tied for
the !nod at 1, 171 after the lint llx games,
but U/8 Coech Jane J&gt;and said
StrMNI'a lack of Mtlonal tournament exca~ her to tighten up In the

=-

p - Odg, ..... of U/8, flnllhea 15th
24-women field with 9IJ) for ....

In the

s.-

pmea. and did not make the final el!lht.
.
OIIIg Ia a IOPhomon from Kenmore E.ut
the RO!/IIIa learn wll compe!AI In the
Hllitl School.
.
. ACUI ~tiona! Turn Charnpionfhlpo ..
s..-.1, Dellg and oiNr ........,_ of • • ,...,_._, Wlae. 011 May 1-S.

,

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

APRIL 3, 1980
VOL 11 e NO. 2&amp;

Dentistry gets its $500,000, BUT

• • •
llvM..,BediS,...

n.

recent
EdllaoW -Leglolature's
·Sdonoosinclusion ol
SS17,000111tlallrvenlonolthe 1980-81
Stele ................. conwctlon ol
cWidondalrt .......... ~.t
the School ol De..-y Is a otep In the
right direction.
But K's sllll no ..-aniM tlw School
wiD , get the money, aeutioned Or. F.
Carter Pannll Jr .. U/ B vice prnident for

health odences.

" It's certainly to Rep. John Sheffer's
everlasting credH that he spearlleaded a
campaign to get Sllpporl and money for
the School. and for that, we are most
grateful.· said PannUI. But, he pointed
out , Gov. Carey could sttU veto the
budget addition. or the funds If approved
by the Governor. could be frozen .

Not bdta olf. Jld
• .
"We can't say the School Is be«er off
for the Legislature's action," PanniU con·linued . "unHI the money clears the remaining hurdles and Is actuaRy released.·
PanniU and U/B Dental Dean Or.
WtUiam Fe-ns praised the actions of
legislature members. many ol whom put
a great doool of time and effort Into seek· •
ing aid for the School. ~h'sRiclellce that'
the ~ ~
6d)ool's
needs and
to them

Thla llrtlot'o rencles1ne ol the new Batnl and Slee halle at Amhent depicts
.toow the muele comp&amp;n will look - within the Mid yac or,oo.

-Was New York. State a fluke for }(ennedy?·
•

~ ..... - tt..n cine
, . . . ...................._.
...,.

•

hll ...._ &amp;- I..Qu

H-do. a . . , . . .. - . g pololen,
..,a.d.
·

n. NMOn for the ned ' - - Ted

Kennedy'o c;opture ol New York t-:1
Conn«:ttcuulln the~Among t"'- who cldn' anlidpale hla
win II l&gt;rolesoor Geoid Goldhaber,
U/B'• resident.,....... pololer and pral·
dent ol Mc:luhan. Goldhlber. Wllaams,
Inc., a c:onoultio8 firm llpldalzing In pol1ng and mar1&lt;et oervloos. So how did I
s.-.lfaclorure involved, explomed Goldhaber, not the least ol which
II that "M's tha yar ol tha ._uve

"-"?

. ... . ._

I

~

lli(,1lc:OIIt""f'~.Sobwi\. ••
•••
Aa tar li t&lt;.nnedy and " - - ' go.
Gololbob.lr -vs moot people q - .

Tedcly'o c:Nnc:ter.-nd moral fhr.'and
view Ra9n as .an "extremist" and

-w.monger.•

•-t

......., Ia o If
1'he l'lalclent doesn't fare much bet·

Ia. Accorcllnv to Goldhaber, tha public
perco1w1 him as "Incompetent." awardlng him npCaiJy high Ineptitude ratings
In economic and fomgn policy.
Aha Corter's and Re-n·s big wtnsln
lllinolo, Goldhaber theorton New York'•

Ern::

votan came to the uneasy realization
that, If the
Stat feU In line, theoe

~~you an Idea ol what tha Corn- · =-=~

and ·l::or...~~
"with two looen" running for Prnldent.
So, concluded Goldhaber. the New
York victory can be viewed In part as a

,;..
,.

-

'

~-....
~=-=.

J&lt;altSM lhto......
-

.

•

"""9&gt;

.

_

toalt._._ - . --..
...............

•

o:r;
·· •
-.JfactorlnKenMdy'oNewYork

wtn, Goldhabe- thlnko, hao to do wllh
demagnphics.
Masaachuoetto liberal
-.do In good staid with labor'orank and
file and with the Jewish electorate, two
laoge constituent blocs In New Vorl&lt; . With
tn!lirtion conl!nulng to optral, Goldhaber
submlto that labor II beginning to Carter as IMif-...1 In combetlng thctr
number one concern. Jewish voters are
sill hot over the U.S . voce In favor of the
~ reoofutton condemning Js-aeh settlements In occupied Arab terrKory.
Sa~ cast In Erie County reflected

n.

~t!:ogr.=: f=-~uHe:r~

•............. .,.,..,
Yet II0&lt;1Ihes t.ctc. which stung CarliiJ
II that tha
Iran
"doesn't fly 811)11110N;" that II, M hao
become more olaliallllty than an advan' -· s.c.- C.. ·~ hirnoelin
the fl.g." Goldhabethen..:.
tarall! In past ~ clldn' .me oo
much lor CarliiJ the poklc:ian u for
Carter the President. Jnltlaly, conl!nued
Goldhabe-, Carter wu pen:elved u "dolng oomething" about the situation, but
now votan IMw him more u reactive
than proactive.
Ammtano don't want an "anti-hero"
who Mems to be "walling for the Shah to

.......,._,-In
...-uleted.

::,~~ ,t!

:::-a:. t~ !!jJ,•~

_
Shaw studies 'tsunamis' u_sing the computer

thlo II how
he thinkl tha general public ~
theoe praldentlal hopefuls: JOhn Con-

munlcMions profeoeor means,

.

---

Bvl.leola~

T-

In

J.,-.

tha wqrd

.....,. "'orge hMilor - .· and nders to

whet moot W - ula tidal wave, a
mounl.tn of water that unex pec:aedly from the sea, br1nginv death and
~

TIIUJIO
are a wry real threat to
many .,.... ol the worid. partioularly
t"'- bordcnng
Pacllo: Ocean and
lha Peclllc lolands. the wat coati of the
Unit&lt;od Slata, Alaoka and the Hawllllan
blands haw al
hll by !ham
around
wor1d have
)Oonad to coorclin.ae and ohare r....-ch
on how...,_ are formed, how
ar ~ ....,.. tha ooean, and
how they 1mpacl on land Among oeven
from
U S tnvolved In the Tounami
Convnloelon ol
G«&gt;detoy and Geophyob II Richard
• pr"'- ol . . . , _ . . Idona
and cMI
her

..__...Union"'

!f'

Amherol, Wast Seneca and onawanda ,
areas heavily Inhabited by eKher Jewo or
blue collar worken.

Wayne type ol bold, - - v e leader" .
who Isn't alr.tcl to make decloions , expounded Goldhaber. ·"Iran and tha

__ ..__.,.. .......

�Aprtl3. 1980

.._

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

To .lhio, ..W MIWYofk's "low lor the
........... the goneraly unpredictable nature of primary cleclions (lor
..t.dl Is a tradllonally low voter
tum-out) and, I&gt;Oila!. a Kennedy victory .
Goldhabcr maintained that political
analyols
aWIR ol changing sentiments towards Carta: ,they just didn't
C!IPccl them to suddenl9 climax in New
York.
·
Kennedy forces •e now gcattng up for
wins In Pcnn..,ania. Michigan, Ohio.
New Jetoey and Calllomio, and with the
enc:our1191n9 demographics 1n theoe--such as a high concentration ol
induotr1al worifors In Michigan and
Ohio-victory may be In the realm of
posoiJillty.
A Kennedy win In Pennsylvania might
still stai1 "a real horse race."

were

_

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

• Tsunamis
1ft ~ In

arus that· border on or
. . clc&gt;oe 10 .., OCHI'I .
"''"m"" enornaly," SMw. wbo resides
onugly oomc 500 mila lnlaocl from the
Atlantic; comments. "h may seem In·
congruous that I ""' conducting ts~p~ami
~ hac. but most ol my work Is
the&lt;n1icaly oriented . I don1 need an
ocean to work with. just a computer and
aaa.s to data."
SMw points ou1 there are many
populw l1'lilconcepCio about tsunamis.
~lint has to do with the name.
"Tld.l wava, or tsunamis, don't haw
Mvtbk&gt;!i to do with !ida." M uys.
are generated
primarily by qrthquakes. although
YOicanoa and huge rock or mud slides
can aloo set them all. The shock of an
earthquake can send a tsunami traveling
thousands ol miles.
.
• An Hr1hquab In Alaska can cause
daiMge In .Qdle. ~ Shaw noccs. adding
thai tsunamis have caused oorne ol the
wotldh's ~~-d~~J':"c.u~uake
that K ..-.. on """" •• .day. t
.
cauood a tsunami thai struck the Kodlek
hlends and IOUlhern coati oiAiuka with
a $-1- wave which klle4 96 people
and .......S mooe than $100 mlllon
damege The tsunamis formed by the
eruption ol · Knobtoa In 1883 are
atimalcd to haw killed -wroximale)v
36.000 people.

t....wn..

964

•

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

"

some tsunemls do lit !he
............. olthe p l - strikIng ~- SMw nola that the
can uouely be .-aoed eo penons
on thoR .r a cllsUnce from the ger&gt;era·
lion can be mr-n.cl.
"UUuaay. the tounld1ll OCC\Itl as a last
no1nt tide ralb. tt..n a huge wave."
SMw explmo. " h can be only • ' ~

=.,.~t;e"'....:.:~sT.!~
and can

mlniiiH. Thai's ~~do a
lol oldaniage."
' .
One unforiunate lniliol lndicallon ol a
""""" moving In Is the recftSion ol
"'aler away from the shore.
"Peoples lint ~Is to wal&lt; onto
the bacb Md pick up 11th lor dinner.·
SMw 101111 Many times. the 1..._ lor
dinner ends ., dcalh when high water
- I n sudden)v.

•

Nations -.nd tho world haw formed
a Tamami Wamng System, coordinaled
.,
u.s prtrnartv by the Nallonal
Oc....nil! and AllnOI!&gt;h«&lt;c A&lt;ln*\lslrand ...-..~ In Honolulu Md Alab
Th
nctwor
conslll.s of seismic
llbor- winch rnonllor earthquakes
Md """""" 10 predict • a PanleuJor
Is big .......... Md the right lund 10
gene-. a
then
IIMhed to that ll'llghi be elletted .
"T
uouely trawl pretty fall .
haw been -.....! 10 nwl450
..... an hour," SMw - - •lf Cine Is

w-.. ..,

CI&lt;Ne"''la

lot"' ...........-,.,..haw

- o r *i" houn' ..,.,..,., but fIll

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

~- only

a ' - mlhutet ol

~ . They usually don1 ...... M."
The basic problem being tadcled by the •
ocxnllsU on the commioolon 1o how to 1cll
when a tsuneml will occvr.

"At this point. we sill don't know how
to tel when an urthquake:wlll generate a
tsunami.· Shaw uys. "Some huge earthquakes don't, and tome smaller ones do.
It requires rescan:h.•
Shaw Is studying the trapping of long
wava by underwater topography. For in·
stance. when a long wow. SU&lt;lh as a
tsunami. hils an underwater mountain
range , K can gel trapped along the ridge
ol the mountains. When this happens,
isn •• dispersed
the energy of the and the wave """ cause much more
damage when H hils land. One such ridge
lies perpendicular to the New Zealand
coast. where wava arc much hi!~~- than
normally would be ""PCC!ed.

Eqlor.....,.......

·-

Without a great deal of real wcWid data
to worlt with, Shaw Is eoncenlraling on
analytical numer1cal models whi&lt;h are
still exploratory.
"That! are things happening Jn the
ocean we don't understand" he. oays.

~of= a~:~;:.;~

deep ocean. That! has never been .any
instrumentation in deep ocean when a
lsuNiml rolcd over H. We only know
what happens dose to and on land.·
Shaw points out that a Wallt! which
might be 30 feet high when H hils land
mlslht be only six iK:hcs high in deep
-Ia. F'IShcrman. lor aampl.. have
mumed to shore 10 6nd their villages
wiped out by a wave they didn 'I even
nollce. Because tsunamis are random
cwnts, odcnllsls can't predict ahead of
time when and what! one will occvr ,..,.
that mcaswing Instruments can be set.
out.
.
"AD our rcscarc:h Is done after the
(act," he oays.
That!' s no way to prevent a tsuneml .
Shaw states.
"The only way we oould prevent one is
If undcnoood how cartilquakes
worked and oould diffuse than. Onoe an
urthquake has gone off. aboul the only
thing we can do Is gel people out of the

"'"(.; that reaton. Shaw believes the
education ol people to the dangers Is

v~J!ll's

oudla tranendou w
when we
could I'I'IOW people out of danger. but
they won't go."

,......., .... "-'

Shaw'o tsunami lnvaligalions have
been funded i&gt;rimarilll by the Oflloo ol
N.val ~ and by NOM. He's in·
IIOived In oct.. poojeds and was recently
elected pradent of the lntanallonal
Soc ely lor Innovative Numerical
........ T h a i _ , _•• _
•
to ~ t.cbnological -•Iller of
numerical *"niques clcwloped for
engineering and oclmll6c pn&gt;I&gt;Wms
among u-....., government Md In·

~ . only

drawbedl to conducting

........... ,__., In BuHalo. Shaw fcclo.
lo thai, * - they're not really • problem
hee, there ....,, meny ~*~Pie wldl
wbom he can ...,_ hio wodc .
• M's • '-*'aline Mliljact," he

"T--.. . . . . .

Jv. Md M t l w - lime I ito~ aphyoai.......
that ....... al _, wodc II clciM. .....
~,...behelped.. IIMirmwodc­

tng to help ........ If• a good

•

....

K.-.~r·-Kennedy's critical error. theorized
Goldhaber. is that "he started believing
his own pols," got "too · and announced his candidacy prematurely. He
alto began taking bad advice from his ad viser$ to lone down his ltbcrallea.nlngs In

favor ol • -

~ bent.

mklcle.&lt;lf-the-road or
RMIIdnt hlo rl&gt;istake,

he's.- decldecl to "be himself" when
tllkJng slancls on - · observed
Goldhebcr.
.

The "New Y.ork ..,.,.. press" also
turned on Kennedy. Whee they had
lrcaled him as a "golden boy" bclorc his

aoQCildaey. they ......, suddenly struck by .
poioxysrna oll"gulll" and felt "an obliga.
lion" to """"- hla ,....,.. aspirations.
lest the eledorate think they wetC biased
In his favor.
But onc»-11gglln. the tide Is turning , of.
~ Goldhaber. The media rqlized
they almoot caUood hla Waterloo and are
now CIOI"*''',.'IIJ ·more on the Issues
and on Carter's Sland on them.
By convention time, Goldhabcr
prcdlded the economy will be • more
compelkiiJ losue than M II now. H the
President doeon' come up wtlb any
viable plans to bololer M, Md Kennedy
wins some addillonal iilr8leglc primaries.
then delegates may cbOOM to change the
convention rules to permH Carter
delegates to switch to Kennedy. This Is aU
in the rcabn of pooobllity. but, cautioned
Gofdhaber. in terms ol mathematical
probabllllv (delegate numbers) . Kl'nnedy
"doesn't haw an easy road ah....d •

• Qentlstry

........-_

.......

levine as full-time dlrecl6&lt; of the Endodontics Program :
to h&lt;ilp us.· Feagans said .
e tncreased
rotalton
in
U/B's D.D.S . progr'!"' received condimedical/surgical areas lex oral surgery
tional ec:credilallon last year 'after being
residents at Buffalo General Hospital and
reviewed by the American Dental
Erie County Medical Center.
Association's Commission on AcciedHa·
lion . The eo...mbsion laultejlthe School
primarily 0.. cramped ladli"-s. and ln- ·
adequate equipment. faculty salaries and.
operating funds.

Feagans noted that a March 15 reporl
from U/ B to the Commission c:Hed f1
pledge by the Governor Whlcli slated lliat
although the SchOol • was not ·gtvell
money With Whidllo addrfts thttsc flocal
problems . no Reglect was h*nded and
the liiue would be addrcllied In 1he IUj&gt;plemental budget.
·
NoHIKal~

"There were some areas In which the
Commission made recommf!ndalic&gt;M for
lmj&gt;rowment whi&lt;h were non-tiocal In
nature and which have been corrected .·

FeTe~ :.:~!tut.
• Initiation of a review and evaluation
ol the D.D.S . culric:ulum within the
Schoof:
e 1nHialion ol a mandatory counc In
practkle management for dental seniors
whi&lt;h will be altered beginning this lal:
• Increased lnterac:llon Of oral biology
faculty on a monthly basis wHh other
departments within the School:
• appointment of Dr. Ming Shieh

Feagans noted . too. that dental
Students and faculty had solicited parents
and friends to write their loCal legislators
to' help the School after the Initial State
budget lolled to include monies to assist
In Gon-cc:ting n.cal pooblems. ·
"Some of the students were fourth ·
year and were still concerned enough '"'
the School's future to support the letterWriting campaig(&gt; dcS(iile the fact their
diplomas were In no way jeopardized by
the Commission's condltional 'eccrediUI·
tion ."' Feagans Jakt.
;

Ho~ell is unopposed;
Jenkins urges her election
Dr. Barbara J . Howell and Dr. Edward
S . Jenkins are on the ballot lor the post of
vicc-&lt;:halrpenon, chair-elect of the Faa ll·
ly Senate. but Jenkins has announced he
Is whhdrawtng and has urged lacuky to
support Howell. Dr. Norman Sol&lt;off Is currently com pleting his year .. vk:e-chairpcnOn and
Will lake over the Senate Chair on July 1.
He replaces Dr. Newton Garvu.
The new vk:e-chairpereon. chair-elect
takes ollice Julv 1 aloo.
Candidate H.,_a 1s • professor of
phlllic&gt;lomi who joined the U/ 8 faculty in
1959. She ewd a two-year term as
sacretary of the Senatt , from
1976-1978. Cuncn!Jv, lihe 1o a SUNY
Senator •. o:epr.-ttng the · UIB Health
Scionces Center.

Jcnldns, the dhctor olthe Education
OpportunMy Prow•m. said he fch HoweU
would malla an .....,.. Senale J..der.
The s.n. ......... commlllee wiiiMve
to dectdc wf\11 to do now the! Jenkins Is
""' ol the . -.
AI .,_._ o1 the ~ *""v ..,
to Od baba In lhe .........

Ballots will be going out this week and
must be retumed to the Senate Otflce by
April15.
Faculty are also being asked to elect a
secretary lor the Senate . On the balot 101'
this post are Dr. Baldy Ed&lt;lins. professor
ol philosophy, and Dr. Gerald R. Rising ,
a profOIIOf In the Faculty of Educ.lional
.
Studies.
Cole campus faculty and p r o f - .1
stall •e also being sent blllots to name •
SUNY Senator to replace ADen H . (Bud)
Kuntz, who Is completing his tern&gt; . Vying
tor tbio post will be Slefan Fleischer.
aaociate profaaor ol ~ . and EDen
McNamara. asoodate dHctor of the Of·
flee ol Admlslions and Reeords.

All-Stars
Tom Wilde. a sc.-

left·..,.,_ from

W ll'OVIIIe. and ju,_ goa1er BID
Klimlntka, • Kenmore 'lftldcnt. rwopre·
U/ 8 on the 1979-80 AD-State
~ ol New York Alhlotk: Con·

'-"!e (SUNYA.Q lcit Hoc1cev T-.

�.i "

Apoil3. 1980

t -

I

•
''

.•

l

Buian takes
post at
Missouri
Will be provost
at Columbia Campus
Or . Ronald F. Bunn will become
provost of the University of Misoourl et
Columbia . UMC Chancellor Barbara S .
Uehling announced Wednesday morn Ing.
Bunn. who has been academic affairs
vice prnldent here since 1976. will
assume the position on July 15.
He woll be the top-r.,klng .,q.
ministrahv of~Ker oo the Columbi.D cam·
pus. filling a new post created a part of a
reorganization being carrtep out by
Chancellor Uehling, who has been head
of the Columbia campus for two years.
Bunn wiD be the principal academic of.
ficer of a campus of 23.000 students.
totally coordinallng all academic programs· teaching. research and faculty
development . Reporting to him will be 15
school and college deans. the director of
libraries. a vk-e provost for extensiOn. and

Sheehan wrote the 'script;,
now he will see how i p lays
He hqJ.d write tht MIN SA·Conslku·
tion. Now he's getting the chance to put k
lntopracllce.
Timod&gt;y Shqhan, I'UAfllng without the
almighty endorMm«nt of The Spedrum.
W.. elect.td praiclent of the Student
~lion this week, with 699 voles, or
2&amp;"' per C&lt;!f'll of ballocs cast for the
praldcncy.
The election. which featured haH a
do.., slates of .can41detes and a referen·

cr ~J:".~'9&lt;Y.J!ll·
~

• . . .. p ...... ~

ql

~~.-~
.000 l'lh9-

lun\0\11.
~ tl!al'

~.. .

•

':.

slwehan led the . Enterpdoe ~.

bedcad up by O..vld Hollman who oought
the pool ol vice praidcnt and Alan
N.then . who ran f o r - - Nathan
...., suc:caotul. but In what was obviously a major disappointment to
Sheehan. Hoffman was nooed out by
DianNo I&gt;Rrhak. current SA director of
student affairs.

A.......-..aecllthe
Thete three •• the only SA executive
slol$ foiled by popuJ.r YOI under tht MIN
Constitution . Previously. seven posiJ
wo.e contated In the annual elections.
The Jlream&amp;nlr\i made K easler to
clevdop compatl&gt;lo tickets. Sheehan
.-..d. J;Mfore. he explained , Mwas dWIlcuk to asaemble a slo of seven people
who thought allb and could work weD
togother. They might hang together long
enough to get elected. but al too often
the cd\ftlon and unlly feU _,t alterward . along with the dlec:liveneu of siU·
dent gowrnmcnl.

Thio -'o'o election also. filed three
non-exacutlve: posts , the sludent

~n~tive to
Unlverwity Coundl
(Chrllk&gt;pher .lum) and two repracn·

to the Student "-&gt;eeation of Sta •
~ (Travto Ballard and Joeeph
Rlob&gt;) .
'
The new SA adrnlnlolration wtl now
na
lndMdualo to Ill live coordlnalor
-

poolllonl-for otudent organizations,
oudemlc all.... external affairs , wdent
alfaln. and athlrtlc .Hairs. Also to be
named are a director and up to four potillono on Sub-Bowd TheM poolS will be
Iliad througlt an lntGvlew proceu, the
m«haniomo for which have j,/et to be
worked out. ~ indlcAied
Rounding out
of otllan will
tine additional coordinaton, for cornalf • "*'&lt;Jrrly allan . n d - .
t1oM1 11\idento, to be Ncled by their
"""'"'ICtive~ ­

So much for the SA

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

live btanch.

Uncler t
new consbtutoon , the
br
will of two
A
, 10 be eltdccl next
deal
al ,.....,.. conccmThere
be L2 elidedand

I

..

«11

members (the three elected SA officers) .
An Assembly (to be elected next faD) will
have jurisdiction over issues pertaining to
sllldent righll and weNare.
Drafters of the new constitution feK the
fanner one·house legislature spent too
much tWne on money and not enough on
important looues affecting siUdents' everyday .,... on campus.

'"""'
~ beet
.
~ caml&gt;'\9oed hard

on ~

~ that he aDd .... l&gt;4rtl/ Mew the
, _ conotltutlan. Pnl and ....,.. .best

qualified te&gt; rnaiw .It woril. Somc)lolhat of
an outsider In SA circles. Sheeh4n. a
20-year-old junior majoring In history.
became active In government only this
year when he vofuntured for the panel
to rew&lt;Ke the covenants of QOVCI1laftCe .
He oaw that panel start off With some nine
members and dwindle to the point that he
virtwallv worked alone on some of the constitution "down near the end ."
Had that new document no1 been 'approved by tht electorate . earlier this
semester. he wouldn't have sought the
· presi4ency. "I didn't want to mess around
with the Senate as presently made up."
he winced .
As for strategy, Sheehan looked at past
elections and decided e6r1y on that about
1500 voles would probably be caot. He
needed 550 to win. he figured . When the
turnout In early ballollng proved much
heavier. ha was oc:ared and stepped-up
his ponon·to-penon campaigning. "I
knew then I needed more :
The &amp;ug.l effectlven- of SheU&gt;an 's
campaign could offer 1 leaon to professional polilidano. He and the Enterprise

:1 :a ~4~~~ t:,;~~

telephone was the major campaign tool.
Sheehan .........l·ln on Individuals In the
dorms or in other power bases around
campus to set up a flrm foundation of
oupport. He did OOI'IM! door -to-door
stumping and gladhandlng, mainly as a
last resort.

Mr. Spod&amp;
In the raidence halo. the Enterprise
Party rtlled on pooten featuring Mr.
Spock of the s..htp EnterpriM , to help
Identify the party aild Ks candidates. ·
wtoy did he win?
The new prnidcnt offm no ldmllflc
evidenoe In .._,.:ling. Some people
vote on the baslo of pictUres, or word-&lt;&gt;1mouth or catchy olgno. he top«Uialas.
Olhen may know one penon on a par·
lk:ulor ticket. oo they vole for that entire
olale. ~ he won Wilhout k, the
Spectrum ~~ doeon' hurl ,
.... ~ .. the flrot otudcnt body
preoldent 10 win without that blaoing In
,....,. memory But lhlo year's oua:nolul
candidates lor booh vice PNt~c~ent and
.,.....,_ had that paper's aJpport .
A ralclent of Apalach"' , New V &lt;lri&lt;

(the tiny community outside Binghamton
where U/e magazine caught the Malia
gathering some yean ago) . Sheehan
came to U/ B to be an engineer. He
switched to history. though. and is now
considering an MBA or perhaps law
School , after he com pletes his
undergraduate work.
Any Incumbent would probably teD
you the same thing, but when Sheehan
says htsgoalis to change student govern ment for thei&gt;etter, lt rl~true . The constttullbn was rt good
to otarl, he
feels, and now that
's In office. he
pledges to "otay out of the rut" which so
many past SA administrations have fallen
Into. "I am not there )uot to keep things
afloat. I want to move son)e place ." he
commented. The shape and direction of
these moves , however. will be revealed
later.
·

'"-tiM r•poaelblUty'
The traditional question to put to the
new SA President is "what will be your
stance
in
dealing
with
the
administration?" Here, lhfle have been
"good yearo and bad yean recently ,"
whichever way you look at U. SA Presl--&lt;lent Dennis Delia two yean ago couldn't
walt to meet with President Ketter. He
had his meetings scheduled. for a haN
year In advance, he once told the
RepoiU:r. At the other extreme . SA
President Joel Mayenohn has refused
this year to rnee1 with Ketter at aU -or so
the U/B Presid&lt;mt alleged at a recent
Councll meeting.
"There are two sides to that." Sheehan
gJinned, on the quatton 'of what Mayer·
sohn did or -didn't do . But that's past

htstoiy .
For himsd, he's • not looking for a
fight ." and would like to develop
"honest. open relationships" With both
the Central Administration and the people in Student Allain. But he wants to
chart a course OOI'IM!Iilhere between confrontation and witleso submisstveneso.
"I believe the term is UMtllve responsibility: he oaid . quoting something he
once read .

INS wants change
The Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS) proposed new regulations
Man:h 19 to !jve k more Information and
controls J&gt;n lor«tgn pool-secondary
studenll jn this country. The new rules
would requn non•lmmlgrant students.
now admltled for the duration of their
wdleo, to apply annualy lor utensloni
of ,their Mil in thto country f their course
of otudy ........ts one year
INS said events of the last year callsed
ft to re-evaluate Its pooltlon on siUden '
....... and that the changes propooed
would provide the ,_....., lnlorro1ation
and c:onll'ol to enable " 10 , _ . Ks
r...,.,.,..,...y.

a vke provost for research (who also
serves as dean of the graduate school! ..
Bunn wiD also hold an academic appoint ment as a professor of political science.
U/ B President Robert L KeHer Issued
the following statement about the appointment :

"Ron BunA has done an outstanding
job at the University. He brought a great
deal of leadership to the Ofllce of

Academic Affairs . I certainly regret tl)at
he will be leaving us: however. I am
pleased that his ,talent has been recognized by another major university and that
he has this opportunity to move Into_ a
higher position. f know he wiH serve
Missouri with the same dedication he
brought to his duties here.
.. Simultaneously . 1 want to k!t our own
campus k11""' thai 111 th petlod ol dW •
ficult budgetary adjustment there wiD be
no lapse In the leadership of the Office o f
Academic Affairs. I expecl to name a sue·
cnso&lt; befoo-e the effective date of Or.
Bunn ·s rnJgnalion .Bunn joined the U / B administration In
1976. Prior to that he had been dean of
the Unlv~rsity of Houston gradual~
school and a member of the faculty col
that institution fO&lt; almost 10 years. He
also taught at LSU and Texas-Austin . He
holds the M A and Ph.D from Duke
Universily and lhe B . A . from
Southwestern at Memphis

Recruitment
day slated
by two faculties
A student recruitment conference.
designed to lnterat high' school juniors
and seniors In Arts and Lettero and Social
Sciences fields at'U/B. is scheduled for
Saturday, April 26.
The event is being Ofljlnizad, coordinated and administered by l'loject
Communication , Inc .. an experimental
public relations agency run by siUdenllln
Prof. Linda McCalister's coune In
Organizational Communications.
the U/B sludcnll haw contacted
OOI'IM! 2QO high iChools and have set up a
variety of even II for the day. along tht
academic spine at Amherot .
The Zodiaque Dance Company, the'
Theatre Oep.tment, the U/ B Jazz
Ensemble and others will provide entertalrmwlnt.

Booths will be set up , with reprewn·
tativeo from hurnanKies and sOcial
sciences diociplines scheduled to be on
hand to -'&lt; about their respective

fields.

.

Soviets shunned

"'\

The Nallonal Academy of Sdenon

!NASI hNowpcndad for six months joint

. - . . with the SoYiet Aaldertljl of
becaUM of .. "d"P concerns"
over the lneern.l exte of dloold.ent Russian Phyoidot Andrei D Sokhalov. The

s...-

·-"""'th .......,.,.,
bilateral tymp&lt;»la,

applies to ..
Mrnlnaro, and

~"-'-"the two acedemla

�ApniJ, 1980

'Slams' against
......,

.

Newton Garver piKa hls an.ck
-""'the recent ect1on of the UUP Buf.
felo Chapwr's Execuu,_ Boerd. In its
aolllng for pledges that faculty
members will not plan lor the firing of
other faculty or slaff, In the con1ex1 of an
"--ling _ , of the mind of the
UNon •• Praident. Bill Allen . Such ladles
confuse the issue . The UUP Resolution
edopted. by alop-ha"'Y \/Ole. by the
" - - a-d, a body eleaed by tl\e
900 members who worit here: It was first
~ as a recommend•~ of the
Work Againot Rl'lrenchrMnt Ts Force.
a 1!;-mcmba group wbich I chair.
This Is not to ..y that suppon for It Is
unaninlous nor that It should not be fur.
thcr debeled. and f need be. chenged .
But attKidng It as if b _.~neely the pd
Idea of 1M union's ~ Is a way of
~ the union and the subslanllal
. . . . II has mede. under Allen's leader·
ship. In the paol few months of slnlggle
.....,. thelludpt cuts. I .,..at that II Is
- ................. 1hat has made Or.
loluc hil -~ hootile

,.....lion

co.......

-·

A::..
"--co.- '*
~

a "'Nc bdowr."
thai
collegial ad-v
lo -.... deaf' 10 the crtllc:lln&gt;t; lewled
lgllnollhe UUP poollion, and that ~not at
one point" don he show he has given
lho* Qllonal impact on his own iduo a

~

co.-. ""-"""·

should not
lcnow what goa on lntkM
Alon'• '-d. Ndher ... he pooaiJiy
know;-,as bo also -u, lll.r "No one
r11Rnd•11eod here." Thno are
phlotoplllcelly unwloa poolllons; pooolbly
ehey .now diorespecl for lhe indMdual
. . . . - - thai Or . Garver 00 hiahl!l
valua.
Also, pcrtlncnl Is anolher ovadolm.
. mede by Or. G.ver I n - - dedarallon
1o the !"acuity Senate. nameJv, thalli It
should . _ , that budget cuts •e
dialrlluted JXOI)Oitionately among the
-.SUNY c.ampuMS, "the pa)lofl will
c:enainly be that the quality of SUNY pro·
gi-ams wiD degenerat
across the
bolll'd ... " (l!cporter Feb. 211 .
I no cm.1nty In these mallen.
PNdidlng- what will ........... 10 .. pro11"""' In the whole lnJIIIullon Is not 00
fimplo. Nor lo • al
~ . .. Gmver
-m on 10 say In that ..sdreu, that
"To IIYOid the wonl pooot,le outcome.
dedolons mUll be made 10 lltnll.....,...
and to reduoa programs, -and
to
alimlnale Jll'9'ams." While k II Or.
Garver' • privlleva 10 campaign for the
c:looing of • .....,... and to.....,.... the
......._of whole prognoma, I lake It ..
unobjec:tlonaiM that he wll haw lo do
better than just ~ hio c:atalnly. In
order to penuada us that hlo - . r n
the bell for lhe .....lion al hand .
~ 10

....,......,&gt;'

ewn

......... ,...•

,

Contpk:uowly not !Mntloned in hls
· nq&gt;ly of IMt -'&lt; Is ~e&gt;ure ~ pro·
gram r«tm&gt;c::uncnn. ac.d«mit freedom
and l«nnlft are a\IIOinlliDIIy claiJoyed .
The Mllor , _ t (New York Slaw
"-"'b'y Commii1N on Higher Educa·
lion. 197
po1n1s out thai Jli'9'Am
rl'lrenchment 1o noc oubjed to col·
lecflw bargainlniJ Alas. the union cannot

__ __
.,

HNUIY .IACKSOI&lt;
.:....a...~

IIOMJtT T I4ARUTT

,... ....

oiCIHII " a.ovnEII

-~
IC1Ya.
8UCHNOWSI&lt;I

All~n

be blamed .for this. The State can
dmlnale programs. A 'tanured profaeor
In a JliO!PITI that II dminated losa
l~tnure and job, unlaa a/he can ocramble
to another position under the 'rules of
sanlorlly-a proopect not likely given the
non-inten:hangeabillt of .most ac.d«mlt
spadalra!ionl. G.ver dud&lt;s this te&gt;ure
Issue. preferring to argue -"'&gt;Ia non·
p01111on that he lmeglnes Allen to hold.
namely "1hat no u--.Hy which ra·
trenches any arnployea•.. can pood&gt;ly
Improve Its qUality as a university as a

&amp; UUP -irk Efron
may also have to lace a clmate of
opinion crated by faculty leaden which
holds that culling programs Is lhe height
of wisdom . They wiD have bean victim·
ized not only by budget lluctua- and
slate pollics. l!ut by "c:oleagues," a word
that will have a lol lea meaning
lheraafter.

provide to the Univenity. AI this was re·
counted by BID Allen, In the Re~r
(Feb. 28), who again claerves our thanks
and aedlt. Many of u • - the "problem"

as one In which~ haw done more to in·
dicate our lllillingnaa to aa:ept r4!1rench.
rMnl , thus encounglng M as a politicaJiy
· pooatie event, than to fighl-"&gt;ot b.

Tlle_of...........,-railed""" -,.....,. .....
~- 2

I ',

The- of~
week by Or. Aleolln hio .-.ply k&gt; those In
Union RU.,Iutlono are public
one group of faculty who favond firing · llllllllleents, not lulocale pclllllon papers.
aomc of our coa.- In order 10 ,_. ~ If the Writes of Jetlan woulcllceep !hat in
rauk of IUCh ect1on ."
lllde new pos111on1 !o.. their own - . In
mind, lhey'mlght...._ thalli lo aenslble
It would haw bean useful-It II not too
the laCier signed by 1 .,..,..... of lhe
to bring up ~ not cMr.dly men- ·
much to expect of the hAd of the Facully
Faculty of Law and JurllprUdence, lloned In the raaillllont without assign·
Senate-to have adclr..ad not ' INa
have
a
IOIMWhat
similar
problem.
That
lng
cllshonasty or ftdoilallty to those
straw·man prediction that Aleol did not
faculty Is not threatened by rftench·
who defend the Union poolllons.
make. but one that he did make. and
rMnl
..
In
my
c.pac11y
as
chairrMh
of
the
As
to the OVBal ~of the debate , I
with which I cohcur: "' can Imagine our Unlvanlly could «~nilw _ . , &lt;II·
Work Against Rl'lrenchmerd Talk Force,
no cxc:.. lew Dr. Grainer's com·
I called 5 member$ of lhe Law Scl!oolto
parlaon of our UUP Pre•ldent's
lerent kinds of clllasten. indudJng ,..
- I f any Would ll!rW . None would; and
atatements with the rhetoric of
I gave up. In any case, the lignen of the
"demagog.- - have known ," nor his
atsls.
of having faculty members m
Jailer be!! the questiOn at - · in their • ~ of lhe pledge proposal, when K
par1111g wllh thai "the Unton'o poelllon ' ~up-by 811 Aleoltn an td&lt;ltess
tarvet uch other for dismisoals.
.... beooma. bolh In ~ and In
"'the l!acuJiv Soinale, .. Aleol'• "latest
tenure Ignored."
tone. mote In '-Pin!! with the •
. the· pa&gt;blcm apd IIi~ .-.,_of" .'_..paocla."
Or. ~.did ---~ ...-the
Dr. G e e - - us thai
• • TherciocauJ~Cio . . . . . . Aito......attliM
ln~...cfwlldi~J IOgollilih
merd hoppans here, II "will not be :
.
"problem" actually Is. In Or. Grainer's
the oilglnlol ~ -=-tiona 'of Mcear·
It will, for cxarnplo, be nowhere as
·or1glnal blast at UUP Prai&lt;lanl Alen. the
thytte 1Kt1c1 that he SllppC&gt;MCi to be
as II has bean this year and IMt In
problem daalt with In IIUCh 1cnns as
bec:klng up-a job he did not do despke
~ sysiAml, nor a11n ~ ~: "Pubblc. fundi . . noe unlimlled,
picking M ovwr, slnc:e he lgnored Bill
CUNY. and Calllomia 1n
and we mUll .,.,_our llffanln light of
Allen '• J.lold mcpianallon of~ilt:.,the
years." To my mind the won! ".-e
that rullly." I hope l'WIII be farglyen for
pledge was not~ nt·
wlll'fanted when - cro11 the 11ne. nevf~:
claiming our &amp;mJiallons as!JUP IMftlbcn
ly, Or. Garver finally had to ocale clown
before a....! at SUNY Bullelo, at
have not 1llmnmed &amp;om any fancy that
hls - - - - 10 ..,.... .,...... "'tngmng
-.nclling tenured faculty, reganlla&amp; Of
!hera .-. ur*nlted fundo .ound. We
threat" of c:oen:1011 'lhat hee ouni lo there.
whether the number lo 1 or 30. (At
hoq&gt;en to think that suppon lo .tfeded
He lo al!led perhaps )n dNcllng this
SUNY ·Stony Brook, one recent ...m.
not jult by what Is voccd. but by other
danger through hlo . contad with ''the
mer, II was 30 te&gt;ured and 15
political factors such u the adlons.of,the
hi!Jhest prindple of moralt!y." He doesn'l
te&gt;urad. (Repqrter, Feb. 28, 1980, p:9t.
~.ofBu&lt;!alot, • , .... .., .• 1,
oay ·'whal •·that , ~ lo, or· hov.! he
Wl&gt;k the 1JliP has lakai a ~
...................
Sleial-~
i&lt;nolols1koonlll
tbi ..1illwlet.•boltt.e ......
lblnd In Its eff'ort to ~ noc on~))' ·
of t1&gt;a Com~ .OI'~· ~uo:atlon.
prelly damn . .....,_thM lhc'Jt:JUP pltdge
eenurad but ·fhose on tem,:lbr.entl.
1\as'toljl how,lc) ~ ~~ spNY
"-YIO!ates"•I .'•No 1dotabt .he l!ould e&gt;q&gt;laln
and
from arbilrary
uctlonS, the
ollidali.~ In on alowing a tultjpn lr\· his r\tmalks in tortuocls detail, and they
Facully Senate leader has not even kePt
CfUM, triclood by • promila that lhe
haw alruay prooolded him with th~t
up the tradiaonal faculty opposition to the
money would be used In ways the
bene&amp; of another ooculon to llam the
deslruction of te&gt;ure. As for telling us
Unlvanlly t..dly .......U. ~. the In·
Union. but how does that help anything?
how lucky 1ft ..... compared to other
erased tuition inlaire ..... "SIOion" by the
-Aitll• Elroe
u n -. I expect IIUCh apologetla
Budget pecple and u.d AI subotitute lor
Pruleuor of English
from those In management who want to
part of wluit the Stata was ~ to
"""""" retrenchment. I questiOn whether
11 lo lhe ldnd of thing for the a..Jr of lhe
Faculty Senale to be teylng In public jUJI
at thlo lime In our hiAory . ·
In many rapeds, the public oaa.qe of
llatements mede Is the laue before us. A
public pledge not to Identify P'&lt;9'•m• or
uet.:
inlo the democ:rallc procesa by which our
individuals lor retrenChment II quka dlf·
I cannot reapond to everything without
Chapter of UUP {or the Health Sciences
· larent thing than a commkmant made In
running the risk of becoming a potrma·
Chapter.
too) Is run . About April 22 we
private oonoclence. It notice to
nent centerfold feature of lhe Rcport,er.
will have our Spring Membership
management that retrenchment II Indeed
So
I
wtU
limply
speak
to
1wo
of
Professor
Mfl'llng.
Let aD who oppoM our Ex·
a policy that 111111 not be given IU~, If K
Garver's points. !=Int. he'1 right that there
ecubve Board's ac:tion1 coma and vote lo
Is llllemplled. Profnaor Ouryeaa lblte·
are
some
things
I
will
not
compromise
retcind tt. If the majority' so vOtes. our
rMnl, that AAUP policy does not "ra·
about and one of them Is lhe prlndple of
policies wtlllorthwtth be changed . Let aU
quire or ewn imply ponidpallon In~­
tenure. I am ~ to any breaking of
who oppoM my leadenhfp,. panonally.
mlnallon of opedfic Jll'9'ama or In·
tenure . whether under the guise ol
vote a motion of "'no confidenCe" and tf H
dMduak which might be retrenched." II a
"retrenchmenl." "rullocatton," "plan·
fine one: and II II v-.... partly because
carries I wiU resign on the tp01 . I '""' nOt
ning." or whatever.
.
II II made In public. But I wonder ~ k Is
trying to shut off cr1ttc11m: bul I am
compatible with other lbltements made
Second . I don't think thil makes m~t a
pointing out that critics can also oct-with
by thosa who obiecl to the "riletorlc
immediate effect.
"true believer" b«.UM I also with
asaociated with UUI&gt;'s adlvttla." u does
Goethe : u fn1 dar Nanodt. so long er
Finally. I wu so taken by Professor
Dr. Ourya hlmsel.
llrd&gt;l. Freely translated: "Anyone who
Garver's suggallon that I am a secret
In an urSer communlcallon (ReportcT.
'-Po trying to aocompllsh anything Is go. follower of Bilhop Barltclay. that ! have
Mardi 6). Or. Duryea, .. Praldtnt of lhe
ing 10 make mlstakn." But I 1Uspec1 I
decided to become a fuD-IIedpd solipsist
AAUP c:hapler. mterates the need for
could alto ma!&lt;a my quota of predictable
So I wiD shut my eyes to further letters.
"arly. careful, and meaningful faculty In·
errora by not doing anything. too.
whereupon they wiU become unreal.
volvemmt In decialons related to the
As to everything elsa. let me simply re·
Sincerely yours.
reduction of inllnldlonal and teMald1
mind everyone that corractivft are bulb
- ""'*"- s. ADen
programs." One problem with havins
IIUCh lnwlvamenr "arly" Is that, uln the
currentlituallon, you wind up with com ·
rnlltes!t ..-.g long before any budget
U?tor.
Evan though H was costly, K's good lo
cu become real. They write plans which
Sinca I am on a leave of absence . I
know thai ll/ 8 Is stUI a ae&lt;:ond-class.
alfec:tiwly gre
the ~ for retrench·
have not bean on the Main Streat Cam·
dioorganlzed mess. It gives me great
rMnl . once the ligures are handed down .'
pus of U/ 8 linea lui December. You can
pleasure to feel that I am right aboul
The raul! lo llkelv to be that of being
Imagine my alief" today, when . upon
tranoferrlng away. No mailer what can be
used ; any plano that haw bean drawn
returning, I IPUnd the old place hadn't
Mid aboul the. academicS, K'o just not
up, ragardlao of the intentlonl of th&lt;.e
changed a bit.
worth it al U/ B .
I8Ving on tha commllt
, will be re·
I drove around Micha&lt;tl l..ol for l0-15
I thought the courteous and ~tfficient

:==:a':::"au~;l
Su~~i!

....... -.......

0

*'.

non·

*"

Allen 'shuts his -eyes';
future lett~rs will be 'unreal'-

She's mad as hell and

fared to as a praleld of facultr,11UpPOfl in
actions that lrwolve firing acuity and
llaff The~ Involvement may
tum out to mean in fad that shorter
notice lo given , and that when ratranched
people .,.._ and star1 t.helr pvance.,
t.helr dlanca
.._... ...... damaged In
~ by dcterminallonl already macle

by.~of~~~- ~

minutes jusl to ai&amp;ure mywlf thai th&lt;tre

weren't ~V parking spaces- Just like old
limn. t 'igtttlng to control my joy. I
par1ced at tha and of a row , dose lo
Bailey. and not bloc:klng traffic .
Needleso 10 My , when I came bad&lt; .
there H wu- that lowly ydow citation
which doubles u an .envelope to mall
away your money. A lol of
money.

vou;r

ruponsas I've gotten from other colleges
were flukes . Now I am poa!tiva thai U/ B
Is th ·poor exoaption . And the Ad·
ministration Wonders why they Ill' losing
students. Ask any commuter The only
thing dona right concerning me In rwo
and a hall )IUR wu Mnding out my
transcripts. Thank you .

-.loa• T. c:awt.oa

�AprilS, 1980

LE1"1'ERS
Social Sciences De.an Levy airs
his thoughts .o n.promotion, tenure
Wlletla.....,__,..,..,
t..w
On - . 1 OCCMionl .. Dun of the
been
Facully of Social Sdmca, I
aslu!d what sland.rds I apply in making
recommendations on faculty tanure and
promollon ~- I wish to lake this oppcxtunlty briefly to comi'Mftt on some
uped$ of these mailers publicly.
The Slate Univenlly of New Vorl&lt; at
Buffalo Is a unlveslly center and as ouch
its mission Is tied directly to the generation, transmission. and preservation of
knowledge 1n a V1ISI amoy of disciplines.
When I was olfered a position at U/8, I
was proud to accept Kbecause I felt that I
would be joining the faculty of a university center. For me, what distinguishes a
unlvcBIIy center &amp;om a four-year college
or a community college Is the fact that a
unlvailly center should be concerned
with graduate training and providing oppcxtunllia for talented faculty to engage
in and be reinforced for producing meaningful reMarCh or oehoiershlp. These opponunllia are diminishing year by year
~this country as university budgets
contract.
Given today's job .1IUiri&lt;et in many
disdplina coupled with a ocartity of
unlvenlly .....,..._ in general, I am unwlling to support a CMe for tenure or promotion. acepe under Utr.ardlnary drcumotanca, that doa noC minimally
mectllancWds of adequate performance
In eoclt tind euery one of the are• of
.-ch or - . , , teaching, and
Jevft. From my point o( view. !hue Is
simply no julllfico,tion whatsoever to settle for anjllhlng lao. If an i&gt;dlvldual
demonllrates adequate performance in
each and evayone of tt.e., areas, I will
oupport the caM 1&lt;&gt;r tenure or~ ·
O..~~lnOMIX­

Adequate performance requires that lntellodual c:.paclly be combined with hard
work to prod~XJe both ll1hnlngluJ (as
del~ by Internal and external
roferea) 6nd suslalned researt:h or
scholoorlv output In addition, there
should be evidence of independent and
original contributions. I also believe that
faculty research or scholarship should be
published . Publlcatlon ensures the
dissemination of knowledge and, more
IITlJ)OI'tantly. aillcal evaluation by others
actively engaged In the same or related
research areas. One's having produced a
single ~aningful contribution would not.
In general, imply adequate performance
for me , nor would sustained output in the
absence of any meaningful contribution .
At a four year college or a communHy
college . one might define performance
levels wKh respect to research or scholarship In a way which Is quire different from
what I have described here . For lnslance,
adequate performance In the domain ol
research might only require that one keep
abreast of developments in one's
diociplne. At a un~ center. I simply
do not believe that
is sufflclent sinc4!
most faculty at a university center are expected to be conllnuaOy Involved In traln ing graduate students to engage in
research or scholarship.

Whet Is ade~ performance In supIMX' of a lllnure or promollon case with
·respect to c'-oom teaching? In my
opinion, I Is not limply t1..a one p&lt;&gt;MeSS
oratorical skils. It Is talent combined with
at least Initial effort to produce counes
whose content Is appropriate , current,
arid factuaDy based : In addltion, there
must be evidence that students learn the
material which Is preKnted. Though k
might be desirable. H Is not neceswy thal
students be pleased with the teach.,.·s
c:Jas.coom performance . It should also be
noted that I believe that active involve·
ment in research or scholarship can
enhance the effectiveness of a facuhy
member's teaching.
Active Involvement In research often
enables a faculty member to place Issues
in a broader conceptual framework for
students: active research Involvement
often allows faculty to anticipate p.-oblems in communicating complex ideas to
students: and, active research Involvement often results In a faculty member
being better able to answer questions
posed by students. Very simply. from my
perspective , faculty Involvement in
research or scholarship enhances
teaching effectiveness and affords
students who attend a unlvcBIIy center
educational opportunities that they simply would not have at most fous year colleges or community colleges.
Ow•
.... .........._.
Ou.-.ding performance In this doMany faculty are alleged to be outmain Is eesy for me to define, but difllc:uM
standing teachers. particularly at the ~­
for fac:ulty to attain . It Is. very simply, susof their promotions. Th4!re must be
tained. meonfngful research or 'scholarly
rig&lt;?rous standards, adopted In the assess·
ment of teaching to discriminate those
output.
••· ·
A unlvcBIIy cenl!lr Is not .:.-.:~&gt;~n­
facll!fy who are trulY ou~nd"'9 from
thoo(t Who OKil only ~lt . or even
:4'1\eNIIft . • ~-~ .. -tlno
~ to llalform al ~ adequafeiV
~-~ .... lt..n adequate. A teacher
1"1111-lll ...... ~-1a
"""-&gt;a!
in the~"'"Y ilevelop courses whose content Is
Ill IN- .... Of ~ ....cl 'icNice ...
11rong recomrnendellon of .ouppoot &amp;om
appropriate. current. and factuaDy based:
well as in the aro'of rt.ellrdt or· ti:holarme. However. ou1standlng performance
In addition. the teacher-may be wen
shlp . If Ill true, however. that many of
in one or more .,... coupled with leu
organized . a good classroom performer.
today'• students are leu prepared to
than adequate performance In one of the
and a motivator of students. AD of this
undertake higher education thao thnother areas will noe. In general. engender
may be necessary for outstanding
p.-edecason. university administrators at
my suppOrt at al .
classroom teaching: but. H Is not suffia unlvcnily center mull guard~ a
cient
. h Is my belel that outstanding
substanllile shift In faculiy effort away
T_..._....t be a rtW.nl)uatto.
c:Jas.coom teaching Implies a sustained
from research or scholarship to accomcreative teaching effort . One might have
modate the speciol educational needs of
~ will argue th.t outstanding
to Invest great effort In the pr-atlon of
students who are leu pe-ed than they
t aching or service must be recognized In
a variety of unrelated courses from year
should be .
order for this lnslltutlon to malntaln Its
to year and teach aD of them at least ade There are. of course, various teaching
studenJ enroOment . I agree with this:
quately to be considered an outstanding
activities In which faculty .,. engaged at
classroom teacher: or. one might have to
however . I feel th.t the mechanism for
this institution . I wish to confine my comdoing this should not be the granting of
invest great effort in the preparation of
ments In this regard to the area of
the same courses from year to year.
tanure or promotion If there ""' dofi&lt;Wn ·
clauroom teaching., particularly at the
c:\es In the area of researt:h or scholarship:
demonstrating significant changes In
undergraduate level.
rather. the awarding Of special t aching
pedagogy
or significant changes In the
PenonaOy. I do not believe that effec·
and servi« awards. and possibly the
content of the courses. while con~nulng
Hve classroqm teaching Is any more d~­
awardmg o( dioc:retionary mcreases In
to teach aD such courses at least ade ficuh to evaluate than Is the quality of a
quately hom year to year.
salary. could be used to recognize and
faculty member's research or scholarship.
What Is adequate performance In supmnlart:e ouistanding t aching and serUnfortunately. leu attention Is paldto the
vice
nee the number of lacuhy poslpot1 of a tenure or promotion case with
former than is paJcl to the latter. I have
respect to service? It Is nof simply one's
been somewhat appallep •• the lack of
'"""' at unlwrsdy centers
lik4!1y
willingnesa to sit on an exhaustive list of
decline In th near hstur . each award of
documentation concemlng tuching efcommittees. It Is talent combined with efIn term of
fecllveness In dossier$ lor tenure and protenure which Is noc I"
motion. In a nutsheD. M_ . , . lo me to
fort to at least perform assignments com·
r&lt;!seart:h or scholarshop may d~e
petently when asked to do so
oomeone of a precious opportunity to
be relatively
for a facuky member to
As with respect to I aching. rigorous
e.,_ In these actiYltia: In addition .
be regarded as an outstanding teach4!r at
standards must be adopted In the assessnery promo11on which Is not justified in
this university whereas the term "out·
ment of service so that truly oubtanding
standing" Is very difficuh to come by with
terms of researt:h or ochol.rohlp may
.performance in this area can be noted
d J!rlw th lllstrlUtlon of the flexibolity it · respect to research or scholarship.
and rewarded . Outstanding service. In
so desperately Meds to reloforce and
In mos1 dossiers, the documentation In
my opinion, Implies sustained . creati\14!, ·
help retain Its product
researchers and
support of teaching performance merely
and meaningful effort expended In either
consists of a set of classroom perforschol.rt. The
malntananc~ of
a variety of related or possibly unrelated
mance ratings or solicHed letters from
student enrollment Is 11mply too high a
I asks.
former undergraduat and graduate
pt1ce to ~Y for the urc noslon of that"
I appreclateth opportunity to set forth
l.cet of this lnstKutlon which qua
Has
students. Such documentation. from my
briefly my thoughts on these compl;cated
a un1w y c ntet if tenure and promo·
point of view. does not necessarily sup~~~ not JUObfied tn the area · of
Surely. aU of us must recogni.lJe
IMX' adequate performance In the do- ma
the importanc4! of caroful and conscienr
IIKh or ~rohop
main of teaching even when the
.
personnel reviews. the consedocumentation Is posillw I believe that
Hlwlng lilted that I minimaly upcd
quences of such reviews ar too great lor
MnOUS evaluation of aching ought to be
adeqUiola paformanc:. In each and every
supported by th. unlvcnily adminlstra· . tile faculty or administration to do other·
one of the of r-.:11 or tcholarwise.
lion and that actual evaluations must be
shop, tuchlng, and oervu, I fMith.t HIs
- "--ttl J. lAey
undertaken at the clepamnentallevel As
tneumbent upon me briCiy to defin« ode·
Dean, Social Sclencn
an aside. I do not believe that teaching
and -.11
perfc&gt;rmanc:e In
should only be evaluated for the ~
Uchof
......
of tanur or promoCion ..._.... Produc·
\IJbol • adeqtMI perf~ Ill up·
bve reM...:.f&gt;ers or scholan coniiWltly
IMX1 ol a
.. or promoclon CUI with
t.. ther work evaluated by peers when
,._:t to ..-.rd1 or~? In my
• adeq~Mte performance In thlo lhey IUbrrul artlCios or rnon&lt;lli'ephs lor
Jaromlr Ulncht .... .,_, reooppotnted
publication. there It no ,....,.., why
~· oornethlng more than
chairman o4 tha Dep.rtment o( Chemical
evaluations of teachlniJ cannot be provid-ply a demonolr
that a lacully
10 faculty members by
EnaiMatn!l for a term to run &amp;om
meinr..r ~
loctual CJ!Pid- ed conlln
their own _ . and studen
Jariuaoy, 1'981, 10 January 15, 1984
ty 10 ...,.. In r IOd&gt; or ICholarship

.......w. '*""'-

_....,.

""'Y

Reappointment

CAC needs
your help
to aid others
Etllt-.
Little p.-ograa con be mode

-'II by

repreafng IAihal fl bod. Our greo1 hope
lie• fn deoeloplng ,.,., fl good. - from

BITS &amp; PIECES Morch l !IMI

Lonely elderly persons have much to
share with othen. Young~ ·· selfes!Mm and self-confidence have been
worn down to nothing. Slow le..-s
need direction and one-to-one teaching.
Inner-city youths, potential high school
drop-outs. the mentaDy and physically
handicapped need speciol attention .
Stray animals need homes : some species
ase senselessly slaughtered .
Spending an afternoon with an elderly
shut-in : baking, talking, shopping - just
being there. Helping a student lmp'2VIl
his/ her reading and writing skills,
boostlng his/ her confidence and showing
dou care,
the student that
someone Is there. and someone con and
will help. Giving low and att~tntlon to
those with speciol problems. Caring for
animals and devoting energies to their
rights.
.
COMMUNITY ACTION CORPS
makes progress. We are an organization
of undergraduate students who perform a
variety of voluntary services In the community.
Frahi'Mft and sophomora, don l until you are juniors and se.-s to get In·
volvltd, !li&gt;u are needed now! It Is important for you to rullze that to be part-'ll
CAC you do not need experience - WE
GIVE TT - that's why we cxltl. Too many
students fMI that they don' know the
~ -•....,..., or that they don't
have ......... - - 10 bacotne Involved In a student organlzallon unlll they
t..w been t.... for one or two_.. But
this Is an inwleYant and~ a cusa. why - ? sc.t today.
We want fNsbmen and oophomons,
as well• juniors and seniors, lo join with
us In our mission:
(a) to CllCOUI1III" and provide opportunllla for students to adlvely conlrtJute
to satisfying the .-ds that have ariMn In
ous community as a resuk of our govemmentalllructure and economic syotem .
(b) to provide a cae link ~ the
university and the community, and , '
(c) to enable students to lncruse their
knowledge of the community. Its social
problems and needs, and also to enable
students to apply their knowledge.
learned in the classroom, to community
problem-solving efforts.
Elections for positions in CAC ""' approaching. These elected posts range
from movie coordinator, to external alfain directors •. to publicity coordinators.
to execytlve director. to name a few.
Get . some expertera-JOIN USconsider a position in the Community Action Corps It's a fine Investment.
- o.toora K ..............
Oiropor. CAC

so,.,.,.

Patients needed
Patients wlfh severe , generalized
periodon tal disease not currently
undergoing treatment for the gum condition are needed for a study at the School
of Denttstry .
The study, slated to begin altar Easter,
will further evaluate the value of the an tlblotlc mlnocycline (Minodnl as an ad junct treatment for the dental ,condition.
Dr. Sebastian G. Clanclo. professor
and chairman of periodontics, says the

:e..r:'t! ::'..dlim.=v..::

6onal lrutmenl such .. sc.ling, planing
and periodontal swgery.
Patients In the study muJtlau 50 mg.
of the antibiOtic four Urnes dally for a
-tc. They mull mum to the $chool
onca -v thr• weeks for a ;tv month period.
Dr' a.ndo says the l*ienls will
racclvt a fr• daniAil duning and relm•
burwment for their participation.
who -believe they Ill the c:r1terla
should contact CianciO at 831-4432.

n.o..

,

�ENGINEERING SCIENCE, AEROSPACE
ENGINEERING AND NUCI.£AR
ENGINEERING SEMINAR• •
Mioollo- T........... O.• .kt
Radt, Calopan 104 P"""' 2 J0-4 p m

Thanday- 3
GEI'IBIAL EOUCAnON COMNJTTU
MEETING Willi FACUUV
Jeonnon.- Room ,
Hoi 'l-Ila m
ThoGanofal Ed...-Commonec ... .,... woth

f....,"""' oUbmonod

e-n

CO!tiPUTel SCIENCE COlLOQUIUM•

Eapr-.

l.oolc:
Docidablllry.
~ - Dexter Kc»tn . IBM Thomas J
WabOO Reseerch Cent4h' Room 4) . 4226 Ridge
Lea 3.30 p m Coif and doughnuts., Room 61

clfta1poon. al cou.... to. m

c:lu- on ol&gt;a Ganofal Educallon Prog.am
Facuhy t . - k hom tbc Con""'""~
bdore compt.nmg tal courM propcw.oJs Me urged •• ·

at

3

attond
PEDIATRICS RESEARCH SEMINAR•
11.- Thy N&lt;iehbor. Apnoa Evalua"'"' c.ru..
t.n N~ M 0 Board Room
a.ldml'o ~ 12 ,_.
0.CUtMOt

PHYSICS COl.l.OQUIUN •
~- ol Eadtofta, 0.
"""""' l)opartmant
p m ColfH "' 3 \5

Ut8

y c

Leo .

454 Froncuk 3 30

CIVIL ENGINEERING SEMINAR•
Opdonal UN ol N«Utralbetlon ProoteH. In
TruUne MNM Add WHta, Robert Jacoby .
0eponmont ol Ctvtl Eng;-. U/ B 139 Porltft
4·5 p m Refrnhmenls w6D bt ~
UUAB FILM'
Th«. Grem Room (Fraoce.. 1979) Conferena
The.atr~ . Squ..-e 5 15. 7;30 and 9 45 p m ~
admislaon S2 JO •tudents Sl 60

AHTHROPOLOGV COUDQUIUM '

Dewlopmnt of tiM Eafttl St.tr. Some Nore
Fee. of UohdkMa. 0t Hmri ~ . lnltltute of
CuiMal ond Social S&lt;udloo Tho N&lt;1bcrlan&lt;k
1..o&gt;gu1ora Lounge Spoukbng Quod Buoldong 3 4
p.m R«ftnhments Sponsor...:t by ttw Graduate
"""'""""' Aoooc....., ond tbc l)opartmont al

COLL£GE B PR£SENTAnoN '

""--ck MatJoMv, baladftr . wll pre:.nt a pro·
gram oi foil song~ and- ~»~ids Red Room . Facuky
Oub H.mman~ 8pm Admiak::lnls~

pH Sh1t ~~- 0. Hanlt F. Kung. oo

SUO£ PIIESENTAnoN AH.D LECTURE'
Rldt Dllllnohonr. pott., from So,.. Fe. Now
Muico In conJUndkln wtth
of Dlllngham ·•
....ark at the Nina Frt!uMnhcam Gdny from A1ri
S.May I 320MFAC. ~ 8· 10p m. Sl otth.
door ~ed by tN Crl!alr\0«! Cntft &lt;Anter

I...£C'IUI£ / DISCUSSION'

UUAB JCIDNIGKT FILM'
Ente-llM Draeon (1973) Con'erenu Ttw.atre.
S.,W.• 12 midnight Ganofol admlloion S2.10.

~

CElLUI.AJI PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR•

-~.......

Aea-- .. - . .

...._........,.o/.....__ 108&amp;...·
nW1n 4 p m CalfetM3451n S· IS

-... ......... _

.. a....t._

w- ..

~
Their Ploce. o.
\..eo Cwr.n ~ KM. , tO\ BaAdy 4 p rn . Free lid ·

Glt1o' -

--10bo--'-""
tlw a-. Cltob

••hllit

students S I 60
1\n almost poriect ..-o fllm tho! a&lt;.1lcwo plot
.Nt ~tre\n Of\ ~~ ,M.attiaJ ..... . ~

!':~~=,:.~~

PUBUC HEAluNG'

I " public hearing on the Now Y«k S&lt;otc Boo,d o/
R~' apPr~al ol • tencaftW ptoposaJ on
"TeOo:hing ti a P«J.-. and T~ Com· ·
~.. wCII be hekl from 1 ro'6 p m In 1M Alden
!Mooll Court Room o/ O'Brien Hoi
Two additioNJ pub&amp;lc hrartngs on rhc i&amp;ue atl!
tchedu'-d fot New VoR Clly and Ahmy la1er this

month
Anal actoon ltv tbc 8oonl o/ R....,ts Is plonn&lt;d
for \ale Aprl. acxordtng to a New York Slate Ed~ ·
lion l)opartmonl ..,..._.,.., In /\loony Tho
Revmes· action . the spokesp.non noc.cd . 1s pert of
• comprehentiW! dfarr in thr past rwo yean to im·
prow tNdcnl l)ftform.anca in ~ntary and
second.ery educatiOn
Further Information can be obtatnrl!d by con·
tect1ng the OHKe for Poky An.alysis In Abany •!

lSI

474-1 313

GENERAL EDUCATION OONMllTEE
MEETING WITH FACULTY
233 Squ .. from 2-4 p.m.
The Gml!ral Education Comi'J)iHee wiD meet with
faculty vmo submi«ed dncriptions of COI..l&amp;WS for In·
clus6on tn Uw General Educedon Program.
Facuky desiring tHdbadt from the Commm..
before complding f C'OUT'$11! proposa.ls IW urged IO
attend

BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR•
SnodicoOftthc~oi Gi(loopn&gt;tdns

In Plentl, Or DoiOa' J.ma. UniY1!1"5Jty of Texa5.
a p&amp;.nt physiology eandkiete. J 14 Hochscdter
J .JOp m

BIOCHDIISTIIY S£NINAR•
ThoSudoceT_of _ _ O.. C. J . Van
0... 0epattmcnr o/ M~ . U/ B, In col·
labo&lt;otion Dr 0 R. Aboo1om. H_,ooi '"'
Sick CMdrl!n. Toronto 108 Shmnan. 4 p .m. Cof.
fH a13:30

:e: r-:~~le$

PHA11J1ACEU11C$ SEMINAR•

s..,..

0... ~ ol ... -

....-. - Adelman.· ·- C50tl CooN 4 p ..

CELLA~ IIIOLOGV SEMIMAR•

u.

ol ~c.. .. S W d , - ...._
.............. 0. O..M-., ,....._ond

-........ - C
· o..--o~-....~.
a l a e o o / - 114 . -.
, . 4 1Spm C....ao4 -..s~tvon.
ol Cd. -....lltology and CltomioUy
o/ llloloolloal
ua....-

s.--

UUAIIBM '
l1oa ~- IFntnce . 19791 Waldman
· """'""' S· IS. 7 30 and 9.4S p m
Ganofal a d - s.2 10 . ........ $1 60.
M .n. &amp;.a. _. in f)Oil·W'4'1 ~ fr•no
~!bout •

-

"*'·· ~ to.....,....

the dud . .,
ol&gt;at ulti-.lo loadtt to . . _ , d..th

EllA AC'I10if TEAM ..anNG '
f « -........ and ............ on~
wOhoi&gt;a-.aiERAr.- ............
"""'""'C.... 611pm Foo-coiiDonno

ao636-m3

Saturday- 5
UUAII FilM'
(1lw V.....,..l IGcm\any. 1'1191
Conleftnce n..O.... Squire 4.:10. 1 ond 9 JO
p m Gcnonal admlloion S2 10. lludcnts Sl 60
A IIOfy oi the undud In thil nrewat ad.lptation .
w...., Honog - t o cldght ...._.ltv load...
them througl&gt; tbc labyrinth o/ notions ol&gt;at .,. """'
t..rboNd ebowt Draa.&amp;. 1o ttw SJieMric: source oC the
the shadowy drl!amworid in whith our
myth
own w•U61~..-nn ate

FilM '
Letttt fJ"ON anl.Jftk.now. WOIIliiA (1948) . st•·
nng Joon
l.oula Jon!on and di&lt;edcd ltv
Moa Ophu~ BuHalo • ErW County Hloloricol
Sodoty 8 p m A d - Sl SO -.,.s ltv
Madia S&lt;udy Bullolo

Fon....,..

UUAII JCIDNIGHT FilM'
Eator n.. 0 . - 119731 Confcnncc n...c,e
Squire 12 """"""" Gcnonal a d - S2 10.
·1 60
-

ARCHin:ClUIIE L£C1UIIE '
l'llc F--. lor M... Truelt: Plannlnt~
~ Jerome l..utln . Prtnorton eduatw.
. -. 33S Hoyos. S JO p m Froc a d - .
ART HISTORV I...£C'IUI£'

w.. p._,,
- Wooloe
of Acadmoy
~ -310 Fostft
· 0...
S&lt;ephcn
Human!at
7p.m
FilM (FILII HISTDIIY) •
Not- fHIIChcodt. 19461 146 Dtcfonclori. 1
p m. -.,.s ltv the
for Madia Study.
Ingrid a..,.-.. Cary &lt;;,..,., O.u&lt;lo ~ . 1\
gowmmcne agent and • r.tugec woman u~
• ciengerous million .... &amp;rul. ... JUtpeC.'Ie(l by •
master~ c:tu.f 5orM ~momenta .

EFnCTrvE LEAIINING fOil
UNOEJIGIIADUATES SPECIAL SfliiES '
._IO..,_.andT.... S4anda-Tao.,
Vannoloc A . Collins. the Unlvftsloy L.,.ming
c.no.. 202 Baldy. 1-2:20 p.m. Sponoond &amp;,. tlw

UUAIIIIONDAY NIGHT FllMI '
S.C. My 1Rw 119481 . 1 p.m . ol
U1o. 8 50 p m 170 MFAC. Eltcoot. Froc admls·

.ad..... achoot a d -. Tho foCus ol""' -

c.-

-

sa.,. My Low •• melodr.,.. .bout • man who
~ 10 ~~- . . . . . . Cl&amp;ly. Slon Claudcttc Col·
bon. R-. Cum ...... and

..

Friday- 4
I"£DDAT111C GIIANO ~os·

--..... .. .--- c-:
.. a.- .... - v....

...........

EASTDIIWNDAY SEIIVICE'

....,. Kaelo&lt; Room. Eltcoot Conto&gt;ln 4 S p m

1975 .........
1979. ~nd A " - M 0 Kindt A - m

~:7.:-:::;o:.:.=~

ava.
........ O.SP

Fclowohtp

__

'Ch6clren"• ~ 11 • "'

dYI -

llDUNAR•
_
_ ,....._

_..__
Ut B

I~ Porltoo 2_30.4 p m

-

ltv on.

Don-·

1 - ol Ulo, -Lana y..,_, John Gavin
and s..dra Doe , .. a ... hanclwtdtiolfcann. obout
• glr1 who t.com.et a giarnorot.ft actrta wtth .an

Saaday- 6
lntoma_., Amcrieon Student

UUAIIFilM '
(1lw v•mw•l ~Gmnenl! . 19791
Waldmon ~ . """""" 4:10 1 and 930
pm Ganofal-1210 1160

Corol M Z.mol al tho UIB o.,..r..- of All
Bethune Hoi. 2917 Main
1 JO p.m Spon.
-ltv the c;..ao~ua...Student o/ tbc
Oepattmcnr o/ All
.
.IOHN W. C0WPE11 DllnNGOISHED
VISITtNG I...EClUII£11•
The Che•lstry of the Bral• : The

--..

~-Gleed

ont1-..

R..........,_

IP.,UI. 0. AndfowV Schaly, win-o/ thC 1977
8~~-M-e-.
p m

Schaly " .,.._., a ......_ "' _

--1'
..........51'..

..
........

va.~M""ttyour,.._ot
_..,a~

...

.. . . head "' &amp;tclocrtno and Polypcptidc

c....... ,.,... -

...... ...,.

~~.::-.:;a owodan!il&lt;d .... ""

Wllboonhowto _.looancltalutUndaodo.d
oums ouch aa GRE. LSAT. MCAT. MAnology. and GMi\T . .

.IOHN

w. ~ Dl5t1NG4JiiHED

VISI11NG t..EC:n.a•
Tile Clae•letrr of the Bnlo : Th f'

~Gioood--~
CDtn1

sa-

,_and-. head ao T..,..,. u.-,oy He

Moaday- 7

R•adorog and S&lt;udy Sklllo ~ o/ tlw

IPatt 2) . 0. A - V. Scholy. Ol!rianHol 8p.m. S..Apt7llollng.

L£C1UII£ •

O'Bnan Hoi

1ltE CHlH£SI;: EXI'EJilENC£, BOVnQUE'.
Sale ol ~- - a n d """' ,......
~ "" on. Abi~N~ ~ SJ..., 10
CApn Hal. nat 10 'TVbn ROOM 10 a m. ·3 p •
s.o--1 ltv tlw Ol!ior "'
a

HEAL11f RD.AlED PWOFESSIONS
COUOQUIUII'
Tre t ......,._,~to TnaUMnl ol
Chlldrm w111t ~-. Kent
N. Tigges. auodatc prolusor. OccupeUonal
Tho&lt;apy. 4th floOI' Coni....,.. Room . KWnbal
Tower . 12 p m.

~

~

.,

the

Vmtans

Ad-"'lnattration ·

.. New Oo1Hno
s,.o.-.d ltv the F...., of Notwal - . _
and lolo-

-~:!;:.,..,.

-"'-

._.....
...
-

memo

•op~eno.

Weda. .day- 9
11fE CHINESE EXI'£IUENCE: IIOUTIQUE .
Sale o / - "'-'"~~ a.on.. s.. Apn1 7
...... 10am ·3pm -..sltvtbcOffC&lt; ol
Cuku'-' AHan. wtlh a wam from FSA

GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR'
a-Jto .. a.....~oftd-~­
ol...._...,l_,l\ E S.OO. Oopottment ol
Earllt ond 5oo&lt;o Scloncn. SUNV/ Siony B&lt;ook
Room 18 4240Ridgc La 3 J0-4 .J0p m Coif..
.end doughnut,. ..,.. be • ..,...,.. .. 3

a:=-~= Pio

..._ Jamao E Funk.
wlh

K.

Oll!&gt;has.o--1
.. -ltv the ~)open
Hall 8
......

_ _ , _ _ , _ . _ _ _ :10

~ ol C..am&lt;

E......... Ahd ~

1070'8tlan 4

Pm _ _ _.bo.....tt.om 3 JOto 4

4

�Apri13. 1980

7
UUAB t. M11intJ ..,._- b a •-•·
... production of 'Sleuth' .clhe ConMII
Theatre, April 12. See "Nollcn.'

DIIAMA"
_....,.._.,
Lo Ro,ode. d -

,_

___ _ ....... _
by o...t. Compbd. UIB

. . __ lo_

............ dub wflh

.,.q-. ~- ..

In •

communlly ceni«T or chUfCh

The wcxklihop v.rt1 brr
concluded by Lone Duqu... - - chuman.
ond Nancy Ddloy. lre....,.., clllwlluflolo S.anch
MUW Food
Tho&lt;• ~a f&lt;e al $1 0 R_..,

Sludto 8 p m General od.......,., $3. """""" and
- - $1.50
Lo ..... .... .... locol daw&lt;tlng - · a(
O.ok CAtnp6ol

~ Cred

Tho 10-tnombeoaot.~--.....
uch of fiw tcena . indudn; tlw whon., C.e Lea .
dw JOid.a. Jerry OK:rocx:: llw p.rior maid . Amy
Hoffman ' dw ,... .... gendeman. llNcc Kofbl&lt;y.
and the ~wile . &lt;Andy Mano.

AI Amherst maua are at dw Newman C.nter.
Frontift Road . al Matn Strut I'I\IIIMS , Ctmr.Nd.tn

c...... 3233 Main -

....... .... huobond. Knelond - .. .........

Dunlonl . ond

D1rec1or C.mpbd. • -

lrclaod. -

a(

m. Coum.

Hol,l '""""'""' Amheno

p m Main Scrm- 7 p m

Bdlut. Noothem

-

EMtwr Viii: Amhtnt
Screct - 8 p.m

ln...........,

Cj&gt;olume and Ml dalgno d bo by Sieve Pmy
The play wll ""''"",. 1lwough dw 131h. and
-Apotll7-211.

~- 0..

J ~- Koroa C..:lOpm Coll. . .tJ, IJ;

- - 4!&gt;4

IIIOLOGICAL 5aENCES SDIINAII•
11M ~ of Rllf DA I I . . . . to

0 q Suns Tong. lloylof Cdloge. an ..,.
docnnology condldot&lt; 114 4pm

noon

be pratnled by tfw Human Raoui"Cft Drwlop
ment and TraWling sechOn of ttw Penonn.f Orp.r! .
-~_..

wtthout

AMDIICAN ASSOCJAnON OF UNIVERSITY
WOllEN USED 1100K SAL£
Founh Flooo . Prudenllal lluldlng. Onuch &amp;
P...tSb
Aprtl 7- 10 • m -7 p m wtth Sl .di"NSSIon .
Aptll I ttm. 11 - 10 • m ~ ~30 p m AdrnGilon a

In 258 Copen

IChobrd. 19631. 146 lllol.nclorl 7 p .m
s,.o.-.d by dw ee- ... 5aody

0..-"
"
"
'
·
-....... - ...

U U A I I - Y IIIIGifT FIUIS "
[)lory al o e - . . - (19451 . 7p '"·' Pon

193111.

a ( - (Qual

. POf:I1IY liEADING.
- -. 4211CopenHol 4pm By .,.
...,_ oNy s,o.-.d by tho Frl&lt;n&lt;k ol dw
lJNwnlty L h W..m Bronk's ~~ ~ The Force Gf
Dooln, F-., ' - · SU..C. ud M .........

I " " - l l w R -: Apnl3. 1215-12.45.
tw. Am...... Compus T_ . wol
ondude ind&lt;nlllyioog your .................... 1ypn
o( ~mn. and methock (Of wndng an ~

.....

resui'I'W
u
~v... :Apo-110.
t2.15'12.45. 1n
Dining Hal.,.,._ c.m...,. T_.will Include giving and rl&lt;Owing . . _ ,.
lions fcx lrnproytng the' dtah of your raume. p&amp;.nn·
lng ........ --and""'"'""'""'
o.her mH tr*lnt: PfOSIW"' to w.teh tor during
May ond J .... will bo ..._..... v... TloOo and
T"""-lowlho-.

r-.

f'honc&gt;waph ......dt. '""*· and
.,..,.... .... bo lnduded ..... books ...n.od Into 60
c a -. ronglng from . _ - . and cook
boob to rar books. ttn. am. le:lds, rftrr•nc•

--

andn..-w..w.

~n.... . Squn freood·

840pm

Poulotlc Godolaod ond Buogno

[)lory, -

-·dw~aldw-a(dw
Fnmcll--~

---.....

UUAII FIUI "

-

-

s..-

......

__ _

and U. ..._.. Woldmon Thulre .
,.,._ 4.30. 7and9.30p.m GoneoiS210. - $ 1 . 6 0

....

NEED ILUIC DENTAL CAIIU WIELL. tLUI
NEED5YOU
_,whk:h
_
TEAM to _

.._
_ ,,.al
_ 0... _
a_..,_...
• .dw.Schoof
-

--.--...--...n-tunily 110 work In • lirnuleted oftb Ntftng,

BUFFALO EHTEKTAIHJIEifT THEATilE
FIUI / DIIAMA
Chotlot. ........, and dhdod by Gary D f'ol&gt;e-.
R.y w... - Chode a..,h . ..... KM&lt;n
R - . -aldwi'T..... SI. - C o. llullolo
~ ...... Tho- Ia c.aniago- bock from
dw ....... dtrKIIv s....·. a..tlalol . 21M

&lt;S-don. 19781 . ..... Ingrid

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

..... ~-­

Btds ... bo NOftdoy 1!-.gll n....cta.,. and
h i g h - ......... dw ........ Foldoy. Plocoedt
ol lhe .... ~'"""do funds ... - - and .. ad....
$tudy by wonwn tddars .and for communMy pro·

n •• .n-

.. .aun-~ .

You m.y regiPet' at the door Bnng
oboglunchfl""'wM
The firll ~m. Wnting Your Rnunw . 'Nil brr
pramted in IWO pArtS

- ond~ .
1

~

c:n.ve.

Notices

A -.led '*i lblir'wJ auction) NM M.n.ns more
than 100-oud.•arlncrah-. ~

F1UI CFIUI HISlOilYl .

m. M.tn

WNCtt-nME. MIN TRAINING PROGRAIIS
A Mrin of lunch ·drne. mlrif framing prow-amt 'Mil
ment T'he programs were ~
clorsed by thl! Ut B Worrwn't C.ucus

"""-lo~Ciolct.Goollo!T.-.0. .

C£U.IAAII PHYSIOLOGY SDIINAR•
Or. Fredctk:k s.ct.. uslllant profn 50f
Oorponmmt al Phonnoa&gt;logy ond Tho&lt;_.,tics
108Shmnon 4pm Collftdbo...-101 3 45
., Room S-15

C.mpa.~s - S p

Sunct•v: A.mhn:.s C.mput - 9 15.
10.30. 12 nooo and 5 p m Main Street - 10 • 12
Eaitrn-

lionoiF-..Ihe_bol.,..

....._..., " - " " - a ( D o p H

and 7

Moln

.......... 1o .... IJnJt#d Kingdom

_... ........ ll)&gt;iled s~ lour .. Carnpbel't .,....
duction of .. ,., Midwmma Nighf5 Drum:· which
hid dra\IWI crltic:.J acclaim at aM Ect~nburgh ln~ ­

PHYSICS~•

c.._.- s

Good fridoy: A......., C.mpus - 5 and 7 p m
Main Strut - 1 p m • C.ntabn Centft , 3233

8il

biO...,.bdorocominglolheU 5 In 1976. 1he
Coundl lot
C...lacl oponocnd • fourPEDIA11UCS IIESEAilCH SOIINAR•
R- . . . . ... Nacloaol M..a-. Boord
Room. Cttlchn"s Ho.pba. 12 noon

Free .......... • •83 1-4301

HOLYWEEX 5EIIYICES

M.... Shd4 S.dach. dw _ . . D J Bakeo ; !he

-· a..Gon..

c-

TEAM il

....... -'dnglhoM-'"'"' dw Un-..y
whoM ip«&lt;fit nHdt ere lot «al • ·

community

Ot!nlll - c a n bo ...,..._., lhe TEAMdinlc
• minimal wofltng period ond ........... tn addMion. '" •• TEAM ....,._ "' such • t.shion
as to m.M .. rouiiM cknt.l care •
and .. -t... - ........ So. f II"" do neod
belle ~ c.. .-My we~~? Call .. at 1D 1·2213
any day.,.._, 9 and 4,JO and- wil bo glod 10
..-range. tcrHnint ~lnwnt for you

-

comf....,.,

-·p---_
_..,.
-- ... - __
.... . -- _., __ __
-----·hal-.
_
-....--...
&lt;
-.-Dick.--..-0..--.....- . ..... __..,. __ - ...- --··. ---10-el
,..,..._ '·......
- -... a
- n- d .........
- ... oqlhon
""'
............... "!!"'bob ................ and .............

FlUIS"
S. tWt and- ........ I lliolondoof 7 30 p .. s,...-.d by "'" ~ ..

._,
lo -

.....

..

"'"~"'-­

......

Tho-IOdwiaaood"V-Ial_..._.
...........
...

~

-~10..,.__...0

o.--

and dw U/8 -

Tho

. _ -.. dwlolol 1~7 .. dw ... Sloo
.....,_.,c-..-andJ&gt;.--'"'"'" '

__.._.
..... c.-olohoc-andPedcw.

~-

. __ ......,w. ......

--andW.W io -

-

......

.... -

Hlo-.c.and
~

.. ~-and­

........_
-o..-- ... ~ .. "" ....
M&gt;HII

Confwronce -

me

. Squn 5. 7 and 9
Sponooqd by lhe Oftlco al Cultural AJ

-Allbougl&gt;
- • .....
..... China
ltomFSA
In 1839-1842 . ... 11m ...

................._.,a..- ........

EllA
' .....,...ACTION
......__ nAIIIU£1'JNG
and .................
dw -..1 ERA , _ . , . . _
A-~ 6-llp.m Fo.loaooncoiDonna
ot636Z773

.......,...,: n..c.n-.

M&gt;H11 W. COWPDl DISTINGUISHED
VllrTING ~ZCTU~Dt•
-~ ...... -

(~

... n-..- ,.,..._

a(

Ill """"- V Schaill Coorl. Ollnan tw
~-·--1.
7pm S..Aprt7 .....

NCf ~ I..ECIUIE'.

LECrUIDI•

IW

1/1()()

-eo...

...... 7 .....

I..ECIUIE'

-~ . . . . . . . . -~Ill

M
-~
c
~-

Fo. mo.e .............

co1842~94

BUFFALO fOU( FESTtVAI.
UUAB. • ol Sub-- I. Inc . J&gt;. an nounood ., .,..... lkdlalo Fall ""'""al to bo htld
Apotll7 . 18. 19and21l""lhoMoln-c.m.
pus An atrav ol conofttl, craft demonttrdons. Jolt
donee and - _ . . . . . , . ... rna&lt;~. llwlour-doy

.....

Loudon w....
wrighl IU. Go.g.Hamo.
llowon. The Rodws.
Mimi F - . Uw.pool.ludles. Tho Mo.gans. p...
Nan Hollman. Bob Zonu. Btl RjiOn .
Roe~ . o n d - llno trod....... and con·

v. Gello'a c - a.- -

CGhm

3 1 0 - 730pm

a.-

__

JOnn Kolllod.

-

• ~ DlmHGUISHED

-~
-~-~-~c.....
0. -..v 5c1oo11t
o._

.....,...,...,.,.__

final"'"" ...

.,....,.bo..._.ltomdwPooples~ol

pm

a( Cotol-l: A c - ..
. . . . . _podonnodby~

• and dao!lh... Tho
• ..-.p~ay· thai •

Ingrid ~~orgman ·,

THE OIJNER fJO'DUENCE: FIUI '
U. T......_ ('"l'h. Orpk.am W•1. fh1 6ucure

a.n.

COHCEJrT•

~

. . _ "'"' d._. ... -

...--pony
__.

Fr..Sl • - · paotdng Goneol otf$3. lluclaQ and - . , Sl 50 ADS

c - ... be hold friday and Sot...O.,. ...

T-~~-M­
.............
~ads ...., . . _ ocodemlc
blod9ounds .. noodlntl ....... Englloh . .

..............--..........
.................. -

-

Include .......... dinner ......... In ....
al Squft. Foldoy. S.!Urdoy and S..n

••

c....

T.....,._.

-.....,n..c-.Aooo(l9'751andT~ Tlonoollo . , _

(lf711

...

Hood._, G&lt;od..... wOh .,...,..... RA ..

r.......-. MSC.

Tho - a l " being ~ by ... Buflolo
Fall Fes11vo1 ~- lJUAB Collc.Jiwal P-...,.MI. Flm. M-. Publldlyand
S o u n d - Fo. f u - . . , _, col
6J6.m7

:I

DNtCE GII&lt;Xft FOIIIIAHAI

" - tlwougll""" 15. 1910. '"'"' .... Olllco
d '"'........,.... Soudenl Allm. 402 c.p... .., ,..

&amp;lS-6230 •

~

Room and bootd .,..,.&lt;ded

~

day

- a n d - $1 s,.o.-..1 by ... c . ,. Dick. ... • .......

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

liwlv ,._ lot -

llolrdlladoaliW . . . .
&lt;lonoroi-.SI50. UfB~ . """" .
alohoO.-ond~-

....n

_.......,.lot _

reoding . ....... Englloh and hog~&gt;-.....,...,

........... -·Room and a.n. Gym--

. -bolorwllwl-..ltlwougi!UJBIIdoot..,.....
~bo ......... _ . ...... . . - Addood-lhlo

A l d - . _ .._
.. ~ ......
BaN; cw,·, Tloord ......... ~
"-al
should . , . _ ,....... .. 636-41144 "' Janet ..

.. ... _ _
_He._
___
- ... -..--.~v~­

SUMMa PIIOGIIAII -.oYIIEifT
1.oo1t1oe For A .W.? Upwonl Bound
IIJIIOS..,_ RaldenflofC- ,._.........

......
-a
nd Minimum
....,high
odoooi.Jewl.....,.....
.._.,..

~ RSTIYAI.

C!Wil'IYE AHOCIATE !lEOTA&amp;. '

RESEAilCH INStlltiTE ON
AI.COitDUSIISDIINAII
c.m. Rondal, PloD .. ...........
Medl&lt;ol Un-..y a( Soulh c-.. .. O&gt;orlalan.
wllo:ondo.cta--""AprtiStllied•E-.
Fo. and ~ dw F.... Abtlool Syndrome
Hu,., .nd ~ Sludin.- RauR::h lntt ""·
1021 MPt StrMI. 10 30 a m.

o..c.

100ft -

.,.......

Conlacl

Upwon~

Bound. 311

=-.:t~~:- •n&lt;OI!QIIId .....

TAX INFOIIJIIATIOH FOil fOIIEIGII
STUDENTS AND ICHOt.AIIS

-

, . _ -"'"11

..... 1636 22581

--..... -

1979 ...

bring

,__,andW2THE WIIITING PlAC£

l

r.-........ ..,._....,.nv_.,

p_, piing ""' Tho ~ Ploco can ..,.

~""'

FOOD CO.()f&gt; COUI5E FOil~
c...lllfne ........... .- . _....,

d w - - ThoW...,.Plocoto.O.,...Iot

lndwdint - - . lood

11- cWy . _ 12~ and NOftdoo

--..... ......

......

~

........ ..... -.Npa. Tho _.....,,
_.,.Apotll9-9.30aM oolpm

.--., • to..._., Baldv Hal. R - $36and

. .....

w-._

and'lhunllo!l ......... 6-9

·-~.- -

•.•

..._

�•

Aprll3, 1980

MORE LE'I=t•ERS

· Both views sincere,
Prof. Dles-ng suggests
ed? Perhaps the Senate does have some
influence,
The r«mt Repofle st.atemcnl5 by
Prof. Alen. on the one hand, and
various Senate official$ and supporten.
on the other hand. are expressions of two
l1llheT different mcntUtles and definitions
of the situation. Thl$ makes communica·
lion dilfx:uk. In addition , the vituperation
oa:unti)g In some of the stattments indicates that SlrOng feelings are involved,
and thl$ further hinders communication .
The Senate olfJCialo and supPorters
believe that the faculty ought to plan the
educational structure and process. and
that the Senate 15 the proper body to do
this because It represents the whole h•;ul·
ty: They believe that the Senatt planning
committee I$ already partldpaling In plan·
nlng: It is holding hearings. deliberating.
and passing resolutions. These people
knoW that the Senate Is purely advisory
and that President Ketter must make the
final decision . However. they believe that
!Jiving advice is a form of partlelpation in
planning because President Ketter listens
10 the advice.
.
What mabs these people believe that
thft advice Is taken seriously? Perhaps
the ba• Is tha belief In the 1mpot1ance
of rellon.. deli&gt;erallon and discourse. If
the proper Senate committee deliberates
...tuly, lis conduJiona - ~ 10 be
f.ldy .............. : Praident Ketter. being
a r..,.... ,.,., will be somewhat per·
....cled ; and therefO&lt;e his own thinking
and final declelon will be somewhat in·
tlumced. Or s-baPs the bUs 1$ thft
belief thai President K - ~ to take
!heir -"""- .nou.lv. and .._.. obligedot- aomc (...,.In thl5 world: •tt
....- t.o.. .. the tr.,dllions qi

CICIIegl.aly- and

c:ctalnlv

nol Improve

faculty monle-11 the Prndenl were to

...... IUCh decioions without the advice
and~ of faculty. " II!VS Garver.
Or pertw,po they have had apericnces of
President Ketter taking Senate advice.

. . _ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .tto.
Some of us, lor betltr 0&lt; · have a
different definition of the situation. We
- MllOiliw to power and to c:onflicts of
lnlftnl, and perhaps as a resull insen·
slllve to other Important things. We be·
lew that advice will be takm seriously H
there is some kind of power behind It .
The only power behind the Faculty
Sena'te is the power·ol the faculty to hold
Indignant mass meetings, asln 1975. and
therebv disrupt the smooth running of the
Unlvenity ternpoorily. TherefO&lt;e President Ketter. who Is a skllllul politician .
must Iaten to Senate advice £nough to
prevent mass Indignation.
We beliew that the re.J power lies In
Al&gt;any. and that the future of the Unlver·
lily lo therefore bcmg planned In Al&gt;any,
by Gov. C.ey In negoCiallon with other
holden of power. Consequently. f we
want 10 partlelpat In planning we must
go 1o Al&gt;eny-not merely
h reason·
.a.&amp;c arguments. but aloo with some
power Our Ott bit of power in Al&gt;any Is
based on our ~ with 16,000
SUNY facuiy, with SUNY udents. wtth
200,000 other teachen, with parents,
alumni. and 10 on . ~ lo the power of
vola But oolidority &lt;:onlills of ltiCklng
togetber and not firing one another. We
do not oay, "they ohould cloM down that
wotthlno ag. and tach. campus out there
and out wonderful campus" .,..
"they thould cut that llruggllng program
and _.e cx.rs • W are · a~ in this
I
Solid.Mty II not compatible with

e
The !unction of
Senate . a s - tt. Is 1o dloguiM the of power
behind a ...... of colleg\Uty Praident
ICe
II 1\oppv 10 lal&lt;a ihe -"""- of the

Senate wherl •
wih hil and
-olhiledm......
adVIIOfJ,
In a trt..mph of ~ col.glellty.
not

'"*~of

m

_,

....tdng "-'! 10
Senal« an
K!lw partidpenl In planning And can
- aay wllh
thai they are delud·

UUPreeol••..._..•
l"therefore am inclined to think that the
UUP resolution , lor which I voted, was a
mistake. It assumed that others had, or
could be penuaded to take. our view of
the situation . In our view His lmpO&lt;tantto
focus attention on Al&gt;any budget politics,
and slick together 10 we can participate In
those politics: but In lnslsting on our view
we Ignore their equally sincere and
perhaps equaUy valid view.
A more detailed statement ol our view
appears In the March 21 Voice, p . 6 ,
which describes the experiences ol Cortland facuhy .
-Palll DIMiatl
Prolesso&lt;. Political Science

AAUP protests
Ros well stance
Editor:
The Execu1Jve Committee ol the State
Untver5ty of New York/Buffalo Chapter
ol the American Association ol Unlvllrsily
Professors has been lnfO&lt;rned that Dr .
Beverly Patgen of Roswell Park Reoearch
lnllitute has been prevmted &amp;om par·
llclpating In a federally-funded research
project for which she has proven aper·
lise. We are deeply troubled by a set of
drwmstanca which suggest interference
with sclenlllic freedom and a set of con·
stralnts imposed on Dr. Patgen which
may be Interpreted as a p olitlcally
rnotlvllled
We~ R.,....;l
Pad! and the RooweD Park Boerd of
Vlsilon to raolve thl5 conflict In a man·
ner which defends freedom of Inquiry.
encourages open dtocusoiOn of scientific
findings and prolects the Integrity of
researchers.
-E. D. ~. President
E4wen1 H-t&amp;a, Vice President

...._t.

Marathon
needs you, too

=il~~~~or::
pu~y~~

!?Pr\lli fllpg,

ar'icf Valaree 'Kcnn&lt;idy:
Ann George: hospitality : Harriet Strau~
and Dorothy Sarra : newcomers: :Judy
Klsailus and Marsha Buckley, and International: Pam Spanogle.

Campus.
Reservations must ba In by Thursday.
AprlllO, to Mn. Abert Pautler. 50 Bragg
Court. Wllllamsville, N.Y . 14221.
The evmlng begins wtth dutch treat
cocktails at 7 p .m . Dinner Is at 8 . The
menu includes: wine , pineapple wtth
strawberries. spinach salad with
mushrooms , beef Wellington . honey
glazed carrots. dinner rolls , cheese cake.

Porter named
to advisory panel
Conway Porter Ill, a cerillied public ac·
countant (CPA) . has been appointed a
member ol the School of Management
Advisory Board .
Porter currently Is the only black CPA
In the Buffalo area .
At the age of 33, he owns and operates
the Buffalo accounting firm ol Conway
Porter. He said he accepted the appoint·
ment becauoe ol his strong Interest In
minority business ventures. He wouki like
to see more blacks In Management .

Music from 9 p .m . untU I a .m . wtU be
provided by "A Touch of Class."

GUests

Jerry's kids will be aided again this year
by dedicated persons in U/ B's Fourth
Annual MDA Dance Marathon. despite
student apathy in general.
CommunHy Action Corps (CAC) , the
organization ,

The,.U/B Women's Club

~o.-T... ~~Iwl'~~~~
b . at, _,.,.,
on
• ~·~

coffee or tea .

Editor:

spon1oring

Women's Club·schedules
'Spring Fling,'.April 19

has

32

registered couples who stand out brUliant·
ly agalnSI the 25 . 000 student ·
background here at U/ B. We cannot and
must not harp on the sharp decline in stu·
dmt volunteer • participation with the
dance marathon, but Instead work with
what we have tO make this IT\arathon M
successful as the other three

30-loolll claac:e
The 30-hour dance marathon .
scheduled to begin Friday, April II . at 8
p .m . will carry on through Sunday. l\prit
13. wrapping up the ceremon
at 2
a .m
The program boasts ol six musical
groups to provide entertainment for the
spect41&lt;n and rhythm fO&lt; the darJCers.
Volunteers are IIIII needed to help on
committ
ouch as getting food fO&lt; the
dancers. an~ working on the prize and
publtcHy commltt es Also , anyone
genuinely interested In helping out at tha
marathon Itself Is encouraged to go to the
CAC office - 345 Squire · fO&lt; more
details

and

non-members

are

welcome . Tlcke15: S 17 per penon : dress:
optional. Tables can be reserved fO&lt; 8 or
10 people .
Parking will be In P5. off White Roa~
on the North side of the Capen complex.
The dinner dance committee consists
bf: co-chairmen: Leila Baker and Balt&gt;ara
Meenaghan : Invitations: Judy Baumer

• .C ale ndar
, _ _ 7 , ..&amp;.41

display ttwlr

UUA.B DIIAMA '
Sleuth wt1 be pewnted on -'Pril 12 In tt.
KathattM Comd ThuM •• 8 p m TkMes arc SS
for ~ncflil pU'blic . $3 50 fatuity and Mit ; S2 50 foJ

A-

Let's show .l«ny's luds that we care
Raise money. Come to waleh the
dauntlus dancen. a line l'fO!l'llm
line-up and hear aomc super t..ndl. SUppori the Communiy Action Corpo'
Superdancc IO&lt; Muoculu
y

-Oeboow - ~
Dnctor. Comm ..nlly Action

c"'l&gt;&gt;

by lllto ll&lt;mp. A -

al tho

bod&lt; Smol .......... a l . . -.

ut1ng blod&lt; on • bociogn&gt;und Aloma
Goilfty. Bodo l1oll IMoin Str«tl. Mondal/'l'rlda ~.
10 • m to 5 p m Through Apfd 2S

"udonu

ho ., London ond Poria. tho ...., hod ..
... mphont New Voril ............ I 910 Alwf _ .
t~ the Tony ...,...d for bnt pley . ...... went on
to rw:k up a reconl-bruklng 3-y... run on &amp;o.d·
woy Slou6l II king ~ by DMclolus Produc
liOn$. •nd ttw ~ wll honor .... cndillon
and arcNiv cto.k the nth•• ol sa..rt.•s tpldel
&lt;ooting - . _ . , , 1llto Ncw Voril pooduc

_10 . .

CHINESE EXPEIUENCE

The "" of a.. .... ••htbtl al - - one!
collig&lt;oploy by Chlnotc pOint" Zhu Chmguong ond

•

• m to5pm ~Goll..y . lthhO...al~

"""""""hll .

-.~--boldl,r

......- ....-.,wft«UU&lt;d

ARCHITEClUIE
"" al "'-oploy by l.ucion !ioow:
A Moolmt 16ch Cootwy City: Fotcltpo. Slut w!l
run th.ough Apnl I~ In the lollby of Hayes Han on
tho Ma., s....t C.mpus Sponso.od 1&gt;!1 tho School
al l'uchil«t~n ond En ............ Dnlgn

...,....od

O o n - 1 0 - - SiovtllwMholtho llioni
.,. ond ouddon thocb w\*11
C..

-

from -

- . . , . Moncloy.fridoy. 9

tt.IIA......., ,.,...., ...... 17

~~ MEMORIAl.~IIRARV

&amp;hlbiU

b--care

cr«M~

-

1800's~

AliT EXHIJIIT
U . . . N , -.nhlbltal_bj/._

ll ..... Cehoa. Bochuno Hoi ...... ~ tlwout#l20 M
- - w ! l b o l w l d o n ...... ~. l·tOpm

s.tulo-

AlAJI() GAU..EJn'

Are 0.. Tu- ond Oltt! Tado

.,......... 11M -

.

...... '""' dllploy al
mo...W. tho ........ clcwlopmont one!
oco~_.. al boal&lt;jocbt P&lt;oducttom ond - o d by c;,_,._lligr_ '""' ...............
be ovolobio ID the public durint NgU!oo lbo-"'Y
hou" .. tho ~- al Lod.wood from ...... 1
tlwout#l the JOtlt

.....

�•

April3. 1980

ucs

plans
cuts
Some services

will be curtailed

e ·fnto
Annie " ' -" with oophomore David
ttoffrMn In his 8lh floor single """" In
P-Quedel~ .

. She . - ullerl a word of """""""''·
although he " - her locbd aw.y In a
sullcaM much oJ the tlmc .
Dnpila the trutmcnt she gets. 1\nnlo
io committed lo ~ olhon. That's her
sole PUQ&gt;OOO In life.

=

:_!.' ~ ~:

. . ...... . _

nie is a CPR lcardto.p.IIIIOOIII)I
~~-nllln. ~­
..~~~ .'~~equip­

pat Willi an'~dm:i ""'*"'pro·

ACTING OlaECTOR, UCS

c-;..r.. s.r.

.....
.....................
..........,
- . - . .... c.v-.
etc., ...,.,...._.
..............
....... ...._........,..,
..__of~

-.,.s-,~

. . . . . . . . Dr. . . . . . . . . . . . ..

~
- - ........
a•s•
....
r
~-~~~~-

...... ....-.

F--u .c.s. ~w

...... ....., ..... Noodoul&lt;... ,-. rrt...lic a - d l, ........

c......o.

mor. U...S reqcalrtni multi.,..

C&gt;Ulput

be beod the lui cost of the pooper. In
muJap.t...,.,.,. wt1 be provld
ed on ftlicrolld&gt;c only.
•
• P - ~ now~
and duplbting mlc:ro6d\e 'outpui wt1 be
eliminated un1eso &lt;;JOn.trd&gt;g juslffbtlon
1s prov1c1ec1 . •
• ... the COUI'M of the pt.-. addlllonal
1o con1r01 ~ consump11on
wll be Introduced. Including the ..,.
..........,..... o(
o( cccnputer out·
put on mlaoflchc for 1aogc liltings.
4 On Inc
d punching wt1 be

e--111.

~
car
S The UCS prlnlint
doMd down

.,._

be

budget for~
~hac....., reducad by 28'(,
Thio
r
in tome reduction o(
SaturdayandSundayopcrator.,.,.,... .
If~ funds become ava
In

6 The

-.me

the coune of

-

141r Informs ...-.. -

· the USC ncwslin·
o(

ralric·

be removed fnl pr1on1y
be
to the rwumpdon o( fu Nlvlcl at
On the ocher hand , If
the actual budget c1oea not , _
·
budge! far · far a ·

taons

tfw .,...

wnplo

~ from

~·

7·10 p.ro. Sunday ew·

coune Is orvanlzed on.., modulor
basis. A workbook outllna uch lesaon
and what ft takes to complete K. Per·
tlclpants lam on their own. at their own
.,.ce. with an lnslrudar. who is ccrttfiod

tile Red Croos. lllanding by.
Completion mM1 t.t-cn 6 and 9
h o u n - two or thru Sunday after·

by

noons.
J'M .,..nual for the coune is • Red
C.O.. booklet ll&gt;llh leuons on mouth·to·
mouth rauldtatton. one-.nd tworaaMr CPR techniques. how to cane for
ctdtng 111c1tms lcontclous and not con·

or

.. _
s.r-

r - . c:ee--

I

CPR·Instruction -·.

room In Porter (C!FC N ns"'

cluca and issues from her side a t.pc on
~ at·
odous). and caring for children .
tempt~ - recorded . enobllng the student
Since the training effort lllarted In Col·
to -11 he or she Is doing K cO&lt;Tecdy. At·
· ~ego H last year. Hoffman estimates that
tached lights flash gr..,. when ventilation
between 100 and 200 students have
efforts ...., com!d . " yellow light indicalet
become ~nt In emers-ncy life.
that cornpraslon efforts In the area o( the
salling techniques. Hoffman and his j;:ol·
heart are properly cKecuted: red means
somclhing .• wrong .
lege H IIOiunteers have also trained Food
Service and Porter Housing stall
Annie Is also equipped wtth a
employees: last se,..sler. they re ·trolned
metronome for counting compraslons
aod re-cntlfled 40 .Physical therapy
(80 mlnute for a one.penon effort:
60 - minute for a twcNnetnbcr team) . • seniors whose pr.,vlously·acqulred
mastery had waned with non·use. There
Pupils and pulse can be manipulated by
Is that danger. Hoffman warns: II you
an lnllrudor to simulate what " - n s
don't UJt your skills. you can get Nlly.
with ,..J lllctims.
Periodic refresher courses are a good
Annie cost $1066 arid was purchased
Ideo. he bellevu.
for the CPR program under a grant from
Sub-Bcwd. A twin . aloo Annie. was aloo
purchased by Sub-Bo.rd The twins arc
Hoffman's more than usuallnternlln
shared bv College H and. neighboring
CPR was kindled when he took Prof.
Cllllonl Furnas College ICFCl .
Judy Mann's Health Education courae .
David · Hoffman .. keeps.. Annie
advanced llnt aid for non&lt;rnajon. He sliD
beta- he's the CPR program coor·
a ssists with that courM. In addition to be·
dlnelor for Coloee H . (Mlb Sch..iertz is
lng a member of the Unlwnlty's Rncue
his counlctpalt In CFC) . Making use o(
Squed .
Annie and two ocher manikins supplied
Generous ll&gt;llh aedll for those who
by Environmental Hullh and 5afoty.
have helped with CPR training effotts In
Hoffman Is llteraly out "'o saw the
the collega and elsewhere on campus .
world.- Of at least that IJrOiolllnll portion o(
Hoffman mentions particularly College H
Its population which someday .
Instructor L aurie Shapiro . Chris
~ may need spilt·second CPR
Mlchalaka. Dennis 8ladt and Chris
t r u - or help when choking on food .
JaMn o( the Heallh·Care Dlvlsior&gt; of SubEmergency medical technicians and
Board (who helped In getting approval
IO&lt;Tnal rncuc tcamt arc good thingo.
for the purchase o( the two Annles) . and
Hoffman ~ts. but a _..,.. suffering
David Smart of Enllironmental Hcakh
cardiac arrnl or choking needs attention
and Safety
within one to thr
minutes If bnoln
damage "'· poaa,ly. duth are to be
ave1ed. Drowning 111ctims and those who
He lnllires anvone on campus or In the
have suffered severe electric shod&lt;
cornmunKy who would like to have CPR
olmiYrly need quick help-bdor · the
lnstt\ldlon to cell College H at 636-2245
EMrs can arrive on the ocene.
or him fl 636·5275. "You can leave
word with ' Hotvey' [his anowcrtng
Hoffman feels
ongly that as many
device) WI'm not ln ." he lndldes Just teD
people u poatie ,n the crowd " of
e-vdaY life should know how to. act to
~ onswers that you 're internled In
save ltws An «rncrgency can ' - n In
CPR . and they'I try to set up something
Ho(fman prefers to lcftp the duNs
a bus. at the office. In the duoroom . In
fhe donn. in a ~tore . at o sports ev nt . in
below l5. but · - don1 tum anvone
" If Collego H can't fh you ln. ·then
a ,.....w.nt. Anywha
Anytime Vou
should
reedy
parh.po CFC
That number is

whlth the rhythms

Ektlw . . 1; Dr. Aa.ft s-.
U/B _ _ wlce ......... ll .....

floor~·

1nc:omo1 from r-.:11 ~

further economy
and larburanu o( , _ . .,

.....lllltllleC!&lt;-~ . "The

"-"-_

-•Y

636-4540

E- ~
· -·

Hoffman's

courw Is given uch

~.· tfw~ ~."':..-~~;f.S:'m~=•:.,-

.....
can

.

David Hoffman II headed for a earin pu
edmlnlslratlon. the next step
- . 1 wbich Is law tthool At U/ 8 lot
only two ~· ha has oltwedy helped

fashion a rdarendum tlwt changed dw -

course of llludent ,.,_..mene ...t Is one
o( the authon o( tt.. ,_ -...on far
that _..rncnt.
He de..-. • large bloc o f - to SA..
u
to CPR . but conliden the
schedule he has set lor ' - I wtlh the
latter to be "furl."
"That's the bcaom Inc." he says. "I
enjoy H. I'm not lnlo .W...atlldng."
The other Colege H CPR -..ctori
are: Pot Burke. Many Merc:or. Doug
floccara twho 1s a1oo ~
the
Racue Squed). a n d , . . _ Burltc.
Tcaching CPR ~ el CFC orr.
Mark Halpam. .....,..,. ~ . John

- a..

t..av

or

Kurk~ . Oannc Blllutl&amp;. lid. Kina.
Carl Schmtdtman . Sylylo Brown. ...t

Pete Woteh .

Exxon fUnds
TIAA study
of careers ·

JOBS
FACULTY

F~ - - -0..~
-

vw...
..-..~vw... - o . -. F-0024.

r..:;:;:- .-

.....

-----Sdo alofJ!'

- · L-, -.;y. F.Q0%7

-

--

cz - --a-..
· F4l2!6

-

-tllo&lt;hnoI

- . . - - - . ,.r.ooza

.aAIICH

. . _.,.._ ISG· 91 - Med~ .
SUHY/B Clr*-l c -, R.oozl.
1Aooo CIOol R.dlo

T-.. .........
T;,IIO---..11«123.
R-0024

~ - WIIfO.FM.

.

�... __ ______ _
__
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----_____
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.
...........
--_.,
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.
.
.
.
..........
____..... -........ .-..
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.....__.. --.....·--.-...
.....----_
-..... _. _. _.,
_____ __ --·--· ----.Tiool...
......,..,._
...........
._.....,_ ...,.. ...,....,

Why study the humanities?
......., __.,

on an alnloot willful

:

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

-~~~.....
no., .... _ _ _ ......... .,

-------.....
- . .... _ _ . _ • .-,y _ _

..........

l1le clergy Is reprewnted In the correspondence In fon:e and In fme form.

l&lt;&gt;nl&lt;'bmes philosophJcal and poetic as
that speaker was. sometime piercing and
vinegary.

Among ~!Jose who would f m - a
curriculum on the stucl.nt was the ir-e&lt;ent Reverend Edgar Tiffany . He
wrote:

___ _

tthW.k . . . . . . . . . . . ._

•.....,..,....,...., _

.,

__ ... n.,_ ... ___ _

"'* he -

..---~·-be­

Suggesting tha.t some of the wrong
people - e In college or In college lor
the wrong reasons. Tiffany plioced blame
squarely on the heads of educatoD
themMfves. Standards had dropped and
these WeTe the reasons he ave:

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

--~-T-

...

.--w.- .

Yoe ca.'t
l1le more-or-less impo5ed curriculum ,
deshble tho&lt;.lgh M was, was no Ionge&lt;
practical or poeslble according to anotheT
clagyman. Waker Lord . He said that
President Eliot of Harvard had committed
"the great educational crime of the 19th
oentury" when he started the elective
~em . But, as Lord said, "you can't
unscramble eggs" and go back to
prescribed studies. Rathe&lt; than legislate.
he would motivate . He would use aU the
powe&lt;s of peTSUaslon he had with young
people and hope they would choose
weU. In his letter he passed along a piece
of his value oystem .

_ F...WV.-

_....,._?
....11111-...
_ .....
_.,.,__
..... ...........
__..,"' . .-.

tho - "" ... - :
-,.._._."'-altho
tho - ....- "' -·
Gr-.
_tho_, __ """"'
, _ of

lnh. Mv point

.. ...... . . _ " ' _ (IAotla,

MadM. .tlcf.. chc

OM .......,

end ten

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

-----~

April3. 1980

_ ... ....,.. .......... -..flo

vortl-to.-lns..-. AIIollhla

~----

lbese letlen •• fairly pe&lt;suasive.
They're ~ enOUQh to sll1l ring
true today. Their flaltMu llays because
they WeTe _ . , 0\lt of peroonal conviction and, more lmport8nl, &amp;om penonal
experience. Mcoot.of the letler-writers had
Uved long lives and _,. able to look
back and reflocl. They t...l no easy
...._. but did haw lrnegWiative ways of
viewing the liluallon and pulling their
own light on a. They went beyond theory
In saying, as did a newspaperman. A.H.
Klrdiholc.r. "after aU. oomething should
be left to experienoe. which also is a
teacher and sometimes a great teacher."
l1le lette&lt;-wrilers saw the mission of
colleges and unlveJ$11ies as one of
developing qualities of mind and the ability to see aspects of life In relation to the
whole .. Many recognized that U/B's concern was a nationwide one. The war experience helped crystalize the thinking,
based though In · ete&lt;nal values. as
Horace Reed illustrated:

.-.....

_ d o ....................
I
~. AdiM. thM ~ caa ,........ .o

And so, the abiding values accumulated as the ..plies came In .
Iron leaBy, the sense coma .through that
sometimes theTe Is more support for the
humanities out theTe in the community
than In the Ivory toWeT. And, there's the
feeling that educators would do weD to
step down out of 11 and ask around for
guidance among its supporters, from time
lo time.

~--.toort.... -

lbe letters proved useful In the short
run and the long. Dean Park made use o1
!hair lnsplrallohs and affirmations in a
Curriculum Committee Report. re appraising goals of the liberal arts college.
published In 1945. l1le Report stated, "it
is a noble thing for a man to earn bls livIng and provide for his famUy ," but
asserted thcttheTe Is more.
Maybe the letter-writers remind us only
of what we've always known, that. as the
property appraiser said. "Ideas are
strongeT than steel." Today. we would
pick up the telephone or call a meeting.
In those days. they wrote lette&lt;s. Thus .
we can have the lasting pleasure of
reading what thinking men tho..Qht In a
prose that's free of rhetoric and clich&lt;! and
often Is beaut~ul. l1le Ideas are as good
as ever. the prose as pungent. For
~erlly. they said they valued the
"useless" things. the great lttl.angjbles.

.An invitation to serve
Much of the worl&lt; of the Faculty
~ il eccornplished by standing
cOmrnl'tea, ad hoc committees and
advllory c:omm-. Any faculty
member may be nominated to serve
on a comm- of the Senata. The
Foculty Senala Exec:ut!Yc Committee
wiiMo to Increase representation on
commlltees and to encourage young
and/ or previously Inactive faculty
members to become more Involved. In
particular, we would like to Identify
those faculty members whose particular sldlls and Interests coincide with
commllta cbarges.
&amp;low il a list of commlltea, their
charges. and the vacancies for the
1980-81 academic year. Could you
please list In rank order the lhree comm
s on which you would like to
serve. Although there can be no
ll"arantee that aU who voluntee&lt; will
be appointed . having an available pool
of candidates would be an Important
step toward revitalizing the committee
llludure of the Senate.

Foatlly T - . Mil,_...

Two viiCaflida
RevW:ws manen conceming s&amp;andards rw ~ IIRJOintnwnt. promotions. oVId &amp;iltnUr«
allotutty. and - i n ! l fo&lt;ully riQhl5
and priYiogft
~

No voconoos
INIHcn conccmlng UnlVCBity
Gownwtce .nd gowmanc:c ol ac:~ ~o~nb

R.Wws

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

_

__ ._...,.,....

t~tand

..__

~~-"'

o - - ...................

_.
tho

~

and--.

....... . . -...

~

BYTHESENATE •

::'-~tat~l

h....._.......,..who _ _ _ .,gotnad·
-

""' tho nanno1 -

critmo but
oc.-- _....,on
othor

cr--.

Reviews matten conccmini Univenity
-~
-and

Outotao6ot--

n.c:o.n- -l.Jniwnity ........

net to be conoidorod ... -

c:onlltlulion5 to lhc

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

~

T....... Qooolltv

Fo..-v-~ maaen conceming the condua of
...... . . - tho Univsnity ond poced"'n

tar .... .,...._,"'"""' ..ochk&gt;e

-c.-..
---

"UNIVERSITY·WIDE COMMITTEES WHICH
!lEQUIRE SENATE NOMINATIONS

c-u.
Thloc......-·..........

........-~-the

program• within

h--

that

,....__

- -· poomotlons. and .........

pu...__...._

Uotwnttr -4 oo ~F.._

"to ......
,... tho ..,.,.._.. al the SUNY -...n
Tho princtpoltv..-. olthlt -

Tlw..__oftHo-.tto .. - a n d

-- ..... --- -

. , _ o f SUNY/ IIohlo

•

.,.~com -

...

rnlllle1 ~.,...burin~ Oft~ . . . .-,

- - a n d to .............t ~
.. """' ......... ........,. and oponoond - - OCIMOoS at SUHY/ -

'-IIIIolo~ .. ._
The

~ KIJ •

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lllppHk

, .. .

(j f •

1

eo.w-a....-

-bodios.

llwa v--..ncin
R....- ...... ..-.compau~ngolothloti&lt;o&lt; ·
a.llon wilh

I:Mda .,-,d eaniH out a continual

tho Dndot ol Alhlotlcs

eo.wl'hrM YacM\dn .
-

polldos- th&lt; colega

F..-.,..-.,.
I ! . - ....... eo&lt;~C«ming tho planning &amp;nd
of lJniHrUty lacJitticts

UM

o.-.
Two \lkllndr;s.
R....- the O'adtng polian olth&lt;Uniwnity
. . . . _ _ oad t..1&gt;rooy A -

Four

\lac.ndn

....... and poced.... ol the
Un!wnity's b"'Y ~and othe .,_
~ rnourca .M Mf\llcn.. amn out •
................... t h o - ollnlor·

--ondUnryRaoun:..

~

....

Thlo~--...-.... ol the eoa.,...

..

--=---......_-.. . .
..
__
F....,~

Scholon

.. . . . . , _ .... to _ _

Please .-.nk order on the form below the three committees on which you
would bke to serve. also Indicate .which committees you may be qualified to

chair . Every effort will be made to make committee appointments based on the
expressed Interests of faculty . Please caD the Faculty Senate office at636-2003 K
you have any questions.

...... fO&lt;Ulty ~ SchoiM

F....it,
..._ _ _ . ,
............... _.,
...... """"
..... _., .
-~-..........-

__
_
-.
__-

I would kke to serve on the followtng Senate committees:

Rank 1) - - - - - - - - - -

~

._....... a n d - ......
......_, ...... _
....... - o l t l w

. ........,_
....
-AWe
..............
....,_
........, ...... _,

.

t.-,
___
... _ o l to
n._
C..........._
xa:..,.ndMiona

~-

Rank

2J - - - - - - - - - - - -

~nk3 )

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I could chair the _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ commltt

Name

..

R....- tho SINCIU... Iv..:t10nJ ond ..wllons
of the ed~iltradon to th. facuaty .net stucXnt

TWO\I.candn,

Tho princtpoloolo altho-Boon~ .... hqo Pur·
ch.Ming ••unt b function ol rnllin...mg•neff«ttvo a n d - ·

ActMtr

............. _ . . . . t h e -· ......
-ondsoltalalooholl&lt;--ontlw

,.~_..,..

~·· a.o.rd• f-..ily~•alnt ..... ,
-MilT-.
Tho a.-d poovlclncounMlondocMce .,tho
Praidcnt on ooncomlng IO&lt;Ulty ..,.

.

.

~·

"'fSghi v::::..~·

ryor..-.,.,_tho~

-...-__
. .__

COMMI"'TEES MANDATED

impltt...,.. ,... Individual·

cril&lt;rill

.......... poooodurn. and -

ing of curricular

v _ _ ....... -...

od...-..

who~...

- Twov~
.... er..- A&lt;tMty

wtth the power to affirm . r~ . or modfy any
modo by .. lnstNc:tor. deportment . ..
adjudlco- comrnllft.

. earn
......Tho

""""""'""'tho..- .... ond tho td...!ul·

COMMmttS MANDATED BY 1ltE
CHAIIT£II Of 1ltE FACULTY iOIATE

&lt;l&lt;Mrol EdoocaTlw Corn- .. choogod .......mend.
k"9 • c:otwr.nr progrtm or programs In gmrtnJ

"Department

Return to:
fecuhy Senotte Ollee
405C.pee
. , Aprlll5, 19110

�Aprt 3. 191!10

Ethics stUdies
'Ineffective,'
charges Caplan
Most medical ethics ~ _ ..
taught ellodlvely becaute they . .....
~ theorlits rather tt- IMihocla
wt.:h INdl ftm!re physicians how to
develop anelytlc.l
says Or. Mhur

~

sldllo.:

told thote atlitndlng a U/8

mediCal cthlc:a , . . . - loot - - that
111011 of ~ Cl&gt;Unn lend to focus on

-

...... no-..

U/8 theatre seeks l_ts own Identity
When . . . In . the lloepartment of
Thutre and"-- kept hearing the U/B
CAnter T1walre referred to as the "old
Studio Anna" and c:on&amp;ued recdvlng
phone inquiria about bookings at
Shea's, tlwy " ' - the CAnter Theatre
had an "idcotily crisis."
To ~ the Buffalo community identify
the Cenm T1walre as a _.lit entity. a
logo has ..._ deWioped which wll appear on tid&lt;do, programs, promollonal
materials. stationery and possibly even
T·shlru.
The logo, formed . with sholgun letter·
ing. was designed by Kai Mui, a U/ 8
oophomore who Clime to the U.S . five
yean 111!1" from Hong Kong .
Kal along wtlh some 75 other students
wbmllled designs as part of a class pro-

a coune taught by Bud Jacobs In
the School of Art:hltec:tun! and En·
vlronmental Design.
·
Neal Radice • . . - n t to the chair.
noted that many of tlic designs were of
fine qualty, but Kai's was "just wb.t we
were looking for" In terms of versatility.
Image and visoal stalemcnt.
jed for

~Moot U/8

ufKiln9"ads smolce more
11./hen they drink 81 home, don't eat thr
meals o day. and feel they are more lm·
1'\une to peer praou
d&gt;ildi!mllfil'

alii iidMty than These and

their lrienclo.

other attitudes and
behaviors concerning smol&lt;ing, dieting,
and oeK...I KIMiy In U/B dorms were
diocussed lui Thurtday at the Univenit!l·
Wide Stucleot Conference on "Com·
municatiw Behavior: Appn).cha and
Resean:b..

Tine _ . - · puMnled by sbt
U/ 8 under~ua._ whoM MO!gnment.
grven In MtlnlitrVIewlng duo. to coo·
Information~ IUJWYI tNt
r.tlec:l human -del. linda Me·
Calloolcr. ~ profcaor of com·
munlcatlon, chaired the afternoon ~a­
sian and eJq&gt;IAtned "tNt ·the ourveys are
r.r from periect. but
good learning

-e.

......

tiCpel'lence for theM IIU&lt;knts."

The fnl ~· litlod. "Srnolca- V$,
on-5.........,.: ~ •and Con·

trUbng A

I

and !Wiiwlors." given

by Slitpben Snlh and Jeffr'!)' Siegel, wu
besed on a l'llndom polling of 160
students The purpooe to at·
tlucla of smokers and ~and
to

determine

possible

arns ·of

·~:l-

found that smok·
' lng ~ when lhldenta •• reloud.
driving or wlwn they arelof9Y. Smoking
cloublao under
1 and thtee as
many.,.._ . . tmaload when drink·
lng .!collol at ._.. .._ when drinking
on I bor
A r-..11 that IUJlliiMd
novice 11'1·

"""............ eooept
smolo.tna tn-tNt
a bor ,_. .._ smol&lt;ll1g ••

home Aloo, .......
oboul aoldnt ........... tO

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

ambovalont

put . , . . _

out

Lori

"A

and Faye Meola
on Nutr111on and

COller of
~tal magazine called -

a new

Center
Stage," which will be pubbshed three
times a year and feature articla of In·
teral to theatre goen along wtth llotlngsof
coming ~15 at the Centlor Theatre and
throughout the Theatre Olstrid.
The logo will also be used liS part of a
permanent dilplay In
caMS which
will grace the theatre s rebulll laellde.
Before students started the projects,
once c:onslrUdlon Is completed . U/ 8 's
they rem!Yed a wrillitn c1esaip1ion of the
name 111111 be prominently placed ·near the
laciNy along with an explanation of the
logo to the community undenlands the
type of productions Men there. In addi.
Theatre's
close afflllatlon wtth the Univer·
119n. Radice spoke to each cia-' to
discuss the kind oflrnage the "Theatre cllr
stty. Radice noted .
As .wln- of tha logo competition. Kal
rently has and what the department •
wt11 recclw free theatre pasaa for himseH
would like k to become .
and a friend forwmalnlng ptriorrnances
· The opening of "Lord Allreil"s l.owr ,"
this year and for next year's full seaton.
April 24. wtll merit the debut of the logo.

se~

Smoking·, diet,
ByMary.,;:N.IIIe

. It IIIII ...,._- on the

surveys aired

three meals a day . cut out snacks and IIC·
qun hobbies that wtl take your mind off
eating. C-rrate on what you eat a!ld
enjoy

II'-

what you eat •., ' "'

......... edhftJ
:
Studenls who conducted the .IW\I'II ""

Dona

"Oomo Ufe and Suual Aclhdty at U/B"

had more .problems oblainlng accu&lt;lte
~ becaute of the sensitive nature of
the topic. Karen ~ . and , Susan

Bergin who sU&lt;veyed 280 donr&gt;
residents. lett that many ~dents gave
soctaJy 11CC0J&gt;ta1&gt;1e answes and read d~­
ferent meaning into the questions.
The
udes of many were that oex Is ,
Ins dirty and
Ins gujlt toqay.
Many felt a -ua1 relationship lo an lm· •
por1ant way to echleve closeness.
·
One qJMStlon on the survey stated. ··rt

cr-

!fa."'Then .the

thai·

has been said
there Is a lot of peer
peessure for people to engage-in soual
whllt living in the dorms.·
Studenta ....-e asked to rate how the
statement applied 1lo their roommate and
to themselvft.' Half the respondents feh
peer prnsure affected their roommates.
bul onJv one-thlrd acknowledged that It
afledelfthem.
'
Questions from the opaMe auc!Wnc:e
deah mainly with how students wtole
their survey questions and what criteria
were used In judging the eflodlveness of
questions. McCallister nplalned that
studants learned to look for leading. load·
ed and biased words. She further stated.
•u Is not easy to develop good questions
bj.t by the end of the assignment. the
und~uates had dcYeloped a ,..uin
adiVtty

amount

of eKpeftloe .... "

·uuP claims 'victory,''

changes stand on pledges
According to Buffalo Center UUP
Cha!&gt;ter Prtsident 8 U A)len . the word
from UUP Contra! 1 of late T uesda~ .
was that SUNY will end up lostng only
!he 4 75 6MS originally prncrt...d by the

008

Allen happoly relayed that U / 8 has
t&gt;nough vACllnl positions to more than loU
u proporti&lt;&gt;Nit' share of the cut
This "good news.· howt.ver. Is all con·
h"9fnl on Governor Carey not uolng his
power of line Item veto But even ~ that
ohoukl come to pass. Allen speculated .
In the
there may be enough vo&lt;
L1111 lature to override the veto .
Remembering that the Ugislature has
~ before overridden a Carey veto.
Alen r"""'"""" . '1fs bite sin. after you 'w
clone ~ oncto M"s ..W.. to do.·
Allen. howewr. urged members of the
Univenily community to wnd '"legroms
to the Governor asking him not to veto
. the tntored SUNY funds
Callit1g the cu1tent mood at UUP Cen·
tral "exuberant." Alen r merited that
008 Oorecl&lt;ll" Howard "'Red" M
mull
M "
ng now • Miller threa.......S the
union not to attempt to llfl SUNY fun·
d•nv restored. but both the~ and
Hou voted 10 do M
lib. deadline. the
lurned
thai
~ Bawd of UUP'a Buf.
r.lo 0...,... pMMd
tlons
T
wNdl ~ dwp that

R._....

President Ketter and Chanullor Wharlon
violated the spirit of peer review In their
denial of tenure to PoiHical Science Pro·
r~ Daniel Novak
In addition two other resolutions Wfte
passed According to UlJP Chapler Prnt·
dent Bill Allen . beqouse the Board ftlt the
Governor Is unlikely to veto restoration of
SUNY funds and that the "•'""'11""'11
situation Is now over.· H -Od that II Is
"no longer neceSsary" IOJ members of
Urriwnlty planning cornmiHees to sign
advance pledges saying they wiU not
name lndlvldualo or programs lor posslblt&gt;
relronchment. This obvtatts the need to
mak public the names of those who
would refuse the pledge
The Boerd aloo vot&lt;td . howt.ver. to IIC·
eept 1 resolution which reafforms their
original position that no member of the
Univerolty community ohould serw on
cornm a which must target programs
or individuals for re~ment

Prize Winner
WI! E. Mcear1hy, I ~Wile Jludent
In U/B's M ~ . r_,t)y took
top pnae In the 38lh Walern New Yorlt
Exhtllllon.
tier

--a

oculptur•-• --.

dultW "' '-'boo ~ wt.:h

28-toat .....

two-par.-ph &lt;Me stuclia which bealiltle ~ to typbl. elhlcal
problems nonnaly seen 1n prx~~ce .
"Too often. medical IIU&lt;knts . . u ·
posed In class to problems which an too
simplisllc-such as 'ahould the ~I
live 01" ahould the pallent be alowed to
die,' without ~ the rarnlfbtlons
in terms of the patient s family or the dr·
cum-..:..," Caplan pointed out. Often ,
the "problem" identified Is not llilher the
real Issue or even . the most slgnillcant
aspect of the real .
A eliSe In point. Caplan said. Is u.
lustrated by a dermatology study at Col·
umbia In which I group of psoriasis
patients Wfte to recclw a new type of
treatment 10 help their ·skin condition. A
control group ol pson.sis sufferers _,,
to rec:atve a p&amp;ec.bo.
"The ethical question her.. oiMously
appears to be whether Mjs ethbllo put
the control group patienb at rlsli of continuing to have the dise- sloce they're
taking sugar pills," Caplan explained. In
realky. though , the q.-lon lo not: that
clnr-cut . The underlying.....,.. for the
study was to demonstrate a need and
grounds for funding for a clinic at Colum·

.-..ct.

.

..
'

question becomes 'Is It
ethical for the patients
the placebo to
continue to suffer from poortasis so Col·
umbia CliO get a clinic,' • he submllted .
Wllh&lt;;ut •n:&gt;lj/tlcal skills. the problem
becomes oversimplified. And without
adequate kh9wledge of all the facts.
future physicians Cllnnot learn to deal el·
fecllvely with ethical problems ID
medicine\ Caplan added.
StudentS o( med~ ethics ne.d to look
at Issues beyond w1io gets the donated
kidney. who shaD have the plug puled.
or who, shaD be allowed tel die. They
should also have an undenlanding of
how so&amp;ty has arrived at the potnt
whero spch questions are pertinenl. and
whether 1n pll caMS technological ad·
vances ohould be used .
"Thee Is an' art to solving medical/ •
ethical Issues which Cllnnol be learned
through the often mechanical approach
ol theory teaching and applying theory to
lim~ questions." Caplan emphaoa.d.
In the required course he teaches tD
sophomore- Columbia medical student5.
six tapes 01 complete case studies uq
actual patients. their familia and t&gt;hysl·
clans are eltplon!d tn great detail wtth em·
phasl5 01) . . many variables ... poat,le .
"By acquainting students with the
overall picture in these sill · case
studios-which Involve a child bor'n ·wfth
a severe birth defect. 1 ter'mtnal patient
and so on -and teaching them to apply
analytical skills and. lastly, theorlits of
ethics or philosophy. I believe they're
p&lt;Obably better tqulpped to deal wtth real
problems lalitr on." Caplan said .
The oemlnar was sponsored bv the
School of Medicine and the Sc:hoors
Committee on Human Values and
Medical Ethics.

on

Solkoff asks
end to letters
A r"''uest to my colleagues Professors
All&lt;-n. Glover and Greiner .
Pleaoe put a hab to the leners' The'\/
ha"" bec&lt;&gt;me oblutcotlng. oeW serving
and narcissistic W Cllnnot af1011 a fur ·
ther decline of cotlegitoltty at our lmlolu·
rton or any HOSOOO of confidence our
student may il havo In u WM!her a
union membef 01" not - an endorse the
prtnciple of ..cc nc., In&lt; ou,....lws and
the Unlwrsky let's bogln to do oorne
real Kildernlc plann

_ , . . _ . . . . .. PhD
o..tr Eloct
Facuhy Sanelit

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April3, 1980

I'

., ...... ..._
'1agrH

lide of ft . Raillanoe to the '-anities Is
...._. Ill expediency. ~ ID NorCllment. a lawyer, ........ giving
woulllllop unless colleges .ntl u -ollles began to alter their lllllllons and
cun:icula to conform to the
of the country. Thus far, hndal gifts
had only slowed down.

Uiilh J10&lt;1 al&gt;ouf the Humonltla

onl!r lllorougltfv but mllllonlfy.
To rnv ,...,.d tlwv ..,. whal educolion li
Jot. !he oocollonal being onlv o

-

nol

_..,,.., drob ond

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lncldenl.

The .,......,.. of hoUJ 1o w/1 tJw Ideo it.
" - - · quite a d~nf and dflllcuH

In the cooe of mv 0111n children I
lold tJwm thot tJw onlp
lhlngl In 11/e thot I cared for ~ t~
...-.. dringr. TMv knOUI my way of
pulttng lhlngl ond do not mitunderslond.
I think the uruol rtudent doer. -

OM.

h-

The tone was set by Maulsby ~lmball . a .
lawyer ..-1 a Bulialonian. wrillng In
dftenw cf ltle humanities In 1944 Were
Klmbaft ...,.,.j today. he- would in aU
·
l'!ot one whH 1111rprised that
his tho
bade then 51iU have valtH!.
The humanities- languages. ~teraturl'S.
phllooophy and the am-needed de fending In 1944 and they stiR need de fending today. The ~m of making
people aware of the value of what cannot
be ieen or counted Is ago!-old and promises not to go away .
Here was a lawyer who had long since
made his peace with the value of a n
education . but there was a specific reason
why he was ar!lcu~ftng his thoughts on
'the sub,ect in 1944. His adllice and
opinions had bun IIOiicited by the dean
of the College of Arts &amp; 5ctences of the
Unlvomlty of Buffalo. Julian Park . Park
had wrilten to many memben of the Buffalo buskMu and professional community ·
to quallon them on aopeds of education
whleh , 11 happened. the 5«ond Worid
War had p8111qdatly S~M~ed to undermine.
Jusl as values can gel lost around a
u~~! · 10 can a file of cOr-,
reopclftdenc:e. The letlm thattheK men
wrote In reply to PMII have only lately
ourfaced In • dusty corner of the camput.

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~===.=:..ln.!:

' WhM is mool worthwhlllt is de' lenttie. and the cauoe of the huiNinllles
had superb defenders In 1944 In this dly.
On Kimbel's side of the ca.ute....,.. more
lewyon. engineet'l. ud\tlects. banbn.
chemists . phormaclsts . clergymen .

• N\ailon. Journa..... Tiley .. believed

thM the best education was one precisely
In the human
• Nlrthennon. moot of
them contended that this traditional.
deMical. ,....I education was the only
trw one
To

these

non -educators .

Park

c:lwlracWrload the plight of academic pur-

"'

But, expediency it • IUbjecllve notion
that was seen dllfaeoll!l by dfferent men

"'""II'

pate at thM time as e-ntioiJy a decline
ol Intern! In the. humanllla. Fewer
llllldento _,.. coming to college wtth an
eye to getting a broad education : more
~ coming to study 110eational subjods
that would outflt them for trades. How to
d«al With cha,;g.ng valun among college -

bound otuden • how !o direct and advise
JIOU"II people In dectooon-malung that
would aflect them for al of their lives.
W«te the quallons Park raised .
Park. an old hand In acad~mic Ill . a
long-time teacher and admlnlotrator. feh
that the Unlvenity oouldn' ha., al the
an
And oo he went looking '"'
_diltanced Wlldom m&lt;&gt;Ag some of the
bell mtnds In rhe communHy He put
quntion tot
men . "Oo ~oou agree
with u
about the value of the
huma
,..

no., .... doelr OWil tleftnlticlow

E.,.,.,.,.. who responded ~ a majonly did) had his own way of ddlntng
aduuuon. of reporting 011 how his
eduutlon had ..-I him. ol speculating
on how education- men !J«nerally,
ol enl.rglng llpQR
thougl\b lo say
how the-edUCIIbon ol
The *orie.al selling ol the "'"'
prowd 1o
a proyoca
to forrmng
and
lcHas on edUCIIbon .
that ~nd . educallonal
IIOOCI out _ , mora sharply than

et the time. lha ~I ~ •
Newell NUIIbeumer. charaderimd the
expediency ol the war era In another
way. He was speaking not wHh college
endowments but with youthful
employees In mind , In sa_ylng:

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-B ut letters &amp;om leaders of
the city ro~e to their defense:
'Tbey1l1!ndure, Of we won't'
, ... r.l

....
they might have In puatlme.
Whal .-.!be valua ~

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educallonnpouoea?l&lt;il'i'&amp;lf. th~--~ - - - - - - _. . . . . . .
who counted the . . . .
U..;WMIN ...... -

rf rn

things." found gooc1 C0111PMll "WWiMi
Rogers, a""""-· Rogers clcflncd.aducalion .. tlae ablllly Jo think and said thcl
the ability to enJoll life was a learned $kill:

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Colleges and unlwr5bles were places
to acqulr thinking and fife skills. not for
learning 110eational skills. These men
valued being members of fasnilles,
members of society, and I It that they
could Interpret their own lives better
against the background ol h ory. Percival Bowen . an appraiser whose
bu.m- K was to evaluate propcrtln,
coukln't have put a dollar llgn to the type"
ol edocabon he valued·

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.,

--·-oltlooloct-•tno&lt;·'
f'l.......roftt Orv.
U.S.Poataee

PAID
lluffalo.. N .Y.
Permit No. 311

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.,.tolk:

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Rogers and ao-n , both in financial
professions, thought to use the strong
word "'raggc" in cl.-acterlzlng a narrow
education .
Solllcfotolldltl............
SuCh men had an easy Hme !lelinlng
what education was and what H had
gained them . Others said education was
Indefinable . Charles Diefendorf. a
banker, wrote of his great dlffltuhy In explaining to his own children the value of
an education . He doubted he had as
much appreciotion for his education
when he was their age. One-needs to go
through life and discover for himseH the
meaning of the education he could have
had when he young , Diefendorf
believed . Nelson Taylor, a lumber dealer,
said edocation was best come by when
the home was saturated wHh K. There
was a chance that JIO&lt;Ing people could be
persuaded ol the good of edocation -by
parenr. who appreciated II. You scU the
idea, Taylor would have 10id to Maulsby
Kimball , by example.
On the other side of It , men came for·
ward to 10y they cHeply regrened their
lack of a bberal education . NeweU
Nuubaumcr, an engineer, and G .C .
Carey. a pharm_, . wrote that they had
l&lt;!k the loll throughout their lives. They
were successful in work , but looking
bade. they would have done K another
way The heart of their regret was failure
to c:ommunlca and apruo themwlva
as they would have kked None were
more honest or, perhaps, harder on
thamselvd than they

Praclkal .u-t
In al of the corrapondence ther a lone ~lor. an eminently praclicaf
man . Pradlcallty is, of COUJ'N . ona more

-

In our own time, college graduates run
to high -paying jobs, and the god called
security has been displaced. pefhapS
rnocnentarUy. by other Idols. Financial expediency changes its hue or Its skin from
era 1o era, as Nuubaumer's Jetkor shows.
What Is more to the point in a defense
of the humanities Is the growth of leisure
time that this engU.- pointed out. What
concerned him and all the others who
wro1e was the totality of their lives which
included leisure time. Not onlv _..
thenr lengthening hours 8111"1/ frono.worlt,
there was fife after re11remenl. Elq&gt;adtly • •
or Implicitly, each ol them wanled to ac-·· '
quire the tools to spend leisure lime wile· ·
ly and well.
.
•
'Another·~ by becitg!ound 8!'d.o.
~·.bybcle.~
·"",_f.JIIIt!.t·
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• 1"11~
~;hli-li!l!i!

tit !liMn R.dn

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lttlpolnllrig&gt; """'""' wily !hea Mm&gt;W education but also
oil!.

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have aot ••fflde•t kao•ledee of
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1overtt•••t to ••v•

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Footer's narrative was taken up · by
another. as though these men were
- e d around
In a symposium on
the wlnerabillt!l ol the humanities. ;
George BarreD, • lawyer. aho took the
historical reality ll!f Hitler Into account In
speaking his 111lnll on education.

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- - · ... how DO - l o r the
'"'Nt.ntk: Moe~'"' • eva the ""S.JJ4wwy
Dtaoo&lt;-" 0.. . . _ which I ohould

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Frank Janeway, a clerwman. joined
tha roundtable dltculllon - With an open
mind , he bfgan his letter by 10ytng
~unle the economic factor Is very urgent
I believe that ewry rtud«nt wllf be weU
repaid Whe will lay a foundation f9T his
cuhura In the humanttln " And , ending

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'Die ....,pow of tllis report is twofold: (I) to provide infCIOIIIUea oeodcd to update lasl year's COIIl·
~ Aody of lldmitlioos lmldi at SUIIIYAB;
(2) to ~ on thr i.lllplanmt~ioa of rccommnda-

from the oollon that hu,aduatecl t - yean earlie1",
a similar a&gt;mment applies to tranofers • .AU .schools
are faced with tile problem, and somcthina
•IISI ai»e. Thr comprririon for Aucknts will
~ &lt;'OIIlaincd hi lasl YQI''s report and adopled last
tbcrrfore ~ 111udl more lntrnsr, maklna it increuinaly diftll!\lh to rvm maintmn our share of ap..
year 11)1 mr Smale. Based on lll&lt;a .ulysn - will
preent -her oa or rttOnllllelldations.
plications, lrl ilonr incrttsr.il.
'
Thr srcoqd implication of 1M numbft"s iq Tabk 3
is that i1,will ~ncrrasin&amp;Jy &lt;liffiCUII to maintain a
SG-50 balance bctw- 8th JD and non -8th .10
studrnts. This is breaux the ciJdjnr in 8th JD hiah
school ~uatrs will br much. morr-srvrre than for
the rat of the statr. Whilr the SG-50 bala~ could
ronaivably ~maintained by Sdtina lowrr standards
18 out:
&amp; ,_.,.
for 8th JD applicants, it is not rvm drar that thi
Tabk 1 .,.._., tralds in DUE applications and
would hdp: rvrn with oprn admi sions, it is not dear
admluion of lk&gt;lh Freshman and transfrr Sludents.
thatthrre wiD br rnouah hiah school araduatn in the
Vny frw of the numbft"s in df tablt arr rn.ourqar.. ~o su~ain the SG-50 mix unlrs wr a~ ablt to
ina. Prrhapo lilt 1'11051 earouraaina i that the cut in
dra&lt;eteally cn&lt;rraK our sbart of thrx applteants.
the III!!Pibcr of
EOP m&amp;&lt;Wina Frnhilel&gt; 'f~ · ·'
'f ~ tt-~•" i• to sustain thr qu&amp;Jity of
12 •26'1T'a
al&gt;it mor&lt; Mivr: 79 , uodell.._
~~~thout cullinJ back on mrollrnmu,
~«111 of app!icants wrre ~d!ftitled t~i ye8rvi."Q• . ', d_'..q(iiif io~r. ~ iblr to a~ndon thr ~50 obje-cl!&lt;'fCtnt last tear~ 'nri 611' 1; mull of a lkltbrral&lt;
IJV&lt; anclto'concmtratr r&lt;cruouna rfforts on arras of
policy dedsion.
the Slatr which Wf! do not currmtly rovrr vrry wrll.
Aslck from the incn:ate in Freshman sdectivity,
But tbil wiU not work nthrr unlns currrnt limit•
aii'IIOSI aU of th&lt; trends an nqa~ivr. Total applications on dormitory spacr can br ovorromr. Thr 111&gt;tion of naular Audrnt wrrt doWn at both
shoi of &amp;II &lt;!f tiM is that it will broom&lt; impo5siblt to
Frnhman and uansfrr lrvrls, and transftr
sustmn unclrraraduatr mrollmrnts at thftr currmt
rarollmtrtts dropped off by 101 lludrnts. Th&lt; 001ly
kv&lt;l without nthrr: (I) a major de-clint in the
apPicadon catqory to incr&lt;&amp;K was Freshmrn from
availability or romprtina school du• to the drmisr
outside the 8th Judidal Disuict . All cat orin ar&lt;
or in&lt;Citution which arr in worK condition than wr
orr ronsidrrably from the 1977 lrvd .
art; {2) • major incrrasr in the attracli•mrss or thr
Ia coatTUtto naulitr applications. EOP Frnhman
prCip"UII and acadrmic climatr at SUNY Buffalo.
applications wrre up ronsidtrably. As a rrsuh, it wa
b. fl-1/ty
'bk to br much morr sd«tivr rrorn ·thi aroup.
A vny &lt;ktail&lt;d report rnritlrd 1979 Fr..hman
Th' incraa.io applations is probably anributablr
Class Profilr hu brm rompilrd by the 5taff or A a
to boch iacrrutd recruitina&lt;ffortsand to a ~in
R. Thr information prrsrnt&lt;d hrre ronstitutn a wry
UIIIYAB's ddinition or Ul EOP SIVdmt. To qualify
n.rsory ummary or the information In the A It R
as "eduratiollllly di&gt;advant&amp;J&lt;d" ..nc~rr EOP,
rrpon.
Tablr 4 prnmts a comparison of Frnhman clus
Rtldrnt baa ofon had to br unacreptablr ac:cordina
to our admission standard Sii"'CC this critrrion
profilrs from 1977-79. Thr year 1977 providrs a JOOd
mak liulr liHS&lt; if 10 prrC't'rlt of thoK who apply are
brnchmark ~usr this is th&lt; last year in which the
univrrslty was ablt to achi&lt;vr a sd«tivity ap..
llftna admitt&lt;d, the drfinition or "&lt;ducationaRy
disad•antaaed" wu cbaiiJed by the Adminislration.
proachin that for rarlier years in th&lt; 1970's.
to scor bdow thr -40th prremtilr Oft thr AT.
Thou
the drclinr is nlll vrry larar the data in
Tabkl shows !hat the ....,... ii!O'ftS&lt; ia Frnhman
Tabk 4 UJJ&lt;SII a rontinuin de-eli no In the avr&lt;&amp;Jr
applical
from 1971 to 1979 w for mJin«ri ,
quality or applicant . Thus whilr wr wrre ablr to
wlllk the
drclinr wa In hraltb scimas. Thr
achievr about the samt toc&amp;J trumbn' of applicants in
rec:mt do:dinc ill Art and 'Lt~trrs and Sodal Scirnrn
the pest year as in 1971, thrrt mr morr low quality
Frnhman applic:al
apprars ~o ha t bottorn&lt;d
applicants a mrasured by h.s. avrr&amp;Jr, rank and
out, u ~~ sian- P 'bly the tttt~~t
SAT. Thi b obviously noc a vrry romfortlna tro:nd.
drvdopmmt of rccnaitlna brochurn b)lthrx artaS
Whilr the quality of the applicant pool dropped
had 101M po5itivr rfftet.
liahtly, tbr quality of the 1979 Frrshman clas&amp; imThr dedi..r in transfor application to h&lt;afth
proved vo 1971 on 1'11051 of our mrasurn. Thi i duo
taenCU and ru
momt may bavr ruahed pertl
to Jrtalr&lt; sd«tiYity (10 prrc-t11t admirted in 1979 vs
from ' admi •
andar ia tbrx hi&amp;IMkmand
U prremt in 1971). Convendy, brcausr of Irs sd«artas. Un
thr capedty to haadlr udent in thrx
tiYity, the 1979 class don not far&lt; as wdl on the
.,_can br itlcnas&lt;d, it ma br vny diffiCUlt to bah
avrrqt, ran and SAT masurn as the 1977
.
tile do:d
in transfor mrollmrnt .
Whilr the quality or 8th JD applicants is infmor
Tabk J pree~~ mroDIMnl projections to 198S/
cornpotrtd to thoK from och« part of the mtr, thr
for the Buffalo SM , the W&lt;Arrn naion a~ all of
quality of th J D mrolltes is not, &lt;xcrpt on the SAT
math scort. Tho avrrqo non-&amp;th JD rarollrt isquitr
New Y
• · Accordina to thnr projection , the
mroUmau do:d
will - ld a Wltil tltil JuM. YC'I
inf&lt;rior to the avrrqt non-8th admit, indicatina that
our ....,....,
have brm off conslcknbl r thr
tbr bettor or the admitiC'II Auckn from outsick the
peA two yeen.
'nno on J1100, thr potmtial for
8th JD trnd to 10 dsrwhtrt. Thry li dy usr
"'
. ions w.U be&lt;omt much wont rr
UIIIYAB a~- On the ochrr halld, thrrr iJ not
the IWX11nC'11
and well bryond). Thr probkm
much or a drop in quality lxtwrm ar.h JD admit and
• to br ,...,h IIIOr'&lt; llf:Vrre for the lmrncdiatr
mrol
.
mutrr ..,..,. than for thr rat of thr ate: In
TaWt 5 ........ , .... tv&lt;a ,......., - O f t .........
/16thr
rrato M
...uha ronl ~ thrprraWt .. 11t lllc"Y oolldl•t. 111e A T - e1 tilt
or · school araduat .
...., ...,. 1otn arc.,.. ....,.. 111e a......,.
portrnd t
t i
. ust, wuhout
• ..-"'-Yet\ s..k. A 'milar anaiJJj m
OI1ICI .,., JooJs OIICJ'
"' cbr
or
1as1
,., ~ lndlcattd that thr hiJh ldlool
..,...........aotaat
VA , - ..U DQt br
•wtatn of our rntrrlnt FreshrntD wrn abo wdl
I
C'llf'fml IIU
er F
a'bo&lt;it thr ...o-1 avrrqt. Th
•••• stil at·
,..,. f
,.... if""' ..w 011 o,wrt
tract
lfY uckna, and, rvm thouJh - are
u
t pr
corM
DOl a It to br ""'Y aloctlvr, w rr tldrnts ap-

Status of CuiTent
Ad•~IEarollments •t
SUNYAB

*"

,

.,

t

'•'

parcJI&amp;Iy are not bothC'Iilla ~apply hrrt.
.
Tablt 6 prnmu.a docile:'-bralrdowft of ipplicants
and mrollec$ by hilb school avrraae- A brtakdowft
by drcikOft our admiuions .._nkinJ criteria (drop 1~
Wtaknt sror&lt;, add the rtr~~~inina two rank~ would
bavr brm much mort drsicahlc: becausr it would
havr allowed a look at &amp;he specifJc aroup which wu
dmitd admission. Unfortunatdy this was noc
availablr.
•
Tho breakdown in Tablr 6 SIJI&amp;r&gt;ls that, by.and
lafJr, - wrrr ablt to tliminatr studelts with 8- at C
hish school avrrasn and vrry lo"! $AT· scorn in
1979. This is the arour&gt; which will bqin to 5how up if
wr fail 10 maintain our CUrTml Jtv~l Of Klrctivity.
The tablt also suunu that low hi1h schoolavrr&amp;Jr
tftrollr&lt;o tmdrd to havr relativdy hi&amp;h SAT ororn;
an ~nosing ian. Apparrinly wr war abl&lt; to
ditninatr tbOK who had bdow av&lt;raJ&lt; prrformancr
on all three of our CJ'hnia.
to MIFC_G...._.P....,_
Given that the 20-JO yrar oklaar cohort is currmtly vrry lara&lt;, """ would think that tbcrr would br
Jrt&amp;l markC'I opportunllin for adnlt and aradwtr
tducaJion. lllrKJuovr not matmalizcd bert {or, for
.1M most part, dsewherr).
Whilr MFC mroHmmt have rontinurd to de-clinr,
thrr&lt; is sornr rvidrncr that the do:dinr may havr bottom&lt;d out : the Fall 1979 MFC rnrollmmt wu '263
vs . .)464 in Fall 1971, 4164 in Fall 1977, and 4660 in
Fall 1976. Con idtrablt rudy and practical &lt;ffon
ha brm aivm to rojuvrnating MFC. and thrr&lt; is no
need ror txtcmivr commmt hrrr. HOWC'Y~. tX·
amination of MFC's lise of courK offmnas suqrsc
onr obvious po5siblt source or its J'fobtrrn&gt;: with
somr nocablt uc'tption , then i a distinct lack of
upper-division J&gt;FOiram and COUrK offrrin&amp;•·
O.Spitr thr Jarar siu or th&lt; potmtial manti,
araduatr mrollmmt and applications at SUIIIY A8
havr .de-clined (sre Tabk 7). Whilr this is undrrstandabk at thr doctoral ltvrl, aivm the paucity of
opminas for collta• profrssors, the do:dinr in
mutrr1' admissions II much more puzzlinJ. Areas
howin1 the lararst de-clinr in araduatr applications
ovor the put two yrars arr Arts and t:dters, H.,.lth
Sc:iencr and Social Sc:iencr. To relie-vr the pressure Oft
undtraraduatr mrollmrnts, tM&lt;r is • critical -.Ito
tap thr re-crnt ~uatr marktt by drvrloplnt auractivr and carrrully-daiantd proarams aimed at snvina ptOpir with dqrtn who are rrnployed fuU timr.
Thnr miaht br ccrtlf!Cat&lt;, ma t&lt;rs, or d oral pro-

A........_

, Aurtllott
Thr problem or fallina mrollments is'lJiravat&lt;d
snlously 11)1 the univ~y·s allrition ratr. AccordiiiC
to thr report, UIFiom-nty Attritiotr 11)1 PC'I&lt;r WittC'IIIan
of thr OAR, our ovrrall aurition ratr is currrntly
close to ., ... Whilr thi ratr bas brm stable for thr
paS! srvrral yrars and soan• to r-nmt a nationwid&lt; historical norm for inAitutions of SUIIIYBuffalo'w typo (lktte Pllblk u,;om-ntin), it can no
lonarr br acccpled unclrr currmt clrcumstancu. It is
nprcially alarrnlna. for rumplr, tbat thr aurition
rate ror students from the 8th JD. who COIIIIituk
h&amp;Jf or rvny c
, is thrrr limn hlahrr than for
lludrn fronl outslck our area.
or particular conttm to the faculty should he thr
fac:t that &amp;niOI1J the tm reasons most frrqurntl
Jivat by r - lludrnll for noc retumin,. fi•r
directly rrllect prrttption about faculty qualoty and
attitudn: Transl'&lt;:r to 1 col~ with a bettor ckpert ·
mmt; Dissatisl'ord with teach'
at U/8; Lac.k or
faculty adviltmmt; u...bk to uiOdtmand facult y
mrmbrrs; Unabk to undtrlland •-h
tanu.
._.. Ulyone bdi&lt;vr tbat only thr ~or udmu
hold
prrerpl.
and drop OVI, II should br _ ,
phuutd that twi&gt;-thirtk or the lludmts in t attri-

�tAIL£ l

...

,

APPLICATUlliS

-

lt79•
1971
1971

:1416
3614

AIIUTS

~

-·

l . , lot.UD

ZAIJ

APPLICAnCliiS

U mrE AIIIISSU.S

.,._•
AtllllTS

-

lAPP

- - , _ IICI SCtiOOL

1626
Hl9
1219

"I
""' " I ....

.,
77

uu

6)

U5S

ss

.

ms
10t2S

1196

71.56

~·

10
90
66

, ...

IOU.ED

1). .

1Sl9
1177

.,.

APPLICA-

nCliiS

Al»UTS

011 ..rJCII)

l9

12:171

lt
16

1R11
14539

2S
14
27

41t5
4StS
Sl86

I An IOIJ

..
79

26 ]
Jill

944S

OS

:Ml

JUG

77
12
11

111

21

...

-2

lotH

- . a nuoorrs &lt;. . ror ca -.:reM)

197t..
1171
U77

f

I

1126

U65
1416
1)94

;,:~:: i

494
50S

1919*1
1971•

90
137

U66
1290

5)1
367
649

11
IS
11

191
124

40
44

l2

)6

)8

21

S....-ry
It is obvious thot the admissions-relaJed problems
r~ by the university ao wdl beyond those or determillin&amp; a smsible ~~ or admi sions standards. Th&lt;
c:enlral problem is. really one or determininJ an appropnate stral&lt;&amp;Y ror respondina in the race or a
~vere dcdine in traditional markets. In the face or
this problem it makes lillie =~ to tinker with admi tons standards, especially since wt are headed
toward op&lt;n enrollm&lt;nts anyway. We will, howtver,
make some adm' ions-related suaaestions at the end
or this r&lt;pon.

Nn.lt:C'Ttll •rr:~~

ialoo&amp;.

)192

,.

....
.

2126

HU
21:16

n
11'

n

Implementation of
&gt; Last Year's
Recommendations

236
116

21
2)

EOP D.AHSFf::a

ll
3S

149
111

21
lt

lA
lA

.

I

tchool

US '
4011

240
:Ill

.

'

"'

32

.

27

13

.,,,
..,··:=R.

.

10/11

, ,.

A'""'IC:A ,-S

2)

~

"

"
"
~

I.A-.
a-....
ktlll•l••· .........

Al l....,. , t.aotc••--·
'~~t-..ur•, .._ ... , •• l'lrle-,

a..~.

IJ .U

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

7'·n

...

,.,,,
,._,,

••

QJ'-OS U..

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

..

'

17.17
SJ .Jl

H. tJ

\Jo . L.~ 1\IU

..... ..... .,_.
... It

...,.

•• \1

rrte, ~-. Ll•l-"•· .... ,_ ,
tt...,..., ~,... v,-f•, f•t•• c-,t •.

a. lwf-.tlea-rdalttl.

'"'II

11M

cntPMtww ~ nu~

107011 ,

I. tud or relationship bet .. en&gt; admissions
Mltnia and a rana.e of ptt(orman« masurn. in·
cludona academic arodes, continuing enrollment in
the unlversit , and admi sion to ont's desired pro•••m or study.
.
2. tud th&lt; nature and efrectivenes or current
recrunin stralqin.
) . tudy or factors related to attrition/ retention .
4. Compote better data on aradua.te admi ions.
Whi~ man bodicos • ·err raisin
imilar issues al
the same 111M, one response to our recommendations
arrnrs to ha•e been lh&lt; .. ianmtnl or the
President' Committee on Operational Processes
Uen Committe&lt;) 10 the recruit men( problem. To the
...., dttrom&lt;tll or hi tarter ... an academic T&lt;·
searcher, the Chairman of this Admi ion Committ«' ..,. . .draOed" to llt"n~ on tht Jcn Commiu~ a
"'dl . Therefore he 1 quote familiar •;lh its proarn .
siQ!l the Jen Comminee I stoll worki
on a
~ItS or recommendaotoon which will respond to the
rt&lt;: mmendation 1i ed above. h work will bt comf'leted tho pnna.
Gi&gt;en thi bac:karound information. we
no
&lt;'Ommtnl on the impltmmtatlon of lht recommenda.toon b&lt;ted abo•"t.
I . G-Ift' COMIIIIJ-1 of /IMitdlll~~~td 1 1 rn...,rus. There
been a ~ ""'"" tmprovement
'" 1
resourcu dt-\oted to recnntina~ at least the
budget ror tra d, pu
tion• and rdated item wa
ln..reased from SIO,
S20,
, and Stveral new
bro.:hurn ....,.. ~doped . HOW«"er the pr~nt
~UIJUJif Uftit till On! h
fovt prof.. ional starr
mbetl (t dudo.,. the dor&lt;Clor), and oro&lt; or these
ri• ,... • pod d
her&lt; •n A
R in Fall 1979.
Th
arr llletll
mu.R conduct hish boot and
1 11oor
• 1
the 1 te, attend col~
fllln, 1M&lt;naJid their famdlft, anmd

164S
1291

CUIICATU Ul MOt l1Mtt IUrt

.....

La t year wr m~the foUowin recommmdations
which wtre adopted by the Senate and transmintd to
President Ketter.
A·. ltomolfiJil..ftialttl.
I. There hould bt I &amp;rooter commitment of financial and human rnourcn 10 the rtcruitina effort .
2. St&lt;ps U.ould bt taken to assure that there Is
max.1mum coordination btl w«:n various indiYidual.s
and om~ involved in th&lt;·r«ruitins proces .
3. ' Panicular tncouraaement should bt siven to
faculties and d~artmenu to participat&lt; ae1ivdy in
r«ruitmt-nr.
4 . Greater follow throuah hould bt made to per;
wade admi11ed student to an&lt;nd the univer ity.

J771
4U6

fX&gt;P FI.ESHIIEII

U49

NA

SJ4
600
7S4

r•nns-1 ..~/M

Jt/to

n CORlactSI411h

not

. - Souree: Office of Ad.•ieeiOil• aDd a.cord•. "sui~ Report-DIId.erarMuau Act.1.. .1oa.•-F•ll 1978."
Other data are fro. "&amp;aport or the Seaate ec-ittH 011. Adabd0011." ti8T~ 11. 1979.
• lefera to at:.udeota vb.o peid depoa1t.•. 'lb:U 1a a ....,.,. very ciON to aetual eerol-.at• .

lion aroups urveyed had GPA 's or 2.0 to 4.0 .

,...... d1

·1uo

45
50

ta.n

"·"
.....

TABLE 6
DECILE BREAKDOWN OF 1979 APPLICANTS AND ENROLLED
SniDEKTS BY HIGH SCHOOL AVERAGE '

APPLICANTS
MEANS FOR DECILE

HIGH SCHOOL
·AV. DECILE

ENROLLED
!lEANS FOR DECILE

HS AV

RANK

SAT V

SAT ll

HS AV

RANK

SAT V

SAT M

1

95.49

95.91

556.19

623.07

95.31

95.38

538.40

612..32

2

92.71

92.77

525.22

599.50

92.74

92.29

501.29

578.32

3

90 . 98

89.52

509.35

580.18

91.22

'90.83

492.26

,565.41

4

89.49

85.40

493.80

565.67

89.91

86.21

495.82

57l. 92

5

88.10

82.45

478.70

551.29

88.76

83.39

467.91

550.25

6

86.71

77.99

474.20

541.04

87.64

80.87

463.27

543.93

..

7

85.16

73.09

461.57

526.40

8

83.48

66.90

455.08

522.03

9

81.14

58.11

' 434.60

10

76.27

42.47

415.91

I
I
I

86.61

77.84

462.90

539 .34

85.37

75.l3

459.32

540.54

502 .81'

84.03

12. n

474.67

540.79

474.81

80.55

61.93

490.55

565.47

·

"

�uau:'
"""-ICUT tu!VI It all&amp;lall.IM !/
UPLU:AnC.S. MX:IP'I'I AID DO'OIITS

,..,

.,......,
Ill-.

'
I

26U
)011

J

MS2.

run

......,_

-

31

k'--·'
IOo-co

. . t.r&amp;l

)4

s.ctal

I
I

ld.-cet~

..

.wat.lsu·at~

.....
.

I

4

Sct.-eu

MOl

I

..,

Ar1.a • . .'1-ta.n

•at--rta.a
,.,.a
..

-

-

....
.....

Mdll.t:kltllft l
~.

,,....

1!
y
1f

uu
16)0

lt24

uu

).671

lUO

11. .

uu

... ""...

WI

1.104

1731

- ...

'"

U7

"'

162

110

414

U4U

9114 10f2S

16ll

"'"

""

"

.. . ... ... '
U7

"'

1126

lll

114

111

m

102

101 ·

lU

Ill

I

,
" ' ,.,

· -4

'

"' "'
1161

1071

1110

mi' S t ...... t&amp;

br:LIM• ) )6 Fru-.. "hU o.,..u•" lllho Yl thllllrEu.l....
Tr•• hr " P.t4 Da~tu " who \oltthd~

ffi

......_ 1.!!
t.elMe•

rra..._. '"Pill Dafooolite• 1llho to~lth4r.!!_ tT-..tar '"P.U De.,o.tu"' •
wtttwt.r ev

f\'W'M.\tm

!MJ.S '"''

"'·

q;o,.u n ..n , f'\Jl'vnlrn"

~ m~

Tfl~u.n-.--a.-tt•'IW.-...IT11"111'.&amp;l..,.lllf1111n

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

..,. . ,

_..r_..., .

"" ""
~
" ""'··'
'"·" "..tf
,,.._., '-_.,
-.
"'·" ...... * ·"
...._

···"

...

... .....

6200

lMU \

...

..

"'

.

I I

llJ74

~1.-.

...

Ul

10 .. ,
.... "
,
.
....
,.., "" ''
'.
""

~u.••

. .....

, __,
,__
............

l1),l)

UJ ...

n t .n

IOA11.....,

nt.i1

.... n

HZ;.41

,,.,n

.!1!!

......

-....-·.....

MoL..

\11.U

ns. u

II fl ••

1!1J

, ,

71

1

)Ho."

\U,IJ

).

!.!!...L.f·

u • .•,

...

~7 - M

\I), Jt
\N.l'

·~

.."'.

••Ul.,_.
,..11

~

~

:;}

U\ , H

"'

......

....
,., ...

• • .__, . . . . . . -

~-J_••

u•.1•

Ul ...

...1.1\

-·.., ...
-·. .-..... _n,_
....,

r:!!!!.!!.!!!

~I:.M

.1!1!

.. LM

n.a.rr

..."'

J!!!

:+

U I . JJ)

..

...... ...
....
"'
.,,
"'""'-'
....
"'

t

,.,~,

n~.,,,.,

!..!U

.•"-". . . ,........ ...... ,.,.., *··
..... .......,:, .... ,.,.. ......
......, .. .. . ... ...,,.v.... ...,,._.,... '"'·"
,,..n "''·-"
t\I U

,,.

.

m
" '" us
.,
"'
"' "' '"
,.
.., IllS ,
... 1041 ,,. '".,
,.
,., ,.,

, , ,.,.

116)

t:....._ .

u. n

.

'" "'

.U41

. _ ........ .,,_ ltJIIt

1.1

I

---·...

..

,.,

14

~~ral llll tw.n lr-J

~

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

IJ7t~

ze. ttn

1-..uc-att-. Ac:~rWI:s 1......~ [,..t ten s. .
'~ ..!'
!:...!! .!!.'! .!!!! !!!! !.!!! !!.'! I!!!! .!!.'! ~ !!!! .!!!!. .!!.'!

27

ll
26

,
,
, ""
I

AJEnD

~

~9\.UII

US,)4
Jt) • . ,

.... ..,....

'

WIIO.H

I

n~~o . tt

.

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

n•.u

U6.U

...,...

u~

,.,.,.

4&lt;1) . ,.

U\. lf

~- - · - . ,.. ._. . --~hoi , _

•ll- ._.._ - •*·

u...

~

TABLE 7
TI.ENDS IN GRADUATE APPLICATION
FIRST SEliESTER

S~TUS

FOR

.

---

!:....'!..
l.~2

NXEPT!ll

APPLICAfiOIIS

ENil04-ED

LEVEL

78/79

77/78

76/77

78/79

77/78

76/77

78/79

77/78

76/77

1.32

MASTW

3835

3920

SOlO

2006

2048

2219

873

1085

960

DOCTOIAtll

2U7

2298

2659

942

952

1010

272

351

360

TOTAL*

6319

6547

7802

3246

3293

3323

1401

1664

1390

~ -41

L.92
1.25
1.9)
1. 34
1. 54
1. 79
1.47

-.J

SOIII.CE :

Offlc• of AdaiaaiGDa aDd lec.orda, Allnual kporta 1978/79, 1977/78~ 1976/77.

* Kaecer•

plua Doc:tonte d..... not t:ota1 bec&amp;Wla noa-decrte atudeou are included
total .

111 tb

:

~rson n e l , and ~rform various ckrical tasks. ()b.
viously, this is a lot of work for fi ve ~plo ,.nd;
bc:causo the staff i• so limitod , cove.-. of hiah
schools and junior coiiOJ&lt;s outside 1~ 8th J D Is
soveroly li mitod, even in the New Yo rk-Lone Island
area.
Daia gatherod from a survey of stale schools o f
roughly comparablo si.e and orienlalion revealed far
larger rtcruiting staffs and budgds: u. Mass 11
Amherst has 10 professional&lt;, with a budget o f
$106,000; UCLA has 13 professionals (bud@d data
were unavailable); Michigan at Ann Arbor ha 17
professionals with a travel and ex~n se budgd o f
$33,400. These sehools are all in-a comparable posilion lo SUNYAB: they are lara• pu blic institutions
facod with ronsidcrablo p&gt;mpe\ition from ot her
quality state and rriva1e inStitutions. and locat~ in
major states .
In contrast. Wisconsin at Madison has o nly 3 proressiona1 t all of whom aro mgaaod in mi no rity
rtcTuilins. This university conduct1i no vi'"ilalions.
But thb institution is -ddtrly IM major uniYer'ilty in
Wisconsin , publi&lt; or privale, and i• in a somewhat
difrtrtnl posicion than we arr. Moreover, " ' isconJin
uses plannod on-eampu activilics for ,.,.renls and
prospttti~ studrnts as 1 substilutr for rccruirin1
visias: i1s aroaraphkal proximily to oc h~r major areas
of the state undoubtodly facilitates this .
Anoiher lara• stale university with a •mall r&gt;rofessional recruiting staff (4) and budget ($24,280) is Jl.
linois 11 Chica&amp;o Circle. Ho,.-ever. this sehool has no
dorms and is thC'ftfor~ a lotally commutrr campus .
Mortovn 1hi5 univrrsil)' ha problem' of failin&amp; 10
mt'tt enrollmm1 targ~l s v. hich are similar to ours. h
is therefore not a good model 10 follow .
Thus, available data r&gt;lace 1~ UNYA B rocrui1in1
staff and budget a1 the low end among comparable
&lt;ehools. A SUNYAB rC'C'ruiting s1aff and budl"!
thrff limes Ihe currem si1e would .. ,ill not ucecd that
observod elsewhere.
In sum, we must condude thai th&lt;re has been only
minimal resron~ 10 our recommenda1lon to increast
the amount of resour~ devoted 10 recruitinf. Whi&amp;t
we r«&lt;gniu thai rinanc.ial and polilical C9Rstraints
may have made further incr...O d ifrtcuh, we
wonder if tho&lt;e mponsibk for ~IIT&lt;C allocation
reco&amp;nizr the urJency of the problem . lnaated
fecruitina effort have become a condition for J41r·
vi val.
1. AUM~
c~
di&gt;-#duls Ofld ofjkn ifll~ ltl twnlltltlt . While
last year's result• are miucl, this is an area. •hidt the
Jon Commiu .. has concentralod ·on, and 1~ Is
,....., hope. for future implementation. ~ ha•
been considerable dialoaue between A A It and the
departmmlS in the pa t. year, which Slaned wdl
before our commiu .. report . Thi hclpod in t ~
development of a number of brochures about In·
dividual departments, mechanism for sharint applicant lists with department , and similar im·
provements. That i• !be favorablo side. n,., unfavorable side is that, if anylhlnc. ricruitlnc C!OO&lt;·
dination bdw.. n A .t R and other administratiw
units became wOrst' in the past year. Thoro I till no
central recruirina orrocc. or other orpnizational
m«:hani m for assurina that the proccs run
moothly.
J. ElicH,.,_/ /0 f«&lt;lilla /0 ,.n/dtMII. n,.,
above-mmtionod dialoauc is a &amp;ood sian. and
racullies lhmudVC$ 1Cm1 tO have taltftt the initiative
10 dnelop bdter rocruhina procedures In some cases.
l'herc is 10me evidence that brochures dewlopcd by
...-fflll racuhies in conjunction with A A Rare bctinnin&amp; 10 provide positioc rcoulu. Thus, Jarad becau.e
of faculty awarftiCIS Of t~ ~· ratuJtift have
become more atlive tn rocru tin • n,., Jtn Commit·

maxi"'""'

..,_ ,_

3

.
.....

-

�~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1
t« is 1a ~~~ proc:eu of ~~~~-a-m.,.,- foriiiar "ln-adilitlOii. 'wi WiO'-mal;e a- scnn·or rcccimmcndaWe noce1Jaafincreasa-i11 tlaeran,e.ohuldnni .aclmlt·
-"attisno for foot&lt;rina faculty involvm~ent. This is
IO&lt;dyiMt!Ciecl.
-. GlwW _,..,. ,.,_._ Apin the-re is evid~
Jhat dw--ilrililllivt or facuki&lt;'S, wor1ti111 in ronjm~ctiool with :.-. .t R, has kd 10 ~ proaress in this
area. Certainly i~~eludina brOchures abollt spttiroc
fllalbia in at1 information p8d:et sent to admitted
.staden ;. a st&lt;fl in 1M riaht direction. So minor prorr.U has boom 111ade. But a bold follow up campaiJII
invotvinr, ..,. alumni or facully contact . ha yet to
~

deYdo!&gt;ed.

A with tM reromm&lt;:nd.ti9m on rccndtin&amp;. tM
rf$110o~ to our rec:ommtndation on information
hav&lt; litewiw ~ potty. On&lt; pooitivt note is tht
creation of tht orrte(__of ln..itutional Rtstarch , and
'"" namina or. di~or. RtopoM&lt;S 10 OUT specific
r&lt;eommtndation• ar~ outlined btlow:
1. Sllifl~ t1w rritJtiOIISI!ip b n - fJJ/m#ssJJHrs '
pt'rf~ 111-rn. Larady at th&lt; initialive of A It R. thc-r&lt; has b«.n consii!erablt
respoow in this area . Tht 5tudy of aurition by Peter

mtn-

WltttmanofAltRdidaformalanaly~soft hcrda-

tion bt't...,. ;rades and attrition. Anothe-r study
corwlucted b Wineman ;, lootina 11 '"" corrdatiOII'
b&lt;twoo t"" thret admission crlttria: basically this
5tudy ~ws that th&lt;r&lt; i• a bi&amp;h oorrdation b&lt;twem
hiah school av&lt;raa&lt; and dass ran~ . but a much
lltr (Choup sipirtCOol) corrtlation.bftW«n each
oft~"ariabln"and SAT orores (r: ,20). Ther&lt;for&lt;
SAT iJ a Jar&amp;&lt;ly inckpmdent masurc. which i• not
·rerribly surprioin . What remains is to tudy lh&lt; relalion b&lt;twt&lt;R our three criteria and SUNY AB 1rad&lt;
AYmlJf. SOJ'Ddbin which ~ undrntand i~ on Wit ·
lcm~tn' qetl(la. Unfortunatd our computer syotern
is Mill - Kl up IO facilitat&lt; uch a study.
1. Sl_, tlw - - """ r//«fiWtWU of n~nnt
Tber&lt; Slill hasnol boom any formal study of vi itation strateltes: C-1·• wMh&lt;r Wt
ar• visitJnr 1M rJcht hoob. At '"" rC'([Utst or tht
JenCommhte&lt;, ownor,A.Rinitiatedastlfstudy
or'"" r&lt;eruit ...... t procns. which led to som&lt; usorur
·result .
J. SliMly of [«Jon rritJtH to ~trlt#OIIIM~/1011,
Tht aforemnotioned Witt&lt;rnan r&lt;pon provides an &lt;X·
t:'tht and thorou&amp;h responK to thi r&lt;eommtndo. lion.

,......,. .,,.,,pn_

ted·on our..erit&lt;ria mau this an ideal time for such a
study.
iaC.rnet ,.............. Jlccopizins tllat demcJiraphic 1mlds will soon
C1117t11tly 'Siudentf rejected for normal admission
make · it &lt;;mpossillle ,., maintai11 admissions ftom
as freshmen -are considered for indi¥1dlllllited admistraditionel populations at thrir-curren t lew! we
ion only •t thdr own ~uesl . Wlefo.m mend that
recommend:
'
.
thi br chan1ed so that studmts~ed for admis· I. A ~~~~~ r/1011 ,._....,., ~1111- ty
olen who bav&lt; ckdared on imerest n low demand
IWiwcMr llftrltltM. . • ·' •
. -areas ~ automatically conoidered for individualized
As pointed out in last yeor'sffllO"', a reduction in
admissions.
attrition bylouf.percent..., point• .would reduce adTht recommended mechanism for accomplishing
missions mpsirements by 500 students. Much of the
th is wQUid ~as follows. Annually. tM Director or A
effort to reduce -attrition 'C81l·&lt;Om&lt; froon ·•h• facuky
&amp; R would con tad the Dean or each ·raculty to deteritstlf in the form of pr.,.,.,,. that meet st udent
min&lt; tht faculty's int&lt;rtst in namining thest apdtmands, incrtased attention to qda.lilJ&gt; ttaehina inplicants: currently, for txampl&lt;. w&lt; could envision a
el uding th~ i n volvern~n t of -senior faculty at 1h&lt;
high interesl on th&lt; pan or Arts and Lttttrs, Social
Freshman atfd -5opb0111or&lt; ltvcls. and ~lly in·
Sci&lt;nces and Natural ScienC&lt;S and Mathtmatics, and
cr&lt;ased tfforts tome&lt;t stud&lt;nt nteds without diluting
no int&lt;rest on th&lt; part of Engin«rin1 and Mana&amp;&lt;·
academic quality. :O.tt&lt;ntion should w siv&lt;n to Jhc
ment. For thus&lt; faculties &lt;xpressing an intertst, tach
possibility of reducing th&lt; sizo of lar1&lt; enrollment
rojecred applicant's materials would aulomatically ~
classes by commuting mort faculty to th&lt; t&lt;achlnTof
rtferred to a r&lt;presmtativ&lt; of the departm&lt;nl in .
thest courses, div&lt;rting thtm, if nccmaty, frorrl
which h&lt; had dccltred an intcr&lt;st . The..,.,..._,. " . ~or araduat&lt;!'Purst's whet'&lt; trlrollinents
tativ&lt;, or a depanOJiental com~nkt« ~-be dopa«-.•• &gt;M&amp;&lt;~Ier. Also tht'FlocUhy Senate Eui:uti\'i, Comment could S&lt;l up iu own mechanism), would rccom·
-mii-.Jitould &lt;valuat&lt; and consider for impltmentamend accq,.anct or r~jtttion . The recomm&lt;ndation
tions some of '"" recommtndations for assuring
would ~ transmitted to the Individualized Admis·
quality t&lt;achina which hav&lt; come ~for&lt; the Stnate
sion• Committ«, which would then mak&lt; th&lt; flttal
in the past .......al years.
··
dcci ion .
Morcovcr, tht rccommtndations of th&lt; UnivtrsityIt 'ihould ~noted that this proeedur&lt; applies only
Wid&lt; Study Group on Attrition- Ret en ·
to thus&lt; who had txprtssed •n int&lt;r&lt;St in low·
tion must ~ ranked in order of importance: to corresdtmand area ; tudmts who had expressed no inpond with th&lt; reason why st udents do qot rtturn to
ter&lt;Sl in an area would not ~considered . Wt r&lt;gard
U/ 8 as determined by th&lt; Witttmao Ropon on attritions about admissions-rdated iuues.

~

this as lq.itimate: an inturst in a panicular ar.ca
would appear to ~ a ltgitimat&lt; criterion for giving
special consideration.
·
The proposed pruaram could not ~put into tffect
.until ne•t year's applications art considered. In «ddilion to th&lt; proposed proaram, th&lt; currcnt individualized admi ..ion program would ~ k&lt;PI in &lt;f·
rea . W&lt; would also recommeftd thattht cdling on
total individualized admi..ion• undtr both tht
current and uuested proarams ~ k&lt;pt at 10 p&lt;rctnt of th&lt; fruhman class. Giv&lt;n that th&lt;r&lt; art currently only about SO individualited admissions under
th&lt; uistin&amp; pr ·1m, this should ~ no probltm.
It ould ~ omphasized that tht proposed chang&lt;
i minor, and, whil&lt; it may help individjlal area out
somewhat. it will not provide any lona term solurions
to major problem • To illustrat&lt;. last year r&lt;jttts for
frtshman adm' sion to Arts and Lett&lt;rs, Natural ·
Scimct and Math. and Social Scitncc:s w&lt;r&lt; ISO, 206,
196 respcctivdy. About 25 p&lt;rcmt or thtst would
havt mrolled if admitted. Thus th&lt; proaram could
han led to about 37 students for A .t L, ~I for Nat.
Sci. and •9 for Soc. Sciences if ol/ of lh&lt; rojcct had
beftl admitted . Tht resuhina num~ would hav&lt;
~ wdl under 1M 10 p&lt;rctftt cdlina for In·
dividualized Admissions.

Oclltr ltft:o•IM••adoal

Given '"" statu of thtir implementation, ~ can
r&lt;peat all of laS! yt~r's recruitin -nlated recommm·
dations. Thus •• recommtnd that:
I . Tberr hould bearreater commitment or r.nan·
cia1 and human r&lt;sourcn to'"" recruitina tffOrt .
2. 1
should bt taken to a urc that tller&lt; is
muimwn coordination b&lt;IW«n various individuals
and omen invohed in tht rccruiti
proctll .
l . Ponkular &lt;roeou.....,.~nt hould ~ Jiven to
faculties and d&lt;flarlm&lt;:DI to participate activ&lt;ly in
rtef\titman .
• · Greater follow throurh
ld be mad( to p&lt;r·
ade admitted students to atttnd the univ&lt;r ity. ·
In addttion ~ ould like to repeat on&lt; or last
on ' 'nfonuttoft-rtlated rccommmd tion :
1. That ther• ~a stud er '""relation ip btl ween
ad1n1 '
t!ritor;. and I ran
of p&lt;rformancr
• on&lt; or whidl would obvleusly

w "'

4

tion and other studies. The appropriate univft"Sity
agencies must impltment th.,.., recommendations
which art found to address important reasons for at·
trition, resourC&lt;S to ~ mad&lt; availabk as -necessary.
Special attention must ~ paid to th&lt; needs or
stu&lt;kntsfromtht8thJD,agroupwhich hasrdatiV&lt;·
ly hiah attrition . P•rticular att&lt;ntion must ~paid to
commut&lt;r&gt;.
1. A t:OMD'tlltl tffort to drwiop Pf'OINIIII wltklt
urvt 1M II«1U of tl'lldiMIIn alfd otltB - ·
traJ/ItiONd stlldntts.
Thtr&lt; is a larJ&lt;, untapped, population or coii&lt;J&lt;
graduates, and, as '"" only sraduate center in tht
area, SUNYAB is in a uniqu&lt; position to devtlop
proarams aimtd at this aroup. The apprO!Kiat&lt; prorrams, which must be devtloped in rnponst to community n«ds, may ~ part-time. ev&lt;nin proaram•
with a care&lt;r orientation and interdisciplinary in
scopo . .Whil&lt; they may differ considti-ably from
traditio04l offtrinp. th&lt;S&lt; ntw proarams may
ultimat~ly provide the key to thi university's sui·
vival. Th&lt; J&lt;n Committ« will soon ~ makina
rccornmtndations rqardinJ prorrams aimed at nontraditional population , and w&lt; tronaJy ur1• t hat
rhcsc rerommend•tions be aCClorded serious con·
sideration . ·

J. MIHY -plwuls Olf r«n~ltlllt ""d"f.rHIMit
n"dmu /roM Ofltsidt tltt WmDrr Ntw YCHt A,.,,
Whilt Ill&lt; university mu 1 maintain its commitment to provid&lt; quality education for area residtnu,
adverS&lt; dtmorraphic lr~nds will makt it incr&lt;asin&amp;IY
difrocult to maintain '"" current SO-SO balanct
.bttW«n 8th JD and other studtnts. This will ~ lrut
.... tr low&lt;r a4mi •ions standards ... Sft ro. area
· resident . If we wish to m.intain freshman and
transfer admission at th&lt;ir current l&lt;vtl, th&lt; declinin baK or prospects in thi area makes it ilnp&lt;ratlv&lt;
to
r&lt;;h elsewhe-re.
onally, tvtn if our recommendations ar&lt;"adopted,
w&lt; art quit&lt; COIICC1'ned about delays in thrir im·
pkmmtation. W t tht'r&lt;for&lt; ask that nt~t yt~r's Admlulon Committe&lt; mak&lt; a pccial&lt;ffort to monitor
'"" Jlatu of any of tht abov&lt; recommcndaJions
w ich are adopted b oh&lt; Stoat&lt; .

•

~

•

I

~

,
,,
l-

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>.STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

MARCH rl,1980
VOL 11 e NO. 24

vice p&lt;aldents to with Praident
Kdlcr (In consultation wtlh the Senate) to
woril out an o/fidaJ a&lt;:o&lt;kmlc pion.
· Other propoMd dniderata Include :

• Reclucilon

In

raouroes

[should) be

IOCCXJIIlmOCial through open public proaf.
forded a mantn¢d consullatlvc role.
• dunk&gt;r faallty should nol bear the
lui burdn of ftducllooooln ·
• R.audlonlh reoourca shoUld be
accompliohed In ways which avoid or
llmK redudlono In enrollments.
• RO'Irenchment ihould no1 be undertaken acep1 on a clear and convincing

. , _ In which faculty and ttall are

demonstration that H Is required In order
to p&lt;_,. and pn&gt;lej:l the integrity of
the Uniwnlly'o IICIKiemlc and -w:e

functions.
• If rmenchment Is required , no fuUIUM faculty or p&lt;ofessional staff on term
or continuing contracts should be released upon las than one academic year's
DOIIcc of termination of contract.
In b Lui section under "p&lt;ocedures
and objective akrle for allocating reduc·
ttono," the report ouggests the following :
• lbat reductions In faculty, profeo-

sk&gt;nal and support staff be allocated by
the Pluident, with advice from the vice
presidents and deans, and afier consultation wtlh the Faculty and Professional
Staff Senateo. Appropriate student
organizations should also review and advise ragard!ng proposed reductions .
• lbat reductions should not be accompliohed -through pro-rata distri&gt;ution
. •I'IIOD!I all aoadelnll: unb, nor by permanently elimtnllllngl)OSltlons from units
simply ... v~ arise .
•
lbat reductions should be
allocated directly to departments In
academic unKs which are organized on a
departmental basis.
• lbat redudlons may be allocated
below the departmental lewl If the unH
has a separately identified budget
recognized by the University budget offlee , If h offers a degree or certificate program recognized In official U/ B publicaon the
tions, or ~ ft appears as an
University's official 01
chart .
• That
nol be

Sbort----

The :eport also lists 10 ways In which
the University could tty to acc:omnoodate
budget cuts "In the short run " by adopting
"temporizing meaoureo." Among them
are :

0

·-

• Ina-easing the amount of on·load ,
inl1rudlon In MFC and exploring the

.....

$235,000 grant funds
asthma center. here
asth.,.;.

annually from oevere
attacko.
~sltlz.ation to offending allergens
plays an lrnpcxtant role In controlling ·
oome alergles, Middleton noles, but drug
therapy II the key to aiding brealhing
prOblems of asdlmatico and thooc who
haw naoal allergies.

s.M~caabe=-

Many m8der, lrar\Mnt
allergies
are helped by antlhlstamlneo and
clec:ongeants allllllable In plio, Sp&lt;ays or
liquids. But, Middleton cautions, oelfmedkatton may be Ineffective and
poeolbly dangerous for thooc with - ·
naoal alagieo or asthma.
three c"'-o of drugo p&lt;aat.ed for
asthma pdtnls, oome may be mor eft-.,. than othen In controlling the con dltton In lji«Jfic: patients Though
methods ol action dlfer, aU three aim to
_ , airway narrowing . .

or

0

Bronchodllatoro, ouch ao!Juprel. com-

"'* the fnl .,._,.._ drugo, refeTed

to • bela ..tr--s~&lt; lllmulaloro, cau
........... oflll'IIOOih rnuldes by blncllna
tbemtelvet to rectplon on oelauf.ea.
~ . anoiNr oo-c:alod broncho........
...-II mu.do by lnllrf.rtnt wtlh
mchanlom

ol cell

·- ---~_. _

.......

_._ ........

-

�Mad! 'D, 1980

l

e &amp;Rete
...,._
...... ..

~ of ........ ocbool
- - - 011 load.
• ...._....and/« ............
~ . . . . ln . . . . _ b v _

... .._

...... _.._of ........ lnNahdc~--rcdudng

- - · ........ more-. of
-....1
- · and
bv on
nololllg
or
,
- - . .....,._,.
cdngl
COUl'M5.
• ~faculty In law cMm.&gt;d
to oa.i GE c:ouna end ..w:.
- I n Nab demand-• ~ llllbbMicals to lui ye.- ..

-

t.lp.v.
.

......... ~ moratoriums

....,..111•••

on lha
of new TA's and
GA't In law demand thua ahfllng
-='*'II Dad to ful-41me faculty.
Eaglah Pt-aM.ar w111am w....,
thel d..mg raourc:e,
Ndudlon petocla. "q...aly CWI cliMppur
~ and quietly" ........ 'ioo.igh decl-

...... s.n.an

liOns ' are made · on "selective
..,.....__
. w.... .-...t the Comml-

•

"' conalder concnle, objecllye wayl
wHdl • .......,.. of «XCC!llence"
.......w and evalua~ .
He ...., lntormcd lha Commlllee that,
to hit knc&gt;wlodue, pJ.na for cuts .,. being
made bv the cJe.ie In conaultat!on wllli
com.-, not bv the President « vtcc
Jn*lenb- As he ............u the tltua·
lion, w.... Aid. the Ptaident and vice
preaidenta will jull ..... cuts Keady
~

... be

plw,ned . To

ensure f.,;uJty J*lldpatlon ,

w.... .-.commended· that the Comml-

... clcYiM a plan under whk:h deans can
NpOit to them .._.t1ng allelll now beIng UMd to atabiah cuil.
Senator Edwvd Dudley was conc:emcd over the crllalon for reductions
below the dep.tmentalleYel which stales
that degree or cerflflcme po-ograms
recognlBod In offlcl.l U/8 publications
Qi'l b e = units for retrenchment.
Dudley
lhis criterion would make
pn&gt;grama oil
ma&lt;e than one degree
''Inviting targets" and would alto
~ development of new~
prosJ1ii1'IS bv making theM areu "too
idmllflablc" for re!renchrnent .
Irving ~ then atkad the Cornto consider aattng tome sort of
ad hoc group of people from In and outside the Untvenliy who could make "certAin Judgmmta" about -arns bv comparilg them to Jlmller ones In SUNY and
to related -ams within the Unlvenlly.
Such acllon, he feelt, would guarantee
more "princtpled JUdgments" about
reductions.
The former ~- dean also
thought I "Imperative that the Senate
dtoc- and pooslbly - e on any
accdemlc plan lsoued.

lm unol

____ ........

Center
named for Wltebsky ·
The U/8

c.- tar.........., . .

be.._•lhaErMII~C...

-:n- ~bv

fer ....._....., lolowmg _....... of

lha

IN U/B COuncil....

=

• Asthma
Cromal!ln. ....... d.. of drugs,
.,.._,.. prlll:luc8s of ...._ tueh ..

uoca11ona wHdllllhd rialloNI end In·
'tcrnaUonal lntereat among 1mIt ..... allen ad11C811on In

tar - - . I

.::s:'".,i :::.....-::::

~ clwnge,
bv the c - and ....... ~'"""' ........ bv
and the School of Mcdlc*w, honon the , aponaortng aummer program• In
. . Or WlloWiy who, aa:onllng "' the
"Md&gt;odt.of Jmmunologlc RciMrch and
prcpoullar lha new name, - •one of
Oloanooll on altemele .yean to the conthe . . , . _ IJIMII of """"""*'s-•
voallont. Some qualllled
Since Wlleboky made "to many Mred Ionge ...., .-.elations

.....-..s

0

penonsare,.:

original ~ to the theory and
pr.ctlce of blood tPOUP immunology, lmmllllohom t .. !jiY. oped6c:lty and
aulolmmunlly a ....,.,.W .,.,.,._
wtlhln Mecllcb Nit thm naming the
Center, l'lllfw !ban a !'011'1- .,. a
buadlng for him, would be more filling.
The CcnW formed In the laic
1960s • an orgllllilcd raean:h unit
within the F.,;ulty of Health Sdirnca.
Under the direction of Or. WilciMI&lt;y,
who MIWd aa cNirman of the Dopartment of Bac:telology and Immunology
f« a number of ye.s, a !JOUP - of
raearch lniiCitigaton wtthln that depart ment had become bv 1965, •one ol the
most effecllve on campus," a background
peper tubmllled to the Council recalled .
Mdtl of the IJMdpallllpldl of modem
Immunology· had been included In their
lnvatlgallve pn&gt;grarns. This oclmllflc
!JOUP had become lnc:reasln!llv refened
to as " the Buffalo S-chool of
Immunology.• Creation of the Center
reccignlzltd theM accomphhments.
Today, the Center as a local
point for IICienllsll and physician~ In the
community With basic Interests In lm·
munology, affa&lt;ding them an opportunlty to share their views and subject their
research to the corillnJCI!ve crillc:lsm of
their peers. This It accomplished prlmari·
Jy bv monthly round -table dlocussions
held throughout the ~mlc year. The
Center also dltsemlnates new research
knowledge In the field by convening biennial International Convocations on Jmmunology In Western New York , con -

II'ICIIIben of · the Center In their own
loboralorla.
The .-lei tubmllled to the Council
CICifUincd ~ &amp;om prominent lm~ from llwoughout the world
gathered at the lima ihe Center wu

at.bllthcd.

. T!JIIIbl of these It this quote from Dr.
Wema Henle of Phlladelphio : "!tit rare
to find that a wholot ..., of medicine
o-. Its .-.bliohrnent and datlftcatlon of
Its many f..,... to a tingle Investigator.
Or. WilciMI&lt;y belongs In. thlt exlra&lt;lf·
dinary cat.gory through hiS life-long lnterat In organ and -.e-spedflc anllgens which culminated In the rccognllion of autoimmune diseua, their
dlagnotls, pathogenesis and e~~
of conllbuting hoc:tcn. l:fis ....... ~u
teaching and Jeadeohlp Induced many of
hit pupils to conlinue aeatlve work In this
· and th111 II It more than jultl6ed to
4jJeak o( the 'Buffalo School'. "
•
'The Buffalo School of Immunology
wu at aU limes lntlm.atelv associated
"with Ernest Witebsky'o fundamental and
original contrbutlons to the reladvely new
dbdpltne of immunology and his inaeastng ~ternatlonal slature as one of the
world s most eminent spedaiJsts In this
field." Council members were Informed .
The Council agreed that "the new
name will both perpetuate International
recognition of Wttebsky's achievemenls
and continue the acknowledgement that
the 'Buffalo School of Immunology' he
established , is ·still very vital and
effective .... •

Myths often interfere with
proper health care for women
Women's health care Is compromlted
when physicians and other providen of
care believe myths about women, many
of which have per$IJted for thousand• of
years, says Dr. Caroline Whitbeck.
The Unlver1lty of Texas (Galveston)
ethicist enumerated tome of theM harmful myths for thooe alknding a U/ B
medical ethtc:s seminar last week: women
tend to over-report lllneu, complain of
more than men and are generally
leta capable of pertldpaling In dedllono
about their health care than men.
The myth that women are less able to
sland pain Is debunk d In a illudy by Dr.
M.radee O.Vit of 6913 osteoarthrtds patients between 2S and 74-years-old
which found that the men reported pain
more ohm than the women .
The effects of the myths crop up again
In otudleo such aa that repocted bv Wallen
which Indicate that male p a - get a
gJUier amount of Information about their
diagn&lt;&gt;* and trotment more quickly

pain

from physicians.

-roc.

.

"Thit study showed It loCi more perand more qu-. fa&lt; women
11 to oblaln the same amount o( lnlorma11on." WhHbeck explained.
The mytha, the noted , ""' dad to three
moll&amp; con&lt;emlng women whk:h recur
throughout l-olat&lt;lcy. One It that woman It
a pertiM, and th;oqfore Incomplete. man .
Another It tNt woman It a llletaphY*aJ
~· to man; the thWd, that
woman 1o on Earth t o - man's needs.
. . , _ throullhoutlo the idea .....

pa

man It

•ac~~w•

and

woman ,~."

whk:h lo faat becoming ex_.t ..
' - - myth of them ... Whitbeck said .
" Many - · · ..W-help groupo,

whk:h ...... """"" up - a ...... of the
.......... -o f -·to- unclantand
IMchli1tl more
great
..... tho* bodlat ~ their
NpfOdlidlw
.not lboul how they
.,..~pertlcfpellelil._own

. . .. .... polnlild out

n-.-haw~lnmak ·.

tng Inroads Into the prejudice of some
physk:lans and are freeing women
themselves from accepting myths which
have dme and again compromised their
health care.
lntereotlngly, Whitbeck noted In
another seminar. the majority of those
who actually detiver health care are, In
fact, women .
"Most of the registered nurses , licensed
pradlcal nurses , aides, orderlies and attendants are women," she said, "but less
than 20 per cenl of the admlnistrat«S,
dendsto and physician&gt; are femalot ."
What's ma&lt;e, she added , it's Interesting that our culture seems blind to
tht, fact .

ln

occupations categorized · as

"women's" In health care and otherwise,
the job-holder typically meets the needs
of others but has no control over the work
Itself.
The situation may be looking up ,
however, Whitbeck said . The glOWing
need for a teamwork approach In health
care delivery may lead to more sharing of
lnf«matlon among the members of the
team. And there's tome Indication that
women physidanl and young male
phvsidans are more padcnt-oriented than
Older, maMt dodon.
"A otudy of 207 physicians- 97 of
whom were female and 139 maleshowed that female and younger male
phyoldarls were more ea:allble to the
public, more Mnlltlve to patients and
more ...,... In their ~ than were
the older, male docton , Whitbeck
noted.

Reappointed
Robert W.·

potmec~

~

h. b,en

reap-

cn.rm.nSc.iance~~acc
.. the ~· of

Engineering

~and Nuclur

All

thiee•ll"ar

~1 . 1980.

term

0

II

begin

H.hMbeen~lhle1978.

. _ . . . and .,..,. d...al ..tlolocs
&amp;om .... ' - ' - ' ............ when

...............
.
..,.FMIP
n:ludaa*"*'ttueh as

....-~~v

'n..

prednltone. ... ..,.. _ . . among

....................... n-dnogo~
to cut clown t h e - of inllunmatory
c:dl to the - of a l a g l c - In the
lungs .

At. the
new U/8
- · much of the
1n11a1
........,.,
wll b:ut on mechanlams
involving . . _ . . . and on the beta

~~.:;.and
a.n "of the
of Metklne'a ~t
of l'barmacoklll!l ~ wiD
be involved In ilie .... .........

At.&lt;Moftn'• ......... tt.-.bolltm

of ....... and .,.._ - - drugs and

their relallonabipa "' ..... adNnergic
rec:epi«S on while blood c:elo wll be In-

vestigated bv 0'18 Da&gt;artment of
Pedlalrics faculty II'ICIIIben tlr. Scanley J .
s...t1a and Or. Eaot F . .::..
~

Other ..-.dl wtl locut on ~ clau of
chemical eompoundt .,..... Cavonoids,

found widely In fNIII .... vegNbles.
This work ... be c:ancluc:tod lit Buffalo
Genesa1 HotpMal and the U/8 School of
Pharmacy bv Middleton and Or David
TI'Wie, prot_. of biochemical pharmacology.
Research Keady completed bv Mid
dleton hu shown that oome flavonoids
appear to have alrong, and-allergic activity. As inht&gt;it«S which - m to block the
release of hislamlne from human white
blood cells, they may-.have potendal as
therapeudc agents.
'
0

0

..- - - . poMbiiiU.
Middleton Is reluctant to make the
jump &amp;om applying basic laboratory
findings with tissue 'Cultures to advocaling
special diets to help prevent reactions to
allergens « uthma, but he concedes H
po-esents Interesting possibiJtties for further
exploration .
Middleton and Tr1ggle will also study
calcium anbogO!llsts which may po-ove
beneficial In relaxing smooth muscle In
abways.
Another research project com templated by Or. Mary L. Voorllees of
U/ B and Children's and Or. Fred
Hargreave of McMasler Untverslty In
Hamilton, Ont., will study "adrenal gland
catchecholamtne response to the stress of
asthma."

.-.-

DINct lapllc:a- ..... loc:al

While Information prodyoed through
research Ill the U/B cenllr wtl contrbute
to the gencal body of knowledge of
asthma, tt will have even more dtrect lmpiJcatlons for local padents. These
padents, says Middleton, wtiJ be among
the frst to benefit from advancos made
here.
During the past two years, NIH center
grants have alto been aw•ded to researchen In the School of Denllslry for a
periodontal raeardl/dlnlcal center and
to the School of Pharmacy for the otudy
of

llharrnacoklnet.

the award of the most r«:ent NIH
center grant here It an indical« of the
quality of allergy and Mlhma ..-rch
which hu been conCiuctcd In the Buffalo
area for a number of ye.s.
Middleton and Ellia ""' nonowned In
their field and •e co-cdllon of a two·
IIOiume tat on alerml/asthma r....-ch
and treatment.
c.t ArtJaman and
Dr. Robert E. Relsrnan, alto U/B facuiy
members, · are widely known for thetr
r--=11 and npertiM In tha field of
alergy They. along wtth the late Or
Wtl.d ~ made great advances In
daen6Atlou ag11nat lnMcl venoms.
"WWth .ynthetlc ..-~ala lna'eaaing.
Qi'l ._s to more people with
alargic
·" ..,_,.,.,
Mlddl.lon aeys,
tlwough- lmproYcd
more "and
who

or.

0

0

~~tilled~
naturalj
c1Joenao111c
and tm·

. Future

technlquea

proved fer atlbrM/aler!W patlentt may .... be lnluenc.d bv ~

made bv ~and.,._ WOiitlng loglll.- ttwo..gto tha U/8 - -·

�Morch27,1~

Geologists give
lee core report
at Houston
O&gt;emical analyses of ice samples
glacial regions are revealing
Important Information about the earth's
atmosphere during the pasl 100,000
years and the effects of modem
technology upon It ,
Researchers from U!B reported Tues·
day on glaciochemical dating techni&lt;Jues
utilized In thett Polar Ice Core Analysis
Program during a symposium at the
179th national meeting of the American
Chemical Society In Houston, Texas.
Chester C . Langway, who serves as
curator of the world's largest collection of
ice cores which Is housed at Ridge Lea,
and as chairman of the Department of
Geological Sciences, served as panel
chabman for a discussion on future directions of both nuclear and chemical dating
techniques. His associate, Michael Herron , presented a paper authored by the
two which described chemical dating
techniques.
"Ice cores fill a gap in our knowledge-of
earth history and overlap the
chronologies of dating by tree rings ,
which go back only about 8 ,000 yea~} ,
and by sea sediments, which can date
back several mUiion years," Langway ex·
plained.

drilled from

............. c:-dl.

Sconiers urges Coundl to take
more active role in campus affairs
"We're going to stop doing symbolic ,..
things a nd start doing things with clout
and Impact," U/B Council member Rose
. Sconiers said to Student Representative
Michael Pierce toward the end of Friday's
Council session in Capen HaD.
Sconiers was refenlng at that point to
Pierce's decision to withdraw a resolution
about the budget which he had lntro·.
d uced . h would be only "symbolic,"
anyway, P'K!I'ce said .
1lle Council last month took a stand
aga lnJt Govdnor· Carey's proposed
budget cuts by endorsing a letter from
President Ketter to members of the
Lealslilure. 1lle letter made the point
thlit 'lhe cutbacks would place "the
academic programs ol the University In
serious jeopardy."
Pierce agreed with Council Chabman
Robert I. Mlllonzl that further resolutions
might ever be counter·p JOductive .
. '"Vl,e've done our part," Millo~ ~ ­
'1"he matter Is now In the lap of the
gocls "

Actl..tam ..,.ed on Counc:ll
Sconiers' response to Pierce about the
bo*
proposal reflected a new spirit ol
activism which she had urged on the
Council. "We've been caDed a perfunc·
tory body, a rubber stamp for the Presi·
dent." she said in opening the meeting.
"But we do have powers under the law
that we tor« not exerdllng."
SpedficaDy, Sconiers (who Is the aunt
of MichMl McClendon, one of two
studen
d In a plunge from the 8th
Ooor of Fargo Qu.ad Last month] called on
the Council to 5ve up to ~ clearly·
mandAted responslbllrtv to make rules
for , and ova:see "stud• nl housing and
safety on c.ampus." (Section 356, State
Educ.atlon Law. IIUbparagreph b .f
1lle Law makes clear, Sconiers contended, that the Council Is the local
IIUpervioory body for the University,
responsible to the Trust
for ~ op&lt;n·It should begin adlng lik H, she
urged

Buil.t lngs should be designed with peo·
pie In mind , Sconiers contended. She
recalled that housing p rojects In Chicago
which did not meet people's needs were
''blown-up." Is EBicoll safe for people?"
she asked.
Sconiers also called upon Pr.siimt
Ketter to make available to the Council
the official report on the deaths at Ellicott.
Ketter responded that he is constrained
by the Office of the Attorney General to
Umlt public remarks on the EIUcott inc!·
dent to Information contained In Public
Safety reports on the events and in
maintenance reports and orders

WUI It be •..u.ty~ng"?
Ketter felt Council Involvement In
building safety is both "appropriate and
desirable," but had mixed feelings about
whether or not It wlB be "satisfying." He
-..1 -lhat he has lrM&gt;d prevlou61y to lo struct archttects about changes In campus
designs , which he thought were
necessary from an engineering stand·
point He was informed, he said, that he
can not do this under the law The State
feels that for loc.al clients to participate In
dec:isions of this nature would terid to absolve architects and planners of respon sibility for meeting safety and health
regulations and other building code re·
qulrernents.
Ketter added that the EDicott situation
Is further complicated by the lad that it
was a venture In which SUNY and State
· DormHory Authority monies were comingled. This was brought about because
of the blending of · educational and
residential facilHies In the complex. Thus,
varying agencies are responsible for vary·
ing a reas.
No air collldltlonlntl
A general design policy ties behind

rome of the problems with the windows

at EUocott, Ketter noted . The State Dof.
mftory Authority has a blanket rule

ou tla wing air conditioning In student
residential spaces. Thus , windows o n
even the highest floors of EDicott have to
be open ~ there Is to be venUlatlon . 1lle
guard ralls are there to preve nt the larger
windows from opening more than four
Inches, but they are easily remove&lt;! so
-windows can be rotated 180 degrees for
cleaning _ Stu dents are aware of this, so
they remove the bars to open the win·
dows to get air - something they
wouldnlt have to do if there was air con·
dltionlng. "Bars are continually missing."
Ketter said .
The President reported , too , that there
has been a problem at ERicott with win·
dows being blown out by high winds.
U/ B requested funds to redesign and
replace some of these two years ago, he
,.id. But it has only been within the last
several months that an architect has been
. lnted
~Iter .;.ld he lee)s concerns that may
be raised by the Councd wiD at least find
their way Into the conect forum which
wiD enable them to Influence long-term
changes. Whether they will do any good
in the short term, Ketter said . " don 'I
know."
The Council passed the following
resolution dealing with Sconiers' proposal:
"BE IT RESOLVED that the State
Universtty of New York at Buffalo Coun·
ell authorize ~ Buildings and Grounds
Committee to undertake an"tnvestigatlon
of safety conditions on the campus and
that such Investigation should Include a
tour of the campus by the CouncU lor the
purpose of observing conditions of safety
thereon ; and
"BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that
this Committee be authorized to monitor
campus safety conditions and make
recommendations with respect thereto to
the CouncU as a whole."
1lle tour of campus buildings is ex·
pected to take place before the next
CouiiCII meeting , set lor April 15.

Nobel Laureate to lecture here
Dr.

Andrew

V . SchaUy,

whose

loneerlng work with brain hormones of.
ers new approaches to birth control and

r.the treatment ofiiUCh deficiency diseases
as~ s,

wiD be the John W. Cowper
Dlsllnguished Visiting Lecturer here In
Apri.
Dr. Sc:h.ally's two..decade search lor
pottulafed brain hormones culminated In
hla bern; awarded the Nobel Prize lr)
Phyoiology/ Medldne (jointly with Roger
Gutlemlrl) In 19n.
Schely
present lour lodur . April
7 through 10 In the Moot Court Room,
O'BriM Hal AI are free and open to the
public
Thr.. lectur wtl begin at 8 p m :
"'The Hypolhalamus Gland and Human
Reproduction (Part I) , April 7, '1"he
Hypothalamus Gland and Human
Reproduction (Part II) , Apri 8 , and
toUIIn and Its Analogs · New 1\,pproaches to Oiabna Control," Apri lJ
"rhe 1M! IX' nt.ttlon. on "'The Current
Slaws ol Raearch on Hypolhalamic

Amnaalleyen
"Chemical analyses of the Impurity
content of polar snow and ice strata have
proven useful in estabUshlng and relining
Ice core chronologies through the iden·
tlficatlon of seasonal variations In concentra tions and concentration event
horlzoru." Herron reported . "'The iden·
tilication of an annu"lol spring maximum In
co ncentrations of crustally ·derlved
a1uminum. ealdum and iron , of an an nuaJ winter maxlmuni in concentrations

of marine -derived sodium , magnesium'
and chlorine and of a summer maximum
lor other species each allow Ice core
dating by counting annual layers."
Herron pointed out that these ice core
chronologies can be verified and lm·
proved by comparing annual layers wtth
known occurrences. For example, the
Lakl volcanic eruptions which took place
In Iceland In 1783 resu~ed In a sulfuric
add concentration more than an order of
magn itude higher than concentrations In
modern Greenland snow.
Also, the 1883 Krakatoa eruption
resu ~ed In Greenland concentrations of
cadmium. zinc, lead and copper as much
as a factor of 20 greater than average .
Herron added that there are stiUmany
unknowns In the study onhe chemistry of
ice cores. While researchers attribute high
cad mium , zinc, lead, sulfate and chloride
concentrations to volcan ic activtty and
sodium and chloride levels to sea spray,
there are other chemical elements whose
origin In the ice has not been attributed to
known fa&lt;:tors.
He noted that many scientists believed
high cadmium concentrations In ice were
a resuh of man -made poUullon which
began after the Industrial Revolution .
However, he said that when studying ice
cores going back as far as 1,000 years
before IIUch pollution began, the same
amou nt of cadmium can be found .

Natural eoun:n ol 'pollooUoe'
Hormones, " 1!1111 begin at 7 p.m
"lllere are natural sources for many
A native of Poland, SchaDy Is curreotly
elements
that were thought to reiiUit from
section head and prolaror of experimen·
human polfutlon." Herron stated, adding
tal medicine at Tulane University School
thai
volcanism
Is one of the major
of Medicine In New Orleans. He abo
sourca.
serves as head of the Endocrine and
Herron e mphasized that ice cores pro·
Polypeptide Laboratories a t the Vderans
vide a n exallent measure of the eart n's
Admlnlslratlon Hospital In New Orleans.
1lle author of more than 1,000 atmospheric condltlons. One thousand
years of a tmospheric history Is revealed In
publications, Schaly Is also the recipient
800 meters of ice core , which arc too
of numerous honors , including the med.al
cold
for chemical r actions and leach ng
of the SOOth anniversary of the Coperto
occur
nicus MedQJ Academy In Cracow,
U/
B's 1&lt;a core analysis program began
Poland, last year, and the Allert Lasker
In J anuary , 1975. Its present emphasis is
Basic Medi&lt;al Research Award of th
AINnt and Maly Lasker FoundAtion In , to esaabllsh and charact rlze the nature of
icc sheets during their chronological
1975 for his contr1butlona to the loolatlon ,
deve~ment In various locations on the
siNCtu determination and IJIIItheslo of
Greenland
ll;e Shftt and the RON Ice
hypochalamic hormones
'"rhe Cowper Lecture Scr1es was SheW and other Antarctic loc.atlona
ftlablshed In 1973 by the Buffalo-bued
1lle U/ B ice core faclity lo responsible
CONirUctlon firm , the John W Cowper
for procaung, catAloging and dlslrlbutlng
Conslruc:tlon Company, Inc ., and Is
ice cora drilled In Anlarcta , Greenland
pr-nted by the Facuky ol Natural
and other polar and IIUb-polar regions
Sc:lenceo and MAthematics
•und&lt;lr programs sponaored by the NSF.

~

�Man:!! ?:1, 1980

4

Crisis mentality seen m9re damaging
than collegial pla-n ning for cuts
Editor.
that his propoMd pledge Is a type of
I come 8WIIY &amp;om I'Qdlng the ex" moral" preuure, and (8) that, "prochAnge In the Rq&gt;o&lt;tc ol Man:!! 20,
tecting the Individual should take
be-. ~ Allen and his critics,
precedence OYer enhancing the institution." Each of these propositions appears
with the siJOng that Professor Allen
should have been a ph~ Instead
to be a firm and immovable one In Proof a historian. I am reminded In parfessor Allen's oonstellation of Ideas. To
ticular, for example, ol Bishop Berkeley,
proffered c:rlttdsms he appears qu~e
and hlo steadfast refusal to be ~ ­
deaf. and he turns tha a1tldsm into
bv good, practical, sensible arguments.
evidence of the obtuse thinking of his
The good bishop ma intained that
crHic. Not a t one point does -Professor
physical objects were nothirlg other than
Allen ind icate that he has considered the
rational Impact which the points of his
C:ollections ol lions, which Samuel
critics might have upon the truth of the
Johnson nduted bv kicking a stone and
pointing to the obviOus distinction
propositions which he ho lds un between the resulting paJn and its cause .
challengeable .
It seems appareui to any observant, practical , pragmatic penon that the cause of
The oath .,..
the pain lies outside ·the mind which
We aD have , from time to time , properceives the pain; a nd ~ Berkeley was
positions which we hold as fundamental
persuaded that the Incident merely
and which we flnd others to be denying ,
showed that Johnson misunderstood his
or at least refusing to accept . What, In
ldeu, which he could not conceive to be
such circumstances, is the appropt1ate
wrong.
way to respond and interact with those
So, too , Professqr Allen seems utterly
disbelievers, those sl&lt;eptics of the "true"
'convinced that he cannot possibly be
belief? One response . typical of the
wrong , and that those who reject his
Restoration monarchy In 17th century
views must certainly be mistaken. Hence
England , of the Inquisition , of the
he "COrTecl$" Prolessor Greiner, who is
England Puritans, and of Senator Josq&gt;h
"lmpredse" and who "confuses the
McCarthy, has been to bind the beliefs of
Issue." His response to Professor Ralston · the sl&lt;eptk:s and critk:s by means of an
and others Is even worse: Where they
oath or a pledge or an affidavit or a cercharacterize a certain point of view as "at
tificate . Professors Greiner and Ralston
bnl Ingenuous and at wonllntellectuallv
suggest that Professor Allen means to
follOw In this tradition . It seems plain that
dishonest," he takes Has a personallnsuh
ond replies with an open slander: "So I
he does. And yet he denies that the
will reolu by aocuslng you ol something
analogy holds. on the Irrelevant ground
even 'v'\voue . I th ink you lack
that lJOP does not have the power to lire
Imagination ." To lack Imagination is very
people . {Whoever thought that H did? Is
much the same 5011 of defect as to be
Professor Allen implying that Professor
unable to undersiand . an intellectua l
Greiner was mistaken on thn matter?)
lameness or impolence . and therefore ·
HUAC did not have the power to lire
this fll'lal reply to Professor Ralston and
people either. The chilling power ls the
others Is very much of the same order as
power to brand -colleagues as pariahs
'Berkeley's reply to the 5011 of cntldsm ilbecause of their conscientious beliefs a nd
lustrated bv Samuel J ohnson's kicking
actions Professor ADen's pledge. like all
the ston •
the others, a nempts to replace consclenbousness with conformity . In this
C!&lt;falnty and ateadfulneaa
respect ol, Joke all the others, violates the
The Issue at hand I o ne having to do
hoghest pnndple of morality . for such Inwllh certainty and steadfastne s about
sistence on conform1ty over conscience
funda mental beliefs Professor Allen
fa~s to respect the persons mvolved as
seems to be what Eric Hoffer has called a
fr e rational beings
"true belio!ver " He will tolerate no aherProfessor Allen refers to the pledge as
nabves to what he concetves as the truth
.. moral pressure .. This could mean either
woth respect to maners he regards as fu n(a) that the pres5ure consosts solely on
domental These ondude. as far as I can
reference to mora1 princ1ples and rationa l
teU from his statement&gt;. the following
appeal to conscience, or (b) that the
propoodlons: ( 1) that any retrenchment Is
'preuure Is moraDy permissible . I believe
necessarily going to have devastating imthat he is correct to think , ff that Is his
pact upon facuhy morale . (2) that no
thought , that ~ his action were " moral
un lvers1ty wh tc h re trenches any
preuure" in either sense (a) or sense (b) .
employees (or perhaps he means just
then H would not be McCarthyist. Cerfaculty employees) can possibly Improve
tainly there Is nothing McCarthyist at aD
quality a a unJvenily as a result of
about moral pressure in sense (a). But
such ec:tlon , (3) that there Is a "profound
Professor Allen '1 action is not moral
d
" berween "'eggtime
longpressure In sense (a ). partly because he
range ecademic plann ng" and academic
does not appeal to principles ol morality
planning In a context of severe budge!
and partly because of the pledge . Nor ts'
reduction when retrenchment II a poul·
hlo action moral preiSUre in sense (b),
1M oulcomc ol SU&lt;:h planning, !4) that
slnoe It violates tha highest principle of
there II a sharp and clear dlstinclion
moraiHy. I conclude that Professor Allen
between managerMnt and facuky roles
Is mistaken In Mying that he Is bringing
the unlvcnlly. (5) that laculry and
morol pceuure to bear. He Is rather bringohould not advlsa the admlniltralion
ing organw.d aodol pressure . which Is
about retrendlment decisions, (6 ) that
quito another thing , no1 unlik what
conaullatlon with admlnlotr lion about
Senator McCarthy employed.
the best
retrenchment dedllons Is "
As fa&lt; UUP not having the right to fire
ol motive&amp;
. IIIII an abhonent act" . (7)
people : WeU, HUAC did no1 have the
power or authority to fire people either.
Nehher did the lnqu tor have the power
or authority to bum people at the stake
Both ol these were "merely" Investigative
bod s, who turned the results (and victims) OYer lo other agenda for n..
lnquloltlon depended on "the MCUiar ·
arm" (governments and artnla) ; McCarthy and HUAC clapended on trustees
and administrators of unlventtla and
corporatlonl. One does not know wha!
powers Prolesaor Allen mig:ht caD upon.
But one remembers that two yean ago
Proleuor Allen's predecnoor, In a blnlc
day for ac.demlt froedom at U/ 8 , called
on the Gowmor's Oflica IOER . to be
~) 10 lnJtruct Prftldent Kalter to
lodt
door ol
room where MUP
had ochaduled a dltcvollon ol the UUP
epncy 1ft And one knows that thla year
UUP't "'ar chetl Is stuffed With twO a&lt;

Ptedse

three times the green power because of
the agency fees . The bngering threat Is
ooerdve rather than persuaoive. In the
light of this hlst:ory, Prolessor Allen's attempt to reassure us Of the benign
character of the UUP actions seems, to
borrow Professor Ralston's phrase, either
Ingenuous or Intellectually dishonest.

AD eiPt

........,.w- falee

I

U~s

'doublethink'
draws fire
EdltOI':
T..io aspects of the recent discussion of
the UUP position on university planning
as explained In communications from the
chapter president require darilicatlon , I

believe.

First, the AAUP does not censure institutions which taU to adopt lis 1940
statement of prtndpleo on academic
freedom and tenure, although this was
endorsed by 84 major national associa H&lt;&gt;ns concerned with higher education .
The AAUP does not censure Institutions
simply because they dismiss tenured personneL Censure comes only after an extensive review on the part of a carefully
selected panel of members of the
academic profession which investigates
the evidence, consults with aU parties
concerned, and vislls the campus In
question . It sets no precedent for the kind
of action against planning comminee
members proposed by the UUP.

It Is my considered judgment that aD
eight of Professor Allen's fundomental
propositions are false . No pledge or
rhetoric can possibly make false propositions into true ones. U aD or most ol the
eight proposillons are false , then the
pledge Is a bad Idea - I am sure that even
Professor Allen wiD acknowledge that.
Even II they are doubtful , the pledge Is a
bad idea. I suppose that fa ilure to take account of the - doubtfulness of basic
pre mises may be part ol what Professor
Ralston et ol had In mind In ca!Ung Prolessor Allen's statements "Ingenuous."
(Professor ADen should note , by the way,
Second, there appears in the UUP
that a statement can be ingenuous
discussion of thls issue a confusion betwithout Its maker necessarily being naive :
ween Involvement in planning and the
It Is he who introduced distasteful .o d
naming of colleagues lor retrenchment.
hominem remarks Into the debate .)
Of Professor Allen's eight propositions, The right , and indeed duty , of members
of a professional community to involve
the most critical lor present purposes Is
themselves In the development of policy
(3) . Academic p lanning means resource
which bears upon their professional Uves
allocation , and since the short-term a nd
carries
with It the protection of the In long -term decisions should be coherent
terests of individuals who may be affected
and mutuaUy reinlordng , there Is reaDy
by such policy. It ~rrles with it the
no possible way of doing "legHimate longresponsibility also to monitor the im·
term academic planning" without thvreby
plernentatlon of such policy by ad participating in retrenchment decisions .
ministrative heads to protect individ uals
That , a t least , Is my judgment, based on
fro m capricious decisions. By no mea ns
some years of Involvement. If Professor
does this requ ire or even Imply partlcipaAllen Is to make his case at aD, he must
make clear how his "profound -distioc- . lion In determina tion of spedflc progra ms
or individuals which might be retrenchozd.
bon" Is to De drawn In practlte. Unttl then
· One must regret. that the -very i'05itive
I -have to regilrd his asseo:ti&lt;&gt;n of a ."proand important work of the UUP with
found distinction .. where none exists in
legislators
and other stale officers in
practice as , again , either ingenuous or inAlbany becomes involved In explicit
tellectually doshonest
threats to coUeagues having a sincere
concern about the weUare of this campus
No one w an ts retrenc hment
I have to concur with Professor Greiner's
No one wants an y retrenchment here .
dismay at the rhetoric associated with the
The Governor doesn't want it. the
UUP's activities. It evidences the kind of
Chancellor does-not want it. the Presi"d o ublethink" which can only damage
dent does not want it , and no one on any
the un ion and , more importantly, aU of us
Senate Com mittee wants it. If the UUP
who serve as professionals on this camhas been only half successful in ots lobbypus. Despite recent efforts at coordinatng effons. there will be no retrenchment
tion , I fear that the UUP has declared
here . Even ~ their lobbying falls, re o pen warfare on the Senate , an action
trenchment wiD nol be severe . It wiU , for
which can only prove seriously divisive at
example, be nowhere near as severe as it
a time when maximum cooperation
has been this year and last in the
looms as essential.
Pennsylvania system , nor a s In Wiscon E. D . Duryea
Sin , CUNY, and California In other years.
Professor
The panic/catastrophe mentality which
Professor Allen portrays and fosters Is
wholly unwarranted , even by the worstcase pooslbility now facing us. I wonder II
faculty morale Is not eroded far more by
the crisis mentality and "war" footing
Profeaor WIWam S. Ann :
which Professor Allen promotes than by
collegial planning .to accommodate the
The undersigned , members of the
reduced 10nrollment SUNY must expect
Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence , have
over the coming years?
shared BID Greiner's concern about the
Union's position on the question of faculAltematity participation in decisions affecting
There are varloul ahematlves to
SUNYAB's response to the growing
retrenchment ~ and the Senate 's
financial crisis which confronts It . Granted
Academic Planning Committee will be
that e fforts to d iminish the severHy of the
reviewing a number of them in ks conbudgetary cutbacks should be as intense
•ultatlons with the administration. Some
as poulble, H remains a fact that there Will
ahematives, however, may be worse
be a crisis of major proportions in the
-e 9 - suspending aU T A and GA stipends
years Immediately a head . The ma nner in
lor a year, or elimlnotlng Inter-campus
which the University responds will affect
buiSing. The judgments Involved have to
Hs quaiHy fa&lt; decades.
do wllh allocation of acarce raources
Accordingly, some method lor obtainThe final decision lies with the President
Ing -faculty judgment In connection with
but K would depart from aD the tradHJons
the measures takMn appears to us to be
ol collegiality- and certainly noclmprove
essential. Your often repeated position
faculty morale..,.lf the President ~W:re to
that any such lnvplvement Is treason or
make such dedslons without the advice
worse appears to us to be fundomentaUy
and consultation ol facultv . The Faculty
unoound In principle as weD &amp;I fnex·
Senate and its Acad mic Planning Comeusable in manner. We therefore wish to
mitt will play that consultative role . My
identify ourselves wHh BID's letter and
only personal regret about participating In
fervently ·hope that the Union's position
the proceM Is that Prolusor Grmer has
will become, bOth tn substance and tone .
ahady claimed II plaCe on the list ol
more In keeping with the nature ol the
nonligners .
·
problem and its university sentng
Yours faithfully ,
- MUtoe Kapbuo, olacob Hym.,.,
- Newton Ganoer,
~.... Heorv Sclaletel , Wad e
Chair,
Newh-. K•_., D. Jo,ce, Loula
Faculty Senat
A. DeiCotto, M...a..U J .

Law professors
agree with Greiner

Br..-.

J

�LE'I"I'ERS
'grav~

Novak c ase seen as haVing
Thls is a ~ to the Uniwnity community on the case ol Prolessor Daniel
Novak ol the Department ol Political
Sc:ience, who was recently denied tenure
by President K..tter and O...nullor
Wharton. AI. I hope wtll become c:IQr,
the case has grave Implications for the
plindpla ol faculty governance, peer
review, and the rule ol merlt. h also Is
..veallng a( the true role ol leaching In
personnel dedolans and o(.the Inconsistent manner In which the unlverlly's Internal rules on penonnel dectslons are
being lntetpretad and applied.
Proleuor Novak!s record clearly
alabllshes that he is bolh a lim-rate
teacher and ocholar who has a prima
joda rjght to .tenunt on the meriis. Novak
came to the Unlvenlly In 1973. com-

'

leagues in·· the fiiC\llty, including four
strong supporting letters by tenUNCI facul-

implications'

Is~. end In 111011 CMOS II ourely
wJI prodLJ&lt;e a divided vote. I op~ Nov11k. IIIII PNIIdent Kea.PI"'-' John Caocann ol
the ~ ol l'hlloeophy, ..._.

ty rnembas who have wofkad wllh
Novak In coune .,.....c1qn and/or
observed his IUching end lntenacllon
with students ~ the years.
ll8ndords on _ _ , . !pdln he 5. An ~~Gong loller &amp;om
......., wllh !rom Cooann'a previous
Dean ol Uncler9aduate EdiiCMion John
..,..,. on the President's ~ Boerd. ·
Peradolto. Dean Peradolto spedllc:ally
Cooann end I !hen ..ud ""*-or Ira
chOM the Novak caae as a nwAns ol emCclben, a...r.r- ol the ~ ol
phaslzlng the unlverslly's commitment to
l'¥holo9!l and Iarmer Provott ol the
.ucellentJeachlng. and he wrote PtaiFaculy ol Social Sdenca, to as
dent Ketter to urge tha Novak'be-..ward-- C~.ed tenure.
On November 9, 1979 the
Dep..-....1Chancellor's Advisory Committee
In March, 1979, the tenured lecully ol
r~~~-~N--'LthePollllcaiSc:ience~tvotedln

fa110r ol tenure for Novak by a vole o1 ten
In favor, foUf agoinll, one abstention . In
light ol eertaln intra-&lt;llsdplinary d!vtslons

pleted his dloMrtalloil In 1975, and
published a book based on the dissertaIn the department this a good vole
tion In 1978. During this urn.. he also
Once Novak's ~ wCr.t before ou~
completed an arllcle. a book chapter, and
faculty reviewing bodies, where
a review ol two books In a ocholarly jourdisdpllnary differences are lttelevant
nal; he Is CUJftlrtly comp~ another - there -nor a Jingle negalloe "'*· '
book &lt;hapter which has been accepled
The next reviewing body was the Perfor publication . More lmporiantly. since
sonnel Committee ol the FIIC\llty of
finishing his book, Novak has bftn
Social Sc:lenc:es. conslsling o1 five senior
engaged In a major research effort. a
IIIC\llty members (four ol them IUD propolitical biogmphy ol former Speaker ol
lesson) , &amp;om the various
es o1
the House .lohn McCormack . Novak has
the sOcial sciences. excluding political
gained exclusive ac:cea to McCormack's
science. The commltlee had a weDpenonal papers. and his planned work is
deserved reputation for demanding
described by a prominent outside
standards, as demonstrated by a number
evaluator as "lll golden scholarlv opporol recommendations against tenure or
tunity-a once . in a "lifetime dlanCe to
promollon. The Committee unanimously
produce something ol great value to the
supported Novak, 5-0-0 .
community ol congressional scholars. •
However. the Dean o1 the Faculty o1
.lllf far greater lrnportance is the quality Social Sciences, Kenneth Levy. recom of Novak's book, The Wheel of Ser- mended against tenure. It was the first
time In anyone's memory that the Dean
uftude: 81oclc Forced L.ai&gt;or After
had failed to support a unanimous vote of
Slovcty. Ten leading scholars In the field
were asked to evaluate the book; nine
the Personnel Committee . In my official
wrote strongly positive !etten. AD ol these
c:apadly as Advocate lor Novak, I talked
scholars are men ol national or Internalniortnafty with the Dean on a number of
tional reputation (olx hold endowed
occasions. I am persuaded that the
chairs) , and thm Institutions are Harvard ,
Dean's decision was based on the merits
Yale, Princeton , Slanford , Brandeis,
ol tlie case, as he saw them , h~ver
Rtoe. Rochesler, VIrginia , llo5ton Colmuch as I dl$agree wllh his dectslon and
lege, and Oaremonl.
his judgment In ovenidlng nor only the
The outside letten praise Novak's book
Political 5clence Department and the
Faculty Personnel Committee but also
for Its originality, Its oeholarly craftsmandisregarding the near-unanimous opinion
ship. and lor Its stylistic quality. His book
ol ten dl&amp;lingulshed outside faculty
is described as a major new conlribution ,
evaluators.
as a work which wiD require a reevaluaThe Dean's decision was based Oft his
tion ol Important periods ol American
history and Important .._:ts of past and
judgment that Novak's record was de ·
flclent
In research. as he had published
exlsling lnslitullons.
a book that no
scholars working In the aru can Ignore, . only his dissertation . This negatlve
recommendation was then supported by
and the like. This was NOvak's first book.
the nut admlnlstratlve reviewer. VtoeThen! .,.. productive and -n-known
scholars who do nor receive such
President for Academic Affairs Ronald F .
Bunn. Dr. Bunn died the University
rec:o,jnlllon and praise in a lifetime..
Gu.ldellnes on Personnel Mallen, and
concluded that Novak had falled to meet
the requirements for promotion to
associate professor calling for
"achievements In research or creative activlty extending weft beyond thoee Involved In the attainment or the doporal
d -." Thls Interpretation ol the re·
qulrements was to become the central
llaled reason lor the denial of tenure to
Novak. and I want to return to H shortly.
The final regular faculty review body
was the President's Rev;ew Board . whic:h
met In the summer ol 1979 and sup·
ported Novak by a 4-(}.1 vole. In late
August. President Keller turned down
Novak, citing his alleged research de-

lic:lendes.
Art1c:la 33 . -

Novak then availed himself ol Articlo
33 clthe Agreement ol the State ol New
York and the United Unlvenlly Proialloris IUUPI. the governing contract on
~nel matters. Under Articlo 33 ol
the contract, when a facullv member Is
turned down for tenure a/ier receiving
lavor.t&gt;la faculty recommendations at the
~tal and dlvisic:&gt;MIIovels, he Is
enlllied 10 a ful review on the merits by a
~ CONIIlUtad bv and reporting
to the o.ano.lor ol the State Untvenlty.
In Odobar, 1979, the Chanc&gt;tllot's Ad·
llloory Comrnlbec ClOI&gt;duled. Under
Miele 33, the candidate III'P'*III ,...,.., ol the commtttae, the un1ves1ty
~ oppoinll ancd'ler,

"""' -

and.

third,

.. Chalrm.-o, Is jolritly lpthe two ~ rnembas.
Oblllowly the ol
a&gt;m

JIOii'l*l by

to..,...,......., .. ,_."""'

.,.... .,..

-.led tenure. Beaou. that ~ Is
confidential. I am nor at h1)/to &amp;...
detail; ' - - · the repprt strongly
rejected the arguments ol Dean Levy,
Vlca-Praldellt Bunn, and President Katler, ~ c:onc:luded that the doeller
alablished beyond I'CaiONible doubt that
Novak daewd promotion and tenure.
As Indicated earlier, the central. argument ol Praldent Ketter and other admlnlslnltors was that Novak latled to
meet the unlwnlty criteria that can~Ia for the ,.nk ol associAte professor
should have ac!Mvements In .....-ch
extending wei bevond those Involved G;!
the attainment o( the doc:toral degree.
The faculty members ol Social Sciences
P""?"nel Commlllee, those of the Presidents Re,vlew .Board, and of the
It In

ChanceDor 5 AdVISOrY Commlllee wer,e
naturaDy
awant ol the university 5
they ,all decisively
rejected the Admlnlstration s lnterpretalion ol those rules as they applied to the
Novak case . There were at least three
reasons:

..,..o

rules and c:rtterla, and

3-

l. To attain the doctoral degree, one
mll51 only write an acceptable dlssertalion . The publication cia book based on
that dissertation-particularly a book
reccMng high pratse-11 "an achievement weD beyond that Involved In the atIAinment ol the doctoral degree ." U a
book based on a dissertation had no
more weight than a mere dissertation , the
requirement lor the doctoral degree
would be a published book , not a dissertation as such . The overwhelming majortty ol dissertations are not In fact published, the ma]ortly of llnt books are In
fact based on dlsseftations, and the overwhelming majority ol such first books do
not receive anything like the kind of
recognHion that Novak's book has
already earned. ll&gt;erefore, the Ad ministration's Interpretation ol the rule Is
mistaken.
2. In fact , the Administration has Irequently and regularly awarded tenure to
facuhy members whose published
resurch was primarily or whofty based
on their dissertations. Therefore, even if
President Ketter's lnterp&lt;etallon ol the
"J)pplcablo rule -.e unchalle"9""blo. the
fact ' that K has been routinely ignored
renders it a non •rulo .
3. Beyond all this, Novak In fact has
completed several other scholarly works ,
is nearing complollon on others, and Is
Into 11111 others, none o1 which have
anything to do with Ills ~tlori . It has
been the judgment o1 every faculty
reviewing body that Novak's forthcoming
works-particularly but nor exclu-ly
the major McCormack study-wiD make
a stgnillcant contrbutlon to ocholarshlp.
Tenure 1s nor a reward for past work , but
a status conferntd In expectation ol conUnued eJ&lt;ceDanoe In research and
teaching , Every faculty rO£vlewlng body
conclud«d that Novak's work , put, present, and projeded, tufty Justified that ex·
pect.atlor).
On February 1. 1980, Chaoodor
Wharton upheld President Ketter's dadto deny tenure. He ollered no
r~s....

..,..u

*"'

s-t-1 COIICi... DM

.

Wfiat condulions may ""' ctr.w

from

this alfalr? lsuggar the folowlng:
I. The cenlral prtndplas of faculty
~ . peer"""""'· and the rule ol
that govern .. ~ unlver-

-

evidently en clllllle c:onc:em to the

~-- ol this uniYe'llly.
Ev.y faculty body at every level sup-

padld Novak-moot ol them unenlmoully or -tv to-end every ..tI'Rinlllnllor at every level refuoed to accede to that ..commendation. In my tx....--and In the experience ol ..
other facldy rnembas and a good
number c l . . . , _ et thle unlvenity and elsewhere who familiar with
this caee-lh.n Is no pNCedent for 10
• violation ol the fundamental
prlnc:lple ol peer """""'.
Aa:orcllng lo the American Pollllcal
Sc:lenc:e Aseodallon, "the bat .......,. ol
prix:edures" on facldy penonnel matters
is a 1966 Statement on the Gowmment
ol Col.ga and
Jo*llly formulootad by the ~ AaoocWion ol
Unlvenll)l Profeuon, tha American
Counctl on Education and the Aaaoc:tation ol Governing Boards ciUnlv«&lt;llia
and Colleges. The key _ , folows:
• "FIIC\ltty status and releted n.-s are
prlnMrlly a fiiCIIIty raponllbiltty; this area
Includes appointments, reappointments, .
dec:illonl nor to reappoint, promotions,

u.w.-.

the granting of tenure, and
dlsmluai. .. The governln~ ard ...
should, on questions ol lac
status, as
In other matters where the
:ultv has
~r~ . co~~the
IIIC\ltty-judgment except In rare lnstancel
and lor compeDing .....ans which should
be stated In detaU."
Why did the Administration so blatantly violate these ,guidelines? Naturally we
must be careful about Inferring motivation
In the ~bsence ol hard evidence, and It II
qutte possible that at different levels of the
administration there
differing sets of
concerns. SHU, H would be foolish to
overlook the context in whic:h Novak was
denied tenure: the present budgetary
situation, possibly Impending retrenchments, and repeated Indications that the
soc:lalldences are destined to be cut back
over the next five years. Thus, the In ference Is strong that Novak has been the
vic:tlm of a de facto retrenchment disguised as a merit review; If 10, this course
of action II tpedflc:ally prohibited bv the
contract between SUNY and the UlJP. In
the end, ol course, the administration's
motive or motives is mlovant; peer
review and the rule of merit, In any case,
have been Ignored.
2. Teaching excellence, despite aU the
rhetcinc to the contrary, evidently plays
little or no role In tenure dectsJons toda_V·
The Novak case, at any rate, can hardly
laU to lead to skepticism about the university's suppmed commitment to tuchlng.
3.The uniYerllty's Internal rules with
regard to penonnel matters are being Interpreted and enforoed lnconslltently and
capriciously. When rules which ..., at the
very least ambiguous In their meaning are
understood In one sense In some caMS
and In another senle In others, or applied
In some cases and Ignored In others, they
are no lot1ger "rules," but mere tools In
the hands of those who hold power.
4. In this unlventty arbitrary ad·
mlnlstratlve power ·aaems to count fw
more than logic; facts, and reaaoncd
argument. Every argument rnacle by
various administrators to jutllfy th«&lt;r ded·
sJon was effectively countered . AU to no
avail - the arguments were limply Ignored.
The p~ or this report has been to
alert the unlvenlly community, particularly the faculty, to a matter that nor
only violates central Principles of university governance but aJ.o entails a gr_ave
mJoc:arr\age of elementary justiCe . I hopa
that others will join In an effort to, at the
least, ensure that this kind of thing wiD
nor happen -.gain, and at best 10 Induce
the O...nceDor to revese hts decision.

-.e

_.,..._

Sla~Prof~

ATI'EN110N FACULTY
MCJilben altha-...., are mc:ouragc;l

to IUblllll lhalr Faculty R Fon. 010 SCATE to the StudeDt
"-"da6ao • - • poMible, David
~olSA .........Wthle ........
Fac:ultv
erwiMIII..t to

with.....,_

636-2950.

�Meod! 27. 1980

CALENDAR

-------

-.ooY _ .
~ e.-"
- ....... ~-·no.,-- .... y._-.,c.lo- ..

Fh: 0.0 . . . 0. (Cube ...,.., the
~: 5oc:loly ond Peopo InT...-,. 148
Dtolondorf. 7:30p.m.

. . - . ~ oll'hyololoay . ........ Eln-

- eoa..
a1-... 101Shorm.t. 4 p.m.
.. 3:451n S-15.

s . - . , - Edlkal n-y, Dr. Mhw
~-·

~

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

IIAn.MA'IJCS cOI..LoQUUII•

n...dav-27
~

T1tlo:ll

_ . , . ' - o f - . D r . .. E...... -

--·~~~

-COIC

IW:EON

me...

107 MFAC.
Ill .... s.,..-.d
....... c.-lor-ai~T-

111--tobo-tod•obv

R•••rk•.

9 ;30- 10 a . ~a .: latrM•c.1orr

. -.
- - Conwlor dw Study
al
Cullonl
T
~~12:30; , _ . _ al c
p_.
...,.._~, ~ Dovld
M -. ~ ; ~Golh..An­
............. one! PaW~~.
1:30-3.30 p.m.:. CGiloeo Ulo: ~
~ p_. .... ...., Siogoi ond
Soopbon Smloll; 1 ' ¥ - ond l.Gri~.
one! Koroo Moolwy ond llor!lln . .. Com·

'

- S o......... --...•. - -

~-

lllollngglol..t- - - u..-.o. ol
"*-·
end .......... al dw · Nollonol
Acodomy al s..r-. 104 ~· 4 p.m.

............ _.D

~~A-~F-,Mort.
PHAIIJIACEl1nCS
- ·
Goodnor, ...Suoto Oluclmt. C50I Cooloo. 4 p.m.

Sdonca.

I

-o..-n--

3 .:J0.5p m . --~
Koolor Room • . , __

M

UUAII FUM'
Mora " - b e

0

R--.

Jww

~

..........

-

............. """-

PAIITY'

n.Dolctlc:~lo~Ao&lt;&gt;-*wal

';

''~Gene

Thoro ..... bo • oponoorcd by the
I.Jndorgroduato Hlotory Coundl to bo held •• 404
Copen 8oulovord at 8 p.m. Few.,__

"'*-n, . , . -, ldwao Cologor. Room
90, 4226 RlQgo Loo. 3-S . .... l'nNntod .... dw
Ooportmont al ~ Dloorders ond

JUST IIU'FALO IIEADING'
fllitllotJ 0..0. one! Mldoeolltlc:Clwo. Allen.,.... Communly . c.n., Ill Einl.o.'OOCI ncar
Allen . Tho re.dlngo wtl boaln ot 8 :30p.m. Admls·
t1on at lhe door • $2,
Flttlding Dawoon, who bogon hlo CO&lt;ftl In 1949
ol Blodl Mountoln Cologor, Is the outhor ol mony
boob. """'"'' tlwm The 8lact M&lt;HinBook
(c.-, "'-! , An
14cmor of ""'"'
Kltno (Ponthoon), The c;...,., Stooy E.., Told,
Gt.GI 0.,. foro Bolgomo, The Man Whc Chongcd
~t • .nd mort reomdv, Two Penn., L.one, a
now!.
Playwrtght and poet MlchNIM&lt;Oure'o boob In·
dude The Adept, The Elcord, ~ Tonao , Hym"'
10 St. Gct,.on, Dcrl &amp;own , ,.,... Sdmcc &amp;.ay..

-·

£NGINEEIUNG SC1e1CE. AEilOSPAC£
EJIIGIN.EEIIING 1tllt.lb.£Ajl ENGINEEIIING

~ (19791 . Woldman
- . _ 4:30, 7 and 9:30p.m. Gcnonol
S2.10; $1.60.
Tho_... .. Gooogo ..._. p o p u l o r -

~-

~-·

~-~SM.. Kothorinc
Co,nel ~- 8 p.m. $.50. An ...
hl&gt;ltlonal~--~ond"'"!! . .»'

Coplon. 684 -~- 3 p .m.

.,..._,~­

-

--.o-·

&lt;::II1.U.M

IIOIIt: M . . - ·

..

E-

""""C. s.un.-ildd
Unlvenly
ol
- G.Uolot s. -·
l4id&gt;lgon 104 P.n..r. 3:30pm.

dw-oldwtlm'• - -.. ............
New YMr'l CWI from 196410 1967.

CIVD. ENGINEEJUNG SOIJNAII•

EllA ACTION TEAll MEETING •
For lotter-wrttiog ond tolophontng In c o n - .
wlh dw .-..1 ERA rattllcoOon ~ ­
Amhont ~ - 6-8 p.m For location coli Donna
.. 636-2773

111r - - c-troa '"

w..-

..._ Yodo..

-Now York
McGony.
..... poluOon
· -·
SC... - Ooportmont
al Env!ronmtntol
c:.on.rvatton. 139 Parittt. 4-5 p.m . Refreshments

wtlboMIWd.

R&lt;n Angel. JQgua. Slrvo and

100M

roamdy

Antechombor &lt;I Other Poem..

THIRD WOIILD WEE1C'

AUXlHOLISII 5DQIWI'

---·~: A

- - ...... Dr. Bod&lt;,- ol
Drchonl
_ , ....
. .~.
. _ _ -Pad!Momanol
..
~ .

1021

.

sa- -

EGYPTWEEIC'
llo .m. --·-~'**1
U.. F__. (11m)

c.---"'~
r'*a-..·.DHaopbl

N ~- -Roam.

12-

Lft-·

,...,..,., - 17-- --

- - 1-4 p ... f7 ... """"
L11nrf
~
~

&lt;;..,_,. ol ......__ Katharine c...n.u
Thu&amp;re , Eac:ota. 8 p.m. "T'tdwta rney bl: ~
lor $1 .50 .. tlw 5quft Tlckot Oftlco "' .. tlw doc.
Food - - t1w peri........,. . tr..
LECTURE'

-

,__y _

--·IIERAIIOt
~· SOUNAII•
PfixATaJCS

-

ea.u....c. no.-.

CAIIJBANA'IO'
1M c:.t.bean Stucknl Auodatlon pre.ents
.. Deod. . . . . .__.._ ploy ....
Alhol "'-d, futurtng dw Notlonol Fal!vol

-S...IOa.m.

12

- . pluo
- ~
Cblo.dw11Mu.s
.....,.._
- ..
8lunde-o ...
Ink&gt; w
Squh 7 p m

Sc. Compuo

·-~
tho
7-9 p.m ~

~- F.
- -· Edwon! M
SlnMr
, low11-....,
orudont , U/8 Showing olthe Zaprudo.
11m ol t h e - -- 147 Diofmcforf 8 p ..
F,.. s.,..-.d by the SA Spoakcn'
lluruu .
POETIIY II£ADING •
MlcMol McCiouo. But

Go-·-

poet ,

.....tlngfram . . - . P~Room . 420~
8 p.m " -. s,.o.-..d t,. the Englloh o.p.n.

. -·.Gooya....

f7 ........ Aod 17-""-- Comp.o

E.o.-51!&gt;-6~pm . -Sc

col636-2801or-IIO-. A AU'tiA lAIQOA Df.I.TA ..utiNG • '
, _ . . . . . _ . . _ , . l o r .. _

...

Our,..

Friday- 28

eo.----,....,._..,.,

T....... ol N

f

I

John &amp;nn.l

--DGa-·

_..., ... Gn+o*-~.

,.._.,...Y ••
-

-

H-.

20ih.......,
u......

....... - - al

Gco&lt;eo

............. -.AINd!iololllz.ln
_,~aMy
Opon ....

II'Al1101.0GY ......,...

-~-- .... s.--

_..,.._IIM~--

.. , . _ Dr 8 - I.Jow.
_ , _ a i " " " " ' * -, U/8 1112F330p,.

Plf\'IICa &lt;Xl&amp;.U)QtMM•

Oo·--

--eon...- ~

...
- ·4$4..........
"""*" o.,.-.P•

1~12,_ :

c-_,~

eo.n...u-

-Sodo~v-: ,_.
- , a.-.
l4ocflcol
Cor1iu.... Potttr
Commun'icauve
Oloonlor.. ond llll:lor Soolboos. ~

_
_
3 l l.
- H o l . .. 330p ...

~

P£DIAJIIICS GIIAND IIOUNosT - n. Solotr _, ~ llalo lo Chilli

-.......... r.c- OooiOfd Kon Grant.
N 0 ond Honry ·Co..-do. ~. Aol&gt;o&lt;·Pricc
T&lt;¥ Kind&gt;- o.ldr..,'• Haopbl II

...

OIIAI.IIIOLOGY SOUNAII•
.......-ol--c.ll~lotloo
- . Dr &lt;&gt;-- ~- 14 0 . o.p.n.
- a l P........
U/8
-107 . ~10-- 121pm

o..-n- a1-...

MEDICAl. SOUNAII•

~

.. 315

-

Tho liye lpOn50ring .,., Tho Jopon
FoundoOon . Wldhtngton D.C. Oftlco; Counc:i1 an

ln-..tlonol Sludlu, ~ f&gt;r&lt;¥am . SUNY
Bullolo; ln...- Engltoh . . . . _ lnduto.
SUNY BuffU;, , and Japan-A.rnaica Cutfure
. Bullolo.

QUANT1TATIVE ANALYSIS lAII

CAC FIUI'

$1.90. otudonts, foculty and otofl Sl.50.
Tho ~ doug~\ boy """' Ou"'
Spec. In what could Put for • aysta1
not
holf tlw u.s
a n d - Rlchord ~ o ...,chic._..,.,.

~·

. . _ II. 4240 flld8o Loo 3 P·• -

thcftwtlbconuh_al....,_..,.and

"oils tnduding ,.._ orronganonto , coliw..,.y,
judo. etc. TradttionoiJoponao rdrftluncnto wtl be

- 107 MFAC. me.. Ill doy s,.o.-..d
bv tlw c.-lor Slu*s al CUihnl T -

_ _..... " - .... Corol - .. An·
............ Corol McDoonol. Antlwopology, ond
Jo_,_ t..e.y.Hobbol,
1-3 p m., al - - . Sodol

-

bclaro-

-but

Gtcotfun

R -...............
- -·the
ot .....
Mor-.
~ DrA
......,.
dlocowrer,
F..... El-f-onl. ~ V-.g Ptof.- o1
NchMology, who ..-!hod .. ...... dty

Wololmonn-., - . , 7 p m
T - U . . - fNmlwtlboohown
.,dwWoldman-119pm
aCFIUI'
&amp;a, Rltlor. 147 Diofoncfaof 7 ond 10 p m F,..

-·lot-"-·

-

CMm .,.f, U/8

CUI Cooko

2 p oe

bv dw

U/ B Womon'o C.ucuo ond

· dw ...................

--w..s

dtfl....,. ...,_ olthelopk and to
·--- Tho~- ol ohor1
vignettes daigncd both to ~ women como to
gr1pl with their own eltituda about .gtng and to

--proWio lntlght ..to -

con&lt;:cmlng • .

·· doblbtoting ....cia

"""'-~. ~a..­

Roth. Amy Pitt ond Fotth Lobonboum wt1 lud

Such top1t:$ •

_ . . , . . _ onuollly, phyot&lt;ol

~andlllogoolowtlboexornlnatl "lnooup·

''Workahop

for

Wom~n :

The Growing

Yton . flam 261080 ond beyond ..,• wtl begin at
9 ,30 o .m - - ..
In front
ol dw Woldmon Thutn. Tho progrom wtl con·
dude obout 4 p.m. Colloo ond donuts wtl bo pro-

-Hoi.

- but

Yided during bring. lund!

~

ohould

Boc.uN allmlocd · octv.... roglotration •
· Enrolmont iollmttod to 60.
For - . . , lnlarmo- "' eonllrmotion ol

~ In Soudwm
Colfomlo, ............ ... tonk. ond-offlorojount
-dwSouth- &lt;lntln.dlor "-~

- 107 MFAC. ~- J!,l doy s,.oe-.cl
bv dw c.-lor Slu*s al a..ural T r a -

ac...-

T_

_.,..,_. ~

BENEFIT CONCEIIT •

Aol - Nodldnol·

s.,..-.d

Studeot -

' - · -· col636-2807.
STUDENT COIIFEJIENCE ON
COMJIUNJCATJON•

...

(19791 ea.u....c.
· 5quft 4:30. '7 ond 9·30 p m Gonorol
ocl-1210. oludoni&amp;SI60

........ - .. o.,..n-..t
.loooph

-·to-

flm"

to I R C - -; Sllor Donna H -, P- Fondo, Jodo Nlchoiocn.
K.m Blodl and R-. w - - I n " * . _ ol·

C26F- 1 2 IUiliCINAI.
, . _ , . CIEKliTIIY
, . . _ _ IEJIINAII•
_1 _.

WORKSHOP ON AGDIG
Aging lo on lneYitoblo port ol the lifo cyd&lt;, y&lt;1
seem apedaly ~ 10 the
• ._........n d - -tlwwordcvoka
IMiy women otr.n drud dw Ideo ol growing
old« and reo&lt;t to 1 bv.........,.. ..V-dclcoting at·
... - ... bo ......... In • day-long -.no. ••
IOINhow worna'l

auav. growth .•

EGYPTWEEIC'

WMFUM'

- c - - . c-.. - -

Saturday - 29

....- otmoophoro which . hopofuly will ,....,

_ " ' _ _ _ _ _ Dr MhwCoplon

-

fonnot

willcoclodloc:utoion~•
From 7-10 p.m In 5pouJding Dining Room .

~ - 7ond9:4~p
- al ""'
'"*" Klnrl. 170
MF,.c,m.o..
. m . Goncol-

-

5

been,.__,

Hoar .... bo ,.._,, .. dw """"""' and

-

11\JDEHT CONfDI£NC£ ON

~~·

UUAB IIIIDNIGKT FUM •

A NJeht ot 11M ~ 119351. Confe..nce
Theatre , Squh . 12 rntclnlght. Genco~ o c l $2 10; otudcnts $1.60.
Tho Man.. - . Y"Uili couple In low . Tlw
ploc ....... YCIJI , ... ._.._ the brotlwn destroy
It with lhU IUITf.a.listk: biend of humor, lunacy and
chooo Fn!OmcohownotU/ Btnlb0&lt;1glnal35mm

F_.

U.. al 11M c,bo&lt; Tat EAit..-- s-. D. 5-7
pm .,21311oldy lmlnoaorio MichNi wawn.cn
For hmhor lnformoOon. col636-2110

Z34 5quft "2 p m
1o T -. ReNo-"-""· ......... ....... end R4k Sbolng
N11M,.. bo ....._.. ond p1ono . . , _ -

....... _..

e.oa

nftg ol ....,_ cu~un: at the
~· ·
Tho opening ovont wtl be o 11m onttdod,
At MJau.-.1. to be shown 111 170 MFAC, al 4 p m .
Tho 111m lo obout o fol&lt; fatlvolln FukuiP&gt;decturc o1
Japw1 and dcpk:b an age-old pe1ormtng arts tradi·
-which ....
In dw 1\Uol .,... ol
northern J_., Tho produ&lt;e ol dw 111m, Me

SHORT~·

UloW~-oodll-ho
, chorgo- ....,._
_
_ .,dw_u..-.o...,..,..,..,
A

- - - • - t o b o a l n T o .........

.IAPANESE CUI.n.IIE '
Aw campus lgllb1da • • IC01pOniOring an cw·

-T-

St.-·.·

c-.-..... -

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

v--·

9 15 11 :45: . _
Popn by
Solch Sulotmon. l.lngulotla. 8odcr Owd&lt;.
...,.,._., ,..._ 8olmego ond Mohoud T ,.,_..,,
lnt•nttve Engbsh lAngu.,. lnatllute , •nd
Moh......t T Aronl. Jn...- Eng11o11 L.onguogo In

......

12 45-2. p m : c---llftd the Media.
P - by Poul J Kowolowtld ond SuM• J How
Guetyn fioiestl nger

~ ...... Dr. ~ Gantk.
_,_.,-~

........,. _

U/ 8 , ond ...... K.,_-Gontlo
Lutt.on !School · .1135 011-. Sc ,
7.30pm T - . . 531or
- o n d SI 5 0 1 o r - - l
Ronond Kov ... _ . "f...... ~....
. , . ,_
. . . . .ond_..,....
. . . _ . _ _ ...
75or....-.
hy _
,.,......,...,

ond~R-- , ....,.._

"""

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

Communketion , end

2 15-4 45 . . . _ ............. Popn by M.ido

.. -. ~

-- ~. F

.lUST IMJFFALO WIUTING WQIIKSHOP'

-

-

pm

.. -

• - . ..... Floldtng Dowoon

·eo..-.y c -.

Ill ~ 2

~tofr•ond~.,

.... , . . .

�Mardi TT, 1980

7

Japan Night

'f....., ........ ---....
old ...................... _

............ ~&lt;*lbn.Frldav.

UUMIFILII'
w_.tr Ia.-~ . 1978) . Conlorene.
·s.-.
7.45 .... 9:45p ..... Gonorol
- . 12.10;- SJ.IiO.

5,.,_

-

n.•-lho~oloiCJih­
Gennon--llh-ol~

-

_ho_bll...._

.... -

unlolhluiiO

'*"·he--.

PHYSICS~•

. , . _ ol T~ ~ Plofe.w E. Mon!rol, - - ol Pbyaks.
IJnivenly ol . 454 Ftoncaok. 3:30 p.m.
Calfee e1 3:15.
0.. Mon!rol II U/ B • on od)und pro-

JIICFIUI'
IOp.m.

" - oo IIC-.-., S1 for oohon.

by

- " - ..........,_
. . - .. plano.
5pc&gt;r-.d
p.m.
mmla/ M""".

!e.w.,doo~tof~.

CANCEil EDUCATION PIIOGIIAM

Hoi. 8
tho Oepert-

IIILTIDISCIPUNAIIY CONFBENCE•
~ Ed-.! S. Hendaton. M.D.
H - Audltortum, Roo-...11 Pn
tdtute.

CAIUIIANAW'

-

~-0..:..-~-Compuo. p.m. ~: $4 f o­
rS3 for jull tho clondng. A 11w R -

MomoN~ In·

p .m.

CHEJilCAL ENGINEEIUNG SEIIUNAII•

FII.JU•

s-.1--

no. . Shloloo, " - (I 9381 .....nne Joan
c..,.bd one! ~ Sullvan;' AI ·Fol o(19621, wlh Ev• Solnt, w....., Bully. Erie
Counly H-.1 Sodoty. 25 ~ eo...t 8
:.::'.tvt~
5pc&gt;r-.d

S1,.

4~ 5

s..JioeoiM....,_Fiow._ PtofctooJ
S. L. Soo, Unlvonl!y of -/un.on.. 107
O'Brian. 4-S p.m. Refrahmcms at 5 .

~ donee;

bond.

ENEIIGY II£5EAIICH liOIJNAR•
Nltrt&lt; Oxide , _ CbooDicd!l
In Cool. L.A. Kennedy. Oepertnwnt ol Mochanlcol ~ - U,&lt;B. 101 Boldy.
4--S&gt; p .m.

by-

FUC (fiUI HISTOIIY) •
l ' - M-!oll (Mimguchl. 1954) . 146
Olofonclorf. 7 p.m. Spontor&lt;d by lho Contcr for
Modlo Siud!I-

UUAII JUDHIGKT FUC •
A ...... 01 lho Opon (19351 . Coniam&lt;O
n.u.. Squn. 12 tn~c~nt,;~t. Gen.ol -

S2 JQ. -

._,

followt . Spo,_od by the Doportment of
Pillooophy, Tho o.oduolo ~ In Modom Gorman S&lt;udla, ond tho Doportmont ol Hlllo&lt;!I-

a.- of . . nH KJod. 146
DldoNioof. 7 _.9:45p.m. Gooonol ~
SUIO: -.loaaly _. .... Sl.50.

BFA IIECITAL •

-- .

.T.....
-· ...p.m.
Buld,
l.lnhctlly of
684 -Boldy. 3:30
llllc.-

CACFUI'

~--170 NFAC,-.7ond

...

.....,_

LECIUI£'

bolo&lt;&gt;nd ..............................

W._tll.,___,_plg.......SIO
•d!&lt;'ol_, ....

$160.

UUAII WEDNEiiDAY NIGHT FlUlS'
"""' 119411. 7 p .m. ; T-M.., U947) , 8 :55
p.m. Confe-enc:c 'Theme, Squh. Free admtuion.

Saaday- 30

-c.-Fot-.. .
PAS501/Dl

no. -

c;.,.,.

.,_.,

......

0...-F.... _ ._

c.w....· p -

- - ..... ol Bu&amp;lo.

-a - - m-&lt;lono Fnu L.ong 111m llbou:t
man ...
who atWmptl to .....,_ate Hider.
Tho llghq wllich sunounds tho

T--

- 10:30 . ....
- 787
--CAl. 11«-

LECTUIIE'

StAn&amp; .. "'* c.,~ra~~o~ ,._w-.
..... M........--al
.......

o.o.-. " --

n..

833-2868 .. 41nn Gludo 434-99n .
Aloo .... - - - - Sundotl ochool.

-

CACFUI'
Clooe -

"' ...

Sl.90, -

--

ment ol E&lt;onoMb •nd Cologe Workshop .,

nH """- Con·

w..-.

~-

1978).

w-

-5.30, 7:45ond9 45p·m
-S210, - S I 6 0

P0£11IY II£ADING AND JIUSIC •

s...-

~ .. '-11 ...
Anno
ol P r -. 0.. Oowld IIOIIF...,... reacler: -.Holl&amp;own . .ocollot;
H..._. HloiO&lt;y llwportment. Unlvenlly a1 . Sydnc F. . Mc:Gowon , plonlot. R&lt;d Room, Foc:ully
Michigan (lomworly o ~ ,..,...,. e1 U/8). 26t
Club, Hen1rnon lbooy. 8 p.m. F.... ~ by
Cologe B.
~ - 3:30 p.m. ~ by tho Go-odond Cll!ord
Col,g&lt; .
Due 10 - rt.ll j&gt;oogro1ft rwdlodulod

Tho -

loPioloT-~ lo lhoPr•

n..-.

Trt!asuty -saents 1rytng to get to the bottom ol a
c:ountcrfrirtng.

u:clUI£'

~saENCES SDIINAII'

..-to.1, Pool F. H..,_, Gecloglcol S...., ol
Conodo. Room 18, 4240 llldgo Lu. 3o30-4:30
p .m . cal• and doughnuts wtl be av.a.ble .a: 3.

Genen~-.

-o--.........,..., undea&gt;voo-

HISTOIIY FIUIS'
11M ..__, to Talk; Eorlp T T...... 148 Dlelondod. 7:30p.m. 5pc&gt;r-.d by
... ~· ol Hlolo&lt;y.

Sod.a ~ 0.. s.m...lllowloo, ,..,...... ol

. loaaly oad """II 50.

UUAIIFUI '

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&amp;hibits

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IUIT EXHIBIT

s - &lt;:"'-.

Mon:h
Hoi

31 ·~

Moot.. ol Ane
20 Socond F1oOf Golo.y. ll&lt;thune

LOCKWOOD MEJIORL\L lJBRiUIY
EXHlBIT

d-.
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NEED IIASIC DENTAI. CA11V Wfll. TEAM
MUDS YOU

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PHAIDIACEUI1CS
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I

March 27. 1980

Solar heating:
would it pay·you?

.

• Calendar

..,__,.-.

i

c - . . -...........,

J\lloon~ht7pm

. _ ..

~

w-'pril4ot630
. _ _ .. Cultwol-

Would II pay residents of the U~ited
Slates to ..,_ In solar energy heating

lll*fN leo their present "conventional"
hoona?
h a8 depends on where you bve, a
UIB prof..or reports, based on his
reMardi Into the.cost of harnessing solar
-w .. II m.ta to the cosl-&lt;:&lt;&gt;nsclous

consumer.

Or. William A. Hamlen Jr.. an
associate professor of envlton~ntal
.,..)yolo aNI policy In the School of
Management. said In an Interview that

the

tun

seems to

shine

most

favorably-from-a consumer point of
view-on what appears to be a nanow
band -'*'9 across the counlly from
coast to c:out.

..........t-·.......

Among 21 dtles studied. Hamlen
pointed out, four lie within this Imaginary
band . These are Binghamton In the
southern part of New York State. Pillsburgh, lndlanepolis and Denver. Because
of tile lmlted nature of the study. elden·
lion of the band to coastal locations Is
laclcing.
1'o the north ol this band ." Ham len
observed . "there's not enough solar
radiation to justify the extra expense of
purchasing and Installing a solar energy
eolledor and storage system. And to the
south . there's Insufficient demand lor
heat. "
Could solar energy be used
economically lor air conditioning In
southern states ~ applied to existing
homes? Hamlen said such application
was outside the scope of his research , but
that the lechniques he used to evaluate
home heating benefits could be applied lo
air conditioning.
"The results. especially In the South .
co.uld be quite different ." he added .
Noting that the 21-dty study takes Into
account only "existing homes." Hamlen
also oboerved that future solar energy
developments could change lhe entire
picture for home heating .
For instance. he pofnted out , a new

horne correctly designed lor solar energy
efficiency would definitely provide more
solar heat than a solar system added to a

conventionaDy designed existing home

$5,000 and up for a.n 'acthre' •v-tem
So-called "active" solar sys1ems. the
type currently available lor existing
homes , are considered effective . Hamlen
said , K they produce from eight to 10 per
cent of total heating needs . The cost of an
"active" system. he added . starts at about
$5.000 In the present mllrketplace and
ranges upward .
Building a new home with so-called
"passive" solar eneTgy capabilities might
add about $20.000 to the cost of the
home . Hamlen noted .
Whatever the approach . he cautioned .
any giant steps taken lo utilize the sun's
energy for home hellllng could resuh In
reduction or loss of the conventional fuels
necessary to supplement solar heat. ·
He reaO&lt;&gt;ned that widespread use of
solar heat could lead to an "Ineffective
level of operation" for utilities and olher
supplien of conventional lu•ls. Such a
siluatlo~ . the professor warned . might
bring about uncertainty of supply and
higher prices to compensate for lost
revenue .
As Hamlen sees It, an "accepted prob·
atMIJty" Is that consumen, when they fear
loss or Interruption of conventional fuel
supp . would tend 10 purchase greater
supplies of fuel oil, gas or electridty- at
any affordable price- and thereby reduce
solar heating Investments.
Thls would be particularly true , he
oboerved. should the consumer lace ra·
tlonlng procedures based on former
lewis·of consumption

H- euc.h 'hat' we11 otand
But there Is a limit u to how much
· ecooomlc "heat" the consumer wiD bear
according to a · projection Ill Hamlen'~
studies, based on tripli~ the prices for
conventional funs In such a tuation, he
contended, solar heau~ Investments
would opurt, even In ar a north and

south of his solar-effective "sunbelt."
The average consumer. Ham len
believes, tends to look at home heating In
terms of personal C&lt;?Sts rather than In
terms of conserving fuel .
Regarding new homes built lor
"passsve" solar efficiency, Hamlen ad·
vised that Owner. should be aware ol
problems that could develop. He pointed
out that there often are ventilation
problems due to airtight Insulation and
wtnd problems due 10 placing :!le home
In an open area to obtain maximum sun
radiation benefits.

Cctotral ....., plaabt7
He further observed that home-heating
needs could eventuallv be met by central
solar-energy electrlcaf generating plants
In the southern part ol the counlly. In
reference to such a 5~/S~em . he called at·
ten lion to a new type of "very expensive"
transmission wire being develop2d
which , unlike present transmission Unes.
Is able to maintain electrical energy over
long dlstanC&lt;!S without significant loss.
"It sliD must be dekrmlned. however.
whether the energy potential of such a
system wiD be sufficient to meet the cost
of building it," he commented. "The
money market demands that any system
must last long enough lo oporrate effl·
ciently enough to absorb the cost ."
For energy efficiency, Hamlen rates
nuclear power as having the greatest
potential lor meeting energy needs. providing that such problems as nuclear
waste disposal and radiation danger can
be solved . A nuclear plant. he pointed
out. Is economicaUy efflclenl because It
can produce more energy than It absorbs.
As lor solar energy, he believes the
general public -has adopted a wait-andsee attltude,.with a keel\ eye on prices lor
conventlonal fuel5 .
A firm believer in the laws of the
marketplace . Hamlen says this public at titude "is as it should be ."

Fuller will address
SAED graduates
Philosopher-Inventor R. Buckminster
Fuller wiD be the commencement speaker
lor the School of Architecture and En·
viron mental Design, Friday, May 16. He
wOI also be guest of honor at a reception ,
sponsored by the Friends of the Universl·
ty Libraries, lhat same day.
Fuller, Inventor of the geodesic dome ,
noted speaker, and author of several
books, Including Operating Monuol for
Spocuhip Earth , and Utopia or Oblivion .

JV slate set
U/ B win play a lour'jjame fun lor varsl:
ty football schedule In 1980, Head Coach
BID Dando has announced .
It marks the firs! time a jayvee·program
has been scheduled since football was
revived In 1977 _ The BuDs had a suc·
cesoful freshman program through 1970.
Three of the opponents of this fall's
slate conduct NCAA Division I varsity
programs: Colgate, Syracuse, and CorneD . The fourth . Ithaca College, Is 1n
Division Ill.
Two of the games. again t Colgate and
Ithaca, wiD be played on Friday alternoons at Rotary Field . On the road , the
Baby Bulls face CorneD In a Friday con·
test and Syracuse on Sunday. The
schedule : October 3 . Colgate (HI. 2
p .m.; October 12, Syracuse (A) . 1:30
p .m.; October 17. CorneD (A) , 4 p.m. ;
October 24. Ithaca (H) . 2 p .m. -

JOBS
COIIP£TmVE CIVIL SEIMC£

~.. l:"'NoSG-~:--a· Coo&gt;ool ~
Noli&lt;:.J::;' -

SG-7-""""-. Uno

1\IPIOt SG-S- P........... Uno No 40071
NON.(;OitiPf:TITIYE CIVIL
YlCE
ol
SG-11- - Comer
Uno No 40412
.

s..-- a..-.

�Diet called
important link
to cancer
hazar·
;

Smoking, heavy drinldng and
dous chemicals aren't the only lectors
which appear to be linked to cancer, say
two nationally-known nutrltlonlsls who
spoke at U/8 recently.
Did Is now emerging as an lmporla!lt
factor, accotdlng to epidemiological
studies as wen as those conducted on
laboratory animals .
"Nutrition 1sn 't the only anSWet to
cancet thetapy," admtts Dr. P. W .
Newbeme of MIT, "but~ we provide bet·
tet diets, we may be bettet able to resist
things lhat do cause cancer."
Indeed, the loods we eat ha"" already
been hnked to a variety of other diseases.
And early evidence would appear to sup·
port the Idea that the truly well-balanced
diet Is clearly benet than elthet "stuffing"
or "otarving." Those who are "ovet·
nourished." says Dr. Newbeme. tend to
have more coronary and vascular
disease, hypertension . diabetes, colon
and breast cancet. The "undernourished"
are more prone to infections as well as to

uppet gastrointestinal, stomach , cervical
and liver cancers.

It may be the moet Important
"Of all the enllironmental factors which
Influence cancer," Newbeme said, "diet
will probably be shown to be one of the
most Important."
In mouse studies. for Instance, a
loweted caloric Intake has been shown to
decrease mammary lumors. And in
epidemiological studies, the more obese
the woman . the greater the risk of
developing breast cancer.
"fiurthermore ," said Newberne .
"women who had more body mass wete
more likely to have a recurrence of breast
cancet ·after the first mastectomy.''
While those lighting heart disease have
championed indusion of unsaturated fats
in the diet . other researchers have found
evidence that these same , unsaturo1ed

Gala
at the
Gallery
at was a Wftkftld for BIG events. At
Shu's Bullalo, Hans Jurgen
Syberberg •~:

unconventional •our

Hiller,' went on for 7 hours Sunday, en·
trancing some, boring othen unmercifully. At the Albright-Knox, Saturday
and Sunday, the Center of the Creative
and Performing Arts presented a sort ol
musical equivalent: the John C..geLejaren Hiller collaboration,
HPSCHO, utilizing &amp;..., harpsichord ,
40 slide projectors, "' mm projectors
and 51 tape recorders. Presented In the
sculpture court, the ~nt was partially
participatory; the audience was Invited
to walk In and around the perfor.
mance. Con ldend by many to be the
definitive multl-medla wort., HPSCHD,
llke "Hiller,' Is at least one of the
longest: It luted u.ntll mJ4nlghl

fats enhance mammary and colon cancer
in animals

Dr W J . Visek of the University of II·
linois noted in his presentation that there
are two phases of carcinogenesis or "birth
of a cancer." One Is rhe initiation stage in
whtch there are changes in lhe nature of
the cells. The second stage os "promo ·
lion ."' which hastens the process .
"'In animal Sludies, it appears that fats
are promoters. not initiators of ca!K-er , ••

Rigid teaching may ruin a young writer
OM day , James Collins ol U/ B's
Faculty of EducatJonal Studies saw his
young daughter turfuDy attempting to
write a hornewori&lt; assignment The tealS
....,.. born !rom lruslration She mply
couldn' llnd the exact WO&lt;ds .he wanted
wtthout first perlormJng minor surgery on
her prose
The oympath tic lather then showed
the chid a sample of hio own writing .
teplow with additions, deletions and tcvi·
sionS of al kind W11h a sUJp!Wed look.
the youngster told her dad that het
teacher would "kill" her f he saw COPY
that
to uy , H took a whll« to con ·
N d
vlnca
incredulous daughtet that
"sloppy eopy" Is accept.obl. when wnllng

English teaching, Collins recommends
'that Iacuity whose otudents exhibit dialect
variations should ottess the use of dtalts
In writing, wtth lnotial obncentration on
conlent. Form and conformity 10 ~tan ·
datd American English can follow, he
beLeves .
When too much conecting of non otandard forms Is done too early In the
writing process. df""lopment can be
thwarted . lt's more lmponant . he lnsisls,
that these saudents learn first , how to ade ·
quately represent meaning by ute of the
wrilten word and how to develop and at·
ratljje Ideas Into meaningful prose.
Ukenlng this learning proeess to wood working , he uld , "You don't llllln and
polish fumHur until H's been budt "

ilory. explained Col
"'-· • thai lt!ad&gt;on of .mtJng
ollt!n
un
etecl "barrren" In
lummg
ll'l'oc.M II
plaot tn
cmphuoa on
the wrong thing
over content ,
or u
of correct WOJds or otandard
Englolh lomu over ldaa dcwlopm«nt and

They'll be more · If his adlllce Is heeded : Collins said,
more agerly attack o&lt;her
stud«n
wtltlng problems because they can
percelw their written work as "beeng lm·
pottant and having mea~lng . " Cleaning
up enors, he cont~ . then becomes
"wwlbng" rather than persona!y ltvut·
enang
Collins. whose current r search
revolwl around dialect variation In
wntlng , aha
thet the way a teachct
can bnt
a stud«nt to develop
wntlnfl
Is by tackling "one ~m
ot a me " II an lnJiruc:tor tries to deal
With them cumula!Miy, llhct by the red
,Ink method In theme annotabont or In

.

ru.~ .-

The point of

....,.,._t

. . _ IIOC:Io-&lt;oc-'&lt;: . -...
~

Thlo. ~ dctnm«ntaa. he Mid .

to

njng -

from ""- _,.,

""""lrequent
n
n word
an of wt&gt;a., high achool

of non -..ndard opeedl forms II

•-.-d to
A 10-

one discussion , "confusion and discom·
fort" usually resuh .

Pattema ohould be worked on
!notead , what he suggeils, Is that lnstrudors work on patterns ol errors. For
example. ~ a student who speak$ lhe
Black English vernacular drops his final
S , II could be he Is confused over the fact
that his own dialect permHs 11 . but the
writlt!n form doesn 't Or . he may not fuDy
comprehend one or more of the final
tules
What the teacher must do Is IJolate
each rule and have the student work on II
before allowing him or her to go on to the
nexl one
This summet CoUins wiU be conducting
1 workshop geared for urban high school
teachers which Will focus on ottalfgles lor
writing Instruction . A lew Incoming
freshmen In n d ol remedial help In ex·
_pooitory writing will be the stud1mt pat·

s

· to'1?h:'!g.,additional
the workshop , Colbns hopes
InSight Into how
gain

Ia~ Interaction between I acher
and Rudent affect the writing process
altet the first malt composition and 1n
subacqUt!nt d.
Gtadu.lt! partiCipants wlllt ach wntlng
one hout a day and then an
their
teaching for two houn Bacau
analysllls lmmediat • Collins said detet
minalions can be made dally on the next
~gist
htth
arni1QPI'OC'fl!ll, •

Vlsek pointed out Calories. too. appear
to promote the disease .
,
"We know that the Seventh Day
Adventists whose diet is primarily
oegetarian and who drink no coffee . tea
or milk have a lower incidence of cancer
than the general population ," Visek
pointed out. But Mormons. who are
meat eaters but stay away from the
stimulating beverages, Including tea and
coffee, stUI have 22 per cent lesS cancer
than the general population and have
specillcally lowet rates of breast , uterine
and ovarian cancers.
·
" Fiber may be the common
denominator-or adeqllate amounts of
Vttamln A or selenium." he added.

Eaoph_.t canur
Newberne noted that esophageal
cancet, often associated with heavy
drinking , smoking or both, also may be
related to did. Those who llveln the Cas·
pian Sea region ollran have among the
highest Incidence rates ol lhls form ol
cancet and primarily eat wheat grown
locally which Is low In protein This
population's diet Is deficient In lruHs,
vegetables_and more specifically deficient
In zinc, pro&lt;eln . Vitamin A and trace
mlnetals
"It has been found that those wHh
esophageal cancet have low COpper and
anc levels competed with those who
have other types of cancer. othet
diseases or who 111c perfectly normal,"
Newbetne noted
' "1
Until more del nlllvc cvid nee Is shown
to ~nk cancer and did . both speoktrs
• suggested the best COUtSC to foloW Is o
wcU-balanced did with emph · on

~.;.oktrs

were sponsored by the
Gtaduate Group In Nutritional Sciences
and the Department o/ Biochemistry at
U/ B and
a ant !rom Tops Friendly
M4rl~Jts -

"""

�March 27. 1980

PACE Is UUP's approach to
new clientele; U I 8 weighs it

David Kochery: warm,
caring, just; a &amp;lend

gram here .

We come to celebrate the Uf~ of David
Kochery

David Kochery-a teacher whose
reach to his students was touched by the
warmth of mutual affection.
David Kochery-a colleague whose
concem and caring pervaded' each col·
leglal contact .
David Kochery-an arbitrator whose
finely tuned sensitivities enabled him to
deal justly With heated conlllct.
David Kochery-a citizen whose
causes included most Importantly the
creation of jusllce for the people and
groupo most deprived Jn our society.
David Kochery-a friend whose Win ·
nlng wanvth brought sunshine on even
duD, grey days .
We knew these many parts of David .
We were Impressed by them , touched by
them, heartened by them. and occa·
sionaDy awed by them .
The bare reoor'd shows that he began
t aching 31 ~an ago Jn Kansas City
when, many Will recall, K st111 boasted of o
Yankee farm dub and President of the
UnKed States, probabil/ln that order and
that he came to Buffalo 4 yean later.

He laid It aU out
It does not $how that-as a law teacher
he ran against convention . Others played
often elaborate mental sheD games wKh
their oludt&gt;nts, hiding more than they
rev
d , adding more frustration than
knowledge . David, Instead, laid It all out.
He was concerned that students should
be able to organize their thinking. He was
uncomfortable with embarrassment as a
teaching device , with disorganized
dispute as a teaching technique. He ex·
· plc&lt;ed id as wKh his students; he
uruaveDed cornplexKy for his students:
and through difficuk materials and prob·
lems, he stood by his students They
recognized his virtues and his abiUties.
l...asl year, they chose him for the award
Ol outstanding teacher. He was pleased
wKh the award ; but, K was the spon·
taneous outpouring of affection. signified
by the low chant-Coach , Coachbuildlng quickly to a resounding chorus,
that meant even more to him .
David was especially Interested Jn the
growth and succeu of his younger col·
leagues He made special efforts Jn his
senior lacuky role , mor as counselor
than as an evalUAtor of young lacuky , to
be avoilable when they had problems and
questions, concems and d~l\culliH. H
a ays f h more comfortable giving ad ·
vice than making judgments. The hard
deciok&gt;ns about tenure and promotion

~ ~~ =~~d :m~~

Inward ddfi&lt;Uky

A auperi&gt; arbitrator
ln a slightly paradcxic:AI way . these
u
1r
of charaQer mad him a
· superb arbMrator Few know the weight of
ear that arbilnotors bot They often hold
lola of a penon and the bves of Ius or
her tam· "' thn cl«lsion , a dedllon to
affirm or reverw a drsmiual from a Job, a
looo of semonty, a qUAhlleation for ad·
anc:ement Each day the fates of hun·
dreds ol decent peopl4t rest in the deci·
slons of labor arbitrators from which there
II ocaru _ . . and
redr- The ar·
bolrator's lllalwe alford him the owor·
tunity 10 pia~ God . often on a .,..a play·
11'11 fldd . but u God nonethelns 1ho5e
who act out o f - of"- own
omn
nee
! ThoM who act out
of
revenmce for f~ . th
c:.pll(lly lor cornpiiMion and an Jnnat
of humllitv, aJ David did. SIIOCftd
He Ql'n.d the f.onor of .... f ............ In
1\.crodemy of 1\.rbtraton, u
1M did ., man honon
qut.t humlll·
ty

Advisory Council located al each work
site. The group Is composed of elected
classroom representatives and members
of the union's Education Comrr.Ktee .
PACE- an acronym lor Project lor
But the success of each program Is
Aduk CoJege Education-was started
dependent upon the "drive. and energy"
about a year ago by United University
of the Individual who directs each cam·
Professions (UUP) as a pilot project al
pus operation . All program directors
Buffalo State . According to its organizer
must be UUP members.
and Bull State history professor John
"They have to have the zeal of mis·
Aiken , the program is designed to offer .
slonaries without being obnoJ&lt;ious,"
an ahernatlve education deUvery system
·Aiken remarked .
to non-traditional students.
Aiken said one program ran into real
For convenience, the program is now
problems because the person Jn charge
limited to UAW and AFL·CIO union
..coukin't communtcate" with blue-collar
members, but Aiken would eventuaUy
workers and had a "better-than thou" a t·
llke to see PACE offered to community
titude. What 59me facuhy and ad··
residents. Seven PACE programs are
mlnlstrators
fail to reaUze, he explalned ,ls
estabUshed In SUNY and In colleges out. that workers and their union reps don't
side the State .
U~ "supercilious" comments and also
• Its core Is composed of three, four·
don't want to be made to feel that the col·
credit-hour courses per semester with
lege is "doing them a favor" or using
one course offered one day a week, for
them just to beef up enrollments.
the State-mandated three hours and 20
minutes, at the place of employment;
Some faculty ob)ec:t
one given three weekends on campus,
Some facuhy object to PACE because
from 8 :30a.m. to 6 p .m. , Saturday and
of Its use of TV Instruction . "They feel it's
Sunday, and a television-discussion
gimmickry," Aiken said . But the program
course that Includes haK·hour lnstruc·
Is designed to make education more aptional programs plus an hour and 20
peaUng to those "whose primary interest
minutes of discussion once a week at the
Is not higher education" and the•media
work sHe .
course provides the schedule flexibility to
attract workers, he continued .
Schedllled for worken
Faculty can tape their own lectures or
The deUvery system was constructed
use Instructional programs UUP pur·
with the schedules of shift workers In
chased
from Wayne State. which pro·
mind , Aiken said . Some locals here
made It even easier for employees by duced the segments for a similar educa·
tiona!
venture
.
purchasing video cassette recorders. II
Others criticiZe the program because il
students miss a 1V course - offered earhas
a
high
attrition
rate. Often , students
ly In the mornings as a pubUc service on
Channel 7 - they can easUy make up the drop out for a semester then return later
for further instructioh 1 Aiken said.
work .
A.$ far as the actual teaching ex·
PACE has. received backing from
perience goes. Aiken personally feels it I
·SUNY administrators and has also re·
cannot
be compared With regular aduh
ceived the endorsement of UAW and
educationJ'rograms. ·students and facul·
AFL·CIO top leadership.
ty
Involve
In PACE develop a "sense of
Aiken noted that studies indicate that K
a col~ education were made "con - community" and instruction becomes ..a
social as well as academic act ."
venient : and less-threatening to the adult
Still , Aiken lndlcated that some faculty
population . Of1e·third would be attending
school. He also pointed out that unions aren 't overjoyed at the Idea of teaching
blue
collar workers, nor do they relish the
such as UAW provide $1 ,000 a year In
idea of giving up the distance and
tuition rebates for employees and that an
authority
Implicit in student·teacher role
estimated total 9f $2 billion a year Is
playing.
available In education benefits from
Aiken hinted thai U/ B administration
organized labor groups. But this potential
hasn't been moving too quickly trying to
resource for the most part Ues untapped .
UAW , for example , uses only one to establish a PACE program here . He said ,
however , a pilot project Is being con·
three per cent of Its allotted money for
sidered for the Chevy Foundry where a
education , Aiken said .
course is now being taught.
Aiken recalled that In 1974 UUP Presi·
Although Aiken feels the University Is
dent Sam WakshuU predicted that SUNY
not moving as rapidly as II might , Ex·
would face retrenchment due to declining
ecutive
Vice President Somil told the
enrollments . Because of the prospect of
cutbacks . Aiken was charged by Reporter that U/ B is definitely interested
in
PACE
and that his office Is now search·
Wakshull to devise a plan which would
ing for a stall person to head a pilot pro·
anract non·tradttional students. "And all
gram
.
Somil
said he hopes to have II In
the while SUNY was saying 'No , it
place Within a year.
(retrenchment) won't happen ,' " he
last month, the Faculty Senate Admis·
moaned .
Aiken has discovered that the majority sions Committee recommended that a
··concerted effort" be made to develop
of workers past their 20's are enroUing In
programs which "serve the needs" of
the program because they want to know
non -traditional students.
more about the world around them and
"what makes things tick,'' rather than
because of any opportunity for profes·
sional advancement. He pointed out that
an average assembly line worker at Har·
rison Radiator makes between $22,000
James Lee , a doctoral candidate In
and $26.000 a year and Is not llkely to
history at the University of Chicago, WiD
glv up the Job to become a "profes·
give a public lecture, Monday, March 31.
SIOnal."
on "Social Sotence Research In China
Underscoring his message, he quoted
Today: A Case Study of Patterns of lm·
one worker as saying. " I'm working ·at a
m lgralloo In Southwest China,
$28.000 a year Job and when l graduate
1250-1850." Place: 357 MFAC, Ellicott:
I'Dget a degree worth $10.000 ."
lime 3p.m.
Lee was one of the first American·
They doD't like It 'wataed dowD'
trained scholars to pursue social science
Although PACE students do not have
research In China . In 1973, he studied
to take entrance examinations, they must
history at Fudan University In Shanghai .
fulfW aU college requirements before a
and Jn 1978-79 was associated With Beij·
degr Is granted . Because the program
ing UnlversKy and did field research In
Is concerned With maintaining credibilfty.
Yunnan Province.
Aiten says he_ stresses use of a "trad i·
His research focuses on Chinese
tiona! approach" to education. With Ire·
population motlements during the trans!·
quenl testing , standard tellls and
tional period from China's "Medieval
materials . ·
Economic Revolution" to the period of ~
A.$ a matter of fact , Alk n said that H social and economic equU1brium of "late
PACE students think courses are being
Imperial China ." His findings relate to
"watered down" to accommodat them
Chinese social history. the role of
the,i ar the ftnl ones to caD facuhy ~
demography In economic histOry, the
tho carpet lor d Moot students In the pro·
processes of urbemzallon and rurallza·
gram ar very dlract and don't pull any
tion , and the relationship between ma·
pun&lt;Ns, 1M said
jorlty and minority nationablles
lf and when problems do ariM. they
Wine and cheeM WiU be served follow ·
are explored and resolved through on
lng the laDe

The U/ B administration Is investigating
the possibility of establishing a PAC£ Pro·

EDITOR'S NOTE: Law Profeuor
DIIYid Koc.herv died ouddcnlv ......
oprtng bruit (l«qorter, M8rda 20). AI
a -orial ocMc. at the Law School
oa March 17, the following trtbuteclellwred by the don:

counsellor to leaders In the search for
equal opportunity In education and
employment In Buffalo and elsewhere ,
David made another of his quiet , unob·
trusive, monumentaUy effecttve contribu -

tions. It was fitting that President Carter
would honor him and others who
mounted this fight wKh vigor and determination and Withqut the lanf '• of
public:Hy, as the President did jlt , 1Wo
yean ago.
l will remember David best as friend .
His Interests and my Interests In the -law
found little common ground - his In civU
procedure and practice , and labor
law- mine in property , history and social
proce55. His emphases and approaches
to legal education diverged from mine at
many points. But these differences made
no difference to our friendship . David
was not one to allow academic
disagreements to disrupt a friendship . He
woukJ drop in my offk::e from lime to time
to \eave an early warning about some
disharmony groWing wKhln the facult y, as
a kind favor to a friend

a

Thlngt1 that friend• do
We did thlngs together that friends do.
We played golf and l marvelled at his
conslstency and strength off th~ lee and
the fairway . That slim frame could whip
the daylights out of an unsuspecting golf
baU . And I empathized With him as he
searched occasionaDy - almost comically
searched - lor a way to get the baD on the
green Into the hole . Taking three putts
from 12 feet was his particular form of
golfer's affection . His luck or skill or both
at the poker table , on the other hand .
usually assured him of ample walking
around money for several days after our
monthly low stakes engagement In
poker, he was a risk·taker. he played With
studied recklessness. One sensed that he
ran the rest of his life a little that way . too
He took his chances unobtruSively.
displaying always both calm and sell·
control , but freq4endy takmg the longer
odds
•
David would watch these proceedings
w1th an air of bemusement . There would
be a dual smile on his face : a smUe of ap·
preclation and a smile of annoyance at
the fuss . H had his hie m perspective
Down deep. that's why we loved hun and
that's why we WiD m him greatly We
Will miss him greatly
- Thomu E. Heaclrick

New pregnancy test
A new pregnancy screening test of.
fered by the University Hospital at SUNY
Stony Brook can help r assure 998 out of
1,000 mothers-to-be tl!at their baby does
not have one of the most common birth
malformations 1n the Un d States neural tube defects

NUCLEAR FACIUTY TOURS .
Tours of the Nuclnr Science and
Taehnotosw Fdlty wiU be held .wry
tlrst and laa1 Tuaday of the month at 4
p.m. Studen... f~~a~lty and otall
members W'bo are ln.ter ted ln. t tour
m
caU 831·2126 for r-tlono.
The next tooars .om be April 1 and April
29.

History schedules
lecture on China

�M.wdiZ7.~

_
---

......
-

ane,.~~

.....

l.Woooollr

auoo

SUNY/Wolo

~- ·-

s.

~ -llolv.
0..0
~- al c.Awodo Booloolty

..-..-.--.
.._
U...al-

llolv ., _

__

llolv. ciT-~

21.3150
24.000

22,230
27.000
28.000
28.000
21.300
2S,600
22.000
27.000

- .......c13
4
17

12

'-

40

11111
634

UlN'
37
IS

1,012

4&amp;

1.011

Sl2

96

471

116
IS

22
47
167

1.186
1,280
1.236
492

'IllS

14&amp;

l.l!OS

27
17

24.1100

.........

~

4

1.353
1.415
666

39

560

8
19
2ll

9S9
1.134

36

Duo guitarl8t8
debut In New York

82
124
184

I ,I4S

c.n..-

58

-

~~ .

0..0 Gullltlll ........ c..... - '
MlchMI AndNcdD . . . . . . their " York ~ In
R.:l8l 1W an
Weclnelclay, AP.t1 2.
SR. ~ their duo 81 the "Gull.7r ..__... Fatlveltn Toronto, the
huobend lind . . . '- ~

116

~ the u.s. -' In Europe. In
1978, Ancho 5.govlo .....,allv - . f .
ed !ham a lui "ochol.nhlp ... p.form 81
hll ~ a- In
de Compe-a, Spein, lind they the tnt
duo ct-.. ... ~ In La
v-...
di T.-o tn Jt.lv.
Lasllal, the couple ~ ... perform lor the~ 1\mt-dor to the

22
13
18

800
99S

n

92ll

41

s.na.ao

IS

a--

·~-"'·--

u.s.

Violence, vandalism are up, but
record is good for a town ·this size
Vandalism and violent crimes on cainpus . . lnaeMklg; the U/B Council
learned In a llpiC8J report on campus
oecurlly Friday. But, ao Council member
M. Robort Koren ncMd , "the recad is stil
qulle good" when you consider the
Untvenity It a community ol IOf1&gt;C
35,000 tnc!Mdualo.
.
The local media had a lleld day with
c!ormltOf}l cf.etnlec reports included in the
statistics~ 110 the Council. The
ligures lndicaled that In 1977, tlwoM were
1951ncldents of phyoical damage in ca""
pus dormllorles, taUitlng in a tolal ol
$36,256.38111 repair worii. In 1978, 948
incidents wae reported , with damages
totaling SS4,989.08. In 1979, the ft!jln
jumped to 1,483 Incidents. costing
$93,769:33.
President Rolljlrt L. Keller said
damage lnclden~ to escalate here
and at other u~ when the ltrn,
Animal Ho-, was releaoed , glorifying
mindless escapades on college ampuses. The total has just kept on gi'OWing.
Local radio
headlined the vandalism slory on Saturday and again on
Monday, and 5uMn Banks of Owmel 7
told her viewers Saturday niglu that "you
and I are paying for this."
The MCurily report also conlalned
ligures COIDI*In9 U/ B's aime JliiCCifd
with unlvetllles ol llmilar u and wtth
SUNY't other three centers and tts two
largest lour-year colleges, Brockport and
Buffalo State. (See accompanying
boxes.) Again, Council members voiced
the opinion that the U/ B racon:1 is not

sta-

The U/ B security lo:ce has 79
authorized position$, the Council was
told , including 49 patrolmen . 9
lieutenants, 7 Investigaton, 1 parldng enforooment offlcer and 4 administrators.
lllere are lour black males, lour whtte
females and one black female . AD
memben ol the lor.:e, except some who
were here before job qualifications were
changed In 1971, have a least a two-year
~ .o r two years ol police e~e .
Thirty Individuals have a bachelor's
de!J'ee and three have master's degrees.
The U/B Public Safety Department.
said Ketler, has the highest percentage of
mlnorly employees of any law enforcement agency in the area, 13% . n.e·compara!K figure lor the Erie County

SUNV/&amp;Holo
lkodopcon

......._

' ' Sicony-

BlrotJI&gt;amton

BuiiS&lt;ooo

"-""
2

tive In crime prevention activities.

0

5

2
2
2

0
5

122
130
... 9
74

I

3

Officers

U/B force , Ketter continued, has
on· 1ls stall several experts _in various
phases of &lt;:rime detection and law en·
forcement . A bomb expert Is currently on
loan to the Buffalo Pollee. and another
campus officer is Involved In riot.counseling for enforcement officers at Attica. The
campus -urily unH has also developed
rape p re vention materials used
throughout the community.

Boo.-glaoy

!58
158

20
31

16
18
13
17

Crloolnal

Mloclold

WCftl!l
674

' 360
309
580,000+
231

S44
341
4n
308
336

307
244
233

·n.- ._.... iO PIObllo: 5alcty. Doa noO indud« "-found b, """"""""""' "'- . ....... o(
fiPOdS con. _ In hllweys

'

...

''Flguns .......... for II monotu only.

• • •&amp;q~wy .Utillb ere not

~ed

WI 1M .arne

~Nay

eoa.. lind

Elected in A&amp;lca

regularly meet with students, he said ,
and , as a further """"'pie, a black security officer is assigned to dormitories at aD
times II\ response to complaints about
racial tensions in the residence halls.

RoloMy
6
I

...... the~

Andrtoocdo is on the muo1t fKully et
U/8.

SherBs ~~is 9.8% and that lor
the Buffalo Pollee Department, 7% .
Ketler said that the security lon:e is ac-

lignllicandy dlfferent &amp;om ·other · cam·
puoes.

1-..ov

~.c......

11"¥811' el Fredonia ~

as other tchook in rhc Slate

Naomi ONnl ~ who recoelved
her doc:torMe In communlcetlon ..._ IMt
tummer under the dhctlon ol Profaeor
Molefl Ka "-"'" has -*lily won a
seat In the new Naaonal ~ ol
~on the ZANU llcket.
Asante says, "She It a penon with a
historical mlulon; she'l do very _ . In
politics, natiDnaly and intemetionaly."

'Average' student
A survey of 350 conllnulng education
students at the Stale College at Fredonia
reveals thai the "average" continuing
education student Is a 30-year-old single
woman who has never been to college
before and wants to further her education
without necessarily getting a d'19"!e. The
study was conducled to help the college
better design services to meelits students'
needs.
CAP AND GOWN RENTAlS
Cap and Gown rental onMn are now
being accepted at the U111venity
Boollatora thrOQIIh April 4. A $4.00
late charge iolln ellect altu Aprt14. Th"
o'-olut" dead/,_ Jor ordering lot Apnl
9. Rental onMn are ..,.,......S at all
three atora • Squire, Baldy and
Ellicott, but orden mUll be plcUd up
at Sqodn.
Pick up for School ol lnlonaatlon
and Ubrary·Studla and the School of
NU1111ng lot Mll!l 7-9. Pick up for other
divlolonal exercloes and General Commencement Ia Mll!llS-16.

WBFO's 'Morning Edition' is 'Today' without the tube
Now ttw.M'a a natlonaloy ~
radio alteNIIVa 10 "Today,. "Good
Morning America ,• and the "CBS MornIng News," one you can begin al home
and finish lblening to In the car on the

"'11!1 to the campus.
1ft Morning Edition," National Public
Radio'• tWo-hour news and eurm&gt;t affairs
11"9..... .canted -e.day mornings
&amp;om 7to 9 by U/ 8-baoed WBFO (88.7
FMI . WBFO lnc::lden!Aiy now ftndl IIMII
--'&lt;Jng 10 a much llqe&lt; ......
thanks io io 30-f9ld ~ booot which
.tl&lt;octive recently.
Co
•• _ _ ....... ,
NPR Ptald&lt;mt . Frank Manldewla
nota that the morning pTC)jJram
·~ our commitment to quality
prognunmtng In - Until rotNI." he
point-.! out, "..ape lor our 'AI Thlngo
Con.lder.d' In the -*"'· there has nol
been * " l l - and lnformdon l)rOfl'OOttl·

mtng ollhlt~ avallal* nadondyon
a cWv"-."
.
a.t.. Cohen , dlredor ol - lind
1r1bn-. et NPR. says tha 11"¥811'

the ............ CCI'IIml·

.....,. ollalent lind money that NPR has

.....s. 10 . ,,

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

eon..s..d' -

aeo.•

'AI Thinga

leunched eight ,......

The .,....,., • dMcled into tight

_ , bour lnc:kodlng eight
oi on the hour lind lour
lllln- ol ....

minutes each - contain : a closer look at
the lOp , _ llorles ol the day, national
sports and weather coverage, consumer
and how-to segments, profdes ol people
In the news, and features on the popular
arts. lllere arc regular contrb.lllons from
a variety ol commentatorS and a111cs.
The second hour follows the oarne lormel as the 6rst with news updates and

wholly different features .
NPR has commHted unprecedented
resoun:es. The program has a $1 .7
mUIIon annual operating budget, a
20-person production staff IAIO&lt;klng
around the clocl&lt;, and more than 20
commentators and a1llcs contri&gt;uting.
In addition to the 14 reporters In the
NPR · Washington bureau , "Morning

Personnel News

636-216461.

.
Nat Monot.y, 3/31/al, II the dudlinc lor Mng 1979 ~Medical claims.
Oolm Icons jblue - ClpiiOM&lt;I to the 1980 bufi-&lt;&gt;Oiond claim fotmol ...
. . . . . . . . the " - - ! Department R..plon Window, Room #106 Crofts
Hcl. T....,._
be dncted to Milo Penny Ziehl at Amherll Ex·
lllnelon 2650 (636-21646 lor olf-camp.oa calli.
.

,..-should

TIM/cal' .......

The P - - ' ~ reporia II ha ..-....! 261 .-v.aon. (Iii ol
Mrtndll!l..,_ 3/24/ 80tlor tha lhnoe llAA/CREF- d*luled lor
- . . . . . , _ o n Apt 15. lnw-.1 ~ . . r-..s.d thai Friday,
Apt 4 , it ....... lor__..__ .
.

4

The.._..
Bob Edwards and Barbera Hoctor are
hosts. Both formerly worked lor " AD
Things Conlldered."
Commenting on his new job, Edwards
said he cxpeciJ to expand the type of

programming heard on that afternoon

JC /C UJe . _ _ DhWeeol..._.
The Mlonagerlioi/Conlldenlllll Group lnsurWIOI ~ experience lor the
c:oncr.::t I"* ending 8/31/79 has resulted In the dec:laration ol a dividend (a.,.. funds *"'- opontlng npen- and cash r-..c arc determined) .
Mr. Joeoph E. 1..1Jpet. ~. Employee Benalls Adminislratlon, exp.tned thai the amount ol each dividend was determined by the tolal premium
J*d by each M/C cnroln lor life Insurance and/or loCddenl and ..,..,_ In·
......... .,.,_... clumg tha experience yut. He addad, "1hts dividend is being
dlllrt&gt;uted as a refund ct..lc to ~ enrollees."
lndMdual refund checkl should lie rOICCiwd by March 31 at the lawt. Ques_.ttng tt.- refund pegram should be d)Ndold to Mn. Fran Scanlon In
tha P......... ~I (Amhenot Exlentlon 2650; olf campus, cal

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

Edition• lap$ reporters In New York.
Chicago and Los Angeles bureaus lorna·
tional stories. Robert Siegel. lonner
senior editor al NPR now ltalloned in
London . provides International news
coverage daily.
.

magazine program. CommerCial networks, he said, abandoned news two

.

decades ago excepl lor the hourly
newocasts - random hea!flines tqu-.1
between commen:ials. Edwards had been
host of the evening news magazine since
1974.
Hoctor, who joined the Mlworlc last
September, notes that "aD-news radio - while quKe good In some marlcats lands to be .repetitious and supailclal.
NPR taket the time to examine in
depth.
'1'hll is ~Dy important In tha
mornJngt ,"

the explained, "because

morning is the time o(day people want to
be ~ - With tha quality programming we have at 'Morning Edlilori', we
can give llorles almos1 the treat·
menta~ doer Ill a time ol day
when people arc too buty to read .•
David S..ndcrs , acting 11cncral
manager ol WBFO, nota that although
tha new morning news program II
daolgned to pennK loc:al news, weather,
I
res, etc .. WBfOiaclq,fundttomake
• wry "local "

�u

M.n:h '1:1, 1980

.,.. ~ -7,bR- .'

'Country boy's' designs
are visually 'intoxicating'
Bv~ Buch~

" - Soolf

He's just a country boy from a small
Mid--.! farm but his vlouaDy Intoxicating
sets , costume and poster designs
evidence the elan of no mere bumpkin .
Seven yurs ago , when Steve Perry
starled his freshman yur at the Unlveni·
ty oflllnois in landscape an:hltedure, he
neva would have guesoed that In 1980
he'd be graduating from U/B as a theatre
and dance rrwojor-and alttlng tight until
. he hears W Yale haS aa:epted him for
waduate woo1&lt; In theatro design .
Hlo piiSiion for the theatre was
fomented by chance . Right before Perry
left Dlinols In his IOI&gt;homore yur, he
registered for a practicum as a aew
rMmbcr for some 1beatre Department
productions. That cxpalltncc whet his art1s11c appe!ltc . But the plea! du-eolotan«.
came that summer when he landed a part
in a mulk:al.
For the neJtt thr
years, Perry designed and buill sets Ia&lt; a quaslprolaolonal ectlng group in 0\empagnelhbana called the Celebraflon Company .
That's what he did during the evenings.
Six days a week, he supported htmseM by
doubllov as an assistant manager at a
men's dol.hlng store .
"Penon.l reasons" caused his move to
Buffalo. Fonunately, a friend turned him
on to UIB's 1beatu Oo-putment. He
regillered , almost puled a 4.0, won a
Cru
and Performing Aru academic
echolanhlp, and the rat, as they say, Is
hlllory.

A..,...
Dur1ni

o1 c:re.uu

the lui two years a1 the Untvellly. Perry ' - dftVled sets for "Red
Crooe." • Angel City," and "Kervtedy's
a.Gdren.• He was assistant detlgner lor
1ut year'a ..W.a ad Shakapure-ln-the·
Park po:oductlons. ln addition, he delignad the ,....... and c:oo1urna for "Kenneely's Children." the &lt;:ootumes for
ov-~&lt;." and the pooten for "'The FaD
of
""'*"""'." '"Tho Club," and "The
Thealr• of Sam Shepard "
.
H latdl prajkt, In his astlmalion, II
his . . . . - c:haleng.. Since January .
Pmy haa been worlung f*Wrilhly on set,
c:o!II\IIM and poa. deslg;lt for "La
Ron&lt;M," an Arth Schnlliler play that

lakes a "lusty and lighthearted" look at
VIenna at the turn of the century . lt
opens In Harriman, April 10.
1be reason he flnds "La Ronde" so
challenging Is that k Is a "realtstic: P."ri&lt;&gt;d
piece" which mUSI pro)olct the "intimacy"
of a smaD production (no more than two
actors·are on stage at any time) while accommodating 10 quick set and costume
changes.
!.at anyone get the wrong impression,
Perry's Ideas for set-costume designs are
not things which miraculously take shape
over a beer at MuUigan 's . Inspiration
takes some perepiration .
Before he aeates a visual picture of a
set In his mind's eye, Perry first reads the
play several limes over, and discusses it
with the director. Then, he proceeds to
bury his head In books, researching the
period for specifics on costumes and furnlshings. "La Ronde" took him three
weeks.
A 'fll.IUiy tbt1111' happena
Then a "funny thing happens." After a
while of just "sitting on the play," he
beglno to see colors, ltneo and tutures in
the enVironment around him which he
can somehow tranopose to an imaginary
set Now, with creative juices flowing', he
decides about the oc:heme for the play
(i.e. stylized or realistic) , then ftnally examines the physical ·s pace for oc:ale.
Perry feels his strength as a designer "'
displayed in his use of color and texture .
When asked about his talents, he readily
adinlt$ to being "good." but also notes
there's room for Improvement. especiaDy
in his okdch renderings, something he
hopes to work on in graduate ochool.
Perry also consklero himself lucky that he
hao eJtperien&lt;:ed both the performance
and technical side of theatre . Because of
M, he f
he can better relate to actors
and understand scale and movement.
Although New Y orl&lt; Cky It where mot!
of the det1gn lobo are . Perry says the "Big
Apple" Is •a fraction too big" for him-at
least where he·, oomlnQ from now. H
suspects that alter graduate tGhool he
rrwoy settle In Chlcago. Aim aU, he
smiled,
ew Y orl&lt; Is along way from the
farm "
N_,.roflt

o,.._

U.S. PCM1age

PAID
Buffalo, N.Y.
P..,.h No. 31 1

�a Ill 'lllndoft of
The Olllca of
Culanl Affairs

Esther Harriott, writM-editor

T-he Chinese
Experience
Continues

Dance
Chtang Chong was born on China and
graduated from the Pekong Academy of
Dance. She draws on her lmmersoon In
Chinese dance (tolk and clesslcall , her
extensiw background on ballet, and her
e&gt;epOSUre to American modern dance
sonce 1970, when she settled on New
York
Her choreography for the
8-"*Ylber Chtang Chong Dance Company, whiCh she formed on New York on
1973, IS a moxture of Chonese and contemporary American dance t&lt;irms. The
Chiang Chong Dance Company has
toured throughout the U.S. and Europe,
and h8S ;ust been onvoted to perform on
China. Chtang Chong has been on the
dance facuiiH!S ol Berlceley, San Franasco State, Huntllf College, a.n d the
'J acob's P~low Dance Festival Recent
performances by the Company in New

York !December 19791 got rave revoews
from the leadong critics, such as Anna
Kosselgoff on the New York Times.
Chtang Chong and her Company perform
tomorrow, Friday, March 28, at the
Center ·Theatre at B p.m . (See magnet
directory for detaols.I
Friday's program woll range from the
tradotoonal "folk songs" to a solo danced
by Chang Ching, "Soliloquy of a
Bhoksuno - the story of a young Buddhist nun, based on a 16th century
Chonese drama, " Craving for a Worldly
Lole" - to the ontense and theatrical
"Shen," on the subject of exorQ5ong
demons lor our other selves}. "lntllf·
pretat1ons" IS 1n a later vem , as various
choreographers use the same music and
come up with entirely different dances.
Dthllf works on the program: " Kensho"
lthe foghterl , "AU in Spnng Wind,"
"Iris," and "Yuang Kuan "

The Chinese
Approach to
Painting
Painting demonstratio&lt;)s on the ttadiC~ style were goven during
the fitst wee« of the festiVal by 8rtiSHnresidence from China, Zhu Chenguang
On Aprol 1 at 3 :30, James Kuo, a
Chi,__Aniencan painter land professor of Art at Oailmen Collegel, woll
demonstrate the C""- sources of
abstract style in "The Chinese
to Painung." M r. ICiJo, whosa works
have been exhibited on one-man shows
at the More--Rubin Gallery and the
Albright-Knox Members' Gallery, will
giva his presentation in the gallery of the
Art Department (2nd floor , Bethune
Hell, 2917 Main Stl

tioMI

Films from China
-..nos

A

CHooot Clolnt -

··

Thllfe woit be two
of folms ,
woth three· shoWings each Two mms by
the wortd-famou
Dutch documentartan, Joris Ivens,
ba the first bill
"The Drugstore" ~ et place on a busthno Shenohao pharmacy/clonoc, whiCh
1000 custom.rs a day Its 24
workers 1~1 prescnptoons. d~nose
aolments, apply acupunctur , and
~tch birth control lecturers to the
countrySide Ther IS no edot~ ont
PI tatoon. but per101\81ot
and emerge fa&lt; example. the drugstore's

elderly former owner, now ots
clerk , who explains that he avoids
political group discussoons of the other
workers. because his reflexes are Inalterably profit-oriented. Ivens shows
the day-to-day life in Shanghai too - the
post offioe, the neighborhood teashoos.
the tao chi exeretsers, the apartment tole
of a young couple. Paired with this
feature-length movie is a short , " Behond
the Scenes at the Peking Circus," woth
beautifully photographed sequences of
the performers rehearsing , culmonatong
in a pubhc performance of acrobatics.
By concentrating on small areas and a
few people, Ivens reveals a China ·
individual faces and voices, rather
masses and slogans. The films'
premiere (along with the r~t of Ivens'
Chona senesl at the Museum of Modem
Art on New York was the best
film series in the history of the museum .
Waldman Theatre, Amherst Campus,
April 2. at 5, 7 and 9 P.M . and free.
"Lin Tse-Hsu" I"The Opoum War"} is
the first feature film to come out of the
People's Republoc of China . Although
set In Chona dunng the Opium War of
1839-42, 11 tells us a consoderable
amount about popular cOntemporary
Chi.- attotudes. .The color him was
made on Shanghao, and, havong been
freed from a ban that lasted 15 years, os
currently a popular success on China lit
also rec:eoved very favorable notoces in
the New Yorker magazine when it
played in N- York last year.l On one
level the f~m is an exuberant ~lure
story On another, ot shows the oncredibly rich and ancient hllfotage of
culture on .Chona: the Revolutoon ha not
been able to wall oH the thousands of
years of Chona's hostory. SQuore Conference Theatre. April 10 at 5, 7 and 9
P.M . Free.

Manners and Mores
The Widow of Zhou Enlat, Prome
MoniSter of Chona unt~ hos death three
years ago, onvotad Zhang Suchu, her
husband and a soster to tea on Pekong last
faH. }USI bafor6 Moss Zhang (io e all marroad women in China, she uses her
malden namel left to go bad&lt; to Adelpho
Un!VIIfsoty on Long Island, to resume hllf
studtea on EngliSh hterature after a lapse
of 30 YMfS '$he cannot attend colteoe on
Chtna because the age hiTllt
30 M o
Zhang woA atay hllfa two years, then
retum to hllf husband, da hters, and
work on Paftong
Zhang Suchu came to the Unoted
Statn for a sponal fuSIOn on 1947 at the

·---

�Aspects of Love
Two dramatic productions opening in
APril will climax the current Theatre
Department season. "La Ronde" by
An~ur Schnitzler. direc1ed by Derek
Campbell, will play in Harriman Theatre
Studio, April!()- 13 and 17-20; and "Lord
Alfred's Lover," written and directed by
Eric Bentley, will follow. with performances at the .&lt;:enter Theatre, April
24-27. May 1-4 and May B-11 .
" La Ronde"· is Schnitzler's well
known sexual comedy. set in Vienna at
the tum of the century. and the " ronde"
refers to the series of romantic encounters: A loves B who's trying to
coun C, and so on and so on, until it
ends full circle_ The press release
promiseS" " no fewer than ten major in-

prepare a 10-course banquet of northern
Chinese dishes le.g. Chinese crepesl.
This Will be a sot-down, served ·affair,
with tables for ten Tickets t
for
students, $12.50 for others) re at .
Squire Box OffiCe, and must be purchased in advance. tMail orders are accepted, if a money order and stamped,
self-addressed envelope are enclosed. I
T.ckets will not be sold at the door. A recent sampling of the catered meal by
Lee Chu was the festoval plannong commonee's happy task, and n was superb.
A caveat here: the elegance of a donner
for 200 on Spauldong Dining Room. Fo•
example. the splendod Peking Duck
specl81lly os somply not transportable.
However, the menu. whiCh woll be
planned by Lee Chu together woth Dr
Wolllam James, promoses to be sumptuous and specl81 Chonese wone tWang
Ful will be avaolable
Throughout " The Chonese Expenance." an exhobn of Chonese paontongs and an obtects will be on dosplay on
Capen Gallery, fifth floor . Capen Hall,
Amherst Campus

discrtttlons" in this Viennese confection .
Derej&lt; Campbell, who 101ned the Theatre
Department faculty this year, is directong . He's a native of Ballast, Ireland, and
acted and directed in Britain for ten
years (one of his most Interesting and
unconventionai produclions was " A
Midsummer Night's Dream" at the Edinburgh Fesuval in 19751 before coming to
the U .S. in the late seventies. The set
and costume designer is Steve Perry. a
sen10r on the Department of Theatre,
some of whose previous designs were
seen in " Kennedy 's Children" and
" Woyzeck"las t year. A great deal of emphasis os being placed 6n design on this
productton , with tnterestmg set and

llghtong

effects

underscoring

the

eptSodtc nature of the romanttc en-

counters
Contrastong woth thos lighthearted
poece os a new play . " Lord Alfred's
Lover ." by crtttc -playwnght Enc
Bentley Lord Alfred was Lord Alfred
Douglas, a'nd h1S lover was the writer.

Oscar Wolde Wolde os now studoed. performed and revered , but at the tome of
the scandal ( the turn of the
century ).homosexuahtv was treated as a
cnme 1n England, and Oscar W1lde was

sent to JS•I Bentley's play deals woth the
relationship that led up to h1s arrest , the
tnaf , and W1lde's subsequen t tmpnson ment The events are gnm - Wtlde's
pubhc hum1hatton, h1s w1fe's and sons'

renuncoat10n of him tone of
wrote a remorseful book - a
public apology-later; but his
dead: it was too latel . and the
destruction of hos brilliant ·
But the play is not gloomy. It is
and even funny . because Bentley
used Wilde's own peerless wit in
text.

Oscar Wilde will be played by an
ment young Canadian actor ,

Nazumdar. who did a one-man
about
Oscar
Wilde,
" 0
Remembered," at the Stratford, Ontario , Festival last summer. He is cur·

rently touring the play in
Australia , and New Zealand. While
ri!Sldence on the Theatre Department
the eoghl weeks of rehearsal.
Nazumdar w ill con du c t actin
workshops .
"Lord Alfred's Lover" has a large
124 men and 2 women) of current
former theatre students. and

Saul Elkon w ill play two roles·
"vollain" - Lord Alfred 's father ,
Marquos of Qu(JJ~b!-lry IY"'$. the
who onvented the rules of Q&lt;lxin!jl a '' mysterious figure" who visits
Wtlde 1n prison, bringmg the
from the Pnme M1nister, from

Wolde has requested pardon.
The magnet directory gives
detaols of the two productions.

Aki Takahashi in
Recital
Ak• Takahash•. the Japanese poanost on
ri!Sldence thiS semester at the Center of
the Creatove and Perforrnong Ans. is, to
quote Buffalo News cntic, John Dwyer .
"one of the foremost modern-muSIC onterpreters on the world." And at the
same time that she has been performmg
the most dofhcult and esoteric new
muSic all over the world, she has added
claSSICS to her repertoire. F;or example.
she appeared with Lazar Berman at the
Beethoven FestiVal .1n Bonn, Gerrnahy.
on 19n_ and on Tokyo she gave a
10-concert "EriC Saue Series." Seviews
from Japan. Germany, Poland, France,
and the U S. rave about her vortuos.c
techntque. her muslCIIInshop, her omagonatlOn, her energy and concentration Moss Takahasho os sull on hll&lt; 20's_
one surm1ses that her career
monumental

ThoU_..WW-~--·-­
P&lt;-M*\'4.

·z

wm be

The program that she has chosen for
heo March 27 Creauve Associate recotal
on Baird Hall has perhaps lhe broadest
appeal of any new muSIC concert on r&amp;cent urnes PoSSibly some afiCIOnados of
new muSIC woll hnd '' too "safe:·
because the composers represented are
enher old masters or estabhshe.d
moderns But 11"s a remarkably am
b&lt;tlOUs program on scope, and woll
poobably draw a large segment of
concert-goers ·The following work s woll
be performed Sonata on E mator. opus
109 by Beethoven, Two Pumo Poeces
119561 by Monon Feldman; 5 Preludes
from Book II by Debussy. L'olse Joyeuse
by Debuss)', and El Salon MeKICO ltwo
p18nos ve~onl by Aaron Copland . per formed together wllh Leo Smot

Repor1W/~

%7. 1110

�.... 'Highllghta' fordetala

11ck-

tdets, wl1ere requ1red, are available at the Squtre
Han TICket Olftce (In advance!; remaintng tickets at
the door one hour before event . 1.0 . cards must be
presented 1n order to purchase t ickets at
Student/Faculty/Stalll Alumni rate.

MARCH THE CHINES£ EXPERIENCE:
rJ
MUSIC LECTURE•
n.undey Tan Shuzhan, Deputy _Director of the
Shanghai Conservatory of Mus1c :
"MuSIC'" Ch1na " Batrd Recotal Hall 12
noon Fiee Sponsor: DffJCe of Cultural
Affatrs, Wtth a grant from FSA
MUSIC
Creative

As socoate Rec1tal
Aki
poanost. Batrd Recital Hall . 8
PM . General AdmiSSion $1 50. U/B
Community and Senoor CitiZens $1
Sponsor: Center of the Creatove and
Perform1ng Arts, Department of MuSlc
Tak8hasht~ ,

THE CHINES£ EXPERIENCE:
DANCE PERFORMANCE•
Chiang Ching Dance Company Cente1
Theatre, 681 Maon St. 8 PM General
AdmiSSIOI1 $4, Students $3 Sponsor:
'OffiCe of Cultural Affaor$, woth a grant
from FSA
MUSIC
Re-crNtion of a mtd- 19rh 'Ctlfltury brt1ss
band concen. ustng a lull set of or19onal
tnstruments. loaned by Ma1k Elrod of
WaShington, D C Members of the Buffalo Pholhermonte and fnends , wllh
Frank Ctpolla, conductor, Oavod Kuehn ,
cornet solOISt, Adnenne Tworek -G1yta,
soprano; Carlo Ponto, poano Batrd
Recotal Hall. 8· 15 PM Free Sponsor
Department of Muste.
MUSIC
Symphony Band Concerr. Frank J
Ctpolla, conductor. K yte Peterson, student conductor Cornell Theatre 8 PM
Free. Sponsor Department of MuStC
APRIL THE CHINES.E EXPERIENCE:
PAINTING DEMONSTRATION•
1
Tueedey Jamtl$ Kuo, paonter and professor ol Art
at Daemen College "The Ch1nese Approach to Patnllng " 2nd floor gallery.
Belhune Hall !Art Oepartmentl , 2917
Maon St 3. ~ PM Free Sponsor Ofhce
of Cultural Affa11·s, Wtth a g1ant hom
FSA
POETRY READING
Roy FISher, BntJSh poet. Who was 1n
close contact woth the Black Mountain
poets, readtng from .h1s works 322
Clemens Hall. Amherst Campus 8 PM
Fr
Sponsor Abbott Poetry Fund

2
THE CHINES£ EXPERIENCE:
'+\lotdtusda 1 ALMS"

Reoent fdms ol Jons Ivens " The
Drugstore" and " Behtrod the Scenes at
the Pektng Ctrcus " Waldman Theatre.
112 Norton Hall f bove t cafetena on
the Capen-Norion-Talbert compleKl .
AmherSt Campus Free 5. 7 and 9 PM
Sponsor· OUJCe of Cultural All 11$, Wtth
a grant from FSA

MUSIC

Stfll)hen M~tM$, poanJSt Works by Rug
gtes. B g, Sclloenba"g. Strav1ns y and
Scnumann Batrd Recital Hall 8 PM
&lt;&gt;-al Admt Sian $3, U/B Faculty,
Staff. Alumru and Sen101 C111zens $2,
Students, $1 Not T ets Will be sold
at t
door only Sponsor Oeparlllll!flt
of MUSIC

J
THE CHINES£ EXPERIENCE:
n..r.dey LECT\IRE.OI CUSSION•

Zlwlg Suchu " M.nnon and Mar

on
Zlleng IS I
prO&lt;T*Wil r....-,1 of P 1ng, who has

Cant

'-&gt;

porary Chtna " M

8 Wit
10
OfV The lVI.
8oldY Hal, Amherst Clmpu 8 PM
f
POf1IOf Offa of Culture! Af
f
• With a gre"t from FSA

MUSIC

U/ 8 Jazz Ensemble. directed by Lee
Bash. Batrd Recital Hall. 8 PM
Sponsor: Department of M usic.

4
Frtd.y

Free.

SUD£ PR£8£NTAT10N AND
LECTUR£
Rick Dillingham, potter from Santa Fe,
New Mexico. In contunction woth exhob1t
of Dt1Un9hem's work at the N1na
Freudenheim Gallery from Ap11f 5-May
1 320 M FAC . Elhcott Complex ,
Amherst Campus. B-10 PM . $1 at the
door. Sponsor: Creaove Craft Center.

SAE.D. LECTURE 8£RIIES:
7
MOf1.day IN SUPPORT OF PLANNING
JerotrlfJ Lutin, Princeton, "The future
for mass transit· planning perspectives "

335 Haves Hall. 5:30PM . Free. Sponsor:
School ol Architecture and Envtronmental Design.

THE CHINESE EXPERIENCE: .
BOUTIQUE•
Sale of an toque fBWBiry. books and crafts
from China by the Albnght-Knox Gallery •
S t. 10 Capen Hall (next to the T1ffon
R mi. ·Amherst Campus. 10 AM ·3 PM .
S o
: ott1ce of Cultural Affatrs, with
a grartt from FSA .
THE CHINESE EXPERIENCE:
8
Tu.....,y BOUTlQUE•
Sale of aruefes omported from Ch1na
See Ap11l 7 hstong . Note Bout1que will
be open 10 AM -3 PM and 6-10 PM
Chonese calligrapher w1ll be present durong evemng sale Sponsor Offtee of
Cultural Affatrs, with a grant from FSA

9
THE CHINESE EXPERIENCE:
W"'*-irry BOUTIQUE•
Sale of al1)cles omported from Chona 10
AM -3 P,M . See Ap11l 7 rtsttng Sponsor·
OffiCe of Cultural Affatrs. with a grant
from FSA .

POETRY READING
Dav1d Posner, read1ng from h1s work

216 Norton Hall. Amherst Campus 4
PM· Free Sponsor Department of
Enghsh

10
THE CHINESE EXPERIENCE:
Thu,.clay FILM•
·•un Tse-Hsu " ! " The OpiUm War"/
Forst fealure movJe to be released from
People's RqJUbliC of Chma Con fe1ence
Theatre. Squore Hall, Mam Streel Campus 5. 7 and 9 PM Free Sponsor Of
f1ce of CultUJal Affatrs. wolh a grant from
FSA
MUSIC
Roberr DICk, flule vtrtuoso Creative
Assoctate Recital Bs•rd Recotal Hall B
PM
Gene1al Adm1Ss1on $1 50.
Students, U/B Communttv . Senoor
Citizens $1 Sponsor · Center of the
Creative ahd Performing Arts
DRAMA
"La Ronde," by Arthur SchMzler .
dtrected bv Der Campbell • Hamman
Theatre Stud10, Ma1n Street Campus 8
PM General AdmiSSion $3, Students
and Senoor C111zens $1 50 . Sponsor
Department of Theatre
POETRY READING
Wlil,.m Bronk Poetry colleetoon. 420
Capen Hall. Amherst Campus 4 PM

-----

Sponsor: Director's OffiCe and • Th&lt;j
Fnends of the Un1ver ltV Lobraries

11
Friday

DRAMA

"La Ronde. " by Arthur Schmtzler.
directed bv De1ek Campbell. · See April
10 listing

12
DRAMA
Saturday "La Ronde," by Arthur Schnotzler.
dorected by Derek Campbell • See Apnl
10 lislmg .

DRAMA

Sleuth. a mystery play. performed by a
road company Cornell Theatre 8 PM .
General AdmosSJon $3.50. Students
$2.50. $5 day of the show Sponsor·
UUAB Cultural and Performmq Arts
Commottee

13
MUSIC
Sunday Wind Ensemble Concerr. Frank J
Cipolla, conductor . Cornell Theatre. 8
PM . Free. Sponsor. Department of
MusiC.
DRAMA

"La Ronde." by Arthur SchnJtzler,
dtrected by Derek Campbell. · See Apr1l
10 listing
·
14
S.A.E.O. LECTURE SERIES:
Monday IN SUPPORT OF PlANNING
C Rtehard Hatch, N J I. T " Approp11a1e
utoptas· destgnmg lhe
City." See Apnl 7 hst1ng.

post-modem

16
THE CHINESE EXPERIENCE:
Tueedey ACUPUNCTURE•

..

Dr. King Ju Lin , acupuncture
demonstra11on. and Dr. William Jam&amp;,
slide-lecture Cornell Theatre, ElliCOtt
Complex. Amherst Campus .. 8 PM .
Free Sponsor: OffiCe of Cultural AI·.
fa11s, With a grant from FSA.

17
DRAMA
Thu,.clay "L11 Ronde. " by Arthur Schn1tzler.
dtrecllad by Derek Campbell. • See Apnl
10 hst1ng
THE CHINESE EXPERIENCE:
CLOSING BANQUET"
A 10-cou,.e benquet of Nont.m
diahft, c:a...-..1 ~ LM Chu. Spaulding
D1nong Room Advance purchase of
tiCkets at Squtre Half Box Olfooe requored General adm1s 10n $12 .50.
Students $7.50. Sponsor: OffiCe of
Cultural Affatrs, w1th a grant from FSA
MUSIC
Ttmch AnnMirsary Concert · Four World

PrernierBs, a concert of works by
Andrew Suller. Cornell Theatre 8 PM
Free. Sponsor: C&lt;iHege B.

FOLK FESTIVAL
Buff•lo Folk Feswal. Workshops, con- ·
CBilS, aquere denc1ng. etc For more on-

·-

folmauon call 636· 2957
Sponsor '
UUA8 MuSIC and Coffeehouse Commit

3

�APNL
21

MUIICOLOGY u:c1UitE

~~

Bent.

Bnmdeis Unive&lt;sity.

T..-, " The Sacred and Ceremonial Music of
.JollanmS Ciconia." 101 8aifd Hall. 4

PM . Free. Sponsor: Oepertment of

Music.
21

MUSIC
/Cuivie, composer: Sound-image
performance !video, computllfSl. Media
Study/ Buffalo, '107 D~are Avenue. 8

!f!lult;=*• Ron

PM . General Admission $1 . Sponsor:
Cen te&lt; of the Creative and ~erlorminy
ArtS.

24

DRAMA

.

n.ur.dey Lord A lfred's Lover, w ritten and
directed by Eric Bentley. • Cen ter
Theatre, 681 Main St. 8 PM . General
Admission $4 , Students. Senior Citizens
$2. ADS vouchers accepted . Sponsor:
Department of Theatre.

2li
Fridey

DRAMA
Lord Alfred's Lover, written an~
directed by Eric Bentley. • See April 24
listing.
MUSIC
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchesr,., Julius
Rudel, conductor. Clarlc Gym . 8 PM .
General Admission $3.50, Students
$2.50. $5 day of the show. Sponsors:
UUAB Cultural &amp; Performing Arts Commitlee and Ottice of Cultural Affairs.
DANCE
.
O.ncers' WOikshcp. Harriman Theatre
Studio. Harriman Librarv Main Street
Campus. 8 PM . April .l5 - Apni 27.
Sponsor: Department of Theatre. F&lt;&gt;r
more onformatlon call 831 -2045.

21
DRAMA
SaturUy ·Lord Alfred's Lover, written and
&amp; '1:1
directed by Eric Bentley. • See April
Sunday 24 listing. Sunday at 3 PM.

SAE.D. U:CT\JRE SERIES:
21
Monday IN SUPPORT OF PlANNING
Jan McHarg, FASLA, FILA : " A human
ecological model for . piannong." See
April 7 listing .
MAY
1
T'huNday
T1wv 4
flutoct.y

DRAMA
Lord Alfred's Lover, wrotten and
directed b y Eroc Bentley . • See
Aprol 24 losling. Note: May 4 perfOfmance os at 3 PM

DANCE
2
Fridrt Dancers' Workshop. Harriman Library.
T1wv4 Main Street Campus. 8 PM . Sponsal:
Sunday Department of Theatre. For more information call 831 -2045.

Al'fliL
11

"'*'Y

DRAMA

"u

Rondtl, n by Arthur Schnotzler.
direcled by Derek Campbell . • See Aprol
101istong.

MUSIC
e-&gt;ongs f01 New Music: Aki T111rJJhashl,
pi811tSt·in-resodence, U/'$1/ill ()pptlns,
guest poenOS1. WOII&lt;s t;y L.igetJ end
Messeoen. Baird Recrtal Hall. 8 PM .
General Admossoon $3, Students, U/B
Communny, Senoo&lt; Cl1lmns $1 Sponsor Canter of the C01111tove and Perlorm-

Kuprowicz, conductOf. Premiere performance of " She's Down the Road by
Miss Winnie," by Netty Somons. Baird
Recital HaH. 8 PM . General Admission
$1 .50, Students, UIB Community,
Sentar Citizens $1 . Sponsor. Cent"' of
the Creative and Performing Arts.

DRAMA
"LII Rondtl," by Arthur Schnitzler,
dorecled by Derek Campbell . • See April
1( tong.

FOUt FUTIVAL
Bufhllo Folic Fesrivtll. See April 17

I

DRAMA

11
MUSK:
........, John Bouldllr,

form r

Auoaita, and Groupo

Creatove

"Pen:us»o

AQOtiiL n a Brazilian percussion ensemble. l'rogram of MW musoc; Bawd

Reo

H.. 3 PM General Admission
Studen , U/B Community,
Senoo&lt; C.toz- S1 Sponsor. Cante&lt; ot
the CrMtMI and Performtng ArtS

t1 .50,

MUSIC
U/8 Pwcu#KJn

7

Wed:=*i

Buffalo Folk Festival. See April 17
listing
•

lislong

~.

aolocsl.

and

featurong

J•"*

"u Rondtl," by Arthur Schnitzler .
dorected by Derek Campbell • See Aprol
10 lostong.
FOLK FUTIVAL
Buffalo Folk Fesrivfll. See Aprol 17
listing

&amp;.A.E.D. U:CTURE HRIES:
21
Mondey IN atJPPORT OF PlANNING
TU111J11Y Lee, M.I.T.: " Piannong and
design on the People' s Republic of
Chona " See. Apr~ 7 I tong

N

u.a. ...-..

. PAID
BufWo.N.Y.
Permit No. 311

MUSIC
of the Corcus. Assosting will be Orchard
Pari&lt; music teacher ..,.boren Geoger, an
expert on circus music. Cornell Theatre.
3 PM . Free. Sponsor: Department of
Music.

FOUt FUTIVAL

ongAns

hn W

4

Su...., Wind Ensembi&amp;-Symphony Band Concert, Frank J . Cipolla, conductor. Music

MUSIC
U/8 Choir and U/8 Chorus, conducted
by Harroet Simons . Works by
Mendelssohn, Brahms . Telemann.
Hassler. Dilasso and o1he&lt;s Baord
Recital Hall. 8 PM . Free. Sponsor:.
Department of Music. ·

DRAMA

n.ur.dey Lord Alfred's Lovflr, wrotten and
T1wv 11 directed by Eroc Bentley. • See Aprol
Sunday 24 ijsting . Note: May 11 performance is
at3 PM

Exhibits
Thll Art of Chins: Paontong, calligraphy, caNed ivory
pieces, and othe&lt; an objects from Chona . Capen
Gallery. 5th floor Capen Hall, AmhllfSt Campus.
Through April 17. Weekdays, g-5_This is in conjunction with the month-long lestoval. " The Chonese Experienoe," arranged by the Office of Cultural Affairs.
woth a grant from the Faculty-Student ASSOCiation.
Oerigning the Book Jacket. Thos display of materoais
iffusttating the history. development and practical
~ of book jacket produCtion was prepared by
Gregory Vogress. AprH 1-April :.!. library hours, in
the fov- of Locf&lt;wood Manorief Library. AmhllfSt
Campus.

FetriPUF Silcri, A Mot»m XV/Ih Csntuty City. Hayes
Hal, Main Street Campus March 17-Aprol 15 9
AM-6 'PM SpontO&lt;· lnslltute Francao

4

~

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                    <text>MARCH 20. 1980
VOL 11 e NO. 23

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

Budget
is -still
very fluid
Because the budget sduation Is still
"very fluid ." President Ketter cautioned
Professional Staff Senatol"$ Tuesday
against too much optimism ow negativism
regarding Its status. He did concede,
however. that "things wUI probably get
tighter before th~Y. gel better" and
predicted "this won t be a good year for
anyone ."

Rumors have been circulating of late.
Ketter said . which maintain that "the
crisis Is over" and that the Legislature Is
bound to restore cuts .

Response from legislators to correspondence regarding the budget has
been exceptionally strong li1 support of
SUNY. Ketter noted . But even llillh full
restoration, he cautioned . the Governor

stUI has the power to line-hem-veto any
additions. Even if Governor Carey
should decide to accept an amended
budget . he still has legal authority under
the State Constitution to "freeze" funds
or inaea.se savings factors if he thinks a
"cushion" is necessary to guard against
insufficient revenue . Ketter explained .

Schlesinger deftly excoriates Carter;
keep Kennedy in Senate, Horgan asks
Maybe Arto1ur M.. Schlesinger should
run for President.
He has wit, bite, brlllance and a 5011 of
ru....,Md...,.,_ma . As a surrogat for Ted Kennedy,
Historian Schlesinger drew on several of
these qualilia to advanlbge here Monday
night as he rnerdlessly vcc:oriated the
Carter admlnillratlon.
Carter , Schluinger Indicted . Is
negligent . unslable and Incompetent In
h policies at home and abroad.
Spcaldng lor Carter In the SAsponoored debate, Dan Horgan, former
mayor of S . Brunswtcl&lt;, N.J . and a
"typical" Irish poMican d ever there was
one, preferred to bluster and pout ·on
behal( ol his candidate. '"The American
p«ople want a President with Mart."
cried 1-lorgan, citing Carter's "sohheartednns" In allowing a "sick, old
fontlgner" (the Shah) access to America's
medical expertise - despite world
opinion .
Soltheodedness. Schlesinger would
caU.

has rejected the notion of an American
expeditionary force on thelr soU .
Are the ev•mt&lt; In AfghanJstan the
gre- threat to world peace since
1945, as Carter has charged? ""Only an
overwrought President or one devoid of
memory could say such a thing.•· the
author of The Imperial Presidency
charged . Are we to believe, Schlesinger
asked , that the situatiOn In Kabul today Is
a greater threat to the world than the
communist moves against Greece In
I 948. or the Berlin Blockade, or the
Cuban Missile Crisis?
Afghanistan . the P11litzerPrize historian
noted wijh sarcasm , passed behind the
Iron Curtain In 1978. not In 1979. "And
Jimmy Carter didn't even bUnk "
Europe q....Uoae hie competcoce
Schlesinger kept on coming . Our European allies both question and reject
Carter's wide swings In foreign policy.
"One month he's kissing Brezhnev on the
cheek. and the next he denounces the
SovietJ for plotting to take over the
world .• QuMe rightly , huffed Schlesinger.
the Europcwos question his oompetence.
Domestically, Schlesinger went on . the
President has presided over a JlrOwlh In
the Inflation rate from 4 .8'l. to 20'l. . The
prime rate has skyrocketed to 19'l. .
Carter blames OPEC . he said . but. In
reaiMy. only 2.2'l. out of last year's 13'l.
Inflation rale is dJreetly at!Jt&gt;utable to
fcireign od price Increases The U.S .•
Schlesinger reminded. get&lt; only a portion
of Hs od from the Middle East : Germany
and Japan are totally dependent on
OPEC . Yet. thelr inO..tlon rate Is only
S'l. .
Let's face M, Schlesinger summed up.
"eart.r Is a Republican when It comes to
economics If FOR had held his views.
we'd
be In the Great Oepras~on . •
Carter has twned his back on th tradl·
tiona! Democratic perty. Schlesinger has
decided . Ted Kmned~, on the other
hand. Is the "champion of that tradk1011 ,
he said
.
"Kennedy Is the only candida! willing
to support the on/~ way to deal With inO..tlon c:ontrolo
"Kennedy II the only reallttlc ake~
to a man who has compiled the
won1 record of IMptMude by 1 l&gt;raldent
W..-ren HMding
eart.r
Is bulng his campaign on the
-v fonolgn troubles that he alone •
respon
foe- creating." concluded
Schlalnger . A~ "won't lland for

n-

1\.nti-W eentlmeat
Another factor which should be con ·
sidered , continued the President. is that a
..profound ·sentiment'· exists in the State

for redudng excessive personal and cor·
porale taxes. This, together with upc:om·
lng State elections, may have an Impact
on flsal decisions, or at \aast on the
po5turlng uf legislators.
•
The President was critical of those who
feel SUNY should be given "pre.ference"
in the budget to the detriment of other
agencies or programs. He likened this
'Oumbmuc:k' by 'KI..tnger'
stance to those in the "do·it-lo-himHorgan claimed to be "dumbstruck" at
rather-than -me" room In OrweD"s 1984.
being on the same panel wijh "Dr
Regardless of current rumors. the real
Kissinger.· A lo4d laugh from the au consequences of the budget wiU not be
dience brought a speedy correction .
realized
until 'l'id-May, Ketter relayed .
The Kennedy Campaign Is creating un While some people have criticized him
necessary divisiveness In Democratic
for not being more publicly demonstrative
ranks, Horgan complained . Fights
In protesting cuts. Ketter said he believes '
among Demoaats. he thundered. gave
the nation Eisenhower In 1952 and · such action would only be "counterproductive to the Institution ."
Richard Nixon In I 968. He "prays" that
Responding to a question from the
divisions stirred up this year won't result
floor. Ketter acknowledged that some
In having ''that rotten movie actor" as
legislators want to "curb the power" of
President In 1980.
OOB Director Howard " Red" Miller, but
Kennedy has 20 years left to run for
that he believes an attempt to do so
President. Horgan submitted . CaOing
would prove fruitless .
himsd an "unabashed fan of the

it."'
Is he dismayed that Kennedy Is lagging
in the primaries to date? Not a b" ,
reassured the professor. "Carter 5larted
strong and finished weak in 1976 and
he "U do that again ."

· - -...- -a.-. a

·-........·-···--·

U/R Einstein prof
to assist in Physics
Elliott W. Montroll . distinguished
physicist who holds the Einstein Chair In
physics and chemistry at the University of
Rochester. has joined the U/ B facuky as
an adjunct professor. President Robert L.
Ketter has announced.
Professor MontroD also serves as director of the lnstHute for Fundamental
Studies at U/ R.
""We are wry fortunate to have: succeeded In having Dr. Montrolt jotn our
Department of Physics and Astronomy In
· this capacMy." Duwayne Anderson. dean
of the Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathilmatlcs, said. "He brings an enor·
mous depth of mat~rity and accomplishment In physics together wMh a sympathetic understanding of student In·
leresiS
~He brings such a breadth of ....
per1ence and knowledg
that his
PfeMOCe !Mire
bendw the Unfvenlty
as a
1\.ndcnon .&amp;led "The fact
that he has bMn wtang to Keep! an ad·
)unci appo intment reflects very
fa\IOrably "
Montroll will present a public lecture
here Wednaday. 1\.pt'tl 2, ln 454 Fron-

whole:

czak at 3 :30 . p.m. His topic will be
"Dynamics of Technological Evolution ."
Aklra lsihara . chairman of the Department of Physics and Astronomy. said that
·Montrolt is arranging a physics lecture
schedule for the Fall. I 980, semester. He
will also be available for studomt consulta·
tlon .

MontroU has held the Einstein professorship at.U/R since 1966. He Is considered one of the world's authorities In
mathematical physics.
He has served as editor of the Journal
of Mathemollcal Pllyllc:s and Is co-editor
of the joumal. Studies In StotistScol
Mechonlcs. He also serves as associate
edMor of utkrs In Applied and l;{tglneulng Sciences and as advisory editor\to the
Journal of Mothemotlcol Blolog~
He Is the recipient of a oumber of
alllards and fdowshlps and Is a member
of the Natlonal Academy Of Sciences and
the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences
U/ B has anoth«r Eln
Professor on
faculty, Dr Jul H Wang. who holds the
Eln in Char in Science . Dr Wang
Joined U/ B In 1972

�M.n::h 20, 1980

l
• Debate
..,.._
........
sen-or·.;

~eary ·

he IUIIIII*d thlll right now
he can provide • ~ -.Ice to lhe
c:ountrv In the Senate. There, not ao In·
c:ldenlalv. Horgan reported, the man
lrom ~ has lhe highest
record of support for Prealdent Carter's
policla of any Senator.
·
In fact. aid Horgan, Kennedy has
~ vot..t ..,., the l"restdcnt a llillhdv higher
~ of the time than n. did wttb
hll own brother when .IFK oc:cupied lhe
Whle House. Why, aD of a sudden. has
Kennedy clecldcd It Is a mistake to have
Carter remain? Horgan wanted to know.

Psychedelic guru
still peddling
same message

---

., ..... Gr8ce-K.....
Tlmoehv t..v'• ~ to 8ullalo began
wtlh t.d l&lt;.nna. 0. maybe the Karmic

w- had begun the night before, In

......._

EMl ......... Michtgan. where he had
....,...cl t.lore what he ddc:rt&gt;ed ..
300 "drunkan" Michtgan Stale ltl.ldenll.
~. hen he was In a clrtzztlng fog
Ill the 111rpoo:t In Cheektowaga. 'HII
·· c=- had broken down and lhe

yes," sakf Horgan . " But he admits
lhem."

~· soft~ Indian !rom SA's
. . ... Bureau apologizing pro-

tu.lv. hll clipped

Oxbrldge a&lt;:cenl
betraying bll agllallon.
" At that point, I was wilhlng a 747
would roD over me ," remembered
Hklhlevmar Hathi, whose unhappy task
u choirman of the.Student Asooclallon's
Speaker's Bureau was to usher Leary

about.
But that was only lhe beginning. Hkub
balled a cab, which rushed the two to
Squire lor e pracheduled 4 p .m . press
conference.
No one was " - "·

"I haven't had breakfast yet and I need

IOmC ooffet." the notorious psycheckllc
guru complained . Hllah squirmed.

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

.
The press fiNoly arrtved. having been
olowecl by the long climb to lhe third floor
ol Squh. t . . y - ready.
He fWded q.-!ons &amp;om lhe Courier
Exp r eaa a nd various campus
newi!PII*I· bll answers coming qulddy
as~ he had nopeated them many
tln\el:
"My lunc:tion has always been the
; he Mid. "My basic role In
American society II to encourage
dlorapecl for authonly , to nwtrabo the
guill generated by our Judeo-Ovtstlan
sodety and the fur brought about by our
male macho Western society.
"I want: to lltimulate seV-confldence,
self-respect, self-indulgence and self.
suffiOmcv for those ready to take respon ·
...aty for their own lives; to roast every
one of lhe sacred cows of America; to
alert indMduals to the machinations of
thev.C'-arltnted aiAbllshment."

t-'

The Courier reporter asked hbn about
bll view of the media.
"As we moYe Into the SO., ewryone
reabn that the media tolally fabricates
our sodety, • Leary told hbn. '1'he media
11 cverythlng negative. My message to In·
telllgmt
Is to loown the control ol
the rna. media over your lives." .
At that .-nent. Q\annel 7's Instant
Eye arrived.
"Waltf' l.ury cried as the camera lens
was aimed at hbn . He rushed to hll fligbt
beg, puled out a red telephone which he
Ml on a t.oble as a prop, combed hll hair.
ut down , and flashed a healthy Callfor·
n111 srnie 81 lhe camera.
• rm ready. • the pi\/Chedallc outlow
announced to lhe media he would have

'*"*

ue p.ore.

He repealed the news of bllllfe's cur·
reni purpooe lor thlllllallon and later lor

a ,.,.,., and camerawoman from
o..nncl 2 . He ,.,.. esMd about bll view
on dn.ogs,
reporter tellng hlm about
ao incident thlll had occurred that mom·
1ng 111
High School, where
llaht IIUdomta were rutbed to a holpilal
· ..--doolng" on some tranquiltzm

a

Ana't . . . . MD
"Ann'! drugs bad?" -

the~ ­

"You can't ~." t.e.v replied .
• ..........,.. II tccally a dnlg cukure We

haw 20 ....... student aleoholb.
"fm booslcalloJ pro-drue ," he uplalned.
~ c:hcmbls .,..
~ ONgs to the lwU&gt;
what oltw whldol . . to
.... ol the

~- he
now'-

..t\111 ,..,...

""*"*'- a n d
pie- a.......nd

·-

-!Odosl

ten yean IQO · The SO. will make the 60s
look like a Boy Scout picnic."
He was asked about allegations that he
gave Information about drug suppliers to
the government; he "flady derueci" them .
Does he still experiment wkh mind·
expandlng drugs? Leary replied , "fm on
probation 'tll1985. I don't do anything II·
legal or Immoral."
"So what do you do for lun ?" someone

asked .
He didn't answer.

How .... · - tbeln?

Before leavtng, Leery asked thow
gathered what olher spoken had appeared at U/ B recently and what size
crowds they drew.
.
"I'U be aboolutely ahottered If there
oren't at least 500 kids here tonight ," he
said. CoNiderlng the snowstorm building
up outside at that moment, H~ub looked

nervous.

Leary's next mind-expanding e x·
per1ence was lhe drive beck to the elrport

..,... to hll motel In a fogged ·up , rusty
Pinto whose owner Hltub had bustled
for a ride . The door on Leary's side was
bashed ln . The rush ·hour traffic, snow
and fog made driving bad. They got losl ,
so settled for a motel where be had no
reservationS, but was told he might get a
room after 6 p .m . He asked where the
snack bor was and stalked away.
Hltub and enothcr then told the clerk
who Leary wat and asked If he might not
be given some oonsiderallon . The elerk
relented and the two went to flnd Leary,
who was calmly drinking a mixture of
T eern and beer over Icc .
The waitress brought lhe wrong order
and Hltub then groused only half.
jokingly that the bad luck that had
plagued them might be the resuk of
iiltftb's ~lim ol a former life. My evil
Karma may be rubbing off on you ," he

told l.ury.
But why mUll I suffer for vour sins?"
Leary asked, smiling through clenched
teeth.
Leary was good-NIIured end began to
td Hleob how to Ml up for the evening.
"I want loud mwlc oleytng before my
pr_,atton ," he ordered ." "It muot ·be
'The W or anything by O.vld Bowie."
WBFO luckily had a tape ol Pink
f'lo\111'• lotat ......... which they loaned.
an1ved 111 the
As more . _ 550
~ Room , thcv walled In • d.-k·
.ned room flied wttii blar1ng rode mwlc.
It )WI ... wdlng for • rode aoncert
lo begin .

'*"*

...,.,..... r•.._........,

31 cWdoul

---lhcv)IOUf'l

_

... _.,,..

Has Carter made mlltaka? "God ,

t..v'• ~-more pcrlor, _ than lecture. He lo the.. . . .
1rom the beck ol the room , a . , _
t8Mad . . In ................ and

tan shirt.
"It's an Intelligence test to be here
tonight ," he announCed , smiling. "You
aU passed."
Dancing and hopping about the stage
like a fundamentalist preacher, Leary
took after a wide variety of "sacred
cows" :
On the Pope : '1'he great miracle of
American merchandising, a 65-year-old
vlrllin · I have nothing agalrut hbn . I ad·
mire h im and respect hbn when he goes
eastward and looks down at the re ·
pressed countries o f eastern Europe
where medieval points of view are still in
the future . But when he coma west to
2 ht century North AmeriCa and tells
North American women not to use birth
control and tells North American voung
people of the eighth cardinal sin, to avoid
temptations ol the body and don't get
high ; well, folks , then he's intruding on
mv turl."
On bom·ogain Chrislionll)l : "An amaz·
lng American phenomenon . I call it born·
again Christian Maoism . Life according to
Chairman Jesus."
On the Middle Ea.t c:rllil : "One of the
great media mistakes of aD Ume was the
Shah ol Iran . He sent 50,000 Iranian
students to the U.S. thinking aU they'd
learn was dentistry. But they watched the
tube and learned the tlldics of the SLA.
and Abby Hoffman ."
On Jerry Brown: "After being gover·
nor of California, being president would
be a demotion ."

Tbe lint aarcotlce balm IQtCIIJ
On the BoOk of Genal~ : "It's been
tuddrig people's heads up lor 2 ,000
years. You'D aD think I'm putting you on ,
but there are still millions ol people who
believe In thll great comic book. In H,
Jehovah told Adam and Eve they could
stay In Eden , as long as they obeycsl the
FDA regulations. The· fruit .w as the lint
controlled substance, and what hap·
pened next was the lint narcotics bust In
history . Talk about a hanging judge .... "
The ~ the dol/or fo deualued:
"We're paying S9 biDion a vnr to Colom·
bia to bnport oornething ..,. could grow."
Hit hope /of" the future : "We have to
move Into space. Our DNA II Instructed
to lUI up every ecological niche. h's better
to moYe Into e new frontier. Only on the
open frontiCr can lndMduallty exlll . It's a
c:h.nc:e to llillt again , the only way to get
beck to vtlagc life, In space captl.lla. Do
you want to spend lhe ra1 of your life
ctnglng like • slug or • ~ on
~-··world?"
On ...,.,., "Women are • 11undred
intdlgmt than men." ·
Who can IIVUC wttb a men who wamo
you, "Don't bellavc anything I aay. I'm
limply ..wllnQ out stgo\llls to '-I&gt; your

-1110111

brain moving?"

The President, he defended, has a1so
presided bVer aeallon of 8 million new
jobs and has "dropped unemployment by
two points." And "nol one American bas
died In 1 wor·llke situation."
. In the 135 days since Iran, Carter's surrogate pointed out, no one In the country
has been able to come up wkh a viable
alternlltlve to Carter's position on the
hostages. '1'he American people support
an d salute hbn for lt."
Moreover, claimed Ho~an , the Presi·
dent has shown "courage in taking un·
pop~ stands, despite this being a
political year. 8oycottlng the Olympics,
embargoing wheat shipments to the
SovietS right belore the Iowa primary,
and coming down hord on in8allon just
as the voting moves to the industrial
states, ma~ prove to be "terrtie mistakes
politically, but they were aD the "right
thing to d o," Horgan contended.
Carter, a Republican? To the contrary,
sakf Horgan, It's Ke nnedy who sounds
like the last President who imposed price
and wage controJs. That President was
Richard Nixon.
Throughout the even ing, the two
Sl&gt;eakers disagreed o n controls, with
Schlesinger citing sua:ess lor s uch
measures und er FOR and Truman, and
Horgan harping on the Nixon d ebacle.

F~~

especiaDy p iqued by
Carter's Insistence that any debate o n
foreign policy II d estructive to the
Nation's Interests abroad. The President
thinks he can arrive at a position and
then , wkh "great moral rectitude ," stifle
aD dissent , invoking "grave crisis" as the

reason .
In 1940 when H itler was stand ing In
the Eng(i$h Channel, Schlesinger re ·
called, FOR and WendeD W illkle engaged
In fierce debates on foreign policy. "Are
we, then, to believe thai we can't talk
about 'k now because the Russians are In
Kabul?"

Tbe ....,.,. trouble
·
The major trouble wkh J immy Carter.
Schlesinger assessed, Is that the President
has failed to realize "politics Is a
learning process. He knows 50 things,
but not one thin?.· He thinks like an
engineer." He cant command respect.
On the other hand , Schlesinger n~ed ,
a recent poD of the U.S. :;en.te fou nd
Ted Kennedy ranked as the second most
respected member of tha: body.
"Good," responded Horgan . "Let h im
5laj' there. Next year, maybe h e'D be No.

1.

SA had hoped to provide a forum for
Kennedy In penon before the New York
primary next Tuesday, but Canlslus, of.
lering a larger hall, attriiCied hbn there
Instead . ·

JOBS
HOJOI-COIIP£11TIYE avJL SEIIVICE

~-.SG-12 , olahnBanc C...

- - . .. SG-8, olahn Bane c.-

-

· SG-6. Helms Fodloy

�Women in State jObs
often face 'dead ends'

-.&amp;.de

., 1955, .lcihn 5mlh IMpn hit career
3 ....... tor the 5I* of
" - York ..rung Mlout S2,600 per
yur. N.y ~ b9n woddng for the
Sbtta that year .. • Grade 4
Her job paid about $2,700
..., year. John Is now a GretSe 32 bureau
dlrec:tor for the Department of Sodtol Ser·
vices. N.y Is a GretSe 13 pmcipal
~ .for the Department of
l...aboi: John earns aliout $33,000 per
vear and Mary makes about $14.500.
This scenario Is real. 1be question Is.
"What ~ !hat -ated the
careers of JOhn and Mary and thousands
of other Slate wori&lt;ers like them?"
Nancy D. Perlman. executive director
of the Center for Women In Govern·
ment, provided some of the answers In a
speech heard by 200 women attending
• A CAreer Planning Workshop lor
Women in the Public Sector." held on
campus March 11.
Perlman emphasized r- important
results of sex segregation at work:
I . Outrageous undereualuotlon of the
work women do; equal pay for equal
work wUI not become a reality because of
sex. segregation In jobs: equal pay lor
comparable worl&lt; Is what women should
be looking for . What makes a dog
catcher more valuable than a nursery
schoolteacher (in Slate service, the dog
c:etcher makes morel?
2. No oduoncement opportunities.

_101111'......,.·

Two in 'The Times,
Two U/8 poeto were reviewed in the same..._ of tbe Tlmec' Book R~.
Sund..v, March 9. How manv unlwnlty departments of English can mcke
that ldnd of dalm?

New student billing system
to~ be Introduced this fall

/

Jl. new student billing system will be in·
augrated this FaD to provide more com·
~e and up·t&lt;Hiate information .on
payments, credits and money owed.
Even with rnodlflcations made over the
years," the existing billing syotem-de·
s~g~&gt;ed some 10 years ago-no longer ef.
fodlvely meets needs of the stud.,nt or
University, noted Assistant Vice Pres!·
dent Len Snyder and Cliff Wilton , direc·
to&lt; of Student Accounts.
Studen
now receive one biD a
semester which mav not reflect money
owed for ouch things ·as lilnry fines, lab
bre..._, dorm damage or tuition and
room and board edjustrncnts. Because of
thlo, JIUdents who contend thev've never
been bikd encounter check-stops In
registration without knowing why.
Set up like M-. Charge billing, the
new system elimln- this poai&gt;Utly by
providing up to thrft ln\/Oica a semecter
(r- during Summer Saolon), rcllecting
unpaid charges, current pa,ments and
aedb. In addition, the new bills will In·
elude a audent'a rakknllal llatus (in or
out-al-e), dass, dMaion and wh«&lt;her
he or the lo lui-or part·tim • enabling
studenll and pam\ts the opportunjy lo
aotldl .....,..., ouch as being dwgecUncorrect tuition rates.
Ako lib Muter~ . tf pa,ment Is

not made by a given due date, a late
chatge 111111 be added to the next state· •
ment. Wilson saki once the bill is sent to a
'Dead Enda'
student's permanent address, about three
Women In State government. she con·
wuks wUI be given for payment . If none
tended . have been the vicltms of a s~em
Is received. up to a $20 late pa,ment fine
which shunts them Into "dead end' jobs.
will be assessed. WhU. this may seem
Not only do women start at lower entry
hanlt, the two administrators noted the
points than men, but the escalator lor
Univerlty Is within Its legal rights to make
women's careers, having started In the
the -ment . In fact . most other
basement, ''breaks down half way to the
SUNY units demand payment "up-front"
first floor," Perlma,. said. For men , the
before registration .
ladder starts on the fir$! floor and goes to
Besides the obvious benefits of im·
the filth .
proved cash flow and a reduction In ac·
. To prove her point, she contended that
counts rec:dveble . Wilson and Snyder
at a typical State agency , female
saRI . the new system will alsoJ&gt;elp rodlly
employees begin as Grade 3 clerk·typists.
a problem cited In a State ComptroDer's
whU. a man will more likely llart as a
audit . 1be audlt report crlliclzed the
janUor or .nauffeur. Grade 6 or 7. As
Un~ for losing money by falling to
another example, a female llatlsticlan
require students to square their debts
holds a Grade 5 slot, but a highway
before luvtng.
·
maintenance worker Is a Grade 9 . And
Snlfder and Wtlson · adm~ .the new
whU. men routinely progresato Grade 18
system Is far from perfect, but maintain
or 21 , or higher. moot women rarely
that K'a a "vast improvement" over the
achieve a Grade 13. In fact , said'
current one, and provides a "buUdlng
P.,tman, most jobs above Grade 13 are
block" upon which future refinements
reserved for college graduates. She noted
can more east1v be added.
·that fewer women and blacks have col·
Bel- the system bOcoma operable,
lege degrees than do whU.. males.
Snyder said thM about r- dozen new
Nationally , Perlman saki:
compukr programs will be developed
e 5()% of women now work outside
and some two to three dozen will have to
the home.
be modrocd.
• Only 17% of all farnUtes are tradl·
tlonal (mom, dad , 2 kids, dog &amp; cat; dad
work&amp;; mom horpe) .
• 57% of aD women work because
thev have an economic need to work.
• Men work an average of 40 vears
over a lifetime: women work an average
of 34 ,.....
of the Unlvenlty library, where they
e ln 1955: women earned 63' to a
ttrdched along the \llholc south waD. But
man's $1. In 19n: women earned 59' to
the mow to the Amhent Campus coin·
a man's $1. (It's not getting better.)
c:ided with budgetary problems that tied · • Women with a bachelor's degree
up~- · "Now the Ala are safely in
earn less than men with an 8th grade
the hands of the Department of An·
education .
thr-opcmgy. avaa.ble again to all In·
In New York State Civil Service,
teraled people. on campus and off." he
Perlman reported, 45% of the work foroe
tndlallled. .
Is lerna!.: 44% qf these women earn less
than $10.000 (cOmpared to 29% of male
avu Service worken) . Sixtv-MVen per
oent (73,000) of women employed by
the State are In clertcal or para-

Human Relations Files
now available In Ellicott

Patrick won
his 'Grammy'

James S. Patrick. - n t professor of

·millie. haa won a G111mmy Award In the
catespy of "Bal Al&gt;um Not . • lor a
detai1ecl - y he wrot lor the five .
record al&gt;um package. "Charrie Parker:
The Complda Savoy Sesolons ...
The ennual Grammy A-rda show

~at":· valuable

raoun::e and

are underutibzJod. Perlman emphasized.

sa....._ to . . ......
Folowlng Perlman's keynote addr....
four pancllsta Ollllin.d llratagla thev had
used .to· edvan&lt;:a In State .....W:.. One
• ....,..,..,..,.. roae fr9m a Gracia 3 to a
was t~ February 27 on CBS·TV.
Grade 18 whlla taking care of6 kids (with
no hutbend). and commuting 60 miles
U/ 8 prof.., PaMc:k. who dlrectathe
Prognom In Jazz Studln. no&lt;ed thAI the
one wavto work each dav.
Parlcct al&gt;um •
for
lint
I.M. In the dav. the women brob up
.. the 1&lt;..-n rK«dl
Parker · Into worto.hopa when thev aal&lt;ed tq
maloe
an ....a.-t of their careas and
made for the Se~¥nd pieces
goalo bv lr8dng olgnillcanl tnlluenoes In
ihelr devtioptt.ant. 1bey w.. llloo
aoked. to,... opectllc r..ona forwantlng
-attid In
19401 and
focuted tlrldly on jiiD and
"new
to work. to evaluat.e the 11tcnglhs ancl
\110
pUI/WI of be-bop •.
. . . . . _ o f " - -· to d..,..

.

"'-: ......

pa~lth

"'.:';,.,..

the typa of organlullon In which they
would prefer to work, and to define and

.._.r how they could bat uae their
tlc6. There wee .lllso cxadses In
developing a raume.
1be workohop was sponsored by the
Center for Women In Government 81 the

Slate ~ at Abmy.· The Center

was founded In 1978 "as a catalyst for
eliminating sex dlscrlrnlnation In public
employment ..

eenier

-The·
has coriducted ..__.
research studies and educational end
training projects.
"It Is clear that formidable barrien to
women's advancement

do exist:'

Perlman emphasized . "For the•flrst .time.
however. we haV&lt;..,hard data on where
the most slgl&gt;lficantObstacles occur. This
Is the lir$1 step to making change. In providing the Information neoessary to
analyze emplo,ment patterns. New York
State and Governor Hugh L. Carey are
indicating their destre to understand how
the current system works JO thareffective
alftrmative action programs can · be
designed."

O'Neill named
dean of school
Dr. Edward T . O'NeiB has been named
to succeed Conrad H . Rawski as olean of
the School of Library Science at Case
Western Reserve UnlversUy In Cleveland.
O'Neill will assume his post on
September 1. 1980.
O'NeUI, 39, Is currently an associate
professor at the School of Information
and Library Studies here and an adjunct
professor of industrial engineering and
higher education .
O'NeUI ha$ an extensive background in
information octence . He received a B.A.
from Albion, then went to Purdue whete
he received his B.S . In industrial
engineering. his master's In lncl:ullrial
engineering, and a Ph .D.. with a concen·
!ration in the areas of operations
research. computer science and llatistlcs,
and their applications in Information
science.

He joined U/8 in September. 1968, as
an U$lstant professor. and was subse·
quently promoted to associate pro!essor.
O'NetU IICfVed as acting dean of the
School of Information and Llbiary
Studies from Februarv I 970 to
September 1970 and as assistant daan
from September 1970 until September
· 1975. From September 1978 to
September. 1979. he was the visiting
distinguished scholar at the reaearch and
development division of OCLC, Inc .. in
Columbus, Ohio, where he conducted a
studv on providing subject aco:ess to very
large bibliographic data baNs.

Elected fellow
Dr. Robert A. Osteryou119 of the
Department of Chemistry was recently
elected a fellow of the American Auocla·
lion lor the Advancement of Science.
Oster,oung - . cited "for contrtbu·
lions to electronanalyttcal chemistry, In
particular for simpWylng and populartdng
pulse polarographlf, and for advances In
molterl salt elecirochemlllry."
He recently joined the U/8 faculty,
coming here from Colorado State
Un~vets~tv.

JELl enrolls 110
Approximately 110 lludents repr.,..
sen"ng 15 ·countries are enroUed In the
spring program of the lntenslv Englosl•
Language Institute (fELl)
Although most lEU students are
privately funded . the following sporuors
have also sent students lnt rnatlonal
Institute of Educatlon/ Fulbrtght Commts·
sion , All-Nippon Afrwa!ll. Saudi A~n
MIMion. the I\/Of\l Coast Embailay.
Jewish Family Services. the Iraqi Em·
· basov. and tho African American In ·.
tull! / Atencv for lnternahonal Ot-v lop.
m«nt (AAI / AJD)
In addition to the regular numbet of
tuden at the IELI . apprOKtmaiellt 120
part tlme udents ere studying Engboh In
· the F&lt;&gt;r' lgn Student Engl; h Program.
which tnclud the Foreign T A course

'

�March 20, 1980

Put me first on your llst, Greiner tells Allen
What
u.w...v. l.c¥oliY
.,...,
tor- •.._._..... .-.g
here. w• ._

........_Wdii..S.Aa..

. . . mel . . - - . of the holac.uol lo
pMII as "collboi-.a" !hoM allis who
daN lo lbkdt eboul the , _ . of the
Unlvently I n - of academk planning.

Your Nmarics at the March 4,
of the Faculty Senelo ....,. bolh In· . I did not olljecl ....... you oo~·
ly .._.aed thai loadon of the Senate
mel troublaome to me. While
..... 1M the loadon of the Jcwllb &lt;XJm·
- ~here common values regordlnsj the
fuluN of !he lJnJvenlty, we hold very dlf·
munlty In the WWMW ghetlo who helped
to .....,. lhe exodus to the gas
,__ .-gordlng means to praaw
the 1n1t1tu11on and to prol8ct Individual
c:hamben. I even. ..-elned m~ dur·
lng the Senate ..-.g when you sug·
rtgha mel exp.datlotls In a time of flscal
~

~~fully you; view~ pro·

poscd budget cuts arc politically
mollv.ud, I do ·not treat that as a
~ illegillmatc upect of our en·
vtronmcnt. lncrutes In the Unlverliry's
budgets In the '60s and 70. -.. just as
pollticaly mollvated as are the current
cutJ. h Is the CIMI)CC of polttics that
elec:tcd oflldals ~ pr1ortlles regardlng_the
aBoc:ation of pUbUc funds . We were
beneficiaries of that process In the paSI,
and we did not protelllts legitimacy then .
We should participate aggressively In that
process now, and att«mpt to persuade
political leaden thai I Is In the public In·
tent to suppo1t SUNY. UnWed Univenl·
ty Prolasions Is bell equipped to perform
th.t talk. b has the funds, collected·&amp;om
our salarln, to conduct Ulenslve and ef.
fecttvc lobbying efforts.
At the same nme, however, we .must
plan for an uncertain future In which we
will surely be required to carefully hus·
band our resources. Had we done better
at thlo In the past, Our present sluation
.might not be oo grave; ~ we do not do
better now, our future will be even more
dl&gt;ubdul. Public funds are not unllmlted ,
and- must manage our affairs In light of
thai reality.
FK11lty claJ-.d doe role Ia tbe '60e

... "7.0.

goested that adaptation to reduced
bud!lets Is to be ..., lr\ tarrns of "purges"
and tumbrils rolling to th~~&gt;gulllotine .
That restraint has been based on
courtesy, respect for you as a person and
a colleague, and on the belief thai the pa·
tent ..,.,.._ of pour dlet.oric deprive I of
meaning. Your latest escapade Is,
h o - . too much to bear silently.

Loyalty ..... oathe
DOt ecceptable
Your plan to solidi "pledges" from
members of unlvenlty committees and to
"expose• those who refuse to sign Is

Profaeor WIIIJam R. Grtbac&lt;

trenchment to reallocate fund.

s.....

___

....... ..
"---~
~ ti N&lt;wv_.

....::-.:.l

.. _ _

Oalio i W . -

""- O . . . a l - -.
HMIIY .tACI&lt;SON
~.o.w

li08EJITT

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

n..,.. a..ouru

evidence to support thai innuendo. The
oath , like aD such oaths, Is couched In
such v~e terms that no lignato&lt;y can
really knOw what he or she Is undertak·
lng. It Is appalling to think that anyone
prudent and honorable enough to reject
the oath Is to be presumed guJlty of some
offense and put on a list of enemies.
What you propose to do Is vintage Me·
Carthyism . What you have done in some
of your speeches also fits that unsavory

.-..y. Furthermore, ustng retrench·
ment to fire f~ Is not going to make
SUNY 10ong«r (the myth of tha
benevolent "'&gt;urllc1 but wukcr - no
how !lOu tnlnk you can plan I .
And this 111'11 Ul to the heart ol the mat·
* · The lui taolulion p..-1 by UUP on
March 4 dilalngulahas ~ between
-.ptablo and deletenous planning:
" ..• WHEREAS long-nlf18C p/onnlng II
0

~

"'"lch

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

coWl~ k /mpropcnJI mil·
wed 10 proollde 0 t:DWtr /&lt;K retrmchment

"""'*"-'

btl other Ilion

t:tflll:d

/»oDD

CQt .............;

AND WHEREAS lhcN Is o .,..P..nd
~ " - ' - " .___long__ge

"'*""* ploniwo, -;:;;;·(;; -

for short·

~rm considerations from areas of

O...BW,
Your letter of March 11 Is usefu l
because I permit$ a public exposure of
Issues .that reallv must be openly dis·
cussed ~ oome ol the private panic in the
ranks of our Facodty and Staff Is to be
count«red . Leso useful are Its error&gt; and
misinterpretations, which I will correct.
As to the sarcasm In tts last two
paragraphs, I am simply going to Ignore H
because I believe It arose from your sense
of anguish and not &amp;om personal
enlmUJ.
...
You are not In an enviable position :
you took on what should have been a
quiet task as head of the Academic Plan·
nlng Cornmlltee and suddenly you find
yourself su.spected of planning to wreck
the CM'Ief$ of oome of your coUeagues.
No one could go through that without
dismay, but I think Kbetter to find way
around the dilemma than simply to ven tilate the dismay.

a

~

end .... .,..,. to
limply
not -.ptablo
lo be free
to lhlnk about, dlocust mel dobet.e 11ny
~saM, even such pracllcal as
budget redudldns, and such repellent
...... retrenchment. Wll !hoM who
think and tal&lt; .bout such problems then.
be 1ICCIIMd of partlclpallng In • plan to .
name c:oa..,g... for -.ndunent? The
very $llbrn-. of such an oath Is an af.
front . h implies that the C011Jmltlee per·
som In question are contemplating "par·
tldpation" when there Is, In fact, no

tradition .
next? Why notlmpanel a
committee on Un•unlvenlty activities?
You could chair tha hearings and ask the

question "Are you now, or have you ever
been, an academic llianMr?" When next
you riM to .tal&lt; o( "coDaborators" and
"purges," name the names 11nd speD out
the particular$. Let ... If you have
anything which will stand the ICt'Utlny of
your colleagues. OtherwiM spare us the
embarrassment of watching a dlstlng.
ulshed scholar and teacher act out a bad
caricature of unionism, using some of the
worst rhetorical devices of demagogues
we have known .

The roll of those who refuse to sign
your loyalty oath , will be an honor roD on
which I want to appear. Indeed, I
herewith request the privilege of appear.
tng flnt on the list.
Cordlally,

-William R . Gretn«r

'

Professor of Law; Chair, ·
Faculty Senate Committee on
Academic Planning

Campus needs reassurance we won't
retrench -ne another, Allen responds

In lhe acaderhlc planning process,
faculty should at least play an advtoory
role. On the way up In the :60s and 7 0.
we claimed that role; we fostued pro·
gram opanslon, and sometimes we abdicated our responstbtlhy and said
nothing wh programs - . . added by
flat.
In the straight ned drcumSiances of
the '80s, we should not let program
reducllons occur without our advice and
wonc, without our scrutiny. AI the very
should Insist that processes of
change and redudion be public, and
t«Md against atter1a and values which
conec:tlou
suppolt. w. should protei f~lty .
Fnt, oom• corrections. b Is neither
and stall collngues against any arbitrary
UUP's nor my contention that budget
action, and lAke extra steps to help the
cuts are "lllegltlmate." I do think that the
Untvenlly avoid having to make de·
propooed daclrnallon of SUNY stems
dslons which In the shor1 run hurt in·
!rom an fnauth«nlll: •crisis• (on« not obdividuals, and In the long run dntroy the
)ec:llvely jUsttflablo by the force of clr·
..,.,.... and moral ftber of the lnslllution .
cumstancal . Secondly, UUP Is not con·
To thai end, we must be bolh crlllcal and
dueling lobbying )wl on the besls of our
ouppor1lve of our colugues In ad·
dues money, though we use I to cover
mlnlotrallon who mUll milca lhe hard
._,..a 11M traver c:a.~s to Albany , etc.
~ .-.gordlng allo(:lollon of reoources.
The lobbying, however. Is the woe!. of
TMM values ere shared by many,
volunteco from amongst the facuMy and
J)C'haps mool, of our coleagues. h Is
stall, colleagues who saalflce their
r.,.n.bla thai you ct-.to mpoq&gt; the
precious time becaUM they think re·
~ and lntagrlly of !hoM of ... who
tr:enchment would be a dlsastu and
eel on !hoM values In '"l/1 thai you find
therdo.-. the better thing to do Is to pre·
lnlipproprlale.
vent I altogCther. You would ccrtainly be
welcome to )oln our ..~forts, too.
I have quietly and pa1Mntly ...,;.....
Thlrdly I reject !hi notion that we are
myoeW mel olhen to be~ to your
1
being cut llecaUM of poor planning tn the
cnto&lt;y on a number of ""'**&gt;ns. I .,..
pae. Not even the Governor has claimed
mUiad lllctll when you lnYOked the lm·
thai the propowd cuts arc because
SUNY's quality 11· wanting. We could be
perfed In _ . , raped and still the 008
would went to trim us, just to save

Ia...-

NIIUIP*II to the central .. . . of the

wn·

porory low enrollment to OT1!0S where de·
mand is currently higher, on approach
that ~rts the PUTJ&gt;OSf! ofiTue long·

~rm

planning;
AND WHEREAS the /alter proass
would cause trremedlal damage to the
unluersttv by desboylng morale col·
legiolity , and the mutual good faith and
cooperation that. Is eiSCntiol to the
academic spirit; would S«t groups within
the unluersftv ogainlt each other· nd
would poS« a groue dang«r to the p',.,fes·
s/onal security of all ... etc. •
No complaiDt with .u.tat..--...1

pbumias
In short , the Executive Board of UUP
at SlmY / Buffalo has no complaint about
disinterested academic planning, but It
becomes an entirely different matter
when planning commltees begin (using
the wording of the resolution again) "to
name programs or colleagues lor re·
trenchmen ." We believe that the faculty
and staff should not "advise" the Ad·
ministration as to who ought to be fired
but should collectively protect each other,
If need be In opposition to the Ad·
ministration . This Is not a matter of bn·
~nlng "the mollves and Integrity" of
colleagues who mistakenly
1n
"planning" no matter what the dr·
cumstances. WKh the bell motives tn the
world, targeting colleagues for dismissal Is
still an abhorrent eel .
It Is this consideration that led me to
compare such a course of action to the
trllge()y of the Judenrate during the
Hc:ilociouot. I grant that the comparison Is
QUite wrong In turns of consequ..nca.
While • Is bad to dntroy oomeone's
career, that Is IIIII a long way &amp;om con·
damning people to gas chambers and I
have no wish to tr1vlaliZll the Holocaust In
that way: But resp&amp;JCting that lnlgjrdy, we
can stUl learn from lis mechanllms. You
might need to know, BW, that I have
been teaching courra on the Holocaust
and oo my cornparlton
not mere
ori\IDIY but a prec:ioe analogy.
The Judlmrote ....... moolly ftlled With
men of high Integrity and pure mo11ves
(S.. lsaieli Trunli , J!Jdenrau , or Lucy
Dewldowlcz, The Wor Againat the hws,
P.t
who were ~ In a llltuation
where tbd deslrclo do the right thing led
them to acts that . were wropg .
Somcllrnes, and retrenchment Is one of
!hoM rare situations, the onfv proper
coune of Kllon Is..-,_ to the whole
conoepc; there Is no wey 1o mlllgate K by
lrylng, t..,__ rationally, to dO • "for
the good of the Whole." Vlrtualy any at·
tempi to amdorlll.e I malcn • Woric, not

beliew

w..

m

"-&lt;.

•

Furthermore, If (a condJtionallllted to
In my s.n.te ~ one begins
.of ... • the poiX:eoa of IN1Iellnlr p&amp;r-.s Of pro•.

grams for retrenchment on the grounds
of quality and substanao, then there Is In·
deed a danger of a "purge" atmosphere
developlng. Purges develop their own
momentum ; I was chlng a real danger ,
not using a rhetorical device .
,

A pledte IUl t a loyalty oath
You are also being lmpredse In com·
paring our quest for pledges lro~. plann ·

tng '7-'mmltlee members to loya~
two are dlff~t as follows .
1) The loyalty oath refuser was
threatened whh loss o{ his job; but here
we have retrenchment advisors threaten·
lng others whh loss of job.
2) Those who refused to take a "loyalty
oath" were blacklisted (kept from getting
jobs) ; but here H Is the reiTenchu who
will be caSI onto a job market, possibly at
an advanced age , where there are virtual·
ly no jot$.
3) The House Un·American ActiVIties
Committee blacklisted people for refusing
to name others to be blackiisted; but here
we are asking people NOT " to
name ... oolleagues for retrenchment."
FlnaUy, we are bringing moral pressure
to bear because h Is the only weapon we
have . UUP does not have the right to fire
people; H Is the University Administration
that has that power.
•
Which brings up another point: you
can name aH sorts of options for retren·
chtng people. but since only the
"Chancellor • designee"- "management
confidential" and iherefore not
faculty/ staff-&lt;k!es the retrenching, they
will pick and choose am&lt;&gt;fl1! your names
and aU you have done Is legltlmloe the
process and muddy the responsAMllty,
Therefore, you confuse"" Issue when
you contend that we Me somehow trying
to prevent free discussion, because what
'll.le are Instead trying to do Is prevent
specific action, namely "to name ...col·
leagues for retrenchment, • that would In·
jure others. And pie- remember that
retrenchment can be used against
~nured faculty . "Tenure" was created to
protect academic freedom predsely
because otherwise faculty could be fired
capriciously.

oaths.

T'!e..

MUPdkllt
• As a long-time MUP m«mber you
ought to know that tnstltulionl were
ubd to pledge themselves to the 1940
Stolement . and If they refused (or later
violated It by firing tenured peroonsl , they
were "censured" and their names
publishad - ln shor1, ralh«r lika wh~
.,.. propoolng, a.&lt;:.P.( that lnllead of for~--~ ," W.. ere limply saying
uowx penons will not pledge themselves
to aYOid targej1ng colluguea" which
...._the per-. rr.. to~ hil/h«rj
adlono before the bar of pUblic opinion
1... In fact, pou have doM) . Your
Wlalogy thcrefo&lt;e tn.ks down .

·-·--........

�M.dl 20, 1980

Change

Computer profs, Allen
have differing ideas
on oaths, lists, etc.

That's what SA ne~ds .
these four writers insist;
they propose to provide it
Ee.r.
For the pMI month, - · "Siudents for
Sludents, • haw oubmltl.d letlon to cam11"1 IICI'Iocllcalo.
of
iotdcl! not printed, were inr.ncled to

n- ....... ......

...... INdent -In~ Student
"-ccoolon. Thcv ... primarily wKh the
problano- thinic CX1o1 wtthln.S.A. What
lolowo II a brief """""""Y of our views.
t=r., we nota&lt;~ a...,.. of fltcal rapontl*y. Your .-.datory lludcnt fee Is
tlvown II the wrloul dubo Uld organlza·
-which .... funding. Often times the
S.A . II funclng conccp11 not prqpms.
WI.- ....,... to .be laoible on paper
clo.s nol worit out In the delivery. For ft..... , $1,000 Is opcnd on something
called "S.A. Outreach." The ~ of
!hit conccpl Is to keep Main St. students
~ on their Student Auodation
~mont ~ that • hu moved to

The Student A-.:latlon has alto
~ to the students.

ladced

u. yo.- alllrW!I- taken to find out If

IIUdentt desnd an option r_.jjng the
.......s.tory 8bortion payment. 'rhc resubs
"""'-f ..- 80 per cent of the student
body fa-.d 1111 option. Where Is your
option? Anpcher aamplc of lade of
~ 10 the students Is Men In
the funding of the Commuter Coundl.

The..cun.nt budget allocates $13,000 for
~uter
telephones!

Coundt and $14,000 for

IIEJIO 10: Profaoor William S. Alom
equal-and eqUaly ~FROM: Faculty In lhc Department of
Sill, you ""'Y be
. Despk
Computer
Science
(see
lig- .
What - cell "confrontation P&lt;*lcs"
lng INdent..-. Uld
..... - RIIIUNibelow).
tlonal ..-.. the upecl and 8Citmony
has~the ~"-ociaalon
SVIUECT: Rmenc!uncnt, Bilddlsllng which reallocation by mrcnchrnent
and has been a c:auM ol neglect of the
UIC!Ain..t
would caUM ~be JO !Pill l would be
students' needs. For namplc, while they
Should laugh or cry? In one
better nol done. But to ...... """ thee
were trying to ouot President Kder &amp;om
p.-.,-aph In a recent raolution of the are no oChar values to be taken Into ecoftloe, thee. wu no lludcnt dlnrctory,
local UUP Chapter we read about the "lrcount II, al bat, lngcnUOUI Uld, at wor!ll,
Uld " " - to U/B hoclcroy games ·""""'
mnedial damage" that would be clone to
lntelloctually dilhclna.
dropped. 'Notlc:e cliO, the lack of 00111"mor.Je,
collegiall!y
and
mutual
good
-AIIIIMoer ........ c;..,_ T. H..-muntty lf*lll U/B.
fallh • u the rewb of "retrenchment to
In 1111 effort to mum student pan· GWeoe Ytlftl, S... N.
. ruloc.t• funds" which would, we are s.a-t, IAny D. Wilde
men! to the lludcnts-, we announce our
further told, "set groups "wlltin the
candidacy for the upcoming student elecunlYellly againll uch olher. • And then
tions. w. advocale "cooperation pc*lcs"
in the next paragraph but one - read
The answer:
""""- pooslble, conln&gt;oting problems
that "UUP wUI publish the names of aU
"nol people. We propose that a sclenllflc
who
rcfwc
to
pledge
themselves
to
a
IWWY be taken to determine how
oomrnltmcnt" no1 to partldpate in any
students want their money spent. Our
logicaly you -~; psychologically
committees which may be planning
you an wronsl· Ufacu .-.:1 to promise
prlorlly, of coursa, Is fu16111ng the
rctnmchma&gt;t.
to love and charlsh
olher, """ does
"avesage students' • needs. We enimply doubt to begin wilt . But "What
We are Indeed impressed by your faith
c:ouragc you to take the t1mt to read our
wOuld
you
do:
let
the
fun
fester? There ·
that
such
a
bladdisl
would
nallhcr
harm
platform. Copies are posted In numerous
collegially nor set groups llgaln!ll one
are already faculty oomlng to me wilt
buidJngs on boch campuoes, Squlr!l HaD
another.
-Or
Is
the
point
that,
W
only
lean
that
they
nwoy
be
axed
and I can't
and the
lounge being ~g
shrug tham off-alii can do Is try to figure
100% of us would make your pledge,
tham. Help us give back to ~ what
out
a
way
to
halt
the
decay
previously
then,
of
course,
we
would
remain
one
should be yours to begin wlh : student .

v--

0................... -

e-n

government.

-8111 lllack, (Canclldate for) President
Doe ~. (Candidate for) Vice
President

Marl!

Moon, (Candidate for) Treasurer

Bob WIM. Student Representative
University of Buffalo CouncU

Good 'neighbor' helped her
To ... Eolleor.
b _ , the Ides of March but H was
Thursday the 13th. A considerable
amount of snow leJI that morning and by
noon cars In the Amherst Campus Park-

. inS loa r-..bled

marsh~.

With my meeting over, I prepared to

hoed back to the Main Street Campus. I
blithely ttarted the car, turned on the
defroolcrs, and got out to brush . Mission
aa:ompliohed , I attempted to get back In·
to tha c.w.
Sure enough , wilt the careful cond~
tiOinlng of tha
who always loc:b
tha doon, I had loclced myself out! Inside
th• motor puned on, draining gas and

car..-

turning my mental acuity to oornething
Min to the blan 8uffln- rd been- attempting to remove. As I stood and1rled
to del.,.,. my nut course of ac:tlon , a
.,....,.. happened by. Trying to keep my
voice casual, I lightly Inquired Whe had
any lmowledgc of breaking and entering
Uld rccfted my dllcmma . He advised me
no1 to br..r. the window yet Uld 11 I could

• Allen

find a coat hanger, he'd delay meeting

somrl"frlcnds and help me .
The friendly, helpful Office of Placement and Career Guidance In the persons of Karen Whiney and Patrlck Hayes
provided the hanger, kept there for such
occasions!
Due to the des9n of the car, tt was
necessary to use the hanger on the win dow roD handle! It seemed impossible but
the feat wu lkiJifully completed .
This whole prologue Is an Introduction

)o my thank you to Dr. Willlam George ,

associate

professor of mechan ical

engineering, for his kindness and help
and to say that I believe he lyp~les many
of our University Cornmuntty.
I'm proud to be affiliated with 1uch
people and wish to~ express my
appreciation to Dr.
.
Sincerely,

- Phpllla Schaffacr

DMslon of Continuing Educa,tion

respon~s
dicated that pledging themselves in advance agoin!ll naming colleegu g1va
them a chance to dear the air and wort&lt;
freely on real planning.
Flnaly,- lest you think that U/ B is
unique In these MDftrnents, I remind you
that at.....,., olher SUNY campuses the
S.nates hew already voced a ~ ol
~no cooperation on retrenchment. At
Brockport, for uarnple, tha Senate advised thatr campus prcoident that they
would cllocu.. altemaOves to relrcnchrncnc; but not ways to do it. I wish we
could do that here.
Abow al, - should conccnlrllte Our
•nctg~a on preventing tha flocal drc:umstanca 11\at might -~~ retr•nchrnent. rether than accepCing Hu ine\lllable and preparing for • mentaly.
You know that UUP II doing 11.- and l in.,._ you to conoi&lt;Mr wMther thll might
- be a betlu
of your t.Jents. In the
rManbme
taffillUI needs a gooneral
- t h a t retrenchrn&amp;nt w t l - be
~done by the fac:uby Uld llafl to

uc:h oehar.

-WI.JUaa S. Allee

·~- -VUP.fl

happy farnOy? For niUOI1J "adduced
below. we are nol neccsoarily in agreement wilt the essential thrust of the
resolution . But even we were, the McCarthylte, loyally oath mentallly which
Informs K would repel us.
AD of us are sensitive about the situation which led to the resolution. Retrenchment means )obs, the )obs are
those of our friends and collcagucs and
the resuk can only be, at the least, major
personal upset. Still; there are two matters w!&gt;ich the rDOiution convenicntlv 9 nqres or triu to misrepresent which
makes the Issue rather less clear cut than
imptied :
I. It Is true that "rctnmchment to
reallocate funds for shorHcrm considerations" can rarely If ever be defended . It Is
also true that the absence of any meaningful long -range planning on this campus In recorded lime leaves us wlhout
the guidance to make decisions based on
such plans. But Kdoes not foDow - and tt
Is mischievous to suggest otherwise-that
aD currmt low enrollments are ..tern·
porary" or that h9h &lt;lemand Is also
necessarily temporary. This suggestion Is
In fact nothing more than a smokescreen
to enable you to Imply that students wUI
not be affected by decisions on retrenchment . But they wUI be . Example : 133
members of the current Freshman class
Intend to major In Computer Science;
this department remains at Is present
site, approximately 30 of those 133, (to
say nothing of those who haven't made
up their minds yet) wUI be admitted to the
undergraduate program In this department.
You may believe that no harm comparable to facuky retrenchment will
thereby reoub ; we disagree. And , In case
you're not aware of II, the demand for
computer odence me)ors is ristng rapidly
and can be npected to do JO for yean to
come. If this university gets the (already
deserved) reputation . of being a .poor
place to come to study computer S&lt;Xnce.
then university enrollments will•uffer further, budgets will ouffer further , more
retrenchment may be neceu.y, etc.
2 . You were quoted In the Reporter as
rejecting as "illegitimate" the nollon that
• quallty can be lncruocd by pwges.•
Certainly the use of as pejora
a term
as "purges• II con!ll!llent wilt the thinklng
!hot led to the bladdi!ll idea . But, If you
think that a.I&gt;OIIcv which requlres that no
vacant line C.n be filled 10. long as the
rewb would be retrcnc:hment ..,.,.........
elM .-.:1 nol hurt the qualty of thil or
any unlvenlly. then your undcntlmdlng
of wNI can happen (and hu been happenlns here for ,.ann when raow-ces
are 1101 raloc:al«d It own cLmrncr than

n

a

-would haw~ Such a policy II
almolt- to
the Institution as
l pcrsu.des tha best- Uid, therefor • the
rnool moblle - l*)plethalthe.dmlnlllra-

-.un

caused by this evil situation; to restore the

"mutual good falh" that I wish were seU-

evident. If you have a better idea, pleaM
don't be modest wtth II.
Your idea No. 1 (retrench some!~
to fund disciplines that are "hot" I wont
do. In the flr!ll place, you are asking other
departments to fire faculty 10 that you
can expand, which ..-. an obvious
Issue of impartiality. Then there Is the
problem of predic:tabillty. A dozen years
ago our university m!ght have bet heavily
(but wrongly) on the future of MJOtpaCe
engineering-after all, we were )ult about
to land a man on the moon and the
future looked starry. Then the boltom feD
out of the boom. I admK that your field
does look solid and I hope k continues to
, but not at the expense of my colIn other Departments. Patient
b
ng , u the resources become
avaUable through normal aKrltlon, would
help you wlhout hurting others. After all ,
yours Is a field wKh a high external
market demand, bull ask you to Imagine
the situation faced by, for example, a
55-year-old spec:iallst In Chaucer cast
upon .the oommardal )ob marl&lt;et .
As to your potential students who
m9ht no1 flnd room, I commiserate wlh
them . But I would also lament for those
who are already majors In other Departments that would have to be gutted to expand yours. And do you really think that
the University Is going to become a more
attractive place II H cleliberately smashes
the core dlsdpbnes? Ruthleslneso II
usually also lneffldent. n-. Is, In fact .
no rationallhort-terrn way to readjuJi the
unlvenily wlhout hurt. But il something
Is going to be hurt. then I think protecting
the individual should take precedence
over enhancing the Institution.
Had your reasoning been foDowed to
Is extreme In the past, my ancestors In
the Ireland of the Dark A1Jfn would have
"""" studying the design of homed
helmeto rather than gloaing on the
manuiCripiS of ancient Rome and
Gr....,. ....
Point Two: Prudent reallocation Is goIng on aU tha time and we do have
stringent quality controls. But reallocative
retrenchment would .Jlfodute preCisely
the atmotphere of "p~" (that term you
deplore . but which your letter lmpticsl
that would also drive "the most mobile"
faculty away. And your phrase "upset
Uld acrimony" does not remotely begin
to desatbe the pi'Y&lt;lhlc: consequence of a
polity that would ..y: "Forget about
lenu,..; &lt;!VCI'}'body's up for grabo; let the l
davil take the hlndrnotl ."
I'Niy, I dislike being caled "In·
gcnuout" at my age. And "intdectually

clishorMM" ll a llanderous phr-. ·So I
reply by accusing you of IOIM!hing
even wonoo. l think you leek Imagination .
Youn

1~.. , tio'\~.dl-t"lly ~a~~-~~--- - ------=·-::::_:~ ----~

�Mon:h 20, 1980

COar Hltlel'
...........

~.,

......... __

--...e .................. _._..

1111 U/B .. SIMa'• ....... s-111,•

.,.... ...., ........ u.s. cll!r io - l t .

CALENDAR

IOgOdw" ov.y Thuncloy hom 5 p.m.
- - .. .. 1424 ~ Hwy..

Tlaanday - 20.

01

Plc&lt;olo's

EllA ACTION TEAll JIEET1NG'
F a &lt; - - ond ICiophonlng .. ~

wlb tho -..1 ERA , - . . . _ ..
Arnhont Compus. 6-3 p.m. Fa&lt; locoaon col Donno
ot6J6.m3.
CHA11LE5 OLSON NEIIIOIUAI.. LECTUI£'
~ k o.t, MichMI M&lt;Ckttc. 8al

FESTIVAL'
The a...~! Zhoo ~­
-·raldmco, · - - &amp;.ohonil brwh
. ......... -cutllntl IO~IW
,.,_,.2 p m n... Spon-.d by lho Olllce ol
Culbnl lllfoh. w1b a IJonl hom FSA
CJpono.g ....... "'· • moncb-long ~ Ea

....

....--· .

T-

PSYCHOLOGY LECTUIE '
The c--.,~ 1\blllty
lo - . Sodcoy,
~ J Holan.tc.. U/8
~ . ~-...dhom.- .. study
ollhc Naoanalll&lt;odomy ol Sacnc.s Com
-onll*yT-.g RoomC·31 . 4230Rldgc

Dr

La 3

p ....

Lob-..

!CAL ENGINEERJNG SOliNI\R•

Gon.atlon poet: · - ...... tho biologbl-

olpoctry,a-oiOdionpolnllog,~

M d - by Oloon , tiort 0..., J&gt;a.IBiod&lt;bum,
Jodo KotoU« and Sholey 420 ~ - 8 p.m.
Spon-.d by tho English l&gt;&lt;ponmonl's Gr.., Owolr
.. Pony' ond t.ca..s.

FIUC SCREENING'
- . . Ma.: "'Cone's Th.rd Yc. or Panldtse
Not Vctl.osl ." Madlo Study/ Buffalo. 207 o.Jawore
1\w 8 p.m 1\dm.,_ Sl Spontot&lt;d by tho U/8
c.n.... lot Study and Study/ Buffalo.

NUSIC '
u..llr.......... Com.....,..
R«:bb Hd 8 p .m . Fru:

c-.

Boird

w...... - Yort. w..- .
EldMnlaub, w....., Mleftlgan U.........y.

Or Val
Kaiamuoo. The KIVa. 101 Baldy ] !IS p m
Rch..n......

_J-._ . __

-s,lolo
...
FINE
AlrTS DISCU

Friday- 21

~ tl Beth..,. Hal. ROO&lt;nl13 at 330
p m Opon 1o ol ~ INdonls and flo&lt;dy

1110t.0G1CAL saENCE.S SEMINAR•

GcMo .. a........dn,
.1o1m 1\ndonon. Pluduo Unlwnoy. 114
Hoc:h~~ettt~r . 4 p .m
~ .. s-tlc

Or

PEDII\llUC GRAND ROUNDS•
Str-•bl••u•. Dr . Albert Kraua . Kinch
Audlonum, Chidrcn'l Holpital 11 • m
BROWN IIAG UJNCH COl.LOQUIUJI'
- - o i R _ W _. Sian Marl&lt;
E n - t a l S.udla c.n.... 123 Wllkaon
Quad , Elkon. 12 noon .

BUFFIILO LOGIC COl.I,OQUIUM'
Ane, I.JNwnOov ol
" ' " " - 2CIII Didondotf 4 p m

NIHOIUTY FI\CULTY liND

DEPAirTNENT OF ST"nmcs

MEDICI\L SEMINAR•

-

..__ -

·Kit

. ._

........ ' - - . . _ _, T- - s.--~- Subhuh c
Nonolo . Sdlool ol ......_....... Polyocchnlc ......... Room 11·16. 4230 Ridgo Lea
4 P-"' Colloo .. 3.301n Room " · IS

LECTUI£ IN BASIC NEPHROLOGY•

-ChlortoloT_,t-_c-.

...-~- Dr
-

loe .. a~

-

!'.pstfto. HofSchoal. 51011 Shorman. 4 P-"' Col-

s.,.,.-..s bv 11M

~

o1

Phyoiology, · Md ~ ..
'""'-'*"Md ~by lhc ~ ..

-----.-..fwlllodplnoo " - -·

•

......
,. 1 ........... DIIIIInllle ...
~-·

......_ C50II CoaM. 4 P""·

....

UUMFIUI"

, _ .. .._R-. _ n -•.

415, 645, Md 9.15p ... Gononllld·
- 1 2 1 0 , - . . . , 5160

n.._. ....... ..-_..._ .........
"'-r..a.

--

F ol on • pklnlc al • cr-.w protnaion on

lhoduolyplsino

n...oltbcm~

Q.aJCII!IIII~

L ......... ad,.mcs . . - ol &lt;uo·
- M d -. ..._
SchoaloiEduca·

- · f - ~ ~ 0..0,. Room.

~ 43Qp18
.. ... - ~~~~-·--"""'
ollhc
c.-..
-•-Aan...Too~...,...,.._
... v-"-,n..T--Y-

.... -

STAFF MEE11NG'
201 N&lt;tton . Arnhont 12 noon

r - . r . . . _ .. w.......
c...,__
Dr Corolne-.lot lhc l4edocal H............ GaiYaoon. T..... G26

se.o--t by lhc o..-- ol

~~---..-

F -. 12.-.
THE CHINESE EXPDIIENCE'
Zh• ~ --ln-&lt;aidmco· dcmontora_,.......aohand brwh
c:al9oPhy. cvttioig. 10 ~ I..,. 1o Ttlf\n Room) Noon-2
p m n... Spon-.d bv lhc Oftico ol CuiMaJI\f•
fain. w1b hom FSA

-dog.

ENVIIIONNmTAL STUDI£5 CENTEII
Of'£N IIEE11NG •
O p o n - .. INdonls .. lhc [n.
wtronment.J Studies M..-. Prosrr•m. 123

T-_.

~Quad.Eikon . 2pm .

Clao\DUAn ~ tN saooncs
LECTUI£'
C1t1oooo 0,0..,
---1\
"--' llolaolooo, OoportoiE.I
1\Mn
·
u....ntty
ol T"""""
.lane~ Room , ~- 2 p m. For -.lnlotliiDliCINAL atDOSTtiY SOWINl•
... la .......... Oidda.

- · - - O r. Donlol J. ~ . . . . .!
.. p
~
CoaM.
mo1
-.- -·

Cl21

UNIVDISITY COUNCIL ll£E11NG '
Cound Conlonnot Room. 5th loot ~ 3

pm

LINGUISTICS 5P1t1NG COI.LOQUUII
~~-.~

e......,

Ohfldt-•.
I.Jnguistics
Lo.roeo. Spauldo,g Quad. 3 p.m Co_ . t...-..-ondc.-lor
lhc Study ol Culb.nl
. _ _.

o1

~-.Camel~

T•-

I'HILOSOPHY
INAR•
The~ ..
Car&lt;*&gt;o - . ....... lot lhc - -· Galoootoft 6114 Baldy 3 p m
COMPUTEJI SCIENCE cou.oQUt\1111•

--DtO.... Dr

O..A.....,__...,.,_._
Dtaa.--.....
"-· KAzuo-...,..c:o.on

-

ol Elodncol ~ and

OVU. ENGINEaUNG SEMINAR•
-...:eoltllcN-FuciS..W.
Plont at w... V.U.,, Yook, Robort Woznlok.
prtnq&gt;a1 . . . . , _ tochnldan. NYS l&gt;cpartmo.u
o1 Environmental eon...vot~on 139 Parka. 4-5
p m Refreshments 'ollill bt Jei'Yed.
PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR•
~-lotbcM-..... .
- .. Skalot.l ..- .
Stolan J. Meflandt.-.
Deportment oll'hysiology and 8iophyJico, u.w.,.
!1ty ol Lund . SlOIIShcnnan. 4, 1S p.m. Coif.. at
4

Dr.

Con-

UUMFIUC'
Plcolc ot """-"'" R-.
Theat.c,
Squn. 4 ' 15. 6,45 and 9,15 p .m. General admlo·
S2.10. otudcn.. Sl 60.

.

COMPUT'Eil SHORT COUISE •

-~~-oo-y,.
-_.Rca.
213 Baldy. !&gt;-7 P-"'· ~'
MichMI-......
Tl-. shan -

!no creditj

........ -

...-.,.y l o t - who ... .. attend
l h c - - - - dLWinQ-- houn .
- . u and mw~~ bo held Mardi 28 Md 1\pril

- - Paui-Gorvtn .. 6J6.2tn.

~ .. -

ENGINEaUNG SCIENCE, 1\B!OSP/\CE
ENGINEaUNG liND NUO£/\II
ENGINEaUNG SEMINAR•
Allte a.....t s-.tloN ol Random Hut
Trandlr ProbMms. Profaaor G . Secus, Univenfly
ol C»ccnnall. 104 Pari&lt;a 3.30 p m.

~otbcHcaltlo

COLI..OQUltJN•

-

Rick Awry and Judy Greenhill provide
the entertainment at the UUAB
Coffeehouse, In Squire, Saturday
night.

ION '

-~ Room 41 4226
lt.tp l.aa 3
p"' Coli• and ............... bo .
.. , .. "'-61

GI\ME 1100t1 OPENING/In'. PA1WICK'S

DAYPMTY '
The lntor·Raidmco Councf!l

18. Fcwlunt... ~ coii6J6.2110.

CIIC FILII'

c..-.

Y-- A
170 MFI\C,
· 7 and IHS p.m Gencral- Sl 50.
toady, ""' and-ts Sl.25

IRC F.IUI"
~~ 147 OieWndorf 7 •nd 10 p m. FrM to
IRC foopayon; $1 lot olhcn
THIRD WOIILD 11/EEX'

With .............. Urut#d
s.po1Jcy - . 1 lhc ThOd Woold, . - . ol

lho llWd W..td S t u d o n t - hope to,._
~ ..... -bythaotoa ..lormatton
- - l h c U.S 11-...ad.,thftownmun- . They an - l h c annual Thin! Woold

w

.....

--eon-.-

The~·-

21·28

........,llWd Woold- como 10 a..tfalo lot
the line #d...-, allordad by SUNY and want to

""*"""

~
- ...a.ct.d In
undantand
ldoak
.
. not
.._, councry's ret.doni, which

--

that

--by~----·

- - ............- -

............. lorlhc

~ .- - - - - -theD&lt;aA.
........ · so.,.. Cologo•.and c.t DIMd
Toclay's

Dr--...,.._"'

-Anne.. 7 -30 ptil - dtall -

..-.Is

MW

-Patrtdc's,_,
.. F- Cafotorio - a bolalod S..
Day Party,~ by lhc lttsli Stu·

29 Dlolondori

dMt

Union.""--·

be ...-Ito

..........
dancalhcJ.Itil.llg
-.
- . _- .. . _
· ..
Food
... alao bo
.,. b o -. 8p.10. until?
The new pm. room wll be open on • ,..,...
- · Sunday • Thuncloy hom ,_. 10 midnigl&gt;t
and on Friday ond Sawtda•, hom 2 p.m. to 2 a .m.
b
bo - b y .. - . . . . _ 0&lt; net !hoy
llw ., Elkon. Thow dwtddng out a q - wll
bo •aqylt-#d to luve thftl D. cardt wlb att&lt;ndanll

m.v

""'.. ""' - · llbotng uaad , to ............

~ 10 T.,. 1\nW&gt;t, .,-., ollhc IRC.

-tod.

lhc """"llaqulppod _ , . - . ... - a n d - boanlshaw..-.~­
.......... . . . . , . . . . _, and_,_

fooobal -

~

-

. . . . . be

. . - Uoaollhoaq-lst.n. - l o r
fooobal, pool and - - lot -

.,

."""tmal

·---~-. 75pcr\'!
--pong~

::::· pool, Sl .., how. Md

.....

._, w11 . . fvtwo dam JRC wll
JlfO"'de • . _ ollhc -· lor·"""'*··~
The -

Eatopo lot lho- -

· lho-"""" wil
·-a.cohollc." ...........,.,IRe._

~~that~·-_, ..
--

al
W...,
Quad,
tlvough The
the
....
ond . . _
_-,_.....Isd&gt;arvad

�Mllri:h 20, 1980

7

M•lc'e HIUer
..... wllh
.............
.

........_ .._ .. ea
~c...,

.......... M'fJCHD. ................

.......... ,....,'E...........

loo ••• •• Allrleht-ltMa
New
M.-'dlle......._..tolootl5yun

• . . .. -

of .... c - of Creative and Peoform•
... Alta.

Peta Lom!s chad-mwtMttr In Acr Lang's "'M... as
...... Pundllwtlh [\HI a.. .... Judyl . ~
and,_,
~- lndood . !he on1y ....
HJdtor • tem
fMhbn a when an IC20lllllrh

w-·
In...._·

• sDong ~to him Ia..., cmaging from
w.
and ta\ltnrg .net wc.nng.

w...,·... ,.,ling

Romon-.

bock-..

Mucb of !he film'• ,.., If clortwd &amp;om ....,.,...

---

""""" ond .. tpObn "" · - odon In ~ IW&gt;dlng ........
blowupo
.. -

.. 8orclotagoclon ond !he a..nc.llay ond

oi...!Wol._.

w-.

0. !he oound lrKic , 8odhoYon.

· Haydn ond !he ..........,_...t pop mw6c ol the ...-a, Nazi merc:ha , lirWIICha of
Amaiaon rodlo oerial! ond , """'
brood·
ut11 chortlng !he courw ol Hller'• 12-yoar mgn.
FNncod bv Brltioft, Gorrnon and Frmch telovllion
•• a &lt;001 of~ $500,000, Hider, ....
much EngW1 nanation .nd excdtnltublirla, was
shot bv ~In Munich'sBavw Studtos in 20
IIORI«lhlng
For .... length . ,_boriS
and hos bNn pnxloJmed bv Su..n Sor\lag M " on&lt;r
of the gr...t woc1u of art of IN 20m century and one
of the grcataa fUnu; ave m.lde.Hider .... ...... sucr:aofW In Fnnc., ond
~ .... toured .. .,_
Gorrnonytho Him , ~ • olw•vs to lui housa In brief
spe::ial runs or ewn c:wt a one-or two-ni§Jht·tcand
bMis rather than In comrn«rdaa rum

......,..,t.

!lire""",....._ .... _

cloys--

w...

.... tor
........ ,.,.,,_.VC""·

--

A~munt...r

a:~pa

&amp;om • mental Ntflution to retum to his
honMrlown ~ the umc tudeous crima ocew

CACIUM'

y - " -. . . .

ear-.

146 Otclen-

dod. 1 ond 9 .45 p.m Gone-of odmlotOon Sl 50.
lor:ufly. o n d - $1.25.

IIIC FIUI'

----

llQario. 170 MFAC , Eacott 1 ond 10 p m

F...10 IIC ~ ; Sl lor othon.

_
_ __
THiRD WOIU.D
·_ _Sq-.7pm.

,..,.___ ~

CONCEJrTS'

....... c - t . fc--.g t h o - ONYXX
and opodol -

Jim

Domboowlld, Glonn

w.a.o., - . . &amp;oola and o.... Goddonf _

- - Comd n - .. 8 pm. Is
SI .SO_.aandSIIor- Formonlnlo&lt;·

-

· .,.. 636-2038.

ONYXX Is !he Coloec 8 -wood -o....·
• ..-.
""'"""v oocupiod
and "Swo c;,.....

•

.... - . . .
"" . , . __

-·~- UIBc-- .

681Moln-. 8p.m. Col882·76761or- ln-

- - ~""tho

c.- ... -

~ . , Eric Comrnt.nity Cologc ~

P• ---.M-·Squn
PI AM) UUAIIPIIERifTAnDIC'

-

Domo.-. CBS _.....,. - . -

opodol- - - - -

s.-. 8

lor ............ ~ . .

$650

tW ~ ~
. ._
. . - _._n..· s.u P I .............
T_.

~-«NNX

GAlA

.....,.- bv .lohn C.. and IA_ . . _, and............,bvAioiT--_Noe.
~

,., an.:., DoYid F.... v- Mlthoaholl and DoYid
Tudor. Abtghl-Knarl M

Golooy. Nord&gt; Tan-

ponrfl ~ Golortoo. 8 p.m T h e - Is
. - . . . - .. _bv_lromlheNMionol
£nclo-nontlorthoMa, --~ ond
tho Sloe~

.,_....,_

.....

··--·-o~
ondwlng·HPSCHD bv tho,.,-..,
.lohn C. and I.Ajoron HJie- -...ly

_, -

-

T.....'•
~·-

~ ~ • g o l o - lor

-....-tho
c_.....,,

c . a . v -. - - t h o

1~-tongNfo·

c.-

Abtghl-Knao ond tho
.. tho
and p .......... and tho-·
.,.
_
_
- - - - ..Suncloy'sporf......._,._
- -.. lhe-ol

_....

............ Ewolr9 ... _ _ _ ondlf

... -·-··___
...... ... ,...._
...............
_
--.. ......... _..... _...........
'llw ....... HP$CHD colo lor .... -

..

-~and-·---

S.tanlay- 22

-.

- - - . . ....

I

--1140

~40

-·ThcGolooy_
· - . . - ...........
ond51
.
.l
_o
..
_
r_
. ._
- _._
- -lorthopo-.c
-and

F1UI '

-andto4
~~~, . c-. -

&amp;15 1 .

-

tcOplt of
the ongoing ewnts.
AHody • moeth In.,._-. unclor the dlrection ol lAjoron Hk. HPSCHD hu ~ 10
&amp;ftolo on impnoalvc """'I ol tod1nlc.ol Joel Chodobc , diredot ol t h e - Mull&lt;
StudJo at SUNY/ Ahany, hu boon coled In .,
special technical odYIIor: Chodobc hu producod
HPSCHD at Abony ond ot the 8rooldyn Acorlomy
1n Now von. John
w11 be wrivtng S....dov

c.
.,.,__,...a_.....

Corn_.t bv Cago and H. . In
lJnivonly .. prem.,.
•.

orN

1967~

at the

- HPSOtD ......, ....
of lhc .,_ li'1iltk:: en~ts

""""*'-""

ollhe -v... , _, .
bv
rnony 10 be tho dcflnllvc multi-media- FIUI'

Join c.-tord
ond
John G.ftcld119461,
ll&lt;rllolo-A Eric County
H_....
Soclcty, 25 _ , _ , Court 8 p.m $1.50. s,...-od "" Soudy/Buftolo.

FOLK MUSIC CONC:Eiri •
F. . - - Rid&lt; Av.y ond Judy Greonhll.
Squh - -- 8 :30-11:30 ..... , _ -

tho

$!.50 _ . a: Sllor - . .. ond.,. ............
Squn nct..t Ollk». s,...-.d bv WAS Cof.

· - Corrvnlrtft.

DAIICE'

F - - - h e . . . . . . . - . ., wllhowHc ........ _
........... IIC'.
poltyol ......................... .........

space to molble them to percefw a wide

_,.,

. and-_.ot......,.wllbe-- - .. t h o - - -

UUAII IIIDNIGHT FIUI'

Canto 119761 . ~ - Squn. 12
~- Grmorol " " - $2.10, """"""
$1.60.

CWI')IOIM

"'You do not cwn Mvt 10 go to high tchool10
"'II ftlm; !he pr-oblem" to get ........ 10 &lt;on&lt;on·
&amp;rate,"' he uys. 1'h« moll important thing Is to be
""'-· P-'t " ' - thol 'Holocautl'
made lor
-

w.,

'""""''· You ""' rnoloo QOid out ol the ..n.. ol
I"'"'~-" Auocllwllz! 'Holocoutl' moy do
ICM1'tt momentary good , buc1n tM long rvn people
wil nr;ect tt. This is ~.ery dangerou1 ..
T'he movtc has ello been caDed " much of a
. . - . ol tfw rnovlclndustry • ol H - hirnlllf
~ Is ttpl&lt;lllfy honl on Holywood , KCU&gt;Ing MGM Mogul l.oub 8 M•VWI ond orhcn of ex·
plol!lng tho Nom lor proftt ond l•llng to old the

.kwf.

'Oroooltow-·
Aa&gt;coodlnQ to Or. Gerold O'Grody, ol
the c..- lor Soudy, who .... contriiClld

--~··OrrvU~"'"-&gt;v"'

bnng tho 111m to ll&lt;rllolo. • .... boon tho u.s. only In Son Fr......., ond ..
New Vorl&lt; City. -~ls•lilrnwhi&lt;hMdtobe~

~In

hcnbocadol-cWturolhlolorjllnon-·
fy MW form , which ......., ol .......... thot .... fdooo
'-11 wll oloo be chongcd. I hod
otlgNify ....lor • loot " - •nd -.glor 16mm- to bocomc ov•tfoblc ""Or. Soloolol ~ _ . . . . , ...
-tho trlu ol ~tho 35
ShM's. He teaches • courM on the Holocaull with

ol wkun ond

mm-- "

--Aionoftho~ol
._,.and ho - equoly conu•wtt&lt;!d 10 i It If •

doys_tho_.,.._ ..Shoo'•
_ .. ... .
-

thot ... ._,.. ..

)oltl-

SIIIIK.thoh-llmrnadclnll&lt;rllololn...... bul tho Shoo'• ·-~· .. tho ported
- l o r t l t l f - and- ......... projoc·

- ·· -·"""'""'kind ....... -

~aaday-

Sb.e'• • • tim ~ c:ante in Downlown fk.t~
lola ~-thoc-lorMoclloSNdv

23

bNn-.

..-~ondlloriM.,Inl975ondlhow

CACFIUI"
y - F . - • c . - Conlormcc
~ - Squn. 2, 6:15 ond 8.30 p.m Grmorol
$1.50, flocufly, ...., o n d - Sl 25

tong time lor tho trilogy to be finish·

od."

TKORDWOIU.DWEEX'
.. u.s. o.-.-.. ~­
Robert c.hcn , U.S. p._ Coundf . F
Turld.

•u!hoo. -oi"P.....,IInflcvoow", Or

F1U1...£cr~·

Olllu~ ,

~

Fonf
Hcrw
" " ' -~·.o.Hidor,
A -F1los fTve
~

Sho'• ll&lt;rllolon-. Thcllm. - · hourt tong and ... .._only .... ~ .. Buf·
lola, wllrun&amp;om2 3010615p m. ond&amp;om 7~
'Ollpm Wlh•~UMI:nlikfordlnne:rMOfW!
oltho_llloolct
__

so.-.

BSUC. 233 Squtyc 4 p m

UUAIIFIUI'
"---119781 Woldm..,-. Amhor«.
5: 15. 7:30 ond 9 .45 p m Gone-ol odm._
S2IO . ..-.SI60
DANCE'

TlcNto .............. Shoo'• Boa Olfico, Squire

IW. ond .. Tldrob-ool s,..-. "" !he U/ B Conlor- lor Study.
Council on lntenM!onol . -. ~ o1

_F......_ ..............

. - ,, Sdlool .. -

...,.,._,- .... the

··

ear..-..~

~
..
u..on
...........

-·--..-......
_.......$10

........

.. tho L.A. r-.

""~­

...................
-oiDorF-..•
... . . - .. ~ ............... ... and
adlwo

In.....

.... _,.,.... ....,..ol
-.a

--·---.............
1M H

in ewryane ,.._ . . . . . . . . In •

_....,.....,..._ _ _ a n d _ ..
"""""'"·
--.....~-'"""'

--a..,..·.

Groot~ Or

Colteon ond

X...... A~- U/ B &lt;=-• - ·
681Moln- 6p .. Col882·7676forll&lt;kolln·
Span--' b\1 !he c.m. lor -

=-

"""*"'"

one! Eric Community

Coloec ......

EVEMIMGS "FOR lfEW MUSIC'

Horpclchord. . - - d "" .lohn c. l!f!!l
~.o;or... H-.., and porlormcd"" AW T.......,.:,
NMfv a..... DoYid F.... v- Mlthoaholl ond
DoYid Tudor Al&gt;nghl Knao M Golooy Nord&gt;

T..._..,

~

Golloria 8p m T h e -

"--~
.. - " " ..... &amp;om tfw NoiOonol
~lor thoMs n..-ec.- ond

tfwSioo~

C FIUI '
U.O&lt;Wiok; lANnon tour.gc, ~ 8 p m

fM 10 IIC , . . _ . Sl orhcn
· -~,' -11,-'.1

�•

M.rch 20, 1980

IRCe Game Room
1'lole -

~

IRC _..., Ia F...,
................... St.

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

........ o., ................ s-

~~

_

eCalendar
.....
.........

no_.,
_ _ ..,._
-.-:oLOGY
I.KTUU:'
~-W . NI:fiiMon . U/B. IIoH

Jloaclav- 24

IW.4p.m.n.....t_.. ...........
~-.o-·

tG'SIIUIIIIIIC* I.EC1'WES'
_

_ . c -,Jp.m.; . , . , T_

--.4

·-·

_.

p. M . - ·P.N .

...

ciT~.

.

~~~~~
~~
o...--o~-,. Sdloolol

-...
. U/ 8 .
-

a.

---.-.. . . --a...-

- - . OliN. Ph.D., ........ o l -

.......... --

,_ .......... u.s.•· 0· ,
_. 0 . . CanloNnoo Thuh, Squh. 7 p.m.

ClONCIIIT'
- -.. ·-ol~ -ol

atMLU 01.- - I . K T U U : '

-

.... """"'"' - - NtCII.n. -

Gononolon -

· A look II -

Englloh

~·,

COHCEIIT'

s pn. , _ -

llychlooy conducting,

o . . - - o l -.

no.,........_..~s.m­

... ........ ... Bodo

Coloeo a ..

--.llu. .

AIICIIITECIUIE ~·

A c...! ...,._, R. Jo,oco Wllilloy. AICP.
ltONA ~ · 335 ~ s ,30p.m. n..

FACU.TY IIECifAL'

-·

-col

B-Ninoo-- .... -

ToWry Church, 37 1 o.tow... Ave. 8 p.m. 1ldootl
$S; ...... - e n d lhodonll $3.

852-8314b-.

--.--.-~-'

.._

Gnoy O&gt;oir.

lwJMI-.,JIIIh~llolldllodlaiHol.

· Spon.Jood"" ... Dopon·
-~~--endlho
ol .._ Lllonluros. ...

•

Sung~ e n d - · - 1 7 1 h - 11!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~=:!!!!!::::::::!!
~ . 420 c-&gt;. 8 p.m. " -· Sponoonod b!l lhe •

ollho

,john

St.
u.u-.. Church Mkhooi--.
ol """-· 6540._ 5&lt;.

...... end .... puiM'f'"llaomo.

8 p.m. -

Aln' ~ I.KTUU:'
0. ... ---~.Dr.

-c..--..
__...., ...

POEI'RY- Alii) MUll&lt;:'

sw.o.o- .. ""*1r
... . _ - Anno,
-.Holl-........

Koyfnnoc, _
,
~ F. . No:Gowon, plonlll.
FO&lt;UMy
Club, Horrtmon Llonry. 8p.m. F-. Spon..-1 b!1

Red-·

Cologo B.

ucn.·
_...,._.,

VIOO
&lt;XIU.EGIE
no
_., _

doo~._... . . . . T - N.

w..-. Ph.D. FO&lt;UMy CJub- -

fWJICf'll,ll~ '
L - ~. 19611.

p ... Spon.Jood "" ...

-NcOon. Sch- -

WedDesday - 26
146 IJidondaoj 7

c.- ... -

-y

5cudy

........ u.s. - . Univcralt~
Ann -

MAJHEJIA11CS COI.LOQVIUII•
The Rl.. ••• Dedlae of Att•lr8d

-

~-..,-·

Women '• Stvd.._• College,

·

of

--.s.uno.n--.-

lllobngulohod s..- Prot-. llniwnily
ol
end paident ol lhc N-..1
Acodomy ol Scionc:a 104 Oidmdoof. 4 p.m

a.c.eo.

- -· end • ....... ., be onnouncod.

335"'- 7pm

UUM

IIJCIIOBIOLOGY 5EIIJNAII•

NIGHT fWJI&amp;'
no~~ 1192:81 . 1 . ... , ,....

-~119311 . 8&gt;1Sp ....

J70MFAC.

~- Ft..- .
no~~- Eml.._end

- -.11-•R--who
T....... ., ""-""' ...o1
- . . -. - - e n d ........ _
c:ornet to~ Md -...... Holywoodeua

Ao -r-.o...··-·~.-

._oful.loul.--.-lnlhoS... "

- - lhon Goaoges.-'o'"*. _ .

'A"'-

-

WAIIEaTAL'
Toowl, llolrd Rodlal Hoi. 8
Nn T.,.t It • ol Soophon

"-Drool

p m "-

L- -

· 19611 . 146 Dlriondori 9
p .. Sponoonod "" ... Conlor ... 5cudy

Taesday- 25
HEALTH IIElATED PIIOf£SSlON
ALLIED HEALTH'

~IN

_ . . . . , .. _ _ -

... 5toon.

"'-"

~

T~

FWollly . .

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

Lag~. F ~ . -

121"100ft

·-

.....k-1

~ of Qr.

........ -~- CllnooOc-

.. · Anne M Fogunc!Uo. Oopoot·
ol ~ . U/ 8 223 SMrman. 4 p m.

-

-

...,._,

Screot. lkJO p.oo. , _ ·
l4tCbw publ!olood .. ......... ond
--ono!lhto.....Sot-.M.. London end One Woold Poolry In -.loon.
Slw " ...mo. o1
E.- (8o.1h " ' -· 1974)
ond ExMaoW
IMf " ' -· J978j .
JUII &amp;ftolo P~-. . . modo .......
"'port b!1 • gr.,. from lhe New Yod! Stile Cowd
on rho Ml end rho N-..1 Endowment b rho

w•
L4w-

......

FIUI (FIUI NAIIIIA11YE) '
Ar.-.1 (Dowh&lt;nloo, 19291: E.wth (Doy.
"--oo, 19301 . 147 IJidondaoj . 9 p .m. s,on-.ct
by .... c.n...... Medii 5cudy.

_......_ ... b e - loom~ ~ 30
~IN~•

Sblllltts of AkrTaot Cortical
~I

c:hamben. Amhlnl 7 p m .

THIRD-.DWUX'
l•t.,.al Oppr... loa. Panel di.Kuuton
Hll, - N o t i o n; Skip Roblnoon ,
Unllod " - ol M.......... Robm Goolo ,
Rep«- IAeJilo- Tul&lt; Fo•u . Nollonal
Allonco ......,~ Oppr- end r
~ R..,....
335"-. 7pm
UuAB W£DNESDAY NIGHT FlUIS •
n . . - S h 6 (holy, J9521 , 7pm , , . . _
"'- 119601. 8 45 p.m Cant.mc:o l'hoon.
Squn ,_~

*"'

__ _

ln WII...
--.
- ........_
hit-o..l l h o - l i e,
......... -. -....
Sh6, ..tolcoyouJOt~llolf

~-·-a...-.. e n d -.y ol • hoi..- lndlon ..... - -

&amp;loo, " lhc

::;:..tldoo-

Thanday- 27

hit-··"""'*"" ... ...

FIUIS'
Dr. ,.._.Nr. Hyok; " " " " . . . _· 148
7.30 p.m. Spon..-1 b!l lhe 0opon•

~

,_.,~

lfiJSK: P£IIFOUWIC£.

-

. . Ciollo, ................... _

w...-

- . p1uo "How lho u.s. Bfunclcn 1n1o
eo.-... Thuh , Squn. 7 p .m.

CIIEATI\II! A&amp;IOCIATE IIECifAL'
Alii T - . · llolrd ll«iioo Hoi. 8
p.m. c;.n.ol-. $1.50: U/8 aommunlly.
- -. - $ 1.

AldTokohooN, otolonlod"--pionillolln·
....-_.........,lludltd..-vuloko

""· R.ov lAY end &lt;loa!~ v_....,, boo _.n.~ •

._.... ol ~ .......... portor.

-

.......,. -

· concor1l

-'d.

end ...... .......,.. ....

Slw hoi pcrionnod ...... mojor , _ _
oymploony - . ~ on Gcrmon , Poloh end

" - - nolionol rodio end ·
POEI'RYIIEADING'
Mlchecl llcCioln. But Gono&lt;otlon pool,
....tlngfrom
"-Y Room, 420~ .
8 p .m . Free . Sponsored by the English

hlo-..

Ooportmcnl'o Grey O&gt;oir,

I A J P i o - · - .. c-&gt;10

ALCOtiOU$11SEJCINAII'
Nk:otlllc 1111 Clllda Q I
A
Alcohol N - - s k l o - llr. F...tllod!. - o i O .·
•

choniP.t.~ . -P.t.Memoriolln ·

flowoodo ln...IO on Alcohohm . 1021
M*a Sired. 10 a m.

'IIIWIO

CHINES£ EXPEIUENC£'
N - ol a.Joo, Ton Shuzhon, ol lhe
Shon9&gt;ol c.n-v-v ol Music. 8olrd R..,..,
Hoi. 12 noon
followed by
• quation-and-answer paiod .

The.,............, ......

Dr.

P£DIATRICS RESEARCH SEMINAR•
~ ol Clnooalo&lt;yooo.
Gonalo
N. ~ . Boon! Room , Chldnn'o ~
12 noon
FIN£ ARTS DtSCUSSION '
M.M1aMc "'-8ok. c:w-MOr of 20ih c:enlury
phot09faphy at George: Eastman Houe •
!~""'- . ... be _.wng- ........ Sticgllz, ..
Room ~13, Bellounctw. .. 3.30. m. Open' ....
orudonb ond ,.....,

In-......

..- ....

-

PATHOLOGY SEIIINAR•

......

from 9 a .m. to 3 p .m. on M.ch 25. &amp;gn-up tllblft
d be ac up on lhc ground flooo of c-&gt; , . . rho

......_BooohonMo.do20ond2lfromll'45
a .m. to 1:15 p.m.

In-

DIAL ACCESS LIN£
The~ Oolonlollon Ad.-y ~

The ......,. new...-

It - l h c dowlopmont ole
lo
lhc llud&lt;nl body.
II colod D.I.A.L.

l!&gt;nct

-Unc).

. . al-. --so-The-

O.I .A.L. II o l&lt;lcphono coll·ln 11\11&lt;.., whk!o
ttudmts can e.ll Ia hear lape recorded~ on
• vwtety ol conccrnt. lnduc:L-.:1 Ill thil point •e
...._ ..........tlng ocodomlc end penona~...,.,, .,

Otto. ochoolo, ouch

01

In ... ol T...,,
rho llniwnily

Noo1hen end · ..... . . ..- fovoroblc
- "........
" ........... ol01yon
end
U/ 8

11.-..
lhe r.,._on:oJ iolllelyro be._,olod
Fol f lludcnt . _ . . II
O.I.A.L.

next
good.
bcgonopcr.... lhlo- o n d - - ...... be
doccly. In Noy..... lmpoO ol
D.l.A .L. ... bo ......_ ond o - . . . . . .
modo o b o u l -. Including oc.domlc .......
--end~--..

........... -v

~
,..._ - ·
_ . . ,~
T . . _ I11M
l r (SHill
Judlllo8.
vwollow.
-•...,._oi~ . U/ 8 182F.3.30p.m

-

CD.UJl.AII PHY&amp;IOI.OGY SEJCINAII•
Dr. . . £...... _ , . ....... Doponmont

-"'"
_......,""
..- lunher_.
.The-,..,.
2-4 _
- - ..
........ lludcnll ..
_ ...Mony

-

ol~ .

........ ElnninCologool-..
1011 Shormon 4 p.m Coli. . ot 3-45 "'S.JS

IIATHDCA11CS COlLOQUUiol•

........ -...- ........

--.o-·

AmNn!Compuo . fi.Sp.m. fo&lt;locotloncoll Donne

.. 636-2773.

IJl.OOOIIOIIIL£

I

Nnroeal

M. .tal Rocanlolloo, Dr
Domlnldl P. Purpuoa, RoM F Kennedy c.n... b
Rao.do "' MoniOI R&lt;la.dOIIon II&lt; Hurnon o...lopmcnt 245 Carey 4 p.m
Ia

EllA M:TIOif TI!AIIIIIEEIING'
f o &lt; - - . - ............. -

_ . . _ERA_........,,

Notte:. .

-~lodoo-........ K.T Whil·

bodoalod by ....

...

· J802Niogon

ENEilGY IIESEARCH 5EIIJNAII•

""·
o.s-n-• ol-...al
Englnumg. UnNa111)1 ol Minn...,..
101 Boldy. 4-5 p.m

. GSA SENATE MEETING
GSA Sonole Mmlng T_, Hoi Sonole

f WJI (fiUI NAIIIIA11VEI ,

· 8 p.m.

.AJST .UWALO POEI'RY IIEADING'

SooP- ,._., US l.obar P..., - .. .310
F - 6.50 p.m. n..

~ol--lhe

-Ylowo ...... ......_... .. ......__

--~"'"--.•·bolnv

- - ... -

. ...... - e n d ..

StudonamoycoiiO.l.AL. .. 636-~t.rw.n
lho houn ,of ~ 10 p.m , S..nd.y liorough
Thundoyo. An -

..........

end ploy ....
loom

longlh

1\nv .............. .. ...........,,
~ ~"";!;t· Ofhoo oiSCudcm Alf.n,

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_
~~3269-5&lt; S p O L -

a-.. .... _

-·be~~

....

E....... .lool-lo/lho-.!f~

• -

-

-

Rololloo. ....

0...

Prof.,_ Soundon Mod..on., Mu

~ . ..... -

- - - ... a... . .....

~

_
_
._
Oootdl ....Jm
......... Ho -

. . - . ol ... N-..1

Acodomy .. - - 104 IJidondaoj 4 p.m
~.

z-~A-O....F-.­
Gtodnor, . - . . . , . C50II ~ 4 p m

UUAafWJI'

- - - ... " S t . - -" "'17%3
...,.,.
_ _ ,.,...,...., __ .. sc

~

...

New

v-··

__

,_1oom 1964., 1967

~"""

Plogromo ... -

•

-.loy

............
. The-....
_ . . , " " " 191oom 9:30om .,I p.m ..
_~

doun:h

""" ~ (19791. ~ ~.30 p'" o-.1
Thcocquclro Goaoge Luc.o' . . , . . . . . . _
..._b!llo&lt;uolneon

:;-t

FOoD~ ootasE FOil SPRING

- . . , on lhe - - o l e food~ dub.
lndudtnt ~. food oodcrint. -

The-....
... be
-......

conduaod"" I.Jono Ouquin, -

ond -

· .. .. .

..... _ , Dol&lt;oy, · ollholluloloIW.NI Food
~
1M ol $10 " . _ . , ~ " - ,...._ ot 831-430L

c-

...

Av___o ·- -.. ....-..

~ANUI!

CU.n.E

....,... o1 , _ _ araw..

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

roldoy. Mo.do 28. ..

--·-...... -. . --··- ·- __

,.

�March 20, 1980

...n.._....-..........- . n..•·-...............
_.. ..... ...., ... "'
n.... __ ,.. ... _ ..... -.....s
....
.
-~

____

A I - . IDbo- ot11DWAC. 014 p ......
,........al
..... tp111d .............
__
~....s

-

-.--.

..... Tho ........... al ...... Nr.

...

7-10 _
p .m. _
In Spouldo.fl o....g Room.
_ "-&gt;
.....
al~

-

-and

--..--~­
........

Judo, .... T-~--

-.. w--.

Tho .... --"''I -

_ , Tho J_..

D.C. Olllco. Coondl""

--.~ ......... SUNY
llo6llo; Enaloil Uonguogo - . . ..
5UNY Buflalc&gt;; one! J_,·Amorito Cul!ure

-.Bo611o.

_« _____

Lft-.uiOPS
.U. _ _ noods...._.b_ac·
- - . . .... ..-...hieing, bitycling, bicycle
pleOM...,PbyiiO
'"~&gt;*· ·« .I
~
In ludini

Norton.-......

you·,.

C&lt;

col636-2807.

NEED MIIC IIEM'AL CAIIE1 WEU.. TEAM
. NEEDSYOU
TEAM 1t •,.,.
..,W
_ ._
, . 011hc
Sdoool
a1 DenIIIUy_
_
lhcoppor·
!Wily 1 0 - " ' " * " " " " " - -· TEAM 11
.........
- . a - pononolrom lhc I.JnJv-,
- * MOCk . . lor cnl a-

&lt;c&gt;mmunily " " " -

- .con.
- .....
ndentalbe perlonned
ftlhc
TEAllroutine
din£
mHrMI wailing period end minimal cost .
In-·.,.
01 TEAM--., ouch a,.,_
Wlh •

M

• to rnllke .. rouJiM cMntal '*e as c::ornlcwtab&amp;.

---frwe .. _...

and ..
So. d ..... do ne.d
dental .... ..why woll1 Col .... 831 -2213
any c l o y , - 9 one! 4;30 and- wllbo ~ ..
anango • ICftG\ing appolnUnent for you.

PASSOYEJI
The Jcwloh famly Group- Famtly Soda. Como
CAWJr-Me P~ wtlh us-., lnlronnei Mtr1\.Ww:
10 lhc ttacllblal Seclor.-5undoy- 30. 1980. ..
10.30 a.m Jewish Cenlor of Boflolo, 787
Dolowce ·Awnue , Buffalo. Fa. . , _ end
,_,_,~; Benlce NoiN 833-21168 a&lt; Lynn

___

Gludc 434,WI7 . ....... -

Sunday tc:hoof.

U/ 8 ,
Reparlor SC.H

... - -

.....__

........ malh, Enaloi!Whighft _
_,..,
- - . 1 - a n d -. - u m; Bachclon
"""' high tc:hoof-lovcd leachlog ._.....,._
T-~{R- _ . , M"'-m.

~
bodvoundo ~
., fhdiov,
Room' and

-.

-malh, """"'
Enaloll.aooclcmk
odmc:e ,

- --d
. - . - ....
pnWidocl.

H o M - Gnod.- wlh a - H A ...
............
a-.1, Sll T - . 1. MSC,
C...tac1~

831-3503 . Wcric.stlldy - . . - . - 1 lOop-

""'· Dooclh .. Apt 18.
TAX IMI'OIUIATIOIC 1'011 FOIIE.IGN
S1\.IDEMTI AIQ) ~
.................... Apt 15, 1980. 11on! lhc Offlc:e

ol--..t5oudcn1Aiolra. 402Capon. tor...... 1636-22581. ~ ...tdng
- - ........... of-l9791U
-andW-21om10.
UIA8 OPEN ~'ValES

UUAII~~-Ihc

- ol .. lor-_....ond __Hoi_

join in education project

· By Joyce Bucb.-..ld

•
SUIOIEil PIIOGilAII £JIPLOYJIEHI'
~ fOC' ... - - .lob? lJpwwcl Bound
1980 5u...., Raldontial Ccwnponenc It ocap~~ng
~""

epotnc•t

G~lle

"Inch for Inch and painting for
painting, ·no museum In this country can
better the Albright-Knox In Buffalo when
H comes to art of the second haH of this
century."
Quite an accolade, e&gt;peciaDy when H's
penned by M!UJ york nm.,. art critic and
author John RusseU , and bett£r stU!,
when H's the opening passage of a promlnendy featured spread In the &amp;nlthso·
nlon magazlne.
Yet, lot years this renowned Institution
and the University have acted more tike
lhcurlous acquaintances than concerned
friends . Rarely was there an exchange of
resoun:es or expertise .
A~

.

But times are changing. The Albright·
Knox and U/B are now engaged In a
mutually-rewanling venture which is
quicldy solidJfytng their friendship and
benefiting local htQh school students.
The program-modeled after one
orlglnaDy offered a few yean baok at the
Cleveland Museum-offers advanced
plllcement art history lnlllruction to 15
college-bound seniors eager to tncreaJe
their know*dge of art while earning col·
lege credl.
Now Into their second semester, the
students, who take clasoes twice a week
at the gallery, are being Introduced to art
ranging from the Renatosance to the con·
temporary era . .Last semester, they
covered Ancient Egyptian artwotk
through 1Sch century Aemlsh.
The strength of the program, according
to U / B art historian and course
~. Uv1ngston Watrous, it Its
"sliow-end-teU" feature . After an hour of
dialogue Intermixed with a slide presenta·
lion, students adjourn to the haDs of the
gallery 10&lt; a more penonal encounter

- '"*-·--.. .
--..........-................
...,-....
... -.. ·_c..._
Opon Soria. Squn
-lroml-11 p................
_ , lburtday ....
.....

"" ....

~- ...._,.-In podcnnini
1.-.d
- · tOPOI 7.30p.... lntho ROI.

- O N AGING

_
_
.. lhc
IY/IIta"
.. -_ ._wy......,..
..... of tho . . cyclo,
l/al
- o n e ! ....... . . _ ... _ _

~---t.oidoaolfii'O"''o&gt;t

ol&lt;lorond.-.IOlby_ ..............

__.
-·
---='
--...........- ..__.... ___ . _

With the subject mattar.

_...,
_ _ __
n..-.....-ol-. They won't
_._....._.,....,
take women

-

29 .. """'-~by t.o UIR
oad
. .. .. _ _ _ ai ... IOI*and"'

........ -_.............

Praident Carter's proposal to register
for·a pcllllble dralt wes dedstvcly
rejecNd Mardi 6 by the ·House Armed

-.,._,..""'~

SavioiS Subcomrntnee on Mllltery Per·
--.nel. Subcom-. tN!mben voted
6-1 to t.bk a bill authortzlng Select!w
Scrva registration of women , on

Sod&gt;.,.... .. _

~

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

_.....,.__.......,. .....
...,_
_..,......

"""'*'

grounds dllll there .,. enough draft-age .
men t o . - the armed ..vica' needs In

--·
..........__
.. --.
_____
......
_____ . .
ror •wo..-..
Gfltwit\t
v- .,..,.,
_.,..,
..,....n.
.. ..........

'

_..,..._..

tW,-.-

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

.....,.,

_._

-~·-·60

. - o f an~ .
~ Olalrman Rlchwd c.
White (O.Ta.) Add th.c wesno rwed to
register women . ~The purpoH of
,......_, .. 1D dcvclop a r - - to be
c.aled up end trlllnad lllllhln f&lt;Nr month
for r~." he uld . "'t'o no4 ex··
peckd lhM ........... would be In combat.
n...lorc I no rlHd ID replcr

·--.·---·

··-·

..

educational

experience .

He

color for the canvas.
Their receptivity to new Ideas coupled
with a "visceral" rather than theoretical
response to art Is what Watrous tikes most
about teaching these students. "They get
your juices going and , their excitement
can rejuvenate your own Interest In art ,"
he grinned .

wants

spontaneous responses are .often

Otber pro)ec:U
Olher new University-gallery projects
Include an elght · w~ek lecture and slide
series for the public on the Age of lmpres·
slonlsm . The program, also held at the
Albrighf-Knox, Is being taught by Alan
Blmholz, vice chairman of U/B's Art
Oepartment .
The University and the Albright-Knox

characterized by "superior ll'lslghl."
Of course, fhere are the quiet
moments. Students' first exposure to the
nude form Is good fOO" several seconds of
deafening silence usually followed by a
catharsis of giggles. Red faces provide

::urof
the art gallery In contemporary America .
This program would be presented as part
of the SUNY Conversations In the
Disciplines series.

students to see and articulate what they
sense is the "truth" about a work, but he
also provides them with a referential
framework for study.
Because of their "lad&lt; of cultural
overlayerlng," students haven't as yet
been told what they should see, explained Watrous; consequently, their

~~hk:h~:kl'1oc~ o~e

Personnel News
• TIAA/CREF s...m-.

.

The Penonncl Department has completed armngements fOO" three seminars
on Tuesday, April15, for state employees currently enrolled In the TlM/CREF
Retirement Plan and for thole .with Supplemtntal Retirement Annuity (SRA)
and Tax Defared Annuity (TOA). Mr. OOu!llu Burnett, TlM/CREF advtoory
officer, wfl conduct the one-hour seminars. Ae will be available to nnpond 10 In·
diYidual questions at the concluJion of each presentation.
Mr. JOOieph E. Lippert, manager ol ~benefits admin!stra!lon, sta1ad
that • some 1,800 seminar invltallons were mailed earlier thlo _... to stale
""J&gt;!oyees enrolled In these programs. • He added the ochedule for T....tey,

Apitl15&lt;, Is .. foUows;
10:15 a .m .• Alden Moot Court-John Lord O'Brian rial, Ambenl Camp~.

1:45 p .m . - l..ectura Room -144-Fllli&gt;er Hal, Main and 8allcy Campus.
3:45p.m. · Lacturw.Room -144- F...t.er Hal, Main end Bailey Campuo.
Supcrvtoon .,. aulhoclzed ID grant release time, without charge to leave
aedlts, for attandancc at these seminars. Lippert urged i n - . ! ~to
rwturn tha ..-vatlon dps es soon upoooliile IInce "the Mallng capadly ol the
1'001110 hmitl total allirndance end aocceptanee of .._..atlol;ls will be on a h

come; lint served " --"

.-..------~ondiO

~

For many, these "expeditions" through
the gallery provide the ''first opportunity
to come (ace to face with a work of art ,"
Watrous noted . He lakes this very
seriously. It's both a "gratifying," yet
" awesome re s pons ibility ." The
"challenge," he malnfalns, is that of providlng an "open-ended and liberating"

·-

Two addltlonal ~ntallono are ~nned exclusively for Raean:h
Foundation employea on Wldnaday,
16, as lollowo:
9 :00a.m . • W~man Theatre, Room 112 Norton Hall, Amherst Campus .
11:00 a .m . - Conference Theatre, Room -129 Squire Hall, MainMld Bailey
Campus.
Lippert stated MD. 8etban Burke ol the Penonncl staff will be coordinating
the April 16 ,..aentallons and that the Founddon en'CIIowa end Project
Dtrccton would _be receiving more ll*lflc tnfonnatlon later Ifill month.

con-

Taa'- A........

For the
ol ln-.! employea, Federal and State Income Tax '
Formo (short, long, vartoua ocheduln end lnoinlcllonal booklelll - sill
available In the PeroOnnel Ocputmcnt'o Benefit~ Rack located In the lobby ol
Crofts Hal, Amhenl Campus. OeaciMne fOO" fang II April15, 1980.

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

March 31, 1980 11 the deacDne for ~9 MIP Medical dalml. Calm
forms (blue es ClpPC*CI to the 1980 buff
claim fe&gt;rtMI -available at tha
Pcrtonnel o.-tmenl 11.-pcion Window, Room 106, Crofts Hal. T~
ohould be to Mloo PIIM)I Zldll at Amherst Exterlllon 2650 (oft campuo
cal 636-2646) .

r.,.-

~~~----~---------------------------'

I ~J

�•

March 20, 1980

Pain Is sometimes
breast caoc~r symptom

c:-..y lo populor ....... p.ln Is
_ _ _ . _ en .....,.,._ .....,... of
.._. _,.,..,·.-dim et U!B and
c.lllamlll Saa u.-.., (Lang a..ct&gt;)
1

Tbe Main Street cwtodlal std prowlded !hill tpeettng lor thOH on the fifth
Boor of
Mondey. Pr..ldent 'O'Kdta' looka pleaeed.
·

c-.

Here's a
mailing list
w...... New Vorll Sto" -blw

Tholiona&lt;ololo ........ O E..O

N-Vori&lt;Sto1e~n

736 IAgiolotvc Ofllca Buldlng
Ah"'/. NY 12248
1490 Jcfl....,., Aw. · 2nd Flc&gt;or
NY 14208

-•io,

For the convenience of those who
would like to write to the Western New
York leglsletlve delegation concerning
the proposed ..5UNY baclget cub, the
• Roponu Is providing the following list,
with addresses both loca.Oy and In
Albany.

Mo.,_ J. Murphy, Jr

Tho H"""'oblo
New York S&amp;~~• lua
547......-tvcotllct

Ah"'/ . NY 12248
131 fAit Avenue

L-NY14094
Tho Honcnble Jooo;&gt;h T Pllltt.,c
N~VoritStat.~n

n. Hcnaroblo Joma L

Emo.y

t..o~o~aa .. OfiEt Bulding
Ah"'/. NY 12248

The H....... Robin L Sc:himm.,_
Now Vorl&lt; S101c -~~~man

Tho H......t.lo 0.... T. Ganld

GencraiDonoYcn O«&lt;ce llulding
Buffolo. NY 14203

NowVort.Sto•~

741 .......... Oftlco Bulding
.U...,, NY 12248
c;.....l

o..-.. Olli&lt;e llulding

1100 Pine Avenue
Niogua F. .. NY 14302

4!&gt;2 . _ . . _ otllct Bulding
At&gt;a..,, NY 12248

n. H.....- John a

Shell...

-..o. NYI4203
,. lllncenl J Gnbof
NewVort.s.... -.....,_.

Tho H.....- Donlol B. Woloh

-

~ Olli&lt;e Buldiotl

""-"!~. NY 12248
290C...Rood
w.. Sonoco, NY 14224

Tho H......t.lo Slcplwn R. Gn&lt;o
NowVori&lt;Sto".............,
739 ........... Ollcc Buldiotl
.U...,. NY 12248
o.-1 o..-n Oltloc-..

NewVori&lt;Stolc~n

PO. Bc.194

Oloon, NY 14760
W....., Now V..t. Stote S....ton
Tho Hcnaroblo .lohn B Do1w

NowVort.Stooos.n-

IIollolo.NY14203

n. Hcnaroblo Socphcn R Howlc!l

.T h o -

NowVori&lt;SOoio..........,_,
~ Oltloc Buld1r&gt;e
.U...,. NY 12248

19-,se....
-.NY140ZD

Tho--811&lt;¥
-Vorl&lt;_.............,

oeo. Bulding
G.M.I o..o- oeo.-.
5311

~

Alo.oo¥. :tv 12248

l2S-

. . .. NY14203

,__Rid\OidJK.N

_v...

-.....-

su~oeo.-.

l2S--

~.NY1z:MI

-o..-oeo.-.
_ _ NY1
Tt.-llldiOidL~
nt~oeo.-.
-v--~

~ . NY1t:ltl

roa.

-.NY14110

v _ _ _....,..
n.-~.......... oeo. .......
. NY uaea

""""--.

-,NY1410t

w-

J. Flos, Jr
NowVort.Stooos.nl..oglolodw Ollcc Bulding
.U...,. NY t2247

=-2~ Olb Bulding
~Coorl-

a..tblo, NY14202
,__.,......F. ~

NowV... S..O.S....
Slllll..agiololiYc Olli&lt;e
.U...,, NY 12247

a.-...

,__. . J_

Rood --""""

290 c.m.
W. s.-. NY 14224

---..

-

NowVort.Stooos.n.......... Ollcc &amp;Mioe
AJI&gt;onv, NY 12247

-

r.-

n. Hananlllo "-"""'
NowVort.s..o.311 ..........
Buldlnt

oeo.

......y. NY12247
- . . . - Oftlco-.. .
~Coori­

n.-OoloN

v-

NowVort.--

........ oeo.-.
~. NY12247

5441-' -- NY140111i

something was wrong; an addlllonal
seven per cent lndlcated R was pain
wkich led them lo probe the boeasl and
find the lump. For 73 per CAm! , the lump
was the first symptom. BuDough noted
that the women variously described their
pain as a "hurt" or "funny feeling ," rather
than acute or shmp.

MCMt

womea IIUICl. die dlacovery

tltemaeha

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

breast reii&gt;OIIed. when 11Mv hedn'\ realioed masl-.my w• ....., aiJCIIIII*y.
Rapondents alto indicaled tbiit ...,__
dans were"""" often the prollicleS " In·
formation about cancer
"About 70 per CAm! of ....,.....s..i Mid
they received reasonably good emollonal

than--·

support

during

their

a&lt;deal,"

said

Bulough, "but a grut deal ollhlo support
came more 1iom friends and relatives
rather than from health .,..,_,.,._"
Ave per cent said they needed arid
wanted emotional support, but didn't get
it .

N - ehoidd play

role

a--

ac:thoe

BuDough suggested the study points
out the need for nurses, of whom there
are more than one million In the U.S ., to
take a more active role In patient educa·
lion regarding breast cancer as weU as a
more supportive and inf·ormative role

with patients who have the condillon .
"Many states have expanded their
nurse practice acts to allow nurses to ac·
cept greater reseonllb~ In .patient care
and educaljon, she emphasized, "but
our study suggests this Is not being
reflected In the practice setting."
Much still has to be done to bring down
the mortality rates attributed to breast
cancer, the major malignancy among
women, Bullough said .
·
"Nurses can and should be better
trained and utilized .to give patients more_
information," she believes.
But nurses also need to be more

Not ..surprisingly, 80 per cent of the
women Aid they , rather than others,
detected the 6rst symptom. Onl_y 18 per
cent said the discovery was made first
during an exam by a physician .
The U/B.CSU study explored the .
mass media's role as an education source
on br'east cancer symptoms and the seK
breast exam . Of 58 per cent of
responden'ts who said they. checked their
breasls etther once a month or oc·
castonaOy, 42 per cent learned tha tech responsi~ to mastect·o my patients' emonique from the media . Forty-three per , lional needs.
cent learned it from a physician , with only
So do physiCians .
one per cent lndlcattng that a nurse
Others Involved in ihe study include
taught them.
CSU nursing faculty Connie BerthoH,
Folly-two per cent of the women said
Jean Dunworth, Flora Meisenheimer and
their· needs for information about their
Martha Siegel; and research assblants
. condition and about Ms treatment were
Pat Citron, Jane Dah1roth, Susan Moran ,
met. But some commented H was like
Rita Slolln and Debra Zirkle.

Who should decide on how
a doct~r treat$ a patient?
Edllaoloi-. Hcollhs...Physiclans may ethically make decisions about medical treatment on behalf

of a patient, beheves Dr. Lawrence McCullough , but onfv ~It's done to ultimate·
ly protect that patient's autonomy.
McCullough, of the Georgetown
University Medical School/Kennedy In stitute for Ethics, recently discussed
paternalism In medicine at a semlnM
sponsored by the U/8 School of
Mediclne't Committee on Human Values
and Medical Ethics.
"Patemaltsm seems lnevttable In the
physldan-pallent relationship," McCullough pointed out. Patients don't , as a
ru~. have enough lnf6rmalion In the
medical ophere to take complete charge
of their own treatment. Those who are Ul,
moreover, may suffer a loss of ability lo
make- decision• In their own bes interests, even d they have had considerable training In medicine.
In ohort, said McCuDough, patients

:::"~t:~.:Jh:O:..r~~

and the parents say "operate," but the
youn!lster, because of newly acquired
religious beliefs, says "no." McCuUough
believes thai the physician Is ethicaUy
justified In performing the bfesavtng
surgery. The patient's age and the fact ,
that he or she may not be able to reaDy
perceive the consequences of the choice
are factors that have to be considered,
McCullough argued .
"On the other hand , ~ the patient is an
adult, Is rational, an,£ adamandy refuses a
blood transfusion- solely on grounds that
his religion does not perrnH M, the physician Is not ethically justified in going
agalnot the pallen(' wishes."
McCulough cled a need to establish
crlleria which are acceptable fa&lt; justifying
weak paternalism .
" Many cases are 'muddy,' " he said..
"especlaOy those In which pain may or
may not have reduatd the patient's
Jiulonomy.• Somettmes, he added, H is
dlfflcuh for the physician to make such a
determination.
Some patients demand 11n&gt;ng paternaliom. What a physician should do when
the patient voluntarily and knowingly
gives up his or her own autonomy In
decisions affecttng treatment a&lt; care Is a
probieg, which McCulough did not
discuss.

coune of. ail ~. boicomlt'll dependent upon their phyoie~Ms In much
the way they were once dependant upon
their parenll.
"Thotc who believe In llrong paternalism (In lnedtcine) , believe the physician lhould always c;letennine what .. In
the patient'a bell
even ~the patient .. able lo make chok:el," Mc:U/B's v~ footbaO team will open
CIIIolql ~ - In hll view, though,
the 1980 season at Brockpon Slllla on
thll llpPI'OaCh ~ the In~ of the
Saturday, September 6, Athletic Director
~ .00 lhould be condemned.
Ed Mato has annouooed .
Weok ~ II ethically justified,
1"he addition of Brockpon gives the
he said, when patient eutonomy Is re Bulls 11 games for only the aeco~me
duood by 9 , general lnc:ompel....,. or
In 67 MMonS , The 1970 taam, under
pljiChllltr1c condtllono, when pain or . Coach Bob Deming, pooled a 2-9-0
emotional llpMaval cau.. temporary
reoard In NCM Dlviolc.n I compeltlloft,
J.ck of conlnll, and when undUe out.slde
the final Maton until the program was
lnfluenca and a J.ck of full knowledge of
revived In 1977 .
the conoequenceo of .,.,.., actions oome
The 1896 UtB foocbaU tum played 12
Into p&amp;.y.
IJA'"C!S (9-1-2). but MYetal were agalns
13-year-old . YMCA, athletic club and high ochool op~ """*'dicttlo whic!&gt; requlra 1Ufi8tY
ponents .
.
..
. . . ... .

in-.

. NY14701

- .. NY14202

Bonnie Bullough of the U/B
School of NuiWig, .... prlnctpal In·
........,. ofaiiiUdy ""*h ~ 139
c.llfomlll _ . , who lalt boaiils to
~. lllld pain bel been ells·
counted - a ·breast ......,.. oymplom ln
most IIIUdia and meny Inti.
"'n our ltudy, however." she said,
. "pain cleArly Is an early symptom to
which patients and health care deliverers
should be alerted." Bullough uld pain
was deocrlbed as a prtmary symptom by
13 per cent of the survey respondents.
Six pet cent said M was their first clue

By MillY Beth Spina

92S L9iatvc O«&lt;ce Buldlng
Al&gt;a"'l. NY 12248

Room 413 c.,... Buld"'O
Albony. NY 12247
1410PineA~F... NY14301

l2S--S32

n

NewVori&lt;Sto"~

92t 1.41otvc O«&lt;ce Buldlng
Ah"!!. NY 12248
~794 Main 5lrft&lt;
WlllamJIIIIIc. NYI4221

12SMainSireot

.

Room 536

Now Vorl&lt; Stole..._..........
Coprd Bulding
.......... NY 12248
Roomi39Dooyliulcllng
PO. Bc.36
SUNY et Gw.aeo
Gor&gt;noo, NY 14454

~

8l:lu.ly

"puulng . . , . lo find ....,. -

11'J1n9 on. Four ·~ Mid they
enlered IIUigGy ....t
....a.. to find •

s....-.. for-.. .•

Brockport added

. . ..

.... .

.

.. ........ .

�n

Moodl20, lll!IO

e &amp;at~get
..,.. _

Moynihan will speak to gradS

...... 41

Aect r

. ....

In .,.,., ~.

~ reporllod 111M
to dota, ~'* for FaD lll!IO . .
down for
u&gt;d U/B, but that the
qu.llty ol ..ty ..,picants Is lliln6:andy
imprOVIng. The President ..... Mid 111M •
........ cWk:iency" .... l'lllltl In the
number ollludents trantlcn1ng to SUNY
- ' to the IJnlvawjry. Ha - - . ! that
U/B .... be "'ucky" If I. gm 1,000
traniNn out ol an expected 1,600.
Roselyn Wilkinson, manager of
Human Rnourca and Development
Training, NpOI1ed to the PSS that 115
full-llmc and 45 part-lime • U/ 8
~ . . taking course wort. this
oemaler thro"9h the Experimental

-

Survival seen as central Issue
.for education In this cet:ttury
"Survvval ol higher cd~" will bee
"biilng cenlnl - · for the remainder ol
the century.
To undencore her point, Helene Bein
Howe, dnctor of the Communly Col·
lege Unk ol the u.s. Office of Education,
noted 111M wllhtn the pest 18 month$.
oome 245 collegn haw ellher merged or
dosed .
1-w-'s eddr- ·et the South Campus
of Eno Community Collo!ge WBO the sixth
In a ol proantatlons for Walern
New Yori&lt; higher cduceton sponoorcd by
U/B's Depertment ol Higher- Education.
Allhousil&gt; • belanoed federal budget
..ol prornoiC a lhllt In prtorMics In education _,..jjng, ....,_. opeculatcd the!
funds (or. otudent oevlca will be the Jowl
d&gt;opped .

~

petlimlslic predictions of
others, owe maintained that "nationally
and In the ll!l!lfe!lllle," the Office ol
Educatioo to expedlng enrollments and
FTE's to ·~nae- regularly" In .~ to
come-not just alter the pn&gt;jccted 1995
boom.
Oddly enough, lhc said , e poor
economy may MrYC u an unlkely bolster
to sagging enroar.-. Hlslorlcaly. In
the Mlciwat u&gt;d
periods of
IWgh unemployment haw raultcd In an
lnaeased ltUdcnt population.
If roday's trends remain consaant, a

South-.

higher dJvorce rate coupled with more
lingle parent families will bring -lnaeaslng
numbers of older females back to the
classroom, along with rrdddle· and
retirement-age men embar!Ung on new
careers. What may prove to be en added
bonus, continued Howe, Is that theoe
non-traditional students tend to be more
ettraded'to the Arts and ScXnoes than to
'professional programs.
Howe, who received a B.A.
economics, an M.A. in public edministra·
-lion u&gt;d a JD degree (law) from
Syracuse, cautioned educators against
commBing ~ raourca to "slick ad~er­
llslng campaigns." She recalled that one
Texas college dropped balloons over a
targeted area with SSO JChoianhlps at·
tached to some.
·
The former Mesa Community College
president ouggaiAid that ochools could
make better use ol limited resources by
dlocovcrtng more aboutattrlllon patterns,
and how their graduates fare , and by
oolldtlytng relationships with alumni , who
~ contends, are underullllzed as
polllical and public: relations agents.
Howe Indicated that the 1981 federal
budget will show an tnaease in opendlng
for cooperative education programs as
wei as In areas which effectuate national
policy in "inflation, youth employment
and environmental ooncems."
·

Bullough named to SUNY Council
on policies and programs in nursing
Dr. Bonnie &amp;Iough, dean ol the
Scllool ol Nur1tng, t..s been natnecl to a

Alden . N. Haffner, uoodate chancellor
for health ICienccs In the Central Ad lill·member Council on Nu:nlng Educaministration . Haffner notes that SUNY
tion which wll edllloe SUNY on policy
t..s a special respond&gt;lllty to the nursing
u&gt;d JlrO!Pm dewlopmen In the llcld:
prolesoion , ~ now when health
The ~formed Counctl reaffirms · ICienccs, health mani&gt;ower and the llruc·
lure ol nursing pracllcc arc undagoing
State ~· continuing commit·
ment to
u&gt;d ~t ol
significant changes.
Others named to the Council arc Dr.
n"'*&gt;g
ucallon ~"" ~ the
l\lllem, 8COCifding ID Chancdor Clifton
Lorraine Phillips, State Unlvmlty ColR. Whar!Dro, Jr. SUNY grants3200 nurs- lege at l'lattJbwvh; A. Donald Insley,
ann~ and has men than
State University Agricultural and
10.000 n"'*&gt;g lludents enrolee! each
Techntcal College at Alfred; Dr. Dolores
yea; In 39 clcpee u&gt;d • corllflcala pro- F. Saxton, N....,u Community College;
~.
Mrs. Fay Whtincy. Upstalc Medical
The Councl, an 0&lt;11F&gt;Wth ol a SUNY
Center, u&gt;d Dr. Daflas K. Seal, president
c:ontvenc. held Jut lal on llUrllng ol the Sta
lJnlvc1lty College al

ing--

.

education, wll

wort. chdlv with Dr.

Fredonia.

BUI Hughes is 'Coach of the Year'
U/ 8 ~ co.ch Bill Hugha t..s
been narned "'Coec:h ol the y .... by the
had coec:ha ol the Stat IJnlvawjry ol
New Yen Athletic Conference.
HU!jba, In . . MCOnd __,. M Buf.
tolo, tumcd the Buls IIOUnd from 7- 18
IMt _ , t o 17·10 thto year. Hto tam
17-2 aa-~m~ OMolon m ~.
waalO.Oin
SUNYACWat, .ndwu
,..,..... In

""t. SUNYAC

- u - champion-

coec:ha alao named .,

Al..tonf enc. BaskctbaJ Tearn which
tnduded ' - U/ 8 players: Torn Par11ot1s,
a junior guard from Baltimore, Maryland,
and Nat Boule, a -lor center from
Kendal, New y ori&lt;.
Freeman, a oenlor for·
The Bulls'
- d from Oxon H , M.vland , wu an
honorable mention AO-Conference
player AI tine U/8 ployen were also
named to the AI-Wat DlvWon tum .
p.......,. wu "Player ol the Yut" In the
Wal.

Sample
General Ed
coarse fonn
~

Thlo 1onn ohould bo uiOd to ........ lew ""' GcMrol E:d.-.1 "-""'· In tho . .
poyol ....,.,... ol couna wtl bo -.,..t a "Knowwodga Aru" . - . . - ,. W,_have..-,.

...

~ "tho"
' - "Knowwodga
Area".-..-.
...... GcMrol
· ..... . .
., tho
..............
"Knowwodga
,.,_,... tho
Apt, 1979 ~altho
c:....mo-

u.-

1o ..,_thai !he counc '*'II a,_. ~ . . . . .
Fonn 10 lhis ..,.._,_
...... ohould bo ..cumod 10 ""'
tho GcMrol Ed..-.

I,_ . . Thome Coune

""""""al

_.s tho

-

Comololod
a.. ..
eo...-, 544
C... . ...a. Sl-"'Y/ AB, Bulfalo 14260. ~ . . . . . _ . - , _ OCE _ . , . . _,-.......,
ootha..,...__,.Jikm ... bo~/orGEC_....,,,..I,l!IIIO, flhotl-to bo

lie..........., ...

ollondln tho f a l - oll981. No..... ........,.....,,..,.
lho GEC..,...
lioplomloor JO, 1!1110, f that~ .. 10 bo ollond In fal1981. C:O....- 1o lhe GEC ohould
Mudy have t h o - · o1 tho DUE c....tcu1wn ~ Couno Numbe - - - TIIPC lchod&lt;ll.ec - - WHidyconlad houn - -

Coune TldalAb - - Coune ..... houn - -

========

pn-.lv~~b,~DUE?~~:;==========

.. . . - ......~o~~ngw
PrwffqUiok GcMrol
Ed..-.
oourNf
H•thlacoune
boon-""""
IGcMrol
......
connoc
have....,__, _ _ _ ,
~

Educa~~on

I . a.d&lt; lhc Knowlodgo Area In which,_- ,.... - -· Pla.a aoolgn !'OW
oourwe to one . . . &lt;Jnlv. tA MmMed
flllll*:ill ceMS,.... be alowed In
•
'*"'
--- .... knowlodgt.u~. l ...... - lohave - - - I n .... - . . . . . malw- ..,.._, .. tho a.. .. tho Gon.ol ~ c:c...-.)
n~

~

~ m.~~y

------__
__-......oly-.__
....
_ _ _ H-....andl'llloaoploicai_ _ _ PII)IIIcol Sdenca, T-...tow and M.ohama&lt;lcs
- - - ........ and u. Sdenca

_ _ _ l.ltonn.n Of - - - -

---"-~"'~al-

_,_..

.....,....__...., ...

2. Aaach•""'""'"'Y~dtho ...... -lcwtho~a......t . . . . . . .

-.-

3.""'-....... .,..._.,....

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

which '" " " -

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

4. Indicate tho ocopa ol tho couno
)o&lt;l.

and...,...

how t h o - . . . - a - l e w tho,...

t n - -· •anv. -lhocourM-..-ol ......... -w .......?

s

6. E&gt;o&gt;loin howot.- .......... depondano . . _

.. -

E&gt;o&gt;loin how-.......... .............. -

7.

allcalthOJidng_, t h o -·. - , .. _

...

........ ....,__

8. ~tho-b,which- lntho ...... w t l b o -

n.. ......... _...,_~~=:::;:=:=:;:::=========
Ill W1lllne-

.
9
-

... - - b o - and dowlapad In ..........?

10 Pla.a....,...dtho-...,.· ala ............-"'''abw; bja-.,lo«........ &lt;)Yialo)

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

lcw......,..sl; dl_ol.......,._wtd/Ofa-ol"""'*"...........,
II Do"""have ....... lcwthoOY""'"*'!'ol":--:"'and-?Pia.a--.

-·
--.-------..----Coune ,._....
Fomt
n . . - , . c - ... Gon.oi~
................
-"""" _
_Tha ...
.... ..,._lndlocladln-Woltho-GEC~. W,__oo _ _ a _
· . . . . , _, - t h o a.. oltho c-..~
.........
..
~· Thay-clowloptho-·
-~
.. . . . , . . . _ a n d - .. t h o _ .. _ , _ _ _ They-

.. -·...-. ..

.,....,_. ___,_

aooo~~~.......,

---and-.......-..

t -~ ------------------

3 --...-...and-wtlbo~ ... t h o -1
S. ttowwtl ... _
_ _ ,. _ _ _ _ _ _?
-~-.......-..-

4. -

......

... -

-

�D

M.ch 20, 1980

-

c~
. .... . .. • lor doctoral
lhe U/8 unK aloo functions asa train·

A '. - - I ldad' of t.ca1ty
In describing his colleagua as "a v...y
peB&lt;&gt;nal kind of faculty," Sanders may
havo&lt; deocr!bo&lt;d tho&lt; attitude of tho&lt; entire
Speech and Hearing Clinic.
Faculty are lnteated In discussing wllh
any Individual a personal program of
rehabilitation, or tho&lt; lraliling of infants
and children to hq, overcome problems
resulting from hearing ln"i;&gt;alrment.
!HI hearing aid Is required, the device
may be tried out at the clinic. And
regardless of the need for an aid, a
rehabilitation training program can be oet
In motion . Perhaps mos1 Importantly,
emotional support Is provided.

lng center for greduate and doctoral can·

d dotes In speech pathology or
audiology Students In !hac fields work
with clients unde close facWiy supevi·
slon Holl adds that al faculty are In·
tensely Involved In clinlcal training procedures.
l'h\llklans. aches, psychologists and
par«n an among !hoM who refer pa·
u.nts to the clinic, tum&lt;ntly under the
guld...a of Dr. Mary 8 . Monn, chairmAn
of the D.portm.nt of Communlcalille
Oioorden and Sctcnc:.. Acldidonal refe·
r.Js com« &amp;om MIVice egcnci«s with long
IIIIa as wei ... &amp;om orca hoapltals.
And as
around, requats to.

\UOfd.,g&lt;tts

Burford named

- · .... theapy lncr«at«

Scrob ......... aw.d
lhe otroka patient with urebral
dam.lge oloo bandlls &amp;om arty trot·
....,t, Many lllroke victims suffer paralysia
on one *M of the body. lhe lllroke can
oloo olfect opeech mutdu, the tongue
and control of the llpo.
"What - decide ," «J&lt;ppains Hall, "Is
what
patlmt '*' rullollcally bped ,
N-Proflt Org.

U.S. Po.tage
PAID
Butfelo. N.Y.
Pwmlt No. 311

Dr. Thomas E. Burfoo:d has been
named associate dean In the School of
Health Related Professions, according to
Dr. Harry A. Sullz, dean of the School.
Burford had been.assodate director of
U/ 8 's Educational Communications
Center since 1975. In that position-, he
coordinated biomedical communications
for the health sciences and supervised
development of the Health Sciences
Learning Resource Cen er. Before comIng hee , he was liiiOdat profeuoc 111\d.
chairman of the Department of lnllrUC· \
tlonal Technolow 11 Wayne State.·
Burford will now be responsi&gt;le for
facilities )&gt;Ianning, axtemal affah, In·
structio...J development and conl!hulng
education for Health Related ProfessiOns
SuJtz Mid Burford's teachln9, con·
sultattvo&lt; and research cxpar1ence In In·
structional lystems will be a valuable ad ·
d.itlon toHRP.

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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STAT&amp; UNIVERSf1'Y
AT BUFfALO

Maj~

MARC.H 6.1980
VOL 11 e NO, 22

8Ift &amp;olil

Jaeelde faads
State Law Center
A new ~am In the Law School Is
aimed at Improving local government.
Creation of the Edwin F. Jaeckle
Center lor State and Locel Gowmment
Law at U/B Is being announced today by
Unlvenlty olflclols. The Center, mode
possible lluough a major gill from Mr.
and Mro. Edwin F. Jaedde, will have al
ill primary objectives: Improvement of
the qualHy of legal services rendered by
public. and private practitioners dealing
wKh local government problems, and
sponJC1'1hlp of research lor developing
long-range solutions to those problems.
President Robert L Ketter. in making
the announcement, said, "the Edwin F.
Joeckle Center for Stale and Local

Government Law is a miJestone, not onlv
in the continued development of tho U/ B

Law School but also lor the We5tern New
Vork community. The Center will be the
mOst extensive of HI kind In the northea5tern UnKed States, and will provide
a locel point lot training, continuing

education, research and community service In on area that ploys on important
pan in the lives of everyone. The Unlver·
sity and the Cotnmunily ore indeed In·
debted to Mr. and Mro. Jaedde. both
distinguished alumni of the U/ B Law
School."
Law Dean Thomas E. Headrick odd·
ed, "the Center will contribute slgn~icant·
ly to the Improvement of the leadenhlp
capacity of ourofficlols In Stale and local
affatn and over dme will grow Into one of
the foremost programs of HI kind In the
cou(IIJY."

Carey doesn't care,
campus ralfy hears
"Gowmor Carey hu no comrnltmmt
~ to pubic higher tduation ,
and, !Mrdore, ct1llc:al policy decisions
hove bocn loft to indllferent budget of.
ticals. ~d and often ridiculous
~ decisions have been the

Th•t

aueument

from

local

AMornblyman John B. Sheller summed
os well os any as
~«Mntaflvu of labor, minorities,
wder&gt;ts, tducalon and Western New
Vorlt td lArge came togelhor In the Haal
Lou.,. Monday 11001). The occaoion was
• fonun entldod. "Unnvady and Com·
munlly United to Seve Pubic Higher
Educ.ollon .•
A .,... number of Wder&gt;t liolenen
_ . . , . In aod out u opeakar alter
opokor ~~rode to the podium to damoo
up the .liluatlon

...... c-y·• .,._.!budget ..... for
SUNY and to .....- of dQIIne
with them.
SponiOI1ng _ , UUP, SA and the
n- Coalition for Human Rolallom.

A......,_

In hlo lltttem«nn. mailtd In for the occa·
_.. and read by l'lol James ·lAwler
~Y and l.UP! . Shefh&lt;r called loi
"• belanc!t botwoen the grandioM pro·
jo&lt;1lono of the Rockefeller .,. and the
. dlomantlng of the Sta Unlvcrslly propoatd by .Carey Shcller'• _ , tlcktd olf thae
loc.oJ symptoms of the Governor's ladt ol
piaftnlng.
•
Iundt alocaled In. the
Governor'• p&lt;OP&lt;*d budget lor tho U/ 8
Dental School, cumrndv In """"'" ...
joopatdv. .... OYer $4
~ndtd lot the Slony

a:: o:::ca,

NO ISSUE NEXT WEEK
DOt be IJUb.
......
Mst
the
mid--- bruit. w.oi wtll

,. a..-w will

-~

Thlnday,

A==·· . .

ment of the Center has been a

• New construcllon has been rccom·
mended . while """'lty. $1all and equip·
ment to HD sucl) structures hoY&lt;! been
ebminated .

eln ,1979. BuHolo's Law School hod
the hlgheot tuition of any public low
school In u-,country and the State In·
creased K by another $200.

•Random . atlrillon -genarated
ehmlnation of faculty 1o recommendtd by
the Governor wKhout roganl to Ktdemlc
priOritln or current faculty levels.
Braking ronltl wKh WI' policy. Shel·
fer gi'Onted that some re!T10nchment moy
be nccnsory. Rather than cripple
everyone. though. he said. stepping fur·
!her away hom WP. "ft Is e~nt that
tho MWJ"el marginal ochools should be
iaolated and clooed. Only then will the
Kademlcally subotanllal. contributing In·
sllluttons.. &amp;Udt as U!B, BuH Stata and
ECC, be fltcaly able to purouc quality

"St!ft!·"brondcd as "out of line" the
" ' - ' f o r a new low school ot Queens
&lt;:oa.ge. and auwed the audience that
Carey'• "lad&lt; of commKment to quality
higher educ.otlon .. lo not representallve
o('the lAgislature ."
Elsawhcre on tho program:
U.~udMtha-

• Praid«nt Bdl ADen of the BuHalo
Canlcr Chapter. WP , used tho case of
pool-war Eut Gcnnony •• • _,_..,1
to tho .-.crance an tducattd populace
can m.lca. East Garmany- reduced to
rubble bv Allied bombing by tho end of
World W. U. and wu fur1hcr IIVIPPtd of
HI oUMIMng indutblol plant by ill k-ulolan
occupiers 'I'M same RU111ons oet up
I&gt;\II'I)Ctl who bungled and mllma"-&lt;1
every - " of the acqnomy.- Vel. E..st
Germany 1n one gfhcl'ation hu rcbuik
beyond Ill World Ww poelt, io now the
~ oation behind the bon CW1aln
Why? S...UM b bod an td...,.,.
popoololkHI, Allen said OtsiNmlllnt
SUN' . he con!lm&gt;td, would be • dHih
blow to the future of N- Vorlt Stole

n

·-~--· -

..

-·

long•slandlng .goal of' the Law School
which has alrndy developed an
Kodemlc concentration 1n the Held. The
gift bv the ~. the largeot alumni
contrllution ever recetvcd by U/B Law,
will enable the'ixpon*" and extO"nslon
of that program.
Dean Heodrld&lt; said, "the Canter wOI
give cohnlon and structure to what have
been dtffUM unclertaldngs In teaching,
continuing ec!ucatlon, resarch and com·
munily related to llttte and loc.oJ
government low. It .wtfl lllmulaw and
ennch such undertakings by protnoting
comprehensive examination of aitlca1

lsouet. Recent IOdal, economic and
technological developments, ouch as the
current tax squ,_, the doclinlng
physical and flocal base of the cltln,
especiaDy .in New York and otMr nor·
thastern lltttes, and dacgregotion ef.
loris In housing and tduc.otion , have
made lheae lsaues lnc:raMingly complex
and serious."
The U/8 Foundation will be the llocal
agent lor lbe Canter. Its Pre51dent, John
M. Caner, said, "the long dmc support of
Mr. JaukJe has enabled the U/B Law
School to develop mony programs which

otherwise would have; been non-existent .
The 111J1P0r1 lor this Canter not only
reflects the concern of Mr. and .Mro.
Jaeckle for the challenges lacing the legal
profession , but also their claire to im·
prove the service Of llttte and local
governments to tho individual. We hope
the legal profession In BuHalo wiU par·
ticlpate In programs at the Canter and
add their support to this much-needtd
organization."
Mr. Jaeckle Is a 1915 graduate of the
Law School; Mro. Jaeckle received her
law degree here In 1936. Jaeckle Is still
active In his law firm , Jaeckle .
Flelsc!&gt;milnn and Mugel.

Seml·••to_.,_
The Center wiD function

as a semiautonomous unit wKhln the Law School.
Practicing attorneys, law faculty and
public olficlals are expected to help
develop arid teach special counes on
spodllc ...... and local ~t law
topics.
1M ... be- ....

eo-"'

clustvclv lbr lew IIU&lt;knll; otMa will be

pr-.

lor bolh sl!:ldenls and
Dean
Heodrld&lt; noted.
Shor1-coune ~ to be devised
by the Center will tddreso spedollzed
fields of lawyering no1 covered In the
regular curriculum or by the usual one·or
~y 10emlnars profaslonal organlza·
Uons somctimea sponsor. Such a
package, Dean Headrick explained,
might include six short courws, each run·
nlng lor about • month, on such themes
as urban redevelopment , low and public
service, school law, local tax and finance
low, etc. Students will _ , coww credits
depenslins on the number of such
·-·--.·-a.eo~.a

~. In their conclusion,

the team further
states thet "ttlc report ill a poolllvc one;
the proleuional program ill olf to an a ·
cdent start and that the students going
~ Bu!Wo's- of .n:htlaclure

prOgr.m ohould -

on exoclent

~ for I W. In archllocture."
Prolaaor George Anaalevictta. chair·

""'" of the Oepollment of Atchf.
tettu,._ come to Buffalo lour yuro
19&gt; from the cholnnanlhip of the AI·
chllaclurc Oepollment at Harvard to help
develop a high-quality Dopwtmcnt of AI·
c:bltacture here and to Mel&lt; ""!'!"el K ·
credllation. He, • Will u the dean and
tho facuiy oi!M Sc:IIOOI of Archllocture
.and En~~~tonmentel Dosl!p\, .. . . - ........
eel """' the rcport and "conoldero •
anolha lmpOrlanl step In the Unlvcnily'o

continuing quest (or excellence ,··

....,.._,. oaid.

,

�l

~6. 19110

~

9oo4 govemmen~
!be"""""'

...

........ _.-..ey In
hlllwr
tlwl·~-~
Dapk
lhe
....... howls ..tlii:to9.-d '*propoul, lhe ida- edoplld l h e - and ewntu.lly aiBbllohecl the~ for
the .,.-,t Stale·~
system.

-w.n

In a- of ler·Ounst pollical'
ct... lhe ~pallial ,.tv ....

- = . t h e 11m major *II In lhe pro.,_ o1 lranlfentng to the county or

:0. ftYj1 be aid·of II, romehow I -a...

realonAl JapoNibi&amp;tln for functions
which had once belonged to the

metropolitan

tnollallon "'**loeln lhe world. ~

k -

- lhe medium through

-'*"'

SorMam.

dub,

IIOIIWtlma Wow, ft

""**

...s-

~.,;, 1s EdwW&gt; F. Jaale.

He has punued a political carnr from
ward _ . , . . t o State Par1y chMman .

Hlo - • n:juvenal!ng lnfluenoo which
txuthed naw We Into a State Par1y that
had been lhut out of ........., far almost
two decada. He~ three-campaigns for the Republican presidential
nomlnallon, lwo of them IUCll:allul. And
he championed new concepts for
l\'ldropolbn government In the suburban
long before most of us ruliaed that
- bad enlaed a naw eno . Becau.. of hio
efforts In behalf of hloJ*1Y, he has been
cAIIocl Mr. Republltan .

ly get thrown out this lime."
But Schmidt Insisted. Again, he lnvlled
everybody to have a drink with htm and
was met with silence. A thnaten111Q YOice
growled: "Get outa here you bums."
J-=ide gclting WICOiilforlilble wMn
suddenly OM of four felows at a ncadJy
loble spoke up to accept the offer. Lalor,
when they -.e leaving, young JMdde
chtiped : "Well, ""' made proweu this
lime, didn't""'·" To hts swprise. Schmidt
replied: "Sure and why not...l planted
those four fellows In there."

a.... ..............

Whether or not the lesoon had any effect Is moot, but Jaeclde qutc:ldy began
maldng political progres of hio own . At
22, he was elected ward svpervtoor. And
three yean later. he was named clerll of
lhe Erie County Board of Supervloon,
Soon however. there was a conflict between ' hlm and the falleilng Republican
loadcrohlp of the times. Though ~y
"""" on the way out, they managecrto
muster their forca to remow htm from
the cleri&lt;shlp In 1928.
Undaunted, he again challenged the
old guard by successfully supporting an
Independent candidate for county
lrQRII'er.

Following a succession of embenassing
defeats, the par1y turned to him for
leadership In 1935. He was appointed
County Chairman. He was f8ld to be
Ideal for the position . The rusOntng went
oomethlng like this : his German
~ made him a man of the lltde
people and he was -aJoo right with those
who lived In the big houses on the other
lide of town .
sucoessfullewyer,
he had been to
nd to represent the
heirs of the E.M. taller estate and had
seTVed u distinguished counsel for the
atates of lhe eons ol Magnus Beck, the
br........ To cinch I, they said he was a
member-more than that, a dnctor-of
lhe Buffalo Club.

ri"

educalloMl pwpooa.
Alta his retirement from ecllvc J)Oilllcs
In 1948 Jaeckle c:onllnu.d to fulftll a
bleld~ UIOitment 'ol 'mpon..,._, u a member ollhe Slllla Commlsoion on Law Revision; u a member of
lhe farmer Unlvenlty ol Buffalo Council;
as a member ol the Board of Reaents of
Canlllus College; and as a member of the
Board ofT..- of State Unlv.stty. In
this laller capacity he gave ~s
guidance during 1961 and 1962 In d\e
tangled MgOtiallons of lhe merger of the
Un1ven1ty of Buffalo with State Unlvenlty
of New York ....
TaD and eqct with diotingulshlng white
hair, Jaeclde can look t.dt proudly on a
long and rewan!Jng career of MrY!u. He
says, "PoiHic:s Is not cheap In Itself; It's an
honorable profession . But Wyou're In It
for personal gain or personal benefit,
your effectiveness Is gone. You build a
replll&amp;llon either way and the public soon
knows H."

Jacoutot: best
in Division Ill
The low point In Tom Jacoutot's collegiate wrestling career came on January
26, 1980, when he finished sixth In the
New York State Championships_
The high point came exactly a month
later when he not only won the
118-pound NCAA Division Ill title. but
was so Impressive In compdlng a S-0
tournament record that he was named
the ~ Wrestler from among
300 athletes representing 89 collega and
unlvenltles at the Coast Guard ~my

last -ltend.

Jacoutot, a senior from Old Bridge .
N.J., Is U/ B's fftt Individual nellonal .
ch.mplon In any sport at any level. He
had finished thin! in 1979.
In boosting hts .._,.,record to 25-S-0
Hlo accamplishments In Erie County
and his career tnark to 74-17-1, Jacoutot
a~ tho
raped and AlPscored IMjor decisions ave John Evans
poll ol many meinben ol hio party
of Augustana (111.1 Colege, 19-5, and
throuQhout the State, pailicularly those
John McHugh of St. ~ lJnkcR·wt.o were dluallsfled with the tnelfec- ty.
22-3, then pinned Frank F.,..,., of
- - ol the Republican organilallon
Broclcport State In 6 :13 ol hts quar!Gs1nco the defeat ol ~ Milia In
final round on Friday.
1932. In 1938. he became Chalnnan ol
In Saturday's aeml-flnala, he decked
lhe State Rapubk,an Executive CommitBob TIO\Iofa of Stanislaus (Cal.l Colege
- and In 1940, Republican State Chairat 2 :31, then crunched defendl!lg
man. Hlo riM, polwcaJ hlslorian Charla
ch.'1'pion Ed Bailey of Salisbury (Md.)
Van Dcvandcr has said, peralcls the State
In 7:48.
ddne (at least the lemporaty declnel of
T10\/ofa had upset 1978 tttlist and 1979
Democratic Influence In tho State.
runner-up Henry Callie ol Mllleavllle
Soon, Thomas E. Dewey was
(Pa.l State In the seml-flnalt. Bailey was
chalenglng Herbert Lahman In a dose,
the No. 1 ~ f..- the tourn.ment, Callie
but WliU&lt;lCallul bid for lhe ~
No.
2. and Jacoutot, No. 3 .
In 1938. In 1940, under Ja.:lde.
SUNYAC.wtnnerBroclcportStatcwon
tutelage, Dewey almost ddeated
the
llde
with Ill 14 points.
Wendel ~ far lhe R.pubbn
UIB finished 13th with 24'11 points, al
presidential nomination . In 1942, the
scored by Jacoutot. U/ B's other entries,
Rapubltcans OIICNihelmlngly won the
John Ha{inah, 126; Steve Kelcv, 158;
State' HOUM with Dewey. In 1944 and
and Scott Sladio, 167, were al defeated
1948 Jaacl&lt;le's candtdatc, of c:oww. was
In
the fftt ~ on Filday.
..---...
the Republican presidential nominee.
The ...son Isn't finished for Tom!
In 1937. Jaacl&lt;le lllood for Mioyor of
Jacoutot.
the City ol BuffU&gt;. It ...... time of flecal
dloaote. Wefarc money, In pac11cuJar, _ · By winning a [)tv-., Ill title, he advanc:el to the NCAA Division I
..... In IJal demand and .._ supply.
at Oregon Sta um-Ha campajgned for conaoad.tion of
slly, Co.valis, Ore ., on Maldll3-15.

-lion.

._
--c.--.
-....-.-.
--S
·-- -.SG-9G-,_.--C.. O._..
aw.~--~
Q

0

.. .

_..._ _

SG-7

~

-c-..

__ _ !21

_ . . . . , . . . /'t:I/Q . LJoolle~l .
_ , _, SG1.2 ....

- - - -.SG. U..Na.
I4-.

.
--·-

- -....... "'
u.. 31749

-

......SG-6.-....-.

-.
......

ISU
- . 31515
· SG-6

appropriate

edWle Initiated a ol actiOns
which lod to: transfer ol the Meyer
Memorial Hoopllal from the ctty lo the
counly; creation ol a County Heallh
Oep.rtment; establishment ol the model
county library syslem; ~of d ty and county proilatlon _..:in;
eubllohment ol a )olni 811thority for the
Buffalo airpoct ; and adoptiqn ol a county
IIIIa lax with the proceeds going to the
school syslems within the coUnty lor their

.. .... - ... o...ocr.a.· ....

.....__SG-6.a-.c...

the

mulapllctty of Individual cilia and towns.
Ott.- NYOiutionary ~ In the relationship o1 county and dly soon folow-

" - ' , _ of widely dflennt peqpla
~to IPdc lhe ~ of lhe OM nation the end lhe community.
~ to lhe level of IOCial

~ conupt, often shallow,
-falls, through
·,.._ to become once again
~- upright, procluc;tlve. The virtuous
of "'-1can pollltcs come
obout only through lhe dedicated end
clenw&gt;cllng lobar of lis true leaders.
n..ic'are men who ot1r CX&gt;n""-'Y and
rna1ca enemies. men who are often
ed for being llaah, men who oomellmes
h.ve to push. But above aD, they are
men commllled to the Ideals of good

unit

Chamolon..,_..

�Moodl6,l980

Macintyre ' •
ccepts post
a_tNCAR
Or. Wlllla- M. Macintyre. director of
Unlvenity Computing SeiYices here t1nce
the fall of 1976. wil.become manager&lt;;;!
the Computing l'adllty et the National
Center for Atmospheric Re54Ulrch
(NCAR) In Boulder. Colo&lt;ado. effective
April I.

1lte position Is regarded as amoo&gt;g the
top flw or ten in scientific computing In
Ibis counlry. Macintyre indicated. 1lte inc;!Mdual who holds H. he said. has an opportunity to inftuence the direction of n.ational efloru in wealher research and also.
the dln!Gtion of · sc:lolntific computer
development.

Since

~ts

formation ~

Macintyre noted. "NCAR has been at lhe
cutting edge- of l&gt;rogress in bolh areas. " .
Cbfford J. Murino. director of the atmospheric technology division at NCAR.
described Macintyre's new post as "a
position of signllkant nationaL even in·

temational. ~ and importance to.
the ·fields of atmospheric sciences.
oceanic Jdences and solar physics. The
quality and scope of NCAR computing
fdty services. the degree to which they
.,..., carefully planned and balanced to
communHy priorities, w!U have a deciding
inlluence In the Rile of progress in these
sciences.··
Macintyre ~id In a letter to President
Robert L Ketter notifying him of his leaving !bet the positiOn "would have In terested me regardless of where I was or
what I was doing:"
He said he hopes he leaves ··ucs In
better order lh.n I found H." adding to
the Prestdent that "I could have accomplished little without your .$1rong and
uofailing support.·
Keller accepted th resignation wtth
"deep reluctance." He said Macintyre's
service to UCS and to the UniversHy "has
been of unquestioned bene!H." lt "will be
very dilfocult to replace you .· the President said to Macintyre.
Or. f~tyre, heto.e-cornlng to U/8 ,
wH bUd of the Computing Centre el the
Nallonallnatltuw for Medical Re54Ul&lt;Ch in
London, England. Prior to lhat, he
taugbt chCmlslry at the University of Col·
orado, Brown University, and lhe
Unlwnlty of Claogow (Scolland) . He
dka:lor of the computer center at
Colorado from 1961-1965 and was
chan&gt;an .of lhat Untv.mllv's Cornpuler
Sclenec Oopertmcnt from 1963-1965.

Katkln will
head Psych
Or Edward S. Kalkin .' professor of
psychology. has been. appointed chalrm•n .o f the Department of Psychology by
Prestd nt Robert L Ketter
The thru ..yur trrm is effective
September I. 1980.
Katkln. who joined th~ facuhyln 1963.
Is a &lt;On$Ultant to the Buffalo Veterans
Admlrrislrlltion Hospilal and to the Nationallmtitute of Menial Heahh.
Holding a Ph 0 . In clinlcal psychology
from Duke. Katkin Is the aulhor of ntenJIW .....earch publications In the areas of
psychophYJIO)ogy and "motion. clinical
and community mental bolth and
I)IVChopathoiogy. and - l i t y
· His Worl. m a var\tlty of rewarch fields
has gaoned lnt-.tiorutl recognltion
reflected In numerou invhed ·addresses.
~ludmg ta1&lt;s g;ven at the NATO SO..n
t1lic: Affan Division Conferences on o.to.
and Carnbndge. England
Katkln' s curnnt research In clinical apploc:alions of bioi edbiocll includes the
-ation of 1 community e5nlc at U/ 8

""""Y

IBM sponsors
minority program
to....,.

a oummer

~o~nt

\ntroducto'fy

cl-.-y and
and

cour es

~.

"Carry the message home and to
Albany." he urged students.
e Waher Simpson oflhe Western New
York Pe-ace Center agreed , terming the
lhreawned "destruction of lhe SUNY
system a much greeter lhreat to our
securty than lhe Soviet presence in
Afghanistan .•
• George WesseD of lhe local AFL·
CIO CouncU ...sured lhal organized labor
is "alerWd" to lhe ~faclng~Y.
-..bd "twos lhe ~Isms, and \hi P£9·
pie to do the ~- in restoring lhe budget
cuts. Key legislators ha"" pledged their
support to the effort, Wessen oaid . " The
AFL-00 w!U do Hs best."

Lut h...... lint fiNd
e Ms. Luenne Peanon, seaetary of
lhe 8ullalo 0\apler of the National
Qrgaolzation of Women. said NOW opposa the cuts beceuse female faculty.
"the lui hired.. w!U lkely be the "fnt
fired" under re-tJendunent. (Black feeders
said the same about black faculty _)
Women make up more than half of the
student body e1 some SUNY unb, ~­
son Aid, hut only 24"' of faculty arc
women. Carey's "meet axe" has olready
...,mowc~ aD State support for "displaced
han-.akers' programs," and cuts in the
SUNY budget will mean prohibitively
higher tuition for women in dire need of
education and retrelnlng, she continued.
U/B'o prestigk&gt;us Women's Studies progr-am and lhat unM's plant for a BA will
undout.ledly face tough times, Pearson
predi&lt;Wd , despite ll,'omen'o Studies efficient student-faculty ratio of over 60
to 1.
e O..niel Acker oflha Buffalo NAACP
said NAACP "objects" to the cuts. and
urged gathering of petitions, marches on
Al&gt;any, and a rtlentleso media campaign
"untl vlc1ory Is won. • Acker told the story
of tv.oo frogs who mistakenly hopped Into
a jar of milk~avt up and drowned.
The olher
and klcl&lt;ed until he
churned lhe milk Into huHer. and walked
out of the jar. Those who would save
SUNY should take heed , huuggeoted .
• SA President Joel Mayersohn
slltiMd that higher education 11 not a
·~· program . "Can we afford to
live wtthout k?" he uked "I don'I lhlnk

so .

The l&lt;&gt;....,.oonal Bu neoo M.chones
Coop ~nWd Havetfo&lt;d Cologe
S60 .000
a program to use the
trantllion of minority studen mov"''l
from ecede _., . _ or poor hW&gt;
oct&gt;oolo 10 •
colo9t wtth a oiJong
curnculum The po'OJe(l
in·
Pre

,__ ........,

In

tutoclnjj.
ofiiCiencec.....,.....

ty

.

• Or. Jooeph Manch of the CommuniAdllisory Coundl announced that his

oJganlut1on

has

written

15

~n

and 6 Senators beckll)ll
Prnldent Robert L : Katter'o posltlon on
the budget Kette- has CAlled lor phuedtn rodudlol'l of the S12.3 ,..,.. In job
cu •
climlnallon of
$14 milllool
-....- - - cutbeok, and litgillla
to alow &amp;.oM UniYetllty lncrused

....,.......u---......allc&gt;&lt;1&gt;illly.

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

e Cornmunlly adlvist Frank Meslah
hooled at petitions and letter writing.
"1lte only place you should be putting
your name." he urged students in the au dience. "Is on voter ragislnltion cards."
1lte 18-24 year-old ago gr-oup , Meslah
said. bas the worsl voting record In lhe
State. Students &lt;all walk around lhelr
campuses, yelling and screaming as
much as lhey want to, he said, hu~lhey
. aren't going to be able to change onylhing
until lhey enter lhe election booth. The
Governor bas made a political docislon,
Mestah emphasized . "Young peoplt
don' vote.. 10 politil;lans don't pay any et·
tention to them."
• Rooseveh Rl&gt;odes of ·rho Coalition
For Human Relations wore a black arm
bend to mourn the dealhs of two students
el EDicott las! week. Alter calling for a

~

. ..

~~~

moment of silent prayer, he said !hat

blacks In 8ullalo have come a long way
&amp;om "Clinton Street." When U/ B'Was
private, he noWd , lhe black communhy
never considered h a place which !hey
would ever be part of. ·w~·ve come a
long way to make sure !hat education Is
available to all," Rhodes said . " We can 't
Slop now ."
• Charles Raccula of the New York
State UnHed Teachers offered the full
support of his orgonlzation's slaw-wide
membership. of more lh.n 200,000 In·
dlvlduals. He promised that the tuching
profession w!U use ttl polttical clout on
behalf of SUNY.
Finally. Executive Vice President
Allert Somil echoed tl!e advice of
NAACP's Acker . ·~on kicking and
churning." SomH urged the smaU garber·

lng.

,

�March 6, 1980

•

Allen says·i.Jt.lp will attempt

I

to extract anti-retrenchment

pledg~ from ·those :on committees

,.._.,.,._.....blllt,

-w.·.. w..... .......

rudy lo plav t..d bel01\ thlo,.
Prndenl
of the Bulalo
Cenler tAJP
Aid Monday .. he
dac:rhd a .,.....
the union INIIJ
lry to ex.r.ct from ~ t.cully member
ol cwry plannlnv ~on campus.
n..
"I wtl nol parlldpala
In pion to name prc&gt;!J'llms or col·
luglws lor rmenchment and wll ra1gn
from my ~ W.H attempts to do
ao."
UUP, iol.oly e&gt;ppoled to rmcnchment,
platw 10 publloh the ol those 'Who
wtll nOI agree IP the Jlalement, Allen
seicl .
n.. HlstOI)I Profeao&lt; and union cl·
fleer granted IN ls.sue Is going 10 be
dlvlslw . He Is aware ol senUments on tile
part of oome facullv that "'&gt;&gt;ol&gt;nlnQ"
ahould Involve "rullotative r.,ti-enoJi.
menl." He, to the contrary, rejedl as "tJ.

a....-

""'*"

1'4edga-.

le!Jitlma•" the notion that "quality can be

lnauled by purges." To argue that H
can, Allen contended, Is to Ignore tho
· - . a m o u n t of quality controls we
alrudy have.·. Among them: peer
review, program reviews, the presld.,nrs
review board, etc., etc. "I hcve taught at
Michigan and MIT." Allen seicl, "and
have never
n such rl!lld controls. To
~~-!_-e. you afmost .need the
It'• his and UUP's contention tl\at facuJ.
ty cooperation In plans for "a purge"
would undo al the riorts UUP has made
to data to have the SUNY budget
rntored .
Allen said he fun that rdrenchment
planning comtllillaft would be uncomlootably .......... to "R~··· Comof Public s.l..ry during the
French Revolution , that old and ugly
academle prejudices would re-emerge to
..,. facuMy.
He granted that a ~ m;gb( be
"cllMuloful" to aomc, but Said a purge
"would be cwn more ao.•

a.. ..... ~

Allen noted that UUP'slobtiytng riorts
have changed .._.~~y . lnllead of promoang - . , rallies, the thrust now Is
to aend ..... •""'\' o«d: to meet
wllh le!llolaton. Laol -'&lt; a UIB group

.......r

by Paul . Olieslng of Political
Sdcnao went to the capllof; thlo week
Ron Ha- ol Modem LAnguages Is
group le..tas. IJned up lor lutuN mls·
liON .,., Glory Hooldns, of Political
Sdcnao, Mild&gt; 10; Torn Cor\RoDy, of
Englloh, M.rch 18; and f.ric Carpenter of
March 24. &lt;:.rpenter Is also a
member of S.nator Walter Flou'

u.-.

.......... AdYIIOI)I Committee.

,..._oiUUP.

Howard MJllcr from Impounding
funds which are reslored , as he has
threatened to do (Repomr, Feb. 7) . Allen
seicl tho union has received a promise
.-from local Assemblyman John Sheffer
that d Miller attempts to Impound SUNY
funds , Sheffer will introduce legislation to
keep H &amp;om happening.
tor

doc'-"-'

11oey .....r I Ia
Allen advt.ed that UUP has sent a copy
of the Reporkr's account of Mlllcr's lm·
poundment threats to every member of
• tho Legislature. Cbalnnan Arthur J .
Knmcr of the Assembly Ways and
Means Cornmlttae was seicl to be ao In·
cenMd after reading H that he arranged a
bNelcfaot l1lft1lng •"""''' hlmsel, Miler
and Carey to prusure tho 0011 dlredor
to CUM making such threats.
UUP's main thrust this Wftk, Allen
nOied Monda~ . Is to make sure no one
lea- tlils campus lor the spring break

wllhout carrying home the about what the Carey cuts would do to
SUNY. UUP has entered an aDiance with
the Student Asaociation, jointly sending
~etten about the sHuation to every parent
of cwry student. Now Allen wants
students to further talk things up when
.
they get home.
160,000 otuclents with two pa-ts
each can have a deflnllc Impact, he ven·
luNd .

E-=11 ........ ....... noted , 32 such
.._Item ~~ SUNY are conWfiln9 on Ahnv to lobby lawmaken.
UUl"J lniiW problem , Alan went on.
1o goln of support from
.......... of
I.Aglolature lor rataring
the cull The mojortly leaders of both
A 20-year old employee of FSA wu
' - have now voiced that support, he
$hot and robbed behind Bethune HaD
Ald. n.. na1 . . _ will be: 1) to looep
""~~y I1JO"'il18the Govemor from ~ •a . ~ - . • Perll1tlM ~ 4..
;toA;Io ~ ~
SUNY budgot, and 21 to IIOp OOB dlrecP.,a venc1Ji;9 machines for FSA . was
hll&lt;en lo Erie ,County Medical Center
wher he wu II ed In "good" condition
alter a ,22 ~ bufleJ was removed
~..,
Item hll upper left ahoulcler.
~oi-Yooioal.__
According to Public S.l..ry reporu .
.. • I Ooo6o Hill, - . .
T"!!ffi11 had cOfTII&gt;Ieted his talks In
Bethune lihortl)l alter tO a m. ond was
driving ttvougli the r "' driveway when
1111 car was haiCad by o _., dacrtJed u
o while male. about 35 years old. sftgh_~

FSA employee
shot by·thu·g

_

... .

_""""'
---~

T..,._

........
~,..

_
Q.OU'Illll

owr
tilt 225
I
Ia and weighing - ··
imately
pounds
H - WQrtng

blue and

In c:ono.qucnce of the MIIDus threat of administration of the lJnivenlty and
retrenclunm&gt;t now lacing the · Slate assuring professional involvement In
on-y and thlo campus tile Ex· . aillcal policy determtn"'!&lt;&gt;ns.
ecuttw Cornmlaee of the SuNY/ Buffalo
Cha!*r of the Atloritan Alaoclotion of F~uM
The Committee recognlra also that
Un~ Profesaors Wllhes to Its
termination ol peraonnel inevitably and
qli&gt;IIAued commttrnent .to a policy of rational pion'*'!! can1od out in tile Interests intimately relates to the educallonal and
of the Integrity of this Institution . ft. raearch quality of the campus. It Impairs
therefore , supports the following afflrma· curriculu m and faculty acholarshtp . It
asserts further that tile !Mnate give
lion:
All pou1b1e effort should be mad£ at saibus consideration to AAUP national
the local and slate Ieveii to support tile policy expressed In Hs " Polley Documenis
needs of tile Untver.lly and mitigate tho and Reports" (the "Redbook") . This In·
dudes .Hs position on the necesstty of a
excesotw c;urtllllment of financial support
"bona fide financiiil exigency" which
by tba Sill~ government. Where possible, theint.grfty of curr.,nt personnel-and threatens the University and which condemns !he making of new appointments
programs shoUld be maintained . With
this In mind , the Committee endorses the ala time of termination except in extraor·
dinary dn:umslances. It Involves the funstruggle of the UnKed University Profesdamental Importance of the principle of
sionals to a1101d a pr..cipltous and unplan·
tenure contained In Its 1940 statement. It
ned reduction tn stall this year.
underscor£S the 1966 Statement on
Not to ,_.... -.141 be -.Jec;t
Government and the 1972 Juidelines
financial
AJ tho same time, the Committee related to the •con5equ..nces
exigency; H endorses the 1976 "Recom·
recognizes that financial and political
dectslons within the Slate and tho pro· mended Institutional Regulation on
)ected reduction of the SUNY system Academic Freedom and Tenure. " These
support the "primary ruponsibUity'' of
make clear that efforts to Implement a
retrenchment program may continue . the faculty lor educational and research
policy, the n£CeSSlty ql "early, careful,
These decisions present serious threats to
tenure of professional personnel and to
and meaningful faculty tnvolvem.,nt In
the acad"mic Integrity of the University.
decisions related to the reduction of In·
To fall to rupond to this situation would
structional and reseMch programs," and
constitute a neglect of the Interests of this
the Importance of a "joint "ndeavor" Ol\
campus and Hs faculty and other profesthe part of professional sial! and adsional stall.
ministration for effective planning.
It Is of imrnedlate and aitical lmporThe Committee r..cognlzes• the lnlance that the AAUP standards for a bona
her.,nt divisiveness which accompanies at
fide financial exigency, one which
times the competing consequences of
·~hreatens the survival of the Institution ,"
financial curtaijmenl : that o f the threat to
be recognized and observed . It must fur·
the security of individ uals and the conoe·
ther be recognized that a state-mandated
quenl necessity of effective due process
reduction In budget does not """e to
procedures and review lor individuals
juatlfy adminlstrat1ve decisions on
academic program -reduction or realloea- either with or without tenure and that of
th" Impact upon the weHare of the Institution of resources.
tion In terms of the Integrity of Hs mission
Therefore, the Ex..cutive CommHtee hereby slapds committed to the pr1n· and 54!rvlce . To pooled one without the
other will undermine both . Both are In·
~le of faculty par11clpation In the maldng
tegral to the academic program for which
the University exists and consltlute a pro·
v1nce of the Faculty Senate as repr.....n ·
Unlvenity In lnslructlon, raearch and
!alive of the lnternts of the faculty .
scholarshJp, and service to the local,
state, and national communities. 11
-EAI~
President, AAUP
presses the Faculty Senate to take leader·
lor the Ex..cullve Committee
ship in repraenling these lnlernts to the

pnstr.ped~..Usand a

navy watch c;ap,
robber got away wllh 'undeta.-·
mined amount pi money and o Mf of
k«ytfqo tho vending-mac"- At

n..

-toward- downtown
· he - Bu '"'
'-dtng
.Jo ta_,
o dark
1968
Bu

:0,':/'Znd"':'h~:Sm:fu':'~

Take the word· home with you:
the Carey cuts will destroy us
Editor:
f would like to take thlo opportunity to
ask every member of this University cor:n·
munlty to extend Information to your
home cornmLtnltia, lamllles, and lrtend.s,
on the terrible slate our SUNY system will
be In 11 Govemor Carey's current budget
~ are passed by tile State

"'We"':ee~ of the largesl unlvuslly system In tile world . U these budget
cuts are _.,.,ed , a great number of
fl&gt;culty fnd staff poolllono will be loot, thus
rneanlng a larger student-faculty ratio and
a loss of many savlca. These cuts will
surely lnlllate iha downfall of SUNY.
.Will SUNY ·110 from OM of the
soundnt educational Institutions of our
country, to one of bttle rapact due to
lt.cal ratralnt? The answer depends on

us. It Is our responsibUity to see that
SUNY remains a respected educational
Institute lor stud~ and raearch!
The decision on the budget must be
made by the Slate leglllature before
April 1st. Help them decide! Pie- wrk
· to speaker of the "-mbby Slanley Flnk
and Majority leader of the State Senate
Worren Andenon (letl.ers ahould be ad·
dressed to the IAgjslattw Oft\ce Building,
Al&gt;an~ N.Y. 122491. lMnd carbon
copies to your own "-mblymen and
Slate !Mnaton.
Without your help, the Stale UniveBIIy
of New York is doomedl
Sincerely yours,

_.........,

..

AdministratiVe

~

~nt

UUP

Music will establish a Friends group
llje MUsk: Oopartmant. Is looking lor- d ,to incruMcl community involvement In Hs programming and oct!vitles
ltu&lt;&gt;Ujlh the atablishment of a Friends of
Bltlrd support woup.
·
The Friends, according to Music
Department Chair W m Thomson, will
help _ . . . doflon through v-11
-..benhlp duaalor addllonal. act1 · ,
ouch ae -speclol lodures or concen. by
guat pori'ormen. n. selection ol proIP will be decicled by the group.
n-.aon, with help from the F11ends'
Board of Dnc:lora, Is planning •

membership drive for the Spring. The
"'nteiim" goal is 500 members.
By enlisting support from area music
Ioven, Thomson Is hoping to provide an
audience to fill Baird's new 750--.ot con·
cer1 hall at Amhcnt ~pions to ad~­
IIM the F11ends by ~ announce·
ments to current concert ~. to U/ B
Foundation pai&gt;Ons, and to IndiVIduals
suggatad by the Board
.
Several categoriel of memberships wtll
be avalablo
Buffalo attorney Kenneth Fradin Is
presld«nt of the Friends board.

1

�-____.. _-_
_

c -_......._., __ ......,__..,..,._
. .. _

...

_,
_...__
.. ..............

----..
.tt
-~·

she charges

.?6
.13
:1t
.79
.&amp;;!

To stop it :

:~· Vamtals-~
..........
...._ ""........-.....-........ at fault,
I 5.83
1! 3.43
3.42
4 ' 3.40
5 5.40.
6 3.35
7 3.21

.81
.75
.84
.83

..,

I 3.17 .48
2 3-'11 .?4
~ 3.48
.1'5
3 3.48 • .81
4 3.48 .79
6 - 3.42 :?6

.II ·
.13

'

_.._.....,
,.........
... --.
_...., .. .......
__,
_....p_ ......,._
__,_ .. __..._..,..

.,

Dowiopmorol"""--.. potOONI-.Ionlo""" ~·---­

9 3.21
.86
10 3.12 .90
.94
II 3.04
12 3.00
13 2.90 .88
14 2.83 1.10
IS 2. 19 1.01
16 1.93 1.01
17 1.77
.91
18 1.51
55

-_.._. . . . -..,..--.o...nd-_
.....
-.......

__
---

~.,-

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

~··- ... ~phlooaphvcl . .
-~

..

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...........

~lha--.

"[--._...s
..... -...~ ......
Lodlcla.._
__

- ~_...

Doioylw_....., ............. _
I~

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

8 3.23

_,.

3.33

.n

9 3.21
8 3.211
10 3.15
12 2.99
11 3.02
13 2.96
14 2.89
IS 2.30
16 2.01
17 1.76
18 1.53

.82
81

.87
.92
.96
.87

1.10
1.06
1.07
1.00
.89

, .,..._,

'

'

I

3.111

3
5
4
2
6
8'
9
7
10

3:51

U3

3.48

3.52
3..4;l
5.30
3.27
3.31
3.20

.1'5.

.81

.81
.90
14 .3.0S .91
lS 296 .83
II 3.-11 1.02
16 2.57 104
12 3.09

17 1.88 1.01
L.57 .90
13 3.07 .94
111\/J 1.5? .89

LS&gt;h

Colop-., , . , _ S....,.. adm-.d bv 5ouoienl l-and Rnoaodl, 01-. ol S!udm Allain

·--"-dona"-_. ....1 - n o t -. 2 - sllghdy-nt.-5 · """'"'0101v-""4 · - v - --

U I 8 frosh are les money hungr.y ·
FiN1nc1a1 &lt;IOI&gt;Siclcrallons appur 10 be
at .._,. importMice among !rahmen
ente1ng U/8 INn tt..y . . among the
Mlion's
!rahmen at lat:ge ..
tePC&gt;rted In a pol c:onduded by

coa..

~ (Repc&gt;Mr,

Feb. 281.

In the UCLA pol at 1979 freshmen ,
the goal of making money came out as a
highly 11npor1ant one. Among the U/ B
cia. entering In 1978, ...,__, "Financial ind~" ranked 11th among
20 ruoons for entering colege. Money Is '
l)lllning ll;llmportanoe, though. It ranked
only 14th among freshmen entering In
1916 and 1977. Ranked as m&lt;lSI lmporlanl . .

three ..... ·c-a
"Jn&lt;:re.ed ability to handle

pr~ . ·

raponslbillly" was ranked MC&lt;&gt;nd by
19'18 freshmen while those entering 1n
1976 and 1977 consider-ed "ma-.a-1 In·
dependence In thought and ac1lon" ..
the second mos!lmportant !caJOn for college attendance.
Accordlng to Helen Wyant, dlroctcr of
student testing and research , ...tatively UtIle change In rank order of Importance of
reasons occurred ove&lt; the three years ln vostigated, "ahhough, interestingly, the
1978 freslunen attributed more Importance than did the 1976 group to
every reason except one ... That ~ was

the

No .

po;~n ."

1 respon se ,

" Career
'

In light of current lnteres In a General

Educallon ~. Wyanl said , "11 INIY
be worth r&gt;otlng that "Increased
Knowledge. of Human lnes, Social
Scianeos and Natural Sciences" r:anjied
llth or 12111 In 11nps&gt;rtanc:e for the IncomIng freshmen over the three years.
She also dlrea.d attention to the fact
that the mosllmportant reasons why U/ B
freshmen attend college reflect _ , . )
and JOCiolas wellaslnlellectual and vocational goals. To retain students' Interest,
she suggested, " H -rns reasonable ,
even lrnperallve, that facully and stall
icknlify specific skllls, abilities, and .
knowledge sought by students and Incorporate ...,_~t . &lt;?1 - ~111 . jD thtr.
c:oo..- and prograrns.olfered .•.. "

'Shame them!'
E&lt;lltar.

This is In relercnca to the recent
tragedy at the Unlvctllly which resuhed
In the dealb ol lwo stud«nts. It In deed an accicloont. My hurt _ . out to
lha families and friends of the vk:llml.
Howe-. K bothers me penonally
when I feel the blame wtll be put upon the
Univer&gt;lly lor lis negled In replacing the
protective ber In front of this window. I
work In the ElbcoH COmplex and know
the great amount of vandalism going on
here. The gullly penon or..penons who
removed the b. In the first place should
lake the burden of this tragedy.
Wh•t a shame and wasle of property.
We the laxpayer;s have to pay lor the
violent damages performed _by a few bad
apples. What type of people are they that
gel their kicks out of vandalism? Does H
give them a leebng of superiority In havIng """" working people clean up and
repair their lowly messes? A mother or

:~~~ct:i'r~n ~ ro~~ ;;:,"!:or::

would be , you did H... you clean H up.
It is too bad thel the Innocent will not
come lonh and report the perpetrators of
these acts of vandalism. lrthe vandallzers

are

stud ents .

they

should

be

billed for the damages by Student Ac counts. II they do not pay. they should be
unable to register In lhe future . I also
think their names and pictures should be
publicized lor aD lo see . Shame l~em
publlcly ... perhaJH H would be a deterrent
lor any future thoughts to destroy .
Sincerely ,
-~.I. P-a..

These students are tired of 'an SA for the few'

Dr. Jorge J .E. 0... ' - ..._ . of
l'hloooptly by UIB PNsirlenl Robert l .

,-....t. d&gt;alrman at
~-

n..~

""'n.--

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

s.,e.n.ber I . 1980, lo Augaol31 . 1983.
0... ..-1 - dlndao- of the
Sala•lmCII Protra111 In 1919. -.n
- - .,..,..... In

5c&gt;oln )olntly

_..

....., by the c - d on ,....,_,.,
Scucloo • .UIB ....t the Sc.IM Unlwnlly .
Coleto • BuiWo.
A _......, at the U/B t.cully since
1971. - ~ II ~ In the .

~tbl-....,......on
LArin,.._~- He
...................... ~l&lt;holar.
In 1972. h a - a ....... .,...,_ of
~ ..... Unlwroidad de p -

Is._.

A Canadian .-.,, who WI!\ born In

I

�..._.. 6, 1980

CIW. ElfGINEBIING SEMINAR•
Gf .... """"

Tho w......

Tluanday - 6

eo.,.. of~ ..

Now Vcrd&lt;, Col. G.o.ge !&gt;. ,loh,.,..
dotrid .,.,_._ u s. Army eo...,., EnginMn
13!11'wtoe-. 4·5p m. ~Uirfthmonb..Cbc-..d

PaiiAl'IIICS IIUEA&amp;CH SOONAR•

.__._POl .. ____ ..._

- ~of R..--ONA oo
a - . . . - of

~ T - ond

PKV$IOLOGY SEIONAR'

- ..... Q.ldm&gt;'o
0. NlchMI
Gonid&lt; lloonl
R
Hoopbl
12 ..0.

o......- ... c . . - - llindlntto
.............. 0.. Ronold F, Cobum. Deportment al
f'bvliology. llnioentty al J&gt;ennoy~v.,.. Sdoool .,
Medidno 5-1085Mnnon, 4p.m

UHGUimcs -.ro COI.LOQIJIUJr

............ .. dttof ........... ~
K Obit&lt;.~ RaM...t.
lJnlwo.

c.nt...-

.., -

Spould&gt;ng

o..--

Sdoool

3 30 p m

~ ........... 106
C o . _ . . j Wlh

m.

al C o m - Dota.don and

5clmcoo

lin-

~-CdiM • 3.15

SPEaAL SOONAR: PHAIIJIACElltlCS

Racttvo .....-.of......_.., ....

CDI1D 1'011 STUDIES Ill CU.TUIAL
111A!fSMISSIOM: PR.E-coNFEKENC£
~

PtfYSICS COI.LOQUIUN•
L S.. ~,Ph.-o.p..,mcnt .
p m

Friday- 7

454 fJoncul&lt; 3

30

IIIOC.OGICAL 5aEMCU SOONAR•
n.. c - . - of Gooanolotloa .. " -

.lono Koola Rocwo . 107 MFAC . Ek:ca, from
9:00 • .m. to 12:30 p.m.
-""""' wtl .,.,....
...tTho. .
- , _ . "" m.

how lq -

c.nw. tt.lld· -"""""'

I.JrWenly-wldc
-Room
· ............ tn
h J.M KH&amp;.r

i.MW. O. . ~~- -~
114~4pm

F-.

Doubl .........
f'bvliology
108 -Sh.rrn.ln- 4 p m · o.p..,mcnt al
~of Tr-

.....ol

S
4pm Coftft ..... btMI'WdinSO
~-345

OPERA WORKSHOP PIIESEMTAl10N'
Dlolo ....
undco .... ., Gory
Burgao
U/ 8- Ccn10&lt;· Thoo~o
. 681 Mo1n St. 8·
p m llcbts, M1f; be available in -.dvanct •t the
C..t.,Tho....,OodatScluir-'~
ad...._, $4 ; U/ B faculty , ..ift. alumni and senkw
_ . , . SJ: OIUdents Sl 5ponooNd.., the Oopa.trncntof NwJic

CIJIIIUCIA.VN LEADERSHIP
SEJIINAR
~. _' OIMI&lt;
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r t
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Tho fuly
_ , ., bucd on dasKal Gree. m¢&gt;o'ooy . It bctng
~
~-- ---kdaign..,
...... Englioh . Mi ~ ... conduct tho .._.
anct atnne orchesml wtlh c:ontintJO amor. Scl&gt; 1s
the .,...,.,. cond...._.
1o by E..

..

4 30 p.m

ond concenfoo ·- ·· m. ..,_,

a...-ophv

W.~tnourcultw. Al•~and:

........... ,....... .., e.M.-

...... of ...- &lt; d......... ~-- ...
... '"loold" .._......-.. ........ of ............
.. cwrltldom ....... loo_of_....,.,

()per• Woriuhao&gt; membcn •

_ _.,_""""""nfl\lond..._

___
___
_
....,_..........,
.,._... .., ....

~

.a

..... SJ.SO

PHAIIJlACnmCS SOONAR•
..........._, of the R- t p ~ c - - - ond "",_,..._ £1.
ilcu • "--•· ~ W'hidlrrtd , gr.adua&amp;t tiude.nt
C508 CooM: 4 p m

-

Fllmcwe

Muhty TACOS. F-al Oudott. Ploy It ,..,..,
Sam'o, F.,..., Wodd , Buffalo SW. one! Squn
Tid&lt;ot Offioo Gen...al a d - $5 . U/ 8 - . ,

F~ ~. ~ Glodya. UCLA

5pouloline Dinino-

Com.,.•

str.,.......

Suffak)s own 1'l*d Floor

Room , Squirt 7:30 p m Tlckett av.a.t:.&amp;t •'

~

-

CONCERT '
~ Sha'a BuHUo 'l'hutrc , 7 p.m.
5ponooNd by ...... _
Englioh Longu- In·
ttitute S5 for lW atu!Mnts. S7 b oehcn. . Price In·
d u d e t b u t . _ . Tict&lt;ottati16Rlchmond
Quad , Ellcotl, 12 noon-4 p .m

In conJu""""' wlh llodoe., WAll Muoic
,_...,., Nlco Up lhe Duco, Slifi/Epic
r«&lt;rdtng artiot lAM.........., , Columbia reoordlr'!l
..- a.- Wooley ond tho
Clul&gt;, and

atDIJ_$1JIY spuHAR•

....

H~lllrh C508 Cooke. 4 p m Refrahrnents wi1 be
MI'Yed •' 3.50 p .m

UUAII SPRING CONCERT SERIES'

CEIJUAIII'tfYSIOI.OGY SOIINAR•
r.-. ond c..tec
0. Thomoo

~

27"' 29

=--~: ~~....::::::

o.on.- by

" 8
Satardaf-

of Cwriarloft

~ond--

....,....., ___
..,_
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.... ond
~
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.... ~.

_
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Or-

Wedaesday - 12
HOIIIZONS IN NEIJIIOIIIOt.OG'•
Tho F - . 1
Popal.adonl. [)f Robert E.

of Motor Untr
Burtce. National In

-~~~- 245Cory. 4pm.

Thanday- 13
P£DIA1111CS II£8EAIICH SEJONAR•
, _ - ot ' - - c-.l,llcwrly Poig&lt;n .
~

Ph.D .

PM!. Board Room.

"'Moloculor
Chlldr~··

~~~a~ogy.

R..,...u

Ho.pltal. 12 noon

SIHGLU GET- TOOEnti!JI

~ ,.,...,._ ........... ofPhor·
PHAIIIIIoCEUI1C
-·
Dola. 0.. Roy B. !loti. llcpor-..
al · ..,_,.., ., Qclohol-no. C508
Cooke. 4.p.I'D •

..........
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m.

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Plcoolo'o -. 1 - - - Hwy .. iOtho
Trlodbuldlrtg. Tho-cl-loNduooddurtns

rJIA AC110N ftAII ~ 0 • "1 "f~f" l •I
_tlw_ER
A _
and...,._.,.
.. _
-

Far---..

-~ -ondto

loculty ond
___
, -_ .............
.......
.....
....... of...._
.......

._hour .......

___ __

d'oo.,...- -

·

c - 6-llp .. Fof""-eoiDoMo
.. 636-2773.

Frfd.Y,- 14

.._

IIIGH!III!:DUCATION

-

~c.-. 5233-SO

_

.

.

.

.

-

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1

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Hoow. · Coramut.ov Cologo Unit. Cologo
IJSOE_
Colaoono - ~No . 5. Erlo
· South. 8 a.m.
Collloponment of H..... Uuco- lew rHtatlt.
Thlt • mode ........ .., .... .,_..,

. . - o f ........ O...tlw~-..... E

A-.

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PaiiATIIIC GIIAND IIOUNDS•
Orocoolow-1-, Dr Cotnar&lt;&gt;o Tolliot
""'Pn Kmch ·
~. lla .m

&lt;.hllok••••

.·

Moaday- 10

WOllEN'S CAOclJs NfEt1HG

~~.

PttVSIOI.OGV I.EC'IUE•

- - . - . . . . ..._of

""'- _. IWooooil»n.. .1omoo H woa.

PIID . o.s--o~~. ~of

=-~-:-

1!4 F.._ 4 pm

567~

-

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of

c.w-

~"-'!- 0.- -JF......,.~of
~"'51084""""""'-·
l5, ... &lt;AI.
at4 , _..

�Mach6,1980

7
Strangen
JelAIIen ud R.M. , . _ podorwtwldl
'11llnl Floor s.....,....; 11t UUAB'a
'Nice Up the Dance' _ , .t Squn,

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

.•
..... 8p.m ......_, .. s.po....d ..... U/8
CAnoe for M&lt;doe Study and Media Scudv/ llollalo.
MUSIC'

~-.. ~c-. llud

Rdal Ha1. 1l p m.

rn. '

Notte:. .
CHEESE TASTING PAin'Y
Tho F....toy Cllb Ia holdino • ...,. end c t ~11Ymt . F~. ~21 , .,8 p+m in H.-·
...... Six "'-and ...... - w i l bolatu&lt;od
S4 PI" Pft'IO" . Raervations In .ctv.ncx Call MM1e
Mood&gt;

llcnnctl . 831 -3232. R...,.atiOn 17

Tbanday- 20
FESttiiAL'

_

The a . - ~ Zloo a-nt.
... ......,.... demonolr- &amp;Hhend ""'"'

P""'*'t . ........... -culllng.

10~Hol.

N-.-2 p .ro . r.... ~ bv lho Plflc&amp; d
a.Opcnlog
...,aiAifon
. ..... • - &amp;om FSA.
.......... rnonlh-long ~ Eoporionc&lt;. "

T-

ICEDtAit!CAL EMGIH£EillltG soiJicM'
J...b Ek:tl a. w_..... Neat Yerk W•lher.
0. Val Elmenleub. w.-. Mdo;gen lJniwnly

KN•.

Tho
flol4y Hoi
poecedlng ............

d V...... (TOV Com·

_____ _

:us

p.m.

J1e1ret!wnonb

...._

DEPARTIC£HT OF NATH£11An a '

Oiotingu;ohcd - · Plolaaor. lJniwnly ..
Ch-and--toflhcNetional
Acodcmy of -5clrnca, wil be , _ Maoqo 26, 27
and 28. On Mard&gt; 26 • ~Wwn tided "'ThoR..

::'t~~~-~~J:=

qulum , "New lllows on the Phloaophy of
Melhcmetks ." ....... bo..., .. 104 Dwlendori
at4
"''
t 1· ,.
t f
1' • _,..,
GRADUATE ASSIST~ Dl•.

lllDDLE EASTEIIN STUDIE5
~-.-ror .. - . . . , o f
M .164,..oh • - d - f c a, I O b o bvAhoCooncfon--forlhc

_..., ... - - .....,;, ........, ..........

...__)980181 . T h o _ ........

RNEFITDNICE
For lho ~ Siroolfllooolnot ol lho

__
__
__
_., __

... ancl»tcr-.llolo-. and ohooold .........

u.-n Chun:h, """* ci Elmwood and fony. 9

-~
• .-1
...._....
.. and ....
..._.-...._
Conolideta'

p.m. U.. """"'lljllho-. -.1 Mr&lt;mvWol.

_ _ _ .., - - ...... Aro...,..._ahouldbo _ _ _
dhlgh_..,,

~-st .50 .. ....,..and~•lhodooo .

20 .,,

aau.Ein1111EAliiE.
F.-,F_ _ _ C:..-.681

-

- S o. 3 pm. Gonoool- ~ .50. ADS
_..,.,...._ c.l847-6460oo--.
~ ...... -

d V.... ITOV Com-

Weda. .day - 19

--$-· VIIto..- -.. .
I

•'

.....
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Teclonoloel
107J.:JO
Ollolen. 4-5 p'"

$

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,.. GoW ..... lCiwoplnj. 1t;&amp; Dlolondorf 6.:10

Moaday- 17
IIECf.PI'lON.

~v- ·

:.,.,..- ~

..

~"""-·

~lJ!CI'UIE '

---~..._. ~

......_
"*-" ~ 335
Ho,ooo 6JO .... " -· s,c.-.d ...... School
.. .... En--...1 DooiF
FlLIC (RUI HdTCin) .
DlolyoiA~--- . 19!&gt;11 146

_
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and .... dnlt. (19681 .

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P&gt;ol._A. Soono. o.--o&lt; d
..,............_

Sodolow. Speuldlog Quod. -

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........

COt.I.OQUtA

eo..._

s,c.-.d bv lho -

.a

0...... Or. Georglrene 0 . v..dutiu
Bo.rd Room , o..un·s Horptail. 12 noon

PSVatOLOGY LEC1\lii.E'

.......

wwn

PEDIATRICS RESEARCH SEJOMAII•

The
Sonoundiog _ ,
"' Noclcno Soddy, 0.. Ed-. T Holandoo, U/B
profeuc:w , recendy returrwd from • ~· es study
dftdot of ttw N•tk:INI AQcHmy of Sdcnca CommiiiH on l\blldy T - Room C-31 , 4230 Ridgo
Lea . 3 p.m .
ICU5IC'
,_s-R«koo. BaiodR-Hol 12. 1.5

N--.. . . . .

Flnon&lt;ial---· ~

Monday,
J end
~ ...... 14 Tho aodll.- .,..... wil bo
from 7-9 p m. on the Amtwnt Campus. The
c:oune • dnisPtd 10 ~ peaple get out of ftMnda,l
diff'icu)y and st.y out. Pu
CIOWf money p.n.,,

bud.!l«ln!! end . . -. end wil dul -

Ia f..Cel

P m Ft..

FOR
•
.
direttor of eon...IMI'
d lkdlalo. !ric.. . .

"""'"~!- h;gh ...... and • ....-._,...,.,
ft)f rtfomwdion .bout r9*adon. cal 831-4301

.u-.... .. Ddniot .... - . . ..... Doloct

CHII..DU:N'$ ntEAliiE •
Fw, F - - . ... - . c..- no.-. 681
S o 1p"' --~50
_..,.,.....
Col847-6460 .. .._... _liDS_

CII£DIT.fii£E COUI5£
ICON£V PIIOIII.OIS
John V Pu, necutivc:
C...tll c:o...dng Sonoicc
o.Kh -p_,.j

c::OiuG£

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.......

.

. . ~. 1.-...1 "Thool'hlo-.I~Nal
Whoi." N , PhD. -R-,F.-.loll
Cllb. - I W 8p.M

an IIUJHOYflf CYCLE'
q,do
v a
- .Se1oe--Soall.
Hoi
lp,.
. 1 -. M . Focull\o.
- - D. S3: - . S 1
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--.£Ill . . - ·

Juil

~

......... . . . _ , Mlilf1Dhlip.IIIPIIIv-

lng ...... ;

w.z:;

I

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two young- •
'-II~ on
theE-...e--.
Almool 100 dorm ......... lolovooed
the IUIIbuiMca 1o the ~ room
at Milord ,.,._ ~ Hoc&gt;ltal.
wt.re the two- decloNcl cl.d shortly aller 2 a .m. Tholir ll'lencls tried to help
the farn*a and nch olher cope with the
enormity ci the "-&lt;~Y·
That awful " " ' - from the eighth
floor. which the county medical examiner
._ termed "acddenlal." not only e~
two promlolniJ young lives but -.ned to
bring home lo many student$ just how
thin Is the line that -ales the mun·
dane from the tragic. ihe Invisible bonier
that ·is crc:.ed when pasotons IJIOVe a
situation beyond control.
Students who were al or near the
scene say they wiU never forget that
night. In -rate Interviews. two who
lived across the terrilce In Porter Quad

----7. . . ,
.___

.e Calendar
c-

al

Llo---loodonboutdocoac·
........................ - . . blqdlne. bqdo

&gt;

--

-......
-.. lucline
_ . .........
. . _ _. . .. _""110

-.~

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..... --2807

T.....,.t,s.tQ~naq......,, .....,w-.

.........

nell
poor. .
Mllim:;
far d
people
. . to.
_far
_
. , _•••
on
_ l who
_. _

c -.

Como .. lloldy twl ...... -

...

N&amp;MYOU
_

TEAM

lo • _ . . . - o1 lho Sdoool al Don·
.. _
... _ _ _ TEAMio

_...

,don' think~._~.,_
~-·---

Nolhing about lhe Incident - "lair."
One young _, gof hlmoelf caught In a
volatile · The other died while
trying to ...... peace.
~ butloacb d students, u weD as

~'!J!t:.-:::=~~

last Friday .t 51. John's AME Chmch In
N'-" Falla. Ford's on Monday .t the
Emmanuel T~ Seventh Day Ad·
Church In Buffalo.
At McClendon 'sluneral. his pastor. the
Rev. Edgar L. Hull. deocrtbed the per·
1000lity ci his family .
"He came !Tom a family that is always
involved In helping others." Hull said.
"He died In a way that is repr-ntative ci

~ ~ 11\ftDUnca

the

al .. ap.. .... Soria ~· twl

-

~

..... .-. .. be....., Thundoy ......

fMY

9

-Golay , 5ohlloorc­

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twl,
Thio lo oneallho.-lo
11M a.- e_,_.,·
Olllct
al c.lt\nl Aloh, lunclod t, • FSA ..... .
~ondpaOn-t,.loe M . Fltc:l1«allho

won! 5&lt; ~Mold&gt; 14. Golay ........ II
• .m liDS p m., Tund.y ~ Thurw:t.ys.

T- N--'" ,__..__

LOCKWOOD EXHWT
c-y
F"''"' all.odowood . Mooch l ·ll.

up • 7.30 p .m In the R.M

WOIEif'S JI'ISTJrlln
liriiO Co1oe&lt; ond HERS

so. EIUt1IIIT

Mid...__ ••

..,..-.lftcllfth......!Sumnw._b

hold Jvlv 6 ............ 30 on tho Boyn ...._ """""'
T 1 w - ........ - l o a d y ond
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the ohock ci M jiB, Roc.evell Rhoda,
c:oordlMIDr ci minority student ......
uld early thio wnlc. He - -.ring a
black .......nd In memory ci the' two
youtbo .
"8oth young men .cy out·
IIMcllng, .cy, \C\1 nice," he lllkl. He
aplainecl that the ormt.nda bad been
_ . j out lnlllally Ill a """""""' ocrvlal
lor McCiondon
Ford. but that many
penon~ -continuing l o - them ...
a "stalement."
•
"Some studento - clrculallng • petition aoldng lor an oullide _.,rnent
agency to come In and ............. the
quality of life lor studento on the Amherst
Cernpus, particulaoly minority IIUclents,"
he stated, adding that 1lva mlnorHy
students haw now died In Ellicott. Daniel
Cordero ...... klled by anolher student In
March 1978. Domingo RIYaa was found
gully ci first-degree manslaughter In spite
ci defense pleas that he was legally In·
sane at the lima he llabbed Cordero to
death with a flair ci -=-an.
"A number of the minority faculty and
stall feel that some form of adult supervl·
stan or ldentillcatlon needs ID be available
to students In
the dorms."
Rhodes. noled that there are many "ur·
ban mentality studenb Isolated In a naal
ottuo.tlon" on the Amherst Campus. Programs are needed , he said. to make up
lor the lack ci transportation and
theaters.
The Coaltttoe'a -ltlon
The position of the Coahtion for
Human Relations . a group which
developed as a reaction to last semester's
demonstrations by minority students. ·is lo
push lor an Investigation . Rhodes said .
either Internal or external, to ..ap·
propriately address the sltuotlon ." and
implement Its findings .
Whatever the findings of such a com·
mission. If H Is formed . two young lives
have been wiped oulln a ITek. senseless
accident.
" k's made a lot of us think about the
way we live here. obout the vandalism .
npeclally." a resident of Porter said .
Those whose IIYel were touched by
Michael McClendon and Marcy Ford
have their IOcmoriel to ponder and thelr
deaths to mourn .
And
d us In the University com·
rnunlly. as ROOMYeh Rhoda uld . have
the quality ci our IIVft to constdcr.

and

1ftc ..,. Thuncloy, Mooch 20. J·9 p .m .. • whkll
.......... dc&gt;...... -.ol&amp;.oftondt.uth-·

"""-c-.

hlnl • .._, .................
-...!
In lhe chuoch'o poulh
prog18111,be told the ............... Ford bad
been pul1&gt;11 the cleaton board ..... aught
Sunday ochool and "moving In a

....._and....._a-n - :·

lair."

UUAII OPEN IOK£ SEIIIE5

........ . . __
-·--podod
........... ...,._,._ .... .,._.........,..
. ...... .,.,.... ....
" " " " " " ' - . . - - ..... lholloMrJOy

-n. ,.... .. ..,.... _ ...........

that .I the studento' t.ull." ho uid.
"1"he ..... _, _ ,,.. to blame. II Isn't

oou; GAlUJIIES EXHIIIIT

w...- .. HWw~- .. .,.

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~

c..- o.n c.-. U/ 8 . Colo Gollma, 49 Ed·

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~~~!=~ "=~~-::r.::.::
" - Nopach. ~ .. porlonnlng
NElED IIAIIC DOaAL c;_, WEU... T£AM

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

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Room 336 . ... dey """' 12 .. 4 . .. - . ..
Wocinndo!l ond n.....loy &amp;om 6 ., 9

______
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T1w Wrlling- ................. -

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

THE~ I'I.ACE:'-~~

Ann Hldos. ~

Hoi1636-2S0161 . ...
, _a...1 1 0 - Hoi,
1636-21071.

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�• Mold&gt; 6, 1980

New ~ further .nlting boneclestruc:tlve ~ ouch .. "-matold

adl!rillo and periodontal ~

Trutmentlreq~dy Involves surgic:al·
ly reducing the depth of "pocctft" In the

gums which harbor destrucaw

to a dr·

-mer

~"':.L't~E~:

---

normally hjgh levels of the hormone wtlh
sites o/ bone destruellon and' tnflemnlo·
lion.
This Is the lint time, ho.w\1\!;r, that
receptors spoctflc to PGE 2 have bftn
ldentlfled .on bone cen surfaces. Their
abllhy to attract and bind the hOrmone
may pave the way IO&lt; tha substance's
destructive action . Raearch has shown
other prostaglandins produce berwdjdal
effects. One lor Instance, a~ars to be
helpful In lowering blood pressure. Fur·
ther research on PGE 2 may show ft has
benefldal etfects on fissue other than
bone, Hurd says.

)llwofT_..._

Science .Museum curator
seeks closer links with U I 8
It may house .them . but the Buffalo
MuMum of Science will never be a fos.il.
thanks to the efforts of Its amic:able .
cherub faced director. Robert ChenhaU .
who just concluded a year's honeymoon
~riod at the helm of the dly landmark.
Now that Chenhall. has established
himself In the community and made
headway In creating a more pos6ive lm·
age for .the facility. come next Spring he
will test the waters of academia in Buffalo
and teach a coorse in museology at U{B.
Offered through the Anthropoloml
Department . the lnterdltclplinary listing
the CPA-tumed-anthropolog;st to draw
from his expertise and professional experience In 1 aching' the management of
museums and cultural age_nc:Je$.
Unique backlfOUncl
ChenhaU's background is unique.
Before making a mid -life career change in
1966 which culm.nated , alter he
earned a Ph.D .. In a flue -year teaching
stint at the University of Arkansas.
ChenhaD worked as an ac:countont for
Price Wotethouse. and as a systems
analyst and a financial offiCer In two cor·
porations. Most of hlo topical research
locuMS on the application of computer
technology In clossilying and categorizing
museum colections.

Putting theo&lt;y Into practloe. ChenhaD.
be-fore he come to Buffalo. "broke new
ground" In.aaablilhlng a comprehenslue
cataloging system at the Morgart~ Strong
Mu...um In Rochester. There. he wori&lt;ed
lor thre. yean as the head of Data Serlllces and chairman of the Exhibits and
Planning Comm
.
ChcnhaD hopes to
to his
llud~ts what he consoders the common

PI'""'"'

crlttcal

clements

In

proper

m""'um/cultural agency management.
Areas such a flnanu . -no! and
public relations wtl be oamtned along
wtlh tha lnuolued In rnalntoln·
1ng good WOf1dng relations with t&gt;o.do of
trust
• Topla unique to muMUmo will
aloo be explored, such .. oolodlon of ap·
poopnate exhibits
A toll~ " rnuMum oa~eoman :
Chcnhal refUMS to dwel on nego
.
l;le did mention. " ' - -. that In yean
poli tha Museum and tha Unlllersily on·
joyed limited communication

up
One of his most i11Jpot1ant Immediate
goals is to broaden the base of public sup·
port lor the Museym. With a good
stoff- including eiglft.'
D.'s. a recently
renovated building in ' a "good" location .
ao!l adequate flnonclal resources. he
feels he can do the job, and do it well
This spring, Chenhall will embark on
stiU another chat1enge He is one o/ two
Amerlc:ans (on a team of 15) Invited by
the World Bonk and the International
Council of Museums to help plan the
renovation of the Museum of Antiquities
In Cairo- the ~anent resting place of

King T ufs treasures.
ChenhaU IS proud of the assignment
and promises In all his travels. he'U be
spreading the good word about Buffalo's
rejuvenated artifact . the Museum of
Science .

Tops again
sponsors talks
CarlCer and n~trltion will be the topics
of the lint two of this year'• Tops Friendly
Markets Lecturn.
On M.n:h 17, at 1 p .m., Dr. W. J
Vtsek, professor of clinicalldenca at tho
UniY01$1ty of IDinois at Urbana, will
dilcul&amp; the relation o/ cancer Incidence to
essential nutrients. At 4 p .m., he will
cllocuss "Ammonia Mmbolism, Urea Cy·
de Capacity and Its Biochemical Auessment In Man ."
"Nutrition and CorlCer" is tho topic to
be prOMOted at 1 p .m. March 24 by Dr.•
P. M. Newbeme, professor o/ nub1tional
pathology at ~ lnstltuoe of
Technology. He will tal&lt; about "Drug,
Toxin and Nutrient Interactions" at 4
p .m .
AI Tops Nutrkion ~lectures wiD
be held In G-26 Farber Hal and are co·
oponso&lt;ed by the Grwluate Group In
Nutrition and the U/8 Oepartmant -o/

Bioc:homlstly.
Tops M.ltm have sponoored a nulri·

""*"'

t i o n - for avera! yon at U/8
has helped bring In nationally known
o.ulhorltla In the llelcl. The program~ ..,.
of Interest to phyoldans, dietlt:lano, and
others profaolonaly involved In nujritloO
and Its role In health and disoaM.

Program for women
The Jooiah Macy, Jr foundation has
awwded a $6M,OOO ~t to tha Seven
Colege ConfcNnoe IO&lt; a ..,._.~~ve
r.-.n:h projKt to develop a long-term
~· on the careers of ....,.,...
tiWden who plan In their ~uate
yean to entft the medical profaolon .
The conference repreMnts Barnard, Bryn
Mawr, Mount Holyoke; Radcliffe , Smilh,
and
Colleges. About
2,
at !he collegu have
indlcaled a prefer....,. for a medical
- - The ,.--a; projlcl M«b to
evaluate tha irnpKt on women of
under11radua1
preparati on and
pmnec~ical acMMment

v-.

w

""""*'

y

·

bactoria

found In dental plaque PI! gingival
secretions. The surgery maloes b for patients to remove the bacteria ~
fleming and brushing.
•
"Attraction and suboequ«nt binding of
PGE 2 to spedllc bone cell swf~ ton may etther allow the bacteria to
destroy bone or enhance ~ b.detla's
destructive
Hurd . , . _,
The New Hartford. N .Y., native
isolated bone eels from the skulls of rail.
which ore accepteble animal rnoclft, and
applied radioactive PGE 2. Tracing the
tagged hormone, he was able to lclenlfy
rec,pton to which H gr.t.v.bled al)d
bound Itself.
- -

culallng hormone In the body has bftn
reponed by • dental student
here.
DouliJas Hurd , a senior ln the School
of Dentistry, hao Identified opedllc bone
ceD swf~ receptors which allrK1 and

10CIIon:

Moet_30 ...welt •

SecOIId . . Conducted under the supervision ol
Dr. Ro... Mary Dllak, Hurd's research
won second prize at the American Dental
Association's annual Student Research
Com~ton this faD . Students from the
University of Michigan. Loyola . and Harvard also took honors.

Petlodontol disease, which aa::ounts
for mcist aduh tooth loss, b characterized
by weakened and resorbed bone. Most
- l e ewer 30 suffer from the condition
to some degree. II treatment II not begun
early, the bone's resorption causes teeth
to become loose; frequently, they may
faD out.
Although nelther the cause nor the
mechanism of ~ontol disease Is fully
known , most research polnts .to cenain
gram negative bacteria as being the chief
culprjts lor the condHion.

Dr. Dziak, assistant professor ·o/ oral
biology, has received a $6,000 grant
from the National Arthritis Foundation's
Western New York Chapter to study
regulation of PGE 2 A key to the hormone's destructive action may well be a
result of faulty regulation, she theorizes.
She will also attempt to find whether the
hormone is prncluced In abnormally high
amounts lnilde bone cells. II H Is. this
could also be an Important factor in the
destrut;tlue process.

Nominate a student
The Unlv01$1ty Commllnity Advioory Council (UCAC) will again honor luitime IIJ1de1vaduates this spring through Its annual COMMUNITY -STUDENT
AWARDS Program.
Th.,.. awards are presented In recognition of the countless houn and devotion to servic" by students of the institution In OSSClCiatlon with various agendes •
In Western New York.
Please direct your attention to the nomination form below. The form has been
designed to elicit brief, but exact deocrlpfiue Information to sufflclendy dotod a
candidate's merlls. AD nominations must be retumed by March 21, 1980.
Each Community-Student Award repplont will be presented a certificate from
tha UCAC, plus a $25 honorarium. In addition , a $25 conri&gt;ution from the
UCAC wil be forwarded to the agency which the awardee represents , or to a
spoctflc agency the awardee designates.
The solei:tlon committee wiD be comPriled of students, staff, and lacuhy of the
Univenlty, as well as mel'l'll&gt;m of 'the Community Adllisoty Council. The
awanls ooremony will be held on Wednaday, April 23, at 6:30 p .m. In tha
Spaulding Dining' Room at Ellicott.
Undergraduate stud~! recognition Is a very vital concern of the UCAC. Your
coooperatlon and responM would be most kindly appreciated .

FOR FUIJ,.11ME STAlE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
AT BUFFALO UNDERGRADUATES MAKING OUI'ST~
COHTRIBUTlONS TO THE COMMUNI1Y

·Campus Addrea,_ _--:7":;--;:-------------;-:-~Home ________~~~~~
~~~·~--·~--~~----1. What Is the nllture gl the vi&gt;lunt- serlllco?
2 . How Is this InvolVed?
,
3 . Why In your judgement II this lnuoluement/conri&gt;ution Important?
4 . ,t,pproalmat.ry how many hours per
durtng the current academic year
has Ibis penon conlrtJukd?
·

r

NOMINATING IDENTIFICATION:

Company/OrgoniAtlon ------:---::--~----:--~

Adme:.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

· AU. NOMINATIONS
SHOUlD BE RET\JRNEO TO; '

Stud~nt Awards Commtn
Community Adllisoty C6liQdl
516 Capen Hal
Smt University of New Yorlt at BuHalo

Amherst.

New York 14260 •

636-2925

�March 6, 1980

Dean's List

-· E.......
-

A~ cl 1023 otudenlt- ......
to the Fal 1979 Dun's IJII II¥ the IJIId,
liOn "' lJndor!pduele EducoGon. The
to._l includeo 224 ~. 259
oophonxqo, 257 )Union and 283
oenlom.
~ fer the honor are upiAined In

........

~

LondraG. IIogloty,KonncthL--..,, An.

B. · 11M: S a . -. Rolond S.
a..,hom. Jolon F. ·
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· ~
5 .Slophen
Bliobag
Dotto&lt;oh
E . -·
A..
Bapod, .loon D Bolnll&lt;y, C.,.. D. Bop. •
-~. lhndcnburg. - s.
Swon
llotg, Elnw J

Aldo A - · Jolon T - . , _ _ .

- . . . . . , - . . , A . - . ,, .loon W.

a.m.a.

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A. - BWr,
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14 -.t.loaD
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Kolhlooo
14 - · s. Bonn.
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c.a...tnc M C.CU.clli. Edwonl J Oe.on. s.-n
M C...,. c.d Colaoy, Joma M. Culigon.

DouglooB ~
. Elz.t. Dlnoudi. """"""' J Doy, Ben R. Debold.
Ko-A. Dodrid&lt;, RocNniA Dommo.- J.
Dd'ouw. Paul H Deoo. Kim 14 Daboon. Ma1;ono
llonlbn&gt;ootld. Poa-d W . Dowd. Dowl M. ~ .
s.-L Dully, Mey E Dyoon, Doorid M. Elol&lt;ng.
Ann E. ~ . Noncv l E.ooong . Jolon F Elcy.
Kot~A Dntokl. HoNov
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Rir::had E e.. ~ A F.,lty, L~ fm"eo

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Polnd&lt;A Globon&lt;. KimbcrlyR . ~ . Mowecn ·
M Goc!Dch . John S . Godzuk . Dnld F. Gooamoo .
- C. Gouloo. Jun T o..f. Ewlyn C. 0....
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Juice E. Dorrico , John N. Diebold. 1141&lt;'-1 J .
F. Contwd, Kothryn H. ~
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c.-ole. Kortn A
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Sing Fu.-y Olu , K..m A. Ocmcncy, O&amp;.n• R.
Donovan. ~&lt;om&gt; .A. Drehoo. Dov.d J . Dmola. Nan·
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cy R. Droot. Holme C. IJNcl,e-, S...n R. Dully.
Poulnc J. Cook . c..... J. c:..run... P - L.
Soncn M . Dufft. ~ A. Owl.., kmes B.
~ . Elconc&lt; M . CUJ&gt;an&lt;.
E.oolon. Timothy J . Edunail. R~h J . E_..
MlcbMI T. D'Angelo, Banv D. Dmloon. Mey
Somh Eld&gt;chobt. Jonolhon P . 'bgcl, G ... T
A. Dcnoy. Ml&lt;hMI K. Denlalon . E. Da·
Engluc.
mond. a.t.on L: Dcud. Toni L. O.utodunon, J .
Anthony E. Faber, Joan B. fft'rara; Mark 8
J . O.W.U . Lub~.T..... K.Dalo, l.oriJ .
Fllc:hmon: Moly Elcn Flaherty, Janlo H. Foa.
0...., Edwanl J . !Moolo.&amp;ton K. &amp;ldos, Mlcltolo
Timothy E. F•oy. &amp;uce W. Friodman , Alan K.
Elm«. Suan A . Elajl. Shmy B. Elio, Mlny M .
F -. Chorln A. Froehlich. T...,. M. Goota.
EYOn&lt;O.
00.0 R. Gomb;no, Patrida A. Gonnon . R - C.
Volmo A. F•oct. Soled F......,.., P - E. Fen·
nor, Gmdlon A. Flod&gt;c&lt;. Joma J . -.....,.,
Gome. Lountn A. Gauthlc&lt;. J . Giglia .
~ M. Glod-.., Jolon K. Glecoon. /40"'""
- . F.....,,
I. MMI&lt;
-·
DaugiH
J.
Key J . - &amp;tw.d· M
J. Gn.m. 0..... F. ~ . An&lt;how D. Gonion.
Floc&lt;on.
C. "
-· Jolon
P. ~ . a.,_ S. Friodmon. o....d A. ' Wok« 0 . Gonion , Elolno J , Goo!lnod . Joonne
O..hont, IlNce A. c;..,, Gey S. o,_,, Daniel J .
· ~ V. Frla, _ _ . R Marto, a...,! 14.
~ . Rlcltad S. G&lt;lldo. GeyJ . G -.
Funtocc , n...- F. Googl. E"-'1 T. Go. CWolyn s .
$hdov J . Hotn. O..oldlne
DoW~ C. Guolng . " - C. G&lt;Mn . ......... L
A . Holody, Shohid Haque, ~~A . Ho.co.m.
~ . Roy N. Gltd&lt;sman . EJoon A. Gagen, Kelly
Rlchonl B. . -. P-D.
Moo~! E
L. o.-. Jolon P. o.-hol&lt;. M..., B. G.tftlth,
Hatllcld, M. Hoyos, lloloon T. tw;n......, ,
Alan D. 0.0..• .loocpft l . Gull. Olgo A. 0....
Holy B. Holblch . Ahon L. Hldoo. MMk R. . -.
Brion D. Hoblrolcbcn. Kenneth .
R-M~ . o..ldR , ~A .
Mey E. HlniL Paul J. · ~ A. Hoff.
onon. Philip A. Honcmpo, En&lt; C. Hoxo;o, Suson
Hoft.... Wo9rJV. H.por. -....P ~.
B. H -. Wolt..- A Hunt. 'lbotno&lt; D. H)oy,
Meyjo Houolo. Moogont G ~ MichMI
Hlnbon . v-.,lto. Julo T. ~. TimGOhv
Anthony 14. lngogb. · a...un. A.
Jonl.lns . u...nc. R. Jones.
'
N . liomo&lt;. Sondta J . Howcmon , Jonoothon J .
Slown M. Kohn, Clndy'M. Kan-.n. l'n'd&lt;
~Jolon M H.-... IAwnnco A. Hyldolol.
14. Kohoc, s.-11. Doo A. K!Mo. Jolon R.
p....,. F. H,JidoH. Moly F. ~ . Alonoo Y. lp.
Klotn . Donne M. Kine, T"""' B. Klodl, Gloodwn
W. · P_. R Jones, Howonl
~- Cindy ~ - l«&gt;ncMtl.. ............ J .
S . ((ootlon. IlNce D. Komluln, 0 - * R. Kotz.
Kopcqk, lloncy H. Kannoo, Ratocrt "- ""'-· !lonna L. Koly . Bobby Kldcl . lloohlnn M. Klnon·
Raltdd B. Knme. 11atocrt C. Ktou~ -..1 D.
· Bodt R. King. lloyd G. 'King. Roln U.
Kto&lt;honld, Po- M. K . -. Alan A. Kuab.
Klow, Donn1o M Kn&lt;&gt;fing, £ - . A. Knoph .
Kodvyn A. Kunldol
~ Kdt, Jolon T. Ko&amp;oeo. 14oft S Kudw·
P..- N . lAbodz. n.on- C . ~ . Vid&lt;y L.
M. Ku.,.., lAurio P. ~Woiwoo&lt; , a - L .
~. - N. loc&gt;P. Kolt Mcne lAc. Cindy
1Acb1ok. Holm J . Loflomm«. """' N. Lon*&gt;g,
~ - LeW. Dobonh L. l..eYy, PN&lt; ~ . Anno M.
EJOc S IMdt. Anlhony lou. Sun T U., Slowlrt
J. 1..-thor, " - " ' R• . . _.
J .......
. . -. o.inJ. . . _, Dob·
Kom&gt; E. MoP. Pota T. Molonoy, T•_, D.
blc A. Lowto. Rcio«u A. Lcllough , DoWd A
Moloy. Gol N Molyub. Alon M. Norlwt. Uoo·
IAiontpio,
Laudon.
Joyno ,......,...,, l4ichocl E . ~....... Rono
J-..D A.Monld,
· Jclhev
c. -·
P.....
IIN&lt;eH
. NonoWd
, J ....
A.
P. · Roymoncl
- L . ·Nc&lt;AIIon.
Gey R. Moloon.
C.......,.....
T. Mazw, l.C...
Poul E•
•. Todd IN Mortin. Aotltony F. ·
NcNohon . Timothy P. M&lt;Mohon . G. L. MciWv.
L. MoluJDk. Mlchool J . Moy, Thocldous J .
· l&gt;lool M. MoN., Gftold M. Mcerink,
Undo D MKhunt , Dey! L. - - · Elon A.
Mld&gt;ollc L. NcGI.o. KonmN. M&lt;Mohon . Rabm
. n, Undo
R
R - -·
LocH . NdwloM . ....... RonoldJ . Miono.
C . McMunoy, ~ J . I&gt;Wdo, Thomas K. M6..
.loocpft l' MIMI, o...ld M Nhndo, Soon W.
DoWd M Undo A Mulon, Roboft N.
Mura, Moly A. Mytloo, S... l l&gt;logol, Amy M.
~. J - J. Moon. Riconlo F Monn.

Boloaod. Ellzobcth R &amp;conow. .....,_. J
B&lt;odigoll. W. &amp;...,.., Thomas G. Bud.·

Ingham, RUIId C. llurdwri.
Don1o1 M. ~ . Oonold P. Cohill. ME'-!

-..a

a.-.

..._d.

H-.

Hom-.

-....D.

E..Y, H. Polme, .lullo A P - -. Mhur

Jolon C T-.

W Blod&lt;.

E

oloi.-

o.w-.. ~ E. OwloL

s.a..n

Bijok. lAurio E. lliNideld. -

J..,_ F Blasllnt. Wendy A. Blod&lt;, KolhiHn

c-.w.. C)Jnlhio M.
c-ham. Ronold R. ~ . -E. o..tn.
Joyco A Chebwb. 1Ao1 eM*. Don N. a.-.
w..... R Cludocy. Mlchclc CoNn. P.- A
~ . Thomas

E.

I.M.von&lt; Il .- ·_,.-·

A-. · i:....~nno.:.~- ~~~:

P...
0.... 14 - . - N Yocyn;dl, .leftooy

A YwcM.O..WA U,., ,.._,l

FilheT, Sendr•'\ J

~M~

DoNicl
s.-, - . L. ~. a....dlo ·
GoaA~."""""D-.

R

C Fon-. MichMIJ Fedok, GoegW. Fcdomlok,

Mlchoc!

-·
\/Moo..
D. n
-.....,,
~
B -· Ko.la-_
F. McNuloy,
Moo&lt; J.

Rlca, Joho
F-J~. --.

Ins R Oonzogc&lt;. Ctnt G. o.Gn&gt;ll. John P.O.Lu&lt;o. ~ DoM.co. Kolhlnn F Dcaoyo .
An....,. DoSiclono. Jud.&lt;h I Dtldinc. Cloudio M
Dixon, Thoi T Do. Noncy N ~ . Scoct M.
Dotobiolo. Hony G. Dub. Jr ..
Goa M Eoglcoon . .Icon E. Eggeo. lloodol D.
Elnho&lt;n. L.. R q,a.m, Aomdo A Fololo. J.,..

"~r-.
o01o " · M,
R MouslooFI. KoJi&gt;onno

Jolon R. ......... Foh Pow Uow. Uoo Lu, Monin P.
~- .1. Lublnoo.
-J-.
Nehn
1 1 g n ,~E.-.·Johl W ..._,.,

a.n... -

· S....... M.
L. llocmon.
Brion L. Bd. Den L. a..kowllz. Eril: B. a.-.•
MichMI G. lloycrllln. BonyJ . ~-Thomas C.

-.c E. Curta. Joma c-111.

David R

C. &amp;oun.JomaD. Bm&gt;nor.Jomool4. ·
Suson M a.-. Jofffty A. Boodoloy. Maryanne
Bubo~~&lt;, ~ M . Buddcy. Douglu J . Bu'11"'N'.
n.on- F Bumo ..
Pomcla A c.l, Fnmk W c.ntlt, Poul H
Kolhlnn A. c.rn.y, Polndo I. Coorlngton, l.ori B.

c.....,.

O&gt;odooW. ~ . AnnoF Coonan. IJo.iA

c.p.o. p_..,. E. ~ . c.w. K a..my. Judy
0... Oot C. a.oy, n.c.... E ~ v..,..
L.a.-. ....... p Cducd. Gey J CGnslontlno.

T....,.J. ~ .

·-.. A . -·

· Gol

-

Aloy."-

J Kowcaynold.

.._..... S.

u.M. - . . . .. v - - . - F.'
l\loMod , Lucio L. 11o1oo. Gooold T. ·
NlchMI J . · DP(t 5 . llomln. 0... N.
- J u d l l h S. - . - M. .

·A
EdoNnl
L. - . . . -. O&gt;odoo
J -- . D· oln
Aloor.Annol4
G .......... w..dyl4 - U i e y E. Amold.

w-

~H. --... .

s.-&gt;M. - s . - &gt; M._ . . . . .... J .

-

lhc~bo·ed-·

-

w.... ,._,., Wadd,O.S.A.-

.._C. '1'1 ,

N · Lyow. N - . . . _
~
JaltoJolonll
A - - · - . UooJE
-Chorjl. LL.....
N - -.

Long.-

-D.

R-

-

Ne. , l4ithooll&gt;l.l&gt;lcw . lvyR.- . CNK . ~

......,.. Nidk:h. Susan J. Niwl". Penny K. Nuwcr
LoUrie J . ~ . K.&lt;rn M O!lowold. Morio l
Ooono. Kenneth A. POliO. MlchMI J . Polumbo .

s.- R

P -. Poul H

P -. Bd&gt; A.

. UooA p......,, """"""'J P -. Marll
W. ,..,., ......, M Plofo, , Undo S Plmm, Alan
H -...DoWdA . Mey&amp;..,.,.E Pto.... IWM . Moo:C.Rood, ldoR IIOJiov,
Rid&gt;oniS -

. MoryC. Rinor . RatocrtoM Rl·

*-S~.
· Doonloo Koot-. M " - ' o, EAt·
Nid&gt;ooiGR-. s.-&gt;F

R - ,, Moly G R.-.
'
s.-&gt; B Sonde. n-.. J S... luoo, Jd.
troy B ~. Tlmolhy U. ~. Joonno S.
~.

Mort.TSch.- .

PIIIIpw

SchumM. - . S Schw.u. Jodi L ~ .
JolonP Sooftcld,Annl4 Sdg. MoryC SomcNo.
DoiJoo F ShopOo, TimGOhy J. Shochon, t-onS

~.

-

-SO.,....

Kolhloon
s.-&gt; I . . , H - · 5ouo&lt;1 C -Down C·
Bony S S1oono. Slown G Snycito.
n - K -. P..... DS.W.tlly, llodMI
E s.--. -....J. Sionloo, a.bonLS&lt;od&gt;.
s.bete Slelft, Ruth A. &amp; m , Nency· E
B Sudo. Down A Sulor, Joonn
H
J s,.c.. Dot,nto J ~
Hooloo T........ Meyltotlo T - . Anno
L Tlooloo. - P T,_, ,_,.,R Tl1oi.Roboft
R vR. v...sa,.s, Kotttoyn E.
V -. - A. I/InO,AmjJ V..... e-IA

-

s,.on.-·.a.-

· w..to. - . . R

" " -· . _ . . P

...,_R w.,, !WoooohK

-

.

·,lorna

n-..w. Moxon.- -.
Rldw-d L. H-.loio K. H - . -. Han·
cy A . l'liolon, Donolcl J . ""-&gt; . .a- P. H......

14 Oloozol&lt;, Thona M.
Kcnnoth D. l&gt;l&lt;ulk, Oppttz, Rho&lt;&gt;do l Oq,ol. Gey J . P-. Mlc:hclo
B Poncm, """'" A Ponono. Eric S P-....
V..-o C Pologrino. l4ichocl P. P -. Gey D
PloOydo , ..._,.'E. Pogue. Slophen J Polooj,

0... A

" -·

""""'J 1'\woi&lt;

........... J Q,oW.on. Annomorio Rolool. S Red , Rd&gt;ort F R - . - A. Rldt, .lontlo
M llood&gt;. TimGOhy A. Rock, Holy r Rogut.
a...yl A Rololf. RUII Roop, Jocly E. Rubin.
Pomclo C. Rucholold. ~A. Ruocxo. Kortn
E. Ru., P - S. R- . JolonT. ~ . J - F-1
~. Wolto&lt; C Schmidt, Jr . John K,

Sch...-,

Amy K .

Sch-a.a...

Undo M

~ . s.- M SChwind, Poul L. S....
...,_ B s.-.1. Cynthlo A. Soponl&lt;, SOewft B.
se..t...v.
Wendy C. · Sond&lt;o K
-.. EJonA . Sindoio- . ~K SW., JomaP.

HolonoM
· - s.
A -.
- Mttttls..-.
· Judith A -LynnG ·
Snoool, Poul6 Sudo. J Suowtft.
DoWd E T -. Jo.- R Togllolotolo, Rlchonll
Thll, Rldtood L Tindel. Dionno M. Tridooy •
S T.....,, Judillo.fi....Uirkft , B D VW&gt;CO,
VctiU, C...WoddOl, SholloA. W..,.,,
""'"v p Woylond.- A
a.F w..n. Mhw F w.......... MMtl C. w.c.t.
a - L.
• Dione M Wlioodoo. CotittJ H.

-M

W-.

-.-J

w-. """""
Mdoool A v..... Goalhoy L. v...,.. s.- G

.n-.J

. AnnoM Wholon. L,_.N. .
0..... L Soool- J . , _ . . _,

c-....
~-J
ZMnno~oov .

L

z:..a:.v...

w- ·

~

�.

1M ......

o.nc-.•

~

l i l . . t j W b u - - ............
.... .nclldtldulg . . . IntO 8lulgortan
'-to 11.- -'-c11n New Yout. Oly.
The lloupc hao been imltMd to peuform
Mardi 8 _.!he 17th BI-annual Conwas
ol !he Bulgarlao National Front In
celebration of lhe country's In~..,. Day. Some 1,500 first and
second generation Bulgarians from
ac:roe !he counlry . be in allenclal!cc.
The lnviiMion -~~the~
form ol pmoe." noted U/B alumna.
danc:ar and group CO&lt;IIdlnator• . V -Ten:leff. Eopedaly ~ her h...t.ond.
George. 11 the group's only ""live
Bulgarian and Is responsible for teaching
a I'Mf$1ey ol dances he learned while
wowing up there and peuforming 1n
amal&lt;lur ensambles.

Now about l.S-)IaiS-old, the WOUP is a
rpin-oll Of the defunct Bulgarian Danccn
who used the lntenatlonal ~le ..

""*
home bue. 1lldr r~e In·
dudes dances from Balkan and Eutem .
Europan counlria r&gt;&lt;tformcd with
lllgnetla depicllng native customs.

The Balcan Danccn' performancc unll
has about a dozen members. composed
ol ltudcnts. faculty and communily
rnidentl. Becauoo the dances require
fast

f-...ork

matched

to li'regular

ubythmS, the ~ pr~ IWioo a
week lor 1wo to tlvec houn a HUlon .

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

The woup's recreational d.nclng com·
ponent oilers fr•lnlernallonal folo dane·
lng, wtth lnslrucllqn, each friday night at
Squire fo anyone lnlftalcd In leaming.
Mcmbcn ol !he peuformance unM con ·
duct the lnoons:
/
Many ol those Mloded as peufonnen
catM lnltlally to the Ftld.y program,
showed promloe and inlernt. and pulln
long houn ol training. Although she can 'I
CXj)ialn why, Mn. TerzMfl said that
studenll from the science ......, to havo
a special afflnlly for the group. She
lament-.! !he Imminent departuTO ol o
talenled medical student member ol the
performance troupe whose coming
~ rotations ore pulling a clamp on

hisalracutricul¥actMI!es
The &amp;lean Danccn rec- no flnan .
dol SUJ&gt;POrt from the Unlvet'5ily, but are

...

:=r:.:..-,~=- ~ -

"-ol~oOheMs......

Oly
ol llullalo. "'"' !he
non•pro/11 WOUJl recelws from peuformance, goes beck Into club colf.n and Is
used for necaslllesiUCh as costumes and
lnlnlpOitation, relayed Mrs. Ten:leff.
A SlUt Council on !he AJts .-m .....t 10 develop Sablan dance - and MCUJe native c:ostuma. Anding
oulhenlic c:ostuma 11 no eaoy ._.. ~
there .,. but few costume duolutn In this
part ol !he country. E-. If a penon
could lrav.l abroad looking for them H
woulddt be any · Villages . _
!he costumes still exist ""' geMRIIy ....
luclumt to !IIW them up . Beca.- ol this,
Mr. Tealell and other members o1 !he
~y. after much historical raurch,
haW fiWIM shoes, and panll.

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

An ADS r~ from tbe National En·
dowment of the Alts and the Clly-one
wi-Ocb the group has just loamed ft Is get·
llrlg-wll be used to dcwlop Hungarian
dance
and for costumes. When
funding pamils. Mn. Tenldf said , !he
group htia oaiiYe c~hea.
Each Labo. Day weekend, the dance-s
- a "'oll donee can&gt;p" atWatoon
~ In Coming. Th&lt;a"tllu:livlly II
open to !he general public.
.
Baida performing at spec:iallJnlvenl.
ly fundlonS and lor lOcal cMc and oodal
organizations, !he WOUJl has lnlvcled to
otll.r •eooln w-., New Yout., out o1
·-.and to Toronto.
Nat month, !he BaiMn Danccn wll
lhe second lime at !he Ethnic
allvolln the. Buffalo Conven. Mn. Ten:leff, who coor-

rou-

ru

dlnat.d allhe on-tlage periorrnanoa for
the Fallvol's - t reulved debut last
yar, II again doing the same. The
Fatlvol data are April 25-27.

Slggelkow elected
Richard A Siggelkow, \/Ice president
for student affairs. was recenlly elected
vice praickm ollhe Greater Buffalo in·
-llonai'Chapter ol Sigma Della Chi ,
the sodely ol profaoional joumalisll.

Personnel News

llM/c:.J' s-e..n

The P..-1 Deportment has tiWIM arr~nts for tlvee seminars on
T....tay, April IS, lor-~ curra&gt;llll ..-.rolled In !he TlAA/CREF
~ Pt.n and for thooe with Supplement.! Rellreawnt Annull)l (SRAJ
and Ta DoNn-.d Annull)l (TDA) . Mr. Joeeph E. U&gt;Pet . ....._of Employee
Banefilo Admlnillratlon, olfled that !he TlAA/CREF Advllory Offlair, Mr.
Doug Burnd. will mab lhr• ~ (one al Amhent and 1wo at M.ln Balovl on tho 15111. Enrolod _cmp..,....wllba.-vtng_.reoerva·
- IOrmo froln P_.... wllhln the Md 1wo ....-.. Two eddllonol. . oloo planned. adutMiy for Raardl Foundation employan on !he followIng dey, Aprill6,

Dr. Willard EUiott:
he was 'exceptional'
U/ B biochemistry profess« Or.
Wllard B. Eliott wao cuJogized as "one
who wore no unaolcs, an CJ&lt;Ceptlonal
gentleman and ~ who was always
teaching and always c:arln!l. • to an
overflowing crowd Mond.y ~lght at

r--=11 efforts -UJiy. he set """"'
lime for communlly ~In· hll
chwch, In !he Boy Scouts, and !he .
tchools.
Many area Boy Scouts owe thetr expertilc and lntcrat In cano.lng, MOIIm·
WilliamsvliiC United Methodist Church.
mlng and ~ c:atlil*lll to his lime
Dt-. Ellloct, 57, died Feb. 27 at his and efforts: many church cirnpes can
Snvder horne following a lengthy battle aedH !heir skills and 1n1erat In !he out-&lt;lfwllh cancer. He is survived by his wife , doors to his enthusiasm and luclenhlp.
Dr. Roaemory Eliott. o stall member at . And many nunlng home raldenl$,
Ros-a Park Memorial Institute: four
~by his visits and enthnled by the
ch&amp;dnm, Tim, Alen, Meg and Catoline:
unusual and baautilulllda he'd ......,
lwo '*"!&gt;-children. Ella and Paul, and one
on his world travels, valued even more
wandoon.
his genuine ln!A!rat In lhem aa people.
Known In !he communlly as !he "bee
Some ol his photogu:ophs lo be
man" who avidly ccfedecl un-nted
featured In a childr~'s book about an orhives from area houMs lor his reworch,
phaned hippopotamus which he rocantly
Dt-. ElloU was an expert In the effecll ol ....-with Margery Facklam and which is
venom ol stinging lnsec:ts. Pallonts
to be published later this year,
around the world who were hypenen·
Dt-. Elliott wu truly one who could be
deta1bad as a "Renaisoance man ," In·
to eflecll of Insect """""' ~..
been deMnsltioad with extracts produced
teresled In """'Y""" and .-ything,
In his U/ B laboratories.
constantly (and daj)lla his long illnasl
Her~ the Ph.D. In blochemislry
making plans for new and future projects.
from !he SlUt Unlvenlly ol Iowa In
His conlrbltions to !he ICienllflc world
1950, joining the Department of ae - t documented In !he UtaMww: his
Biochcmlllry f&amp;ady here the same year.
contributions to his fellow human beings
5uj)ported healllly through the yean by
are documcnted In the heorll ol those
National lnstltuta of Health grants, his
who knew him well and olhen who knew
later wout. In wnom ellects was based. In
him only llmlngly.
part , on _.... findings connec:led wtth
Donations in Dt-. Eftiott's memouy may
reworch on energy metabolsm, heme
be made to the Patient Fund at RosweU
plgmenll and low lanpcqturw speC·
Park Memorial Institute.

troacopy.

Aootloor, . . . . . . . ~._ .
During his tlvee-decade career, Dt-.
Elliott published ..-ly 100 profusional
articiH, most recently o chapW on
chemlslry and Immunology ol repllian

wnoms. H&amp; oloo wao a . - for
many ldentillc journals, an ed- ol ~ Biochcmlllry and a
member ol the edllodal tta11 ol TOJdcon.
Adlve In nearly • dozen natlonalldentillc
organizations. he last yar organized a
UJIInl.sympoolo for !he lntamallone1 Con·
· - ol 8loc:hmniltry. .
/!&gt;1 dnctor ol gr.duate studies In the
Deportment ol 80ochmristry. Dt-. Elliott
guided r-.:h elle&lt;ts ol waduatc and
posl-doaor.llludents. Yet he .all found
lime to on or chair many School o1

MedleN and Un-..ry ~and

projado. eoa.~ and studenll always

lound him • wiling llslanar wtth· whom
!hey could share ldua. Oftan he heatadly
debated them on lsoua ...,. which he

felt strongly, but I wao aeldom he lost the
.._. 01 hto ~In the procao,
H&amp; . . . In touch wtth " ' " - col~and ....... ~ !hem

- ' IUPI""'*W !heW elfe&lt;ts lhoush !hey

""t =-~~:':.~role
far r-.ft _ . a-.lo, a

at duolrm.n

chalensae IIIIW:h ji8W him !he __.,...
ty to help facultjl embarlcbg on
.,.._.. ......... othcn who """''ht.....,

r-.:1&gt; dlrecdono. He took
. _.
ill&gt;llly oortoualv and ethlcaly. .., .
sr-ding avolloble raou1&lt;:a and -.g
Chey -

not

Hoit'e•t-t
Dt-. Andrew Holt . acting dan ol the
G'aduale School. Issued the following
statement about Dt-. Elllolt;
"Qn behalf ol the Institutional Funds
Committee I would like to record our ap·
predation of the many flnc contributions
fiWIM by our late oo8cague, Dt-. Willard
B. Eaott . as chairman. He labored
mightily to assist new faculty members
wiih their rnearch problems. olton providing !hem wHh his expert cou-l.and
even -...ng them In negotiations with
ott- oectors ol the Un~ for equipment ....ntial to theit Investigations.
"Ot-. EDiott's own r...arch .. ,altcsled
not only to the quality ol his efforts but to
his exceptional vigor. Yet. bull/ as he obviously was. he never declined a request
to the Unlverstly and he lulllled
" - obligations wfth lhe same degru ol
commitment evident in his own~ "To me. he exempllflod the aca&lt;kmlc
prof.- . He was ouch an eocallont
rCMAII'cher. a widely respedod lekher.
and he served the academic communily
with dJstinction . He upheld the standards
ol his prot.-,, yet did ,., wtth wft and
wisdom which engetidmd .--ct lor
them aa well as for h1mseW. His edvtc«
and support will be surely miiMd by me.
but even more by the wider circle olthooe
""""'" lives he has touched."

...

New officers

miiiA&gt;Iled -

c - - J t y .......
But ... he took hil tuchtng and

..

�Baird air retested-;

l lev~ls about the -same
The U.S. T-.g c.,.,_ conducled
..., a1r ~on Januiry 17, 1980, In
'Bawd Hoi to - whelhor thee was any
ddaclable charp In the .,._,.,. ol air·

..,.,.... .......,. pootic1a u a raul! ol
rehabtl~Wion actions taken by the
[Malnlotnanoe Department lut , year.
There- none, E. W. Doty, vice po:esiP.ent lor tlnancc and management, In·
lormed Mu* Chairman Willilun Tbom'oonttus~
• Doty quoted Mr. David Hansen who Is
_.slble for the testing: "The asbestos
fibers detected In your samPles constitute
fugitive particles In corx;entratlons which
would be similor, and verlable, fOr any
location ·on your campus. l .get basically
the Arne results In most schools In other
parts of the Unled St.ow. lt Is not
unusual to get ambient counts of 0 .04 to
0 .05 particles per cubic centimeter."
"Fugitive particles," Doty explained,
are those wliich are released.) nto the air

-lsn,t It so?
rau.tt. ol a ;ludeot Protect to
~.., tt.ciOr..a COOI!Molweekendo - · - H aB. Well tbete'aooe
thine. - ....Jiv. Flnt, the break, Ud theft aj&gt;rtDg Ia here. Can the end ol

n. _. ...J et Go--. one ol the

from many sources and vory In concen·
tration &amp;om time to lime and point to
point depending on wind .o.orrmts, ac·
annulation by recirculating oyslcms and
point sourte rele-.
Baird Hell, he pointed out, Is sur·
rounded by parking lOts and Is close to
Main Streel "Minor amounts ol asbestos
are. probably being liberated .&amp;orn brake
shoes ol automobiles going by or entering
the parking lot, but even .so the ambient
as detected either Inside or outside Is In a
concentration that Is about 0. 15 per cent
of the Unled Slates Occupational Safety
and Health Act Staeerds." The actual
ligures are Usted below. The figure P.1,
Doty said, represent:lowesl concen·
tration that can
mlcroscopicaOy
detected . "Figures
than that are
mathematical extrapolations and thus aU
the ligures both before and after the en·
capsulation are In that catego&lt;y."

Baird sample

.... - b e ... bcblncl?

YEAII

197,

U I B ••ke S
.t~ :repla~
domi windows, Hunt explain _
Repor1l publahed In the Bulfok&gt; £ ......
'"II ~.,. over the weekend oontend that
U/ 8 olllcials had uked Abany over two
yean ago to redeoign windows In campus
dormitories similar to the one through
which two students crashed to their
dealhs Tuesday, Feb. 26.
RQj;lert E: Hunt, director ol enllirqlfbental hulth and safe:ty, ...1c1 the
funds lor changing the windows were
sought boca- student$ had repeatedly
removed Nfety ban which prevenl the
floor· tc&gt;&lt;el1ing windows &amp;om pivoting
completely open.
It's common lor students to remove the
bars to let alr In , Hunt said. He said U/ 8
had asked that the windows be replaced
"wwth windows that would not open Ill the
bottom, but would open at the top lor
ventilation."
The ulety- which prevents the win -dows &amp;om opening and which Is aloo said
to cushion contact with the window
ellegedJy had been removed from the
window at the _,. ollast week's ecd·

dent.
Hunt told the ~-II bas been decided
IInce ihe ~~ to alter the Afdy ban
uoed at the windows. Now oak planks 8
1ndws hlah and 2 Inches .thick wll be
balled In Iront ol tha windows 40 Inches

from the floor , he said. Previously, a
4·1nc:h round oak ber was saewed into
brackets 34 Inches from' the floor.
The ~..,. also quoted Hunt u saying
Jhe Unl..-y has already spent about
$10,000 ro:plactng windows In dor·
mltories which have not withstood
hallway f-*&gt;aH gomes or careening pool
balls. Hunt said the one-quarter ~nch ·
thick plo glass 1"&lt;!ows were designed
"for wind reslslance but not for Impact."
Dean H . Fredeticks, director ol the
phyfical plant, said the Unlvenlty hu
used Lexon plastic to replace Droken win dows bocauw the plutlc
breakage .
Fredericks also said the Univenlly ~
made I a practice to replace largt broken
windows with two or three smaller ones
which are , themselves, e . - to replace.

r-

AI comments about the lltuation In the
preu were unoffic.lal , University
spokesperoons cautioned. Offk:lal reports
are being compiled for study by President
Robert L. Ketter by such agmda as
Malnb!nancc and Public Safety.
Earter In the week. ~nons for
both the Ellicott Complex archhct and
the St.otc DormHooy Authority contended
that the design ol the building was not at
faul In the ecdclent.

Senate stalls -stand on cuts,
reaffirms skills requirement
...-ng or • peri&gt;aps, a spocial meellng
.tier the spring break.
Elocwhere, the Scoate reaffirmed Is
.-..olution ol October 2, 1979'

"*"
and

rupee! to both th
writing
mathematical part ol the College Skills
l'f&lt;9am: that the..:Z:~t ol this
progrwn lo one ol
achlevtng
•otandard ol prolidalcy .. dew·
mined by pMOing a ~ cum a1
an~ le\lel or by paulng courMS
"tha docu.ment, Coflogo Sldllr

=-In

In DOnllldomg thlo motion the Senate
~ an arna&gt;clment to M
ad..........t by Pr"'- p - tiMe, chU·
man ol the o.na.l Edueallon Commit·
tae. The amendment -.1 thai ciN8s ol
the and tha COUfMS In quallon
ohould
~ by the General
Educallon ~ after
wllh the unlll ..t.lch offer tha prascrt&gt;ad
. - . . .. The ........sad rnolution ~

cledded to

--.uon

wlthoul~.

Norl Prolll Oog
U.SP0019
PAID
Bullalo. N.V
Penni! No. 311

SAIIIPU&gt;Bolnl HaD
RodloiHol
RehNnol Room 35
Holway- Room 17

0005
00095
0 .0147

0 007

0 .016
0003

Levine's Love Canal
book nears completion
U/8 sociologist Addne Levine, who
has spent hundreds ol hours with
residents of the Love Canal since 1978,
will ooon be completing a book on her
research findings .
AlreadY ollued contracu for publica·
tlon, Levine said she Is Wl1tlng the book
for an Intelligent but lay reader , and will
di5pense wtth "an:ane" terminology . She
Is hoping the text can be useful In
teaching a variety ol environment·
oriented courses.
Chapten will focus on the historical
background , a descriptive an61ysis olin·
tervlewl with resli!ents, and the major
organizations that formed to addrus tha
problems. The State's rdponae to the
lltuation wiD also be dlocusled.
UnHke natural disasters whleh strtU
quickly, Love Canal had a "long, In·
sidloul onoat" oo residents only slowly
came to realize the Impact ol the chemical
contaminants.

"losing control over their lives" and that
"home ," with aU the psychological and
physical security K implies, was no longer
a safe place.
Residents fen "let down " by govern·
ment because of a perceived Inadequacy
In the way K responded to the problem,
L~nereported . ~use of this, many
residents- even those who would nor·
maUy be conskie.red more conservative - remarked that they now under·
stand why sludents often reoort to
demonstrating for what they believe ln.

Swpeteed at rel-..ce
Still, levine said she was "surprised at
their reluc:lance" to blame their health
problems on the cache ol poDutants
burled there.
Some ol the older residents were con·
oemed about tha devaluation ol their property, and having no youngstcn to worry
about , preferred that a lid be kept on the
whole alfalt. Otliers, however, either
wanted to relocate until evldenc:e showed
their homes were safe, or fel they ohould
sa.y put until aD the facts wore ln.
levine Aid st. didnl "tanM any panic:
the residents , only fear. This wu large ly due to the realization that they were

herreMarCI&gt;.
Balda ~an "exciting wey to work
with students, Levine's Love Cinal
research has had a "ripppe effect" on student partldpents. Two dlsaer1atlons and

In

Credltto.tudnu
Levine gives much credK for the book

to eight graduate students and one ad·
vanced uncferwaduate who assisted her
in gathering data from some 60 families ,
and to work study students who organ·
ized the massive amount ol Information

:~ s~·s !i:, r.::'~~~'U;Bi.:i~
ty who offered axpertiso which faciltlated

these5 have evolved &amp;om H u wei as a
photo -Y· ln addition, students
presented , _ , . about the projec! at two
proftWional meetings, and one ol
Levine's students is teaching a related
courtc through Rachel Canon College.
Canal praents a
Although the
goldmine ol
activities in
• variety of disdp..... levine that,
to her knowledge,
Is the only one
wrltlng about H.

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Do
Some llories !IOU don't want lo cowr:
Tragic,
-ouch
• 1Nt
of
two students
plunging
lo
their
cluths

ftom an 8lh floor WindOw In Elicoll.
You hear I trumpeted ftom local radio.
"Push comes to shove" ooe locelstetion ·
had tlw coiooAI bed taste to report, You
- where It happened .. News-"""the·
Spot umeres pan Jlowly across the
broken glas. Sem.atlonal.
People gossip •bout it In haUs and cor·
ndors, speculating. meting out blame o n
the besis of the most fragmentary of hear·
say, innuendo, rumor.

"--? ·

People look for reuons. Why? How?
They look Jor reassurance, comfort,

ocapotgOats, even.
AI we can offer are cold facts :

Aa:orclin!l to ...,... from c....,...
Pubic s.f.ey olllcen, .. . . . , _ . . -..
telephone bill began ""' cyde ol that led to the tr.gtc d..cho ...tv Tuadav

momlng of MichMI A. 1\kCienclon, 21.
lind Mercy B. Ford, 21, cleelloalhe Erie
County medlcal examiner has termed
"accidental. •

The ~ment culminated In the
plu"ll" of McClendon, a junior student,
and Ford. a sophomore. &amp;om an eighth·
story window In Building 4 of Fargo
Quad In the Ellicott Complex at about
I :20 a .m. Tuesday. The two landed on
the second-level stone terrace below.
According to the me&lt;lical examiner,
McClendon died of head injuries and
massive damage to Internal organs and
'Ford of severe bleeding &amp;om a lacerated
heari.

a-

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

up tlw flghland got Ford ou1 of the room
and down the hal into an clevlltor.
The two men _,., In tlw elevator
10 tlw f.,.. ol the young men: adding, when, Griffin reports, Geter rushed In
"The Uniwrslly .. deeply grieved by their wah a fire Cldlngulsher which she aimed
tragic dalho at Ford, who then jumped toward her.
Lee Grtllln. dtr.ctor of Public Safety. McClendon' grabbed Ford and tried to get
Mid the teln of events began late Mon- him back onto tlw elevator but the two
day when Ford , who raicled In lehiNin men los! their balance and plurtg8d
Hall, vl•lled his girlfriend , lioa through the plate glass window Ill !hot end
Washington. In her room on the eighth of the hall .
floor 'Ol Fargo. Carol Harrison and
Brenda V. Geter. also siudents, were Stoodeoobt ..W, tiW - •
preoent. Reportedly, Washington and
Among the students who rushed to the
Geter began arguing over tlw payment of Sa!ne were four who had recently corn·
a phooe biD and Ford Interceded on pleted an on-campus emet!jet'CY_ medical
behalf of Washington and slapped Geter. technician training course: Douglas Floc·
McOendon, who was also visiting a care. O.vid Hoffman , Wabr Gordon
girlfriend In Fargo. at that point arrived In and Louis Kohl. They Immediately began
the room to meet FOI'd. The two men to apply emergency medical treat.m ent
were friends. McClendon tried to break
,' - 1, - . t

U/B

~

T.....S.V -.:1

11abert L. ~

-'Y

of sympathy

c•----

•--T. . .

FEB. 28, 1980
VOL. 11 e NO. 21

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BU FFALO

Wharton
asks for
·'time'

State University has two fundamental
·
lues w!th Governor Carey's budget
recommendations for the fiSCal 11"81
beginning April I , ChanceDor Clifton
Wharton told the )Oint Senate Committee
on Finance and the Assembly Ways and
Mans Cornmlttee during heari~ held
1n Al&gt;any Monday·
1. The budget does not suffick!ntly
recognize the cumu la~ve eff cts of reduc·
tlQJis already absorbed by SUNY over the
p85l five years
2 The proposed new reductions are
placed In a tune frame that makes them
lttlpOS$ible to Implement Without serious
and far-reaching dlslocations withon the
State Unoverolty syst m
For the p.. five years, Wharlon saJd .
SUNYs non -hosptlal campuses have loot
1,480 positions while hospital personnel
hav oncreased by 1,858. Thus. he said.
whole SUNYsroQI work force Is up , posi·
lion associated with increasing student
enrollments have decreased
The
bulk
of
the
recent
reducti:ons ,Wharton· reported . were
ailoQted to support services. suppl
and equipment
ot unexpectedly.
SUNY now lace. a mountmg "hidden
debt," resulting "In both fiScal and pro~amma.tal d4rterio&lt;ation • MaintenanGC
s;talls arc below requ.- d standards.
leadmt to aoceiftat d impalrm&lt;tnt of
These steffs have continued 10
decline. Whatton compiall'led, even
while million of square I 1ol new space
have been added

EAI•I...,.t obeoa...c:-cc
,Much of the equipment pwchased dur'
1ng t
boom building years of the 1960s
ll cnt!""9 obooletcence at the same
bme Rop!Kement costs winch have to
be nwt owr t1w cornmt II"MS amoun110
hundreds of millions ol dollars
The conbnuor&gt;ll erOSion In support
ar .u h80 had consequencti ., ln:MrUC·
t.ionel area . Wharton went ·on
Student/ faculty ratlol haw deteriorated
And ~
, _ pcnonrwl reduc
lions Qllnol help but - lniO the qu.tlty
lhaJ10 h..-d (0 INIU&gt;!Ml ."
Fl
,
Chancelor noc.ed, I
II

"""~ t

111

con

Add

,

hot Mid . mUJI be taken Into
In vieiWI!I

budvet cu

~ pooa&gt;on

cu
..... anodMr '2200 )Obi. Wharton S4Jd
T ' - are cuts whoth I ha to be nwt
"",_.........,t layolf ol facuky end
me ha
10
c:k....s or
and ac.adcm•c programs
r uc:ed Of ~ted

••ff

on

•

'ltudent

Johnstone of Bull State (above) and Somlt
of U/ B (top right) told Auemblyman Hoyt
the same tl\lat: cuts mean 1oM of quality.

SUNY unit heads all tell
the same story: 'we'll be hurt'
ByJov&lt;:eB~
~5101

It was like a broken record .
Fnt came the president of Eric Corn·
munlty College, then U/ B's ExecutiVe
Voce Praldent Al&gt;crt Sornil and, finally ,
Bruce Johnotonc, Buffalo Stat 's new
leader. They mav have used different
words but the
ol their statements
was umJ1ar. If SUNY• budget is not .
rntor d , per10nnel cur. wil ensue, pro·
gJam wiD be hun (If not dropped
ahO!I«&lt;I&gt;crl . and stud nts
be adverse·
ly Jfecred by a cull&gt;eck in scrvlcd
Student r pr-ntath&lt; ftom U! B and
Buffalo Su who folowed the trio real
fwmed wllat
pr ioutly said and
~OICed ilrong oppc&gt;~~~IOn to the pruned ·
b«.k bud!lott Dwo for UUP Bu
Center Chap&lt; Pmodenr B Akn
. The tc
-•
t t
Offtce

.-nee

Building at 67 Court Street at an Informal
hearing called by Assemblyman Wiltaam
Hoyt. Assemblyman John Sheffer and
Senator Dale Volker were also there 10
hear the tesllmony Governor Carey,
who by coincidence had been -..:heduled
to visit Buffalo Fnday. was In voted to at·
lflld. bur dccbned. )Bad weather kept
Carey ftom making tha trip anyway.)
Before the heads of the SUNY uruts
poke, Sheffer read a terse stat ment at·
taclung the budget He accused the
Governor of not having a "deliberate,
cornpr henJive policy on higher educe· •
tlon and said the curTent budget Is a
resuh of d . But even .with a defuutJve plan
In plac.e, Sheffer said , "lOme dcgr ol
retrenchment" would 11 occur Hlo sug
gestJOn- tha ..,.,. one endorsed by
Pre. nt K ner-lo dou&gt;g one or inorc
ng
"matll!n.r e~~mpuses tnllead ol
cuts I~ er hrough and bleed the ntke

,
multi-campus syotem .

It had .U beta ..W befon
Sornit told the Stat representatives
nothing that hadn't been .conVCII"d by the
President earlier to various !IJOUps on
campus about the ramlfocations of tlw
budget . When Hoyt asked how cu
.would be made . Somlt responded that

~~uca~ ~~ ..~

to "':~ ~
programmatic need of
Afterwards. Hoyt, a former high school
teacher. warned that cuts made ac:·
cording tQ "a strict response to enroll·
men!" would be a "dlsMter "
Although Somlt ceponed that bmveen
270 and 280 lines would be eltm11'14ted If
t
cun nt budvet m ets pproval. h
declined to grvc the number of "warm
bodies" who would
the.- )obi La

t~rvemty."

·---·-9,. &amp;.1

�February 28, 1980

J
• Dorm TI'!JI!Cly

Hare urges Incentives to spur

and~ f8UIIdlllllon .

faculty Interest in General Education

..__ ........

Unfortunat.ly, !heir

etrom

were in

vllin. Bolh I/OUII!I men - e rushed to
MIIIMd Fillmore Suburban Hoopbl
where medical O'elloll tried to revive vital
life sigJ\S. Bolh were dedered dead short·
ly alter 2 e .m
:
Public Sefety officas end the emergetl·
cy medical Cl'CW5 who responded to the
caD praised che four SUJdent EMTs. Grif·
lin said they did "a lenWllc job in a very
difficult situation."
Statements &amp;om wttnesses of the lncl·
dent. most of them friends of Food and
~. were taken by Public Safety
ofllcero on Tuetdey. The two young men
were -u.known end -U-IIked, Griffin
noted; end added that ft was esp«&lt;aaly
lriiQic that McClendon, who saved as en
RA on che fourth floor ol Wilkeson, met
hls deeih whll£ trying to eel as a
-~maker . "

The Incident is .un under investigation
by several stat agencies, President Ket·
let aid . Widely-published repom that a
guenl reU In f'i-ont of che window ·was
missing at the time of the eccident ere
among the detaUs being examined.
Bolh young men were footbaU players.
McClendon had played last season as a
running back for the Niagara Falls Spar·
lllns. a semi-professional fOOiball team
Ford was a reserve running back two
seasons ago with the U/ B Bulls . McClen·
don was reportedly attempting to recruit
Food lor the Spartan team lor the upcom·
lng season
A native of Niagara FaDs. McClendon
was majoring In· business administration .
He was a member of the Black Student
Union here and had done work at
WBFO,
Mc:Cimdon is survived by his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. William McClendon of
Niagara Falls, three brQihen and a sister.
He was the nephew ol Rose Sconm, a
member of the U/ B Council.
Funeral services w1U be held Friday at 1
p .m . at St. John'• AME Church in
Niagara Falls.
'ford Is survived by his parents, l.C.
Food and Mrs. Echel Cole. both of Buf·
falo , three sislers, a brother and two
children .
- He was a graduate of East High School
In Buffalo, where he won many trophies
lor lootbaU, bMketbaD and track.
Funeral serviCes for Ford had not been
llnaliled by Repotkr deadline.

Fulbright scholars
will convene here
The lntcr~Uw English l.arQuage In·
ldtute end U!B ~ been Mlected as
110111 of a opeclal Futwlght pre-academic
tn11n1ng Pf'O!IIIIIm which wiD begin In late

You can ·exhort laeully members ell
you want lo obout lis pbilooaphical lrn·
portance, but che propoted U/b General
Education ~ won't reaDy lake off
until "meaningful Incentives" are created.
" Individual lacuhy members and
academic units mull perceive the reform
as in their own Interests," Dr. Peter H .
Hare, chair of che Standing Committee
on General Education, told President
Robert L. Ketter In a recent memo.
"Ahhough patticiplltion In General
Education surely w1U be found rewarding

in itself."' Hare went on , ..ex.trinsk
rewards are needed as weU."
On the basis of statements by the Presi·
dent and ouggestions received from ad·
ministretors, faculty and students in Inter·
Ylews .end ourveys conducted last year ,
Here asked Ketter to endorse the loUow·
· Jng incentives which w1U make "a first-rate
General Education Program" possible
here:
I. Create In the ofllce of the DUE
Dun a opeclal pool of matt money to
be clilatrlbuted to those who make the

moat olgnlflcant contribution• to
General Education. A healthy propor·
lion of whet Is presetltly used to reward
Universlty·wtde service should be used
for this purpose, Hare propooed . "This
Incentive hu ~I Importance in light
of the fact
~the succus of the General
Education Pfogram depends aucially on
participation by che University's most
senior facuky," he ald . " Although H is
also imporlllnl that contributions to
General Education be weighed heavUy In
che promotion of faculty," he went on , on
behalf of the commtttee, "K must t&gt;e
acknowledged that a large proportion of
faculty have reached the top of the
academic ladder and cannot be pro·
moted further . A way must be found to

motivate facully of luD rank as -n as
fllculty of ~ r...W. We believe that
euen modest dlsaetionary salary Increases. ~ publicly identified with General

Education and given consistently over a
period of yean, can do mu~ to en·
cout11QC outStanding contribulior)s by
senior faculty. Furthermore. if senior
facufty become enthusiastic pertidpents
·In the General Education Program. they
will naturaUy inlluei&gt;ce. the Interests of
their less senior colle~ues."
2. Introduce opecial teaching ......do
In General Education. "It would be
helpful to recognize publicly thll' per·
ticular sort of teaching as distinct &amp;om
other kinds of good undergraduate or
graduate teaching," Here argued. "Public
praise is a potent motivating force . Not
only classroom performance but also the
preparation of new courses and program
development should be publicly
recognized."
3. ArrMtle fo&lt; achollll'-teachen and
atudeats to meet at retreats to clloa.General Education programming. In
the Chairman's Ylew, "Such conferences
w1U lead not only to development of ex·
citing counes but to the creation of an
de corps amona those Interested In
General Education . This eaprll will lead
faculty to work on General Education
above end l;&gt;eyond the caD of what they
regard as thetr educational duty. •
4 . A.emble • team to oeek atemal
lunda ... Gaoeral Education ~
ment. Other univenltles (e .g. Columbia)
have recently been funded generously for
•uch development . "There is no reason
why SUNY/ Buffalo cannot compete sue·
ceoslully for funds ." Here said .
,
5. Create a pool in the DUE Dun'•
ollie. to wblch incllvlduafo c:oWcl apply
for apeclaf General ~n course ·

~--·Such funds could be
used Cor clerical support, audiovisual
aids, travel to other unillenllles active in
General education, etc.., the Incentive
proposal states.
'
•

6. ~........,...toepplyg

grants (e.g. SUNY .teiiChlng
grants) to-t. . .
1n General EdueallbL In ~ Where--a

......,.......,__t

grant Is awarded lor """"' during the
regular academic year, H.,. SllggeSis the
Administration should compensate the
Instructor's department for temporary
loss of faculty .
7 ' Set . . . . of JIUIIIIIen of c:ouna
and numbers of ltlldeala In General
Education lor partlcalar Feculties.
Balance in General Education offerings Is
crucial to the success of the program,
Here said. "The purpose of the program
w1U be defeated if some Faculties make
negligible contributions. It is lmporlllnt
that your office and the olficeo of the Vice
Presidents strongly encourage certain
levels of perticipetion ." he told Ketter.
"This level may appropriately very &amp;om
Facufty to Facuhy, but oertaln expecta·
lions should be made clear."
8. Take....,·acxoamcontrtbudonoto
General ~ ·In faculty promodon c:.a. Although the General Educa·
lion Committee does not believe that
untenured faculty should be expected to
shoulder a heavy tlurden In teaching
General Education counes, H does
befteve that if such teaching Is done and
done weU by junior faculty, H should ~
clearly recognized and rewarded . Also ,
when tenured ass&lt;X:iate professors come
up for promotion to fuU rank, the com·
mlllee feels contributions to General
Education should be a distinct pert of tlje
section of the dossier that concerns
teaching.

3 students to tour Switzerlartd-= with&lt;R·o we :_::-. ·,
Three U!B students will be touring
Switzerland this oummer.
Deborah Sue Weiss. a Corel Springs.
Florida, graduate student; John Cloer,
an undergraduate from Charlotte , N.C ..
and Farley B. Pearce, a graduate music
student from Raliegh , wiU join U/ B's resi·
dent R~ Quartet on a one·month tour
of SWitzerland. They will perform
chamber music and solo recitals in
Trogen, a SlhaU town near Zurich . and in

neighboring communitia.

Cloer' wtli receive a bachelor of fine arts
degree in music here , this May. He at·

North~~~~· •'Cbarlo~{i,;;_(,~,j a t:...Ci;.;;g~~nt·

tended the University of
a1 Chapel Hdl &amp;om 1975 to 1976.
Frum 1972 to 1975. Cloer was prln·
cipal cellist with the Youth Symphony of
the Carolinas. He was section cellist whh
the C harlotle Symphony Orchestra &amp;om
1974 to 197S.
He plans to continue studying with
U/ B's Rowe Quartet and to work on a
master's degree In performance.
Pearce wiD receive a master of flne arts
degree in music this May from U/B. He
did.his undergraduate work here and at
the Univenftv of North Carolina at

ship at U/B from 1978 to 1980 and a
U/B Music Department Scholarship for
1976·78.
A member of the Charlotte Symphony
Orcheotra between 1974 and 1976. Mr.
Pearce, 23 has also been principal cellist
with the UNCC Chamber Orcheotra and
tl / B's Phllharmonia.
Ms. Weiss received her bachelor of fine
arts degree In music here , and expects to
earn her master's degree this May.
Her honors Include a Rawe Quartet
String Student Scholanhlp for 1978-80.

Augull .

Tie-line hours
to be curtalled

D

Telephone tie· hM service wiD be cur·
lllll£d on weekends and evenings effec·
live March I , E W. Doly has announced .
U/ B's Vice Ptesldent for Finance and
~ s.aid Inter-ely tie-line - ·
olce would be availabl« only between the
houn of 8·30 a .m. and 5.30 p .m . Mon·
day through Friday, starting In March At
ocher tlrMt, long~is1Ance toll drcuits
mull be uoed
In a !Mrno to U/ B officials, l&gt;oty an·
nounced that the Sill OIJ'a of General
Services Is now rewfng Its b4lling proeedur
ln ead of dwg!ng SUNY units
a flat rate. OGS · soon be charging in·

~~:=:r·~:.::e:~
Doly aid tJaffoc pellemslnclate U!B's
c:harga would - rapidly urider tho . . billing system unlus "we do
-.hlnQ"- namely, rellrlct IW· Iine use.

-

Man

bites dog

For Arta and Ldten p r o f - to c:omm nt on IOdal problems Is quHe
c:ommon. B I when • ooda~ aclence profaaor retodo poetry, that'• n...,.l
Madeleine Nathlot, profaaor of ftngul tlca and anthropology and director
of the C...ter lor Studleo of Cultural Tranamlsaloo, q hown r~dlng Flltnch
poetry at the Albrlght·J&lt;nox An Gallery In a program dedicated to Sonlo
Ddo)lr&gt;O)I'• World: Po..U In the To.oentlft. Joan Calltln Mlped With the
Englkh tranalatlon.
.

�Fet.n..Y 28, 1980

• Wlwtop

..,__Loo&amp;.ll

enrollments trrnpecllve' of long -range
tnnds. Lower end middle income

famila wil ...tier most, the Chancellor
predicted, as SUNY reduces access to
education.

·
Wharton granted that tl)ese may well
be the directlonJ that th&lt;r State wants its
public higher ed~ system to follow.
But, he said , such steps cannot and
should not be taken without thorough
planning and lengthy lead lime.

A tlareat
"Any oth&lt;rr course not only threatens
the basic qualHy of the educational pcoceu. H also depreciates the tremendous
Investment that the people hove In their
public university.
"We are gravely concerned that the
budget recommendations wUI unlnlen·
tlonaUy but Irrevocably push us In that

direction .·
HI$ concerns are not suddenly atrived
at , Wharton said . As long as two years
ago he identified fo ur major initiative s to
help mainta in or increa"' acade mic
resources or generate non -tax dollar support lor the system .
These initiatives. he enumerated , ··a re
in the areas of research . international
programs. public service a nd private
fund -raising. They are not simply reac- .

tions to fiscal constraint; they are steps
that we, as a major public university. wilh
magnlftce:nt resources in penonnel and
knowledge. should be taking. anyway.
Significant progress 15 being made in each
of these areas."
Five-year p lan
In addHion , said the Chancellor. he 15
issuing a call for immediate deve lopment
of a ft ve -year ~ NY- wide plan under
which "each ca mpus will reassess a nd
reorder Hs program priorities In the light
of its percetved mbsion ." The pla n will
consider research. silt M d , quality.
Current enrollment levels and future

projections make it clear. Wharto n
reported to the legislators, that there will
be a contin uing strong de mand for entry
into SUNY . Despite pcojected declines in
college-age students. "S UNY's high
quality and low cost educational offerings
will continue to be attractlve."
The aitical qu estion. h&lt;r said, "IS
whether the State will be able or willing to
provide the necessary flnanctalsupport . If

insufficien t resources are available.

Sea. urchins offer clues to human ills
By MUll Beth Spina
E.daonol- -Sew

The round . colorful shells of "'a urchins are often valu d as collectibles by
beach -gou&gt;jl tourists
But
eggs of th&lt;r sea creatur s ire of
mo&lt;emterHI to U/ 8 scientists Research ~rs

hete

v~

r actions ~Nhkh OCCUT in

th&lt;r
upon fertlhzanon m•y pcovlde
clu to maWunctions whiCh contlibut to
human medlc.J problems
One r arch J&gt;rOIOd involving th&lt;r urchin eggo focutn on hyabn. a ceA surface
protein Re aH&lt;I upon f&lt;'11rllzation . th&lt;r
pcoteln pcOVId
direction to th em·
bryonlc ce - oha~ and organizing
th&lt;rm to perform .op«t!IC funcllom
Cen rface protein
mtlar to hyahn .
I
Dr Robert ummers are
Wved to pmOflTI compar.blo functions

.. u a·
m hu~n

Sumrnft'l. an at5004t

pcol- ol anatomical saencn. says
hval n·, role -s a -ce:m nt "' holdu-.g
togetlwf th&lt;r lis ol th&lt;r embryoniC lea urchm ,. no1 w N un&lt;Hnlood But n Is
that 1 eels ol th&lt;r embryo f
~ rduang to od
to each ~
normally. "'hen calcium r mowd from
th&lt;r.l'ro&lt;M Wh&lt;rn K's rein ·
duced

k"""''"

... .,.....

c.- .. dwac--.1.., ........
Cancer

JZed sea urchin eggs. providing us with

.

dua to mechanisms of human protein
malfunction ... Summers adds.

U/ 8 Associate ProfesSO&lt; Dr Herbert
Sdluel and hi$ wife . Regtna . a research

associate . are studying other reactions
which occur at fertilization and which
may pLay a role in spontaneous abortion
and infertility In humans

••Bf
,......_.
Too

iapn-m un

caUM

.

" During normal fertUization only one
sperm enters the egg.- explains Dr
Sdluel "Th&lt;r fertilized eggs of sea urchins
or thooe of olh&lt;rr species . includmg
humans . ar
protected by defense
rnecMn ms which prevent polyipenny.
or oddttlonal _ . , from entering Wh&lt;rn polyspermy occurs. developnwnt abnormal end the embryo even·
tually dtn
"lfo known that about 20 per cent of
opontaneous abortions in humans In th&lt;r
firll trimester of ~nancy occur because
of poly permy ,' he adds This
" rtpr-nts a slgnillant problem In
humatl lnferttlity - By leami"'l mor
about rnecMn ms which pc vent tbe
plwnom«non . th&lt;r Schuelo hopor to find
du to posolble COUMS of lnf
y as
wen .. to how fertaty can be prevented

l•prop« _ . _ ... tT-bl•·
eoae. too
Oth&lt;rs ructions believed to occur at
f
which .Dow eels of th&lt;r sea urchin to ore and rNaM lliOCRilons have
tmpbcatrons In oth&lt;rr human d
Many
1 may be knkt.d eH
lo
~ producwd stort.d or me.-1
• says Dr Schud - among
hem
and Tay-Sechs DIMasc

thing gntn
from the N11

_ , . $160 .000
Sc...,.,. foundation lor

lOla

their projects. the U/ 8 researchers fertilize the eggs In therr laboratory. drawing
eggs and sperm from hundreds of sea ur·
chins Each female relea"" from five to
20 mlllion eggs per draw and each male.
one miltion minion sperm

Whal'o II got to do with humaao?
To thooe who consider sea urchin egg
studies far removed from clinical human

medicine . Sdluel is quic!&lt; to point out
that th&lt;r sludy of marine l~e as ~ may
re.late to people is not a new concept
The M arine Biology Laboratory at Woods

Hole, Mass.. was ntablished nearly a
century ago to encourage study of fun damental life proceues which are more
easily observed In sea antmals

"The recent success In achieving
human fertilization outside lh&lt;r female's
body ltest tube babies) Is uklmately baH&lt;!
upon fundamental b;ologlcAI re arch on
sea urchins.· Sdluel a dds. Development
of d rugs to treat leukemia and other
human cancers Is anoth&lt;rr outgrowth of
basic researc.h on division mechanisms of
lertiflled sea urchin eggs. h&lt;r says
The Sdluels, Dr Summers and
numerous U/ 8 gradual studen have
joined ~nflsls from all owr th&lt;r world at
Woods Hole to WO&lt;!c on projects focu ng
on marlneltf
lntere llngly. th&lt;r first eggs to be
observ d mlc:rooc:opically during ferttllza·
lior1 wer-e those of .._., urchrn Thet w
100 yean ago

Today. fertll:ed eggs of th&lt;r sea
ere lu
are continuing to play an lm·
portont role in sclm
' diortJ to learn
mor&lt;r llbout factors which may cauN or
contribut to human dlwases

SUNY could contloue at its pcojected size
only at lh&lt;r expense o f quaUty. The a hernative Is to red uce tota l enrollnwnt while
trying to maintain o r improve qualHy.

Time needed
"If the cu rre nt proposed reductions are
the harbinger of future rnource reductions. the n we should be allowed lime to
plan for a new SUNY configuration and
not be presented with arbitrary personnel
ceilings and configurations and financial
cuts. It Is this type of approach that wUI
best serve the people of New York."
If SUNY Is to be reduced, Wharton
pleaded, "H should be In size only. and
not In quality. Preliminary comment from
th&lt;r S UNY campuses are strongly In favor
of maintaining quality wUh a smaller sile ,
if the State resources are noc adequate.
AU, however, have questioned the
wisdom of starving the one State sector
which contributes more to the State and
th&lt;r Individual than It costs.·
The resource Issue Is largely a public
policy q Uestion , he said . "How high a
pciorrty Is to be given to public higher
education In the allocation o f S tate
dollars?"

2 from U / 8 on
Kennedy panel
Two U/ 8 polltlc;al sdentistl, Drs.
W m Mishler and Mullyn Hoskin ,
wer-e recently named co-chairmen of en
Issues development commltt
for th&lt;r l
Kenned y pcaldentiel campaign
Thomu Fricano, frio Cou nty caml*gn' coor~lnator for Kennedy, sold tha
two Unovenliy faculty would
raponttlble for r......-chlng how such matt..-. ..
enervy, education, health ewe, women's
tuua. programs for th&lt;r elderly and the
draft lmpad on W em New York.
Kennedy, who fated slightly -..- In .
New Hllmpohlre than the polo pr..t!Nd,
says he's In the race to lllay.

�F.t&gt;ruary 28, 1980

The Zimbabwe elections: Is Britain trying
to 'rig' them? Will· war follow? Or what?
"'* Tlma) Lon-'
"""''/rom Rltodetlo

MlchMis, had ol U/B's Council on International Studies contended.
"I hear ZANU saying;'" Michaels went
poeheNion in Britain. bolh lntide and
on. thet "WZANU wins, the people have
oullick 1M Gooemma~t.
spoken: but If ZANU Iota, the fight will
Wllh 1M eledlon of a black majorlly
go on, ~ people have not spoken."
If the South Africans move for
Goooemment /or the colony lett than a
- ' : a""'J', much of 1M euphoria that
Muzorewa and ZANU calls In "the
Cubans." Michaels said, "God help
of
occompanled the c:aae·tn - here leu loll year hat gluen woy to
us." A U.S .-Soviet confrontation could
........., becctuc of reporU of uoter In·
result.
tlmldallon and violence. There are grow- ·
The predominantly black African au·
lng femo that wh.at had ~en regarded as
die nee hooted derisively.
a cf9Jiomatic 'triumph might tum into
Jeen also predominated when
Michaels "as an American and a Jew"
~"(/-can jutt pun r off, 1'11 ~one of disputed claims ol lsraeM coDuslon with
1M mott tmpottom things Britoln hat
the Rhodesian wh~e regime against black
achieved in yecn," tt: British diplomat
freedom lfghteB, an accusation that had
tQld pr~yotely the oilier day. "But God · been levied In a fUm shown at the top of
the evening.
he~ ut if""' can't; · ••
"I haven't oeen any evidence of such
Get ready 10 call on God!
lsraeb lnvolvemeot." Michaels said with
The wont possl&gt;le outcome ol the
heat, "but I did see Russlan weapons beZlmbabwean eloctiont, going on today ing carried In the film by ZANU
guerrillas.•
and tomorrow, wouldn't swprise any o1
~ ~ who took part in lntemaIsrael bought 11 helicopters from BeD
tlonel Colege's "Zimbabwe Update" in
Aerospace right here In Western New
Red Jacket Quad at Ellicott friday .
York and then sold them to the lan Smith
AnciTew Mthetwa, · North American regime in Sol! · Africa, charged a
dis1rict -=retary lor the Zimbabwean
member of the a
. He was reinlorAfrican Nallonel Union (ZANU) , aocuoed dng an argument"'tiy ZANU's Mthetwa
the Bntish goYftnment of attempting to
that "unbiaoed sowca document 1Jra£h
rig tha outcome in favor of what he
involvement with South Africa ."
branded as a bt.:k puppet regime. head·
As to Michaels' fears of a ''race war" In
ed by Bishop Abel T. MUZIOI'eWa..
Zimbabwe, Mthetwa shrugged them off
. ZANU and ZAPU. another "freedom
by claiming "U's not that simple. The
lighter" organization which joined In the
liberation factions enjoy some white supguerrilla battle -"'"' while minority Nle
pot1 even though o/)Clf'~Mid made that
in ~ I&lt;&gt;nne British Colony ol Rhodesia.
almost Impossible. And ." he continued,
have egreed to a "cose ln." Mthetwa
"Muzorewa Is as black as I am. but walks
clarillecl, not a peace. He warned that U wtth lan Smith."
this week's elections are not carried out
Anally. Mthetwa accused ZAPU (led
"democratically" In ZANU's view. the
by anolhcr black actMst, Joshua N'*&gt;mol
lighllor freedom will go on .
ol being the "real" Soviet puppet In . the
He Implied that "democratic" means a
Rhodesian show.
ZANU vk:lory.
Prof. Baker also disagreed strongly
wfth Michaels' allegations of communist
BdtWo .....................
inOuence. The same thing has been said
Prof. Norman Balcer ol the U/ B about every AlricaJt bration moveHlslory Department disagreed with
ment, Baker recaDed . But In most cases,
c:ha.- ol British meddling. Why would that hasn't proved to ba the case.
the lintish want to go through such an
"In a war." said Baker. "you look lor
elaborate charade (a new constitution , a
help anywhere you can get ft . If there Is
&lt;UM·Iirc and elections) , If their Intention
communist inOuence, H's because the
1s to " rig" the procno? he dftnlll\ded. ·u Wes1. h. lned up behind thoM whom
~ wanted MW~C&gt;re.wa ." Baker said ,
the liberation 9JOUps are llnlggling
"they had him before the talks."
and Britain don't have
against. The
[Muzorewa was prime mlnist:u of a white·
the best of recards In this regard ."
dominated , bt.:k " majority" g!)Wmmenl
wlrich held- olllce before the ceue-llre.J
and
aDIIO!If!d "insubed" Prof.
No, said Baker, any threat to free elecMichaels'
accusations
tions Is the work of white South Africa.
Chdungu . "The U.S . can make SALT U
That's~ nation with the most to lear.
agreements with the U.S .S .R .. and can
Dr. Simeon W Chllungu, a native of
grant trade concessions ta Communist
Kenya who Is on the Anthropology faculChina, but Independent African states
ty al Buffalo Sea•. warned that even a
apparently can't do the same." he
pe~ul outcome in this .....,.s declions
responded wiih annoyance .
won't mean peace in Southern Africa.
"Frankly speaking." he continued, the
South Africa and Namibia have to be · bt.:ks of the former Portugueoe colonies
liberated "The stNggle won't ttop With
of Angola and Mozambique would not be
the election ol Robert Mugabe," ZANU's
independent today ~ not for Cuba and
charismatic luder, In Zimbabwe ,
the socialist countries."
Chllungu said .
Lesa anyone mlslnt rp&lt;et., he ailded
qulc:ldy thai he was once "thrown oul ol
tha Soviet Union" because he doan't
" Many people believe a ZANU victory
agree With their policies.
means a takeover by an organization
dedUted 10 eot.bllonlng an author1tarlan
· rm oony." said MichMis. otlcking ta
Menoot sta With no place lor whltes or
h guns In the lace of a peppering of
the MUJIDI'ewa lactoon," Dr. Albett
hostile questions. Sorry that he remained
unconvlnced, he meant.
(Speclal 10 1M Nelli y

don, Fe. 21- The

It ~ fnaeotlng dlsaat and op-

an

.

u_s_

·-ltecl

......... ......._.?

It

" " " " ' - al , _ .......
HARRY J.ACKS0H
,...-/ Ullor ..

I Mli!EJIT T

.o.w

""'"" -

Ui~CA

a.-a Ito doe 50a

Earlier, Mthetwa ol!ered background
on ~ Zimbabwe-Rhodesia tltualion.
British colonial rule in Rhodesia began to
be quntioned In the 50s and eady 60s,
he recalled In the latter 60s, the white
Rhodulan government " illegally"
deelar d lndependen« : the Brltioh .
bowed out meekly, becauoe ~ didn~

"*

rwo
conuol. .Blacks organizltd·
themoelves -in11 the "illtgal" lan Smith
regunc

At lirtt, ZANU and ZAPU forces ....,.
no matdl lor the whiM Rhod«Mn mny
whk:h, M
charged, was oupplied
Wllh NATO -apons through Portugal
When ~ PorlujjueM left Mooamblq..,.
and Angola, though , the tick tumed.. 1'n.
Smith go.wnmenl by the mld -1970. wao

spending a mta1on doUan a day to silly in
olllce. By 1978, "freedom flghtas." aid·
ed by ~ newly Independent neighbors,
controlled two-thirds of the nation: Smltb
had only the cities. The economy was In
a shambles: Smith was on the run .
Then, said Mthetwa, the_Bntish decid·
ed to "act to protect their property." They
would recognize Mworewa .,. head of a
""majority" government, he went on, but
the Pattlotic Front. an allionce between
ZANU and ZAPU, was to·be excluded .
When Nigeria and Tanzanla threaten·
ed to have Britain expelled from the
British Commonwealth, Mthetwa noted ,
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
capitulated to "free elections." The socalled Westminster Agreements resulting

from negotiations among all concerned

parties established a 100-seat national
assembly. Whites were given 20 "reserved" places; their elections held earlier this
month resuked in the election "of lan
Smith and 19 others." as Mthetwa put H.
Mthetwa said the British have tried
repeatedly to provoke ZANU into walkIng away from participation in the
democratic process and resuming the
war. That would assure the former colonial mutus of continued control. he
said. For. the British "know" that a really
free election wfth ZANU participation
means a victory lor the Mugabc forces .

Chlqa ........ doe Brttltlh
Mthetwa charged that:
eMugabe was kept out of the country
until well Into the election campaign:
eZANU wasn't allowed 1o print campaign literature in the country, and was
slapped with a heavy tax when it tried to

fly

SOR)e in:
e19,000 Patriotic Front 6-eedom
hghters have pe~lly co,. Into
assembly areas (where they're guarded
by 1200 Commonwealth !rooJ&gt;$1, while

South African troops have sealed off the
border~ to· nations frlen4ly 10 the black
cause: and
e The British and South Ahlcans (with
Israeli hq,) have tmlned 28,000 "auxIliaries." who pretend to be freedom
fighters . These forces tenortze the COCO·
tryside. blowing up churches, and causing other problems for which ZANU is
blamed, Mthetwa said.
The British governor h. the power to
suspend the election process in areas
where there is "intimidation." Alleged
Mthetwa, Bntain's making ......, there is
trouble where ZANU Is lllrong.
Reports by the Organization lor African
Unity bear all.thls out, he contended .
The New Yon Tlma reports that
several African nations have expressed a
"a'isis in confidence" In ~ c:ondud of
the elections. So has Amnesty International.
They ...... .......
Sympathetic as he seemed to the black
African cause, U/B's Baker could not
agree with all of Mthetwa's broadbrushed picture.
"The British see ~ Westminster
A!Jft!OCnts as a lace-saving way out" of
a Rhodesian headache Which doesn't
serve their Interests, Baker said .
Mthetwa's scenario, moreover, endows
·~ British government with more skill
than ~·re entitled to."
Also, he retorted dryly, "I flnd it dilflcuk to believe that after 14 yeaR of warfare, losoes and rudle, ZANU and ZAPU
forces are just silting peacefully in the
staging areas with Angelle purity. It would
be .Upethuman of them K they weren't
trying In tome way to lnftuence the election , especially 'in the lace ol provocations. It would · be perfedly under'Stan- 1
dable, more realistic, il all sides admitted
to being actiVely engaged In the struggle ."

Reader lends support to
Women's Studies BA proposal
Editor.
I must voice my support of the
Women's Studies proposal to offer a
degree-granting program this laU pending
University approval. Ms. Buchnowski's
article in the Reporter (2/ 14/ 80)
"Wo men's Studies Wants to Offer B.A .
Degree PrOgram" served as the Impetus
lor writ ing th is response . Ms .
Buchnowskl's presentation clarified the
benefits to both the University and the
proopecllve student with the passage of
the BA proposal.

I would like to congratulate the women
who worked on this proposal lor over
one year. Their efforts and dedication are
to ~ applauded! The engineering of the
proposal was quite a hefty task.
This proposal is vital and pertinent to
the lives of women . I urge those charged
with the responslbdity of evaluating the
proposal to see its lmmenoe validity and
importance and approve the B.A . pro·
posal as Is, wHhout altering it in any way.
Sllocerelp,
- Doeaa Kaaeeter

�~n open
It seems that our nation is
fast going to war. With or
without registration and the
draft, there Is a clear possibility
of many of our young people
being kUied in the Middle East.
And, this may happen without
a declaration of war by the
U.S. Congress.
tn ~ weeks. 'Nit h.w . - our fOYm\_·
........................... _
.. e

S400 . . - , loon
bon -

-

pto,.

10

P - . . linon&lt;c eg.,.

ol guerillo•. oend - • hugo

lao_....,
CMTI&lt;nlnl&lt;l

19Md20~olds

t h e - Str.... b&lt;gon
Uld lh&lt; ._.... d&lt;ek ol
AlthiiiQUNktousJiMa

NlbOn ~oliO

ww
W the Conwe.. once 911'1 as .., 1964
· 6 5 . - .. rnondoled&lt;cruaiWOonol duty?
' Will we enee • ww. once lllllin· bv a-=utrw
ftiaa?
)'OW'I men .00 W'OIIWn bt Mnl Wdo

w•
_.......,~---fiOIM't.rtv

u&lt;Mionooodond_..,.__
II
lho bqo ond ......._ dobode olllw Vld·m~~n W• . .? Or. d
do tts duty?

eon.--

of'64

Real

Th1o
. 1979-80. .... 1 0 o - l
df the ......... ol 1964 ...... ~
Johmon. running lor of8ce. • • "'puce un·

letter to Congress

.

w t l - - -lho SoW! Union
As In 1964. flw llnot ol SoW! .._ bftn· ohred to In to ),dtify Arnmcwl r«
~!On. Uhough no one c.n My wtth
ond ol ....
wil lh&lt; .._...... ol SoW! OC·
cupkd
«WWt ~the futLnw uw of
-~beyond m.tr ~...........

"""""""INc ..-

..

.-..Of

C~~~~&gt;Mite
In f.:t. a good use can b.- made for quu
lbe oppool1c conclusion .,.ybo the Unded

Quite the

for ... 10 C01M IOOQ Jw the efec·
WM' In ~ . . . of lhouMnds of

bOnlo-•

Amoncon- _,.

.........
Once-·

~

""''Inded ..

..,.._10conbd~ ...... ond

---...... oodoy. bv ocquioodng .. e be-

"' .....- liot.

eon.-- ...

lhO~blho-.ollho-

~ ...

w•

H-.y M. tllown . , _ namdy"' lh&lt;
\lidnem ww ea. tM wildom ol ihM eontllu·
...... ... -lho~­
aon ol our ww *nt.. P1ft1.*11 to a~
ol WM . .. to llwlll: IOCW and poliitic:-' 0'1111 . not
only · bul ....... th&lt;Unhd s..... ..

The--

-a

w~ ~do,..

dutv?

oiJhe c....
Doc·
..... _ ......... flll....tvb. ond- ·, how 10 fieht IL IVo onned o n d A:meric:wl . . .., ..... Mlddk En: . WI' ~ ~

.

flw Alghon pocp~e&gt;
4 Do "" .m to ~ up dw s.udi mon
ord&gt;y. lho Sullon ol Omon. ond .. lho '"'Y
kklgdonK o l l h e - Ed ....... lionMy O¥ft1htow1

5 How fer ..e ~ PftPMed to endorw the
-dflotoel...,lh&lt;W..,Bonk'
6 In bq. do 'M int..nd 10 ovmhrow ltw
praenl ~ . e pro-hlnt_lllWIO, gel.
ri&lt;h.&lt;OC&gt;dtl,.....,.,....dwt&lt;-lh&lt;&lt;&gt;&lt;·
panson of t1w Soviet Union into the gulf ar •'

s.-·
· - rW&gt;t .... e quagmft Moybo
dw pramce: of Arnenc.n troops ., suppo11 of

H...._ oa the faUure of

~

... Io
"'&gt;&lt;ioelho 1onnor Shoh of Inn 10 N"" Voric 0 ·
ty, Wbo lobt:Md for M? W• II in the bd in·
\ftetU ol the UnHd Statn' Was our Embulv
., Tdta:M notified bdortNnd' If so. wh.t
wea thn rnponM 10 the tntmded inVUllon'
w.. lh&lt; Shah ...., O&lt;Ck? Dod ......... New
York medk:aJ rreatment . 01 "-M that • ruse?
WhoM ruse?
2 w..........._
ollho UnUd s.....
10 oly our nodon b ,. long ..ot. lho Sl&gt;oft'•
regime? W h o - Who-.!,.. "'"
olionce? Why the CIA unllonned &lt;bout
.... -.go~~ ond brudlh ol 10 ....
Sholl loR ...., ......, too regime~ to;opled?
Gi¥en thill the SNh .,. an ·oa hawk.'" f•YOf·
. . o1 priDo wl1hln lh&lt; OPEC ol
c:Mel
t1 .,.. our tnterae~IO beck his ngirne
for 10 meny yon? h .. true that the s;.nt
mulllndono1 .. coopondono golned from

WMl euthorurien ~- for «k·
omple Poklllon end S.udi A&lt;- . ...,. P&lt;cwidc
1M SoYWt Unic:wl JUII the rahon..UtkM\ it
....S.oojuolifylu.....,.,......,liondf....,.
OWft Mil~ we ~ fNWng • big miltllke
Moybo
ought 10 lake the me 10 1n
_ , . .. .... Wil eo.g,..,. do., du~y&gt;

eo.v-

A

1horoutil&gt; Cong.e-...1

.,_liOn

Would~ OUt Nlnotl' l intention~

and off~
.. -people ) u - ' ' " - ..........
tblll tnWtt be. -"eee of bm "l"Mr« • no otheway. in • c:lernoa.ac IOCitty. to obcUt the
-"!~!~""' oldiO people.
Amrnc.n po1ida In
. . Mickle Eest. and ,.... ,.., tome qual:.ons
we wane at'IIWifred. In hd and open bunng~.
bdoa we would offa our lU dolw5 and the

c:on,p.."'""-

lYe of our~ in • war

dcdole." - - 1lw oceria - l l w
niiiiOft

e-

Heart-. oa Cart

Doc:trlDe

I WhM .. the C.... Ooclrine .. 1110/o41ddle
Eotl? How • .,.ply .. ....,. nolion ......
.rea? Whet .,. our priorttia? Do we tMk
unrabtcled

~ to

o6? But wouldn•l '"d.y
lh&lt;

one· o1 t - . In lhe Middlo Ed -

.......-~ollhoolf;dds•Oo­
Watll
wtth MlionJ thM t\.w 8 bf'oed

.a.nc..

""""* """"""

-preMtKe
ol
of

Arnate•n

How
could
lhe
mUitwy
forca

--"'-?

2. In Iran . .n! we ~ to rec;ogna tlw
~--'Ordo--10
rcploor lhlo ,.,.,..., gou&lt;mmenl ...he ......

-regime~
. .. for""- · lhe ··• .
3. ln~ do'-1ntondol ..........

..... AWoio pooplt? f .... '""v'olb -

imply

.,.. ... 6o, .... clo, ........ gowwnnicnt do ...
'"*'&lt;110 pul .... ploco? Whol- .,.......,...
doa auch., -~ ~ Mw

~~-mod&lt;. louoF

w•

..... -

- - 'Did lhoy Wluencc

iho- budget&gt; Who will .......? W l l _ ,
... oducadon. h&lt;dl&gt;. """""e end jobs ohMic
. . furttwr?
.
2 O...lholndu_ol_ .. . . . _
.--.! chfl col-._ the
ol '"' """'"~...... 10 lho Equol Rogha

.,._1

c-·,

AIMndment''

Wuh

ERA

unp.M.Wd. ••

\I.IOfMnbnlg~.,.,.an~rlghltndc-1

3 " "-'d&lt;nl c...r·. col for ""'
unleatlmg of th• CIA pM1 ot a mum to .,
earner era whet gowmtMnt ~ were
used 10 ...,_, public on. ond
diAQI'HnWnt v.1th, gowmmern poky'
4 Oron lhe ~• 14\ll of the uw oltacucal
nude• Wlt'apocn In N MddJe U. nwan an

opt"mng up of Pandora't. BoK wwh dw In ·

evttabW and e\o'ltf\IUAI tiealanon of ttw v.·• mto
a ful scale nudnr
betwftn the Unud
Statn .and ~ Sovwt Union'
Un~ thew q\H!tliiom ~ rhoroughly In·
- e d .. ._.public h&lt;anngobdoo&lt;Con·
greu. and unClt al charges of con'l*"acv Mel
Jnfluence peddLing are lAid to rat . ill would br
'"IO#W lor .any dKwd repJnmt.tlvc m Con
greM IO go along WICb policit5 th.t rille the livn
ol ... young people.
a vaw In tM Midcn. &amp;It for goal5 we do not
Y'd know. The unantwered questions will
..- ,..ce~y come home )O ...,,. ~ bvl

w•

end.,..._ ........ '"

-.lohn Otoop. Englioh DoPomncnl
DoAo1c1 F -. Doputmen&lt; ol Pllyoiology
Frtu Ron., POOIQI Sdm&lt;e ~­

T...,

Cllorloo " - Coio9f
- . n Stvdios ~mont

Chotleo K&lt;ll,

polcy moldng .. ol ....... lho
Sl&gt;oft? Congr. .. - · boon unduly .,.
llucncod .. "' .... Sholl'•
-.bvlh&lt;_ond_ol ..........l

ElluMdl "-"""· Anwricon Stud.s 0epc
0... .......... H"""V D&lt;ponmml
n.o- , _ Donlal School

coopondono?

P S We hope lhol __, focully ond .wf
membn ~ -wea with this later wll14gn on
during ........ few day&lt;. bv ~ e ....

3 Why ' - ' lho Unled -

hod ••

enoogypolcy...!&gt;doeYOids~onol

im-ed &amp;om lhe Mlddlo EM . which ..,.ld
be .,.. akemM)I,J,f to going to war?
~ OD

of war

the futtoft Impact
·

I Howlong.,.lheworbelA&lt;olyiO!o••
Wh.o&lt; wll111ie _,be_, 10 be?tiow .......
eoa t. txxne? we .. t. &amp;uN dlt«dv to
~iordww• . arlrilwc . •-~wllh

w• .

~
~.,, .through

the

p-., far lhe com In later
lntl.tion7 WNt domnlic

~wtlbe~..ot.lh&lt;lnaoOMOin

to .....,, Clwwln Ke1. Americon Studla
Oepc .• 1010 Ct.m.n.. "'· Chotleo " -·
Coio9f. 107 T-nd Hoi.
~ollhlo--. -ocktitionol
agMtures. wt1 be wnt to CongrftllioNII
f~n\Mtws nat Wftk .
Focully end tleH ......,.ed ., ,..,...,
diOtmination of lhil Open lAtta . vii v.tous
locol • ...,. and nodonol _.....,..., end

T...,

~ . ............ ..__.._ol
lhoNpood&gt;i101ot. F....., F&lt;bl9,3,30p.M.,
107 T - Holl, MSC.

LE1"1'ERS
Anthro offers ,
$5100 stipend
in profs honor

U I 8 sports 'ma·d as hell'
~

T •.:e within the past two 11/ftks the
ecromplishments ol our Men's and

The Department ol Anthtopology has
o $5, 100 foWien E. While

es1ablished

w_.·, Vanity Baoke1ba11 Turns have

Memorial Assillanllhlp. honoring the

..... lgnclred by memben ol the s.loc·
lion &lt;:onuntu.a 1« DiYWDn m NCAA
Eaol R"'jjoniil and N.w York SU AIAW

di&gt;llogullhed ard&gt;Mologlst wbo died In
1975.
.
The -.caotshlp is open on • com·
pelitive basis to !h.- app1ytng to the Allthropology graduala progrMl lor admlo·
s1on in Fall 1980. n....tn any su""lloold

T-.~

For the rec:Ol'd, U/B's men_,. 17·2

agaiMI Olv Ul oppon«&lt;IIS. our women

7·I ...." unclef-.:lln the divillon at the
toM ol Mlotcbon, llolar losmg to Broc:kpoo1
Stale , \1/hich eventualy advanced to t
NYS f.,.l$. by t marvm of thr pom15
The loo.- by the rnen's t am were to
Pottdam Sw , nonkad
4 on the
counby. by live pomt m lhe SUNYAC
Chart1p100 1p game on Feb 23. •nd by
eight pomts on Dec lito SUNY Abany.
,.,.kad o 2 111 ~York Stat and No .
1S In the country
The S..U. avenged that Albany dcrl at,
b5·S7 111 four overtmws. m 1 flrsl round
of
SUNYAC Touma~Mnl a1 Ciarlo
Hall on Feb 22.

are ellgt&gt;le.

.

Suppof1 will be $5, 100 for oc:h
academic year. plus tuition remission .
The redplenl Is ellgble b four ye.-s ol
support' on this uslstanlShlp, contingent
upon academic perfonnance and progress 1oward the Ph .D
Dulles olthe reclp~nl will ba similar to
those assigned to other graduate
assistanls (primanly aiding faculty in
teaching or research) .

An application for graduate admission

ma, be obcalned by wrlllng: M . Jean

Yet.

gentle. liMping glanl
On
ol the memben of .the
l)epartmcm! ol Rea a1ion • Ath
Re ted lntlruction. our coathat and
~ our athleta, I f*ll&gt;on for the
11J11P0f1 ol U.w
y Adlnm,iltr•otlon
Fa&lt;vky and t.tf dunng the coming
decade os
otnve \0 bnng recogniiiOO

... . . ...
~

. ......

and ecciMn to lhll inllllution lhn,•..;jh In·
tercolleg~at• aahktics
Our MIN battle cry "We·re mad 11
Hen. and ....., not ·go~ng 1o tak H
onymore"'

-LanyG.

teele

OollldOf . Sports lni01'1Tlatlc&gt;n

Grela. Dej&gt;art&lt;Mnl ol Anthropology.
SUNY/ Buffalo, S81·L Spaulding S. Bul·
lalo, New York 14261.
In addition 1o llandard admission
malerlak, appllcanls should Rlbmll their
bet! undergrad
.
ual "!'"' P"P"" or projed The ~ will ba a.,trded
baJed upon the standard ~ (GRE
ICOI'a, lotler1. •nd tranocnpl5) Plu• the
strength olthe in compariton with
submlttad AppbniS mus1 .-a
..dude the name ol the lntlruclor for
whom the paper w prepat d
Compelllion papers ond appllca·
tionsmUJI ba subm
by Mart:b 31 .
1980 The award
ba announced by
May 1. 1980

�February 28. 1980

CALENDA
n ....day-

-ntYv- _.. _

IIENmT CONCEIIT'
ft. bene&amp; conc:at fof the anlf-drah movement wt1

28

I'DIIA'IWICS~--­

fHIWO ibo U/ll.laa · - Jloom.
Squn 8 p m Tick.., S 1 at !he Squn tw Boo 01·
lb Spon....t 1&gt;!1 Cologo F

~- .._.,..~oloho~
of ClhRcaJ Ph• r•ac.oloef ••d Pilar - - 0. S..nloy- -ROom.
Otion'o ~ 12 . - ..

IHTDINATIONAl. COLLEGE I.ECTUIE •
NJeorio, 0.. Halloo l..ynch. hcod . Afrlcon Studocs
~ - Columbia Unownlty Second Floar
...... • • Red .t.cb&lt; 8 p m.
Co-sponorxcd 1&gt;!1 !he Alriton Stud

C.UIEIONAII•

,.._ .. ..._...lldlt ....

~olaN-x.ttc. F........,

~ 0.
En"""""'""' c.n..sa. 211
P.,._ 2pm
Spon....t 1&gt;!1 lho c.m.. foo Cold R&lt;,;Ons
~. s..- and T«hnooogy !CRESn

Friday- 29

M-

PEDIAtlUC GRAND ROUNDS•

ComiDOft and Unc:onunon Per.tta. Or.
Rlc;hard Lee Ktneh Auditoriu m , Chi1d r~n·s
H051)ital 11 a .m.

III£CHAN1CAL ENGINUIUNG SEMINAR•

~ ...t
Efteln-.:
KWollol?. """- Hlnrich Mortons.

No Yoo

SEMINAR•

~oiElocobiand ~ Engln...
Int. U/ B Tho K... 101 lloldy 3 15 p m

Rdfalunonu d

....,.00

Edolclol 1 - In the - t a l N"'Mrll· 0..
Uuttmae Nceulough, K~nedy lnlbiU1e kJr
E!hlc:l G-26 Fern.. 12 ~ Spon-ed by tho
School of Meddle's Committu on Human V.tua
and Mcdocol Elhl&lt;t
How do
tcr into the oftm agorriDng ded1101'1 about car ~.d treatrl)omt of defectiw babies,

m. ..-.,

I"SYCHOLOGY PIIESEHTA110N •
~

p--.. . . . .

Ia tho P......·o R--oiCIUno.

" " " - Ching Chi Chong Oopanmmt ol
l'1ychclogy. Polung u.w.n.y C·31. 4230 R;dge
I.N 3 15 p m
1&gt;!1 Psl'&lt;hology ond
rfw! Cound on lntem.uon.i Stud.-s

c.,...,.,._

GEOGRAPHY LEClUtE '

Guitarist

CAC FU.J( '
0.. the Watcri-ont. 170 MFAC. E.Lcon. 7 and
9: 15Pm. General.cimiiUon $1.25: studenb Sl
1M 5tan clb c&amp;u.k: fUm . .. Marlon Bn~~ndo .
EYII Marie So.int, K.rf Makfen. Lu J Cobb and
Rod St.;g.. Foruful• .._-dw-gcd molodnuna
about tho docks ol New J....,. - !he wod&lt;en. !he

Edooolc
Mfoptlooo
ho fuocl, Dew~. Uniwnity o1 Tel Avov
414 fronc:z.llk 3 p m

lomllia. w...... of
· !he -....... and .....
a~ o.c.... lndudlng "Best fim ."

"*"·

UNGUISTICS SPRING COI.LOQOI UM
SERJES'
Error ~. Ge-rhard Ncke-1. UniYer'SIIY of

WAB MIDNIGHT FILM •

BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR•

Stung.an . Germany LinguisUcs Lounge. 106
$paulding. Elicoot 3 p m.
1&gt;!1 the In·
l«f\5~\~e EngMh Languagt ln511tut~

PHYSICS COI.LOQOIUM•
Elocts 1o HIP ....t '-·EMrw
- _ """"- R H Pna. Pt..,.es Dopon
lJn-..y ol P......'llh 454 F•onaak 3 30

pm Coffecar3JS

Uth~ Gr..-.y ud .... G&lt;-h ol Plo.... Or
a plant ~ e.nddatt, Ya"'
UnN«rU!y 114 Hoc:hltett«f 4 p tn

St~ Bnu,

CEI.I.l.1lJ.R PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR•
f ot"Cft .. Tr~ Ot.modc. Prneure. ~:&gt;~­
Edmund ~.
profeuot _Departments ol
Podlolrics ond Phyololow 108 Slwnnan 4 p m

MIOC.._

Collet&gt; • 3 4S Wt Room S t5
PHAIINACEUI1CS SEMINAR•
etlcl of T r 0.
lc)lcllc
Anll ·
. Ph•r•acok
, . _ _l•_
c . lildsov
~

o.v..... ~ldow

C508C..U. 4pm

SEMINAl!•

P_._ M- . 0.
io

u.,,_.

Me·

Culough, Konnody '-Outo ol Ethb. Gooogotown
u..-y5d&gt;oolo1Modlcow . G26F- 4pm
Spon....t 1&gt;!1""'

.., Hu....,

School oiModic......eom.......
Modc:ol E!ha

v._ and

eo._,....,&lt;d

EDICI IlL CHEMISTRY SEMlNM' •
""-'-Add ~ ol ,........, "
NowlSyna- ~- ~.
P - J HoMson. ggduaoc sludcnt.. Ooponmcm ol
Mcdoconal Chom~s~&lt;y. U/ 8 , Cl21 Cook• . 2 p m
Rdfcshmcnts
PHII.OSOPHY SEMINAR•
r........- oad Pa -· Rlohto. o. Lau..nco
McColooogh •• Gooogotown u - 684 Boldy 3

v..,..... .._
104 P - 3.30

Field, S Rojorom

p m

UUAII FIUI'
1M 1.- W..O "'-""'· 19781 Waldman
n-o.
4 JO. 7 and 9 JO p m &lt;icnftol
. o n - S210, Aud&lt;nts SI60
A.......,.. .._,.. ~ ontnly ol tho
1Pnd of ~on fnUfldMe b«heYior .net ewnts

Pro·
gromo. Hoolo&lt;r Chcmlcol 139 P - 4-5 p m

'"Fo.---..............
'" . . . .
doool!l .................... . - -

c.....,.

Rochon~ ~ II a """""""' Sydney

...,

~-a 1 - . -

- t h o - . . I E R A . - . ,~
..._
A - c:.m,.... 68 p m
loeooon&lt;oll Doone

Fo.

.. 636-mJ

.-. . .·a-_.-. . . . . _ .. _thot.... ........ . . _ _?Icon

~r

... _....__

ol .........

CM.-..

3233

-

En..w,...,.....

R&lt;f&lt;ab,_

c.-.

74Spm Fnoc 5pon....tl&gt;!l

- ~ c:- _,-' Rctu.·
--~c:.m,....

MEDIEVAL FESTIVAL·
F""""'• Room . Squn lUll 12-4 p.m. EnJoy
fighbng, danc:w\g. music.

saory-wltng and ex.hhJti

BAIRD COMPETITION FINALS '
Cameron Bolnl Mcmrxiol Concmo ComBolnl Rcool Hof. 3 p m.
.
UUABFU.J('
Honlwono w.,. 11978) and Muppot Movlo.
C...l......., Thoatrw, Squn. 4:30. 7 and 9:30
p .m &lt;icnftal e d - S2 10. lludcots Sl 60
Hardwan! Wara II ., alimungty famdlar Jhot1
that shouJcf mnind you of an ot.cure lktle tdenc:e
_ fiCtiOn chr~ tMI .c.me out a few yun ego A
1riliont pomdy - . , . llw odion and dm.n.

M-- -

......,_ltorl

~ - Reollllao,
--Old
Rlcto..-d B Bonloon.
D V M • Ph 0 • 0oponnoonc o1 lrnonu........,

!he old lllyic Holywood SUC•
-~of•- lduho on the doc. dapoc
- .. a glycn tho &lt;Oyol , . _

R-

- .. IIUrlnlng .. - . . . . . . .
ot&gt;d • valct)l ol ~ ~ the Ia~

M"""' _. -

.-

S0....4pm

P-'&lt; Rorxn 107. 4510 Main

.......

19781. ConMowoce

r-- ,. .,. ,

4·30. 7 and 9 30 p.m. Gcn..ol
S210. Rudonto S160

-

llfTEIIHATIONAL ~ DAY'

l.ooWotl

n..

s....ot

DocMootldocW-·,-

~

.......... Squh 6 J0.9 JO p ,.
6.JO - Open , _
F...
R.pi a ti -.,... tro.n Wom.n't J110WP1 WI Bul.io

In""-

-. . . ., ..Fo.--

Reodorot .., c - - ·

CACFD..M '
O.thcW--. !46~1ond915
pm Vcneaf-.St!S ......... SL
N

c-..

00 ()pcoo.

a---

Thoorrc , 681 -

~="'.::!:

-n.:.::.:-""'

juz L U/ B
' &amp;ro.t. - - . , 8
W r..., O,..,.thc

In a -oljuz conc:ctUfeoturing

="M-""'"'"-"'"'""'-

,.so 0.. lllod br Bullolo d&lt;\&amp;mmor and &lt;om·
· who .... ol his -

Rcboo1 -

··.

n- ... -~• a- - . . . o l

·

.- a .,. " -· br ""' WNY

,_

David Alderson . trumpet and fJuge:Jhom . JS a
nativt Buffalonian who began his playing career at
eight years o( 1t9f! wrth a 60kt performance at
KM:inhans Music Han At twenty, he St:ft the area
and toured with vmous group~ , He is cunenrty ~
live In Buffalo tudolng and playing
Dave Schiavone. knot', do . 50Pf"Ano sax
ophona and fkuc . has wodced wrth the Umt~
States Army Band and has bHn on tour v.iih dw
~ group 1M New Wave
Joel Pmoy has Quched wilh Oswald R.antuca. and
hat performed in many diff~t Mtt\ngl around thE
Buffa1o aru. He i5 curnndy ~klg Wllh the
Jemny WaU S.nd. whBI MrVing on the faculty of
the U/ 8 Oepanmenl of Music.

WAB COFFEE HOUSE COJolfOUTTEI:
PIIESENTA110N'
Mttchdl Kom, deubl guJt.mt and comP&lt;*f
Squn Hell Rothok...,, 8 :30- 11 30 p m. TKkets
are $ 1 for ltUdf:niS and 51 50 for~. and ar~
available .. the Sq... Ticket Office. Opcn;nq tho
evening wll b&lt; Rob&lt;n Dono;io&gt;olo
A typical Korn program ranges the ful gemul
from Dda Blues to nslem wn~ pM!ICel
to ha own compc.iions going to the I'OOtJ ol
Amenc.n millie

r-.

UUAII MIDNIGHT FD..M'
Toe (England. I 962) C...t..enc&lt;
12 midnight Gcn..ol .ct .........
S2. 10. Rudcots Sl 60

n....... Squn.

.._JV.

&lt;olll31-3405

Sunday- 2
CAC FD..M'
On the Watltf'fronl . Conferc.ncc Thul't!.
Sqoolo-c. 2 and 8 p .m Gcnonol .ctoroltUon Sf 25
students St .
RWGJOUS DISCUSSION GROUP '
Share your religiioul upenenca wtrh odwn in an
iolonnol ~,; 332 Sqoon Hal. Main S:o«1
Conopu. from 2-4 p m Aloo on Mood&lt; 30
s..rx-..~ 1&gt;!1 11w U/ 8 Bo.'tol Club

- _ w--·

.,.,. .. 0.. -

.. -!he~ ...

--.and_.,. ..
be-.... ,......._ ..... ......
.........
-.. .. - ... "'"""""'-"-to
•••
_......,_
_..,._
n.o--.
..........
w-··""

ooii&gt;!I .. _ _ ....... AI _ _
· - o... ..... - - no. ...
-

""''*"-I.

-t

. , _ II no ..c:h rtq • a lil*k; mua.l mo-

;;: - - - - - ... -liMy
8 00 p.. .........

He k • recipient of a 1979 National Endowment for
the Arts Jazz Grant. He draws .ketches for Pull to
Open and other Ustenm to color in as they choose
Peter PicdrUJI. the basstst of the proup. has aka
u.'Otked wrth Harry Leahey and l)aw Samuels and
il a composer for .coustic •nd ~ic m-

oiAZZ AT THE~·

tAJAII FlUl '

The-. 5quft

~

Edgo.~··

- Do.- IV: A 14·DOJI Dlooo to 1000 F 0.. S.. Kll1ono s. Ull Shcmo.o 4·15 p m. Cof.

Previte. who Mo does voc.is. has worked v.'flh
Marian McPartland . Dave Samuels. &amp;lly Hart , the
Cre:ai.Ne Asi0Cl4te.s. and the Buffalo PhllharmoJuc

$&amp;nlments.

Saturday- 1

ORAL BIOLOGY SEMJNAR•

n.. ._ w- ...._....

CATHOUCS AM» WTlUJIAIC :
At£C1\Ja:
•

""""""' Or Rolph l..oow. -

l«hrolcol ......_. Spoclol

PHY$IOLOGY SEMJNAR•

£aA AC110N 'nAM lllfE11NGS.

II&lt;..,..•

Club

noliom .. ..-..,. " ' " " " " ' - . ' " ' - ...

....... - " ' " " ' - ' diooriftoing boauw .......

S2.JO. 61udenl5 Sl 60
Mark l.ewii. • cameraman. has an unusual hob· ·
by - filming women •s he murders them A bitarre
~film &lt;..tic!! " llick" eod "d&lt;IMftted" when lint
nilt....,.
wtl b&lt; lis 'Buffalo

DIGINEEJIJNG SCIENCE. AEROSPACE
ENGINEERING AND Nua.EAR ENGINEER·
lNG SEMINAl!•
MHD Clt-.1 Flow end Hcoot T1o o

WATER RESOURCES AND ENVIRONJoiEN.
TAL ENGINEEJUNG SEMINAR•
" - ol .-..... , _ Joy Cui.

A-

Peeptn1 To m (Englind, 1962) . Confere~
Theatr•. Squh 12 midnight General admission

Sponsrxcd 1&gt;!1 tho lln&gt;woing l..lbr....,. Tho Society
for Crunve Anachronism , and tbe U/ B M~vaht

W!wnlo-olhicolfrxph-tOP&lt;octlc&lt;,....

bOou?

On&lt; of !he films thot made &amp;ando . BRANDOI

pm

, _ Dopmolcoc Spodolly

Guitarlot MitcheU Kom headlines
UUAB ColleehoUK, Saturday night.

_ . .-, _porion-.
w.......... hod .......
ooc~y-..-

.......

, thon

opon

------

UUAII FD..M '

- · w-

119'1JI! """ ..._. Jolovlc.
Amloilot 4 30. 1 ond 9 30
9'" &lt;icnftoi- S2. IO. IJioKicnts$160

:."'i:!:'h::!::...!:!:::'".... r.n ....

\ll$fTING AII'T1ST CONCDIT '

. -no.""""'-...-. """'- ...... "'"

Word Swinglo. M&lt;oy

-- ._ . -.-....,,.. o~ovr

-

s.toto.Jo ........

PM T~

the dhdlon ..
s.-oundo&lt;
Rorxn. Ktow- 8

. . a~ In IMfvMCt .. tfw Squn
Ticket Oftlcc and wt1 b&lt; oold • tho door Prica .,.
S4 foo - . 1 · l3 b U/ 8 loculty otolf

�Febnoary 28. 198&gt;

DEPARTMENTS OF PHYSICS

a

AS11IONOMY AND ENGINEEJUNG
SEMINAR•

S....,lldoclo ~Fiowflolds, John
N... H H. W... Phl/fol&lt;sl.obondllri51o1Univmity
245 Froncuk. 3:30p.m.
DfPAIITIUHT OF PHAIUIACOLOGY AND

TltERAPElmCS SEMINAR•
Tho T - ond F- ol 2. S. 7. I
·Tott~·~ (TCDDI 1o 1M
Golden Syrllon - . . -. Ja""" R. &lt;&gt;loon . Ph.D..
Cuatro" hom Q'th. WOkiman Theatre. Amherst
3:30 p m TIC:km $2 at Squire H•l Tk:k~ &lt;&gt;ffict_, or
c-.11 691-4627 for group re:s.ervafions and infonna
lion Tho pie• -.ill be porlonned 1n 5penlsh Span·

tol'e:S by 1M &amp;.eluate Student Auodation of
5penish.
The Toothbna&amp;h. a two-act play, oHen an absurdly comic &amp;ook at a marriage and • murder Stw
dreams about forks . belleves m astrology. and hu
her eMphone tuned to J&amp;lZ . Ht': suangtn hiS wtfe
after iN uws his 10o4hbru5h 10 polish hf'f shoa In
the second act. the wife reappeatS as the maid ~
her frantc husband tria to hide dw corpse

wh~

R.diaUon Chmdstry, Pro(ftiQI RonMct Lawler ,
Browo Unrvemty 70 Ac:he:son 4 p m . Coffee WJI
be ......S In Room SO a1 3 45 S,,.....od ., rhe
Oepanmen1 of Chvl'l'ltllry.

a1 !l~JO

WI

MICROBIOLOGY SEMINAR•

ntERAPEunCS SEMINAR•
T~ ....t Ito es..- oe S -

NULTIDISCIPUNARY CONFERENCE•
N ............ Dr. St.wn H ~ &amp;1o Counry
Mftlioal AmphitheaMr. 4·5 p m.

ART LECTURE SEJUES •

FIUis·

ment facuky 10 be given tha semesaa Next WiU.vd

R. Hanio. Man:h 17
NOle. thil ltMtng i5
confwm

•
~tabve

c.l 831 -5251 to

BROWSING UBRARY SCIENCE
FlcnON DISCUSSION•
Elicca llr""""'' Ll&gt;nry. Room 167 MFAC.
7 ..30 p m There w.l bt a dilcu.Aion of somce t.c·
tiOn books. movaes and comics
FIUI (FIUI HISTORY)•
Loa OMdadoa (llunuol. 19501 146 Dlel&lt;mdori
7 p.m. Spomo..d by dlo c.m.. to. Nedil Stud•

---~~,~._

P- colod tho s-oglo Siogon

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

Tho F....m,.,....

11oc-- -lbc-.10-,_ -·
end""'....__
............. ...._""' ..... -""
""'--

.. lool ,...._,..., 1973 In 1974 Wood
Sww!glt _,. .. .....t ~. , _ al"""' - . e n d 5ooOnglo II - Thew -lodiO. - - - . lolowod 11,1
-...... - .... Loodon~
s...
. t a l - . e.....,.,._
... _ _
_ .....

c..-,.

.

----...~·"""._..

andlo,/~ ... ~.--al

~- .... - e d 1 1 ' -------..evtarotw

-s.r...nn..--""'.,..o\1""""""""
.
-""·--alflw!Vws-oglo

~

Calc!ene

n.._...

•~

UUAalliONDAY NIGHT F1U1S •
Tblol 91 s..tM (19241. 7 p m : PWW&lt;d
(19471 . 920pm 170WAC.Eiicca F,.cedma-

WOI!IJISHOP•

2·5 p .m.

hett..on ~

and promote bett«r ~
......,. tbe ~ 11011 &lt;01 lhe oodal. roi!Qiouo.
. _ end culturel al""' ....,_ al ....
Nlddlo EAiol - !he blonl;c World. Tho p r ond ...... -wilf.,....on~lhe

-.....tprololomoalotwblemkllltdont.
""'
........... allolam.Sowral _ _ _
-lhoNiddloEMI

~--~~,~ -.....alfallho~al

end""' O f l l c
ool-----~"-""'Of·
Fer-........._.
6Ji&gt;.2809.

lice

call

ThW. ...,.llo&lt;9M Foiot&gt;enb

........ ol ........

~.

, _ end -

lhlo

~

~

11,/lhc

., ""'

fentaoy ..........

been ~ In ~ . or In dabbrlle
IIIVdlo........ - . T.,... Wo1ghl. ~~&lt;&gt;bon Nll&lt;hum
ondO...~ Wlwnlho-olfmod·· hl~lolhe41T•. •- .... II&lt;"'·
hom dlo - l t m IOihc mclod&lt;...., T1W film
WM dw ~·, tn. plyChologlc:al WftM!m about a
dcwnnlned men ..t.o 1o out 10 fW&gt;d t..

-

to-··

Birth of a Natioe. Part II. 6p m.: Huchbadlof
Nocre 0..... 7·30 p.m 148 Dloflndcrf Sponsored ., the Deport.,.nr ol H"""Y

FIUI (FILM HISTORY)•
O..olW....tr (Or..,._ . l9431 146l);dando&lt;f 7
p.m. S,,.....ed i&gt;!l tho Ccnte to. Modio Stud•
UUAII WEDNESDAY NIGHT FIUIS •
Th•
(19671 , 7 p m : . . . . _
(1968) . 8.55 p m Conference Thnrr•.
Ftte admaion
MM N~ won an Oscar a Bat Oir«tor for
llua londmorlo Arnericen comedy. TIM
. Coa.g. grad (Duslili Hollman! coum • !/OU"9 girl
(Kothenn&lt; Roorl lind .... oeduellY&lt; """"-· Mn.
Robon- (Ann ilencrolt) . which lcedolo compke·
lionl so- end Gerfunkal ~ lhe mulbl

G&lt;-•

Squ••

G&lt;-..

-··

. . . . _ 1o • hilcriouo updellng ol tho F... ot
logmd Ml In Nodiah Loodon whee Dudley Noorc
M.Jk h• toUI to the devil 10 purtue hif drc.-m girt
r1uou!i1&gt; ,._ dlfl.,.nl ........ Requ.t Welch

-he&lt; t... IICtNn pcrlonneneo •

dw-... .

Room 8 p.m

SA SPEAKERS· 8UIIEAU PII£RNTATJON•
Tt•othr Learp: " Amerlc.en Culture .
• 194!&gt;-19115 " F-.Room. Squh. Spm Froe

r"""""''--""dftd
ouc.ick

No.

IAoltiotl"'
Ho11,,.,..,............
...
.......... -.

4

ftC) , . . ..

T----lltc.,&amp;lr
a..,..-plane

rlw- . ....

__
__ ......
Ut
.
y
,
-·-- -

Ct11Lu.N
DEPf. OF ENGUIIH
_ ,D11A111A
_ • ......

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

MpOioalorod,....._. ....... ~do-·

-or ,._,

. _ l.oentlc,. I~

.

, . . , . _ - ,_ floctjnrlp ...,.,. ,..,..

p m

Spomo..d ., Soli

Scooo~oora· s-.

Doolilt .._...... .. _ a...~

LUST

1/lCO COULGE LECIUI£•
T h o - al ~ c-y s.-.
o o U t - - U t N - ....
o · Or. DR. W -. Fecvlly Club Blue

F IUI (FIUI N-lJVE) ·

OUfT~·

'.

p.m

Loa OMMoloc l&amp;nucl. 195(¥ 147 Olcf.n&lt;laof.
9 ... -s.x.-oo~ "" .... c.-tar Nedia Study

Taesclay

Moaday- 3

CroM-Ruct~ng Am. . . . Sh.red loy Oral
Bacteria in Nammallao llnuft. Russell J
N - d. D D S.. Ph.D • prol...or of pmodon
tks. as50dale profe.510r of macrobtotogy. Schools of
Medidne and Dentistry. U/8 223 Sherman 4

Eibnlaadon In the: TrNhnmt ol Asduna. Stanlev
J Szefler. M .D .• rue:arcll prolasor in eM Oepan
m-enu of Pedlalrtn . Pharm.cology and
Thft""apeutic.s. and Pharm.ceuties. Schook of
Medldnc end Phonnec,t, U / 8 124 F.m.. 4 p m
RefreshrMnts .V 3·45

0.....,. tt.tdMn. .,. facull• manber. will .now
slides .of and ditcua hill work. Bethune HaD. 2917
Main Street. 7:30 p .m. frH
Thil " ""' - . I ol ... l«tur.. 11,1 An o.p.n.

$P£CIAL

••lc

BIOCKEMIST11Y SEMINAR•
cu NNR Studloo o1 N - - . . , . .. Acdw
S'"' Dr. R.,a Khalifah. VA Medical CenJer. Kan -

DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACOLOGY AND

to ilrnMte "'
-..-.1-liroi~ION-al

CHEMICAL ENGINE£RING SEMINAR•
107 O'BMn. 4 p m Reftnhmenrs et 3.30.
PluM check 'Nih rhe departJm&gt;:nt fOJ iPUkft •nd

FOSTER COLLOQUIUM SEJUES•
I
a..mlcally Induced Spin P - l i o • In

l OlA C...

Ttw -' ol Vllfta N hUd'lllin ~

Wednesday - 5

hom ....

ws Ctly. 108 Sherman 4 p .m CoHee

........ .....t _ _ andSitar-....

of Biochemistry, Centt&gt;r for En·
\IW"onme:nl&amp;l T oxicofogy. School of MediCine .
Vanckrbih Unlventty 124 Farbn 4 p •.m
Rdrnhmmts at 3 45.

[)epartJMnt

H o - . _ , - _,., .• _

...

-n..~­

..

.........

�~:al.l980

Colloquium
helps keep
&amp;osh here
.

The voung man hod thrn quations

ll'rilkn out on o 3 x 5 cord.
~which

f«ultv mem~rs ~!""d
out.tonding service aworda last
Sef*m&amp;err
'Who to 1M focullv member "'ho hoo
;:.::.;,..obc"" /re4ks ond obout being
"Who on the focuky con ~ addrt!ued
as Dr.• Folher ond Pope?"
IW woo hoping 10 find 1M onswers In
1M index 10 the ReportD, okhough he
olteodv that the
with the
multi-lilies U!OI R~rt G . Pope of
Hlotmy.
•
Whol prompted this ocodemlc
SOOIH!ngu hunt on o chi/ly.fo/1 o{tnnoon?
"It's for my /res.hmon cv/loqulum," he
rt!SpORCied. " We 're /In ding out how to
use the reiOUrca of the Un!oerslly. ••

p,.,._

m....,

--By Katherine

~ubala /

.

The Frnhman Colloquium Is an ek!c·
tive. one-credll coune offered to U/B
·ITnhmen . Slightly more than 300
lludents ere enrolled this 5emester in 21
sections meeting on different days and at
various mes. The students are seHseleded except Ia&lt; foreign students and
mature -dents who received a ·special
Invitation to join a oolloqulum. l..asl year
students wtlh either low verbal or
rNI!hematics SAT scores were also
targeted for special oonsideration .
it"crultment of fruhmen Is accomplished primarily through oontad
during the ecademlc adllising portion of
Summer Orientation and thus the colloquium Is pr«KDted as an extension of the
~ntation cxpaience. Students are encouraged to r&lt;!gisler for the 5eCIIon that Is
taught by their academic adviser.
~. since aU .eetlons are taught by
academic advisers, ey.,n ~ students do
not have their own , they· still have the oppartunlly to lnlenld In a smaU class with
an adviser and slrt!ngll\en their identity
Wllh a slgnlllcant penon In the University.

• Calendar
....__,,
.....,

W kading ftgurebf the con~ rnovmM"nt.

dacrt:lft hrmMif as • ·change agmt and an

m.

oo-y ,.rl.,: In

~·

0.

90 """"'" pcrionnanco .
l.uoy ........ • uplanallon ol
hi5IOritat forca v.bkh cnated the cullural rcvolu·
uon of th« 1960's - using dramebc t«hntques
dn;gned lo he\&gt; the audlonce &lt;&gt;&lt;p&lt;rion&lt;o me
humor~ ocn~nt. att.Jh.JcM and vOx:~ whdt

m.

~~~":'::!:~. 0.~
Le.y wi1l prumt blueprints for tha-fuhlrw desgn~
to stimulate mernbm of the aud'en« to make !tw
next dec:ade: even mOre tntensc and brain-changing

than the preceding "
Ooc of the molt oon~l f~gUJes ol the 60's
lrin to maM il into dw 80's.
NARKA~ •
Strtlue [Eisensmn. 1925): Pot-IElsmstein.
19261 . 147 D;ol&lt;ndori. 9 p .m . s,on,.,..d by the
Center fOJ Medie Stud~

FILMS (FJLll

Thursday

6

UNGVIsncs SPRING cou.dOttu~t·

Tho-.......-

ol~ lo&lt;-

K. Oblo&lt;. ApNN Roouoch C...... lloslon Univft.
oily Medical School. ~ l.oungo. 106
Spaulding. 3 p .m.

· PHYSICS COUOQUIUM•
. . . _ L.
~- PhyoD Depart........
ComesPo-Melon Ufwenily. 454 F&lt;On&lt;Ui&lt; 3 :30
p.m Goff" .a 3:15.

s.

- - c:.4loc , _ Dr. Thoma.

Doubt • .....do - - ............ ll&lt;pertmenl ol
l'hyolology. 108 Shennan. 4 p .m .

CHEM15111Y &amp;EJIIIHAII•
---olT-M...a
~

c-pa..

John Gta.lyv. UCLA. 5
~ - 4 p .m. Co&amp;. d
bo •...wd ln 50

llrUCIUre their own cunlculum and cour1e

PKAIIJCACa.ltiC SEJUNAII•
~­
.......... Cu
t ~ _. A ,
ad • EJ.
-lo"'-.l.lo,ldWiillidd. goad...... udonl.
C508 Coaloo. 4 . ....

which INures .,...,. oommon content and
to. genealy acx:epted set of
'1M objoctives of the coune ..,.,.
daillned ~to reduc;., albillon .
The OWft'ldlng goal Is to lrnprOYe
~

god.

,......._

In a _.... Unlvellly-wldc SUJVey ••
students told us that their main reason for
luvlqg !h.. Untveslly was Its large size
and oonoomllant buruuaatic maze.
Both !h.. cognitive and affective oomponmiJ ol the colloqujum Integral
nwthoclt of anphaslzing !h.. advan1a9"1
and pooidw asp«ts of a large urban
unNenllly whle at the same llrn4t p.-ollldlne the smaU group c'-oom expclilr&gt;ce. !bat ao many ITnhmen nad

and-.
The COUtM curriculum f atuteS: class
..-ken who are nher faculty or admlnlstrala&lt;s, e .g , the dirctor of h«lth
MrVica, !h.. don of Arts and Letter•;

2. A ,.....,.., ol .... 2 .,_. daabng lntetnts to da&amp;c. plans lor fUI'I:her grwl~e lludy. .nd
- ........ IUchlng .............
Two reffteft famibr wtth ·the applc:ant's

won. should bo ...._--.. '
ol IUA)OI't. 10 .wriw by tt. Rlmi dalll!
The_......... bo made by. t.cuty oNe·
don commillee . Raub we be announced 10 can~
didatft around .... beginning ol Apt.
acod&lt;mlc

. IIEED IIASIC D£111TAL CAiiv WElL. TEAM

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

--·
~

:=,~W::~.='..:::':.....::r.:;

juiO-k.-lhc-. TEANto~-­
,.....,. from me lJmveoily com""""'Y

-opoci(lc- .......... _

_.,_.___
~G

_ _ _ ......,....olMitT

- - - ~ OiNngfloono. Ellcoa. 4:30p.IO.
11!1""-""~ooi!IHamman
. . ....,.,_
-o
.....,...
- ·
_
_
. . . , who
. _'_
lin

...

_ a n d _ ...._ . , ... . , . _
lllo-lnowc:ulura. l \ s a - - a n d

hao -- .._....
...._
..,. ... ollay
_.,...,..,...
_
....t _people_
ln ............. planaMg ... _ol~·

s,.a.-.d by

m.

~

ol ~

""'---- ............

~and---EllA ACTION TEM IU!EJ1HG •

-

.

~

li1c .......,.. ERA , . . _ . _
m F.. ...,._ ... Donna

"""'""'Can-o&gt;us. 6 8 p

0

N!EDSYOU
TEAM Is • opocialprogram 011h&lt; School ol Dm·

in!l -

J.EADEallltU.'

.. 636·2773.

group gcllirllj-to-ltnow-you exercises;
and lelooni doling with specflc okills
CATHOIUC5 MD LU11IEilANS, •
Meded by IIUdeniJ, ouch as using the
A I.£C1UIE SEJII£8 •
undergraduate lbrary. note talung, tn
~- Whaol......,.h_ laboulrocon·
pr-atlon , ' etc. 0urtng each of "'"
c:lintl
lwo •doglonoj . Dr.
no maltft what the content.
"'-"&lt;· - · Gr... l.ulhefan Churdt.
studc
• alfo honing their IOdalllklls • ~- II Y , and 0. Gobriol Sea&amp;. 004.
...........
ollhoology.
a-m.
KJng s-....,. E
k
and oommUnlca n
......... c-.lidan c -. 3233 5I 7 45
p m s,.o.-.d by Main SorHI Colholc Catnp.•
....t
Hou.. fi.ulll«an Cam·

ca-.

ott...

sponJOring the ltfth annual Summer Institute for
Women In H;gher Education Adm1nlstration to be
he4d Juty 6 through 30 on the Bryn MaiNt CMnpus.
The raidmrial program offers women fec:utry and
.dministTaton Intensive training 1n ~ocationaJ adminlstradon and men~lstdlh , focusing on institutional goverN~~ and planntng. admlnisrra..ttve

computing - -· and prolaoional dowloprnent, Cost, includ~ tuition, room and board. is

dllf«--"'"
-M- -;on

~----can bo porlannod ~---­
lhc TEAM a
minimal wding potlod and """"""'-.Jn addlIn

a1

tkJn. w. • TEAM opetllle tn such a fashion • 10
make al fOUdnc dmtaJ e.re as con'lfonlble lnd ..
So. fyou do
don·
101 coow. •. why - ? Cal us 01 831·2213 ony doy

- -fro• .. ,......

need-

.... _ _
...._,9and4:30and-dboiljodOoon-angoa

*""""'!~_

TAX INRIAICATIOII FOIII'OIIEIGI'I
STUDEJol1$ AND &amp;CHOLAIIS

A•aloblo"""'9&gt;Apft5. l'lllll.bom lhc01b

oi--..IS!udml-402c.-. . .....
-Ill ...,._ollha1979w
1636-2258) . ThoM ...tong
_
_

SlkUk. &amp;yn Mawr. Pennoyivonla 19010.

&amp;lalblts
~~~ncflf.t.ne Gi.nz-'

TEST ADJIINISTRATlON
E l l - lmmedlalely. Sludom Talln9 and
R..-chdboop&lt;nunlil6p.m ooW~
~ o1 r unct.ya to Arlm~ntt~er 1a11 to ptt"ttnt
u....-. 10 Kbeduk them dunng regul.w olfice

""""

Golooy ' - " .... Monday """'9&gt; Frjday. 9,J0.5.
mcnlnf&lt;&gt;nNIIion . ... 831 -371.·

"!"'

COLE GAl.LEIUE5 EXHliiiT
O.ow~ngS a n d - - by Joe M. rooch&lt;rol me
C . . - Cnfl C...... U/ 8 . Cdo Galoria. 49 Eelwood 51. T1uooogl&gt; 14. Goley t......- II
a.m. 10 5 p .m .• Tuotdoy lhr.,..gh Thunday.

I.OCKWOOD-

T-~-.to~

F.,... of l.odooooct 1-31. lndaodcd . . bo
woriu ol Nln. Pound. Keoua&lt;.. Koutm.l . Oliara

andlARoiJonos.--10--

.. Cbarllo P...._. Ec~gor v-. Honv Parldl. ,.,..
nold ~-John Cclnno and P.W Robooon.

Oa Tile Air
FERUAIIY...
Ccu

.

......

_:s- ........

--ollh&lt;llulloloCalolo tChannol llll . 6:30 p m.
MARCH S:
c.n-~ono ln !he Am! HofOld Collm.
dnn. Sc:hool of A.n:hM~f'l! 8t Envronnwmal
Design ln1ematon•l c.bW 1a..nne1 lot 6 p .m

MARCH 4:

Qu, oftic:e edl'l')inilren • v.wty of cdtiheatioft .
1a&lt;1guago plac&lt;mon~ and vocallonol In- .....
"''MJe lfth..,. gl"ooen b\1 indivldu.lappo~ntrnenl and

rtfer:r-•1 fot more

infonn.~~on

~ in the Am ~

A-.nblyinon

eo..n.. Cabla

WWiam Hovt.
!Channel tO) o 30

pm AJsoontheS!hat7

c..l Colora Gerber

.. 831 3707
THE WRITING PU.C£
'1lw Wrang P*:e • a Ire« ~tn tutoi'WI wnting
who wang help w1lt'l Wliint- ll't:
nooc for .p oor .,.,._., l'• b people 'Nho w_,1 10

I«.,..._.

--li&gt;oy-andhaw·-- J 0 BS

eoo.. 10 - . . Hal .. """- c-,pu.. Room

:!36.n.....lay
-doy-12104.
0f/o4ondow
and
_...,. " 6., 9 p mWodnndoy

UUAII oft:N lUilE SEIUES

~~ ~

___

~ :PR=OfESSr===D::;;N:::AI.=S=T;/IS'f';;;,~;;;~===
F-.p--

Co..--

- - . . fhlo...,_.;·, open ......... bor '-ed Alooclatai - Fadll,.. Plan..... , PR-4

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

GllADUAJ£ ASASTAHT10HIP II'IIOODLE

STUDIU

..,=

~plomlhe~~"":t==

M 164.wdta...,oftuti0ft

.

byJool"-'h Anyono._aledln·~
.... . , .. 7:30 p ........ Rao

10beaw_...

····· .··.

1

bag. Alamo Golooy. Bode Hoi. Fobnoary 28
lhr.,..ghMaodl2t . Awtnoand--IOf
""'.,.... wtl bo held Fobnoary 28 " - 7-!J p.m .•
'-eel .... m. """ ...-. ,.. hullh -

eo..-

-........tW·~-

cenMf

A&gt;alloc:Noolnlho-

.....,..

1

$1800. wllh on add_,., $75 non· fC!vndablc ap·
plication 1«. F.. ,furthc lnloonallon . .... 1\fyn
Mawr Collogc/ HERS Mid-Adantic Summn In·

Un!YenllyN&lt;Ofds:

-013:45.

Cl(f'411ttnca, lbero Is an Instructor's guide

Sodolosw- Spoulding Quad . ~ - The following
documents lhou1d M included (one eopy e.c:h) :
1. Complete Uniwnlry traniCripls and.Jor

C£LUJI.AII PHYSIOLOGY SEIIIIMAII•

~

atllttloe Ia a .....
While lnttn.&gt;cta&lt;s enjoy the freedom to

by me Coundl oo ln!emadonal SludiG fOf the
academic ..... 1980/ 81. The.-...... bo ...
peeled to tuch Shndard modem Arabk: at elemen lafy and lntennediole lewis. and lhould lhemore
._, a good "'--aQgo ol Anoblc: and ....,.
undonuonding ol I a - !&lt;aching. CandO!ala.
"""""' and p._.as In goac!U.I&lt; study lhould bo
ol high quaily.
An ~-lhould bo submllted briOfe Ma•ch
20 10! RutMI A. Slon&lt;. Depa.lmen1 ol

RESEARCH
0... Eftlry

IA-.uRI

Clnlo- Sodolosw Depart.....

I.Mo&lt;olbty T -- -"*Y Depart...,..

Cle\-Soc!ology D&lt;pertme..

•

�f.bruay 28. 1980

831· DU benJ
will change
on May 26

P4oncYy, Mev 26, has been targeted as
the . . . - - many Main Street end
Ridge t.. campus leirpi10MS wll be
ringing to lhe dl.l cl a dllferent number,
the UnMnly'o Olllcz cl Telecommu~ has Mnounced.
N- York Telephone company
~..,. in11a1 up to 650 new line
numbers prior lo that date, aoc:ordlng to
RoeMnl J. UH.r, U/B's coorcltnato. c1
tele&lt;:ommu-. '!ben, owr the Ma
25 --..!, the phone company
swttch ........,._ to their new lines.
New .... numben wtll be assigned to
aK Main Slrftt ...:I Ridge Lea campus ex·
tensions otltcr lhon . those between
831-2111 and 831-3999. &amp;tensions In
the 2000'1 end 3.000'•
remain the
- · Zehler oald. He aloo released the
folloWing d.talls cl the swllch-over:
e The um-y•s maln listed number
(genaal lnlonnation) will cbarige from
831-9000 to 831·2000.
• .... Main Slrftt and Ridge Lea
numbers, both old and new. wtll retain
the "831" prefix.
• After Nay 25, Main Street and Ridge
Lea telephone u.ers ..,. not be able to
reach the Amhenl campus by dlahng "6"
or "76" plus e lour-digllextemion . Users
wil dial a three-digit code and then the
Amhent extension. The new dial code
· has not been delermlned at this time.

IM....._IIoe_
• Amhent telephona wtll nol be af.
by the~ . Telopbonc wieR at
Amhent wll IIIII be able to ruch colle~ on ~hoi olh• two c:ampuMS by
dialing "194" ~the desired lour-digit
I~

extension.
• New telophone utcnJion . _ will
be anigned to Un~Yers~ty un11s located 1n
the E.J . Meyer Nemorial Hotpital Annex
on Grider StrHI. Theae School cl·
Medidne numbers wiD be MrVk:ed
tluou~ • . local ~ exchange lind
will no longer bur an "831" prefix.
Academic: and edmlnlstratlva unK
heeds will lind out """'' their newly
uolgned lines wll be ""- they receiv&amp;
copln cl
Febru.y telophone US&amp;
Slatemml. Zehler has _ . w l that ..
departments make an effOrt to remind
frequent .callers cl the propoted changes.
lnSiaAollon cl the Mw lina wil enablor
the phone co.npony to routa cals
·~a modem IWitdUng device at the
utility s Main Street ollie:&amp; which will
replace a 15·year-old master switch In
Goodyur Hal. The new switch will
feature current "'stlile.·of·the·art"
capabi5tlu and ptOVIda the University. h an opportunity to reduce 00015
through spec:tN features and usage con·
trois, Zchior aid
·

tbelr

A)DWR-.gcllllgN ,.,. _ _ ,..

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

&amp;om4

C, visit Siegel

ill-.llhe ....... ....t ...........

cl UUPc!Mples and~ --from
~
the lour SUNY Un1uet1y
(whktl lhe .......,_. "" ... D()B
held In New YO&lt;k Fttday, Febna.y 15,
prior to tha deleslldon.• with
.._, dolir put- r-.:11 ........
"-mbbyman Mark 5191. chairman cl • $19 In oulllde funclng ., that ....... too,
the Higher Educ:allon Com-.
""" faculty cuts IIIOUid ... the 5c8te
Minutes ol both !how..- co.npll~.
ed by Prof. WDam Alen, chairman cl
the 8ulfalo Center UUP O&gt;apcer, give in·
Pr"'-or ~n Garver (8uftalo)
dlc:alic&gt;m; a) cl how the other unlvanlty
dacrlled hio Senah!'s "Academic: Plann·
centers era approaching the retrench·
lng
Committee", cruted live yean ago In
mml Issue; and b) of Assemblyman
Siogel's vkws of the slluation.
to IOi1M! admlnlslnotive plans
the
foculty found ~ ....
The soma group of lacuky w!U
reconvene In Ahny March 10 to pursue
Eaac:t
e-.
the discussions. Pro&amp;. Newton Garver
Dlsc:u551on then focu..d on the exact
and Norman Solkoff of the U/B Faculty
dimensions of the current cuts caUed for
Senate were the other repreKntatlves
In the Governor's Budget. Goldhaber
from this campus.
refuted the faUadous statements thet eU
Edited excerpts from Allen's minutes
State Agencies had suffered equaOy 2'1..
follow:
·
noting that :
(I) While SUNY has been cut lor the
post five years, the other State ogendel
[Prof. Allred) Goldhaber [Stony
are betng c:ut only now for the first Hme.
Brook, Senat ·UUP) reported on whet
(2) Varied Income-offset provisions
the Senate at Stony Brook has done In
mean that about ·half the State agencies
responsa to their Pr:esidomt's request for
are nol really being cut.
c:onsultatlon should retrenchment
(3) Sine&amp; SUNY has to absorb an In·
become necessary. Between midc:reose In positions ($10 million for the
~ber and mid-January, the Senate
new hospital on Long lsland)'whlle suf·
~an "Ad Hoc Committee on
position cuts. the effect Is that the
" (It hasn't yet actually mel) to
~ positions will come out of exlsling
auure communication With all concerned
l)r&lt;9aii'IS.
parties and to make rec:ommenclations
There was _..11y agreement that
about Stony Brook's future to their PresiSUNY was being dlsproport;onotefy cut
dent, who 1s supplying n with copies of all
and thot the actual cumul4tive numbers
relevant data that reach him . This supwould be 3.500 by March 31, 1981.. ..
plements their Standing Senate Commk·
'A'fOid a~ Baaclp'
1ft on Resoun:e Alocation end Planning.
[Prof. John) Stemm [Stony Brook)
A thtrcl c:oncemed -body Is the joint
cautioned aD to avoid attacking the Bun·
Senate-Admlnlslrallon "Working Group
dy
Aid Program at lhio time: that would
on long-Range Academic: Planning, •
be bod political tactlc:s.
w~ 90'11 Is to produce a summary cl
Allen
said he wtohed the separate
evollable ~• and Ideal long-term
goals. Tha 14tter's chief purpooa Is .Faculty Senates would:
(I)
Define
their Unlversfty by deciding
pooltlve planning fo. the future (rather
what was the absolute aine quo non
than rudlonl to alsal .
'
(Faculty and Students?) and then other
Professor [Barbara) Elling [Stony
lac:IO&lt;S In dac:ending O&lt;der. lclenttlying
Brook, Senate) added that this extensive
what SUNY could swviw without (no
comullat!ve mechanism Is at least partly a
matter how uncomfortably) , such as
response to the bod experlenc:e their
almost aD admlniltrotO&lt;S.
campus had In the oumrrwrof l9n when
•
(2) Urge every faculty member to take
(ost.....stlly becauM cl time presoura) the
the situation seriously end tum to UlJP
prior edmlnlslnllon retrenched 45 peofor coordinated effort-etlellll until April
ple from their School ol Education (2/ 3
1 when the budget Is voted on.
of them tenured foculty members)
(3) Avoid " leglllmlzlng" retrenchments
without oonsuilng the faculty . Goldhaber
by
Insisting on the prlndple that no one
added that there Is also otrong foculty
must be cut and thot no logical system e•·
..ndrnent agalnSI breaklng ony contracts
1sts
(or Is likely to evolve) to produce ••
and !Iring ony tenured faculty, though
Ilona! and ac:ceptable cuts. however
there Is also · anguish over the seniority
much
that might be theoretlally
prindple In the sense that the future of e
desirable. Garver dissented vehemently
un~ Is In IIJ young faculty. AI per·
from this last point .
ties pre..m expressed anger over the In·
cident at New Paltz where single In·
Sletlei
d!Viduals were clefoned as " programs"
The !P'OUP then agreed upon a set ol
and retrenched. and k was ~ that
quetllons to pose to A.semblyman Mark
the lour Senate chan woulci ...-ite to
Siegel (Chairmen ol the Higher Educe·
Chancellor Wharton utglng him never to
lion Committee) end at3 p .m . ad)oumed
permlt such a thing to ·hoppen again.
to hio olfice at 223 E. 82nd St. They In·
becauM II was contrary to the basic
formed him that they were not there to
iiiC:edamJc ethoo.
make' any oeparate o. opoc:ial pleas for the
Un~ Cent.,.. but rather to stress the
need fo. e restored -budget for SUNY as a
Profeuor Stewar1 Landry (Binghamwhole. Mr . Siegel responded that he
ton. Senate) reported that at Binghamton
undersaood this; In fact , he would not
the UUP c:hapler wu adamantly opposed
even sPeak wilh them ~ they were ther
to any cliocl-. cl retrenchment beton
&lt;Xh«r grounds.
the Senate and the Admlnlslntlon
In responoe to questions. Mr. Siegel
on the !P'OUncls that ·by IOPI)eartng to
made the following points. At this
thl!n
legibmia retranchmmt h would be a
)unclure hio priorities inc:luded:
"bdrayee." Hen&lt;:'~. thay haw no plann·
(l)
Ra10&lt;e the over 2'1. cuts In the
1ng committee as such . However, in the
budget,
ake cl retr nchment exparier&gt;ces !her
(2) Work to sec that SUNY porcic:ularly
lour years ago, the Senat did negotla
gets Its portion back.
(from a new edmon atlon) a " statement
(3) WO&lt;k agalnll the principle ol
c1 prinCiple" bv which VPM St n
haphozard reductions.
agraed that SUNY/Binghamton would
(4) fielp ""- unill that have par·
no1 (l) ..t.ltnrily cleMe an Individual as a
tic:ular
needs that the Budget has in·
·~m· for r tnmelunent, no. (2) eo·
go&lt;ed ....
panel some IK!O&lt;S cl the unlverlily- by
[SU Y needs 10 have] a pl4n, other·
new ll)pOinlrnan -while retrenchment
wiM there will be enroDment-dt)ven
was going on in other areas
SUNY budgets which ·ar• lik ly to be
mindlculy dustrous.
Siegel also agreed with the idea that u
1\J Allany, ProfWakin
11
porclc:ularly Important to have SUNY•
Mid, ....... ..... a
cl bitbudget -.latacf.from hoapltaf-opontlng
- - .,_ prior Nlr~ and
c:oou
.
~ consultative mechanlomo

c.r.n -

_..........,..,-..,_ontbelrcampua

......

....._._of

s-,..._..

.........-

-n

=

,......,

-.IOnt"in .... "

A~and

Comtnlooion. -

Oillallloobeol

....,_"""" .............
ttne

I'M"' ego and ead&gt; Fal W.V

plaf\ (Jurat.._. tlw)lleyunno
Att
.........
AlpCallon Comml·

•

_..

. . She altio

ca-.ca...-?

How aerbutlv thould one lalca tha proto doN a campus o. two? Sllgoil

~

aid M....,. """-abla

.

(If You don't roly sa
money by
dosing • campus, 91Y't" tha need to

Is..._...., .........

12111 tha pll!lllcll...__; to
' - "**V ..... ochoals ......... then •
ftw glents;
(3) The .._ cl our NqUtra
educallon8l ditlpaul ...,...,.ikaly, on
ac:onomlc .-ouncls. ....t to accommodate
dispened populations; and
(4) ~ you . . . dosing C8lllpUMI
political factors (e.g., regional economic
int.rallj will automallcaly · cause the
dedsions to be made on non·acadernlc:

~-

..... to the origins of our present alsil,
Siegel oald that dapk his pleadings.
SUNY ol!lc:ials gave In on their oppooi·
lion to a tullion inaaM last year becauM
they wan! promised that the extra Income
· would become available for dltcmionary
purposes, for badly ...ted program ad·
dllions, building nrpon, etc. Never·
theless, once the tuKion lnae- wu
voted, the entire dividend was "stolen"
by
the
OOB
and
si m ply
used to suppl4nt the State's contrtbution
to the SUNY budget which was then
red~d proportionately.
As for current tactlc:s, Siegel llraMd
the need lo. SUNYs faculty end students
to lobby incessantly between now and
March 31. Only that might saw the $14
million . which lOoks like the best that can
be hoped for. as of now ....

• SUNY
,__
...... .,heads
week, President Ketter told the U/ B
Coundl that about 120 people may beef.
lected. That number was reported In both
the Buffalo and campus press.
Buffalo State President Bruce
Johnstone estimated that the' college
would have to retrench between 80 to
125 ~ · He noted that a "call fo.
austerity In the public sector - • nol un·
warronted, but cautioned that the absorption cl $26 million In cuts over such a
short lime period would relegotc SUNY
to a "less distinguished" position .
Johnstone lndic:otl!d thet Governor
Carey was ill advls&amp;d f he actually
believes SUNY can digest the cuts
without undergoing retr&amp;nc:hment.

lntlated br NJII«
The repraenuotlves-._.:lally Hoyt
and Sheller-expressed Inflation over
remarks made by OOB Director Howard
"Red" Miller last month at U/B whan he
asserted his ol!ic:e would Impound funds the=ura attempts to put bock Into
the bu
Hoyt charged that Miller "has
no
right" to take such action, while
Sheffer complained that tomethl~ Is
wrong with a State budget procedure
which allows one man such power and
"arrogonce."
Observing that the budget Is now out cl
the Governor's hands. Hoyt told student
representativu they should "wool&lt; in
unison" to oppose H. He suggested all
protest letlen be sent to "-mbbyman
Fink and Senator Warren Anclenon. tha
two Individuals who wield the most
power In the Asambly end Senata.
before the April I vote, A c:oncerted cf.
fort Is needed. he advised. anc:a the
budget Is gaining support in some circXs
because of Its f...:al restraint.
Finally. Bill Allen . whom Hoyt called
"an eloquent spokesmu fl)r the Unlveni·
ty" denoutlC*l tha budget by dedanng b
will "replace excellenc:e In education with
medioc:rtty ."
Allen predicted that ij the current
budget pal5ft the legislature, SUNYs
national reputation will suffer, good faculty will~ )obo elsewhere, and signflcant
reMarch activity wiD be stymied.

u...

Doe. doe~
,..U?
He got e laugh from the crowd when
he told the repraenta- that the equip·
ment in U/B's Dental School 1o 10 old,
we ""'Y have to go to the Smlthaonlan for
parts
Alen argued that • no objective need
exills" for budget cuts "at this time" end
oald he no logic In ")eopordloing long
term lnvettmc.nts for short ttrm

problem •

Alter hao1ng .. tha ...... argutMn •
......... Mid flnaly that he bed "c:hanged
hio "*'d about oppc111ng rella&gt;ehment.•
'1 think - fhouid recr.ttldl Red M
"

-

�February 28, 1980

Urban planning degree
wins Carey's approval

eight semesters, not including summers.
Gov. H.q, L. Carey has approved an
The field c::hangcs too fast to draw H out
ar &gt;endment to the SUNY Master Plan oflu~. Jammal says.
fl.::lally authorizing a U/ 8 program
IMcling to the ~ of Master of Urban
Wllat ...........ould be
Planning (MUP). Dorothy Harrison
The nuts and bolts out of the way.
Blaney, deputy commlslioner for higher
Jammalleans acn;&gt;ss the table In his office
and prolnslonal educalion , State Educaon the second ftoor ol Hayes HaU. The
tion Department, announced earlier this
Important thing, he stresses, Is the nature
of the planners he wants to tum out.
month.
The first three or four graduates from
The urban planner has to be m&lt;&gt;n! than
the program (which was conditionaDy apsomeone who plans, period. He or she
proved two years earlier) will !'!Uive
can no longer be content simply to pass
MUPs this spring. Prof. lbraharn Jarnmal
forward to politicians a view of a final proof the School of Architecture and Enduct , abdicating all respon.a,wty for lm·
vironmental Design (SAED) reports.
plementation to the bureauaats. The
Eight students are CUJTently taking the
planner has to become Involved In the
MUP sequence, Jammal says, with an
social, behavioral, economic and poiKical
uhimate enrollment of 30 projected .
aspects of the urban environment, jamThe U/ 8 program - the only one of Its
mal insists.
kind in SUNY -takes Its place with
He or she must be future-oriented to be
slrnUar ones within New York State at
sure, but should not be locked Into any ,
C9meD, Syracuse, Columbia, NYU and
one view of that future . Jammal feels
Hunter.
decisions have to be made that keep
In line wKh a growing trend at schools
future options open .
·
wllh slmUar Interests, the urban planning
The planner also must have a sense of
program is being enriched wKh the
responsibiiKy concerning which decisions
presence of an International arm. Columcan and should be made, and their
bia and the MaKwell School at Syracuse
ethical Implications for society.
have both moved In this direction. JamThe planner needs a systemic view of
of the property's proximity to LaSalle
By Joyce Buchnowsld
mal notes. Here, a Center for Comthat society, an ability to trac.e out the imPark
.
She
agrees
that
LaSalle
is
a
line
~Sioll
parative Studies In Development Plannpact of a decision or c'hoice on aU the
municipal asset . but doesn't feel it's a big
"If you build a suburban shopping mall
ing was estabUshed this past September
related pieces that make up the whole.
draw - at least for tourists, or for that
on the downtown waterfront . are you goHe or she must be aware, too, of
maher. suburbanites. The recreation park with Jammal at Hs helm.
tng to get Mrs. Jones from Amhenl t.o do
The
programs
are
parallel
and
mutualpolitical reality ... We may not agree with
she proposes. on the other hand. could
her shopping there. especially in the
ly
supportive,
Jammal
Indicates.
the
power strudure that exists, but it's
be
seen
from
the
Thru
end
would
be
wmter when she has to park her car 300
there, and we have to recognize . respond
unique enough 10 attract those who orFour need• being met
feet away from the storesr'
and
affect It, .. if plans are ever to be
to
dinarOy
would
be
heading
off
to
Niagara
The
MUP
program
serves
at
least
four
In the same breath. Heidi Carman
any more than just that, if the planner Is
Falls instead of Buffalo.
specific educational needs, Ks director
responds to her own question. The
ever
to
be an active pt,licy maker, rather
"In
order
for
downtown
revitahzation
answer Is obvious to anyone familiar with
points out:
to be successful, people have to have a
than a passive technocrat."
1. A n~ed for profeulonal planning
the Queen City's formidable off-shote
reason for going there,·• she insists. As for
The ethical, socially-conscious, aware
upertise. In this decade, h has been
wind gusts
planner also knows when to say " no,''
LaSalle Park. "leave h undeveloped "
estimated. the U.S. will require between
Carman , a graduate student m the
16,000 and 17,000 professional urban Jammal hoted . That's the kind of plannSchool of Archkecture and Environmen£nergy conoerv.tloo Ignored
ing ll!hich has characterized Cleveland's
planners for governmental agenctes
tal Design , has been asking a lot of quesAnother beef Carman has with the
well-plotte&lt;l adaptation to decline . That
alone ; there are currently less than haK
tions lately about the development of
American Chies design Is that it "ignores"
city
has had the guts to turn its back on
that figure . Only about 20 per cent of
Buffalo'• "crown jewel" - questions
energy conservation . Fond of posing
grandiose proposals by developers- •.
those taking planning degrees now go inwho:h have caused discomfort lor both ciquestions to emphasize a point , she mu.s·
which , in the long run , didn't make sense
ty offiCials and American Cities Corp.,
to government agencies.
ed aloud : "They think It's ell right to build
i
2. A need wllhln th~ University for for the municipality aod Its people.
the Bakimore-based firm hired to manage
condos right near the water. but how are
Behavior-based planning and design ,
the waterfront development project.
graduate training In plennln!l- 8efore
these people going to pay their heating
Jammal
says,
"inverts
the
classical
quesAnd the more she probes. the more
the
MUP
came
into
being,
only
md1vidual
biDs? Have you ever noticed the railings
tion of: 'What are the effects of the
courses and scattered specializations in
ar a residents are beginning to express
nor the water? They're caked with ice .''
I ar that the project WID be handled With
urb8n studies and urban affairs were of- physical environment of Man?'. to the
The obvious implication : What's to prequestion of: 'What are the behaviors and
the same visionary zeal that put an open
fered he11!-ln anth~opology , economics.
vent the wind and water from playing the
geography, sociology and a number of activities of Man which should affect or
air stadium In snowy, suburban Orchard
same sort of havoc with residential units?
generate certain kinds of environments?'; other
schools
and
departments.
The
Park Instead of a domed factlky in
In Carman's design , all units lace south
downtown Buffalo . Or further back, that
MUP will draw upon these other and 'How can such behaviors and ac-·~
so passive solar systems can be incor~
tlvlties become the basis lor coordinated
approved constructk&gt;n of that curvaceous
disciplines,
and
w!U
provide
a
focal.
coorporated. The city doesn't get enough wn
intervention In both the physical and
arch~ectural aboriion , the Skyway.
dinating point for their applications in
for active systems, she notes. AD dwellsocial
systems of his environmentr "
In December, Carman completed a
planning.
ings are also far enough &amp;om the lake to
master plan model lor the 66-acre site .
3 . Needs of the planning proleulonal
prevent unnecessary hardship from wind
Mdhocla •pproprlate to the
Her design, she believes, evolves &amp;om a
for continued upgrading. Many Inand water. Parking . Is underneath the
problem•
dividuals now engaged In planning lack
d erent philosophical framework than
units, again, to minimize exposure lo in·
Just as each dty needs the type of
professional backgrounds In the field . · development that suKs Its own peculiar
the one offered by American Cilleo.
clement weather.
Too, the field is changing so rapidly that
Stmply, Carman maintains th~ public
The aho-voiced graduate student
needs, so do the developing nations of
land should be developed primarily with
those wllh professional credentials need
wondered aloud if American CK!es' arthe Third World .
1
the public In mind . This is not to say that
up-dating.
chHects were designing plans lor the BufThe Center for Comparative Studies in
Amencan Cities doesn't agree; K's the
4. The need lor a. catalyst lor coorfalo waterfront while sipping gin and
Development Planning Is dedicated to
degree of accesslbilrty which-differentiates
dinating University r.........,.. Into an
tonics on Waiklld. They certainly couldn't
enhancing this capabUKy by eKposlng
the two tchemes.
lnterclblclpllnary nctwod&lt; capable of foreign planners studying here (and
have understood Buffalo's weather, she
responding to urban planning needs In
contends. or the needs of Its citizenry.
Americans who plan to work abroad) less
Carman wants 10 ge1 one tning
the community.
to western perspectives and more to W,AYS
A 10-IICI'eperk
The MUP course sequence Is bulk
str'!ight. She Is not trying to peddle her
Carman·, plan calls for a 10--acre
in which they can develop persp-ctlles
upon a conceptual-theoretical foundaown plan and she is not on an ego trip.
appropriate to th~ country· In question
recreational park near the water featuring
tion , a group of courses which encourage
Dapile comments from cit}l fathers and
and responSive to the stages of develop80 amphKheater. night club, beer garden,
American CK!es' officials, she Is not "just
development of a common language and
ment In which that country finds itsd.
childr n's park, children's museum, a
reference frame for students who come The center w!U attempt both to provide
a student" looking for a cause or a soappond and boat rentals. all for the amuseboK . Neither is she making her opinions · from a diversity of undergraduate advanced academic training to educators
ment of the public. She puts a river walk
backgrounds and lnteresiS. Students will from these nations who are already
known - as a recent Courier·fqweu
right n«artht.water's edge Instead ol havedHorial seemed to Insinuate - to emand have come from areas as widely scat- teaching planning at the urban, regional
1119 ~meander~ ')&gt;arklng lots," as
tered as architecture. environmental and national levels, and to offer adbwrass any governmental leaders or
~~proposed In the American
stymie tho political aspirations. Maybe
design, urban alfalrs, behavioral. social
vanced professional training to practi·
for
some,
polK!cs
is
a
motivating
Ioree,
and physical sdences and the U/B col- tioners and government officials.
An we of buldingo Including a hotel,
leges
wKh
utban
and
environmental
inbut
ft's
not
for
her,
she
insists.
two office towers....! r~ 11om partlaBy
· Basic to Its work will be a network of
t resiS. Others want to supplement ties wKh planning educators, profesIIUITOUnds the recreation area . Since
ellot to
It bit
previous or concurre.nl profe:ssk&gt;nal train· sionals, and Institutions throughout the
parking Is located within each structure,
Buffalo Is not her only home, but H has
lng In fields such as management, law, world.
been home for some ten years now. In
mor til'
space Is avlilable for public
civil engineering. social weHare and
fact , Cannan owns a house In the city.
UM Some 400 residential un
are also
Such Unks have already been forged
public heakh .
pl8ced bacll from the water. keepng the
She I Is the battle she Is waging against
wllh th~ Center for International Training
Once a common base has been and Research In Urban Development In
current development plans transcends
\IICW lnlecl
froe1119
land nor the
developed, students venture onto one of Washington ; the Development Planning
petty polrtics, her role as a student arlake for public u
Coverod toraldes confour specialization tracks (5J"'IIal systems UnH, UnlversKy College, London; and
MCI "-&gt;&gt;I and raldentlal ar H 10
ch 8cl, or any egi&gt; involwment.
design, urban policy and urban manage- the International Asoociation for Urban
ON need MWr I
wtnter'a ch8.
"Buffalo has one shot to make R big,"
men\. behavior-based &lt;ksign, and urban and Regional Research and Education,
Bv contnst, llhc nota. the Amencen
she up
s, "If they blow K this time ihe
research and theory building) . Electives Alx-eit-Provlnce, France.
or--a "- rdden and com· clly will clio&lt; "
and a set of hands·on eq&gt;erlencn (labs
......,..j units ncar the -er·. edge, with
What Carmen wants Is compromise.
Other ties and outside funding will also
and prKticums) round out the program . be sought .
parking behind
blddings ~
~ Quinn and the head ol
· 1
Finally, a termiOIII thesis or project "at Quinn, torrn.oiy the clly'a economic
American Cltfa t I her that her "openA major conference will be held here In
t
to the comp«tcnce of a graduating May for Fublght scholaB &amp;om develop~ •..,uclhdOf, _,..j81a.....,t
space" c1a1gn "Is not economicaly I
otudcnt."
· Ing nations, on the topic of "Appropo:.U..
blc ," the lnliltS HIs.
.
......
tNt .. 11M •
'
Both lul- and part-time students are Education for Development Planning "
Corman feels more publoc m«bnffS
and
"pubic," But,
being
aecepted.
Jammal.not
s,
the
latter
be
held
on
the
development
thould
thll &lt;My
Later In May, Jam mal will be off to a
wtl ~ be prolaolonals cunently coni"' nee In France . He hH been to
QOIJ'8cl, •you .... un) to
plana And theM
(unlike the
In
•
employed. A fuD-ttme otudentls required similar ones In Toronto, here In Buffalo,
ochenl ohould be well aPvertiMd and
to complete hlo or her work In fo"!'
aty'•dalgn
ocheduled for limel when worldnt people
In Pari&amp; and In Pozn.n, Polond Lest
l&amp;r!WIIIers; • part-timer. In no mor than
weab«eu
un end
year, he vbfted the repubbc of birc .

Carman has her own ideas
about waterfront deve lo p ment

o...

c-

-t . -. .

c--

•ak•

�·.
Fmnaary 28. 191!0

The U/B CbiDae community ushered In 'The Year of the Moal&amp;e!l' at
AmhHltlh School Saturday night with tnlditlonal dance, traditional
food and the traditional good time.

China Night
Moynihan aide predicts
more research fund:...
" Nothing Is predictable " In
Washington, noted Timothy Russert.
chief of staff for Senator Daniel Patrick
Moynihan, ·but what's probable is that
more "Federal dollars will be funneled to
energy and defense. with higher ed11ca·
lion benefiting from a release of additional money for research and developmenL
R..ssert's appearance at Canisius College Friday marked the fifth In a series of
presentations sponsored by U/ B:S
Department of, Higher EdtJCation.
Auertlng that me education lobby "is
one of the strongest and best in
Washington," Russert ~ted that
ed11cation in general will "hold Its own" in
the Federal budget, oorthat "no new programs" will be funded . Citing last week's
5-4 S11preme Court decision upholding a
New York law that provides reimbursement to parochial ochools for Statemandated paperwork and programs. he
cautioned that higher edtJCation should
be prepared for sharing Its resources "at
an lncr ased rate" with elementary and
MCOndary ochools.
Russett , an a orney who is run&gt;Ored to
want Jack Kemp's CongressiOnal seal ~
Kemp should decide to pu1$ue loftier
pol~tcal aspirations, said the State's
educational institutions most be more aggressive in their efforts 10 gel R&amp;D
money . He proposed forming a
"5~/Rochester/Buffalo axis" tom·
posed of the area's public and private
lchools and lndullries which could work
an conoert 10 attract contracts and
research monies.

Freshmen place money above
other reasons for college
Freshmen who enteied college last fall
are more Interested In making money
and being financially well-off than any

other entering class in recent years, ac-

particular benefit to the State, Russert
theorized that such a "dramatic cutback"
In taxes would "freeze the imbalance"
New V ork now experiences in receiving
Federal wpport and would kkely shrink
the budgets of current programs sustain·
lng localllles, such as revenue sharing.
"It's a large price to pay for a state
already hemorrhaging," he concluded .

oe-.
the draft ..... Carter
Addreuing isSues of national

statisllcally adjusted to represent the na·
lion's total of some 1. 7 miDion fuU-time
freshmen .
The 1979 survey also produced
evidence that a ten -year trend toward
"grade inflation" In the secondary schools
may be ending, according to UCLA P&lt;ofessor Alexander W. Astin, survey dlrec·
tor. The percentage of freshmen report·
ing average high school grades of B + or
better dropped from 43.4 to 39 between
1978 and 1979 .
The trend also was reflected In another ·

survey question . The

percentage

acknowledging that "grading In high
schools has become too easy" declined
from 63.7 per cent to 60 per cent between 1978 and 1979
The survey. The Amerlcon Fre•hman :
Nallonoi Norms for Fall 1979. Is $7.50
from the Cooperative Institutional
Research Program, Graduate School of
Education , Univel$ily of California . Los
Angeles. Calif. 90024.

Personnel News
N- Health lioeuranc:e Boolt.tet.

tcope.

Russert relayed the majOrity of Congress
no longer holds the opinion that the
Unlled States Is number one in defense.
Many on the Washington scene are convinced that the Soviets halle "overtaken"
the U.S . In conventional hardware and
foras and that our country's ma~ary
preparedness must be "drastk:ally"
bolstered .
Russert pointed out tluot Senators
Moynihan and J~ tried to get approval
. of legislation that would revive the Gl BUI,
oot didn't meet wkh success. If such
benefits are m.aintalned . the Senators
contend . more men and women wiU be
encouraged to enlist , possibly lim nating
the need for a draft. Moynihan. by the
w.y. feels Selocllve SeMce registration
for women "consistent" with his views
on feminism. Russert relayed.
RuSMrl lOki the gathedng he bekeves
th« U S has done
can lo " promo! "
detente , oot that he feels "tru.e" det&lt;mte
never really exlsted . SALT 1ust "legitimized the arm• • - Co-exJstell(le is lmpo&lt;·
tant , but human oecunty has to come
lust." "" declared
.
As lor Presad&lt;ml Carter. Ruosert thlnlu
he had an "Ineffective" foreign policy lor
his flflll two Y."ars In olface and filnl
· wrong$IQ!lllls' the R
Masaruuk
of It He predid d thai Car1 r'1
Repul)lacan opponents w «:l&lt;ppoit
In th months to . come and
e
P&lt;Ui&lt;lofm •.._,n haw a to"ijh time" de
fending wto the clKtonat

aa·"

cording to the 14th annual freshman
survey conducted by the University of
California at Los Angeles under sponsorship of the American Council on
Education .
A total of 62.7 per cent of the
freshmen , compared to 59.7 percent last
year and only 43.5 per cent in 1967 . said
that "being very well-off financially" is a
very important goal in life.
Al the same ttrne. 63.9 per cent (tom·
pared to 60.4 last year and 49.9 In 1971)
said that a very .important reason for
deciding to go to college was "to be able
to make more money." A sligh~y higher
percentage of students this year also ex·
pressed an interest in ''obtaining recognition from colleagues" and In " having administrative responsibUHy for the work of
othel$."
.
The 1979 survey was based on questionnaires completed by 289,814 new
freshmen &lt;mtering a national sample of
560 two- and four-year colleges and

univ~. Of these. 190,1S l question·
nalres and 362 Institutions were used to
compute national norms which were

Various Health Insurance booklets (as previously reported in the 1/ 11180
isSul' of the Reporter! will not be distributed this month . Mr. Joseph E. Upl&gt;'!rt,
manager of Employee Benefats Adminlslration, stated "th · Employees In·
surance Section in Albany has delayed the statewide dlstributtoia to state agenclos due to problems at the print shop." The Personnel Oepartm"'t now an·
tldpates receipt o( these booklets and distribution 10 University employees by
late March .

·y.., F-.. Anta.ble
for the convenience of interested employees. Federal and State Income Tax
Forms (short. long. various schedules and lnstrudlonal booklets) are available in
the Personnel Department's Benefrts Rock located an the lobby of Crofts Hall.
Amhem Campus .
Ma)or Me41c:al DeadUnc
March 31. 1980, is the deadline lor filing 1979 Major Med ical claams. Claim
forms (bl11e as OJII'C)Oied to the 1980 buff-&lt;OOiored claim forms) are available at the
Personnel Department Reception Window, Room 106. Crofts Hall. Telephone
requests should be to Miss Penny Ziehl at Amherst Extension 2650 (off campus:
call 636-2646) .

MEDICARE Remtader
If you or any of your covered dependents are age 65 or older. or have not attained age 65 but are recelvlng Social Secunty disability benefko and are ellgible
lor enrollment In the Federal Medicare Program, you or these dependents mWt
· nrollln the MEDICARE program to prevent lot$ of he•lth insuronoe benefits
Benet~ payable by the Stat Heakh lnsuiance Program for covered servicles
wil be reduced by benefits available under MEDICARE as soon u you b.come
iglble lor MEDICARE whether or not you enroll in that program. n-idOte. ~
11 extremely Important that you and your covered dependents ~tnroll tn
MEDICAR£ when lirsl eligible
·
.
You wm be reimbursed by N Y State·(ln your bl·we kfy paycheck) for the
month1y cost of ""'rollment In the Federal MEDICARE Program Contact Mrs.
F'ran Alopaugh In P"..--.nel far additJonal lnform.ollon on th requirement
R .-ed ~ employees should contact the Employee ln~~.~Rnee Section ,
N Y tat Owpartment of Crvil Service. the S14te Oltice Butldong Campus.
A!)any , rt Y. 122391or addJtional-inlorm.at.aon .

�D

Crackdown on dru......
may 'cost' too much

---

&amp;,NIMS....

In &amp;.ndlnavla, drunk-driving II as
abhoned as violm1t crime.
In Fnnce, the police c.n 11op you at a
......tblodt, wllh no cauM lor suoplcion,
and . . !IOU to prove yow oobrlety.
In a.-., ~ !IOU are caught drinking
' your llcenM II autolnaticaBy
. That's the low.
Dr. H. Laurence Roos. a worldrwnowned e&gt;q&gt;ert on the question of

~

. . . . , _ Ia drinking and driving,
~

me

lo not, "Can the low deter drinkdriving,: but ~Is It worth H?"
lo a prOfaeo. of sociology here
and . , adjunct profeaor In the Law
School. ,.. a raul! of ..-clt in Scandinavia, France and Britain, he is con•
· vtnced that, In order IO&lt; the low to haw a
long-term, continuous effect In deterring
drinking and driving. a heavy police
presence would be necfiSSilly.
Ing and

Ro.

lt'a

_t....,

People wO&lt;klng in law, he s~ .
haw a tendency to try to get people to do
what they're supposed to , as though
that's easy. '"I'm saying H Isn't,'' he explabu.
New Y O&lt;k State low ha5 mandated
license suspension, IO&lt; drunk driving , as
British law does, since 1967. But the
8ritlsh enlo&lt;ce lt mO&lt;e successluOy than
we, says Ross. because we bargain and
"push things w&gt;der the table.•
The law can deter, Ros5 muses, " In an
sorts ol ways It's a function primarily of
the probabUdy of apprehension and only
to a. lesser degree of the severity or the
penalty.
It depends, he speclloes, on the nature
of the act, how much motivation Is In··
volved , how easy h is to observe the act .
and how possble H Is 10 prove that the act
was committed
Scholars in the sociology of the law
and legal psychology ar just beginning to
try to loU the holes in our understanding ol
these considerations. he adds.

People rnpood dtflertndy
Scientists who have tried to categorize
how people respond to threall note there
are differences. according to the per-

sonaltty ol the offender What os the ol·

lender's toleriiiiCle for pain, for inltanc:C;
lo the~~ or future Ol:le-.!?

One
theory , Ros con.tlnua, ..,._. thet oome people live
mO&lt;e In the present, and ochen, m0&lt;e in
the future. The middle claoo, he notes, Is
particularly ~ to defer gratilicallons oo
to do without for the sake of future
rewards .

The WO&lt;klng class, according to this
theO&lt;y, is mO&lt;e present-oriented . They
want gratification now and don't care
about what's coming In the future .
"A present-oriented person Is less
~detetTable' than a future-oriented Individual , because the punishment wiD
ta\&lt;e place In the future ." he says.
Optimism vs. pessimism Is another factor, the U/ B social !dentist points out.
Psychologists note , he reporll, that some
people are just generaDy mO&lt;e optimistic
about their chances than others. The optimist, Dr. Ross concludes, is less deterrable.
~He ' ll thiiok: ·wen. ten per cent of the
people get punished. and I won't be In
lhat ten per cent .' ..

He'• dublou•
Roos is dubious that enforcement of the
driving and drinking law is ever going to
be worthwhUe .
"The threat would ~ve to be so oppressive, ff h's going~ have .any effect,
that we would aU suffer. I wonder
whether we shouldn't try to do what we
can, within Umhs, on drinking and drivIng, but put our major emphasis on making cars crash-proof."
You could finance the effort, he sug·
gests, by fining people who are caught
drinking and driving and putting the
money Into research In automobile
design .
From the point of view of deterrents
theory, Ross concludes, the idea is a very
good one . From the point ol view of civil
rights , though . he feels h"s debatable. ·
··we don't know how much his.'" Ross
says, "but there is a price In terms ol
pollee Intrusion Into the Uves of citizens
that would have to be paid in order to
keep the roads clear of drunks .
.. I'm not sure that's consistent Mth the
way we l"ke to love... he says.

Luther left, but Rome
rallied, History prof says
The Augsburg Confession. penned
authorny the Catholic church wielded
nearly haH a millennium ago by
over 11.$ members. Added to this was an
evolving anti -clerical althude reinforced
lut11erans. was originaOy conceived as •
"Slat ment of reconc~iatlon'" between the
by blatant abuses ol priestly vows and the
1"""-rs of Marton luther and the
Church"s preoccupation with WO&lt;ldly
Roman Catholic Churcb.
concerns.
"It fOiled ." observed U!B h torian
The Issues debated nearly live cen ·
Robert Pope . but dod provide a basis of
tunes ago betwe~n the t'NO rehgions are
unly and ldentoty for the early lutheran
Sllll points of contention today. offered
church
Pope; the notoon• of papal authority and
the assertion of freedom of faith for the
Pope's address lost Thursday """ the
tnt of thr sponSO&lt;ed by the lutheran
individual, among them.
end Catholic campus monlstnes to mark
What luther did , relayed Pope. was
the 450th anniversary of the Augsburg
"'offer people direct access to God ." In·
Coni · , the document which offiCialstead of teaching men to lear the wrath of
ly splot the two relogions Anoth«r lecture
God and be overwhelmed by guih
10nrght by Dr Robert loew, rehglous
because of human frailtaes. luther
dlfecsor of t
Chautauqua lnst.uution .
substkuted a r de mfng Chnot who saves
Ius faithful through grace. Salvation. exlocuo on common miiCOOCOPuon
the two groupo have ol each olher. The
plained Pope. became a "divine gift"
lut.presentauon. March 6. to be jointly · fr ly goven to man. And a gift he need
given by a lutheran mlnist«r and
not prepar IO&lt;.
Catholic: priest, woll emphasize comlnst ad of the Roman Catholic Church
mon
In the two churches and "What
becoming enfeebled through divistveCan Happen Now" a a resuk of them.
nes , the Counter-RefO&lt;mation which
followed brought new "vitalhy" to it. The
The 1ectures begin at 7 45 p m at the
Cantallooon CAnter on Main St
Church moved to negate many abuses
Alihouih luther orofluencAtd the Refor- and r or "admlnfslrative efficlency."
matiOn , he cbd not aloM preapitate · il .
By 1600. Pope noted, Catholicism had
The un•y of Wm
Chrlouamty t&gt;eg.n
expanded Its boundaries · to 'North and
to
1
decades before the apSouth America ard Africa
pearance of ,...,.., luther. nocad Pope
" Modern Roman Cathobdom ha• rt•
Poatleal end aconomic developrnen .
rooa ., the Counter·RefO&lt;maoon," he
Midi as
jpOW!h of urban commu
added It wu dunng thlo period that
RO&lt;na began to expand upon the pnn·
4lnd
aducawd ~ - under! "to ihuotr and 1
of
e and devotoo~ to Christ

Non Profh Org

U

Passage

PAlO
Buffalo. NY
P rmot No 311

20 I 20 invades
For the last several months now. Dr.
Mary Cassata. U/ B's resident soap opera
fanatic . has been the central character in
a kind of media serial that might be called
"As The Camera Rolls."
Cassata"s been bubbbng with delight as
a promotion campaign lor her Buffalobased soap conllnues to gain
momentum .
Along with several colleagues. she has
been creating a soap opera whose. setting
would be the Queen City . U/ B would be
known as Warren Univer5ity . named
after the chap whose dilly. "Shuffle Off
To Buffalo." is one of Buffalo's claims to
fame .
Cassata's venture garnered cover story
_,.enllon by the Buffalo News Gusto
tabloid a few months back. And she's appeared on national radio talking about
"Ryan's Hope ." "'All My Children'" and

cla~sroom
other would-be competitors ol her own
continuing story. to be called "The New
Buffalonians.··
Her latest media coup was a February
25 campus visit by a reporter/ camera
crew from '"20/21).'" ABC"s televi.ston
magazine.
During Cassat_.s 10 a .m . soap class in
Clemens Hall. Monday. the "20/20"
cameramen, sound crew and a couple of
writers gathered Information for what
they told the Reporter wiD be an Integral
part of a larger report on soap opef!IS in
general.

Cassata was then interviewed
separately in the Cooke Hall offiCe of her
Project for the Study of Daytime T elevision .
II Is not yet known just when "20/20"
will air· their report. Stay tuned ....

Credences sets editorial board
An editorial board lor Credences, a
journal of twentieth century poetry and
poetics . to be published by the
Poetry/ Rare BOOk Collection of the
University UbraJies, was announced this
week by Saktldis Roy. director of
libraries.
Dr. Robert Bertholf. curator of the Collection , is editor ol the journal .
Membero of the editorial board were
selected for "their abilhy and wisdom to
contrlbute to the substance ol the
magazine. twentieth century poelTy.
poetics and the aflied arts. Each is expeeled to actively assist Dr. Berthoff .ln
making Credences an authoritative and
successful publication :· the library News
reported In hs February 11 Issue.

Board members Include :
Dean Keller. curator ol special collections , Kent State University;
George Butterick . curator of
manuscripts , Wilbur Cross library ,
University of Connecticut :
Michael Douidson , curator ol the Archives for New Poetry, University of
Cal~omia, San Diego:
Robert Creeler. occupant of the David
Gray Chair o Poetry and letters.
Department ol English. U/ B:

Career·Day
Bullalo publk high ochoolotudenta were on campus laot Wednuday to get
a 1IIm- of what fttllneerlnt li aU ~bout . Sponsored by the Faculty of

£nP.-rln1 and Applied Sclmon, the Entlneerlnl Car- Day bfOUiht
more than 120 kl4a to both cam- to obtain careu Information and tour
lab lacdltleo, where they 110t a chaoce to peer through an ltctron ocannlng
mlo:rOICIOpe, abolle.

�a publication of
The Office of
Cultun~l Affairs
"Esther Harno11 .

wnter ~edttor

To keep track of
U/B's cultunlll
events through
March 2:1, save
this m11gnet

The Chinese
Experience
A month·long !March 17·Apnl 171
festrval of Chrnese culture. 'The
Chrnese Experrence·· wtfl bnng a varrety
of events and vtsttors to the campus
The Offrce of Cultural Affatrs. through a
grant fr om the Facully·Student AsSOCta·
lion. and '" consullatton wrth members
or the Chtnese communrtv and wrth the
1979·00 Cultural Affarrs Councrl. has ar
ranged the p&lt;Ogram
An exhtblt , " The Art ol Ghtna."
featunng parntrngs and calhqraphy bv
Chrnese parnter. Zhu Chenquang Isee
below I. and w orks loaned bv provate col
lectors. wrll be on dtsplay throu!jhout
the l estrval rn the Capen Gallery !Sth
floor Capenl. Amherst Campus The ox
htbtt"s apenrng receptiOn wtll be Thurs·
day. MMch 20. from 7·9 PM . durulQ
whrch the artrst . Zhu Chenguang. writ be
presenl. and wrH do demonstratrons of
freehand brush pam!rng and calhgrat&gt;hv.
Mr, Zhu wrll also grve demonstratrons
hncludrng paper culltngl from noon·2
PM on Thursday and Frtdav. March 20
and 21 tn 10 Capen Hall lnextto the Ttl ·
hn Rooml He IS the forme&lt; dtrector of
the Guangxr Arttsts ASSOCiatron and of
the GuaOQJU Arts &amp; Crafts Research In
sttiute. and author of " The Three
Perfectrons - Chrnese
Poetry ,
Caflrgraphy and Parnttng " H rs vrsrlrng
from Chrna thts year . to leach art rn New
York Ctty fHe'H also teach Professor
Paul McKenna's cia rn the Art Depart ·
ment on Merch 20. 9·11 AM and Pro
lessor McKenna savs that obtsefvefs are
welCome I

On Thursday, March 27. at 12 noon .
Ten Shuzhan. another vtsrtor from
Chona. wtfl drscu
" Musrc tn Chtrl3 ..
Mr Tan ts head or 1 Shanghar Conser·
vatory of MuSIC (roughly OQurvalertt to
the Jurlhard Schoofl and wrll spea and
answer q
Iron a Ill "Musrc 1t1
China .. A parent of a SUlu t·method
vtohn pupol 1\15 poonlod ow to us t hal
Mt. Tan I who
hom f e VIOIV'tll) wrll
ha much 10 say 11111 wrll be ot IIller 1
to 1
ot tills Japanese met bod of
t-.chlnJ, as
Mr T • ""''' to the
U S. is bttOQ sporsored by Cotum~
0011111&lt; I

~"'ate rn

The Marc ...,,

(i/tn&lt;."P PNiormance

Milt

th

Ch•ar~

a

Chong

'

�Lene Lovlch. punk coloratura, ends week of rock eventa, March 7.

•
Thefe are too many htrn snow.ngs 19
1ndtvtdu8My 10 m~Jgner.

Good soutoes

mlornl\l·"""' are the UUAB folm eaten
ava~able at Squore fnformauon
Streotl and 106 Talbert Hall
!Amherst!. Call 636 2919 Jor recorded
onformaHQn Center for Medoa Study
also publishes a lostrnp of therr films ,
wl1och 1S avarlable at 101 Wende Hall
Street!. Qr call83l -2426 And the
Fnend of CAC ICQmmunlly Acllon
C01psl announces a Spnng Semester
weekend mov1e program . wtth
"PIIerVIhtng from the ava111 -garde to the
" The telephone numbet of thl&gt;tr
HaU olltee 1S 831 5652

a Cr

twe A
IP Recual nf
bv Japanese pmm I , . Ak.t
ao Baud Rroli&gt;l H~ll on
Thuro;d;ty, March 27, 8 PM

mustr.:

T

ahasl~

~ concer1 of mtd mnett'Pfllh rentluy

band mu. , PL-1~ fl4'"1 onqtnal m
tlli!YW'fl(S Du led bv Fran Cor&gt;f)l&gt;la
fllf'fnhefs of the Buii&gt;IO Phtl! or
and Fr•&gt;nds B rn Recolal Hall.
28. 8 15 PM

UI!IA"B ""MLSIC Commouee calls rts
sprrng semesler concerts "Rock 'n R.ofl'
Dance MuSIC lor the OO's " Consult the
magnet d~recJory for detaols of the three
'Shows; all or wl1rch w olf be held, m the
words of UUAB's news release. "in the
Unrversny of Buffalo's Ftllmore Room.
located, 11 beauhful Squ~re Hall ."
Heat's some more rn formai1on sup
plied by MadiSOn Avenue voa UUAB.
"Root Boy Slrm has been called the

Rauw was a wetl-4-nown. dancer I
choreographer hn 1964. well -knowo1 10
l~
potnl
of
notortetv,
for
choreographrng and performrnq rn ~
nude pes de deux for Bullalo's " Fesllval
ot tho Arts Today" I. assoc•ated wrth the
avant-qarde arts scene at New York 's
JudSOil Chwch She had onco'l)Orated
short fdms mto her performance Pteoes.
but tho use ot narrative and character
gradually developed, cutmrnatrng m
"Lrv or Performers." wl11ch she made
on 1972 Thill was the tuonrn!j porn! lor
Raoner . wl1o ga•e up dance and concen·
lrated on feaiUre l1lms
"Jouoneys from Berlin /197 1" rs
Raoner's fourth teature-length movl8 II
prernrered on New York a tew weeks
&amp;go. and crl\tcal re Irons ranged hom
tmPressed f"the 11'1310&lt; tndependenl him
ol the Vf'-"r " l to annoyed f"humorl
sejf rndulg(!nt;e"l Perhaps the revrews
reflect as muc about the oosrtoon of the
cut
YtS ·3· YI
avant garde films as
nython&lt;l el .
You ·ll have a chance to form your
own ,udgment R ner wrll screen and
drscu her him at the Albnght·Knox Art
Gal
tomorrow ovenonq. Febwarv 29.
at 8 31J. as lhe second on the 1979
Ev
for New Folm sefles ·

eo

Most Dosgustong Man on the World .
wl1och may be true But we prefer 10 call
ot .. charistnB. " After Root graduated
from Yale. we are told . he formed hrs act
w11h som€1 fnends They sl.arled woth
numbers loke "I Was A Go-Go Boy m the
Mark Sprll Show," "Naughty but
None." and "A Lot of Songs About Pat
Ntxon .. - "so me really dtsgusttnq
mater.altn an era when dtsgust was real ly not rn " Success came to them.
however. when lhev introduced the
James "Brown beat and recorded theu
self -descubed underground claSSIC,

" Boogre 1Tol You P.Uke ." And so on
Root Boy Slim writ perform with Buffalo's Talas on February 29. Next , Pearl
Harbor . wllh The ExploSions. wrll appear
on March 4 Aiid '-lt.&lt;Minale. March 7. os
" Nooe Up The Dance," wllh Lene
Lovich . Bruce Wooley and The Camera
Club. and !Buffalo's ownl Thud Floor
Strangers Lene Lovich is a punk coloralura, and there's a prcture of her m
lhrs magnet. taken woth her boyfnend.
who ts not Ench von Strohetm.

�................. ,- .....
Ticketa
TICkets. where teqwed. ar available at the Sqwe
Hall Ticket Offtee hn advance! ; rematntl'g tickets al
the door one hour before event I 0 C31ds must be
presented on order to purchase l ockets a1
Student/Faculty/Staii/Aiumno rate

MUSIC
En7r S/ri0/d6n. Pl&amp;ntSt/cotnposer
from Denmark . Recttal of works by
Borup-Jorgensen. Boulez, Beno. .
Cage. L.geto, BussctU Batrd Aecrtal
Hall 8 PM General AdmtSStOn
$150. Students. UIB Communrty,
Senoot Crtllens 51 Sponsor CentE!I
of the Creauve and Performong Ails

21
Fridey

FILM SCREENING/DISCUSSION
Eventngs for New Folm YYOnne
Rarner • Albriqht-Knox An Gallery
8 30 PM General Admrssoon $2,
Ganery Members and S!Udents
51.50. Sponsors· U/B Cente&lt; lor
Medta Study, Albnght Knox Art
Gallery, Medta Study/Buffalo
MUSIC
EveniOQS for New MuSIC. Robert
Morris, dorector of the Electronrc
Studt&lt;&gt; at Unoverslly of Ptttsburgh, os
guest composer. Musrc performed
by Akt TakahaSI, p!3no, Robert
Drcl:. flute Solos and a duet by
~hesa IWO lllf!UOSI, plus " Untttled
Commossron&lt;&gt;d Premoere" for flute,
piCCOlo, alto !lute. bass flute and
tape delav. by Aob!!lt Dock 8 PM
Geoetal Admossron $3, Students.
Ul B Communtty. Semor CttllP.OS s 1
Sponsor CentE!I of the Creative and
Performong Arts.

CONCERT (
T11kts and Root Boy Sl;m. • Follmore
Room. Squore HaU 8 30 PM
GenE!! at adllllSsron 55, U ' B students
53 50 Sponsor· UUAB Musrc Com·

m1uee.
Merch

z

Sundey

3

Mondey

•

~ueedey

MUSIC
U I B Wrnd Ensemble. dtre&lt;:ted by
Frank J C.polla FredericJc Fennell,
founder of the Eastman Wtnd
Ensemble and condUC1or-tn·
resod
at Unoversrty of Mtamt,
woll be quest 'onductor Or Fennell,
lorm&lt;'f 8S.'IOCIIIte conductor of th
MtnneaOOlt Symphony. has con
dueled most m8101 orches11as and
ha wntt
&lt;ten5tvely on wrnd
must!: Cornell Theatre, Amhmst
Campus 3 PM Free. Sponsor
Department or MuSIC
S.A.E.D. LECTURE SERIES: IN
SUPPORT OF PLANNING
Brirron Hams. Un..,ersnv of Penn
y1vanta " Piannonq as an 01)ttmumSeelunq PtOCPSS " 335 Ha s "HIIll
• 5 30 I'M Fr
Sponsor School of
Archttectum and Env~tonmental
O&lt;&gt;Siqn
CONCERT
PBiJrf Harbor and The Exp/osKJns,
wrth speael quest . ThtJ TOV&lt; '

Fr111T10f"e Room, Squore Hall 8 P !
General AdmtSStOO SS, U/B
-stud&lt;&gt;nt $3 50 Sponsor UUA8
Mosoc Comrrutt , Harvey &amp; Cor y

•

Thundey

CONCERT
COI'IfUnrO F,

lonco NIICIOIIIII tk

Cui». • Cuban trou

of StOQef
Thrs
that&lt; l11 I U S
~~oc
le!nhans MuStG H
8
p m $5 for I E l I Stu
IS, 57
for others Puce oncludl!s bu
tr n
tattoo liCk t at 11 Ate
,.,d Ouad . Ellocon Com
•
Amhefll CAr"'&gt;U&gt;, 12 noon -4 p m
Spon
t" '""' Enqo, h
t 11 ut

and

7

Squore Hall . Maon Street Campus.
11 45 AM · 1 15 PM Free Sponsor ·
CentE!I ol the Psvchologocal Study
of tho Ans

CONCERT
Beatleman~ Shea's Buffalo
Theatre 7 PM $5 fot IE l I
students, 57 for others Prtee includes bus transponatton. TICkets at
116 Rrchmond Ouad. Blocott Complex. Amherst Campus. 12 noon-4
PM Sponsor: lntensove Engltsh
Language lnstttute

FEMINIST CONFERENCE•
Feminist Poetics. Speakers. Rachel
Blau DuPlessis· "For the
Etruscans:· a doscussron of a fern 1e
esthetoc, Annette Kolodny · " A Map
lor Aereadong: or Gender and the In
terpretation of Loterarv Texts " 233
Squtte Hall, Maon Street Campus
2 30-4 PM Free Sponsor Center
for the PsychoiO§ocat Study o f tho

OPERA

Ar1S

Dido and Aeneas. Center Theatre,
681 Matn St. 8 30 PM General Admossoon 54, Students and Senoor
Crttzens $2 Sponsor · V1il Opera
Workshop

FEMINISM CONFERENCE•
Alida Ostnker, readong from her
works fand doscussron of
motherhood! 233 Squtte Hall, M am
Street Campus 4: 15 · 5. 15 PM
Sponsor Center for the
Psychologocal Study o f the Arts.

CONCERT•
Lene Lovich. Bruce Wooley and the
Cemeta Club and Third Floor
Strangers. Follmore Room. Squore
Hall 7 30 PM Genmal Admossoon
$5, U/ B Students $3 50 Sponsors·
UUA8 Musoc Commottee and
Rockers

CHILDREN·s THEATRE
Fur, Feathers and Scales. Center
Theatre. 681 Mam St 1 PM
General Admrssoon $2 50 ADS
vouchers accepted. Call 847 6460 to
reserve seats Spansor : Theattc of
Youth ITOY Company!.

FEMINIST CONFERENCE•
ld801ogy vs Consciousness,
Speake&lt;S· Vivian Gornick: An over ·
ytew of the fetnm•sl movement on
the meantng or femtnism : Drana
George: .. Rape, Pornograql&gt;v and
the Myth of love " Commentary by
ElltJn DuBois. The Kova. Baldv Hall.
Amherst campus 10 30 -11 45 AM .
Free Sponsor Center for the
Psychologocal Study of the Arts

f

CHILDREN·s THEATRE
Fur, Feathers and Scales. Cen teo
Theatre. 681 Maon St. 3 PM
Genmal Admossoon S2 50 ADS
vouchms accepted Call 847 6460 to
reServe seats Sponsor · Theatre of
Youth ITOY Companyl

17

RECEPTION
In honor of poet Michael McClure.
who woll be on residence March 17
-28 309 Clemens Hall. Amherst
Campus 3 PM All are welcomP
Sponsor Department of EnqltSh ,

Sundey

Mond8y

FEMINIST CONFERENCE•
· Psychoana/ysrs and Gender DrTfer8flCe . Roundtable doscussron Oororhy Dinnerstei'n, Coppe/ra Kahn,
NIJtll/18 Sharness, Lar111ne Flemmtng
The Kova, Baldy Hall, Amherst Cam pus 1 1&amp;-3 PM Free Sponsor
Centeo for the Psychologocal Study
of the Arts

FEMINIST CONFERENCE•
The EsthetiC Use ol Drlference
Speakms. David Leverenz on The
SCIIrlet Leuer: Susan GulJd, a sltde

S.A.E.D. LECTURE SEAJES:
IN SUPPORT OF PLANNING
Magora!r Maruyama, S I U "Mtt ·d
scapes on Urban Plannonq •· Sec
March 3 ltsunq

11
Tuesdey

lecture on transveslt.Sm m 1he ans.

Surface:· an tnvesltga1ton n '

Myles Slatin · on Wtlla Cather The
ova. Baldy Hall . Amherst campus
3·30-5 PM Free Sponsor Centm
101 the. Psychologocal Study of the
Arts
•

OPERA
Dido 11nd Aeneors Center Theatre.
lllll Matn St 8 30 PM General Ad
mossron 54. Students and Senror
CltllPnS $2. Sponsor Ul B Opera
Workshop
FEMINIST CONFERENCE•
Difference in Thaoly lntroductton
bv Murra M Schwam Speakers.
Jane Gallop a readong of luce
lrogaray's rnterpretatt&lt;&gt;O of femroonr
ty; M11rtha N081 E.-.ns on
autobroqraphy and Vrote11e leDuc's
La Bat11rde Respondents. Dranne
Hunter and ~ MykYtll 233
Squore Hall. Marn Str t Campu
10 11 30 AM ' Fr
Sponsor Cent!!f
for the Psychologocaf Study of the

Aru

FEMI 1ST CONFERENCE•
Identify Thaoly rn Femrnrsm Panel
drSCUS$100 ElrZIIbftth AINJI, Judllh
Gardr
,nd Joan LKJoff 233

CHARLES OLSON MEMORIAL
LECTURES
MIChael McClure. Beat G(ln&lt;&gt;rattC&gt;n
poet "Scratchong the Bc•t
pot

•y

from ·the carlv Seat penod of
Arncrocan poetry, espeoally tha

htstouc road.ng tn 1955. at whtth
Allen Gonsberg lttst read "H•·wf
!Gary Snyde&lt; and McChJ•~ ·~ad
there, too I Poetry Room. 4}9
Capen Hall. Amherst Camr• • 8
PM Fr
Sponsor Enq•· r ~)PIJ••
ment Gray Chart

zo

Thursdey

FILM SCREENING
Independent ftlmmaker JoMs
Me/ells "Oona' s Thord Yoa "'
Paradt Not Vel lost .. 11977 791
Me'-los has been the most tnfluer 11
flqure '" Amerecan tndependent tum
Madoa Study / Buffalo. 207 Oelawar
Ave 8 PM Adm•SSU&gt;n $1 Spon
sors U I B Centm lor Med111 Study,
Medoa Study / Buffalo

FESTIVAL: THE CHINESE
EXPERIENCE•
.--....,

lhu Cheng._.ng, art"t rn -rPsod""""
demonstrattona on freehand btusl •
parnttnq , callography. paper cuttmy
10 CaP"&lt;• Ha !next 10 Ttflt" Room1.
Amhetst Campus Noon 2 PM
Free Sponsor Ofl
of Cultural Af
fa•rs. woth qram from FSA

3

�a
T.-.,

.... ..
MUIICOLOOY lECTURE

JBmfiS W McKinnon, assocoate professor of musoc at U/8 . "Th&lt;&gt; Exclu·
soon of lnsuuments lrom thr ~n­
cient Synagogue" 101 Baoro ••all 4
PM Free . Sponsor: Department of
MUSIC .

CHARLES OLSON

IIIIEMC:WA&amp;.

LECT\JRES
Michael McClure, Beat Generatoon
poet · "Into the Theatre." a loolc at
poem" as energy systems. with examples taken from Chonese poems
of the Sung Dynasty and haiku from
17th century Japan Ramon
Margalel's Perspectives in Eqological
Theory woll be the local point of the
doscussoon. See March 18 hsting.

POETRY READING AND MUSIC
Shakespeare in Poetry and Song.
woth Anna Kay France, reader;
Elizabeth Holt Brown. vocalist:
Sydne Falk McGowan. pianost. 'Red
Room. Faculty Club. Hamman
Ubrary. 8 PM . Free. Sponsor: Cotlege B.

MUSIC
Universitv Chorus. Hamel Somons.
conductor Passion According to Sr.
John, wolh Unhlersttv Philharmonia.
James Kasprowocz. conductor.
Soloosts onclude ,!JI B, graduate
students on voice, ChrostoP.her
Critelli las the EvangaltStl, Michael
Foacco, and. Jay Anstee. Jean
Reogles. pra'fessor of voice at
Houghton College. will perform the
soprano anas. Other soloists are
Joel Bernstem of the Un1versity's
medocaf faculty , and Denise
Blackmore. St . Joseph's Roman
Catholoc Church, 3269 Main St.
I next door to the campus I. 8 PM .
Free This os the filth consecutive
year that the Newman Center has
collaborated with the Department of
MuSIC in presenting maJor choral
works at St. Joseph's Church .

20
Tl'Airsdey

Mich&amp;el McClure, Beat Generatoon
poet "Hammenng It Out." a lecture
about the boologocal basos of poetry
A diSCUSSion of ac-uon pa1nung.
boophysocs and paems by Olson.
Hart Crane. Paul Blackburn, Jack
Kerouac. and - Shelley' See March
181ostonq

21

Friday

DANCE

CHARLES OLSON MEMORIAL
LECT\JR£8

LECT\JRE AND SHORT FILM
Mi/efla Dolezelova. Unrversny of
Toronto " Chonese Opera - Tradrtoon
and Revolutoon A Semootoc Approach " J ane Keeler Room, Ell"'olt
Compte • Amherst Campus 2 PM
Free Sponsor Gradual Group on
Semoot~
·

F£STIVAl: THE CHINESE
EXP£RIENCE•
Zhu ChtmgUIIng, artosHn -resrdence
demonstratoons 111 freehand brush
paontong, e~~llography , paper C\Jttong .
10 Capen Half (next to Tollon Room).
Amherst Campus Nooo-2 PM
Free Spc~~~sor Oltlce of Cultural Af laors, woth grant lroro FSA
•

MUSIC
• E\180on95 Ia&lt; New Musoc John Cage
and L...- H/llftr. lMSt composers
Perlormenoe of "Harpsochord "
Musoc from Mozart and computer·
scored parts pi8Yed srmultanllously
on 5 harpsochofds, plus 51
recordefs ol P,._UIIltod computergenerated Sound T
mammoth
..~,., '-"'&gt;g" w compowc~ bv Cage lind Holler on t969
Albroght Knox Art Gallery 8 PM modnoght Genef Admossoon $3,
Student , UfB Cornmunrty, Senoor
Cotonns $1 Spon1101 Center of the
Creon and Perlormong Arts

t-

OfftDe of cw-.1 Att.lnt
411 ~Hell. SUIIIYM

An1Nrn N.Y. ta.

Kari8mu &amp; Company. Center
Theatre. 681 Main St 8 PM . Call
882-7676 lor ticlcet onlormatoon
Sponsors Center lor Posotove
Thought and Eroe Communoty Cotlege Noght School

23
Sunday

27
1'hundey • •

POETRY READING
Mich&amp;el McCIJire. Beat Generatoon
poet, reeding lrortt hos works.
Poetry Room, 420 ~pen , Amherst
Campus 8 PM . Free. Sponsor;
Enghsh Department Gray Chaor.

MUSIC
Evenings for New Musoc John Cage
and Lejaren Hiller, guest composers
Performance of " Harpsochord ."
Music from Mozart and computerscored parts played Simultaneously
on 5 harpsochords. plus 51 tape
recorders of pre-taped compu tergenerated sound Thos mammoth
"sensoroal happenong" was com posed by Cage and Holler on 1969
Albroght-Knox Art Gallery. 8 PM modnight. General Admossion $3,
Students, U/B Community, Seooor
Cotozens $1 . Sponsor· Center ol the
Creative and Performong Arts.

DANCE
Karillmu &amp; Company. Center
Theatre. 681 Maon St. 6 PM. Call
882-7676 lor tocket onformatoon
Sponsors. Center For Positove
Thought and Erie Commuruty Col lege .Noght S~_:_

a.ALD, L£CTUII£ satiES: IN

Exhibits
The Art of Chma, • leaturong paontongs and
calhgraphy by the contemporary Chonese paonter.
Zhu Chenguang, and works loaned by provate collec tors March 17-Aprol17 . Opening recepuon lor the ar·
tost Thursday, March 20, 7-9 PM . at which he woll
gove demonsllatoons of freehand brush paontong and
calligraphy. Capen Gallery. 5th floor Capen Hall.
Amherst Campus Thos os one of the events on " The
Chtnese Experoence," presented by the Ofloce of
Cultural Alfaors. funded by an FSA grant
Rialn:fo Monn and HelentJ Glanrzberg. Alamo
Gallery, Beck Hall, Main Street Campus February 28
through March 18 Openrng: February 28, 7-9 PM
Sponsor: VP for Health Scrences.

t:.rtY' Chic»go Architecrure,

pllotog,;.,h8, 4&gt;1'!11• end
draWVlgs on loan from 1he Smothsonian fnshtutoon.
Thfough March 14 Library, SchoOl of Archotecture
£L.Enwoll016ntal Desogn . •

SUPPOIWT OF PUUIININO R. Joy&lt;Y Whitley, AICP, NOMA ,
Urben Planner " Ad&gt;locacy Planning
and Communoty Renewal' A Ctotw;al
Appraosal." See March 3 listong

Voyager Encounters Jupiter, photos taken of Jupoter
bv lhe Voyager spacecralt . Sctence and Engoneering
Ubrary, 2nd floor, Capen Hall Through Mardi 7
Ld;lrary hows Made possoble by Or Duweyne
Anderson , dean of Natural Scoences and
Mathematics

AI(T HISTORY LECT\JRE
Dr. Stephen ~r. U. S labor
Party afl~late: " On the Baroque Al toS!. C.avaggoo " 310 Foster Hall,
Matn Street Campus 6ii0 PM
Free Sponsor Department ol Art
Hostorv

Surgicltllnstruments. on loan from the Smothsonoan
Institution Most of the 18th cen tury onstrumen ts
belonged 10 George Washmgron's physocoan. Dr.
Charles M cKnight The exhobot also dosplavs
obstetrocal InStruments or the 18th and 19th century
Health SCienceS Lobrary, Main Streel Campus, forst
floor Through Marcto

Non-f'roflt 0rg.

20th Century ~usicmns in Llierature: Books and
photographs of Non, Pound, Kerouac. Kaufman,
O'Haca •. S.r"'a ILeRoi JonesI, and Br&lt;JOI&lt;I;, woth
referen&lt;;e to such musoc&lt;ans as Cllarloe_ P:'{klll'. ~dgar
Varose, Harry Partch, Arnold Oolmetsch • .John Col
trane ttnd Paul Robeson Lockwood Memer1al
Library, l over Lobrary hours March 1 March 31
Sponsor Lockwood Memonal Library, •courtesy
Musoc Lobrory

u .s. ~

PAID
Bufholo. N.Y,
Pennlt lllo. ~1

r

..

&lt;&gt;

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                    <text>Tom .Mcoutoc! SUNY• bat. lrf!.ne:

s.utpr,.. by c.,hM .....,._._

Koro~iin

ear- MJ....S. - -.. Ol ~ .'

Today we look at: an African studmt's an show bdfte 01aged at tb" A&amp;o- •
Am"'lcan Cultur" Cmt"' In «&lt;l!bratlon of Black Hlfto&lt;y M011tb (pall" 9);
th" campus 'Camaval' cdd&gt;ratlon (pa!l" 12). and th." SUNYAC Wrutllng
C h.ampionshlpc, a t which U / B'o Tom Jacoutot bl!cam" • cdd&gt;rity, tb" c onf&lt;ermce's ' Moot Outotandlng' """''"""· pag" 11.

Celebrations
STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

FEB. 21, 1980
VOL. 11 e NO. 20

'
Spring '80
A
cl
ot on t
e yet .
registration: in· budget poker, Ketter says
'best ever'
Sprtog registration 1980 wu OM of the
moot """"'""'ul ev£r aocompllsh..d at
U/8, useua Executive Vice President
Albert SomH.
"Not perfect, but pretty good," was
how Somlt dncrlbc!d u last week disagreeing with crlllclsms raised

eJoewh.,.e .
Responsible lor much ol the success.

Somit indicated, wu "a signiflcanlly im·
prOVI!d level ol cooperation among aU
parties, between the Computing Center
and Admissions and Records, m partit:ulo&lt;." Computing and A R each
designat..d ona person to"""" u special
liaison with the other
Somit also singled out the "academic
duns who moved to aeate more courses
whl!n !hoM originally oclwoduled were
over nroled - partipJiarly Dean Geor9"
levine ol Arts and letters who opcn..d a
number ol .new sections ol freshman
COUI"MI wluc:h had been closed out.•
11te imprOY&lt;tment. SomH said, is a
reflec:bon ol recent effons by the ad hoc
comrru
on regislrabon, chared by
Robert Wagner,
nt UI!CU
V .P .
11te faD registration to be conduct..d
later this spring should Ill! even mo&lt;e
wrinkle-free . thO! uecutlve vtce president
continued
Th Repqrcr M d th two speaal
reglllrallon to. n persono. orma Re.,., .
o ..,."' dndor of A&amp;R. and Chl!rles
Mol , afiiOCiat dl'ector. UniVtJ ty Computmg Cenwr for oome opec:dtcS on
what_,.. wd durtng spring reg ratiOn.
wt..t didn't. and "'hat plan or In thO!
for furthff Improvement Tbe.r
r
be don • &lt;YJUquc con •
doc d by
1
unb
From
R"s •antega potnt R&lt;'lt ..od .
the reba 1 olthe ComputJI'llj Center's
oervl&lt; ono
tmmenoooly . d""'n·IUM
,..
I .so..... dra 11&lt;~
f
pr r
r 1 n

rrK,,R

sad "'

oflhf- cour
hatm

" AI the cards aren' t on thO! table yet ,"
President Robert L. Ketter and several
mem~ of the U/8 Council agreed Friday in dlscussin~ the Impact on U/ B of
Governor Carey s proposed budget cuts
lor the SUNY systern.
Ketter complained that to date he has
receiv..d no instructiOns from SUNY
Central regarding U/ B'• share either of
the 1,125 job cuts ordered to be made by
June 30 of this year or of the additional
$14 million "SUNY re-examination"
which the Governor Is calling lot.
But, hi! speculated, if past history is a
guide, U/ B can look for a proportionate
share. That's always been SUNY's apprQBCh, and Ketier said he has no Inkling
that anything d~ferent will Ill! done this
time .

•

Under proportionate pruning, U/8,
with about 14 per cent ol the SUNY
bud9"t, should steel itse¥ for 14 per cent ·
ol the sluha: roughly 384 positions
Turnovers (which make for appro•·
imately 140-150 open positions at all

times) and various hiring ceilings and
freezes have produced about 260 unfilled
lines at latest count [hnes which can be
us£d toward the cuts) .
That means, Ketter projected , "we'll
have about 120 filled positions" to cut "if
we take ou r proportionate share."

They could d o otbe&lt; thlnge
But. this Is on/v an " K," the President
emphasized . SUNY could choose other
ways to save (could , but probably won't)
11te Trustees could close a campus
Wisconsin did thai, Kener said .
Or, they could define "all'Order of importan&lt;:l!" lor funding , making sure those
programs which "bring In money" are
well -funded , and tightening the screws
on those whk:.h aren't revenue producers.
Or. SUNY cotild deckle to protect the
UniversHy centers (because of their lmportanc.. to thO! State's economy) and the
communHy coll"9"5 (because they bring
local funding with thl!m) , and take the
cuts out of the middle tier (the four -year

colleges) .
lney could do any of thl!se, Kene
not..d . If he had to bet, though , hl!'d pu
his

money

on

proportionate

cuts

Nonetheless, "there a re some cards th•
people aren't showing yet" in the blo
political poker game that the annut '
budgeting process turns Into.
Anticipating thO! worst, Ketter said h
has allotted to the vice presidents "'orkln
ligures for the share of cuts each woul
have to suffern U/ B Is assessed 380 pos1
tlons. The vice presidents are looking •
the situation now, he said, they are to fil
with the President a rank ordenng c
where they would take the jobs Kette
made II clear, though , this is just
preliminary exercise to get -people thlnl&lt;
ing
.
Academic pr.,.ram• no Jon,.
Mc:red
Traditionally. Ke tter noted, academl
programs have been conolder..d sacr"'

· - ·u.-.·-a....a.

�'•···

l

==-l.lnMnlly looMII...._tor

sn. 111e - . )lonllart.l poolliono to . - y lour
euts.

...

lo llue
,_,.,., """ could IUm In 11-. . . . !hey became and ......_ lhe
number of ...-. Ieee eech NlftAinlrlg
janitor had lo clean. 'Thlt lime,'--·
lhe -lion cannot ax:omrnoo:t.le the
rnagnlludc of aato projected by p&amp;.ytng
around wllh janitorial . . . . OM or more
ecademlc programs II\8Y have to go.
If this happens, the 1.JniYawly will have
to negotiate wllh other --.,lions, public
or private, to have them 8IIUIIIe responsl&gt;llity lor the affected studeniL The dHflculty here, Ketter said, is that U/B has
progr"'"' which seveal other campuses
may want to phaM ouh They may be
asking us to !like care ol their students. In
the absence of a SUNV-wlde plan lor
making ac:romr(IOdatlons. morec&gt;ller, we
might flnd ourselves cutting a better program than is ..-ed somewhere else.
If SUNY decides. somehow, to make
cuts on the basis. of the real val~c of pro·
grams, U/ B will be OK,
Ketter
predicted.
CQuDCil member Robert Koren asked
about the legal Implications of cutting
programs. When Wioc::onsln phased out
entire campu101, Ketter responded , the
courts there ruled such phaseouts to be
perfectly legal, if the unlvenity made arrangements for students affected to finish
their degree work at a comparable institu·
lion, under the same catalog requirements.

·

Polllla will . . - It
Ketter said Hwould be both proper and
appropriate lor SUNY to consider
phasing-out Institutions when determin ing what Hs future structure ought to look
like. BUt. "I don't think the ·political
frarnewori&lt; of New Vorl&lt; State Is such that
M could be done."
In reoponse to another question. Ketter
repor1ed the University has been looking
at ways of accelerating educational programs In the name of cost efficiency l)arllcularlv for medical and lew students.
He pointed out, too, that the way Abany
is moving on the present cuts, linal notice
on what has to be done may not be
received in lime to comply wHh the three month minimum nollco required by 'UUP
contract.
Council member ROM Sconiers. who
attended the SUNY Faculty Senate
budget meeting here last week In addition
to a recent meeting of SUNY Trustees
and Council members, agreed wHh Kel·
ter that some political deals JI\8Y have
already been struck on pulling some of
SUNY's money back .

MardoiJoe ...... Ia Nay?

.

Dr. George L. Collins. Jr .• who as a

Tru

-designate has been sitting in on
meetin$11 of that board. endO&lt;Md that In .
terpretalion, too. "That's one reason
opec:JIIc lnslructionl - haven't been lor·
thcomlng from Abany," he informed.
Olocutllona of tactics to be used In talking
money back Into the budget wllh the
legislature, the 008 and the Governor
are sliD going on at a furious pace, he
aid . In addition . the Central Staff In
Al&gt;any lo preparing a five-year plan to
deade mnong opclons OIMJl to the
~m, Including ohrinldng programs and
dooing one or more JJChools Closing •
campus has no1 been ruled out yet, CoJ.
11m said. In any ovont, he told Ketter, the
final budget picture and this flvo-yur
plan will t.. lhe bHI lor inllrudions
which U/B will ~ ..-w from
Ahny. "1hho should be rudy around
M.y ." t.. predicled .
The plclure is further clouded, or
'*"'-~-by the lad that In the

-.loo of J lhe nolle about cuts. 008

............... have boen J.vlsh in their
pr.... of U/B, have ~ thai U/ B
would , _ t.. ~- and have announcod ........ lof the lm·
~future at bolh """-"'and Main
sn.t "How do !IOU eaot al this out?'
aokad

.,... ... c - t l c-. ...
Whai CWO
of lhe Council do
...,, the ...........? Frank c - aoload
K.tMr ..t t.. haa . alumni
IMrMn who - manhallna s-ple 10

llglolalon and the~. t..
cal on
Comrnun AdYIIory
Counct 10 do t h e - · He Ia ~
10 cal on .-y

tor. he aalcf,

februaty 21. 1980

~
.... !UIY c-.1 .._.
m~..::'
=--=~
..........., ' - no alljKtlono 1o locAl

..... -

. _ been the result of
"188dng lui ....~ of the
............ deconlrol ....... .

011

c..y·.

Pierce 11-.1, .Jao, that II Mcomes to
relrafll:hment, lhe campus u a whole
should be consulted.

........ lalll¥na lo • ...-..
ecbiCIIIon c:lr.- In lhe ...........
"In New York Oly !hey oaeun allhe

lime; . . pri¥Mo - . . - . aloo ........
their ... wei known in Ahny but lhe
SIMI-supported ochoolo . . noc VOCAl "
Council member Koren commented .
SUNY doesn't take advan!9 of the
tremendous voting power which M can
w;eld on lhe put of students and their
families throughout the State. •
SUNY is the State's stepchild, CoiUns
submitted. The A.embly tradlllonally
pushes City University; the Senate is the
preserve of the private Institutions. In the
Rockefeller days SUNY came under the
protection o1 the chief executive, but
that's not the CAM wtth this Governor.
Council member George Measer of the
Amherst Bee denounced the State
lor: buying Govem'or Carey a new
helicopter. building a dome at Syracuse
University and refurbishing a State·owned Lodge lor the use of VlPs at the
Lake Plad&lt;l Olympics. He called Gover·

While he regularly with faculty
and student groups, Ketter said, he "will

not go for. a l&gt;ioblldle" to clct.nnine
where cull wtB be made. Ultimatolu he
said, a very III'IAII group "of one'&lt;~''wn1

........ the ftnal

declaiOns.

.

For Place's Information, Kdter noted
the Undergraduate Student Atoociatlo~
has refuted to,_ IIIIth hlm on any mat·
ler5 since Last August.
nor Carey's proposed tax of $1 ,000 for
those receiving SUNY degrees both
ridiculous and a divenionary tactic, intended to draw student attention away
from the budget cuts.

T- much marijuaaa?

Student Representative Michael P'oerce
said the Governor's Idea lor the $1,000

"Then SA has abdicated Hs responsibilities," Pierce fumed . "llnlist that the
Mayersohn gc&gt;venment respond."
lfs too bad, mused

Carey admlnislmllon

Plftce,

that the

Is not subject to a

vote of no conliclcnce, such as occurs in
the parliamentary systems of Canada and
England. H H were, Plerc.! obviously feels
Canada wouldn't be the only political en·
lily having elections this winter.

• Registration: 'bes t ever'
cr.- -

1 • ...._ 11

enroll in necessary courses without dif·
ficuhy. The six-digK facuhy unit codes
ldenUfylng students .as majors worked
better. she sub ·
Registration si1

were more effectively

organized , Reali said . tmd siudents. more
dispersed at the various sites. Using·
Hayes 8 only for those new to the
University or returning after -a semester or
more also helped alleviate pressure.
Students were registered in different
modes. depending on their majors and
levels of study. An HRP. Medical. Dental
and Law students were pre·registered .
Graduate students were invited to register
by mad and weren't required to show up
physicaUy at registration sites Another
way lines were kept down was by having
specific groups of students register on
specHic days
A&amp;R. for the hrst time. used especlallylratned temporary staff members 10 augment regular staff and relieve the strain
which the pressures and .long hours of
regtstration have traditionally placed on
the regulars The temporary workers
were primariJy housewives from the commun~y . the hope be~ng that they wUI
form a cadre of trained registration
assistants able to come back regularly.
No Una alter 3 clava
The upshot ·o f the changes. bolh Reali
and the Computing Center's Moll
reported. was that regiStration lines which
persisted for " I 0 solid days" during spring
1979 registration were "non -existent" by
the thord day of the 1980 run -t hrough
The first day this year. Reah said. the
average wah on &amp;ne was about an hour;
the second day. about 10-20 minutes.
Aftet that. there was no wah at aU. Th1s
desp1te the fact that more students
regiSiered this year than last.
MoU emphasized that dedication of the
enUre computing caJ&gt;«:hy to the registra tion real-time system made a big dllference In r babibty. but added that-additional computer capacity is needed . Plans
are underway to accomplish that. he
said

Wllet'e.UUiobeciOM
A&amp;R'o Real (who came here a )I'08r
ago from • position on the psyc:hology
faculty at Boston Univcnity} suggested
IOY«al arus where further Improvement
Is In order:

The COWM flle has to be stabilized.
Thet Ia, when a c:oune II listed on the
po-e-registration ochedule, « should not
oubMquontly t.. doletad, as aD too many
currently are. New regulallonl making M
harder to dalota CO&lt;.IrMS, II they slid&lt;.
could lead to major lmprovcrncnts for the

lal.

many.-._,

In
capadtla ....,.,
put high mough to bc9ln IIIIth. and when
they are 01&gt;mec1 up, h's done by one's
and two'• rather than by any llgn6:ant
tolal. Sludanu aren't told how long M
takas lor a coune to open, oo tdo many
return ....n...ly to regltlratlon ~
liv•orlow-adaylor- days,
~ . _ and confusion. and

ohottantne tompen

Reali would lllt.e to -

the duo

schedule cut down In size and made
which worked weel)ends and pulled
more understandable. She'd gladly con· _ Mveral aD-night lours tJI duty to Insure
dud even more indlvldual departmental
that things went smoothlY - In parregistrations and, thus, take even more
ticular, Richard Kucharski, Ken Herrpeople out of Unes.
mann, Dennis Henneman and Hank
The check-stop system aies out lor at·
Miller.
tentlon, too. ReaD and MoU propose are"It was because of dedicated people
evaluation of what kinds and amounts of
bolh here and at A&amp;R that things worl&lt;ed
outstanding bills should stop a studenfs
so well," MoU said .
registration; perhaps some should merely
result In a warning.
ltcloa~
Part of the "trouble" with U/ B's
lt'e DOt eoc:lal at Fr-ooacull
r~atlon system. Real! and Moll point
Amherst is underused lor registration,
out, Is Its very sophistication and
ReaD finds, "frankly because Fronczak
llexlbillty.
.
HaD Isn't a social gathering spot. Students
It's possible to: register students accor·
don't see their friend• there ltke they do at
ding to majors; reject any en!Jy Into a
Squire."
'
course wHhout permlsslon of the InstrucHandled by the t..tch method, exceptor ~ tbafs desired; check lor time contion registrations currently lag anywhere
filets; make those notorious check-stops~
from three to six weeks behind the com·
bills aren't paid; enforce restraints on
puler data base . Students don't know
aoss-registratlons among diVisions until a
"where they are." They may have In
given amount of time has elapsed; keep
hand the necessary departmental
undergraduates out of graduate courses;
authorization for the exception transacand allow the exception proee11 to over·
tion . but, through often bitter experience.
rule everything.
they don't rest easy until H shows up on
ReaD and Moll have looked at registra·
the computer. Often , large numbers of
lion at Penn State, Michigan State and
people are In Une simply to find out ~
the University of Michigan . The first two
their exception registration has made K
sttD use the old-fashioned card and arena
onto the domputer. This mode of
set-up. A1 Ann Arl&gt;or, the system Is
registration should eventuafty be handled
similar to ours, but il more tightly con·
directly at terminals, MoD suggests . "It
trolled . Students, for example, pay for
would niake things cleaner . lor
drop-and -add , a charge that has never
everyone ."'
been levied here .
Finally, Moll and ReaM agree the enlin!
"Our system Is more elegant than
process could be Improved by shortenl"l!
Michigan's," ReaB said, but we have to
realize that elegance bo::.ds problems.
~;,.J=tlon just goes on too long,
Moll repor1ed that "when we make
The two liaison people are lavish In
presentations elsewhere about our
their praise of one another's efforts to lm·
system, they don't believe we. can do all
po-ove registration.
these things.
Moll also aedHs the Computing
"'nce they're convinced we can, they
Center's entire SARA ProjeCt Team
wonder why we wantto."

Paul Bulger named
assistant to Cohen
Dr: Paul G. Bulger. former prelidant ol
the State College at Buffalo . has been
named a opecial ~ to Harold L.
Cohen . dean of the School of Architecture and Environmental Design .

Dean Cohen oald Bulger. who is
retired from a long car- In higher
education , will be serving strictly on a
volunteer basis.
His ftnt task, Cohen explalnad is
ovenoelng U/B's Docent Training
llfllm, under which reprnentatlves of the
architec:ture school go Into area JJChools
and me.t wllh various community groups

pro-

to dllcuJS topics dealns wllh Biifflllo's
ravltalallon and the study ol cchltec·
ture. The Docent program 11 funded
tlvough the Junior League of Buffalo.

"Bulger heard about what U/B has
boen-doing In Buffalo's theatre dla1rld."
Cohen said. "end· wanted to t.. of - ·

va."

Bulger, 66, commented · " It 11 good to
t.. baCk in Buffalo and to have the oppor·

tunlty to try to seva a

fine

city ..

"The Buffalo area and Hs people," he
continued, "have meant a great deal to
me and my family from the time we
moved from New Yon. City to Buffalo In
1959. It was prut then and l Is even
gromor today.
Bulger sorved u Bcdflllo Slate's presl·
dent between 1959 and 1967. In 1967
he was IIIIOCiato commluloner of hiQI&gt;er
and prOfesolonal education for the Siate
of New Vork for one year.
From 1968to 1975, BulgorMrVedasa
profi!IOOI' of higher education at the State
University at Al&gt;any . He then became
· principal of HarfaJW&gt;n College of the
Unlvoirslty of Evansl/llle In England until

1977.

"1

.

Bulger has held various consulting and
adminillradvo poots, including service as
educational consultant to tl;e U S
Department of Stale in South Vietnam In
1966.
H• II a member of the Board of
Trulleel of Erie County Savings Bank
and a member of tba Now York State Exarnlnallonl Board .

�c

c~

SOO student volUnteers engage
in a series of serviat projects
assisting both the young ·imd the old
The

..uon

In U/B's Commwllly k-

llon Carps II communlly lrlvolwment,
not pollllcel poolurinQ, the lJniwnlly
Council heorclln a report et b Fet.u.y

volu- and a "tMe" on the part of
tt.... Nina ........l, but ~aNI.-.
forbolh. '1'be ~ /B.....,_
g1D1 from the out-atf·IM~ lliilld

mea

propose

-work for

J!!r&amp;-.'-Preololent c:.t.r'a prapoul that
· "*-ll ......,._. be ..-...:1 has
alread!l- __ ........ tMmbers of
lor Selective Service
and lor Dr. Georg lggon.
'-"- rti/B .......,. of Europeen
intllectual ......... II a loandlng member
ol and a coaMelor at the Dnlt CounselIng
ol Bullalo.
The C8Mioad ol the Center, wlrich wllli

Congress.

~-

_....,. and the COIII(IIUnlly JMIIP!
gaining our .-vice ...., ~fll
tlwmMiv. asln any human -.:tlon,"
l..lndqullt, a~ from .lamaiOiim, told
Ms. Undquilt noled.
Council members !hat the Sluclent Pace
formed 1n 1967 during the Vietnam War.
In addition to work and learning exCOIIIIIIon had _.,..m.d CAC just last
dropped markedly alter the draft expwed
perlenoes, CAC provides volunteas
~ lor a conld&gt;ullon to Fddey's antiin 1972. tgg,m and other members of the
"wllb ~ and management
draft rally Ill the Fedenl Buildir!g
Center have counseled members of the
skills, and opportunities for the · military sinc~P then .
downtown.
domonstlilllon of luclenhlp, raponsiblllCAC declned, she repcrted . Why?
But now. lggers expecls an intrease in
ty and duly," b dlredor said. For inShe quol.ld from a Reporl;eT article of
the Center's work. If Congr~ approves
almost a decade ago: "The CAC stance, the organlalllon tponSOrS the ana bill bringing registration bock.
nual Muscular Dystrophy Dance
volunleer isn't one of 1,000 students
He and other memberi of the Center
rn.ching down Main Street; he's alone, . Marathon, which Meds volunteas to
met this week to discuss "'standby"" plans .
organize committees In order to gd H
\llllll'ldng one-on-one, tutoring a disad·
MilHary registration . which Carter has
underway. It runs a Volunteer Income
-. van'-!lad youngoler."
proposed In the lace of crises in Iran and
Tax Asslslance (VITA) program which
ll\at's our mission, she oald.
Afghanistan . Is eKpected to resume this
CAC, founded 15 yean ago In an era • makes use of students' managerial talents
summer.
·a nd tax law expertise. "Being In charge of
of "tough times" for campus-&lt;:o;rununlty
Already. lggers says. he has received
a program, oveneelng a certain project,
relations, II as "steadfast as the stars; as
·a few" phone calls from people of draft
o.- being a member of-the policy-making
enduring as the words of the prophd,"
age .
Prof. Frank Corbett, the unH's laculty core of CAC Is valuable experience," Ms.
Numbers may be amaller
Lindquist submHt.ed.
spoNOr. observed In lntroiluclng Hs
Because the draft Itself is not being
For a service to become a projecl of
leader.
resumed
. and because there Is no war
CAC, It must be one from which the stusuch as Vtetnam. which large pans of the
dent
benefits
educationaOy-l.e.
the
5oo ac:tlft ..............
popula«on
found moraUy objectionable .
volun
uld not benefit from going to
flv&amp; hundred student volunteers are
the number of people who seek counsel·
wash .Groeone's windows, sweep a
amen~ asooclated with CAC projeds,
ing at the Center probably won't reach
porch, eU:., but he or she would gain
Ms. Lindquist reported. ll\al's down
the levels of I 0 years ago (as many as
&amp;om teach!ng a child to read , or helping
&amp;om a high of 2 ,000 a few years beck.
300 a week at the height of the warr. lg·
out In a hospital.
l1le shrinkage represents a consolidation,
gerssays
an effort. to Improve .qualltv, as CAC
Edacatl--relatad pro)ects
But there wiU continue to be persons
trusurer Gary Stelnkohl expfalned H. By
CAC provides v.olunteers lor lour
·&lt;for whom military r~tration is a moral
the end of this year, the student leaders
spedfk education-related projects:
problem
.
predicted , around 900 volunteers should
At St. Augustine's Creative Learning
' We will see people who are not op·
be Involved.
Center, 1600 FIUmore.Avenue, students
p{,rtunistic. Very serious people. very
Also conbibutlng to CAC's somewhat
arueadlng tut0151or black children, ages
committed people ··
truncated 5IZie is the fact that several
7-14. The volunteers, according to Ms.
agencies which began under Its wing
Undqulsi, are "more than tutors, they are
What about counaellng wo,..en?
ha\le developed Into Independent enancouraging &amp;lends to children who have
President Carter has proposed that
tities: the Sunshine House counteling
had their faellngs and tmotlons hun once
women also register. Will counseling
service and the Human Sexuality Center.
too often." Tutors go to the Center two
them be harder than counseling men?
to mention two . NYPIRG, to note sliD a
afternoons a weak.
No. says lggers. "'The problems aren't
third.
CAC volunteers tutor junior high and
that different."" He and other draft
CAC recdves an annual budget of
hlgb school students In various subject
counselors have worl&lt;ed with female
$28,000 from Student Association, and
areas at the Jusendo Program, 735
me,..bers of the armed services during
edds to that about $2,000 earned
Humboldt. They work on a one-to-one
the last eight years.
through Hs weekly movie series. l1le sA
basis ,.nth mentaDy retarded children and
lggers. a native of Germany. became
money !lOa to lund educational projects;
adolescents at the West Seneca
Interested in draft counseling In 1965.
the movie money, lor "extras," such as
Developmental Center. l1ley Interact
when he saw that ··a lot of young kids
parties lor children and old people.
with junior high school studenls (primariwere going to Canada I thought it was
Students may recelve tnlnsportatlon exly Spanlsh-opeaklng youngsters) at
penses, but gd no "salaries" lor thdr elFriendship House In Lackawanna, stresston.. A secrdary, a non -student, Is the Ing basic reading and mathematics skiDs,
agency's only paid employee.
but also acting as big brothers and big
Polley Is sd by a -central committee of
sisters.
students, and most administrative
lndlvid~ls from the Buffalo communi·
respon&lt;ibd!tles are camed out by a nonty who feel that they or their children or
paid student staff.
students are In need of tutoring services
The Idea behind CAC, Ms. Lindquist
can also caD on CAC to help lind an In·
explained, Is ;..st what Its name suggests,
terested volunteer.
to lacllitate Interaction between the U/B
community and the Buffalo community.
Health care and the elderly
. In the field of heahh care services,
CAC volunteers are pan of the VA
Students are reauMd to volunteer In a
Hospital outpatient cara program. Work·
variety of service areas: heahh care,
lng at two II A homes (on Main St. near
education , older aduh-. conams and
Bryant and at 263 Summer). volunteers
youth counwlinjl. The uhlrnate goal Is
help outpatients get to the VA main laciJI.
not lust a "gove on the pan of IIUdent

..-.g Friday.
CAC'• lint woman ~~

c-..

-ggers

unnK.ssary that they ltave this •
coutllry."
He and II bke-mlnded people formed
the Draft Counseling Center In 1967 . It
operated In a house on North Parade
Stree1 . and provided lndMclual and
group counseling.
-Thousends• of penons 50Ullhl advice
at the Center. lggers says. He estimaliOS
th..t he worked with "hundreds" of peopW. He and the other counselors
volun-ed their Mnltces.
Counselon explained the options tn
stay out of the military. guided those peo·
pW who sought a parllcuta...deferment ot;
Conscientious Objector status.

n., .... lllelr .... 4ecWoM

"As far as possible," klles says. "we
explained what was avllll8ble ,wMhln the
,
"We never told anyone what he should
do . l1ley made their own decisions ....
Most of the · people who sought
counseling durlng Vietnam were white,
middle-class students, he says, but the
Center wiD lry lo reach a wider group If
Congress acts.
lggers has continued to give mllltary
counseling In his Eggertsville home .
though•he &lt;loesn't recetve the late-night
phone caDs from· potential draftees that
he "occasionally" got during Vle1narn.

framework of the law.

..,_...be

No oee
'forced'
"The draft II a form of compulsion . 1
don't think anyone should be forced to
do mUHary service," he says.
lggers was too young to jotn the al"(lled
services during World War U. Two ol his
sons, who were draft-age during the Viet·
nam era, became Conscientious Objectors.
A teacher lor 13 years at small black
colleges In the South . lggers Is oh the
board of the Buffalo chapter of the National Association lor the Advancement
of Colored People (NAACP) . He was ac·
Hve In NAACP-led dvU rights actlvltlnln
the South. "1 got more crltlclsm when 1
was Involved In the clvll "rights move·
ment ," he says, than he has lor his draft
counseling work .
•
lggers says he is a "sympathizer" of
Israel's Peace Now movement, which
favors territorial concessions to obtain
peace agreements.
·rve always had strong pacifistic In·
clinatlons," he says.

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

•-'CAc:-•. ..a.•

Getting

ahea~

Ed Nowell

StOff honored

~

oca«

The financial Aid
rec:errtly honored live daMilled
employee for
ten or ""'"' ,....,. ol cledlcated Mr\llce. They are: (leff to o1tht: standing)
Kay lkrrM, .lonne Touwhey; (se.ted) Shar0«1 Pulcak, Junne Oantm,
Fran~ .

'

...

,.

�F. . .ary 21. 1980

We'll have.one world-or we'll h•ve none
Bp Walter

51..-

- . . . llocNI c.- Collgo.
~. 'MNP_. c-tft

llle latl lew months have been
bewllclel'lnt .
In Octc:t&gt;er. - had to confront the sad
leceo an&lt;l dosaended bellies of starving
Cambodian chtltlr•n In November. we
had a , _ ruoon Ia&lt; dismay; Iranians
seized Amelcan hoslages In T~hran But
the .,.get' we felt then has s nee been
replaad by lear While the med"' tell of
the "Soviet Threat" and the dire conse·
'queaceo ol losmg access to l-liddle East
oil. most America ns Instinctively know
what the rol danger I : War.
Whi le th~ Sovter mvas1on of
Alghani~an must be condemned . the
mosa important tiling now is for our counny to defuse the pr~t cn51S and avoid
getting locked into a chain of events
leadong Inexorably to mihtary conftlct or
nuclear ronfrontatk&gt;n with the
viet
Union Unless we are careful. our
government's readM&gt;n lo the SoVlet mva··

slon may prove to be far worse than the
invasion itself

The world may imP.Iy not be able to
sui'VIve another missiJe criSIS Brezhnev is

weak now and Soviet decosion making
appearS to be In a s1ate of dosanay Even
d « weTe not. tile Rllssians cannot be
counted on 1o bacK down aga1n
Nor can we be sure that cool heads will
Pf:evaol in Washington Jommy Carter ap·
pan to be preoccupied with ho real or
imag ned 'Impotence .- and he is continually being goaded to ..get tough·· with
Moocow Our President would ltke to be
m office for four more years and he
Kems lo have chosen mobilinng out naUon for war as his premium reelection
strategy
A DlequletlD!J Lack of S.laooe
We have not Men this close ro war
w«h the Sovoet Union for many y,ears
Under these orcumstances. there is an
urgent need to 1mp..-ov~ relations between
the two su-WeTs Unfortunately. the
Carter Administration seems committed
to makong things worse
In a February I column m the New
York Time• . histonan and former U S
Ambassador to the Soviet Union . George
Kennan pla«s us In the "danger zone ..
He claim that he can thmk of - no mstence m modern hi IOTy where $UCh a
breakdoWf\ of polutcal comtnunlc.auon
and such a triumph of unrestraoned
mibtary suspicoons as now mark Soviet
All'K!'ncan relations ha not led . in the
end to ar-d conflict ··
Kennan's remarks support the thesis
that the Cartet Admlnisnallon has
dangerously over1&gt;Ct~d to the Soviet oc·
cupaoon ol Afghan tan Tracmg the
r - ol this respon . Kennan atgun
that there ha been a "di&gt;quietlng leek of
balance" both In the offocial analysos of th
J)t'Oblem and In our tespon to d In the
s.am~
rw .York nmes arttCW h

observes
"In the of/iclol American In ·
lefP'd&lt;l._ of whot occurr~ Jn
AjgflonWon. no MrfoUJ ac:c:ounl

oppe&lt;n 10 houe been lOken of
....,~ ~pedfic

focWn ..

~pro mil)l,

ethnic
a/llnMy of ,.,.,. on both llda

of 1M l&gt;c&gt;nkr, and polrtk:t;lln lfabilllv In wltolio, after all, a
border country o/ the Sooiet
Union. Now, sp«&lt;//e focWn of
lhio · all suggallng
tk/erwiH
railher
lhan of/emlve
lmpulta, mO)I not haue been
aU lhere 10 Soulel moiiiiO·
tlon , nor would thev hove •uf·
/Iced 10 juatifv the ocllon; but
thev uoen releoanl 10 • ond
ohould haue been gloen lhar
due In any reolWic oppraiool

. CO!ISei'Vatlves
"·!! ,._

might readily dismiss

these remarks except for the fact that
Kennan himseH is a consavative . He
adds tiJs knowledgeable voice to many
.others who are calling attention to U.S .
offldal hysteria and our alannlng proxlml·
ty to World War Ill.

A Hanlliae Begets a Hanlllne
In rejedlng the thea&lt;y that the Russians
moved into Afghanistan because of their
for that the Muslim rebellion would
spread to the forty miDion Muslims who
live within the Soviet Union, the Carter
Administration has ·turned «s back on
what may be t
rosonable ex·
planation ol Sovie.-t:ondud and motlva·
tlon . Carter also fails to recognize ways In
which U.S . poflcy has contributed to the
Soviet action and the demise. of detente.
If in 1980 the Soviet Union buried
detente in Afghanistan, then last year our
own government was kllling detente In
America and Europe . In September the
U.S . Congress decided to embark on the
development of the $33 billion MX
mobile mlsslle system, a new nuclear
weapon w«h ftrst -slrike potential . Then ,
In December, the Carter Administration
decided to enlarge the Pentagon budget
and place a new generation of u.s-.
nuclear missiles In Europon NATO
countries.

These developments, along with the
U.S . Senate's faUure to ratdy SALT II,
mus1 have been viewed w«h great
discouragement In Moscow. Might It be
that with detente already in shambles the
Russians perceived that they had Uttle to
lose by their action In Afghanistan?
A hardline begets a hardUne . Our
government has tried "gelling tough"
w«h the Russians and the results have
been negatlw:
T1ae CarWr Dodrlne
In the place of a balanced analysis and
response the President has giv~ us what
hao become known as the "Carter Doc·
trine . • Thlti doctrine exaggerates the
Soviet threat and , like a oef.fulfllllng prophecy. wtll pressure the Soviets Into maklnll their milltary forces even more formidable.
By ac:gulring new foreign bases and
facllitles, creating rapid -deployment
forces , and establishing mllltary aUiaooes
w«h countries along the Soviet Union's
southern bordeT, the Carter Doctrine wtll
onten51fy Soviet fears ol being encircled by
hooble powers. This likely to lead to a
greatet Soviet mlliiMy bulklup.
Moreover, the Carter Doctrine, In caD·
ing for the use of U.S . mUitary force to
oppose a Soviet attempl to take over the
Persian Gulf or Pakistan, comm«s the
United Slat to an inllexi&gt;le course ol
acbon which could have catallrophlc
consequences U the Soviets are reckless
mough to move beyond Afghanistan.
llle Carter Doctrine Is a powder keg
wotttng fa&lt; a match . W«h or without the
drah , the United States cannot wage an
cffactlve ground war agalnot the Soviet
Union In AN . Thus, once Involved, In
order to avoid clef at the U.S. would
have to reoort to nuclear wopons.
h .. the oil in tha Middle Eaot worth a
nudNr ww? Our leaden tal&lt; as though
they thinlt 10

""-'-- p ............. Clolaa?
llle Un~ed Sta
has a t..d 'habot ol
tnt lo t . - . - of unsa110ry die talon Aidlrlg Plll&lt;lslant Preslcknt Zla wt1l
tc tNt objectlonltble policy Zla
II
to u Amcncan- aoalNt
• .,. own people and 11-. ol ~
India~

Pak\II!Mil~.''fi!''

a powerful arsenal would also aggravate
Soviet lean.
Ma&lt;eover, despite offldill denials, H is
widely believed that Pakistan is in the
final stages ol d.veloping an atomic
oo-1&gt;. :&gt;hould we give llghtet planeo to
Pakistan knowing that theoe aircraft may
become the detivcry system$ lor nUclear

wopons?

.

Obviously, arming Pakistan wtll create
serious J)t'Oblems. And they wtll not be
solved by giving nuclear fuel to India,
another Carter AdmlnJMration proposal.
- ll would also be a mistake to provide
military
to Chine. Tensions
between the Soviet Onion and China are
already greet. Exploiting and exacer·
bating these tensions is cynical and not In
the intetes1 of WO&lt;Id pace .
Perhaps the ll)os1 alanning conse·
quence ol providing U.S . militaty equip·
ment to China is the fact that such a
move would heighten Soviet fears
tremendously and resuk In massive
escalations of the anns race on aU sides.
Instead of playing ow "China card ." we
should return it to the deck .

..-nee

T1ae Draft?
In response to the Soviet Invasion of
Afghanistan , President Carter has called
for the relnstitution of registration for the
mll!tary draft. Should there be registration
for the draft?
Draft registration should be opposed
for a number ol rosons, not the least of
which Is that H will, like other Carter pro·
posals, heighten tensions between the
Soviet Union and the United States.
Draft registration sets In motion the
machinery lor war: With registration tn
place our government would be only one
step away from the draft and thus the
power to wage war - even d the cause
was unpopular. Moreover, draft J;891olta·
tlon may lead to a peoce-Ume draft; such
a draft must be opposed because It con·
stitutes a serious violation of constitu ·
tionally guaranteed freedoms .

The Relf!V&amp;Dce of VlctDilm

Ree..-datJona

1. As a nation . It is imperative that we
recognize the truth of Abert Elns1ein's
observation: .. You cannot slmultane&lt;&gt;~Jsly
peve:nt •nd prepare for war... Our
government's preperdUOns for war wiD
lead us to war. The "Carter Doctrine,·· Including h caD for Increased m~ttary ex·
pendltures, draft registration. and mUltary ·
aid to Pakistan and Chit1a , must be rejec1ed .
We mus1 insist that our leadeTS In
Washington calm down and regain
perspecllve. In protesting Sollie&lt; aggression . our country should pursue
peaceful, international avenues of
pr'Jiest, preferably through tile Unhed
Nations. We should not act unllateraUy.
We should not risk war .
Z. With the height~ed possibUity ol
war between the ~ Union end the
United States, the need to eel decisively
and effectively to rev- the nuclear
arms race has never been ma&lt;e apparent.
The U.S . SeMte should take SALT D oil
the "back burner" oendnllfy h immediately . The President and Congress should
enad a moratorium on the development,
testing, and deployment of new nuclear
weapon systems. Such a moratorium
may be our only way ol heading off the
runaway anns race that now threatens a U
l~e on our planet.
3. We need to drastically reduce our
consumption of energy; otheTwlse our
country will become increasingly caught
up in the global scramble for vanishing
non-renewable energy resources. The
connecllon betwe~ solar eneTgy, eneTgy
conservatiOn, and peace must be
recognized.
4. Ultimately, we need to challenge the
Klsslngen and Brzezlnskls and answer for
oUrSelves the question: What is America's
~vital Interest'? Is It oil? National pride?
Milltary superiority? Power?'Or pace?
If we answer ""peace," -1hen we must
work to get our own house in order. We
need to consider personal lifestyle
changes as weU as changes In U.S .
domestic and foreign policies 10 that they
foster sharing and community In the
world . If we want peace, then we must
och do our share. Either we will create
one world or there will be none.

Discussion of the draft is reminiscent ol
our country's Vietnam War experience.
At this time H would benefH us to rellect
on that experience .
While Presidents Eisenhower. Kennedy. JohAson , and Nixon told the public
(fnNo-l.col.l)
that Americans were lighting in Vielnam
ty , visit and talk with them, take them out
10 stop Communist aggreS$1on and to defor a cup ol coffee, or perhaps just play
fend freedom , the Penklgon· Papers. the
checkeTs
with them. Volunteers may
govemmenfs O\lol'll history of the war,
work ind ividually In occupational
disclosed a sordid tale ol conuptlon and
therapy,
physical
therapy, recrotion ,
imperialism . For over twenly years our
emergency rooms and other departments
government backed one puppet governat Buffalo General, Chtldr~·· and VA
ment after ano1her in South Vietnam . Fifhospitals, and at the Erie County Medical
ty thousand American lives and $150
Center. Volunteers also assiot the
billion were expended trying to do what
American Lung Association and the
the French coukt not. namely. to prevent
American Cancer Society In special pro·
the Vietnamese from achieving injects
and fund -raising activities.
dependenCe from Western colonial rule
A senior shuttle service brings help
In Vietnam . anti-communism was used
from the campus for older adults In need.
10 justify intervention and vk:&gt;lence on a
U/ B volunteers pick up eldeTly persons at
nearly unprecedented scale . Is that
their homes ustng the CAC van , and take
what s about to happen again? In the Perthem grocery shopping. aiding them in
sian Gulf? Pakistan? Elsewhere? Is our
food selection and wise-buying practiceS.
government again intent on geltjng ...;_, to
Undet arrangements made through
beheve that the mlMtary can do no wrong?
social agencies end private clients,
In the name of freedom . wDJ we once
visit with loMJy shut-in adults,
volunteeTS
again oppress people and kill I hem? '
and may take care of minor chores or of·
In caUing for a new draft and possi&gt;le
fer to take them for an outing. The Wheel
lnterventiot)s In the Third World . the
Chair Home, the Rosa Coplan Nursing
Carar Administration has give}l us no
Home , the Beechwood Nuroing Home ,
guarantee that the hypocrisy. deception ,
and the Erie County Office of the Aging
inhumanhy, and honor of Vietnam wi11
cooperate.
not be repeated. And. of course . there
can be no guarantee . Our ravenous ap·
pettle for resources and our govemme.nt's
Womnlll .......a
conHnued support for authoritarian
Rnally, volunteers work w«h women
reglm around the world make l highly . at Ablon prison, selling up workshops
unlikely that the use ol U.S . military force
and offering Individual assis1ance to help
anywhere wJI contrl&gt;ut to the cause ol
the wo-n re-enter sodel!l. But thafs
peace and )uottce
not the end of H: CAC memblm are com·
In a sertlng the relevonce of our Vie&lt;piling a referral booklet of positions.
nam War upenence. h ohould . hoW..ver.
agendes and emplo9'fnent · centers
be pl)loled out that Intervening In the
available In Buffalo. Th.ir alm Is to
Mkldle East would poM an addllional
"realisllcally deal w«h the hlslh return rate
liolt I am reletring to tile dan~r &lt;5I a
tn the prison syst&lt;rm "
'
duct miLiary confrontation woth the
CAC maintains oflica at 345 ~uire
Soviet Un n In tislung nuclear war, the
and Is "elwal/1 open to new kl as for
ne t VIetnam could jeopaTdlM the Air
volunlee oervice l'fOjactl, Ms. Lindquist
vtvoj.JI( Pie f'lllr· ~~
•• .{J
-~r : ..._...~c~ .n~ ...... ., ...

e CAC

;Wd. .,.;-.,

j

�Fobnwy 2i .

1980

EEnERS

I

Faculty should stand finn on
certain principles, Garver suggests;
quality is the best protection

,.,......,s-a_
.,_, ........

~.a..

0...: ....._,I, 1911
AI the T . . - meeting C!l F«bruary 2,

n.e

r..-

&amp;.n~ o1
.conepicuouslv
f.a.d to come to tems with the praent
lllcal aioiJ ol the Unlvenllv. The Board
'-'! a ....,.,n &amp;om the Chancellor. In
....-n the Chancellor reported that the
mendated redlldlona would haw to In·
cludC 1001101 poolllons cummtly filled. ,..,_
retrenchment , and In which the
et.nc.lo&lt; oullned the range ol options
to the. u.w..lty. With rapect to
Nducaono, the Chancelor pointed out
that the Euc:uOw Budget proYides
SUNY wlh $4,000,000 t-lllx dollars
than IMt ~. wllh a base budget reduction ol $26,300,000 and a $75,000,000
Nductlan In our bud!let ~ (as com·
pen.d with $500,000"1Mt yur) . In tems
ol...,, bv June 30 tlwra will have been a
~ ._ ol 2600 authorized poei·
lions ( • 2 Bull. &amp;.tal. and the 80-81
budgol wll bring the ._. to ebout 3500
(whidl II equl\talalt to the ~ stall of
UB) . The options - limited to a v.wty
of steps to (1) CUI costs, (2l lncnase In·
come, and/or (3) lncreale manlgerial ef.
flcWncy . The Chancdor did not f...-lly
lnlllate retrenchmeru procedunos, nor did
...... the Bo.d to do 10.
At the dose of his preMfllallon .the .
O..ncellor suggested that the Board
m9ht not wllh to come to a raolu.llon on
these matters, pending his further
negOIIMions with the Governor and the
Dlvllion of the ·Budget on steps whidl
would allow the Unlvenfty to _,.,. Its
llolr ...... Of the lmpecl Of SlUe fllcal
planning In an orderly way . The
Chancellor hoped that ~ effl·
clendes can be asPeed on whlc:h wtll both
M\le money and strengthen SUNY. both
on the local campuMO and as a sys~em ;
and that pr&lt;9llltll and steps to augment
SUNY's non--tax Income can llloo be In·
corporated Into the bu&lt;lget. "T:he Board
did not wllh to come to any iesolutlon.
and accordingly accepted the
Chancellot'olnvtlallon to give him a cww
blenehe (blank check, Tonkln Gul
Rcoolutlon) and to poslpOne ad!&lt;&gt;" until
a later -..g.
The oultome of the Board meeting 11.
therefore , that retrenchment is Inevitable,
and t1wra no policy guldellna lor
IChievtng H.
•

"'*'

.voided 8!llnll whethe- or not he Is
" ' - - ' lo ftllllce such dedolons, and the
~ him no guidance, .....,

......... to . . . . . . .
·T h e - of t.cully members dlffer.
The I n - oll8cully membon at com·
munlly &lt;Oiegeo cllfer &amp;om thooe at
Brodcport, and the lnluesta of thooe at
Brodcport dlffer ·&amp;om *"-.at Buffalo.
Not only do t.cully Interests diller &amp;om
ca....,... to campus, but the Interests ol
dlfferent proleuon vary significantly
within a Algie campus. It Is, therefore,
dlffic:ult to present a common &amp;ont as
faculty. h Is dear, furthennore. thatoome
faculty members are bound to be affected
more poignantly than others bv whatever
.adjustments are finally required .
Nevertheless, I believe that we should
sland ftnnly on certain principles:
(11 that programs which make a special
conlrt&gt;ution to the qua1ity of the instltu·
lion should be lden~and sustAined;
(2) thai Institutions Which make a
special contribution to the quality of the
~ should be ld~ntilled and

(3) that Faculty. through the SUNY
Senate, the Faculty Senate, and other
appropriate faculty mechanisms, be luDy
involved In the Identification of institu·
tlonal quality . By saying that faculty
should be luDy involved. I mean that they
should be involved not only In speDing
out the criteria to be used , but also In the
judgments which apply to those critl!fia.

~ ...-..tkaa.~-·
Theee Pnnclples are not easy to lmple·
ment, and they do not spedfically ad·
dress the llscaJ crisis. They are sound
whether there Is a fiscal alsls or not; and
If they art not eternal, they are at least
valid over the long.run. Wrt have perhaps
paid too little heed to these principles In
our umes ol proopertty; the currentllscal
situation' makes them aU the more urgent.
Institutional quality and strength Is a great
protection ega1ns1 shW1ing tides, and n is
only bv rooting ounelvcs In such prln·
clpies that we can avoid lurchings from
crtsllto crisis.
None of ... wist- to be part of • weak
or cHdnlng institution . At that, lnsolar as
myself: If this cannot be a vigorous
unlven;lty with lncruslng olandards of
ocholarly and pedii!IO!IIcal quality. I
would peroonally prelai to be cut and
helped to relocate, rather than remain In
a slate of palstenl anemia .

J(och, Hentoff
join Forum lineup
The Faculty ol Educational Studies has

Retrenchment can't be
viewed in chaste void
Edlter.

The ~. "Pakntt..

era.na and

Procedures lor Retrenchment," bv
~- lijoadrlck, Roeobelg. and Welch
(In the Febru.y 14 ._..of the Repoowrl
Is lrnpr.-ve. h cooly adclnioas a hot
topic., reflects a pdndpled, rational orlen·
latlon, and oilers numerous commen·
clable suggestions. (For example, In Part
"· criteria cleftnlng a nrtrencMble unlt.)
yet, because of lis virtues-not clapite
them-the document Is flawed : b vir·
tuous penpedive overlooks several un·
chule matters. Analvsll of the proposal
and Tecollection ol past events will
highlight those matters.
The proposers authors duly adhered to
their charge to corulder " U&gt;Oys In which
retrenchment, If necessary. might be ap·
plied wHhln Academic Affairs" (emphasis
supplied). Having clone so may be

understandable, even appropriate. The
result, however. imposes on the
Reporler'• readers a burden of cognitive
dissonance. We are ceDed upon to ex·
amine an elegant gem-finely polished
atterla and procedures- but too~
Its aude and tarnished political setting .

To appndate lt. - lla~~e to f.,..et
To appreciate the pr&lt;&gt;posal, we must
erase &amp;om memory the admission by Mr.
Miller, the director of the State Division of
the Budget (In your pages on February
7), that the Governor's budget allocations
for higher education rest on "policy"
(read, Politics) . Simllarly, are we to
refrain &amp;om recalling that Miller expects
public college• and unlvenllies In New
York would close before a major private
college? Must we also suppreu
remembering (&amp;om the February 14
iUue) the ~w report ol the sue·
cess1u1 lobbying 1n
~~v Commio·
sion on Independent (sic! Colleges and
Universities? And are we to forget Gover·
nor Carey'• career-long, staunch sec·
!arianism? In short, to admire the proposal on ways to retrench , we must tg..
nore PoUtically·lnsplred reasons to
retrench. The origin of such retrench·
ment would be Political, not financial,
exigency.
Although the proposal ,_ oe cannot
be faulted lor the external Political con·
text, an Internal defect is clo$er to home .
It presumes ihe necessity to retrench. at
SUNY/ 8 would be determined on a
benl!pl. valid basis. To Its aed.lt, the pro·
posal advises that the judgment whether
SUNY/8 has reached the "point of

Abanr

II you happen to see facuhy or •laff
members boogying to disco sounds in the
Pub some weekend. they will likely be
members of the Human Relations Coall·

uon.

The Coalition. chaired by Dr. Shirley
Harrington, assistant director of the Affir·
mative Action/Human Relations office.
Colum!M, poet and playwright, will tal&lt;
was formed late last semesler alter
M&gt;out '"Teachlng Children- to Wrile
students engaged In a weekend of what
seemed to be racially-Inspired confronta·
Poetry." Wednaday, July 16, and Nat
Hentoff wtJ give lipl on "How to Prevent
tions.
•
the Schook &amp;om Crating a Permanent
Studant5 whom HarringtOn ap·
Undadtloo." July 30.
proached about the events later were
K«h's moet - 1 book of poetry Is
"fearful." fell they had been treated un·
The llurNng lifv*r!l o/ An"" In J9SJ .
juSlly bv campus police, and. in general.
He l w - 11-. books on education:
ieemed to need a vehicle or forum in
Wlllla, l.Jas and Drwomo: Teodtlng
whid1 they could vent their frustrations.
Cllllohn ... Wlile Poetry; lbe Where
the oboerved .
Dfd You Gel Thai R.d?: Teadtlng GNat
lluo1's when the, along with a handful
of other conc:.med llaff and faculty.
Poetry .., Cloilct-M; and I NeNr Told
~:
Poetry l4/l1ling In a . decided to ~nlao a group whidl could
,.._., HoMe. Hll playa ' - hqUcntly
Intermittently v1t11 students In their own
been poducad ol.aro.dwwy.
· milieu, listen to any
.WU.. any
An autb« and edllor of.e-.1 books
mounting hootllty. and aU.mpt to
on aducalon and on jlta, allalf wrililr lor
~le perceived problems.
On villts to the Pub. Hanington · has
The ,_, Y.....,., and • c:olumnlll lot the
V. . . V"*", Henloft conlolndl thlll "the
n01ed that students who approech Cod·
sdtools - not worldna lor more and
\ion ~ -m ~ve of their
more Githa young, espacllolly In the ~
efforu. If not a bit Incredulous that
c:llles, and • II not the c:hldrert'o fAult.
anyone would bother taking lime on •
He d .............. ~ ol who lito
~to lntaad with''-' ·
1t1ame.. and ~ ol r - - . a the tide of
Students seem mucll Ina fQr!ul ·now
!&amp;lluN-~ • we1 • ~.,·~·V
than thev did.befqre t~- ~ .
IIIW ...... •
lilmliijlcln aiMSMd' ~ eltd huii't

.om.,..._..

that

the

~.

campus

oo-v.r,

possesMI auch
the -~.,..,..

ceeds to -ttally thet the
auclal judgment would be rencMNd bv
applying "academic criteria" wtth
apolitical
fairmindednells
and
e\lenha~. not with eobllr.-,
capriciousness, or pmtisanship. let alone
pettiness or vinclilc:tlvcMM. In short. H
presumes ecademlc rather than polillcal
atterla would be generally applied .

......... . .,. ........... It-·

lluot admirable presumption may oest
on collegial values, or a rationalist ap·
proach, or sheer~ preference, but
at our campus k cannot rest easily on past
experienoe. l refer to that crillcilllnddent,
the retrenchment crisis of 1976. NotweU·
known "academic crllerla" but private,
s/tllting, and murky rules were applied .
As a conoequence, faculties expr&amp;Aed
"outrage" and a "tolallack of confidence
In the Administration;" ·departments
voted not to hire If either the letter or the
spirit of contractual obtogatlons were
violated ; making retrenchment
synonymous with academic planning was
condemned. Unle wonder a Faculty
Senate commHtee later reported "faculty
distrus(' of the Administration. And
alumni, the AAUP, Facuhy Senate, stu·
dent associations, UUP, and other con·
cemed constituents acted vigorously. AD
these actions not only upheld "academic
atterla". -nd forestalled ~mept;
they saved SUNY/ 8 &amp;om joining SUNY
central (and several of HI units) on the
cunent MUP list of censured admlnlstra·
lions.

,_.__

Two lessons emerge &amp;om that lnd·
dent First, whether a decision to retrench
Is not only declared but made effective
depends to a considerable measure on
the actions of the faculty and Its constl·
tuents. Second, lf retrenchmcnl were car·
rted out, the faculty has little reasort to
simply expect that "academic crkrla"
would goyem the process.

_..._.. a....lllatt
School of SocW Work .

Human Relations Coalition
keeps check on campus life

signed the Jut two partidpants for Its 5lx
part Summu Forum oerles.
Kenneth Koch, proleaaor of English at

T..,..

unavoidability" -the decision "that

means of reduction lhort of~~
would llgnllcantly jeopardlle the range.
quality. and achievement of major In·
structlonal programs"- "ohould be -.:1
against ecademlc allerla -a.known
throughout the campus."
Aside &amp;om the .w..t.ble contention

sn-.

noticed any factions of students In·
stlgaling Irouble. She arid other Coalition
members are convinced . through their
conversations with students. thai the
eruptiono In December were n01 opon·
taneous. but wae precipitated bv a build· up ot tension &amp;om threats. -uks and
Olher forms of harassment.
To ·u nderscore that point. H.mngt.,....
pulled out a flyer dlstri&gt;uted on campuf
this semesler bv the Klu Klux Klan whicf.
read: "The Black Savage Mull Go.'
" Every 14 mlnuies • woman Is raped lr
the U.S . ." "Unhe together, white man."
Ahhough students recognlao lbat suet
claptrap c::omes from lringo elements ir
ihe -.oc~t~y . 11 Invariably _... _,.,.
resentment. Harrington explained.
Before the end of this semaler. tho
CoalltJon ' - lo sponoor a teach·ln I.the dorms wher• students can ... ebou '
any cNflcultles they may be ·~
and get the benefit of feedback &amp;orr
facuhy and staff.
In addition, the Coalition. ~juCtlol
with the Minority Allain and All'emattv. 1
Action/ Human Relations offices. b
reviewing the responon of Pretideilt Ket·
ter to the demands of the IO'C8IIed Con
tclou- Cornmltlee. made In the wilko
of the troubles In December The Presi
dent'a office aslced the representa\lvu t&lt;
offer sugges~ions on WII)IS ll c:Ould addres
hoel more IICIItel)o lo the n,ads and com
plain:ts of thrtsntuden:ts. Harrington ..aid

�February 21 . 1980

CALENDAR

SINGI.ES GET- TOGEntEII
b'a cWfi::uh ac beR b 'MWCOmtn to the UntwrJaty-cwn lhow who Mv« been •ound for •
whllo-10 ...... lriond• ....th lhon

Thlli'Sday - 21

~coa._..
In an arte:mpt 10 fc»tn ~-and 1o ,usc
p~o., got to know ..:h ochft-a !11'0111) ol ""91&lt;
facu~ .and ataff ar~ orgenb:ang an informal "'happy
hour grrt together- rwTY Thursday from S p m •'

Piccolo's Ra!Aurant, 1424 Mi&amp;trspon Hwy m the
Tr..d building The- COSI oi dnnks: il red.uoed-ch.tring
~ hour and hen d'onJvra arc free

IIESEAIICH INSTilUTE SEMINAR '

p- ~:
R - 5tudin on
suuw on A~ .

S.....lon• 1o&lt; Chnical

ERA AcnON TEAM MEETING'

Alc:oholi&lt;ta. Rftoaocllln

F01 .....,.

1021 Jt4..n
Mt lpariung m
thoMoon&amp;NootttS.HIIooJ 2pm
PMtJcc»nt., 'Mil br Steven Sc:hw-artz, M H S .
ct.ectur Scutlmoln Alcobobm Tr~•tment Center .
Bulfolo i'¥1uolrtc Cmt.,, Rabon Shoat M H
dnctot Altohohm Servttet d Ene County. Erie
Courny R habll•atton Cenw. Bufll'o. R~
Whuney . M 0 • dne:ctor . Oe:panmtont of
Alcollolom Ene County Medtcol c..,.., Buffalo

PHILOSOPHY SEMINAR•

""*"

ltl

&lt;onnectoon

636-2773

SOCIETY OF WOMEN ENGINEERS
MEETING•
n u..,.h Fnt . _......,• .
.. You never gn a MICIOnd '"hancc to JNkco • first im • Maricne Rooon . Proi.......W lmoget
Faculty Club Blue Room . Moo. Sltect
6 30 p m.. rdrnhnwnt5, 7 p m . Pf05P'"at'l'l
M.mbm only Cal Paulifw at 82S 2962 for more

l'fo-

c...,..

....

M.othod "' ~Ia··
d tho
R-...loo ol l'fotmoloo Gomwonv. l'toloMa
KJou, o.t.t.. Un...... ty"' Hombutg 084 IWdy 3
-

"'""""ond ~In

the national ERA tatibbOn urnp.a.gn
Amherse C.mpus 6~8 p m Fot 'ocabOn caD DoMa

inbm.taon

pm

CATHOUCS AND LUTHERANS:

ll LECTUlE SERIES '

PHYSICS COlJ.OQUJUIII•
MW.- Olpo6t M~ R«qulted co Blad • n

Eloctt.. Dr J E T....,., Hoolth and Safoty

Itew-.. Ook Rldgo Nobonol L.tbanototy.
4!&gt;4Ftonc:ook. 330pm
lln!mC$ COlJ..OQlJIUic•
T"e Po l..oa Approal••tlon:

~-

Rec-ent

0pontng loduto: Dr Rabon P -. - l c pro·
,...,. cj hntO&lt;y. U/B C...tolidon c.n.... 3233
· Moo.Sitect N5pm . FtM . ~t&gt;,Mm
SetHI Newman Catholc C.mpuo Minbtov ond
R-..oction House (l.uthcron ~ Min"""l
The 4501h """"'"'-Y "' tho
ConJ...
lion
be c:eldJ.-ated on June 2S (rt~fs the docu-

ment thot motbd tho lonnol dMtlon bo.....,
Rome and tho dmontinv •"""'-" "' U.thcrl A plan , lonnulalal bv • f110UP "' Now
Vortc.e..d lutheraM and c.tholk::s MIIOdl;ted
wtth tho Amoricon Luthcron Publdty S...... and
the Gr.ymoc. &amp;umtNcai lnGute, . '"'*'e&amp;o in -

J
John Hopldno 1J-.iy R"""' ll·16, 4230 Rldgo
t - 4 p m Co1Mw In Room A· IS ot 3.30.

lLCl\.u IN IIAiiiC N~•

-

_
_ _ol_
P_R....,Tubaioo.
~
Utlot.-PAH T - "

..... ond ..,...,.,.

chu-

Dan-. ,..,._.,

~.,

....

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

· ond

~

.

......

~.

.......

S&lt;anlcy SHIIo&lt;. droac. "' phonnocalotll.

Chl*on\~ola...to CSOIC..O.. 4pm

~- cjthe M. .- .
~.. And.....,, Hon.anl

0...... Folldo. Dr

-~ Z46C.., 4pm ~bv
Ana-.1

s-.c..

... ~a(

w - .. ....._

__

,..,._.,1-.ooy"'
5pou111on,a 0onone Room .

&lt;"-'-"'·-..............
., ...

a.a-, 430pm llvodv...,..__,onljl

Dr Gr bc.wrnt~wn~. --~ ..
~
-...~

-

,....,... ., - l i l l y ond

.,._ ~ ... o.--"' a....a.....

~---foc.ltycj

---..a.

___-

......
_budgot_ . .......
. . ___
..._.
FUS M£ETING '

......

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

I&gt;

-that
._... ...

.......... a-. _ _ _

- - -er..tcy·. -.......

boolt.• . , _,. IOioo .-..d ond diocuooodt&gt;,er..tcy
,_ Foculty Clllb Rod Room. Hontmon Lbwy,
--~8p.m"-~bv

no.--·.
. . _ _ .... Soaooy
tho £nsjtoh

ClnduoN Plogrom ol

·M """ ..... • capv ol .... !tool., bnno i , -

WATER IIESOURCES AND

M E&amp;on, ,..,._."'

EntiWI

SEJIINAII•

"-&amp;he t.o.ow
ea.t.o..

T - ol~

Conol bv
JloMph

ol Dr
McDougal, ~. Nlag.a
W...,.,...,TtH~nWntAint 139,Partc. 4 Sp.m
_.......,...,.~&gt;&lt;........,

w•

F*

I

- ·Soma-

and tw..m.n1 haw gone back and forth bdween
Mr Rabon Nugobo, tho ZANU condido,., and
Uxd
Soamo
. ....
..
.... ~-dngtho
-·
thor 1o ..I&gt;I&gt;C*d 10 ..r_.t lhe oloctiom. The
Unkod Nallont Security Coundl, indudlog tho
U.S., doo "'" thinlt &gt;0. Lut ...... II J*Md a
raolullon - . g tho ll&lt;1ti.h 01- handing ol

t h o -.
Altho- ......... wll bo d ltcuuod tonight
.,_~r.,... Mr. Oswald Ndan1• . North

1\meric:on Oioald ~..tlw '"' tho ~
Ah1eon National lJ-. IZANUiwll -""about tho

enS. '" h• country
apective:,

In order 10 proW:Ie • fuler pet
tchol.an from the 8uffaJo are:• wil reply

to M.. Ndanga'• .......,.., 0.. ,..._, MlchHio,
head cj tho Council on lnlcrnallonal Sludlo at U/ B
... dioctuo 1\meric:on ,....., policy In tho . _,

0.. No.aan - - . "' ,;,. Hlototy daportmenl ..
U/ B, d ..,.... about Ollcmol ..,...., oonllittt
o.. -w. a.....o~m.~&lt;n~.

c..,.
. •Zlmbobwc
"'
t&lt;on,.., ... ..,.... about .... "roPocc
"' ....

dotponmmt "' Bullolo -

conlltct on tho mt ol Alrico.

_d_

Alfi-- ......... IWontho thcrowtl looafllrriabout-. Motw...r..

....... Zimbabweon .... •nd donee. Fot- who

tll'lhu'9Y ihmt wllbooc:honeeto,_ZimbabAI of the e-w:nta .,. fret eo rhc public, ncept fOJ
tho food whidt it ,_ to 1C · ond S2 '"'
non·mmlbes.
Co~ bjl tho 5.A lnternolionol AIIMn

~

....

liUNYAC IIASKE'r8Au. CltAJII'IONSH&amp;'S'
a..lt Holt. 7 ond 9 p.m. Eaol •1 w. w... "2.

~~~~;I :.~

PHYSIOLOGY SEJIINAA•
COt Mo4ulat)oa of tb• Car4io~lar
R-oo~ Dr, JohnA I V - 5108
Shennen 4 15 P-'" Refreshments at 4

tho Stole u-...tv "'
Now Yodo Athlotlc Conte."""" (SUNYACI Wnt
. . ond __, .... ' - """ lor tho

UUAIIRUI'
Newwfr-t (Aulitrall. . 19781 Confcte.nce
· Sqon 4:30. 7 ond 9.30 p .. Generol

e..•----lolttoplcy

-

Friday- 22

_

ENVIIIONJIEHTAL ENG1NEE111NG

.... u..

"'"""-"

19181 Wold- no.-

A u-... T - Relotloool 0 - - Model
wltlo Blaolo Ea-. lldrian W..... Boll
~ M..,.y Ha. N.J Room 41, 4226
Rldgo La 3.30 p.m. C""- and clouthnu,. 01
Room 61 al ~p . m .

.

POEniY IIEilDING/ DISCUS5ION'

, . _ 430, 7aood930pm O....ol...._,
S2 --$150

COtiPUTEII sat:NCE COIJ..OQUruJI•

-.. -BolniRcitoiHoll 8pm F...

UUAII FaM'

· - ........... _.... a.lton. -

pm. R-.....,l&lt;dbo........,
~ jointly bv a..tl EngiMeing ond
EnginHtlng Sc:ionce . . . . . _ EnginHtlng and
Nude• EnginHtlng.

CONCERT'

EducoloNol s..-

---·-- __

~ENGINEERING SEJIINAA•
Who&lt; C.. the c-,..., Td Uo About Tie
Rod!_, Cableo?, Dr. John II Huddlaaon. pro·
r._ o1 dYII•nginaring. U/B. 152 Pan... 2:30-4

T h o - ... bo _ . . . , .. m.c.n..-.
eon.... ..-.~. Fe. 2.1 . Fe 28.
and"'-dt6

..,pr,..,..

Rclatlouhlpl of

DNA s,..dtftlo, Emilia A Rutlgltano, !II'Oduale
ttudmt. Cl21 Coob Z p .'" Reltuhmonto

"'-"&lt;.

foc:ultyol~ond,...,...., SdoncaSCu·
dmt--- · 252~ lpm. AI
Md 1r'U:iur., mull aftiAd Be ~. .

A c: tl vH~

6-Stobodtut..r ~: s.t.cdw ltthl&gt;ltloo ol

.._ (Or

tdlool

,..... Hoio-ondou&lt;borollhe--on

........ c - . , ........... ... - .

... - - 1941156. -

JlmtCINAL CltENISTilY SEJIINAR•
Str•ctur~

Zlmbabwe . Untii•~Zimbobwo. thon knowo .,
Rhodell. , was controlad by • whl&amp;e supqnwdst
gowmment. A "~ " w•
fought by two
gucn111a Of!IOnlzoliono, ZANU ond z.aJ&gt;U, In Oldot
10 insurt ld~tion lor ZJrnbebw.. h is
undut. howowr , whothe-lho•~~ ..,...,.
ly ..... place. - · .... old. colonlol-."
~tho -. Owgescj lntintldlltlon

636-2177.

k
tonighl)
Whot .. . . _ . . . - · Dr ~ l.oow.
tdg.ow dir.ctof. Ch.utauqua lnlbtu't
Who&lt; ..... " - Dr. Rabon
· Groco lAo1lwnn Olun:h. Hombufs, N.Y ..
and Dr Galtrid ScorN, OFN, ,..,...... "'
lhoalot!l. Cl'ritt tho King
E """""·

~ond--... ~ .... - . . . .

~rtn'a Hotpital.:.. 1~1 ~ ·"'.·

Pootia , T•I·Avtvl.ln-..y. IOCapen . 2p .m . FOt
.ddltional tnfotmaHon. cab Paul Garvin at

m...--

~-

Audlorium ,

1M s...Jodc:o o1 Wlodow D.....,., Norni
T•"*-Ghoz. Yah!va .Univonlty ond lnduto cj

s.-,.

Cl-~-:::.u~Corl " · Gr- -

~

GllllDI.IATE GIIOU' IN SOilOnCS
LECTURE'

U.thcran ~ - . , . ~ thlt
IINdv- .. ~- ...... - . . ,

Steuld

- . . . , loo d w T - oi """'-, Dr

-·

u..........

_,. .......... _
--concemlng . . p-··-

Phannocdotw
&amp; n..._.tb
ond
~
~

;dso ..wl tH £6at •

t

PEDIA11UC GRAND ROUNDS• '
IISepuol Ddect. Dr. R'_, Gingell

. ,.. 1530 ...n.od tho tWt cj OUI fonnol
.- tho comtNltft hM Mid, •ooulcf"'" 19110
"""" lhe ~ cj out uruty 01 tho One
Chutdo "'a-? t. ........ -'*'~~ · Of • •
.noc~v
In which ... _.,.. 10 hul tho
btuch o1 tho 1611&gt; CantutyT
To otq&gt;1on
lhe Catholic and

·

~SEMINAR•

Troh

Romon Calhob ond

Rus.rt, &amp;om Waa .sen.:., Ill .11 forme we:swm

._.. _ .......... ,.. Mo!mlhan

about .... ....,. "' doctrinol .... two
haw IUChod In - • thaologal

Dr H
pllyoiolow
1-..oyoiMoonaCalogtcj- 5108

Shormon 4pm C""-oc34S

""""'"'11

we

- Appilca-.
"""'s.rflna, Sdonca, Tho

·u .-... st.50

CACFIOI '
1M fldoe. 170 MFAC, Elocoo 7 ond 9 30 p.m
Generol~ $125, - . . . Sl

-

Rodlord, Paul-....,., R_, Shaw,
Homllodo'• - o n Eulllc IIW&lt;e Ac·
No~ ... one ol the

......,_.,
-

.

ao. . .....,_., a f'lllltll

~

INTt'IINATIOIIAL COlJ..£GE U:CTUII£ •
........ Rod ........ 2nd Floot
" - 7p ..
27 ........ 29, - - ... too held
lorthoW-Iora_........,._,_.,

On,._,

1979.-80 Booitdooll ~ T -

Friday ond

Solunlatl. Fe

22·23 .

-t.

AI -. tho

undo!.- 01 che dM·

P""""""Siote. 9-1 .

dlnchad .... E a o l - . . _ , - . . , 83-75 W:·
IOfy .,... o.--,,. SO... on "-b. 12

Tho ....... . .
Oorlt Hal ... pil
Potsdtm Sea.. lgllinll ~ Seal. •I 7 p m. on

Fob 22, ond Bull... - - SUNY~

(7.2) "'~Stole (6 3) M lhe Eaol N"""''

LIJPM9pm

-

.Tho -

............. conoola- .... ~

Solwdatl·nW&lt;. .... - I n

~ ... looaolcl .. - . . . ............. 1...
-~-S3lcw-andS2101
- . . ... nigh!'• - . . . . .. ...... tho

Clorlo Holt ""'"' Olkc doyo
ThoSUNYAC~- ......bld to ohe NCM ~ plo!l'6

�7

Fobruery 21 . 19f;IO

·_sunday- 24
CAC FILM'
Th• s...,. Conloronc• The.,., Squlr• 2. &amp; 00
•nd 8 30 p m Genaal admiHoon S I 2S. otudonlo
Sl
FACULTY SOLOIST'
Stepb~ MaMS, touring contert ~ •nd pofnta~ II Ut B. will M l h e - artist in 1M MOlMt

Plano Concorto In E·lfoo. K 482 woh lh• Boftlllo
Phllh.rmoniC in KWinhans MuPc: Hal 2.30 p m
Tk:keb&amp;re $9,$7 50.$6 50 end $4 . srudenlS $3a
hll houJ beiOfe tM J)ftforrn~~nce

DANCE/ MUSIC'
ZocKaque Oenee Company, .,.,ith gus arttStt. .
Q&amp;a~~net, -Quartet/ Quanm " Ceo:ntn
Theatre , 681 Main Str"' 3 p m Geo:neral admis·
lion S4. itud«nts and t.enior ~ .$2 ADS

The Buflalo

voudoon ""'""'ed Sponsored bv ""'
llwwe Rewarch

c...... '"'

MFA RECITAL'

UUAII MIDNIGHT FILM'
n.c H• How E:!IOO U9nt. eom.......
Thea... Squn. 12 """""""· Genonl - s -

u . -...sl.SO.
Drtdnecf 10 Mlain the ume cuil folowing u
T a a o a . - - lhlocon- hor·
..., . _ - """"" 10 tho

,.,., bv - ' " ' dcmond .

uu"" mlcln;ght

IRC FILM'
R......, ol fh&lt;r
170 MFAC, Ekon. 7
and 10 p.m. Froo 10 IRC * " - " " I l o r -

o...-

DANCE/MUSIC'
~ O..a Coii!IP•Y· wilh g\lft! M11sti.
The Buflak Gutt.r Quartet, ..QU«WI / Q~ ...
CAnter Thotte. 681 Main Strut 8 p m Ge~
Mlma.ion $4 ; &amp;~udents and Hn.ar at~Ht~S 12 AOS
vouc:Mrs ac«plcd 5ponll0fed by 1ht! Cen1n fOJ

TMaueRnarch
JaCFIUI'

1460iolofteloof. 7ond 10
·
KungFU-• .....,fllnocoLH·IociMd.
_.,tho~

Satarday - 23

p m Froo .,IIC """"-· Sl b -

11.01'5 SWDIMING a DIVING •
llheoa
Claot. Hal. ;z p.m.

ICE HOCIIn''

UUMU'

........, s..Ca~oeo. T _ . rca Time

7.30p.m

•

MAGMA . - n a t LoS soaE1Y
liEEJ'ING'
232 Squn , 730 p.m

~o-~.·--·
Qooon«. "Quonoo/~ .

- . M. -ond - - $ 2 . 1 \ 1 ) 5
.......... ..._.., s,o--1 bv tbo c.n... ""

..

.. bo p.ionned
""'"'"~"'~- .
Linda Swlniuch. • aliond ol l o W - ond
- . . - . . -. ond ....... _
..

-.

-

~

and ViYoldl The a..lalo

Guloo Quarto~ . . bo . . - on -

w

.........

v-.~

.......

10 ploy

"*

---.hal

............ ~~w_.... :;.~~:: :::..:...'"':,."_Vc.!::;
"V-." aN 11 baNd on Fnoz

w..,.._

1loo
(111791 Conlor.nco Thcatte.
Squh. 4:30. 7 ond 'J,30 p.m. Genonol a d S2: -...SI.SO.

-val-'"""---meMo?
.._, ...,_""""""'lane.. "_..........,.
............
Hoodiv· A .........-aammed
F. .

C...,_., 681- Snol. 8 p.m. Gonorol

-

c:oa.o.

n. ..... tho

1loo ..... -

r- -

L••l• Mm ollho

CHINA NIGHT'
.lc*olho-oltlwY_ol ...............

"""School.

-!:lin...: ~.3().7
Cennl: 1~ p.m.. 4301
·
" -:- 7:30p.m.
3 hounj, _
, 54.50"" dinnc and

...... S3b"-onl!l Forticbt.-coll

-

Kam\al~ .

, _ ............ Squn

n... .. b o &amp; . - - - .......

Boo Olllco
Squ... ...., I~

... Gomwl .... tho
~
..... a
~bt"-~Aocl Thcmuolcb~lo

-··--·Tom-·

._

"'tho dandotl. """ .....
10- b t -.tho...,..-..............
....... a jail pio&lt;a,

hal -do~--

looiMs .... _ . . .....

~. a...- W...._.ond

I!IIIS&lt;'Qu.wo
.. _

... _ _ _ , _
~

.,.. continuo Two Am81cans (l..ondoft-b.Hd
lOPiano Judll.h Net.on al'ld Paris-bMed harpsi·
chotdtft w..-m Chrislk) ;otncd wtlh &amp;tg\llft Rerw

Jarobl. coun1c:rt«nor . ior concctts. r«;onfs bra-d·
cnts and feSUY.a ~a 1hroughou1 Europe
lbey tt.w ~a r.pu\ll tK»n kw thu fiN lntGpretlllioM of 1M voclll mUik: of the eariv and la1to

Baroqu•

• St~ MHitl, ~ contlffl J»nilf and

f~ a1 U/8 wil ~ dw solo .us~

'"

lM MoU'fl
P't~~no Co..-ciU10 tn E~n•t . K 482 ~h •he Buff.to
PhiNrmon.c in Klmhans Mutic H.l 3 30 P m
Tliekeu•• S-9. S-7 50. S6 50.,ct SA; studltf'tsS-3 . •
h.. huur belon 1lw ~Of'!J\al'l«
'

CACFIUI'

THE VAI.ENn I!'S DAY

.....

.

s,o--1 bv SA. GSA. CNnec ~Sou·

- -· --...-.C..OWaiAJ.
tan, CNnec - - oiNcw York,_.

-

o.r.q Gn&gt;up.

•

SUNYAC~~SH8'5'

Clwll Hal 6 aN 8 p.m

~

aoocl

1loo Sdoe. 146 Dlalondorf 7 and 9:30 p ...
Gonorol- Sl 25, ........ Sl

GoodyeM ~ 10 p: M 2 • m Aid
IIOf'l 25 ~- CW:mency 111\d ~ Fund

,..,....,

nwtnblft S 1 mtwm 'Three bHrt kM' $1 thfouthout

A"""""'._..,-- hal-

oo~yauflnd...,., orMo. RIIhO
~

Dlllt (8 30 • rn

..a

dalgned

-upanap·

p.m

J. ar anv s-

_...Main--·.... -.
n-.

today

.-yaur ........ atlhollalollodO.... Cool

.. 50-an• (lor Clonnoncy and GoodyoM hond
. SISO-Cindudosad-oolho
done.) .,., .. donci

n...·. - Eadl - I n GoodyoM and 0.·
,.,..,... tW It lfWMed to tpOMCI' OfW ~ ia I

.... . . . . . a/-""-.. . .

"""""'doooo da... _ _ . .

do-.
.
.
The--

hi .... coupla

S20a/_b _ _
Who ,Mirll -

Concerto

U UAII FILM'
Tbe w...-.... (1979) . Wo&amp;dman Thutre.

Arnha• . 4:30, 7and9:30p.m. Gcne'alad..S2: 11udonls S1.50

EVEJIIINGS Fdit'.Nf:W MusiC'
Aid T - 1. planiJI and 1980 Cr&lt;ativo

peri.,..._.

Atoodato. In ,_ -

dobul.

8alnl R.doal Hal. 8 p.m. Genaal adrn- S3:

U/ B community .net ...., dtillml S1
1\1)5 """"""" - . . . . Spanaorcd bv .... c.n...
for lho c-ow ond P.....,lng Am ond tho
~n~dl!nts.

-in-·
-ary m-.

.,__,aiM-.
TaloohuN wdlcd with Yutab Ito, Roy Lov. and

corts. and
Parlo. Tokyo. Rorno,
Warsaw, Bangloolo , ond ~a " - _ , tho
nw+ar force in ha acquilitjon ola v• ,..._c of
She hal porforrnod """' ol
the me;qr J~P~MM 1ymphony orchelar.. and .Yo
on GormAn, Polloh. and .._...,. radio and .....

-

~ STUDIES FILMS'
M IFrlU l.a"ff) ond Fotal GIMo ol with
W.C. FIIIds. 262F-. Ear:ol1 8p.m. No-.

.... -..

M,madoln 1930, w•!Ang'•fnl ......... 61m-a
P1 disturbed~ murderer 'T'N ,.,_ shawl how
boCh the poliol and the unde:rwortd al'ldlpt to trap

..,..,.._,.,~drama

Lon•...,.

•

lhederanged .....

~

Monday- 25

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

- a n d Iormor U/ 8 " ' - SIH ......_ ol
~

In
.......- a
Baln!Hai,
RoomiOI

hladdooJon
P-'ClPIIW' h\ • eomp.~W mttth. but t.ny .

Tloon4o¥. F - 1 1 1o 1ho - -·

...... on~!!

-

MUSIC'

(IIEIAtu»l DANCE'

fi\CU..TV llf.CrtAL'

--U.-SI.- .

FIIIENDS OF VIENNA PROGIIAM'
M - . will Swo Laal Rchlua. ,.,...,..
...,._,. and U/B ~ : Allon s.g.l. clarinet. and
Carlo Pinto. plano. International ,,_,., 864
~e Ave. 3 .30 a.\.m. Concert is opRn to thl
public. Admiuion ls frft . bl.l1 donatioN ltl!

--__
. . ._ . . . -Oft!!-_ . . . - · - --- bl'*'

Dohlo, " - ' ... " - ........ - . o n d F - .... _
- - ........ Gonorolad. U/1 ....... - .... - . . . t
booald ..

pto-

tho bo tho ....? • lhoy wtn . you
wouldn't w.nt 10 hMie .........

boginnlng .. 5~

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

a.-.

bvlho~oi M-

Georg V-'&gt;ely. P&lt;tlonnanars In ,.....,, coo ·

FACtJLTV SOLOIST '

UUAJI COFF£EHOUSE'
11M Rac:qve~tc Rtvft RCH~n*"' -• c!MldNit
ewnlng of bluegr.~tlblun .nd c:onWtnp)I'•Y
mutital en~~ - Raa.~ . Squh Hal
8301130 Td~ •• Sl Sor.wdents.. Sl 50 for
othwt.. and art av.W. .. ,he Squire Tltlwt otfiC~t
The new trio O.n ~hem . MchHI H.dfiekt
•nd Jot.&gt; K.i&gt;s. hav• ...., - . , prol&lt;....,.ly
b y.ars O.n i5 fuwred an gutt.r. dbbro. .-ld
rNndoln whk Nid\Mf conwlbutn MM. • ..mg
gu:twtr and vocal wet\ Johtl a a .ngn t tongM"~wr
whoM a..Wnts inClude pili~ 6 and 12 s-w.-g
gutt.r.
1nd kuoo

7:30 _

-

""""'*" "" - . w•
......................... -.,f,dvanl "'""""""'-·

-·

Gnotond"""""To_,... ... _
.... _

UI B fac:utly. s1.ft' . •lumni
and Mnior dliHnl 13. s.tucknl~ Sl
Conc.n0 \IGCU. .,., tOf'me'll 1o "..,ao.. wwn....m M\d «ightftftlh&lt;tniUfy worid tor two voeatJ

o n d - up In ... 8nJna In tho-'!! 60o "JUSI

DNICEI MUIIIC'

--

VIStnHG ARnST SERIES '
eo..ccrto Vocal.. S.k"d Redlal Hal 8 p m
GcMra~l .&amp;milsiorl $4 .

,...,M,

.Ny
baritone Ba•d Recilal Hall 3 p m
" - ortitb will bo plonlsl
Se;b and.
topf"IOO Laiey Ddt fi'H ~ Spontored

2nd,._,

·· ""'""" ..

JllDNIGKT FIUI'

.

(19nt Cooler.....
~ . Sqoh 12 ........ GonoroiE;jiOO

-""" -. ........

Q . . . . . . . $1.50

peri-"'
.. - ·
lOam
" -. SJ&gt;oc-adbv

the&lt;=- oilhoer-and P.._,.,., and
lho~oiMutfc:

IIIOCitEMisMv 5EIIIINAII•

_...,Gory"""'""'·
....

Hornooflololo, Dr

..

Mc:C&lt;Itun .........

...... ...... Hoplclnt Unlve10y 108 Sherman 4
p m Calft •t 3 .30 in lOlA c..y

OOMPUTER SCIENCE COUOQUIUII• •
............ Solo""" "' w..a.a, S~op~ot
Fr....._ ......... ~oiiiMs...-1

KW,Dr~-· ~"'"""'""

Matlwrnatlc&gt;. W - 1 -. Ioraol Room41 ,
4226 ~ Laa 4 p .. C4lko and ilouglln....

-··

ROOI"ft 61 , 3 lOp m

I'HAIIMAOOLOGY • THDIAI'UIT1CS
_,.,_....ol_ll&lt;oloT_A_

1 1 - o . . w - , - A Rolh. PIID .
~. Ooportrrwnl ol ~
a N " " - - U/11 l24 f - 4 pm

-·345
·-~; -a.-a.t

�Fllbruary 21, 1980

Coac:erto Vocale

• Calendar

...__.,,-..,

, . . ..,. -.nlnl'

.......... Olrold&gt;9. 19561; ~
----~·
- ........... Cl9621 146
7 p.m

- - . .. 1~ . 146 Oto4ondorf. 7
p.m. Spew-.~ bv lhc c . - b - - . ,.
_ _ __ _
andEngllslldlo~
Tho .. """ ....... by · Silt

.wRI.AMG -

I . I U M -Y - F I U I S '

_ _
-~-

,.,._...by ....

c - ... - - . .
ATntE

I.IUM~Y MClHT FILMS'
...... ~ . 19281. 7 p .... ;

....

v...... A . . ..,_C19661 . 7p.m .: ~
' - a Ottdo. !19661. 8:50 p.m. ConloNnoo

t'-

-

IMo (194.31. 8.40 p m. 1711 MFAC, -

-

-olo
l - t..ne'•
....-.y
......_and

_uol,.....
~-

.... _ . . ol t..ne'• - -

.........
.._. ... ..._._ ......
-

o(a-- -

· ...,._by Long and

..

HOHoa COUNCIL PIIIERNTATION'

- - . .. - . O t. On*Mior-

o..w-.

phj,, .-y
and Ot. John Perodolto.
doon , DU£ .lone~- . _,_

...... ""- .. a - ol-e- c..n-..a.n.· _..
hoi -

.... Cornol _ ,

7·30 •p.m

.s.-.F - -.

V•'reAIIIe a.., It a..,..., 11m a l a man..., -._.n.. _..who lums abooit
W.!Toma&lt;olout-Lenl a.... • Dwell tlftlOiUfttl to C'l Kt ol puN -a·

~-

~·.-..a_IMng.,.,.

__

who~ goesJ&amp;adt ra1Mg MM•nd commit&amp; a
.,_ ......... A c:oonedy.

FIUIS'
l.a,toM o i V - Ond Sinh ol• _ . . . . ,
I. 148 Dldondorf. 7.30 p. m. ~ by tho
~ ol Hlolary.
.AnyoN. who'a f"'lt'Wf _,_ D. W. Grilfilh's con--

· ....,.,... - -· Blnhai•NI&gt;-

- - - - a n d , _ . . . "'"'~liP In

hk or ha mcwfe eduation.

ca.~~w.
RlcNnl CbombooWn II • IUCUIIIUI ¥nell

caq, ....-"'" ........_. - -

........ clolondiOg ~ &amp;om • -

.....

munlcr

ERA ACT10N ttAM ICEETUIG •
Fos-lottcr-wrttlng ond1aloplto&lt;*'l .. with lhc notional ERA • • - . . -.
Amhont Campus. 6.JI p.m. Fos-locotloncol Donna
.. 6J6.Z77l.

centft""- w h o - . . _ -who - t o
writing • • ••

-

... -

Como to

_

, ...... people

...., ,_, and -

• undontuod.
Amhonl Campus, 336, onv day !Tom 12to 4, .,.Monday, Wodncodav
and 1'hundov cwnlngl &amp;om 6 to 9 p. m.

IWdv IW ""

b y tho -Coundlunde-a.-&amp;om
...
fSI&gt;oeo.n... , _ , _

FAClLTY IIECITAL •
Da.rtnc
Rooald Rkharft, obobt , I
D o - - a ..... oocjo~y? On Murphy
8 p m.
and P.-~oao
Soudonttcomp~~o • unique R_.., -........ Bolnl Rodtol
-p .. oocjoly. - _,.;.:;,............... - . ... bo . . . - a-lio Hoco arid
llokww ....... -~-~moch
o . n . . I - S J: U/ 8
'-lty. Jtolf, alumni and_..,-., $2; wdenll
- - .... &lt;1¥ o l - and """"
T h o - - Coundl "...,.,.....t ol II s,..n-.&lt;1 by the
o f -.

"*"'"'

--l..nOt

....
....._~ -Sododot·• ....
SoolollnoWntty-oiHow v...... Bdolo. Tho c......
jo"""'
DMsloft of

........,....~
by the
~~andlhcDMtlonoiStu ·

&lt;II.

--· .. --.

;e._~;.':..'e::,::~;::..c;;
C......and _ _ _ ....... _

...

""'*"'-

AMEiucAH WON£N IN SCIEftCE
ICEETUIG'
Blue Room , Foadty Club. 8 :1!&gt;41:30 p.m. lnb·swap • 8.30 Cdl.. ... bo &amp;om
7 JO.IUS.
Do you flinch wt.n you ho• ,.op~t 1011tht&lt; • 1t
b .........., thon men to Ill' flOOd )obi .,
--&lt;!¥?Do you ... -

~·
~....-.- .... - o f

:::.:r~~:"'..!:~=.~~

women wllh Ph.D. 'a in

. . --Dic:k·'--

~-

... bo...._

Fobo a n d - Doold Fu1oo ollhc
~ Opon Wcwlahop unde t b c - ol
Goo,/
alto . , . . . _ Hoi,/ T~
............. Cltuod\, 10110 8.15 p ..
..... and ........... · - t o ••.,.,

a.- ...

FIUIS ...... IIAMATIYEI'
, _ . , ....... ~ - 191161,

"drop ouf' man

AWIS-.gwilboon-..--· -

.a .. ~to come and._. .ny IOUICif
o l - f - -. -

. . - -. « .1 - y o u ' -

· -

·

Alto.onv-

....,ol....._ .. ....._. . """""""".,..'"""'
ere welcome If you hew JUC:h ertidls. we en·

to.,. •

1/0U ................ along to .... - . .

-

and , w....... bo

~

brio! oum-

"*l' oloho c:omont1 (H -. do not , _ . , 10
~

C......b--..

_.,..,.,....C19621

~by ...

.a.nc:.

......... "'-

147~. 9pm

comcownfyoudo-'-such""olobltl. "'ohoond oloho · ...... ,...n..

- - tbc........,.,.. .... blbllowol&gt;hll- ...
bornodo-IOolwho ......IONIIod

FIUI (fUI IIAMATIYEI'
~. 19461 147 Oto4ondorf 9
P m s,...-.d by lhc c.n... b Modio s...fy.

Taeeday - 26
~MG~~-·

n.. F - ol . . GSA_.

ltllfloor~,joycoPIM
,_

.__oe..."'

4768oldjiiW 12

LATIN AMEaCAN Sl\JDI£5 COMMII lEE
PIIIERNTAliON'
~-- o.c..,•• &amp;......-c.. . . ,
.
. . . . . . .-. """"""'
_ _ _"PPdgoft
J""*
SUNVAA.
, __ ~.

-00:0.

...,.., ~c:.....yU..-InO. .
.....,_ and

614 IWdy l.JO p ....

... 'IIC:QOGY ~·
----..-a~..-..,,
~ol- - 1 0 1 - 4p • " ' "
...... "r ... o . - - o l -

-110'-•
... -

Tlaanday - 28
Plaar•acoto1~ and

_____

--.-...--c:...w~
o..w-_~oiT~Coi-

....::.1.:-IIWpt.. 330-4.

P•

._..._.,......
a--.

~MGI

............. ~---­

.......
Or,._.
U/11117~
•
• ,._
. ... _ _
_ 1.30 .. 4 4

*-*'•---oov•
a.... ....
.........

-_ . , .......... Ot

4•

TI - - .0...·
, M$

SooTh........ • Feb 21 fltttnQ I&lt;&gt;&lt; dotolt.

P-

~~.2pm

~· c:.n..~o

Nod cee
IHTDl-VAIISITY CHIUSTIAN FELLOWSHIP

-·dub . . ..... . . -. . . ;,.

Has a - on~

S4udy
... "
" " ' -Int...n
about
God'•loJIIICII\
the:Owltdono
PMI•nd
.. 19110 Thi&amp;

Ew.yono 11 - . . . . .. Don Wlton , - Houoc, 2 Unlwnily A_,uc, Wadnooclav. 7:30
p.m.o 0... King, R..-..lt Loungo ~ •
l'hundov. 3 p m ,; Ellroboth SchWa, Wodncodav .

8om .. Squn~ : Jtls-Jlcwood-S...
C:....OV. Sunclov. 9 p m.; 547 P"""' (Bldg. ~I ;

Gnd study Alon Sonn, Tucsdoy, 5 p.m., S23 "'
S2SCooM.

MEDIEVAL FESTIVAL NEXT WE£K
--.Roaon. Squire Hoi 12-4p.m. ..,Man:h
I. En;ov f\ghlng , dondng,
-.y4dlng and
Spor-..1 by .... " ' - u ........ Tho
Soc:iotv b Uutiw " -· and tbc U/ 8
-Club

""'*·

__

HaD MSIC DefTAI. CARE? WElL, ttAM
NEEDS
YOU
tlllry _
_ _ _ ....._ .... _ _
TEAM II • spooto~_.,. at oho School o1 Don-

.-... ...

__ ...

-...~.....-dental

....

_,_ •...-.So,·-

IINOOGR4DC IAT£ 'PsYatoLoGY

ASIOCiAliON 1110WN 11AG UJNat'
A.~ in •Kttolthe• .... ollnlerfttin
tbc ~ ~ ... bo........, 4-6

- u d t d o t l b • l u n d l l - - 1 2-1
29tll--...""'-'-dlfgnupiDR_,
C·lS, 42JORldtlo Lu "'col831 · 174l

---

l:"-"4~- .......... o . . - - o l
I'_
_....,...,IOI-4pm
&lt;Aloe • l 4$10 Room S.IS

.........r.ek.UMt.la •f Trk,cU' A•ti.
-

........ Ot

c. ........

w....,.,_.., ___
o.v- . - - . . - C501CooM

_

n.

t..
__

'" -

4 p ..

- 4:!0.7
- . .onoi9:!0o"'
. . 19711. o-.1

-lit-1150
-

•. - - .

that -

ol

........... of ....

rnociBn ~In American~ . ts on
tlvoutlll 14 .. lhclflnrv oloho School
ol M:hbcturo and Enm&gt;nmontol Dotlgn .
Tho tro\OObng exhibit h on loon !Tom lhc Srnlthto·

man lnltiMion .

The~ II on view Monday-Thu.ndlly1 9 a.m.
to 7 p .m ., friday , 9 a .m. to 5 p .m. and S.turday,
noon to 4 p .m .
Cuncndv on a nalionwlde tour, cht: n~ G
undlo lhc
ol lhc - - T&lt;awling
E.hlbltlon Sorv1cc and_....., bydio H lunorlcon BuJidtng Surwy.

"""*""'

ART DEPAirtiiEHT EXH1111T
l.u a..-, U YOMI, A R~ . 2nd
floOI' gokv. Bethune Hal IAn !lcpartmcn~
Through Folon.la&lt;y 22.

cou; GALLE1IIES EXHIIIIT
0towtngs onol , . . . _ by Joe M. Filchor o1 oho

Cdlt ecn.... U/8. Colt Galena, 49 Ed5I. fctou.y 23-M-.:11 14. Gdory ' - " . .
II a .m to S p,m . Tucsdoy through Th.........
Opontng .....,_ ... be hold ... r.t.n.o&lt;y 23
from 4 ·8 p .m.
~

-

IIONOGIIAPHS OF 1978-l!nt
Bv oho Foculrla ol s-1 5c:;o,_ and
· School
ol andSchool
l.bwy
Studla,
School
ol Social
w....and ""
ol
Monogomont. Loc:boood MomoN~ l.bwy fovor
and An l.boly, Febn.a&lt;y 1-29. .

5EL EXHIIIIT

v-

J-

- . n .....,_, An .,.,.,. of
~-. o1
by,...
Spoc.ntt
o n - ... lhcftntfloOI'oiSc:lonca and EngtM.tng
l.boly- 2 . ~ - Tho-- ...
~ molariol- Jupllft and .... v and It rnoclo ...... by Ot Ouwoyno
,..,_,, U/ 8 Ooon ol Notun1 Sc:;o,_ and

m-

v-

~

· Tho -"" "'""'"'~~
· ... Monday through
through
7, " avolablo
FJW~av!Tom 8o.m . IOI1p .m., Sotunloya, 9a.m. 10

--

9 p "'· on4

SuncJovo.

11 a.m. 10 11 p.m-

"'lhc llldeat.o~Fo~on.~a&lt;y25"""""'1hc

SlaGKAI. IN5T'IlUIIEifTI

c-IJUAI- --s.-IW

"" 18th ............... bolontod to Gooovo
w"""'-'~ ol&gt;!*ton. Ot. a..... Md\nWlt. n..
............ -....... ........,_ ol tho
18th and 1 9 t h - - -.-l.bwy.
--Campus, lint-· Through Man:h.

IAJAa ~
-olll()pon-S...

tho

-Thlt-.--..

..... _...

~"
.......
llp.l!l.......
. ... _ to
_bo._
. _, T'boondov"""'
_ . . , . _•
byolofl

Onloon!Tomlhc~---

_.,

bo,._,._.,~

.

- - . . . 7.JOp.M ..... flao

~.

••

a..._-. .. -

-

..................... ......... a..,

ail.ua.M
~-T-~-.Ot
I'IIYIIOLOOY ·

AIICHIT£CTUIE EXHI8IT

EMir

0*'11 ~ [)oportmOftl ol
~ . ........ ~ . C·31, 4230 Ridge
t.. S IS P-"' eo__, by~ and

.... ~ ...

Alamo Gdory, Beck Hall. Mondav.f&lt;ldoy. 9-S.
s,..n-.&lt;1 by V.P. fa&lt; Heolll Sdonc:a and Dcpc1mont ol An . Ends Feb. 26 .

Ch-.. . . . . . .

211

P'IYOtOLOGY ~AnoN'

AlAIIO GAU.EIIY EliHIBIT

1,.. ... c-.,~ On ...... !Tom
privoOo coloctlont and onllquc " -· and fa&lt; .....

...._...,., ...... , and chawtngs of -

_ ... .....,...Ot1t... .............. _,._..,........ ... __
v.- ....
C l E a T -•
~

--lllo-Oooilo:A_to_· IJUAI ...'
~

Main C.tholc ·Compus Mlniltry onol Raur&lt;OCIIOII Houoc ( l . u - Campus MlniltryJ.

con bo podonnod ., lhc TEAM ..., •
.-..!walling plliod onol at.-..! COlLin oddidan, WI et nAJ.t opel'. In ~ • '-hion es 10
riWIIke .. roulne dena~ «*C - comfoNble and .,
do"""" botitdon·
to1 aW. w11v - ? c.r ... • 831 -2213 onv c1oy
Ot. bol_,9onol4.30and ...... boglodl0-·

Conlor ... Cold Reglans
~ - a n d Todvlolotav ICREST)

GllOII OGICAL 1C11M:a-

"-· ~ by

Ph•r · -

· lloonl' Room.

s..--t "" ...

. . . . . . . . . -27

3233 Main Stno1. HS p . m .

_"'"""'

~--~ollho~

of CU•lC...I

(con-

tuniljltu- .. a .......-.~--· Hoving
..... --.~ ... l h c -. TEAM It odiwl!l-·
tng ......... &amp;om .... lJnNawlty .........niljl

PEDIATIICS 11E1EA11CH SOUNAR-

. Ot Stonlov -.
~ ·s.....,..l2noon

-?

com~ng
hoalng tbc rift .... ........... Ot ~ l.ocw, ol Nl;glous
lludla. a.._.. """""•· Conlallc:lan ecn...

mo-

..... oocjolyMondoy~

-~Gunt.-

CATHOUCS AND Ll1THQIANS,
A I.£CTt.-E SDIIE5'
.._... r-: Whol " ,._.....

_,_
ollhc

.. ~-~·~-~~"- ....,

..

...__., Oa Tlae Air

v.TA

_ .. _,!.ow

I'EIIIIUAIIV II:

- -OIIoo.
, ___
Scftool,,.._o-.

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

THI w.t1IIIG PlMZ

-

- - - . . . . . . . - - ..... $pond.

~w:
-

F-' 77, 4 ' ·"' O'lldon

M 28.

~c-c..

U/ 8 t..w

Tho~!"-·~ ... ~ luOOOII, .

....
...._C..

fChannol 101 6.30 p

.._,

'"

FEBIIUAIIYU,
Pin

Ho,o.

_,

~

fCI&gt;ooMollOI 6

�Census data
to be on file
at Med unit
Consultant service
also avaUable
Cert~ln types of 1980 Census information •bout New Vorl&lt; Stat valuable to
plan"'"'- re~archen. busm&lt;!Sli. tndumy
and government will be available through
the U/B Communl1y SeMces Research
and Oewlopment {CRSD) Program .
Located In the Department of Soda!
and Prewntiw Medicine at .2211 Main
St . the Program ·a charter ofhhate of
the New Vori&lt; Department of Commerce·• State Data Program. II will be a
· deposrtory for &gt;tatewlde data acquired
dunng the Census to be taken in April
Frank Rens . O!!oetate d1tector of the
CRSD Program and a nationally-known
expert on cenSU! "tape analysis. says the
deposrtory Will not contain information
on mdtvlduals questioned dunng the
Census but wiD focus Instead on populo'"'" group charadertstics and houSilng
data
lnl""""hon available through the Pro·
gr-am can be lnvafuab~ . for Instance. to
ager&gt;Cift ch~ wrt p!Mining health
serviceS or indUstneo marketing new products.
.
In addition to answering data requests.
the Program will provide consultant service on &lt;:en.... data access alia technical
assiStance ori" Census proj«&lt;s. and will
malntaln a llb&lt;ary of. basic Census
docume.nts
·nce.the CRSD Program Is also to be
a Federal Censuo Tape Proce sing
Center. Census Information will be
received here on computer-readable
tapes. as soon as they are available.
probably In early fall All services wm be
ava1lable to users at cost . acccwdang to
Rens.
He notes that CRSD personoel have
had vast experience In analyZing 1970
Census data : they are also expert In a

variety

of

other

areas

mcluding

geographic analySIS. computer mapping/
graphics. and data base management
ThOO&lt;apac.ity. coup~ with the fad the

Program i local. guarantees users
cu tOmlled accwate reports faster and at
a lower cost than they could get from ourof town proce rs. Rens says
The CR D Program. Rens pomrs out .
has for 15 yearo provid d computer·
besed mformatton procesSilng setVICes for
local . Stat and national users It was
l.gun by Dr Harry A Sultz with a grant
from HEW Dr Sultz. an epidemtokigJst .
f1QW dean of the School ol Heakh
Related Prof Ions
During the 1970.. the Program ex·
ponded rt data base to include informa·
tton on VItal statiSircs. h~ahh fac11!ty
ullbz.alion and cost heohh manpower.
ttansporratton and other topics
Kenneth Rogen. project drrector of the
CR D Program says the Stat Data
c~oter cone~ ls an exciting one
b«au " dra
together Census users
who are analyang the same types of rnformatlon
Rogen oald his staff os attemprtng to
idenr~y .n Cen u rnlormahOn u,..... from
W tern
ew Yor
nd elsewhere
statewide n order to coordmat data re·
q
t mor fi{tdently
1'hoWo onter ad rn oblainlng P,ogram
Wfvt('e

shou&amp;d

coniKI

R ~r

at

.11 5."&gt;21

JOB
~

..

ITAFF

PR-4

.. ,._
_,

-

The palnting and sculpture of Cephas
Agbemenu, a U/ B graduate student and
lnslntctor In Black Studies, Is f~tured this
month at the Alrtcan-Amertcan Cultural
Center In observance of Black History
Month .
Among the notable -works of the
Ghana natiw Is an ebony carving commlsslolled by the Ghana Ministry of
Foreign AffaJrs In celebration of Queen
Ellzabeths Sliver Jubilee. A concrete
Water Fountain by the artist also graces a
public area In Kumasl, Ghana. The wori&lt;
was commissioned by the Kumasl City
Council.
The art wori&lt; on exhibit at the Center,
however, represents pleca produced on-

ly within the last two years, while
Agbemenu was completing an MFA.
Moot of his art wori&lt; focuses on African
themes. The Slanding Nude, for exam~ , his first wori&lt; completed In Buffalo, Is
based on a puberty rite which marks the
"corrung of age" of young women In
Ghana. The artist noted that K women
refuse to participate In the ceremony
soon alter their lint menstnuation their
maniages will not be recognized by the
communrty.

WhUe Agbemenu uses " African
elements" In his Freedom of Speech
wood carving, he believes its "message Is
universal." What he attempts to communicate through his wori&lt;, Is that

freedom ol speech Is never absolute., but
subject to laws and bureauaatic controls.
Agbemenu's Ash F0110 wood-carving
represents his Interest In creating the llluskm of t!onUnuous movement.

Although Agbemenu Is now taking
doctoral courses In the Communication
Department-with an e'l'phasls on Intercultural communication-he readOy ad mits art has become "p•rt and parcel" of
his lifo . He doesn't s,._ct he'U .,_stop
palnting or sculpting.
Agbemenu Is grateful for his exposure
ro American cuhure . Because of " he
feels he possesses a "wider scope of
understanding" about what constitutes a
wori&lt; of art.

New center focuses on cold regions
various forms and states on other
A Center for Cold Regions Engineerof both Engineering and Natural Sciences
plane-tary bodies In the tolar system.
Ing, Science and Technology (CRESll
and Mathematics. A Council composed
under auspices of the Department of
was established on campus In January ,
ol University-affiliated and professional
Chemistry, the Department of Geological
becoming only the 11th unH of tts kind In
engineers and scientists oflen guidance'
Sciences and the National Aeronautics · and advice on research and Instructional
the world.
and Space Administration .
According to Deans Duwayne Anderprograms and on future developments.
Special seminars, symposia, short
A primary asset, Anderson said, Is
son of Natural Sciences and Mathematics
cou,.... and workshops are also organ · CRESro world -wide affiliations with
and George Lee of Engineering, the
ized and held from time to time.
other universities, governmental
center Is a c:lusterln~j of elements within
laboratories, and engineering mganlza·
the University which have research Inlions acllvely Involved ln the study of cold
terests In cold environments.
regions.
Jt'o a natural outgrowth , they suggest,
CREST will work closely wrth ten
of a Graduate GroupJor the oame types
Special facdldeoo
of studies which was organized last yeer.
similar centeno throughout the world,
Special facilities are available on camOuting that formative year, Anderson
Anderson said , The aim . Is to draw
pus for CREST projeds, including
together rfllaterl engineering and scientific:
elaborat • existing progral\'l$ In both
laboratories and equipment for InFNSM and Engineering were drawn
expertise In order "to aJd In systtmatlzlng
vestigating lee C:Oven and other lee
togetha as a nucleus ol an advanced
existing knowdge and enhancing new ,
engineering matters.
coordinated research of ev'n broader
~and research effort dealing with ·
A rotating laboratory faclll1y for the
ms asoociated with fr..uing , thaw- study of geophysical flow phenomena ,
scope and complexity."
Complex problems wiD be investigated
Ing •nd low cnvlronmenlal temperatures.
wind and wave basins, hydraulic: chanuSilng lnter.dlscfplinary means. Engineers.
nels, and a model test basin have been
. . , _ , .c:tiiPideoo
geophysicists,
meteorolo!lisls ,
constructed and are In use .
geochemists, oceanographen and en· Among preoent CREST activities •re:
Machines for testing the Slrength and
e A comprehenolve field and
vironmentalllclenttsts IIIIU an be Included.
other low I mperature properties of
Acttvltln wUI focus on the north
laboratory ·r-arch program on the
marertalo are available .
Gt-eenlond and Antarc:tlc Ice Sheets being
temperate zone as weD as on the subartlc
An lee cores study lab maintained at
and polar regions.
conducted by the Department of
Ridge Lea by the Department of
Geological Sc:knces;
Geologlc.al Sciences has both slorage and
• An investigation of how ice melts
wori&lt;lng space malntamed at sub-uro
and forms in fresh and salt waters and a
temperatures, and Is equipped with
projlcl related to buoyancy-Induced
micrOKopes, mechanical measuring
tramport procesws betng cooductad by
devices, chemical analysts Instruments,
the Department of Mechanical Enginand photographic: apparaluJ . An adjoin Ing Wl'"" room houJes a computer ter·
~lts ol ice tramport by winds, mlnal that provides aa:ess to the central
w•va and currents ln the Great Lakes,
SUNY/ Binghamton geology professor
Unlvenity computing facilities as wd as a
and wor1c on the effects of onow-lc&gt;adtng
sPectal use mini-computer.
Frando Wu has recently retumeO-kom a
on struc:IUI'el. being conducted by the
Addlllo:onal specc, lnstrumenYttion •nd
two-week ocrentiflc exped~ioo ro tibet.
Depaortmotnt of Ovfl Englnftrlng,
ladlitles are •v.U.ble In traditional
where he w 1 rnernbcr ol lhe first
e An cxploraaon ol
phY*J,
departmen
In which ~ and · f&lt;&gt;t;elgn geologrc.ol team to Sludy there
~ •nd rnechanla ol fra.n
sdentlsts affiliated lllllh lhe
reolde.
Jincc 1949 Wu . vice chaonnan of the
around t.tng conductad Jointly by the
Anderoon aid. Acc.e. . to mach ne,
delegation. was tnlllled ro jOin the WOUP
DopartnWnt of Geological Sdenca and
woodwor1&lt;ing and .!ettron shops to
by the National Academy of Sciences
the fedeol Cold R.glons ReM...:~\ and
lilv provided for construdlon of
Ilea- ~ his expertJM In AMn tee E.nglr-.ing Ubor•tory 1n
models , prototypes •nd spec!• I
tonic&amp;- !he geology ol the earth"• strucNH ,and
tnstrumentalion.
tural deformouons whJch cau
urtf&gt; ·
ol
• An In
~------ Tht-~~IL~"!c!~~-d~!_ __q_
'~~J~~uJ&gt;!BJ'lU'Mf.a_u.ft

SUNY prof

~-~c...-.

FACU.TY
_
,_

Art ce ebrates Black History

(Cbolnowon.

~~

-

Scloool

one of 1st
Into Tibet

c.-

Ha-.

�February 21. 1980

Yearley, Haynie
differ on
its merits

Tbe:scientlflc Gta may D()t be di4!re,
.......~.....,. obvio
ve Canal is I

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

~~---

Thee'nlld.-of lwd, ldlnllllc Mia to'
llnll the mecllc:al ........ of Love c:.n.J
Suppoee you- .nlled by the,u .s . Nlldents . . . . , .., the .-ping, ~
Armed Fan:a. WbM JKIIIIOM would you
~ ........ -their homes.
be .-v~ng? Would you be clefendlrs.the
But there .. pieD~!~ of ll:ldhct evidence
I n - of an aplollative ""-'ean rulthet a tw.llh __..,.:y In the
Ing class, or would you be fullllllng an
Nlegoq F. . ~ ..,.,..gh to
obligation to a nation which has given ......t
raidents, thooe atyou a high ~ of living and a con- tending a NCent UIB ....,_ wae iold .
sldenble amount of personal freedom?
The sem-.lp()I1SONd by the Com·
"'JPP''nnl _,., put lor- mltlft on Occupetlonaland Environmen. ward by,...,_Charla Havnie of Tolstoy tal Health of U/B's Chapter c;&gt;f the
Colege and Dr. Clifton yearlev of the
Arnaican Student Medical Asaodallon,
Hlstofi Dlponri&gt;ent in a huled debate focused on medical raponslbillty and the
lut Thuncl.-y. The debate Wat oponiored Love CanaL
by the \,Jnder,pcluate Hlslory Council
Speakers were Lois GibbS, president of
By the late 1970s, raldents began ..,
and was """'-&lt;i by a lively crowd· of the LDve Canal Homeowners Assocla·
"*&gt;~! II .......... that they and their
100-plus In 112 O 'Bnan.
lion ; G&lt;and Island physician Dr. James
chldren had !JOW!ng numben.of medical
The Ianna! for the er&gt;Cilunter consisted DunloP; RosWell Park toxlcologist Dr.
problems which friends and relatives livof openl!1g stalements by iach partldpanl
Beverly Palgen; and Dr. Adeline bevine,
Ing elsawhere did not. Most were ralucf~ by rebuttals and questions from
U/ B SOCiology professor and author of an
tanl, hoWever, to link the often vllllly-.
the floor .
.
upcoming book on the Love Canal.
. . . . . contaminants to lh&lt;itr ailments.
Haynie argued that both the U.S . and
- :J"hay bad. after aD, worked hard lo find
the USSR are lmperialisi nations as 800 .,....., poteatlall.oft Caaak
llownpayrnents for their homes; thev.
lllilnessed most obviously by the U.S . inIntroducing the speakers, medical stucould tD afford to see their.Jnvestrnents go
volvement In the Vietnam Waz and the
dent Dan Ford noted there are 800 Idendown the drain. They believed the land
Soviet lnvulons of Hungar y , tified toxic chemical burial sites which
had to be safe, eloe no..one would have
Czechoslovakia , and Afghanistan .
have lhe potential of becoming Love
been allowed to build upon it.
Similarly, he maintained that the Cold
Canals of the future . And !here may be
Even today, saki Dr. Levine , residents
w,. cannot properly be considered a roany more whose locations have yet to are divided on the solution to the Love
• conflict between the peopk of the U.S .
Canal problem . Older residents , many of
be identified . ..
and the USSR ,. but ralher as a conflict
"The~ and SCientific community
whom have homes which are paid for .
engmdered by the ruhng classes, the
has a r~illty to evaluate the health
are reluctani to start their lives over, even
military-industrial complexes of both
risks of toxic chemiCals to the public at
with the State's offer to buy their homes.
nations.
large.~ Ford emphasized . He added that
The younger residents with children are
In Haynie's view, the draft, and Imprimarily the ' ones who worry about the
physicians also need more training to
plicitly a renewed U.S . military presence
enable them to recognize and treat
safety factor and are anxious to have the
in the Third World t constitutes an effort
medical problems which may be
State buy their homes so they can leave.
by the U.S. to militarily establish our
"People are brought up to believe
chemically-induced .
•
client states In these areas where politics
Dr. Dunlop said that, although science
'home' Is supposed to be safe," Levine
have fa dad .
demands that careful studies must be
noted . "Finding that 'home' is dangerouk
The lhlrd World , Haynie argued, has done to prove the cause of a medical
to you is a real.shock wblch residents en.been exploited long enough; n 15 time for
problem, clinical observations can give
dured along with hysieria, &amp;usirallon and
the U.S . to stand aside and permit these clues which later are verified by scientific
disruption of their bves."
nations to develop on their own. The first
studies.
step toward achieving this goal, he exHe has observed , lor example, that
Out of coatrol and abandoned
horted, Is for Americans to resist a draft
youngsiers in his medical practice who
Dr. Levine sail! Love Canal residents ,
designed to ensure the perpetual &gt;lavery
live in Grand Island and elsewhere in
102 of whom she interviewed, felt they
of Third World nations.
Niagara County tend to have seasonal
had lost control over their lives and were
In Yurley's view , howev&lt;!f, the over· aDergles and asthma, while those kvlng
weary of feeling abandoned. Many, she
riding considerations governing the
near the Love Canal tend to have more
said, also have guilt feelings abouJ living
American people's thinking on the draft
severe , non·seasonal attacks and more
near t!Je Canal, feelings wlilch are Intenshould not be questions of Third World
ohen require hospitalization .
sified If they have children with birth
sovereignty, but rather Jhe realization that
defects or severe medicall""oblems.
we live In a world where force Is the final
He can't make an lnvestlgatloa
Caught up in the situation were private
orbiter of national differences. If the U.S .
"I don't have the means or the time to
phys;cians and those employed by the
Is to protect Its interesis, Yearleyoaid, we
launch an investigation , bull do think the
New York State Health Department.
must be fully prepared with a force suffiNew York State Health Department, the
"The Health Department doctors," said
clent enough to deter and . if nec&gt;essary.
Environmental Protection Agency, or the
Levine, "didn't want to tread on the toes
repel any Soviet attack on our vital interFederal . government should conduct
of the private practitioners; the private
national Interests. Yearley considers the
studies so I can know if my observations
ones were fearful of breaking confidenSoviet Invasion of Afghanistan the direct aze siatlslically signilicant ," he said .
tiality regarding their patients' medical inr..Uh of the Carter Administration's
In addition to science's demands ,
formation by sharing H with the State doc"wealmeso" and its lapse of know_~ Dunlop noted, New York Stale also
tors."
and ability. But, he added . this human
demands hard , conclusive. sdenltflc
The Health Department physidans
enor. d not outright bungling, Is tolerated
evidence that ailments of l.Dve Canal
also had the added problem of making
only In free societies: "we're funny
residents are direcily related to specific
certain their findings could stand up
because we're free ."
chemical contaminants found In the air
under scrutiny of their scientific peers ..
In a world of force and brutality, and soil of the neighborhood.
She added the Health Department was
Yearley argued. military preparedness Is
But, he pointed out , "sdentiflC studies
very rushed and feh ill-prepared to do the
an unpleasant neces ty and It .Is the
to see If chemical ' A' does something to
studies pinpointing health risks. Then,
responsi&gt;llity of the American people to . mbochondrla in certain susceptible peotoo , the goals of the studies conducted by
"pay their dues• and del d the Interests
pie with certain HLA types wiD take
the Department were perceived different- ·
of the nation which has SI'Ven them their
ma!ll&gt;e s1x or seven years." In the mean ly-tJY the Love Canal residents and by the
rights. .
time , the people ought to be moved .
Health Oeparln:lent itself.
The arvuments were pOles apart and It Otherwise , he said, those who can't ails doubltUI that the opln1011s of many in
ford to leave wm become guinea p1gs lor
'Uaela.' hou-'fe data
the audience were changed. But, said ICientlsl$ to siudy In the luture.
Homeowners were told by the State,
one History Council member. "we
Dunlop also contended that lack of
that the siudy was conducted to deter- .
thought that by prewntlng two radblly
training In diagnosing and treating
mine the health problems and that they
oppotad viewpoints, we oould at least
chemically-induced IUnesses has caused
might be moved out later, based upon
mulate IOf'ne thought on the lsSUt!s
many physldans to be reluctant to pin·
resulis , but the study was primarily a
involwd "
point the cause of l.Dve Canal residents'
research pro}ect. State reSearchers
medlcal problems. .
viewed the l.Dve Canal residents as
"llhinl!•• physicians we tend to slough
laymen, lncapa'ble of providing valid In·
off those ihlngs we don't understand; and
formation . Thls further complicated the
MARCH 4
when we don't know everything, we may
Issue.
say ft doesn~ exist," he added. While a
Indeed, Mrs. Gibbs, who launched the
great many physicians ..,. . initially skepearly door-to-door survey of residents to
tical of a link between the diseases and
dettum ine the. extent of medlcal
the chemical contaminants, he saki.
preble
saki the State looked on her
!ROfC are now tending to believe thetc 's a
results
uxless housewife data.''
connacllon, despite the absence of purely
One of the fnt residents to suspect a
link between specl(ic medical problems In
sci"'tlf"' evidence. .
,
.
her own famUy and the escaping
" place to Jikalc ... Ice ......
chemical
contaminants, Mn. Gibbs said
Outlnlng the history of the Love
that with few exceptions there had been
Canal, Mn. Gilbo r.:oumed that in 1892
no
help
from
either the inedlctl comW m LDve dedded to build U as an lnmunity or local hoopttalo.
el&lt;pl'lllive power JOUrce and a place
where Chlldicn could lee skate In wlntu
"E~ who hao tried lo h&lt;lp us ha.
and famllln could plcnlt In aummer.
been n . - d; lhe told the audience.
Beset b\lllnandal problem , howcwr,
She added that the Homeowners
LDve abandoned the - The land ""'!'. _ ~~ ~ ~· ~.ve .~1 area_

"""*'*'

n-

....... ..__ .. ,.

a...ct ....... ........
Dr- J&gt;aigcn told the ..... lhlll the
goneml .............. ol phyllcianllo a-t involved In the Love c.n.a ......,..._
medical Inproblems
besl _
typlliad
the .,.., of·-a manpabape
who tulfered
cxt.nsiYe ~bums of hllf9 while
kneeling In~ at honw. He -told he
was suffering toni 11.-:t biles, she said.
Jf the residents fruslretad Willi
medlci(le's ~t inability to pinpoint
the ca- of their allmants, 1hey were
even more chagrined when physlcltms

claimed their medical problems didn't exIst at aD.
The fact that residents were exposed to
ohen high levels of toxic chemicals
known to cause or c.,.,..,ute to central
nervous system disorders may have
made them sound a little "kooky,"
Palgen cenceded . But the Valium which
some physicians dispentad In response
was simply a way of dismissing the complaints.
Palgen , who conducted a siudy In conjunction with the Love Canal
homeowners, admitted she has been
harassed for her efforts, &amp;nd believes lfs
because her figures did not agree with
those in the Health Department study. ,

Healtll Departluslt tlueat.a
"The New York State Health Department sent threats to another researcher
with whom I was plannlng to collabora..
on another siudy; and oome researchers
have backed off (from woridng with me)
because of grants they're seeking from
the New York State Health Department,"
liheJold the audience at Farber HaD.
Palgen said that hel data , .collected
with the help of the Homeowners
Association, on incidence of asthma,
miscarriages, birth defects and suicide (or
hospitalization for mental !Uness) we,..
severely flawed . But, she ventured , there
are strong indications that residents who
live near or on underground streams
branching from the Canal report greater
numbers of these problems than do those
who live in "dry" azeas.
Palgen compared the incidence of
these problems among those who live in
"dry" areas and were moderately exposed with the Incidence among those
who were severely exposed (in "wet"
areas) as a control agalnsi bias which
might resu h in data collected bit laymen
who had vesied interests in leaving the
Canal.
The study did show that higher rates of
birth defects, asthma, miscaniages, and
nervous

breakdowns

(at ·

temptl!d suicide or hospitalization for
mental illness) were clusiered in areas of
the neighborhood buUt over siream beds
which .had been filled In with rubble .
Residents living in the Rings 1 and 2
homes nearer the Canal were not included in her study because they had already
been evacuated.

50 per cent birth clefec:t.a .
She said her f19ures show the incidence
of miscarriages among the women was
only 8 .5 per cenl before they moved to
Love Canal "wet" homes; afterwardJ, thl!
incidence jumped to 25 per cent. Figurfs
showed, too, that 56 per cent of .children
born to families In "wet'' homes during
the pasi five years had birth defects. The
incidence o'f birth defects In the general
population is only 4 to 5 per cent.
Among the chemicals in the Love
Canal area are
• undone, shown to cause central nervous system disorders and linked to
cancer and aplastic-e&lt;~,emia;
·
• dioxin, the most' to&gt;&lt;lc man-made
chemical which has no known sale exposure levels and il linked to liver and
kidney damage , cancer and birth defects;
• C-56, a precursor of Mlrex which,
preliminary data suggests, Is both carclnag6llc and mUiagcnlc;
• bcnune, aru..d to central nervous
• , _ c:.-1.,: -.ll.. .,.&amp;.. s

�·.·

£ttlrwly 21 , 1980

:

Personnel News -

TIAA-CREF adopts a

unisex mortality table
llAA-CREF, the caflesle and u-.aty
IY*fn, will IMk New Veri!

retirement

approval
of
aStale·-~
merged ~cler, or "unitu,"
morldty
- tabla for use In 11AA and CREF enTom Edwards, chalnnan of
Teachers Insurance and Annuity Assoda·
lion and Co/lege IUtlrement Equities
Fund, made the announcement this
ll)lltles.

week.

.

·

Edwards pointed out that the 600,000
annuity contracts now In force
throughout the system permH changes In
mortality tables, and that this new table
wiD take age but not ~"" Into account In
determining the monthly ennuily bene!Hs
to be purchased by future p.-emiurno to
these and aD newly l!oued annuity con·
tracts. This will mean equallz.ation:
smaller pension checks for men and
larger checks for women for whom equal
premium payrrients hove been mode .
Women ITadlllonally have received
smaller monthly checks because they are
expected to bve longer and thus receive
more monthly checks than m9'.
The chall{ae will'not affect payments to
persons now receiving ennuity lnco:ne,
nor will It affect any future benefits
resulting from premiums paid before the
adoption of the new table.

W.....t of oplalon ca.....t daaage
"Th!s decision results from lhe weight
of opinion from recent judicial, legislative
and regulatory developments, and from
coneenns of our own participating Institutions ," Edwards stated. "What's happenIng," he said. "Is ·that today's social
pressures are taking precedence over us·
lng the known differences in male and
female life expectancies for determining
.retirement benefits."
The Introduction of the new 11AA·
CREF mortality · table Is scheduled. for
mld-mmer 1980. It will accommodate.
this chenge In policy without affecting
commitments made to participants In
prior years.
.
Employer pension contrtbutions, long
recognized as a form of wages, have
always been equal for similarly situated
participants In TIAA-CREF plans ,
regardless of sex. These conbibutions,
together with employee contributions,
have purchased 11M and CREF annull}i
benefits over the years at different rates
for men and women . Edwards said. "For
future service the monthly benefits

themselveS are now aloo being vie-.! by
CI!I1H&gt; authorltlos .. • form of W"'JJI that
should be equal, l'ellll'dlal &lt;Jf - ·" In hlo
oplnlbn, such en
to beneflls WID
ailed all lypa al ·pension plans. bach
public and private, because ell)lpa now
use sex-dlsllnct mortallly tabla In cktermlning monthly beneflls for IOflli! or All
methods of peylng retirement Income.
How much, If any, difference the new
merged gender IIOble wiD ...... In llAACREF beneftts to be pwd\ued by future
p.-emiurno wiD depend on the method of
Income each parlidpant elects at time of "'9
retirement. MOll men elect ajoint -life In come optlon for hUiband end wile. _
choosing between a luD or • 'f.1 continuIng benefit to the IUI'Yivor. Tl&gt;ere wiD be
no significant change for these options
since they are already based on a joint
male and female life e&gt;q&gt;&lt;!Ctancy.
-

-"*"'

Mea getleM.-a •on
For .participants who elect a one-life
option when they retire , a dollar of future
premium wl/1 buy fl.1on!, for the women
ond less for the men than 1/ Rx-diltinct
morto/ity tables were u...d. Foj example,
at age 65the changes for one-life options
are expected to range from S1 per S100
of monthly Income for the option least in- _
fluenced by mortality rates (hie annuity -..,
with no less than 20 years' payments
guaranteed) to as much as S8 per $100
of monthly Income for the straight life annuity (all payments cease at the annuity
owner's death) . 11le greater the protection elected for a beneficiary, the less ·t he
elled of the new mortality lloble.
Edwards said, "The Idea of changing
from se_x-distinct mortality tablti to equal
periodic benefits for equal contributions
has been a matter of much controversy In
and out of the pension and Insurance In·
duslry for many years. lbcre are still
court cases pending and questions to be.
answered by federal agencies. But now,
when participating Institutions sum up:
• recent court decisions involving
TIAA-CREF and other pension plans,
• findings by state civil rights agencies.
e benefit requirements In state and
federal legislatioh, and
• the new policy directives expected
for Equal Pay Ad compliance and for In·
slitutions to qualify for federal funds ,
they ar.d their national associations
compelling reasons lor using merged
gender mortaiHy tables In their pensiOn
plans."

see

Psychiatric text is book of year .
A' psychiatric nursing rutbook
authored by a U/ B nursing professor has
been 'named "Book of the Year.. in Its
field by the Ameri&lt;'on Journal of Nursing ,
·'Psychiatric Nursing" by Carol Ren
Knies!. U/ B associate professor. Is published by Addison-Wesley. Men lo Park.
Calif. If is the tom psychiatric nursing text

to comprehen vely combine "a human·
istic, symbolic interactlonistic appn&gt;ac:h
for deallng with clients.- the author

Mat tourney
U/ B'• scnlo r pion; OsW0190 Slate, thlnl with 41 points.
In addition to Jacoutot, U/B qualified
118-paomcler !rom Old Bridge. N,J ., was
Tom

Jacoutot ,

Mlected u the M~ Oulltandtng
Wtader In the 19th ennlllll Slate Univerllly of New Veri! A!hlrie Conference
CSUNYACI ~ held Ftidav
Md s.turda!r. Feb. I.S-16, al Otirk Half.
J.ocoutoe, In wtnftlnll hJo MCOnd
slrliigbt conr.r...c. titlt, ...-1 dec:lllon
011er n.nk F.,.no ol Btod&lt;part,
1&amp;-2. and O.W Pllltll of Oswego, 12·2.
The &amp;It 8nlohed foottll In the r - IIIIth 39'1\ points 8rodq&gt;ort Slate.
the No. l NCM OMolon Ullam In the
to~~nl!y, ran awttY wllh the team tide,
8 of 1M 10 tndMdlllll cham•
plilln1 and - . 112 polnla.
SUNY~ llntot.od a ....nt
-..1 ilh (!&gt;" points and one C..m·

"""*

three other wrwders for the NCAA Olvlllon .D ~IPs. Feb. 29-Mar. 1
at the Coeot Guard Aeadem~ . New Lon-.

don . Conn . Sophomore ScQCI Slade. of

Elma.

was Ml:&lt;lrld at 167-pounds;
tophomore John Hannah. Soulh Wales,
J&gt;laud third •' 126·pounds. and
lrahman S - Keflev, Seneca FaDs, was
fourth at 158-poundt lind wM one of 10
"wiid card" oe1ecdont by the c:oaches to
advanco to the National Cbamplonshqn.
Freshman Rick Fie. Olun, wat foUrth
a1 1n-1)0Unds for U/ B. but wu not
named 10 the "wad card" list. Frahman
Briati Adler, Amhcnl, wu si!&lt;th ot
I 90-pounds Md acnlol' Tim Roc:k,
HiQhlalld, wa lllxth at hea~ht.

notes. ·
Thl• approach . says Ms . Knlesl.
focuse$ on a partnership With clients by
the pra&lt;:tilione1' rather than on the traditional medical m&lt;;&gt;d~l in which !he client is

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

• Love Canal
,.

~m

disorders, depresHd bone marrow, and bleedi!'19 - and Is C41Cln&lt;&gt;g~tnlc; ·
• ro/wne, wspect In c:hromoloioilw
breaks end the cause of bone marrow
dliordeN -and oenlral nervous 1!/*m
probWms; end
. .. chloroform , which Is embryotoxic,
c:arc:lnogenlc llll,d a central nervous
- ~polson .

......... .. todd.,_ ..............

"In one home, benzene 1eveJo were so
high that Industry would have perm111ed a
worker 10 be allowed In there on!v for two

minUtes a dall,i yet a' family was •uJng
there," Palgen ))olhtad out. Som. patella on the L""" Canal our the 99th
Street School ·were pwc lindane.
·
Slw noied that when Canal rnid&lt;l!'lll

rreated as a ptllient who has Iuiie cuntrol
over or parUdpahon in treatment
Knies!. wh&lt;&gt; has published five other
bo&lt;&gt;ks in the arf!a of psychilnric nursing.
says rhis newest tex.L published last April.
is used ln the undergraduate nursing cur·
riculum .at U/ 8 Other schools of nursing
have chosen it as well. making it the tnp
sener among psychiatric nursing te)(ts

~

Knies! reports the book It alsu beong
translated into French fo~ the French
Canadian market
She has been with the School of NursIng since 1966 and received her
undergraduate degree here In 1961 .

earlY

moved to motels during
"revli:liza·tion" efforts, their olein rUhes disap- - peared ; al!d other health probWms lm·
prQVed.

In the -wet~ areas, 50 per cent of
young boys- had ·a bnormal liver function
tests.
· ~we were r8liSONibly sw:e the little
children who had abnormlll liver tests
results were not eithar ~ 1o
chemicals in their occupations or heavy
drlnlten," Palgen said -donically.
• "People often 1oM l(gh1 of whai the
1-""'1 Canal sHuallon Is really .bout," Dr.
Levine added. ·
Showing • slide of a-young 1-""'1 Canal
(lither carryln!J. pidlet llgn , hll tiny ton
hoisted to hilt lhoul&amp;m, the said, "This Is
r..,lly what .ll's al abcwt."
•

�February 21 . 1980

Carnaval

The Mardi Gras is a time of tumuh and
revelry in latin communities around the
wcxld. In this.country, the 5treets of New
Orlean. are mobbed for weeks In ad·
vanoe of the Lenten season as both the
faithful and not-so faithful take one last
pre-penetentiallling. Fe5tivlties In Rio de
Janeiro are so colorlul and captivating
that they were used .. background for
!Niny a movie , 50 uproarious that hun ·
dredo die !rom over-stimulation each
year tl/ 8 got It$ annual glimpse of "Car·
naval" In the FUlmore Room Saturday
night a5 the Brazilian Club opon50red the
usual unusual evening of merriment and
memories of Carmen Miranda . .

.UUP sends
petitions to
Gov. Carey
Three local UUP chapters sent peti·
lion. to Al&gt;any on Saturday prote5ting
the projoct8d budget .cutback lor State
University.
Signed by about 26 ,500 local
residents, the petitions are part of a
Statewide campaign to raUy public
opinion to the side of SUNY and to
"deplore" Carey's budget plans.
UUP showed-oil the mound5 of paper
at a JXU5 conference held at Buffalo
State Saturday morning and attended by
Or. William S . Allen , president of the
Buffalo Center Chapter; Or. Norman
Corah, presiden1 ~ the U/8 Heahh
Sciences ChaplMf and John L. Allen,
president of the Quffala State Chapter.
Speakers at ~news conference took
note of a "crisis" situation within SUNY
and contended that Carey has cut the
UniversHy more than he has other com·
ponents of State government.
More than two-thirds of the petition
signatures were collected by the Buffalo
State Chapter. Spokesper50ns reported .
that 5frong support was received !rom
labor uniono, high school students, and
auto-plant workers.
•
The three UUP leaders e5timated that
hundreds of jobs will be lost at the local
campuses during the next two years
CORRECTION
The Reporter ..-eceived erroneous Infor-

mation last week about Dr. Emily Tall.
In fact. she did not volunteer to head a
letter-writing campaign lor the United
University Professions (UUP) and is not
working in , any "Save-SUNY" activities .

unless oomethirlg Is done .
Allen of Buffalo State suggested that
Carey wants indMdual units of SUNY to
"cannibalize" each other in a fight over
timlted funds . But, said ADen , "the union
has 5aid we won't fight one another." The
•v•tem is what Is important , he
emjfhaslzed.
SUNY has to be cut, the UUP posl·
tion Is that the cut should be a carefully
studied and controlled one which comes
about over a period of time. You can't
just say "We're gonna cut things back im·
mediately," UUP argues.
U/ B's Allen also announced that UUP
and SASU are coordinating and funding
a mailing to aU parents of students here ,
asking them to wrHe letters of protest to
majority leaders of the State Assembly
and Senate, as weU as use any influence
they have to restore budget cuts.
Last Friday, Allen said that he, along
with Senate Chairman Newton Garver
and Senate Va-Chair Norman Solkoff.
met with leaders of the faculty senates
from SUNY's university centers. The
group agreed that the centers should ·
receive "no special pleading." Allen
noted, but rather efforts should be made
on behalf of th~ entire system.
Afterwards, the trio met with Mark
Siegel, chairman of the Assembly's
Higher Education Committee, to discuss
"long term ~ment . " Allen said
Siegel seemed guardedly optimistic"
would restore $14
that the Gov
million of the

All State hiring
needs ok from VP
Effective lmmediat.ely, a// recruitment
and hiring to posHions In the stote
operating budget (not IFR , endowment,
or U/BF) wiD require the specific
authorization ol the approprlalf' Vice
President , President Robert L. Ketter ad·
vised administrators this week .
Before recruitment begin. to fill anv
posllion (faculty, TAIGA , profe5Sional
staff, civil service) . Ketter sa!d, the UQ!t
must secure the authorization of the Vice
President It is anticipated that few such
vacancies would be liDed at this time , he
said, wi«l the fiscal picture for 1980/ 81 15
known In more detail
·
Ketter said he recogn
th10 add• to
the workload and burden for ad
m1n1strators. "'but gtven th eKtraordlnary
folla ncaal constratn,. that ma~ be 1mposed
on thtt 1nitnutton, I
nu vlh r •It 1
nativ ..

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Coiwt~w:- _. ........ a - ........ '-ldl...,..Jor U/ll'a e Than, 611 Mala Slrat. ,.___ .......,. die . . . - .. Mardi. Tile
face . . It ...... paid b 11!1 a IUI.CIOIIWoc:k,.-._ die U"'- ...._.

.

~-

FEB. 14, 1110

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

VOL 11

e

N0.11

'It's war,'·
UUP's Allen says
ab·o ut Carey's cut
a, . . Booc"-"'1
IWponoo 5ooft

The Buffalo Center Chapter of United
University ProfessiOns (UUP! Is par·
tlcpoCjng tn a broad-based. State-wide efl011 to bring public pretOUre to bear on the
~ and leglslaton to restore funds
'Prun«&lt; from SUNYs budget.
According to Chapter President Bill
Allen. the union~~-~ UJ&gt; for war ..
and intends to take luD advant~ of the
expertlle evdable a1 the University to

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

-~~~
Irving Spilzbag

and Carole Smith
Pe1r0 we heading a Media Coordination
Commllt e ro!sponst&gt;le for providing
daaly and weekly papers and the
electromedla With information whlth
oould spur
pport lor public higher
educ.tion.
A pe11tion drive ptotesting SUNY
budget reduct10m Is being spearheaded
by An!UI K. France. Signatures gathered
locally. and throughout the Stat by other
Chapters. will be -nted (hopefully
with pr
presertl to the Governor on
F.bruAry 20 II the atewlde goo! of
250,000 llgrnltures io md , Allen said the ·
pehlloll will be lmmonallzed In the Guln, _ Book of Worid Records for
r presenting the largest number of
ugnatur ' obcatned in the shortest period
ofbme
Governor Caley wiD aloo be ...:.wing
lottters from Influential community. dvlc
and government leaden In Western ew

York . Ed Salndoux is in charge of the effort to enlist this support.

-A lot of ~ care
"We want to convince the Governor
that a lot of people care about SUNY."
offered ADen.
To - a t e more support lor State
Univenlty among legjslators, EmUy TaD
and Irving Massey are coordinabng a
letter-writing campaign. Example letters
are aveilab&amp;c for conventence.
Alan io t.e.ding a committRe which
plam to produce position papers giving
data and/or arguments to bolster proSUNY sentiments. The papers wiD be
di!itrlbuted locally and to other Chapters.
A committee of lacuhy and staff has
also been established to act as a liailion
wllh "potential allies," such as alumni,
Int resr groups and supporting unions,
etc .• ADen noted.
As announced In last week'• Reporter.
a legislative liaison committee Is now
meeting regularly With the Western New
York delegation The team. headed by
U/ B political scimtists Gary Hoskin and
Paul Diesing. Is providing the State
representatives with pertinent informa·
lion about the budget's negatlve Impact
on both University and community .
In addition, Work Agalnot Retrenchment, a task Ioree created laot !aU , Is con·

~~~h~~':. ~tEr~'hec:i.n~;
group .

'Data bank'
The comrrh1"'" WID be able to draw
upon a "data bank" for any facts and
ligures they may need . Allen relayed .
ubranan• Martha Manning and Verdoa
Jenkins are coordinating that aspecl of
the •ww ..
Finally. Shirley Harrington Is chairing a
carnpu I community affairs commh1 e
charged Wllh preventing redundancy and
9"""9 an owraD coherence to the ac·
tlllltiel of the various UUP commilt.e es.
More lobbying and demonstrations are
also being scheduled .
Reprewntatives from UUP chapters
throughout the Stat plan to lobby the
Weys and Means Comm
February
2S In .ddotJon, a mass raBy, m ~JUnC ­
tion With SASU •. 11 on the burner for
Man:h I 0 tn Al&gt;ony UUP lAIII likely
provtd buMs for the Man:h trip

·---..·-·... ..
""" M'Mr Commiooion

DOT sponsors
new transit program
By Unda Gr..e.Kobu
Nt-ws Bu.- 5ooft

A flrst · of· ll•· kmd tran sportat ion
research training program for young
facuhy members of mlnonty colleges and
universities w1ll be conducted here thili
summer under a $186,497 grant from
the Do.t&gt;artment of Transp011ation , President RObert I; Ketter announced thio
week•.
The grant, awarded by OOTs Urban
Mass Tran•portallon AdmlnlstTatlon
(UMTAlto the U/8-based SUNY Center
lor Traruporlallon Studies and Rnearch
directed by Robert E. P - 1. io intended
'"""'- toopportunllln
partlctpat for
In
mmority tocollega
tran~ation

deve

•-arch activities by

the research
faculty members
The wmmer workshop

maNOgement

be jointly

hosted by U/ B and the Tranii)Ofllltion
Training and Research Center of the
Polytechnic lniiitute of New York
(PINY)

Refleeb GOIDIDI-t to~
"The partldpatlon of this univenily In
UMTA 's unique training workshop
reflect• our commitment to expanding
the oppor1unllles for minortly person• at
aD lewlo, student and lacuhy, to enter In·
to areas from which they have tradllionih
ly been excluded," Pralclent Kelter said
."We have gone through a lot of kftn
competllion to get this major grant;
Georve l..ec. dean of the Facuity of
Eng;naring and Applied Sdmca. commenMd, "and M says a lot about
11rength of our trantpOrtabon _.Hring
program that - have won • ."
L.a. added tMI the summer ~op

a- 'DOT-'-

I, oe&amp;. I

�February 14, 1980

l
• DOT traaett program

"TMy woll learn. essentially, how to
gather their own skllk and apply th;rm to
this research." PaasweD explained .

JHr'll-biWI tbelr,OWII -*wort.
A long-range goal is the development
of a network of mlnori1y lacuhy familiar
with tht! ins and outs· of transportation
research and funding.
"We want them to form a cohesive
group to shore in research alter they
leave here," PaasweU said.
By the end of the summer, members of
this new network wiD be familiar not only
with transportation research but with the
artraclions of Western New York.
"We want to show Buffalo off,"
Pauwell added . The 15 oul·of·lowners
will be treated to visits to local spots such
as Niagara Falls, Artparl&lt;, the Erie Canal
and activities al Stratford , Melody Fair
and the Allentown Art Festival.
PaasweD has two staff members who
will be ht!lping coordinate the workshop
and related activtties. Tht!y are Stephen
Kirsch. assistant to the director lor the
SUNY Center lor Transportation Studies
and Research , and Eileen Hughes. pro·
)eel secretary.

Hughes nears
his goals
By Lany Steele
Sports lnlonnat!On
Prior to the start of the 1979·80 varsity
basketbaU season, U/ B Head Coach Bill
Hughes listed three primary goals for his
BuD cagers:
e To be a contender in the
SUNYAC West Division .
• To win 13 or 14 games.
• To have I:J/B's first winning

cr......-. a,...&amp;. •i
1o part of an ongoing effort In mmori1y
reauitmenl mad" by the engineering
~lty. citing tht! annual Engineering
Career Day for mtnori1y students from
Buffalo public high schools as another
example
Codirectlng the program with Paaswell
is John Falcocchio. assoclat professor of
transportation engineering at PINY .
Other members of 1M projed team are
James Mulder of tht! School of Arohitec·
ture and Environmental Design , who will
provld training in research methods.
and William Lobbins. associate dorector of
tht! Offlu of Urban Affairs. who woU par·
bCipale prtmorily tn the selection of par·
tic:lpants. Other U/ B faculty from the
Deportm..nt of CtvU Engineering, SAEO
and the School of t-lanagemenl woll also
ta part
Team members from PINY are Louis
J Pignataro, dll'«tor of Its Tronsporto·
tlon T....tnmg and Research Center who Is .
r«ovn,...d as one of the leod,ng
educaton In tht! transportaoon held tn the
country, and Roger P Roess. assodal
profusor of transportation engineering.

season in si.x years .

-l-

and if there is equ"able distribution of
transportation reiOUJCes in lhtS country.''

A bieDd of experliH

"The staff

unique because 11 blends
two mapr public and pnvate mst~ulions
tn tht! Slate." PaasweU noted . "The pro·
jed also recovn~zes th c:apabolitlH of the
lnsU1ulions and goves viabtltty to
SUNY's capablhllH In tronsportot100
r arch "
1M elght·week summer workshop.
wtw h
run from Juno 7 to August 3 ,
Will bnng together IS mtnori1y and female
t.-..:ultv nwrnben from
•lutions aU o11er
th counil'y. particularly the south and
....,st , P-Ioald .
Workthop' parhdpan w spend one
;,1
«lght
on ew York City.
wher they
tour and reVIew the mau
transportal""' syst ms ther TM olhet
..,...,.. w
...U be spent Jn Buffalo.
wh4!tw th&lt;r 15 facuhy wtU get a look at tht!
, _ ltght ra~ rapod traMII vst m now
undft constJUctiOn , as
U as attend
......
......... dewlop propooals
and conduct r
rch '" spectf!Qd
tr ~""'problems
Paa
r~ that the r~
cunducted bv t 1S
n01 locus on
lv on transportal""' pr m m urban
IS

UMTA's sponsorship of IM summer
workshop stems from efforts made by
DOT to increase involvement of minomy
lnst1tu1ions 1n tran5J)Ortation issues.
Paaswelt explained. adding that these in·
sttrulions lace a number of barriers that
prevent them from conducting Special·
!zed research.
.. Faculty from smaU minority inshtu·
tions may have an interest in transport&amp;·
lion problems. but lack technical expeo·
tise." he said. "The schools generaDy
hove very smaD budgets and are pnmarily
teachtng ochools. wh&lt;rre research is n01
con
ed of pnme importance Facuky
membe" have dUiiculty in getUng
rHOUrces and tune. aHotted to conductmg
research ·
'Old bitddy' network lo hindrance
Another bartier, Paaswea noted . is the
dofliculty ol entering tht! "old buddy" 114!1·
work ol tabksh d r arch institutions
to gain acceu to fundong agomdes '
"Tht! DOT people arc very anxious lo
r ach out to tht!se smaUer instllutions."
PaasweD oaid "In our summer program ,
we want to monuntze the handicaps of do·
lng •
rch and maxtmi.t th benefits
W ·u ht!tp them ntabllsh contacts and
learn how to compet for funds "
P
added that tht! commrtmt'nt
ol th facuk y m mbers' tnstrtullOnsa very
portanl and thai admontstnlors must
"' h ach candid t &lt;'1\dQrslng -. ·
ll'r and
ra
that tho porton w t...
aided 111 conducting pro 1 when he or
r urns

AI 7-0 in the SUNV'AC West, Hughes
and the Bulls hove achie\OI!d Goal No. I.
With a record of 13·8, Goal No. 2 Is a
real"Y. too. And with lour regular season
gemes remaining, victory no. 13 insures
the first winning marl&lt; since now·Aihletic
Director Ed Muto's 1972-73 squad went
16·8 .
Hughes Is most concerned about wrap·
ping up the SUNYAC West Utle (tHe Bulls
sport a two-game lead over second place
Buffalo Stale "'"h three conference con·
tests left) . II U/ B won at Brockport State
last night (Feb 13) thai would have vir·
tually canched H. Oswego State. next
Monday's opponent at Clark Hall, is 0· 7
in !ht! conference , 1· 16 overaU.

83·81
lithe Bulls drop either, or both games.
It could come down lo the regular season

Enthuotaom Important
In emphasizing that the primary goals
of the workshop are the Involvement of
the mlnortly faculty In practical, applied
research projeds and the development of
their research management skills .
PoosweD added that the program's
measure of success will nol necessarily be
whether each person has learned how to
wnle a proposal for DOT: the level of en·
thustasm for conducting transportation
research that is Imparted to them wUI also
be on Important goal. h4! said .
TM mlno'"y faculties expected lack of
techmcal skills In transportation research
or engineering is not expected to be a
problem ..PaasweU n01ed II may·even be
a bona•.
"Minonty colleges are strong in the
oocial ociences. including economics ,
sociology, urban planning. geography,
poUtic:.orocience and often have strength
m pure sciences and mathematia,·· he
said "This will resuh in a highly Inter·
discipbnary team •
The antral focus of the eiQht·week
worltshop Will be a research project con·
dueled bv the partiCipants Sugge ed
topocs (ohhough the faculty membe" will
be encouraged to dev lop th or own I are
the Impact of transportat ion and
economJc d veloprnent on mon y com·
,munnJH. pubhc transportabOn and the
economically d!Sild vantaged . tran ser·
viCe to low d"'15"Y areas. and fore equJry
Tho lacu by members Will become ln·
volv d not only on tht! r
n:h problem
otseM, but also In ~ admlnlstrauon ,
budgettng and reportJng

finale at Buffalo State on Feb. 20. U/B
won a tough 83-81 overtime meeHng al
Clarl&lt; earlier In the season .
In addition to the division crown , the home court advantage lor the SUNYAC
Championships also reSts on tht! out·
come of tht! last three games, tht! West
winner to host tile rour·leam tournament
on Feb. 22-23. Potsdam Sbote and
Abany State appear to be certain East
Division representatives .

U/B l.o ok a giant step toward the West
title by nipping Geneseo State (5-3).
61 ·60. on a baseline jump shot by senior
forward Tony Smhh (Bakimore) with 15
S«&lt;nds to play last Saturday night at
Clark.
.
With three seconds showing. senior
center Nate Bouie (Kendall) stole the baU ,
was fouled . miued the front end of a
1·and· 1, but frosh lorwlll'd Ken Jones
· (Roosevelt) came down "'"h the rebound
to ice the triumph
Smkh finished with the 9"me·high 18
points, including three clutch buckets
down the stretch. Senior forward Mike
Freeman (Oxon Hill, Md ) hod 14 points
and eoght boards, freshman guard Dave
Acree (BeDport) scored 13, and Jones
pulled seven rebounds.
~
Coach Hughes' Quote·ol·the· Week :
"Uk Rodney Danger! ld, we've-i!OI to
k«p WQrking to gain respect "
That's another goal achieved

�February 14, 1980

Hourani joins White House talks on
U.S. relations with Islamic world
with no affectations.
"He listened sympathetically:· Hourani
said . and "encouraged people to speak.
"He made a few shrewd comments
and was weU on top of the sftuatoon."
Hourani added . "He deals directly with
people and puts them at ease . I fek his tnteDigence. his quick reaction. He is weUInformed ."

By Nina Sedita
Hewo&amp;n.uSod
Dr. George F Hourani, speciallst on
the Near £as1 and chairman of lhe

Philosophy Department, was summoned
to the Cabinet Room of the White House
on February 7 to meet with the President
for a discussion of recent events In Iran
and Afghanistan and their Impact on
U.S . relationships with the Islamic World.
Although scholars were invited from
approxlmat~ly 20 ma,or universities In
lhe norlheast , Dr. Hourani was the' only
representative from SUNY.
Dr Zbigniew Brzezinski, assistant to
the president for national security affairs,
also participated . ·
President Carter read a .sta·tement ex·
pre 'ng the interest of this country in the
-Islamic world and Its concern with the
problems of those countries. ·
ot at liberty to disclose.the exact rohlenl of the diSCUssion , which began
promptly at 12·45 and ended by 2 p .m.,
Houroni gave freely of his general Impressions and observations.

W-

Wha did be h..,e lunch?
Because the meeting began at 12:45
p .m . , Hourani was curious whether

.......,t

!honking and problems was off the record.
Hourani said he was very much im·
pressed by Brzezinski'slucidoty in expressing his views and with his clear thinking.
Brzezinski was formerly a professor
pololical science at Columbia University .
. Hedley Donovan , senior advisor to the
President , continued discussion with the
academicians for 15·20 m1nutes after
Carter departed .
"We wish we had had more time to
speak," Hourani said , "and there was a
general feeling Jhat II would be useful to
have further meetings between the ad·
ministration and the ~em ic communi·
ty ..
Hourani said he has a ·'favorable 1m·
pression" of Presodenl Canet . adding that
the President "os a straightforward man

to etrengtben tlee
President Carter. afrer readong his
media statement (see box below), open·
ed the meeting for further discussion and
asked each scholar to comment on U.S .
relations with MusJlm countries to see in

what ways we can strengthen lies with
them
The President spent approximately
25-monuteo with the faculty represen·
tlttiues , commenting at -one point that he
had an appointment with the Australian
Pnrne Minister "on six monutes "
The ~et Room meeting began with
a 15-mlnute review by Bruzonski who
drew some conclusions hom his recent
(February 5) talks In ~aklslan and Saudi
Araboa .
Ailhough th revoew of Whhe House

Carter on Islam
The following otal&lt;tm&lt;tnt ..,..·read by Preoid&lt;tnt Carter at the beginning of
his m«llng with repreRntatlves of faculties in Islamic Studleo at major
unlvnallles in the northeast on February 7.
·
The hlltory of I 1om II oery long compared to that of th~ United Staru.
I lam II ceJ..bratfng th~firor yeor of ill I 5th century. A1 on independenr no·
lion ""' houe only ju11 f!nl~red our third.
But, from the beginning. the United Statu hal f!njoyed dolt! and valued
tlu with thf! Mou/lm World. A Moullm .role, Morocco. """ thf! ftrot to
recognize our lndependf!RCf!, Our koleldo«opic population lncludu '0
ulgo"''" I lomlc community. Many echo/or~.from rhe MWIIIm World pur·
ued thdr atudles hrre. Center~ fo~ lalomic and Middle ED tern
Studlu-mony of which you rrprf!lf!nt-houe grown up in uniuer~ltlea oil
ouer America.

H uman. moral valun we hare

~

I houe beD~ 1truclc, per10na/Jy, and In my experience o1 Presldenr, by rhe
human and moralooluf!l which Am~rlc:G"' a peopl~ ahorr with lolom .
e W~ ahor~. Jim and forema.t, o dup fai&lt;h In the one Supreme Being;
• We ore all commanded by Him ro face campo ion ond jWitice;
• We- hcrve o common re pcct and re-~nce for low; ·
• Deepite the 11raina of the modem age, we continuf! to place peciollm·
portonce on the family and the hom~;
· • And we 1ho,... o belief that h01pl&lt;olity I o ulrru~. and that th f! hoot,
whethrr a notion or an lndivlduol, 1hou/d behoue with genera II]! and honor
tOU&gt;Ordl guau.
On rh ba Ia of batJi voluu and interuu, the norurol rf!lotlon hip bet·
W«n I lo.m and the Unired toru II one of frlendlhip . I olfinn that }rlend·
ah p bath 01 o reality and 01 o goal-}WII 01 I totally reject any attempt to
make moral and pirltual beliefo a barrin to und~ronding . rather than the
l&gt;rfdge that they can and hould be.
I om d~lned to trengrhrn, not weoken, the long- tanding and oolued
loon&lt;&amp; of frlmdlhlp and cooperation between the United Iota and many
MWillm notion~. We Ill lmd our 1uppor1 to any notion working for peou
and }Wit lee and to rul t extf!mol domination. We will continue our ~Jforu ro
help rnolue ptOceo.bly-ond with ju t!Cf!-the lntemollonol dllputes, In·
clud ng rhe Aro/J--Ior&lt;H'Ii CO&lt;lflict, li!hich off«~ th Mu lim World.

T1M
u ...... rejected • pect
It II th P"fffovnd reuu ion that the world now ll!ltneues the r~jection of
th- prlnctpl of undrnotonding and ' peer on the port of the Soule&lt;
Union. Toddy, In o MWIIIm &lt;'OWl try, Rualon trOOI» ore making wor again 1
a ~ UJhOR ded' gtion to lndependeoou 11 01 /lf!ra o their faith .
In o tim of tra"" danger, I want to '
nn what I 10fd of- wukl ago:
We houe o dHp re11p«t and reuerrnufor /11om and aU u:ho hare the faith
of &amp;lam.
OJ~- th.,... I• lndlgnoHoto omont Am...-lcona today ouer """"lain OM
I lomic coo.ontry. I hare that lndlgnotlon, but I con a re you that thf1 ju t
o
·n- be twJ.,rd nto o fo l'f!lf!fltmmt ogo 011 lllom or I&lt;• faithful.
I..., th« tlo
mu. .
o rr.pect for r llgloWI faith .a dup/y
In tlo~
er of IM Amnkon people.
W ~"''"
t
th~ c
poull&gt;l polot ol, economic ond culrurol
r
""'" tlo~ I Iamie nollOJII ond with Mu /1
throu hout the ..-fd. Tloot

I"'ITO
hao -

.«

clo

gf!d; It

II

ItO(

do "II"

President Carter would have lunch before
or aher the meeting.
"Probably before." Hedley Donovan
guessed . because, he said . the President
is In his office at 5 :30a .m.
Hourani said ne was "most pleased" at
the meeting and at having been asked to
participate.
"We hope that it wiU lead to more sup·
port from the government lor middle
eastern studies at untverstties,·· he com·
men ted .
·There was no com itment so far ...
but they listened to us ."
University professors who ,otned
Houranl in the Cabinet Room included
faculty from the University of Chicago.
Harvard , and Georgetown .
Hourani is stepping down from his cur ..
rent appointment as chairman of the
Philosophy Department In late August .
after four fuD years plus some summers.
,in order to devote full time to teaching
and research He has lived m the Near
East .

A native of England
Born on Manchester. England. of
Lebanese parents , he rece1ved his B A

with honors in classics and philosophy
from Oxford Unoversity and the Ph D in
Near Eastern HISto ry from Princeton .
Before coming to U/ B in 1967. he was
pro fessor of Near Ea!t~em h1story and
Islamic pholosophy at the University of
Michigan.
In 1979 he was a vosotong poolessor of
pholosophy and Near Eastern Stud oes at
UCLA
Hourani was pres1dent of the Middle
East Studies Association of North
America in 1968-69 In 1978-79 he was
president of the American Oriental SocJe.
ty
He has ma~research use of Arabic.
French . ancient Greek . Latm , German .
Italian . and Spanosh and has trayeled extensively m Europe . the Near East and
North America

Vico sets
lecture series
VICo College IS sponsonng two M?nes
of lectures d"nng the spnng seme teo All

are open to the pubhc as well as to
members of the Umvers1ty communny
Held on Wednesday evemngs 10 the

Blue Room of the Faculty Club. the S&lt;&gt;nes
" atural Scaence . Ari and Lnerature- w11l
constst of etght lecture..s explonng the
thematK un i tle~ wh.ch have hnked sclen
llSlS . an1stf. and wnteri tnt o a commo n 1f
tnternally diV ISive group Dr D R
WtSwalrs lectures w1ll explore the 1n
terplay of natural SC1(.'nce and literature '"

eoghteenth century England Germany
and France. whole Or M Woost o "''"
d1scu the h1stonc evolutiOn ar'ld wc.a l
meaning o f sy terns of sctent1f.c das 1fk:d·
toon Dr A CosteUo woU conclud the
ne.s wnh two ~ures explonng the ef
fects on an of tw.entteth century pobucal
events. pantCularty the two World Wars
· Th wcond n
oo be held Tuesday
evenongs on the Palmer Room of th
Faruhy Club. v..oll.cons!SI of talk on cur
rent re arch by U B faculty Broadly
speakong . rhe tall&lt; W11 locuo on the
h tory and sooology of od a Sub
1nclud~
~ence and moderntzatJOn '"
Ru
and Chona. th eoghteenth century
cone pt t;&gt;l thQ European stat sy tern .
the ntn t noh century phoiooophy of
hostory. th myth of the lOW! races m
Hnood
Wor
ond Do, , end the
pohtocol f"nc:t n ol ho tor~phoc myth
E.ch loctuo and talk w~
an
nounctd m ad\l&amp;nc: m th Rroort.er nd
Tlo• Spe('!rum

• Dentistry funds
~-I • ..&amp;. I)

had died the same deficiencies. A report
must be submitted to the Commission by
March 15. indicating steps taken to correct these problems.

Budtlft dlda't recommend aovtblns
The Executive Budget. released two
weeks ago, did not recommend monies
for the School to meet the accredhatlon
problems but ndicaled there was "no
neglect Intended" and that the matter
would be addressed In th&lt;t Supplemental
Budget in June .
LaSt year. aftet the School received
lowered accreditation status. Rep. Sheffet and other legislators succeeded in get·
ting $100.000 on the Supplemental
Budget. The representative said he and
anothet legislator have wrillen Gov.
Carey of the seriousness of the March 15
report deadnne for the School in light of
no tangible results to report to the Com·
mission

But. Rep. Sheffer warned . Gov Carey
has "no commitment · to public higher

education ." He noted that "the U/ B
School of Dentistry is a symptom of thos.•
He also noted the Gotlvernor and Albany
have a "New York Cit\1-orienlatlon ."
Prior to the 1978 gubernatonalelection
when Gov. Carey was opposed by
Republocan Perry Duryea from Long
Island . the Governor pledged $18 milloon
to SUNY Stony Brook. In the current
budget. he has provided an additoonal $4
million lor Stony Brook's School of Dentistry. Rep. Sheffer added .
Fund• for private sChools, too
" Private dental schools at Columbia
and NYU have also received funding
from the State . but sonce 1962. when
U/ B JOined the SUNY system. monimal
amounts have been provided the U/ B
School of Oentostry for SP."C" and equop·
ment needs:· Sheller said Only because
of Federal capitation funds . expected to
dry up within the next two years. ha.s the
School managed to make virtually any
needed •mprovements on (aobhes and
equipment
heffer encouraged th e dental students
and the1r parents to wnte leg1s\ators
sustewide to urge them to vote "yes.. on
the upcoming amendment which will be
introduced to give the School $5 17.000
now
A total of $717.000. of which
200.000 would go to omprove faculty
sala ries (which was a def.c1ency area
st resse:d by the Com missiOn report) , was
initially requested by the School
Dr Wolham Feagans. U/ B dental
dean . told · the group attendmg the
meettog that defiCiencies relattng lo
money were stressed by the Comm1ssion
on 1972 "In 1972. we assured the CommJsSJon new bu1khngs or rehovations on
ex1st1ng ones to enlarg cRimped clime
space and teachmg area \IIOuld in fact .
be mad by the hme of lherr next visrt in
1979 because we r&lt;tally beloeved n." he
saod
Promises no l o n ger gc:1od enough

Thts ume. the CommissiOn IS nor gotng
to behevll! pbms for some:ume tn the

future (oo correct the defooenck! I. he
added
Feagans also poonted out that Federal
capltatoon funds have ~n subsldozong
the School's faC!Inles for years. soatong
that on 1970. for onstance , 1929 vontage
dental umrs were fmaUy scrapped 10 be.
repiac d by new ne bought Woth the
Federal money
"h got to the poont.'' feagans recalled.
that "old equipment was beong cannibal
aed by o ur marntenance technN:.ans
becauS&lt;' pans were no longer beong mode
wtth ~,~,-tuch v.. could frx the umt.s ··
He told the group he beioeved Foster
HaU woll be renovated and ready to house
off campus unots of th
hool !now In
renoed facdotoe at 4510 M m St ) wothon
two years
"But I don"t really know IA.h n Squore
woll be oenovot d for the Clonoc I ~~~ • -"
he told theon

Doty elected
E W Doty, voce president for fonanc
•nd management. • Nrvfll9 u cha.uman
ol the Buso
Counc.t ol the atoonal
A
iatoon ol State Unlv""'""'' and
Land Grant Colleg 1 for I 9

�Februaty 14, 1980

Libraries will revive
Friends group
The University Libraries announced
plans this week to rename and reorganize
the Friends of LockwoOd Libraty.
The original group was formed in 1935
by Charles Abbott , Lockwood's first
director, in or'der to secure financial support for the library's poetry coDecrion .
The Friends-who were generally among
Buffalo's leading citizens-also gathered
socially lor teas, poetry readings and ex·
hiM previews.
Membership remained steady until
1960 when Abbott reHred . Not long alter·
wards. U/ B went State and the Friends.
into a decline .

At the Blake Center, you can
get a ride, read 'Piayb . _y,' gripe
Whal U/ B agency coddles pro:gnanl
MoOies. subscribes to "Playboy:· will help
you find a ride to C.hfomla , Issues a bi·
monthly calendar ~ events. maintains a
hie of college-catalogs and admissions in·
formation , is the srte of poetry readings
and ccffeehouses , and solicits and
~swers student gripes on the University

in Squire : then. a little extra here, a bit
more there .

{)pen to all
Today , under the direction of Rowena
Adams Jones, the Mildted Bl4ke Center
is one-of the few multi-use common areas
at EUicott open to all members of the
University Community, both resident and
In ~~er~ildred Blake Student Affairs
commuter.
Center. located in 167 MFAC, m the
Mondays· through Thursdays !Tom
EUICOtt Complex
8:30 a .m . until 9 p .m ., Fridays until 7
The Center is a "neighborhood" out·
p .m . , and Sundays from 3-9 p .m ., the
pool of the Student Affaks OMs\on ,
Center serves as a convenient meeting
en&gt;eonced in a space oroginally designed
and study place lor those who have
for libraty use, across !Tom Sy Lecture
cla~s In the large lec:ture-theatre across
HaU (170 MFACJ in the ground level
the haD , or anywhere at Ellicott .
academic core area .
lnstrudms use its conference facilities
lor discussion groups, Of may book the
The h•ci~ty is named for the late, be·
entire
space for exams . Tl}e eenter can
loved member of the Studenl Affairs slaff
be-and often is-used lor coffeehouses.
who conSidered students her "whole life'
dance events, symposia , etc .. by any
while she worked on campus
recognized University organlz..atk&gt;n or
Ms Blake herseM opened the cenler on
agency (call 636-2348 to make a
the day EUICOtt opened in September of
reservation) .
1974 Imagine whal 11 must have been
Ms. Jones, who supervised a large·
like !OJ students thrown into the sprawl·
reshuffling and rearrangement of
scaie
mg . labyrinthme 38-building cluster for
the first tome llveryone was new nobody · the space. notes that "every Inch of it" is
used lor students .
There are books and magazines to
read . Troplcal lish to look at. Board
e rher. traced her way through every
games
to play . A ride board where you
mch of the complex, pooled signs
can get a ride or find a rider for any
throughout the maze , and opened-up
de5lination
from Portland . Maine, to
room 167 complete wtth doughnuto, cof·
Portland . Oregon .
fe , and answers !OJ lhe lost and confus·
You
can
get answers to questions.
ed
Read a newspaper. Use a lypewriter !Tee
From that beginning. Ms. B ke kepi
of charge for class assignments or per·
adding servlceo. flr51 a piece of the
Browomg Lhaty whose main location is sonal business Shuffle through .lists of
part-time ,00 openings on and off cam·
pus Sprawl across comfortable chatrs. Or
register your gripes in a big b~ch book,
and get an answer.

~ld~/:/~.!'"~~~: ~:~· ~;:.,~

Grlpesanda...,wer•
·

"I got a mouthful of plaslic 1ape on a
st ak I had in Red Jacket ." one student

wrot there wbh indignation .
"Food Servtce reports that its sleaks
are lnd widually wrapped a nd frozen . Ap·
parently . someone fa iled to remove a ll
the wrap They promise to be more
careful in the futw e." was the neatly·
typed respon
Each senous compla mt or suggestion
rece1ves an answer from Ms. J ones or a
member of the 5la!f
Stud«nr ... Heat the rN!n's. room ..
Staff • M 11\lenance is looking into 11 ..
Sludent ..Where are 'Penthou ' and
'Pia boy'?"
Sul{f ·At the Library De . protect d
lmm people who lik lo 51 al "
Student ' Your f malt&gt; Molly " ue'}
pr nant Take her oul ulthe ~ank ot the
t..boH .. ill
!Jsh food ..
Stud 111
Why r thvr no fr e
acc, tl~bl.c campu ,...
n • around

6

Stoff
f'..

B«ause ' nda
,'l,l •

'•

e,

tore lh.&lt;rn
:!-"' •,.

Student : •'Why no more express buses
from EUicott to Main St .?"
Sulff: "Because too many students
complained of being stranded at the spine
when expresses dk:ln 't stop there."
Student : "Why no sidewalks from
Clemens to Ellicott?"
Staff: "When the Audubon Parkway
connection to the Audubon New Community goes in. that road will become a
superhighway . It would be dangerous to
have sidewalks ."
lf you don't want to write your question
down . you can call 636·2344 , the
Amherst "Action Line." for an answer.
Eventa

The Blake Center also publishes every
two weeks a schedule of -events lor both
Amherst and Main Street. and distributes
It at dorm desks , campus information
centers, etc. Father Edward Asher of the
nearby Amherst Newman Center is the
cooperative printer. Again, you can also
catl in to lind out what's doing (the "Campus Events Line" Is 636-2760) .
Another unique feature of the Blake
unit is its ..graduation Center." Here. Stu dent Assislant Nadine Lapping has com·
piled everything a student needs to know
lor graduation . (Departmental and
university requirements, commencement
forms , etc.) Also on reserve are catalogs
and other information about graduate
work both here and at other colleges and
universities, and pamphlets for various
gr~dliale adm issions exams (GRE,
LSAT. GMAT, elc.) The reason lor the
collection. Ms. Jones points oul, is that
Ellicott·based students often face dij.
ficulties in getting to other places on cam·
PI.\.S where · such forms and lnformaUon
are routinely available .
In short . says Ms. Jones : "The Mildred
Blake Center dabbles wherever there's a
student need ."
11 even functions a s a tickel booth lor
the student-run frida y and Saturday
noght movies shown on 1-70 MFAC .
Now that 's versatility.

20 million
new jobs predicted
The lolal employment tn the U S os
expected to reach 114 million by 1990 . a
goon of nearly 20 mtlloon )Obs over the
197 level ol 94 4 mtllion. the Bureau of
Labor tallstics predJCIS Well over haU of
the n&lt;&gt;w ,ubs "'oil be on t~o•hlle rolor occupai.Ons profHSlonal and t hmcat
\t..orken. managers and sales and dencal
workers. accOI'dong to •h~ agency'•
forcoca t In addnion lo lh
new jab,.
• crealed by an ••pandong economy. 1he
ag&lt;&gt;ncy Silxl 4 7 molhon )Obs wJII open up
ro t('"plac "-v'k•n. v. hu dJ . r •t1r or
'aV th l.tbur lor&lt; • lot nlht!r " ao;on
The Bl.S proje('loons ar to , puhltsh d
.n Marc h '" t
nn1AJ ·Qccu~rwmal
Oul~J&lt;&gt;k Handbook "
•, : :
•

Rnurrectlon
Under the leadership of Stanton l&gt;id·
die . the Ubraries' new associate diredor
lor planning and development. the
Friends will undergo a resurrection of
sorts. bul under the na me of Friends of
the University Libraries, to denote the
group's support of programs lor all cam·
pus libraries.
Biddle plans to work cooperatively
with other established Friend"s groups at
U/ B to reinforce and supplement their
programs. For example . the Library
Friends may host an author party this
spring lor Buckminster Fuller when he
comes to campus to give the commencement address fo'\\!'e School of Architec·
ture and Environmental Des9l . Another
possibility is sponsoring a ceremony this
laD to celebrate atta inment of the
Libraries' two millionth volume .
As far as creating specUic programs to
benefit a partiCular library . Biddle prefers
to put this matter on hold until he can get
a better idea of what type of programs ap·
peal to new me mbers. A membership
drive. geared for generating interest
among the University commun ity , is
planned for September. Once the Friends
establish a new identity on campus, Bid dle hopes to expand the membership appeal to the outside commun ity.
Categories
The Friends have three membership
categories: A lull membership at $15 per
year for those not affiliated with the
University; an associate membership for
faculty , sla!f and alumni at $7 .50 a year .
and a student membership lor $5.
Members of the Fr.ends not affiliated
w~h the University will be entitled to ac·
cess to library resources. Biddle noted .
Those intere5led in joining the Friends
can call Biddle or fill o ut a membership
card al the circulation desk at Lockwood .

SILS to help
place grads
The School of Information and -Library
Studies (SILSf will offer its I 980
graduates a special campaign lor job
placement. Potential employers will be
given the opportun ity to look at qualiflca·
lions of SILS grads and decide if they
would like to follow -up with more inlor·
mation and/ or application forms, etc.
The list will be publicized nationally and
will be available 10 libraries upon de·
mand,.
The list . to be presenied under the lotle
of "Pul A Buffalo In Your Ubrary." woll
be limited lo those slUdents (complellng
degrees in May. August , or Dece mber
1980) able to travel and work ou tside
Wes1em New York .
Each 5lude nl planning to enter the
1980 JOb markel wUI compile and subm il
a biograph ical paragraph along wHh the
addres most hkely 10 be used during the
year A fk:htlous entry is a va ilable for
perusal by students to give an idea of 1he

"~7.~:~:~~enl

or~

wish 10 use hos
ILS address woth bo number. 1he stu
di!nl w~l be r"spon tble for arrangong for
lor11.ardmg maol afl&lt;'r gradualion
Stvdenl.i are tequll' 1 d to ha:v
biO!IJ•phocal ma12roal wbmmcd 10 !Non
(, rg~ Br.&gt;bon kt by I ebruary 22 I 9
Mat~toal woll be ed•wd And r o d wh r&lt;
rl&lt;eded lo make the yk! of pre
·· ~tent
Hnd It'll

�February 14. 1980.

j

I'

j

Women's Studies
wants to offer
BA degree program
By Joyce BuchiiOIIISirJ
~ Slolf

H tt meets with University approval,
Women's Studies plans to offer a degreegranting program for the first time this
fall .

The proposal for the program-whl!;_h
culminates over a year of research and
dlscuSSlOn by students. faculty , staff and
community women-wtD recttive its first
official airing at next week's meeting of
the Arts and Letters Educational Policy
Commi"ee .
The U/ Bwomen's umt is one of three
SUNY-wide invtted by the Chancellors
Advisory Committee on Women to subm" plans for degree programs. The
1980's have \&gt;een declared by Chancellor
Whorton as the "International Decade of
the Woman" for SUNY.
The curricular model proposed by
Women's Studies captures what the
.group believes ore their major, recognized strengths: the use of feminist
pedagogy and theory In 1each1ng and
underslanding the di1clpline; the presentallOn of theory in the classroom and the
relnforcemenLof It through practical application; the maintenance of both community and Umversity ties , and emphasis
on the development of basic research and
wntlng skills.
In one phase of preparatory work for
the proposal, Women's Studies condueled a su.Vey last loU of its students to
gauge thelf sennments and Interests
ing a B A program Accordmg to
women Nancy Savoy . L1nda
Su ano and Dr Sharon Leder. 99 per
cent of respondents indiCated approval of
11 and a SW&gt;bie percentage also said they
'!NOuki be interested in a major in the
field . Now that the proposal has been
submi"ed, the program will focus this
semester on Klenlllytng potent~al ma)Ors.

indicated !hat the existence of !he program is a ddlnlte factor in their staying
here.
U/B's Women's Studies program -long heralded as a leader in the
field and one of the oldest and largest of
its kind in the nation-dilfers substantially
from those offered at sister institutions in

-Albany and New Paltz. For one thing, it Is
the only program tnat blends the Intellectual message with field work or a teachmg
practlcum . It ·also incorporates feminist
pecjagoglcal methods. such as rotating
chairs (students .calling on each other to
speak in class) and critlcism/ seK cribdsm
(an on-going class evaluation) .
Albany's introdUC1ory course (which
uses these methods) Is modeled after
U/ B's, as ore others throughout the na·
tion Albany. however. Is offering the
program only as a specilll ma)Or.

Outalde funding would be
facUltated
Once the. program receives degree-

granting status. the spokeswomen believe
It will be much easier to apply for HEW
funding under the Educational Equity Act
and also to be considered for grants from
the Ford and RockefeUer Fou~ns
Easter. because such approval would
signify lns«tubonal commitment to the
program.

In addition . degree·conferring status
would provide more avenues for research

with a feminist locus as well as make

Women ·s Studies course-offerings more

~

ebgible for inclusion in general education
Requirements for the BA program
wouki consist of 9 to 13 courses in three
main areas: core courses, general re·
qui.rements and theme areas.
The core course requirements. ac·
cording to the proposal. would be the
..foundation of the . Women"s Studies
BA," introducing students to feminist
education and methodology. They would
63.6 to 1
include the survey course ...Women m
Fortunately, attractmg students poses
Contemporary Society ."' 213/ 214 : a stu no real problem, the women noted . Like
dentteaching or field work practicum and
·other Women's Studies programs
a senior research seminar. The purpose
·burgeonmg across the country-85 naof the research seminar would be to prollonally-U/ B's en)Oys good enroUment
vide a forum for majors to share their
hgures. particularly for Arts and Leners
work as well as an opponunity to develop
Wnh only two and one-haU hnes, the proextW~sive re:warch skills
gram supports a student/ facuhy ratio of
General requirements would include :
636col.
one background course for . successful
To date . the women reported , the prO&gt;
completion of a practicum , two courses
gram has recewed ··commitments" from
which focus on feminist approaches to
26 lacuhy and 12 lectur.,r5' (Including the . trad1Uonal disciplines; one course on
Amencan Studies Women's Studies
Third World Women . and one Women's
componentl who have agreed to e1ther
Scudies elective .
cross·•st courses they ah ady tea¢ or
develop new ones The total represents
Explor•tlon .,ould be ncour•ged
13 out Ide departments. U degree·
The proposal notes thai the course on
granung mtus Is given. no new foculcy
Third World Women would allow
need ~ hired Instead, the program em"students to explore how cuhural dif·
pha
"creatrv use of alr ady·ex15tlng
ferences affect women in contemporary
Amencan sOciety " For the elective re·
resoul'cfl.- explamed Leder
Women's Studies intends 10 remain
qUJrement , Women's Studies ·•strongly
under th auspces of American StudiOs
recommends'" skills courses which could
and WiD also conunu to focus on an in ~
remforce techmcal. verbal , artlstac and
terdisoplinary approach to education In
quantitative sluDs
underscormg ch poll'lj , the proposal cUes
W1th help of an advisor, students
the lolloWW&gt;g excerpt from the Women's
would be able to develop IndividualiZed
themes "'hlch reflect thew Interests and
Studl&lt;!l CoUege Charter.
• An onterdoopLnary dfort 10 crucial to
IIQClltional goals The themes would be
our worl&lt; W ra..e questiOns, issues and
tied 10 the studenfs practicum held
problem that caB for more talents and
Students mt resaed 1n a Women·s
coo than anv ngle diSCIPUne can proStudies mapr or those who dewe more
lllde W• n d Jo bnng together data con
informaiJOn abouc the program are urged
to caD or drop by the Women's Studies
cemmg worn n and method of analysis
whleh are presently fr"9mented and offce at 108 Winspear Ave.
110\ated m vanous departments. To do
th ,
bring together people from
vliii'IOUS disciplines. and we encourage
and ~ In the dev pment of a
f&lt;rm lsi pe,_ct m trlOdtbONI ~·
The Judalc Studies Program has
men or d4clp nes •
received a special gr•nt from the Hebrew
Dnowt"' o:ard lor - n·tradltlonal
Culture Foundation , headqu011ered In
New York City, fO&lt; the teachlf19 of
The r ll(ln IpS formed through th
oourses on elementary modem Hebrew,
ppr.,..n •• sym
m na1ur and
Or Samuel M. Pal.y, director of the propa
, the women NY The
gram. hM announced.
d~ tn"""-1 , tlw ~men
Dr P•'-Y explained that tlw c:aur-.
. ....... - engthel\4d" !hroullh
offered during the present Spring
crooo
. wlule U/ B may bend
. . . - a . ut:!liu the Ulpan method of
from a pool of
.aluden In a1ed In
aching ~. which emphasil
a d-.lr• proyrant a1 a \)lliYerslly c:-ter
lloiamng, opaaklng. \lll'lllfl9 and radlng
•
proyrarn has
a draw·
Mo&lt;o inforrnlltion about the couneo
an
~by con~ l;&gt;r. P !.y
if'l card for """ tr IQNII tiUdcn
t.oc.~v . W
&amp;!Udentolave
•• 636· 2154

Judaic Studies
receives grant ·

.......

Or. Garlapo wUh

go~

rnlorat}Of!: prices are OUI of a:ight.

Gold prices pose

threat to dental work
By Mary Beth Spina
Edrt.oNI Assoclaw. Health

Sdenc~

Skyrocketing gold and silver prices
have increased the cost of certain dental
procedures, threatening to put them out
of financial reach for many, a U/ 8 dental
educator warned this week .
"'Gold , used eKtenslvely for crown and
bridge restorations. has risen from $39 to
between $600-800 per ounce in the paSI
decade ," noted Dr Davis Garlapo Dental gold . wtuch conuuns silver and
platinum, is euen more expensfue - And

the price of amalgam . the silver-based
alloy used in fillings, has risen from $5 to
$116 per ounce m the past ten years
Two pennyweight of gold In the
average crown cost about $4 in I %9 . By
lase summer. It was $22. and. today, ifs
around $60
··While a few dentists fabricate patle:nts'
aowns and bridges. most use commer·
c.al laboratories to fabriCate the casnngs
co fulfill their preocnptions·," pointed out
Garlapo, an associate professor of hxed
prosttiodontics. Thus. dentists have no
control over the price
Fllllngo more otable In price
The fee for f1llmgs is going up. but Since
dentists buy amalgam in bulk , the In
crease is not bemg passed on to patients
until new supplies are bought at higher
prices.
Dental X-rays, which contain sliver
bromide. ore expected to eventually cosl
patients more. also W11h1n the past few
weeks. X"ray blm manufacturers have
announced 75 per cent price hikes
· Although silver prices are up,"
Gorlapo conGeded . "1fs the price ol gold
and . subsequen~y , dental gold . wh~eh affects patients' decillons to hav~ crown
and bridge treatment to restore broken or
severely dalfla9"d teeth " Some patients
are postponing needed dental tr atment.
other• are choosmg to have oalvagabie
t h extracted rather than wait for . •
decline In the price of the preciOUs metal
needed for rltSioration
In some caseo, dentisb ue advioing pa·
llenu who an~ afford crowns and
bridljU to cake .dvant.ge of extensive
amalgam f1 bngs 10 main their Miura!

teeth until a more definitive approach \s
feasible .
Two area dentists. U/ B Dental Alumni
President Dr. Ronald Jarvis and Dr. Ted
Jenkins. have been using metal alloys
other than htgh goki content ones for
metal crowns within the past year. For
porcelain crowns. which requ ire metalm·
tenor veneers for added strength . they've
been using a silver-palladium alloy.
"A technician In our office fabricates
the castings to our speciftcations so we
have control over every step of the pro·
cess to insure consistently high quality
results.·· Jarvis emphastZe-d
"Many dentists hesitate to use any
other metal alloys for crowns because ex·
isting technology for laboratory casting
procedures has been particularly •"uned
to gold ." expla10ed Garlapo
Long-term studies on many of the
other metals have not yet been dQne
However . once· technology can
guarantee dentists consistently superb
castings over the long term from metals
other than gold. chere's no doubt most
will opt lor those which ore good quality
and minimize overhead costs

Perfect m•tch needed
"Traditionally. gold has been used in
hxed prosthodontics because II Is non corrosive; durable and easily cast ...
Garlapo said Casting properties are a big
consideration because preosion i.s re·
qu1red during fabricaUons of a crown
There has to be a perfect " matc.h" wh n
the crown tS cemented onto the extsung
tooth .
"Nowhere in dentistry Is the need for
accuracy and precision greater than In
crown and bridge devices.· Garlapo emphaslzed
.
He reported that many companies are
working on technology which will allow ..--..._
dentists to use other metal alloys without
I
hesitation .
"'1'l&gt;e current speculatiOn on the gold
mark&lt;1 has brought holM the fact chat
den!lstry Is at • disadvan~ when it's
heavily tied to prociouS metals For clthe
prices of the rnetalo riM drutically, the
patient m•y not be able to afford the
quality care dentists are tr•lned to offer,"
Garfapo said

�i

February 14, 1980

J';

Dr. Elwood,
U /8 internist,
dead at 51

~

Looking
for work

Engineering seniors had the chance to meet lnlorm.:ily with recruiters from
area companies last week to line up job opportunities alter graduation. The
bullet dinner held In Talbert Dining Room was hosted by the Faculty of
Engineering and Applied Sciences. Chatting with Industrial representatives
are Dean George C. Lee, center, and Associate Dean lor Educational Ser·
vices Howard Strauss, right.

Gyn-OB residents study microsurgery
A new program aimed at teaching
mtcrosurgery techn iques to U/ 8
resideniS in obstetrics and gynecology has
begu~ at MOiard FUlmore Hospital:{;ates
Circle
Accordtng to Dr Marlin Wingate . U/ B
professor of .gyn·OB. the program wUI
provide comprehensive training In the
use of the operating room mkroscope for
procedures onvolving the Fallopian tubes
In the past . residents' training in
mlcrosurgery has been lomited to assisting
sw~ns dunng such procedures
Dr Wongate . who heads a team of
U/ B· Mollard RUmore surgeons involved
tn the program . notes dis of growmg im ·
portance for resldeniS to learn actuaUy to
perform mlaosurgiCal techn~ques
Other team members are Drs. Harold
Feldman and Bha&gt;kar Achor, U/B
cbnocal a · tant professors of gynecology
and obst trlcs
The pri(Oary gynecologx: ·procedure
utdiztng the mlaoscope It one which at·
t mpti to teverse stenlizatlon by opening
Falloptan tu
blocked by infection 01
dehberat ly closed by tubal ligation to
prevent pregnancy

wo...en want It r~
Tubal ligation onvolv cautenzing or
tyong and cutting the Falloptan tubes to

prevent the egg from traveling to the
uterus where It could become fertilized . It
is an effedive sterilization procedure
which some women seek to ha ve re-

versed if they remarry or lose their
children
"Until the operating room microscope

who seek It are good candidates for the
procedure "If the tubes have been
cauterized o r cut and tk!d near the uterus

or at th e far ends of the tubes. reversal is
less likely to be successful than ~ the tubes
were blocked near the middle:· explains
Wingate

was introduced a few years ego , the sue·

cess rate of reversal surgery was o nly
about 15 to 20 per cent. Using the
mlaoscope . which allows the physician
to better see the goose-quill-sized tubes.
the success rate IS now about 50 per
cent :· says Wingate.
Reversal is p;ossible ~ tube damage is
minimized during surgery with an eye

toward allowing the physician to recon·
ned the severed parts 10 the future .
"Reversal surgery has been less sue·
cessful In the U.S . than elsewhere
primarily because of the tlueat of
malpractice suits stemming from failure of

the iniHal procedure ... Wingate points
out U pregnancy occurs later. the physi·
cian may be sued Thus. providing for
future reconnection is seldom a concern .
ln other countries. where malprad1Ge
suit&lt; are virtuaUy unknown , less surgical
damage is done to the tubes, makong sue·
cessful reconnectlon more likely
Despite the increasang success rate of
reversal surgery, only about half those

7 -month research grant total
up 11 per cent to $17 million
"Aerosol DepoSition In the Human
Respiratory Syslem ." $6.000 from the
Arthntls Foundation to R. Dziak . Oral
B10logy. for a projeCt entitled . "Regula·
tlon o( PrOSl~nd in E2 Receptor Bin ·
ding In Bone. $46.781 from NIH toM
RelChlm , Blochemostry . fm studies of
"Immune Responses to Non-DNA Con·
tainlng Antlgl!ns on SLE:" $79.840 from
IH oo M L Taub . Biochemostry. lor In·
ve tigations of "Hormonal Regulation of
Kidney Epitheloal Cell Growth ."
Also. $62.353 from· NIH to S. Gallant .'
Pathology, for work on " V ucular Receptors M004!ralocortk:oids." $72 ,851 from
IH to B able. Pathology. for studies
ol "lmmunologocal InJUry to Tubules tn
Heymann ephritls." $52,316 ftom lH
to S W Spauldong, MediCine, for TSH ·
Dependent Phosphorylation ol Nucle·
0t0rn.t Prot Vls." $14 .700 from IH to
G Costa for "Anorexia and Weight Loss
In Lung C.nc«r ." $67,996 from lH 10
P T Lansbury. Chem try. for "Total
Synt
o1 Anti Neoplutic Poeudo·
que nolides," and $135,000 from NSF
to R F Gine. Geoloslbl

x-

Pre-operative sereenlng
Before scheduling the patient for rever·
Slll procedures, physldans test the
woman and her partner to be sure they
are otherw~ capable of producing a
child . If the woman doesn 't ovulate or the
male doesn 't have sperm counts and
motility nues within normal limits, the
procedure woll not be attempted.
The physicians also examine the tubes
directly using a laproscope inserted near
the navel to detennine lht! degree of
damage .sustained in the previous
surgery Injecting dye through the eervix
and lookong through the laproscope, they
can determine at what point blockage occurs. Reversal surgery takes about three
to four hours u.sing a general anesthetic.
Wingate says Millard Fillmore
Hospital's Interest in supporting the new
teaching program will allow gyn-OB
residents at U/ B to become more adept
at performing mlaosurgical techniques
Later. he hopes the program may be
expanded to anclude practicing
gynecologosu who wish to learn the pro·
cedures

Dr. Charles M. Elwood. weD·known
Buffalo internist and U/ B cUnical professor of medicine and pharm•cology.
died Jan . 19 after collapsing at a North
Tonawanda tennis club. He was 51.
In private practice with the Buffalo
Medical Group at 85 High St.. Dr.
Elwood loved teaching and had long
been active in programs at the U/ B
School of Medicine. He was also director
of Buffalo General Hospital's rena l
isotope laboratory.
For the past two years. he coordinated
the sophomore physica l d iagnosis
course. working with more than 30 physicians who served as course preceptors.
The year-long course teaches students in·
tervlewing skills. laboratory diagnosis and
techniques for performing physical ex·
aminations.
Well-liked by patients. colleagues and
students, Elwood . who had been in
private practice since I %3. often made
house calls. a growing rarity in medicine
today .
He received the M.D. degree from
U/ B. and took his internship "' Buffalo
General Hospital and .his residency in in ternal medicine at"the University of Illinois
Research and Education · Hospital in
Chicago.
•
He was a Board-certified internist . a
Fellow in the American College of Physi·
dans and a member of the American
Medical Association . the New York State
Medical Society and the Erie County
Medical Society .
Dr. Elwood Is survived by his wife . the
former Nancy Bowers; sons. Karl and
Kurt , and daughter. Kristin: a sister. Mrs.
Gretchen C . Beck : and a nephew.
William F. Hanavan . a freshman at U/ B
School of Med icine.
A Charles M. Elwood Memorial Fund
has been established at the Buffalo
Medical Group . 85 High St. . Buffalo.
N.Y. 14203.

AAAS taps
Bruckenstein
as fellow, too
A second member of the facuhy was
elected a fellow of the American Associa·
lion for the Advancement of Science at
the Association's January 7 CouncU
meeting. [The Reporter last week noted
that Dr. Raoul Naroll had been so
honored .)
Dr . Stanley Bruckenstein of the
Department of Chemistry received the
recognition "for contributions to elec·
troanalytical chemistry, and In particular
for his advances in the theory and prac·
tice of ring-desk eledrodes ...
A fellow ol the AAAS Is defined as "a
member whose efforu on behalf of the
advancement of sctence or its applica·
lions are scientUically or sociaUy
distinguished ..

Personnel-news
y.,. Formo Awallable
For the convenience of interested employees, Federal and State Income Tax
Forms (short. long, various schedules and Instructional booklets) are again
available this year In the Personnel Department's Benefits Rack located In the
lobby of
Hall , Amherst Campus .

volts

When Your Child Reaches Age 19
A dependent chiiJ loses eligibiiHy for coverage under the health Insurance
program on his, or her. 19th birthday, unleM totaUy disabled at the time, or a
fuD -lime •tudent at an ac:Credlted educatlonallnstltutlon.
II your child totaUy disabled at the time he . or she reachea 19, you ihould
contact the Personnel Department (Amherst Extension 2650) for the forms
necessary to apply for continuation of coverage under the State program.
If your child Is no1 disabled but Is attendong an accredited educatlonallnslltu·
tion on a fuU-timc basis on his, or her, 19th litrthdAy, health insura~overage
continue, without further action on your part until graduation . marriage,
• Withdrawal from fuD-time stu&lt;knt status or atlalnment of age 25, whichever
comes forst . At that time, H will be your responsibility to contact the approj&gt;riate
ln..uance CMT\era for convert d contracts.
II your child -II not diaabled , and Is not a fuD·tlme student. HIs your respon·
d&gt;llny to contacl the appropriate insurance canlers lor a pnvate Insurance con·
tract Your faUur to do 10, afler your dependent loses coverage, may rHult In
waltVlg pertocls and a lapM ln.hls, or her, h alth Insurance coverage .

~

�Ntbruary 14. 1980

7

Language teachers now lobby like Teamsters, NRA
m8llon 1111 lln't much In the federal
Modem . IChenw of thlngo.
l'heN's been a r.c:ognitlol:l In Con·
AI thlee agenc~n are adiYely lobbying jPUO. too, IN! ~ proficiency can
In the nation's QP~t81.
..._, promole American foreign trade.
But don't conlure the aciMtles of the IN! .....,..... IIUdy can hq&gt; """"' the
thou , Rk.hard I. Brod , executive
U.S. men compe11t1ve agatns1 Toyota,
secretary of the Asoodatlon of Depart·
Mazda, and West German products.
menta of F-tgn Language of the MLA,
But, Brod urged , despite the
wged !&gt;ere last week.
breakthroughs, "We have to continue to
"We only have a two-room office and
light lor a place In the sun and for the at·
no budget at al lor three martini
tention of Congress."
lunches."
Thus, the lobbying effort.
111e "we" Brod referred to ls an
Even though the federal dollar "Isn't
tomalgarnatlon of 10 organizations lrorn
the only dollar that counts," Brod said,
the normally-!Agmented language pro"It's a vid&gt;le dollar; it has the Impact; it
sets the tone."
fession . They have joined to rent olflc:e
space on Dupont Circle and to hire a slafl
ooocau-Jiao
penon
In " lobbying and
liaison • who will "represent the lnteresl of
On cempuMS, Brod noted , language
the language teaching community In
sludles have clearly bea&gt;me vcoca·
Washington ."
tional-a "salutary effect" to his eye , up
It's not "dlrty to go Into lobbying," Brod
to a point.
said at the dedk.atlon of the new
"That II to say, If we can aeate a
Language and Learning Laboratory In
useful, sobd responsible course, French
Clemens HaD. Feb 6 . In lad, K could be
for businessmen , Spanish lor nurses,
hannlullor the profession not to.
German lor executives, line. Assuming
we have the wherewithal, the know-how
A 'ec•"'•low' .tate of aflaln
to aeate the right kind of course with weD
n... recent report of the President's chosen materials, I beUeve our colleagues
Commission on F~ Language and
should continue to do this . . . . [But) it
International Studies, Brod pointed out.
does not necessarlly mean that we are no
called -ntion to the "scandalous" state
longer humanists. believe thai h puts an
Of foreign language attainment In
extra burden on us to articulate just what
U. S ., Insisted on the need lor lore'
it is that we do when we or~ humanists.·
"It's easy to explain what French lo r
language skills and training In lntema ·
tional studies. and noted a very clear
preferenee for funct io na l sp o ke n
language skills lor American students.
Federal· Incentives were proposed to
encourage colleges and univemtles to
push these stud ies . CapKation grants
were suggested : a $20 federal boun ty for
each student In a lower level language
course: $30-35 per head for those In
more advanced courses. $45 lor mdivlduals taking an exotic language
That's line, wonderful really. aslar as it
goes, Brod said .

What do the TnrnsteB, the Nallonal

Rille

Association and

the

~ Asoodatlon have In common?·

.._-I'ICIId

A.......,

r

Time to do •omethlog
Now someone has to pock up the Ideas
and ru n with them Congressman Paul
Simon of lU~nO!S IS looking to see what
kind of biU can be brought out of the
House of Representatives to Incorporate
some ol the proposals
But . asked Brod . who's "going to con·
vince Johnny Jones or Maria Martinez
that rt's m his or her Interest to learn Rus...,n . Thai. or French We can talk a lot
about the nation's In terest , but . that
doesn't necessan,ly get the idea across to
Johnny or Mana and their parents
Perhaps a slogan , Brod suggested It's
worked lor foghhng dtsease . and selling
Tegr1n Why not. "Help Stamp Out lnfec·
tiou MonolinguaiJ&lt;m ." or "Spare Your
Child the Heartbreak ol Beong the Only
Monolingual on the Block ."
There's some good news out of
Washington , Brod reported . the amount
ol money lor
language and area
programs may be upped fro m S 18 million
to $30 million 10 the new budget But S30

""*-nen Is al about; K lsn~ qufte so
eay to explain what Frmch, or German
or Korean means to the young Ieamer or
what K does for the mind, or what It does
lor perception, cognlliYe sldlls and tplr·
ltual growth.
are chalenga to our
ability to articulate and our capacky to ex·
plain ourselves. . . .n... pubk still has
no sense of what humanKies are aD about
despite the besl efforts of the National En·
dowment. And, I regret to say a declining
job market has h~ lower the prestige
of our field ."

n.c-

~

..........

Greek

Night
Friday was 'Greek Nlgbl' at Squln as
the campua HeHenlc community ate.
dralllt, dai'ICIId and wu merry.

..... ......

·- --~

-

.. -~
....-. . ;

academy?"
II humanists faU to reach down to
elementary schools and are hesitant to.
get more Involved In adult educ.tlon, In
community prognoms, and In the public
defense ol the profeMion, "we wtl-oSUffer
an even greater loss than we are now ex·
perienctng," Brod predicted .

A .-..d ....... ..._
Despite both federal Interest and the
new vcocational vogue, Brod said ,
Ahead of the MLA opokapenon on
language enroUrnents are dropping.
the dedk.ation program, representatives
French is beginning to stabilize and Italian
of Canadian government and Radio
Is "doing well." But between 1974 and
Canada International In Montrul
presented to the Language-Learning
1977, German was dropped in 102 col·
legeo across the United States. Russian
Laboratory a catalog for the 1,000-record
was dropped in 57 "and when a language
collection previouoly delivered on behalf
Is dropped lrom a college H ls very hatd to
of that government. The records, In
several different languages, cover a broad
get It back ." That's the real crisis, he
spectrum of categories: drama , short
contended.
The way to go, Brod proposed , Is to
stories, history . social documentaries.
children's programs. opera and jazz. The
rebuild the humanities base lrom the
ground Up. "I think we In the universities
collection Is open both to University and
community use.
have particularly neglected the
''This is the second major favor done
humanKies. . . In the elementary alld ·
secondary schools. HumanKies In the
lor the U.S . by Canada In one week ."
elementary schools may mean language
said George levine, dean of the Facuhy
of Arts and letters, alluding to recent
arts, history. programs that we tend to
leave to somebody else to develop , to ad Canadian involvement in spirit ing
minister , to characterize . And yet they
Americans out of Iran.

'""'ling

Trustees alter
rule on names

are OUT responsibdltles. II we are
humanists, .. .education ought to be at the
canter of our concerns. Education was at
the canter of concern of Socnta and
.Plato. why shouldn't Mbe lor th._ of us
who have succeeded them at the

.

�•

Day off
..........,, _ ... doMd .. lloaor of

G.r.-

w.......-·.

8lnhdloy: • .,._.

....... ~ and • lu:y, .....
...to.eoocl ... all

CALENDA
'

n ....day-

focully and..., . . onlnfonnol-._
how lld·togdf&gt;er" owty 1lwnclov hom S p.m ot
f&gt;locolo's R......,.onl . 1,24 Millonpoo1 Hwy • in lho
Triod buidong Tho - al drinks " •educed dunng
~ hour and hon d'oeu\ll'a • • free

14

YAI.EKI1NE'5 DAY

CARNATION SALE

Squ. . Contra~ Lounge Solo wll bogon ot 8 • m

s,-.o..d by

l.ombdo Doloo.

~

.

COMPOsals FORUM'

PEDIA1111CS RESEARCH SEIIIIIIAII'

••4

l••••oloelc.al

l•••n o b io l~lc al

........ a l - eo........ Aotle&lt;oPolridl Gonnon . M S Boon! Room .

H..,...

WOIII£N'S SWIMMING It DMNG'
Bi6lo SIO"' c..a.,.. C1arlt Hal 7 p.m.

Choldr..,·,

12 noon

PSST:
MANAGING tNIEJII'DlS()NAL

~· ·

232 s.,..•. 2-4 p ..

How '*' dtlferonces and be manoged .
._...s.
ond ,...,._.,1M woOOhop ...a help

wtucta tho own
lnteraG. v.a&amp;Hs. Of dcwes dlkr from olhcm ~
whom ltwy we linked lJMful conc:epts IOf
undent.llndlng thea •uat.ons WJI be pr61tnled

Graduate student composom Baird Rectal Hall

,. ....,

8 p m Meo Sponto&lt;ed by the Deplrunonl of
JUST BUFFALO ~y READING'
Rebecc:a, 8rOMI Wll rod frorn he tnt book of
poetty. S.Woy Split . Tho Schuper HOUS&lt; 1802
Niagara Slfftt (near Amherst) 8:30 p m This
&lt;Ooding lo modo posolbW in pol1 wllh public funds
from the New Votk SeN Councl on 1M Arts; and
rhe Natk)orwtJ Endc:Nnnenl for ttw AN

pWt~ts ~IN Jit·u abam in

n..r. ..,. ...., be ...

_..niiV

r... tole p1oyong
Loder 8Mb~~-. Bunke, Pb 0 . lliSOCYte pro
t~ of-.IOCNII ~ - ..-.d. her asaooatn.
DRAFT DEBATE '

Tho~-HOkWyCoundl•_,ng

a dtbMe on the quaiJOn of ... drahed -..my ..... jor
..m.. pu._r-. Pralnoon Olton voo~oy
al .... ~ o.,..rtm&lt;nl .... Chooios Hoynoo of
Tololo!l Colltgo 112.0'8rion IW 3 30 P m Foes
.d~

GEOLOGICAL !iCIEI'IaS SEIIIIIIAII'
SulpWdo 0...0 .. -

""'"' The
Klorolu&gt;
.... ~-- 0 Soon.
~ al Goolow. Uno.cn0y of T...,_
Room 18. 4240 Ridgo Lea 3;30 p m Calles ..t
doughnuos013
-

l'tfYSIC$ COUDQUIUII'

,_N. -

c-w-Rcs&lt;noc n.

de to be .nnounc:ed 454 Fronc:.a:ak 3 30 p m

CEl.UJLIIIl PHY1iiOLOGY SEIIIIIIAII•
HtOEocrc·
Ahmod A-h. 108 Shermon 4 P m Caf!M
o1 3 4H• Room 5- IS

.......,.__.R-!Soii ...

Wlor----___

IIIOLOGICAL !iCIEI'IaS SEIIIIIIAR•

.....,. ._ the

...... ~IUNofC
1
Nolollao?, Dt .lonlccl.or..- . ~of
- . . . t l4 4p m.

aASSICS a.ua I.ECTUII£'

TIM-~. Dt. - . , . Koul·

2r.0c-

..... utB
4pm. Rolr....,_wll
bc.-.dMeo-

_..._ ....

JIEOtANICAL ENGDIEEIUNG SEIIIIIIAII•

- .ilall-.

- Y -.Dt RcllatE
Colopon ~ Tho Kovo. 101 Boldy 4 p m

w.. ..t c::hMte 110 falow,

IUf9IIY-tndodlnt
.. ono"'

lilldol'-' _..,._

p..., Sooto

_ - . .-------.. - .

UUMIFRJl'

-. wo~&lt;~mon-. ~- 4 .30.7

..... 9 30 p m
st roo

Gononl-

c-. c

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

Science. C.rnegM!·Melon · · ·
4226 Ridge Lea. 3:30
at lin Room 61

PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNDS•
Recent Devdopments In V
Agalnst
\llnof oro.-. 0. Kenne!h Mi! &lt;ob • .....,.....
pro~....,.. of podlolra. Childm1s tlO..,ool Me'dkol
Center. Boslon Kanch Audnonum. Chlc.iren'1
Hospii.J 11 am .

ENGINEERING SEMINAR•
Trapplnt ol Long Waves Owr a Submerged
RidtJt.., W Neu 104 Padtl!l. MDI Screet Campus
3 .30 p m 5poo&lt;o&lt;ed by lito Department of
Engon..n.,. Science. Aer- Engineering and
Nucte.. Engineenng .

p.m .~nd doughnuts

Ate-·

BAG WNCH COUOQUIUM'
Aa ~ of
Geot&lt;ophy. Dt
ChorlesH . V. Eberl . Geo!JophyDepon.,...t . U/ B
123 W ........ ~ Complox 12 noon. Spoo IOrtd by the Envttonmena.l Studiei Cente:r

JIIEDIONAL CK£111S111Y SEIIIIIIAII•
The
~ al ........... .. .
al Plotstudent
.... , Department ofRobcn
G
8.-UM'I'.
gradiU.te
Meclidna1
ChomlsDy C· l21 Coofo&lt; 2 p m Rdrnhmenb

o.-. -

Aew--·

CfW. ENGINEERING SDUNAR•

S2:-

Scoe .......... low ... . . . _
... _ a l _ _ Doo!&gt; -

......

-.u;sGET-~

~··-·-tooooundU...·
---low •

.., _ _ -

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

-~--tojuM

.......... - - - -- - a l .....

CIVIL ENGINEEIUliG SEIIIIIIAII'
Hydr"aullo E8ects of Power Generation on the
H.....,, h..... ultc .........
p.,.... Authority of S..IO of New Yotk. 139 P......
4·5pm.

Gtut Lokes, A

PHYSIOLOGY SEIIIIIIAII•

to~~~~-=-~~~

4 15 p m CoffH Vtlill be served at 4.

Harclcore (1919) Conf~nce Theatre, Squire.
4 30. 7 ond 9o30 p.m. GoNol o d - S2:
studoniS st roo

Geoogo 0 · u.-.oy of Mmnaota 152
P..-br. Main StrH1 C.mpus 2 30-4 p m
Rofrah......tswolbe...-d

WRESlUNG '

AIM MEETlNG'

The ~n lmtwue of AeronauhCS and
tOO.V "' 22S P.Mr at 3 p m

~tics rnem

Topocs 10 be dosomed include the onps to O.ytoo .
rtw upc:ormng student confnmce in Boston . and •

a.._.,,.__

SUNY
Clorl&lt; Hoi ll&lt;gonning
al430pm
Four 1979 chempk)nl, wil defend their trtkos in
mo 20ch AnnualS.... U - ol New Yotk

Alhlctic Cool.,..,.. CSUNYAC) - . , . Chom·
.........,..

Tom Jac:outot. 118-poonds, Buffalo. Ronnie

o.-&gt;o. s..... Joo

,.-_...,..,.coo..,. Twofilmo. Apollo 7

V.,Noy. 142.

ond llMT_, ,...._.~~ • ..;I

Brockpcn S..to. ond Bob Amoon. 190. Cortlood
Scata, won crowns 1ut yror • u~

be shown after the me:cting AI internad eng~neer ·
... .......... ond tocvlly should ancnd

....

GEOGIIAPtfY DEPAIITIII£NT SEifiNAR '

~-~~­
Mori&lt;
-........... ~ of Geo!Jophy.
Sjo-.._ u.-s.y 422 Fn&gt;naok. 3 p m.

-·

Giani. 1roo.

,...._.,...,..mum .

fVtftn - 7 9
Cortlond s..... lho ......... ..... chompion
The IOUmarnrnl wll start Frfday, feb 15 al4 .30
p.m . with four rounds .meduled. end resumes
S.Mdoy. Feb 16. olli:OOo m . lhochornpionshlp
finallat6:00pm
11cbos. oo $2 od.b and S I otudcnb ...,h 10
uch o f " ' ' " - ISS od.b and $2
ttudentl for the tDUJ'f\a~Mnl ~) d be: on

cords.'"'

Wll£S1UHG'
SUNYAC et...mpfonoh,... a-t&lt; Hal I I a m
•nd 6 p.m.
S.. F....y ~;stings '"' prices.
UUAB FILIII'

Death of a Buruucrat fCubl . 1966} Con
,.,._ l'Ma•. Squlrit S:JO. 7,45 and 9 .45 p.m
GoNol o d - 12: OlUdeniS $t.roo.
A Buffalo premiet'e. thil l~m ls: • polickai Atire
about buruuaacy end l'ild tape ScorN of thf tam
makers whom 11 pays trt,uw to .. 11laSterl of (::Wlema
•• Lua Buoucf. Lowel ond Honly. Chaplin ond
~aeon . -on. of the fun nint moWs of 1he

,..._... ."- s.ttoN-.

IRC FILIII '
Ft1oco Kid. 170 MFAC. ~ - 7 ond 10 p.m
""'IO IRC . . _.

Sl '"' ........

CAC FILIII'

nm.. 7:30 p .m

~ _. """""- Dlo: no Notwe al lho
Dt · 5y&lt;oaoM
~ 614Boldy 3 P '"

U/ a ·c ou.ca. IIIEEI1NG'
Room. Sth floO&lt;

Couocl -._

c-

I

. . . .,....

\/LSI, H

T

a..

Aa

DANCE/ MUSIC'

~._.,~

~

~. ~

of Compute.

mid.

ICE HOCK£Y'

l'lo-.., -eoa.... Tooo_...

a

__ .,__,

Golo.. Q.Mt... "Quwtot/Quonm
C.... l'Ma•. 681 Moon Str-. 8 p.m Gen..ol
o d - 14: sludenos ond _,.. 12. AOS
- . . ..._., s,-.o..d by lho c..- 10&lt;
Tbc -

In

CAC FILIII'

Gen..oi-SI7S. otudents SI.JS

3 p .m

~SCIENCE OOI..LOQUIUM•

SJ

IRaiOd XI &amp;. &amp;ok Shcn. 170
w Mf'AC. ~- 7!30. 9:30 ood 12 mldnlgl&gt;t
-

0

n--..m

donee -.

v-.dlot_.....
M - o n k -.
two,_..

hoo

mtde
kw abe PfOUII'am "'R~
Of • Forma- U."' • a IlOilo. 1141"1 to mutk bv Tom
w.... The ..........
coiled
o n d . - .. f ... . _., .... of ....

donee.- -·

-v-..-

"*-

,' .to-

Saturday - 16

P1ta050P1tY - ·

*XOitlpiW*'wnt

· · - " ·....,

shot&gt;

pm O..ond...,. ,.,a h _ , - . , . , .
..... s,-.o..d by""' Q l.Jnguiolics Oub

loto-.,.,.

dioyla
-

UUAB MIDNIGHT FILIII'
Lc s..
lf..oce. 1973) . coot..mc:e
Theatre. Squire . 12 midnight General admtsslon
S2. SIUdeniS SI .SO.
How (not) to become • 5WUlger In a world ~
uln·pennissiw il the concern of th 111 moral tale ol 11
Woody Allen-like shopkeeper .

_ . . Cllaled XI &amp;. &amp;ok Shcn. 146
Dlofondorf 7:30 •. 9o30 .... 12
Geoonl
..._
$1 Th: students $1,.35.

_. ....._......,.. R. . .. J...,.. Gtrilort. pro~...,. ,
Oc ~rtm e nt of Modnn Ungua ges , U / 8
.......... Lounge. SpouldO&gt;g Quod .. ~ 3

wi1 be pooionned .
"Atobos4&lt;M." door....... by C&lt;&gt;mpony Undo SoMnludl. roo blood of
ood
.......... doncc ........ ondlo'"'IO""""of
Pt-. Dowland ood Vovoldl. Tho Buftolo
Gu.... Quorwt ..;I be ......... .. ploy ""'

For love

GLF OPEN HOUSE'
The Gey Lhenbon Fronl is sponsoring an ~
house ~ 8 p m In 332 Squire R ftrahmem~ and
muse wiD be provkied .

wloo!lhedcke&lt;ofl":oofCiotltiW.
IRC FILIII'
Fritco Kid. 146 DWfiPndort 7 •Ad 10 p m Frn
10 IRC ~ . Sl 10&lt; .. hers.
Fritco Kid fcatura ~ Wtldet M a ..ebbi
1umed coweoy&gt; Ha...- FO&lt;d ..._.billing

----w~s-.Ruta

F..., ,_

Alplla t.a..wa o.lla .. ...... .........

== =.~~~~~=~~-u::

laddas as an inlegr:al pan ol the dendng , and ·IS WI
lO music by Ntna Stmone.. Grover WMhingcon end
Bil Schnee .
Bd'Ot"e the dancing begins. the Suff•So Guitar
Quand wil open the concert with works of Brahms
Defalla. Revel end Bach .

utJAB.U..·

o...-R-aiUMn-........ ~
by lho - . , ln-ol Equotloo Method,

LINGUISTICS SPliiiiG COUOQUIUM

Dt - ~lhou.alu,__..,
hart~
~In MW'r. . ..

7 . Room 4 1.

Friday- 15

" M'

ilho Gennon

"'"* -

the

• _ . _ . . . . , .... • pon&lt;honl 10&lt; - .... .
ploi'O'f by p - t.-.1 Tho- b -v......-"

.. ......-but

_...con&gt;btn-.

of Ed-

Griog ond RandyTo~lho-al-.a..- .

MUSICAL IEI.ODRAMA'

~ - moto.homo
· lho Strou•·Ah&lt;l Lord
T...,....,.
. p1on1o1 Elonor..-5d&gt; ond

•odler Mortyn Boobe a.o.t Rdol IW 8 p m
GoNol 13. UIB focully. ..... olu..,.
ood-cllloens S2. - 1 5 SI n.:t..oosoot lito " - only. Spooootod by lho Deponmenl of

M"*

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

Tho ......, _ undodylog · -of
TenrJVIOO's
venc n.ur• ttw. heroic poem""
~in neture A do. &amp;MrwS , lb4l' IICIOI'..f.tnil
von Po.art who.., a~ 1n ~. WI.

'*'*
.....,.,..,.....

chid ~ of lito Mundi C.O... Opers The
-t. - IOtendod to be • "spoaol _....,_... 10

----·--.
. -Thuo
lu1IO..,...- - - _....,
.......

- -. 10-hiod«&lt;omoiOO'y ...... ..
........... - . . . , ......... ....rtltodbylho

10-

- - n . . -· pold ........ m._.

�FebnYry 14. 198()

'Chicago School'

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

.... Cllbp Sct.oal ol Archlledurw ..
11M SA£D Library. H.,.. HaD•
............ Narda 14. Showa ........

...._ .......... doeChlc:8to Scadt
~-

----

-londcd .... on. por1 ai.Joe .. for hlm on. ""'9

-

Kom't "Showbool .· 11om -

" ' " ' - Robaon't - · "()!' Mon
'I MOCiies.. Hil sd-chown I"'Or as • bladc-..::tMSl
cut lhort a promiling mcMe c.rftl HowcYer. he
mode II films. includiog "The Emperor Jonos" one!
He left Holywood "! 1942 to punue anti r·IOSt
actiY1tia • ht continued to 5109 for 1M Amenc;an

public: N a foe of r«:~~m~ hit picketed 1M \AihM

House. r&lt;futed ., *'lJ ... -led - - -ausodcd lynchO&gt;t one! Iough! ....... Con·
!1',. for"t&gt;lock cquaJ!y In bucbol
&amp;o• Peoc:e ,....__ His ou~ lldmlrahon
lor the ScMrt UnkM\ , which was admiNited wtth ha
_ . . , . . ., I~ ol lho Stolon Pcoco !'No.
turned the Amencan pubk agemst him during the
cold WW , Wtualy ~ OUI hili SQge carMI' •
He refuted to sey publidy \lt'hdher hit was •
Communfst or oot . end the Suate Department
revobd his paNC)OI1 in 1950 A SuJftfi'Wt Court
~ _. another c.asc forced the rctum of ha
pllllpCWt In 19S8. Bu.t his darts to reviw h• CArftl
~ ....EWH

hit,..__ ......

..........

.. p&lt;Milion - eoncert melle

wllh .,.. Amrtric&lt;ln ¥ft·

phony - ·..·
ond ~ ond ........
.._.......
SoulhA..-.

u...-

A~ ltw ceWn ~ In Nr Cobol ""'•
futu,.. , the Mu* Dtp.nment ~. • . .

lorlhcomiog
" " "when
' - 10the Quonct """""
whom
...
met lui oummcr
., c;,..

mony one! s..tz.rlond

Scrourd&lt;. !rom

M•

Donou
.....h.
- -·
.,
Englroh.
Gem..
ond..............
Mcnc1. Coboo -... ..,....S
lhil wmma concm.iDng tn Europt and hopa: to
spend enaung wmrnen: tMt-. • wd
For three-. prbto the- Dccembor holid~oy ieUOn , the RCMOe Quane~ made • ti)Ur oliN
South. gMng conc&lt;riJ .. wo~
"'-csond
workshops in AMbame. Ten~ . Ncwth and
South Carolrno.
and Florida 11wy ....,
g.~ve • concen for rhc ~ o1 A.nwnun
S......, lhc Pan American UNon .,

.. .._,

v_,..

w......_,,

DC.

VICO C0U£GE LLCTUIIE SBUES'
- ~., Elob- c . - y ~· -Mrecht V0:. ~ Poft ....
Sdcatiot, D R Wiowal, Ph D. Foculoy ClUb. Blue
Room , MainS.... Campus 8 p m
CMI

Fir-""-·

Once dftcrt&gt;ed • o -..og~c hm&gt;.• Robcoon dlod
on Jan""'l' 23. 1976 •• tho ogc ol 77

FUJl5 (fiUI NAIIIIA11VEJ'

WOIIIDI'S BASIIE1'IJALL •
ll&lt;odlpon S&amp;ooo Colo!Jo. C.rl&lt; Hal 7 p m

Land

M..._ al lhc !Deren. 19451.

(O..on , 19431 . AI

1947).

1950) . Notdook

R•bblfa Mou (Anve:r .

147 [);dcndorf 9 p
the C«ntcr ,.. - · Scudy
(Mcni&lt;en)

IID'ER10IRE ORCHESTR.V

&gt;--------------------------------., Mled"' .. -.........., ouccaoM Goo-

moo""" ollho · - . ocldod --.o~o~y 10
Strau." reputation .... compoMr
MMtyn Booboo holdt • ol M-* clo,pw.,
- - poriormonce one!~ from ... Un-tlty ol Cobado Md • ~of
in w:.:.
- t h o " - ' School ol"'- Slw ...........
on lho loadty ollho Communoy M - School
Eloncn J Sell joonod lho
loadty horw.,

m-

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1973 A.-ol&amp;l!olo. ftholdtollodoebol
M- clo,pw !rom SUC 01 Fr-ond o .. ol
-* ond '"""'mcntol ~
fromlho Nanhoaon Schoalol M- Slw ' - bHn

M-.,

Moaday- 18
GEORGE WASHINGTO!ni IIUITHDAY
Obocnood holdav no_, olllca doood

UUAII JdDfi1GHT FIUI'
Lo s..
lfronce. 197
Conlo&lt;.._
~-- 12 ~ Goneal oct.......

sa...

12 ......... 1150

'

IIIDI'S IIASKETBAI.L •
0.... S&amp;ooo Colo!lo-1?-" Hoi 8 p m

DANCE(...-:•

~0...~.---­
Tioe0.... Qowtoo. ·~~ .

---

c : . - n - .. 6111-S.... 3pm Gonorol
- M . - o n d - - 1 2 ADS
- " " " " " ' " " 5por.....t .... tho c..- ...

.W.AF-~IIeed~ - ­
.luno C.....to.d. " ' - " 1-.oy 202 1loldy
1-2 20 p m. "'-*&lt;~ b!l lho flooding ond Soudy
516 ~ ol The

--Holt

L£CTUII£ ON AGmG •
- R - 1o ~-tc ..._.lor lhc
EWcrtr. Dr. Ed-.1 5IOinlold 234 Squ;rc 3:30
p m. Spcor-.d b!l the Multidiodpllnory CAnloo '"'
... Study olllging.

p-.. -.. ... ..

r...--

~. o..ld T. Show. U/8.
107 01lrion 4 p.m. .l&lt;*ody hold """ the ~
11-..d&gt;
be

s.m- son.. -

...

......t &amp;o.n s-s 30 p .m

FUJl5 (F1UI Hlsro.Y).
.. lho - - fDercn . 19431 . IU

C«ntor
f«W lt\Kitna rud at dwir IDOIIII didcnt rata. A ..
...... -.ad 1 0 - ........ will be ...

~~Donn . 19451 : ..._... " " -· 1947) . •
R.abttu··e Moott. (Angcr . 19SOt; Not..._
IMcnlwnl. 146 Oiolondorf 7 p .m Sponooood b!l

ploinod.

.... c.-lor -

- n i l y 10

....... ~ Oodrio-

-·

~y·~
_,_,

~

st-.. Dcporuncnt al
Molo&lt;ulor Biology. R - Pwlt. R_,.,

R-----lnRESEARCH INSTITUTE- '

o1

SP£CIAL SERIES ON ER'ECmiE
LEAIINING FOil UHDERGilADUA'IU •

..-

P£DIATRICS
llESEAIICH - ·
--ol......-~

ltyWido, Dr

Otildr«n't Hoopral 12 noon.

CHEICICAL EJIGINEEIUNG SEIIIJNAII•
_........,.._oiAoraoolloo-c-ol

u.w..ov ..........

S.aday- 17 -

Thanday- 21

, _ oo.:-: s _ . _ ....

~

Uolae .......... - ........ Dr.
llopootiMN oii'NnMcalow.

Soodv-

dir-.r.-..
R-.

al frio Courtly_ frio
C«ntor. Bullolo.
County ·
Whitney . N .D .. director . Department of
-"""'-·Eric County Medal
PHa..osoPHY iifJiiMAII•

Fodo,--

Tho

Spm

---~dlootho_..

o.o..
... Mr. p...,.
II •
-~
.... - ol !..- oc_,

UUAII FIUI'

o.Aofa-!CoM
n-..
,._ ~30. 7-4S

- - 12. CACFIUI'

ond 9U p•

-

Tooitolow c.-. Co1oeo ol - - The

Un-y ol low•

124 f -

4 p .m .

'11M-.........
.. ........
...........
...__
u.w..ov

s.,.n.

-l'll()(liiMI·

233
7 p '" F-.
tho~oiP_.R-.wt.o-•

. . . . c:a. . . . . . . end .:tor to t.ccw. •
. . , . _ - - . . , . . . . ond ...-.. ......
... be ............... _ . . ..

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_

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- - - Dr J E T.--. ortd Solctv
DMoot. o.t.Ridgo-..1~.
454 Fronaak. 3.30 p m

_____ .....,T_
y_.,
J..ECn.s IN Mac - . o G Y •
~of U.... .... PAH

Dr. Wtl;am H. llanotla . . , - al ..............
Uruwnlr\l ol .......... Cologo .. 51011
Sltcmton 4 p .ra. C...., 3.U .

hurry 1 0 - hil job o n d -

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~

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ol • Holywood -

ond ...........

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- ond Phlnrtocoloel •

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- ola..lolo
Otldton't Hooptol

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.......,_ .,.. on tDp al ...,. ond ----ond--

IIOIIES AND leOOPIJII AIIOICAN
&amp;OCIETY'
"W..td w....... . Go-.,. . . ,
(Wor4d w. o. _, ., - - 148 Oiolondorf_
1 30 p m 5por.....t b!l tho llopootiMN ol
~ -

IUE IIEEI1tOYUf CYa.E •

QoanoL 8 , ..
GooooralM . U/11- ~Hoi
- ..... . . . .
o n d - - S J. - 1 1
ol ... Quanoo- l &gt; - Coboo ond

lMca Ototo&gt;.
Cocco- . .................
........_ .. tho_
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Coboo
Dl Dl

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p-

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Gr-.-..-.
-

ond
-

........ -Col

-~...-...-on-10
_10

·""'-·-

ol Hontbto!l- -lloldy 3
pm
PHYiiiCS COI.LOQI• • •

Klout Octtla.

UUAIIWEDNBDAY NIGHT fiUIS'
- · · F - s,..t? (19641 . 7 p.m., Tho
.._... 0.. (19651 , 9 . 10 p.m. Conh!rcnco Thoolrc.
Sq... " - -·
_ .. F-~-IIodlliodoanond
p.... ....__,..,..,._. ...... . _ _

~013.U

PAUL-

R.._.

C«ntor.-

--1--__ .... - . -... . ..
_--_
.._,.,..__ --Holt
._____
-.. . . . . . .R-.---··
-'-· ---. --··..
p--__ .
- ..WAMaTAL'

c=-.1

1021- S.... (pwltingln
... - . - Strect loci. 2p.m .
P - t t ... be: s..-t Schwortz, M H S .
· Scuumon Alcoltoltm Tru~mcn~ C«ntor.
&amp;dlolo P.,dtlolric Ccnw:- 51... M .H.S ..
otiluloon Alcoltoltm ,

Tae.day- 19

()pcro Wooloohop

b!l

-10_ . . ---0..-c.tl

Chao
,.. ..........- ond ............ ...,.....,
Slrinflploycn . ...
.W.t rudngs on a regular besil

Wedaesday - 20

5WIJOIING a DIVING'
K.-. Colo!Jo- Clod&lt; Hoi 7 p.m

~

-Wooloohop
one!....................
()pcro
ondlor...- ~
ft'"'*""S.,...., ~1ft addibon k) her wadi.•

&lt;OOdv'-• ...

The MotrOpolllon ~· Ordwsln ..til read
Morart'• R - . under ohc dire&lt;tion al Paul
Schmid. Goodyear S.nd Hal 7:30 p m. Moutt's
......,_ 10 on. ....... Flute ond lho ......._ ol
fleato ... oho be rud under the d - al
Anthony Fumivol. dnocloo al Sc Poul't Calhod&lt;ol

m . Sponsoo.d

C5011~

CarlA.

4 p ...

t.-..,al

-EkOOI 4:10pm
... - . Soooultlne OinOte Dr Gr_ _" 'ay-.o.......-.oni)l.
--ol
·_
--lor...,.._,...__
_
_

.. --·

·-~.--·

�•

February 14. 1980

Woman treads on male ground~ teaches Jewish law
~from o.tood and the
Hebrew University In JeTUsalern . Aa:ord lng to Mrs. Breger. only a " handful" ol
other law 5&lt;-'hools ha"' a similar ollerlng.
Her seminar explores the processes or
dedslon-maklng In the Jewish legal
sySiern rather than following the more
conventional approach ol analyzing what
Jewish law says about torts. criminal matters. contracts or property ownership.
Breger said the course Is of sp:ecial
value to lhose .. with an interest In com·

Jhlish Law. which has dewloped and
been applied since Biblical limes through
rabbinic lnl"'l'felation and dedslons. Is
the subject ol a gnoduate seminar being
offered for the lim lime here .
The course. "Authority In Jewtsh
Law." Is designed for gnoduale law
Sludents. Ills being offered by the Department ol..._l Studies olthe Law School.
tn cooperation with Classics.
The tnstrudor Is London-born Jenn~er
Breger. whose credentials Include

..-er·s

parallve jurisprudence .

c_.,._,....
......
a.t.tlml ....

lc ....

" It Includes sociological and
philosophical comparisons with the
Anglo-AfiM!Iican legal sySiem as weft as
with other religious legal 'l!"'ems such as
Islamic and Christian Jaw. she noted.
An unusual aspect is that the course Is
being taught by a woman . Breger explained that Sludylng and teaching

• Calendar
HSL exhibit
MllciNd Hallowltz, History of Medicine
librarian at the Health Sclenc:n
Library, diopboys a surglcaltnstrulllelll
&amp;oao George Waahlngton'• era, part of
an uhlbH at the HSL. through March.

..__,_..._

Jhlish law has been a male domain
ahrough the cl!fliUrip. Some rabbinic
authorities ewn say the Jewish female
should be fori&gt;/dden from learning Jewish
1ega1 texts.
Only recently. she went on . have
Jewish women gained access to these
aexts as an accepted practice.
"What is fascinating ebout.lewbh law."
she observed. Is the way the ""'!iilen law"
ollhe Bible has been inmpreted and applied In light of changing soc:ial and
c:uhural conditions. "while sliD maintainIng Its sacredness."
She died the Uteral Biblical Injunction
or an "eye for an eye." This is Interpreted
more figuratively nowadays as a demand
that monetary compensation be provided
for an Injury.
The seminar Is also considering Inter- prelations~lled during crises. such as
the Spanish Inquisition and the
HolocauS1. when special rules were
necessary because survival of the Jewish
communlty was at stake.

• "Jewish law Is unique." Breger said .
"in thai its legal rul&lt;s developed
hlstorlcaUy under numerous political
regimes while Jewish courts only lntermlllently had the power to enforce their
edicts."
Noting
that _ " authority
Is
decentralized ." she explained that "each

..

1M MCOrld speaker WI this .senes bec.euse of hiS
knowtedge and ~nee- in ttudymg and fostering
CClOfJe'atlw ~ning by community and school
~ He Is edilot and author of lt.latesa teAl on
lhll oubl&lt;cl. eom ....... P -tion "' Educo-

rabbi can make decisions for his com -

munity. There is no hierarchical chain of
rabbis. no supreme court. or chieJ

don.
Spor.,..ed bv the Oepamnent of Curriculum
Drveloprneot And lnYruc;:tJOO.al Medae. . Faculty ol

justk:es."

Educauonal S.udw:s

On the other hand . the flexibility afforded rabbis in decls1on -making is constrained by the requirement that they ad
within the body of Jewish law and tradi-

UUABFILM'
Newdronl (Ausballa, 1978) Waldman Theatr~
'Amhnsl 4 30 . 7 •nd9 JOp ..- Ge""""odm""""
$2 lllHI&lt;no.$150

tion.
The seminar is exa mining : similarities

$ranrnng the yut\ hom 1948--56. Nt!WS~ront "
a ~ but dHt ey.ed namUW~tJOO of AwolnJiia '
n.w . .nnu:ent paroduol cukurt!. seen through the
eyn ol the men otnd ~· ...,h,u recot~ that
pmoJ on IWW'fil"l'\"1 fdm - 1 w.n hoc;Jked hom the

in decision -making by rabbis and COil) ·
mon law judges. to whal extent the rabl:&gt;i
is bound by precedent. and how subjec·
live the decisions made by rabbis are.

.Jl04 of Ch100 Marx 51oyrng 'Wahliny
Mardd.·
Ancb·ew San1s

fwst

SINGLES GET- TOGETHER
tfs diffltui &lt;l* betc Jot· newtomer&amp; to dw Un~Wt
slfy - e\'~tn 1~ '*"ho he
been ar~od for a
whM- w make fnendt. ~h anyone od~ than
~n.... o.tcolo.,.,..

In .an attvnpc 10 Joilef ~lny .md to "'"
piMn get to know Hdt odW'I' - a group of ~
f-.cully and st&lt;~ff .. e urgall.lltng an lnforma;J ~
hour geot toge-~- 11?\."*'\f ThuP.;day from 5o p m ott
Piccolo-s Rnu,1.. .nt 1424 Miller~ Hwy m ttw
TNd bulld.ng Th.? rosr of dnnk~o is rt'duc~ dunng
Nippy hour •nd horb d -~'"t'' are frff

SOCIETY Of WOMEN ENGINEERS
MEE11NG•
Prme..:ionlllism Through Fint lmpreuions..
-vou fWVt'f ~ a w.cond dwx:e to make a fwSI un
,..._.. • Mo&lt;t.n. Rosen . Prol.-.-..1 Jmog.s

fac-uky Club Blue ROom, Malo Streer C.mpos
b 30 ,p m r frfthmentt. 1 p m , program

,_..mbrtl only

R~ are r~u.ed

by Friday.

F..., 13 Coli Pouw •• 82S 2962

The process by which rabbis and
schollJrs gain preeminence and how their
opinions become authoritative will also be
looked at.
can b. performed 1n the TEAM dtmc: ~o~o-•th a
m111m.l *...unsl penod end at mnimal cost In ackh
oo .. ~ • TEAM opnate in such a fash100 .s to

\ltCft

n

-

fr~

PEACE CORPS/ VISTA INTERVIEWS'
Amhont' Boooh- Fob 20. IOJ.•Capom Holl
Ground Floor lnformat!Of'l Meeung - Feb 20 4
p m -'" IOC.pen
Main Str-Ht : Booth - Feb 19, 10 3. Squtre HaD
Lobby lniolmation Meetang· Feb 19. 4 p m . 232

Squ ..
~lOt lnt~ws Get •ppo.ntment and~
ltOA at Unrvenf~V P\acement Of'hce. Hay&amp; Annex
lLm

·5 p m

UUAB OPEN MIKE SEJUE5
Commit~ announus the
of IU ~ Mike ~ Squlfe H.U
the piKe to be e~ Thursday night
fi'OOl8 II p m for beet~ and ~mg enter
lfl~nmr.nt ThiJ Hm&amp;aer's open mike Wll be hosced
by Jo«&lt; N~ Anyone lruerftled in pe:domung
,....,"9.nupat730pm tnthe Rat.
·

UUAB Colfuhouse

Rathske~ il

P OETliY R£AOtNG 1DISCUSSION '

s- Camov•

p m "-

tlw lngioh D.ponm.nl'o

s,.o.-..t

&lt;Rodu&gt;~•

~

Progrom ol

l..Af.t--''Ufo"tlftid~

t aw • copy of tht book bnng
.... -- "" Chon ........... ol EngW\
I

il ay.

ye•tnPoveJtyt..w
lnfonnation meet.-.g Feb 27 , 4 p m , O'Bnan
1-i... Amhenc
m......- Fob 28. Plocemen1 OIIU. U/ 8 Low
School. 3rd l1oor O'Brian Make appointment now
THE WRITING PlACE
n.. Wribng Ploco 1o lhc ploeo 10 . . . lh•
~ill' off nght It' a a free dmp-in, tuiONI writing
center for anyorM: who wants help with wni:W\g It's
no4 tor poor writen, lf1 Jc. people v;ho WMI to
wrM:« ~ rhey mNn and haw r UJ\d4maood
Como .. lloldy Hoi .., ...,_
Room
336. ""11 o1oo hom 1210 4.'" - . . . ,, W&lt;dnotdoy
onc!Thurodoy.....,in9J&amp;om69
·

R_____
_
.........

... ..__ Lo.n-..God'.-ln .... _ond
n....-dub.-donornono_,ol

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.._,Scbu._ w -. 8

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.. s..c.Mtmo. ,. s.-.,. 9 ... . 5-47 -

!Bide

s..

"6) .

c.m.....

God~ AlonS... .T....do\I.S pm . ~23o&lt;

S25 Cooloe

_-·

DEHTAL CARD WELL. TEAM

....
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Ollh&lt;Sd&gt;ooldDon

ALo\1110 GALI.EJIY EXHJIIIT

tw~n

1880 and 1910
Thl! exhibit tn~ces the Ouc:ago .schc)ol olardutec·

ture·-' deveiopmen1 from early pragmauc destgn for

commeroal builchngs 10 the renowned ornamental
work of lootS SoDJVan and lhe dew!iopmenl o(
donW!Suc - p,uw Houses·· by Frank Lloyd Wright
and h• tolower$
Among Wnponant srructur-es su~ iS Frank
Uoyd Wngh!'s Roble House of 1908·09 which v.:as
declared • Nat.onal Monume-nt ln 1964
The e:xhibie " on .....ew Mond.av· Thursday. 9 a m
10 7 p m , Fnday. 9 • m . to 5 p m and Saturday.
noon to 4 p m
Cunently on a nat~ tow . the: exhibihon 11o
under the ausptea of the Sm11hsonian Traveling
Exhbftton SerY1CW and co-spootOred by !he HIStone
A'""""'" Building Surv.,.

Let: Ch~ 25 Yors. A Retta.:pedtw. 2nd
iloo&lt; gollo.y Bolhune Hoi (M Deponmenl)
Thi()Ugh Febru""' 22
MONOGRAPHS OF 1971-1979
-By tlw Faculfioo ol Soool Sdonca ond
Humanitin. School of Information ~ Ubrary
Sludioo . School ol Soc:lol Work ond lh&lt; Sd&gt;ool ol
..... _.....1 lockwood Momoriol LJbq,y roy..
ond M Lb-"v. F. . . . 1-29
SEL EXHIBIT
v~ EftccManten .luplta:
An nhbl of
phoka ......, o1 .~up~.. ~ •he
Ss&gt;-&gt;•h
on.- on lh&lt;""' iloo&lt; oiSdmc&lt; ond ~
U.ooy (Jowl 2 c-nl n.. lnduda ··-

v-

~·

U/ B Dun ol NoMoi Sdonc.. ond
n.. ........ .. cl!oplo~ lhro&lt;ogh
Mo.&lt;~&gt; 7, 1o .......... 1..- Mondoy l!vough

Ftid.yfrom8am 1011pm ., S.~, 9am to
~ 11. p m

0..-

Hoi. Monclov l'ndov. 9 5
lo.HnllhS......ondDopon

-·-""""""~

=

=..tory~...=-..;:.:-: ~0.....

,

JOBS
FACUL'IY

AM&amp;atanc, AHodate or fuJI Pro~Naor-ln
dustnal Enganeertng
Aul•t•flt Profeuo r •G•s1roen t e ro log~

Unit) -

o._..... ol ,.edidne

,....._, ......,...,. Prolouor tChk!l ol lnftcllou O....WII-O..,.n~ o1 Mordlcin&lt; .

A••lslant / A.t&amp;Odate ~n10r (Chalrm:~~n
C®tlnuing Educ-.thOI\1 - School of Nursing •

9 p m and Sundary.. 11 am

.,.. - c-owy Qvh.
&amp;om
polY... - . . ....................... ....

~~YP

mc.KU&gt;m movemenc In Amencan architecture ts on
v~ ""' through March 14 m the lb-ary of the School
of Archllectur., and Environmental ()es.gn
Thto traveling exhibit "on loan from the Smtthso
man lnsutull0f1
The pho4os and dnJwtngs are of structures I hat at
tatrWd lmponanc~ in ChiCagO apptoltlmateiv be·

-

&amp;hlblta
1\lomo Golooy. -

Computer syotem hao been
developed
A new development in interpreting
Jewish law, Breger pointed out. is use of
a computer system at Bar~ llan Un iversity
in Israel.
The computer allows a rabbi access to
the vast historical body of "responsa"
Uterature , the case laws of the Jewish
legal syS1em. The "responsa" are !ormal
repUes to legal queries ad'dressed to
recogniZed rabbinic authorities. Contem ~
porary rabbis, particularly in Israel and
the Un~ed States, are called upon to
answer questions on such diverSf! issues
as euthanasia, artificial Insemination .
dietary laws, slum housing and laws of
war, she noted . The computer indexes
rulings by subjed.
''The reception of Jewish law in
Amerltan courts Is also being explored ,"
Breger said . For example, "the response
of American courts to instances where,
alter secular divorce has been granted,
the husband refuses to give his wife a
religious divorce , thereby preventing her
from remarrying under Jewish law ."
Mrs. Breger is the ~e of Dr. Marshall
J . Breger, a member of the law faculty
here .

ART OfPARTMENT EXHIBIT

VISTA

Spdng and IUn'lnwtr Saw grad~s Amefiu's
poor and ct..dvant.ged need your help Spend a

INTOI·YARSITY CHRI T1AH I'EU.DWSHIP
l-lao o Bi&gt;lt Study t.. """' MHI o&lt;hcr Cbr_,.

p. •

So, lfyoudonwdbascden

~um

~ trCHI'I Robt:n Crer:Wy't MOiit re«nl
· "t.o.l4&lt;."., ..od ond de..-~ C.Hioy
lono foculry Club P-od Room. Hommol&gt; Lin'Y

I

all routlfW tlenq,l UTe at. comfortab&amp;e and as
heeM~

C . Feb 25. 2&amp; from 9

CONCERT •
J4u EawmWe. S..d Reol.allial 8 p m

In

~

~.a

t.aJ UR Why wa~t1 Cal us at 831 2213 MY day
be-tween 9 .00 4 30 and we wtD be glad to anange a
scret:ntng appo.ntment tor you

ARCHITECTURE EXHIBIT
Earty Cbtcago Ar&lt;:l\ltectun. an exhibtlion of
phalographs. planJ and drawtng&amp; of h1storic
Chc.ago monu~niS that tluara1e the nw of 1he

····"'

RESEARCH
S...... Labo&lt;otO&lt;\I T«hnldoo - Meli&lt;oM VA

Milc:tic.l Ccntrr
Rt'Herch AAKtant - Btoch.:"llstry Main St ·

c.mpu,

.

OOMP£11TIVE CIVIL ERVICE
.' T}'fliiii~- MIJ.«

St.

s- SG-9

'•''~

Doon'o Oll;c . .......

1

u.....

�F~ary

n

14 . 1980

Child Care Center
offers call-in service
By~M . N.,.Je

A new communtty service d"51gned to
answer questions about parenting. child
development and pr.,·school testing Is
now ""'og offered free of charge under
the auspicies ol the Early Childhood
Research Cent..-.
Known as the Child Care A~vlsory
Service, the program has been
developed In r"5panse 10 a great demand
by Wwer'n New York parents. teachers
and para -professionals . says Or .
ChriSline Z. Cataldo. director ol 1he ser·
vice and a lecturer o 1he Department ol
Elemen1ary and Remedial Education .
Mrs Wio~red H . Morrison . who serves
as coordinator ol tbe new program .
noted thai "people who call in are as
unique as the queSltons they ask . If we
don't have the answers. we use our con·
suhant ~nel for advice ."
About 15 specialists mpediatrics. our·
Slog. rehabilitation. psychology and social
services are avatlable for confidential
referrals K the U/ B·based staff needs
a ssistance on a part ic uJar inquuy

.

.

~

Dance trains the 90% o us.
some academics tend to shun
By Paul Chimera
~"

Bureau St.eH
The Beach Boys urged us to ··Dance .
Dance. Dance ." and John Travoha
showed us how
But a U B dance professor conte-nd
the workJ of dance: - 54?rious dance

education - is

not

a

shallow lmd

glamorous as the disco craze might s ug

gest
··1o academia . some peopw tend to
look down on dance as mferior. ·· says
Lmda H omeyer Swinluch . assoc:Utte pro

fe sor of dance . head of the dance pr9·
gram and director of the ca mpu s' residem

Zodoaq ue Dance Company
"They &lt;ay thi because what we do is
phy ical:· she asser1s. adding that that
argument is about as graceful as a dancer
'41th ht.'O

left feet

'In educatiOn we tend to train only 10

per cent of the body - the bram This
perpetuat"5 the myth that the braoo ts
more ompor1ant than the body ··
Debunking ~laconcepUon
That kind of thmkong has gtven rise to a
number of myth about teachtog dance at
the university lev I The lithe. fiv ·foot·
three dance speclaH t muSlers not a Inti&lt;.
vehemence in debunkmg m isconcepfions
ond setting the r ord straight
At U B. she says. dance Is taken very
senously Stattshcally. tt is one of the
most popular d~lin"5 among Sludent .
accordoog to Dr George R Levoo . dean
olt
Faculty ol Ans and Letters
S..toluch says the department ts
nverllcw.tog v.11h 51udent olall ages who
clamor to get Into courses in ,au and
bal (the most popular) . modem dance
and tap
It 1h inter rooted an st.ud~n · secret
es to dJp Hke Travolta 0&lt; lunge hke
Bary ollcov?
That may "" a smaa pan ol • .
wmluch acknowledges But what
1udent really want ts the dJsclphne that
botllel . in particular demands ··o.nc Is
popu
becau
11 oH~s an amazmg
o ol accompliShment
1' opl« know 1hey·re leamtng a lot. add "T
know the lftehers will
take 11
wnh them •

program here used to be an adjunct to
the PhysiCal Education Department She

had a ··philosophical'" probwm with tha t
a rrangement
"I was unable to accept dance a s non
an ·· she exp~m s "Dance educat aon and
the art of dance are no t separable Bu t
dance was viewed then as bemg equfll
with a sport "
•
Now. she pojnts out. dance has
become a part. m name and m theory . of
the Theatre Department. plans call for
renaming it th e Department o r
Theatre / Dance
Furthermore . says Swiniuch . " I see
theatre and dance as o ne For theatre
maJOrS . body movement ts required . but
most also take JaZZ. balwt and modern
dance There's a ciossover ..
Filled up
Current staustics reveal that all dance
classes at Ut B are lolk.d to capacl1y woth
studen1s eager 19 tone muscles and
devek&gt;p "mind -body connec1ions ··
The studio 10 Hamman Hall is used
from 8 a .m to ""yond 10.30 in the eve
ning. and there are c~sses on Saturday
and rehearsals on Sundays The early
momtng sessions - h~ld at an hour tradi
11ooolly ungodly to mo51 college
tudents - a re swelled wnh high Sleppers
o1 an haP"' and sizes
Swmluch wishes she could assure all ol
~er st uden ts that .tob opportumues are
abundant in the field . reality diCtates
otherwise
•
It 's get hog harder and harder . he says .
to land teaching Jobs in dance One
need at manamum a master's in f1nf ar\s
plu prolessk&gt;nal training and perfor

visory Service plans lo conduct lectures.
workshops and In formal discussion
.groups on parent· child relations .
childhood development and related
topics.
One feature-now'" operation is a takehome toy service . through which toys
may "" borrowed along with special ln structk:ms on how to maximize chiklren's
learning potential dunog playtime .
Mrs Morrison said a bibliography ol
books lor professionals and parents Is...,_
ing assembled . along with a til• on area
soctal agencies and a list o f com monly·
asked questions about child development
a nd parenting.

Anyone may caU
Anyone with a question may call the
service at 636-2379 on Tuesdays and
Thursdays ""tween I and 3 p .m Ap·
pointments to visit the center. ~ted in
Room 15. Baldy Hall . may also "" ar·
ranged during these limes .
Mrs. Morrison. a Ph .D. candidate in
elementary and remedial education at
U/ B. noted that queSlions !ro m parents
and other community members have
ranged from discipline to ways o f seniog
up play groups .
She added th at the Chtld Care Ad·

A praeUcal eerrice
·The Child Care AdvtSOry ServiCe is
not theoretical but practical ,.. she ex·
plaloed . "Chudreo ca n't "" taken out ol
the parent context. The fam ily unit must
"" taken as a whole :·
Cataldo sakJ the new program is a
"direct service .. unit with a strong em·
phasis on advocacy . ··our single conce.m
is children ." she emphasiZed .
Dr. Richard T. Salzer. U/ B assocla1e
professor of ewmeAtary and remedial
education and a counselor in the pro ·
gram . belie..,. patents are "554!nllally
"brokers· In making decisions lor their
children Professionals. he added , should
be consulted as a source or information
by which parents can make their ov.m in·
formed deosioos
More Info rmation about the servtce can
be obtained by contacttog Mrs. WioKred
Morrison or Dr. Christine Cataldo at
636-2379.

Graduation schedule
Hard as It may be to imagine, the commencement season is just three months

away. For those who want to plan ahead , here's the schedule.
·SCHOOL OF INFORMATION
AND LIBRARY STUDIES
John Lord O 'Brian HaU. Alden Moot Coun
Amherst Campus

May II
Sunday
3 :00p.m .

• SCHOOL OF NURSING
Buffalo Convention Center
Convention Center Plaza . Ctty ol Buffalo

May II
Sunday
7 .00 p .m .

SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE AND
ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN
S1eps at Abbon Library (Weather. Abbott/Sq uire)
Maio Street Campus

May 16
Friday
5 :00p.m .

·FACULTY OF ENGINEERING
AND APPLIED SCIENCES
Lawn a1 Parker Engineering (Weather: Clark Hall)
Main Street Campus

May 17
Sa1urday
2 :00p.m .

• SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT
Kle.mhans MusiC HaD. Main Aud itorium
Symphony Circle . City ol Buffalo

May 17
Saturday
7 .00 p .m

• SCHOOL OF PHARMACY
Kletnhans Music HaU. Mary Seaton Room
Symphony Ctrcle . City ol Buffalo

May 18
Sunday
10 30 a .m .

• SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WORK
Katharine Cornell Theatre. EUicon Complex
Amh..-st Campus

May 18
Sunday
3 :00p.m .

• !34th GENERAL COMMENCEMENT
Memonal Audrtor1um
140 Mom Street, Ctty of Bullalo

May 18
Sunday

'SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
Kleinhans Mu5ic Hall. Main Auditorium
Symphony Circle , City ol Buffalo

May 18
Sunday
7 :00p.m . •

'SCHOOL OF HEALTH RELATED
PROFESSIONS
Shea's Buffalo Center fm the Performing Arts
646 Main Str et , City ol Buffalo

May 18
Sunday ·

• FACULTY OF LAW AND
JURISPRUDENCE.
Kleinhans Musoc HaD. Main Audhonum
Symphony Cin:le. City ol Buffalo.

May 25
Sunday ~
1.00 p m

' SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY
Klrinhans Music: liaR. Main AuditOrium
Symphony Drde. City ol Buffalo

May 25
Sunday
500p m

mance experience to get a college post

Daece theraP!I
Dance thel-apy. however. offers more
stable opportuoilln.
Because ol this. the dance program
has reantly begun an internship program
In which stud ots can acquire practical
teachtng uperieoces in that asped olt he

field
A reant share ol a Health , Education
end Welfare !HEW) grAnt adm10istered
locally through Ans Development Ser·
viceS is enabling the Zodiaque Donee
Company to provide fuD ·scale perlor·
mances and clasoroom·siled workohops
in Buffalo area schools and in•dutions
Four other drama. mulic and kterory
groupo abo partidpat
·
Recently. and lm the lint hme, the
troupe . performod 11 the Bull ala
Poydltatnc Center. and to a very . ap·
pr«tat
audiaoca
Danca a1 U/ B has been tn a - poor
~
role" fm far too long. Swlniuch
mu
•· ow we arc •tt~ • new kind
at
y-one that cleari)l rdlects th
k"''l olstudcn• ln'-eA."

• Capo and Gowns wtl b. worn .

5 OOp m

7:30p.m.

•.,.

�u

February 14, 1980

VIEWPOINT
Here's more on Kershaw's report on the future
of public and private higher· education
As reported last week here !based on
Information gleaned from The New York
Times]. a background paper prepared for
the Sloan Commission on Higher Educa·
liOn by Joseph A . Kershaw of WUhams
College and the Rand Corporation had
some 1nterutmg ob5ervations to make
about the future of SUNY. CUNY and

which the dechne has set in and the d~ ­
fJCuhy of bringing about the necessary ad·
.rustments to accommodate to it . There is
a more basic que.stion ... of how these
reductions should be allocated . The
system is endeavoring to keep all uilHs
open and operaring, though clearly all
unh:s are not equal .... "

the Stat ·s private coUeges and umver·
sot

They are JUst observations. obviously
The U/ B Department of H19her
Educanon had a copy of th~ paper tn liS
flk&gt;s (It's about a year old). making poSSt·
ble th closer look at some of Ker haw's
observattons, conclusions and react1ons
IThe Sloan CommissiOn Is preparing a
report on "Government and H19her
EducatiOn" due thiS spnngl

The pnv•te outlook
About pnvate educatiOn . Kershaw
observes.
..The very etrective organiUtion to
which almost all pnvate mstttuuons
belong (CommiSSion on Independent
Colleges and Umverslties) has been an
aclive and successful k&gt;bbylst , and has
ba5ed ITS appeal Of\ the need of pnvate irl ·

stitut10ns for state suppon . and on the
not.tOn that h is ~5$ expe:nsrve ror the state
to ubskhze pan of a student's costs at a
pr1vate insWutkm than all or most of hiS
costs at a pubhc one. It appears mevnable
that when the enrollment drop begms ns
real btte, some pnvates Will be unable to

endure. but evidence of wholesale pro
spectJVe bankruptctes IS not now at hand
.. 11le pnvat sector and us ·cham ptans 1n the ~l51ature have succeeded m
providing handsomely from the state
trea ury . a subsidy of something over a
mUbon doUars per 1nstitu1ton on the
average .. some 7 per ce.nt of the average
budget An while averages tend to be
miSleading rt m19ht help to th1nk of each
one as having a student body around
2500 and an annual budget o f about
$15.000.000 However 11 IS viewed . 11 IS
a k&gt;t of money, far larger than pnvale in stLtuhons r ewe m subsKI.es 10 any other
stat If the pnvate sector IS in fad 10
serious fmanclal trouble '' IS not easy to
attribut 11 to the niggardliness of the
stale Indeed . 11 may uggest the
fascmating. d subversive, notton that
fiSCal heakh IS not related lo the amount
of stat aid to pnvate educatton'"
There'-1 another side 10 ttw! pn\.'ate support com . K how polni5'0Ut the case of
"the iarge pnvate · natiOnal re arch
unJVersn.es. - Columbla. Cornell.
ew
York Un1verstty . Rochester and
yracu
ThMe mshtuhons. "'hteh
t
ther produce over 60 per cent of the
Ph 0 cregrees grant d m
ew York
tat , benefrt from he state a do others .
though by relatively le s Thetr tudent
aid money tend to be leu per student
su\C!e they draw tudents heavily from out
of tat
"

CUNY Is. ' lntillng'
A• for CU Y. Ker,t,.,w observ that
the budget for th '&gt;+.•n1or Colleges has
~
l1 I''' 1 nee 1974 5 and
c ntlnu
''
" d" · 11110 1978-9
Budgets of cour.- al~ &amp;a.ge~ enroD.ment
cnven and thiS ... 'h there has been a
d.;clm •nd why ·he decbne will oon
Iru
1 h problem IS th 5P"ed wuh

Imaginative management needed
On SUNY: "The cessation of growth of
resources available to the system. and of
tudent customers, brings a set of pro·
blems more diffJCult by an order of
magnitude than how to manage growth _
Just as one e~ample . what should be
done about the likely fact thai the
chances of making four excellent univer·
sny centers 10 the state has disappeared.
yet physJCaUy four are in place In the
absence of lmaglnauve management and
the willingness and ability to make some
unpopular decisions. there is real danger
that the system will shp 1nto medJOCnty ·The problem to:
On the dimensions of the overall
problem , Kershaw writeS "In 1990 I Is expected that 167 .000
w1ll gradu
!rom New York h19h
schools . or 31 per cent less than in 1980,
about equal to the 1960 level. Some
have argued that a h19her proportiOn of
high school graduates may go on to post·
secondary education m the future _ But
New York"s rate is already htgher than
average . and has begun 10 dechne There
as at leASt as good an argument that 11 wUI
be lower m the future . On balance. the
future enVlro nment 10 whteh higher
educat1o n must hve in ew York seems
certain to be less friendly than It has been
in the recent past
"' Acco mpan y mg the e nr oll m e nt
dechne , and stemming 10 good par1 fro m
the same underly1ng demograph ic and
eco nomJiC fadors . has been a declme m
real resources ava1lable to higher educa uo n ThlS has been most dramatic m the
CUNY system . lor a spec~al set o f
reasons , but 11 has also occurred m
SU Y It 15 mo re dlffacuh to generaltze
about the pnvate sector If faculty
members. expen lve educatK&gt;nal equipment . and square feet of space were all
dental. of course, the fall in enro llment
would ·sotve' the drop 1n resources But
of course they are not. nor d o the
dechnes h1t all units of the system a1 the
same hme or w1th the same 1n1ensuy
And thiS JS the essence of the problem .
how does a system which lS charactertled
by great mflexlbthty. and by long lead and
lag times , accommodate to a contractK&gt;n
in 11 over-aD SLZe?
A r•ndom , market place effect
.. The pnvate sector has already lost a
few mstituttons which have simply ceased
to eXJSL They hall been unable to attract
sufhcient students and fund•ng to stay
abve More of this can be: eKpected to
happe-n There is a cenam randomness to
th method by which institutions wJII be
chosen for obhvion - whether curriculum
1 popular or not , whether iocattOn tS at·
tractNe or not . whether one or a few
alum01 or fnend.s wtth weahh ere at
tr t d to the mstrtutlon . But for the
vulnerable pnvat colleges. enrollment 1$
of ftrSl tmportance and when 1t beg1ns to
decbn senou.ty and the downtr nd per
over several years~ it tS u.sually in
senou trouble To the extent that thiS Is
true . the market JS working That IS to
say, If the customers keep buying. them·
t1tut10n w1U SUMVe . and vic v TSll Th1s
is ,. It should be. always provided that
the cuSiomers are not kept by turning the
place Into some sort of circus ..
For the pub!\&lt; sector, Kershaw sug
gests , "the policy optiOn ar clear The
sta can kH? quota• low for rt most
populat unus •nd dwec1. by persuasion or
othawile. 1Urplus itudents. to the least
popular un , thu1 sharing the decbne

..,..,. the
m gqdudy Or H can
maJ&lt;ITniM fr edam o{ choice. look •• the

r
llant 118n0. c"leUI popular
un· over the ~. end COT'IUntr•r. the

resources it has on a smaller number of
unHs with an enhanced possibtlity of im·
proving quality In them . It seems clear
that the first option would uhlmotely
result in a uniformly medJoc:re system
Selective closlnge? .
"Up to now SUNY is going the first
route . or at least has not felt thatlhe lime
has yet come when the alternative route
should be considered .. .. CUNY Is
budgeting on the same basis exactly ....
"For the most part. SUNY and CUNY
do not even do research on 1he possibility
or selective closing and concentration of
resources . Since their activities are so
public they do not want It known that
they might be thtnk1ng of retrenchment
through selective closing. Indeed . some
offiCials have persuaded themselves that
closmgs would save nothing- 'whafs
\.Vrong w1th havjng all 64 instilutions 30
per cent smaUer than they are now; after
all they all were once that size.· So very
httle consideration of th is whole maher
has yet taken place . perhaps. but only
perhaps. because the squeeze has not yet
become inlense enough to force it.
'"SUNY's four umversity centers ex·
emplify the problem. It seems clear that
the state is not going to be able to create
four first rate umversittes (it mkJht have if
the steady state had not arrived for
ano ther decade or two} _ It also seems
clear that if it conhnues to try to. all four
of them will gradua.lly slide Into medlocrl·
ty . But the two which are out 1n front are
probably Stony Brook and Buffalo and 1f
that IS the case these are lhe two that
should rece1ve what untverslty resources
there are . The other two . however , are in
Albany. which is the capital of the state .
and 1n 81ngham1on, from which the
popular leader of the Senate comes
Cle arly. to force these two either to dose
o r to reven to fo ur·year status {both of
them appear to have excellent
undergraduate programs) woukJ rt?qu1re
a po hhcal miracle ··
Criticism lor the 008
Kershaw is critical of the SUNY budget
process and of the dose 1nvolvement of
the OOB in academiC dec1sk&gt;n -making:
"The Chancellor and his Immediate
staff are the chJef defenders of the budget
before the Legtslature, w1th occasional
help Jrom campus personnel in special
cases -Mosl campus presidents become
mere bystanders . they may have kepi
their local Les•slators mformed as the
process unwound , but there IS ltul end·
running of ell her the SUNY headquarters
or the GoVernor's offK:e by the campuses;
the four umvers1ty center presldents
should probably be exempt from th1s
~nerahzataon . though at least one of
these has vowed not to end run in the
future . having seemmgly succeeded once
but then havmg ·pa•d and paJd and paid'
10 subsequent years
"'The campus ro\e 1n the tolal process IS
thus no t very great It ts d1mtn1shed fur ther by two other features of the system
One ts that employees .. are uniomzed
IState -wide) This means that the cam·
puses have no say essenually over costs
amountmg to about two·thJrds of aU
costs The second IS that campus budgets
are bas.c.aUy enrollment·driven
"The budget proces . suggests that
SU Y Is very much a svsrem Component unils tend to be treated rather equal·
ly. and whUe the Input mto budget·
makmg by the units IS not IOCOnsequen tial. nehher 10 11 ma,or The large and lm·
portant declsions are being made In the
pol1tical arena - by the ChanceDor. the
Governor . I he Leg1slature-after
painstaking negotiations that go on constantly This has probably always beim
th case. but h must have seemed and
been tis painful when lh system was m
IU growth period . .
"One change that seem apparent is
tho enhanc d role of the DivlSicSn of
Budget . whlclt may be inevitable In a
period d dodining rnource avadablllly
Many SU Y people .re perouaded that
th important educatlonal deciSions are
flOW belnQ made by the Director of the

Bud~t and his senior staff (and many
seem thankful , Incidentally. that these
tend to be people of real competence) .
The validity of this claim is not easy to assess , though H is clear that the Importance and constancy of both budget hearings and participatlon by budget person·
nel in the decisk:m·making process
have increased in recent years.
·

o-r-budgeting
"Also lending substance to the claim Is
a new practice that has recently
developed. i.e .. what might be called the
·over· determination' o f the budget
system What happens is thai the budget
Is approved and returned to the un its of
the system. Then . perhaps a month later.
an order comes to SUNY that regardless
of approved budgets, no more than a
given number of personnel may be on the
payroll. or no more than a given amount
of money can be spenL These personnel
or expenditure ceilings. as they are
known . are then passed on to the cam·
puses . and "'stnce they are always m o re
restrictive than the budget. they become
det.e rmining. There is some suspicion that
the device is used so that the executive
can claim credit for a generous and pro·
gressive budget whUe quietly putt ing the
clamps on the system with a budget ceilmg. The deviCe is of course. always
juslif1ed as a prudent move in a period of t
fiscal stringency. but it tends to project the
Division o f Budget into academk day-to·
day affatrs in a way many administrators
find frustrating and infrin ging on the campus' abi11ty to make academk decisions_"/
-Want to speculate?
A U/ B expert in higher education
assesses that Keshau/s observations are
not based on hard data but seem to have
been shaped through conversations and
discussions with various individuals in the
educalional establishment. "'Nonethe·
less." this source agreed with those who
have read only sketchy reports of tts con·
tents . the paper is in teresting.
Even more interesting , he proposed .
would be to speculate on the sou rce and
t1ming of the Times ' ank::le . not to men·
tton the genesis of that paper's emphasts
on the Buffalo and Stony Brook recommendation - whteh was presented with
much more emphasis than Kershaw
h1mself put on It

Now look here,
Morley Safer!
Editor:
Readers of the Reporter who watched
Morley Safer's segment on Intercollegiate
athletics on CBS- TV's "60 Mmutes, ..
Sunday . Februacy 3, 1980, should be
'Oware that Mr. Safer told only the rare
excepttOns 111 our natk&gt;n 's institutions of
higher learning.
For every University of New Mex ico
violation there are scores of reputable col·
lege athletic programs. thousands of
coaches and admmistrators who are con cerned about the weKare of their studentathletes, concerned that they receive an
education and that as many as poss1ble
graduate
On the national average. Caldornla at
Berkeley Sociology Professor Harry Ed -1
wards' (Jgure ol80 to 90 per cent of Black
athletes who lad to graduate Is grossly in·
correct. And the hall-dozen Black
athletes Interviewed represent a very
smaU minority of Blacks who participate
In intercollegiate athletics
Jus1 as there are unethtcal persons in
every profession law, medicine .
politics, even broadcast journalism - so
are there unethical ~hes and ad·
mlnlstrators, but they are'lOught out and
punished, many no longer In coaching.
Institutions such as Penn Stat , Unlver
sity of Mw:higan , USC. Notre Dame , etc
prove that h iJ possl&gt;le to have a suc·
ceuful, hOllOfJibie athle · program AND
an outstanding academic reput•tion
- Lany G. teele
Oir or. Sports Information

�februuy 14, 1980

Education in 2000:
paradise for students

Next year at a glance

!

This is the -..ulsed Official Academic Calendar lor the l 980-81 year.

-An ~ Council on Ed~

Su.,...,.,.. Sa.loro

1980
I Session ·

June 2 - July II
June 23 - August I
July 14 · Augusl 22
June 2 • Augu&lt;t 22

II Session
Ill Session
12 Week Session

FIRST SEMESTER. 1980
Instruction Begins
Rooh Hashana Observance Begins at 6 PM
Cla•seo Resumed at 6 PM
Yom Kippur Observance Begins at 6 PM
Classes Resumed
·
Thanksgiving' Recess Begins a! Close of
Classes
·
Classes Resumed
lnstrudlon Ends at Oose of Classes
Semester Examinations

I
!

T. September 2 . 1980
W . September 10
F. September 12
F. September 19
M. September 22
W. November 26
M. December I
M. December 15
T. December 16 ·
T. December23. 1980

SECO ND SEMESTER, 1981
. Instruction Begins
Washington's Birthday.Observed Holiday
Mid -Semester Recess Begins at Close of

COMMENCEMENT
~authorized.

will be 1,~nged .

L
nea.na aDd Directors, Academic

Affaln
From: RODald F. Bunn

Briefly and personally I want to report
to you on my condition and on how my

offke will operate until I retum to normal
activ11.ies.
Quite simply. I experienced a form of
heart attack called a myocardial infarction _This means that one of the coronary
arteries developed a blockage. which In
tum denied blood to a sedion of
muscular tisoue; In my case the location
of the mfarction was on the underside of
the heart When this happens. of course.
the affected tissue dies- and , unlike , lor
example. the skin , this tissue Is not
replaced by live tissue. Instead k
becomes, in time ,.scar tissue. AU of the
Indicators are !hat I have experienced no
impairment of the heart's functions . I
have progressed now to a slage of limited
acbvily, .at home, while the scar tossue
d v"lops and I return gradually to a nor ma) routine of actiVIties
During thJS period . I'm to lose oome

we19ht, liUiy Indoors, avoid •udden and
-exaggerated. physical demands on the
heart. observe a soh-free diet , and make
myoeU av&amp;~lable to the phy$iclan lor
periodlc morutorin!J$ Th period of con·

choice

and

not

aMlectift
are · - category,
....._.ble
"The
·mosl vulnerable"
with
enormous variations among individual in ~
stitutions. Includes less-selective. liberal
arts college•- many of them located in
the East and Midwest - and privote two·
year colleges. a declining group for some
years.
On a regional basis. both the Easl and
Midwest may lose about ten per cent in
their comparative share of college enroUment, while the South will gain five per
cent and the Southwest and Wesl ten per
cent or more . "Some institutions in the
South and West that are now In the se·
cond rank academically will make it into
the first rank by the end of the century."
the report predicts.
Overall ,
the
council
said .
undergraduate enrollment may fall live to
15 per cent in the next two decades, with
an overall decline of 23 per cent in the
traditional 18-to 24-year-old age group.
The council predic!ed that the following
slates would do "much better than
average:" in enroUment trends In the
1990s: Alaska. Idaho. ·Nevada . Utah .
Arizona . Texas and Florida . However.
the coundl said . it finds state projections
of college enrollments are ohen inade·
quate and unduly pessimistic and warned
that over-eager state officials may use
such projections to promise to save
money on higher education , or to justify
plans to place higher education under In·
creased state control.

just

time attendees, and one-quarter of all
students wiU be members of minorities.

Roughly one-h.U of the students In the
classroom of 2000 would not hove been
there H the composition of 1960 had con·
tinued . This is a fundamental . almost
radkal change In higher education ."

Bunn is convalescing,
wants to keep fully informed
To:

of

better-assured futures than the private

ones.

fate-institutional action with private support Is the single best key to unlock future
possibUities."
Students, the council believes, "will be
reauited more actively, admitted more
readily , retained more assiduously.
counseled more attentively . graded more
considerately. financed more adequately,
taught more conscientiously, · placed In
jobs more insistently , and the curriculum
will be more tailored to their tastes."
Clark Kerr , who is retiring as chairman
of the council. released the report at •
news conference in Washington . In col·
leges and universities by the year 2000,
he said, "there Will be more women than
men. as many people over 21 as 21 and
under. nearly as many part·time as fu11·

S . March 7
M. March 16
F. May 8
S . May 9 ·
S . May 16
Sunday. May 17. 1981 "

Classes Resumed
Instruction Ends at Close of Classes
Final Examinalklns

• Divisional cOmmencements .

ma_tter

M. January 12. 1981
M. February 16

Oasses

R•-

There will be many changes and ad·
justments in higher education in the U.S .
by the year 2000. but sludents will enjoy
a "golden age" in which they "will
seldom. if ever, have had It oo good ," the
Carnegie Council on Policy Studies in
Higher Education predicted in lis Anal
report last month.
The Council's report concedes that "a
downward drift in qualil)l. balance, in·
tegrity, dynamism . diversity. private In·
ltlative , and research capability is not only
possible, but quite likely in higher education ." But . It added. such a change Is
"not required by external events. It Is a

Changed characterlada

va\esce.nce is expected to last a few
weeks. at the end of which I can e.x~t to
be back regularly on campus. I have ap·
predated very much the expressions of

goodwill and encouragement from all of
you. Please know, above all. that I om in
good spirits . I remain as In terested as ever
in the progre.ss of our schools, facuhies ,
and program•. and I intend to be kept
fully informed by my staff of the affair5 of
our division .
In the meantime I shall depend
especially on Claude Welch. Valdemar
lnnus. and Pierre Han. to carry on the

daily work of my office. to keep me informed . and to consult wkh me by phone
and by visit on questions affecting polocy
and budget matters Claude has my com·
plete confidence as my spok.,srnan dur·
lng my absence from the campuo; I shall
also be In touch regularly with Valdemar
to ensure that. as always. the budget is
properly mondored and that resource
allocations are consistent Wlth general
policy
I know that this .situation is of great
inconvenience to aD of you .

My

timing

Is eopecially bad' But more than ever I
appreciate the dedication and · slrong
leadershrp you collectively bring to the
divisiOn

·Michaels, Jenkins reappointed
of scholars as a whole ."
He said he particularly appreciates the
' time, effort , and thought" Michaels has
invested during his tenure •• director of

The council's report , Three Thousand
Futures: The Next Twenty Years for
Higher Education, predicts the following
changes in undergraduate student
characteristics between 1960 and 2000:
women-37 per cent in 1960 and 52 per
cent in 2000; minorities 18 to 24 - lour
per ce nt in 1960 and 25 per cent in 2000;
two -year sludents-16 per cent in 1960
and 41 per cent in 2000; non-&lt;eslde nt
otudents -40 per cent In 1960 and 85
per cent in 2000: age group 22 and
older -30 per cent In 1960 and 50 per
cent in 2000.
Kerr said the impact of enrollment
changes-on institutions wiU vary, but that
research universities, sek!.ctive Iibera) arts
colleges and public community colleges
will be the least vulnerable . Commenting
on the title of the report , Kerr said higher
education does not have one future , but
many futures determined by numerous
factors. The best universities and liberal
arts colleges may become beller , he 50id ,
while not quite the besi may become
comparativeJy worse in the average.
precollege caliber of their students. Com·
munity colleges appeal to new categories
of stud~nts . but are vulnerable to
Proposition-13 type actions affecting
local funding , and to low retention rates
Institutions o f average or stronger
vulnerabihty Include doctorate-granting
universities with relatively modest
research activities whose: academic pro~
grams will be hard hit, and the unlver·
silies lind coUeges woth multiple programs
below the Ph.D. leveL Whole there 'are
wide variations ln both groups, he said .
the public Institutions generally have

rrun.astralJV

review of Jenkms' perfor -

manc • carried out by a special reu&gt;ew
commolt e In AcademiC Aflaors. ondiCated
wveral trengths he- has bt'ought to EOP
at U/ B As d1fector, Jenkon1 ~Noll be ebgi
ble for periodiC r ·lew through AcademiC
Affan. th hr 1 to be no lat r than opnng
.
I
The Educahonal Opponundy Pro
gram twoer wtd , prautd on of tlw
c.h
mean of ntty to t
Unt\leBJiy for
on• muca •nd · ucat&gt;Onally d..ad
udent " J
'" ho
n
'
lor &lt;lfll-e prl&gt;!lt' M tin«" 197S

'""la&lt;Jed

NYPIRG wUl
help you register
The New York Public Interest Reoearch
Group. Inc .. registered over 800 people
to vo1e in this year's primary and general
elections during a voter registration push
In late January
A Voter RegistrattOn enter is kxau~d
in-Squire Hall The Center wUI contmull!
10 register voter.s throughout the spring
and Into the fall campatgn sea.son
NYPIRG hopes to ponoor o forum for
Pre identlal candidates In mid-March .
pnor 10 the New York Slate pnm ry elec
lions

Institutional funds

the unit

Dr Edward Jenktns was renamed by
Ketter to head the EducatiOnal Opportunity Program Ketter 50td that the ad -

Jfow decline will occur
The decline of live to 15 per cent Is
projected by the council as follows : the
current plateau will extend to 1983. Forty
pe&lt; cen t of the decUne would "xtend from
then to 1989 when there would be
another plateau continuing to 1991. Six·
ty per cent of the decUne would take
place between 1991 and 1997 . A gradual
reco very woukl extend from 1997 to
2010.
To help preserve the pnvate sector and
encourage choices based o n quality. the
council said states shoukl conlinue to
place reliance on tuition scholarships.
based on need . with shared support from
the federal government. Whe n declining
enrollment is severe, the council saki . ··u
may be bener for rhe slate to close. or
better, merge some campuses than to
have them all deteriorate . Publtc-institutions are unlikely to merge on their own
account :·
The council's report will be pubh•hed
later this year by Joosey-Bass Inc ..
Publishers. 433 Caldomia Street , San
Francisco. Calif. 94104 .

nKI

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�February 14, 1980

appropriate ." In short, the contract permits retrench ment on a variety of grounds,
· Looking at these five ground&gt;, H appears as though
different loci of major responsibMy ;&gt;otentially exist for
inyoking each . Ftscal exigency. for example, would
appear to rise from executive and legislative action .
that. in the eye&gt; of the ChariceUor or campus President. directly ,mandates changes In program and staffmg. or indirectly requires· such changes by imposing
cuts that could not be absorbed by the University
without jeopardizing .ma}or academk programs
and /or risking overaU weakening of the quality of
degree programs. RealloCation of resources falls within
the province of the individual campus: at U/ B,' this
would be guided within Academic Affa irs by the planning statement published in May 1979, and as approved by the President In a letter dated
July 6, 1979. Reorganization of degree or curriculum
offerings or requirements would appear in the main to
rest with Individual departments: what is essentiaUy a
faculty responsibility may involve Senate action and
Presidential ratifk:ation , if degree or curricular changes
are major in nature. and must further be approved by
SUNY and the State Education Department.
Reorganization of structures. programs or functions
would appear, within Academic Affairs, I) to be the
province of an individual School or Faculty if confined
to that entity, 2) to loU under the jurisdiction of the
VPAA , with advice from the Senate . if involving more
than one unit in Academic Affairs, and 31 to require
Faculty Senate and Presidential action for reorganiza·
tion going beyond Academic Affairs. Curtailment , it
would appear , would be subject to the same three
considerations.

Proposed
appro-aches to
retrenchment

...

The Reporter prints the
following documents suggesting possible retrenchment
criteria and procedures in
response to a · resolution
passed on February 5 by the
Faculty Senate. Among other
things, that resolution called
for publication of any criteria
which may be considered in
making cuts.
University officials emphasize that the first document reproduced here, a
report issued by an ad hoc
committee of the Academic
Affairs deans and directors,
was sent to VP AA Ronald
Bunn in late November, well
before the dimensions of the
present budget proposal were
known. This report, Vice
Pre ident Bunn has- empha ized, is "simply ugge ti e". and is part of a
bro~der process of discusions which the VP AA has
held with dean and directors
to clarify for them and him
ertain item which, as Bunn

Rut it, "have to be considered
retrenchment should
I
become a necessary part of
our planning at -some future
date.''
The VP AA has emphasized, too, that the report has
no official status and has not
been approved either by him
or by the President.
The second statement
printed here is a resolution
which the State UUP passed
'in late October concerning
retrenchment procedures.
The University itself has no
retrenchment policy. at the
present time. The two
documents are presented to
sharpen debate on how that
eventual policy should be
shaped, if necessary.
The PrPc;ident, the office
of ·the vIce President for
Academic Affairs, and Prof.
William Greiner, chairman
of the Senate's Academic
Planning Committee, are
ready to receive comments on
the documents.

lo

MEMORANDUM

UBJECT:
OAT •
"'1th your r«qu•~ w~ ha• drafted
'"&gt;d r ns for \-'QUr cons&amp;dera.uon about Vola~
t • • "!&lt;i&gt;m'"'' If """
m'!lht b.! appl d
a nur Affu 0..1 &lt;&gt;biervaooun end sug
ar d" od .d 1rll thre 1*1• II Ground• on
h "
nc '""'"' may
d"'*'r d 21 M ans by

r (tm

It would appear to be prudent educational planning.
if major reductions seem likely because of continued
enrollment shortfalls, lor adminstrators and faculty
members to assess the means by which such changes
can be met wilh least harm to the educational pro·
grams offered . The questions posed by Deans Anderso·n . Alutto and Levy heve been useful in this regar.d .
Given recent events. notably the recent failure to meet
budgeted student targets and the J978 reduction man dated by the Legislature owing to such a shortfall. cautton dictates that attention be given to possible re
trenchment Cuts at or above a certain level may re·
qUJre a major reconceptualization of the University ;
they may well extend beyond the capacity of the institution to absorb without jeopardizing the range.
quality and institutional goals of instructional pro·
grams. There thus exists a point at which normal
turnover and elimination of unfilled lines cannot meet
mandated reductions. in which retrenchment seems
unavoidable . It is our belief that the VPAA , in consultation with the Deans and the Faculty Senate ,
should play the major role in recommending to the
President what steps might be taken 1!. in his judgment, retrenchment appears necessary . We believe
that circumstances require that the Vice President
move at th1s lime to clartfy the means through which
retrenchment might occur. recognizing. to be certain.
that such discussion will arouse concern in many part
of the University
4

Any recommen.dat.Jon to the President regard ing
retrenchment will require a high degree of knowledge
about the effects of possible actions at the basic levels
of organization. particularly departments. Control
within departments - faculty hrring and recommen~
da·t1on for advancement, basic design of curncular pro·
grams - has traditionally been exercised by faculty .
This long.,;tanding heritage. reinforced by a variety of
other factors. makes it essential that the process.
cnterio employed, and potential Implications of retrenchi'TU!n t be understood by as extended a group as
possible . ahd that the grounds fo1 retrenchment ,
where such mt~y be necessary, are U11.ierstood by rele·
van I faculty and staff groups. It is essential. further .
that Deans play a major role In assesStng any poss1ble
steps and their consequences The consultative pro·
cess sugge ted below·is aimed toward these ends .

· whteh l)m mtght b.! apploed. 31 Steps that should be
1aken to msure awareness of proc

TO:
FROM :

The ground for retrenchme~t m~st frequently cited
is major financial change . For example, the most re cent AAUP statement on retrenchment dtes fiscal ex·
igency {.. an imminent financial crisis which threatens
the survival of the institution as a whole and which
cannot be alleviat·e d by less drastic means'') and pro·
gram discontinuation "based essentially upon educational considerations, as determined primarily by the
faculty as a whole or an appropriate committee
thereof.'' as the only grounds on whkh a tenured ap·
pointment might be terminated or a term appointment
ended, prior to ,_its normal date .

and opportumty

for partiCipation of intere&gt;ted and potentially affected
groups

I. Ground .for Retr,.nchment
Article 35 of the contract specdies f1ve d1stinct
ground ford clarallOn of retrenchment 11 fiscal ex~gency . 2) r aUocahon of resources. 3) reorgamzauon
of dey~ e or cumculum offering orr quorements, 41
r('OrgantZ hon of academic or acfmmtStrahve 5truc tuns, program or functions . or 51 •·curtailm nt ol one
or mor programs or functions Untverslty--.'lde or at
such ·a le I of OrQI&gt;nization of the Unoversny as a Colge.. departm n1. umt. program or liuc:h other le\lel or
organ~Utlon
the Chancellor , or deStgn
deems

II. Muns of application
Art icle 35 uses a variety of terms with overlapping
and often unclear meanings· .. structure: · .. program:·
"'function .'' "department:' ''unu :· or ..o ther level of
organlzatlon • appear in the 1 xl Perhaps1h&lt;( least ambiguous reference is to departments ; the overwhelm ·
mg majority of thi&lt; University's teaching faculty os_
grouped ill d partments and departments serve con
currently as budgetary, academiC and disciphnary
umts With whiCh faculty klenufication IS strongest
Departments cu&gt;tomarily offer pr&lt;tgrams leading to
degr es wilhm overall polk:k!s approved by the State
Education Oepartm no as a result of a lengthy. com
plex appr""al proceu "Pretgr m" outlets from am
btgu11y On th on hand. "program " at U/ B offer

�II

FebNiry 14, 1980
~ or majors 111 bolh ~ ....t pool·
beccala..... lowlo(..-pla: 11 "-"*' Sludla.

1n .t1ect a~ a1 II own 1n Allin ~.In
which there .... ~ In ~ AlnerlcM.
Puerto Rican end
Sloodla: 21 M Hlolooy,
whlc:h is lloled budgelaotly .. pen ol die M Deportment. but Is _.seiv bowled, llalled, and directed
tOIIilerd dlffenml degree; 3l --..... - . . - . ouch
M French, German, ar Spanish , bowled wtlhln the
J:&gt;epartrMnt of Modem Languages lll'ld Uterature.)
On the other hand. "programs" may cut acrosa - a t
d-"""'&gt;ts ar even Schools ar Faculties (examples:
11 the School of Management, with School-wide programs at the baccalaureate, MBA and Ph.D. levels; 21
the lntm&gt;a.tional Development and Environmental
Planning doctoral program. formed by cooperating
fliQJity ol several departments, In one of which the
degree fonnally will be granted.) "Unft" or "structure"
is hampered by lack of clarfty. It might mean an
academic but noo-degree entity (examples: 11 A Col·
lege in the collegiate system: 21 the Intensive EngUsh
Language lnslltute In the Coundl on International
Srudlesj. "Function" mlghtrefer to various types of ac·
.tivlties that support ongoing academic programs, but
are budgeted In an other than I&amp;DR function (e.g.
Organized Activtltes, Organized Research, or Exten·
ston and Public Service) "'ther level of organization"
is clearly a catchall phrase. Out ccmmlllee reccm·
mends thar any possible retrenchment not utilizle this
final category, and ensure a high degree of clarHy In aU
others.
In our judgment, an entity exists for possible re·
trenchmenl purposes 1/ one or more of the following
criteria are met: 11 the entity has • separately identified
budget, as recognized by the U/B Budget Olfu: 21
offen a degree or certillcate program expllcitly
recognized In ollicial publications of SUNY/Buffalo:
and/ or 31 appelll$ on the offlCial U/B organization
chart as an entity.

w-··

111 . Procne of lmplemeatatlon
A. ThO&lt; polnl of unaooldobllll)l
The first step In potential retrench'!'enl Is, obvious·
ly; deciding-whether such a step would be necessary.
As indicated above, cuts at or above a certain level
may require changes beyond the capacfty_of the in·
stitution to absorb without jeopardizing the range.
qualily and achiewment of existing major Instructional
programs. Information appropriate for deciding the
approximate range of reductlons/reallocation5 that
would lead to potential retrenchment Includes the
foflowing :
·
• the number and distribution of turnover positions
(05 through retirement, resignation. contract explra·
lion, or the like);
• potential for voluntary early retirements and
voluntary assumption of pAri·Ume status. and for un·
paid leaves or fuD·year sabbaticals at half pay that
might, on a one-ohot basis, permff reduction without
retrenchment:
• the extent to which exisung University ccurses
and penonnel might be rediTected to meet teaching
needs in highly Impacted areas, thereby reducing the
need to hire additional fiKlUity:
• the need to make additional faculty appoint·
menl5 In certain areas of high enrollment demand
and/ or potential.
.
• the extent to whlc:h acadeJnic programs might be
affected by changes m TA's, parl·lime lecturers. and
the like .
Declaration of retrenchment Is ve51ed. according to
Article 35. in the Chanullor or his designee. Such a
declaration , we reccmmend. $hould be based on an
ocockmic judgment that changes imposed on the cam·
pus by the Executive Budget would (taking the above
considerations Into accounll nece Hate termlna.tion of
employm
_
ent for some members of the profeliSional
staff What we caU the "unavoidabt1Jty" decision would
result from Presodenllal deosion (on the basis of advice
provided by the Vice President for Academic Affairs
and the Deans) that mons ol reduction ohort of
retrenchment would slgniftcantly -rdlze the range.
quahry. and achievement of major lnilrUCIK&gt;nal programs Such a judgment should be tested against
academic cnteria well-known throughout the campus
H~. in the paragraphs that foflow . we su9gest two
stages of heenngo. the flrsl d41V(){ed to elucidaung th
ac.demic cntena for retrenchment. the second
""'-ad to xam1nong potential application of retren·

chment

4. The Vice PNoident b AcacMmlc Alt.h would
tapond . In -.g, lo the ........... ol the '-lngo
Willen oammunlca·
md would- the cMiil allerla, II~.
In conoullallon wtlh the PNoident.
5. The Praldent end VIce Pleoidcnt for AcacMmlc
Allan would· ofllc;.ly publoh the revt.d alllrll no
later than11ve _...alter their In~ ~. end
would ensure their wide-cftulatlon on caq~US.

.,...at

c. • ..,_,._

or.........,

,..,._ __._ -

H- . ,.,_.,51-.e n

lire

Foflowing revision of the crfteria and their publica·
lion. and folowlng affirmation by the President, alter
consultation with the Vice President for Academic Al·
fairs . that sufficient basis exists for declaring retrench·
ment, the following steps would apply:
1. On a confid~Ua/ basis, the Vice President for
Academic Affairs, following consukation with the
Deans. would reccmmend to the President academic
entities within whlc:h retrenchment might be applied.
This examination would Include a) which alteria weoe
applied In JUdging what entities were potentially liable
to retrenthment . b) which akernatives to retrenchment
were explored, and cl the size and implications of
retrenchment. both for the University as a whole and
f&lt;&gt;r individual entities. Such confidential reccmmenda·
lion would be based on the budget proposed by the
Governor.
2. The President would announce the application of
retrenchm..nt, under Article 35 of the contract . with
specific indication of the entities within whlc:h retrench·
ment might be applied.
3. Each entity potentiaUy affected by retrenchment
would have the nght to a hearing before a neutral
group well informed about the academic standards
and P. 9'Q1'01llmaUc needs of the University. This
group,
suggest might include the Unlvenlty ~~
lor Undergraduate and lor Graduate and Professional
Education, the chairman of the Facuhy Senate Ex·
ecutive Committee, and a retiring faculty member
oelected by the three participants.
4. Each potentially affected unit has the right to be
presented In the hearing by its Dean . chairperson . stu·
dent and staff representatives. and lacuhy as internally
selected by the unit. Each hearing shall be open . and
shaU be scheduled within two weeks alter the an·
nouncement of retrenchment.
5. The hearing procedure shaD produce, within a
week. a report. analyzing the facts as presented ,
showing areas of factual disagreement . and suggesting
how conflicts over factual maHers might be resolved .
The hearing group, in other words. would examine
the data presented In relation to the crfteria as
previously pubUshed . This report would be given to
the Vice President for Academic Affairs, who would
then transmit his final reccmmendation to the Prest·
dent.
6. The President $hall issue his final decision within
10 days.
7. Any retrenched facuky or 5taff shall be eligible for
opecial consideration for employment . placement .
retraining, and other rights as opelled out in Article 35.
Notification dates will be respected. and any person
retrenched shall receive a state.ment of the reasons for
retrenchment. U/B shaD provide all assislan£e possi·
ble from academk: officers.
8. Further steps. If any, shall be governed by Article
7 and other relevant sections of the contract .

D. Clariflcotlon of procedural •tep•
The document prepared under IIIB ohould include
the criteria by which academic entities are defined .
and should clarify areas of potential obscurity in Article
35 of the contract . In particular. attention should be
given to clarifying the way In which retrenchment , If
declared, would be applied. Article 35. aher
enumeratins the bases on which retrenchment would
be Invoked, specifies that retrenchment shalf be ap·
plied within the particular level ol O'll"nizatlon "In In·
vene order of appointment wffhln each affected group
of employees... ": these are spectfied as follows:
I Part~lime employees holding term ~ntmenl5
before fuU·time employees holding term appoint·
menl5
2. FuU-Hme academic employees holding term appointments belqu academic employees hOlding conll·
nulng appofntments.
3 . Part·time academic employees holding conlinu·
lng appointments before lull· time academic
employees holding conllnu ng appointments
4 . Full·time prof....tonal otmployees holding term
appointments before professional employees holdong
permanent appointments
5 Pari-time professional vnployees holding perma·
nent appoontments before -fufi· tome prof....tonal
vnployees holding permanent appoontmenl5.
Accordong to Ron Stein , the official date of appoint·
ment the dat on the penta~ filed wffh Personn I
Indicating the fnt day of &lt;en~ice . Should avera! per·
sons have th same Initial appointment dat and not
be dilferenuated mother lenni of Article 35 (e g lui
or part-ume. term or tenured). an additional "logoc:al"
baSJS of selectoon might &amp;e used ( g date.of initial for
mal offer; date of acceptanc of employment I A per
son holdong contlnulng apporntment ha the dar at
whoc:h ha/her appoontmenr wa granted as the oc:ial
dat for ouch statu A peroon who holds a fuU time
pporntment wlthon
Unovenocy tlwot spltt among
""'" can be only r trenched for that pao1 ol hla or her

The cornnwnts, crfteria and procedures sugget~ed
above are deliberately cautious. Reduction of faculty
· by methods other than voluntary attrition or non·
renewal based on academic quality grounds does not
come readUy. Some of the cardinal values of unlvenl·
ty lije- collegiahty. exlensive deliberation , perceptions
of what educational philosophies and pfograms merit
special

suppor1-are

tested

In

rerre.nchment .

Many means should be considered. such as voluntary
early retirement , shWts from luU·tlme to parl·lime
employment. or reassignment of facuhy within the
University. to reduce the strains of retrenchment . The
role of Deans in this process is central. Thus far . U/ B
has not been severely tested. by comparison with
several other SUNY units - although the campus
retrenchment discussions of spring 1976 aroused.both
faculty concern and presidential disquiet about the
process used . Ukimately. there may be no set of pro·
cedures. no list.._ of criteria, that could counter all
criticisms; the key elements would be openness.
academic sensitivfty. and that rarest of. gilts. wi5dom.
These last three quaUties may be needed in abundance
should retrenchment prove neceosary.

Resolution on Retrenchment Adopted
by State·wide Delegate Assembly,
UUP, October 5, 1979.
WhereOJ at SUNY / New Pahz 21 tenured faeuhy
and II NTPs have recently been retrenched uder Art .
35 of the UUP-State Agreement without adequate
consideration or seniority or recourse to attrition lines
and In vk.lation of the principles of tenure. academk:
freedom, and job security :
And WhereOJ the N.Y. State Assembly's CommH·
tee on Higher Eduo:ation has found that since 1975 at
least 82 tenured faculty (not counting those at New
Paltz) have been retrenched at SUNY: that financial
exigency was not the real cause of these re·
trench men Is but rather It was administrative decisions:
that responsibility lor the decisions was evaded by
SUNY Central and local campus administrators
respectively; that there is doubt that these re·
trenchmenl5 even saved SUNY any money: that they
have, however, caused ..a dedine in the extent and
quality" of Higher Education in our State:
And Whereas Article 35 has been interpreted as
allowing anyone acting In an administrative capacfty to
retrench any Individual faculty member by defmlng
him or her as a .. unit" so dull our contract alone does
not provide adequate protection against retrenchment;
And WhereOJ this situation threatens the job securl·
ty of all UUP members everywhere and Is thus a mah
ter of common concern to aU.
Now Therefore Be It Resolued that UUP use the luU
weight of Its political and publicHy resources. In addl·
tkln to its use of the grievance process. to prevent fur ther retrenchments;
And That every effoo1 be made to compel ad·
ministrators 10 proue the existence of unavoidable
financial exigency. with an insistence that realloc.ation
of resources, reorganozation. cyclical declones In
enroUmenl5, and spurious JUSII!ications are simply
unacceptable as causes for retrenchments:
And That UUP unilaterally announce that it will pro·
test and seek to prevent any hiring of new faculty at an
ln•btutlon undergoing retrenchment.
And Thor UUP demand that the Chancellor of
SUNY In conjunctoon wilh UUP Central develop
uniform guideUnes concerning retrenchment in labor·
Management Meetings. such guidelines to be ap·
plocable to every campus of the SUNY system :
And That the UUP State Executive Board lm·
mediately set up a special "Task Force on Retrench·
ment- to: .
(11 Inform all members in a.n chapters whenever a
retrenchment action appears likely anywhere
(2) To mobilizle the resources ol UUP as a whole In
order to prevent arbitrary retrenchments.
(3) To e•plore new method• of pulling maxlmur,l
pressure on SUNY admin-Istrators beyond th formal
provisoons of Art 35. includong pocl&lt;eroog. use of
adverse publicity. leglslatrve resolutions. ad hoc
altlances 11o11th the Labor Movement and Student
Organizations, lobbying. etc ., to block every re
trenchment
(41 To conduct an Immediate educaiJOnal campaogn
so that the general public may be onformecf'bl the
dtsestrou consequences of r~trcnchment upon th ar
public educational ys1em
And That aftdl pters of UUP undertake to dewlop
local and pl!rtlcularly approproate campaigns to rem
retr nc:hmeru .

And Th01 all member welcom retrench.- col
fugues to new depar~ments W&gt;th fuD tenur. nd
senoonty . roghts. through lo?nd le
program new
htres. and any o~nd aU C'rQflv Appr
he IO Avang
coUogues · jobs al'ld onco

-

�February 14. 1980

Flo Kennedy.
What's lett to say about her?

She:

eT. . . IIb a truc:1r. clrlwr. (AB life in
the establishment is an inlerlldiOn be·
tween the "sucker" and the "suckee," she
submHs, deadpan. Get on your knees,
·brothers and sisters.)
• Never met a politldan abe . .es.
They protectthim testicles, she has com·
plained , noting that that's where you
have to put pressure to set things done .
But sooner or later, she adds, "They'D
show their ass." Nixon should have been
sent up; Ford was a "smiling WhKey;"
RockefeDer was "oily." Seven million
were out of work while the latler two
were In the WhKe House and ''those
mothers were going to tax gas." she once
fussed.
Feminist Kennedy. also:
• Hu Uttle patience with men: " If
they could get pregnant , abortiOns would
be- a sacrament. " "Draft the whHe ones
between 40 and 55," she advises, they're
the ones who want a war . ..God damn Ye
Merry Gentlemen" sung to the tune of
the familiar. Christmas carol is one of her
favorite anthems.
Uke an enra in an Andy
Warhol movie. Last time she was here,
she opted lor a seaman's hat and a
nautical motif; last Tuesday, _the look was
early Dale Evans.
• Offera boundii!5S advice to the
young: "We're surrounded by a moun·
tain of bullshit , but everybody gets a tea·
spoon .... Use that tea,;poon."
elblnks God's a woman: "Our
Mother which art In Heaven . . . our
washing's done. our kitchen's clean ....
Lead us not into hom~ economk:.s, but
deliver us into politics, for there is the
kingdom, and the power and the glory,
forever . Amen .•·
• Drawa hate maU by the bushel:
"She shouldn't be allowed on cam pus;
you shouldn't be permltled to air her
scurrilous oplntons," wrote an incensed
reader when the Reporter presented a
report on her March , 1975 appearance
here. " 'Kick ass,' Flo Kennedy advises
lawyers," was how the. headline read .
• Doesn't care what her sponsora
think about her speeches: "If they
decide they don't want to pay me, I'm not
worried about a thing. I'll just raise hell
and gel a lot of publicHy which will end up

•Dr-

in even more Invitations. Then I'll jack up

my price by $250."
Strangely, only about 100 people
turned out to hear her bombast under s~
Speakers' Bureau auspices in the
Fillmore Room. Feb. 5 .
If you weren 't one of them , there's one
thing left ,lo say: you sure mtuec!
oomethlng.

Non Profit Org.
U.S . Postage
PAID
Bulfelo. N. V.
PermH No, 311

92 cases
went to Boa.-d
in 1978-79
The President's Board on Faculty Appointments, Promoyon ·and Tenure
handled 26 lewi!r cases m 1978-79 lban
in the previous year, a total of 92, ac·
cording to Dr. Lawrence A. Cappiello, ·
secretary to the Board. Cappiello - t l y
circulated a statistical summary ol Board
activities to the vice presidents for
academic affairs and health oclenct!s and
the chairman of the Faculty Senate.
The most notlcea&amp;le drop In Bo.d ac·
tivity came at the auocia!e professor
level , Cap~U,~t...,.red . At that rank,
39 cases were piocessed In 1978-19, ·
compared to 65 ~ 60 in the preceding
two years, respe(jively.
•
At , the full professor r~nk , 43 cases
were heard In 1978-79 (48 the preVious
year) .
·
CappieDo proVided statistic5 also on
the frequency of disagreements between
the President and the Board concerning
recommendations for personnel ac:llons.
In 1978-79, as in the previous year, there
were only two cases where the Pr&lt;!Sidenl ,
said ''no" to an action after the Board had
recommended "yes." A dramatic change
occurred, CappieDo noted. ' in cases
where the Board voted "no" and the
President said ''yes". In 1977· 78. there
were 23 such disagreements: in 1978-79,
only 6 .
Cappiello said it "appears as though
the general level of approval and rejec·
tions that come to (the Board) remains
roughly the same through the years,
ranging from a 14 to 18 per cent rejec· ·
tion" (from 1975--76 through 1978· 79) .
Last year, as In previous periods. Cap·
piello pointed out, there was "very liUie
disagreement between departments and
their faCility" regarding recommenda·
tions. The aver~ annual total over the
past lour years has been six ·cases . Be·
tween vice presidents and faculties. he
said. ..there has been dramatic move·
ment'' recently . There were 26
disagreements between these two levels
in 1975· 76, but only 8 in the past year. ·
Disagreements between the Board and
the vice presidents, Cappiello went on,
..average in the 22 per cent area for the
past lour years . " Twenty su~h
disagreements occurred this ye.a r; 34 last
year, on a larger caseload .
Presidential disagreement with vice
presidents has taken place in an average
of 9 per cent of cases since 1975.
There were seven such disagreementS"'·
in 1978-79; 11 in the preceding year.

Patrick is up
for a 'Grammy'
James S . Patrick . &lt;&gt;sslstanl professor of
music. has been nominated for a Gram·
my in the category o,f "Best Album
Notes" for a detailed essay he wrote lor
the five-record album package. "Charlie
Parker: Tl\e Complete Savoy Sessions,''
Professor Patrick was notified of hls
nomination by JayS . Lowy. presideJII of
the Nallonal Au.J;y of Recording Arts
&amp; Sciene&lt;&gt;s. the
nsor of the Gram my
Awards which
annually telecast on
national lfllevisio'\i_
This year•s aw.s show will be aired .
Wednesday. February 27 . on CBS-lV
Pacrk:.k noted that lhe nominaJed
album "gathers for the first lime all the
known recordings Charlie Parker made
for the Savoy Company and placeslhem
in precise chronologic•l. order."
Savoy. was a sma11 independent com·
pany which Dperated in the 1940s and
focused stricil_y on ja.U • nd the " new
wave players of be·bop." Patrid&lt; ex·
plained
A co·nomlnee for the Grammy Is Bob
Porwr. who produced the five·dise
pockage
Patrick said thal more than"i{l.OOO
.:oples "'"'" sold betwe.en Februar\l and
Christmas of last year
.The album was Issued on the Savoy
latx.l. which I owned by parent recording
company Arisla Arista . In tum . is an af·
filiate of Columbia Motion P"ldures
Patrick Jl.llld he doea nc' plan to attend
the Grammy Awards c...-emony In L&lt;:&gt;s
An9"les. but might •ttend a relat~d
gath'ering oS nolmne&lt;!S In NH~ Vork CHy
on lht! D"""date. ·

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

·.

I

'State should
concentrate .. .
resources on .. .
Stony Brook,
Buffalo ... ' - -

·.
FEB. 7. 1880
VOL" e N0.18

:Wharton se
'grave crisis;'
Trustees won't criticiZe Carey

4 centers
too costly,
p~per says
In thl! early I %Irs. tlw rep&lt;&gt;n of the
Heald o mmisston . a blue ribbon panel
charged v.1th study.ng th.! future of higher
education in the State . proposed a ma}Of
expanstOn of the State Unlverstty system.
to 'be e~~pped by creation of 1wo major
umvershy graduate: centers. one
·down tate and one upsaate .

That recommendation was enlarged
by the expansion · minded
Rockefeller admlni!ilration whic.b propo5·
ed and set out to develop four maJOr
gradual&lt;! centers for the SUNY system .
. U/8 among them
T_,ty years later. the siluation has
changed dramatically. New York has one
of the nation's largesl public university
upon

$ystems and more private colleges than

any other state - this. in an era ol a
shrinking college population pool and a
body of resources for edUCIItlon which is
shrinking even .IMler.

sa.-c-....-

Looklng at the problem today Is the
Sloan Commission on Government and
Higher Education. establlshed by the
Allred P Sloan Foundation two years
ago and slated to report this spring.
S•eAiing a march on that eventual
Tuesday
report . The Ne"' Y ori:
ran a story on a "background" paper
prepar d for the commission by Joseph
A Kershaw. an economist assoaated
wnh Will111ms College and the Rand Cor·
poration Wh no1 purported to be the
view of the commiSSIOn tt N. the Ker·
shaw paper. the Times said. "may
star! educatOrs and legislators thmking
about some of tho policy questions they
hav~ tended to shun unt~ now. . "
Essentially. Kershaw.dwells on the ob·

r,,.,.

vtou poan1 that there is not goang to be

enough State money fO&lt; bolh CUIW and
SUNY. and fO&lt; the growing demands of
pn\lille educ tion
Kersha u
the four graduate anters
of SU V as a ca '" point · h
ms
dear .. h SU.t ment reads. ··that the Rate
, no1 g&lt;&gt;~ng to be able to cr alA! four first
ra unlvertillft It aha seems dear that H
d continues to try to. al lour of them w!U
gradual~!~ tJod mto mediOCnly •
The wrller 1101es that the state has provided "handsomely" fO&lt; powat colleges
and umverslloes "tithe private sector Ism
r.. tn senou• f Nl!lCtal trouble ... not .
osy to attrlbot ~ to the noggardhness of
the sta
Indeed. • may suggest the
latanatlng If subversive n01ion that fiscal
heahh
not ~ted to the amount of
lato aid to pnvat education •

l

l

MIIBftW~......._dM

.........

SUNY is at a "crtlkal JUncture." facing
enrollment projections. however. do not
reduction m the total State payroH by
Indicate a "precipitous dedme ." If
a "grave crisis ... Chancellor Cllhon WharApril I. 1981
"mas.dve cuts" do become a reahly. the
ton said at a meeting With the Board of
Trust
last weekend on the Amherst
Retunchmt!lll uouftcl the corner? . Chancellor Indicated that declining
Campus.
The propo5ed personnel reducllons
enroUment may then become a *'selfcannot be made through attrition . the
The TruSiees just hstened. a resolution
lulfllling prophecy •
cnlic:lzlng the Governor for creating the
The Chancellor assened that "positive
Chancellor advised . The cuts will "In·
tuation wa rejected .
variables" are at play which could
evitably require elimlnaling positions now
occupied by facuhy and staff;" a nice w~y
Reading from an It -page memo 10 the
mHigate severe student shonages. SUNY
provides 'high quahty edUCIItion at low
to warn that retrenchment is around the
Trustees. Wharton pred!Cied that the out·
como of this year's propooed budget wiD
cost. the State has a la1'9!' contingent of
corner
Taken together. Wharton said . "the
havo a "profound effect on the tong.
students who could be persuaded to atrange futur of the SUNY system ."
implications of the budget recommendatend Slate schools Instead of seeking their
He pointed out that the 1980 Ex educa!lon out of stale , and Increasing
llons rl'ise serious questions about our
number-. of non·lradltional Sludents arc
ecutive Budget aduaDy recommends $4 · abdHy to fully maintain the academic in·
millon IHo In tat tax support than
tegrlty of the Slate University "'f*m The
looking to SUNY for lde·long education
SUNY goc last year In add lion. wrlhtn
questions stem 1101 only from the recom·
oppor1unitla.
rune months. the Slate University musl
mended dolar and position reductioM.
Given the current Executive Budget
reduce 2. 125 pool\ions "Such an ac:uon
but aha from the inhaent lnabollly !'f a
recommendallons. the Chancellor said •
II roughly oquwalentto dosing down one
univenily to r act Immediately to ma,tor • SUNY could respond by reducing 'costs.
unovenily c nter. or two arts and odi!ncos
policy changes
generating addrtional •ncome and lmcologn 0&lt; frvc agrocuhur..t and technQJ
"It takes 10 to 15 years to build a qua&amp;·
provmg managanwnt affectlv n
cam~. and e~mlnallng up to 12.000
ty academic program. but • can be
studen •" he nowd
detlroyed In IHo t.h an two." he added
Cl....... - - " ' -• okt.,lnt alld
Add•ng doom to gloom. the Chan
Whenon complolned that a major
elt..-tlatl
celor alerted the Board \halt Stat has
ra\JONI
SUNY budget reductioiu
Under the optiOn of cost reductions.
announced pi.J · fO&lt; another 3.000
doer
d
nrollmenu SU Ys own

--:t

roo

·---·-··-·

�Februory 7. 1980

Situation serious,
Ketter tells Senate
President Ketter used one key word to
describe lhe U/B budget situation to the
FacuMy Senele Tuesday: "seriouS."
When quaUoned how b cull would
be dislrt&gt;uled throughout the University.
Kelter somberly relayed that ~ a tentative
projeded 280-Bne cui were to be
distributed proporUonately throughout
the University. some 100· 125 facuhy.
staff" and support poslllons might be af.
lected in Academic Allaits alld bet""""'
60 and 75 in the Heakh Sciences.
h appears U/ B Is in lor about a six to
seven per cent cutback. Keller noted. bul
Stony Brook Medical Center gels
p&lt;eferentlllltreatrnent lor lis slaHing from
the Governor. the total here could jump
to about nine per cent. Whtle Keller cau·
lloned thai there"s "no guarantee.. per·
sonnel reductions will be dlslributed
lhroughout SUNY on a pro·raled bails.
he said that past performance indicates
they will.
The problem Is "serious. "' the President
warned. and requires "underSianding.
academic Imagination and compassion·· ~
il is to be managed properly. He added
thai in about 15 to 45 days. his office will
have lo make grave decisions regarding
the cutbacks.
"I will do everything In my capadty to
temper the ouleome." he promised .

a

• Wharton sees crisis

..,__1......,

Whanon said SUNY could auempl to
close a campus. ebmlnate rriajor pro·
grams. merge campuses. un:b.s or programs and delay or eUminate conslluc·
lion
Clooing a campus -ms the least
viable aTtemalive. he lndlcaled. The
reason Is that such a move would resub on
.. 1111le Immediate savingo." sin« the in ·
Slnutlou would have to fuKiD Ks commit·
menl to otudents already enrolled there.
Further. even lhe announcemenl or a
posoiblo! closing could have a "disastrous
impact.. on a unit's ··attracttveneu.. 1o
. studotnts. facuby and Slalf if the school
should not close.
Elmlnating or reducing major pro·
grams would p&lt;esenl ""difficuk p&lt;obleins. ··
too. noted Whanon . but p&lt;Ogram• do
ex lsi - system · wide
or
muhi ·
campus- that " might be eUm!Mted or
•tgnlflcantly reduced .'" Also . the
ChanceDor noted thal a .. few instances·
e&gt;&lt;1s1 ""-• physical proKimlly could
make a merger of some soo1 "feasible ."
The merger or transfer of unKs or programs •mong two or more campuses
would al$o have "obslacles." "but could
p&lt;Ove to be somewhat le.. d ifflcuh than
fuD·scale magers ·· he opined .

c-.c-laalt?

Akhough delaying or eliminating con·
llrUCiiOn could re5Uh In sorne debt service
..vongs. the ChanceUor contended that.
In -ar cases. · failure 10 complete projeds could rauk In serious Increases In
student aUri11&lt;&gt;11 and loss of facuky. •
Whal1on ptopOSed two inaln ways in
which SUNY could generate addltlonal
Income. luilon Increases and new or ex·
ponded in~lllllves in public service..
research. International programs. and
privele fund·rabing.
T ulllon Increases. at least for the p&lt;esem. were ruled out Even if SUNY dld
r
its rates. the Chancelor noted. per·
sonnel redUdlons would Slil have to be
made (Under the rubric of publoc service
projects. SUNY has recently ptopOSed
using Income Fund Relmburaable ac;.
counts to • create a Small Builne5S
Dewlopment Nd.wooi&lt;. The Chancellor
hopes to got seed money for the p&lt;o,ect
In the Supplemental Budget I

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

... t i l e _

Prlvale lund ·ralling. ac:cordJng to
Wharton. Is the · one major area· which
could ha a -~1 pc&gt;llliw lnlpact"
on SUNY Thll wil only happen ,
carnpuseo are not rft1rlcled In
uslnglhe funds to offMt operating costs
The pnnwory way SU Y could omprove
maM!iJemeo&gt;l effect,_.., IIU!iJ!I&lt;!Sled
Wharton a by immedllltely lo iliMJn!lthe
devekl,l)m4tn'' of a SU Y·wlde f ·year
plato
"""'"' rcquinl oct&gt; campu lo
··r
and rco&lt;dn oU J&gt;r0!1111"'
prlorolla Ill loghl of ill miNion !&gt;U Y .. ould aloo
to IrOn out -proc..dunol st !p&lt;" w h the OOB wtuch
cov!:i faulouole man"'!!menl dfeciovenoro eac ~
and In
oytj.em . . "'

oo-ver •

,.lonw

Oftpl morbid prospoc1&gt; for """""""'
n • ...,.,. quo pooaton. Ooroald

if'l

,.,

.... ·.

was no\ "singled oul .. for major fiscal cut·
backs. lnSiead. he submllled. lhe reduc·
lion was part of a muhi· year plan to
decrease all Slate expenditures.

F..ht .,. Oltlht?
The Truslees lhen commenled about
the way In which to app&lt;oach the
p&lt;oblem . Some Board members. such as
sl udent repre
live Sharon Ward. ad·
vocated a more ..-gre:ssive stance in deal·
ing woth the Governor ·and legislatoro.
She recommended that each Trustee
··come out lighling" they expect any
governmenlal officials to help rectify the
situation .
She also caulloned the Trustees
agalnot being 100 condlllllory and said
they shouldn't even suggest that luillon
hikes or closing a campus could even be
considered.
Right now. Ward said . she feels there is
ci!".!'~~~r higher education in t.h e

a

Board nominee Arnold Gardner of
Buffalo basically agreed with Ward. He
told fellow T ruSiees that they owe it to
their coo1~uents and to themselves to
$how they are prepared to make a .. hard
effort ... Showing ··acqu iescence or
resignation" now would be seV·defeating.
he offered . .
NotCOMI.....
Olher Trustees. however. were not
convinced that Is the route to lake . Board
nominee George CoUins (who p&lt;eViously
served on the Ul B Council) said the
group would be better off to offer "aher·
nelives" 1o the Governor and l.eslisJalure
inst.ud of demanding · a bigger piece of
the pie ."
James Warren . who cloimt he's been a
long-time fighter lor SUNY. contended
that · saeomlng" won"t do the lrlck . What
will. he believes. Is "woridng In a spiril of
cooperation While the Chancelor was quid&lt; to
point oul the dalerioralin!iJ foocal situation
for SUNY and lis debdllallng effects. he
a)$o noted to the Board that this "grave
crisis could lead to a positive conclusion"
and thai SUNY may come out stronger ·

at a result.
·
A8 TruSiees agreed wtlh Wharton
aboutlha necessity of a live·year plan .
Before adjoumin!l to executive sa·
ilon. the Board rdoc1ed a reoolullon of.
fered by Ward which wa• alllcal of
the Governor s budget proposals for

SUNY.

Naroll named
AAS fellow
Or. Raoul Narol. distinguished pro' - o f an~ . has been selected
• a fodlow ol the Amerlean Association
lor the Advanc~l of Science by li!al
organization·, Council
A f llow Is dorflned •• "a member
whoM efforts on bo.haf of the advance·
ment of science or ill applications are
sclenuf
o. .oaally d ngulohad ."
Naror1 name was p&lt;ewnted to the
Council of the M
wtrh thl&amp; c!tJotion~For h
purtUol of comparative
m«thodology. lor thaoretoc:al stud
of
ltural ~u tion . cuhu
. and
..tare . and for geMOal ,.,_..,. of
theory."
~I •

~. '

•

t

' "" •

OIINr.,.._ ...............

The President reminded Senaloro that
other systems, Wisconsin and Mlnnesola.
for two. went through cutbad&lt; sltuolions
about live or six years ago and 5Urvived
the criils. Under former Governor
Ronald Reagan. California underwent a
10 per cent reduction. What ad·
mlnlstrallve officers decided to do In
Wisconsin and Mlnnaota. Keller noted.
was close a campus rather than Impose
cuts throughout the system. Unfortunate·
ly. the Trustees did an "about lace" on
the idea this weekend when they mel al
Capen. he said.
Some olficlals feel SUNY has 1\ad · a
plush life lor years.. in terms of
facuhy / studenl ratios. he continued . so
the personnel cuts shouldn"l come as a
surp&lt;lse .
Aller lhe Board mel. Keuer told
Senators he leh ..very lonely and

frustrated .·· because there was no
guidance and direction from them on
how the problem should be handled. He
said he concluded from his discussion
wilh them that each campus will have to
"'define.. Its own program . and "stand or
fair 011 h.
Ketter also said that the all~ude of the
Trustees seems to be thai little can be
done to curb the $22 million loss. "Now.
they're just shooting for flexibiiHy." he
I05$elled.

Gan.r ......
later In the meeting. Senate Chairman
Newton Garver undencored the Pres!·
dent's senllments. noting that while the
Trustees MCmed to Ieel retrenchment
was inevllable. they issued no policy
statement for achieving K.
The President said lie wants 10 got as
much Input "' he can about retrenchment
p&lt;Oeedure• but Is ha"-ed because he
mu~ meet condltlons specifoed by oct&gt;
union. Currently. a "frontal disagree·
menl" eKistson how to approach the problem . WhUe oomc facuky want to make
sure their representatives are included In
the framewooi&lt; for discussion. olheri.
such as union rep&lt;esenlalives of the
Unhed Univenily Prolesiions (UUP). feel
the budget Is a "political document" and
refuse doscusslon about k .
Other points made by the President
during his addre5S are cov~d In several
arlicles on the budget which appear in today"• Repomr.

Whert-'a, UUP cftorta ........._..
Aller some debate . the Senate
unanimously p85Sed an amended fivepan rotsolutlon offered by Its Academic
PlAnning Corn~lee which supporu the
Chancellor In hoa .efforts lo lncreSUNYs managerial orlflclency and oblaln
addotlono l resources. and endorses
UUP's efforts 1o reslor funds to SUNYs
budget
Addollonally. other sections ol the
ouolutlon
k Information which will
,.,, '
•'
·

..

..

..

assist the Cornmollee to make p&lt;elminary
re~mendations

lo the Sena1e on

retrenchment mailers. The dala SOUShl
Includes information on elq&gt;O!Cied tum·
over lines. and current and continuing
vacancies. (I also calls on the Adminlstra·

lion to make public and dlscu5S any pro. cedures and aiterla it may conskler in
maklng cuts. and gives the Comm~tee
the go·ahead to augment Its membo!r·
ship .
Prole55or GaU KeUy offered a resolu·
lion . to be added 10 the package . 10 en·
su re that women and mlnortt\es not be
disp&lt;oporllonalely hH by any cuts.
Senators argued thai the amendment
might run contrary to union contract
policies on relrenchmenl and thai the
issue could better be addre..ed at the
next Senate meeting when the Academic
Planning Committee makes its report .
An amendment lo this effect was of·
fered by Senator Schoenfeld and passed.

Alfred Tech
'pro-America'
A December · " Pro America"
demonwalion at Alred . Tech attracted
more than 500 sludenls. lacuhy members
and others. Organized by a newly formed
group called •Alfred Students lor Peace."
· the demonslrallon focused attention on
the plight of the American hostages in
Iran and Included brief speeches by
students and facuhy . The college has
joined with churches and other educa·
Uonal institutions thorughout the nation
In ringing beDs lor an extended period
during the noon hour to draw attenllon to
the hostage crisis.

Mat tourney
slated here
The 20th Annual SUNY Allllelic
Conference (SUNYACI Wrestling
Championships will be held Friday and
Saturday. Feb. 15-16. at Clark HaD.
· Nine member Institutions will enter:
Albany. Binghamton . Brockport .
Cortland. Geneseo. Oneonla. Oswego.
Potsdam. and U/ B.
Trophies will go lo the championship
learn. four placewinners In each of 10
weight cla5SCS. and 10 the most oulstandlng wrestler.
Cortland Is defending tum champion.
The tournament will start al4:30 p .m.
on Friday with the preliminary round.
followed by quarter-finals at 5 :30 and
consolallon rounds at 7 :30 and 8 :30.
The championship seml·linals . are
scheduled lor 11 a.m. Saturday; consola·
lion boulllor llfth and sixth place al 2 :30
and. alter an intennlulon. lor lhrd and
fourth place at 5.
The championship finals will begin al 6
p .m.
.
Tlc:kets are $2 lor aduks and S 1 for all
stUdents for oct&gt; of three onolons. or $5
for adults and $21or students for the tour·
nament packago. AD llckell will be sold at
the Clark Hall Tickel Ollice on both days
of the tournament.
AI U/8 ..,..._ auendlng will boo re·
qulred to purchase llckell al the abow
SIUdent rates as per SUNYAC policy for
aU championship compellllon .

The Cleveland
gets 'raves'
The Cleva.land String Quartet.
in ,..sldence ol the MusiC
Deparlment here. commands a page ol
atlenllon In the Feb. 4 Issue of

formerly

New~U~«k .

The group. which ~lnaUy turned up
shortly before the Marb&gt;ro Festival in
Vermont in 1969. Is celebrated for play·
lng "chamber music wllh!&gt;ut cobwebs,"
Railed New UJeek: "In many ways. the
Cleveland Quartel Is the clo se•t
equivalenl to a grul )au COOJlbo in the
elegar.t world of chamber music AI any
given concert, Its members will not be
playing the .. me way they did the night
borfor . They constantly tmproviM . har·
monize. theorize. lnleracl - which h~
explain why the Cleveland Is one of the
most eiiCI\lng quartets In America today."

·.·

.·.

...

_

�--~-trait~lfata
.....JW'ed' notices
U/B saudents rtipOO&lt;Itng to a study
conduaed by the OHice of Institutional
Rae-arch raoged from neutral 10
somewhat negattve m thear evaluahon of
FaU 1979 regislratton . a repon I sued by
tl1ollt office reveals.
A proponoonate random sample of
3.400 IndiVidualS seleaed from lower.
upper and waduate level students "'l:Ore
campus depenments f'ecelved the SUf'Ve.\-'

queslionnatre

Usable

respons~

numbered 1.922 and were stali&gt;1ocaUy
proponJlnMe to student ~prc.scnlataon
at each of the three levels
Although 7H I p&lt;!&lt; cent of th~
· r~dents JUdged the oltlrude of
reg1stration staff 10 be po:;htve. the pro.
ce
Hself was troublesome. Of all
•r~dents . 70 3 per cent partiCipated
In drop-add. 46 4 pe&lt; c~nt voluntanly
changed the" schedules. 45 7 J&gt;&lt;" cem
were closed.-.out of cour:;e . and 27 per
cent had to change theor schedule
because of course-hie changes.

aS ~~~~t af:!~d~m~::Ju~~"r~h:!

than Universtty·lnduced change. th~
report noted. But ··preciSe mt~retahon •·
is "dlllicuh ... it said: ·•for exarllple. a student might have been closed out In at
tempting to make a voluntary schedule
change. en-. because he was closed out. a
student might have voluntarily changed
(rearranged his schedule) ."
'

.Carter's counsel would prefer
change to parliamentary system
By Jo,1ce Buc:h...... f
IWponft Stof

The U.S. Conoli!ution should have a
""Jtnglo sho&lt;" amendment to correct a
"51tudural !auk" which .lnhibits presidents
from carrying out 'lhe domestic and
foreign programs favored by · their
adm nislrallons
SubmiUing what he said were his "own
Ideas.. formed prior 1o any association
wtlh !he Carter admmistration. Lloyd N
Cutler . counsel to the President and
d.rector of the Brookings lnstMute. told a
standing-room-only crowd at Baldy Hall
...._ week. that "ngid separation of
_ . · between the legtolalive and ex·
K&gt;ltive bnonchft of gi&gt;vemment And the
tnebO!rty of an adminiolralion to "form a
government" - In the parliamentary
.., of the word - have made it almosl
~ for our nation's Chlri Ex·
ocutrve 1o
held "accouniablot" lor the
....,.,.... or laWre of the programs he was
el«&lt;ed to lnlllate
Elaborlotlng on I point. Cutler noled
thai . unlike governments which are
J)'Ofloament.llry In nature. the United
SUites does no1 glv4! its president the
const•uuonal power to .,....,., that his
programs a. leglsWed £wn wllh large
~ of hll pany in both the House
and s.n.... a president's propooals may
undergo oubst.llntlal moddicatton before

~- lerge porllons of any progn~m

--a~ Imprimatur only

....twn a otrong ""!toNI conoensu supportuach«ktment Unfonunat ly.Cutler
lomenWid . th 1md of S&lt;lpport
rar .
"that"s why no president since World War
11 has been llbiOI 10 ie9iola and ecute
hol entn program "

are also "costs." he offered.
"I botlieve these costs have boten mounting during the lost ha~ of the century It's
hme to examine whether we can reduce
th'«m \llllhoutlosmg the virtues of separation of power." suggesled the presidential
confidant.
What CUller proposes are " mode51
changes.' not a !Olaf revamping of the
Conslilution Change is more critical now
than in the past. he said . The reason. is
that the country has a "wide variety of na ttonal goals which not only conflict with
one another but also ~mpete for the
same pool of llm~ed funds The relatively
recent emergence of lfllerest 9f'OUps. a
decline in party dlocipUne and the eclipse
of the power of pohtlcal bosses have aU
served lo compound the problem. he

observed •
lcleM fordaa....,
Continuing his address desplle inter·
millen! outbursts from a few students
derroundng C.rter's policy on Selective
Servtce registratto~ and his aUeged backIng of b;g oil. Cutler proposed that the
following "id as·· bot Incorporated In any
Conollutlonal amendment.
• A ex&gt;mbined election for presidtmt.
vice president and members of the
House . This would lnlmwfne the
"po tical fortunes" of our nalton "s
lodeQ. Cutlu I els. as wei as make
Congressional represent.llllves more lm·
pervious to the praoures of lobbyists and

or~~h'..rai'th..

Cablnel from
pany members In the House and S..nate
who would relain their sealS In Congrna.
.• A broaden inS! of Presidential power
10 Include the eboldy10 dissolve Congress
and cal for • new ele&lt;:tlon C"utlu
beliolves this • ...._ , _ . tactic could be
used lo break deadlocks and rouse oupport lor programs
Ounng a Quetlton and -answer teuion
which fcillowed hlo presentation. the prO:
m!Mnl Wuhlnglon atlorncy defand«d
SALT U And in-.1 thto1 dapKc ,....u
confronLIIIions wtlh the USSR. both
countrtn """'ld be "better
\llllh th
traty than
hot.lt k
R_..tiog to 1 ttatemero from a stu·
denl ...ho said he knew of a soldier kilad
1n combo! the AlghaT!islan-P
n
border. Cu
inMed thai " ncepllor a
handful of ad
.. no
m
~ncl ... p - t lfl the orea

orr

u·

.

"'

Four hours and more
Thirty -wven per cent of all
respondents spent less than two hours
registering. the 51udy found. lout an equal
proponton spent four or """" hours.
T wenty-lwo pe&lt; cent had "almost no dff·
llcuhy." but40. I pe&lt; cent indiCated etther
"considerllble or unreasonable dfflicuhy. •
Where 8 .9 pe&lt; cent of respondents considered building a satisloc:lory schedule to
bot easy. 54.1 per cent found K ellhet
"'mode&lt;ately hard" or " extremely
ddficuh • Rounding out their assessment
of outcomes. 22 pe&lt; cent ranked the total
reglstratton process as ekher favorable c.very favorable . and :!4 .2 per cent judged
II either unfavorable en- very unfavorable.
The reit were neutral
Elsewhere. the report found that
freshmen and sophomore n~spondents

were closed

ou1

o( classes more ohen

1han

junior. senior and graduate
respondents. and were. understandably.
more negative about the process. Oddly.

pre·regi51e.ed k&gt;~~A.'---t·c&amp;Msmen "-ere .clos-

ed out of cla....s
non pre-registered
spem more time
non-pre -r...~istered
Student · who
untversili~s

were

more frequently that
IOwer-classmen. and
r~istenng than their
cou1llerpart.s.
had aneniled othet
stgnif1cat\lly

more

favorable in asses-.ing rt.'9istration at those
inshtutiorn. than they Wt!re in rating lhe
proces h~e

OIHfc ultlft, au-Uone
The questionnaire "sked respondents
to sped( "any ma)Of difficuhy" In
rt!gtStenng by mean or a fn_;oe-re ponse
shor1 an wer Th~ most frequently rltcd
problems were ··sedion!t c~:" long
wa1ting line. in reglstrllitk:m : lo~ wawng
lines

111

drop / add .

and

computet

bredkdowns
Sugg..._~ions

for Improvement w re
ehdled Th most frequently of(~red
W\!r~ : - add computf!r terminals ..... add
sechon for courses closing ••.uly ~ ·· - mor'-'
knowledgeabk! registration J&gt;l~ltn('t ;"
··add drop/ add ~nters. ·· and "diff~rctu
regi lrcttJOn days for dtfferenl' s1Uden1
lewis"
In drawing conclusions from ilw data.
the h)Siiluhonal Studies r"J''rt suggesk!d
that "the perhaps Inordinately 1\igh in·
cidence of being 'closed out". panlcularly •
for pre registered freshmen. may reflec1
inadequate monitoring of student d~
mand so that appropriate sectton supply
can be offered."
The registration process here does not
disllnguish between studen1 ·1nitialed and
University-induced course modifications .
the reporl continued . But it is only such
"causal d~ferenllatton that wiD allow the
introdudk&gt;n of differentiated procedures

that assign dKferential prlorily in regtSlra·
tk)n processing.··
The registration study did what was intended. the repon concluded. it elicited
data on .. the notu~ of the regis1T&amp;t\on
process as experienced by students. and
iheir assessment"' of il . But . the repor1
went on. "the product of that process"
eluded the study.
Future studies. the repor1 recOmmend·
ed . should. thus. "include examfnatton
and assessment olthe extent to which the
registration process rewhs in course
schedules that satisfy academic goals and
student preferences. and the extent to
which the accomplishment of such ends
is related 10 studenl relen1k&gt;n. student
flow . etc "

UUP's Allen buoyed by
outcome of 'Save SUNY Day'
Because of statewide lobbying elfons
by facuhy. students and staff In Albany
during "Save SUNY Day." Jan. 29. new
lnhiallves are now being taken to unhe
legislatcws in a poiHical light against any
erosion of the Stale _University budget.
WiUiam Allen. president of the Buffalo
c,nler Chapter of UUP. said this week.
Allen said that Assemblyman Bill Hoyt.
who received delegations ol SUNY
lobbytsts for nearly lour hours. ollered to
spearhead a bipa;tislan coalitton of State
Senatcws and Assemblymen who have
SUNY unb k:ICll!"&lt;i in their .electoral
districts. The purpose of .the coelillon will
bot to roadblock any cuts !he Governor
has In mind lor SUNY.
Hoyt also recommended that the Buflalo Otapter a-eate a "liaison team..
which could ~
through April I
\llllh Western New Yori&lt; legtsialors in
order 10 supply them \llllh the necessary
fads and ligures about how an odipsed ·
budget """'ld Impact on U/B and the
syot m •• a whoW. Allen said. Thei- first
meeting" Is ldteduled for next week
Ostett~. of the recenllobby·
tng efforC Alen also rq&gt;Orted . the
A.embly's Htgher Education Commit·
!ft. chaftd by Mart. Siegcl. voted
unanimously to rejeCt the Governor's
racom""""""llons for SUNY and
lo rtlaiOre al propooad cull
·
Akhough the i:onotltutlonal _ . of
!he leglolawre
in the !ileal procea. Alen nOiad that the Governor Is IIlii
a poltllcal anlmll and 1N!I llsl«n to !he
appeola ol kay comrNI
and ~live
pport groupo
_.

budvot

••lmllad

Belling that the Governor stilt has his
ear to the wound of public opinion. Allen ·
said that the Buffalo UW Chapter. alon~
with others throughoutlhe State. will attempt to shift Pll61ic aUhudes In ·suppon
of higher education. To accomplish this.
he said . he personally would nOI favor a
lV or radto blilz. but rather the mcwe "dUflcuh" approach of holding meetings and
disclussions \llllh communhy groups. He
may. however. bot overruled
Only about 80 members of the U/ B
community boarded two busses before
dawn for the aU-day lobbying elfon in
Albany A handful of 01hm lrom U/B
met the delegotion at the C.pilol By
comparison. Buffalo State sent five
busloads.
Ahhough Allen expressed dlsappotnt
men! over the lock of partlctpallon ~
facuhy here. he was enthusiallk: about
the resuhs of the lr1p . In his atimatloto
the recommendations of Hoyt. the sup·
port they received from his cokagues.
and the action of the Higher Education
Commhlet! showed that the legllloton
were wrlous In their concern about
SUNY and 1\01 merely "gladha~
constituents.
. Just over 2 .500 people from
throughout !he State participated
After hearing shari ~ from
represcntallves from UUP. SASU.
NYSUT and from A.arnblymen Slagel.
Allen said. lhe Buffalo Chap1&lt;1r contJngenl broke up lnlo three groupa for
meetings
Western N«w Vorl!
~ors and key polttlclllleadan In the
Auernbly and Senate

�February 'i . 1980

DOB dtreetor threate to impound
any SUNY funds l.aWIIDakers restore ·
Howard F Miller. diredor ol lhe
S\llle's Division ol the Budget. speaks
platnly·
•
.
• Stale University is deluded if K
thinks h Is going IO work lhro..gh the
Legislature lor lhe resl&lt;&gt;rallon of the $26
million which Gov. Carey's 19!!0-81 Ex·
ecuiJVe Budget plan slashes If lhe money
Is reslorad. Miller vowed here Thursday.
·ru Impound u I won't lei h be spent."
• SUNY should serioi.ISiy consider
closing a campus. Miller advised . Other·
1.1.1se. he's "afraid eve&gt;yone will be ground
inlo th" d irl " If H were his job 10 pick the
unlu&amp;y campu . he'd opl for one " in the
hinterlands whh only one s..nator and
one assemblyman represenllng ~ -"
Consolidating depariments: within
SUNY would be another way to aaom·
modale cutbacks. he proposed "Teach
biOlogy only at Buffalo. lor example ..
Still onolher approach might be regional
..conclaves- with private tns1itu1Jo.ns.
• Asked whether or n.o tthe Carey ad·
ministration has made a polhical decision
10 suppon prtvate higher educational lhe
expense of lhe pubroc sector. Miller
responded lhal "haK lhe campuses of
SUNY will close before Colgate w1U ...
Mdler spoke at a dinner meeting
clunexlng a workshop on the budget
wllich was anended by facully represen·
tatives from across SUNY in advance of
the 14111ler meeung of the SUNY Senate .
(The Senate convened at U/ B Frtday
and Saturday. see S&lt;!paraoe story I
Chancellor CIUton Wharton sal at the
headtable as the po!llically-1)0¥1&lt;!rful DOB
darec1or made his candid remarks

Good News for U / 8

"'""""be

E~'e...._ted

Dunn; his ..,.ech. .Moller both defended and kidded the Governor&gt;
"Wh~ we finished the budget , i told
hiM ohai ·for your saki.. I .I&gt;OI)Illheros a

:~~r~r:;!

-y

I•• ~~41 "'-""Yew\ • BuH.6o

~---"IJbC....Hol .

. . . - T.........wiL'Io&gt;21&gt;2b

-.. 0........,. ,._All...
JACKloOt;

E..,_ Chwl
ROIIEIIT 1 I4NIL£TT

,... .... --.

.IOif!'; A Ct.OUl1ER

-lAior

.10\'CE IIUI;:I1l'IQIO"""

Recent .international events again sug.
a need for Slate Univo.rsily lo assess
the desirabiUiy of continuing hs exchange
program with Moscow Slate UniversHy.
Dr . Anlhony Rals!on. professor of compuler science al U/ B. sold in a leller lo
Chanco.llor Clifton Wharton this week .
Ralston called the Chancellor's allen lion to a leller he had senllwo years ago
lo the Slate Univers~y provost. asking for
suspension of the exchange program
" unlil Moscow Stale .. .proves ttseff :o be
an institu tion . .. wort h y 'of normal
academic exchange."
In thai leiter. Ralston ciled lhe case of
lrtna Brailovsky. formerly a n employee of
lhe computer center al Moscow Slate.
When she applied for an emigration visa
in 1972. she was dismissed from her job.
She was furt her informed by lhe rector of
Moscow State thai she mlghl nol be
granted permission to · leave for many
years. The reason given was Soviet
security. Rals!on saki. ahhough il was
claimed only that Brailcrvsky may have
ouerheard secrets. Further. Ralston
charged. she was harassed by the head of
the computef center at Moscow State
who told her ··we have ito tolerance and
no understanding for our ideological
enemies ...
ges1

Doeen't buy II

.

Some good news for U/ B surfaced
through the overall gloom .
A s1ory m the Courier· Express Thurs·
day morning had claimed thai the budget .
director is "planning 10 spend $50 mdlion
lo $60 milhon per yea,·· (or conslruc\kln
a1 both Main St.rqei and Amhe.-.51 over the
next three years, About S4 m111ion is be·
ing releaS&lt;!d now 10 permil design of lour
new Amherst buildings. the Cou.rier said
Miller said (The foUl are: phase two of 1he
physical educaUon complex. a social
5Cle-nces buiki1ng. a compuier center. and
a student acti111lles soructurej . The DOB
chief was further quoted "' pledging that
·Were nol shortchanging Amherst or
U/ B Main Street . I'll see 10 thai ,"
Thursday ahemoon. however. the
Buffalo News downplayed lhet slory.
ciling other DOB olficials who saki
nolh1ng ha changed regarding U/ B contrucUOft
.
The New. os wrong. MUier advised lhe
Courier• Frede&gt;lck Reinsch when
Reh1Jd&gt; approached him after dinner to
resolve the confliCt of information. Miller
produced from his pocket a chart of
SUNY conSirucUon projections lor the
years between 1981 and 1985 Of $40()
mlUion plaited OUI there. he sold , $275
million IS earmarl&lt;ed for U1B - $175
mUiion for Amherst and some $100
million fOf Main Street. renovahons
U!Bstill has some growth ahead . 11 wiA
1M oue 10 clo : · Mi8er said

Re-assess
Moscow swap,
Ralston urges

s1k!nt maprity out there . because you"ve
alienated every identifiable interest gro up
in New York State .' ..
Miller described the budget in its final
form as · a Governor Carey' budget. I've
never seen ·a Govemor in my lite who
knew the allocations problems so well.
and decided how money will be spent
I've never worked so long w1oh a Gover·
nor on a budget ... he revealed.
"Carey knows exactly whol he's doing.
and why he's doing it." Miller went o n.
.. He juSt ha~n·l lold me why .""
William McGowan of the Civil Service
Employees Assoctaoion has labelled the
spending plan "Miller's massacre." but
the DOB director preferred a different
descnptton .
This is o "remarkable" budget for
SUNY. Mi8er contended . "even lhough
you may not think so •

It'• the limit
Gov . Carey has the feeling. he explain·
ed. · that the emounl ol !h.. State's
resources which can be spent for high"'
educaUon has reached lhe Hmh .. Any ad-·
dhional funding wUI have 10 be raised
elsewhere. Miller saki . He suggested lhal
&gt;tudents could pay $250 directly into an
ln&lt;:&lt;&gt;me fund of some son . "What you .get
beyond what we bave programmed is
yours lo spend,- he saki at one point.
Later. he modified lhat: "I'll lake 60 per
cent and leave you 40: that's what I do
with Menial Hygiene. "
Miller looks lor no ...vision of Carey' •
tax reduction program as long as the
Gowmor ro.mains in Abany. "We must
become economicaUy compeOUve as o
Slate." he sold . and reducing taxes Is one
way to do l .·
"You have 10 deal whh thai r ellty." h"
advloed 11&gt;&amp; SUNY Senate delegates "If
you're unhappy this year. another half a

=::hi;:;:~~~1 !;.;..~!

goin9 to 1Ue your share

&amp;_, ...........

Th4t adrrunis!rauon Isn't excu.ing Its ec·
lions by blaming a poor economy. Miller
said 'The economy Is strong. he
repor1ed Theros no NCftllon In New

Yorio Slale

Saln oax and other nrwnuft ar• about
$50 million · higha- lhen forecast. he

noted . The unemployment rate is good.
··The tum around has come ." he sug·
gested . lnduslries which had previously
threatened to leave the State have now
opted lo stay here and expand. All
because of lax reduction .
Miller predicted "a normal growth rate"
for the New YOfk economy in the next
Several years. Thai kind of grow1h. coupled with laX reduCiion. though . means
Slate coffers will be "strapped."
Allel)'lpts by SUNY lo go "one-on-one
whh legislators" to get funding Increased
ere violations of lhe Stale's budgelary
pl1ndples. MUier averred. SUNY is an integral part of the executive branch . he
pointed out._"And we're aU going. to hang
logelh"' - "! you'll hang separately."

Five years .. rueonable, but...
Miller acknowledged the propl1ely of
Chancellor Wharton's reques1 for five
years In which ''lo work out where SUNY
is going in order lo malnlain quaUty."
"That's-fine ." lhe DOB head saki . "But I
can't do 11 . I hove lo Uve from year 10
year."
.
Miller. who holds a Ph.D. from Har·
verd and spent 15 years on lhe campus
of Syracuse as a professor In I he Maxwell
School of Public Adminislrellon . tried oo
display lllleaslempalhy. K nol sympathy.
''I'm bleeding for you all the lime." he
contended. "Only nobody knO&lt;Iois ' " .
nobody appreciates ft ." He suggested. for
example. lhal the fu-st 4 75 cuts he took
• ou1 of SUNY's payroll of more than
31.000 were "lnfinftesimal." He took
"400 oul of only 10.000 in Transj&gt;orta·
lion ." he added. "You won't be cui
twice ." he promised If Jobs are deleted as
a resuh of the S14 mllllon SUNY has
been told to save lhrough " redirection."
"you'll~ credit lor ft ." he fledged .
What • his assesament o the political
lmpac1 of closing a SUNY campus? MUier
wausked 'We'll fmd oul when we close
• · m~nlal hyglo.ne inslilulion." he
=_!d. "Four of them need to 'be c~d
'M'
npressed greet lailh in how
Chancelor WIW1on Is going to mee~ the
fiSCal challenges facing SUNY , but added
lhal " I wouldn't wan11o be In lhis Un!vn·
Slly during the """' five years· ij my life
d.,..,ded on K • ·
•· .

Ralston said he does nol buy lhe argu·
men t that it is better to ignore such cases
and continue exchange programs so the
lot of the so·called Soviet refusenik scien·
lists won't be made even worse. There is
not one iota of evidence to support this
\ argument. Ralston countered . He said
that such arguments are nothing more
lhan pleas for appeasement. The Soviets
respect only strength. he noted .
Ralston saki the need lo assure lhal
Amerlcan- Russian eKchanges take
cognizance of the human rtghts "of our
coHeZtgues in the USSR" is more obvious
today than lwo years ago. He said he
hoped Wharton will agree that .SUNY
should not be involved with any universi·
ly which denies academic freedom 10 its
facuhy and slaff. "Moreover." Ralston
continued. "I don'llhink SUNY wishes lo
appear as insensitive- to human rights
issues as I believe it has in lhe past." Ao
lhe very least . Ralston urged. a commit·
tee lo assess continuing the program
s\tould be appointed.

Co ngr-lonal heut111
Ralston last week appeared before a
Congressional hearing in Washington to
submit a s!alemenl on "Sclence Policy
and Human Rlghu." in his role as a 1""51·
president of lhe Assoctalion for Com·
pu ling Machinery.
At those hearings. he argued that
American delegates lo an · upcoming in·
lernalioniSI ScieniKic Forum In Hamburg.
Germany, should make 1 "unmistakably
clear that lhe future of sc lific coopera·
Uon between the United S le
the
Soviet Union is gravely impe d by e
policies of the Soviet government toward
its own scientists.··
Ralston noted ol the CoMressional
heartngs thai il has been claimed that on·
Jy. through scienlific exchanges with the
Soviet Union can we keep our finger on
lhe pulse of Soviet science. But. he said .
"I see IHtle evidence thai the benefits of
this have outweighed lhe reciprocal
benefits 10 the Sovieu ." Too often. he ·
continued . "these exchanges have been
accompanied by what amouniS 10 official
·-.bandonmenl of the cause of the dtssi·
dent and refusenik scientists."
• Some say lhal only through such ex·
changes can Amertcan scienlisls have the
opponunHy to visit the refuseniks who
are otherwise cut off from their profes·
sions: bul Rolston demurs here. too.
"These Soviet sdenll~ be ompng
lhe fm to argue thai a
of firmness
and quid pro quo Is 1 e best eventual
hope for ameliorelb1g lhelr Pl"hion ."
Ralston was leSIKying before lhe Com·
mission on Security and Cooperation inj
Europe. lhe Subcommfttea on interne·
uonal Security and Scientific Allen and
the Subcommkteo on ScJence. R•search
and Technology of lhe House of
• Repre•ntalivb •
• •
'

�February 7. 1980

I,ETTER
Now a word
for donn life:
it's enriching
Ytw:
I enJoyed !he arllcle "" Douglr
Bacon. "U/8 brat.· In January Jht': -

Not even Carter has as much power
·over b_u dget as Carey, Veillette says
"No slate has a slrongeT Execut~
Budgel proo::us grounded in ils ConsiHulion and laws.·
This observation · was made and
undenco&lt;ed lasl week by Paul T.
Veillette. chief budget examiner for the
-DivisiOn of the Budget's (008) Educational UnH The 008 officio) was on
hand to shed some light on the intricacies
of the budget proo::us during a worl&lt;ihop
sponsored by the SUNY Senate.
Veillett began by nollng thai the State
Conslilulion mandates lhe Governor 10
oubmk a balanced Executive Budget each
year by February I. The document mus1
contain a complete plan for revenU&lt;!S and
expendhures along whh appropo1ations
for the Execu1~ branch and "unchanged" budget requeSIS from the
legislature and Judiciary.
Accompanying the Executive Budget
are appropriation bills which an be
amended by the Governor up to 30 days
alter presenlalion to the legislature.
AfiftWllrds. any changes must be made
by legiolatlve consent.
The Supplemental Budget. on the
Olher hand. io alw.ys offered alter the
30-day deadline and automallcaDy
becomes "negollabl«. " II JaP&lt;s the "fanfare" of ils p-edecessor.,relayed Veillette.
and Is usually deviled through "behind·
the-scenes• discuoslons.

How do-.-.,.. ..........
Because of SYte law. Veillette nOied
!hat the leglslat.u re mu51 fa,t COO&gt;ider the
~lions contained In the Execullv"
Budget .bdOd acting on ~s own budge!
ln~illllves . During this process. lhe
powers of the l..o9olalure are limbed : b
an only "lllioe out or reduce" money for
budge! kerns and not lncr.,... fundklg.
The way )he l..eglslature then atlempl•
to change the budget Is by rq&gt;lac:lng a
llricl&lt;en ll«m wllh another "separate and
diollncl" budget Hem tor a " single objeci
Of pwpose- These eddlllons. howeVer.
•e oubjlc:t 10 veto as are the~
lions lor the l..eglsl.ture and Judlclaiy.

.._.,_
.....................
"The l'reticknt of the Unked Slates

doesn't even have the power of Hem veto
"' Federal budgels.• commen1ed the
008 reprewntallw.
Also unlike Federal budgets .
"rldon" cannoo be p&amp;.ced on approprla·
t10n1. el money mUJI be used lor one

-

The Finance Alllcle olthe Constllutoon

gives !he 008 " lrormendoul

poweo-."

II rnandMes that !he
Governor's budgetary powers be ad·
--.~ by
008 under tuo b
lion
Eucul La - 1 0 further
008'• ..Mority by PfOIIIdJn1l that ..
head ,.. ho • t plua. of !he
n&lt;Md V

Governor)

I

Governor .,

cleveitJpong and «!
Jlllet'Wig I
budget
"Thlo ll1icJ.
lha 008 direc:'IOr •
In to.mulau,.g and
oft Gowrnor'sc""·
uto&lt;y
In

fiscal affairs ...
Reviewing co\trt cases which had a
" sign~icanl impact" on the budget process. Vellleue recalled that during the
1950's and 60's. only one budget flgur~
was submHted for each campus in SUNY

:,:1~~~ ~=~w~rt::

l..evill took lhe late Governor Nelson
Rockefeller to court charging that his appropriations for SUNY I Albany weren't
sufficiently hemi2ed.
Rocky countered that since SUNY is
one syslem. each campus should be considered a separate budget item. and no
further breakdowns waa needed. Tlw
case was seuled out of coun .
The problem. admitted Veilletle. is that
the ConstHution neglects to defin~ what
constnutes a budget ilem. Through
negotiation whh the Ways and Means
Committee. the 008 finally settkd on
seven "'functional appropriations·· for
campus budgets.

m~~"\~;: u:;d' . :l."a~'"~~=
faculty/ Sludmt ratios .. are not a science.the-y facilitate communicatil'9 in a .. non·
adversarial wav.•

c-w.•t It ... -

.......the?
Faculty Senate Chairman Newt.o n
Garver complained !hat a ·more imoginallve • and less burdensome procedure than pre-eudl should be used to
chedc an inslllulion's fiscal Integrity.
Vedleue countered !hal the pre-audH is
a nec:e.-y precautionary measure. but
conceded !hat " Is "absurdly detailed"
and should be updated for d/iciency.
Another partlcipent asked the OOB of.
flclal If he could eXplain why !he Governor insists on increased aid for private
eduealion when public educalion should
gel lop priority.
" I can •t provide a rational
explanation," answered Velllelle. "h'• a
policy decision.-

HIIIO..... teoldlciaw

Vellloue offered !he
as "im·
r:::"'
highlights" oftha Slate'sFinancial
folowlng

• Section 21 , Gives the head of 008
aa:essto al Slate records and offices and
also the poweo- to IMue oaths and oubpeonas

e Sect;on 42· Ac;knowledges !hat an
appropriation ..il not a mandat
to
tpend.• h 1\l)ecif.., !hal an agency is only
enlilled 10 lhe amount of the aJ&gt;PfOP'!"·
lion which~"' p u - This
Is wher the idea of "expendBure
ceilu)gs" comes Into play. Dplained
Veilet . h'• the "II"P between what Is
appropr;.ted and what the 008 actually
allows an agency to spend • .
• Section 43· Slates !hal money provided for a sped{ic purpose cani'IOI be
~t.eloewher Th is what is known as
"legislaUYC inlent • Veilleue ruf~Wmed
that ouch meaour as pr -aud• control
and u of alocattqn cerllfc:.ot• jiuued

by 008 lo conlrollers for authorizing
payment of bills) W..re insthuted lo ensure
thai legislative intent is honored.
• Section 50, Stales that money for
SUNY personnel. maintenance and
operations can (lheoreli&lt;aDy) be transferred from one campus to another
whhoul timil . This section remains on the
books because of an "oversight" in I 972
on the part of the controller and the
leglslatunt. Veillelle noted .
• Section Sl , Restricls lhe Interchange
of money between major State programs
to 5 per cenl.
• Section 94, Provides !hat a Govern·
~ Ernervenc\1 FlOod ~ created for
specific fiscal emergency situations.
What's interesting about this section: offered Veillette. is that "SUNY Is the only
Stale agency named which can legally
lap the fund .
"This strikes me as being of some
significance in light ol the 1980-81
budget recommendations." tre added.

U/8 bowlers
take honors In

ACUI tourney
The U/ B women 's varllty team and
the men's Sludenl union-affiliated team
bOih won championships al the Association of Colege Unions lnlematlonal
(ACUI) regiOnal bowting tournament in
Troy. Sunday.
II was the second Slrllighl regional tHie
for the women. the first for the men. and
bOih teams advance to ACUI Sectional
Championships. the final step before the
National Tournament. In March at sites to
be announced.
Coach Jane Poland's Royals scored
8.525 for nine games. and also claimed
first and second place in Individual AMEvents and first place in individual
singles. Sophomore Pam Detlg (Kenmore Easl) won the AI·Events crown
wkh 1.765 pins (196 average) . and
Junior Terry Strassel (North Tonawanda)
was second al I. 741 (193 average)
Oetlg and Strassel advance to the National Individual Championships at Seatlie. Wash .. Aptil 6 -8 .
The U/ 8 men IOialled 8 .71910wln the
tnle over 26 other teams. Willy Formanek
(VestaO was second In indiVidual AUEvents (1.859J and advances to the
men's National Championships al St.
Lou

Quiet a t Oswego
For -a1 days and nights before
Christmas. the music of holiday caroli and rock - wu muted In . Sludent
re'sidence hah et the tale Co8eg6. al
a.-go A 24-hour ban was enforced to
~ lludenls· to lludy In silence and
p-epare for semes&lt;er-endmg exams The
noise ban wa one of many measurn on
the compus 10 ~ lludents flnilh the fall

~~~~ -· ·' .-,

Reporter. He sounds like someone U/E
can be proud of. and I '9"" that U/ B 1:
undenated in many areas.
I am a senior occupational therapy SIU
dent. and both of my brOihers (freshrneT '
interested In anthropology and engineer
ing) also auend U/ 8 . We aU live in lh&lt;
same dorm. by some colnQdence. W•
are nol thai unusual: I have observe&lt;
several Olher groups of st&gt;lings here.
We came here because U/ 8 had •
repuustion for being a solid. m
nonsense. good school. We live sever•
hundred miles from here. and H is tho
first lime we've lived away from homo
longer than a summer.
I only bring all this up to point oul tha
Douglas Is " under-raUng" yet anolhe
aspect of U/ B IKe when he negates tho
effects of living away from home anc
specili&lt;aUy passes IJII dorm living.
As a resideni advlsor. I admit to a cer
taln amount of bias. but think living awa• •
from home is a wry important part c
··growing up ... II oilers a chance for tho
student to see himself as a new persq,n socially. emotionally. and lnlelleduaU~
His life Is his own lo arrange. There is .
trem.,ndous spectrum of things to do ·
and even something as simple as sitlino
and talting in a friend's room unliiS a .m
Is exciting. The cliche of the lone)~
drunk freshman on academic probalio•
should be chucked.
For those who want lo gel involwd
liying on campus offers proximby ,,
musical ev..nts from classical 10 pun~
volunteer causes of aU kinds. moVIe
from Charlie Chaplin to Kenneth Anget
and myriad oth"" goodies, not the lea,
of which are dorm-related. such a.s ge
Ung to know Vietnamese. Jraniar
Cypriot. Colombian. and Olher forelg
students from places that once were onl
words in a N.Y. Time• article. or livin
with a growing population of handi&lt;a~ ·
ped students and realizing for once an
for aU that they belong here wtlh us.
Speaking for myseW. I've had an e&gt; •
cellent three years here. because of m
major. which included practi&lt;Umsand 1r ·
lernshlps thai haw involved me whh
variety of people. and a smaU depar ....,.,, with lots of individual auenlion an
cloS&lt;o·knlt Sludenls (commuters. ex -~
students. and a few dorm students) . U.
ing on campus (flrsl in Schoel&lt;opf fc
lwo years and now in Goodyear) •. hl
been a uniquely ~hing way to "gro
up.· and one which I thil)k ought to ~
available to and recommended 1
students coming lo the Univ"rsl;
whether from thousands of miles away &lt;
from wkhin the "30-mile radius.-

o---___
. ......
.

- C.....,. Helt

__...,.....,...
,....
_... ..,....

w...................... ...

ol U/ 8 ; - -

..._.....,_..._
..... -111M.

....,;,,H

..._.~

d

,

-.s-t.

CONI'£nn\l£ CJYa. SE11Y1CE
T - SG-3 - L-. Sdt.odlllntl F. . . to.
Clooll SG-3 - c....... Mo;lj,
s.-SG-s - .._
om ~ ·- ""-"' Ploo•. ,...
Offn ot !lit~ AccuunS.. ,o\coeooM Clorl&lt; SG-9 - u..-.ay Bud,
Of!«
s-.. Clort&amp; SG-S - ....,.. ,_.,
s.. SG-9
...... o..n·, Oflc. .......

-

t...oos:.,_ -

SG-9
"')_ Phyocol Plo

....... .....,.,... ~ SG-14 ~ S..q
,............ "'-""' SG-11 s.c.n..
SG-11
""'
!&gt;J&lt;oy

c-

o....

Pv,.-.

�February 7. 1980

·o-th Row'
Bruce ~ ·and DIMe Chrildan of
1M Entllloh D_,._ will ocreen
their 59-minute color documentary
about lito on Doth Row In Texu. FricS.v at 3 In The Kiva, 8aldv Hal.

CALENDA
Thursday - 7
PEDIATlUCS RESEARCH SEMINAR•
A.mlbdn end Tkarc:llllo M Empiric Th«~
k1 Canca P•t~ ts with Fewr, Htw..ard ~ l·.d.:tt
.. M I) Roard HQOnl Ouldrt!'t'l·) H~al 12

PSST'
ASSERTlVE
MARKET""

''?0''

I uu•toc:s.tt~&gt;~l aud tlw l-."\11

KIU.S FOil THE .1011

·u~:, fouT~hon

RECITAL"

2.:U~
n~

.u.ck!iOf\ ~md 0WtMCtw.RW~~n of dw b~ ~
~~ U , 8 1lM! Kwa. lUI 8akfy 3 p m ~pon
SOt~ by dw [}epar1fTWfll of E•~
Finwd .aa ttw Ea. Umt of ahe T..-J~.M ~na
u( OI'T«110m. Te..b' Oeaah rtNo . ,..ofwr~ Hlb mer1
""'-on! ••IC4rtera'Wd llw f~ "aboo.n life on rt~ Row
how.~ men Qt'1 'by l.ow ah.!y ar.: marwtged "'""'
1~ do In dw blg Y'!"'~ Mtv.."L"lm ~'tlWT'ICA'Ig and
ftnal ~lion Fund~ f:,y tho.- Anlt.....tcan film
ln"Jlu~. the Polar&lt;Md FoundahUn. tlk! PS.ltyboy

l.S11n•
r.Jb mMM•t "'tough 'iind cnmp.•hlM• AN you
1tm ~i hnuf muQu$;.' •dl OlUO:UU4Io.! Ull

Trombon"' studt!lrb n."Cilal
i I!Jp'm ff«

Bawd R ..•cnal Han

ptYI).tfl'\f#

.,M:' bi..fklv•u•

11

applw~ II•

I'M'-'J»nng aud

nun~ \.• "''"""" .....tk·n &lt;K.'\!ku-v. ~Jkl\o-'n'k'll1
lhrwyh ,.-*.- pl.n.11.y ,md '&gt;tn.K'IUJ\"ti ,..,,en~ \'flU

ph·

l\olw tJ~ •.ISJPOI1UI\II~ 10 ptGn-.t,' y&lt;IUl il""'-"''lM'
ifl.. "' lf'MI".' tvpt(•l trouhl._•,onw ~uatf()U!i [-.
lA""-'"'~' 4ttd (~'''-''' llk• w..uh af l'f(~'C'II\&lt;o? ltet1on
(f.mulf'f'Wt~ i.mllt."tl t•) C'\lnll-ntk. ~·~~~·d U IJ
ut .. k.~~ ..tuJ.•u.b t
Lcotdt-n. !ll\!'1)1~1•' Ltx·k~m•n pt.c_.m.-.u
CVU.I~...... UnN r~t(~fnL'ftl &amp;: (.:Mn.., (lullLtnc..•

\\

••lid

.-...~.,.. tbr-._'C"',-.n

Bt&gt;• Hurh

Uul\'"")11'-'

BUfFALO LOGIC C()U.()QUIUM"
Oumment's ..JuJtifk.adon of Oeducdcm,"'
HIYCk. Unr\."-~'Y of V..ar.\.-k t.l~nd ll q
&amp;ldy 3.:J(l p "'
l&gt;umnwm- 1n'J)OI'1itlll l!niCk? fn&amp; a~n.&gt;d hl
Procttdings or the British Acactem.,, I 'J7:J and t5
h.,.nwd •• tm. r...'C~tut bQok Tn.lh •nd OttleEftigma5, Hdf\--drd. 1'11H IUio r~"-"\\atd H&lt;MCk!l
The Jusadrauou of 0.-ducto,,- MJND, 1970.
11'2 II 'J

!)uwn

(.: UU!belftly ..,._'1'Vtc::l'

COMPUTER SCIENCE COU.OQUIUM•

PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM•
MfSOft Scatterint lr-om Nudri in Th~ and
Prkdce. Prt_ri~ -.{JI! 0 Kofh.m Ph\.'!iiC~ I~
"""~ lhuvo..-t~Y of Roche .....- 4ft4 t-rouu.Aik .i JCI

A pr.n.Bued A ....... ol Indirect Speech
A ,
Janw,. A~n . !Hpanment ol Computfl!f
X-..'fiC.... UnM-~Y of Rot'ht!Sler Room 41 422b
Rdyto L~ta J 3U p m Coif""-' and doughnu~; ilt J tn
Roomt.l

pm

BIOLOGICAL SOENCES PRESENTATlON "
Somo Probl&lt;ma

0ttun1no

0.......

Oowlop~aMI of the ""-u.aJ S,...en~ . ()r t\nM Ruiotf.
Un;wnlty ol Mkh-. • -lopmonoal biology
CIIOd.dMe I 14 Hochstenn 4 p rn

CD.LULAR PHYSIOLOGY SEMI AR•
Mpt.. Me1hyl Dopa, Superoa:iM Oi$mu1ue
a Ad th~ Human [rylhrucytt.. Or l'lu\.'-' C'"-"-"'
0...,-..mm..•nt uf M.-dKIIh' Ji»C ~h.'f11lttn

,,.,._,«,.
4 pm

Cuff~

•• .i

4~

Na11. llt Cl. . k.. .yht•~ d.-.'C1(1of ot ph;ti
nt«"y ttani&lt;Wd 11&lt;htmai CStt&lt;~ c~ 4 p m

'au

CUIIRICUWM LEADERSHIP
SEMI AR SERIES•
ThomM Joynt, pnlt."'plll Pul.d I t hyh

OfWlltl~ "IIIW l'NI

t r-u·~ I Rath4 M,·n.,lfldl ~..nw..- ~.,..._, :l!pon...-lf\."-1
"""d"' f :'plWlRk'lll cJ$ ( un ulurn l), ..,_.__.tupn"-.,''•'ld

"''ud"'"-

M~odw l- ,..._u)ly of l:.dlKollW.JI\al
J&lt;'\ofl! bob. . . . . .t llt.ah ""~ h.!bt-.,....,,&lt;k ....."T~·J
lol(1io.'t4

'" th•· 1"':

"'"'ttnuthl~ ~-huul

an tl~ Ont!o..'tl ~:.··,

n._, J,·latl()tl,.l'4) t't·'~t"'-"t1 dw ...-hooJl ,.(dtf •rld l Utll

tlwh' ko~ 1l1o (lUrp._., cJI cumculun1 1'11.tn
I~ f"' lo l~'ff ""h'I)I'H...i
flw ,...,.....
''~"''" ''' '-A.~u
'-'¥.'work t·ut

mui•l!'&gt;

m ~......,._.,

""

n•rnrulum '"''"'"-"~

E G Lundgr'"'' Sltlt3 ~'""man 4 IS p m

off....- .., 4

5. 1 IS and 9 JCI p m
t&gt;llld ..'1t1S

Sl

lhtatr~

(ietk!'fal

~uw&lt;'

adm!)6.1011

011 thfo RYn flruH•ul) \\L4Jn-...ull~.u~
A11tl-.-r'-' -, 7 ~~~IJ•I «lpt'1J (...._•·k.'l..l &lt;••.hru~.,.. .. ~
l 1&gt;1u•k.. ,h I Stt

f'l•·"'· •. t.'Wl'W

ol\.&lt;li~

UUAB MIDNIGHT FILM ·

TrMh . Conf~-"lC'C Ttwatro.&gt; Squlr~ 12 m.d
mght Gerwral adrrusSK&gt;n S.2. Rudents $1 50
If you~~ I~ chUdrcn 10 -s~•l!il &amp;au 1y 9'-'1 '"'m out befort!' tht5 001W lK.'9au
Hf'il\ollm C•n W•ll. rnca 194~ . is not to be con
fused wtlh H~•ven Can W•lt . circa 197 ~ Th~ '7H
· H~awn ""' as a re makf' - but of Her~ Comn Mr.
Jordan 0941) Thf' '4:! H~•"" ~ing iCh.~o...,ted
~ f"atures Chafin Coburn . Gene Twrney. and
()on 1\rnedw in a conwdy about a la1e I Ylh Cen

Sunday- 10
CACALMS "
Man; BnMhen Doub&amp;e Feature Duck Soup and
Monkey Businaa. Confen!lta! Ttw:alr" · Squire '/.
m Gen\.'fal bdmiuion $1 25 . ~t udetus Sol

a.r~ ~ p

h&gt;jltur~

PEDIATRICS PRESENTATlON "
How ChUdren Grow. ~·'T'i l&gt;r Margato..'l
Mite'( otlb\'ldY and Or M.wy V~o...'\1 profo..-unh u4
U B And ro dnoc1on Endncmw
J).,...,nm.__•nt. Tho..· Ch.Jdrctl ~ Hospul of Bulfakl

flot.·dwtra.'1i

l'm1h~

Sleepint Beauty, a Wall Os~ey producuon
Woldman Theatr" 1\mtwrst 4 b g and Ill p m
G\!'lk!t1ll admlmOO $2 ; Sludent~ Sl 50

BFA RECITAL"
Brian bmner,

RQOm

Chl\dum" HI&gt;'I)P•I
7 .«1 'I Jt) p n1 ~hoUfo.'tl by 1lw Hunwu ( or• No 1h •
Found-'IOS' ell '4._.~-.·m "' York

MFA RECITAL "
Oet.orah Weks, vloku &amp;11J R-..ntotl H ..H N
pm

p m

Free

p~mst

Mr

Eie-nma

Batrd Recnal HaD g

baniOIK!

Zumler ......U

~ attOmpem~

~ib ~pon3&gt;01'ea by

dw

by

~nwm

of MuiiC

~u·~

12 mkl

wytll (WtWT'al edmli&amp;I(HI 1-2 ilu&lt;k..lb lol 5(1
"'dw ... only a poor Iran~ - "~. l1ut Ww'd kJIIOt'
• P6" uf Jo.n Crawloni ~"S Otlt.' o( th.. moe..•
~ ._.,,u- · 111 ttw Andy \Aiafhol film catalog

Saturday

10

tlw

~evil

why

PSST,
USnNING . NOTETAKING
AND THE ClASSROOM LECTURE · •
IOKNonon J!Jpm

Mu..-

You anend a tiWO hnur k.'Ciur~ V..lwn you lo.!l!\1\' '
1J0U ha~..._. on~· a haJf d ~ of not.!i You arrM.'
home you tw.w fOI'g(Mt~n mos1 of \\hat \\·a~ Sind
and 1h..&gt; OOiot.'S 8Tf' uot ck!ar ~nd famdksrl Many
cuL.'g\.' ilu&lt;knts ~~~ noe aikqu~h!'lv pr.:pared t'l ,of
l«1twly lak~t 110t durmy a looc1urv lbe pu~ of
thlf ~is-to providf! you v.·11h th.- opponunny
10 ko.am how
l-.·~ ~h-.~ \4.'--ems t~«hwlfi a11i&amp;Wtnt tlw

BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAR•
Moleallar F ac1on in Cytochrom• C ControllIng A(:dval.i on ofT and 8 Lvmphocytn, Dr Mo.rt~. R"'ichLu
Ocpartmt'!nl of Mttdtemt! and ·
~mblry . VA H~&amp;l l'ntd U B It~ !&gt;~r
m.tn 4 p m CoCfet.! at 3 j(J,u lUll\ Caty

MUSIC"
For th~ Birds, a ~ular cot1ttfl honor11~
Buffaio ~'0\lr\bry Chap._&gt;~ . 2U5 Bld""•'R
Park\\•ay lip m
-..

bwds

I o..'i:tlunng pnokt vwtuoso Ll!ur'-'IIClf Trot!
wprano ~.J ~-tli. p1illll151 'Yw.r Mikhaiholf
i:ttld ~us.~JO"bl Jan \A ,n,ams
l\\o\\'OritsbyU Bcom~wiUbcpro.'mkM.I
Coc:k Aobn1Mby too mn (f~ soprano. f)k.-«W•
and pcr c uiirOn) and · 1\n 1\polhcchl~ ut
1\rrhaeoplmA- by ~ren Haller- mil v.1l ..pc&lt;tk
about hbi bng nn..-rt.' "' b*-di and hrs ("'f'nf)())oll'Hu
~pon)Qit\.'d by.tlw PICColo ~k·ty and Buitdlc '
~·m•lAfY

FILM (FILM NARRATIVE)"
Tntament o( Dr. M.buw (Lang J9j2) 147
l&gt;Wfet\dort 9 p m Sponsor~ h,.• ttw C"'llk"r k.~dY~udy

Recent Studin on Substltu1ed Ac::l!ti!nltide

Tollkltv. Ecf.A.an:t B
prof~

SEMINAR "
CollliJtUftlty Contributions. Ttw ~ wil
conseckt- ~~Mid dw ~~~and
upnaiiOn ot vok.mtnr ~IIOOS E..d\lbQ v.il
~

thr VMIOUfl ~n~ ag.mdH iocAt~ Ill
&amp;Ho~~lu lb7 Ml A( U.Cou R~r••M:Mt 'J .to
• m \\trap up WWO!l 2 J() p m R~• uon f~
elf ~ •teiudn lunch ~Jonaor~ l)\ stw luten.Jw
lngAdh l.artgu9 lututu
dw Buffab V..ortd
Hc~y ~liOn .00 tlw Na110N11 AHOCwa
uot1 lor Far-.-tg~1 ~udent 1\ff~n

.,_lton M 0 .. Ph 0

(Nper1m~ttli.S

of

llwt-apwurs And Mo..-d\Cllw
RclrdhriW1Hti a1 J 45

asS~Sumt

Phann~~eok)gv
h~ 4

124

and
p m

FILM {fiLM HISTORY) •
Th« T~mnt of Or. M•buw (lAng 19J2J
140 Dad~ndorf 7 p m ~•torN by dw C~nh."l'
fOr Med.- Study
UUAB MONDAY NIGHT I'ILMS "
So Tbk k Park (L -..c-h 192&amp;1 . 7 p m .
HawnC...Wak {Lubtuch 194]J 82Spm 170
MFAC. l:kolt J

rH ed~1

Tuesday- 12
RECITAL"
~udtttu CNmber Stnng Remal Baird R«1tal
Hal 1215pm Fru
WOMEN"S BASKETBAU. "
,
Cankhd Co~Wge . O.rk Hal 7 p m
WOMEN"S SWIMMING A DIVING "
a..t. Hal 7 p m

.......,.. u-....,.

WRESn.tNG "
Do

a.- Suo!• Coll&lt;9&lt;. O.rl&lt; Hol

uu.\11 Fll.M •
G"

~ Buuoy• • "'""

(onfft~~Mt

ThNtrc

("""".I~

~UN

Ip m

o.:.,...
prod..,..,
o. ~ ..lei tu p m

52 111-ucknb $1 50

R.ol!l

ICE HOCKEY "

a.- s.... Cellfto. T......Ondo k

7 J.)pm

nue ·

Do. .

he

LECTURE"
Women ancl lAbor. From 1940'• War Worker
to the Coalition ol t..bor Union Women Todev.
Ba.--bara Werthdmer, 339 Squire . 7:;30 p m Chad
ca"' will b&lt; proWled . Sponscnd bj, Tolstov Col
Wgre , Women's Studln: Col&amp;ege , and American
Studta.
For more Information caU Tohtoy Co~ .
831 ·5386.
MEN"S BASKETBAU..
Roches1er Tech CR41.T .). Oark HI!IU !-) p m

v.olin. C~ Gobbe1ri, OUI~t. P"'nny 1\,)(],'Ts.otl
IIIO&amp;a Talowshi M in~a. ~lo. J.t•'-' Cary harp
itCho«J Baird Rll!&lt;'ital Hal ~ p m Gt!!k."lal adrru.~
son $J . Iaculty. stall. alumm bnd wmor dlll\'H§o 'L
iludt!niS \I . Sponsor~ by 1tw ~Hpctnm..·nt ot

Monday- 11

PHARMACOLOGY A THEIIAPEUTICS
"'
SEM INAR•

9

:~~k~~: ~~ ~=n

MUSIC"
Buffalo Philharmonk: Fril!nck: lntda filch...,

L'-"•rn•'9 C"'n\\.-r U B

...... Ill O..UUIIoo_"'CUt-•1
••&lt;-otmttr•Jn 4111\

(1iltli7.t 1-.JI

UUA11 COFFEEHOUSE·
Barb -P•retlowskl , sin ger sougwrht!r
R.thskotller 9 :.1 t J JO p m ~~ ere Sl for
AuMnu. S 1 SO for 01hen. and a)e a\taiJabll&gt; at
Hallld&lt;et Offb
M' Panadowski. who ""'nh:!S end p.._orionns in a
comitfTlpOrafV JaZZ dkm't. accompanld hll!nool.'lf on
piano Ht?f music. 1nost df il origln•Dy doni! .
diSploy;s an u1 100mmon bWnd of iolk. blud. ,an.-.~
rllglhnl! szyl.:oi To complto.h!' t~ uhmwne «&lt;f
kebouw etmospht.'fe . \IJbk."$ v. il tk&gt; candletil and a
~,~.,w.y of exo&lt;ic cofk-es and cht.'l.&gt;wi v.'ill bt.&gt;

$2

!)(I

Duck Soup ~nd
Monkey BuPneu . 17U Mf/\C Elw:ot• 7 and "l 45
p m ~neral 6dmb.~l I 2,5 _ Sludo.'lll i-1
In Oudt Soup ( 19J:.ij _Lroucho b 1hl' d.c:tator QC
a mvth6cal ktngdorn and lho.' od"-" 1wu 01n• loP~~
db.!it llk.'Pt or.n
Monkey BusiMU ( l'U II !uw:J• thto lh~o•c .,~
~0111.:~~ on • thip GJo.'at conwd"' b n-.ovo.'f &amp;t....J
a1~ (lfOUCho'i ck'PfnStOU pun,_ oitf\' 'tllll lUUfl\i

()o:Jn'-" ,.

Tlwy're at lea~ more pro\IOCauw lhan ··SWepuJQ
Bt-11\lly ..

UUAB FILM "

UUABALM"
l.oue Oft lh~ Run. Confereno:

UUAB MIDNIGHT ALM "
T....-. Couler~nc~ Thctatn.'.

l..o\.~

I .. "' ...,. .,,_lSI tt~..f d.:
'~ •LAAR..t

1)1

~ huol

(\\aoo;ln 11 ~IJ.a'9 Otnil~ Room t:Jir(M1 4 JH
r m ~ ~h• .tnc'\' ·~ISitaHon null,!

TJw 1"'--~Ut)ll man., tlw

C~

CACMOVIES"
Mon. Brottwrs Ooublt&gt;

., ::, 1!•

PHARMACEUTICS SEMI AR•
Phiifm~ ~ of Sdectf'd Anllbloda in
R,.f,._·~"""-.,", litl

PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR•
Cardiopulmonarv Efkrcu of lmma-,.k)n,

CAC MOYIES "
M.rx Brothen Doubt. FHture o.ek Soup &amp;ld
M..... · 14b o..fendori 7 and 9 4~
p m ~ adrnMion Sl 25c. saucknb S.l

r ....

To list events In th« "Calendar, • call
Jun Shrader at 636-2626.
Kev: "'pen only to tllooe with a profnalonallnterest In tM subject; • Open
to tM public; ''Open t.o m~mbers of
the Unlvuoltv. tJnleu othenolu
opeclflod, tlckm for Mnb charging
aclfl!lulon can be purchased at the
Squire H.U Ticket Ofllc:a.

Wednesday - 13

�7

f~7 . 1980

Notic:es
CAMERON IIAUID CONCERTO
COMPETITlON
Euoanu ll l •he 4th anu u~ Cam.._'fott &amp;•c.J
Memonal Couo.•rto Comp.!liliOII a1 tho.' Q,'J)II(Ifnt!ul
of Mu ~. "'"il tw ~-d 111 prdlrll llldfW» 011 ~1 u1
day. March I a 1 d dos.!d twanug TIM.• hn"ibh will
p....&gt;rlOJm till a !'l.'SLSI('IIIJP..'n to ttw puN... 011 Mmd1 I
en :c p m tn B.urd R'-OCJidi HaU t\d"""'-"-KH' i .. fn.-..•
V.."u"·'"' w.·W po..&gt;riom1 a.. ioOIQ,sls \ol. tth 1lw UnA,'f"S'I
IV

Philharmoma

at

a

euttOo"f1 10

tw g 1wn on Mav 'I

TI~ ~IIKM• ~..,.-. Nat"lll...h-.&gt;d In

honot lh\!

1~ lalt&lt;" Cam._.,.,m RavJ , found'"-oz _., •.._!
chairman uf th...• Mu!&gt;te l.k-p.1.nm&lt;!nl ~.._. •&gt;I
pnnclpil] yo.ltk 111 dw Wn...,. c~l..t~o.ll\ V.&lt;l\ 111

Rll''110f\-' of
lh~J fn~

"~'

bnug \!XC-1)1tOUilly
..1udy 111 BuHalo

bKk. nonV'l.'fbal belvvn. aa.w 11'ilPn•J9· ~rib
· ~ I~M!-.gs • .00 ot~ lOpe$ TI..... f~t .,.,,g In
ctu&lt;W both • l«lurll!
~ntial aerctWS
LeWt:!r X'ott Murr~ docloral canddat~ 111
CWII$dng psychology. U 8

••td

-LECTURE '
Manpower Polley and Evaluado n , Or E \A.;
~~~ ot ABT AModa~ Kr.us Ct.&gt;ttlt.&gt;r.
Croob!&gt; H all J5 pm ~-edbyoboC..o...,.luo
Poky Studllt'-5 4md tfw R qJI(tc~l Ecouomk"
AssisUtnc:~Ceulef

SnJDY OF AGING LECTURE '
Po~tials Dewlopment a:. w;t CommunkadOM,
&amp;oth ~ic.'tmwlll and Or S usan I&lt;LJidt 2J4 ~uW
J 311 p m SponlliOI'ii!d by dw
Omt~._"' lor the Study of Agug

M uliid~nary

BUFFALO LOGIC COLJ.OQIJIUM '
Modem NathnMJical Plawni5m , Joht• &lt;.:01'
roran Phlkts.ophy. U 8 119 B.tkly 4 p m

C HEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR •
Propcnia oiWater kl Thill film~. Duv.a~"'~ M

Auderion. don Facu.hy of Natural !&gt;cwtlCei and
Matht-matiC'S. U 8
JU1 o·Bn.m -4 ~ p "'
Rt&gt;fr~sbnwm' .,..il bll wrwd '' J :.tn

FOSTER COlLOQUIUM SEAlES•
Form•don of Clvlter Bond O rganic Moftles.
Jerry ~ E.non Corpo.-alJOn 70 Adlnon 4
p m CoHee ""'• be lefW.d"" 50 Adwson at 3 4~
~by tho
o4 Chemiolry

Oepart...,,

MEN"S SWIMMING. OIVING '
8rockpc,n ~ C e Collegt. Cl&amp;rit HeJI 7 p m

tiARRAnVE)'
Mo.the.r tPudovkin.. 192bJ . End o( St.
P~1ersburg (Pudovk•l) 14 7 Dw.-tendorf 9 p m
bpooi«ed by tlw ~M fOJ M(.tdla ~tudy

PEDIATliiCS RESEARC H SEMINAR •
Immuno log icAl and lm mvnobiologlu l
AsP«tS of Enw:robac.1eria,l Com mon Anttge.n.
Patndc Gannon M ~ Bo.rd Room Chik!r'"•n":.
Hospital 12 noon

PSST'

MANAGING INTERPERSONAL
CONFLICT ' '
232~U8"'-' 24pm
H~ un dafleren~ ontl confuc1~ b.t manag..od
~-vrkshop ~A-111 lwlp
panlt1plllm:. eumn~ shuatk:MI!o ln whtch tht..-n CN.11
•1ten..'·115. \lahJes o.- &lt;Wwr~s diU ...., from othvrs u..'nh
\ol.hom they arv lnlk0;t U~ul COIIC"'P'S f01
UJ~end•~ 1~ wtuaHous ,.itJ tw pr~k·m..-d
Thent"'-i!l e.lsQ~ill1 oppot\UIUI\' thruuyh rok plilo,.

negohall!d and r...'SON.!d·J Thb

rng lOt p.rhclpants to prac:IK't' managtt\g confhcu.
usklg satuanons from t~• ov.n &lt;!).j'X'n~.·nc~ til w(wric
d:.:tfoC1dl'' J)l"&lt;l

&lt;hScJCwt\6!.,

DEPARTMENT OF UNGUIS TICS
S PRING COLJ.OQUIUN EAlES .
The l nt«ac~ioa Betw«n Struaure Rukes ond
Phonoktogical Ru~. Jor~ Uu11~r1 lNp.muwnt ol

Moc:lnn

l...angu~

U. B lllb

~J)&lt;lu\du.y

F..kun

Jpm

W All WEDNESDAY NIGHT FILMS'
JioUt,wood «W Bust 11~ 7 p m The Nutty
Pr~ t19b..SI. H 45 p m (;ouk!rl!nc'-'lf'-!odll''
~n f-nM" admr-..cln
Kollpwood or
t-..~.., hill&lt;'

••u:

1&lt;' ~

.UO'"iilht,

\to

Busc.

or,.,. o(

~tw.ck..._:, ~.,

.tbou1 a l'nOVW m,n 111.h&gt;&gt; ~n !y
hb fi\101111'" tklt •nd piCk. up a g..nlbk"t'
•

'

11M Nuuy ~ . "nh .k-ny Uv. .. wt ~wa.
~~""'• ~a l~~toa.l tNt tlw Myl11~ 1alrt
J~ ~ • 9)01!)1 ~ proft."'i!o(W ~bo turn~ H'M
• c:..-.mpu ~ \lo ilh .. cqncqct...,.\ tw dt."\11
In htW,

FIUIS '

0...-.., "- s..... .... 1M Tramp
IObopltnl 148 Ololcodoof 7 30 p "' s,.c.-..1
1&gt;!1 ibo ~ .. Hailory
VI ITING ARnST SOl
CalooooWo ..... Qoo.tet . Bud R«&lt;•l Hoi l!
P m ~.....
$4 ia'ub\# . ....,.. .Natt-w

.... - " ' " " " ' S3

......... \ )

l&gt;ponoofod

-_......- - a.,....- el M""'

~ Hud!lQn.,... ~ b•v.• ~ii
....... l _ . Hoi ond Aod&lt;c £ ........ ..11
tdo wtltlllo
aln:lt.JN' ckmot•~' on lht&gt;
...,......,~

Rowl ..&gt;dllorg

....

.. a....

V..,.._ Hv6ot "•• C...

~

__ _

VI&lt;:O c:ou.£GE u:c1UI£.
~ .. 1... o-y £owlloh

--- o.-~.

0 II -

Pl. 0

PHYSICS CotJ..OQUIUM•
Pt-~ A~ O.h •~ C.W V.ftol.!rn Htnoer\~
til' 10 bto announced 454 hona41c. J Jtl p 111
CEl.LUUUI PHYSIOLOGY S EMINAR•
Prot, ..l.and.,.. and Rt!RIII Sah and HtO
tioa.l\tnn.d Att.a.h JOK ~twfm.tfl 4 p m
at J 45 1n Room~ I~

-

Foaolly Oo4.

... _ _ ..
, . .. ,....c-a,.
., ... lllooColollo

lU I'.}H(I Till5 toiUd'-"111 dub b lolll\.'r dt..&gt;tKJmtl\all()l\;t) .
EwryOI"-' tS o.-,~onw Don V..bou R tfSUnt."('lJJOI

House 2 Umvtc'rSih.' 1\v-.•llut! V..~dne~a).' 1 :41.1
Oaw l&lt;uag Roo""'wlt Louugo..&gt; ~Gowmtx~ .
Thur5da~ :i p n• Eitab\.&gt;th XhuLw v...._odnt.&gt;Sdoty X
a m ~Uifo! CAkot\:'fld Jll ~ndkwood
~Ut.'
Cr~ !:.u1wiay '} p m
&amp;47 Pont.'t (8\dy •b).
&lt;.tiKI .saud\.' Alkn !)Q!.t\!1.. Tuot:td&lt;W. ~ p m !)lJ Ql'
p m

&amp;ere~
Cofi~

UUAII ffi.M '
Hardcofc. IJ.. oldtNtl lbec11lrf"_ Amtw.~ 4 31.1 7
end 9 J0 p m Gf"Of!'I'Ai lldmtiWOII .$2 _ ill~ Ill.

Sl 50
Ci.og.e C ~ou " botua.g kw his r'Uild14.W
Wrlrtl~ o.ughtn oNy 10 d.1sc.'owr iiw"• b«onw
dw quem of ~ fitn'l (k.'('p drivd

FEBRUARY 10
C routalk 1: Dr. Judhh S . Braunagel. a•nNillll
prol,-,iJVJ !x't"""'-ll of lnl{'lfm, nun &amp; lihrarv Stud....-,
'11w Pm:"" 1\(t &amp; Ttw f-r,"-'\Jom of lnft~ m.-.n..u
M

V.. l\otl llwv M..·au tv Yuu- \r\.Bt.J\ (•Kttij

Ct o..)lc~lt II l&gt;r Ju•11't M (iUI~At1 . a,,.ocaat'-' 1""
fo:'o~" · M.,.k.,.n l ..i'll ~Uttyn 1)1 L\lt.'fd iU1-.....
lu
[)d,•n'"'-' Q! I •"+.'':JII l~•!&lt;JU.tg..o; • V..IUJ\ t'l~it l)

II H.'lpm
lM"-.'fJ)I., horn bolh Ullt.'l\.' f&gt;l-.•t.t." nli.IV bo! lk'o:t~o l ou
Cm~\tt lk

•J

~~

lt!&lt;Jhhytu

"'lli:.N I·M (lttl5). h.oht·uM\.'

i am

FEBRUARY

ur.
rh~ Ans : Qriftopht-r Bollas.
;!Jiud ,..vcl.,Jllno."llY»' Couno..'f C&lt;tb&amp;t.·

Converatiom In

ltl&lt;.'rary

~~K~n

ICilillmk.oJ IC1} b:.iCl pm

'

FEBRUARY II '
Convnu;rion5 in tht- Arts: Mere« Cunn·
Ingham , Je~lll t..' t dun-...-oyra ph,.,. lnt , 'fiM IICIItctl
Cotbl..• (Chctnnd Ill) b p m

FEBRUARY 12,
Converu1&amp;ont in lht- Ans: Se'myon Byc:hkov,
as•••onal"

ul RufidkJ

oonduo01

Coun~rCabk
1 :~tlt 1111 7 p m

PluU umno uiC"

l&lt;..:h.uull.'l li ll b :\l ip nl Aiw•HII III.'

lnk'rvlo!\\. ...'f lor Co:»"''-""'"'' "H'" t., ~ hn H•rr\on,
ol c:ul:ufdl .dfotlll&gt;

daro"("IUJ

Cook~

NEED .BASIC DENTAL CARE? WEU.. TEAM
NEEDS YOU
TEJ\M IS a SfWC~ pt"ogram al tl"• ~ o( lkn
trstl"\i vvluch yrws fenior d en1al f tudmH ~~ uppor
IUHII~ 10 t.t.:oric lu a 5KmJI..th..od offiCo.' k'ltllf\1 H cl\11~
IU~ \tiln'l.'d fot ctw o,o;&gt;mL•su.., Tf.AM '' 61"1•~~ ..,....,.k
tug thow J".&gt;rY-"•\ lrl,M'n t~ Untw1~1,1 comniUIIII\o'
~oo:ho,.., • :&gt;l"'--'&lt;'1hc: m."Co"d .. "'~ fOJ oral ~.a m lnarion ,
clea nings and flllinp. nk!'loo.' ff)U~nl•' &lt;h.•w..J .....,
tan '-"' l:k.&gt;rl&lt;Hfl"Nt.&gt;d m th..• Tf..AM dtltll ¥.1lh .,
m•Hmai ,.atung p...&gt;r;c,d oud ol nl!ntmdl Lt.N In adJt
l~t)lt ~.._."'TEAM ns)-.&gt;tat,· •• ... udl·a frt.Jw•n """ _.,
mok...- d!l rout•~ ckutal t"ttll' a-. (fJmfnt•~· o11tt.l ~ ..
S'J..SS free mo tJ~:.i"lk '-oc-J tf t,.'UU tin lk."-"-'l"'..c d,;,
ldl Ulll! ,.hi. \1.6n; (aU u ~ dl ...,31llH w•..- J.c,y
b._,,,.,~~ q 111tkl 4 Jlla•ld ~I! ~dlb..&gt;yi.Jd 1o.ana•'9''d

"'"'""*

~tt¥111119 a.:~p.)lnll'!k.'fl\

for you

PEACE CORPS / VIS TA INTERVIEWS '
Amhft"SI: S..M14h leU 2U . ICIJ Co:tfk•tt ll..dl
Umund lb.tt lulomwunn Mc,•III"J l t-b /f) 4
pm .,,

ICIC-t~P""II

h.U Ill HI j_ ~ulfl' Hdl
I o..-ll 1'1 4 I) m l ~l ·

Maln S1rH:t : Bunch

Lt~• lnf011'11ithCHt M'"-~11~
~Uif'l!

'&gt;t!H•W lni'-&gt;JV"-"" ~

r,

c.. r...t&gt;

/!)

auo.I&lt;~J'fll...,
~ 1\un,•),

Volt dflpOin\nwm

Pl.tt.~'\11

lion •' Unt\.Vf"iil\i

zu hum IJ 4

m

OtltC,• f t.\
pm

~

S INGLES G ET· TOGETHER
h ~ ddflruh a\~ f•lf" l~""l&gt; IU till.' l1111...._1
Sll\o- li!'~t d"IOSo..' ,.ho haw• ~~ arouud !01 a
,.j,Jt,e to malk! lr-..nd, w.mh ~'VV'"' othol-r 1l\aJ1
.depaT1mo!tlktl: ~~~goos
In o111 a;~wmpa k&gt; f~wr colk'9k'bl1, - tulld 1u }U
pi.tm y..!l K&gt; kuo\lo t!IIIICh Ulher ;. group ul ...rtyltt
lku~-., .od stall ill'~~! org.l1l&amp;bttg 4lll uliormal lwlppy
hour g.;.1 ~~ t'Wf). Titutlday lron1 S p m ••
PICCOlo. , RViUluratll 1424 Milt&gt;twon Hwv tt11lw
Toad buicbng T~COll1 of dr"lk»t,r~u&lt;.~ durn.y
Nippy hour -.ld hon d'WVwft I!Jf'-' ln"tt
·

Exhibits
ALAMO GAI.l.ERY EXHIBIT
19th •nd 20th CeniUf")l Quihti. Ou loan horn
pnvo!Ut' c:olk."C110u,. bnd auuqu.• JK'()» ... ~ fo:r 1!4k•
Aldmu t.alk..'fV. Jkdc Hbl M (Hiditv t-nd...\,· I)~
:O.Jl'-"hol: lft.odbyV P f(1r l t ..~,,tll!..,_acur-.uKI I Jo PI~
ITMII

uf lut Tluouyh

I ....... u.tr ..

2b

ART DEPARTMENT EXHIBIT
LN Chftney: 25 Yea n., A Retrospeoc::1rv.. b~
fltwot g.11k..-., lk!lwtw H o~A tArt l)._'fJ.lfll'···ml
11 rruu~h I ,ol.-uitiV l2

CAPEN INNER GAU.EAY
~ t.lfk lmm 1lw llmV...""f'"&gt;IIV ~i Butf.tloJ &lt;..:ulk..t..-•t
(.,,,• .,, lntk'f (;..,.n..,.,. r,:h
ca, ...... , llo~tl
I ~-t.Jf\h•l)' 4 Motctil .l M •&gt;~141Jt'l, I1 J~.L"-' tJ ,r, 11 tn
I h ..'o! ~,.,.,,n'il ~ clw Uo'f\lt"OM'Ilt •I (l.r

n. •.-.

MONOGRAPHS OF 1918-1919
By th.· r .rUk...... u4 ~--..d !:tt ,,....... ~ ..u.t
~..,JI vf lnftnff\dlltJit o~•.d I ~~_...,.,t\1
.,1\h.ho.-o; ~1.-•J fA """'"-.:w.t V. •tl'k ttJlJ ''"" ~ l"Nl •tt
M.-•1'*"'~"-"'" l.txk"""',J M..'1'1101,,1 bb•..,~ "-"""
Btmktllflk--.

~tnc.lAn llbr,af"\ I t-hruM\ ll'J

URGICAL INSTRUMENTS
On.,_t,frfHill~• "n "'h"'Hii&lt;tU &amp;t t"' ut .. .tn ,.:
•o4
h..1ltut "\l •~tum ...'111 .b_.;.,.,!j•"\J Wl h•" ii'Y.,'
\\.it..hlltyl•&gt;tl"' l~l\.....-w_n.Uo ll\o1ti.._.,.. ~Kt ttyht l h,,
,•,Jtllll -ctb.u J~,_, tJb...k'ttlVII WI-.I!Un\\'111\ olt tho!
I. h ~~ld 1'}111 h.""liVI\' I~·.Uit
ll(lt.,.'" l ..... rv

tl"-' I h

Mftlfl ~1h""t (..otmfMh

ld!iol

fbr11

,

Ti'IJ•KJyh M61· h

R

UUAB OPEN MIKE SEAIJ'S
WAS Coff'-~_w Com!"Nll4etl ttnuowtc..

WOME!f'S SWUI)U G. DIVING '
....., s....c.a....a..t. H.. lpm

{2pml

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

-.-.. .......

GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR •
Maafw Sulphide Ores in l.iland A.rcs: Th•
Kurotco a nd Buchan. &amp;ample, ::tlt.'\lt&gt;~l D ~1.
O..,.,tnl!t\1 ol ~ UnM.-.,.-~\ (I( Tt..wont•-1
Room 11o! 4l40 ~ lo!• .i .40 tJ m t ullw and
dou!Jhnuti at J •

INTEA·VARS ITY CHRISTIAN FEU.OWSHI('
Ha a Bibk ~tudy for you 1 M~-.ot other d tns!Jdn:.
ou campus Learu about (.od !I ~·cxk in dk! pas:t dtld

525

On The Air

1JO!J pIll

CENTER ·FOR THE STUOY OF CULTURAI.
TRANSMISSION
Tlurd /umua1 Uni\.'...onJtv V..ltk ..,lu..k•ut Cou
1-...erlC~ on Comm umc:atlv~ B'-•f\a\ltOl 1\J'Pf&lt;OO"I ..'"lo
and R~search Mardt 2.7 . :l~ ttud 'l'J AI ; tut.:knh
don19 OJ1o!lllla1 n:s.cdrrll it1 411\" ihfWl1 of cum
m unieauw bo:haVIOI Cll"ll! ,.,tCOU~d 10 ~bmlt an
ab,tr.KI of 20() \oi.'OI"d!o or ~ IO Ilk! Ct.'111'-.'t" no kilt..,
1han f...twuarv 15. lt.JN:I
FOf lunth.'f 111fornklti01• c·omdCt /\rln1.._. Lo.~lnk.'l
5 77 ~paulding . EIK"OII 01 call ti.ib 'l.b:"' I f"kod..,..., 111
dude addr~ lUld numb..·t a1 ,. hch you c•n b..•
r~actted

Thursday - 14

,.,1h friend, and a1 ~
lA!~.,. &amp;rbara Bunk~ Ph I )
f~ o(liOOill p,;ycho6c..gy aJ~ lwr

ta~l\t.._-\1 )'lJOI~ 01\J"&gt;ICkltl" IU

THE WRITING PUCE
Tilt&lt;' IJ. t11iny ~""' tl tlw pl.tt« tO ,.tar1 thb
:~oo.~o..'l" off nght JJ', ~ fn.~ dtop 111 tulonttl v.nany
( '-""'' " for au yon ..• "'hu "'-&lt;M•Is twtp "'-1lh "' 1111• '11 lfs
not for po&lt;.11 V.Tlt,·~. 11·• fur IJ\.'"f)k whu u. ..a•l ttl
"fll.: "hat 11"-..&gt;V rn..'&lt;tll and hctw n undo~..~...,xl
Co rn.• In IJ,kl~ HaU on 1\mho•ro,l Cttmpu)' Room
:t:v. &lt;.Jit\'dlf\•lrc'lm l'l k'l 4 ut Mund.w Voi t'CII•'""~Y
ll tld Thut~., ,., ...,..."~'"~ tron' v 'I

COMPOSEitS FORUM '
Gr~ •udent Comp:»WB S..d Rft:ul Hal
fl*! ~ponMl!f·t'd by fh.to l.k.,.,.nmm~ of

K pm

!.he

~unt ot Jts ()p.nt M ~ ~' ~u.n! Ha.l
R..1~ " tlw plkll! 40 brt 1!\1'-'f\1 Thund.y night
irom"' Jlpm for~~ottr.d~t •nrtyo..'l~
litUOmem TNt ~'open mib
bt hoM'-od
..... Ju-.-1 ~ An\oO tnkt"ho!ll.t.&gt;d m ..,-tCMnHitg
fNY"9lU9-'7~.Upm •trh.t: R•

v.•

M-=
VISTA

AI T IIUFFAI.O PO£TRV

a..c:c. 8rowtt d
-"'
s.w., plio.
~~~ Slrftl f._

~lNG'

rc.td from her fn

~

of

T 5&lt;twpo&lt; Ho.w 11102
An'lherlolt t' JO p m Tlw.
................ ~ ...... ..., ..... fuM
lrOf'lll thtt New y·
~ Coufid on th. An• •-'

.... _

... r-fGotlwMs

w"""" ..,...
Artwrk• •
........."'-......-d
...... _"-'&gt;,....,
....
,...,.
~ •ld

~"

y.Mr ., Pm-w:~"'"

tnfurm.,.uocl
H.. Amltn~

~~

~

l dJ 27 4 p

ftl

o·&amp;w..·

liGL HOUU CHAJifGE
Th e following l: bange In 1he
Undergraduate Ubrary Sc.heckde o(
houn for thlo Spri119 . Semater hu
been anno)lncod: During regular
hours, the Undergraclualo Library will
be ~n on frtdavs undl 9:00 p.m.
NOT 11 :45 p.m .

feb zg_P1K.nwnt Off~eit U 8 L..w

Jtdfk.orO'Bnan

M.k&gt;t~u,..-nlnoM~

.

�·.

·.

•U I B Foaadadoa ral8ed record of

$3.89 almoa Ia 1979, Relf reports

The fund-railing lldlvlties of the
University at Buffalo Fqundation
goonerated a reccxd $3.898.386 in private
support for U/ B durir1g 1979. Louis R.
Rd. chairman of the Foundation Boon!.
announced thil week.
Jolm M. Carter. president of the Foun·
dation. said !hat the 1979 total exceeds
the previous year by I 1.2 per cent. or
$393.533. Carter noted that "this record
high in support ... came from aU areas of
the Foundation's fund -raising lldlvnies.
indudlng alumni giving. speciali2led cam·
paigns. corporate support and private
individual gifts.··
Endowment gdls and investment earn·
1ngs also reached new levels. Caner
reported . And 86.5 per cent of those
who made donations in 1978 gave again
in 1979
U! BF Chairman Rei! pointed -to these
highligh of 1979 in a capsule annual
report in advance of a formal publication
later this year:
eRecontl--t Ea~: In·
vestment earnings reached a record level
of 5460.090. 18 exceeding the p&lt;evious
recO&lt;d set in 1978 by 5 .8 Per cent. or
$25.273.23.
eRecont ~~Gifts: Total
income of -$277.063.32 exceeded last
year's record income level by
$12.257.65. or 4 .6 per cent. II is impor·
tant to note. Re~ said. that the 1978 total
included a record individual gill of
$180.000. which was the largesl single
gUt the Foundation had ever received
from a living alUmnus. but was
nonetheless exceeded.
•~ Glfta Gain: For the
second consecutlve year. unrestricted
giving exceeded that of the p&lt;evious
year. Total 1979 unrestrieled suppon
amounted to $210.212.80. an Increase
of 5 .4 per cent. or $10 .731.71 over
1978.
For the future . ReK said . unrestricted
alumni gilts Will not continue to grow at
record rates as a resuh of continuing d ·
fort to solick alumni yiltj by schools.
AddhionaUy. he went on. "we continue to see former corporate unrestrieled
donon restrict their gilts to various
departments of the University lor the cor·
poratlon's own particular reasons."
•"--~ ~

••.,._,This

!IPrfv effort is designed to seek new gilts

from- alumni

to 5Uppor1 Foundation and
Unlvenlly projects. For the year ending
December 31. giving ina'eased 6 .2 per
cent over the p&lt;evious year to $181.000.
During 1980. Ret! promised. "a much
more sophlslicaled ~- wiU be im·
plemenled in this high expense. low
rc1.um . aru ...

eCoi. .rotc Alllo•c• Totol•

HI.~ This component of the fund ·
relllng program~ the solicka·

lion of major businaoes in Western New
York for ~dgllts. ln 1979. there

$8.no .

was • dedlne of
over the
previous ~· d..., to the loss of one
slgnWicant . major gilt which had been
recetYed on a regula. besis for the pas1
ten ye.ars (lot_eling approaimetely
$22.0001 . Thlo gift W¥ not recolved dur·
tnv1979 due to a change In the corpora·
1101&gt;'• giving sy~~.em and prionties. Rei!
Jatd
Thill reduction in · corporate
unreotttcted suppol't is the trend nationally. he added. ScwraJ new J&gt;fOIJ'8ms are
beong Instigated by the Foundation's Cor·
porate Rftotloni Office to reverse the
trend. he said
el'feoWcllt'e " - d o l a Con·
........ &amp;poaol: Membenhip In this
OtgllnlzMlon rep&lt;esen - the highest Je--el
of gMng 1)!, alumni and other friends of
the Univerilly. Rd e&gt;q&gt;Wned. G•ts from
Ptaiclent's Associllt«s members. bolh
amen! and planned I&lt;&gt;&lt; the lu ure.
ornoun1 to $9.330.596. an Increase of
$2J7 .0b5 over lua year's rocord totals.
her~

•llem1de4

s--t

$etc AIJ.
TloM Rec:aot Total -r«s11oaad JnCome
r
hed a record high total of
$:l 9!&gt;1 019 92. _,~ 1 previous
ye• by S345 270 &gt;. or l3 3 per &lt;lent
Tlw 1979 to&amp;al also
ed tha
. , . _ _ . , Mlablillled In 1977 by
2J6 23 .,.
.,. cent
tha _,uon ""
1'. ndatio.ll

in 1962. _.,..imately $40.398.000 has .
been genenoted in privllle SUpporl. Rail
said . $IS million of the Iota! has come in
the lasl five years ,
Fifty-nine separate fund -raising cam·
paigns - . . conducted by the Foundation during 1979. These campaigns for
bolh University and Foundation pro,
grams involved over 400 volunteers and
reached nearly 80.000 alumni and other
friends of the Unlver$lty.

Sertee of prvJecta
Rd listed a series of specific p&lt;ojects

which U/ BF suppon made possi&gt;le .
Income generated from the Founda·
lion's annual Medical Re union p&lt;ogram
helped- · equip a new Toxicology
Laboratory Within the Medical SchooL
More than $27 .000 was raised from nine
reunion classes.
A much needed art gallery faciiHy.
funded by the Foundation. was dedicated
on January 18. 1979. the Inner Gallery
on Capen·S. In addition to providing this
facil~y. the Foundation secured over
$100.000 in an works as ~Is for perma·
nent dispt..y.
Again this year. $50 .000 in
unrestril:ted Income was distributed to
officers pf the University for necessary
bu _ tt!lated expenses.
The "foundation advanced app&lt;Ox·
lmately $43.000 at no interest to various
members of tbe facuhy . whose regular
paychecks could not be processed
through the Stale University system
without undue delay _

EOP....,_
The Foundation responded to a
University request 10 assist students in the
Educational Opportunity Program by
p&lt;oviding temporary advances totaling
$34,000.
Awards
for
Excellence
in
Undergraduate Edu-cation were
presented for the second consecutive
year. These: six $500 cash awards are
designed to recognize achievements.
rather than need. of senior students
enroDed in the major faruhies of the
University.
F&lt;&gt;r the third consecutive year. ~t in·
come to SUpporl athletics at the University was in excess of $15.000. These funds
are utilized to support !he U/ B Football
P~ .

F&lt;&gt;&lt; the .cone~ c:onoecullve year. the
U/BF ...,.-t oulolanding savice to
the u~ end the convnunlly by
members of the focully and stall. Nine
awards of $1.000 each presented
on September 16 01 pori of (he "Slate of
the Un-y· n-.ge by President
Robert Ketter.
Through an anonymous gtft of
S12.000 and $8.000 In U/B Foundation
supporl. considerable renovation of the
sound system and main lecture hall In
Farber HaU was accomplished .
Dental
equipment
totaling
S285.203c85 was transferred to the State
Univenity of ' tuw York Board of
Trustees lor the exclusive use of the
Univenty at Buffalo.

BalhiPolat
Planned Giving p&lt;Omotion by the
Foundation resuhed in various gilts dur·
ing 1979. A unllrust for $65.000 was
established. as was an endowed fund in
Dentistry for $10.000 . Additional
testamentary gifts were confirmed that
wiU uhimately benefit the U/ 8 Foundation . the largest being $120.000.
A five-year. S170.000 grant to benefit
students in Oral Biology was established
by the .Sunstar Corporation of Tokyo.
Japan .
In addition to the gifts of the Baird
Foundation and the Cameron Baird
Foundation. the U/ B Foundation p&lt;ovid·
ed $33.992 to finallle the Baird Point
facility al Amherst.
The New York State Department of
Transportation purchased 2 .37 acres of
the 17 .32 acres of U/ BF land at Sweet
Home and Ct-iestnut Ridge Roads for the
Lockport Exp&lt;essway at a cost · of
$47.600. Additionally. basic research
was completed on the possibility of constructing a million doUar combined
Foundation-Alumni-Continuing Education Center on this p&lt;operty.
Appointed to the Foundation Board
during the year was Morley C . Town·
send.
'Reappointed were William C . Baird.
Alvin M . Glick. Pasquale A . Greco. John
L Hettrick Jeremy M. Jacobs. M.
Robert Koren . louis R. Rd. WiDiam I.
Schapiro and Philip B. Wels.
Appointed to the Executive Committee
was Girard A. Gugino.

Personnel news
111 / C £ - p i - Get Brook 0.. Car Rea_tal
Discounts for car rentals through Avis. Henz and National lo
Management/Confidential employees bolh for official and personal use increased from 20 to 30 per cent on January I . M/ C car rental agency charge cards are
available from the Personnel Department. Inquiries should be directed to Mrs.
Fran Alspaugh. 26SOA.

....... Cue Plea: Opn ..__
The HCP has arranged !0&lt; a series of open houses to give new employees the
opportun-y to bring their families to their Medical Center. 120 Gardenville
Parkway West. West Seneca. NY. for a tour and question -answering session.
Dates and limes are: Wednesday. February 13. 20. 27 and March 5. 12. 19. 26
from 5:30 p.m . to 8 p .m.

Go-. 0.. t..w Wldooat p_,
To continue your heahh insurance coverage while on leave-wKhout-pay you
must pay the fuD p&lt;emlums (employer and employee shares) for the periods you
are off the payroll, If you fa~ to make thew payments. your enroDrrient in the
State Health Insurance Program Will be autornatlcally cancelled. Be sure to con·
tac1 Personnel (Mrs. Fran Stanton or Mrs. Chris Sutter. 26SOAJ prior to your
removal from the payroD for infO&lt;matlon .
New Bloc c.- 1.0 . Carde
Approximately 3.300 employees Will ba receiving new Blue Cross plastic I. D.
cards- at_their campus addrno Within the next week. Mr. Joseph E. l.lppert.
Employee Benefits Manage. advises thai the ofd Blue Cross/Shield card shOuld
be destroyed upon receipt of the new card. Please ba sure to p&lt;esent your new
card each time you visil the hoopitaJ in the future .

Preealptloe Dnte Pr...- · J.D. Card Elitllblllty
In arly January. over 1.600 non-CSEA employees received their plaslic
ldentWicatlon cards forth State's new Prescriplion Drug Program. At that lime,
Personnel r.cminded these employen thai the drug coveragor terlfllnales on the
same date I hat they termlnale their coverage under -the Statewide Heahh In·
of !he expO-a lion date indicet d on I he card (for examflm•nce Plan . regard
ple, by 1 rmination of employment or -change lri heahh insurance plan) The
Al&gt;ony Employee lnsuranee S.C. ton has fur1her advised that persont who use
the Cllrd w n they are not enlttled to do 10 are subject lo p&lt;OMr:Utlon and Will
required 10 mak re thution When eligt&gt;llty cea . deotroy ·your card

February 7. 1980

Med/dent
records used
to ID victims
a., llbry 8adl Splu
~- - He... same..
Changing social customo and logal requlnmlents maJ.e b more~ than
ever to establish the iden\1!1 and .,.,... of
death of victims of ...__ says Dr.
William Cowan . deputy d - o l the
Armed Forces lnslltute of Pa!ldogy
(AFIP) .
Speaking at U/B Monday. Cowan
noted that the compledy of both idenU·
lying and determining cause of death in
victims of mass disasters requires a team
approach to be even moderately sue·
cessful. The AFlP was charged whh iden·
l~ying victims at Jonestown as wen as
those killed in the large plane crash
disaster at Tenerile. Canary Islands.
"ldentKication essentiaUy starts at the
scene ... Cowan said. "for the bodies must
be numbered sequentially and . the
numbers plotted on a map lo Indicate
where they were found ." The numbering
system insures that fingerprints . den·
tal/ medical charts and x-rays taken post·
mortem can be matched with those taken
bdor~t death. In the Jone11own incident.
for instance. FBI fingerprint experts. den·
lists and pathologists worked together.
each speciahy contributing its expertise to
the identaication p&lt;ocess.

Clothee - 1lttlpfW
"While c.lothing labels or names in
clothing may sometimes be help~ul in
verifying a victim 's identity, in
Jone11own. they were virtually useless."
Cowan satd. "Because of the communal
nature of lhe place. residents swapped
clothing back and forth ... And desJlite the
fact that a cache of some 900 paSsports
was located in Jonestown. the information on them p&lt;Ovldes only name.
birthdate and address. making them
nearly worthless for body identification
purposes.· Applications for passporls.
however. were traced: on' these papers.
physical characteristics and age are listed.
The information helped verKy identities
already established .
" Beca use the bodies found a t
Jonestown had decomposed and the
ones at TenerKe had been burned. it was
necessary to t ake post - mortem
i-rays-dental and medical-and compare them with ante -mortem ones which
could. be oblained of people known to
have been involved.'' Cowan explained .
Through the teamwork approach. 666
of the 933 Jonestown victims and 212 of
the 326 at TenerKe were identKied.
Matching dental records identified 156 of
the TenerKe victims whose charts were
easier to trace and obtain than were those
of the victims at Jonestown.
StiU- file
Cowan noted thiot post· rnorl"m x-rays
and notations are sttD on file in case
someone comes forward to determine if a
loved
not yet tdentKied &lt;tied at
Jone11own.
"Those not identified at Jonestown
were buried in an Oakland . Calif ..
mausoleum by the numbers assigned at
the scene. H a relalive comes to us.
verKication through our records and
x-rays may be possi&gt;le." he said .
Cowan's visll was sponsored by the
U/ B School of Dentistry and the Erie
County Dental Society.

one

Geneseo head
draws praise

,

President Edward B. Jakubausk.u has
been commended by the Fac:uby Senate
of the State College at Geneseo for his
decision to forego a formal lna~ratlon
ceremony. In response to Jakuoauskas
announcement !hal he did not wish to
spend ~ an inauguration and
that he feh vet-j much at home at ·
Geneseo. the Senate unanimously passed a resolution which IIOied the President
a warm .....ocome and commended him
fqr his "admirable ..,... of fiscal respon·
sibilily in tight budgetary Urnes In declining a formal Inauguration and preferring
lo have any funds for such a purpose go
into maintaining programs at 1he

coliege.7,. l

... , ,. •

�Fot.ruary 7. 1980

.

S_UNY Senate hears facts of fi cal life
8v Rlchwd A. SltleloSUNV

S&lt;nooor

"Realily" and "nrtrenchment" themes
dominated discussions during !he 64th
Reguler Meeting of !he SUNY Facuhy
Senate. hooted by the Buffalo Unlverotty
Center. Friday and Saturday, February
1-2
It was clear throughout the proceedings that SU Y is prestntly cast In
the posllion of defending ils budget in an
arena that is durlv and almost complete·
ly&lt;domlnated by the Governor.
Two outsid"e evenls served as an eMective backdrop to the business sessions a January 31 wori&lt;shop on the budgetmaking process. and !he Senate's annual
dinner,)l'ftling with !he Trustees on Fri-day.
During the friendly Interchange
between the Tru•tees and SUNY
oenators; Vice Chairman James J. Warren . -one of the fove Board members al·
tending. candidly wondered . " How do
we begin arllc:ulating about what might be
very intolerable on this period of retrench mentr'

SUNY d-n·t ad respect
While Warren did not feel that current
financial constraints
repreoented · an attock on the UnlversHy
per se. public higher education In New
York does not get the r~spect it deoerves.
"The people of the stale are not proud
of SUNY . and we need to seD the State
Unoverslly." he claimed . adding _that. " I
don't thlnk we can sit back any longer
and accept this."
The outspol&lt;en TruSiee also emphasized that "legislators talk about restoring
cuts. but the Executive Branch has control of the money and looks at public
education as just another stale agency."
But a the SUNY oenators hoped lor
specific recommendations about how to
cope wrth Imminent liocal problems and
"bring tb mnsage reaUsticaDy back to
their individual campuses." the Trustees
provided no concrete ouggeSlions other
than stressing that real oolutions rest wHh
SUNY lacuhy.
Chairman Donald M. Bllnken .
understandably lnfluen&lt;;ed by the fact
that the " Executive Budget" is not as yet
adopted in tonal form . appeared to reflect
the general posture of the Trustees. who
had also been surprised by the
Governor's most recent recommendations
"While il is no1 a happy occasion . I am
not tolally depressed. either." Bbnken
saod. "The bleak tone is pretty much the
same throughout the whole budget."
which "addr
fundamental questions
we al have to l..:e ai taxpayers. "
Noting that 1~ were "many complicated legal. educational. and political
lacum. • SUnken agreed wkh Warren that
"publtc education t..s to be treated dH• lerently. but k os being handled jus! like
any other Slate -seney."
He aim warned againot "Inter-campus
cornpetlllon" and ernpha&gt;ized the need
to work IO&lt; !he .ystem as a whole, to solve
our rol problems. Iince "this Is a case of
hangmg together or hang~ng "PM'I12lv "
Trus1e« Nancy Johnson observed that
"orveryon« II getting hH. the stat lo trying
to , de ..,.h a IIJ•at many economic·
problem . and - are in compeOOon lor
funds In w-vs - ne- were before i mpending

WloartM _ . -ber

In hlo tnKIII t mari&lt;o at the openmg session. ChallGellor Cliftoo R Whorl on . Jr .
~ - lrly naabliohed a tomber tone.
staung that "ther is at.olutely no q
liOn about
magnlludc ol dafoculty .
fec.ed in doling with !he budget In the
comlng~·

Conc.rl

ung on sllatesiH avaJJ.ble IO

I
y and lndMdu.l campu
• 0.
Whanon SOld that "l II more Important
than ews before" that i«uuty member•
rm~• de~ · make
. _ - lor SUNY
The a..nc.lor a1oo referred to !he In·
lll*y ol a lin
y lo rQoCt
lllcly
to rnajOI' polity cNngel "We mply c""

turn program around quock-

ly The

undewlandong

eloo ..-d• a bett
10 -

ol pnv~DUoly .....nc~

pointed out • • '

O..U f llud ......... s .....

DiNdly responding to cunent speculations In !he press. such as clooing down or
mer!llng
unls. to help resolve
overall ftnandal problems. the Chanc:elor
explained that the IOIZII cumulative
SUNY -wide reductions 1n
positions sustained $1nce 1974-75. are
already equivalent to the loss of one U/ B
Center « three lour-year unMs similar In
size to !he College at Buffalo.
As on previous occasions. o.-. Wharton reminded his audience about the
need IO&lt; each campus to reduce attrition
and Improve retention levels.

-=*

.,,hoNed

durlntl !he coming aitical two-year
penod. 'could lnd to a sta~wide reduc·
lion ol 2.200 · 2.500 positions.
Anllow noted that !he original SUNY
enrolment cap ·request ol 165.727 was
revised downward to 163. 141 . a drop of
-2.586. (MaJOr mandated reductions in
U/B'o ..,rolment include a -800 total
from the core campus and ·300 from the
Health Sciences. an adjusted -1.100
fewer FTE' s from what would have been
budgeted fO&lt; I 980-81. This Is related to
the University's lnabilhy to reach projected enroOmem targets.)

-'The people of this.State are
not proad of SUNY•••w.e need
to boost the State Univenity'
AcknoWledging realily and the need
lor a ohori·lerm re'.l'?"se "~ we do not
get Sl!ln~icant relief.' he aim emphasized
the long-range view. "the need lor
us - with or without lull support of the
budget division-to develop a fove-year
pla n based on the reconskiered missions
of each campus.- in order to ''encourage .
ma1nlain. and st
hen that which re ·
mains
The Chancellor also strongly urged the
fostering and encouragement of
univershy-wide strengths through bilateral academic and articulat ion
agreements. poinHng to such eJ~.amples
as Inter-campus doc1oral prQgrams and
vlsitlng scholar programs

1•

~al

Education a tam-off?

the n!Cent. moderate wa:ess SUNY t..s
had In hlring-mlnorltlel, women. and the
handicapped. h _. urged. theref.-.
that the University In the development ol
any retrenChment policies make every oof.
fort to prevent the erosion ol ils comm~ ­
ment to success In its afflrmatlve action
program .
• Suppooted the Chancellor and
Board of T rusteu In their efforts to retain
Slalfs arod funds necessary to continue the
exceDence of State University In providing luU and equal educational opportunity to the citizens of the State of New
York. and pledged hs cooperation to
these efforts.
•
• Recommended the approval and ~
dissemination of a non ·IMn~ afftr·
mative action search mcodel (U/ B sl as a
useful guide lor SUNY lnotltution search
commhtees.
• Requeoted a review of !he policy of
the SUNY Research Foundation wHh
respect to charges lor fringe benef~s
against the salaries. stipends. etc . of
undergraduate students participating In
grant suppooted research. wHh tbe objective of removing sud&gt; charges.
• Recommended a oubstantial In·
crease In the upper limits of suppoot lor
SUNY Teaching and Graduate auistantships so that they are competitive in aU
disciplines with those offered by other
major American untvershtes.
~
• R'ecommended the active pursuit of f
increased support In graduate student
stlpendo such !hat SUNY may compete in
all disciplines with thooe stipends offered
by other ma;or American unlversmes.
,e Commended the Chancellor for his
effon s to preserve the various inte:ma·
lional education co mponents and
technical assistance programs of SUNY in
the face of current budget stnngendes.
• Commended the President of the
Reoearch Foundation and the Associate
Chancellor lor Health Services lor p)anning to convene a mee1ing \n Albany th\s
spring to review the structure. functions.
organization. and procedures of lnsUtu·
tional Review Boards. as weD as to ad·
dress specific problems that have been
Iden tified by Individ ual SUNY re ·
searchers . (The Senate urged the
Chancellor to support this action as the
forerunner of the University's continuing
pr~ram to ensure the ability of campus
JRB s to foster quality reoearch by the
Unlversll~ faculty wh ile protecting ohe
rights o f human paoticlpants.l
,
• Urged the Chancellor to charge the .
Office ol Access Services wHh revising
cu rrent information brochures to bener
meet the needs of studenls preparing to
practice heahh care professions. The revision should : cross-reference progtams
by d isciplin&lt;~ and location: list pre·
admission requirements; include eligibili·
ty lor licensure or cm"ication:'list size of
program . list aoticulation arrangements~ .
woth other programs where appropriate .
indu~e undergraduate·and graduate pro -

The afternoon was devoted primarily
to problems of inter-campus aoticulation .
A panel of repreoenlallves-lro m Hud son
Valley Community College. Delhi Ag
and Tech7 Conland. Oneonta . Stony
Brook. and o.-. Neal Robbins of UNY
Central stall. reached the following COil·
clusions:
• Recruitmen t e fforts wi1hin the
private sector are repootedly more effective. better stalled. and provided greater
financial suppon lhan l!lre s.lmUar p rograms at SUNY unils.
• Bundy aid was Identified as a grow ong problem in that this resource enabled
more students to attend private colleges
that are in direct competition with SUNY
F•culty mu•t )oln In
units for students.
..Transfer and articulatton areas requtre
• Basic distribution requirements at
"J901'0US and aggreoslve exploration ." but
SUNY units appear generally "lighTer
"t&lt;! make ft work the faculty must JOin ln.·
than at private insthuloons: additionally.
the Chancellor wamed " It is also amazthe privates seem able to expla in im·
Ing (alter mutual discussion occurs bemediately to prospective transfers any
tween units) how quickly some of the ' spedHc remaining requirement.s. a promyths disappear" about the comparative
cess requiring "months" lor some SUNY
quality between and among the various
umts
types of SUNY unhs.
• General Education programs. pro"I believe it can and must be done - usficiency examinations. language: re·
Ing the preoent system to strengthen
qulrements and unclear co urse
SUNY and eaclt of ils component ports."
equivalency agreements .. turn
students conSidering prospective SUNY
he declared
He concluded by assuring the body
units. Rightly 0&lt; wrongly. such matters
that he -was not an alarmist. not
apparently do not generally constitute
pe$51mlstic. but a realist.
similar problems at priVate units.
" We face a ~ave situation. but we sliD
• It appears essential that faculty must
have the poulbU~y of coming through .
be available and able to provide academic
perhaps even stronger than ""-&lt;e are now.information to prospective students. ·
• Rela tionshi ps with University
Centers and other SUNY unfts are "less
.u.~- .,.ptalned the budtlet
than favorable" and "ohen unfriendly"
During the opening oession. Wffiiam H .
because &amp;Ome Centers are patronizing .
Anslow. associate vice chancellor lor
finance and management. working from and assume a ··vertical. rather than
a document. ''Unlverolty Request versus
horizontal." hierarchy.
Executive Recommendations." pointed
• Staff and lacuhy at private unhs
seem beuer able and more prepared to
out that:
give timely and accurate Information ,
• The 1980-81 SUNY request lor
$937 4 miUion was countt!red by an Exsuch as the availability of financial aid or
residen&lt;;e space on campus and In the
ecutive recommend'llion of $861 .9
grams.
mUiton. a dlfferen&lt;;e of -$75.5 miDton.
community: to pro5pt!Cllve new students
• Maintaining programs was reduced
and transfers.
from $12 8 millton to $4 .6 miDion. a
• The ratio of total number of st udent
change of -$8 .2 million (Equipment
applications between public and private
institution• Is decreasing In lavO&lt; of
replacement would be lncreaoed by $2 .7
mUiion to $5.2 mUroon .)
prlvate-unils.
F0&lt; !he torst tJme In Its 53-~ hiotory ,
e One map conclusion : more l~h y
the School of Ma""!jemenl t..s authoriz.
• Program development (which enco mpasses eKist1ng hospita ls. the
understanding and lhvolvement Is reed publication of a yeari&gt;ook
Binghamton CUnical campus. and !he
quired to resolve aotlclllation problems
The School will jo1n the ochoolo ol
recently constru cted Stony Brook
Senator Al&gt;ert Ermanovlcs (BuffalO
Law . Med lc one and Dentlotry In
hospltaQ was pored from $15.2 million to
Center) . maJC)f liaison lor the host lnstitu·
pubhshlng specialized yearbooks within
a $2. 1 million total. a -$13 I mlllion
lion. effectively coordinated ad the Unlvenlly. The &amp;lfolonlon Is the
ministrat ive anangements for the
decrease (lnmestlngly. related to this
official Unlvenlty·wide yearbook.
aru k what ao111t con idu an
meeting
Robert W. Black of Elma , an.,_
unreallodc -noptloa th•t the Stony
undergroduate IIUdent who II serving as
Brnolt hoopltal will ..-ate 118
Wh.t doe Seaate did
op«ratlons manager lor the School ol
lftillloa (I) In new " " ' - · .., . _ I
The following resolutions. dlrected to
Management book. said ·the project Is beopd111iltlc8lly tnc:t..cleol within SUNY'•
the ChallGellor. were passed at the final
Ing undertaken In rnppnse to a llUdentlacuhy wrvey.
_... budget lncruM ol 121.8
sns1on The Senate:
million.)
• Recommended that In div idual
. MichaeiJ Dietz. TownoiTO&lt;)awanda ,
• Two maJC)f decreases recommended
SUNY campuses hold regularly ochedula gradua student aJoo wocldng on the
by tha Executive brAnch -.-e a $14 .0 ' ed workshops 0&lt; mHtlngs between theil
book, viewed Ill publlcatloft-. ... effort .
mllion SU Y Re-eumlnauon and !he
faculties and local high school teachers.
to promoie a ledng ol unlly lomong the
$12 3 million cut from !he base budget. and between the faculties ol fo\tr•year
ochool 'o 2 , 000 graduate and ·
.. hich lllbwmes wMhln V the immediate
unb and two-~ unb. Such mHiings
under:~n•duate otudents and ·faculty
mlnallon ol 1.125 U Y poolllons . In·
should indudc dtoculliOns ol the re·
memben
dudang $2 (, m!llion In "'Oher Than Per· qulrerMnls of spcial J&gt;1011111~M. the skiDs
As a op«:ial !.ature, a MCtlon lo
oona1 s..M&lt;n " Another 800 · 1.000 and k~ ol entering 11uden1J. arod
planned in which lludenll may purchase
pooi11on$ are .,volved f tha $14 0 million
the eumlnation ol common proble
OPKC for peroonaJ rnnMget .
flau,. is uklmeldy applied to reducing
• Expressed.
rnponsc to rtcenlly
Cool ol the yearbook has be«n Mt at
pl'l'tl)nncl NI'Vices
ann&lt;&gt;Ufl()O&lt;j budget C\liJ and lmplidt re·
$15 The lint lolue, IO bed~ at
~m
tha bud!jel holds. Anllow'o
qulrements I« nrtr nchmenl. the gRvesl
the end ol the current wmn~er . may be ,. 1
t.
wo1pooiUon c , • • c
. ~
liw {IM8J Kt , . , . . nu • ''onkl'ed'lri Rooni1 2-C. Cnoot6y Hall .

ow·

Management
plans yearbook

�FebruaiJI 7. 1980

Draft reglstralion, pro and con, mostly con, wu the oubject of a forumdebate at Squire last Friday. Some 300 studen ts heard varylllg views: no
war for oU, no draft for women, no draft for anyone. Strangely, though, a
ddense ol the American flag drew tbe loudest, longest applause, the
Courier reported.

Resistance to draft
registration debated
f·S~C

gets budget briefing, hears Allen report

Eucutiw CoMtnktft', ..... 30
11~ na~lug,.,.. ~ ~'

~'f t~ ~·.y

('Ut

orck-1

~

'l

.«J p m

to

.-....J.

ltat •1 ,...,..cwet ol MW.t• (,Nnuary ll. 1910)
li(.a~(Htlwlothl~«d
• kl dw ~ tine Wti
r.-pott~ to

Pa,.l 8 TtwChelr

., dw lilw Wft"«Wd lO al!U'ftll.
~to

nee ..

. .. bot

n.otld

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

Pttr¥-tJII( I )IMw(bl•wmm...,v.·~add

P-.•.J

,-d._.. tlw 111-onl Pr-.'toi«k.-•nt
A.n.-

'M.k.,• ~' ._ r.._,on by f\!k'fn~ to dw

Ttw Pt-..

OIIN SSion of 1h.t I'*'C UH &amp;.«uuw
L oundr dM.!d J.Mt~ ~
I')M(J H t' n •"...,..'-'d U d 11.klon•l dot"unwnb
d.....t.u
tfJ tlw t-!:£C I f.nrolrtWtlt• from 1tw
~

.- .tw D.t•

U«u!M ~
,..ct~

j

N•~

I'M'J. 2

Cumpw

PYo,pnt Ob
~-IW'I!I

liJt(ll ti l

iludgo&lt; 4 lludgo&lt; ~ · H.;ronon...,odod ~ O&lt;ol

l -" 1 n"' ond 0.. I

n.,......-.,~ ~"CC•~iot-suNY
dw )9t(h v.-.. ,0..-qtt~o Ul~ • • uon
fuilck_"'f .poii!I IQU ""'-"' I CJki'd HI be tiropp.ld in
pNteft!91(ot W •UU.SI'Y ltw fd.n.•t-=hn-..tU JJIIOC
oJw ~ s..tg.l' . ......

111

Eo.-.

!lw t"Utt w.oNb.wci onttw~oft~O OB 1F1

'*"'
..-..,....,....

lM~ I 'TN for • 'l'\... ~'

'Ow~.,..

"1lw.......,. u ,....._
tfiiJIII""~ ,._.

1n

ill

n&lt;JWd 1t. CUNY~, r~MA&lt;tl ~~
t\K'UQn .... "-n"' ~v ..,
..- tw~ and1lOW'\I

.ntlw~

TAP .,._,..._,

.. .,,_.. .-1

~ A"

lcNciU..wt ••14•• .....-.. ~ tvt
nw ~~

-n......,--....
..

~y ~

I

I

t\"CVt'i"""oVI"' ul

Ch.ncdol

\At. ~

-~ ~ "' ~ ·-- ~ .uo.
nw
"wo-. of ' "' '-. .__..,., •

fk"ICW'I-W'd t..:•k' ~

l

_ol

J Tlw•

plono

4 Th.r •"" .. . . . _ ..

u.-.

-

'll

Gt~PA9_,..•

u.- · t . s llv CII*C" • '-.il oi'~to ..,......
~ ,_._, ,.. "'.

' -'

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

Pl"(9 .......

""""" .. .,..._

...- «&lt;

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

P.... \

~'I

~

COilSid-.'f, od

B. 0.. Cl&gt;ofr El«1
'-' l1w
0.0 ~ "' ..... ~,;c ........
h. b-..-..-n ••~"lilY F.cuk~ Se~ WIIlc:n tt'gM'cbng
lh« ~Mion• ~ llw s-..'tWIIW t\11.!-.1 WM' Onl.'

a-

h.t t.t.n~ from Se.WIIIort
"'' OrMmtuon Prowatn for 1~'\to
!wt~. bdon- ttl-... flrlil ""'-"Wtiny pvkrdbly
Th..'Y bda.ow ~ l«ully w~OOtJ 1h.t roW uf a
!k'1WUf lh.rto.• -.-ou\d ~ mo n • hda\\od to IWfWI

...-

of ....

of

-·•ow---

rnour'Cft emong ~mk: unls be made ln ec·
conlonco """' dw llnMnloy"o ocodo- pion. oocl

-

Item '3

c:o...ttM~t

R.epone,

A ,_.., Gwot IAI!nol

A Proft~tMW u.• m ~ ~ aplb jd • ntpr~
olll\o1UUP and r~\.'d thet 1h.t ~'9
"""""""' • 1\lwl~ ~ quW tu('(",._rut \o\"tlh
JSU(I C..UIIv illlftd J'ud.ot ... J*"~ "'Y Th..."ft' "' ~
x...i '"-'Pf"W'..........-.~ from
Y B C~t&gt;
!irntJ~,dw

Jta--sN«w .......
S&lt;ot&lt;Wido Pion ond Poley (Ant Dn111 (Bmlahl

.... ~ ...- ...... c.

- ·-Aim . He....,__
. . . ....
budiot ... p o j i l b l - ond ..
.,....... NYs • . -

h....
e...&amp;n.le
- ....

Pld«UUr SchwMz

o......

-·

AluchiiMl'ltC

a~-::=~~.;::"':"~ ~~s:r:
..,...,.,.,..j- .... _ . . , - · - . . .

ol ,

polt!col ~ ............ educo&lt;ionol
~ the pu1 .,..... yun. Wh't Jn a

ciKWons

n....- • . . . . . . , - m.ung t o ond- dw
ollnaeM&lt;d
pojiOcol
""""'"'•"""' ., ..., _ educollonol-.,
should bo .............. """"" h .... ..._....
1hM Profe.of Kuntz. • NPta«ntadw of tt. SUNY
s..-. _..""' .._ al&lt;oncm~"' dw SUNV

..-m

"*of

-Sonoto.
It

5. ..... .... \llc:e Pmldonto. Dn&lt;ton.

............... choh. ond locully NdoubleIO . . . . . ~and "*'lmile student at'b1-

o..lt doted Januory 30. 1980. ....
prnentcd by ProiaKW Berdahl in ttw ebMnce of

.................. ..,..--.ondCOO&lt;·

.......Jtoilon """'dw Focullys..-:

4. dwt dw Ptaidont bo ad-.1 to glw tnt priori·
ty lo the Gfort ol ..a&amp;rinD raCM.nca IUfftdtont to
......_ ocodo- ......- .. ""' UnNenity.
ond ............ aldw s..- ald .....
_ _•nd ..... b;m.,thloelfort,

SE ATE
waa MOVED {WolckJ SECONDED

!Schoonlcldl 10 , ............
dw Focully S......

-

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

mm1 to

It • •

1\MEJ\Dt:.D (XhtA"r\kktl SECOI'-IDEO

of.....,. .. - -

ond
...........
_
.... _ _
domoaacy
............

~ol

pubic polcy to dw peopio. wo would -

lhot

---·

edocollonol--..-...yboenbu!l..ed
from dnc:t J*t1Mn control In order to mow •
cbe .. _... ... - . .............. - o l

.
E,.... "' dw boll al · mutmum educoilonol
• ..... should bo ......,. .. 10 !undo ...
ondmntlmonl
-ed. Now . ..............
__
- . .fiocol
. . . ,.....o.ri~y
__. •

- '""'*' SUNV. ond ........ SUNV. CUNY ond

___ _-- - - ___ ..
-....---..--·- --...
_____
fund--·-.
. .tlol-.-..
_Aim ___ .,_
high , . _ . . doMng pOop. hom dw
S....ondhc~""'"· ........ - o n d

ldoo N

...................."'*"

n. lJnkwl •
"~and

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

to form • coeation ol

....,.._---of"'""

....

NVS~ond~--dw

loodwSUNV~ ... -

.... l«m
Hooon·

............... v..... ... oboolutoty
lime.,_ -.w
..... cool ...... - ....... - cl
ocodomil:vW.."-cbewoodlondw--

IHomlonl&lt;o-- .... - - oldw- ..
dw SUNV/ 8 s.-•. o1 l h c -ti..-•odwSUNYS&lt;ot.-........_

s..-

......

~ ·olllw ~I

6 p.m

. .tlonobylocals..-to-ln
....tul.._ ............ - . . . ••- . . ,
Wo con. f ~ . clio&lt;'- ond ..... al

.... ..._.s -CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY ond dw

-oldw-pnfocolhc~-

mooting odjoumod ..

.

2 Nottoc~Nawlh~-· · """"
.......... tollhough .._ _
_ . . , dw UUP

Conlndl
.. ,.,..._ ...... - -.bolotlol!lbblio'llbut"'"ldbodooll-

.-...

He

Mid
l loo&lt;ctnol.,.ond--homdwod·

. , _ - tocutly ..................

...

The F...,l!y

N&lt;wv......

S..,..

of lho ...S....
lJnNonlily cl
_ _....

a..ffo~o-..

io the mrmehmenc ol t.cull;v or tUff and to non·

.........,........._..""'..,.,;;g ........ -

al tocutly ..
..._
--&lt;--'loprimooty.-..dt.,.·

--

SUNV·wldo dodal qoolly ond

too-....._
..............
-..
................
-..-..-cl
.-..toct.collonal

"""'""'-from

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

-ondhcdooon"•---"*•-ond

· - o n d ....... _........, .... _

I&gt;OB .

eweement among the FS£C th.t 1 •

Bodyonf.......,S. Tho-PionnlnliCcm·
mlnee wtl meet on F.t.uary 4 and dilcu• that
l:llue. further , The FSEC r-=ommcnded the
droit
Jonu"'ll 30. 1980 • •
UnGar chit to the Scn.te on Feb 5

\o\ .S dw "'-....-d b

1-"l!a...." R_..

TheH was

unnecr:u.ary to pntMnt • raoludon to the S.I'\IIW

.._,.. IWWtiiUr amonwu•WKufltw!)~~
to wnpt'UW \!duc'MKM..&amp; proyr•rns b " ~u
""'"''- dCTt~ CitfnPU$6 v.illwn 1lw ~ ..hould aho

~ r~rrwndauon

Tlw "'"''"'·") ·~ ~od .-.corn.-n..-..1

a..·

1lk&gt; Pr~n CUIICh.Kk.-d by ~,.l!il 'P«faf -.&gt;fb1s
~ mad..&gt; ttN.•d coop-.orauw .nd ctM

tohou&amp;d

,...._....._ond-.. ............
1 forocodo-IIO•I'J80.l!llll.ony...._ ..
. . . . _aldwlacully .. - - . .

....._.. n.w -=-dcmk:

....

pR9'afftS

..
.
---........

ar ur*J, ar to

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

............... publc_. W•thcndoneollon

,proprildc commiiN: lllnldUrc. to unclcraM an ft.

-....ov-~

bo ...............

-t.,.Sopoomllor 19tll!. on-JIIIO

..- .......

_,
-___ ___ __ _...___
.......... . . .___
-a... . . . _----......- . __ __
~
oi' _
~to
UNd
r«&lt;r«nCtC.._..
• •
....
. - . ponJ
_ ..
on
__
.. ......, _ _ _ _ ond ......

&amp;-fS[C- -

,_

.

_..._...,_,.FSEC

dw
AGAINST RETII£NCH·
MEHTT_F
_ - _,...,,._,~
.. 4p•

cJioo.ood
... ...... lJoiwnly
.........
_
___
of......_
__
....
ohouldbo--.Jby~-- ...

. . . . - ....... -cllacully .. -

2 .... ..,od_ _ _ .. ....

"0...

.,........,

re'ttmd\"*"'

01

--~of

·----~~)
B
_Go-._b_
........ c - w _ _ _....

,...._

- - . . .... Il l

...... - 1
.

Ill

....

.....

IJ\thhU« budgetM'ffy

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

F........ S...... ..... _odooo~dwt

..,. .... .,

..

lor......._
to ntWn twnow. ~ "' •
..
......... _
...

,

PI'OiJAm tchool

-.~!&gt;_

.. .

3 ............ """' ..~- ..- - ..

dw Gowmcw'o Olftco. dw .,.._, oldw lludpt.
dwl.oglolotuooond . . S....~Doponmenl
......_..... .... -

alllogmll ... polcy - ·
. - . . ...... SloMI.INwnl!y. .... City~-

-

olyond dw-to - - .. Now Y~S....

...

......

s.:au..
..,. · - - .......... _..,.,...

othooM" -SUNY. wo--dwSW.._

.
..,._
_
. .f
.... _
_
al·
.........
o,n
d.
• ._
--

- . ...... &lt; A n t r o l - al ....

s....

Un "«nity at• trtonjtorlna new prbgnm
........,.__dw_SUNY_for
...
... ond
_
_......... -_ . - _......
q-, ........
ond.

-

-

.

l 110/ 10

�•

F"""-Y 7. 1980

Ttiose getting
U/8 funds
are listed
The lJnllll!nlly·wide CommiUH for the.

~

d 8lom.dbl Raoun:e Suppon Gmnt Funds hM elocated $60.346
In ........ d 17 ...arch-Is. The

. - oeladad those to be funded
fTom 36 requnll for health-related
.--ch .,-~o~e~~ng $170.815
n.o. - . g grants. tlwlr projects.
and the. emount d funds allocated are as
lolowo:

.......

~

L. Kieffer. PhyAcal Education. "EMG
and Elodrogoniometrtc lntetpritatlon d .
Two E . - Protocols. on tbe Hip and
Boldt Nauttlus." $3020: P . Wool!lrldgo .
Nunlng. "Reducing P-..t d Olsl,ess
"""' Am Time Chemodwrapy. •

..........

~

.

A. K.
ce. Radiation Protection ,
"liquid Radioectiw WUic Proceosing."
SSOOO: J .R LaFountain . Cell &amp;
Molecular Biology. •nd C.R. Zobel.
Biophysbl Sclenon. "Biochemiclll &amp;
Ultr-..ctural Studies on Platelets."
$3000.
M

:!

• Conference on families

t

I

· C. . Pegelo. Ma~t. "Develop·
rnent d He6lth Can UtiiWotion. Coot and
Expenditure~.-

$1200.

.

"-~....._

s. FrH. 8iologlcal Sclenon. "The .
Role d POII·trenMI!on.f Modtlation In
~Enzyme lewis." $3750: E.
A. Morg.n .

BlologjQI ~ "Aller•·

SirUclure.

$4000: R..
~~. ~I Sclenon, "Mutants

lions In IRJIIA

~~1. ~':::

Phym. "f1uoraomce·Ena!!I'·Transfer
AIAy d Membnnc Fuoion."-S3500: H.
Segal. Biological Sclences, "In·
terrnedlates In Intracellular Protein
Degr~llon . • $3200: J . Mutnsky,

"Is Alginic Acid ""-t as a
Three !&gt;~me-' Micro Gel tn Solu·
~.

t1on

r . S3800.

s.cw....._
R.
Psychology.
~.
P~rsono at

Risk

for

"Studies d
Oepreulve

Oioonlen;" R. S . Bundy. Psychology.
"££I«D d .Early Experience on Auditory

Percep~~on ." M Krlsuol. Poychology.
"Hypolhalamic Influences on ~n·

topha91a and Maternal Behavior."
$7200: R J Tobin. Political Science.
"Truth-tn-Ad-nv: The c... of
Ptnalpllou Drugs, $25QO: J . R.
SaWUJCh, Psychology. "Production ·
Perc.pt~on lnteracllons In S!&gt;eech."
$2000: K A. Hldebrandt. Psychology.
·
"Infant Physbl Appeatance.·

Energy proposals

~--..-.
from racy 1V fare and slarchy ~

ches. to tbe need lor improved
cent care centers and free abortions
pregn&lt;~nlteens who want them .
One woman. who idenllfJed herseK as
a ochool nurse. claimed that sex educallon in the. schools " just Isn't working."
She added that "assertiveness training"
should be given in an effoo to "en·
courage clwtity" among high ochool
studenb. Another woman advocat£d that
sa educ..tion be eliminated enllrl!iy from
high ochool curricula. Others criticized a
merely factual trutrnenl of sex. one
which overlooks emotional and
psychological concerns.
Ignoring a claim by an ardent right-toIii£ advocate that "contraception and
abortion.,.., th£ greatest cause of d..din..
in th£ family." a ..,..;on on "tbe Famdy in
Crisis" -..1 on to ~ propooals for:
lnaeased federal _..w,g for 50Cial
agencies: more sex education In tbe
schools: couruelng services lor rape vicliml: more drug abuse and alcoholism
counseling: and dllzen education pro·
grams to publiciu available services. The
need to avoid owrlap and duplicalion of
theM services was also stressed.

P-...t,._tferdoepeople
Na!M! Americans and an -American
whose !J'IIndpanmls had been exiled to
Sl&gt;erla" were hotly debating wh..tber or
1101 "anyone can make « h..re" as a
workshop on "Ethnic and Cukural Diver·
slly" went on around th..m. Items being
raised tMn! included demands that the
"general pubk be included In plonnlng
future conferences such as this:" that
" media be glvei. owrto th£ people:" that
th£ education establishment recognlz&gt;O bi;
linguallsm and dlvene cukural heritages:
that "mlnorlllu be defined as min0f1lies
of color." and that abortion be avallabk!
10 all women r_.:llea of class or status.
Make I a cnrne to act with prejudice
toward specific groups. one participant
urged: Another wanted workshop
mcmben to join In a cal for convening a
nallonal conNteno. to do SC&gt;m4!1hing
about "distorted ethnic Images" In written
and eloc.1lonic media. public and private.
educational and commerical .
A national policy based on a concepl of
" hollotic health i\Jk&gt;.psycho-sodal wd
being) .• endoned by. group lc&gt;okini
at beallli """'· They called. too. for
hulth education cowring all aspects of .
lving and dying. for a series of aha
NllYes to exlsllng hulth care agencies.
and for aoatove. ~t ed ca&lt;

w........

bdl.,,....

A workshop on the family and
worl&lt;place wound up by ISSUing a
16 poont Family Worker's Btn of Rtghts
Among otbers. I c8imed tha righ to
rtfu to be 1 workahok. refu over
. d
)lOUr own work and
fa
..
wilhout the pr
to' con
form . and r..tusc relocatoon AIIOlher
li'OUl' which -...d ., on work
ed

,..,,

' -·

that employers be forced to r£CC&gt;gnize the
male role In the family by granting paler·
nKy leava. Part-tim.. career lnlcks. W\der
usc of flex tim... and more job-sharing by
couples ....,.. also endorsed.

o-ble ...... tee
The day's political spotlight focused on
election of 8 delegatn and four akematn
to lM White Houw Cj&gt;nlerence from this
rl!glon. Both sides of IM abortion argu ment passed out "slates' of £ndorsed
delegate candldatn from among 16

•2 eaadldates
wereo

botla •latesl'
nominees scleded by a committee
chaired by a Dr. _Regina Lanigan . of

SteUa Niagara. whom the official con·
terence brochure described as r£pr~·
senUng the Natural Family Planning
Association of Western N£W Yark.
The "pro-choice" group passed out
and polttid&lt;ed lor a yellow sheet of
nomln£es who " favor efforts that
strengthen the American faintly through
their concerns about family planning.
family living and th£ diwrsity o/ roles at
work and •• horne." A "blue sheet" of en·
dorsements. canylng the """"'!je ..._
urge you to vole for the folowing." but
nol klenlifytng lh£ - - ." apparently
r£presented "the other side." But. wal.
two candidatn Were list4!d on both.
In a quandary. tbe pro-choic:£ faction
caucused during lunch in one of the pits
In Capen lobby to pass word that th£ two
women in question h,a d either
misrepresented tbemselves or had bnn
mttunderstood In 'their stands concerning
abortion . Clayto~ H. Osborn. on the
Ol~ hand. was reponed to be upset by
th£ endorwment h£ had received on th£
blue sheet .
Dnpile or perhaps because of 1M mix·
up. th£ two doubk!·endorsement can·
didates proved to be tlwi day's lop vOte
getters . They were: Joan Male .
Cheek1"""'9". married and a foster
parent to 47 children. co-founder of
Parenb nonymous of Buffalo and Erie
County. and Geraldine M£mmo. o/ Buf.
falo. a Nallve American mother of four.
tha founder of th£ Buffalo Indian Culural
Cent£r.
Also eleded from the "Slue shnt" was
MINm J . Barth of Eggertsville. a te~
of the deal and 1M learning disabled and

CAO: Judith Clair. Jam..stown . an at·
Iamey and member of IM Chautauqua
County Task Force on Domestic
Violence : Sheila Molnar Felger.
RocMst..r. asslslilnt prot.,...,.. of educa·
lion and sociology. U of R. and presi·
dent.. New York State NOW: and J£sus
Padilla . of Buffalo. a community
edualor associated with Planned Parenthood of Buffalo.
Eleded a~£rnales wer£ Marion Sd·
pion I. RocMsler. an employment coor·
dinator lor NOW and mother of 11. en·
clorsed by pro-cholce:·Mary Ann Doyka.
Williamsville: Clayton H . Osborn .
Rochester. and Mark Zlrnh£1d. a student
at Canisius.

'We're UMd to It'
An independent group known as the
Honest Ballot Association conducted th£

""l':."W~nald·

H . Stein. assistant to th£
prnident. U/ B. was coordinator of th£
conler£nce. Fern Beavers. Linda Grace·
Kobes and Judy Zuck...man W4!re aslistanl coordinators.
Welcoming those allendlng. President
Robert l. KettD pr£dided that view· points to be expressed during the day
would be as diverse as tbe famif\lllseW.
The Un~y is a place ~e such
diversities and dWierences mingle daily.
h£ said. u~ free rein . "We are ac·
customed to M.

moth£&lt; of flve
Bona fide PfD-choice candidatn
named delegates """ Margaret Hayes
S..um. 79. il""'-er. the -=reary of a
c:haner ClOITimHtee to Ofll&amp;n • birth con
trot clinic and formftly affoloated wtlh th£
Merger
Sanger Research Bur au .
Gera.lc!JM Buller Buffalo. director of th£
~
P....,.t ~m of tbe St
AU{IUitlne Center . a r"9lll d nUI'Iit and
a rnember o/
Utban League and

o...--

~.

�,·

Variegated group of 1,150 turns out
to debate &amp; dispute issues families face

Hundreds wft'e regltleted S•turday morning .

,..,..

They came by the hundreds. from all
· over the political and geographic map .
older women Wlth pink cheeks. grey hair
pulled back tightly in· no-nonsense buns.
their (eel warm in sensible brogans:
of the Genesee Valley
representaliv
G"y Alhance. a nun in a fur coat: a con·
servative contingent from Niagara Coun·

ty proudly sporting badges emblazoned
with a scowling eagle; long-haired liberals
·and Junior leaguers displaying yellow
lapel ribbons which identaied them as
"pro choice." blacks: Native Americans:
elderly men. men who looked too young
to have families: professors; clerks;
blowhards; introvens: feminists : a
muJCular guy in a Captaon America shirt ;
an even hefUer woman in a sleeveless
dress. defYing drafty. cold classrooms.
mostly. women. eight out often of them
women - 1150 people in all.
They came to the Amherst Campus
Saturday lor the fourth and largest
regional

Governor's Conference

on

Families - one of five such events being
staged around the State so New Yorkers
can elect delegates and send recommen·
dations for leglslation to a WhHe House
Conference on Families later this year
They had much to divide them as they
groped for recommendatkms on topics

The famUw'• )ob
The family's job. Paterson submilted. ls
to nunure bodies. hearts. and ·souls.
young and old . It matters' not. he ven-

lured. whether it's ··a storybook family . a

pregnanc:.y . nutrition .

Whatever our ddferences in New York
State. In philosophy. politics or lifestyle.
he sakL we are unlted in suffering -inat·
tention from the federal government en·

discrimination.

Not o"" wu oc.luded
Some wanted more government atd .
a

nee and conlrol; other• wanted

government out out of their how. out ol
their p&lt;lekeibooks. out of their lives
REDO member• sought an end l!l
legahud abortion, a moratorium on
pubic paym«nt for abon1011 . CARASA
advoaotes stood firm for choic • That
wry morning a local newspaper carried
a olory quOting a - right to Ill .. sym·
path)zer who claimed people sharing her
belief had been systematically e&gt;&lt;dud d
by thoM handling conltnnce regts!Rtion
(membm of the U/ B staff primarily) .
, Anyone who was "clowd out" of the pre
howevw. had been inform&lt;!&lt;~
that he 01'
could take a chance on bemg reglolered the momlng of the event
And everyone who owed up Saturday
morning ...,. rejllslered
N
York Seaelary of State Basil

i:

p """"
91 '""' byno&lt;
onl
pltnary
of eddr
the d" (the
cr.-! jamm«&lt; tnlO SpauldingBaa:·n-:

Room and owrllowed onto !he
Room whe clowd an:ul TV h,ocl been
·•op).
.
P a - said ha had been "'Slruclc" by
repom emph Ji11n11 dlwrgonte of
"""''' opinion a1 clll'lwr conf"eN:es In

carry to Washinglon on behalf of New
York's families. Paterson said, is that

"re-tool" and •ge1 · back into !he job

reliance on rising prices to reduce energy

• Uniform federal child custody laws:
• Tax breaks for industries which pro·
vide day care; and

consumption is wrong. " wroJl9 because
the first people affected are those that
have the least ."
Other messages .. we must carry are
these ... he continued: "'for too long New
York State has been shon-changed by
federal government expenditures on the
basic necessities lor decent family life.
And lor too long the promises made to
this counlry's minorities in the 1960's
have gone unkept. New Yorkers are going to Insist on a fair share of federal
assistance to housing. tran~ation .
health care. education and economic
development that produces jobs.
..And we are gotng Lo insist that the
good intentions of the dvil rights act. and
the national housing act and the lair

'They came by the hundreds
from. all over the map ...
eight of 10 of them women ...'
single-parent family . or a family without

,.....lion.

l

conference~goers to focus not on where

they dHfer but on "'the over· ridin9 com·
mon cof'lCem that we have for stron~
families ."'

ou&lt;:h as onflatlon. poverty . rising energy
Oosls. housing for the elderly . teenage

televisiorl. domestic viOlence. and education

.......

Albany. Stony Brook and New York City . The Times on its "Style"' page had
gleefully told of a male right-to-lifer pun·
ching out a Ca}ho ;t woman -for-abortion .
A New York
· columnist had fumed
that " Lesbian• over 40"' ·had dominated
the slate of national delegates elected
from New York C~y ·s "'orgy of progress."'
("'The first thing I tell everyot&gt;e is that rm
under 40." quipped State conference
coordinator Ilene Margolin.)
Keynoter Paterson urged Buffalo

beneiH of

maniage at all."

tire)y disproportionate to our numbers

and our needs:' an inaHenUon that
makes the farrrily's work the more M ·
liculi. New York . Paterson said . ls a state
ol okfer ctties. of aging water mains and
deteriorating

rural

employment act be carried out. ..
In each of the conference's 20
workshop sections. participants spent the
rest of the morning focusing on·lssues
and in the ahemoon grappled with draf·
ling l!IOd voting on recommendations.
Their 20 sets of recommendations are
to be summarized and mailed to £hose
who all ended·. in about lwo weeks. What
they agreed on will also be Incorporated
into a set of proposals representing the
State at large.

transportation

Raiae motherhood to a profH•ion

systems We rely largely on other stales
for our energy Ano~ our housing slack Is
in serious decline ...
Discrimination and exclusion are po·
tent factors. too. Palerson said . "'female
h ads of households . blacks and
H' panic5 are the worst housed of all
Americans There Is discrimination in
housing against th£ handicapped and the

gram

~lderly ."

for communicating values. h would raise

One of the workshops on "'Chang~r~g
FamUy Ljle" opened wHh a proposal for
the federal government to adopt a pro·
of

''compensating

wives

and

mothers for time spent In the holl'e. bas·
ed on the number of children raised ...
This would . the proposer said . "'recognize
that the home. not the school is the place

motherhood to a profession." The overaU
cost could· be reduced. the speaker
outlined. by "fncorponoting funds now
devoted to weVare." The plan would
Hispanic5 is surely one oft he saddest and
have the further beneiK. he (an elderly
man) saki. of reducing the unemploymost dev1151aling things affecting their
ment rate by keeping women "'who prefer
family lives.
no1
to work" from "compeilng for )Obs."
"Unemployment Is endemic ln lhe
Family Income should n01 be a considera·
black and Hispanic communities of the
lion
for eligibility. he appended.
sUite. and l"'- who are employed earn.
"'Could we change that to read 'the
along with women. salaries and wage• at .
parent'
and not 'wile and mother?' " ask· .
the low end of the pay Kale ."
ed a \\lOman in attendance
Other
indlvlduals wonted the group to
M.....,for Wull.~~~~~toa
consider endorsing·
One of the me""'9"5 that we mwt
• A recognHJon ot the single IHestyle
thr.ough legislation. providing lor qu~y
!Non Proflt·Org
In t)le lax structure for s ngles without
us p""'depen&lt;Wnts.
PAID
• A • degendertzalion" of dovorce
Buffalo. NY
Ia lUS,
Pmnil No 311
• A lund of "'GI Btl" for d placed
homemakm \l.•hich would pay them to
Mlnonty ld expectancy continues 10
lag behind that of the rest of the popula·
lion. Paterson went on. "'Th~ high rate of
tnfant mortality among black and

market:

•

·

Valu~ - training

for .. some of these

people we're supporting (on weKare)
who have no values."

Eliminate the aberraUqns
A man wearing the eagle insisted right
up front that "we should define families
consisting of people related by blood .
marriage or adoption .·· The conference
shouldn't even be considering "these
people who aren't married" and other
aberrations. he said loftily. his head cock·
ed toward another man who had called
for recognHion under the law of the
"homosexual family ."
A woman across lhe room rolled her
eyes lo the heavens. "'That's Phyllis
Schlafly talking." she moaned.
A group considering lamUies with
special needs heard calls for the federal
~s

government to: provide more services for

support of the elderly; help fa miles adjust
emotionally to cataslrophe; pay for
sheltered workshops lor the disabled;
teach special parenting skills to parents of
the handicapped : provide family educa·
Hon for prospective parents: underwrite
community care networks: and sponsor

advocacy services for the disabled . "'You
can't

ask

government

to

pay

for

everything:· a philosopher from Niagara
University cautioned . But the list grew
longer.

Do awa y with d i•incenUvH

m""'EiiminaUng

to

disincentives · to marriage
(loss of Social ~curity beneftts. unequal
standard tax deductions. etc.) was a con·
cept vok:ed al a session on .. The Family

and The Economy." Paniclpants her~
also: looked favorably on awarding
employers tax incentives for hiring
displaced homemakers. wanted free day
care for those of aU ages who need superVision. asked consideration of programs
lor "breaking the cycle of poverty."
thought there should be federal recognl·
lion of the financial burden• laced by the
middle class. noted that minimum wage
laws can sometimes hurl the lamUy
economy by causing employers to throw
people out ol work. and urged recognl·
lion of lhe proposition that technology
can sometimes be a negative factor as far
as fuD employment is concerned.

Sea, abortion and the .cli'oo..
During a workshop on "Families ~"d
Schools." many expressed dissatisfaction
with the state of sex education. The;e
wa• disagreement. loo: instance. on such
related Issues as whethen&gt;&lt;,nol birth coh·
lrol clinic5 have the right to llisp«nse con·
ttaceptlves Without a parent's knowledge
And . though the group did agree on a
number of general. $1alemeots relaled to
education. !her was oome fairly healed
- ~ tangential ..,. dlscu sion of abortion.
A session' on "Growing Up in the
Eighiies" h Ard concern over evervthb.g

... -~·-··· ..,..

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

JAN. 31, 1180
VOL 11

e

NO. 17

Budget request for U /8 "disappointing;"
SUNY-wide cuts could make things worse
Chancellor,
Trustees here
this weekend
L.

Governor Hugh
Carey·• 1980-81
Executive Budget Request is disap·
pointing as far as U/B's Individual alloca tion is concerned, but verges on the
disastrous whan the total SUNY funding
plan comes Into focus .
U/ B Is In 5ne for an Increase of
$4 ,309,000 over the current year·s
budget base (to $107 . 134 million) . some
$1.516 million less than the rather spa'·
tan total that had been requested . Most of
that d~ference resuhs from a virtual turn down of aU &lt;10-called "improvement"
funding . a net loss of nine positions. and
a dramatic short-faD in the amount ol
money necessary to provide mlnimum
wage increases for temporary service per·
sonnel. While the skuation is hardly
cause for celebration, it nonetheless falls
short of bearing out the Doomsday pro·
phecles of many.
Difficulties, If there are to be any , will
more than likely resuh from whatever
share U/ B is assessed ol rather startling
SUNY-wide reductions. Carey. lor example. orders SUNY to pare 1.125 posi·
tions , representing a gross expendllure
reduction of $12.3 million . In addftion .
the Governor directs a "State University
l'roctldng .._ - .. -

lob.

re-examination'" and , without quite speU·

$450,000 Laqguage.:-Le.arning __La}l_
is linguistic focal point for campus
John A. ~· prole.- of romance
languaga at Dartmouth, tru his clasoes
to theatrics.
As the New York 1lmu describes H,
"Without warning, he transforms himself
Into a Zooba-like Greek or an excitable ,
totaly Idiomatic Frenchman . He exudes
luting, wrath, anxl«ty, surprise. Hands,
· tongue - all ~ out. Gestures
rnoob unfamiliar words comprehenoi&gt;le."
Ch.lrs lly,- shlrts are o1ppcd open. c:ontollng arms anvelop startled pupils. "Repetition makes H easy for the audience to join
ln ."
Raslias who has 9lwn New York ~
cops ~ oourses In "street Spanish
brings language alive, bekves ft should
~f.-e .

Wrote the Times' Fred Hechinger In his
education column laot week, "such stress·
on the opolcen word -ms aucial If
foreign -language teaching Is to be
rncued. Las extroverted teachers could
readily be aided by~ laboratories
- Individual booths In which pupils can
n to ,.,..dingS and tall beck to them
- which flooded the schools I 0 years
o.go, wlwn Federal funds paid for them,
but ha
been gathering dust In recent

v-..·

As If on cue, U/ B this week is
celeb&lt;ating the formal opening of juSI
such a faclldy - a $450,000 language
and ~..earning Laboratory on the first and
~&gt;ue..,.... levels of Clenwns Hal

Ugbt.,..... ahNcl
The laboratory, which boasts four
eJectronlcallv-equlpp~ class/ study
rooms, tape duplicating equipment, a
recording studio, and a videotape
playback room. is nefther as unique nor
as extensive as U/ B planners first hoped .
Other major universities have equally or
more sophisdcated set-ups , &amp;pakespersons for the Educational Communications Center, the lab's administrative
parent, point out. What was first planned
as a langu- center with over 300 sta·

:~~~

.= c:.=:l ~~on"::'o~

have not yet materialized , either. Yet, the
facility Is light-years ahead of the tiny
language lab on Main Street - and one
of Its classrooms is wired for TV, when
and If New York State lifts current restrictions on purchase of, this type of equipment .
Richard Loew, who has a dual appointment In the Faculty of Educational
Studies and ECC, is oflicloJ!y the halltime director of the lab. Klght now,
though, getting K Into operation Is a more
than fui-Hme effort.

a-t.. cene...U.. ~
'The Pi-esentation of 1200 language
records by the Canadian Consulate will
hlghlight the official opening cer mony of
the new unft on Wednesday, February 6,
at 2 p .m . In 120 Clemeno.
Loew Mid this Radio Canada lnterna-

Economics Ph.D. wins
approval from the SED
EconocN:s to yet anott.. U/ B dolpoort.,_t which has ._, .,.rued approval in
Sate Ectuc.cloft Dop.r1menlo review

of doctoral prowama

Sllle Educellon ~ GorM . Ambach advtaed
UNY
Wlwton on Jan.-y 2

cw-

the pr0SIJ10m m«ts qua y IIWidard ."
The economics doctoral faculty at
U/ B, Ambach added, "to to be corn..-ded for .. line repulallon ••

Economics has '-:n . - d y ranked among the top 10 clepootrMn of HI
ldnd In the nadon In 1am1 of voltme and
quahly of U. lacuHy's publication•
(~.

0.. . 6 . 1979)

tional Spoken-Vo;ce Collection includes
recordings ·•very useful in language instruction ," and will augment several
thousand tapes already available in the
lab's catalog.
The discs contain a wide range of lnfor·
mation In French. Japanese , Spanish
and English , Loew explained . One
record may discuss Canadian esklmos
while another focuses on Canadian
titerature .
Wkh the presentation , the Language
and Learning Lab becomes an official
repository fa.: the Canadian Collection
and wUI automatically receive additions
as they are made.
The keynote address for the opening
ceremony will be given by Richard I.

•

-~~.o~o.· -t,ee&amp;. l

lng out what that means, awards It a price
tag of $14 miDion in further reductions.
The SUNY Trustaeo arc given· the
somewhat onerous task of determining
how these system-wide cuts will be apportiOned among various campuses.
At Reporter dead~ne , there were no
indications of how this is to be achieved.
A contingent of U/ B faculty and
staff-fearing the worst- had joined
others from throughout the system In
Albany on Tuesday to "Save SUNY," by
staging a protest concerning the projected
cuts. United University Professions.
representing the faculty and staff._CSEA.
and the Student Association of State
Unlversfty are ready to form a coalition to
lobby against the Governor's directives In
the Legislature over the next several
weeks.

Wloartoo, T.....- .,.,..... IMre
Meanwhile , State University
Chancellor Clifton Wharton is expected

· -

.........·-aa.ee&amp;.s

No Smoking
Dr. Rlc:hard Slggf!llrou, llk:e praldenl for.,.,.,, q#foln, ,... -nhed
til...., ..W... for jrallmen promulgated b!l the Unl-.~tya
ef
Plwmnocyln 1916. The "'lee are not likely to appear In OlfJifvtvrr U/8 Stu·
dent Hortdboob, lie -red.
1. Ajrallman t. any Rudent Ulllo t. epeMfng llt.}lnt year In OltJI Deportment of the Unlueralty and lo eligible for jrallmon teoma.
Z. EDch and~ jrr.ahmon Mall ......, at all tlmm, ~ S....,.
and apec:fol oa:aolona, a cop ef illejofiou&gt;lng de«rlption: a l&gt;lue Mull cop
IIlith a while IM.Uon. All jrallmen ml&amp;lt llclue cape b!l Oct. 7.
3 . No .frr.ahmon •llcllllltll&lt;&gt;h In or oboolt the ""lldlnf!, ,_ •ltolllte amote
a pipe o n - of BtdJoJo. The omoldng room In tiJelifedlcal ""ddlnfl_.for
uppercloeomenONLY.
.
4. No~ altolllndu,.. In olcallollc /lquorl, ,_.alto// be be ol""-'
In ••. OlfJI ef the c:obordl orcq... of Bl4falo, unlma _,ponied b!lon..,...

o.-r-

petc'aJJniCift.

-

5. Frmhmen muot not flirt """' glrlt clurlllg edtool "--.
6. No~ altoll be _....~tm~ to -'1 In tlte }lnt llx , _ or In lite
boxeo ef OlfJI ~ ...,_, ...,..,.,_led b!l _..,.,. or,.,..... clue......,.
7. No,..,.._ alwll/ oc:a.., G M G truliey OIK ...,., , _, ........ 0
lod!l or-~- .....,. ~ oWifled to .-..L
......___,
I . ,..,.,.. or
~ the ,.,........, or
of the
~ lo/twfM*IL
9. AI~...., be"' ·t~tetr •. - . , ll:•l'·"'·
.
10, Nafrwlt- ..... - . _ , . . , ,_ ..... lte .oohlle .. .,.......
altoll Jte

Gl......._

_.. , -=,..,. . . .

..,,....en't

....... ,....:c:: ....... , .._,edtool ... """-· to,
h le ........_...,..

..,_,~lobe

rll.

-

to .-ber...., .......... , _ rvlee
,.,...dMo ....... the .......... .,.,...,....,.

,

�l

-~ 31, 1980

·• $450,000 Language-Learnina, Laboratory

..--··--1)
Brod, nocut!\le

tion

of

secretary ol the Associa-

Departments

of

Foreign

Languages ol the Modem Language
Association ol America. Brod wiD discuss
" Language Study in the 1980s: Our Op. lions lor the Future."
In addition to the Canadian records
I which will eventually be converted to
lapel . the laboratory catalog includes
tapes In French , Spanish, German ,
Italian , Russian , and Middle and Far
Eastern languages. Most have been used
at one time or another (and some stiU are
uoed)ln C119"pu&amp; langu.go COWMS . Both
instructional tapes and cultural materials
arc avall.able. The Russian GOIIection, lor
example, features tapes ol reac\ings ol
Chekhov plooys made In the U.S .S.R.
Also In the catalog are the ntensive
English toching tapes developed by the
U/ B -based lnten""" English Language
Institute (lEU) which makes luD use ol
the I.b's facilities. Five lEU classes a day
are ocheduled lh«re this semester. as are
scYeTal courses offered to regular Univerllly studen
by the Department ol
Modem Languages. Prof Peter BoydBowman ol the Center for Critical
Longuasaa finds the lab utremely useful
for tnstnictlon . lor example.
Anyone who wishes to make a copy ol
any ol the catalog tapes, Incidentally, has
ec:ceu to a sd~e tape-copying
device A grad assistant Is stationed nearby to show first -time users how k works.
IndiVIduals have to supply their own
blank tape cawnes. but the service Is

94--'-

The lolgest Instructional space in the
new loob Is a 94-statoon e.lectronic
daolroom fUtunng equipment lor indiVidual and group usc A student can
usc the Mt·up for ening to a prepared
tape, and lor recording and J&gt;laiM9 back
his or her own language practiCe lnstruc• ton c:.on monrtor and fuel material to· the
IndiVIdual stations from two large con..W. at the front o( the room
Thera are also facilit ies for
Mmultaneous translootlon . a min -UN
c:.opablldy which lhoulcl be a booon to conferenc.es fcatuq non-English speakets
Conlcrene~~._.., would hear the speech
in Engb6h throu~ MrPhooes . l.oew
..._,. k la the onlv such Simultaneous
•MIIIatlon Ul\lt., yJ_, New York.
This large .._.,can be (and uiOAII!y 111
dJvtcW In two by
o( foldini doors
• k becom.s a cawoom on one lide
and an 01*'·wea on
OCher
IIUdenlo IN!' drop-in at
•
I.ttouremuaa'-••~ 10

'*-"""' ....._ l

-t .

. _ can be

cllec:Md out from . . . . . .
boolto . . in • llnrvl Some '"*uctors
punch In and out on a

clodl to ~

vw..••

"'*

A ....., .oom on lhe h

lab work .

floar o1

Clemens is -.
with individual
study c.rels ~h have outlets for
plugging -In "sUde caramates". The
"caramates" comi!lne slides and tapes
and ought to prove handy for the
"foreign cuhure" courses envisaged
under the General Education Program,
l.oew suggests. This equipment could
also be useful lor studying art history, he
adds, undencorlng , J&gt;S the name ol the
lab implies, that H is not Umited to foreign
language usc.
The carrel area has a "computer 11om-,"
already wired lor TV. Only approval from
Al&gt;any stands in the way ol providing in·
divlclual TV rnonHors and videotape
playback equipment for each canel.

"esocerlc" language teaching with Its ltv-

Lob "has as Its.primary mission to support

lngE=iually. he'd like to use the lab's
short
·wave receiver to tape daily news
broadcasts In French and olh«r languages
lor a telephone device, so individ~
could simply call-in and listen (like callers

and encourage language-related programs and instruction and to enoourage
the growth ol an international and

··:.-::.-

~

LeGnl

mblend

for a banana."

Two honored
by Legislature

n-

Whleh

"linguistic focal point of the Unlversi-

lngs with which H might have a close relationship.
In addition, an applicant must
describe: the couBe's context and scope;
how H fosters aitical thinking; how in·
strucllona) 111elhods wiD relate to course
objectives; what way. ~ any. moral and
social que.stions wiD be addressed, and
how math and writing skiDs will be
developed .
Besides the Instructor's vita, the ap·
pllcation must be accompanied by'a summary description ol the course lor the
Undetgraduate Bulletin, a more complete description lor reference and
distribution , a complete syllabus, and o
reeding list.
·

"'-Instruction

~ ~

ltlcu"-·-'
1
• 1•
nw"' un venlly . Is supposed to

GEC ready to distribute
c ourse approval forms

The General Education Committee has
completed a course approval form soon
to
be issued to Univenity faculty .
OthsfuNew courses proposed for General
l.oew rapidly licked off some ol the
Education
aedH far the faD ol 1981 must
olh«r features _of the new facility . It offers:
be submHted for approval by the Com• A high -speed tape duplicating
mittee before September 30 of 1980.
c:.opabllity (where a part-time assistant,
Those counes which already have DUE
Susan Kriegbaum . who has been
sanction and are listed In the coune
associated with the unh since Its early
monk&lt;Xing file must be submllter! by May
days on Main Street, has done "so much"
I. for a faD 1981 Ust!ng, GE Committee
to get the new lab organized and operaChair
Peter Hare says.
tional) .
AD proposed courses should have DUE
• A recording studio which campus in·
Curriculum
Committee approval before
structors can usc to make their own
being consiclered by the GE panel. Forms
language instruction tapes .
can be mailed to the chair of the General
• A laboratory with an oral testing
Education group, 544 Capen.
feature .
Faculty whO want their courses to cany
• A VIdeo playback facility seating 4S
o
"Thematic" de~tion In addition to
(open to all Amherst Campus faculty and
"Knowledge Areas aed~ must include a
their students and ocheduled from the
separate, Theme Course Approval Form
main ECC office, 831 -2304). and
with the application.
• A screening room and workshop
Aocordlng to aiteria adopted by the
area.
Faculty Senate, proposed GE courses
must be ~ to all'students without
T•.-f.,.~
The~ duplicating capability makes H . formal prerequisites, unless the prerequisites are themselves General Educatechn
feasible to provide lndivlclual
tion courMS. Subject matter within the
tapes
nguage lessons to students in
courses must be presented within a conbeginning courses (something that's
text
. either by nollng "methods o( In·
already done at such places as Temple,
vestlgotion and proal and by Ollplainlng
American u. and Georgetown) . Students
established
or competing theories In the
would simply buy two blank tapes at the
field .~ or by an " historical review o1
beginning Of a semester and keep swapdevelopments
in the area that establishes
ping them off for pre-recorded .._,.,
current questions and practices •
tapes at the Language Lob. There's no
In addition, courses must: ~te substall to do thla at pruent, l.oew emjed matter to other fields of knowledge ,
phasized, and classes here aren't taught
when poua,le; foster critical thinking and
In '"lod&lt;stcp," but H could be done.
the atillty to pursue independent inThe I.b's or.J tesllng capability is
vestigations; enc""'- recognition o(
apcclely Important to the future o(
any
moral or social prob!Rm Inherent in
hate, Loew beleva.
t'oo -..,, he m-.. !ochers don't the subject or presented by Its practical
application
; develop the capacJty for inhave lime to - lndMdual students on
formed choice; and require the usc o1
pronunciation, 10 . , . otud«nts don't
ma~
and/or writing lor .tfective.
bochat to learn
they oornplain they
ly oornml1lli&lt;Ming 1&lt;1.. and stating
c:.on't · - · .,. ~· and lnle'ist
results
and c:onclusions.
- - " - · the labs equJpmenl makes
l"*"&lt;'ors Interested In teaching GE
• poootie for an 1ns1ruc:tor to give an or.J
-~toanentncla., and
COO!fMS IUbmit • vita with the ap~ - l"*"&lt;'ors- be "qualified lit
then 111-Y t.do only the respohM . _
o( knowleclgo and training • and
for w8ding A giMt s11p forward. Loew
"c:Ja.oom expcienc:e and ~.. ..
tubmb It hcl the time.
The ,form askathe _.,_to note
I ooniAcl and cndit houn; ill top~ ltncN.4edge clalgnation ·
l.oew .......,.. c:ornplelioly "' lhe

ow-.,. _ ..,. _. ._ . .......

mu

But, adds Loew. it's also geared to the
needs ol the individual who has taken
two years ol a language and "can't even

do lor the weather, dial-a-joke, etc.). At
least one major university does this
a~~IL -, the Lo~·- and , ---·mg
"'"_,Y

::!

ihc

- . . .. ~ CfOIIo-lolings .....i
~. and curr t COUI'M o1fe&lt;..

.

Two members ol·the University Office
ol Minority Student Affairs were honored
by the Erie County ~lure on the
I Oth Anniversary ol the office recently.
Albert 0 . Cappas, director. and
Roosevek Rhodes. associate director.
were praised in a legislative resolution for
"contributing greatly to the recruhment
and successful graduation o( thousands
ol students who reside In Erie County."
Both men have also devoted strong
commitments of time to committees and
agencies which assist In the delivery of
human services. the resolution continued.
Their success in !~easing minority
student participation in higher education
was also lauded.
Cappa. has served on the board ol
directors ol the Puerto RJc.n Chicano
Committee, the Erie County Alfirmat!\le
Action Committee, and the Oty ol Buffalo's Manpower Planning Committee.
and is founder and edh~ Buffalo's only Spanish language n e -. The
Lalln Joumol.
Rhodes has served on the· board ol
directon ol the Buffalo Urban Lague.
the Buffalo Man- Planning CommHtee. and Operation PUSH. He has
chcired the College Division for Operation PUSH . and for - a l years headed
the health. eduoatton and well. . oom·
loc- the Bullolo u.t.n League.

·m-

�January 31 , 1980

I

j

''I

Amherst
Plan for campus of the 21st.century
has been scaled down to meet
the lesser realities of the late 1980s
An "update" on Amherst Campus development was isSued in pamphlet form
this week by the Office of Fadlltia Planning.
The campus Is about 50 per cent com~te. the pamphlet points out.
Construction covers an excess of one million net squan! feet.
"Completion" Is now scheduled for the late 1980's when some 23,500
srudents wiD be M)'Ved by 73 bulk!Jngs.
The rej&gt;ort lists these buildings as yej to be constructed (keyed to the accompanying dlagnlm) :
• The F.ine Arts. including teaching. rehearsal and performance spaces for
Music and Theatre. Planning for the Fai:uhy of Arts and Leiter$ facllltles ("I")
remains approximately the same as originaDy planned . It inc~!; des a Performing
Arts and a Cubural Center.
• The Natural Sciences, Including the departments of Chemistry, Geology,
Mathernallc:s and Statistics ("F'1 .
• Health, Physical Education and Recreation. The far-ustern development
the bulldlng sequence ("J'1 reserves space for these facilities. The location Is
dictated by the strong relationship between the fadlltia and the outdoor recreation area positioned Immediately east of the buildings.
• The Social Sciences, including Psychology, Sociology, Anthropology, and
~phy .

• Electrical Engineering ("G") .
• Lecture halls to service the entire University communHy ("P") .
• Noc:euary support functions such as the Educational Communications
Center, Computer Center and student activity space .
Wllat lfs
Of interest to historians and those who deal in what-lfs.
pamphlet
discusses changes made in the Amhem plan since its original conception (again
keyed to the dlagnlm) . Essentially, the changes represent a dramatic scaUngdown of what was originally conceived of as the "Univershy of the 21st
Century ."
As the pamphlet tells K:
"Originally envisioned to serve some 45,000 students, facuhy and staff,
changing Institutional needs have adjusted the scope of Amherst Campus
development plans. These changes reflect the dynamic quallty present In all
planning actlvlles.
"The IDustration shows the Master Plan for the Amherst Campus as II was
originally conceived In 1970. The basic scheme focused on a mile-long, eastwest corridor housing many centralized UniversHy-wide functions such as
teaching, research , student adlvKy and student services. Various University
academic units were grouped around this cora area with locations designed to
promote inleTaction between discipbnes. For exam~. the Natural Sciences
("f'1 and Engineering ("G'1 are clustered together as are aD of the Fine and
Performing Arts ("!") .
"Ahhough the basic clcmcnts of the plan largely remain unchanged , actual
development Is now planned on a substantially smallu scale. The most striking
difference involves the area where the Facuhy of Health Sciences facilities were
to be located r'E") . The model shows a development of 24 towers of varying
heights which would house the Schools of Medicine, Dentistry, Pharmacy,
Nurstng and Health Related Professions plus a teaching hospital. Two of these
t:owers have been built but there are no plans for further development in this area
today."

me

WwdcNiap mta'
Othe; areas where the ollgjnal master plan has been redeveloped Include the
following :
.
• Paridng Fadlltles. There ""' no plans at present to build the several multilevel parldng structures ("C") . Considering the reduced scale now envisioned for
the campus, K Is questioned whether any of these structures are now needed.
• Campus Roadways. The "Campus Loop Road" concept wu dropped
when lnlffic proJections indicated that the highway sadlon ("A") would rca&lt;lve
vayllttlo we. The configuration of the intachange ("8") bclween the campus
highway now known u Audubon Parkway and the existing Millersport Highway
has aloo asenlialy been redcvcloped. ·
• Rlopld T.-.nsll Syswm. The .-.pid transit systam ("D") was originally to have
tlvee stations on the Amhent Campus. Current planning calli for the line to
have a singlo station on carnpu~located In the vidnHy of the southwest comer of
Lalce LaSale. And although the bne Is still en\llstonecl as being elevated u Jt
CI'OIMO the campus, the alignment for the transit systam will most likely be
changed In redesign phaMs.
• Feculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics. The , _-structure
development housing the Facully of Natural Sdenou and Mathematics ("f'1 will
rcaernble the , _ . . _ r e shown on the model, but will be substantially
reduced In ocale.
• Faculty of Engjnecring and Applied Sciences. As indicated In the model,
orlginel plans lor the Facully of Engineering and Applied Sdenou development
("G") shows fourteen _ ... buildlngt ~d io one another by a series ol
pedestrian bridges. Current plann~ call for lour buildings with a poasibiiHy for
a ftlth ~ created sometime in the future .

S..U.Kale

• Faculties of Law, Eduatlon and Social Sciences. Development for the
Facuilos of Law, Education and Social Sdenca lactlltiu ("H") will retain the
proxlmlly of the various un to one another, bul again Is now planned on a

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

• Service and Main nonce. The scrvlc:c and rnalntenanec functionl ("K")

have been developed 1n the ~ .-.bllobed. The Chiled w- Plant
("L1. ""-vcr, hM a subotanllolly different configuration from' that shown' on
the modellloc:e plans lor a total campus developnlent on a recluc:ed IIC8le loaen
the quan
of chilled thai Wll be needed.
• Town Canter and Retldenllal Development The
lihood of construction
of a town ("M") and ..-.I Jarvely resi&lt;Mnllal developmen ("N") II at
lhlo
. - Current r
that .....,11 thae aruure developed ,
agency thai
out the
no( be the lJiben Oawlopment Corpar
.. orlgina planned
For lhoM who'd lika to make a clc.er study of the onQiNII plan and how ll's
c:t.anged, a Iorge model II d.wplayld on
wal o{ ~ main lobby of

'*""'

Scjence.At(lli.~l..txary
~ •

•

•

•

JCapen-2).
.

.

• • ... .. ..
•

•

,

.• '

•••• •... ·.. ... • 1.' • '1. ' l ....

Original Amherst
Campus Plan (1970)

Blacks urged to believe in
themselves,
not emulate whites
Marcia Gillespie, editor-In-chief of
Essence magazine, told a packed au dience on Main Street Campus Fri day , that one day , a few years back. she
woke up "feeUng empty" but not
understanding why.
"I had the money and the job, but
something was wrong." What she decid ed to do was to have a "quiet talk" with
hei'$0K.
Her Introspection proved fruitful .
Gillespie realized that she had attained
··what while people have." but in doing
so had lost contact with her roots. her
identity and herse~ .
"America can make whores out of aD
of us," she complained , "because In a
struggle to obtain symbols, people fotgel
substance."
Speaking at the Filth Annual Tribute to
Dr. Martin Luther King , Jr., sponsored
by U/ B's Minority Faculty and Staff
Association , Gillespie emphasized that
blacks must remember who they are:
"spirit people." "primary people" who
too frequently have IOI'$8ken the;r cuhure
'and Its values In a rush to be assimilated
Into American society.
"We have bartered off too much and
allowed them to denigrate our cuhure ,"
she aSserted to a receptive audience.
Blacks must stop believing the myths
white people have . perpetuated about
them , she Insisted. One of the biggest
lies, she said , Is that because black cuhure
Is "different ," HIs a "breeding ground for
pathology."
Instead, blacks should remember they
have a "spiritual legacy;" a legacy she
(.,els must be rediscovered along with a
commitment to each oiher as ~ people .
"We have to start speaking to each

other In the streets again . We have to
look Into each other's eyes and
acknowledge thai we're a lamUy people ."
The &amp;#nee editor, who was a recent
recipient olthe Women In Communications Matrix Award, urged blacks to stop
looking to white Americans to "legilimize
your thoughts and ac!JOns." If, "you waft
for people who oppress )!"U to say you're
okay, you're reaDy sick, sha declared .
The trick Is that blacks must stop
emulating others and start believing In
themselves, she said . "We're not thi&lt;d
world people, we're forst world people.
We have to change the propaganda
around 10 WOfk for us...

Folts chairs national panel
Burr Fobs. assistant vice president lor
physical ladlttles, has been named chairman of a national panel concerned with
making higher education faclbties more
aoc:adll. to the handicapped
Thio · advisory commlllec, which was
named by the Asaociation of Physical
Plant Admlniltrators • . , _ _ a projec:l being tponsored
U S Department of Education
c:tmied out by a
group known as Acces5l&gt;ility Oogn
Consub.ants \he prOII:&lt;;t _has two goo.Ts:
•

_.,

•

I

•

I •

J&gt;

'

I~•

·~.

a) to develop acccssibtlily !!l!idelines and
spacKicatlons; and b) to· Clraw up a
manual of existing products which could
~-ful In making facilities m!"re ac-

Other members ol the advisory comml
are the assistant vice chancellor for
fadlltles management at the Univershy ol
CaiWornla at Bert.elcy and the dwador of
physical lacltrt•s from the Unlvershy of

WisconJin ~! M;ii~Juk , .' ••• . • .-.

,

�·i

J

January 31, 1980

I i

Geese gone
from. &amp;Elba'
'
Gold reports
Edit«:
The EUicott !~"""' are gone! . . Huey,
· Dewey and Frank were captured without
incident and taken to the farm of a
Untversky staff member. Accompanying
the birds were 150 pounds oi goose feed,
a water heater and a feeding p;:n. Many
people here In the far comer oi !h.. campus wiD miss the 9'1"5e, because they
gave us som"thlng to watch foo-, learn
from, run from, talk about and feed . We
will especially mbs !h.. goose-tales, which
will b.. re-told and emb..llished for a long
time.
Th gosling Eubie has already b..gun to
b..have like an aduh toward Its caretakers
(a famdy in Eden) and their b..wUdered
pets.
The incorporation of the !~"""' Into our
lives and space was a cover story oi The
Boston [Mass .] Phoenix. Entitled
"Upstate Down ," the article discussed the
control exerted by the ge..se on the
humans of "thiS acad..mic Elba ."
The !~"""' had to go b&lt;!Cause they were
noisy, · nasty and messy. To b.. sure.

Tenure not a roadblock, Metzger says;
women, minorities should be 'patient'
By Joyce Buchnowsld
~Siolf

Within the first moments of his address. higher edueaton gathered to hear
Walter Metzger speak on "Tenure and Its
Alternatives." knew his sentiments.
llle tntematlonaUy-recognized authori ty on academic freedom and tenure
5tarted with certatn .. assumptions."
Tenure is not a "luxury." he argued , but a
"a1tical neceosily as essential to the sue"""' oi the academic enterprise as to the
welfare of the academic profession . • And
"the liabilities of tenure are less grave
than those that ecoue to Its alternatives,"
namely, non-tenure tracks, . . _-term
contracts and generalized term appoint-

ments.
In hi&amp; research, Metzger said, he
discovered that academic people have
always taken effortJ to protect the realm
of academic thought and Inquiry from
thoM who t..d power to Impact negatively on k: Ukewlse , Institutions oi higher
education have always developed rules
and practices to shield academics from
" arbitrary , repressive ~md unjust ..
reprisals.
It is also generally true , continued the
Columbia Unlverllty history professor.
that while " relauv ..ly 5lrong and
indu-" tenure •yskml failed to foster
an "acacl..mic gold..n age." "ohaky, battered and caste-llke .-y1tems are
asaodated with unlversltia In decline:"

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

. . . - ......... ._ta~ety
Addraeing the complaint that rules of
tenUR often discourage the m"ntion oi
promlllng junior focu}y . Met2l!l«r reca8ed
, that the "up oo- out" concept dewlopftiin

. . •a•ra
:....~~~r:::
1-.

response to the previously prevalent use

of a two-track tenure system in which

S...~GINewVooi&lt;•BuH.Io

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lower-ranked faculty frequently were
made to serve term appointments for an
indefinite period _
That system was reinforced by the
economic havoc wreaked by the Depression, he recalled . lack of resources
caused some tnstitut\ons to cut' )unk&gt;r
faculty regardless of how long they had
.served . More commonly , however. they
were retained. but woo-ked long for low
salary.
TM "up and out" rule negotiated by
AAUP and the American CouncU on
Education wAs Intended to "give help and
hope to this academic underc:lass ,"
Metzger explained.
llle provision bon-owed Civil Service
parlance and used tho term probationary
to desc:rbe !h.. pre-tenure stak, making H
clear that pre-tenure "should not b.. considt&lt;red a collection bin for cheap, sut&gt;mbslve and unhopeful labor," he

native to the removal of gifted juniors on
grounds of cost." 1&gt;.. added .
Metzger abo rejected the argument
that tenure "retards occupational mobility" and should b.. dismantled in order to
"unclog chan""ls of opportunity" to
aspiring '•outsiders," such as women and
minorities.
In 1950 , he recounted , there were
190.000 practicing academicians In the
United States. A decade later, there were
281 ,000, and by 1970, a whopping

551 ,000.
"Very few professions anywhere have
grown so lustily in such a short season, ••
he observed. The only fields with a comparable PefC"ntage increase are nursing.
engineering and accounting .
Mlnorltla and womn ...,t Ia

During this expansion, Metzger explained,· a large number of faculty were
hired who did not bdong to the usual
ehte ethnic and social groups. But growth
aswrted.
&lt;USed before racial and gender Imllle same statement dissociated tenure
balances could b.. rectified .
from rank by tying It Into years oi service .
Not surprisingly, Metzger bd'H!ves that
This "legitimized" a claim to tenure that
"part of the assauh on tenure" can b.. atwas not "based on the say-so oi the intributed to the lack oi success by women
stitution."
and minorities in gaining entry into tenure
track pooitions.
Not ~laked with promotion
Other !acton are also contributing to
Although jUnior faculty tend to blame
the current academic malaise, he sugthe provision for II¥! Infrequency of progested. After a binge oi growth based on
motion In these flscaUy stringent times,
lnaeased student numbers instead of an
Met!lger argued that nowhere In the state- . "absorption oi new knowledge." Metzger
ment does H mandate that promotion to
feels acad"mic Institutions are sliD In a
tenure b.. accompanied by promotion in
state of shock from the sudd•m switch to
rank and salary. The only guarantea
"stability" and the fiSCal implications oi a
provided are that tenured personnel get
no-growth rollty.
pre-dismissal due proce5S rights.
Also. those who prepared thermelves
Most Institutions, however, lgnoo-e the
to enter the profession In the mid-sixties
dlsoodation of tenure from rank , Metzger
and early sev..ntk!t "suffered special .torMid. In 1977-78, foo- example, only 2 per
ment" when the academic economy
~nt oi 1ns1ructo&lt;s and 6 per cent of assischanged so abrupdy, he lamented . StiU,
tant profaoors In Independent uniwrhe stuck to his guns, abandoning tenure
sities offering doctoral degrea were
to mak.. room foo- them oo- for an Influx oi
tenured . In communky colltges, by con""""""' and minorities would constitute a
trast , the figures were 19 per &lt;&gt;mt and 61
loo-m oi "rev..rse discrimination· · that
per cent respectlvtly.
would never b.. sandloned by the courts.
"These cHota SUggest that the major
unMmltles refrain from granting tenure
Patlnoce
(to the "'-&lt;ranks! in pm:t to maintain _
Patience is the key . In the mid- 1980's ,
thu distance from the hoi poDol."
Metzger predicted, there will be a surge of ·
Metzger ...-donbUy remari&lt;ed.
tetir-. and In enough numbero so that
Moreover, he Indicated . Mnior facUlty
Institutions will not be tempted to merely
may b.. accomplica In prll'l)CIUatlng the
eliminate the poolllono to uve money.
tic ol tenure to rani&lt; Iince they •• the
llle lituation can aloo b.. ~ If In OMS who "proolt from the detft of thatr
stitutions otart rnakinsl retirement opt1or1s
inllltullont to malnlaln their pOoitiona In · m&lt;n attractive, Meu:iler concluded, and
!he peddna order •
If MUP drops Its plan to ehmtnate oo- up
One 10 c:omblol the problem, promandatoo-y retirement 9 .
..-.1 Metzger' to to • ...,.., down the
Metzae(t.!Jf!:ntation waa one in a
oaltory -.lation · at the boginnln!l oi
Mrlos Ol br
Mrninan apon_oored by
tenuted oeMc:e Thto to • fall&gt;le derthe ~t oi Higher Education .

-·

much about life for commuters, residents

and staff in Ellicott Is noisy, nasllf and
messy; but everyone (including this
writer) held the gees&lt;! to higher standards
of b..havior, cleanliness and sensitivity
than we expect from humans who know

b..tter. We w..re always disappointed. I
could only smile when a studying student
leaned out of his window and yelled
~shut-up" at the honking ge..se while the
halls were simultaneously !Uied with very
loud music . I couldn't adequately
r..Spond when memb..rs of the faculty
complained that the geese were
uncooperative. unsociable and
expansionist.
llle empb..meral Wdkeson Goose
Committee planned to feed. sheker and
care for the geese. However, no one did
the woo-k. So, as finals and the winter
break approached , some Ellicott staff and
myseK assumed raponsibilllv for the care
of the b..asts. It was certain that the geese
had to go when two members of the community proposed a blanket of snow as an
acuptable substitute foo- cleaning away
the (by then) fonnidable pUes of goose
droppings.
The Goose Fund has about $200 remaining from Goos.. Night ai tli'e Pub.
We se..k suggestions for using the money
to improve the Ellicott Complex environment. Pleas« send your suggestions to
Trustee, Wdkeson Goose Committee,
c/ o Rachel Carson College. Wdkeson .

- P-

Golcl

Rachel Carson College

SUNY Senate
convening here
The 64th regular meeting of the SUNY
Faculty Senate wiD convene here , Friday
and Saturday, February I and 2.
EmU H . Hoch oi Buffalo State is president oi the Senate which includes
repres..ntatlves of both faculty and professional staff m..mbers from throughout
the State Unlvasity system.
A highlight of th" two-day session wUI
b.. an address to the senators by SUNY
Chancellor Clifton Wharton who wiD llk"ly discuso ramilll:ations of the 1980-81
State Budget.
· So)ne senaton will b.. arriving a day
..arty, on January 31 , to take part In a
special workshop on. the budget-making
proce5S, at which Dr. Howard Miller,
dlrectoo- of the Division of lb.. Budget, will
speak.
On Friday ev..nlng at5:30 p .m .. President Robert L. Ketter Wttl host a reception
foo- !h.. Senate adjaceOi\to the Inner
Gallery, 5th floor ..X Capen HaiL
Another 'P"Ciaa feature oi the muting will be a Friday aftemoo'\ panel discuo· •
""" on transferring aca&lt;1emic aedill
among the various SUNY inR!tutlono.
Action ~ems will b.. taken up at a session
on Saturday.
Meetings arc ocheduled for the CApen
complex and s.tdy.

�Jan'*Y 31, 1980

I

Studio Arena deserves
support, 2 profs urge
Charles Fogel has bftn attending local
thean productions SII&gt;C8 !he days when
tho late Rooalind R._t! was dJowing
her way Into the tpOIIight as a ""'mber of
the old T ock Theatre repertc&gt;ty company.
When that group went out of business, he
shilled his alegia.nce to Jane Keeler's
Studio Theatre on Lafayette .
Gordon HarTis lntere51 in the Buffalo
theatrical scene dates back to the same
Lafayette Street playhouse; the late Dean
Henry Woodburn lnvtled him and his
v.rofe to a.perfonnance there shortly alter
the Hamses arrived In Buffalo. Since
1965 when the amateur Studio group
became th professional Studio Arena on
Main Street downtown. the Harrlses have
held wason tickets.
Fogel, a professor of engineering, and
Harris, Larktn professor of chemistry. are
headmg-up U/B Involvement In the
Studio Arena's $200,000 Fund Drive

'80

Why should the Studio Arena. now
playing to the l&lt;uge51 numbers of lull
season subscribers in tts hlstc&gt;ty. be wekong out-and-out donations, over and
above a su~ drive?
Simple economics, the two professors
pointed out.
Not-for-proftt
As a not-for-prof~ venture, the Studio
Arena can't begin lo pay all tts expenses
from ticket soles revenues. It's just like
education , Fogel explained; no student
attendmg U/B pays the lull cost of a
Univamty education. And no one attending a Studio Arena performance pays
his or her fuO share of what H cOsts to
mount the play. If patrons had to pay that
price. a Section A ticket on Saturday
night would run $17.20.
In the la5l two years alone, Theatre
spokespertOns report, lumber, a primary
material for building scenery. has increased &amp;om .60 to S1 a foot: plywood , from
$16 to $23; and paint from $14.50 to
$22 a gallon. Yet. you con .UU buy a
Studio Arena ticket for as bttle as $6.25.

To , _ • expenses this year. the
Theatre has to mise $457.000 In grants
and contributions - $200,000 from the
annual maintenance drive.
Harris and Fogel noted that University
faculty and 51aff make up a surprtsingly
small percentage of Studio Arena
subscribers and lund drive contrlbutors.
It's strange. they said . because you'd
think members of one culturaleducational agency would be supportive
of another.
Why should they be?
Good theatre Is a cultural asset which
helps altract people to Buffalo, Harris
suggested.
The cuhural vitality of the entire community Is enric~ed by a wide range of
51,1ccessful arts organizations on-and-offcampuses.
And the Theatre is intere51ed in the
University enough to make available discount tickets for students.
The Studio Arena in no way competes
with U/ B's Theatre Department. the two
professors agreed . In fact . Studio Arena
made its old building available fat University use in order to enhance the developing downtown Theatre District. One complements the oth&lt;:'.

Amaill"ll
ml"ll
Harris and -\';ogel noted that U/ B staff
members who have had a past connection with the Studio Arena will receive a
maUing about the fund drive , as will
newcomers and departmental chair-people. Gifts of S1 are welcome as are . of
courw. larger ones.
Anyone else who would like to contribute Is asked to contact Sally Maxf~eld.
OffiCe of Public Affairs, 636-2925. Prof
Linda McCallister of the Communications
Department, a U/ B newcomer this year .
Is also involved in the fund-raising effort.
Fogel said he could catalog a large
number of additional reasons wliy people
on campus ought to consk:ler oontnbu ting

to the Studio Arena. But in the final
analysis. he offered . 1here's one over·
riding consideration: "It's worthwhile ."

Myths about singles .draw
attention of two researchers
Singles - or "unmarrieds" as they're
sometimes ~uphemostically dubbed - are
often characterilled as either swingers or
losers who are almost invariably irresponsible , maybe even psychologically
warped Single men · also are not suppowd to love as long as manieds of the
some sex (Songle women really luck out;
!hey ou.hve everyone(.
Th is what so-called expen authors
haw told us about being single. Yet U
anyone challenges these widely-held
botbefs or asks fO&lt; proof, !he experts
become susped . There's no de6mfive
data '-e to support any of these
usertJons.
Two members of the Untversity community, Dt. Barbara Putnam of Counseling and Human Servte • and Don
Anger, a doctoral candidat In E.ducational Psychology, are sick of the
steteotypes (which often p rove
disconcerting to singles( What !he two
want are facts , good dacr!ptrve data on both ooluntary and involuntary tingles - that 15. on t"'- who are
unmanied by their own volition, or otherwile They plan to g«t !he Information
from"""" 3,000 We01ern New Yorkan.
The duo, who have conducted a
mnnbcr of wor1uhopo in !he Buffalo area
on
confronlln!l IIO!IIu .nd who
.,_uJy u c:onou\anto for the
Studio Alena Program for Slnglcs. point
out thet being slnglo can no long«r be
asaociotad wllll only the pooa-hi!lll ochool
.nd rctlremcnt blc periods Neither can a
any longer be thought ol ••duSNely as a
tra ory sta e.
·
ltgures Jndicate, they note ,
thet nearly one-tlmf of t
country's
populollon 11
dJvorced. or widowed
or hu ,.._ bftn manied The"- In·
"' nu
. abetted by a rued
. , . , . _ , _ ~.d .. port by
~~
• Bul •••• mowmenl which
lacks sub tanllvc data about . its.

-men

. .....

... -

constituency.
w~ so much misinfonnation afoot

about Singles, the individual's chances to
identify with the movement are under·

mined. Anger observed . He and Putnam
hope th"ir data. once published , wiD yield
enough ammunttlon to mortally wound
the debiUtaling popular prejudices The
team want their rewarch - which still
awaits funding - to cut across all socioeconomic and age groups of both sexes,
gathering a complete slaty for the first
time
The re$4!01Ch can also be helpful to
such servia! professionals as counwlors
in retponding mote fully to the needs of
lhek single clients.
·
When Anger began searthlng for
responsible existing data on singles. he
discover d that a leading national news
magazine had done on article based solely on the perceptions of single etnplojlees
in wveral of iU bureaus. "U a leading
news magazine can do that ." he mused.
"can you Imagine the reliability of other
articlts about 51ngles?"
For better or worse, Putnam and
Anger hope to have their group profile
completed in about a year. Anyone in·
tere51ed in being part of the sample
population should contact them at the
Unlvemty.

Equipment pools
More than one-fourth of colfeget end
universllln ourveyed by the Ameican
CouncU on Education's Highet E.ducation
Panel hav
tabllshed SV*m spoclfical.
ly deslgl&gt;ed to fadlltat the sharing ol
oclontlllc: equipment. An addltional 18
per cent planning 10 dlo so in !he
.,.. future, ac.c:onllng to a study
JnP"red by HEP The ourvey dat reproMOt ~hted nabonal ntlrnata for 676
lndutionto, Including al pubk and
priva unl\lcrsltla. all medical colega,
.nd all lOUT-year eollcga wuh lui-time
equivalent e.nrolmenls 2.000 or more

~

i

Quilts
Exhibit at Alamo Gallery
draws well-deserved attention
to their historic graphic values
By Linda Levine
It's always good to we the best of old ·
quilts hung as paintings. as they deserve
tO be. Showing quilts on walls gives them
a certain respectability. and also helps to
preserve them for fUture generations.

There's a fragUity to old quilts, ~ter.Uy.
but even so you .un we them heaped like
rag bags in dusty corners of stuffy antique
shops as though no one cared . Well. the
Alamo Gallery cares. On eKhibit is a small
selection of late nineteenth century and
early twentieth century patchwork and
applique quilts - and the Gallery cro5Ms
the line from fine into folk art.
There's a good case to be made for
labeHng these ordinary household objects
as objects of art. For one thing, quihs are
often beautijul. For another. quilts bear
specific relationships to significant trends
in twentieth century painting. Some of
the quihs on display in the Gallery begin
to hint of thew relationships. Still. there's
no getting away from the fact that quilt
history Is a melting pot of economic and
social and art hlslory. and this mixture is
also the fun of H.

Qullli"ll bHe were female •upport
grou pe
Quilting bees were the support groups
of the American past, at least the
feminine past. Bees brought a host of
ladies together for the few days they
would need to get a quib done. The

theJ.!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'

future
andsHkibbitz
womenquUt
would
aroundand
the release
edges oftheir
artisbc tendencies. Or. one persistent soul
would sit and qulh lor years In spare or
anxious or happy moments and when
she brought the thing off H would mean
her personal history.
Quilts wer.e made sometimes foc prac·
ticaUty and sometimes for show and
somertmes for both . A utility quih ,
designed rather for a blanket than a bed covering,. would often be made out of bits
of old clothes salvaged from the rag bag.
For warmth it was made thick . In contrast. a "best" quilt would be designed out
of new materials and was meant 10 dress
a bed or impress a houseguest. These
quiltings would be intricately worked and
then appliqued. to boot . Always . there
was a strong impetus to design - to plan
from the beginning .
Ironically, critics who are drawing
associations between folk art quilts and
fine paintings are inspired by the more
direct and primitive and less sophisticated
quilts. Appllqued quihs are usually pretly
and decorative. and lack the graphic
simplicity and strength of less intentionally artful examples.
L.ttecom en
Americans were latecomers to quilt
tradHions which are hundreds and some
soy thousands of years old . As to make
up for lo5l time. America quilted with
great gusto and immenw variety . There
are about as many tradKional American
palierns as there ore .Utches in a quUt.
Comprehensive exhibftlons. therefore.
are rare. In the main. the quilt lander gets
his or her kicks a little at a time . from one
show to the next. This Is one of thow fottle
shows
·
Hewing to tradition In terms of panern.
the quilter found freedom in terms of
details - color, preeminently. In this
show. the slronge51 example of the
graphic appeal quilts can have Is a red
and whKe diamond quih. It happens to be
entirely machln sewn. undoubtedly by a
woman In a hurry to get warm, though b
~~handknotted . It dates to the early

a

The ..-. subtle is the c:rt.-.lze 11M
qullt, an example of what time and wear
does to tcxdles. Dated lat 1800s, the IKtlo quilt looks like a piece of unrolled parchment The feature wall II given o - to
a ian qullt, hand·and -machlnc rNde
Shown like a .monumental graphk, M's
rerninltccnt of the regulartty and r
don ol motifs in Pop Art, by an

anachronlobc twlol .

Prbe for.......,_
The prta for eleganee goes to !he ap-

plique quilt In a row wreath or row
wreath and tulip pattern, aU by hand and
In notably fina condition. especial)y lor its
date of late 1800s. n.. oldest objects are
small quilt-top patches showing the naive
beginnings of many a work of folk art.
Lenders are the Old Amherst Colony
Muwum, Ruth's Antiques of Clarence
and private owners. The Gallery, in Becl&lt;
Hall. M~
·n Street Campus. is open
weekda
9 :30-5 . The show ends
February
Robert Risman and Bert Grobe hung
the qulhs wHh a clear appreciation fat
their graphic values. And, they teaw us
to want more , particularly of thow very
hidden treasures, old quilts in private col.
lections.

HSL essay
eontest is open
Manuscripts are now being solicited for
the I 980 Rudolph E. ·Siegel Student
Essay Contest on the Hlstc&gt;ty of Medical

Scknces.
M.-.. Mildred Hallowitz, Hls!aty of
Medicina libr.Jrian at the Health Scknces
Library (HSL). indicates that April 30.
1980. Is the deadline for this year's competltlon. The contesl Is IIPQflSO&lt;ed a nnually by the Friends of the HSL in
memory of Dr. Rudlolph Siegel. a noted
medical historian who was on emeritus
assistant professor of medicine hero until
his death in 1975.
An award of $200 will be given to the
student presenting the be5l manuscript'
demonstrating eHher ortginal r-arch or
an unusual presentation of on historic
health sciences topic of his or her wlectlon .

All undergraduate and graduate
students cunontly enrolled in pre·
professional Of prolenional health
sciences programs at the University are
eligible .
Monutcripto should,..bc no longer than
25 typewritten pages, dOuble spaced.
Entries will be judged by a wlect commllfce of tha Ftlends of the .HSL. which
reserva the r'clht not to award a prizlo W
no submlulons . . - the comm-·s
criteria for ~nee .
Man~ should be sent to the
Friends of HSL, Slod&lt;ton Kimbel Tower.
by the April 30 ckadline
The wonner will be announced June
30, 1980

�January 31, 1980

CALENDAR

-

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.... ......,
~

E.glnHnng 2.30-4 p.m Rdruhmonu wll bo

CACFIUI'

u :ctuu:·

Advntwe of Sha1oc:lt Holma Srnarta"
......_. &amp; COrtoon. 146 Di.rendotf 7 ond 9.15
p m Gcnftolodmwion SI.25. 11Udcnli Sl

W-....t~ 1o

0.

thellllniWorld.

Corolyn Ellioa. Cantr&lt; 10&lt; Rnutoh on

Women , W ....... Coll.ge 109 O'Brian 3 p m
Sponso.-cd by ln........,.,.l Col1&lt;go Felows Pm-

gnm

Thu.day - 31

MAIUIIST STUDIES SEMINM •
&amp;........,. al ""-1 "'-''a: A Dloloc·
llcoi M - Vlow, ,O. Etw,n towqull. 5d&gt;oo1
ol Ph.,... ond
Unownkyol M.,.,.....
255 ~ 3 pm Spon.....t by tho &lt;;;olcge
WO&lt;'iuho!&gt; In M&gt;n&lt;iol S&lt;udin

PEDIA.UCS'IlESEAIICH SEJUNM•
EkCIIql r• ' alaa· FoMowtnt S..... ()pea.
T , _, o. Doniol R Plnono Bo.d
Room Otildren's Holptal 12 noon

SUNYSEJIIATE·
~ON

THE BUDGET•

s.n...

s.... u.......y

Tho houloy
al 1M
ol
"'""' Yorir. . through Irs Comm.nec on tM UnJWniry
S.dgot 11 ~ lho worunop food,.

p..,...

al -

... the "'--edge ol .....m.... ol
...,....wm.-,......oltbolcx:ol
f&gt;&lt;u!ty """""' .,.,.,..,_ By odvonc.d

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PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR•
Rnptr•tOf)' t:r.act Deposition or lnh•led
Acro.oll, Or T•u ·Trh Soong. lHpartrnent of Ctvll
Englne.ring 5 I08 Sherman 4 15 p m Coffee at
4

dwfocu~y . .,

c.,._

feg~Ar"Mt()n

only
~ • INI event
lndudto P•uJ T
Vdeurt dwf ~ U~~mtncr. EdUQbof'l UNf
""'-&gt; ol tho &amp;dgot II 10 pm.). Wdliom H.

"""""' - . . vic&lt; choncob. r......_ and
fNINgeTMOI . SUNY Central (2 20 p m ) . .net Or

Howotd F Milleo . do-0&lt;10&lt;,

o..-n ollhe &amp;dgot

loO•d-- ~..oco~... Goodyar-10 F..
Wlfonnat.on , contact Netl M Goen. 306 Crofts H•ll
Tho Wlnlef- ol the SUNY Faculoy S...tc

!.t"";'" t,cld borit Fnclay and Satunfay. F. . . . . I
PSST:
HOW TO HANDLE ST1I£SS '
232 Squn 3·5 p .m
Loom .. phyobl .... ~
Ugnl olllrett •nd to understAnd itJ conRque:ntfl.
• wd • wNt kinds oi.Mtu.t1001 are likety to pro
duce • • W• wt1 ..a.o dJicu• and pr.ctiot
... ...._ . . . t - s,.o.-.d loy
f&gt;toe&lt;am ... - - T...,... ,... 10 ..
ilUdotnts No regilllration .-equftd
t.o..s.. T..,. " ' -· . . . _ coonscloo Wllh
Eno County Coodlmon4 Oiotnc1 rv
Cal 636- 2809 for rnc:n lntorm.tion

PAntOI.OGY SEJUNM•

EatM:rifaftlal Hyp.rleM6oa, Or
Golan! 178 F - 3 JG.-4 .30 p.m

S.muel

8IOI.OGICAL
5aENC£....
·
a . - ..w..-lo
G...~.
0.

......
,.,..,.,.,condidaoo 1 1~4 - 4p m

SOop!., Gonclol. -

s......_...., __
CEI..I..l.l.Aa~-.

~~

. , _ ... &lt;AIIo. 0. Uiny"'--mon, -

UUAII FILM'
Get Out Your Ha-ndkerch5dl Cf-rara. 197
Confet"erw:e 'Tho~. Squn 4 45. 7 and 9 . 15
p m Gener-al admlioSIOO S2. itudents S 1 50

CAC FIUI '
Advalture of Sherloc:k Holrnn · Smarter
Brother &amp; Canoom 170 MFAC . E1tcon 7 ond
9 15 p m ('i.eneral admisttOn Sl 25. AuckntJ. SJ
Gent: Wiktn s rhe gentu1 of rtw htle Need monr

be-Mid"
MEETING•
N-e F r - L-5 Socto., M-no. 330
Squn , Moln StrHI C..,.,... 8-9 30 p m
tJUA8 MIDNIGHT MOVIE '
Mwm,h1 Cowbo,. Confertncc Theatre. Squre
11.30 p m Admb11on chMsJc
Jon Voight is a dumb T uen who coma to New
VCK1.. . ptitMd to become a 1tud Du!ibn Hof£JNn
~ RMto Riuo
him wNi • .• .a.-bout.., .

who....,.

Saturday - 2

aASIICS~ ·

WII£51UNG'
l'ooNiot. S....

a..-.

-•"-

--ol

r-~...........
PHAIDIACEUnCS
-·
T•a •t
lu• ........... liM. 0..
0....,.
~"'""""-'""·
C50f!C:O...
4p
.. ~ ...... _ U/ 8..
3~

Y-_., ___ ""'_""'_
n--.
tJUAafiUI •
Goo o.

If&lt;....
w-_.- 44S 7and9 15pm

19

c.--a~

-U-..1150
Two """ " tow wllh the ...., WOI'Mft find N

14__..., ...-.... ..... _

....... '-lv-"'"""--

S o o t o l e C I ' - - - - - .... -Juln
..rJ.t•

eoa..o. C1orl&lt; Hoi

12 noon

MEN'S SWINNING A IMVING •
Conlood sea..

eoa..o. C1orl&lt; Hoi

2p m

UUAaFIUI '

1\&gt;e

•
a....p tzdl;troltl Conloronoo Thoatrc ,

Squ ... 3 45. 6. 15 ond 8.45 p.m. c..-&amp;~-.

-Tu
.. .. ..-11.50
. . . , _ ...

,.,......__ l tlne

-a~ for ""' pooh ......... ol • 19301

w.....

- . hlo Jon v...... dw ciown-&lt;Jn-hiHAdt
""-""""'e&lt;hompwbo_jUCI
__ _
.. _ . . hto ""-&lt;Jay Rldty Sdwood.. 1o the
..,.,.........,. lad who """'" htm .

"Chomp.""·
chomp. bowline

Rldty toa-'-.
10 .... chomp.- you1 be

-

Sanday- 3
SUNDAY BRUNCH /
CIIOSS-COUNTRY SKI
Ttw faculty Ch.ab 15 holchng th&amp; dual program , .u
follows.
Brunch (5n(W,I or not) . 11 a.m to 2 p m.,
Ommg Room. Elicort. $4 25 per penon
(adukl). $3 25 (ch1cittn); infants . fra:.
M..,..: Bloody Moq/s. scrcwdriwB. 01......! fruit.
scr-ambled eggs, chicken Ieven wtth mutbrooms,
b.con ~- huh brown potatoes , paste \ltlith
wucto. ~ pancakft, jdo sa&amp;ad. usoned
rUshes. coffa: cake. danmh pastry. fruit tens. puddtng tmd &amp;Hh bewroga
RaeNahOnl requred
CrON-Country Siding : Snow permitting, on the
traik tn the arus M:ar Elllcon Gukla and in5truc:·
tors a~o~a!l.b&amp;t from 10 a m lo 2 p m. 5«1 brfore or
aher brundl . as you Wllh Oral; should be warm .
&lt;Dmlortoblc and cuuoi .S..,.,.,.. own lido. pole.
and boots R.-ntak 1ft avalaOirl: at ~ •n 5ki
~hope .net .t nominal COli from Squire Hal Rec:rut""' Coll&gt;uotyMolcrot831 -3547fwfu.U...mlooSpauldzng

molion

For more informatk:Kl about the brunch or Jlu
plan$, cd Merie at 831 -3232 .

NIA.nDI5Ca'l.IHAIIY CONRJIENC£•
~~.- R H u -. M.D
lllnm " " " -· a..wn·, Hoopoal 4-5 p m

Friday- 1
To llot even11 Ia tbc "Calendar " call
.H... Shr..ser .t 636-2616.
•
K~ "'pen on~!! to thooc with.• p...,.
-.ro...J lele'fest Ill the oubject; 'Open
to tbc .....,; • '()pee IO memben of
the Uftivtralty. Uotlno otherwise
..,._., lk:UII lor eventa charpig
.......,. .,.. be purch.Md • the
Squire Hd 1'ldoet 0.:..

My Velloy (Fonl, 19411 . 147 Dtdendotf 9 p m
Sponsor~ by th~ Center for Medit Study
Cltb:nt K.ne Is the story of a brilllant tyr\ol who
buih up a YUI chain of newspapers, MO'tfidng his
penonal happlneu along the way. Wdn was
haled as a gmlus for tM1 film whk:h is a lhinly-

Yeiied commentary on tf'M then • powerful Walham
Hcant.

Rondo/ph

How Grftn w.. N y Valley stars Walter Pidgeon

and Mi!l.lTeen 01-tara in a mewing 11ory of a coel
mwting family in Wales.

CAC FILM'
Mwntwr~t of Sherloc:lt Hoh•a Srrw.na
&amp; C.noons Conlotencc n...... Squ...
2. 6 o45 and 9 ·05 p m Gen.to1 A d - Sl 25.
ttuden~~o Sl

pcmo.....,

pm

&amp;tnl Recito1 Hoi. 3

UUAII FIUI '
lbe Champ tzefftrTeiiQ . Woldll"'lln Theatre
Amhcnt 3 :45 . 6 ol5ond84Spm c..-alod_:
12. IIUdcn" I 1.50

Taeaday- 5
EFFECTIVE L£AIINING FOa
UNDERGIIADUATES SI'£CIAL SERIES·
How to T.U Good Note.. Pracnwr: Stew
Cohen, Tho lJnJwrUy lamino Canter. 202
Boldy . 1·2o20 p.m.

n. -

..

designed '"" thocc people who
bow dlfflcuky takino end atganldng lcctu,. notes
A JUOCatfuJ ~ fOC'INt wl be introduced.
D1r&lt;dAod In takklg , _ ... be olfCftd

FACULTY SEJIIATE ltiE£TING
Wokltn~n

ThealrO, lllftoor, Nonon . 2 p.m. Tht

kntllttw agrr.cS. wtl be: Quorum report, approval
ol mlnul&lt;o Cl2/ 4n9J . olflceto' ...,...., commllt.O
......... old bu-... .............. and e&lt;lloum·

wboat.cd

on a ftnr ~ • ina MrVed btsk
5..nc firoworiq .._..., _ tu lhc NYC r._,oi
conference \n S.urdily. a male tight-to-lifer
C.thalic who ...~ obor·

::::.- •r.,..

Ronaldlirln, U/8 219
4pm - w t l b o e a w d. Ad-

U. owr

...,..,..wtlbe~S.turd.avtnarnfr'ISJM9am

lant proft.NOf , (Hp.rt~Mnl of PhyUo'ogy.
SUNY /U,.O.te lOll Shmnan 4 p m CalfH 01
3 4~ 1n
15

..,._.0._ 0.

10

U/8 ... F-SC.te. Clori&lt;Gym. 8pm

UUAII MIDNIGHT MOVIE·
MMini!ht ~-Confer~ TheatTe , Squire
11 ;3() p m AdmiSSion cNwge

NFA RECITAL'
Glcno Stem,

CONRJIENCE ON FAMILIES
The ~·. R&lt;~J~ono! ec..1onnco oo
FemiMa wtll feature Bull Patenon , N«w York
S«m.ry ol Stale in a bynote .ddraa et lO a.m
W&lt;&gt;tlcshopoaddt..._&lt;OnftonlinjJ f•mlfia ln
lhc 1980&lt; wllbo bold llwoughout tho doy. C.,.n
T
- · .....
Nonon
By..w
_ .
One hund...r ploca

MEN'S IIASKET1IALL •

Monday- 4

......

PSST:

EFFECTIVE CO-UNICAnON ·
108 Norton. 2-4 p.m.
How can you improW your spu1ung effec: through both ...t.o1 end notWabol ted&gt;·
niqua? Wh.t llrategin c.n you u. 110 pre:smt
kiNs ...,.Hively? Topa w!l 1ndu&lt;k ,._,. to
~ - uncter..nd . llnd IJ)I'.alk dfncdv to your au·
d..nc:e , whM lunda of ,....,..., and appua are
moll UMfuJ in difertnt Mttingl, end how 10 ilpOI:
manirN&amp;.wc *•klin wtwn you arc pwt of •'\•u·
doencc . You ..tl not only lum boac prlndp1oo oncf
t&lt;ch'""""'loomon -OIJ&gt;OIOkinii. butwllloloo
le...n to ~ more a d6cem6ng li&amp;tenft

c..nm.-.

U.odcr Poul · doctonl
~8 ............. Ocpottmont al

cancfido~&lt;

IIIOCH£NIS11IY SEJUNM•
l lotvntheell of Hor. .• allv Rcevlate.d

s.or-y,_,Dr

BIIHol&lt;f. R-Por!&lt;ln108 Sherman 4 p m CoffH at 3 30 in
lOlA C.,

~tntt:

Wedneaday- 6
I.ANGUAGE/ LEAIINING 1.A11 OI'£NING •
Rlchanl I Brod. ol the - - o1 Deport·
mcnb ol Forq,n ' l.anguogos o1 tho Mod&lt;m
~
-wl11 dlocuu
J . . . _ Sluclw
... theal, America.
_ 0.. o,.looc
...
the Fo...... 1200 lcnign . . . _ r..:ordo ..t1 bo
.....,.... by tho Consul ol Conada 120 ClcmcM

2pm.
PSST:
HOW TO READ FASTEJI '
232 S.'*• 3-5 p.m.
Colege studmts need 10 ~Ad Latgc amounts of
mot&lt;rial ., &lt;lflctendy • ,..,... In moot al tboc

cou,_

Thlc worunop ..t1 opWn focton ~
· ~ tnding rata Mel ways 10 irnpt'ow the tpftd
ond dflclcncy al your .-llno F.,... reading

rw-. 1941! 146 Dl.rendotf. 1
P m. Spor-..r by""' c - ro. Mcdio Study

methodt ......... procticed .
Luder. v.,..nm. A . Colins, Ed M ln roding
educ.lion, mordinMor ol reading and .rudy . . at
the Univentty looming Cantor.

UUAa -DAY NIGHT FII.JtiS•
Tloc ~ IGoNo · 19261. 7 p m , 1
~~~9531 . 8 .25p.m 170MFAC.

0. Glonto -

FUM IFIUI HISTOirY)'
001-. ~

.n.c lootleor II e Jod&lt; lhc R - Soooy

I C..., ..... l4or!Ooomev Clh, Anne But.r
.... Kori Malclon Clh ... -who ... - -..
.............. the.,...,......... . - . .. hio .......

.

I.£CTUtE ON AGING •

s-t

s,..-..r

s.-- Stt....,_ """"'- w-.
330 Squitw 3 30 p m

by theM~ Canter loo the

S&lt;U&lt;Iy al AQone

CHENICAL ENGIN£EIUNG SDIINAR•

...,

O.~~~AR=:.-cf::~•

MFA IIECITAL •

lc9lf 107 O'Brion 4 p m - " ' " " " wtl bo
.,..... hom 3 30-4

pm
-

~- -

-

flUI CFIUI N-~ ·
001.. " - ~ 19411. -

R-.1 Hal. •

G...

w.

IIIOCttEIOCAL

PHMIIACOI OGY SDIJNM•
A.•dvlral Action. of NKieo.Wi•• •••
N - C..S..W..
Edword
Hyde . gradu•tc .-ludenl, Department of

Ar.-.

�January 31. 1'8)

S..t•. and

~ 5JOWf1UMflb, and dW furo•
Economic: Cornmurwy A. tn mos1 lbMWS
\tst~ in·rtw c.wd ~
INormelion oon~.ned m dotunw:nts il oftm ttw
17\0$1 cumru avallabH · \IJhMe tOnW aides in lhe
[)ep.rtment are. more wstab&amp;t for htstory llucknts
_., OIU&lt;Iying ............
ocheR dlitl v.1lh CWTe.nt. ~ economt: . .nd
polital .......
Ed Herman. me ~~ documents llbranan .
wil t'ondud tM dlnin Cal 630·2821 to ftiefV«
your~ - .sinc:t .. SJ'OUP' will
ltmud te 12
Faa.k\1 nw:mben ~ Mo
l1w cllna wll be held., 110 Lockwood on Mon '

ptM'I

s.w ••

only •

h"'""'· ......

._'",ted

day. F . _ , II. 2·4 . TU&lt;Idoy. fob&lt;u"'l' 12. 2 4.
W.Onndoy. FciJn.ooy 13. 2-4. Thunday . fclxuooy
14 . 10.12. Frdoy. Fob&lt;u"'Y 15. 10-12. ond Tu
.,.,. FobN"'V 19. 10 12
GRAD STUDENT AWARDS

T'he Dlv$lon of Gr.duat• a nd ProfH5kmal
E.duc.taon and the Graduate S.~Kient AHOCiettOO
vmh to mnlf\CI riw UnNenily community th.t
March I, 191!0 lo tbc cloodU.. lo&lt;

-.........

--tint

......... - . .... lhe..-1 ............
Non*wdlonllhou.ld be fOfVt/Mded to a saunirtg

com.-., c/o dw ~ Sdoool Ollice. 549
~Hoi .

Tho&lt; ponol w l l - o l t t . . . d&lt;own lrom 011101'01 ........., ol loaolty

...,...,.

Waoen New Yooll
In an annual

pho&lt;o
b\1 the SISien Hoopllal
medic.al sWf. ao tw held in the Medical StMf Uxary
.. the Hospical
Few those intctuaed In a.hbting, enbia m ust
IMMU.N M least 5- X T. and must be mount«! r«:·
c.ngulerly wtfh ttw nhtlilOf·, natM and hospitAl
ond lho pho&lt;o tide on the back They mu11 be oubmll1od to Mn Anno Cobon 01 SoOt- Hospilal b\1
FciJn.ooy 6 Judan .... be Robm Hndl . Photown
Studto. Fo-ederid. Manchol. Monchol Phooowa·
,n.... ond Donn• AlldniOft . U/ 8 biomcdul
photog&lt;.......
(f1UI NAIIIIATIVE) '
Row Dool (Monn, I'Wlj 14 7 Olof&lt;ndorl 9
'" s,...-.d b\1 the c.n... lao Scud,o
Tho.oooy olo
prtoon b\1 the
. who...,_ ond -lor..._....

-

.lromod-

WEDNESDAY FIUIS'

h

..__y_,..,. CIM41 . 7pm , s bHol(l959) . 8:40pm

~cnc:oTho- .

. Ntlod1 1 " - - ' T - - "- I I - - - I o
• tomonow'l ~

doy h o - ...
/ «&gt;mody.

from • •.,.....; . . .

_,-........a...... .....

s -....l..lo.c
Mootyn
·Iunny,
Tony
c.m.
JoclcII Hot,
Lommon.
1o on ~

............ ..,. ..... ,_....-,. ...."*'8 .....
.--o
-.Thoy)oinon
ol..,.t
«&gt;modv
bonO. lldMoic

_

PEDIATRICS II£5EIIIICH &amp;aiiNIIII•
_.,___~T!Mr-

• c - r - - F - . - s Fodon
NO--- ~·~~ 12noon

CEU.U..IIII PHY5101..0GY 5EIIIINIIII•

.............. 0.0.~­
.... IM-~.Dr Flojld&lt;&gt;&lt;-.
..- . ~oiNodldno

108-

4p ro Ca&amp;oo013.4S ., SI5
~

liEMlNAII

..........

••med

Te.c::h.ng lnno\lation aW«d.J .,.
few pro·
,fldl .m.d at rw~ ~ counc mMeNI
and tM way~ In wt*h it II prtKrned and/or for
dcwtoping new COUJ"M5 ,...,_. In lhll category
may ~ a f1\DII'num of $2000
For fuiihcr de1llla on ...,_ OJ boch prowam~ .
...-Cindy llolok. Gnduot• School Offu. 549

•

HoF Sdoool

P • S,odv---Oftl!l

™--tlw-olthel'li!O

~[

b\l tlw o....-oi~Dowlopmontond
...__ · Focullyol£41..-..1. .... _ _ . , _ .. .... Uollod-

Tho_..,._ .................. _
· " " " " ' - o l _ . . . . ....
..................
n. ..- • ....,..
.. ..v__...
-~ -

..__ .. _(T_
F&amp;JI'

-

s 7 1i..,.j9.J0 p •
U-11

Me. Varia. cur

w-n-.
o.-oi-

curTmt resurN . ~'from suptn'flon
and ~rt!Mnt.al ~ --~- from
students and faculry rntmbfts: stucknt fteiuaiiCiftl .
and a brief sumrn.y ~the nornwtft's strong

"'*'"

Aw- will be -need b\1 Moy I, 1910.

DIPOIITIINT DII'IU
FOil
wmNG · - 5EJESTDI
F.tdor,.,........,l:
lMt d.y to ~ couna.
lMo .,., .. &lt;bop ........ wllhout flno-llobll·
ty .
lMl ~ to drop couna wllhout hli"""t en R

CIIIUJlON IIIIIIID CONCDITO
CONP£nTION
Enarant:l tn 1M 4th ann\11111 c.meron Baird
"""""""' Concerto Compotidon ot lho Doponmont
ol
wil be .;.~god In pdmlnorin on Sotw·
.,.,. Noodt I ot o &lt;bod hoorwtg Tho- wll
perfonn .a a lftlion open to the pubk on M4«h 1
M 3 p m . In 8Md RecUI tWI A4million • frH
W....,.MI porlonn .,......, -tho Un;v'Y PhJhwmonia .. a c.oncm to be~ on ~ 9
Tho ~ ...-...cl 10 honor dw

c.-on

........, a( dw ....
Boinl. founder ond
dwfOol-oldwMUiic~. -ol

......_.._.. .... .,tlw--w•to

bnng ~ tolontod \IOU"ii . . . . -. . . .

•udyln Buflolo

.......... ~~Wtova· ~
o n d - Noodt27. 28, ond29 ...........
doing......,,_.,....,..,_,oloom·
~ behaoWar . . «ne::UU99'd to .....,.,. en
ol200 - • «loss lo tho eon... notnonf...... IS.I'li!O
Nor tu.- ........ .Loihnc&lt; •

__

~Q.IIOCI

Cltnk:l- . . . . _ - . , I I oM 19 n-wlllwn-tolocoooond_U..._

,......,_

POETRY COMPETtTION
Tho onnuol SUNYIIB Acodemy ol Anlericon
Po.u Co1t9r Poetry Priz« c:ompdDOn ts now
Thoc-t~..........Sioc.oll!lb\lth&lt;

_.,

Doponmont ol Englosh and tho Ft1onck ol
l...ockwood L.lnry It if part of a ~-wde com
prttJIIon hlld .nnuaUy ar ewe 70 coltgn .00
unlvetlilic!:• The klc.l winner Will r~ • cash

..,.. olliOO ond Will be eloglble lor lndutton., on

--.JUdged

ou.won.l anthoaogy JM.~bllihed by tlM Academy
~~~ lho
loc.oll!l.• _.....
ol n.rional pt'atigc.. olfiaah point out. Owl the
ynrs. wch pot'l1; •• Sytv.. P'lath. Gregory On.
l.ouiie Gluck. ond T ...
ho,. ...,..,..!
MP Colrge Pt~ bdof~ goeng on to aam na

Ga...,..

ttonal

r~tion»

.

PrtMOUI U/ 8 WllliWI'S ha~ bHn Joel Upm.n
and Jama Guthnr (1974 '51 . Tom ~to&amp;da
1197~/ 6) , R 0 Pohlll97o/ 7J . Molgot-ot H...t..

... 119nt onc1 """' s.•d 11978191 . s.v...t
honorM* ment11001 are aho aw.ded uch Y"f
AI 11udents CWTmtly r~ More.,, e~
~ ~

oontnt wmnen Rulft Cll EnhW'

should conllse of no more th.tn hW! . tVJ)ed . double
tpKed p.gn of UOJM.Ibli5hed. onginal ~ m
EngiWo T.....a.t~omond~publishcdwooll
.... be dl&lt;qual;food (2) En- moy- ol omglo
poems or groups olpoems (31 ~ mu• be submitted in tf\:)licale (Xerox "' dun c.bont «
~) (4) The •uth&lt;:w't name mull ooc 19Pftf
on the poems wbmtct.d: inslud . e-=h tnlry lhoukl
be ~nied by two~ fk en.. uch con·
tut"'9 rht author"• 1\blN , addrea. phone. number.
and acedemit ~lUI . together With a liJt (by lftW Of
f.,. line) olpoemssubm;ned _(~I
nol be
mumed un\na. aa:umpanie:d by Qmped, .e.W·

p....,..,.

~rctum~ma o..A..._ .......
lo .,....... 25, 1910. Enbin should be

brought or malled to' . , . , . _ Mu Wdwrt .
Oep.Jrtmcnt of Engkh. 303 Clement Hal .
SUNYliB. Buffolo. New Yooll 14260 Nom&lt;~ ol
winnen And judgn will be announotd by ~rch 17
Addrna .a questtonf to Prolntof Wickert. (1'.C;

636-25791.

........... FoJon.y 11:

W""-'•lllllhdoy-no ""-·

-~ . lolllllnprint

(R_....,...-.............. .,........,,,... ..._.

lMI.,.,IOI'CIIgnWOh70pecentt-lobllty .

Mono_., ("'""

, _ . , , FoJon.y l l:
t.a. day on we.:h IIUcknas IN)' drop ar ralgn
OOUIMI .without .cadcmk pcnaly.
~.-1:

-...-·7:
a.--.

ol-

O a The Air
~·=
c : - • .... -~-­

Frldof, ..... 9:
a.-one~ .

conopoiOf

INNEII CITY IIOUJNTEEIIS N££DED

of...,.._,

Otl.on O....n M - """neod
.. _
.. _phososdlntwrdtywooii. Somo

oldwmooo_needl ... t«woollenloro.
s..daot
Sloop ...
.. 1241 - · f« .........In ln•
__
to.~-chlol

nmedloiNoding ond mo&lt;h . ondJor trolllod pmtlng

c - • .... -

l n - l o r C o n _ .. . , _ _ _ ,
dlreac:w ol cultural •ff.n

""*"""

twodoyslarMo-----.H \IOU .,._,,t hod -

Qool,y---

- - pho&lt;o - . •

..... """" .. 121
.........
aoocfond_would
T - lor--.,_,."""
.... _ _ _ .. _booft.

-

w. ..

neod piiOI&gt;io 10 layout.
p/tototrophy ond ............ Non

~-----·­
b\ltlw - - -· c.o.b,llllC . • - -

-

.....,_.,_
-

Tho .,..._,. .... _ _ _ _ . . Z30
--b\ltlwu..M
-Yooll

EDUCA'DOI'I VIDI!IOCAMETTil
- - - - .. dw-ForCon·

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· - lo&lt; - , . ol lho

u-y·, -

"Tho -

w.,.
-

-

•331 ,

.... Coons a( 1/teor- - · - -......

O...Tltont!Mol In~-.­

~-

hM. .

A~~to

Tope -sst, "HIJih:RIIIt ...._.,

=a.-....-.

......., told ............... Courio&lt; c.tols
(Chonncl 10) 6 :30pm IIllo on dw 6llo ol 7 p m

penonnollo
ond nln ·
IW you ...tllh to know men .bout how you c:an
hq&gt;, ..... col882·9472 ... .. Ud&gt;on Cfwlo.
· .14 Nartlt Sir.... 8uflolo 14202

IIIINAGOIEHT STUDENTS
Tt&gt;doy o n d - 11131 , 2111 •• lho ....

Coutjo&lt; c.to1s !Chonno!IO) . 6.30 p.m

~I :

NOT A LETTER TO 1ltE

REPORTER

. lion -

-----~ol

.......

-DIIlu-

An article by Profeeeor hrome

Slater of Political Sclerft:e
printed In the Neu! Repvbllc on
Jan. 26, 1980, appeared In
week'• Reporkr' u a "Letter to
the Editor,~ ProfeMor Sleter
made a copy of the article
available to the Reporkr' to
reprint for the bendlt of the
campus community. But It
should have llppUred u a
"Vlewpoont" piece, with credit to
the Nev~ R~lc. Profeeeor
Slater wouldn t want anyone to
think It Mitten u a letter to
the Rqomr. Neither would - ·

._t

-___
_
---Doc:

snSpou~o~ong Eli&lt;ol . .. col636-2631 ..
.--Md-·---be

~ U..wywll-ioa.

T"""""""'' c............,

...... o1 Blood
ond
~.- ond Topo •333. -A...o~~ngComploo
lions ol Loco I " - ' - ,- ond
Sileo : 5
C.. P&lt;ablonw_- F« f u - ........- col
831-4614

ConcurT«nt~ with ttw MP competition . enbin
wiD be comidcred for the annuai Arthur Altlaod
Memorial Aw•rd , given to the r•nkJng
undergraduate tubmillion In the ~ and
canying o cash - " ' oll30 Tho Axlm&gt;d Awonf
WM lnltitutecf WI fMmOry of the pod Arthur
Axlerod """'d;ed b'ogicolly whllnn undergraduote
here . end wh&lt;*' poethwnou1 colfaion of V«f'M.
no. sw;lo
on lnttoduction b\1

M l d - -boglns .. -

--.so--__..t
"-•------........
___
_- .
~Dinloi- . Dicoo 4.30

-

a(

'ot

~ . 636-2939

C011D1 FOil ntE STUDY OF CU.TWAL
TIIIINSIIISUON
ThOd llnnuol ~·Wido Studont Con-

UADEll5ttiP

n - ~.......,.a. -

CONFBI£NCES IN THE DISCII'UNES/
TL'ICHIIIG INNOYIITJON FUNDS
Ptopdools lor funding ..... bodt lho Con"'ln lho OitodpliMs ond the Tudmg I.._OIIon poo·
tiJ'MK tn due in dw Graduale ~ office by
llp'j I
Tho Conleencu In .... OitodpliMs .,..,.....,
und«rwrita c:on1e:rmcts lind ledura on ICholeriy

M"*.

Thusday- 7

·
ol ...ogn-. wll be -on~oc~ .
which ... carry • .._,..,.. ol $2!i0. n....
..,. olio be
ol honor- mention
Any regul.atty-.:rwokd waduate •Y&lt;knl who hti
been invohled ., toddng for a1 lust one ~
may M nominated
Ruin
ttw awwds proYidc d~t nomine wilt
be judged on the bui5 of teKhing tkC.. seMca 10
lludenll. ~ -.!Mds. ond ............
growth In Jddkion. how eJCh c:andidMe «valu.sa
stlldenl ~~~ wtl aha be- t.Jccn inlo account.
Each nom!Ntion shoukl be accorns»med by: a

-

-

ANNUAL PHOTO
Physician~ oft
holpilAk ate invled to

oh-

1M-

ond go-od lludootlUchlnt .......... -

Notice.

No-.·

Detec:liolO ond
' 1 m . . . - lor
1\duO.. Who. Whot. Wlwn.- and "Tho ~ ·

Our apologia_

�•

J.nuary 31, 1980

Women's
softball enters
2nd year
Women's fast-pttch softbaD will enter lis
oecQRd year as a vanity sport here with a
19-game schedule beginning~ 12.
According to recently-appoint ed
Coach Kerry Kulisek. practice will begin
February llor pitchers and catchers. l'he
remaining candidates for the team will
join the indoor proctlce sesolons on
February 18. Meanwhile , Interested
women have been given a pre-season
conditioning regimen . including running,

weight training, and throwing/fleJUbillty
exercises. Tearn hopefuls are expected to
follow the program on their own . using
gym facilities at Clark Hall or In the Bubble at Amherst.
When lull-scale practice begins. team
members will have to devote two hours a
day , live days a week to the sport.
Coach Kulisek. a U/ B graduate who
played softball in the Canadian-American
League, has been at the game since she

· was 8. The almost two-month 'pre-season
practlce span Is necessary to help team
members develop the neces!:"'lry timing

Ice
Ti01e
Win, lose or draw, (and the crtppied
squad haa been doing a lot of the middle one lately), U/ 8 hockey has Ita
share of crowd.pleaslng action. The
Bulls are shown In tM courae of their
4-3 looa to Union College recently.
They11 be going against Oswego, Feb.
9., at Tonawanda Ice Time.

and famillarity with the sport , she said .
Some may have played slow-pitch soft·
baU, but most will be newcomers to the
fast-pitch variety.
As In other sports, U/ B will compete in
women'• soltbaD at the Division Ill. noscholarship, level.
The soltbaD Royals' schedule will be
made up ol representatives ol the 30 college and universities in the State whkh
play the game at Division Ill. Eight ol
them will wind-up in the State Cha,mpionship series in

Utst year's

May.

Royals' record was 7 wins and 9 losses,
just under the standard necessary for the
State finals.
This year, with 10 veterans retum;ng,
the coach expects to be playoff-bound.
Home women's ooftball games are
played at the field in front ol Acheson at
Main Street .
Coach Kulisek eported thatlnteresl in
softball, as In otlier women's sports, Is
beginning to mushroom on tlie collegiate
level now that federal regulations have
prompted expansion ol sports oppor·
!unities lor women In high schools. She
noted, by way ol example. that during
her undergraduate days, U/ B was hard
put to lind the II playe"' necessary lor a
field hockey team. "We were lucky," she
says, to have one substitute available .

Now more than 20 women routinely

tum-out lor field hockey. Ku~sek expects
:.~'Jr. more than 20 tea~ ~'!'mbers for

..

JOBS

PROFESSIONAL
1\a:l&amp;tanl 10 Director (Coot-dinalor. Program

~~

and Resr:archl - EOC . PR-2

FACULTY

Auhtant

or Auoclate 'p, o fusor

Pcnodonlics Enclodonba.

'

Au•tant Prolnior - OttupaUonlll Ther~

RESEARCH
S..lo&lt; Typlot ISG· 71 - Physiology
Lab Ttthnklan/ R«:•urc.h A.. lstant
lloocbom....,
h.atruclor or ~nl Protnwr (Special
Educotlon Prot I - Clcropo-.1 Th&lt;o..,
JNtructor cw ANklaM Ptolnlor - Ottupa·
toonol Th&lt;fSt . Lab Technician - Pcdw.tra
LABOR a.ASS CIVIL SEJIVICE

t..bo&lt;u SG-6 - Helm Fodlity

I

s..-. "-

CONPETmVE CIVIL SEJIVICE
~u - Phyolcol Plont.

Amltonl

NON.CONP£T111\IE CML SERVICE

SG-6 - John c.n... 131
Woft.orr SG-6 - Jolon BuM c.n...Mola.....,.._SG-8 - Jcllnlloono

-

~

c.n...

Plomb«/StutDIIuer SG· IZ
Phytlool Plont
.

-

Ridge Leo

ShMt Mec.aJ Wcwbr SG.-12. -

John S..n.

l

c.n...
~ Eloctridao SQ.t 4 c.-

John

a-..

--~ II -

John- Cont..c.._... ~~~ - Jclln a-.. ConiOf
Elocttldatt ~ tz - John-... c.n...

c.-

-/Ptou..-..-~12 - John .......
--~t -John S.one

c....

�iMru.wy 31, 1980

i

FA
UCARE, Farm City group seek
money from programming panel;
Ellicott signs, loan plan progressing
Members of the Unlveralty-Wide Programming Committee -.e asked last
week to conslde.- funding for an anti-rape
securlly project and for plowing a plot of
land managed by the Farm City Colective, to be used as communlly organic
gardens.
The Committee, an offshoot of the
Study
on Reknlion and Allrition,
has about 1,200 left from a $25.000
grant from the Faculty-Student Association. The money was part of Ike
$500,000 the FSA received from sale of
Unlveralty Bookstore merchandise to
Follett's , the bookstore's present owner.
Student coordinators of U-CARE (The
Unlveralty Community Against Rape
Emergencies) asked the Committee for
$300 to be matched by another $300
from the Student Association.
The purpose of the pUot program, the
Committee was told , Is to make streets
heavily trafficked by students sale from
harassment, assaults and rapes. The way
the program worl&lt;s, Is that certain homes
on designated streets wiR be advertised as
"sale houses" where female students can
go In cat« of emergency to use the phone
and 9"1 Information on whom to caD for
asslstanoe. The houses In question will
display copyrighted, ftuoreacent window
signs bearing a recognizable symbol.
-For the time being, the program will be
Umited to Parkridge Ave. Depending on
its success, H may be broadened to in clude streets such as Merrimac and
Englewood . Current statistics show, the
students reported , that a1me rates have
fallen In places where such block associations worl&lt; In cooperation with police .
New York City Is one example.

G'rouf

25 lam1lla later..ud
To date , over 25 families on Parkrldge
have expressed Interest. As a precautionary . measure, each participating
household will be Interviewed and will
receive training from the program's
screening committee. The streets Involved will be closely monHored to guard
against maldadors.
The PI&lt;&gt;Jod's one caveat , the students
noled, Is that partldpants cannol legally
be forced to admK studen Into their
homes. It was suggested, however, that
partidpatlon at least Implies cooperation
In an .emergency situation.
The student-run Farm City Collective
requested $500 to hire an outside vendor
to plow five acres of day-based earth for
agricultural projecll and organic cornmunlly gllfdens.
The multldllclplinary group has been
alowad to usc 50 acres of U/ B land east
of MIDenport for reMareh purposes.
In order to make the land productive,
Charles Schwaru.. an engineering student
and woup opokapcnon , told the Committee, ~Is the necessary llr1t step.
After plowing, lour Kra will be dressed
with organic materialo for luriher fertiliza tion , and one ..,... wil be developed lor

g.ardens where students and aru
raiden can grow crapo.
M.dl ........
If the Colleclive recciva the funding ,
plowing
take piece In mid·March
when the ground Is soft . Seedlingo,
germinaled a1 U/ B's granhouoe, will be
used lor planting
About 20 IIUdcn .-e adlvely Involved In the Collectiv , SchwOIU said .
The group eho hat plans to butld a
Waler•pumplng windrnll for aop w-ng.tion thil op1ng or summer, utlng Federal
and poly. . " -·
The 1'1-ogmmmlng Com- also
hewd two poogr.- repor1t on projtdt
Mudy funded . • $1 ,500 Emergency
Lo.n Fund and o S1.500 endeavor 10
clevelc,., an trnprOYed "V*m of s4gnt In

En~..;:rxo.v&gt; !EDI IIUden
"""'"""" on the
,.epon.ad the reeulta
ol a control_.,._. they orpnlad ~
wNd&gt;
• bound high ochoohenton
hod 10 fllld
-v around Com·
pia ...... a , _ oys~em thay dalgnad .

flul

_.Ia

Apdl
The ED students, Don Wilton and
Gloria CemtneDI, said they plan furiher
refinements In the system based on the
experiment results and on feedback
received from dorm students and others.
A final report will be pr-nted April 24
with a proposal lor a permanent stgnage
system.
Starting this faD , Clarence Conner,
director of Anancial Aid , told the Committee, undergraduate and graduate
students will be able to use the loan lund
to bon-ow up to $50 to meet emergency
cash situations. Under current guid Unes,
Financial Aid will process loan requests
and students wUI have to waH one day to
pick up the money.
To guarantee repayment , Conner said
loans will be restricted to students receiving some son ol flnancial aid which Is
processed through Student Accounts.
Student Accounts wUI automatically
deduct the amount of the i:lebt from the
student's incoming aid check .

Alt btfch is
college fellow
International College has appointed
Professor PhiUip Allbach as its lntema·
tional Fellow for 1980.
The Fellows lecture progra m lor the
year gets underway with Dr. Carolyn
Elliott, who will speak on "Women and
Development In the Third WQI'Id" at 3
p .m . , Friday, February I. In 109
O 'Brian.
Elliott holds a Harvard Ph .D. In
political science, and Is currendy assistant
professor In politicalocience at Wdesley .
She Is also director of the Centre lor
Research on Women . Elllott, whose major Interest Is In politics In India, wUl shortly lake up an appointment in that nation
as program officer for the Ford Foundation .
.
Dr. Allbach's contributions to international studies are well known both within
the SUNY system and abroad ,
spokespersons for International College
point out. Chairman of the Social Foundations Department , he holds a joint appointment in Higher Education , directs
the Comparative Education Center, and
Is editor of the Comporatlue Ed. ReuleUl.
He has had extensive experience
overseas and has written several books
on aspects of education In India , Including Student Politla in Bornbov and
The Acodemic Profasion in Indio. He
was a visiting professor at the University
of Bombay and served as a consultant to
the University Grants Commlulon of India and to the Faculty of Education ,
Unlveralty of Kuwait .
Moot recently, his interests have been
In the rela~ between industrialized
and Third World countries, and he has
written utenstvely on neocolonialism u
M reflect~ on education and lldence. His
book, Publishing in Indio; on Analysis,
dllcuJMI the~ of the transfer of
knowledge from one oodety to anolher
and focuses on the inherent Inequalities
In the knowledge transfer system.
Allbach has alto served rectntly as a
National Science Foundation lecturer In
India and Kuwail.

A &amp; L posts filled
Dr. Ja..- Bunn of tha Doparlmenl ol
English Is oavlng .. Kling auoclata dean
of the Faculty of Arts and lAtten for. •
1mn which began January 14 and oondnulng dvough August 31 , 1980. .
Dr. Norman "Hoa.ncf of the Departnwnt of English hat been appointed to •
live-yar tGm., hold«r of the J.,_ H.
McNulty Chair. Praldent Rpbert L. Ketter announood In O.C..rnber. The flwyar term Is the mulmum ~by the
Bo.d of Tru
of Slate Unlvenlty
and. ~ Mid , "lndlc.llal the h.lgl.
.-~em~&lt; r..-d with which" Holland Is
held.

I

•

l j

'U I B brat' thinks
we're under-rated
Douglas B.:on Is a U/B brat.
The oon of a member of the
Uniwntly's FlMnca and Man.gement
admlnlllratlon. kon grew up In the
shadow of the Metn Street Campus, just
down the olreel on Alenhunl Road. He
was a kid during_ the riots of 1970, but
remernllcn watChing student confrontations with police from the sanetu.-y of the
Main Street sidewalks.· The lawns sloping
toward Main Street from Abbott (now the
site of parking lots and subway excavations! -.e wllerc he and his chums
played soccer and football .
You would think this lamiUarlly might
have led hlm to agree wHh a friend who _
told him, "U U/B wasn'ttn Buffalo, rd go
there tomonow. • Not so. Not only did
young Bacon come here , he did so
despite

pressure

from

-

guidance

counselors in the WilliamsvUie high
schools who thought he should elect
John Hopkins.

Why? Bacon thinks the excellence of
U/ B Is frequently underappreclated by
the people who tive In its own backyard.
Second , he rejecll the "mumbo jumbo"
about having to "go away from home In
order to grow up." He knows a fellow
who moved on campus "to gain
maturity ." but was .. home every
weekend ." Not only that, but the guy
could never get up for mOI'JIIng classes
because the clatter In the residence halls
had kept him up too late .

the administration . But he doesn't deny
those ties, dher. "as long as tha sins of
the lather aren't visited on the son," he
adds with a laugh .

H_...,... -

·tcr-.a

Active In Alpha Lambda Delta and Phi ,
Doable Mal«
Eta Sigma honor societies, Bacon recentMajoring In a unique blend ol history
ly
received a grant from tha Unlveraltyand medicinal chemistry, Bacon wan!$
wide Programming Committee for a
med school (again U/ B Is his choice) . He
series of " coffee conversations," to be
went lor the double major when he no- '
sponsored by a consortium of honor
ticad as a sophomore that he had enough
organizations. The idea Is to have a lacurhours to easily lulfUI requirements lor
.
ty member present a brief lecture and
both . Perhaps someday. he wiD combine
then exchange comments and rub
the two. The author o Coma. he notes,
shoulders
with students. It's a way ol getwas a Boston surgeon who has also wrHting the honor societies some vlsiblbty.
ten a historical novel set In Egypt.
Currently,
the organizations have trouble
Beyond that, history should equip an
at1radlng members becaUM tnany of
M.O. to relate better to people, he thinks.
eUglble
have never even heard of
those
His specialty as a physician will
them.
"probably" be famUy pradice where that
The Image ol honor students could use
personal touch Is paramount.
some sprucing up, too, Bacon thinks.
A first semester junior, Bacon Is ImToo many people dismiss them as "Utile
pressed with his professors In history.
creeps who walk around with calculators
Taking a course with the outspoUn CW
in their hands."
Yearley. for example, Is like "going to a
· Eventually, he'd like to see cration of
show. Yearley really gets into the
a fund to support an annual award to the
historical charaden he Is ~and
honor
student who has done the most lor
makes "preposterous statements to
the Unlveralty In a given year. The award
goad students Into thinking lor
could
honor
the late Dr. Claucie E. Puffer
thetn$elves. Then there'• Orville Murphy
who, Bacon feels, made significant conwho stresses good writing in addition to
tributions
to
the
University himoeW. Puffer
the mastery of historical Information. A
was vice president lor business affairs
paper read by Murphy Is returned luU of
here lor over 20 years, and was the in* b'emendous con5tructtve aitidsm ..,
dividual who brought Bacon's dad Into
lt'a the c:~a.n....
the . . . . .
that area of administration. Paul Bacon
Bacon has achieved a 3 .5average, but
had originally come here as an Instructor
Isn't "grade-happy." H~efen to think
In engineering.
of education u a c
to learn
The younger Bacon ti convinced that
medical
something. What about
adlve .honor societies are a way to help
school admissiOns boards who like to
bridge the gull between resident students
look at aedentials chock · fuD of A's?
and commuters: There's not a lot of mix"Well," smUes Bacon, "l(s probably betIng between the two group~ now, he
ter If you don't hK too monv courses
says, commenting that too many of his
where you learn a lot but only make a c .·
IeBow commuters'""' to look at U/B as
AI WllliamsvUie East, Bacon ranked
a "9 to 5 )ab."
20th In a class of 420. When his courses
were -ighted lor difficulty, though , he
u.......... ..,.taUoe
was third. "I took the most advanced
Bacon Is
to help do sornethtng
worl&lt; I could find ," he recalls, antvlng at
about the poor reputation he thinks U/8
U/ B with 44 hours of college credit
sullen In some .. rrounding suburban
high ochools. Part of this , ha fMk, may
~!rudy In harid, In history, ~lstry,
English , calculus and ~Ish . Spanish
have to do with the lingering memory of
was a particular favortta . He augmented
the trouble In the 70s. To his way &lt;I
textbook readings by poring over the
thinking , the local _preu lon't
Spanish languoQe pages of the comhelplul,ellher. As a partial remedy, he
submHs, why not send U/B honor
munilt Doilv Worid. It wasn't that he was
taken with Ks politics; U just afforded him
students out Into the ochools to taD&lt; to
ngolerS just beginning to consideT cola chance to - the language In everyday
use .
·
s? Picking a unlveralty Is an tncredllly
Bacon had a promising cceer u editor
dedllon to make, he emphasl.s,
and perhapo people aren't gelling all tha
of his high ochool paper- Once' he
rRmembero, ha ran an edltorial using the
lads. Why couldn't IIUdcnll from this
word "ocr.-.! ." School ofllclals came
area tnvtta their high tchool frlendt 10 Ill
down rather hanhly on him when he
In on oome of their ~. too?
wOUldn't dtwlge who had wriltanl, until
Not that he thinks elo«rvtltfng here Is
peri'ect. Afl.lr a "wild , crazy and lnhe proved to ihem that the 11a1e educa·
lion law seld ha didn't have to. At .U/ B,
teresltng" of German 101
he . - . , _, the ltUdent pr.- d-to on
taught by • Gemwl wh'l was
the Jle!lallve: ."The Spmrum ,..1y likes
working on a graduate degree In English ,
10 hack on K.laer."
he hacf 10 take 102 under a Korean TA
who didn't speak English or Gennan very
In light of the hoallllty ........ studen
wd.
dloploy tow.-cl authority, Bo!con edmtll
he ~·t broaclcul that he's -..a.ted" IO
That wasn't -·

-•

e-

-

�Janwuy 31, 1980

Special majors win jobs~ enjoy leami.n g
A U/B graduate, now at Stanford
Unlvenlly Medical School, prcpentd
hin&gt;MII for med school with an
undergraduate concentration In
"Humanllles and Health Sciences," a
prowam he designed hlmseU through
DUE's special major option.
"Education has become a self·
motiv..Ung ~ lor me, as education
should be, ~ wrote in response to a
"""'ndy completed survey of special ma·
jor ~aduati!S. "Through my special ma·
~.~ve discovered the joy of
.That, says John Rls2ko, chairman of
the Special Major Commltlee of the OM·
lion of Undergraduate Education, Is the
"overriding roaon d'eiTe of the program."
To be sure the option Is a splendid way
to attract non·tradiUOnal students and
reault transfers and 15 a useful11ehlcle lor
developing new academic programs. BUt
Its major strength, Riszko suggi!Sis. "Is
that It permitS the individual student to
take pride In directing, together with his
faculty spon501'5, the course of his educa·

don."
0..100 m.ce 1970
Since the ftrst special major degrees
were awarded, In June 1970. over 800
graduates ha~~e taken ad•antage of the
opportunKy, Riszlco reports.
Each of these students has had to
de~~elop a proposal for a course of study
outside existing departments. schools
and programs. In conjunction with two
faculty sponsors. The sponsors must be
of at least assistant professor rank and
ha110 to have some expertise In the stu·
dent 's proposed area ol concentration .
The proposal Is submitted ~~)rough DUE's
Office ol Aaldemic Adlllsement lor
evaluation by a Special Major Commit·
t e. That panel makes a recommenda·
lion to the Dean ol DUE who ollero the
final determination on whether or not the
student may follow his or her own path.
DUE maintains extensive follow-up on
special major graduates. A last sur~~ey
was conducted in Aprll1973, a second In
September 1975. The most recent one
encompasses 189 students who
'l"aduated between September 1975 and
:september 1978. One hundred of them
&lt;ompleted and returned questionnaires
which were designed to: a) determine the
ellectllleneso ol the program In fulfilling
their lndfllidual educational and voca·
tional goals; b) offer the students an oppol1unlty to critically e~~aluat the role of
DUE adlllsers and facuhy sponsors In the
prD!J11m; c) lind ""'t whai students would
ha110 done had the program not been
a11ailable; and il) afford graduates an oppol1unlly for retrospective evaluation .
Voca~...--

Rlszko r«ports that a comparison of the
ar«u In which the sludents concentrated
and the jobs they ha11e acquired "reflects
delinh«ly the 110cational promise" ol the
program . 011er 60 p«r . cent of
respondents noted that the degree option
had been instrumental in getting them In·
to and helping them carry out their pres·
ent jobs.
Flfty-«ight per cent of responding
speda) majors grads were employed
dtrectly alter r«eeeving their degrees; 4
per cent received employment alter grad
achool, 7 per cent combined graduate
.. or1c wtth employment. and 31 per cent
ar
completing gradua study
Respondents not d that . prospec1iv
employen ructed fallor8bly to the
special pr&lt;J9'"•m optiOn ...1 was viewed as
motivated, independent and a ati\le,"
O'lC sludent Jaicl characteristically. "My
l"'ployer feM 1 ohowed lnltiati\le, depen·
clability, and a conclentious allltude,•
.Mel anolher
•
den head.d for graduate school
~ the same "bonus effecl."
RJUko • ports. s.-al accept d by
highly compellll\le mad ochools corn·
mented that their p«911ms had given
11wtm a "human" arid "culturar perspec·
nw
a pure ttdonce major would
not hew These stUden also excelled 1n
requ
ICience c--. "The Important
.,._,._, • Rluko
• "lo that
thowed
~. o f111n a varied and
broader
pcupecllve tn 1helr
u~ ,....., 1&lt;now1ne that a
dotmanding ..,.oaltaa
awailad ihem

In~

• •~,:

•••

... .

By contrasl, some sludents chose a
special, major 10 they could develop a
narrower and more practical specializa· ·
lion in lieu ol an existing major they con·
sidered too broad -partiCUlarly in the
behavioral sciences. On« sludent at·
trlbuted completion of a graduate degree
in special education lor the emoHonally
handicapped and a subsequent job as a
special ed teacher to her special
undergrad major in early childhood
de~~elopment. The program enabled her
to take courses from 11arious sectors of
the Unl11er&gt;ity and to lntem in child care
agencies. It was coupled with a regular
major In psychology.

Not a •lde-etepplog
Riszlco notes that the SP«Cial Major
Committee is aware that some might
view the option negati11ely as a side·
stepping of traditional curriculums. But.
he emphasizes, the four faculty membero
and two DUE adlliser&gt; who seNe on this
panel act as a "queUty control commis·
sion ." They do not hesitate to suggest
that an indl11idual's goals might better be
met through an existing ma)or or an existing major in combination with a special

program . Present membero of the panel
are faculty membeB Barbara HoweU,
Samuel Paley , Milton Plesur. and
Kathryn Sawner. Stephen WaUace and
Kat
Kubala are the DUE ad11isers.
Riszko ~ cfu.irman.
Among students with narrow and pract.ical Interests In the behavioral and ad·
mlnlstraUve social oclences. Riszko points
out. most ha11e achle11ed their goals.
Some have expressed in retrospect a
disappointment in not' specializing even
funher . A student who took a special major in theater arts management. for example. found alter working pan-time at
CBS . that the more rewarding and stable
positions went to those with advanced
quallfk:ations in various management
fields . The student went on to finish an
MBA and ls now an accoUntant at CBS .
But he does not regret the undergraduate
special major: it ge11e him "a much better
knowledge of the particular branch of
management I wish to pursue."
Ally-live per cent of responding special
majors grads said -they would ha11e
chosen another major had the special op·
lion not been available: 28 per cent of
them did , in fact , also complete regular
departmental majors.
Mally .U..Uadecl
Countless student are dlosuaded from
purouing special majors simply because
the alternatives proposed are
"unrealistic" or "unsuitable ." Riszko
reports .
The role which DUE adlllsers play in
the proceso Is o~~erWhelmlngly praised by
the survey respondents , he notes. Eightyone per cent ol respondents agreed the
advisers \lrlere "very'' or .. somewhat"
helpful. Faculty sponsors were similarly
lauded, with the majority of respondents
finding them "ideal guidi!S and menton."
(85 per cent.)
According to Riszlco "the faculty spon·
oors are to be congratulated . Their
dedication and energies, he submits. are
not publicly acknowledged . These spon·
SOB are also useful in gaining admlosio~
to grad schools for their students. "It is
particularly noteworthy ." Riszlco thinks.
"that a significant number ol faculty spon·
SOB are senior and graduate faculty who ,
aside from their many teaching and
rHCarch dulles, fmd time and energy to
devote to undergraduates and help In·
dl111duals define worthy lnteUectual
challenges."
In thaw few instances where graduates
surveyed were attica! ol adllisers and
faculty. thO survey results show, the
Untwrstty'o large bureauaacy w
an
underlying factor. Soma iludents com·
plalneif that their faculty sponsors left
here, leall)ng th m to scramble : a lew
noted communications breakdowns bet·
ween their IIA/0 faculty aponsors.

,.....,_
Riszlco

~kens

the .pecial mii)O&lt; option
to "• barometer, muourlng the academic
needs and VOCllllonaJ COnctml ol •
llgnlfltant number ol students • It has
given riM to sewral new programo which
employ a as a means to ~ant degr soros ·sue as Dance, M $flo Stvd •
'·

••

•

•

t

•

.,

Judaic Studies, and Religious Studies. In
(., t, the special majors In these fields
(more standardioed .fhan the usual In·
dividual prog-ams) serve as a way for the
programs to el&lt;ist until they are em·
powered to grant degreH themselves.
This Is how the special major option
helps the Univer&gt;ity broaden Its offerings.
A nascent program In sports adminlstra·
lion is another case In point. Still one
more promising. area, Riszko reports. 15
perlorming arts administration, a theme
often repeated In lndlllidual program pro·
posals-one which blends liberal arts and
social sciences. Indications are, too. that
regular faculty-wide majors would pro11e
popular, he says.
In the special majors survey, students

were asked what their course of action
would ha11e been had the special major
option not been a11allable. Twenty per

cent responded they would ha11e trans·
(erred to another school. while another
' 14 per cent said they would ha11e discon·
linued their studies altogether.
The special major has played a part in
retaining students at the University,
Riszko maintains. And, he adds. DUE
has a responsibility to publicize tljis option
to currently enroDed otudents, particularly
those who are undecided about choice of
a major. The special major option also
should be publicized to a greater degree
among community coDege students, he
feels . It would be a good way to attract
more of them to this Uni11erslty .

Option time
The Personnel Department announces that an Open Enrollment· Transfer
Period/&lt;&gt;&lt; Research Foundation health insurance wiU be conducted during the
month of February, 1980. Research Foundation employees insured In either
one of the two plans available (Blue Cross/ Blue Shield or Heahh Care Plan) will
be able to transfer to the other. Eligible employees who are not enrolled may
also elect to join either plan . Co11erage will be ellecti11e March I , 1980.
To provide Research Foundation employees details concerning the co11erage
under each plan, as weU as general fringe benefit i~formation, Personnel will
conduct Information sessions on February 7 and 'II, at several campus locations,
as shown below.
·
9·10:30 a.m .
SUNY Clinical Center · Meyer
Thursday,
10:30-12 Noon
Annex Room BB179
February 7

Friday,
February 8

1· 2 :30 p .m.
2 :304p.m.

Cary HaU, Room 246
Main Street Campus

9-10:30 a .m .
10:30-12 Noon

Capen HaD, Room 255
AmheBt Campus

1·2:30t;&gt;.m.

Crofts HaU, Room 142
Amherst Campus

I
For further details. employees may call 636· 2646 (outside) or 636-2650
(campus) .

SENATE
FSEC considers
question of cheating
Executive Committee, January 23.
The meeting was called to order at
2 :30 p.m. to consider the !oDowing
agenda:
tw. •1 " - - ' ol Mtnvt..1-..., 16, 1910)
"-" correction wes made in hem ..,5 IAI.
ln..,._ Requett tSchocntddl (line II the wood
mcndonc-d was sut.tiluled lor pram~d. 'The
minu~ wer)"~ as conec:ted

ll•m "3 Commtrtoc R_..
Nominlltlonl for the foDow\ng Committea wall!
•ppoved b!l the FSEC: T1w Univ~ ao..t on
Spontored FACUlty Ac!Mtia. ~ul&lt;cS&lt;udent Untoo
HOUM Boord. Fo&lt;ully Sonote

Aaembty.-

~·

MombeosoiFSEC owud that..,.,.._ •pprov·
~ for Com lnH5 at tha time woukt run through
1981 •nd 1982.

ltan *4 Old Butineu - none.

l...,'IO....'RA. Tlte Pralcf«ftJ

T1w l'&gt;ftlclenl .... anendong the budget.......,.

hua1NewS.....
. A. Ptllldaorwi_R_.,... &amp;vdml

and wuld not tM! prewnl T'lwrt: w.s no Ptaident',

a.-...

Repon

A ROry which appeared lin the Spcdrum of
Mondoy , JanUArY 21 , about • penon OJ penon&amp;
who arc selling term papen, led to a lengthy dbcus·
slon of ~ faadty me.rnben can do about
chnllng .and About the Unvhstty's potides and proccdura in such rnatllm. f:olowtng the dtlcullkm.
which tna.ded pr-.totlons lrorn bach Richanl
~ow . Vice· Praidenl fOJ Student Affan, and
Ronakt Skin, "-iicant 10 the Prnacknc h was
MOVED (lleodoht •nd SECONDED IDudloyl 10
ldopl the folowing Utement:

B. Th• Choir
I T1w Chn r~ oomc dtff&gt;eullla kl the

s......

oltlce.....ttinglrornthe-olthe

MCt.u.ty'l hutbMwf h II u~ •to When Mr~ .
_ , wol mum h moy be poootblo 10 got,.,.,.

tempc:nry ..-.ncr. In lhe nwanrune.
chc J*f·bnW wdtnts hwe been --..m~ng •
rnponlllltM 'role in a.nying out ~ Senate work
i The Chi« u'«d thai the men'K)Qndum from
Profaeor Schoenfeld refftml to in the M.w'tuta of
.lonUOfll 16. 1980 re-lntormotion .._..tlnjj
~

euthoriUidon and

..,. Sk.

~minahon

c..._.... ol

the

of COW'MI to mft1
~ot

EducoOon

·- . hoo-~tothe~ol

Educ:-.bOn Com~ INS thil flem II on the
FSEC "~~""do b 2/13/ 80 .. 3 30 I

a- -

""" -

• T1w
Sol&lt;o« ...
- ,.tor~......
the . . .lonuoty 30, end - lol A oepon bl/ oho Ac:odemlc Plonnong Commil·
tee wllh Q'Uril to lolow '" taM ~ "'.trt:nc:hnwnt
!bl R - . . - 1 0 oho Hudd-. Rnolu
10 be "" 11cm on lho Febnoooy 5 s..-

••

.

1\gondo.

tel -

•

Schoonlold -... too .. updole
Goneol Ed~

'""" lhO T.... F.,_ on

-··--thio-ond . .

lu4*&lt;•••
.... In · ... a- aid ....
-Hooo~10honoahotdolo ... be

,_.... oo FSEC - • -

"T1w - 1 ..... ol cheating foh wtrh.. the
ocopeolthe-...cF.-Iom•ndR
stbfi1y
CommJrtn,

.-.o. II II r\IIICft5IJy 10 check cheating

oo'v to preMt'VC integrity and standards of
ocodomic •..,.,..-.. bot . , 10 ""'
frHdom and we:Were of II:Udentl who do not ct.at
T1w AcAdemic f&lt;Hdom end ~
minet • lhe~on ask4ld to contidcr lhil'-ue. and
.., report~ can and should be dcme about II The
Chait 1J do ..ud 10 tlltQl*t from the Prl!:lklent •
re:port on rhe ~ caw and tM ~·5
goneool prACO&lt;t ........_.. 10 chuting .
T1w """""' CAARttlo UNANIMOUSLY
no1

c-

/lf-

B. SUNY Smote
h WM anncNnced tn.t 1M SUNY .s.n- and
Boord ol TNMHt ..-.ng ... ho 1.-.d by
BuK•Io. Febnoooy I and 2 h ..,.. _ . o by
"""-WolcktlwotheF5EC...d ,..,......;.....
10 the 1'MtQnl f i1 II perrn6IMble 10 do to, M wei u
- " ' 1 oho budget""'""""" on .Jonuooy 3t

Jl&gt;&lt;~~,...\':fd ~.~ I0!\'1'

..

�.... _...... _

to thad oome light on how the SUNY
...... will _.-;11 the reductions

..,._ he addr-. · the SUNY Senate
here at U!B on Friday morning. On
Saturday, the Executive Committee ol
the Board ol Trustees will convene for a
session on campus, with "the impact of
budget cuts· as the major agenda hem .
Budget documents made avaU.ble to
the R~r th is week offered this
breakdown of what' U/ B asked lor In the
1980-81 budget , and what It got !rom
Carey:

Documentary looks at
local unemployment
About two years ago , WNED-1V, Buffalo's educalional television station,
surveyed the area and found , not surprisingly, that employment was the primary
concem of most resident$.
That bit ol confirming Information provided the impetus lor a !JOUP ol student$
then enrolled In an advanced
documentary 111m coune with noted U/ B
IUmmaker and Acackmy Award nominee
James Bkte - to get out their videotape
porta-pack and sWt ~ Eighteen months later with lnlliallundillll 1rom Blue's Buffalo Doc:umentary
~oup, and linally, with money from the
student1' own pockets, the tape.
"Unemployment In Buffalo," was completed and premiered at Media
Study/Buffalo. The November showing
marked the finl In a series ol screenings
there ol documentaries which will delve
Into loc:al concems and problems. AI the
shows wtl be sludent-produced .
a..t-.1~

A pr&lt;&gt;p&lt;&gt;n«nt ol "reggonaliom" In video
and 6lm documenlaries, Blue believes
the greatest opportunity for documentarians rail with lmmenlon In community isoua; In becoming a natural conduit
lor information and feedback.
Unclerstan&lt;W&gt;Iy, the sludents' apP"*h to the unemployment documentary was dlstlnc:dy "Sloe• In orientation
and format. The cnw acted as lnvestigallvc repcx1ers trying io track down the
forces at play which create and
perpetuate the problotm. The r-Iling
30-mlnute tape, directed and edHed by
Joseph Slelnmetz with Joan Evans as
asoiNnt editor, poin up how Buffalo's
shift •way from heavy rnanufactuttng has
impacted linanclaly on Its labor force.
The tape aloo undenc:ores the fact that
there to no eNbllohed mec:hantom which
CAn sucx:asfully ..- the transition for
wotkerlto a pool-lndustriAI oconomy.
Slelnmetz and Evans. now wodc.ing
pr"'-'a!o In the R.ld. spent a
s e - ..-rc:hlng the problotm and
Along wtlh a cr- ol olha atudent5, Interviewing a . . . . . . - , ol unemployed
raodenl$, the morjority ol whom rei viCtim
to the 1977 s.thl.hem s...J layoll. Also
lntervlrwed were a numbe ol departmental adminlolraton and c:My offlclals involved in ~ problotms ol the
u~ Tom Gut'lerldgo. director
ol U/B's Regional Economic ~nee
added InformationAl commen-

c..n...,..

~~ the crew found , wu that while

r-

~~~

for help The

for the dllparlly thea the~ ....tong """""-n dld
nol oller the -~ew~ ol ~
• 8ethlohem S1iM1 Peopla peloned to

Woe~

and--...... lhory came to ,..,.1 • mere~!/ a

~la!IQIINnd

~ the problem -

-- ~
.a.aoc~
_...,
but .......

'*"*

.....

'
,...,._," -or
aaa....W.opdon

..............
-...,.....
c..nw. -

~,

thai
nol
r.mtv

_._ -

""""'-' to job
~­

.

they found them geared primarily toward
helping younger, less skilled laborers who
earned substantially less. The retraining
programs didn't provide enough financial
Incentive lor the majority.
Not . . IJidic:tmeet
The tape presentation was not meant
to be an lndlctrnent of any one Individual,
government or social agency, emphasized Stein~ and Evans,. but rather a
vehicle to help encourage dialogue and
change.
Because the ra&amp;on d 'etre of the
"regional documentary" as Blue defines
H,ls to foster grass roots movement$ lor
change, aD those Interviewed for the tape
were Invited 'back to see the finished product and to comment on thelr perceptions of Its accuracy. A 11!1ht to rebutialls
an essential element ol this communication mode, Blue contends.
As expected , the November showing
generated a plethora ol comment$,
positive and negallvc , from 60 city officials , workers and vldeornakers present.
Participants fek free to defend, critk:l2le or
take issue with the presentafton.
It's hoped that the Buffalo community
will also be given a chance to view the
tape. Although no finn date has been set,
discussions are underway to show U on
WNED-1V.

UCS takes over
graphics lab
University Computing Services has
assumed operational responsibility far an
interdepartmental computing lab!ora.tory
which will provide the University Community with a.n advanced gnophlcs
capability ,
Jay
A.
Leavitt ,
director, Acackmic Computing, has announced. Until the transfer ol respond&gt;illty, thlo Idly had been maintained
•• a departmental laboratory by
Geography.

The Central Computer. the CVBER
173, is very powerful, leavlll said , but " II
cannot-simultaneously support the time
sharing needs ol this University and the
demands ol advanced graphics. Thus.
this laboratory wt1 be able to provide the
Unlvcnlty with a Idly, which until now,
had no1 been available."
Recently, University Computing SerYicalnslded • VARIAN Pl1n""' Plotter.
This device, which hu a raolutlon ol
200 poin per Inch. is c:apabl. ol productlng bolh and rasler hardcopy
pictur... Leavllt indicated . Vecto&lt; means
thai the plclurc to ~ ol JiMI;
, _ , . thet M to~ ol shadad areaa n.... we plans to enhance the
laboratory with phol&lt;l!PI&gt;hic and video
..-ling ~~ lJltln,.tcly, he
said, • c:ommunlcatlonl link with the
CYBER 173 to planned
The r.dly , loQiad In 352 Fronczak, to
wallablo b bolh teaching and raaoch.
Toun ol theW. may be ......,gad by cal-

11111 636-2757 ~ concerrilng K ·
. . . to . . fedllv "-lee be addJ-.1 to
the ,._,.. ol , _ .
Compullng •
831 -1761. .

U/B wanted $2.039.600 lor obligatory
increases (negotiated raises. annualizatlons. elc.): thai fuU amount was Included. To keep pace with inflation, U/ B
asked lor $2,350. 100: Carey recom mended $168,000 more Ahhough the
Governor included only about 'I&gt; of what
was needed ror the minimum wage increases. he provided $343,000 more
than the original request to cover Jumps
in utility prices. He also awarded the
Libraries $22 .800 more than had been
requested for rising book costs, a total ol
$175,000 to keep book-buying power at
the same level as last year.
For the fiscal year 1981 -82, a new
library budgeting formula Is being
developed by the Office of Library Ser\llces ol the SUNY &lt;Antral Admlnislration , Carey Indicated.
Few 'lmpro-eata'
The University asked for $1 ,550,000
to improue operations. Only $179.100
was approved. Completely wiped out
was a oorely needed $585,000 for Increased library acquisitions; $450,000
which would have made possible adding
some 50 craftsmen tines to the Physical
Plant stall; $95,400 in increased appropriations lor the Regional Economic
~Center, and $69.000 In additional funds lor gnoduate fellowships . The
sole Improvement ~em which Carey approved Is lor busing serv~ . U/B said H
needed an additional $200,000 for this;
he awarded $251,000. Also under "improvement," the· University 10ught to
have Its required savings factor reduced
by $150,000; Carey. on the other hand.
wants it increased by $72,000.
In terms of personnel lines, the Carey
budget gives 10 new positions (lines
necessitated by the opening of ~
buildings) . but takes away 19 jobo, for a
net loss ol 9. The 19 cub are to be
distri&gt;uted across three a.reas: 10 Instructional lines, 5 sludent service positions.
and 4 positions in general adminislratlon.
U/B had envisioned 66.5 new jobo.
Dental fande
In a separate budget requesl, an appropriation of $717,000 was 10ught for
the Dental School as the finl lnstaUment
ol a multi-year master plan to restore luU
accreditation . This request is Ignored In
the governor's budget message, but hope
Is held out for later action . Specifically,
the .budget message says on this point:
"Although no Increase is recommend·
ad for the Buffalo Health Sc:wnce Center
to meet the accreditation problems ol the
Buffalo Den.tal School. no neglect is in·
tended . The State University's request lor
additional funds for the Buffalo Dental
School was submitted late, and requires a
thorough analysis. II wil be addressed In
the Supplemental Budget. The lmrnedlate needs of the Dental School can
be met by the $100,000 ~ad lor the
Dental School in last year 1 Supplemental
Budget and the unexpected Increase in
Federal Capitation Aid received by the
School. This aid amount5 to $36,200 lor
1979-80 and $229.800 lor 1980- 81."

n
jedad. 1,494 wllh ... ._hal ol"""
occurring .. the Uniwnllv cenlln. Scony

Brook is right on the'-" with U/8 with
a proJecl..t FTE drop ol 503. The other
two University centen are budgeted for
sman gains.
Significantly. the live units ol SUNY
located In Western New YOI'k are projected to suffet a drop of 1.904 s1Udent5,
more than the entire SUNY ·wide loss.•
A cat but DOl a COlt
On paper. the slashing of I. 125 jobs

within SUNY is not actually a cut. The
Governor's budget proposal points out
that while 34 .500 positions aro currently
authorized . the University actually has
only 31.800 positions filled Th • 1.125
positions and S 12.3 million assooated
with them . in that se.nse . are. not cuts In
Carey's words. the action merely .. serves

to bring the gap between authorizations
and expendttures to a more realistic
level. - On the other hand. since n Is leh
to the Trustees lo draw up the adual
allocation plan for these cuts , currently
vacant lines may not necessarily be those
which will be abolished .
Unlike the $12.300,000 base reduction , the $14,000,000 reduction In Slate
support called for under the .heading of
"State University Re-Examination" is
designed. in the words of the budget proposal, to "encourage a fundamental reexamination of State University's stalling
levels and funding formulas. campus missions and programs, Federal and private
sources of funds , and user lees. This reexamination reflects the changed
economy and enrollment$ explcted lor
the 1980s. The reduction Is proportionately consistent with that Imposed at
City Univer~ and will be distributed by
the Trustees In a plan to be submitted to
the Budget Director."
On the positive side. the SUNY-wide
allocation lor academic equipment
replacement has been Increased by
$2 .700.000, more than double the
amount allocated last year - a total of
$5.2 miUion . According to the Governor ,
the appropriation will permh SUNY to
"replace more than 69 per cent of the lab,
academic and audio-visual equipment
listed in poor condKion " In an equipment
Inventory. A lack of funds lor equipment replacement in previous years has
been cited as one of the major shortcomIngs in the SUNY budget .
Salariea

The 1980-81 budget document also
recommends salaries for certain high
level SUNY positions. The Chancellor's
salary is $61 ,685, leso than the averages
recommended lor admlnislrators heading
heahh sciences com'*xa within the
system. The presidents ol the two
medical centers and the vice praidents
for the two health sc:lencas centers have
recommended salaries ol $64,114. The
average for the presidents ol the four
University centers Is $54.500.

CSEA appoints
liaison panel

Robert Smith , praldent ol the Civil
Service Employees 1\.soodation. Local
•602. has appointed • -n-mernber
safety committee to wade. directly with the
Offace of Environmental Health and Safety.
.
Aooordlng to Robert E. Hunt, director
of that olflca, the committee will c:omlder
requests from members. consider general
aspects of occupational safety and health,
assist
Environmental Health and Salety In
Dtpla~FTE'·
resolution ol safety and hulth problems,
As usual the budgctrnakers have
and
maintain liailon between CSEA
ftgured student enrollment targets In ·
memben and admlnislratlon .
various WIO)IO. Budget calculations include
The CSEA Safety Com- and
bolh "lul-thne equivalent sludents" (the
ol Environmental Health
SUNY ~ ol bguringJ and "full- me
and Safety, Hunt said, ... ...- on a
cq....~ students" (the OOB method) .
ocheduled bull "to,.... complalnts,..IQ.
Elther way you ftgww II, U/B gct1 a
c:omlder ochaduled mdln and to plan l
decr.ued target .,raiment. C&lt;n camraolution ol polen~ or actuAl dcflclenpus units had • budget target ol 18,460
cta .
sludents lui tal (a target which was nol
Comn\ittee membon ..,, William
rUchadJ . For the tal ol 1980, the a Slobcd - """'-"' Phylical Plant. Ethel
ecutlw budget projects 17,934 FTE, a
Dtdcinton
- Central S4ons. Dennis
drop ol 526 !rom 1979 target~. In the
I...Jth - - .. the ..._ hu been ...., - Amt.er. Phytical Plant. Tom
Wanol
Ch8od W- Plant, Glenn
sluhed by
FT&amp;. 1rom 2.975 to
&amp;loom - Amhenl Phyobl Plant. Bob
2.678 for • local drop ol 823 etudents
SqJ.a - Central ~ and Bob
and -=Aat;ad .._ and funding
Smllh - Main Slreet ~ SUNY-wide, lf:le drop In FTta to pro-

repr_,..,_

eo.-

m

-

�u

'*'-Y 31,

inter Caraival

I

~

Lake l.as.Jie looked like RocbkUer
Center Sunday afternoon _as student

obten tried out the Ice w!Ueh a local

obtl"'l club had shUDned beclluse It
wun 't thick enough . Other Wln!er
C.mlval ewnts that dey Included
sleigh rides around Ellicott, Ice
sculpture demonstrations by local
chds, and a fire to keep warm by. The
Carnival continues through Saturday.

-·

1980

lnternshlp8
available for
professionals
A pilot prognom unveMed by the
Penonnel Offlcc this -.k ,.-hlch will
make H posoi&gt;le for ~ llaff
members to lncreate their knowledge ol
the ~ and enhance their market·
able skills by "Interning" In one ol five
areas ol Financial Services or in Personnel.
This Professional Service Program,
strongly endO&lt;Sed by President K- , Is
being &lt;&gt;&lt;ganioed In cooperation with the
Professional Staff Senate (PSS).
About two _liUrl ago, the PSS Human
Resources ~Jt!~elopment Comm ~tteet
chaired by Patrick Young recomrnencledl
that such a program be started. Last year,
former PSS CliP Cliff Wilson and other
Senators met
the President on
molter. Four Internships In the Presidenfs
office resulted . Over the years, other
areas of the University such as Student
Affairs have also experimented with the
Internship idea.
AHhough the program Is currently
restricted lo about a dozen Internships In
Personnel and Anandal Services - all
under the domain of E.W . Doty, vice
president for finance and manligement the hope Is that the program will be an
on-going, developing one which will
eventually encompass other areas as
weD.
Internships available In Personnel are
in the areas ol: job evaluation and
classtficatlon. employee relations. performance

appraisal

programs,

needs

assessments. and case studies, and in individual projects of mutual benefit to Per·
sonnel and the Individual. Assignments In
Ananclal Services include internships in
accounting, budget, grant and contract
administration, In ternal audit. and
payroll. Individual programs will be
designed in these areas to meet needs of
participants.
Depending on the project , the
assignments will last anywhere from six to
13 weeks, with two to three hours per
day to be spent in the designated area .
No additional compensation will be given
for the work, and those involved must
contin ue to "perform the fuD range of
dutle• in home departments -"
Interested employees must gain per·
mission from their supervisors In order to
be considered. While some ol the pro·
gram's &lt;&gt;&lt;ganizers admH that supervisors
may be reluctant to grant such permls·
sion, Doty expressed confidence that
those "wtth general interest In the training
· and seK·development of their employees,
wiD likely endorse it. •
According to program guideUnes, once
an internship is assigned, it cannot be "In·
terrupted" by the employee's home offlee.
Application deadline for Internships
beginning this semester is February 8. AD
applications should be returned lo
Rosalyn Wilkinson , V&gt;anager of Human
Resources Development and Training,
John Beane Center, Amherst Campus.
Starting dates are variable .
No firm aiterla have been set for
spedflc internships, although a PSS com·
mhtee is
assisting Personnel to
develop ail
general selection . Ac-cording to DoiV and Personnel Director
Robert PearSOft&gt; department heads and
"mentors" - tf1e Individ uals with whom
interns wiD train - will be responsible for
awarding the assignments. The goals and
needs of both the applicant and the in·
dlvldual unh wiU be considered during the
selection process . No qualifying tests are
scheduled, but Individual aptitudes for
specific kinds ol work will be discussed
wtth applicants.

Co-captains
Senior defensive end Jack Dunbar
(Amherst-Sweet Horne HS) and senior
flanker Frank Price (WiDiam~
have been elected co-caplains ol the
1980 varilty football team, Head Coach
BID -Dando hu anOOUOCle&lt;l .
·
Both are lhr ·year letter-winners and
were members ol the 1977 squad, when
U/B's program was revived
Dunbar, a 6-1. 200-pounder, started
all n nc games for the Bulls last IUSOn .
Price, 5· 11 , 175. has llarted all 22
• 9'11114!1 oincc -'77 as a wode resetver.

�• publlc:etlon of
The Office of

--Cultural Affelra

Quartet/Quartets
" Quartet/Quartets" will be presented
by U/ B's resident dance company,
Zodiaque. together with the Buffalo
Guitar Quartet, at the Center Theater,
February 15-17 and 22-24. The Buffalo
Guitar Quartet is a group of U/B alumni

John Sawyers, Jeremy Sparks,
Leonard Biszkont and James Wolf who have been praised by 8uff11lo Evening News music critic, John Dwyer. lis
"gifted artists, " and who appeared at
C:.rnegie Recitlll Hall last October.
Four new dance works will be par·
fonned. " Arabesque," choreographed

by Company director linda Swiniuch, is
a blend of late Renaissance and modern
dance styles, and is set to music of
Praetorius, Dowland and Vivaldo. The
Buffalo Guitar Quartet wiH ba seated on
stage to play this accompaniment .
Visiting choreographer. Frank
Maraschiello, has made two pieces for

To keep track of
U/B'a cultural
events through
februe_ry,

uve thla magnet

the program. " Reminiscences of a
Former life" is a solo, set to musoc by
Tom Wa its . The second is a
dance/theatre piece, called "Victims,"
and is based on Frill lang's film of the
thirties. "M" ftha German classic about
the psychopathic killer with a penchant
for children, played by Peter lorrel . The
music for " Victims" is an improbable
but intriguing combination of Edvard
Grieg and Randy Newman.
To complete the quartet of new
dances, Zodiaque's associate director.
Tom Ralabate, has designed a jau
piece, " leddermoods," whiCh uses led·
dars as an integral part of the dancing,
and is set to music by Nina Simone,
Grover Washington and Bill Schnee.
Before tha dancing begins. the Buf·
falo Guitar Quartet will open the concert
with works of Brahms, DeFalla, Ravel
and Bach

Anger Rising
The " ondependent" h.e. not attached
to a large commercoal en terprise; ex·
peromental; avant·garde; what used to
be called, before the term fell onto
dosfavor . " underground" I folmmaker ,
Kenneth Anger, os best known for his
1965 him, " Scorpio Rosong," about con·
temporary decadence, woth ocons of
motorcycles, leather and chaons, and of
pop rebel-fogures, like James Dean and
Brando.
In t967, when the only print of
Anger's parually completed him ,
"luco fer Rosong," was stolen from a San
Francosco theatre, Anger plaoed a full ·
page obotuary notooe of homself '" TM
VlilloQe VOICe. and then went onto self·
·~ exole on london for the next SIX
years. There he worked on his remake of
" lucof81 Rising " He completed Pll(ta 1
and 2. and wiH ICIMn and discuss tllem
tonoght at B, in E--.ongs for New F~m at
the Albroght·Knox Art Gallery
Kenneth Ange~'a greattl$t onfluence
hal been the teaclungs of A ster
CrowleY. an English
lf·ordaoned
magu
laorcererl. who claomed
~ ea hiS hi~. and~

- - - . - - --... .,...,.~..,--· -.,n. ..

..

·--......

�l"ho--·-~--~---..,_

philosophy was " Do What Thou Wtlt"
- a son of forerunner of the Me

Oecade.
Crowley's Magtck is evoked in
"luafer Ristng," described by Carol
Rowe. wttttng in Film OUilrterly, as
"largely concerned with commumcattOn
between Isis and OsiriS, through the
forces of nature .A magus !Kenneth
Ange.l stallcs around hts tncandescent
ctrcle m •nvocatlon to the Bringer ol
ltght .and luafer. resplendent m satin
l U-C-1-F-E-A JOCkey i8okel. rifes from
wtthtn the arcle lsts and Oslns. the
happy parents. stnde through the colon nade at Karnak to greet then offspnng
and a feldspar-eolored saucer saHs at us
from behtnd the stone head of Ramses
II " AN of thos os done to a symphony by
Ptn Floyd
B . . - " luafer RISing," Mr Anger
wt ocreen the 1,.7 folm lhe was seventeen! thet made hiS reputatiOn land a
scandal!. called " Ftreworks." plus
" Rabbtl's Moon.'' " Kustom Kar
omrnandos. " and " fnaugurattOn of the
Piefsu Dome." whoch. accordfng to
CarOl Rowe's antde. oontlllns Anger's
" most profuw use of decadent sym-

boliSt

lmBQefY ..

Mary and Margaret
H«ber1
~t

.anm

I

leh U / B'o MUIIC
• to become pro

1 - of Musoc at the U,_sny of
I! noos He • now botH chelrman of
MultCOiogy end d~reetor ol th&lt;o
A . . - Arctw. thefe. lind heo
con
consoder.tllv to ICholeJ1v
wnllr1Q on the tnUIIC of
A~
H• publal.onl onclude the !hr-.
volum• C•n•u• C•t•logue of
Menu6CI'¥'~ o1 Polypltonr. 1400-1500.
which he CCHdited, lind .ruc:r. on the

2.

Winter Carnival

music of Josquin lies Prez. the Burgundtan and Hapsburg courts. and
manuscript sources of northern
Renaissanoe music . Professor Kellman
Is currently editing a boo!&lt; of essays on
the patronage of music during the
Renaissanoe.
·
For hts February 26 lecture in the
Music Oepanrnent's Musicology Lecture Series. Kellman will speak on
" Music in the Burgundian Court Chapel,
from Mary of Burgundy to Margaret of
Austria." The lecture IS free . and at 4
p.m. m 101 Batrd Hall

The annual Winter Carnival. sponsored by a multitude of campus
organizations and coordinated by the
Student Association. began January 26
and continu"'i through this week. Here's
what's QOi"Sl on today, tomorrow and
Saturday: square dancing , socials.
movees. tournaments, a 3-mHe running
marathon in the Bubble. snow sculpture
contest 1udging. a concert by The
Roches in the Ftllmore Room, broomball

26 Years of Prints

Mountain to
Mohammed. Says
Moran .

A retrospective exhtbil by pnntma er
Lee Chesney will be on VI8W through
February 22 on the second floor gallery of
the An Department !Bethune HaUl.
Thos exhtbotton ofo25 years of work includes 40 pnnts Uithographs. etchings,
Intaglios! by Chesney, who IS prof&lt;mor
of an at the UntverStty of Hawa• . It
opened m 19n •n Flooda. and has been
traveling to colleges ever sonce. •ncludtng the Un~versny of Mochtgan and
the University of T8l&lt;&amp;S . It wtll go from
U / B to the University of Mtssourl
(March 19801, and liS hnal showtng wtK
be at the UntverStty of Denver neltt
September

Former Creative Associate Robert
Moran claims that, despite rumors to the
contrary. "the new music scene is
almost non-existent in New Yort City."
Whether or not Mr. Moran's perception
11 shared by others, he plans to do
something .about it; spectlically. to have
contemporary muSIC performed '" New
York by the U / B Chamber Orchestra.
under the dtrectton of James
Kasprowicz
The MuSIC Depanment was recepttve
to the notion of a tour for the
38-mernber student orchestra, par·
tiCUiarly 510011 the Department is attempits students' involvellng to •ncrea
ment in new muse. Mr. Kasprowtcz was
recepllve, because he wants to provide
. a greater variety of performanoe sewngs
for the Chember Dra-tra And the
Cathedral of St. John the Drvine '" New
York was recept!W, because tt meant an
opportunity to booaden tl\8. music repertOire ~ted on the Cathedral's ooncert progtamo

and tee skating on Lake LaSalle, basketball IU/B vs. Fredonia) , wres!Ung IU/B
vs. Potsdam!, swimming IU/B vs. Conland!, and something called "CAC' s
Wtnter Wonderland ."
'
Certain events. such as skiing and
particpat1on in compe1it1ve events. were
necessary to pre-register for. rMgnet's
directory will give you more specifiC information about the rest .
Three consecutive evenings ot~­
certs. beginning February 1, w~l be
given at St . John the Divine, with the
first a premiere of Moran's " danaeritual," entitled " .. .on November 28.
1970... " The Phyllis Lamhut Danae
Company will perfollll this work. Thesecond program opens' with Philip Gt.ss'
" Modern Love Waltz," and continues
wtth John Cage's "49 Waltzes for the
Five Boroughs," Moran's "letter to
Verona." Arne Mellnas' "Fragile." and
Logothetls' "Fountain Music."
The third and final concen will repeat
the Cage. Glass and Moran compositions. and add Cage's "Conoen for
Piano and Orchestra" (with Moran as
soloist) , and a PI8C8 by Yoko Dno.
which is descnbed as "a realizatiOn of
one of the pt8C8S from her boo!&lt;.

G,_fruit."
On the way to St. John the Divine. so
to speak, the Chamber Orchestra wtll
present two "programs et John Glenn
High Schoof on Huntington. long IJiand.
Buffalo's mart on new music wdl be fur•
ther 8V1denoed by the tndusionotl''Tune
of the Heathen," a compositiOn by U/B
MUSIC faculty member, lejaren Hiller,
and by a performance by Yvar
Mtkhashoff, also a faculty member, as
solOISt tn " "Pop' Partita."

�Watch For ...
. .

Folmmaker Yvonne Raoner
screMOng and dotcuss!ng her leetunt
folm. "Journeys from Berlon/1971," at
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery on
February 29. This IS in the EVWllnQS for
New Film Series. co-sponsored by the
Gallery and the Center lor Media Study.
... Erik Skjoklan, guest pianist and
~ and Robert Morris. guest
composet'. at 8 p .m.. concerts by lhe
Creative Associates, Thursday and Friday, February 28 and 29, in Baird Hall.
..• the opera, " Dido and Aeneas."
to be prMMted by the U/B Opera
Workshop, March 7 and B. at the Center
Theatre, 681 Main Street.
... "The Chinese Experoence," an intensive, month-long lestoval !March
17-April 171 on Chinese culture, being
arranged by the Office of Cultural Allaors, woth funding from the FacultyStudent AssociabOn. Events wollondude
an exhobtt of art from China, which will
be on displ8y throughout the festival in·
the capen Hall Gallery f5th floor).
Amherst Campus. Pamter and professor
of Art at
College. James Kuo.
will give a talk on Chinese art ldate to be
annooncedl. And Chu Chen Kuang. an
~rtist from China, who is living in New
York Coty lor one year, will be on
re51dence at U/B on March 19, 20 and
21. Mr. Chu will gove demonstrations
and workshop s on brushwo rk,
calhgraphy and paper cutting.
On March 28, the Choang Ching
Dance Company will perform at U/B's
Center Theatre. 681 Main Street. Miss
Chiang, a graduate of the Pekong Conservatory of Dance. formed the Company on New Yortt on 1973, and blends
traditional Chinese forms with American
modern dance The result was descnbed
on a recent review !Oecernber 19791 by
Anna Kosselgolf in the New Yolk Times
as "Simplicoty and economy. amazong
visual beauty. woth a keen sense of
theatricality."
In April. there w ill be a guest speaker
from Pekong - Zhang Suchu, whose
lamdy were dose lnends of the late

o-ne..

'*

n•••·M~~~

prime ........ of Olina. Zhou Enllli;
hUibend, now a "l1lllebllitMird inllllectual," punosll8d as a counl8mM!Iu-

._.*~~s-.. •~••"~·~~-~~

for _ , Y88fS during the
Cullural Revolution . Miss lheng
ICturw. keep their maiden
names after marriegel. who ....U
Engtl!lh fluently. will discuss "Manners
and Mores in Contemporary China."
Other April gpbdies: a 3-day !plus one
evening) boutiQue in 10 ~- selling
antique jewelry. books and crafted objects, imported from China by the
Albright -Knox Art Gallery Shop;
documentary films by the distinguished
Dutch filmmaker. Joris Ivens. showing
daily life in Chona - these films will be
shown here pnor to their premiere at the
Carnegie Conerna in New York; a lecture
by Or. William James on acupuncture,
whh a demonstration of that technique
by an acupuncturist; and a dosing banquet in Spaulding Ooning Room ,
Amherst Campus . on Aprol 17 .
Restaurateur Lee Chu will cater this
event, and will prepare dishes !including
Szechuan cuisine, not ordinanly
avaolable in restaurant dining.
Qh yes, actress Shirley Maclaine,
who produced and co-directed lwith
filmmaker Claudia Weill! " The Other
Hall of the Sky: A China Mernoor" may
speak here We'll know by the next
llONI1y

llt~-+••••a. ~-

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~~~~•A*••·••~ R•~•x~•••~~.£~
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magnet.

fl~·r•!ll•~-t-a•~· _:JA:YJ!Ja~~&lt;

Film Note

As we always say. there are (happily I
too many l~ms to be listed individually
on these pages. Good sources of information are the UlJAB pocket calendars
of film listings
ilable at Squire Information !Main
leetl and 106 Talbert
Hall !Amherst) . Call636:29191or recorded ' information . Center lor Media
Studies also publishes a listing of their
films available at 101 Wende Hall !Main
Street! . o r call 831 -2426.

*fi'Ht-#•

~~~ A~. **~I!J!J~.iG~:ilt.ft~. jal)t;I;C~Jlt~:fr~·~

~ ftfl*s~-~ #l!*~:fr*~~~~~·~-~~~

~- ~~•~•~~"~a~~"m~~~~~~~

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. i9 7Q~7.9?.!Hl

L.-"- ........ -

bythoOfllooofc:-.1-

• See 'hoghliglns' tor -

'"'*TICkets, where required , are avaolable at

I p.m~ Men 's Basketball. U/B vs.
Fredonia . Clark Gym. Free with 10.

the Squire
Hall Ticlcet Offooe lin advance) ; remaining ticlcets at ·
the door one hour befors event. 1.0. cards must be
presented in or.., to purchase tickets at
Student/Faculty/Stall/ Alumni rate.

MUSICAL PLAY
Molly'$ Df'Nm, by Maria Irene Fornes.
directed by Erica Wohl. 8 : ~ p.m. See
January 31 listing .

2
S.IUrdey

RLM ~ING/DISCU1810N
Evenongs for N- Film: /(tlf)(l(1th
Anger. • Albright-Knox A" Gallery
audotonum. 8:~ p .m . General edmis·
sion $2, students and Gallery members
$1 .50. Sponsor: Center lor Media
Study. Albright-Knox Art Gallery,
Medoa Study/Buffalo.

MUSICAL PLAY
Molly'a DrNm. by M- l r - Fornes.
directed by Enc8 Wohl. Off-Center
Cabarel , Center ThMtre, 681 Main St.
B:3&gt; p rll- Generel ed!TMSSIO!l $2 in advance. $2 50 et the door Sponsors:
Center lor Theatre Research , Buffalo
Performance Co. &amp; CETA / Po\L Special
Pr()J8CIS AdministratJon.

MUSICAL PLAY
Molly's Df'Nm, by Maria Irene Fornes.
directed by Eroca Wohl. See January
· 31 los tong Performances at 8 · ~ &amp;
10· ~p . m

7
n.u..dey

WllfTEII CARNIVAL f.VENTI"
AI day: snow .culpturong in delignated

-~--...

8rMSicell836-2960) .
11 ......~ p.m.: Five wonw IPOIU

r11m1

Squn Center Lounge Free
I p.m.: Mmi~athon - 3-mite indoor
run. The Bubble, Amherst C8mpus
._... p.m.: Moood doutl* tennts tour,__, The Bubble. Amherst Campus

7:JI.10:JO p.m.: SQuare Oenoa.
Follmor• Room. Squore Hal. Free
I p.m.·1 a.m.: Re~ S!*MI
Wltlgs, Pllllt Open moke Squore H1141

WINTER CARNIVAL EVENTS•
10 Lm ~ Snow sculpturing contest
judgong. can 636-2950 lor location.
10 Lm.~ p.m.: 8roomball tournament.
Lake LaSalle, Amhe(St Campus.
1G-.JD Lm.-1 p.m .: CAC's Winter
Wonderland. Follmore Room , !.quore
Hall.
N~ p.m.: tee skating to music.
Lake LaSalle ice skating area . near
Elhcon Complex. Amherst campus.

I p.m.-fllidnltht: Pub Speoal. Ellicott
Pub.

· ·

WltfTP CARNNAL EVENTS•
I p.m~ The Roche$, with Bulfalo's
Kathy Moria"y on the bil Wor&gt;e and

a - wol be e8fVed. Fillmore Room.

Sqvora Hal Advano~~ sale: Students
$2.60, non-sludeOa $3.60 Day of
show· a1 tictea $4.

I
Setunt.y

CONCERT
Weerhe&lt; RtlpOfl, Columbia recording
a rtists . Shea's Buffalo Theater. 8 p .n o
Advance sale· Students $4.50, $5.60;
Generel admiSSion $6.50. $7.60 Day ol
show· ill ticltets $6.60. $7 .50. Sponsor· UUAB Musoc Comrrnttee.

. SEMINAR
Community Contnbutions.-Jhe semina•.
will discuss volunteerism and the
development and operatoon of
volunt- organuatoons. ExhlboiS wiN
describe the venous volunt- ager&gt;Cie'
IRed Cross, Gorl Scouts, ADS. etc.l
located In Buffalo. 167 FoNmore. Ell!cot

,

�DANCIIIiiUeiC

Zoc/8que t:::Jent» c~. with gues1
artists. The 8uffWo Guiulr Ouartet·

"Ouertet/Ouenets.... 8 p.m . S4e
February 15 listing.

MUSIC

FriniJ A~ Boldr, piano;
Thomas ~. violin. Faculty recital.
General admission $3, faculty, ~ff.
alumni and senior citizens $2, Stlldents
$1 . Spc)nsor: Department of Music.

DANCE/MUSIC
ZoditJqut1 O.nc. Company, with guest
artists, The Bufftllo GuitJJr Q~t:
"Ouartet/Ouartets." • 8 p.m . See
February 151isting.

MUSIC
Concsrro Vocele !VISiting Artist

Series), a Europe-based baroque
ensemble. Judith Nelson. soprano;
Rene Jacobs, countertenor; William
Christie. harpsichord. General admission $4; faculty, staff, alumni and
senior citizens $3, students St . Sponsor: Oepartment of Music.

DANCE/MUSIC
Zodiaque Danes Company, with guest
artists. The Buffalo Gui/Jir Quarret:
" Ouartet/Ouartets .... See February 15
listing. Note: Performance at 3 p.m .

MUSIC
Evenings for New Music: Aki
Takahashi, l)ianist and 1980 Creative
Associate in her Ame•ican performan
debut . Baird Hall. 8 p.m . General admission $3, students. U/8 community
and senior citizens $1 . ADS vouchers
accepted. Sponsors: Center of the
Creative and Performing Arts and
Department of Music.

2&amp;
Mondr(

Complex. Amherst Campus. Regostratoon· 9:30a .m. Wrap-up sessoon: 2:30
p m . RegistratiOn fee $5 foncludes
lunchl. Sponsors: lntenSMI English
Language Institute, Buffalo World
Hospitality AssociatiOn, National
AssociatiOn for Foreign Student Af 13Jrs.

.......
10

11
Monot.y

13

w-...s.y

14

n.u...My

11

F"*Y

mission $4, students and senior
citizens $2. ADS vouchers accepted.
Sponsor: Center for Theatre Research .

11
s.turday

MUSIC ·

Baird ConctJrTo Compati rion Finllls•

MUSIC

B111rd Reatal Halt. 1 p m . Free. Sponsor: Department of MuSIC.

Elenonl Stlib. piano. Faculty recital .
Baird Recital Halt. 8 p.m . General admission $3, faculty , staff, alumni and
senior citizens $2, students $1. Sponsor: Department o! Music.

MUSIC
BuffiJio PhilhlltmOIIic Friends: Lmda ·
FISCher, v10hn; Cheryl Gobbeno. flute;
Penny Anderson, viola; Takesho
Moneta, cello, Jane Carey, harpsochord .
Ba11d Recital Halt. 8 p.m . General admiSSion $3, faculty, staff . atumm and
- seniOr citozens $2, students $1 Sponsor · Department of MuSIC.

MUSIC
Columbitl Stnng QUIIrret IVoswng Artist
Seuesl 8enjamon Hudson. former
Creatove Assocoate. os forst voolomst.
Ba11d Reate! Halt. 8 p m . Works by
Mozart, Ravel. Berg General adrnissoon $4 , faculty. staff, alumno and
_,..,. cotozens $3, tudents $1 Sponsor · Department of MUSIC

MUSIC
COfriPO$erS FotrJm Graduate student
composers 8aord Recotal Hall 8 p m .
Sponsor : Department ot Music
Fr

DANCE/MUSIC
Zodiaque O.n&lt;» Company, With guest
en ts. The BufiiJio GuitM QUIIrret:
" Ouenet/Ouartets ... Center Theatre,
681 M..., StreeL 8 p.m General ad-

Oflloe fit CoAnl AfWnl
411 C...,'- 8UifYM

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

........,
17

211
w..._..

MUSIC

Unillersiry Phi/harmonia, James
Kasprowicz, director. Holy Trinity
Lutheran Church. 8:15p.m . Free.
Sponsor: Department of Music.

DANCE/MUSIC
Zodillqutl O.ncs Company. with guest
artists. The Buffalo GuitJJr Quarrel:
··ouartet/Ouartets:·· 8 p.m . See
February 15 listing.

DANCE/MUSIC
Zodequt1 Dance Company, with guest
artists. The Buffelo GuitJJr QUIIrtet:
" Ouartet / Ouartets." • See February 15
listing. Note: Performance at 3 p .m .

MUSIC
Harrison Birrwlstle, well-known British
composer and former U/B Visiting
Slee Professor of Composition . Mr.
Birtwistle will discuss his composition
methods. in conjunction with a perfor.mance of his work. Baird Hall, Room
101. 10 a.m . Free. Sponsors: Center of
the Creative and Performing Arts and
Department of Music.

21

T...-y

MUSICOLOGY LECTURE
Herberr Kellman, • professor of
Musicology, University of Illinois. Baird
Hall. Room 101. 4 p.m. Free. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

MUSIC

'

Ronald Richarr:ls, oboe; O.rlerre
Reynard, bassoon. Faculty recital.
Baird Recital Hall. 8 p.m . General admission $3, faculty. staff. alumni and
senior citizens $2, students $1. Sponsor: Department of Music.

MUSIC
Rowe String Ouarret: Slee Beethoven
String Ouartet Cycle IV. Baird Recital
Halt . 8 p.m . General admission $4,
faculty. steff, alumni and senior
citozens $3, students $1 . Sponsor:
Department of Music.

PO£ntY MADINQIDISCUSSION
Selections from Robert Creeley's most
recent book. Lllter, to be read and
cliscus.d by Creeley fans. If you're
one of them. you're invited to participate or hsten. Bring a copy of the
book, if you have one, says organizer
Art Efron, professor of English . Faculty
Club Red Room. HarTm..n Lobrary,
M31n Street Campus. 8 p.m.
Free.Sponsor: English Department's
Gradual Program of Literature and
Socoety

Exhibits
Lee Chesney: 25 Y8BIS, A Relrospactive •2nd Floor
Gallery, Bethune Hall fArt Departmentl. Through
February 22. Call Art Department for hours:
' 831-5251.

19th end 20th Century Quilt$ On loan from private
collections and antique shops, and for sale. Alamo
Gallery, Beclc Hall, Main Street Campus. MondayFriday. 9-5. Free. Sponsor: V.P. for Health Scien..--es
and Department of Art. Through February 26·.
SurgiallnstromeniS, on loan from the Smithsonian
Institution . Most of the 18th century instruments
belonged to George Washington's physician. Dr.
Charles McKnight. The exhibit also displays
obstetrical instru.ments of the 18th and 19th century.
Health Sciences library. Main Street Campos, first
floor. Through March.
Wort from the Unillersity •r Buffalo Collection
Capen Inner Gallery, 5th floor Capen Hall, Amherst
Campus: February 4-March 3. Monday-Friday, 9-5
p .m . F -. Sporl80f: Department ~rt .

Monog,_,.. of 1978-79 by the Faculties of Social
.Scienoas and Humanities, School of Information and
libraty Studies, School of Socoal Woit&lt; and the
School of M8l\8QIIO*lt. Loctwood Mernon.l Library
foyer and Art Library. February 1-29.

4.

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....,

U I 8 leadership strong, evaluators find
Despite oome problems, U/ B ,II ~
good condition, and Its leaclcnhtp Is
strong.
That's how Chaneellor Clifton Whar·
ton pAraphrased the findings of the ~­
member ~ which visited the campus
last laB to review its condition and Ioder·
ohtp .
In lransmltting the paMI'o repoct to the
SUNY Board of T....- Tuadey,
Wharton said fi, · p r - a candid look
at both the strengths and problems" Ill the
University.
The team determined the campus to be
In good condltlon, Wharton emphasized .
with "strong adl!rinlslratlve, faculty. staff
and student leadership." The vllllorscon·
eluded . Wharto n noled, "!hal this strong
leadership 1$ fuUy capabk! of overcoming

the current problems.. •
The C hancellor saki he fuUy concur. in
thl$ finding and 1$ "confident In the con·
'tinued provision of outstanding educa·

llonal ol ....,.._._.
After cllsc:-g the report . the
T ruotees lloued the following resolution
"In ~ of" his leaclcnhip:
"WHEREAS thiS Board , as pert of lis
continuing review of State Unlverslly of
New Vork•s campuHS and their
preoidents who .,.., at the p&amp;e....,.e of
the Board . hM NCeived the 'Report ol
lhe Vlsill~&gt;j Team to Review the Leader·
ohlp Mid campus Condfiion of the State
lJniveslly of New York at Buffalo" dated

the v-.g team's report to the u-.;,y
at Buffalo campus community and lhe
Chairman of tJ&gt;e Board Is requested to
adviM President Ketter of the Board's ap·
.,-rk&gt;n of hi$ leaderohip owr lhe past
ten years and express lis continued sup·
port ol hiS administration .·

JA!:'~~

John E . Corbally . Chairman .
(President- Emerfius and Dtstinguished
Professor of Higher Education. Untvermy
olllfinots.)
David Z. Robinson (VIce President.
Carnegie Corporation).
tdwin Young (President . University of
Wisconsin).

=

Board has discussed

the report wllh Chancellor Wharton and
Robert L. Ketter. President of the Univer·
slry at Buffalo, In accordance wfih the
'Guidetines lor the Review Process for the
Presidents'. ad o pted by Resolution
79- 157; dated June 27 . 1979 now,
therefore. be it
"RESOLVED that the Chancellor be.
and hereby 1$. a uthorized to disseminate

Tat of Report
The text of the report follows :

T-

Procedure
The

team

visited

SUNYAB

on

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

November 11- lj. 1979~by
Mumoy Block ollhe Olanc:dor"• Clf6cc.

SUNY. During that period the members
ol the team held individual or
group
dllcuulonl with approximately 150
members ol the SUNYAB community.
These individuals Included members ol
the College Council , the UB Foundation ,
the UB/ SUNY AB Alumni Association.
the Community Advisory Group. plus
members of the faculty . profesoional stall.
student body. and administration of
SUNYAB. Several "Interested citizens"
who are not officially memberS of any of
these groups also sought and received
time with the team.

oman

There Is great interest in this procea at

S UNY AB and the team received many
requests from Individuals who wished to
be heard and also received ouggestions of
people who should be heard. The team
ho nored every request and suggestion

• -"'•--.·-n.-.t
JAN. 24, 1980

VOL. 11 e NO. 16

Budget
details
sketchy

Physics is _O K'
Three years of tense waiting end
as State Education Department approves
doctoral program 'without qualification'

By U ncia G race-Kobas

.

a-..s..~

Mort than three years of tense wa~ing
and hard worlc fmafty ended lor the
Physocs Depanment last week when formal conllrmation came from the Com·
mlotiiOner of Education that its doctoral
program had been r
nrd to the stlltus
of "approval wfihout quablltlllion "
"Thlo ~o· a very happy itory for us. •
Akn I hara . Physics chaor~ For
almot1 two years, ha added •.h has been
almost "'completely occup~ed"' W1th
deve~ the Ph D. J)&lt;Q!Ifam
The Ph)IID Department rece.ved o jOlt
In 1974 when o SW. EdUQI!on Depart·
projtcl revorw commm gave only
a thrft·year corubuonol approval to its
doctoral program Amoog recommenda·
lions 1'\aM by the EO comiNil at ~
I
Wft« tri\PfO"Cd l'hY*:al f
IPh)IID was
on
Sir
then) .
Mid en .....,_ ., you
facul!y
The com
oted a
~ sp and •lacll of mora
.,.,.,... itudent

"'""*

F~ar of a phue-out
Smce then , the SE'D has suspended
programs In chemistry at SUNYI Albany
and In physics at Binghamton . adding to
!ears that a gradual phase-out of doctoral
r~h:::':.'tc~ . was belng implemented .

It was only a "total effort "' on the part of
the admlnlstration and department that
led 10 UfB"s very positive rabng . ls!hara
believes.
" Everyone worked very hard. wrth
much departmental cooperation and the
£Uppor1 of tha admlni !ration . especially
(Dean ol the Faculty of Natural Sciences
and Mathematic$) Duwayne Anderoon
and NiG• Pr sident for Academic AHairsl
Ronald Bunn. "'ho came to the deparl·
ment and consuhed With us it length.· he
said lsihara noiA!d that the two ad·
mlnlstiators occomphshed th "almost
1mpoaible• ta of findmg seed money
for new fecutiy

fn • tat ment •ubmttted to the SED
Doctoral Projoct commllt by Presid nt
August , Ketter em ·

Robert L K - Ia

phasiz.ed his commitment to developing

U/ B as a "first-class center of study and
research .'"
.. As programmatically the most exten·
slvely developed Univershy C«nter m

SUNY . (U/ B) remain• com mined in its
mission to be.tng

a comprehensive center

of undergraduate. graduate and profes·
siOnal ln5tructlon and research : ' the
statement feads Kener also noted 1hat .. a
program of research and scholarship in
physics at the doctoral level IS imponant
1n stimulating iind supporting ocuvit~es:
important to the economk: , sdenuf.c and
technologtcaW!_evelopment. ol the surrounding comrnt.~nlry ..
Dram•tl c tu·r n·around
Prnldent Ketler'S report also revt!als a
dramat.C tum-around tn funded rue rch
propose and facul!y productivity
eW grant support jumped from a Jaw
S28.3451n 1973· 74 to S480. last year
During 1978 79, 7 per cent ol the
departmental fecuby publi•hed one or
_ _ ... ..... _ l t , cot. •

Cha ncellor Clifton R. Wharton looked
sharply at a newspaper reporter in
Albany Monday and declined to say
" even o ne singte word" ebout Governor
Hugh L Carey's Executive Budget pro·
posal for the fiscal year beginning April I .
Tha reportet had a copy of the budget.
but Wharton dldn ' t.
Much the same kind of com~n ts
came from U/ B administrators on Tues·
day and early Wednesday when asked to
interpret the budget's implica'fions for this
campus. They might be charged with
overseeing expenditures in excess of
$140 million . but the way the State
budget works , they were "temporarUy"' in
the dark,. concerning the spending plans
for the comjng yea[ - and wouki be until
Chancellor Wharton and SUNY campus
presidents finished .an intensive briefing
session on the budget in Albany late
yesterday afternoon. laSl night and
perhaps a.s you read this. some implica·
lions came or are coming into focus in
Capen Hall. but as the Reponer went to
press Wednesday only this much was
clear:
• U/ B will not receive everything
asked for in ils budget request . The re·
quest was for $108.57 million ; the.
recommended appropriation . according
10 newspaper reports , Is $I 07 I million .
• While this represents a "' modest" in·
crease over lass year. mflation and ma n·
dated salary Increases probably will chew
up mos1 of 1t
• Certain specific req uests {for exam ·
pie, lor 52 maintenance poootions. for
funding lor the Regional E.&gt;onomlc
Assistance Center . and for an extra
S69.000 for graduateleUowshfps) do not
.seem to be lncluded .
• The Budget propooal spedfiGaUy
delete• seven faculty and 12 support
pos1tion5. It was not Immediately clear
how these relate to cuts already JT\41n·
dat&lt;'d by the Divisio n ol the Budget
(R•porter. Jan 17 .)
• SUNY has been told to eUmlnote
1.125 authorozed posotlon• as part of
Carey's mandate to cut 10.000 unhlled
jObs throughout State government
SUNY has ma&lt;e than .1 . 125 bn s cur·
rently unfilled . and has been operating
under a vacancy ceiling somewhat h;gher
than this
• Funds for meettng accredrtaHon
needs of the School ol Dentistry, re ·
quested as a separat package . are not
tncluded In th budge! prOposal There
wa , ho\ltle\fer . a prom1se to address
·the n d1 on the supplemental budget
later on.

�I

l

.:

'

,

.I

January 24. 1980

IDA loan could
mean business..
for Parcel . B·

A $1.5 million lndullrlal O.Wiopment
loan could make the long-awaited
Follett's Boolutore building on Parcel B a

of $500,000 has been "pared out" of the
initial plans, without affecting function,
space or aesthetics. Blueprints still call lor
reality in the not too distant future, the
between 20,000 and 25,000 square feet
Repotter has learned. (Parcel B Is the flat,
of space and for extensive use of skylights
and. clerestory windows lor both natural
clured tract of land south of Ellicott and
lighting and eye appeal. An "elaborate
of Lake LaSalle! .
entrance" with Imposing glass panels and
The bookstore would spur other retad
developmenls on the sile, indMduals
"sheared-off' corners is also still lnclud·
IISIOCiated with the U/ B Foundation, · ed.
"We can't reduce coils any further and
Inc ., hope . The Foundation several years
ago entered Into a lease with the State . still have a viable building," Delle Bout
said . This Imposes a need lor a "preferen·
University Board of Trustee• to use the
tial financing arrangetnent."
16.9-acre parcel as a site for commerdal
DeDe Bout explained that both the In·
developments serving the campus com·
duslrial Development Authority of the
munhy.
Town of Amherot and the Erie County
fall-food restaurants, banks, barbers.
movies· and office space have all been
IDA are awaiting word from their legal
counsel .in New York CHy on whether or
proposed under various $Chemes and
not the project qualifies for special !inane·
revisions. AI one point, a maD concept
was advanced; that gave way to the idea
lng under State legislation. They expect a
decision "sometime this week:· Delle
of a cluster of smaller ladl~les In a park·
like setting A motel was considered feasi·
Bout looks lor a favorable ruling.
II the project qualifies. the IDA could
ble at one point.
sell tax-free bonds to finance II . The
. A major problem associated with the
development Is a rigid architectural stan·
bonds would probably be bou,9ht by a
local bank. Beinl! tax -free makes the
dard imposed by the State .
bonds .. a mot 1 eresting inveslment.''
Everything built on Parcel B must conform to "the architectwal vocabulary"
DeDe Soul assessed.
of the remainder of tl)e campus. Simply
Not a glve·away
put . John M. Carter of the U/ B Founda·
The develOper-consultant emphasized
lion, Inc. said in 1976. "this means that
that th is approach to funding Is "no
construction will be more complex and
cosily · than that being deslgned for
giveaway program ·· No tax dolUirs are
involved and there IS no guarantee of
general commerlcal purposes elsewhere
repayment by anyone other than the
in the area .... We can't just throw up a
priuately·owned Follen·s firm .
cement block shell, lor example," Carter
Delle Bovi estimates construction costs
continued .
at around SLI million . with the additional
$400.000 be10g sought going lor
Piau cut-back
·•other costs.··
Follett's. which at one point had e«·
He and Carter agree that " of this project
petted a start on bookstore construction
can be bu11l and proves profitable . then
last June (Reporkr. April19, 1979) . has
we can entice others to build here ."
found just how expensive building on the
"'Retail space on a University campus is
tract can be .
dlllicuh to sen:· Delle Boui noted . ··u this
Its lnhial plan for a pre-cast concrete
building has had to be mod~ied to a less
succeeds. though. then others will lind
cosily brick-and-steel deslgn . another
Parcel 8 more anractive ."
$200,000 was saved by changes in air·
Delle Soul is associated with the local
conditioning and other mechanical
Fornaslero Development Corp . which is
Interested in the proposed hotel office
sysl ms. Carter said in December
Ben Delle Soul, a local real estate
-building complex In the vicinity of Main.
Genesee. Huron and Chippewa streets
developer who Is assisting both the Foun·
dation and Follett's. confirms thlll a total
downtown

Registration being smoothed;
it's as good as the next guy's
Executiw V~ee President Albert SomH .
who Is currendy overseeing an ad hoc
Uniuenhy committee on registration ,
!eels that while U/ B's registration process
Is far !rom perled , h's stiU "as good as
those found In moll lnslltutions of com·
parable
and cornplexHy "
Through cloM examination of the pro·
cas with an eye toward its ref10ement ,
Sornw SOld. tho panel has discovered
that n:&gt; lldequat liaison exi&gt;ted between
. Admlulon and Records and the Compuling CAnter; that the Student Accounts
Offaco was not providing up-to-&lt;latoinlor·
motion, creeting unnecessary~
slluatlons lor studertts; and that. largely
becouse of established laissez-lalre prac·
ticft, departrnen wore C&lt;iuslng reglstre·
lion snotls by moklng too many lasl
mtnule cltonges In course ollerings.
To help alleutate tensions, SomK ..ld
the committ e recently proposed that
departmen not to be perrnlt1ed to mak
coursa cheng 1 eJtor m id- March
0..~ after Jan 25 - the deadline lor
cornpkling proltrn1nary IChedules - can
only be made wtth pmnt...on from the
.ppropna dean and
If this procedure Is lono-.1, sludenta
be eblo to '"""" the Unlvenity tn May
•
a Inn IChedulo tn hand ," he

cn-m.n

~

SomK ~tmattd that llgnlhcant irn·
~ts~won't be f k lor two
to tine yeers But """' firm ocheduhng
M&gt;d on lone r 1r
• th
• dro9 and """ 1m "should
ap·
r

... .

~,.,

• llboul

doer

thanen ·
fie

Ill

1y. observed Somlt. He explained that
facuky fail to realize that similar, ff not
more Slringent schedules are imposed at
other ~rge universities across the coun·
try.
To help solve problems caused by
"prime-time" (morn ings and no Fridays)
schedullng, the comm1ttee has also sug·
gestod that departmehts experiment with
moving required or popular courses to

len favorable . and consequently
underutilized . time dots.
The question remains, however ,
whether departments with enrollment dil·
licuhies wiU heed the recommendation•.
or ~students will change their $Cheduhng
habits to take preferred courses at oil·

lima or IUbstitute others.
There are two ways that scheduling
can be handled , Som~ offered : by arbitrary computer distribution . or by settl·
lng lor en "optimal moder' reached
through compromise. Tradlllonally, op timal models have fared much better at
Institutions than the computer approach ,
he expleined Hopefully, U/ 8 wUI be able
to establish one that is conducive to "ra ·
tronal programming ."
.
Also expected to facil11at smoother
registration , vice pr~en .will be given
dAta on the. closed sections covering a
six senwster period, added Assistant Executive VIM President Robert Wagner .
The information mould make.~ easier
to dctennlne - mor sections of a par·
bc:Uiar course ohould be offered Th11
year, SornM ind . t d that an InsuffiCient
number of 100 louet courses wore
evwW&gt;Ie to fr shmen. thus c.uslng them
OHdlt• hud.ches

Buses leave before .dawn
for Albany protest trek
WHh the threat of retrenchment loom·
lng over SUNY, United University Prolassions (UUP) has decided to slage
"Save-SUNY Day" January 291n Abany
to dramatize to State officials that dire
consequences will result from further
budget cuts to the State University
system .
· Buffalo Center UUP Chapter President
WUUam AUen calls the rally a "critical, all out" union effort . Up lo 10 buses wiU be
prepared to leave the Ridge Lea O.mpus
before dawn (5 a .m .! next Tuesday. he
says, to arrive In Albany by 11 a.m . lor a
demonstration at the capitoL Several
thousand people from around the State
are expected .
After the rally , Allen said that an "In·
tensiue , coordinated lobbying effort" Is
scheduled In order to drive the message
home to elected officials.
The trip, which Is costing the Buffalo
Center Chapter approximately $5,000
(not Including the amount being expended by the Health Sciences chapter) , Is be·
lng coordinated with the CivU Service
Employees Association (CSEA) and the
Student Association of State University
(SASU) . Buffalo State Is organizing stiU
another group .
Participants should bring a thermos
and lunch . Food wUI be provided lor the
return trip . Buses are expected to return
to Buffalo at about 9 p .m. Tueoday.
U.st morith at a lAbor-Management
meeting, Allen said, President Ketter
reported that ~ "things remain unchang-

ed," then "serious consideration" will
have to be given to retrenchment here.
Such a10oue , Allen predicted, will have a
"disastrous effect on the University,"
perhaps casting a "mortal blow" in his
view.
Since lacuhy wiU be the group most
adversely affected, Allen urged them to
"!Jet out of the library to save their jobs.
"II faculty can't glue one day, H's ques·
tionable what the union can do lor them.
I think the saying 'The Lord Helps those
who help themselves' Is applicable here,"
he added.
Allen estimated that students will fill a
bus and one-hall. A good number of pro·
lessional staff and CSEA me mbers have
also Indicated they will attend . Their par·
ticipation "Is a real sacrifice," Allen noted ,
since both employee groups must use
vac.aUon time to go.
A legislative specialist affiliated with
NYSUT. UUP"s parent union. told union
leaders recently that Governor Carey
wants to cut SUNY's budget because he
has .. national ambitions" and wants to go
on record as a fiscal hardliner ..... Allen
relayed .
Moreover, AUen said the group was
told that "no objective need" exists lo cut
SUNY staff considering the State had a
$1 billion surplus last year and is accruing
extra funds from gasoline sales taxes.
SUNY also put In effect a tuition hike
which supposedly brought In $90 miUion
extra to State coffers, Allen contended.

Census enumerators can earn
.crec;lit by enrolling here
Enumerators hired lor the 1980 census
will have an opportunhy to combine In·
temship experience whh academic train·
ing at U/ B.
Dr. Constantine A. Yeracaris. chair·
man of the Department ol Sociology (and
key Slatistical areas person for Western
New York lor the Bureau oft he CenousJ ,
will coord1nate the program .
Eight University departments are set to
provide Census enumerators with a series

of workshops and lectures on relevant
toplco including anthropology. black
studies. communication , .geography,
linguistics. pohtical science. ulban studies
and sociology
Eight to ten lectures of one to two
hours each will be offered to those
enumerators who qualify. starting with
the latter part of March and running
through the end of Aprill980.
Those wishing to translate their work as
enumerators mto college credit shoula
contact Dr Yeracaris at 636 2417 To get
thr e college crellit hours for the ex perience, enumerators will be expected
to r · ler Ill an independent study
course eulgned through Millard FWmore

.&lt;W'CI ~Ill » qiDQ_clwision..QI

U/B .
Ahhough H Is anticipated that the bulk
of enumerators will be seeking
undergraduate credit . 91aduate students.
upon consuhation with faculty, may also
make arrangements to receive graduate
credH.
Yeracarls said enumerators will be
working on either a part-or·full-tlme basis
with the Bureau of the Census during the
months of March . April and May.
Dependln!l upon their performance. they
may quality lor lull time employment dur·
ing the summer mon(fb as weU.

Jobs not covered
The Supreme Court lasH!(eek let stand
throe lower-court decisions ll&gt;at employ·
menl practices are nol covered by the ban
on sex discrimination under Tltlo IX of
the Education Amj!n&lt;)ments of 1972.
two judges agreed to hear the cases
while lour VOles are necaoary. Federal
appeals courts In Boston , Cincinnati and
Sl louis ruled unanimously that HEW
lacked authonty to ....,. rogulalions on
ae drscn!f1)oatiqn JObs unsll'f Tltle )){.

9n1v

�'.NarOII named
cdlstingulsbed
,profesi)Or'

Dr. George R. ' - - . lleen of the
Facuhy ol Ads and l.ellen. is chairing a
joint UniWally-Comnwnhy f'lUidentliol ·
Commluu charged wllh oelecUng
"monumenlllr sculpture for the Amhem
Campw.
In a memo to committee f'PPOintees
issued on December 18. Pnsident Robert
l Kelter said he created the panel in
response to a proposal he .received last
summer from levine. Willard R. Hams.
chairman of the Department o4 Art and
Art· Histor:y: and Nina .Freudenheim..
director of the Freudenheirn Gallery.
KQIIer said he supports the thrust of
that ProPosal and Is prepared " to do aU..
he can ''II&gt; hnplernent the commiUee's
final recom.mendaUons ...
Essentially. the proposal caUs lor the .
pa nel to select live to six already com. pleted works of art and to loc.ate them in
various spots on tlie campus for a period
of one year. After that year. one work will
be selected for purchase and wiU remain
permanently on campus.
Ketter said the first phase of the commfftees efforts. the selection of the ·
sculpture. should be completed by
February of this year.
Joining Harris and levine on the panel
are Robert Buck. director. Albright-Knox
Art Gallery: Esther Haniott. pnesidential
assistant for cultural affairs; W. Duayne
Hatchell . Department of An and Art
History; Seymour H Knox. Marine
Midland Bank-Western . and Robert I.
Millonzi. chairman of the University
Council and loc.al arts patron. Ms.
Fr~udenhelm is serving as a consuhan1. ·
Taward the goal of meethg a deadline
of having the pieces .In place by April ,
levine convened the fuD panel on Mon day of this .....,k to view slides of approx·
imately 20 pieces of sculpture previously
~ned by a subcommittee.
{

S60.000boo4tlet
A budget of $60.000 has been suggested for the projed.; $10.000 lor .
lransportallon of the art works to and
from campus and for instaftation of
sculpture. and $50.000 lor the purchase
of the selected pi&lt;!ce at the end of the
year. Dean Levine.. in consultation with
the research ofloce. will apply for a grant
from the National Endowment on the
Arts under the An in Public Places Program These grants are awarded on a
matching basis and the University will
have a _year in which to raise the rernain·

~

The SUNY Board of TrUslees has ~
pointed Dr. Raoul Nerofl to the pos1 ol

Dlotinguished ~ .
A professor of compara Uv~ an thropology, Dr. Naroll has- since 1973.
been president of the Human RelatJons
Alee Files.·an international association of
22 lns!ltu!lons w h ich d istributes
bibliographic Information on human
behavior and societies throughout the
world .
Director of graduate studies In the
Deparlment · o f A nthrop olog y in
1978-1979. Naron has 23 years o4
teaching experience at undergraduall!
and graduate levels. His background Includes both undergraduate .ani! graduate
curriculum design ; depanmenll!l and
research adminislrallon, and field work in
Germany. Austria . Switzerland and

Greece.
-

lng $25.000. Levine said in the anginal
proposal he also expects to apply {pr o
grant through the Art in Architecture Program of the General Services Administration .

·

Levin~ . Hanis and Freudenheim made
the proposal to bring .. examples of
monumenllll sculpture to the Amherst
Campus in order to'"'beaulify the campus
as weU as to provide .both students and
faculty wllh the oppOrtunUy to appreciate
gre~t

an.··

The trio pointed out !hat sculptors face
unique proble.ms when a eating large
scale works. Space and costs are bolh of
serious concern as is the necessity of
finding a large enough storage spot lor a
finished piece not destined for a spec~ic

No-t always simple

location. Because of these reasons. the
drafters of the proposal pointed out . costs
of purchasing existing work&gt; are often
considerably less than those lor commls,.ioned workS. Also. p~rchasing sculpture
throus), this melhod makes II possible to
give a piece ••tryout" before a commit·
men I is made . A case In poinl ts the
George Segal commission from Kent
State University for a sculpture tO com·
memorate the death of students at the
hands of Nallonal Guard riflemen durtng
the protests of the 1970s. The University
rejected the mammoth work after compleUon. (See accompanying box.)

a

Art atuclenta Involved
. The sculpture for Amherst project is
also viewed as a way lo involve an
students and to enhance and expand the
Sludio program within the Department of
Art and An History. Sculpture students.
lor example. will be asked to assist
sculptors during insttlllation of their
works. Sculptors. an historians. gallery
and museum directors. and an critics will
be inviled to lecture on and discuss the
works.
The panel is expec1ed to select the live
lo six pieces of sculpture which will be
"·audit ioned" o' n the basis of
photographs. drawings and possibly. site
visUs. Ms . Freudenheim wiU contact
sculptors. make necessary arrangemenis.
present works for lhe committee's con·
skleralion. and assfst in the coordination
of delivery and inslllllatJon.
The: committee. In consultation with
the Vice Pl'l!sldent for FaciHUes Planning.
wiR ...,Iect locations at Amhersi where the
sculptures wiD be loc.ated The chairman
of the Art Department wiU be responsible
lor academic programs In conjunelion
with the project.
Among pieces idenlllled to date as
poulbiltlla for the project are abstract
works by sculpton such as Tony Rosen·
thai, Oldenberg, Beverly Pepper and
louise Newlson.
Pieces not oelecled for purchase will re·
~n on campu' unUJ such lime as
sclolplors wish to have them re1umed.
They will be returned at the University's
ex~nse

The propoool for 1he Proiecl recom·
m&lt;rnds that II ·the UnhlerJily wishes to
purchase addhional sculpture. H could
condllct llmllar ~ms annuaDy. In
t.d. lhe prop&lt;&gt;sal conducla. " lo hoped
this will be the beginning .of an on going
program I beau'*ation of the Amhem
&lt;Ampus.

Prior to )olqing U/ B In 1967. Naron
served as professor of anlliropology,
sociology - and political science at
Northwestern.
A graduale of UCLA. he has received
a number .of. awards and fellowships .
He has been a fellow -.t the Center for
Advanced Study ln the BehavioraJ
Sciences at Stanford. and has received '
lour grants each from lhe Nallonal ln~~~l:=.hh and t~ Natio¥1

According to SUNY policy. the title of
Distinguished Profess&lt;\f Is' conferred in
order " to recogniz€achievement of lame
and esteem In the field as a resuh of
original contributions. research findings
and training of Sludents." The adlon by
the Trustees recognizes Narolrs repJJlZIIion as the widely-published author of an
array of books. monographs and journal
articles.
He Is co-author of Militory Deterrence
In Hillary: A Pilot Cross-Hisloricol
Survev. which received wid~ recognition .
His jlublished work also includes crosscult ural. cross-historical and crossnational surveys. as weD as ethnographic
studies. He wrote a 1957 study on Iran
111hlch probes the soda) values. sodal
structure- and general characteristics of
the society.
The honor of Distinguished Professor
begins with a nomlnatJon from the loc.al
campus and Is supported by letters from
distinguished faculty outside SlAte
University.
Naroll Is • native of Can;sda.

·Levy solicits
nominees fo ..
research post
Dr. Gerhard levy, cheirman of the
search committee charged with seeking a
vice president lor research. requests
nomtn•tion• and applications for the
position.
The search commltlee is weldng a
"r.._.,ted scholar and experienced
research admin-or who wiD provide
leadership in enhancing the Unl-y's
research activities , In the development
and implementation of lnotllutional
research policies, and In the promoCion of
appropriate JelaUonships between
researc~ and instruction ...
The vice president for r..arch wiD also
be expected to "maintain elfectlw QPD! ·
munlcation" with gr•niiDQ .gendes,
foundlodono, in&lt;!UIIry, the University'•
Research Foundation, the biohazards
committee and the human ..bjec:q committeft .
The ..,polniee wiU be respontlble for a
sUIIf of professionals who the
faculty In obtaining and properly m.naging reMarch and training granto and
contr6ctl.
Dr. levy said '111&gt;Phca•lont we upecially invtled from
who qualify
lor a senior knured -.:adernic appoint·
-nl. Applicallons and nominations
should be IUbmitted by Fet~ruuy 15, lo
Dr. Gerhold levy, ~ . Sarch
Commtuu loo- Vice Pre&amp;kknt 'for
~. cJo Pre.ldent'o Office. 503
Capen Hal, State Unlwnlty of New
York ot Bu!IU&gt;, Amherst, New York
14260.

candidates

�J.,uary 24. 1980

7th Cavalry won't .
save
you, avows Allen
.,.._,
I know that many of us have welched.
with growing dismay. the tnaeasingly

.,.inS news about the D.O .B.'s plan•
for staff cuts &amp;om SUNY. This Is not
oomc pout,illly but a directive to
eliminate pennanenUy by the end of this
4751ines. U/B'• lint lnslallment
Is 33 lina before March 31 wtth more still
.by June.
•
·
S4nce thlo comes aher repeated earlier
freezes and ellrltlon losses curtailed mosl
of U/B' flni6JIIty, we are fast
· approachlr1g the point where "cuts" are
going to mun just what they sound like.
ft Is W.. who are on the chopping block.
Tho... who understand this are saying
"Why doesn't 5&lt;&gt;&lt;TM!One do oomethlng
abouttl;&gt;ls?"

&gt;

mechanism for organizing It• ........... to
ddend their own collective ln....-.
U.U.P . lo not golng ·to save SUNY for
you. WorK _still:; it is not even going to,
oave your job from being cut. You are or K you don~ . then it l5r\t going to happen.

,._

Hand surgery Is· an
expanding· specialty

Edllariol---

lltr ~ lledt s,lola

A ~eeneger's hand. Scimoft
severed In an accl·
dent. Is successfuOy reattached. The
grotesquely gnarled. arthritic joints of an
-elderly women's fingen are replaced .
And an infant's index flngen are •urglcal·
ly tran$p05ed to provide his missing
thumbs. ·
The5e and thousands of other In·
dMjuals are bendiparies of _evolving
techniq'!es. knowledge and lnstrumenta·
t1on which are being nsed to restore 11t·
ceptabk levels of function to ftngen and
hands ra-.aged by accldents. illnesses or

From what rve seen of the plans •
"Save SUNY Day" could work. We C..
block the cuts; they are not dlclated by birth defects.
One of surgery's newest and. In some
declining enrollments but by a political
wayo. more dramatic sub-spec;ja~les.
decision . And we certainly have the oldlls,
!land surgery experienced its first major
the knowledge. and the lntdigence to
growth in the mid-1940s when thousands
reverse this decision: uniquely .so atn01111
of ooldiers returning home required fur·
our State's dlizens. But the only ones
ther treatment for war-related Injuries.
who wiU do tt Is we owwlves and that
Today. sayo Dr. Clayton A. Pelmer.
means the peroon you see in ~
technology has greaUy expanded the
every morning, not oomebody eloe. It
also means getting up at. 4 a .m . next
ourgical potential.
•
c.-lry~?
Director of U/ B's Hand Surgery SerTueoday to go to Albany and talk to
And now coma the 7th Cavalry In the
legislators. Thars a beginning, In a crisis • vice In !he Department of Orthopedic$.
form of '1be union" to save us aU , right?
Petmer has begun a departmental
situation . Committed and sustained effort
You read that U.U.P. has organized a
teaching program aimed at providing
must foDow.
"Save SUNY Day" to lobby the
So H lums out that there ion't any 7th
~rgical residents more comprehensive
legislature in Abany. We can aU relax.
Cavalry;
there's
just
us.
If
you
want
to
In diagnosis and treatment of
training
"They" will fix IL
harld problems. Some may ch005e to
Unfortunately Hdoesn't work that way.
uve your own pro ~al career (and
r
coBeague·s
t
e
our
campus
specialize
In surgery of the . hand. But
In the fint place. though U.U.P . has in·
lJ.U.P. office and we' reoervell place for
even those who donlt wiD learn to proper·
deed planned a raDv and lobbvin9 day in
you on our buses. arrange a visit to your ly cllagnose hand Injuries and will lind
Albeny on Jan . 29 (and SASU and
legislator's office In Albany, and pack you
that special techniques are pos~lble and
CSEA have agreed to help) , that means
a lunch . But the rest Is up to you per·
may be necessary in certain cases.
only that we've contacted legislators,
oonaUy.
chartered buMs. and ordered box . lun·
Sincerely,
Replac:cmenta .,_•t Ntlaf.c:tory
Ches: It doesn't lnoure that anyone will
-WilliamS. Allen
The Increasing interest In hand surgery
come to do the lobbying.
U/B Chapter President
can be partly credited to the Jack of a fully
Sadly. '1he union" Is not a magic wand .
United University Professions
satisfactory prosthesis lo replace missing
that works wonden. It is only a
hands . The availabl e artificial
replacements. says Pe.imer. simply aren't
as satisfactory In appearance and func·
tion as those used to replace missing
lower lim"bs.
"II a large portion of the hand is
severed sharply and there are relatively
The latent
Eolltor:
The Carter Administration is clearly
The Intent of Congress In pa55ing this few crushed or mangled parts of tissue to
law was clearly to limit the unilateral use reconnect. most hand surgeons wUI
contemplating the use of mdhary force
agalnol Iran in the event the ho5tages are
of force by the President to caoes which probably attempt reattachment." he sayo.
harmed. So far there has been ~ttle public
were critical to the national security of the If the patient is relatively young to
debate about the wisdom of such action .
United States and where time was of the middle-aged and ~ his or her continuing
and virtuaDy none about whether a
essence, A retaliatory attack on Iran in employment involves extensive hand
unilateral Presidential decision to use
the event of harm to the hostages !aUs function . surgeons may doubly agree that
force would be constitutional or legal
outside "these deliberately narrow clr· the po55ible risk of faUure Is far pref&lt;- l,le
under American law. In fact . in the sltua·
to the obvtou5 disability of a mi
g
cumstances:
t1on now lacing the natiOn . wlsdcm and
I. The President would not be respon· hand .
legalrty are lntqaUy related.
ding to an ongotqg attack but would be
While not all operations of thlo type are
The governing law here Is the War
punishing a pall one or seeking to deter successful (and it may take many month_s
Powers Resolution of 1973. whiCh In tum
similar attacks elsewhere .
to make that determination) . the ouccess
was Intended to clarify the ambiguity leh
2. In any case. the earlier Iranian attack rate of reattachments has been aided by
by the Con5tltution on the locus of the
on the U.S . Embauy wa5 not an attack development of techniques which allow
warmaklng -power In the American
on U.S . territory. for contrary to the com· surgeons to better · see and surgically
mon assumption. under international law
political oystem. Under that law. the
reconnect severed bJood vessels, nerves
President Is clearly prohbited from using
U.S . embassies abroad. though inviolable and tendons upon which hand function Is
force In Iran Without opeci{ic. prior
under the prinq&gt;le of diplomatic lmmunl·
dependent .
authorization ol Congre Section 2(c) of
ty. are not American territory.
Arthrtti5 patients with hand ddormtties
the law authortzes the President
3 . Threatened or actual harm to may benefit from replacement joints In
unGatotraUy to commft U.S mllltaoy forces
(lostages. grave as It would be . Is not the
wrist or fingers . The5e have aDowed
"Into hostlhtin. or SitUatiOnS where imml·
kind of national emergency envisaged by
many Who would otherwise be disabled
nent Involvement on ho5toloties is clearly
the law.
•
to enjoy improved use of their hands.
indicated by the drcumolanoes·· only in · a
4 . In retaUatory attacks there Is no
Hand surgeons. confronted with
critical urgency that would preclude Con- patl•nts whose thumbs have been
national emergency created by attack
upon the United States. tts terrbories or
gressional detiberation and debate.
·
severed or are mls5ing as the result of
posMssions. or Its armed forces... In aU
Not-leplha
birth ddects. can also now surgically
otha ~ the Pr~t must go 10
We are not talking about " mere transpose other fingers to provide
Congre for tt.ha declaration of war or
legali5m.. here. important as that Is In a
replacements nece5Sitr)l for grasping ob·
r;pedloc stalutory authonallon to use
country which purport• to be governed jects.
by the rule of law. We need to recaU the
fore~
In addition to tbeoe major injuries and
underlying purpooe of the War. Powers defonnitles. more frequent "garden
Reoolution, which was (as the preamble
variety" hand ln)uries. such as the hand
states) "to fuHiU the intent of the framero
sliced acddentaUy as an Individual cuts
of the Const.itutlon ..•and ln5ure that the
vegetables. also require attention.
collectlve judgment of both th• Congress
Since the range of Injuries and
..-.,..t
and the President wiU apply"' wherever
dloabilitles Is 50 t!road. many general
-~btl olw o..-n
force Is used. The use of force agalnst
surgeono are faced with the po5sibllity of
!on. -~ .. "- v...... 8ufWo .
Iran . whatever the provocation. could set
hand surgery.
[-..~ ..._
.. .. 136c..llo Hoi.
In moCion a chain of events In the Middle
""Physicians in rural areas or IINIO
,..,._. T.......... 6J6 26216
EM! and el5ewhere that would have In·
towns ohould treat theoc Injuries. K
calculable con•quences . . . .
they're wtthln the physician's liCOpe of
This Is not to prejudge tha question of
training and expertise." Pelmer points
.lAMES R o.sAtmS
whether force should be uoed. but merely .out. Local. appropriate treatment can
f.dllof .. a-1
to not that it Is predoely in such dr·
save both tranS!!Ortatlon Ume and addi- . r T. MARL£TT
cumstances that ..,., oorely need ''collec-tional medklal expenMJ. Only highly
tive jUdgment." arrived at aher fuU and
complex cases or those which the local
MIM,_
public debate. rather than the priv"'e
51Jll1C0n Is not adept at treaUng are usual.IOHI! A a.ouTIEII
)udgment of a handful of men In • the
ly rderred IO hand opeciallsts In major
executlw branch, arrived at In oecret and
metropolitan medical centers
-~
IC1VCf.
IUCHfOW5IQ
presented as a /Gil o&lt;:compli to the rat of
the
country.
Indeed
10
the
world
.
w.lofi,~U...
-~ St.ter
Hand surgery hoelf Is no4 ne,.•.
liNf IHIIAilf.R
ahh?'?' '!"'ny of u,&gt;e tecj&gt;nlques ~sed·~~~·. Polotlcal ~RCIC

Decision to use military force
said to call for public debate

A__._.....,--.,.,_AI·

_,,

__

n.. ..._, ...·t-

day evolved over the past 20 years.
General. orthopedk and plastic surgeons
tended these injuries long before a
surgical sUbsp~alty u..tas organized or
recognized .
··1n highly industrial areas like Buffalo.
where the likelihood of hand injuries Is in·
creased . there are usually sev..eral
surgeons who specialize In hand
problems. adding to their capabilities as
technology advances:· Peimer noJes.
The development of an!lbtotics and non·
reactive suture material for stitchh19
wounds. beller techniques .for wound
management. and improved optics and
instrumentation (whkh greatly magnify
tiny blood vessels. nerves and scraps of
tissue and tendon during surgical pro·
ceduresl have all contributed to ad vancements in the field .
Bu~. Peimer cautions. surgeons should
not allow the availabilily of advanced procedu res for reconnecting severed hands
and fingers or replacing disea~d joints to
outstrip reason
"People cen hilve functional hands
even if the liule finger Is missing or if a
!Inger jlp is accidentally sli~ed off. .. he
notes Many who have arthritis may not ·
have severe enough impairment of the
fingers to Wl!rrant ;oint replacements.
"For them. other procedures or use of~­
fect ive medication ml\y M indk.ated
first :· says Pelmer
Surgef\1 len't everything
The physlcial\ considering hand
surgery. thus. must ~eclde each case on
hs own merits. weighing the degree of
disability or deformlly os well as the
patient's functional. occuplllionftl needs
and the general risks and benefits of
surgery.
Surgery mfty restore a hand or a joinl.
but it will not. by llseK. provide the op·
timum degree ~ of restored function .
Therapy and rehabilitation . provided by
physical and occupational therl!pists. in·
crease rmd enhance sur~ry·s . effec·
tiveness. says Peimer.
Therapy usually Involves exercises to
strengthen the hand and increllse rftnge
of motion . Aclivlttes \AthK:h lead to im·
proved sensitivity are also u~d
··Younger patients are m¢re ftdaplable
than older ones in relearning funcl1on ...
Pelmer Sllys Sui young or old . patients
ore increasingly being helped

Summer forum
speakers listed
We haven't even had winter yet. but
planners for the Summer Sessions have
already lined up four speaken for the
Facuhy of Educational Studies' third on·
nual Wedneoday Forum oeries.
Already Scheduled are: Betty Frledan .
one of the mother. of the Feminist movRment whose Fcm;nlll. My&lt;Uque got things
rolling in the 1960s: Max Lerner. N. Y.
Post columnist. political economist,
author and educator; Kenneth E.
Bouldlng, the prolific director of research
on generaiiOdal and econom!Cllynamlc5
at the Institute of Behavioral Soience•
(University of Colorado) and board chair·
.man of the American Atooc:latlon lot the
Advancement of Science: and Seymour
Sara500 , founder of Yale's Psycho·
Educational Clinic.
Frieden will be here June 25;
Boulding, July 2: Lerner. J11ly 9 :
Sara500, July ~-

�January 24, 1980

Writing
It's a pain, a
joy, for Federman
who loves it
By Nina Sedita
liewoB&lt;nuuSI&gt;II

While he was working on his most
recently-published novel. The Voice in
the Closet. Raymond Federman 'was
continuaUy asked, "how's H coming
along?"
"Slowly. painfully and joyfully." he
would answa, offering a word portrait of
how the writh writes.
He expands on the theme:
"You know, The Twofold Vibration
(his newest novel) Is finished but I'm fid·
dling with H. and nowTm retyping it.
"Why? I think to extend the pleasure.
"The pain Is over . When you approach
that white piece of paper and have to get
it right, that's where the pain Is. And you
never know if it's right once you do get it
going.
"Alter all. writing Is like pushing forward Into the unknown . And you never

know what's beyond 'there.' ..
A professor of English here. Federman
Is a Paris-born author who escaped Nazi
persecution during World War II by work·
lng and hiding on a farm In Southern
France .

v- ......, to bellne In you

Having been also a paratrooper before
carving out a place among the literary
avant-gMde, Federman abounds with
rich rellections about writing. survival and
life, some of which he shared ln a recent
intaview.
You must think every sentence you
write Is a jewel, that every story Is a
masterpiece, he counsels aJplring writers.
"You cannot become a writer if you do
not believe ln what you do."
Yet . perlectlon Is Impossible. would be
boring if H were attainable.
We contemplate In our minds a perfect
sentence . . . a perfect story. But as we
go on. Federman notes. we cannot
duplicate that mental lrNOQe or that
vision .
So Instead. Vole unperfect the ' perfect.
We give to our writing, our plcturt. cer·
taln flaws . The flaws make it interesting.
make if fiction , make ll art . .

.......... .,....we-

Apart from the problem of perlectlon.
Federman observes. many writers have
difficulties with wnting about love-or the
.
act of love..
That has to do with the mood of the
times. says the oo-director of the Fiction
Collective . We move In decades. he ex ·
plains. and each has a general mood.
In the late 18th amtury. "sensibility"
descrbed the mood; "boredom" defined
most o( the 19th century. In the late &lt;Ws
and early 50s. everything was "absurd.''
and In the early 60s. "alienation"
reigned .

l'ederman says there was something ln
the 70. espodaJiy which prevented us
from showing~ emotions: therefore
authors could not write about love. When
they did. ln order to save b from senlimentUry. they introduced Irony Into H
Irony was the ref~ olthe late 60s and
70.. not just In wriiiiiQ. but ln our da•y
lnles-and ln the rtiOYies as wei . Now,
we may be .-aching the ttnd ol Irony. The
pr~ o( being swamped with sen·
1117Nlnlolitv looms for the nut decade.
The succ-·ol the two "Rocky" films
...,..ld -m to bear that out . he feels.
Thio may not be bad . Indeed we may
need H, Federman subml .
.
n.-t~oere·

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

Federman !Hilt hat the femtnlst move·
menl may be the most trnportenl force af.
fecung how we deal with emotions He
thlnks most wrflen. at least o( his genera·
toon. ar chauvtnill wherher they adm
d a&lt; not lt'o
n J'04'l d out to htm •n
hit wnhng , he says H 16-yur-old
daU!Ihwr porn k out conSIIIntly and so
do hll uden
But that'• what d
nocn1u..lv t,-.ntform our rooldousnft
,ld be !aiM , he
10 . to a
o(
,.,.,....,. o( today his genen·
uon o(,.
to sudd..,ly r mov from
thotr
"'ll those lenwnll o( ... hat •
d ma
chauvrnr.un " The real

changes will occur in the language itself
·· w~ · ve

corrected our language
somewhat. not c ~pletely :' he admits.
"You know. you ilo lr&gt;nger have the basic
story where the liusband · gets up and
walks In the kitchen and says 'Honey. fix
me a cup of coffee. quickly. I've got to go
to work · No. the language becomes.
'Darling. let's have a cup of coffee
together before I go to worl! · "
Students need to know the subtlety of
language. advises Federman . The wrtter
must be- very careful to equalize the
language. though . not make the woman
stronger . .. No. no:· he pleads. ··;fs all in
the way we speak to each other ··
The worst chauvinists. he confesses .
are his JR . 19. 20-year-old male
students Teach them that tfs In the
language that you become equal. he
urges. and the distinction between male
and female disappears. Not in the body.
he emphasizes. but In our linguistic ex ·
changes. and consequently in our sociaL
emotional exc~nges

Youba...,to.lausb
While the uses of language are crucial
to the writing proceu. Federman also
prize.s humor-. He claims ifs almost im·
possible to stl down and write-fiction
espectaUy-~ you're not laughing at what
you're doing.
"You know." he smiles disarmingly.
"there Is something totally absurd. com·
ical. In the act of sitting down every day.
as mOSI aerlous wrtle.rs do. in front of a
lypewr1ter . because of all human
activities. H'o the one thai Is the most
gratuitous .
...No one forces me . No one tells me:
'you've got to go to your typewriter .this
morning and otart writing.· I could go play
golf. or tennis. but something drives me
there. And the mere fllict of stlling alone
In a room writing Is laughable. I mean
you talk to yourself. you curse yourself.
you throw away the pieces o( paper. you
scratch your head. pick your nose.
smoke cigarettes. o( course .
" If someone were watching you. he
would laugh . So ehher you say to
yourseW. H's idiotic. why should I be here
bonging word on the page. making up
otorin. huh?
"Or
lau h ."
We ~h w~ the social Interactions
o( human beings faD apart. says Feder·
man. The bigger the discrepancy. the bigger the smile, the laugh .
v- .,.. ........ or ....h ,..... . .te

-·

If you ask Federman-hirnsd a sur·

vtvor o( the Holocaust-what humor has
to do with survival . hlo thoughts tum to .

Fan a Fenelon . thO' French-Jewish
woman who survived Auochwttz because
she played In an orchestra while vlctlrns
"'""" '-d to the gas chamber
"She II incredlblof. that woinan."
Federman whi!pert "Here lo someone
fd like to ..0. 10. and w n laugh with "
He says that all our •""""'nces are
behind us and .... ,.pay ,hem.
To Federman. the sole IUI'YIYor In a
family who were 'victlm at Auschwitz.

"replay" Is a key term .
"We replay our experiences In the form
of mental cinema . snapshots. or verbalize
them . The re ls always crucial: replay.
reteD . And in the word. replay. you have
the word. 'play.' okay?
"There Is no doubt that Fanta Fenelon.
now. retelHng this. must say. 'how
ridiculous. how funny we must have
looked there. The six of us with our ln·
struments in the middle of Auschwitz.
playing music.'
..There's no doubt in my mind that this
woman . looking back. with all the horror
of it. has to smile and laugh. even though
it hurts.
"It must have been so funny-for the
others-those who were looking. I wouki
say ll tl-tust ha
~ fumty •even for •
those who were walking to the gas
chamber and turning around watchtng
them
" It

was

so

incongruous .

so

preposterous. that suddenly we realize
the line between what we call the tragic
and the comic is rather thin. " he barely
uHers. "so incredibly thin . that you can
either scream In horror ... or laugh
your guts out ...

Leamlng to write : If• a predlctablr
proceee .
Turning his thoughts to his students.
the U/ B professor says he's had a lot of
students who have worked with him two.
three and four semeslers. They Improve.
he finds . and become better writers
through a predti:table process.
In their early work . students write to
Impress the Instructor with how well they
use the language. but they are not writing
their own language. Instead. they write
echoes of echoes of what they've already
read or what they think loa good piece of
writing
. Gradually. Federman says. they begin
to try to write what the prolessor think•.
That's the second stage.
At this stage. the writing Is already bet·
ter and then . suddenly , they begin to
write themselua. They write who they
are . not what they thought they were. or
what they think the teacher wants them
10 be. but who they really are.
·
"And that's when they realize that one
writes with one'o body." Federman
smiles. "They write about how they walk.
how they think . how they make love.
how
the y smoke
cigarettes .
whatever-that's when ouddenly the
stories become good ."

Jt'e a releAM
Students should be encouraged to take
creative writing even if they are not pur·
suing it for a career. he offers
You don't teach them how to write. he
empl\asllles. you allow them to release an
Incredible amount ol energy
.
"Wtitlng lo pure energy. an energy •
which -Is iocJ&lt;ed ln. and releasing that
energy equels a form o( freedom They
becorM free Free ln thotr mind. free in
their
body.
free
In
their

"'--tluough

maglnation

.

"'i'hai'o what¥ lo If one could measure
the amount ol energy that goes Into a

aeatlve writing class as one measures a
cup of sugar-It would be an Incredible
am-:&gt;unt"

Adme for would-be wrltere
Does he have any advice for students
who wish to eam their living as writers?
The university. Federman says. Is the
last refuge for a creative mind . It's an illu ·
sion. he insists. to think one can survive
financially. socially. by being a writer to·
day. There are a few names. a
dozen ... 15. and that's aU .
If you are a aerious writer. he
und~rlines . the most Important thing is
lime .

"I could not write novelo If I had to gO
to an office at eight or nine In the morning
•'lA SlaY ugtU (i\!e ').nd
to I"V¥'V' Til
write every n1gllt .'
•
·
·
"You don't do it . Maybe when you·,,
young you can sustain that for a while.
"So the university gives me a space
where nol only I can talk aD day long with
my students. with my colleagues. about
what I'm doing-It also gives me the

,.y

time.

..And It frees me. in a way. from
economic pressures. I'm being paid to be
a teach.er. and I'm a good teacher. I
think. and I do my teaching and
everything that'• related to II. But above
all I write.
"You see? In the United Stales there
are no other places ror a writer to go IO ·
day but the university. Now ~ you live ln
France. most writers work for publisher$.
Their refuge ls being a reader for a
publisher. an editor or something.
"If you go to Eastern Europe. then you
are a member of the writer's union and
then you aro being paid like a worker to
just sll home and do your writing.
"But you have to be damn good and
subscribe to a certain set of ideM about
writing."
Federman says: "I like where I am and
what rm doing ..

Macl.alne sought
for China fest
Shirley Macl.atne Is being sought to
headline a fUm showing during a month·
long Chinese festival now being oon·
cocted by Either Harriott ol the Office of
Cultural Affairs .
Harrk;&gt;tt Is puntng together the package
of evenl1 under a grant for cukural pro·
grammlng she rec:elved last summer from
the Attrlllon/Raention Committee.
T..,tatlw plans caU for the festival to
run from mid-March to mid-April. featur·
ing an art exhibit. an artlolln residence, a
perlormanoe by a dance oompany. an .
acupuncture demonstration~ lecture on
manners and mores In contemporary
China. o Chin- boutique, o showing ol
films including Maclalne's -n..· Other
Half of the Sky: A ChiN~.· and a
gala benquet 10 be catered by Lee O.u .
Harriott wtl have more detallo, later,
she promioes.
T rylng to sn.e Maclainc to a long
shot, she admits, .,..,
K be nice
ll u worked?"

"""'ldn'

�January 24, 1980

CALENDAR
Tla....ctay - 24

Sdencc. Mnachuwns Institute of Technology.
Room 41 . 422ft R~ Lea 3 30 p.m Coffft and
6oughnuts wil bl! served at 3'" Room 61

PEDIATIIJCI IIIER:AIIOt 5£JOICAII•

l••••oloetc•l ••41 l~n•t~•olllttol,.tcel

E&gt;o-...w eo-.o.

~.

UUA.IIFlUl "
Tho ...... ffoao B•adl (19781 Conforence
Tlwo,.. . Squn 3 30 6·30 ond 9 p m Gone&lt;ol
12. otudenu $1 90

Tho
f&lt;om Brull (197~1 Woldmon
Thea~~ . Amhersa 3 :..), 6..30 and 9 p m General
a d - 5 2 Snodonu l 150
Why tnuit the .dopted Wtwm of • hundted
stral'lgll!ly .wstn young $0111 bt' ~ by Nazi tu1

PHYSIOLOGY SEJONAR•
Collocdon""" ~- o1 veop~~~ v - ..
Bloloelcal ..,d AJl&lt;rwy R -. 1ft WIIMd 8
Eliott.
d -........ 5- 108 sn.,.
rnan. 4 pm

" " - " o(

P - Gonnon M S
H - ' 12.-.

BOOod 11-.. Child•••&gt;•

UUA11 FD.M' .

a-

nwn• Who! don •lw uchfimd 1ft

Dopa"""'"'

Friu Mongt'le

h.w \0 d.-, "1th Jt7 Why ar~ Gregcwy P«k and Sir
Law~.- OlivW!r clwwsng 1tw ~,
IIIOLOGICAL 50ENCES
liUIINAII•
G.aalae N-.~ ReaW.tioo of Hormon.Dy
R..,.._a... Aden,ol c ....... 0. Jool
Boylo. College of Mod"'"" 114 Hoch....,.,
4p m

lib&lt;•"'""""·

CD.UJtAII PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR•

CACALM '
Slleot MOYio (19761 17.0MFAC. EJI;cou 7 ond
9 15 p m ~l.dmtuAon $1 25. facuhv . waif
•nd students S1
Stamng Mef Broc:*s. Many Ff'ldm.tt. Oom
lnluR and Others. lhlf k the saory of a difectcx try
lng to makt&gt; a conwback "' 1976 by m.t~~king e sllen1
movie It's wacky. constS~endy en1ertafnlng . Jnven·
tlw m.dnf'b rncludmg tome hiarious Sight gags

R&lt;Mic.Ac:..lb&lt;ntTodi....... O. MMyToub
MS~SU~nl

poff:UOf . JOR Sherman 4 p m CoHao a1

ins 15

3 45

DEPARTMENT OF STAnsncs LECTURE•
NM- R_..... l.dt., W J Hab proflf'UOf and
c:hairmtn ~~ of Stausaa. UniY4M"SSty cA
R ot~ Room A 16 4ZJO Ridge l..e:• 4 p m
CoHee •• J 30 in Room A l!J
ENERGY RESEARCH SEJOIINAR•
-loC.&lt;olyttcCool~- .

o.p.n....,. d Clwmbl

Wdor

e.,.._
101
M M'fYed from

S.ldy 4 S p m R«frnhmrrnli will
f&gt;-5 JO SponJOUd by 1lw FA&lt;Uhy Of
ond Aill'liod Saenc

~

0

PHARJIACEqTJCS EMINAR•
Q\Mttdtlldw An.~ of the Renal Handll"l of
Ontp, and Ooea., Alflutbneol In Pati&lt;rntt wtth
ReMI Ol.uM, Of Akh Ka""'Vfi rnu«:h
~ _U B C5ll8 Cooka 4 p m Rdreshrrwnt1
wll be SftWd •• 3 5ll
SINGLES GET-TOGETHER'
Picooki~: Rna.ur~ 1424 Mllenpor1 (tn 1he

Triodl 5:10pm
fostft' ~y - and to JU.It
p&amp;.m ge .a know uch odwr - a group ol s.ngle
f.cully and s&amp;.ff ~ org.mring l'h il ll'ltorrnal ~happy
"""' "" 1&lt;&gt;got1w. • Tlw coo&lt; d drink• 1o .educed
duiYII ~ hour Mel hon cfoeuvres •• frM
Tbr ra&amp;M~ranl iii oper•&amp;ed by two U 8 PJmm
INfll" lO . . . . dimtdr from the Untwr~~ty
Senc4 U, B. unh .onw IC:hook_ doHn"1 Mw
dw I\I'Pf of fiiC'UIIy dub 'When! ~ can ga1her ••
........ I
dUiing llw dov f01 food dnnl&lt; one!
c~. dw group hop. Pic.w&amp;o' s • .- ie.HI
womporarly -. fl the \IOid
If mou
lnler~ I&amp; ~led tM group .....n

tn an

mH't

at~ 10

each fhunct.y

aJ

lfw rf'IUIUI'IInt

Saturday - 26
WINTER~IVAL.

Big E ~ - EH.cot1 Tennis Are. q am .J
p m Free ndes Ratn d.te J..n 27
Snow-Shoring OemonttTaUon - Ellcou TenniS
Coun Area 1 J a m DemonstraHon by Ouung

Club
BuchvtiHr Ha.pftallty Coach- FrH di&gt;rnonstta
and samplet. al dav . Ekott Pariung Lot P2
lnem 1enms courts)
PlnbaU Tournament - Wtlknon Game Room

,.

Snow Sc:ulpt:urf' - AI day m ~tf'd areas
Tht-rM SUNYAB Saiutf's the Wwuer OknnpiC'5
Prr-re6mretion '"Center Loungf Squire and S A
Offlc:e . II I Taben (Amherst) Reglstrahon through

Fnday 25
See other evenls t.&amp;ow
C.mrval ruqs through February '2
Cal 6J6 2950 {Siudf'tll Auocw.tiOR) for mfcxma

'""'

HEALTH SCIENCES CONFERENCE ·
R - - I l e s of M&lt;dlc:ino ond lhe Low
Canal. G 2&amp; Farber 9 a m noon Speakm: will m
dodf' LOIJ C.lbM PfnideAI o4 the ~ Canal
HonwoWrwn Auociat.on 0.. Beve-rly Paigen
R01iu.eU Park llide:ntist Or James Dunlop • Grand
lsl.lnd pedl.a1.-.c..n and Dr Ac:Wiine Lf'vme- U B

Spon50red bv 1M Oc:cuJMikH\&amp;1

Env~tcxun..ntal

Heallh Commrnee of the Americ;en MediCal Stu
den1 AS'IOC:iat iOn Chapt~ at U B

WINTBI CARNIVAL '

eo....,

enSldiot/ l.aoono.
Pre r~etJOn required AmMN Campus touring
lraik ~f' WI ot equipnwnt fcx '13 per ws·
t1on LeMons S1 atta Sations from 9 a m noon

wutt-,..m-.

HIGHER ED IIIIEAKFAST SEMINAR'

WOllEN'S BOWUNG '
U/ B l,...tkJM.I. Squn Hal 12 30 p m

M~

stw

am

••n
lf'I~IOfWIIy r~ tcholac w.
a.&amp;omk:' freedom end

rA

M'N

civil~

rEDIA TlUC GRAND IIOUNDS•
" ' - " " . . . ~ Defodo ..
~l'hoctlco.Roct..dB JolvHioo J&lt; MD
...,._ ond ........ 0opon
I d Pah..,Ml J«w11h H&lt;MptiPI IH:r,vf'r l&lt; inch
~m C"hildnrn-,. H~ II •"'
T1UBVT£ TO MAIInN WTHER KING '
T
dw I •nnu.af rilu.. '0 Or M..tbn Luthrr
Kino J&lt;
by 1ho M""""y Focu~iv ond

-ed

S&lt;offA_.._,

.wnt . . Wk.ck a

lundwon ...-.h

Aow

·a, •• ""'-" 0 . Ew .. ~and •n

~

bv ....... GIJioooM,
lft&lt;h.lf of £-ftOI' ~

Tlw l!...m.o. ..... lwld • """""'

..

~

o,o... ..

Don

UUAII ALM' ,

OrehtW• Rehearsal rFdini. 1979) Con
ftrencc fhtoa1r.. Squire 4 6 8 and Jn p m
Getwral admtssioo $2 stude.ms '-1 50
A ~ ol1he ""'«&lt;nr of tlw West thts bi1 ~
F...... ongonoly dono to. IIOllan 1V ,..,.. ' MI tndulgmt ui\IIOf\iwft bruds ctw.o. and anarchy
PI •n orchatr-. tehelli'NI until aft~ the dust hAs set·
tltd a dicta&amp;cxial ~ wu things ... right " If you
~ Feltnl. you d
ol C'OUrR ~ etWaptured If

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

CACALM'
Sll&lt;ott MOYio 1197&amp;1 1% IMfmdori 7 •nd
9 15 p m C.....AI a d - Sl 25 IA&lt;Uhy ...tt
•nd •\Hknu $1
ICE HOCKEY'
c:orcs..d State
7 JO p ,

ll

fl4o c;...,..._.t, ...... - - ' " ' P m
llw focullv Cl.4 0..,. JUmmo, H..

..d .....................,._
At
• ~ • PDM 1fw N• hdd
1971 14

Cobetc. Ton.au.-.nda

k:~ i~"me

"'*"'canM11Wi111Mthr~

-d- . . .
In

T-

c.._ ...... ..,..._

_ _ _ .... lllock_

Polley sh·a per

t~ne

....

....,_edoed
.... _

WINTBI CARNIVAL'
Ice Skating to Musk: -Lake LaSafle skating ..-ea .
noon-4 p m FrN hot chocoLate K"f'Ved
Ice Skating E.-htbltton. -LaU LaSaDe skating
area. 1 p m Performanc::« by Buffalo Sbting Club
Sldgh Rkln -Horw-dr•wn Ellcon Tennis
Area . noon -4 p m In caM of no snow. carrieges
wdl be used
leo Sculpturing &amp;hlbl- · Ma.WU COWl
Area outside ~udent Club. 3 p m Performed by
Shaaton East CMf staff
Snow Scu.lptuting ·All dey m ~na1ed erea.s
Pre registrauon Wuther permlttfnt .

Pinball Toumamenl -W•ftan Game Room .

~·

U¥

.

Cutler, opedal &lt;:ount4!1 10
Preoldeftt Carter, Ia a White Houw In·
older who helps shape Polldea relaling .
to the U. .-Soviet crlsia. He'o here lor
a Polldc:al ~ e Lecture, W..Snn.
day.

3Oft 3 Men't a..lwtball Tournament -Bubblto
Amherst 6 ·9 .30 p.m . Free. See aboYe regislre
UOn note .
MOYin -Fiw wtn1cr spons films. Fret Clemen!
HaD Lounge:. 8 p m
Snow .sa.lpturlfte ·AI d.y in designa1ed areas
PtnbiiU Touma~~Mt~t .wiiknon Gam. Room
PROGRAM FOR STUDENT SUCCESS

nM£

TRAINING '
IIIANAGEMENT FOR
STUDENTS'
108 Nonon 3-5 p.m
In order to do well acadf'mk:ally. you ha11e 10
know how to scheduk! your lime. If you've ever
~ed how you'l eYe&lt; g&lt;1 ewoy~hlng qone on
11m.. euer sworn you 'I Mwr undergo anothn mid
night marathon or mtss another~ deadbne. 1tm
wori&lt;shop should lwlp you . Spon""ed by P,og'&gt;m
for Student Success Training. Free to an students
No registra tion required.

le:ader Mary Brown. program end/ student
developrMnt consultant and coordinator ol1he In
tematbnal Student Raource C~ter
CaD 636-2809 for man informa tion

BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAl!•
11w Unicellular ~ Tdrahymena as a
VerMtlle Geadk 5ysteft'l : · Pheaylkeeonuric
Tdrahymcna, Dr Eduardo Orias. Department of
B;ok)gical Sdenca. Univnsity of Califomiat S.ma
Barbara 108 Shennan 4 p m Coffee a t 3 30 p m
ALMS (FILM HISTORY)·
11w Pb.nt0111 Chariot (5;ostrom. 1920) . Mnl

FRIENDS OF VIENNA CWB RECITAL ·
PerRI Vehar, JN-nlsl Musk Room cA the Inter·
natk:JNI lns:tllute . 864 Oelawa~ Ave 3 JO p m
Free edmruion but donauons ant welcome

.lohn Doe (C.P'• · (941) 146 Oi&lt;lendori 7 p m
Spon10rcd by 1he ~ter fcx Media Study

UUAII ALM '
Orchettra Rd\eanal tFeltnt J9791 Wold man
Thealfe . Amherst 4 6. 8 and 10 p m General ad ·
rhksion $2 . ltudf'nts SJ SO

UUAII MONDAY NIGHT FlUlS'
Three a.d Men (1926). 7 p m Thrn God·
fodten (19481 . 8.45 p.m 170 MFAC . EJI;cotl
Free admission
John Wayne stars in the Three God&amp;etMn. a
~em. about outlews f1Hing across the desnl
who lind an .O.ndoned child

ooctolog..l

Friday- 25
T-ondiOoAI--.W-P~

Sunday- 27

11005

1 unul 4 p m Fw and hot chocola~.e tn Utchworth
Woods ~-~~ clo.d Wed Jan 23

prof•SJor of h~to1y . Coh.1mbt.a Unw•n•ty
s,....dont Oonone Room Ellcoot 8

WINTER CARNIVAL
UUAII COI'I'EEHOUSE'
Jeff Rappaport and Jet Pullman, guharisa .
Squire HaD Rethskelia" Main Street Campus.
8 30· 11 30 p m Ticlc:f'ts Sl - a11ailable at the
Squ.re Hal Ticket Office
The two Jeffs haw beftl playing togetM for
torven yean and have appeared on Long Island at
Cork 'n' Board. Fearn's Harness Ship. and The Ldt
Bank as wftl as ln New Vorl&lt; Otv Their performanc::H include wa.ctions bv Stmon and Garfunkel
end Cal Stevt&gt;ns

CAC fiLM'
Silent MOYW (19761 Conference Theatre.
Squire 6 45 and 9 05 p m General admission
Sl 25.1acuhy staff and ttudents $ 1

Monday- 28
WINTBI CARNIVAL '
~ ·H.,. Lounge. Main S..HI. II
am -3pm
HaM l..ounge Brnldut -9 00 a m ·noon
Colf&lt;H and hot chocolate 10. cream cheat: •nd
bogelo 15
'
'

.

.. .

. .'. '...'.

. ... . ' ...

a~ ,

\,

t'

:

...

FACULTY RECITAL·
Yvar MMthMhol. pianht . n.o.... Halpin.
Flied ""'" Snow " BaWd
SponJOUd by !he
d MUli&lt; Gcne.ol a d - $3. U / B faculty. oWf
alumni and Rnkw ckirlens $2 • .eudent.s S t Tic::ke1S
at the door only
"
· T'hk January confection concocted by the rn
gerUous Mr M•heshoff lndudft worics by Dftlussv
ond Gmg
M•ha:shoff. a pianist on the performance facully
for a numbn ol yon. t5 known throughout lhtj
counuv and Europe: fcx hit datding paformanct'
ttylc and innovatM! profjlJ•mming He • more Ire
qUf'ntly hurd in MW WOI'tu . rMny ol which hew
bHn commissioned lor ex dedicated 10 him
Tlril lnfr~uent foray into llw more uad11ional
repet1oire wtl be M ~ treat for ktal au
dimca who arf! familiar enough with him no4 10 n
JMd • llghiwdght performance from a fandful1ilie
H• ..P.,no bench progr•m comrMntaty"' drsp&amp;avs
W1t ...,.. introducing • new work or casting nev.'
IJght oo •n old fai.'OI"fte.
I
Halpin K • graduate cA Y-'e •nd • former studfttl
cA Ivan Galam..n He hu perfomwd e~enswely on
the Wesa COHt and on DESTO records
In 1?73. the opportunity IO &amp;oerW Ill toching
li6tjl.ant for the Clewland Qu,artd brougN him 10
BuHelo ....twre he comp&amp;.ned•n MFA tn lliolin per
formanc• In 197S he formed the Elicott Trio whtch
became dw 1rflst in l'ft6cknc:c ~ at Colegre 8
He il hNrd freqUftldy In rfllldlaJ in the Buff.SO arQ
usualy in con,uncrion with member~ ol the U 8
~focuky
"'\

""*""'·
"A Bonbon
Redial Hal 8 p m

MEN'S IIASKETBAU. '
Conlond Sea,. Coeoeo. Clorl&lt; Hd

O&lt;pon....,,

p m

FU.ICS (FILM NAIIIIAnvE) •
Tho Phont- ChoJtot (5jootrom 19201. M...
.klho Doe IC.,.o 1941) 147 o;.fendoof 9 p m
~

bv .... c.- ... Modoo Study

�January 24, 1980

y- -

UUAB FIUI '
Got Ooot
(Fr...... 19781
Woldrnan Theatrt 4 45 . 7 and 9 IS p m Gmeral
admtilion S2. students $1 SO
Two men rn low with the to~ me woman met lhat
nehhft ol dwm an 1111 Mr from her doldrumt
Thr:n comes a 14·YN• old ICht:Jol,oy a1 summer
camp~ - fiNly. she hta15 bds.
• ,::mot" a crou Mtween '"Mulbalf• end "Jwln
MUSICAL'
Nalv'• DRaa, a two-ad mullcal by p&amp;.yv..nght
Marla lreM Fornes fe-•turlng an ~ ~Core by
Buftalo )iiiZl musban Rtthard Shukn.n Off-&lt;An~
Cab.rf1 c:J Ut B's Ct'11ter Theaue. 681 Main Sb~
8·30 p m General adm~.- S2 50 al tho door.
$2 rn adv•nce T'dm information and further
ddalk are avai~ by c.ling 847-6461.

Tuesday- 29
WIN1ER CAIINJVAL.
~SidM-Woobhop .th.
Wtlkoton Quod 7 9 p m Spo"""' .1o1m
Red ol EH1em Mount.in Spom
M-DoololeT-T...mo_,.t.J\mh&lt;no
Bubble. 6 ·9 30 p m Pr.-regtsu:ahon doMd
Wedn&lt;tdoy. Jon 23
Movie ,Avt- wtnter spom flrns Lehm.n Hel
l.ounQ!r. Gowmors 8pm fl'ft
-~·Aidoyln~l&lt;d"'..'
,...,... T~t .w•non Ga:nw Room

o.a......

FTft to al sh.Kknts No registration ~ed
Lt'eder Su.tanne 8 Toomey, exuui.M director.
CREA lnstllute. facul!y ol CrtatJve Problem SoMng
lnJtitute. and oole.gue ol the Creattv.r EJucation
Foundation
Cal 636-2809 for ~ information

BUFFALO LOGIC COU.OQUIUM:
&lt;leo«oo R..,..,- Thoofy, Melvln Fklln9.
m.tMmatics .
Yt lehman C~ 304
Oieft:ndorf 4 p m

CHEMICAL EHGINEEJUNG SEMINAR•
Goo C.Otrtlv... fn&gt;m tho Chomlad Enot-'•
PoAntaf\llew, W.a&amp;«r G May. Enon Rnrarct.and
Engtnemng Comp.ny

PSST&lt;

. B'FECTIVE USE OF THE IJUARY'
1Z7
Undetgo-aduaoo Ll&gt;n')l. Amhono

e-n.

3-.Spm

•

How c.n you lncrow &amp;he effOncy ol your u.M
ot the llbr-v at • tool for study. rnon:h. and put' ·
...... ,.,..,..J .,.......7
be,.....

p..,_. ...

10 ttw U~y u..na and en
nplanaUon ol lht many raourcu that c:.n tlimplify
~ of Pft'Pilrlng TUHtm paper~. repons.
iMd .10 tonh .5poNared by ~"' for Stucknt
Suc:onl T,..._. Free 10 . . •uct.nls No regillra·
M!l tntrod~

___,

the

le.dft &amp;~'ben L...y. r.ter-~
Undetgo-od,.... U...,. U!B
&lt;AI 636 Z809 for f"l'M:Jre lnfcwmatlon

tibfanan

I'SST:
HOW TO l-OVE YOUR MEMORY'
1 0 8 - 35 pm
A good nwrnc:wy Is ~ to IUC'CftiiJ in •ny
ll&lt;ld Thll ~ W1l ooO&lt;h ,.,..

_ . ._lohqo--lnf-

...... and"""" OC&lt;V&lt;OIOiv Spon..-lby p,g.om
fCIII Stud«JM Suc:a:. T,.~ F.... to alst~lJ.
reglitr•lion requftd
Leodft s.-lv Gau-.1 Ph [) • .......n con-

~:-~ ~·=:r,;_SUC/IIuflelo
GEOl.OGICAL SCIENCES SEIIIINAII'
bcro Rno•rca of W•tcT Bca t1 n1
a.--011 R - - . DonG Bebouo. l.oui....,. so... ~ ond Lou- Goologjcol

S...., Room 18 4240 Rodot Leo 4 p m

Wedaeaday- 30

-c..N-

WIN1ER CAIINJVAL •
c - ·""" CAC -

.f._.

"-" Squa 8 noon - _ . hw. doou"
10~--f..... ft..

...

· 5 Q u h - c...... 15

s..t.of ~ .nw Oudaoon
~- Quod Ekao 7 9 p m Spool.. Mb
-

. . . . _ ol

Ouo6ooo ' - - School

- -.r.... Mootoony

Kothonno

Ccmdpm Gono&lt;ol-.5.1.
•U~Sotntt. tuM •M '-"''-v S2 llcktt; ewt.Wt m
Sq." Hoi T - Ofla
c.... Vell~.._ll Toun~••••• -Bvbbl«

~·- ri"'

""'._.-doood
-~ ..... ...,. ~
T
-W.._,Cio&lt;N R_,
1•1 - ·o _ _ T _ .a..bbio
F-

..

.....

~ . 69!10p• ""'·---~ad

T:

__
_
. . .... _-Span

DOlT HOW:
AL FOR P'IIOCIIAST1 ATOllS •

... _ Thto_.....
__
ctn--.a.-N

ms.-

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

. . . __

,~,

~

.,.,~

~

......... . . _ .......... S.U..T-

J07 O'Brian

4-5 p m

HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY•
R AcdylchoUM Receptors and Piastklry o1
o : = : -1 Synapses, Or John frHman
245 c.y 4 mAnooomy. VondooWI Unlvomoy .

t

Thanday- 31

Notices

WINTDI CARNIVAL •
Squue OaftC« -Fillmore Room . Squlre
7 &lt;.t 0· 10.30 p .m Free
Pub Spedol -EIIIcooo Pub. lludwelwr bee. t.. o
quan.n. 9-11 p m 5()+(l«N \IOCib al n9h1. Piu.ll
30 Pft' *« 10-12 p m Ff'ft .dmtsslon
Rotholooll« $podol -Squn HaL Opon Mih 8
p m · 1 a m Wings,fwe c::cnts (lAd : pizza .30. drink

ANNUAL PttqJO EXHIBI110N
Physidam affllieted v.ith Wntml Nr.w Yortt
hotptaais a.r~ invttiPd to po.ri~ in an a nnual
phoco extubation sponSOJII!d by the ~en Hospital
~he~~t be held Ill dw Medical Staff UJrflfY
For thaw interested k1 exhbtmg enc.nn muil
tMMUr« •t WH'ISW" T . and mutt tw mounted rec
tangularty with the exhOtor's name and hospiiel
aM the photo tllle on the back They must be tub·
rnttt«d to Mrs. Anne Cotwn at ~ft'l HospU1 by
February 1 Judging f« In&amp; and wcond piKe in
categoriet. for bl6c:k and white •nd cob wt1 be tM!&amp;cf
FebruMy 6 Juofslo$ ..uJ bo Roben Hlnclo. Phcoown
Studio . Freoderldl. Ma nchall. Ma nc hall
::!::::':';:;~Df'nJ11s Atkln.on . U / 8

opoclolf,.. admbolon
MOYI« .fiw winlft 1p01U films. Squire Center
Lounge. 11 am ·2 p m. FrM
Ml:xH Double Tfttftil Touma~De~~t Ana..

~~we:mJ~ 6·q 30 P m Pre-~raUon
23
Mlni·Mar•thon-3 MUe Indoor Run -Bubble .
~;twrs. 5 P m Pre-regfstratJOn dosed Wed Jan

.

Snow Sc:ufpturfnt -AD da~ m ~ted arl':a&amp;
Pfnbal Toamamen1 .Wilteson Game Room

CAREER AWARENESS WORKSHOP

FIUI (FIUI HISTORY)'

"""" \lor- Homo (F..d. 19401 146
~"""::'udy7 p m Spomoxed by .... c.n... r..
UUAB WEDNESDAY NIGHT FIUIS '
My F ....... (1942) 7 p m , T1w Rood
to Ball (1952) . 8 30 p m Confermce ~atre .
Sq.O. F... a d My fewrttc Blonde, "''lth Bob Hope and
Modoloono Com&gt;l lo tho ttory ol a llriUolo 1PY
(Modolelno) wbo Is forced 10 onllsl oho o;d o1 a
fnghtened Hope in CMTyinQ oot het mUon
The Rood to Boll, wfoh Bing Crotby. Doo-othy
l.arncJII.If and Bob Hope. drtplcu a couple of MM"~g­
.M-d.anoe \lllud~ns who end up on an island
p.,-..:li:M: ~ wtth l.amour in • urong and
W1lh Veriouf ~ MY~
WIIES1UNG '

v-

s,r- c.w-.lq,. Clori&lt; Hoi

7 30 p m

llt.FFALO Pltll.HAIUOIONIC FRIENDS
CONCEJIT'
~ "-blc. S...d Rectool
H.a 8 p m General .d.~ S3 fao.~lly a.H
o1umn1 o n d - - . u. ~- s1
M - o l lho Enwmi&gt;lo . . lAurlo Konnedy.
o&lt;tlng pnnc:lpol- ""'"tho Phll&gt;onnoni&lt;. Jam..
Konnedy. pnnc:lpol ....., """' oho Phlfbonnontc.
UI B foadty 5«phon M..,.. and louring
,.._ Frieda Emomblo .... gMn a
number d peri~ owr the PM' lhrH yean
inCluding , . . _ ~--·Nlft bv the mernbes on
\he NICholl School C'h.amborr Mu* Smn as wtl.s ·
one ~-~.ong ~Mo ~ Choml&gt;oo M"*
~in North Bridgl.oMJn. M.m.. MCh tummer

POUTICAL SCIENCE LEC1\lllE'
u.,.t N . (Allor. «&gt;umof "' Ptoood&lt;,. ,l;mmy
ond SALT • Tho Kiva 10 I
Boldjl
pm
Cudn'"s re"*'u ~ ~ant beuuw he Is ...
dir«t\r In~ on a ct.v·to-ciay bun ., the cur
...................ndong u s SoW! '""'"""'· ond
the lomllont In lrllf'l .net AfgMntUn
Tho ...a d - ......... bof""'
. . - . ond-.,., one~..... o1 Polotbl
Scwn&lt;o Do Swol&gt;lwn C. Holpom ,...,_ o1
~ ldllft« II coordtNtif18 . Yi1ii "'t.:h at.
lnt u~ mtirfiv "-;F'I.ntfiwt Fumi:IUtelnc::
M a publt ICMte
·
Prior fo hk praeni poM CYl... Wft .tpe(ial
COUtiM'f .., 1M ~ on the r~ ol ttw
SALT Q T.-y Tho _....,. Ia..,.. to con

eon... " Afgbon"'"n

....,.aw~"lnolder- ond io "'-""""

. .........- olthoPmtdon&lt;
H• ....,.nee 1111 U 8 tJ paM ola Mritl pa.nn.d
.. . . . . ~ ~ to NobOr\al (jguret
..
ho\&gt;lngiO , _ , . _ , . . . . . . .

,-y

F1UI (RUI NAIIIIA11VE)'

- ' - v.v... -

-sw,

SUNY SENATE
WORKSHOP ON 11fE BUOOET•
The Facuhy Sena~ of tM SlAt« ~Y ol
NI':W York . ttvough its Commillee on the Uniwr'wty
Budge1. ts spomoring thts ~for tM pufPOM'
of enMncing thrl k.nowtedgt ot klc:al me:mbm o1
d"" f~~CUh~ . m particular the chatrpl':non ot the WI

Bv

1

c-.. 147
,..

PiecetMnt and &lt;Ar~P!f Guklancc
rfl«JVe a

fegilttation only
Sp..akfi'S at thrs ai-G.y event
include Peul T
Vdttte. duff budget n.aml~ Educauon Unit.
DMolon ol oho Budgoo (1 · 10 pm) . Wiliom H
Anslow . ·•ssocillte vice chillncdcw. ftnance and
ma~t. SUNY Central (2 20 p m ) ; and Or
Howud F MIIIP. d""""' ~ o1 oho 8udgoo
(illt a ~ RHionJ Location Goodyear JO FOf
Information. contao Nd M Gom. 306 Crofts Haft
The W~nter meeting c:J ttw SUNY Facuhy Xnate
Is being hrid ~Friday and S.turda~ . February 1
and 2

Western New York scholatlyeommun.ltly, and olthe
Wutern New Yc:wk community at larvrProposals should ~ forwerded In tf"4)kate to the
Offk!« d Graduate and Profeu6onal Edwcalion. 549
co,. ol Cindy Booo1o Tho " ' - '
\ should include • brief dac:rtption of The IOpiC And
.teope of the propoHd cOnfU«nce . aud•non both
whhin and without 1M UniYenlty. the rNtion of the
proposed conference to Qlfftnt Of ~
~JwrR!y ~Mig and ral':arch illdtvi&amp;ia. and how
~nented •• the confer«-~ mght be
..

e-n .,

HOW TO HANDlE STRESS·
232Squlro JSpm

Budgetary tnfOt"matlon

0.

~nl

profaSOf.

0.JN~r1ment

Apploco.- sloovld "" ' - · - ..............

'""'

Sa'muel

of Ph~y

SUNY Upo&lt;ooo 108 ShonNn 4 p m Calf.. .,
345m S 15

To liof ewnts In the "Ca16Miar." caU

han Shrader at 636-2626 .
Koy: 'Open only lo lhOM with a
prolaalonal lntereot In the oubl«t·
' ()pd to the public: • • Open t~
mvnbera of the Unlwnlty . . Unlna
otherwlae tpecllled. tlc:km for ewttta
at the Squire Hall Tidtd Ofllu.

•

appropriillt« de-•n Of vtce praicUnt . witb thew o1
flea atllehlng ell'alu•tM comments aa 8ippf0priltwt
Propowlt wi be f'VMt.ted by a c.mrnil&amp;ee con
• - . ol the tt.ee Urwen.ily Dons JaM Ptrtdot
to, DM5kwl ol UndergraduMe Educebon . .latnft
Bildthurll. [)io.Woft ol Con1tnu~ EducMton illnd
And,.w Hok. Grad'-'4\t School and coordJnawd
b\1 the Offa ol Graduate and PtolnMon.! Edwc:a
Quft&gt;loM ...,
- - 10 Mo
Gnoduaoo School. 549 Capon 636-2939

G.lant 178 Fwber 3 J0-4 JO p m
Cfl.LULAII PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR•
...._.. af . . . ..., 0 . - E&lt;oullibrto
af H - Rod c.a.. Do Jdfnoy F....tm... . . .

Include

the •mount reqUftted" and • ltak&gt;M«nt ol funds
Hudy received Of rf'qllftted from other sourws

PATHOLOGY SEMINAl!•
liypofteftoiOft ,

should

btukdown of' •KJ)«nM:S by category. a . .tf'nwnt of

Lorn lO recognlrlr phyiic.l and .-ychologic;al
s.gns of au-ns and to undena.•nd b contotquenc;a
as wei as wh.t ldnds c:J IHuaUons .,,. litl':ly to produce .seta&amp; We wGI also ddcusa and pntdlee
ml':lhods lOt' rNilliiiUon and coping Spon.ored by
Program for Student Sucxns Trillinlng Fret k) a1
audenu No regiwetion requnct
Leodft Tonv 1'190. ou.,.....lno """......, ""'"
Ene County Catchmmt Oiwict lV
C.l 636 2809fot more mlorrnallon
Eq&gt;&lt;rt-.1

1636-223 II to

CONFERENCES IN 11fE DfSCIPUNES

w•

PSST,

JMc«

Ttw UniYetsity npects to have avdabae: funding
to wppon Conferenon In the Otidpbnn: as oi April
1. 1980 1M funds may be uwd to IUpport wrift ol
Wdurn. 5ymp05iill . and the like ol inkfat to
member~ ol the Un~Yersity community. of the

advanc:;ed

c"-rgfn9 admioaiiHI aon be pUt'chaaed
(Ford

Dtol..-r 9 p .. Spontor.d by ....

Frnhnwn and sophomores who arc u~
about theW dlok:e ol rnajor/ c::areer are tnried to a
two-pan Wortuhop beginrung Janu.y 29 at 2.30
p m in 15 Capen Take a ~ter loolt .111 your
valun. stre:ngths and ablt\tn as they rc\atc to carMr
d«ISion·m.P.ing Group saze is limit«d. to If you
ltlro'OUkt ltke to porUdpate. please a~~q Uorwrsity

PEDIATRICS RESEARCH SEMINAl!•
Eloctroph.. ~ Followintl Softnfng O!&gt;o&lt;aT . - - . Do- DonWI R P - Bowd
Room Ch~ren"s HOipilal 12 noon

camJKH faculty budgc1 commiUH

I

,

Bo,olo

DOCUMENTS CLINICS
l'hc Gow-mment Docunwn~S Dlpw\rNN o1
Lodo.wood Ll&gt;n')l w i l l - ..
Clnia" bot-.o Febnoooy 11 and 19 n._ wt.o
enrold a.t.n how to klcM and u.M Unn«t 5\alft

,_"""'"Doc

f~al gowtnfNI"'f

pubak;ationt

l1oporunono ,_ -ooumot&lt;ty 230 000
by tho Unood
N&lt;w v..to
~ ~ C.nad..n ~u. and dw Europun Econotnir Community At In moM itbrM"tn
-

s.-

,.., -led

. ..

~=~~:!1= ~,

_.......

most Ctment all'..,. Whit ..,..... lidft h'l ltw
o.p.tlnwnt .,. ~ -~ fOt Npory.......,..

._.... ,,_ •uotvooo ~......., '""""
- ~~

..

1

�January 24, 1980

EOP no rip-off,
director Jenkins says
.,,..,.,.~

Roj&gt;oolor-

l...ul yelll' a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of
U/ B revealed that she never wanted
anyone to know she -nt lhrough school
with asslslance from lhe Educational Opportunlly Program . The reason she gave,
was that most people think EOP students
are dumb and rip olflhe system.
Such misconceptions Irritate EOP
Director Edward Jenkins, and make him
want to se1 the record islraight.
Yes, the State program is sel up to
assist the economically and educationaUy
disadvantaged . But no, disadvantaged Is
not synonymous with dumb.
Jenkins quoted slatistlcs lor the past
two yean which show thai aboul 75 per
cent of EOP students achieve a 2.0
average or better. Of I he 99 who
graduated last January and May. In fact .
26 maintained a 3.0 or better.
The program gave awards last
semester to 73 out of approximately
1.000 students who took at leastl6 hours
and earned a 3 .2 average or better .

----7... . ,

• Calendar

as long n the facutly membrr c•n demonilnue the
use d new !oehing t«hn5qua for modifying eKilting rourws Of for new coursn lnnov•tion mey
wtl n.nduc1 tN dlnits Cal ~2821 lo r~ range from rw:w Wf1Y1 lO prutnting n«w sub;ect
JNt~ ;n a mort arihodoa luhton. or Pfti«nting
,our ~ - tanef . . group. ..... be lmiled lO 12
MW JN.mM with &amp;he he~ d IWW -.echniqUn
Facully ~ _.. .t.o ln\ltled
wiJ be htld In 110 Lockwood oo Mon· Awards may reach • fNUtimum ol $2 .000.
&lt;loy F . _ , II. 2-4 . Tun&lt;ioy. F . _ , 12. 2-4o
The nMure end goQ of the PJ(JpOiel should b.
W&lt;dnoocloy. F._, 13. 2-4. Thu..doy. F._, oudined '" pr«iM \errnf, acrompaniftl by an
14 10 12. Fridoy F._, I~ 10·12. and T...,. ~ ~ of rNterill&amp;. H'l\llcft. •nd or
&lt;loy
19, 10-12
equipment il"* H needed
Applic•nts. should addrus thtrnte:lvn to the

dol wlh
,.-.J-

Oltwrf

Ed

HcrmM.

CUrTml.

todloi.

«''O())1"'k. ~

1M ..-..nl doaunent:• libnrian .

'The..,.

F._,

SCHOOL CW IIIANAGDUlfT
Tlw .... U BSchocl ci M.._......,..- ..
now In procludJon 1M book wll contain ~
pictwft . . ..m .......... focuh~
tuNS -.:1 a ~ of c.ndid photos P.oplit .,e
10 wllh loyout·phoo....... and
bu*- op~AtiaM Non-Nar\llglfmen~ tludmts •e
wft!ome fi"MMe t"'OM . _ us • ltw yearbook of.
lior c;:...bv 12C. W,.,.. - \n,..al&lt;d o...llo on

'*

... be mode

..ling , _ ond . . . . - -~ 10 . . Manepnwnl

ttucWnts.

StJNDAY BRUIIICH /
CIIOSS-COUNTIIY SIU
Tlw r acully Club ll holding ... du.l program.

-· '- .

f""-v 3 .. ,.......
e.-di (..OWOfnoCil 11am 1o2pm .
S,..Uiclont Dlnong Rocwn Ekoo S4 ~,..,......
~

_llloodv,...,.

-....

Is thh for a ntW courw or an n151.og courw,
the innoYMiw features you wUh 10 lnlroducc and how do ttwy diffa from niAJng olferlngl, How fN11nY iAucWnts wit tlw courw ~, Is
dw tiUbAancc ol your mncwatlon transferrabW
directly or ln. prindplr kl 04her counn in your ..-ea.
otto oounes in other academe: areas? H to. )ndbw
bnrOy how How will your klnovatk)n be brought lO
the atknlion ol ot~ who mvht find tt usefuP.
WMt matf!fillls •nell or &lt;tqulpment wil be nftded to
achinoe your goals which are n04 av•tiab&amp;to to you
ttwough IMtructk&gt;n.al Servk:n. your ~mmt . 01
othe facild.la of tM Unfvenfty,
AppkalioM t.houtd b. dlt«ted in tripljcat• to
CO&gt;dv 8oiol&lt;. Groduo~&lt; School Ofla. 549 CApon_
\tJhe,t are

1&gt;.16 2'13'1

............. &amp;hlblu

-----·-todoiiJI ll~-~
ocr..-.1
-..io-.wtth""""""'""

......

~.....-jdo..W-..1

EAIILY lllmiCAL TOOLS

EnroU...S In 44 departmenta
EOP students are represenled In 44
departments throughout the Universlly.
Jenkins noted . with many in programs
that traditionally have been viewed as
rigorous . Among the top 10 are engineer·
lng , nursing , psychology. management
and speech pathology.
Staff at EOP spend a great deal of time
trying to determine if applicants have the
ab~ity to pum~e a college education _
Most frequently . however. decisions a.re
made on "soft data" ranging from conversations with guidance counselors to
talks with the students themselves.
Akhough grades are Important. Jenkins
relayed that the program will also assist
"late bloomers" who showed substantial
improvement during their last semesters
In high school.
All students In EOP must take at least
12 hours a semester , and are enlllled to
funding for 10 semesters If lhey pass staff
evaluations . Evaluations are conducted
each semester and involve reviewing
grade point averages in conjunction with
the number of hours taken , and total progress lowards a degree.
Because both grade points and aedit·
houn are used in assessing a studenfs
performance , Jenkins observed that EOP
actuaUy terminates proportionately more

_ ___

c:::- ......
-.. ........

~qulpment

used 6y George
pononal ph-n and medical .,_
ltfVrfWf\1.5 uM!d In tlw l&amp;h .nd 19th cenunin are
fotured in • Uwe mon1h aha:ait al tM tw...h

Surgical

W""-""''

,._. . . . . . ---SqoOrotw..c.........,

For---"'"-'"""
,.,_c--_.... _ ..

--Tlw-----""·
...
,..,.,

·-

•

~co.:::,~~. -~=

Aa

.._._.t. not • rtp.ofl

Jenkins also ~ the complaint lhat
EOP students rip off the system. Without
the program , he feels that many students
who have the abilhy would be deprived of
a higher educallon and better·paying
jobs. No rip off takes place. he insists; the
program is helping lo educate students
who ult lmalely "conl•ibute to the
economy,'' not bleed il. Thai's why. says
Jenkins. he prefers to view EOP stipends
as .. investm,nts.''
Before 1967, Jenkins no led . SUNY as
a whole had only a small proportion of
minority students officially enrolled . To·
day , because of special programs such as
EOP. SUNY has some 6,000.
Typic.Uy. EOP students get aid from
TAP (akhou~h the account for less than
one per cenl of U/ B's TAP funds) .
BEOG and possibly SEOG . with each '
student or Ihe family also making a finan ·
dal contnOution.
EOP stipends usually run just under
$650 a year. Bulluhlon , fees , room an~
board must be paid before students can
receive any remltining money ... lfs not
just a cash-in-hand situation ," he
elaborated .
Since EOP money Is supposed to be
used lor purposes related lo edocation,
Jenkins feels the funding is "protected"
through the careful scrutiny of each stu· •
denfs academic progress.
Another fallacy Jenkins wanls lo cor·
rect. Is that only blacks can qualify lor the
program . Race Is not a criterion . he
emphasiz.ed .
While H's true that blacks do compose
the majorily of EOP sludents, Stale-wide,
30 per cenl are Caucasian ; 12 per cent,
Hispanic ; 2 per cent, Orienlal, and I per
cent, Native Americans.

Dental Clinic looking for
patients &amp;om 3 to 11-years-old
The Children s Dental Clinic on the
Main Slreet Campus is seeking paoients
from 3 to II years-old who need routine
care and do not have a regular dentist ~
In the past. there's frequently been a
waiting list for ohe Ctinic. but today a

=:e

o:f r~~~;~s a~=,.;:~~

the general state of ohe economy.
··When money Is tigho. parents may
regard routine dental care for themselves
and lheir children as a luxury rather than
~~
..::w~ :=.:;.::~· Sclon&lt;oot.lnry
a necessity." he says. He's sympathetic.
T l w - ._boon ........ bjl .... Smtohoobut warns that if chiklren don't receive
So. lloollolo NV 14214 niN ln:thludoft s National Muwvm of History ..d
adequate dental care early. they can laoer
Teclmologv Hllloric nwdlc.t le-,;j• .nd Nlrumenb
youf "*""' ..... door
develop more serious (and expmslve)
c.-.c:-, 5lo.llot: s.- ,.....ling. on llw nl1he ad W• er• from the Ut B Hu.kh Sdmcft dental problems.
...
1ft iht ..... ,..,. Ekntt Guda and lnltrUc
U.wy ..... •lao induded
"Some parents believe there's no need
Among ttw -.arumeniJ Oft uhbl ar~ trephining
101'1 ~ tron. lOaM to 2p m Sklt.fOR or
lo treat diseased baby Ieeth since they11
~~- VMd w. bor• into the ekul. and odw• survical
..... brundt. • ~ vtilh 0... lhould lw wenn
eventuaUy
be replaced with heahhy. per·
and
-.neal
......
«&gt;mm-ondc- llnnt....,owo.., .....
Tbt n.hlbl klcated In tlw tt..kh ~ft
,... ~ R&lt;f"'*
Ill wwr.a . u tid
manenl ones." he notes. But unhealthy
Unty on ttw fne floor d tumt.l TO'Wft', Mllin
baby teeth or ohose which must be
eo_.. .. lr .one! _.. lo .... " " " "
prematurely exlracoed can lead to later
~--s.--~w s.....
·1
_
_
problems.
..._...
..... - 7 ... "
",_
2S Col 0..0, Uw..., houn ~ f' ' •m to 11 pm . Monday
~ Thunday
• m '0 9 p m Fridey. 9 • rn
Baby teeth exlracled because of severe
-~p m . 5lwrts.y .net 2 to!lp m . Sunct.y
decay. lor example. may cause permo·
........ _
.. 13!32
nent ones to "!lrifl" In the gum. ExpenDCHIRFOF~
sive orthodontic orealmenl may be
....._...... cl ·1978 79 bjl oho Focolldn cl
~-·"1091~
necessary lo slralghtom them _ Diseased
S«iij Sclon&lt;oo and Hu-. Schocl .. INor
teeth can also lead to pulp or gum pro·
.... o.-.... Sdooal .... .... ~ .. - a n d ........ Schoclcl S«iij w...
ond obo Schocl cl ~ I.Gd&lt;wood
blems which may be extremely painful
~ u..c-. • ._.. .. ......, . . . . . . . __...olfv'* .......... lbo.y ,.,.... ond ......... "~
and require spectellled lr atment. ·And .
12'1
Mill Kaufman. missing teeth on a child or
-- to&lt;holqooa.ond
an adult can affect nutt1tlon by hampering
~GA&amp;U:IIY
the abil~y to chew propeiy
If lhe child has his or her permanenl
te«th.
neglealhg routine care may be
08a'-'
' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " even more m""'s for ~ th
teeth

~·

·- ............
'"" ..... pud·
_
__
... (Needoocoocel"C:.,.ondlmohbova-

sludents per year for academic reasons
than the rest of the Universlly; about 20
per cent of Its enrollment.
Also. since students must be making
satisfactory progress towards a degree • •
Jenkins Indicated lhat lho"' who are not i
ac:ccph!d In departments by thelr fifth
semester are "viewed with a jaundiced ·
eye" In terms of continued eligib~Hy.
'
The EQP Director, who believes In I he
value of a good general education, lllld ,
that when GE takes effect next fal. EOP (
students will not be given any "special
breako." They will have the same re- •
qllire(Tienls as lhe rest of the lludent ·
body.

must be replaced wilh art~icial ones. the
result Is never as durable or comfortable
as whal nalure provided .
At the U/ B Children's Dental Clinic.
third and lourlh·yeill' dental st11dents
work under close facuhy supervision .
They provide routine care as part of thelr
learning process: exams. amalgam
(silver) fillings. and SUrinless steel crowno.
to save teeth damaged by decay. W~h an
eye toward prevenlion. they apply topical
. fluoride as necessary. and counsel young
patients and parents on the importance of
proper brushing. flossing and nutrition in
oral heahh. Occasionally. students per·
form minor orthodontic, root canal and
surgical procedures and rebuild chipped
'
teeth using plastic resin .
One advantage of the U/ B Clinic Is
thai a chUd with a specll&gt;l dental problem
can be immediately referred 10 other
specialists within the Sc.'lool. Cases which
require a general' anesthetic are usually
referred lo dentists receiving specialized
pedodontic (children's denolstry) lralnlng
at the U/ B Chlklren's Hosphal Clinic on
Hodge Street.

Cost per \IISit oo the'clinlc Is fixed at a
nom nal fe1 • no mallet how extensive the
treatment prOYlded. sa~ Qr. Kaufman _
The Children's Dental Oinic. located in
the basement of Farber HaU. se~ patients
from 10 a .m .-noon and 14.30 p .m .
Monday through Friday
Pill'ents lnto&lt;rested In enrolling their
youngsters should call 831 ·2723 lor a
screening appolntmcnt

�Janullry 24, 1980

Look who's Into urban ·re ewal, art&amp;,
transit, the economy &amp; the schools
What local Bulf.&amp;o ~ ;
•
1. Ia Involved in ~clMi on me
area's - i n O&lt;der to ....,._ bustneso
and lndusrry"""' the dairabilily of .nl-

ing here?
•
2. Is studying how foreign cO&lt;npclitlon
cuts Into the profdabUity of Industry In
New Yori&lt; Stele?
3 . Is credtted with helping tr1gger
first concrete re-develoj&gt;rMnl efforts in
downtown Buffalo in several yean?
4. Presents an annual program of c.oncens, recitals, operas, and other musical
petformances (218 of them last ye~~t)
total yearly activity of the
oulstlipping
Buffalo Philharmonic?
5. Provides. the perfoming ans with a
freedom from box office pressures which
makes poos1b1e gretJer on-stage experimenlallon than can be found
anywhere else in Neiu Yorit State?
6. Offers special programs involving
JOB school d istricts and eight boards of
cooperative educolk&gt;MI services ·across
eight counties?
7. Actively recruils minority high
school students for careers In engineering, to the point of helping some of them
gel into Brown and other universtlies outside of the area?, and
8. I• about to start an effort aimed at
enriching transportation en!lineerlng
faculties in predominantly b~s
and universltlc•?

me

me

Deans are
a couple\./
Buffalo State's new dean of natural
and social sciences. OT: Vern L.
Bullough . Is the husband of U/B's
rec~nUy-appolnied dean of nursing
.._
Professor and founder and directO&lt; 01
the Center for Sex Research at California
· Stale Untverslty at Nonhridge. Vi!m
Bullough wiU assume his post • at the
Elmwood Avenue campus In the middle
of February. President D . Bruce
Johnston~

has ,.nnounced

He and his wile. Bonnie . who preceded him to B~ffalo to take the helm oft he
urslng School here. how been o team
ln·the wriung
numerous books and ar·

or

tic~ .

p!JIIough was recognized in 1969 as an
Outstanding Professor among those
teaching at Cal~ornlo Stale Universities
and Colleges. and in 1978 he received
the Cal~ornla Stole UniversiJy President's
Award
At present he Is associate edhor of the
Journal of Sex Reuordo . on the executive commillee of the International
Society for Comparative Study of
Civtlizo.tlons. and a member of the
American College of Sexologists.
FO&lt; three yean (1974-77) he served os
commtssloner of building and oafety for
the City of Loo Angeln and was also on
the 1974 L A Centennial Commission
From 1970-78 he was vlce president of
the Amerlcah CMI Libenies Union of
Southern California
Among hh recenlly published books
are HomoaeJCUObty, A H!"«J! and Sex·
uol Vononce In Socielv ond HistOI)I:
Those on which he collaborated with
Ut B's Dun Bullough In the lui three
yeMS' Include· SJn. Sldrncss ond Sanity,
A Hislory of Suuol AUIIUda, Ptoofilu.
tiOfl An IHultralrd Sodol Hl&gt;lory. and
Core of the Slct The Emergrnu of
Modern Nlmlng He abo edited and con·
tnbu.led to "Frontiers of Sn R«Search. •
an hpanslon of the special 1977 !slue of
"The Human • on the subjecl published
In Buffalo

Four coaches
appointed

10 0&lt;30
Award yoursd 10 points lor each time
you answered lWB. for U/B Is the
anSwer to aU eight questions.
Teke 20 points for each time you
spedlled o U/B academic affairs dMslon
as opposed to a unit from elsewhere in
llie University.
Make H 30 points if you responded :
School of Management to questions I
and 2: Archilecturc and Environmental
Design to No. 3: Arts and Letters to 4
and 5. Educational Studies to No . 6: and
Engineering to 7 and 8.
The U/ B Council was treated to an
overview of community servlce projects
carried out by these five units at fts
January meeting in Capen Hall, Friday.
Deans Ja.ph Aluno: Harold Cohen.
George Levine, Robert Rossberg and
George Lee provided five-minute briefIngs on their respective areas. alter sup·
plying Council members with reams of
more opedfic bacl9'ound informalk&gt;n on
their community efforts.
VIce President for ACademk: Affairs
Ronald Bunn abo introduced Council
'members to the remainder of his deans
and olflce directO&lt;S: Edw~~td Jenkins of
the Educational Opportunity Program :
Frank Corbett of Urban Allain: Shennan
Merle. dean of Social Work : George
Bobinski, dean of Information and
Unry SJudies; Kenneth Levy. dean of
Social &amp;:iences: Thomas Headrick. dean
ofuw. and MwraySchwllltzol the Colleges.
.
AI will be Invited lo make reports in the
future. Council Chatrmon Robert MiliONl
pledged.

~n

Aluno of Management talked
about the Regional Economic Assistance
Center (REAC) which the School ol
Management houses. REAC blends
educotion and servtr:., he repomd. w;th
education being paramount. In 1979. the
agency - . I $70,000 10 budgetaJy
support from the Sdlool and generated
anolher $450,000 In outside funding .
Thr hundred otudants participated in Ks
programo (some In lntcrnlhips or
coopcatlve education anangemcnts) .
and 60 corporalk&gt;ns and other entlties
relil&gt;ed benellts.
Alutto noted that to be accepted by
REAC a requut 10&lt; oervlce musa: a) be
acaclemicolly Justifiable, and b) cal for e.x·
per11M not available &amp;om other agef!CieS
In thearu
In raponw lo a Coundl memborr's
qualion . Alutto said lormerly c.ornpa!Jtlve. overlapping, jealous local
davclopmenl agencies are • now puling
togolhe • Tha mayor's ofllce "has been
rcnw\oably ~~ In .,ppo&lt;llng pn&gt;lfJ1'll'll." he added

T

....._ •••IDJ•••
19 ~.. ,._-

uf!Mf weW&gt;t

In,....,.
survey

-e.;;;-

CaiNn of ~
IIUdy of reaching""""
Councy
and ~ Dnlgn who NPQI1ed
8ftd a eoot..tlect~wMM
~
on hia school's wicl.lv-eCxlelmed role in
out In Dunktk are two examples. Its_a
~ Olalrict .~ atudy.
&lt;Mtter of redprocily. RoMberg ~fr~Phasiz~mayor MMct,. fO&lt; a plan for a one·
ed: "We supply~~-- m return .
block ara. Cohen recalled . "When we
learn from the school dtSiricls.
were ~ . we had carried out a
20·block . S60.000 project ;· Law.
M..W. aad - l n M i t
Engineering. Management and agencies
Dean Lee of Engineering outlined his
&amp;om oft-campus were allo involved. he . Faculty's campaign to Interest minority
told the Council. waving a few of
last
high school freshmen and oophomores in
40 copies of the comprehensive tabloid
that field . Htgh school guidance
repprt rcsulring &amp;om
IIUdy.
counselors have .-ed. he sold . as
The multi-million dollar Buffalo Savhave local lndu-.. Unde-Union Car·
ing• Bank • Hyan hotel complex. now
bide co-sponsored lost ye~~t's Engineering
seemingly usured for the 500-block of
Week campus visit program 10&lt; "-group
Main Street (sntching along both of Its
olthese students. and Bethlehem S..l is
decoying side• from Huron to
cooperating with this year's llffort )slated
Chippewa).-. triggered by the Theatre
for.S..bruary) . Lost year. t.. Slid. 150
Dt5lrict planning. Cohen contended.
minority youngsters took advanlagc of
His school ha• been involved
the program . In addhlon to touring CK·
elsewhere. he said: in studies 10&lt; the
hlblls and heanng lectures. they met in
Baird Point amphitheatre development at
small groups with faculty members who
AmheBl,
consideration of sites for
urged them to caD whenewr they had
placement of the Pulaski monument (in
questk&gt;• or problems concerning
cooperalk&gt;n with the Buffalo Polish Com·
engineering as a career. Many d id call
munity). by way of two examples. The
back. Someday soon . Lee hopes to ex·
Friends of SAED.and the School have
pend the program Into a summer inJ!Hu te
just trained 22 docents who will Introduce
- ~ outside funding can be obtained.
courwwork In environmental concerns
Speaking of that. he told the Council
Into aTea schools.
that FEAS has been aw~~tded a one.of-a SAED. Cohen clarified. offers hs ser·
kind grant of $186.000 to run a summer
vices only to governmental. quasiprogram for selected members of
governmental. and private not·for'Jlfofil
transportation engineering facuhies at
agencies: it accepts onty commbsions
predominantly black colleges and unlver·
related to the Interests and professional
sities (where programs in this rapidlyqualifications of !Is faculty . Akhough
growing area' &lt;&gt;f engineering have tradisome faculty are -licensed archilecls. no
tionally not been stong) . Participants will
projects are undenaken for which ltcenbe exposed to the urban mass transit ex·
""" is required (unless a practicing arpenise of U/B facuhy such as Professor
chitect from the commu~ily is involved)
Robert PaasweD.'wUI study transponatlon
theOry and resealch. and take a dose
A ch&amp;nee Ia Art.o and !Atten
look at Buffalo's on110ing rapid transit
Arts and !.:etters used to reach into the
development . In addtr10n. the black col·
community only in terms of hs wide lege faculty members wiU spend a week in
ranging · music performance schedule.
New York viewing that city's subway
Dun Levine recounted. That's changed .
he said . Nowadays. a much broader
sy~jB· competed with the University
population has access to these
Chicago for this grant after applicants
dlsdpUnes: a) because the Faculty has
from all over the country were nanowed
shifted many of Its lop professon and
to two.
most popular courses to evening hours
Perhaps. the break between Chicago
where they are available to all: b) through
Mayor Jane Byrne and Preside~! Cart-;r
ail Italian culture course In association helped swing the final balance 10 U/ B s
with the Italian Federaoon : tnd cl
favor . Lee speculated with o laugh .
through cooperalk&gt;n with the Institute of
Jewish Studies at the Amherst Jewish
Community Ce.nter.
Levine pointed to these addilk&gt;nal
1own110wn interactions: 1.) The Musk:
Depanmcnt provides one concert each
year lor the Buffalo Chamber Music
Dr: Leenderl G . Westerink .
Society; 2 .) The Center for Theatre
Distln~ulshed Professor of Classics.
Research QCX:\IpleS a place of prominence
recently received the Charles J . Goodwin
In the fledgling downtown Theatre
Award for the best book on a classical
District: 3.) The annual Shakespeare-insubjecl.
Delaware-Park program (whlc.h lost sumThe award. given every thr~e years by
mer attracted 14.000 indtvlduals) is "a
the American Philological Association .
gilt to people of Buffalo frO&lt;n U/ B:" and
was
in recognHion of OT. W~oterink's lwo­
4 .) Four or ftvc Art H istory faculty
volumc book. The Greek &lt;;:omment-s
members have developed a high school
on
Plato
i Phoedo (2 volumes. Amoter·
survey of Western Art which ena~ nine
dam . 1976-77).
area high schools to fill a gap in thetr curWesterink holds the Andrew V . V.
riculums (and earns advaaced placement
Raymond Professorship of Classics. He Is
college credils.IO&lt; those who take h) .
the auihor of numerous books and jourThe fact that U/B Is able to secure the
nal articles.
part·llme services of members of tht Buffalo Phllharmonlc OTchcstra enables the
Musk: Dcpanment to maintain Its petfor·
monee P«&gt;&gt;l"'m at a htgher caliber (for
lower cost) than might otherwloe be
possible, Levine added. It's reciprocal .
Council Chairman Millonzj UMIIed Access to the Univel$ily helps make the
Philharmonic more attractive in terms of
recruiting and maintaining orchestra
CONP£11T1V£ Cl\lll. SEIIVICE
members.
SG-3- ~. Uniwnlly l..borin

me

me

me

In

-·

of

Westerlnk's book
on Plato lauded

JOBS
T-

CTS~ .

Ed41Ca"-~
Educational Studies

Dean Rossberg
MrOed in on the Wa1em New Yorit
EducalionAJ Servlces Coundl as his a ·
ample of c:Ommunily tnvolwment. The
Council d,ates back to the Un~·s
· dayoas a privatelnstilulk&gt;n: H became in·
dependent In the 1960s, but was re·
adop4ed. "rcsurreded" reaDy, by FES In
the 1970.. Thll agency offers pcnonnel
development programs lor thosa
employed by ochoolo. and 10&lt; -school
board rncrnbew, ao one oftts primary .c·
tlvitles. Ill c:Mnleof upcrlcttce prDtram
proVIdes a doaen lnternshlpo 10&lt; wedu
stu&amp;nts in education. flnalv, the Coun-

-~- ~UCII - ~101)1 ~

--

Phyllcai Pion&amp;.

s..._...... SG-S -' Va , - . ,

lew

--Olfloo
.. Pubk · ""'-and
Mod School. Sodol Wid PtevmiM

~-!!,-;;::::~~,":_""~

Pion&amp;. -

, ~..
~·

s-o SG·9

- Doon's Olfico. Am oncl........_
1

~ CIY&amp; SE11V1CE
Y{aoloe SG-6 - Holm F

c;,.;..,.a
-

~- SG-12 -

220

~i,:_5G-IZ - 220W_, ,__
. . _ a..ua CIY&amp; SE11V1CE
~ SG-6 ts--e - . _ F_..
Plont ...,._ SG-6 - 220 ~-

-

atudiH. a •• !""""

-- - · •• ,.

-= .

�Janumy 24, 1980

Patenen wlll
Beglatratlon~

keynote family
eopference

gradlag, ~ollmen1: BJe.aired
-·--~~-The- a l• l
...
-. _
hod_
Mr.
h.o
_ poe-.!foo
.W.O
.nd
..en.
good llpPOintt'Mnt

tomd~M-

10 ~
..

n... .. .~~CJ~M~oflhaoveral

............... o(~lnl!oftolo (which ........
ol 1100 bodol. ond ol ~ •

.. -

·~~foolho-oiSd&gt;oal.

•

w--'"" • drOit............-..

t.-.::•:=~~PI~

automatic. but can now be t.ded locally inste.d

~~~~:~~=~·SHmSamMr

6.-..._...

Tho f'&lt;aldenl hos hod fiY&lt; luncheon mH1Ings
with tenkx' Uc:uJty 10 discuss the creation ol an
Honoos Plogrom He hos found no opposition ond

much enthusiasm. ·anct will thettdore proc:nd 10
consd:ute a wry smal group 10 woriLout tiM detaik
for a~ to bt implemented In thenar future .

Appadlx B.

'

All ,.,.,... Rqcwt on IM ..,.,menlodotl oJ lhe
Foadfy Smote 1/Lt/76 R I*JivtNM on GrodfJw
Policy.
The Gr.dang Committee met sU: times rtus

.

Rrnater. twa Wllh ~ewntatives from DUE.
AI&lt;R. ond
oil ............ Tho ............_
from lhese olllca. ol unden1a~~ . ..... helpful
and COCipft'lltivc: ttw commi:tee beliews dwtt com-

ucs

~=~S:. tf::r!..ntallo

'llw-G.ocling Cot~un&gt;~................. - " " '

lis-· but
"""'" "'-lhol
""'!'SEC ...tow.ld
.. In
che adtmoi:5trah0n
contirJUf: elon:s

only 10 " - tho FSEC odvfood ol
pasuad~

Sam-.y ol Cabinet M - ol .loauofy 14,
1910, from Newton Garver. Sen.•~ Chair.
1 .~

ll&lt;glob"otloo

&amp;o~~==1~:c=&lt;~·~

(up 400 from foil

2. Ctw.nc:«llors 8lft'tint with Counc::U Membtn

· and~ton

·

President Ke««·s imprftsion was that the p&amp;ea

~;:~~-'::::~~hathartt;

..,...., fd on~ ftfl . The: cut of 475 position$ •
OK M king as CUNY t.aa..es. a cut~ coo. Th«re wenu

~n:-~!;!~~~~~~:fU:~.n~

""' tho! high on lhelo priorily liot
p,.-.,... K&lt;tler and a..J (N\donle) - · ""
only SUNY praide:nl:l prnent at lhe lflauguratton
of Buffalo S&amp;.te President 0 . 8NGe Johr\5kJOe .

Somo "' "" people In """" (people """' .....

~="Lr~H!. b;yt~10 t~U~.!n :~

thmgs he c.nnot get from the Stale ('The ChHman
ol the- Buff. SlaM Coundl has been • member of the

aur.1:'~-t:...d='~ 't"".: ~...~~

ochool on Que.,.. Rogcnt Genrich . who
be-Mues there ahould lw no rutrl:tions on tM
number oll.ew IChook: legal ~uc.ation Is U!:latrwly
....,.,...., and Ia..,... how many diYene JOb
opportuntliK The Gowmor w.s reportedly aJ9Y

lhar dw Trutlftl

~ ~ aA

~c

extm!lion o(

MedQ in Queena: b. sums to wanJ 10
do~ few h• su.ppot:ten"' Qu.«ns
4 TlM: problun of N'LI.Iionl between dw County
and the Medical Schoot ted • new tum with tM
~tmem of Lo..ns Ru:uo as .d.mirrim-ator The
~tme:n1 WH n-..de withow1 conwkatJOn with

llwlln-.
Sud&gt; - ol" monciAiod
Merncwandum
Awee:men1
betwaon by
U/ 8llw
anddroll
the
County- but lhol do-oft hos boon Jilling on M•

Health Insurance costs

SI"AfE1llfll£ I'UIIi
U!Wc.-/Shiold

t:"u~ ~
.()pa

a Mop -.a

~~

GHII'UIIi

c::."".i~
.()pa

AIO!Iwn

~.'t:.
AIOolwo
HEALTH CAll£
I'UIIiOFEJIE

OO(.WTY IIWOI

. _.......,

$00

00
00
00

~'t:.

AIOIIwn

$130 68
13093
131.30
131 !"&gt;5

00
00
00
00

_____

""'.()pa
U..oles&amp;\

JS32
14.32
1491
14.32

5 74

219
00
281

124 S3
12259
124.55
12321

_

_.
.........,_ .....
--·-~~ ........ ...~...._._.,79

,.,.._ ,

_...,.. ....... Ofllllll .. _ _

c _..,.._..

-----.-POII ......

s.n...

Iowan! implomcnlallon ol Ill&lt; 1976
...alu·
tion on !PdJng.
In lha f.al oii978.DUE began a hand lmpfomonla·
0on olllw S/ U poofion ollho •aolullon . ond durin9

Appoodla A.

Iho_.

todt"'- ............ - -.... - - - ,.,..
........
..

p..... Ollco """'-·

~ :=-~~=)?9u:dawd:;'d:'

fiBI 10 be aUIOmoticolly changed 10 S 0&lt; U by Ill&lt;
computer fat theM .lludentf vJho Nd elected the
S/ U
during lho udy1)011 ollho fal
~ or 1979. en .ct hoc procedure for the
instructor...teaed P/F option w.sdevised. The procedure • ~ by al conccmed as cumbasome
and temporary.
The Grading Committee beiitva that tlw folow..
5ng impfO~t~C~Mntl ~ asentiaJ and ~ be. kn·
~ted Immediately·
0 P/ F couna lhoulcf be lcfen~led (taggodj . al
regimation , and the instruaon of these COUI'MS
gtye:n ~ w4tde forms which wil .auto..n.tk:aly

-Aioo.

rudandprintPandFgr~

1

FOf this prQ!Ctdure to be carried out by fal . 1980.
rww grade forma mu.t ~ ~ bv 1M ~nd of

Fa....,..

.

2) A compu ... procodu" ohoulcf be ~
students mey elect tlw S/ U option on·llne at
the time of registration.
from a Lllehnical point of view. the eboYe tuOm ·
mmdallons will be much simple. to Implement f llw
~ P grades (parA) can be put Into the: same

10 that

""bUcket"' as the o&amp;d P grades

(giYftl lor transfer
credit) and S grades. vtz. 'the "buc'ket• of gradn
which do not flgu.rt: In GPAs. Ttw Gr.-diog CommltlH recommends this be done
In summafY. the Grading Commiiler ~

tho....,..., _ cl OUE. A&amp;R •nd UCS.
IM'Id asks that ltw FSEC uerl prei$UJ'« upon the
pr~t to direct UCS to imple:tMnl the abow
pr~dura wtlhout delay.

Computing upgrade
set for next week
During the week of Janu:ry ;!8.
University Computing Services plans to
upgrade its academic computer in order
to support lncreaslhg demands for -seT ·
vic&lt;'&lt;. The CDC Cyber 173 will be con·
· verted to a Cyber 174 with the installation
of a second central processing u_nh . The

amount of central memory will also be in·
creased '"from 13 1K to 262K of sixty bit
.words.'".
Peripheral equipment associated u.iith
the Cyber 174 will be upgraded. 100. but
this will occur ovei a longer period . of
lime.. In pflrlicular. the tape drive&gt; will be
exchanged lor unliS capable of support·
ing 6250 FCI.
storage capacMy will
be almost doubled. and !he number of
ports available for time-sharing users wiD
be substantially increast'd Th.e details
and lmpac1 of these and other changes
will be couered more thoroughly in a
futW' INTERFACE article. .
The mos! significant and sens~ive
equipment changes will be made during
the wuk ol• January 28 and . possibly.
the following week. UCS plans to do all
of the inotallalion and t ling during normal nbn·production hours It is posslblt!
howOV&lt;!r. !.h at unlore..,en probl ins w.li
resuh In either momen14ry or long-term
out.ges dunng scheduled production
u....,. COnsequmUy, Academic Computing usbs ar being asked to ext'ldse
P&lt;&gt;tlence and to take exira ca•e to back·
up o1llcalfllo!o untd the In lallation ·Is com ·
plete

rna"

OOI"'s C onference on Families to be held

on campus. Saturday, Februmy 2.
Ave regional coniorences. being held
White House Con-

in prepaoatlon lor a

ference on Families planned lor June

5. ~ ...... ~
H-.

Basil A. Pat1111011. New York secretary
ol Slate, 11(11 keynote the l'1!gional Gover-

5-7. will focus on what New Yorkers
perceive to be !he -e·s major familyrelaled isoues and will elect delegates to

the While House C onfere nce.
Topics to P., covered In wcrkshops a t
U/B's alklay conference will be changing
l""'ilv life, lan&gt;ilies with special heeds Md
in sln!ss and crisis. ethnic 1111d oullural
diversity. hou,sing and communu y.
families and how they Interact with
schools. heahh and the workplace . and
· growing up in the 1980s.
Paterson has ...served as secretary of
state .since January 1. 1979. A widely·
respected mediator •.he is the recepient of
many honors ..

For live years. he held the post of uice
chairman of the Democratic National
Committee. Paterson is presldent of the
New York C~y .Branch of the National
Association for the Adva ncement of Colored People and is 01i the board of
edilors ol the New York Low Journal and
the adviso&lt;y board of the Black Thealer
Alliance~

Because of tremendous public interest,
the -co'nlerence has
pre-registration
closed .
One hu!'dred openings will be
avallabk! on the· day of the event on a
firSt-co~ first-served basis.
_
, M ore information can be obtained by
calling (716) 636-2901.

l&gt;een

or

T!tere_are no
unused ..dorms
U/ B has been asked to make vacant
dorm sprtce at Main Streef availablt! for
conversion fo housing lor the elderly. the
Bu/folo Euenlng News reported last .
week.
But UniversUy officials have responded
that there is no vacanf space.
Last fall , University housing was SRO:
an oddltlono! 530 beds could have been
used , Housing officials said.
• This spring, a few vacande.s may crop
up because of atlrttlon, Housing Director
Madison Boyce indicated early this'week.
The final housing situation wdll't be
known for several weeks.

In any case. Boyce said . there are no
large unoccupied dorm spaces available.
President Ketter told the Newl the
same thing.
The Issue was raised by Thomas S .
Cavagnaro. director of the " University
Distrtct Neighborhood Association.
Tower Dcirm. once used lor residence
space. has been converted fo needed
library and office use.

Radice named
in Theatre
Neal Radice has been named an assls·
tant both to !he chairman of the Departof Theatre and to !he director of the
Center for Theatre Research.
Radice, who earned. a master of arts In
humanities here , was formally director of
lhe Tabletop Players dinner theatre
troupe .
men!

Dimmick tops
test takers
Officer Oonald Dimmick of !he U/B
Office of Public Safety scored the highest
In New York State o~ recently·
administered Civil Service exomln.tlon
posllioff of Can\pus S~rity Of.

::.:'Jf.

Officer Dimmick compef£d ogalns! approlllmaf£1y 750 ott..; ollicer candidates
throughOUt !he Slale in """minatton areas
covering general knowledge. Intelligence
and physat abibty.

for';~~~;"" 1he camp"' security

�'·

_

• U I B leadenhtp m ong, evaluaton
.....
...... .,
e..

and to the bat o( b knowledge ' - d
every penon who aNd to be '-d. The
chairman o( the tum- also aNd by a
group of llUdents to hold a public forum
to dlscua laues related to the luclenhlp
of SUNYAB. This req!MS was denied.
Prior to tis vl5ft to Buffalo, the tum
received President Ketter's statement on
the condition of the campus, received a
number o( materials from President Ket·
ter providing bacllground Information
and current data for SUNYAB, received
&lt;~mens o( letters asking for tim« to be
heard, ~ an extensive report from
the chairman of the Faculty Senate Ex·
ecutlve Committee ~ received copies of
Spectrum (a campus ~ which
has taken a otrong positiOn In oppooltion
to President Ketter), tec:elved copieo o(
minutes of recent Faculty Senate
meetings, and received several un·
solicited letters providing evaluative com·
mants from members of the SUNYAB
community. Wl)ile at SUNYAB. the team
received the results of several surveys,
polls. and referenda related to the leader·
ship provided to the campus by Presklent
Ketter and his administrative colleagues.
While the team was mindful of the
evaluation guidelines annd particularly of
the statement that "evaluative Information ..• must be attributable," the very
fact of the existence of so many poDs (one
for students, one for professional staff,
and one for faculty) seems lmponant. In
addition, the results of such poUs • while
neither conclusive nor necessarily objec·
tive • do represent some evidence ol
campus ctimate. Accordingly, these poD
results were . Included among th~
evidence accepted by the team .
The

team

received

eRceptional

assistance from President Ketter and the
staff of his office. Harry Jackson, Assis·
tantto the President, spent most ol Sunday, November 11, scheduling Interviews
for the team as did Rose Levin , contact
for the team , and a_number of other people from the Presklent's Office . There
was complete openness and cooperation
and the members of the team are most
appreciative olthe assistance given them .
The team also wishes to acknowledge the
thoughtful contributions which H received
from all o( those Individuals who provld·
ed eHher written or oral communication
to the team . While fedngs on some
Issues related to SUNYAB are Intense ,
those who spoke tb the team members
dod so with objectivHy (or wtth carefully
descrt&gt;ed blaKS) and In a spirit of
assisting the team and , most particularly.
olasmtingSUNYAB.
Much of the major substance of -the
repon to fo8ow was transmltted orally to
President Ketter by the team during an
"exrt" luncheon. This transmittal was
done In keeping wtth Sectlol) B-2-g olthe
Guidelines fo&lt; th• ReuieUJ Ptoceso.
~
It 1o Important to preface the findings of
the team with a general statement o( the
apparent snngth o( SUNYAB. It seems
clor that the faculty, stall, admlnislra·
bon , and student body are of high quali·
ty. While few Individuals upressed no
concerns about SUNYAB, upr Ions o(
concern ,_ generally placed within a
context o( str"ngth ~tllf' than within a
context ol disaster. The evaluation pro._IIMII appors to encourage " negAtive
thlnlting," aod K - - obYious to the
tum rnembon that some o( the aillcal
commants rec:aived were not viewed as
crucial nor even o( great Importance ex·
cep1 that they -med to be requ erl by
the e v . l - procas.
b IS also clear that SUNYAB shares the
problcriiS f"'*'!! at o( higher edUCAtion In
the Unllcd States tod.y The team
not . . - tho. probkms tn detail, but
will sompiv rn«nbon the folowing bms
which SUNYAB shares IAIIh at majo&lt;.
comprehcnslw un--.illes
l O.Cbn ng enrollm.,nts (or th
~~~ of declonina 41n101mentsl d
to demognrphio: factors
2. Flnand.J pr...._.... eggravated by
h
of Inflation . (While public -tor
u..aty log behind inO.·
bon, they tradtlloMiy ...., log behind the
cMflatJon
.....~ to follow .,.
adiiMitage - " "

n
find

Hcularly between "teaching" •nd
~...ardl." While
lilnllons _.ay more opp.ent than real, and
establish a delmerl cllr;ho4omy where
none need exist., they lire .,...... and
they color the vllrlous pereeptions o(
~ns that are held, for~. by
undergraduate students as "'llloo.. to
graduate students or by faculty from the
humanHieo as opposed to facility from
the hard sciences.
There are some special issues (or some
local variations o( the concern• listed
above) at SUNYAB. Each of these will be
reviewed briefly.

n.. "B11111"cated" ea.SUNYAS e&gt;&lt;lsts today on two "main
campuses" (Amhenl and Main Street)
and several smaller sites. Because of the
nature· of the facilities on the two main
sites, students In mO!'y curricula spend as
many as two to three hours each day
moving back and forth between cam·
puses. President Ketter's statement con·
cemlrig this matter (pages 13-14, Presidential Stotcment: Condition of the Campus)
appears to the team to understate the
negative effect which the divided campus
has on students, faculty, and admlnlstra·
tion . In many ways. this division destroys
the sense of communHy which is an
essential Ingredient of a campus. The
division wW be. to some extent. a perrna·
nent one even when the Amherst campus is completed, and
task ol over·
coming this division will
'ys be on the
agenda o( the leadership o( SUNYAB.
A.

B.The"E&amp;~Uon"Crlaw

SUNYAB shares wtth lnstHutions such
as the University of CaiUornla at Irvine
and the UniversHy of UUnols at Chicago •
Circle the problem ol equating the high
expectations of the 1960's with the
realities of the late 1970'o. These lnstHu·
tions expected to join the smaU number of
major research universities (e.g., AAU In·
stitutions) and to do so rapidly. Estimated
slopes lor the add~ion of faculty , equip·
ment, facUitles, and discretionary doUars
were positive and steep . Now it Is clear
that these estimates were wrong and In
the minds of many, "Someone is to
blame!" The gap berween eXpectations
and reality leads to morale problems and
creates a need for leadership which has
some elements o( Inspiration , understan·
ding. and hope.

c.

Aaodemlc Leaclenhlp
Just as the campus of SUNYAB is
divided . so · in the minds of many faculty
• Is academic leadership. The history of
SUNYAB, starting wtth the orlg ns ol the
University o( Buffalo as a medical school,
but even Including the more recent
history o( seven provosts, has worked
against the creation ol a single. strong
academic vice president . The Executive
Vice President, the Vice President for
Ac.ademlc Affairs, the Vice President for
Health Sciences. and • perhaps · the Vice
President for Research have duties In an
area which could be described as
"academic affairs." The vice presidents
recogniZII some overlap and' duplication
among their tasks and recogniZII some In·
ability to delme clearly their tasks. The
faculty and students have great difficulty
In determining who is the key academic
leader In President Ketter's team and
10me, therefore, assume that there Is
none. With President Ketter Increasingly
and..,..,........; Involved In external mat·
ters, the need for a strong and respected
single academic "Inside president" Is In·
creased
It Is clur that the administrative team
includes many able Individuals. As a mat·
ter of fact . the recruHment ola number of
exe«knt, vigorous , otrong academic
deans IS a positive step which could have
aevera negative results In the &amp;boence ol
strong academic focus at tha highest level
of campus adrntn151ration Without such
central lnde:rshlp, • univcnlty can
become • federation o( independertt col·
leges rather than a true un!Wrsity. Some
commen heard by the team Indicate
that som&lt;1 obMrvers see such moves
towwd federation taking pt.c. partJcuJ.r,
1y with r_.t to the varlou health
saences, to ~t . to engineer·
Jng . and to education . The divlderl am·
pus c:onllt&gt;utes to thlo procas
O. Tbe UNY~"
Wh k may be an rn.cx:urat

vit&lt;w,

opa.ang • .,.,._ wllhln the SUNY
the~

...... and uncWr
and
*ol. the S.... ol. New York appurs
to be ..... whkh the
pro-

~

n1llloe much · mare dllfit:uJI than IS
_ , _ F- peopo lnlllrvlewed by
the....., did not Mel 111M both SUNY and
the Stale Mnpered SUNYAB. Certainly
the ~ lud to conc:crns about
numbers end about prerogatives which
are unhealthy.
lines" an a

·p-

~ at every level o( the cam·
pus and _., even d.iscuaed by sltjdents.
s.Jary ranges for admlnlotraton ere fell to
na.._ recruitment and, much wone, to
be a disincentive for performance .
SUNYAB feelo remote from the power
and authorHy In Ahany • - t l y a
feeling which Is general In wet1ern New
York and relates to aD government rather
than only to public h;gher education .
When one adds to the ratrlctlons
imposed by SUNY and New York State
those Imposed by the Federal govern·
ment and the require.tTKmts of various
union contracts with extensive grievance
procedures, one fmds a system which Is
perceived by many as completely remov·
lng SUNY AB's destiny from Its own
hands.

E. l'rftldelltl&amp;l H ..tory
For many members of the SUNYAB
community, the days of late 1960 and
early 1970 are stiD vivid . President Ketter
is spoken of by many as the "man who
brought law and order back to Buffalo." It
is typical of the real and semantic problems ol that period that "law and order"
can be lllewed as both "good" and "bad"
depending upon the context and the at·
Illude. The problems In Buffalo during
the 1969-71 period were serious and
President Ketter still Uveo with residual
credits and debits from those days which
affect the views held of h!m and of his
leadership team .
Conclualona
This brief review cannot do justice to
the volumes of material and to the many
interviews through which information
was provided to the team. From this information

and

rememberi ng

that

SUNYAB 1s a strong. high quaUty lnstftu·
tion. the team has drawn a number of
conclusions.

1. There are a number of special
strengths evident at SUNYAB which
assist In maintaining the academic
strength of the Institution . Community
and alumni support of the lnotitution
(which were at a low ebb In 197ij are
strong . The faculty . staff. and otudents
may have concerns about a number of
things. but I! was clear to the team that
there is not oppression on this campus.
Faculty, staff. and students presented
their concerns openly and directly . To the
extent that SUNY can be said to have
"stars" (a position allowed only outsiders.
such ao this team). I! seems clear that
SUNYAB is such a star. The College
Councll Is Informed and active and pro·
vldes excellent suppon to the admlnistra·
tion. Student organizations are weU fund·
ed through a mandatory fee and appear
to be well organiZed . Although there Is
more of an adversary relationship be·
tween the undergraduate organization
and "the administration" than Is typical
today and the major campus newspaper
Is cluriy "anU·admlnlsttatlon ." there is an
open campus atmosphere In which
a1t1c1sm Is freely and loudly offered.
2 . There is a morale · problem at
SUNYAB which is real and which is
serious enough that I! Is distracting many
Individuals from their real tasks as
students, faculty , staff or administrators
of SUNYAB. The pl"oblem grows /rom
the Hems enumerated above and from a
feeling that there is neither understanding
ol nor sufflclont efforts to overcome· the
problems at the presidential level While
the team did find som&lt;1 understanding of
and" efforts to solve the problems at the
~entia! level, there are oufflclent pcopie who stat that neither IS true to In·
dlcate problerN of communication and o(
perception which must be d ah with

~'*'II funcllon, the allocation o( - · end the provision ol...,
iiCademlc o( cllrwdlon felt to be
poorly handled by a number o( tho. with
whom the taam Wiled. SUNYAB ap·
pears to J.clt "the t.culty's men or
woman" at the SUNYAB central ad·
~ew~: Most u n - have
a highly rapeded chief academic ollicer
as the ~number-two" penon In the ad·
minlstr8tlon who can insure that there is
an academic voice et the highest lew!
rather than a 5el of audemlc voices.
While one can argue hlolory or opeclal
conccms about health - · these are
arguments to be de&amp;M with In auting the
academic admlnlstt&amp;llve position rather
than arguments which should cause the
position not to be created.
4 . Some ol the procedures and rules
Imposed upon campuses by the SUNY
system and by state govemmant should
be dminated . The Chancdor o( SUNY
is the key leader In this pro&lt;:ftl and his
contribution to the campuses will be enor·
mous K he can gain simplification and ra·
tionalization of the pr&lt;&gt;&lt;:eaeS!adng cam·
pus administrations. At SUNYAB. there
is a feeling that ttems get lost In the ad·

academic

-

ministratlve morass. In a situation as

complex as the one facing a SUNY cam·
pus, someone should '5erve a fuD·time
"expediter" role to "find" lost He"ms: to
gel acUon In 8.5 timely a manner as possible: and to serve as an Informed , sym·
pathetic, and helpful aide to faculty . staff.
and administrators in dealing wtth com·
plexlties. No person interviewed by the
C '
team could ldentKy such a person .
5. For a variety of reasons, there is a
strong undercurrent of dissatisfaction at
SUNYAB which finds its ultimate focus
on Presklent Ketter. There are fascinating
contradictions In expressions of this
dissatisfaction. First , there are many who
leel a great sense o( gratitud~ to President
Ketler for "his actions during the early
1970's in leading SUNYAB back to
business. He Is described as being readily
available lor meetlngs. as a person who
goes to dormitories and to athletic events
to meet people . and · on the other hand
-as ..remote ... He is described by some as
··autocratic" and by others as "unable or
unwilling t·o make decisions."
It Is clear that President Ketler Is not a
..non -person" on his campus. In some
ways, the lack of a strong, academic.
numbe:r-lwo man places more focus
upon Presldent Ketter than Is warranted .
And · one who Is given credh for posHive
results in 1971 will also receive blame lor
negative results In 1978 or 1979. The
university presidency Is a d~ficult and '
complex position, and H Is one In which
goodwill Is used up much more rapidly

·----·--·
Ph 1

•
ys CS
_ _ _..;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
P... I, ..a. a)
more refereed journal articles, "a slgnKIcant Increase from the level o( 50 per cent
of three years ago and further evidence ol
the build-up In momentum ol both
theoretical and experimental research
and other scholarly activity," Ketter's
repon reads.
One of the main concerns o( the 1974
evaluation team, the lack o( and poor
condition o( facilities and labonotorieo.
was alleviated by Physics' move to Fronc·
zak HaD on the Amherst campus, which
Increased individual faculty rn«mbers'
I!IOf(&lt; space More than $700,000 was
also used for new research equipment.
Ketter eKed as further evidence o( con·
tinued rev~alization and development an
Increase in graduate student stipends,
with further Increases planned . The
average 12-month stipend for eight
research assistants In Physics ~ $5,235.

Plwtltl- ....., _ _
Ploce.ment o( doctoral recipients has
been successful, too, Ketter reponed .
with -er.I prestigious appolntrn«nts to
institutions such as MIT, Case !Ncpem
Reserve end the Los Alamos National
ubooatory being au.Jned by recent
vigorously ·
grltduates.
3 In spite o( the effort• which have
One problem thai the department sdll
been made to cr ate &amp; functional and
faces Is lack ollecture ha space, lslhara
strong administrative team at SUNYAB
.ald. but thiS should be ruolverl With fur·
1- pages 2 through 5. Presldentiol
ther completion of the new campus
Stolemenl. Condition of the Compw) ~Is
Even that problem, however. has tis
the lllew ol the evalu•bOn tum that these
positive side, he notes: il Indicates an 1n ·
. !._ff!'_rts-~~·~ !'o~. ~~&lt;;!'!!~-~~ Th'!......-~~";1!. In ~~~~~! ~.
~~ment.

'!'-.

-

�u

January 24, 1980

• Leadership

,__ ...... .,

than n Is created . While there is still a
store of goodwill toward Pruldent Kener
and his administrative teAm at SUNYAB,
there is ample evkletlC&lt;I of a decline in
that store, As President Ketter and
ChanceUor Wharton consider the future,
the question of goodwiD deserves atten·
tion aloog with other factors .

CoDCludl"' Sbltemeat

T'h e
Police

To hdp cure the January doldrums,
UUAB callecl The Pollee, the English
reggae rock trio that uPeople"
magazine calls the "perpetrators of
some of the 6nest and most popular
New Wave music around." Although
the N - reviewer thought they put a
packed house to sleep at Clark HaU,
Sunday, these photos show the audience awake and enjoying.

It is the duty of the visiting team In the
SUNY review process lor the presidents
to obtain an accurate impression o( the
leadership and of the a&gt;mpus condition
and to report this Impression to the
ChanceUor and , thrO\Igh the ChanceUor,
to the College Council. to the President ,
and to the camp\15 community. Contrary
to a widely held view. it Is not the func·
lion of the visiting team to recommend
the reappointment or non-reappointment

of a president. That decision Is a constant
responsibility of the ChanceUor and
Board of SUNY.
Thus, this visiting team concludes its
report by stating that ~found SUNYAB in
relatively good condition ; that the leader·
ship of SUNYAB was cognizant of the
problems which the te•m was told by
representatives of the campus communi·

ty were the major problems: that morale
at SUNYAB ls.low.er than "heahhy grtp·
ing.. and requires atterytion : and that
some rather specific matters need to be
addressed soon . The key reminder which
the team would make to many of those
who visited the team Is that few . If any. of
the major problems facing SUNYAB are
capable of solution by changing a lew key
administrators . Regardless of the person
who occupies the presidential office, the
solutions to problems must come from
the concerted actioh of an entire campus
and particularly of Hs faculty. staff. ad"minlslrators . and student leaders .
SUNYAB Is fortunate to have strong adminlstrative. faculty. staif and student
leadership which can and should overcome many of the problems faced and
which needs to devote its attention and
energy to 1hose problems.

1

Millonzl'• ruponae
Robert I. MUionzi. Chairman of the
U/ B Council. forwarded this response to
the report to Chancellor Wharton on
behaK of the Council:
~ Pursu.nt to the Guidehnes for ttl. Re\Mw pro·
cftl lor the Prudenu. on January 18 I rec~rved
from Dr John E Corbaly the 'Rrpon of the
Vi51tang T~am to Rnoww ttw Leadership and Cam·
pus Condthon oft~ State Un~y of New York
at BuHak» •
~The reguler J.nuery meeung of the Counal of

dw Umversaty at Buffalo was held on Friday aher noon. J.nuary 18 The afore Mid r~ was
presented and dt~c:UIKd IU thet tnHting Th~
Council hils asked that I trantmlt the report wtth my
1

~;;'b:l:~fu.o•~t;e~~:n~ ~pr~~:;

=

obwrvatlons artd concerns on the: r~ prtXe$1
and tome thoughb con«mll\9 the rnatenalln the

&lt;epon
.. It is my Vtll'~*. and thllt of tM Council. that the.

-

-

task presented to the re,.,iew comnunee. ln many
re.spects . 15 qude dlfhcuk to 11ttompirsh tn a britt
pmod of tRTM Ahhough II If true . as tht repon
points out . that rnariy people wtre \n~ •nd
an opportunity effOfded to othen to prncru v.Y~~~.
W• quesaiOnabW as to w.iwth«r an~ analym tn depth
can be accompbshed in what many fHJ 1$ a cursory
revtew The report ~tl out many thmgs that art'
otMouJ For eJtamplt. commentJ on a ip11t campus. dt!'layed com~Tucrion. busans of 5fUMntli, and
a Lack ol WMe of community, .-e k\druted The
report U.O c~ -.bout poky wuhtn tM Stalt':
~em , tneqUIIab&amp;e s.ai.We and the kkc ABo men·
noned wwe lUong ~IC pograms. exu~nt
f.xulty and uudent body. a hohhy and ~ful in·
terac:uon with the commuf'ity. a tund \4o0rkang and
dftlut.d admmlitr.trion . and the fk'l thai there b
an ~ eampus. -'mosptwnt '" which cntc~~~m if
&amp;..ly oftfted
"'Ttw!o stronghe poou of dugreeme.nt ooncems
the ecadrmk: lltUdure Appare:nrty 1M st,and,ards 4
applied by the: ~ing team prcmde fOf a sbonger
«ntraJ Ofjlanilatlon wUh wuk.er parts We~

~="u':hS::~eo::rMa:!J*'s!:;:!:..~~

wath oehet prc-fe1510f\a! Schook The [)reans are fell.
to b. JOp notch throughout the u~uatt'
Rrutture Although .oon lftm fed«aoon PfC)blitrN
may result . w. newrthc:lnl -~ C'OnVtnCeS lhat .uch
ptoblems can bto hilndlrd An o~,or~d umverYy..
v.-.&amp;t HniOf acadtomtc oHic~ • on« of M'Yif'l'aJ
nwthods that on tM uted
About a VHf and a ~ tgO . • a rnult of a cam
Pll9f'l by 1he stuMnt ~and odwr• . . the
Counolo! Butfoio · - I
btoa of ohe p,..,
~ll Mn ~and conllldn
d.IIC1,ItllOII \W
d unanwnously to tuppott hm While lhls ' '
c.m """' by the r4Mt'w ~earn 16.at t'Gfteil'fMd v.·•h
the ~ QUdheln ollhc cond.Jtton of the c..-n
pus • • ~tNt th• hM bHn c:onJtrU«&lt;•
enot.hft r~ of tfw Ptftlid4ont
In sum dhough v. are conornwd wt~h dw
pruuc~~,~
we r~ gratdlfd tNt tN Cotbely
1 am found the condthon o111.. carn.put lo ~good
~lhat "•MmpWwd "•mvhopt~ youa!Wi
tfw T rutten. can proc:Hd 10 tflmlnM4P the m.~n@'f at
u.bru pow..bW ltml: ..

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                    <text>dolmstone

Geetie

Olpaapics

Alphabet

Buffalo State
inaugurates a new
president amid a sea
of familiar faces . See
page 3 .

The ones at Ellicott
are testy, messy and
prolific and may be
on their way out. See
page .12.

Two U/B surgeons
will be involved in
emergency medical
care at Lake Placid.
See page 8 .

A U/ B professor
proposes a new one
which makes more
sense phonetically.
See page 5 .

dapiter
The SEL has a
display of
photographs from the
' latest NASA space
probe. See page 7.

JAN. 17, 1980
VOL. 11 e NO. 15

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

U I 8 assessed 33
additional vacancies
in first wave of. cuts
U/ B has to increase its required vacan·
cies by 33 positions between now and
March 31 as its share of a reduction of

has ordered to be achieved by June 30.
1980.
.
The cuts w
ma ndated by DOB _

260 posiliqns which S UNY must make in
iis p.;rsQnnel!tm!zet by that dat
According lo f(obert J . Wagner. assis·

1980-81."

tant e~ve vice president, the new
vacancy target fpr the remainder of the

fiscal year is 245. rather than the 212
figure which had been operative earlier .

On December 21. U/ B had 267 authoriz·
ed positions unfilled. so no disruptions
ate likely.
The campus must

also take a reductioo

of $217.000 in appropriated OTPS funds
(other than personal services) In the State
operating budget (other budgets are not
affected) . SUNY as a whole has been
called on to reduce OTPS spending by
$2.3 million between now and March 31 .
The positions reductions across SUNY
are expected to amount to an additional

Are Polk jokes next?
Millard Fillmore tk/fnllely hcu a n Image problem.
.
!.at U&gt;«k, while the Unioerwity U1IU cereman lo,..ly celebrating the 13th
Prsl&lt;knt'a ·I BOth birthday, Ed McMahon, Johnny Canon '• oidekiclc. wo•
nominated to recelue the "Millard Fillmore Medal of Mediocrity" from a Cal·
orodo Millard Fillmore Socie ty a. "Beat Number Two Man of the Decade."
Do&lt;S that tell you oomethlng? u t'o face 11, more than a ocatterlng of
America"" th ink the name of U/ B 'a firo t chancellor Ia aynonymoua with
obacurlty. But II'• a bum rap.
WCBS Radio f rom New York recently Interviewed DUE Dean John
Perodolto about why hlotory hoo been ao unkind to Fillmore. Ia It ju.t
beco...e he Inherited the unlucky legacy of being o nu'l!ber 13?
Perodotto o.. ured rodlo hoot Gil Gro" that the Prealdent'a "incredible
mod&lt;Sty" played "no amoll role" In his "undeaerued" otatuo.
"But aome people ooy he hod a lot to be modeat about." Gro.. countered.
The Dean then went on to auggeot to Gt"ON juot why Fillmore deaeruea o
better reputation. According to Perodotto, MF U11U: the Individual largely
reapmulble for th e Incorporation of the City of Bo4alo; the /frat praldent of
the Btdfalo Hlotorlcal Society. the Buffalo Club and the Bujfolo Gene ral
HoapiiDl.
"Well, ao fa r he ooundo like o great prealdent for Bu.f!olo, but what did he
do for the real of the country?" the radio peroonallty de manded.
The Dean e&gt;q&gt;loJned that Fillmore "had no deolg"" on the Preoldency" but
qfter Zachary Taylor'• death . found hlmoe!f "th,.t Into 11. " Thoae were di/·
ftcu lt yeoro. The opllt between North and South woo growing, border aquobb/s were erupting between New Mexloo and Texoa, ond, to boot, South
Carolina wcu threatening to rolae Ita own ormed force.
lf ..,meone '1eaa de lica te" hod been handling the oltuotlon, the Civil War
might ha"" atoned 10 yeoro earlier. Perodotto proclolnied.
That no lnconaequentlal fea t. During the 10-yeor reaplle. the North
~rew In proaperlty. Hod It not been /or that delay. the Union m ight not ho ue
been oble to win the wor. at leo.ot a ccording to oome hlotorlo,...
I'
"Well, Dean Perodotto. • Groaa oop ftuloted, "I feel o lot better about hhol.
From now on 111 make all m y jokeo about Polk. •

$1.6 million for a savings total of $3.9
million this fiscal year.
Further adjustments for 1980-81 will
be required . Wagner said . as SUNY
copes with reduction of ano!her 215 post·
tions which the Division of the Budget

beca use of what i1 p;ctures a5 "lhe S1eadl- ..•

1y deterloniOng linanctaf outloolc lor
DOB said in a memo to Chancellor
Wharton late last fall . that the revised peT·
sonnel targets will constitute the basis for
calculating personal service appropria·
tions for the 1980-81 budget. mea ning
they will lead to pennanent reductions of
lines authorized.

On De&lt;:emlier 12. Harry K. Spindler.
SUNY vice chancellor for fina nce and
business. notified U/ B and other cam ·
puses of their shares of th e interim cuts .
but went no further .

The Chancellor was not yet prepared
to announce the campus-by-ca mpus im·
pact of "the anticipated permane nt base

reduction of 475 filled positions. and a
corresponding $8.3 million a ppropria·
tion" red uction tied partially to these posi·
tions. Spindler said .
When those .permanent decisions are

raade. the vice chancellor went on. "each

·-·ss-;-u,...&amp;.•

Social Work places
9 of 1 o·grads in field
Approx imately nine out of every 10 re cent graduale5(0f the U/ B School of
Social Work ani employed in the field for
which they were prepared. Dean Sher·
man M erle repons
The dean gets his information from

surveys taken In 1977. 1978 and 1979.
which were responded to by 86 per cent
or more of the graduates of each of those
yean. Among 1977 graduates who
responded . 90.7 per cent were employed
In soctal"worl&lt; fields . Ninety-one per cent
of the respondents from the 1978 class
and 93 per cent of those from 1979 were
similarly placed .
Where they were placed is· sign~lcanl
too , Dean M erle points out , notit\g a
definite trend toward employment in the

local area. In 1977. 74 5 per cent of the
responding graduates found jobs in Buf·
falo and Western New York. In 1978, the
figure was 85 per cent ; and In 1979. 92
per cent

·

Merle beams that the figures show that
graduates are "employed magn~lcen tly"

and are doing "what we are in business
for. ·· not ending up as "assistant buyers at

Hengerers." Those few graduates wh6
reported being unemployed were ln that
situation voluntarily . he added .

We're regional
The dean points our that where
graduates are placed indicates "we are a

regional school ."" He doesn't "take um·
brage" at that designation. though . " It is
marvelous" that we are regional. he
thinks . That means. he says expansively ,
that this school is "one of the most lmpor·
tant resources for professional social
workers for everything west of Syracuse ...

This include5 the Rochester metropol1tan
area as well as Buffalo.
The only not -so-good things In the
survey results are the salaries which MSW
graduale5 are able to command .
Ahhough wages in the field are going
up, Merle acknowledges they have not
kept pace with Inflation. 1977 graduate5

·---.·-·.. ....
·

,· .

�~

I

Jan""'Y 17. 19so

Ii

8CiiDOI.Of IOCUI WU.

-~· . . . . . . . . . . . .9JF.J979

1918
Number of Goadoalhs .... . .•.•...... . ..... .... . ...
RaponclentstoSurvey .... ..... .• ... •.... . ... .. . ..
Employed ........... .... ..... . . . ............... .
Unemployed ........ ... ...... . . . . .. .. .. ....•..•..

186.6'1.)
(90.7'1.)
( 9.2'1.)

~-~~-E~~~'.' .......... . . . .

26 (44.0'1.)

Wes~em

New York ....... . .. . . .. ... . .....•...•. .

Out of Slate ....... . ... . .... • ... • ... •... ... .•. .
No Locallon Gtwn ...........••.••.. . • .. ••.. . ...
Salaries, Top Salary ..........•.. . .. . . . ... . ......
Lowes! Salary ......•••.• . ..• . .... ... . ..
Average SalaJy . . .. . . . ........ . ...... .. .

18 (30.5'1.)
12 (20.3'1.),
3 ( 5.0'1.)
$15.293
10.300
12.057

49+
43 (88'1.)
39 (91'1.)
4 ( 9'1.)
18
13

s

(49'1.)
(36'1.)
(13'1.)
( 7%)

S6
49

(88'1.)

46 (93%)
3

( 6'1&gt;)

28 (61%)
14
2

(31%)

( 4%)
2 ( 4%)

3
$16.000

$16.500

10.500
12.SSS

13.260

11.000"

• Social Work

..,__
........,
received an average beginning salary of
$12.057 per year: those graduating in
1979 reported average enlry salaries of
$13.260.
The Social Work dean said the School
began laking the graduate employment
swveys in 1977 . There was concern over
whether Social Work graduates are really
being employed In the field in the face of
constrictions In social service programs
brought on by the nation"s and state's
economk: crunch . This seemed a par·
Hcularly appropriate question to raise In
New York. Mette said . because the slate
is the site of I 0 schools of social work
which produce each year close to 20 per
cent of all graduates in the field in the na tion. Within SUNY alone. there are three
social work schools: the other two at
Stony Brook and Albany.
The U/ B Sch.ool was cut back as a
result of budget problems In the spring of
1976. This was reflected by a decrease in
the graduating class from 75 In 1977 to
49 1n 1978. The numbers are now rising
again . Merle noted . In September of
1978. the entering class enroUment
jumped to 75 from 60 in the previous
year: thl$ past September. 90 new
students were admitted to the two-year
master's program . The number of enter·
lng students will be maintained at 90 In
future years to meet a student / facultv

ratio of IS to I. Merle said. This is an increase from 10 to I In previous years.

Part-d_.,...._
As another means of lnaeaslng the
numbers of students serviced by the
School. a part·time program was begun
this fall . Thirty-two Individuals enrolled .
equivalent to an add itional 16 full-time
stuaents. The original plan was to admit
fewer part-timers than that. but the limit
was raised because of large numbers of
very well qualified students found among
more than 100 applicants. Plans are to
$Ctrtlit another 15 or so part-time students
In each succeeding year.
Dean Mette notes that the School of
Social Work not only trains the professionials who staff local social service
.agencies. but also contributes an amazing
number of student "manhours .. to the
programs of these same agencies . Some
92 agency -based field instrudors super·
vise practicums in 61 separate agencies
ranging geographically from Buffalo to
Rochester on the east. to Batavia on the
south . as far west as Gowanda and
reaching Into Canada . In addKio· •. the
School staffs eight •o-called '"S&lt;udent
units"" in the field (Merle defines a ··unit'"
as a cluster of ind ivid uals wl}o are under
the administrative control of the School
but are physically located in a social ser·

vice agency. at- the agency"s Invitation) .
These eight outposts are located with
Catholic Charities of Buffalo. the Unlver·
slty Health Services. Holy Trinity
Church . and the Erie County Depart·
ment of Social Services.

n-ac18oflooan
Merle provides the following statistical
summary to dramatize the net effect of all
this involvement:
""The combined total number of hours
completed by our first-year class In an
8-'/2-month period in their Aeld Prac·
ticum is 40.267 hours. or 5 .369 days.
The combined total number of hours
completed by our second-year class is
38.715 hours. or 5 . 162 days. The total
of practlcum lime. combined. completed
by our 126 students during the academic
year 1978-79 was 10 .531 days. or 42
work years and 21 days. [This is) an ab·
solutely amazing statistic that is very
poorly perceived by most people: even
those who consider themselves to be In·
formed about the School and Its contribu·
tion to this community ...
The U/ B School of Social Work. Merle
e mphasizes. provides sign~icant contributions in terms of both public service and
education .. In the most syr)Chronized
fashion . Neither takes precedence . but
both mesh in the fulf!Ument of the University's ~ission ."

Tuition-&amp;ee course option is now
available-for employees in UUP unit
Facuhy and staff represented by Un~ed
UniVersity Professions (UUP) can now
regisler for a credK-bearing course on a
tuition-free basis. if space Is available.
The Experimental Einployee Course
Registration Program. provided In the
curren1 State-UUP contracl . is available
to full-and part-Urne employees for pur·
poses of professional as weD as personal
growth.
Each SUNY unlls dev151ng its&lt;&gt;Wn ad·
miS&amp;ion policy. but all campuses must
follow general program guidelines set by
the Chancellor. Under the UUP agreemen!
•he luKion-free program will
~l" '! .)r a..'l experimental basis until
June 30. 1982.
Applicants must meet the prerequisites
ol any cou{;le they c~ . If a class Is of.
fered excluolvely to !Njors. the applicant
must first gain admltiance to the depart·
ment .

Employees have the opllon of taking
the course for credll or on an audM basis.
Only one course. on a graduate or
undergraduale level. can be taken per
semester or sp.!Cial seS&amp;ion . AU fees are
payable by the employee.
If a desired course 15 olfered only dur·
lng the regular work dey. the employee
1nuS1 arrange an adjusted work schedule
approved by h is or her supervisor. This
scheduloo musa also be signed by the ap·
pliicant and attached to the application
form
Forms should be returr ed as ooon as
p&lt;&gt;s&gt;ible to Rosalyn Wilklnson . manager
of human resources development and
lnolnlng In the Personnel Office. She Is
located In the John Beane Center.
Amhersl . Ahhough awlicatots can do
course work at an•• SUNY unM. each
c-ampus wdl probably give P' •ference to
•s own employfts as U!B if doing.
ThoM applying for • tuition-free

registration. should attend aU classes
while the application Is being processed .
In order to find out the status of an ap·
plication . Wilkinson suggested thai
employees contact Phyllis Schaffner.
director ol student services. Division of
Continuing Education . who Is keeping
close tabs on enrollment figures In desired
courses. Initial conta:t can be made as
soon as two days after the application is
gtwn to Wilkinson : final determination
wiD be made no later than February 16.
If an employee registers for a tuition·
free class and then has a change of mind .
he or she must slill pay course fees unless
written notlee Is forwarded to Schaffner
no later than F~ary I .

n.. ___..._ ...........

When admittance toTparticular course
is imperative. Wilkinson suggests that a
better route might be the tuition -waiver
program . Here . registration is
guaranteed. but applicants must pay SO
per cent of the tulilon . The State pays the
olher haH. Employees have the option of
submlitlng an application for both programs. then determining at a later date
which program to use. Again . Schaffner
wiU likely be able to give enough Inform•·
tion to applicants 50 that an educated
guess-can be made about !"hich program
to use .
Applicants !)ave the oplion of taking
one tutlk&gt;n-free course lh addiUon to one

or more which are tuition-waived. Entry
Into one program does nol preclude enlry
into the other.
Employees with either positive or
negative comments about the tu1tion-free
program . or suggestions. should write
Wilkinson . Under the Chancellors
guidelines. each campus' has to keep
stallsllcs about the demand for . and the
utllizallon of the program . EAch oernesler.

... ·.

the information will be forwarded lo the
vice chancellor for faculty and staff rela"
lions.

CSEA.,...._
Full-time employees represented by
CSEA or Council 82 will have a better
chance this semester of -obtaining flnan·
cialsupport for coursework. Wilkinson in·
dicated. Under the Tuition Support Program. these employees can recetw reimbu.....-nt for SO per cent of tuition costs
up to S300 a fiscal year.
Before reimbursement Is made. the
employee must be notified thai his or her
application has been approved. In addi·
lion . tuition paym~tnt receipts must be
submitted along wHh a standard voucher
and proof ol satisfactory completion ol
the course.
Again. adjusted work schedules must
be approved by the employee"• im·
mediate supervisor if classes are
scheduled during the normal work day.

R - d l -.,ao,Full -lime professional serv ice
employees and faculiy paid by the
Research Foundation are eligible to apply
for tuition al)d fee assistance through the
SO per cent SUNY Tuition Waiver Pro·
gram.
Under this program . waivers are given

for credH-bearing courses which are Job·
related . used to satisfy a degree require·
menl. or taken for career development.
A 100 per cent tuiUon waiver is provid ed only if a specific course Is part of a formal training program required and approved by the appropriate U/ B vice
president. An outline of the program
along with the vioe president" s approval
must be on file al the Human Reoources
and Development Training Office .

Mer a m~ hiatus. the Divi·
sion of lJndasp11duaie Education (DUEl
has re-alabllshed the O..."s Llsl to
honor the acaclcmlc achiewments of
U/ B students.
DUE Dean John PeradoUo explained
that because of grade lnftallon. the re·
quired quality point average has been In·
aeased to 3 .6. Other eligblity requirements are that students must complete 15 hours during the semester with
at least 12 in regular le«er-grade courses.
The Dean noted that. currently. close to
45 per cent of the ~ Issued each
semester are dher As or B"s.
Even w[h the higher standards.
Associate Dean David Tarbet. who Is
helping Peradouo reorganloe the pro·
gram. estimates thai about 12 per cent of
undergraduates will qualily for the honor
each semester. Any lower grade point re quirement would have generated a much
larger group and diminished the distinction. both administrators suggested .
Adually. Peradouo said he supported
even more stringent requirements. but

finally opted for the 3.6.

lde~lly .

the

Dean would restrict the honor to no more

than 500 students per semester.
This semester. names of students mak ing the Dean"s Ust will be published in the
Reporter and letters sen! (or distributed
via advisors) lo students notifying them of
the achievement. In addition. the Dlvi·
slon of Public Affairs will be asked to help
get press acknowledgment in hometown
papers.
Peradotto personally favor s
establishing a new grading system which
would give both an individual's grade and
the mean grade of the class. He believes
that would be a more accurate barometer
of academk: achievement.

~

Listings sought
for ·inventory
The deadline for inclusion in the an·
nual inventory of University services to
the community complied by the Office of
Urban Affairs has been extended to Fri·
day: January 25. to provide University
units more time to report their 1979-80
community service acUviUes.

Each year. dUA ca[alogues the
organized servic:)IS' • provided .by the
University lo the Western New York
region . The results are published and
widely disseminated 50 · that the public
may be kept weU·Informed of the many
ways In which the University performs its
corporate citizenship obligations. Frank
Corbeu. OUA director. explains.
·The services listed In the catalogue
must meel the foUowlng criteria: the pro·
gram must have been In operation be·
tween September. 1978 and January.
1980: the service could not be exclusively
an Individual resean:h effort. unless per·
formed for an agency or organization in
the commun~y; the service could &lt;&gt;ol
have involved a mere membership on
a board. committee or taJk force In the
community. and the serva{s) could have
derived no monetary compensation for
the service.
·
The inventory is being coordlnaled by
Virginia Cardinale. Hallie McCarley and
Willa Johnson . graduate assistants in !he
OUA.
AU services that meet the above criteria
should be immediately r~d 1&lt;&gt; the
OUA. Forms may be oblalnfd by calling
831-5131.

Smithson named
to another term
Dr. Evelyn Smithson has been reap·
poinled chairman of the Department of

Classics for a three-year term extending
through August 31 . 1983.
" The

unanimous

support

of

Dr.

j

SmHhson"s colleagues and the strong en·
dorsements by Vice President Bunn and
Dean levine testify to the success with
which she has chaired one ol the Univer· ·
sity"s dlstingul5hed departments." Pres!·
dent Robert L. Ketter said In announcing
the action to individuals In the unH.

..

.·.

. .. ·· . .

·.

�January 17, 1980

Health Science
council may
be reinstated
Faculty

Senators

'representing

the

Health Sciences will meet at the end of
the month to determine whether or not to
rejUvenate the defunct Health Sciences

Faculty Council.
The reorganization effort. spearheaded
by Senator Jack Klingman of
Biochemistry (who also serves on the
Senate's Executive Committee). has met

with full support from Vice President for
Health Sciences F. Carter Pannill. The
group will meet January 29 in Pannill's
office to examine if :suffk:ient-\nt'erest ex-

ists among Health' -Sciences faculty to
revitalize the organization .

Klingman and other Heallh Sciences

Buffalo State celebrates its identity
at inaugural of President Johnstone
Buffalo State College has carved out a
unique identity for itself. despite having
to operate "within the shadow" of a
major SUNY graduate center. Donald M.
Blinken . chairman of the SUNY
Trustees. said Friday.
The College is "the jewel in the crown
of the SUNY colleges system ." James
Bums.

a

personal

representative

of

Governor Carey. chimed in.
The accolades for the College came as
H inaugurated D. Bruce Johnstone as Its
fihh president in ceremonies held in an
amazingly spic and span student union
on the Elmwood Avenue campus.
The union . an unusual setting for a
SUNY Inaugural. was freshly painted and
-carpeted and generally spruced-up for
the event which President Johnstone
preferred to think of as a celebtatlon 9f
the CQI!ege_ itseli (at(&gt;er than, of hjs i~ ­
augural. [As the Courier-Express howled
about expenses. College officials were
quick to point out that the refurbishing

has taken cuts ; Its employees have ab-

sorbed a

d~cl ine

in real wages over the

past 'decade; and it has been victimized

along with everyone else by federal overr

' lation.

the woes of the public sector generally.''

Johnstone e mphasized .
Harmful mvtM
He debunked three myths that do
harm to higheredu~tion : 1. That the demand for higher education has been
saturated ; 2. That the value of a college
ed ucation has declined ; and 3 . That the

universities. learned societies and profes-

sional organizatiOns. President Robert L.
Kj!Her. for example. represented both
U/ B and the American Council on
Education .
In his inaugural

address. Johnstone
was "defensively opti mistic" about the
fu ture of the College with its 11.000
st udents and 500 employees. and about

higher education in general.
He Is not worried about enrollment
declines, Johnstone said . Cuts can be
faced thoughtfully. humanely and with
integrity . he offered .
He is not worried eilher about meeting
changing needs of students. Teaching,
after all. has always been a challenge.
Shifting gears to accpmmodate student
interests may be a problem . but is not a
won-v.

Neither Is the poor preparatiOn with
which many Sludents enter college. That'
too Is a challenge which higher education
can do something about , said the new
president who was most recently vk:e
presk:lent for administration at the

University of Penn5\llvanta.

Public le WUfll
Higher educatiOn is unfa irly affected by
the great erosion of conlid ce In public
institutions .

John stone

lamented .

Today's public - wearied by Inflation .
taxes. ugly social problems and big
government - is down on everyone
from garbage collectors to the nuclear
regulatorS' to the Corps of Engineers
·· corruption and insensitivity.. deserve
the collectlve wrath of the public. the
former administrative assistant to then

U.S Senator Walter Mondale said . but
colleges and umvers1he.s ··are more inno·

cenl than moSI of the sins of the public
sector .. The educattonal establishment

Dr. William Ziter. left office .
Although some see the reorganization
as a divisive move . further driving a

wedge between the Health Sciences and
core campus faculty, Pannill, K"ngman
and Zlter believe the body would be a
valuable adjunct to the Senate and could

preside nt told an overflow audience of
1.000 (which included his parents) . "I
relish the light. "
serve as an additional channeJ for infer·
Advice &amp;om Meyeraon
. mation to and from the VPHS office.
Drawing on his experience. Presiden1
According to Klingman , the Council's
Meyerson of Penn _ offered these ad - bylaws are similar to the Senate's. and
membership In the body does not
monitions to the 38-year-old Johnstone :
preclude participation In the Faculty
A President must be daring and innovative but must not defy tradition .
Senate . When the Council W/'S functioning, several of its members. ih fact . were
A President must be o utspoken but
must offend no one .

A President must make decisions

also Senate representatives . This would

likely

happen

again .

Klingman

speculates.

We haven 't begun to fulfUI the goal of
exlending the opportunity for college to
all those members of society who could
benefit from it. Johnstone pointed out by

possible constHuencies of the lnstH ution .
.l::!e must be above politics , but must be
able ~ajole the legislature into passing
his budget .
He must be accessible to everyone but

have representation on the Coundl. apportioned according to their numbeT of

The cast
The cast of luminaries for t he afternoon
also included: Chancellor Clifton R.
Wharton . Jr.. Martin Meyerson. presi-

earlier. The group has not met. however.
since 1977 when its two-term president .

without hesitation . but must never dedde
anything witho ut .consulti~HOn with all

unemployed Ph .D.s and overed ucated
taxi drivers should be allowed to obscure
this fact . he demanded.
A national authority in higher educa-

dent of the University of Pennsylvania
and former president oflJ/ B. and a
number of U/ B administrators and faculty serving as delegates of colleges and

"Higher education. SUNY and Buffalo

sult with departmental colleagues a•d
report their findings in January.
The Coundllirst convened in 1975. its
bylaws having been approved a yUr

system is overstocked with deadwood
facuhy protected by tenure .

be done in a matter of

months. anyway.)

region in both education and researCh .

State are worth defending." the new

We are properly challenged to justify
the expense of higher education. but
should be judged by our own strengths.
weaknesses and contributiOns. not by all

way of rebuttal to the f i rst.
Blacks. H ispanics and other disadvantaged minorities are cases in point. No talk of

would have had to

ty to Include those who have been
bypassed . and to serve Buffalo and the

representatives to the Facuhy Senate initially met in December to discuss the
matter. Those present were asked to con -

remain free of everyday assignments in
order to contemplate the big picture.

He must be a friend of students but
must be iheir disciplinarian also.
He has to cut budgets without taking
money from any individual program.
Finally. said Meyerson . a President

tion finances. Johnstone granted there is
no accurate way to cakulate the

must be able to "walk on water but when

monetary returns of a college degree. But

he does. people will ask. 'What's wrong.

in any case. he noted . lhat is probably not

can't he swim?' "

Important . anyway. "Most careers which

The inaugural provided the opportuni-

~~en~o~~~:.~~~':,~~-i~~r:~~:"~h~l~

~h~~~"orse~'1:art~n.d'Pr~~~~~s aKe~t:~

or wrongly requ ire a college degree ."

and Johnstone and Trustee Chairman

Johnstone rejected the conventional
"wisdom"

that

there

are

Blinken about the SUNY budget. On

substantial

Saturday morning, Chancellor Wharton

numbers of faculty not pulling the.ir
weight. Most faculty he knows display a
wide and high range of productivity_
They teach. read , prepare lectures. grade

loured the Amherst Campus with Ketter
and -Vice President for Facilities Planning
John Neal before meeting with the Board
of Trustees of Erie Community College .

tests. counsel students. keep abreast of

their fields and keep an eye on deans and
presidents. U an occasional faculty
member Is a burden . he submilled . the
fault is not that of the tenure system but of
the administration which hasn't bothered
either&lt;o rekindle the lire that must once
have burned or to build a sound case to
get rid of the individuaL
Johnstone pledged : to' develop a
superlative undergraduate education pro-

gram at Buffalo State : to bring the arts
and sciences together with vocational
needs: to expand educatiOnal opportuni-

man of the College Council.

said that O'Neil has received high marks
students for being accessible and lor his

ington campus since 1975.

.

programming

among

Health Sciences units, the impact of
possible retrenchment in these areas . as

well as facilities planning, would likely be
high ranking Items on the Coundl's agen·
daif

~~~'l!~:i:h'S:,~~~ces Senators decide

to rejuvenate the Council. Klingman

hopes to hold spring elections in conjunction with the Senate's.

the College . an extensive pictorial history
Inaugural and displayed in the union lobby: a history of Buffalo State since its
founding in 1867 as the "Normal Sc)l90l
at Buffalo" was published : and the' Burchfield Center is displaying an Invitational
exhibit by 14 members of the arts faculty .
The Burchfield was also the scene of
an elegant inaugural dinner catered by
the Parklane's "Peter Gust" . The dinner
was given by M rs. BI)Jce E . Wallis. chair·

Robert M. O'Neil. who served as an

Bloom-

interdisciplinary

of the institu tion was put together for the

assistant to the president hefe during the
administration of Martin Meyerson in the

in charge of Indiana University's

FrEs. Bylaws restrict membership to 25.
with 10 representatives from the School
of Medicine .
Klingman emphasized that the Faculty
Senate. because of its University-wide
status. cannot get Involved with problems
unique to particular Health Sctences
schools unless specifically asked to do so.
The Council. however, could easily ad dress such matters along with providing
important feedback from faculty to the
VPHS. and vice-versa.
Such concerns as academk: planning.

Carrying out the theme of celebrating

O'Neil heads Wis'c onsin;
succeeds Edwin Young
late 1960's, has been named president of
the University of Wisconsin .
O'Neil. 45. has been the administrator

All five Health Sciences schools would

from

Indiana University officials and

Grad school
appoints ~arba
Dr. William Barba has been appointed
acting assistant dean of ihe Graduate
School. effective immediately.
His primary responsibility, ~ cling Dean
Andrew Hoh says. will &amp; that of
graduate student recruitment and reten -

tiOn. This will entail assisting de partments
in

their reauilment

efforts.

such

as

through· participation In graduate college
day programs and institutional visits. as
well as a variety of activities aimed at in·
crel!sing the enrollment of part -time
graduate students who reside within com muting distance to the University.

willingness to seek out aU views before

Barba has already begun to coordinate

making a decision.
The louisville paper reported also that
O'Neil has been heavily recruited for top
admin1s:tralive posts at several universiUes

graduate programs. Hob reports. and will
conlin ue to expand this effort to develop

his

activities

with

representatives

of

collaborative cooperation . Hoh says the

Wisconsin is one of the nation's largest
universities, and O "Neil was selected to
head It by its Board of Regents which in·

over the past few years.
One Wisconsin regent told the student
newspaper at Bloomington that W iscon-

terviewed rDore than 200 individuals. He
replaces Edwin Young who resigned
February I
The louisville (Ky ) Courier Joumof

sin board members thought O'Neil "knew

maintenance of the University's distinc·
live mission. doctoral education and

more about education or about what this
university is all about . and be could enunciate it better than anyone . .
··

our exceptional resources more accessi-

Graduate School Adm inistration hopes
these "activities will help to insure the
research, while at the same lime making
ble to the community."

�i l _a1 .i .
..

if

January 17. 1980

VIEWPOI TS

J ob prospects .
looking up,
surveys find

'Kramer' Isn't a U that grand;
'Electric' Is a romp, not an Indictment
Critic Dwight Macdonald, who was Esquire magazine's film reViewer for several
years, said. when he was at U/B a while
back. that h was no fun writing about
movies anymore. because their heyday
was over. This disenchantment doesn't
seem to be shared by most pradldng fil m
reviewers. Their chief problem appears t.o
be In reaching for ever more dizzying
heights of hyperbole.
Take the recent flurry of idolatrous articles about "Kramer vs Kramer." It's
been more or less unlve~Uy embraced
as. at least. a minor masterpiece. and this
view-In addition to the topical interest of
the subject matter-must have a lot to do
with the long lines at the Boulevard
Cinema, where every showing has been
a sellout.
.. Knmer vs Kramer'' is about divorce
and child custody In the same style that
"An Unmarried Woman" was about ·
divorce and the rehabilfiation of the aban·
doned wile. The chic. attractlve and .
above all. trivial surface of both movies
deflects from the enonnHy of what has

happened .
AaotMr .....,..._role fcx Streep
In .. Kramer vs Kramer" there are
wonderful performances by Dustln Hoff.
man and Meryl Streep: in fact . Streep
must be the most patient as well as the
most accomplished contemporary film
actress. She keeps getting cas! in small .
thankless roles- " The Deerhunter,"
"Manhattan." "The Seduction of Joe
Tyna n ,"

and

now

.. K ramer

vs

Kra mer" -which she animates with enormous subtlety and skUI. Her courtroom
scene portrayal of the mother who has
walked o ut flat . leaving the lather to read
her fairly shabby letter of explanation to
their seven-year 91d son . then r~ums
after eight mDRlhs . wantJng tbe .child
back. is so moving that only a heart of
stone tNOuki refuse p Hy.
Justin Henry. as the child . acts- or is
directed-very well. too. But there are
too many loving camera shots of his lillie
tow-headed figure as it walks adorably in
and out of the bathroom . or stares up at a
nude lady-friend outside Daddy's
bedroom in the middle of the night . asking her conversationally (and with unconvincing sangfroid). " Do you like fried
chicken?"
The child Is made Into a model of
wisdom and restraint. Only once does he
show defiance. and the anger and grief
that are revealed in this defiance are grip ·
ping. The director wants him to tug at our

heartstrings. but the poignancy would be
tncreased . it seems t.o me . by showing the
gamut of behav;or thai a child who feels
betrayed by the person he'd most loved
would exhibh .

Mal• parenting
There's no real sense of a developing
relationship between father and son: it
changes • pir'ly from non -existent to
devoted . w~ are also shown the dlfflcuhy
of being a single parent . ahhough the In·
dulgenl chuckles thai the audience
bestowed on Dustin, Hoffman. as the
P.T.A and other parenting demands interfere with his previously soaring career
in the advertismg agency. seem to be a
function of the lncongruHy of a male
parent wilh total responsibiiHy. When a
d ivorced mother struggles with these con·

flictjng pressures it's a commonplace.
and t enainly not an occasion for pointing
out thai h 'i CUl t! or, Indeed. -..dmirable.
.. Kramer vs Kramer'' is a '•ery convenhonal movie that tS utillzing a crucial cont~mporary theme. It's a kind of e xploita uon of audtences. or at ~ast a cop--out. to
deal with the wreckage of a family and
the devastation of a young child . as a
a-owd -pleaser

.......

A t •n'f*J community~ pub;tshcd

oodl n.u.ctay bv the DIY-. ol Put oc AI
loin. s.- ~ o1 :&lt;....von. . r.wr.ro
Edoonol olfoca ... 1oc....r ., 136 CR&gt;'u lUI,
~T~ t.._, 26 ••'b

Electric:-_.
should 8n1ve

If you
at the Boulevard
Cinema to find "Kramer liS Kramer" sold
out. you can go next door to oee "The
Electric Horseman." an "!J"eeable vehicle
for Jane Fonda and Robert Redford.
They remind us of what movie stars (as
opposed to fdm actors and actresses) are
about: presence and sex appeal .
Redford is very amusing as the brokendown cowboy. Sonny Steele. a former
rodeo champion. who has been hired by
a greedy corporate conglomerate to
hawk one of their products. "Ranch
Bceakfast" cereal. Fonda Is Halite Martin.
the gutsy if brittle TV news _reporter from
New York CHy. who pursues Sonny. in
order _to get a scoop on the scandal he
finally perpetrates against the Ampco
corporation .

Dftplte wbat FoDda - · It'• aot
dutatealnl
Although Jane Fonda , off camera. has
been describing "The Electric Horseman"
as an tndlctmenl of capitalism' s
systematic rape of the land and degradation of the masses. this movie is no threat
to )3recht. It's an old fashioned romp .
wAlt lots of reminiscences of when
moVies were fun .

For one thing. we don't have to be
concerned with moral telalivism : there
are good guys and bad guys. It's true that
Sonny Steele gels drunk a lot. but that's
because his moral fiber has been eroded
by Ampco . His ex-wife. affectingly and
believably played by Valerie Perrine.
tends lobe. weU. a bit loose: but she's got
a heart of you -know-what. As for the corporation boys, In their bland suits and expressions. they're updated henchmen to
the mob boss. who In this case is the
sinister chainnan of the board .
There is a gorgeous sense of the
vulgarity of American life. exemplified by
so;ourners and decor in a Las Vegas
hotel . "Caesar's Palace" (a real place).
before we are whisked off Into the

unspoiled landscape with Sonny. Hallie
and a horse. Here's where we have the
nostalgia behind the nostalgia-the
American yearning to return to the
simplicity of rural life: the restorative
function of merttng wlh nature and
mastering (without machines) the
elements: the freedom of the loner. accountable to no one . bul with his loyal
mates for easygoing cameraderie .
Physical stamina Is extolled, and sirnplldly. and the aackerbarrel humor and
laconic kindliness of small town folks.
Tile~ ......
This is Sonn9' Stule's physical and
SPiritual home. And . naturally, Hallie falls
for him. not just bea~use that's a given ln
a Hollywood movie of this genre. but
because Sonny becomes the archetypal
American hero. In Hallie's sophisticated
milieu back East, Sonny iiiould seem un polished and awkward. But here he is
strong . independent. resourceful. rugged. a t one with nat ure: the American
dream .
The sad part of this American dream is
that It is an anachronlsm. Even while
caught up In the romance of it. we know
that the Sonny Steeles can't just ride off
into the sunset. to the romantically
melancholy strains of cou ntry-Western
music . It's 1980 America. and the frontier
is over. The cowboy suil Is exchanged for
the coal and tie. the horse for the desk.
the rustle cabin for the country cl ub.
- The Electric Horseman" shows us the
place of this myth in the American
psyche . The contemporary pursuers of
success in this country embrace convenUonalHy. and their sacrifice of the cla~slc
American freedom . the freedom of the
"boys' books" (our most romantic
literature. as Leslie P~edler has astutely
pointed out) leaves an emptiness an'd an
uneasy sense of loss.

- Eather Hamott
Director. Cultural Affairs

Sunshine House. seeks
volunteers for its programsEditor:
Now that the Spring semester has
begun. Sunshine House is looking for 10
to 20 peop~ interested in working as
volunteers.
Sunshine House is a short-term crisis
intervention and counseling service. We
operate primarily over the telephone.
allowing the caller a non-threatening opportunHy to discuss his (or her) problems.
We also perform outreaches and provide
some short tenn emergency housing.
Sunshine House has advantages which
someone looking for a volunteer job
should know about. As in any crisis
center. volunteers here UJOrk directJy with ·
people in trouble . You can really help
people here! Furthenriore. volunteers run
the House. There is no aggravating
bureaucracy. and uhimate responsibility
for Sunshine House rests. not in a rigid
hierarchy . but In the volunteers
themselves . We receive no government
money. so we don't have to follow
nonsensical regulations or fill out

countless forms end a~n concentrate on
helping people.
Before working in the House .
volunteers go through 50 hours ol intensive tra ining over the course of about a
week and then work with more experienced House members yntll they are
confident and competent enough to work
by themselves. Volunteers are expected
to work al least six hours weekly and to
attend two hours of in-service training
each month . We also Insist tha t
volunteers commit themselves to working
here for at least two semesters.
If you would 'like to know more about
Sunshine House. are interested in
volunteering. or heve something on your
mind that you'd like to discuss with people who care, give us a call al83!-4046.
or drop in at I 06 Win spear.

-Mark Olaoo
. Asst . Director
Sunshine House

CSEA tries to clear up
confusion on directed absences
Editor: .
During the Local •602, CSEA ·
SUNYAB labor management. meeting of
December 13th. several questions arose
concerning Vice President Doty's letter In
your issue of 12/ 13/79.
Local •602 continues to believe that
the question of adverse weather and
SUNYAB employees leaving work Is still
the subject ol confusion.
So that SU NYAB employees
represented by CSEA may know their
rights. we quote verbaftm from the labor
agreements between the CSEA and New
Yori&lt;State:

"ABSENCE - EXTRAORDINARY
CIRCUMSTANCES:
"An employee who has reported for
duty and : because of extraordinary circumstances beyond his control . is
directed to leave work. shaU not be re·
quired to charge such direc!Aid absence
during such day to leave a-edits." (emphasis supplied)
Any CSEA represented employee who
believes he or she has not been treated
fairly under these circumstances is urged
to contact his or her Steward .

-CSEA Local •602

BOU'd of Dlnc:ton

~

··-

~ .- •

.,,.... ...

~:&lt;

l

• ..~ ••

~ ~· · ··

.. ,,.,:.. • .·,. .• J'. •. . ... : '· .,•. :..1

.-r-

Employment prospects for college
graduates are expected to continue to improve in 1980. according to two naiional
surveys.
The predictions were made by the College Placement CouncU which surveyed
534 employers In the private sector, and
Michigan Stale University's placement offlee which surveyed 471 businesses, industries. governmental agencies and
educational institutions.
The placement councU said employers
in Hs survey anticipate-a 13 per cent increase in hiring over 1978-79. but that
the strongest demand wtD be for technical
graduates.
John D. Shtn9Jeton, director of placement at Michigan Stale, said hts survey
indicates an lnaease ol one to two per
cent in the hiring of graduates. He noted .
however. that a downtrend Is QJ&gt;ected In
the auto industry and that fwi&gt; large auto
firms have cancelled scheduled visHs to
his campus. " Michigan Is going.to be soh
In hiring," he ·said. "The slate Is geared
toward the auto Industry. But aerospace
-is going great. So is the petroleum in·
dustry."
The College Placement Council said
fede,~al government hiring Is expected lo
remain on the same moderate-to-low
plateau of fairly stable replacement hiring
which persisted throughout the 1970s.
This level is about 20 lo 25 per cent
below the growth period of th~ 1960s.
Projected Ina-eases of six per cent .at the
bachelor's level and ten per cent at the
master's and experienc~d levels reflect a
return to average hiring volume from the
unusually low levels of last year when a
partial freeze on hiring and lowj tumover
combined to produce the lowest levels of
college rea-ultment by federal agencies
since the 1950s.
~.....,aped

tm,._t

Despite current economic urycertatn·
ties. 47 Per cent of the "mployers respon·
ding expecl Improvement In the
economic outk&gt;ok for their organization
In the first half of 1980, with 34 per cent
predicling slight improvement and 13 per
cent anticipating substantia.) improvement. Another 33 per cent foresee no
change from the last half of 1979. and
only 14 per cent indicated conditions wiU
worsen . The remaining six per cent are
uncertain .
,
A strong market ts projo!cled for
engineering graduates and in science.
math. and other technical categories. AU
three degree levels expected improvement for an overall increaSe in hiring of
16 per cent when compared with last
year.
In business-related d isciplines .
employers indicated they expect to hire
eight per cent more graduates than last
year.
·
Overall, an eight per cent drop In the
hiring of other non-technical graduates by
the private sector is anticipated .
Decreases In job openings were reported
al all three degree levels. This category.
which includes Uberal arts graduates, has
not shared in the generally improved
employment market .
UtUitln expect blaat . . By specUtc type of employer, public
utilities including transportation project a
63 per cent Ina-ease in hiring. and
petroleu m and allied products expect a
38 per cent gain. Other larg#-volume
employer a~tegories reporting increases
of II per cent or more were public ac·
counting; banking, fine.nce . and in·
surance; and chemicals. drugs. and allied
products . The automot ive and
mechanical equipment category has
shown a dramatic downturn . After repor·
ling an eight per cent lnaease in hires in
1978-79, a seven per cent drop is
forecast for 1979-80.
Employers who provided comments
were In agreement thai the demand for
technlc;ll graduates, especially ehgineers .
wiD continue to bet strong. Men y
employers commented that the market
for business graduates should be stable
bul that students with other non -techntcal
degrees may experience some difficulty
In finding appropriate employment.
So what else is new?, you might ask .

�January 17. 1980

Cohen wins
the Courier's
Focus Award
Harold Collen. the energetic and everoptimistic dean of U/B's School of
Architecture and Environmental Design .
Is the winner of the 1979 Buffalo CourierExpress Focus Award . the paper an nounced last week .
Cohen . who also received a U/ B
Foundation Award last fall for outstanding service to the University and
Buffalo community. was died by the
Courier for his ''visionary" Theatre
District concep t. a " rallying point for
downtown revitalization ," and for his

~~r~;; :::~~~~~=~ ~~~~ CommiHee
Late last year. the Committee released
a 181 -page document on " Buffalo Public
Art" which catalogued art works In the city. including public structures. and noted
their historical significance . The group
also gave recommendations on where

-with . . . .

some Bvffalo statuary might be relocated
for beHer exposure and wider public apof h lo olpNbol.

Art professor pt:oposes solution
f~r 'inadequacies of Roman alphabet'
By Mlh Carlin
N&lt;wsllwuuSIOfl

Whal do you do ~ you don't like the
alphabet? You Invent a new one.
That's what Tony Rozak did.
Anthony J . Rozak, an associate professor In the Art Department, laments
what he sees as the "inadequacies" of the
Roman alphabet as H applies to English.
The Roman alphabet , originally
designed for Latin , Is the most extensively used alphabet in the world and has
been adapted to countless languages.
But Rozak feels Hs development, particularly in English-speaking nations, has
failed to -keep pace with a rapidly changing world and lnaeasingly complex communications needs.
What's wrong specifically?
One of his ob)eclions, Rozak said In an
Interview, Is that the ancient Roman
alphabet, as applied to English, is only a
parllaQy phonetic system.
Take the letter "o," for Instance.
"This is a case of using one symbol for
different soqnds," he explained, eKing
such words as "go, do , dog , wome,n,
One."
On the other hand, different combinations of letters can for Identical sounds.
Compare " u" as In "ruby" or "rule ," with
"do , fruH, bruise, group, through , threw.
moon, flue , maneuver, canoe, two ,'' he
suggested. There's also "rheumatism."

40_bo..
Rozak's new , all-phonetic alphabet
contains 40 symbols as opposed to the 26
of the Roman alphabet. The symbols
somewhat resemble those used In
shorthand and represent the 40 distinct
sounds or phonemes involved In speakIng Engtish.
There is no bask: difference between
handwriHen and printed forms in his new
alphabet , other than connecting or not
connecting the symbols. The symbols
represent only sounds In spoken words:
spelling Is out the window.
Even though the Roman alphabet offers 14 fewer symbols than are needed .
three of the 261eHers II does offer. Rozak
said , are .. useless," "c." " q ,to and. "x."
He explained :
·
• The sound of "c" Is duplicated by the
sound of either "k" or "s." In one word :
..accent "
e The letter"q"ls expendable because
"kw" could take lis place.
• The sound of the leller "x''
duplicates the sounds ol "ks" or "z,"
depending on whether you are pronouncing "exlnl" or "xylophone."
In developing a replacement alphabet.
Rozak created his 40 symbols lo represent the "remaining" 23 letters ol the
Roman alphabet and 17 addotional
phonemes. There are 24 consonant
sounds, 13 vowel sounds and three
diphthongs. or vowel combinations
Beoldes doing away with spelling and
different charaders for wrHing and
prinbng, Roz.ak's system would dmlnate

capital letters.
..The context of what's being read is
usually dear.·· Rozak commented in
defending his proposal lo ignore
capitalization of names. If not. some
proper names with double meanings.
such as White or Carpenter, could be
underlined .
Rozak . whose field al U/ B Is graphic
design . created his 40 symbols to provide
''visual communk:ation" based on con cepts of vok:e'\lariations. Various types of

symbols disti ngu ish among throat.
tongue and lip sounds.
His concept -related vowel and
diphthong symbols are "horizontally
based." to represent the qualities of "unconstricted voice," as

he exp~lns it.

Consonant symbols utilize vertical a nd
diagonal hnes to represent ..stop" and
"friction" sounds respectively. For example, the letter "!" Is symbOliZed by a verHcalline. the letter "f ' by a diagonal line .
Variations include use of loops and
placement of symbols above or below an
imaginary axis .
Some symbols are used in reve.rw but
only vertically-that is. above and below
the axis. Horizontal reversals. such as "b"
and "d" or "p" and "q" In the Roman
alphabet . are avoided . Thai's because .
he said . "young readers perceive vertical
reversals more easily than horizontal
reversals .''

WIUIIworlo?
WUI the Rozak alphabet work?
The
40 - year -old
profes so r
acknow~ged that much more research
is needed .
.. I'm sure there may be failings ." he
granted . Bvt on Ihe other hand . Rozak
feels there is a need.
''I'm not criliclzin1/ the verbal
language." he clarified . "I m criliclzlng the
speUing system, which Is artiliGial."
He pointed out thai children are taught

hand is designed "for rapid writing and
nol for speed reading."
Amp beyond
Rozak believes his alphabet-because
of its graphically designed symbols-goes
a step beyond these linguistic phonetic
landmarks by offering greater efficiency In
reading and writing. There's also a
.. kinetic efficiency, " minimizing the
number of motions or strokes needed to

form a wriHen symbol. The writer doesn't
have to cross a " f' or dot an .. i."
A completely phonetic alphabet with
concept-related symbols would also be
ideal for reading or writing in foreign

languages, Rozak contended . Words
would be written as they are pronounced
and would be read accordingly, with proper accents where needed . The idea is

that n you can speak a foreign language ,
you can read and write il phonetically,
perhaps with some modnlcations lo ac-

commodate sounds not used in English .

The Rozak alphabet first came to light
in 1971 as the sub)ecl of his graduate
thesis at the University of IUinois. where
he received an M.F.A. in graphic design .
A Bvffalo native , he also attended U/ B,
earning a B .F.A . In communications
design in 1969.

Change lnevlt•ble
Rozak feels "change is Inevitable ,"
whether it takes live or 500 years.
How would we implement a new

preciation .
The annual award Is presented to the
Individual whom the management and

staff of the Focus section of the Courierbelieve most contributed lo the "cultural
and entertainment life of the Niagara
Frontier.'' The Courier noted that Gohen
Is the second winner affiliated with an ·
academic lnstltuUon. and the only winner. beside Michael Tilson Thomas. who
had lived In the area for only a relatively
short period before being presented the
award . •
Previous

recipients

were :

Robert

Millonzi. chairman of the U/B C11uncil :
Joanne M. Allison : Maestro Thomas:
Lewis Fisher: Calvin Rand : Dr. Edna M·.
Lindemann. curator of Buffalo State's

Burchfield Center: Robert 0 . Swados.
and J . Michael Collins.

Speed refunds,
PERB orders
The Public Employment Relations
Board has found thai the refund procedure of the United University Professions regarding its agency shop fee has
not been implemented in an expeditious
manner as required by a previous Board
order. (Case: U-2951)
Morris Eson. a member of the Stare
University bargaining unit , but not a
member of the UUP. filed a charge wilh
PERB alleging that UUP did not have a
proper refund procedure for _agency shop
fees paid by non -union members.
The Board's findings were based on a
report prepared by Martin Barr. PERB's
Counsel. The Board requested him to
conduct an investigation into UUP's lm·
plementallon of the refund procedure to

determine whether II had been carried

alphabet?
There's no simple answer. he admrts.

citing the unwillingness of people in
general to accept innovations and the
cost of translating mountains of existing
printed materials.
But he remains convinced that " even -

tually" the advantages of a phonetic
system would far outweigh the cost of
lnlnsfer.
Hee may bee rite.

out in an expe.dmous manner.

The Board has ordered January 31 .
1980 as the deadline for refunds filed In
1978. Also. in subsequent' years. therefund procedure must be concluded by
August 31 of the year following the ap·
plication . according to the PERB order.
The decision involved only two
members of the Board . Member Ida
Klaus did not participate.

a certain sound for the letter ..s. •• such as

the "s" In "soap." Then . he added . they
are required to speU such words as '"rice•.

and "rise ." They are told lo "follow the
rules" In spelling and not to think for
themselves.
"Why," Rozak asked . " are we
punishing ou~ kids for using logic?"
He Is "not alone" In his criticism of the
English language speUing system . Rozak
observed Efforts to phonetic!U the
language have been evident since 1844 .
In that year. researchers Isaac Pitman
and A. J . EJiis Introduced a "phonotypy"
system based on capital Roman letters
"readapted for a phonetically ellicient
system " The U/B art professor also died_
developments such as the lnHial Teaching
Alphabet (ITA) . the International
Phonetic Alphabet OPA) , and shorihand.
The IPA Is phonetically acceptable
because of lis "one-to-one relationship
between symbol and sound." he assessed. The ITA Is less phonetic because
11 Is a compromise between the IPA and
the traditional Roman alphabet Shari-

I

Freshman profile
64.15 percent af/rdltmerr mtmng U/B In I~.fall af 1979_,.., In ll1r top
onr/Vfh af tltdr high echool c.....,_, li1/0nnalfon/rom tho: 0/11« af Admloand Reccwde lndk:ot~. Tlllo comporu.{G_,., 1111th 56.41 percrnl of
entering frshmm 111ho _,.., -'mllorly ronkrd In lhr /Gil af 1918.
A_..., SAT «:ora/M lui/Gil'• mfmii!J cloa ~ 485.56 oerf&gt;of, and
56J .6 ""'"'· A A R rq&gt;GtD. Whl/r tllr oerf&gt;ol ocon rr:Jf«to a drop af onehalf point/rom,.,,.,__.. a - . thr math~ a-..gr""'" 8.3
pohlta hlghrrthan In I~ loll af 1978. 36.62 percent of the entering group
..-ftllloe-.. 500 Gltll .S99 on lhr oerf&gt;o/ tat, wh/Je 8.23 per crnl ocoral
lldul«n 600 Gltll 699. 56.31 per ur~t of/rdltmm ..-ftllldul«n 500 and
599 on lhr mothmtirtlcoJ.ponfon ofthr SAT, Gltll30.01 percent hod math

..,..,..,. ~ 600 Glfll699.
r
Adm......,. Gltll Recordojljrura ohouo aloo that 95.54 per cent of all daytfrM
In the /all oematrr ..,.,., from N.,., Yort
State. 7,d.en/rom W-..N.,.., Yorll:, 54. 09percentaft~ fl&gt;tGJ. Nell!
York
1,414 ~,... « 10.4 per cent af th., daytfmr .........., IDUJJ. The _ , . . , _ .,_,.,. ......,., Nell! Yori: Oty
"-e/M 1,776 .,.,.,.,., 11. 97 per"""'"' t~ toto/. 1,464......,.
(17.99 per cent) t:lnfle/rom "'*"kcoun-oultlidf! Watrm N.,.., Yori:ond
615 (4.56 per ur~t) _,..,from other otala and nou-.

u...........,.. erorotw
City.,_,..,""

�January 17. 1980

'Molly's Dream'
OrltliMI ,...... at

In • claertod bar

opeae 1011lgbl •• the
CaiNIM.

CALENDAR
WOMEN·s SOFTBALL MEE11NG •
3 Clark Hall 5 p m If ).'OU cannot •uend. contact

Thursday - 17
PEDIA11UCS RESEARCH SEMINAR•
t&gt;ewaopme:ne of Pancttatic E.aocrine Function
in lnfaniS and Children, Dr Emanuel Lt.&gt;benthal
Bol.rd Room . Childr!"'s Holpttal 12 noon
PHA.RMACWTICS SEMINAR•
Pharma cok1nt l 1Cii of Lyurg lc
D;.,hyjomlde (lSD). 0. Z.hod ~odd•k
Cool«- 4
Refre~ments ctl J 50

"-m

A cid
C51.,_

UUAB FU.M •

2001 : A S~e Odyney ll~l u.,,kfmiln
Amht..-rtil Call bJ6 ~ 19 fOt sh&lt;m :utk,.
Adm1won charge

~alrc.

The ptOt and explanatiOn ol lhb. brtli~anl movk:
t&gt;Ju,;a on an aJmos~ ""blrmlllal kwl m 1he 1ra.:u'9 u1
man h~Qiy and h~ romi!ld v.'lth nev.. ldl'
Long beffltc ·~e•r \Nan. · iulolh'-" ~rwr41JOn of

c:tlUegto studenb mad~ a cub of thl) """··:rbk&gt;"'..n ab
wrbing SCk'nC~ fk'tJOn lhnlk.&gt;r ~ ... ol tht.'m rn
WSit.&gt;d 4~ or\lv V.lJ\1 10 \A.alch It~ SlOrK&gt;d

and on \'I lUI

bock
MUSICAL •
Molly'5 Dream , a IWfh'K:I rnu~ill by pla\.'IA.'nghl
Mana lren" forn-.?" (\'atunr\g an origmal ~or.. b\
BuH.»o ,aa mu*.an R!duud ~1ulman Of1 Ct."Oit!t
Cab.ret ol U, a·~ Cemer lbcatre ~I Mctlll :,,,._..._-t
;tO p m Uo!1'M!fal admi»M)n $2 5U a1 1he door. $l
m advanc::f! TICket mfomumon and fun~ dt.•unl.,
are awnlabk&gt; bv c.ollJng S47-b401
·The fu-s~ prOducnon of tht&gt; I9Xlli for the Cvntl'r

Theatre. Molty'5 Or~am ~ set 111 a ~aU ~-ned
bat and ln\.'ll.es the aud~nce 10 shan• 1n th~ pn\latt•
f•nt.tsy \\IOfkl (I( Mollv. dw \loOaitr e~ \11.-hO ~~ h(&gt;l
day then?"
E.nca Wohl . dwec101 no~ thai playv.:nght
Fomet. u. -~med wrth 1tw anguiSh and dJhC'Ult\.
of relatJOnsh1p5 Wrll Molly get what ~ wants 111
her dream or will .tle wake up too late'J Is ha111ng
enormous sex appeal an bsse1 or a lla~hty·r

11M p&amp;.y'5 ~of moe mdudes &amp;rbara C.sey a)
ttw walt!C!'Sl. John Emmen and Mary Jo llptna:yk
reprnentatNti of tM MadtiOO AYmue ootton o(
dul ma.W/ temale suuUiy. Tom Johnson as 1tw
ban~der . and Rox Cramer. Rowmary O"Conn~ll .
Frazer Ll~o~ely . Magd.,Jena Estrada and Carol Sa
85

........

Fol&amp;oWJng thK product JOn. I he Off Centft
&lt;Abaret Will close foe renovalJOn but Will re-open m
Apnl Wllh a ~ of speoa1 event5

Friday- 18
P£DIA11UC GRAND ROUNDS•
Eku of Splenectomy Oft Ho.1 DdmK, Dr
Htlau-e J W A Meuwtuen . duector of lm
munology. Buth Ddeol lnst11ute . N6!W Yorio; Stat"'
[)epanment of Heahh Abany Kinch AudJtonum.
Chiktren' 5 Hosp. .l 11 a m

U / B COUNCIL MEETING •
Jeannetl« Marhn Room. 567 Capen 3 p m

COMPUTER SCI£NCE COLLOQUIUM•
A High l...ewl Muld-Ungual MuldprCJC:USOr
KMP/ 11. Dr Mario Tokoro. [kpanment of Com
puler Sdmoe University of Waterloo Room 41
4226 Ridge Ua 3 30 p m CoffH" and doughnuts
\11.111 be wrwct 1n Room 61
PHYSI~

SEMI NAR•

Bod!~ Cootoot """" O...th. 0. Lom. A

K~ . Dri~
tal M~ leln~.

Ms Kern• K~ok 11'1-lfer Clark HaU
ltJI2935

offic-~

or ·ca.ll

CACFILM·
King Kong , 1he- 1933 unedned oogmal WTS10n.
\ol.tth Fay Wra\o'· Raben Armstrong . Bruce Cabot
andCartOenham 170MfAC. EftiCott iand915
p m Gc.."'lftal Bd1Jm41Qfl $1; ;tuck&gt;nl.1- lacuhv and
sWf S 50 Tic"Ut~ tT\11\o' be obtauu_'&lt;f ar 1b7 MFA
~from~~ lhtath'
.J'bl.'~l'&gt;~&amp;i\llj_tebt_.-.t

DRAMA "
A Tribute to a King . · Cent(.&gt;t lor Theatr'-'
R~arch .
I Ma•n ·Sir('("' KJ() p m Sponsor'-•d
by dw Educatl()na! Oppooumty Cemer tEOCJ
Ttwam• V..~k,hop and the lns-nutt" fm P(.'OJ)k
Em.._'1pn)(&gt;'t II PI:. I AdmiSSIOn S4 general pubnc . $2
stud'-"fns and ~moT auzens
Tribute hJghbghb seen~ m tlw can.!'l-'f of Dr Mat
un Luther Ku.y J1 1rom tlttt ~nniny •A hb m
\.'OIWrtlt"''llm ttw Ct\11 Rtghb M(~·.._onwntmthl' nud
~,u, thrnugl "'"• ht•olfn. MaTCI' un \\.a~uugsrm t•
lu~ d»iit-t'-IHIIh•m 01 M o•rnph•~ Th~t pi.d\o' v.a-. \I!Tlii i!IJ
k a gtOUJl "' ..- nmnU"lrh,' r-.•r..nns nf \llhrl Jean
Jmu"''" and 1-Htnl•'' Ma:.ttfl..·r ttw diT'-'&lt;"tfJT ,md

.

r=~ ::\.llflro~r:~· b"~'-·,h::~::,
Wu.ho.··~ II \!Ia~ pwduccd at Our Lad\. nf I11Urrt._• ..
H t Church. Tiu: BUIW Acadcm\. ,nJ ~hllnh
S,pu..t Chur..:h th~ pa$l tlu ..~ 1.:ear.,
Tiw !Ide TOM.' tht, ~~at l!lo portTay.."d b\· U.11J J
Bro\lln J, dut'CIU10frhe EOC Amm ~te rhlm ....·lf
R(.'"l. Brov.11 b dlso Jla&gt;IOI of Nt'~~o Covenant Umt"d
Church of Chm.t Ac1tw 1n tlk' OvU R~ghb Mlr\'•
nK"nt 111 tu~ llitll\.!(' Mt~3o15Stppl dunng tlw hctgln o!
the saruggk-. Brf..l"ot.'ll bongs "'-'hat b described ,,., an
~tutheotte. ""-'nWI!Ve. inld ~mpathll"" dmwn~n '" tlw
dvuact~ Febtur-:d as the nanator ·~Ed\!! ani Pc.,,
son a lrfe long Buffalo resJdcn1 aud kwlg llml! cwd
nghts and Iabat koad'-"' A f()rm('r BUILD Pti?Sid~tn t
Peara.on rs p«.oso..&gt;ntly chatrman of the lns'"ute for
Peopk&gt; Enterpnse) (IPEJ and prt&gt;~ent of th\!
Nlbgara FrontK.'f Tradei Union U&gt;ad'-'fsfup Coonc1l

INFTULC)
MuSICal d1rectton rs by Ms Ins S~t.ovetlson . a mu!ol(
tnSirudOt a1 C.ntstus College and RtveMe H~g h
School St'-'Venson has compOSed several n'-""'songs and d&lt;'Wioped crealive anangt-ments of okl
gospella\IOntn She has anar~ fOt such mu~al
produc110ns as - Manw.- - Godspe:d ~ .I.Guys and
Dolls - "The FantaS~~ek, .~ -Camelot .~ and -Qitllft and rs prnerllly wntlng a musical1o be produa.-d at
the lle\41 StudiO Arena Ul May of thiS year
Le~s from gcwemment. education . Civil r~htl .
and th~ reltgiOU' commun11y havl" been nwu,•d to
appeM Some v.lho have acce-pt('d rokolt "'-'
Alsemblyman Arthur 0 E.w County E)l.t."Cl.ol h'l!
Edward Rutkov.'Skt. Mayor JaJTK&gt;S Gnffin . legtslator
Mum.e Gtlk.&gt;1h! . Coundlmen Oetmar Mttdwll
G~eo K
Arthut Davld CoDtns Anthony
Masie:llo. ~nd James p-nts . Ju~ BArbara Stms
and Samuel GtH"n . Wilham Gaht!f . ptesident ol
IPE Dan"-'! Ack('f ol t~ NAACP . Frank MeSJah
and Norman GoLdfarb of CCHR Raphael Dubard
of 1he EEOC . tlw Rev 0... Benne\t Smrth Re\.
Fredmck Hmton. Bishop Carl R~ . Rt:&gt;v
John Chr'ilt and Harokt Cohen . dean of tht:'
Enwon~mallA!~n
play w1U go IO\II'ard

School ol Archllt."Ciureo and

Proceeds from thfl
eiolabhshb•g a scholarshiP tn Dr Kntg's honor A
donation v.,.,U allO ~ made 1o '-'n!C1 a saatu'-' in rhl"
MU&lt;, J, . Park Till:~ tnJormahon and re~at loth

Off~nter

may tM.! kCUred at tlw Bo~ Off~e-e a• 847·&amp;461

MUSICAL·
Molty'5 Dream. a two· acl musacal by plaY'4Tight
Mana Irene Fonte.., featuring an _onginal score by
Buffalo jlltz musloan RiChard Shulman Off-Center
Cabare1 of U B\. &lt;Antet Theatre. 681 Main Street
N 30 p m Gen~al admiS!WOI"l S2 50 at ihe door $2
m ad\•arlCe Tk:kct lnformauon and further details
one availabk by calhng 84 7 -6461
UUAB fiLM •
2001 : A Space Odyuey (}~ Confere;la?
Theatre . Squire CaUb36 ·2919for.showllnies Ad
mtS)IQn charge

UUAB MIDNIGHT FILM •
Singing in th4! Rain (Kell}•. 19521 Conflmmce
Theaue. Squtre 12 mM:inight Admts§IOn cht1f9i"
~en)'. Donald O 'Connor . Debbie Rwnolds
and Jean Ha~n rna funn\. 1uneful accoun t I)£ \ll'httt
htJp~n.._-d wh~n HoU\."""-ood Warned to so~~!k and
&lt;;flffi\' ":h.., top r;~a r, dKin"t M;sn~,; contct•d 1(-, th;.o
N.o:ot n"ll1\'ll.'

mu~ICdi o!~•'t

Saturday - 19
WRESTUNG ·
U/ 8

\.'S.

SUNY Binghamton. Clark HaD I p m

CAC fiLM •
King Kong , lh&lt;' 19:-\3 unedned ongmal \...-rSfOn .
\ll'llh Fa ~· Wrav Raben Arms1rong Brucl.' Cabot
and Carl Denham 146 Dil"f(!Odorl 7 and 9 15
p m General admsssKJn Sol . siUdetus. facuhy and
staff $50 TICkets can be obtatned at ~uue Box
Ofhce from b p m

UUAB fiLM·
Hair (19791 Conference Theatre . Squire Call
b30 2919 for show times Admission cha~
On sev0al be51 10 bsa for 1979, this 5Ctftn ver·
sion of the protest musical of the Hower era 'ts
strangely up-to-date . INilh·h. and v..oonckrfut to
watch Twyla Tharp's choreography didn't hurt .
nenher dKt John Savage and Treat Will111ms
DRAMA·
A Tribute to a King . Centet for Theatre
Research. 681 Main Street 8 30 p m Sponsored
by the Educauonal Opportunity Centet (EOC)
Theatre Workshop' and the Institute fo r Peopko
Enterpnses UPEI AdmlsSKJn S4 general public . $2
S~udent.s and 5eniof cnlzens

MUSICAL"
MoUy'5 Dr4!am . a

mu.steal by plaY"'-'fl9ht
Maria Irene Fomn featunng an onginal sccxe by
Buffalo ,au musaoan Rdw-d Shulman Off-Center
Cabaret of U/ 8 '5 Center Theatre . 681 Main Street
8 30p m . General admlssk)n S2 50 at the door. $2
in advance Tcke1 mfonnaUon and further details
a re avatlable by calhng 847-6461
An addnional performance llolill be gwen at 10 .30
IWO· act

Sunday

20

DRAMA•
A Tribute to • King C~ter for Theatre
Research , 681 Main Street 3 :30pm , Spon50red
by the Educational Opponunity Center · (EOCI
Theatre Workshop and the lnsti1ute for People
Enterprises (IPEI Admission : S4 general pu!JIK; S2
students and senior dlizens

CAC fiLM•
Kln,g Kong. the 1933 unedited original version .
with Fay Wray, Robert Armstrong. Bruce Cabo!
and Cart Denham Squire Conference Theatre
6 :45 and 9 p m . General admission Sl ; ~udents.
facuhy and saaff $ 50 Tkkets can be obtained at
Squtre Box Off~

UUAB fiLM•
Hair (1979) . Woldman Theatre . Amher$1 Call
636-2919 for show times: Admission charge

pm

UUAB CONCERT•
UUAB MIDNIGHT FILM·
Singing in the Rain (Kelly. 19521 Conference
Th~atre . Squrre 12 midnight Admtmon charge

Th4! PoUce, A &amp; M record1ng artists Clark Gym
8 p m In advance. gener-al aclmisskm S6. S4 50
students Tickets will be $7 on thf! day of the Vic-w
Tickets available at the Squtre HaU Tk:ket Offn.
Buff State Tkket Offtee. The Record Theatre. Play
It Again Sam'5 and aU Central Ticket oullet5 For
mote informauon. caU 636-29 19 o r 636-2957
Opening for The Pollee on thas spedaJ e~o~enmg
are record1ng artkts XTC and Third Floor
Strangers

•nd Ctvillnst.ltute of Enwonmen
'5Vl04

4 1!) p m C.Qff

Ontario S1089wr~

at4

Monday- 21
BIOCHEMI STRY SEMINAR•
ldentfflcallon •nd Possible Rolu o f
Pluml~n Activators ln Hum•n Tumon, Dr
Gabor Markul . ROlwe.ll Park fnstkute 108 Sher
man 4 p m Coffee a\ 3 30 in l OlA Cary

PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUTI CS
SEMINAR'
Phann•cologkal Characterludon ol CArdiac
Hlsl•miM R«qtton , James; H Zawa:. Ph 0
BiOrnedal Research Departmetll . 10 Americas
Inc 124 Farber 4 p m Refrmments at 3 45
fiLM•
Alice'5 Rabiw-anl (1969) (Arlo Guthrk&gt;) 147

Chefendorf 6 .25 p m SponSOJed by 1he &lt;Ante. foe

Piper
La..,..

Trott. on pk:colo. hudllnea

• pr

m ol pipe mu.lc •I • Bullalo

Phill&gt;annonic Frieftdo c:oncert. MOll-

My.

Medu. Study
Drrector Anhur Penn. uling a newel IOUTCe 10(
movie material - a hi tong - ha5 managed t:.tak4! the origma1 Jlim Aory outline and produce an
ongtnal fikn of 5Ubltancc Based on Af5o Guthne's
bel! Hlling LP which recounted htt advtntura and
5ubwquent an-u. foe huering A unique comm-n ·
tary on how some ol our youth felt aboutiOLOety tn

•... 60s

�7

January 17. 1980

Far out
Bruthlaklns views of Jupiter and lis
moons oenl back by the Voyopececrah are on exhlbll In the Science
and Engln«ring Ubrary, through mid·
semesler. See "Exhlblls" llsllng bel.,..,

SPECIAL SERVICES PRO.IECT
Ar~ you looking fOJ help In yout ~~Are you
abald that your language bmitauon ~o~&gt;•on't mesh w11h
\.'OUT ambtt.on to ftnlsh your colk.ogc t!ducanon? Arot
you v.•o riung and taktng courses at Millard f-Illmore
E\·~•tng Cotk.&gt;g&lt;&gt; and m naod ol ht.•lp wtth vour
cla~"" Let t~ Spedal ~ PrO)f'ct help ~o~&gt;'Jih
youT educatiOnal problen11 ~· aulsdng you '"
I Math - ~'bra. Cit."''nK'IfY. Calculus
:l Sc~nc .... - Phys.c• . Chemtstry. B~
~i Englt~h - Wrt~tng . Rt'adtng skllb
For furth'-'1 mformatk)n concl!nnng the Sp...oda!
:::..._'lviCO Pro,ect. 001w.ct M lnna N Tones. Room
:i J2A T0\l.'llM!Ild Hall Mam St~ Ulnti)US at
:H 5514 01 b..il 551.5

TUTORS NEEDED
Tih! ::,P"'C.al !:M.-n· .c.;.~ PrO)l"C1 loc.tl"d at J 11
T0\!!.1bl"tlCL Room JI2A D k)IM!.tng for qu;:,ldr..•d
tutor TutOB v.ho wo uld lik._. to ;:,pply fot a pu.,ruon
v.'lth !:IJ)I.."&lt;"ldl St·rw..._.., muil mt:'-'1 the luDov. Ill !:I ,._.
qutnomt!nts
Tutur .. mus1 tM• cC'Ipabk-. of tutonng in Mnth
lalgt·hM g.-orrn.'1f\. ukukJlJ Stll.'nct.' tpho,:w ~.
r hl.'mt .. tJ'\. b.n~l -&lt;tnd l:.ngb~t (l4'flln'lg l'!nd
h'l1dll'9 :-ktlh.l

UNIVEJISITY COMPUTING SEJIVICES
SHORT COURSES'
Job Control Language and CYBER Control
languag~

- 213 &amp;ldy . ;i 5 p m 1 l.-b 4 b II
l :i
Buffalo Text Editor - Room 7 4:!.34 Rtdg..
Lea .i 5 p m F~ J2 14

Exhibits

FILM'
RWa of tM Game (1939, Renoir) 146 Oiehm dori 7 p m Sponsort'd t, lhe Cenler for Medaa
Study

UUAB MONDAY NIGHT FILMS '
Wac ollandbw ( 1928) . 7 p m .. Where Easels
Easr (1929). 8 ~ 30 p m . Matte. of the Vampire
(19JSI.9.50pm 170 MFAC.Eiicou Freeadmas·

-

BUFFALO PHILHARMONIC FRIENDS
CONCERT'
Laur~ Trott. piccolo &amp;ird Recital Hal 8
p m Assiiong .USU WiD be pwmtst Claudia Hoca
and IOPf"ilno Rachel Lewis. llc:k.eti al the door on~.
Getwral ~Kimisllon S3: U/ 8 (ecully. staff . alumni
and,..... dllzenf S2; tludontt $1 Sponto&lt;ed by
1he Department of Musk
Muwc on lhc program Is cbwn hom a high pipe
lradltion: lhe pipe and labor of France. lhe lriih·
penny wtustte. the m8ilary fH . horMmade pipet; OJ
~histleo. tho oolowy med..,lw sounds ol Jopan .
1he t!JCpfUilw music of the P•npipn ol RoumanW..
and the miltonnil-okl prac:ta of bnilMing or depictmgblrds

Trou t5 one of tm U.S muik:ianti 10 receive an
Americ:an Mu* C~ter ComrnkskM1 Award In
1979. ond k alto llw subjocl olo nationally t.oad·
&lt;ail radao program enlided •Piccolodeon ... produc·

•d by WAMU-FM in Washinglon. DC
FILM'

The First Twenty Yean, P.u I. II . Ill .net rv
147 Dwfendorf 9 p m Spontc,..-ed by the Center
lor Medii! Study
·

Tuesday

22

BROWN BAG WNCH'
The: ProbktN and Prlorit:lft: Before the Prnldenc of a Uberal Arts CoUeee. OJ Oamel R
Cha.rnbmain. prhidm1 of Hough&amp;on Colegt!
S.kly HAl Conferrnu Room. Rm 476 12 noon
Everyone anwed lo .t.enct

EARLY MEDICAL TOOLS
Surgtcal ~qulpment ut.ed by George
Washington·s petsonal physic.an and medical In
Slrumems used in the 18th and 19lh centuries art!
feoJturll!d In a three ·month exhibit at the Health

Wednesday - 23

Thursday -24

LECTURE'
Life Stage ResPonses to Environment•!
Okuii!T$, Sharon Rowe . d0e1oral candidate .
Soaology 330 Squo&lt; ~ J0 p m SponSO&lt;ed by
the Multidi5Cipbnary Center for the Study of the Ag

Aspects ol

FOSTER COUOQUIUM SERIES'
Activation ol Coordinated Carbon Mono•·
ld.-A Solution to the Eac1w Crlslo7, 0.. D F
Shriver. Northwntem Universily 70 Achaon 4
p m Coffee at 3 .45 in 50 Achaon SponiOrt!d by
dw Department of ChemisUy
HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY•
Ups and Down in Extr-.nDt.te Visu•l
SY5tem, Or Ann Grayblel. Oepar\ment ol
Psychology. MIT 245 CMy 4 p m.
SWIMM.ING (WOMEN'S) •
U / 8 VI . Alfred Untwr511y. Clark HaD 7 p m
UUAB WEDNESDAY NIGHT FILMS'
Subtvan's Tn~\1$ U94tt. 7 p m.: I

I Wa1a Male War Brick. stars Cary Grant as an
ex Ftmch Army officer who dtsgutSn himself as a
WAC in order 10 accompany hiJ ArMrican WAC
bnde (Ann SMndeg) 10 the U S on a troop ihtp

WOMEN'S BASKETaAu '

~MMING (MEN'S}'

•UtB"'-Bo6loS..... Clori&lt;thl 730pm

A

SuJMv.n't Trawk, wilh Joel McCrea and
Veronica Lake . a the story of a movie dtr«tor who
"''ants to rnbke a dramat.c him . 10 he 5ets out to
kram about life A fascinating . off beat adventure

pm

a-lto Rtwra. Nonh Tuas S..e
~Y a..d Hal. Room 101 4 p m Fret .ct
l'niMIOf'l SponiOfed i:J¥ the Dep.runent of Mu11t.

w..

U / 8 w . Untwnhy of

Rochat~ .

ENERGY RESEARCH SEMINAR•
· Studieti ln Catalytk Coal HydroUqudacdon. S
WelLer . Depenment of Chemical Engmeenng 10 I
Bakiy 4 -5 p m Refreshmt!nts ~u be 5erved from
5 -5 J() Sponsored by the F6Cuhy of Engmeenng
and Applted Sc:Wnus

DEPARTMENT OF STATISTICS LECTURE•
M~an Raidual Ufe, W J Hal. profnsot and
chairmen . Depanment of StatiStics Umwrsny of
RocheSier Room A 16. 423() Ridge Ua 4 p m
Coffee"' 3 .30

111

Room A- 15

UUAB FILM'
The 8ovf; From Brazil ( 197tii VvoktmoJn
Theatre . Amhent CaU &amp;36-2919 for show ttmes
AdmtsStOn cha~
Why muSI the adopted fathers of a hundrl'd
SIUinge!y smtstn young sons be kJHed by NaZI tut
men? What does the archfiend Dr Fnu Menge~
have to do With n? Why liTe Gregory Peck and S1t
Lawr~nce OIIVNn chew.ng the sc~t&gt;nery,

EXHIBITION OF MONOGRAPHS
Monographs of 1971!5-79 by th" Facult~n of
School of lnfor
matiOfl and Ubr'-ary Stud...... Xhool of Sooal Wotk
ar~ tlw School of Managcnwnt
Lockwood
M"monaJ Ubntry f~1 and an library February
129
~I Sc~nces and Humanilw•

JUPITER PHOTOGRAPHS

A new d•splay ol piCtures of Jupitet and its moor~s
sent back 10 Eaf1h by th~ VoyagertspeCecraft has
been set up in the Sdence aod Engineering Ld.ary.

C.,.n Hal

Maie War Bride (19t9) . 8;45 p m Conference
Thu!re. Squirt! Free AdmiMion

DANCE PRESENTAnON '

lri'Miift.~

I mmunological and lmmunobiologlc al
Enr~robacterial Common An~n .
Patnc:k Gannon. M S Board Room . Children's
Hospital 12 noon

mg
BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY
SEMINAR•
Oevdopmmt ol u lnt.acl CeBular ANaly lcK
Mammalian Thymktytale Synth~ and ill UK
for the Shldv ol Andcllncer Agmts, Jack
Ya.lov.ric:h . graduete Sl.udent. Depanment of
Bkx:hemkal Pl'wnlkology. U/ 8 307 Hochstetler
3 45 p m . Coffee a1 3 30

I.Acture/ Demonllraoon TN Ht.lor\1 ol Oanc::e:.
E.mmtus Cen\4tr 161 Hamman 2 p m
~ by Em.aus Center. al wck:onw
MUSICOLOGY L£CruRE •
Thf' lnterKtiOn of Lmear •nd Triadac 1lwory .n
t.le lrfteenth and hrly ~UCIHnlh untury mugcai

PEDIATRICS RESEARCH SEMINAR•

Sci&lt;oces Lob&lt;My
Mildred F HaDoW!Iz. U/ 8 history o( nwdcamo
librarian . says the coUecllon hM been loaned by tlw
Smithson\an lnSIItutlon's Nauonal Museum of
H~CKy al}d T echnokJgy Historic medtealte11u and
.n"'Strumenls of dw Ctvd War era from the U/ B
Heahh Soences Library art' also tncluded
Among tl~ m101ruments on ~rthlbet arl' tr~ntiug
tooi 11 Ullt.od to bor..- into the skun. and otht&gt;t surgcal
ancl obsletncal 1temr.
~ Sonw of the n1Slrument' ar~ crud~ ven1ons of
theM uwd today . ~ Mrs Halowrtz potots out. ~while
oth~ are consdaed obtoie:tt' ~
The exhibit . k»cated in the Health Sciences
L1bfary on the ftrSI floot of KimbaU TO'IWI'. Main
Strel!'l Camp us. IS free and open to the public
Library hours are 8 a m 10 J J p m . Monday
through Thursday . H a m to 9 p m . Friday. 9 a m
to 5 p m . Saturday. and 2 to 9 p m . Sunday

Notices
SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT
The ftrst Ut B School of Managt"ment Y&lt;'arbook ~
now •n produchon Tile book wtU conu!dn '"drvtdual
pte~urn of each Managenwnt Slutkont . facuhy pte
tures. and a wcUon of candid color pholos Peopk&gt;
are needed to \lo.Ork wnh layout photography. and
bus.nHS operations Non Man~ment sauder1b Oh!'
v.e:k:ome Piease come see us~ the yearbook of
hct&gt; Crosby l2C . if you ar~ lnteu&gt;Sted Ototaik on s.t
ttng ttnws and purchase iocauons v.1D b.! rn.ack&gt;
available to aD Ma~ment ltuckmts

Clark Han 7

ASSOCIATION FOR WOMEN IN SCIENCE
MEETING•
Wha1 Witf\1 lldlalhl &amp;houkf know about granl
.clmlftkb"ation., EJizabelh A Kopr-•. d•ectcw
grants lind contracb .drmrustratton. U/ 8 Blue
Room. F.culty Oub (Hamman HAJJ 8 p m

To lls1 event$ In the "Calendar," caD
Jean Shrader al 636-2626.
Key: "'pen oaly to tho.e with •
profeutonal Inter- In the .aub)ec:t:
'Open to the ~bile : • 'Open . to
memben of the Ualftl'Sity. Unloth.....,lae apec:IDed, tlckeu for
nent. charwlns adm!Mioe can be
purchued at the Sqlllre HaU Ticket
Offlce.

Ntneteen JO.by-40 rnch c:ok»t photos. c1agrams
and dra\lo.'lfl9S wmulatlng Voyi9n"s mtsSIOn haW!
bet'n mounted on w11ls m the SE.L's mam lobby
1lle phO&amp;~ au~ pan of a new colectJOn of
matenak detatling Voy~·s mts»on obtained for
ttw SEL through the clfon~o of Duwayrw Anckrson.
dean of the Facuky of Natural Sc:ien«s and
Mathemauct.
Anderson is a member of the NatiOnal
Aeronau1a and ~ Adminlsuation'l research
team and has ananged for the SEL to rc.'Cdve
NASA materiak. kldud.ng a ~voyager &amp;leon ~
that provides periodiC 5tatus repot'l' of the
~ec:raft"t. purn~y to Saturn
Susan Kroll ol the SEL saY" the display wtU 1x up
at least until mid seme:Sier break and then ..,.iJI be
added to the Unrvenily's permanent map coDec
100
Th~ SEL also has •vailab!• three n~w
.. bibbographies. James Webster. SEL direc:tor.

,.,.,.,,

Tiwy are 1'he Voyager MiHions.- ~ThrH MJLr
Island ~ and ~~..ow
&amp;.Ita lwo supponed
m JW!f1 by RKtwtl C.t10n Colege and the F.c:ulty of

ean.a.-lhe

Eng;"""""9 and Applied

sa.nc..

·-~.· -

.......

�•

January 17, 1980

~ssence'

editor to lead
annual tribute to King

The Fifth Annual Tributa to Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., sponsored by the Minority Faculty and Staff Association comes
Friday, January 25.
The'event wil include a luncheon with
Assemblyman Arthur 0 . Eve as speaker
and an evening keynote address by
Mardo Gillespie, editor-in-chief of

Essence

magazine .

The luncheon will be held at noon in
Talbert Dining Room. Reservations can
be made lhrough Sheryl Ogden at

831-5636.

Ms. Gillespie's speech wUI be presented
al 8 p .m . in ihe Facuhy Club Dining
Room , Harriman Hall. Main Street. and
wiU be foUowed by a reception .
As editor of Essence, a post she has
held since 1971 , Gillespie heads a
publicallon with a circulation of 600.000.
II is "ihe only magazine edited solely with
the Black woman-in mind," she states.
Gillespie won the Mary Mcleod
Bethune ·Award of the National Coundl
of Negro ,Women and the 1978 Federa·

Two U I B surgeons
headed for Olympics
By Mery Beth Spina

Ed*NI-. Hullh Scimca

The Winter Olympics wiD be a vacation
for the thousands of spectator.; expected
to flock to picturesque lake Placid in
February.
But the event promises to be no vacation for U/8 surgeons Drs. John Cudmore and Diane Peters. Officers in the
New York State National Guard, Col.
Cudmore and Cpl. Peters will be among
380 Guard personnel who 've
volunteered for active duty at the international games.
" Usually the host country provides
regular armed forces to coordinate and
provide emergency medical care." says
Cudmore. "but the Guard is doing It at
the 1980 games at the request of the
Lake Placid Olympics Committee." A
clinical associate professor of surgery. he
is commander of the Brooklyn-based
2441h Med. Group. Peters. a clinical_
..-!ant professor of surgery. commands
the Masten Ave. Armory-based 243rd
Med. Company.
Although the Guard's primary respon sibility will be to provide emergency
medical care to participating athletes.
c&lt;&gt;Khes. trainers and others of the
25 . 000- member official Olympic
"family ." they're prepared to cope with
emergencies for spectator.;, too ,' If
necessary.
"When you have 83.000 visitors - ex·
elusive of participants-yet· :an expect
heart attacks. strokes and other emergencies normally found In a population of
this size." says Cudmore.

-·t be...._
Guard units
be the vanguard of the

n.e,

will
emergency medical side of the Olympics.
but they won't be alone. They11 be coordinating efforts with some 80 volunteer
physicians from aU over the notion.
"If an athlete is Injured during an event
or a proctioe session. the clvlllan ski patrol
will bring the patient to a team of
military/civilian personnel who will see
that the condition Is stabilized." says Cudmore. Depending on the injury. the
patient will be whisked by Guard am·
bulance either to the Air National Guard's
Hospital Polyclinic. a 40-bed Infirmary.
or to a nearby hospital in lake Placid or
Saranac. If the injuries require medical attention unavailable locally, the patient
will be transferred by Air Force helicopter
to medical oenters in Albany or Bur·
lington . Vt.
On the other hand. routine iDnesses or
medical ernergoncles not arising out of
Olympic partidpalion will be supervised
by the lllhletes' own team physicians.
And, a8 memben of the Olympic
"family" from outside the U.S . must have
proof of health Insurance.
Since Cudmore Is commander of a
medical control type group, he will be
concemed primarily with coordinating
the units under him with civilian and
other military personnel. The 247th and
646dt -Med.
from s..toga and
Glens Falo wtl provide ambulanoe ser·
vice and trained paoonnel for transfer of
the lnjunld. Dr. Peter's 243nl Med. Company will be equipped with outglcal and

eo..

lion of Record Executives Woman of th e

e mergency equipment identical to that
typicaUy found In emergency rooms. The
Group's 47 members who have
volunteered lor active duty will be
respo~ (or providing treatment at the
scene .
The 825th Med . Del. from Brooklyn. a
laboratory unit. wiU, under the lake
Placid Olympics Committee's authorization, collect and lest urine samples from
medalists and other athletes selected at
random . Any charges of Impropriety
regarding use of legal or illegal drugs
revealed by test results wiD be made by
the Olympics Committee-not the
Guard , Cudmore hastens to point out .
Lab

personnel

may

also

conduct

necessary , routine tests for the Polycllnk:

on

athletes

suspected

of

having

respiratory Infections and the like .

A lot of Oa
"There11 be a greater Incidence of flu like illnesses, common when large
numbers gather, but we're more con·

cemed with potentially serious injuries In·
herent in the Winter events," the two
U/8 surgeons agree.
If bobsled teams. flying a Ions at speeds
of up to 80-miles-per·hour. sptn on ·a
tum . several people are opt to be injured

Year Award and has been named by
Block Enterprise as one of the mosl im·
portant Black women in American
business.
Mosl recently, she received an "ACT
Accolade" presented by ihe Aduer1ising

Communications Times and the 1979
New York Women in Communications
Matrix Award lor Magazines.
Gillespie Is a member of ihe National
Arts Advisory Committee of the National
Coundl of Negro Women , the board of
directors of the Black Theatre AUiance
and the Black Professional Women's Network.

Singles get-together ·
lr• dftllcult ot beat jor neu&gt;COmen to the Unloeralty - ond even thoae U&gt;ho
houe been around for o U&gt;hlle - to make .{rlettb urlth on)IOfle other than
departmento/ colleogua. Split com_. don't help, oltd the problem ,.
compounded U&gt;hen the lndloldYOI hopperu to be •Ingle ond deDOid -of CL
rmdy-mode •uppcH-1 ~em.
In on attempt to Joater col.fegloUty - ond to ,.,., ploln get to lmoa&gt; eoch 1
other - o group oJ Rngfe fa&lt;:ulty ond .tqff o,..., orgonldng on lrtfonaal
"happy hour get-together'" roDt Thur.doy (January 24), ot5:30 p .m . ot Pic- .,
colo'• Ratourunt, 1424 llfll/enport HII1JI., In the Trlod bulldl~. The co.tof
drlnb t. reduced during hopPJI hour ond' hora d'oeuura o,..., free.
The ,...,.touront t. operated l&gt;,o fw!&gt; U/ 8 alumni eoger to pleou c;llentele ,.,
from the Unlver.lty.
.
Since U/8, unlllce .ome ..:hoot., doe.n 't houe the type oJ faculty club
where people con got her ot oorloua tim~ dwrlng the day jor food, drlnlc ond
conueraotlon, the group hope Piccolo'•· ot leo.t temporarily, will fill the
oold.
Uenough lnterat t. generated, the group "'"' mm each Thurwdoy ot the
restaurant.

at once. Their emergency treatment is

dependent upon last. effective teamwork
on the part of those providing the service.
The potential lor orthopedic Injuries. of
course . is always lurking especially in
speed skating, ski jumping and down -hill
skiing , Cudmore and Peters point out .

"In the biothalon . the event which
combines target shooting with live am·
munition and cross-country skiing,

there's the additional possibility of accidental gunshot wounds." says Cudmore . Less dramatic but more likely Is
frostbite In temperatures which may drop

to 34 degrees below zero.
"Participating In a medical capacity Is
going to

be

a unique experience ." soys

Peters. "and one wh ich certoinly'W&lt;&gt;n't be
routine or boring."

But while the ticket-paying spectators
will gel • chance to enjoy the competitions with an eye toward who will win ,

the Guardsmen will be watching Instead
tor those who will need their help.

RtiNenal loo 'Tr1butelo o

Med schools
set record
Enrollment in the nation's 126 medical
schools this laU reached a record high of
63,800. an inaease of 2.5 per cent over
last year. the Association ol American
Medical Colleges reported. John A.D.
Cooper, president of the association , said
the increase was the smallest In live
years . A tolal of 16,930 first-year
students were admitted , a gain of 2.4 per
cent over last year.
Cooper said enrollments this year lnaeased partly as a resuh of the admission
of charter classes by two newlyestablished schools - Unlversidad del
Caribe In Cayey. Puerto Rico. and Oral
Roberts Uniwrslty In Tulsa, Okla .

Klatl.' bdat ........ ot C...ter Theotrw, Foidoy ""-h s-!aj, ( -

6.1

Uott..,., -

,

•Calendar
l i N - - 7, ..&amp;. 4)

lnt~

for Conversations is &amp;tt..r Hwrlott.

director of cukural affairs

Oa The Air
~-

.

,

~ ... the

c&lt;&gt;mpoMI Courift Cable

Arts' Gwo- Schullor.

(ChonneiiO) . 6 '30 p.m.

.-....,u,
c-.._ in the Arts, Chrlo....... Bolloa,
!Auaty K:ho&amp;ar and psychoeNlytl. lntan.Uonal
Coble (ChonnellOI . 6 p.m.

.......,u:

c - . . - ..

the Arts' Oido,llu....
Couriol' Coble IChonnol 101. 6.30 p "'· Abo .. 7
p.m on tM 29td

JOBS
PROFESSIONAL
C.ounwloJ - Educational Opportunity Program .
PR· I. B-9053
R£SEARCH
R.....d&gt; Aulslano -

Phannocology. R·906!&gt;.

t..bonOO&lt;y Tuhnldoon - Biocnemlouy. R·90b6

FACULTY
......., -....,. - Medi&lt;ol Technology.
f ·91!&gt;3
Choinnan - Phyoicol Thc.opy. f ·9152 .

�January 17 . 1980

I

•

••

I I

Dog ban threatens
research -a nd education
Bv.io,ce~

R-s..tl

While researchers here and ebewhere
battled last summer to prevent repeal of

the 25-vear-old Metcalf·Hatch Act. the
State Legislature passed a revision of the
Agriculture and Markets Law which
poses an even greater threat to research
and teaching programs that depend on
dogs for models.
Unlwt$ily officials say that under the ·
new law, which was effective January 1.
unwanted dog5 In pounds can no longer
legaUy be made available for research ·
purposes; If the animals are not adopted.
t~ must be subjected to euthanasia.
Adding lnsuh to injury for many in the
biomedical communlly_ the MetcaHHatch Act was repealed at the last sesoion
of the Legislature, daplte attempts to
block the action. The Metcalf Hatch Ad
was the object of torre~c:riticism from
antlvivlsectionlsts, "dJ6.
general. opposed the use of any antm in research
and teaching endea\101$. lt mandated
that stray.- unclaimed dogs and cats In
pounds be gillen to authorized research
.
facilities for use.
Jorge Velasco. . . - t e director of
U/ B's Animal Lab Facillly. complained
that the Univefsity and other SUNY
research centers \ltollere never informed or

consulted about the revisiOn of the
,.gricukure law. He suspects the Metcalf·
Hatch repeal &lt;tffort might have been used
by the growing anUIIivlsectionist lobby .as
_ a diversionary tacUc. to caD attention
away from the other change.

SUNY Ia .,_. .tlly
Dr. Alden N. Haffner. SUNY aosodate
vice chancellor for heahh sciences. ac1cording 1o Velasco, Is In sympathy with
1the problem now facing some research
t and teaching programs. and is acting as
the researchers' spokespenon to
lawmakers in Albany. Facuhy wishing to
express their opinions regarding the law
are urged to do so In correspondence to
him.
Velasco and Dr. Shaheen Nakeeb,
t director of the Animal Lab Facility_ are
hoping that Haffner can flex enough
politic;al muscle to postpone lmplementa1lion of the biD. but the odds are against it.
ldeaUy, the men would like to see the law
rewritten to enable research facilities lo
once again gain acce~ to unwanted
dog5. But this means another bill would
have to be lntnoduced. and the whole
process would take about a year.
In the meantime. Velasco noted that
several research projects now underway
will eventually be hampered . not to mention the Department of Surgery here.
which uses dogs in student teaching programs. Fortunately_ the University has
enough dogs on hand to last several .
weeks. Velasco estimated . but aher they
are gone. the University wiD be forced to
pay ten·fold more for dogs raised by
breeders or commerlcal dealers. Currently . from some dealers , a ·six month wait
for animals is necessary.

1

I

lt'e.....-we
Wrttes Dr. David Pendergast. associate
professor of physiology here: "It Is
unreasonable for sod£ty to expect high
surgical skills, new surgical techniques.
understanding of medical problems. new
medical cures. disease treatment or
prevention from the medical profession ~
the developmental model Is eliminated."
In another ktter to Haffner, Dr. Francis
Klocke. chief of cardiology at U/ B
Medical School notes: "An Important
fraction of the beneficial diagnostic procedures and SPOdfic treatments now applied routinely In coronary care units , car-

dlac catheterization laboratories and
open·hean surgery are a direct outwowth
of studies which would have been
hampered tremendously ~ Article 7 had
been in effect. I cannot believe that proponents of the Article have accurately ap·
, preciated Its potenuaDy devastating ef.
feels on continued health care research In
New York State."

'Dosnawlas'

Velasco puts forth another argument:
Since stray. unclaimed animals must be
euthaaized after a certain lime period ,
why should two animals have to be
sacrificed? There's also a chance that
spiraling costs for animals wiU put li·
censed dog dealers out of business. lore·
ing researchers to deal with breeders
whOse costs are even more prohibitively
expenSive. Even worse. some predict the
law wiD encourage "dognapplng." that Is.
the marketing of animals which have
been secured by iUegal or unethical
means.
With some Irony. Velasco notes that
the Town of Tonawanda recen~y hiked
license and Impoundment fees. In part. to
pay the SPCA a proposed $12.700 for
the administrative cost of processing dog5
and for boarding strays caught by the
Town's new dog catcher. Vetasco questions th logic in denying biomedical
re~ access to dog5 In pounds
which tlcely wiU be destroyed . He also
points out that, because of·the s~uation .
the State wiD have to supply additional
funds for animal procurement, funds
which ultimately come from the
taxpayer's pocket.
U/Bboiollot1.200 . . . .
Last year U/B. the largest user of
research animals in the State. purchased
approximately 1,200 dog5. Oog5 from
pounds cost about $10 to $15 eadl .
Before passage of the biD. commercial
dealers were charging between $75 to
$100 per deg , and s;pecial breeders. between $150 and $300 each. Supply and
demand is now driving prices even
higher.
•
Velasco relayed . that the University
could become a licensed dealer and raise
Its own animals for teaching and resean:h
purposes. This. however. would require
funds U/ B does not have. and would
also subject the University to the c:riticism
of those sympathetic to the antiviVisec·
tionlsl philosophy.

c-pater modele?

Last July. the Research Animal
Alliance backed a biU introduced In Con·
gress establishing a National Center for
Alternative Research . which would
develop methods of research and testing
not involving live animals.
.
The proposed Research Moderntzat16n
Act wquld also prohibit the use of federal
funds in research or testing where live
animals are used. if alternative methods
for the work have been published in the
Federal Register. In addition. It asks that
no federal dollars be used' to support
research or testing Involving live animals.
U the work has been · duplicated by
another agency.
Several letters from U/ B facuhy to
Haffner. however. dispute the use of
computer models as animal substitutes.
John Krasney. assoct..te professor of
physiology. sums up the argument : "A
computer model is never an end unto
ltseH. the simulation must always be
tested in the anknal. The computer
model only serves to organize our thinkIng and provide directions for further
research . It cannot replace the animal."

Craft classes
1M Creadw er.&amp; Corter. 1.20 MFAC, Ellicott, beglne -.rtinl Moaot.y
of-...ol
-'Wiope (laedntl4-6 wnlla) In ouch
................ poa.rv, Je-lry, ball&lt;. caJIItr8Phv, picture framing, otalnedand
~ • .-.colon, .-v~at~........-. and qulltins. Both afternoon
CaD 636-UOI, after l
~from
7-10, or ACIJ' btl the ee..t. .,. ddalle-

a-

an• •

zs

._.,._......are..,.._.._
·.

p.m.,

... -- ,.. __·--- -- --------- -. --

-

U /8 women set
bowlittg records
U/ B's women bowlers. scoring a tournament record for them. finished sixth In
the aU-events competltion at the annual
Arizona State Invitational at the
Showboat Lanes In Las Vegas .
December 30-31.
Coach Jane Poland's Royals scored
9.986 pins. much better than their mark
In finishing second last year. The total
was higher than last year's winning score.
But , says Coach Poland . H's the same
as with records In practlcaUy every sport
these daj,rs: they keep geUing bested . lfs
all due to better coaching, and more experience. she surmises.

Two U/B women won $1,000 In
scholarship funds lor the school in stngles
competitions held during the Las Vegas
event.
Senior co-captain Gail Simmons won

$500 by taking the singles ~e and
her stsler. sophomore Pam Detig. took
the doubles crown. for another $500.
$2.500 in scholarships were available
overaU in five women's events (another

$2,500 for men). a gift of the Waker
Peabody Advertising Agency.
Erie CommunKy College took another .
of the five women •s awards; the team
title , giving the Buffalo area the lion's
share of prizes which were contested by
46 teams. That's only fitting because of
the great Interest In bowling locally.
Poland feels .
And . she says, H's good for U/ B that
ECC Is so strong In women's boWling:
many of its stars finish their college
careers here.
One of those double alumnae. Cindy

Coburn. now turned pro, aa:ompaniet
the Royals to Las Vegas where sht
helped coach. wooldng parllallarly wltl:
Simmons and Detig wlh whom she ha!
bowled In local leagues.
Simmons a1oo won a trophy for pl.cin{
third In the indMdual ~ts calegor}
at the meet; her awrage was 197. -Del;,
averaged 193. Other Royals and tho!!·
Las Vegas a _ _ . are: Mary An
ne Bubollz_ 178
best toumamen
ever) ; Frosh Barb lrwln, 178: Lor
Mostoler_ 169; and T~ Slrasael, 168
Mary Anne. lncidentaDy_ Is the on!,
non-Buflalonlan on the U/B oquad.
Poland Is enthusiastic about tiM! tow ·
nament expe:rtenc.e: "It's great to ha"'
the chance to compete
sud
schools as UCLA. Michigan State .,,
Ohio Slate and do well."
Because of their limited budget. lh&lt;
Royals stayed home from a West VIrgin!&lt;
tournament In order to save funds for •
start toward financing the trtp to La!
Vegas. "I felt we had to go," Poland says
"I thought we'd win something and w&lt;
did."
Even at that, though, thev had to a&gt;n·
duct the usual raffles and hal sales to ge
donations needed to augment th•
travel budget.
The Koyals continue to bowl at horn&lt;
every Monday night. fadtJg Western Ne\1
York league competition (Buffalo State
ECC. Niagara, Canlsius. etc.) at Squirr_
lanes.
"It's a great facility." Coach Polanc
observes. ·rm the only coach arounc
here who can make that statement."

o-

-tnsl

Metro Bus now
routed through campus
Metro Bus service from Lockport to
downtown Buffalo is now routed through
the Amherst Campus.
The new servk:e was announced over
the semester recess by the Niagara Frontier Transit Metro System. Inc .. and was
effective December 30.
Metro Bus stops at two places on campus. both on Augspurger Road. at end
sections of the parking lot facing the
Capen Complex. Bus stop signs
designate each location _
Service Is provided Monday through
Friday. but not on weekends. Bus fare
from Lockport to the Amherst Campus Is
60 cents: from the campus to downtown
Buffalo. 70 cents. The full run from
Lockport to Buffa!~ Is $1.05.
Buses depart from the d&lt;&gt;wntown
NFTA main terminal, 181 EUicott St. .
and head for the Amherst Campus beginning at 5 :55a.m . with the last run at 7:50
p .m . There are 10 runs a day, wllh a
heavier concentration at peak hours dur·
lng morning and afternoon .
Buses leave Main and Locust In
Lockport beginning at 6 :30 11.m . and
finish at 9 p .m . Thb1een runs a day are
scheduled .
In another transit development. a
prtvat.e bus company_ Charles R. Baisley
T ransp&lt;?rtation Corp. of Buffalo. recen~y
proposed a new service that would link

...

.

.•

_,1

.. . . , _, .

r.t:." ••-'.J- •,

•.t , .J

. . ...

•'

t•·

I

•

the Amherst Campus wllh the fasten
Hills and Boulevard maDs. The plan t
subject to approval by the State
Transportation Department and thr
Town of Clarence. and will be discusser
next month at the Amherst Town Boar&lt;
meeting.
If the bus company ge1s the go ahead
the UniversHy cornmunMy_ along willthose Uving In the heavily develope&lt;
residential sections along Maple Road
wiD have easier aa:ess to major shoppln!
and reaealional areas.
'
Metro Bus has contended In the P""
that there Is insulllcient ridership on th•
proposed route to juslify bus service .
A spokesperson -for the Balsley Corp
said the company would like to provid
hourly service six days" week. Stops 0 1
the Amherst Campus. the spokeSPOrso•
said. would be subject to Universlt
needs. The University'~ bus servic
already provides several schedules to
Boulevard MaD each day. • prtmarily fc
students.
ff approval of the Balsley Corp. pre
posal Is !J'anted . the service should slat
in about three months. Fares will ter
tatively be 75 cents to the Boulevard Ma
and S I to Eastern Hills.
The spokesperson for the company re
quested that those ,....., support the pro
posal should write the company .
't '~ •

~ •• '• • •

·~· ••:. ...

'. • _., :

-

�·V'"·i" I

•SENATE
Ea..-

c--. Doc u

nw rnHUng was can.d to order at 2.40 p m

10

han •1 Approval ol Mlnuta (November 21.
1979)
The fob.'109 CO!Tections were made
p 3 Otem •4) Old BosinesL A Cce) Add the word
Commiti.H ~er the word AdrniQions.
p 2 latl ~..,h on page. ~a comma
~the word r«J))rt , lot c&amp;.rk~
lbe n:a1nu1a ~ ,approved as cortected.

I·

Item '2 &lt;&gt;lkert' Re11J011
v.'bS

;;:~~~::~~~~:!~~ =~~~r!de~

nwnt Annual hospkAI o perating ddK:ils can run in·
tO the mU&amp;ons

an~h~=~~dS:hJ:!.:=in,:U,~
prnent plitnning
1 A status quo po1100n .
2 The rnpoosblliy for ECMC

absetu - 1here was no Pres.

dmfsrepon
8 . TMCito"

Univeuily (At\Khment 1)

3 Presidentllll r~ documeols were wnt 10
mtwr SUNY aunpu.sn (Auachmmt 2)
4 Budg.t Fac10n no&lt;ed
a Oowrgading cred11 raung of NVS Bonds.
b 008 decision that 4 75 posations are 10 be
rimtn.lftl (out of 32JXXl) .
c 008 Informed SUNY • wib no1 acceyt a.ny
~ enrollment targetS fDf 1980 exCHding ttw
octuol enrolmeru lOt' 1979 (Tlw ltmils Mil' on
budgf't and not on lldual enrolnwnt. he notN.)
llwre W\'rC quaUons rel4ted to 1he v.canon
that exist curtently and whether the cu\S eN in .addi·
t.an to tiM unfilled positions . The Chair responded
that may tlO' bt' firmly Mtetminfll
One nwmber suggHled thai we need to concern
OUTWlvu with the CUNY budget . which appears 10
Nlw bee.n lhif&amp;
ed from a 75~ state budget 10 a
JOO'{. Rate budget Mxt year Anodwr n&lt;M~ thlu
our cull are pt"'ppfootd in conJunoton 'Mith a rise of
$.JO.OOO.OOO.S40.000.000 in aid to privatt&gt; higher
eduation Tht!re was a conseMUs thai the Chait
lhould consult Wllh the Academ~e Planning CoJm·
mlttu Mout way. to rafse pubhdy the politic•!
qua~ton .-bow transfmmg SUNY resource-s 10
CUNY and 10 the private sedor

University

seems

aurae•

4 A wparate free standrng lnstili ution "",th iss
etc
It was noted that the Un'Nersity has not requested
the acq uilltkM'I of tM ECMC ConcerTI was vtpt'ftl·
ed bv FSEC membtrs about the long-range com·
milmem fmandaUy Dr PanniD noted that the deci·
SIOn wtll ultimately be made on pohtical rather than
academic grounds. H~ ltoted that 8rookl)ln
0\oltll'l

The Cha. repone-d
1 The Commi1t« bsts wtll be matied to all
~naiOI'$ ~th the Oeceml:wf minutes. nominations
for Committt&gt;es ~.u ~nd11l9 are to be q:msidered al
the December 19, 1979 meeung.
2. He c.o!lt!d their attention. to \he W.th!r of
Dec.embe JO. l979!o0r Kettl."fre-g&amp;rdlngttwsug
geRed ck&gt;ve&amp;opmem of en Honors Program at the

~ th~

4' e~::~f':t ~n:;~UI
addittonal
v.thich
least

linafl(je:S for dewlopmwru .
live.

A.J¥-· .
The Pfntdent

f1C JMr~n ce 1n thf' lf cllnk al sprc:iahkl . but
economk:ally this: could bt d iMIITOUS. An example:
of the HospilaJ buill at Slony Brook was dti!d Wl

d.-eoions which tv en visaoned as possible from the

t.J

President.

=-,!,, Hj:,'::,'
:,onu~.o"::!rs :C,.
J«

H11: .

proprioted
on oltemotfue uw }or tid• jodllty.
In referen« to the present Maln Slreet renova·
110n. the Cannon Oesagn projec'l was described and
a numtwt of~m~ in regard to the pro)Kl compkhon He noted that there has been a delay in get·
tiog a progress report . ~md that he coukt nol.
therefore . share any detaUs or speafics wilh FSEC.
Some d1scussion fo!Jov.oed regardmg the utilize·
olthe Main Street ampus providing the ECMC

v~~=!n~..::d ~he~t:~~ ;::;:~

would keep units on Main Strret as they ere. in addition to bringing bkk «rtain dMsions of Heahh
Sdenctos presentty located In outposl areas. such as
Ridge Lea The Vice Prnident strflSed the need fOt"
~hly among facuhy aa SUNY1 Buffakt and
Urgt!d FSEC to learn more about what tht! Hea"h
ScWtl('~ facu.ky are involved in He suggn~ed that
\ollie conuder having an FSEC mee\ing at the ECMC
and to ha~~e a tour 10 SoH how the Heahh Sciences
funclion
Dr , Klingman was aslowd by Dr . PanniD to d'lart&gt;
thn recent communicatkln about the rejuvenatiOn
of the H~ahh Sdenct&gt; Council established ln 1974
Dr. Klingm•n ts cumtnlly ,.YkaiUing the Counol
madtt up of proponionate members from each
schoot A meeting has been W!t for December 18.-to
~~7s~ Commhtee. and later communicate
The Chair agreed to schedule an FSEC rnHttng

f~y~e~~~~edlcal Center with a tour of the
B. Othtr

hnn "3 ComOlhlft R_..

-..,1&lt; -....., -

Ptal-«a

HocJ,firid

orttlGrnwr.
Profntor Hochtie:ld mtrodiJC«dtM request of the
AcaMmic P&amp;.nnlng Committet fOt" • rNndAte from
lhe FSEC regard.ng dltCUSiions on retrenchment
'The Ch.-it ·e:~ suggn&amp;ed this Commllte-e. 1w
beli«vn. shoukt be: loolung ai proc:edurn 10 avoid
r~tre:nchment r•ther lhan to wt crhftia for tlw
umenchme:n~ pt"'ftSl There was diMgr~l
among IOfM FSEC nwmbe:rs ~h the policy of laSt
hired · fna f1N-d h was noted this Is the- wnlonty
conslralfn Mt in the UUP Contrao at prne:nt
ProfftSOJ Greirwr t&gt;mphasl.ted his conc-tm •nd
confusion .bout the approach 10 retrenchment if 11
becomn necessary and the procedure to be: takm
"'-'lth the Academic Vice Pre:sidmts and Deans tw
funhe:r noted lh..t currently tome other commiuees.
are dtscuumg increasing enrolment
Profe:s.or S~ggelkow expressed concern for
wudents and when they sa•nd 10 light of what he
seu M the policy to enrol iUffloml bodW:i to maan·
td1 PfOSJI'•ms
A •ngthy dtscuuion purJUe:d r~dmg the roW
of r~t.t ol The Acac:N.m.:: Plann111g Com-

-

II ,.., MOVED IM-1 SOCQNIJIOD 'iS..

yelkowl the FSEC reafhrms that ihe. Acdmit
PlaMing Comrnlnn should wnou~ desc'uss
guklelinft and pok.n v.-hich should gowm any •
uN\ICiktabW rf'llench~nt . "'-1lh tM A55UIJ\P'~n ,
thai the CommntM Wll ronsub "'-1lh ahe Vke
Prnktcnts •nd wd report 10 thl" FSEC '" wfficitm
nnw fot dw Ft!bruary , 1980. Senate M\:'~ung
Tho motiOn CARRIED 1:1-1 I

lle.m *5 New B...W..
A. Nftff~t~ tc!Wt ~~~ Ponltill
Dr Pann• f\IPHS) w.s inV1ted to an~ ttw!
FSE-&lt;.. mt!'f'tll"9 '0 prowk some darilicatiOf'l n!
g~tdtng .two~ of the: EM County~ Cftlter
•~ • ~tha.l SUNY H abh Saenc:a Hospilal and
T..ac-loJngC«""ter
Ot PMW,. t:wtsa-1• bv prnmUng sonw nt5aoncal
.md p."*IC..J bk.kgro Jod to.. a bnJ"' undentandeng
,., ltw prnetlf .iiU.bOO " ' J)fHml ~ uuLut.on ol
t"ll! ECMC for Huill ScWncott dtruc.l1n~ion as
•PP'o.~ 48ct oft~ tOial FTE dn.::.t instruc·
uon Odwt hospltllh •ko u~ mdud.! Veterans
Medocol c.n... Bultolo Gonftol. South Bu!olo
Mft ~y Ctutdr.n • .nd Stsaer: ol Chanty Hoipitak
fit. nQit
1h..t danC.S rel,t;IJOI,~ipfi h.d bun
eQabk:tJwd for m.ny .,,...n M the lCMC a."1d thfte
~~a OH of d4tmmt rd.\Jomtups, .tong "'"'h ..,.
chantJf'J tn the Coutuy
1M Vw:. Ptn.dent •••,_.o • "'oukl bot • good
·h'"fl for SUNY Butt.W. Health XWI\C"n to own
&lt;e~~tld cunuol dw hoq)ut ""'-htN tho .-udtnu tee~

, •

J anuary 17. 1980

Pannlll reports regarding Issue
of ECMC becoming a SUNY hospital
conikier the following egeonda:

\~ I

on

«n=

=~~de ~~~~C:C::d:V~~~:!v~~~~-ln
f
k&gt;ok forward with great antidpaUon
and e:xcitemem to the dewk&gt;pnwnl of thts idea and
tropLementatiOn
Yours sincerely.
- Newton Garver
Chaa

1ts

An.-ch.mft1 2

Deer Fe&amp;ow Cha'lm'wlln :
As you know. the TruSiees have rec:entiy adQJUd
and promulgated new guidelines for the revWw of
President5.. They have alto eliminated fixed terms
for PreWdenlS, lO that aJthough reviews occur ewry
fiVt! years. ~ts serve a1 1he pleasure or the
Board of Trusaees. The Center ai Buffalo was one
of !he fint instnutiOns to go through a Presidential
revWw under the new guidelines. and I though! a
mighl be useful to share our experience with you .
Enclosed are ahree documents One is a motion
of the Facuby Senate at11s September meeting. The
protei~ of 1he T ru~eeS prohibh.Jon of surveys for

~:~~~~ ~Ntt~Se'::~ ~=·'""!C:~

seems a perfectly o u1rageous affront to fecutty ln-

~~~~~~~~~f:~~~a,t: :'~t!:~eiJ!";,~aJ
the Board.

The second document is a report of lhe (acuhy
survey which we used here lin defiance. I suppose .
of lhe Trustees' prohibition) The raw data were
Punched onto a.rds at a cost of about $100. and
the data tabulated and a.na}yzed on the computer.
When !he analysis is complete. the dale will be:
stored on tape and would be: available for comparison """'h data from other institutions. Professor
Milk would be interested in exchanging da ta whh
anyone: who uses (in wtde Of in pan) the M me
surwy inarunwnt . The survey tnstrument ilse:lf is in·
duded as part of this document. and you a re free 10
use it
I sliould mention t~ there was in fact no
resktance to the survey ex the survey d.1a. The
revirw panel was happy to have H. and Murray
Bktck . Vice-Chance:UOt" fOt- Campus Liaison. said
thai ht! did nol believe thai the Trustees had intended to exclude:
10t1 or survey.
The third document k my sta le m~ to the review

th•

:::~,~

:=f ~~~~:,e:~ ::t~~;!U~~

speculation . llhlnk that was a wfse decision . I _commend sonw e•tensiw consultation to you if you
must submfl such a llate:ment: It was Interesting and
rewarding to nwet so many col)eagues and coGect
their v;e\A/1 ,
I k&gt;ok forward to hearing from you . I particularly '
hope that your Senate can endorse the right of
facultit&gt;s to use surveys. and that the survey instru·
ment dewk&gt;ped here is of use lo you .
Yours sincerely .
- Newton Garwr

10 football
games set for
1980 seas on
The 198e varsily football schedule includes the 1978 NCAA Division Ill champion . an NCAA Division fl pow~r . and
1wo opponents from the Bulls' first intercollegiate grid season in 1894.
Athletic Director Ed Muto has an·
nounced thai U/ B will play a 10-game
schedule in 1980. 1he mosl since the program was revived In 1977. Five games

are scheduled for Rolary Field On the
Main Streel Campus.
Added to lhe slale are Baldwin·
Wallace . 1he 1978 NCAA Division Ul
litlist: Edinboro. Pa .. Slale. a Division fl
school with a number of Western New
Yorkers on its rosier: Hobart College ana
1he Universily of Rochester. foes In 1894:
Dayton Universily. an opponen1 during
the 1970 season before U/ B's Di" ision I
program was dropped (and which itself
has dropped Division I play) : and Grove
Cily . Pa .. College .
Repeaters are Cortland Slale. Albany
Slate . Canisius and Alfred Universily .
Games al Rolary Field will be againsl
Grove Cily. Sepl. 20: Robart. Sepl. 27 :
Albany Stale. Oct. II : Edinboro Stale.
Nov. I. and Alfred . Nov. 15.
The Bulls play al: Cortland Slate.
Sepl. 13: Rochester. Ocl. 4 : Canisi us.
Oct . 18: Dayton. Oct . 25 . and BaldwinWallace. Nov. 8 .
U/ B's first lnlercollegia!e game was
played Nov. 29. 1894. with Hobart winning. 12-6 . The two schools have met40
times. U/ B's longesl opponent series.
wilh lhe Stalesmen holding a 21 -15-4 advanlage. including a 33-12 win in the last
meeting. 1956.
U/ B's only other game during that firsl
11

=~~nl:'.ds ~~~r:!n"":s f4'r:~R-fh~":~~
won 1he lasl game played . in 1937. by
12-7.
O ther series records include :

Alfred . first meeting 1902. 37 games.
U/ B leads 19-15-;l. AKred won '79.
16·3 . Grove Cily. 1-915. 2 games. Grove
C ity won 10-7 in "15. 0 -0 lie In 1916.
Canisius. 1920. 4 games. 2-2 . Griffswon
21-18last season . Edinboro Stale. 1928.
i game. Edinboro won 35-0 . Cortland
State . 1950. 12games.U/Bleads6·5-l .

1he
H!".a ~he:=ee ~r:r:~ ~as!sr:= PERB says no such
Char

1 The Chair asked the sctwduhng of an FSEC
the Main Street campus lOt'
ll!arly

~

2

Profii!'SIOf

Eber~

was asked about dw

e=5:d~::
!X"me~~~~~:so
to prewnt 1hh repon

:J Profe:s.sor Schoenfeld sough\ danflcat10n
r*rding lhe substitution of courses in the Basic
Skills Program Ht! wes asbd by 1he Chair 10 make

t;::i~~U:~':on~';l· -f:hc~~lr~=~: ~~~

proach lht! Ge:n~al Education Commiuee and
otlwrs fer 1heit reactions. and 10 repol'l back 10
FSEC
Tlw met!ling ad,oum«d at 5 20 p, m

AttKhmftlll

Dr Robe:rt L Keuer . Presiden1
O...Bob

Nc!w""~ ~hTo';!~0a:H~~;~:~':,:!

Honors Co~ at ttus Unrvet~~ty is an irnportanl
SU99f'S\KH'I I am delighted and tmCOUragec:t ,.ith
your delermJRaUon to see it through . and assure
you of ,.-has""·llf suppon k is ~ fOJ nw to giw
to th4! proJ«'
·
...

thew!,':et~!~~_:u;:C~d~ ~:!'"'~!.~:~

Wllh ~ Elo'.«U!wc CommiiiH and various other in·
dMduals h SH"ms dear 10 me that the best way to
for you 10 name a small group of lacuhy
and ch..rge then. Wllh tht! responsibility for df"f1ning
and ory¥ttlmg an appropriatt' Honors Program I
betiew thai one mernbn of the group should be
~an Murr•y Schwanz Dean Schwartz tS intew-estt!d

proc~d ts

~n~~~~:-r~~ew~~~ ~~":

change . and tlw dewlopmenl of a Untvft'Sfl y
HOOOf5 Program grws an opponuntty fo. him 10 In·
tegr•te such • J)fog.-am wrth a transformatiOn of the

c.u.g..

At the same tinw , I doubt that

Dean Schwartz

~nldH=r~~~~j..f':nt~
may be: the oght ""'"li'Y lO go. \ollie should not dose out
her opl.JOOS at the beganmng of our delibe:rauons I
rf'iore woukt ako suggett that there be add11100al
mb.m 10 thct smal fi'OUp . who could repr-ewnl
rong Wllerelt IR .-n Honors Program wnhotn
~ being comm111ed at the .same unw 10
seeing that program tOldy a.b5orbed "'-ishin the Cot·
lt!gn
From the ptecedtnsJ remarlu k wdJ be dear to you
that I am unemPl about w.rha1 d•eo10n &amp;n Honors
Program ihouJd tak" My mclinauon would bt&gt; to be
sure tt..l m •s tn•lill saages the Honon Progr•m
hew more than ontt &lt;hr.a.Jon m which 11 couki go

§

~n~u~Otou~~ c:i;"h =h~be~5UC~~

two-pronge:d progr1m II 001 admunsuaw~ WM!
• b61r. and I would be op.n 10 twang con~ed ttbout
th..t by !he am~miu that
ed lf'lto the manl'f
M~ gentJal phtlo,ophy I' th•t anV1hlng

thing as a 'free ride'
The Public Employment Relations
Board (Case U-3740). ru led In mid ·
Dece mber lhal UUP ca nnot charge age ncy fee payers for pre miums for insurance
w hich Is available only to unio n
members. A ccording to the ruling. either
the insurance must be made available to
all or lo none or the union .. shall cease
and desist from collecting from each nonmember that portion of its agency shop

a union is the beneficiary of agency shop
fee payments in amounts equal to dues

paid by me mbers. lhe union must use I he
funds so oblained in a manner lhat will
accord lo both members and agency
shop fee payers an equal opportunity to
share In substantial econo mic benefits fur-

of the insurance benefits ... The union was

nished by the union with such funds. A
violation of I hal duly Is an imrroper prac·
lice wilhin the meaning o CSL Sec.
209-a .2 (a)."
Just as the agency fee is designed to

lold to furnish the State controller. with

e.liminate the " free rider .. who benefits

fee which is equallo the per member cost
the appropriate notice to effectuate the
reduction in agency fee collections if it
determines to continue its present policy.

A deadline of January 13 was given for
compliance .
Some individuals on campus have

estlmaled thai if UUP conlinues to provide Insurance for members only. this will
amount to a reduction of around $35 a
year in coUections from each agency fee
payer• UUP . of course. could elect to
drop all such insurance coverage for its
own members .

PERB also ruled that lhe complainant
in this case . one Monis Eson . should be

awarded a refund of that portion of his
agency shop fees paid lo UUP since the
commencement of the insurance program or the commencement of the col·
leclion of fees from the complainant.
whichever is later .

No '&amp;eerlde'
In its ruling. I?ERB staled I hat "by placing the nonmember in the position of

having to join the union or forego lhe
substanUal economic benefll for which he.
is paying. UUP commits .. . an act of coer·
sion ." Under the Taylor Law . PERB said.
the Stale has a-duty to protect the agency

fee payer from discriminatory use of his
funds . "Thai duty requires that so long as

~~:::n u;;~:.. ~~in~eld"t~h~~t r6:.~
members and nonmembers pay the same
amo unt to the union . the union cannot
provide insurance for one and not for the

olher. "A union cannot be pennllled to
make 'free riders' of Its members at the
expense of nonmembers."

Under a ppal

I

UUP decided lo appeal lhe PERB ru l·
ing. Richard Curre ri. co ulfse( for PERB.
lold the Reporter lhat his office received
nollficalion of the appeal Monday. Curreri said PERB c fficials were not surprised
and have come to expect appeals on
decisions involving the union . Curreri
estimated II could "take years" to sellle
the matter If the union decides to contin ue appealing aU the way lO the State
Court of Appeals. The case Is now in the
State Supreme Court.

UUP Secretary Ed Alfonson refused
comment on the appeal. He told the
Repoi'U!r he didn't feel II would be proper
to discuss a matter currently under

IHigalion.

WRITE .
We welcome let ten on topica of cam·
pus lnteral and conu rn from a ll
member• of the campus community.

VIewpoint plec... too.

�('

n

~17.1980

134 profe88lenals, 536. faallt9 -sliue
iD 1979 _cll8a'etl011819 tlafilt awards
T.

One hundred and ~~*tv-four ,....
sloMI .............. ....t S36 feaolly
shared In lhe IMIIIIOUIICI of clliii2-..y
u1ary .-do, wbich . .-prov~~~.~tn the
conlrad
~
UUP andlhe
The _
_
, _ ts..M
o·lasl

~-

¥oro Ooloo. a..too A.

. _ _ J&lt;...... J.
Doo~F. E - . . P. 0.,. ~ S. Oojoor. Oloooo
L Oolooty.L ~Joof'ooooo. ~A. o.-.
.,.._ Cart E. l:lorw*. ~

o . - . . - A. Oopuo ........... M . ~ .

=. ~: ::..~~~

July 1 for anployees holding 12-month
appo1ntmen11 and to s.pe.mbor 1 for
thaw on 10-month slaluo. I~ ap·
peamlln lhe December 19 paychecks.
Under tams o( the praent conliacl.
one per cent o( the total payroll o( each
SUNY campus's UUP bargaining unM is
to be made avatlablc each year lor discre·
lionary raises.
Those receiving the a-rds aM :

S. '*-.RodnoyLDoron.-E.Ooooong.
Seymour ~. c... G. Onory. lM s .
Dryden, Ellen C. Oubolt. K. .,..._,
Slool&gt;on c . Ounnotl. lohn w. ~ Goorwo E. - . . . . , _, J. Ebortoln.
Raben R. Edw.df. Mhw Elton. Soul Eldn.

- . . a.. P - Enk. - . M. " - ·

~~~F::.c..!· ~~

PI I 11h ••I Sta8

Dorochy B. Adana. . _ 0 . Alojondn),
a-go W. Anclonon. Al&amp;od G. Allflolcl. twwyS.
hlaod. Kotharino R. · Jolwl A. Bollrami.
O.Yid L. Bondcn. Modloon L. lloyoo. SOOphcn M.
B&lt;odloy, Nancy P. llrodcridc. Rlchonl E. a.-n.
Chorta T. Btunlkll, Ruth D. lloyont , Suun M.
B&lt;ngc&lt;. l\nlhony c. c-. Jooophlno A. Copuona,

• Chi·Man Chon. Bndloy T. Chuc. Ronold R.
Clchodd. W1lma R. Opola. H. William Coles 01 .
8cTtha N. Culchcr. Rlchonl J . Cymmnan. ~
P. Oevls. M"'ll .lone B. Coy, F,.noos K. Oiett.
Judith A. Olngeldcy. Cathln1nc L. Dohn. Ronold
K. Oolmonn. Down M. Oonoldson. Bovorly J .
Dove . ........... D. o..ke .
Christina H. EJvet. Bwbera·E. Evans. SuzAnne
F -. J. · Ruth A. Ank. C.lhatno
~ . c. M-oncovllla. Joseph A . Gogllonlo,
Royno M. Gongi. Paul S. Goodmon . Linda F.
Gooco-Kobos. John M. Grolo . funk A. Guzmta.

Edword

H . ~.

Conoid F. Hanavon. M..,C .

lion... ~-. ManlouT. Hdloy. Raben
W. Hendaoon. 0..'* A. Henneman . Kenneth P.
Herrmann . Riehan:l K. Hooper. DeniM B.
Houston. Malo Hoytc. Raben E. Hunt . Thomu F.

Hurley. Suun A. Hutton .
. . , _ K. Jon.-. William R. Jon.-.

Chayl A. ~ . Roglna Kododd. Gonld;ne
A. f«9or, Joseph J . K&lt;okowlok • .lone B. Kubola.
Marie L. Kun~:. Jonathan B. Leononl. Rh G .
~ . Royanno Luta. PalricX J . Lyons. Rlchood
J . Mocokan)o, Raben T. Marielt. Wlbur J . Mat·
tioon , M. Holly N&lt;G&lt;....han. Ellen McNamaro.
Ja .... J . Mecca Jr.. Rlchonl T. Mann. Jane E.
Meyer, Barbora D. - .. Henry J. M.....
Charla W. Miler Jr .. O.Yid Murphy,
James S. Nadbnuch, L. Dolo O'Donnd. Sheryl
Ogden , Corole Smilh
L. p.,..,
l\llred D. 1'\ice,.Raben H. Puloo. Nanna C . Ral.
JoMph J . Rogne. O.Yid R. Rhoock. l..oo Ald.anl·
ton . John Rlul&lt;o, OINh L · John H .
Shdum. a- G. Stdoroldo. l\lan J . Slopl. Linda
M. Skora. Oau.&lt;to!l H. Smlh. Gony R. Sochne-.

1'-. -

Gor.adlno · Roglna Spirito . Mooy Ellen
Scaoo. LAny G. Sooolo. J_,t. R. · SIWtoy
D. Soout. Hclon M. Strtdolond.. Mld1MI G.

-·

~-

.
Myron A. ~ 01 . Gerold M. 'l'hc&gt;m..
1\gMs J . Tl&gt;unl. Mo.Jorio L. llodemono. Iris

u.-.

Tona. DoYid E. T . -. c;-g. D.
Nor·
' man F Uooch. Gerold J . Von-. \lqll S.

• W..... Slophcn N. W.a.:.. a-. H. W....
R-Wonllow. Mid1MIT. W--..S...A.

1 W -. Ruth A. ~- ...,_ 0 . -

·

Clflord B.
l.-.not T. zmoklo.

JoMph F. - . , ., Lula G. -

Wloon.

~

S. \Nrlsilll.

Slophcnio B. ZucMnnon.

C . Jolwl l\boyounlo. Athol D. -

!Iorio
Raben
· W - A.

· - E . - . - s. -

D. l\londoefor, Pl&gt;ilp G. -

-.....w-K.-.....- L - .

· Lome J . " " - ' B.
·Jim D. Alwood.
Plono L Aolloory.
lllono L - . . .. Om P. Bolli.
M..,B. IWou. ""-T. D. ........ - C.

L...... 5. -

-

-llok..

Bony,
R
. - a...
. - c. - ...· --

E. · Oonold
. ......
G.

Bmov. llonold . - -. ~~- s. a..-. Olgo

c.- . -·

~~omo~...... .......
lv P. lliohap. Gee-. D. J&lt; .. Raymond P.

Blancllord.- - . - -.OonoldR.

· No1oan L · Rlchonl F.
Blu......,, lAny E. Bah. R. , . _ · ,_
M. ~. Bony B. . . . .. Corol J .
lkodlay, - B. ~~rod,~. K... E. ·J. a..&lt;. - R . . . _. twwy-man, Honold lhdy. Fnnk · 1.-.nco D.
a.-n. Joon
Stonlty ·
.ieomyA.-. ........ GlluKMr. H. Bunn. ..._ L. · Joon L. lljlboo.
Oovld A. Cool&lt;nhMd. Ho1uk Coa1or. IArow G.
Collahon, Lawmw:e A. Copplolo. Eric J .
~. ~A Can J&lt; .. Gola H. Cantlhors.
J. C.W, ~ M. C.W. 0.., A.
c-... Jolwl C..., _ T. ~ . Chorta
J.
~ J . c.-. Raben 0..00..
0..,. Chou. 0.. Choomg, lllono a.-&gt;.
MciYyn ~ s... ac-a. - J .
~. Jobn C a.M. Chorta V. a..-y,
-A
S. ~. - R.

F.-

c-.

·

K.

R.

c..bun&gt;.
W. Calwe, RlchoniC. ~ DMiol

~- Don

c -.

J. C....,, A ~ . R - M.
.a.- B c -. Pl&gt;ilp ~. L
Coroh. Jobn c:on:..... JaM R. c -. Fronclo A.
c - . , 5ooniov H. er-. JaM W. ~

"-K

=· ~~'"::.":!...~~:

Genco. J . Ronold Genlllc. William K. Gooogo Jr ..
Tyrone Georg;ou. O.Yid A. o..bc. P - K.
Gaonor. C.lhlnn I. Gaily. Franz E. Glasoua.
a-.. A. Glomski . P&lt;~&lt;r S. Gold. Raben J .
Good. Nicolas D. Goodman . Jorgo Grado.
Anthony M. Gr-.o. Willa K. O...n, ...,... M.
o...nbcrg. 0...,.. W. Groene. Glen E. ~ ­
Daniel A . G&lt;Vfllh . Jorgo A . Grimes. Suun A.
Jorgo M. Gultaot. Raben H.
.,.,... G. Guttcrldgo.
.
Mlldnd F. HalowltL William S . Hamilton . Mac
Hammond. Frando V. Hanavan. James C.
Hensen. P&lt;l&lt;f H. Ha... A. Gaylor Horfonl, Gcr·
don M. Horns. W1lord R. Honlo. PalricX M. Hart.

"""'m.

Gu..-.

EllDINrlh C. Horwy. Mikhd · Bnan
Ha.an!. Sluor1 P. Haslings. u- H........,n.
Chorta A. Haynlo, Robon W. Hdor. Briton R.
Hendaoon, FtwderiO&lt; K. Henrich. Edword Ha·
man. Goboo- T. H.nnon . l..oulsc M. HoubuJch.
Woltor R. H •. William R. lftwo Jr.. John T. Ho.
Waltor C • . -. 0...,.. Hochllold. O..nls S.
Hodge. Perry M. Hogan. Suk·KI Hong. Carol
Hoocnfcld. Morliyn Hookin . Maril W. Hud&lt;llalon.
Konold J . Huolner. Joma R. Humbm . Jocob D.
Hyman .
Embelh B. iannopolo, Kenneth K. lnoda. """"
· Bruco Jockoon , louis F. Jocaba. Mm K.
Join. Plyoro L. Jain . E. . . _. Richanl
S. Jarvlo. Fronk C. Jon. Ed.....! T. Jennings.
Mobol J . Jcpoon , ThcocloN C . ,._.Jr.. Erwtn H.
Johnton. Nancy S. Johnton . Kennoth F. Jo..,..
Clan R. Kohono. Mhur L ~ . Thomu I.
Kalman. Toi S. Kong. Kyoid11 Kono. H . R4y
Ko,Jian. Kaplan , Jomos W. ~. Ed·
.....! S. Kattdn . AI Ko!z. Ella J . KaubNn. Tbomao
M. ~ . JaM T. Kams. Goll P. Kdy.
...,_C. Kenrick, NlcNol W. Klob!l. Lclti&gt; F. Kef.
!c. Hony F. King• .looo!&gt;ft-ll. Kloo. ~ M.
Klolnbag, Raben A. Klodoc. QoYld R. Koct.y.

w-

~Koenig . l\llred s. Kono&amp;~&lt;y .
P.
Kopnodd. Oonlol J . ~ . Poul J . KOIIyrilok.
Mort&lt; B. Knolol. funk J . Knyolollok . Raben J .

KurWnd.

~

James R.

J . KUIOs.

l..olooo-. eo- G. Lain-.

Chorta M. Lamb. , _ T. l.onobwy . John A.
Larkin. Gooogo M. ........ Joma M. Lawlor.
Ellooboth c. t.-n. - · B. Lay. v - A.
U.,. 0.00. S. Lachnor . Shorco1 R. Lade&lt;. James
B. I.M. Johng Y. Lao. Yung C. Lao. Hclon l.Hs.
~V- ~-GonloniAvlnc . Mid1MI

Fec:att,
-

Fcldmon. , _ D. Fololoo • .t.mny D. I'm.
Thomu D. - . _ ., SWan Floloiher. t.-.
~ Hony E. Flynn. ChortaM. Fogo!. IAWis
A. Folden, John V. "-"&gt;· - . t G . Foooor.
John C. Foun-. Chorta R. """"'-· tlolio
Fromplon Jr.. Anna K. France. J . Bruco Fronclo.
Gidoonl'ried..-. Toma.a U. Frcol. Ho-I.Aungfung.
Andqw A. a_. Ello&lt; N. Gola. Samuel Goilanl.
Raben L Ganyonl. Oovls A. ~. Newton

~-W.c..t.. ~

. . . . . . .. .

.-.·. .·__....·.·: . .

~·:

:·:

--'-

J . IAvlnc. Mino S. lAvine. o.m.d Lavy. E._,.
A . leo*, l.ionol 5 . ~ Emanuclo G . U.:..O.
Quo,Uong Un. T. Un. Chorta ~­
Monuol D . .._, Loo A. l.oubon. Hclon M.
t - . Anno M..,S. ~.ooony . a-_, a ............
... . . . , _ M. Ludwig.

-....J. 4onch.

.

a-

G . .............

lloYid M. -..n. Oennlo P. ~, Stophen
· A n - J . ~. Mon: A .
· M.., 8,
E. Manning.
Siool&gt;on Morwofio, HiMr:lo
R. · JoMph Mooing, ~- · J .
Mbur · ~- w. ~. -..D. MeCol J&lt;•• L. Thomo Mt&lt;Miy. Undo L I'4&lt;Coutland.
-E . ~ Ann P. McElroy.M. MdnlyN . ....... w. J&lt;.. a.lonc s.
- . . . . Jolwl D. - . . . -. JaM A. ·
Mlchoo!A.
- · Ella A. Mol9f. Mlchool M. Mol9f,
Laurencc A . Mlchot Jr.. Y-·Emilion E.

-A, -

-·-.-a.-A.-·
-·
Mld&gt;ooholl . ..._ w. -

JaM D. ........ -

M. -

·-

·

.R.-

~.

~

R.

D. Mohl.

a... T. MUOJII&gt;¥. M. Luthe

M. - JaM
· Gocqo
H. Edword
Noncoloo.
"'-Ph
R. Nollolla.
F. Noo/b.
B.
Noloan. WirnoJ . -., . woc~oJ. - .

Jcny
M. · Nidoonon
Oonold E.. -~G
· Raben
C.
Ni&lt;ht*.P-A.
Nla.

R - J . ~ - .lonrn!l ,._, Oovld A.
~ . Raben E. Otlo. ,_.., L Qwo. Codwlnc
L. Oloon. Ed.....! T. O'Mca. Lan&lt;o F. Ortman.

KalhF. Oot-.
Raben E. -

· Samuol M. Paley. AnOhony

Poc&gt;o~o . Byung H. P..... 5ouf9yoon Porll. Dione

C. , _, AnlhonyR. P -. - 5. PalricX.
- J. P-. F. ,.,_ Poyno. C. Cart Pegolo.
ao,o.n A . - · DoYid R. ............ -

In program -

-A.-'-"·----

J. - . . . . - - - - , _ 0, - , .
Chorloo • • ............ ......... A.
..... .1oM Plocopo. - G. ,.._ L

-Papa, P. - . - - P. ..._.., 0.0.. G.
-.J_,t.T. ~ ~M. _, ,_P. -.­

W. -

. - T. . T-A.
-·e.-do
s
.
.....
w. .....
Mlchoo!F.IIIolr.GonldR.-._.IobnG. - ..

llo6. _ . _ - - K.

Loo -

.,.,_

..,, Honey L. --..Raben._, Oonold B.
a....oNI .......... A. Raoh. A. - . , "--lnd.

.

-L~ .

J . ~. -

-

H . s..~on~

m.

mnc..M.s.-..- R. s--.s-.11

·. Soiphon
w-.., R.G.Schenk
......_ HJ ..

K.
Soodoklononcl. Schonuol.

Sdwnlog. JaM H . Schlogol. Rlchord N. Sc:lln*'t.
E!!&lt;h ~ Gu- - . Sdlucl.
JoMph B. ~. D. Scccl. Fred G. S...
Elmcn J. Sci&gt;. s. Sola-. c.
~. M.y A. ~. DoYid T. ~ . Man:
Shd.U.. S. ~.- L. Slwo. Jo..,. E.

Sirianni, Michoo!F. Siqt.-.J. SWO...M..,
E. s - . Elolo M. Smilh. 0...,.. W. Smilh.
Koren F. Smilh. 0...,.. E. Smulko. 0..,.0. H.
Snyd&lt;r. Norman Solocll. Alan J. Solo. Soom. Jolwl A. Spanoslo, fWwy Sprowl. Alla1
T. ~Jr.. Wllom W. Stein . ~ M.
Stempien. Kar-. M. - . .. Chorta L. Stinger.
Ruad A. SOonO. c.olyn L. Stowe. Edmond N.
~- Howord E. s........ ~ A.
Sua&amp;. Raben G. Summon Jr.. HenryS. Su.man
V'ojoy C. s-tny. A-. D. Swanton. Cia.. M.
Swinonld. Linda H. Swiniuch.
Anlfl P. Tolvltio. DoYid W. T - . Hanhad R•
Thaoooe, Loon T. Thiem. T.....,.. J . Thlnes.
Carolyn E. Thomu. w__, H. Thomu. 0.... I.
Thrall, R. T -. S.....8. Toth. Komo!D. TOUibol.
Janice Bcyc T -. O.Yid J . Trjgglt. .to.ph J .
Tul-... Ahmed A. Ullunan. Hugh D. Vanliow.
Phmpp F. v... J . Craig v...... Richanl E. Valey.
Adrian

0 . vadutiu.

Edword L. Wolooo . Conoid H . w...... Rlchood
H. W - . Thomu W. W -. Man&lt; I. W - .
Sam W«tnb"aub. l.c* wa. F. Robert wm Jr ..
Naomi W . - . Claude E. Wddl Jr .. Sol W.
W...... James J. Wholon. Vldd L. Whetlo..
Thomas P. Wh.._ Max A. Wickat. Gawd
Wioal&lt;owsld Jr .. Roy A. Willo. Sidney M.
Willhelm • .An G. Wa.ms. Scott W. Wilkams.
Word Willlomton , Jenold C. Win..,, Lany D. W• ·
"'· Wolgong Walck, Howord L. W -. Elio M.
Wor- . Raben ·H. Wood . ez.- L. Wdodoon .
John R. w.tgl&gt;l.
~ T. Yang , A. Nd Ycri&lt;cy, Chia-Ping Yu .
Shu.. V..... Monk B. Zolald. Wlliam R. lame.
Zb;gnl&lt;w H. Zldomy. 5ton1oy llonts. wa.m D.
lite-. o.vtd A. Zubin .

Hamm.o nd attends
White House fete
Or: Mac Hammond. poet and pro·
lessor o( English. represented Buffalo at
the 11m WhHe Houoe reception ever held
for poets on Thunday. January 3.
"This is a personal honor." saki Ham·
mond. "but I attended as a representative
the poets o( Buffalo."
Hammond noted he r«:e!Yed a personal Invitation from Mrs. Jimmy Carter
and that he praented three of his
published worl&lt;s as a gilt to the Flnl
Lady.
Or. Hammond's wtlc. Kalka. accom·
panted him to the 4 p .m. reception.
which was held to honor American poets.
o(

The S... and CSEA. lhe ........

unl tepuetotiiOJI .,_ 100,000

wort.. and moot

s..M

o( SUNY's ct.olllod
pcnonnel. have mutually ...-1 lo a
mantlortum on job..,......_
whldl ....... employees eligible fqr .,.,.
fonnance ~· ...,.,..... and
performance ....ards. The tenopoqry "-"
was caJiod so , . . _ . - lrom the
Stale and the union could "'-examine the
Employee Performanctt Evalualton l'lognun asJI presently exlsll.
Both cornpenMtlon plans- .,.. o(
the three-year CSEA-Siale canlrKI
~ to laslllpring. The Idea
In·
aease productivity among SIMa worloers
as well as reward thaw who do "hWdv
effective" or "outstanding" work.
According to a spolcapenon lrom
SUNY Centnol. ·any Individual schedul·
ed for eval~atlon on or before January
10. 1980 wlll receive the paymcntlhey
would have goUen ~ the moratorium was

-•o

not in effed ...

Actually. the vast ma)orily of Slate
have
already
been
evaluated.noted Kevin Sellz. manager of
classified employee re!atlons here .
Presenlly only a small percentage of personnel should be affected by the ·
moratorium: those htnod alter July 10.
1979. or those who received a change In
grade level alter that date.
According to an Associated Press artl·
de which appeared In the Bu/folo f!J61 ·
ing News. Slate officials became upset·
when they found that a higher percen·
1age of workers than they anliclpated had
bftn rated outstanding or highly effective
by their supervisors. The Office of
Employee Relations (OER) expected that
10 per cent would receive 11\e best rallng
of outstanding and about 15 per cent
would gel evaluoted as highly effective.
What transpired . however. was that
almost half of the work force evaluated
received the lwo top ratings . Thai's twice
the number estimated ..
workers

----l. . . ,

• 33 vacancies

campus could receiw • higher or lower
proporllon o( the 475 posiUon cut as they
did with the 2f;O pos111on reduCtion ."
II should be "clearly understood."
SJ!indler .said. !hal the first cuts a"' tern·
porary "and the final reduction wiU be
larger In total and vary by campus. "
' Campuses will be notified as soon as
possible about the permanent cuts. the
vice chancellor promised.
Wagner saJd the amouniS of Interim
ceiling reducllons lhll unK must make
haw been apportioned to U/ B vice
presidenllal . .as: doclsions on how they
wtl be made are being left to these In·
dlvldual areas.
Wagner added the local admtnislrallon
has heard no more about the permanent
plans. but said these may be included in
the Governor's annual budget rnesuge.
scheduled to come down next ......,.. In
Albany.

Personnel-news

· Mono.-G.

-...-.DoleD.-

S.te, CSEA agree to halt·

TAX FORJfS AVAU.ABLE
For the convenience o( In~ ~. Federal and Stale lncotM Tu
Forms {short, long, various schedules and lnslruclional booklets~ . . again
available this year In the Penonnel ~nt's Beneflb Rack locattcl In lhe
lobby o( Crofts Hal. Amherst Campus.
SOCIAL SECURITY BASE GOING UP
deductions from Un~ employees' bl-weeltly

The Social Seau1ty (FICA)
~

wll remain ill the 1979 rate (6 .13 per cent) throughout 1980.
l!owever, the maximum earnings' base jumps hom $22.900 In 1979 to
$25,900 In 1980. For thaw employees who wiD earn $25.900 or more In 1980.
this means a tax lncr- o( $183.90.

NEW HEALlH IN6I.JRANCE BOOIUETS
A new booldd entitled "General Information for N.Y. Stale Employees" wiP
provide employee health PfO!Pm Information regarding eltgtbillly. enrollment
procedures, changes o( cover-. continuation In retirement, etc. In addition.
other new booklets 'Wll desc:rl&gt;e ~ benefits available under each component part o( the progo-am (Blue Croso Hoorpitaltzalion, Stat.ewlde Plan Pracriptlon Drug Pr&lt;&gt;!Pffl. llletropoltcan Medical/Surgical · the Major 114cdlcal.portton
of the Statewiclc Plan . Medical/~iglcal portion of the GHI Plan). The p.._,.
neJ Department anticipates receipt of these booklets and distribution to UnivGRIy employea.by -tv February.

-

�u

.i

l

January 17. 1980

i

I
honked voc~erously, feinted once or
tWice at their tormentors, then huddled
noisily with the would·be mother. Several
minutes into the "discussion." the trio
quieted down. Then with great dignity,
the little goose rose from the nest and.
anyone. tenured or not. to come close tot
jofning the others, marched airily away
the little courtyard jusl north of the tunnel
[oward Lake LaSalle. They had surat the eastern end ol Spaulding Quad.
•
Skirts and coat-taUs could be seen flap· . rendered.
Seventeen eggs were taken from the
ping in the wind as boll-. the macho and
nest on that and sub.equent days. Four
the milder-mannered took flight before
ol them were determined to be ferttle .
the lren:ried. honking charges olthe two
Having lights on at night encourages the ·
larger geese.
geese to lay eggs out ol season. Gold was
Curses were shouted .
told .
Someone. naturally. called the Prest·
Of the lour"'ferlile eggs. one hatched
dent's office.
this past weekend. Christened "Eubie"
Was it the Christmas excitement or
(U/B,
gel it?) , the newcomer will' be
what? ·
farmed out to a backyard I arm in Angola.
People safely inside Anthropology
headquarters soon discovered the reason
lor the agitation.
Testy
aad •says
- Gold, Huey, Dewey
Meanwhile.
The third goose was nesting on what
and Louie themselves may have to go.
looked 10 be a mound ol eggs. just next
Not only are they)a bit testy. but they
to Anthropology's windows.
make one hell ol wmess around Ellicolt
Gold enUsted friends from the Colleges
and the Biology Department to help . with their droppings.
Really .
retrieve the eggs and place them in an inGold says he intends to encourage the
cublltor in the Animal Facilities unit in
Wilkeson Goose Committee to find a
Hochstetler to guard against their being
good home lor the three and then to use
damaged .
the fowls' endowment (raised last fall) to
help improve the general Amherst
Ruckus expected
wildlife situation with birdhouses and
Expecting an enormous ruckus. the
birdleeders. po~bly .
party came armed with wire and large
wooden bQards to lend off kamikaze raids
by the geese.
Surrounded, the two larger ge"?"

One of the three Elicott geese had just
"k~" a tenured professor, Peter
Gold o(ftachel Carson Colege was talc!
one chiOy afternoon in (llid·December.
Outside, the geese were defying

�........,..........".

UFE WOIIXSHOPS are dewoted to
-lopinq - u o1. tnlormation

a1looorin9
okillo, endpeople
ideol to
In abare
a lrwend ·
tnformal oetttnq. They qlve you the
chonoe to . . - ""'" people In end
around the Unlvenity. Each
- · we experiment with new
coune olfertnQo, while ,_linQ
thc.e the! have been popular end
ouOOIIOI!ul. The worl:ohopo are open

to all members of the University
community (students, loculty. otaff.
. alumni) end their opouooo . They are

voluntary on the part of the leodero,
u-.of-&lt;:redlt, end qenerally lree-olcbarqe to partlc!pents.

Many thenU to all the volunteer
leadon .00 to the many clortc:al
meJnlenanoe otaff who help to make
thio proqram pooolble. The LIFE
WORKSHOPS Ado~ao~y Committee
have t.en particularly balplul In
olfeiin9 oupport end direction to the
proqram. Nembero are Dlenna
Derbal:,
'Dundon, Karen Flnqer.
Undo G c • Mickey Groden, Scott
Helland, JUin Hlcka, Mary Jace&gt;l.en,
Dorthy Lew!o, Nancy Marmoroo,
Cbarleo "Ouoty" Miller. Geil
Niederbauoer. Mary lane
VonVolkenl:our!l. Helen Wyant , end
Stephanie Zuckerman. Special
apprec:iation 1a: extended to Karen
Finqer, Secretary to Ule
Workahopo, end to Mary Jace&gt;l.en
and P"9QY Dundon, who developed
thia eemestera proqram. Paul Allaire,
loo.

currs

....

...a..
~-­
~.lor-r'

Leeder: Geo1.frer Schall, a wine
connot.eur

~~1 - F._,.

-IllS. . - 5:GO p.-.1..._..

c-.Leader: Joe.M. Ftecher, Director of
Creative Craft Center
Woobbop Do.c::riptlaD:
- Experience the Joy of drawino!
• Become aware of your erective

abilitieal
- Get advice In developinQ your
skill!

You will be introduced to basic
desiqn theory and techniques which
will be demonstrated by the let~der .
Encou raqement will be providec:f to
prdctice drawing a wide ranQe of

sub ject matter (portraits,
landaca.pes, animals , cartoona) uslnq
various media includJng pencil.
charcoal, markers , crayola, etc.
Mitte rials will be provided at the
first session, however, you will need
to purchase supplies for the
remaining aeuionJ.

required. Pleue inform u.s at this
time if you require any special
aaii.Jtance due to a ho.ndica.p. Mops

mwa.aTII&amp;IDIHJ

Mo.t work.ahop&amp; have a limited
enrollment. oo thet alter the
maximum bao been reoched, we
beqin a weJUoq ltst , Th«-e may be
othero waltinQ to reqioiM lor the
space we are reeervlnq for you , .:&gt;
pleeoe check your calendar before
you reqloter. Aloo, pleaoo reqloter
for no more than tour worbhop&amp; on
o linole day , ., that u many
peroono u pc.aible con partlc!pete
In LIFE WORKSHOPS.

• as

......

r

Viol! or phone
110 Norton Hall , Amherot, 636-2808

,_,

Jenuary 21 ·23
8 :30 a .m.-7:00p.m.
!loqinntoq January 24
8 :30 a.m .-5:00 p.m. Monday-Friday

. IF

* 41•

&amp;llll'iiW

Thlo ...,..Uhop will be offered.upon
demand. U you are lntereoted In
leernlnq how to bUt or Juol went to
qet ~ with a CJT'OUP ol. knlttero.
Inform LIFE WORKSHOPS. It will
be arranqed at a Hme mutually
a9.....t&gt;le to participants end
leaden. The leodero, Rita Watt...
end Jooie Capuana , are both ezper1
Knltten .

......

P'rlolariF...,. 11'--GO • • •

p.-.1---... .
Leodero: Talteko Mlchll,
Coordtnotor ol. Japioneoe Studleo
!&gt;r-oQram, Council on International
Studieo, SUNYAB Katth Wall:er,
U/B qrad llludenl end apertenoed
peper lolde&lt;

.......

~

Expend your underotandinq ol
Oriental art u you leem the oklll
of J . _ Paper Foldinq.
R891oireiion will he ooolirmed 10pco
the payment ol $1 .00 (ouh only) to
.,.,..,. . - ol. paper .

... . ... __,. ........................ .. .... _. . .

_.,...,

.... p.-.IIWa lt. ~

ReQistralion is essentlaJ for aU
worbh~. It enables us to inform
you of schedule chanQes and helps
the leader prepare lor the oorrect
number of participants. You may
reqlster in person or by phone {if no
fee is involved) . When you register ,
we will inform you of any supplies,
readinq moterials, etc., that will be

are available upon reque.t .
Pleue reqilter only for workahope
you are aure you con attend. Once
you are reQi.tered , your apoce in a
workshop will be ..-rved until you
notify us to C4llcel your reqistration .

...... 1980

lload&lt;rp!Febnmy II- llan:h 3
(udadlag Feb. 11)17:00 • 10:00
p.a./llaiMnl c:a.p.
Leeder: J""""' Puf1li•l. Aamtant
Director of Creative Craft Center
. . . . . . . Do.c::riptlaD:
You will qaJn beoic underotendinq of
the poulbOitleo end propertleo of a
preclouo metal. Each penon will
de.tqn and create their own project
(rtoqo, ptno, pendants ... ). Purcbaoe
of nec::euary materlalo will be

.....
requ(red.

.&amp;liD ·c ooBIIIG

....
...............,.,...,.,_
wtroo.or

111'7M-.,. p.a./Oti-

Leedero: Thom.u Seitte end Alen
Winkleotein, are both taoolwinq
elictonodoo.
. . . . . . . Do.:ripllaa:
For~ ol Bullalo'o "1'1'
bau1e cuisine. Learn how to tum out..
your own lim cl,.. chicken WinQo
end taooo. We'll do cblcbon wloqo at
one MM!on, taooo at the other. We1J
eat alter - cool:, Reqlolretlon will be
oonflrmed br the poymont of 53.50
(ouh ooly) to-~~~ -

. . . . . . . Do.:ripllaa:
Sealono will be oonduc:le&lt;l In the
otyle of o proieo1onal taotlnq. WtnM
&gt;nil be explored uotoq varlouo
.
tecbnlq-. ouch ao blind taotinQs
and rotlrlQ for oomparaUve value;
intemalional tutino of wines from
countries with low production of
wlneo (e.9 . Greece, Alrtce , South
America, etc. ); verticol tostlnqt,
that it the tutinq of a wine from a
particular vineyard, but from
different yeara (vintaqes); and
comparative tastinqa of varietal
wines of different vineyarc:la.
Reqlstration will be confirmed by
the payment of $12.00 (~ ~ly) to
cover wine oo.t.s.

JAPDai:COODIRI
Frtday/F..a..-y f/4:00 · 1:00

p.m./Otl-110
Leaders: Tol:ako Mlchii,
Coordinator of Japanese Studies
Proqram, Council on IntemaUona.l
Studleo, SUNYAB Hlroko Neqahara .
vi.Jitor from Japan

Woobbop D.ecriplloa:
Es:pand your cultural awareness and
learn 80me of the teeret1 of oook.inq
Japen--otyle. Tol:ako end Hlroko
will demonstrate how to mo1:e
Tempura Suahl. lleQiotretlon will be
conllnned upon the payment ol
$2.00 (c.uh only) to O&lt;mll' food
coots.

�...

ftJIIIIIII--

~~5-111....10..

~/P~IIIMI· . .

.-JIItda lit. ea.p..

p.a.~oe--.LMc~w: &amp;bin llombord,

~ end

r-der: ~ Goldlleld. bao

with ~ and
teecbM mime lor the Theatre
[)eportm«&gt;t

otudl«&lt; -

enlh-c c:hel.

.......... o-tpllaal
Enjoy an e...unq ol oooklnq end
eelinq Italian otyle. Leom to make
AnUputo, MI.-one Soup,
Homemade Pula, Vee! Sc:e.lloplne
and llallan a.-:ake. The menu
lo llesible u Robin may be able to
accoiDill&lt;l&lt;late opec:l4l ~·
l\eqlotraUon II confirmed upon
poyment ol $2 (c:aoh only) to ..,..
food coolo.

..... .....a
--~"~

......

.,

p.a./011).eeder: Robin l!enJhard,
eoporlenced and enthuolaotlc chef

Cll&amp;&amp;'l'lft ltaJICII

..........

Frldlrp/F~ I ~faT I

IOCiali%lllQ a.a you lea.m 80me Ups
for )ewi&amp;h oookinQ. The tentative

eoporlenced danoo Instructor

~
Take time out. EntoY o.n evenioq of

menu includes K.naidla.ch (Matza
bello) Stuffed Capon, Stir·Fry
Carroll Squaoh and Strawberry
Shortcake. Re¢otraUon confirmed
upon poyment of $2 (caoh only) to
cover food 0011:&amp;.

ranUY I'VUILLD
.._day/ Feb&lt;.-y 2.5/ 7:00 - 1:30
p .m./011 campuo
Leader: Robin Bernhard.
experienced and enthualutlc cheJ
Worbbop Deecrlption:
Se.Uify your sweet tooth and learn to
cook oome delightlul desserlo.
Robin's selection includes Mousse,
Cream Pubb Swans, and Amaretto
Pistachio Pie or Banana Cream·
Coconut Pie. Registration confirmed
upon poyment of $2 (caoh only) to
cover food

costs.

ra&amp;IICII

c:uuun:

JloDday/ Febnlcay &amp;17:00 · 9:30
p.m./011 campuo
Leader: Robin B8mhard. an
eiperienced and enthusiastic chef .
Worbbop Deecriptloa:
EnJoy an evenloQ of oook.lno. eating
and meetinq others. Robin has
tentatively selected Stuffed Filet of
Sole, Stuffed Muohroo1m, New
Potatoes With Lemon Butter, and
Cold Grand Mamler SouHJe' for the
menu . ReqistraUon confirmed upon
poyment of $2 fee (cuh only) to
cover food c:osts.

DANCE
AND YOGA
KUIID&amp;I.DII '100&amp;

(exd1oc11Dg ....... ltl/1:45 - WI
p.a./Jiala ..,_ ea.p..
r-der: Carol Karninokl ,

w......... Deecriplloe:

ParUctponlo will be Introduced to all
dance tecbnJques with the emphasis
on individual improvteatlon. Esch
session will feature al laaot 20
minutes of Lmprovisalion and

"

exerciees designed to help expand
participant's creotiveneu In dealinQ
with time , space and motion .

Beginners welcome.

diGDI. . .G DIICO D&amp;IICZ
'\llec~Deodays!Jcm-r :Ill - March

8- !excludillg llaft:h 12111:30 -10:00
p .m./MaiD St. Campuo
Leader: Cecelia Langlois , an
enthusiastic dancer who enjoys
sharlnQ her knowledge of diaoo with
other&amp; .

Worbbop Deocrlptloll:
Find a friend to join you In learning
the latest in dilco . Some of the

IIIDDLE EUTEU DDCE
Thurodays/January 31 • March
6 112·110 • 1:00 p.m./MaiD St.
Ct .w 1

t o\.1,.. 4lJ t Stephen.c&gt;n,
r ,f.. .ooel '. idle Eo.wrn dancer

.,,

Wor

op Descrip tion :
yrur C"f..por"umty to learn the
1

fi~pOI"I"J

~-

1f Middle Ea51ern

L.! WorU:h·~ January 17 , 1980

8l.&amp;tK &amp;D WIIIU
I'IIOI'OftG
l"b......,/Jaaamy II· F~
21171GD - 1:30 p.m./lllala St.
Camp•
Leoda&lt;: Ken Landau, photo bull
with tea.ching e xperience
Worbbop Deecriptlon:
This work.ahop Is strictly for
beqtnnera, no experience is
neoe~~ary . Learn how to develop
and make prints from black a nd
white film . Participants must have
acoeu to a C41nera (other than a 110
pocket type) and provide their own
film. Reqtstration ls limited and will
be confinned upon payment of $7.50
(cash only) to cover the oost of
chemicals, paper and a photo
handbook. The lee includei
memberohip In the UfB Photo Club
which entitles you to the uae of the
darkroom in addition to workshop
time .

ftlft&amp;8J&amp;D.

......a&amp;~

T.......,.__;II aDd
F~ 517.00- 1.ao
"""'-!~

and 3-count hustles will be covered
as well aa line dancinq. Partlciponta
should wear comfortable clqthinq •
and footwear. A party at one of the
local discos Is a posslbility . so "put
on your dancin' shoes! "

PO..... FOLIE DDCDfG
Molldaye/Jrm-r 28 - llan:h 3
(excludillg Feb. 11)/1:30 - 1:00
p.m./MaiD St. Campuo
Leader: James Hewitt , member of
lhe White Eagle Dancers, has
experience performinQ publicly and

teaching Polioh loll: danclnq.
Worlrobop Doecr\ptloll:
Folk dances are not only fun and
ooocl exercise, they are alao a way
of understanding and developlnQ
pride in Polish culture and heritage.
Dances taught will include the
Polonez, Krak.owiak. , Maz~ and the
Polka . Partlclponts ohould drell
comfortably and wear soft,
low -heeled shoes or sn&amp;e;k.ers.

CREATIVE ARTS
&amp;CI'DIG WO. . . .OP •
IU!WOD •err II&amp;HI:U
Wec~Deodays/Jrmuarr

:111-Man:h 28
(except March 12)/7:30 - 9:30
p.m./MaiD St. Campuo
Leoder : Mary Brown , prominent

local actress soon to be eeen tn
" Eddie" and a U klndo of .U.qe
productions over the years.
Wodrahop Deecript!OD:
A li«le Stan(lolavokl), a little Brecht ,
a httle Brown. a lot of lun , learning
and work ... on "how to find the
personal truth in the creation of a
character.'' Exerciaes in
concentration, relaxation ,
lmaQtnation, creativity and emotion
Memory ... p lu• uae of the voice a"nd
body m the creotlve prooea in the
theatre.

Dnu.GPDIG COLOa

IILIDBI·I
Thureday/ Febnlcay 21/7:00 - 10:00
p .m./MaiD St. Campua
Leader: Kenneth Landau . photo buff
with teachinq experience.
Worbbop~

This work.ahop ta desiqned for the
photo bull who hu already enloyed
the e~rience of developinQ his or
her own black and whtte ftlm. Wtth
the help of a Kodak Ektachrome ltlm
proceosinQ kit, porticlponto In the
workohop wtll develop a 20~re
roll of Kodak Ektacbrome film. Note:
Partictponto must already know hOw
to develop black and whtte film and
must plan to brinQ an expoeecl
2()..,.pooure roll of l&lt;odak
Ektachrome fUm to the sesalon.
Reqlstration is limited and will be
oonflrmed upon poyment of $3.00
(cash only) to cover the cost of
chemicals and instructional
materials. (This fee does not indude
memberohip In the UfB Photo Club.)

Leader: Robert Roeobarq, Dean of
EducaUonal Studle ., who bao been
Jazz proqra.mmer for WBFO for
several yean.
Worbbop~

A treat lor earo and mind . Thl5
workshop will cover the history of
joss from the beginning s through the
Swinq e re, and qtve you the chance
to hear classical performers arid
performances of early joz::z . Format
will include lecture, listening , and
discuuion .

FINANCES
AND FUNDING UfKi'lii.....aJ.
Wlllftllth WU7 '1'0 ~
DDWIIall:1'0 . . . . ft
l"bunclrrpiJcm~ 31 - F~
7/2:00 - 4:00 p.m./Aabont c-p.
Leader : Shirley Stout, Asmtant to the
Vice Preoldent for R......-ch , II an
expert on writinq proposall and
flnding qranll.
Worbbop~

Learn how to prepare research
propoeal1 and "action" propoula, a.s
well as how to locate poaible IOUroes
of financial support for l"ettl!kVCh or
other klndo of projects. G raduate
lludenll, be¢nning faculty membero,
. and lh08e involved in soc:ial aervtce
educational, or community qroups '
should fi nd this workshop a utefu l
introduction to the world of qrantJ .

DfftlODOC'fiO. 1'0
n&amp;'l'oaz I'ILII..JI&amp;KIJIG_
W..u...drrp/Februcay 6 - April 2
(excludlllg March 121/3:00 - 5:00
p .m./AIIlh- Campuo
Leader: Aldo Auhcino, studied at
UCLA, has been in filmmakinq for 6
y&amp;us and prev1ously taught Basic
Mohon Picture Production.
Worbhop Description:
Participants will be exposed to the
lu ll course of motion picture
production from pre -planninq
throug:h post -production includmq
shootinq, act ing: and editing: . You
will have the chance to observe and
porhc1pate in the actual production
of o feature length 16 mm. motion
picture cu rrently beino produced
and directed by the leader. If
interested, you might allo have the
opportumt y to Ulm your~ own Super
8 mm proJect w1th Aldo't aatst.ance.
Pu.rcha.te of Independent Filmmalung by Lenny Lipton 11 optional.

'~

p.a./

current steps in the New York , l...atin

T~~21 - llaft:h

2.5/1:00 - 7:00 p.m ./llain S•.
Campuo
Leader: Bhoi Oyal Singh Khaloa .
experienced Yooo teecher
Worbbop Deecriplloll:
Develop expanded awa.reneu,
greeter flenblllly of body, relief
from tenllon. deeper and more
relaxed state ol oonacioutnea
through yOQa tx*ure. breathlnc;~
and meditation . BrinQ ruQ or
blanket and wellr loose llttinQ
cloth ana

.......... o-tpllaal
Leom the bealc lecbnlques end &lt;;lllln
aol the playful.- al and pontomlme. We will""""' oome
of the beoio illuolooo ouch 01 the
woll and pulllnq a rope, etc. and
&lt;;lei inlD oome tmpro'rioallon. In
addltloo - will dl.cuoo the
undwlyinq prloctpl.. (enchontmeot,
tonoloa, end illuolcm) oi9&lt;&gt;'J)Of'el
mtme. PaJ1IclpeDII " ' - l d comfortable clothinq. F'omBI·will
include oome lectunt, dlocuoolooand deroonatrallon but will lnoolve
more individual end cpoup
•
participation.

•on'III&amp;JI~•

LE&amp;U·U·DOIIHI

Tueodaya/Febnlcay 12 rmd 11/7:00
-10:00 p.m./MaiD St. Campuo
Leader: Audrose Mackel Banko, has
had 25 years expenence in adult
home economics educa.tion a nfl ts
currently employed as a financial
·
consultant.
Worbbop Deecrlpt!oll:
Learn a new approach to personal
and family money management.
Part ici pants wtH learn how to
analyze expenses, schedule monthly
J)o'ymenta, monitor their use of
Credit, and organize savlnQS. We
will u•the Save ond Spend
Agenda (available at the first
session; cos1 11 $3.00). You ohould
brmQ ca.ncelled checks. bills, and
reoe1pt1 for the last 12 months , as
well as a calculator (if pouible) to
the Jint leUlOil -

�.......

~

~"-'.,..

...-.111*11. c-.-

Leoder. Ric:bard Flarello,

....

r_,...

Somoe 5peclaJIII with the lntema1
• fleonmueSor-rice

........

~

Stymied br the coomplulty ol your
lu fonM? Don' t - - you
..-1 o obort form or o lon&lt;J form?
Should you n - ? Here to help for
the huoled tupeyer. Thio WO&lt;bbop
will - ' y o u with. - a l
owemewol-~lnthe

tu law and will cxmn- point. ol
lll*'ial tntereot to the unl-.tty
COIIIIIIWiiiT (e.q . marr1ed liludents ,
lellowshlpo). Mr. Fiorello will allo
reopond to Individual ~

......

AIIDPBYIIC&amp;L

HfiiEII'

·a ,,,._ •. ,....,.
......,.... .. 0....
.......,
"-

~ ....

....,. •• a

___

---

t..ior: IUoa c - . .........
tauQbt _ ___

....... Dwu\1
.__your- to. 11.-IDOrellaible body. Ea.doiDQbe enl&lt;&gt;fablel BIJen wlllleed&gt; the
beolco baD wbJcb you can dnelop
your own routine. Weer
cxmlorteble, lao. ltttinq c:lotheo
or I«Qrcc .

.......

,......, !117M·

lt.~
Leoden: Wanda Neomer, Physical

Education maJor, la: en enthtUlaatic-advocate of the "New ~"
coocept ol phy&amp;tcal condltlonlnQ

throuqh ploy, ond SuS&lt;IIh C . 8.-oun,
Occupollonol Therapy major ond
enthuotu of the " New Gemeo" boo
hod experience In leodlnq qroupo In
Ufellme filne•.

...........

~

.

lncreooe your okllnQ pleooure by
tncreoatnq your IIOiety on the ai~­
Leom the mechanlco of oommon
okl!nQ lnjurieo and what protective
meaauree you can l4ke to avoid
them. We11 COYer c:rc. country
UilnQ .. well .. downhill.

. . . . . . .&amp;aiiii8&amp;D
IIIIDIY&amp;I.I&amp;alliOUD
T--,.llaaa.T II . F.a.-y
1117:30. 1:30 p.aJIIabl St.
c-p.

skiers
WorWaap~:

First -timera end nov1oes wiU learn
the bMics about equipment and p1ck
up the ak:illa needed to heve fun on
crcu country lkla. Revastration wtJt
be confirmed upon the payment of
$3.00 (C&lt;Uh only) to cover the coo1 of
ab rentals.

ao•...... YDWDITD
T~IIGDd

, . _ . , l/7r00. 1:30 p ....J-..
Sl. c - p .

Leeder: Mlchael Cantwell,
Phtlooophy/Bioloqy major, boo bed •
qreol deal of experience hiklnq on
hit own and with qroup1.
Warbbop~:

Leom the -ntlala of beckpocking.
what lo take ond what not to toke,
where to qo, and how to survtv£
Periidponts ohould emerqe with
tncreooed confidence in thelr obillly
to survive in the wood&amp;, and with a
view of bockpocklnq 01 more than
exercite, 41 a way of understandinQ
our relationlhip with Nature. We
will plan two weekend excunioru
toqether. Beqtnneno and thooe with
bockpsck:inQ experiencet to
contribute are equally welcome to
participate. Fonnot wiU include
lecture , demonstration, slides, and
discuuion .

Leoder: Paul Allaire, 11 an
uperienoed winter runner and ha.s

reod exlenoively on the topic .
w.........,~

Leom helpful hrnts to make runnlnq
winter weather IDOf'e en~le
and Mfer . Winter runntno it easy tf
you know what to weor and bow to
do II ; the hardeol part II qellmq out
the door. n.- thmhnq of
beQ1nn1nq runnlno and lair-weather
runners are welcome. Format 11
incl~re . demc::JJ'l.tTatkm. and
10

d.ecuiOion

...... e-ly -)be beolc ruloo ol

t h e -.

---

........J&amp;IWII

..........,.,._,........
.~a

.... ..

IIJ7. . . . . p.a./. . . . .

c-.~:

llocJor

Mlcbeel SlwobriJiDlont;l-u - ~

H-.

-~

....... Dwu\1
For ClOIIDCll-.n ol ~ VW'a.
I

models...,.-

a.- p.aJIIala

Leodero: Phillip C. Culliton,
O.P.M., ond Stephen Rycyna, M.D.

1/IO:CIO .......

'lido-'*" lo -.dod lor . . .

-~30-

tlundap!F.a.-y 14 aDd
11/5:110 -7:110 p....JIIabl St.
c-p.

Leadera: Paul Alhlire end Laura
Weimer, experienoed .,._ oountry

...,.,....
....
i e r.
'
-"-_
-p
pYJID9

~

IIOW '1'0 &amp;'fOlD~

-l:GOp.-J Aaloenlc-p.

:M~

1!ZISIDI- K&amp;Y

.....,....

llatardaJ'/ F~

JMJID9• t h e - - . . ..... lor

.....,

Leomthebeolcool~-

Warbbop Deoc:riplloD:
StoylnQ In QOOd phy&amp;tcal condition
doesn't hove lobe done throuqh
bortnQ work.-outa. PlayinQ
noncompetitive Q4JIMM can achieve
the same qoa1 in an atmoephere of
fun, cooperation, and cloeenesa with
othen. Find out how to., :t Poioon
Peenut Buller Pit, People '1'011, and
Blind Polyqono, amonq other qemeo .
Come and en)oy the chance to be a
kid oqaln. Periidponts ohould wear
comlorioble clolheo ond oneokero.

c:aOII COGIIftl'r IIDIIIG

..........

=:=-=.!n..t
ll.c-.- .._.,._,

c:.al
Thuradayo/Jan . 31 · Feb. 1418:00
-9 :30 p .m./Moln St. Cempuo
Leeder: Wayne Grodl , U .S .C .F.
rated expert ond Vioe Preotdenl of
U/B Chea Club

Warbbop Deoc:riptloD:
U you're a beqinner at cheea, thta 11
your opportunUy to learn the baaica.
U you olreedy know oomethlnQ
obout the 9f!IIM, you can Improve
your okllts.

W~_.Frldllr!F..._.,

30 . . . 1111. . .1. . p.-.llloda St.

._u-tuq buqo, " " - " · - becb (air-cooled
o...t.en, Sctrooooo, or Rebblta).
We11 . , _ lnlpectlon, tune upo,
electrtcal aywlema, enqlne OOMboul,
ond what to oon&amp;tdir " ' - buyiD9 a

--

VW. You do DOl .-Ito own • VW
to join. Formal will include lecture

~
Leeder: Deborah 0 . Moroleo,
Aallllont Otrector ol the Oolry
Coundl of the Nlaqora FronUer
Area. [nc., haa had extensive
experience In teechinq foodo and
nutrition a nd nutrition education
technlqueo to health prof...ionols
and educators.

...........
- .......
.........

Warbbop Deoc:riplloD:
An aCUvtty-orlented work.ahop
desiqned to involve participants in
lea.minQ more about bosic nutrition
and ib: proctica.l oppllcation to
heolthlul, everydoy livtnq. What ore
leader nutTienll? What ore their
functiono and food oouroea? What Is
o oo-&lt;:alled "belanoed" diet? What
are the concepts used in veqetarlan
diets? These qu..Uono olonq with
product labelino lnforJMtion, fad
diet.a end weiqht control options will
be diocuaed ln the worbhop. Whol
better way to invest your lunch
hour.

Leodero: Gerry Thorner,
Counoellnq Poycholoqt&amp;t, and Mary
Jecobeen, Counoeltnq Intern and
Teechlng Aoslllont, hove leed
severol worbhop1 on teachlnQ

rooD roa YD •oaaow
UD'I'OD&amp;'r

~11-lllardoS

(excludlag F.a.-y lii/S:30 • 5:110
p . . . . J - - - Camp""
Leeder: Jean Schultz, Home
Economill

Warbbop Deoc:riptloa:
Ms. Schultz cliacuael the
tmporionoe of c;rrolnl, veqetobleo
and fiber food&amp; for better nutrition
and the implications of nutritional
hoblll on enerqy reaourc:es and
poroonal t-lth. Leom lo make
whole qroin, y_..., ond qulcl:
breeds and how to cook nutritionally
without meol. A free copy of the
cookbook, Food lor the Morrow ond
Today, wiU be qiven to oil
portidponlo. lleqtotrollon will be
conlirmed upon the payment of one
dollar (C&lt;Uh only, pleeoe) lo cover
lood com.

-

demon&amp;trallon .

~

T~Jt.--t/a..

-5:110 p....JIIabllll. c - p .

effectlveneu.
Warbbop~

This work.abop will provide an
inJormol eettlno to ahare your own
teachinq experience and learn lrom
others' experience. We will uae our
own qroup's procea aa a way of
examlnlnq cloaroom dynomtco ond
our own roles. You will hove the
oppor1unity to examine your
leechlnq otyle ond reoelve feedbecl:
!rom poero lhol ohould help you
odopl your o"" belllleochl!lQ &amp;lyle.
We'll d.lscua iuuea IUch as
qrodinq, mohnq examo, modem
technoloqy in the clo.aroom, end
teecher/atudenl relatlonlhtpo. With
qroup oupport ond leomtnq from
peen. you have the opportunity to
in.cre.ue your interest in and
enthuotoam for teechlnQ. Anyone
lnlere&amp;ted In l«achlnQ Is -loome,
whether you're a Unt· year teac:h.tno
aaaiatant or a full profe.:w. but we
prefer that you currently be
leeching oomethlnQ.

IDV&amp;LIY'r1 FSa.IIP81,

n1'110L081:, . . . . . . . .

UD WOJID'I ID&amp;Lft
Ta.dap/laaa.T II • lllan:h 15
(exdadlDg ..arch 11)/8:30 • 9:00
p..,.J - . . St. Campua
Leoders: Sherry Ellis , nm Morrluey
and Joc:U Goodie man, are
CounaellnQ Directors at the
Sexuality Education Center, U/B.

IIUIC 11&amp;11&amp;8 roa
aa.IZ&amp;'I'IOIC1 &amp;

Worlr:obop Deoc:riptlon:
Here ia your chance to become
better Informed about emot tonal and
phyaioJoqioal aspects of hWMn

iiiWII•u• c:ouaa:
Saturday/ F.a.-y 2/10:110 a.m.
_.,oo p.m.!MaUi St. Campuo

sexuality, tncludinQ Individual
similarities and differences . We will
talk about aexual teeUno• and
preeent a wide variety of information
on the anotomy and phystoloqy of
reproduction and eexual rnponae
for males and females , learn a.b:Jut
birth control. steriliution, ab:&gt;rtion ,
diaeaiM and their prevention,
homoaexuaJity, rape and ather
topics. Sattafy your cunoulity and
qet the c hance to di.Jcuu sexuality
in on Informal. open Rrt!IDQ .

Warbbop DMalptloD:
Leom the hmdamenlots ol ...,..qe,
includinq the belie otrokeo for each
pori of the body , their pu.-- end
techniques . Format will include
lecl....,, demon&amp;trellon, and prodlce
by particapanta on one another.
BrinQ oll ond o aleepinQ bo~ or
eome sort of peddinQ to He on . W~r
ohoril and holtero .

Leeder: Holly Golner Ia on
experienced maueute ond ha~ led a
masaoqe work.ahop previoualy.

Reporior/L!f Workohopo/Januory 17, 1980

�.........
,..,..,..,.._.., .......
nnwaaw . .

. , . . . . . p.a.!........

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

'-ion: G.DJM lleVIDnef,
lWoren&lt;» lJbNrian at UGL, ODd
Pat Teqler, l..itnry Sludioo
Lib&lt;arian, are _ . . a t
~ltbvteo.
~

the world ollibrar-,
.-uroeo and oervlooo lor puroulnQ
""""'=!c and penonal tnt-..
Became more oomfortable ODd
oonlldoot _.k!nQ In a librar-,
~ . lleYelop efftdenl ....ch
llreleqleo. Format wtll be informal
lecture and dlocu.lon with .,..,..
media .,._.w,tlon; toura ol campus
librerleo or ol opecial oemc- (I.e.,
computer -.chlnq) wtll be
arren9"'f ~ to po.rttclpent

· Should be po.rttcularlr
UMIW to new OT ...turn1nQ lludonb
who want tO 141iilliarize tJ&gt;em.Nwtth librar-, .... a n d -·

........

an-. cur.-.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . .1)17. . . . . .
p.a./IWaiiL~

t-ier: Glenn Ceponta, on avid
JUQOler.

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

Through deiDO!lllraUOIH by Glenn ~
aucerviston and practiCe, you too
can learn to Juqqle With relative
- · Brlnq Juqqlinq bella to the lint
eeaaion. Three tennis balls will
aulltoe.

'PSYCHOLOGY
JlND
OMNUNICATIO
&amp;n'IIOI.OCIY DaiGY
P&amp;ftDJII
Thandcrp/Nardo 20 . April
1711:00 4 :00 p .ID./Amlo.a
Caaapua
Leoder: Irene Friel , member of the
AmeriCAn Federotion of Aatroloqers,
has written numerous articles and
lectured on astroloqy on ra:dlo ond
TV ond et various qroupa ond
oolleqeo.

~

andaclln9.
w...... Dowlel
You cen meb ,_.. m- ~
true d ""' 0111 IIDd oat Whet they
ore. We11.,.. a.m.. Sbor'o
Wilhcrelh How to Qol Wbol TO..

.liNIIrW...t. &amp;~1Dua

.

~~~ - -

....

Warbbop ~

A. an individual , you live and
interact within a IOCial context.
Uplora the chanQea currently
taklnq place In mel.tfemale role&amp;
end dtiiOOVer wayt to create
penonel, tnte.,..._w , ODd IIOCial
~ · Hopefully , - wtU lind
, . , . , . _ -... non..tereotypical,
nd mutually t.rn.ltcial waya lor
a;en and women to relate. lauea
d~ wtU tnclude men'• MC!
women'&amp;role bind&amp;, . _, naed&amp;
lor Intimacy, allachon, MC!
Mrwaltty. Format will tnclude
lacturoa, film&amp;. aaan:lon, role playa,
and eome fun . Men anc: women of
aU aoes are welcome.

~e~tUie W.;.~.n;...;

i7,' 1980

ODd.........._. ol. Suoceoaful

Oi«:aur_. and --and

aulbored • bool: on ONrccminQ

.......

publiobe&amp; a monlhlr
aelf·lmpiOf-d -.letter.
~

Bulld your ..u conlkloooe•

worbbop wtU ..,.. the lollowtnQ
topicl: Undontand Towwell Borttor

·~ ouch ... breinll!&gt;nDJnQ
MC! bomNJolrrq (leorninQ lo - the
ol. olbon)lo help dewelop
. your oltllla .. maklnQ wtahe&amp; Into
reality.

----·-81-.. .
........ ~· - -

1/MD-Iollp.-.1........ ~
t-ier: Cbaplrrtn John ICamarao baa
been trained ID oltnlcal p..toral
educatiOn both at Warren State
Hoopital , Pennsylvania, and Nonrich
State lfoopltal , Connecticut. Harr
tauqht varlouo worUbopo dealtnQ
with deprealon.

........

[)eprMilon is the number one
e llltlli;Jnal problem lacinq our

culture today. Thia wnrbhop Will
teach you how to r40CIQiliZe and
underatand ~ and help you
to develop the alctJl&amp; you ..-! to
cope wtth 11.

TD .&amp;DUSIICS or
IIDft&amp;ftOII

Thunrlcrp/Jcmaaay 31 . 8/8:00 . 7:00 p .m.lllaln St.
Caaapao
Leade" Bhai Dye! Singh Kllal&amp;a
Warbbop Doecrlptloa.:
Real ize your undeveloped potential
as a human beinQ . Experience
HiQher ConiCiouaneu ond overcome
fear and neqativity . We will practice
meditoUon.J which util ize both
breath and mantra. Brinq a blanket
or cushion to sit on, and wear loose,
comlorteble clothino .

.

S.U·~-. baa
/
~~lor
oelf·~ to hundredo, baa

""""l'' lo IIDd out .me ""' Nally
wrml aDd ' - t o qat H. We11 ,_- •
writlnQ ....a-. ,..,...,., ..nd

.. poWnllal. Thio .._.,..

creo~~

and Toke Cbarve ol. Your Life; Rloe
Abcmt Your Hurto-Worrr·Diocaur__.,t· The Blaho; lleYelop l.aottnQ
Reiallonohlpa wtth Family, Frienda,

---.-.
------.._
~; ~ your
Poooiblllll8o-Tllnj Your Problema

tnto - ' - 1

..........,..,.,
p...,_,
ils.GI • , . .

IlL

~
· WUktnoon, baa
Leader: Debra

worked wtth the Center for IJie and
Death In TranotHon MC! baa
co-taught " ' - In College H on
Death and Dytnq.

........

Ufe Ia a continual prooooa ol aaytnq

QOOd·bya to fomtly, friend&amp;, lovera,
pleooo, thinq&amp;, or lllliQe&amp; In your own

IUe. Reooqnlztng tn- of looa,
&amp;taqea ol grieving and becomtnq
awore of your own values and
methnda lor ooplnq With tranaitiOO.
CAn help you develop more effective
weys to deal with various kinds of
losa and chanqe, whether deelth ,
divorce , movinq , leavinQ your
parents, sudden lou of material
possessions, or l01inq a job. Forrnot ..
will include participation and
ahe.rinQ by those who attend.

ANDOTBEBS
W..m-lap/Febnaary I · 1711:00
-1:311 p .... ./Am~o.a c-p..
Coordinator: Roger M. Chrilllan, d

Dunrlorr~

IJ/1:111 . . . .
p...,_, c-.-

IlL
Leoder&amp;: BeatriCe Roth·, Unlveratty
CounoeltnQ Center, and Amy Pitt,
Waroaw CounoeltnQ Service&amp;

• . . - . . . DoecripdaA:
You ha.., a right to your leelinqa,
beliefs, and opiniC~HI Leam to
aooept thia and practice expreulng
them through diiCUOilon and
emrdM&amp;.

c••••••~an
'ID .....
Tlo~

.... p...,_, ... c-.-

11 - Fei&gt;. IC/-

t-ier: Sioter Vtrqlnla , Principal St .
MarY• School lor the Deal

........ DowtJ4Ioa:
The three -

wtU OOY1tr

" - " - and _ , . , problema ol
the deal. beoic ua ol the manual
alphabel , ~With deal
ch!ldran, ODd dlocu.lon ol the
educetional, oocial and vocational
implioatlono ol deefnaea.

proqrom consultant and active
pertlclpent in tho W&lt;&gt;Tk of the N.A.
Jewiah Student Ne!WO!'k
Warbloap DoecripdaA:
Current thouobt•. concepts and
contemporary vtews on alternative
llfeatyle&amp; found In Ioree! wtU be
c:liacu.-l alonQ With the hiatory of
the many dtverae paopl01 and their
individualized culture&amp;. The forme!
wtll Include films. alldea, dtocuuion ,
and g.- &amp;peeker&amp;.

.......... y . . . . .

...,.....,,W.n'

W&amp;lft'D'I'O lmOW ~
waaanaa'I'O&amp;a

-~.am-y· - 1117. .

~· c-.-

·p.a./llala
Leader:
Ron Broob, who Ia
currently With Computerland of
Buffalo, baa had 14 yeara ol
aperienoe in the computer

........

......u ooarpu1en

--·.-reb and

play. A brtol ~ ol. computera
elooQ with - tntrocluctlon to the

herclwve, workln9&amp; ol. the
m.ochtnery. ODd ool.lwaN wtU be

__
......

connrd
the lour
" " '· In
ecldtllon,clurtnQ
the leader
wtU demanotrato
the appllcetloo ol. mtcro computera
to varloua operetlonl and actlvitleo.

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

.....,._ ...

~·-r.-..iry
~
t-ier: SbrpMn L. John . a U/8

.;reduate &amp;tudent In EnYironment
Sludioo baa been an active member
In Zoro Pnpulatlon GIOWih.

W. . . . . D
t_M.
The -ulrop wtU lualliaa.
~with the boolc- and

_,.to

cuDcop.
populollon
- the
· war
JW-.ueolwtU
be
tn whl&lt;:h human papulelion-lotlacto
wtth t h e - -· ~DQ
-ouch .. conyiDQ oopeelty and
~equl)ilrdum. ~
IDfonDal ~ partlcjplmll wtU
aplore a l - and ,_mq
.-poinlo to'JIO,PUielkrn QrOWih and
del" IDto acme ol. the tndlvtdual
and oocial tnvul.-:1. Aloo,
wtU locwr on poooible
oolutlon&amp; and optioN lor todey'and
~utuno_..uuna

.

~

CUL'niii&amp;L . . . , . _

laloU

.,.,. . . ............. IlL~
t-ier: Stephen Novick, baa
-rched and 1ecturecl on Men'a
Stucliea at va rious coiiOQe&amp; and baa
orQ6lllzed numerous worbhopllor
area CtrQ4nizationJ.

c...'-lor: a.,_ A. Sle!U, launder

.u.._t , and~,......

&amp;WIIf&amp; . . .w.ll

'!a
\WI-•
. '1'0_
COI'8
un:.c:w•
_ _ _.
_

paleatlel lcr uoiDQ
el ' -·

~

.,.,....~ z ~ 4Dl!

Warbbop DoecripdaA:
Gain an under&amp;l4ndlnq ol ..troloqy
a1 a way of QalnlnQ tnaiQht into the
pef*lna.lity , aa a tool to inteqrate the
pcyche, and • • a means of oell·help.
Format Will Include leciure,
dtocuiiSion and open ahartng .

_..........

•..

...,. . . . . p.a./........

...... ,n.

Leeclw: ....., a.- . -~
ret~.- be awlncJIDQ on a , boo
bed }'Mn ol. - - I D '-'iW&gt;Q

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

-~

..

~

~

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

loclmoloQr and to learn about the

indullry.

~

la a micro computer o worthwhile
tnverdment lor homa or office? How
much do they coot? Muot you learn a
lanquaqe to Pf'09J"a.m your own
computer? What about IDillntenance
and repair? What Ia thelnvntment? What can ~ anticipate
in terms ol appliceUon and
availobtltty In 5-10 yeara? Horeia
your opportunity to qetn a belie
undentandino of computer

There la a IJC*Ibillty that other
warbbopo Will be offered such u
Gatttng to Know Buffalo, Friabee,
and Ganeoloqy. Watch the
lpectraa for announcements or call
alter February I to be put on the
malltng list (636-2808).

'••••

Please let ua know U you decide
not to attend a workshop for which
you have reqiaterecl. Pen10n1 beinQ
kept on a wa.iUno list may then have
the opportunity to enroll. U you do
oot let us know , the workshop may
have a amaUer enrollment than
neoeaary , which can be fruatrotinQ
for other participants and the
leader.
Our leaden volunteer their time
and eHort to offer you theee
opportunlltel to Jearn; as o courtesy
to them MC! other membera of the
unlvently community walllnQ to
reqloler lor worbbopo , pl....., call
636-2808 or come by 110 Norton to
cancel your reqt.tration for
wurbbopo you cannot aHend or
cannot continua oltendlnq alter you
have begun.

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

Put leader&amp; have Indicated thet they
were able to relaz ln the fun and
friendly atmoopha"' of tho
wnrUhop&amp;, and have found that tho
teachlnQ/leaderahip expe&lt;ience
anhancea !hair raaumea. U you
talent or elq)MIIM In a
particular area , why not take pride
In helplnQ otherrr enrich their lt....?
Prop:.ala on any topic area e.re
welccme and wtU be oon&amp;tderecl for
the Fall 191!0 program. U you ara
intere&amp;ted, contact the UFE
WORKSHOPS Office (110 Norton ,

,

636-2808).
Desiqnad and llluatrated
by Kim Mellema
No ....., la ........... Nlatton.hlp
wtth SUNY~ ~I be ..,~ 11o
d.iecrilalnetion on tM b.- ol rece, .thnic
t.c:kqround, n.tkiNl oriq6n, ..tiQion, mlot ,
_,., - or oond.rtion ol haadk::.p.

�</text>
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              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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            <element elementId="50">
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          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1390316">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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              <text>Microfilms</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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          <element elementId="41">
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1390305">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
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                <text>v11n15</text>
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          <element elementId="113">
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                <text>16 p.</text>
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                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

DEC. 13, 1871

VOL 11 e NO. 14

Ketter
responds to
14 demands
Appreciates
minorities'
interest, he says

EDITOR'S NOTE: 1be following iuh e
University admlnlstrallon's offidal
r e s - to demands iMued last week
• by a coalition of black students:
Mr. G uy G itten • • •
Black Stud ent Union
I am addressing this lener to you since
it Is my undersl&gt;lndlng that you were the
princ1pal spokesman for the minority
group thot met wtth University represen·
tallves in Room 218. Norton , on Tues·
day ofternoon , December 4. 1979, atap·
proximately 5 :00 p .m . I oppreclale the
Interest you and others have expressed
about the representation and treatment of
minorities within the University com-

munity; and I believe the most straightfar
ward manner to respond to these conaddress them in the order In ,
which they were delivered ln printed
form .
"1. a - the a u m ber o f blacb
• aDd IDIDortty aacurlty suarcla o n
cerns Is

to

caiD-·
At present there are 62 Public Safety

Officers at the University. riVe of these
.are minority group members-four
Patrolmen and one Ueutenanl. As you
may know. the State of New York
establishes Civil Service requirementS for
these positions . Moreover. the University
Is conslrained to recruit Public Safety Of.
hem fr01'1111stf~lhr'Ciolll Sl!r·
vice Commission. To my knowledge ,
there is only
allemative to working
from the OvU Service Commission list:
that Is . one could penuade an officer to
transfer from a comparable Civil Service
position In the State. Through this abernative, we were abk!. to recruit our last
minority officer from the Buffalo Police
Department. Lest there ~ any question
In your mind, the State University of New
York, and the University at Buffalo in
particular, would be delighted to have
more minority Public Safety Officers. and
we hope more minority pel'$0ns wtn be
taklng this examination In the future .

one

••pec:ta

"II. AU
'that _., Involved
wttll the 1-..c:ea of Dec:ea&gt;ber 2,
1979 be fully pi'OMCIItecl • • ••
The University Is prepared to prosecute
any Individuals involved in illegal activities at the University - including those
involved In activities on December 2.
1979. Prosecution , as you know. re·
quires positive identUication. We already
have ;arrested one individual. and he is
being charged In the appropriate court .
Papers are being processed to bring
another up on charges before the HearIng Committee for the Maintenance of
Public Order-the uppermost tribunal at
the University.

"ID. AU eecoutty - · IDvolvecl
wltll the ._...,.. of Dec:etaber 2.
1979 be ..... - . - - 1!"' ....
No evklence has been produced which
would suggest- based on their actions of
December 2, 1979-that there is any
basil for charges agalnsl any olthe Public:
Safety Officers at the University for
allegedly Ulegal actions performed on that
dale. Should such evidence be forth·

·-·•· -·-a.-.a IASTISSOE

OF THE 8EJIE8TEil
Today's Reporter is the last Issue
for the fall semester. We will
resume publication Thursday,
January 17. Meanwhile, our best
wishes for a Happy Holiday

Seasqn.

.

.

'Follooo

tla.,.

to ...._.-.·~ ..,__

Solidarity with Iranians urgecJ
If the U.S . government uhlmately
moves to round up and detain Iranian
studenls (as he believes they will) .
Chicago-based . free lance writer David
Kline urges aD Americans to follow the
example of the Dutch during World War

plause.
Sharing the podium were:
• Professor Kaukab Siddlque ,

Pakistani editorial consuhant recommended by the Iranian Embassy. who
suggested that what we are seeing in Iran
today Is only the beginning of an Islamic
revolution against Imperialist puppets
who are O_P.P!essing masses from Moraeto-to l)le -f't1illpplnes: and .
•

n.

Just as aU the people of Holland put on
gold stars when the Nazis ordered Jews
to ~ r -&gt;should

..n

a

Amerit:o~M ;ln

Kline's view, rally around the Iranians. "U
they are ordered doW.. to Jmmt!lration."
he exhorted an audience of some 300 In·
dividuals in the FUlmore Room Monday
night. "we should
go with them ."
Kline. who writes occasionally for the
Chicago Sun· Times and the Christlon

an

........

Wlto bell- ... .... 6e *=k?
.....1. . . - ··a,.__~
shah was admitted to lhe United States
simply because he Is a poor, sick. old
man?" Kline iy&gt;qulred of the au d ience . No
hands were raised .
Why. then , Is the shah here? he con·
tlnued rhetorically. The first reason, he

~WI(~~~-. ~-;i:~~~.. ~hauh~2t;" ~~;:;~

Science Monitor, was one of three

speakers at a panel on Iran which capped
a 10-hour educational program spon·
sored by a group Of Iranian studenis,
U/ B facuby. and communHy people.
To the delight of the audience which
was heavily Iranian and minorities, Kline
took dead aim at U.S . polfcy in Iran over
the past quarter century. The U.S .
government is solely responsible for the
plight of the hostages In Tehran today. he
stated categorically- to rousing ap·

• Professor John Dwyer o f the English
deparimenl at Buffalo State who. en·
guHed in hostiiHy, maintained that the
American hostages have been seized I)·
legally a nd must be returned before any
debate on the injustices of the shah can
~roperly begin .

was a major reason w hy David
Rockefeller of Chase Manhanan Bank
and Henry Kissinger pleaded the case for
his admission to this country ." Each one
of the original 62 hostages translates Into
S403 milfion to David Rockefeller. Kline
charged . Rockefeller is more than willing
to gamble each life against this amount,
he said . Besides. embassy personnel in

_

·--·-··--·

More minority poli_c e? Not so
R.,....

By Joyce Buch nowskl

·

300. estimates Griffin . and by the time
these Individuals are notUied of their ac·
ceptance. the number . through anrilion.
wlll be chopped by another 10 to 15 per
cent.·

Scoff
Ahhough ·complaints were recently
lodged by some black students here that
the University's Deparimenl of Public
Safety employs too lew minorities. cam·
pus police say their efforls In recruiting
H ..beet e atranu reqalrementa
and retaining blacks and other minorities
There Is still another variable at play.
are handcuffed by State regulations and
Officers in the state's Public Safety
stiff competition from other Jaw enforce·
Department, says Griffin, have the
menl agencies whose starting salaries far
" highest level of entrance requirements In
exceed U/B's .
the country," except for the FBI. some
_ First of aU, job candidates to fill campus
highly specialized units, and a scallering
polk:e slots across the state come from
of progressive police departments .
Civil Service lists. The catch, according to
M.inimum qualifications include at least
Lee Griffin, director of Public Safety
two years of fuJI.time paid experience as
here, Is that the C tvU Service lest Is given
a member of an organizled law-enforce·
only about once every three years. The
ment agency or campus security force .
most re&lt;lelll was offl!l'ed lasl February,
Only an associate or bachelor's degree In
when some 750 people took the eiUim
police science or criminal justice can be
for about 90 openings state-wide . This
substituted entirely for that experience;
number can be compared to 23,000 ap·
general college-level study In any other
pllcants who took lests for a few hundred
curriculum counts for only up to onevear
· stale police openings.
of the requirement.
So not only Is the job pool smaller to
No other · •tatec county or munldpal
begin wlth , but, In order IQ qualify lor
law enforcement agency In New York has
ca"'pus security positions, an applicant
such a stiff mandate, Griffin nole&lt;l. Per·
must pass, In addition to a wrillen tat. a
sonelly. he -nts the requlntmenl retaxed so any accredited college-level•ea
preliminary physlal exam, an orallnler·
view; a final phya:al. ~ l»cctground In·
ol study could be subotitutcd for · ex·
vestigationandanl!lllliiY- - By now the • pen,ncc : Tltio would lncrua ' the
750 have been knodoed down to ~! . : nurnl}er ol job candidata; partlc:ulady

ea~y

blacks. who tradHionally have not been
attracted to the required majors.
Even after q U'IIilied Ind ividuals gain ac·
ceptance into campus security positions,
Grnfln says they_ oflen don'! stay. 1be
reason? An "image problem ." Compleins
Griffin: "We're bastards In the aiminal
justice

system ."

U. thaaeq..t
Unlike other law egforce.m ent units.
campus security uolts 'aerive their status
from the State education law Instead of
the criminal procedures law . Legislation
Is now pending to partially rectify this,
Griffin relayed. but even ~ H passes, !hoi
departmen(s powers are "spelled out d~­
ferently ." again underscoring the unM's
leA·Ihan-equal status.
Aho contributing to the image problem
Is the way In which campus oecurtty
groups are perceived by other law en·
forcemenl agencies. For tho most part ,
says Grlffln. they are viewed as • "guard
force ." The Irony, though, he continued,
Is that campus police olllm .,..r,ate under
more "strnoful conditions than their
higher status counterparts. Griff~~ . who
worked for the state police for over 10

.·:.US~:,':t.'"?c.rto~~;

·---· - ~~·

�;

o-nbif 13,

_

••••.......
emanc~s
.....
,
commg, -

8pJIIQ!IIIIIIel.

would. of coune. act

'W. n. ...... Slllde.t Ualolo. Cora

.a-:_-:-::
:r::;';7'..:::::...:
... the
. ..... .,.....
_._
P ......... willa

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

~AdloaOIIIce

..... Wit), . . . -

_

•kanlaas

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

Tehran were warned In advance ebout
the posslbillly of reprisals if the sbeh was
admitted to the U.S.
The role the U.S . has played In Iran
over the pest 25 years Is another reason
the Iranians (and Kline) don't believe the
presence of the shah here Is a question of
humanitarianism . The1J.S. has siphoned
billions of dollars out of Iran. Kline submitted . We used Jhe .bah. to exercise
tremendous~ power lr&gt; t~e.MI4dle
• East. AD this~ gone now. The Iranians,
remembering how the U.S . connived to
throw out Allende in Chile, are con·
cerned we wtD 11y to reassert power In
their nation,
No one belteves America wants to
restore the shah , Kline granted, but,
nonetheless, the admission of the former
Iranian ruler to this country was per·
ceived as a sign of trouble by leaders of
the blamk: n"'olutlon . "It's nol hard to
understand where the Iranians are comIng from ," said Kline. who was In that nation last summer and witnessed flrst-hend
the "evidences of groteoque and shoclsing
tortures taken from the Iiles of the
Savak ." the shah's secret police .

5Mpecta c.n.'a motlfta
Kline Is suspicious of what he sees as
attempts by government and the media
to whip up public sentiment "ll"inst Iran .
Aller aD. he threw-out, didn t a memo
from Carter's advisers (leaked to the
Wash ington POOl} urge tl-tf President to
rally the nation against an outside enemy
as a means of bolstering his chances lor
re -election? Although OPEC was sug·
gested as the prospective boogerman In
the original ocenarlo, doeon't Iran do just
as well? "Wouldn't Big 00 prefer to tiave
Americans demonstrate against peaceful
Iranians than take to the streets against
·
them?". Kline went on.
Threats to round-up and deport
lrenlan students are especially 1r0ubling,
the lree-lanoe journalist argued . It smacks
of the move to put Japanese-Americans
In concentration camps during World
War II , he charged, noting that both the
ACLU and the Japanese-American
Citizens league are heatedly opposed to
it. He quoted a black friend who
pondered, "Whenever they start talking
about rounding-up this or that group , I
always worry that b'"?'" wiU be next_."
'Meclla blitz -~- Iran'
Professor Slddique also delved Into
history to set the stage lor an under·
standing of Iranian actions in the present.
Taken out of context, he said , the em·
bossy incident Is difficult for Americans to
understand . It's made even more difficuh
to comprehend, he charged, because of
the nightly "media blitz agalnsl Iran"
which plays up everything that cen be
lound that Is "uncomptimentary ." Siddi·
que suggeoted that the title alone of
ABC's nighdy report , "America Held
Hootage," Is provocative. The purpose of
aU this. the Pakistani journalist went on. is
to make the people of the U S . fOill"' "25
years of the shah and what he did."
The CIA lnslalled the shah In the early
1950's, Siddique charged , and the U.S .
bedced him up by underwriting rorture
and terrorism on the pert of his armies
.nd secre1 police. At the sa:ne time. the
media systematlcally blacked-out the
feels Wilen the IJ~bnt peopl¢s •arted o
rail!. SladiQ\lv eonttrlued the- A...-~am
media billed them all •a ~ Mintist ter-

rorisls," and reported little about ' their
struggle.
The "war party" of the U.S ., Slddlque
lnststed, is trying to enflame the nation to
support mUitary Intervention rather then
swap the shah, a "mass murderer." for
the hostages. Iran's "king of kings" wtD be
only the finl to faD before the peaceful
wrath of the Muslim world, he warned.
"Shah" Hussein of Jorden will go, as wiU
1he " shahs of Saudi Arabia. and other
~.propped lQ&gt; bv Imperialism (both
ih(."'tl.S. ·a nd the Sovk!1 Union):" ·

A coaacrlpted ll!lvocate
Moderator Broady Richardson (who
teaches social science at Erie Colnmunlty
College) explained that the sponsoring
organizations had been unable to secure
a speaker representing the U.S . State
Department . To flU that void, Professor
Dwyer of "Buff State was hauled In . His
wile, Cynthia Dwyer, was the coordinating spokesperson for the sponsoring
organizations.

Proli'SSOI' DWyer. soh-spoken and un·
prepossessing , said at the outset he was

uncomfortable having to speak In suppori
of a government with which he doesn't
always agree . He preferred , he said, to
think of himself as speaking for the
hostages. It was that ad of hostage-taking
that outraged the American public.
Dwyer explained.
Events in blamabad where the em·
bossy was burned and two Americans
were killed have almost been forgotten by

the American people, he said . So has the
sacking of our embassy In TripoU .
Americens cen understand these acts,
while deploring thjm&gt;, because they see
them as the outgrowth of frustration on
the part of Third World peoples
themselves; the governments In both
cases have apologized.
For a government , though, to take and
hold hostages as a counterbalance to the
return of the shah Is both "unfair and in·
correct." Dwyer pleaded. He argued that
the hostages and the shah are separate
issues. as the U.S. government h"' "properly" maintained. Dwyer pointed to a
World-wide unanimHy of public opinion
thai has brought together Arabs and
lsraeUs. Russians and Chinese. In suppori
of the U.S. arguments for the safety of
embassies.
•
'
'This Is the issue." Dwyer Insisted to
catcalls. The shah . his enlly here, his
connection' with Kissinger and
Rockefeller. his alleged terrorism and the
U.S.'s role in II, aU wiU be discussed and
weighed by Americans and their
representatives at the proper U,e , Dwyer
predicted. "The issue now Is the safe
return of those hostages-that's II," he
saki. reddening ...Ours is a just cause and
needs no apology:·

Mother Teraa, we need you!
Fully 90 per cent of the questions that
foDowed were directed with displays of
umbrage toward Professor Dwyer. He
was often Interrupted by heckling ques·
!loners before he could answer.
Finally, one studenl on tho r....nt row
gained the microphone to lmpl6r~ ~hat aU
the arguing end talking at one another
otop. Why can't we sll down face to face
and JUSI talk to one another in hopes of
f~ a ....,_, he waNed *&gt;Juww.
"Why ca11'~ . ""' be mora like- ·M.otbc
'Tert..?" .
r. t'
,.,,
·'

.......... npcnU

diNcdpto ... ...........
Sbt of the ten member5 of the Saeen·
tng Commltlloe for the DlredDr of the Af.
11rma11ve Action Olllc:e are minorities.
The U~s Committee on Afllr.
mattve ActiOn earUer had .._red. H
woUld be appropriate lor the Alllrmative
Action Olllc:e 1o report dJredly to the
President, and this was acceptable. It was
suggaal, however, that en appropriate
would be afttl' a new Oiredor
had been able to ~his« her views
about the matter. You may or may nolbe
aware of the fact that the original place·
ment o1 the 'office In lis reporting relation·
ship to the VieR President for Finance and
Management was prtmartly because of
the expanded role of the office- Afllr.
mattve Action and Human Resources
Development . Recendy , the Human
Resources Development portion of the
office was separated and placed in the
Personnel Office. The reporting relation·
ship of the Affirmative Action Office to'
the Office of the President, therefore, is
now more appropriate.
"'V. Sepuate bJ.c:k aad miDortty
~ huoded by U/B, for

b

,.WJca_..

AI funding for student newspapers Is
under the control of Sub-Board I, Incorporated. The authority of the President In
regard to expenditures of these monies is
specifically Umtted to ensuring that they
are spent In accordance with guideUnes
provided by the Board of Trustees of the
State Unlverslty of New York. The Presi·
dent cannollnitlate or dictate directives of
disbursement but can-only rule on the ap·
,propriateness of suggestions that are ad·
vanced from the appropriate bodies.

"'VI. Better •--'-tt....... cleat ac:tlvltta laailiaa for aU black
miDorlty

_..ua-·

The answer to this concern Is essential·
ly the same as hsted above under Item V

'VII. Meet11111 wltla Ketter, l.ae Grlf·
Ba, aad be..s. of Stodeat AffaJra aad
H-.blg by Wedaaday, Decembe&lt;

5. 1979"
I am sure you are aware that there was
to meet with minority
representatives on Monday, December 3,
at 3 :00 p.m. No one appeared at that
scheduled muting. However. a meeting
was held the following day with represen·
tatlves from my office, with Lee Griffin ,
Director of Public Safety. and with in·
divlduals from the Office of Student Af.
fairs . In addition, Rooseve~ Rhodes and
his supervisor, Leo Richardson , were
present from the Office of Minority Stu·
dent Affairs . You were the spokesman at
that meeting.
agreement

-vm. To ratore the Deputmeat of
Minority Student Allain to Ita tradi·
tJoaal role u a 91tal fuDCtiODIDg
d~eot at the Unlvenlty"
Should you have any concerns about
what has occurred or what should be oc·
curring In the general area of Minority
Student Affairs, I would ask you to direct
these questions to Mr . Leo Richardson.

."IX. African aDd African-American
Studlea l&gt;eputmeat be -bllsbed
aa auch: with the fuU • ...,_ltloa at
the UDI-.Ity"
For a number of years there has been
in the University In the Faculty of Social
Sciences a Department of Black Studies.
I assume that this would be the requested
department referred to in this item . II is
established and fuUy recognized .
"X. That mon blac:b aad m18orltlea
be plaeed Oft tlie .IUftk:e Board to
pt'opel'lp ._..., the -ll·beiDS of
bt.doa aad m1Dc111tlea that - • appear before the Stadeat Wide

"•dlclarV'
This question Is somewhat ambiguous.

1f you are concerned wtth the Student·
wide JU&lt;l\ciary, K should be noted thlll Hs

1979

membenhip Is control.d 1&gt;!1 the Student
Millard FIUmore
Student Association . This Is In keeping
wllh the byla1111of those-groups. H, on the
other hand, reference Is being made to
the Hearing Committee lor the
Maintenance of Public Ordet, I would
draw your attention to the fact that of the
three lacuhy memben cunendy on the
Cornmlsoion, one Is a minority. Of th~ six
staff members, four are mlnol1tles. One
of the stx designated students on the
board Is a mlnorlty.
Therefore, of the current membership of
fifteen , stx are minorities.
Association and by the

"XI. The Stadeat Aaeoc:latlon
Mlaorlty Stadnt Alhtrs Coor·
dlaatar will be tile alaorlty
··-latiN
Ia
the FaCility S..te"
Only the Facuhy Senate can determine
who wtD be allowed to be members of
thai body and have voti'!g powers.

wldl--. .,_

"XII. All Ual•eraltp mlaorlty
oqulza.tl- line .....t lato the
aelec:tloa af at1

.._._...tor

ownee aU...__ ....-

to
Stu·

dent AMoclattoa•
I do not understand this Item . If you
could clarify the matter further, I will res·
pond .

"XIII. A ....... af faaolty, atudeata,
aad c:ommualty

.....-aau.eo

be

-bllsbed to . _ . . . ... the treat·
meat of ..........., attodeata oa camP•· Tbep sbO.Id ........tel, ln-

_ . . t e the-~ of - - t y
-cleata OD the Alalaerat Ca•pua
for the put ttme 0,.." ~
I have been informed by Dr. Siggelkow
that cunendy lour University-wide com·
mlttees are concerned with matters such
as these . There Is a Unlverslty-wide Affirmative Action Committee. Since July the
Office of Student Affairs has had a com·
minee under the direction of Dr. Robert
Palmer functioning In this area and, according to Or. Siggelkow. there are two
committees of the Facuhy Senate that
deal with rights of minorities.
"XIV.
lmmualty
for
all
demo•traton aad .,...._hom
aay aad aU legal pn&gt;eec:utloa"
This University has a long.,.tendlng
policy and practice that If campus rules
and/or regulations are violated or if penal
laws of the State -of New Yark are
violated there wiU be no lmmunlty . It is
my understanding that there have been
no violations of the law. Therefore. the
question of immunil!rls moot.
I hope you lind these statements
responsive to your expressed coQCems.
The University has made substantial
strides toward realizjng its commitments
to affirmative action . Nevertheless. there
is much that can, still be done. I look for·
ward to working with you and others in
the University as we seek to expend the
accomplishments that already have been
made.
Very truly yours.
-Robert L . Ketto:r
President

'Bama president
under fire
The Faculty Senate at the University of
Alabama has called lor the removal of
Alabama President David Mathews.
former secretary of Health ,1 Education
and WeKare .
A resolution passed by the Alabama
Se.nale dted inadequate wage lnaeases
and low quality equipment that Is "either
obsolete or rapidly beccming so" as
reasons why.
The director of public relalions at the
Tuscaloosa campus said the presidents of
the Alumni Association and the Student
Government are supporting Mathews.
He blamed the problems died by faculty
on the St..te Legislature.

Kellogg grant
The W.K. KeDogg Foundation has
awarded $1.2 million to complete the
development of the New York R~
Extpernal ~ureate,. ~ '4"~
rogram.

j

j

�December 13, 1979

It's
1ights out'
at Amherst
Exterior lighting
being reduced to
save energy
A program to repair aiJ Amherst Campus strut lights and then systematically
reduce total exterior lighting levels In line
wtth energy conservaHon mandates Is
n"'!! underway , Dean Fredericks, direc·
tor. Amherst Physical Plant and
Maintenance, has at•nounced.
Previous attempts to reduce lighting
levels by eliminating every other light on
campus roadways were compromised by
chronic problems with the electrical
systems themselves, Fredericks said.
Often, entire secHons of the lighting
system would become inoperative
because of a Ieeder (cable) laUure . But
the exact cause eluded repair crews. In·
lerestingly. Fredericks reported , while
electrical engineers In Albany were attempting to correlate data regarding cable
specifications and application, campus
electricians noted "strange abrasions" on
cables removed from the system.

Mice- doe culprits
Closer lnvestlgaHon and evidence of
mice within street light bases, caused
campus personnel to conclude that the
"abrasions" were actuaUy teeth marks!
(Rodents must chew to keep their incisors
sharp, the physical plant director noted.)
Mice were able to enter the
underground street lighting system via
the light bases. They then buUt their nests
so that they were supported by the
distribution cables, being careful to locate
the nests above nOrTnal ground water
level. Each evening, the street lights
would be activated and the mice's en·
vlronmenl enhanced by heal flowing
through the cable system . Comfortably
warmed , the happy mice chewed on the
cables. And out went the lights.
A special project resulted . Over 2000
bases were sealed to prevent entry by
rodents. The results have been very successful , Fredericks said . Far fewer cable
losses have been experienced during the
past year. More recently, he noted
University personnel have been seen us:
lng a boom-type truck so that nearly all
street lights are now In operable

~~: takln~~rganballonal Communication display the logo of their "corporation." The circular
Mct:rus~lds upcoftmmunlcadv~ Is ahn ongoing process with many elements interwoven. Prof. Uncia
yen a ~ ~ing t e corporation.

S

dents practice 'PR' theoty

By
Joyce Buchn"""'ld
Report« 5&lt;o1J

.

•

Students often detect what seems like
an msurmountable schism between purist
theory Imparted In the classroom and Its
application In the real world.
But not students In MFC's OtganlzaIlona) Communication course-at least
not since Professor Linda McCallister, a
new aJ!ival on campus, decided this
semester to merge pradice and theory In
a unique marriage whose offspring is a
stude.nt·run "corporation:·
Conl(lnced that educators "cannot
teach (n a vacuum ," McCallister was
determined to give her students-who
range in age from 20 to 55-an oppor!unity to use the theOfY they learned durlng the first haH of the semester. The way
to do this , she thought , was to have them
form their own organization and choose
corporate objectives.
The students decided a good place to
begin

was

In

their

own

academic

Energy conservation efforts are com·
mon today "and campus lighting systems
are no exception ," Fredericks said . Conservative estimates are that the annual
cost lor exterior lighting exceeds $80 000
(at loday's rates) . Furthermore, he ~on ­
tinued , ..when local town governments
elect to completely darken major
highways like the Youngrnann, our
Amherst Campus appears to "glow' even
brighter to area taxpayers."

back:Y,ard: they started a '\public relations
firm .' dubbed Project Communication .
Inc. (PCI) , to help promote U/ B's Communications Departrneni. The short-term
goal was to produce a pamphlet before
the end of the semester that would ap·
peal to undergraduates, particularly
undeclared majors, and also could be
useful to other University units. such as
Academic Advisement.
For their long-range goal, students
wanted the pamphlets eventually used
for recruitment and as a means of

E-.vwucloap

disseminating information on the department to ne\lo!Comers:

condition .

F&lt;ederlcks said campus lighting
systems, unfortunately , were designed
during periods when energy was cheap
and decorative lighting, common . The
multiple head, square lights used at
various

locations

are

indicative

of

decorative . rather than functional
hghling, he pointed out .
At the present time. campus cre\1115
have eliminated every other fight on campus roadways, being careful not to
reduce lighting at critical locaHons such as
lnlersecHons . Fredericks said additional
reductions will oocur in parking areas "but
these decisions wiiJ be based upon Input
from Public Safety, Student Affairs and
Physical Plant. • He promised that particular attention will be paid to "potentially high crime areas and In no way will the
safety of the campus community be
Impaired ."

Oswego wastes
to be studied
A project to protect water resources in
Oswego County has been initiated by the
County Legislature using the State College at Oswego and federal agency sden$11 . The otudy wd include developmeot
ol• p\an_1o Dd the counlll ol ari eitiniated
35.cio0 drum o£chemical wastes

'Departm-' - e fonuecl
The group broke up Into
"departments" to accomplish the task.
Their Resource and Copy Department
gathered inlormaHon and wrote the
brochure; a Public RelaHons unH advertised the COI'pORIHon on bulletin boards
on both campuses; Production designed
and layed-out the pamphlet; Budget and
Anance oecured funding for printing and
lor a semester-..nd reception , and flnally .
an administrative unH monHored both
Inter-and Intra-departmental communica·

«on.

Each unit.was opected to write a final
departmental report and to select one of
Its members to presentthe report to other
communicaHons students and -possible
majors at the recepHon . In addlllon, each
department had to design Its own evaluation form so members could conlidentiallv assess their co-workers as weU as
themselves.
What made the whole experience
especially relevant is that PCJ encountered many of the same difficulties
any

corporation

faces :

personnel

problems, departmental conflicts, financial dllemme~c and communlution
laogla. AI were resolved-by the stuclents
•with .supcrvislorl from the c.ha~n olthe

board • McCallist er h erself ·
Pollcie ca.....d problems
McCallister set-up some of the
problems by the corporate policies she in·
itlally imposed. For example, al first she
would allow departments to communicate only via memo· and would not
consult with any group until H first went
through the proper administrative hler·
archy. As might be expected , the depart·
ments voted to abandon this policy for an
open-meeting format where questions
and gripes could be aired and settled
quickly. Once this move was made MeCallister observed . morale and 'oP.,ra:
lions improved dramatically.
Students , of course, were aware thai
changing administrative policy Is hardly
done so democratically elsewhere. But
the Important point . McCallister stressed
is that they experienced and discussed
what did and didn't work for the corporate good l!lnd were able to compare
their conclusions with information
gleaned from texts. H any of the students
ever lind themselves members of an
organizational structure, they wUI be able
to have a positive impact , McCallister
feels , at least on a departmental level.
Just as financial predicaments plague
big business, they also look their toll on
PCI . After unsuccessful and frustrating at·
tempts at solicltiny funds lor the project,
Budget and Finance called an emergency
meeting with McCallister. A sub·
committee was formed to give further attentlon to the maHer. but this lime when
financial backers were sought. the c~ir­
man of the board was there to personally
put her credibility and power.; of persuasion to work. Uke New York City , PCJ
was baUed out with a little politicking.

.
Student Affairs . Admissions
and
Records; and FSA came to the rescue.
Smiling whUe recaiUng the situaHon
McCallister noted that when she
giving directives and acting as spokesperson on the financing matter. PCJ's presi·
dent balked . As any individual tha) high
up on the corporate ladder, he did not
like being circumvented . But that's life in
the cruel world of big business. MeCallister mused .

beg.,;

Tt..v aod..t ap eoiYaat
Fortunately. PCI wound up solvent
and managed to make Its end of the
semester deadline lor .publication . A
BOC,ES unit was good enough to print
the brochures gratis, and the paper stock
was " donated" in Ueu of payment for ser~

vices - namely, in exchange for a lellder·
ship seminar McCallister promised to give
for the company.

To meet their deadline . members of
PCI mel last Thursday, the day before
their wine and cheese reception. and
folded 5 ,000 brochures. haH of which wt11
go to DUE. Even the chairman of the
board pitched in .
What did students gel lor aU their ef·
for1 ? A great learning experience.
headaches. and one-third of their final
grade, McCallister said .
Next semester. she Intends to keep the
same corporation . but will let the class
decide on Its project goals. The on_ly thing
the board chairman Insists on Is flrm
financial backing. But this shouldn"t pose
a problem . PCI has already had a lew
good offers from on and off campus.
E~en in the corporate world . when
you re hot, you're hot.

Management group
enters Chevy contest
How to best market and advertise the
1980 Chevrolet Caprice and Impala Is a
challenge business students at U/ B have
accepted as participants In the 1980
General Motors Intercollegiate Marketing
Program.
The competition , Involving 15 schools
of business across the country, Is designed to offer a real -world marketing
and advertising experience to students in
these disciplines.
The U/ B tea"' headed by Proleuor
Stepheo A. Goodwin wiiJ be vying for a
top pl'lze of $7,000 lor the University. In
addition . the students wiD h6ve the opportunity to drive and evaluate a Caprice
lest car provided to Goodwin lor the
duraHon of the program.
Chevrolet zone manager G . D. McCullough and .hia staff U. a.d!alo will I!IOri&lt;
will&gt; · the; · studenll, to ful11)er their
understanding of the princlpln •. Qf

marketing and advertising.
1
Team entries wiD consist of an oral
presentation plus a written treatise . They
"!ill be judged on the quaUty of the
market research and creative strategy.
A panel of marketing and advertising
professionals wiD visit the campus In the
spring to review the team's Of'al presenta·
lion. The tu.m's written submission will
be judged in DetroH .
In May. members of the top five teams
will be brought to Detroit to present their
winning Ideas to senior GM management
and to share In awards totaling S 19 500
Partldpatlng schools In addb t~
U/ B include: Bolllllng Green State
University, Colorado State , Drake . Kent
State, Michigan State, Northern JUinots
Northwestern, Southern lltinois.
~do, University of ~oil , Unlvi!O'Sily o1
lllio&gt;ols,a&amp; ~. R~t. toledo..l!"d

Col:

WasbinQ.tpn U,.iJ!.,.Jty,

, .••. , ,

�December 13, 1979

LEnE

Who
playe 'My Shawl'
&amp;om Memphis?

----&amp;,Dick . . . . .

Remember "So You Want To lead A

Band." Rippling Rhythm, In the Mood,

It's Tommy Tudcer llme, Anllll O 'Oay
and the lint edition of the Four
Freshmen? H you have ever socialized
somewhere ' - ' - Malibu and Hampton Beach, N.H ., this piece might catch
you , lor It's a tefleclion of our time slowing the pace for a sp£0 to let some _of
the pasl cald1 up.
It's acceptable and. really , quite ap·
propriate to glance back upon occasion,
back Into the bygone when the Big Bands
were swinging and great s_ong stylists
were singing.
As a w.-rnup to what's in store, can
you recall the Singing Winds with Ralph
Flanagan. the Encores with BIUy May
(later to become the HI Lo's) , the
Clooney Sisters with Tony Pastor, Sentimental Doris Day with Les Brown, or
Ray Anthony as a young hom player with
Glenn MUier?

s...,. Heale?
Have you ever caught the movie twin

biD, Orchesln&gt; Wlues and Sun Vollel
Serenade? The MtUer band was featured
In each ldm with a very recognizable
roster ol sidemen who would a short time
later lead their own big groups Into the
concert and dance business. Geo&lt;ge
Montgomery played trumpet, as the male
lead, In Wlues and Sonja Henle was Sonja Henle In Serenode, but the Mdler
mu5ic was out front and at Its best.

Emphasis wrong,
c .u rran says of story

Well, after !Ding Midnight Sun , Polka
Dots and Moonbeams. Nancy With the
Laughing Face and Moonlight In Ver·
mont for some whistling friends and takIng care of those library things at home, l
succumbed to how it used to be: HIGH
ATOP THE HOTEL PEABODY OVERLOOKING BEAUTIFUL DOWNTOWN
MEMPHIS, CBS RADIO PRESENTS
FOR YOUR LISTENING AND DANCING PLEASURE, THE MUSIC OF ART
GUM AND HIS RUBBER BAND WITH
VOCALS BY etc .. etc.
Remember those Big Bands? If you
want to recollect a memory or two , stay
tuned. If you like the bands, and there
are sliD some in business, match up the
theme songs with the foUowing leaders.
There are 20 matches to
you started ,
and more where they came from .
For those who readily remember that
this was the way it was, make a match.

gei

-

rm

L. lei's Dance
M. Leap Frog
N. Celerv Stal&lt;s At Midnight
0 . Oh How We Danced
P. -'-Y In Rhythm
Q . Racing With the Moon
R . Moonlight Serenade
S. TochaikOVIky's Plano Concerto
T. Muskrat Ramble

Steering committee
formed for family event

_

Ave such conferences will be held

...
,._
...............a
-

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

l'lwnclov "" tlw ~ of Pulolt ,.._
u.w..oy "'"- v ...... Buftolo.

"""· s....
EdltoNI-..
....,_"'

136 C..... Hoi.
Amllea. T.......... 636-216216.

.· ,•

•.•..,

. · , • . •,_n -· ·'~~· ~
. .:n.__v.loL!_

across the state to prepare for an upcomIng White HoUse Conference on Families
to be convened sometime In 1980, which
has been designated Year of the Family.
At each conferenoe , participants will be
asked to define areas of concern, develop
policies to deal with them, and to elect
delegates from the area to attend the
Washlngion conference .
Issues expected to be covered at the
conference include how famUies cope
with changing economic states and
employment sUualions, what growing up
In the 1980's will be like. how families interact with schools, what changes are occurring In the traditional family mode and
what roles ethnic and cultural divenity
play In the family .
Persons within · the University who
would be interesled in serving as resource
penons in workshops for the conference
are asked to con1ac1 Michael F.,.....u of
Sociology or Eliabeth Harvey ol the
School of SoctaJ Wool&lt;, both members of
the steedng commillee.
.
Aloo needed are persons trained as
recorders a.nd volunteers to ~ with
guiding partjdpants. Anyone Interested
·shquld con~~ Zuckermap .m ..tt:ae·
~~ ·· '1 · fJlf

1

(1 'f:s• ,.!'I J

,1 ~,. ... ,•: , 1

ly the result ol high taxes and low morals
(espectaUy sexual )mmorality) . l thlnk this
point Is adequately deah with In the
article.
Where the mlslmpresslon may arise is
In my comparisons with today. I used
contemporary paraUels primarily to make
more lnteUigt&gt;le what happer.gd in
Rome , ahhough In the article my purpose
may seem to be the reverse : using the
Roman experience as a guide to the
present.
To the extent that I also did a bH of the
latter, l merely wanted to suggesi that
there are other lessons that might be
drawn than those most commonly offered to the general public In the application of Roman history to current events.
To do this properly would be a much big·
ger job.
This Is aU a matter of emphasis and I
am sony if I did not make sufflciendy
clear where l thought the principal emphasis should lie.
Sincerely yours ,

- Leo C. Cumon
Department of Classics

Colleges pass resolution
on campus conflicts

ANSWERS: 1-G . 2-H, J..K, 4--M, 5-P, 6-R , 7-A, 8-0, 9-C , 10-Q, 11-E, 12-S,
13-F, 14--1, 15-L, 16-J, 17-N, 18-D, 19-T, and 20-B.

February 2.

Carlin and the

the~

A. Shanty In Ole Shanty Town
B. One O'Clock Jump
C . Siarbunt
D. Smoke Rings
E. Stardust
F. Heart Of My Heart
G . Tab The A Train
H. Blue Flame
Getting Sentimental Over You
I.
J . Snowfall
K. My Shawl

A steering commtnee has been formed
here to prepare for the regional Governor's Conference on Families to be held
on the Amherst Campus, Saturday,

k&gt; thank Milt

Reporter for the attention paid to my
views on ancient Rome In the Reporter of
November 29.
G'\..,_ _ ~
However I w ~ .~ correct a
m1s1rnpressk,n
may produce in
the minds of some readers. Pat11y
because of your subhead, "American
leaders should take note," and the first
sentence. " WIU the U.S . go the way of
ancient Rome?" and perhaps because of
some of my own remarks, I may seem to
have put myseK forth as a prophet who
presumes to lecture "American leaders"
on what Is wrong with the country .
When Mr. Carlin contacted me and
asked me ~ I would be willing to discuss
the fall of Rome and paraUefs with current
developments, I welcomed the opportunity to help correct certain popular
misconceptions about Roman history and
its meaning for us. One of the main
points l wanted to make was that the fall
of Rome was a complex matter with
many causes and was certainly not, as we
are so often told by those who have their
own political or social axes to grind, simp-

From the Hotel Peabody

THE BIG BANDS
1. Duke EDington
2 . Woody Herman
3 . x..-Cugat
4. Les Brown
5. Sian Kenton
6. Glenn MUter
7. Johnny Long
8 . Guy Lombaldo
9. Gene Krupa
10. Vaughn Monroe
11 . Artie Shaw
12. Freddy Mal1in
13. Les Elgart
14. Tommy Oorwy
15. Benny Goodman
16. Claucle Thomhll
17. Ray McKinley
18. Glen _9ny
19. Bob Crooby
20. Count Baste

~~

A combinlllton ol lnstanoes· put this
nootalgia together one evening. The mlx
was memoria. while playing some lFs
at home, plus fulfilling rntscellaneous requests for identllicallon ol tunes I'm
caught whisding . I whistle a lot Ill work.
Whistling good tunes Is an extension of
sorting biscuHs (records) during the late
night hours In Burlington. Honolulu and
Syracuse.
As a short aside of local sociology. why
don't people whistle anymore?

The following resolution was passed by
unanimous vote of the Colleges CouncU
on December 6, 1979:
Be it resolved :
that the Colleges calf upon the offices
of 'Public Safety and University Housing
to exert whatever additional effort might
prove necessary and otherwise to do all
in their power to ensure the personal
safety and general welfare of all students
on campus;
and
that the Colleges Immediately place at
the disposal of the UniversHy In general,
and the offices of Public Safety and
Housing In particular, whatever resources
- academic or residential - as may be

required to promote and supplement
such special efforts during the current
period of campus unrest;
and
1
that the CoUeges endorse and encourage the personal Involvement of
President Ketter In the lessening of ten sions during the sensitive period, calling
upon him to Issue a strong public statement emphasizing that violence and
bigotry wUt not be tolemed on oompus.
and to reaffirm his administration's concern that every student be afforded
legitimate access to the educational.
residential, and recreational resources of
the campus, free from intimidation or
fear .

Doty clarifies question
about snow closing policy
Edit..:
A question has been raised as to
whether there Is any conflict between my
memorandum of November 15, 1979,
concerning snow announcements and
the provisions in the union contracts
which have to do with leave aedHs when
people are direckd to leave work prior to
the end of the normal work day .
There Is no conflict . The November 15
announcement has to do with permitting
employees to leave work, after they have
arrived, because of adverse weather con ditions. Quoting· from the November 15
memorandum," .. . ~ HIs determined durIng the course of a work day that the
University cannot operate effectively, no
employee should be required to leave at

that moment; employees should rather
be permitted to leave then or any time
thereafter prior to the normal close of
business. Only the time that they are
absent should be charged to leave
credHs."
It Is unlikely that after the work day has
begun employees would be dire&lt;Xd to
leave work prior to the normal closing
time. I can howeve&lt; visualize conditions
when, because ol adverse weather.
employees will be permllkd to leave
early. This Is the clrcumstanoe covered by
my memorandum ol November 15.
- E.W. Doty
Vice President
for Ananoe and Management

Lake LaSalle level being lowered
The Amherst Physici.J Plant Department, working with FacUlties Planning, is
attempting to krwer the elevation of the
west section of Lake LaSalle by approx imately four feet .
The purpose of the project Is two-fold .
Dean Fredericks, director olthe Physical
Plant, said . The primary objective Is protection ol the lake shoreline as weU as
Baird Point and the Joseph Ellicon Complex during periods when Ellicon Creek Is
abow flood stage. The topography
around the west lake and the presence of
the old Bl&gt;er Creek bed cause EUicotl
Creelc to flow Into Lake LaSalle during
flood periodS with .a consequential rise in
the lake. During the floods In September,
Fredericks noted , waters reached
dangerously high lewis adjacent to Baird
Point neceosltating continual pumping In
P{de:r , to protect the , electrical system
wbie:h had lUll the.11 been repa!Jed ,tier a

·-

~

previous flood .
An estimated 39 .-Jiion gallons of
water can be removed from the lake by
lowering the level four feet. This could
provide a "significant lag Ito potential
flooding whde providing ·time for the
Physical Plant Department to establish
emergency plans ." Fredericks indicated.
The second, less aitical objective, he
said, Is to reduce the depth ol water In the
section ol the lake adjacent to the Ellicott
Complex In order to enhance the
possibility ol Ice skating . Redc•dng the
level should enhance freez;,g whUe
reducing the danger ~ any person•
should fall through the Ice.
The krwered level will be maintained
throughout winter and unUI after the
spring thaw. The lake level w.'ll then be
allowed to -rile nat~, un!ll, ~ .reac#&gt;es
"deslgt)"_condiiJQn~ fl''l'le~ ~ ., ,~

:). ~ 1. •:1

~.-. "I

,,

�December 13, 1979

'i

Starvation
still stalks
Kampuchea

Cllanges In
financial aid
are outlined

· A n~UllbeLol c:hafl!JI'S will be inslitut
in the application procedure lor flnanclal
aid for the 1980-81 academic year, the
Office of Financial Aid has announced .
A major change Is the redesign of I·&lt;
Financial Aid Applicalion (FAF). 111~
needs analysis (orm used for determining
financial need. According to a " " e onent
Issued by the Office. the FAF has been
streamDned in an effort to .simplify its

Friends delegation
finds nothing
but human tragedy
"None of 1M photographs or stories
about current condHions In Cambodia
(Kampuchea) hilly prepare the visitor to
lace 1M reality, the human tragedy
counte!ed there,
"It Is a shattering experience to travel
through a major tlty with no ll)ore

completion . The ~core document"" is

en-

shorter than past years with fewer ques-

rions. Certain sections are co~r coded in

an attempt ro prevent confusion as

population than a country town ; to see

countless drawn laces of hungry people
and malnourished children so weak that
they cannot cry; to hear the gentle voices
of surviving Cambodians convey
repeated tales of horror and suffering,
patiendy e~plalning how the Immediate
members of their family died or
dioappeared."
James Matlack , vice president of the
American Friends Service Committee
Board, on campus lor a talk and ·slide
presentation Tuesday, December 4,
painted this picture of the situation in
Cambodia based on his visit there in
Seplember as a member of the first
American delegation allo-.1 In since the
ouster of the Lon Nof government In
1975. Matlack was one olllve Americans
representing 1M American Friends Service Committee which Is now '![sing
funds lor food and medicine lor the people of Cambodia.

l t hMdly .u.ta
Cambodia hardly exists as a functionIng nation, Matlack saki. In Phnom Penh,
mosl buildings are deser1ed. It was "eerie
and depc-essing," he recalled : Canyons
formed by modem high-rise buildings
were deserted . Trees were down and
.rubbish was Piled around 1M curbs.
Somoo families_. campi11!1in ~ fl®r
rooms of theoe buildings, but uppeo-lloon
were empty. Matlack and hio group saw
cows grazing In front of the old Hotel
Royal . Aaos the street, a barren flat field
offers no trace of 1M latge Catholic
church which once stood tliere .
Two young women who served as
guides lor the Matlack party told of experiences common to nearly every resident of the once-thriving cHy: "They were
driven out of the cHy immediately after
the Khmer Rouge . victory," MatlaCk
reported, then "forced into the fields to
grow rice under the most primitive oonditions - heavy labor, one meal and live
hours sleep a day, no food lor those too
m or too weak to work . Casual or
calculated killtngs were frequent. Whole
families would be taken away and
bludgeoned to death (bullets were costly)
and the blood-soaked clothes brought
back lor others to wear. . . . Many of
those who survived until last January
were kUied when they refused to flee with
the Pol Pol cadres as the 'liberation'
lon:es of Hens Sltmrin and Vietnamese
troops approached."
The delegation vlshed Phnom Penh's
sole orphanage. Ahhough H housed 539
cl\lldren , only 26 of them were live years
old or lao - a dear indication , Matlack
said, "that the years under Pol Pot had
been most lethal to the youngftl Camb&lt;&gt;dians."
A stall member at the orphanage told
how he had been driven out of Phnom
Penh in 1975 to a rural~ where he
and his family ~ved for the next three
years. The entire village ..,.. later forced
to move hallway across the nation, In
1978. Many died on this trek or were
later killed by the teen-age cadre who
ruled the lives of the people. The orpha,.. wodu!r told of 5fting a killing
ground whee eewral thou5and persons
had been beaten to death. 11&gt;ere was an
estimate that 70 per oent of Cambodian
women between 19 and 35 who had
been mmried were now widows.

A edlool._._ • ,...._
T1lf Friends towed a former
Fre~ 1ithoolin the city which - . made
Into a po1oon lor polttlcal ..lp«&lt;l after the
o.nm..nt,t 'takcMr. They were told
thM •20,008 peCple •died •4hm: "The
regi!ne pul1led and pwged In a sell-

devouring quest lor purity, or at least lack
of polilical opposition," Matlack Said, The
overaD experience, he-indicated, was "lor
our time nearest to a tour ol Auschwitz or

Dachau a generation ago."
·
Matlack reported there Is no currency
in Cambodia. Rice Is the medium of exchange. Barter-and scavenging are common . Many Cambodians are too weak to
do physical labor. Most machines and
vehicles are broken and non-useable .
The Friends committee went Into the
countryside out trom the capital, visiting a
provincial town and hospital. AD around
there was devastation, desolation and
starvation .

,

,

"As (left the hospHal ," Matlack said, "a
mother and child stood In the sunlight.The boy she heli! had slick-like arms and
legs and a distended belly. The otherwise
gaunt mother had so latge a bulge that
we asked If she were pregnant. We were
told that her stomach was 5Wollen
because she had eaten only grass and
banana leaves lor Jive days en roufe to
1M hospital.
"Our lui trip through PhncS'm Penh
was as un54!hling ~s the first ," he continued. "No quick adjustment Is pbSSible
to the scarcity of people in the urban
landscape, to the breakdown of aD normal systems In a modem chy. At the
bridge on our way by car out of the city a
strict checkpoint was patrolled by
soldiers. A stream of people walked and
biked over the bridge, many carrying
scavenged furniture or artifacts or, occa·
sionaDy, some food from the country. At
the far end of the bridge was the largest
crowd of people we saw anywhere in the

to·--

Olympics organizers
· seek library mate~ials
• A special library Is now being
developed lor the families and participants In the 1980 Winter Olympic
Games in Lake Placid , and donations of
materials and money are being sought.
The collection Is being assembled
under the auspices of the Chnton-EaexFranklin Ubrary System , which wiD han dle the processing and the assignment of
the books, eHher to the Olympic Village
itself or to the Lake Placid Public Ubnory.
Alter the Games are over, the books
would be housed and mamlained at the
new Olympic and Winter Sports
-Museum , which wiD include a research
and International library in a.H languages
on the Olympics. This wiD form the
nudeut lor a collection of books which
might travel to other Winter Olympic
games lolowlng the 1980 ga~M~ .
The books Meded should be In
categories of interest to persons -'&lt;lng
the folowtng 24 I a -: Spanish,
FreAch , Italian; German, Dutch ,
B~tl!l•rl•ll,
-&lt;:htncu,
Or•elr ,
&lt;:;ach/Sicwak, Danish, s-dlsh, Fin-

10

w_hich Items dependent and In dependent/ married sludents are re·
qulred to complete.
As in the past. undergraduaoe students
may apply lor the Basic Educat)onal Opportunity Grant • !BEOG) by filing the
F AF. Financial Aids spokespersons note
thao special anenlion should be given to
ilem 43, which permits an applicant to
apply lor: (I) both BEOG and University
based aid ; (2) only BEOG; or (3) only
campus-based ald .
The processing lee has increased to
$5. and the FAF should be mailed after
January I. 1980, but ~/ore the due date
of January 31.
F...,.U / B..,ne
In addition to the _FAF, continuing
country. They were living In shacks-and
under tarps waiting to be cleared lor entry • students will lie required to submit the
- Into the cHy. The authorities permined
new Institutional Financial Aid Applica·
tion (FAA) . replacing the Form U/ B used
only those with a job. or needed skills into
In past years. The FAA wiD be required
Phnom Penh , keeping a growing mass of
by February 28, 1980. to determine such
others at the perimeter.•
Information as prior Institutions attended ,
financial assistance previously received,
Eut t-..-d Vletaam
types of aid lor which the student wl$hes
From Phnom Penh the group drove six
to be considered. plus an affidavit of
hours heading east toward Vietnam. One
educational purpose. An important ne«,
member of the live had traveled the same
feature Is an alfldavH of independent
road 10 years earlier when the counstatus that must be completed by oJ/
tryside had been lush, fertile and busy.
applicants
who wish to be considered
Now H looked "sparse and battered." .
independent lor .fln~nfllil . aid J)urposei.
On a ferry across' .the MeJ&lt;ong .Rlva at
Documentation
o( · lnd!!Perident. staous
Neak Luong {a transPortation Wtu
has been mandateil bY, federal regulawhich stiD showed the de~astation of
-tions.
·
'
American bombing), Matlack met a'
Transfer students will6e aSked to meet
French-spealdng man who had been first
an
additional
requirement
of
supplying
a
wounded by American bombs and then
financial aid transcript from each instltu- driven Into the countryside to starve durlion previously attended. This requireIng the Pol Pol years.
ment has been extentled lor those who
The man estimated that 50 per cent of
plan to apply lor any Title N funds (I.e .,
the population of the Neak Luong region
BEOG.
SEOG. CWSP,NDSL and In·
had died , and that another 30 per oenl of
eluding the Guaranteed Student
the population had disappeared between
Loon/
New
York State Higher E&lt;lucoUon
1975 and 1979. With soh pleading,
Services Corporation Loon}. Financial
Matlack said, the man explained "they
Aid
spokespersohs
point out that the
needed food , medicine-, -ds •.•-""icles,
financial aid transcript is. again mandated
ev..rythlng. "
.
. .
Matlack's appear~ -hcre J'IAS $J)on;• by Federal Regulations:SIIl!'l! sev,er.J THie
IV programs have sljllutory limits regarsored by the Third World Sludent
ding the amount of ~14· • student may
Association, the Student Associationreceive during an award period or an
International Affa irs Coordinator ,
undergraduate career. .
Graduate Student Association and the
Western New York Peace Center. ·
Drift
aid
He 15 director of cuhural affairs. HampAlthough there seem to be many
shire College, Amherst. Mass . . Dona·
~eslrictions on being considered lor aid,
tions lor Friends' activities In Cambodia
there actoaDy Is a major drive to increase
can be sent to 1501 Cherry St.,
the nul)'lber of applicants eligible for
Philadelphia. Pa., 1?102. •
lina'nclel assistance, spokespersons emphasize. The Middle Income Assistance
·Act, passed in NO\Iember, 1978 , has
slgnnicantly hberallzed eligibiiHy crtteria
lor federal progra-. For eumple,
ellgibihty lor federal interest benefits on
Guaranteed Student Loans Is how pronish . Hungarian, Icelandic. ~ars l,
vided to all students without regard to
Japanese, Korean , Morwegian. Polish, family Income , and many ' more
Rumanian . Russian , Lebanese (Arabic),
undergraduates are eligible lor the Basic
Serix&gt;-Croalian. and English.
Educational Opportunity Gram (BEOG)
The lllnds of materials needed include : since the farftlly Income and·- ceiling
I. Books on the Olympic sports and
has been raised. It has been estimated
winter games from each of the countries that New York State recipients wiD
and in the languages stated.
receive 58 per cent more BEOG aid In
2. Good two-way dictionaries In these 1979-80.
languages.
The Ponancial Aid Form (FAF) and the
3. Children's books In these languages, UniversHy's .Anandal Aid Application
especially any dealing with the winter (FAA) are available at the Office of AnanspOrts, but also books about the countries cial Ald. Annex B on 1M Main Street
themselves.
Campus.
4. Books In these languages deating
with the music and art of these countries.
The Upstate New York Chapter of 1M
14,000 CERTIFICATES
Special Libraries Association has agreed
14,000 ..- . . ................... - to ll5llst In this program, and has ap"lllaotea ... ......... •t9 .... oeat
pointed Gladys Ann Wels of the Senate
......_ M the Nome R. ' - - Slate
Research Service in Al&gt;any as project
U......... F..ter.l Credit U... Slop
coordinator.
loy or c d - of their~ locaLocally, donations or Inquiries may be
'*-'
~
direCted&gt;• "" .~... w~ --,~-· &amp;: • IWl, ISl-Zlll, uc1 """- ~·
~ Libnory, •22B_'.c;p;A •PWI,

... ..,,

a.. s.-.

...,_

---

�•

December 13, 1979

Happy Holidays
.,

CALENDAR
....

1i1ED1C1NAL CHEJOsTav SEMINAII•

Thursday- 13
RESEARCH INSTITUTE ON ALCOHOUSM
PRESENTAnON'
'

\~~ ri.ftCr~M

of

~d:. :k;!:~

Ron.td C Thunnan. Ph 0 . -..odate prolHIOI'.
Oepertrnmt of Pha~ . 1M Untversity of
NMhCornltn. .tC'-IHID.I021 MolnStt..t 2

pm

RESEARCH SEMINAR SERIES'
Polypeptkle11: New N"ral TraMmiHera ,
JOHph Manin. MD.. Bullard profHlOr of
neurology, chiof. Neurology SeMen. Massa·
chusdts General HOII)kal. and profeuor and chair·

man . Oepartmmt of N«Urok:Jgy. Harvard Medial
School Doclon' Ointng Room . ChiSdr.n'~ Hospilal
3p.m .
PHYSICS COUOQUIUM•
Low-EMrw Pion-Nudeon lnta-Ktion, Pro·
,....,. M.D. a....,... Physics Department , Un;v.,lify a1 Mo.ylond . 454 Ftonaok. 3·30 p m Calfee

.

~·~

STAn5nCS COUOQUIUM'
S..W. """''" olthe &amp;podod Muruof lnlo&lt;moGounstHo Kim , visiting - · prnfeuoo-.
U/8. Room A· l6. 4230 Ridge Lea. 4 p .m.

James Kasprowic:t. dirf!Cior o( the orchestra . wiD

~-~
~
Activity of c.n.1o Ttiqdlc: N - . 0&lt;.
fAn&gt;y 8 . Townwnd . Depo.unent ol Medldnal
U n - of Michigan/ Ann Mxx .
C121 Cool« . 2 p m.

l••noreeu&amp;a•ory Nmwotks Probed b ~
~-F- Cell ltjlbrldo, Do-. lliclwd D
flonkat, Ooponmcnt allmmunology, Roowol Pork ·
Memorial lnstitutt. 114 Hochttctter. 4:15 p.m
Coffee at 4

UOAIIFUM '
Mr. IUdft (france . 1977) . Woklman Thutre ,
Amhenl . 4:30. 7 and 9 :30p.m Gmenl adm;,Qon
S2; students SL50.
Mr. IUda Is . . .ut ~ thriller 5d in
perm.n~ P.a W\ \942. about an •~•I
opportunill who exploks, J«WS for profit until he
hii'Metf k ecdde:nta&amp;y rnistakel few a Jew .
SEMINAR'
K..thy Ac:lwr wiD 'Pt'•k on the topic " lmagina·
tionJ of Penon in Comtemporary Podry. ~ In 438
Clotnens S p .m s.pc.-od by the G.oy Chao al
Poetry and IAtt.... Ooponment al English.

JVENINGS FOR NEW FUM'
.
I.e G&lt;lco.
by
Jonas M«b$.. u ..the mota important fdm wti5t
-"'"9 today In E,pnd" " Emily." A ....,,
avant~film . Aibr1ght ·Kno•AnGekry 8p m
F,.. Sponto&lt;od by the Cont., fct- Modia Study.
Mod.. Study/ &amp;llolo . and Al&gt;nght-K""" Art
Galey

lllm..-. -

MUSICAL COMEDY'
The Otob, by Eve Mmiam. ditected by Saul
Dun. TIM Cc.ntet Theatre. 681 Main Sc . 8 p.m
~ .dmiakJn $4 ; Jtudenti .00 senior cit:l.z:enl
$2 MlS vouchen ~

Friday- 14
PED1At1UC GIIAND ROUNDS•
.........
· "' Theodoft
Kinch
Auditorium
. Ol~rtn's
Hoipir.J c11 aJ.......
m

U/ 8 ~CAUCUS N£E11NG '
567 (Apen H.al 11;30 am · 1 p .m

'

Monday- 17

T,_

PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR•
R.,-1 Heat " - and the Cooottol ol Sholl
IMUllidon Owing lmrnenlon in W•tcr, Or .
'Arsenio Veiateinas . 5108 Sherman. 4 p.m.

DINAR•

Rocftefellot- U- 108 Sltemtan. 4 p.m. Cot.
leeot 3:30 In lOlA c..y.

S2. studenl&gt; S !.SO.

PHAJIMACOLOGY a THERAPEUTICS
SEMINAR•
~ Chorac:t--ol Ca•dloc
H-..aaJM: Recq~ton. Dr. James H. Ze:vea.
Biorne:cUul Research Department. ICI Anwricas .
Inc. 102 Sherman. 4 p .m. Refreshments tn 124
Fube&lt;ot3:4S.

ICEHOCXEY '
Kent Stat ~t)f. Tonawanda Ice Time .
7:30p.m.

Cangocdro (The &amp;nditl (ll&lt;aDI . 19541. S :SOp .m .

UUABFILM'
Mr. Kldn &lt;France . 1977) . Squirt Conference

Tlwatrt . 4:30, 7 and 9:30p.m. Gcna-al.dmiMion

UUAB MONDAY NIGHT FUMS'
O..drintbeGonlm(Mexlco.1%61. 7p.m.: O
Woldman Theatre . Amhersl . Free admisskm .

MFA RECITAL •
Deborah WdA, v6olln , and FarWy Pura,
celo. &amp;ird Recttal Hal . 8 p.m. Free admtaion.
Spomo&lt;od by the Doponment al Music .
Ms. Weiss and Mr. Puree will bt vkllinlR Geoffrty
Peny and \riolist JoanM l.ooNt

-ng

MUSICAL COMEDY'
The Club, by E.. Mmiam , dOected by Soul
ElkJn . The· Center lhutre , 681 Main 51 , 8 p .m
Ge:-Mral admilsion S4: ltudmts and sen!&amp; citizens
$2 ADS vouchen acc.ptod .

Death is a n~~rely seen Bunuelnarralive essay on
anti-Imperialism and anti·Catholidsm . on the:
nature . extent and cost of lndivklual frndom .
0 Canpcdro bi based on actual events from the
early part ol ttw 20th century. The cangaceiros
were pusants rulMd by feudatism who became
Robin Hood ·like bandits.

Tuesday- 18

Saturday- 15

4p.m.

UUABFUM'

Chrtltine Mantrand, soprano. Baird Rf!dta.l
HaD . 8 p .m. ~ by the Department al
Mullc:. AdmisskK'Ifree: .
Asslstl09 artlofs will be : Erik Slt)oldon. plano:
MWne Witnauer . flute . Jane Cary, harpsk::hord ,
and Farley PeatU . c:«Do

•

MFA RECITAL '

MUSICAL COMEDY'
The Cltob, by Eve Mm&lt;am . d•octod by Soul
Elkin . The Center lhutre. 681 Main St. 8 p.m.
Ge;neral iidmtsefon $4 ; students and M.nior dtiuns
S2. ADS vouchen ~ -

Sunday- 16
ICE HoCKEY '
l:lmJr. c.o&amp;lep. Tone wanda Ice ltmt: 2 p m

MFA RECITAL'
Anno A I - . , Moot. plano 8alnl Redial HaD .
3 p.m. F•n a d - s.pc.-ed tfy the o.p.n.
tMnt of MutC AHhllng artlsti wil be: az.beth Hok
Brown. soprano: Jo Ehn Hanil. cLarinet; Mana llo
and ~rma Kon:Unak. piano, and Karen Rol . Oute

Thursday- 20
PED1At1UC RESEARCH SEMINAR•
Syttemk: Au.lolmmune Immune Complu
DiMaae Induced In Rabblb· by Mercuric:
Chlodde:., Dr. Giuseppe A. Andta, proff!I.IDr of
mlaoblofogy. pathology and medicine, U/ B.
Board Room , Olildrmn'1 HOSfital . 12 noon .
COlllGE 8 CONCERT'
11M: .lama Oatk Trio. Ka~ CorneD
Theatre . 8 p .m . Admiuion is fret and op«~IO the

AU.IIEETHOVEM PROGRAM '

l..Wwnkv "'.........

In a oonc«rt

c:om·

-the~oiBeethoYcn &amp; Od
~by

Rodlo!Hol 8p.m moodmlooion
tho llopomncnt ol M"*

279. Le..,btug, Po . 17837.

BAPllST CHURCH SERVICES
Sundays. 9 a .m . at Squire Union and 9 :20 ~~
Red Jack&lt;t Code. o bus from the RondoD &amp;pt.,
Church &lt;X WIDiamsvll\e wtll pk:k up any who \ltoUh to
attend MI'\Meu . 'The: bus wiD retum to
between 12: IS and 12:30.

a~mpu s

BASIC 1-UNOl.OGY LECTURE•
Au _
_,lly, 0.. Felix Milgtom. chalnna'n.
Doponment al Mtaoblology, U/ 8 . Scotchenl HoU.
&amp;flalo General HOiplfaf. 4 :30p.m . .,_.., 9.
Saturdey

Villi: 5

p . m .~ -

339 Squire and

Mewrnan Center. Elticotl e&amp;mpa.
Sunday: Main Street: 10 a .m . and 12 noon Cantalidan Olapel ; 8 p.m. - St. JoKph's. 3269
Main Sl.: ArnMrsl : 9 :15a.m .. 10:30. noon and 5

p .m. - Newman Center, Ellicott .
Monday-Friday: 12 noon - Newman Centl"l'.
Main St. &amp; Untv~ Ave .. 12 noon and 5 p.m. Newman Center. EJlicott .
Saturday: 9 a .m . - Newman Center 'on both
c:.mputa.

CRISIS SERVICE VOLUNTEERS
300 volunteers are needed to train as crisis phone
counsek:n at Buffalo and Erie County's central
lifeline fOf vital MMces. You can train to be a aists
interventionist and he.lp others with problems '" hving by registering now for the next training program
24-houn·a-day. 7-dayo-a·week, Crisis SeMceo
coonwk families in distrea , vkt:ims of rape and sex·
ual assault. the deJ)fes.sed , penonl"faci.ng sudden
00 or a life crlsJ:s and sulddal people.
Register fiX training now at the Ute Stress In·
5titute by cading Crisis SeMca · 838-5980 The
number for Crisis Servic:cs a also listed on the inside
COWT of your telepho:\f! directOry. Remember. caD •
838-5980-24-hours-a..Oay.
FORaGN STUDENT TUmON WAIVER
APPUCAnONS
FOf Spring 1980. Foreign Student Tuition
Walvers are now available at the Office of Anandal
A;d , Room 6 . Annex 8 , Main s..... C.mpuo. The

pubic.

Friday- 21

PEDIAt1UC GRAND ROUNDS•
E\IOke:d RnponM. OJ. Martin H. Feidman.
. . - ... prof.....- al nc......togV, U/ 8 and VA
~I Kinch Auditorium . Children's Hospttal.
MUSICAL COMEDY'
The Club, by Ew Meniam . ~ by Saul • lla .m
Elkin . The Center T'he:atre . 681 ~ St 3 p.m
Gener-al .c:tminion $4 : Students and senior otizens
S2 ADS vouclten ooceptod
CHRISTMAS CONCERT '
Niapre W...,._ The: Hoi~; Trinity Lutheran
Church . 1080 Main 5tJftl at North Strut. 3 :30
p m Admiuion is free. but donations an: .....ekorM
A Vtenna~: coff• wil foDow the progtam . Spon101'~ by rhe Friends ot VIenna Oub.
'
P~ts: are; Marlme Wttnauer, flute: Cathy
Oe:l Ruuo , oboe: s.l Andc*no . ~: John C
Hunt. ~ . and Mary Hickson HunL. hom

January 5 at: National Alpha Lambda Orr.clta . Box

CAntOUC NEWMAN CENTER lllASSES

MINORI1Y FACULTY a STAFF
ASSOCIAnON IIIE£11NG•
Blue Room . FacWty Oub. Main Street Campus.

To liot ewnta In the "Calendar," eaU •
Man Shrader at 636-2626.
Kev: ~ ...a, to ..,_ wtth • UUAB FIUI'
Reloef Whhout A c.- (19SSI . Waldman
pi '
, ••• - - Ia ......b)ecl.:
·o.,.. ID doe . .bile:; • • Ope. to 'l'hQb-e , Amhent 4:4S. 7: IS and 9.30 p m
_
...... ol .... ~,..!!..._ Gencnl a d - S2: ~uden" U .SO.
......._ epedft.d,
for

--~--·
~ .. doe Sqodre h•c.-be
HaD Ticket

wit br. Suze L.e.al. muzo ·-

U/ 8 COUNCIL IIIE£11NG'
Coundl ~net Room . Sth lloo&lt;C.pen HoD
SEMINAR'
•
Jp.m.
An Espoation o( KhKhlan's AAtortthm , Pro·
ORAL BIOLOGY SEMINAR•
' lessor John Ban~. De-partment of Management
The E&amp;ct o1 " " - " " ' '"' Cuitut'od Human
Sdenof!and$y:slems . U/ B. l19Ctosby. lla .m .
Glngtval Flbroblub. Kathy Ben~iste . Ph.D ..
usodate profeuor. fkp&amp;rtmtmt ol Oral Bio4ogy.
IIIOCHEMIS11lY
No&lt;thweotemUn""''iffiOentaiSchool. Room 107.
and ol ~tic
4510 Main Strut. 4 p.m.
ntRNA Studied With Atlctlovlnd 2, 0.. Ed Zifl .

Robel Without A Cauae (I%Sf . Coooleence
Thotre: . Squtre. 4 :45. 7 :15and9.30p.m General
.dmmion $2: ~tudents Sl .SO.
_ P~ Is 24 hours in the ailii-lom We of SO's
ICEHOCXEY '
odolacent ....... Dean . who, lib the eplt: hemal,
Hobart College.. Ton.wand.a Ice Time 7 30
ancient mych . muse pau from innoc:ence to ex·
poft'ie:nc:e. enduring the: flra of he:R before he can
p "'·
enwr heaven F'nt time ever shown at U/ B In iii
IIU'FALO CO-UNriY STUDIES GROUP
original 35mm Vtlkte screen formal
N£E11NG '
123 Jcwen P.n..way (frank lJoyd Wright
House) 8 p m Coffac at 7 30 O.vid Getber.
Depa.unent ol HlAooy, U/ 8 . """dtocu,. "Prnblems
In the HISiofy of Ethnic P'turohsm- and ~
Dowdal . ~rtrMnl ol Soc.ioaogy , State Univeft,hy
Colegc a1 BuJ{U)_ will ddru• ..MentAl Hospil:a\lzabon and Economec Change -

artisU

10prano. and Heinz Rehfuu. bass baritone.

a....-.

-

CEIL a MOLECULAR IIIOLOGY SEMINAR•

conduct. Guest

.... " " - .......,._ lo D«embe&lt; 21 .
1979. Studenb musl be on an For J viA in order to
apply for the walva .

GIIADUATE s0tooL DEADLINE DATES
. Satwd.y, December 15-Anal examinations
begin- Fal semester.
Saturdfy, Deotmber 22 -Anal uaminalions
md-FaD semester.
W...........,, D«embe&lt; 26-AI final g.-ode&gt; oWe

Notices

in OAR by 4 :30 p .m Grade reportS od be pro
cased on Oecirnber X1 and January 3 and will be

ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA FELLOWSHIPS
For the 1979-80 academk: year, the NaHon.al
Council al Alpha Lambda O.lta will -ord 12
lelowoltlps !0&lt; JII'Od- study 1$2,!i00 each)
Any member of Alpha Lambda Otka who was
w-du.te:d wldl a cumulatiw: aw-rage: aa or above
the Alpho Lombdo O.lta onltit...,. otonda.d " dg;ble. G.-.duating' senion may apply ~ they ~ve •
.c:hieve:d thts average to the md ot the first Mmater

mailed to tludents. Delays In submitting graMs ..WI
automatically moun • delay in the ilwan« o4 stu
dent grade reporti and-trllmcriptl.

of thil year
Appficonts will be judged on ocholasllc .ecoo-d ,
rec:ommmdationi, the souhdness of theW stated
pn&gt;)&lt;cf.

pu.,... and need .

•

. Appkotiom may be oboolned from Ann Hid&lt;&gt;.

110 · 636-21107
Compfeled oppllcations must be ..ceiYed J&gt;y

�~13.1979

7

Religious _sttiities
prove popular here
&amp;, Paul Chia.era

Nevertheless. through lhc special m • .
jon option . 15' studenls haw beer.
"Wha1 area ol study not presently
graduated with a 'major In classics with
available al U/ 8 would you like to see of.
chief concentration In religion.
lerecf?" undergraduale students were
Many students enrolled Intend to pur·
asked In 1970.
sue careers directly related to ' h L' I:
Religious studies immediately sutfaced
studies- Jeachlng. seminary work and ."'
as a major 1nlerest.
church admin istration. for ex3mple.
Today, a Program In Religious SIUdies
Others use the study of religion as a
has developed into a viable and popular
framework lor other pursuits.
sequence.
_
''One woman who recently graduated
Rev. Arlo J . Nau . Lutheran campus
has gont' on to tbe serrllnary to pursue
pastor of Resurrection House at 2 Univerher divinity degree." says Nau . "Another
sity Ave .. admlls that in the past . the prois now in medk:al school. One former'stu·
gram has had some identlly problems.
~e~~~~ ::z:.~nd another ls working as
Many people, he says. simply didn 't
know II existed . Or. if ll)ey did . it wasn't
There's anolher benefit-an intrinsic
clear how It "lit in to" the Universlly's
one-that emerges,
ecademk: structure .
"There Is a certain therapeulic value
"The program at one point seemed to
here ." says Nau in looking al the program
be floundering. and It was subject to at·
as a whole. "In that people share things
taclts from some observers." says John
with one a nother-they develop trust
Rlszko. en adviser 'in the Division of · relationships.
Undergradullle E&lt;lucatlon (DUE) . "Some
"My involvement." he adds. "has a
people questioned the . program's
pastoral value as well. Sometimes
academic integrity.··
st udents come to me with concerns or
problems."
Now In Arb and Letter.
Rev. Nau makes It clear that no atRec.enUy. however. Religious Studies
tempt is made to persuade or dissuade
has become a formal unit in the Departstudents into or out of their partJcular
ment of Classics under the Faculty of Arts
religious beliefs.
and Letters. That affiliation seems to
"We're reaching out t.o people .:· he
have' resulted In needed visibility and a
says io summary . ..That's what education
more fdrmal structure.
Is."
More than 225 students are now
enrolled In 20 courses offered throu gh
Religious Studies.
Directed by Dr. Thomas C . Barry.
asspdate professor of classics. the pro·
gram foc uses in an objective . non·
denominational way on a wide range of
courses offered through the dey division .
According to recent In-house studies,
Fifteen luU-time faculty t~ach courses
about 75 per cent of minorities who enter
in religious studies as well as in the
the University do not graduate.
departments of Classics. Philosophy.
As Indicated by their grade point
Sociology. and Anlhropology. among
averages. poor academic standing is not
others.
the prlmory reaoon. ln.tead . suggested
An equal number of lnstrudors serve
Dr. Robert ' Palmer. project director of
as adJunct faculty . including Rev. Nau .
Upward Bound , the reasons are more
who notes that a major new direction of
closely associated with "unmet affective
the program is Its plan to offer a course
needs"
or quality of life Issues.
this spring . entitled "The Pauline
In an effort to help Increase minority
Letters.''
retention , Palmer is chairing a committee
The course will examine St. Paul's
that in tends to investigate just what these
writings. their authentidty and their
students' special needs are and how they
presenl·day relevance. a nd will be ofcan be met by Jhe University.
fered through Millard Fillmore College
The committee. an offshoot of the
(MFC). the evening-division .
Universily-Wide Study Group on Reten·
It will be taught by Nau. who Is a Th .D.
lion and Attrition chaired by Student AJ.
candidate In New Testament lnterpreta·
lairs Vice President Richard Siggelkow.
tion at the University of Toronto.
met for the first time in November and
will continue to meet on a monthly basis
Llnka with other dlaclpltna
until the end of next semester when
Several courses are available that link
recommendations will be- forwarded to
religious Studies with such disciplines as
the President.
,
psychology. medicine and anthropology.
The group hopes to eventually colOne course , for instance . delves Into
laborate
jovith
a
sub-commillee
o( the
relig ious ethics and
med ical
Un iversity Affirmative Action Committee
issues- genetics. abortion and other lm·
chaired
by
Leo
Richardson
,
coordinator
portant topics.
of human relations for affirmative action .
, Dr. Phillips J . Stevens. associate proAlso foouslng on minority retention,
fessor of anthropology . teaches a cdurse
Richardson 's sub&lt;ommlttee is now workin primitive religions and the occult.
Ing on a "data -driven retention model''
..How." muses Rev .. Nau . "can you
which will render needed information on .
sludy hislory or philosophy withoul
among other things, ways of improving
studying religion? Religion Is perhaps the
minority recruitment , admissions pro·
best Interdisciplinary subject." he concedures and stude('lt services.
tin ued , adc!Jng that the study of religion Is
Palmer thinks the University currently
fluid and constanlly changing.
offers a variety o( support services to
In addition to broadening its lies within
minorities,
but un(ortunately , few know
the University com munity. the Program
of them. A possible recommendation, he
in Religious Studies has its sights set on
indica
ted
,
may
be to create a directory
com munity service .
which calalogues the services, lifts con·
A certificate program is being
tacts In them, and also Usts minority
developed through MFC which will locus
faculty .
on specialization In Biblical studies.
Although Palmer wants to lake a
ethics . the history of religious education .
"holistic approach" to retention. he concomp•rative religion and other core areas
cedes thai minorities have special con ·
of both academic' and practlcal use. Rev.
cems that must be recogniZed by the
Nau explains. The original idea lor the
University . Becau se of their
prtlgram rests with Dr. Clarence F. Dye,
backgrounds. which tend lo dUJer !rom
associate director of student affairs.
the traditional, mlnorities at times feel a
"The program would be aimed. lor Inparticular " incongruence" with the
stance. at Sunday school teachers. area
Un iversity. The objective of the commHministers who might not have as much . tee will be to explore how the students
formal education as they would like, and
and the: institution can better compliment
church administrators: · saY\_ Rev. Nau.
each olher.
RecaiHng the events which caused
FMU-fledted tllllljot?
racial tension on campus last week.
Rev. Nau says he and his colleagues
Palmer noted that hopefully, when the
would Ideally like to see a full-lledged
commlllees conclude lhelr deliberations.
Religious Studies major. bul money Is
their recom~ndations ,.;n " mlnlmizlo lhc
always a (DCtor.
need" lor a similar occurrence .
News Bureau Su.tf

831-2213 any day between 9 and 4:30and ~will
be g1ad to arrange a screening appointtMnt fOf you .
PSYCHOLOGICAL SEIIVICES
The P~ Servke
run by the
()epwtment of ~- provides outpatient
psycholhe.-apy ,... ,...,.. both wUhln ana outside
!the Univenity COtnJTlunlty. lndMdual proble:mr, as
well u marital and family issues, an dealt with usIng both msight.-nted and boha"""ol procedures . For further information. call 831 -1187
~between 9 a.m. and 5 p .m.

c.n....

STUDIES SK1U.S LAB

C~ R: Linda S. MCC.IIlo...-, d•ector ol
undugra1tuate studiu/ Miist6nt profes.scx, Oepart.
menl ol Communication. "How Bosses R~mand
tho Opposito Sex." WBEN 19301. IUlS p.m.
Excerpts from both intmtiews may be heard on

Crosstalk• Highlights, WBEN -FM (102 .51.
Decembc 15. 5-7 a .m .
DECEMBER 17,

Conveuatlon5

In

the Arts : Konrad

Wachsmann, arcltitecL International Cab&amp;e (Chan·
nel 10). 6 p .m .

The Scud;es Slaflo lab at the Un!Yenity l..eaming
Ynter. 368 Baldy twl. is open lor tutoring in
writing and studies 5kills. The houn ar~ : Mond.eys:
Tuadayo and ThW&gt;&lt;~A,. . 12-3 p .rn. ; Wednacta,..
10..2 p.m. No hOurs on Friday. 1M Lab as op.n 10
aliU/Botudonts.

DECEMBER Jl,
ConwtutioM in the Arts: CaMn Rand, former
president of tht Shew Festival and newly appoint~
board member of the New York State Council on
the Artli . Courier Cable (Channllt tO) . 6 :30 p rm
Alto on the 19th at 7 p.m. and the 21st at 6 .30
p.m.

Exhibits

DECEMBER 23 ,
Croootd&lt; 1, !h. Philip G. Altbach, cha• ·
man / professor , Departmen t o f So cial.
Phbophital and HistoricAl Foundations , '"Student
AclMst$- Where Are They Now?'' WBEN (930) .

ADIRONDACK IMAGES
Allah... oilS phocognophs by Room E. BU&lt;·
ton, dlnctor ol U.an.s at SUC/Piottsbu.,t. and
fOfTI"'etiy Uliltanl drea« of Uniwnity UJra.ries for
Public 5eMca at U/ 8 . Maln Foye. ol Heahh
5denc:a Ubruy, Scodilon Klmbal r .......

ALAMO GAU.BIY EXHIBIT
-Walent New York Wocoen Art1m: Reghtry lnExhlbltloo. a newly formed group ol

~

Mtists. Won.. by Copley, Headricl&lt;.
Hamouda , Kennedy, Koenig and oehnt;. The e•·

....,..,

hi:Jition runs through Januory 14. Beck Hall. Mak'l
Street C.mpu5.

CAPEN INNEJl GAI.I.£IIY EXHIBIT
Works by ~UNYAB Gr.tua.te Students. Sch

Roo., Capen Hal. From Decombor 10 through
Jan..... 10.
GAI.UJIY 119 SHOW

Lind~~ Bond, drawings and water cokln
Decombor 8-22. Galle&lt;y 219. second Roo.. Squke
Hall. Mam 5trdt Campus. Houn' Monday.
Wednesday and Fridayo. 1-3 p .m. Fo&lt;furthednfo&lt;·
marion. cal834-l088.

LES COPAINS AliT LTD. EXHIBIT
1'lM Prt.ttiw Eye:, an ~ ol Afrbn and
New Gutno Art, Through January 15. Galery
hour$ are Tuesd.y-SetucdA-y. 2-6 p .m The gabery
is klc.ated al 35 VOCifbea Avenue .

MUSIC U~ EXHIBIT
Maorico Rawt, ...............)&gt;y. Musi&lt; Ubn&lt;y.
&amp;od Hal. through Deeembor 31

On The Air
DE«:aaER ,.,

eo......- ...... """,.., Clanll.,...
c:o.-..H..-.

Courio.Cable !Chonnoll~ . 6,30p~ · fa.
Is Eotha
director ol
adtunl

aB.n.

DECENIIEJI16,
era..... 1: Dr. Robtrt E. Ford, a~nt pro·
!._. llepartmmt ol Sociology (&lt;unontly on leaw
• nd chW of oc-"•tion5. Erie County Sh«df• Of·
lito). -n.. ~and tho Law ." WilEN 19301.
9q., p .m.

9:05p.m.
•
Ooutalt II: Ger-ald R. ShJnds, usociate PfO·
fU501 . Sc~ of lnfon:narion and library Studies,
HThe Growing Ce:nsorsh~ Attitude In the 'United
Sutes." WBEN (930) . n ,os p.m
Excerpu from bolh inteMews may be heard on
Cn&gt;..talk Hlghli9hts . WBEN-FM (102 .51.
Oea:rnber 22. 5-7 a.m
DECEMBER 30,
Croutalk 1: Dr. Manfred Eige:n, Nobel
Laureate. director. Max Plandt Institute . Gottlngf'n .
Wat. Germany , " How Life is Begun at the
Molecula&lt; l..evel." WBEN (9301 . 9:05pm.
CrOM&amp;all 11: t..rry G. St~. tp0rts information
du«:tor. University . News Bureau. ""The Role of
Athletics m lhe Untversiiy ."" WBEN (930). 11 :05
p.m
Excerpts from both Interviews may be heard o n
Croutalk Hlghlight.a , WBEN -FM (102 .5J.
Dece-.mbe.r 29. 5-7 a.m.

JOB
NON-COMP£TITIVE CIVIL SERVICE
CleeMt §G...t - Main Street or Amherst Campus. Urw No. 40280.
Malnt~nane~ Helpe:r SG-6 - J o hn &amp;ane
c.n.... Llnc No. 31389
FACULTY
Aau.tant or AAocL.te ProirAor- Architecture .
F-9142.
.
- . Chatrman- Donnaeoqy. F-91 43.
Au1•tant Prof~nor - Pharm'&amp;Celog y &amp;
Thaapeutln. F-9144
·
Polldcal Scte- SuOju.t Ubrarloo -LMLRder~no~ / Colections Dept .• F-914S..
-•- O..hopodics, F-9146
Ucturer- Recrution . Athlehc:t &amp; Relilted In ·
otru&lt;tion . F-9147
l...eetu.r~ P-T or ~ A.Hhta.bt - Cora P
Maloney Collego . F-9148

RESEARCH
Ocft- Sodology. R-9059

Minority life
under study,

�•

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

with an "Idealistic:" educational communitY which •htghly sauttnlzes~ your every
action . "We're 100 per cent eccountable
lor everything we do." he added.
Griffin wonilerecl aloud how many
other law enforcement groups would attempt to Intervene In a posstJie mob
sttuation (as was present on the Amherst
Campus last weekend) without protec·
lion of firearms . To boot, there hasn't
beeru complaint about pollee brutality in
seven years. he recalled.
.
At lea$! in the area of peer recognition ,
U/ B's Department of Public Safety Is
making some inroads. Griffin noted wtth
pride that one olficer was recently
selected to head the defensive tacllcs
training un" lor the pollee academy.
Another coup Is that U/ B's campus
security was the first in the state It&gt; have
an operational computer model lor
reporting criminal statistics.
High demaad for miDorttles '-

Friends of
the handicapped

Twenty people were honored Dec. 4 by the lnclependerib lor their
elforb In eliminating attitudinal, architectural and acaclanic bar·
rlers for handicapped otuclenb. In alphabetkal order, plaque
llllnnera were: Arthur Burke, Bertha Cutcher, Viola Diebold,
President Ketter, Franca l..ac:ey, Roger McGIU and David

Rhoads.

Cltationo were a-rded to: ~ry Devin, Robert Hendenon,
Ann Hicks, Charles "O..ty" Miller, .HoH Nash, Frank
Wlodarczak and sblcients Nina Cascio, Diane Hill, Herb Hough,
Susan Ledcler and Fred Sandner.
·
John Warren was awarded a citation posthumously.

Elderly _watch TV for course credit
Watching 1V has taken on new mean the elderly." she explained, "and is
log for a group ol elderly penons who
designed to surmount boredOm by keepev&amp;l~e &lt;Nhat 1hey see belled on ..tuca1ng these ·people Interested lri furthering
tional guidance . Some attend classes:
their education.
others don't .
" II 1helr Interest In a given subject
lfs called •"Bringlng Continuing Educagrows sufficiently, they ohen tum to
lion to the Homebound Elderly," a statebooks, magazines, newspapers and other
funded pr"9"'m coordinated in this area
resources to extend their knowledge."
by 1he Multkllodplinary Center lor the
Ages of the participants vary , Dr.
Study ol Aging at U/B.
Hammond said , but "some are In their
Or. Doris Hammond, program coor80's ."
dlnator. explained that those who attend
Some classes are conducted at U/ B.
classes are designated "learning comOthers. however, are set up by parpanions" lor others who are homebound
llcipating IOdal agencies at their own
participants. Or. Hammond said nearly
ladltties. SpQnsors have Included the VA
100 elderly · perwns have particiy_ated
H&lt;fPI!ll! J'l. Buffalo; Jewish [;amily ·S...since the pr&lt;&gt;gllliha: • • i:!f,f}ur(tf&lt;l ~~~ Cv~lofi:h Gl&gt;o&lt;lU'~ 'c~ r ill the
January.
...,JeWish Center on Delawan• Avenue: the
Here's how U - * ':·- ~ 4
...F""'County&gt;Oopa- ~ l/oen)ot·Str,
• • • · ::--! •._,, l •
•
In the 'Rath B~~ttl'g: the l'sychlalii&lt;:
~ c.,...,.alCenter at Gowanda , and Oaemeo ColThose who enter 1he program select an
lege.
academic cou"" such as psychology.
WKRP and 'Topper'
sociology , current events. ethnic
The Department of Senior Services.
heritage, sodal gerontology or family life .
through Its Retired Senior Volunteer ProParticipants are paired so that a '1eaming
gram (RSVP) , provides transportation for
companion" Is assigned to each homeIndividual participants ~ needed .
bound person.
In any given class, a qualified Instructor
selects certain 1V shows to be watched
over a one-week period, prepares a list of
questions pertaining to those shows as
related to the subject matter being
studied, and conducts classroom discussions.
The "learning companions" who attend classes vtstt the homebound , who
Two U/B medical facuhy are listed In
also watch the assigned 1V shows. and
the October Issue of Harper'• Baloor as
relay Information discussed In the
being among the " Best Medical
classroom. They also deliver new class
Specialists for Children."
assignments to the homebound and colThe list was based on a survey conlect previous ones.
ducted by the lfl9Zine among pediatriClaues are conducted lor two hours
cians and pediatric r;peciallsts at 25
eech week over a 10-week period.
medical !Chools. Physicians responding
At the end ol the course, certificates
could not Include faculty at their own Inare awarded by the U/B Center lor the
stitutions in an effort to counteract bias.
Study of Aging to both the homebound
U/B faadly listed aN Drs. Elliot Ellis,
and their "Ieeming companions."
prolaoor and chairman Ql the DepartOr. Hammond, who recently received
ment ol Pediatrics, under "pediatric
her Ph.D. In cou-q from the Univer- ·allergists;" and Or. Joel M. Bernstaln,
sity of Georgia, noled that "active parclinical assistant professor, under
llclptllion" by tha elderly Is the primary
"pediotric ol.oloryngologlsls" (ear, nose
and throet) . Named one ol the "Best
aim olthe ~ - She said certificates
are _,jed on a "bral basis" to all
Medical Centa:s for Children" was the
""- who IMlNully MWmpl to carry out
P~ and Adolacenl UoM at
Roowell Poric Memoriallndute headed
tholr .............

;J".ds

-

A recent assignment In psychology
called lor participants to view "The White
Shadow." "WKRP In Cincinnati," "The
Suicide's W~e ." the 1V movie remake of
"Topper" and "60 Minutes."
One of 1he questions relating to "The
Suicide's W~e " solicited comment on
how Angie Dickenson , as the widow ,
"dealt wtth despair, gulk and the respon sibility for her son ."
,
Many of those who saw the two-hour
movie might admit, "That's a good question."
Another question lpr 1he " old timers"
was: "How does the newer version of
'Topper' compare with the old version?''
SnU another : "What lesson In htunllity
do the hotshots of Carver High learn
from the Harlem Globetrotters In 'White
Shadow?'"
Sodal agencies and Individuals In terested .in further Information regarding
the program are advised to contact Or.
Hammond by calling the Center for the
Study of Aging at 831-3834. Callers are
asked to leave a number IO&lt; her to caU
back' II she's out.

Two U I 8 faculty
cited as top specialists

A......-.IIMcll

i'

' t

"This Ill ........... of Involvement lor

~~~- ~f~"nd :~

Or. Elli joined U/B In 1974 and was

formerly on the facuhy at the Unlverstty
of Colorado. He Is also director of the
Clinical Research Center and the OMolon
of Allergy and Immunology at Children's
Hospital. He Is board certllled by the
American Board ol Pediatrics and the
American Board of Allergy and Immunology. He is also a member ol 1he
Society Tor Pediatric Research and Is a
Fellow In the American Academy ol
Pedlatrtcs and the American Academy of

Allergy.
Or. Bernstein received the B.A. , M.D.,
M.A ., and Ph .D. ~from U/B and
has been on the c:lintcal faculty since
1969. He Is certified by the American
Board ol Otolaryngology and Is a Fellow
In the Amerlcan:coJiege o( Swgeons. He
Is aloo a Felow 1D 1he American Academy
of Ophlhalmolomf and Otolaryngology,
and •
of the . Pan -Arneoic:an
Medical Aaodallon, and 4l&gt;c ~
Audiology Society.

-lllber·

It's stm difflcuh, though, to keep good
people, especially blacks, Griffin
lamented. Because of a high demand lor
minorities in the field {precipitated by
federal, state and local judicial
mandates). those on U/ B's force are
~n offered higher-paying positions
elsewhere. This makes the department
more or a ..stepping stone.. or ·'training
ground" than a permanent home , Griffin
observed.
Currently, the department has four
biack patrolpersons (out of 46). one
lieutenant (out of nine). ~nd no investigators In a unh of-seven. Blacks are
underemployed in supervisory ranks , explained Gdfltn, because when the State's
Public Safety division was re019"nlzed in
1971 , the vacancies In those slots were
quickly grabbed by existing personnel.
Now, a supervisory position must open
up before an)IOne new can 1be hired. In
addition , applicants must pass the State's
promotional exam and must ••come up
through the ranks" as opposed to being
hired from another agency at ttie super·
.
level.
recruiting mlnoriltes from other
law enforcement agencies Is the only way
the University can side-step the long,
tedious Civil Service procesS.' U/B Is less
competitive in terms of •'salaries. According to Griffin , SUNY pays tts olftcers
on par wilh rural pollee, but Is thousands
of dollars behind city, state and
metropolitan pollee, 0&lt; even Industrial
guards.

'im:Ue-

a- thaD 112,000 to •tart

The starting pay for a patrolperson
here lsjusl shy o~$12,000; In Buffalo HIs
over $15,000, and In the subwbs, over
$16,000. It also takes one year longer lor
campus pollee to reach the top of their
salary grade ($14,068) and retirement
beneftts are nol as generous comparatively .
Because of these monetary drawbacks ,
along with the prestige {actor, which Griffin maintains may be even mO&lt;e significant, those young enough to be recruited
by other agencies will take 1he other, better elfers. That's why Griffin said he no
longer shares the names ol those who appe,a r to be qualified minority appltcantt
with other law enforcement groups.
Besides trying to recruit minority offleers employed elsewhere, Griffin says
his staff "actively" advertises openings
through over a doZIOn minority advocacy
organizations.
AttemPting to give an overall assess-ment of his minority recruhment program, Griffin says he Is " proud" of
departmental efforts but still cotshes more
minorities were on staff. None1heles6, the
department "looks pretty claron good" In
his estimate In relation to other Western
New Y or!&lt; law enforcement groups
which , percentage-wise, have far less
mtnority representation .

2 Buffalonians
named Trustees
Buffalo Attorney and U/ B · graduate
Arnold B. Gardner and Dr. George L.
CoUins. Jr.. a cancer researcher and
graduale ol U/B Medical School. 111ere
recently appoint.&lt;! by .Gov. Can.y•to liD

~ -~ - ·doe · &amp;niV· 8olln:f ',of
Trustees.

�•

December 13, 1979

U I B engineers are community activists
FEAS Dean Lee describes
his faculty's services to area

--Sblf

By Uncia Gnoce-KobM

lngs of $90,000 per year for the county,
lee reports.
Members of the Faculty of Engineering
These two profa.sors also worked with
and Applied Sdences are involved In a
the CHy of Niagara Falls on studies for the
wide span of community activities, rangdisposal ol sludge from that dty's
Ing from research and consultation on
wastewater treatment plant, whk Prolocal issues such as pollution problems to
fessors Diane Badorek and leon Thiem
active reauitment efforts In area public
are engaged In research on the treatment
schools, FEAS Dean George C . lee • of drinking water for the Falls.
reports.
Professor Meredith has also served as a
consultant on waste disposal in landfills in
"These activities are In addition to the
Niagara
County and has advised the
very signKicant advances made on a na·
Buffalo District Corps of Engineers and
tional level by FEAS faculty," lee says,
the
City
of
Buffalo on the renovation of
noting that FEAS currently has some 80
the Buffalo water distribution system.
full-time faculty members and carries out
roughly $2 .5 miUion In externally-sup•
ported resean:h annuaUy.
Water nieourcee
"We exped to confer 500 BS degrees.
Faculty members with 'experiise in
120 MS and 30 PhD's during 1979-80."'
water resources and engineering have
he adds .
been very active, lee notes. Professor
Noting that engineering programs are
Ralph Rumer of Civil Engineering has
among the most desired majors for In ·
been Involved In studies of the Lake Erie·
coming freshmen students, Lee says
Niagara River Ice boom and has studied
FEAS has undertaken several major pro·
the proposed extension of the navigation
jects to provide opportunities for enroll·
season In the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence
ment to local students, especially
Seaway system.
minority students and women. who have
Professor Rumer's studieS have also
traditionally not entered this field .
focused on several problems related to
An Engineering Career Day for Buffalo
Western New York , induding hydraulic
public high school students has ~
model studies of the circulation of Lakes
an annual event , lee says. Held d uril)g
Erie and Ontario. the effects of poOutants
National Engineering Week-In February,
discharged Into these lakes, the fate of
the day provides students a chance to
de-icing salt in the Buffalo metropolitan
come to the campus, meet with engineer·
area and how it affects waterways, the
ing faculty and students, and learn about
build-up of chlorides in Lake Erie and the
various engineering disciplines .
transport of lee by wind and waves In the
lee says he is also In the process of same lake .
beginning discussions with school prinProfessor Volker Harms has served as
cipals through the Affirmative Action
a consultant to the Buffalo District Corps
Office to develop an on-going program
of Engineers lor the design of
for gearing Interested and talented
breakwaters In Lake Erie and In beach
students to engineering.
erosion studies.
lee reports that, as a service to the
1-.hipe witll 22 CODlpanles eod community, FEAS has Instituted an En·
vironment and Energy Resource Center
StudentS n""' enrolled In engineering
in conjunction with the Science and
programs hen! are woridng with localinEngineering Library . Comprised prlmari·
duslries In under!P"oduote internship proly of the former Environmental Clearing
jects and graduate thesis or design proHouse Organization , the center recently
jects, lee notes. Among 22 companies
released a bibliography of material
and agencies Involved are Bethlehem
relating to the Love Canal.
Steel, Carborundum, Chevrolet, Fisher
Price Toys, Goodwilllnduslries, Harrison
MHlcal.,._
Radiator, the Niagara Frontier Vocational
Another focus of faculty efforts has
and Rehabilitation Center, the Research
been the emergency medical system in
Institute on Alcoholism , and Welch
Western
New York. Faculty from the
Foods.
Department of Industrial Engineering
The 22 companies and agencies incur
have
conducted
a series of resean:h
no direct costs from the program, lee
studies in this field during the past six
points out, but receive significant
years, including an investigation of the ef.
benefits. In nearly every case, improved
fectlveness of the training of emergency
methods, cost avoid110011 or cost savings
medical technicians and evaluation of the
have been reported. In some cases, sav911 emergency telephone system in Erie
ings have totaled more than $50,000.
County. Recently , Warren Thomas.
FEAS faculty are porlidpoting In a
chairman of the depMm&lt;!nt , completed a
large number of funded research projects
study establishing new zone boundaries
that relate to local Issues and problems,
for Buffalo's ambulance system to reduce
the dean submits, adding that one of the
the time required for an ambulance to
newest and largest of these Is an effort by
reach the scene of an emergency.
faculty in Civil Engineering to work with
Several U/B bioengineers are at work
the Niagara Frontier Tranoportalion
with the research stalls at Children's,
Committee to develop a car pool pro·
Meyer
Me!Oorlal and Buffalo General
gram for local industries in order to help
hospitals.
conserve energy.
Many FEAS research projects are
T.......,..tattc.aadtbeee-1 directly Involved with industJy; a good
number of them , such as Calspan and
Robert Paaswell and Antti Talvitie of
General Electric, are local industries. lee
Clvil Engineering are both involved In
points
out that among the companies
several projects relating to localtranspor·
David Shaw of Electrical Engineering wiU
tatlon systems, including Buffalo's new
be worldng with on his recently·
light raU rapid transit system; these
announced $790,000 contract with the
studies utilize both federal and local fund·
Department of Energy is General Electric.
lng. Paaswellis currently directing a major project funded by the u.s. Deport·
Dr. T . T . Soong Is rurrently carrying
out experimental studies · at Calspan's
ment of Transportation to analyze the lm·
wind tunnel fadlity on automated control
poets of rapid transit development.
Local environmental Issues and prosystems for building structures In a project
blems conc:em engineering faculty , too , · oponsored by the National Science Foun·
lee states. Three engineering faculty
dation .
Another way In which U/B faculty In·
recently testified at a public hearing
terad with local industry Is In continuing
against a plan by SCA Chemical Waste
education , with 20 to 30 courses being
Systems, Inc., to dump chemicals . into
offered each semester through Millard
the Niagara River.
FiUmore College and through special
Prolesson Dale D. Meredith and
seminars
and workshops.
Andrew C . Middleton worked with the
During National Engineering Week this
Division of Sewerage Management of
year
FEAS
oponsored a Mmlnll&lt; on toxic
Eric County's Department ol Environ·
waste disposal which brougl:lt together
ment end Planning to improve a system
experts
from
outside this area as weD as
for phoophorus rem&lt;&gt;Yal at the Sewer
Dlslrics No. 2
trea!ment plant. , c~ ol local companies and
. .1 -!1,
Their~ raultoodlll...,v· ' ~rrvoents ........ ,, · , r~ ,_,,

.....,..

--tar

'.J

&gt;

•J

•• • • . ; : J

'.r:.GJ'.,_

The expertise of engineering faculty
has been utilized by most local industries.
Lee says. Serving as consultants. U/ B
engineers have worked with a wide range
of companies.
Placement efforts with local companies
have also increased, he notes. Last
March, the Deportment of Mechanical
Engineering held a · Job Workshop" In
which representatives of local induslries
met with students to discuss employment
opportunities. The event was highly sue·
cessful and wiD be repeated.

.-

C - b u t l - to profaato..U

Lee also mentions the extensive con·
tribution of U/B faculty to professional
society activities.
" I think it is fair to say that there Is not a
local professional engineering society that
. has not benefited from U/B engineering
facuky ," he says, noting that FEAS has
regularly worked in conjunction with local
societies to provide programs and
workshops.
These societies have presented major
awards for outstanding service to faculty,
also. J . Gordon Hall's recent receipt of
the 1979 Aerospace Pioneer Award from
the Niagara Frontier Section of the
American Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics Is but one example.
lee feels that FEAS community efforts

will not only continue in the future but will
be augmented with the addition of still
..,_ore projects.
New protec:ta
Among new projects Is a faculty-wide
commitiee studying fEAS.industry In·
teradion. It is pursuihg several new ef·
forts with Western New York industry
and governmental agencies, among them
.an optional cooperallve education pro·
gram .
FEAS is also working on.development
ol a self-supporting technical information
sean:h service that would be available to
the area engineerin9 community. lee
feels Jhis service would be porticularly
valuable to smaller engineering componies and businesses that don't have
library capabilities.
A new Cold Regions Engl.-ring
Science Center Is being established by
FEAS and the Faculty of Natural
Sdences and Mathematics that will provide "significant technical asmtance to
the region," Lee says.
FmaUy, the dean sees an extended role
in the future lor the Laboralo.y lor Power
a nd Environmental Studies, head·
quartered on Ridge lea, which has been
providing technical information on
energy and the environment to stale
legislators and which w1l serve as a base
for future energy resean:h here,

Five-year NCI grant funds
total cancer care program
Total care for cancer patients Is the aim
of a new Medical School education program that will be funded by a flve·year.

$726,296 grant from the National
Cancer Institute.
U/B medical students and residents in
training at six local teaching hospitals ore
learning how to treat cancer patients
more effectively and comprehensively as
a resuk of the effort, which wiD incor·
porate current Information about cancer
into the students' curriculum.
Dr. leonard A. Katz, the grant's prtn·
ctpal project director and associate dean
of Medicine, !eels the program will help
future physicians to provide better care
lor cancer patients. Too ohen , he says,
Information about cancer is given to
medical students In a fragmented man·
ner.
"Many patients and , unfortunately.
some physk:ians, still see _cancer as a
hopeless, terminal illness at a time when
more. people are cured ol it than ever
before," Katz explained. The patient may
equate cancer with death or Ungering
painful IDness and so may his or her
physician , employer, relatives and
friends . AH this can create social and
emotional problems In addition to
medical ones .
"Physicians who only infrequently deal
with cancer patients need to learn more
about rurrent diagnostic and treatment
po-ocedures and how they can help these
patients deal with emotional problems

:=":ft~~~ea~~=

~'

••

,,

j

•

patients in their care should be referred to
more specializll!d practllloner$," Katz
pointed out.

•

The aim of the program, howewr, Is •
not to make every physician !Vaduating
from U/B a cancer _,w;st.
Katz said the program expands U/B's
relationship wtth Roswell Park Memorial
Institute for the benefit of the medical
students and residents.
Freshman
medical
students
volunteered to participate In the first
phase of the _..,., this September by
attending weekly sernlnar5. This segment, according to Dr. Katz. will be re·
quired for the entering~ of 1980-81.
In addition, city-wide multidisciplinary
medical conferences on cancer are being
held monthly in £hildren "s, Buffalo
General and Sisters of Charity hoopilals.
at RosweU Pari&lt;, and at the Veterans Ad· -&lt;
minislnllion and Erie County Medical
Centers.
Included In the program as associate
project directors are Dr. John Wright .
pathology; Dr. Edward Hendenon , act·
ing head of the Division of Medical On·
cology, and Dr. Frank Schimplhauser.
assistant dean of medicine .
Assistant project directors are Dr.
Stephen Noyes and Dr . Monica
Spaulding, medicine; Dr. James M.
H . -. surgery; Dr. James R. Humbert.
pediatrics; Dr. Richard Johnson and Dr.
li.M. Dayem, nuclear medldnc; Dr.
John Lore, otolaryngology, and Dr. F.J .

Gaeta. ~
- . .... •.•. ~~
. ...

., .

. · •

~·.~.

•.
.A...

�December 13. 1979

"-

Springer Implementation tops agenda
Execadw Committee, Nov-28.
..,;:..
~~~ot 2:30p.m. IO
JWm•l~oiM-

q-

The mlnu1es a l - -.go tOct. 31. Nov. 7.
and Nov. 14} wac appoyvd.41 circulated.

o.:.re Report
A.,.,..,_,

ltaD

~

The
al doloytng lmplemoniOllon ol the
_Springrr Report on cuntcu1ar struc!Utw: came up.
and the Ptakknt rNdc referencr 10 his dtlcus6ions
abou1 this """' the Cabinet and with lhc Deans. He
Mid lh.t the OtaM art united in going IC)I'Volard With
the impienwnt.etion. induJ:fing ~ing that
.,... there are appropriatt edueedonal ~srfic:ations lor
doponu,. &amp;om lhc 3-too-·3 IW!danl modulo The
DVE 0.... ..;II . - ma1&lt;e .,. ollhe Deono 1n collecting tha necaury documentation from departrMnts. end wtD ~ the President and Vk:ePrnidonlswhm-ng.
When asMd by 1M Chair about the future plan
for developing •n Honors Program at the Uniwrsi-

~ Pr~ ~~::: ~~~agr":d
that resourca fOf deYelopment ol an Honoo Pro-

:,a:sh:,~~ed~ ':'

=H':r.~
.

suggated the need for the appointment of one 01
more indMduals to work on details with the
resulting~ being reviewed by, for exampie.
the Educ:aUonal Polity and Programs Committee of
lhe SenaiC .

be~~~~~~&amp;,=~~-=
The Ptaidmt noted that the Owmceb had earlier

~ that there be created a SON¥1jll!lide.
Honors Program. The euct cktaih of such ~t-o·
gram arc not worked out , nor Is tM plan ceniin to
be implemented : ~ the Chant:eBofs PfD-

=

~~~=:=:.:c:::
~::n:u~~

~';ts 1~ :~~

SUNY students uhimatfly invofved . The President
saM! rhat tt was his pot.ition that ~ shouk:l ~

Co~~~t:u~.=~:SUN~:

Prognom.

B . 1l&gt;&lt;Cholr
The Chak' r~ed that he had rne1 with the
orientation Advisory Commit1ee and discussed

=~~~he~:nbu?::;:d~~;oi
-.....-

... be - · d and deueloped.

lttm 63 Commltt« Reporb
Copies al lhc lolowing AD HOC Commlllee
membership~ circulated ; The AD HOC Committee on AfftrTTWttiw AcTion and the AD HOC
Continuing Education Committee h was noted by
the Chair Nt no term ol offlcM was listed since AD
HOC ComrnJttees continue as k&gt;ng as the majof
Committee Is aetiw. llle recommended members
for the two Committees were approved by the

FSEC.

.

The members of 1M Uniwrsity Gowmance
Committee were scheduled for the 1981 ·82 terms
on the besiS tha;t thil is a new Senat• Committee
and is
in being appointed .
The lis! of nwmbe-5 fOf The Educational Policy
end Progrlm Commrtwe was circulated II was
noted this Committee is tornpOMd of ex-offldo
according
a pnor decision of
Profnsor Bftdahl asked If Commihee Reports
cou~ be r6!q'Uested earner than at tM md of the
academic year Professor Soltoff repooed that the
plan is 10 conlllotl the Chair of each of the Commit ·
tees soon 10 make the request for a progre$5 report
earfy tn the Spring Semester.
ProfaiOf Berdahl Mked also that a requesl be
made 10 1lw Academic: Plannjng Comminee for a

late

members.

10

FSEC.

==7~ar~·'Q!~~~~~·~~~

quest to the Commit1ee
hem

140W~

A. RdrmclttMIII r~rlon
Profeuor Hoddie.ld. ChaJr to The Academic
Planning Comrnit1ee.. pruented the amended
raolution ol the original resolution pramted by
Prot._ Huddloslon. tAppondlo&lt; 0
The lolowing changa W«r• m.Ge 10 the"amftld·
ed r•tolutiOn . io re:ad, (d) the AdministraUon .
Deans. depertment chairs and facuhy make a major
effcwt to max.lrnlz.t admission applications
mtnimw tn.ldcnt attrition .
An a6dllion ...... I'Mdc .
Icc) lht Admillbu is aMad to rev\l!:w the efforts
on the m11tta1 ol admissions and .nrition and to
10 d-.. s.n... In April G&lt; Moy.

and

h

was

MOVED tSiggelkow) SECONDED

(~ to trantmit the Raolution on f«uJry
Retnmchment as amended to the Senate to be
aatd upon )'be motion was DEFEATED 6-9

~~~~~~~;:

C:,~f!:'t:'rJ:k~~:"'Jw~ .

CARRIED.

fuR coune 1o.t for llUdenb:
t2) w . - - e - a l l h c - h &lt; M s
cmlil vo1uo tor con1ac1 houn In mony
COUIMS , end
(3) We haw .n option for the equJv~ contact
cr-edit hour prindp&amp;e for aedlf in exc.as of roruct

hourtm fe.wexc;:eptions.
Profeuor Tatt.t J)I)Ced that the Comm11tei! had
taken Into considnation those divisions as
Engineering whoM: aedits an: lnflumced by an out·
iide accrediting group and tM courws taken
It was recommended
by tM FSEC to re· anangt
primori1y
by ·
the: four -part raolution by nche.nging part 3 end
pari 4 of the raofution . This was acceptable for
dari:Ocallon
$C!Quenu.
Profusor Schwartz spok• in favor of the resolu·

and

tion.
II was MOVED t5ponogle) SECONDED (Wolckl
that t~ resolution bt transmitted to the Senate for
their consideration. The motion CARRIED.

B. Oll&gt;er

Professor Hamlen asked the consida-ation of
FSEC dialogue •olollng lo The Rep&lt;WI allhe Cho•

(11!14!79) att.ached to Nowmbrr 14 Senate
Minules • ..,.n!lng The Bmo1dyn Jewish Hospilal
bankruptcy ~m
the potential effect on our
own Medical Sci&gt;oolond !he u -.
Membe" al !he FSEC suggesled having Vke·
Pre:silknt Carter PanniU come to an Executfve
Senate Meeting soon to diiCUss thls issue. The
Chair agreed to invite Dr. Pannill to the December
12 meeling ollhe FSEC.

and

Appendix A- Springer Implementation
Bockli'OUnd

The J977 Report of the Faculcy Senate. Committee on Curricular Structure (now untversaly referrnac:W . among
Olhers. the foftowtng recommendations:
• That the University re-affirm lM three..a-edll:/
three.-contac:t hour coune as the 5tandard module
for Instruction in the lecture-recitation . or seminar
mode:
ethal the University undertake a systematic
revtew of the curricular structure of all
undergraduate degree granting units and
red to as the "Springer Reporf1

plogfaf1'\$ ... :

• that the Internal e\laluaUon of each unit or pro·
gr-am WU at least address e.:h of the following : {a)
justification of the use ol instructional modules other

than dw standard three-credll/ thrH-contad hour
course in non-LaboratOtY COUt"Se$ , (b) an estimate of

~~:~~ "'a:k~lal~;;.~~'s:'~~d=.::

contact hours ... :
• that the Unlwrsity not aUow the aBoc.ation of
resources among units to be de1ermlned solely by
the number of student credit hours generated ....
In June 1978. the Vice Pr-esklent for Academic
Affairs, sent a memorandum to [)reans and Oirecton In Ac-ademic Affan calling for careful scrutiny
of aedit hour5 assigned to courses in preparing their
responses to the requirerne;nts ol the Spnng.r
Report . A timeta~ was proposed according to
whk:h departmental reports were to reach the
Facuhy or School level by mid ·November to be

~~ha~nJ~on~ry ~~~ t~J~Ium Committee no
Re:sponses of depanments and facutties. with few
exceptiOns . proposed moving toward contad/ oedlt equl~aSency by either of two modes: {a)
redUCing credit to conform with contact (in most
c.ue:s. reducing 4 credits back to 3) . or (b) 1~­
fng contact to conform with aedit (In most cases . in·
creasing 3 contact hours to 4) . In addition . some
departments offered ;ullifications lor departure
from contact/ credit equtvakmc:y . But no )usttflca·
lion$ for departures from the three-credit/ threecontact hour standard moduSe 'N't!l'e lnduded . nor
wa.s thtre much evkience (except in a few cases)
that a systematiC revWw had taken pbtc:e on the
acadtmic reasons for pac;kagfng courses the way
they Vro'ef'e

No report was flk!d by Heahh Science depart ments and programs . DUE was give:n oral
assurance by the office ol the Viet President for
Heahh Sciences that complete contact / aedil
equivalency prevailed.

-

cvaluotions end lheW ..,.Ill.

w•

The ~ of the departmmts
dllcouraglng 10 lhc Comminn. Only two clcpoolmems hom
Hallh SciaQs .apondod ..... allhc o(.
tecled dopodments In Acodomlc Alloits dlcl nol ....
pond . a l l h e - oubmllled loilcd 10 ad·
.U... lhc c:rilerio qUOied ..,_ _ Nonetheless. d-..
Cunlculum Commlnee bcgon Ill wook in the hope

:::. '{;,'f: r:::~ 1';)~~:

lion .

In October. there were tdll many departments
whldl had no1 yel ..,.ned. The DUE Oe•n
ad~ that . in t:Jf'der to adUeve irnplmwntation
of phase two m ~mtber 1980. the Curriculum
Committee. in the abiencc of departmentaJ data
suffident fore delibe-rate evaluation. would be fore ·
ed to lAke action &amp;eading J.o IR-wfll In departments
and programmatic chaos for their stude:nts. He
therefore requested 1he President to defer im·
plementatkwl until September 1981.
There were other good reasons for this COUtM of
adion. The Dean h6d nodced a widespread tenden·
cy this Fats to undere:nrolt. lriggered by the decrease
in four~ c:ou.rsa and the: pauciTy of two-credit
cou.rMS . which might haw bee~ used to round out

~each~~er~o ml : : :~~
semesters with 128 hourt. (The racutty Senate has
~ made no recommendaOon regarding this overaD
minimum .) At the 5ame time. !here was a dramatic
increase in demand fOf new five-credit courses
hilheru&gt; (;ghdy en&lt;OIIed ro .e. basic t...;gn language
courses) . and fOJ one-credit courses in physical
education - even by tho$e who had fulfiUed lhe:ir
physical education requirement.
To Implement in the faD of 1980 would mean
redudng e\len further the number of four..a-edit

=~~~~=~~~:t' r6:

more credlb withoul taking six courses. The decision to defer implementation until 1981 would
mean tt\ait (1) departments would have more lime
to prep.a.rt }usi:Dteations fOJ courses ol other than
three ctedib: {2) the Curriculum Comm{lt" could
give thne justifications the deliberation they
deserve: (3J the FacuJty Senah! could come to a
detmnination on the 128-aedi! minbnum: (4) in

1980. 1he Unlwrslty would noc haw to ~M the fuU
weight ol two depre:sslw mrotlment effects at once.
the "grandfatha- dausaM (the effects of
whldl wm have diminiohed by 1981) and •he
tendency toward undetenroUment noticed this year .
When the recommendation to defer implementation of pha• two was ddcus.sed in the Academic
Cabinet. the Dean was asked \It/hat criteria the Curriculum Co(nmtttee had been using in dealing with
departmental )ustificatlons for ckpartur• from the
3-for-3 standard module. He responded that the
CommUtee was using the broad guidelines 5Ug·
gested fn the Springer Report. namely compar·
ability to programs at other, iimilar insttluUons. and
consistency ol 5ttucture with other on-campus programs ol a bask::aDy similar nature .
Several members of the Cabinet expreued
di!lsatilfaction with these criteria . and broached the
possibility ol a comminee ol the Facu"v Senate to
prepare more specific and datailed aitttria which
might serve as guidelines to departments in assign·
ing courses credit value . and to the DUE Cur·
riculum Committee ln e~aJuating drpa.rtmental pro-

namety

f)UtDe~~~t:~Se.h:tfe~~t;:

and constftutlon of wd1 a a&gt;mmlttee and to make a
recommendation to d-e Executive Committee of the
Facuky

Senale.

re~w! t~~~~~ou"'!i'~ ~~t:U!r'Ju=~
!'ions for departures from the 3x3 module . as provided In lhc Sprin!l"' Rep&lt;WI : •nd

BE IT RJRTHER RESOLVED THAT lhc

Sen•••

approves using the pradic:e of pee:rlnstit_utioru. a.nd
cognate dbdpline$ as preliminary sounlng criteria
for- such justificafiort$. provided the DUE Cur·
ricu.lum Commttt~ is also ready to allow other
justiflcaUon:s for particular Couries and to allow

~~~~rsd~,::{s~::~::t~::!=:d
Phase One Implementation: and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT •P·
pro;niaw Senaw committees report to the Senata
on both the 128-hour requirement and on the ap-propriate adjuslmenb lo planning formulas because
of the new headcount/ FTE U.ifts .
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT 1hc Sene••

=ta~ t~rnsf.',:: :!~::,S: ~n'bY

dw Dean . wi!h the understanding that compliance
with Phase One lmp&amp;ementation wiD noc thereby be
jeopardized or ettuf'!Wolmted .

U/Bwomen
bowlers are
5th in nation
The U/ B varsity womei1's bowling
team Is ranked fifth in the country In the
Collegiate Bowling PoD announced
earlier this month by the National Bowling Council ol the Amertca.n Bowling
Congress.
The Royals. coached by Jane Poland
placed slxih in last yeac's National Col:
legtate Championships at MUwaukee.

Wise.
Defending nalional champion Penn
State is ranked first in the poll, followed
by San.Jose Slate, Erie Community CoJ.
lege and HUisborough (Fla.) Community
College .
The University ol California at
Berk; ley is No. 1 in the men's division.
U/ B's women wUI compete in the
Arizona Stale Invitational at the
Showboat Lanes in' Las Vegas. Nev. , on
Dec. 30-31. with over $5,000 in scholarship grants as prizes.
The Royals finished second behind
San Jose State in the 1977 toumamenl
and sixlh last year.

5 students
win honors
in music
Ave U/ B music siudents have received
Anna C . Garrahee Scholarships.
Anna C . Garrahee was one ol the first
women executives with !he Buffalo ollice
ol New York Telephone. A trust lund
established through her estate has been
set up to assist local music students in
defraying educatio~ costs.
Winners are Slephen R. Beamish.
North Tonawanda; Deborah Bateman.
Niagara Falls , Ontario; Roseann
Perrello. West Seneca ; David MacAdam ,
Cheektowaga, and Kyle Peterson ,
' Buffalo.
A total ol $1 .700 lor the awards was
received by the UIB Music Oepartmenl
from !he trustees ol Ms. Garrahee's
1
estale .

73 from WNY
get recognition
Seventy-three Western New York
students have been selected to receive
scholarships from the Kan Parker
Scholarship Fund at U/ B.
Selected on the basis ol outstanding
scholarly achievement four received
S300 awards. ,
They are' Patricia Gorman and .
Charles W. Steams ol Williamsville. John
Richardson ol Niagara Falls. and Mary
Spry ol Youngstown.
Students rectMog $200 awards were: Cathleen
Boling, Alden: Gretchen Vedder. Amherst : Ronald
See. Bemus Point; Sean McHale.. BiasdeD.
Also. Isabelle Cozm..ll!. Michael C..;l&lt;owoki.
Patrick Dowel. John Hughes, Kevin Land. StanLey

r.~~a~~e:n?"r:!ar=:

Richard Travers and Donald Weatherbee. aD !If
Buffa~ .

Al5o Teresa Antonac:d, Theodor• Paweta.
Sha.on Reichen . Rlcluud Volt Caroline Zut...

~~~JL::ey~~c:~~c':rlu]t~:

Depew: Eric Spina. EggertMIIo: Robert Go.by •nd
Kevin Uhrich . al Elmo: Denno Polukl. F!Umo&lt;e:
11mothy Thiel. Gaspon end l.ouno Cool«. Getz.

ville .

Alto. Paul Gugbemt Hamburg; Alan Woodard ,

lAlla Ass.d . Andrew Morrow. Kevtn
Walsh. Jamu DaJy. Ketfnore: Troy Beutel. Mark

Jam.tStown :

Corio. Paul DlM1Do. Susan Eigenmann , Cra4g
Nev..oeD, Meureen Poole. Lockport: John Barr. Jr .•
and Jooeph Kr•"""l/k. Nlagono Folls: Rlchanl
Ackelsche:rer and Barry Goodin. North T Ot\8WJfl •

do .

p.~/'R;.~~f;~~~-cs:~

Mod! P- " '· Sloan: John Cal.ngelo. Brion Mol

•nd David Rovner. Snyder; David Oune. Gary

Gowor. E1Wobeth Gill. Goty Peten . Kalhle&lt;n
Weibel. Tonawanda: Ke:vtn Cotter, Mary Grtfftn
and Cheryl Zimmerman. Wn Senec:a: Brett Col
lin&lt;. Wesdleld: Thomu Boldric:k. G.-.gcwy Kress
and C&lt;a~g Wachob. WllliamMIIo. end M.n. Webb.
Youngstown.

Nineteen of these ssudentJ were recommended
S:.:..,~ ~ •w.nts by lhc Engllleerin(o,
Karr Porl&lt;e.. who eso.blished lhe schotanhip
fund . Is praldmt of the Buffa&amp;o Eledrk: Company.
P'ftldent al !he Bulla1o Chambol- ol Com·
a fonnermemberolthe U/ 8 Couodl (1945

post

mere:•.

~ =:a7!7·!;:l:r.w;p::Jr~=-':"

,..,hbn ,. • . ' ..

i&lt;/i'I!Uildiig " ..' oJ A n - thg(,_, P.-...,, . . - n!IOifjllp

�December 13, 1979

II

Changes in health plans effective Jan. 3
As • .-all ol Fedenl ~ and
nega&amp;~~ons bet-. lhe
end 11s
various t.rgalnlng unlls. the Slate Health

s-

Insurance Prt9am will undego a major
with the start ol !he new
year. EJrec:llve 1/3/80, ..-rly 3,700
SUNYAB ~ enrolee! In one of
t1uee 1lealth options (Siatewlde, GHI.
and Health Core Pl4n - HMO) will receive
subotanllal Improvement In benefits, the
P...-.nel Office points out.
These enrollees are PR and SG.

reslrUCiuring

managerial/ confidential employees,
faculty apd professiOnal staff covered by
UUP, Security Service represented by
Council 82, end the Admlnlslnl~ve .
Operalionlll and lnstitutlooal Service
Units of CSEA. AI&gt;Proxlmall!ly 110 other
employees (In tiM i&gt;roleoslonal, Sdenllfic
and T echnlcal Service UnH represented
by PEfJ ara excluded and will continue
under their current health plan's coverage
until their union contract is signed with
the State.
Mr. JoMph E. Lippert, SUNYAB
manager ol emplOyee benefits admlniolrlltiOn, highlighted the chan!~'!$ as
follows :
Smtawldel'lu
Blue Cross will continue to underwrite
hospitalization coverage. Medical and
surgical coverage provided by Blue
Shield and the major medical coverage
carried bY Metropolitan are being consolidated Into a new medical-surglca
coverage to be undelwritten by the
Metropolitan Ufe Insurance Company.
~n drug benefits have been
carved out of the current major medical
coverage and will be offered as a freestandlng J&gt;n91lm. This new separate
prescription drug Insurance J&gt;n91lm
(which generally covers all but the first
dollar (Sl) of each prescription) wtB be
available to aD employees excepl those
represented by CSEA, filr which a unionadministered prescr1ptton drug Insurance
program has already been eslablished .
Uppei1 lurther explained that under
the new Statewide Plan an individual can
receive major medical benefits up . to
$25,000 a year, and $250,000 In a
IKetlme, In addltion to hospilallz.atlon
benefits (under the old plan cunently In
existence,

maximum

benefits

~hill been expanded.
Certain . . . _ have been added,
too. For example, coverage for
chiropractic will be J"'''Icced only
for condition• requiring manual
manipulatiQns of the spine to comet a
subluxation that can be demonstrued by
~-fllll or for services preocrhd by a
physician. A "no-fault exclusion" has
been added which makes Statewide
coverage secondary to no fault
automobile insurance in claims involving
automobile accident victims.
GHI (Blue Cn.)
This optioil now places greater emphasis on preventive care and on first
dollar coverage . New are a $15
allowance (now $5) for visits to a doctor's
office and a SIS allowance for a oOc:tor's
visit to a patient's pome (cunendy s5 per
home call) .
·
Chang&lt;!$ In maternity coverage are
similar to the Statewide Plan. Blue €ross
will provide payment In fuU for hospiial
charges. The doctor's charges will be paid
In accordAnce with the existing schedule
of allowances. An addltlonal S50 payment for doctor care of a n.....oom child
has been added.
Lippert explained the new GHI Plan
will feature the same changes in coverage
as liSted abolli der the Statewide Plan
(up to S40 payment for each out-ofhospital psychiatric visit , voluntary

HEALllfCARE

lltelllizotlon, of alcoholism,
• ......._ lip to $50 for ambulence servtoe end the "no (auk exdusion") . He
noted one mojordl~-pr~
drugs coverage. CSEA members are ex·duded (as In the Statewide Plan) since

=

::v
S1

H..tdo Can,.._ (HMO)
This plan provides services rather than
enrolfees for their cost of

reimbursin9

medicaf oervlce and emphasioes preventive rnedk:ine and care. Basicallv the •

same coverage continues Into 1980 with
improvement of preoc:riptlon drugs. Currently, enrollees are able to purchase
prescription drugs at the HCP Pharmacy
at a reduced rate. Alter 1/3/80, CSEA
members of the HMO wiD be eligible for
the CSEA S1 prescription drug plan at
community porticipoljng phormocla but
not at the HCP Pharmacy. Non-CSEA
members are eligible for the special HMO
Sl per prescription (and refills) plan when
written by a HCP physidan and filled at
the HCP Pharmacy located in the HMO
Medical Center.
Lippert feels "the cap on out-of-pocket

PR&amp;SG
Mgmt/Conf. and
UUPMemben

Security Service
(Unit Council 82)

.....

Fa-.

.....

$2.46

$8.02

$2.46

$0.00

$4.90

$0.00

$2.81

~

~

Admlniotratlve,
Prota.ton8l. Scleatlllc
Operational aad
&amp; T echalcal Unit (PEF)
lnolltvtional Services
Units (CSEA)

..._

Fa-.

..._

$7.40

$3.46

$9.34

$3.05

$9.36

$0.00

$4.28

$0.00

$4.03

$0.00

$4 .65

$0.00

$2 .19

$0.00

$5.74

$0.00

$0.00

PIAN(HMO)
STATEWIDE PIAN

(.,aue Croat

Metropolitan ~
Medical)
GHIPIAN
(BiueCrou)

Coverage begins 1/3/80. ·First bi-weekly
payroll decfucllon at new rate is
12/ 19/79.

are

$15,000 a year; $50,000 In a lifetime)
He added that "the new plan is designed to provide protection against the
costs of catastrophic illness. It places a
maximum, or 'cap.' on the out-of-pocket
expenses an employee pays for covered
medical expenses (excluding outpatient
treatment by a psychiatrist or
psychologist) at $475 for individuals and
not more than $625 lor famdies ."
Deductbles wiU rise to $75 (QOW $50)
for lndlviduals, and to $225 (now $150)
for families . Alter dedudibles have been
met , the new plan will pay 80 per cent of
covered medlcaf expenses of up to
$2.000 and 100 per cent of covered expenses beyond $2,000. Currently. once
the deductible has been met , insurance
covers 80 per cent of the remaining
medical expenses, regardless of the total
amount .
Matemlty
Statewide
• The new plan guarantees full 0001erage
for maternity-related medical expenses
for female employees, opouses of male
employees who have family coverage
and dependents covered under family
coverage. AdditionaUy. charges by a
physician for care of a n.....oom 'child wiD
be a covered charge under the major
medical portion of the plan up to a ma~­
imum elf S50 per child (this allowance will
be a par1 of the mother's bill for maternity
expenses, and not subjed to a separate
deducti&gt;le) .
Coverage for out-patient treatment by.
a I&gt;SIIChiatrist or psychologist is broadened to include 80 per cent of reasonable
charges, not to aceed S40 per visit ; subject to an overaU maximum benefit of
S 1,500 In any calendar year and $3,000
during the lifetime of any covered
employee or dependent.
An allowance wGJ be provided of up to
V50 under Blue Crooo for ambulance ser....,.. to and/ or from a hoopttalin connection with·~ ln·patlent admislion . ,._~
Valui\I.OfY_sleriiWolicSn' 11M !Jeett aooeu
as a covered ~ under major
medic-' c:ov.noge of aatment for

~:.;.:;.i:l~ ~~~

pracrip1ion drug plan. Non-CSEA
members of GHI must pay their own
pharmacy bills in full. obtain a receipt and
file a drug reimbursement claim to GHI
(80 per cent reimbursement alter the annual SSO deductible per family Is
estabflshed) .

payments end !he pracrlption drugs
under the Statewide Plan are the most
llgnlficant changes." He added , "the new
Slalllwide Plan offers not only greater
benefits but eliminates the need for
employees to keep track c:.· drug :.!Us and
flU out forms to take advant..ge &lt;'f the
benefits, so long as they usc a par·
tlc:ipallng pharmacy." He~ elect
to use a 'non-participating pharmacy
under the Statewide Plan, they stiU have
coverage . In these cases, Uppet t noted
they will have to pay the ph• •·•·acist fuU
price, obtain a recelpland forward H with
an appropriate claim lonn to Blue Cross.
The Penonnel Oepartruent expects to
receive employee identtflcatlon drug
cards (similar to a plastic credit card)
within the nex( two weeks from the
Employee Insurance Sectton In Ahny.
Lippert antldpates Individual diolributlon
to aU employees coocerned during the
last week of the month . He added that
"booklets, containing full details of the
new Health Insurance Ptogram are now
being prepared in Ahny. As soon as
they are printed (hopefuUy by mid to late
January), copies will be provided to all
co\lered employees." Specific questions
on the new plan as weD as current
coverage should be directed to him or
members of his staff (Fran Stanton and
Chris Sutter) at Amherst Extension 2650.
Below Is a rate comparison of health
coverages.

a..--_..

Comedy
night
~

Frederlc:b (abow) emceed an

ewnlnt

(ealurintJ IIOU"' otand-up comics Su...S.,
Pub became the Co!Mdv

.. wm.-

Store Nonh. That's Stu Shapiro wltb the

-

·; To,. $..,11001 without: .

.

-

�u

December lS. 1979

tJS
Moscow hasn't really changed
in 10 years, Hays and Garvin find
while there for· major conference
James Res1on said it first In the Times
YeTy day U/ B Linguistics Professor
David Hays came out of the Soviet Union
In late November. Hays feels it bears
repeating.
Remar1utd Reston (w&gt;th Hays'
unequivtlcel second) : Moscow is the
most sloWiy-cllanging capital of any in·
dustrialized.11arion in the Western world.
Russian !fiends who picked Hays up at
the alrpon had tantalized htm . "Wait till
you see the changes." they said .

the

But there weren't an9. The architec·
ture, the ambtence . the style . Hays
lamented 1n a recent interview, were all
the same as they had been a decade

"and successor corporations.·· and ar
Georgetown .
K~M&gt;WII

!&gt;Y the Sowleto for mac hine
tra.,.JaUo n
Both men were involved in a conference on the same topic in Armenia 12
year~ ago: and both are well-known and
respected by Soviet scientists.

pie appeared to be dressed better. but

Hays spoke on " Communication and
Control1n Man and Mechine Translation ''

none of the social revolutions which have

at a plenary session of the 1979 intema·

eartJer. There was more traffic ; and peo·

swept the U.S . In the last 10 years could
be detected .
At a dinner Hays attended . for exam·
pie. a male colleague who had already
enjoyed one ···roast " too many. stood to
propose yet another round of quaffing
"to the ladles!." bless them.
"That couldn't happen at a professional meeting In the U.S . today: Hays

remarked to a woman present.
"We're thankful H still happens here."
the Soviet woman scientist responded
somewhat primly.

'

Another U/ B linguistics professor.
Paul 'Garvin, made the same trip to
Moscow the last week In November. He
agreed that any changes In Soviet Ule
have been .. quantitative.. rather than
"qualitative ."
.
For example. all outdoor advertising
still is reserved solely for the Communist
Party. he notes. "Glory to lzlbor," and
"Glory to the Pany" remain the Soviet
counte~

of

"Have e Coke and a

Smile ... Yet. a fe:w neon signs now
trumpet the availabUity of lmpods from

socialist nations.

S""'wl baa hit Mo.c:""'
Garvin reported that Moscow's suburbs
have begun to SPfawl. But they're made
up of the same high rise apartment
buildings Soviet planners have tradi·
tionally favored In the postwar era .

There are inevitable changes in the
social vernacular.
Students at Moscow State University
(where Garvin met the current SUNY ex·
change delegation and negotiated a ·
teaching otint lor hlmseK for a year from
now) sport beards and blue jeans as their
American counterparts might.

...

Garvin said with only slight exaggeration.
Hays and Garvin, both made the trip to
Moscow to participate in the second International Seminar on Machine Transla·
tion . a field In which both had done work
prior to joining U/B: Hays at the RAND
Corp .. and Garvin at Ramo-Wooldridge

And. rock is "in" - socialist rock
though it may be. Occasionally, voices
from the West are aired - but the anist
will be someone Uke Elton John who has
either vistled or has some special tie to
the U.S .S .R . The best home-grown
groups come from Soviet Georgia .
Garvin was told . The male rock idol is
Biser Kirov, a no-doubt funky Bulgartan
whose records (Garvin brought one
home wHh him) top the Moscow charts.
The ''georgeous" Alia Pugachova is his
female counterpart , she's currently
featured In a successful movie "The
Woman Who Sings," a bit of inteUigence
Garvin gleaned while thumbing through a
Soviet movie magazine.
Radio Moscow now offers a day-long
English radio service. Garvin noted:
yean ago. there was only part-time
English on short wave. The news on
Soviet airways , lncidentaDy, is presented
without vitriol or bombast. he .-kl.
Roportt on the Shah's being transferred
to an air base in Tuas were covered
quite even-handedly. lor example.
course. a lot of the news In the U.S .S .R.
inYOives gloWing reports about this or that
accomplishment or achievement In the
economy or In agriculture. "That's been
going
on
for
60
years . "

or

tiona! gathering : Garvin's paper was an
update of earlier work he had done. en·
titled "The Fulcrum Approach. 12 Years
Later.·· He was al~ chairman of sessions
of· the meeting's section on analysis on
machine translation.
•
Machine translation Is just what it
sounds like. It's the field of developing
technologies all&lt;l techniques lor having
rfll.lchines rather lhlln people meet the
world 's ever-burgeoning translatipn
needs - an area in which the two U/ B
lingu ists agree . little progress has been achieved .
In the U.S .. the Air Force has lor some
IS years had in operation what Hays and
Garvin describe as a "low quality"
machine capability for translating pri·
marily technological information . Gossip
in scientific circles has it that a "reverse
Sputnik" phenomenon finally set in , that
the Soviets in the last three or lour years
have become hell-bent to catch-up with
or surpass this American achlevement . At
the All-Union (a Soviet term corresponding to what we'd call national) Transla·
tion Center in Moscow . three teams are
hurriedly working on machine programs
for ttanslating French . Gei'TT\lln and
English into Russian . There's' a crash
atmosphere . and a deadline lor completion of next year .
Although seminar partlclpants were
not invited in as consultants. the Soviets
clearly are interested In the exchange of
Information , which could enhance their
efforts. The two U/ B experts suspect,
though , that despite the big push, the
Soviets lack the computer capability
necessary to achieve significant
breakthroughs.
Also attracting Interest at the Moscow
session (and the primary locus of a concurrent scientific gathering In the Soviet
capital) were computer-supported terminology banks (technical dictionaries)
lor the aid of human translators. Here
again . though. Hays assessed , the
technology has a lolljl way to go before it
meshes comfortably With the needs of the
humans who must use il .
Hays and Garvin were haU the
American delegation at the Moscow
translation conference . Three East Germans (two of whom were women) , three
Czechs . three Bulgarians , . two
Hungarians. a Pole and a Frenchman
rounded out the non-Soviet contingent.

Hete - ·re not .., c:ooceraed
Over 100 papers were contributed ,
Hays said with a shake of the head . "In
the U.S .. you might get six for a slmUar
event .''
The general U.S . population (scholars
and scientists. included) Is blithely
chauvinistic concerning languages, the
linguistics duo grumbled. "We take the
altitude that d the research Is worth its.
sah. H will lum up In English sooner or
later." Granted, between 6(). 70 per cent
of aD research and technical papers are
published in English (and about 20 per

Non ProiH Org.
U.S . Postage
PAID
Buffalo; N.Y.
Permh. No. 311

cent In Russian) , but there's no room for
complacency, they agreed . Hays. who
··1s not mono-lingual," noted there's still
much material in his field to which he
lacks access because of language barriers.
Soviet English teachers who studied at
U/ B In recent summers and ones he's
met In Moscow have told Garvin that
English Is taught not onlv In English
departments In Soviet universities . A
physics depanment is quite likely to offer
a course in English physics terminology,
as are other technka.l and scientific units.
In America, he mused . our eoglneers,
to mention but one group , seem oblivious
to work done in Russian . Otherwise , with
soaring engineering enrollments ,
students should be "hollering" lor courses
in that language ; they are not.
Neither are U/ B students panicularly
excited about the SUNY-Moscow State
exchange, It appears. The head of this
year's exchange delegation (a professor
of history from Oswego) complained that
students
from
SUNY · Albany
predominate . Surely, some social science
m_a jors from here ought to be inlerested,
Garvin suggested . They don't have to be
greatly accomplished In Russian to be
accepted . either.
Garvin will teach at Moscow State dur·
lng the 1980-81 fall to spring break, from
about mid-December to mid-January.
For beginning grad students, he will lecture on topics in linguistics. For degree
candidates.. he'll offer a research seminar
and a "high-powered course" on lunc·
tiona! linguistics theory . Madellene
Mathiot of the U/B Linguistics Depanment. is lined up lor a similar visit to
Moscow In 1981-82.

The price ol c offee
A Buffalo News interview last week
with another recent U/ B visitor to
Moscow, Dr. Claude Welch, offered the
startUng news that in the U.S .S.R . coffee
costs $15 a pound .
Luckily, they don't drink a lot of It, said
Garvin who reported paying only about
19 kopecks (25 cmts) lor a breakfast of
bread. buher, cheese and a glass of tea In
a subsidized student cafeteria· at Moscow
State. Lunch was half a dollar. Hays'
tourist hotel breakfast cost $2 for much

.

.

:-..,.

Garvin and Hays concur with Welch
that the Moscow subways are model
operations. Clean, ohen overdone stations boast two sets of clocks: o ne set
gives you the ti me : the other ticks off the
seconds between trains - never more
than two minutes at the quietest times.
even less during rush hour. Fare is 5
. kopecks (about 7 cents) and-you can ride
for miles. Newer stations have flou rescent
lights Instead of the elegant glass
chandebers which decorate older ones,
but even so the tubing is tastefully arranged, not Just lined-up In monotonous
rows .
Garvin browsed in the so-called "dollar
stores'' where foreigners (and Sovtet
citizens with· hard currency) can buy
Russian-style luxuries. There are no
bargains, he complained. Stolicho.aya
vodka is only about S1, a fifth cheaper
than in Buffalo, and a stylish fur cap
which caught his eye went for $240. "I
abstained, .. he grimaced.

Operu, tours and Iran
Hays augmen ted his conference-going
by attending a performa nce of a ria-

tionalistk: 19th century opera. "Ivan
Susanin" at the Kremlin Palace of Congresses and by taking an "lntourist" ride
through Moscow.
The English-speaking guide on that
tour came up with lwo observations
which struck him as "typically Soviet."
First, she explained that the legislature
in the U.S.S.R. is in "two parts, eq ual In
number: half labor and half intellectuals."
Then , she notl!d, "religion here -is the
people's personafbuslness. Hence, then!
are no statistics."
"I think we'd call'that .a non-sequflur."
Hays grinned .
Both men reported that no one they
met talked about "Iran."
The sole exception, an old friend of
Garvin 's muttered simply : " The
Iranians must be mad."

n P o Q~C
1
'9!1
.Qc.tna•ri'Jit'll

R.I.

.to ·

~41

· · ·

·

a

l !fi Jr.

heartier British fare: the first day only,
•,,·.·,···. '.
. . . ·. · ·. ·. ·. ·. · ·. ·.
coffee was 31 cents extra.
~
Garvin stayed on "campus" at Moscow
&lt;&gt;&lt;•~ A . .. . ~;..;- . · · . · · · ·
State for the four-day visit . His accom Kor•ye, &amp;
· 6.1011 ~· - • • • . • • •
modations were In the 25-story, ornate
.f,• ~ __.
Stalinist skyscraper wHh "wedding cak~
,
.
-~-·JI!II~o;o:il-~
trim" Jhat dominates the suburban cam~,. ~. 4!P~ 1
pus builtin the early SO's. Located across
,
. •
·I ·
the rtver from Moscow Center near the
Leoln tJIBs, the Unlvenlty is seven sub- . ~.~.":'."":"-~~--:-'':-~~--.;1
wa11 stoi'IS dist;u&gt;t from dolol(rllown and
,. , , ,
, .• Dono~ .;.,. ~ u.
1&gt;\11 one
.
, re""lv~ fr~ ¥&lt;J ,t;!JflS In the ,,.• • ·
-"~-or--.
Hills
' ·.• iV.;.;;;.T.

W',.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>I

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

Blacks
march for

ollocalad budget,
"'n April 1979, 17 block and minority
SlUdcJ&gt;ts wae Illegally removed from the
SW&lt;Iet Auocilltlon Senate. ol which
they democratlcaDy oblalned nrpraenla·
Uon on • [ED. NOT£: A campu•wlde
relerwndum lad to dluoMng the entire

·---·-··--·

NO. 13

Ketter tells Senate
of plan for
honors program

Dorm incidents
lead to drafting
of 14 demands

Security 'anti-black'?
Prote$1ers at Monday's raUy charged
that U/ B Security is onti·block and
doesn' t respond to attacks on blocks by
whites. One white individual at the
demonstration was relieved of a pellet
gun by offioers with no further incident. A
block bystander complained that had the
person with the peUet gun been block, he
would have immediately been hauled off
to 1"~The protesting group Issued 14
demands and o statement charging that
block students at U/ B are not receiving
services I&lt;&gt;&lt; which they and the taxpayers
ore paying. Over the post years, the statement charged, "many attacks hove been
made 9n11 the basic rights of block
students and other minorlly students.
" In December 1976. two block
students (ollioers of the Block Student
Union) were expeled and joUed because
they rewlted agalnll being told they
could not purchase candles lor a Kwanz:ao .-lebratlon with money from their

e

SUNY in
line for
475 cuts

~justice'

"We want justice," some 200 blacks
chanted Monday afternoon during o
demonstration at Main Street in the
vicinity ol Diefendorf Loop.
The group blocked passage of four
buses I&lt;&gt;&lt; o brief Ume, but there were no
incidents.
The Block Student Union , the U/ B
NAA&lt;::P, and Phi Beta Sigma were listed
os sponsors of the raUy.
A University spokesperson sold the
demoostroUOn resulted from confronta- lions over the weekend between block
and while students at Amherst.
Public Safety officers reported that four
students were injured in three separate
incidents.
At the Faculty Senate meeting Tuesday, President Kener sold that from
depositions he hos read so far, the whole
o.fio.lr seems to have ignited early Saturday at Wilkeson Pub when a while Student remarked sorcastlcaUy to o block that
the lraniim situation "has pushed them
off the front pages of the newspapers.''
A light erupted which was stopped by
friends, but another ensued later
outskle.ln the later incident, the block
student allegedly broke a beer bot1le and
cut the face of the other, reportedly o
member of U/ B's footbo.U team . Keller
said no one would idenuty the assailant
and police lear members of the team may
intend to take independent action in the
matter.
Sunday at about 2 a .m . a snowball war
took place between dorms-which is
somewhat of a winter tradition for
residents of the Amherst Campus. What
sparked further tension. however, was
that a dorm window was broken, eulling
the leg ol someone inside. An irate roommale ran out swingirlg o hockey sUck. A
block student was hurt In the incident and
charges are being leveled. Ketter said .
MeanwhUe near Governors, other
students throwing snowbaUs decided to
bombard o car With a block student inside The block fought bock . wielding
belts, among other objects. More
students joined in and another light ensued. Ketter sold .
Suspects taken Into custody by campus
police were released later aher a short
period because the evidence against
them would not stand up in court., Keller
reported.

·oec. 1.1171

VOL 11

Because of a "delerlonting ltnoncio.l
outlook" for the State in 1980-81, the
Division of the Budget has asked
Chancellor Whorton to reduce SUNY's
personnel target by 475-a move the
Chancellor believes wiU make program
reduction and retrenchment " totaUy
unavoidable."
Reading excerpts from correspondence between DOB and Whorton,
President Ketter informed the Focuhy
Senate Tuesdey the! DOB plans to reexamine each State agency's expenditure
ceiling in order to make cash savings dur·
ing the remainder of the 1979-80 budget
year and "permanent base reduclions"
for 1980-81.
DOB asked Whorton to n!!duce the
March 31 SUNY personnellalget by 260
positions, with an additional 215 n!!ductions to be mode by this June. The total
cash savings is expected to be around

$3i&lt;~.:"J~ntd

Car -won't start?
Maybe It won't work with this much of the white stuff but a new booklet from
Env&amp;onmenlal Health and Safety tells you how to start your cor when snow
cowrs the engine-among other tips for winter driving . See page 3.

Fall headcount total
was up slightly: 24,683
Total enroUment for the 1979 loU
semester was 24.683 students, the official report of the Office of Admissions
and Records lndlcales. AU ligures In the
report reflect enrollment as of the close of
classes on September 21.
The overoU head count enrollment was
104 more than in the loU semester of
1978-79. an increase of 0 .42 per cent.
Total undergraduate registrations
declined by 100 to 16,960; graduate
numbers were up by 150 to 5.970; and
professional school enronments (Dentistry, Law, Mediclne and the Phorm-D
Program) increased by 54 students to
1.753.
WhUe slightly ahead of the previous
year, the head count figures were below
targets.
The 24.683 individ ual students enrolled were equivalent to 21 ,407.7 FTEs.
The report gave no FTE comparison with
the preceding year, but FTE enroUment,
H has been noted elsewhere, feU below
targeted expectations by a greater
amount than did head count.

Who emoUed where
13,697 1ndlviduo.ls enrolled as deyUme
undergraduate students, including 1,948
men and 5 ,749 women. 7,364 of these
were enrolled In the lower division (up by
some 300 over the previous year) , and
6 ,333 were In the upper division (a
decline of some 200 from 1978) .
Total graduate registrations were
5 ,970. Of these. 2 ,867 were lull-ume
students and 3,103, part-lime. Some
3 ,335 of the graduate students were
men ; 2 ,635 ~Nere Women.
The professional school registn&gt;UOn
total of I ,753 lludents were oil c.lossified
as lull-time. lllere were 1,263 men and
490 women In these ochools. Law enroBed 547 men and 264 women; Dentistry had 305 men and 47 women;
Medicine, 402 men and 176 women;
and the Pharm-D Program, 9 men and 3
women.
Tocal day division head count was

21 ,420, up from 21 . 115 the previous
year.
MFCdown
The Millerd FUlmore CoUege (evening)
enrollment was 3.263. down some 200
from the previous year. MFC gained
slightly In part-llme.students, but suffered
a drop of 269 in fuii-Ume registrations.
Of the 5 ,900-plus graduate students,
5 ,066 were enrolled in core campus
departments and 904 were pursuing
graduate programs in the Health
Sciences . other than professional
degrees. Educational Studies had 1.344
graduate students and the School of
Management, 755. SILS enrolled 172 ;
Socio.l Work , 177, end ArchHecture and
Environmenta l Design , 102 . The
enrollments lor the last three schools
were aU at least 20 per cent higher than in
1978.
Health Sciences divisions accounted
for 1,078 undergraduate registrations;
the remaining ones were in core campus
de~rtments .

Where they come &amp;om
Of the 13 , 697 day sc hool
undergraduates, 3 ,011 entered the
University directly from high school;
1,306 transferred from other colleges and
universities: and 78 transferred !tom
MFC. There were 360 re.,.ntertng
students; 8 ,857 continuing students, and
85 others.
MFC hod 419 students entering direct·
- ly from high school; 388 transfers from
other coUeges; 189 transfers from the day
division ol the Untverslly; 508 re•entering
students , and I. 759 continuing
enrollees.
Among the 5 ,970 graduate students,
887 Wet/! new to • graduate school; 420
were transfers from other schools; 609
were re-entering U/B students; and
4 ,004 were continuing registrants.
114 otudents trantlerred into professiOnal school programs here; six · re·
entered; 3n wae new to ~

·--·-a. . a.

a

the authorized number of
positions lor SUNY is 34,517, with U/ B
having 4,279 of them. Up to now, SUNY
hos been allowed to fill 93.7 per cent and
U/ B hos authorization lor 95 per cent.
Eliminating 4 75 more positions would bring the total up to 8 per cent of what the
Legislature authorized.
Right now. U/ B does not know what
share of the 4 75 redudions it must
shoulde&lt;, but p&lt;e&gt;portionolely , the
Un iversity would hove to Increase its
vacant positions by 59. There ere currenUy 44 more positions vacant than the
sum needed, but 23 of them may hove to
be used by personnel from the Erie
County MedJcal Center who are being
moved onto State Unes.

OTPScut.
In oddHion , in OTPS (other than
personal services) , DOB asked thai
SUNY make • further reduction of $2.3
mUUon . U/ B's shan!! of this would be
somewhere between $250,000 and
$300,000. Ketter relayed . But this poses
a particularly dnlicult situation, he sold,
because busing costs come from OTPS,
and by April I, U/ B will owe $280,000.
Ketter explained that DOB originally
figured the busing money would come
from personnel savings, but he Isn't sure
if that is how the bill wiU now be paid.
In an eight-page response from
Whorton to the DOB which Kener
quoted in part, the Chancellor called ettention to the fact thet SUNY's total
budget enrollment has grown by 5, 750
FTE' s or four per cent over the past ftve
years, while personnel has been cut by
five per cent. In eddHion, SUNY has
been forced to meke $41 .5 million in cuts
during the some years to fund new program development , me inly lor hospitals.
The Chancellor went on to note thet
Un ive rsity programs " changed
dromatlcaUy" when o 500-bed hospital
was added to the system and two other
hospital programs were expanded. What
is happening, complained Whorton, is
lhot the 95 per cent of students served by
other areas must subsidize medical programs and funding of hospitals for five
per cent olthe student clientele.
What aggravates the situation, the
Chancellor wrote, Is that aU this Is happening whUe Bundy and TAP funding to
private schools Is going up by $33
mtllion . He suggested that such circumstances would lead one to believe
that reducUOns mandated by the Stale
ore not being ohored equaUy between the
private and public sector.
Although cr1ter1o I&lt;&gt;&lt; retrenchment ore
being dllcuued by the VPAA- ond will
be made avalloble to the Senate's
Academic Planning Committee-the

·--·-a...a.a

�Dlcember 6, 1979

.,.__LeoL«t

u - y II nol now
oper1111ng tn a ~I mode.
Palldent saijl the
Attempting

to amplify Ketter's

raponse to a question from the floor,
Senate Chariman Newton Garver told

Mildred Blake Center
dedicated ·in Ellicott
Students, faculty and staff recently
paid td&gt;ute to the late Mildred H. Blake,
whose 20 years of service to U/B were
memorialized by tile naming In her honor
of the Student Affairs Center In the
Joseph Ellicott Complex.
Miss Blake joined the University In
1959 ana most recenUy served as
assistant to the vice president of student
affairs. She died of cancer In September,
1978.
The recent dedication of the Mildred
Blake Student Affairs Center was opened
by Rowena Adams Jones, coordinator of
the Student AffaiB Office In Ellicott,
loDowed by music by the Graduate SUing
Trio.
Rev. Edward T. Fisher of the Newman
Center gave the Invocation.
Several University and communtty officials deUvered brief remarks abOut
Mildred Blake's life and work They Included Dr. Albert Somlt. executive vice
president; Rose Soonlers, chairperson of
the Coundrs SulH:ommtttee to Name
Buildings and Grounds; Dr. Richard A.
Siggelkow, vice pr&lt;isldent lor student affairs , and Sister Mary Delaney, coor-

dlnator of the Cooperative Teacher
Preparation Program at Canlsius College.
Also, Dr. Michael P . Farren, assoctale
director of the Center lor the Study of
Human Groups, and Michael Plen::e, student representative to the U/B Council.
The ceremonial naming of the center
was condUcted by Carole Hennessy, program director of Everywoman Opportunity Center, formerly a U/B staff
member.
Joseph M. Fischer, director of the
Creative Crafts Center, unveiled a red
oak dictionary stand and an Information
display stand designed by Jim PugUsl,
assistant director of the Center, and constructed by local Craftsman Jim ~tes .
The dictionary stand was received by
Dr. Anthony Lorenzetti, associate vice
president for student affairs, and wiU be
permanently placed In the Mildred Blake
Center, 167 MFAC, EUk:otl. The center
Is a central place for students and other
University members to relax, read , study,
use typewriters, etc. ·
Dr. J . Daniel Vann, head of Lockwood
Library, accepted the information stand
which INIU be Installed In the library

• Enrollment
era-- I, call
school; and 1,256 were continuing.

A_....,

...Siateeded ,.....,

·rhe A'&amp;R report broke down
un~uate enrollment according to
approved and Intended majors, this way:
Arts and Letters, 802; Engineering and
Applied Sciences , 2,664 ; Health
Sciences, 2 ,197; Natural Sciences and
Mathematics, 1,294; Social Sciences and
Administration, 1,813; Management,
2 , 102 ; Architecture , 345 , and

miscellaneous, 54.
Core campus graduate students are
"nrolled as follows: Arts and Letters,
572 ; Educational StYdies, 1.344;
E~ and Applied Sciences, 410;
NMural Science and Mathematics, 436:
Soda! Sclenca and Administration, 919;
Soclill Work, 177; An:httecture, 102;
~. 755; Information and
Unry Sludles, 172, and RosweD Pari&lt;.
107.
Health Sciences graduate enrollmena
include: O..n~~stty , 54; Health Related
Prolealons. 224; Pharmacy. 73; Nuu.tng. 250; Medocal Sciences, 184. and

RosweD Pari&lt;, 119.
Other stollstk:s for the fall semester
reveal that there are 1,391full-ttme faculty members and 479 parl-Ume. This Includes 503 (u_U professors, 548 associate
professors, 439 assistant professors, 125
Instructors, three adjunct professors, and
252 lecturers.

Senators he believes H Is "essentlaf' lor
the University to begin weedl~t weak
progr,ams, on academic grounds based
on substantial external revl&lt;!w.
K¢ter added that he still feels SUNY
must close a campus to remain solvent,
but legislators find that option "un-palatable."
Hoaoq program
In an attempt to enhance the University and .. regain mom'entum ," Ketter told
Senators he wahts to take a leadership
role In establishing a special honors program for about 250 top-rated students
who would be recruited to the University,
In groups of 50 to 60 a year. Currently,
the University has no programs catering
to "intellectually elite" students.
The program , which has so far met
with "euthusiastlc support" from faculty
and adminlstraUon, would be planned by
a group of 6 to 12 faculty. In H, degree
requirements might be waived and
accelerated, intensified programs
created, Ketter explained. A reward
system for particlpaUng faculty would also
be built In, he added.
To help combat the "Isolation" of many
faculty unfamiliar with the work of colleagues In other specialties, Ketter suggested the Reporter might be asked to
run stories each week featuring a particular department.
The President said he has also been
made aware that faculty would like to
know what he looks for In a dossier when
evaluattng an individual lor promotion or
tenure. When unanimity is lacking on a
recommendation, or when more lnfor·
matlon Is needed or questions aop up,
Kl'ller said he meets with the appropriate
deans and/or vice president. Any individual under revl&lt;!w has the right to examine his or herd~. he said._ ·•

that I don't have a question In my mind."
Unfortunately, this doesn't happen
ohen, he observed. What does, seems to
take the form of an "apolOgy~ for the Individual In question. The conr.otatlon is
that "this Is the best we could do , given
departmental circumstances" Ketter said .
And this _type of stance, again , "raises a
red flag."
Criteria lor tenure specify that a facuhy
ml!lnber must contribute something
significant beyond the dissertation , the
President explained. While a good dissertation Is a valid reason for hiring an individual it Is not one for promotion, he
, Insisted .
It is not uncommon, the President continued, for him to caU a leader in the field
and ask about the work and reputation of
a faculty member being considered lor
full professor. If the expert hasn't heard of
the individual, Ketler said this impacts
negatively on the person under review.
Turning to evaluating teaching quality,
Ketter said the University hasn't come to
grips with how much tt should really
count lor promotion or tentJ.!l!. Quickly
done opinion polls of studentS do not
carry much weight, he noted.
Cut short because of time constraints,
the President" said he would continue
discussion of the topic at the next Senate
meeting In February.

Other matters

In other matters, the Senate Executive
Commttiee dectded to send a resolution
on retrenchment back to the Academic
Planning Committee for a report before a
vote Is taken . The resolution was offered
by Professor Mark Huddleston, from
Political Science.
Responding to last weekend's violence
on campus, Senator David Gerber moved that a committee be created to explore I
the qualtty of life for students on campus.
The Executive Committee wiD report on
the proposal and likely recommend a
more narrowly defined charge.
No magic numbers
Wtth no debate, the Senate passed a
There are no magic numbers of
resolution: reaffirming that educational
publications' which guarantee upward
justilk:attons be made lor departures from
mobility, the President remarl&lt;ed; rather,
the three-for-three contact/ credit
he looks for how well the faculty member
module; approving the use of peer In·
fares In the context of the department, . slltutlons and cognate dlsciplines as
and what has made him or her an
preliminary screening atterta lor justifica"outstanding" employee as opposed to a
tions; and deferring the Phase II immediocre one. There must be something
plementation of the Springer Report until
in the dossier, Ketter went on, that sug1981. The resolution also called lor a
gests the Individual wiD remain producreport on the 128-credlt hour requiretive In future years.
ment and appropriate adju.&lt;tments to
As far as prom..otion Is concerned.
planning formulas due to headcount and
Ketter told Senalors he can say
FTE shillS.

•, _
Blacks
march
_ l,coLl)
Student Senate as it was constituted at
that lime and replacing It with one to
which senators were elected on a dlllerent basis.)
The black students statement continued:
"This past weekend two separate
assaults were made on black students by
white students. No Immediate action was
taken against the white students Involved
although security police had substantial
evidence and justifiable cause to apprehend the assaulters."

. The President said he wiD not meet
direclly with black students making
demands until they have exhausted
meetings with Student Affairs offk:tals
and others. An administrative response
to a meeting held Tuesday Is expected
later this week.
Under no conditions, Ketter said, J
he agree · to any demand that calls for
Immunity from prosecution. As a result of
Generators that convert wood chips to
gaseous fuel for Internal combustion · the weekend Incidents, , Ketter said
engines could moke available on oddi- students charged could face possible
tlonol source of energy for sawmill opera- suspension, expulsion or jail terms.
~·, _ according to engineers at the
SUNY «;:ollege of Agriculture and . Life
o-.1.
Sciences. CorneD.
The blacks' demands are:
Dr. Wesley A. Gunkel and graduate
I. Increase In the numbers of Blacks
student Nick A. Stgrimls have butll and
and Minority Security Guards.
are testing such a gen...ator. reviving a
fl. AD suspects that were Involved with
technology developed in Europe before
the Instances' of o..cernber 2 ; 1979, be
and during World War II when· many
fuDy prosecuted under the Law.
•
types of vehicles were powered by fuel
· Ill . AD securlly guards Involved with
fro m organic by-products. Because wood
the Instances of December 2 , 1979 be
chlp&gt; are produced in great quantities by
under ouspenslon without pay.
sawmUis In the Northeast. they could be
IV. The Black Student Union, Cora P.
used to prOYide gaseous fuel (or the 51&amp;Maloney with aD other minortly organizallonery enjjnes In the mlllo.
tions ~te In the selection of the

Wood chips

"categorically" that he views CjU8Itty of
faculty "from the perspedlve of a person
being sold ... and sold in such crass terms

next director of the Affirmative Action Oflice. This Committee reports .dir"!''ly to
the President. The new ~«ior reports·
direclly to the President.
V. _ Separate Black and Minority
Newspapers funded by U/ B, lor biweekly publication.
VI. Better appropriations of Student
ActiviUes funding for aD Black Minority
Organizations.
·
VD . Meeting with Ketter, Lee Griffin
and heads of Student Affairs and Housing by Wednesday, December 5, 1979.
VIII. To restore the department of
Minority Student Affairs to Its traditional
role as a vttal fu~ctloning department at
the University. ·
IX. African and African-American
Studies Department be established as
such; with the fuU recognition of the

Un~ven::it· more Blacks and Minorities be'
placed on the Justice Board to properly
Insure the weU-betng of Blacks and
Minorities that must appear before the
Student-Wide Judiciary.
XI. The Student Association Mtnortty
Student Affairs Co-ordir.ator, wiD be the
Minority representative with voting power
in the Faculty Senate.
XU. AU Untverstty Mlnortty Organtza·
lions have Input Into the selection of an
administrator to ovenee all grieVances
against Student Association.
XUI. A panel of faculty, students and
community representatives be established
to Investigate the treatment of minority
students on campus. They should lmmedliotely Investigate the treatment of
minority stud&lt;'nts at the Amherst Campus
for the past 3 days.
XIV. Immunity for aD c~emonstrators .

j

�December 6.

1979

Surrogates
Patient stand-ins used
as aid to teaching med students
how to conduct gynecologic exams

Edlloriol-.-

By Mary Beth SpiDa

their methods for opeculum, breost and
pelvic exams. which could revul utertoe
5doncos
U/B medical students
ere learning how
and other problema . If these
to reduce pallents' anxlely, discomfort
exams aren't performed com!CIIy. of
and ernborruoment during gynecolOgic
course, potentially fotol problems can be
examinations with the aid of "surrogate"
mlooed.
patients.
After completion of the program,
The low surrogates, professionals tn
surrogates and @udents evaluete each
teaching and other llelds, also help the
other's performance and cr1tlque the prostudents learn technical aspects of the
gram itaelf. Meny students believe the
exomlnallon . Carefully selected and
experience Is so worthwhile that they'd
tntenslw~ trained, the surrogates ore
welcome Rlrrogate partldpallon In other
"patients, on whom students learn to
segments of the physical diagnosis
perform exams; but must also be
course.
tQChers, who know when and how lo
coned the students.
A coatltba- to edtocatloa
" Before the Deportment of
The surrogates also pace!ve the
program posillwly. emphasizing the
Gynecolog~~'::,etrlcs began the
Surrogate
two years ago,"
contribution they have made to the
explains Dr. Ntnnala Mudaliar, "students
educallon procesa. One surrogate,
married end the mother of two, believes
learned to perform the exams using real
patients In teaching hospilals." This
her portldpallon allows her to Influence
_,hod, used by most medical schools, health core of the future . She joined the
haS several drawbec:lcs.
program two years ago and soys her In·
vofwment and Interest stemmed partly
Being examined by a group of students
from her own experiences as a real
unfunilior with the procedures can be
hwnilietln!l and even painful for patients. pat!Cnl
Students Tlnd their Ieeming experience
"'ne physician I consulted, as well as a
nurse pradltloner, del!vered core with
hampered because there Is little or no
patient Interaction a. feedbeck . But even
concern for me as a person. But another
ma.e Important, the students have to
physician left much to be desired In his
learn to nl&lt;lOgl&gt;lze normal, healthy organs · manner. his ability to communicate and
befa.e they can PfC9eM to discerning ·his attempta at patient educallon," she
relates. As a teaching surrogate, she feels
abnarmal a. diseased ones.
she can aid students to dewlap better
Especielly-tralned surrogate patients
patient rapport.
hq&gt; students muter the techniques of;
lntervlewlng , laking gynecologic
"Paller¢$ ldeaDy should know as much
histories, and performing exams with an • about their medical cere as possible; they
need to learn how to give physicians
emphaSis on c:oncem for patients. It
feedbeck on core and treatment," she
should be noted that prospective
says. But, she points out, physldans must
surrogates must be free of ~
also learn how to communicate often
problems or abnormalties which would
make them lea than Ideal teaching
technical, ldentlflc lnformollon In a way
assoc~ata .
.
patienlll undentand. Patients unfamiliar
with medicel terminology can learn about
Bcldl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . their bodies and their oondJUons ~ the
physlclana take Ume 'to explain In
understandable Janguag.., she feels.
Dr. Mudalier, asoist.ant profeuor of
gynecology/obstetrics, soys lhat before
Goed,.._._.~
the students condUct exams on the
surrogates, they atlend lectures on
"Good heelth cere l:onslirners ere
history-taking, view 8lrns of the breast
those who ask quesllons and demand
answers
In a way they understand," she
exam, and praclice pelvic exams on
says. She oflen chides her students who
piMtic: models of the reproductive
view the examinations as "routine": "To
syslem. The surrogates also undergo exthe patient H is not routine." She also
tensive training 0- several weeks with
tnslrucls !hem· to be aware ol facial
faculty lo learn coned tnetholts for aD
these procedures.
- - a n d remmks which could be
mlolntapmed by patients and urges the
Surrogates, unlike most patients, can
doctor.to-be to encourage questions.
frankly &lt;'tocuts the apprehension, anxiety
Mudallar, who modeled U/B's proand emberraument lemale patients may
gram after others In medical oc:hools In
experience and can lnslnl&lt;:t students on
Ohio, Iowa and Indiana, agrees that
better patient educeUon techniques.
selected, trained surrogates make a ·
Mudallar noles It's. lmponant for students
positive contribution to students'
to learn eorty to communicate well, to
educallon.
make polionts C&lt;Jmfortoble, and thus
"It's effective because It relieves
permit e freer flow of lnformoUon which
students' arutlety, makes them more con·
moy be pertlnent In dlegnosls or
fldent and prepares them better for their
treatment.
clinical wori&lt; with real patients," she soys.
Surrogates also help students perfect

_.

........

Awards criteria
Nomlnallons for lhe ChanceUor's Awards for ExceUence in Professional
Service are now being accepted for the 1979-80 series. The deadline date for
nominallons to be received by the nomination commUtee Is friday, December
28. The eligibility requirement&gt; are as follows. The Individual:
) . must be an employee of on Integral unh of SUNY.
2 . must have completed at 1east one year of continuous professional service In
the position for whk:h nominated prior to lhe year of nomlnallon.
3 . must be an Individual serving In o fuU·Ume capacity in non-teaching, nonlibrarian services. Specific categories Included ore: a) acadernk: administration;
b) business affairs; c) student affairs; d) institutional support technologies: e) In.
structional and research suppori technologies.
A person Is not e1igibje within five yeors after receiving an award. Candidates
must be nominated each year since nominations do not carry over from one
year to another. An updated file must be submitted on any candidate being
renominated.

Those Individuals wishing to make nominations should contact Leo
Rk:hardson ot 414 Capen, Amherst. or Joseph ine Capuano at 266 Squire HoD
for the statement of eltgobilrty and the dossier requirements in support of the
nominee This material Will be forwarded immediately upon request.
•
Completed nomtnallon dOSSierS should be forwarded to Leo Richardson ,
chairperson for Chancellor's Awards Nomination Committee, 414 Capen
HaD. Amherst Campus.

Library

~pening

Ubrartes DIRI:tor s.ktldu Roy (left) and Execattw VIce Preoldoat A1oert
Somlt cut the "rrbboa" to open the ~ ....t E.•••
Deslanll,...ry. Funcla for expe- of the loclllty - e ...-.c!lly the F.....
of SAED: IOIDe 120,000 tor 900 voluOMS. Located In the_., ..... of
,Hayes Hall's first 8oor, the llmuy has 7,000 voluma, ofllce - · a .....,_
lng reoource centu and exhlbh ereu.

~

Bei.n g relaxed. is
key to winter driving
When winter's snow and k:e begin to
play havoc with your car and drtvtng, the
best thing to do Is relax and not spin your
~literaDy or figuratively.
lbel's the crux of a compilation of
"Winter Driving Hlnis." recently Issued In
pamphlet form by the Office of Envtronmeotill Health and Safety.
That office Intends also to set up two
open rap lesslons on the oame subject, Its
Dtrecta. Robert E. 'Hunt adVIses.
"Winter Is Inevitable," Hunt emphastza, "so relax end enjoy H."
One way to avoid problems, the Environmental Health and Sefe1y booklet
suggests: Is "to be prepared." Most cors,
especially American-mode, are designed
to start et very low temperatures. A properly prepared engine should start easily
In Buffalo winters.
A c:Mc:ldW foo _.aiD~ ._..,
The booklet offers this checklist fa. getting ready:
1) Tires must have good , deep tread.
2) Brakes must go on evenly. (Check
for puU to one side when brakes are applied.)
3) Replace point&gt; every 15-20.000
miles.
·
4) Replace spark plugs every 25,000
miles.
5) Replace distributor cap and rotor
every 30,000 miles.
6) Cars with electronk: lgnHion require
replacement of essential distributor ben
approximately every 50,000 miles; spark
plugs about every 25,000 miles.
7) Clean the carburetor/choke
mechanism . Use o spray can of "carburetor cleaner." foDow direcllons. Do
n01 spray the outside of the corburetor.
8) Replace radiator hoses and heater
hoses every two yeors.
9) Replace engine thermostat every
two - three years.
I 0) Replace permanent and-freeze annually. (Provides maximum anti-rust protecUon.)

11) Clean battery terminals and starter
cable terminal annually .•
12) Replace fan beh or genera lor beh If
efiher squeals.

Whattodo If ...
Also Included In the pamphlet are what
to

do~ :

a) Ice /orrN on ..;indowo, Tum on
engine, set healer to hot ancllan lo higl&gt;,
tum on rear defroster-and relax. When
th~t window temperature hits 33", water
forms under the Ice and you can slide off
the Ice sheet with little effort. k's . . and faster than furious haddng.
b) ,Snow cocren engine' Remove snow

eomj&gt;letely from around plugs and off the

distributor wires befa.e starting engine.
Snow In the eiiglne compartment makes
for moisture which, In tum, cautes an

electric short.
c) Snow II deeJ" Carry a shovel and
dig out In front of al four wheela down to

the pa~t; -moke e trick long~
for good momentum. Do no1 optn ,_or
drive whaels; Ice pockets wiD get you.
Also keep front w'-ls olnJlg/11; otherwise
there's more friction than rear wheels can
overcome.
d) You houe lo driue on lee, Go very
slowly; go alow on applying lnkes, too.
You do not haue ~to
snow lira,
the pamphlet polnll oul But good tread
is essential to keep moving. "lf you lee!
better with anow Ures, gkay, but you'D
haw less traction on Ice."

haw

Em-..cy....._t
The booklet outlines whet you need In
your cer for emergenctos, In New York
State, h points out, "you can be ticketed •
you blocl&lt; traffic." Always carry; a thovel,
a bag of rock aalt, a lei of jumper cables,
a blanket, sand (e 40-1&gt;. bag ~ each
reor wheel) , an Ice IICraper end snow
brush. Motorists are warned;&gt;&lt;» to use
concrete blocks for weighting; they can
become deadly flying mlsst.les In a cofll.
sion .

Anally, the booklet offers tricks for
starUng an engine In cold weather and explains just "what the heck's a choke."
Copies are available from EnVIronmental Health and Safety.

Arts Center
Livingston Blddler, chairman of the
National Endowment for the Arts officialed ot the recent ribbon-cu'tttng
ceremony for the formal opening of
Stony Brook's $21.2 million Ane Arts
Center.
The period of October 25-31 morked a
gala week of art, music, theatre and
dance events.

�December 6. 1979

New presidential review process

clsn't what It purports to be'
S....llmenat_a_

..,. be . . . . In Ahny ..-acing ....
Rob.t Keller hM been Hold to 11811 on
.. PNoldenl of SUNYIButWc&gt;. n..t

1*.._..

of the
....._~.
the eladacl ~ cl tN IIUdant body,

and a member of lhe - . . - l l l a l f
of the collge . . . , . by the Praldent,
~andthe.,.......by~ .... · to .,.,.-... "---va M an ad ltoc
haw been ...toed hew..,. me think
evablllon comiiJIIIIM of the praldent's
podormance.
about the - " ' role and power of the
In llltdng contrut, the procedunes
facultv In ihe ...,.....,..,. of
lntlllu·
adoplad this pMI June leQUft the
t1on. My conc1u11ont are not te.....ms
Chancallor to "oonsuh with lhe Plesident
lor thOM who value an open, honat ..,d
on the formation of a vlllllng learn &amp;om a
clemocftllc dialogue about the major pro~ of selected colleges ...t unlvenlty
bloolll c:anltonllng the Univenlty and the

"*

d . - thai has been charted owr the
pMIIIve,.....
The ..., review pcocodures, adopted
by the SUNY Trustees in June 1979
upon the recommendation of a comm~­
tee of campus praidents, drastically
diminish the power ..,d role of those on
the local campus in reviewing their pres!·
dent and influencing whether (s)he re·
mains in office. In order to appreciate the
portentousness of that chlmge H is
nec:essary to compare closely the new
procedwes and the now superseded
1977 guidehnes lor evaluating campus
presldents . The new arrangement
substanUally alters a president's term of
olflce, the composition of the presidential
review committee, and the purpose and
duration of the review process itself.

I . A Pnelcleat'a T - of Olllc:e.
The 1977 guidelines establish that ••tn
September of the fifth year of the Pres!·
dent's period of service, the Chancellor
will request the President to indicate if he
or she wishes to be considered lor realltrmation." The policies of the Board of
Trustees in Artlcle IX S I stipulated that
chief administrative olflcers "shall serve
lor a period of five years" and that the
"service of a chief administrative officer
shaD terminate at the conclusion of an appointive period ." In short, under the
1977 guidelines presidents had a fixed
term of ollice.
By contrast the new guidelines set no
such fixed term . A President does not
ever, in effect, have to stand lor reappointment. Rather, he serves at the
pleasure of the Board lor an indeterminate period. He can be removed only
when the BoaTd initiates what In the context of the new guidelines must be considered a rather irTegular measureaction to relieve a President of his duties.
Whaus previously a president could not
serve beyond the fifth year unless the
Board spec:ilkally acted affirmatively to
reappoint him. hereafter a president will
continue to hold office untU he either
resigns or the Board intervenes to interrupt his tenure and dismiss him. This is a
subtle. but not insignificant shUt of
burden . Its import undoubtedly is and,
more importantly. wiD continue to be. to
entrench presidents. and make their
removal a more unusual. difficuh. if not
extraordinary step than was previously
true.

II. C.._,-Jtlon of doe Reftew
c-!Uee.
Under the old guidelines the
Chancellor Invited the chairman of the
College Coundl, the elected chairman of
the lacuhy senate, the elected chairman

. . .u ..
A '*"PUt communtty newtpapet pubbl.hed
cedi Thuncloy bv lllc Dlwbo ol Public AJ.
f.... S... lJNwnoy d New Von • Buffolo

EdlOriol- . . lacooed .. t36 Crofts Hoi.
Amhcno . Tclophonc 636-2626

Dna.OJ ol Public AH•n
JAMES R Dc5AN115
Edioao-ln-Oucl

ROBEJIT T MARlETT

"" .... Production
JOHN " a.otmER

-Edllo.JOVCE 8lJCHNOWSKJ
Wooldy Coionclor Edioao
JEf\H SHRADER

praidents, or comparlllly experienoed
peers, from outside of SUNY." 'There are
to be three memben of lhe evaluation
team pluo a representative of thl'
ChanceUor's olflce sittlng ex-officio. The
chair of the team is to be chosen by the
Chancellor.
,
The revision Is. in my )udgement, the
most offensive provision of the new
evaluation package. It constitutes the
coup de grace to any of us at SUNY/ Buffalo who may have hari&gt;ored the illusion
that the memben of this community were
to be a decisive force In assessing the perf~nce of our president, and determin·
ing t"'e: · elihood of his remaining in of.
lice.
•
The new procedures violate the most
fundamental norms of demoaatic governance. They displace the central role that
the 1977 guidelines properly assigned to
elected campus leaders in conducting an
evaluatiOn of a president's leadership of
the communHy he serves. As if all of this
were not enough , the very aim of the
review process itself has been modified ,
once again. to the obvious advantage of
incumbent presidents.

m. Tbe Purpoae and Duration of the
R-Proceea.

The 1977 guidelines stipulated that the
ad hoc evaluation committee .. prepare a
written appraisal of the pre&gt;ld&lt;!n~al performance" (emphasis added) . By contrast. the June 1979 procedures state that
the evaluation team should "obtain an accurate Impression of the leadership and
campus condition." The general goal, the
procedures go on to say, should be
similar to that of a Middle States report
which, of course, evaluates an institution
and not a particular chief administrative
officer.
The sole object of the review process,
under the old system , was the president.
It was his conduct in office which was to
constitute the record under review. The
new procedure obscures that objective
and unnecessarily diffuses the charge to
th_e. evaluators. Yet having so enlarged
the scope of the evaluators' mission , the
new procedures severely curtail the time
to be devoted to that task .
Accord ing to the recommended
timetable of the old guidelines. the ad hoc

review committee - s given _.tially

one month to devise pcocodwes to
go-.. the review ~. and then
three months during which 10 gather in·
lortnllllon ..,d liS report.
The new procedures require that the
chairperson of the evaluallng team make
a s11e visit to determine the oCheclule of in·
tervlews ..,d meetings lor the team . The
evaluation team is to make a "villi of up
to three days" during which time K is to
receiVe the views of the President,
chairperson of the local coundl and of the
lacuhy senate, the pcesldtng officers of
campus student bodies, as well as other
persons deemed necessary by the
chairperson of the team.
s-at~

worth aotllll

There are several things worth noting
here. SUNY/Buffalo is the largest, most
complex, ~nd in many ways the preeminent institution in the vast New Y orl&lt;
State system of higher education. It is
hardly aedulous to believe that over a
period of no longer than 72 hours, three
individuals who are essentially strangers
to this institution could come to understand its history over the past live years
and the adequacy of its president's performance during that period. This intends
no rellectJon on the integrity or abiUty of
the evaluators. Rather II speaks to the
magnitude of the task they are presumed
to perform and the amount of time and
effort that one might reasonably anticipate as necessary to complete that task
in a seriOus and thorough fashion.
What then is the ultimate import of the
new evaluation procedures? Stated plain·
ly and bluntly it is this:
First the procedures are a god51'nd to
campus presidents. Few of them will lose
their jobs unless they choose to leave
them .
Second, the reforms enhance the
power of the Chancellor's office in this
process largely at the expense of constituent groups, and most especially of
lacuhy, on local campuses.
Third, the Chancellor, Trustees and
campus Presidents should recognize that
a long shadow will be cast on the
legitimacy of any decision reached
through a process so specious and flawed
as the June. 1979 reforms.
The new presidential evaluation procedures constitute, in the most literal
sense of the word, a fraud . They are not
what they purport to be. They do not, to
any significant degree, hold out the
realistic prospect of providing a meaningful. independent and comprehensive
accounting of those ostensibly being
reviewed .
-Stephen C. Halpern
Associate Professor
Department of Political Science

Sharing rides seen
as step toward community
Edltor:
By this date , faculty and staff should
have receiVed a copy of the T ransporta Uon Survey prepared by the Office of
Student Affairs, 408-409 Capen Hall.
The purpose of this survey is to determine campus-wide interest in two ideas
Involving travel.
The first is car pooling. Reports of
other Institutions of similar size have
shown that car pooling comprtsed of
faculty . stall and students provides a
dependable , pleasant and convenient
means of commuting to and from campus. The survey asks whetlier or not a
faculty or stall member would be Interested in participating in a car pool. and
has space for additional remarks.
We originally began this project only
looldng at the student population and
realized that we were misslnQ the polential development of a greater sense of
communHy tl we did not include aU people em~d and studying a1 the Jchool.
We learned from the Courier &amp;prea that
their area-wide efforts at asseaing car
pool lntl!(est yielded only l2 responses

from U/ B. On the basis of that Information . this school was not targeted lor the
development of a car pool. Informal
assessment of car pool interest showed
that there would be more than 12 people
who may utUize a car pool.
The survey is also interested in learning
how many faculty and stall drive between
campuses during the performance of
their duties. Operation Good Neighbor is
a concept which _flows directly from the
need to develop a sense of community.
The survey deocri&gt;es Operation Good
Neighbor as a voluntary alternative to
campus busing. The idea is that faculty
and staff would drive past certain campus
points where other lacuhy, staff ana
students would be gathered lor rides.
Students have already. been surveyed .
II any member of the campus community wants further informatiOn about
the efforts to assess campus interest, they
are asked to call the Office of Student Af.
lain. 408-409 Capen Han. 636-2259.

-.loeepiiKnkowlak
Office of Student Affairs

Rules for
liquor use
outlined
Editor:

With the approach of the holiday
seaoon, the Alcohol Review Board is

_.., anticipating a considerable number
of events on campus at which alcoholic
beverages will be oaved. Consequently,
we wish to remind members of the
University community that the policies of
the Alcohol Review Board govern the
sale and consumption of aloohoHc
beverages on campus. 1bey are designed
to BSSUre that the provisions of the New
Y&lt;Xk State Alcoholic Beverage Control
Law and rules of the State Uquor
Authority are observed and adhered to.
- Of particular concern is the illegal act of
selling alcoholic beverages without a New
Y&lt;Xk State license to do 10. In addHion,
these policies also place the res:x&gt;nsibUity
for the conduct of any event at which
alcoholic beverages are consumed on the
sponsoring organization and indMduals.
These responsibilities include accountability lor violations, provision lor cleaning up after the party, and reimbursement
for damages or breakage .
Oaty FSA1:aa 'aell' alcobol
I would like, at this time, to once again
draw your &lt;~llention to the fact that only
the Faculty-Student Association, through
its Food Service, is licensed to sell
alcoholic beverages on any campus
location. The definition of sale is
sometimes troublesome lor those who
plan occasions at which alcohol will be
consumed . However, the Law IS quite
specific. Under the Alcoholic Beverage
Control Law, the word "sale" means:
"any transfer, exchange or barter in
any manner or bv anv means whatsoeuer
for a conslderotion, and Includes and
means all sales made by any peDOn,
whether

prindpa/.

proprietor,

agent,

servant or emp/oyea of any alcoholic
be~roges and/ or a warehouse receipt
perl41ning there/0."
It should be stressed thai only FSA
Food Service is licensed to dispense
alcoholic beverages on campus lor any
consideration, donation or fee in any

form . Further assistance in determining
what constitutes sale is available through
this ollice.

C-IDptlon 811lclellne8
Consumption of alcoholic beverages
on campus is governed by a separate set
of regulations, designed to protect the
liquor license. The serving and ::onsump·
lion, without sale, of alcoholic beverages
on aU University premises still requires
permission from the Alcohol Review
Board or those delegated as appropriate
agencies as follows : University Housing.
Squire Student Union. Food Service and
the Faculty Club. These agencies must
approve space reservations and deter·
mine that the guidelines for the use of
alcohol as approved by the Alcohol
Review Board will be followed .
Consumption of alcohol on University
premises which do not fall under the
purview of any of. these agencies must be
approved directly by the Alcohol Review
Board. In such cases. permission to use
the desired space lor that purpose may
also require approval by the Office of
FacUlties Planning.
#
Any questions about thl! matter or
requests for exceptions to the above mus1

be directed to the Chairman of the
Alcohol Review Board at 409 Capen
Hall.
It should be emphasized that any
violations may jeopardize the continued
licensing of FSA and that individuals and
organizations found in violation of regula·
lions may be subject to referrals to the ap·
proprlate civil author !ties or
University disciplinary body.
It is our hope that careful compliance
with regulations will ensure our continued
ability to authorize the serving of alcoholic
beverages at campus events.
Thank you for your coop~ration and
best wishes for the holiday season.

- Aatlttotor F. Loreuetti
Associate Vice President
lor Student Allain

j

�December 6. 1979

Ethics

Unions, demise of loyalty, conflicts
of time and information have combined
to change attitudes on campuses
R_....Sio-,

By Jo,ce Buchn-.ld
lloporte 5loll

-

Because missions and goals of institutions of higher education vary, there can
be no single academic ethic appropriate
to aD . .Moreover, a ~oollapse Ol the old
consensus" regarding the rnilolon of
higheJ education has played havoc wtth
facuhy pen:epllons of how they should
behave.
Or. Norman E. Sowle, director of the
Center for Study of Values at the UniversitY of Delaware, made these observatlor1!&lt; last week at a breakfast seminar for
Western New Vorl&lt; higheJ educators, the
third In a series of eight being sponsored
by U/B's Department of Higher Education this year.
Sowle, president-elect of the American
Society for Value Inquiry and a consultant for several organizations including
the National Endowment for the
Humanities, told educators he Is concerned about the "consequences" of the
disintegration of the "tJadlllonal view of
higheJ education." One such consequence, Is that the nollon of "being participants In a coll)munlty of scholars" has
ruptured. This-Is evidenced, said Sowle,
In the increased presence of collective
bargaining _.,ts on campuses and tlie
burgeoning tendency to litigate
grievances Instead of Telying on the
"judgment of peers."

Oiher AAUP guideHnes state that the
"profeuor as teacher" •hould
"demonstrate respect for the student as
an ·individual," "adhere to the proper rofe
of intellectual guide and counselor,"- and
"foster honest academic condud." To
Bowie, this presents contradictions
because the "professorial relationship is
inherently patemabstlc.
"How can you show 'genuine respect'
lor a student, yet at the same lime insist
·rm the teacher and you're the student?' "
he asked.
Sowle also inquired how an educator
can l!&gt;$lar academic honesty, especially
in a large classroom sHuation where ob"jectlve tests are used . PoUclng the class to
make sure aU exams are turned in Is a diflicuU sHuation at best, particularly ~
several hundred students are involved.
Also, a finite number of questions exist
on any body of subject matter, and after a
few years, they can become common
knowledge, he noted. He had no
answers, but did assert th~t ebminatlng
such headaches by putting exams on file
in the library Is an inadequate response
whl!lt dilutes the educational process.
RGgarding sexual relationships between a teacher and his or heJ student,
Bowie pronounced the situation
"generally immoral," but believes that sex
between two consenHng adults (even ~
one party Is a teacher and the other a student) , should no longer be considered

....,..., .. clad
taboo.
11&gt;e apParent demise of "lnstllutlonal
loyalty" also concerns the UntversHy of
What'• really Immoral
Delaware phllos'opher, and In hts
What he considers really " immoral" on
opinion, Is directly llnked to the now
the part ol an educator Is failure to : meet
nebulous status of the educational misclasses, keep office hours, return papers
sion. Discussing such loyalty today Is
before the next Is due , provide the
about as popular as "talking about
number and dates of exams and papers,
patr:lollsm in the late 1960's," he mused.
provide Information on Qradlng, and
Tlie only guidelnes available on prokeep In line wtth the syllabus. Any
fessional ethics are contained in a stateeducator
chronically guihy of such ofment Issued 13 years ago by the
fenses should be "warned, punished and
American Association of University Proeventually
fired , regardless of tenure ," he
fessors (AAUP) ; that document, .Sowle
- declared.
said, "badly needs reworking."
Sowle also-argued that "no violation of
After quoting from the section of the
academic freedom" exists when an instatement dealing with ethical respon sUtution Insists on " minimum competensl&gt;illtles of educators, Sowle asked in
cy" of fac:uhy and encourages classroom
counterpoint: "How much of the scholarobservation and evaluation by colly activity and production in institutions of
leagues.
higheJ education has the pursuH of
Although Sowle reoognizes that facuUy
knowledge or a search for truth as Its
commltlee wort. is not often viewed as a
primary motivation?" Answering his own
criterion for promotion or tenure, he requestion, he lamented, "Far too little."
jected the argument that, because of this,
One reason, Sowle suggested, Is that
one should Ignore the responsibility.
conflicts of interest arise which underSuch adlvltles are "moral" obligations
mine ethical CONideratlons. According to
and
one lhould not have to be paid to do
a Carnegie FOipldatlon study which he
them, he inslsl'ld.
died, faculty face "conflicts of time," in
On
the otheihand, a "good argument"
determining how hours should be paragainst oommHiee work , he said, exists
celed out among toching responsibilJties,
when 1111 individual would have to
schoiMiy work and outJide activities
sacrifice his or her own career to parwhich oupplement Income. A "conflict of
ticipate In such activity. This could coninformation" arises when it has to be
ceivably happen d no other colleagues.
decided If "Inside information" should be
are ~ to share the commHtee
used for penonal gain, to the detriment
worlcload or when an instHutlon places
of the lnslllutlon.
such a high premium on publication that
Some INIIIutions, such as the Universisuch volunteer efforts would be selfty of Delaware, ~ oolve the problems
defeating.
by crating polida governing the amount
Not on1y 1s "free expreosion of ideas a
ol time t.culty can consult- But more fremUll" for INIItutions of hlgheJ education,
quently, Bowie ot.aved, INIIIutlonal
but, a--le told his audience, ad rules lend to promola such conflicts by
m - should both "e11C011J119e and
considatng f• for service activities as
supPort ~ behavior and lifqjyles
"evidence of scholarly behavior." An lnthat ra11e quations about the moral klal.
llllutlon could try to promote the educaWhere cloe in IOdfty but in the ivory
tional idaJ by tn-.g thai faculty donale
lower '*' this be done?" he asked.
their fees to It, but this would "only aggravate INII!ers," he said. 11&gt;en there
would be no .._... of placating those
who receive Inadequate salaries, the
reputation of the ochool would likely suffer, and ~lions needing -...nee
s- Univenity College at Potsdam is
would be deprived of expert advice.
one of 10 AmGican colleges sharing In a
$540,000 grant from Jhe Fund to ImBowie ouggested thai a "conflict of
prove Post-Secondary Education
jusllce"
Consullants from prothrough the Ama1can AloociatJon of
f~ schoolo receive much more
State Colleges and Untverstlla to help
remuneration than thooe in arts and
cletmniiY how effectively the bUc colICiencls, and IG"Iior faculty and those
lege lew! lkilll of otudents are being
from top schoolo are often oouaht out
dewloped .
raults of the two-year
more frequently than younger ecfuc.tors
study. wtl be made available through
and those from lao prallgloul ochools,
AASCU
as
a
raoun:e
to higher educaregarcllao of KCO&lt;npWur*"· "It's a
tion inllllullonl ~t the United
c:luac caM of the rich getting richer." he

Potsdam grant
funds sldlls st_u dy

also--

n.e

-.~ .

S!ol""··- --

Ticket drawing
Shown pulling lucky numbers for Sabra tickets out of a U/8 oporta cluftle
bag are (from· ldt): Paul Narduuo and Tom Wllcle, U/8 hocby c:oCIIJ)talno, James R. DeSantis, director of pubbc ellaln, and hocby C:O.Ch
Ed Wright. Receiving two tickets for a Sabres game In thla cam- United
Way rallle were: James E. Carrier, Administrative Computing; Robert

Newman, Jr., Animal Fadlitles; Salim Jahshan Entllneerlntl Sc:lenc:e
Aeroepace I&lt; Nuclear; Herbert L Fo.ter, lnstruc~; and John C: Dlesfeld'
Physical Plant, Main Street.
'

Grad student 'majors'
in poker 'playing
You might say that Charles ' E.
Pearson, a U/B !pduate stuiie'nt, Is
" majoring In poker. '
·
'
That's because one of his lnstrudors in
the Department of Computer Science,
Or. Nicholas V. Andler, Is a recognized
authority In the developing field of
"artificial Intelligence." Andler has been
dernonstraHng that a oomputer can be
"taught" to play poker.
Utile wonder then that Pearson, a
22-year-old Niagara Falls resident ,
recently found himself running a coml'uter game of poker In New York City,
With a group of celebrities providing the
opposHion
·Pearson. conducted the game on

two. But in terms of dollars, the computer
increased Its $50 stake to $90.
Without making a Torma! judgment on
the machine's skiU as poker player,
Pearson commented philosophically: "It's
not how often you win, but how much
you win that really counts."
Likewise, hewasreluctanttoassessthe
poker-playing abilities of the computer's
opponents otheJ than to "'--- that
"20/20's" Hugh Downs -~ to
know what he was doing" and Is ''better
than average."
Pearson, a second-year doctoral
hopeful, described himself as "the eyes
and hands for the computer" in the
Omnl-sponsored promotion. "11&gt;e com-

~~sr.,:,:.:;.~';,;l'U,~'jqe!

~~~~d~ll-

v!

Hilton, against a background of hoopla
calling attention to the first anniversary
Issue of Omniscience magazine and promoting the somewhat unpopular Susan
B. Anthony $1 coin.
11&gt;e participants, Pearson reported , Included 1V personabty Hugh Downs,
former middleweight boxing champ
Rocky Graziano, science fiction writer
Isaac Asimov, and former first baseman
Ed Knlnepool of tlie New York Mets,

fiiNIIew

OD

J.w

Pearson explained that he was selected
to "do the honors" because Flndler, on
sabbatical leave, was In Amsterdam, the
Netherlands.
11&gt;e poker game Hself, five-card draw ,
was played on a video terminal wtth
keyboard, which Pearson took to New

Vorl&lt;.

11&gt;e terminal was linked by a leased
telephone line to U / B's poker(&gt;rD!Irammed academic coll)puter· ~
Ridge Lea.
In his reseait:h, Flndler and his aides
have even programmed the computer to
"reoognize" bluffing in a poker game.
Pearson said eaCh of the par11ctpents In
the New Yor!&lt; demonstration , including
the computer, received 50 Susan B. Anthony dollars to · oourtesy of the
U.S . T........uy DeP.Ortment. But, a was
only a loan and the CC&gt;Im. _,.., collected
again by. a Treasury~ _.,tat
game's end.

How61tloe_,.... ...7
How did the con:q&gt;U.Ier make out?
A total ol 10 hands were played,
Pearson re~. and the _computer won

the thinking," he
11&gt;e oomputer even has been "taught"
to deal the cards in random fashion,
Pearson related, but in the New Yorlc
event only the other pllrllclpants dealt.

U/Bn. . . . . . _ . . . .
Conceding U would be P&lt;*lble to
"teach" 11 oomputer to cheat, l&gt;eanon insisted U/B "runs an honest game."
n.e programmed dioc fed into the
computer for the New Vorl&lt; clernonotratlon contained whet Peanon claat&gt;ed as
a "sialic ltrrblgo/' for playlnl poker. He
explained that new and Nflnicl - . g l a
are developed as prowam modlllcallons
are made.
In one type of research, he pointed
out, "seven machines played egatnst
each other In a game, each using a dif-

ferent slnlleiiY·"
,
As to what poker strategy might be
superior, Pearson oommented, wtth a
twinkle in his eye, that a oomputer 11
unable to check on the worth of any
given strategy "because It doesn't know
any better."
Pearson II a part-time lnslruclor in the
Computer Science Department. After the
Ph.D., he hopes to continue delving Into
" artillclal intelligence" through .......rch
and teaching.
.
Flndler sees the uncertainties related to
I'Qker playing as being relevant to such
endeavors as economic planning ,
po!itlcal campaigning and war strategy, in
that decisions mt111 he made on the bull
of imperfect information.
p......,..., then, mlllht be called a deeler
in the eclentlflc wodCl of c:hanc..

�~6.1979

Women's artManben of the new W - NYorlt
Art RetlaUY will be
ahowlnt their worb at Beck Hllll.
betlnnlnt December 7.

w-·•

CALENDAR.
~COIIEDY·

1'111usday - 6
I61H ANIIUAl. INSTITUTE ON fEDERAL
IAXA110111 •
Rep. a.bor B . Conoble h .. oen1o&lt; R..,..blc.n
- o l t h e Houoo Woys ond -...Commllleo
...-s ,_iogio~Mbn, will spool! on "What
Aboul Taus?" . Hotel Stader. T1w two-day ewnt is
- - bv U/8.. Oflloo ID&lt; Oed•·Frn p,.,.
...... tho £no County Bor"""""""" ond the
llullolo ~ ol the s... Sodoty ol c..
lifted Put* Aa:ountants. ReglstraUon mauired .
Col831-4301,.,. .-tnfO&lt;motlon.

""*"

~'IIIICS-CHSOUNAII•

11M ReMW•tatloe Cuter: Kaow Thv
0.. R - w,..... Boanl Room.
Chlohn's Hooplol. 12 noon .
'
~.

-·

CHEMICAL

ENGINEERING

c_.._K_ ...
Doo11oo. ....,_,

SPECIAL
~

.lohn Gonide. Dcpodment ol

Chonocol one!-~. Unlwnlly
Cologo London. London. Englond. 260 ~ - 2
p .m.

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

.... _

PltOIOOUPHY IEClt.IIE"

COfFEEHOUSE•
llw Goodyear Fund and lRC prar:nt a colt.. hou,. stanlng Riot ol · Polo-a n&gt;d&lt;·n·roll
bond-in Goocfyeot South Lounge. 10 p.m.
B.Y .O .B . l8ring Yo&lt;n Own S..O. Munch... pro.nded. Open to .... public.
•
/

hwband IBeau llridgetj ond • N~ York union ·
0&lt;90nloer IRon Ld&gt;man) . he&lt; ddlonce ol tho
powerful anU-Iabor sentiment. and the nmewal of
her M:lf-esteem.
Undoubtedly the bat p;.ce olwortc yet t&lt;m&gt;ed in
Ms.
who Iindy P.Uts "Tho Fty;ng Nun" to

:Z.,.

£ldd

ICE HOCKEY'

r - . . State eoa... Tonowondo loon,..

7 :30p.m.

CONCERT'
from c:.oa.o.tovoldo bv tho 8olrd Con·
temporary Ensembk!:, Jan~ Williams and Yvar
Mlkhashoff. dftcton. 8olrd Recttol Hoi . 8 p.m.
frM admllllioo.

M-

Friday- 7
PEDIA11UC GRAND ROUNDS•
New Mecllc:laa Ia tht ICN. Oilcussants:
Neonatology aaff. Kinch Audlortum , Children's
HospHal. 11 a.m.
ORAL BIOLOGY SOUNAII•
" - uti Or.J
0.. 8nJoo S.um ,
Gerontology R......m Center. 11o1ttmore . Clty
Hoopital. Room 107 4510 Main Sbm. 12:30

F--.

p.m .

- MUSICAL COMEDY'
Tho Club. bv Ew Mmiam. mreded bv Saul
Dun. The Cent£ Theatre., 681 MaJn St. 8 p .m.
General adrniukwl $4; students and senior citizens
$2. ADS wuche.s .Ax.pted.
UIJAB JIIDNIGHT FIUI'
Attodtoltbe-Tomo-11978l lariginaly
ocheduled to. Soptembor, but canoofled) . Con·
faence - .... Sq..... 12 midnight. General ed·
-

__
_
JIEDICINAI.
CHEJIIS1liY
5DONAII•

$2; students $1.50.

_.To&lt;ol~ol

~~u~~o~o.....,...,..

montoiM.

. . . , . . _ . ., Oliung-Ptn Cha~ ~........
d#nt, Ocport....nt ol Medidnal Chc..-y. C121
Coob. 2 p .m . Refrah.ments.

\IIDEOTAPE CAS5ET1Eii • JIOIIIES.

~SCIENCE

ond ....._ his wortc In the l'hotDgrophy Room ol
Bclhunc Hoi . 2 p.m. Sponoorod bv the Dcport-

~.-o~-n..-·c.-ol

dipo from ...... ol the -

-

ol the -

ond

~-- Y-. 4Ciomcns Hoi.
2 p.m. Sponoorod bv the Dcportmmt ol HlstO&lt;Y.

-·
CEU. •

--

MOUCUIAR BIOLOGY AND
CHEIIISIIIY OF IIIOLOGICAL SYS1EJIS

.

-...-~
~-.
0.. .lohn W. 8oyncs. Deportmona ol ~. I.JniYe.tly ol South Coroflno.
. 1 1 4 . H -. 3:15p.m. Ccflco 013.
LAW. EC0N010C5JIEE11NG#
706011rion. 3:30p.m. Thoguat-ntwill

" " " " - Vogolwtl spool! on

"'-"' Rlohls Entllomem .•

·n.. ~ ol

GooMiotlotJ .. tbct..e,
0.. Hugh D. VonU.W.
PHYiiiOLOGY
·

5108 Shmn.n. 4 p .m .

UUAIIFIUI'
MeMo 119781. Conlconce - ....
Squ. .. 4:45, 7:15 ond 9:30p.m. General edmb·
$2; students $1.50.
CortloeciS..U ~- Carl&lt; Hal. 7 p.m.

ICE HOCKEY'
&lt;&gt;- S&lt;aoo

7:30p.m.

PHY1iiC5 COI.I.OQUIUII•

I f f - · """'- B. W-..n.

Pl&gt;ysics

· 454 Fronczak:

Dcportmom. UnMnity ol 3:30 p .m. Co8et at 3:15.

LECTUIE'

w..tc ......._ Or. ~F . Houranl. chairmon. Ooponmont ol Pl&gt;icoophy. Tho Klva. 101
Sakly. 4 p.m. Free: admiiiiGn. Rcfrahmenls wiD be
...-! Sponoorod bv the Undergo-aduote H-,
Counctl ond tho O....C. Oub Racheduled from
Oec...-4,

UI.WIFIUI'
NOYie NovW (1978)

COILOQUIUJJ•
- , " - &lt; Ia&lt; 8-T..., 0.. Shalom
Tsur. Computer Sdonco l&gt;eporttnent, Penn State.
Room 41 . 4226 Rldgo Leo. 3:30p.m. Coif.. ond
dougl&lt;nuts. 3 p .m. In Room 61.

WOMEN'S IIIAiiKE1&amp;\I.L.

be~ Vogel. ........... ol economics at U/ 8 .

•

no. CW.. bv £,. ~m. dnded by Saul
Eltln . Tho Center Thootre. 681 Ma;a St. 8 p.m.
General e d - $4; •udents ond - S2. ADS wuche.s MX&gt;Ipled.

Colloeo. Tonowondo

ice

nm..

NIAGARA FIION11ER 1.5 50CJE1Y
Tho tnt .... be hold In 234 Sqw.. at
7:30 p.m. Explo.o the possibtltU.S--.....,ts In
speol! by the mel of the antwy, lunar mining, solar
pc:JWer sa\dlites, tndustry in IJ)IIC« , effects on human
sodltty. tpaot lew and the moon treaty. Come and
be • part of the adventwt .

MUSICAL &lt;:OMEDY •
Tho Club. bv Ew Mmiam, dlreded bv Saul
Eldn . The Center Thea.tra, 681 Main St.. 8 p .m.
Ge:nenl admbsion $4; sti.Uknts and senior dtizlms
S2. ADS wuche.s aa:ep~ed

Woldrnan 'Tbeatre .

~ !:,!~~ -;19:30p.m . Gene.aled""f
MeMo- Is • pMOdy ol 1930's double bils
(two films for the price of OM) The two movies are
..[)ynaml&amp;e HAnds.. - a rags lo richn box~ tale,
And "'Bula"s Buuta... a b.tdulagrr. ~·s put on a
""""'stoty
girl"""' bocome. .......

tobout.-

5DONAII•
Mkhool -wtlspealton thel&lt;lplc'"lm·
_...,. ol Penon in Contempo."'YPootty • 438

UIJAB MIDNIGHT FILM·
Aluckoflhe-Tooaotoeoll978)Coriginally
tcheduled f"' Septombor but ancdod) . Conf4!ftl10t Theatre, Squire. 12 mklnighL General admission $2: 5tudents S 1.50.
·
A hll.rious and &amp;Htttionate spoof of the nd._
tiona! ''invasion
monster movies. Giant
tomaton in the U.S . sudcXruy go berserk and
spread a reign of tenor and des:ttuction acJOH the
land. the alr and even underwater.

or·

Clomens. 5 P m. ~ bv tho Gtoy Choir ol
Poooy ond t..u.n. O&lt;porupent ol Engloth.

NSPE JIEEIING•
FAiurintJ- fn&gt;m tho Buffalo Ropid Trontlt
System 1 t 1 Wmde 7 p m. AI eng~~nurs •e cord;.!ly '"""-!. Relrnhmonts New ..,.mbon wt11 be
MX&gt;Ipled ...... -

Saturday- 8
UUAB FJUI•
Norma RM (19791 . Conference Thutr•.
Squn_ 4:30. 7 and 9 :30p.m. General admission
S2. students Sl 50
1M tiiOfy ola smaii-\OWn Southern
woriter
ISally Aold) . he&lt; ......,... ..t.tionshlps with ......
do&lt; ond not "' do&lt; to hc&lt;-~rly he&lt; "'!"'

'"*

sa..s-·
"" ......,._ ol ""' "-dam ol lnf"""""""
Ad .... the Pwvocy Ad .. " " ' - ol this ....tt.hop
• hom 7 30 to 9 .30 p m. m 2151141 CondUCied bv

~IMitth~·,7:""" ........... ol .......

""'-.lnlonnotoon.... 636-2413 s,.o.-ed

bv "'" School ol COUEGI: • CONCEJIT•

.... l.lnry Studios.

- c . -. - . .

Cornol - .... 8
p.m A d - II lrw ..a open to tho P~Mc .

Men's follies
'The Club' continua to poke fun at how
mea view - . at the Center

Theatre n..u.dav·Sunclav and aealn
nut wed&lt;end.

Sunday- 9
PRESENTAnON •
An
oad Slido show on a
R__. l/lolt to c.ba. Bobby Ptobis ond Elizoboth
Kennedy. 234 Squln!. 1·3 p.m. Spomcwed bv
American Studies and Women'a Studies CoDege.

I....._.-

MUSICAL COIIEDY'
Tho Club. bv Ew Merria.m , &lt;IW&lt;Ciod bv Saul
Eldn._ Thrt ,Ccnter lbatre, 681 Main .st. 3. p .m.
General admiuion $4; atudmts and tenior citizens
$2. ADS wuche.s acapt&lt;d .

UIJAIIFJUI•
Nonaa Rae (1979) . Woklman Theatre ,
Amhont. 4:30. 7 ond 9:30p.m. Gen..-.! e d $2; students $1.50.

COMEDY NIGHT'
Will&lt;aon Pub. 8 p.m. Sponoorod bv UUAB Cof.
,........, Commllt.!c, Cukurioi Pm~&gt;&lt;mlng Arts
Commltlee ond the Wtlkeson Pub.
Hosting tho owning ol humor will tie Joy
Fredalcb from WKBW redlo. F...&lt;Ued peri~&gt;&lt;men
wiD bt Stu Shapko, Poncho Pamat(.Tom Stratton
ond Tony l..owls . nw. four loco! prol-.ai com:
edia,!ll have performed reaularly at the
Tralamadore: Cafe and haw: appeared at Stage I.
Twenties and Thwties Btues/Jazz will be offered by
plono player Kevin F&lt;nntz.
Take advantage of drink .spedals and let yourself
go for an evening o( unbmtted laughs. llckets Me
$1 and will be sold at the door. For more tnformation aoll 636-2957 .

CONCERT'
Tho U/8 WW E . . - under the dlredion of

mnk

J . Cipola. In • conoort o1 R....., music

futuring guest oboist Nora r-. Katharine Comoil
Tl)q... 8 p .m. Frn e d -.
&gt;·
~"'" Post'"""'-'«! he&lt; .BA hom Jho.Uoi-y of
California. San Diogo, ond both he&lt; MFA and
Ph.D. from New York Universil:y . .She Wti II
member ol tho Center ol tho Crutlv• and Pmonn·
lng Arts h.,.. fn&gt;m 1975 tlnough 1978. She mode
her debut at Town HaD in 1974, and hal sinor perf~. n!OO&lt;ded ond ledured tluoughout tho
Unked Stata ond Europe. In ......_, to he&lt; ,....

�December 6, 1979

7

Januwy 5 at Nollonal Alpha Lambda o.b, Boot

279, Lewisbwg. Pa. 17837.

Th1U'IIday - 13

MP'T1ST atUK;H llEIMCES

1IESEIIIICH INSTIIU1'E ON ALCOitOUSN
PRESENTATION'
Tho s.tlt ....,._ h&gt; H-llc Alcohol
M . . - , Tho U.. ol ~ oa a Tool.
Ronakl G. Thurman. Ph .D .• es:soc::ilt.! proftuor,
Oepartmm~ ol Plwmacology, Tho Univ.,...y ol
North c..oino al 0 - ' Hit. 1021 Main SkHI. 2
p.m.

lonnklg ......... Mo. Pool .. ..... • bulde ol
II .........uy
al New York
u.-.oy ond dw Cty u.-.oy ol Now York.

-

-...a

· She

Klngobooough.

-·

glamooous legs ""'"" sho llnlddlod • -and in a vak:e that toUnded more

gravel-••

then

SUNY~

Cluk lUI. 8 p .m.

Moaday- 10
c,dlcNJtr_. _ _ ...... ,_
Wedaesday- 12
~-·
- I I - - . Or. 8emord P.
PHILOSOPHY
SEIIINIIII'
__
., .... _udSodoiC....
Sc!&gt;tmrnu, Bonltng ond -

~ ol

Moclcol-..di,U-,oiTcoon~o. I08Shc.·

· 4 p.m. C... al 3,30 In lOIII Cary.

-

.

-

""""- Mhllo ModtOYic, U - y ol

JloVad&lt;, Unlwnlty

ol Pennsylvania. 684 lloldy.

Rachodulld &amp;om Nov. 30.

IIIOCHEMICIIL PH/IIUliiiCOLOG

--aldoo-Yodls-o.--ol

4o-. .lohli s.-.or. --"'

-~Ot~Toa.

I

dlrecloo,

Now Yodl Slalo ()epanmcnl ol Envtn&gt;nmontal

Conaarvation. 211

Park«. 5 ,30-6:30 p.m.

Ra&amp;-.....

SEIIINIIIl•
~ c.-,laoa ..

~.

c.puala
olu·

Pbannaoology,
U/8. 307 H -. 3,45 p.m. Coli.. a1 3:30.

c.ampuMS.

CHANGE IN DATE FOil LlrEIIIIlUI£ AND

'--Eaew Ploa-.._ -·Pro.

slly ol ~- 454 Froncalk. 3:30 p.m. Coli..
at 3:15.

UU/111 FIUII'
M&lt;. KloOt (Maaco. 1977). Woldman Thain,
Amhon&lt;. 4 ,30. 7 and 9 ,30 p .m. Gene-a! admluion
S2; stuclmlO $1.50.
Mr. K.lela il • taut psychological thriiSer Mt in
~ l'lorls In 1942. aboul an amonl
opportunist who ap6olts Jews for profll und M
himMW IIIICCiclenlaly mistabn for a Jew.

LOGIC COUA)QURJN•

-O....,.oi,....~.Oov

FIUI' (fiLII HISroiiY)
(McCarey, 1934) . 146

Dlolondod. 7 p.m. Sponocnd bv tho Con..,. few
ModiaScudy.

SEJIINIIR'
K.thy lld&lt;oo- will opuk on lhc lopic " lmaglna·
lk&gt;no ol Penon In Con-wy P~. · In 438
domeno. S p.m. Sponocnd bv lho G.oy ChW ol
Pootty and l.ollen, Oepanmcnl ol Englloh.

ICE HOCKEY'

-

C.....

p .m.
~IILD

""-'"" "' ..... G-.

Paul C.vanaugh,

doni, Dopartmont ol -

Tamall, ModwmaUa. U/8. 3020idcndorf. 4 p .m.
FOSTER COILOQUIUII SBIJES'
n-.11-..o.~ IAMf 5ndla on ~

Tonawonda leo llmc. 7,30

Edwin J. Funhpan , ~ ol Neurobiology,
H""'""' Medical School. 245 Caoy. 4 p.m.

I.e Gtlco, llmmaka, bv
Jonu Mebs as "'the rnolf important Rbn artist
working loday In England", " Emily." A .....,,
a\lanl-garde fUm . Abtght-Knox Art Galey. 8 p .m .
Free. Spon:lored by the Centl!r for MecHe Study.
Media Sludy/ Buffolo. and /lblglrt·Knox Art
Gallny

n -.

-

~

,.,_..,..n
-

DYe-for~

decad&lt;nco found In lho
•

~-opedflcoly .

IChmnc Ow fi'IOWS from bed to WOIM.

"ltoood Ot doo Tnp-51 Augustine ...... ol one
who, haytng pul hB hand In a - · mual cany l
..,..nd wilh him 1 -. A bon&gt;qu•. ~
~ gothic mystery that tMy remind

Edslw Alen Poe .

on. of

FIUII' (FIUII HISTORY)
Blood ol II , _ CCc&gt;coau . 19301. 146 Olden·
dorf. 7 p.m. Sponocnd bv lhc C&lt;nle for Media
Study.
A landmark film, Coc&amp;uu's Ant. wr1:1cn and nar·
rated by him , Poet is c:onsaruc::ed as a M't1ft of
epllodic, .rugmallc, kequenoJvau~ lm·
.gtnary ewnu, ~Uons and transformations.

pm.

UU/111 WEDNESDAY NIGHT FIUIIS'
- P - 119481, 7pm.; F.-C..Cao
!Franco. 19551, 8 '55 p.m. Conflft&lt;JCO Thoa...

EVENINGS- NEW MlJitt•

Sqw..
-

vw.o~. -~~~--ol-- ·

P&lt;"WY ttam0on&lt; llleralU,. R_. 100. Baird Hoi .
9pm
A formu CruUve Auodatc ( 1965-66, ,
G1alloluw .,;I ploy a _ . . . ol hll own works. f:a.

" " - · 1973, R•l/lw/&amp;-.. 1973, ond

v.....-. 1977 . .. _. aas-a v 1966 bv

u-noBcrto, ond-1969bvMouridoKogoi.
A worbhop/loclure, ~ wilh a.... In·
IINm&lt;nlJ,. ... bo _ . , ! bv lhc Ooponmcnl ol
Mu* from 1-3 p m., sodey, In Room tOO Alta

--

.,..,_..and....-.......

,..,...latty-

...........
Glalloluw

haa _ . . . , o4h IRCIIM,
Pa,., M had of tlt: tntwmmts and vok:c dep.rt·
ment He founded N.,., Phontc: Art with AJ.&amp;N .
0.0.... and P"""' In 1969. haa mada
'ocordonsls ol hll compooOlono. and ..... fmluonolv
........,_ Ewopo, lha us ond C.nado

nu-.

Taesday- 11
NOVIQ•
........ ot ........... Ia Cha.tlo 0.. m-..1
and no._...._.. (Mariana Dlotncl&gt;o,..-·
..,. ....,. ........, bv _, 5lombootl Waldman
, . _ . , . 2 30 p"' ~ bv lho Oepan·
...,.oiH~

Ololrtch -

E&lt;onomlc

MUSICAL COMEDY'
Th• Club, bv Ew Merriam , d•med bv Saul
Elkin . The &lt;Anter Theatre . 681 Main St. 8 p .m
Gener-al admission $4; Jtudenls and senior dtlMns
l2 . ADS """""""occeplc&lt;l

Freo-'-

....... wilh F...! Aotan. Judy Garland ,
p...,. Lawlord and Ann Mill«, lo • dellghdul lovtng
lkrtln mutical. AlLan tria lo forgd ex-dance part·
ner Mk u he riles to fame~ wlh Judy.
FTftdt C.. C.. loa
flm..OOU1
lhc opontng ollho Mouln Rougo In P - around
the tum of the ecn1Ury and !he danar ttt..l ...n·

"""""""unnlng

.......... -...

HOUDAY fiEIIIiON CONCDIT'
II F - a ol Colola, perfomwd bv lhalJniYenl.
ly Chonlo and lho u - a.... unde&lt; .... direc·
lk&gt;n ol Hatrlol Simono Baird Rodlal Hal 8 p m.

F,..-

Koolhv /ld&lt;oo-, -

Notlees
lllJ'HA LAIUIDII DELTA FELLOWSHIPS

c!.~~

1:0~.a":.mlcO:;...~~~

I•......... for wad...,. 11udy CS2.SOO each)
Any m«mber of ~ LAmbda o.Jlal who *u
graduated with • cumulatl\lc average at or ~
lhe Alpha Lambda o.b lnllallon Slonct.d 1o aligi·
ble: Graduating ~~mk»n mey apply • they haw
ec:hlewd thi&amp; •~• to lh« tnd of the ftrsl Mmtsler

ollht.,....

~

and -

....... ... •&lt;ad

hom ha w«k In lho P"""'/ Room , Spodal Ccfloc.
Spooucnd bv lho C...
ChW alp_, and
~ ol Englooh,
and odwdulld In""'-"""" wlhlhc P-v/ R.o
Boob Collakln fr• .dmillion.
Ms Ack«r k tht author ol Blood _. Gl* 1ft
Hlolo Schaal. Iliad&lt; T..-., no. Ad* Laa o1

-.. c-4 , 8 p.m

u.-.

T . . - Laonnc ond Koo.... Gooa oo 1-.

al--

Applan10 ..;I bo jUdged on tcholullc """"·

-...~.....

- . - .. ,..._ ond
· lhc
.
nead .

READING'

o.c.mbo&lt; 17.
Bolas, will opuk on "Tho Sd In ~nalv*"
hom 3-5 p .m .. aach day. Monday. Oooomloor 10,
lhrough Frlclay, llocembo&lt; 14. In 410 Clcmmo

Hal.
Tho - " fne ond open lO lho . . - .
. - - 1 hll Ph.D. In Englloh han ondflo
"""'.-~In London . ~

came 10 U/8 !Join 8od!eloy " " - ho
prep~ring

for his Ph .D. In LlleraW"e and
Poychology. ho ond Dr. Mu,.ay 5chwoou ol Englloh
~ • tr~ progr.m In the l.JnWelly't
P&gt;ythialrlc Onic.
. '
For lnl&lt;wmation on the Nminar, caD 6J6..2563.

Wlooa----lot·--

moy bo

....,in&lt;d &amp;om Ann Htcb,

110 """""· 636·2807.
Completed opp~D-. muSl bo -

bv

When- .. .--...............

regula&lt; will bo conllnuod •""'"'" .. c.emputn lor du-n hoan ..... ~
beooma dfecttw. Alto, two buMS will continue In
MMot between Main Street and AmMn1 for two
add;Uonal houn.
Tho folowing offlca ... bo nolhd lrnmcdlaloly
f k ba&lt;oma ....__, 10 chango bus achodules
bocaute oiWU!ho&lt;' WBFO ; Houotng, Main Offio&lt;
(636-2171) ; Arn Oesk1 at EUk:ott South
1636-22951 . Elicoo EaSl (636-20111. Gowrnon
1636-21351. and Main su... 1831·41401; Squn
lnfom&gt;alion 1831·3541); lnle·Raidonoo Cound
(636-2211.21 ; Sluclml !636-29501;
Secwoy (2222 on ..,_ campus! ; and
C.mpuo()pe.Ol&lt;&gt;&lt; (Oi
Rnktcnt students are adviNd to clip and saw thll

c..;,...

lnformaUOn .

H Mbecoma trnpoulbie 10'""'' OUl lhio plan. 1110'
above offlca ..;II bo nctlfood and a tpOCial " -

8uo-

..,. bo played on lhc ldophonc •-"'i dcvlcoln
lhc C.mpuo
Olflco (831 · 11761.

CRISIS SERVICE VOUJNTEEIIS
300 volunteeR are nnded 10 tram • aWt phone
counsckln 11 BufWo and Erie Coumy'1 certrel
lifeline for \lUI tervtea You can trlrlln ~ t. a oWt
interw.ntionill end hap ochers v.1lh probWms in ~­
ing by res;stering now for the nat trlinlog program.
24-hou,.....e-dey, 7 -days-a-WHit, Crisis Servica
countek f1milin in dlltra5. victims of rape aod ....
ual a . .ull, the ~ . Pft'IOill fadng suckle«

km or a life aids and wlddal people~
Regbter for training now at the Lif« SC... ln.,..,. bv coang c- . 838-59110 Tho
numbft for CtWs ScMcct II; aJ.o hied on .._Inside
""'"'ol ...... lclcphonc dnct&lt;xy.
838-59110 24· hou,..a-cloy .

-

·cal

FOREIGN SnJD£NT rutnON WIIIYEIII
IIPPUCIITIONS
F&lt;&gt;&lt; Spring 19110, F..... Swdonl T..-.
Wa~YCn .,. now a\laleble .a tt.. Offk:e of Rn.andaJ
_
_ _ . . . , . . _ _ _ 11,
Ald. Room 6, ""',.. 8, Main 5INel c..np.. no.

1979. Studenll mull be on a For J vtN in order to
e,PY for the waiwr.
lliEDICIIL c::ouNaL CAM:£LI.IIJIOIII
Tho s.-tng Coorwntu. ollha F&amp;Nly Cound,
· haa eanoalod lho Coundlo
School ol - - f e w Oooomloor 12.

·-~:-a...a.a
...... few .... - · - -

had -'-1

••• ......_ ..... achiooplnnlc chlldron. -

bo opa-a!Od on lho ._wSalwdoy odwdulo. &amp;om
7:30 a .m. until 9 p.m., the Campus Bus ScMot
has •nnounoed.

OJIIIII.IIliN IIMEIIICIIN FIUII SBUES'
Cllogontlna, 1961). 7 p.m.; Hand
Ot doo Tnp (A&lt;gonllna, 19611. 8 '45 p.m.
Woldman
llmhon&lt;. Freo admission.

_,_lt ......

w"""'

MEEilNG'

123 J _ , P..._y !Frank Lloyd
Hou.). 8 p.m. Coffee at 7'..30. O.vid Gerber.
Oepanmenl ol Hlol"'l/. U/ 8, ... dioal• "Problems
In lho Hill"'Y ol Elhnic Pluraliom• and G..,.
Dowdall, Oepartm&lt;n~ oiSoctology, Slalc Unlvonlly
College a1 BuHa\o, wiD ditcuss "'M«ntaJ Hotpbtiu·
lk&gt;n and
Chango .•
EVENINGS FOil NEW FIUII'

IN~·

Tho ....... ol e--1 F....,. oa tbc

·l o n g - 0 . . - I O b o _ .
bv Or Chriolophco ollhc T.- Clink.
... olio
London. England, haa lt.Thohad_,... _ _ fewdw-ol

t:.cau.. of ~condliona. two IraNI bu-.wll

T-Choboi~--Or .

HOIIIZONS

.

Tho -

COMNUNrrY STUDIES GROUP

T--~-a.-.-.Dr . M . /1 .

......

PSYCHOLOGY-

CONTINGENCY 1105 SCitEIIUJO

~IILD

Tho . . . . . a...ta ~ . a...t..RU9!1ia
ond Mooy Boland-dw hlorioutlalc ol an Engl;sh
""""'who IUdclmi!l finds - I n lhc 11..-.n
Wnt whm he II won by an A.l'l'leric:aln b"' a poker

EI.S.yod. U - y ol c.lllomia, loo Angola. 70
Achaon. 4 p.m. Coli• In 50 llcheoon a1 H5.

U-

PHYSICS COlLOQUIUM'

3:30p.m.
WIITEIIIIE:IiOt.-cES AND

_ _ _ , I l L ENGINEEIUNG
_,..,

CIITHDUCl'IEWMIIN CENTEII MASSES
5Mwdotl l/ltlll' S p.m. - 339 Squn ond
Newman c.-. ~ Compla.
s-doy. MMn SINel ' 10 • .m. and 12 noon C.nlalclan Chapol; 8 p.m. - 5I. .loooph'o, 321;9
Main 51.; """'-' 9,15 a.m .. 10,30, noon ond 5
p.m. - Newnwl Ccmer, Ellcott.
M~' 12 noon- Newman c.n.....
Main 51. &amp;
Ave .. 12 noon and 5 p.m. N......., c.n..... Elicoa.
5Mwdotl: 9 a.m. - N&lt;wman c..- on bach

RESEARCH SOilNIIIl SBUES'
Potypepdda:: New Neural TT&amp;M•Itten,
Jowph Martin . M. D. Bullard profesiOf of
neurology, chief , Neurology Servlcu.
Ma-..., Gene-ol Hoapl,oJ. and prot....,. •nd
cNirrnan, Dep..rtmmt cl Neuro&amp;ogy, Harvard
MedQI School. Codex's Dining Room. Chld...,'s
Hoopllai. Jp.m.

t._ M.D. Bonerj&lt;e, ""-Oepanmenl, UniYC&lt;·

NEN'Ii~·

~=w~~·-~~
'!""'~9:.:
pick""....,

Churd&gt; o1
will
who..., ...
at\a\d Mnlk::a. The bus wtl mum to c:empus
""'-12, 1S•nd 12,30.

�December 6, 1979

ing

Economics I lOth In nati

._.,. not sure 1.- long It's going to

ThJngo . . qm.t on the 6lh and 7th
loon aiiWdv tW what alllca al the
o..-- of Economics- loceted.
n.t quill, ' - · .. the "oound" al
diOion .......... The ~t: ranks
lenlh Ill lhe "*'s the jl8ldstld&lt; of
........ al publlhed .ucla per faculty In
a ~ """"''' al publishing perform-

last..

...., ........ _,I'

high ltholarly output, Economics has an
enrollment
which
Is
huvily
undergraduele. It Ia faced with one of the
highesl student/faculty ratios In the
Faculty of Soctal Sclenoes: -oomewhere
between 34 to 1 and 32 to 1, depending
on who's counting. MOll of these large
un~le numbers ore clustered In
the basic "J&gt;rinctppes" course offered In
sewn ledlons each semester and atiJac·
ling up tO 400 students In SOfne secllons.
Almost 1400 individuals are taking either
the first "' second semester of the course
this fall . As Romans puts It, every percentage Increase In the Inflation rate accounts
fOJ a rise In enrollments In Economics.
Some shudder at the thought of lecture
registrations In three figures, but Romans
subscribes to the notion that once you
break 80, it doesn't matter how much
larger a course becomes. The lectures are
augmented by smaller recKatlon sections
which provide opportunities (Of Individual Interaction with a group leader.
These groups range from as smaU as 25
to as many as 100.
Almost alone among campus departments, ~mics uses underg&lt;aduates
65 weD as r; d\Jate assistants for Its recHa·
lion groups. Usually these are seniors
with good averages, and the procedure
has worked out quKe weD , Romans said.
No undergraduate assistant Is assigned
more than 25 registrants.
The hordes who flock Jo "Economics
Principles" come from all over, many
from Management and Engineering.
Each year, some decide Jo stay on as
economics majors - of whom there are
currently between 150 and 175.
While the undergraduate degree In
economics Is not a professional degree In
any oense, Romans suggests H provides
good training In logical thinking, a skill at
a premium In almost any field . Of course,
there Is the option of going on to complete a Ph.D. In economics, a field not
experiencing the overload of qualified job
seekers common to 10 many doc:loral
areas today. Economics is aloo useful fO&lt;
students going Into law "' looking toward
the M.B.A. In Management.

11'1112"'-

A..,..-..ldoewodd
The national and lnlernatlonal slatus of
the 20-member faculty Is reflected aloo In
the fact that at any one moment a significant number of them are away, not just
on sabbatical, but aloo on opeDal
assignments. Last year, Romans said,
eight faculty were visiting elsewhere; this
oemeste six are on the road: one at the
University of Berlin; another with the
World Bank In Washington; a third on
Fulbright In Poland;. another with
Mothematlca, a private consulting linn;
one at the UnJvenlly of Tokyo, and the
sixth at the Unlwrslly of ManKoba.
Thla ubiquity Is unusual fO&lt; a srnaB
~t, Romans noted, and il provida unparaleled opportunities fO&lt; In·
lmldlon with lnstilullons and ogencJes
world-wide. It also means that visitors
!rOfn eloewhee CO&lt;ne here to teach. This
oemeste, • _,...ast In envWor\mental
economics Is visiting from West
Germany.
Yet, ouggested RO&lt;nanS, there are In·
herent chawbod&lt;s. One .. that the department Ia not 10 IMge as to enjoy the

elsew"""

s-

Ta..Pia.D . .........
U/ B turns out approximately 5
economics Ph.D.s a year. There Is no
separate master's program for regularlyenrolled daytime students, but doctoral
candidates receive a master's enroute to
the Ph.D.
1lw first year of the program, Romans
explained, Is espectaUy rigorous, and provides basic Intellectual tools fO&lt; later
speclall:atton.
Beyond this common CO&lt;e of fun-

....
_,..... .,
.., _____ .... __

damental courses, many graduate offerings In the department are decided each
year by a vote of the students enrolled .
Coalitions and caucuseS politick for
courses with all the lnienslty of polilldans
in smoke-filled rooms. Facuhy may also
engage In the bargaining process,
perhaps to push a new course which they
have developed. Once pobtlcs are over
and votes counted, students present the
department with a rank ordering of
courses they want offered during the
year. Taking account of facuhy availabillty and other faclors, Romans said,
departmental administration follows that
prtor1ty listing as far as K can, perhaps
scheduling up to five "' six courses In line
with students' wishes.
Romans feels the method results In an
even-handed rotation of catalog offerings
which works out to the benefit of aU the
students In the four-year program. Some
courses also come up every year. A
danges exists that a course could get
dropped our for two years and t.erome
permanently "lost", but this hasn't posed
any practical dlfflcuhy )/"'·
U/ 8-tratned Ph.D. s In economics,
Romans noted, are fully qualified professionals who enjoy an excellent command
of the tools of the trade. The bulk of them
take faculty positions at other unJverstttes;
a few end up In government, and a smaU
number may enter private Industry. He
acknowledged, however, that the degree
Is not really geared to the private sector.
An Individual Interested In a career as an
economist In that area would more likely
take a doctorate In management.
Romans said the schools which employ
U/B economics Ph.D.'s are of high qual~
ty, and that the outlook for economics
professors (supplemented by the needs of
government and private Industry) remains buUish. He cautions, though , that
•

•Calendar

M.c DanAI. c;_, WEU. 1EAII
-YOU
Sdlool ol Don-

TfAM ... _...-.. "'"
- .. - ...- - -.Tf
.... AMII

~.,.__. _ _ far _ _

~-..---

~

WWEif'SI'LACZ
_
_
_
Shoiii.Aigbwomen·.
PIKe.
45 _Alen
Stred. t.. • new
Eeq.,

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....... St.

~

...... l ( A M -

onct.--..........ond ond-...

1ft ........ - • TEAM Oiplnll' in IUCh • t.hion
.. to ....... ._..... ...... c.e - c:ornblable

So. fyoudo-

......... .. wlljl ~Col . . . .
831-2213d •o
ll- 9
4:30
bellfodoo..._
.......,...,...._....,.
_ _

I&amp; .~. WontcJ'I' I

Ploce on~- S.7 P·"'· " " -·

mcnlls....-y.

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-...GPIACE
Tho
Ploco ... ' - .......... ol ow

qoo-.s-

......
who,..,.... . . . t u l '-log-~
-

10-......

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............... dnlt. eo....- ....

....
336

~Hollonthe.........,.c.m,-. o...t......thio

_ _ , -.dav.._.,Frlday, 12 noon un·

11 4 p ..... ond ~ - Wodnoodoy ond Thundoy
. 6und9,

____..............., ____
...,....._
--ond-_
~-,. ............ --c..o... ...........
o.-- ol .............. - - ....,_..

-GMJ.aY~

T.................. ll-3pJL; ,.............
»lp• " " _ ... ,....,. Thol.l!loll-10

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831 -1187

--.....LM
,.t h e ! . --...,...
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olll/8-

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lvt-olli.,._..,....,_E. _
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~ond

........ - - o l t . - . o , L b . - l o r
PIMc 5orw. 01 U/ B. " ' - ol Halh
t.lnoy, Sooddon T_ _ y _ _ _ ...,... . .

·.·. .

.•

~

.·.

...

.•

.·, .r .•.,' l

Albany gets
humanities grant
Announced recenUy at ceremonies at
the New YO&lt;k State Museum was award
of a national pilot program by the National Endowment for the Humanities Jo
SUNY Albany, designed to establish new
methods for aduh community education
In the humanities.

Making the announcement were
Joseph D. Duffey, chairman of NEH;
Albany President O'Leary, Dean of
Humanities/ Fine Arts John Shumaker,
and government offlctals. An Initial grant
totaling m0&lt;e than $250,000 has been
awarded. The results of the project are
expected Jo be used as the basis for other
programs.

._"""hom Docomboo-7 otuou,;l Jon..,.14.

BocitiW.-- c.m,-.

Tho-..

"" ..,... ~ .....-. .... be held Flklay,
Docomboo- 7- - . .... ~-- 7-9
p.m.
bel-.d""thoVIoo.....,._
doni ... s.:...-. f« fur1lw ·
cal831-3711.

OaTheAir
DECEIIIIEII 7:
~

.. .... Ada,_.___.
•

"""*- .... llt.nry nd 101. 6•30 p.m.

· Cowter Cobia (a--

C A I ' a ' - GAUDY~
Waob "" SUNVAB Gnd.- Studcn11. 51h'
...... c_. Hoi. Mom Docomboo- 10 .._..
J - 1 0.
GAU.EIIY lit SHOW
.__ - . , . _ ond
colon.
Docomboo- 8-22. Gollory 219, ....00 &amp;oc.-, Squn
Hoi. Campus. Houn• Monday,
Wodnoodoy ond frldoyo , 1-3 p.m. f« fur1lw W... - . . cal834-1088.
Ms. Bonelli• ~ - She tpduOiod

Sludloo, "Shouud I Buy My Child • Compulcrt'.
WBEN (9301 . 9:05p.m.
~ II; 0.. a...Jo E. Woldo, k.,

.. ....... She 11....-ntly c:c&gt;dindar ....
-oltheCiyArt(;ujd .. ~.

c.--...

w-

~"'--· ·"-­
....

"-""" .
u--.
LEa

...... " ' " - C:O., IncludOieNew v.... Cly, ....
~....._..~

COP~

AliT LTD. £10-.r
E,oa. ... ol Alllconond
New ~ M n-.,;. ~ 15. Gollory
t...... -r...s.y.~ . 2-6 p.m. Tho go1ay

n.-

"locoood ":!5 V-'- ~~--

- .- Kooonodv.
w...
"" ...
Caploy,
Kooni8
- -- n. ...

.

All Amhent p l o •
Economics was one of the pioneer
departments at Amherst where H Is a
"tenant" of the Law School's In O'Brian
Hall. That proximity, Romans said, has
led to close relationships with Law, to
development of joint teaching projects
with that faculty, and to Inception of a
Law and Economics Workshop. Being al
Amherst has also meant less Interaction
with the School of Management of which
Economics was once part.
fronlcaOy for a faculty which publishes
so heavily, libraries were, and remain a
problem. Many of the coDectlons needed
by Economics are still housed closer to
Management at Main Street. However,
said Romans, • the Ubrar1es are •YIP.·
pathetic, and many of the journals needed are also housed In the Law Library In
O 'Brian .
As well they might be: an author ought
not have Jo travel all the way to Main
Street to see himseH In print.

I

homtho~ol--onclhoslo\91l

---____ __

.... 1 . - . o , -. . . - . . - . .. -

..._..,.._,._
........_-·col
.... s,....

A .,owing M.A. program for part-time
students, now some eight years old,
enrolls almost 40 majoB. Thla evening
degree sequence Is regarded as a terminal M.A . , offering a broad survey al
_ prtndples to penons as clivaM as local
government offlctalo, bank employees,
newopaper and radlo-1V ·jdiunallsts,
even the unemployed. Anyone with an
Interest In acquiring a general acquaintance with the field may apply. To help
those with no background In economics,
a pre-course Is offered each summer.
Not all members of the faculty ore
overjoyed with this aspect of the departmenfs offerings, ~omens admits, but H's
popular
In the University. For
himself, he noted a certain satisfaction In
dealing wKh a more mature and diverse.
group of students than one encounters In
regular programs.

Un...... for a department with ouch a

...crtn the leld (Beland Seater, 1978) ;
Ia 13th In the
of faculty who
. . publiahlng, and 15th In terms of total
llltldes, ewn· though Its faculty numbers
-~smaU.
'
Dr. J . Thomas Romans , chairman of
Economics, noted that U/ B Ia the only
pubic trwlllullon ranked In the top ten of
J)Ubllahlng performance In the IW'Iey.
The nlni ahead of us [In order) an!:
Cam.gie·Melon, Stanford, MIT, Brown,
R""'-'er, Chicago, Harvard, Northwestern and Princeton.
Four public lnslilullons and one private
unlvenlly place Immediately below U/ B:
Minnesota, Washington, Michigan, Pennsylvania and UCLA. Yale ranked 18th,
&amp;rl&lt;eley, 20th, and Wisconsin, 21st.
The study looluod at full-length articles
appearing between January 1970 and
Deoember 1974 .
Romans said similar resuhs have
turned up In similar studies done In recent
years. It means, he says, that U/ B's
Economics faculty Is highly productive
and reoearch-&lt;Xienled. Economics, he
explained, Ia a field where articles are
!&gt;- more prevalent than books, and the top
20 journals covered In the ~ubllsh
the bat _.-. In the fieldcondensed pieces containing no
, and
~ a high degree of technical expertloe. A""'"lJ them, to mention three,
ore the journals of the American, Royal
and Canadian economic asooclatlons.

'

Ta..JI.A.

DECEIIIIER t:
~ 1:

Dr. -

R. Rloloe. ~­

-- . Foadlyol~

--~~-- -

· political - . . , ., "P_. Role ol 1\lmod
foo&lt;es Around tho W..td." WBEN (930) . lloOS
p. m.

&amp;cort&gt;1l hom bolh . , _ may be hurd

D.cembcr 8,

Hielo.ll.~...

on

WBEN·FM (102.5) ,

~ 7 •~m.

DECEIOEII 1..

.-eo.- ...... ......,~..-.­

..-..olthoSI.-F-ondnowl!o ...... dOd
b o . d - olthe New Y""' SO. Councl on
tho Mo. ._._...Cobia (Chono.ol 101. 6 p.m.

...... ......,_Oonl._.
on

DECEIIIIEIIJI:
~

Courlor Cobia la-n.l 101 . 6:30 p.m. Aloo

Docomboo- 12 " 7 p.m.

-

.... eor.-.. tho ArtaloEoliw

- . - ol cullurol-

�O.C..mber 6 . 1979

Legal aid
U/B law students handle
up to 300 criminal &amp; civil

cases a year for the poor
By Mill Carlin
NowslluouuSWI

"Your honor.. ." The judge llstens In·
tently as a law student pleads the case ol
a client unable to meet the coot ol hiring a
private attorney.
This, In essence, Is a fleeting descriptlng ol how the U/B Law School runs Its
highly-prizled ~ As&gt;istance Pro!J'am.
During 1978-79, fo. lnslanoe, student
laW}I'ZR handled nearly 300 aimlnal and
dvd cases,
with the blessing of the AppeBate Division ol State Supreme Court.
As explained by Ms. Mary lang,
technical aosislant for the program, the
opportunity to practice in a courtroom or
bdore an admlnls1Jauve agency, such as
a school board, Is offered to third-year
law students on a voluntary basis. About
40 are accepted into the program each
semester, and those who successfully
complete H earn four aedH hours toward
their law degrees.
Students get the practic'e they
need-always under the direct supervi·
slon of a licensed attorney-and
members of the communKy 4f11t1e to af.
ford private legal assistance ret&gt;ifve "fuU
service" representation bolstered by
students• eagerness to win cases.
Clients generally are referred to the
Law School by legal service agendes or
courts specified by the Appellate Divl·
slon, which authorizes the program on an
annual basis.
The referral agencies named by the
Appellate Division are the Lege[ Aid
Bureau of Buffalo and Neighborhood
Legal Services. which Is State-and
federally-funded .
In some instances, thanks to recent
judicial law amendments, the U/B Legal
Assistance Program accepts cases
without referral.

an

SWted Ia 1972.
The U/B program was Initiated in
1972 to defend rights ol students at the
elementary and secondary school levels
under Slate and federal laws. Now expanded, H currently is permitted to also
lunctton in non-jury cases in many courts
within the jurisdiction of the Appellate
Division's Fourth Department, which
covers 22 counties in the Western part of
the state.
Courts listed by the Appellate Division
as "on UmJts" for student law practitioners
are the CHy Courts of Buffalo and
Lad&lt;awanna; aU county and lamUy courts
within the 22-county area; Stale
Supreme Court, and the Appellate Divl·
ston itself.
·
The student lawyers also are permitted
to represent clients before Slate agendes,
or State-related agencies, within the
same Appellate boundaries. A county
Social Services Department would be
considered State-related .
The Appellate Division further
stipulates that "an attorney admitted to
practice law in New York State and
associated with the schoofs Legal
Assistance Program shaD be present in
court or at the admJntstrative proceedings
at aU times with the student to advise and
counsel him or her."
The U/ B Law School program is
slaffed by three attorneys and Mo. Lang
as technical assiJtant. The attorneys are
RoH N. Olsen, a Columbia Unlvers"y law
graduate who serves as program director;
Gerald Seipp. a law graduate of the
Unlvenity of Michigan, and Stephen
Lacher, a U/ B law grad.
Setpp explained that education cases
may be referred dlredly to the program
by the parento ol school chUdren or by
school officials.

Umlte4 c:rtmlaall....,._t
He pointed out that in atmlnal matters
student attorneys, lor the mosi part, are
limlled to handling mlldemeanor cases in
their entirety and falony charges through
the preliminary hearing stall« . Misde·
meanors indudo 51mpie assault. petty
larceny , some morals charges.,
unauthorized use ol a moiO&lt; vehicle and
flrst-ollense drunk dnving ..
Seipp noted, hOIWvet, thetthe student

attorney io authorized to plea bargain
some felony charges to reduce them to
mlodemeanors. H sua:aoful. the student
lawyer then repraents the client at
sentencing.

Crtmlnal cases olten are acquired by
the students by being at the right place at
the right time.
"Studento appear in court on a given
day," Seipp explained, "and are auigned
to cases during'the initial arraignment. In
effect, we are subolitulln!l for the public
defender on that day, and then han~
the cases untU their resolution or, with
respect to felony cases, untU their
presentment to a grand jury."
Certain types of Family Court cases, he
added, are assigned to the U/B Legal
Assistance Program by the Law Guardian
Office, a branch of the Legal Aid Bureau.
These cases deal with juvenUe delin·
quency

and

persons

in

need

of

supervision (PINS) .
Mo. Lang estimated that a student
lawyer might handle up to four or ftve
cases during the semester spent in the
program . She pointed out that the more
complex the case, the longer H Is Ukely to
take to resolve. thus affecting the number
of cases handled .
Seipp recaUed a recent lostet care case
in Chautauqua County which was
handled by lour students in State
Supreme Couri and FarnUy Court over a
period of lour semesters and required six
or seven bips to Jamestown and
Mayville .
Vl.ttatlon rtgbta
The students involved represented the
natural parents of three children who had

:"..:'
t /:,~~..:~'U.~ ~~':!'ioT~~
Sociill Services _representatives lor the
foster home placement, and the county
Social Services Department subsequently
denied visitation rights to the then·
batUing parents.
Seipp explained that the students
Initially obtained visitation rights lor the
parento but laUed, in a two-day trial, to
win custody ol the chUdten lor them.
The case didn't end thete , howevet.
Seipp related that in subsequent review
proceedings initiated by the law students,
Social Services officials agreed to return
the chUdren to their parents.
"II was mainly a case of bringing the
parents together through counseling,"
Seipp said , "and convincing Sodal Ser·
vices that giving custody to the natural
parents woUld be in the best interests of
aD concerned ."
"Most of our cases prove successful,"
he added . "because the students are
enthusiaslk and determined-and work
hard. On many occasions they spend an
extraordinary amount of time working
dlrecUy with a client."
In addition to handbng 113 dvU cases
and 179 criminal cases during the
1978-79 academic year. U/ B student
lawyers were caUed upon to argue 14
habeas cases in Federal Court. Seipp
explained that these are post-conviction
cases in which federal constitutional
claims are argued.

A requeat &amp;om Attica
One of the program's non -referred
cases. Seipp related , concerned a male
Attica inmate who wrote lor legal
assistance to obtain a divorce. A student
was assigned, Seipp said, and the divorce
was granted.
" It seems," he added , "that the
inmates ~\eat about us through word of
mouth and then write to us for
asslstance."

·Texas has biggest
The accounting department at the
University ot T aas at Austin has a laD
enrollment ol 2,621 majors which mal&lt;cs
the department the largest on campus
and perhaps the largest oltts kind in the
U.S. A toea! oll68 students are punuing
the Masta in Profastonal AccounHng
degree program , and 44 are woridng on
Ph .D.'s.

Reyner Banham
says farewell to U I B
Greeted by heavy applouse and a con·
feature stone, lor the Urst lew feet off the
tingent ol students weartng beige and · ground, and brick . The stone, usualy
brown T -shirts featuring his image and
dolomite, was used lor protective pur·
that of his wile, the popular British
poses since it was strong enough to with·
archttectural historian, Reyner Banham,
stand the scn~ping and bumping of metal
gave his swan song at U/B Monday alter
wheels used at the time.
a three-and one-hall-year stay as chair·
The solidHy and reUabiiHy of these sim·
man of Design Studies in the School of
pie but powerfuUy-destgned buUdings are
Architecture and Environmental Design .
evidenced In ouch works as the old Buf.
His farewell address-presented to a
lalo Veneer buUding, now Monro-Kar
crowd which didn't even leave standing
Muffler; the Keystone Corp., on Niagara
St.; the Crosby Co. building, on Pratt St. ;
room in 333 Hayes-was the last lecture
of the semester in the "In Support of
and the Flickinger buUding, on Perry St.
Arcltttecture" series.
These structure•. built during the first
The bearded author, TV documen·
two decades of this century in the
tarian and scholar, who previously served
"golden age" of Buffalo's industrial ex·
as director of undergraduate programs at
panston, have held up weD with Dttle or
the University of London School of En·
no care, Banham noted, and would re·
· vironmenlal Studies, began by telling his
spond weD to a "sympathetic occupant."
audience that when he first an1ved in
One reason Is that Buffalo's skilled ~
Buffalo. the only buUding he ever heard
tradesmen produced qua!Hy .tone and
praised was the Prudential, designed by
brick wOO. which has stood the test ol
architect Louis Sullivan . Why? Because
time.
people here tend to judge buUdings Uke
Such buUdings rtse above the "provln·
they do clothes-by their labels. This can
dalism of Buffalo," Benham asserted,
lead to serious ··distortions" in evaluaand are an important part ol Buffalo's in·
tions, cautioned Banham . and should be
dustrial heritage which ohould be preserved .
avoided .
One downtown ed~ice erected in the
same eta as the Prudential, but in his
opinion. ol more substantial qualhy. ts
the EU~eon Square BuUding. Although
this monolith does not possess the detail·
Ricardo Morin. a senior in the Departed entrance way work of the Prudential.
ment ol Art. captured Urst place this oum·
by comparisOn , it offers a more eKdtlng
mer in an itjjernattonal competition in
Interior and better use of space.
stage design sponsored by the govern·
As far as the Prudential is concerned ,
ment of Salzburg, Austria .
..J.
Banham assesses h ao a building "of no
Morin. who io from Valencia ,
great quality" whose-unomamented sides
Venezuela, spent six weeks in Europe
make a good backdrop" lor the cathedral
where he took a course in the .technical
which upstageS it.
aspects of stage des;gn and entered the
There are other buildings of "un·
muiU-nauonal competitlon, which was
mistakable quality" in Buffalo which
co-sponsored by Salzburg's International
receive bttle or no attention because their
Summer Academy of Fine Arts.
architects are. obscure in reputation ,
Sixteen competitors from Luxemburg,
Banham noted . Among them are the
Colon. Munich, France and Vienna, as
structures designed by R .J . Reid path and
weD as Salzburg. entered their stage
• Son, a long forgotten firm which
design concepts fo. a hypothetical proopoirated.tn the early 1900's. Although
duction of Pendereckl's "Los Paradise."
the buildings produced by Reidpath are
In the competition, whk:h was judged
not venerated in archHectural texts. to
by eight professon. Mono was awarded
Banham they are nevertheleu com3,000 schelling (about $300) .
parable to the best work corning out of
The U/B oenlor expecis to graduate
Europe and America at the lime, and left
with a BFA this May and plans to atlertd
a P.,rmanent mark on the dly's '1ndustrial
the Slade School ol Fine Arts, part ol the _.
vernacular."
University of London, to punue a
T yplca.Dy, the Reid path otructures
master's in painting and stage design.

Morin wins
Austrian award

�Dcember 6 . 1979

US urged toe courage language skills
........ ...-at __.... lllldla.

lt'a obYioully IIIII ~ "ffy," but If
~ In • NpGit illued ""
the Pralclenl'a

I

c:om.-. on fcni!Pt

u - end 1 - - . . 1 S1uc1ia are

wiih lhe

environment II ~ lliijaeudesiMd
dernendl on Amalalo ,_.,.., Intellectual capacity end publk oentlllvtly .•
The NpGOt went on to that "trnaglnallv« Kllon, bai::Ud by • rnodaata
l n - 1 cllundl at the fedeml, - •
and local levek, and "" the potultle - tor, will !lleld results weD beyond the
oealflca lnW&gt;fved.''
Aloo .,._.. In the report io: $20
million (or Ope.aaon cl a National Commitlee on International Raarch that
would lund "policy-...levant lntemational
aflalro research" and an increue ot $18
million. to $60 niillion, for the International Communication Agency's scholarly
and other &lt;!Xchenges. By the mid 1980's.
the Commlsolon recommended the sub•idy be booaled to $100 million. The
report aloo urged that the Department of
Education annuaDy lund 20 to 30 summer Institutes abroad . Their purpose
would be similar to that cl the regional
language centers, but would include advanced students, educators other than
loriegn language teachers, and emphasis
on less commonly taught languages.

2() . . . . _ - - Mtng
- - - ' .. I*( &lt;ill'*~

..a

St8.75 ...... tor 65 to 8S - . . 1

heeded:..-. -- cl the Uniwnlly

centen for lldv......t lr8IMitl and
..-ch. n.. ....... -ad be divided
lnlobalh"_ _................ ........

-..1 • good c'*- cl MCIIring addlIIDMI ..... dalln.
Aalardlng"' ., lltide oppeartng in the
CllroNdt o1 Higher E...._,, the Com-

onolh.r~end~

Nglono, end "'Mue centcn," ID tuM out
aper11 on auc:h maaen .. - n a l
trade, oecurtly affaln,' food and energy.

......, lllg8d the gove-nrn«nt to spend
$245 ~dian to bolur foreign . , . _ _
end lnlerNIIonel studies J)I09Rrns lot tlie
prlmery, MConcialy end college lewis.
The M&amp;m II S178 mlllion more than the
$67 mllion appropriated this year.
Terming the country's leek of competence In knlgn Ia~. "scandeloua," the 25-member commission,
~- chehd by former CorneD Presld"nt
Jemeo A. Perkins, who aloo heads the lntemetlonal Council for Educational
Dcwlopment, uked thel cologos be
given lnceniiYe tPnll cl S40 per lludent
eruoled In ~ or fourth lfvellenguage
couna. In addition, en $15 Is
rec:ornmended for aech lludent taking
wb commonly taught . . _," the
Cllronlde llated.
The report elso caled for the U.S.
~~ cl Education to lund 20
regional &amp;eng._ centers-meny to be
located In &lt;lOiega end u - - 1 0
"'reenvlgcnle end~ lenguage and
tachlng COIIIp.tency cl taches at aD
lewla. The regional centcn would be
alotled ~ $200,000 to $400,000
a yur, wllb two-thlrdl coming from
ledeml ccllen and the remaining third
from llate and olher revenue sources.

The centen are expected to act .as a
raoo..ce to IUIIain and stNnglhen internallonll lludles 'l"ttonally, apecialy at
the college level.
According to the Chronicle, the
average grant for the 200 federaly subsidlled undergraduate centers for lnternatonal studies would be about $40,000
a year for one to three years , depending
on the size of the prowam; the average
~ant to national centers. about
$250,000 for a live-year period, and the
average grant to regional centers around
$150,000, again, for a live-year period.
While the Commission did not cal lor
colleges to have mandatory admission requirements In foreign languAge, H
"~" that languagR profldency be requWd for admission or graduation, and
thM two to three counes In International
lludia be compulsory for bachelor's
d~ candldales. In addltion, the CommilliOn advised business, Industry and
labor to piece "h!gb,jx\ority" In recruiting
employea with
language and international studies training, and suggested the State Departme=t In comnee wtth its own r
liOns on
requisites for ernp
es.

Local lapec:t
As far as the report's Impact on the
Universil¥, both the Department cl
Modern Languages and the Council on
lnlemallonal Studies would like to reap
posd&gt;le linandal bonuses and both
believe they have the potential to give
other compelltors-espec:ially those from
within SUNY -a run lor the money.
Drs. Albert Michaels, .director cl the
Council on International Studies, and
Stephen Dunnell, who heads the CouncU's Intensive English Language Institute,
support the report's recommendations in
general. They are particularly pleased
with Hs recognlllon that foreign language
programs should be expanded not only at
the college level, but in the primary and
secondary grades where formal Ieeming
begins. Also Important, they believe, II
lhe Commission's emphasis on enbanc- ·
lng the pedagogical skills of language

fer.

~uage

s...,._...

Nau-.1 MCIIItty
The Chronicle noted that the Commission justilled the lncreaoe In expenditures
"in terms ol national security." The report
slated that the Commission found "a
ser1ou1 deterioration In , the country's
lahguag.. and research capacily at a lime
when an lncreaJing)y hazardous International, military, political and economic

In addition to the language centers, the
Commllolon recommended that $36.5
million In prants be ~ to jpduate and
un~uate centers cl International
studies. The money would be divided this
wav : $8 million lor about 200
under!J'aduale programs to encourage
"lasting" inaUiutional commitments ;
S9.75 million for a network ol 60 to 70

How libraries stack up
The following analysis ~mpares the University Libraries with 22 other Institutions which have been identlfied by t~e
=!uflalo administration as being our peers. that Is. most similar to U/B In terms ot program. mission, and

· Volumes in Library
- Volumes Added (Grossi
- Total Microform Hold ings
- Current Serials
- Professional Staff (FTE)
- Nonprofessional Staff (FTE)
- T olaf Stall (FTE)
· Materials El&lt;pendHures

9 - Materials &amp; Bindlng ExpendHures
10 - Salaries &amp; Wages Expenditures
II - Total Expenditures
12 - T olaf Items Loaned
13 - Tolaf Items Bon-owed
14 - Current Periodical El&lt;pend~ures

sJZ;c'!~ta for the foDowing comparison was taken from the 1977-78 edHion of the Association of Research Library
IMiitullon
UclW!o&lt;:onMn
U clMichlpn
u cl Mlnnaola
UclWMhlntton
U cl Cel at Bat.eley
Colulllbia

Cornel
UClA
U ofTexu, AllAin
Michigan State
Purdue
Penn State
Ohio State
u of Colonodo
UNC, Chapel HW

R......
U cl ~land, CP
Ucl..,_
u cll'ltllllloqh
UclKa..
UclVqloM
U cl NMa at AJ.herot
SUNYAB

1

2

3

4

5

6

10

10
6
8
2
3
5

9
10
20
I
15
4
7
8

7
5
9
8
I
3
6
4
2
14
20
16

8
2
14
7
3
4
6
5

II

10
2
6
9
3
5
7
I
8
17
21
12
14

23

20

10
15
21
13
17
12
I
22
19

12

I
7
8
2
3
5
6
4
II
22
17
9

20
12
16
23
15
13
18
14
21
19

II
4

5
14

23

19
21
3
16
6
13
14
17

17
7
22
13
12
21
16
9
18
15
19

23

20

12

II
18
22
2

II
15
16
4
18
16
19
13

8

9

8
7
13
10
3

8
7
14
9
3

II
6
2

II
6
2
17
13
15
16
22
· 10

II

17
21
14
15
21
9
5

15

Is

20

20

17
18

13
19
16
22
17

12
19
15
4

19
12

19
15
5
10
22
13
9
12

II
21
16

7
7
2
10
6
I
5
8
3
4
18
21
9
12

23
14

4
20
18
5

23

23

19

21

10
9
3
4
7
I
5
6
2
8
17

11

12

9
3
8
10

3
12

20

7
5
2
4
18
21

11
12
23
14
10
13
19
15
21
16
22
18

II
12
22
13
6
15
17
16
20
14
23
19

thai al the money will be approp1ated by
given the large sum, 1'1-etident
Carter's ~ to reduce the federal
budget, and the chance that some may
view the report as • telf-wrvtng document largely wrtiiAm by educators. Dunnett remains more oplimlltlc. He ouspects
large, .snultinallonal companies and
otbas wtlh large export components are
realizing the Importance of foreign
languagR and international 11udies programs and will support the report's lrnplementallon.
Since U/ B already has an international
studies program unmatched within
SUNY. the duo feel !he lJnivenlly stands
an excellent chance of being selected as
an undergraduate center for such studies.
If some """" funds should come his
way, Michaels said he would propose hiring a fuU·tirne professional staff employee
who could write grant proposals.

eorv-.

5...._._...,_

Although Michaels rRported that
Japa.,_ and Arabic are enjoying~
enroUments this year, by and large, he
feels U/B students neglect language and
International studies coune work becauae
they perceive them as lTlOI'C dllflcult, or
perhapo cl Utile c:onMQUence. Too few
students here recognize that training in
these areas can make them more promotable In , the corporate structure,
Michaels and Dunnell naiad.
Modern ~Chairman Edward
J . Dudley is confident that II more federal
doUars are made available, his departmentis the "best equipped" of any SUNY
languagR unit to receive them.
Not only Is the department the only
one In SUNY to have three doctoral programs in languages, but It also has a staff
of applied linguists who specialize In
second language acquisition and a
developed orientation program for T As.
If extra lundlng could be secured,
Dudley said he would 6D a present weak
spot end hire a German lingulot.
Dudley agrees wtlh lh" Commission's
stance that, In part, the increased expenditure of federal dollars In the two areas
can be juslllled In \erms ol national security. The more sldlls Americans have In
language and 'tnternallonal studies, the
less they will rely on a few specialists and,
the more they will become an Informed
dllmuy, he noted.
..-J.a.

51 elected to
'Who's Who'
studea

Categories lor which the libraries were ranked include:

I
2
3
4
5
6
7
8

'-Chin.
MichMk remains aomewhat okepticaJ

I

13
I
18
2

2

20

5
16
10
4
18

4
5
12
9
6
21
17
16
7
13
15
14
22
10

8
19
15
9
22
13
7
20
14
6
II
21
23
17

8
3
23
19

II

14
2
3
8
4
7
5
N/ A
21
I
16
17

II
12
20
22
6
14
10
15
18
9
19
13

Fifty-one
from U/B have
been aelected for listing lri the 1979-80
edllion of "Who's Who Among Sludenls
1n American Universities and Collega."
Selec:ted by a panel of campus
representatives, the U/B students join
1,200 others from inslltullons of higher
learning In aD 50 llates, the Dlatrtct cl
Columbia, and several foreign nations.
Undergraduate students who have
been selected may pick up their certlftcates of recognition at 544 Capen ;
grad students, at 549 Capen.
Those from U/B are:
Adele K. Anderson, Douglas R.
Bacon, Frank J . Bagot, Christopher F.
Beck, JoAnn E. Boehm, David Bloom,
Mary A . Brewer, K. Jane Brockway,
Peter D. Brodfuehrer, Meredith L.
Brown, Elizabeth.l&lt;. Carlock, Peter J .D.
Carnevale.
Allred B. Cooper, Albert W . O.hl&gt;erg,
Eleanor L. Dougherty, Paul M. Epstein,
Anthony E. Faber, Douglas J . Floccare,
Timothy E. Frey, Deborah J . Garvin,
Joseph C. Grasmick, Rob&lt;::! M. Hayden,
Stephen J . Heyman , David G .
Hangauer.
Carolyn K. HoUand, Arnold J . Hook,
Phllip A. Horzempa, Elaine A. Jennings,
Irene P . Knutson , Irene C . Krempulec,
Dorothy E. Lozowsld, Anthony F. Massi,
Carol A. McMillan, Margaret M. Miles,
JO&lt;!I D. Mayersohn, Kamchung Lui.
Andrew Relstetter, Peter A. Rogerson ,
Andre G. Roy , Arthur J . Russo, Nicholas
Sacc:amano, John T. Saunders, Randall
G. Simmons, James P . Smist, David C .
Sonnenberger, Nancy A. Stecker,
Houng Vu, Joe A. Weedman , Marjorie
E. Winkler, Stephen Wojnarowsld, David
G. Zager.

-

�Decemb.r 6, 1979

U/8 to host
conference on
the family
U/B has been oelected as the site of
one of five major state con!~ on the
famlly to be held In January and ·
February.
The five Governor's Regional Conferences on Families, set In preparation
for a WhHe House CQnference on
Families planned for the summer of
1980, will focus on the state's major
family-related Issues to be considered at
the White House conference and will in·
elude election of delegates to represent
New Yorlc at that event.
U/B's oo!Uerence will be held on
Saturday, February 2 , in O'Brian HaD.
February 3 Is the ~.,.ow date . ~
Topics to be covered in workshops at
the all-day conference wUI be: families
and schools. health, the workplace;
changing family life; families with special
needs; families In stress and crisis; ethnic
and cuhural diversity; housing and commuoHy, and growing up in the 1980's .
Coonlinating the campus conference
with the state Council on ChUdren and
Families, which Is directing the slate's
participation in the WhHe House event, is
a commHiee composed of Or. Ronald
Stein and Judy Zucl&lt;erman of the Presiden(s Of6ce and Linda G.-..ce-Kobas of
the Division of Public Affairs.
Other state regional conferences will-be
held at SUNYI Abany, Jan. 12; ComeD,
Jan. 19; SUNY /Stony Brook, Jan. 20;
an~ Fordham, Jan. 27.

Wardlow will
teach in MFC
Elwood M. Wardlow, former managIng edHor of the Buffalo Euenlng News,
has been eppoW&gt;ted a lecturer in Millard
ADmore CoDege.
Wardlow, a veteran of newspapertng
for 31 years, will teach a course on "Contemporary Media bsues: Professk&gt;nal
Journalism," during the Spring oemaster,
Tuesd.ys &amp;om 6:25 to 10:05 p.m.
Dr. Eric Streiff, assistant dean of MFC,
in announcing the appointment, noted
thai ~Mr . Wardlow brings a solid
eslablished background In real-world
journalism with him. As a course 'abouf
journalism, his topics will include such
Issues as the nature of mas§ communication, the role and responsibility of the
media, ethics and standards, and will
feature guest appearances by professional news people."
Wardlow, who announced his retirement from the NeuJs in October, afier 'n
years, oerved as copy editor, slotrnan,
asslslanl managing edHor and managing
editor there.
Prior to joining the News in 1952, he
worlced on the Freeporl Journal Stan·
dard in Freeport, IDinois, his hometown.
During recent years h~ has aloo lee·
lured and taught a val'lely of writing and
jouma&amp;sm courses In several area colleges and unlversHies.
The new course, according to James
H. Blackhum, dean of the Division of
ConUnuing Educallon, joins other spring
semester communication course offerings

through MFC which include "lV Newscasllng," "lntrodudioli to Journalism,"
and "Non-verbal Comipunlcalion."

Love Canal
bibliography
A btJilography of more than 570
newspaper and periodlcal articles and
documents relating to the Love Canal is
available In the Environment and Energy
Raouroo Ccnte&lt; of the Science and

~~tk~

are the 500
n4NIIPII&gt;U articles lisled, which range
from AugustS, 1978, to the present. Included in the documents collection are
1es11mon1a before Coowelllonal committea, stale and fed"ral agency
nwmoranda and the lnlnoa1pl of ..,.
Killing Ground." a opec:ial ABC News
rtport on the Love Canal.
- , . ~y was complied by
M.rja I. Hart, Jannlne A. LAe and

J.,._ Weboter with the support of
Rachoi Ccnon Ccllege and the fac:ulty of
~end Applied~

U I 8 graduate i.s 'teacher of year'
right lime and at the right place,"
Lazerson is now supplementing the exIf a mouse wanders into David B.
Lazerson muses, you might strike the
perience with Boy Scout training; the
Lazerson's classroom al the Dr. Martin
responsive, "magic" chord. On the
youngsters in the class will have unforms
Luther King Communlly School, the
whole, though , he doesn't believe in
and be able to earn merit badges.
rodent is like~y
o be conscripted into
magic -only in hard worlc.
L.uerson's
pel center," the
Popcomaad .......
showcase of his
m for learning
While special classrooms offer the
Although Luerson has recelvei a
learning disabled a needed chance to get
disabled (LD) students and the envy of
smaU grant from the SJale to underwrite
back on track, l.azerson cautions that you
the entire school.
some of these activities this year, his
have lo guard against "too much isolaIn residence in the center are gerbils,
students themselves have to raise much
lion" and make motivallon a byword .
chamelecms, snakes, tree crabs, hamsters
of the money. A favorite way is to make
One of his students, "a very Iough
and tropical fish , in additiOn lo the
and seD popcorn to the rest of the ochool.
13-year-old," had a history of being
enslaved mice. L.uerson's LD students
The money goes Into a bank acoounl
absent from school 40 per cent of the
are totally responsible for the care and
which the students handle. It's jwl one
lime. He was really hurting. He had failed
feeding of the pets; they're also aDowed
more practical lesson, Luerson feels; If
two grades and had had to repeal two.
to teach so-called "regular" students an
they don't make out deposit and
"He was tired of school and you can't
about them.
withdrawal slips properly, they don't get
blame him .~ When he walked into
Imagine, beams Lazerson, the thrill
the money.
Lazerson's room and saw the freaky pel
thai the "special" student gets when he or
The~~~~ . L.uerson
center, "his eyes lit up and he got excited
she goes Into a regular classroom lo
suggests, teaches theoe chUdren things In
~lnslrud" those guys.
about school for the 61'$1 lime ."
such a way thai they don't even realize
Thl5 unique approach to both science
they are learning.
.d~ burten
an&lt;hnollftlkm, combboed wtth-the-com- - - lbeai!IDe
That pel center, Luerson submits, · p-tac~a...
P.rehenslve outdoor education unH and
helps break down the baniers between
Lazersotl has devised still another way
ille peer teaching program with which he
regular and special classrooms which
to beguile his youngslers Into learning.
also enriches his charges' ochool clays,
often haunt the students labeled as
He
farms them out as tutors for children
won for Lazerson the tHle of ~Teacher of
"special." AD the kids al school are
in the prtmary grades. Even though not
the Year" In the Buffalo Public School
fascinated and want to learn more about
the most capable leamen themJelves,
System.
.
the pets-even if they have to learn from
they have the necessary skills to help
The 29-year-old father of three is a
a "special" kid. Kids, incidentally, are not
children in kindergarten and In the flat •
graduate of Bennett High School in
fooled by fancy labels which aduhs give to
and second grades. Each day, four or five
Buffalo who earned a B.A . in American
programs for the less gifted, Lazenon
of his students devote ""'-en 20-40
Studies al U/B, In the early 70's. After
points ·out. You can give remedial or
minutes to prtmary clamooms where
three years al the Rabbinical College of
special education a fancy name like
they "help" teacher$ worlc wllh the very
America, he returned borne and look a
BOCES, if you like, but the kids will still
young. There's a double bonus: self- ·
master's In ~ educallon at Buffalo
mocl&lt; each other out by using the term. ..YJorth soars and the "tutors' " own skills
Stale. Now, he's worldng on a Ph.D. in
"Hey, BOCES." translates into, "Hey,
are reinforced . If you're going to tutor a
urban education with Dr. Hesbert Foster
stupid."
IHtle kid , you bone up on what you are
of U/B's Faculty of Educational Studies.
Lazerson's freaky pets are not just to
going to teU him, so you don't get embarThe emphasis Is on experiential
play with. They are also the basis for
rassed. From his studies of the uoe of
education.
science experiments. Kids who have
problem learners as peer Iuton, Luerson
Lazerson's first experience with
trouble measuring Unes on a piece of
has come up with an article entitled, "I
teaching came while he was at rabbinical
paper get very excited about the same
Must Be Good If I Can Teach," soon to
college In New Jersey. He was prtndpal
task when II means calculaUng the length
be published in the Joumol of Learning
of an afier-day Hebrew school. After-day
of a gerbil or a hamster.
Disabilities. Last year, he was invited 10
means students came there lo learn
Scotland
to talk about the concept at the
Outdoor education
Hebrew and about their religious heritage
First World Congress on Special EducaLazerson's students also learn about
afier a fuD day at regular school. The protion.
ecology, nature, and how to plan and
blem of mollvaUng youngsters, wh1ch is
worlc together through his year-long outMore t o e now his speciality, was buill-in. To lessen
door educallon program. The cUmax of
While working on his doctorate at
the tedium, he tried to make things come
U/ B, he hopes to develop a cHy-wlde
this
Intensive
Instructional
unH
is
an
actual
alive . If Passover was the lesson, for
camping trip to Allegheny Slate Park in
experlenllal education progliom for the
example, he would march his pupils out
late spring. But the preparation begins In . learning disabled al junior high level,
to a factory where matzos were made
the faD. Throughout the year, day-long
using various ethnic and cuhural comrather than simply lecturing them about
field trips to places such as wUd life
munities In Western New YOlk as the
the traditional ceremonies.
reserves, fish hatcheries, the Red Cross
laboratory.
For the longer range future, laarson
(for lessons In first aid) , etc., set the &amp;lage.
I
The tunled-off ucl doe -blecl
Class members also have to draw up
would like to develop a total educational
AI the Martin Luther King School on
menus for the expedition and make propacl&lt;age for learning disabled &amp;ludents
High Street, Lazerson is in charge of a
visions for supplies and equipment that
that could be used in any 5etllng +
class of 10 youngsters between the ages
will be needed. They learn about nutrianywl)ere-a package that would blend
of 10 and 13 who are c:ontidered
tion
because
they
soon
find
out
they
can
'I
physical educallon, special acadernlc
"failures" by ordinarv .educational stanUve on Pepsls and potato chips. They
cour54!S , vocationallnltning, and ould&lt; or
dards: kids turned o£f to school because
learn
how
to
overlook
nothing:
experience$.
aD they have experienoed in that oetllng is
The prowam would almost certainly
humillaUng failure ; kids with acute. somettrnes the hard W")). For 9f1'! trip,
L.uerson nollced no one had thought
Incorporate something eloe he feels "''111
emotional problems who can't or won't
about toilet paper. He look along a supstrongly abqul: educallon for m ral
leam.SkJJis are so dlvene that among the
development. Too many people tod.ty,
ply in the trunk of his car, but waited unlll
I 0 there are four reading groups and four
students diocovered the problem for
he feels, confuoe moral lratnlng with
math groups, oome at pre-prtmer level.
themselves before saving the day ..
religion, and want the sc:hoolo lo play no
T'- "LD" youngsten are grouped
Once out in the woods, Ids "macho cHypart In M. He dlsagrees. Proper codes of
apart from others In the lale elementary
kids" ·otten become ocared and anxious; . conduct, living~to responslblllti tS,
tndes. a ·~lion" that is likely to
have nothing to
folow them through both junior and they don't wanllo sleep outdoors or be In being a good
the daril . But they learn how to cope.
do with organ
religion. He tells tis
high IChoolo.
how
to:
lie
knots,
build
rope
bridges
class
In
connec11on
with
the outdoor
The Buffalo ochools emphasize
across aeeks, collect dry firewood and
camping trip thai "If you want to go, you
"malnslreaming" theoe studenls back Into
build
a
proper
fire,
survive
a
10-mlle
have to put out." AD life's that way, he
regular claaa, If at al poatie. " If you're
hike, and identify tr- and leaves, etc.
ludcy enough to got one ol them at the

smlla.

-

�December 6. 1979

Refugee law
being changed,
panelists say
legislation pending In WashlngtolfwUI
for the first lime outfit the U.S. with a
standard policy for dealing with refugees
and their problems, those attending a
symposium sponsored by lntemaUonal
College last Thursday learned.
Michael Polsner, executive director of
the New York City-based lawyers Committee on International Human Rights.
noted that the U.S. has simply reacted to
refugee aises as they have occurred since

the post-world War II era .
The Refugee Act of 1979, st~llo be put
into final form by Congress, alte!Jlpts to
define a policy in advance of any future
crises and &amp;o elimlnate confusion sur·

rounding delinllfPns of who "refugees"
are and what ca be done lor them.
Polsner explallled t'&gt;at the p(Oposed
legislation attempts to - transfer the
"sense" of the word "'refugee" to a

brOader definition than that which now
exists: being from a communist nation .

Other participants In the discussion
were Sister Morita, represenling the local
Catholic Charities who have been successful in relocating both Indochinese and
Ch~ean refugees In this area; Shirley Feld
of Jewish Family Services, whose experience has been primarily-with Russian
refugees; and Paul Do, a Vietnamese student at U/ B.
Estimates are that in the world today,
some six and one-half million Individuals
are uprooted, fleeing various forms of
political, religious and economic oppres. slon. Obviously, said Sally King , an administrative ASSistant and lecturer in Inter·

national College, even with the best of intentions, the U.S. can't accommodate

them all. The new legislatiop a:t&lt;m~pts to'
determine how much help can be given,
and who can get
The panelists reported that the President has asked private, voluntary agencies to come to Washington to testify concerning possible criteria (other than purely political ones) to be used in deciding
who can be admitted as a refugee.
Should, lor example, those from countries in whose affairs the U.S . has been

u:

Coach Bill Hughes' Bulls opened the
home and SUNYAC season with a win
over Oneonta Saturday night at Clark .
Fans were vocal and appreciative as

U / B hustled for the victory. We won't
mention opening night at Niagara. ·

Involved in some way receive special

consideration for aid and asylum?
The pending bill will up the quota on
refugees from 17 ,500-a-month (where tt
has stood lor several decades) to 50,000.
The U.S . Attorney General has always
had the power to make exceptions to the
current legal Umtt and has exercised that
authority from time to tlme .

Sister Marlta outlined for the audience
how Catholic Charities goes about finding
families to sponsor refugees, and how important cultural differences have to be ad·
dressed if refugees are to successfully adjust to a new way of. life.
·
Ms. Feld said Russian refugees face
unique problems. TheoJ must apply for
visals two·to-stx months before leaving,

and consequently run risks of lostng their
jobs and suffering othor harassment.
They may also be turned down flat.
Donations from the World Jewish Com·
munity are used to process these refugees

Non Profit Org .
U.S . Postage
PAID
Buffalo, N.Y.
Permit No. 311

through Vienna tnd Rome, and onto
their final deslinatrpns, Ms. Feld noted.
'Both reseltle~t agency representatives emphaslz_. that the refugees who
settle In this courby are " I 00 per cent
employed ." It's a " misConception" that
refugees arrive here only to go on
weKare, they agreed .
They also calmed lear"' that some
refugees might be "subversives," only
pretending to be in distress. The FBI has
checked their records repeatedly, Feld
and Sister Morita said, "and have never
found one subversive ." Such individuals
are probably weeded out of the pipeUne
long before they reach the point of berng
resettled, they suggested.
Some members of the audience raised
the issue ol Haitian potilical refugees
whom the U.S. wiU not now admH. _The
reason Is that, by delinllion, there can be
no "refugees" from a nation whose
government is friendly to the U.S .
Haitian dissidents entering this country
on towlsl visas are not granted asylum.
The pending legislation, Ms. King
pointed out, may change the sliuallon. "It
won't be the final step, but H wUI be a
start."

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

NOV. 29. 1979
VOL. 11 e NO. 12

U I 8 impresses evaluators, Ketter reports·
.

I

'Big Ten'
schools could
'be envious,'
he is told
By Joyce Buc:hnowskl
ReponerSialf

From the onset. the evaluation team's
approach to the campus review was not
one of determining ~ he should or
shouldn't remain at the helm of the
University, President Ketter told the Professional Staff Senate (PSS) Tuesday. but
rather one of identifying the institution's
strengths and weaknesses.
Calling the team "well qualified,"
Kett:er went on to say he considers an
evaluation a "desirable" and "healthy
process" which presents an opportunity
for in-depth discussions of current and
possible future problems facing the
University.
Recalling some of the comments
relayed to him during the evaluation
team's exit visit, Ketter reported that the
trio praised the quality of programs here
and suggested the University's offerings
coul~. be looked at with envy by the " Big
Ten .
So impressed was the team , Ketter
continued, that one of thelf recommen -

Disasters: they offer lessons
By Unda Grace-Kobas
N~

Bureau Staff

''Disaster."
The word conjures up grim images of
human suffering in floods. fires . earthquakes, wars: events that inspire
nightmares among those who've never
encountered them, and bring recurring
nightmares to those who survive them .
Today, the probabUity that a person
wiU encounter a disaster. either personally or through the eyes of the media , is
greater than ever before in history, SZiys
Professor Charles H . V . Eberl of
Geography, who believes people can
become much better prepared to cope
with a disaster and Its aftereffects.
Ebert has developed a new course.
"Geography of Oisaslers," which he feels
can provide students with "an understan·
ding of life' '
" Regardless of where people may
stand In life," he explains, "they may encount.e r disaster, either a natural disaster
such as a flood or earthquake, or a man·
induced disaster such as a war, or forms
ol poUutiOn. If they don't adually en·
counter one, they should at least have an
awareness and understanding of stress
situations. This would help people cope
with them, and possiblj! make such
upheavals more tolerable.
Among catastrophes to be covered in
the course are several that Ebert has
himself thoroughly researched , including
the Managua earthquake; a lirestorm In
Hamburg, Germany, that followed an
Allied bombing raid In World War II; a
Costa Rican volcano eruption that wiped
out an entire city, and the Love Canal.
· rm Interested In a societal response to
human tragedy," says Ebert. He intends
to cover not only natural causes and pat·
terns leading to specific disasters, but also
human reactions and ways in which
future disasters may be avoided.

A concern for life ._ • prerequlolte
The most important prerequisHe for
enrolling in Geography 201 , Ebert notes,
is "concern about the nature and quality
of life and the future of our planet Earth
and a willingness to face, realisticaUy, the
problems of past and potential future
disasters."
Acknowledging he is not a social
psychologist, Ebert feels his personal ex·
periences and research nonetheless :&gt;ro·
vide him with a rich background , His
study of the Hamburg firebombing is
widely cited in professional Uterature and
is based on first-hand research. He has
been to Managua three limes, before and
just after the big 'quake; he investigated
the eruption of the volcano lrazu in Costa
Rica; he witnessed the uprising in
CZA!Choslovakla ; and he lived through
World War U and served with the U.S.
Army in postwar Europe. Ebert has ac·
tlvely Involved himseH in field work, too,
and spent two months last summer as
part of an archaeological excavation pro·
ject in Israel.
"My entire lifestyle is based on great
concern for the quality of l~e ." says the
former dean of the Division of
Undergraduate Studies and two-time
recipient of a Chancellor's Award for Ex·
ceUence in Teaching who maintains an
open door policy for his students.
Begtnalllg ht. 26th yur
Ebert Is entering his 2~th year at U/ B,
and hopes development of the new
course wiD help dispel the notion that
tenured profess&lt;&gt;B become "old iron" or
"dead wood."
"I feel many courses today deal too
much with abstract concepts and model
building," he says.
attempt to reach
right down to the real world, to portray
happenings that may be painful to realize
and may cause coniroversy, but certainly
wiU help yoyng people sort out their own

·r11

ideas about life, life values and priorities.··
One thing he will not do in the leaching
of " Disasters., is moralize: "I will present
facts brutally, frankly and straight·
forwardly, but the course is not designed
to teach moralHy. Each ind ividual must
develop his or her own mora l
framework .')here will, however, be an
opportunity to form moral values, for

Ebert will "try to teach in such a way that
it will not be difficult to see the lessons to
be learned ."
Because of the strain it puts on the en·
vironment, overpopulation is a con -

tributing factor to many disasters, Ebert
notes .
" If a volcano erupts on an uninhabited
island , it's no disaster, but 50 years later
when there is a city at its foot, it is a
disaster."

The medUo contribute
The media contribute to a perception
that more disasters occur today, he
believes .
" AI the tum of the century, just as
many tornados may have occurred as oc:;.
cur today, but with modem sophisticated
coverage, few escape being noticed ."
Ebert also feels modem society is
''becoming more and more susceptible to

disaster.

.... ..,.......... .... z. col. I

Brooklyn Jewish:
a threat to U I B?
Dr. Newton Garver, chair of
the Faculty Senate, notes that a
bankrupt hospital In Brooklyn
may be more threatening to
U/B's future than anything the
DOB might do to the 1980-81
budget! See Senate minutes,

pase 11.

dations to the Chancellor will be that
SUNY, within the next few years. should
seek entry for U/ B into the AssociatJ&lt;.n of
American Universities, the creme de Ia
creme of higher education affiliations,
even if it takes extra resources. The last
schooltbe AAU admitted some years ago
was the University of Southern California, Ketter said . Aocording to at least one
member of the team who served on that
AAU evaluation committee, U/ B is easUy
on par with USC if not superior. The
AAU currently has 50 members, two of
which are Canadian .
The team's opinions concerning
a¢ademlc programs here, the President
nbred , were not made exclusively on the

basis of their campus visit , but also on the
basis of consultations with colleagues
from around the country .
es. . 'PSS.'
2. col S

pa••

DeSantis
•
•
restgntng
James R. DeSantis has resigned as
director of the University's Division of
Public Affairs, effective February 1.
DeSantis, a member of the University's
staff since 1967, has served as the
University's senior public affairs officer
since 1977.
He termed an announcement of his
professional plans as "premature at this
lime ," but said that he is in the process of
..setting up a very exciting new organiza -

tion wh,\"h is the fuHillment of a long-time
dream .
,
DeSanits emphasized that his resignation is "entirely voluntary" and he is
"leaving the University on a positive
note." He said, " I will. miss campus life
and the many friends I have made among
our students and faculty."
Programs under DeSanits' management have won some five national and
four State-wide awards, including the
highest possible award for communHy
relations programming from the Counc:U
for the Advancement and Support of
Education.
He is accredited by the Public Relations
Society of America, and is past president
of the State University Public Relations
Counc:U. He is active in the Buffalo com·
munHy, serving as a member of several
boards and area-wide committees.

�. . •aUIIl
Huddleston asks__ Senate
to take stand on cu"t;s

November 29. 1979

•Disasters
IfN--I. eeLS)

"Environmental deterioration has gone
up. We are making more of an effoc:t now
that we have become aware of the en·
vlronment. but we must make a much
greater effort. The average citizen is very
poorly inlonned about environmental
Issues. The effects of actions on the environment aren't analyzed with the same
effoc:t used to determine how much
money will be made ."
Too often. long-range effects are not
even considered . For example, Ebert
notes that In an area north~ast of Ver·
dun, France. poison gas used during
World War I can still be traced in the soil
and even smelled ?n hot days.
Lowe C.aal
Love Canal Is an01her prime example
of human lajlu•. Ebert was one of the
first lndepetll!ent scientists to do lillY
testing at that site , an independence he
had to in•ist upon to maintain his objec·
tive Integrity, he says. He Issued four
reports on his research . Recommenda·
lions and predictions he made over a
year ago have been proved valid with the
recent release of data by the state and
EPA .
Ebert was one of the hrst to recom·
mend testing of a specific site north of the
canal. which he was convinced was
heavily polluted . A recent announcement
by the EPA conlinns his fears . He also
pre'dlcted that the drainage system stU!
being installed around the canal would be
ineffective since many of the chemicals
have already leached beyond the drains.
wiD continue to leach under them, or can -

not be removed by the system .
Pre.Jiminary . reports from state in·
vestigators are bearing that out, too.
Love Canal will be covered in Ebert's
course: he will discuss its unique physical
setting and the historical evolution of the
problem, while also assessing the abate·
ment plan and whal measures can be
taken to prevent such tragedies in the

hear."
This constant recitation of horrors -

millions starving In Cambodia , hundreds
killed in an earthquake, chemical pollution affecting almost every one of us -

can lead to hopelessness, Ebert agrees.
"Many things ore nearly hopeless." he
grants. "but once you admit this, you
paralyze yourself. There ;s not a single
sHuation that cannot be proved by do·
ing something about it.
least is to in·
fonn yourself. The Important thing is to
be active intellectually and physically.
"We know the lessons to be learned
from many man·induced environmental

disasters," he says. "'We can no longer
say, 'We didn't know ,' or permit existing
situations like Love Canal to continue, or
future ones to develop. II we don 't learn ,
we are twice as guilty ."

future .

Another type of avoidable danger that
Ebert has researched IQ.volves aviation
hazards caused by poorly·plaJ:&gt;ned loca·
lions lor airports and atmospheric
phenomena. Landing approaches are
usually set over urbanized areas. but a
factor olten overlooked, he notes, is that
heat generated by an urban area can
cause changes In updrafts and affect the
Oight pattern of a plane.

Can fur paralyze?
Physical condhlons are only half ol the
complete analysis of a disaster. Ebert is
Interested, too, In what he caDs the
"phenomenon of panic." Is there such a
thing ~ being "paralyzed with lear?"
"How did the Gennans, or the
Japanese, behave under massive bomb·
lng?'' he asks. "Some societies apparently
tend to be more stoic, philosophical. such
as the Japaoese. It's a societal response.
brought about by cuhural conditioning.
During World War II , the Soviets in
besieged Leningrad underwent terrible
suffering. The overall ability of the Rus·
sians to suffer is incredible, but they've
been dtsctphned to do so."
Is H odd that a geographer should be
Interested In human responses? The
stereotype ol geography Is that h is a
science focussing on physical factors, but
Ebert points out this Is false . He sees
geography as the hnk between the purely
social and the purely natural sciences .
If one can use as an indicator o! a per·
son's nature something so basic as
bookshelves. H can be said Ebert has a
broad view of life. His campus office con·
tains two sets of shelves. One is filled with
books on mte.mationallaw, government.
and histories of Eastern Europe which
behe his interest as a youth In becoming a
journalist. the other is his "worldngsheH:
crammed With books on soil science,
water and other physical matters.

of contract of non-tenured faculty or staff
A resolution calling for any budget cuts
or any fiscally motivated non-renewal oi
for next year to be met solely by atlrition
contract of non-tenured faculty or stall at
will be presented to the Facuhy Senate at
this University.
Its Tuesday meeting by Professor Mark
"Be it reso/ued that
W. Huddleston dl the Facuhy of Social
"(a) lor the next fiscal year, any
Sciences.
changes in the size or composition of the
The Huddleston resolution also pro·
lacuhy necessary to meet Division of the
poses that any long-term reallocations be
Budget enrollment targets be met by attri·
undertaken only with the advice and con·
tion alone,
sent of the Senate . The administration
" (b) lor the long-tenn , any Internal
should exercise- stronger leadership in _
reallocatien of resources be undertaken
representing the campus to Albany, the
only
with the advice and consent of the
resolution says.
Faculty Senate , and be made consistent
The text of the resolution follows:
with the broad educational mission of a
"Whereas administrative officials of the
University Center, including the goals
State University of New York at Buffalo
expressed in the General Education- prohave failed to provide a budgetary base
gram, and
for the University that ensures the
"(c) the University Administration
integrity of core academic programs while
exercise stronger leadership In represenallowing lor growth in high demand areas
ting the Interests of this campus to Albany
and
·
in an effort to achieve an eduCationally
"Whereas the Faculty Senate of the
sound procedure for resource aDocation
and redouble Its efforts to stabUize
State University of New York at Buffalo
strongly opposes any retrenchment ol
enrollments and minimize student
attrition."
tenured faculty or stall , any tennination

U I 8 getting machine that will
coilvert print into 'speech'
U/ B will soon be receiving a Kurzweil
Model Ill Reading Machine. a device that
converts printed information into
simu~ted speech and is an invaluable aid
to the blind and visually Impaired.
Accord ing to Mr. Saktidas Roy. dlrec·
tor ol University Libraries. U/ B was
selected to parttcipate in a national
dissemination project funded by the
Bureau of Education for the
Handicapped .
The machine. whk:h can also serve as
a "talking cakulator" capable ol perfonn·
ing standard mathematical and scientific
functions . will be the first of Its kind in
Western New York, Roy pointed out.
U/ B's selection under the federally ··
funded project was based on an application made to the Bureau of Education for
the Handicapped by Ms. Bertha Cutcher.
coordinator of campus Services for the
Handicapped ,
The project grant also provides lor
machine maintenance. teacher training.
and educational support servk:es.
The innovative machine will be Installed In the Special Resources Room of
Lockwood Library and will augment

other resources and equipment presently
available there. such as a device known
as a Perkins Brailler which writes in
braille .
"The Kurzweil machine will add a new
dimension of convenience. in dependence and Immediacy to the use ol
the Libraries by the visually impaired .''
said Roy. "It will eliminate visually·
Impaired persons' dependence on help to
accomplish research and will further the
Libraries' goal of making our resources
equally available to all ."
The Model Ill Kurzweil Reading
Machine consists of two basic components-~ seenner and a computer untt ,
each only slightly larger than an attache
case.
The machine reads al a rate controlled
by the 11ser and is capable of speeds considerably lasler than human speech. The
quality of the machine's "speech" is
remarkably natural and easy to understand , Roy said.
Timelilbles lor delivery of lhe machine
and for initiating instruction in its use
have not yet been established .

e PSS
(fro• . -. . 1. col. 4)

Sconiers on
SUNY group
R1&gt;Se H. Sconiers, a member of the
U/ B Council, was elected a director of
the Association of Council Members an&lt;
College Trustees of the State Univershy
of New York at the association's annual
meeting .
Ms. Sconiers graduated from Long
Island University with a B.A. in political
science in 1969 and from the U/ B Law
School in 1973: she was admitted to the
New York State Bar In 1974.
She is presently a partner in the law
firm of Sconiers and Sconiers and serves
as an assistant to the corporation counsel
In the Chy of Buffalo Law Department .
She has taught courseo In English.
reading and black history at the U/ B
Educational Opportunity Center and
business law at Niagara University.

Info...,..tJoo ower~-d
A danger Ebert sees In constant media
coverage of Information on disasters is
the tendency of people to become
Two reappoontments in the School of
deadened by "onlormation overload ."
Management were announced thls we{)k :
and to rebel. or defend themselves.
Dr Robert F Berner as chairman of the
against too much inlormatoor,
MBA Program Cc.::mllh:t! for a three" A...., os con tantly bombarded with
yea r t&lt;rm concluding .\~~ust 31. 1982:
statlstx:• ... rod numbers." he says "The
and Dr Lawrence Southwick as chaordanger os that when somothor.g really lm·
man of the Depanment of t:.nvironmental
portant h.!opp..rt~ . w~ hove no ear• '1.0 ••. Ana~is ll{'d ,Policy. also lor 3 i(e.,-s. :.

2 reappointed

Probleauo not unique
Members of the University community
seem to perceive U/ B's problems as be·
lng "unique.. In nature , Ketter said . But
lor the most part , the team leh differently
and indicated to him that many of the
same problems are being experienced in
colleges across the country. "Higher
education is no longer ol primary concern
to the general public , " Ketter
explained, and because of it, ~ng in
the early 1970's, a "general malaise" has
developed.
The evaluation team also told Ketter
U/ B's high lacuhy salaries and low pay
for administrative personnel are "not a
healthy mix," but viewed the situation as
one created by the State . Among other
observations the trio made was that the
State's bureaucracy "was the wors(' they
had seen, and that they were surprised a
system the size of SUNY still has Its locus
ol control In the Governor's office.
The members of the evaluation panel
also told Ketler they will not participate in
any future SUNY campus evaluations
and found this review "disruptive."

Ketter suggested contacting Personnel or
explaining the situation to a higherranking supervisor.

lotemshipe
Responding to questions from the
Ooor, Ketter told the PSS he has no
objection to making a broad statement In
support of departments allowing profes·
stonal stall to do internships In other
areas, but he feels the situation is better
handled through private contact between
his office and the appropriate supervisor.
Regarding the current budget freeze ,
Ketter expects It will be lilted soon; but he
thinks there will be a lower expenditure
ceiling
and
a
mandate
for
additional lines to be kept frozen .

Wharton, 008 chief coming
The SUNY Senate will meet at U/B
February I and 2 , the PSS learned from
SUNY Senator Richard Siggelkow.
Chancellor Wharton will address the
group that Friday morning.
The next meeting of the PSS will be the
annual hoUday party Dec. II.
PSS Senator Neil Goen, who also
Mileage between campu-?
serves as :he chair of the SUNY Senate
On other matters, the President told
Committee on University Budget , .
Senators he "highly values" the Informa- announced that that group Is sponsoring
tion and recommendations the PSS gives
a workshop January 31 lor the purpose
him o~ University matters and personally
of helping faculty representatives more
feels Its Important that supervisors permit . effectlvely participate In the budget pro·
PSS members to attend meetings and
cess . The day·long program at U/B will
allow time fer Senate work.
feature presentations explaining the
Ketter also said that , according to State
Intricacies of the State, SUNY and camregulations , professional stall who must
pus budgets. Dr. Howard F. Miller, directravel between campuseo In performance
tor ol the Division ol the Budget, will
of their jobs are. enti~ed to relmbursement
address the group on current and future
lor m~ . lf. Siipervisws'do not agree:
problems of financing State agerrcles.
'·

�November 29. 1979

Construction:
$50 million underway;
more now in planning
\

SlK bullcUngs . whi ch wlll cost
epprol&lt;imately $50 mlDion , are now
under construction at the Amherst
Campus, wllh several more in various
stages of planning.
Albert W. Dahlberg of the Office of the
Vice President for Facilities Planning last
week issued the following status report on
these Amherst projects:

I. Projec:ta Under Construction

m.

-Engineering - Phaa
The new Engineering buildings
presently under constructJon near Fumas
HaU were designed by Marcel Breuer and
Associates of New York Oty and are be·
lng bulh by the John W . Cowper Company of Buffalo at a cost of $9. 178.000.
The building west of Furnas HaU (currently referred to as R-8) is a two-level
structure which will contain high bay
laboratories on the ground level for the
Department of Civil Engineering. In addition to laborat.o ries for concrete and soil
preparation. mechanical metaUurgy and
strength of materials. this building will

contain an area for an earthquake
simulator which will be one of the most
advanced of its klnd in the United States.
As Is the case with Bell and Furnas
Halls, the exterior of this building Is made
of pre-c 5st conaete sections. The exterior woUs. roof, concrete floors . and
stairwells are essentially complete and
workmen-are now installing duct work for
heating and cooling. along with plumbing
and electrical wiring. The project. ap proximately 45 per cent complete at this
time . has a contract completion date of
November 3 . 1980.
The other Engineering Building (R -3)
under construction north of Furnas Hall
wiU contain several laboratories for use by
the departments of Mechanical Engineering , Electrical Engineering and EngineerIng Sciences. lncfuded In this three-story
building wiU be several laboratories for
hydraulics and pneumatics, electromagne.tlcs. charged particles. micro-

wave.

compressible

and

non-

compressible fluids . Although this Is
primarily a lab building. it wiU also contain
24 faculty off&gt;ces, a chairman's suite and
two office• for graduate assistants.
Included In the pro)ect Is a pedestrian
bridge which will connect Furnas Hall to
R-3 {unnamed at this tlme) at the second
and third lev"ls

EAat Uctur&lt;! Halla.
The two-story project presently under
belween Norton and
O 'Brian Halls. which is taking the shape
of four octagons, WID contain six large lee·
ture halls fully equipped 14ith sound
systems There will be one large lecture
han with a seaung capacity of 450. three
at ~ ,nd two at 90.
Th4.exterlor wal of this building con5Ist of pre ·casl concrete panels which are
being erected 10 CO "Junction wi&gt;h Iho
tructur'loh el bamtng ,·
construction

When complete
Is facility wiU provide despenotely ne~ space in which
to schedule approximately I 00 lecturetype courses per week at Amherst.
Associated with this project is a
pedestrian bridge which wiU connect
O'Brian and Norton HaUs at the second
level so students. faculty and staff will be
able to travel the entire length of the spine
without going outside.
The East Lecture Halls were designed
by Hamilton, Houston. Lownie
Architects. P.C . of Buffalo and are being
constructed by the LeCesse Construction
Company of Rochester at a cost of
$3,474.000, plus $161 ,000 for the
pede~trian bridge.. Anticipated completion date Is July 1. 1981.
flfu.lc and Chamb6 Halla.
Construction on the Baird Music Hall
and the Slee Chamber Hall is well undeJ"
way. These two separate buildings wiD be
connected by a basement tunnel and a
glass-enclosed bridge at the second level.
Baird Music H.U is situated southeast of
Clemens Hall and north of it Is the Slee
Chamber Hall.
This project was designed by Ulrich
Franzen and Associates. New York C~y.
and Is being built by the J . Mlgliore Construction Company of Buffalo. Total cost
of the project Is $8.711 ,000.
The total net square footage in these
buildings will be approximately 54 .000
square feet. The Music building will be
the larger of the two and will contain
space for a rehearsal room to accommodate 200 band members. a 27.000
volume music Ubrary. two multi-use
rehearsal halls. 64 pradlce rooms and
several faculty studios. Slee Hall will be a
two-story struaure which will include two
orchestra rehearsaJ rooms , a recording
studio, an electronic musk room , tWo
warm-up rooms. an organ loft, and a

700-seat chamber haU .
These buildings are also scheduled for
completion In July. 1981.
Alumni Arena.
Phase I of the Health. Physical
Education and Recreation Complex. officially named Alumni Arena, Is a field
house under construction just north of
the Depanment of Public Safety's Bissell
Hall. This first phase of the complex will
provide 93,325 square feet of space. . A
ma}Or portion of this building wiU be used
for basketb.G. volleyball and track. Other
large areas wiD provide space for six
handbaG/ racquetball courts and general
use locker rooms to accommodate 1258
men and 1296 women . Also included In
the design are separate team locker
rooms for Inter-collegiate athletics, a
therapy room , an equipment checkout
area. two seminar rooms and several
faculty off&gt;ces.
Within the arena there wUI be 2156
fixed seats, 6680 moveable seats
(bleaChers) and 1200 temporary seats for
.a t&lt;ltliLseatlng capacity of I 0 ,000.
Plwa_l of the+lalth~ Pb9sldal£dutaJ

Slee Hall (left) and Baird (right),

lion and Recreation Complex was
designed by Robert F. Coles of Buffalo .
The contract to build the arena was
awarded to the Siegfried Construction
Company last spring at a cost of
$12.940.000. The first phase of this project Is scheduled to be completed by
January 17 . 1982 .

II. Pro)ecta Designed and Waiting
Permission to Bid
Educational Communication Center.
The ECC project Is ready for bidding
and hopefully will be Included In an early
bonding package . Should that be the
case. construction could begin before the
e.nd of the 1979-80 academic year.
Ill. Projects Approved For Design
The

State

University

Construction

structed adjacent to the north side. of
Phase I. Its 110.000 net square feet will
accommodate an Olympic stze pool (50
meters). a diving pool and a triple gymnasium . It will also provide for six hand ball/ racquetball courts. seven sq uash
courts and a gymnastic area. Supporting

other athletic needs of the department
will be a combative/ wrestling a rea and
weight/ training rooms. Several faculty
offices and classrooms will also be
available for the departments associated
with this building.
The programming of Social Sciences
Phase I was recently completed and Includes 95.519 square feet of assignable
space for the Departments of Commun icative Disorders . History .
Linguistics,
Political Science.
Psychology. Sociology and the Office of .
the Dean of the Faculty of Social
Sciences. The site for the Social Sciences
Building will be south of O 'Brian and
Baldy Halls. The project will include a_
pedestrian bridge to O 'Brian Hall .

Fund has received permission from the
Division of the Budget to Initiate the
design on four new buildings: Health.
Physical Education and Recreation
(HPER) Phase II. the Computer Center.
Social Sciences I. and Student Activities
IlL The Construction Fund may now
begin to negotiate with various architectural firms in the awarding of contracts for
these projects. Once the design contracts
A seven-person Search Committee for
are awarded. the design phase wiD take at
a Vice President for Research wa5 named
least one year to complete .
on November 12 by President Robert L
The proposed site for the Student!
Ketter. Ketter said the search to be conFaculty Activities Ill project will be at the
ducted should be national In scope and
east end of the Spine. north of Lockwood
that the committee should "pay particular
Library. This building will have an
attention to qualifted women and mlnori·
assignable area of 25.990 net square feet
ty candidates ...
and will Include space for a ten-lane
A final report Is due April I. 1980. In
game
rooms.
a
bowling alley. several
which the committee. Is charged to " idencultural complex . a meeting /
tify at least three qualified candidates.
activity complex. and a food service area .
briefly summarizing what seem . . . to be
The new Compujer Center will be
the major strengths- and weaknesses- if
located northea51 of Fronczak H.U . facing
relevant-of each." Ketter said the com- 1-iamUton Entrance. and will have nearly
~i~d~!!~e 10 ind ~e rank order
30.000 net square feet of space. The
faciiHy program Includes areas for .comMembers of the committee are: Sally
puter operations. a central location for InBloom . Biochemical Genetia: E.W. Doput/ output of data. academic comty. vice president for finance and
puting. administrative computing. and _management; Dr. Leon Farhl. Physiseveral qff~ees and conference rooms for
ology ; Dr. William George . Jr. ,
the staff of University Computing SerMechanical Engineering; Dr. Saxon
vices . Tentative plans call for a bridge to
Graham , Sociology : Dr . Marceline
connect this facility to Fronczak Hall at
Jaques, Counseling and Human Serthe second level
vices. and Dr. Gerhard Levy. PharPhase II of the Health . Ph~ical Educam"'ie)Jlk;~.,Dr . lell)l js chplrpersoopl Jhe
• tion anctRecreatJOn Complex wllitle co ~ · ' paneT.

7 named to
search panel

a

of

�November 29. 1979

4

Anti-Nukes are 'beasts,' 'sheep,'
bronze souls, writes Mr. Billings
&amp;fltor:
·
I've been following the nuclear debate
In the paper for some time now. I've
welcomed Interesting arguments both
ways, bull feel that no conclusions wiD be
achieved on the level that the arguments
are proceeding. At best. the resuh of this
line of argument is that a pluralistic consensus will be achieved with neither party
having an adequate conception of right
and wrong. Clearly. no adequate declsions concerning nuclear power can be
made as long as the arguments proceed
on the level of negation of negaUon . We
need to elevate our thought above this inferior level to what may be considered
Kanllan Pure Reason.
To tat ourselves to this level. we must
first examine that whk:h is universal in,he
development of the biosphere; then we
may extend this universal to th~ present
situation
In a ;evlew of natural history . one
realizes that our universe did not always
exist as we now perceive it to be. In the
beginning there were no organic or living
rocesses· and all phenomena could
l:ve bee~ descnbed under the domain of
Inorganic physics; ir other words. all
phenomena could have been desert d
as interactions between non-living thi
The energy content of the earth was partially controlled by the combined effect of
heating by the sun and cooling by radiation Into space. Existence was bounded
by the laws of inorganic physics.
-8ut life developed. Some argue that
this happened as a result of random intermolecular collisions. but '. disagree.
Statistical theories of the development of
l~e cannot account for the rapidlly of the
· emergence of life forms . It is this principle
of development which we must isolate in
the following discussion .
Life changed the rules
.
With the emergence ol lae. the limitations Imposed upon the universe were
superseded by new laws in the domain of
organic physics. Lae processes replaced
the limiting conditions of inorganic space

and developed so that that which was
once limiting could support a larger
amount of beings within the same
amount of space. This non-Darwinian

evolution proceeded to the exten hat increased complexity of inter-life relation ships allowed the fixed amount of
energy. that was being supplied by the
sun. to account for increasing energy

content and throughput in the biosphere.
When the limitations inherent in the inorganic physical universe were replaced
by the realm of organic physics. stiU more
limitations were Imposed ; the earth could
never have developed to its present level
of energy content and population poten-

tia) unless these new limitations were also
superseded .
With the emergence of mankind . the
laws of organic physics have been
superseded by the law of reason
Through hi6 creative innovation. man has
been able to organl.z.e inanimate energies

.......

and ob)ects to the effect that we have
been able to overcome limitations blocking our development. In other words. we
have increased our mastery over nature.

A campus communily ~ pubhs.Md
each Thurlday ~ tlw Dlvkion of Pubbc Af.
f.... S...te Umwrsuy of Nt&gt;W York al Buffalo
Ecblor\al offiCft are k»cated in 136 Crofts Hal.
Amh&lt;"' Telophone 1&gt;36-2626
Oireaor of Pubk Affaln
JAMES R DeSANTIS

Edrtor lri-Chief
ROBERT T MARLETT
Art .M Produaaon
JOH A CLOUTIER

AHiltantEchtor
JOYCE BUCHNOWSKI
Wftldy Colondor Edo..-

JEAN SHRADER

., ...

At any particular period of h~man
development. there have ~n certain
things essential lo mankind s survival;
these we have defined as resources. But
as they are defined. they are relatively
limited. This means that the more suecessfuUy man expands-or remltlns al a
static level-under a'ny partiCUlar mode
of social practice . the more successfuUy
we deplete the resources essential to continued existence in that particular mode.
This fundamental arrtinomy is what led
Thomas Malthus and more recent neoMalthusians to believ! that mankind's existence has to be statiC, l1ke the beasts of
the forest. But these people-or as I
prefer. donkeys-have neglected to team
the lessons of natural history.

We muot develop new technologies
As we deplete our resources we must
necessarily develop new technologies to
define new resources that will permit
higher levels of social practice . Otherwise. we will suffer the consequences of
the entropic forces of depopulation
characteristic of a new dark age. The
distinguishing feature of human civilizalion has been our ability to develop and
assimilate such new technologies in order
to sustain higher levels of social productivlty and population potentials. The
universal here is creative innovation.
Kantian Pure Reason . Ludwig Feuerbach's "SeH Subsisting Positive." or
Natural Law.
This is the principle Inherent in any
great work of art. In Beethoven's music
alter Opus 95, this was the principle
which he demonstrated must exist. At
any particular point In a Beethoven
piece , the movement can be defined by
certain laws of development. As the
movement proceeds, Ironies and ten sions are developed so that at a certain
point the necessity of developing higher
orders of dlmenslonalities arises. At this
point , freedom of creative in novation is
uti1ized to generete these new dimensionalities. This isn't enarchial freedom in
the Dionysian, Wagnerian sense, but the
freedom/necessity inherent in Karl
Marx's wrtlings. This is the principle that
Beethoven made directly accessible to
the layman through his music.
One should see by now that the prtnd·
pie responsible for the development of
the biosphere is creative Intervention .
The successive leaps from inorganic to
organic physics, and from organic physics
to the realm of reason have come about
through creative Intervention .... The
e.xlstenc-e of mankind proues that the
prindple of creative intervention for selfdevelopment Is un iversal. The
characteristics of each successive leap
have not only been an increase fn per
ceplta energy resources and consumption , but also an Increase in the per capita
rate of eneTgy consumption and
throughput. In this sense. energy should
not be considered a scalar quantity, but a
vector quantity defined by its potential for
seH-development .
It is in this light lhal we must view
nuclear power. Fission and fusion
technologies represent the most superior
power source known in terms of energy
density. This means that lor less lime.
labor. raw materials, and energy, we can
produce a vastly greater, in orders of
magnitude. amount of energy than wtth
any other power source known . For example, the amount of Isotopes present in
50 cups of sea water can generate, under
a controlled thermonuclear reaction . an
amount of energy equivalent to that obtained by burning one ton of coal. This
means that instead of having a large portion of the popula~M?n concerned with obtaining the energy we need to survive, we
wiU have more of the population concerned with using expanded energy sup·
plies for the development of mankind's
population potentials
Everyone I• not eaual .
The U.S. ha• not developed into a
democratic rep'.JbUc Oecause our found ·
lng fathen wished to !;'·•e equal treatment
to the opinions af ~ts •• dogs , C9'/'S,

·,•

lunatics , children, adolesc~ts. aimlna~,
and sane mature persons ahke. yte
able to establish a democratic orm 0
republic because, at the time, nearly a 0
adult cHizens had achieved~ lev~lch1
mO&lt;al and lnteUectua1 cu lifie d
moral!~ and tntellectua 11Y qua e
em
lobe Citizens.
ed
The members of society are separat
into ~ee ge~eral levels. Plalo_uses thd
heuristic devtees . o_f b'?nze• st1ver an
golden souls to distingutsh them .
On the lower level, man is .a mere existentialist, a person of Individ ual ap:
petites and irrational deSIJes. ~ th! sec
ond level. man subordonales IS existential, beastial ~ves to the diCtates ?,f ra·
honahty-the tyranny of reason: On
the third level . man Is a consc1ou~ ms~ ·
ment of natural law, developong IS
biological !unctions a.s a means of further·
ing that htgher function .
•
H is those persons on the second a :
thrrd levels who . are qualified lo
citizens of a republic: In the U.S., ~permit persons on the first level to enJ~Y the
rights ol citizens, which may be a mistake.
We do this because we find ll abhorrent
to discriminate among persons because
of their manners of thought. Fortunately.
we can afford to follow this generous approach since our tntdilions of mandatory
general education and our !eve'. of cult~~=
have ensured that the ma)Onty of
population will be qualified as citizens,
outwetghing the follies of the unfortunales, confined to the lowest levels of
moral and mental development.

wei

d,

True cltlzeu muM INd the •heep
We true citizens must keep thousands
of years of civilization before and alter our
time in view. Our Imperative is to contribute, in the here and now. to the sur·
viva) and advancement of mankind. into
the future . We must be concerned with
the advancement of peoples intema·
lionally. with conbibuting to raised levels
of culture and prosperity, and providing
the basis of security for all. Our lzlsk is to
defend the foundations of the past. keep
faith with the conbibulions of our
forebears, and lay the basis for further
contributions. We must view our mortal
lives as being governed by the fruitful purpose of serving as instruments of a great
work that has long preceded us and must
continue after us.
Our task is to make every citizen aware
of this same point of view. He or she
must be elevated in knowledge , in order
to discover the greater purpose In lne, to
know the joy of being a conscious instrument of this great ceuse.
The aolnlne will not prevail
This knowledge cannot be attained,
particularly concerning nuclear power. if
we are forever arguing over the par·
tlculars and losing sight of the purpose .
To say that nuclear power should not be
realized beceuse we can't make the
wastes vanish is asinine . We have ways to
adequately deal with nuclear wastes, but
we must not overlook the true purpose in
our discussions with persons confined to
the inferior level of the bronze soul.
These persons are sheep , but we cannot
blame sheep for being sheep. Instead . we
must provide ways to raise their souls out
of this sheepishness. We can do this by
showing each of them that there is more
to life than his or her infantile , sheepish
desires and fears .
Nuclear power is defined by the
necessity of human developmentfreedom . Not only must we not subordinate ourselves to that universe of fixed
laws that the environmentalists define in
their banal conception of natural law. but
also we must never stoop to discuss totally on their inferior level. Ours is the work
of the moment in the span of history . The
life of the environmentalist who refuses to
believe the possibility of the utility of
nuclear power ts for the moment. The
most psychotic of the environmentalists
will enjoy the fruits of mankind's progress
in spite of their heteronomy.
I remeln yr. obt. svt.,
-; Er;llo_!Syeo~'JJIUI!'ga .

. ... ..

. ... '

~

'.•

Keep those
'fallacies'
coming
To Paul M. GljJho and Dr. Chon:
I want to thank you , two, for your
"logically" composed pro-nuclear
arguments. They've helped me Immensely , but not In the way you might
have expected . You see, In my
"Introduction lo Logic" course, my professor told us that we could earn extnt
credit for any examples of Informal
fallacious arguments that we could find in
the newspapers. WeU, your letters have
supplied me with so many fallacies that
I've already raised my grade by ten
points.
For Instance, In the la•1 issue of the
Reporter (Nov. 15) , Mr. Giglio offered a
wonderful example of a fallacy of
relevance, which logicians refer lo as an
Argumenlum ad Hominim (abusive) . In
the sentence he slates, " ... the antinuclear advocates always tum to creating
emotional issues out of t h e
facts .. .because they ar~ too unrealistic or
too narrow-minded lo weigh the risks of
nuclear power against the benefits it can
provide." Whereby he attempts to
disprove their stand against nuclear
power, by insuhing them personally.
which Is an unacceptable means of supporting an argument, from a logidan's
point of view .
And Dr. Chon used a blatant example
ol an Argumentum ad lgnorantiam (argu·
men! from ignorance) when he contend·
ed that on the basis of health studies not
yet performed . there have been no
nuclear power plant assoclated fatalities .
An obvious fallacy, ' for those with a
logical ear.
Now, I don't want you lo falsely conclude from my letter lhatl no longer want
you to write letters. On the contrary, I
want you to keep up the good work. At
this rate I might gel an A in my Logic
course .
'sincerely.
- PriKllla Schulman

'Garver is
too modest'
&amp;litor:
Newton Garver's letter m the Reporter
of November 15 is a characteristically
modest effort to keep the record
scrupulously straight, but Hgoes too far in
disavowing the magnitude of his personal
contribution. The Ad Hoc Commitlee on
Presidential Evaluation Procedures, and
the Faculty Senate. made recommenda tions which they believed might help to
obtain some responsible, meaningful.
and credible facuhy conbibution lo the
enormously daficulllask of evaluating the
administrative leader of an institution as
complex ·as a modem university center.
Professor Garv~r's outstanding report
does more than vindicate the Faculty
Senate's judgment that this could be
done usefuUy; it demonstrates that il can
be done superbly. There wUI be d~­
ferences of opinion ab-&gt;ut the weight to
be accorded the factors dea~ with; and
about the posslble omission of certain
factors. But certainly the report provides
a firm starting point an~ most of the lnfor·
mation needed Iori a thoughtful and
informed conclusion .
Sincerely.
-J.D. Hyman
Professor of Law

Leads project
Dr. Stephen C . Dunnett, director of
the Intensive English Language Institute .
has been appointed supervisor of a
national research project to assess the
needs of foreign students In the U.S .
The project is being sponsored by the
Agency for International Development.
In addition. Dunnett i.as been named
chairman of the Commission of Profes·
slonal Development for the National
Association for Foreign Stude~.~ ~~:~s .

�November 29. 1979

I

{

1

i

lo1iform chl.l6«-.

33 centuries later, Tot still wows 'em
By Ann Whitcher

~-

Inlaid with carnelian, lapis lazuli; colored
beauty . A white lotus chalice is carved
glass and quartz.
from a single piece of alabaster and Is in
One U/ B visitor admired some large
the form of a white lotus blossom . The
handles are blue Ullies supporting the god
e-ngs which In Tut's time were worn
only by boys.
of eternity, Hen . The inscription in
"Imagine wearing those,"she smiled ,
hieroglyphics around the rim partially
reads: "May your Ka (spirit) live and may
lUting her head as ~ suddenly weighted
down by the huge earrings made in the
you ~nd millions o( years, you who
I~ o( hybrid birds-their wings and
love Thebes , sitting with your face to lhe
bodies shaped like those of falcons , their
north wind , your eyes betioldlng
heads , like those of ducks .
happiness."
Many sludents were Impressed, also, ......,_ The jewelry is also beautaul to look at.
with the delicate, gilded figure of Tut harMike Ramos , a counselor for Upward
pooning, and the chesls and chairs with
Bound , especially liked the falcon pectheir whimsical and Intricate decoration .
toral necklace along with the smashing
"Oh my God , look at that ," exclaimed
vulture collar, a necklace made of 250 in·
one student as he gazed at a lovely
laid segments placed around the neck of
ceremonial chair made from red wood ,
Tut's mummy .
•
After viewing the exhibit , some
gold, IIIOfY and bronze , and covered with
magical Inscriptions and symbols.
students milled around the museum gilt
"Everything was religion," he mused .
shop filled with Tut paraphernalia . There
" Even a chair. Can you Imagine that."
were Tutjlgsaw puzzles. Tut coffee mugs,

Thb1y-three centuries after he was laid
to rest In an Egyptian tomb,
Tutankhamun Is wowing them in
Toronto.
II Is, of course, a predictable response
to the treasures discovered 57 years ago
by a British · an:haeolc)gisl . After the
record crowds In seven American cities,
anything less than a frenzied reception to
the celebrated "Treasures of
Tutankhamun" exhibit, now at the Art
Gallery of Ontario In Toronto, would
have been big news. By now, every
possible superlative has been used to
descril&gt;e the remarkable cache of
treasures burled with Tut, the 18th Egyptian dynasty pharaoh who reigned from
1334 to 1325 B.C.
Still, even those weary of gushing
reviews would be hard pressed to scoff at
the Toronto exhlb~. II contains 55 of the
Unpl'ececleated uphuftl
most beautiful and representative of
Durtng Tut's reign , Egypt was emerg5,000 objects discovered In 1922 by
Ing from a period of unprecedented Interarchaeologist Howard Carter and his
mol upheaval. Akhenaton, who may have
sponsor, George Herbert, the Flfth Earl
been T ut's father, and his queen Nafertiti
of Carnarvon.
had devoted themselves to a new faith
Among visitors to the gallery on · based on the worship of Aton , the sun
November 16 ""'re some 150 U/ B
god . The new theology resulted In a new
students, faculty and staff and communi·
temple dedicated to Aton, as well as a
ty members, who took part In a King Tut
new cour1 city ln Amama-lhus removexcursion sponsored by the Black StuIng the court from the traditional capital at
dent Union (BSUJ and the Black Studies
Thebes. But the changes caused cohster·
Program .
nation among devout Egyptians.
According to BSU secretary Wallace
When Tut ca'me to power, advisers to
FerreR, the organization started pla nning
the nine-year-old king urged restoring
the trip after FerreD, a sophomore who'd
worship of the traditional gods, especially
seen the exhibit In Washington. D.C .,
Amun . The Atonist names of Tut and his
talked H up with his friends.
· wile were accordingly changed from
"We started caOing around to see
Tutanhoton and Ankhesenpaoton to
where the exhibit would travel after leav·
Tutankhamun and Ankhesenomun.
lng New Vorl&lt;, and found that~ 111as goIn the exhibit, visitors can see the In·
Ing to San Francisco for the summer," he
terestlng mix of symbols from old and
said . "We then learned that H would arnew theologies along with the fresher,
rive In Torohto on "November I."
more naturalistic style of art that
developed during the religious upheavaL
They Rood oe llae Ia Alapllt
An example of this easy naturalism is
The Art Gallery of Ontario used a ticket
seen In the painted Ivory and ebony chest
which shows graceful scenes of Tut and
order system , FerreD noted . So In
his wile. In one panel, the queen sits on a
A~~gusl , 49 students went to Toronto by
bus and 'stood In Une for ticket order
pUiow at Tufs feet , het hand placed af·
forms whic:h were then exchanged for
fectionate!&gt;' on her husband's knee .
A child s chair on display may have
four tickets' a~.
been used by Tut. And a gold dagger,
"We relied on word ' of mouth to let
found safe within the bandages wrapping
studenlll know the trip was being
Turs mummy, was placed as close as
planned ," saki F.erreD . Notices, however,
possible to the dead king.
were sent OUI to the community and the
The discovery of Tut's tomb, the first
whole trip was made available at $11 for
such royal burtal place to be found Intact,
students and '$20 for the public. ·
also made possible a new appreciation of
Once lnilde the nicely designed
Egyptian art .
museum , sludents admired the popular
gold mask which had covered the head
and shQM!ders of Tut!s murnmy. The . ' iftc:IWIIilc beoillty
Many of the pieces are of incredible
231/:1 lb. work IS made of sobd qold and

and yes, a display of King Tut chocolate.
The gilt shop also had some overpriced
books on the collectidn and lovely,
though expensive reproductions.

Some tickets for weekday admission
remain for ..Treasures of Tutankhamun ,''

which continues throiJgh December ·31 at
the Dundas Street gallery. According to
one museum!jullle, '1\tke!S are~Dy
available for Cht!Stmas Eve and New
Year's Eve. They must. however, be purchased In person In Toronto. After leaving the Art Gallery of Ontario, the King
Tut exhibit will travel to live dties In West
Germany.
In addition to Ferrell, other BSU offleers Involved in the hip's organization
Include Chris Sealy, president, Shirai
Kin~sberry , vice president , Leroy R.
Halley, treasurer, and Deborah Glover,
activities coordinator .

Remodeling to be resumed
at Art's quarters in Bethune
After a three -year hiatus, remodeling
worklillll be resumed at Bethune Hall
near Main and Hertel. the home of the
Art Department.
Bethune has been bonded for the third
phase of Its rehabilitation, and , according
to FaciUties Planning Vice President John
Neal , work should be underway
sometime In 1981.
In the meantime , the Faculty of Arts
and Letters Is providing a relatively small
amount

of money for restruduring ex-

isting space In order to generate badlyneeded classrooms. This temporary construction, being done_ by U/ B crews.
should be completed by the end of the
semester.
Art Department Chair Will Harris said
enrollment In the department has increased while Arts and Letters in general
has been experiencing a decrease In
students . In particular, the graduate program is flourlsl)ing and now graduates
some 40 MFAs each year. U/ B Is one of
only two SUNY units which olfer the
MFA . The other is New Paltz.
The third phase of rehab work will provide a permanent exhibition gallery, additional space for the graduate program,
and classrooms. An. art store will be Installed on the first floor. According to
Neal. ventilation and lighting systems will
be reworked and other Interior finishes
made .
Including equipment, the project is expected~d cost'$700.000. '•
Harris said his faculty has expressed

"relief' that some progress is being made
on updating Bethune and that their
academic needs are being recognized by
University officials. He added H is
"remarkable" that students In the department have continued to produce quality

work without benefit of adequate
facilities . He credits their "constructive"
attitude for the accompUshment.

International unit
seeks new master
lnternaHqnal College Invites nomina·
tions and applications for the mastership
of the College. This Coilge, located In
Red Jacket Quad, provides reildential
and
academiC
programs
to
undergraduates with an Interest In com·
parative and International issues. The
master should have a demonstrated Interest In the International area and In
undergraduate education . He/ she wiD
J?.la)! a leadership role In aD aspects of
College l~e .

Nominations and applications must be
submltled to the International College
Master's Search Committee, care of the
Dean's Olllce, The Colleges, 350 Porter
Quad. , Ellicott Complex by Friday,
December 14.
The Search Committee includes Professor Claude Wek:h , Professor James
Bunn , Professor Irving Spitzberg, Ms.
- Sallie -Xing.- DeaA -Murray SchwaN, ... nd
International College students.

�. . .a ...

November 29. 1979

'The Club'

CALE·N DAR
Thursday - 29
BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAR•
R - , _ lo&lt; 125-0ih........xy Vitamin
D3, Dr Renny Fran ce:~ehl. Department ol
Biochemistry. Universi'ly of Wisconsin-Madison
108 Shennan 11.30 am. Coffee at II in lOlA
U.ry
RESEARCH SEMINAR•
Toward~ Therapy of Tay-S.CM DisaH.: En...... rn.p.itlon ond Blood·Brolft. Borner
Permeability 6n lh~ Cal. Dr Mario C RalloUZ~
Board Room . Children's Hosprtal 12 noon
CRAFT EXHIBIT AND SALE"
1 5 p ,m CreatiVe Craft Center 120 MFAC.
EIIJcon Pottery. ,.ewelry. W(&gt;a...tng. -macrame,
photography. Cdodk!s 18 20 exhibitors Admls!OOn

..

,,

AMERICAN STUDIES LECTURE"
Natiw Americans ln Cuba, a repon and pic
lures of the e~thibiUon ~- Nattve Amencans m
Havana this fall Moo\ Coun , O'Bnan HaD 2 p m
ASSERTIVE SKIU..S FQR THE JOB MARKET
2J2 Squttt" 2 5 p m This ~~ hour workshop will
concenuate on aswru~t&gt; ~haV10r ib n dpplw!o 10
prepanng and prcsentn1y }'OUrself ~-he n ~lung
empbynwnt Through ro~ plaYJng and ~truMUI\.&gt;d
t').~'faSt'1&gt; \.'OU \1:dl have the opponunny to pracuc.e

your 11)~\rt' skills •n ~ tyJ:ncal snuauons whJCh
you JX_'TCetv(• i» bemg troubksome En~lment
hmitt!'d to curr\'ntly enrulk&gt;d U B undergraduates
To reg~su!r caD b:IO ~~7
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM•
Deni:hy Se;paratkm of Solkk in FerroRukb
with M•gnetk: Grids, t&gt;r Ho111(&gt;"1" Fav. Umon Car
bkte Corporauon . Linde 01vfston 454 h onczak
•l 30 p m Coffee at :i 15
CUNICAL-COMMUNITY PSYCHOLOGY
COLLOQUIUM •
Working in Stat~ Government: The: Odyssey of
a Community Psychoktgls:t, Or R~ Coht&gt;n
deputy ass.~!ilant rommasStOntJ . Bureau of Adult
Sen:teei N Y S Office of Menlal Heallh. Albany
Room C 31 . 4230 Rktge Lea J 30 p m
COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY
COLLOQUIUM·
Human Facton Raurch at Bdll.ab5. Dr D
Jam4!'S Dooling. BeU Telephone Labs Room B-24 .

4230 Rodge Lea 3 :l0·5 p m
DOOmg rece1ved the Ph 0 in cogMive
psyc:hoaogy hi!re aod taught at Kenl Susie before
,otning BeULa~
Dr

UUAB FILM"
Oapalr (1978) Woldman TheatTe. Amhersa
3 45 . 6--l!J and 9 15 p .m General edmisston $2 .
StU~ntS $150
Thii ts the story of Hermann Hermann . the Rus·
swm emigre. owrwr of a failu\g &amp;rbn chocolate lac·
tory v.&gt;ho stumbles acrou a 1ramp who he consid~
to be hfs double:
ENGLISH SEMINAR ·
lmaginetlorw ol Pft'IOn, Arakawa. an tnterna·
uonaUy renowned painter . and ~er MadeliM' H
Gins 438 Clemens 5 p m Sponsored by 1he Gray
Chair ol Poetry and Leners. Oepartmem ol English
Arakawa and Gms Will dtSCUs.s their fealurc
length ftlm wf Of fx•m~ .- In connecuon wnh thetr
1opic MOSt reaontly tlw pair collaborated on the
book Th~ Meehan~ ol MMni.ng (Abrams
1979)

LECTURE"
What wiD you do when you're drafted? John
Judge. fk!ld represenlative for the Central Commit·
tee for Consdentlous Objectors. Conference
'Thelllte. Squire . 7.30 p m. Sponsored by the
Western New York Peace Center. the Coalition
AgainSI Registration a nd the Draft. the Studen1
Coalition on Peace Educ;.,1ion. and the S A
Speakers' Bureau
Judge wiD discuss· How Imminent is a draft in our
future, What ~ the likelihood women wt1l be
drafled? What are the ahematlves 10 the draft for
ttl.! consckmtk&gt;u5 obteaor?
MUSICAL COMEDY •
The Oub. by Eve Merriam. directed by Saul
Elkin. "A musical tour through tum-of-the-century
male sexism. not quite nostalgia ." The Center
Theatre. 681 Main St 8 p.m . General admlssK&gt;n
$4 ; students and senior citizens S2. ADS vouchers
accepted . Sponsored by the Center for Theatre
Rew.arch Through December 16 (Thursdays·
Sundays)

Eve MerTiam . who wrote the oH Broadway hit,
-The Club.- describes the play a5 ··a muscal diver·
slon ·• The senang IS an elegant men's dub In New
York at the tum of the century. and the characters
Pl' four dub members. the head waiter. a page
-boy . and Rthe maesuo.- who S11s at the piano and
provides muSICal accompa.ntmenl The twlst is that
the §e'\.·en members of the cast are played by
women ~ not women dlsgu1sing themselves as men .
but wo men We6nng men's clothes and saying the
thangs that men say. yet remaming. qulle clearly.
women
Merriam has uwd many songs from that periOd.
such as the one with the oftquoted li~ . "A woman
tS a woman . but a good cigar IS a smoke ·· By having
tlw aD·women cast sing them . she focuses ~tonk at ·
tent10n both on the content of men·s views and on
the fact that the attitudes wh.Ch we connect with
that histoncal period. are prevalent today

OPEN MIKE"
Squire HaU Rathskeller 8 30·11 p m S;gn-up
sheets availabLe from 7 30 p m Refreshments
available Everyone wekome Spon50red by UUAB
Coffeehouse.

Friday- 30
SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CWB
Las1 day to )oln the Ski Club. Office hours today
a re 9 a .m . to 8 p .m . 7 Squire Han .
WNY HIGHER EDUCATORS BREAKFAST
SEMINAR" ,
Acadm~k Ethics, Nonnan E Bowie , dlreciCk .
CAnter for the Study of VaJues . Univenity ol
Delaware Wick Han, Daemen CoUege 8-10 a .m
For further information. contact the Department of
Higher Education at 679 Baldy HaU .
PEDIATRIC GRANO ROUNDS*
Eumtnation end E\lalu.Uon of the Floppy In·
fant , Or. Danif'l Lacey Kinch Auditorium.
Children's Hospital . 11 a m
CIVIL ENGINEERING SEMINAR•
Cumulative DamlltJt., Fatigue, Crack Growth
and Wur, Or. J . L. Bogdanoff. professor ofcMI
engineering . Purdue University. 152 Parker 1:30·3
p .m Refreshments \IJIIJ be served .
MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY SEMINAR•

INTERNATIONAL COLLEGe SYMPOSIUM ·
The lntomatlonol R~ Criols. 112 o·Brian
Hd. 7 p m Speake,. mdude MJChwl Polsner. ex·
ecuuw direclo. Lawyers Committee on lntema·
oonal Human Rights. Shirley Feld. Jewish FamLiv
~ - ~et Manta. Cathobc Char~tie$ and

==

!~';:::;al~~ ~aldng

on then

LAW a ECONOMICS WORKSHOP
MEETING•
70&amp; o·sn.n 4 p m (~nstead of lhl! usu.-1 3 301
Ttw guat particpant wiU be George Hay. professor
of law and .conomo at Comdl Law Schoot Pro
feuot Hay wtll speak on -&amp;onomic ltsues and
Anll truJ' Enforotnwrn ..

To llllt - I n the "Caaendar,"
caD .lan Shradel- at 636-2626.

J(ev: .000...,. oaly to tt..e with a
pn&gt;f.-loaal tatcreet In the aubject:;
• ()pea to the public; • • ()pea to
_...,.. al the llollftntty. Unlothawtee apectfled, tlcketa for
~ u..ta.lon can be
~ u the Squire HaD nc~&lt;et

1'lw lJM of Suk:.fde Subltratn end Computer
Graphk:&amp; In lnacti\lation Studla of th~ 3 Alpha,

20 Beta-Hydroxv-teroid Dehydroge.naw From
Streptomyon Hyd:rogenan., Dr. Douglas F.
Covey . Department of Phai'T1'\&amp;COkJgy. Washington
Uniuenity C121 Cooke 2 p.m
COMPUTER SCIENCE COLLOQUIUM •
A Plon·Booed Anolyolo ol lndkect SpHch
Act., Dr James Allen . Depanmena of Computer
Sdenu. Uni\lershy of Rochester Room 41 . 4226
Ridge Lea 3 :30p.m Coffee and doughnuts at 3

PHILOSOPHY SEMINAR*
Sod.ali.t VWon.t: of the Future .nci SodaJ eon.
stralntl , Ptoleuor Mlhai&amp;o Markov ~ . Univemty ol
Belgrade. UntverRty ol Penns-,Avania. 684 Baldy.
3;.J0p.m .
·

Women do and say 1he lhings men do
and say in this musical diversion with
anti.sexist overtones. opening tonight
at the Center Theatre for a three·
weekend run.

Association , American Studies, and W~en 's
Studies College .

ORAL BIOLOGY SEMINAR•
E&amp;cts of Dllantin and Ot.Mr Drugs on the
Metabolism of Androgens In Oral Mucosa, Jouf
Vinek , M.D . . D.D.S .• Ph.D.. New Vorl&lt; Medical
College. Room 107, 4510 Main Street. 4 p .m .
PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR*
Hemodi.Jution ud Controlled Hypotension, Dr.
John L. P&amp;ewes . S108 Sherman. 4 p .m . •
UCARE MEETING"
107 Townsend 4 :30p.m .
This new organizatton. University Community
Against Rape Emergencies. is modeLed after a pro·
jKt In Washtngton Its aim is to maintain safety in
wa1king to and from campus 24 ·hours· a· day.
A pflot pro)ect will begin on 13 blocks of
Par'kridge Avenue , from Kensington onto the cam·
pus.
Rebecca L Little , coordinator of UCARE. tn
dicates tha1 one house on each bkK:k wou~ be
dalgna1ed a "'safe house~ where someone who Is
being harassed or has been assaulted or raped can
go for lmmedlate help A speciaDy designed \lt.lin·
dow emblem would be placed in the front window
of the house
Safe house volunteers. who would be carefuUy
screened. would have phone numbers for poUce or
crisis services, she said .
Ms Little said 1he project lS geared toward ··side
srreets where most of the students live and where a
lot of the trouble 15
··we need he~. - she said .

CAC FILM"
Rollerball . 170 MFAC . El\icon 7 :45 and 10
p m General admission S 1 25: students . faculty
and staff $1 .
The fUm Is a tough allegory which purports to be
crliiCizing t!w vioJence of our society and our profes5tOnal spons . us.ing the singularly repeUent ~ of
Rollerball-a futuristic combina1ion of rugby. roller·
skatmg and gladiator-f;ght ·to·the-dea th spectacLes
CONCERT"
SUNY Singers , a vocal }an ensemble. under the
ditectkm of Daniel Belmondo. Baird Recital Hall 8
p .m . Free admission
The program of CUITent popular/jazz ar·
rangements wtU include . among other numbers.
"Jump Shout Boogie ,~ "Joshua ." "Swee1 Musk:
Man :· "Kites Are Fun ." and HBright Sunshiny
Day DRAMA"
Play 11 Again, Sam. Katharine ComeU Theatre .
Amherst . 8 p m . r~ekers in advance at Squire Han
Ticket Offk:e: $2 .50 general admi$Sion ; $2
students . On the day of the performance . $.3 and
$2 .50 i!Ckets available: allo at Tk:ketron locatKms .
"I smoked pot once. Had a b6d reactMln . . . .
Tried to take my pants off over my head .- Alan
Felix , another of Wood y Allen's neurotic
autobiographk:a.l characters. takes the stage and
relives hii di\lorce in this STAGE (Siudent Theatre
Associa1ion for Gen u ine Entertainment)
production .

CAC FILM"
Rollerba11 . 146 Diefendorf. 7:45 and 10 p .m
General admbslon $1.25: students. faculty and
Slaff $1.

DRAMA"
Play It Again, S.m. Katharine ComeU Theatre.
Amherst 8 p .m . Tickets In ad\lance: at Squire HaU
Ticket Office: $2 .50 general admission ; $2
students. On the day ol the performance, $3 and
$2.50 . riCkets available also at Tlc:ketron kx:.ations
MEN"S BASKETBAU. •
One:onta St•te College. Clark HaD. 8 p .m.
Season's home opener. 5ft separate story this
Issue on seuon's prospects .

JUST BUFFALO POETRY READINGS "
lahmae:l Reed wUI read from his: works at the
AUentown Community Center , 111 Elmwood. a1 9
p . m. 1be readings are spon$0fed In part with publk:
monies from the New York Slllte Coundl on the
Arts and Poeu &amp; Wmen.
Reed rs a publisher and writer born In Buffalo
who currently lives In San Francisco. WeU-known
for his novel Mumbo Jumbo, he also writes poems
and is d\aWman of the Advisory Board for the Coor·
dlnating Council of literary Magazines.

MUSICAL COMEDY"
Th~ CNb. by Eve Merriam, directed by Saul
EJkin . The Center Theatre. 681 Main St. 8 p .m.

General admission S4; students and seniOr citizens
$2. ADS vouchers accepted .
1

MONTE CARLO NIGHT "
WUkeson Second Aoor lounge . 9 p .m . Admis·
sbn is free . Thae will be beer. games, pril.eS. Spon·
sored by the College ol Mathematical Sciences.

UUAB MIDNIGHT FD.M •
Phantom of the Pa.redi:H (1974) . Conference
Theatre . Squire. 12 midnight. General admission
S2 ; students Sl.SO
You need not haw seen a slngSe wrston ol
Phantom of the Opere to enjoy this fUm , but a
working knowledge of Psycho doesn 1t hurt.

Saturday - 1

LECTURE "

WOMEN"S BASKETBALl. •
0owqo Stolo College. Clark HaU. 2 p.m

c..m...-ory

PRESENTATION"
Anarcho-Femlnl5m: Theory and Pntctla.
Elaine Leeder. originator of TIAMAT. an Anarcho·
Feminism study group in Ithaca. N.Y. 234 Squire
7:30 p m. Sponsored by Tolstoy College and
Women·s Studies College

MUSICAL COMEDY •
The Club, by E\le Merriam . directed by Saul
Elkin. The Center Theatre:. 681 Main St 8 p .m.
General admission $4 ; students and senior citizens
$2 ADS vouchers aa:epted .

UUABFli.N"
Oapair (1978) . Conference Theatre . Squire .
3 ·45-. 6:35 and 9 :15p.m. General admission $2 ;
audentJ $1.50.
Domatldljl ond F e -.. , Stro- lor
UberoUoit "'
Dom..uc Flcdoft.
~h Ehrt, a.aistar• !'fCII~"' · hatory. SUNY
~"!" - j!IIO. ,Sql"lrc Hoi 4 p.m Co.
~ad by the I !lsby Gr.duate Student.

Christopher Plummer. James Mason , Donald
Sutherland and Genev;eve Bujold are the cast In
this most recent Sherlock Holme5 fiJm . whk:h pits
the master detective and his faithful Dr. Watson
against the Insidious historbl murderer Jade-the
Ripper.

UUAB flLN•
Munlc&lt; bv Dean (19791 Conference Thoaoc.
Squn . 3:45 , 6 :35 ~nd 9 . 15 p .m . General adm.Ji,
$2: oludenb $1 50.

UUAB MIDNIGHT Fli.N"
Phantom of the Parad:iH (1974) . Conference
Theatre, Squire . 12 midnlghl. General admission
$2 ; students $1.50.

Sunday- 2
MUSICAL COMEDY"
The Club. by E.. Mariam . d•ecr•d by Saul
~ln . lhe Center lbutre , 681 Main 51. 3 p .m.
General admission $4: 11udcnts and Mnlor dtlmls
$2. ADS llouchen accepted .

''

uuA&amp;FIUC·
MUrde-

by t:&gt;ecrN ' U979J . Woldman Theatre .

�November 29. 1979

7
I

man, Department of Philosophy The Kiva. 101
Baldy 4 p. m Refreshments wUI bo No ad·
m;,slon cha09&lt; Sponso&lt;ed by the Unde.gooduate
Hts.c.y Councf and the Classics Oub

WOJIIEH'S BASKET1IAU. •
Fredonia State College. Clark Hal . 7 p .m.
CONCERT·
U / B .leu EnH:mblt:. under the direction o( Lee
Bash . Kathartlw ComeU Theatre 8 p m FrM ad·
mission. Sponsored by the [)q)artment ol Music
POETRY READING.
Stanley Kunltz.. Pu5uer PriN·winniog poet. will
read from his works In the Poetry Room. 4th Roor
o( the Ubrarin. Capen Hal at 8 :30 p .m SponS«ed by the Abbott Fund . lhe English Department
and Poets &amp; Wnte:rs. Inc .
Mr KunlU"s Se:lected Poems was praised in are·
cent fronl ·~ge review in the New Yort.. Tlmn
Book RMew .

SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT L£Cl\lll£•
Coopo&lt;oteSodol , ............,
aad Trend!J, John McLaugtdln. diredOf ol IOdal

c...--

performance planning. Th~ Equitable L1fe
As.surai"'Cle Socirty of the U.S 120 Fosaer 7-9 30
p.m
MEN"S SWIMMING·
Go.- Stote College . Claril Hal 7.30 p m
POETRY READING ·
P()(&gt;l Mkhael Brownaldn will gtW a reading
from his poems in the Poetry Room . SpeaaiCoDec
tion$ . Amht.'JSt Campus. 8 p m SponSOfed by the

Gray Chair ol Poetry and Leners. (Rpan.ment of

Englioh.
Brown"'-'"' is the author of a numbef of books
and chapbook of poetry . mcludmg Bra~Ntor'm~
(19711 . Thirty Pk:turn CI972J . Country Cousins
(1974). and Strange Days Ahud 0975) .

VISITING ARTIST RECITAL'
William Parker, bantone Bantt Recnal liall H
p m ~n.:ral admi5SIOn S4. U 8 facuh y. saaR.

Wednesday - 5
GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR•
Wllllam L. Grtffin, Minera)ogisk. Geologtsk
MuieUm , Oslo. Norway . Room 18, 4240 Rktge
Lea 3 .30 p m Coffee at 3
INFORMATION SESSION FOR POUCY
STUDIES SPRING SEMINAR •
The Center fOJ P~q StudW:s.announces 11 spring
wmrnar on Publk: Polcp Research and EvaluatiOn
Pan of the seminat will consiSt o( pres-entations by
Abt Associates. Inc . dealing w1th the ropes of
hou11ng, economic: development . child and famiSy
polcy . health , aim1nal justic~ . and education For
more mformahon . interested students are invited to
anend a preliminary discus:s10n about the seminar
wsth Dr Ben)amm Chin.tt and Dr Anhur Cryns . today (Dec 51 at 3 p .m . in the Blue Room of the
Faculty Club Refreshments wtll be 5ef\led

• Amhena. 3 :45. 6 :35 and 9 :15p.m . General admil·
sian S~ students S1 .50.

CONCERT·

FILM· (FILM HISTORY)
Amntean Madneu (Capra. 1931) . 146 Oiefendori. 7 p .m . Sponsored by the Cent~r for Media
Study

U / 8 Pe:rc:uaion EnHmble , unde-r the: direction

of Jan Williams Baird Recil:al Hal 8 p .m . Free ad5ponso&lt;ed by the O.,.rtm&lt;nt ol Muolc .
Assisting arbsts will be guitarists Joanne Castdani
and Michael Andriacdo. flutist Rheva Ka~n . and
AndtNI Still!r. recorder

DIIAMA.
Ploy It 1\ealft. S...: Kathorine Cornel Theatre.
Amherst 8 p m Tickets in advanct' at Squtre Haft

Tk:ket Offloeo S2.50 general admission . S2
51udento. On the day ol the pori.......,.,.. S3 ond
S2 50 Tltk«ts available also al llc:btron bcations

Monday- 3
C&amp;\1. BIOLOGY SEMINAR•
Ahern.atlvn lo Traditional Periodontal
Tloeraw. Dr. Kenneth Kdwarl , D.D.S .• M S ,
......... pn&gt;leu«. College ol Dontillty, The
lJnivcouy ol Oldohomo. 178 Farl&gt;or. 12· 1 p.m.

BIOCHEMISTRY SEJtiiNAR•
s ....... With Cloeetl Seq ....... Eftcodlnt In·
- · 0.. Lydlo \llla.J&lt;omonlll, Department ol
Mlaobiolosw.
a/ M- u - Medal
Sd...t 108 Shennan . 4 p.m Col!ec ot 3·30 In
IOIACa'll

Un-

WOMEN"S BOWUNG •
WNY Cooftr~nce Matcha Squn Hal 5 and 8

pm

AltCKJTECruRE LECnJRE.
SU:Illvaa .

Bunsham

and . .. Rctdpath? ,

R.yner S.nh&amp;m 335 Hayes 5 30 p m Free ad·

Spon""ed by the Sd...t ol AR:hllcdwe
and ~ntol Oalgn
UUAB NOHDAY NIGHT FILMS•
Homooo O..e (19541. 7 p m ; The Bla Cor·
_ . !Ace In the Hole) (19511. 8 40 p m
Woldmon Thea~e • ..........._ FrH a d . . - · Dccln.. - b y Fritz Long , .......
filed-- ol Emlo lola's "Humon a....; about
an W'lfalhM w1c end • Jdro,.d .,....._.,., band

...........

The Bit ~ " the - , ol a )oumalill.
played by Klril Douglas, who ., make a nome
for htmtcl, ·~ a aory abouca man trepped In a
CWI b , • 'twortb

FEAS MEET1NG •
252 ~ . 7,30 p.m Each &lt;ngin..nng 50C&gt;&lt;Iy
mUll send at &amp;east two reprn.ntatiws. Items on
the agenda kdude: sctection of freshman and
sophomor~ representatives. dan'cation of voting
procedures and an update on Engineering Recruit·
ment Day. AD e-ngineering students , faculty and
friends are urged to attend
MFA RECITAL •
Joanne Lowe. violist. Baird Recital HaD 8 p .m
Sponsored by the ~rtment of Mu* .
Assisting artlsu wUI be ChriRine Monuond ,
sopreno; Glenn Stun. em:u-Siion : and Oaud.,
Hoca . p&amp;ano Fru .dmission.

fiLMS• (FILM THEORY)
Hetuod,n~

IFramptonl : T.O .U .C.H .LN .G .

(Sharill) . 147 Olofendod. 9 p.m Sponso&lt;ed by the
M~dia Study.

Center for

Tuesday- 4
TAU&lt; AND SUOE PRESENTATION·
Starvation In Kam.puc.hu, Jama Matlack , a
member" of an American Frie.nds Service Comm•ta ciftegadon 10 V"ldnam and Kampuchea (Cam ·
bod~ tn September . Conference Tlweb"e , Squire. .
12 noon Sponso&lt;ed by the TlUrd Wcxld Scudent
Aslocf,edon, the Student Association-Inte-rnational
Affairs Coonbnator , Gnduate Student Atloc:lalioh
and the Western Nn.1 York Puce Ceniet
Mr Medadt II dlr«tor of cultw-al affairs, Ha.mp·
.... Cologe. Arnhent. Moa • and .........t
ol the American Friends s..:vtu Commln• Boonl

alone-

FACULTY SENATE MEETING•
Woklman l'hub"~ . Norton Hal. 2 p .m. On the
.geneS. ere reportl by· the Praklent , on "'crtte.ria ol
acodemk: quality," the chH, on the SUNY budget
heaJ1ng and Senate commklaa. • rctolution on
retrenciiiTI«nt ; .net • raolution on currlculw muc-

L£CTURE ON AGING'
Mo!lvadoo ol the Aged , 0.. Beverley Gounacd
234 Squire 3 :30 p. m
Part of a series sponsored by the Multid5cipMnary
Ce.ntet for the Study of Aging, focusing on medk:al ,
soda! and emotional aspects of aging .
WORKSHOP AND GAME THEORY ·
Gunt •poker. Murray Brown . U! B. Will
speak on "'The Household Formation Game " 210
O 'Brian 3 30 p m Sponsored by the Economcs
Deponment
CANCER EDUCATION PROGRAM
MULTIDISCIPLINARY CONFERENCE•
Lunt Ca.ncer, Dr Monica B Spaukhng VA
Medical Centet . Room 301 4·5 p m
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR•
lmpllcotlonto ol HCF RodicJI Fonnadon In
~ewan . Morgan ·
town Energy Techrdogy Center 101 Baldy 4
p m fWfruhments wiD be served from 5 5 30
Jomtly held wil:h the Energy Research Semmar
Series

CH•/ FtCombuatlon, Gerald W

MICROBIOLOGY SEMI-MONTHLY
SEMINAR'
lmmunolog le Crou · R~actlvlty of Oral
e..ctaia wtth Mammalian llMuft, RusseU J
Nisengatd. D D S . Ph D . poole""' of pmodon·
tics . assodate profn50t of mlc:robdow. U / 8 223
Sherman 4 p m
OIL\1. BIOLOGY S":~':,~Q~•
Periodontal Olv~ -~· an Opportunistic
a.ctma1 o..n:~G.:nneth S Komman . 0 D.S ,
Department (,~ etiodontia. School of Dental
Medicine . University of Connecticut Room 107.
4510 Main Street 4 p m

UUAB WEDNESDAY NIGHT FILMS.
The Loll Hoadod Gun (19581 . 7 p m • Bod
• Coaap.nv (19721 . 8 :55pm Conference Theatr~.
Squire Free admbsion
Uf1. Handotd Gun stars Paul N«Wman, LN Milan
and John Ddlner - an underrated film \lt.lhich tds
tM story of the we111's legendary deiperedo. Bdiy
lhe KW!. sheds 10me light on rHsons for ~Uy's infamy . end tr~a~ the Pat Ganett -Silly friendship With
;might
Bed Compenv ~ ihe ,.ory of • youth on the run
., the CMI War Waa Wnnen by Robert Benton
and O.vid Newman of -Bonn~~tand Oyd~- feme

tu"

Folowtng .djoummmt. • r~n lor the
Faculty S.note and guau will be given by Praident
and Mn R_ , L Ken.,, T.._ Dinino Room,
4 ~to 6 p.m

L£CTURE ANb DISCUSSION·
...:0.. 0.. Gco&lt;go F H"""'nl. chair·

FIUI.
M (Lane. 19311

116 Olofendod

7 p m Spon-

....d by the Centl&lt;loo Media 5tudy
M. a ...,_...,tul. poyc:hologjcol crime d....,..
wul..ang's t\rst ta14ng fim h was alto Peer l.on'e-•s
lftMndebut

•

alumni and semor crtJNns .S3. studenb $1 T~s
are ava.~lable •n adl.'aow only at the Square TICket
Offn. and wt!l also bt! sold at the doo. Sponson&gt;d
b\• the (Rpannwnt of MuSK

Dalton Bakt\o\111 nOted piamst, w10 00 the acrom
pamst
Parke~ ....:on hn.t pru::~ m the ~-&lt;:ond annual Ken
nt.&gt;dy C..'11l'-'f Rockt.&gt;lelkt f-oonda1 to n lrlleTnalk&gt;nal
Com)l\'llllon lo1 Excelll'nce m 1tw Performanc4! of
Amencan Mu...c on ~plem~ l b of 1hl'lo yedl He
also \/JOn fu~&gt;t plbce in tht! Balumore Opera Audi
uon!. 1lw P1"'mK&gt;1 G rand Pnx all~ Tou5ouse Inter
nauonal Co m~tniOn 1op honors a11lw Munieh In
tematiOI\llll Smg1ng Compt&gt;tillon. and 1he Montreal
InternatiOnal Ht.&gt; also captured fi'rst J&gt;OLt! and the
spccW!!I Poulcnc Pnze a\ the Pans lnternaliO!\llll Slog
mg Compc1\11o n . and 1n 197() "'-'a" no,nwd - slfl9'.'1'
of the Yeo[ by the NatiOnal AsSOCW)Iion ol
T t.&gt;.)('h~rjo of SiogTng In Anwnca

Thursday- 6
PEDIATRICS RESEARCH SEMINAR•
The Rehabllltalion Cent~r : Kaow Thy
Ndghbor. Dr Robert Warner Board Room ,
Children"s HoiJ)ita!. 12 noon ..
VIDEOTAPE CASSETTES A MOVI£5.
Vkteo-~pc usKtta of ..The Mov\nR (e series of
clips from some o( the great films of me put) and
Hollywood: Th~ Sclm.ick Yean. 4 C~s Hal .
2 p.m Sponso&lt;ed by the O.,.rtment ol H~ .
CELL A MOLECUlAR BIOLOGY AND
CHEMISTRY OF BIOLOGICAL SYSlDlS
SEMINAR•
Non.£nrymadc Gluc::osy&amp;adon of Protdnt ..,
Dlobelft Mellltuo. 0... John W. Bayna, Depart·
mcnt of Chemistry, University o( South CaroltM .
114Hochlletter 4 · 15pm Colfaat 4
UUAB FILM•
Movtt Movk (19781 . Woklman Th~Mrc .
Amherst. 4 :45, 7 :15and 9~30p .m . Genualadml·
sion $2; students S 1.50.
Mcwle Mcwle is o porody a/ 193Us d blo 16
(two fUmt for the price of onet . Th~ two inovin •~
"Dynamite Hands" - a rags to rtcha bolting IAk.
and "Baxter's Beauties-. a backstage, Itt's put on a
shOIN story about • chorus girl who b«.ornes a star
SEMINAR•
Mk:hod Br_,.ln wUI spqk on the topic "lm·
~lions of P.-.on in Contemporary Pa.y - 438
Clemens . 5 p m Sponso&lt;ed by the G.oy Cha• a/
Poetry and l..rtten , [)repartme:nt of English

,

NSPE MEETING•
Featunng 5f)eaker from the Buffato Rapd T ranstt
SyRem Ill Wende 7 p m AD efl91neeTli are COf dialty anvited Refrahmentl N~ memben will b.
a&lt;:«pted al this meetulg

SllS WORKSHOP•
An ettplenation of the Freedom ol lnform.ation
Aa and the Privacy Aa Is the batil ol this -shop
&amp;om 7·30 to 9 .30 p .m In 215 Bel. Conduded by
Dr. Judith Braunag«&lt;, esa.&amp;ant proleNOr al ~
tdtnor Admilsion il SlO.
FOf more lnformatton , cal 636·2413 5ponlored
by the School ollnformaUon and l..hery Srudla

NEH"S IIASKE1'1IALL •
......, Stole

Colee«- a.lo Hal. 8 p m

NUSICAL COMEDY•
The Club. by Ew Monlam, by Saul
Eltin The Cen11&lt; Thu.... 681 Moln 51. 8 p.m
Gcn.al admiNion $4; INdentl and ...... $2 /IDS vouchers~ -

·--c.-:~a. .... t

�•

November 29. 1979

Sickle Cell conference slated for campus
Sixty local educators and health pro·
Service of the National Institutes of
fessionals wiD par11dpate in an inlensive . Health , augmented by Dr. James R.
training seminar on sickle ceD disease,
Humbert, director of the Division · of
November 30 and December I . The
Hematology and Oncology at ChUdren's
event will be held In Squire HaD at Main
Hospital. Humbert Is also on faculty at
Street.
the U/ B School of Medicine.
Semin M participants _.wi ll include
The seminar Is sponsored by the Buf·
teacher$ of hea,lth and science In the Buf.
falo Area Consortium on Public Health
falo p ublic schools . A few school nurses,
Education whose members are: Buffalo
sodal wori&lt;ers and guidance cou nselors
Board of Education; Niagara Frontier
will also attend .
Association for Sickle CeUDisease; S ickle
Theme o f the seminar is ''Bio-medical
Cell and Genetic DiseaSe Program uf the
Facts about Sickle Cell Disease."
Erie County Department of Health ; and
The training will be cond ucted by a
U/ B units, including the Center for
team of scientisls from the Public Health
Media Studies. Jhe Department of Cur·

rtculum and Instructional Media, the Office ol l.hben Affaln, the School of
Medicine and the School of Nursing.
Coordinators for the event are Mrs.
Cynthia Kaudeyr. d - of the Sickle
CeD and Genetic Disease Program . and
Prof. Frank Corbett.. director 6f the Office
ofl.hben Affairs.
According to Kaudeyr, the seminar
"signals Buffalo's leadership in national
efforts to ftnd cures for the disease and.
also , to eliminate public ignorance of it.
The disease primarUy affects black people ."
She explained that the seminar has

three purposes: to acquaint participants
with the latest facts about bio-medical

aspects of sickle ceD disease; to mnillarize

these professionals with source materials,
equipment and suppUes available for effective curricular seq'Uences on the
disease and train them In effective use of
these aids; and to provide a launching
point for Intensive follow-up work, in efforts to stimulate local human service
Institutions to broader and more vigorous
efforts to eliminate public ignorance
about both the bio -medical and
psychosodal implications of the disease.
Advanced registration Is required.

•Calendar
( &amp; o • - 7 , ool. 4)

Notices
A1J'HA IAIIIBDA DELTA FELLOWSHIPS
For 1M 1979-80 academic yeerA the N.&amp;nal
Council ol Alpha Lombda Delta .WI owa.d 12
fellowsh4» foo- graduate "udy ($2.500 eachl
Any member ol Alpha Lambda Deha who was
graduated with a cumulatiW average at or above
dw Alpha Lambda Delta kntialion standard is e)igi·
ble . Gradualing stnk&gt;rs may appty If they have
~d this aueragr lo 1tw end of 1he firS! H.mester
of this year
Appilcants wiD be judged or- scholastic record .
recommendarions. the $0Undness of ther stated
prOject, puTJ)OM and need .
Applications may be obtained &amp;om Ann H~tlu ,
110 Norton, 636-2807.
Completed appfQtions must be received by
Ja nuary 5 a1: Na tional Alpha Lambda Delta, Box
2 79. ~'ll- Pa. 17837.

BAP11ST CHURCH SERVICES
Sundays. 9 a.m . • • Squre Union and 9:20 at
Red Jacket 0.-de. a bu$ from tho Randal lloptist
Church of Willi.emsviBe will pick up any who wish to
a n,:nd servitft . 11le bus will mum to campus
t.et-.nl2:15and 12,30.

CATHOLIC NEWNAN C£N1el MASSES
Vlsll : 5 , p .m . - 339
and

Sa"""""

Newm.n Center. EJiicon Comp'n:.

Sq..,.

~ : Matn stred: 10 a .m . and' 12 noon &lt;lontolldon Chapol: 8 p .m .~ St. .Jonph's. 3269
Maln St.; Amherst: 9 :15a.m ., 10:30, noon and 5
p .m . - Newman Censer. EHk:ott.
M~.......: 12 noon- Newman Cenoer .
Main St~ &amp; University Ave ., 1!-ftoon and Sp.m. NnnMn Center . Elk:ott
Saturday: 9 a .m . - Newman Centn on both
Qmpu5a.

CHANG£ IN DATE FOR UTERAlUIIIi AND
PSYCHOLOGY SDIINAR
11le weft.long ~CheW Seminar to be gtwn
by Dr. Ov-..,.. Botlas ol tho Ta""ock Clinic.
London. Englond . has
af Doconobor 10
14. The ocmlrw
had -~~~ been announced f&lt;&gt;&lt; the week ol

been
..-.... "" ....
thr-"

Docernba 17.
Bolos wll""'ak on ..,.. Sell ;, Poychoanalysls
from 3·5 p .m ..
day. Monday. Docembft 10.
through Friday. December 14. ;, 410 Oemens

•am

Hal.
T'hc temlnar is free and ~ to the public.
Bolu · - his Ph.D . .. Englloh ..... and •
now a practking psyc::hoana.Jysl in London . He
CM~mc to U/ 8 &amp;om Berkeley wha'e he had woriced
lis a thrrapist wilh schizop!wenic children . While
preparing fOf his Ph 0
in Ut~a rwe and
Psyd&gt;ology. lw and 0.. Munay Sc:hw.,., of English
atabWled a nWling progr;tm ra the Untvenity's

P.,..-Ciinic_
Foo lnfonnatlon on t1w ......... ca1636-2563.

_

CONTING£NCY BUS SCHEDULE
Whea ct... •« CIIIIK:elled for .., ntirt Uv
btalute of wudwt conditions, two transit buses will
be opaated on the regular Setu:rd.y schedule , from
7:30 am. 1.1ntd 9 p .m .. the Campus Bus Servk:e
has announced.
Whee c:&amp;a.e. are a nc:cl&amp;ed dwine the dav.
regular MI'Yia: wtl be con&amp;Jnued among aV thrH
campuMt kJr three hoan alkr CM~aalladoa
btcoma effective- Also, two buMS wil contin~ in
st'I'Yic::lt betw«cn Main Slr~tet and Amhtnt for two
odditoonol houn
The tollowtng olflcos
... nodflod lmmediotely
W I bocomn to chongo bu$ l&lt;hedulos
bocau• ol wutlwr. WBFO. Hou'"'ll . Mm Office
(636-2171) , Area Oaks at E.Jbcott South
(636-2295) . EM (636-2011) . Gowmon
t636-2135t. ond 1831-41401 . Squn
lnlo&lt;mo- 1831 ·3541) ; ln..,·Raidenc• Cound
(636-2211.21 . S.udao (636-29501.
C.mpu• SocuOty (2222 on cilher a...,.~ : and
Campuo o,..-- (01
Rnldent studmb 8lf: -.dviNd IO dp and ..Yf: thJi

sv-

lnforJMhOn

,.

II'*""- impolotio to """Y out~ plan. tho
-olflcosdbo-anda..,-1.._
d be ployod on tho o.lephono · - devtco;,
iho Campus But QHk:e {831-11761 -

DENTAL STUDY
Persons who rhlnk they nHd dental wori4. and
would like to take part in a study-of petienr response
to routine dental tteatmenr should contact Dr. Nor·
ma n L. Cotah ar831-.4412. Volunteers mu5t not
cun-ently be under the care of a denllsl. Par1icipanl$
will reuive dental examination and x-rays to de-ter·
m\ne ho w much routine treatment they require.
Two fillings wUI be provided by a dentist as pa11 of
1he study Sponsored by the Oepaz1ment of
Be.havioraJ Science

KaTpuchea
James Matlack, vice president of the
American Friends Service Committee
board. speaks on starvation in that
S outheast Asian nation. Tuesday.

FOREIGN STUDENT TUITION WAIVER
APPUCA TIONS
For Spring 1980 , F«ejgn Student Tuition
Wa
att now avaUabae at the OHice oi Anandal
Nd. gem 6 , Annex B. Mah'l Stteet Campus. The
dudllne lor theM • ppticatiOM II December 21,
1979. Students must be on a For J vi5e tn order lo
appty fOf the waiver.

GRADUATE SCHOOL D£ADUNE DATES
M....... l&gt;ec:aDb« 3-Submlsslon of Ph.D.
statenwnt of ~s lo GJ"Mtuate School for
Septembe&lt; 1980 coni.......
M~ . December 3-Submission of Masters
statement of programs to Graduate School for June
1980 conferral.
.
Mld-DecemMr-Applications for Anancial Aid
· f« 1979-80 generally ava.Uab&amp;e ~rough Office of
Ananc:t.lA.XI .
F....... O.C...bc&lt; 14-l""'"&lt;"ion ends at c:low
aldassa .- fal.~mater .
MEDICAL EDUCATION VIDEOCASSEFTES
Networit for Continuing Medical Education
VideocasMtte SeriH Tapes 329/ 330 .. NaUonaJ An·
tbiotic Therapy Updale . Parts I and II ."' ln a two·
how video praenmtion u;pdating the Nattonal An·
tbiotic TIWn.py TeSt (1974). four distinguished
physk:i.ans prncnt 29 different patient cases. each
of which po5e5 therapeutic quations . The praenta·
tion meets the criteria for flw: aedit hours in
C.tcgory 1 for Education Malerials for the Physia.n·, Recognition Award of the Arnerlr:an Medical
Association , prcMded H has been comple&amp;ed ac:·
cording 10 instru&lt;:Hons . Available for v4ewing
December 3·23 at the Health Sc:irrncu Unary
Media Raourcn Center. Stockton KimbaD Tower.
For additional tnformation cal 831-4614 .
MUSIC UBRARY AMNESTY
ln u&amp;rbration of the 100th annlvenary al Rudolf
Frimfs birth , on Sunday. December 2 , and Mon·
day.~ 3.the Music Ltnry . Baird Hal. wit
grant an arnnnty on overdue fines for all MuUc
books and scores which are re.tulllCd to the: Music
Lhary Circulation Desk AU m usic books and
scores mu.si be received by the Musk: Lbrary
betwun the hours of 2 p . m. and 5 p .m .. Sunday,
and 9 a m .·9 p .m ., Monday.
NEED BASIC DENTAL CARE? WEJ.L. TEAll
NEEDS YOU
TEAM is • special program at the Schoot of ~ ­
tistry whk:h gives Halor clcntalstudmts the oppor·
tunity to worit in a simulated office setttng. TEAM is
ac:tivdy -ing thote ,......,. from the Untv.mty
community whose spedfic needs a.rc fOf oral a ·
am.ination; de. . . . •nd
"'TheM routine
d..,tal-.. can be p&lt;rlonned;, tho TEAM clinic
with • mtnimal waiting period and at minimal cOlt
In .ddkion, '" at TEAM operate In such a fuhion
as to make al routine dental care as comfortable
and as stras-free as pot.slbW. So, If you do need
ba* dcontal care ... why walt? Cal us at
831 -2213 any day between 9 and 4 :30 and we wiU
be gla,d to anange a scrHning appointment for you .

lUI,...

PSYCHOLOGICAL SERVICES
The Psychological S..W:..
Nn by t1w
O.,..mont ol Psychology, provldos outpatlont
poychollw&lt;aP\1 for pecpls bcch wibln -and outsld•
1M Uni\lersily mmmuntty. lndMduaJ J)I'Oblbns. as
wd as marital and famdy issuu. a.re ded wlh UJ·
ing both !might-oriented and behavto&lt;al pro·
cedura. For further information. cal 831 - 1187
~betwfl'n9a . m andSp.m .

c..,..,.

SNOW 'D AYS
.
Wh.n waltM'r condiUons ere 10 NWre that the
Uniwdlty cannot "C~Pftatle effectivtly."' an an·
nouncem«nl wJI be m..:N OYCr local racUo stMtons
by 6 • m ., • a1al ~-and wll be rq)eatcd fre .
quontly. Ll!! .qoty . vice Raid&lt;nt 1&lt;!f 1"'-&lt; ond

Exhibits
ADIRONDACK IMAGES
An exh;bit ol 18 phof&lt;¥aphs by R - E. Burtoo. director of Libra.ries at SUC/ PSattsburgh and
formerly assistant director of Untversity Ubraries for
Public S.M&lt;u a t U/ B. Mabl Foyer- ol Health
Sciences Library, Stockton K lm~ll Tower .
Through December.

ARCHITECTURE
Drawings of residential and commerdal housing

=~~ ~=~~~::.e~
~ ~~:

management, outlined this week .
Before the decision is made.. Doty indicated, kx:al
road conditions. the ability oi tM bus M'tYicc1o provide tran.sportatbn among campuses, and the
Maintenance Maffs abilty to kl!2p roedways and
par\dng lots open, have to ... . . -.
H a snow annou.n cement ls ~'~'lade , Ooty said , .. on.
ly eswnt\al service employees arc exprectcd lo
repor1 to wortc.: Powert.ouse, Maintenance , Securi·
ty, Animal Care, Food Savicc, Hea b:h Servk:e and
olher empk)yees constdered essential. ..
AI employees who do not report to work must
charge the tlaw to d tMr -..c:atlon. penoo.al
1aw o r compt""DMtory tlme. Anyone who does
not haw wfftdent accruals may borrow from future
accruals, Doty sa.ki.
No person who Is able to $d to work , ~ .
wlD be deprived of the opportunity to work , and will
be reported as prese:nt for the day. Doty said tt cannot be guaranteed that those empbyees who get to
the campus wil be able to work at their normal
places. Provi51on should be made '"for alternate
campus wort!. klcitrons and akmate woric for thole
who do get to the campus but who cannot go to
their regular work places or who cannot perform
their regulM ~ assignments,.. he advhed wpeYison .

H MIs determined during the course of a work day
that the Untv~ '"cannot operaee effectively,"
Ooty continued , - no emp~ should be requlred
to i«•ve at that moment: empbyea should rather
be permitted to ieave then or any Ume th~eaher
prior to the normal dow ol bulinesl . Onty the time
they are absent should be charged to leave a edits,Dotysald .

STUDIES SKJU.S lAB
The Stu&lt;fios Ski~ Lab at tlw Untventty Leammg
Center, 368 Baldy HaU . Is open fOf tutoring in
writing and studies sklls . The houB are: Mondays,
Tuesday5 and Thl.b"'Sdays. 12-3 p .m.: Wednesdays,
10-2 p .m. No hours on Friday. The Lab is open to
.S U/ 8 students.
WOMEN'S PlACE
Women's Place, 45 Allen Street. has a new
volun1eer staff mr~ . She is Leigh Andenon ,
Esq .. attorney 111 Law. She Is avallab&amp;e al Women's
Place on Monday evenings 5-7 p.m . No appoint·
mcnt Is neca~oary. Leigh will inform clients of their
legal rtghb without cha'!JO .

WRITING PlACE The Writing P&amp;&amp;ce k a free drop·ln writing eenler
thai wtlcomes writen at any stage of the composing
procea. T akc advanlllge of our qualfied wrtt1ng
ruton who provide c.erctul response to both 1hosc
havtng trouble understand.ing an assignment and

those polishing a final draft_ Come visit us tn 336
B&amp;kly Hal on the Amherst Campus. Our hours th1s
wmatcrarc.: Monday through fridiy. 12 noon un·
Iii 4 p m •. •nd Monday. WednHday and Thursday
evenings, 6 unlit 9 .

.fr

1

•

HaD. Sponsond by the School of An:h•ect""' and
Environmental Design and the Counc:iJ on International Studies.
ART FACULtv EXHJBmON
Mernbes ofthollepanment clAn ha.. palnlil)gs
and sculpture on n.htblt In the Inner Galery on tbe.
fifth floor of Capen HaD. During business houn.Through Novomber 30.

ARTlSTS' BOOK EXHIBITION
Artists' boolu; from tho Al&gt;right·Knox An Gallery .
In the Art Book CoDection on the ground Roor oi
Lockwood Memorial Llnilry . Through December
7. Sponsored by Lockwood Memorial library and
the U/ 8 Department of Art History.
GAU.EBY 219 SHOW
lJDcla Bond. d rawings a nd water colon .
Docembft 8-22. Gallery 219. second floor. Squb-e
Hal. Main Street Campus. Hours: Monday,
Wednnday and Fridays, 1-3 ~ . m . FOf further Information. cal 834-1088.
Ms. Bond is a native CalifomLan. She graduated
from the Untversity of MassachuM:tts and has taught
at several coOe.ga:. She is pres..•••ntly co-director end
instrudor of the City Art Guild in Massac:huwtts.
Recipient of numerous a wards, she has uhlbiled
along the East Coast, Including New Yori&lt; City. and
is represented In private co&amp;ections throughout the
Untted States .

L£5 COPAINS ART LTD. EXHIBIT
The Primitive Eye. en uhJbtdon of African and
New Guinea Art. December 1 to J•nuary 15.
Opening &lt;e&lt;:eption will be December I and 2 from
3-6 p .m. ReguLar gaJiey hours are TuesdayS.twday. 2·6 p .m . The gale&lt;y Is locotod a t 3S
Voorhees Avenua.

MUSIC UBRARY EXHIBIT
Maurice Raw!: An~ - Music lbuy.
Baod Hal . tlvough O.C.mber 31.

On The Air

,

NOVEMBER 30:
ConYft'Ations in the Arb: Jobn Ciardi. Cowiet
Cable (Channel 10). 6 :30p.m .
DECEJIIIIDI S:
Conversations ln the Arts: C.hrin bad. former
president of th.e Shaw Festival and newfy appointed
board me-mber of the New Vork State Council on
tho Ans. lntemal»nal Cable (Channe!UI) . 6 p .m.
DECDIBER4:

eon........,.,, ..

the ""'' Uwsb " - · -

·

modernist and literary critic. Courier Cal* !Channel 10) . 6 :30p.m . Also on December 5 at 7 p . m.
lntervlewt&gt;r ts Escher Hamou, dftctor of cultuq,l
affairs.

11'

.

�November 29. 1979

Change
Women no longer
working until a
Prince comes along
a, J~ Bacll-.ld
Repo&lt;1«SWI

In years past, the only lifo scenario
women were familiar with went
oomething like this: meet Prince CharmIng, get married , be a homemaker, and
let hubby pay the bills.
If women entered the labor market.
they did so on a temporary basis to payoff certain expenses. put away a "nest
egg" for the future. or increase family
purchasing power for a limited period of
time .

This u-adillonal ·-rm ju51 working
until ... " attitude. says Marjorie BeDChambers. vice cha1r of the National Ad·
visory Committe~ for Women. was one

of the main reasons women seldom plotted out a l~e career plan. and helps explain why women are still trailing men as ·
far a• upward job mobility is concemed.
Bell-Chambers was on the Amherst
Campus la51 week addressing women at
the third annual continuing education
forum sponsored by the U/ B Alumni
Association. The theme carried through
this year's day-long program was 'The
Working Woman: Contnbutlng to Your
Own Success."
Because of their numbers and raised
consciousness. women can no longer be
Ignored as a viable part of the labor force.
contended BeD-Chambers. But women
need to examine and inventory their
talenls and skUis. along with asking
themselves where they wish to go profes·
sionaUy. how they plan to get there. and
what the motivating force Is behind their
desires. In other words. contended the
mother of four and long-time women's
rights activist. women have to come to
grtps .~th "what they wish to become and
why.
Life planning-Including time-out for
child rearing. If desired-provides the
foundation for successful careers. she
said . Without it. women can aU too easily
fall prey to a "seH-fulfiUins prophecy of
faUure ."
Women "need a critical mass of
women like themselves" to help them attain career goals. she advised. "Tokens
won't do." she added: achievement Is
much easier when there are other women
with whom one can feel a special
camaraderie. A "token" may not feel as
free to put her ""be51 self forward" and
often does what is expected rather than
what she wants or feels is best . Achieve·
ment is facUitated more when women

have "strong ties of affection and friendship" with other women . Bell-Chambers
noted.

Queen Bee •yndrome
That'• why the "Queen Bee" reigns as
.. anathema to the Women's Movement,"

she declared . Instead of acting as a
helpmate to other women associates by
funneling information to them and promoting their skills lo those in power po51·
tions. the "Queen Bee." having already
attained a prominent place in the
managerial hierarchy. will. instead . do all
she can to make sure no other woman
gets comparable SU&gt;tus-at least not with
her help.
Women should give "verbal and emo·
tiona! support" to those who have the
talents to get ahead . In addition. they
must leam how to "plug into the form~!
communication network ol the off~ee .
The people who most often know how
the network works best . says BellChambers. are secretaries A smart
woman wiU 5how respect and ..be nice'. to
secretaries: they can be of g!eat
assistance in a quest for upward mobd1ty.
If one's career plan gets off schedule.
" modify il and readJust." she urged , while
keeping goals in sight. If one decides to
take lime off from a career to rear
children , professional leamlng can co~­
tlnue of ume for it Is included In the days
ochedule. even if H'• just a few houro for
reading.

ERA'• day will come
·
Beldong questions from an onterested
audience , Beii -Chomben •aid that
because the country is in a .. conservatiVe

swing."" "time Is against" passage of lhe
Equal Rights Amendment. "Bul women
with raised consciousness will not crawl
back into the woodwork."" she exclaimed .
What women must do is continue to
~t,eadily work for reform. When the peni!\llum swings back to a more liberal
poUtical period (perhaps in the later
1980's). Bell-Chambers predicted the
ERA will meet with resounding success.
The former president of the American
Association of Unlveroity Women then
told the good-sized gathering that she
see.s abortion as an issue separate from
ERA. and that she believes some women
reject the ERA because they fear ll will
force them to enter the labor market and
destroy family life as they know ll .
Such fears are exacerbated by
spokespeople like Phyllis Schaffley. In·
stead. whal women should be made to
understand. she continued . Is that the
ERA "wUI give them a choice" to do what
they want with their lives .
Until the amendment is passed . the
burden of proof regarding sex discrimination Is on women. Once the ERA Is part
of the Constitution . however. the tables
will be reversed and It will be up to the
party being charged to prove no sex
discrimination took place.
For those who want a better under·
standing of their rights as homemakers in
New York Stale, Bell-Chambers sug·
gested writing to this address: Status of
the Homemaker In New · York .
President's Advisory Commission for
Women. Department of Labor. 200 Constitution Ave .• Washington. D.C .
Womenuboeea
One of the most interesting sessions of
the program centered around the general
topic of work responstbillties, and dealt
speclically with the concepts of women
as bosses ai\d equal pay for comparable
work.
Barbara Goralczyk, manager of equal
employment opportunity for Carborun·
dum Co., read figures reflecting women's
low salary statuo, lnHiating a salvo of
groans from a packed classroom In Norton.
Although one would expect women to
be making more money today (compared
to men) than they did decades ago, quite
the opposite is actually true . Goralczyk
noted that 40 years ago women made 58
per cent of the average male salary. By
1977, aU that had been realized was a
one percentage point gain to 59 per cent .
While oome might rationalize that the
salary discrepancy results 'from notable
differences in educational backgrounds.
again; this Is not the case . According to
Gor-alczvk. the majority of women com·
pleting low years of college still earn less
than men who finished only the eighth

gr1~~ reason , asserted Goralczyk, 15 that
women are trapped In "female occupa·
tiona! ghettos" and this ghetto ~ndltion
causes a flood of appllcanU for the same
rypes of traditional female-linked'jobo .
Since most women are not doing the
same work as men , Goralczyk suggested
that in•tead of advocating equal pay for
equal work , women •hould concern
themselves with equal pay for com-

parable work. Several states, such as
Nebraska and Minnesota , are currently
studying enactment of such a wage
•ystem, she said .
Gt&gt;ralczyk predicteCl'"ll.ot establishing
equal pay for comparable work would
Ukely co51 employers biUions, but she discounted the argument that correcting
wage discrimination should be held In
abeyance because of its adverse
monetary impact.

'Pregaant' with -lbiUda
In one court case Involving wage
discrimination. Goralczyk relayed that a
judge ruled against nurses who complained they were being paid less than
tree trimmers and sign painters. In his
opinion, the judge offered that correcting
the situation was "pregnant" with possible
repercussions for the country's economic
system. That comment also drew some
moans.
Alihough equal pay for comparable
work Is "morally desirable," Goralczyk
admitted that arriving at a system for do ing so would be difficuh since total job
content would have to be accurately
assessed In order to come up with hone51
comparisons and dollar valuations.
Next. Mary Ann Lambertson, vice
president for personnel at Fisher Price
Toys, offered some ear-catching observa·
tlons on women as bosses.
A tall, commanding woman. Lambertson said women have often confided to
her that they prefer working for a man
rather than for another woman . Part of
the reason for this, she believes, Is sex
stereotyping. Women who make H to the
top in business or induslrj) are thought to
be "pushy, bitchy or overly-aggressive ."
PeroonaUy, Lambertson feels women
make excellent bosses; but she concedes
that some supervisory problems may
resuh from a sheer lack of experience In
dealing with various managerlal
headaches.
"Most professional women have never
had a female boss." she reminded the audience, whereas men have always had
executive role models whom they could
emu),; e .
Women baft the edtle
When she compares male and female
bosses she has encountered In her career.
Lambertson said. the women "have the
edge ." The reason is that the women
"'paid more attention to the finishing
details" of a project, making implell)entation much easier and more effective.
What has It been Uke for her on the
long haul liP the co~rate -ladder?
Assessed Lambertson . "its been fun and
frustrating ." At one time or another she's
had to deal with : assoctates or subordinates who resented her position and
were open about their hostility: horny
male co-workers: jealou• wives; hurtful
office gossip and a number of other
tTaumas.

..

But along with the negative•. she ha•
also experienced posltlva: men and
women who have acted as mentor5 end
giv£n her Invaluable guidance , and the
encouragement and support of other
women she's met along tht way.

she

and

~o~npr&lt;teooce .. are the qualities that wiD

help women overcome temporary
obstacles In their career paths.

lmpn&gt;perea:ui--

Responding honestly to blunt questions from the audience, the Asher Price
executive gave this advice:
If a male associate makes an Improper
sexual overture, a woman should eKher
immediately leave, or say in no uncertain
terms that the relationship 15 strictly'
business, and that~ Hcan't be, then~
will be no relationship. What a woman
shouldn't do is poUtely put11he individual
off with · a laugh or a comic statement. U
this "saving face" .approach is used,
Lambertson believa H just postpones the
Inevitable repeat situation.
The three other panelist5 stresoed that
sex should never be used as a means of
getting ahead . Dipping one's pen In company ink (oo to opeak) can only bring professional as we~ as personal heartache.
the women agreed .
If you happen to be a female who has
an Intense desire to be Uked by subordinates, Lambertson suggests you not
gather soctally with people from the office . Although this might appear "extreme," she noted , It will prevent you
from Inadvertently or Intentionally show·
ing what may be perceived ao favoriU.m
to particular employees. A5 far-as socializIng after hours with male colleagues,
Lambertson said she Is always mindful
about how she a.c!5 and the amount she
drinks, although the men aren't.
She also advls&lt;id women against
engaging In overly chummy conversa·
tions with male ro-workero or subordinates to the point where sexual innuendo may be u5ed. even kiddingly. Coover·
sation should be &amp;lendly but always professional. This Is especially Important
around wives of co-workers who could
easily get the wrong impression .

Ofllcee-lp

If vengeful gossip about you should
surface In the office, Lambertson believes
you should Ignore It and keep your dignity. Eventually, people will realize the
truth. Panel moderator Dr. Susan Kulick
noted that at times H may help to confront
the offender(s) .
What to do ~you're a crier? Don't. The
panel15ts felt that women ~ho have a
tendency to cry when thingo go wrong In
the office should stop internalizing the
problems and leam to vent their feeling•
in other ways. Lambertson said playing
sports Is helpful. A way to overcome un·
wanted emotional outbursts, offered
Kuhck , Is to go to sad movies and practice
not crying .

c .._...... A ..... For
EXCELLENCE
IN UIIIIAIIIANSIDP

Send letter. of nomination by
December 7 to: Charla O'Anlello,
cbalrman, 1979/80 Nomlnadng Com·
mlttee, Lockwood Library, Amherst.
OoMiero milA be completed bv
o~mberl4 .

�November 29, 1979

U/BF cites
6 students
for excellence
Six l i n t - .man recet..d $500
awards lor "Excdenca In Unclagrad.Educallon" from the~ al Bu!f.lo
Foundllllon In a~ MCatpen HaD
last week.
•
.::.r..~·-~- &gt;
The awardo haVe llien - - t o
recagniZII ............ ac.aclemic ..__

mental the u~ level, lllld . .

poaa&gt;leld to the sludent with lhe hlllhat
grade point average In

faculllel or IChook wllh

ach J

111x

~

programs. lh the- .,.. of lies In grade student wllh the---higher &lt;
a _ . In COUlSeS wllhln his or her
faculty or' school _Is oeledlod lint. the
awards guidelines inclicaW.
·
Winners of this year'• awMis . . ,
Slaphan J . Wo]Mrowsld, a · Spanish
major with a 4.0 average, 1ep~otb41
the Faculty of Arts and bellen; .Jemeo R. Mlldrew, a c:ompuler sdBnce major In the
Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics, also with a 4 .0 avemge;
Janis Fox, an anthropology major
representing the Faculty o! Social
Sciences (3.964) ; Ann H . Barnett,
Nwslng, Faculty of Health Sciences
(3.95) ; David M. Schlntzlus. Accounting,
School of Management (3. 961) ; and
John D. Wilson, electrical engineering,
School of Engineering (4.0) .

a-... a

SUNY Singers: jazz singers
Longfellow once wrote that music Is
the ··universal language of mankind."
Maybe that's how ll managed t ~g
together 15 U/B students !rom such
divergent fields as management.
muslc ,physical therapy and psychology
(to name just a few) to share a common
educaUonal experience as members of

the SUNY Singers.
This vocal jazz ensemble will make its
debut tomorrow In concert at 8 p.m . in
Baird Recital Hall.
The admission~free. one-hour concert
wiU have a .. non-stop. no-applause'' format, enabling over a dozen songs to be
sung-songs popularized by such artists
as• Barry ManUow. Kenny Rogers end
Anne Mumty. The program wUI also
feature solo vocaUsts and a jazz guitarist.
Other musicians playing plano. guitar
and drums will provkle accompaniment.
The SUNY Singers are under the
direction of Daniel Belmondo (no relation
to Jean-Paul) who received his MFA In
Music from U/ B and teaches at
WiUiamsvUie East High School. Belman·

do's high school students recently participated in a Choral Festival oq campus.
and one of his classes was also invited to
atlend a music convention at the Con -

cord resort hotel early next month.
There. they will demonstrate how
students can be taught to read music using

a

particular

learning

sequence

developed by former U/ B Music Professor Edwin Gordon . Belmondo studied
under Gordon .
Eventually. Belmondo wants to work

choreography Into the group's concerts.
not the Four Tops Variety, but something
more "subtle." But that will likely be incorporated in a big spring concert : their
only other performance this semester is
December II for the U/ B Dental
Association.
Belmondo suspects that because of
schedule conflicts some members of the
group may have to retire next semester.
so auditions for new ones will be held. If
possible. he wants to keep the ensemble
size to a manag~ble 15 or so.
There are no formal prerequisites for

belonging to the Singers, he relayed, but
the ability lo read music is a clear advantage. Some members of the group cannot
read music. though . "That's one advantage of popular music." Belmondo explained. "if you can't read music. it's
easier t'o gel the meloOy by ear."
Membership in the group provides a
one-hour credit elective offered through
the Music Department . Belmondo feels
the course Is a good allemaUve for those
who enjoy choral singing but prefer
Manilow's "Jump Shout Boogie" to
Handel's "Messiah."
Although there's a certain element of
theatre In any stage activity. including
choral performance. Belmondo says
many of the SUNY Singers were not
··naturally inclined" to the stage or to
moving their bodies with the flow of the
music. He's working on that.
What ensemble singing does. he
noted. is instill a certain amouof of poise
and self-assurance . But probably more
important to students is that it's a fun way
to appreciate music.

Lawvere
reappoit:tted
Martin prof
Dr. F. WUUam Lawvere has been
reappointed to the Martin Professorship
of Mathematics
President Robert L.
Ketter.
The three-year appointment will be
·•
effective through June 30, 1982
In announcing the reappointment, 1
Ketter said the Martin Chair Is one of the
highest honors U/ B can, confer.
On the faculty here since 1974,
Lawvere has held posilions at Reed
College , Portland , Oregon; the University of Chicago; the City University of New
York Graduate Center, and at universities In Zurich; Hal~ax. Nova Scotia;
Aarhus, Denmark and Perugia , Italy.
He Is a graduate of Indiana University
and Columbia University.

"¥

Hug.h es expects good, running cage team
U/B's varsity basketball team opens
the 1979-80 season at Niagara , on Friday, November 30, under seco,nd-year
Head Coach Bill Hughes.
Hughes has three starters back from
the 1978-79 team that posted a 7-18
record , 7-4 in the Slate University of New
York Athletic- Conference (SUNYAC),
several transfer students who will play,
and a number of talented freshmen .
Returnees are senior center Nate
Boule . who averaged 10.5 points and
8 .0 rebounds last season, and senior forwards Tony Smith, 11.0 pis. and 6 .5
reb .. and Mike Freeman . 7 .9pts. and 4 .7
reb.
Sophomore Kevin McMU!an, up from
the junior varsity. wiD start at point guard
and is. joined by Tom Parsons. a junior
transfer from Coppin State College, In
the backcourt.
Fnt off the bench will be junior
forward·&lt;:enter Cordell Jackson. a
transfer from Herford CC; junior forward
Harold Walker. a transfer from Montgomery (Ala.) College, and junior guard
Larry Walton. a transfer from Nassau

cc.

Top freshmen are guard David Acree.
fo.wards Ken Jones and John Flt2palrick,
and 6-8 center Chris Rhodes , all from
New York State .

-

Good recrultiDtl year
"We had a good recruiting year,
Hughes states. "We have "ight new
plloyers and there have been no dlsappo&lt;nlments.
" OwraD, we have more team speed ,
we're much quicker, we'U be a better
shoPti!!9 team, and~ have 'J'Uch 1more
d~ptW ·· _',.: ._; · .. ;: . · . , .,'. ' • ; : · , ••

guard on the squad and Is "doing a prelly
good )ob ." Freshman Jones has shown
excellent rebounding abUity.
Most of the other transfers and
freshmen must adjust to a new system
and a new coach, but wUI contribute this
season and give the BuDs excellent
potential for the future .
Although U/ B has no dominating big
man (Bouie is the tallest regular at
6 -foot-6) , Hughes says the squad has
good overall height with Freeman and
Jones at 6-5; Jackson , Walker and Fitzpatrick at 6-4 , Smith and Parsons at6-3 .
Tearn speed will allow the Bulls to run
the fast-break and play a man-for-man
pressure defense.

The achedule
The 1979·80 varsity schedu~ :
NoD. 30, at Niagara.
Dec. 1, O~~ronm SloJe; 4 . at Fr~onM State; 6,
&amp;dfolo Stole; 10, Younptoum Stot~: 11. SUNY
Albctny; 28·29. at lnd.ku\1 , Pa . XmasToumarMnt
wfth Queens College, Rhode Island College.
,Jon. 5. at South Flork:la: 8, at Sktson: 12,
lln&gt;d:porf Store: 15. b1 Hortwic:k: 19. b1 Genesco
State: 23 , at Oswego Stale ; 26, at P'&amp;IUJburgh
Slaae; 28, Conlond SUite; 30, at CanWu..

Fd&gt;.I , F.-S&lt;oro; 6, U. o/Roc,__9,
Gme.eoStote; 11 , R.I.T.: 13. at8rockpottState;
16, at Gannon; 18, 0~ Stoll!; 20, at Buffalo
State.

Goldhaber to rate
candidates on TV

Communication behavior wiD be used
•• of 25?
Friday's opponent , Niagara, Is one of
to rate the personal magnetism of
the few Division I teams stUI on the
presidential candidates on the "Today"
schedule. Hughes says the first six games
show, Thursday, December 6 , on NBC.
will be the toughest. The initial SUNYAC
Dr. Gerald M. Gll'ldhaber, chairman of
test will come Saturday, December I, an
U/B's Department of Communication,
8 p .m. contest at Clark Hall against
wUI study film c8ps of each of seven
Oneonta State, which won last season's
potential candidates from both political
meeting, 66-57 .
parties during the 8 a .m. segment of the
With cautious optimism , Hughes
program (carried locally on WGR-TV,
states, ..1 think we can be a contender in
Ch. 2) .
the West Division of the SUNYAC." The
Alter observing each candidate on film .
conference championship game next
Goldhaber will use current communicaReporting th'at he's pleased with the
February wUI be played on the court of
tion behavior theory to evaluate what
progress made during the pre·season
ihe West thlist.
special power each may have to generate
petiod , Hughes says. "We hope to be a
He's aiming for 13 or 14 wins in the" popular loyalty or enlhusia."!n.
good , running basketball team ."
~arne schedule .
Contenders representing the 1o
"All three returnees (Boule , Smllh and
"Hopefully, we'll give U/ B lls first winDemocrats are President Carter, Senator
ning season in..six years," he adds.
Freeman) are looking better than at this
Edward Kennedy and Governor. Jerry
time last year; Tom Parsons Is everything
For the second straight year, a junior
Brown. Republican hopefuls whose perI expected. he's a line shooting guard ,
varsity wUI play a 15-game schedule,
sonal leadership qualities will be assessed
starting Saturday al 6 p .m. when the
and CordeD Jackson gives us back-up
are Ronald Reagan , Senator Howard H .
strength at both forword and center."
Baby Bulls e~tertaiQ D')'ouX~Jie 1(1, 11
~"J· Jr., C?e~ Bushl ~d Jph.~. B; .'.
McMUlan , rhtr"not~: !- ~h,• ~~ ~m~·;· prelltrilnary c&amp;\t~~:~.,.:,t ~:.~~.,..., :.:~·
1
a)tv1 ,•;,1,o,J'JI ·.~ • f",,. ~ J,• .J",rl " • l'lll

'· •

�N011ember 29. 1979

II

$250 awards

SE ATE
New registration procedures for fall,
budget hearing, ca~endar dra~ notice

KodaR grants

anoched-

U/B has received employee/alumni
grants of $6,450 through the Eastman
Kodak Company's 1979 Educational Ald
Program .
The grants are presented In recognition
of contributions made by U/B graduates
to the company's business success. The
awards are computed on the basis of
$150 for each year of undergraduate or
graduate school completed by persons
who jQio Kodak within five years of their
graduation; this year, grants totaling
$895,700 are being awarded to 291
institutions nationally.
Recipient schoqls are asked to
distribute the monies to the department
indicated by an Individual's degree.
Departments are asked to use the money
for Kodak undergraduate scholarships.
Kodak cited 197.4 U/ B graduates
Frederick X. Albrecht, James J. Briggs,
Genevieve M. Brudzinski, Catherine M.
(Undqulst) Burzik, Anne E. Cadek, Ran·
dall W. Cook, Paul A. Demerly, Gerald
Esposito, Michael M. Gontarek, Gary R.
Larsen, Gordon C . Moore , Samuel
Reele, Daniel A. Rehberg and Michael P.
SuUivan .
Also cited were James R. Orto, class of
1970, and Uszer Reigman, class of 1971.

B. TMOoalr

Tht

c-bolow!

was tubmllled by the 0....

Some FSEC mombes ....,.....d concern abou1
listing c:ouna and instNdots at this time, gtven the
looo ol facuky -"' ., the Spnng

·-led

~~.c:;.~.:;:"o::;

and ~ b&amp;fcn friday, Nowmber 16, when
furtheo- •ogjllnllon plans will bt made . AD lhings
considaed the members fell • senM of urgency to
procioed the ..lorJns and •• infonn Sludcnb
about che pwJ)CIM ol the new pre-registration
poooodura.

lae.*40WS........
lu · - to. the FSEC. Prot..... Sa-daN geve a short report of the MUP meeting,
_ . . t by • Food Foundation Gronl. hold ;n
Buffalo Satunlay. Now.- 10, 1979. A more
dciaiicd .... bt
In wrillng.

1-"5--

.....,.led

Wilcoo. •udcn• _ . . . . . . on dw
I,Jn;vm;(y Calendar CommittM• ..........., -

=

~c:~~~!'d.~U::
~~':".::-...:.::..s::.~

.:::,.~-:=,~!-~
contidcled. '" ........ he -

~ ..~m!'!.l~

~m.:

Levy elected to

ai&lt;O&gt;g !hal the

,..t:.c;t::,=.,:e: NAS institute

holiday- from oludonts.

o1~G,:":,.'~~j.,'7,~~

Dr. Gerhard Levy, distinguished pro-

lessor of pharmaceutics. has been elected

bach lor Sludcnb and 1acu11y which lhouJd 10M
.....,.. 1n • ~ - . . . .. Thtrc wonr """',._,.. from oomc FSEC .....- wllh addi-

==-::=-~--=~=«;=

w•_mA

01 lhla ..,. 11u1 ......, !han one . . . . c&lt;&gt;mplo-te agrHm&lt;nt w&lt;lh k otudcnl's ...,_

=

-~m.tlngtunumbcroltchcduie
,• ...,.,.,....... ,_ bointl uocd at SUNY

~:ol~~- ~,;'

19111-82.
Tht ..-.tng adjoumod at 5.35 p m.
Rcpan a1 . . Chair~ _ , _

A~~

1

m!"~T':.,.-w!";!:; ::!' ::r:::"'~

F-..~!y S o n N - . conlolning tal m y -mcnt. 11&gt;1 tho liot ol ~ facuky. wilh

~-. lcl-tsoubmitlediO

:::.::..w;::.~~':;'t'f=S:::.
o1 the Od
lw&gt;c - .... E - ProoodU&lt;• eon-.
l•i d w - ~and Sopoonar)

~ !J::;

~;~b':.~~~ in [~~~n o~ ~tfs' co~{
health / medicine , social/behavioral
scieAces. law. engineering and ad·
ministration. Membership is limlled to
about400.
CurTently. institute committees are
developing a program of policy studies
for national health planning goals and
standards Studies bf ~~- ~1eti1, lh t~· ,
·· US. have been completed .
·

e::::.~~..::. •.·

lathM-Ibe 1977-olthothonD.onCt'

to the Institute of Medicine, an organization chartered by the National Academy
of Sciences to examine matters which
pertain to the public's heahh.
One of 36 Individuals recently elected
to the prestigious institute. Levy is a
pioneer ln the f.eld of pharmacokinetics,
the study of how drugs interact with lhe
body. and is director' of U/ B's CUnical
Pharmacokinetics Center_
Those elected to institute membership

1

avaUable for
grad teachers
the Graduate School and Graduate
Sludent Aaocillllon have announced an
awards program for grad student
teachers.
Thtlle "E&gt;u:ellence In Teaching Awards
f"!' Graduate Students" will carry a cash
prize ol $250 and a Certificate of
Recognition lor five students judged mos1
outstanding each year_ The idea behind
the effcxt is to emphasize the UniversHy's
commitment to high quality inolruction
and to the Importance of teaching provided by graduate asmtants.
In addition to the top awards, Cer·
tiflcates of Honorable Mention wt11 also be
conferred .
The competition is open to aD lvll-tlme
graduate students Who have been
teaching here at leas! one semester_
Nominations may be made b\1 any
member of the University community and
should be received along with supporting
materials, by March 1, 1980. Materials
should be forwarded to the Saeening
Committee for Excellence in Teaching
Awards, Graduate School, 549 Capen.
The panel will announce its selections by
May 1, 1980.
The committee wiU be composed of
flvfL_members drawn from recipients of
Chancellors Awards for Excellence in
Teaching and previous recipients ol
graduate student recognition _
These criteria will be used:
1. Teaching Skills . The candidate must
perform superbly in the classroom _
Mastery of teaching techniques must be
demonslrated and substantiated. The
teacher must be able to adapt readily to
student needs, -interests, and problems.
2. Student Services. The candi4ate
must be generous of his/her personal
time , easily accessible, and continually
concerned with the Intellectual and social
growth of individual students.
3. Academic Slandards and Re·
qutrements. The candidate must set high
standards for students and help them
achieve academic excellence. S/he must
work actively with individual studenls to
help them improve their scholarly or ar·
listie accomplishments.
4. Evaluation of Student Performance.
The candidate must evaluate student
achievement fairly and competently_
5. Professional Growth. The candidate
must be making salisfaciory progress
toward his/her degree. The candidate
must be weU prepared In the area in
which s/he is teaching and should use
relevant contemporary data from that
area and related fields In his/her
teaching.
Nominations should also include the
following :
A vilae statement; supervisor's and
department chairperson recommenda·
lions; a summary statement emphasizing the primary reasons for considering the
individual; statements from students, colleagues and others; and student evalua·
lions where available.

Rubenstein fund
set in Pharmacy
A ,student award has been lul)ded at
the Schoof of Pharmacy in memory of
Copel S. Rubenstein, a weD known Or·
chard Park and Williamsville pharmacist,
who died last year .
The Award, to be provided througH'a
fund established by the late U / B
graduate's brother, Dr. Harry Ruben·
stein , wili be presented for the ftrst Hme in
1981 to pharmacy students exhibiting I~ e
highest standards of ethics, integrity anJ
humanitarianism.

Copel Rubenstein, a 1939 graduote ol
the Schoof of Pharmacy, &lt;lias president &lt; (
his freshman class and also played tackle
on the football team. Known to h&gt;S
friends and colleagues as "Cuppy." he
was also a member of Rho PI Phi frat em ,.
ty.
After graduation, Rubenstein workeJ
at several pharmacies in the Baile Delavan ~Genesee

area before fo, ming

.J

partnership with William Dorr .n _ For
many years, the two ov'Tled Gk'" Pharmacy at Main and Cayuga Streets h
WiUiamsville. For 20 years, they operated
the Neil Pharmacy In Orchard Park.
.

-

�u

...•a••

November 29. 1979

US ~ &amp;

BoDle

There are similarities in problems,
says Classics Professor Leo Curran ;
American leaders should take note
By Milt CArlin
~ws

Leavitt is advocate
of handicapped rights
Back 'in 1955. fate changed Jay
Leavitt's life In a horrible way .
A broken neck suffered in a gymnastic
tumbling accident left him a quadriplegic.
Today. at43. Dr Jay A. Leavitt. aided
by a steel leg brace. shuffles awkwardly
from one place to another as he carries
out his dt.~tk?s as director of academic
computing at U/ B. Moreover. he has

become a champion of the handicapped-with credentials to spare .
What a quadriplegic can accomplish is
exempiKied by Leavitt's academic record
He received his bachelor's from Brown
University In 1958. three years after

becoming handicapped. hls master's in
math from New York University in 1960 .
and his Ph D. from NYU in 1963 He
spent the folk&gt;w1ng year in Italy as a
Fulbright Scholar.
Before coming to U/ B last year.
Leavitt had held a tenured position at the
University of Minnesota for 14 years

A need for polltlal force
While Leavitt looks at his own plight
philosophically and Is thankful lor the
things he con do. such as drive a car. he
espouses the need for "political force" to
give the handicapped the governmental
ass.istarice they need to retain a measure
of Independence. He proudly calls
himself a " rabble -rouser" for the
handicapped.
ln his new role as activist. Leavitt has
aligned himself with the New York State
Coalition of People With Disabilities and
represents the Niagara Frontier Division.
However. he prefers to classify himseK
and others like him as "handicapped"
rather than "disabled "
In an appearance at a State Energy
Commission hearing in Buffalo. Leavitt
complained that the state's proposed
"Energy Master Plan" fails to consider
problems ol the handicapped. especiaUy
when It comes to gasoline and home
heating-oil supplies

..

,

JadepelodeAC:e I• lmpot1Aal
"For me. and many others like me. independence is extremely important : he
leslllied "I enjoy going to the theater and
restaurants I enJOY traveling. 1 am extremely proud of the work I do and I feel I
am successful.·•
Saying that the handicapped have con·
slslently demonstrated that they can per·
form competitively. Leavitt told the
energy commission.
"If moror fuel Is not available on a
priorlt~ basts to the handicapped, you
would be creating a sHuatlon wl)ich
would endanger our independence and
hvelthood.
"Obviously." he added. "were we

unable to continue to work . one consequence would be that we probably would
become wards of the state."
At a recent appearance at a coalition
eeting in Rochester. Leavitt commented. "New York has not been a
leader among states in developing legislation for the handicapped . Sadly. it has
not even been a good follower ."
He puts the number of hand icapped in
New York State at about two and a half
million and the total number in the United
States at 36 million.
He lauded Minnesota for Its laws pro·
tecling the handicapped . recalling that
during his 14 years in that state he "never
missed a day's work.''
He pointed out that business
establishmems in Minnesota With 10 or
more em'ployees are requ ired by law to
provide parking spaces for the hand icapped and that another law mandates
cleanng of snow from sidewalks.
In New York State. he satd . some
private business ftrms erect signs to set
aside parking spaces for the handicapped
on a voluntary basis. but "there is no state
law and enforcement Is impossible." He
further observed that federal regulations
tt&gt; aid the handicapped pertain to public
bl.lldings only.

Extraordinary expense•
Leavitt . who is listed in the directory of
the American Association of Handi·
capped Scientists. also proposes that the
handicapped be given income tax
writeoffs for "extraordinary expenses."
In his own case. he said. a suit of
clothes lasts only about six months
because he frequently falls and the fabric
becomes shabby and tom . his leg brace
rips his trousers: his shuffling, grind ing
pace wears out the soles of a pair of shoes
In six weeks: his leg brace costs him about
$300 for replacement every three years:
and he undergoes frequent physical
checkups for which he pays.
"Fortunately ." he noted. "I can afford
it. But most people can't."
LeaviH is convinced that the total
answer Ues in "humanely destgned laws"
to proiect all segments of the population.
-MC

Coppens elected
Dr. Philip Coppens, professor of
chemistry, has been elected a corres·
ponding member of the Royal Dutch
Academy of Sciences.
Coppens was born In Hofland and
received his Ph.D. In phl(Sical che!'listry
from the University of· Amsterdam. He
has been at U/ B since 1968.
Non Profu Org.
US. Postage
PAID
Buffalo. N:Y.
Permit No. 311

Bureau Staff

Will the U.S . go the way of ancient
Rome?
A U/B classics professor sees a
similarity between problems laced by the
U.S . and those which plagued the an·
dent world power before Its decline and
fall . He feels U.S . leaders might do well
to look into the mirror of Roman history.
Dr. Leo C. Curran . an associate professor of classics. emphasizes that his
assessment is hardly one of doom . but
rather a comparative look at what happened to Rome .
Every dvilization is ··subject to mortality."' Curran noted in an interview.
Rome-both as a republic and empire- lasted almost 1.000 years. ··an ex·
traordinary length of time ."
When the Empire fell in the 5th century
A.D. , Curran said. it was beset by inter·
nal problems of its own making. as well as
by external problems .
''There was no · single reason'' why
Rome fell prey to virtually constant invasions by German tribes al ong its
2.000- mile frontier formed by the Rhine
and Danube Rivers.
The poor were •lienated by lnH•tlon
"If Rome had been strong enough to
handle its Internal affairs ." Curran commented. "it would have been able to han·
die Its external problems. The reverse
also is true ."
lntemaJiy. one of Rome's major proble ms was "alienation of the poor from
society."' which "resulted in a tremendous
lack of social unity."
The root cause, Curran pointed out .
was an economic factor quite familiar to
Americans today - inflation .
In fact. he ad ded . infla tion got so bad
the government cut back on the amount
of gold and silver in its coins.
Rome's inflationary economy. Curran
explained . eventually meant serldom for
the poor.
"The rich were virtually immune to inflation and higher prices, while the poor
were saddled with overwhelming tax
burdens collected by the Roman counterpart of the Internal Revenue Service ."
When the poor ran out of money to
pay taxes. they were forced to pay "in
kind" by giving the government goods
they produced and services.
"The poor man had little choice but to
attach himself to a wealthy landowner."
Curran said .
As this social system dev.eloped. he
noted . laws were passed making serfdom
legal.
"This meant that when a piece of property was sold . the workers on that property would_ be sold as part of the
package . Land was the most Important
source of wealth and it was in .the hands
of relatively few . mainly senators."
Ur!Mn blight
Another factor in the decline. as explained by Curran . was Rome's neglect of
Its cities -"urban blight." He pointed out
that public seJVices were virtually halted .
resulting in roads , buildings a nd
aqueducts being left in a stale of
dlsreplllir.
"Throughout history ." Curran said.
"cities were the center of civilizations.
CiUes were the heart of the Roman
Empire .''
With "urban blight" in full sway. Cur·
ran related, individuals trying to escape
rural poverty would go to the cities to
seek employment that didn't exist. thus
compounding the problems of the urban
areas.
Meanwhile, Curran observed, the
Christian Church was "getting richer and
richer through donations and bequests,
an9 eventually took over the slate ."
SociaUy. he said. the church's em·
phasis on salvation of one's own soul
paved the way for a seKishness similar to
that d is p layed by today ' s " me
generation."
"This world doesn't count-only the
next world Is imrortant" is how Curran

described the church's philosophy of that
day.
In keeping with that philosophy, he
pointed out . talented, educated people
"dropped out of society" to pursue per·
sonal salvation in religious orders instead
of going into government jobs. mUitary
service and professional activities such as
law.
"What's in it for mer· was the watchword . whi)e crealivHy and social wellbeing were all but forgotten .

ll

Immorality had eothbog to do with
Contrary t041Dpular belief. Curan went
on , moral degeneration was at low tide
when the Roman Empire crumbled. It
was during the 1st century A.D. undeF J
Nero that reports of moral depravity were
most sensational, he said .
"The 4th and 5th centuries were far
less exciting, and there was no evidence
of large·scale degeneracy compared with
the earlier days.
"From a historical view , Rome reached
the pinnacle of Its productivity, mUitary
streng(h and creativity during the lime of
its im moral excess."
Persecution played a part in Rome's
downfall. Curran continued .
"It was popular at that lime for Christians to persecute pagans, Jews and
heretical Christians."
Still another irritant in Rome's fahering
social structure , Curran said . was the
practice of allowing German invaders to
become part of society. but not accepting
them as equals.
"This might be compared , for instance ,
to our treatment of immigrants in days
gone-by and migrant farm f'IOrkers today
as second-class citizens," he commented .
On the military front , Curran said.
Rome's once mighty army grew weak
and troublesome. and was unable to
cope with tribal invasions along the
2,000-mile northern border.
"Rome could not alford to support a
strong enough army even though Its
defense budget was high ," he added.

Military problem•
He cited these in ternal mUilary
problems:
eJndlvldual generals going olf to war
by themselves In hopes of gaining a victory that would give them political power.
eThe common soldiers, even though
poorly paid, were hated because much of
the tax money collected was needed to
support them .
• Large contingents of German troops
were taken into the army and these
soldiers proved less than reliable.
"It all bolls down to the fact that the
Roman Empire lost its sense of national
unity and purpose," Curran observed .
"The citizens of Rome , devoted only to
themselves as Individuals. lacked concern
for society as a hole.
"Patriotism was a thing of the past. In
fact , neither the wealthy nor the poor had
any reason to be patriotic.
" This was In sharp contrast to Rome's
heyday when petriotism was ala tremen·
dously high level."
Curran asserted that Thomas Jefferson
and America's' other founding fathers
"knew Roman history.
" In framing the Constitution 200 years
ago , they were thinklng of Rome at 115
height of unity and freedom. "
Looklng at the various issJies troubling
the United States today, C'urran posed
this rhetorical question: "Where are our
national priorities?''

Cal profs busy
Facuky members of the University of
California continue to devote about 61
hours a week to teaching , research and
public service. according to a faculty
time·use study. The findings, based on
two-day time records reported by a sam·
pie of 944 lull-time regular-rank faculty ,
closely paraDe! an Initial study done In
1978. Tl)e faculty devote an average of
26 hours a week to Instructional activities.
23 hours to research and creative activity.
and 12 hours to poblic service.

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

NOV. 15, 1979
VOL. 11 e NO. 11

U/8 one of five
picked by .DOE for
coal clean-up study
By U nda Grace-Kobos
News Bureau S1eff

The Department of Energy (DOE) bas
selected U/ B as the recipient of one of
five large contracts to be used for
development of new technologies to
clean the eroding part iculate e missions of
advanced coal-fired power pla nts.
To be directed by Dr. David T. Shaw.
professor of electrical engineenng and
director of the Laboratory for Power and
Environmental Studies. the two·year pro·
ject is being funded by DOE for

$790.000

Ted Kennedy
had no 'coattail'
By Nina Sedita
News Bureau Staff

The first scientific test of Senator

Edward M. Kennedy's impact on a local
election. conducted by a U/ B professor
three days before the race . eccurately
predicted limited Impact of the Kennedy
··coattail .''
Measuring Senator Kennedy's impact

on a pre / post basis, Dr. Gerald M.
Goldhaber. chairman of the Department
of Communication. aslteq 500 people.

'"When you couple that with the lack of
movement on the hypothetical pre· and
post · measurement. you ' ve got
something that says ' no coaltails.· " he
added .
A further measure of the lack of the
Kennedy coattail effect is that the actual
voter turnout in last week's election was
70 per cent-exactly the same as the
average turnout for preu1ous county ex·
ecutive races in Erie County .
The soread for Rutkowski was 68 per

randomly drawn from throughout Erie

County. the following hypothetical question on October 30:
"'
'"Would you be more or less likely to
vote for a candidate for county executive

endorsed by Senator Edward Kennedy?'"
The results of this pre-test were : m ore

likely, 15 per cent; less likely, 20 per
cent : no difference. 55 per cent :
undecided, I 0 per cent.
The post-measurement followed the
Massachusetts Democrat's in-person endorsement of Frank J . McGuire on
November 3 McGuire. Democratic candidate for Erie County Executive who
was defeated by Republican Edward J .
Rutkowski by a margin of 203.311 to
91.954 . was the first local candidate
Senator Kennedy had campaigned for
since becoming a legal presidential candidate on October 29
The results of the posHest were ; m ore
likely, 17 per ""nt: less likely, 19 per
cent : no difference, 55 per cent;
undecided, 9 per cent
The actuel endorsemem question.
asked Saturday (Nov 3) prior to TV
news analyses of the endorsement. was:
"This morning. Senator Kennedy was
In Buffalo to endorse Frank McGuire
What Impart , ~ any. does this endorsement have 0&lt;1 your choice of Rutkowski
or McGuire for county executive?"·
The percentage breakdown was· no
Impac t, 84 per cent. undecided , 7 per
cent : switches back a nd fo rth , 9 per
cent

Will Kenne dy'o
magic nab off?
"I think we've demonstrated that a
local candidate tn a state, city or county
cannot take for granted that the "Kennedy
magic' wtll rub off,'' said Goldhaber.
The really significant figure . the U/ B
professor said , Is the 84 per cent " no tm·
pact "

e Sce 'K . .•etly." paee 2. coL 1

In two years. DOE officials w11l select
one of the five techniques developed
under this program for use in a prot01ype
plant that will be bUilt wuh DOE funding
~ we are in effect competing wnh the
o ther four award recipients. " Shaw said .
noting that the U B group IS 10 very
"tough .. company. the other awardees
are Exxon Research and Engineering
Company. Lmden .
J . General Elec·
tnc Co mpan y. Schenectady .
Y .
Westinghouse Electric Corp . Pittsburgh .
and Air Pollution Technology. San
Diego
30 oubmltted propooalo
Thirty companies and educational institutions responded to a request issued
by DOE last March for proposals to
develop techniques to remove contaminants such as alkali metals and par·
ticulates lrom the hot gases leaving the
combustors of colll·fired power plants.
Shaw said U/ B's was the only university
proposal accepted and was listed fourth
in the announcement of awards.
Each of the five grant recipients will
develop a different concept for cleaning
up coal plant emissions
Shaw's research group is conducting its
project under the general title of
"Acoustic Agglomeration for Hot-Gas
Cleanup in Pressurized Fluidized Bed
Combustors (PFBC) ... Put simply . the

DOB declares
fiscal deepfreeze
What looks like one of the deepest
" freezes" ever levied by the Division of
the Budget (DOB) was imposed on
November I . U/ B officials have learned
The action ·Includes a total hinng
freeze. the possibility of abolishing vacandes "deemed unnecessary.·· and a reduc·
lion In OTPS expenditures during the
present fiscal year
According to a Budget bulletin from
Howard F. Miller. director of DOB. the
steps have been taken because "' the
State's fikal and economic situation over
the next two years dictates that additional
specific restraints be Immediately applied
to the operations of State departments
and agencies. .
. " Current spending
must be brought down to levels " nearer
th~ that wUI be required for the
!980-81 and 1981-82 budgets."
Miller said reductions must be made
now. Instead of simply deferring expen·
dHures to the next fiscal year. "'The fiscal
situation in 1980-81 and 1981-82 will be
more severe than this year so postponing
expenditures-rather than reducing
them-will only compound the problem
we will aU face next year." Muter said All
requested deficiency budgets fbr the cur·
rent year will be closely scrutinized also.
Three areao of control
The DOB director outlined three areas
in which controls ore being imposed :
a . Personnel. A completelreezo on hir·
ing Is effective Immediately, Muter sold ,
extending to "all permanent and tern·
porary positions funded from. Slate

purposes· Regular and related offset
appropriations " The freeze will remain m
effect until "new personnel tllrgets are
established for each department and
agency ·· He said budget examiners ""ill
be contacting all llgencies shortly
reg~rding revised targets
These new personnel targets. Miller
said . will constitute the basis for
cakulating personal service appropria·
tions for 1980-81 . that is. appropriations
recommended to the legtslature will fully
reflect the reductions Miller said . too.
that DOB will "abolish vacancies deemed
unnecessary" in order to "eliminate any
anticipation that the savings from these
reduced hirings will be liVailable in future
..
years.
b. Fiscal Controls A reductkm in
OTPS expenditures. to be determined by
L&gt;OB in conjunction with each agency.
will be achieved prior to March 31 . Miller
~id departments and agendes will have
flexibUity on where and how such savings
are to be made. However, he noted . it
will not be possible to interchange monies
for Slllaries and opoe:rntlng expenses. and
'' unusual or excessiVe carryovers" into
the next budget year will not be permitted
under next year's expenditure ceilings.
c . Capita/ expenditures . Special
guidelines to control capital constn;ction
expenditures will be published later. DOB
said .
The DOB memorandum emphasizes
that the fiscal agency Intends to allow
Individual utt~.s of the State '" maximum

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

'""-.

group will attem pt to perfeCt a technique
that uses very mtense sound wllves to
clean dust particles from the hot gases
emitted by burning coal.
'"The work we are doing for this project
is a continuation of other research we
have done here that has been supponed
by the National Science Foundation .
DOE. the Electric Power Research In·
stitu,e . and the French Atomic Energy
Commission. among ot hers." Shaw ex·
plained
Coope ra tion with G E and a n English
lab
As prime conn actor for this $790.000
project. the U B grou p will work with
engmeers a t General Electric who will
carry out conceptual design and
economic evalua tion . Experimental
testing of their model will take place at the
Coal Utilization Research Laboratory in
Leatherhead . England .
When coal IS burned . a hot gas con·
taining sulphur panicles Is produced .
Shaw explained In conventional pow'er
plants. this gas is released into the atmosphere through smokestacks. Cll using
a pollution problem.
What the U/ B engineers hope to
perfect is equipment that would be used
in a combined -cycle system-the
pressurized fluidized bed combustor. This
is an advanced techniq ue that burn s coal
mixed with panicles of limesto ne or
dolomite. which combine~em icall y with
the sulphur released from the coal du ring
combustion to form an inert materia l thllt
can be re moved with the coal ash .
'"In the case of cleaning up dust particles from the hot gases emitted by bu rning coal. especially lower grade coals with
a high sulp hur content. conventional
devices such as filters or scrubbers will not
work.'' he explai ned . "These combustion
systems have dema nding enviro nments
with combined high te mperatu res. htgh
pressures and highly corrosive gases. •·
Higher efficie ncy
By o perating the co mbustor un der
press ures six to 16 times that of atmospheric pressure. the heated gases
created would have enough ene rgy first
to spin a gas turbine and then to prod uce
steam that would run ll follow-on steam
turbine.
This dua l generlltlng combination
could offer an efficiency of close to 40 to
42 per cent. compared to the 33 to 35
per cem effk:Jency of colll·fired plants
with conventional "scrubbers." Shaw
noted .
• S•• 'DOE P• • t.' ,... . 2 , coL •

THANKSGIVING
The Reporter will not be
week !&gt;ecause of the
Reeeu . Our nat lsaue

dav, -~oyflll.~er 29.

BREAK
published next
Thanksgiving
wiD be Thurs-

�J

November 15, 1979

Laws im-p ede
nurses' work,
dean charges

•Kennedy

---··---

cent to 32 per cent In the poD for county
executive conducted just-before the election, and the actual spread was 69 per
cent to 31 per cent. This showed,
Goldhaber said, that the Kennedy coattail
effect was non-existent.
Gold haber used the occasion of
Senator Kennedy's November 3 visit to
the Buffalo Convention Center to Interview 100 persons going Into the Center
and 100 oomlng out .

Ketmedy or McGuire?
Of those oomlng In, he asked: "Are
you here to hear Kennedy or McGuire?''
Ninety-eight persons said they came to
hear Kennedy, while two said McGuire .
Of those going out. he asked : "Did it
(Kennedy's endorsement) have any impact on your decision to vote for either
Rutkowski or McGuire?''
Ninety-seven answered .. no,., while
three answered "yes."
According to other data gathered and
analyzed by the professor, the best candidate the Republicans could put up in
Western New York would be Ronald
Reagan.
"He (Reagan) runs best against Ken nedy and Carter," Goldhaber said .
.. aJthough if Carter is the nominee .
Reagan narrows II quite closely. Whereas
with Kennedy as the nominee. the
Reagan lead dissipates.
"So Kennedy handily beats all the
Republicans. Caner beats them. too. but
not as handily."
The question facing both Republicans
and Democrats nationally this year.
Goldhaber underlined , is "what is the impact of Ted Kennedy?'' The Caner people, he commented , are being told that if
Carter Is nominated , he wiU not be able to
help, In fact, wiU hurt the local can·
d tdates. Demon&amp;trable evidence is
crucial, he added.
Unique analyela
"Which Is why the Democratic Party is
supposedly looking at Senator Kennedy
as an alternative . WhUe others might look
at results afterwards," Goldhaber points
out, " my analysis is unique because it is
based on a measured , pre/ post basis."
In order to control ZIS many other factors as possible that were likely to in·
fluence the outcome of the race-beyond
the Impact of a Kennedy endorsementthe testing was performed as close to the
end of the election as possible. The timing leftlinle likelihood that something else
oould intervene.
Senator Kennedy's Buffalo visit . so late
In the race. provided more accurate data
for measurement, the U/ B professor
said, because he , Goldhaber, had a long
track of seven continuous polls which he
conducted every couple of weeks for the
last four months. tracking the two CliO ·
didates on the race for county executive.
" We saw a stable trend ," Goldhaber
said. "and we were able to conduct these
poDs over a period of time so the race
could be tracked very closely What happens is that when a national candidate
comes in at the very end of a race. like
Ted Kennedy, a presidential candidate ,
you're able to see if there's'any jump in
the voters' preference."

A pafect mlcroc:o.m
Calling Erie County a "microcosm of
the greater United States," Goldhaber
said the county Is Ideal for projecting
voter behavior across the country .
"We've got all the major ethnic groups,
broken down very nicely. We've got the
ru ral element-Clarence, Newstead .
Alden-all those areas. We've got heavy
Industrial, blue collar, and manufacturIng, and we've also got the farm .
" And you have education and major
universities around here It's reaUy ,
literally, a mlcrooosm of the United
States, here In Buffalo."
This fact has not escaped the anention
of market researchers, the U/ B chairman
pointed out. Buffalo, along with Dayton
and Cincinnati, Is among the top five or
six dtles in the country used by corporalions to test-market products. he noted .
S0-65 ,_r-olcla
The results of the Goldhaber poll were
broken down by varlouJ demographic
~ps . including oex, age, ethnic group

t"''~t~.~~-

Goldhaber said those who were more
inclined to vote for a Kennedy-endorsed
candidate tended to be In the 50 to
65-year-old age bracket.
Fifty per cent of registered voters in the
United Sta es are over 50 yea rs old, he
noted .
In term ~ of sex. 58 per cent who were
more inclined , in the pre-election sample.
to vote for a candidate endorsed by
Senator Kennedy were 'female and 42
per cent were male.
Goldhaber said the research will continue . He plans to conduct similar
pre/ post polls in a number of com·
munitles for a variety of local candidates

• Deepfreeze
(ho•INI . . I . coL 3 )

flexibility" in making adjustments .
However, Miller warned that if selfdetermined actions are "insufficient to
achieve the necessary savings. we will be
forced to revert to centrallzed control. "
The memo gives no Indication of what
the dollar target for the cuts may be .

No new word
At U/ B, E.W. Doty . vice president for
finance and management , noted there
are currently no exceptions to the freeze :
it Is complete and applies to all categories
of &amp;ployees . including st udent
assistants and hourly employees. DOB
intends to make no exceptions. Doty
added in a memo to vice presidents.
Doty could not be reached by the
Reporter for further clarification early this
week , but Harry W. Poppey, assistant
vice president , indicated that U/ B has
had no further word since the November
I memo from MUier of DOB .
Poppey thought It "will be at least a
week" before this campus is Informed of
what its new personnel ceiling will be .
Aher that , though , he suggested . hiring
can probably be resumed within the new
parameters. Speculation Is that ceiUngs
will be established more quickly than has
been the case during previous freezes or
holds on employment. The freeze means
" no new blood" on campus. Poppey explained ; transfers and promotions are still
possible.
Vacancies
Poppey said lines likely to be abolished
are those which have been held vacant
for the past several months In order to
meet previous ceilings and restrictions .
That does not rule out the posstbUhy that
a new opening might crop up tomorrow
which a vice president . might want to
"tum·in ,.. he said. At any rate, no further
Instructions have been received on this,
either. No numbers hove been suggested .
Nor has DOB yet notified SUNY Central or the local campus concerning OTPS
reductions. Poppey speculated that tight
controls on travel may be reintroduced , .
· along with gas cutbacks for campus
vehicles. Administrators may be told
perhaps to buy less papers and office supplies. Again , there's no word on dollar
targets for OTPS savings, either.
Once further Information is received , h
will be shared with campus ad ministrators.

For years, professional nurses ha~e
diagnosed and prescribed therapeutic
measures despite the fact that legislation
in most states prohibits them from doing
either, says Dr. Bonnie Bullough, new
U/ B dean of nursing.
An authority on nursing praclice law,
the nurse educator and author will
assu me the deanship J anuary 1.
Speaking here recently at a seminar at
the Sheraton Inn -East, Bullough said today's praclice acts are a strange mixtu re
and more often than not fail to recognize
the full scope of nursing functions . More
tha n 200 nurses, p hysicians and ph ysician's assistants attended the day-long
progra m.
Outlining the legal/historical aspects
and problems of nursing practice acts,
Bullough noted that patients could and
would have died in certain instances had
nurses not been willing to perform
beyond the lener of the law.
"The nurse who withholds a medication due to adverse reaction untll a physi·
cian is notified has prescribed a
therapeutic measure ; the nurse who
alerts the physician by phone thai a pregnant patient has dilated seven cen·
timeters has diagnosed ," Bu llough
pointed out. These are common in·
stances in which the nurse has traditional·
ly acted outside the legal scope of her
duties. but , Bullough said , the advent of
special care units really brought actual
nursing functions into direct conflict with
practice acts in many states.
"The professional nurses trained to
work in these units were taught to read
the monitors and to determine if a patient
had had an arrhythmia as well as how to
defibrilate the patient." Bullough said .
And. she added. there's linle doubt that
the mortality rates among patients who
had suffered myocardial infarctions came
dOwn as a result of these nurses'
vigilance, care and willingness to perfonn
a wider scope of functions .
Later in the 1960s. the nurse practi·
tioner movement started to grow. Nurse
practitioners are specially trained nurses
who perform such functions as taking patients' (medical) histories as well as con·
ducting physical exams. While in most
cases. these nurses worked In conjunc·
lion with a physician. some attempted to
establish nurse practitioner clinics.
Despite the fact that nursing functions . .
have always included duties legally
disallowed by most states. laws governing
practice acts have been slow to change .
'" Nurses have been their own worst
enemy when it comes to legislation on
practice acts." Bullough said . In 1955 , for
instance. the American Nurses Associa·
tion's own model practice act specifically
prohibited nurses from diagnosJng or
prescribing therapeutic measures at a
time when rr.any nurses were already do·
ing both . In its hesitancy to tread on legal
ground already carved out by the medical
profession . the nursing profession has
found itself in a dilemma partly of its own
making .
Bullough noted there is a real need for
changed language in nursing practice acts
in most states in order to "allow" nurses
legally to function in ways in which they
have been functioning all along. Such
ideal practice acts should include provisions for certification of nurse specialists,
she said .
.. We also need more standardized
practice acts since current legal language
varies from state to state ," she added .

United Way at top
The University's United Way Drive has
almost reached Hs goal , campaign director James R. DeSantis, director of public
affairs, said this week. 99 per cent of the
total has been raised .
The drive officially closes at the end of
the week so aU volunte~ are urged to
forward any outstanding pledges or
pledge cards as soon as possible, DeSantis said .
As of Wednesday morning, less than
$800 remained to be pledged to make
the $130,000 goal. The . figure in hand
was $129,268.18.
A~nal report on the drive wiU be carrled r-tn the issue of the Reporter of
NQYfY'Qber29 •• l ~ ,,,Jr , . 1.,~ .•·j4 •' •• · ' •'

e D OE grant

Shaw

( &amp; o • - I, coL 4 )

The sound waves generated by the
acoustic agglomerator .:ause the particles
in the smoke to move and agglomerate
(stick to each other). When the particles
reach a certain size. they d rop and ~n be
removed fro m the system with the coal
ash , instead of being released into the atmosphere.
''Insulation to contain the sound waves
within the system and to hold down noise
is necessary," S haw said, "but is not a
major problem . The mu ffler for a car is
more complicated than that needed for
an acoustic agglo merator because the
noise generated by a car covers a wide
frequency band . We are now testing a
method of generating a single high frequency sound wave, which is relatively
easy to insulate with a conventionally
designed muffler.''
The .major drawback to acoustic ag·
glomeration's ind ustrial applicatio n has
been the cost of the power req uired to
generate the very intensive so und, about
160 dB (deCibels). needed to cause the
particles to agglomerate .

Not a new concept
The concept of acoustic agglomeration
is not new. Shaw said . noting that the
technique was developed in the 1940's.
During the 1950's,• cheaper-and less effective - methods of filtering out particulates were found and research in
acoustic agglomeration essentially
stopped.
"We picked up this research about 12
years ago," Shaw said . What began as a
student dissertation has developed into
one of the major research areas in U/ B's
Laboratory for Power and C:nvfronmental
Studies.
Shaw said that the U/ B group, which
Is leading research into acoustic ag·
glomeration in this country, has another
contract with DOE to look at the possible
use of the method in coal gasification
plants, where coal would be converted to
gas in a high temperature, high piessure
environment .
George Fumich, Jr., program director
for fossil energy for DOE. said .
.. Although we have made significant progress in developing the pressurized
fluldizj!d bed coal combustor, present
technology for cleaning the hot, high
pressure combustion gases has lagged
behind and now threatens to become a
bonleneck in the development of a
combined-cycle power genera tlfng
system .
"This program is Intended to lnsur_e
that the gas cleanup technology os
brought into step with the developmen.!
of other combined-cycle components.
he stated .
Working with Shaw on this project are
Dr. Gerhard Kasper, a Fulbright scholar
from the University of Vienna visiting
U/ B. Dr. James Wegrzyn . and Dr. Paul
Lee.

Men now a
campus minority
Women outnumber men for the first
time on American college and university
campuses, the National Center for
Education Statistics repo{led this week.
Women account for 50.7 per cent of an
estimated total enrollment of 11 .7
mtruon,the ~e.ncy saki.
..._ , , ,; 1 ·~-. ·

�November 15. 1979

Iranians·
offer their
'side of story'
In the wake of the continuing interna-

tional crisis. representatives of Iran ian
students on campus issued the following
statement this Monday:
Dear fellow students and faculty :
Due to the recent developments in
Iran. the Iranian student com munity felt
responsible to inform you of the other

side of the story
International law suppons the temtorial
and personal immunuy of any embassy in
any host country While be•ng a full sup-

porter of the legitimate nght of the international communit)'. we wish to mform
you of the leg111mate nght of the op-

pressed people of Iran :
1 Dunng me past 37 vea rs. the place
called the U S ~mbassv has been a
ce nter for CO\iert ana oven dCnvmes m&lt;•oe Iran "-'lth cio~ ~oope ratl on oetween

C I A and SAVAK under the pretext of
preservation of !he United States'
srrateg1c and economic needs
Now. after 37 vears and after a bloody
revolution cosun9 60.000 hves. the same
embassy has been found to be the shelter
of the U.S government's coven antirevolutionary activities. wh1ch IS tn continuation of U 5 government's violation
of the most respected pnnc1ples of inwrnationallaw- ON ·INTERVENTION
2 . They have not told you that tn the
past 37 years. on the average every 48
mmutes. ex-Shah of Iran has ktlled one
Iranian for his/ her political beliefs with. if
not explicn. Implicit suppon of your
government. On 1953 after being ousted
by mass uprising. he was brought back to
power by spending 10 million dollars of
U S cittzens' taxes and has been supported thereafter.) Now. this the so·
called "benevolent dictator" has been accep ted for the alleged medical treatment.
If occu pation of the US . embassy in
Tehran is perceived as humiliation of the
American people. the acception of the
Shah under the so-called "humanitarian
considerations" has been perceived by
Iranian people as humiliation of their
bloody revolution.
The people of Iran want what the
world wanted after WWII . that is to try
the criminal for the sake of satisfaction of
human conscience and decency. While
this Iranian Eichmann escaped the coun·
try with billions of dollar~ . the people
were literally dying of starvation.
Now. our problem is a matter of
perception :
We, Iranian people. had been brutally
ruled during the past four decades by the
U.S . government's puppet. Everyone of
us has direct experience with socioeconomic and political oppression of the
Shah's regime .
For us the best judge is you . Sooner or
later the so-called embassy crisis will be
over. but a murder must not be a barrier
to a close relationship between the people of our nations.
-Iranian •tudents at
Unlveralty of Buffalo

Panel seeking
award nominees
The director of University Libraries has
appointed a Nominating Committee
chaired by Charles D' An iello of
Lockwood Library to seek and accept
recommendations for nominations for the
1979/ 80 Chancellor"s Awards for Excellence in Ubrarlanshlp
U/ B is eligible to send up to three
nominations to the Chancellor's Advisory
Comminee in Alban y by March 1. 1980.
During the past three years. five
librarians from Buffalo have received this
prestigious award.
As in previous years, the following
criteria have been established for selection: a) demonstrated skiD in librarian·
• ohip; b) outstanding service to the University and to the profession; and c)
demonstrated scholarship and continuing
professional growth .
Facuhy, students, and library staH are
urged to participate in the program and to
send their recommendations to Mr.
D'Aniello, Lockwood u"brary , Amherst
Campus, as soon as possible. Recom·
mendations may also be sent to heads of
the Unit Libraries
' ·

Mr. William Baird applies monar ror new Baird Hall

Budget went well, Ketter says;
Bairds hailed for their contributions
Just back from a budget hearing 10
Albany. President Robert L Kener told
the U/ B Councli Friday that the session
was "more gentle than normal. " adding.
"it's either because we gave a good
presentation or because their minds were
made up beforehand.""
U/ B Council member Robert Koren .
who accompanied the U B entou rage to
the State capital. thought it was the
presentation . Assessing that the University was " well served by 11s
representatives." Koren noted that Division of Budget officials complimented the
group on their presentation saymg. "it's
the best we've hea rd "
"The deanS, vice presidents and the
President gave a lucid . succinct and
clearly·explai ned presentation .·· Koren
observed . Koren also lauded Student
Association President Joel Mayersohn (as
did President Kener). noting he "" handled
himself with distinction "
Earlier in
represe ntat ive
"overview" of
sent at the

the meeting student
Michael Pierce gave an
a report he hopes to prenext Council meeting ,

December 14 The full report could not
be given Fnday because the Council was
expected at co rnerstone laying
ceremonies at Ba1rd Music Hall Pierce
said he hoped the statement will become
a tradition wnh the st udents who sit on
the Council in future yea rs
The recommendations he W111 make 10
this "annual repor(' will not need
budgetary co ns1dera11on. Pierce continued . Instead . they w11l focus on what
the Umversity can do 10 such areas as improving communtcation between
students and faculty and between units.
such as Ans and Letters and the sciences
Remarking that the Council has gone
through some "healthy changes." Pierce
cautioned that they must "listen to
students' concerns about the University ..
His recommendations will hopefull y
facilitate such commumcauon. he said

Pierce then asked Council Chairman
Hoben MillonZJ to discuss the repon
Millonzi forwarded to the Chancellor
regarding the condition of the cam pus .
Millonzi responded that the report . according to Trustees guidelines is a "con -

fidenual document. " but that the
Chancellor could make 11 pubhc if he
WIShed
P1~rce also asked the Council to
become mvolved in the discussion about
possible sale of the Umversity's Fran k
Lloyd Wright
house at 123 Jewell
Parkway. Millonz1 said he wasn't sure of
the role the Counc1l could play in the
matter . but was aware that fede ral land·
mark status is being sought fo r the house
by a civ1c gro up in Buffalo.
La ter. in Talben Banquet Room after
the B ~i r d Hall cornerstone was put inplace by members of the Baird family and
University officials. President Ketter told
the gathering that the event marked "a
renewed commitment by the University
to its leadership role in th e cultural life of
the com munity ..
Millonzi remarked that the University
and Western New York "share a co m·
mon debt of gratitude to the Baird
family ... for creating a permanent am·
bience in which music can flourish ."
The ceremony program also included a
recital by the Rowe String Quanet and
refreshments.

Telecommunications office set up
U/ B has 4500 telephone sets. 100
C!lllarm circuits. 150 data circuits. and an
•nnual telephone bill approaching $2
million.
Each month . some 1.000 .000
telephone calls are made into and o ut of
oa mpus offices: 650.000 ca lls w"ithin the
campuses; 150.000 local calls out:
180.000 calls In ; 15 .000 toll calls: and
45.000 Albany tie line calls.
At an average of three· min utes per
call . estimates Richard J . Zehler. Univer·
slty telecommunications coordinator. "we
are spending 50.000 hou rs a month on
the telephone."
And . adds th is man who answers his
own phone , reception ists and secretaries
are probably devoting over 5 .000 hours a
month just to screening and processing
calls.
Zehler is a retired Air Force lieutenant
colonel who served for 10 years as direc·
tor of telecommunications in various
North Amerbln air defense regions and
spent slx years as a telecommunications
manager in k&gt;caJ business. He came to
U/ 8 in June to establish a newTelecom·
munlcations Office within the Division of
Rnance and Management (430 Crohs
HaU) .

Why we need It
.
Why do we need this kind of olflce?
The present and projected volume of
campus telephone use underscores hs
lmpot1ance. Telecommunlcations use Is
growing at a 15 per cent annual rate ,
Zehler notes, "and must be managed as a
controUed system with respect toilse end

expense
As one case in poin t, the entire Main
Street Campus telephone system is being
revamped and modP.:rnized. Zehler
repons. Memorial Day Weekend 1980
will mark actual c h angeov~r from an antiquated on-campus step-by·step switching
system to a new computerized electronk
switching apparatus located in a
telephone co mpan y building off·campus.
The changeover will make possible for
Main Street users the same station
features (call tra nsfers. three·way calling,
etc .) now enjoyed at Amherst. Improved
call processing , the possibility of greater
physical restrictions on li nes and a more
flexible hunting feature for Incoming calls
will also result . The majority of Main
Street four·digit extension numbers will
be changed In the process. although the
831 exchange will be continued .
Within the next few weeks. Zehler will
be spearheading a station survey of current Main Street phone instruments.
Managers will be contacted concerning
service changes. possible reduction of
key sets. and other alterations designed

On national panel
Dr. Darwin Dennison. associate professor In the Department of Health
Education Professions, School of Health
Related Professions (HRP), has been
elected chairperson of the American
School Health Association's Research
Council.
The CounCil reviews research effons in
health education/ health sciences from
across the. nation :

to take full advantage of the new system.
The nature of administering telecom·
munkat ions facilities is rapidly changing,
Zehler. who directs the Western New
York Telecommunications Association ,
points out. M•sslve changes In the last 10
years have led to introduction of co mpeti·
tion in more and more areas of the
marketplace , significant technological
developments . rapidly Increasing costs of
service.s. and expanded use and ,greater
dependence on these services.
Save• time and money
Using telecommunications obviously
saves both the time and the costs involv·
ed In traveling , writing letters, etc. In a
University as spread ~t and fragmented
as U/ B . proper use of modern
technology can mean major savings. It
might even be possible, for exam ple, to
cut busing costs by using telecommuntclll·
lions to offer the same class
simultaneoulsy at both campuses.
An office such as that headed by Zehler
has to be both systems·and cost·oriented,
he says. "in order to take fuU advantage
of current facUlties . capHalize on available
advancements for expansion and lm·
provement . and Insure cost·effective service and accurate biDing ."
He's not here to make decisions about
what phone service an office should
have , he emphasizes; his function is to
help a given account manager better
understand what his or her telephones
can do and can't do , how the equipment
wori&lt;s, how H can be Improved. what it
e h e - ·Ut,b.LI

�.......

November 15, 1979

VIEWPOINTS~-

Who is Norman Podhoretz? Why are
they saying awful things about him?
By Marc Epstein

worked increasingly to the detriment of
the power status of the U.S . in the world .
Podhoretz, as a patriot, feared acco m·
modationism and appeasement. As an
American Jew, he feared egalitarianism/
redistributionlsm, and the general atmosphere of the de-authorization of state
and society to which the mainstream intelligentsia had contributed so much. He
organized a defense of America that offe red equality of opportunity rather than
equality of results. He lent support to a
beleaguered Jewish state which by its existence defended those values essential to
our being. For Podhoretz, America with
all its faults, faults inherent in the nation
state structure . still remained the most de cent state on the face of the earth .

Twenty years ago Norman Podhoretz
became edhor-ln-chief of Commentary
fl'"!lazlne , and began a remarkable
transformation of that journal. At the
time, Its readership was modest and its
range ol topics was largely concerned
with Jewish communal and religious affairs along with literary criticism. It was a
throughlv respectable journal and it served tbe American Jewish communtty os a
window on the world at large. Scarcely, it
would seem, a promising cockpit for
political debate and controversy over
such diverse issues as U .S . foreign policy,
abortion, race , the new-anti-semitism,
the weHare stale, and a host of issues that
have since plagued the American body

po~~

did this come about? In his
recendy published reminiscences. Breaking Ranks, Podhoretz traces his evolution
from literary critic in search ol new and
frequently rad ical alternatives . He
simultaneously rejected both the
Americlln intelligentsia's romance with

the Russian Revolution , especially with
Stalinism and what he perceived as the
cultural ' and political stagnation of
America during the Eisenhower years.
The 1950'• malnetream
In the 1950's . the mainstream of the
American intelligentsia was liberal. This
was then understood to entail strong advocacy of social reform at home; a drive
to extend and fuHillthose possibilities of
American society that had first been
broached by the progressives in the early
part of the century and had become part
of the agenda ol national politics during
the New Deal.
Foreign policy . the hberals felt, should
be made up of equal parts economic aid
to the underdeveloped countries (the
"Third" World! and a vigorous defense
against the Soviet Union and its satellites.
This post-war understanding of the
Soviet Union , and of totalitarianism , had
led to a tacH and even explicit recoil from
the flirtation with Stalinism which had
bemused the liberal intelligentsia In the
30's and during WWII .
In short, the mainstream was liberal as
this was understood at the time : at home .
social weKarist, pro·state interventionist :
abroad . for strong defense against the
communist world, for large-scale aid to
the neutral "Third World ."
Podhoretz was trained in the discipline
of scholarly literary criticism, first at Col,umbia College, and when he studied
abroad at Cambridge under the tutelage
of F .R. Lea vis . editor of Scrutiny and
dean of English literary criticism . As
editor Podhoretz was first to introduce
the r~ading public to Paul Goodman's
Growing Up Absurd, whkh became one
of the sacred texts of the "counter·
culture "
A magic triangle had come into being
with 1ts venices in Washington. Boston ,
and New York. For a bnef moment, aid·
ed by the ascendancy of Kennedy I. the
alhance of political power (Washington).
academiA (Harvard). and the publishing
&lt;ommunicatton center {New York).
made everything seem yossible

A umpus communWy nnl'5pllper pubbshed
each Thunday by !h« OMsion of Publr.:: Af
fAlfS. Stale Umversity of ew York at Buffalo
Edl:oriit.l offices •«
136 Croh5 Hall .
Amhent T.tophon&lt; 636 2626

r.oeated.,

Dlr.ctor of Public Affairs
JAMES R DeSANTIS

Ed•Of in Chid

ROBERT T MARLETT
Art •nd Production
.I()HN A CLOUTIER

......._ntEdtor
JOYCE BUCHNOWSKJ
Weokly Colond. Edoo&lt;w

JEAN SHRADER

Changea In America
While changes in the content of Com·
mentory
proceeded apace . America .
too underwent a series of momentous
cha'nges. The civil rights movement, Viet
Nam. our venture into space, all provid·
ed experiences and raw material for the
intellectual community to absorb and fuse
with an ongoing critique of American
society. But , "Something Happened ."
America found itseH increasingly embroiled In dvU strife lit home and mired in the
rice paddies of Southeast Asia abroad . At
just this time. the Israelis demonstrated
that the sands of the Middle East provided no insurmountable obstacles when
their existence was threatened . A new
Jewish self-awareness surfaced in the
U.S . and it ominously was paralleled by a
negative aitique of American foretgn
policy which soon permeated all sections
of society.
This corrosive critique filtered down
from the Intelligentsia to the popular
media . A plan of action for mobilizing ali
the "people" precipitously ended our involvement in Viet Nam but did not cure
the ills of the ailing American state.
Adherents of the "old left" like Bella Abzug and Utlian Hellman re-emerged with
an aura of new respectability .
A failed Kennedy admimstration ,
essentially liberal and anti-communist in
thought and deed . was now recast and
mythologized as having been a left-wing
benevolent presidency. which had it but
survived Dal~s . would never have gotten
us deeper in Viet Nam . would have •n·
itiated del.ente and would have suc·
cessfully championed civil rights. This
bore a curious resemblance to the
Bonaparte myth of a social _empire that
was thwarted by English cupidity and
European reaction . A myth the exEmperor did so mu ch to encourage in his
memoirs written on St Helena . By the
end of the 1960's. the liberal mainstream
was increasinglly anti -Amencan abroad .
redistributionist and egalitarian at home
Podhoretz addressed these looues
Podhoretz, after briefly !lirtmg with th1s
fonn of liberalism when 1ts Implications
were not yet too manifest. was apparent ·
ly frightened by what he saw of its ac·
tualities and of its possibilities. Along wnh
a like-minded group of scholars, writers
and politicians. he began to address these
issues in Commenrory . He staked out
and tried to hold the " middle ground ."'
the most dK!icult of all emba«led positions.
WHh an almost audible screeching of
brakes he pulled up short Suddenly, he
remembered his Jewish roots: he was
frightened by black militancy. he was
frightened by the sympathetic hearing
given the PLO in the left media , and by
the easy fusion of current liberalism with
the "Third World" totalitarian liberationlsl
movements Finally, as a 1950's - style
patriotic American, he was frightened by
the n""' liberal thrust into the foreign
pollc{ '~lisllm;mi:'• • ·-1hnis\ ·which

Can't accept
fulsome praise,
Garver writes

Editor:
1want to thank Professor Shechner for
his fulsome praise, bull cannot accept it .
There have been no " single-handed efforts" on my part. Not even doublehanded ones. There was an organized effort of the Faculty Senate. It began 18
months ago with the appointment of an
ad hoc Committee on Presidential
Evaluation Procedures, chaired by Pro.
lessor J . Hyman . This Committee
reporied to the Senate in February.
recommending that extensive faculty in·
terviews arranged through Faculty
Senators be supplemented by a Faculty
Survey . The thoroushness and
thoughtfulness of this C®imittee's report
were impressive, and their recommenda·
tions were overwhelmingly approved.
Neo-Conservative?
What has been done over the past six
Podhoretz has been labeled as ·· neoweeks has been the Implementation of
conservative," a vague concept whose
these recommendations-nothing more.
referents are difficult to ascertain . Indeed .
One part of the process has been my
Pohoretz himseH has resisted the name .
extensive
In terviews with faculty ,
albeit, not too strongly; apparendy, he is
reported elsewhe re in this issue . While
more concerned to restore sensibilities
there were considerable efforts on tny
that have been destroyed. Podhoretz is
part . they were not single-handed . In the
convinced that dialogue has become diffirst place they were just the mechanical
ficult and even impossible; the old. core
implementation of what the ad hoc Comconsensus of the mainstrea m liberal inmittee proposed . They were not
telligentsia has been fragmented .
something I thought of myseH. In the
His "conservatism" is nothing more
second place they were arranged through
than an attempt to conserve those va lues
the Faculty Senators. without whose efwhich no longer exist , even as a memory.
forts and assistance I could not possibly
for the current liberal intelligentsia. Pro·
have got around as much as I did . In the
bably the term neo-conservative distorts
third place the interviews involved the
more than it defines. A term like ··old
time and thought of many colleagues
liberalism" would be better-or would
around the campus. I was listening and
more accurately describe this complex
position -a position frequently one of
taking notes while others were talking. I
was impressed with how much thought
keeping his feet firmly planted in mid -air.
It would seem that new-old liberal Norand prior consultation went into the
preparation for these interviews. In the
man Podhoretz committed the unpar·
donable sin of not only refusing to lower
fourth place I had substantial and inhimseH into the bottomless pit with his
dispensable support from Mrs. Silvestri
erstwhile fellow liberals. but of heroically
and the Senate office both in scheduhng
attempting to pull himseH up and out of
the interviews and In preparing my
the pit altogether' In the process. he
repon.
transformed Commentary into one of the
As for the Faculty Survey, its prepara·
most respected major journals of opinion
tion , distribution , and tabulation was en·
in America .
tirely in the hands of an ad hoc CommitWhatever one's opinion of Podhoretz.
tee of FSEC. chaired by Professor T .
and few can remain without an opinion.
Mills. I deserve no credit whatever for
his willingness to "break ranks'' and
that component of faculty input.
openly defend his positions. no matter
Professor Hyman's ad hoc Committee
how unpopular is a noteworthy ac·
made a second report to the Senate in
complishment. Especially to those of us
September. after the Guidelines had
in the academic community who cherish
been changed . This report urged the
the ideals of intellectual integrity and
Senate to protest the restrictions on facul·
honesty above ali others.
ty input under the new Guidelines. and a
protest was duly made and endorsed by
Marc Ep5teln Is • doctoral candidate In the
the SUNY Senate.
Department of History. Peru of thls essay were
So there has been no single-handed elgleaned from a conversation he had with
PodhOt"etJ: during the author~ltor'• visit In Buf·
ton but a concerted effon on the part of
falo Nove.mber 3 for a Jn.oish Book Fair lecture
the 'Senate. Professor Shechner snubbed
co-spol'l5ored by U/ 8 .
the Senate by ignoring its protest of the
Guidelines. and he compounds that snub
by overestimating my role in what the
Senate had done.
Yours sincerely.
-Newton Garver
Chair
Faculty Senate
Sara Hornbacher. a video and soun d
artist. has been selected to repla ce
Momca Polowy liS business manag er of
the Center for the Creative and Perform
mg Ans.
Marvin Resnikoff. lecturer at Rach~l
A graduate of Moorhead State Univer·
Carso n College and staff scientist of the
sity, Hornbacher received her MAH 1n
Sierra
Club's Rad ioactive Waste Cam
Media Studies here in 1978 . Her appaign , has been invited to participate in a
pointment runs until the e nd of August
conference on governmental issues c&lt;;&gt;n·
The fate of the internationally re·
cerning the siting of nuclear wastes bemg
nowned Center is still in questio n.
presented by the Aspen Institute for
however
Human is t ic Studies at Har vard
According to Music Depanment Chair·
University.
man William Thomson , by the end of the
Among the other invited speakers ar.e
semester the Executive Committee of the
John Kemeny , chairman of the Pres1·
Music Department (which includes Jan
dent's
Commission that studied the Three
Williams, one of the Center's artistic
Mile Island incident : Dr . John Aheame .
directors) will give Ans and Letters Dean
head of the Nuclear Regulatory Commisf
George Levine recommelidatio.[l5 on
sion ; John Sawhill. deputy secretary o
. how the Center can most efficiently coenergy, Department of Energy; Judge
exist with the Music Depanment. Also in·
David Bazelon , chief justice of the U.S .
eluded will be recommendations for
Court of Appeals, and John Gibbons,
funding.
diredor
of the Office of Technology
Lev ine's earlier suggestion of a
" unifk.ation" of the music Center with
Assessment.
Resnikoff said he is representing enU/ B's Center for Theatre Research has
apparently been rej~ejl , 9Y , tno~ '
..
,1,?,: 1_7
involwd. - - - -

Hornbacher is
center manager

Resnikoff speaking
at Harvard event

~~~~~~~\st~~· ~~ .}~~ ~~~."·r

�. . _.am

November 15. 1979

'i

LETTERS
Geese
Ellicott Geese are white Emden,
and they can pretty much take
care of themselves, if dogs let them
EDITOR'S NOTE: The "'EIIloott Gce.to· hour
ceptumd the Janey of monv Watem Nt:tll Yort
~-. Thll lrttrr to Nra. Robert L Krtt~
from o Sour~ Tier ~!&lt;fmt k typical.

Dear Mrs. Ketter:
By now you must know that the type of
geese you have are white Emden . They
are. in temper, just about like the other
breeds. They can become quite tame but
should you have both sexes among your
flock, the ganders will become protective
end even aggressive with intruders during

the spring mating and laying season .
They alread y have down jackets
As for the concern regarding the geese
and cold weather: Firstly don't forget
geese are already wearing down jackets
that humans have to buy . I have always
provided my birds with accessible sheher
but most times observe them lying on the
snow outside with their legs tucked up
under

their

wings

invisibly.

I

really

wonder how they can do that , myseff.
rve seen them out there in absolute ice
storms. refusing any sheher other than a
blind of bushes or a clump of trees. AU I
can say is that some of my geese are pret·
ty old so as usual animals know what's
best for them . ~ne thing I am careful
211bout is my own intervention : humans

can really throw things off kilter through
their good intentions.
If an animal should become hurt or sick
and have to be nursed in a warmer area. I
always try to slowly get him used to the
colder and colder temperatures in a
gradual way. In Allegany County this is
not such a problem because rooms in
houses are often left unheated in the
winter if they won't be used . I used to use
a dining room as a "decompression
chamber for those about to enter the yard
alter being 'cured'... Also: some birds
don't recover , but that 's a fact we sort of
understand when we take on the respon sibility of caretaker.
Snow better than &amp;esh water
I have had some discussio,. about this
with other bird people , but I firmly believe
that birds do not need fresh water to drink

as long as snow Is avaUable . I feel that
snow ls even superior in the fact that it
cannot be splashed around or tipped
over. I have had birds whose feet became
frozen when they got continually
splashed with water in zero weather. Yet.
snow doesn't seem to affect them. even
when it starts melting . Neither does swimming in a cold pond . All in all I try to
avoid water. when possible . unless it's an
open pond .
As far as food . geese generally are not
like game birds. They prefer not to eat
meat. although I see mine eating bugs
now and then . Which brings me to my
comments on whole com vs . cracked
com vs. "scratch ." Whole corn is exce llent during the cold months - corn is a
heat producer. cracked com also produces heat-but the kernels are crushed
into-"llf!l pieces. Geese will eat either.• I
prefer whole corn in cold months because
I feel there is a greater heat produced .
In the summer. we are not so concerned with heat but too much heat is
also bad , of course Birds can bum up if
their food is "too hot. " I prefer to feed
mixed stuff which is cracked corn . wheat .
oats etc . The geese don 't like it as well as
the whole com but they don't overeat it
either.
Hopes things will work out
It was really nice to know that the
students are so concerned . Ho pefully
with some kind of accessible structure .
proper food and some hay for bedding .
as well as spring nesting, everything will
work out just fine .
Dogs are a real danger to geese .
especially ~ the lake is frozen and there is
no open water to escape to. Emden
geese do not fly very well . I guess I would
view the dogs as more of a threat than
anything else.
I am a great believer in animal therapy.
I'm so glad to see that everyone has ap·
parently been voting in favor of keeping
the birds. Good luck with them .
-Elizabeth Coleman

Licensing exams need
scrutiny also, Staple argues
Editor:
The New York State legislation respec·
ting public disclosure of correct answers
and student performance in examinations
used to screen applicants to colleges and
professional schools has been the subject
of several news items recently.
Not surprisingly, In concert with others
in their positions , the deans of both the
Dental and Medical Schools have strongly protested against this legislation on the
grounds that H Is not in the best Interests
of professional education . It Is, however,
surprising that public disclosure of the
practices of the National Board of
Medical Examiners ("Measuring Medical
Education," John P. Hubbard, 2nd . Ed ..
I 978, Philadelphia, Lea &amp; Febiger) has
not elicited equally vigorous protests.
I find particularly reprehensible the
following paragraph (p. 70) concerning
whether the pass mark in these examinations should be determined by relative or
absolute standards, i.e ., Norm -or
Criterion-Referenced: "In addition , It is
necessary to corjslder the effect of an air
solute standard upon the educational
syst&lt;tm ltseH. If J~n absolute system were
established, the educational system
would undoubtedly attempt to gear its
selection mechanism• and teaching programs to meet this ~dard . In time, and
at some cost, any reasonable standard
probably would be surpassed by aD but a
very few Individuals, and the fadure rate
for the urtilication process would approach zero. As this would occur. the
motlvMional value of certlflcatlon twuld

diminish ."
The concept that some examinees,
however able, must fail , in order to main·
taln the prestige of an examination (and
hence: that of the examiners). is surely ir·
relevant to the evaluation of a amdidate
for professional licensing, besides being
depressing to good teachers, who can exped that they can insure that all aHain "a
reasonable standard ," given enough time
and effort .
As with arguments concerning criteria
for measuring effective teaching, the dif·
ficulty of obtaining agreement among
medial! educators on what constitutes an
absolute ~ndard for any examination Is
advanced as a cogent reason for using
relative standards. Many will not accept
this reasor:a for maintaining the status
quo, nor some of the data manipulation
that the National Board of Medical Examiners employs to adjust the relative
standard for passing at exams held in
March and May of the same year.
I hope this letter will prompt critical ex·
amination of what has been di!closed
about tests that are just as important to a
student's career as those that are now
under legislative scrutiny.
- Peter H. Staple
Oral Biology
SPECIAL INSERT
The •tatemmt of Newton Garver, chair
of the F8CU1ty Senate, to the Preolden·
tlal Evaluadon Team .. a apeciaiiiiHrt
In today'• ........

Hochfield's idea
'screwball,' -Allen
Editor:
Last week's Spectrum article on " Low
Enrollment Could Force University to
Lay Off Faculty" cited Dr. George
Hochfield. chairman of the Academic
Planning Committee , as thinking h ntight
be best ''to retrench now and get It over
with to spare later grief. "
I like George. but this is a screwball
idea . It reminds me of the man who
realized that he might someday die In an
auto accident. so he committed suicide to
prevent it. But there are other issues involved. too .
Firstly , retrenchment i5 not a proper
matter for some planning co mmittee to
determine; by law and contract the issue
of retrenchment Is reserved to our Union .
We will combat any attempt by other
faculty groups to involve themselves in
this issue because what we need above all
is solidarity and concerted action . not col-laboration with · management ot
·piecemeal effortS. ·This above all is an
issue where we wiD either hang together
or separately . UUP's approach ls no collaboration . period
Secondly . UUP now has a precisely
defined posiuon o n retrenchment.
adopted by our Chapter and unanimous·
ly accepted by our State Delegate
Assembly It IS that we will combat o/1
retrenchment effons. will not euer assist
the admimstration to retrench . and will

demand documentary proof that no
other option ls open . In short . we mean
to have no retrenchments short of the actual bankruptcy of the SUNY system .
The reason is that retrenchment to date at
other places has been a result of ad·
ministrative Incompetence or caprice.
"Fiscal need" has been shown by the
Legislature's Committee on Higher
Education to be bogus and attempts to
"define the circumstances and procedures" only give legitimacy to a
spurious claim .
Finally, the claim that low enrollments
are a justification for retrenchment Is also
spurious . U/ B actually has more
undergraduates than last year but the
system for counting them has changed
due to the implementation of the Spr·
inger report , as Dean Peradotto has
stressed . To fire faculty because of "an
accounting change is insane and UUP
hereby puts everyone on notke that we
w ill not accept th is under any
circumstances.
The only way we can deal effectively
with the retrenchment issue is to insist
that we will not accept these spurious
arguments nor will we permit retreOch ·
ment to take place. Period .
-William S . Allen
President , SUNY / Buffalo
Chapter of UUP

Feed strong, squeeze weak
Stanford officer suggests
"Feed the strong and squeeze the
weak'. is the first rule of thumb which
should be applied In allocating acodemic
resources . Vice President William .F.
Massy of Stanford suggested recently .
In remarks prepared for delivery at the
annual conference of the American
Co uncil on Education in Houston , he
said:
"One should try to enhance the strong
or promising department or program at
the expense of the weak and unpromismg one. subject to certain constraints.
such as goals dealing with the breadth of
course offerings needed for general or
distributional requirements.
··Academic quality exhibits increasing
returns to scale in many situations.
"New faculty appointments added to
already strong departments can make a
disproportionate contribution to th e
quality of academic programs. lntellec·
tual synergy often dominates the
(economic} law of diminishing marginal
productivity.

tiona!) relied on the following criteria during o ur budget adjustiT'.-.nt and budget
equilibrium programs , during which
some 15 % was removed from the
ope'rating budget · over an eight-ytiar
period :
• "Is the program academically
important?
• "Is there now and will there continue to be student interest?
• "Can we as an institution be
outstanding in this program?
• "Can the program be securely
funded?
"While these criteria are very generaL
they did provide a measure of Ctedlbility
and reassurance with respect to academic
importance and excellence ....
·· stanford cannot be good at
everything: we should not stan or continue that which we are not likely to be
able to do well, and a sense of reasonable
security of funding is necessary for a program to newer("

ZBB
Thinning
"Obviously, one must also make
judgments about what may be potentially
strong-for instance . innovat ive and im·
portant- as well as the currently strong,
but the principle of thinning and clearing
still applies.
.. A mechanism that can systematically
elicit candidates for reallocation and then
help one follow through with the resulting
tough decisions is a critical factor in the
quest for academk: quality , even though
such decisions may lead to strong
resistance on grounds of local seH-Interest
and perceived inequity."
A professor of business administration,
Massy said : "The idea that programs
should have a right In equity to equal ac·
cess to scarce resources simply contradicts the objective of maximizing
academic quaUty. No Institution that
seriously aspires to excellence can adopt
the egaUtarian point of view."
The cornerstone of .any successful ef·
fort to reallocate resources is-" systematic,
high quality, and credible choices by
academic officers, such as department
chairs, deans , and the provost or
academic vice-preoident ....
"Cri!dibility is Important for aoceptance
by faculty .

Crt tala

-. !;.

" At Stanford (former) Piovost William
~~~ .~ pr~ ~.SRII~o/.o.a·

As vice president for business and
finance . Massy has applied zero-based
budget techniques In allocating resources
within hts depanments.
But ZBB is not at all applicable to
academk: departments or programs, he
emphasized: "Academic units must be
evaluated holistically, with careful aMen·
lion to the interactions between subdisciplines and the strengths and
weaknesses of particular ,iaculty
members.
" In contrast, ZBB analyzes an
organizational unit into components. with
each component being evaluated Independently. Surely, the basic Idea of
Identifying and ranking options, and
making decisions subject to a funding
cutoff, Is applicable to academic
departments."

New phones
New phone numbers have been Install·
ed In the Office of the Dean of Contlnu·
lng Education and Summer Sessions on
the third !100&lt; of Abbott. They are
831 ·3131 , 2. 3. and 4. Effective irn·
mediately, the foUowing Individuals can
be reac;hed at the new numbers: Shirley
Ahrens; James Blackhurst, Catharine
Dohn , Haniet Forbes, Jean Fralnler,
William Greene, Rose Sknynlan ansi

. ,Erlc; Str,lff.

• .- •• • ••• • • -.!

�November 15. 1979

Religious rock
Israel"• top religious rock group. ~ he
Dlaspora Yeshiva Band. Is booked lor
the FlU more Room. Tuesday, Nov. 27 .

CALENDAR
Thursday • 15
AP!'ROPRJATE ENERGY AND TECHNOLOGY
CONFERENCE"
On this third day of the sbc.·day even ~. IOiar
erwrgy, wind ~rgy . conwrvaOOn and erwrgy
po1ttic:s f.iims will be run ronunuously. Squire Hall
ConJ~

Thutre

Conference run5 through

Sundoy-18
Sponsor. for the conferenu andude U B
Ame:rk:An St ud~n Program. Farm Oty CoDecbve .
Emma's Wo~n·• Bookstore. Gray Panthers .
North Buffalo Food Co ·op, Greenfield St
Restaura nt. P~le's POVJer Coabtion . Rachel Car·
ton College: . Spea k~·, Bureau . U r B Student
Association , Toktoy CoUege , and Women's Stud lei
College
For more information , contact dw Farm Caty C&lt;M·
iutiw a t 831 -5386

RESEARcH SEMINAR•
Q\la"dtin:

A

Nowl lnhlbhor of Andgen-

lnduced H•tamine Relea.M , Dr Elbon Middleton.
Jr Boerd Room Chlldr~ ·s Hospital 12 noon
RESEARCH INSltTUTE ON ALCOHOLISM
PRESENTAnON"
Rdattw RoM of Alcohol and lJvn DiHase
Upon the Pathogennb of Hypogonadism . Oavtd
H Van Thiel. M D Depanment 01 Mechone
Unluen&gt;ty
Pltubu&lt;gh School
M•d~me 1021
Main Street I p m

o/

o/

PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM•
Solar Energy - State of t he Art, Profe5SOI' Carl
E Nie:lw:n Physics Depanme:nt. Oh10 State Umver
sity, Columbus . 454 Fronczak 3 30 p m Coffee at
3 15
LECTURES IN BASIC NEPHROLOGY•
Drlvfng Forca lor Fluid Ab.orpUon in the Pro.

sJmal Tubule , Dr Thomas E

Andre~.

professcn

-.nd chatrnian . Deparimimt Of -Mterrial Me(!.itane
Uniwt'llt)l of •T fi':KJIS MediCa ~ School a t Houston
5108 Shef"man .q p m RefreShments at 3 45

DEDICATI ON
The naming of 167 MFAC. Elhcon . as the
Mddrftt Blake Student AHatrs Cemer 167 MFAC

4 30 p m
The Pfogtam andudes tht&gt; un~ll.ng of
crafted pWcn of lurnnure
By anvnatton

t\lo.O

hand

LECTURE . DI SCUSSIONS"
Clio In C u ne iform Cost ume, about Mlddi~·
Ea.st.ml h·storP':)Qraph~ ' M~..opota maa n 1 ... ~1~ [)t
A Ktrk G r.a ~·:tOn A 'lft()log:at INpanml'r.t ot !\eat
Eash•m ~tudie, Um\•~stl\ of Toronto Th~ K t\a
1101 Bald~·' 4 JU p m Ro!freshnwnh ""'~!I b..o ~n

•d
HARRINGTON LECTUR£"•
lndMdu.lhy and ~If- M arki n g In Biology ,
bt&lt;Hogist and ruearchet

Lew.s Thomas "" 0

pr~m and ch.r. execuuve cJfhcer Memona!
Sbn Kettenog Cane:~' C~mer 1\e~oo. Ycwk f\ Y
Buder Audllonur'l ( l!JO Farbft-1 5 p •m
Tnom.i IS author ol The llYn of a CeU: No ta
of a Blc»ogy Wa ach rr anc! The Medua and the

Snail.
A)dlOI.Ii ~IJ knO\I.'n 1n the scwnuhc c:ommunn)
tm contribuuons-notably rHearch m 1m
munoklvy and rela1fti hclds-he ti better knov.-n
among the pubUc as an author &amp;cerpti from The
Meduu a1Ni 1 ~ Snaa ll ~.W&gt;re featured 1n dw Oc
tober - Rudfot s ~1 ... Uvn of a CAll won I~
197S Nalionel Soc* Awatd
for

UUAII FIUOI •
D • ol Heawn ( 1978) Wo&amp;dman T'Matre
Amherll 5. 7 1Sand 9 30 p m Generaladm.JWOn

12. stl&gt;dcnU II 50
Ttu. Ac:.de-my Aw..ard nomklft 1$ tlw ta~ of thre.!
rntgrant tolio'Ot'kn't ln tht Te~~.u Panhattdlt:, thdr tf.
fons to bttter themwtwl and the compliceh&lt;MU
tNt rea.ll
A b. .ullfully phot..,.ph&lt;d film

auffALO COMMUNITY STUDIES GROUP
MEEllNG"
123 Jewett Pkwy (Frank Lloyd Wright Housel 8
p .m Coffee at 7 ·30 The lnt mHting olthe yea r
will consist of sever-al 5hon prc.wntllltiOns of research
In progreu All persons. interested in Buffalo
Studies . whether eurrendy in~ in research or
noc . are uwited 10 come and parUcipate
UmN AMERICA TODAY"

Panel

~n

and SUde Show. 233

COMPUTER SCIENCE COLLOQUIUM•
Cone·Bearm and AU That, Gk!eon Yuvel
Room 41. 4226 Rk!ge Lea 3 30 p m. Coffee and
doughnuts \lolitl be served at 3 In Room 61

7 30 p m Panelists wUI Include: Robert Hllhard .
Latin Arnenc.n Solldaril:y Comminee , Buffalo .
Jose Salazar. C hilean exU. , Robert Ammong.
Committee AgalnJ' Vaolation5 ol Human Rights an
El Salvador The dide show concerns Naragua
Thlt, k th~ farJ' of thr« days of activiues beang
sponlOred by 1h~ Third World Student A~ia.tkJn .
PODER . SA's ln~mallonal Aftalrs Coordrnator . the
Br.u:ihan Club, GSA. the Amencan StudieS
Undergraduate Club. and the Laun Amenc:an
, •
Solidanty Commn!ee

LEe~·

·

·

The Juh.n f K~nedy Ai-M.Hina Uon. Ed\lti! C
Stnker former 10101 mar ...tah cQn!»uham to tht.&gt;
Houw Select Commme-.. on As~ssrnauom, 17{1
MFAC Elhcou - 'lOp rr ~ponsorrd bl. th.? Fargo
M

Hou~ng ~tall

PHILOSOPHY SEMINAR•
Pluralism and Conte:xtUallsm : A Crltique of
Ra...ts , Profeuor David Sklotsky ,
Umvenlty 684 Baldy. 3.30 p m

Columbia

ORAl. BIOLOGY SEMINAR•
and l mplladonl of Glycoprotein

Orlgln

Molecular Weftht Heterogeneity of Ovarian Car·
d noma Cells, Howard J Allen . _Ph .p .. De~n ·
nwnt ol · hynecoi~IC . Oncol~, Roswell P,ark
. Mirhona Ur\stltule ~m 1.07 ~ 45 10 ~a1n Strt"et . 4
p m.

PHYS IOLOGY SEMINAR •
Human Hut Exc hange In Watft', Dr Donald
W Renme 5108 Shennan 4 15 p m Coffee a1 4

UUAB FILM "
Oa~ of Heaven . Confete"\Ce Theatre . Squ1r~ 5.

DRAMA "
Woyttedc. b)· Gt&gt;OrQ Buchner drrected by Nerl
Rada Harriman Theatre Studao Mam Strt"et
C ampus b p m General admassron $3 studenu
and ~n1or CiliUm• Sl 50 SponfoOI'ed by t~
[kp.anment of Theatre

POETR Y READIN G ·
Rk hard Wilbur: Th11d Annua l O&gt;Car Srlvl'rman
Pootrv Readtng Kathanne Cor•wU Thl.'a1H' Ellrcon
b pm Ire.!

RIChard W~bur t~ pcrhap!&gt; tho! most elegant ot
ArnfnCdn poeb In an ag,• ~A.ht&gt;n rhvmt&gt;d verse an~
,- sti1c: mt.'ter arl' not fa..h10na~ ht.' u:JoE'!» them ~A.11 h
..uch stvk and ~A. II that hr~ po.:•ll) tonsL!»1t.• n tl~
deilghb
Ht!o IA.Ork has IA. Oil tht&gt; PuhtzE!'f Pnu and thl• f'\a
uo nal Book A~A.ar d lA albua hac; uan~tt.•d an.:!
Mlapted ttu~e pldys b\. M oiiE'h'

Friday -·16
CENTER FOR THE STU DY OF CULTURAl.
TRANSMISSION COLLOQUIUM·
The SeU PTOjection TKhniq ue In Counuling .
Prewntt&gt;r Roben Holmes L1ngutSt1CS Dasc:u~n t
~botah Garvtn Chn~ea: Psyc:hok&gt;gy Lmgut5hCS
Lounge Spaukhng Quad 10 am

KING JUT EXC URSIONS
An excurSIOn to YlSI\ the Kmg T ut o!khab1tron Ill
Tor onto as bfoang oH~t~d 1oday by the Black S:ud~n :
Umon Buse5 W1li leave Squue f01 Toronto at 11
a m and re1urn at approxamat~l) 9 p rr.
Tde1s for the tnp are S25. mcludrng cost o{ bu)
and admiSSion FOf tnformauon anC rt&gt;Wt\odiiOn)
caD ttw BI..!Kk Stud4m: Umon at 831 5421
A wrw1 of othet Kmg Tut excursaons artavallabk&gt; Th8..f'~Us lvlng Day, Nowmbe-r 2.2 and
fr-i day, Novem ber 23 . lea ~· rng trom loc&amp;l
malls- S29
general charQ('
S24 9U lor
stut.Wnt5 Can 433 -677i 01' 625 9211 101' detaab

PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNDS•
Reflux and Rdlu.a N~h rop.thy , Dr C Jo:-rn
HodiOn proteuoc of rada~ . \ a\t Unov~rSII)
Schoo( of Medcme Krnch Audrtonum Chlldr~n !&gt;

7 15 a nd 9 30 p m
nudents

~~

General admiSSIOn

S2.

New music

50

ARC H ITECTURE LIBRARY •

Tnt&gt; ne....·lv ~xpanded School of Archrtectur~ dnd
Enwon menaal Design !SAED) hbrary . mo~·ed
withan Hayes Hall on the U B Mam Street campus
and red~veloped through a successful fund · rarstng
pffort for ne~A.• books. v.n.H be opened wnh a ribbon·
cunmg ceremony. to ~m wrth a rec:ept.on at 5 30
p m PresKirng will be Dr Albert Som1t. U B Clo.
pc:uuv~ viC~ pr~Sldem . Jrm Oyen , charrman o! the
board of ttw Fne:nds of SAED. Robert Nonh . chau
man of the Fne:nds' Labrary Development Commn
tl"e . Nanq• Bakay Frwnds coordanator. and SAED
De:an Harold L Cohen
The re-c:eption IS bemg hos•ed by Saktidas Ro)
dtrector of Unrvt&gt;f'sny Ubranes and Cohen
Accordmg to Nancy Bakay , coordmator of the
Frwnds abou1 S20.000 was raiSed for the acquiSt
non of books Sll'-,c:e the dnve began an mKi-June of
thas year about 900 addat.onal volumes have be~n
ac:qu•red M!o Bakay saki
Th1s was a marvelous sh01.1. ol cOIT'munit) sup
pon ·- she commented - we had a real mUt.ed-bag
of donors wt-oo helped mak~ the effort e.:tr~m~l~·
)uc:cessful
Among groups acuve m the hbrary development
prO)i!Ct w~re th~ Buffalo Fo.mdatJOn. thp Peter Cor
nell Trust dnd oth~r local to undauons Ms Baka~·
addt."d
U B' atehneclure hbran has been housed m a
small. north ~A.·mg atea on 1he fuse fiCKK of Haye!io
Hall Th~ n~"" fadlmes on the opposite end of the
bualdtng\ ftrst floor are conSiderably more spacaOU!&gt;
In add ruon tn ne arl~ 7000 volumes the bbrary
wrll tnc::ude off..::l' spacl! a ~~tarmng resourc~ cemrr
and addtuona: spac~ fOI' et.habtts

Michael Tilson Thoma s will conduct at
Sunday's ·Evening for New Music,' at
Baird Recital Hall.

O P ERA "
Strevrnsk)'S opera The Rake's Progrus . uno&lt;!:
the d1recuon of Gary Burgess Sweet Home H1gh
School 8 p m Tickets will be: available at the doo:
onlv General admission S-4 . U 1 B faculty. stati
alumm _ and senaor otllens S3 . stud~nts $1 Th~re
will be two performanc~s only tonight a nd tomor
row Sponsored ~· Unrvers11y Opera Workshop o·
the Department of M u~k
The 1hr~t&gt; act opera ts bllsed on a feble b\,· hbu•·
trsls lA H Auden and Chester Kallman The pro
duct10r. .,.,;u be fully staged with scenic lind llghtm~
d~SIQil by Mike Englrsh and cOStume des~gn b.
Vtrg1Ric1 Slater Tho? Universily Phrlharmonaa unde1
James Kasp rOIAncz d.rectiOn w.·UI prOVIde OJchema
accompaniment

LATIN AMERICA TODAY "
Fdm Me m oria of Unde rdevelopment, duO?Cto"C
by Tomas Guuenez Ak&gt;a 146 Dwfendorf 9 p l'T'

UUAB MIDNIGHT FILM"
Re turn of the Drago n (Hong Kong . i972) Con
ference Theatre . Squire . 12 midnight General a ::!
mrssaon !2. students Sl 50
Set in Rome thli Kung Fu adventure stars tho;
late Bruc~ Lee es liL countf\• bumpkin. hiding ht,
dead!.,: talents untl! provoked Into action . !he cb'Tla\
of tbt&gt; him is hi! tnanic: battle in Rome's Cohseum
with seven ttme World Karate ChampiOn Chud
1\ orrl~o IS'Iar of the cu rrent Good Guys Wear Black I

APPROPRIAT E EN ERGY ,t,ND
TECHNOLOGY CONFER ENCE·
Vegcum.uo Pu1 Luck Otllllt.'T a nd SP'!ake1 Cl\.il
llbertiH and Approprlatt&gt; Tt&gt;ehnologit"S, Oonna
V.. amod Sv,-.:Ku w Peace Councd Dmner b p m
Jl)'i Toown~nd ~pea ke1 i ,"\1.1 p m
14$ Duc-fo?~l
don Danct l'l' 9 p m HllmOI'e Rodm ~ '!u:r.
\.4. nh ~a m n C Lark'i- Peoplt&gt; . -'\dmrss)()n $2

H~ll la m

Saturday • 17
ALUMNI FORUM ·
The Woc1dng Woman : Contributi"i to Your

Own Succc:u. Wokjman Tneatre. and elsewhet._
m Cape:n-Nonon-Talbert AUday

BAG LUNCH COLLOQUIUM .
Tony White wtll be .speakmg on "Ton: Waste
Control tn N~r1 County " 123 Watkeson Qua d
Ellicon 12 noon SponiOred by lhe En\'lfonmental
Studle5 Centt&gt;t

and
o/

o/ o.n.

MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY S EMINAR•
Svnt- o..._
Conotnocdon

....,. and Pk:rotOidftln, Roland Oole ,_ graduatc
otuclont. llopo&lt;1ment Modicinol Ch&lt;mistr; U/ 8

Cl21 Cooke 2 p m

To llot - t s In the "Calendar." caU
.lean Shrader at 636-2626.
Key: "()pa only to thOM with • prolnlionallnt-'ln the oubject: "Open
to the public: ''Open to manbas of
the Uftlve.rslty. Uftlen otherwise
opedfled, tk:bts lor - t a cheJvlng
e.t.leollon can 1M purchued et tho
Squire Hall Ticket 01\ce.

Squ~re

Ci1y of Buffalo. a nd the Hon Wl!bur P Tramme:U .
associate dty coun judge
The program Is bc:lng presented by the Student
Association of the Prognam in Applied Public Affairs
Stud~ and the Graduate Student Association .

NEW PERSPECTIVES ON URBAN
REVnAUZAnoN ·
Red Room, Harnrn.n HaD 3 p m
T1w Mminar wll focus on the fedvral govern·
ment's rde tn wb.n revtlaliudon J.ma A . And«'t·
a.on , man.ge of tM Buff.SO arn offiot of the U S
Otp.rtm«nt of Housing and lh'ban Drw.k:Jpn.nt ,
wt1 pracna chao main Mktrns
Providing commcntarie• will be Andr~w
Goklman, ........,.nt vice prtiMknt for economk:
Mwk)prrwnt for thor St:a\e Utblin ~~
Ccwp , 8ru« C Baird. ~~at the

CAC FII.H "
King ol Hearu (Frenc:h·ltaUan . 1966) 170
MFAC. Elbc:on . 8 and 10 p m Gene:ral admission
S1 .25 . .rud~nts . faculty a nd staff 51
A lxaullful a'nnwar fiJm . with underplayed saUre
Toward the end of World War I. a Scottish pnvate
(Alan Sates} coma to a French town to lnvntag.at~
a bomb thrtal The only residents he find s are the
rnklentl af the local ansaM asylum - a funn;
toudung Plrebk!

COlLEGE B PRESENTATION·
1bt Kot l S.hlmore. Kathanne CorneD
T'lwalrt' 8 P m ~I admtHk»n SJ. 5tudents
and M:ruor clllzens S2 50 Spom.o.-ed by Co!Sege B
and the lnter-Raidencc Council
~
\.Jproarious .ccount of the dr9 of soc:Wty who
populaW! a flnblg hole!

DRAiiA •
Wovzqdc by Georg Buchna , directed by Neil
Hamman Theatre Siudio, Main StrM

Radb

C.mpus 8 P m G.n.oral admission SJ. stuMnts
and te"nklf dtlltr\1 Sl 50

Spontored by the

PertiCipams ""ill have a choke of attendmg tv.·c
out of three ~A.•orkshops at which p.aMirstl ~ ad
d reu areat of mrerest under a ma,or topic An Info·
mel question-ancl -antWl'T period follows ill! whkl
indivJdualt can group up with any parwebst ~o~~~:t-

""t;?.: ~W:~:

,;.:

responWillll':~,

are wen
home and family ruponsibillties. and fmanc&amp;a•
resporuibllmes
At the \A.'Orkshop dubng with work. "Women M
Boues~ wtU b« dlscuued by Mary Ann LambertSOn
vice preQd«nt for personrwl at Asher-Price' T~'\
''Equal Pay for Equal Woril... vAD be expior~ bo,.·
Balbo,. Gorolczyl.. ma._, Equol Employm&lt;nt
Opponunity at C.rborundum Co . and ··The RP
entry W~n.. will be axamined by Betsy Hopkins
u«uuve d.-ector of the Everyo...•oman Opportunrt~
Center
Under tw:Mne and famJJy rdi)OnsibiiiMI. Donna
Kaminlld , v.ce president of Seneca Communo
Uor\5, Inc
will addre.a the sub;ltct. "'Working
Womt:n .~Shared RupondJII~ .- and ··Work
ing WCXMn as MotherS' wtD be e:wpk&gt;red by Mary
Ann Bol\a, deputy dirKtot of ln·Home: Support
Xrvioa A dilcu551on of KOnomk rnponslblbt~
related to dlvoree wt11 be prtM:nted \n ''Oivorc«S a'

o/

L..:=-:::::::::::::.__~Dopon
~::mo:m~o/~Com~:mu:nlly~~o.v.lopmcnl
~~=~t=..~""'~~Dopon
~::mon
::~'oi~Tho
=•~"•:____..__~~-~W~oril~lng~W~""""' Tho LogaJ H...,c~o.:· ~

H-

�.......

November 15. 1979

their parents a nd their teac:hcm 148 Diefendorf
10:00 • m - Water an4 Ice on Pia~. Ou ·
'wayne Anderson. d u n. Na tural Scienca and
Mathematles
ll :00 a m - Some New Mathematk:l, J ames
Greenberg. profeiSOr of mathematics
1.00 p m - The New Genetk:a, Raymond
Kelleher . assislant prol'e~ . bioJogical SCiences
2 00 p . m - Low Temperatu r e Phyalu ,
Jonathan Reichert . associate professor. physics and
astrOnomy .
SponiOred by Buffalo Educatk&gt;nal Ta lent Surch
and thot College of Mathtomancal Science!.

UUAII RLM"
Mklnlght Eapras 119781 Conference Theatre .
Squire 3 45 . 6 ·35 and 9 15 p m General admiS·
siOn S2. studenu Sl 50
A gripping and suspenseful true lale about B'
Hayes. who is tried and c
· ted for pos
0(
hashish in Turkey A hauntin · usacal
vides an eerie bltdtdrop to th1s vi
rich and
compk!x ftfm Nominated for the best pteture of the
yeo•
CACRLM·
King ol Huru (French·ltalian . }9(,(,) 146
Diefendorf 8 and 10 p m General admisSIOn
Sl 25, students. faculty and staff Sl
COUEGE 8 PRESENTATION"
The Hot L Baltimore. Kathanne Cornel:
Theatre 8 p m General admtWOn S3. studenb
a nd semor otlzens S2 50 Sponsor~d by College 8
a od the lnter· ReSKienct&gt; Counc~
DRAMA ·
Woyueck b~ Georg Buchner . dnected by N~U
RadiCe HamiT\lln Theatre Studta Maln Street
Campus
p rn General admiSSion S3 . students
arod wntar cttLZ.ens S I SO Sponsored by the
Depan.nent of Th~?:aue
FILM•
A Trlltutr CO" SO.Y"r. Gitfw Amerlcan MU5k al
Film, Part II: The King and r, stamng Yul Brynner
and Deborah Kr:n SuHalo and Ene Coun~·
HIStoncal Sooetv 8 p m Admtwon charge

OPERA ·
Strav;nsk'lo' s open1 The Rake'• Progreu . under
the d•recoon of Gary Surgeu S""'•eet Home Hlgh
School 8 p m TIC'keu wiU tw avat\able at the dOOJ
only General admiSSIOn S4 . U 8 lacuh~·. staff.
alumni and senior C:ltkz.ens S.3 . students S 1 Spon·
sored by Umve:rsuy Opera Workshop of thi&gt; ~pan ·
men1 of Musx:
U UAII MIDNIGHT FILM"
Re tu mof thr O ragoo fHongKong 19721 Con
terence The:aue Squtte 12 mdn~ght Gt&gt;n~ a l ad·
mtsSion S2 . studrnts $1 50

Sunday· 18
APPROPRIAtE ENERGY AND
TEC HNOLOGY CONFERENCE ·
Stele ol t he An Appropria te Technologies e nd
Oprtons for thr Future , 1-\athl Rya n and Gel) Hn
shberg from thi&gt; Ne\olo Ak:hemy lnstrtute , AI G ras\
from v; T G Wtnd System~ Inc fillmore Room
Squtre 1 30 p m
UUAB FILM•
Mldntaht E.kpra• {1 9781 Wok! rna '"I Theatre
Amhn'st 3 45 6 35 and Q 15 p m G•nenlli admts
SIOn S2. Sludrnts Sl 50

H Blumberg. domatic rel.IUOI'b rderee for tlw
~Uiile

Supreme Coon
Fmaly under financial rftPOn5Jbility, corrw

diK'u5fK)IU on ..lnvatl'nV\ts How. to Uw M~
IJ..rwle, .... Etlata and
and - rnauranc:e •

wms ...

g:rAduete dean for Uw Union ol E.xpenmenting Coi·
k!gn and Unfvet'51ria of the Midwest Chamber'to
address. at the Wold man Confn~ Thutrl' . lolrtlill
foc:w on "Pkl(ung a Ufe Career The day-kmg program . lndod•og l;..nch 11 SIS
Rese:rvaooru wtre due briore New 12 For .dd.itaonal tnfonnabOtl , c..D 831 -4121

La.u Huhhoff. en acooun1 executlw wtth Advat .
w.rUI giw .n OWtView d in\.ffttf'I"Wnt CJbtectwa,
and a rf'View of ~ eunmt fltal and saoc:k marbt
outlook Ruth H Penman. a Dnsed .a
•HOdate wtlh Tomplum .00 F1nk Reakor., wW
I
wtth a dttcussion about rhc posmve and

TECHNOLOGY CONFERENCO•
Conanuous fUm dlowlngt soW energy, wtnd

RegabYC •.IP«'b of real acate lnWSJ~ts

eiWIJY, CORMrVabOn and enervy politb, Squh

Inc

Eben Ough~.. a ,udg« from dw State
Woriunan·, Componatlon Bo.d . ...W 5pUI&lt; •bout
Ut.sn and
Con.umcr informatiOn .bout
1 ft~UT"anoto , th. venous typu, and wi'Yt one .tlouid

w• .

"""" bof... puochosing - · d bo ......l&lt;d I»
EMh.t Krat.. Ewr-.u. prnident of Kratzer In
IUr&amp;nc~ Co
Tho """"'"e ond oftcmoon """""'- ..til laJ1
~ro•urn.tRiy 90 minutes
Th. progr-am'• Ml"''I'C ~Pftkcr • Mai)Ont Bell
Chom~&gt;o... chu lex tlw NoOonoJ ActvWy
Comm.tt.t few Women , pu1 prUdenT ol ttw
Ammc.n Auaa.lion of Um\rftWiy WCNn«n and

LATIN AMERICA TODAY ·
Speakr:r. Neftali Garda. Un1vetS1ty ol Pueno
RICO, speaking on HPueno RICan Natural Resource's
and Culture .. Confer~e Thratre , Squire i p m
C ultural Acdvttift: Recepuon. Pueno Rlca.n
food tastmg . Film MPercussions lmprns.ons and
Reality ." Also muSK and poetry by Buffalo anrsu
COUEGE 8 PRESENTATION
The

APPIIOPRIAl£ ENER.GY AND .

Hall Conferenu Thutrf' WOI"bhop5 on pedAl
power. ecoMm~~ntics , women and energy. spiritual
~. world e:nergy futures , P\lbllc pow«r , enerw
cortM'fVation , rrn croppmg , enerw eduabOn,
v.oorid eMf11Y stra~eg~e~. tolar wclk. energy 'and
minorities
~ry

nw.w

Hot L llol""-•· Kothonne ComeJI

8 p m General admiUKW'I S3. studa.nts
and . . - diWno 52.50. Spon""cd by College 8
and the lnwr-Raidence Coundl.

DRAMA •
by Gco.g Buchnc&lt;. dhcted by Nell
Redkc Harrtrn.n Thaiu• Stud6o , M.tn SuHt
C.mpuo 8 p ,m G...,.J admlio;on S3 , students
and ocnlcx dllzons 51.50 S - e d t.,. tlw
[)cponmcnl oln...u.

w.,.-

_..... FIUrnore Room Squ.n 4.30

pm
C.l Farm Cit\. Collecl:tw: •t 831 ·5386 for kla·
lion .nd tunti of WOf'kshopt:

WHATS N£W IN SCIENCE AT U / BP'
A program al four talts tor high te.I'KJot students.

EVElUNGS FOil NEW MUSIC·
Michael na.o. n.o.... wtl conduct Mor1on's

~~
~
~. ~~ !n~n~:~,!

otuc1cn10 $ 1 ADS vouchcn """"P'&lt;cf s,..-..t
b\1 tlw C.n'"' ollhc 0 - ond Pcrfonnmg Mo

7

or

a nd the Oepattmem
MuAC
Perllkl Una prvmieted • t the Ca Wornla In·
st1tute of tht Ans last May. and v.ill tw periortMd
thi$ M.I IOn by Laure:nce Trott. who commfs.skloned
Subotnk:k to compose the che~ \IIICIIrit; for piccolo
solo. gh~ ~IKtromcs a n d eigh t pia ~. under dwr
baton ol Mr. Thomas 1n Buffalo and at Huvard
Univ~rsiry .

Monday -19
PHARMACOLOGY It THERAPEUTICS
SEMINAR•
Mediattd Cellular Traneport Syt-tema lor
Drugs, Ftdor Med.Dhradsky. Ph D .. I.SIOdlte profesloOf. Depanments of Biologtcal Chem istry &amp;
Pharmacology. University o( Mich tga n. An n Arbor.
102 Sherman 4 p . m . Refreshmenu a t3 4 5in 124
Farber .
ARCHITEcnJRE LECTURE•
Planning and Arc:hllec:turt' In Israel, Elia W~a ·
berger 335 Hayes 5 ·30 p m SponiOred by Coun ·
cil on lntemattOnal StudieS
FILMS •
Anemk Cinema (Ouchamp , 1926). Retour de
Ia Railon (Ra~·. 1923) . L'EtoUe d e Mer (Ra y.
1928) . Emak BakaLa (Ray, 19271 . Un C hdn An·
dalou (8unuel &amp; Dab. 1929) . Lu Hurdn (B unuel.
19321 146 Diefendorf 7 p m SponfOred by tht&gt;
Center for Med~a Study
UUAB MONDAY NIGHT ALMS·
Wo men on the Beach {194 71. 7 p m .
Shockproof 0 949). 8 25 p .m Waldman Thea tre .
Amher~ Free admiSSion
In Wo men on the Bnch , Raben Ryan falls m
love With femme fataLe Joan Benneu but becomes
""'"ar;. o f he1 bhnd husband Jean Renoir's last
AmeriCan him is a dark and laut melodrama
Shockproof Is the story of a femaLe ex·con who
falls for he.r parole off iC~ wh&amp;. trying.'o go straight
FEAS MEETING ·
252 Capen 7 30 p m Each engineenng loOdecy.
must send at least t\1.'0 reprewntauvn Toplc.s to be
d1scuu.ed tndude diStribution of new funds .
recogntuon of SOCM?t~ not aff1laated w1th a depan ·
ment , and the gentnl rellltaiiUII!On of the organllb·
ttan All engineering stud"nts. facult y and fnends
are u rged to att(lnd

CONTEMPORARY YUGOSLAVIAN
ENSEMBLE·
Acuanra . Zagreb New Tendend n Ensemb~ .
Ba~td Rectlal Hall 8 p m Sponsored by the lnpan
ment of Mu.IIC through the au!ipiCel oltu Slee Chait
of Compo5111on General admt:niOn S4 , U/ 8 facul ·
ty. staH. alumni and seniOr OtiZens SJ , sludcnu S1
Members of Acez.antez are GIOvannt CavaUtn ,
wmds . Dubravko Detont . keyboards . Fred Oosek .
keyboard"· Veronlka Kovadc. votee. and Dan~el
Thune. stnngs and tuba
Acez.antez IS a group of well knov.m muuc:~ans
and compowrs brought together by the1r musicalaf·

~~;::o~s !!::n:"~,::u~~:n~ a:~r!;":

0

spe:.ifiC km~ of M\1. muSICaltheaue . m which con ·
temporary concert muSIC l.i comblnt&gt;d wnh eWmcnu.
o! movcmem . 6Cting, pantomime. end transposed
uprewon of langu•ge Wherr t«hrucal ~qulpment
pe:mtts n. e:k!ments of plast.c ans . bghting and other
~oMUa l and acoustte devx:es are added

Wednesday· 21
ALMs ·

,

The Souhcll ond the Clergyman (Duloc.
1928). Rhythm• 21 (RICh!..- 192 11 . Symphonic
Dlqonalc (Eggellng) . Tho fUmo ol Ooca•
Fhhlngcd ldi (I926-68J 146 !Micndorl 7 p m
$poruored by the Centv for Mr:d'l! Study
THANKSGIVING RECESS
Tho~ Rceco&lt; beglno •• dow ol
Cleua raumc Moodey, Nowmbet 26

a.-.

Saturday - 24
RLM'
A T - 10 SOY-.ol t h o " - " - ' t -

FU.. Port U: W.a Side 5 - (19611 Buffolo ond
En. County Hmoricol s-ty 8 p m Admloooon
dwgc

·--c.-...·-a.-.a

�•

. . .u...

November 15, 1979

Final PSS report more critical in tone
The Executive Commitlee of the Professional Staff Senate {PSS) gave the
Presidential Evaluation Team Monday
afternoon a Condition of the Campus
Report which varies In format and tone
from the draft document presented to
Senators for debate last week (Reporter.
Nov.8).
The report, unanimously accepted by
lhe body last Thursday. eliminates a
p ositively-wo rded organizational
response and an introduction-su mmary

statement in favor of an ''overview..

which Is more critical in tone.
The organizational response had been
written by PSS Chair Tom Hurley after
verbal and/ or written communication

with six of seven past PSS chairs still at
U/ B. Senators, however, preferred the
Tearn to see a statement which more l!IC·
cu rately reflected the sentiments of the
entire body and also Incorporated what
was expressed by them during two days
of debate.

and with supporting an ineffective affirmative action program- one that makes
the staff "question the degree and slncmty of commitment" to It by University
leadership. In addition , the statement
points out that communication has to be
improved "at every level."
In what seemed like an effort to note
mitigating factors , the statement also said
split campuses and Inadequate facilities
"create serious problems," and that the
Albany bureaucracy "often Interferes with -

What resuhed was an "'overview..
which lists seven "perceptions ... common
to aU areas represented" by the group.
Besides the overview, the report also
contains statements from the five consti -

tuent groups which compose the PSS.
In the overview, the Administration is
faulted with being "reactive rather than
proactive ," with having top level
management doing too much of the
decision-making; with having operational

objectives that don't appear compatible
with the University's mission or goals,

effective functioning.''

•Calendar
(fro• • • • 7 . coL 4)

Wednesday - 28

Monday- 26
FD.M'
Muriel (Rnnats, 1963) 148 o.efendorf 5 and 8
p m Free admiuion Sponsored by the Depart·
ment of Modem Languages and Literatures

ARCHITECTURE I.£CTURE•
The Endow~t Polky and 1he State of Urban
Design In Archlleclwe. Mic.hMI John Pmas 335
Hayes 5 .30 p m Free admission Sponsored by
the School of Architecture and Environmental
Design
ALMS '
The R~ (Lorentz) , Valley Town {Van Dyke .
1940) 146 Di&lt;!endori 7 p m Spon&gt;a&lt;ed by the
Centn for Media Study
UUAB MONDAY NIGHT FILMS'
'J"My Uw Bv Night ( 1949) , 7 p m • Pk:kup on
South Street (1953). 8 45 p m Wo&amp;dman
Theatre , Amherst Free Admission
They Uw 8~ NJght- A doomed k:Ne affair in a
hostile society: a boy on the run makes a futiLe al·
tempt to hvc down his past and stan a new ltfe wtth
a young girl who shelten him
In Pk:lr.up, Richard Wklmark lnadver1ently ob·
talns top-secret mk:rofUm and becomes a target for
espk&gt;nage agents

GEOLOG ICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR•
Or. Aklho M~uhlro , Facuhy Exchange Scholar
Program Room 18. 4240 RM:ige lea 3 30 p m
Coffee and doughnut~ w1ll be avatlebl" at 3
WORKSHOP AND GAME THEORY•
Rational E•pectadons, Adaptive Expectations
and Noncooperatiw Equilibrium and Mod~ of
Oligopoly with Umit~ Information. J Fned
man, Umverwty of Rochester 210 O 'Brian . 3 30
p m Sponsored by the Department of EconomiCS
BUFFALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUM'
(Ua.t•m In the Phii()M)J)hy of Mathematics,
R;chard Boyd Philosophy . Cornell Unklersity 302
D.efendorf 4 p m

MUSICOLOGY L£CTURE SERIES '
Lawr~ Guthee, profnsor of musk: . Untveni·
ty of lltinois a t Urbana-Champaign Baird Hall 4
pm
The lecture . ~nw Creole Band . 1914 1918." IS
dw second in this year's series sponsored by the
MuUc Department Gushee . .u a graduate student
at Yale,· was a regular contributOf to The Juz
Review (1958-61) H11 early professk&gt;nal career .
~ . urMd him wide respect a.s a mec:Ueval
scholar, and in 1970 he was awarded the American
Musicology Society's "AVred Einstein Priz.e" for h11
\.\10&amp; In 14th century mu5k: theory In recent years .
GushH has returned to the study of )azz. Hi:s excellent program notes appear on twO Smithsonlbn
lrwitudon r«&lt;Jd anlhoiogies -~King Oliver's JiW
S.ndo 1923" (tho .ubject cl h~ U/ 8 talkJ and
"Duke E.lington 1940 "

FD.M I DISCUSSION'
The Cclleg&lt; ol Urban Stud;.. and the OepartTMnll of HIStory and Anthropoklgy pt'esent a program on lJrb.an Oea~ and Urban Renewal : A
Ndghbothood Penp«ttw. The program will con·
""' ol the f1nt Buffalo ohowing cl ' Mmion Hill and
the 'Minclc cl Boston'," a fdm produced by Ctne
Rnurch .-....oa.ta cl Basion The film charts the
recent ...ory cl a ~ caught up m the
forca of dednc and renewal
Following tho lilm thct-e will be a panel
sion, with Lynn Corcoran . a Buffalo hlmrl'\aker ,
David Getber, a.uociate profftSOt' . history; Lewis
Harriman. vice president fOJ community devdop
ment. M &amp; T Bank . Enr Johnton, professor of an ·
thropdogy, and ma.s&amp;et' , Colege of Urban Studies,
and Denn• Woods. Catholic Charities of Buffak&gt;
Re:ftuhments will be 5erY.c:l 170 MF At. Ellicott
(Sy Lecture Hal!) 7 30 p m

cmcu.-

Y-

CONCERT'
The ~
Baad, ts...rs top
......,... rock IPOUP. will .,.. "' f1nt locol concert
Hal, Fllmon Room 8 30 p.m Genen.l ad·
$3.50, wdonts 52 .50
The bond. wlnnon ., t 977 ond t 978 ol the
ta.d ~ Fntivol , wil ploy tw..
ol"'
MCOnd North ArMI'fQn tour. Its fiw metnbnl, al
Amencan~bom . •e ~ muskia.ns and
Jtudenu at the Oiupofa Yatdva on krusalem's
Mount Zion The yeshiva t1 a tchool of rellgtous
for t.o.lof , · . - , Jewish people &amp;om
NCUW b~Qaroundl who haw r.tumed to thd
religtous rOOis

Squ••

u-

WIIFO UVE BROADCAST
fte~C...... MIIOicSocteq,_,
~Trio. WBFOI88. 7

FMI 8 ·JOp m

Tuesdays and Thursdays . 12·3 p .m . Wednesdays.
10·2 p m No hours on Friday. The Lab is open to
-aD U/ 8 ~1udents

M

THANKSGIVING BUS SERVICE
Regular bus service Will be terminated
Wednesday, November 21 as foDows .
Last bus leaving Main Street (via Ridge Lea) 1 1
pm
Last bus lea\llng Amherst (EIUcottJ (\Jla Rki~
Lea) . ll :OSpm
Last bus '"\Jlng Amherst (Governors) 1\ll.a Rkige
Lea). 11 : 10 p .m .
See posted notiCeS at Bus Stops for scheduk! in
effect from November 22-25.

women

Meniam has uwod many songs from that period ,
such as the one wtth the oftquoted line, "A woman
is a woman . but a good cigar is a smoke " By having
the all-women cast sing them . she: focuses ironic at·
tenllon both on 1he content of men's views and on
the fact thai the altitudes whach we connect with
that hlSiorical penod , are prevaLent today

WRITING PLACE
The Writing Place IS a free drop-in wnting center
that welc:ome:s writers at any stage of the composiO!:I
process Take advantage of our qualified writ:tlg
tutors who provide careful response to bo1h those
having trouble understandtng an assignment and
!hose polishing a ftnal draft Come vtsit us in 336
Baldy Han on the Amherst Campus Our hours this
semester are : Monday through Friday. 12 noon untU 4 p m , and Monday, Wednesday and Thursday
evenings. 6 until 9

UUAB WEDNESDAY NIGHT FILMS'
The Incredible S h rinking Man 11957) . 7 p m .
Panic in the Year Z«ro (1962) . 8 45 p m Con
ference Theatre, Squire Free admtSsiOn
The Incredible Shrinking Man IS 1he !.lOfy of a
man exposed to a mysterious fog . who begms 10
grO\I.• ~maller and smaller The scnpt and VISuals
genera 1e a mood of ~pitaUing desperatiOn
Pank Is 1he forceful drama abou1 a man trymg to
wrvive , along wilh h1s family when 1he country IS
devastaled by an atOmiC holocaust
ASSOCIATION FOR WOMEN IN SCIENCE
BUFFALO CHAPTER MEETING·
Blue Room . Facuhy Club. 8 p m "Bemg a Role

============== -: ==.'Z:~"t:.~;..~~:,.~_:;;~s

Tuesday • 27

Sundays)
Eve Meniam . who "'TOle 1he off Broadway hi! .
"The Club, descnbes tht&gt; pia&gt;• dS ··a musical dtverSK&gt;n ·· The sening is an e~ant men·s dub m New
York a1 the tum of the century. and the characters
are four club members. the head waTter , a page
boy, and "'the maestro," who sus at the p~a.no and
provM:ies mu~lcal accompamment The !wist ~ thai
the seven members of the cast are played by
women , not women dtsguislng themselves as men .
but women wearing men·s clothes and saying the
things that men say ye1 remaming. quhl! clearly .

slblt.\et of being a role model for younger women
scieniiSI:S and the quali1.es that we look for when we
search for role models for ourselves

Sl£E BEETHOVEN SmiNG QUARTET
CONCERT'
Orford Quanet. Baird Reotal HaD 8 p m
Sponsored by the Department of Music
Members of the Quartet are Andrew Dawes and
Kenneth Perkins . ~ns . Terence Helmer, \/lOla,
and Marcel St Cyr , cello General admissKm S4 .
U/ B facuhy . staff, alumni and sentor citazen~ $3 .
students $1
WRESTUNG'
St . .lohn Fisher

Coli~ .

Clerk Hall 8 p m

FILM (FILM THEORY)'
Rise To Power of louia XIV (Rossellinij 147
01efendorf 9 p m Sponsored by the Center for
Media Study

Thursday 29

Notices
CATHOUC NEWMAN CENTER MASSES
Saturday Vigil: 5 p m - 339 Squire and
Newman Center . EIIW:ou Complex
S unday: Main Street 10 am and 12 noon Cantalk:ian Chapel. 8 p m - St Joseph's. 3269
Main St, Amherst 9 15 am .. 10 30, noon and 5
p m - Newman Center. EUK:on
Monday-Friday: 12 noon - Newman Cem~ .
Mam St &amp; University Ave .. 12 noon and 5 p m . Newman Center . Ellicott
S.tu.rd.a~: 9 a m - Newman Center on both
campuses

WRITING TUTORS
Faculty, Students, Staff: Consider tutoring in
the Writing Place. You w!U be carefully trained to
help others impf'O\Ie their writing while you Improve
your own . Contact Barbara Gordon at 636· 2394

Exhibits

DENTAL STUDY
Persons who think they need dental work and
would like to take pan in a study of patient response
to routine dental treatmenl should contact Dr. Nor·
man l Corah a1 831 ·4412 Volunteers must not
currently be under the care of a dentiSt Participants
will recetve dental examinatiOn and x-rays to determme how much routtne treatment they require .
Two fillings will be prowlded by a dentist as par1 of
the study Sponsored by the Department of
BehavkKal Science

ADIRONDACK IMAGES
An ohlbH of 18 phocographs by Robert E . Burton, director of Ubraries at SOC/ Plattsburgh and
formerly assistant direc1or of Universlty Libraries for
Public Services at U/ 8 Main Foyer of Heatth
Sciences Library, Stockton Kimball Tower.
Through December.

AlAMO GAUBIY
.
Kevin Noble, still fUm stf'1&gt;s, John Maggio«o.
SX· 70 Powo;ds Alamo Gaiie&lt;y. Beck HaD
Through November 27 . GaRery hours, 9 :30 a m 10
5 p .m ., Monday through Friday

GRADUATE SCHOOL DEADUNE DATES
Monday, December 3 - SubmtSSK&gt;n of Ph .D
statement of programs 10 Graduate School for
September 1980 conferral.
Monday, December 3 - Submisslon of Masters
statement of programs to Graduate Sc:hool for June
1980 conferral.
Mki-Oeccmber -Applk:ations for Financial Aid
for 1979·80 genefal)y available through Office of
Financial Akl
Ftid.ay. December 14 - lnstruction ends et dose
of cla.ssa - FaD semester

ARCHITECTURE
Drawings of rf:5idential and commercial housing
units by Barton Myers. Toronto architec1 , are on
view throughout November 1n the lobby of Haye:
Hall. Sponsored by the School of Architec1ure and
Environmental Design and the CouncU on InternatiOnal Stud'es

RESEARCH SEMINAR•
Towards Therapy of Tay-Sachs OiHue: EnI:V'H Dl&amp;poaldon and Blood-Brain Barrier
PumeabUJty In the Cat, Dr Mario C Rattazzl
Board Room . Chikiren's Hospital 12 noon

UUAB FILM'
Dapalr ()978) Waldman Theaue , Amherst
3 45, 6 .35 and 9 15 p m GeneTal &amp;dmtssion $2 ,
students $1 50
Thi5 h: the story of Hermann Hamann, 1he Russian em'9fe , owner of a fading Bertin chocolate fac tory who s:tumbla across a tramp who he considers
to be his douh'e
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM•
Denelty Sepa.radon of Solids In ferToftukls
with Megndk Grtck. Dr Homer Fay, Unk:ln Car·
bide Corporation . Linde DMsion 454 Fronczak
3 .30 p .m Coffee at 3 15
PANEL DISCUSSION'
The lntemadonel RdYgee Problan: What Is
the U.S.'s Re.potM end What ShouJd It Be? 112
O'Brian 7 p m Panel will COMisl of lntematlona!
CoDege Slu~ll relating thn experiences a.s
refugMS and prof~G working In refugee problems Free Sponsored by lnlft'Nirional Collegrr.
MUSICAL COMEDY '
'The Club. by Ew Mmiam, directed by Saul
Elttn. "A musicel tour through tum-ol-the--c:entury
rna&amp;. .wxlsm. not quite ~ - "' 1M Center
ThQtre, 681 Maln St 8 p m G.ner.J ad.million
14. students and Mf'lior dlans $2 ADS vouehen
-'"&lt;! Spon-ed by the
lor Thu..•
R - Tlvouglt Docomber 16 (Thundoys-

c.n...

ART FACULTY EXHIBITION
Members d the Department of Art have paintings
and scutpture on exhibit in the Inner Gallery on the
l;fth l1oor }j. Capen HaD. Durlng business houB.

MEDICAL EDUCATION VIDEOCASSETTES
Ne1~ for Con11nuing MedK:al Education
Videocassette Mries, Tape •328 , '"Status Report on
Viral Chemothen.p;n,r '"The Abnormal Pap
Smear," and '"Temporomandibular Joint Dysfunction Don't Overdlagnose: and Overtreat ." Available
for v\ewlng November 12-25 at the Health Sdences
Libfary Media Retources Cenktt. Stockton KimbaD
Tower For eddttional information , ceO 831 ·4614

ARTISTS' BOOK EXHIBITION
Artists' books from the Abight-Knox Art GaDery.
In the Art Book CoDectlon on the ground t1oor of
Lockwood Memorial lln&lt;y. Through December
7 Sponsored by Lockwood Memorial Library and
the U/ 8 Department ol Art History .

,

NUCLEAR FACIUTY GUIDED TOUR
Tours of the Nuclear Science and Technology
FaciDty will be held every flrs:t and lest Tuesday of
the month at 4 p m Students . facuhy and staff
memben who are interested In the tour must call
831 -2826 for reservations The next tour will be
November 27

MUSIC EXHIBIT
Musical Anniversaries: Obaervances for
Nowmber. Music Library, Baird HaU, throu~h
November 30

On The Air

PSYCHOLOGICAL SERVICES CUNIC
Th,t Psychologicoi SeMca c.n... , Nn by the
Department of Psychoklgy, provides outpatient
psychotherapy for people both within and oullide
the UnWentty community Individual problems. a.s
weD as markal and famlty bsues, are deak with ~·
tng both insight-oriented and behavknl procedures . FOJ further information, caD 831 · 1187
weekdays between 9 a m and 5 p m

NOVEMBEII 19o
ConwnaUons In the Arll. Esther Harriott interviews Pulitzer Priu-wtnnlng poet Rkhard WObur.
lntemationa1 Cable (Chann«.. 101 6 .30 p .m

NOVEMBER 20,
ConverNtlons ln the Arts: E.sthcr Harrion Interviews Nina Freudmhctm of the Freude:nheim
Galleries Cowie Coble !Channel 101 6.30 p m
Alto on Nowmber 23 at 6 ·30 p m.

SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CWB
Stop in Room 7 Squire for ln(Ofl'l\o!IHon on our ski
trips during s:emutcr bfeak. Open to aD .

NOVEMBER2L

STUDIES SKILLS lAB

Con.....tlons In the Aru· Esther ......
views N.... fm.rdcqhelm of the FreudenheJm
Galleria Courln Cable (Channel Ill) . 7 p.m

The Stud\es Skal LAb at the UrWenlty Learning
Center. 368 Baldy Hal, il open for tutoring tn
writing and INdies . .. The hours a.r•; Mondays,
• •

•

• •

• Jo

• "

•

~

�November 15. 1979

Advisory panel
promises to be
'aggressive'
The Academic Computing Advisory
Committee expects to represent computer user concerns ''aggressively'' to

A night at the opera
The U / B OP4!ra Worlr.shop has produced almost as many worlr.s as the
Met this semester. Just weeks ago, a
triple but of The Magic Waters' by leo
Smit; 'Hin und zuruck' (There and
Back') by Hlndemith, and 'Amelia at
the Ball' by Menoltl was mounted at
Buffalo Seminary. This Friday and
Saturday, Stravinsky's The Rake's
Progress' is scheduled for Sweet Home
High School (see Calendar). Gary
Burgess is the Worlr.shop director.

University Computing Services administrators this year. The committee Intends
to keep well Informed of UCS plans and
to lake and publicize stands on issues affecting users.
' ,
" Of course," says this fairs chairman,
Dr . David Farr of Educational
Psychology, "we will be able to serve this
purpose only if the user community will
tell us what's on Its mind."
One concern already idenllfled for
study, Farr reports, Is the current system __
of allocating funds to users. Questions
have been raised about the general
wisdom of the plan, he says, as well as
about specific parts of It like the definition
of "instructional. " Is it right , for example ,
for the department sponsoring a doctoral
dlsserlation to be required to pay departmental dollars for some portion of the
student's computing? Dr. Stuart Shapiro
of Computer Science will chair a subcommittee to study this area and assess the
need for committee action. Comments

on the topic should be addressed to
Shapiro at the Computer Science Department, 4226 Ridge Lea .
A second area ldentlfled for study, Farr
says, Is the ethics of computer use by
University members. Professor Anthony ·
Rozak of Art will chair a subcommittee to
investigate questions of ethics and begin
development of a statement which could
be endorsed by the user community.
Users are urged to send ethical questions
which have arisen to Rozak at the Department of Art , 2917 Main St.
Other areas of concern identified at an

October 30 meeting of the advisory committee have received no action as yet .

These include: the statistical library ,
subroutines

libreries.

end

interactive

utilities and systems. User response on
these and any other topics should be addressed to Farr at 217 Baldy Hail.
Dr. Jay Leavitt , director of Academic
Computing, reported at the October 30
session that UCS faces problems in Implementing good ideas because of limited
personnel. In addition . he said , OP&lt;!rational problems result from the heavy use

of disk permanent file space and rapidly
Increasing paper costs.
Leavitt reported also that a priority
scheduling system is nearly ready for im·
plementation by Academic Computing .

Two adva nced priority levels will be
available to paying accounts , along with

two lesser priorities, with corresponding
pricing. An inquiry system to allow users
to optimize use of priorities ls being

develoll&lt;!d also . Leavitt said.
Elsewhere, Leavitt noted that : Fortran
77 will soon be available for academic
computing use ; FTN will also be available
for at least a year ; UCS is llttempting to
implement grlllphics softwear consistent
with expected industry standards; and

Cobol 4 will be dropped soon.
Turning to projected upgradings,
Leavin said the hllrdware upgrade to the

dual processor Cyber 174 configuration
planned for Winter of 1980 will roughly
double throughput . the number of telex
ports will increase to 124. In the
Summer of 1980. he conun ued , disk PF
space will be Increased approximately 85
per cent and speed of access wUI im·

prove . There will be fewer, but higher1

speed tape drives, he said , and no
7 · track drive. Anangements to cenvert

7-tra ck tall&lt;!S will be available .

DOE solar grants
The Department of Energy has
selected 42 winning proposals, including
s-, from colleges and un iversities, in a
new program that will provide federal
funding for the use of passive and hybrid
solar energy systems for heating, cooling

and lighting of commercial buildings
The six colleges are Colorado Mountain College, Colorado School of Mines
Research Institute , Albuquerque
Technical-Vocational Institute, Onondaga (N.Y.) Community College ,
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and
S:§rn.l!llt:flkli2n.U01~. -- -·- I ~

�•

November 15. 1979

. .lELIA

ORE VIEWPOINTS

Resnikoff 'made' him write, student says
Editor:
For weeks now this University has
wttnessed on exchange of both pro and
ontl-nuclear letters between Professor
\Von Y. Chon (director of U B's Nuclear
Science and Technology Facility! and
English Dept~nment graduate student
'4orc Leeds Recently. Marvin Resnikoff
1as also taken up his pen tn order to state
,is feehngs on the subjea of Dr Chon's

ct~t~r reading Mr Resmkoff s letter that
lppeared in the November 1 ISSue or the
Reporter. I too feel compelled to ..?n!er into the discuSSIOn of nuclear t!:l1ergy
Especially smce Dr. Chon has mdicated
hat he wtll d1scontinu his r~ph ~ vn ihe
:uc ar t&lt;sue unless fUiure CISC\JSSIOns ar
drned o ut on a ca:m ..oo:ca. bas:(
\1y expenence ha ~flown t~dl ibis
tuauon thougn enuret)' log1cal cannot be
realtzed 10 aciUal pracuce The anli·
nuclear advocates alwa ys turn to creaung
emotional issues out of the facts In my
op1mon. thlS is because the)' are too
unrealistic or too narrow·mmded :o
we1gh the risks of nuclear nergy against
!he benefits that 11 can prov1de
Each generation hao lu crl•i•
Each generation of our socu:?tV has had
·ts own maJOr cris1s to face Ours IS quite
szmply "energy .. The SOCiety of man has
evolved because man has been able to
hi;.rness different forms of energy to perform work for him so he may be: free to
think ond create a better life for htmself If
we want to remain free to be able to hope
and work for a better future. we must
continue to meet the demand for energy
that we (society) have created And we
must do it now by whatever means we
have ovoiloble .
As a graduate st udent at U/ B m
Nuclear Engineering and after having
.spant eight months doing research in the
area of fusion power for the U.S. Depanment of Energy at Argonne National
Laboratory. I feel I am very qualified to
speok on the subject of energy. lndden·
tally. I was ot Argonne during the Three
Mtle lslond incident ond helped do
preliminary core damage analysis
colculotions.
Argonne lS this nation's lead ing center
for nuclear reactor research and it enJOYS
Lhe diversity of major research in other
areas of energy production . distribution
ond storoge os well: such as Ouidized bed

JOBS
FACULTY

ln•lructor

or Aulatant

Profuaor- Oral

0\agnoshc SeMen. F- 9123

Pro{euor / Chairman- Compuler Science
F 9124
AM•t.ut Prola.or-Mathe.mata. F-9 125
Aatktant Of Auodate Prolasor- Computet

Soe.nce. F-9126
Aa.•tanl Of Alaodate PtoCeuor-De-panment
Ardutecture (2). F-9127 and 9128
AaocWte ProlU60r- P•yc:h~atry 12). F·9129
and 9130
AA.. tanc PTofutor- INrma.loiogy. F-9 131
Auodalt Profeuor / Chalrman-D~s tgn
Stud.... F 9132
AMiltant ProWuor- Dnign Studaes. F 9133
Profeuor ._ Aslkcanl Proftuor- Law &amp;
Junsprudtnoe F-9 106
ln.-tructor-()pe,auve DenU$try, F-9l:i-4
ProlaiOf/ Chalrman- Envaronmental Destgn &amp;
Pl.tnn1ng. F-9135
of

RESEARCH
5ecrdary-Geological Satnca Ice COJe Lab

R 9038
l.HoretoryTechnldaa-MacrobtcNogy. R-9056
NON-TEACHING PROFESSIONAL
PrOFa.m•cr I A.nalvst- Un~ve:rslty Computing

s--. R·9050. Ptl 2

NON.COMPETfTIVE CIVIL SERVICE
IAIHwor SG-6-250 W -. Physico~ Plont.
UnoNo 32303
M - Vohido o-ot., SG·7 -220 Winspoa&lt;.
Uno No 32285
M - Vohldo o-otO&lt; SG·7-4250 Rldgo
LAo. Uno No 34948

Eledrldu SG-12-John Beane c.,ta". Unt
No 34621
S... Sto-ry~ SG·14-Jolm S..nc
c.-. Uno No 34473
·

combustion of coal. cool slurry transport
methods . advanced batteries and fusion
devices. As a result of being a ma/·or
center for energy research. Argonne a so
enjoys a continuous flow of lecturers on
all forms of energy production including
solar and petroleum .
I was fonunate enough to have been
able to attend many state-of-the-an lee·
tures on all of the above :nethods of
power generation. In so doing I realized
that there !S no one source of energy that
IS to be preferred over another source of
energ)' m general.
The point
This bnng~ me 1u th~ point that I ~.A.• ou ld
like to make v.:nh 1h1s :4:!1Ter Dttfli?nng
.merg~ net?ci~ shouia be 'llt!:t .A 1th prodtJ~
;:on rne:n• ·C!I :hen or~ sunaoi~ :o ;n~
ieea For ,:~o)rn p tc ;,)rye ce.nlrall.Ze.C
pov.er reaUJrements c:uch dS a c ty.
;hould 1--te '":1\?t \l,:llh largt? ce:malized
power yenuat1ng !ac;lnies . .-uch as coal.
oil or nuclear plants But on the oth~ r
hand. home hot water heaung 10 certam
climates o r rural water pumpmg needs
may be mel by solar or wmd power
At the present time. solar technology
does not exi
r large centraliz~d power
production Sn 1.he anu-nuclear argument
of usmg solar ene~gy mstead of nuclear
energy IS JU St not valid By the same
token . wmd power cannot replace
nuclear power That is not to say that
research m these areas should not continue and even accelerate. but since these
technologtes will take years to develop. it
is logical that in the meantime we continue to use all forms of prod uction
avatlable to us And . undoubtedly .
nuclear energy will remam with us even
after the development of alternate energy
sources is completed . for it will provide a
means of production 1n some mstances
that cannot be met by other melllnS as
effectively.
So it is logicol that all forms of energy
productio n be utilized in this country .
each applied to the sit uation that it is best
suited for . This will be the only way we
can manage to work our way out of the
energy mess we have managed to get
ourselves into
Of course . so far I hlllve completely
overlooked the issues againS1 nuclear
energy and have only looked at it as a
logical means of obtaining energy. Now I
would like to address one of the Issues
that the opponents of nuclear power
have repeatedly focused their attention
on. The issue I will address concerns the
consequences of rad iation exposure. In
so doing I hope to show how one can
compare the apples of deoth coused by
radiation-ind uced cancer to the oranges
of traffic fatalities . I am making reference
to Mr Resmkoffs reply to Dr. Chon·s
comparison of risks found in our society .
Why we should accept the hazards
Of course , it is ludicrous to think that
ony thorough coverage of this ~ubjeet or
any subject relating to nuclear energy can
be accomplished in a letter such as this.
But at least I can begm to present some of
my reason ing for accepting the hazards
associated with nuclear power and even
considering them neg!igible.
First of oil . I'd like to inform my readers
that radiation is not a man-made
phenomenon It is as much a natural occurrence as gravity or matter. Everyone
receives obout o 130 mRem (millirem)
dose of naturally-occurring radiation each
year Nuclear power contributes much
less than I mRem odditional dose (ac·
tuolly 01 mRem) to the public each year.
Bear in mind that this Is less than the
variation in the natural background radia·
tion level experienced by living In · M ·
ferent locations of the country
The Nationol Council on Rodiation
Protection and Measurement has
estoblished dose· limitlng recommend•·
lions for the nuclear Industry in which
they recommend thot the public receive
no more than 170 mRem in any one
year. Th.is remember Is an upper limit and
the actuol dose received Is less thon I
mRem pe.r year. But for argument's sake,
let me use this upper limit to demonstrote
a point. II we converi the octuol dose
received by the populotion to the oct11al

number of cancer deaths that it can be expected to produce and then compare this
number of deaths with the number of
deaths that are accepted from other
causes. we can more easily weigh the
risks versus the benefits of nuclear power.
If I use Moncuso·s cancer doubling
value of 15 Rem and an assumed dose of
170 mRem per year per person . It is easy
to calculate that about 2300 cancer
deaths can be expected due to nuclear
power. And at an actual dose rate of less
ihan I mRem per year per person, we
ca n expect about 100 cancer deaths per
year. But tf we use: the presently accepted
ca ncer doubling dose of 50 Rem and the
dCtual dose rate of less rhan 1 mRem per
vear per person we can expect about 40
Jeaths per year
.-\nt; dearh :ron; dfl i. ( llJSe " wgr :able dnci to t:M! d\'O!deO as mucn d~ prac.
:~cally possibl
out 10 acruallly _ bvmg a!
all is to nsk dymg 1 If our society is willing
:o accept ihe nsk of 50 .000 death~ ;::&gt;er
\;ear due !O traff:c acciden:s. :hen c:un~!v 11
Ca n accepl 1he nsk that the :1uc!ear .m
dustry brings wuh it
Alte.r nate means pose risks, too
That is how we can compare apples
and oranges. Comparing apples and ap·
ples is no d1fferent We would then com·
pare the nsks asSOCiated wnh one form of
energy production with nsks associated
with an alternate means. And let us not
try to pretend that wind or solar power do
not possess risks equal to those of nuclear
po~.A.•er generation The question of risk
versus benefit for all types of energy pro-

duction is a moot point as is the question
of real risk versus potentllll risk associated
with nuclear power.

Real risk I define as those acddents
that can be expected to occur. while
potential risks are those that may occur
but whose likelihood of occurrence is im·
pracucally small. I am quite satisfied that
the redundant safety features built into
ou r nuclear plants preclude the occurrence of potential acctdents such as a maJOr release of radioactivity into ihe enVIron ment . Therefore. the potential risk
of a occ:.~rring. though devastating if n
did. becomes an acceptable risk
The fut ure of the nuclear mdustry

depends on genmg the facts about
nuclear ~nergy 10 the puolic !!O they can
d.ec1de ,, ,; ;~ v.orth ~he r.sK. As a member
\L;::i~ar 5oc!et~1 anci diso
~c1enust anc engmeer. i would iike to
m~ t=art m seemg that th~ public has

· :ne ..:..m~nc~n
u;,

il

do
the facts so they may make an ed ucated
decision on the issue .
!n :n~· opmion. th re IS httle to risk and
:nuch to be gamed by usmg nuclear
t!:ne rgy ;n this coun try as a source of
power
In future letters. I would hke to address
other 1ssues associated with nuclear
en rgy . such as waste disposal. arms pro·
hferauon . nuclear fuel cycles. nuclear
power on the world scene. TMI. and the
history of nuclear power. These are also
subJeCts that are important m the decision
for or agamst nuclear pOIA:er
Sincerely.
-Paul M . Giglio

Is French plant
really the answer?
Editor:
In suppon of nuclear power . Professor
Chon has again written to the Reporter
.. for the last time .. (Nov 8 . 1979) . Thts
"last" time. he proffers the first page of an
article describing the French high level
waste solidificlltion experience (Nuclear
News. December. 1978) as .. proof' that
the radioactive .waste problem has been
solved .
Has the French experience been successful and has it .. solved.. the wast e
problem? Having visited with French
scientists in Hannover , West Germany.
this past spring as a consultant to the
State of Lower Saxony, I can provide
some further background. Let the readers
of the Reporter decide .
I) The French separate the toxic .
primary heat-producing radionuclides.
strontium and cesium. from the other ra·
dionuclides which then form the glass.
The strontium and cesium must then re·
main in a cooled pool underwater for
several hundred years. Institutional controls for this length of time are not what 1
call a "solution" .•
2) The French have solidified high level
waste which is much less radioactive . ten
to thirty times less radioact ive , than that
from standard U.S . ltght water reactors
The pilot French plant did solidify 12
metric tons of glass containing 5 million
curies of fission product activity , not over
3 years (as the article claims) . but over 6
and therein lies another tale . To my
knowledge the results of the testing pro·
gram have not been published in a scientific journal.
31 The French have provided no infer·
matton on the radiation releases to the
environment and the occupational ex·
posures ot their experlmentol !acUity. Is
the iodine, ruthenium, cesium and
technetium retained In the gloss block or
vaporized and released to the environment?
4) Does Professor Chon know that in
Jonuary. 1979, one month aher theartl·
de In Nuclear News oppeored. the new
French AVM facilHy hod o serious ocd·
dent In which contomlnoted oir backed
Into ..cleon" oreos of the facility . exposing
severo! workers ond shutting down the
facility for over 2 weeks? A fuU discussion
of the French experience has been writ·
ten up ond .can be obtoined from me ..t·

Rachel Carson College .
5) But now , ignore the cesium and
strontium . assume the French facility
works perfectly and that the glass product
is sa tisfac tory . Would the waste
problem then be solved? No. because
these little glass honeys would still need
to be disposed of in an underground
waste repository fo r the required
100.000-year period until the radioactivity decayed to insignificant levels.
However. no suitable site has vet been
found. numerous technical problems re main . and there is considerable public
concern . This is why I stated that "after
35 years of generating nuclear waste. no
solution exists to the waste problem
anywhere in the world .'"
If all this leaves vou frustrated and
hopeless and you would like to turn your
energies to more constructive ends. feel
free to drop in at 3164 Main Street.
where the Sierra Club has a Radioactive
Waste Campaign underway. The picture
of solar energy and energy conservation
is not nearly as dark as Professor Chon
paints it. but that would be another lerter.
Sincerely,
-Marvin Reonlkoff
Lecturer. Rachel Carson College
Co· project Director, Sierra Club
Radioactive Waste Campaign

Iranians
must report

,

Accord ing to direct iv es from
Washington . Iranian students at U/ B
must report to the Buffalo DistriCt Office
of the lmmigrotion and Naturalization
Service before Dec. 14 or face deporta·
tion proceedings.
When reponing to JNS, students must
have proof of enrollment and number of
credit hours being taken , and their
passports . 1·94 slips and current ad·
dresses.
Any supporting documentation need·
ed con be obtained from the International
Student Affoirs Office. 408 Capen .
Approxlmotely 120 students are in·
volved. including both those ottending
the Intensive English Language lnstHute
and those regumly·enro1ed. • c ' · '

�. . .am

November 15, 1979

Lawyers
They need ·a brQader education,
Headrick submits as he suggests
a series of curricular changes
By Paul Chimera
News Burteu Scaff
The need to educate the " whole
lawyer" Is the Impetus behind a series of
curricular changes being proposed by
Thomas E. Headrick, dean of the Faculty
of Law and Jurisprudence.
" Most ci the existing courses in the
U/ B Law School-and in law schools
generally-provide broad Introductions
to substantive law and reline the student's
capacity to analyze · legal problems,"
Dean Headrick said in an Interview.
"But they do not develop a broad
range of lawyerly skills, nor do the~· sensitize students to social and economic
aspects of the world in which law is prac·
!iced. As a oesult, many young lawyers
have some limitations which could be
romoved by a broader education."
As a continuing refinement of the
schoors Long Range Plan of 1975.
Headrick has recently drawn up a proposal for a revised curriculum .
One Important purpose of the proposal
is to provide a greater variety of learning

experiences to counter what the dean
described as a "'progressive deterioration
of interest and excitement" among law
students over the course of the three
years in school.
Putting Idea• Into action
While the 1975 plan deah generally
with ordering priorities, according to the

dean, the most recent suggestions focus
on converting earlier ideas into action.
The "whole lawyer" concept-embodied In what Is known as the Buffalo
Model-has three essential aspects.
One, that Jaw students should be train ed In rigorous legal analysis.
Two, that a range of skills-such as
litigation, bargaining and negotia tion-should be taught and practiced in ·

the academ\c program .
And three, that the law should be
studied as part of the social, political and
economic milieu in which it operates.
Said Headrick : "We must not lose sight
of the non-legal aspects of the
professk:tn ."

Overly entrenched In bdlll·to
In the present three-year curriculum,
the first-year student gets overly entrenched in the conception of "how to learn
law," and, more slgnUicantly. In a narrow
J'Onception "of what It Is Important to
know ," Headrick wrote In his 12-page
"Suggestions for Curricular Change."
By the second year, the dean noted.
students focus attention on a narrow
range of substantive courses covering bar
examination subjects. Many channel their
energies into working in clerking pOsitions
In Buffalo, and "nurture their anxieties
about the bar examination."
This is a common phenomenon in blw
schools, the dean explained , one which
has even led to the suggestion that the
professional program be shortened from
three to two years.
While Headrick feels the three-year
program should be retained , he believes
some changes are needed . A greater
~egree of spedaUzation through sequem:es of course work, and study aimed
at xoadenlng the law student's perspect•ve would make the third year more
useful and interesting, he believes.
Presently, students at U/ B devote
most of their study to legal analysts and
coverage of substantive areas of law, with
only a frllction of work devoted to social
perspectives and skUis development , the
dean noted.
"My proposal," he said, "would set
down requlrements to ensure more of a
balance " He envisions the breakdown to
be perllaps two-thirds study of legal
analysis and substantive law, with the
balance about equally divided between
skills developma&gt;t and study of the social
environment of law.
According to the dean ' s pro·
posal-which he ernphaslz&gt;ed Is still In an
early stage and will require faculty dllcusslon and approval-tcveral SP&lt;O"illc
alterations are~
•d.r
•. ,· •.

w...

Flht year to be broadened
The first year would be broadened so
students are exposed to a wider range of
legal studies, methods and necessary
background lor lawyers.

The second year would become more
diverse by limiting the enroUments In
substantive courses tn order to encourage
a wider range of teaching methods and to
require students to spread their choices

across a broader range of courses .
The third year. according to the plan .
would emphasize advanced work in
some specialized areas, and advanced
research and/ or clinical work. This last
year would further include "Survey of

American Uw," a course whkh would
provide a broad survey and integration of

the substantive fields now covered in
discrete courses.
Other innovations. Dean Headrick
suggested, could include the development of mini -courses on topics of current
legal intere.t or controversy and courses
that deal pragmatically with what lawyers
and judges do in the practice of law and
administratton of justice .

Studies of specific lnstltutlol\11
Headrick would also like to see the
development of the empirical study of
specific legal institutions-the State At·
tomey General's office or Buffalo City
Coun . for example.
''These local offices and couns." said
the dean , "provide good examples of
how similar legal institutions across the
country function ."
Study of these institutions by faculty
and students could do much to enrich the
academic experience and develop
knowledge of how our legal system
works. he pointed out.
The impetus lor the proposed changes
rests . in part , with what Dean Headrick
sees as the rapidly changing role of the
legal profession over the next several
decades . as well as a marked change in
society In general. The development of a
national energy policy. for example . will
require new legal mechanisms to effect its
ends. he said .
The nature of the business Is
changing
"Much of the work lawyers have traditionally done is being removed by legislation," Headrick said . ''No-fauh insurance
and probate or bankruptcy reform are
changing the nature of the ~w business.
'' Popular dissatisfaction with cumber·
some litigation is stimulating the search
for altetm~tive ways of settling disputes.
At the same time. new social problems
are emerging which call lor the development of new legal Institutions and new
modes of law practice," he ekplained .
The adoption of curriculum changes at
the U/ B Law School hinges on an
Academic Program Committee, chaired
by the dean , composed of three faculty
and three students. And . moreover:. it
depends on a strong consensus of the en·
tire faculty .
"While there Is no firm timetable for
faculty review and implementation of a
new curriculum, some changes are ex·
pected to be reflected by the fall of 1980,
while others will likely take place In
1981 -82 ," the dean said.

2 reappointed
to SAED posts
Two reappointments In the School of
Architecture and Environmental Design
have been announced .
Prciessor George Anselevicius. professor ci architecture and holder ci the
SUNY Chair In Architecture, has been
reappointed chairman of the Department
ci Architecture for a three-year term
through August 31 . 1982.
Professor Gunter Schmitz, prolessor ci
architecture, has been reappointed director of undergraduate sbJdles In architecture, also for a three-year term through

AueUJt3.~ 1962. ·.· •·

. • ... ···-·

II

Cryosurgery used
to treat malignancy
a, Mary Beth Spiaa

Edltoriol-.
A U/ 8 swgeon reports he has used
Sc;c,_

ayosurgery as a method ci treating major
salivary gland malignancy.
Tumors of the parotid glands (the
major salivary glands In the face) , are
traditionally removed-by excision or cutting. The procedure carries considerable
risk that the seventh facial nerve may be
cut, leaving the patient with permanent
facial paralysis. Cryosurgery, on the
other hand , kills diseased tissue by freezing it with supercold gaseous liquids.
Dr. Russell Bessette told the International Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons in Toronto that his patient
did not experience permanent nerve
damage after cryosurgery desp~e the
nerve's being subjected to -40 degrees C
dur ing a four · m lnute multiple
freeze / thaw cycle .
Bessette noted that ~ parotid tumors
are removed by exdsion . there is a 15 to
30 per cent chance mild to severe per·
manent facial disfigurement may occur.
Damaged or severed nerves cannot carry
nerve impulses to muscles.
If damage is mild , the patient may be
unable to chew on the affected side . In
severe damage , there is permanent lack
of facial! expression or an inability to blink
the eye. depending upon which areas of
the nerve are damaged . Inability to blink
keeps natural moisture from the eye ,
necessitating frequent use of a substance
called "artificial tears." Without this
necessary moisture , serious eye problems
may develop .

An 80-year-old patient
Bessette performed his cryosurgery on
a woman in her 80s as a palliative treat·
ment for parotid malignancy . She
adamantly refused to have traditionlll ex·
cisional surgery to remove her baseball·
sized tumor because it would have been
necessary to perform a radical. d isfiguring
neck dissection . Without surgical intervention. her physicians estimated she
had only about three months to live
One year following cryosurgery, she is
leading a normal life and has no evidence
of facial paralysis. It is not known .
Bessette said . whether the malignancy
will recur.
"Risk of damaging the seventh nerve
when excising the tumor is always present. " said Bessette, "no matter how
skilled the surgeon .·· Because the parotid
glands and the seventh nerve both are
white, it's difficult visually to differentiate
o ne from the other during surgery.
Cryosurgery would appear to allow the
surgeon to get as dose to the nerve as
necessary to remove the tumor without
causing permanent damage. Bessette
said the outer, latty sheath covering the
nerve is damaged only temporarily when
this freezing method is used . Within ap·
proximately 30 days . the covering
regrows . allowing the nerve to conduct
impulses within normal range .
Uaeful In non-malignant cuea
Bessette said cryosurgery may be
especially applicable in removal of nonmalignant parotid tumors. Since most
pathologists feel benign parotid tumors
must be removed . patients who fear the
risk of nerve damage may be less
frightened at the prospect of cryosurgery
Instead of the traditional method.
The U/ B surgeon said , however , that
more research must be conducted to fully
determine ayosurgery's effectiveness
against these tumors. The Buffalo patient
was a special case because of her refusal
to undergo exctslonal surgery, her poor
prognosis and her willingness to undergo
the experiment with the new method.
In addition, she was an especially poor
candidate for conventional surgery ln
view of her age, her fear of severe
disfigurement and the length of ll"'e she
·would have been onder the anesthetic.
With cryosurgery, hospltaUzation and
operating time were shortened , with
tumor Uqulfic.atlon and subsequent
drainage occurring two daysiollowlng the
procedure .
Bessette, a clinical instrUctor in surgery
and clinical associate prcieuor of oral
patholo,gy, told the plastic surgeons

~~l)ll.tt..\ 'INA 9JY~PI. qf al\lm~ ~~~lei,.

Ill U/ 8 funded by the National Institute
for Dental Research laid the groundwork
for clinical use of· cryosurgery on the
patient:
U/B-...:11
Other researchers had found that gland
tissue could be destroyed at tem"'ratures
of -20 degrees C and below. But It was
U/ B researchers Drs. Joseph Natlella,
Michael Meenaghan and Andrew Gage
who de ter m in ed that baseline
temperatures of -40 C with multiple
freeze/thaw cycles over a lour minute
period selectively destroyed gland tissue
but not cranial nerves, of which the
seventh facial nerve Is one. Earlier this
year, Drs. Bessette, Nallella. Meenaghan
and Samuel Shatkin reported no permanent damage to the facial nerve in
monkeys when the gland was subjected
to the "dose" of supercold gaseous liquid .
An electronic device was used to
measure electrical impulses liCTOSS the
nerve. which were found to be within
normal ranges about 30 days alter
cyrosurgery.
Although cryosurgery has been
employed clinically for two decades. Its
application has primarily been In the
fields of dermatology and gynecology.
Only within the past lew years have
researchers begun to explore more ex ten·
sive uses.

Bevona wins prize
Cherie M. Bevona. doctoral candidate
in the Depanment of Sociology. is the
winner of the annual Rudolph E . Siegel
Student Essay Contest sponsored by the
Friends of the Health Sciences Library
(HSL) .
Bevona received the $200 award at
the group's meeting November 7 . in the
HSL's Buffalo Academy of Medicine
Room . Her winning essay dealt with
development of art and medicine . Ms.
Bevona is a member of the Society for
Epidemiological Research . the American
Public Health Association . and the
American Sociological Association
Following the award presentatio n . Dr
Oliver P . Jones spoke on "Confessions of
Three Grave Robbers." Or Jones is
distinguished professor emeritus in the
Depanment of Anatomical Sciences.
The annual essay contest honors the
memory of a Buffalo cardiologist and
Ut B medical faculty member who dies in
I 975. He was author of several books on
the history of medicine and was lnterna·
tionally known as a medical historian

UPS service
on campus
United Parcel Service will be available
to all University departments starting
November 19. Wtllis R . Utter. principal
stores clerk. Central Stores. has an·
nounced .
Three details concerning use of the ser·
vice were highlighted by Utter In a memo
to campus administrators this week:
1. To have the Maintenance Department pick up items for reshipment , v~
Central Receiving , It Is necessary to ha ( e
the Receiving Pick-up and Delivery order
form prepared .
2 . For Central Receiving to ship via
UPS. or other means of transportation, a
new out-going shipment form must be
prepared and forwarded with the shipment to Central Receiving. A supply of
the new forms may be requested by
memo from Central Stores.
3 . This service Is for Universitybudgeted departments, and Research
Foundation grants and contracts. It Is not
available to private Individuals, Utter
said.
The new out-going shipment form Is
8 1/z x II inches In size, and replaces the
former 5 1/z x 8 form . AD copies ci the old
form should be discarded.
To reduce freight costs, Utter said ,
UPS servic,e should be selected over
other types when possible.
Questions or problems should be
directed to Central Recelvl•g at

636-2840 . .

.. ·'·'
/'

....,.,.-,

-

�..•sa••

n

November 15 , 19 79

The Italians

VAMC plans
$7.5 million
education wing

Their rich culture is the subject
of an Arts and Letters course
spanning music, architecture , film and art
By Ann Whitc her
University Publcations

Coloratura soprano Adrienne Tworek-

Gryta lmd just finished a Rossim aria . her
lovely voK:e clear and commandihg.

On hand to applaud her was Thomas
Dlina. senior clerk to the Buffalo Com·
mon Council and a student in ..The
Italian Tradition." a 14-pan lecture series
on Italian culture being offered this fall by
U/ B's Faculty of Arts and Letters in
cooperation with the Federauon of
ltalian-Americl.ln Socseties.
Mr. Diina. who along wnh son
Anthony. hasn't msssed a class. was
especially enthusiastic c..ver th1s spec1al
presentation on Italian opera by Munel

WoK. UJ B associate professor of music
The Imaginative Wolf had asked seven
talented students to illustrate her lecture
with anas from Mo.:an. Rossini, Donizetti. Beliim . Verdi and Puccani. accom panied by pianist Carlo Pmto

"The whole course has been temfic ...
enthused Mr. Diina. ..But thiS recnal.
what a treat. "
A number of topics for two c redits
.. The Italian Tradition. · organiZed last
su'llmer by Faculty of Arts and Letters
Dean George R Levine and Federation
officials. covers a number of top!cs on
Italian culture . Including an. literature . ar·
chitecture. musk . history. film and the
development of ltalian-Amencan com munities. It's a two-credit course held
Thursday evenings in 147 Diefendorf on
the Main Street Campus and continues
through December 13.
According to course coordinator
Edmond Strainchamps. associate pro·
fessor of music, the intent has been to re main fairly chronological and yet give a
broad overview of Italian dvilization from

antiquity through the 20th century.
''Some topks , of course. couldn't be
confined to a definite period :· he notes.
''Leo Curran (associate professor of
classics). for example . gave a slide
presentation on ' The Art and
Topography of Rome ,' a topk which
cover~d a vast subject area- from the
classical period to modern times.··
In September. Dr. John Peradotto .
professor of classics and dean of U/ B's
Division of Undergraduate Education.
gave two lectures on .. Dante , Christiamty
and the Classical Tradition ...
Focusing on Dante's masterpiece. The
Diuine Comedy. Peradotto traced the
development of the epic from Homer to
Virgil.
Much of The D1ume Comedy. he
states. rehes on classical patterns.
especially Virgil's Aene1d. Indeed. Virgil
is Dante's guide through two·thirds of the
work. wh.ch relates the poet'!» JOurney
through hell. purgatory and heaven
.. It's especially importanllo understand
the manner in whtch Chnstianity
develops classical philosophy and
transcends it. as Dante does w1th Virgil's
Aeneid. ·• Peradouo points out .

ltallan prominence In music
Italian prominence in early Western
mu.sac was another area covered by
course planners. In addillon to the
general discussion of Italian opera by Pro·
fessor WoH . Jeremy Noble. a.ssoctate
professor of musK: and former music cnuc
for The T1mes (London). described the
domanance of Italian musac dunng the
Renaissance . With the exception of one
eady p~eee by Francesco Landini in the
141ll century, NOble's remarks cen ter&lt;d
on 16th cen tury composers hke
Palestrma. Luca Marenzto . Andrea
Gabneli and his nephew Giovanm
Gabrleli , and finally . the great Claud1o
Monteverdi. who lived from 1507 to
1643.

In her lectu re on .. Italian Opera : The
Voice a nd Divine Madness:· Professor
Wolf cited the Importa nce of Monteverdi.
especially as seen in his 1608 o pera.
Orfeo. She added thai. despite so me opposition. early 17th century opera was
domina ted by the Ita lian . artificial
sopranos. the costroD . The period was to
last more than 100 years. as women were
not allowed on stage for some time .
Various city-states and
principalities
Italian artistic identity notwithstanding.
Italy itself wasn't un ited politically until
1861. when the Kingdom of Italy was
formed under Emmanuel II. Its history is
also one of vanous city-states and pnncipali'.ies.
Fiorence . for example. was sw1rling
with political intrigue during Dante's
hfetime (1265-1321) . The bitter feud Uet·
ween the Gh1belline and Guelph fam11ies
_plays an ampona nt pan 1n The Diume
-&lt;eomedv. Even with constant poliucal tur·
moil. Florence contin ued to flounsh
among Italian ClUes 1n the 14th century
Churches in the new Gothic style were
erected. 11 was also the tame of BoccaCCIO.
Petrarch and . of course . Dante In suc·
ceeding years. a number of artists. such
as sculptors Donatello and Ghiberu . ar·
chitect Brunelleschi and painters Uccello
and Masacc1o. were to bnng their respec tive an forms to the frontiers of the
Renaissance .
The works of Masaceto (1401-1428).
and his con tributions to the notion of c1vic
humanism were discussed in another lecture by Dr , Charles Carman . associate
professor of an history .
Carman. who assisted \A.•ith restoration
work m Florence after the disastrous
1%6 floods. spoke of a new . an thropocentric quality in Masaccio's art
and the kind of heightened civic con sciousness present in Renaissance an
generally. He also gave a second lecture
on Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci .
Historical 1rends throughout Italy itself
since the 18th century were traced for
seminar partlctpants by Dr Leo Loubere ,
the author of several books and
numerous ankles on the social and
politicl!ll history of France . Loubere. who
chairs the U/ B History Depanment .
discussed the rise of Italian nationalism in
the 19th century. and the " romantic"
movement In politics. which he termed a
reaction against the European Enlightenment.
Italian contibutions to modern an and
planning were also d1scussed tn the
senes

Dr. Victo r Doyno. associate professor of
English.
.. I'll talk about their reasons for leaving
Italy, their reception here and the kinds of
immigra nt com mun ities founded ...
Doyno will also discuss assimilation
patterns and family values among Italian
Americans as well as the.- stereotypes
which persist today.
Filmmakers
Also on tap for the remainder of the
series are lectures on works by two noted
Italian filmmakers : Robeno Rossellim and
Michelangelo Antomoni .
On November 15 Dr . Gerald O'Grad y,
dtrector of the Center for Media Study
(CMS). will discuS. Antonionrs The Red
Desert (1964) . the filmmaker's first color
film . And o n November 29. James Blue .
documentary filmmaker and associate
professor. CMS. will discuss Rossellini's
1966 teleVIsion documentary. The Rise
to Power of LoUIS XIV. Professor Blue.
who won a Cntics' Prize at the 1962 Can ·
nes Film Fesuval. entitles his talk " Louis
XIV : Ftlm and the Democrauzation of
Knowledge ...
Faculty of An s and Leners officials
hope to repeat the cou rse next faiL
In announcing the co urse's formation.
Dean Levine com mented . "This is an opportunity for peo ple to learn about the
culture of the country of their origin . A lot
of us have parents or grandparents who
weren't born here
"There's a link to another tradition
that 's not American . And it's important
for ourselves and our children to not lose
that link
"I n shon. I c~n't think of a richer
culture for such a course than the Italian
cultu re ."

Buffa lo's Vete ra ns Ad min istratio n
Medical Center last week received approval to build a research an d education
addition to the facility whk h will be particularly beneficial to U/ B health sciences
stude nts in their clinical years of training .
According to Dr. Peter Rega n . director
of heallh polky st udies a t U/ B an d
associate chief of sta ff for e du cation a t the
VA. the new un~ will add approximately
60.000 square feet to the hospital and
will cost about $7 .5 million . Funding
comes from the Veterans Administration's facilities planning budget so must be
appropriated by Congress before any
construction takes place .
The expans1on will ge"lerate more
- research and teaching space and also will
prov1de fo r a library and audio·visual
resource center. Insufficient study and
teaching space al U/ B's affiliated
hospnals has been a long·time headache
for health sciences st udents and
admmtstrators .
Regan sa1d the 'hew constructiOn- wh1ch could possibly start
so metime m 19 1- will be the result of a
proposal inmally made five years ago by a
co mmlltee chaired by Vice President for
Health Sc1ences F _ Caner Pannill . and
co mposed of health sciences and VA
Hospital off1cials. Fruitful dialogue wnh
Washington along wnh accompanying
recognition by the Veterans AdministratiOn office there of the work and training
needs of the hospital. were partially .
responsible for the approval of the addi·
tion. Regan said .
Construction will take between 18
months and two yea rs to complete .
The VA Hospital curren tly provides
training grou nds for studen ts in all five of
U/ B's healt h sciences schools. Other
U/ B·affiliated hospitals are Buffalo
General Hospital . Erie County Medical
Center and Children's Hospital.

Futurism
Dr. P Reyner Banham . chairman of
Design Studies in the School of Architec·
ture and Environmental Design . discussed the influence of the Italian Futurists on
modern archnectural planning {Futurism .
a movement 10 an. music and literature.
began In Italy about 191 0) . In h1s
November 8 lecture . he noted that structures on the order of Buffalo's Marine
M1dland Tower can be traced to Italian
Futurism Famed archnect af"ld city planner Le Corbusier knew some of the
Futunsts , he sa1d . and some early drawings of those Futunsts working in Milan
show skyscrapers and also railroads run nmg through buildings.
'
In a December 6 lecture. Dr. Alan
Bimholz. assoctate professor of art
history. w1ll discuss the Italian Futurists
and their effon in the years preceding
World War I to .. free Italian an and
culture from the tyranny. in thetr view. of
the past ..
Italian immigrants to America began
arriving aher 1896 and tlieir history m this
country will be discussed December 13 by
Non Proln Org
U.S Postage
PAID
Buffalo. N.Y.
Permit No 311

Sum~ru1/le

WBFO receiver
This sa tellite receivi ng dish now in plac..e west of Pritc hard H\11 enables
WBFO to recei ve live National Public Radi o trans m is-sions in hi§h fidelity ,
s tereo. The project cost approxi mately $72,000 and was paid for by th e C orpora tio n for Public Broadca sting .

• Telecommunications
(fro• paga S , coL 4)

costs. and how costs can be reduced . A
manager. says Zehler. has to balance expense con trol and personal convenience
i!llgainSt cost of service and make his or
her own decisiOns accordingly.
A Buffalo native. Zehler holds a B.S . in
electrical engineering from the University
of Michigan and an M.S . in engineering
management from the Unive"'!ltity of
Alaska .
Beyond familiarizing people with what
we have now and how to use It, Zehk!r's
long-range goal is to develop lnforrr.ation
on future telecommunications needs and

.h.o-....,,

oh- -

-

~

_ _. _ _ _. _u............_ _ ._ _

Th is extends to evaluating new vendors'
products and to desigmng . developing
and Implementing new systems
The telecommunications office (whose
staff Includes Mkhael L. Day, an assistant
accountant. and Rose F. Wynn , an
account clerk) is also expected to act as a
buffer between suppliers and University
needs, to establish communications standards. and to establish contacts with in·
dustry assoctati.&gt;ns.
Generally. Zehler summarizes. the
thrust is toward "a cooperative effort to
enable the University community to ob.~a!r the gr_eat__est ~dv~nt~e .... fr~~ its

�November 12, 1979

racommendad two aocts of-preparallon. One - ax.......,.lnlavlews wllh the laculty, concluded through
the good offices of the F.cully sen.ton; the otheraiUI'\Iey of al faculty. Both 11.- *!»have now been
18Mn, the Iarmer by me end the latter by the Ex..,._ Com~ .
During the month of October I had meet1ngo with
.bout 115 f.cully mernbcB In .bout 50 oepa'Bia - . each oaolon luling 20 to 90 mlnuta, wllh the
cxcepllon of one oaolon which ran for two end one
hal hours. The meet1ngo took plaoe at five diltlnd
~ locations and reached nearly .0 comcn
of the University. I opoke with lacu1ty from al ocftools
or fac:ullla wllh the axc:eplion of fOur smaler ocftools:
SAED, Sll.S, Social
end PharrMcy. I ernaged &amp;om these ~ with more than 8S poges of
notes, In addition to a dean wrlllan submlulons from
lndlvldual lacu1ty members. The outruch through
these meetings was In facl graler than the numbers
Indicate, since a large number of penons who sj&gt;oke
with me had consult.ed with colleagues before doing
so.
I have not had a chance to consult the results of lhe
survey In preparing this report. The report Is bated on
my experience and my recent Interviews with lhe
faculty . The survey Is properly ce&gt;n&lt;:etved as complementing what I have to say here. There was, for Instance, no set format for my meetings wHh faculty
members. I found that the matters which they wished
to discuss and on which they gave me many delalls
were often matters about which I would not have
thought to ask questiOns; oertainly there would not
have been any set questions along those hnes. One
result of this was that the meetings were far more Informative and less tedious than might have been ex·
peeled. Another result Is that not all of the colleagues
wHh whom I spoke answered lhe same questions. The
survey. therefore, even though HIs hmlted In its scope,
does two things which I could not do In my metrtlngs:
it asks the same question of aU members of the faculty,
even though some would prefer to answer different
questions, and It addresses these questions
systematlcaiJy to aD members of the voting faculty.
The aim of my meetings and of the survey was to.
ascertain the views about the state of the University
and Its leadership from the consthuency of the Faculty
Senate, which Is all members of the voting faculty of
the University. This body Includes Ubrarians, but excludes those classified as management confidential. as
professional staff, and as CivU Service. All contacts for
the meetings were made through Faculty Senators,
and all the meetings were held with persons In their
capacity as colleagues. No attempt was made to ascer-

w.w.n.,

Statement Submitted
by Newton Garver,
Chair of the Faculty
Senate, to the
Presidential
Evaluation Team

tain the views or opintons of other Important groups

such as the UUP or the AAUP, nor have
undergraduate or graduate students been Included.
There Is no Intent 1o suggest that these are not perfectly valid and important consthuencles In the UnlversHy.
It was felt . however. that the primary task of the Facul·
ty Senate is to represent the views of Its constituency.
and that this task alone would be demanding enough
without trying also to provide an avenue for the ex·
pression of views from other constituencies, which

presumably have their own voices.
I entered upon these consultations with my col·
leagues with a good deal of trepidation, and I emerged
with gratitude and respect ror their thoughtfulness,
their concern about the Unlversily, their helpful
analyses ; and their informative contributions. Much Is
said of the low state of faculty morale. and It was
highly encouraging to find so many faculty participating wholeheartedly, intelligently, and with a
hopeful sense about the future in this process of the
evaluation of the campus and its leadership. There Is
an enormous-and still largely untapped - reservoir of
faculty concern about and commitment to this institu·
tion.
.

I must take responsibility for what follows. I could
not have written it without the extensive interviews.

John Corbally, Chairman
David Robinson
Edwin Young
Section One:
Background and
Preparation

tee of the American Philosophical Association ; and
within the Western Division of the APA I have served
on the Program Committee and as Parliamentarian.
Here at Buffalo I have served for five years as
Parliamentarian of the Facuhy Senate, for two years
on the President's Board of Faculty Appointments.
Promotions and Tenure , for one year as Chainnan·
elect of the Faculty Senate, and I am now In my second year as Chair of the Faculty Senate. The years as
Parliamentarian all Involved sitting on tlie Executive
I joined the University in 1961 , when H was stJll a
Committee of the Faculty Senate , so this Is my
private Institution, and rose up through the
seventh year participating in that body.
ranks - Associate Professor In 1966 and Professor In
Last faD , knowing that there would be either a
1971. In the Intervening years I have been moderately
Presidential Search or an Evaluation this fall, the
active In professlonal and In University affair• I have
Senate constituted an ad hoc Cominlttee to advise me
had vlsltlng appointment$ at the Unoversltles of
how to proceed In the event of an evaluation. That
_ . Mlc:btn and BorhasiAr.and at fMMs .WO.lct.Col-•••• rommUt-. lo ~1 un much.Inclabled, &lt;alllev.oed - • ••
lege; ve served on the Academic Freedom Commh·
the prior evaluation and search procedures and

my own picture of the University has been mod~ied by
what my colleagues said to me. and I have sometimes
explicitly represented their views. I have tried to Indicate cases where the views are clearly mine or clearly
theirs. Nonetheless all that my colleagues contributed
has had not only to pass through my fallible
understa nd ing but also to fit into the formal of this
report . and they have had no chance to check the
1
result.

Section Two:
Years of Decline
or Doldrums
By and large the recent years ar this University
Center have been years of decline or doldrums, and
they are by and large seen as such by the faculty . This
lack of progress, which is of course relative to the
previous period of rapid expansion and plentiful
resources, has occurred with respect to standards and
qualily as well as to support and services. There must
be qualifications put both to this conclusion and to its
significance, but the conclusion Is nonetheless firm .
Let me flBI present the details and then the qual~ica ·
lions.
I. DETAILS
.A .- ~• .1.1/c . haoe ·'-""""Y~-&lt;&gt;1

world rank , and cerialn 1Jnhs such as Physiology,

�Pharmacy, and English have renown In International

drdes. Nol\dheless the general level of faculty seems
to many to have stopped improving. Last year, for example, the President announced the sucx:asfuJ wooing of the distinguished critic Louis Marin , now the
Melodia Jones Professor of French, together with
three younger scholars. from Johns Hopkins. to
bolster our Comparative Literalure Program; but at
least two of the younger scholars were untenured.
Professor Marin is normally to be on campus only in
the fall semester, and the appointment package did
not really make up In standing and repute for the prior
losses from Comparative Literature of Professors
Albert Cook, Eugenio Donato, and Rene Girard. It is,
of course, the better faculty who are able to get offers
to other institutions. and in most cases there have not

been compensatory appointments. The greatest recent loss was in Statistlcal Science, where the Un iversity suddenly found ltse~ last year without sufficient
qual~ied staff to meet the undergraduate, graduate,
and professional demands . In this case the loss of Professor Zelen and others to Harvard is no shame to Buffalo. but the loss of Professor Parzen toTexas Tech at
Lubbock Is diffiCUlt to reconcile with the rank Buffalo
has had and should have. Other rather embarrassing
recent losses include an English professor to Arizona .
the Melvin Baker Professor of American Enterprise to
Maryland. Engineering professors to the University of
Massach usetts and to the University of Cal~omia at Irvine. and Dentistry professors to Columbia .
Buffalo was for a time (certainly through the early
' 70's) a magnet institution, able to attract faculty from
higher ranking Institutions. It Is now widely perceived
by my colleagues as having lost lis magnetism . Some
now even see Buffalo as a place to get away from if
you can. and these examples of uncompensated em-

barrassing losses are man~estatlons of that attitude .
Among )unlor faculty, departures are always complicated

by

tenure considerations . Cenainly we seem

to be able to attract very able junior people in the traditional Arts and Science disciplines. when positions are
open . N onetheless concerns have been voiced about

our abtiity to hire first-rate people in fields suth as Law
and Engineering. Eighteen months ago t!W campus
was buzzing about a •· mass exodus" from the Law

remained (symbolically?) vacant. It may be that much
ftrie raearch is being done without funding, or with
funding that does not come through SUNY institutional channels. Nevertheless the failure to achieve
major growth in funded research over the past
decade, when funds were generally more readUy
ovailable than now, contributes to a sense of relative
decline.
One explanation for the mediocre research record Is
that only haK-hearted attempts have been made to retain outstanding research faculty, and many have left.
Another. reason Is that set-up funds for research
facilities for new faculty have often been unavailable ,
even. reportedly, in some cases where they had been
promised in writing. Students and humanist members
of the faculty sometimes criticize this odminislration for
being research oriented . From my interviews with

research faculty , I have to conclude that this is
demonstrobly not the case. Though there have been
strong words and OCCllSional exhortations, ad·
minlstrative support for research has been in the

doldrums for the past decade.
D.

R~urcu .

Everyone perceives that Buffalo has

lost and continues to

lose the resources needed to sup-

port its operotion. Even the departments which are
growing in faculty strength are losing in student/ faculty rotio. Everyone has suffered cutbacks in paperclips.
travel. xerox , assistantships, and secretaries. The
steady decline in resources is depressing.

E. Morale. It is not surprising that a sense of decline
Is accompanied by low morale . It could hardly be
otherwise. And yet the sorry state of faculty morale
has been mentioned so often . in meetings with so
many diverse and widely scattered colleagues. that it
must be mentioned separately as an area of decline
over recent years . (Sometimes the anger or despair or
frustration was very strong, but I cannot estimate with
confidence exactly how deep , or even how

B. Student. . The Baker Professor
Enterprise Is leaving

1n

01

American

phenomenon is described as a

lack of spirit .

sometimes as a business atmosphere . Apart from the
sense of stagnation . there appear to be two causes for

academics} seem indifferent or even hostile to scholarship. Often the depressing insensitivity to scholarly
work takes the form of subjecting scholars to more
paper work . and then complaining that the scholars

don't fill out forms correctly, don't keep track of the

part because we cannot attract

hours, and are generally inefficient . There is a
should protect scholars from such harassment rather
than subject them to it. Hence the demoralizing feeling
that Capen Hall has no understanding or appreciation

grams in Health Sciences and the School of Architecture and Environmental Design suffered a reduction in
applications or in enrollment this year. Perhaps the
\NOrst area of student admission/ enrollment decline

has been that of Upper Division DUE students (i.e .
juniors and seniors). whach is supposed to be an area
of concentration for this institution . In order for the

widespread faculty feeling that the President's staff

of scholarly work.
The other cause is exasperation with the managerial
inefficiencies which are detailed in the next section .
Two aspects are mentioned the most freq uently as
sources of frustrations . One is the sense of impotence

conveyed by repeatedly being told thai nothing can be
done. One colleague said that all one ever hears from

Capen Hall is. " Albany has my hands tied _" A number
feel that our President seems to alienate or to defer to

Upper Division to reach the Master Plan target of 60
per cent of DUE . a large number of transfer students

Albany rather tpan to persuade Albany.

would be requtred , and the steep decline tn this
category therefore skews the student population

faculty feel that they are made to feel impotent. The

significantly away from the target. At the graduote
level. GA and TA stipends were held at a constant
dollar figure for 9 years. allowing inflation to push us
from a strong competitive position to one of the
weakest-in some fields to the very bouom rank
among our peer institutions. And the list of admissions

and enrollment setbacks could be extended .
What do these data mean? Even given the national

reduction In the applicant pools. these declines do not
seem to my collel!lgues to be altogether necessary.

Many remorked that the quality of undergraduate
education Is high and seems to be a real ~argain here ,
and Increasingly suspect that admissions and enrollment shortlalls must be due at least in pan 10 ad ministrative bunghng The deeper worries are that
there may also be a qul!llitative as well as a quantitative

decline 1n the student body, and that the chronic admisSIOns shortfalls portend a shrinking institution . For
student$. as for facuhy, Buffalo seems in recent years

to have lost the magnetism it had through the early
70's.
C. Reseorcll . Over the .past 10 years the dollar
volume of funded research has not kept pace with the
rote of inflation Perhaps this Is in pan because no
Chancellor prior to Wharton has placed much emphasis on the research mission of SUNY At any rate
there is much anger and discouragement about the
research cltmete here . Three particular complaints are:
that SUNY policies suppress research , since heavy
overheod costs arc recovered for purposes other than
to stimulate and support research (principal Investigaton have a sense of being taxed rather than
rewarded for their success) ; that the Comptroller Impedes rather than facilitates papet work; and that for 6
or 8 years the office of Vice i'restdent for Researcft has

2.

r' I

'• • • ~

#'

f

years. The third is the work of the General Education

long way toward removing some of the frustration and
despair noted in the preceding remarks.

top aides (ones who must regularly deal with

the right doctoral students for him here. In Philosoph y
the groduate applicant pool has shrunk in 5 years from
200 to40. In September 1978 the University Office of
Admissions accepted 85 per cent of freshman applicants, instead of the usual 65 per cent. Even such
career· oriented programs as the undergradul!lte pro·

ly improve the registration process. which has been a
source of frustration to the whole community for some
Committee, now chaired by Professor Peter Hare, to

this faculty malaise.

and to retain faculty of outstanding caliber .

ing to do with admissions processes . The second is the

effort, headed by Vice President Somit, to dramatical-

strengthen intellectually the degree requirements for
baccalaureate degrees. The fourth . engineered by
Professor Allen Kuntz. is the establishment of an Office
of Institutional Studies. reporting directly to the President , to provide accurate information about the
University. All four of these efforts appear to be very
solidly based and to have the full support of the President. If they are only half successful . that would go a

The first cause is an uncertainty that the President
appreciates scholarly achievement. No one recalls Z!lny
words from him about the substance of a scholarly
work . there are no distinguished scholars among his
immediate staff and closest advisors. Z!lnd some of his

portent and needs to be corrected . Many colleagues
already detect signs of mediocrity due to failing to hire

personal observation than on the inte.rviews ! is that
major efforts are now underway to correct significant

shortcomings. I wiU mention four such efforts here .
The lim Is the work of the CommiUee on Operati&lt;&gt;~al
Processes, appointed two years ago and chaired by
Professor Frank Jen . The CommHtee first addressed
itself to problems about purchasing. and made a report
in February 1979. It is now addressing questions hav-

widespread. the morale problem Is; I hope the Faculty

there is similar talk about Civil Engineering , where .
again , some excellent people were lost (and. it would

deteriorated, the loss of magnetism is a worrisome

have no doubt that we remain the strongest institution

within SUNY.
The third qualification , which Is based more on my

Survey may provide this information .} Sometimes the

School (we did lose excellent people). and th is year
seem, not adequately replaced) .
While the quality of the faculty has not yet seriously

recognized by my colleagues. Ahhough there Is a wide
consensus that the University is stagnating, there is
therefore no parallel consensus that the present administration Is to be blamed for that fact .
The second quallf\cation Is that there are areas of
strength, where there Is no decline or even some
growth. No one has suggested to me that either Phormacy or Physiology has lost Its national stalure. It
seems clear that both ArchHecture and Management
have grown over the past five years, probably in quality as well as in size. The Law School suffered one !'ear
of severe faculty losses. but Is clearly a unit which is increasing in strengih. Beyond these and a few other
areas of acknowledged strengih, which constitute exceptions to the general phenomenon of stagnation, it
has been suggested that there Is mere underlying
strengih in the institution than Is generally perceived .
That Is, II may be that there Is a kind of seKdepreciation at work. which leads us here to
depreciate the value and strengih of our own institution. In travelling to conventions colleagues find that
the name of Buffalo is still treated with respect . I think
this may be right . Overall, In spite of the significance of
the stagnation or decline over the past live years, I

Using Albany as an excuse is one way in which
other is when an administrator asserts thai he alone

has the authority to decide. Whipped between these
claims of impotence and omnipotence {neither of
which is ever wholly true). faculty members conclude
that there is no rational way for them to get a purchase
on issues of the day. and they become discouraged .
The other aspect of managerial practices most fre-

quently mentioned by colleagues is the long delay
before a decision is rendered It is notorious that the
really hard decisions are hardly ever made. and even
the easy ones seem to take inexplicably long. So facul ty tend to give up. A number have concluded the
.. successful" admlnistrl!ltOr is one who regardS faculty
as a nuisz.nce and who becomes "effic1enf" b~ never

UJ . SUMMARY
None of the colleagues with whom I have spoken
regards the past five years as a period of general institutional growth or improvement. The President has
placed highest emphasis on construdion . and
whatever growth has occurred h3s been confined to
buildings. The consequences for institutional programs

have often been debilitating because of the separation
of closely reloted faculty units and the necessity for extensive bussing. Some of my colleagues blame the ad ministration for this. but a majority regards outside fac·
tors as primarily responsible for most of it ; or else they
are very uncertain as to the proper assignment of
responsibility . It is true thl!lt there are now underway

certain strong efforts at strengthening both the ad ministration and the undergraduate degree re·
quirements, but my colleagues are not much en·
couraged by these efforts. Man y are skeptical or even
cynical, unconvinced that the administration is
serious. Many note the stagnation or decline of the
University and regard it as inevitable or as benign .
since they could easily imagine something much
worse . Few expect anything much better from u'le
present administration . if only because so many of the
essentials seem to be outside its powers.

Section Three:
Three Main
Faculty Critic_isms

promptly or effectively solving faculty problems; faculty thereby become discouraged . and the administrator
has fewer problems and nuisances . In Its extreme form
this Is a minority. and no doubt exaggerated , point of
view . but it does raise the important question whether
there are proper incentives within the service side of

the University.
II . QUAUACATIONS
The most important qualification to make about the
preceding observations is that the phenomena noted
are..not unique to this institutlon ·and are determined in

large pan by external factors . The most important of
the outside factors are the demographic decline in the
troditional pool of students and the fiscal dilficuhies
and bureaucratic structure of the State of New York.
No administrolion can get around the demogrophic
data which have led to a dechne In applications for admissions. There may be something to be done about
the factors within New York State , but effective action
Is rarely wit!&gt;ln the power of the President. These
limHations are widely, though not universally,

There was a remarkl.lble convergence among the

faculty with whom I consulted as to the principal
weaknesses of the current administration . The
criticisms came from people who support President

Ketter as w•ll as those who would like to see him
replaced . It Is essential , therefore. to d~nguish sharply between criticism and lack of support. In what
follows I shall convey a convergence of opinion with
respect to criticisms of the current adminb-tratlon. but
there is no corresponding convergence with resped to

support or lack of support for President Keuer.
I.

~F ACADEMIC LEADERSHIP

Nearly everyone with whom I spoke noted a lack of
academic or educational leadership as a major fault of
the present odmlnistration . I believe that the most important thing that wos meant by this is that the ad ministration does not clearly articulate the goals and
mission of the University and l'llate such statements to
the particular decisions being made. Sometimes the
complaint was that President Ketter and his ad -

�ministratiOn lack vision. The faculty feel stJOngly that
their main sort of actMty. the invesligallon of
phenomena by means of words and symbols and the
transmission of the results to students, needs endonement, encouragement, and reinforcement from the
administration-and that this administration conspicuously fails to provide any evidence of its appreciation for these lnteUectual endeavors and
achievements.
A second aspect of the complaint of lack of intellectual or educational leadership Is that the administration
talks about University problems almost entirely in
terms of numbers. The numbers are then referred to

constraints placed by the Division of the Budget, with
the result that the administration seems to be practic·
ing. as one colleague put it. foliowership in the realm
of finance rather than leadership In the realm of ideas.
Many of my colleagues are realistically sensitive to the
Importance of budget, but are not convinced that a
realistic concern with the budget need eliminate In·
spiration and exhortation in the realm of Ideas. The
lack of educational goals and the persistent emphasis
on budgetary data are two sides of the same com·
plaint.
.
A third aspect of this criticism is the weakness of
academic planning. Academic plans have been
presented periodically over the past five or six years
and the current Vice President for Academic Affairs is
to be congratulated for having written a sensible plan
that has not been shot down by faculty criticism.
Nonetheless some colleagues complained that there is
no corresponding plan for the Health Sciences side of
the University, that there is no Indication given as to
the priority of different aspects of Dr. Bunn's plan . and
that President Ketter has remained officially silent
about the plan since it was presented six months ago. I
personally do not feel that this process of developing
an academic plan has been unduly slow. nor that the
lack of an academic plan is a very serious aspect of the
failure to provide educational leadership: but the point
was pressed by a significant number of my colleagues.
In practice the lack of academic leadership means
that operating decisions are made on the~ of ex·
pediency rather than principle. Very often eaucational
goals are compromised with budgetary constraints.
and since the budgetary constraints are more explk:it

and more firmly defined, It is the educational principles (largely unarticulated) that lose most in the
course of such compromise. This practice of making
decisions by compromising two programs or two
claims no matter what their relative educational merit
seems to occur at every leveJ of the administration

down to departmental chairmen . It is a part of a prac·
tice which leads to a support of mediocrity at the expense of merit and is the most depressing conse-

quence of the lack of academic leadership . It is
because of a widespread sense that we are sinking Into
mediocrity that my colleagues so deeply deplore the
lack cif academic leadership .
One example of this process at work can be found in
the current discussion of the Implementation of Dr.
Bunn's academic planning statement. The whole
discussion

centers

on

the

student/ faculty

ratios

presented on the centerfold of his statement. a focus
where the whole issue is of compromising between the
current situation and the stated numerals. What Is
neglected entirely in this discussion is reference to the

prindples of programmatic depth . of selective
development. and of establishing national centers of
excellence. all of which principles are explained and
endorsed in

earliei sections of the planning statement.

These neglected principles might well bring academic
and eduCl!ltional concerns more

cleculy

into focus .

whereas the current debate centers solely on the
reallocation of resources and is therefore almost wholly a matter of compromise .

Another example is the way in which various
academic units have been reorganized The depan-

ments of Statistics, Biology. and Physical Education .
have aU been split into two , and the Sl.lime step was
contemplated for Mathematics. In none of the cases
was a clear and oveniding academk policy or division

of sub)&lt;!Ct matter the effective reason for the action .
These cases are. therefore . different from the cases of

Communication/ Speech Pathology and An ·
tluopology/ Ungulstics, where the subjed matter Is
divided along conventionally established lines. Instead
there were personalities ahd special interests that were
compromlsed , and imponant academic issues were

postponed rather than faced . In none of these cases
does it appear that the divided cells flourished follow·
ing the mitosis: other parts of the University were con·
fused and cynical about the moves. and some of the
neglected academic issues have remained to haunt us.
Although decisive actions were taken in these cases .

they seem to represent a failure of academic leader·
ship.
II. POOR PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
There is an overwhelming consensus that President
Keber has made too many mediocre appointments.

The most powerful form of the criticisms is that he has
appointed and retained too few people of scholarly
distinction One senior Professor In Arts ond Letters
went so far as to brtng o rather long list of persons in
senior administrative positions who have no significant
academic experience, and others were concerned
about the lack of scholarly eminence or the lack of
academic sympath~s on the part of persons who must
deal aD the time with academiC$. Many of my col·

leagues, on the other hand, IIIOUid trade ICholarly
eminence and ec:edemic sympelhies for more efliclen.
cy in the operation of the University and for more ef.
fectlve and convincing decision making at the Sec:ond
level of the University management. These colleagues
find, however. that both are often lacking, and hence
the consensus of a gMer.l 'dtssatlsfaction with the ap·
pointrnents of the President.
A second aspect of this criticism is that there is no ef.
fective delegation of power within this administration.
Many colleagues express this by saying that it's
necessary to go to the top in order to get anything
done. President Ketter's extraordinary knowledge of
the particular details of the University allows him to
make reasonably Informed judgments, perhaps better
informed judgments than those of his subordinates.
about nearly any aspect of University affairs: and he
has not hesitated to intervene . The other side of his
own personal competence in these matters is that he
rarely refuses to enter Into an issue on the ground that
it has been definitively handed over to some other person. It is this failure to define and respect areas .of
responsibility (a failure which one colleague noted ap·
peared when Dr. Ketter became Graduate Dean)
which makes effective delegations of power very dif.

as

dent "clauical". The incident is In Itself trivial, and H
is certain ihat no such Incident can seriow1y disrupt
the campus: but the accumulation of such incidents on
a large scale begins to have o depressing ond
demoralizjng effect, as if everything that can possibly
go wrong does Indeed go wrong. Together with the
fadure to address problems when they appear ond to
answer Issues promptly, the toleration of small errors
which accumulate over time is seen as one of the factors which leads to the administration always being in a
crisis.

IV. CONCLUSION
I began this section by emphasizing the distinction
between criticism and lack of support. Many of my colleagues who join in these criticisms nonetheless support the President. It should be borne in mind,
however. that these criticisms are not ones which can
be attributed to constraints of the Division of the
Budget or the blame for which can possibly be shifted
to Albany. They are faults of the present administration. whether or not they may be compensated by
strength and achievements of the present administra·
tion in other matters.

licuU.
The failure to define areas of responsibility, and the
failure to refrain from Intervening in defined areas of
responsibility, also make it Impossible to have effective
administrative accountaba!ty. One colleague reports
President Ketter looking at a chart of figures that had
been prepared for a meeting. and noting after a few

seconds that the totals were Inconsistent. The result
was not that anyone was held accountable for the er·

ror. but that the President then corrected the chart. In
other cases the President has been given erroneous in-

formation crucial to hearings in Albany with the person
at fauh suffering no known consequences for his
mistakes . In areas of responsibility which lack deflnl·
tion. a great deal of sloppy management is possible
with no clearly assigned accountability. It Is In these
areas of sloppiness rather than in matters of dear cut

fault that the lack of administrative accountability is
most serious. It leads both to an Inability to help subor·
dinates to Improve their performance (since the job
they are supposed to do remains too loosely defined)
and also to an inability to replace people at appropriate times. More than one colleague remarked

that it is nearly Impossible for President Ketter to
dismiss someone for incompetence. basing this state·
ment on long experience with the President. This is
not surprising, since it is obviously difficult to make it a
rational case for dismissing someone in the absence of
clear·cut delegation of responsibility and standards of

accountability.

Section Four:
President KeHer
And The Faculty
In such a personalized administration, in which the
President personally manages so many details, It is
ironical that so many facuhy sense him as a distant and
remote figure rather than as a person . Very few of the
faculty colleagues with whom I spoke believed that
they knew President Ketter or could make ony
judgments abo\11 him . Very few reported that they had
significant personal Interaction with him. A number
went on to suggesi that this ltseH was a giound of com·
plaint: but I mus1 dissociate myseH from such a view.
since it is asking for a nearly Impossible ideal to sup·
pose that someone should be both an administrator
and a personal friend . Perhaps the President or his immediate staff should get around more often to depart·
mental meetings and other academic gatherings. so

that there Is more direct Interaction : but a good deal of
distance and remoteness must remain between him

and most faculty. In any case. there is a sense of
remoteness, and much of this section is therefore written more on the basis of my own observations and ex-

There are of course exceptions to any such sweeping statement. Nearly every member of the admlnistn,.

perience than on the basis of my meetings with faculty .
I have reponed on the faculty exasperation with the

tlon who was criticized by one person was defended by

admtnl.strative toleration of carelessness. erTor. delay.
proaastination. incompetence , and ineffk:iency .

some other. There are , in addition , members of the
administration whose image is generally favorable
among the faculty . Some colleagues are even satisfied

knowing that they can go to the President to get a pro·
blem resolved-ihaugh it seems obvious to me that
such a personal style of presidency undermines effective administration and is suitable only at a much
smaller institution . With all these reservations noted .
the consensus of criticism on the matter of personnel
management remains very strong.

Ill. MANAGERIAL INEFFICIENCY
The greatest complaint of the faculty about the ad ·
ministration as management Is that no problem is dealt
with until it reaches crisis proportions. This may be
something of an exaggeration. but there are many

cases to which this complaint accurately applies. The
most r~nt cases are those of the Dental School
facUlties and of student registration . Faculty members
experience long and seemingly unjustifiable delays in
responses to reasonable requests . It seems as though

the decisions are postponed as long as possible . and
then made only if the situation becomes a crisis Very
often the issue will have diSlllppe.ared-for example .
when an excellent candidate takes an alternative JOb
. An important asped of crisis management IS an
ability to avoid crises . and this administration is very

widely perceived as lacking that ability. The problems
of admissions. enrollment . and registration have been
known for years on this campus. but is was necessary

that they develop to critical proportions before any action was taken . At the present time there appears to be
a serious effort to address some of these problems,
since the crisis is upon us. but it is too early to say

anything about the &gt;'UcceSS of the attempts to devise
solutions. The point is that the solution will cenainly be
more difficult now that the crisis has Indeed appeared ,
and that it was a failure to address very apparent problems at their early stages that led to the crisis itself.
The crises build and become sometimes Inevitable
because of an accumulation of small tolerated errors.
The toleration of errors is connected with the point
made earlier about the lack of accountability in personnel management. Recently the campus security decided to change the parking stickers, from the sort which
are attached to the backside of the rear-view mirror to
a sort which is attached to the bumpers on the front
and rear . The rea10ns for the change were .not an·

nounced . When the new stickers arrived, they were~o
have a two-year-duration, but it then proved that they
were printed in a non-permanent Ink and would wash
away with the rain. One colleague referred to this ind-

There is no doubt that this results In a climate that is
frustrating for many faculty. and that leads to a tension
between faculty and the administration. As one col ·
league pointed out, however. this frustrating climate is
not a "'chilling'' climate . Not a single serious academic
freedom issue has come to a heatj,..on this campus during Dr. Ketter"s tenure-as President. This may be due
in part to a relatively peaceful historical era. and It may
be a largely negative virtue . but it is not insignificant.
An exa;mination of the dal3 on promotions and ap ·

polntments from 1971 through 1976 showed only one
case in which the -academic review had been favorable
and the Presldent"s judgment was negative. and that

case could not be ITaced to any political fador . Nor has
retrenchment occurred in a chilly or heavy handed
manner. Many of my colleagues charge the administration with attempting II: and In 1976 a strong.
well·organized faculty response was an Important lac·
tor in determining the University's benign reaction to

the budget crunch The point is that this is an institu·
lion where such a faculty response can occur and does

make a difference : and the Center ot Buffalo was
specifically exempted from the censure which AAUP
voted against SUNY for retrenchment actions taken at

other

campuses

In

1976.

lnefflclendes

and

bureaucratic frustrations certainly slow down one"s

work. butt hey do not Interfere with work or change its
character In the way In which a chilly or frightening at·
mosphere might. ,
President Ketter remains as a faculty person with
strong respect for the mechanisms of faculty participation in unlversitr governance. He explidtly endorses

the principle o collegiality. even though this goes
against the advice of the New York State Office of
Employee Relations and runs counter,.to prevailing
practices within SUNY in Its relation witfi the bargaining agent. He frequently consults the faculty through
the formal mechanism of the Faculty Senate. and It is
my experience that he listens carefully to the advice he
gels as a result of such consultations. Some of the colleagues with whom I spoke told me of Instances where
the President hos Ignored faculty advice, ond I om sure
that there have been such instances. It nevertheless remains true that this President ha&lt; endorsed and
respected principles of collegiality in a significant way.
anci that it ls very easy to imagine a far more autocratk
adlfunistration .
One aspect of the President's endorsement of colleglolity hos been his formal recogniUon !&gt;f
mechanisms of cc.nsuhotion. He formally recognized
the Charter of the Faculty Senate last tall, In spHe of
being advised by legal counsel not to do so. There is

....

•

3·

�aloo a tlandlng ...,_.,.m, ~ a laalormal one,
about ~lllo the Praldent'o &amp;o.rd al Faculty Appolubo-. Promollono, and Tenure: the Praldent onookeo :r:•bneoill only &amp;om olllla al nomlnatlonl pNMn
lo
bv the Executive~ al
the Faculty s..-, In c:onbMt to hlo pnodacaoor, who
made ...dl_,nbnents wllh no fonnool c:onoubtlon.
The Praident appean owgularly al meetings of the
Faculty Senate, end frequently al meetings ol the Ex·
eculiYe Commltlee. While hlo poootlclpiitlon In theM
meetings Is most often In the fonn al reports, he occasionally poortldpoota clnctly In Senate debatao, end
there are soonetlmcl frank end lengthy dloc:u.slons
with the Executive ·Commltljle. This again Is a concrete pattern of action In conformity with hlo explicit
endoosement of the p.!ndple of collegiaJ!ty In unlvenl·
ty gowmance.
On the genmol topic of President Ketter and the
faculty, It reoN.ino to be lnsllled that feculty morale Is
very low. In the mlndo al most faculty the sense of
creeping medloalty and lack of academic leadenhlp
overshadows the polnto I have made In the preceding
paragraphs, polnto which were hardly raised at aD in
my Interviews with my colleagues. My colleagues have

'*"

not found academic leadenhlp coming forth from this
administration, and they do not anticipate that this ad·
mlnlltration Is capable of providing H. I found during
the month of October that there Is an enormous reser·
voir of Institutional loyalty and hope on the peri of my
colleagues here. Some day that reservoir must be tapped, so as to produce a more lively Intellectual climate
and a spirit of academic collegiaiJty that reaches further
Into ordinary faculty ranks. When that happens the
low slate of morale wiD no doubt tum Into something
more positive. AI the present time, however, n must
be noted that President Ketter's contributions to the
University have not been In the direction of stimulating
academic enthu~iasm or raising faculty morale.

Section Five:
President Keffer's
Mark
The observations and conclusions In this section , as
In Section Six, are largely my own rather than those of
the constituency I represent. For the most part the
mailers I deal with here were not mentioned in my
meetings with colleagues. The principal exception is
thai the President's personal qualities were ohen mentioned bv those who have worked closely with him.
Wnh respect to these qualities, it is important to
distinguish between them as they apply to the man
and as they apply to his administration. Thus those
who know the man generally consider him to be forthright and trustworthy, but those who know the ad minisbation do not generally consider it to be forthright or trustworthy. I mention this because those
who do not know the man may be Inclined, ~ they ignore this dlsll~ to attribute to the man the
characteristics of his administration. In any case, the
conclusions in this sectiOn and the next are my own .

enumaated In Section Tine or lor the of
decline which I have claat.ed in Section Two. The
thJngo which are uppermoot In the minds al some,
ouch .. lhe bulllng, the tplll c:ampua, lhe ....... In
the Statistics Oepoortment, or the cledne In American
Stuclla, -theM thlngl are al real but palling Importance. At least some of tt-lhir1111 wae not ineYttable
end need not have happened, but their significance
wiD - There are certainly two thJngo lor which he
will be remembered, one lntdec:tual end o n e =·
Over the pall year Praklent Ketler has
lly
railed the lsoue of public expenditures for the benefit
of private lnstltutlonl, and the relation of theM expenditures lo the public support of public lnttltutions. He
has already attracted national altentlon for his
51aterD&lt;:nls. Over many yean the lsoue has been
buried. Over many yean the legrolature has been
dominated bv the graduates of private Institutions,
who u'*"'btadly retain loyalty to those lnttltutions.
With the palling of time then! will be an lnaeaolng
number of graduates of public Institutions In political
office. To i]ilse the Issue at this time is to raise an Issue
which must persist for coming yean, and which holds
more significance for the future of this Institution than
do the many small decisions which have been made
over the past Ave years. The issue has recendy been
taken up by the Chancellor In the addresses he has
made both to the SUNY Senate and to the SUNY
CouncU of Presidents. It wiD not be forgotten , and
President Ketter wiD not be forgotten as the man who
dared to raise it.
When Rldge Lea and the bussing are long forgotlen,
President Keller will be remembered for his role In the
construction of the Amherst Campus. He was involved In the planning of the campus as Vice President
for Factlltles Planning, he got the Initial momentum
under way with the first construction of the Ellicoll
Complex. and he has made the continuing momen tum of construction on the Amherst Campus his lint
priority over the years. There are many who have fell
neglected because of this priority, and there are many
others who have suffered because of the uncontrollable irtegulartties of the construction plans. The
construction process has certainly not been easy.
There are furthermore those who deplore the new
buildings for one or another valid reason .
Nonetheless, the campus Is rapidly becoming functional, and with authorization for the Social Science
building, the Aeld House, and the Student Union , the
project will reach its final stages . It will have consumed
the best energies of the whole of his administration ,
and his substantial role in seeing It through will undoubtedly remain as the greatest mark of his administration.

has less chance to meet. But beyond this Inevitable
condltion there Is also a very IUbolantlaJ remolenesa
&amp;om the thinking al the older leaders of the faculty.
Whie this~ may to oome extent be defended, e Presidetl who ellowo o u c h - . . to grow,
while et the oame time being commltled to collegielity,
Is not one who eltMr can or Intends to remain long In

office.
The third factor to consider lolhe President himoelf.
Ills entirely noomal for a penori to be worn down bv
10 years in ouch an office, end President Ketler Is no
exception . One colleague, for example, noted that he

seems to be defeated, because of the penillent emphasis on what he can't do, on the way his hands are
tied bv one office or another In Al&gt;any. Although he
still has the fuD energies that he has been accustomed
to bring to his duties, he no longer COn&lt;:!mbales u
much on oome of the things In which he used to excel.
Several persons who work In the communlty as well as
on the fecuky noted that he has a reduced community
visibility; he seems to put less time Into his contacts
with the community as weD as Into his contacts with
the faculty . His reduced attention to some of these
mailers Is due In pert to his Increased teaching-a sign
of shifting commitments. In the past year he and his
fellow authors have published another edition of their
text book In Ovtl Engineering, and he has taken up
substantial teaching duties in the department . Indeed,
the Structures Group within the Civil Engineering
Department decided last sumtne! that he would be
one of three people who would regularly teach Structures I and Structures II In coming years. One crass
point to be kept in mind Is that when he returns to professorial ranks, the across-the-board Increases since
1970 will resu1t In a salary about $6,000 higher (for 10
months) than his current salary (for 12 months) . One
must note, finally, his great hesitation this summer as
to whether Qr not to continue past June 30th , a hesitation which was resolved only bv a sense of the immediate urgency of the University's needs In the
budget process.
These various bits of evidence point strongly,
though not infallibly, to the conclusion that Dr. Ketter
will not remain long as President. It Is a conclusion to
which all segments of the University must learn to
adapt , and the sooner the beller.

II. THE IMMEDIATE FUTURE
Over the next year or two there are two important

needs of the University: to maintain the momentum In
construction and to avoid a debUltating Interregnum.
Both needs can be met by President Ketter remaining
In office for at least a year beyond June 30, 1980. The
momentum in construction requires securing the

Section Six:
President Keffer
And The Future
I. PRESIDENT KETrER'S TENURE

-

Whether or not President Ketter should remain in

authorization of the three main buildings mentioned
above. Afterwards there must be an Important effort
made toward the renovation of the Main Street Cam·
pus and the provision of adequate facilities for Health ,
Sciences: but this problem is not one with which 'President Ketter has been closely associated and its solution
can be left to the next administration . The problem of
a debilitating period with an Acting President Is illustrated by the recent history of Stony Brook. With
our already fragile relations with Albany, we would
fare even worse than Stony Brook under an Acting
President. I believe that it was his perception of the d~­
ficulty of avoiding an Acting Presidency if he were to
resign as of June 30 that was a major factor in persuading President Ketter to remain for at least one

I. PERSONAL
Those who have worked with President Ketler have
been impressed by him . He Is forthright, trustworthy,

office is the issue the campus is debating. It Is the issue
on which I am now expected to pronounce myseH. I
have found it an extremely difficult issue on which to

yellr .

loyal, unstinting in his efforts, full of relevant information , and politically astute . Whatever one may think
about his policies. his administration, and the decisions he makes In particular cases, it Is hard not to ad m~e these personal qualities. In many ways the
University Is fortunate to have a person with these
quatitie.s as Its President. There are other institutions
which are considerably less fortunate In this respect. '
Some of these qualities, of course, have a negative
side. President Ketler's forthrightness comes In the
form of a bluntness that ohen rules out graciousness
and diplomacy, and those who feel that a University
President must above all have a graceful and gracious
style will deplore the bluntness more than they admire
the forthrightness. The President's sense of loyally
similarly has a drawback in adminisballve matlers, in
that he finds it very difficult to replace a person for Incompetence. And his own knowledge and Interest in
all aspects of the University has as an adminisbalive
drawback that delegation of authority that is rarely well
defined . His political alertness may lead him to be
cautious about making commitments, and in spite of
his general forthrightness, he therefore sometimes
seems to lack candor. There Is no reason why the
negative side of his virtues should not be openly
acknowledged . Nonetheless. President Keller
deserves to be remembered personally as a blunt,
1uaclical. political man With a deep sense of loyally
rnd a broad grasp of facts.

come to a confident judgment. On this Issue the sum
of my Interviews is of little help; for although the op-

Ill. TWO ESSENTIALS

ponents of President Ketter's continued tenure were
clearly more passionate, they rarely cited faults or

shortcomings which were not acknowledged by his
supporters. After much thought , I have finally concluded that this issue is largely a non-issue. I am convinCed that President Ketter will remain in office

beyond June 30. 1980, and that he will leave that office after one year, or t\AIO years at the most . It would
be no service either to the man or to the institution to
persuade him to remain longer . It would be no service
to either the man or the institution to force him out

sooner. Both his supporters and his detractors should
reconcile themselves to his departure in the near
future . It is the one central fact about the Presidency at

this lime .
Let me trace out the evidence. There is first the fact
that the historical situation has changed dramatically.
President Ketter assumed office in conditions which

ca11ed for momentum in the construction program and
rebuilding the Image of the University In the community. These needs have praclically disappeared . and will
be altogether gone after the authorization for the remaining few buildings in the Amherst Campus. The
new need for the University is for a person who can

rekindle the lively Intellectual spirit which so many of
my colleagues miss. who can make the hard decisions
on issues that have so often been compromised, and
who can help revive the University's national and in·

I~ .

HISTORICAL

President Ketter assumed office as a " law-and·
order" candidate aher the serious disruptions of the
late 60's. His lint task was to maint&amp;n order on campus and to restore the good Image of the University
wll,in the community. Tbese tasks were accomplished, but they are not what he Is likely to be
rerowmbered for In the historical long run. Nor will he
long be remembered for those faults that I have

·-4-- --·· ... ·-- ---·

tellectual stature . Tbe man who serves the University
In the one historical context cannot meet its need in
the next one. A blunt, practical, political person Is not
morally beller or worse than a subtle, learned, prin·
cipled one; but they are besi suited to different situaHons.
There

is ,

second,

the

lnaeasing · remoteness

between President Kttter and the faculty . This Is to
some extent inevitable, since there are Inevitably

young members joining the faculty who the President

The first essential for the next year or two Is to honor
President Ketter for his achievements and to support
him in his last year or two in office. Nothing can be
gained by trying to chip away at a person who is completing years of strenuous and dedicated service to the
institution . He has served honorably and he deserves
honor. The University, furthermore. needs to have a
President who can serve With the support of his faculty
and staff.
The second essential is to prepare for a smooth tran·
sition to the next administration so as to avoid an

Acting Presidency. The Interests of the University
urgently require this. All segments ol the University
and all shades of opinion within it can coalesce on this
point. The greatest service which the Evaluation T earn
can do for the University is to convey to the
Chancellor and to the Trustees the urgency of laying
the groundwork now for the choice of the successor to
President Keller and a smooth transition to the next
administration .

,

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                    <text>Senate OK's Gen Ed, hears poll results
cs--.-1)
PSS evaluation of Ptesident is mixed ,._.,_,_11
NOV. 8,1979
VOL 11 e NO. 10

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

Recombinant DNA research underway
By Uncia Grace-Kobas
News Burt":au StoH

Three scientists at U/ B are conducting
research projects thot involve the use of
recombinant DNA techniques. the chairman of the University's Biosafety Committee has announced .

Dr. Joseph Kite , chairman of the
15-member committee that

was ap-

pointed by U/ B President Roben L.
Ketter In May. 1978. said that recomb!·
nant DNA research began on campus
early this year and Is closely monitored by
the committee, which has developed an
extensive series of guidelines and restrk·
tions to regulate it.

"While there has been considerable
debate in the scientific community and

elsewhere about the risks of recombinant
DNA research . we feel its advantages
outweigh possible disadvantages.·· Dr
Kite said. ··we have looked at it very hard
and are proceeding as cautiously as we
can .
"We are as sure as we can be that there
is minimum risk with this work.'' he add·
ed . noting that the Biosafety Committee
is ··very responsible io the task we have;
also. we want to be sure we do all we can
to inform the community."

Experience suggests It's safe
Noting that work with recombinant
DNA has been going on for several years
at various research centers wfth no pro·
blems occurring, Dr. Kite said ... With this
experience, we think it's safe to proceed
in a responsible way."
All recombinant DNA research is sub·
ject to guidelines issued in 1976 and
revised In 1978 by the National Institutes
of Heahh . The U/ B guidelines developed
by the Biosafety Commiltee are more
rigid than the NIH guidelines. Kite
pointed out.
"We are not just a rubber stamp com·
mittee for the NIH ." he said . "In no way
would our guidelines ever be more
relaxed than those of NIH ."
The committee has several non·
Universlty· affiliated members , Kite

noted . It also has the poweY to disallow
any research project that members feel
may be questionable, and has set up an
information center in the Office of Environmental Health and Safety so people
in the community have access to in formation about the research .

No threat of toxic or poisonous
agents
Kite emphasized that the U/ B research
in volves no work that wo uld produce a
toxic or poisonous agent , adding that the
NIH itseH has all but excluded work with
pathogenic organisms.
The three U/ B researchers now involved In recombinant DNA work are Dr. Ed·

ward Niles. first to conduct it on campus.
and Drs. Michael Garrick of the Depan ·
ment of Biochemistty. and Jeremy
Bruenn of the Depanment of Biological
Sciences' Division of Cell and Molecula r
Biology . Four othe r researche rs have
submitled proposals fo r their work . All
proposa ls must be approved by the com·
mittee before submittal to fund10g agen·
des
The host organism used on the U/ B
research IS a strain of Eschench•a col• . a
very common bacterial cell used as a tool
for many years by microbiologists Thts
strain , E. coli Kl2 . is considered extremely safe for recombinant DNA
research because evidence so far in-

dicates It cannot survive outside
laboratory conditions.
In fact, the NIH commi1tee which
authored the original guidelines recom·
mended in September that recombinant
DNA experiments in which E coli Kl2
serves as host be exempted from the strictures of the guidelines. Such experiments
account for an estimated 80 to 85 per
cent of those now covered
Kote said. however. that the U/ B
guidelines would not exempt E. coli Kl2
work even if Nl H does
Public will be lniC&gt;rmed
The committee will keep the public ful·
•See ' DNA.,'

p••• 9 , col. 1

281 faculty protest evaluation procedure
The Presidential evaluation procedure

as presently set·up Is both superficial and
meaningless, a sizeable group of professors charged this week .
A petition carrying the signatures of
281 members of the facuhy was forward ·
ed Tuesday to SUNY Chancellor Clifton
Wharton protesting "the terms under
wh\ch the upcoming campus evaluation
is being conducted."
In a cover Jette&lt; signed by Professor
Mark Shechner of English , six faculty
members representing the group note
that ••foremost among the concerns of the
signatories is that this evaluation of our
campus ls not part of a decision to reap·
point President Ketter , which came as a
surprise to this facuh~. and to many of us ,
an unwelcome one '
1be Jette&lt; also argues that procedures
eslablished for the evaluation are by lheir
very nature destined not to give a fuU and
accurate picture of how a complex and
highly diversified unlversl1y operates, The
way the evaluation is being conducted
suggests "that the future of lhis campus Is
not being lOken seriously" by Whanon ,
the letter conlendo.
Shechner signed the letter on behalf of
Prolesson Laurence Schneider, History,
&amp;w.n Segal, Psychology; Tho~s C:on·
noUy, English; William Gill, Engmeenog,

is tentamount to no evaluation at all."
The group strongly protests "the separa·
tion of this evaluation of our campus from
the question of the reappointment of the
president ,·· he emphasized
Funher, the idea "that three strangers.
no maner how distinguished and compe·
tent , who shaJI be among us for three
Not anti-Ketter per se
days , can provk:le an adequate assess·
The petition should not be Interpreted
ment of our educational program in the
as reflecting anti-Ketter sentiment per se,
absence of a full -scale seH-study as a
Shechner cautioned , but it does reflect
prelude to their visit, strikes us as a
concern that Albany appears to feel that
fallacious one at best ." Shechner argued
the presidential review is not a serious
Copies of the le1ter and the petition
business.
also went to Donald M. Blinken , chairAlthough circulated outside the
man,
State Un iversity of New York
framework of the Faculty Senate, the
Board of Trustees. and Roben Millonzi .
petition is not to be interpreted either as
chairman
of the Coundl of the Universicriticism of Senate Chairman Newton
ty.
Garver and the role he has taken on
behalf of faculty in the evaluation pro·
Change of signals dlatteulng
cess. Shechner continued. He Said , to
The petition itself points out that up unthe cont,..ry, that through the singletil this loll faculty had been led to undershanded effons of Garver, it now appears
tand that the president would be subject
the review Is going to be a serious prothis year to a ftve ·year review as a condicess, at this end at least .
tion of reappointment, and. that such a
Shechner said the Intent Is to aeate in
review wouJd signiftcantly ln110lve facuhy
Abany a sense of the concern which U/ B . in assessing the performance of the ad·
facuhy feel about the evaluation.
ministration. For that reason , the petition
In the letter to Wharton. Shechner
statement clarifies, the Facuhy Senate
noted lhat facuhy signing the petition
Executive Commlnee In Spring 1978
.. believe that an evaluation upon which
voted to defer deliberation on the ad·
nothing is at stake -lor the admll'llstrationministration until the normal re.,;ew pro·
and Nicholas Kaz.arinoff. Mathematics.
Shechner said the nearly 300 individuals who signed the petition repre·
sent o brood spectrum of University facul·
ty , primarily tenured faculty , aaoss all
disciplinary and political lines.

cess could take place. Faculty are
d ist ressed . the statement goes on, that a
"nominal procedure with built-In constraints on com municaUon" has been
substituted for a full·scale assessment.
Such an assessment . the petition state·
ment continues, "can predictably
discover nothing that isn't Immediately
obvious or superficial.
"We feel that President Ketter's
stewardship of our University cannot
reasonably be assessed by such a pro#
cedure , and we protest the neglect of
issues that it seems to imply."
The idea behind the petition . Shechner
reitereted . is to convince the Chancellor
that "there is wk:lespread discontent on
this campus with methods chosen for the
evaluation."
Shechner said that those colleding
petition signatures reported about a 75
per cent return from among faculty and
departments that were canvassed . The
signatures were collected In a maHer of
two weeks . With more time . he saki ... we
could hove doubled the number ofsignatories without &lt;l~ficuhy "
He sold he hod thought only Arts &amp;
Letters faculty feh like "seventh sons" of
the University, but found that professors
from severi\l disciplines shore this
"negled,ed': f~eWng.

�l

.......
i' j

I

Faculty gets
early results
of poll on Ketter
B11.k&gt;!lce 8~
R-SW!

68 per cent of facuhy members responding to the Facuhr Senate's questionnaire on presidenlia perlormance indicated that President Keuer has "acted
to improve relations with communHies in
the region ," aU or most of the time.
49 per cent of respondents indicated
he has hardly ever or never "encouraged
discussion on attica! issues and solidted
faculty op inions before mak in g
decisions ," with only 23 per cent Indicating tlu!t he does so "all or most of the
time.''

These were the most faverable and
most unfavorable ratings received by the
President in the survey (based on the dnlerence between those who strongly
agree or strongly disagree with a given
statement on his perlorrnance.)
Preliminary reports on results of the
survey were circulated at Tuesday's
Faculty Senate meeting.
The Senate also voted to accept the
General Education Program for Foil '81
implementation , and again approved ~
September 1980 starting dote lor the COllege Skills component of the pla n .
Arter the debate and vote, at about
mid -meeting, Senators were handed
copies of the preliminary report-con sisting of six tables-which gave some

findings of the Faculty Survey on University Goals . Responsibilities and Perlormance. The tables were thought 10 be
seH-.explanatory so little discussion or explanation followed .
According to the report, which will be
given to the Evaluation Team Sunday

along with othe.r survey breakdowns not
yet available. 28 per cent of the faculty
(424 out o( 1,526) responded to the
survey. Soclcll Sciences returned the
most with 39 per cent of the faculty
responding. Next came Educitlional
Studies itt 37 per cent; Arts and Letters at
28 per cent: Engineering and Applied
Sciences at 27 per cent: Natural Science
and Math at 26 per cent. Because of
small numbers. respondents from the colleges and SILS were combined for a total
return of 64 per cent.
Seven of 13 facuhy areas had a return
of 25 per cent or less. They are: Manage·
ment . 25 per cent; Libraries, 24 per cent:
and Health Sciences, Law and Social
Work. with 19 per cent each. Architecture was the nadir at 5 per cent. Under a
classification of "Others," Academic Affairs. DUE and EOP registered a 20 per
cent return.
Professor Theodore Mills, who chaired
the subcommittee whkh prepared the
survey and report, said he was Initially
disappointed with whal he thought was a
poor showing by faculty. Later he was informed . however, that the respondent
rate was twice as high as what the Senate
usually receives from its surveys and
madings.
· Table 2 of the report gave the rank aud
length of service of respondents. Most
faculty who returned the survey (44 per
cenO . are full professors; 31 per cenl are
associate professors; 18 per cent, a ssistant professors; and 4 per c; nt, instructors or lecturers. Eight faculty-or 2 per
cent of the respondents- did not give
their rank on the questionnaire.
Individuals working at the Universny
between 10 to 15 years accounted lor 35
per cent of the respondents. Fourteen per
cent have been here from 16 to 20 years.
Eight per cent have been at U/ B 20 years
or longer. Those with 3 to 9 years service
mode up 31 per cent of the respondents
and those with less than three :,~eMS composed 13 per cent.
According to the table on goals, 37 per
cenl of respondents {eel ti-e University's
most lmportant goal is to .. serve as a
center to advance knowledge through
pure and applied rewan:h." The second
aAd third ranked goals, end'&gt;t"Sed by 28
per cent and 21 per cent respoctlvely
were to ''serve as a center for the effectiv;
tr.nsmisslon of knowledge to students"
and to "serve 8\ a fP!I""' of new Ideas
that enhance the quallt\r of !tie" sodeiy
whether those ~ ar~ In . ~:·

ar

s:..,.,

November 8, 1979

PSS

Organization applauds Ketter,
but Area representatives
point out 'shortcomings'

literature or arts."
All other goals suggested In the surve~
received less than a 2 per cent backing.
The most important function of the Of.
lice of the President , according to 80 per
cenl of the respondents, Is the selection
of "competent subordinates. ':/me next
most slgnnicanl endorsed by t.8 per cent
Is "&amp;etling institutional goals." Third
ranked at 67 per cent Is "protection of
academic freedom ."
Also considered Important functions
are: "assu_ming ultimate responsJbility in
crises," 66 per cent; "clearly articulating
the University mission," 64 per cent ;
"allocation of resources according to long
term goals." 61 per cent; "opening channels between administration and faculty,"
58 per cent: and "reinforcement of
wisdom versus political pressures." 50
per cent .
President Ketter was credited by 68 per
cent of respondents with "improving rela Hons with the community." This was his
most favorable rating . •
The following aspects of Ketter's per·
formance were rated most favorable (that
is, at least 46 per cent of respondents Indicated he does them "all or most of the
time"): bases decisions on his view or objectives (6 7 per cent) ; manages according
to the Board of Trustees (58 per cent) ;
pro!ects academic freedom (57 per cent) ;
encourages affirmative action {52 per
cent) ; accepts ultimate responsibility (56
per cent) : advocates effectively in Albany
{46 per cent) ; and allocates resources according to long-term goals (46 per cent) .
These points of the President's performance received more unfavorable
ratings. that is, 39 per cent to 54 per cent
of respondents indicated he ""hardly ever
or never"' does the following : solicits
faculty opinions (49 per cent). clearly
presents the mission.of the University (54
per cent) ; shows leadership in securing
outside funds (42 per cent}. sets future
goals clearly (5 1 per cenO ; shows leadership In setting high academic standards
(50 per ce nt) ; protects against political
demands (49 per cent) ; appoints competent administrl'Jtive Stl'Jff (46 per cent) ;
and anticipates crises (39 per cent) .
The last table. whk:h continues to give
evaluittions of the President . seems to
reinforce what was indicated earlier about
Ketter"s prowess in public relations. 61
per cent of respondents agreed or strong·
ly agreed that he presents a favorable image to the public, 28 per cent fe lt the op·
posite. The President's main failing , ac·
cording to the findings , is that he shows a
ll'Jck of creativity in performance . 68 per
cent ind k:ated they disagree or strongly
disagree that he exhibits creative
leadership.
Other findings are : 39 per cent agree
the President is candid in dealings with
the University community. 46 per cent
disagree: 36 per cent agree he responds
to aiticlsm with poise, 46 per cent
disagree; 32 per cent agree Ketter has
strengthened the administrative sector.
54 per cent disagree ; 28 per cent agree
the University has Improved under his
leadership, 58 per cenl disagree; 28 per
cent ~ree Ketter ls doing as good a job as
can reasonably be expectttd, 60 per cent
disagreed ; 23 per cent agreed the President's personal style enhances performance, 61 per cent disagreed and 20 per
cent agreed that his policies have
strengthened faculty . 69 per cent
disagreed . 29 per cent agreed he dellnes
academic goals clearly; 68 per cent
disagreed.
Senate Chairman Newton Garver emphasized he had little to do with the
survey Instrument and expects the subcommittee who -prepared It to make a
presentation to the evaluation team.
To date , Garver told Senators, he has
'J)Oken to about 175 colleagues from d~­
lerent areas of the University at some 50
separate meetlngs, Most of the ln~lvlduals he met also consuhed with
other-s before speaking to ~im, he noted .
No format lor discussion was used, so
facu~y were able to bring up what they

wished.
• ··
• s.o. .s.,;.;.; ....

~

- ·'

;

In a yet unapproved draft "Condition
of the Campus and Leadership Evaluation" report, the Professional Staff Senate
has applauded President Ketter forfostering and maintaining a good working relationship with the group. Statements from
Individual component areas of the PSS,
however, which compose another part of
the report , are more criticaJ in tone and
point up several Presidential "shortcomIngs."
The drah report was presented to the
PSS lor revision and vote after Reporter
deadline Tuesday . At that time,
however, lengthy debate took place over
the emphasis of two sections of the
document: the organizational response
and the summary . The PSS will
reconvene at noon today (Nov. 8) In 207
Norton to continue its deliberations. The
draft report was Issued by the Ad Hoc
Committee on the Condition of the Campus, a group formed by the PSS Executive Committee. The process used in
the review. whtch was approved at a
spedal PSS meeting last month , Included
holding five area meetings (covering all
professional staff constituents) . Other
verbal and written com munications with
Senators or PSS officers were also permitted . As previously reported, all area
meetings were: sparsely attended.
Instead of picking out commonalities
among area reports and combining them
into one statement as originally intended .
the Executive and Ad Hoc committees
decided after hearing them, that each
area should Issue its own statement. Certain commonalities are underscored .
however, in the overall report's summary
statement.
The report 's organizational response
was written by PSS Chairman Tom
Hurley after either verbal or written communication with six of the seven past PSS
chairs still at U/ B Hurley noted that
some of the past chairs felt it was difficult
at best to discuss the relationship between
the President and the Senate without ad dressing the condition of the campus. In
general. however. it was thought the
President has been '"consistently suppor·
tive. cooperative , encou rag ing. accessible and communicative to the point of being blatantly honest. "
During the past few yea rs. Hurley
pointed out, the PSS has been more
heavily involved in the administratlvP
consuhation and decision -making process. and is currently represented on the
Academic Cabinet as well as on every
major University committee .
Are• 1: Health Sciences
The Area I report , composed of input
from Health Sciences constituents .
prefaces complaints by acknowledging
problems predpllated by "geographic
dospersion. lock of State funding. and inadequate facilities . It then, however,
points out that the staff is "disappointed"
that the Administration has failed to
"'make diffk.ult decisions"' such as the
reallocation of resources away from
"weak and less essential untts'" in order to
maintain the bask: function of "essential
services" such as libraries. maintenance
and animal services.
The Area I statement credits the Administration with '" stabilizing the University environment and solidifying relation ships with the com munity," but complains that internal problems have not
been handled so successfully. A case In
point, is the "protracted debate" that
developed betweer, the dean of
Undergraduate Education and Vice
Presidents Bunn and Pannill; a debate
which the report claims, "exacerbated the
Heoilh Sciences - Academic Core spill ."
In addition , Area I charges the Administration with a "lack of loresighl" In
dealing with enroUmea·.t problems· lillie
"positive leadership and concrete t'ncentives" to nl4ke o general education program viable, and Insufficient attention to
complaints of students regarding "calibre
of teaching" and ability of teachen
to "speak English clearly."

Auf ..; ~- ~~

_.

Ar~ 0 constituents (oore campus pre).

lesslonals) noted in their report that judgIng the quality of leadership Is difficult
without a clear understanding of an administrator's responsibilities. Neve rtheless, the report indicates that campus
leadenhlp "seems to be sporadic a nd
reactive," changing priorities witho ut a
"clearltdefined sense of direction a nd
goals.'
Area II also noted general agreement
on 10 other points. Among them a re: top
admlnislralive a ppointrntnts at times do
not seem to Indicate good executive
judgement; authority Is not properly
delegated and loci of accountability Is
obscure; besides the Amherst Campus
build-out , the President's goals for the
University are poorly understood; longrange planning has been Inadequate and
a backlog of problems has currently
resulted from II: proble ms are allowed to
hang in limbo too long without resolulion, and the President is not visible
enough and appears '" uncaring" to some
members of the University community.
Area Ill: Student Support Services
Professional staff from Student S upport Services in Area Ill complain in their
report about many of the same things .
They die a lack of long-range planning,
delays in the decision-making process.
and a ''lack of cohesion and coherence"
in relationships between units.
It is also generally believed by Area Ill
representatives that a "communication
problem" exists at the University. Examples incl ude "duplication o{ efforts by
offices and committees, overlapping and
dysfunctional systems and , at times. erroneous information ."'
The Area Ill report concedes ,
~owever. that the University community
IS not always aware of constraints placed
on the Presiden t and his top staff. who
are often falsel y blamed lor decisions out
of their control. In addition, the report
credits the President with being accessible
and '' honest and straightforward in his
approach to problems and individuals."
Area IV: Li brarin, ECC, Computi ng
Area IVs report comes in two sections;
one from the Libraries and the Educational Communication Center a nd the
other based on Input of professional staff
in Computing Services.
. The aitlclsms leveled by the first group
onclude a lack of ability by Adminlstralion
to make hard and fast decisions. absence
of political muscle by the President in
Central Admin istration and State agen Cies; a reactive rather than active ,..
management , and an annoying "quality
of arrogance" surrounding the President
and his top staff.
According to the report, professional
staff In ihe Ubraries and ECC would like
to see, among others: strong leadership
in the face of declining enrollments; a
total commitment to Millard Fillmore Col·
lege; more cohesiveness on the vice
presidential level; and more clearly defined goals and missions.
Comments from professionals In Computing Services are restricted to concerns
about their dally work situation . Their
report notes that some participants ex·
pressed concern they did not have the
qualifications to properly assess the President, while others felt 4hey might encounter criticism from peers for speaking
too candidly. In general, those who at tended the .Computing Services meeUng
feel "cut off' from the rest of the University and " unique" In terms of the types of
problems they experience and how they
deal with them.

Aru V: Adminltotr•tlo n
. The report from Anea V, ~o;hose conshtuents are professional staff In University Administration and Operations, seems
least cntlcal of the President. Their statement takes into account the faculty and
student unrest present when Ketter took
office nearly • decade ago , and the ad~lstrative problems he Inherited from
has predecessor. It also contends HIs "unfair to say the Administration reacts
~ to. problems, since its ability to

•-'PSS·-·.col·

�November 8, 1979

.:II Iilia

C.C. Furnas
College seeks
new master

Nobel

toast

At Stanford, you could find yourself in an elevator wilh six of them. but in
Buffalo, two Nobel Laureate visitors on one day is news. Here, Dr. Frederick
Sanger, the English biochemist who won the 1958 prize in Chemistry,
toasts Dr. Manfred Eigen, of Germany, 1967 laureate in the sa m e field, at a
dinner given by President and Mrs. Ketter Monday. Sanger was here for an
address sponsored by CeU and Molecular Biology; Eigen, for three lectures
as the 1979 Cowper lecturer in Natural Sciences and Math .

• Faculty Senate
(fro• . . . . Z, eoL 2)

Terming the informat ion he gleaned
from the sessions. "fascinating." Garver
said he has prepared a 30-page report for
the evaluation team which incorporates

the interviews and the survey results. In
addition. he is composing a list of 33 peo-

ple representing "all corners of the
University" With whom the team can
meet , and is sending the group about a
dozen written statements he received
regarding the campus evaluation .
The evaluation team has asked Garver
to meet with them Sunday to help work
out an agenda.
Ketter informed Senators that the team
has asked him for a listing of all recognized representative bodies on campus as
wen as minutes from a few of their last
meetings. They also want one week's
edit:ons of aU campus newspapers.
Ketter relayed that a car will be at the
team'$ disposal as well as the services of
Rose Levin, a secretary in Institutional
Studies.
Most of the debate concerning GE
centered around the themes component.
Senator Constantine Yeracaris voiced
objection to the lad that the themes listed
in 1he report show little concern for a
"social aspect ." while others suggested
that the aeation of new courses to fi~
themes was ··artifk:ial.. ·· lnsteati. some
Senators feh current courses could be
made more relevant and new ones
shoukt only be created in a .. natural
way.. -when a need arises. Senator
Erwin Segal spoke out most strongly
against the themes calling them
"vacuous , and counter-intellectual.''
GE Chairman Peter Hare and comm it·
tee member Tom Headrick countered
that the themes presented in the report
were not meant to be exhaustive in
nature. but merely iJlustrative of what
could be done . They also pointed out the
themes were not onty developed as a
framework for the creation of courses,
but also as a means of identifying currently available courses which could be taught
under them . Arguing for the themes.
other Senators noted they give the program focus and coherenoe and also serve
as a guKie to students.
Professor Jeremy Noble moved that
the number of themes be sliced from I 0
to 20 to 8 to 10 Noble fek some of the
themRS wer" ".scraping the bottom of the

barrel" in terms of content and a sufficient
number of courses could be created using
half as many as proposed . This senti·
ment , however. was opposed by other
Senators who liked the flexibility and
unrestrictive nature of a greater number
of themes. Noble's motion failed .
Senalor Philip Ahbach spoke against
the descriptive language used some
places In the report. He contended the
langu age was sexist in nature. A motion
was made to edit the document to make
it ·•gender neutral. " The voice response
to the vote was too close to call and will
be reported in the Senate's minutes.

Senator Segal then asked why just the
term "foreign language" was used to
describe the knowledge area "cross·
cultural or foreign language studies."
Segal reminded Senators that a pro·
tracted debate concerning the add1tion of
cross-cultural studies to the knowledge
area was settled months before by Senate
vote . After some debate. Senators
agreed
to
add ing
back
the
"cross-cultural" terminology.
Senators also voted to strike o ut a
passage in the document which indicated
that Millard Fillmore students are likely to
be deficient in the College skills area.

Agenda indefinite as
panel visit nears
At Reporter deadline. efforts to get a
line o n the schedule for the presidential
evaluation team's visit next week proved
futile _
•
Apparently , no one on campus Is serving as coordinator of scheduling for the
three-member panel due 10 be here
November II through 13 . Not even the
President's Office had any information .
"Why should they?". asked a member
of the facult y ... It's not their committee.··
(Nehher the Faculty Senate nor the Pro·
fessio nal Staff Senate had been contacted
as of T uesd.ay concerning interviews with
the panel.)
One informed sou rce said the group
will anive here over the weekend and will
at that point begin 10 set up its schedule of
appointments and Interviews.
Dr. Murray Block of the SUN'( Central
staff has been assigned as the- liaison officer between the evaluation team and
SUNY .
Meanwhile . most of the speculation
and interest about the vislllng group
centers on its chairman , John S . Corbal·
ly , the former president of the University
of IDinols. Corbally has already indicated
he will not ignore survey and polling
results , even though SUNY guidelines at·
tempt to preclude their use.
Various rumors conce"ling Corbally's
style .a"'! .. h~. vieWs ,.!&gt;( ..~n)li~t.sii\I: . ~.d-' ·

.ministration have been circulating around
the campus in recent weeks.
Corbally has been described by those
who have had dealings with him (in·
eluding President Ketter who served with
him on activities of the State UniversityLand-Grant Institution association) as
"tough -minded ," "independenl , '' and
"innovative." He's definitely his own per·
son. observers agree .
Also. he's "astute." "He won't be here
30 minutes before he has a feel for whal's
goin§ on. " one who knew him at Illinois
said .
Other members of the evaluation pa nel
are: Edwin Young , president. Un iversity
of Wisconsin , and David Z. Robinson .
vice president , Carnegie Corporation. a
member of the City University of New
York Board of Trustees .

Research up
Binghamton's recently filed annual
report acknowledges a banner year for
obtaining external funds for research and
programs . For the Research Foundation
fiscal year ending In June 1979. the cam·
pus received new awatds totaling
$4.820,805. an Increase of 36. 1 per cent
over the previous year, While the number
of new awards lncre~ 4.6, ~ pe~ ~n_t..

A search committee chaired by Pro·
lessor Carmelo Privitera has announced
its interest In identifying candidates from
among the regular University faculty for
the position of master of Cli_llo rd Furnas
College. the oldest and largest residential
unit In the Collegiate System .
By providing a living-learning environment In which students can expand their
awiSreness of the Interactions among
various disciplines. the College attempts
to bridge the gap separating the scientist
and the humanist.
The membership of the search commit·
tee itself reflects "this fundamental interest in seeking the un ity underlying
disparate d isciplines." a spokesperson for
the Colleges said .
In addition to the chairperson . the
committee includes : Dr. Joyce Sirianni.
associate professor o f anthropology: Dr.
Costas Veracarts. professor of sociology;
Steve Rovner. Michael Franco Charles
Guizzotti. and Beth King. st ud ents from
Clifford Furnas College .
.,According to the College charter. the
master of Clifford Furnas College is
responsible for all activities of th e unit. in·
eludi ng course and fa c ulty develo pme nt ,
residential life. COOP:erative ventures on
the part of students• and Fellows of the
College. and interaction with -other programs both within and outside the Col·
legiate System. Such duties may be per·
formed as pan of a master's full academic
load or thro ugh rel eased- time arrange ments with a faculty member's
regular University department.
The committee welcomes both applications and nominatio ns by November 29
directed to Dr. Privitera , c/ o the Colleges
Dean's office. 350 Porter Quad .. Ellicott
Complex . Buffalo. New York 14261.
Telephone Inquiries should be directed to
Dean Murray Schwartz (636-23 16) or to
Dr. Privitera (636-2891) .

Orchestra open
to sightreaders
Have you ever fantasized about playing in a symphony orchestra - except
you'd be afraid to audition?
If you're a good sightreader. show up
at the Goodyear Hall Band Room (• 155)
on the Main Street Cam pus. Tuesday
nights at 7 :30. and you will become a
member of Paul Schmid"s sightreading
orchestra.
Since there are no performances. there
are no rehearsals. The Idea is to read
three to four pieces of orchestral literature
every week , without repeats . Of course.
it you are loath to arrive totally un·
prepared. Mr. Schmid. who o rganized
this project a couple of months ago , does
announfe the next week's repertoire at
each session.
But if you're confident enough to wing
it . just bring you r instrum ent. and the
scores will be provided . If you 're really
proficient, you could be soloist in a con·
certo, with l;,e orchestra accom panying
you .
"We have a su rprising number of musi·
cians from Medklne and Dentistry,'' says
Mr. Schmid . He doesn't theorize why:
'"They just have that kind of mind . Mo re
than you'd find In the School of Architecture , for example ."
There are also high school teachers
and students, advertising executives ,
U/ B Music Department students, ~ nd
two teachers who drive in from Fredonia
each week (they play oboe and tympani) .
Although regula r attendance is not
demanded . ··everybody comes back. "
says Schmid . ··They love it."
Right now there are 20 mem bers;
Schmid wants to Increase it to 50. and Is
looking for string players, especially.
They' ve done. ~o far , all of Brahms' sym·
phonies, the Beethoven Viohn Concerto.
plus lots of Schumann. Haydn and
Mozart. The repenoire is traditional: the
newest work was Prokofiev's Classical
Symphony.
Schmid , himseH. Is a 1975 graduate of
Fredonia, curren~y working at U/ B
towards an MFA in contrabass pe:rfor·
mance. and he plays bass in the Buffalo
· Philharmonic Orchestra . He's an aspiring
conqudQr, which is o~e qf the repsons ~e . •
forme~ this gro~ . · ·
· ·
·

�November

8~ 1979

VIEWPOINTS
N-urastes
French vitrification plant
now operates routinely ,
Chon wants readers to know

_

Editor:
As you may remember. I stllted in m y
lester lo you of November 1 that in the
future I would not respond to politicallyorie nt ed debaters From past ex periences, I hllve concluded that such an
engagement is a total waste of time .
In order to aid the generlll relldership
of the Reporter, however. I wou ld like to
ask you very respectiully that the
Reponer reproduce at least the first page
of the enclosed article on Wllste manage me nt which appeared in the Decem ber
1978 Issue of Nuclear News. ·
This particular article. on the vitrifica tion plant at Marcou le in France. may
e nable your readers to evaluate for
themselves whether "After 35 years of
generating nuclear waste. no solu tion ex·
ists to the waste problem an ywhere in rh ~
world." (Reponer. November 1. 1979.
Marvin Resnikoft) .
The amount and intensity of distOrtiOns
which some of these people are ma king
are sfmply staggenng

lion of only about 60 blocks per year.
Development work on waste solidification was started at the Fontenay-auxRoses resellrch center near Paris back in
1957 . After looking at many solid~icatio n
processes. boro-silicate glass was selected
as the preferred route , and a small pilot
plant was built at the Saclay center in
1962. This was followed by a pilot plant
at Marcoule in 1969. which was ope rated
for three yea rs lind produced some 12 te
of glass containing about 5 MCi of fissio n
product activity. Sampl~this glass are
examined from time to time. and after
periods of more than six years' storage
there is no trace of deterioration In
parallel. there has been a program of ac cele rat(td radiati on damage tests
estirnac.d to have simulated 900 years of
st ora ~~ ttgain with sat1sfac10ry results

Encouraging

With this encouragmg basic mformatlon . work was stan ed o n the AVM plant
in 1971 Inactive testing of the plant .
aimed at proving the remote maiO·
Sincerely yours.
tainability of every item within the plant .
-Wan Y. Chon
started in 1977 and took almost 18
Professor of Engineering
months Active tests staned in July of this
D1rector
year. and aboUI 50 blocks of act1ve glass
Nuclear Science and
have been produced . At the end of OcTechnology Facili1y
tober the first replacement of the ceram1c
core of the vitnhcation furnace was due to
permission of American Nuclear
take place . This IS probably the most
Society.
•
critical of the mamtenance JObs likely to
be encountered 10 the plan! . and if all
goes well . 11 should prov1de fmal confirFrench well oatiolied
mation of the plant for extended 111
with vitrification plant
dustnal operation
The high -level waste vitrif1ca11on plant
Other countnes are showmg conat Marcoule in France. init~ally designated
siderable Interest in the AVM process
as a demonstrlltion plant , Is now effecGermans are negoliatmg a license to use
tively operating on a routine industnal
11 on the WAK demonstration reprocess·
basis lifter an exceptionally smo01h
1ng plant. and n is a st rong comender for
period of test operation With a team of
eventual adoption at the Gorleben cen ter
21 distributed among six shifts. the plant
(see NN . February 1978. p 48) h has
is now operat1ng contin uo usly lind will be
also been designated as the preferred
used to solidify the backlog of military
process for deahng with the backlog of
waste lind future a ccu mula tion of highwaste at the Eurochemic reprocessing
level waste from the reprocessing of
plant in Belgium. The Japanese are
nlltural uran ium fue l.
repor1ed to be showing keen Interest fo r
Currently the reprocessi ng of natural
ns
use at the Tokai Mura reprocessing
uranium from France's firSI-generauon
plant. and it has also been suggested that
gas-graphite power reactors is bemg
Bntish Nuclear Fuels Limited could adopt
phased out at U. Hagu e and will be
the AVM process 1nstead of its own rival
transferred to Mllrcoule, where there is
capacity to reprocess about 1000 tonnes,. Harvest process for a demonstration
VItrification plant at Wind scale ...
per year of sPent fuel The vitrification
COGEMA says tha11he cost of the new
plant at Marcoule - known as Atelier de
VitrificatiOn plant proposed for La Hague
VItrification de Marcoule (AVM)- has
is expected to be in the region of FF SOO
now achieved its desagn capability for the
m111ion ($ 125 milhon)
production of one !50-litre block of glass
per day. lind u should therefore be
capable of workmg off the backlog of
wast e from 20 years of reprocessing
operations at Marcoule over the next few
years Aher that , the waste accumulation
from the French gas-graphite reactors - lind one Spanish reactor-will
llmount to a reqUirement for the producEditor:
Because of lack of interest 1n the
University's football team by a majority of
students. evidenced by their absence
A c.mpus communrty MW$pap(&gt;f publiShed
from Rotary Field on Sa1urday. Oct 27 .
eoteh Thufld.y by ttw 0wtwn of Public AJ
1979. and considering the current flap
fan_ Sc.1e UNY«rliry of New Y&lt;Wk At Buffalo
over the waterfowl in res1dence at Lake
Ed1tonal offices are located ., 13b Croft' Hal
U.Sall~ . I propose
Amhenl T•iophone 636-2626
Tha t the nickname of th is Un iversity's
~Gtheeletsew: t.~ms be changed from "Bulls" to

·sy

EditOr lf"I ·Chid

ROBERT T W..RLEIT
An and PtoductJOn
JOHN A CLOUTIER

..._,. Ed.oo&lt;
JOYCE 8UCHNOWSKJ

Editor:
In your November 1 issue , your
reporter charaderizes questions I raised
at the Mitchell Lectu re of Marcel Ophuls.
Telford Taylor and Michael Frisch as ··a
charge that the allies had been arrogant in
judging German atrocities."
It was indeed unfortunate that Taylor
seemed to take my remarks as a personal
offense . Equally unfortunately. the
Reporter did not me ntion my public
clllrification that I was not suggesting any
personal arrogance on the part of individullls involved In the trials.
Further. I was not merely making a
"'charge ... but raising a fundame ntal ques·
tion about the three lect urers' foregoing
theme : the interplay between me mory
and history. Ophuls' film Memory of
Justice vividly presents the ironic questions our memory of Vietnam raises
about the moral position of the U.S . and
France a s "judges" of war crimes at
Nuremburg. My question was about the
validity of our perce ption of both events
as aberratons o r anomalies in an other·
wise "civilized"" Western history

Examples of that arrogance
This perception IS a classic example of
the civihzauonal arrogance I was pointing
out Ou r conde mnation of such "depar·
tures'' from the ··superior. enlight ened"
values of Western c1vilizauon depends
upon a conven1ent failing o f memory . We
forget that Western civilization itself was
bu1h upon the prolonged and systematic
mfhct1on of atroc1t1es and war crimes by
France. Bruain . Spain. Portugal. the
U S A and other coloma! powers upon
CIV1hz.at1ons of the wo rld which we
labelled ··mferior·· and made the obJect.s
of a brutal ··wh1te man's bu rden·· of
destruction the CIVIlizations of Africa .
Asia . and South. Central and North
America It was on ly through th is destruction of others· civilizations that ou rs was
able to develop to its state of advance ment .
Absent a faihng of memory . it should
not have been necessary to await the
atrOCilles of Vietnam in order to see, as
we do in Ophuls' film . the irony of
Western (Allied! 1udgmem of 1he Nazi
holocaust Such atrocities are cor-

.·

nerstones of Euro-AmericAn greatness.
They were and continue to be the outcome of a central value of our "enlight-

ened'' Western societies: racism . The
same racism that engendered the ho rrors
of colonial conqu est and slavery authorized the Nazi holocaust and l"9iti mlzed
mass murder in Vietnam . That racism is
the product of. very predsely. Western
cultural and civilizalional l!lrrogance .

Taylor's response was symptomatic
These

questions penetrat€

far too

deeply for comfo rt Into historical truths
which 1.ve tend to shun from our conscience . as social taboos. Taylor's own indignant response to me was symptomatic. We speak , as he did. in generic

terms. of ''other instances'' of world
historical atrocity. but we avoid at all costs
dealing with them as a classic p3n of our
Western heritage . We seek justification to
avoid responsibility for them- a perfect
example is our continued teaching of our
Black (African) and Nati ve Am erican
child ren that th eir a ncestors were
"savages." It is this avoidance of respon sibility. th is fa iling of memory, that allows
us to cli ng to the notion of our civilizational superiority and moral capacity to
pass judgment
Th ose of us who quest ion these notions a re likely to be brushed off a s mere
fanatics. irrational ax-grinders or correct line poht1cal hacks . History . especially the
new and challenging history being written
by capable researche rs and scien tists of
Africa and Asia (e g .. Cheikh Anta Diop .
Chancellor Williams. Iva n van Senima ).
shows that irra tionality is in fact the domain of Western civ1hzatio nal arrogance
nself .
My question to OphuJs and Taylor.
then. was wheth er the Nuremburg trials
and th e film itself. by implicitly trea ting
racism and holoca ust as aberrations.
rather tha n an integral part of th e continuing historical development of Western
society, did not play their own roles in th e
distorting interplay between memory anti
history so provocatively examined in the
Mitchell film and lectures .
-Elizabeth A . Larkin
M.A . . American Studies
Second-year Law Student , S .U.N.Y.

'Running' also
celebrates .!manliness!

The moVle, '"Running." IS not about
run ning. nor is it "about having the
Courage to be what you are. " as its lofty
subtitle promises It's an old-fashioned
Amencan success story about starting at
the bonom. overcoming adversity and
making it "Winn ing"' should be the title
Michael Douglas plays Michael
Andropolis. who. we are told . is a loser
Not for one minute do we believe it
Although h~ has dropped out of medical
school , law school and marriage. and
lives in a crummy furnished room in
Manhattan . he's clearly a golden boy.
Lit he an d ha ndsome (with a stylist haircut). Michael is adored by everyone .
from the black and Puerto Rican kids on
his block to his young daughters to his
wife's divorce lawyer. And not because
he's lin irresistible rogue . but because in
add ition to looks and charisma. he has
Th;s is not to Imply that U/ B's football
character.
·
Michael is also a mythic American
program IS a fly-by-nigh! OPeration. or
that the WUkeson Goose Collective will
hero (His G reek su rname . Andropolis.
web-foot the bill for feeding lind sheltermeans ··man of the chy"- a scholaring members of the grid squad .
acquaintance informs that the root of
But how about a bumper Slicker
::Andro·" h!s the add.e d meaning of
reading· "Honk If U/ B Goosey?"
courageous - and provides. both an
Beyond that , we will have to wing Jt ,
ethnic touch, appropriate to the melting
and the idea might lay on egg. ahhough
pot feeling that th is movie tries to evoke
personally it gives me goose bumps and
and a reminder of the genesis of th~
could definitely be worth taking a gander
Olympics.)
.
.· _ Hf~ lhe , rugg~ .· i~~(vjdualist , _who
•. . . _-l.,ap)l G . St.,.,le. , · spurqs ~ust'\r Jobs lok~ seD"m.s shbes, or ·
•Du-ector. ,!;pOrts.JnfoVRotlon corrupting ones .like . seiUog. -~-. He's •

'Geese' better
than 'Bulls'?

Olri!C\Of of Public Affan
JAMES R DeSANTIS

It wasn't a 'charge,'
but a basic questi-on

good to the "little people": we watch him
in an amazingly unconvincing sc...e ne set in
an Unemployment Office . where he
stages a one-man protest on behalf of the
huddled masses against the unfeeling
bureaucracy.
Boy meet• girl and oth~aky
formulae
Other creaky formulae have been exhumed. In 1979. "boy meets girl . boy
loses girl. boy wins girl" can be about a
divorcing couple The girl in this case is
Michael's estranged wile. Janet . pl~ed
kittenishly by Susan An spach . She's considering marriage to "a new and used car
dealer." Howard , who Is coarse, corru pt
and wears pastel suits. Ho ward Is the
kind of rich jerk who has traditionally
figured as the rival in American co med ies
and whom no one takes seriouslv.
When Michael takes J a net out (t hey' re
still in love , of course , but he has to prove
himself before they can be reu nited). we
watch them . through a soh focus lens.
strolling in an idealized Central Pari&lt;.
eating hot dogs, sitting on a park bench in
the rain . Anspach behoves like a sappy
high school girl on a date with the captain
of the football team . When they kiss
goodnight on her fro1ot porch , It may be
197'1 New Yod\, \&gt;ut it's re,dolen) of
~th Tarkin!jlon.
.· . .' •· _. .

.............:_..........
_

~.

�November 8, 1979

LETTERS
'Rare Books' situation
clarified for community

Over the past few weeks . a local
newspaper has carried several repons
regarding allegedly stolen valuable and
rare material from the hbraries of the
Unlversity . Despite our attempts to pro·
vide full information on the snuation and
the accurat e reporting of the problem ~
other area news media . we feel that this
newspaper has so seriously distoned the
facts that we must provide ke y co mmuni
ty leaders with th e facts.

Halloween at Crofts
Costumes were the unifonn of the day at Crohs Hall on Halloween as
Grants and Contracts and Payroll both marked the occasion with office parties. This 'perfect couple' wouldn't say who they are.

•'Running'
, . . . . . . . . 4 . coL4)

There's even a crusty old coach, who
remembers Michael from his old days as a
quiner. Coach Walker Isn't fooled easily;
he's seen it all. But even though he talks
tough, we know his heart's in the right
plaoe . When Michaelis chosen to repre·
sent the U.S . at the Montreal Olympics.
the coach says to him , with a lot of feel·
ing,

' 'Don't

disgrace

this

country ,

Andropolls."
Aag-wavlng, too
The flag-waving petriotism that bursts
onto the scene for the remainder of the
movie must be Intended to appeal to our
yearning for the pre-Watergate, premalaise days of old . The principal of the
elementary school where Michael's
daughters are pupils (and his wKe a
teacher) announces in assembly hall that
Michael Andropolis wiU represent "these
Unhed States" In the Olympics. There is
thunderous applause , and wKe and
children smile through proud tears.
(Significantly, when Michael was just a
terrific runner , but not oertilied by the
establishment ~ such, he was an object
of deriskln. Success, In this movie's
terms, has nothing to do with personal
satisfaction In doing something that's not
officially recognized. despite box office
hype about the virtue of doing your own
thing.)
When Michael inspects the contents of
his Olympics kll and holds up the red .
white and blue T-shlrt that says "U .S .A .. "
the camera actually zooms in on tt, and
trumpets strike up In the back11round . As
~free enterprise, family and flllg weren't
enough, even the huge cross of St.
Joseph's Oratorio that dominates the dty
of Montreal gets dragged in , apparenily
to show that Michaers quest has some
vague religious significance, perbaps hav·
lng to do with the Holy GraU .
Running has become a contemporary
phenomenon. But the movie Ignores
pote'ltiaily Interesting questions, such as
what mOIIvates the runner or why runn·
lng holds a magnetism for Increasing
numbers of people. Instead ,' H concentrates on!Y · on' Ks -co"""""tve'aspeet . It ·

could just as easily be a film about prize
fighting : at the movie's climax , Michael is
as bloodied and punc~y as a boxer. It's
manliness. American style . that 's
celebrated here. the same quality that has
been selling movies. and wars. for
genentions.
-Esther Harriott
Director, Cultural Affairs

Prof. Hall
honor.e d as
'aeropioneer'

What was stolen?
In 1978. Un iversity Libraries moved to
their new facilities o n the Amherst Cam·
pus. Many books which had never been
kept in open stacks because of space
shortages an.;! whkh had been stored in
cartons in the old Bell Aircraft Plant on
Elmwood Avenue were moved to Capen
Hall.
Before the books were moved to their
permanent location on the fourth floor of
the building. they were stored in a base·
ment stock room of Capen None of the
University's "rare" books were among
those stored in this manner . However.
the boxes were marked "rare books area •·
for the benefit of the contract movers.
All truly "rare books" were moved
under the tightest security possible . They
were removed from the vauh on the Main
Street Campus, packed In boxes and
moved under the direct and continuous
observation of library personnel. who im·
mediately unpacked and inventoried
each carton as it arrived on the fourth
floor of Capen Hall . The result ; No rare
book from the University at Buffalo
Ubraries was lost during or after the
move. Not one I&amp; missing.
The items that were stolen were nine
(not ten) old books which had been
previously stored In the Bell Plant. Police
feel that they have solved the crime and
have traced the theft to a ,anitor who is
currently serving up to sixty years in
prison on drug charges .
Also stolen were certain Currie r and
lves prints, whose value was so small that
they were not even listed as being pan of
the University's An Collection . All of
those prints have been traced through a
very cooperative local art dealer who will
return those that he hes In his possession
and provide Information on those which
he sold . In any event, none of the prints
has a current merket value of more than
$100. They were decorative pieces whkh
were on the walls of offtces in the old
LoCkwood Library- not valuable pieces'.
The University's oflkial an coUectlon Is
intact. Not one piece or the coUection li
mlulng.

Dr. J . Gordon Hall. professor of
mechank:al engineering. Is the recipient
of the 1979 Aerospace Pioneer Award
presented annually by the Niagara Fron·
tier Section of the American Institute of
Aeronautks and Astronautics.
The award was presented to Hall in
recogn ition of his "pkJneering contribu ·
Wa• there an attempt to buy back
tions to the eMct formulation of non·
•tolen material•?
equilibrium flow solutions and for
At no time did any official of the
University offer to buy back the stolen
outstanding work In shock-induced flows
and unsteady expansion and compres·
goods. There are no funds provided for
sion waves."
this purpose since all purchases are either
A member of the faculty since 1969,
made on official State purchase orders or
HaU Is former head of the Aerod ynamics
with private funds spent only with the ap·
proval of a board of community represen·
Research Department at the Cornell
Aeronautical Laboratory , Inc. {now
t.atives. No such req ueSI was ever re·
cetved or processed through either of the
Calspan) , where he was a researcher
from 1958 to 1968. His present work Is
two possible offices which would be In·
volved In the expenditure of University
basic research In air flows for very high
speed aircraft , sponsored primarily by the
funds .
The curious point in the newspaper's
Air Force Office of Scieniliic Research
and the Office of Naval Research.
reporting of this allegation is the con·
tr&amp;dlctlon In the reporter's own words. He
While at Calspan , Hall panlclpated in a
major project sponsored by NASA for the
accused the University of being careless
In that he alleges that librarians and
Apollo space program to develop com·
municaUons at the spacecraft's re--entrv
University officials' were unaware of the
materials being stolen "until they were
point.
.
The award, given in commenoration
picked up by law enforcement agencies.
of past aviation pioneets from the
He goes on to say that the University of·
fered to buy back the material which the
Niagara frontier, n01ably Glenn H. Cur·
tiss. Lawrence D. BeU and Reuben H .
University did not even know was
Fl«&lt;, was presented to.HaU at the annual
missir)9 .
lnstai.~!!tlon a nil ' ~onor$ dihner' of · the ' '
The fact' is that much of the .material in
A!AA' on October 6 . . ·' · : ·
. : -thO. wea- of the library had noi been in-'

ventoried. It ls estimated that it costs $25
to catalog a book. Since much of the
material In the Bell collection was not
deemed worth keeping. the University
had not gone through the expenstve pro·
cess of cataloging each ptece
Even after it was determined that some
relatively valueless books were mtsstng.
the University's Department of Pubhc
Safety worked with the Drug Enforce·
ment Administration to ensure return of
the material. It is senseless to publish
detailed lists of such material because ex·
perie nce tells us that the cnminal eiemen1
will destroy it in such cases This tmpedes
investtgation and results tn pe rmanent
loss.
A matter of &amp;eeurlty and public
accountability
If there is a security problem today . it
has been caused by erroneous reponing
which creates the impression that ir· is
relatively easy to steal valuable materials
from the University's Libraries. We can
only hope that this misimpression does
not encourage would -be thieves to at ·
tempt to remove valuable materials. The
University invited all area news media to
view the area where rare books are
secured . Those who acCepted the invita·
tion were more than satisfied that extraor·
dinary measures have been taken to
secure valuable Un iversity resources.
At no time during this controversy did
the University fail to respond to requests
from area media for information and
tours of the facility . While the newspaper
in question declared that the University
had called a .. news blackout." other area
media were Inside the special collections
area of the library.
Even while the atte mpt of the
newspaper was to call into question the
Universily's public accountability, many
of the newspaper's own outrageous
statements were being dlsproven by other
area news media.
The newspaper failed to tell the tax·
paying public that the University's costs in
terms of staff time In this episode were ac·
tually several times the value of 1he
material allegedly stolen or missing . This
was the amount of time consumed in pro·
viding detailed information in re~nse to
often contradk:tory, mostly outrageous
statements which the newspaper claims
to have received from yet unidentifi~d
anonymous sources.
This has been a very sad incident for
our Western New York public and lor the
cause of solid and responsible )ournalism .
On the other hand. the response of other
area news media was gratifying. Several
newspaper and broadcast stations provld·
ed thoughtful, objective coverage .
Our student newspaper, The Spectrum , was Invited to tour area art dealers'
shops with the reporter from the
newspaper In question and concluded. as
a result of that tour, that the reporter had
been led down a blind alley.
The Unlnralty'e rnpoDM:
It is not often that the University ls
forced to respond to a controversy In th is
manner. However, as a matter of public
record . the Unlvershy has frequently ad mitted that public criticism has been warranted . By the same prlndpl&lt;'r; of hon·
esty and fair play by which h has accepted
criticism in the past. it Is necessary that it
respond fully In this Instance .

Frosh seminars
To help freshmen address problems
and questions which campus newcomers
face In their fi,_. year of college. Platts·
burgh has Initiated a Freshman Seminars
series. Elghteen Instructors, most of them
teaching faculty from a wide variety of
disctpUnes, comprise the facuhy . along
with several non-teaching professionals.
Umlted this semester to 250 freshmen
the seminar carries three hours oi
academic cred~ and focuses on a wide
range qf, fta,d!'!'lic .aflP. developm~ntal
themes. Oosel)l monitored will be the
Pf091'&amp;'1''s ef(ect on pttiltlon .
·

�November B. 1979

Woyzzeck

CALENDAR
Thursday ..... 8
TRIAL Ofi.HOW HUNAN SERVICES
PROG~ ARE EVALUATED "
104 O'Bnan Hall 9 15 am 5 15 p m Allen
dan« fee of S25 includes lunch
Sponsored by U B's DwtsJOn of Communny
Psychlalry . Dlvi,lon 27 of the Amencan
Psycho&amp;ogical Assocwlllon and 1he Contmumg
Education Program tn Mental Heahh Planmng and
Evaluat)Qrfl . the workshop as a1mt&gt;d at mental heahh
profeHIOIUIIs as weD as conwmers of evaluatton
such as 1he ~~ med.a
W•tneues a1 1he ··tnar •nduM Drs Allan &amp;~gel
d•rector of 1he Sou1hem Aruona Men1al Heahh
Centn , Anthony Brosk~i. executiVe director of
1he Norths.~de Community Mental Heahh Center .
Tampa. James A Ciark&gt;. Mental Health Systems
EvalualtOn PrOJKt , Uni\OeTSity of Denvt.&gt;l' . Murray
Levtrw . duector of the Oimcal Commun•ly T nnmng
Program al U/ 8 . Herbm Schubftg, d~rector of the
Office of Educauon and RegtOntlli Programmu"'g a1
Wesaem Psychiatric lnstrtute and ClinK , Prttsburgh .
Joseph S Who&amp;ey, depuly ass;stanl waetary for
evaluauon with HEW . Charles Windle. Heahh Ser
vkts Development Branch. NatiOnal ln~ltu1" of
M"ntal H"akh. and J ack ZuiiNin , professor of
psychl&amp;try , University of Southe...n California
School ol Medicine .
RESEARCH SEMINAR•
Hlah Frequency VlbraUon: Eape:rlmmu.l
SNdia and Its Potmtlal RoN: In the MAnAgt:·
mmt of Infants with Respiratory Dt5uas, Or
Daniel C Shannon , associate professor of
ped'atna, Harvard Medical School. director of
PrdYtric Pulmonary Unit , Maii6Chusetli General
Hospital , Boston Board Room , Children's
Hospital 12 noon
CHEJOIICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR•
A Moleaa.laz View ol tM Rheology of
Polym"lc Liquids. R Byron &amp;d , Unlvenlly ol
WtKOnsin 127 Cooke 3 p m Rcrlreshmenli will
be Sft'Wd fTom 4-4 ·30
lAW AND ECONOMICS WORKSHOP
MEET1NG"
Room 706 O 'Bnan 3 30 p m The gum speaker
wiD be Gerard Butters. professor of economics at
Princelon . who will give a paper en11tWd
"Equilibrium Advertising and Search for a
He1erogeneow: Good ..

PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM•
Temperature Deprmdent 0\am..gndism ol
Liquids. ProleHO&lt; f,J' O.y . Physics Oepartm&lt;nl ,
U/ B 454 Fronczak 3 30 p m Coffee at 3 15
STATISTICS COLLOQUIUM LECTURE•
A Regreuion Analysis Po tpou rri, H T
McAdams. Falcon ReM"arch &amp; Devflopm('nt Co •
Buffalo RoomA-15. 4230Ridgele:a 4pm Cof·
fee at 3 30
UUABRLM"
TM N}ght of Countint the Yun (Egypt.
19691 Wolclman Theatre, Amhent 4 45, 7 15
=~sri JO p m General bdm155100 S2. studen~

Thf' dite:oYefy of a Royal Cache near Thebes.
Egypt , in 1881 provides che basis for this hauntingly
strange and beauuful him consadered by some as a
Third Workl ver1100 of The Mu.mmy's Tomb.
DRAMA "
Ghoats, by bien. dareaed by Ward Wdll.amson
Center Tlleatre. 681 Main Strret
p m Gener-al
.SmtWOn S4 . stude.nli S2 ADS vouchen ec:•
up~:ed Spon50red by the Oepanment of Theatre
•nd Center for Theatre Research

ORAI'IA"
Woyuedt by Gtrorg Buchner drrected by Neil
Radrcc Hamman Tlle•tre ~udto , M•m Street
C.mpus 8 p m General admtsslon l3. 5tudents
and wnior cttauns S 1 50 Spontored by the
~cof'Thutre

ThiS con&amp;rownial ~y (....-tuch hils bHn c:&amp;Bed the
f.m modem playt traces 1M ~ory of • young man's
;ourrwy tlwoogtl We

INDEPENDENT FILMMAKERS SERIES •
lec:1ure/ showing by p)()O(&gt;et him antS! . Leo HurMedia Study Buffalo 207 Delaware Ave 8

""'' lll

pm

MUSIC "
Com pose:n Forum . Baird Reatal Hall 8 p m
Free admission PartK:ipants w•U be Jan Walhams .
percussion. Mlcha('l Andrlacdo , guhar. Gary Han .
clarinet. John Cloet . celk&gt;. Ed Folget-, percuSSIOn .
and Wah""' Hunt . percussion Works of graduate
student composers Paul Gallagher . Chnstos Haws,
Steven N Swartz . In Hwa Nam. Char~ Ames .
W1lham Onll. MIChael Zak . and Joe ()I Renzo wtll
be featured

undet constructJOn. n wiD provide a total of 54 .280
net squere feet
Tlle State Universily of ew York Board of
Trustees. apPJoved 1he Ba~rd Musk: HaD name durrng ns meet1ng on October 24

ORAL BIOLOGY SEMINAR•
Changes In the De ve lo pm e nt of
Hae~n.~~topoietk Splttn Colonln lnduad by Low
lAvf:l (1 -ISR ) X-lrradiation FoiiCN!Ing Bone Mar·
row Tr-pl.anla.tion. John Dak!-y. U/ B Room
107 . 4510 Mam Su:eet 4 P m
PHYSioLOGY SEMINAR•
The Ufe of a Sui, Dr Kenh Ronatd. dean . Col1eg(' o( Bk:Hogkal Sc~ences . Un1versny of Guelph
S 108 Sherman 4 15 p m Coffee at 4

Friday- 9
SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CWB
Ski Swap. FiUmor" Room . Squue HaU Hours
.ne 9 a m -9 p m Equ1pmen1 regislraho n begms a1

UUAB FILM"
The N ight o( Counting the Yean. Conference
Theatre . Squrre 4 :45, 7 15 and 9 30p.m General
admission S2. stud"nts S1 50

~~~!i:'!-- Utde: Rucals feature shorts of the

PEOIATRIC GRAND ROUNOS•
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, Or Dante! C
Shannon , associate professor of pedllltncs. Harvard
Medical School . dtrector of Ped~atnc Pulmonary
Unit , Mas56Chuse-tts General Hospital. Boslon
Kmch Auditorium . Chik:lren's Hospital 11 am

JOs. plus an origlnel Laurel &amp; Hardy. Brat5, plus
two Melanic" oldy canoons (Bugs Bunny in the
MBarbeT of Seville" ts one) 170 MFAC . EDicon 7 . 9
and 11 p m Gener~ admissaon S 1.25: students
Sl Tlckets may be purchased at Squire BoK Office
or 10 167 MFAC on Friday aha 6 p m

CIVIL ENGINEERING SEMINAR•
Acttw Control In Stnactural EnginHring, Dr
T T Soong 152 Parker Engineenng I 30-3 p m
Refreshments will tw WTVed

ORAI'IA "

MEDICINAL CHDIISTRY SEMINAR•
Oew~rnmts ln the Che:m~try of the Antitumor Agent EJJJpddne, Miss Arvela RICk.
graduate student . Department of Medidnel
ChemistTy , U / B C121 Cooke
2 p m
Refreshments
COUNCIL ON INTERNATIONAL STUDIES.
IDEP AND lATIN AMERICAN STUDIES
COLLOQUtUM"
The Nlca~n Revolution , Professor Mauricio
Solaun , psychobgy pt'ofesiOf . University of Illinois
and forme:r U S Ambassador 10 Nkaragua dunng
the Canet Administration 684 &amp;kty 2 15 p m
U/ B COUNCIL MEETING
The November Coundl Mreting is scheduled at 3
p m 1n the Council Conference Room . 5th floof

c..,..

WORKSHOP / I'IASTER ClASS"
Alan Mandel, piano Baud Recital Hall 3 15
p m Free
The lentat!Ye topte 11 an approach to contem·
porary music for piano
C ORNERSTONE LAYING "
Outside the .w~ wall of the new Baird HaO at
Amherst 4 p m
Opening remarks by-Rabat E Millonzl . ch.a.-man
of the U/ 8 Council. wW precede the placement of a
box of me:morabiha beh1nd the comerston"
Among contents of the box are COrTespond~nce
betWHO the 8a11d family and the UniverSity . campus and daily Buffalo newspapers, the 1956 rOSI:er
of the Council oftheUniver5icyo( Buffalo. the 1927
crtallon conferring the Chancellol- 's Medal on Frank
8urken Baird and several US coms
Pamapantsln the laymg of the ssone end appbca
tion of moruu wW be members of the 8a!l'd famtly ,
U . B President Raben L Ketter . Dr ~orge R
Levu\(' , dean of the F.&amp;euhy of Arts and Letters .
MuSK Oepar1me:nt Chairman WdiYm Thomson .
and Millonzl
The ong~MI Baird HaD on the U/ B Main Street
campus, dedacated m 1956. was named'" honor of
f,ank Burke" Baird , who was elected to the Unlvet·
Sity of Buffalo Council in 1920 and wrved unttl h15
death in 1939
Mr Baird hAd been a ptime mover 1n the bu1klu-.g
~ the Peace Bridge Also, he buih 1M Tonawanda
Iron Company , ckwloped the Hanna Fuma«
Company and served on the: OO.rd of d.-eaors of
tlw Pan Amenc.an Exposkton
Frank Burkett Baud's Conneccion wrth U/ B was
continued through hts
Cameron and William
Ba•d
The late Ca\'1WI'OO Baird was appointed chairman
ol the Music ~nwnt in 1952
William C BUd continua to MrVe today on dw
U/ 8 Counct and on the ('Jt«utive: committee olthe
U/ 8 Foundation . Inc In al. he has grve.n more
than 40 yeMJ' MrY~Ce to the Un~Yentty·
Tlle nrw four ·suwy buldmg was designed by
lAoich, Franzen and Auodata of New York Combmed v.otlh an .dptntng 5&amp;H Chamba Hal . also

sons:

To I lot ewnts In th~ "Calmdar," caU
~~an Shrader at 636-2626.
Key: ..Open only to those with a pro1-nallnteratln th~ subject; 'Open
to the public:; ''Open to m~m~rs of
th e Unlv~rolty . Unl~.. othorwls~
opecl(led, dc:ltets lor ownts charging
admlsalon can ~ pun:juoRd at tho
Squire Hall Tlc:k~ Olllco.

The cast oi 'Woyzzeck' could populate
your worst nightmare from the looks of
them here. The controversial dra!"a,
directed by Neil Radice, opens tomght
in Harriman for an extended 4-a-week
run (Thursday-Sunday).

Ghoats . by Ibsen . directed by Ward Wllhamson
Center Theatre , 681 Main Street 8 p m General
admrs§K)n S4 . szudents S2 ADS vouch~ ac
cepted Sponsored by the Oepar1ment of Theatre
and Center for Theatr(' Research

o~:~~

d11ecte~

by Georg Buchner ..
by Neil
Radke Hamman Theatre Stud)(). Mam Street
Campus. 8 p m General &amp;dm.WOn S3. students
and M"nior otllens S I 50 Sponsored by the
Department ol Theatre

SYMPOSIUM O~VtiORLD.IUSTICE
Toward a New Ec:onomk Order-A C hristian
Penpecdw: . Newman Center , 15 University Ave .
8 p m )and November 10 fTom 9 30 a m to 3
p m ) The sympos!um wtU be opened by Ms Jane:
Blewett . asSOOIIte director of the Center of Conce.m. Washington. DC A former healthcar"
worker in Pakistan . the Phibpplnes and Hong Kong
Ms Blewen was a par11dpant In ttw UN Confe:renc"
on Sc~ence and Technology for Development which
took place thts year m V~enna She was a deLegate
at the UN Wor~ Population Conference m
Buchar('St
Par1icrpa1ing with Ms Blewett on Saturday W\U be
Sr Judy Justing('r . SSJ . Ph D.. Rev Dawi
Gallivan , and Re\1 Dan Mulvey. S J Th" mormng
theme wtU be Chns~ian Sooal Teachings and Re·
cent Papal Encydicak
The afternoon ses.5M:)OS wtU szress "The Chnst~an
Ideal and Chnstian Practice" and MMarx and ChnstYn Acbon " The sympostum rs open to the public
and shoukl be of speoal mteteSI to students tn
economics or busme:ss A Slmp&amp;e lunch wiD be
WJVed For more mformation , caU 1he Newman
Center at 834 -2297
VISITING ARTIST SERIES •
Al.an Mandel, paano Baird Recital Hell 8 p m
General admission S4 . fac:uh y. staff, alumni and
senior atizens SJ . Sludents Sl Sponsored by the
Oepanment of Music
Alan Mand£'1 is. professor of muSIC and chairman
of the p&amp;ano depanmen1 at Atmmcan Um\ler'Sity,
Washu-.gton D C He has won accla1m for h\5 lnterpretation ol ragtime piano music of the twentK':th
century usually assooated wnh movie houses and
paano ro&amp;ls
JUST BUFFALO POETRY REAOING •
Ra~ Bre~M&lt;f:f &amp; Mlkhall Horowitz will read
from thO works Alk!-ntown Communhy Center .
111 Elmwood 8 30 p m Admiuton S1
Ray Bremser is a Jau-5tree'l ·poet . who gave
readtngs wnh Mu-.gus &amp; Monk Blowing Mouth ,
1978. Cherry Valley Edllioru.. is his moss recently
published work Also, from Intrepid Press. Blade. lt;
8'-c:k Blues, 1971 . and Angel, fTom Thompl.-.in s
SqiJare Press. wMh an introduak:»n by l Ferfinghetti

MlkhaO Horowtu is a performance poet living In
New Patu He has published a collection of collages
and commentary-a visual mbt of poetry and
bo-U - ""'h Coty .Ltghts Qoolu ~ Bit l.eotruc
Pons. and was .. Nur in the comedy team ol " NuD
&amp;. Void" which toured this country
Sponscnd m pen wah public montes fTom !he
New Yori!. State Council on tlw Arts and Poets &amp;
Writ.,.

UUAB MIDNIGHT FILM •
Eru~rhead (1977) . Conference Theatr(' ,
Squire 12 midn;ght General admission S2 .
students $1.50.
This is the sunealta1e ol an innocent entering the
nightmarish aduh world. a claustrophobic cul-desac: of O\let"ppWering sights and sounds For tho$('
who missed che debut of this midnight classic .
because of last year's M"llouts , UUAB is giving you
another chance to en}oy the startling beaLIIy of
EraHrhe:ad .

Saturday - 10
4nt ANNUAL lAW SCHOOL
CONVOCATION•
Urban Redevelopment . O'Brian Hall 9
a .m -12:30 p .m . SIO . Sponsored by the law
School and the Law School Alumni AssociaHon
Topics include. " Anandng Urban Developmen• ~
(indudk-.g the Buffalo eumples of the Chen Hotel.
and Nanodata and Comptek Corpor-atJOn) . " Urban
Rehabll1tation and Restoration," " Sources of
Funding and Funding Programs:" Buffalo's - waterfront Development Opportunil:ie.s," and "The
Future of Development in Buffalo ..
Lunch begins at 12:30 p .m . and Includes prese.n
tatk&gt;n of the Edwin F. JaeckW Distinguished Alu m
nus Award
Joining Buffalo's m051 prominent leaders hom
both the public and private sector wUJ be many lUI
tiona! ellpfttS in the field ol urban redevelopment
Among them are : Samuel Beard. whose
organlt.ation has participated in vw-tually every ma
JOr redevelopment prO)ecl in the country: Cement
Ctwn. developer of BuHaio's waterfront hotel. John
Harris Gurley and Thomas K. Burke of the Rouse
Company devebper of the "new town" of Colum
bY. Maryb.nd . and cunently the country's 1eadtng
urban development corporation, Stanley Thea .
New York City-based deve)oper and a ma)or force
In the proposed rehabilitation ol the Prudential
Building. and Robert T Dormer, of the New York

St~~;:;;:,ofa:::::~:oc.,tion

will be 1he
Class of 1929, who are celebn!t1ng the 50th An
nlversary of thrir graduation from Law School

NYSC OL ANNUAL CONFE!lENCE
The New York State Council ~ngu isdcs' an
nual conf"rence. including a symposium on 1he
Relevance of Pidgins and Cr~ lo LinguistiCs and
Second Language Acquisition . win be hekt
NOYe:mber 10 and 11 starling at 10 a .m For fur1twr
information, cal 636-2177
UUAB FILM "
Watenhip Down . Conference lbe.tre. Squif"
5 , 7 15 and 9 30 p .m . General admiSS»&gt;n S2.

5Cu:n~~~. ~.

and a1 times haunt1ng surVIval
story of rabbrts searching for a place ~o live The
characters are bdevabH! because they re real rab
bits The song " Bright Eyes" is sung by Ar1 Gar
funb! Keehar's voice was provided by Zero
Mostd. the la.s.i part he pe-rformed ~ore h11 death

CAC FILMS"

Fiw: "'dassic" um. R.uc:all future short~ of the
30s, plus an ortgtna1 Laur... &amp; Hardy, Brats, plus
two "clueic" oldy CMIOOns. 146 Oidmdorf 7. 9
and II p m ~neral admiSSion S1 25. saudenl5

Sl

�November 8 . 1979

. . 1211&amp;

7
Bofill
The emerging and eye-pleasing jazz.
blues singer Angela Bofill appears at
Squire next Tuesday under auspices of

UUAB.

Wednesday- 14
QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS l.ABORATORY
INFORMAL L£CTURE SERIES'
Apple Microcomputer OemonsuatkMt. Mr
Greg Czora of tht&gt; Binarv Orchard wdl conduct bnef
lntroducttOnsat 12 15. 1 30 and 2 45and leav'-' dw
remaining tune be1wun 12 and 4 f&lt;N specifiC quo
ho ns and demonstratiOn$ 2 13 Bakty Han

)

GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR•
Solution PrOCUMS and Cle•\lage Form.·
Uon- View of an Hertrtk:al Structural Geologi:Jt,
James W Granath . I"Npartmenl ol Earth and
Space Sc.ences . Srate University of New Yor-k at
Stony Brook Room 18. 4240 Ridge Lea 3 30
p m Coffee and doughnuts will be available at 3

ECONOMICS WORKSHOP AND GAME
THEORY•
lncenttw Mechanisms in Economk»,
David Salant , U/ B 210 O'Brian 3.30 p m

Dr

BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY
SEMINAR•
Membrane Actl\le Agents-Polv•ne An tibiotics, Ms Met·Ping Kung . gradua te student .
Depanment of Biochemcal Pharmac:o&amp;ogy, U/ B
307 Hochstetler 3 45 p m Coffee at 3 .30

HOCKEY'
Cotpte Untw:rsity. Tonawanda Ice Time rink.
7:30pm
The Bulls' 1979-80 home.,.,..
V~ll!fan Hod Coach Ed Wnght , 1n his lOth
-..son with a record ol 117-109-4, has 181etterwtnners beck from the 1978-79 squad that posted a
15-- 12 mark and competed in the ECAC Division Ill
ployoffs
The reu.nnecs Include Last year's top $COfer Tom
W ilde (WIIIlamsvllle South) . who h.d 31 goals and
23 assists: ALL-SUNYAC defenHman Rich
MKL.ean (WiUiarmvllle Nonh) . and two-year goalie
Bil fUminlka (Kenmore-C.niliusJ . an OlymX
loyoUtllnollJa.
Junton Kellh S.wyer (Skaneatele~ . Paul

Nan:luz:zo (Wilbarnsvilie'-C.nisau.sJ and

~

UUAB MIDNIGHT FILM '
Eraurhud (19771
Conference Theatre .
SquiTe 12 midnight General admiuk&gt;n S2 .
S1udents Sl 50

Tuesday- 13

Sunday- 11

13TH ANNUAL ~EWISH COMMUNITY
BOOK FAIR'
Howard Wolf. professor of Enghsh . U/ B. MGo
WeS1 . Young Mensch Towards a Def1nltion of the
JewiSh Ammcan Writer 11930· 19801 " JeWISh

DRAMA '

GN.ts. by lbsen , directed by Ward WIDiamson
Center Tlw!atre , 681 Mom Street 3 p m General
admission $4 , students $2 ADS vouchers ac·
cepted Sponsored by the Department of Theatre
and Center for Theatre Research

Rigler

(Buffalo-Ri verside) . and sophomore John
Gallagher (Gnmd liland) are otheT experienced for wards llw defense should be improved with junior
De-nnis Gruarin (Niagara Falk Catholic) and
10phomores Pete Dombrowski (Williamsville
South) and John Sucese (Massena) u ve1erans.
Newt0f'l'lef'5 who wiD play include Clayton

SUDE A SP£ECH PRESENTATION '

WattftS (Onawa. Ont_) , a transft&gt;t from Canton
T ec:h and the first Canadian on the squad in four

UUAB FILM '
Waten.Mp Down. Woklman Theatre . Amherst
5 , 7 15 and 9 30 p m GeneraJ admiSSion S2 .
students $1 50
DRAMA .
Wovuedc: by Georg Buchner , d1rected by NeU

~rs . Brien Murphy {Buffalo-South Parle) . Dale

Guynn (Swft'l Home), and sophomorto cemer
Chril Weinhokz: (Kenmore EaJz) . a transfer from
P!.ttsburgh State
Junior goaler Dan Kowalchuk (Brasher Falls) has
two years exJ)ftience in reserve and has performed
well in the past

DRAMA •
Gtw.u, by Ibsen. directed by Ward Williamson

Womt:n's Emandpation In Iran, Anne1te
Morino, author, and Manije.h Zavareel , a speciabst
In the poltticAl economy of the Middle East . who
was m han during the uprising Squire Conference
Theatre 3-5 p m Sponsored by American Studies

Rachc:e Hamman lbeatre Studio , Main Street
Campus 8 p m General admlSSion S3. students
and sentor clllte:ns $1 50. SponSOfed by the
Depanment of lbeatre.

Cemer Theatre. 681 Main Strut 8 p m Gerw:ral
adtnisston $4 , students $2 ADS vouchers ac
cepted Sponsot-ed by the Depanment of Theatre
Mld CAmet for Theatre Research
Woyuedt by Georg BuchMr . d1rected by Neil
R~rce Harriman Theatre Studio. Main Street
C.mpus 8 p m General admlHion S3 , 5tudents
and wntor citizens S1 50 Sponsored by the
Oep.nment of Theatre

Fll.Jtl •
A Tribute to 50 VdtS ol the ~n Mnic&amp;J
FDm, Part u, Iloilo An R11960! . Slamng
Judy Holiday, Dean Martm and Jean Staple.ton
BuHalo &amp; Erie County Histonc:al Socie1y 8 P m

--

Ad-duu91
The 5toty of a lovatrudt oper-ator of a te~phone

anSWfting

KJV~Ce ,

..

faDing for the voice of a young

Barton M~: Presentation of ~k 335
Hayes 5 30 p .m SponiOC"ed by the School of
Architecture and Envuonmental Design

UUAB MONDAY NIGHT MOVIES'
Ruthku: ( 1948) . 7 p m . The Naked Cit\~
0948). 8 55 p m Woldman Theatre . Amherst

Free admlssion
In Ruthku:,

t1

group ol peopW gather at a man·

won whose owner had touched , changed and
destr~dtheirlivu

The Naked Ot\1 Is a reaiKtic pollee drama shot
on kx:aUon with N Y C settings overshadowtng the
actual stOJY of a young girl brutally murdered and

the manhunt that follows

L£CTUR£'

VIS mNG ARTIST SERIES •
AJaa Manckl. pano, and Nancy M•nlkl. VIOlin
8oWd Recul Hoi 8 p m Genenl odmmiOn $4 ,
lacuhy, Jtalf, alumni and IWnioJ clbzens S3. students
ll Sponto&lt;ed by tho
ol Music
Nancy Mandel fOku her hu!band In tonight's con·
em She has been described as a ~ who

Deport....,,

''comblnn a stunning vwtuOidy wllh an eTlChlinting
and atu-.arw SU~ge manner - She combna
1\mertcan ~ mugc with boCh a con~por¥Y
.tndrom.nlic.rf"')e't\\ft

penod~eals

TEACHER EFFECTIVENESS SEMINAR '
10 Capen Hall

1 3 p m Four winners of the

Chance.Uor's Award fot Teaching will lflformally
dtseuss teacher effect1veness Participant$ Include
Joe Mashng. Psycho1ogy, VJnCe Ebm . Geography.
Notman ~off . Psych~atry . and Joyce Scriannl.
Anthropology Open to the pubic Presented as
par1 of the D1\IISK)n ol Student Affairs' Teachmg Ef
fecuvene.ss Senes

FOSTER COLLOQUIUM SERIES '
An ApptOKh 10 the Total S ynthals of
Coriollns , Dr S Danishefsky, Unlvershy of Pill·
sburgh 70 Acheson 4 p m Coffee Will be served in
50 Acheson at 3 45

MODERN LANGUAGES PRESENTATION '

M.o nday- 12
ARCHITECTUII£ L£CTUR£ '

DRAMA '

Community Center. o.iaware Building , Buffalo.
1130a. m Admi:ssion $ 1 50atthedoor Salad Bar
Luncheon Sponsored by Brandeis Un1vu5iry Na ·
1100111 Women's Commiuee
WoH is the author ol The Vola Within: ReadJng
and Wrtdnt Autobiography (Wilh RogRt Porter) .
and Forvtw: the Father. A Manak ol Changing
Ge:neradonl . He has published ~rv . esMys. he·
oon and book reViews in many scholarly

. Ke"ftftdh Burke, literary c:rilk ~ LogokJgy Ill
Language and Techtdogy " llw KIVa , Baldy Hal
Free SponiOred by the English
Oepenment's Edward H Buder Chb
Burke is a wd knowit and contr~l man ol
letters. who at a v1gor0us and entertaining 82. IS still
going strong He has written In so many fOt"Tm and
on 10 rrwmy sub;ecu and with such an eclectic ap·
proach , that reKt6ons to h.m haw been very
nuxed In a huge book cal~ Cnbalf Ruponta to
Kenrw:th Burke, he i5 hded u " the for-emost aillc
ol our -ve and perhapt the grutest critic Since
eo&amp;.ndge" and a&amp;o diwniued as a "'crackpc:M with a
pa,nace.a " ('The lana 11 k'l r~~ to h&amp;l50fdl for
a umwrs.J philoeophic sylkm ) H• ~o.ch to
language and to literature has utllited

8 p m

.,.,.chc&gt;onolyticol . _ .. lndudto\o rrec ...-.
Qon . N ~to quote Burltel ~a truly '*qwd attitude
tOWtfard.s spMid\ ..

Three R~umfrom Ruuia - U/ 8 students relate
their experiences o n thre~ study-tour programs lfl
the U S S R 828 Clemens 4 p m Sponsored by
the Department of Modern Lenguages and
L1teratures

FILM '
last Ye.a r at MarieOO.d (1961 ) t Resna~) 148
Dtefendorf 5 and 8 p m Free adm1ssi0n Spon
sored by the Department of Modem Languages and
Uteratures
This fascinating, eh.Jsrve film was hailed by rntiCI
14fhen it hrst appeared and has been puu:lmg and
sat.rslymg audwnces since then It's been called ~ a
ddfiCUh . muki leveled . any entry
worth dw at
tent)Of'l ol serious. discriminating film enthusiasts "

MULTIDISCIPLINARY GRADUATE GROUP
IN NIJ11UTIONAL SCIENCES
PRESENTATION '
Recent D~ments in Human Nutrition and
the De¥dopment of Oie.U.ry Guidetina, Dr M C
Nesheim , drector , Division of NutnUo nal Sdencti.
Cornel UniYenlty G 26 Faobeo 7 30 p m

CONCERT '
Angda BofiU , rhythm and blues and J11D: s.nger
who has tv.oo &amp;burns out Anmorl!l . Room. Squire
H.t.U 8 p m General admTulon Is $.5 SO, $3 SO for
stu~nts Sponsored by UUAB's MuMc Committee
~UST BUFFALO POElllY READINGS '
Tony Gorthwolto, R...U. Son-... 6 Bobbie
LouiN H....._ will perform at 1M Schupe:r
Houte, 1802 Niag~ira St . 9 .30 and 11 JS p m
A d - n s.,on.o....t 1n -h publo&lt;
monws lrom the New Yorit Stat• Cound on the
Aru and Poru It Wl'llers

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR•
Chemical Ruction~ In Spouted and Spou.l·
Fluid Beds , Howard Littma n , Rensselaer
Polytechnic lnsrltule
10 1 Baldy 4 p m
Refreshments will be served from 3:30-4

HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY•
The Acceuory Optic Sys:tem: A Vkual S,.ten
In Vestibular Coordinates, Dr J ohn I. Stmpson.
New Yotk University Medical Center 245 Cary
Hall 4 p m
MICROBIOLOGY SEMI-MONTHLY
SEMINAR•
S.roiook Charoctcriotka ol tho " " - In the
Saltva ol Blood Group A. Secrdon, Nancy C
Owens . Oopartment ol Mocoobiology. U/ B 223
Sherman 4 p m

FILMS (FILM HISTORYI'
The FaU ol the House of Usher (Watson} . Lot In
Sodom (Watson. 1933). Paris Qui Don/ The
Crazy Ray (Clair . 1923), Banet Mechanique
(Leger. 1924) 146 Diefendorf 7 p m SponSOf"ed
by the Center IOJ Media Study
UUAB WEDNESDAY NIGHT FILMS'
Eyes Without A Fa~ (france, 1959). 7 p m .
O nlbaba (Japan , 1964). 8 .55 p m Conference
Theatre , Squir~ Free admission
Eyes Without A Face: ts the mas1erpiea!: of
GeOJges FranJu . the haunting tale ol an insane
plastic surgeon who . after ac:ddentaUy dtsflguring
hts daughter. vows to replace her face. wtth those of
other girls So.veet
OnJbaba is a beautifully photographed . eerie
Japanne tale of kwe . ,eak:Nsy and honor 1nvoMng
a mother and her daughter·ln·law and their at
re:mpu to cope with a \110&amp;ent feudal socit!'ty
HOUSING SUDE SHOW'
Mr Michael Frederick , U / B graduate, prese:nrs
the hndlngs of his urban Internship during hes wnlo.year at U/ B 262 Fargo Quad . Eltlcon 7 30 p m

SCREEHING / DISCUSSION '
Unemploy me.nt In Buffato. a documentary
mack! under the d~rect100 ol U/ B Center foe Medaa
Study profeSJOJ and documentary fdmmaket Jamn
Blu'-' 8 p m Media Study/ Buffalo , 207 Delaware
Ave

,

Thunday- 15
RESEARCH SEMINAR•
Querddn: A Nowl lnhlbhor of Ant.,._
Induced Hiftamine ReLease, Or Eliott Middleton .
Jr Board Room , Chidre.n'1 Hospital 12 noon
RESEARCH INSmUTE ON ALCOHOUSM
PRESENTATION '
Relat.lw Role ol Alco hol and Uver D isease
Upon the Pathogenesis of HyposfOI\IIdllm, Oalnd
H Van Th\el, M D Department of Medldne
Uniwnny of Plntburgh School ol MedldM 1021
Main StrHI 1 p m
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM•
So1at Eaer1V-Stat• ol ttw Art, ProfftiOf C.ri
E Naelsm . PhyUc:s Department, Ohio State Umver
slly, Columbus 454 Frona.k 3 J0 p m Coffee M
3 15

.... -c.-: -

•. eel. l

�••
•Calendar
, _ _ 7 , &lt;01.4)

Herdman

LECTURES IN BASIC NEPHROLOGY•
DrMng Force for fluid ~ ln the
Pro.d mal Tubule, Dr Thomas E Andreoli. pro·
feuot and chatrman . (Npartment of Internal
MediCine. 'JniwTW1y of T exa~ Medical School at
~';;,ston S 108 Shftman 4 p m R~s at

Priscilla Herdman is providing the folk
music al the • UUAB Coffeehouse
Saturday night at Squire.

HARRINGTON LECTURE '
lndivkh1111ity and Self-Marking In Biology,
LewlS Thonuu.. M 0 . biok&gt;glSI and researchel .
pres.ckmt and chtef t&gt;kerutl\.oe offtcer, Memol'ldl
Sloan · K~mng Cancer Center . New York. N Y
Butlet Audnonum (150 farber) .5 p m
Thoma!&gt; li authol of Thto Uvn of a Cell : Notes
of a Biology Walcher clnd The Medu&amp;a and the

WRmNGPlACE
The Wriung Place is a free droP·in writing center
that wek:omes ~·nters at any stage of the composlnq
process Take advantage of our qual.died writlng
tutors who provide careful response to both those
havrng trouble understanding an assignme.nl and
those polishing a final drah . Come visi't us in 336
Ba.ldy Hall on the Amherst Campus. Our hoUrs this
semester are ; Monday thro ugh Friday , 12 noon un·
ul 4 p m .. and Monday. Wednesday and Thursday
evenings , 6 until9.

Snail.
Ahhough well known

1n

1he scwnuf.c communny

ht~ cuntribuuum. notably f(_~·arch '" tm
munology and relatt'd held!o he ,,_ bencr knoo,om
&lt;1mong the publtt a.s. an author [ )(ccrpu from The

!OJ

MttduH and the Snail wprc featured tn dw Oc
tobe1 ~ Reader 's Digest :· Uws of 8 (.vii ~A. On thl'
I 975 NatiOfllll Book A\A.•lnd

WRITING TUTORS
Faculty, Students. Staff: Q:msider tutoring 1n
the Wnting Place You will be carefully trained to
help others Improve their writing while you improve
you r own Cont.act Barbara Gordon at 636-2394

UUABRLM '

Days ol

Hea~n

(197SJ Woldmdn

Theo~~ue .

AmtWTSI 5. 7 15and9 JOp m Ge~ral.sdrm!oSIOn

\2 . stu denu;, S 1 50
ThiS Academy Award nommee ts the tale of th ree
m~gtant worker'\ tn th~ TeJtiJS Pcsnhandlc _ therr d
forts to betti&gt;r themselves. and ttw complicano ns
d\llt rt&gt;-Slllt
A Ue:autlfu11y photographed film
BUFFALO COMMUNITY STUDIES GROUP
MEETING '
123 Je~tt Pkwy (frank Uoyd Wnght Ho usel 8
p m Coffee at 7 30 1ne hrst meetmg of dw year
Will consfst of several shoJI presentatiOns of research
1n pogrn.s
All penons mterested In Buffalo
Sflld.es. whe100 cu n~n tly mvolved in research or
n&lt;M . ase invrte'd to come and pa:rhdpate

DRAMA'
Wovzud&lt; by Geo.g Buch""' . d•ected by N.,l
Rada Hamman Theatre Studio, Main Stree1
Campus 8 p m ~neral admisSIOn $3. students
and sen;or citllens S 1 50 Sponsored by the
Department at Thea1re
POETRY READING •
R&amp;chard Wilbur. Third Annual Oscar StJverman
Poe1ry Reading Katharine CorneD Theatre . EUkotl
p m Free
RIChard W11bur is perhaps the most elegant of
American poets In an age when rhymed verse and
stncc rneter are not lashionable . he uses them With
such sty&amp;e and wt1 that hiS poeuy conStStently
debghts
His work has won the Pulrtzet Pnze and the Na
tional Book Award Wilbur has translaled and
adapted thrH plays by Moliere. and Wl'ote the very
funny libnmo for Leonard Bemslem·s score of the
Bro.dway hit ~Ca ndide "

Notices
ALUMNI WOMEN'S OAY
The U/ 8 Al.Jmni As.sooa11on Is sponsorU"Ig Its
third annual continuing educat100 fOfum . ""The
Working Woman Contributmg To Yow Own Sue
Satur~y . Novembet 17 The program wil:l
be hdd at dw Ctpen CompWx 411 Amher5t
Partie:ipants will h..ve a choice of attending two
OUt .Jf three workshopi Tile WSSIOOS CO\Iet work
r~Ues . honw and famity r~sponsibtht~n .
and fuynoa.J responsibibt.es
TIM! program's keynote speaker is Ma.T)Orie BeD
Chambet5. ~ -::ha• for the Natklnal Ad\ltSOf"Y
Commtttee for Womt"n The day-Song program. in
dlldtng luncheon. 11 SIS Rewrvahons ihould be
rn.ade ~on~ November J2 fOf addn.lonal tnforrnahon and reservai!OtU, caliSJI-4121

cess:·

ARCHITECTURE UIIRARY DEDICATION
The newly up.anded School d Arc:t'mecture and
EnWonmenaol Detign !SAEDI lba.y. """"&lt;l
wilh1n H.ye-s Hall on lhe U/ B ~ Strm campo"
and t~ thr~ a ~ul fund-ratstng
eflOfl for n-.. IJooks. wiD be dedicated in a ribbon
culltng Cllh'"emc:H\y. Fnd•y. November 16. to begin
""1th a reception •t !. 30 p m Ptniding will tw Dr
Abrtt Soma . U/ 8 a:«u!rve vice p~cmt . Jim
[)ym chairman ol the t.o..rd of tlw Frimds of
SAID. Robert N011h. cha•man ol the Fnends"
Lka:) Oev Aopment Commtttu. Nancy Baby.
Fnendi" c:ooui.,.lor and SAEO Dean Harold l
Cotwn
CATHOUC NEWI'IAN CENTER MASSES
Vlotl: 5 p m - 339 Squ•• end
N~ CenYr. ElicoAt Complft
~ M.am Str~ 10 a m and 12 noon Cwu.-c.n ChApel. 8 p m - St Jowph"5. 3269
MM" St Amherst 9 IS a m . 10.30. noon a.nd 5
p m - Newman CAnaft. f.koa
.............,......, 12 . - . - N......., Cen....
\iainSc JtUntveni~yA.;e_ 12noonand5pm New.n•n •.Atuer. Elllrott

So...,...,

~9am - ~"""""~~onboth

........

Exhibits
AOIRONDACK IMAGES
An exhibh of 18 photographs by Robut E. Burton, director of libraries at SUC/ Piansburgh and
formerly assistant director of Universi1y Libraries for
PubliC Servk:es at U/ 8 . Main Foyer of Heahh
Sc-iences Library. Stockton Kimball Tow~r
Through December
DENTAL STUDY
Persons who- think they need dental work and
would lik~ to take part m a study of pal.ent response
to rou1ine dental treatm~nt should contad Dr Nor
man l Corah at 831 ·44 12 Volunteers must not
cu n~ndyobe under the care of a dentist Paructpants
wiU recerve denial exammattOn and K·rays to de1er
mtne how much routme treatrrtenl 1hey require
Two filhfl9\ wiD be prO\Ilded by a dentiSt as part of
the study Spon$0red by the De-partment of
BehavJOr~l Science
GRADUATE SCHOOL DEADUNE DATES
Mondlly, Dec~mbH 3 - Submission of Ph 0
statement of programs to Graduate School for
September 1980 confenal
Monday. December 3 - Submlssion of Masters
statement of programs to Graduate School for June
1980 conferral
Mki-December - Apphcauons fDf Frnancial Aid
for 1979-80 generaUy ava1lat»e through Office of
Financial Aid
Frkiay, December 14 -lnstrucuon ends a1 close
of classes · Fall ~emester
INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE
Fac::ulty and Staff: The deadline lor retum.ng the
questiOnnaire for the addendum for the dir«tOfy of
faculty with lnternatiOT\41 eKperttW for 1979·80 ha~
b«n extended to November 15. 1979
KING TUT EXCURSIONS
An excursion to v1sit the Ktng Tut exhibition m
TOJ onto and a program about the EgypHan King are
being offered by the Black Student Union The two
events are co-sponsored by the Black Studies Pro·

.......

A pogram that mcludes a document.ary filu1 .
slide presentat.on and k!dure about the legendary
king will be presented on Saturday. November 10.
at 6 p m. at the WokSman Theatre h is free and
open to the poblic
11M' bus ucurstOn to W!E' the sold -out King Tu1 .
exhibit 15 se1 for Friday. Novembt-r 16 Buses will
leave Squue for Toronto !II 11 a m and wtll rerum
a1 approximately 9 p m
Tlckets for the Toronto trtp are $25 . includ•ng
c~ of bus and admission For lnfOt"mat ion and
resavat100s , caD the Black Studenl Union . at
831 -5421
A senes of other King T ut excursions are
available . ThanksgMng Day. November 22 , and
Friday . November 23 . leaving from kK.al
malk - S29 90 per person , $24 90 fOf students
CaU 433-6777 or 625-9211 for details

MASTER FOR INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE
ln~emafional College is accepting nominattons
and appbc-ations for 1M mastership of the College
Th~J Coaege , kx.ated ln Red Jacbt Qu.d . provides
residential and academic programs to
und~rgntdu.tes with an interest m con'\patatiw and
intema.Uonal issues. The master. who must be a
tenured unl~o~erslty faculty member with a
cHmonslrat~ lntftesl ;n the lntemitional area and
in undergraduates. will p&amp;ay a W:adenhip roW In aU
as;pects of CoiLtgt Wc-. wllh spedal emph..sis upon
the ~~ of the academic program.
Nom6nations and appbtions must be submilted
to the lntftnAUOnaJ College Master's Search Com·
mlttH. c.e ol the Dean's Office. The Collegn. 350
.,..,., Quad . Elicott Compie• by ~ .
- l l.
The Sun:h Commloft lndud&lt;s Ptof Cloud&lt;
Welch. Prof James Bunn . Ptd ._Jrving Sptuberg ,
Ns. s.Jiy Ktng. Dtan, Mumty ~art&amp;. af\d Inter·

nolional College

ll,udenJ&gt;

MEDICAL EDUCATION VIDEOCASSETTES
Network for Continuing Medis:al Education
VKJec:x:aswue Series. Tape •327 ""Fetal Monitor
lng PoliCy. ProtocaL Prtfalls."" presented by Roge1
K Freeman . M D . medical d1rect0f, Women"s
Hosplt.al of Memonal Hospnal and Medical Center
rn long Beach . Callfom.a -chn~eal UpdatE' in
Urinary Tr6CI lnf«ttOns Are You Doing All You
Can7'" presented by Patrick Joseph. M D . chief .
Chn.cal Research Um1 . DiviSion of lnfecuous
O.seases. University of C.ldOfn.a . San FranctSCO.
'"Counsehng VICtims of Sexual Assauh ... presented
by Thomas Novomy. M D . dm~eal instructor.
ambulatory and commun11y medic.tne . Umverslty of
Cahforn ~a . San Francisco
Available for vlewmg November 8 at the He.ahh
Sc.ences library Med.a Resources Center. Stockton
K1mbaU Tower For further Information call
83 1-4614
SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CWB
Stop m Room 7 Squire for information on our ski
tnps dunng semester break Open 10 all
STUDIES SKillS LAB
The Studie-s Skills Lab at the Unrversity Learmng
CPnler . 368 Baldy Hall . tS open for tutonng m
wrning and studies skills The hours are
Mondays ,Tuesdays. and Thursdays . 12·3 p .m •
Wednesdays. 10-2 p m No hours on Friday The
Lab is open to aD U/ B students
THANKSGIVING BUS SERVICE
Regular bus service wUI be t~rmlnated
Wednesday. November 21. as follows
la5t bus leaving Main Street (via Ridge Lea) 11
pm
Last bus lellving Amherst (Ell~eotl) (via RKtge
lea). ) H )5 p m
Last bus leavmg Amherst (Governor's) (via Rkfge
lea). 11 tOprn
See PQS'ed notKes at Bus Stops for Khedule In
effect from November 22·25
WINTER PARKING RESlRICTIONS
Overnight park1ng restrictions in campus lots will
be In effect from November 15 to April 15. 12 00
midnight to 6 .30 a m ThiS restriction Insures lots
can be cleared of snow and made ready for vehicles
the foUowing morning The number of parking
spaces have been Increased foc overnight parking to
bener accommodate resident students Any vehicle
not moved from any~ removalatea o r on Put ·
nam Way attn mKtnight will be tiCketed and tOINi!d
a1 the owner"s eKpense A~utely no exceptions
wtll be made
On the Meln Street Campus owrnight parking
ateas wiD be provioed in the Ma.in·Ba.iley. Sherman
Faculty and Parker Fecuky k&gt;ts
On the Amherst Campus overnight pa:riong will
be provided in k&gt;ts 1. 2. 3 . 5. and 7 In each case
only a des;;nated ponton ol a tot v.nu be available
In order to facilitate dearing ol overnight spaces.
commonly occupied by dormitory residents and onduty "'-ff. whida must be moved Housing
reside:nu haD aaff. Houilng Custodial staff and
Physic&amp;! Plant staff wUl notify trppropriate parUa to
mow their whides to cleared . rutrict~d areas Jor
one nrght only .
Vehk::les which are to be- - 5lortd'' for the' wtnter
mull be removed to ··sa.orage" areaS AJ Am~ or
Mah Stref:'t. caU Pubtic Salety at 2222 .
Abo. RON that dw Depannw:nt of Public Safety
prOVides up--Io--date campus condition reportS by
loiephonong .~~.5.

ALAMO GAllERY
Kevin Noble. still film strtps. John MaggioUo,
SX -70 Polaroids. Alamo Gallery , Beck Hall .
Through November 27 Gallery hours , 9 .30a m to
5 p m . Monday through Fnday
ARCHITECTURE
Drawings of residential and com mercial housing
units by Banon Myers . Toronto archi'tect . a re on
view throughout November In the lobby of Hayes
Hall. Sponsored by the School of Architectu re and
Envrronment.al Design and the Council on International Studies
ART FACULTY EXHIBITION
Members of Oepar1ment of Art have paintings
and sculpture on exhibit In the Inner Gallery on the
hfth floor of Capen HaD . During business hours.
ARTISTS' BOOK EXHIBITION
Anists' books from the Albright-KnoK Art Gallery.
In the An BooK Collection on the ground floor of
lockwood Memorial library. Through December
7 Sponsored by lockwood Memorial Library and
the U/ B Department of Art History.
MUSIC EXHIBIT
Musical Annlv~rnries: Observances for
November. Musk Ubtary . Ba.ird HaD. through
November 30

On The Air
NOVEMBER II
CROSSTALK 1: BW Szymc:&amp;ak. lnstrudor. College H. "The Disabled PeHOn ." WBEN (930) . 9,05
p.m
C ROSSTALK II: Paul R. Chimera, aru/education edrtor. University News Bureau . "Salvad.C&gt;t"
Dall Madman or GenlusT WBEN (930J 11 .05
pm
Eace.Tpts from both lnteT'Views may be heard on
Croutalk Highlights, WBEN - FM (102 51.
No~o~ember 10. 5·7 a .m.

#

, ..... -

•• &lt;01. .,

change '"focus and priorities ," in many instances, is "controlled by forces outside

lhe State University."
Among complaints voiced by Area V
constituents are : commu nity relations
could be better than they are at pres..-nl;
the President Is perceived as nol being
VISible enough; the organization ollhe In·
stitution is not understood ; and. -..given
the economk climate," the University is

perceived .as not having .enough political
.clout. 1 ••
•• ;.,._
•
' ·'

�-November 8;-t&lt;J79-

•

Recombin~t DNA

,_ ......col..,

ly Informed of the extent and nature of
recombinant DNA work on campus. Kite
said. because of the heavy debate which
has surrounded such research since i1 was
developed in the early 1970's.
The technique itself involves the ··cutting" of the DNA molecule by exposing it

laboratory structu res which Niles said can
allow one to work even with p&amp;thogens
without danger . A special filtering system
deans the air under the hood of mkro
organisms.
At the P21evelat which the U/ B scien·
tists are operating, safety guidelines are
similar to those used In any minimum risk
lab experiment: lob doors must be closed
when work is in progress: work surfaces
are decontaminated daily: a universal
biohazard sagn is on the lab door; entrance is restrided: hands must be
washed after handling the o~anisms and
before leaVing the lab, etc.
In addition, Niles said. all wastes are
sterilized before they leave the lab and
again before disposal.
Kite noted that the committee is at tempting to be as helpful as it can in providing information about the recombir.ant
DNA research to the community. Its
bimonthly meetings are open to the
public. and anyone can request information from the committee .

to certain proteins called restriction en-

zymes. which break the double chain of
the DNA molecule at panicular points in
the nucleotide sequence . If the same
restriction enzyme is used on DNA from

two different sources so that the break wiU
occur at the appropriate target sequence.
the ends of the separate molecules will be
compatible and can be rejoined. or
recombined. into a new single DNA
molecule.
This new DNA molecule. made up of
sequences from separate organisms. is
then put into a suitable host cell When it

propagates, it will generate exact replicas
of the recombined DNA .
E. coli may have. in addition to its
single large drcular chromosome. one or
more independently replicating. smaller
loops of DNA known as plasm ids which
are also used as vehicles in the recombinant technique.
These plasmids are broken open by
restriction enzymes and used as one component of a recombinant (linked with
DNA from another organism) and
returned to • whole cell When the cell
multiplies, it will copy the new plasmid
containing the inserted nucleotide sequence from the foretgn source
The recomb inant D NA d ebate
The debate over whether humankind
should continue to tamper with the
replication of DNA-nature's most fun damental chemical reaction-began in
earnest in 1974 when a group of investigators declared a voluntary
moratorium on some types of these expenments that they felt could be potentially dangerous. It has continued ever
since , though Dr . Kite feels it has simmered down a good deal Some scien·
liSts. notably George Wald of Harvard .
have declared that fooUng with the
genetiC code is simply too risky for
human good
Other scientists feel that possible
benefits. such as using the technique to
direct cells to produce beneficial
substances like human insulin. are wonh
the risk
Dr. Niles explained he is usang the
recombanant DNA technique to further
his studies mto how genes are regulated
particularly the gene responsible for synthesizing ribosomal RNA .
''The recombinant DNA technique is
permitting me to make large amounts of
the gene I'm studymg," he said, .. and to
Isolate specific regions of the gene so that
certain chemical and physical approaches
can be taken in studying it. ..
Niles' research
The gene Dr Niles IS studying is obtamed from a single-cell orgamsm called
Tetrahymena pyriforrrus, whk:h grows in
fresh water Alter "recombining" the
D A molecule. he inserts it 1nto E. col1
Kl2. where n reproduces.
The enzyme RNA polymerase ts
responsible for synthesiZing ribosomal
RNA Ntles Is studying this gene in an attempt to understand how the enzyme can
recogmze spec1flc sequences in the DNA
whiCh are the stan and stop locations for
RNA synthesis
· Dr Niles pointed out that the recombi·
nan! DNA technique is being used at U/ B
simply as a tool for obtaining large
amountS of certain genes, and IS not bemg utilized in .. shotgun" experiments in
which DNA is randomly and unpredictably recombined .

It'• a tool, a techniq ue
"Recombinant DNA Is JUSt a beginning.
It's just a techntque." he said. "It's
opened up a whole world of e.xpenmentation not available five years ago··
All recombinant DNA research IS carried out at U/B under the speclfte
guidelines ol the Btosafety Committee.
which ha• uoed the NIH requirements as
a startmg point
The NIH commhtee divided safety requa.ements. .fot. .recombinanL DNA • re~
search mto several a~tegories according
tp pot rulitlleveb Qf danger, four Jevl!ls of

The basics of the recombinant DNA
teeh_ftique employed on campus are illustrated in this diagram, which shows
a piece (in parentheses) of the DNA
molecule separated from the DNA
chain of one organism insened into a
plasmid isolated from E. coli bacteria
and then reintroduced into a whole
cell.
physical containment . Pl to P4 . and
three levels of biologaca\ contamment .
EK I to EK3. for E colt host systems
All U/ B research IS being conducted an
the lower P2 levels. Dr Kite satd
"We are doing no research now and
none has been proposed for the higher
levels." he said "All our work is being
done with E coli. wh1ch seems to be in capable of surviving outside the
laboratory. The genes are not ones that
would tell the cell to produce any
pathogenic agent "

C lose m onitori ng
Even so. Kite emphastzed that all
aspects of recombinant DNA research on
campus are closely monitored. BeforO
researcher can even apply for funding for
such research , he or she must obtain the
initial approval of the Biosafety Committee . which not only reviews the ex periments proposed but also the
background of the principal investigator
and the physical properties of the
laboratory to be used .
The recombinant DNA resea rch in
campus labs is done in biohazard hoods.

Informat ion center
The Office of Environmental Health
and Safety serves as an information
center for the co mmun ity . Available there
are a collection of the mmutes of the
com mittee meetings. schedules of future
meetings. reference lists . books and
descriptions of ongoing research proJects
in lay terms Persons interested m obtam ang informauon can contact that offiCe
"The potemial importance of th1s
research IS such that tt's wase to go ahead
with 11 under carefully cont rolled cond1·
t1ons." Dr K1te emphasazed
Servmg on the B1osafety Commmee
are Dr Kat e. chairman of the comm1ttee .
Department of Microbiology . Dr J
Gordon Hall . vice chanman of the com
mlltee . Department of Mechanical
Engmeenng, Robert E Hunt. director of
environmental health and safety .
secretary. Dr . Alan K Bruce . radiation
protection off~eer . Dr Jeremy Bruenn .
Division of Cell and Molecular Biology .
Dr Edward A Carr. Pharmacology and
TherapeutiCS. Father Edward F1sher .
Newman Center
Als o.
Mary
Lou
Fle1ssner .
epadem•olog1st . Ene County Health
Department. Dr Floyd A Green .
Veterans Adm1mstrat10n Hosp1tal. Dr
George W Greene . Depanment of Oral
Pathology. Dr A Gaylord Harlord . Dtvtsion of Cell and Molecular Biology. Dr
James Mohn. Center for Immunology .
Dr Michael Noe . Buffalo General
Hospital. Rita P1ccolo . Depanment of
Pathology. and Eugene Wilczewski , ex·
ecutive director of Health Systems Agen cy of Western New York. Inc

•
Ketter ISSUeS
Theatre statement
President Robert l. Ketter Issued
)&lt;'ct . Following approval by the Theatre
thi&amp; statemen t Tuesday concerning the
D1strict Corporauon and Studto Arena .
downtown theatre:
the project went out for bid m late
In response to recent editorial comSeptember .
ments in a local newspaper regarding the
renovation of the facade of the Center
O ver budget
The bids came 10 over budget and the
Theatre. which the University leases from
architects. through some dek!tions and
Studio Arena Theatre , it is 1mponant to
note that the university is aware of the
material cha nges. then redesigned the
project to reduce the cost In late October
problem and progress Is being made in
resolving the situation
the project went back out for bid and
Because the University does not own
these bids are scheduled to be opened
the property, it IS not possible for State of
November 8 .
New York capital funds to be applied to
The new facade wtll feature a brick
any major renovation pro,ect. This is
frame and glass front with glass doors.
dear in the lease w1th Srudk&gt; Arena .
providing a fuU view of the theatre lobby
whose Board of Directors has moved
from the street A decoratively lighted
very quickly to bring about the needed
bright aluminum marquee wiU also be in·
renovation.
stalled as pan of the project.
In August of this year. the Buffalo Ur·
A spokesman for the architectural ftrm
ban Renewal Agency approved a
said that work on the new facade should
$75.000 Federal Community Develpp·
be underway by Christ.ma; 1979 and
men! Block Grant to Studio Arena for
completed during the early part of 1980.
Additionally, the University has conreplacement of the buUdlng facade at681
Main Street, which the University leases
tinued interior improvements, using stufor its Center Theatre
dent help and physical plant materials to
clean. paint and make the ln.sldo sofer.
Studio Arena contracted with the Buffalo Architectural firm of Hamilton ,
Plans for the · renovation of the
Houoton and lownie Jo.dooign the pro· . - "cabar81" are also underway.

Automation
for Libraries
on the way

.....

The University Ubraries are on the w..sy
to having an au tomated circulation
system to replace "the cumbersome
manual operation which has long since
outlived its usefulness." the latest Issue of
the Library News reports.
Ubrarles Director Saktidas Roy an·
nounced at the Libraries Administrative
Council meeting on October 26 a nd at
the Professional and Civil Service staff
meeting on October 30 that the Division
of the Budget in Albany has accepted the
Ubraries' request for a new. comp uter·
based circulation system and that bidding
for such a system has bee.n officially
opened .
The need for the system has been
voiced with increasing emphasis over the
past seven years, the Library News said .
Mr. Roy expressed pleasure that action is
finally being taken as well as "enthusiasm
for the increased efficiency and improved
service whteh the new system will pro·
vide ."
At the same time, he than ked individuals who have worked on the proJect so far. particularly Dr. Walter Macintyre. director of SUNY / Buffalo Com ·
puling Services. ''whose assistance has
been invaluable ... Roy said .
A request for proposals (RFPI was sent
to potential vendors during the first week
of October followed by a vendor briefing
by Macintyre on October 18. The RFP
specifies that vendors must mdicate their
intentiOnS tO bid by the middle of
November followed within two weeks by
the1r proposals. Demonstrations by ven dors will be conducted through the
month of December by invitation
A selection com mittee to be established
by Roy will review proposals and submit
to him their find ings. He . in turn. will
have responsibility for making final
recom mendations to President Ketler.
The RFP stipulates that final selection of a
vendor to sup ply the system will be made
by January 31. 1980. and thai Installa tion will be co mpleted by April, 1980.
Roy said vendor interest in the contract
1s great. a number of computer companies. among them IBM . CL Systems
Inc . and Hewleu Packard, were
represented at the October briefing.
The system as outlined in the RFP will
be based on a mini-computer housed in
the Libranes . It will be able to house a title
file of nearly 500.000 entries and a
patron file of 30.000 Individ uals. A total
of 13 terminals are planned for seven
units within the Libraries, each terminal
to provide an on-line hnk to the data files
with a guaranteed average response time
of two seconds. The system will provide a
number of fundions. such as checking
out . checking ln. and renewing materials.
including reserve materials. maintaining
holds on materials. t.omputing fines ,
restr icting borrowers , answenng
bibliographic questions. and producing
reports on collection use.
The process of convening the present
manual sy~tem to a computerized operation will be time-consuming and complex . Roy said He expressed optimism
that the Libraries staff .. will approach this
project with the same enth usiasm as was
evident during the recent move to the
Amherst Campus."
At the same time. he cautioned that
extensive negotiatk&gt;ns concerning fun ·
ding as well as a detailed revtew ci proposals submitted by vendors must take
place before the Libraries have to start
worrying about actual conversion . Further details will be forthcoming. Roy
promised

..

Arms at Oswego
President Virginia Radley has author·
lzed public safety ofticers at Oswego to
bear sidearms from II p m. to 7 a m .
Authorization came after almost three
years of careful consideration and consultation w'ith campus constituent groups.
The decision was made in view of the
natwe of several criminal Incidents
perpetrated or attempted on campus during the past year.
While regrettin!! the neces.stty for such
a decision , Dr. Radley said It w11s ma&lt;le in
the best Interests of the college community and to protect the general welfare.

(

�•

. i...

It's one area where
all four SUNY centers
are cooperating , scientists hear
In order to lure really big research fun -

puses across the state-both public and
private-must work in cooperation and

not as rivals. an Albany official who holds
high posts in both SUNY and the
Research Foundation told a grou p of
physicists Friday evening.

He also praised efforts made by
SUNY's physicists towa rd shanng
resources and coordinating activities.
Dr Herbert McArthur. who serves as
assistant vice chancellor for research for
SUNY Central and as director of
academic research development for the
Research Foundatton . made his remarks
at a dinner for vis1ting ph~'Sicists and
guests attending the two -day. fourth an nual SUNY Ph ysics Symposium here
''This

meeting

was

significant

for

Western New York colleges." Akira
lsihara. chairman of U/ B's Department
o f Physics. said .. As far as I can recall.
there has never been an intercampus
meeting of this type in this part of the
state We tnvited sc1ence faculty rt\e'mbers
from all Western New York colleges and
high Khools to atlend also ··

Collaboration not competition
lsihara echoed McArthur's remarks on
•he importance of SU Y untty: "We
have been working within the system to
increase inter-campus communK:ations
and collaboration . The four physics
depurtments within SUNY have realized
that the resources at each campus are
limited and that each campus has its own
strengths and uniqueness.
··By making better use of the resources
within the system . we should be able to
improve our ed ucat ional and research
responsibilities even under curren1
growth restraints.··
McArthur. in his discussion of the ad·
vantages of working as a system . review·
ed the econom1c trends that are leading
to cutbacks. Nbting that JUSt the cost of
heating all SUNY campuses will soon
reach $]()()million a year. he said cam·
puses will have to develop cooperative
efforts themselves and not rely on the
magk: funding source . the state . to direct
them
SUNY physicists "confessed" to him a
couple years ago that they had been
mee1ing. McArthur said. and he en·
couraged this interaction not only for that
group but for "any group of people who
want to reach across campuses to form
research teams. consortium s and other
cooperative eHons."
It was this cooperation that led to the
recent formation of a state-wide Coal
Research Laboratory , for which federal
funding is now being sought. McArthur
said . The potential funding for the con·
struction of a physical facility is about $4
million with an tnitial operating budget of
S2.3 milhon

Rivalries transcended
.. At our first meetings to discuss this
proposal. Buffalo and Stony Brook were
ready to demohsh each other to be
named as the site of the coal lab," he
saKi '' But we were able later to transcend
campus rivalry because we knew it was
the only way we could re~lize the coal
lab "
A member of the audience questioned
the inclusion of the st~te' s private colleges
(Cornell . Syracuse . Rensselaer and
others) and CUNY in the research group.
"It was evident to everyone that . if
SUNY or the pnvates went in alone. the
proposal would fail ," McAnhur replied
"We had to develop a package to present
to the Department of Energy that shows
we could perform as a system ...
McArthur described the "Institutional
relauonshops" which exist between DOE
and some insttluUons. notably MIT. that
gtves these units access to fundmg
Another member of the audience.
noting that the original plan was for
dev lopmen1 of a wide· ranging energy
anshtute and not one that focussed on
coal, asked what happened to the inhial
idea

"We had to present a spedfic proposal
for a planning grant ." McArthur explain·
ed . "We're trying to get DOE back to
basic research . If we ca n get into DOE
with the coal proposal. we have a better
chance of getting in for ot her funding
also."

A link to Brookha ven'• synchrotron
Walter Gibson . chairman of the
Physics Department at SUNY I Albany
and a prime mover in the cooperative effon. discus~d his hopes for inter-campus
unity.
"The whole program in the system Cdn
be more than the sum of its pans. " he
noted "Each program has some areas in
which we have really established centers
of strength o n a national or internatio nal
scale ..
SUNY physics departments have
regular exchanges of faculty and
students. he potnted out. and depart ment chairmen meet at least once a
semester to "break down barriers ...
Gibson described a proposal that the
group has put together for possible DOE
fundmg that would develop a SU Y link
mto a new multi -million dollar federal Na tional Synchrotron Light Source facility at
Brookhaven Laboratories. If funding as
approved . SUNY will have the only
umverstty·based program on that facility.
Gibson said
He added that the real tmponance of
the proposal ts tts )O!Ot development
wilhin SUNY. so that even if funding
does not come through . an impo rtant
step will still have been taken

Wright House
status clarifie d
by officials
SUNY Chancellor Clifton Whano n
and U/ B President Roben L Ketter last
week issued th1s statement clllrifying the
status of the Frank Uoyd Wnght House .
"We have tried to obtain funds to have
the Frank Lloyd Wright House ... renovat·
ed for the past nine years; however. the
State budget has refused to provide these
funds Renovation and preservation are
more important to us than who owns the
House . The Board of Tru stees of the
State University of New York recently
passed a resolution which allows the
Chancellor of the State University of New
York to transfer the House to the New
York State Office of General Ser·
vk:es - the only group authorized to sell
State property We have been info rmed
that the House will not be transferred
un~ss adequate assuranc~s are given
that it will be put in sound condition and
maintalped as a histoncaltrust ."

3 U/8 grads
named to
'wall of fame'
Throe U/ B graduates- Bill Monkarsh.
Dr . Joseph Manch and Warren
Rosing-were among 12 athletes in·
ducted into the J ewish Center of Greater
Buffalo's sports "Wall of Fame" on
October 20. 1979 . at the Center's
Amherst facility
Monkarsh, Class of '60, was a basebaU
standout and later played In the DetroH
and Los Angeles professional organiza·
tions . He has been head coach of
baseball at the University since 1968.
establishing a record of 359· 212 · 7 .
Mooch , Class of '32. was an outstan·
ding athlete In football , wrestling and
bo~eing , and was recently elected to the
U/ B Sports Hall of Fame . He is a former
superintendent of the Buffalo Public
Schools.
Rosing , Class of '36, starred In football
and basj&lt;etpall, as a triple-lhreat h~ijbaj:k ·
on the gridirOn and guar~·on the co.ul1,
'

··-

November 8. 1979

i

New CSEA evaluation
process starts soon

Physics

ding grants into New York State. cam-

l

-·- ...

In a:t effort to assist supervisors in administrative, operational and institutional
units at the University to understand and
properly use the new perlormance
evaluation program for CSEA represented em ployees, the Personnel
Department is conducting training ses·
sions today on the Main Street Campus
and tomorrow at Amherst.
The new performance evaluations,
mandated by the current union contract .
affect some 1.800 classified employees
and 500 supe rvisors . Although the three·
year pact was effective April 1. Personnel
only last week was Informed by the State
Employee Relat ions Office about specifics
of the procedure . whose first phase must
be operable by the end of the month . Still
to be refined are provisions to govern an
appeals mechanism for the evaluations.
and payroll and budget changes.
M ore mea n ingful

Accord ing to Personnel Director
Robert Pearson . the changes are "exten·
sive" in na1Ure. but should make the
review process more "meaningful" to the
parties involved . Previously. classified
employees had only one performance
evaluation a year , and frequently that
was done with little or no communication
between supervisor end the subordinate.
noted Pearson . Evaluations also had no
impact on whether o r not an individual
rece1ved an increment. Under the new
evaluation procedure . however. com·
munication and feedback are built into
the system Perfonnance evaluations will
be done twice a year and will have a
direct bearing on increments.
After explaintng the new program to
his or her workers. a supervisor must appra•se each employee's JOb performance
in three to seven of th eir most important
assigned duties. Supervisors must then
give the strengths of the employee re ·
garding each task . as we ll as list any areas
needtng improvement.
In addit1on . each employee must be
g1ven an overall rating of either "outstanding ." "highly effective .'' "satisfactory" or "needs substantial improve·
ment... An explanauon or justification
must be given on the evaluation form for
the performance ratings given .
At the same place on the form-a seclion
entitled
"Supervisor ' s
Comments"- other aspects of Job perfor·
mance not d1rectly related to quality of
work can be commented upon . Evaluation of JOb performance in asstgned tasks
or duties. however . is strictly according to
quality and / or quantity of work pro·
duced .
Pearson recognizes it ma y be difficult
for some supervisors to separate the way
they personally feel about an employee
from the way in which the employee per·
forms on the JOb. but is confident the pro·
cedure has safeguards to inhibit
misrepresentation .
Upon com pleting the evaluation . a
supervisor must review the appraisal with
a superior. The intent here is to insure
"accuracy and e quity" among ratings and
"reasonable consistency" with evalua·
tions conducted by ot her supervisors in
the unit. Afterwards, the supervisor is
obltged to meet in private with each
worker to discuss his or her rating and
evaluation . Employees have the opportunity at this time to express any opinions
regarding the evaluation and to make
suggestions concerning "practices and
procedures of the work unit. ''
The new proced ure is designed to
foste r commun ication as well as provide
the means through wh k:h job respon·
sibltities can be solidified and better
understood It Is also believed the new
procedure will enable a supervisor to
more easily assist an employee in gaining
the knowledge and skills necessary fo r a
good evaluation .

Grleva ble
If. however. an employee feels he o r
she has been given an unfair review it
may be grie\Ted. In the grievance pro·
cedure. It would be the responsibility of
management to prove the worker deserved an unsetlsfactory rating (sinte it
would mean no pay increment) , and up
to the em ployee to show thet a rating
high.~~ !~an 'sat!sfoctq~·w~s ~~t!fle~ .. : ·. ,

According to guidelines is.sued by the
Employee Relations Office. It is expected
that in a work force the size of U/ B: only
10 per cent of employees would merit an
"outstanding" rating: 15 to 20 per cent
would be expected to receive a "htghly
effective" evaluation ; 10 per cent would
"need substantial improvement." and the
rest would be raied "satisfactory."
Under contract provisions . individuals
rated as needing improvement would
receive no increments. Those receiving
two " satisfactory" ratings In a year are
eligible
for
a
"performance
advancement" increase . This is a
sched ulized raise and is approximately a
5·6 per cent hike. Workers co nsidered
··outstanding" o r "htghly effective" can
receive a pe rformance advancement
and / or an "annual performance award ...
To get the $300 cash pe rformance
award. an employee must be at o r above
the "job rate ." that is. above the max·
imum salary stat ed in the salary sched ule
fo r the position .
Cash performance awards can be
given to workers mo re tha n one year in a
row . This year's awards will be issued
sometime in January or February. Pearson said .

Two tracks
Employees can now get to the "job
rate" classification in either a fast or slow
track . depending on performance evaluatio ns and/ or their personal motivation to
improve work quality. For example. an
employee consistently receiving the two
top job evaluations can reach th e "job
rate" 18 months after hiri ng. For a
"satisfactory" performer . it would take
four years. but no more . Even this is an
improve ment over the last contract.
noted Pearson , because previously it
took five years to reach "job rate ."
Personnel hopes supervisors will ap·
proach the new system wilh an open
mind and do the best they can, giv.en th e
shon amount o f preparation time _ An y
kinks in the process will be worked o ut in
the near future . Questions pertaining to
the evaluation itself will be answered in
the training sessions .
Two sessions. one at 8 :30 a .m . and
I :30 p .m .. are being held today in Squire
Conference Theatre . One session will be
held tomorro w at 1:30 p .m . in The Kiva.
101 Baldy. All training sessions run ap·
proximately two and one-half hours.

Nursing receives
$500,000 grant
A nursing faculty me mber has received
a three -year $585,139 grant from HEW's
Division of Nursing for a program to
educate school and pediatric nurse
practitioners.
Charlene McKaig. clinical assistant professor, said that during the three years ,
45 nurses with baccalaureate degrees are
expected to be enrolled In the program.
Upon completion, they wiU recieve the
M.S. In nursing. The offering is a part of
the child health nursing graduate
program .
McKaig reported that most of those
entering will later be employed as school
nurse practitioners. Unlike school nurses ,
school nurse practitioners are especially
educated to proviP.!e assessments of
children through ph ysical examinations
a nd other techniques. Their role In pro·
vidlng health screening In schools is
growing. Several Western New York
school systems have followed the trend
away from hiring nurses who provide o n·
ly emergency first aid to hiring nurse
practitioners who can offer greater range
of services.
Those enrolled in the program as
pediatric nurse practitioner students will
focus on providing similar assessments in
well baby clinics and other health settings.
McKaig said applicants must have a
baccalaureate degree , preferably In nurs·
ing. with one to two years experience in
ambulatory child health care. Those with
a master's degree will also be considered .
Applicants for the January class should
contact McKal~ . at tl)~ School o( Nursing.
Stocltlo!'. ISfrn~lll;ower · • · · . .• ·,

41' ...

.

�..•=•

OY.ember..8. -1.979

.I

II

SUNY's edge being eroded, Wharton warns
Federal, State intrusions,
intra-SUNY rivalries harmful
By Rlchanl A. Slggelkow

SU~e~.:,Petitlve edge of ''low cost ~nd

high quality," lonnerly one o!the gre~test
benefits ol public higher education , "has
been slgnlficandy eroded" because ol
-shifts In public montes to support students
attending priv~te lnsttiutions, Chancellor
Cl~ton R. Wharton , Jr., warned the
SUNY Faculty Senate during the opening
session of Its 63rd regular meeting at
Po!5dam, October 26-27 .
" Meanwhile," he added, "the private
sector has now become genuinely dependent on tax dollars lor lutwe survival."
He ~lso reaffirmed that "we need to
m~ke a case lor public higher education ,
noting the sign~lcant differences that exist
between the mission ol the private a nd
public sector."
Dr. Wharton concentrated primarily on
the recently proposed $936.7 million
SUNY oper~ting budget lor 1980-81
($96.8 miUion over the previous base. an
11.5 p er cent Increase). relating
budgetary needs to the overall economy.
He also expressed concern over
·'escalating governmental intrusion" into

higher education , emphasized the need
for closer cooperation between and
among various SUNY units. and con cluded with a consideration of "future

needs and directions" for the system during the 1980s.
SUNY's educational goals interface
with current and potential budget
problems ''In a state simultaneously trying
to improve Its economk: health and tax

base." a situation "complicated funher by
increasing competition among other state
agencies for available tax dollars."
Billion dollar budget
Although referred to in the media as
"the billion dollar budget ," the current
SUNY request, In the Chancellor's j•Jdg·
ment , ''does not meet the real need of
SUNY ~mpuses as a whole ."
He realistically included "a built-in
assumption (by the legislative branch)
that dollars to be made available lor a//
state agencies for the next five years will
be limited to $35 million," which is pro·
poriionately liule more than one-third ol
the total SUNY request lor 1980·81
alone .
Sixty per cent ol the budget meets
already fixed obligations, "over which we
have no control," while another 10-12
per cent will hopefully cover continuing
Inflationary trends.
The proposed budget still fails to
resolve the serious need to build In finan ·
cia] suppon for equipment replacement,
for which an estimated $35-$45 million is
required annually; even ij the present $5
million item now requested remains intact
lor this purpose, the Increased amount ol
$18 million would still be far from ade·
quate.
Ubraries would be allocated $2.4
million , while another $1 .1 million is ear·
marked lor Student Services "In response
to an lnausing number of warnings by
various units that future declines in stu·
dent support areas are Impacting student
retention efforts; it is necessary to redress
some..of the under·funding existing In this
area.
There are other difficulties. "Since
1974 we (SUNY) Increased our gross
square footage in physical space by
6,000,000 square feet , whUe (concur·
rently) losing 121 positions from among
the personnel who maintain the
facilities."
Mcwe rnldeace balla, but not here
Also , despite an~ted enrollment
reductions (the State Education Depart·
ment reports~~ there wiD be 1.5 million
le-.- students In aU educational insttiu·
lions In a downward trend~~ will con·
tinue until the mid· 1990's) , K Is now
necesoary to construct additional student
housing at certain campuses (Albany,
Binghamton , Stony Brook, Cortland ,
Cobleskill, Faf1T'\fl9dai,. ~1. and. Pyr·
chase) where J'ruent . demand ..xcetdo
availability an ~us Problelns havi

resulted because of "tripling" over·
subscribed residence halls.
"We are going to have ~ major battle
trying to convince the Executive and
Legislative branches about the need to
build more student housing in the lace ol
declining enrollment trends." Dr. Whar·
ton predicted .
Nor is he optimistic about monies from
other sources. Although individual stu·
dent support Is "quite well entrenched on
the federal side, Institutional support has
fared poorly." The foundations "are also
seriously eroded by inflation ," but he still
hopes lor "some help" from the cor·
porate area . Private fundi ng "is necessary
to provide flexibility and additional
resources to live on during a period when
we will not get needed tax dollars."

lntrualons
The Chancellor also "tactfully and
diplomatically" address~d "escalating
state and federal Intrusions ," acco m·
panied by regulations affecting University
affair~ While ··not malicious.·· preoccup tOt\ over expending tax dollars in·
variably results In "greater and greater
degrees of control."
Continued academic review procedures by the State Education Depart·
ment raise such questions as : "Who. in
fad, shall make the judgment on many of
these issues?." and "How do you deter·
mine need in academic programs while
still recognizing the complexities and rela tionships that exist between various
depanments on different campuses?"
Furthermore. "Questions of substance
require judgments by qualified peers in
the field. rather than by someone with no
professional competency ."
These procedures "are deflecting
dollars away from what we are supposed
to be doing - high quality educational
services-as well as deflecting the time of
our leadership from predominating con·
cems about educational matters... the
Chancellor declared.
Escalating lnter-cJ~mpus rivalry
Dr. Wharton Is also concerned about
the real possibility of "an escalating inter·
campus rivalry within SUNY' in re·
cruiting students and establishing com ·
peting academic programs which "could
very well prod~ce massive strain within
1he system.
"We need to realize the imponance of
dealing with each other jointly and collec·
lively to address such Issues as competition among and between units within ou r
own system ."
As on previous occasions, the
Chancellor reponed on the continuing
disenchantment ol SUNY students seek·
ing transfers to other units within the
same system who can and do transfer
without difficulty to private institutions. In
fact , credits are accepted outside of
SUNY even a her the end ol the freshman
year.
A ''singlemost significant lmpacl on
enrollment occurs when currently enroll·
ed students communicate their
positive-or negative-reactions to
friends who are still attending the high
school from which they came." he
asserted.
Dr. Wharton firmly believes that
.. Quality" and "Diversity" remain as
marl&lt;et~ble strengths within the SUNY
system and Its individual units.
He urged that we "recognize oppor·
tunlties ~nd build on already existing
strengths ol individual units ." This does
not mean "centralized control, or loss of
autonomy," but taking advantage ol
unexpk&gt;ited opportunities to ·e ncourage
more facuhy relationship$ and Interaction
among SUNY units, building simul·
taneously on the strongths ol each cam·
pus and the entire system.
Opportllnltlea lor coiUOOrtla
.
Emphasized were possibilities ol a con·
sortial approach In researoh activities,
"already working successfully within the
private sector," which Is " more flexible
and c.an move more rAPid ly:',
He identified "Coaf as Energy" and
"Url&gt;an PrOblems" as several key areas

~~ lend themselves to the development
ol natural consortia. Pm ol the solution
rests on ··an abiUty to recognize areas
where we need to work togetherincluding joint doctoral programs
and encouraging student mobiUty among
units-so as to develop and utilize our
diversity."
He concluded hts formal remarks with
the challenge that , "I cannot tell you
where these opportunities are; you know
your own resources, and how , and
when, and the manner in which this
should be done ."

Prnlclen&amp;l rnlewa aod ....rches
During the following question and
answer period, the Ch~ncellor said there
was no intent to ignore the importance of
faculty involvement in ''presidential
reviews." He reaffirmed the rT'W!Ijor role of
local Councils both In the review process
and in forwarding nominations of can·
didat es for President, conclud ing that
"this matter is one you should argue out
among yourselves."
He also hopes to see public service
programs developed that "will impact
favorably on the economic fortunes of
New York."
He Is Interested in the international
area. in part because of fu nding
possibililles 1 and because "We have
unique resources: New York Is one of the
most international states In the Union ."
Other measures to be taken include
"the need to draw alumni into the pro·
cess" and eliminating a tendency within
SUNY ''to be a lillie defensive" about our
educational image .
Discussion during the business session
centered mainly around a resolution from
the Committee on Governance relating
to Trustee guidelines for the selection of
SUNY PreSidents and the body
unanimously endorsed without dissent
the following principles.
" 1. (a) The official presidential search
com mittee of a College Council should
be a JOint committee composed of Coun·
cil members and representatives of the
ca mpu s faculty . professional staff.
classified service staff. students , and
alumni. The membership of the search
committee should Include representation
from the professional employees in addi·
tion to at least one·third academK: staff
representation
"(b) In making its nomination to the
Board of Trustees. the Council should
select from among a panel of final can·
didates prepared by the search
committee
"(c) There should be a Chancellor's
representative to the search committee .
who should work closely with the commillee , acting as advisor and providing
services as reque~ted .
''2 . The Faculty Senate Committee on
Governance, which has been studying
the procedures for the selection of
presidents, should be included as a lull
participant in the discussions and the
development of a final draft of guidelines
for the selection of presidents . The
Senate respectfull y requests the
Chancellor t o im pl ement th is
recommendation .
"3. The Faculty Senate affirms the vital
interest of the facuhy and professionals in
the matter of presidential selection , and
welcome' the Chancellor's commitment
to sharing the final draft of guidelines for
presidential selection with the Senate for
its response.
"4 . The Senate directs the Executive
Committee to submit, and in a timely
manner, the draft of proposed guidelines
for the selection of presidents that it
receives from the Chancellor, to the
Senate for its deliberation and action ."
The following resolution from SUNY
Buffalo Center also passed unanimously:
"1bat the SUNY Faculty Senate ad·
viR the Chancellor and the
t_
that It obJect- to the ki&gt;D'e lfmllatforu
placed by the neu&gt; Gukklf.- on oecu•·
lng of faaJlty opinion In connection
IIlith the ,.uudenllol ~oaluallon prcr
cao. Such llmltallono an notonly con·
trary to the bat prodlce among
American unluerwltfeo, but corlfllcl with
the prlncfpl~ by which the ret&gt;leUJ 11 to
be go~.·

r.....

Bu.s.et.W......,hop

.

~eU 9oen,, ~~ lqr the F~hy
Senate Budget COmmlnee, announced

~~ ~n ahemoon workshop, scheduled
lor January 31. 1980. will cover State ,
SUNY. and local campus budget
preparation. Mr. William H . Anslow ,
associate vice chancellor, SUNY, will
discuss SUNY budget processes . Present
plans include a dinner address by Or.
How~rd F. MiUer. director ol the Division
ol the Budget, State ol New York, on
current and immediate future problems In
financing State agencies and higher
education.
This special workshop will directly
precede the regu/or 64th SUNY muting,
scheduled for the Buffalo CentA!r cam·
pus, February l -2. 1980.
Also approved was a revised charge ol
the Committee on •Jntemational Educa·
tion Development, which sh~ll now "be
concerned with the University's involvement in International Education and
Development. It shall address critical
Issues and make recommendations concerning the development , coordination ,
suppon. improvement. and effective ad·
ministration of international education
and development programs. act ivities.
and related University-wide policies. It
shall. additionally, consider means ol in·
creasing the awareness and under·
standing of programs in International
Education. Area Studies, and lntema·
tiona! Development activities wit hin the
University."

Other action•
Other approved actions Included:
" • That the Senate reaffirm ils
previous position that the deve lo pment of
new so·called 'e xternal or non-traditional
graduate programs receive the same
review as do any other newly proposed
programs. and that whenever a graduate
program is proposed by a unit that has
not previously offered graduate study,
such a program not be o pen to students
until it Is registered by the Stat e Education
Oepanment. fCommittee on Graduate
Program!
" e That units whkh are experienced in
graduate work shoukJ be encouraged to
explo re non · traditlonal modes of
awarding graduate credit and degrees in
order to insure that these innovations are
held to the same standards of excellence
that characterize the traditional program.
!Committee on Graduate Program}
" • That the University Faculty Senate
recommends to the Chancellor that An ide IX be revised to include affirmative ac·
lion {as a specific item for the ~riodk
review of presidents). IFalr Employment
Practices Committee! ''

JOBS
COMPETITIVE CIVIL SERVICE
Twilft SG·3 - Admtssions &amp; Records. University
Ubrories·Ctrc:ulalk&gt;n
Creda~Uala ANktanl SG..C - Admis~Kwt• end
Rec0&lt;cls !21

Stenographer SG·5 -Sc:hool ol Architecture &amp;
Environmental Dnign , Physia &amp; Allronomy. Aff•
mauve Aclion/ Human RrletiOns , StuMn1 AffanSiudenl Union/ AcuviUes
Radiation Safely Rec,ord• Cl«-tk SG·
5 - N~r~~~•&amp;T~~

Stenographft SG·S- Dun's Office , Nursing.
l)lvtsion ol Continuing Educetlon
Account CLrrtt SG-5 - 0ffk:t of Studml A&lt;·

counts (2)

Trainee 8Y6gd Ana)yP SG-13-Unlvtf"5Ay

,

Budget Offa

NON .COMPETITIVE CIVIL SERVICE
Ground. Worker SG-6 - John Burw Cen1er .
Line No 32091
Uborer SG.6 -Hr:lm FKiUiy . Line No 32~
FACULTY
A.ktant P r -- CM1
F-9113, F-9114. F-9116

Eng!- (31.

Aaail;tanl to Full Protn.or - CMI EnginHnng .
F-9 115

/uat.tant Prolaeor - Jndu•trt.l Eng.,wenng ,
F-9117
AaMatant or AMoc:Yte
Engin«ring. F-9118

,....___flectricaJ

A..-ktant ProkNor - EI«trical Engineermg.
F-9119.
ANociatr: Of AaNI\Ut ~ - Che:mic..aJ
EngonHring, F-9120
AMktant , . . - - .- M«hanical Enginnrwlg
12l. F-9121 . F-9!22
PROFESSIONAL STAFF
F - " " " - ~... IMechanQI
Enginee-Foctlltin Ptonnlngl , PR-3, B-9049

....

�...an•

u

November 8, 1979

Art
r~

Faculty show
in Capen called
'a good mix'
By Paul Chimera
University Newt. Bureau

One of the artists exhibiting in the cu rrent faculty show at Capen Hall's Inner

Gallery was on the telephone . ··t haven't
seen the show yet:· he said "I don·t
knOw who's exhibiting •·
John Mcivor. he was told. and
Prochownik, Paterson, Will Harris and
others .
.. That. .. he exclaimed . ''is a good mix."
A good mix , indeed. and there's likely
to be something for everyone here.
' Meld'
One of the finest works

Prochownik's

canvas.

IS

Walter

" Meld ." '

•

Prochownik demonstrates with precision

how gradations in color hues . when

asstduously rendered . can create the appearance of illuminauons from withm .

....

Five horizontal bands. olive green at
the ends and placed one above the other.
become a luminous yellow towards the1r
center This def1 colonst reverses the process in a sixth band that. unhke the
others. is dark blue 1n the moddle and
gradually grows hghter towards Its ends
All is set on a manilla background
Unlike many paintings of this genre .
"Meld" transcends mere des1gn or op art.
It~ a striking piece of craftsmanship

Enigmatic. erotic
Sculptor Anthony Paterson . who's
received several commiSSions from the
University adm1nistrat10n 1n the past . is
represented in the present exhibition by
works of a markedly d1fferent style
A provocative series whk:h he calls
"Erotic Landscape" serves up nine
dehciously entgmatic brorlte items . each
set w;thin its own metallic receptacle The
anost employs a highly polished . fluod
1echmque to achieve an ornamental
erotiCism that seems infatuated wnh
female breasts and vaginal references.
H1s style in this context recalls Hans
Bellmer's "Doll" sculpture of 1936.
Paterson has described the erouc qualit1es
of his work as ·•symbolic-erotic in a non overt sense
''These." he explains. "are basically
simple statements. figures reduced to torsos. isolated . almost. 10 thear lmle graves
and incapable of movement ..
Paterson seduces our tactile urges ....·ith
th ... obJects, ondeed , do not feel asham·
ed if the desire strikes you to separately
fondle each sensuous piece Three
thematk:ally similar sculptures by the artist also are on view.
Real or Imagined?
Two canvases by Terry Katz Kasimov
employ a kmd of textured tromp I' oeil
that is potent in its s1mphcuy Kasamov
strips a flimsy , megular piece of canvas
onto a rigid background . purple is the
nearly exclusive color here.
From a distance , one might conceivably believe the three-dimenstonal effect was achieved solely by a well han dled paont brush
In a similar work . titled "11-15."
Kasimov takes this devK:e one step further wnh strings from a threadbare edge
of the overlayed canvas Again, from a
d1stant perspective. are they real or
Imagined?

Handoome mixed-media works
Two extremely hl!llndsome works by
Seymour Drumlevotch. "Tanka VI" and
"Tanka X" are certain to be favorites
Miniature bits of colored paper ,
newspaper columns-even a clump or
two of maned lint - are combtned to give
each of these mixed -media works the ap·
pearance of large aerial photographs.
Drumlevitch uses triangles. rectangles ,

trapezOid and diamond shapes to
achieve a splendid effect that . if done by
a lesser artist . might have come off as mapprop
Ly busy In h1s use of an infmite nun.ber of disparate shapes- each
pa1nstakmgly merged with another on
helds of red and gray - he has ach1eved a
remarkably unified whole The results are
most enticing

Hard , angular lines
Duayne Hatchett . whose sculpture is
characterized by hard . angular hnes . carnes th1s propensity over 1nto h1s
·'Untitled" acrylic of 1974
Perhaps not content in remammg co nfined to the lim1ted dimens1ons of the
medium of paint . Hatchell has cut thm
str1ps Into a sheet of blue-gray canvas.
which he's affixed to a second canvas.
One gets the 1mpression that the optical play of white lines IS pamted on the
background . when in realny the whne we
see is the blank canvas showmg through
the narrow incisions.
Stare at this picture awh1le . and it
begins to play tncks with your
viston-one moment you see three rec·
tangles . the next four . or perhaps two.
Various illusions of depth also appear .
depending on how your brain chooses to
conceptualize and arrange it all A well
balanced , tightly crafted poece
Photographs by Nichols
Don Nichols. who gets feted
November 9 at a testimonial dinner
honoring his 30 years' service to U/ B's
Department of Communication Destgn .
has two fine photographs on view .
"The Message" focuses on a political
poster where the words "Freedom ."
··Peace" and "Free'' are mostly obscured
by a violent tear in the poster's center. In
"Cross is F1ux ." Nk:hols uses a low angle
and distorts a large stone cross that .
because of the photographer's vision.
looks all the more imposing. and not a lit tle disquieting. One Is drawn to the
various textures of the cross Itself - details
that may have been less conspk:uous had
the subject not been treated so unconventionally .

Clrcular Canv&amp;HS
An Depanment Chairman Willard
Harris continues his interest In circular
canvases with two cheerful effons here.
Herris creates textures effectively by both
his color scheme and the way he applies
his. paint-sometimes smooth , other
times with an Impasto, sometimes wash thin .
His colors occasionally merge with
delicate subtlety while . toward the middle
of one of the large canvases, we find
cubistic clashes of oranges, reds ,· yellowgreens fmd purple . These two paintings
may best be suited for fanciers of pleasing, decorative design.

Non Profit Org
U.S Postage
PAID
Buffalo, N Y .
Permit No ~II

Waves of black and yellow
"Time Track Series. Yellow ." differs
from the structured . geometric expressions often associated with Sheldon
Berlyn A transfer painting on paper.
"Time Track" shows a rich . sp•rited use of
waves of black and yellow that dominate
th is stunning work .

It has something of the properties of
decalcomania . those who enJOY seeing
everyth.ng from butterflies to motorboats
emerge from a smgle pattern w1ll en)Oy
thts effort . where the chance arrange·
ment o f fo rm and color results 10 a spectrum of v1sual messages What do you
see?

Vibrant flowers
"Splendaza for the Iris" is one of two
vibranl efforts by John Mcivor. Here the
white -petaled flower sprouts from an explosion of warm colors- mostly reds and
yellows. Mcivor makes an interesting
point of departure at the top o f this piece
by giving us a seque nce or studies for the
flower .
The first sketch is a hexagon with
numerals around its periphery. As one
moves sequentially to the right . the image
takes shape . Perhaps he wanted to show
how . like a flower that develops from a
seed . a work of ail grows from an idea .
The exhibit runs through the end of
November on Capen - 5. Viewin~hours
coincide with business hours. . \

Four police dogs
retire from U I 8 force
Four U/ 8 poiK:.e dogs were off1cially
retired from active duty at an emotional
October 17 ceremony held at the Department of Public Safety's headquaners in
Bossell Hall at Amherst.
Also at the ceremony. Officer William
Georger was named Outstanding Police
Officer of the Year by Buffalo Mayor Jim·
my Griffin .
The dogs. which were acquired by
Captain Jack Eggen in September 1970
are trained attack dogs . Though never
used for that purpose. the Community
Canine Corps has been useful for track·
ing, in marijuana detecUon. in building inspections, and as a back-up when making
arrests , Eggert sajd _
He indicated the dogs are.being retired
because of "changing times . ..: and
because ''there is no real need for them
any more. They served a worthwhile pur·
pose, but they're getting old now "
The ceremony marked a ··sad day" for
the Canine Corps ond the Public Safety
Depanmenl. Eggen said "The bond be-

tween these men and the dogs is a strong
one," he noted. ··Every night the dogs
were taken home as members of a family,
and came back on the )Ob the next day a;.
'policemen .'"
The dogs will spend their retirement
with members of the U/ 8 force . Officer
William Sura{ Is th e former handler and
new owner of Mike; Officer John
Crowley owns Hans; Officer Georger
owns Baron . and Eggert owns Hans

Albany unit
aids economy
Leading businessmen and women of
the Capital District, with the cooperation
of SUNY I Albany have launched a longrange project to buHd an economic pro·
gram for the region In the 21st Century.
William K Holstein , dean of the School
of B4slness. is chalnnan of the project,
know~ as Metro 2000 + .

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                    <text>NOV.1, 1979
VOL 11 e NO.9

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

Final framework
for Gen Ed plan
·headed for Senat e

Calm prevails at
fprum
with the
President go, last Friday's session in
Squire HaD was lame.
lbe Haas Lounge has seen significantly larger and more obstreperous tumouts;
there may have been 300 students present as the crowd peaked.
With the exception of one minor
disruptive walkout by iour students who
tried to shout down the President during
his opening remarks, the assemblage was
quiet and attentive-although apparently
not overwhelmed . The quarte.l who
wal&lt;ed out drew scattered applause, but
also was subject to the loudest round of
heckting of the day. A group of individuals later shouted at Ketter from out
in the haUway, but this was short-lived.
The President, in a relaxed and amiable
mood, smiled as he tried to talk over the
momentary din.
Staff members of The Spectrum, past
and present, dominated the question
period. Jay Rosen, former editOI", and
Elena Cacavas, present news edHor,
asked if the President would attempt to
continue In office If opinion polling indicates he doesn't enjoy the support of
faculty , staff and students. Current
edilOI", Danny Parker (dressed in revolu tionary war garl&gt; as if ready to reenact
Paul Revere's midnight ride) Inquired if
Ketter plans to fire any of his top administrative staff II reappointed. Another
Spectrum alumnus, John Reiss, wanted
to know just what good the University
Council Is. Reiss expressed Incredulity
that Phyllis Kelly , a former member of the
Council, could sit at a meeting and ask
with great surprise, "Do we reo//v have
25,000 students?"
In response to this mini "Meet the
Press," Ketter told Rosen and Cacavi&gt;S he
would not necessarily slep down if aU
segments of the campus convnunHy express lack of confidence In his leadership
in the upcoming referendum .and Facuhy
Senate polL "Embattled presidents have
stayed on at other places," he polnled
out. As to why he would want to stay in
the lace of th" kmd of opposition. the
President sounded like the mountain
cUmber who ctimbo because the mountain
Is there "I could say I want to see the
AI; campus confrontations

The Faculty Senate will be asked to approve the basic framework for ""' entire
General Education Program ol its
meeting next Tuesday (November 6) .
A FaD 1981 starting date Is now pro-for all components of the Proexcept the-basic .skills ponioll.That
was okayed for a FaD 1980 start at October's Senate session .
The skills component requires all Incoming freshmen (and transfers In some
cases) to be tested on their English and
mathematical skills. If lest results show
them to be below a given standard of
competency, they will be directed to
classes which, if successfully completed.
will demonstrate they have acquired the
minimum skills required ol on educated
person. Students may opt to re-take the
exam in order to satisfy the requirement.
if they prefer. Skills course requirements
may range from none up lo several in
math or English. or both .
Administrative approval is still required
to make the skills program the law olthe
University effective next fall. General
Education Commlllee Chair Peter Hare
(of Philosophy) notes that data on
whether or not the University has the
resources to follow-through on the concept are now being gathered, hopefully in
time fOI" final administrative approval by
mid-December (the deadline for starting
to plan the fall 1980 class schedule) .
Hare Is confident the course demand to
be generated by the skills requirement
can easily be met using existing
reoouroes. English has more than enough
~"tor
base, Hare says, and
math skills cou be taught outside the
math department In various areas which
now o&amp;t sta"Ustlcs and even logic
courses.
Hare points out also that similar datagathering concerning Fall 1981 implementation ol the overall program Is

ttiZIIJ
'

next three buildings go up at Amherst,"
he suggested. "Sometimes," he added,
"you keep a job just because you think
you can~l something done that some'one eloe miglit not be able to." At any
rate. Ketler noted, the question for the
present Is hypothetical.
He iniOI"med Parker "it Is not appropriate to discuss the question of
whether or not some top administration
may be replaced," but added he does not
expect any great exodus on the part of
faculty should he be condnued in office.
Parker's costume, incidentally, was not
for the session with the President . but for
a Halloween party later that evening.
Ketter told Reiss he uses the CouncU to
lobby for State appropriations on behaK
of the University, but granted that its
powers as presently interpreted , are
relatively meaningless. CouncU membership. he said , Is a matter of political
patronage; members ore appointed by
the Governor. He noted, though , that
the current membership Includes a
number of lawyers who seem dissatisfied
with limits on Council authority.

Deer- not unique to Bulfalo
ln his opening remarks, the President
emphasioed that decreasing enrollments
and shrinking resources are not unique to

Buffalo. He said he detects on campus a
renewed determination to cope with and
overcome these problems. Turning to
complaints about teaching, he reported
the administration has agreed to fund haK
the cost of a student survey of courses
and instrudors for this year. He remains
unconvlnced, though. that this Is the best
·w ay of evaluating teaching. noting that
Brown University has done longitudinal
studies of its stujlents asking them to
evaluate teaching at a dl5tance removed
h-om the immediate undergraduate experience. Many campus departments. he
said . are moving to peer evaluation of
teachingy but disagreemenl remains
among lacullles as to the best method for
University-wide evaluation .·
About foreign teaching assiStants, the
President said the Intensive Engtish
language Institute Is providing special

·----,'-9,eoel.3

also proceeding now-for although more
than a year Is left for lmplemenlallon. the
task will lake every bit of that year.
Beyond that . both faculty and administration still need to be shown that lmplemElltation that earl ~:c.

..Four-pert program
The proposed General Education Program, approved ln principle by the Faculty last spring. has four features :
1. The basic skills component:
2 . A standard program to be fulfilled by
most students;
3. An adjusted set of requirements for
certain groups-professional school
registrants, transfers. etc.; and
4 . A set of alternative core programs
which interested students can opt for In
lieu of the standard format.
Of all these features , only one part of
the standlll'd program was developed in
detail last year: a set of distribution requirements across six "knoWledge areas".
(two courses each In hiotorlcal and
philosophical studies, p~ and math
sciences/ technology. lfe and health
sciences, social and belwtvlolel sciences,
cross-cultural or foreign lafit1109e study,
and uteralure, augment~ t!il one course
In the arts.)
Within this distribution, there were to
be certain "themes" for general studies.
The report to be presented for Senate
approval Tuesday fleshes out the themes
component, and also sets mechanisms
and criteria lor the evaluation of courses
to be Included In the IJIC90m.
lbe document rounds out the .ontlre
package with a 14!1 of crlterie and examples lor alternative cores, and proposals lor the adjustments to the basic
program required in special cases.
lbe General Ed committee's final
thinking on evaluative crit~ and aller-

·----·-a...a.l

Dean seeks deferral
of Springer Phase 2
Undergraduate Dean John Peradotto
Is arguing for deferral. not abandonment

of the second phose of Implementation of
the Springer Report . the dean clarUied to
the Reporter this week.
J&gt;eradollo said he expects the molter
will be given full consideration at an
Academ ic Cabinet session scheduled for
November 12.
Phase I of the Springer Report called
for achievement throughout the University of contact/credit hour equivalency in
coursework. With a few exceptions,
Peradollo said , that Is now complete. In
the vast majority of cases. It Involved a
reduction of course credit h-om four to
three hours.
In the second phase of Springer Implementatio n . a panel headed by
Peradollo Is looking at remaining deviations from a three&lt;ontact-hour-for-three·
credit-hour standard. These are classes in
which co nta ct hour / credit hour
equivalency has been achieved but in a
modu&amp;e of four hours or more.
Peradotto's reason for wanting to defer

decisions to reduce credit and contact
hours In these classes Is to avoid further
erosion In the University's
equivalent (FTEJ enroUmenl.

full-time

Ahead on huclcount
His ligures Indicate that while DUE Is
ahead of last fall's headcount by some
126 students. and Is 218 students ahead
of this year's headcounl budget target.
the unit has actually lost 145 FTEs over
last year and Is 109 FTEs short of the Fall
1979 target.

He submits the FTE shortlallls caused
by the fact that the average
undergraduate course load Is one-half
credit hour less than last year. This converts to nearly 600 FTEs and would account for the deficiency despite increased
total numbers.
Some part of the shortlall, Peradotto
suspects. Is due to various "grandfather
clauses'" In the Springer implementation
program. These allow some junior and
senk&gt;r students to take fewer courses
and/ or fewer hours in order to graduate.

·-

Freahman enroUment Ia affec:Ucl,

D ata recently gathered by Peradotto
seems to Indicate that the change from 4
to 3 credits has had o.feffect on freshmen
enrollment as well. lending to reduce the

number ol beginning students who are
taking a 16 credit-hour norm . In the fall
of 1978, 51.5 per cent of freshmen carried a 16-hour norm . This fall . only 25.8
per cent of freshmen are at that norm . A
freshman taking five courses wilh threehours credit each. for example. Is carrying only 15 hours.
The Springer implementation also
seems to be discouraging students from
laking overloads. In the fall of 1978. 77 .6
per cent of freshmen were taking I 6
hours or more. This fall , only 51.5 per
cent are exceeding 16 hours. This further
cuts Into FTEs.
Perado11o suspects the effect In I 980
wiU be even greater U four and five-credit

._. _,._,_ ......
•

�..... .

J

November 1, 1979

,.:.

. •General Educ:atloa .....
. _ _ ...... 4t

..... -~the.. tNt wblch- •"" blfare .... s..-

EuculM ~In Aa9MI-' circulated to dcpMtmcnts early In
September. (Reporter, 5eplernb.r 131.
A ~ dllculllon of thenws n
the provlolons for "..tjuUd"
""'major "new" clerncntllncluckd In the
cunent report, Dr. H""' .dvtses.

......,ms

.,...._

The report~ thllt:

1. Th,.,., theme cou.- be required of '
every lludcnt completing the standard
general education program, but that no
portkular theme be required.
2. To satisfy the requirement, a student
be required to take theme counes in
three different knowledge areas. Since
themes may cut across several areas,
however, students may sallsfy !he r qulremenl by: (a) one course each In .
three separate themes; (b) two courses in
one theme and one course in another
theme, or (c) three courses In a single
theme.
3. The Standing Committee on
General Education molntaln a list of
10-20 approved themes, and the authority to delete themes from the list.
The purpose Is to lead students to "see
that the traditional disciplines, which
some have claimed t.o be 'remOYed' from
the real world and Irrelevant to the problems and Issues of personal and social
l~e . can be brought to bearon OYerridlng
•
questions and proble
• Thus, these spedflc defrnltions:
1. A them£ shall be a single subject
aru that:
a . deals with fundamental and open
questions that invite different forms of
analysis and Inquiry and assume no
definitive answers;
b . .ddresses an Issue or problem of
pressing concern today, which . by its
eharaelA!r, has h.d and wiD have continu·
lng slgn~lcanee ; and
c. provides, where possiiS\e, an "''.~r­
tunlty for exploring recent dlscovenes
and new concepts that will affect future
soeta1 and technological changes.
2. A tlteme &lt;:ou,..., shaR by Its subject
maltf!r and Its manner of prf!sentallon:
a . fit within a single approved theme;
b. use concepts or principles to integrate In an Intellectually coherent manna two or more disciplinary perspectives
or mOdes of analysis; and
c . strive to stimulate students to
evaluate their own altitudes, convictions
and values.
As examples of broad themes, the
Cornmlt!M suggests, "Ethics." "'rder
and Disorder," "Stigma," and ''The
Evolution. Current Status and Future lm·
pact of Scientific Thought and Method
with Particular Emphasis Upon
Technology." "Beyond Survival: How
Living Systems Develop New Capabilities
and Directions;" and "Man and the
Transcendent."
The Interdisciplinary possibilities are
suggested through the example of theme
courses on ':Ihe Environment." These,
the panel says, could give a "synthesizing
focus" to material from the sciences and
related technologies and also from
sociological, political , econom ic.
historical and ethical-aesthetic reabns.
The Cornmlnee adds a word about the
relationship between themes and theme
courses: " A theme course should (lot, in·
deed could not .ddress encylopaedically
all the dimensions of a theme. In fad, It
would be de.Vable to have a wide range
ol quite different courses offered under
the same theme, each taking a different
integrative approach. SuperflclaUty Is to
be avoided. For example, under the
theme, Ethics, a course on lying (see box)
could draw on many sources In presenting a penetrating analysis ol the topic
without reviewing aD ethical d_&gt;eories."

........

~ &lt;&gt;--~

Uoocalloa

For unclergrwluate students In eight
~programs, three pr&lt;9ams In
the Health Reloled Proleaions, Pharmacy, Nuning, Ma....gement, ArchltecluN , Mla.rd Rlmore College and
lnnlfan, the General Education report
ecknowlodga there 1M11 be dlfilculty In
luNing the slaoda'd PfO!pm .
For moot of " - ~. the docuoudiMs the spdico ol adjusted
programs. It aloo ~ two general

The theme is lying
'*-*

L!linll
hu..- . .. SocMI oclentlsts clec:epCion In their ..,..
. . - . -. 1..awyen ........,..... the truth In court on behd of their clients.
~ . . 1o the ~ II; they pracr1Je plecobos. Journallols Ue to oblllllllnfclnMIIon'""" their IOURlel. Ad-*- ..
their products. Government a8lcWs .s..:.1v« when they think the true slate ol affeln Is beyond the comPNhenllon of the average dllzion or the oocurlly ol the country requires it.
. l;veyone ,;vas !aloe aaues 10 as not to hurt the feelings of someone making

,0 ...

an=:;: :UC~

as

in which they rank 60ll'i ol aU graduates
belonging to the top 10ll'i . A priest feels bound by oath to conceal the fact that
one ol his parishlonen Is pRg!lant. In poker decoption Is part ol the game.
Pollee olflcen use decoys to
drug dalers and unmarlced ears to catch
speeders. Young men falsely delm physical or mental disabilities to avoid
military service. In bargaining between labor and management mutually deceptive roles ~- Physical scientists conceal their prdmlnary findings from
comporllng colla es. Parents keep from their children the fact that their marriage lslriillirijj up. J&gt;eOjilQe tl&gt;llieiiiM/ila B Wilas IOOI!iiB.
Can we oysternallcally claslly lies? Can we sort out the reasons, legitimate
and IJio9timale, given in jusllflcallon of lying? VJhat are the psychological and
social cou- of lying? What ""' the psychological and soetal consequenca of lying? What have been the attitudes toward lying In earlier historical periods?
These are some of the questions Slosela Bok tries to answer In her recent book,
Lying, Mora! Choice In Public ond I'Wvc&gt;U Uje.

entrap

M_, .U.C:..,.._I..,..hed
Many discipbnes and professions can throw light on this problem of moral
choice. Sociologists can illuminate the soetal conditions which tend to Increase
or decrease the practice of lying. Pobtieal scientists can Illuminate the role of lying In the administration of public policy. LtlA!rary aitics can analyze lying as It Is
plf!sented in nOYels, plays, .etc. Anthropologists can compare decepti\le practices and altitudes toward them tn other wltures to such pracllces and attitudes
In our own culture. Historians can give ~nto of decepti\le practlce5 and attitudes toward them In the past. Phllosophers can clarify the ways that different
types of ethical theory have evaluated lying. Psychologists can e&gt;&lt;plain the
psychological causes and consequences ol lying. Health professionals can dluinlnate the types of lying that occur In matters inwlvlng health. Management
special!sts can clarify deceptive practices used In business management. lawyers
can ciMtfy the deceptive aspects of legal practice and legal evaluations allying.
SpecliiUsts In early education can clarify the ways lying Is used by parents,
teachers and children.
Uslng Bok's exceptionally lucid and rigorous book as the basic text, a general
education course on lying could show the student how varied dlsclptines can be
brought to bear on the aillcal analysis of a moral problem of pradlcallmportance today. Basically the same course could be given by faculty In many departments and schools. As re.ders of Bok's book will recognize, lying Is an aspect of
human Ufe that can be grasped by any disciplined inquirer. lnstrudors need not
be trained In moral philosophy. As many as twenty or thirty sections of the
course could be offered in ilipartrnents and schools scaltf!red throughout ihe
Unillersily: Led by a Course Coordinator, lnstrudors from the various disciplines
could meet regularly to discuss their common problems. Instructors could also
exchange lectures, e .g., an" anthropologisl could ledure on lying in other
cultures to the class of a lacuhy member In the School of Nursing who could
reciprocate by lecturing to the anthropologist's class on lying to the terminally ill.

c---

c ....
..fertllbatl- .....
Having a large number ol

undergraduates take the same course in many
departments and schools could provide the benefit of giving students common
e&gt;&lt;perlences despite their varied dlsclphnaryand professional commllments, serving to lessen fragmentation In the student body. Also, the coming together of
instrudors from many parts of the Unillerslty to teach a common subject molter
could lead to Intellectual aoss-lerlllizallon and an Increased sense of common

pui~OO:.kt.also be noted that such a theme course could handle a very large
number of students without requiring the vast auditoriums U.S . lacks. Neither
would FTE credit be a problem. A department or school could simply be given
credit foi- the students registered In the sections taught by members of Its staff.
Issues:
The first is that of professional accreditation by outside bodies. The Gen
Ed panel notes that It Is not usy to
answer the question of "whether the
number of professional and pre professional courses currently included in
the various professiona l pro grams ... are actually mandated by accreditation standards." This Is so, the
panel feels , "because accreditation stan·
dards are seldom couched In predse
terms, and partly because the strength of
a gillen program Is not necessarily a function of mere compliance with the

curriculum. ·•
The second general Issue Is whether
.djustrnents in General Education requirements for professional programs
should be un~orm or varied. The Committee notes that arguments for uniformi-

ty outweigh those lor diversity, and
recommends a single mod~led program
lor SeYeral of the programs in question .

n ....,....

For Engineering. Health Related Professions, Nursing and Pharmacy, then ,
an .djusted program of up to 31 hours,
depending on skills course requirements.
Is proposed: 0-4 hours as required In
minimum standards. For exampLe, any
program can meet both accreditation remath skills; 0-6 hours In English skdls; 6
hours In historical and philosophical
quirements and general education requirements by extending Its duration , but
studies; 6 hours In socllll and behalli9ral
this approach may render it un - sciences: 6 hoors In literature and 3 In
arts-or 2 foreign language courses and
competitlw with programs elsew"ere.
Furthermore, even ~ a program meets
one course In either literature or the arts.
the minimum standards, H may nOI conOne ol the courses in each knowledge
area must be a theme course.
tain enough technical courses to allow a
!niluate effectively to market himself or
The pro/esslonaJ school deans had
lierself as a prd~ .talked of25 hours for general education ,
11 Is dtfflcub for outsiders to prove or which this would seem to accommodate.
dltprow assertions which various profesOnly the remedial skills courses would up
sional schools make about the necessity . the total. Professional schools are also
for cou .... for accieditallon, the report
eneouraged to develop alternate cores
c:ondudes. Vet, "the potential damage to with fewer total hOUR, as prescrtoed In
the prowan1 Is 100 ~t" IO IIIIII'Rnl any
the report.
such rW&lt; "apedelly since much ol the
In Imposing this load for proleuional
General Educ.otlon program can be acstudents, the committee acknowledges
commodat.d under..,_,. avMiable in the . that General Education and ·lndtvlclual

unit requirements will now account for
111rtually all o1 " - students'
four (or five) yean. "The conoequence Is
that students wll have little opponuntty to
punue a sequence ollludles oulllde the
major. It Is the Commlllee's view that this
Is a price well wor1h peylng for the
breadth of experience the General
Education program provides."
Only sllgJitly different rajulrements are
lmpoled for Man.gement; here the life
and hulth sclenca knowledge area Is
subotttuted for IIOdal and behavioral
sciences. Thts leaves Management
students room for 10 hours of eloctives.
The Committee has not completed its
discussions with Ardlltecture and wishes
to defu consideration of that program
until a lalA!r date.

Ume """'

'

MFC
MFC presents special problems, the
Committee notes. fts iiii&lt;len-..arellld ,
have more fOCIIMCI alms and may be
more readlly deterred from attending college by the proopect ol :aking required
courses whose value they do not see.
Then, too, II may not be posstie to offer
all courses eventually approved for
General Education during o!llening hours.
It may tum out, the committee report
speculates, that a core program with a
limited number ol courses wiU be
necessary for a viable general education
in MFC. The dean , the ....,art notes, has
expressed willingness to work with relevant departments to dewlap such a core.
In any case, "defemil o( Implementation of an MFC .djusted program until
one year aflA!r the Implementation of the
standard General Education program" is
recommended.

Tr.-...
The committee wants General Education requirements to •be imposed on
transfers on the basis of the number of
credit hours each has accumulated upon
entry. Students transferr\ng with 30 credit
hours or less would have to meet allre·
qulrements of the standard program, as
well as the skills requirement.
Students transferring with 31 to 58
credit hours would have to liave a
distribution of two courses In each of live
of the six knowledge ..,.....
Courses completed at other insUiutions
may be applied ~ they pertain to one of
the designated knowledge areas. All
courses to be taken here, however, must
be approved General Ed~cation courses.
Students In this group are exempted from
the thematic requirement. H transferring
Into an area with an adjusted program.
they would also be exempt from the
distribution requirement in knowledge
areas waived for that program . They may
gain credit toward fuKillment of the skill$
requirement ~ they have successfully
completed appropriate skills courses
elswhere. II not , they will be required to
fuKill the U/ B requirement.
Students transferring with more than
58 credit hours would be called upon to
complete 12 hours of coursework in each
of two knowledge "clust;,rs" outside the
group In which his or her major falls .
Students In this group could apply cer·
tain courses taken elsewhere. They
would be exempt from the thematic re·
qulremenl and from the college skills
requirement .

Why-?
General Education Chair Hare rejedS
the notion that implementation of a
General Ed program in the face of
already dwindling enrollments Is
necessarily risky business for the
Unlversl~ .

"We don't know how It will affect
enrollment," he adinlts. But he reports
that Harvard and Vale have both recenily
reintroduced General l:d requirements.
and that Syracuse has in place a progro~
which Includes a skills component that "
considerably more demanding than what
Is proposed here.
•
Stdl other tnililullons are rushing to
complete such programs, he says.
Hare feels our program will not put us
at a competilille disadvantage in at·
trading students. To !he contrary. he
thinks students may ev~n find It a reason
for enro!ling here.
. At any rate, he argues, "It would be
embarrassing for us to shun a General
Education pr&lt;9am simply because we
need warm bodies.'"

�November 1. 1979

The Pedal Power Coellllon, '-'led by

Suzanne B. Toomey, held Its flnt Buffalo
..-Jng ..... Saturday In Squire HaD.
The Coelllian .. conccmed with the
' - - · ......... ooluttons and ~
........ of bicycling. This particular
..-me deak speclllcally with legiolaf!w
- · highway funding, reduoed bike
theft, safety and education, and tbe promotion ol the bicycle as a viable transportation altemaUve .
Between 1956 and 1975, Coalition
speakers pointed out, federal . slate and
local governments spent 325.2 bUiion tax
dollars ori highways-$1 ,478 for each
man, woman and child In the U.S. Section 141 of the Surface Transportation
Assistance Act of 1979-82. 1)18kes $80
million ($20 million per year) 8)1ailable for
improvements for blcycling-9 cents per

man, woman and child.
In the past, the CoaUtlon has had no
success in dealing with the federal
government.
"We want to see conditions improve in
our ltfe.times:

Memory call .d more important

Seilios.

"

l·

ln particulat, they :were discussing
Ophuls' "The Memory of dustice " a WOik
1 book,
heavily influenced by Taylors
Nuremberg and Viilnam, An American
T.._d!&gt;.
Frtoch, a otudent ol oral hlsto.y, was to
spak on "Memo.y", Law .Dean Thomas
Headrick said by way of mock-pedantic
introduction. Taylor · would speak on
"Justice." and Ophuls would speak about
"Of." The audience laughed heartily. As
It turned out, each of the three spoke
about "MemOIY."

wua-a.tiiWt........-

o...,r.

and Taylor 19'!ed that what is
important about Nuremberg or Vietnam
or lillY event in human histOIY is not what
was actually done at the time, but what is
saki and dona about H subsequently. "It's
what people think happened that is more
i~ than what actuaOy did take
place.
That's what "The Memory of Justice" is
aU about; that's what oral histOIY deals
. with; that's what aU histOIY consists of.
Frisch suggested that this phenomenon
accounts for the way Americans have put
the Vieinam experience out of mind and
have relegated K and similar U.S. transgressions to the "distant" pasi. He told of
a woman in one of his classes who had
"forgoHen• that the u.s. had "lost the
war in Vieinam." He recalled a lV interview with former CIA agents who, when
discussing the various U.S .-Inspired attempts on the life of Fidel Castro, agreed
that such actions were "deplorable." But
they added, " bo&lt;lk then people had this
thing about communism." Back then?,
Frisch asked . h was only 15 or so years
ago; and only a year before, the U.S .
government had been involved in the
overtlvow and killing of Chilean President Allende. Again In order to ward off
the communist "evU." Yet, Frisch said ,
we pretend k's In the "distant past."
Frisch said that the beauty of "The
Memory of Justice" is that H forces us to
underotand and come to grips with this
phenomenon. ~huls' earlier "The Sorrow and the Pity' served to PJod the oollectlve French memOIY to set straight its
reoollectlon of how that nation "resisted"
'the Nazis. That epic runs 10 long, in-

'cidentaOy, because H was designed to be
shown over 1wo evenings on French lV.
which refused to run II.
Legal scholar Taylor noted that the
filter of time plays strange tricks on our
understanding and lnteJptetation of past
events. Events are often lelntapreted to
flt a pattern that wed~ only with hindP.~ht .
- ·
Opbuls suggested that the 'filmmaker,
particularlv the doc:urnenlary filmmaker,
has to - be somewhat arrogant and
manipulative In this regard In order to
'give Stltk:lwe and meaning to 'B film narrelive. He quoted George Bernard Shaw
who, some 30 years before the-t;se-ol
cinema uerlte, had said that one cannot
derive truth and meaning from
haphazard, unstructured "slices ollife."
Filmmakers have to be judgemental,
Ophuls suggested, even though M is
"trendy" not to be.

Elsewhere during the discussion,
Nuremberg prosecutor Taylor rejected a
student's charge that the allles 1\ad been
arrogant In jUdging German atrocities at
the war almes trials·. "lbere was no ai-rogance," Taylor said with some heat .
"You obviously wi.rRn't there." He
ackn011o11edged that the representatives of
the Nuremberg prosecutor nations realtoed that atrocities had Indeed been
cominllled by their natio..; during a long
span of colonialism and slave trading, fi&gt;r
example. But, he said, those trials artd
the purilshments meted out were envlsioned as a deterrent to future almes.
The alminal justice system, Taylor said,
can not pretend to punish eve.y
wrongdoer. It is designed to deter the
masspf people·fn¥n becoming aimlnals
through use of symbolic punishment.

He tl-•·t pre-ecript
One reason his fibns tend to run long
and to command big budgets in terms of

of World War 0 might not have made better judges at Nwemberg, Taylor said not.

what is generally spent for documentaries, Ophuls revealed, is that he doesn't
pre-script anything. He simp!y goes out
arid shoots, reaching his judgments and
concJuslons in the cutting room.
He recalled that "The MemOIY of
Justice" had been assailed by some
dewish altics, notably Harold Rosenberg
in a devastallng atlack in The New York
Reoiew of Boob. "The Rosenbergs,"
Ophuls said in general of this group, have
a notion that the Holocaust is something
that should be kept locked away in an airtight room, much as the U.S . Bureau of
Standards keeps its platinum foot sequestered so as to pt'eserve the Pfeclse
measurement of a foot. These critics,
Ophuls said, think the H'olocaust must be
similarly quarantined as the pure
measure of evU. and should never be

cornparedi~ov~~a~'1i.:'ru~::t:.!:d

~nnoyed and bored by having to
answer this crHicism "from Jews who
came no closer to -the Holocaust than
Rumpelmeyer's Restaurant on Central
Park In New York." He said he was
simiJar:ly vexed with having to talk about
his reasons for debunking the Gaulist
myth of French non-collaboration with
the Nazis. Ophuls is himself Jewish, and
was·a refugee from the Nazis along with
his famous fUm direcjor father, Max
Ophuls. They fled Qennany In the
1930s.
Ophuls added that judgments should
not be absolute. "I don't believe in hanging judges," he said. Those who insist on
such absolute interpretations fan the
flames of revisionist histOIY, he charged.
They encourage the now fashionable
"second looks" which conclude "it
couldn't have been that bad ."

N..-1 paweno?

Asked ~ the neutral powers at the end

Who else but the allies could have run
such trials In 1945?, he iUI&lt;ed his ques-tioner. There was no United Nations
then, and the so-called neutral powers
couldn't have been dragged Into the ju.y
box. Had the Korean War ended In other
than a stalemate, Taylor suggested, b
might have been possible to hold a trial of
both the UnHed States and the North
Koreans before the bar of world justice
using the UN.
Ophuls emphasized that one should
never consider neutraUty to be a matter of
nationality. He reminded the audience
that even though Switzerland was neutral
to a fauh , there were many individual
Swiss with strong pro-Nazi feelings.
Another student asked U something
isn't a bit wt of whack when wars have
"rules," and people are tried for violating
these slandards. Isn't everything done in
the name of war, an atrocity that should
face trial? he asked. How can you have
rules? he implored.
Again, as a "deterrent," Taylor suggested.
"You cannot expeCt the law to be
perfect," Ophuls emphasioed by way of
answer. Other professions are not ... Can
a doctor cure the common cokl?''

Bookstore holding
special observance
McGraw-Hill Health Professions
Bookstore Week is being observed in the
Squire HaU Bookstore, October 22-

November 2.

means we can't walt

s-

than what actUally took place
"fm rambling," documentary filmmaker Marcel Ophuls acknowledged at
onepolntduringapaneldiscussklnattbe
Law School Friday. "Thafs why I make
4'12 hour mOYies," he quipped, In
...ference to "The Sorrow and The Pity."
Ophuls, legal scholar Telford Taylor
(the U.S . prosecutor at the Nuremberg
Nazi war alminal trials), and U/B
hlstortan Michael Frisch had come
together to cap a -.!&lt;-long series of
showings of Ophuls' films, which constituted this year's MHcheU Lecture

That

for government to do things for us. We
have to take direct action- to let the
government know that H is here to serve
the interests of the people, the taxpayers,
and not just specitol interest groups," Ms.
Toomey slated on Saturdav. adding that
the Coalition's prima.y
are:
e The appropriation of S20 million not
merely for the building of or maintenance
of bikeways, but to give priority to the
design of bicycle lanes for aD ro.ds and
bridges. _This. the group believes, is a
must to protect bicycliols against physir,ol
harm, debris, poButlon, IICGidents and
harassment on aU highways .
eEstablishment, when practical, of
safe and corwenient bicycle parking and 1
support facilities for aU employees in aU
federal buildings.
• Support for the Rails-to-Trails plan.
making UM of over 6,000 miles of abandoned ra!I&lt;Pads. The roadbeds would be
made Sl!illol&gt;lii for use for )oggjng, bicycling, croos-country skiing, foOtPaths, as an
example of encouraging energy conservation and beahh.
eProviston of adequate, ~e ·storage
for bicycles at airpol1s and train and bus
stations. In addition, Improved baggage
provisions should be added on aD publx:
transportation vehicles for bicycles and
wheelchairs, the Coalition maintains.
The Coalition was formed out of the
frustration of dtioens serving on the
Niagara Frontier Transportation Committe8 who had put tremendous amounts of
energy Into improving bicyclists' conditions, but who accomplished nothing, '
Ms. Toomey explained.
The Pedal Power Coalition's main concern is the faUure of the City to follow
through on groundwork to complete the
group's short- and long-term goals, Including a Niagara Frontier blkepalh, proposed in 1974.
In 1975, Jan Meyers from NFTC
began as coordinator of the Coalition's
actMtles. Akhough projects were outlined, no work was begun. Again, in
1977, groundwork plans were implemented with no end results.
According to Ms. Toomey, "The progress and commitment to date has
equaled zero." The citizen committee is
considering legal action due o 10 years
of inaction by the federal and local

•

During the week, the Textbook
Department of the Squire store wiU hold a
special book sale on medical and health
education publications. The Squire store
is located on the first and basement levels
o1 the Main Street Union building.

gov.emments.

Funding for the Coalition ~mes mainly from private dtizens, whose contributions are tax-deductible. -JIP.

Chilean agreement
set by Dentistry ,
The U/ B School of Dentistry and the
University of Chile's School of Dentistry
at Valparaiso have formalized a "sistership" agreement to encourage future ex~.;r"lnf'!.:.%~: studen~ and educeThe Agreement was officially signed in
ceremonies held here, October 19. Signing for the Chilean School was Dr. Armando VaDe, chief administrative officer
and chairman of the Departments of
Restorative Dentist.y and Dental
Materials.

�NoW!mber L, 1979

Chon's arguments termed
'hackneyed, tlrecl hYPe'
Editor:
Mr. Chon's letter mu• ~I the
most hackneyed, t!red and regres.tve
arguments that the nuclear Industry can
muster. h's a sad state of aflaln for higher

Ieeming.

_

In dlsc:ussing the nuclear waste problem and the West Valley situation in particular, Mr. Chon makes the foBowtng
statement :
O.Oft: 'Tite poiU:k:af " " - 01111
etalemot.e U&gt;lllclt the ami-nuclear ac,..._....,to build up In Weet Volley In
order to ptolong the debot.e 1e ddoylng
the pn&gt;per tec:ltnalogk:ol oc:tfon. ae all
of ue ore U&gt;l_,., •
Comment, What Is Mr. Chon referring
to here? The Sierra Club has been very
concerned about the West Valley site
since the local group was formed in
Western New York In 1970, and has
been particularly concerned about the
high level waste situation lor the past 5 1/2
years. Why? Because we believe that the
shuation is a perilous one. The tank contains a large amount of radioactivity
· to
which must not be allowed to
ich
the Cattaraugus Creek watershell
leeds Lake Erie and the larger Buffalo
water supply. We have lobbied Congress
to have these wastes soUd~ied and
removed as soon as possible. In test imony and legal papers, our position ha'
been consistent Further. the Club works
with an groups concerned about West
Vahey, including those who would like
the site re-opened. We know of no one
who wishes to prolong a - debate. That
would be a terylbJy irTesponsible posi·
tion-to place as we see It , the lives of
millions of people In jeopardy to "prolong
the debate." Sa, Mr. Chon, who are you
referring to? And to what S!J!Iements?
Really. Mr. Chon , what.are you talking
about? The Club would like • response.
lnesponelble
Other than H being an irresponsible
position, It Is an unnecessary position.
Surely there are ample problems wtih
nudear power and radioactive waste
disposal without labrlcaUng additional
ones.
Chon: "Commercial nudeor power
plant. ltoue -"'ted In tile Un/Ud
Stotee jor more tltcm tJDo hundred rmctcw )leol'll. Tile United Stotee Navy'•
IIUdeor - ' a , lncludmg eubmarfnee,
ltoue aviled ouer tltfrfy-Jlue million
mUea. amcualng aome 1,900 reoctorli"'I"'I U&gt;ltltoul o fatality. Pleoae
remember, ""' loee ouer 50,0110 H..,.
=~-)le euery year In title couniJ}I
Comment, As Mr. Chon Is well aware,
each amount of radiation received by
humans increases the probabihty that
cancer and genetic effects wiU occur. We
are talking here about low level radiation,
not the devastating bombs dropped on
Hiroshima and Nagasalcl, nor the massive
dooes given In radiation therapy to kill
cells. With p release ol radioactivHy, we
predict a 9'l"efaa Increase In genetic effects and cancers, which, In almost an
cues, cannot be distinguished from the
ellects ol other environmental Insults.

.......

A Cllf"'''PUUcommunily I'WWIIpllper ~

ooch Thundoy bv lhe OMolon cl Public AI·
~an. s.... u.w...o, c1 New von. .. Buflolo.

~ ........ locaMdlnl36er..ltstw.

"""'""' Tolophone 636-2626.

Dnoar cl Public Allah
JAMES R. Do5AimS

u-.....a..~
ROBERT T NARLETT
Anandl'toducllon
JOHN A CLOUl1ER

The cancen would oaur lifter a latency
period; we don~ aped to oee paoons
naUMOUifrom radlellon sickness, or skin
falling oil lbe genemJ population. The
cancers, In general, do not wear tags to
Identify lhelr origins. Heallh stodles must
be carefully contzolled.
·
Now, Mr. Chon , please Identify the
healih studies which have been performed to document your point that tlie
200 reactor yean ol commetical nuclear
power plants, and the 1,900 yars of
Navy nuclear vessels have not led to a'
falality . This reminds me of my mother's
admonition when I couldn't ftnd m)l
socks, "You know, Marvin, you don t
look, you don't find."
'
Health etudlee
.
Health studies have been done of
uranium miners who mined the uranium
which went Into power reactors and Navy ve~ls . As Mr. Chon may be aware,
the lung cancer rate has been several
times higher than the general
population ' s

rate .

Many

native

Americans have died to allow those Navy
vessels to cruise those 35 million mUes.
The Navy fuel is reprocessed at Idaho
Falls. Idaho. Increased occupational exposures should lead to increased health
effects such as Cllncers and genetic effects. Unfortunately, no health srudy has
been done of these workers. No health
study, y~t Mr. Chon says that there was
no fatality . I leave it to my University colleagues (of course, including students) to
judge the logic of that sentence.
Health studies have been done of the
workers at the government reprocessing
and waste facilities at Hanford , Washington , where 28.000 workefl were
followed lor a 33 year period ol time .
Prehminary results by Mancuso. Stewart
and Kneale appeared in Health Physics ,
November, 1977 . In sp~e of the low
levels of radiation received by those
\AIOrkers, the results showed an increase
in cancers. Are these real or imaginary
latahties? Perhaps it should be added that
the researcher Mancuso was ftred .
·
Mr. Chon , by saying no l~taUties ~-

~~:,~·ed'd~~'::e~: ~:ld'h~~~~~

that, "yes. lataatles occur. And we
believe them to be small in contrast to
other methods of generating electricity." I
would argue with that conclusion, but
goodness me , it would be more honest.

Barry refutes

UUP fund '
exp~nation

~. the radioactivity ol the high level
waste Is comparable to that ol the original
UTIIIIlum ore. After 1,000 years, the
radloactlvlty ol the high level waste Is lesa
than the uranium ""' .
Of coune, the original ore Is a ma.Stve
amount ol mateNIIn contrast to the high
level wastes, and gram lor gram, the high
level waste Is far more toxic. It Is also lair
to say that the original ore decays
harmlessly In Its natural state, but the high
level wastes are placed In a mined out
repository and are • heat source which
may enter the biosphere much more easily. Neverthelesa, Is this the lull story or
are there other pieces?

Pro-nuclear hype
But what happens when the original
uranium ore Is brought to the surface,
and the taUings, which contain 85% of
the radioactivity, are disposed of at the
earth's surface. This makes the radioactivity much more acoessible to humans.
In addition to these mill tailings. we have
low level wastes from reactors and other
parts of the uranium fuel cycle. environmental radiation releases. and occu~lional exposures to workers in the
nuclear industry. Oh yes. don't forget
those high level wastes: they probably
won't forget you . In terms of environmentllll hazards. whk:h is safer:
allowing uranium to decay harmlessly
below the earth's surface. or making the
material more l!lccessible to humans? Ob·
viously, leaving it below the earth's surface . Of course . this isn't a fair question
because the benefit of generating elec·
triclty by fission may outweigh the human
toll. To make that decision. which is
made in the political process and not in
the backrooms of the Nuclear Regulator;
Commission , the public needs the facts.
Mr. Chon is just providing some pronuclear hype .
After 35 years of generating nuclear
waste, no solution exists to the waste problem anywhere in the world. Just as a
farmer wouldn't put cows in a bam unless
he knew what to do with the manure, so
nuclear reactors shouk:l not continue to
operate without a solution to the waste
disposal problem .
Frankly, one could write books in
response to Mr. Chon's letter, that Is as
much factullll material as was omitted
from his letter. Radioactivity wastes: the
more you know, the less you like it.

Applee and oraogee
Sincerely,
To contrast highway lataUties with
cancers caused by radiation is to contrast
-Marvin RanlkoB
apples with Ol'llnges. Electricity Is not •
Lecturer, Rachel Carson College
generated by running cars. At least one
Co-Project, Director. Sierra Club
should compare the latahties In the coal
Radioactive Waste Campaign
industry with those In the nuclear power
industry, that would make 'sense. In any
case, no one Is satisfied that there are
50,000 such fataUties. It doesn' t justUy
lataUties elsewhere. And ij a lew hundred
additional cancers are caused by the
nuclear Industry yearly, that would be of
concern even ij 50,000 persons died
Among the 1.300 fans watching the
elsewhere . I can assure you, Mr. Chon. if
'U/ B victory over St. Lawrence Saturday
one grocer gets shot on the South side,
was Eleanor Mondale, 19, the daughter
quite a few people are concerned, in spite
of Vice President and Mrs. Mondale, who
ol tha.fact that 50.000 persons die on the
Is a student at St. Lawrence.
highway.
It was a "disappoinUng game," EIUe, as
Woete prob,.,...: Alter d~ng
she prefers to be called, told the Courier
f;q&gt;reu. "We should have won " Miss
'""" qulcld)l ,....,looctlolt)l In _..t fuel
Mondale said , adding that "I didn;t think
deca)oo. Mr. Chon tltat IJf/t« !00
the referees were very good, and they
· ·,.,...,....,
noto/lt.
""
ltanned..,
eotl-.Jd
... 0 .-w
-nd
were University ol Buffalo graduates," to
Wldoloo 1,0110 _ . , the radlooctilllty
boot.
was the Courier able to picl&lt; her
/rom
- - UJIJl "" allout the outHow
-•tlootof~
of the crowd at the game? "It must
.,.,...,,.. Of"'!e. ..
have been the six guys In black sults who
Rnpo,.,, I will not enter into a discusVt!fte surroundlng her,'' remarked one
sion ol whether ft Is serious to eat one
campus wag.
gram or a quaner-pounder. (Is that what
McDonalds Is selling?) However, I will say
that Mr. Chon's Argljments concerning
the toxicity ol uranium ore In contrast to
high level waste are correct. Correct. but
The University of Arkansas Foundation
irrelevant. We need to look at the 5iluahas received from the Gulf Oil Corp the
tion In two ways. Uranium Is mined from
~ny's technology lor converttng
I 00 to 450 fm below the surface o1 the
cellulose Into ethyl alcohol, a potential
· ~·. ,~ ~.'.9'~J'A~.'. ~ alter 1,000 :~~~ .'?~.· of...~9~.

Miss Monditle
cried 'fQJJI'

Gift fiom Gulf

!""!"·. ..

EAIItor:
Once again I must dispute the
statements ol Messrs Fink and Greenblatt
concerning VOTE/COPE. for upon
reading their Ieder to d-~Reporter ol 25
October. H Is not at al clear to me that
their understanding ol the Issues Involved
Is much better than mine.
FUst I am glad to see that the writers
transforof.ed their circular's · original
"poUtical activities" Into "partisan political
activlties"(thelr emphasis), a distinction
not only considerable In dimension, but
most helpful to • those considering
whether to denote mor.ey to VOTE/
COPE. My view of the union's ability to
spend money for political purposes as
long as union dues only are used derives
from documents submitt~d in agency lee
litigation . II I may quot~rom one of
them:
\
"We do not hold that a union cannot
constitutionally spend funds lor the expreoslon ol poUtiicel Views, on behalf of
poUtlc:al candidates, or toward the advancement of other Ideological aouses
not germane to Its duties as collective·
bargaining representative. Rather, the
Constitution requires only that such expenditures be financed from charges,
dues. or assessments paid by
employees who do not object to advancing those ideas .. . Abood us.
Detroit Bd. of Education 431 US 235-6
(1977)."
I understand that this does not
preclude the existence of laws limiting or
regulating such use of union funds .
I am also afraid thal in regard to the
stand Messr.; Fink and Greenblatt take in
the second and third numbered
paragraphs of their letter. they are in for a
big Surprise. The Public Employment
Relations Board of New York has already
spoken twice this year. through its hear·
ing officers. on the definition of re fundable items under the Agency Fee Act
of 1977 . On 24 August the PERB com·
pliance investigation attorney. considering what items of UUP's expenditure
should be refunded to agency lee payer.;.
stated:
"Not only In Abood... but In earlier
cases... the US Supreme Court In·
dicated that non-members ... an only
be required to contribute to the cost ol
collective bargaining, contract admlstratlon, and grievance adjustment.
The labels 'politiaol' and 'Ideological'
do not lolly define the pertinent constitutional Inquiry. The refund man·
dated by (the Agency Fee Act) must obviously comply with theee eonstitu·
tiona) standards and the statute must
be Interpreted acc:ordlngly. Report of
Investigation and Recommendotlono,
case U-2951, 24 August 1979, pp.
12-13."
In an earlier decision we find, " ... Any
assertion that the organization need only
refund lor 'pohtical or ;deologlcal' expen·
ditures, no matter how unrelated to on individual's terms and conditions of
employment, Is rejected." Hearing 0/·
/leer's Decision, case U-3740, 28 June
1979, p . 14 .
This rather changes matters in regard
to the writers' seCjlld and third numbered
paragraphs, to say the least . Th~ writers
may also be interested to dlocover that
PERB has just upheld its compliance at·
tomey's findings that once again UUP has
violated the rights of agency fee payers
IPERB Board Decision and Order, case
U-2951 , 12 October 1979) . I should like
to describe this sordid situation In exten·
&lt;a, since some readers might find It at
least amusing, or perhaps even ed~ying .
but this letter Is already too long. I do.
however, advise Messrs Fink and
Greenblatt that before they deliver
themselves of another opinion on the
points at issue In the agency fee litigation
they consuh UUP's attorney, Bernard
Ashe, esq., 80 Wolf Rd ., Albany, N""'
Vorl&lt; 12205.
Sincerely.
,"-.

- n o -·C. Bany
•

,l

.~ '

.•

1 • ··, •.•

�NOIIel'nbeo 1, 1979

Leeds' latest letter called
'emotional and belligerent'
Ytar.
I read two rebuffs In your October 25
ilsue, both ol them responding to my
earlier letter ol October 18 In lhe
Repcw~er. One was conlrlbuled by Mr.
Narc Leeds, and lhe other by Mr. Marc
Ganz. l1&gt;e general readership must have
noticed, howewr, as I have, lhe much·
lncNased emotional and beUigerent atIllude, combined with personal attacks on
me, In Nr. leeds' latest letter. This is
rather unfonunate.
On my part, I believe firmly that any
academic dlscusolons by lnteDectuals,
especially at the univerSity level, should
be carried out in a strictly courteous and
yet calm manner. For this very reason ,
this will be my final response to Mr.
Leedo' slated position . Perhaps Mr.
Leeds mistook my well-meaning, and frequently even accommodating, approach
to him as a possible sign ol weakness on
my part. Or, perhaps he felt frustrated lor
some reasons unknO\olm to me. In any

case, H ...,. sad to read Increasingly emotional outbursts In lieu of sound logic.
I will be very happy, however, to continue this debete as long as His needed on
this campus, provided that the future
debeters are not politically oriented, and
further, do not commH the same mistake
which Mr. Leeds has made. I would
always consider my Sunday evenings
well spent In preparing position
slatements for decent discussions of this
most lmJ!Orlant issue of today.

R........wy .... aaltlple . . . , _
In my original letter of October 18, I
presented four -step, Integrated
arguments to answer Mr. Leeds' original
accusation; I.e ., "Industrial greed which
can not be~ -" They were, as
many readers may cecaD, (!)the recognition ol the human llmllalions. I slated "no
engineering products would be absolutely
failUre-proof, even If we tried not to cut
comers." (2) the rule of check and
balance which wtB greatly minimize lhe
detrimental~ ol the Hem (1) above,
namely human -.m1a11ons. (3). c:oos-ation ol reactor vendors and Nuclear
Regul.tory Coaullilllon (NRC) In achievIng "bat ...,..._ quality control," "dur1 t h e . - claign and construdion,"
would further help Improving the
~ ol the nuclear plants.
In CMe, . . . _ _ , the above (2) and
(3) ...., IIIII fall to detect the poulble
flaws, I finally suggated (4) "a truly
u........,.. amount ol redundance (Is)
built Into t1.e plant daolgns." As many
r...._. must '-e.noticed, though, Mr.
Leeds qulcldy jumped on my of
...,.,.... cutting," which I offered as an
equlvelent to . . ".-!." and tried hard
to- a
that this wrt1er
may be ..tmltllng or even confessing that
the "corner cutting" Is indeed clone as a
bulc Nle In nuclear indu-. l1&gt;e trouble here lo that he would conwniently
forget my oequentially-pracn~ed oonduslons In the ~~bow-mentioned four (4)

:l.d:

laiN....,._

part~,.',w, an educaled mind would ,
ol COUIW, be triclced Into his venlon ol
my condUiton. Speaking ol the redundancy, k worlced weD In the ThrM Mile
bland Incident. In spite of many human
erron, oomc component lailura. and
even some nullflcatlon ol partial redundancy (Mveral back-up feed -water
pumps clooed aller lhe roullne In·
opedlon, lnllead ol being open), llw
pl.ont contained llw radloactiYIIy well,
due to llw bua-ln redundancy and multiple .W.... cleoign oonc:epl. The coreattntiwly damagod, but no melt-down
occurTed (they - two dflerent thing~~ .
l1&gt;e prellminmy Kemeny (Praldential)
Commllolon Report, which loaked
out to llw the other day. shows that
the cxpooure ~ the plant
during llw Incident ebout 20 mrem ,
-v . - to, and yet llighllj/lna than,
the •rill .......... made by the National
Ac.demy o1 Sc:lmce, .. I mentioned In
~...--""'.the Stale ol New Yori&lt;
·~ Plan. II 1o rec:allod that tha max-

lmum permtalble dose for general
population Is 500 mrem, wh8e the
background radiation Jn the Harrisburg
area should be around 140 mrem. l1&gt;e
maximum occupational (nuclear facility
employees) dose, meanwhile, Is 3,000
mrem (3 rem) per quarter, 01" 5,000
mrem Per year.
It Is possible that Mr. Leeds felt cllended by my earnest suggestion that he
might attend my class on Nuclear
Engineering Systems In order to undersiand lhe redundant nature of the nuclear
power plant. But should he feel offended? If I were engaged in a discussion on
some Shakespearian work wHh a professor In English Uterature, and were told
to take his course In order to study lhe
subject fully, I certaJnly would not be offended a bit. Alter all, I am an engineer.
and not an English Uterature major.
E~Sbeater

(Durtetae) or Savoalue

Wb!Jd Geeeratm a Horlzoatal Prop?
I at ntremely saddened, observing
Mr. Leeds' complete lack ol knowledge
on lhe subject of wind power generators.
If he could not attend a decent energy
engineering course , he should then at
least read some good magazines, like
Popular Sciena! or Popular Mechanics,
and read lhem rather carefully. I have
met many lay-people who are familiar
with these wind machines. But cal"ng the
Darrieus

(egg ~ beater}

or

Savonius

machines which I described earlier "an
outmoded" "horizontal (!) prop taken off
a plane," I think Is a Utile too much. They
are typical vertical-axis wind machines!
h Is rather embarrassing for the quality
of this particular debete, as weU as lor
many non-technical majors, who know
the subject much better. By lhe way, Profeooor Howard E. Strauss, associate dean
of Eng!Mering, and Prolessor Niels H.
Juul, are experts on wind power. Some
of the readers must haw noticed lhe
machine which he and his students
assembled and Installed on top of Furnas
Hall on lhe Amherst campus. It Is visible
from the Capen Hall bus slop. That Is a
horizontal machine, though not outmod·
ed by any nwans. It has hs advantages
and dleedVW&gt;~ages !'Ompared to the ver-

tical
machines.
About
the eastside co-op apartment
t.ou. tn New Yori&lt; wHh the wind
~ and solar panels-this Is good,
and we al are trying to utilize the solar
and wind power as much as posdlle . l1&gt;e
point here Is that much ol the energy consumption In this country Is Industrial.
TheM indUitrtes Nly on dependable
~ energy IIOUI'CCS. We Buffalonians tn an excelent poolllon to appreclatt the relative slgnlllcance of both
types ot enerw IIOUI'CCS;

n.. .,...cW
....... c-aleeloa
. . . doe .._
~

Even prior to last week's leak of lhe
conlenl ol the Kemeny repOit, H was not
too dfllcuM to predict the general direction ol the possible Comrnlltee recom·
menclations. After al. the American
public's confidence In nuclear power has
rebounded to the pre-TMI Incident level
of approUnately 2 to 1 (actually 56-37 In
lhe Augull 3-5, 1979 Harris survey) lor
construction ol more nuclear power
plants In the u.s.
l1&gt;e future oonlrlbutlon ol nuclear
power 1o our energy nMds wiD never be
denied~ - The Commission ,
, 1o apeda!
recommend P'*llie reconllrudion ol lhe
Nudar R.gulalooy Com..- (NRC) .

to

further

Improvement

of

nuclear

technology, and operator training programs, clc., as llw be-. for continuing
nuclear , _ bnsing.
.
Nature Is trwlolent. There Is no such

~~;perfection is

ww_ ..
Not

10

our debales cllhe past several weeks, I
would •e to deoatbe some ol our
nuclear engineering ac:ttvttles on this campus.
Our nuclear safety research project,
which Is jointly carried out by both lhe
FaCulty of Engineering and Applied
Sciences and lhe Nuclear Science and
Technology Facility, has jus: completed
the thermohydraulic simulation of lhe
Three Mile Island locident (Core Un covery Heat Transfer) . This was done In
response to a special request made by
nuclear industries. The results are being
analyzed by Dr. Carmelo Adclabbo. my
associate . and several nuclear engineerIng graduate students.
Dr. Adclabbo and I shall be bringing the
results to the forthcoming NRC Water
Reactor Safety Information Meeting at
the National Bureau ol Standards (NBS)
In Gaithersburg. Maryland. on November
5. l1&gt;e nuclear safety research facility.
which has been used to Investigate advanced emergency core cooling systems.
was found to be also Ideal lor the studies
of lhe particular type of aocldent, such as
experienced at TMI . Thus, this campus is
contributing sign~icantly to the conslant
Improvement of nuclear safety, such as
wiU be recommended by the President's
Commission soon. Our nuclear engineer-

Ing program, which ts housed in the
Department of Engineering Science .
Aerospace, and Nuclear Engineering,
has been sending out weU·tralned nuclear
personnel to aU segments of nuclear
establishments. This Is one of not-toomany NuE programs In the nation which
enjoy luD accredHation, and indeed Is
the only such program within the entire
SUNY system.
It may also be remembered, In this
connection, that our Faculty of EngineerIng and Applied Sciences Is lhe only fully.
accredited engineering school within lhe
SUNY system also. Three olher university centers also have englneerln~ programs which are not accredited fully . No
wonder forty (40) per cent ol our Incoming freshmen are destined to be engineerIng majors.

low a "troccoaocnt"?
In response to Mr. Marc Ganz's rather
Interesting comments of October 25 on
my position, the following answers may
be offered. (1) l1&gt;e power reactor operation Is not a bomb test. (2) l1&gt;e currently
accepled ICRP (International Commission on Radiation Protection) and NCRP
(National Council on Radiation Prole&lt;:tion) cancer doubling dose Is around 50
rems (although there are some Independent researchers who seem to think the
. dose should be lower) .
H tl\e papulation which was Inadvertently exposed to the laDout from
bomb tests associated wHh military exercises has Indeed shown more than twice
lhe normal cancer rate , for lnsiance, lhen
11 may be -.med that more than 50
rem, or 50,000 mrem, were received by
the lndMduals. l1&gt;e average natural
background In lhe UnHed States Is 130
mrem, while lhe national nuclear power
program will contribute less than 0.91
mrem, or negligibly.
It Is Important to note that lhe people
who might have been exposed to lhe
bomb lalout received the dose directly,
and wkhln a lew h9urs to a lew clays. The
nuclear waste glass or waste ceramics
conlalned In stainless sleet canisters are
deposited several thousand feet In the salt
beds, which have been Intact for several
million years, completely lnacx:etotio to
lhe public. As was staled urller, lhe
waste decays and approaches lhe normal
background level in a few hundred years.
It Is totally llloglca) to compare the bomb
tell !aBout ancf the risks Involved In deep
repoe1tcry nuclear wastes. They can not
be compared.
Malpreollctloe

...._..,.._.taldai

Sincerely yours,

-w-v.o.-

much as a - to Mr.

Leeds' . ~~.

bu(flt.a.NI'Oilr!C! lOe
general readefshlP, whO haw endured

' .' •

'), ..

Proteuor ol Engineertng
•• ~
and Technology Facility

'f ~ ...... .Nu,Je•

'Other One'
unfair to
'The Record''
E*or.
This edKorial Is tn ._n;l to an article
printed by one of your student
newspapers called The Other One. l1&gt;e
article pull down our student~.
The Record, here at Buffalo St.te.
l1&gt;e author, who Is a Buffalo State lludent, complains that '1he Record Is
notoriously middle clllw road and hales
to aeate waves with the administration
and Student Government."
I disagree with her potnt of view lor !he
following reasons:
1. As one who reads the Record on a
regular basis, I feel that the Record takes
an objective point of view and gives the
reader both sides of an Issue.
2. The Record has been In conOict
wHh our student government and administration In lhe past. l1&gt;e Record Is not
afrald to speak out when they have to.
3. The Record publicizes students'
opinions on Issues In the edkorlal oec:tlon .
4. The author of the article prlnled In
The Other One had an edltorlal In the
Record about her potnt of view. h _ . ted an Issue here at Buffalo State on the
same clay, Oct. 18, 1979, when both
papers were available to the student
body.
5. I'm surprised she 1s complaining
about the Record, when at the same
time, the Record published her point ol
view.

-EdwaniF.._

Buffalo State Student

Reporter said
anti-Catholic
Editor.
l1&gt;e article, "Study finds high Catholic
abortion rate," ReporteT, Oct. 18, Is
perfectly conmwnt wHh lhe -Repcwter's
anU-Cathollc and anti-human life bias.
Why Is this?
Also, It's shoddy sociology and shoddy
journalism.
Considering the source, this Is also
perfectly consistent.

No cia•-

_,...~

SA Sociology
MA Communications

(on Medallle Colege letterheadl

Hal Charles Foss
will be missed
Ulter.
Hal Charles F._, born on April 10,
1951, In Akron, Ohio, and a gwadume
student In cultural anthropology a1
S .U.N.Y. Buffalo, was Idled Sunday,
October 21 , In an a.-nobile acdclant
near Alllon In Orle.,. County. Hal
received his bechelor's dopee In Geok&gt;Rv
from lhe Unlverltly ol Wyoming In 1973
and completed two years ol greduMe
work In Anthropology there before enterIng the ~~~am e1 S .j,,.N.Y.
of 1975.
Buffalo In
He received his ........ cleiPe In Anthropology In the Spring ol 19'17 and advanced to Ph.D. candidacy In May ol
1978. Hal was a teaching - I n the
Department ol Anthropology 101" four
years and taught couna In Mllard
FlllmOo-e College including lntrodudoly
Anthropology and World Wide Social
~- Hal waslntenMiy lnterated In
problems of ethnlcHy and cultural
ecology, and had a _ . . In
evolutionary theory. He was designing a
~ propoMI on the Ultninlan
communfly In Watam New Yori&lt;.

a -·

HalF- was
hordworltlng
individual with com~ for others and
a prolound ~ 101" art, mUIIc
and llw b.uty ol life. Thoee who kMw
him ~ bv his calm dianllv
and hio qw.t ol humor. He wli ""

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

L!!'M4.l&gt;v..... ____ ___ -----

I

�Nowmber 1. 1979

Minimarket
Mra. a.da Tell*kto._tha~
. , . _ partldpetlnll Ia the U/B

w-··
CW.'• _ . 'Mialambl'
s.ams..
at Squire.

CALENDA

- TT-

mOll disllnguished )llu musicians and are currently
Rrving on the prrformance faculty of the Music

Tlaanday - 1

()epartmcnt's Jazz Studies Program .

IIESEAIICH IIOIINAII•
Michele M Ooutiet
Hotpllol. 12 noon

In

the 1\lrw.... Dr.
Board Room. Chdd~n·s

Friday- 2

-0 . ._. .

Gena.a ~ to the United Statn ....:1

N - I h Md

~-~

CEHTEII FOR THE STUDY OF ctJI.lUIAL
TRANSMISSIONS PRESENTAltON'

HISTOIIY L£CTURE.

c;-..1...,...._

DRAJIA'
· by lboen , drectod by w.,d w • mson .
681 Mo;n Stteet. 8 p .m. Genenl
o d - S4 ; !llUdeniS $2. ADS vouchcn ac·
•ocplod . s,on-.d by the ~ment .X Theme
and c-or lo&lt; Theatte Resea«h .

Shlclyl•l Mu• Co••u1catlo• FroiD
"Within": Ooe
ol the "700
&lt;lob," Paul Kowalewski. Ungu- Lounge,
Spaulding Quod, Elicott Complox. 9 a.m.

"'-..., In t.te
c-wy, Dr. Klaus J .

s.de:, Sriedl'tl:h-AIIrunder University, Institute for
Hislooy, Erlangon. Wat Gamany 260

e-n

1,30 p.m Spon.oood by the Deportment ol
H"'ooy Ew.yono welcome

Cllnlcol............,._ _,

PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUNDS•
Chlonompbenicol'

· Drs. Stanley Szd1o&lt; and Dan·
ny She.n. Kinch Auditor\um , ChUdren's Hospttal.
11 a .m.

-

UUAB FILM '
Pcrmval (france, 197&amp; . Waldman Theatre.
Arnhn-A. 3 . 15. 6 :10and 9p .m. General admission
S2, students Sl .50.
A BuH-'o PfCmee . a kMng attempt to tllwm.inatc
thrt chivUic Ma.rt of the twdth amhny by reteling
c:.hrttilm de Troyn' famou~ romana·ln·vnsc
lbout the Arthurian Knight. PeteeVal ol Wain.

SUNY PHYSICS SYMPOSIUM•
Phytldsts from ac:ross lhe llak will gather hrre.
I&lt;&gt;&lt; oiWO-day SUNY·wide Pllysica~m . Frl·
day's llnlions run from 1:30 p.m. to 5:40 p .m.
Saturday's evtf\ts, from 8:30a.m. to 3:10 p .m.
Today's
wil bcgtn with opming remerks
by U/B's -3:ean of Natucal Sden«s and
Malhcmatic:s Ouweyne: Andanon and President
Robort L. Kolw&lt;. 4!;4 Ftonaok Hal.

PHYSICS COlJ.OQUIUM•

Q.C.D. ~olthe~-. Prof . - D.J . Groos. Princeton UniYml1y. 4!;4
3~ p.m. Coffee at 3:15.

fton&lt;'.ak.

c..-,.....,

F~ 1s tho auth&lt;X ol The S c r - Let·
ton one! The Cluonldeo ol Namla.

.lUST BUFFALO POETRY READINGS'
Benefit Reading by R - Cnoloy. AlentoWn
Community Center, 111 Elmwood Avenue. 9 p.m.
.... . _ $2. Spon.-d In .... wtth public
mania &amp;om the New Vorit Slate Counc:l on the
Arts and Pods &amp; W riters, I nc.
c-ley will ..ad from his now book. Lot«, as
wei as rec:alt wodts. He has published many
volwna d e n d -· - . The loload.
anc!Tbo Gald~ wW bo . - t h l o lalby
his Brttbh pubtisha, Manon Boyan. Inc. C.eeley Is
Gny Chol&lt; pool...,. In English t..don &amp;
at
U/8 .

JIEDICIMAL CHDOSlliY SEMINAR•

IC£CHANICAL ENGINEEIIING IIOIINAII•
. 5ooMe ol · Slon1oy Comin. Tho Johns

,.....,. Cqooaal s o- Dr. El
Sheflo&lt;. Cl21 Cooke . 2 p.m.
Rm..h.,.....
-

Hopldno IJniYOnlty. Tho Ktvo. 101 Baldy. 4 p .m.
Folowod by ...,. anclcNao.
PfaaiOI' Comin 11 wei-known for his contrbl·
lion&amp; to tuobulenco inc! bio-lluid mochanlcS

·-·

INDUSTIIIAL ENGINEERING IIOIINAII•

TboRoloal~---~~~­

~: Eao...,roo . , _ . . . _ ,
K.H.E. K.....-. Dr. 1ng,, ~ ­
lnclusutol Engjn-"'i and Opeollons
R-a&lt;dt. Wayne Stal&amp;
325 Bd. 3 p.m.

-

~.

FACU.lY O F - A APPLIED
&amp;CIENCES 11tJDE101T GOIIEIINIIENT
IIEEnMG AND IIOCIAl.'
Room 214 P -. 6 p .m. Tto bo dloeuaod
indudo ..... updatof&lt;xms. UBF Pbonathon brtof.
1ng. and thk yar's FEAS meMo. Tho .-.g wW

mont d

n..n.al-

.,_~ Bony

p....,..,., {)eputn'K-nl ol Earth and . ~
Sdmol , Massachusetts INiilule ol Technology.
Room 1.8. 4240 Ridge Lu . 3 ,30 p .m .
Rdrahnwntswtll be avai&amp;M* at 3 p.m. Evpyone \1
invkd to attend.

lnYOocl.

sadlwt·
Tbo ...._..... ol the !!.'* and Ale to the

I•

.....w woo11cn o1111o wotld ....t 111o ao. by

MoMn Oubofolty. pool....,.. SUNY al Binghomton.
Room 234 Squue 7:30p.m Sponsored by Tolstoy

CGI&lt;go .

COFFEE AND DOUGHNUTS SEMINAR '
. . - , . _ , Politico, Dr Gcuy Gcldhabe&lt; .
Oepartn'K-nt ol Communk:aUons Fe:lows Lounge.

3nl &amp;oo&lt;. Fa,.. Quod . Ellicott 8 p.m.
s,on-.d by CWion! Fumos Collego.
DRAMA'

GbonJ. by Ihlen. direded by Ward WiJIWirmon.
&lt;Ante Thn~t . 681 Matn Stfftl 8 p m Generl;l
M . atu&amp;mts S2 ADS YCJUChen acocplod Sponoo&lt;od by the Deportment d Thcatte
and CAn~ for Thutre Raarch
'Thtre 15 drama in dea«ptkln . especi6ly in seW-

red~

deception 1u any web of lies and conculmenli un
folds. unexpecwd s«:rdS are revealed He.nrit
lblm's GhoPI i&amp; 5UCh • S1ory Thr C'OWred·up
mlodNds ol one g&lt;ne&lt;o- mad&lt;ediy affec1 the
ltYesclthenext
GhoNs trec:ft th. COUrM of decay th.t datto!iS
the Alvtng famity Mrs AMng, widow of the:
,........., ~ ~- has ....... dOdos&lt;d the
truth .tlout htr- 1ale husband to thn IOf\, O.Wakl
R - . tho Alv;ngs' Maid, " "'"""nlod by he&lt;
t.ma and wunled by the ~ in hts past. PNtor
Manders hu auempled throughout to sotve the
dispu.., In o dec&lt;wouo ancllOdaly acoepiOblo way
Ward Wa.mton, diredof of iul. liUIOfl's km_. hoplf: gu:i6es this produdion Anna K.y
France. w•m Gonia . M..y Jo ~ . Paul
~ and RIChard Wa;p 5lar
GhM ta runs Thunday Sunday thtough
N~ 11 CurWn 15 at 8 p.m on lnunday
through S.turday end at 3 p.m on Sunday

Thio ~ • modo - - In CETIVPAL s,..dol Projecu

.

GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES IIOIINAII'

b o - by pioeopoog, dons ancl...nalunonts.
Ill ~ students. faculty and ...

.._...., A~- lho

U-

Sloop ot AltltDde, Dr. John R . Sutton. Deport·
PHYSIOl.OGY - ·
mont ol Modlclnc. McMast., UniYml1y. S 108
Sherman. 4 p ,m

CAC FILMS '
W .C . Aftk FntNal: Ne.wr Gfw a Sucker an
E..,. Bnok; My LIUio Chidtodoo. 170 MFAC .
~- 7 ,30 one! I(U5 p.m. (complelo double
feature at each ~ng) . AdmitSion S l.35. Tlckets
may be. purcbued at Squire Box Off~e« o.- in 167
MFAC on Friday after 6 p .m .
""ShoYc K under tt.' dOOf,.. Mae. West breathes
he.avity when Aelds e~~• at hrer hotel room k) an·
nounce he '"has tornething for her ... l"heW fast fire
........ " the h;gh d Chk*olleo. • comedy·
weslml farce of tN 1930's. Both wnu lhn own
material and the resuk k a nocHlop scmery·
chitwing war to grab lhe. spotlight.
In Sucbr. ~k once again pitted against his
arch-e.ne.my. ttw chid (this tirM -cu~ay"' child saar .
Gb\1 Jean)
At Aekis Aid of htmsel, '"Anyone who hatn
dogs and dUJdren can't be an bed."·

AlfEIUCAN MAVERICKS RUt SERIES'
l...ooM Enda, an k\depe.ndent dmna made k1
Minneapolis. and ......... are»ddtama ~by
'"'"""Buffalonian DoW! Milch Modio Study/ Buf·
fakJ, 207 Delaware Ave 8 p .m

CON1DIPOIIAIIY CONCDIT '

~-c-. Bol&lt;dRocbl

Hol. 8 p m. m.t.....__.
The . . . , _ . . w11 bo the UIB
Enoemble . ..... 1.lniYoniOy ~andy......

p....,_,

· pcrionnlnjiW&lt;Xb by John Cage, ClvWian
Wollf, Monon Feldman end Eade &amp;own . Spon·
.-d by the ~- ol Music.

by

1NOEP£NOENT FUMM'UIEIIS SfJUES'
. , _ _ - F- . Mod1o Swdyl
8ullolo 207 Delow.- ..... 8 p ...

.1ua - .

• lfUIIC'

U/8
,..h lM Bosh. dJnclo&lt;
A!oolo&lt;oluRd w11 boo Faculty T"" with AI Tlnnoy .
....... one! ....., BMd Roalol Hol1 8
p m m. o d - Spon.oood by tho 0.,..,..

..-dTbo-

~ ........ lhofinl halfolthe
w t t h - . b y a - P - . Hoo&lt;&gt;ld
"""' · Thod,__oncl ...... AITINwy,

1.---

and- p...,-

-~~u~~o~o·.

c.s.

ud Bcyoad -Tho 111• ol
1..ewi1 MootCoun Room. O'Brian HeJI. S p .m. Ad ·
m.;,. Sl. Spons&lt;Xed by ln~e&lt;.Vanlty Chr\slion

Book Fair speaker
Norman Podhordz, editor of 'Com·
men!My,' _.,. !he Book fair at the
Amhent .lcwtloh Center Saturday night
with ' lecture CCHPOftSOI'ecl by U/ 8 .

P-v

UUAIIFILM'
Poreowl (F....,., 1978) . Confaoncc Theme.
Squn. 3 ,15 , 6 , 10 and 9 p.m. Genenl..._

y--

S2: 01udents $1.50.

UUAB IUDHIGHT SPECIAL'
(1968) , dndod by G«wge
Dunnklg, wlh muok by the lludu. Conf..-.nco
n -. Squn. 12 midnight. Genenl .....,.._

S2; -

SI.50.

- pop .

Tho Balla ....., on the Blue Mun1a and the

f... o1 myth1eol Pepperlond ......, '" 111o bolonce.
Puns, jokes, - e n d
Ylsionl lt'olld you, not IO mention thoee iJUl 8e.aUa
"'""" "Elean&lt;X Rl!lbv." "Lucy In the Sky wtth
Dlomondl." "All You Need Is Lovt." .and many,
m.ny more.

aofls. Almon Room. Squn. 10 a .m.-5 p .m. The
...,....ts wlllbenollt the Gnce w. c_. Mem&lt;XIol

Scholanh_,
Fund ""*" _., - . - -onls
aYIIIIol&gt;le to UIB ............... who have • ~
point

1101'0-MARKET

The U/8 Women's Oub will sponiOI' lls ntnlh annual Mini Morilct . . - , and sole ol ans and

~

... , . _ . joweky, pollay,

.........
and .. .,...._. Of opeclol ...
·~
........ bandpointed
wW bo an and ule d 011011&lt; foods
p._.o by members d the
Commit·
teo. MD. Horold J. Dumoln; chlirmon. said thlo
_.. .......... broodoned to Include .....
!Oihlblars from the lacu1ty end Oludent populotlon
at both U/ 8 andBuflalo SiaM. Cc&gt;&lt;halnnon al tho

t...,.
-

In-

1o MD. J.P• .lona.

UUABFIUI'
Up ... -

Satarday - 3

-·- doD

a - d 3.9"' bello&lt;.

Tho dloplay and

(19781.

eonr.......

Thcatte,

Squn. 3 ,30, 5,45, 7,45 ond 9,45 p.m. General
odmlsslon S2; Oludents $1.50.
Tho
comedy ...... d Cheed1 and
Chongotorlnlhcl&lt; flnl.-pklun. otongue·ln·
cheek k&gt;ok e1 a ge:ncraHon ..-ed on rock 'n roland
dope. "'In the same genre as ~ HouM, this

..,.._-cuku&lt;.

�7

NCMII!Iber 1, 1979

Fleldsfest
MM Weot end W.C. Fleldo ...... a

baln~t "'•-"-'Mil

Utile Chickadee,' ....._. at CAC'a
W.C. Fleldo * - ! Friday and Saf..
day.

l.£CTUIIE'
A *=ture: enlided "Monopoly

~ and
Shoke.peo.-e's Rlchanl D" wtl bo ...... bv f'&gt;o.

,.,... Jock H. Hextu . dlstonguished . , . - ol
history. Wuhinsl'on Unfvetsily at S L l.ot.ds 4 p .m.
in T'hr Kiva . Bekty Hal. PtoiNor Hn wr ts author
of More:"• UtCJp!ill : lhe biography of an idra and
reappratsak in histcxy. Everyone is ~ - This
lecture is sponso.-rd by the depanment.s oi l ·~ltd\
and Hist..y.

PHYSICS AND~
fmm hb - · studies d. the development "'
mdhods to determine the structure ol DNA . thi$

UUAB MIDNIGHT SPECl/\1. •

y.-

S u b - U968l . d•ected bv GeO&lt;ge
Dunning, with music by the Butln. Conference
lhe.a~. Squire . Genci!ntl admission S2: students

work resukd in the lim total k~ ol the
chemicel composition ol the gma ol any life fonn.
Dr. Sanger is"curr~lly wtth the Medk:al Resea rch
Coundl in C.mbridge. England .
Hb lecture b spon..,..,s bv the 0!.,_ al C.U
ond MolecuiM Biology ond tho Chomisuy al

Biok9cal Syswms lecture serles.

$ 1.50.

.._.,

Unt ANNUAL .IEWISH COJOWNITY

--

IIOOKFAIR'

~

_. a-,

M0&lt;1on Hop-

pcnfdd, on:hltect. plonneo-. Un-..y al New Mu·
teo. 335 Ho,.s. ~ ;30 p.m. Spontoo-ed bv tho
School al M:htto&lt;ture and E.nWonmcntol Design .

lloppy, crazy comedy" rnon outhonll&lt; ond appeol... """ .... ploin
~

0...,_ RooU, 0.. Maxine Soller• ........,,.
prot....,, s-1. Phi1ooophlcol ond Historical
Foundations, U/ 8 . Jewish Community &lt;Anter.
Amhust BuQdlng. 10 a.m. No fee .

FU.II (FlUI HISTORY) • •
The'- a l - N., (Pobsl) . 146 Di&lt;fen·
dorl. 7 p.m. Sponoor.d bv the ecn... I&lt;&gt;&lt; Media
Study.

£11£RJIIS'
W.C. Flolds Fesllvolo - G M aSoodoo&lt;aa

BFI\ II£CITI\L.

UU/\11 MONDAY NIGHT FU.IIS'

--My.._~

p.m. Free admission .

lun-.--LA.-

146 Dielcn·
- · 7o30 and IOo l~ p_m. lcomplole doublo
""""""' ad&gt;"-'"9 . ~ $1 .35. Tlc:Mts
be ~ .. Squn Boo!. Offico .. .. 167
lllfi\C on Frldoy- 6 p.m.

.-A'
-

bvbon. dlnoctodbvWIOdW....._.

C..tor , __681 - . Slrect. 8 p .m. &lt;&gt;&lt;-a!
$4 ; . . . . - S:!.' ADS ~ iif.•

""'''!d- ~ bv the Ocpor1mcnt "' -

DIIAJIA'
· bv Ibsen. dnded bv Wwd w.a,_,_
Ccnle Thco,., 681 Moln Slrect. 3 p.m. GcnenJ
o d - $4; ttudcnts $2. ADS ~ ac·
""'''!d. ~ bv the Doponment "' Thco..
and ecru. few 1M.atnt Rac.arc:n.

Ml&lt;hosholf. plano , ond

......
•• - -·
- Lui.
violnlsl
l'hlpinand.mezzo-soprano
Suze
BUdThornos
Redal
Hoi. 8 p.m. GcnenJ o d - $3; U/ B focuky.
-The
· olumnt
ondi5S2; ""donls
Sl.
program
entitledMDivertimcnlo
ltd.e.no."'
.nd il a musical tolr-ea in U. manner c:l a salon

-.a. Rome ""'" 1929.

bv the Doponment al Music.

lntt ANNUAL .IEWJSH' COIIJIUNITY

NOW-.

woddhap ..of
, Jewbh
_ ""
"""
" " '"-• - wc:wldthe
darfQtion
values..
Bdns
....-..1 plodonn opcobo os wd .. woddhap
leader. Jewllh Community Center, Amhe-rst
Building. 3 p.m. Spontoo-ed bv the J""""' Student
Union at U/ 8 and the Young Adull DEp.rtment of
theJewllhCcntc&lt;.
tJU.\11 FU.II'
Up Ia s-.b (1978) . Woldmon Thcoue.

Amhonl. 3:30. ~ :4~ . 7 :4~ond 9:45p.m General
odmiaion S2; studmts $1.50.

flU('

AT-oo50Yaanaldw-'-'caaM-.I
Film, p_, 0 : ...,.._
with Dodo Doy.
John RUt and Ecld;e Fay. Buffalo &amp; Eric County
HlslodcM Society. 8 p .m. A dm......, cho'VO . Sponoor.d bv Medio Study/ Buffalo.
'The pb, 'ottlhic:h serve5 as an ~ for .al dv
tltU*-I numbers. rr.dva .ound a ~ factory
union 's efforts to get • pay 1"111:5« al MWn·and·a·hd

Go-.

U/ B

~

CHEESE TASllNG EVENT
The U/B AJumnl Association invfles you to thls
event, 10 be led by Mr. MichM:I Wtw:lan. wN
m~~nager, PrenUer Uquor Corporation. 8 p tn. ln the
Focuky Club Dwng Room, Hommon Hal. Dono·
~perponon ThcWIMs ~Lawen­
...., Kobinett 1977, a..-u Fenonde 1977;
Chtn•s 1978; Ch.te.au Buu.-tour 1970:
Souwraln C•bcmel S.u\llgnion 1974 The
BdtSu,nme. Doux D &lt; M -. Itolian
Fontln&amp;, Goudo. Buche&lt;on 5&lt;. S.Yiol By,_...
tioo Call the U/ B Alumm Aosodolioo. 831-4121.
fOJ ITM)fe lnformadon.

a-

ta•

•• •.

•

-

~L£Cn.RE·

......_. flea. 1967 Nobel

Bud with Frank Cipolla. d•·

R-..-. R-

&lt;CIO&lt;, ond the ~ al
Ca-.~ s-1. wlth

Mlchool Romey.

director. Kltharine Cornd Theaere.·Eacoct. 8 p .m .

Free.dmkllion

l...eurtate in

chomisbY. ond cuncndy dD-«10&lt; "'the Mox Planck
lnslllute I&lt;&gt;&lt; 8iophystcol Chomlsby. Gon[ngen .
w.. Gormony. 147 Dielendorf. 8 p .m.
The tlvft-lecture ....., b being ,....ntcd bv tho
FKU.lty of Natural Sdmccs and Mathe.maUCs
through • gift fmm the J ohn W C...,... Construe·
tlon Company. Inc.
Dr. Bgm's JX'mary research lntvab are in the
mechanisms of b6ochemlcal reactions and mc*cular
sd·cxgonlzollon involved k&gt; the origin end evolu tion of Bfe.

Today's topic k Oynamk:s of Mo&amp;ec:ular D•r·
wbdaG Systm..

Monday- 5
NAHI\GEJI£NT liDIJN/\11'
n..w-..~

...

R.....,c..._

~' Dowlopiog EoocutM Sldllo b tho
tide ola rwo-day .emmar for women, to be gtw:n e1
the CoMn T Knous Cont.,...,. c..,.., k&gt; Crosby
Hoi, Nowmbc.5ond6. ThcMminorlude.-wlllbo
0. EluOcth B. Adorns, ........,,. prot...,. al
. . . . _ . . . . . 01 GeO&lt;ge WHhlngton
who'- hold_..,... - w i l h iBM ond

Unl-.

wrwd•onolficook&gt;theU .S -Co,po.
For further infOITNtion, contaa Cynthia fairfidd
831-2027.

--p---

Cammt Solely 1soua eo.-..lng Coometlcs,
Dr. Norman F. Estrin and James Me Nerney, tmc·
icolog1sts . Cosmetic Toiletry and Fragrance
Auodation. 121 Cooke. 8 p.m.
SpontO&lt;ed bv the School al Phonnocy ond tho
Ph..rmacy Alumni Association

FIUI (FILM THEORY)·
Me. In War (Anthony Mann. 19571 . 147
06efendorf 9 p.m. Sponsored by the CA:nla" for
Meda Study
Robft1 R,.., ond Aldo Roy ""' k&gt; thlo grim .
realistic film about the Korean conf1id Again. the
theme h ~ conflic1 amid the hel of war.

81

lSTH ANNU/\1. .IEWISH CO-UNITY

IIOOKF/\111'

Taesday- 6

Scloolf. prot.,... al pi!IChoiogy. U/ B. Jewloh

PSS SENATE NEETING '
The Regut. M..,;,g al the 1'1-ofesslonol Stoll
Scnoto hod been mowd &amp;..,. Tuadoy N......U.
13th to Tuesday. November 6 . •t 3 p.m in the
Junneuc Martin room In Capen Hal. This regu'ar
mHttng has bHn moved to an earlter das. in

eo.nn..n..

S-

PodhO&lt;.u It the author al ........ h ond Dolooo

aad

u....... ,.._, no. -

... ,.,._

Ia

- - W....... H• , _ book . ........
A 1'-.J · wtl be published this
....-.h A loodong ......., ollie and todol common·

__

_ _ , . _ _ Ho'-~
· ho , _ - - a n d ........ 10

-

_,flldlo,

lftrWion and unhle:ntty QmPUta IIPUk·
..... - -- ......., .......... pollctcs.
Ofl

COWPEJIL£CltJII£'
•
1967 Nobol
chomlsby. ond ououndy dlrociO&lt; al the- Plond.
lnstltuto '"' lliophyslcol a..mlsoy. ~­
w..
Dielcndorf.
8 P-m·
TheGermony.
_
__ 147
,._...
.. being..bv the

-

a.-.

u.- ..

Faculty ol Natural Sdenca and MMhtmatics
through o gift 1mm tho John W. eo..p.. Conslnoc·
Uon~. lnc.

O. . Elgon's prirnooy.....ch--k&gt;the

mechonamsal-.-and-lor
Todoy's toplc

.. t h e - ond evolu-

li The~

A....._..al

-~lSTH ANNUAL

.lEWISII~

BOOK FAIR'
,.. .-..,a~~uw-

Robbl Ylsrod Hooxhel

G&lt;anbav

.... M-.

one! Genhon

Wachtel . Jewish Community CAnter. Amherst

Building. 8 p .m. ~ bv Chobod House.
Rabbi Grftnba-g, a distlngubhl!d Torah tic:ho&amp;ar
and a uthor. will speak on 1lw Chalmge and Oil·
hculties

Involved

In

Translating

Chassldic

LKaature." Ge:nhon Wachtel. pianist. wil Pft$oml a
.-ec1to1 al Chosoidl&lt; music with a&gt;mmentMy bv

WBFO UVE BROADCAST
Buflolo Cluunbeo- Music S«Mty Series; Slrlng QoouU-1. WBFO (88.7

FMJ. 8 ;30 p .m.

PKAJIMACY LECl\JRE•

lntt 1\NNU/\1. .1EW1SH COMMUNITY

ecn.... ,.,._
""den"

.... (ICJ!l91 , 148 Dielcn·
dorl. ~ and 8 p.m. Free odmlssion. s.--ed bv
the Ocpor1mcnt .. Modem ~ and
Uteratura.
mnch Dbect&lt;&gt;&lt; Alan R -' mood ploco about
a French moYie actraa and • J..,... erd*-::1
who mHt In Hiroshima ye.an .her WWII. H.a.d M
-... "' the II'UI&lt;SI films"' .. tJmo.-

David Sholom Pope.

.klyee R_.nLalc.. pianist . Baird Redial Hal. 8
p.m. Free admmion .
Assisting artists are Jay Anstee. baritone: Mary
Cowbett . violin : JoEIIe.n Hams. clarinet. Marsha
Ha!Ktt. cello: Joanne Lowe, vto&amp;a . and GaA Wise.
piano Sponsored by the Department ol Music

800KF.YI'

Opontng Ewntwilh
lo-chiol"' c - - y, .. the_., opcobo The
lllo al his ... wt1 be "Tho RIM one! Dodinc al the
Amoriaon Jowooh Nowlool - Jewloh Community
Building 8 P ... A ...,.,...
honoring tho opcobowtl , _ G c n « o l S3.
Sl
Spontoo-ed bv tho Foculty al Ms and !.etten/
hdolc Studlooi'I&lt;Jgmn ond the Book Folr

DISCUSSION'
Albncht H. . . bv Dorothy Rol..- Wtswol.
1030 Clemens. 4 : 1 5- ~ ; 1~ p.m . Sponoor.d bv the
Graduotc Germon Club. Open to tho pubic. No od·
miuion charge.

..._ . _ ..tion ol lfe.

MFA RECIT/\1. '

CONCERT'

emu an hour.

FRENCH AND GEJUCAH WINE AND

Raw Dool (1948) . 7 p.m.; The Dart. r ...
(1948). 8 :30 p.m. Waldman Theatre. Amhmt .
Fret edmksion.
Raw Dool b. baullfuly modo. honj.boifod _ ,
of a man who acepa from )a~ to take RYCng~t" on
!he penon who fnlmed him.
'11M o.k p_. is an~ narraUvc ala mad
ldllto- holding • poychologlst prison« ond al the lot·
ter's atWmpU to
sen. into the maoiK.
A

- v-

~-altho-aiOt­

~

- 8oird Redlol Hoi.

""'tho
o..
Dov P...u Ellk&gt;s . This wtl be on _ _ . . . .

.ACU.TY II£CITI\L •

........ Y••

"""'- Kuno. -

IIOOKFAIR'

and Ccntor f&lt;&gt;&lt; Thuue Raun:h. •

-

.

~-...·--.c-.
24~ Fronczak. 4 p.m.

FIUI'

1\RCHITECTURE LECTURE'

Saaday- 4

~PHYSIC8-·

0.. 1\ lsihooo .

no. .--.aao~ v-c-. o.. N...,.,

Communly~ . Amhent~. l l:.J0a . m

Ad-SI R.n..nmmtswtlbowrwd . Sponbv the Young w.....,.·,-Gooup a1 Temple
Both Zion

o-

NOIIO. LAUREATE 1.£CltJII£'
D&lt;. F........ ~- tho English biochemist
who wa the fna to dcftM. the complc\e dwtnical
_ , . a1
11 4 Hochot..., 4. 15 p.m.

s.•·--"'

coH.. aa4
0.
thoc!oomk:o~IIN&lt;·
tun of inluln. d'W pro&amp;etn involved in reguillting
...... ...... .. tho blood and cldlcioncy
...,,.. eomod '*"the I~ Nobol Prioe

NOYe.mber to present the reports on "'Cor..iltion ot
the Can-opus." This move Is ......-y 10 got lui

1'1-of......,.. Stoll Scnotc . - ond dlscu-..
before the ~aluadon puwl• viii on NOYI!.fl'lbrr 11.

12. one! 13th. -

plan to ane:nd .

change """' «olondo&lt; and

.,a....vy

Howtldltcwohlo...,.....n...........,thecom·
piNIINCIUtol---althe..,-moleriol
dloboclorlolviNI Thll......,......chcvolved

...

OIL\L IIIOLOGY SOONAR•

The

Role"'

()cdoofo.la .............. -

-

Dr. Alan Pollon, asiOC'iiiW: profe:aor, Unklersity of
Rochest.et and chairman , Oepartme:nt of Periodon ·
tology, Eostmon Dentol Cenler. 182 F -. 1·3

p .m.

MEETING '
[),-gonit.alioool -

,_
3~

~

I&lt;&gt;&lt; student

&lt;"-

al

Sociot¥- 206 F...,...

p.m. Junior and MRb
an! suongly urged 10 aiW\d

~ AUd«nlS

WORKSHOP AND GAME nEOIIY•
The s.... ol tho v.. --Solutloo n-y, Wiliom Lucu, Comd llnN«o!·
ty. 210 O'Bnon Hal. 3o30 p.m . Spontoo-ed bv the
Ocpor1mcnt "' Economics.

BUFFI\LD LDGIC cou..oQURJM •
- d """""""'

c-.- u.e
Ialtnt.....
SUNY BuHolo 302 Dielendorf. 4 m

ID-

Eugene Kleinbag . Mathe:m~~tics.
p

·-~.- - .. -.1
To llat event. Itt the "Calendar." caD
.lean Shr8d«r •t 636-2626.
Key: #()pen only to~ with a profeaionallatereot In the ...t.ject: •Open
to the public: • 'Open to - b e n ol
the University. Unleu otherwiw
specilled, lk::keta for ewnm charging
a~ can be pure..._.. at the
Sqldre Han Ticket Ollce.

�Nol&gt;ember 1. 1979

SUNY authorizes
transfer of 123 Jewett
n..
"' ... ._, n. ......
The Unlwnlly's f'nmk Lk¥1 W~
pr-. houselll123~ "-"-may

t100nbeupfor ....
The SUNY BOMd alT....- lui -.k
voeed ............ tranofer ol ownership
from the University," clUng high
-...once COlli and the need lor a-

. .....,.._

~.-_..

Teclmically opaldng, according to an
lll'llcle by Dennis Holins In the Sunday
New., the decision doesn't authorize actual ... but Is the first legal step toward
finding • , _ owner.
Hop.fuly, that new owner could
the deterioration which Is setUOg

...

-

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

tallllled In

... ..........., ........ ol Hiltorlc ......
whkh - · - - b e IQrn down .....
- - - -ol-...hlp
- _....... ... .the pabllc,
........

HoUins lnterwlew•d Donald M.
8hnken, cMirman of the SUNY

T-.lllhofl0eed thwStale Uniwnlty
jutt doaon'l ' - the ......-y 10 kelrp the
,__ In proper shape. 8ll1bn -.Ill the
rool...- fixing, .. does the porch and
some other thlr)gs. Becauoe ol the impor·
tanoo ol the bulldlng, 8llnken said, .tts
ownen ..., raponslllo lor keeping h 1n
pMie condltlon. Since the Un~

- ·lito
he ftnd
lldcMd,
the -who Qll
........
CGWW
someone
.
8ll1bn pointed out lhlll the Tluslea'
............... the house lllpulales that
M'l/ , _

"mUll maintain the
hlotootcoll and erddtec:tur.J lnle!JIIy ol the
building."
"We won't tnmsfer II without rec.iving
that usurance." he pledged.
Ojllner

Ptaklent Robert L. Keller told the
Ne11&gt;1 U/8 has been trying unsuccasfully
lor the last nine yean to get money fr&lt;!m
0.0.8. lor repairs on the house. Rool
repairs alorie wtD cost between $80,000
and $100,000. Ketter estimated. Much

ol the ortgtnal wood
to be .........
Part ol the front porch caved In ....

April.
Ketter said, in his opinion. some agency ol the State (perhaps the Pedes Commlselon) would be the most llpprCpriale
entlly to take the.house owr. He said he
doubted any private owner would be able
to meet the requlremenll ol 11M natlonlil
registry, one ol w~ Is for tours.
The U/8 Alumni Aaoclation Is now
the only U/8 agency located In the structure. It Is also used lor meetings. Ketter
said maintenance costs, Including
janitorial and other services, run between
$15,000 and $20,000 annually.

•Calendar
E1EC11IICAL £NGINEEIUNG SEMINAR•

n. -

,.,_ ., s,.r- u.....

~ A. Fam. Electricol EnginHring. U/ 8 .
338 Bdl. 4-5 p.m. RdreshtMnts.
JilL~

T-

CONFERENCE•
Dn. SI&lt;YCn H. Noyes and

c--.

trm. V. M.gou. An..,tlftheater. Erie County
M&lt;dlcal

c.-. 4-5 p.m.

, . _ CFIUIIUSTORY)"
"

•

t

~

1924).

o&lt;tranov). Eatr 'Act. (Clair.
(Motzne&lt;. 1929) . 146 Diefendorf.

1 p.m. Sponsored by the Centn for Media Study.

UUAII WEDNESDAY DOUBU FEATURE"
'--No T ......t (1932) . 7 p.m.: For Me ood
M, Gol 119421 . 8:55p.m. Conf"'onco n-....
Squ... F-

odm"""".

Low Me. with Maurice Chevalier and Jund.le
Mo&lt;Oonald . II poool&gt;ly the,....... blod. and white
.ICrftn musical madt . .bout a lab who woos a
prin&lt;ao. Wonb ond mutlc by Rodgen and Hut.
For No ... My Gol - . Judy Garland. Gone
Kdy and Geo.ge Mu'J)hy In o tale of two
v~. cOca WWI . falling In low and uy1ng
for t~ big l:l:nw. Kdy's film debuL
COWPER LECTURE"
....... £1eea. 1967 Noba Laureale in
ond """""tly .. of the Mox Planck
1-..10 for lliapl&gt;yolcol Chornloby. Gotliogen .
w.. G«mony. 147 Dlefendoof. 8 p.m.
Tho tlno-toa.......... " bolnv
by the
Focully of NotU&lt;OI ~ and Mothemallcs
tlwough • gill loom the John W.
Conswc-

clw-.,.

.,.....,ted

c....,..

- c:o.np..y. Inc.
Dr. Eigen's prirlwy rnuK:h In~ auln the
-ol-.-andmoloculu
.........-~In t h e - and ........

_.,

..

_

Todoy"t_ll_oi~(Ao"'­

• -.. -Ga. _ _

---.....Nocr
IIUIIC"

).

·•-·"'""v-

-c

ond Jon w ....... 8oinl Redtal Hoi. 8
p.m. Fr.ad...-...on.

-

admfl,sk)n $4: studcnb $2. ADS YOUc:bm ec:·
copied. Spons«ed by the ~nl of Thoue
and Center fot Theatre Rewan:h .

DRAMA'

w..,.- by Georg 8udu,.... di&lt;-.1 by Neil

Radice. Hantman Theatrt Studio. Maln Street
Campus. 8 p.m . Getwral adnMsion S3: stucSents
and wniot citizens $1 .50. Sponsored by the
Department ol Theatre:.
This controYe&lt;5ial ploy lwhic:h has bnn called the
flrsl modem play) tra«s the story of a young man's
journey through lif•.
INDEPENDENT FllJIOIAXERS SERIES"
lecturt showing by pk)nftr film artisl, Leo HurMedie Study/ Buffalo. 207 Drt&amp;ware Aw. 8
p .m.
MUSIC"

~Forum . Bah-d Redial Hal. 8 p.m.
Free admission. Partic:ipanls wiD be: Jan WO&amp;ms.
pemwion; Mld...J Andrlocdo. guJW; Gmy Hah.
c:larlnet: John Cloef. colo; Ed Folger. -

and Wabe Hunt , pacusslon. Works ol gqduate
studmt com_. Paul Ga.llagt...-. Christos HolDs.
Swwn N. Swartz. ln-Hwa Nam. Charla Ames.
w-.m Onk.. M~l bk. and Joe 01 Renzo will
be iaturtd.

Notices
AU. 5AIMT5 DAY IIIASSES
F.,. the Nowmbor 1 F..., of All Solnto. the foon.
..,_Rood Newman Ccnler Cbopd. Amhent. has
achedWed Nasta at noon and 5 and 1 p .m . 1br
Main 5L Newman Cent.u (15 University Awnue)
d t..vc Mas5 .t the Cantakian..Center at 7 p .m.
CATHOUC N£WJIAN CEHIEJI JIASSES

_.., V1tJ11:

5 p.m. -

C.ntollclon Cbopel; 8 p.m. - St. Jweph"•· 3269
Moin St.: Amlwnl: 9: 15 o.m.. 10:30. noon and 5
p.m. -Newman CAntft. ElicoU..
M #wt F~Wiv. 12 noon - Newmen Cencer.
M.tnSt. lt Univcntty Ave .: 12 noon and Sp.m. -

-......c.-. Eiticoll.

s...r. 9 a.m. -

..... CfiUI THEOirY)"

A-.

~

ol 0.. C...., (Wolno) . 147 Dief•n·
dod. 9 p .m. Spoo-..1 by the Canlft for Modta
Study .
....-.. ·-· ~~m
epllonolfor
.,......._IIJI(Iood""""'Yandll--olan

.....

339 Squ... and

- s-.v:ec......
Elticoll eon.&gt;lnMain Strftl: 10 a.m . and 12 noon

CAl-.

Newman Ccn• on both

DENTAL STUDY
p......, who think they need dontol

wort. and

....tho-....-..Gornwl....,....-""""'

one__..,..__

______ ..

n....tav-8 .._.
....

~-·
_., ______ .___Dr.

p-

,_-~

Da.wl C. Shl.nnon. UIC!da• prola.or of
J)Odiolricl, Sd1oal. of
P.trnonooy Unl. Geneool
HOipkal. Bc.ton. Board Room . Chlklrtn's
~

CHEMK:Al.--·
A

12noon.

•

__

.....,_... U..WO, R.

_, . . _ . , . ,

11on&gt;n

Bird.~ of

- 1Z7 c -. 3 p,m. - - d
b o - - 4-4:30.

UUAII.._..
n. .....

.,~

1 -.

..

v-~ .

Woldmon ~ - - _ 4:45. 7:15
ond 9:30 p.m. c;.-.1 o d - $2: - . .

-andThlod--·
suo.

T h o - - "'.

""""'c..ho - ,_,

~lnl881...-llw-fortNt

............
11m conoiolond by ........
ol Tllo - . o ( a T -.

-

... -

. - b y w . . . t - - ..

c-~, --"~¥-1"~ ,..

~

the

o..n·.

01-

ty teaching required colegl: courses. H.rpu InstrUctors wW be choRn from c:andidaW:s with
especial tnterat in ~ fund.arnen-.1 ilsuc:s and
texts in lhe: humanities and lhc IOdal sc::icnoes.
Application$ must bo submitted by Jan""'l' 15.
1980. Do&lt;alls of the oppb- .,..,.,..t.... may bo

MEDICAL EDUCATION VIDEOCASSETTES

ol&gt;tain&lt;O by Jonothon Z. Sm•h. dun of the
College. The University of Chicago. 1116 Eat 59th
Sueet. C~. llli- 60637.

Network for ConUnuing Medk:al Education
Videoc:usette Series. Tape '327: "'Fe1al MonHorlng: Policy. Pro&lt;ocol. Pidallt." .,esented by Roger
K. Freeman, M.D.. medical diredor. Women's

and

Hospital of Memorial Hospital
Medical C.nl&lt;r
in Long Boch. California. -canal Update in
Urinary Tract lnfecUons: Ate You Oohlg All You
CanT
by Patnck Joocph. M.D .• chief.
Ctmk-al Raemd&gt; Unit. DMslon of Infectious
015eua. UniYe:rslty of C•lifomia. San franc:i:scO.
- Counseling Victims of Saual Assaub.."' pri:M'nted
by Thomas Novotny. M.D.. dinic::al inslrudor. ambulatory and communtty rnedic:ine. Untvasity of
C.Womia . S.n FRndsco.

.,...,ted

NUCUIUl FACIUIY GUIDED T0U11
Tau" of tho Nuct- Science and Technology
Fadlly will bo held"""'"' 1n1 and .... Tuadoy of
the month at 4 p .m. Students. t.c:uky and sVJf
membm: who are lnwres&amp;ed m the tow must caD
831-2826 fOJ reservations. 1"he nat tow will be

-·-

HYSCOL ANNUAL CONFDIENC£
The New York St.eW: Council on Ungujslk:s" an·

nual coniCRne~ , indudi:ng a sympolium on tM
Rdev...,. of Pk9ns and C..oln to llngulsllcs and
Second languge Acqulstoon . will be heLd
Nowmbtr 10 and 11 starting at 10 a.m. For further

lnf""""""". col636-2177 .

SCHUSSIIEISTERS SKI a.tlll

.

S1UDIES SKaLS I.Ail
T h e - - ........ the UnlwTIIIyl.aming
c.-. 368 Baldy Hal. .. open ... botorlng In
The hou.. .,.., Monday~
tlwougt. Thu&lt;&gt;doyt. 12-3 p.m.; WedMidoyt. 10-2
p .m. No houn on friday . 'T'tw lab Is open to al
U/ 8 - . ..

-and-....

Jane---tool&lt;.-.,.

at~9p.m.
l"lc:Ub for ttw TCII'Onio trtp •• S 11 for students:
120 for ..........
but and odllon . For Wonnetion and "raavations, cal the
Black Studml
831 -5421.

lndudlng-.,

u.-. ..
IIMTEa- .n&amp;INATICINAL COUEGE

.,..._lor ....--QuOd,...-

- - Cala,.c .. . . . _ , . ond
- . h l p olllw Cala,.c.
"11*Cala,.c, . . . _ ...
.
.._
.....
.,_
_u
on
nd
_ .-_
-.o
n
d
1..0
ct
- --T h o -. who-boolmUNd

.-...,~acu~op- - · - I n - - .,. ._ - - . . and m unc~.r-

. - _ weo~oy • ......,.,.. ..... _ o l
• Coll,teo, . . . . . . .

-w .............. ..,...,the

WHITE HOUSE FELLOWSHa'S
1M President's Commiuion on White HC»U.W
Fdowshlps has announced the current competition
end deadlines.
The White Houw Fellowship program is de·
&gt;igned 10 provide gif&lt;ed and highly motivated
Arnmcans. early. In their careers. fii"Jlhend ex·
penence tn the proca.s of governing the naUon . and
a Knse of personal ln~t In the ~P of

tho 50dely.
U .S . dtizlr.ns are eligible to appty during the early
and formatiw yurs of thdr career or profession .
There are no basic educ.aHonal requtrements and no

uc-

special career or profasional ca\egOries. Employees

of the Fedenol Government ue "'" eligible. with the
of cautr mlllwy P""'"MI of the Anned

Snvicu lAnny. Navy. Marine C"'PJ. AI&lt; Fon:e.
and Coast Gu.rd) . Thcrt are no re:sbictions as to
age. Mil . ctftd. or national orijJin. nor any physical
requiremmll.
The dudline for requesting applications is
November 15. and appke.Uons must be c:ornp1e1ed
and sent in by December 1. 1979. The od&lt;Jr.,.ts
Presldent'5 Commission on White House
Fetlow.hlpo. P.O . l!!ox 7737 . Washington. D.C .
20044. F.,. f.......,.lnfonna-. col 0.. M. C.rlota
Baa. 636-2901.

WIUIING PlACE

The Wrtdng ~ Is a free drop-ln wrtting unter
that welc:omes ""'*"at any Aage ::A the~
Take advanc.ge of our quallfted writing
. . _ who prov~c~o comul .._.,.. 10 both .....
having .......,.. ....s.-ndlng on Ollignment ond
5CHll5S...sTERS SKI SW/#
.
The...-...! Sid Swap ... bo 9 .. the polshing • final draft . Come us In 336
f1lmore Room, Squire Hall . from 9 a.m. lO 9 p .m . Baldy Hal on lhe Amhmt Ca~ . Our houn this

2 lithe ... day 10 join the Sid Club ..
the cunont prices. Tho oHioo ot 7 Squke Hoi wll bo
open from 9 a .m. lo 8 p .m. on Nowmba 2.

--

-luYt Squtrc
........
Fndoy.16. wtl
for Toronto at 11 a.m. and wl rdUm

Thnc ·positions .-c opm to persons who hew
&lt;ec&lt;twd their 1'1\.D. no ....., thon Scpto..- ol
1975 and to theM who wll recetw their df9w no
late&gt;' than Soplemba- ol 19110. Harper lnstructon
are membfts of stllfs compoted of UnNenity facul-

1011.

-II.
n.. Sun:h eo..- induda l'lol. Claude
Wdch , l'lol. Jo&lt;MJ Bunn. l'lol. bvlng Spibberg.
Ms. Saly King, Dun Munay Sc:hwartz. end lnternollonal College studenll.

wouldllkctoloke-lnoll\Kiyol-tmponM
roudne ckmw.l trub'Mnt thould comect Or. Norman L. Corah at 831-4412. Voluntftft musa not
CUf'N'RdiJ be under the Clft of a dmtill. P.-tidpenta
wil rwcetw dm&amp;al examination and •-rays to dder- -SYMPOSRJJI ON~ Al5TIC£
mlno how much .......... _ ....... llwy .........
T-•--0...-Aa.Two Mngt ... bo provided by • donlilt
of ...,___Newman Canlft. 15 U-..oty Avo.
the """"· Spoo-..1 by tho Dcponmcm of Nowmbor9ot8p.m. ond-10hom9:30
BchovioroiSctoncc.
a .m. to 3 p .m . The tyrnpOiium will be opened by
lUNG TUT Ella.&amp;ION
MI.
of the c.n...
of Concem. Watillngton . D.C. A former hnJth.
An n&lt;unlon 10 the King Tut . . - , In
T......., ond o _.,.,about the £ayptian ldng on """'wooi&lt;a-ln Poldtlon. tho~ one! Hong
Kong.
Ms.
sto-o
~-In
thc.UN Con·
being o11....s by 11w Black studmt u.-. n.. two
r...,... on Sdonca ond Technology foo Dcvdop. . ~by .... BlodiS&lt;udla Proment""""'
thll,... mlllenno. Shea ddegaW: at thr: UN Worid PopolaUofl Confml!nce
A pi'C9Wn that lnc::lud.s a documentary film.
lnBuchorat.
P-IIng wlth Ms.
Sotuhloy wtl bo
and · about tho Nowmbor
legenda.y
ldng
dbo pracnled
on·Wed&lt;M&gt;doy.
S.. Judy J - . SSJ. PII.D.: Rev, Dovld
14. .. 6 p .m. at theO.C. Micheauk Tbt.atre. Kensone! - ,. h II &amp;.c ond open to tlw . . -. Golivon. ond Rev. Don Mulvoy. S.J . Tho morning
theme will bo ClwWion Social Tuchings o_nd R•·
The WI ftCUI"IIIon to Ml: .thc soW-out tong Tut
k)

...
of in
- 1919.- •told
a1llc
Mode
hosbnn
.
-.... .
lirstCn&gt;wlhoo.
_.
ol
and ......._. of
modo Hllu poulblo. OC&lt;OOdlngto

_...,_.,.must

dewiopmenl of tho o&lt;odemlc _.m.
N - ond
bo tubmllted
to
t.-...llonol Colege -."1 Sun:h CommftiH. cote olllw
otllce, Tho Colloga. 350
Porler Quad, Eacott eon.&gt;ln by Molodaop,

-on

procu~~ .

.........,. . ., Mondoy througtt Friday. 12 noon un1114 p.m .. ond Mondoy. Wed&lt;M&gt;doy and Thundoy
ewn)ngs, 6 unU19.

WIIII1NG TUTORS

F.....,, " -

s - . Co&lt;1oldc tutoring "'

you.....,._

the Writing Place. Vou will bo c.omuJy b-olned to
holpc&lt;hmtm,..,...tlwlr wrlllngwhile
your own . Cont.act 8arben Gordon •' 636-2394.

EddbiU
ADIIIOND.\CX IMAGES
An ....... oilS phooog&lt;ophs b y - E. - -· ollborlet at SUC/ Piottsbwgl&gt; and
fonnedy Olllstont dftc"" of Unlvmolty lborlet foo
Public Sevk:es et U/ B. Moin Foyer of Haith
Sciencn Library . Stockaon KlmbaU Tower.
Tluough Dec.mbo•.

l&lt;e*-. ....

,

AI.AIIO GAU.ERY

film-; _
_,..........,
SX-70 Polaroidt. Alemo Golay. Beck Hal.
Encyclcolt.
Tluough Novombor 'ZI . Gotlfty """"· 9 :30a.m. to
The oltomoon- d ..... --n.. Chrilltan 5 p.m .. Monday through Friday.
ldulond Ct-rittion · and "M-Il ond Chrio.., At:tion." T h o - .. open 10 the public
ond thould bo of _.w 10 lludenll In
oo .....__ A _.,.. lunch w11 bo
saved. For men Information. cal the N«wman
Ccn...,. at834-2297 .

.- p_.

()a The Air

U/B COUNCJL llfETING

~·:
Ca. atl•o a .. ._ Ana: Esther Haniocl lnler·

_ , -F.-_d.....,.oltlwNino
T h o - Councl MHting II tchoduled lao Fmod.nhclm Galcry. Cou,... Cable tChonnel10! .
N~ 9 at 3 p .m. In 1M Coundl C:O.Werencc
6 :30p.m.: at.o on November 7 at 7 p .m.
Room. 5&lt;h lloor c-.

_

UNDEIIGIIADUATE nii.CHING IN THE

- A N D 10C1AL &amp;CIEJtC£5
The Cala,.c ol tho lJnlvcqjty d Obgo 11 now
~............,.for__......,,o_.
_...,._~~~-

�••

November 1. 1979

Like him or not,

Griffin has 'grit'
a, .lo,c:e Bllcuow.ld
R-Stoft

Even if you object to bis politics, there's
one thing you have to say about Buffalo
Mayor Jimmy Griffin : the man has
chutzpah.
He came to U/B knowing he Isn't exactly popular with students and was
bound

to encounter some hostil -

Ity-which he did . Given this sentiment
•and the fact that only a few students
turned out (no more than 30 at any one
time) . the mayor easily could have_made
a cameo appearance and called H a night.
lnslead. he was seen shaking hands
and speaking with the very students who
hurled the most sarcasm at him during
the question period. Other men. less
poUtical or not as gregarious. maybe
more prideful. wouldn't have bothered.
Griffin's message was a gospel about
Buffalo. What's right about the city. he
noted. are 1ts: abundant fresh water sup·
ply. skilled tradesmen. large financial Institutions, hydroelectric power, transportation network ("Where else can one
travel from the suburbs to down1own in
20 minutes?'' he asked). and Its cultural
resources. The University. by the way.
was not on his list of them. Later, a ..student asked why not. The embarrassed
Griffin gulped that indeed he "should
have mentioned it. "

He then dted Dean Harold Cohen's
comributtons to the city. but in the same
breath told the audience he wants U/ B to
become ··even mQTe involved ."' Griffin

said he liked the idea of the University
hold ing classes at City Hall for
employees. but added there hasn't been
much talk of it lately.
A 'gre•t p resid ent'

Siogiog pr•l8ea

The Mayor also: sang the praises of
Buffalo's Eastern League basebaU team .
lauded local bankers for providing capital
for development projects, and lavished a
salvo of compliments on Buffalo PoUce
Commissioner James Cunnlngham .
Although

admitting ~n

increase in

murders. Griffin pointed out that . overall .
Buffalo's crime rate has decreased 14. 1
per cent since he took office.
Eight new poUce satellite stations have
sp
d the opening of 18 new
buSifll!Oses employing some 400 people ,
he claimed . Sales in areas with the
sateUite stations have gone from $15
miUion to $22 million, he said .
One major way the city was Z!lble to stay

solvent this year. the mayor reported .
was to cut 600 jobs-amongthem a good
number of relatively high -paying deputy
positions. Buffalo also received about
$300 ,000 from auctioning some 8 ,600
cars abandoned on dty streets.
Responding to a question from a black
student who Insinuated that his endorsement of the elimination of councilmen-at·

The mayor gave an informal endorse-

ment to Ketter. calling him a "great presl·
dent." He also assessed that U/ B currently has ..a preUy good image" in the
community. "A lot better than in the
'60's."
He reaffirmed his cohtention that applicants from the Buffalo area should "get
first crack.. at admission here. as well as at
Buffalo State . He doesn't think the "ratio
is high enough" presently between local
and out -of-town enrollees.

same vein. The country's Vietnam Involvement would have ended sooner If
students during the 60's had communicated their feehngs In more orthodox ways. he said. The fou r letter
words he heard from U/B student protesters at the time still ring in his ears.
Griffin said 1200 new jobs have been
created by the City's development corporation. and 300 have been saved in
businesses and industries that were
scheduled to leave the area . He predicted
Buffalo's Rapid Transit will be a further
boost to the economy.

•

Candidly. Griffin blamed most of the
University's "problems in lhe '60's'' on
"the New York City contingent. " For the
most pait. he contended. commuters
didn't take part because they were too
busy holding down part-lime jobs.
Despite sntdc.ers and stares of astonish·
ment (and audible groans from U/ B
Council representative Michael Pierce) .
the former Stale Senator continued In the

large posillons was raciaUy Inspired. Griffin responded , "racism has nothing to do
with H," merely economics. Griffin
pointed oot that Buffalo, ip relation to
other major cities like Pittsburgh ,
Sacramento, Tucson, SL Paul. etc., has
several more councilmen on the payroll.
To boot, he "never sees" the councilmenat-large at City Hall and suspects they
"would do a better job" If ~ligned to
districts. Eliminating the five posttions
would save the tax-payers about $1.3
million over four years , he noted.

In the last two decades, Griff\n said ,
Buffalo has lost some 200.000 people .
His gut feeling, however. Is that the trend
is "reversing." "The more people talk
positively about the dty, the better it will
be," he declared. Students with gripes
about Buffalo were urged to "write him"
or make use of the "complaint desk"
which he has started at CHy HaU.

•Peradotto
hour courses are ··no longer around to
~--··-help fill out a student's program.

M.Jd,.. etudent. c o n.ernttve
Peradotto Is arguing that the change Is
making students initiztUy conservative.
Many of the freshmen now carrying less
than 16 hours will have to take an.
overload later In their academic careers to
achieve the necessary hours for graduation . But that doesn't help matters now.
While ligures on them are not yet
available, Peradotto suspects the same
depressive effect will be found among upperclassmen. whether or not they are enjoying a "break" because of the grandfather clauses.
While a fuD-time load of 12 hours used
to comprise three courses, Peradotto
pointed out, It now takes four three-hour
courses. A student who can't swing the
extra course Cit who doesn't need h to
graduate drops into the part-tlme
category. He or she may be taking the
same number ol courses a• last year, but
is no longer generating a fuU FTE for the
Univentty.
Peradotto wants to defer any
clepregtw eff«:t the s«ond phase of1mplementatjon might have until 1981 by
which time effects ol the grandfather
dauJC will have diminished.

In

times

of

enrollment

crunch ,

Peradotto said, it doesn't seem wise to invile both depressive effects at the same
lime.

Author of
'Lives of Cell'
to speak here
Dr. Lewis Thomas, well -known
author, biologist and president of
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Center, will deliver a Harrington Lecture
here, Novm1ber 15.
Thomas, whose books, The_Uues of a
CeU, Notu of a Biology Walcher and The
MedUMJ and the Snall, have been recent
best Jellers, wiD speak at 5 p .m . In 150
Farner. His topic will be " Individuality
and SeW-Maridng in Biology."
Although Thomas Is weD-known in the
.aenliflc community for his contrjbutions-notablv research in Immunology
and related llelds-he Is better known
among the public as an author. Excarpts
&amp;om The Ned..., and the Snail were
featured In the October Reader's 0/geM:
The Lioel of a CeU won the 1975 NallOn&amp;l Book Awllrd .' '

• Ketter meets students
(&amp;ooo-l,cot. 21
courses for those who state under

ll

cer-

tain point on an English exam in order to
improve their performance before they

get Into the classroom . ~OIJfSeO'on how
to teach have been instituted for all
teaching assistants under auspices of the
Division of Student Affairs, and a new
program of cash bonuses for outstanding
TAs has been instituted.
Despite present enrollment difficulties,
Ketter said. U/ 8 remains the second
largest lnsUtuUon of higher learning In all
of New Vorl&lt; State (only N.Y.U. has a
larger registration) . EnroUment feU below
targets this faU . he explained . because
Millard Fillmore College and transfer
enrollments did not meet expectations.
To remedy this. he said. MFC will be introducing a number of innovations, and
.. formal feeder institution relationships"
with a number of two·year colleges are
being explored .

O ther q uestto ru;
In response to more questions. Ketter
answered;
• He sees nothing wrong with using
the Nuclear Research Center to produce
short-Uved radioisotopes for cancer treatment and various types of research.
There is an approved system for collecting, monitoring and disposing of the
wastes involved. he said. "The risks
take·n ," he feels. "are n..2t as great as
those invC"lved in not doing the
research."
• His position as a member of the
Board of Directors of Marine Midland
Bank-Western Is not Inconsistent with his
role as University president. The bank
does not "suck money from Western
New York and invest it elsewhere," as a
questioner charged . " It· invests in this
community.••
e ll some of the U/ B endowment
(which Is managed by the State) Is invested In South Africa, H is consistent
with the SUNY Trustees' decision that to
withdraw such investment woukl be more
harmful to blacks there than leaving H.
This policy, he added , Is being followed
by most colleges and unlv!'fS'IIes across
the nation.
• Undergraduate education Is admittedly inconsistent on campus, nonging
from the very good to areas which need
upgrading. The dean of DUE Issues
priority reports on strengths and
weaknesses with "n eye toward making
-this 1&gt;1- ol·e d - n unilormll&gt;' good.

• He would not be opposed to a
University-wide assembly such as has
been i~stituted at Binghamton and
Albany, but doubts faculty. stall and Sludent governance groups here are willing
to relinquish any of.their prerogatives to
such a group.
• The second phase of gymnasium
construction has recently been given top
priority by the SUNY Trustees. but It
seems unlikely that the State will be will·
lng to provide additional money for
athletics and recreation as a means of lm·
proving the quality of student life .
• A student union similar to Squire
Hall will not be built by the State at
Amherst. Private funding wiD have to be
used to ultimately develop such a facility.
At any rate the present Squire will probably not be turned over to the School of
Dentistry for at least 2 1/t years.
• U/B is one of only two institutions in
New York State which enjoy uncondi tional approval for all graduate programs
from the State Education Department:
Columbia University Is the other.
The question period ended alter about
an hour and 45 minutes. The President
said he would be willing to meet with
students on a more regular basis in similar
forums, but said this was the first time he
had been asked to do so this year by student officials.
Pohte applause ended the sOssion.

ha.-:t?
What Impact did It have? Thet won't be
known until the results of the student
referendum November 6 and.,7 have
been tabulated.
Michael Pierce, student representative
to the University Coundl. asked by the
Courier what he thought of Friday's session, suggested H was probably Ketter's
best showing at such a forum .
Yet, he added that the students attending and others on campus will have
to see what the Speclnlm says before
they can make up their minds on the
question of Ketter's abiiHy to lead.
Not even the New York nmu can
claim that kind of clout.

Credit-free t otals
TotaJ regiolrllltlons In nonaedil aduk
and continuing aducatlon coursa at a&gt;lleges and unlvcnllla
from 5.6
million In 1967-68 to 10.2 mllion 1n
1977-78, accordJnjj to the NatioMI
~nter for Education St.-s. · ' - ;

r.-

.-

�Nowmber 1. 1979

Independents will honor
their friends on campus

Phi Beta
split over

More than • dozen lndtlriclllals. mnglng
from President Ketler to an olltcer of the
Student Assodlltion, will be honored In
December for their eflons In breaking

llva..deE.Weldl,.lr.
-

Oooolaan

PH-~

a..-.

"Bu1 woe to you, scribes and
hypoc:rllal Because you ohul
the kingdom ol ' - - ' against men, for
you nelhlr enler jiOUI'Mives nor .&amp;ow
!hoM who would enllr to go ln."
With t ' - dramatic words, drawn
from The~ of Matthew, • Phi Beta
~ MNI1&lt;lr highlghted the major
confronting thls year's triennial
meeting of the PBK Council. held In New
Orleans October 18-21.
n... question of access Is by no means
• new. Since the mid-1930's, the Unlled
Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa have been
weighing proposals lor expansion. At the
present lime, 255 c:Npters are scattered
among clc.e to 3,000 colleges and
universities . This means that
undergraduates can be elected to Phi
Beta Kappa in only 12 per cent of
baCcalaureat.!-granting Institutions ln. the
United StaleS.
Two NpOrts placed the Issue of ac.cess
squerely before the Council:
• The CornmHt.!e on Qualijications
reOOI:nmendeol the admission of three
new chepten, cl.mpared wllh !lin 1976
and 15 In 1973; the Committee had
received 90 applications, and made site
vto111 to a doaen campuS£S;
• An ad hoc cornmHIA!e proposed a
"dry run" experiment, by means of which
students from perhaps a d"""n unlver·
s111es not c:urrently sheltering Phi Beta
Kappa chaplets could be considered for
selection, on a carefully contJoolled basis'.

p....._,

s.wo-1 .... ._

I·-·

Debate over both at the triennial Councll ineeting-sal times subdued, at other
times Impassioned . Underlying both
yiews, however, was awareness of both
numerical st.gnation In higher education
enrolments, ' and the pn&gt;blems of liberal
arts In the face of undergraduat.! professionellnterests.
·
The three schools admitted to
membership-Alma College , Drew
University, and Western Maryland College-are relatively smaU schools. fitting
what many saw as the classic mold of the
....,... .m college. The Committee on
QuallfiCIIIIol&gt;s looked primarily. In the
words of Its chairman, emeritus Dean
C.therine Sims of Sweet Briar College.
for s1rong faculty and administrative identlficatio11 wHh the liberal arts at a bac·
caleureale level. Complex universities
seem likely to taU short by such a
atlerlon . given their variety of slu~nt
and faculty Interests. The three proposed

·-to-

This action led some dlstingullhed
delegates-Including historian John
Hope Franklin and former f'hl Beta Kappa President Bentley Gli!sa-to ~
the Counclrs actions. Sevenol questions
were Intermingled In debate: Is the
chapter foundation of Phi Beta Kappa the
most appropriat.! format? Might this
chapter emphasis feU to give adequate
recognHion to high quality students who
study at Ul)iversltles wHhout units? Are
existing aiteria adequately attuned to the
reaUIIes of current American higher
education?
Whatever the answers, the questions
of access-raised lnHially at the 1937
triennial meeting-bids fair to return In
~lu\ure .

TM loc.l U/B Chapter-Omicron of

New. Vori&lt;-was repcesented by W.

Leslie Barnette, professor of psychology
and secretary/treasurer of the Chapt.!r,
and myself. We found the debates oflnt.eresl, JllwNhe oppcxtunHy for discussion
wHh cWegates stimulating, Phi Beta Kappa cle.arly Is In search of a revised mlsslon, notably at this time of challenge In
higher education.
_
We' learned, for example, thai 1979
morted the /lrstllme a mojorily of newlyelec:Rd membe,. haue bun women. (At
U/Et, 243 of the 422 mem~¥rs lnduct.!d
since 1977 liave been female.) Some
422 350 persons have been chooen lqr
Phi~ Kappa since 1776, of whom ap.
proxlmately 355,000 are,stdllivlng.
·
Campus activities of the Omicron
Chapter Include periodic lectures,
recognition of outstanding undergraduat.!
achievement ~u!h Chap)er prius and
through election to membership, and a
geneRII desire to enhance the quality of
llbetal arts education at U/B.
(To help update the chapter's records ,
Phi Beta Kappa members on the U/B
facuHy are requested to caD Dr. Welch at
636-2992 or wrHe him at 562 Capen
HaU.)

Brain imager being used
in U I 8-VA research work

down "attlludlnal, archttectwal and
acaciemic benlers" for handicapped
students at the Untven~ty.
The Independents, an ocgantzation
composed of handicapped and nonhandicapped students who guide and
monitor complfance with llw Rehabillta·
lion Act ofl973 at U/B, are sponsoring
the evenL Thllls the first aWIII'ds program
to be held by ihe II""!~J.but accordlng to
Hs president, Colleen-· the ooganlzation Plans making H an annual event.
The "Equal Access" Awards Banquet
Is ocheduled for the Haymes Dining
Room [n Squire on December 4 . Erie
County becutlve Edward Rutkowski has
been contacted for the guest speaker's
slot, but no firm arrangements have yet
been made.

The award.,._
Seven people will receive plaques for
their outstanding efforts in assisting U/B's
handicapped communHy; 11 wiD receiv! ·
citations. In alphabetical order, those
receiving plaques are: Arthur W. Burke,
assistant director. Office- of Services for
the Handicapped; Berti-. Cutcher, coordinator, Office of Services for the Handicapped; Viola Diebold, associate professor , Department of Recreation ,
Athletics and Basic Instruction: President
Ketter; Frances Lacey, clerf&lt; typist,
Facilities P-lanning; Roger McGUI, director, Busing Service; David Rhoads, assistant director, Main Street Campus
Physical Plant.
.
Those receiving cHations .are: Gary.
De.vln, athletic affairs coordinator, Student Association; Robert Henderson,
associate director, Student Unions/Activities/Program Development; Ann
Hicks. associate coordinator, Student
Unions/ Activities/ Program Development; Charles "Dusty" Miller, director.
Recreatiohal Programming; Edwardo
Rhodes, assistant professor. School of
Management; Frank Wlodarczal&lt;, Jr.,
night manager. Squire HaD; and students
Nina Cascio. Diane HID, Herb Hough,
Susan Ledder and Fred Sandner.
The Independents credit Cutcher and
Burke for the suocessful operation of the
Office of Services for the Handicapped.
In fact , II was Cutcher who first appUed
for and received federal funding for the
oHice. " Without Bertha Cutcher,"
declares Independents President Miller,
"there would be no office at aD. She's
always approachable and willing to help
us wHh any problems."
Besides running the operation wHh

~~~ t!uh~e.::"~X,..~tali!'l

visor to the group and for helping them
secure funding far their newsletter, The
A new technique for looking Inside the
than equivalent X-Ray scanners. And
Independent Observer.
living bnoln Is the focus of an-Investigative
because It creates no radiation ~ requires
VI Diebold, according to the Innone of the heavy, expensive lead
program at the U/B Medical School and
dependents, was instrumental in
the Buffalo Veterans Administration
shielding normally needed In
"malnstreamlng" handicapped students
Medical Cenler. n... technique Is based
tomography.
on computer reconstruction of cross·
n... Buffalo stud!! will fOncentrate on Into the Unlversity"S'recreational activities
sectional bnoin images, similar to the
development of a oroaa new class of · by providing leisure counseling, and
athletic programs and equipment.
technology used In so-celled X-Ray CAT
radlopharrnaceuticals for use in medical
Diebold also coordinates a skills program
Imaging. One class of ' chemicals showing
scanners. But in thls case, no X-Rays are
that teaches various sports. and was a
used.
much promise Is a group of metabolic
force behind the ramping of Clark Gym.
Research spokespersons deterlbe the
agents exhibiting a measurable affinity for
project as.Jollows:
brain chemistry. Because of their special
Wbv Ketter?
The equipment to be utlllzed Is the
characteristics. they are called "pH shift"
The Independents are citing President
Union C.rblde Brain Imager. Using
materials.
Ketter for providing the "encouragement
radioph...-maeeuticals which ere ad· The study will be coordinated by Dr.
and support" for architectural and proministered to the patient, the system
Monte Blau , both at the Medical School
grammatic changes. When proposed
measures tiny variations In the dlstribuand at the VA Medical Center. Clinical
changes became bottlenecked In the
studies wtU be under the direction of Dr.
lion of these chemicals In the brain.
University bureaucracy, Miller says. KetBased on mUUons of ouch measurements,
Jehuda J . Steinbach, chief of nuclear
ter responded to their pleas for assistance
·the computer In the syst.!m constructs
medicine, VA Medql Center.
and "got the baD roDing."
and displays cross-sectional (tomo·
The design of the radiopharrnaceutiFrances Lacey ••knows what button to
graphlc) Images. If there Is any pathology
cals wUI be by Dr. Hank Kung of the
push" to facilitate changing classes to acOJ malfunction of a particular regionUniversity's Department of Nuclear
cessible buildings. the Independents
such as might be caused by loc.l brain
Medicine.
not.!. AHhough members of the group
A program underway at Harvard is
disfunction or stroke-a computer "slice"
know her only via phone conversations.
through the affected area will r4011eal !he
making use of a similar body function 1mthey feel her " helpful allltude" and
anomaly.
ager to study the effecto of heart disease.
" n4011er-say-dle" approach to accesslbiiHy
Because the system portrays the body's
also using radiopharrnaceutlcals.
problems merit recognition .
functions , k permHs Investigators to gain
Roger McGUI, according to the In·
the earliest possRM view ol pathological
changes X-Rays , which provide purely
dependents. has beeri lnslrvmentalln ensuring that they have transportation beanatomical, or structural, views Into the
tween campuses for classes. In addition .
body, give only Inferential indications of
The Department of Music has added a
how well the body II woriling.
.
he trains drivers how to properly use
new graduate dewee program for woodhydrauUc l~t equipment and assist handiBeaoute the system Is lao complex,
wind _.;alists, the Master of Fine Arts In
the Bnln 1.._ COils slgnllicantly las
capped riders. Says Miller: "We couldn't
Woodwind Performance.

New degree

do wllhout this Ml\llce. He does a

greet

job consiclertng what he has to WOik

wHh."
David Rhoads Is being recognlzad for
facllt&amp;allng accesstilty to Clerk Gym and
for supervising other architectural
modifications. When the S... inlanned
the Independents that accesol&gt;llily won.
at Claslc would be too costly. Miller says
Rholids interceded and wori&lt;ed out a
reasonably-priced solution which provides them entry.

c...-

CHations are going to: Gary Devin, for
"pulling the power of the Student
Association" behind n!quesls for athletic
program funding; Robert H~rson, for
providing assistance In making space and
equlpmenl available to the Independents
In Squire; Ann Hicks. for her efforts in
securing an office for the organlzatlon;
Dusty Miller. for helping facilitate use of
Squire's recreaUonal actlvltles: Edwardo
Rhodes, for being the first faculty
member to ask and get his department to
assume the cost of speclaUy prepared
maps, charts and graphs for the visually
handicapped; and Frank Wlodarczak. for
his assistance and efforts in helping the
Independents relocate to the first floor of
Squire.
Students Nina CasciO, plane Hill, Hem
Hough, Susan Ledder ar(d Fred Sandner
are receiving citations for their won. on a
vldeolape which is currently being used
by the Independents for Information and
publicity pu&lt;p&lt;&gt;ses. The videotape{ according to· Miller, was "sensHively and professionally" produced and will act as a
source of encouragement for handicap~uca'::.lduals 1 c!?nsldering a higher
Finally. the lndepender.ts. want to
place a plaque In Squire tn recognHion of
aU the help they have received from Hs
staff, such as tlie· maintenance and
cafeteria crews who have been P.,rticularly sensitive to Iheir needs and requests for
help.
.

SUNY asks
$936 million
To offset Inflation and maintain existing
programs, Stat.! University of New Yorio
will require $936.7. mlllton for operations at Its Stat.! campuses during fiscal
1980-81 , the Board of Trustees told the
State's btvlslon of the Budget last week.
More than 50 per cenf of the proposed
$96.8 million lrn:rease over the 1979-80
base Is necessary solely to meet Inflation.
OveraD ••the Board will seek $812
million tn State-approprlat.!d tax funds,
compared to $724 million last year, and
provide State University support of
$124.6 million from tuition and d&lt;Xmitory room rent income, compared to
$115.8 million In 1979-80.

In the course of a pubUc briefing at
State University P""-a In Ahany. the
Board 'sald that In excess of $56.8 million
(60 per cent of the overaU Increase

~~~~~ts~~erbew:t~N~ ~.":CC:::

trol, such as negotiated salary increases
and spiraUng costs of uti&amp;tles and
supplies.
The Board contemplates no tuition
lncreese.
U/B President Robert L. Ketter announced In September that SUNY Is supporting a budget Increase of SS..S miDion
for U/ B, with most of II going to Inflation
and mandated Increases . The request Includes only $1.679 million for new ventures. Approximately one-third of..)hat Is
e.arrn.arked for Increased llbrai\Ti&gt;cqulsltions; another $450,000 would fund 52
journeymen positions ln Maintenance;

$200,000 Is going for additional busing
costs; $90 ,000, for the Regional
Economic Assistance Center; $69,000.
for graduate feDowshlps, and $51 ,000,
for ten maintenance positions required
for new buildings. Another $717,000 Is
being added as the first lnstaUment of a
three-year mast.!r plan to bring the Dental
School back to fun accreditation.
AU budget proposals, of course, are
subject to action by DOB (on behaK of the
Governor) and the Legislature.

�November 1, 1979

.•

D

Broadcast career
calls for long houi'S

---

PSS schedule
.........,.. St.lf

11!1 NIM s.llla
·rm bae to

c~eaoy

J.

any and

H:ll

.a llu·

slons that you might ....... concemlng the
romantic Mpeds d a job In lxoed·
cesting."

to come In end work In this field ."
Many d the~ who put Channel 2 on the air In 1954 ere nearing retirement, ..ld Den . In the next several years,
there will be many jobs open, not only at
WGR-lV but at Other stations in town.
While on-air penonahUes ere caught
up In the re~oor-syndrome, Den
noted that many d the engineers [lave
been wtth the station for 25 years.
Returning to the romantic myth d journahsm, D., conceded that Woodward
end Bernstein may have contrl&gt;uted to
the , legend because~ were so instrumental In brir'!Piig about some v~
Important changes In our government.
Broedc:asl journalism has had Its Impact
as well, ..id Dan, who himself is a winner
of the State Associeied Press Broadcast
Awwd for coverage m the Attice Prison
Riot in 1971.
Den acknowledged the on·air personalities who may be viewed as "stars"
because d their visibility each night on
the 6 and 11 p .m. news. But he also paid
tribute to the 70 or so persons behind the

ea....,...

2. Tuadav, Nooember 6. 9 a.m. Profesolonel Staff Senate (PSS) olllcers

3. Tuaday, Nooember6. 3p.m. Racheduledregu*meeting&lt;ithefuiPSS
In the Jea~ Martin Room. Capen Hal. "Condition d the
r.port 1s
the mein item on the ~ - Mntlng open to d profesolonel staff members.

ea....,...·

4.Friday, Nouernbn 9. 8:30a.m. Meeting d the PSS Executive Cornmittet
In the Jeannette Martin Room. All Executive Commktee meetings ere open to
the whole body d profesolonel stafl memben.

casting."

"This Is a tremendous opportunity for
-women
~
-. We
can't find women who went

Nwernber 2. 8:30a.m. ~ d PSS Executive 8oenl fee 1tn111
d the Condition d the
Report. J q n - Martin Room, ~

meeting with President Kder.

lhlot wu the bed news.
Broedcalt jouma)ism, aald Stewart
Dan, news dnctor d WGR-lV, Is a very
dlllicult job. If you're looking for 9-5
seautty, If long houn ere not your forte,
"then I wge you not to consider broadDen's .........t.s came In a keynote address Friday (October 26) In the Teben
Dining Room before a fuD-house audience d area students ellending the ftneJ
dey d a.,week.jong Career Horizons program. The P1&lt;911m, sponsored by the
University Pl•cement end Career
Guidence olllce In cooperation wtth the
Community Advloory Council, devoted
Its final dey to inlormetion related to jobs
In gowmment, education end communlcetlons.
11le good news Den brought was that
the general explosion In tedinology has
created a demand fee people trained to
run the , _ machinery end to fix II.
"You know, we hew jobs that ere
open now in engiMering end they go
begging," said the news director. "We
can't find who has a llnt-dess
federal cornmunlcallonslicense who is interested In the technical upects d broadcasting.

s.s- Adlvlla Calender, N............ 1979:

Fri~Mp,

5. Tuuday, Nouember 13. 9 a.m. Regular meeting m PSS canceled. Mrwed
to November 6 .
6 . Friday, Nouember 30. 8:30a.m. Meeting d the PSS Executive Committee. An open meeting.

.,.. New

scenes who struggle with the complexity
end bulk d the new technology end Its
frustrations , day after dey. EQuipment
faOure or breakdown Is a daily threat, he
lndiceted.
"The glamorous 'image d the job
doesn' t fit the problems and great frustrations that are part d the continuing explosion In J~nology."

v-..._to8tart...U
Opportunities abound In broadcasUng,
Dan concluded, but he urged his young
audience not to expect to s1art at the top.
Small towns, he said, .are sliD the very
best way to break in. The opportunity Is
there to make mistakes, to learn-end to
mow on to bigger markets.
It would be rare that he would hire
someone In Buffalo (the 29th largest
market-New York is first, .Los Angeles,
second) who hasn't been at a smaD town
station, Den ..id. He has, however,
hired people with experience from smell
t.owns around the coultf.
'

. !..IIJilk.e~.

~msdo

not nave reporters who are specialists on
certain beats. A pohtical science major
himself, Dan has no argument with those
who wish to prepare by earning journehsm ~ees , but he urged en "aUaround education" which includes
history, economics, and religion, among
other dlsdplines.
As top priority news races from murder
to energy to finance, Dan reminded the
audience that the responsibility d broadcasting news Is awesome.
"Quite frankly, there are limes and
situations Involving decisions relating to
victims when we don't know whet to do.
"We try ," he Yid , to get as many
opinions as possible from the newsroom .

recruit~ent

The Facuky of Arts and Letters has
received and is beginning distribution of
an eye:cetching · packet of recruitment
materials designed In cooperation with
University Publications.
Inside a brown and gold parchment
folder which carries Information about the
Fecuky and Universlty-at·large [and
displays Joyce's spectacles and a handwritten manuscript) . the prospective student will find four-page brochures about
music . theatre . English . modern
languages and literatures , classicS.
American studies. art and art history. and
media study. The folders . each with a fuD
page cover photo or design. outline the
offerings of each of the units and give
sources for additional information . Large
photographs show students engaged In
the various fields of activity.
A large French hom dominates the
cover of the music booklet. whUe ballet
and Shakespeare-in-the-Park clalm the
theatre cover. The American Studies
cover llispleys an American Indian. •
hippie -type wit h a headband . a
McDonald's sign and a typicel American
family with a new car In a design con-

'Fay's, Columbia women
give pharmacy awards
Two School d Pharmacy jUniors have
been· awarded academic scholarships
from funds established at U/8 by the Columbia University College m Pharmaceutical Sciences' Women's Club and
Henry A. Penald. Jr.
Karen A. Clemency, an Amherst resident , was awwded the $1 ,000 Panasd
Fund ocholanhip. Mr. Panasd. chairmen
d Fey's Drug Co.. Uverpool, graduated
from the School d Pharmacy in 1952.
He recelYed the B.A. here In 1948. He
and his father, Henry Sr .. a 1924 School
d Pharmacy graduate. slarted the first
Fay's store 20 years ago In Syn~CUse . Today. the chain has 105 stores, 76 in New

York and Pennsylvania; the others In the
Carohnas.
The Women's Club Fund scholarship
(also $1 ,000) was awarded to Steven A.
Rich , Rockeville Centre. The Fund was
established at U/ B and at three other
pharmacy schools when the College d
Pharmaceutical Sciences at Columbia
closed In 1976. Raised Initially by alumni,
spouses and friends d the College during
the time H was open, the Club's monies
now also benefrt students at the Albany
College d Pharmacy at Union University:
Hebrew University's School mPharmacy
In Jerusalem; and the Philadelphia College d Pharmacy and Sciences.

Tel Aviv faculty member visitS
A faculty meiiiiMr at Tel Aviv University'a School d Dental Mediclne Is spendIng one yur u a vta1t1ng profeuor at the
School &lt;X Dcntlatry .. part .. the cukural
exchange relationship Mlween the two
inatltullana.
.
Dr. Moahe Gordon. a profeuor In the
d Oponllve Dcntlatry at Tel
Aviv, d 1-.:h in that cMpaotmcnt here

o...--

'*

llay. He ... aloo l*llcfpMe In
raean:h and be In·
volved In othc work-ttudy projec:ts.

during

~ denl*y

Tel Aviv University Is developing and
expanding Its dental school, en endeavor
which the U/ B School has "!!l'ftd to
uo1st by Inviting key, young faculty here
. to enhance their teaching and research
uperienca.
Dr. Gordon , a major In the braeli
DefenM Forca, has • raponsiJie poollion wllh the Forces' main clinJc. His wife,
M.lca, end their two claufllt.. have
joined him for the var'• prof~ In

Buffalo.

packet

celved by Publications artist John
Cloutier.
The individual !olden can be used
separately or as part d en overall packet
extoUing the offerings and excitement d
Arts and Letters.

Ciancio writes book
Dr. Sebastian Ciancio. chairmen d the
Department d Periodontics, has coauthored a book on dinicel pher:
macology for dental hygienists end
assistanis which wiD be available in local
bookstores this month.
Published by McGraw-HID, Cllnlcol
Pharrnocology /or Denlol Projeaionolo Is
designed to ~ dental auxiliaries learn
more about medicetions and their implications In dental cere. Ciancio ..ld the
text may also be used by dentists as a
review .

"A great many dental patients are
receiving medicetions from their physl·
clans- and dentists-which should be
considered when dental treatment is to be
perlormed," he added.
Co-author Is Dr. Prisdlla Bourgeuh.

United Way
Progress
10
Atdtitech.lre &amp; &amp;wironmentol

o..;gn

Am&amp;'-&gt;
fngl-'ng &amp; Aj&gt;ptlod ScMnc.o

-sa.n.o.

__.,_,

Low&amp;_......

Nooovnol ScMnc.o &amp; SodoiSc'-

~~--

eon•- -

....

~-

----~

...

.... v.ce......w.m

"-""910-

F;_,__.
Facilities Pb.ning

S tud.nf AHoirs

l'ubtk Nio'"'

UIIIfoundaolon

w..- ond u t . a . y -

Sci-' &lt;* Soclol WO&lt;k
Uni¥etlity Ul:woriea

Univenolty goal: $130.000
Total raiOod to date: $104,368.79
Percent d goal ec:hieved: 80.28

...

20

30

..,

50

60

10

80

90

100

~

�November" l, 1979

STF lrolds
'emergency' drill
By Marcy Phllllpe
Public AffaJn lnaan

-

Biting winds and a swirl ol snowflakes
invade a silent campus. An occasional
student rushes by In an effort to escape
the dull chill of an October day.
AlmOS' as unnoticed as the falling
snow, a small explosion breaks through
the sllll. Sirens scream through the campus. followed by the blinking lights of
careening police cars. which screech to a
stop In front of a laboratory building.
This chil~ng event could take place on
almost any campus. or in any town in
America . Now, U/ B wiD be prepared for
just such an emergency.
Under the direction ol Dr. Wan Y.
Chon, the Nuclear Science Technology
FaciUty (NSTF), the U/ B Radiation Protection Department (RPD) , Veterans Ad ministration Mediall Center, University

Health Services, the University Puboc
Safety Department, the Buffalo Fire and
Police departments. and the Buffalo Am·
bulance Board took part In an emergency
medical drill at the NSTF on October 24 .
A small explosion was assumed to
have taken place In the Activation
Analysis Laboratory of the Containment
Building. It was IOrther hypothesized and
simulated that live NSTF personnel
(represented by Ftn;t Aid Simulation
T earn members) suffered physical
juries, as weD as possible radiation co"·
tamlnation. Although this is an extremely
unlikely event in view of the lack ol explosive elements In the Containment
Building, NSlFs goal Is to be fully
prepared lor any event.
PhiUp M. Orlosky, operations manager
ol NSTF, was the day's emergency director (the highest ranking and/ or most experienced NSTF and RPD staff member) .
lie alerted the ladlity staff and ordered
the evacuation of aU personnel to the
nearby Howe Building, in which RPD is
&amp;ased . He then " shut-down" the nuclear
reactor.
First-aid personnel from both NSTF
and RPD were the first on the scene,
monitoring the radiation level in the area .
The "victims" were then checked lor
possible contamination while first aid was
administered.

'

]J_&gt;e Public Safety Department, upon
~ ol the acddenl report from the
. emergency director, alerted all the abovementioned unHs lor prompt action. Police
cars were sent to the University Health
Services building and to U/ B's Main Cir·
cle to escort incoming ambulances. Also,
the cars were sent to block all incoming
roads and to monitor traffic so am·
bulances and fire engines could move

quickly and safely.
University Health Services (the director
of which Is Dr. M. Luther Musselman)
were next on the scene to examine the
victims. who were then sent to V.A .
Medical Center with the assistance of
RPD personnel.
Upon transfer to the Center, the victims were treated at the Emergency Unit
by Dr. Jehuda J . Steinbach. chief of
nudear medkine.
The Buffalo Fire Department was
responsible lor control ol any assumed
lire, while the Police Department assisted
the U/ B Public Safety Department in traffic control.
AI Addams. senior reador operator.
proposed that an actual nuclea r lab ex·
plosion would be "far-fetched ." In the
simulation of this drill, it was assumed
that, lor example. acid had blown up on
an overheated bunsen burner.
He further stateq that "this type of explosion would not be unique to this particular laboratory." Similar dangers could
result In any of the 100 ~/ B labs that use
radioactive substances. These labs use
radioactive materials for research in
biology, engineering, health sciences, ar·
chaeoiogy and physics, he said .
The U/ B reactor Is one of the 10
largest university-owned reactors In the
U.S. It is a major supplier of short-hved
Isotopes lor research activities throughout
the nation , supplying materials to
research centers such as RosweU Park
Memorial Institute, Harvard and Yale
University Medical Schools: the Mayo
Clinic, and UCLA .
The First Aid Simulation Team which
provided the "victims" Is a non-prolil ,
educational organization which offers
training and educatJon to various rescue.
hospital and emergency care organizations throughouiiA/estem New York.

Non Profit Org.
U.S . .Postage
PAID
Buffalo, N.Y.
Permit No. 311

F aculty actress

find_s Ibsen demanding
It's not easy having a lead in an Ibsen
play. His protagonists are complex. In·
tense beings struggling to find their own
reality and 61ten stripping themselves
bare in the process.
·Ten years ago, Anna Kay France says
she probably wouldn't have tried out lor
the part of Mrs. Alvlng in "Ghosts" - a
woman tom be1ween obedience to conventional precepts and en inner voice
which questions their validity- but
maturity and life experiences have now
provided the resource from which she
can empathize with and rea ~UcaUy portray the character.
Hardly a neophyte &amp;ctress. France. a
professor in U/ B's English Department,
has been active In theatrical productions
since her teens. as an undergraduate at
Radcliffe and later as a graduate student
at Yale . LocaUy, she appeared In last
year's production of Shakespeare's
"Merry Wives of Windsor" and in Gorki's
"Summer People."

The clauroom Is an outlet. too
Besides coordinating and participating
in a number of workshops and readings
through the English Department, she also
finds an oudet for her thespian interests in
the classroom . France, a svehe, softspoken and private woman who feels uncomfortable being interviewed or seeing
her name In print, teaches Shakespeare,
Elizabethan and Russian drama. She ad·
mHtedly approaches the subject from the
psychological framework ol a dramatist
rather than the analytical perspective of
an English professor.
She often has students act out ocenes
in class and muses that they frequently
enjoy portraying characters whose per·
sonality seems antithetical to their own.
Next semester, Franoe assumes a halftime appointment in the Theatre Department. While she's never experienced a
credlbiUty problem with students, she
feels her acting background can only
have a positive Jmpact on Interactions
with Theatre major$.
"Ghosts" is the first work ol the
Norwegian playwright In which France
has ever acted and she finds the experience "exciti'l9." What appears to
fascinate her about lbsen- who is often
credited with being the "Father of
Modem Drama" -Is the "enormous
vitality" of his characters; a vitality that
enables the actor to thoroughly explore

them and their relationships to each
other.
" If you flow with Ibsen, he ali!&gt;WS you
to come to moments of revelation ,'' she
observes.
Because "Ghosts" is one ol Ibsen's
tnost popular, U not most Influential
works, France wonders ~ she may be at a
disadvantage , since many in the audience wiU likely have definite ideas
regarding Mrs. Alving and the way she
should be played.
France, however, l""ls comfortable
with her analysis of the character. She
"likes" Mrs. Alving and views her as a
strong rather than weak woman who unfortunately discovers too late that she
erred In letting others persuade her to
obey conventional dk:tatP.s._
Not deprnalng
Ironically, though the material is
weighty with venereal disease and
aduhery, France clai!"S she never gels
depressed when contemplating or plbying the role. Instead, she finds a certain
exhilaration In peeling away the veneer
and really discovering the character.
Of course, .assistance from a director
and support from feUow actors is instrumental in the process. a nd France fortunately gets both. The live-member cast,
she feels , makes a "concerted effort" to
come to grips ~any problem In the
play, and becau
it, a "powerful trust
.
factor" has deve
In preparation
"Ghosts," which Is
currently playinll at U/ B's Center
Theatre , downtown l:lullalo, France
rehearsed live days a we~k. three hours a
day lor nearly six w~ks. Before performances, she doesn't go through a set
routine of breathing exercises, but consciously tries to keep her body loose. She
does do warm-up exercises with BiU GonIa (who plays her son Oswald) so she can
better relate to him on stage. If she feels II
necessary before a prrlonnance, she may
also think through a part or read her lines
aloud to herseH In order to maintain an
"Intimate familiarity" with the character.
The role of Mrs. Alving has more
"depth and magnitude" than any other
France has portrayed. Although she's on
stage lor almost the enUre play, she has
no real fear of forgetting her Unes. "I
always have a sense or where it's going
and that's the most important thing."
The play wiU continue through
November 11-JB.

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>OCT. 25, 1971
VOL 11 e NO.8

S'fATE UNIVERSlTY
AT BUFFALO

Corbally
won't rule
out polls
JOhn Coobelly, charman ol the lhnle~ panel to evaluala Pl'esident
R&lt;&gt;bm L. Keller, has -.nod Facully
Se.- Chair Newton G.vcr he has "no
lntenlion ol Ignoring" lUrVey raub In
connecllon wllh the _ . u l ol the
Preolclent end
campus lo be undertaken shcxtly.
The new SUNY guidelines lor Ptesldenlilll ev.Jullllon attempted to precludoi
poDing. The rules ate: "Campus 1eec1cn
'!'•Y receive Input &amp;om their conslltuen·
ties In oral or written fonn. Evaluative In·
formation thus obtained, . . . mull be 0!,·
tributoble. Thl$ would preclude the use cil
on opinion polling or survey procedure
for constituent Input."

.a..

The Reporter hu learned lhat the
evaluation team will ~ Ita -

vfoolt on .,..,._ Noveaober II tluuugh
13.

Ellicott 'residents, under guard
Three raidents of the Ellicou Complexwere ~ under police proleCIIon this
week Gfdcr ola high admlnillrative of.
lid.!.
three are Huey. Dewey and
Frank. domestic geese who have
acloioled EJIIcoll • horne.
1M tt.. '-1 llllllUc&gt; be benefltlorieo
ola lund-l'lllolng event lobe held -IF!

•be~':12:':::
"*"aclmlooiaft..........,
Spedal.........
• and
an

ol .25' o r - wtllgo toward clofra!o*&gt;ll
cools ol coni1IUCtlng o winter shelkr lor
the,aoese who would not be able lo wHh5land the cold on their own.
l&gt;orndllc: Jlate do not migdlc.. They
Slay ~e they . . lor aD seasons.
Paulate Bureczenokl. ,. ruiclent ad·
vilcM' 1o Wilkeson. is heading up the ddve
to protect the geese.
M&gt;. S..ac.ruki coiled Mrs. Lolly Ket·
1er with her concerns about the !owl. Mrs.
Kelter volunteered the servlca ol the
President to design a oheker d Sludents
would build K. She also offered advice on

how the geese should be cared for during
the cold season. For elUimple. students
wiD heve lo take responslbiiHy for br~lng _the Ice In Lake LaSalle for the mo.
Pro)ected cost of the sheher is $100.

08lc:lallr .......

....... r+

No pne II . . to dJvWgc who taid

'"' ....... phaoe caU 10

Mrs. Keller, Un-11 Police 'noti!Md
otlldcnts In Wilkeson that lhe goew hove

bHn olfiCioJiy adopted by the University,

and will be j&gt;IO!ected os U/8 property .
Wlwre the gene came !Tom remains a
mysterv: Speculation is that they may
have wandered away from a nearby
farmyard or that someone who got "cute
llttle goslings" for EaSier last year decided
they reaDy didn't want full-grown geese.
Four geese were first spotted late last
spring or early summer in the vicinity of
Baird Point where they mingled with
fishermen and sun bather.; for most of tbe
warrn weather. As faD neared . the geese

slllrted slowly shifting their sphere of octivHy closer to Ellicoll llseH.
Louie. the fourth member of the gog·
gle. was somehow injured. One eye was
poked out by persons or geese unknown .
Arr~ments were made to hove him
plaCed on • farm where he could be look·
ed oltor mON clo&gt;sely.

~ ""'-11~--lljll Mll.cp "'-

tha ~ l!oll at much as the trio heve
talwn 't o U/8. Earlier this laD. a malicious
pRnkSier threw ...tlrecrocker at tha three
geese, only 1o be met wHh extreme

Corbolly's assurance that survey results
would not be "Ignored" seems to afford
renewed Importance to the detolled questionnaire on presidential performance
ana University goals whlcb the Facultv
Senate c;irculated laot week to all
members ot-lhle voting locultv.
Senate ChalrGarYer said, as ol Mon day of ihls ~-more \han 200 returns
had boiiih ~li'orri amof!!! the 1500

_

~~!
.................
-....
...__
.. ...................
.......
~

~

nollft,ut111 ..mpus'l'lllillelle .., MMI ~
day, therefore, wiD not be lhcluded In
final tabulations. To lnslln! incluSion,
those returning questionnaires at the last.
hostility by other dorm residents-In od·
minute will hove to hond-dellver them to
dillon to hysterical honking. Ms.
the Senate office, 405 Capen .
Buraczenski savs that such an Incident is
Garver said results of the survey will be
not hkely to be repeated.
made public independent of their release
'Khlaappt... follad
to the evaluation team. He suggested
some results may be available •• early as
Then-there was the time on individual
who works for ·Matntenani:e tried to kid·
November 5 .
nap the geese-or so the students
·The University-wide referendum on
thought. Actually. this was a mix-up. The
Keller win be held Nov. 6-7. Students.
. . . . ~·~'
....~
....-•........................'acu---hy--an_d_s_t•_ff__
w_ilh--IDs
__~
__n_v_o_le_.__~

REAC: 'a shot
in the arm for WNY'
Jackson Meats on Jefferso11 Avenue
was on the phone.
How, they asked o represenllltlve of
the University'• new Regional Economic
Asolalance Center tREACI-how could
they go about gelling o government

contract?

Another recent lnqulrJI was from o hair
solon. Where, the caBer wanted to know ,
would be the bell bet for expansion?
Jackson Meats was refened to the local
Minority Business Opportunity Center;
thio hairdresser, to the Erie County Induma! Development Agency.
What bullness Is k of the University's to
be odlliP&gt;g meatpacken and hair lly(ists?
A major one.
U/ 8 and SUNY admlntltrators hove
decided that the economic !lids olllfe In
this sorely dlstreosed industrlal center
hove to oommend lnstllutlonal attention.
~-lt'•-'la1

ChonceDor Oilton ~on puts h this

way:

~ Is a prirq,1e of public policy
tha makes a public service mission for •
state university fundamental. Public ser·

vice ts the most direct way of
ocknowladgJr1IJ the basi&lt; obligation ol o
-aJI'IIOIIed u~y to the socloly

which provl&lt;les the resources tor hs
exlslence."
·
U/B's response is through REAC, a
muhidisclplinary outreach unb located
within the School of Management.
Establiahed In May, 1978, REAC has o
mandata to provide "dHect services to
local industry and government In the
forrn of applied research projects,
technlcal/monagerlal consulting
assistance, student Internships and
spectallzed projects." It is also designed to
act as a .. broker'' between the community
!llld vJOrtous areas of the University In the

delivery of economic development
assiSiance.

U/BbnllftAcodemic jargon aSide, h bolls down to ·
giving the Buffalo area an economic
"shot In the arrn" by marshallng U/B
brainpower.
For example, under REAC's umbreDa ,
fiiCllhy memben hove done Sludles of
slumping neighborhood business dlltrlc1s,
are looking at what H lllkes to get people
to move bock Into the City, are developIng a coat comparison between doing
blllineso here and setting up shop In
several other rival areas, and are begin·
nlng to oddras the broader quatlon of

.... wuc.·~a,ee&amp;.l

,

�Oclobor 25, 1979

J

_

• REAC: 'a Shot in the ann'
.....
. -. ..
clei:bne throughout the north·
(of which the local area provides a

economic
easl

textbook' cue) .
REAC has also devised a computerized
model which businesses and industries
can follow to poepare fedeTally-mandated
ei!Wmativt action programs. A second
compuWrlzed model allows a company to
project future job pool availabilities In
apedfic ocx:upationlll """'s and mesJI
t ' - wllh future job openings in order to
atablish net saalllng teq!Jirement$ and
the ~nel ac:llorr plans required to
meet them. A managerial asse55ment
oenter from which client ltmis can obtain
objectiw a.essments ·of the managerial
capabilitia and development needs of
seieded employees Is also In place . .
Students are or wiD be Involved In each
ol t ' -. Through REAC , Managel'f"!'lt
grad students are offered unique oppor·
tunllles for~tesec:lor and public
agency In
-a "hands-on" approach to thd
n as managen. A
pilol cooperatllle education option for
under!Pduates began this fall, providing
a chance to alternate between going to
school and worl&lt;ing for a gol)emment
agency.

Fldlue ....... tartleb
Approximately 110 students and 25
faculty were involved In these and other
REAC actMtles In 1978-79, the first year
of operations. Some $150,000 In &lt;&gt;utslde
funding was generated In that ftnl year.
But one m::ent grant alone exceeds
that-a $205,000 commitment from the
Economic Development Agency for the
study ol how New Yori&lt; State ftrms have
adjusted to economic decline, particularly
those ftrms whose llc:llvltles have been
doubly tmpac:led by foreign trade (steel
and auto-making come Immediately to
mind] . Sixty firms have been selected.
The alms ere to devise public lnletventlon
policies and _.,ms (tndudtng trade
adjustment assistance) to aid these In·
duslries and to come. up with economic
and uban development programs.
Orlginally, the study was to have Included an examination ol how displaced Individuals have adjusted, but that has
'-n deferred for the Hme being.
REAC olllcials expect that outside
funding for Its projects will lnaease over
years, hlttini a pace ol
half a mtllon dollars annuoly by 1 1-82.
Ceuin individual service components
ol the Center, yet to be developed, are
~'~ provide expert1oe lor fees,
~ to make REAC mootly

~

Yet, points out Dtreetor Thomas Gutlaldge ol the School ol M........... tn a
- t on REACs future, the Untverlllly has to make a comrnllment beyond
lip service If the conter to to realizJo
lb ~- In 1978-79, REAC was
_funded .. ~ $60,000. That
.... should rloo to $200,000 a year In
... .-1!119110o, ~projects, and
tlwl ..... to IIIOUnd $100,000 by
111113-84, once things are fuDy opera-

tii:IML
'11* ...t money opproac;b to developIng IlEAC to ~. Gutt.ridge points
out.
l, the Center wtl have to

w.--

. _ . t prllnarily to requests ror

-.

are·fuiiY·funded: Tb~'
would completely shut-off " many deserv·'
lng clients" and " numerous stgnlflcanl·
economic development studle~," 11&gt;e
results would be unsatisfactory io both
the State and the UntveG~ty. he feels.

asslstance-vrl&gt;teh

WilaLothcn luoft doae
lJil -end SUNY are not alone In em·
phaslilng ~ publ_lc service thrust for htghet
educatio11, REAC offlctals point out. The
phllotOphy has been a vital force In program destgn5·at many U.S . universities,
particularly In the South and Mid-West.
To learn what specific public service
projeCts are being carrled out elsewhere.
REAC is an assodate member of the
148-member Association lor University
Business and Economic Research
(AUBER) .

Two members ol that -association, In
particular, have been extremely sue·
cessful, Gutterldge points out. The
Business Research Center at the University of Toledo does e&gt;cadly what Its name
Implies, In addlllon to operating a small
business assistance service.
PENNTAP (The Penns y lvan ia
Technical Assistance Program) Is located
at Pennsylvania State Untvenlty. There,
seven lull-time technical specialtsts channel current relevant Information to In·
dustries, businesses, government agencies, etc. Spedftc projects tndude construcHon Industry management and urban qualtty assessment ac:llvllles.
These two examples, Guuerldge feels,
provide a broad lrzuneworl&lt; against which
REACs objectives can be assessed.
" REAC Is In tune with national efforts at
unlvenlty/commun~y relations. Given
adequate resources, It has the potential to
beoome a significant Instrument for the
economic revltaltzatton not only of
Western New Yori&lt;, but the entire state."

a.tlalo - ' - Sbldp
One ooncrete example ol this potential
for asslllance to the region Is the on·
going " Buffalo Assets Study," a
cooperative, voluntary venture which In·
volves REAC with the Greater Buffalo
Development Foundation, the Erie
County Industrial Development Agency,
the Chamber of Commerce, Erie County , and the City ol Buffalo. The goal is to
develop sound quantitative and
qualitative data about doing business and
Hvtng tn Buff.Jo.
Costs ol energy, land, capital, labor,
transportation, taxes and environmental
regulations wiD be computed for Buffalo
and for Its major competitors. Also to be
developed arc facts and figures about
housing, consumer coots, the environment, cultural and reaullonal resources,
public scrvloa and health care, pitting the
local region _..,.. Al!anta, Bollon , Ctndnnllll, Houston, Norfolk, Raleigh ,
Cleveland, PitiJbwvh, San Otego and
Suttle. Both a 300-page technical
ref-noe document and a slid&lt; 25-page
brochure for industrial prospec:ts wiD
.....k,.

AlleedoeciiiCthltla
REAC bas creatad and/ or aboorbed
from~ In the School ol Management a number ol centers and projects. h
hao annaed the Human Raourccs lnllllute, for lnltanoe, an agency which

provides conHnut"ll educaHon, technical . to various - A considerable amount of llatlstk:s and
asSistance and applied research for those
data have already been generated about
dealtng with employment at~d training
social and economic conditions locaUv.
programs In public agencies. REAC
REAC proposes to c:alalog and analyie
wori&lt;s In cooperation with the Trade Adthe Information and to regularly Issue
justment ~nee Center at SUNYuseful for economic developsummaries
Binghamton (whose records wiD be used
ment projec:ls.
In the economic dedtne studyJ.
The Center also looks forward to
It ls aloo the administrative home for
establishing a capability whereby local
actMtles associated with the School of
organlzaHons could draw on U/ B's
Management's Rand Chair endowment.
engineering and sc:lenllftc expertise in
REAC has a staff of three professionals
developing new Ideas, Inventions and
In addition to Gutterldge, four clerical
projects. Career planning and counseUng
employees, and six grad asslllants.
assistance for sponsored employees of
area
business firms consHiule yet another
Field education
possibility.
Associate Director Geraldine Kogler is
most directly associated with field educaWhat ha...,._.r?
tion e&gt;&lt;perlences, the catch-aU designa·
At a reoent gathering of area media.
tion for Internship and cooperative
business and education leaders, a
education endeavors.
newspaper ed~or asked rather lmpaHenl·
This semester's pUot co-op program
ly, "What ever happened to REAC?
finds lour students worldng with the
There was this big announcement, and
Housing and Urban Development office
th~n nothing."
•
In BUftalo. Another Is assigned to the
The answer Is that the foundation Is be·
Treasury Department's Bureau of
ing thoughtfully put in place.
Alcohol, Arearms and Tobacco, where
Tontine Tile, Westwood Pharmaceu·
her assignment Involves making the
Heal, Buffalo China, M&amp;T Bank, Paragon
rounds of wineries In the Anger Lakes to
Wire, Buffalo Savings Bank, the CHy,
monHor excise tax reports. A sixth stuand the Coun!Jy are among companies
dent Is with the Department ol Defense,
and public agencies which have already
working out of both Buffalo and Boston.
used or are considering making use of the
REAC has pending a grant proposal to
Center's expertise. That Ust Is growing.
the federal government lor a staff person
As we know from experience at
to run a similar cooperative effort In the
Amherst. the steel of ac:lual accomplish·
private sedor.
ment can rise practically overnight once
Ms. Kogler notes, too, that the REAC
foundation work Is completed.
lntemshlp program, moved over from
Polley Studies, has been qulta popular
with several major local industries, particularly Carborundum w'hlch views Has a
useful reauHment tool for the company
The winner ol the 1967 Nobel Prize In
as weD as an educational experience lor
Chemistry wtU be the John W. Cowper
students. In fact, representatives of both
distinguished
visiting lecturer In the Facul·
U/ B and that oorpon~tion wiD be outlinty ol Natural Sc:lcnces and Mathematics
Ing the benefits of the relationship at a nathis fall .
tional con erence on Internships and field
Dr. Manfred Elgen, dtrector olthe Max
experience education In San Antonio this
Planck lnsHtute for Biophysical Chemt."lly
semester.
In
Gotllngen, Germany, wtll present a
The Internship Is dtsHngutshed from coseries ol three public lectures under the
op education In that the Intern wori&lt;s
general
title ol " SeH Organization ol Mat·
part·Hme In a man~ setting while
ter and the Origin ol Life," November
also taking classes on campus.
5-7 .
On Monday, November 5, the topic
t.o,...._p......
wiD be "Dynamics ol Molecular Dar·
REACs longer-range plans for utiliwinian Systems;" Tuesday, November 6,
tartan seH-suffictent activHies tndude:
he wiD speak on "The Hypercyde: A
An econometric model of the WNY
Principle ol Natural Self Organization;"
economv. This "business barometer"proand on Wednesday, November 7, the
gram wiD measure and projec:l results ol
focus wiD be on "Wilnetoes ol ~·
the lntenelations among such variables as
(an attempt to reconstiuct the first genes
total consumption, Investment, residenfrom
Information In present biological
tial construc:llon, employment, wages,
macromolecules) .
output, governmental expendltures and
AD
three
lectures wiD be held in 147
population change. A-Management proDiefendorf on the Main
Campus
lessor has already developed the proand
wiD
begin
at 8 p .m. Further tnforma·
totype lor the model, but attempts at
wiD
be
provided
as
anangements
are
tion
securing the funding have as yet been
completed , FNSM spokespersons
unsuccessful.
promise.
A Small Buslne" Deuelopment
Center. A consorHum ol New Yori&lt; State
business ochools, led by U/ B, has
developed a proposed approach , but
Oakla Cho, a postdoc:loral fellow spon·
again funding Is neei:led. Several other
sored by the Human Relations Area Files
states have established Such oenters
and the Korean Social Science Research
under joint State-federal sponsonhip.
Council, wiD be oonduc:llng research this
An Erie Countv Area SUJWv. This wiD
year at the Department ol Anthropology
be an on-going project to provide a social
at U/ B.
lndlclllor data base lor WNY. Its actlvkles
Dr. Cho, who received her Ph.D. from
will vtekl longlludlnal data on the quality
SUNY/ Stony Brook, has tnvesHgated
ol h(e here as well as altitudinal - n s
social stratification In a Korean village .

Nobel Laureate
to visit FNSM

s-

HRAF fellow

j

�October 25, 1979

'Parcours' project
ready next spt:ing
If al goes .. expected, nat Spring ....
Unlvenlly community will be able to get
In " ' - by jogging and exerdslng
around Lake L.aS.ille
two-mile "par·
COlli$" circuit.
Parco.ns Is a French word meaning
dlltance covered, way. road or route.
The idea originated about a decade ago
In Sw!Uerland and has caught on fast In
the States.
Charles "Dusty" Miller ol Student Af.
lain and Coach Ed Michael ol Recreation, Athletics and Reloded lflllrudlon are
collaborating on the $5,000 project. Half
dw funding came from the UnlvenltyWide Program Cornmltlee, an olbhoot of
the Study Group on Retention and Attrition. The other half came fmm a matchIng IJ'Ull Michael secured &amp;om the
Unlvenlty Committee on Innovative In·
slrudlon.
The Faculty-Student Association gave
the Program Committee $25,000 last
Spring to underwrite projeds positively
Impacting on dw quality ol campus life.
The money wu part ol $500,000 FSA
-=elved from the sale ol Unlvenlly
Bookstore merchandise to Folletts, Its

on •

owner.
Aa:ordlng to Miller and Mlcha,el, tile
parcoun will contain 18 exercise statiOns
with three levels of exercise at each;
beginner, Intermediate and advanced.
The first third of the dn:u~ wiD be devoled
to bending and stretching activities; the
next third lo conditioning exercises (~·
ups, puJI.ups etc.) that apply stress to
muscles, and the last third, to "cooling
down" exercises. Signs, with colors
blending with the environment, will give
exercise lnslrudlons, dlstanc:es of the run
and d~s to the next station.

=..:::·===-~'d
woods.
IIIII be ·

dw leke

0{
The - . .
placed both within and outside ol wood·
ed . . . .
"It's nol going lo look like a jungle
gym," ollaed Michael.
After conslrudlon Is complned, RARI
wants 1o 11M dw parcoun for~ olnce
H proYides a different rnodellly ol aerclse
for llUdentl normaly cot6&gt;ed to Indoor
~ and condlllonlng actlvllla. During
the wlnllr, the pan:ours can be used for
crou-counlry lkling, added Miler.
To ~ the worbbilltv and adaptability al the ~. MtchMI and
Miller along wllh Sal Eopoollo, Waller.
Kunz and Ed W~. vlslled a stmllar
courae In Canada. Michael was able to
check out the ·poircours at the Unlvenlty
ollowa, while Miler c1ic1 oorne further In·
vestlgaling on his own. Miller relaved·that
the tOWIII al Tonawanda and Amherst
recently Onlshed conltrucllng parcounes,
but that theirs are of different lengths and
have a different number al exercise
areas. U/B'sls being designed spedflcally
wHh the campus environment In mind.

preMnt

D..,_.

laternla. cllffalae helgllt.
The 51ations will be at varying Intervals
from each other with lengths depending
on the rigor of each prei:edlng activity,
says Michael. Also, they wiD be con·
strutted to accommodate different
heights so women and children can par·
llclpate.
Miller and Michael note that great care
will be taken not to interlere with the
aesthetics of the area. While jogging on

T..._._ polea aDd wood c:hlpe
MIDer Is now contacting power com·
panles for old telephone poles and wood
chips for use at exercise statlons. The
chips will spare participants the lnconve·
nience of having to exercise on muddy
areas, while the poles, with connecting
bars, can be used for such actlvHy as puJI.
ups. On-ground exercises will be done on
several poles fastened together. The
poles wiD be anchored In oonaete.
Miller estimated that about 100 man·
hours will be needed to complete con·
structlon. As yet, H hasn't been decided
whether Maintenance or an outside com·
pany will do the job. If necessary, -Miller
said, he wiD organize a contlngen of
volunteers.
Both Miller and Michael are confident
there are enough joggers in the UnlversHy
communHy to make the project viable.
What's particularly good about the par·
cours Is that It's a Safe outdoor actlvHy In·
dividuals can do at their own pace, alone,
or with famUy or friends. Recalling the

P•rcows ....... ahows propoeH

~

tragic death several years ago of a student

manuals and other Hterature about the

jogger hH by a car on the Amherst Cam·

sports can be perused Is also planned,

pus, Michael emphasized the parcours
wiD keep people off busy public roads.

Miller says. If enough Interest Is
generated, he would like to olfer
workshops where use of equipment
could be taught via movies, speakers and
Informal Instruction. He also envisions a
trip board which students can use to
make contact wHh others interested In
camping, hiking, canoeing and CJ05S·
country skiing trips .
Miller told the Reporkr he intends to
pay back In fuU the $10,400 the Program
CommHtee gave to him fl&gt;r the projects,
Including the parcours, but he suspects H
wUI take a few years to do so.

Eqalpm- reatal, too
Miller also recelved funding fmm the
Program Committee to build a rental
center and to purchase cross-&lt;X&gt;Untry
equipment, snowshoes, and camping
and hiking apparatus which will be rented
to students at nominal prices. The rental
room will be located near the Wilkeson
game area and will be manned by existing
and new staH.
A resource library where equipment

FES has new unit for undergraduates
The Facuhy of Educatlonal Studies
(FES) has established a new unH to serve
undergraduates.
An article In the faD Issue of the FES
Newsletkr reports that the unH's principal
components wUI include the UnlversHy
learning Center, the Office of Teacher
Education, and FES activities In General
Education.
A concerted effort Is underway to give
the undergraduate component new em·
phasts and to ln•egrate ~ programs with
the primary scholarly and professional
orientation ol the Facuhy, the Newsletter
reported. FES Dean Robert RossbeQj, In
announcing the new division. signaled his
lnlentlon "to encourage the lntegratlon of
undergraduate activities In this Facuhyto
the maximum extent possible" and urged
that aD faculty Interpret the changes as a
clear sign of their Importance to the oen·
tral mission of FES.

Frucla to direct
The director of the Division of
Undergraduate Educational Studies
(UES) Is J . Bruce francis, an associate
professor In the Department ol Highet
Education . Francis came to Buffalo In
1970 after receiving his Ph.D. In educe·
lion and psychology from the University
of~ - From 1971to 1973 he was
aUOdate director ol the Survey Research
Center, and In 1974 he directed the
University-Wide Analysts al Courses and
Teachlng Project (ACT). He currently Is a
member of the General Education Com·
mltlee.
Francis was CXH:Iiredor ol the State
University component ol Natlonal Project
Three: Elevating the Importance al
T eachhg. He also carried out a follow· up
ourvey for the State Education Depart-

ment of New York State communHy col·
lege graduates and. most recently, com·
pleted a year-long evaluation of Change
magazine's Natlonal Tcaching Project.
As director of UES, Francis wUI have
administrative

responsibiiHy

for

the

UntversHy learning Center and for the

Office of Teacher Education. In addition ,
he wtU serve as an adviser to the dean on
aU matters relating to undergraduate
study In FES. Operational supervision of
the separate components ol UES wiU be
the reSJ!Onsibility of the assistant diredor
for the University learning Center,
Muriel Atkinson Moore. and the assistant
director for Teacher Educatlon . Karen

Nisbet.
O~ofUES

UES hopes to Increase the involve·
ment of FES facuhy In undergrduate programs and In the scholarly study of
undergraduate professional educatlon .
The director will encourage relatlonships
between current FES departments and
undergraduate programs. and find new
ways to serve non · tradltional
undergraduate clientele.
He wiD also seek to Increase the
amount of grant funds available to FES
for work with ·and about undergraduates,
and to foster scholarly research and
development aimed at Improving the
quality of undergraduate life and the ef.
fectlveness ol undergraduate learning
and teaching.
The FES Newsletter gave this
breakdown on the component unb of
UES.

Dlwle- of UES

The University l..eaming Center was

establls_!led as

part ol the Equal Oppor·

tunily Program to provide remedial and
developmental education to students
whose secondary school background had
not adequately prepared them for the
university. In 1974 the Center became
part of the Facuhy-of Educatlonal Studies
and expanded Its mission to provide basic
and study sk1l1s instruction for aD unlversi·
ty students In the areas of mathemalics.
reading, and wrHing. During 1978-1979.
UlC offered 56 courses and 14 mini·
courses to 1,518 students as well as ex·
tenslve tutorial assistance . A UnlversHy·
wide ledure series on Jeaming and instruction was also presented. ULCs new

position as a central component of UES
recognizes the essentlal contributlon It has
made to the Facuhy of Educational
Studies and to the enUre university and
provides H a vehide for even greater contribution In the future , the FES Newsletter
said.
The Office of Teacher Educatlon coor·
dlnates the preparatlon and provisional
certilicatlon of secondary schoolteachers
in the areas of English, languages.
mathematics, sdence, social studies,
music, physical educatlon, art , and
speech. The provisional certiltcation program takes place through a system of
Teaching Centers, groups ol schools In
which students participate In an in·
tegrated program of Instruction and prac·
Ileal experience. In 1978 a special task
group ~examined the pre-service teacher
certJfJcauon program and made a series
of strong recommendations for Its con·
tlnuation , reorganlz.atlon, and enhancement. These recommendations centered
on Increasing the involvement of FES
facukY. and ~ prognoms and ln~lallng
programs al research and lnnovatlon
which would capkallze on the hmUed size

of the program and on the scholarly In·
terests of facuhy. The incorporation of
the Office Df Teacher Education Into the
new undergraduate division Is a first step
in carrying out the recommendalk&gt;ns of

1hat task group.
In addkion to contributing to the
UnlversHy General Educatlon program
through the basic skills component of the
learning Center, the Facuky of Educe·
tional Studies will become Involved In the
knowledge area and thematic elements of
General Education, the Newsletter said .
An FES Task Force on General Educa·
lion recommended In 1979 that the facul·
ty develop a set ol courses addressing
core topics In three areas pf social and
behavioral perspectives, ~istorical and
philosophical perspectives. and lnterna·
tiona! and comparative persjlectives. The
carrying out of these recommendations
and the further development ol FES
responses

to' the

University's

undergraduate General Education re·
quirement will be the responsibility of the
new division .

Braunagel wins
essay award
Dr. Judkh S . Brau.,_l, assistant professor of Information and li&gt;rary studies,
has won lint prlu In an essay contest
sponsored by the Amerlca.n library
Assoclatlon's offtclal journal. Amerlcan
Ltbrorles.
Her essay reporting on her research In
"Job Mobility and Career Advancement:
An Analysts of Men and Women In
llbrarianshlp," Is to be published In an
upcoming Issue of the monthly magazine.

�October 25, 1979

4

The nuclear debate goes on: Chon rejected
.,.._,

I mull reject Dr. C h o n ' s - that
his letter printed In the Reporfler on Od .
18, be taken as a satlslactory synthesis to
the ongotng Hegelian dialectic In which
he seems to think weareeilgaged . His at·
tempt to synlheolze our two points of
view Is flawed by Inconsistent reasoning,
mllrepresenllng analogies, and over·
looked adllllnCeS In alternative energy.
For Dr. Chon to blithely state that "In a
profit-oriented free enterprise, intentional
comer-cutting may not be always avoid·
ed" SOWids as if he would expect the
public to aocept a degree of negligence In
reactor construction as a bulh-ln factor of
that free enterprise syotem. And since he
agrees that "we human beings being what
we are, no engineering products would
be absolutely liulure proof, even if we
tried not to cut comers," there should be
an even greater concern for the extent to

which we may accept failure in reactor

components.
Depending upon the complexity and
use of a product there should be a com·
mensurate amount of perfection In Its
manufacture. Considering the impor·
.lance of ensuring the safe and ~nt
operation of a unH as complex as (and
possessing the Inherent dangers oO a
nuclear reactor, I fail to undersiand how
Dr. Chon could expect the public to accept eHher shoddy construction pracllces
or the admmedly Inferior manufacturing
of a reador's component pieces. The
state of the art Is seldom equal to that of
the engineer's blackboard: and Dr.
Chon's acquiescence to this phenomena
Is disheartening, to say the least.

Abooot ~~~~- daeck• aad balaaca
Dr. Chon seems to believe that since
the utillties lay out such great sums of
money to ensure eff\dency and safety
"the utliHies ... would not wish to accept
the plant without the best available (or
possible) lnspecllon of their own. The
rule of check and balance works more
vigorously within the !Tee enterprise
system which Mr. U.eds seems to
distrust." Aside !Tom the fact that the
utilHies do not put their collective necks
on the bkx:k to finance reactor construe·
lion but rather the consumer Is charged
for the construction and ·breakdown of
those facilHies-1 will pass to this system
of checks and balances.
The Od. 17 and 21 Issues of The New
York Times carried articles about the
"safety" of the Con Edison nuclear plant
atlndlan Point. The guards contracted by
the Gleason Security Service (whose
specialty Is five-and-dime department
store.) complained of loose and inadequate oecurlty measures at the plant. Two
guards told how they separately In·
filtrated the facilHy by climbing fences
which were supposedly electrlcaUy wired.
Unless Dr. Chon may have missed the
nmes articles let me highlight some of
their features:
"The guards, most of whom requested
anonymlry, charged In Interviews that:
e " The two operating nuclear power
plan!$ at Indian Point, 24 miles north of
New York City, are vulnerable to a ter·
rorill attack because the operators rely on

•••ata

" compus a&gt;mmunlly -

publiohed

ad! Tllutodoy bv lhc ~ oiJ&gt;.- AI·
loin, s..o. ~ o1 New van. " BufWo.
olfloos ... In 136 c.oo. Hoi.
Amhonl 1'&lt;lcphone 636-2626.

Ill-trained guards and faulty security
systems for protection. 'It would take one

commando or one well-trained wacko to
go In, inllict heavy damage ancf leave
without being detected.' declared one
former guard at the complex.
• "Records were falsified to show
guards had passed training courses they
never took .
• "Security officials used inadequate
psychological tests to screen the guards
and gave weapons to some guards who

had repeatedly fatled shooting tests.
• " Physical

security

systems

are

dangerously wlnerable. Warning alarms
on fences that were disconnected and
casual control of plasllc key cards that
open locks to supposedly secure areas
were dted.
"Robert Morel, the (Gleason) servic:Q's
vice president and general manager,
refused to comment on any of the

and then returned. There Is absolutely no
reason for the public to have any con·
fidence in regulatory tnstHutions and con·
tractors since they have failed to prove
their trustworthiness time .and again .
· Dr. Chon's analogy of making each
unH of residence and Industry an In·
divklually, self-contained energy produc·
lng entity parallel to that of Mao's idea for
putting blast-furnaces at each similar site
Is ludicrous. There are homes all over
New England which are fully heated by
solar power without contrtbutin_g any
poOution to the environment. There is no
need to haul up the sun every morning, it
does quite well for itself. Feeding blast
furnaces requires mining and transporting
fuel and living with its noxious wastes. .
Equally ludicrous is his spurious and
discombobulated analogy of 200 reactor
years without a fatality compared with

50.000 lives lost each year on the

charges, saying terms of the contracts
prohibited him from discussing security

nation's htghways . What one statement
has to do with another Is beyond me.

matters.
···Security

Dr. Chon further overlooks the fact
that wind energy has already been
proved successful and profitable. Three
years ago a group of tenants bought their
building on New York Cfty's east side
(you know, that's the cHy with all those

at

Indian

Poin t

meets

N .R.C .

requirements .
said Bud
Stengren . a Con Ed spokesman . Specific
questions were not answered . Mr.
Stengren said . because doing so 'would

tall buUdlngs) and renovated It Inside and
out. They insulated the bullding and In·
stalled solar panels. They also added a
vertically based, bowed tri-prop wtnd tur·
bine (it resembles three pieces of twisted
licorice, bowed, and connected at top
and bottom) which produces an average
electrical surplus of 11 per cent dally.
, This building Is a six-story structure with
one elevatorl On a lark the tenants decided to ask Con Ed If they wanted to buy
their surplus energy- they Wen! refused .
When they found out that the' utility Is
mandated by law to buy the cheapest
available source of ·energy In whatever
quan!Hy available they decided to file
suH. Con Ed lost-and today those
tenants make money every moment the
breeze blows. AU this without Dr. Chon's
outmoded idea of a horizontal prop taken
off a plane.
Dr. Chon's attempted synthesis was
weak, illogical, obfuscating, and In·
suiting. If he wiD agree to register for
classes in ethics and moraUty I will register
for his energy engineering classes.

-Marc J..eeda
Graduate Student
Department of English

not be in the public Interest: and those
beyond policy and procedure were not

answered because they 'don't deserve the

dignity of a reply' .·

'Innocent' comer-cutting?
I can't help but wonder if these
breaches of N.R.C. requirements faD in
that category of innocent "comer cutting.,

Dr. Chon so readily accepts. Perhaps he
would be relieved to know that whatever
else may happen during the day to day
security tasks that In the event of a
massive demonstration or aSSlliuh on the

facility , the Gleason faithful are prepared
and would rise to the occasion despite
"regularly working 60 hours a week. One
guard said he and low others had been
sent to a makeup class on 'Crowd Con·
tror after working forced overtime. In·
stead of Instruction , he said, they were
shown an X·rated film on a video cassette
machine and then told to sign a docu ment attesting that they had taken the
course." Fear not Dr. Chon-In this
"profit-oriented !Tee enterprise" system
those guards who raised their voices were
duly fired . Con Ed Is currently looking In·
to the possibility of having New York
State Troopers become the permanent
secumy force.
In the face of such flagrant viola·
tions-the nature of which are more

readily detectable than the faults In a
reactor's components-it ls of little
wonder why "public conRdence In U.S.
Institutions has diminished ." It has
already been confirmed that the
operators at Three Mile Island delayed
reporting their accident at least two fun
days. But these checks and balances of
free enterprise must mean something.
Perhaps the answer lies In the "Signal
30" which comes over the walkie talkles
to guards at Indian Point. "It Is a warning
signal that Investigators or Inspectors for
the N.R .C . are on the stte or on the
way." (Times) le1 me see, If the guards
know beforehand that the Inspectors are
coming . .. then someone must

be teDing

someone else . . . and, oh! I get It : the
party of the first part wmes a check to the
party of the second part whose bank
balance vigorously rises. I'm grateful to
Dr. Chon for having broken down this bit
of economic detad -Lord knows that this
poor ole English student had enough to
deal with concerning ~f?lnts of nuclear
engineering. .

'

N o - for l"'bllc ~
WHh "security" of such facilities left In
such good hands, Dr. Chon Is confident
that we should advance to breeder reactors. Ahhough tenortsts may not be able
to retrieve the weaponi'jjl'llde plutonium,
It Is evident that sabotage Is a distinct
possibiUty. Chances lor this occurring In·
crease dramatJcally considering the opent
fuel would .-&lt;! to be transportoed to
reprocessing centers such as Welt Valley,

VOTE/COPE has
to be voluntary
have traveled and will travel to Albany for
Editor.
similar purposes. Legislators are invHed
In the October 18 Issue of the
on campuses to visit and meet with our
Reporter, Professor Thomas C . Barry, in
his letter on UUP, indicated his lack of · members. Cost of these activities are properly paid for !Tom dues and agency fees .
knowledge of Federal law, State law and
3. Pontlcal acllvlry only Incidentally
the proper role of collective bargaining.
related to terms and conditions of
There are three categories of union
employment forms a third category.
"political actlvHies."
Agency fee payers are en!Hied to a refund
1. VOTE / COPE monies .being
on their share of monies used for such
solicited by UUP wiD be used for partisan
purposes.
po!Hical actlvHies. We will try to unseat
The exact boundary between
legislators who do not support SUNY
categories 2 and 3 Is presently In dispute.
(e.g. persons who vote gifts of money for
private university medical centers, but
There Is no question about category I
and the need Is great. Your voluntary
vote agalnsi adequate funding for the
contribution of $10-and your will·
U/ B Dental SchooU and to replace them
by more friendly persons. It Is a violation
lngness to work for candidates-Is need·
of Federal law for any dues or agency fee
ed ~ State University Is to remain viable.
monies to be spent for this. We need yow
Sincerely,
voluntary contribution.
2. Lobbying forms a second category.
---Fillk
NYSUT has a fuU-t!me lobbyist who
&amp;ern.rd Gneooblatt
works for us educating the State
Co-Chairmen, VOTE/COPE
Legislature. UUP officers and members
Buffalo Center Chapter, UUP

It's a pity Coppola
didn't consult her
Editor:
After wading through the "Apocalypse
Now" review by Unda Grace·Kobas, H
seemed apparent that this person had
spectfic expectations about what she
wanted the film to be about. Coppola did
not meet her expectations {he really
should have consuhed her) . She went into such !J'Oll(length to cr1t1c1z.e this lack of
meeting her preconceived notion of a
documentary, that she did not once
touch upon what, perhaps, Coppola wu
doing. fine . It was just as weD to say H
was not a film about . my uncle's ex·
perlences as a pilot and I wanted It to be
and, therefore, H Wi!J a terrible fUm . It Is
hard to ignore her c:ibvlous misinterpretation of various scenes In which the
primary message was fairly straight·
forward while she crttk:lzed It on the basis
of how H did not address her ideas.
I consider one large form of racism to
be someone looking at another person's
behavior, completely out of context of
that person•s cuhural dpertenc.,, and
judging them, quHe harshly, by their own
cultural values. Replace the word
"culrural'' with "cinematographic" and
Ms. Grace-Kobas seems to be embracing
a baste higher process that leads to racism
In her reviewing methods, while

simultaneously critldztng racism In the
text. Fighting fire with fire?
Sincerely,

-R . .J.Siellal
Grad Student · CMB

Chon's 'burger'
won't sell
Editor:
Mr. Chon, In his response to Mr. Marc
U.eds' letter (Reporter, Od . 18) con·
tends that nuclear waste decaying today
wiD be fairly safe In 300 years. "By that
time, as they say, one would probably
not be hurt by eating a quarter pound of
it."

Mavbe Ronald McDonald will be hired
to sell this energetic concocllon. The
marketing scheme should be-buy IMle
quarter pound and for an additional pen·
ny get a decommissioned nuclear plant.
Seriously, this Is but another glowing U·
lustrallon of hO&lt;f! a technocrat can
malpredlct the futilre : Mr. Chon should
check Utah cancer rates before eating his
quarter pounder.
Sincerely yours,
-Man:CIID&amp;

j

�October 25, 1979

~nergy

war:
we can win"'*it

By ISriH O'H.n
U/B Economics Prolasar Murray
Brown mentions an economic joumal
study associating only l -2 per cent of the
country's annuall3 per cent Inflation rate
with the rising cost of energy. and condudes. ""that sounds about righL If the
price of oil goes up . the prices of some
ot her products must come down."
Yet it IS hard to imagine that OPEC's
last price surge hasn't had o more
devastating economic impad . since oil is
used as an ingredient for so many products and as power for industry and consumers alike. So some eSimates o f
energy's contribution to the Inflation rate
hk live per cent.
~ the true figure. buslneumen
and...,.,.,..,_ ......, to mention inllation
....t !h. a.....ci CIDII cl mergy in the
lnoth; pahopo t.ca..e. unlike
-.--ortheamountol
money ptnt.d, "'-rrng the CIDII ol

=·

ts the t...v- lnflatlonuy
COIIIidalng thai the patZrttage ol the
nellon'a dally otl OOIIIUmption which Is
tmpooted ' - rtoen &amp;om roughly 25 to 45
pe cent In the laol ten yean, and OPEC's
~ hM tnc:re.-1 right along with H,
the poolllon cl the u.s. Is becoming ltlOn!
wlnenble. Tb£ IIIIUatlon will not Improve
unlaa l!l"'hettc .nd eltematlve fuels conllt&gt;ule a...-. share of energy than
are doing Ill present.
Regional Director of Externai . Affairs
for D.O.E. (Department of Energy) Randy Wilson Is confidant alternative energy
wtD play a more prominent role In the
n.,. future . "With a combination of conservation and alternative energy
strategies" he liates, "the federal govern-

ment estimates tNe can cut our share of
imported oU in half by 1990."

Co-tlo•

Everyone agrees that a strong conservation policy should be the first step in an
energy program. If the consumption of
energy is markedly reduced , 'hen alternative forms of energy can be pursued on
a smaller scale . According to an
American Petroleum lnstHute publicalion , the U.S . could theoretically cut its
consumption In half through oonservallon.
Conservation should be the easiest,
. fastest and cheapest energy plan to Implement for the obvious reason that It just
entails reducing the purchase of an
overused commodity . Some ad·
ministnrtive and computer costs are in·
valved, however. In the technical field of
energy management, the allocallon of
power for lights and phones In an office
building, for example. i5 controlled by
computer.
./ Energy management is an lnaeaslngly
oought-after service by business these
dayo , because business people are often
aware of the most mundane of costs.
Ahhough consumers have rushed to purchase smaD car5, thttir acumen for cutting
less obviou• energy bills may take much
longer to develop.
SliD. efforts to reduce consumption are
already noticeable. Since the beginning
of the year, the U.S . has cut its conoumption by roughly ave per cent.

Coal

The U.S . boasts the world's largest
deposits of coal. The deposits cornaln
enough B.T.U.'s (British thermal unH5) to
oupp)y all ol the country's energy needs
for 300 yean or maybe as much as five
hundred according to vartou• estimates.
Coal is preoenUy burned eHher by utllities
or large manulliCIUring firm•.
An acHing aopect of the industry Is
that there are over 600 companies Involved in some stage of the coal proce55.
"The technology Is there" oayo Exxon
spokesman Ken SmHh. "The companies
are just waiting for a supportive sign from
the government 50 they can prepare for
an expansion ol the Industry. and
research even more ... The sign they are
looking for would be an indication that
the government will relax a particular
5tandard mandating poUutton control.
A local refinery director (who lh moot
other oO uea, asked not to be named)
uplalned the ftnandal burden ol the
standard. ~ moot effective poUutant
device. an eleclro-statlc preclpttalor,

S35 ......., dolln to IDIIall, and
,_. up 18 per cen1 o( a ~·· own
enagy jail to run. Thai method Ia ninety·

eight per cent effective In deanlng the alr.
versus a method which Is nlnety-flve per
cent effective that costs only $8 million to
anstall and uses up none of the utility's
own energy. The differe nces In costs are
enormo us. U/ B Environmental Studies
Professor l ester M1lbrath cou nters ,
""there are reports showing those e&gt;Ctra
few percentages signiflcantly improve the
health of some types of persons.··
Several new techn iques on the
horizon , induding fluidized bed combustion , may be Implemented Instead In a

__
.
=--=.:.=:.-:.-.-=:--=
......
...._.. .. ..._, . . .
-cnw..-......--.
.,_,...._...,. .. _ . . . uta ..

-.............
----------------~

..

number ot yeaB becauoe they are both
AD In all, "the
government Is very opllmisllc about
coal," says Wilson. "Tb£y are planning
for coal to supply 40 to 50 per cent of the
nation's energy by the year 2000-up
from 20 per cent at the present time."

Inexpensive and eflecllve.

Olltrv. c:oal, tar ................
Oil is a "pure" form ol energy, which

means It can 1"1 used to power just about
anything. There wiD still be demand for
an oil-like 5Ubstance well Into the future .
Heading the llst of synthetic fuels Is od
from coal, shale and tar sands.
Oil from coal Is achieved by controlled
heating of the rock. The process creates a
poUutton problem as well as the question
of what to do with the rock after It actually
expands. Being able to produce large
quantities of oU at a single plant will require extensive research and experience.
A big advantage to. this method Is the
abundance and ave!labUity of coal.
Oil from shale Is perhaps a more feasible alternative, although that rock expands 05 weD. Using this method,
200,000 barrels of oU a day (out of the
nallon's dally appetite of 18 million barrels) are produced within oeveral ol the
Rocky Mountain 51ates, where most of
the suitable shale is found . The price for
that synthetic oU presently is about comparable to prices on the world opot
market, which fluctuates but is the world's
highest-priced od.
President Carter Is heavily advocating
this method, but environmental concerns
cloud the picture. OU from shale cauoes
pollullon, and uses up large quantities of
water, some of which might be uoed for
agriculture instead. Residents ol rural
towns in the West are afraid that a• the
shale Industry booms, 50 will the sizes ol
their towns, reminiscent of short-lived
mining towns In the pasl.
Od from tar sands Is a bit trickier to obtain than oil from shale. Yet in Canada,
where there are more tar sand fiekis than
In the U.S ., the government Is making an
1111-out effort to make the method costefficient. One very encouraging report In·
dicated that some of the oil being produced there Is being sold for the same
price OPEC charges to contract buyero.
Just as exciting as the price ol oU from
tar sands and shale Is their abundance.
Says Stan Davis of the New York State
Petroleum Councd, "The amount ol oU
that can be obtained from shale Is greater
than the known reoerves of all Arabian
·oil. The amount that can be obtained In
the U.S . and Canada from tar oands is
even greater than that."

Solar. wlad, aeotha"mal..... - -

Solar power has been endoraed heavily by envtronmen~. and is billed by
many as an ultimate panacea. For I}OW,
though, solar panels have really only had
success In powering the buildings to
which they are attached (and many
buildings don't have acceso to the aun).
The eventual goal is to build plants that
can Mrve aa utilities. The technology to
make this practical Is a long way off.
Libm1ll eSJmatea place H at no oooner
than the year 2000. Actually, before this
happens, a newer concept employing

.

·-~-:~ae

..a.t

Want esprit de corps?
Try boosting athletics
co uld f!ll thilt \.'cr1d omd u.:ga:u
prt,..ltg(? lort ht&gt; ·Mit.

Tom Hurley
PSS Chalnnan

""ft\'

Tom :
In response: to the request fm inpu t o n
the -condition of the campu ·• pro,ect by
the P S ad hoc Commhtee on Ca mpus
Evaluahon . pumit me to s\a~ thl! case
for lhe role of athletics at the Universit y.
I accepted the position of dtrector of
sports infonnallon in October. fl977 .
because of the potential of Intercollegiate
athletics at the University in conjunction
with the ~ ol the Amherst Campuo .
the nistlng media market. and the
reputallon ol Western New York and
Buffalo as a sports community.
Disappointments In my two-year
tenure indude the decision by the State
to exclude the spartan stadium and an ice
arena from the Amherst Campus plans.
the media's concept of medlocrHy In
athletics at the NCAA Division Ill level.
and the disinterest of the WNY communi·
ty. UniveroHy facuhy-staff and . until this
semester. the general student body In the
athletic progrem .
In the Final Report by the UntversttyWide Study Group on Attrition/Reten·
lion . solutions include more campus·
wide events. building tradlllon. custom
and the kinds of activities that develop
loyalty and allegiances. and Involvement
by academic departments in recreation
and oports events.
Specifically. reoommendallon No. 69
ol the 101 was: "Encourage the develop·
ment of a strong sports program to serve
as a rallying polr:tt for the many diverse
groups within the UniversHy. •
Peter T. Wlttemann . of Admissions &amp;
Records. In his study of '"Unlveroity Attri·
Uon," notes. ''It is known that activities
must. be undertaken to provide a se.n5e of
smallness or closeness to the studenlS in
lieu of the University's large ness ...
The Facuhy Senate Executive Com·
mittee's survey o n University Goals.
Responsibilities and Performance Incl ud es t h e s ugg e stion " Pro vi d e
university-sponsored artistk:. intellect ual
and at hl e ti cs program s fo r th e
community."
Your own committee heard that "An
eoprit de corps is lacking (at the
Univef5ity) ...
How to get It
I contend that esprit de corps can be
achieved through intercollegiate athletics.
The ath letic program is o ne of the Un iversity's mos1 visible areas In term s of
achievement and campus and commun ity reco g nition . Reports o n the
University's men's and women's teams
a ppear almost daily in the WNY media.
and In New York State and national scope media fo r accomplishments 1n a
nu mber of sports
The foci thai the majority of the
University's athletic teams must com peie
at the Division Ill level using inadequ ate
facilities is. as noted by a fM"ulty me mber
in the De partment of Recreation .
Ath letics &amp; Related Instruction . a
microcosm of the problems of the University as a whole
The loso of prestige for the "Flagship of
the Stale Univershy System'" i5 obvlou•.
You should be aware that. a mong rna·
;Or slates. New York alone has no successful. ma}or college athletk: program a t
a state-supported institution. This Unive r·

t

at

You know Joe Paterno. but.. ..
A an exdmpte _ l o!fer Penn taw
\'\-hoi!;. lhe. prestd.mtl Who ts
the h~ad football cooch?
Contrdry to the op1nion of sonw
acade miCt at this Univt!rsrty. 11 as e'lot
necessary to compromise scholastic stan dards to be suCC&gt;!SSfUI in athletics at the
major college level. And through recognl·
tion in athletics the University could
receive additional financial support for Hs
academic Pf0!P11m5 In the lon!l.-ol grants
from alumni and other IOURles In the
U mH~ rsn y

private Mdor.
Increased oommunHy Involvement and
al5o resuh. and the problem cl student attrition would lessen as
the University's successful major colege
athletic teams build tradition, develop
loyalty. a sense of closeness and esprit de
oupport would

corps.
Adminlstrat0f5 and coache5 in the
Department of RARI are ready to assume
that responslbUity. and they are better
able to relate the means than I.
The basis for Implementation .
however. is an awareness by administration. facuhy. staff and students that inter·
collegiate athletics can help create an lm·
proved attitude at the University and.
most importantly. that desire and effort
can achieve that goal.
We would appreciate the interest of the
Professional Staff Senate.
-Larry G. Steele
Director. Sports Information

2 masters
for Colleges
Two new College masters were ap·
pointed this week by President Robert L.
Ketter.
Jame• Pappas, chairman of Black
Studies, is the new master of College B
for a term to coincide with the current
charter of the College, which is ocheduled
for evaluallon this academic year.
Pappas Is a practicing artist. and College B is a unit concerned for the arts in
many forms .
Pappas Is also a member of the University'• Affirmative Acllon Committee.
Dr. Orville T. Murphy, a profe55or of
hi5tory. is now master of Rachel Carson
College which pursues enVIronmental
issueo and concerns. Murphy. a veter_pn
member of the facuhy, hes underta~en
several administrative and studentoriented duties during his tenure here.
He was an assistant to the president during the term of Martin Meyerson and
served as head resident of Red Jacket
Quadrangle in a recent academic year.
That was the first time a faculty member
and opouoe had Uved closely with
students in a UnlversHy residence hall.
~cc~~-=~~':" coincide. with the current
Both appointments were made on the
recommendation of Dr. Ronald Bunn.
vice president for academic affain, and
Dr. Murray Schwartz. dean of the
Collegeo.
On asoumlng the leaderohip role in the
Colleges this faD , Schwltlz said he would
seek regular fuR-time facuhy as College
masters. Both Pappas and Murphy nD
that bill.

Best sellers
According to the UI B Booblore. these were the Campus best sellers as o/
October 14.
1. C.._...... by James A. Michener.
2. Secalld co-a~. by Howard Fast.
3. Fw Pa..wo-, by M. M. Kaye.
4. ~ by Eleluo Ploln.
5 . ........ ~- Owa ~ bv Dr. Wayne Dyer.

6. Wile,, by JIIIJJIBiume.
7. qe ., doe ~. by Ken Follette.
8. &amp;cn,.lee. by Judith Kranm.
9. n.. ~ Honw. by Jav Anson.
10. SfAen ... Scn..-., by H~n Van S/yb.

�October 25. 1979

Last hurrah
s.t.rdaV• foo4ba11 game ......., SL
. : - . . - ....... tlaal home..,..........,.
of ..... Buill thlo
lut
chaace to . . . dance, act a fool. lt'o
AmJMnt-Ciarence Day aloo.

--IIO'If

CALENDAR
______ ...... _

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

__

PHYSICS COLLOQURJII*
Do •• tJaolonloM Chota? Dr. v.s. Mod=.
Phyoieo Oopootmonl, Unlwnlly ol R-or. 454
Froncr.ak. 3 :30p.m . Coffee at 3: 15.

-..-.......

CEU. a JIOUCUAR BIOLOGY SEJIDIAII'

Sbo ol s.-m- ud ~~- ol ~
-Oavkt..Sabetint.
o..-Olltpanment
..-1 - - - D r.
of Cel &amp;oaogy, NiitW

Tbanday- 25

Voric Unlwnily. 114 HochAetter. 4:15p.m. Cof.
fe~tat4 .

- I E A L T H CAll£ CONFDI£NC£•
newly--led don ol
11,. School ol Nun~o&gt;g , will be k..,_ tpUka .. a
luncheon fOf a c:onfera"~CR on prirT*\1 he.akh care
~ by 11&gt;0 U/ B Schools ol Nun~ng and
Medlcin&lt; She will dlocuss "Na-al Pmpectivn
on Legal luues fO&lt; Physicians and Nu..., In
Primary Care Prac:dce." She:r6lon lnn·E..sa.
The. day-long 1)1'(9"am Is aimtd at physbans,

Dr. -..........

POET1IY SEMINAR •
~--&lt;&gt;I Penon In eon_...
Pomy. Donakt Hall, pod, a:sayisl and editor . 438
Ovne:ns. 5 p .m . Sponsored by the Gray 0\air of
Arts &amp; l..elten. Departmen1 ol English

UUABFILM.

c.de of

autstants. plannf'J'S
end admtn15trators adiYe tn primary heakh care.
Odw ......... lnduda fay Whllnoy. ctiredor ol
IN nutW pl'Klilioner program at SUNY Upst.at ~
Medical Center . on " Ca\Wk:.adon of Midkwel Practi·
tioMn in New Vex\ Sfele." Angri,ne Pe\l¥!n, presi·
dent of the Nurse Practltioner Auodelion of
Waaan New York, and Or, DQu9las Bu~
a - . e professor ol 1he U/ B School ol Manage·
ment . on " De:lrvery Syteems as They AHect Ptirnary
m.rrte ptac:tltloMrs, physidan

Purity {Medco, 1972)

Woldman

Th~tre . Amherst . 4:30, 7 and 9 : 15p.m General

admts.sion $2: studmts $1 50.
' One ol the dassics ol the Ma~cat~ merna. this
film is based on a true Jlory which. while daaibing
the events in fme detail. never smsalionalizes A
psychotic: man keeps his famUy k&gt;cked m thdr home
for 1$ years while he sells ho memade rat poison-a
f~ study of huma n weakness.

c... PradOC&lt; .

MS/8 iNDB'ENDENT FIUitMAKERS
SERIES"
••
l..eCnuo-sb&lt;!!mg _.,. polftical lndion' documen·
urirs by Anand Patward han 207 Delaware Aw 8

CAII£EII HORIZONS: THE YEARS AHEAD'
Max Jacobs ol ~ Servica. 11&gt;0 ciWnnan ol
the Unl&amp;ed Way of Syffalo apd Erie County, Will
keynote IO(ia\/t career tnformation prolgram which
is d...,.ed IO sodol..- ~rT..,., Oinong

p .m

•

~

~

Spon..,ed by Med.. Sludy/Buffalo

Room. Ellicou. 10:30 a.m . lnformation tabWI.
lobby ..... ha-m · 2 30 p .m
Sponso&lt;vd by lhe.Un._y - J o o d c.,-..,.
Guidance office In c:Oopera~ wnh ilie C_Ommunily

Copen lounge~

Advisory

COurd

Rep&lt;aen(Od

..

for the aged CThe' Uppt~r ElmWood 'Senkw Center,

the Amhml Se:nior ~ . the ~I Church
Home ol WNV , and the Erie County ~nt ol
Soaol Servica) . akoholocs. 11&gt;0 blind, chid•en and
youlh (Colhollc Chanlies. Chid &amp; Family SeM:es
of Erie County, New York State Oiviskm for Youth ,
end T n nity Oaycare Center) Also. community

centers, drug c:ounsehng ser.oices. crisk centers.
hospital sodaJ Hf'V'Iees. mental heakh and
psychlalrlc car~t u nits. mn'ltal re1ardarion prognum .
programs fOJ the handa pped . recreatiOn agencie5.
the Un11ed Way, and the Red Cross

PEDIATRICS RESEARCH SEMINAR•
Cdut.r S..is fOf Gen«~~tion of Antibody
Diversity, 0. Alexander R Lawton . pofessor of
pedi.aub a nd maobiology, Untveriily of Alabama
in Birmingham Board Room . Chddren's Hospital

12 noon
IIITCHEU. LECTURE SERIES: MARCEL
OPHULS RESIDENCY
Scremlngs of A SeaM of
Akten Coun
Room, O'Brian Hal 1 p m and 8 p m . SpoMored
bv the M ~ Lecture Saia. Facuky of Law a nd

r...o..,

Jurioprudencc
llriiiS Ophuls' l JS..m lmtSIIt dqcumentary on the
upheav.t in NOf'lhlltm Ireland. Structured around
fot. dulhs. ftdudlng dW)IC ol an tnfaot and a
odlool1(1&lt;i, 11&gt;0 111m w o s - by Vlncon1 Con·
by .. -. beou1Jfulypholopphed and odded •econl
oi~

....... -

PSST: PROGRAM FOR S11JDEHT SUCCESS

TIIAINING
~

lhcG&lt;. . . s,.-. IOC..,.n

H.a. 3-5 p . m . fTec to .. •ude'lts Reglller at 110
-

cal 636-2807
This ""'""""" will ,....,. the Un"""*Y'•
0&lt;

.,...em,lndudlng

whal 1he d&amp;en1 gnwla
~MM . what lmporutnc:e tMy haw on your rec:onk

jpoding

and whM a swdent'sopuons ..c~gnda.
Some wtl oloo be oonduCIOd on lfOOC(
awdy Nblts t.e.cJc il Prafeuor Vlclor Ooyno.
Dcportmonl ol English.

LAW

Friday- 26

... . '•' : • b ..:

wlll be agonolo pr~ -

a ECONOIIJCS ~

IIEETING•
406 O'!!rion Hoi 3 .30 p .m . Tho gual opak«
wt1 be Jmy L Moohow, . , . - .. Law. Yalo
Law School, who will.,._ • - on "D u o -

.. s-1 c.. Aa:ounllng -

•

-~~~N JIIIEAKFAST
Mkldle Mal\llgen, and Colllltge Praide:nts,
Donald E Walkct , pru\d~n t. Southea!;\ern
Massachusetts University South DUling Room . Ciet
HaU. Niagara University 8 a.m . FOf &amp;ddiUona lln·
forma tion . contact the Oepanment of H;gher Ed .

479 Baldy
Walker has authored more than twemy publica ·
tions. his ln05l recent being The E«ectfw Ad·
minkttator: A Practical Approach to Problem
Solving, Dec:Won MakJng and Campul Leader·
ship.

y-. -

Cow1room. O'!!rion Hoi. II o.m.
This dimaus • weok ol oaeonlngS o1
Man:ol Ophulo' docum&lt;ni&amp;Oylilrm _...,.od by ....
Mttchd Lecture Series of the School ol Law. flm·
...._ Ophulo will ..,_ 11&gt;0 pladonn wllh Telford
T~ . ~ishcd legal tchoiM ond U.S . f"'...,..... a1 Nwemberg whooo book on NW'embesg
and V'oetnom lnophd Ophuls' The 11....., .,.
· and U/ B professor Michael frllc:h.
CONFEIIENCE ON AGING"
eo.w....... · Squn. 10-11:30. wllh

lunch In 11&gt;0 Haymes Roon\ hom 12·1 p .m . Tho
!W .......,, on "policy." will be g;vcn by Dr.

Blosoom Wigd&lt;J&lt;, dftc:IOI' ollho i'rogo'am In Geron·
tology at the University of Toronto. At 10:45, a
MC0nc1 . . . - will be given by 0.. Willlom Forl&gt;es.
pofessor and dean , Department ol Mathematics,
UnNersi!y of Watedoo; the topic: "'Research ."
Sponsored by the Muitidi!dplinary Center for tM
Study of Aging. fOJ further information . call

831 ·3834.
CAII£EII HORIZONS : THE YEARS AHEAD"
Gowmment-educadon-commu.niclltiOM day.
Keynote speaker: Stewart Dan. news dtrector,
WGR-TV. Talbert Otning Room. E1bcou. 10:30
a m . Information tabies. Capen lounge and k&gt;bby
are.. ll a..m. · 2:30 p.m. $ponKved by the
Untversity Plaument and Car2er GuJd:a.J\Ct office in
coopemion with the CommunHy Advisory Council .
-Manning lab&amp;es today u.8 be repreantatives of
feckral , state. dty, and county cMl servk:t, the Erie
&amp; ~ Counly Regional Planning lloMd,
boank of educ.ation. teachers' unions. art agencies,
lllrarie$. law 5ei'Vices. )oumalism and media . and
photogt""aphers who are ln private bustnesl .

PEDIAtRIC GRAND ROUNDS•
Common J.mmuoode6c:imda: Recognition,
Evaluation. Trut.ment, Or Alexander R. Lewton .
pofessor of pediatrics and microbiology, University
ol AlabMla in IXmingham . l(jndJ Awditorium.
Chik:lren~s Hospftal 1 t' a .m
ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
COLLOQUIUM'
Engineer Neville Jacobs wtll discuss Solar
Hea.Ung In Buffalo. 123 Wilkeson . Noon . Bring
bag lunch

MITCHElL .LECTURE SERIES: MARCEL
OPHUI.S RESIDENCY
Marcel Ophula: P•.e.l

Dt.cuMion •nd

U/8 compoeer Leo Smlt hao a ,_
- a . 'Magic Waton.' bet"' lnb'oduoed by the U/8 Opera WOibbop
nat Monday and Tlladay at Bullalo

s-Jaa .

st uden~

$1.50.

Marion Brando depk:ts a midd5e-aged American
in Paris who begins a bizan~ relationship with a
young French woman (Maria Schneider) alter his
wUe's sukide as a kind of ac:ape/ answer. Bapned
1
in Italy. this film &amp;roused h wh~ it \l{&amp;s sJ\ov,m
{but did wonders for the sate of buner) .

MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY SEMINAR•
Recent Advanca In Aaymmdric Induction,
Mm Suto . gra d student , Oepanment of Medicinal

Saturday - 27

C h--em isny. U / 8
Refred'tments

Peop~ interested In pro moelng the b6cyde as a
ma;or means of transpoo;atiOn wUI meet to diScuss
bicyde problems and determine po1itb1 strategies
Involved a re me mbers of the N!agara Frontier
TransportaUon Committee's citizen advlscxy group,
the Niagara FrontWr Bicyc~ Oub. and U/B facuhy
Squire HalL 9am · 2p.m
There are bicycle coalitlons aoiv~t 'in NlltW York
Oty, Toronto, Montreal, Bofton , Baltii"DDO'e. Wil·
m lngton , De l., San Juan , Puerto Rico .
Philadelphia. Minneapolis, the State of Maine , Ver·
mo nt , Arizona . California , Oregon, Washington
and 11&gt;0 O!Sirlcl ol Columbia. Now Buffalo bicydisu
are on the move .
The bicycle is a simple , light weight , non·fuel·
consuming, health-promoting , lr&amp;nsponatlon
deva that has a diltfbile place ln the transportation
mbc, lls proponmts contend. h1 use has the potential to save biUions of galoru of (uel, cut down on
polu6on ond lud poloonlng (,om liM emlstion&gt;
from cars. and to reduCIIt trafftc deatl-.s.

C l 21

Cooke .

2

p .m

MICROBIOLOGY SPECIAL SEMINAR•
Structure

and

Function

of

the

Major

H'-tocompaUbiUty Complex in th~ Rat, Dr.

Thorpas J

Gm Ill, Departmen1 ol Pa1hology.
Untverslty of P"lttsburgh School ol Medldne 223

Sherman 4 p m

PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR•
Recombinant DNA-The Power, thllt Glory . ..
Ganick,
S l 08 Shennan 4 : 15
p m. Coffee a t 4

(and ..... pononal drO&lt;to), Dr Biochemistry Department

UUAB f1LM•

C..de ol Pw11y (Mexico, 19721 Conl.,.ence
lheatrv , Squire. 4 :30. 7:00 and9: 15p.m General
admission $2 , studmts $1 50.
MINORITY LAW WEEKEND·
The Black American Lew Students As.todation of
SUNY at Buffaao Sc:hod ol lAw wt1 present a
Mln&lt;rly Low WMkend on friday and Solunlay,
Oaobet 26-27 . Featured speaker on both day, wtD
be MI. Alais Jaduon, Ullstant sok:ltor for the
U .S . Ocpanrnent ol Interior. Local attom~y, and
other communlllr:$ dignltarla will also be speaking.
On Friday , ; .. 11&gt;0 P'O!P"m will be held 01 11&gt;0
BUILD Town Hoi, 1420 Main Su.l, bogJnning at
7 :30p.m . On Saturday, tht: pi"'5J"&amp;m will be had at
the Law School Ofl the Amhcnt C.mpus, begklning
• 11 a .m. The communtty is In~ to &amp;end. Hl!jl
and co&amp;eg. lludenu who . . lntonlled In
gong to law tchool are ~ encouraged to
taka part. For more r..fomwttio.ft cal 636-2163,

883-4059 or 874-3581.
.lUST BUFFALO POE11IY IIEADIHGS"
Pntr a... cao.d and Ra Rlc::hl.nl Alcntown
Communly c.n..,., Ill Elmwood AYO. 9 p .m .
funded by 11&gt;0 New YorkS.... Counclon 11&gt;0 Arts
•nd Poets It Wrtt.cn.

'Magic Waters'

UUAB MIDNIGHT FU.M"

Lut Tango In Puk (ltaty, 1972). Conference
Theatre., Squire . 11 :30 p .m . Genentl admission $2.

ll

PSYCHIATRY WORKSHOP•
The debate as to whether mental heahh clinicians
or admkllftrators 5hould manage !'~'\ental heakh pro·
grams in the community wfll be aired at thti con·
ferenu. 5p01150red by the Division of Community
Psychialry and the Department of PsychWJtry
Speak~ at the ewnt . to be held at the Statla
H01el from 9 a m . to 5 p m . wtll include 0. Waher
Barton . Dartmouth Medical School. Or Alan Krait ,
Abany Me dica) College. Dr. Haroutun Babigian ,
Univenity ol Rochester Medk::al Center. a nd Dr
Sovmou• Kaplan . Alben Elnstein College ol
Medldnc .
A paM! debate at 1 ~ 30 p .m . will be hekf by Dr
John TalxMt. Cornell University MediCAl Conege ,
and 0.. Arthw Jost . Kings View Foundalion Also
ltheduied to speak Is Phihp Weder, acting director
.. lhe Oftlcc ol ~ o.v.lopment IO&lt; 11&gt;0
NlltW York State Offk:e ol Mental Heakh

Rex Richard ls a guitarist and composer and
maker of instnunents. Born in California in 195 1.
he has been busy composing new music for flute .
guilar and other insrruments usl:ng lhe works of
J~ , Basho. Camus. and Peter Blue Ck&gt;ud.

P«ter Blue Ooud WM bom into Turtle CLan.
Mohawk · 01 Coughnow9 Raavc In
Quebec . In 1969, he .... olll&gt;elndlon . . . _ .
ol Alcovu - . he publishod 11&gt;0 Abtraz

- . Hciopoooyed•cwoi_ N...._
Ho .-!Wain !he Sinn! N..odo loolhillo wllh hlo

r.mJy. - . . Cora s.-beny Prno In 191'9,

.... published by

PEDAL POWER COALITION •

FOOTBAll.'
SL ~,owr....,. U............ RoiM)I Field. 1:30

p.m.
Last home game of the su.son for the slumping
Bulk who've lost thft \all three.
Will ll&gt;ey , _ lhtt punch? Wll J;m Rodrlguu
•&lt;member how 10 llvow .... bill? 0. will ..... Ju•
meekly!Oko Oln ll&gt;eear? 1
You have to be theu to ftnd out.

UUAB FllJit •

...... lkMitr Snoldloft 119781. Con·
Theau.. Squire.. 4 : 15, 6 :40 .nd 9 p .m
Genmoi admiloion $2: •udenb $1.50.
K - M&lt;Carthy. lhc -ro - · .._.
fermee

through the ltrftts shouting, ""llwy'rs coming!!!" • .u
he did 22 ..................... cx~g~na~....- .........
lut Wftlcend ...... mldnigN ........

DRAMA·
Ghoolo, by Henot&lt; iboon. Cen1e l'heoUc . 681
Main Su.l. 8 p .m . S4 ,.._.( admlstlon: S2
lludenu a n d - - - 10. 1'1-eMnlod by
lloponmonl and lhc c.n...

..,. n... ..
1\esurch.

r.,-

1'lMn ll drama In deception, apeclaly ln td·
deoepdon lu •ny web ollia and c:::onculm«nts un ·
fokls , unQpiNd Maets . . r~. Henrie.
lbM:n's Gho.tl i1 such • llory. The COYer«i· UP
-

ol .... . . , _ muUdly all......

�October 25, 1979

7

AJoys;us J . Quobbomonn, _ , . . . poofaoor
l&gt;epl.rt.- d. Phonnocology. Univonlly d. """':
naoca. 102 Sherman. 4 p .m. Refreshments In 124
Farbo.ot3:45.

FIUI (FIUI HISTOIIY) •
Doodar (lang, 192ll,. l46 Dlofondod. 7 p.m.
Sponoond by lfw Conte f"' Media Study.
PSST: I'IIOGILUI FOR STUDENT SUCCESS

TRAINING"
-.. ...._Yoar~lo­

~-- 2325qu&gt;-o. 7·9p.m. Sponoond
by PSST. Free to ad students . Regliter •t UO Norcon or cll636-2807._
Leam what maka some speakers more
underst.ndable and tnfluentilll than ocher. and
techniques for improving your own liPQ!Idng and
listening stu1ls. Leader Is Paul Kowalewski . doctoral
student. Department of Communication.
·

!iva d. the next,
Gholts treca the COW'M of decay that destroys
1he Alving famiy . Mn. Alving. Widow o1 the
ed Capurin AMng, hu neve d;odoted !he
ruth about her lafe husband to thdr son, Oswald.
egina, !he A!vings' Mold . Is ........,,.ed by ....
ather and taunted by the seam tn hts past. Pastor
a.nden has ant!'mpted throughout to sotve the
iSputes ln a decorous and socialty aa:eplZtble way.
Ward WIIMmson, diredor of lui season's Sum·
e:r People guides thii production . Anna Key
, William Gonta, Mary Jo l..ipinayk. Paul
wale&lt;: and Richard Wesp star.

Ghosu runJ Thursday-Sunday. through
ow:..t..;-li.'Cu1bln ls''••'~~ ~. nr on ntu...tay
,
gh Saturday and at 3 p .m . on Su~y.

l:ii'ts

t

production is made ~ kl part by

ii.M~PAL ~ Projecu.

A Tribute to 50 YNn o1 the American Musk:al
. Um, Part II : Pal .Iorey 0957) , with Fnmk Sinatra,
!Ia Hayworth and Kim Novak. Erie County

...-, ~~ ~u:y7~.~=-n cha'9f,;.

Frank 5mau-a's rendiUon of 'The Lady is a
standing to apJHaud whe:n
JhsfUmf.,. ployedNewVOI'I&lt; Oue.all , though. thb
Hara . Rodgen and Hart .story about a heel
mething in the nan5ition from stage: to Kteen .

1 ramp~ .h&amp;d moviegoers

E

WEENPARlY'
Music ol Ph..,.. and the magic d. At&gt;.IM.
Fargo Cafeteria. 9:30p.m. General admission $2:
Colege feepa- $.50. Spomomf by Cllff.,..d Fur·
~~. Co8egc of Mathematical Sde:nces, and

!

UUAII FILM •
lnvulon d. tbo Body Snatchora (1978) .
WokJman Theatre , Amherst. 4 :15, 6 :~ and 9
p .m. GenetaJ admission $2: students $1.50.

UUAB FIUIS"
My Name Ia .lulia RON (1945). 7 p.m.; Tho
KUlas (1946). 8 :15 p .m . Woldman The:atre
Ainh..,, moadmlssion .
·
Jun. Rou is e gothic swpenser about a young
woman who beoomu e seaetary for a weahhy
man. Whm the awakens one morning. she finds an
traces of her klenttty as Julia Ross have been
destroyed .
'The KIUaw, with Edmund O'Brian . Ave Gardner
end Bu11 Lancaster, is a taut aime drama , an
elaboration of Ernest Heming'.r.tay's short story
about the man who does not try to escape his
killen. Bun Lancaster's film debut.
U / 8 OPERA WORKSHOP PRESENTATION·
ThrH one-act oprraa.: ..The.MegieWater'' byl..eo

Monday- 29
MICROBIOLOGY AND PATHOLOGY
SPECIAL SEMINAR•
Ia~ Production In Murine Lymphoqrk
Cultures, Dr. Holger Kirchner. Institute oi Viruli
Raurch , German Canc:e:r Research CAnter.
Holdel&gt;ag, w... Gemany. 223 Shennan. 4 p .m
PHARMACOLOGY •
THERAPEUTICS
SEMINAR•
Quantttadon olin Vtvo Rm.1 Metabolifm, Ot.

Smtt; UHin und zurudc." r'There and Back") by Paul
Hinc:lemlth. and "Amelia at the Balr' by Gian Carlo
Menoni. Buffalo Semin.aty Audttortwn . 8 p .m .
Gary Burgess is the dlr"ec:lor of the producUons, and
James Xasprowia is the db-ector of the Untversity
Philhatmon\a. lltkets available at the dOOf.

General admimon $4 ; U/ B facuhy , staff. alumni
and senior dUzen.s $3, and students S 1.
Tftls wtl be the world premiere performance of
Smit's ~-

This new opera is about a mad scientist and is
based on a short story by NatNinWI Hawthorne.

Tuesday- 30
SEMINAR•

U.e of Technology In Tuching. Dr . Thomas
Burford, assodate director of EducationaJ Communk:attons Center. 25 Capen . 1· 3 p.m. Spon·
sored by Student Affairs.
An opportunity for anyone Involved In teaching
to learn what A-V resoUrces are avaiable on Cllm ·
pus and how to effec.tively utilize this technology m
the classroom. Praented es part of the OSA
Teaching Effectiveness series

p_..,_

GEOGRAPHY LECTURE"
Spatial Analysis d. Biological
Prd.....,.. Robe&lt;! ,Sol,o(, Dopartmonl ol Ecology 8,
Evolution , SUNV/ S(ony Brook. 268 C.pcn . 3:30
p.m. Spon""ed by the Dopartmonl ol Goognophy.
U / 8 OPERA WORKSHOP PRESENTATION"
Three one-act opent:S: "i"tie Magic Water" by Leo
Smtt ... Hin und zuruck" by Paul Hinde:mith , and
·· Amelia at lhe Boll'" by G\an Carlo Menoui. Bufta)o
Semi"\ary Audflotium . 8 p.m. Gary Burge:u is the
dlrecto.- of the productions . and Jamu Kasprowicz
is the director ol th!! Unlverliily Philharmonia.
Tk:kets available at th4! dooi. General admission $4 ·

U/ 8 faculty . staff. alumni and seniM cillzeru $3;
and students $ l

Wednesday~

31

QAL INFORMAL LECTURE SERIES·
Demonscralion of the Radio Shack PRS-80
Microcomputer. 213 Baldy. lW'hh•en 12 and 4
p m Briefintroduruonsw•llbcconductedatl2 IS
I 30 and 2 45 p m Sponsored by tM Quantnatrv;
AnaiY51S Lab

::c~~~ENCE COLLOQUIUM• (AND

!UUAII MIDNIGHT FILM"

I ' - T....., Ia

Porlo (ilaly, 1972) . Cont...enco

'Thoan. Squke. u ,JOp.m. Gonenladm;ulon $2;
looudont5 $1.50.

Sunday- 28
BFA RECITAL.

IWal Roa. flu10. BUd Rocllol Hal. 3 p.m.
IUoislmg 11tti1b ... bo Joocph WaliOr, hwptlchonj
and _..,, Anno Moao, piono; Walle Hun1,
drums, and PaW Schmid , double baa. Free admit'"'" · Sponoond by the Dopa1mont d. Musk:.

f'RIENDS OF VIENNA a.u11 PROGIIAJI"

-am.

Tho Fnonds d. VIenna Club wll apon .. .....,.,,
with • lpOCioJ _... ond \lltnnao Tho pel.,.,.,.,.. ......... piau In the lntomational

lnstttu~e , 864 Dtiawarc, at 3 :30p.m . Admission iii
&amp;... bul-.,orewo~&lt;omoo .

"-tnt Eur_.,

Porty Syot...,., Prof....,.

Ruder Wiktcnmann. University of Mannheim (Germany) and adjunet member ol the SUNY/ Buffalo
Polltkal Sdmcc faculty. 684 Ba&amp;dy. 3 p .m. Facutty
and students are cordially Invited .

PSST' PROGRAM FOR STUDENT SUCCESS
TRAINING"
Worbhop on~ Loodonhlp Slol8o. 108
Norton . 3-5 p.m. Fret 10 all lludents. Register at
llO Norton"' ca116J6.2807.
learn how to cr'ICXM.ltag« partiCipation in ~p
adivltla and dedsions. how 10 deiegata raponIYitMts, and design and e:va!uatc programs whk:h

=:~.:=.J~Pl:·.~~t.-'~
'"' Policy Sludia.

CHEIIUCAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR•
. Tho Uthkua/lodlne P........_ Botwy Dr

Curtlo F. Holmes, Wlhon Gr-ldl.

·-~.. - •. ..a.•

'Ghosts'
Ma.y Jo Uplnayk (left), • Regina,
confero with Mro. Alvlng. her employer
and patron, pleyed by Anna Ka~
France~ In • scene &amp;om lbHn's
"Ghocta" bdnt prcocnled by the
Cenler for Theatre RC~ATch, October
~7 through November 11 at 681 Main
trftl !Th.....S..,. through Sundays).

Lui." 10i

Baldy. 4 p .m. Refreshments wt1 be MfWd from
3 ,3().4 ,

�•

:

,...

•

Oclol.r 25, 1979

I

4'

_

•Geae

..... .. -. .

Maintenance worbr hlld been told by his
supervisor that he could take the geese 10
they could be properly cared for. When
students saw him drive up In a truck and
try stuffing the three into bags, "they
nearly rioted" accordlng to reports, and
quickly summoned Public Safety ofl'~ars
"'ho set the matter straight.
According to Peter Gold of Rachel
Carson College. which Is Interested a lso
In seeing the three fowl through the
w1nter. the geese have .. trained the
Wilkeson stude nts" to throw food &lt;&gt;ut to
them when they honk beneath their win·
dows Gold a lso speculated the three

~~ be trying to enrol In Tolstoy
In light of the Untvenlly's allrilion
problems, the geese are espe&lt;:ialy
welcome In that they seem determined to
stay regardless of all practical objections
to !heir matriculation.
Perhaps. they will become one of those
" traditions'' the attrition/ retention com·

mlttee ha~ suggested be developed on
campus.
Despite the fact they are all called by
ganders' names, there may well be a
" mother goose" in the crowd. So even if
the Un iversity's enrollment doesn' t go up
next spring, its goose popu~tlon may.

ieCalendar

..

I!UCaK:AL-....__.,.-.
c.-. ., -

__

- . Eugene . Klcinbotv. NMitomotia.
SUNY Bullolo. J02 DWondod. 4 p.m.

Aft--

I.,.

""'-"·
A -

POnDI COUOQURJJIIIEIIIES'

te

'r v......, Ia Flaw 11lro.eh

s....

· 4 p.JII. Cdl.. ... bo
.. 3:45. 5poNond bv the

Unlwnloy. 70 -

-Dopo.t.... sool- Chcmioby.

I---.

Moot.o ....

tho

a-.Dr........
In
S&lt;onlolowDublsld.,....

, _ ol medJcol l m m u -. Un i - ol
Toronto. 223 Shaman. 4 p.m.

- I N GAllE ntEOIIY•
Wloottoo-~?Pn&gt;I....,.Anotol

Ropopoot, ~ ol P¥hology, Univonlty ol
T......,. 2100'1lrion. 4 p.m.
l'rofaoc. Ropopoot .. the ol widely rud

books. T _ . _ Go.. T - , ond N........
Go..,_,, ond hosclonc .,..,.,. ...non the

dllommo """'"· 5poNond bv the Doport-

-

mcnt ol Ea&gt;nomlcs.

FIUI CfiU( HISTORY)'
- . . . . (Mumau. 1922l. 146 Diefendorf. 7
p .m SpoMored by the Center for Med\a Study.
Tho &lt;&gt;&lt;Vnol Gcnnon .... ol Drocula. ,..,.,..,
rm\MM The MW Vft'lion was playing at 1M Como
lMl Wftbnd.. still may be If ~ care

-··

UUAII WEDNESDAY NIGHT SPEClAL'
_N...,~ 7pm : ThcFhocThouuncl

F - . . ., 0.. T (1953) , 8:45 p.m. Confuence
'l'twatre, Squ\re. Frn adm~ .
Aa&amp;...ttoe Nilght is a prewntation of 11
.....ted sbons. c:ovcring ,,. high In the
hlllooy ol Holyo&lt;lod c:onoonlng, mdlng 1ho1
d.luic screen c:onfronu.Uon , S.mbt Mn.b
Goddllo.
1"'M Flw ThCMM.nd fl.,.e:n is one of
H~'• hnes1 fan..-. dovlled bv Dr Se""'

ELECTRONIC ART SEJIIES'
Japanae expetirn4mtal wieo Pfaertt~ by film
end video arust T~ka llmura . Medta Study/ Buffa&amp;o.
207 DNware A.v« 8 p m
81- Victory (Roy) 147 Diefendorf 9 p m
s,on.o.oc~ t., .,. Cent.. r.. Medoo Study
Rkhard Button . Cun Jurgens, Ruth Rom.n An
interallng J)ftloOf\AJ ~ JMyed OUI agaW\11 a
bodqpoond olthc Afric.on oompolgn during Worid

w.n

Thanday- 1

T- .

Bade . Sn.drich-~ Untwnily. lnltilute for
Hllloov. Erlongon, Wat Gamony 260 c_.,
I 30 p m s,.o.-cd 1, the Doportmcnt ol
Hlo1ooyE-.....wc~oomc

UUAII FIUI '
P•cwal (Manca, 197
Wo&amp;drn.n T'hatnr,
Anthcnt 3· 15, 6 10ond9p m Gonftolcdm-..
$2. llUdcn1s $1 so

A&amp;fl.to-.. olcMng_to . .....O.

.... - , . . . ol the ---uoyt.,mdng
Ctntim de TI"DYCC' famous rom.not ·in·vertt:
..... the Mlturion Knl!;tl, P""""'ol ol Wola.

s----.-

PHYSICS~•

Q.e.D. ,_.,., . .

o.- -

D.J
UnMnoy
m..aak 3 .30pm Cc&amp;.M3. 15

454

•

clocu~

Nm.
lhclogcnd.ory

~ ...... fndov.,- 16. ...
leaveSqt.*e forTororWo.t lla.m. and wtlmum

-

ol~9p . m.

~
Sired: 10 a.m. end 12 noon Con......,n'Citopel; 8 p.m. - 51. Joocph'._ 3269
M• St.: Amherst: 9:15a.m .. 10:30, noon and 5
p.m. - Newman Center, Ellcob.
Monclov-Frtdoy. 12 noon - Ncwmon c.n.....
MainSt. &amp;~Avc . ; 12noonand5p.m. N«Wman &lt;Ant•. Elicott.
S.turc&amp;.y. 9 a.m. - Newman Center on both

1lcbto 1oo thor....... ""' . . $11 lot- otudcnb:
$20 ... the puYe:, tndudlng- olboa ond admtolion . Fot- tnfonnation and racrvations, cal the
Black Student Union, a1831 -S421 .
l.EC1UII£
A lec:bn en1lllod "Monopoly Property ond
Sltakeopu.&lt;'o Rlchonl U" will bo gjwn by Poor...., Jock H. t~&lt;xte, dis1lngulobed pro~....,. o1
hlo1ooy. WMitinglon llniwnl1y ., St. l..ouio, on

compu5a.

CAntOUC SEIIVICES MAINTAINED
Tho ol the Co1holc Compos MlnloUy
Newman Centers will again offer fatival MIIMa on
the principol Roman C..hok Holydoys. A Holyday
M1111 fOf the convm~cnce ol studatl&amp; and staff wdl
be &lt;:eltt:nted at noon on ThUJ'Jd..y, November 1,
Feast of AI tM Saints, in Capen 10, Amhcnt Campus. and in the Allmore Room , Squire Hal, Main
5u-Ht 1M urnc dwduW: wtl be obM-rvtd for Ash
Wednesday, Fcbru.., 20, 1980. ond ......_
Thu.oday. Moy 15 A Mou will bo cclcbrlllcd also
on the Wednesdays ol t..n1 from Fet.twy Z7
dvoustt April 2 Inc_., 10. Am'- .
For the Nowmba I Feast of All S.lnts. the FrontMtt Road Newman Center Chapel, Amherst. has
~u led a ~ Mus fOf October 31 a.1 5 p.m .,
and Muses M noon and 5 and 7 p.m . on tht: Feast.
T'he Main St. Newman Center US Untversity
Avenue) wW ha~ an 8 a.m. M. . and one at the
Canmlician &lt;Ante 1117 p.m.
Tho M... 51. c.m., hos cddcd Slllu M.y Ann&lt;
Slntunle. G.N.S.H .. •ndF- M..,_Gasldn u
-.,to
Jock Chondlcr. Tho~
Cen1or ;....rred bv F..,.. Edwwd flohu. Y1cor lotcampus mlnloUy "' the D1ocae ol Buffalo. and
Father Chrtstian Puehn Both centen are opm dally
from 9 a m to 5 p.m. fOf a fullpfldnlm of religious
and counseling SftVk:el to 1he University
communhy.

Nove.mber:6at4p.m. iD The KNa. IWdyHal. ProHexta- il authOf ol. ,._.... Utopia!: the
l&gt;loso'ol&gt;hY ol 1111 ideo and _ . . . . . .. hlotooy.
E_,.... ~welcome . Thlo lectwc to oponoored bv
the departtMnts of Engbsh and HiAaty.
fa~Gt

MANAGEMENT SEMINAR'
"'w WOCDUi M......- In • ~ Cbangl:ng

Euao-

F-

_,cHEE5£ TASTtNG EVENT
The U/ 8 Alumni Aslodasion in\11ta you to this
event, to be led by Mr. Michael Whelan, wine
monogcr. l.lqUO&lt; Co.pontlon, Satunloy,
Novtrnt:Je 3, M 8 p m. in the Faculty Oub Dining
Room . Hmimon Hall Donation: $5 per .....,.,.
The Wina ~na- LAutentiu.y Kabrt«tt 1977;
Chatuu Ferrande. 1977: Chmas 1978; Owuu
Seeute;ou.r: 1970: Souvnain c..bnnct S.uvignion
1974 Tho Chcaa Brio Sup.cmc. Dowt DeMon..,..., l1olian
Goud.o. Bucltm&gt;n St. Sovlol.
R«MrVadons ~ be tWn on • ftrst-conM bash
lJmil 100. Poid · - a n due bv Claobct- 29
Col 1hc U/8 Alumni · 831-4121 . Ia&lt;
more lnfCJPna60n.

F...-.

INTEJINATIONAL COJ..ILGE Dlll£CTORY
The lnWI'nMk&gt;nal Co1tsJ1: .. now prCJ*fns an .d·

- . . poleldol-dcndum 10 the

DlneterJI ol F....... -

lloool~fot-

._
1979-1980 Copto.oloot-t

been
- .. deMt. dop.uncnl had, ond .........
Addition~~~ c:op.. . . ~ In K:"s OfRcc
1636-2351) ~ ~~&lt;town q - bv
~31 . 1V19 .

to

n-,......_ ..

w--....

-.riNG PlACE
Tho W.tllng Plooc 1o • !no dRip-"' W1itlng . . . lltolwolc:omco-atony-oflhc-tutors who
· Taltc
~ ol ""' quolflad ..t11ng
provide cwcfuJ responte to bod-t thaN
haYing baUble u~ on lind
polislting • fino] dnll. Come ....... in 336
&amp;ldy Hall on the Amhcnt C.mpuo. Ow ltouB 1hlo
semester are.: Monday through Friday, 12 noon u.nUI 4 p.m.. and Mond.oy. Wednaclay ond Thunday
evening~ ,

6 unti19.

F......,. s-.

WRITING 1UTOIIS

s-. c:..tslde •tncxtng 1n
the W.t~~ng Place. Yoo will bo .-.fuJy 1l'aOied to
help""""' Improve- wri1lng while you Improve
your own. Contact Barbara Gordon at 636-2394.

Exhibits
ADIRONDACK IIIAGES

.. 831 -20Z7.

Kevin Noble, Rill film : .1o1ut M -•
SX-70 Po&amp;..o;do. Alomo Gollay. Beet. HaD.
Gaiety hours, 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday
lluough Friday. Opening -..ned unUI next

Couples_!.. ......._, ConJo..nca ...
bo held at the Newman Cent..-. IS Unlwnlty Ave.
on the foloMng dates at 7:30 p.m.: Sunday, Qc.
tobot- 28: Tuadoy, Oaobot- 30. ond Sund.oy,
Nowmbcr 4. For reservations cal 834-2297 .
SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI C.UB
r:uumn now through Odober J0 fOf an opening on
the board of cbrecton SubmM raumes to Room 7.
Squlno Holt.

SCHUSSIIEJSTERS SKI CUJB
"1

Tho lot- - . ....,.._ ..
- I S , o n d . . . . , . . _ _ ... ...........,
ond-ktl,-l.IV19.
Pruklent'1 Commltsion on Whl!tt HouM
F - . . P.O. Boo n37,
D.C.
20044. F"' f""'- """""-'·col Dr. M. ~
!loco, 636-2901. "'

An cxhi&gt;k oll8 pho1&lt;9ophs bv Rollcn E. Jlw.
too, dit-ect«. ol l.harieo ., SUC/ PiaiUbtagft ond,
formerly assistant dlreclor of University Ubrarta for
Publk: Savic:a at U/ B. M.am Foyer of Hulth
Sciences Library, Stockton Kimball Tower .

NEWMAN canati'RE-CANA CON·
FERENC£

P..-.. """' think they n&lt;ed denial won. ond
woukl »tc to t&amp;ke pan in a study of patimt r:apoi'\K
to r:outine dentaltteatment 6houkl contact Or. Nor~n L. Corah at 831-441 2. Voluntnn mUll not
current~ be under the care of a Mntist Participants
wUI receive dental examinatiOn and lt·rays to dda-·
mine how much routine treat~! they require.
Two ftiMngs will be provided bv 6 de.nUSl as part of
the Oludy Spon...-ed bv ,,. Doportmcnl ol
Bmavtor.al Science

n... .. no~ •

DcvorlopiQg
Sldlt. " the
tide ol. atwo-day
Sft'l'dnar for women . to bt given at
the CaMn T. Kraus Confererv:.e Center In Crosby
Holt. Nooemt- S ond 6 . Tho oem'""'lead.. will bo
Or. EAizabcth B. Adams, auodllte profeuor of
managanmt ec George Washington Unlversly,
who has held management posiHonl with lBM and
served .. 1111 offJcc, in the U.S. Morine Co&lt;p..
FOf further tnformation, contac~ Cynthill Fairfiekl

Tho Schwomelslen 510 Oub to aa:cpt1ng

FR£NCH AND GERMAN WINE AND

HISTOIIY U:ClUR£'
0.... ~ to the Uoi...S s...... ond
~._-10-lale
N - ....S
&lt;Aowty, Dr. Kious J

r-

CAlltOUC N£WJIAN C£JnaJ JIASSES
5otoonJov ~ S p.m. - 339 Squln ond

DENTAL STUDY

FILM (FIUI THEORY) '

"'"' -

- - ond ....... ldne ... b o - - " " WedModoy, 14. 016 p.m. 01 thoO.:.. l4chuwt n..-. Komlngton ond Boloy. b .. !no .... _.. 1o tho pubic.
The boa aan1on 1 o - tho ooJc1.out King Tid

Notlc:a
N....,... c.m... -Complex.

~SPECIALIEJUIIIAII•

Md COIIM Gu.d) .

King

.....,.._~,,...
botng- I,
0.... Tho-

s.w-r. -

- . Dr. o.nr. Johnoon. ......

__ -

1o- tho T,.-"' . .-...-. ...-........... """....,...
tho--

taJIIGTUT~

T.......,_.._....._tho~ldng-

INDEPENOENT FaJIIIAKEII5 IERIES'
o.toe
. . . , . _ , P. Scod.
E1oc:trb1 ~
~..,..__ Flmo. McdlaSoudy/ Buf.
U/B. 338 Bel. 4 p.m. Rofrahmonto oonood from • folo, 2!11 ~Ave . 8 p.m.
!&gt;-5:30.

59'1 l.lP lor our: r:acquetbBI tournament now
through Oc&amp;obcr 31. ThtH Is a S5 rdunc:lal*
doposll .
snJDIES SKilLS lAB
Tho Studios Sldl1. Ub at the Unlvenily Luming
Center-, 368 Bakty HaD. ls open for tutoring in
writi.ng and ltUdtes skill. lhit hours ar:e: Mondays
througft Thund•ys. 12·3 p.m.: Wedneod.oys. 10-2
p m No hours on Friday. The Lab ls open to all

U/ B otudcn15.
U / 8 COUNCIL IIEETING
Tho Nooembeo- Coundl Me&lt;ling II ocheduled f0&lt;
Nowmbet 9 at 3 p.m. in the Coundl Conference

Room. 5th floo. Copen ,

Through~ .

HAU.WIW.S ARTISTS

........

MUSIC UBRARY
20th Centwy Musldllna te Ltteraturc. Music
Ubmy, Bolnf Hall. th•ough Oaobot- 31.
POETRY COlLECTION
JAck K.,ouoc, Poooy CoBoctlon Reading
Room Through November 2 .

POETRY COlLECTION EXHIBIT
New A c q - bv the U/ 8 Poouy/ Ru• Book
CoOection: Recently acquired books. manutaipts
and letters induding pieces by Etta Poond. William
C.k&gt;s Wiliams and RObert Duncan . Aho a crayon
drawing by Rabat Duncan and a dnwklg ol. Duncan by U/ B Art Professot" Harvey Breverman Monday through Friday. 9a.m. to5p.m. in420CIIpen.
Tlvough Octobot-.

On The Air
OCTOBERZ6:
AM Ruffolo: D•. E11io&lt; N. Gole, pt'ol
,
S.hovto"tl &amp; Related Sdonoco. "TMJ (Tem·
,..omandibulw Joint Potn) B;ofeedbadt P&gt;og.am.•
WKBW·lV (Citanncl7) . 10 • .m.

WHITE HOUSE FEllOWSHIPS

The Praident'• Commin6on on White House OCTOBERU:

F......... liM .............t lhcc:un.n~.....,.._,
ondduAta
Tho Whir&lt; House FelowsitO&gt; .....,. to dcolgocd 1o fJ'O"'dc glfted and highly motiY•Ied

Ame1tcans. nrty In the eareas, frstNnd a ·
_ . .. the-ol-thenlllion,ond
• ol pcqonolkt'""- In the lccderohJp ol
the oodcOy
us ... doR&gt;Io •• opply dwing the udy
" " " - ...... ol1hft- oo.profllwre we no t.IC educ:M:IoMII r:equhrnmts and ~
_... ......., _ _ Employoa
oltheF-~annotdigJblc , """the

-

ol.....- - . .......... oltheAilitcd
Corp., ,... F....,,

Sevlcao (Anny, Novy, -

t

,•,

•

-

, ••

~ o.

...... ,

I,

•:..~.....

I

0 - - U: DT. Wllliuo S. HuU1toft,
MIOdate profaeor. Russian, and M50Cial8 dean,
Fac:uky dArts and l....dlen. '"The Do's and Don'1's
ol ~... MUSk." WilEN 1930). 11.05 p .m.
1: M ... Benho N. Cutcbco, c:o&lt;x·
dtnator, Services for the Handbpped. ~ New
Educo11onal Qw..tunllln f0&lt; the Hondicappcd."
WBEN (930) . 9:05p.m.

c,.......,

both.,,.._

~from
may bo '-'don
H........ WBEN-FM (102.51. Qo.
aober27, !t-7am.

~

OCTOBER 19:

c - . . - ...... _

El1ha- -

- R-.Alto- .In- C..
lot. 6 p.m .

on lhe 31• 111 7 p.m.

......
(Otonncl i

�October 25, 1979

800 &amp;osh
pick major

Wharton lists
panelists for
four reviews

in engineering
Of the 3000 &amp;ahman students enrolled this lal, 800 have ~elected an
. , . _ g program as their Intended
major. This Is the largest fmhman class
of e~ In the history of the University, Dr. Howard Slnluss, associate dean of
the Faculty of Engineering and Applied
Sciences, said.
On the national scene, FaD 1979
enrollment of aD college freshmen
planning to pursue a degree In engineerIng Is ~ to exceed 100,000. This
Is the largest enrollment ever of freshmen
in the engineering disciplines and approxImately twice the total national enroDment of 52,000 In 1973, just six years
ago. Slrauss pointed oul
During the 70s, there has been not only a dramatic Increase In total engineering
enroDment at Buffalo, but also a sharp increase In the number of young women interested In engineering, Strauss recalled.
In 1970 there """" 150 students In the
fmhman class. Only seven women were
in that class. In 1979, there are 80
women In the freshman class, or 11 per
cent of the entering student body.
Engineering enroDment data suppUed
by the Engineering Manpower Commission shows U/ B wtth the second largest
fmhmen enroDment In engineering In
New York State In the FaD ofl978. Only
Ctty Co8ege of New York (CUNY! had
more entering students, according to the
published Information.
1979 also produced the largest
graduating class In engineering here: 450
B.S . In engineering, 106 M.S . In
engineering, and 22 Ph .D. In engineering
degrees were awarded. lbere were 46
women degree r~ients In the totals.
1l&gt;e largest number of B.S. degree
graduates was In electrical engineering
with 123, followed by dvil with 104, and
mechanical wtth 88.

FEAS women
form new unit
A new Society of Women Engineers
has been chartered and Is active on campus this faD. Starting last January with
four members, the organ-.. now has
50 active members and Is recruiling
more.
1l&gt;e Society of Women Engineers Is a
non-profit educallonal service organization whose goah arc:
1) serving technical needs of aD
engineers, and
2) serving the special needs of women
engineers.

1l&gt;e second goal is of particular Interest
and, spokespersons for the organization
point out, Is accomplished "by Informing
the public, especla8y young women, of
the qualifications and achievements of
women engineers and the opportunities
apen to them, as well as encouraging
women engineers to attain high levels of
educational and professional achievement ."
U/ B student chapter's 1979-80
olfii:en arc: president: PauUne labedz,
lnduslrial Engineering senlo&lt;; vice president : Marjorie Pogue , Industrial
Engineering senior; secretaJy: KHty Higgins, Mechanical Engineering senior;
treasurer: Barbara -Lux", Eleclrlcal
Engineering sent«; Counselor: Joanne
fii!Dns, Mechanical Engineering grad;
Faculty Advisor: Dr. Wayne F . Bialas, In-

-ry.e

dustrial Engineering.

Asante named
to panel
Mole6 Kete Asante, P&lt;ofeuor. Department of Communication, has been inVIted to for lhrec years on the
Councl lor lnlemeltonal Exchange of
Sc:holus' advioory tcremlng panel. In
this copaclly, he ..... applications
of Arnertc.n ocholan In opeech oommunlaillon for ovewas lecturing and for
advenc.! r-.:11 awards under the
-Hays Ad.. Two ott- members
the oommunlcallon fteld have been
"PPPintad a&amp;. c:onoultlodon wtth the
Amaican Cou ndl on Education and
other agenda.

Buffalo jeweler is
WBFO operetta jockey
Operetta to Gerald Goldsman Is more
than just a musical form of theatre. It's
nourishment that feeds his Intellect anp a
tonic that soothes lils spirit.
For three months now, this Buffalo
wholesale jeweler and father of two, has
been sharing his personal research about
operetta wtth listeners of U/ B 11l!iio station WBFD.
Within the first few weeks of the debut
of the "Operetta Hour." Dave Benders,
program director and acting general
manager of WBFO, received 17 letters of
appreciation . An "unusual response" for
that type of program, he reports.
Each Monday, from 10 a .m . to 11
a .m . Goldsman travels back a century in
lime to an era in Vienna - or three
decades earlier still in France- when the
operetta flourished . He captures his audience not only by the fine selection Of
music he pt.lys from his private collection,
but by Imparting bits of information he
discovered about each composer through
Interviews and texts.
~ ..wao-tr..

Goldsman relayed that in Vienna,
once a composer wrote an operetta

(which generally came packaged with
bite plots, happy endings and elaborate
costumes and staglngj which was
favorably received , lie became a
millionaire almOSI overnight. Producers
from throughout central Europe would
then clamor to stage the ohow. Unfortunately, some of the composers couldn't
handle the sudden "star" status or
wealth, and let the bottle or their libidos
wreak havoc wtth their hves. While the
situation Is lamentable, It makes for
titillating anecdotes about famous musical
personages.
Goldsman has journeyed through
Europe gathering recordings of more
obscure operettas and Information about
them . He considers himKI an operetta
historian and Is quHe capable of carrying
on a 24-hour monologue on the subject .
But he oo-,'t.
What he does do , Is trade bits of Information which he's gleaned wtth his orthodontist brother whom he "tuned-In' to
operetta some years back. Now his sibling
has become quH.e an aficionado himself
and has ledured on operetta at Carnegie
HaD. Although In this ca1e fraternal
bonds ..-e slronges than Individual goals,
Goldsman oboerwd, with a competitive
twtnlde, that lately he suspacts his brother
has been "holding out" on him .

Just how this Buffalo native became so
interested In operetta Is a story In Itself.
Goldsman was always a big fan of Nelson
Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. two
Ame:r1can operetta singers. But one day
while attending an estate sale (where he
still picks up fine pieces of old jewelry), he
pald 75 cents for a recording of a European operetta. The more he played H,
the more his appredation for the fonn
grew. Flnahy, his inteUectual curiosity
took hold and he began doing some Investigative work on this musical genre.
What he found , was that operettas produced In Vienna In the latter paJ1 of the
19th century were Imported to America
years later and rejuvenated as B~ay
musicals. The "Merry Widow" was a
famous one. In fact , U.S . producers at
the lime often sought out composers of
European e~lon .

The mule'• the thlag
The music, not the dialogue or the gay,
contrived plot, Is what elicits an emotional response from the Ustener, emphasized Goldsman . He Is particularly
fond of Vienna operettas because they
• were greatly influenced by Strauss and
· frequently feature melodic waltzes.
Today, operettas are no longer being
produced In this country, and very few in
Europe. Goldsman attributes their
demise here to the prohibitive cost of
their elaborate staging and orchestration ,
lack of decent scripts, and what some
might term their emphasis on "passe"
music- the waltz.
In Europe, on the other hand . the old
standard operettas (of which there are
between 30 to 40) are staged frequently
in cities and towns and are quite familiar
to the people.
Not only Is the operetta not produced
In the U.S ., but It's also dlfficuk to find a
radio station that even plays the muoic.
WBFO Is the only local station that does
so with any regularity. At one time ,
1istenas were able to hear operettas on a
Toronto station, but according to
Goldsman, that program was taken off
the air.
If Goldsman's letters of appreciation
are any Indication, then operetta still has
a I&amp;Hhful contingent of fans In the Buffalo
area.
Wrote one group from Child and Family Services: " It fortifies us against grimmer
aspects of life."
Another simply closed by saytn,ll,
"Thanks for playing the music we like!

•

State University C hancellor Clifton R.
Wharton, Jr .. last Friday announced the
naTMS ofl l educators who have ~
to partldpale In the recently implemented
peer evaluation proce• of the SUNY
presidential review P&lt;Qcedure.
Included was the team to evaluate U/ B
President Robert L. Ketter. two members
of which had already been ferreted out by
Th£ SpectTum.
1l&gt;e educators wiD evaluate the performances of four campus presidents In
teams of three. as follows:
State University at Buffalo : John S .
Corl&gt;aDy. former president , Unlver$ity of
Illinois, team chairman ; Edwin..l'oung,
president, University of Wlscontin , and
David Z. Robinson . vice president,
Carnegie Corporation, and a member o f
the CKy University o f New York Board of
Trustees.
State University al Binghamton (Clifford D. Clark, president) : J o hn W. Ryan ,
president, Indiana University, team chairman; Daniel G . Aldrich, Jr. , chancellor,
University of California at Irvine. and
William B. Boyd, president , University of
Oregon .
State University CoUege at Brockport
(Albert W. Brown , president) : John W .
Nason , diredor, Study of Presidential
Selection and Assessment, National
Assodation of Governing Boards of
Universities and Colleges and former
president of Swarthmore and Carleton
Colleges, team chairman ; Lettie F. Coor,
president, University of Vermont, and
Joseph S . Kauffman , former president,
Rhode Island CoDege.
State University College at O ld
Westbury (John Maguire, president) :
Usle C . Carter, president , University of
the District of Columbia, and Joseph S .
Murphy, president, Bennington College
(appoinlment of the team's third member
Is pending) .
Chancellor Whart.o n said he expected
the first evaluation would begin some
time next month , and aD wiD be concluded during the current academic year.
State University, which In 1973
became the first pubUc university to initiate periodic review of Its presidents,
adopted new guideUnes last June, which
included evaluation by peers drawn from
outside SUNY.
Wharton explained that each team wiD
vts1t the campus of the president It Is
evaluating for a vtslt of u"p to three days.
During that time members will talk wtth
and receive views of the president's effectiveness and performance from the College Council chairperson, elected officers
of the faculty and student body and other
persons deemed necessary by the team
leader. Both oral and written Input wiD be
sought.
The review team chairman wiD then
draft a report to the ChanceUor which
also wiD be used as the basis for discussion berween the Council and campus
president. Alter review, a final team
report wiD be submitted by the Council to
the ChanceUor. along with appropriate
commentary.
Following a conference , the
ChanceUor and campus president make a
final report to the Board of Trustees
which , after discussion, wiD share the Information wtth the campus community.

Collins elected
to AMA position
Dr. George CoUins, Jr .. assodate chief
Internist at RosweU Park Memorial In stitute and a member of the U/ B Council
has been elected to the American Medical
Assodation's Council on Constitution
and Bylaws.
A past president of the Medical Society
of Erie County, CoiUns is an assodall!
clinical profesoor of medicine at U/ B. He
holds a bachelor's degree from Yale, and
has an M.D. from the U/ B Medical
School.
In addition to his actlv~ in organize&lt;
medicine, Colhns was
captain '·' th·
United States Air Force edical l.orps.
has served on the boa•d o f directors of
the Unked Way, and •
m«mber of the
executive committee of the Buffalo
Sabres orga nization.

,

�•

October 25, 1979

_

•Energy war
.....
...... .,
...... mey be clewloped -....d. An

lndumt.l 18tel1Ha would constantly
receive ...,. thot . . - obetund bv the
~ . and could be beamed by
microwave lo a reldwly ...... ~nd
Mllon. A lingle ......... could produce
about 10 lima the electrtcity a lyplca!
nudar plant does, aocordlng to Gerald
O'Neil, who heado the Space Studies In·
llllule In Prtnc&amp;ton, New .Ieney. He
believes the goal Is attainable In 20 years
with proper government support.
Windmills ""' not only making a come·
back, they may become m&lt;&gt;n&lt; Important
than ever. With energy coots soaring,
,.._ ol the country that average significant wind speeds (New York State being
one ol them) are Investigating the poten·
llalo ol various windmill systems. lmprov·
ed ~ Is resulting In tnc:reasingly
effective windmill generators.
Energy derived undetgr&lt;&gt;Und from the
earth's hut Is classified as geothermal
energy. Starn or hot water Is tapped to
tum twblnes that generate electricity. The
. - type to harness is drystrea) -but
this fonn Is a "geological freak" found on·
ly In oeveral
o( the world. One such
plec:e Is Sonoma County, Callfomla,
Where the nation's only large-scale
geolloermal plant Is located. The plant
produces about 800 ~watts , which Is
almost the entire need for San Francisco.
The geothermal planls In the U.S . produce more energy than either solar or
wind power now provides. But the
potenllal for geothermal Is quite Umited
unless sclenttsls can devise a man-made
way of heating water through hot rocks
close to the earth's surface.
Power from water above the earth's
surface Is also being utlllzed. Turbines can
be spinned through the movement of
waves, tides, and currents. A similar process generates power in the ocean when
currents with d ifferent water
temperatures meet each other. These
sources of energy are being ambitiously
researched by numerous companies.

areas

Atnde-ofl
Cost and environmental concerns constitute the major Impasse the energy
business will meet In developing most
akemate sources. Faced with lessening
supplies, large oU companies are throw·
ing vast sums away on hit-or-miss
gambles. Exxon claims it spent more on
research last year than It made in profits.

Exxon and other oU companies wiU
quickly point out that the U.S. oU In·
dustry In total spent less on energy
research last year than did the federal
government, yet the industry accompUsh·
ed much more.

'&lt; •

That Is a fact strengthening any case
againsi the windfall profits tax. Whether
or not the tax is Implemented, however,
and to what degree, the large oU com·
panies - unllke the small oneswoukl stiU have substantial resources to
direct towards research. Yet, the oU in·
dustry Is not the wildly lucrative business
much of the public suspects it to be.
Akhough several oU companies occupy
slots in the top ten of the Fortune 500,
none of them rank In the top ten for
return in Investment in the period coverIng the last ten years.
It foDows that a major part of the cOSI Is
related to appeasing the environment.
Said one od 4!Xecutlve, "Getting oU from
tar sands would be very inexpensive ~ It
weren't for such strict environmental
standards by the government."
" It's a trade-off," admKs Professor
Milbrath . "The people must decide
whether they want to pay mOI'e to get a
higher quality of Ufe."
Maybe ~·sa temporary trade-off. Amid
an the confusing and Interwoven percentages, ~lations and estimates, logic
dictates that the effort will eventually
resuk In an energy independence that Is
Inexpensive and safe.
Says Buffalo resident Robert Welch,
echoing a popular phrase. " It's the
equivalent of war. The American people
know that now, 10 we'D get over k."
An analyst on a recent "Wall Street
Week" program agreed, and even of.
fered .. opinion of how long K will take:
"BecauM ol the oountry' s depth and
I think we're going to see the
light e1 lhe enc! ol the tUnnel, maybe In
just a few yean." Thol's the normal- time
II talceo to win a war.

Healt
benefit

The Penonnel Department has announoed that N.Y. State has once ~n
October as the health lnlurance transfer period. During this month .

~

stJiiiVAB ~ may change their health plan to any other available plan

(Statewide, GHI. or HMO . Heakh Care Plan) . AD transfers become eflectlve

1/3/80.
Haw Is a table comparing benefits provided by each of the three

comparison
~

• - you In making a decision .

options to

'

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�•

Oc:tot. 25, 1979

Is cancer cure burled
under paper avalanche?
ByMerql......,_

Publi&lt;---

Do we abady have within our reach
the .-n:h raults nec:essmy for the
developmental effective cancer therapies
and cura? Tv.oo professors from the
School of Information and liblary
Studies have wrMien a new book that sug~. yes: the answer to the puzzle of
canoer may be buried somewhere In the
appro•lmately five million papers
published In the medical research fleld
ove the las decade.
As raeerchon remain buried under a
paper avalanche, the bves that could
poalbly be saved from cancer's ravages
continue to mount-300,000 deaths
each ye.- at a computable financial cost
ol $11.2 billion and an untold cost of
human suffering In the UnHed States
alone.
The authon al Cogent Communlco·
llon: Overcoming Reading Overload, Dr.
Charles L. Bernier and Dr. A. NeU
Yerkey, believe answers to other major
health problems and the nation's energy
woes may alto lie overlooked in the vast
amounts al published literature.

..uc:a..

Mm- ol
.aQ ,_..
Fifteen years ago, researchers
estimated that not being able to find Information when needed costs the UnHed
Slates over $1 billion a year. Chemical
literature Is judged to be doubling In
volume every eight years; biomedical
literature evay 10 to 12 years. There are
more than 50,000 technological books
published each year and more than
50,000 technical journals publish 4 to 5
million articles a year.
ln some fields, Inventions and new in·
dustrial processes are "re-Invented" lind
"re-discovered" every day. This costly
duplicallon occurs not just from one nalk&gt;n to the next, but within the same Industrial firm, perhaps within the same
plant. The reason Is too lamlllarspeclalJsts can't keep up with their fields.
"It's like Allceln Wonderland," laments
Dr. Bernier, now retired from U/B and
bving In California. "It's al there but H's
nowhere."
Professors Bernier and Yerkey suggest
ways to refine this mass of Information.
"We have actively !Ought a aolullon to
the problem for at least a quarter of a century," Bernier says, "but H's worse now
than 25 years ago because of the amount
and ocaHer of literature and the 70 or so
languages In which HIs published."
People must read fewer, more up-todate words, and they should have the opportunHy to choose what they read more
rallonaDy. A change In the reading habits
of professional people Is necessary and
could trtple etliciei-ocy, the professcn
believe. This oould be brought about by
the use of terse concluSions-condensed
literatures which dlotil1 ocholarty words Into simple oentenoes and describe researchon' findings In a fraction of the
number ol words which ordlnarUy comprise a research ..ticle.

Dallr..........,..._•.............,

Daily periodical terVIces on newsprint
for each ol the majo&lt; technological fields
could also be Introduced, Dr. Bernier
suggests. For eumple, the biomedical
research papers published each ye.would , If condensed tersely to one-tenth
to one-hundredth ol ~ size, fill a
dally newspaper one-fourth the thicl&lt;ness
ol The New y cri: nmea. This paper
could be In two sactlons, one carrying
terse conclusions extracted from papers,
and the other offering a complete
bibliography.
Eventually these newspapers oould be
used to derive anthologies which would
Include uiAnnents selected for their
predicted validHy and permanence.
These anthologla could be further honed ·
so that "uullmete editions would cony In
condensed form all major truths
dilcovered In the prof-..· Bernier

SE

~-

Theoe conclusions could be
stored In computer banks and regularly
lllued In publicallons aVIIIWIIe In llnrlel'
computeriled relrlevalljlllams.
.
'1M IKhniqua for productng these
lane ~~endure

Jot." apla!ns

handbooks would COli

Grad enrollment 'troubling'

•

Yerkey, "but pladng the

cost ~ the value of such a program

Indicates H would be well WOith II."
Wastes In time and money, the fact
that the federal government has already
spent over $100 mdllon on the problem
and the notion that the system would
enable professlonalopeople to keep Informed In their fields 10 to 100 times
more broadly than they can now, make I
oeem perfectly logical that mlllons ol
dollan could and should be spent on
establishment of such a system In each
profession, the professors contend,

Mo.t - . d a raporto- .........
According to Yerkey, muCh of the
literature published Is largely Ignored by
other professionals in a particular field,
who fiercely defend their own research,
facts and theories. This lack of persuasiveness Is a major component In the
professors' case for terse literature.
"These findings must be presented In a
logical
uence so they cannot help but
be con~JQi!:lng," says Yerkey.
"The lack of realizlltlon that literature is
lost and that H Is not persuasive Is costing
us ~ great deal- not only In terms of
money but In human bves as weD."
Because ol this, the government,
library and Information fields, publishers,
agendes, and professional socletles
should be more than willing to contribute
funds to the project, Yerkey feels.

3 staff named
VPAA aides
Three members of the professional
staff have been selected to serve as
"associates" in the Office of the VIce
President for Academic Affairs during the
neKt two semesters.

They are: Dr. Merle Hoyle. associate
director. Educational OpportunHy Pro·
9"'m: Katherine Kubala . adviser. Divi·
sion of Undergraduate Education : and
Rita Walter. senior adviser. DUE.
The appointments are part of an on·
going program In which VPAA Ronald
Bunn selects both faculty and stall in
Academic Affairs who. on the basis of
released time from other University
obligations. work for a semester or less on
a question or questions of major institu·
tional Importance .

United Way

Progress

Precise Hmes during which the three
latest associates wilt serve have not yet
been worked out.

Dr. Hoyle. who holds the Ph.D. In
counselor education from U/ B. has been
head of counseling lor the Educational
Opportunity Program . master of Cora P.
Maloney College. and chairman of the
Affirmative

Action

Pr09rem

of

the

Colleges.
Ms. Kubala has an Ed . M. in secondary
education from U/ B and has been an
academic adviser In DUE since 1967.
carrying a caseload of 700 students per
semester. She has developed special advisement materiels end was formerly

assistant dean of students at Buffalo
State.
Ms . Walter holds a master's In
chemistry from Canlslus and has been an
adviser ID DUE since 1966. acting as a
liaison with Heahh Sciences and Natural
Sciences and Math. She was an assistant
professor at D'Youville for several years.

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pages of the terM newspaper
would dal with broad subjecU In each
general field and would lndudc sub~ to save the reeder time.
The per1odlcal covering biomedical
r....-ch would, for example, have MC·

:lO

Arcttltecture &amp; EnwWonmeniOI o..&amp;gn
Am&amp;!Atton

University goal: $130.000
Tolal railed to date: $84,349.45
Percent ol goal achieved: 64.8

,

�October 25, 1979

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Physicists
convening here '~viant'
Physicists from across the slate will
gatll&lt;!r here November 2 and 3 as U/B
hosts the fourth annual SUNY Physics
Symposium.
1be symposium was aealed to enc:ourage coopemion among the physics
faculties ol the four University Centers at
Buffalo. Binghamton, Stony Brook and
Albany.
This year's program has been divided
..Into sessions on general physics,
sychrolron radiation, low dimensional
systems and condensed matter.
1be symposium will be!;n atl:30 p .m .
on Friday, November 2, with opening
remarks by Dr. Duwayne Anderson,
dean of U/B's Facully of Natural
Sclenees and Mathemalk:s, and a
welcoming address by President Robert
L. Ketter. 1be day will close with a
laboralory and campus tour at 5 :40p.m .
The Saturday, November 3, session
wiD run from 8 :30a.m . to 3 :10p.m .
Among the 18 presenllltions to be
made are tal&lt;s by Akira lsihara, chairman
ol U/ B's Department of Physics and
Astronomy; Elliott W . MontroU, Elnsletn
Professor at the University of Rochesler;
John Quinn of Brown University; Daniel
C . Mattis of U/B and the Polytechnic Institute of New York. and members of the
physics faculties ol the four university
centers.

SAED forms new
international unit
The School ol Archltec1Ut1! and Environmental Design (SAED) has formed a
new Center for Comparative Studies In
Development Planning Education, SAED
Dean Harold L. Cohen has announced.
Prolesoor lbrahlm Jammal has relinquished chairmanship ol the School's
Departmcnt ol Environmental Design
and Planning to assume directorship of
the project through Augusl, 1982. He
was appointed to the new post by President Robert L. Ketter. ·
The focus ol the new center will be to

~~:n

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~~~";dP.:::::::J

differences and be universaDy acxeptable.
Pro/e$sor Jam mal joined the facuhy In
1970, after serving on the faculties of the
untventlies of Southern California,
Washington, Pennsylvania and at Hunter
College.
In 1973, he became a member ol the
United Nations roster ol technical experts
In urban and regional planning

Kozol, 'canned' in Boston,
prefers Castro's approach to schools
Bv Jovce Bucllnoonltl
~~opon.,

St.ff

His father was a Harvard Law and
Medical School graduate who sent him to
a "yankee prep school" where he was the
only Jew. Unfortunately, his classmates
were so Waspish, they "mocked out
Presbyterians."
Then came Harvard' and o Rhodes
scholarship to'{)xford. But he didn'tlike M
at Oxford . The English accents reminded
him ol his prep school and Harvard days
when everybody wanted to be and/ or
tried to sound like they were Boston bluebloods.
Of the English he remarked , "They
sounded like a nation of fakes."
But on to bigger and better things-or
so he thought. Feeling like he was "on
the skids" because he was 28 and "jusl a
writer," he returned home from Europe
and landed a job es a sub In the Boslon
Public School syslem. He was refused a
permanent teaching position because he
lacked the credentials. He was fired eight
days before the end of the sc11ool year.
So went the Ide ol celebrated author
Jonathan Kozol untd he gained fame with
his first tome, Deeth at an Early Age, In
which he wrote of those first teaching experiences In a fourth grade ghetto class in
Boston.
In a · low, half-gurgling voice, Kozol
haltingly spoke of his life experiences,
and laced his monologue with sufficient
gusls of dry humor and sarcasm to keep
the audience amused, If not laughing.
His appearance on the Matn Street
Campus last Wednesday was sponsored
by the Speakers' Bureau of the Student
Association.

Boott- button
KO&gt;IOI told why he thought he was
canned . h seems that back In '65 at the
height of the Civil Rights Movement, he
sported a button that bore the symbol of
the movement, a black equal sign on a
wh~e background . The school's principal
told him, " Mr. Kozol, U's a pretty pin but
don't wear H In the Boston Public
Schools."
What harm could a Utile butt.o n do?
mused KO&gt;IOI. After aU, for aU anyone
knew H could have meant he belonged to
a math club. Anyway. he refused to
remove It , reaiJzlng aU the whUe H wasn't
the button as much as what H stood for; h
was the "Idea of equality" that drove the
"old bag" crazy.
N--Proftt

0..-

U.S. Poe._

PAID
Btdlalo,N.Y.
P - I t No. Sll

Actually. the proverbial back-breaking
slraw came when he was charged with
"curriculum deviation ." The charge
slemmed from the fact that he taught his
sludents poems by the Black poet
langston Hughes, who was categorized,
God forbid , as a "ninth grade poet." The
poem, by the way, was dramatized In
class and memorized by eight
sludents-of their own voUtion.
Jl&lt;ozol did the same with Robert Frost. a
"sl!&lt;th grade" poet.
He had always considered himself a
relatively straight individual; the firing actu.Uy made him more popular with his
friends because they (at lasl) thought he
had "deviant possibllltles."
The Irony, he relayed, Is that two
weeks after he got the pink slip for his
curriculum sins, he was hired by the U.S .
Office of Education In curriculum
deuelopment.
Recalling an appropriate quole of
Twain, he said, "At the beginning, God
created Idiots. That was for practice.
When he got good at H, he created school
boards."
The Cuban operlmeut
One way Kozol believed America
could make significant changes In Its
educational syslem was to "open Its eyes
to other societies." So In 1976 and again
In 1977. he went off to Cuba to examine
how that country -I n only one
y~ar-almost eradicated llltteracy.
He relayed that In 1961 the Cuban
government closed Its schools and sent
100,000 youngslen (40 per cent of
whom were 14 years-old or younger) Into
rural areas to teach the Ulllerale. AI the
Ume, almost one of every four aduhs
couldn't read.
The only things these youngsters took
with them were a lantern and a book.
The two objects thus became symbols of
the campaign.
The book was a primer filled with " active words," ..dangerous words, .. words
"charged with the pent-up passions of an
oppressed people." Two sentences from
II which sluck In his mind were: "The land
Is rich. Why are the people poor?"
"Good question," he assessed.
The young cadre of teachers ate and
slept with those whom they taught. It
became a "lesson of lived equality
between teacher and lllught," KolJOI observed. One young man told him how he
helped a famUy build a .new house so
there would be room for him- to sleep
under the same roof. He wanted to
"struggle along with his people," KO&gt;IOI
explained.
The bespectacled 43-year-old author
told how he skipped IIIQUnd the Island
nation to avoid criticism he "was seeing
only what the Cubans wanted him to

see." What he found was not the "grim
and somber" populace he had anticipated, but "good-natured, happy" Individuals who seemed genuinely proud
of their achieVements.
"Uke a good Acapulco high wltb
nothing stronger than fruit juice,". ~
observed .

A briUiaDt IDOft

Castro was "brilliant" In giving this
responsibility to children, Kozol said . This
runs contrary to how youth are treated in
America, he offered. Here, a "paralysis
of childhood" develops where one
"speaks little and thinks less." lnslead ol
youths who are doing socially useful
things, we have "juvenile delinquents
crawling the walls with boredom in the
public schools," he lamented.
Currently, Kozol reported, Cuba has
1,000 new junior high schools, each
large enough to accommodate 500
sludents. In the mornings, sludents sludy
math , science, English and humanities.
In the afternoon , they work on the land
that surrounds the school. Included In
their education Is a "core curriculum
course" which relates to the type of farm Ing they do. For example, U siUdents
work on an orange plantation, they learn
plant blology.
Students are eager to learn, said Kozol ,
because what they are taught Is "part of
the real world."
FlnaUy, he noted that sludents In the
first school erected In 1970 chose to
dedicate It as a "symbol of friendship"
between the people of Cuba and the U.S .
Its name: The School of Martyrs of Kent.

Enis heads
Statistics
for 2 years

'

,

Dr. Peter Enis has been appointed
chairman of the Department of Statistic\'
for a two-year term.
·
Enls joined U/B In 1968. He had
previously served as a mathematical.
staltsllclan for the Cenler for Naval
Analyses and for the National Institutes of
. Health.
He has recently been a slatls1ical consultant for RosweU Park Memorial Institute and a visiting associate professor at
T echnlon-lsrael Institute of T echnulogy.
He II an associate editor of The American
Stolistidan and an executive committee
member of the Section on Statistical
Education of the American Sllltlslical
A510Ciallon.
His primary research Interest Is In
Bayesian classification and group tesling.

�Cuban Comedy
Because of prohibitions against
U.S.-Cuba Trade, it wasn't until 1973
that American film audiences got to the work of Tomas Gutillmll Alea. That
year, his "Memories of UnderdewiOpment" became the first feature-length
film from post-nwolutionary Cuba to be
released in the United States. It ended
up on the "10 Best Films" list of the
New Yott Times and won an award
from the National SoOetv of Film
Critics.
John Simon, an exacting film critic
who is rarely oleased, wrote of
~Memories" that r.it is an ingeniously
constructed, quietly elOQuent film,
whose only and -v minor fauh is to
Ieaiie us excessively hungry for more."
Since then, Tomas Gutierrez Alea has
gooe on to make "The Last Supper," a
satirical altegofy, drawing on oouroes of
Christilnily and SociaUsm. and "Death
of a Bureaucrat," a slapstick comedy
.OOUt the ~yn~nny of red tape. Gutierrez
Alee pays indirect homage to North
Americlln masteiS of~ in the latter, using the styles of Harold lloyd,
ChapUn. Laurel and Hardy. Buster
Keaton. _
Hardly the kinds of films one would,
on first thought, have expected to be
sent from the Castro regime to the
United StateS.
On Sunday, October 2B. Tomas
Gu'tierrez Alea, who is now being celled
one of the major directors of wor1d
cinema. and being likened to the genius.
Luis Bunuel, witt be present in Squire
Conference Theatre when his film, "The
Survivors" will be screened. This is a
comedy about a middle-dass !amity of
aristocratic origins, who. alter the
Revolution, flee with their servants to an
island . They maintain their bourgeois life
style with ali of its rituals, confident that
the Revolution will fail. As they encounter crisis alter crisis, ~hey revert to
increasingty primitive ways, evootually
becoming cannibals- with all their
bourgeois habits intect.
This screening is part of a North
American tour to show "The
Survivors," which, prior to this was
shown at the Cannes Film Festival. Mr.
Gutierrez Alee will answer ~ions
from the audience. following the movie,
which is in Spanish with English
subtitles.

Ballet Shoes and
Adidas
Tt&gt;e Twyla Tharp Dance Company
came from ten years of relative obscurity
to being the smash hit of tt&gt;e modern
dance world. Twyta Tharp studied
classical ballet and tap; then modern
dance with Merce Cunningham. For a
whole she performed wrth the Paul
Taylor company; in 1965, she formed
her own . The work of her company was
highly thought of. but it had a small
publoc until Ms. Tharp became known
for the piece she choreographed for
Mikhail Baryshnikov, " Push Comes to
Shove."
Using the Russian ballet superstar
was news, and brought Tharp's work to
the attenuon of a huge publoc. They
loved rt and so did the crrtics. When the
Twyla Tharp Dance Company was
shown on PBS dancing a rau work,
"Sue's Leg," they became a natrona!
hot. And once Tharp choreographed the
movie verston of ''Ha1r," she became
the bast -known choreographer in
America.
Tharp studied classical ballet before
swrtchrng to modem. and she makes her
dancers study rt . too But the dances
she devises for the company come out
of Amerocan razz and popular musicFars Waller, Scott Joplin, Jelly Roll
Morton. Chuck Berry, the Beach Boys.
The danong style os strong, fast . and
often funny .
The company wrll be on Buffalo
1Shea's Theatre I tomorrow and Saturday And tonrght at 8, they'll give a
lecture-performance on the Cornell
Theatre If there are any ticke~ left,
they'll be on Squore Box Office .
!Presented by the Otfice of Cultural AffaJrs I

.. public8tlon of

The Office of

CuhuMI Aff*a

a:........_ ..........
To keep track of

UIB'a outtuml

.,.... through
December 21.

•vetN.magnet

�"We don't teach Freud in the
Psychology Department," one of their
faool!:y advised some years ago. "If you
want to study Freud you have to go to
the English Department." We thought
that was a tittle JC)ke. but, in fact, the
Center for the Psychological Study of
the Arts, housed on the English Depanment, does teach Freud. And Eriksen
and other psychoanalysts. It applies e
psychoanalytic approach to hterettm~. as
the program's name suggests, but it also
teaches straight psychoanalytic taxts, as
in Dr. Murray Schwartz's seminar,
"Psychoanalytic Psychology."
One of Schwartz's former students.
Christopher Bollas, who got his PhD in
English I his dissertation was on Melville)
is now lt practicing-and prominem 1
psycholanatyst in London. Bolles win b8
a Visiting Edward H. Butler Professor
here for the week of December 17. His
career has been remarlcable. He came to
U/B from Berkeley, California, wbef8 he.
had worked as a therapist with
schizophrenic children. While preparing
for his PhD in literature and
Psychology, he and Dr. ~wll{lL
established a training progr@tl in tile
Uniwrsit'(s Psychiatric Clinic. In the last
year of his doctoral studies he was ac·
cepted conditionally as a therapist at the
British Psychoanalytic Institute. The
coodition: that he get appropriate
credentials. And so Botlas enrolled in
Smith College, where he tool&lt; a Master's
in Social Work, and did an internship at
the Massachussetts General Hospital in
Boston.
In London. he spent four ~ in
psychoanalytic training at the famous
Tavistock Clinic, where his training
analyst was an Indian prince lsicll, who
happened to be the chief disciple of the
late D.W . Winnicott. an analyst of the
"middle" school, i.e. bet_, conservative and eclectic. Because of this con·
nection and because of Bollas' unique
abihties, not only is he one of the few
psychoanalysts without an M .D. who
has been accepted by his colleagues
lAnna Freud and Eric Eriksen are the
othersl, but he has inherited the mantle
ot D.W . Winnicou !great analysts tend
to beget disciples, like Frank lloyd
Wright or the Biblel .
English psychoanalysts are said to _be
interested in writing and other creatrve
arts as an essential pan of the develop·
ment and the rnterpretation of personali·
tv. unlike their American counterparts,
who are more connected to medical
science. Bollas rs obviously of the

fonMr persuasion, and will be diecus&amp;ing his views in the series of liwJ
118minars on PsychoanalySis and
literature, to be given in 410 Oemens
from 1·3 PM each day of his Rllidency
here. The lectures are free and open to
all.

Richard Wilbur
Richard Wilbur is perf1aps the most
elegant of Americ8n poets. In an age
when rhymed wrse and strict meter are
not fashionable; Wilbur uses them with
such style and wit thet his poetry consistently delights.
Wilbur, whose work has won the
Pulitzer Prize and the National Boot&lt;
Award, will give the 1979 Oscar Silverman Poetry Reading in the Cornett
Theatre on Thu[S(Iay~ November 16, atB
PM . It should be of interest to theater
and muSical comedy bulls as well, Since
Mr. Wilbur has translated and adapted
three plays by Moliere, and wrote the
very funny libretto for leonard Bern·
stein's score of the Broadway hit,

"Candide."
••
The reading is free and open to all.

Banda and
Winds ·
I
Frank Cipolla, director of the Ul B
Symphony Band and the U/B Wind
Ensemble. will be very busy in
November and December. On Sunday,
November 4, at 8 PM .• the U/B Symphony Band will perform, together with
the ~VfOPilQnic Band of the University
of Rochester, in the Cornell Theatre.
Th&amp;p, they'll give another joint concert
onNovember17,thistimewiththeU . of
R. playing host. The repertoire includes
masterworks composed especially tor
large symphonic bands.
On December 9, again in the Cornell
Theatre at 8, the UIB Wind Ehsembte
will present a program of Russian music:
Symphony No. 19 by Nikolai Miakovsky
and a complete transcription of
Mussorgsky's "Pictures at an
Exhibition." The Ensemble will also perform Rimsky-Korsakov's "Variations for
Oboe and Military Band." with guest
soloist, Nora Post. Audiences will
remember Ms. Post as the virtuosic
oboist who was a Creative Associate
here a few years ago; she is now based
in New Vorlc , where she teaches at New
York University and CUNY I
Kingsborough.
Professor Cipolla describes the two
performing groups this way: "The Band
is composed of majors in the Music
Department and general University
students who are capable of performing

with proficiency. The Wind Ensemble
affords an opportunity primarily to
muSio majols to perform wind literature
of the highest ca~ber," "
Both concertS are free and open to
..-yone.

The Club
Eve Merriam, who wro~ the offBroadway hit, " The Club," describes
the play as "a musical diversion." The
setting is an elegant men's club in New
Vorlc at the tum of the century, and the
characters are four club members, the
~ ,.-ail&lt;jr,• a page boy, and "the
mael:t'r'O;'wtiositsatthepianoandpro·
vides musical accompaniment. The
twist is that the seven members of the
cast are played by women; not women
disguising themselves as ' men, but
women wearing men's clothes and sav·
ing the things that men say, vet remain·
ing, quite clearly, women.
Merriam has used many songs from
thaj,period, such as the one with the oft·
quoted line, " A woman is a woman, but
a good cigar is a smoke." By having the
aH-woman cast sing them, she focuses
ironic attention both on the content of
men's views and on the tact that the attitudes which we connect with that
historical period, are prevalent today.
Julie Blake, Elise Pearlman , Mary
Worden and liz Eckert play the four club
members-a handsome young bachelor

gynecologist, a cynic who's been married three times, a man who has married
into money and -resents his ...;te's
economic control, and a newly-wed
romantic. The well-known community
actress, Lome H~l. is the head waiter.
and Maxine Baumer plays "the
maestro," and is also music director of
the production .
There is dance in "The Club," as well
as song. and it has been choreographed
by jazz dancer/choreographer, Tom
Ralabate. Sets are by lewis Folden and
Costumes by Dorine Barton. The direc·
tor is Saul Elkin .
"The Club" opens November 29 at
the Center TtMatre, 881 Main Street.
and will play through December 16.

Musicology Lecture:
Spectacle and Music
The next lecture in the Musicology
Series should appeal to a fairly wide
range of people, not restricted to just
those who are interested in, say, Ito
quote Professor Edmund Strainchamps,
who is coordinating the 1979-80 lee·
turesl .. a notational peculiarity ih a given

monastery.''
The subject is " The Comedie ltalienne
at Paris in the Eighteenth Century:
Spectacle and Music" and it will be
presented. along with slides and music.

by Daniel Heartz. professor of music at
Berkeley. Professor Heartz will talk
about the social. historical and political
background of the Comedie ltalrenre
(the name describes the theatre 's
origms, but by the e1ghteenth century it
had been " Gallicized"l, art as a status
symbol rn those days - some of the
elaborate productions cost as much as
$200.000 - and the atmosphere of
wealth , mfluence and patronage sur rounding the Court
Damel Heanz is generally recogmzed
as the foremost authonty on French
music in the Renaissance. and has been
asked to do the volume on the classrcal
penod for the Norton Series of Mus1c
H1stories. H1s talk wtll be gl'ven on Tues·
day, October 3CJ: at 4 PM in 106 Baord
Hall, and ot's free

Film Note
As we always say, there are {happily!
too many films to be listed individually
on these pages. Good sources of infor·
matron are the UUAB pocket calendars
of film listrngs, available a( Squire infor·
mation !Main Streett and 106 Talbert
Hall IAmherstl . Call63f&gt;.2919 for record·
ed rnformatron . Center for Media
Studies also publishes a listing of their
films available at 101 Wende Hall I Main
Streetl, or call 831 -2426.

2

�iJCicels. whele required, are available at the Squire
Hall iiCket Offoce lin advancel; remaining ticltAIIs at
the door one hout before ewnt. I. 0 . cards must be
presented in order to purchase tickets at
Student/Faculty/Staff/ Alwnni rate.

MUIIC
L-1&amp;-Maslllr Cltlss by Paul Elliorr,
flutist · of the London &amp;rly Music
GfOUP: " The eon-t Song." 106

s.lrd Hal. 2-4 PM. Free. Sponsor:
Oeperurtl!nt of Music.

MUIIC

~ttrCfllss by JIJmes Tyler
flure, baroque, guitiJr, mandora,
1BnOr violl Mid Peter Trent llute, cittern, tenor violl of London Early
Music Group: " Plucked lnstru-

rnents." 101 Baird Hall. ~PM . Free.
Sponsor: Department-o f Music.

sion $4, Students $2. ADS vouchers
acoapted. Sponsors: Oepanment of
Theatre and Center for Theatre
Research.

WIIFO UVE IIIIOADCAST
Stee Beethoven Ouarrtlt c,.c.t!r 11: The
OrfO&lt;d Ouartet. WBFO 188.7 FMI. 8
PM .

MJD.OAY MUSIC_.

FWANKU.OYD WRIGHT~

W8FO UVE IROADCAST
Tenor saxophonist Johnny Griffin,
livfl from the TraffiJmtJdom Cafe.
WBFO 188.7 FMI. 10 PM.

D r;;d Hanks, curator of American

DRAMA

DAIIIC£
Twyt. Tharp Dance Comf)IJny•:
lectu r e - Pe r fo r mance . Co rnell
Theatre. B PM . Admission: $2. Spon-.
sor: Office of Cultural Aflairs.

-

furniture at the Smithsonian lnstitu-·
tion, will give a slide-illustrated lecture on Frank lloyd Wright and on
the Ans and Cralts movement in
America. This is the fonal lecture in
the 4-lecture -ies. Albright-KnOx
Art Gallery auditorium. 8 PM . Free.
SpoMOrS: An History program and
Albright -Knox An Gallery.

21
Frtay

Kenneth Drake, fortepiano (Visiting
Artist Series!. Baird Recital Hall. 8
PM . General admission $4, faculty.
staff. alumni, senior citizens $3,
students $1. Sponsor: Department of
Music.

Concert of contemporary
~worit~ tube.lllld ' -· tube and film.
tube and 4-channel amplification
system, prepared tube, etc. Baird
Hall. 8 PM . General ,admission $4,
faculty, staff, alumni, senior citizens
$3, •students $1 . Spon.sor: Music
Depanment's Slee Professorship.

MUSIC
London Early Music Group · " MuSIC
for Merchants and Monarchs."
EngliSh and Italian muSic from the
courts and chambers of the
Ren&amp;ssance and the Ear1y Baroque
performed on rnstruments of the
periOd . B&amp;rd Hall 8 PM . General ad·
mrsSIOn $4, faculty, staff, semor
cmzens $3, students $1 . Sponsor:
Department of Musoc.

DRAMA

GhostS, by Ibsen, directed by Watd
Williamson. Center Theatre, 681
Ma~n Street. 8 PM . General AdtniS·

The Orford Ouanet, Slee BeethovM
String Quartet Cycle. Baird Hal . 8
PM . General admission $4, faculty,
stall. alumni, senior citizens $3,
students $1 . SponSO&lt;: Department of
Music..

November
1
Ttour8oMy

maker: " The Survivors." SpaniSh
with English subtitles. The filmmaker
will be present. Con ference Theatre,
Squire Hall. 7 PM. Free. Sponsors:
Council on International Studies.
Graduate Student Associa tion, Intensive EngliSh Language Institute.
Center f0&lt; Media Study and Media
Study/ Buffalo.

21
Mondlly

WBFO UVE BROADCAST
Billy Taylor and Friends: a special
NPR live broadcast from CBS-Studio
A in New Yonc . W BFO 188.7 FM I.
9:30 PM .

DRAMA

Ghosts by Ibsen, directed by Ward
W illiamson . See October 27 listing.

DRAMA

Ghosts by Ibsen, directed by W11td
Williamson . See October 27 listing.

FilM icMENINGIDISCUSSION .
Tomas Gutief18Z Ales, "Cuban film-

LECTURE/PANEL DISCUSSION

MUSIC
UUA8 and SA Commuter Affaors
Halloween Parry, with Cock Robin &amp;
CBS recorrting artists, The Sinceros.
Fillmore Room. Squore Hall. 8 PM .
General admr5510n $2.93. students
$1 .93. Sponsors: UUAB and SA
Commuter Affairs.

·; MUSIC

MUSIC

tube.

Dr. Tom Morris, Simon Fraser
Un iverse ty . "Herb erl M arcuse :
Human Culture and Human Need."
Herbert Marcuse. au thor of OneDimensional Man and Eros Civilization. doed last summer in Germany.
ju•t shO&lt;t of his 81st birthday. Or.
Morris will draw upon a study he has
made of all of this rad ical
philosopher's work. from the earty.
little-known essays to an extended in·
terview on his OOth birthday. With
panelists: Or. GeO&lt;ge lggers, History;
Dr. James Lawter, Philosophy. 110
Baldy Hall . Amherst. Free. Sponsor:
Program in Literature and Society.
DePjlrtment of English ; College
Wofkshop 1n Marxist S tu d1es;
Graduate Group '" Modem German
Studies.

~.,

Ghosts by Ibsen, directed by Wsttf
W illiamson. See October 27 listing.
Note: Sunday perfO&lt;mence is at 3
PM.

MUSIC
Siae Guest Recital. Melvyn Poora,

.,.

Haas lounge. Squire Hell. See October 3 listing. •

Yvar Mikhashoff. piano !faculty
recital}. Baird Hall. 8 PM . General admission $3, faculty, stall. alumni.
senior citizens $2, students $1. Sponsor: Department of Music.

DRAMA

Ghosts by Ibsen. directed by Ward
Williamson. See October 27 listing.

4

Sunder

MUSIC
UIB Symphony Band Concert",
directed by Frank Cipolla. Cornell
Theatre. 8 PM . Free. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

DRAMA
ARCHITECTURE

Ghosts by Ibsen. directed by Ward
W illiamson. See October 27 listing.
Note: Sunday performance 3 PM .

LECTURE

SERIES
Romaldo Giurgot.: presentation of
work. 335 Haves Hall . 5:30PM . Free.
Sponsor: School of Architecture and
Environmental Design .

MUSIC Alan Sigel, clannet (faculty recitall .
Baird Hall. 8 PM . General admission
$3, faculty, stall. alumni , senior
citizens $2. students $1. Sponsor:
Depanment of Music.

30
Tueedar

6
Monday

WBfO UVE BROADCAST
Buffalo Chamber Music Society
Series: Emerson String Quartet.
WBFO 188.7 FMI. 8:30PM.

B
Thursct.y

DRAMA
Ghosts by Ibsen, dorected by'Ward
Williamson. See October 27 listing .

LECT\JRE

. .,

DRAMA
Woyzzeck by Georg Buchner .
dorected by Netl Radoce. Th1s controverSial play !which has been called
the frrst modern play I traces the story
of a young man's tourney through
life. Hamman Theatre Studro. Main
Street Campus. 8 PM . General admissron $3, students and senior
curzens $1.50. Sponsor: Department
of Theatre.

MUSIC
Jan Hammer. -.Fillmore Room. Squire
Hall. 8 PM . Admission undetermmed.
Sponsors: UUA8 Music Committee,
Harvey &amp; Corky.
MUSIC
Watazumi-Do, Japanese musician
and Zen master, and reoptet11 of title
" nauonal treasure" of Japan. Will
perform on shekuhachi, as well as
other bamboo flu tes. 8aord Recital
Hall. 2 PM. Free. Sponsor: Oepan ment of Music.

LECTURE

II

T.....S.V
Daniel H88ru •• ·University of Ce/11or·
ma at Berkeley !Musicology Lecture
Series! : ''The Comedre ltaloenne at
Paris 1n the Eighteenth Cenury: Spectacle and MusiC." 106 8aord Hall. 4
PM . Free. Sponsor: Department of
Music

ARCHITECTURE
SERIES

Mo rto n Hoppenfeld: p eopl e,
budd1ngs and cltiBS. 335 Hayes Hall.
5:30 PM . Free. Sponsor: School of
Architecture and En vuonmental
OeSJgn.

I
Frtay

MUSIC
At.n Mandel, piano fVrsrung Artist
Series!. Baird Recital Hall. 8 PM .
General admission $4, faculty. stall.

3

�DRAMA

,.

Friday

Woyzzeck by G.org BuchfHJr,
directed by Neil Radice. See
November 8 listing.

DRAMA

.

Woyzzeck by G.org Buchftllr,
directed by Neil Radice . See

.

~81isting .

_ _ _ _ ... _,_DM.II.

alumni. senior citizens $3. students
$1 . Sponsor: Department of Music.

DRAMA

..........,
17

"

-~

Ghosrs by lbstJn, dimcted by W.on:t
WiHiamson. See October 27 listing.

..

.......,
tl

DRAMA•
Ghosrs by Ibsen. directed by Ward
WiHiamson. See October 27 listing.

DRAMA
Woyzzeck by Georg Buchner.
directed by Neil Radice . See
November 8 listing.
violin. and A/en

~~~~~;,.gt,tA(f:.;:;'!~:

miSSIOO · $4. faculty. staff. alumni.
senior citizens $3. students $1 . Sponsor: Department of Music.

12
Monot.y

ARCHITECTURE
LECTURE
SERIES
Barron Myers: presentation of work.
335 Hayes Hall. 5:30PM . Free. Spon·
sors: School of Architecture and Enwonmental Design and Council on
lnterna!Jonal Studies.

LECTURE
Kenneth Burke. literary critJc :
.. Logology Ill : Language and
Technology:· The K1va. Baldy Hall.
Amherst 8 PM. Fr9:". Sponsor:
English Department's Edward H.
Butler Chair.

W...._.,
14

VID£0 BCREENING/DISCUSSION

Joan Evens. Rebecca Goldfield. Rejjni Srikanrh, Joseph Steinmetz:
" Unemployment m Bullato:· A

Office of eutu.l Att.n
410 Clopen tw1. SUNYAB
AMiwat N.Y. 1a.

--

...

EliB Werczberger: planning and architecture in Israel. 336 Hayes Hall.
5:30 PM . Free. Sponsors: School of
Architecture and Environmental
Design and Council on International
Studies.

ARCMITECTUIE LECTURE

MCHJTEClUM LECTURE

RfiYner Benham: ."Sullivan. Bumhem
and .. . Reidpath?" 335 Hayes Hall.
5:30 PM . Free. Sponsor: School of
Architecture and Environmental
Design.

I

W. .

MUSIC
_.y William
P.rlcer; barirone IVisiring Artists Series). Baird Recital Hall. 8 PM .
General admission $4. faculty, staff.
alumni. senior citizens $3, students
$1 . Sponsor: Department of Music.

I

-Sundey

12

W~

policy and the state of urban design
in architecture. 336 Hayes Hall. 5:30
PM. Free. Sponsor: School of Aschitecture and Environmental Design .
27

Tueedrt

LECTURE

Lawrence Gushee. University of Illinois !Musicology Lecture Series) :
" The Creole Band. 1914-1918.'' 106
Baird. 4 PM . Free. Sponsor: Department of Music.

13
Thu.-.day

WBFO uvE BROADCAST
The Buffalo Chamber Music Society
Series: Kalichstein - Laredo - Robinson Trio. WBFO lBB.7 FML B.30 PM .
28
MUSIC
W..,_.y The Otforri Ouartet Slee Beethoven
String Quartet Cycle. Baird Hall. 8
PM. General admission $4. faculty.
staff. alumni. senior citizens $3.
students $1 . Sponsor: Department of
Music.
WBFO UVE BROADCAST
SIBe Beethoven Ouartet Cycle Ill: Orford Ouartet. WBFO 168.7 FML 8
PM .

Non-Profit Org.

u.s.Poe•ee

PAID
BufWo, N.Y.
Permit No. 311

MUSICAL~

" The Club. "• by Eve M.m.tn,
directed by Saul Elkin. "A musical
tour through tum-o_f-the-oentu&lt;v
male sexism. not quite nostalgia."'
The Center Theatre. 681 Main St. 8 PM . General Admission $4. students
and senior citizens $2. ADS vouchers
accepted . Sponsor: Center for
Theatre Research. Thursdays- Saturdjlys at 8; Sundays et 3. ~hrough
.December 16.

- AIICHrnCTUIE LECl'UIE

8EIUES
Michael John Pirt8s: the endowment

DRAMA
Ghosts by Ibsen. directed by Ward
Williamson. See October 27 listing.
Note: Sunday performance 3 PM .
DRAMA
Woyzzeck by Georg Buchner.
directed by Neil Radice . See
November 8 listing.

DRAMA
Wi&gt;yzzeck by Georg Buchner,
directed by Neil Radice. See
November B ~sting.

MUSIC
Acezanrez-Zegreb, contemporary
music. Slee Guest Recital. Baird
Recital Hall. B PM . General admission
$4. faculty , staff. alumni . senior
citizens $3. students $1 . Sponsor:
Department of Music.

MUSIC
Nancy Mendel,

~---...---1-11.

EVENINGS FOR IIIIEW MUSIC
"Parallel lines" by Morton Subotnick
with piccolo soloist, Larry Tron, conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas.
Center Theatre. 681 Main St. 8 PM .
Admission $5,$4.$3. $1 discount for
students -and senior citizens. Spon501$: Center of the ~tive and Performing Arts and Department of ·
Mus_ic.

DRAMA
Woyueck by Georg Buchner,
directed by Neil Radice. See
November 8 listing.
COPFIEiftOWE
Priscil/.o Hetdm8n: Folk Music.
Rathslcetler, Squire Hall. 8:30 PM:AdmissiOn charge undetermined.
Sponsor : UUAB Coffeehouse
Committee.

DRAMA

Woyzzeck by Georg Buchner,
directed by Neil Radice. See
November 8 listing.

MUSIC

.

UIB Wind Ensemble·. direcred by
Frank Cipolla. Cornell Theatre. 8 PM .
Free. Sponsor: Department of Music.

MUSIC
Universiry Choir &amp; Chorus. Harriet
Simons. Director: "A FestiWII of
Carols: · featuring Benjamin Britten's
"Ceremony of Carols:· Suzanne
Thomas. harp. Plus a variety of
Christmas carol arrangements by
Vaughan Williams. Distler Praetorius
and others. Baird Hall 8 PM . Free.
Sponsor: Department of Music.
EVENINGS FOR NEW RLM
Malcolm Le Grice. filmmaker.
described by Jonas Mekas as "the
most important film artist working today in England" : "Emily: · A recent
avant-garde film which " reworks the
notion of~ narrative." Albright-Knox
Art Gallery. 8 PM . Free. Sponsors:
Center for Media Study. Media
Study/Bullalo. Albright-Knox Art
Gallery .
EVENINGS FOR NEW MUSIC
Works of Zinko Globokar. Baird
Recttal Hall . 8 PM . General admfssron
$2. faculty. stall. senror cmzens.
students $1. Sponsors: Cc • •r of the
Creative and Performrng
.,.d
Department of Music.

17

Mor*y
through
21
Fridey.

SEMINAR
Christopher Bolles: ... Psychoanalysis
and Literary Theory:· 410 Clemens.
1-3 PM . Free. Sponsor: English
Department's Edward H. Butler
Chair.

Exhibits
Artists' Book Exhibition: Artists' books from the
Albright-Knox Ast Gallery. Art Book Collection.
ground floor. Lockwood Library, Amherst. Through
December 7. Free. Sponsors: Lockwood Library and
Art History.

4

- - -j

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                    <text>OCT. 18, 19'18
VOL 11 e NO.7

3 options proposed for Main Street rehab
Each would
cost over

$100 million
By ~ B""""'-'d
Roporior Stoff

Feature this.
A building enveloping what Is now the
Sherman-Cary-Farber health sciences ,
complex; a megastructure rendering the
current fadllty unidentifiable from Bailey
Ave .
Now picture covered walkways connecting the h...Jth sciences complex to
Foster, Squire, Harriman, Acheson , and
Parker halls, and Kimball Tower-aU of
which have b&lt;!en rehabUitated .
If your imagination can take the strain,
iry also to envision a new health sciences
llbrary/ bio-med information center nestled b&lt;!tween Abbott and Diefendorf.
Among others, this multi·purpose center
would house the continuing education
division for health sciences professk&gt;
,
audio-visual seH· Instruction materli!s,
and

computer-e&amp;Sisted

Instructional

programs.
It h115 to b&lt;! a pipe' dream , right? After
aU, this Is U/ B, not Stony Brook.

nu.e noo al1lioa optl-

lt doesn't have to b&lt;!. This plan Is one
of three possible options the local
architectural firm , Cannon Design Inc.,
verbally presented to UniVersity officials
last week. Cannon hll5 spent months
sautlnlzlng aU existing buildings on the
Main Street Campus and matching them
via a detailed program analysis, with the
space, raeaoch and lab requirements of
each health sciences school.
As they now stand, Cannon's proposals for the master plan of the South
Campu~ are still In skeletal form , but will
b&lt;! N6ned and made public In about two
months.
AU the proposals, according to Health
Sciences Vice President F. Carter PanniU,
run In excess of $100 million, with the
option just cited b&lt;!ing the most

expensive.
Pan nUl told lhe Reporter that a second
qption calls for no new construction except for the Ubrary/ bio-med information
center. The third falls somewhere In b&lt;!·
tween . It opts lor the h'brary/ blo-med
buDding and oome construction on the
preoent health sciences complex. possibly

back to Main Street to Acheson; Health
Related Professions would take over
Parker, and the Medical School would be
set up In Sherman-Cary-Farber.
Diefendorf would remain a classroom
buDding to b&lt;! used primarily by health
sciences students. The gym and Nuclear
Research Center would stay as Is, and

additional space needed , and other
factors.

Raldence bal..

With the exception of Tower, aU
ladlttles originally designed 115 telklence
halls would revert to IMt putpOM .
Although It·II not lnc:ludeli lll the master
~a.._ "!!119..q~;,~o.. ~. o!Jne Ill!.&gt; of. - ~-'llllll. -~ l'f¥IC1 •.JliiDCIIng..ANL,....plaQ._~~-1o •
tJ!sproposals calls for r!'hab work on existing
fireplaces, would (In one proposal)
some of the dorms used lor tnllnled - structures to accommodate health
become a student center. Part of the biodent housing. a real need among health
sciences programs.
med information buDding could also b&lt;!
sciences students.
used to accommodate student services ~
According to Pannill , parking would b&lt;!
Who would go where
need b&lt;!, noted PanniU.
relocated and campus roads. redirected.
The VPHS relayed that Cannon
Not included in the master plan are
Because of the rapid transli station, the
recommended thai aU of Squire, Foster
Baird, Wende , Townsend and Hayes.
Main Street entrance to the campus
and Harriman b&lt;! converted for use by the
The late of Crosby remains uncertain .
would likely b&lt;! moved. Green space
Dental School. Nursing would stay In
That structure may also b&lt;! converted lor
would b&lt;! preserved as much as possible,
KimbaD Tower; Pharmacy would move
use by the health sciences, depending on
-a. -. I

·-'a . . . . _.

Size, teaching, busing turn·off students
U/ B students leave b&lt;!cause they feel
the University Is too large, not good
enough, not caring enough .
And b&lt;!cause they're dissatisfied with
teaching and their teacher.;.
There's an over-emphasis on grades,
some feel.
Others point to busing, to dormitory
hassles with fellow students.
Many fewer than expected , though.
blame an inabiltty to get the major of their
choice.
Some statisticS suggest perhaps local
area students just aren't ready lor U/ B.
What' s to b&lt;! done?
A study on "University Attrition"
authored by Peter T. Wittemann of Admissions and Records, offer.; three
recommendations:
1. " It Is known that activities must b&lt;!
undertaken to provick a sense of
smallness or closeness to the students In
lieu of the Unlvenlly's largeness."
2. "We should encourage facu~y and
student lnleraGtlon at all levels with hopes
of buJidlng a morale that ls not based on

President Rob&lt;!rt l. Ketter had aUuded to
its findings before the Faculty Senate In
early September, but not even the Senate
Executive Committee had actually seen
the report prior to its release.
The document is a survey and analysis
of students who did not return between
Sprtng 1978 and Fall 1978.
Why wll5 such a study · needed?
Because of Increasing attrition levels, and
projectionS' which suggest even more
trouble In the years ahead. Wittemann
pointed out (see charts, page 2) . For ex·
ample, whUe the "eUglble to continue"
population Increased by 9.87 per cent
b&lt;!tween 1974 and 1976, the attrition
rate increased at a rate ol34.99 per cent.
And, Wittemann added , while it may
look Ilk£ attrition leveled oil in 1977· 78,
"the projection to 1978-79. and 1979·80
does not allinn this conjecture."
One particularly distressing staitstlc,
Wittemann found , is that students from
the Eighth Judicial District (Western New
. Y oriel . who continue to represent about
50 per cent of freshman enrollment, drop

coUl'M achievement alone."
3. "Overt deviant b&lt;!havtor In dor·
mkortes 115 well as claJsrooms must b&lt;! at·
tended to so the lnstltutlon can provide a
sense of human intere.st to Its
Inhabitants."

than 70 per cent ol aU freshman dropouts each year are from WNY.

"fh:'""_.......

OCKalled "Wtttemann Report." a
FNOJJive 9-&lt;:hapter document weighing
pound~! ounca was curioUoly
reJe.Md to The Speclrvm last week by
the IJtWe'llly edminlolntlon, alta havIng been ~ to the JWpotWI artier.

one

=

:':~~:t:.::~:r:.:te

The 1,262 students who did not return
In the Fall1978 semester (of 9,249 who
were eligible to come back) wete each
sent a swvey form to det~lne reasons ·
lor andonlng U/B. A return rate ol 27
per""" yielded 341 mums. Of these,
315 wac UMd tn an anlllyois of reasons.
Each respondent was 81bd to rank 47
Hems on a scale ol 3 to 0 , three repno·
Mnllng "very lmpartllnt" ....! 0 .-otng

the Item was not a factor In the decision
to-drop out.
The top 20 items and their weighted
scores are to be found in the box on page
2. Also, the least important factors.

Wb•t atudents Mid
The questionnaire also provided room

for students to express their own sen·

timents. As in most surveys, Wittemann
says, the statements or questions asked
could not measure such feelings exactly.
One hundred and twenty·live of the
315 students who responded attached a
caveat to their questionnaire. In most of
these cases, at least one statement
responded to ttems within the question-

·--·...-.. ........·-a.-a.a

Who,s to blame?
"U/B Ia not a college. It's a jungle and no personal feeling•
ulat. A person could drop dead and no one would4euer lmow he
evm e:xlated.lf a person W06IIickfor one or two days, he would
not be missed. Who corea? The cia- are too bfg anyhow. Actually, lack of faculty caring has created thla Frankm.teln."

...

'The AdminlatratJon Ia too far out of touch with etudmta,
percefuea them as itdertor beings, and h011 put too hif1h a priority onjlecal rapon.iblllty as opposed to the quality of education
and .ervtcee. "
It .. ~the negatfoe attitude most of the etudenta haue tOWCII'de
the school. n.. ....... never had anything good to .ay
about the 8Chool and Of/tn a while, I ROTted belleolng what It

aold_,__ ..

-

�October 18, 1979

.....

_......

::·::·.

~ IIUcletBmede:--. CXIfll"

pleJnJng .bout dw . . ~!he -.......
Such - - . gena"88v coupled
with such lhauahlo ..,
.
~Felt~ thae, holow lludo!nlsnot ldendly; "Seems " - Is • leek of
communlly," "Lack al conoem for the
students." "U/8 very lmpenona)-between student and student, and between
teacher and student. I was just another
number;" "The people were very unfriendly;" "No gulciJng Influences either
by administrators or fac:ully;" "Prolesson

The
~

rap m a-JM ,__,.,

'c;o.&amp;J:wllh....mlrialtUB
ca-s too lllge
. and/or

RANK
I

2

WEIGHT
440
380
328

PSS1aM8-crltlcs of U I B
leadership
PSS Senators opent hours last week
meeting wllh COIUII!uents about the "con-

dillon of the campus," but these area
meetings were very sparsely etlended,
end those who did show were vocal In
291
their altk:lsm of the Aclminlstratlon.
291
This was the consensus at reports from
282
the meetings aired at a session of the
278
Professional Staff Senate Executive
274
Committee Friday.
270
Characterizing the dlocusstons es " Uve215
ly," representatives from at least two of
11
were unapproachable-too busy with
211
the
ftve PSS areas (which include Health
12
R~n~by~cou~
research to see students;" "Constant em202
Sciences, Core Campus, Student Sup13
Too many personal problems
phasis on .._uve aspects."
185
port
Services, University 5oq&gt;port Ser14
Need for more financial aid
Among statements about facuhy unop182
vices and Unlvenlly Administration .,,d
IS
Excessive cheating for grades
proachabllity. complaints about foreign
164
16
Openstlonsl noted that negative comNeed for a vacation from academics
staff were frequent
151
. ments 10 outweighed the posHive, that
17
Lack of tutorial assistance
" I couldn't understand a number of my
149
18
they felt compeDed to ask partldpants to
Cannot enter my major program
profs In my department;" "Too many
143
19
speak to eccompllshments of the AdCannot enter my major program - low average
foreign teachers with communication
130
20
ministration.
Unable to dedde on a major
problems;" " Most of the teachers In the
Most area meetings used the format
engineering courses were from' other
Not eo Important
recommended by the PSS ad hoc Comcountries end I could not understand half
67
33
mittee
on Campus 'Evaluation which
Theft or violence in Dormitories
at what they said;" " For the amount of
63
3f
FamUy transfer out of oru
sought Information about the quality of
stress put on your grades, then on In61
35
leadership, problem solving, communica54
structor should be predse, deer and
36
tion , sense of community Involvement,
47
37
Too many dating problems
understandable ."
41
38
level of support and other general issues
Penonai iDnas or aa::idmt
40
39
5mous lllnasln family
merHing comment.
28
40
Some concern was expressed by the
While some students expressed probIS
4t
:::.~~members of the Executive CommHtee
12
42
Entering mditaty seMc:e
lems over understanding focuhy and
thai staff members making comments
teaching asslslants, others identified busmight not be familiar with the lines of
Ing as a great burden: ~ waited with
commend within the University and were
as many as 200 studentslQJ' buses which
tmj)roperly blamlng the President for
could only hold 60;" "Rude pushing on
Percent of Attrition from FaU to Spring of ThOR Elfblble
matters not directly under hls purview.
buses between campuses;" "Found U/ B
to Continue by Year and Claa
Others cautioned that the nature of the
Inconvenient due to busing."
evaluative
process Is such that people
Personal problem areas were also
1972-73 1973-74 1974-75
1975-76 1976-77
1m-1s
tend to think In negatives rather than
noted. Slatements relating to dormitory
positives.
5 .26
8.39
6.65
Freohman
8 .76
10.0
9.0
life, roomrnete problems, drugs, llran'ns
One Senator questioned the validity of
In dorms, foreign roommates, etc., were
SophontOf'e
7.68
9.17
8 .02
9.57
10.0
9.0
directing discussion to posHive aspects of
7.14
8 .64
6 .78
9.51
.lunlor
11.0
9.0
Included.
the Administration d that ltne of comment
Some comments reflecled positive at8 .66
8 .01
5 .46
6.25
Senior
15.0
15.0
didn't aop up neturaUy In the course of
Total
8 .4 9
9.78
7.18
9.32
titUdes. They were generally died, WH12.0
11.0
discussions.
temenn 111115. by students wlio left due to
Although comments about the
financial reasons, manloge , or transferrmeetings were besicaUy reSJicted to the
process rather than the results, _ _ , .
Percent of AUridon from Spring to Fall of Thoee Eligible·
tetlves from Area V (Admln-ve and
reopondents , said "Although U/ B Is big,
to Continue by Year and Claa
support units} noted these concerns
the people ere willing to help and/or talk
manifested during their meeting: 1) Com,
to you then at a smaller college. I know,
1973-73 1974-74
1975-75
1976-76
1977-77
muntty relations ere not es positive as
fve been there and fm "'"Y I k/t. "
they could be; 2} The Presid10nt Isn't visiAs In most surveys, the respondents
Freohman
12.9
12.5
11.7
14.4
13.6
ble
enough; 3} The organization at the
made recommendations relating to the
Sophomore
13.3
13.5
15.8
17.3
16.9
Unlverstlty is not understood; 4} An esprH
body of the questionnaire . They
15.7
14.6 .
ll .S
ILl
13.4
de
corps
Is lacking.
included:
Senior
16.2
12.4
13.8
14.7
13.9
Azee I senators, on the other hand,
• " More should be done for the comTotal
15.6
12.1
13.8
14.8
14.8
found thai theJr constituents thought
muter to melee him/her feel more
community-university relations had Imwelcome."
proved over the last decade. Improved
• A cooperative ~yment procommunlly relations along with campus
gram would be beneflclol.
• "I thlnl! you ohould have built a gym
the same rete.
• Almost aU transfers who dropped construction were jpv.., as two positive
ftnllnslead at other useless student union
out had higher grade point averages
• Caucasians had a drop-out rete of
accomplishments of the Admlnlstretlon.·
huilcllngs."
12.4 per cent; blacks a rete of 23 per cent
when they came here then when they
Area I Is the Health Sciences.
(black males slightly higher) .
left. Communhy college transfers had
• "Make SUNYAB more selective."
One Senator told the Executive Com• "Social eounoeling could have been
worse academic records at U/B than
• More students dropped out with
mittee he personally feels thai pert of the
a!JUI deal more 8CICeSSI&gt;Ie In aiding es a
GPA's above 2.0.
those transferring from other Institutions.
communication problem at the University
possible 'safety valve.' "
may stern from middle m...._. who
• Freshmen ranked lint among those
This report, when coupled with other
refuse to make decisions or jpve advice
So.etleMa
clropptng out with less then a 2.0;
on controvenial matters. ConsequenOy,
repor1s on oltrltlon. can and should be "a
Some - n trends discowred In the
freshmen from the Eighth Judicial District beginning place for introspection as to an "institutional paranoia" develops as
study include the following:
were most likely to drop out wHh low
our rnlsilon and goals," Wtttemann
people are ushered from one office to the
• Males end females drop out at about !lfll!les.
concludes.
next In quest of answers.
,
The PSS ad hoc Committee on Campus Evaluation will meet tomorrow to
combine repor1s from the five areas.
· lions.
would mean, among other things, loppThose stiU wishing to melee theJr opinions
along with the visual character of the
"I find that unacceptable," he asserted.
Ing $325,000 all the equipment purknown should send comments to ~
bullcftngs along Main Sired. The Idee Is
chase
budget
and
having
one
elevator
to
Chairman Tom Hurley, 405 Capen. All
Not ...... _
to keep them as recognizable community
transport research animals (deed and
Information
Is confidential .
Considering
that
U/
B
has
the
largest
landmerl&lt;s.
anve, theJr excreta, etc.). along with
health sdences component of any SUNY
Cannon also noted how each option
pessengers.
center
and
has
been
woefully
underfundwould Impact on ouch leeton es the
ed for years, PannW thinks the plans not
He'e ....... tlleetate....,
power supply end sanHary end storm
at aU 5P'8"dlose. Stony Brook, he points
PannW says the architect Involved did
sewers.
out, has received three times the
the best he could given the fact he wes
.....W ........ ~ opdooo
estimated funding and oerves only oneworldng wHh cost estimates from a threeWhal docs the VPHS have to say
third the students.
year-old report prepared by Facilities
Edwin D. Muto, dlrector of men's Interabout aU this? PannW thinks Cannon 'has
As far as any renovation/ construction
Planning end tbe Health Sciences which
collegiate athletics, has announced apdone an cxcdent job In ~ the
- b l e Is concerned, PanniD, knowing
set the renovation end equipment price
pointment of two heed coaches for
needs at the halth 1Ciences an4 ln~g
only too well the delays on the Amherst
tag at about $6 million. In the Interim,
1979-80. Alfred J . Heinen wW coach the
to IICCOIDlDOdala them to axlslirlg and . build-out, opeculates K would be a
however, the State knocked $2 million
track end field and aoss-country teams,
new atructura.
pJ:w!oed process, poaa,ly over five to
off the project, and the erchHect's final
end James H . Ely wiD coach the goH
Pesc&gt;MIIy, he Is buddng for approval
seven years.
cost estlmeta ran $800,000 over what
team.
at the most coolly option , the one lnvofvBut If funding for I!I'Y of the proposals
the State wants to pay.
Heinen also coached U/ B track end
lng tha covered ......_ys and the enceoIs as olow coming as Foster's renovation
PanniH told the Reporter thai six weeks
field In 1975-76. A Buffalo State
lng at Sherman-Cary-Ferber for easy
money, even 11\11- may be too
ago, he wrote a letter to the SUNY Congraduate (1957} with a master's degree In
_...,..,
conMrVatlve. Although Foster was
struction Fund (with a copy to the
educational adm in istration from
I&gt;....,. uys he feels the Slate has the scheduled for a $5 million "'hab this Chancellor} complaining about the rev!- Syracuse, he has had extensive coaching
copKIIy to generate the funds to do the
wlnler, Pannlll told the Reporter there ere
...,. end wemlng that d this Is a ump1e
experience at the high school level. .
job properly. And In hls words, " If you're
currently no plans to a d - for conof what can be expected In renovation
Ely, has been Involved wMh the Buffalo
IIC*'IIto do II alai, you may es well do k
strucllon bids.'
projocts to come, tha State had better
District Goff AIIOCietJon junior program
tight." If not, the VPHS cautions, health
The reuon Is that the State wanted to
reevaluate Its dedslons, or the projects
for tha past three years, and currentlv
facully lftUII continue to hobble
chop all $800,000 from the cost of the
serves as dJrector at the golf committee at
will - the IWtt of day.
To date, he's received no...pon.._, ,
.loaJL~_-!"!!h-_~..g_u.:&gt;_~~--~·---~ - ~~~-' -.figure ·
the ... l'llhooroiJAuotuboh~~~~i!.·.-.-. ·,
Tnmtfar to

a colage wtilt •.llettor cfepertment

&amp;call9e eniJihe* on~
.
Tl'llllllfertoesrnaller
Unable to Ul'lclerand
member(o)
Do not like busing among campuses
Too many bureauaalk: problems
Lack at faculty advtsement
Unable ~o understand leaching esslstant(s}
Lack of DUE advisement
Disappointment ovtir low grades

3

4

5
6
6
7
8
9
10

31()

302

=:-:::::~

......

~~t~· ~....:!..~~

..........

....

.......,

•3 options
._

Nato names
twd coaches

�October 18, 1979

Disabled pleD
1llghts Day'
on Friday
The U/8 Independent Student
"-&gt;eeatton wll ......... - - Dloablad Cllloens Clvi RtF1a Do!! with • pro!IJIUil, Friday, October 19,1n Squire Hal.
Moot wtl be held In the Conference Theatre. All ..., free and open to
the pubic.
The U/8 chapter ol the Gray Panthera
wll have a dloplay, and a ~pe en·
lllled "lnclependents: Who and Where"

at---

What about after tenure? Ms. Sconiers
wanted to know.
Ketler said he has asked the Faculty
Senate to initiate a five-year review program but that "faculty are less than
enthusiastic."

wilThe
be"""""'
Program echedule is:
AI 11 a .m ., Bertha Cutcher ol the Offlee ol Services for the Handicapped will
discuss "Support Services In Education,"
and Kart w~ wtJ . . - a 20-minllle
film and discussion on the WheelchU
Olympics.
At 11:30 a .m ., a panel discussion wll
be held by Frank Endress ol the WNY
Association for the Blind, John Palau ol
the WNY Commission for the Blind, and
Doug Schading ol U/8.
At noon, a member ol the U/ 8 Independents wiD desat&gt;e architectural
and technical atds for the handicapped.
At 12:30 p.m. , anolber panel discussion wiD be presented, this one featuring
John Peterson ol the NYS Division ol
Human Rights, who wiD discuss "Bar·
riers," Ed Orlando ol ARC Advocacy,
who will opeak on the problems ol
establishing community homes for the
mentally handlc_.j, and Jake Kramer
of the Gray Panthers.
At 1 p .m ., Dove Crissey ol the Office
of Vocational Rehabilitation; Dwight
Kauppi, director ol rehabillation cou,_J.
ing at U/8; Art Burke ol the U/8 Office
of Services for the Handicapped, Tony
Serra of the Independents, and Wanda
Miller, resident adviser, wiD hold a panel
discussion.
Also at 1, Randall Bosberg of the 1n:'8::.,.~&amp;,~e:..~ "Commitment on

1bat was thai.·
CO\Ifld) Chairman"Rober{ I. Millonzl is
now n!qulred to make a statement to the
Chancellor outlining his Views on Ketter's
"stewardship. • Millonzi's statement and
Ketter's are to be made available to the
evaluating teem.

"'2, Serra wll
Independent I!Ying oeMc:e he is cleveloptng.
Frank McGuire, candidate for Erie
County executive, wiD discuss the Gray
Panthers at 2 :30p.m. Also expected to
"PP'Br is Ed Rutkowski, his opponent in
the race. Other events wiD foDow .

"'!!!!~

Council meeting on Ketter's report
yields few q estions from members
The U/8 Council dher bored,
baflecl, ew loCIIIy bowled over by President Rabat L. Ketter's "statement of
--.bhtp," judgjng &amp;om Its reactions
at Friday's C:O.:.nci M.lon.
·
Wllh 90 ..... cent ol the meeting set
aside for Council - - lo the document, little hanl q - . g or close ex-

a-

-..d.

The "tougMM" quation came from
Speclrum edtlor Danny Parker (through

student
- IfPierce) .
KetlerMichael
were got,g to
Porker asked
re....! the names ol the three-person
panel which wll conduct the evllluation
ol his pnoidency and the campus. .
Porker lllld he had been informed by
SUNY Central that Ketler knew the
names and would reloeoo them Friday.
"They told you" the Chancellor would
release the nunes, K - c:orrected.

Pierce~.......,...

mended the Presidential statement for its
emphasis on "communication. • He called Ketter's an "open Presid!mcll-"
The President respOnded that there's
no quesllon changes in his administration
have -.gthened ~- He can now have
"productive" sessions with deans, at
which problems ue defined and options
for solutions, outlined. He has a "group
ol deans the institution can be proud ol;
vice ~ts. who are working very
hard. He offered this example of a new
spirit ol cooperation: When It became
clear thai olllca would have to be moved
out ol Ellk:otf to provide UIOie beds for
students, he asked Educational Studies
and Social Scicnc:es to make room for
some extra people in Baldy HaD. The
deans ol these faculties worked it out
around a table; Keiter didn't have to
"raise a finger. • "Ave years ago," he
said, most deans would have n!acted to
"protect their own flanks. • Today's
"shong" deans, by contrast, are
"knowledgeable and cooperative." Ketter
also praised the academic vice president
for being "open and ra:epllve. • Decisions
· ..., no longer made in the closet," he
commented.

Sludenl Council Member Pierce had
been exp«:taa to shoot &amp;om the hip. But
he asked only few the President lo comment on his ooncopt ol "consensus," on
his poo111on regarding a ·~· for
SUNY, ....t on
the University is doIng ..... MCUring outside funding.
Ketter reoponded !hat:
WWollomaalorla?
a) While there is no doubt he makes
Frank Cuomo, the newest member of
decillons which don't always meet with
the Courd, asked Kelter to address how
general -sreement. he: enc~
"excellence" can be maintained in the
dcbetc; looks to the academic vice
face ol budget restraint. Cuomo leered
presidents, deans and Faculty Senate to
that U/8 risks losing some ol its teacheR
shape academic directions, and asks inof "inte.nattonal renown ."
put and comment on al n:ports.
b) He would welcome a "charter"
The President responded with a hislory
outlnlng which s-s .... raerved to
ol the academic achievement whicli was
SUNY Centnol and which to the Cammade pollible In the 1960s and early 70s
puNS, but doubts there's one chance in
through a - v e infusion ol tax dollan.
100,000 1o get one. Meanwhile Slate
In the ..ty 60s as a private inJIItution,
Education Law cle8nes that the Trustees
U/8 had only four gnoduate ~Is
which ....,. ranked nllllonally; by the late
.... the o..-y, and they alabllsh
guldeiNs and policies.
60s, the figure was 22-23; In the mid 70s,
c) The UniYt!ntly actiwly pursues out·
o - 30 ~ts....,. recognioed as
side funds on - . 1 !mots: through the
good to IUp8rior in national terms. DurOffice ol the Vice President lor I I - " ,
ing t ' - yeam, Keiter said, U/8 was
through a SUNY olllce In Wathington,
able to "buy" a faculty ol diotinction. In
D.C .
tnck ol federal funding
1970, for example, fewer than 30 per
opportunities, through the Vice President
cent ol faculty had been here for more
than 5 yean. In one single year, we addfor Stuclant Allain (for student
atd rnonla) , and through the U/8 Founed 270 new prolesoors; now, we're losing
dalion,lnc.
lines.
lMI year, Ketler olaborated, some $26
Dapile the finandal aunch, Ketler
......,In grants ....t ~few various
assured Cuomo there'• lillie llkdhood ol
adiYtlln c:ame from oulllde. As an examlosing facullv for salary. ..,......._ U/B's
ple ol • m.jor projKI noW pending, he
at the top ranks ...,
lllld U/8 is clawla!*lll • prOposal lOr a · ~ the top two or three per cent naCcniB few Scimc:a incfTachnology. This
tioMiy. ~salaries •e where
would be banluolod by the National
fal behind, Ketter satd-for adSc:ienca FoundMion to the tune ol
U/8 ranks below the 40th
$2'1'1-$3 mlllon annually, and would be
.,.,...ollie. Some ~aoional school
salaries t.g, too, be satd.
the ~ regii&gt;MI component ol
a fllllionel effort to lncruM training opAs fw as rnaldng adjultments to add
portunllles In ICienc:c fields lor
faculty In ~ dcmancl ...,., K noted lhmlllnure - limits to OedJtlity.
Moooo• IIIIo• Ketto•'• "••••
Allrttion u....tly occun, he satd, "when!
'I
p Counl:l ,.._.,_ Geolge ...._comyou don't- il"
·

""*

which.._

a-.. . .

et:

m-.

m-.

Foaolty .......?
Finally, in resppnse to Mn. Rose
Sconiers, the President outlined the
University's procedures IDI"faculty review
in cases of promotion and tenu....

dlocua.""""

United Way
Progress
10

20

30.00!000l'O«l90l00

Architecture &amp; Environmental DMign

~·

Continuing Educ:otton

---__
~v-eva

"-'lnslto-..
Focilffin

'*"""""

Pt.w.nt

-

-·~·
........,.
Nolle-

-U/11-

Sd&gt;ooial$oda1Wori&lt;

Unlvenlty goal: $130,000
Tolal raised to date: $46,256.55
Pm:ent ol goal achieved: 39.73

,

�OQober 18, 1979

'Apocalypse·:Now' found
sexist~ racist, trivial
.

.

By l..iDda Gnoce-KobM
To say simply the! Frarx:is Ford, Coppola's Apoc;alypee Now offers a racist and
nanow portrayal of the Vietnam War
does jusCic:e neither to lhe depth of lhe
racism nor the RaiTO\Inless o( his view.
That this 19ng-awaited film Is being widely
praised as a classic says much about lhe

:r::e/~ fu!IW~~V:~

The movie does, to be sure, have se~
quences that are dnematicaUy unusual ,
even breathtaldng, but with $60 mUiion
and an .....nal of modern technological
war toys, Coppola would have to 11y hard
not to come up with something good.
1he lai1we of Apocolvpee, as a comment on the Vietnam war, Is Coppola's
failure to see that particular conflict In any
but traditional terms. To have to resort for
a plot bne to a novel written about !he
Bt1llsh experience In Africa (Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darlmea) Is to say that the
American experience In Vietnam wasJilst
_lilce the! of any imperialist nation 5lftlggling to maintain power in any
underdeveloped counlly.
But M Wasl't.

All ... ,_..,

for~

~the Vietnam war apart from

even Amalea's Korean experience was
that ~ provided lhe lint real opportunJty
for ongoing expaoifnenlal.lon In
technological warfare. During that war,
Americans conceived, tested and
perlecled many new "anti-personnel"
weapons like napalm and ocatter bombs,

~trikes In which
the n.-ve planes flew so high they
couldn't be heard from 1M ground, their
presence was announced by the bursting
of bombs. This whole new array of war
goodieo was developed for a new ~d
of military commancl.r that never hiod to
go near a bettlelleld.
And- wC&lt;:hed Hall on the six o'clock
news.
Especially lnlenle paformaD&lt;leS are
giva~ In Apocolvpee by Martin Sheen as
Willard, an oent by Army In·
tellgcnce to ktl a aaad Green Beret colonel, Marion Bnndo, who Is holed up In
the Cambodian jungle with a trnall army
of Montagnards, Vietnamese and
,.._de Americans, and by Robert
Duval.
Duvall's role as a gung-ho leader of a
llrtke force who "'1&gt;e&lt;&lt; out a Vletnarnele
~ jusloo that he could ~~age a surllng
comat, ..,.. meant as a contrast to the
~. nlgbtmarioh
of Kurtz.
l....uty Is juJI a ol degree, Coppola ..,.. to be saying. &amp;t -·ve
aJw.ys known thot.

"people. - . . 852

rnacm-

F~af=~~~ cheap tricks: we

~ children gaily

see the -

{of·

::.-: ~ ' : " ~
charactersgetkllledollflnt oneSiackby .
'

.

.

\

a _,..lhrough his i-t (what does that
teD you.'); another ,Amaican soldier gets
off~ while llslening to a taped "letter
from home," and as 1115 comrades over his body - hear the kindly voice ol
his mother weroll19 him to "stay out ol
the bullets' wav;" a charact!lf who had
first seemed merely a cowmdly boob Is
aUowed to Clevelop something like
cOurage and Vision, only to end up with
his head culolf and dropped In WIUard's
lap, eyes staring upward.'Yuclc!
Perhaps the cheapest b'lck of aU, and
one which pointedly illustrates not only
Coppola's deep-seated racism but also
his lack of any real knowledge of the Vietnamese people and what they endured
during the war, comes during a scene In
which Willard's escort gunboat crew,
traveling upriver deep In enemy territory,
encounters a famUy In a sampan heading
for safety.
The captain orders his men to search
the small boat. They beg not to, but the
captain fears the famUy may be hiding
weapons or VIetcong soldiers. A young
Vietnamese woman Is ordered by one of
the men to come out from under a low
canopy on the sampan. She starts out,
then turns back to reach for something.
One of the Americans freaks out and
starts shooting, wasting the entire farnUy
In what seems an endless moment of
gunfire.

A -..,, aot a child
Another American lnvesllgat.es what
the woman had turned back to get. As a
woman and mo!her, ~ thought !hat certainly the only thing, lor which a woman
In that situation would defy armed
soldiers would be a child. But the macho
minds behind Apooolypse couldn't settle
for that. Not a child, but a puppy,
presumably a pet, Is what lhls woman, on
a boat In the mid~ of the jungle, In defiance of guys armed with automaUc
weapons, risked-and gave-her life for!
One of the soldiers grabs the puppy,
-.ping and screaming, and adopts k
1he r.;d.t Ignorance that could
develop this scene Is astounding. One
bad the feeling that If the puppy had Indeed been a VietnameM child, ~ might
have been tossed Into the river. A child Is
not sufficient to move the hearts and
minds of these manly men-only a puppy will do.
One need not even begin to describe
the sexism Inherent In this production, as
In moot films of-the "war moYie"
•
Wars are things that MEN do. ~
are merely fodder for the cannons, objects to be raped In the battlefield. or
things to be bought on R ancj R.

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

Just In case - don't get the point,
Coppola throws In a traveling Playboy
BunRII show undoubtadly 10 ·that. men

~alreadyaroool~bythealmootconttnuous

guns throughout the moYie ,
can
ibetr arousal by Wlllcblng
young while women doing the ofd "bump

and grtnd."
The lnle bravery ol the Vietnamese
women who fotqlt and died In !he battlellolds and jungles of Vietnam Is never
ponnyed In Apoc:alvpee. For that matter,
netth.- Is the bravery of the VIetnamese
men who, with the women, lln.llllled for

. . .a ..

yean agalnllal1lchnologlcal ~
that threw every wupon M could come

up with on theW !lny counlly.
And that Is Why .the moYie falls to give
any new or ~ Insight Into the
people
Vietnam War. 1he
- merely victims. The real otruggle Is
Willard's oboeooion with Kurtz's
But that kind ol otruggle could happen In
any war, any time.
Especially In the movll's much-talkadabout denouement, when Wllard finally
tracks down Kurtz In the junglo, does the
film fall. Kurtz. played by a pesque
-6ranllo; .hM hblod himoef lip In an an-

v-

rnacm-.

MondJOHN "- CLOUT1ER

•

·,· · "-

, ., ·-~, ·-1'

"'..;

,.1'-::
.,,..,,...:.r.I,.-,•T
~
&lt;:-:;
..;;..,.
=,.:,.,....
.,.
r,,;,,,
,..&lt;i
,~
,.,,r-.~;.;.;:.1

:.•.""~

.,.,.9 , ... ct#

'

.

-~~, ~•

'•'

dent ruined Cambodian iemple. 1he
people wbo lnherttacl this culture are
mere savages with painted bodies, brutal
and unclothed. The camp Is~ to
be a Vision ol HeD (at least three
characters mention that): naked bodies
hang from trees, heads are strewn about,
everyone snarls nastily.
Dennis Hopper appears here briefly as
·a loot Amalcan, a babbling Idiot who can
speak of nothing but Kurtz's "genius."
Ea.y Rider 10 years later.

Wlalta ............
Now, desp~ the fact that Kurtz Is surrounded completely by savage enemy
ing. And America has yet to deal with the
soldlas, the! he Is a raVIng lunatic whose
awful realization that Innocent people
aueltles can scarcely be lmagk1ed, none
were the vldlms of, not only Johnson's,
of the hundreds of people who swround
butlhe coUectlve egos and macho posturand bate him can muster up the courage
lngs of the men who ran America.
to singly or collectively gel rid of him. It's
The horror of Vietnam for America
up to !he American generals to send
lies, too, l{l the knowledge that In this
another whke man to do !hat.
counlly !here were laboratories In which
And the clue to the entire movie, the
scientists relined napalm from a watery
reason that Kurtz turned from an aUpaste Into a more dense substanc:e !hat
would stick to the bodies It was sprayed
American hero to a madman obsessed
with horror and auelty, Is based on a lie:
on. Other minds carne up ~h the Idea
Kurtz teDs Willard how he and his men
that If the darts spewed by ocatter bombs
were escorting a medical crew to In·
were made of plasUc, they wouldn't show
oculate Vietnamese viD- chUdren _ up on x-rays. And If - can't lind the
against polio. (Kurtz was su~ a
guerillas In the jungle, let's defoliate the
colonel In the Green Berets-wasn I tt
nation so !hey have nowhere to hide.
nice !hat he would take the ttrne to go InAnd on and on .. .
to the jungle to InOculate children?) After
The guilt and honorol-Vietnam cannot
!he Americans left !he vUiage, Vietcong
be confined to the battlefield, as Coppola
soldiers, Kurtz says, entered It and art off
did In Apooolypee. 1he director, and
aU the little arms that had been Inguys like him whO see everything In terms
oculatecl Those mean guys!
of what REAL MEN do, couldn't be exIt Is easy to see how an atrocity of that
peeled to come up with any real insight
nature .could turn a person Insane, but
Into VietnAm, .or any other war. I suopect
the point to be made here' fS that H Is a
that a lot of fans of lhls moYie are guys In
travesty to base Kurtz's-and presumably
their 30s who, thanks to deferments,
Coppola's-claim that that Is how the
never had to go to Vietnam. For them,
Vietnamese were winning !he war, the!
Coppola's movie gives moral justification
for not going because war Is, after aU,
!hey were "stronger" because they could
be so "purely aueL" It-gives a tollllly false
hell.
picture of how the Vietcong could and
But the · movie also provides no
did malntaln !he support of the people,
justification for !he fight to end the war.
so much support, In fact, that their !lnlgOne soldier kills another and Is a hero.
gle led to the liberation of their counlly.
And all !hose people marching In the
U !he VIetcong powerbase had been
back home have no Idea what It's
built on such sheer teuorlsm. ~ never
aU about.
could have overcome the U.S. as II did.
The real heroes and victims-the men
Besides, no such aCt of terror against
and women of Vietnam and ftte
srnaD chlldnm by the VIetcong bas ever
Americans who came home broken In
been reliably documented.
body and spirit-never had a chance In
1he film's final la!lle, as oomeone In
Apocolvpee. Coppola's portrayal ol the
the audience muttered, had nothing to
Vietnam Was as a 1trugg1e for "truth" In
do with Vietnam. h Is merely another
the minds of a few while men Is a truly
portrayal of "white man as hero," saviOr
obocene trlvtallzailon ol a COrdlict that Is
~950.1111f=~~~ aU the Insight still tearing America apart.

,........_

:

U Coppola had Intended Apocalvpse
to portray !he horror of aU wars, and not
juJI Viatnam, he failed !here, too. There
was nothing In the film - haven't seen
before:
1he real horror of lhe Vietnam War for
the American conodence Is not what happened on the battlefield. In any war situation, atrocities occur on both sides.
Kurtz-this supposedly enigmatic
figure-Is no harder to undent.nd !han
William Calley. A mind snaps when Its
ability to deal with what Is happening
finally becomes overloaded. h rMy take a
little or It may take a lot, but there's no
need for aH the mystical and a1moot
biblical imagery that Coppola builds
around Kurtz to understand ·it. The final
half-hour of the film Is nothing more !han
self-Indulgent nonsense.
No, !he real honor of Vllltnam for
America Is In the realization that It was
ordered and carried olll, not by the poor
' souls who ~ oent with guns and planes
to wreak havoc on a small na-, but by
dlspasoipnate men In the While House, In
Con!Pso. In dlc Pentagon, who had no
fear lor their lives but only a will to win .

Beware UUP's
fund requests
Editor.
1he Buffalo Center Chapter of UUP
has recently dlstzt&gt;uted to faculty and
staff a request for contrl&gt;utions to
VOTE/COPE. Members olthe Untversi·
ty may wish to know before they con·
tribiM that t h e - "by law none of
UUP's dues or f&amp;s can be open! for
political purpc-." 1s false. UUP Is
perfeclly wtthin Its legal rights to spend as
much money as It wants for. political or
Ideological purpooes, and no State (or
federal) law prohi&gt;lls II from doing so.
1he only catch Is that aD such money
taken from -ncy f-yers Is refundable on demand.
UUP 1s presently engaged In litigation
with agency feepayen, one Issue of
which lo how much money for political
and ldeologicalpurpc-. taken both from
dues and agency fee co1ect1ons the union
has already openl This may help to explain the union's sudden ....ew.d Interest
In the heretOfore nearly Invisible
VOTE/COPE.

,..

�Ocmb. 18, 1979

to~s,

Chon respon
Eo~!~-.

I ~ 1D rad M&lt;. N.rc
.............. whkh- pubaobod Ill tt.
,....... cl ~ 11, In~ to
111!1 JINVIDullll pubaohed tallmony on ll)e
NeW York Silo!. a.- E:-w I'Wo.
~----- M&lt;. L-'o ~
Qllllllnllv - . . . ! wllh wllll I oeld;
mot I ld _...,. lhlll . . could com·

. ......... • ...._ tt. usual pollllcal
....t ....... ...... dlolaltlons which . .
10 p...,.nl nOwadays. By my
. . . . . . . . 1111 . . -.llllaloohoped
lhlll papllllr mlacolapliolll about
the nudelt - . . . may ~ be
dartlled far ... cl the general

.-....

M&lt;. L-'o IDIIIIIoned the posstie
. . - . . , . . . . wllh englneetng c:onalrudlan. 1l* II timely, and is
quill w I I rleNe Indeed, I hear that
a thana - illloalporaled In the re-

..m

cent J - Fonda IIICMe called "China
Syndroma." Of c:oune, In a prolltorlentad free enterprloa. Intentional cor·
culling m.y not be .twaya avoided.
Aloo, we~ beings being what we
. . . no engiMalng products would be
~ falluN.prool , even If we tried
not to cut oomoa. M&lt;. Leeds may have
to ........ ' - · lhlllthe utllltla who
bonowed the vut amount cl money
&amp;om the banks, end ~ have to
pay the reactor vendors, would not wish
to aa:epl the plant wllhoul the best
...,.....,.. (« poooible) lntpecllon of their
"' ... The rule cl ..... check and balance
won. "I'ICft vtgoroualy wtlhln the free
enl8pl . .c ayotam which M&lt;. Leacla seems
to cliotrult.
Of c:oune, the Nuclear Regulatciry
Corn-n·s regulatory controf is lrn·
p...d on both the utllllla and the reactor
vendors throughout the daign and con~ al the project. In ca.
the beat ..,..... __, conllol may fall
to d-=t the kind cl -8awa which Mr.
Leeda mentioned, • trulv unbdevable
111110U111 cl Ndlmclancy II buJilinto thee
plant dalgna. -o on1y """' M&lt;. Leeds
could • In my c:oune-Nu£421(521)Nudur ~ Syatcma!)
~nuclear power plants haw
opa.-1 In the lJnJiod Sl8lllo far more
than two hundNd , _ _ .. The
u....d Sl8lllo N.V• nudur ~. In·
...m-, haw auiMd over
..,....,.._,...-.gsome
•
. - - y a n without • fldallly.
" ' " - . . . . . . . . .. .... OYer 5\),000
~twa on hlslh-YI.....Y ye.:ln this counlly alone.

w_,...._.

About the poobloma: ~five
per coni cl radloacllvly clecayo bofore the
spent fuel ..._ the ....:tor. Within tan
yan, niMiy-nN perconlofll ... ~
_ . t. Of the one per coni !hot lo WI,
99.9 per cent clecayo wllhln three hun·
drecl - "· Bv
they say, one
would poot.bly not be harmed by allng
a q-w pound cl II. Within 1,000
_ .. the radloacllvly &amp;om , _
... be aboulthe .. dloll of

that-· •

~

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

deed. the ........... _,_.

which

.,.,.- diMr vlrfled (glaaol8ad) ..
cen~mlc wutcform In such deep
NIICIIII&lt;Jry media .. salt .. gran.. farma.

- '""*

cl tt-.......
~ _.lntodj
fonnetlonl
haw~_..

_ _ ._.. ........... 5-

In conn8dlon with M&lt;. l..aelis' opinion
dloll . . haw no right to ...,._ radloac·
- envllonmcntal facton o n . , _ thouAnclo cl ye.:o In the future, I may
hHen to remind him dloll our mankind
has cvolwd Into the ~~ loom under
Intensive radiation. The general
mlsconcolpllon here is that radiation is
something new; In a senoe, you may say
that radletlon was one ol many par·
lidpllllng envlronrnenlal factors In live
million years of human evolution. In this
conqectlon, the aven.ge annual dose due
to
netional nuclear program In the
u. .. that is, 0.01 miiJirem per capita, Is
1/13,000 of the natural back!JOUnd, and
Is pradk:aJiy undetectable.
About the dosage received bv raklents
irnmedialely adjacent to the Three Mile
Island lila, the figure I used COIIM!I &amp;om
the _ , . , , made by the National
Ac:ademy cl Sdence ol this counlly. I am
aw..,, ol course, that the public c:onfldenca In the U.S. public: lnslllullons has
unfcrtunately diminiahed after the VIetnam W11. Yet we must still trust the of.
flclaJ judgment cl the best brains In this
counlly. "&amp;sed upon their estimates, the
dose reoelved ill the lite is lower than
what tbe Denver (Colorado) citizens
would NC&gt;OIYe .wry year. i'lloo, -~~lower
than the annual dose nicelved by the
famed Inca Indiana In the Andes Mountainl, who developed a remarkable
dvtlizatlon.

11oe ........ qde wiD . _ 60
~

On

the

limited availability of

wanlum-235, M&lt;. LMds' -ernent is
This II the NUon why the

c:orrec:L

breeder reactor cycles must be
developed, which wiD utlliza the mOll
(99.2 per oen1) cl natural uranium and
the enliN thor1wn raoun:a. The breeder
cycle thus developed ohould support our
dvlllzatlon I« the next lbdy centuries.
While the nuclear power plants
~ .... wry poO&lt; l&lt;lW&lt;:es of
~ pbonlum, II is Important
that the..,...,_.. management of fuel
enrtchnwlt, icpioc:aolng , and diatrlbu·
lion be ...-ually carried out via

CO:::~t:t-=~

the ....,._ they have, OPEC
countrlelllllll naiUraly lly to reduce their
oil - - . . . the ........... cliMng """"
behind nuclar dewlapmeid wor{d wide
.... b e - economic, not "*-ry. Tha

INFC£ (ln6anollonal Fuel Cycle Evabatlon) clbt which begon Jut ve- at the

cl Preoldonl c... ... good
- - In ......., the reported cl
hlo ....... palllical handing, M&lt;. c-.
must ~ cndk too this
lnlllallw.

-IIMif. ww_..._...._.._
I - ....... eoc&lt;:bd to .....t M&lt;.

would be mcnloldc than the
due to their chromium conlml.
lliolmpOdenl to ............. that- ....
~ bv 1011 and rocks which
contain naturalfy-occurrlng radlotootope with ........ cl ,.... of half.
IIYa. Prof-.&gt;al anti-nuclear aciMsll
wll naturaly talc about the tentiy long
hai-IIYa cl this and that lootope, but
would convellenllv fall to mention the
,...._ arnountl ol thoaa -.pea.
The Wal. Valley tank was built
be1oN the IMor chango cl Nuder
~ Cocnmllolon (NRC) . (than
AIOmk £na;y Commllolon [AfC))
dlopooal ~ . which cal lor
~
al hlgh--J.wl · As
many atvcliolo haw i:onduded, however,
:t1;11! ~Jn .t,1.w Well Valley tank may
o.'ioae:tllledut*lhc new .-.guletcwy ap-

w-

..........

Leeds'
em~ on the- clllltemale -vv
lonna, u:h • ooillr end wind -vii· He
may be_...... to know that this writer
was tha who .......... ID hio collugua In the Engtr...tng Fac:uMy to Ml
up a "Cerde too Wind POwer R-.dl"
ill SUNY/BuffBio as aoon as he joined
this Un"""'*Y In 1967. (Of COWM , Buf.
lalo II the real "WWndy City." A pnvM&gt;g wind ll8loc:ily In Buffalo Is
around -"'a knoll.) My111511111tiof&gt; was
not laMn, howcw&lt;, due pc&gt;olll&gt;lv ID the
ex1remely low efllclency ~ with
thoaa wind ~. and the natural
aloaplldom --.cJ with them. As an
aample, the ao-caled . _ . . . , . . or
Sevoalooi ......-"inc Jllllh • ~­
loot diarMier (which II not small) would

seeks synthesis

pooduce . . . . . -~ • • wild
opeedcl.._ . . . , . . . .. . ..
L-'" mav......,lhii....,._ID_,
.....,_ . . .-.led too an - . .
Alllelan hooa.lhold, dopendlng on the
loadlon ....t - · •Helpful but
llmlled,•a I Mid In Dill tallmony.
Whle ., DIM'!I nudar --yean
have not pi'CICio.-l a tingle flllllly Ill the
IIIII - . y v-s. I am .tNid lhlil ttwlnd ........... ......,COI..-...:1
~~. .-lllvwhentbev

. . lnllllllecl In

t..ckvliNa. Some aallois

would..., ,.._..the homonclowi ex·
perlence cl ~ when the auppoaedly ltout maot stays gave up abrupdy
In a hli#1 wind.
Mr. Leeds temod the c:onc:ept of central po-r generaUon outmod~d .
H"""""", many people mull haYti heard
about Mr. Mao T•·Tung's experiment
during (« before?) the Cukural Revolu·
tion. His government apparently ordered
decentralization of industrial fac:ilitles.
Numerous blast-lurf\aces _(ac_tually
cupolas) were built In every backyard,
and the public was expected to produce
the Iron Ingots which China needed. As
aD ol us know, the experiment failed
mloerably, and the cupolas were moltly
taken down end junked. Oversimplification of technology can produce either a
total failure or limited success, with In·
henmtlosa of lime, material, and energy.
We have indeed no right to waste the
bmlled natural resourtli!S which the future
generation needs, due to IIJch a naive,
non-technological drealn. We under·
stand better now why the more
pragmallcaiJy-oriented Chinese govern·
ment currently wishes to Import our
modem technology so badly.

WMt ......................
In ccnnec11on with tho • oolat energy
which M&lt;. Leads favors, I am only happy
to let him know that this seemingly • outmoded"(!) profess«, a few years ago
originated and developed a solar
engineering c:owa; I.e., ENS 463 (also
ENS 553), Solar Energy En~ . In
fad, this Is the only official c:OUne
dedicated oolely to ooJar energy, and has
been quite popular. Of course, - have
some ott.. cxceJJent c:ouraes offered by
the Oepmtments of Englneelng Science
and Mechanic8l Engineering, etc. Fcw ex·
ample, ENS 410, Energy Engtneering (I) ,
ENS 411 Enemr Enginealng (D), E-w
~ (Ill) , etc. The first COWM,
I.e ., ENS 410, would be an exc:dent
c:oune for ll&gt;eral arts students to audll
with the permllolon of the lnstrudor.
although senior englneelng standing Is
reqund ,.,. cradlt ~We do ........:t. wolic In ooJer energy
tachnology, too. Mloa Linda Green, an
~ IPdwJte INdent, has done
an excellent wolic, and ,... will be preaantlng a oolar energy paper baaed on her
! ' - Ill the 2nd Miami lntanational

~ on Alllrultw EMo!1!1
s--lit~.
haw lll!.dy
.-..I the . . . . . - far the~

w.

&amp;om .t.o.d; e .g., c-..
Aida o..,.... clmnce.
the

u--.

Bv the -v.

llal ,..._.... ..... -vii work

In IUnce
- .....
hun.- . .puillohed
lfty _ .
.... Thonlbe,
eMI!I!I ta:hnalogy loan old fWd. Due to
the cl phyllca lnvoMcl, the ...
deney of phoeoVollaic ..... c:6 II ln'-'dy low, although M&lt;. L-'o l!iiCbd ..... the c:unenl pr-. leporl of
"bi-.k-~- In ..... cei!Khnology .
The c:onfinnc:e wll c:over1be·....
enagy fonna, and .., Inland lo
bring home oome good pradlcaJ _popen
fcw our Environmental Science l.b!liY
and our Farm-City project, which I am
assoc:laled with.

T-a....._

As I saki In the Hearing document.
some alternadve energy forma are
"definitely useful." but""' not sult.able fcw
supporting the "major need" of either the
state or the counlly as a whole. In spite of
my Involvement in solar energy (this is a
form ol nuclear energy, you know!), I
think that the twenty per cent figure
which some politldans In Washington,
D.C. are suggesting as the solar energy
contribution to the total na~ energy
SUpPly II total baloney! It should more
UkeJy be three per cent.
V es, tlrls particular form of energy may
be deployed on the roof, waD, and In the
backyard, If you wish. In Western New
V ork, K may supplement one-third of the
heat needed for your hot wat~ supply ill
the cost of somewhere bet1wen $1,000
to $9,000. h II a supplementary energy
loom fcw moot parts of the counlly ex.cept
Arizona and Southern California. While
- need the money too out graduata
reoearch on solar and too our student projeds such as Farm City, we mull not
spend twenty pc cent of RID monla for
a three per cent yield. We wiD aok too a
proper share cl that three per cent
monilll, though.
From a Hegelan dialutic point of
view, the -.nc&gt;ny which I gove Ill the
public hearing may as an Initial
! ' -. M&lt;. r-Ia non·tachnlcal, but
newrtheless llnczre nospoill8 can cer·
tainly as an anllth.iio. I only hope
that the rapon$1 I p.amt today would
be a reasonable ~ cl our pool- From the T - pok1t of view,
too, I IMI that the unlwnal harmony
may weD be-..! by having~ ef.
llcient and ~ndable c:entral power tiona with an incllvklual « Joc.bad aupplemen1ary enGliY ......,. around Ul.

UUP delegates question
Allen's view of their votes
Stnc:e many of the ~ ill New
Paltz ""' curnndy In the proc:o6o of pv..
lng their Impending .......... under provlslono cl the conlrad, tha ca-. could
be adveraely ..u-d If the Union~
a .....Jullon which implad dloll the conlrad ollaed ~for lndlvldualo
when rctrenebnient toOk place.
In ord.r 1D dlopeJ t t - c:oncerna, In In·
troducing the .....Jullon, Prof- Allen
-.red the delegala that this- not to
be t.lcen • a~ cl the contract n«
of the way that the Union handling
the ..-.chments. He even quoteil
-~~&amp;om aleporl t.ucd by former
Chalnnan Mlller of the Senale HWMr
Education eornrn- which ukl that the
Union fought wry hard to pnvcntdlment but _, - . l y lmtted by the
Taylor Law In wllll I c:oWcl do. In the
lWJt of t t - .....,_many cl ua ..p! poMd the .....Jullon daplle our~

.... ._.........,._u:..a.a

�Odab.r 18, 1979

T.,la Tharp

CALE

_., __

- - -. mWAC,-.1!30
p .... ~ ...... .,__.,~.

Tla....tap-18
- - . a.61ron'a "-"L 12 noon.

_,...

~·

Cook,...-.,
__ - ·..-..... 3110.......

- - - .. ..._, - . - . &lt;'lop. Allert

btl the - . 1
foaloh.

3p.m. "'-· ~

H . ~ 0... Oopoo-.. of

-. - ...............

.

~

011

....... --.. . . ..

· 3:30p.m.
l'olholosw. H..-0 F-.

Sdlool, 178

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

PHYaiCS COI.LOQI . . ..

T--.-~

~-

, _ Mlchool ,.,._, ~ 5donca. U/ 8 .
454 Fnoncook. 3:30p.m. c.«.., 3:15.

UUAa . . . .

Cfnnco,
Woldmon
n
-, --.
3:45,
6:15 1977).
ond 8:30
p.m.

A"'""'*'t'. -

S 2 ; - 51.50.

.................. .
tuddonl!l .......

-----who

*·

aonoly
...... .met
.. liP"
...... ..,...........
• Clllm
~
ou&amp;ar

_......

. . ---(AI -.

-"'~~-~ol--e-­
0.. Joon
ond
v• u-..,. 134lliaphyob
Cary. 4 p.m.

- . o . . - - of -

bo · "'- ond- .....
DD'AIIniEifT OF STA'I1511C8 CQLI.O.

QUUI'

---~....-.-. o...d R.

· o . . - - o f -. Room A·1S, 4230
Rldgo Loa. 4 p.m. CGioo ., 3:30.
POE1WY lEADING.

--.--wlhthoSon
"--Group,,....,....
on "lm-

-

of p...,. ..
Sp.m.

438~

eonw...-.... "-"·"

v---.-

FAOJLTY IECITAL'
p m. Gon.ol -

o n d - - 52; tho Oeponmcnt d MUiic.

Boln!Rocio1Hol. 8
53; locully, - · olumni

51. s,o.-.d ..

how-

The_...,, l l d o d " R - U; Th&lt;MUIIc
of H.---.,,- ...
Dick, ;
Rldwda. _ , LA-.y Dolo, _ ....., end

o.bonb Ungwo, -

hwnor ... tn.knldt p.at.

'*-'

no~ plus -....... 146
~ - 8 ond 10:15 p.m . - $1.35.
1'ldwiS mov bo ~ 01 Squn Boo&lt; Oftlco or
on fridoy- 6 p.m. ot 167 MFAC, ·
FAOILTY IECITAL'

·. - -

FIIAM( UOYD WRIGHT Ltt1UI£ &amp;EIIIES'

,__ .-. ond - " ' t h o
F.-..ki..lc¥fW,W.,._, onthe ...... ofAn

,...._.-Knox

GlooHnoldog (oa .. Wrlahl"• fomoua An Golooy Audlorium . 8 p.m.

,.,.,.._.-!(_

Skad.cs" ia an
- o f - one!..,._, mo1odla and an·
l9051o 1972, on tho ocx:oalon of

..-from

CACFD.JIS'

_......_lAo

· -· end dedicoled to
tho bWidoy ol a..la
Smil.
Sbt Amertr;an ~ . . repraented: Iva

,.._ ~· . , _ plus ........... 170
MFAC. fkool . 8 ond 10:15 p.m. $1.35. Ti&lt;:lwls movbo ~·Squn Boo&lt; Of·
flco«onfridoy-6p .m. .. 167 MFAC, A n - l o r -.

FILII/DISCUSSION
H.... .............

p.m. Gononl 51.50.

-

Gollory. 8

,.,--..,sov_.., .... --.M-..

,...._...w.

H-

neo.·

~ "" An
....Golooy.
An Hlal«y l'n9om ond tho

p--

end -

---of~o., -..

"'" Ana end p - " w..... A d - .. tho
do«.
M1cNo1 Andre .--.dy publiahod tho POCIS En·
qdapodio. ,.. book of poems, ~ ....
o--1 1oc Halos, was publlahod 0\ 1978 wlh an

l.lllAS MIDNlGHT &amp;P£CIAL

-

-

Gononl- 52; IIIUdeniS 51.50.

-

...... ao.r-

(19561 : Tbo
(195111 . &lt;:onf-.ce
- ._
- .. .......
Squire . 0...
10
__
p....

Sandap- 21

~~~o._adlllo

UUAIIFIUI'

Gononl- 52; ....... $1 .50.
- . KoWt McConb(l, Dana Wynta
end Comlyn Jonea. This.- 1950's ad·6 llvk
...._ .. ,..,..., ldinglhotiOoyofoamoltown

lllchM.I Pryoo- 1o

n..-. """-·

...._ ...__,.,""'-......,ave

B...

1111 olion "pods."
"11M
wtth Stew McQueen , A.nd.e
Court..ut .M e..t Rowr. ..h c:w-.. .. . b aawk .•
. k ...... up tho--- ,.. oay young Scevc Me·
~ holpa ...............nlly ......... invodlng
end ""!!UUs pocplo. fl"""'ng In

pw-

8nooo · ........ 01tho 11u1o1o M_,. of
Sdonot, ... _.. • - _....,..on wholo
bog

..__

-~·

Profutor .le••~~, ~!«en , • U~ t••••ttr of

w•

lho~of- .

·Opoa to the ~: • · - to
........... of the u........,. u.....
................ lido.- .... - --

MS/8 . INDEPI&lt;:NDENT FILMMAIIlEIIS

o.m-

Now_...
Aw . 8 p.m.

tl11

~~::.:..~. ~.::;

H ........ ~. o..-1&lt;. 182 Forba-. 3:30
p.m.

o.a.w..

llf1DIES1ED IN A &amp;P£CIAL IIAMI87
330 Squoo. 3:30 p .m. John · 01.- al
I.Jndcrwoduoao Educollon , ,.. bo......,... the sp&lt;dol
......, program. 111 """"""" - . . . snould co1
831·363110&lt;--. ~bythe

,..____

AilCHII1:C11.-E ~·

Jan Poul C:.W.., ~.--.
335 Hoya. 5:30 p.m. lfto ·

FILII (FlUI

-·-Study,

...

-on.

Mas.

~·

Study.

PSST: ~ FOR STUDENT
TRAINING

SUCC£S5

.. - - . . . . . . - Gnphlca

v- " ' - 232 Squn. 7·9 p.m.
Free to .. INdents. Reglller a 110 Norton or cal

636-"""~

Anthony Rozok. Oeponmcnt of Art. d
diacuamethodafow ........ onanglngend _.due·

-y

ing tm.ga and ~ for maximum impad. os
woll • liming ond ...,..._, ol hone!..,..., posten,

bn&gt;churoa,ondoda.
l.lllAS
NIGHT FIUIS'
ONb a.., (J_., 19361, 7 p.ra.:
(J_., 19531. 8 :25 p.m. Woldmon TheaU&lt;,
A""-. F - -.
ONb .. the . . ofo """"""Ylcllmlood "" .... clqu·
ble- olhcr .........

u.-

~ " ... ologoricol """' (........ ....
- w h o - f a r l h o _ , _ _. - • RmUrlll, one • a rnerchn •

FUIS (FlUI11tEOftl •

-- ~v-z...-.,1&lt;11
-.......: 147~. 9p.m. ~ll!l lh&lt;
&lt;Ant. lor SWdy .

~ " " - Sludy/ llulolo.

._ ,....

s.ac-.

Eonb (i)owhonko, 19301 . l46 Dlefendori. 7 p.m.

si&gt;onaored "" tho &lt;;'mer lor -

.. -

Reel (Henry Cowell; s... from "The (l/kgll Thomaonl; Suite hom "The Time of the
Huthen" (l.ejoron Hllcr!: Sot low n..Ot&lt;hoatno ca-r-. 19111: "In the Cop," "In
the IM," "In lho Night;" MUIIc low n-tte (Aoron
Coplond, 19251; ond Vwlotlona"" "1 Got Rhythm"
(Goorge Gonhwln, 19331 , -..... foaollyc.loPO\oo.
"The Time of lho Huthen"
o 11m dulog
wllhlho-ofon,...F...,.plotfowhlarolem

To lilt - I n the "CaaeDdar," call
ShrMor •t 636-1616.
Key; -open oa1i1 to~ with • pro.......,. . _ ID the 8UIIjec:t:

Moadap- 22
PA11IOLOGY _ , . . . ,

-

.. ,.......,

~

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

(19'/81 . Woldmon
4, 6 , 8 end 10 p.m. Genor.l od·

COHCDIT'
U/B . . . . . . , _ under lho cllr..-. of
J.,.... ~ Boinl R"""" Hoi. 8 p.m. me
o d -. s,o.-.d 11!1 tho Ocpwunent of MUIIc .
The _.m of ....... 11!1 1\mertcon- ia

tho!·-

.a the s.- IW 11I:Ut Olke.

c-..rt

- 5 2; atudonlo51 .50 .

. .,......... -... ......,..._. -·
--__123-.--.......... ._
.
~·

(19561: Tbo

l.lllAS IODNIGHT &amp;P£CIAL '.

-

1'-...1-

OIYiomof~~-

I

"' ........ -

(195111 . Coni....... n-•. Squin . 0... ...

~~~o._adlllo-.----bol1p.JL

..

---lho-dSwoG,...nd
portinglho_ond _ _ _ _Tlckels ·
lholongalondlng..-WBFOhoshodtn...,.

Sludy/ Buftalo.

WllfO LIVE ..oADCAST
Jozz rod&lt; group Uo,llw hom tho Trolamodooe
Colo. 10 p.m. WBFO (88.7 FMJ.52.50.

GaAND-

snJDIES CDITEII COl.-

..

52; U/ B ~. end
Oludcna 51. ADS YOUC!Mn ~- s,o.-.d

......,_, Communloy Conte-, Ill Elmwood Ave.
9 p.m. Funded by lho Now Vod&lt; Slolo Council on

-

pafcdy -

11!1 tho c..- of tho C.UU.. one! Poofonnlng Ana

~ond-_.,.oflho ...."

donollng. pef&lt;X·

Huvon low Lllllo

-

.lUST MIFFAID POEI'RY IIEADING5 •

c.-loy. -

~

JWSIC'
,-T -: conoa1 pori......,.. d
mUIIc, end Dick, flullat. Medlo
SWdy, 207 O.W.. Avo. 8 p Jn. Gononl....,...

Fddap- 19

~AI.

a-......

-

..... . ...del.
M. b u g - 1o lho flral IOU CWI...,....

PEDIAJIIIC
~c...lolo~0.0..... Klnch-..,, OIIdr.n'a"-"l II
om

lody.

GW• guordlon: h o Glda."

T - ..._. podonnonoe ol

_...music. ..

wllboneiiiWBFO.

lA* Caron ,

8p . m. -~ .

Rob.t Dick, · Boinl
Roc11o1 Hoi.muale,
8 p.m.end
Gononl$1.50;
U/ B
. --ondlludonbJI. ADS
""""""'""""""'""· ~t.,thoc..-ofthe
a - ond
Ana ond lho Oeponmcnt
ofM-*.

lo

ro..lv .......

B: C,.. 1195111 . -

l.oula .louodon, MoUdco ~ and GiniJold. llullolo I&lt; Edo Cowlty
Sodoly.

IIUSIC'

. . .-

M.yorGr&amp;t, or•
.nwaatSha•sBulllo,
_ -... .-..8p.m.
__.-.pro-

rlounlon Ia lho epitome of lho French mon·oboul·
town who ouddenlv ..-. GiQ! .... grown .....

Flloo, hrt

Loooolw ~ ~ C&lt;xneiThalro, ·
8 p. m . ,.,.._~ - s,o.-.d 11!1 UUAB.

W11FD ~~EMERT DAY'
Thlabonelll ... ....-of _ _ """'""''
Sf¥'0 G,ra. llulolo'a , _ , _ , Juz·lusion

56 ond 57 ....
and .. "'" doo..
n.--....-.~baloo
donollng • porionnonoe .. tho ~ Cornd
n..tN .. 8 p .m . the..,.. ewning. The Quartet, a
... outlll, ,._...,"""""'""- ...dlllonlng
for a NltkJn.&amp; . _ - • one of tb. performIng . . - lor V - Audlonca. Inc. d
W-..NowVod&lt;. - o f 5 2.50 .. thedco

FILII'

52: atudonts, golay
11!1 tho Cent• for
An Golay .

~

inln&gt;dudion
"" New Vod&lt;CIIy.

.... lAo

IAonord -

too .-oy bWidoy potty? theM"* Oeponmcnt

.._....,w...,..-.onc~..,........-.

-

~.

....

I

,...._.-Knox An

· Vlrgl

s...
.......... Coplond, end Somuol - ·
Who but Yv• Nltbahoft could tum • concat in·

Fa.: lllr!lil one! Wlhclm

SWdy ond tho

-

· Bolnl Rocllol Hoi. 8 p.m.
53; locully, ao.fl, olumnl end

~ ~~,.,!!:.,..

_
. of · Cclulor ond Oovolopmcntal
Biology, ~ of Colondo. 114 H -.
4:15p.m.

..-a

v-

. . _ .......,, a.-too .._ -

--. Gen..~ -

of

Colo, Pld- KOidt R. P...... Oopod-

" - ... -

.

CACFaJIS'

--~-

-

QAAICS~·

..,. ......4p.m.
Floe 11-.
0..
.lohn
P
. .·
-. 219a.m.no.
_,
.

-

II---

_...,.

-"'"-from '""'*erno::

W - - ~mot Klrdlbav om WocNcl
. . A - . ond ... . - ..... oflho - " ' " '
....e.-.s. -oftho-hovotodowlhlho
phlooophy of...,._, but . . only mnot&lt;ly con·

11on&gt;O'

_

(19'/81 . Conlonnoo

Lones-h.
_ .. l h o - - - o n d - -

IIUSIC'

~IPECIAL-•

~.

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

~~~.~·~;";j

-

........ c - t

Thla......., _ _ _ ... _ " " " " ..

au. A MOLECI• A&amp;IIIOLOGY SEJONAII•

PA11IOLOGY
- · - 0 . ...
...................

Gen..~-

-

n-. Squoo. 3, 5, 7 ond 8:55p.m. Gononl od·

- 5 2 ; ....... 51.50.

n.-, 1021-S......Sp.m.

P·P.:.,_ Goo.. ......sod lho 4th....,_,..

Ph.D . . . - .. . . . . . . . . . -.

UUAa . . ..

-~
c--.
Ph.D., .,...._ of
. . . - . . . . o f - .. Dululll. 3rd

~
167 MFAC. 3-5 p.m. lftoto
.......... ~ .. uo-owao~
Mr.-28117.
t...n .......... lor loodlng . . -. _., end

- - -· '--lo.lollnT.-,

"-Y Flold. 2

p.m.

-=..
... ---..--..
.-~.oo~~~~~o .. - . - - - -

._

---

-:.x-...:..... ..-.....

AL()()IICII-

PHIL080PHY ~·

Pln:~--IUCCESS

~

Satanla9 - 2e

-o.-·lho-&lt;110...-

~-=at-..... \!Do .,.,._, Dr. Go~~For.

. . . . . . (19711. ond " _ . . . , - "' ....

. •'

.•

�OciDbor 18, 1919

7

__
10-----·- -- ··___

.............
.....
..,_
., ... JIIoooood
........... _ .!-.._.,....._,
.. _ _

- -·M!IIAlloMoooih-.....,.....,_,, .. ....
_

. . . . . . .-

.. -

bo

.. ophald ...

...... . _ ... .,...__.._.
()phuk ...t UIB'o _ _ . Fdoch II II a.m., fri.
~.T

c~ov.~

....... - . c - -.

.....__.a•

,.,....._

Cli!IIILOGICM - - - ·

- - . . . , . . . s.-oojo,

Gaoel.,_..

-.v-~. -111.4MO

....

~3:~·~--=.:!Span.

,...._Eallw- an..

~-QA~RS·

n..-.'-dwflnldlvcldw-·o-.

AI-·
................................tho-·
--·-..
dlv-.cylndw~ciMusitlo•

t-= 2 p .m., _ . , . .-.u: J.5 p.m ., "The
Er9folt VIol eo.-:• 6o8 p .m .. "Eoriy Dora
_ , . 8-IOp.m.. ·~...tSolt Wind eo.-.·

-In lloln:t Aadlol Hal. M.od·

T!,61&lt; lannod Tho London Early Muolc
~In 1976, ho ond- cl

...

:;:.~.....=

--Early

Sinco moldng .. hi;Ny """""""-1 London dobut
..... Q . . - . - . twin .lonuary cll977, 1ho
LEMG hoo pefonnad .__auclionoaln lho
Unltad ~ . llolglum, Holond. holy and
Auolnlla, ...t..-oourlow-Eutopuwlmun·
- ond ... Unllod - I n lho .-..g months

cl 1979. Tho .... moda ....
on 88C-TV ond t.. from
· and &amp;om lho Flandon Fadvol In
Brugo .

Tho-loto-oc:holorty, l'"lolllho.-o
lima, .........
muslt.

-.,..,.,..,..._"'"*'-

...

.

~~
.......... G . ~~~
~-ciT-.....,. IOIIIoWw. 4-S
...... s,.o.-.cl ,..., - - ...
a...-~~. . bo -from S.5:30.
\

......

,.. _ _ ,._c-cv.....
~.

uuu-v--·
.......................
19301. 146 -

- 7--

c-•-SOood!l·

s.-- ... ...

A ........ 119411, 7 p.a: ... IWota
...... IFnnca. 19S31. 9:10 .... ~

----..-.---·
o--ln--

,....,...._
Olarloo- ..... - - - ·
...............................
-----·.- .. .-wwu

- . Sqoa.F.ft-.
Wldor.

Mr. Halah...._ll_...,,_ Till.
wholoa_cl_...t....,.........,_

n. ......

edy.
..-poe., • lltu.ldanlat. Fnnch ...... ~

., -

lli!B~MJ-·

-

~"''""-IItlE..-~.

Sludv. 71¥1-. Aw . II P-"'·
s,.o.-.cl b v - Soudy, ~ -

POEIIIY READING'

-Hall.-·
~c_.
...t odlor.
Room,
Spaclol
Hal. 8P.-y
p.m.
Sponoond bv lho Gcoy
cl lk ..........
~

c:.a.-..
a-

cl Er9folt.

Halhoo- ........... -

.. _

· ...

.......... llldoloe ... "-end lllho- cl
l h o . -, R

--

,

... , _ ,

1HE 11111\'011 MEEn 11E

-

c.u.u.·

" - - 0....Room .
bv lho SA Spaokon'

Squire. 8 p .m. Sponoond

Go1111n w4lllold - f r o m

tho

floor .

Who said SA ..., bmgo I n - ?

flU( (fll.N

ntalRY).

" - ....... ~ - 147 lliolondod. 9
bv lho c..- lao- Mdo Soudy.

p.m. Sponoond

I/OI..l.EYIWL.
SL -

. , _ Callap. Clork Hal. 7 p.m.

Wedaesday - 24
111.000-·
-..o..--..~ono--.
107 MFAC, - . 2-7 p.m.

Spyro Gyra

�~18.1979

Study finds high Catholic abortion ·r ate

-..

_

____
_
...,_,._ARE
_
...... . ..,.,._.........
_......... ... ._

•Calendar
~-

...

-,___.,_011
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The Ccnlor for ~ ~ - •
ol lbo School ol ~ sold ...

-

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"tho """' po-.1

...

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dmlllt. $pon&amp;Mod by the Doportment ol
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M-'!llho- moclom
Roam, O'lldon Hoi. I p.m. ond 8 p.111.'Spo..and .,NcwYon.... .... ., ...
by d&gt;o Nichol locluro Sorloo. Foculy ol t.w ond .,tho U.S. Thft--comaoutoldooolcolbolol
FINDING RliiD8 AIID GEniNG GIIAifT5
n. .. o,hulo' J S . - '*'-'lory ...... populor""'*, from.JdvR.. -IOiho Bach T-. ono-dov _.....,.,. "" lhll oulijod . .

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lor Cndlt-1'.- Propm&amp;.
......... wtl .. -

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hoe .. . . - - . . . . from
dovolopmontol,..,.....~-ol

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In public: odmlnlolrotlon ot G....,..

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831-4301 .

NJJ!ND8-0 F - Q . U I - ·

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au.a . . K Q M - . o G Y -

._

S1UDIES 8KRl.5 LAII
Tho Studio&amp;- Lob ..... u.w..oty ,___
Conte-. 368 Jloldv Hoi. .. opon lor tutoring ..
-.g
- The
~ Thunclo!lo. 12-3 p.m.: Woclnoodoys, 10-2
p.m. No """"on l'ndo!ls- The Lob Is opon tool
U/ BIIUdonta.

_._
-

L C.. ot DJ-1'1!.

...,-•cotaa..J2!17.r.m"''

o.ne.Ak

---.-., ... ~a,

Ct

. . . . Art r..th. tWrtott ....,..

-fO&gt;onNI101 . 6Art
Golay. p.m.

Coblo

Elthe---

c.'!""_ _ .... _
~-·
--~. -olthol.oo .........

....., ~ Donco Co. Coo.- Coblo
(a-...1101 . 6:30p.m. Aloo cn tho 24th 017 p.m.

�~18,1979

H you're coRIIclertng entering a
do 10 with • ol
Thlo helps maintain sanity
inil melra the._....,. penonally ex~·
Adda~-"!..~ audience on the Main
Stre.t ~....... compooed mosdy ol
female lllhletes, Drs. Jan Fetter and
MaJtyn Colly-both on faculty at sue
Brockport-gave 110m11 llpl to entering the Skylon Marathon last
weekend.
Running, like ~. "carries us Into
the world ol total loivofvement," ollered
_......., i'IICe,

~.

Fa...WJMna.....,._ ..........

of "'uu apgagement," he or 1M Ncemes
senoltlwto what IMbodv II ...,..,dug
and llays In dooe IIIUd. llllli the oensuousnea ol the .,.,.....__
Con-.ly, d • I'Wlller wonta ebout
beating opponents or about tnel clock
Urnes, F-511!/S. the......-ev diMngages
him &lt;1r her &amp;om the "vlnnl.,._,... and
makes one " - the aemdy ol the m&lt;&gt;'
menl

Not that play precludes having goals or

A ......... _ . . , _ . . _ .... C.....

• passion to win; k'o )uti that with a
playful -.de, one doan't Nly on the
sport to lulllfv a gael, or does not Judge
the qualliy &lt;:A the _ . , . . . on the out-

Cabaret project has an 'angel'
Conslrudlon ol the University's new
Off-Center C.banlt wtll begin at the end
of the month, and en •anger will be doing the wock.
The "engel" In this C8M is Bob Downing, • ~ friend ol U/B's Center
Theelre who volun'-"&lt;1 his services.
The cabaret, which adjoins the
downtown Center Theatre, lormerly
housed the
Left cocldall lounge·
before k end the Studio Arena rnowd
across the street to larger end more comfortable quarters.

s._

"-~Y._rojed , according to Theeln!
~.-u•~nt spokesmen Tom Dooney,

should take about slx weeks to complete
and Involves knocking down one smoll
partition to open-up space, refwbishtng
w.U., and building • 10 lt. x 10 lt. slage.
Seating will be provided lor • cozy group
ol 50 to 75 o1 Intimate cabanlt-style
tables.
•
Arrangements ""' now being made
with University Food SelVIce for • smaD
mack menu. Beer, wine end juices will
also be av.U.ble, reports Dooney.
The goal Is to keep the cabaret In
operation seven days a week with live
music, poetry, one-act plays, end standup acts. Hopefully, says Dooney, this
bnin-child ol Theeln! Department Chair-

come ol the

man Saul Elan will blossom Into still
another showcase lor local talent, much
like the Tnolfamedore or the Schuper
"House. Any money II generates will lw&gt;ln
offset the costs ol the Center l"heatte~
productions.
Periarmanc:e Urnes will be staggered so
those enjoying the Center's plays can also
caldl on act or two at the cabanlt.

In _..,tldpatlon ol ks opening, the
Theeln! Oepertment la.t ,week presented
two evenings ol cabaret-type entertainment at the Red Room ol the Faculty
Oub. Prolaao&lt; Eric Bentley cllreded the

.

~~ .

Survey goes beyond Ketter
eflec:llveness end tcholarfy wock, to atllludents and secwlng
money !01' raearch. Choices for allocation ol these oaponllbllllles are: llludents.
faculty, chair/deans, vice praldents, and
preoidenl. Section 3 ol the lnslnoment
uks faallty to rank order [&amp;om 1 to 4l
how they pen:etve the lrnpoltanal ol
sevent.en functions of a praident.
trading good

~ ~

throughout the loulllu·
resources; and advocated
SUNY Central

ol reduced
"'eAl!eny.
dlwly
our case before
lion
In

£......,.._....,_
FlnaUy, evaluative responta are
sou!#&gt;~ In 10 · Respondents are
uked to rank &amp;om 1 to 4 how slrongly
they agree or disagree with the following:
• The President ~ts a favorable
image to the general publk:.
• The Praldent's pokia have contrt.uted to llrengthenlng the faculty.
• The Praident ...... ~the
admlnlolrallve sector ol the lf-.aty.
• He Is candid In dalng with
members ol the University communly.
• The President exhlllts creatlvlly In
the paformance ol his d.-.
• He raponds to ~ with poise
and~.

i'IICe.

lnotead, says F_,

"meaning end~ come &amp;om~

• The President's penonal style
enMnc:a his .,_.a performanoe.
• T eking Into a&lt;:COunt the clr·
c:umoUnoes ol .-rt yeM~, the Unlvenlty bat in1JroVed under the President's
leedenhlp.
e Under the poeM~&gt;~ &lt;*curruhonoes,
the President II cl&lt;*&gt;g • good • job as
can reuonably be expected.
~ are to be returned to
the Faculty Senate Office by Oc:toNr 29.

Immediate llrUggle."

o..-ta-....-

When one plays, opponents become
"partners" who ohare In the _ . . . . .
end In a slrivlng lor human cxcdenoe.

Passion II aaually
Fe~ter~,

~.

relayed

by a feeling ol humility and the
reallzzotton that other runnen In the I1IC8
are feeling the same physical and mental

unoertlilntles.

An "egocentric effort" only oerveo to
distort the experience, turning II Into a
race ol "Intimidation" rolher then "affirmation," oha added.
C&lt;&gt;nftnnlng ... colleague'• eo.nn-ts.
Col&gt;y told the audlence they mutt Nly on
Intrinsic motivation when compellng In
marathons. Once cauullty Is peot:elved
as balg outside the control ol 1M runner,
play siDpl and wock begins. That'• why,
said Col&gt;y, one ohould ,_run to..the cxpedallons ol olhen, br for recognl- .
lion, or money, but only for peroonal
gratlfbllon.

AlthooS&gt;

not much r...ch

'-been

done on women alhlctes, Col&gt;y noled
that females have a tendanc:y to play
down ~ ac::hievemenls. A .,.....- wtll
mont likely feel he won a i1IC8 beca- ol
oktl, wbtle a woman will be apt to lao! ohe
"ludced out."

w-w.._.._. .......

With the ~ ol ...... r-t.
athlete rolE mocllk, t - , a~
num!Jer olwomen _,to be NIII&lt;Mng
themselveo &amp;om -.atyped - ....
and are beginning to fell good aboul their
lllhletk:
-·
ollered
...........lind
.
One......,.,
w
h ythe
- ...........
such freedom In the oport II....,_ clan
aboence ol"vartous telooloi ...... ot." In
other words, becaule 10 t.w _,run,
no good or bad -y ol cl&lt;*&gt;g 1 bat )lOt
been defined; women can, In 6ct, do
~own dUng, Colly nlayecl.
The opeaken noled that. elthough
women have a beller body .........,
for long distanc. running, becauM ol
Phv*alllmbtlons. theft 111111 . - b e a
women runner superior to every """'·
althouglt .oome women may outrun..,..
men .
The tpea(cen .-1 1M Important
thing II that women have the oppattunlly
to compele If they wish.

Bring your plants
healthy cutUngo and/or plants to the U/ B Dorshelmer
Greenhouse- along with your own plant troubles-Sunday. October 21 . from
2-4 p.m.
In the recent move from the old goeenhouw on Main Street to the new Philip
Donhelmer labcnlory facllty at Amhent. many plants died.
The community II -..cl to conlrt.ute cuttings end/or plants to hqo rebuild
the U/ B botanical tuchlng coledton ol the Greenhouse.
In retum. Ted Bieniek. the Grftnhouw dlrector. will diagnosis your plant
problem• and tell you what IICIIon to take .
.• Th-: ~m~ G~nhouse ll,edjacenl to~~-. ,
Bring

�•Creationist Rit

William Prince named

seeks parity for that view head of the UGL here
w.
hM..,..,.. ...
.,._..'II
p - Rllchle ....

~

In

who bdews' In
ldenllllc ...-lonllm.
.
Thll that Rllc:hla (along wllh

eledrlaol

whit he cleoatJes as a ..,wing number of
_......and laymen) subeat&gt;a to a
rather old-fashioned notion of
Ollglnl-one which 1o bej;nnlng to gain
, _ retpeet In oome quanns while causIng .--apoplexy elsewhere.
Qulle limply put, the "creatlonl!ts"
hold that the View of "crelllion as taught
In the Book of ~ Is "superior" to
the evokrtlon model. They acx:ept this nol
ou1 of "blind faith," as they put H, but
alter oonsidcratlon of "aU scientific
evidence."
They -..t at least "equal time" for
their In science clessmoms from
·~ ochools through graduate

c:em.n.

How should k be done? This vignette
from a Waf &amp;reel Journal artldc (friday,
June 15, 19791 deocrlbes the creaHonlst

~Split ..... Ia C..S. F.U.
In Ceda Falls, Iowa, the WSJ
nrpooted: "larry Salyer devotes one
week to the orl!;n of the Earth.
"For two daya, he """"- hlo oewnthgradc ~ studenll .. .the tenets of
Darwinism that the Earth Is billions of
!'DR old and that rnM, ~ natural
selection,

descended

from

earlier

anlmels.
"In midweek, Mr. Selyer switches from
evolution to an older theory, one that he
hlmoel believa ln. M•y scientlsls, he
tails the class, believe the Earth was the
work of a Creator a rnere 10,000 yean
ago. l\1_oreowf, he says, 'theoe scientific
creatlonlsls All that rnM was always a
rnM , a dog was always a ~ and the
frog didn't tum Into a prince.'
This method plays weD In the midWest. And In Califomla, where on the
campua of Christian Heritage College In
Sen Diogo, the Creallon R.....-ch lnllllute has launched a naHon·wlde assauh
on -evolutionists (the lnllllute, according
to the Joumol, has seven lull-time
employees, a $470,000 annual budget,
and a 9oal ol"bringlng about a revival of
belief In special CreaHon as the true explanation of the world"). Fanning out
from Sen Diego are shipments of publicaHans, and filmstrips, and a cadre of weUpollahed _.,!&lt;era whooe profession Is to
debele evolutionists.
The creaHonists are also lobbying
legislatures to pass biDs requiring
equal cJ..oom time for the theory of
aatlon. "h's the Soopes Trial reversed,"
said one.

s-

UleW......... aet

UIB Student RHchie Is Introducing the
movement here through a Life Workshop

being offered Tuesdays, October 16
t11ro191 November 13 (4-5:30 p.m., 202
Norton-free and open to al-students
and fecultvl . Advance reglstraHon Is required In 110 Norton.
Ritchie, a graduate of Hutch Tech now
In hlo third year at U/B, says he In·
dependently lludied and thought a lot

about the Issues Involved In order to
resolve c:onfktlng Ideas In hlo own head.
In hlo Nading and ..-chlng, he came
11Cr0SS the Creation R.....-ch INIIIute,
IGII for molertal, and wound up at a oneweek 1n1111ute this summer a1 Grace College In Indiana.

Ballcaly, Ritchie says, he wants to cal
aHenllon to what he Views as the dogma

of the educational and oclentlfic establishment. Students have been "Indoctrinated
to believe that evolution Is an established
principle of science which Is doubled ""
no ~ blologisl or scientist. h Is
....,..tJy maintained," he - . . "that
creation has been Intellectually
~ and has no .._,n, except
that "-'1 on religious faith .
"Nod*'~~ oouJcf be farther from the
truth."
To the ""'*-Y. Ritchie says, study of
........., In lhe'W&gt;t of sclentMic principle
hotel, ~ and

. ...,.__,even
........__.

A ........ ~ . . . . . bchle .... be pointing theoe out during
IM . ~ ~ -along with~

Jon., a U/B ....... IIUdenl tn
rneddnal dlenllllrp. Dr. Duane T. Gioh,
a Plr.O. Ill .......... II who It -.cllta
~ of the CNellon " - - " ln..... ~btl-ofa
media
U/B s .loMa, who Is a ,_,._ of the
lnter-Vanlly Owltllan F~

,..-olallon.

and a tpeluiiM of~
,
Pa., wiD give a workshlp _ , on
Chemical Origin of Ule." He ~hens the
creationist View, nOIIng that ~
here with whom ... has cllocu.-d .......
varied In their reactions. A bioloml pn&gt;fessor ~ k out of hand llmf&gt;lll
"becauoe of philosoplllqll bias." h
couldn't be true, that .,......... oaid,
becauoe almosl aU the oclenllflc oornmunHy believes In evolution. A ~
was more open-minded. Theno I no
reason creaHon couldn't haw happened,
that sdenllslsaid. Both theories are liMed
on assumpHons, he continued, adding
that if 99 per cent of the tclentlflc communHy said the moon Is made of cream
cheese, that reaDy wouldn't make M10.

=&lt;It-s
~

~

tithe~

Mr. ~~-.._ oflJnlvaW-

ty t.anot.., -.need Pmce'a dedslon

1o join the U/B u..ta, ....-.s1 "en-

~ wllh the ..... &lt;I the exlenslw
.-ell which led to the IR&gt;CIIIitment."
Prince, pr.-.dy the Mad of the
General ~tat-a DIYiolon at the

s-

VIrginia Polyl.:bnlt . _ . . and
um-.~~y, Is exp.aad lo hlo
~'-on October 29.
r~ ............. tncble ad·
rnlnltaalng
IJICIIP1Iml, . . . - . and
as-allons of the UGL with Hs collection
of daee to 70,000 volumes and four pn&gt;flllllonal and four support 11811.
P11nce NCielved hlo MLS from the
lJrWellty of ....... In 1973. He also
holds an MAT from Indiana Unlvenlty
and a BA from Lafayette College. Prior
to his poaent paslllon, he an - .
tent social sciences lbrarian at VIrginia
Tech from 1973-1976 and school
lbarlan at the Crescent-lroquts High
School In Crescent CHy, llUnols from
1972-1973.
Creation ln't ........table'
As head of the General Reference DiviJones admHs that "cruHon" Isn't readision at VIrginia Tech, Prince had a major
ly repeatable In an independent experiresponsibility to develop and Implement
ment, "but then nekher Is evoluHon."
an undergraduate library Instructional
Midwestern fanner put h this way to
program.
the Wall Slnet JoumoJ, "When we aoss
Prince has been active In both Ubrary
cattle, we get better cattle. We don't get a
and university commHtees, and has actively participated In professional
d"g;. Glsh of the CRI notes that "neHher
organllaHons. He was a member of the
creaHon nor evoluHon has ever been
Amerk:an LlbnuY AssoclaHon's CommHobserved by human wtlnesses," and thus
te)! on CooperaHon of the ACRL
"nelher Is a valid scientific theory."
Bibliographic lnstrucllon Section &amp;om
Furthermore, he continues, "modem
1977 to 1979 and was chllrman of that
formulaHons of evoluHonary mechanisms
are vacuous and are contradictory to - committee's subcommittee on ClearInghouses during 1978-79. Also, he was
weD-established natural laws." Fossil
a member of the Assoclallon's Library Inrecords actuaUy contradict evoluHon,
Glsh contends. There's no fossil evidence . struction Round Table during 1978-79.
He Is assistant chairman, chairman-elect,
of one animal developing Into another,
of the Southeastern Ubrary Association's
he says, but "ma)or features of the fossil
Referel'lCA! and Aduh Services Section
record conform admirably to a creaHon
model. When an of the sdenllflc evidence
Is considered," Glsh· goes on, "creaHon
provides a model for explaining origins
that Is superior to the evoluHon model."
The WoU Street Joumol reports support for the creaHonlst approach from
David Menton, an assodate professor of
anatomy at Washington U. , St. Louis,
among others. Menton doubts random
- e o - - / O c t . 10
chance could be responsible for
The meeting weJ c:aled to order _. 2:30 p .m. to
something as "incredi&gt;le" as the human
conoldc the talowtng ogmc~o ,

~

and was chalnnan of the Vir!;nla Ubrary
AssoclaHon's Llbrary Instruction Forum In
1978.
He has a number of publlc:atiCSi1s to his
credit, most recently, an "Annotated
Bibliography on Library Guidance
Systems" and a work now being publish·
ed entitled On the Rlue" T"'"'"IV One
Canoe Tripi In the Appolachlon1. Other
writing Includes a handbook on
plagiarism and a directory of library In·
struction programs In Vir!;nia.
In announcing the new appointment,
Director Roy thanked "two able acting
unh heads, ... Norma Segal and ~
Reichel for their devoHon and hard work.
The establishment of the Undergraduate
Library as a vital resource on the Amhersi_
Campus Is largely owing to their okill and ·
dedication," he said.

SENATE
Somit airs registration woes

eye.

At U/B, Rltchle Is using a book
(Creolion·the EuoluHon Controversy}

written btl a practicing ve1erlnarian as

background reading for his Life
Workshop. It comes with the Imprimatur
of the superintendent of public lnstru&lt;:tlon
of the State of Mlc:hlgan.
Most sdentlsls Interviewed by the Wall
Street Joumal, however, come down for
evoluHon, accusing the creaHonlsts of
logical fallacies, right-wing fanaticism,
non-science, mental sleight of hand, and
crackpol scheming.
.
People, especiaUy uncler!Jaduates, wiD
acx:ept any hare-b\'alned sCheme these
days, a professor at BaD State said, as
long as K's contrary to establishment
science.

Not ... tloewall
Ritchie disagrees: When traditional
sclentlsls debale crelllionlsts, he counters,
they tend to attack the theory as a
religious Idea, not on the basis of scientific
fact . "They tal&lt; reUglon , while we talk
science."
He worries that , becauoe of this tactlc,
people won't take K seriously, and tend to
dismiss the Idea as "off the waD."
The object of his worbhop, he em·
p~. Is to c:ondut1 "a real examlnaHon of the Issues In an open forum of
sctent* lnq&lt;*y."
.
Aller that, though, he adds with a
twinkle, thae•s no way you won't come

to oee h his way.

-"'
"""-' "'~~- ~~::.~
__

Gcnonl EducMion ~ Program ..... bo '""
-~ .

Tho-,..._

The n*'uta were .pproved • correc:Nd.

�Oclober t8. 1979

Group protests
presence of
Hooker reps
RepresentaUves

of

tbe

Hooker

Chemical Company ......, on campus
Tuesday hoping to generate Interest
among potential employees, but the excitement the!&lt; visit aroused was of a different kind .
The Love Canol Coalition, consisting
of The Other One, The Spectrum,
Thundercurrenl, Tolstoy College,
NYPIRG and a number of other campus
and outside organizations, orgonlzled a
· day-long picket outside the Placement
Office In Hayes &lt;:; and a rally In Squire
that featured two members of the Love
Canol Homeowners Association.
Although the events were generaUy
peaceful and no one was hurt or arNSted,
the demonslnltion did raub In a few
broken or cracked windows In Hayes C
and announcements by some students
that the Campus Rules and Regulations
would be legally challenged .
The momJng picket nne was uneventful . but emotions were charged after the
homeowners' speeches In Haas lounge at
noontime. One young woman announc-

ed that she had recendy lost her fourth
baby. Another described her feelings as
she read that Hooker's profits last year
exceeded $260 million.
The two women said that the lat
statement from Governor Hugh Carey
seemed to promise penmanent relocation
for the "Love Canal refugees" now staying in hotels, but added there were no
definite plans announced lex the state's
purchase of their homes. They urged the .
students to write the governor and apply
political presawe for thet. relief.
A group of about 100 students then
marched back to Hayes C. They asked to
hold o dialogue wtth the Hooker
representaUves, but campus officials
decbned that request, staling that the
Hooker people were not official
spokesmen for that company and
therefore could not cllscuss policies or

llobllity.
The students chanted for awhile and
marched around the building banging
wolls. Two windows were broken and
one cracked dwtng the course of the
afternoon, but Lee Griffin, dt.ector of
~~bile~~ he feelo the bnalcage
At 1:35 p .m . the ftumMed students
barred one door of the annex wtth
wooden stakes and sent contingents to
block the others. ~ to the butldlng
was maintained by campus Public Sefety
offlcen, however.
Student ~ucla Michael P1erco and An·
thony l.orenziotti of Student Affairs work·
ed out a compromise by which l.orenziotti
promised to ~t to the Hooker
representatiwsletters &amp;om the students.
At 2:10 p.m ., Jack "-rt and John
Grelo of Public Safety broke down the
barrier that had been put th~ the
north door of Hayes C without -..c.
from students, who then formed moving
picket lines at two doors and chanted
"Hooker Sucks."
Severolotudant complaints ......, made
about a photognopMr taking pictures of
student demont~raton . Dan Pfoltzer of
The Other One said he Intends to make •
legal complelnt .._.-ding such picturetaking. Studenll aloo said U/B regulations forbidding the cany1ng of signs In·
side campus buildings ere unconltltu·
tional. The gathering broke up shortly
after 3 p .m .

OT celebrates anniversary; field is growing
By the year 2000, oa:upational
therapllts will have aD but vanished from
general hoopitals, the EWng where most
are employed today, predicts the president of the American Occupational
Therapy Asodallon.
Guest speaker Ill the 25ch annlversmy
of U/B's Department of Occupational
Therapy, October 13, Mae HightowerVandamn oaid thenpists will Instead be
found In -.g. ouch as public schools,
centers for the elderly who are not sick,
as well as the more famllar clinics,
rehabllldon Clellllln and nunlng homes.
"The eldorly will, by 2000, account for

a greQ!r

.....-mg.

of the American

population," Mrs. Hlghtower-Vandamn
said. Whether they spend their Ume-or
at lalt part of It-In ~ adlvlty
designed to help them remain functional
will partially be determined by the
avallablbty of occupational then!plsts to
_plan lndtvlduallzed leisure programs for

them .
Hightower-Vandamn predicts many
occupational therapists will be employed
by ochool systems as a dt.ect result of
Public Law 94-142, also known as the
Education for AD Handicapped Children
Act.
"As more youngoters with handicaps
and developmental problems enter the
schools under this law, the need for occupational, speech, and physical
therapists In this setting will grow considerably," she noted . •Although
therapists will not be charged with
teaching these youngsters, their expertise
will be needed by the teachers.
"Oocupational therapy has oome a
long way &amp;om the days of World War I
when Its prac:tllloners, then known as
'reconstruction aides,' received a sixweek aash course to work with Injured
soldiers," she pointed out. In 1970, there
were 12.000 occupaUonaf therapists In

Rehabilitation Medicine.

~ effective
1/3/80.
Mr. Joseph E. Lippert. employee benefits manager, stated the decision to remain with one's present health plan ex to transfer to another, Is entirely up to the
employee. Those satlslled with present cover- need take no action (n this mat·
ter. Those wishing to change must submll an applic.aUon (PS-404) to the Per·
oonnel Department not later than October 31 , i979.
Lippert lurthe -ed that this year's lransfer period Is particularly lillnflcant to
aD employees because of exterulve changes In both the otructure and benet~~ of
the Vllllous plans which will become cffecUve on 1/3/80, as wei as thooe which
have taken place since 4/1/79. To employMs In maldng a dectslon he has
arnnged for representaUves of aD three plans to be available on campus for the
balance of October ... follows:
..... Str.ISZ Soplre: Tuesday and Thunday mornings, &amp;om
8 to noon, on 10/18, 10/23, 10/25 and 10/30/79.
· ·
AaMnt Caapooa: 201 N - Wednesda)l and Friday mornings, &amp;om 8
to noon, on 10/1/), 10/24, 10/26 and 10/31/79.
..... 1.- c.-..-: •A-44 Ia SW.. '4130: Monday afternoon &amp;om 2
p .m . to 5 p.m. on 10/22/79.
·

Health
option
period

c-:

,

IIHioeeldy,.,.,...,..,..

RATE COMPARISON OF HEALm COVERAGES
J/3/B(). Flnt
. r - 111k II U/19/79}

t c - ......
PRA:SG

"-t/Cooof. ud

s.a.ttv Savlct

(Ualt

~

ProloeoloMI, Sdatllc
A: T~ Unit (PEF)

U..(CSEA)

Faa.

..._

Faa.

$3.46

$9.34

$3.05

$9.36

$4.28

$0.00

$4.03

$0.00

4.65

$2.19

$0.00

$5.74

c:o-:11 II)

o,.-..!Md
• r ·-1s--

UUPMc.ben

Pnoc:tlca. None of ua wanted to go on
~=~.:...~Ins! an anU·

l..t.

F-.

l..t.

F-.

l..t.

$2.46

$8.02

$2.46

$7.40

$0.00

$4.90

$0.00

$0.00

$2.81

$0.00

keePing with c:ummt Union policios and

HEALTH CARE
PlAN (HMO)
STATEWIDE PlAN

{lla.ec.-/

N ............
~)

) ·~ 1

About 100 alumni of the DePanmcnt
attended an enUre day of worlcshops.and
seminars ~ted by faculty b) OT .,d
In the ochool of Medicine's Department of

(Statewide, GHI, ex HMO · Health Care Plan) . AD transfers

lions about oome ol the Llngu-. since
the general a1m of the rnolutlon was In

,.

me

Honored at
25ch annlversmy dinner _,. former department chairpersons, Nancle Greenman, Genrude Dray
and Kent Tigges. A _.w a--.1 was
praented to Mrs. Regina (Reggie)
Kodecld, assistant to the chairman, who
has been with the department for 16
yean.

The Personnel Department has announced that N.V. Stale has onoe again

.... _......

aPPfOpl'late.

"By 1980, job openings will Increase
by 50 per oent; so occupational therapy.Is
one of the ten futesl IJOW(ng occupations In the labor rnarl&lt;e today." Indeed,
many job openings go unliDed beca- of
a shortage of therapists.

desU&gt;aled October as the health Insurance ttansfer period. During this month ,
SUNYAB employees may change their health plan to any other available plan

• UUP delegates

Aslu"*'!! that Prof. Allen was quoted
con-ecdy, given the above sequence of
eveniJ -deem Prof. Allen's remarks ln-

the U.S .; eight years later, there were
27,000.

GHl PlAN
(lla.e c.-)

~

$0.00

~

•• J,

. ....

:;fl,.•

$0.00
. ... ,,,,.-:.Jilt,IIN",

•·

�Octoba 18, 1919

D

JOB

-1EACIIING---AIIInnoliYOA&lt;- --Unlvaoloy--~-~.
Pll·
l , B-9043.
tlon/Human

~.

P!I-S. B-9044.

lng, Pll-1. B-9045.

FACULTY
_ , _ _ (6pool-

oYOIIabloi-School ol NUlling, F-9098.
F-9099, F-9100, F-9101 , F-9102, F-9103.
tlons

RESEAIICH
- - V.P. Jo. R - h .
R-9053 .

.__,T,....-School

ol Management•
Reglonel Economic:-..:. Ctt, R-9054.
NON.coMPE11TIVE CIVIL &amp;EilVIC£
--Phyolcal Plant,
MainS. .. Uno No. 32084 .

........,. K •
EngtMmng, Uno NO. 25035.

88-ta-Porker-

U/B takes
credit cards
An arrangement has recently been
worked out with local banks to perrntt
students to pay tuition and fees using
Master Charge or VISA.
According to Student Accounts Director Cliff Wilson, students can use the
cards to pay any charges appearing on
their bills exceptlranscript costs and stu·
dent loan payments.
A student may use his or her parents'
charge card providing the student's
signature also appears on the back of H.

Waiting/or

the B-52,s

Payments can

The Buffalo NetU revlewu mused that
the crowd jamming Squire last Thwsday lor a concert by the B-52's was as
Interesting

as

the

punk

be made in person , oVer

the phone, or through the mail.

Don Nichols
to be feted

rockers

themselves .
Public
Affairs
Photographer Ed Nowak agreed,

Donald E. Nichols, professor of art, will
be honored at a testimonial dinner at 8
p.m., November 9 at the Holiday Inn,
620 Delaware Ave.
Professor Nichols, a 1949 graduate of
U/ B, joined the faculty In 1954.

catching these glim- of some of

those waltlng for and Ustenlng to their
favorites.

He

has executed designs for numerous

organizations and has presented over 15
exhibitions In the last 22 years. Six of his
works have been published, his latest a
graphic design textbook.
Professor Nichols has performed public
service work since 1964 with organlza·
tlons such as the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery .
·

Syracuse gridders
face charges
In their rush to report In front-page
headlines all we could ever absorb about
Syracuse UnlversHy football , the local
media overlooked this AP story datelined
Syracuse. which appeared in the Niagara
Gazette,
Four Syracuse Untverstty football
players have pleaded Innocent to charges
they assaulted another student at a tavern
after a game .. .

...
"

,._._"u.s. ..-..
PAI.D

.-.

·.

Bodlalo, N.Y.
P-No. Sll

..

~

Judge Mathilde Berson! of Syracuse
City Court released the four without bail
Wednesday and placed them In the
custody of the team's chaplain, Monsignor Charles Borgognoni, pending an
Oct.'31 court appearance . The priest ap·
peared In oaurt with the players.
Larry KirnbaU, the school's sports lnfor·
motion director, said no action would be
taken against the players until after
disposition by the court.
Police saki the four were accused of
punching and kicking (another student).
after midnight following the team's vic·
tory over Washington State Sept. 29.
The scuffle occurred after one of the
players allegedly popped a balloon held
by the non-athlete student.
The players oantended they were
defending themselves.
The complaining student suffered a
dl$loceted shoulder, bruises and cuts,
authortlles saki. He was treated at a city
hoopilaJ and .dvloed to recuperate at
home for six weeks, accordJng to the
Syncua".....
Poot
.•
... .. Slondard.
. .. . ..

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

.

.. . .

�Presidential
Statement:
Condition of the Ccimpus
.. .os required under Guidelines for the Review Process for the Presidents Issued by the State University
ol New York Board of Trustees ...

Robert L. Ketter
Praklent
St1te University ol New York ot Buffolo

September, 1979

I
In order to properly assess the condition ol o portlcular campus, one mull first hove an oWIIn!ness ol
the ocope ol !hot Institution's activity and ol the
organizational c:onstnolnts within which K operotes.
At the Slate University ol New York at Buffolo, our
role as a University Cent.er requires o highly diverse
profile. We ..,., unique within Slate Unlvenlty In the
number ol ec::c::Ndled professional schools ond programs that are availabie. We hove Individual faculty
members and academic unKs !hot ""' nationally and,
In a nurn!.r ol -.ceo. inlematlonally recognized.
The priority accorded graduate and postb.oca!.urute profaoional education .. aooornpanied
by a commitment to maintain a strong lll&lt;&gt;l"'m at the
uncler!lnoduate

level. The academic ~ ol our

students ranges &amp;om the highly co~ to a need
for remediMion. While we ..,., committed to .......-v1ng
50 percent ol our regular freshman daa places lor
raldents ol Walem New York, we also are the
leading campus wkhin State UnlvadJI In lnlernational
education, ond the foreign student preance II
here then on the campus ol any other unit. In sum, the
University at Buffolo is a broed-t.a.d Unlvenlty
Center whooe activities In fulfiDment ol Ks teaching,
......:11, ond service mlalons span the teglon and
other nations.
n - adlvltles occur within a Slate Unlvenlly
system that was dacri&gt;ed apdy In 1960 by the Gov...nor's Comm- on HW&gt;er Education (the Heald
Com-) In words that unfortunolely slill their . . - . -. "SUllo University as a whole." daatbed
the Commitlec, "app.B to haw . . edmlnllttollw
and manager~*~! freedom ol operallan then almoot
any othe publdy oupporlod 1ru111ut1on or W0U1J1 d
lntlitutions In the UnKed Stain .•
This characta1zetlon ol the syslem ...,... In even
~ter ~to the Individual campu- whooe principal officers hove counterparts In State Unlvenlly
Central Admlnlllratlon wKh whom they mull lnlerlld
on a conslanl basis. The admlnistraUve laye at the
¥~«........ ~-liM lint thatmu61 ~eel~

a-

-

this campus In dealing with a myriad of State agencies
whose action or lack ol action can proloundly affect
the campus. Perhol&gt;s the situation was best described
In the University's 1972 Self-Study, which stated thot
"this Is not a system In which the operaUng unl1s .. . ..,..
given certain assigned tasks and resources and held
responsible for accomplishing these tasks wKh the
resources provided. Instead, It Is one In which every
detail ol operation is subject to ongoing review and
posol&gt;le revision If not rejection ." The Mkldle States'
accreditation l@m responded !hot "the present pro·
CA!dure is cumbersome and It adds to the dlfflcuhy of
determining who holds the final responslbUity In a
,
given situation."
Within this organization and In the conduct of these
highly diverse acUvltles, the Presidimt, according to
the Polk:ia o1 the State University Board of Trustees,
Is responsible to the ChonceDor and to the Board of
Trustees for the administration of the campus and for
the promotion of Its development and effecUveneu.
He is charged wKh the preparation and recommenda·
lion of the campus budget, as well as with reporUng
and recommending to the Choncellor, the Board, and
the University Council In matters Involving the opere·
lion, plans, and development ol the campus.
Moreover, he appoints or recommends for appoint·
ment faculty, non-teaching professional, and classified
service personnel and, In general, is responsible for
supervising their adlvKies. Unstated, but dearly irn·
plied-and explicitly bell.eved In by this President-Is
the charge that the Praklent shall be concerned with
the Institution In Its entirety. He must maintain an undiltorted view ol the whole while deating with the
porochlallnterests of the many parts.
In meeting these responsibilities, several brood areas
of concern can be defined . These are: administration
and organization; communication; educational direction; budget and facilities; and external relations and
issues. Some years ago, I presumed thot the latter-external relations a.n d lssues-woukl demand
more ol my Ume and attention while internal organization and operotional matters woukl require less. In
retrooped, this was a misplaced expectation-portly,
at least. Allentlon required by external concems,
apecially In view ol economic decftne and the proopec! ol a decreasing pool ol students, has grown

"'The University at
Buffalo Is a broad-bQsecl
center Wlfh,. a Variety Of
Opera OnS

dramatically. Tile attention required by ,olher klentlfled areas of concem, however, has not dl""nished;
those matters, too. demand conUnulng rather then
transitory care.
. . To convey a sense ol the condKion ol the campus In
each of these areas, as well as the acUvlty ol the President, one mull decide whether to approach the task
through a detailed rec:ounUng of aU situations, actions,
and statements or through a broeder process ol
highlighting. The length of this document, as prescribed In the guidelines issued by the Board of Trustees,
dictates a greater reliance upon the latter. Therefore,
these highlights, supplemented whenever necessary
by timlted detaU, convey from the pe,_ctlve ol the
President a sense of the condHlon of the C:ampusln the
brood areas identified above, including certain suggestions about future action !hot may ailed those condl·
tions .

II
The composllon clthe administration, for lnslar&gt;ce,
has undergone great change since the mid-seventies.
Included In this transformation II the appointment,
after an extensive search in 1975, ol a Vice President
for Academic Affairs. Leadership also has changed
among Schools or Faculties In Sociel Sdenca,
Engineering and Applied Sciences, Natural Sciences
and Mathematics, Educational Studies, Management,
Medicine, Arts and Letters, Law,and Jurisprudence,
and Pharmacy. More recently-within the pest few
weeks, In fact-new appointments hove '-n made In
deanships In the Colleges, the School ol Nursing, and
in the School ol Health Related Prolasions.
Change also has occurred since 1975 In• the
University-wide deanships: Greduate and Proleuional
Education; Undergraduate Education; and ConUnu·
lng Education . Moreover, new leadership at the vice
~ lavel In addition to Academic Affairs, is
being exerted In Fadlilies Planning and In the former
Division ol Unlvenlty Relations, which currently II
headed by a Oirec:ta-.
Although oome a1t1c1sm can be and has been made
ol the .,..,_ wKh which oome ol IMM eppolntments proceeded, I believe that In each Instance we
followed a cWb!note c:oune !hot, under the economk:
and internal crcumstanc:a which prevailed, was the
bell to take even though M may not hove been the
moll swift. This II the case, apeclally. In .._.t to our
present search for a Vice Praklent for Research.

The accre&lt;lllootlon rePoif 01 the "MICidle'Stlita'~qm
...._ . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _.._..-...---~ ..
--. .-. .-.........-..
----- -lha~-WIIad-the camp·• In 1912-73 ques!!ooed. t.e
"

�Jna. -To~"*

In

to .......... wllh

·

atchllgls·lhal NqUire II

to..._..,_..........,_lo ........ how
..__cant.IW....-.
the
of . .
The__.....
which...,

a stronger

--.aladlvlty

~-

..-flora ~06» ....... flamlhe . . ol
the Gnodu8 DMn. ~........ ~~~~~a .......... ...-.. . . . . . . . . . .
cumbentslll tllll-.tolbe......,ola-...:ol
the two....._ orlbeaallaa o l a . -. . . . . olla-

-raolved, ''-*
two. BlfoN
"* ..... ·-his
· ththe
e Grado.DMn....,..,.

lnlentlon to ...... the Unlvenlly for .. ed......t patltlon lllanoct--...on.lt-r.IIIMIIIII....,....
st-ld be a JMjar party In any ......_, aldie IIIII·
tar. lberefon, I I - not und a new~ OMn
had . . , ldendlad and had~&lt;**! the Unlvftly thlll
the qii*ion of ~ was raolved during lhlo pall
year. The
who conducted
live lludy of
of the ~. oboawd that

$n,

prafllem, ~liP'

=:'lbls.-....
a_......:vs.:.r=

''There M no

an-·

the merger
nell'- neceA8Ill nor clanble.
Moreowr, he recommended that oelecllon of ., acIIYc ocholar atld .-.cher to head the Re...:h Of.
floe wwld ....,._ the bnponance of this adlvlly to
the Uniwrllly, Addlllonally, he suggaled cartaln
steps that should be taken to llrenglhen the Interaction
of the two olllces.
At a rauk of these recommendations, we have
beau.n a oearch for a Vice President for Research who
wlf be expected to provide an added impdlls to
QJOWth In our annual raean:h apenclllures, which
liave climbed from $16-million in 1970·71 I&amp; more
then $24-million In 1978-79. Moreover, Jt wtll be
necesoary for the penon selected to establish dose interaclions with the Office of the Graduate Dean and
other academic and support offices on campus. Unfortunately, the Gnoduate Dean with whom this person
wtll work also wtll be new due to the untimely death of
the Incumbent. A search for a successor also Is underwa.fi.e.e Is no question in my mind that the changes in
the admlnlslratlve officers referred to above have produced a 51r0nger adminislnltion . In fact, It has never
been stronger during my Presidency. The Deans have
shown an increasing tendency to exert leadership and
to resolve problems at their level, as have the Vice
Presidents lor Academic Affairs and Health Sciences.
Akhough HIs Impossible wl!hin the system in which we
operate to totally decentralize operational authority, I
am pleased that the authortiy that ts available Is being
exercised at these levels.
As personnel changes have occurred, changes also
have been made In organization with an eye toward
benefitting both Individual units and the Unlvenstty.

For 1nstance, several of the professional
schools-Management, Architecture and En·
vironmental Design, Information and Library Studies,
and Social Work-previously reported to the Vice
President for Academic Affairs through one of the
Faculties. Those reporting relationships now are
direct ; and this , I believe, has enhanced the effec·
tiveness of those units.
Also Important organizationally has been the
substitution wlthoutlnluma of the title of Dean for the
previous title of Provost. The present title Is more appropriate for the defined positions and . In addition ,
reteJVes to the President the option of employing the
provostal tHie at the University-wide level, as Is the
practice elsewhere In this country.
In addition to these and other organizational
changes at lower levels, certain organizational shtfis of
emphasis are occurring in the Office of the President.
In earlier years , for instance, no clear separation was
defined or observed between the Executive Vice Prest·
dent and the President in terms of officers reporting to
the Office of the President. More recently, I have in·
dicated that entities such as the UniversHy Libraries.
the Computing Center, Admissions and Records,
Public Safely, and Cultural Affairs report directly to
the Executive Vice President and through him to the
President. Moreover, I have stated that the Vice
Presidents for Academic Affairs and Health Sciences
report directly to the President, as . do the
Undetgraduete and Graduate Deans. both of whom
..:1 as staff officers to the President on policy matters.
These organizational relationships will continue to
evolve and , I believe, wnl bring a greater clarity to tines
of authority wHhln the organization .
AddltlonaDy, I hope that these changes will have a
beneficial effect upon a fundamental issue that has not
disappeared from this campus; that Is, the organiza·
tional division between Academic Affairs and Health
Sciences. Although the division Is rooted In history at
this University and Is reinforced by the budgetary
separation imposed at higher levels of State Unlversl·
ty , we certainly are no1 unique among Institutions of
higher education in having to contend wHh u. Never·
theless, the tendendes that w&lt;luld puB the two divlllons apart end effectively destroy the concept of In·
stllutional unHy-to which I am committed-require
constant attention. The most recent and obvious ex·
ample of this problem occurred during the past year
Q!lef the role of the Undergraduate Dean .
The tltuation stemmed from a recommendation by
the Facully Senate In 1977 that sought to place the
lJnlvenfty O..n of Undergraduate Education in a
~ to _ , greater leadership In the dewloprMftl of undegraduate education. The Senate felt that

lheO.... tbMd

.__w-.c. upGDthealaca·

and ....................... _...., lilnpc...t upon

._.,.__.'*_..._.........

" - .,......,..., but they . . ....., IPdlc *PI
lhlll _,be. taken-...~...-. Thlt Is along.
...,.. project. The Nlldlon ID the c:ommllllal's 6nt
NjiOit on the~ opedllon olthe ~.
' - · ~ .. ihls operation lmplnget upon
the prlndpal
lnvestlgalon, ~ that the
c:omm1111a1 wt1 as a valuable cammunlcilllon
clew. as_. as a catalyst for~~.
Although the Pmlclent can communk:lllelnclncdv,
atlilrouF a commlllae, II 11.....-M!f through cliNct
commun1t:at1on that the President
-inlcrm olhen ol
his hopes and concems for t h e - and through
whk:h he can suggal, encourage, and when
neceA81\1. discourage. It II this dlrwct communlc:allon
which consuiTMII the 1JU1er part ola PNoldent's - ·
In addition to ..-.g with the instllutiDnal admln~ bodies already menttoned, 1 . - ragular.
1v wllh the
Council. the 1u1 Facully Senate,
the ExecuiiYc Commlllaes of the Faculty Senate and
the Prof-..1 Staff Senate, ofllaln of the lludent
asodallons, offtclals of the two eftllllovee unions, the
Communily Advioory Council, and &lt;ilben.
On a more informal basis, I have tried a number of
devices for meeting at limes wHb Department
Chairmen, ranging from meetings wi!h the enlln! body
of Chalnnen to more relaxed - . s wi!h smaler
·groups over brealaast or lunch. I also have eel aside a
periodic open period In my calendar during which any
faculty member, student or employee can arrange an
appointment for dlscusolon of any Issue.
AD of these steps are In addition, of course, to stan·
ding appointments wtth certain ollicers, to the
numerous meetings that are necessary in the conduct
of the dally business of the University, and to the
speaking engagements and countless ceremonial appearances I must make both within and outside the
UnlversHy. QuHe clearly, I believe that the channels of
communication to and from the President are open
and that the business of the Untverstty Is discussed
openly and frankly . While the abnosphere of legalism
that has been created on campus by government in·
tervention and the rise of ·unionism wtD not disl!ppear,
and while the factlon~m that has been traditional
within higher education wtll not be totally dissipated , I
do believe that they can be ameliorated through the
sense of colleglaUty that Is at the essence of open and •
frank communication.

loll a l - ._..._..... and, In .........
to
_,...this, lhep-...W lhlllb DeaR no
..... • •
la'aptldent olllca ~
~ to the I'NIII!.nt bul Mc:ome • cliNct line o(.

.....m

~ ...... the VIal PNoldent for
AcacMmlc Allain or 1o bofh the VIce ......_.. for
AcacMmlc Allain and the VIce PlaideDt for Heallh
Sciences. The s... ..,.._.., ' - · lhlll a
lndlvlduallhauld .......................y for
educ:allon In the ~. Thil apeclalv Important In vt.w of the U-stti• -~ cleveloprn...a In Genatll Educotion.
F&lt;llowlng longlhy clebnollons. the two VIce

....

can

a=oohich

Praldenls, Mllldng at thlll In conjuncllon wllh
the
devl.d
the Execuuw VIce
Illitel&gt;ralcMnt.
De.. would
nport
to the
Vk:e
Acaclernlc: Allain and aloo
the
tide of Atloclale Vice PNoldent. Allhougb the prln·
clpal of unity between Academic Allain and Heallh
Sciences- acknowledged, the~ for Its
maintenance -.e to fuilher plwmlng. Willi the
preliminary part of the plan tn place, I soon became
clear that the etne19ng adminislnltive ammgement
would effectively dtvlde responsibility for
undergraduate education between the two Vk:e
Presidents, thereby removing It as the primary conoem
of a single individual and further isolating the two
academic aieas from each other. The reaction among
faculty and students was one of alarm.
After careful consideration of aU of the options
available, and In the face of honest disagreement over
the most effective manner to meet the Facuky .
Senate's concerns, I directed that the Dean of the Divi·
sion of Undergraduate Education serve as a staff of.
fleer to the President, as does the Dean of Graduate
and Professional Education, and that he assume
responslbiiHy for developing and directing the General
Education program of the UnlversHy. Moreov~r , I
have made clear to the two Vice Presidents and to the
Deans that I Intend to work closely wHh them In
establishing operational relationships whk:h perrnH the
Dea!]s to exercise greater leadership while
simukaneously not Infringing upon the ~ne respon·
sibllity of the Vice Presidents.
(The preceding should emphasize the Importance
that can be atiached to having reclaimed the title of
Provost for possible use at the University level. Also, It
again raises the question of whether or not It Is to the
advantage of the University to continue to operate_
wlth ·two distinct and separate, principal academic officers .)
In order for the operational relationships referred to
above to be effective, there will have to be frequent
and direct communication between the parties lnvolv·
ed. The need for communication , of course, is a oontinuing concern In an Institution and system ol this size
and complexity; and HIs a concern that probably more
than any other places the greatest demands on the
President's schedule.

~for

u..-v

IV

A great deal of communication.obviously Is aimed ot
providing educational direction . The official
documents of the UniversHy-the SeH-Study, Master
Plan , Mission Statement, Annual Reports, the Budget
Requests, the statement entHied "The University: Its
Purpose and Fulfillment" -are replete with
philosophical, altitudinal, and operational statements
about the missions and goals of this Institution.
Throughout this decade, however, an abiding concern
has been expressed over academic planning. During
the first live years of the decade , this concern was ex·
pressed almost exclusively by the President as I sought
to encourage Individual units to realisticaOy assess and
to assign priorHy to their plans for development in the
face of a worsening economic situation. In 19751 felt H
was necessary to appoint a University Committee on
Academic Planning. The necesslly, quHe bluntly, was
not as much a need for the definition of a new or ex:
panded academic direction for the institution asH was
a need fer the University to come to grips wHh the
question of resource allocation and reaDocation. The
committee was charged , therefore, to first develop an
academic pro!Ue of the UnlversHy, and then to make
recommendations whkh would convey the future
shape of the institution, while serving simultaneously
as a guide to resource allocation .
The need for such a guide was urgent in 1975, for
this was the first year In a lwo·year period of severe
contraction necessHated by a coUapse of the financial
base for New York CHy and the overcommhment of
the Urban Development Corporation of the State of
New York. The Committee on Academic Planning.
however, was aware that Its evaluation of University
programs had to be c~ucted deliberately, and It did
not feel that its proceedings could or should be rushed
or compromised . Nevertheless, the University needed
a set of guidelines, publicly distributed, that could
serve the Institution during this difficult period. To that
end, I appointed a second Unlversity·wlde committee
made up of faculty , staff, and students, to develop
Budget Criteria for the institution.
The work of th.is panel, however, did not drastically

Ill
Some time ago a F~culty Senate ad hoc committee
Issued a report which. although based specifically on
study of the budgetary process, reached the general
conclusion that communication between the various
admintslrative levels must be bnproved in order to
create a better understanding of the decision·making
process. The chairman of the committee was invited to
discuss his findings wi!h the University's senior
academic officers, who then composed the Academic
Cabinet. As a resuh of those discussions, membership
of the Academic Cabinet was enlarged to include the
Chairman of the Faculty Senate , the Chairman of lhe
Professional Staff Senate, and a student representing
the Presidents of the various student associations. Ad·
ditionally, there was created a Deans' Coundl to bring
together on a monthly basts the Deans In Academic
Affairs and Heahh Sciences. Vice Presidents also were
encouraged to share Information at lower ad·
mlnlslrallve levels within their own d ivisions.
In summery: there now are three mllljor ad-

ministrative groups that I chair and that meet on a
regular basis with me to discuss academic and
budgetary Issues: the Academic Cabinet , the Vice
Presidents, and the Deans' Coundl. Generally, I am
convinced that there Is an appreciation at these
levels- Wnot always understanding-of the complex!·
ty and ambiguity of the declslon·rnaking process that is
dictated by the operational control and review exercls·
ed by Central Admintst'ration and the various State
agencies. This appreciation diminishes, however, as
one becomes further removed from the process; and
the resuk Is indeed frustration over a system that does

"Many of our frustrations
result from policies and/
or procedures that are of
our own making"

not appear to be: responsive. Furthermore , even an
understanding of the system.does nol preclude frustra·
tlon wi!h II.
MtnY of our frustrations, however, resuk from
pofk:ies a nil/ or procedures that are of our own mak·

.·

Npadl,

..... eualllbl* ... the UMellly comrnunlly,
not anly ....,.. how the In qMIIIDn ope-.

·.

�alllct ......................... l'R&amp;... ...
~-

~for ~ Canilr, tM ........... II cl

•'-*dmlloa-mad., ............ _

...._an .....-.s

-

..,.._, .............. - - CIOIIId .. ......
1hrougtl the .,. o l -

'-,and~ .. .....,.... . . . . . . . . . .

tban.,...........-. ...... ~.•-wuhlt
.... pel1od olllme folooolng _....._ o l llon-f- had Nllod on ~-would have
been ~ lhorl and ..... the lnllllutlon.
thercfCft, should~ JIIOIIII'III....S.Ioa oen_ , far the plight &lt;II Individuals.
~-and In lime forclldolons!Mtbood lobe
mac~a 1n 1976 per~a~n~ng 1o the 1976-n buclgel-tt..
Budget Clkla Commlaee NCOIIIJMnCied tbat ....
principle ol Mlec:tlw edjullmall ol flocal ouppoot, In·
clucling rulocallon, ohould .. oppliod. It. ol-.d
allella lo guide aJCh deciolons, and dwe ~ quite
oimllar to allella being u.d by 1M Comm- on
Academic Planning In .. evaluation ol ~- The
concopt .ol Mlec:tlw edjuslment also endorwd by
1M Faculty Senate, the Academic Cabinet, and the
l.lniwJIIIy Council.
Thenfore, 1M Prowsts (who ~ Feadty heads
under 1M old tllle) and School Deans were lnstruded
to mllka rea&gt;mmendatlons about redudlons and
rulocations to the then Acting Vice Praldent for
Academic AffAirs. The process involved .......uaDy the
core campus at:ademlc because M was In these
unlls that the previous year's reliance upon allritlon
had created the !JUiesl imbalances. Following receipt
ol the recommendations by the Acting VIce President,
they were forwarded to m&lt;! and were discussed on
sevaal occasions with an ad hoc committee ol the
Faculty Senate. Together, the Acting VIce President
and I held final hea1ngs for aU programs recommend·
ed for major reductiOns.
Suboequently, I made the following public stale·
ment: "Quite frankly, I am d'eeply disappointed in the
product ol the recommendatory and consultative process which was followed In this initial attempt at plann·
ed reallocallon. The results, In terms ol resources
made available for rullocation , are absolutely
minimal; and the trauma thr~t the University
has been profound. The process Will not be duplicated
again." (My own disenchantment, incidentally, was
mirrored in the report I mentioned earlier by the F.acul·
ty Senate ad hoc committee, for the anecdotal
evidence on which H was based was collected a few
months after these ewnts.)
It was In this atmosphere, therefore , that the report
of the Committee on Academic Planning was issued.
It was viewed by many In the University as a budgetary
document; and, indeed, speciltc recommendations for
resource increase~ deaease. or stability were contain··
ed In the report, on a program-by-program basis. The
campus reaction to the report can best be characteriz·
ed as one of alarm, lor the commHtee had done what
had not been done by most unH heads during the
previous budgetary process: It had made very dlfflcuJt,
fundamental, academic and operational recommen·
dations.
The fact that the recommendations emanated from
a PrestdenUaUy appointed, UnlversMy·wlde committee
of faculty, staff, and students was viewed by some per·
sons as an attempt to centralize decision·maldng in the
Office ol the Preoldenl; and the work of the committee
was criticized upon such grounds. Also, the Health
Sciences units felt that the Individual professional mis·
slons of the Schools either had not been fuUy
understood by the commMtee or had been Ignored . In
the core campus, concern was expressed over
judgments made about particular programs as well as
the data upon which the judgments were based. I
therefore asked the VIce President lor Health Sciences
and the VIce President for Academic Affairs to res·
pond to the planning document In whatever manner
they judged to be appropriate. Both have done so.
In the case of Health Sciences, documents were
submitted which emphasize the missions of the profes·
slonal schools in the Health Sciences. In Academic AI·
lairs, which, as I stated , was the more aitlcal area
because ol the need for reallocation of resources , a
newly appointed VIce President submitted this year an
academic plan which draws upon the broad priorities I
Identified In the document. "The UnlversHy: Its Pur·
pose and Fulfillment." that was published In the
Reporter In 1975, and also utilizes many of the evalua·
lion aiteria employed earlier by the Committee on
Academic Planning and the CommHtee on Budget
Criteria. While having the VIce President's own
dlsllncHve imprint, the plan also Incorporates the prin·
ciple ol selective budgetary adjustment, Including the
reallocation ol resources.
·
The response from Health Sciences, as well as that
from Academic Affairs, stresses the need for greater
Interaction between the two divisions. This is an in·
teracllon that I, too, desire In order to lend greater
meaning to the concept of Institutional unHy .
Therefore, methods to bring this about will be the subject ol discussion in the relationship that! have descn'bed must exJst between the two VIce Presidents, the
Graduate and Undergraduate Deans, and myseH.
The production of the planning document In
Academic Affairs, coming to grips as II does wHh the
issue ol resou~ allocation, is one of the reasons for
my characterization ol the Unlvenity as more mature
In this year's "State ol the University" address. The
planning document was drafted with the cooperation
of the Deans ol the various Schools and Divisions who
know that resources must be shifted and who are
prepared, I believe, to make very dlfficuh decisions
over the next lew years. This, too, Is one ol the

... ~ ...... dlllztcl. - ' -

ocolci..
MJivllilllan:•lw~......... ......-for
.......... ._..
........... tnaclcb-

~Mae

llori lo . . . . . . . .

U.....W•

upon.us"
p d n w y - far my ........... ........., of
the~ unltl ... _
................... Is
tod.p. ,.. ........ In ... ,..,........ . _ , ....
~- ol our-....,- win 1M fuluoe; a
fuluoe ..... Is """' upon us.

v

While a !JU1 clal ol thc&gt;!9d and elfort i- been
c1evo1ec1 to planning. tt.. u~....,
ruac~e
prcl!pS ·In punutng .. tradillonel ol
...-.:h. leKhtng. and oervtce. ~ expen·
dJtura, uJ .....-d _..,.,have tnaused.ennually to mooe tban $24-....,.. ~. facullyshowing a ~ ~ to accept 1apouolblllty
fo. -'&lt;log a lema! support. The number of J&gt;IOIIOIIIIs
being forwenled has tnaea.ed. New!rthelas, ·I
recognize tbat we haw conslden!ble strides to make
for a Unlvenlty ol ~size and -...e. There ts a nMd
for ~ adlvlly within a more varied faculty base.
To that end, 1111111. continue to olfer encouragement.
Also, the ldenllftcation of an outstanding .....-.her. to
head the Research' Office and the tmplementation ol
the recommendations ol the Committee to Study
Operational Processes should be beneficial. Ultimate·
ly, however, the progress we make In retearch wiD de·
pend almost exclusively upon the lnltlallve and In·
dustry ol U&gt;dlvklual faculty members.
In teaching-which I view In Its broad sense to in·
elude curriculum: what is taught and the context In
which H is taught-the University Is displaying a

._

....

renewed Interest In creating new programs that will
meet the needs ol students. I attributed this in the
"State ol the Univenity" address to the prospect of
declining enroUments as weD as to a reasserllon by the
faculty of confidence In Its own academic judgment
and their genuine concern for education. This reasser·
tion is evident In the work ol a General Education
Committee appointed jointly by the Faculty Senate
and the VIce Presidents for Academic Affairs and
Health Sciences. I suggested the need for a General
Education program In the document , "The University:
Its Purpose and Fulfillment," In 1975, one which
would encourage cross.&lt;flsclp~nary approaches to
broad issues and help breach the insularity of the
disciplines. The possibUHy of this materializing through
the committee and the Senate appears strong, and the
dlven;tty ol programs at this Institution should con·
tribute greatly to the allractlveness of the program
which evolves. Additionally, a number of units already

are providing some cross-dlsciplinary courses and
dual-degree programs.
I also believe II is Important to note that in the
development of these programs the Unlven;tty has not
resorted to the trivlalization of higher edutation. In·
deed, in our converskJn this year-after repeated encouragement-to a basic standard of contact
hour/credit hour equivalency, the Univen;tty is
demonstrating a capacity to provide students with a
more rigorous and broader education at a time when

the easter choice might have been to maintain the

status quo.

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

J &amp;u:tto . . - OIIPIIIttlllllla •·

fkinlill,e......... - I n lll1ilch ........ ol.&amp;ort

·

The facuhy's Interest in the education of students, as
I have slated, is genuine among the greater part of the
faculty . It is evidenced In a renewed Interest In
teaching evaluation as a means of Improving
classroom performance. Although a single evaluation
instrument does not appear to be feasible-and this
has been a source of disagreement among many per·
sons-the Vice President for Academic Affairs has
been charged with responsibility for encouraging
departments to develop appropriate Instruments. The
students al~ are again carrying out teaching evalua·
lions for a number of departments. Efforts In both of
these directions will continue. Moreover, if the experimental program conducted by the Graduate
School to assist graduate teaching assistants to lm·
prove their classroom performance is successlul, add!·
tiona! efforts In this area will be undertaken .
The University also has enlarged Its public service
role within the communHy; and this, too, has required
the creation ol a new attHude. With its history as a
private Institution , combined with Its development In a
public system as a research center, the University ap·
peared lor some time to display the attitude that it had
a choice as to whether or not II wished to acknowledge
this aspect of Its mission. Today, however, I believe
there is an lnaeased appreciation of the fact that the
exte.nsk&gt;n of our programs Into the community ls a
aillcal prerequisite to our clairil lor public funding.
Recent example$ of our efforts to directly benefh the
community Include the creation of a Regional

...........

-~-......~,... .......... ol CIOUne, ....-only .........
_..... lip of

the IOib.g. Tt.y can only IUIIIIIt tt..

true _ o l .... ~· tnvolwment In th.l:ommunlly'a ecanomy, Is enWonll*ll-bolh phyoical
and cultural-and In ......, of .... JIIO(eollorllll - ·
ouch • '-lth ......
"""*-'-· today, Is
. , _ tban It - - ............ and .... Untwioly.
Community relationship has .......-1 beyond one
ol toloiallon and ...,.,..._ to one o1 ~.
Tha -.glh ol tM cMpartments and JIIOSPIIIIIS
which conduct tt- mlaloos, and ....... ....
-.glh ol the Unlvenlty, Is evident In our abllty to el·
tract.suc:h- ...... Cenla far lrdlgrellve Sludia,
which ... mow here early
hum the lJnMr.
oldy ol tiouJion. We also continue to cllllw outstan·
ding faculty to 1M UniversitY. such ., four eminent
ocholan In Cornpandtve lJterature who mowd
simtslta--'v from Johns Hopkins Un-..y to Jc*1
1M Faculty cl Arts and Lett.n. The l'IWI1be o1 our
faculty who are recognized through external
lelowshtps and 'awards-IUch u five Guggenheim
redplents this yow-continua to compeN favwab1y
wtth prestigious
l'lllcemenl ol graduate
degree t&gt;olders also suggests tbat In most fields our
graduate programs are aa:orded national andtntflmll·
llonal respect.
The acadellllc quality ol our programs aloo Is at·
tested to by the favqrable reports ol the State Educa·
lion Department doctoral J&gt;TO{II1'm review teams, our
own Internal reviews, and by the reportS ol the
numerous accrediting _.,.:les which visit the Un!Yer·
slty. Such reports, however, are more frequently em·
phasizlng the direct relationship between academic
quality and budgetary and fadlttles support-such as
occurred this past year In the School ol Dentistry.

n..

ncxl-

u-.

VI

The University's State-supported budget and Its •
construcllon program are .affected primaril~ by
enroUments and the state of the economy. In regard to
the latter, Inflation has reduced the value ol our
1979-80 State-supported budget of $98-mUIIon to
$59-million In 1970 dollars. This is SJ..milllon lea than
the $62-miUion State-supported budget we had In
1970. The Implications ol this Inflationary erosion
have been profound.
We recognized-and stated explicitly In our 1977
MissiOn Statement-that the day of the comprehen·
sive University Center In this State had come and
gone. ~ Indeed It was ever here. We also slated that
we Intended , Instead, to cukivate a broad base ol programs through the process of selective development.
We also will continue to aspire to excellence In aU we
do, with the realization that the process wiD be step-bystep In narrower ranges.
Within the Schools and Faculties, recruHment in a
number ol areas-whenever hiring fteeoes have not
been Imposed by the Division of the Budget-has
become Increasingly dlfficuh because of salaries which
now in many Instances are non-competitive with those
that can be earned In other situations. Equipmen·t
replacement is a aillcal factor In the sciences. The
University Libraries, which now are housed In splen·
did new quarters, continue nevertheless to be plagued
by a shortage of funds for acquisitions. Non·
lnstrucllonal support staff are spread thin, having been
reduced by 100 lines since 1970. In the core campus,
70 facuhy lines have been lost during the sarpe period.
To counter the effects of Inflation. I have had to use
our endowment monies to provide some degree of
relief to the acquisitions problem In the Libraries.
Monies from these sources also have been used to
assist In making appointments In Am&lt;!rican Studies,
Classics, and other areas. They have been used In the
purchase of equipment. AddttionaUy. we now are
working with State University In the development of a
system-wide plan for equipment replacement. A
higher salary schedule for Law faculty also was agreed
upon in consultation with SUNY Central; however,
this has been stalled In the Division ol the Budget.
Currently. efforts also are underway to increase
salaries In Dentistry.
Another source of funds that is used to supplement
the State-supported budget is .,e University at Buffalo
Foundation. Private financial support contributed
through the Foundation has increased annuaUy in past
years to more than $3-mlllion . Many of these dollars
are for restricted purpo5es- such as for the recent
establishment ol required dental teaching facilttles In a
a local hospital-and unrestrtcted funds, which provide us with greatly needed flexibltity, are becoming
lnaeasingly more difflcuh to obtain.
·

"Academic quality of our programs Is attested to by
favorable.reports of Education Department teams,
Internal reviews, and by accrediting agencies"
Prelldentlal Stulement#October 18, 1979/Page 3

�................ .,........ ._..._.

......

The Fou~ h. been~ In .. ...._
In ...... two ....,.. '"'IlL ~ . . . . - - · . .

u.w..ty b«eme • pubic ............. . . .
suppclltfts, lor the JIMl, . _ ,..
....ched the palo olthollrcar.n. ~. . . . . . .
ol a lack ol Slate flnandalouppoot lor Foundallon aeIIY&amp;s and ,..._.ne!, the Founclalton- be - . l y

..

.,.,....1181

...__._

....... areiiePared to continue to move .

forwatd; wII: .• Cl man•r of~ and wiD
and courage; these are necessary to prevail .

We'- ~ to counler ! ' - dlllcullles bv

edcllng to the fund-railing IIIII! olthe Foandallon and

bv bringing the Alumni AIIOCilltlon Into ...... reporting~- The llltler ........ Ills hoped, wll pn&gt;duce a ~~rang baM ol support among griod..-.. who
. . made awere ol and can oppreclate the linllndal
..... olthe Unlvenity.
The fanner DMIIon ol lJ-..yRelotlons, now
the Dt.loion ol Public Affan, reooganlzed and
-mined In 1977. an. object ollhll reorganization,
although by no means the only one, was to create an
o8ica Which could more effectively devote a greater
J*1 oL lis allons toward portraying the Un~ to
the community. This, too , should help us as we seek
lnciused amounts ol State and , _.. financial support.
The INijor way that we can deal with budgetary
.--!cllons, however, II to shift our own resources
wllhln the ~ns that are Imposed by the State.
Thole ~are severe; neverlheless, as I have
..-.ttoned, the planning document prepared by the
VIa! Pralclent for Academic Affairs deals with the
isoue ol resource shifts. The ll)e!hod adopted In this
plan II to provide Incremental mowments to areas ol
greatest naed while avoiding the more dramatic
dislocations created by actual declared retrenchments.
To date, we have had the luxury ol operating In this
fashion , and I believe U Is the proper way to proceed
as long as we are able to do so. The time may come,
however, when this will no longer be possible. The
reuon for this, and one faced by every institution in
this country, Is the spK!er ol dedinlng enroDments.
The Unlvenlty's State-supported budget Is
upon student enrollmenL Last year, although we Mil
more lltudents than the year before, we did not meet
our budgeted target. Many reasons for this were evl·
dent , and extensive discussion resulted In an agree ment being reached with Slate University and the Division ol the Budget on a projected enroDment lor
1979-80. Addltionaly, SUNY Central requested
enrolment projeclions through 1984-85. A major
Issue lor the present and future, therefore, Is the"
strategy we intend to folow in order to meet these poojedlons.

Some persons argue that enroUment caps in high
demand areas should be re"l""ed en «rely, that
resources should be transfened swiftly to allow lor expansion-obtained obviously through retrenchment in
other areas-and that the high demand dlsdpllna
should be allowed to carry the institution. I have not
accepted this argument because I believe we have to
look to the long-term and lmpooo reasonable rates of
growth upon currently popular programs In order to
preserve the bask: nature of the University.
The operational implications of that decision are
that we will have to design more altnK:IIve programs In
low demand areas such as Arts and Letters, Social
Scimoes, and Millard Fillmore College, and that these
prowams wll have to be widely publicized. These
" ' - are being taken by the untis involved and, on a
Unlllenlly-wide basis, by the General Education Commltlft. We also will have to Increase our recruitment
efforts, a situation of which the Executive VIa! President and Director of Admissions and Records are
aware, as are the lndMdual unlls that will have to be
Involved . A1 the .,..duate level, our success In persuading the DMIIon ol the Budget to lnaease the ceilIng lor -ntshlp lllpends, as weD as our internal ef.
forts to Increase the aW1119" llfpend, should help In
the no:ruHment ol outstanding graduate students. Of
c:ouroe, we must continue our efforts to obtain add~
tiona1 funding In this area.
It will not be enough, however, to direct our - ..
tion only to prospective students. We mwt tMelleps
to retain the Sludents we aftady haw. To thai and, I
on Attrlappointed last year a Unlwnlly
uon/Retent'"' which has come ID&lt;Ward with
numerous recunl!nendationl that have been pt.c.d In
priority order by the VIa! President for Student Affairs.
I have Mloed thai he work In consultation wllh me
tow•d the implementation ol t"'- NCOmmandalions
which are feasible. Moreover, he .nady h.
reorg,antz.d his own DMsion in an ellort to provide
bdler student MrVIces Ill both the Amhent and Main
Slreet Campu-.
Two other situations that have required actions to
proYide student MrVIcal In - t years include the
abolishment of our Foreign Student Allalrs Olllcc by
the le!lislature ol the Slale ol New YOlk. To oounter
the ellects of thll reduction , won.load was
radlllrtbuted In the OMolon ol Student Affairs 10 that
fonlgn students would~ 10 have the guidance

eo...-

..We must Increase
recruitment while takl~
stepa to retain 11uc1ents
we already have'•

and ad-..- . - y i n . . . . . - In the teeond .._...,the lack of....-- fac*les
on the Amhent Campus- countered by the u -.
lily's acquisition ol a "bubble" gyrnJIMkam. A teeonc1
temporary llrudure ol this type has now been funded.

VII
We obYiously could achieve an Immensely better atmosphere for students, as well as for t..c:u1ty and IIIII!
II construction ol our physlcallacilllles had proceedecj
cfurtng the past decade according to schedule. When I
stated In 1974 that I believed we could achieve our
projected physical growth wtlhout 1nuneNe cMiculty, I
did not foresee the colapoe of New YOlk City's &amp;nancia! base and the profound effect oflhll upon the State
and the bond market. Althol!gh we have made considerable progress In moYing the core campus
academic untis to the Amherst Campus, construcllon
has been seriously delayed.
In the face of that delay, we were able to persuade
the Board of Trustees to assign top priority among
State UnlversUy construcllon to completion ol the
Amherst Campus and rehabilitation of the Main Street
Campus. The State Education Department also was
persuaded to recommend that construction of facilities
lor the Health Sdenc:es be moved forward as rapidly
as possible. This, in view of the fact that the Main
Street Campus cannot be made totally available to the
Health Sdenc:es until completion ol the Amhenl Campus, was a lad! recommendation lor completion of the
latter despUe a recommendation lor a moratorium on
other postseoonclary construction In the State.
Moreover, aUhough H ultimately was not required , we
were able to coniiUICe a number of local banks to
guarantee a modest bond issue that would aOow some
construdlon to proceed.
Within the past year, a significant amount ol new
construdlon has been inlllated at Amherst.. The
facilities now gOing up Include two Engineering
buildings, a Lecture HaD, a Music Buikllng and
Chamber HaD, and a Field House. We expect to begin
aocepting these structures within slightly more than a
year from now, and the renewed construcllon actMty
obviously has Improved morale within the UnJversUy.
On the Main" Street Campus, a dlsa9reement between the architect and the State UnJversUy Construction Fund has stalled movement toward renovation of
Foster HaD lor Health Sciences' use. Nevertheless, we
stiU expect a construction contract to be awarded durIng the first part of the coming year, however, K Is
possi&gt;le that the funds prov;ded will not be sulllcient
lor renovatkiit-ol the entire buJiding.
More opttrnlstlca]ly, Cannon Design, Inc., seems
now to be making satisfactory progress with the poogram study of the Master Plan for the Main-street
Campus which will be used by the Unlvenlty and the
Construction Fund to justily to the Division o1 the
Budget the space needs of-the various Schools In the
Health Sciences. A draft report Is antldpated shortly
with a final report expected toward the end of th~
year. The Importance ol this work, and the negative
Impact In Health Sciences caused by Initial delay, cannot be overemphasized. This Is especially true in
r_.:ito the School ol Dentistry, whooe lOOCredltatlon,
despUe our warnings, has been threatened because ol
a lack ol physical space and Inadequate State funding.
In this particular Instance, we have developed a threeyear plan to remedy identified funding deficiencies in
the School and, ol course, thJo School has been gtven
top priority In our 1980-81· budget request. Nevertheless, as other Schools and Departments In the
Hallh Sciences undergo accredllatlon vlslls, we can
antldpate receiving ~ .a1llclsms ol physical
fadllles on the Main Street Campus.
Another oerlous concern Is the pending lour projects
at Amhenl which have been ]usllfled by the Unlvenlty, have been approved by the Legiolature, and have
been a111l0Ul&gt;C*! by the Governor, but which, as ol
this date, have not been authorized by the Division o1
the Budget for the active design _n- include thesecond phase ol the Health, Physical Education, and
Recreation llldltty, the Computer Center, the first
phase ol Social Scimoes, and addltlonal Student Actlvtlles space. Also, the Division olthe Budget has requested ~ lnfonnatton about the Theatres and
Gallery project prevlouoly ~ by the legislature
before gMng flnel design authorization. At this point
the Division ol the Budget has not released any of
theM projects, ai-od we have been unable to proceed
furthar. T h i s - wil requk-e continuing atiention
and effort to breech the lmpasoe.
Plajeds delwrwd during the past Included the
..,..,_, ol Stoddon Klmbal T""""' on the Main
SINet ~- This porrnttgd the School of Nunmg
ao be broujllt together. under a *&gt;gle roof and abo
......_. some """"'*~don In the School ol Health
!Waled Profeutons. In both lnstanc:a, morale has
been favorably oll«ted; howewr, the space Is still in-

..

adequate. The Biology Dellartment able to conooadate lis operations on the Amherst Campus with
the completion ol the leboratory Greenhouse. Additionally, a Serlllce and Warehoute Complex was occupied durlng the past year which provides a permanent location for Maintenance on the Amherst Campus.
Despite the construction ~ ""' haw m..'Cie
barren field In Amherst to what
now II visible-we continue to operate a split campus
in two major locations, as ...,g as smaJer scale operations at the Ridge Lea Campus and elsewhere. We
have moved untis, at the direction ol the Division of
the Budget, from temporary, off-ampus rental
faclll;es to on-campus locations. n- mandated
moves have been, In some Instances, leso than Ida!,
and have requlled the use of space originally Intended
for otber purposes. Last year, as dormKory living gained in popularUy, we were able to ease the room shortage by reclatrnlng space for 130 beds from academic
users ol that space through the exemplary cooperation
of many offices at Amherst. Neverthl!less, space
designed for dormKory purposes continues to be occupied by academic unlls, and students and faculty
continue to be shuttled back and forth by bus from
campus to campus. We have attempted to mlnlmi&gt;e
this Inconvenience through class scheduling adjustments. The Lecture HaD now under construcllon at
Amherst Is expected to provide some relief. The Inconvenience, however, wiD be with us lor some time
to come.
slna! 1970-from a

VIII
As I stated eariJer, the attention I am required io
devote to external relations has Ina-eased as the
economy has worsened and as enrollment projections
in the State and nation have become more dire. These
relations Include lnaeased Interactions with State '
University Central Administration and . the host of
State agencies whose decisions ailed this campus: In ,
the preceding, I have tried to suggest that the extent of
that involvement already Is great It wiD become •
greater, lor the critical nature of the years Immediately '
ahead for higher education Is heightened In New York
•
"" ~
State by a number of unique factors:
The first of these Is the traditional reliance by the
· Stale upon private higher education, which has been
accompanied by tax-funded support ol the private 5ef·
tor at a magnKude and rate unequalled In any o,lher
stale in the nation. Competition for funds,. as weD as
lor students, among the public and private sedors ob- .
vtously wiD Intensify In this State. That competition wiD
occur within the sectors, as weD.
A second unique factor Is the fuD assumption by the
State oflinandng lor City University, thereby a-eating
In New York Slate two extremely large public sector
systems of higher education. The construction needs
of Ctty University are vast, and we will have to be
especially alert In this sUuatlon.
,
A third unique factor Is the role olthe Slate Edu.:ation Department In this State. The SED tradlllonaUy
has served as the handmaiden of the pilvate sector.
Yet lis authority In relation to State UnlversUy recently
has been proved In the courts. It now seems more In·
dined to exerdse and expand II.
Each of these factors wiD Influence decisions that af.
feet the Unlvenlty at Buffalo, and I Intend to continue
my efforts to draw attention to the issues and to lm·
prove the position of this Unlvenil}' and of public
higher education In New York State. Despite the great
importance of these extental matters and dealings,
however, the most Important Issue remains wlthir. the
Unlvenlty Itself; that Is, can the disparate parts of this
institution unite and move forward In the face ol the
harsh realities which confront higher education now
and In the Immediate future .
In this report on the condlllon of the campus, my
own belief !s clear. The University has continued to
progress toward Us !11)111 of becoming one of the
nation's distinguished Institutions; h has acted to help
Itself. The progress and actions ha v• ""' • lwaytll:ome
easily; nor are they likely to be any . • &lt;ier In the
foreseeable future. Most persons-facuh; ,tall, and
students~are aware that this Is the situation; ~nd
most, I believe, are prepared to continue to move for·
ward. ~ Is, as II allllays has been, a matter of disciphne
and will and courage, for these are necessary U one Is
to prevad and not merely persevere .
This institution will prevaU.

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
ATBUFFALO
.

OCT. 11, 1979
VOL. 11 e NO.6

No specifics yet
on cutbacks, Bonn
says about shortfall
Ahhough the UniversttY is faced with
another serious enrollment shortfall. H's
still too early to talk specifics about retrenchment.

Accordlng to Vice President for
Academic Affairs Ronald Bunn, several
mitigaHng factors are at work which may
temper the outcome .

But first the given; nU/ B's average an -

nual core cempus enrollment remilins ap-

proximately 700 FTE's shy of target. If attrition this spring remains at about four to
live per cent. 11nd II the Division of the
Budget (DOB) forces the University to
give up salaries and tines corresponding

directly to the shortfall. then, says the
VPAA. U/ 8 will not he able to make

ture at this point. remarked Buon.

Notnn eboat ~

Bunn emphasized
th University Is
not "'"' just how DOS will
nd to the
shortfall. U/B's budget
earing Is
schedu~d for early November. but even
then. administration may not know the
answer, They will. of cour.;e , find out I!Ji
January when the Executive Budget Is
made public.
~The VPAA pointed out that DOS "is
not wedded" to the Idea of exacting !lie
lull cut ol lacuhy lines and salaries. II dRI
not do so last year when enroUment was
also off-target. In fact , II really hasn't
done it so far to any SUNY University

necessary cuts through normal attrition .
and will face retrenchment.

Center.

· However, U/ 8 presently Is taking steps
to beef up spring enrollment. One way Is
by bolstering MFC's student population ,
which has been steadily dedin lng lor
about six .yea.rs . Bunn told the Reporter
that he has requested the dean of Con-

change its strategy this year . The rea!IOn

tinuing Education to report

back to him in

two weeks with definitive lhoughis on
how this can be accomplished .
Both MFC and DUE "must assume
more aggressive leadership in moving

The VPAA Is not convinced DOS will
is that U/B in Its "good faith arguments"
against full cuts reinforces the obvious .

Namely, that the split campus plays
havoc with recruitment and enrollment as

do word-of-mouth reports from disgrun tled students who spend hours each week
on buses between campuses.
Bunn anticipates that ''as the function
of the campus Improves" so will recruitment and enrollment. He remains

their flexible resources to meet the

hopeful that the DOB and the Stale will

demands

realize that , given our unique cir·
cumstances. enrollment must be viewed
In a multi-year rather than stngle year
context .
eS.e 'Too urtv IOl' ~,',.... 10 . col. 1

of

student

needs. •·

Bunn

asserted. (See related MFC article In this
Issue.)
But whether or not MFC alone can
close the enrollment gap ts simply cpniec·

Center's death notice
'greatly exaggerated'
lri5 Pell of Lewiuky's troupe..

No more dance!
-until the 25th
Bella lewltzky worships movement ;
she punishes her dancers' bodies untU
they achieve the effects of doublejointedness. Rudy Gernreich does her
costumes. fresh from triumphs with
Unisex and the topless bathing suit. Ms.
lewltzky lnseru two dancers Into one
oversized stretch Iabrie jumpsuit by Gemreich and encourages them to puD against
each other llke a kid pulls back a slingshot. "These miracle fabrics have revolu tionized dance,'' she says.
The Paul Taylor dancers perform
crowd-pleasing numbers about furry
animals. funny dogs , and mean
machines. There's a

lot of bare chest

and

billowing chiffon as they reach lor adulation .
Merce Cunningham , a greying reed of
a man, over 60 now~ whose body doesn'1
respond lil&lt;e It used to, dances to noises
evoking thunder and lightning-doesn't
care if this synthesUer accompaniment
splits your eardrums. "Better people than
you have walked out on it ,.. he seems to
IZIUnl. "It's a tribute to Me:rce's freshness
thai peop~ stl/1 walk out," one campus
ob!erver says.
These diverse groups made up the
U/8-Artpark Dance Festival on campus
this Augu51 -a happening which cost
$6,000, and yielded three lecture·
performencei,

two

modern

dance

"events," a video presentation, a sene. of
master classes, and a heightened taste lor
dance •mong the campus community.
Well over 1,000 people aHended the
public events-on very hot nights.

George levine is concerned.
Levine and Music Department Chair·
· man William Thomson are in the midst of
discussing "available options" which
could pump some adrenalin into the
Center.

Then why all the flap over Its demise?

s - were lasplred
A

management major without even a

gllmmer of interest previously, got so he
could facilely contra51 the styles of
lewttzky, Taylor and Cunningham .
Another, who thought darice was what

the Dallas Cowgirls do, was Inspired to
careen fiom Merce Cunningham through
every single dance attraction on campus

and at Artpark , ending up despondent
when time came for the Canadian Na·
tiona! Ballet to dance its last "Coppelia"
and make room for jazz in Lewiston.

Esther Harriott should get S]&gt;Qdal credit
for a reaDy spedal event, said someone

who intended to write a "Letter to the
EdHor" about it, but never did.
What she did gel , the director of
cultural
·~elephone

affairs

responded ,

Forget the eulogies-at least for now.

The Center lor the Creative and Performing Aris Is still alive {although not
well) and will continue to function . At
least as far as Dean ot Arts and Letters

was

bursitis" (a diagnosed enlhy

resulting from endless hours of phone
negotiations about everything from
stagehands to power generators for out-

door performances) , dehydration, and
headaches, ·
"Never again," she sighed.
The Festival culmJnated several years

planning wHh David Midland , the director

of Artpark. U/ 8 shared the three com·
panles with the lewiston lnstrtution {ac·
tuany claiming the lion's share of the
lewltzky troupe, who taught master
classes here for a week) . Artpark had
wanted to throw ln the Musawwtr Gym -

nast Company and lar lubovttch, too;
but three's a crowd. Harriott thought.

•&amp;.e"Ne..,......_.,. ,..e 11. col. I

Apparently a communications problem .
Levine admits he was not able to tell the
Center's administrators-widely ac·

claimed musicians Morion Feldman and
Jan Williams-if the job of business
manager recently left vacant by Monica
Polowy (who took a job at a similar center

at USC San Diego) could be filled by their
imposed deadline late last week .
Although no firm yes or no answer
could be gl\'en. levine says he hardly ex pected to see an art;cle tn the Cot~rier­
Express announcing the Center's death ,

especially since he. VPAA Ronald Bunn .
the President. and the Center's Board of
Dh'ectors weren't consulted about the
obituary .
The Dean says his "intention" Is to fiU
the line, but he needs time to negotiate
around a vacancy pool requirement

placed on him .
The Center-started 16 years ago

bv

the celebrated former director of the Buffalo Philharmonic. Lukas Foss-Is "one
of the most visible programs" at the
University, assens Levine . and a ''center
of international renown" for which he
refuses as yet to ring the death kneU .

levine told the Reporter thai one option being cpnstdered- which he will
di!-cuss at length with all parties in·
volved-is the possib~ administrative
"un~lcation" of the Center wHh the

ecutive managing director's postuon that
could serve the fund·raislng. business

and.Jegwork needs of both groups.
Originally, noted levine. the Center
for the Creative and Performing Arts-as
its name implies-was meant to include a
theatre component , but this never

materialized. What levine would like, is
for the Mu$ic Center to move its head·

quarters to the Center Theatre, In the
downtown theatre district , and lor the
Creative Associates to ..assume more of a
teaching function ."

Some sacrifices, In the short run. will
no doubt have to be made by each
group, assessed Levine, but In the long

run . both should be able to continue
viable, distinguished programs.
With the withdrawal of funds from the
Stale Coundl on the Arts and the Prest·
dent's endowment,

Levine

says the

Music Center is left with only external
funding to help pay its bills.
The Dean says he wants to settle the
matter soon. but untU the fate of the
Center is decided one way or the other.
he has received assurances from Music

Department Chair Thomson thai il will
continue to (unctkfn .
Thomson confirmed that. while some
short-term provisions can be made to
contin ue operations . there's .Just too
much legwork Involved for the faculty to
assume ihe responsibUity on a permanent
basis .

Thomson. himself lured to the University largely because of the International
reputation of the Center . says it woukl ~

a "tragedy" to both U/ B and the Buffalo
community if the Center were forced to
such an untimely demise .

At ••,..,., ........... - · fro•
""'• ••• ..__ ....._ .. Geo...
Le.rlae '-fo..... ....... a ......c~
• - • for Jl-tea Polowy, -~
CenlCT for Theater Research . now more
• • 41ndooo of tile c-w, wt11 ...
comm09ly referred to as the U/ 8 Center
......... Tllla .. .,......... • •
Theatre:
II thtS proposal is accepted, )'alowy'• . ~ cnodal _...... for __........_
vacant hne would be expande811&gt; en&lt;e~t• • •
t

...,

........

�October 11, 1979

l

Career week on tap
for October ~2-26

the University) .
According to Wes Carter, assistant to
the director of Placement, the idea of the
week is to bring to the campus people
employed in various occupations and
professions In which students may be In·
terested.
Carter stresses this is no placement
project or recruitment fair . but rather an
opportunity for undergraduates to sit
down . talk Informally with people In a
variety of fields and find out exactly what
it means to work In those fields. He ex·
peds students to learn: what each of the

dude biology, physics and chemistry.
computer science (IBM and Sierra
Research). statistics, architecture and
engineering (Coming Glass, Harrison
Radiator, Republic Steel. Union Carbide.
IBM, Acres American. International
Harvester. and Moog) .
Max Jacobs of Sports Service, the
chairman of the United Way of Bufialo
and Erie County. will keynote a day
devoted to social services. Thursday. October 25. Represented wUI be agencies
providing services for the aged One Upper Elmwood Senior Center, the
Amherst Senior Center, The Episcopal
Church Home of WNY. and the Erie
County Department of Social Services).
alcoholics, the. blind, &lt;:hUdren and youth
(Catholic Charities, ChUd &amp; Family Ser·
vices of Erie County, New York State
Division for Youth, and Trinity Daycare
Center) . Also, community centers, drug

occupational representatives does from

counseling

A week-long program called "Career
Horizons: The Years Ahead" Is being
scheduled for October 22-26 by the
University

Placement

and

Career

Guidance office In cooperation wtih the
Community Advisory Council (an
assoctaHon of business and civic leaders
interested in advancing the programs of

Lq

strength

lo ....... oo.....S m the Klneoiology t.b.

U I 8 research team is
measuring marathoners
1111 Mmy Beth Spina

ministering the strength tests.

Edllorlol ............. Hullh 5dmces

Runners participating In this Saturday's
Skylon lnternatlonal Marathon are
undergoing extensive tests on campus to
provide data for a study on the
physiological measurements and run
habits of "super athletes."
The runners in tum wiD receive lnfor·
motion by which to gauge their fitness
and wiD gain estimates of their marathon
performance potential. In this oense. the
project has been described as a service
venture In appreciation of the volunteer
efforts which many local runners have
provided for U/B studies of the effects of
exercise.
Two to three hundred runners out of
the marathon field of 3.600 are receiving
Individual evaluations conducted by a
U/B research team composed of faculty
and staff from the Departments of
Physiology. Physical Therapy, Social and
Preventive Medicine. and Physical
Education .
The runners began undergoing the
tests In campus laboratories yesterday.
and testing continues through tomorrow.

A •Diqae prolec:t
"Very llttle data Is available on the ex·
act physiologk:al measurements and
habits of 'super runners' such as the
marathon~rs. .. says Dr . David
Pendergast. U/B associate professor of
physiology. These athletes typicaDy run
from 50 to ISO mUes weekly. compared
to the considerably lower mileage logged
in by amateur joggers.
Dr. Pendergast points out that
akhough the tests being conducted are
not In themselves unique. the entire
package of measurements that Is being
taken has not been available to runners

elsewhere.
T1w EKG·treadmilltest. for example. Is
commonly used on heart patients to
measure and compare the activity of the
heart while at rest and during mild exer·
lion. U/ B physiologists are using the test,
however, to measure the runners' maximum metabolism, or the

maximum

amount of energy liberated as they ap·
proach total exhaustion on the treadmill.
Body fat aDd .......... •ea-rs
To accurately measure the ratio of fat
to total body weight In the runners,
researchers are immersing

the runners In

Mecllcai blstorlee, pepchologk:al
questl.,.....lree
In addition, Protas and Bork, who Is
also a research assistant In the Department of Social and Preventive Medicine,
are detaiUng the runners' jogging habits
and the types of equipment they use. and
taktng brief medical histories. This data ts
expected to provide Insight into types of
Injuries most frequently incurred by
marathon runners as weU as factors whk:h
may protect against Injury.
Psychological factors of running are be·
lng explored by Dr. Diane DeBacy,
associate professor of physical education .
These tests wiU show runners

how

to

pay attention to themselves during the
marathon, how they can eliminte seH·
defeating habits, and how they can
develop the proper motivation. Par·
tldpattng runners returned questionnaires
by maU prior to the lab so that resuils are
available to them before the "'ce.
During the three days the marathoners
are in Buffalo, they also have the oppor·
tunity to discuss athletic injuries with U/ B
Trainer Michael Rielly and Jerry
Frteschlag of Canlsius College. at U/ B.
The soctal and psychological problems
of female runners are being discussed
with women participating In the
marathon by Drs. Jan Fetters and Marilyn
Colby of the State. CoUege at Brockport
and by Dr. Carolyn Thomas, U/ B pro·
lessor of physical education . on October
II.
Bill Bowerman. former U.S . Olympic
track and field coach and official starter of
this year's marathon, presented a public
lecture on "The Overwork Syndrome"
last night.
Dr. David Tarbet, assistant dean of
undergraduate education, Is chairman of
the Buffalo Marathon Association and the
Skylon Marathon Symposium.
The race begins at noon .Saturday
behind the Albright-Knox, and ends at
Table Rock. House In Niagara Falls, On·
!arlo.

Corporate planning
seminar slated
A seminar on ··t.:orporate Planning and
Strategy for the Growing Business" wiD
be conducted, Thursday and Friday, Oc·
Iober 11 and 12, under the auspices of
the Center for Management Develop·

a pool in the Department of Physiology's
Sherman HaD. Typically, the lower the
percentage of body fat . the faster the per·
son can run . A good marathon runner
ment .
may have only stx to seven per cent of
The two-day seminar will take place at
total body weight as fat.
. the Ramada Inn, Niagara FaDs. and will
Males in the general population have
feature Dr. Norman Coates. professor of
about 20 to 30 per cent body fat. while
organizational management and In·
females usuaUy have higher ratios rang·
dustrlal relations at the CoUege of
lng from 25 to 30 per cent.
Business Adminlsttalion, Untvecstty of
The runners' muscle strength Is being
Rhode Island, as leader.
tested tn the Department of Physical
Coates has served as a consuhant to
Therapy's Kinesiology Laboratory tn
the governments of Egypt, Canada, Syria
F&lt;&gt;Aer Hal A CYBEX II dynamometer Is
and Venezuela as weD as to the Ford
~ng how much force a muscle ex·
Foundation,
erts
a joint through an entire range
The Center for Management Develop.
of motion
men! Is an arm of the School of
Eltzabeth Protas. -tant professor of
Management.
pbysocal thetapy. and Christopher Bark.
Further Information may be obtained
thenpiol, - . d by Dr. Carlton Ill.~ .
by contactlng Cynthia Fairfoeld , School of
Management, at 831· 2027 .
,•,.."' ~.._,
pro1...,.. of physical ed'ac.i!lbli: ""' .ilf.

"""*

day to day on the job, what kinds of
education these practitioners have found
helpful In meeting job demands, what
kinds of problems and difficulties the field
presents for newcomers. These are con -

cerns that no textbook or classroom in struction can ever successfuUy address .
Carter suggests.
·
He emphasizes it Is critical that students
come prepared to ask the right kinds of
questions so they can gather the lnforma·
lion necessary to help them decide on an·
undergraduate educational program.

Geared to the aDdeclded
The event is geared to those who have
not yet decided just what Ills they are go·
tng to do In their work lives. Both Carter
and Pat Hayes, a career counselor in the
Placement Office, note that they see a
large number of undergraduates who are
floundering . Others have elected a career
wtihout really knowing the vagaries of the
job market, or just what it takes to suc·
cessfuDy compete in a given occupational
l!lrena.

The sponsors have sent letters of In·
vltalion to all ftrst-and second-year
students to take advantage of the week·
long opportunity.
Each day of the week will be devoted
to a spedfic occupational cluster. A
keynote speaker representing the day's
area of concentration wtU open the proceedings In the Talbert Dining Room at
10:30 each morning. Then, from 11
a .m. to 2 :30p. m., tables will be manned
throughout the Capen HaD lounge and
lobby area , at which representatives of
each of several sub-areas within the
general professional group will be
avaUable to talk to students one-on-one .

the clay-by-day lineup
Monday, October 22, will be devoted
to the heakh services. The keynoter will
be Paul Crafts, associate administrator of
ChUdren's Hospital. Discip~nes to be
represented include medical technology,
occupational therapy, physical therapy
and health education, pharmacy. In·
dustrial nursing, medicine, dentistry.
chiropractic

medicine

and

health

maintenance. Chevrolet has agreed to
send the industrial nursing represen-

tative, and the Health Care Plan of
Western New York will supply the health
maintenance personnel.

Tuesday, October 23, Is business and
industry day. William Clarkson, president
of Graphic Controls Corp., will be the
main speaker. Tabies will be manned by
representatives of an accounting firm
(Ernst &amp; Ernst) . a financial analysis unit
(from Fisher-Price Toys), a marketing
and sales organization (from Marine
Midland) . a human resources department
(from Graphic Controls) , a personnel office (from Fisher-Price) , a manufacturer
(Chevrolet}, a retail store (AM&amp;A) . a
brokerage house (Merrill· lynch), an in·
temalional business firm (Carborundum)
and the Public Relations Society of
America. Advertising firms and banks will
also be represented.
Wednesday. October 24 , the locus will
be on science and engineering. Dr.
Richard Brandenburg. former dean of the
U/ B School of Management. now vice
president of the Manufacturing and
Engineering Dlvisiotl of ~rborun~um ,
W'loa'll·off•' Ael'di-~ bi!'Ytpr'elli!rited 'It\.

services,

crisis

centers.

hospital social services, mental health
and psychiatric care units. mental retar·

dation programs. programs for the han·
dicapped ,

recreation

agencies.

United Way, and the Red Cross.
Friday, October 26, Is to

the

be

government-education-communications

day. Negotiations for an opening speaker
are incomplete, but a local TV news
ftgure Is a possibility. Manning tables that
day will be representatives of federal ,
state, city, and county civil service, the
Erie &amp; Niagara County Regional Plann·
tng Board, boards of education, teachers'
unions, art agencies._ libraries, law ser-

vices , journalism and media , and
photographers who are in private

business.
Brlag your curloelty
The Placement representatives have

no estimates on how many students may

turn out , but feel that most
undergraduates should participate to gain
exposure to a variety of professions. Both
Wes Carter and Pat Hayes promise this Is
to be only the first annual Career
Horizons week, and that it will be
augmented - with follow-up contacts.
Carter said his office Is Interested in set·
ting up ongoing relationships with the
professionals participating so interested
students can also visit them In their offices
and perhaps "shadow them" for a day to
get an even clearer view of what it takes
to do a particular job.
In the present tight job market, Carter
emphasized , each student has to become
an active agent in his or her own career

planning and declston·maktng. "The stu·
dent has to go the the mountain ," he
said .
During this week, though , at !east a hill
of Information ls comjng to students. ''AU
you have to do is bring your curiosity, "
Carter and Hayes advise.

EOP honors
special friends
The Educational Opportunity Program
recognized two special "friends" during Its
fourth

annual

awards

ceremony

September 23 at Ellicott.
Recipients of the honors were Muriel
A. Moore, assistant to the director of the
Learning Center, and Frank J . Corbett.
director of the Office of Urban Affairs.

se~~e ~=.~ ~~{f?i ho~u~:n~~~

Foundation, Inc., for her major role In
the development of the Leamlng Center.
for which she has served as teaching
asslstant.

communications

!ab

coor-

dinator, assistant director, and acltng
director since 1971. The Center provides
special assistance to EOP students.
Corbett. also an associate professor of
soctal work, received a U/ BF award
earlier this year, at which time he was
hailed as perhaps the one person on this
campus who has done the most to ad·
vance minorities.

Dr. Kenneth Gayles, a Buffalo physl·
clan, U/ B graduate and former EOP stu·
dent , was the guest speaker.

The EOP presented 60 of its students
with high academic achievement awards
at the ceremony. Fifty-three gra&lt;l!lat.,.
received State-wide Awards

�October 11 . 1979

MFC to start
12-14 new
degree options
Wr.hln the next year. Millard FUlmore
College wtU !tart between 12 to 14 new
prt9ams which should Impact slgnlf·
icandy on Its sagging enrollmenl
Allhougb James Blackhurst. dean of
Continuing Education. did not want to
reveal spedflcs at this time because of the
dellcMe and 51111 tentative status of discus·
slons, he told the Reporter the programs
would be in "high demand" areas. and
would generate more FTEs for the
University.
Among the additions. will be new
masaer's degree programs and one
undergraduate health sciences program
which has the possibtiHy of enticing
several hundred new students to MFC.
Two of the programs may be announced
as early as next week. Blackhurst said.
To ensure that funds are available lOT
their developm•nt , Blackhurst has
reallocated $200.000 out of a $765.000
budget and earmarked the funds for this
purpooe. Previously, over haH of the divi·
slon's budget was devoted to Arts and
Letters courseS' which 5erved fewer than
300 majors. he noted. Arts and Letters .!!
has now put its MFC instruction "'on

load."
In addition to the new programs,
Blackhurst says he is currently discussing
the possibility of other departments going
on load . This means other areas wtn be
teaching "regular courses In the evening
with day-schopl facuhy .
Although MFC does not gain FTEs In
this arrangement, because they are
credited to th' respective departments.
the Important thing to Blackhurst is that
more courses can

be

made available to

non-tradJtlonal students who normaOy
would be denied access to them.
The Continuing Ed dean-now just a
year on the job-rejects the tradttional
notion of certain courses being considered a part of MFC's exclusive domaln
as opposed to the day division's. Such in5Ularity, he maintains. benefits no one.
Instead, he envisions the responsibility of
his division as promoting "maximum opportunities In higher education" to those
usuaUy excluded from them . Period. In
fact. If the choice were his. the University
would operat" around the cloek. with no
barriers between day and night
education.
To help with the Student Services side
of current and future programming.
Blackhurst has hired two new staffers and

~:~'!:.Hin6n~or ;f d~~o~;
employees. Ms. Helen Sweat. Is tbe first
11)lnorHy tndlvidual to work In MFC In an

'

advisory capacHy.
Under Blackhurst's new organizational
framework, the heads of MFC, Urban Extension and Summer Sessions (Eric
Streiff, BIU Greene and Shirley Ahrens.
resp&lt;!CIIvely) wiR Interact with Individuals
In chMgc of student services, planning
and budget, and admlnlstratlv&lt;!" support
services when matters pertaining to these
areas arise . They aD, of course, report to
Blackhurst . Previously. each unit
separately decided course offerings, staffIng etc. The new Unes of authority make
decision-making more decentralized. yet
under a tight umbrella.
Although CredK-Free and Urban Exknslon have their ,.ot&gt;&gt;ems, Blackhurst
says they definitely have a future at U/B,
albeit with some changes. For example,
he would like to see Credit-Free offerings
"better reflect the basic strengths of the
Unlvenlty." Courses that don't liD the biU
might b.. better handled through a high
ochool aduh education program, he
asserted .

Fisk to Nigeria
After spending eight months as a
visiting fellow and consullant In academic
admlnlslrallon at Mel&gt;oume State College in Melbourne, Australia, Dr. Robert
S . Fisk, and his wife, J.,an, have left lOT
Calabar, Nigeria, where Fisk will be profi!SIOr and dan of the Faculty of Education at the University of Calaber.
There he will 8S5ist in the further
development of a new unlvenlty and give
parllcu4rr auention w the development of
Its graduate program . He and Mrs. Fisk
opec~ to b.. In Calabar for the not two
~-

'

-E~

~ .,.._.;....;...--.;a

A. blaze,

a bouquet
A bonfire and ratty held in pouring rain
kicked off last weekend"s Homecoming

Festivllles Friday nigh1 near the Bubble al
Amherst. Sponsors were Sigma Phi Ep·
silon fraternity .
Barbara Plotycla. a junior in the School
of Nursing. was crowned 1979
Homecoming Queen during haKtbne
ceremonies of the U/ B vs. Canlslus foot·
ball game. Saturday. at Rotary Field.
Ms. Plotycia. a resident of Eggertsville.
was sponsored by Sigma PI fraternity .
· She was crowned by Ms. T errt Hall.
1971! Homecoming Queen . and
presented a &amp;ash by the Sigma Phi Epsilon Fratemlty and a bouquet of roses.
compliments of Eckel Florist Inc.. . of
Cheektowaga .
N....,k

Ns. Plotydo (lolr) ond Ns. twt.

Bacterial pneumonia vaccine is ready
KJller bacterial pneumonia has been on
the ''most-wanted" list for centuries under
such atlases as "the old person's friend"
and "captain of the men of death."
But Its weD-earned reputation even today as a kUier of the elderly and
chronlcaUy iU may be waning. A recently
introduced effective vaccine can offer
80-95 per cent protecllon against 14
strains of the pneumoccocal bacterium.
Dr. Robert AuSirlan, the redeveloper
of the new vaccine. delivered a HarrIngton Lecture at U/B reiently. Contrary
to what many lay people b..lleve, he said,
antibiotics dld not totally wipe out
bacterial pneumonia, or Its potential lor
caUsing death among certain population
groups. In the elderly and the chronically
m. the organism can cause Irreparable
dam89" desplle use of antibiotics, or h
may wreak havoc because these patients'
Immune systems are Impaired.
ltbepa1Dl911
Dr. AuSirlan, a researcher at the
University of Pennsylvania, noted that
although the new vacdne became
avallable only two yean ago. elforts to
develop H b.,gan In 1911 . These aljempto
were in response to epidemics of bacterial
pn"umonla which periodically occurred
among South African gold miners.
"There was nothing pecuhar to the
mining industry or the gold mines to
cause these outbreaks." Dr. Austrian ex·
platn..d. They typically occur when large.
groups of people convft!!C and Uv.. In
doan~orles. barracks or lnstttutlons.
Furth"' atlempts at a vaccln" were
made at vanoustlmesslnc.. 1911, but HIs
OIJI 1 k1'9WP,. how ~,r the , ~

ones were because of poor testing techniques. The widespread use of antibiotics
after World War 0 caused Interest In a
pneumonia vaccine to plummet .

In the 1950's and 1960's, though , it
became obvious that the "wonder" drugs
were not saving aD those who contracted
bacterial pneumonia. Interest In a safe.
elfective vacdne was rekindled.
. The vacdne avaUable today Is based on
earUer principles of extracting polysaccharides (complex sugars) from the
organism's most common strains. and in·
jectlng them Into patients who subsequently develop anUbodies protecting
them against these strains.
No ractloa ID -~~~~
Unlike other vaccines-most notably
the one for swtn" Influenza-whose salety has been subject to debate, Austrian
said. the pneumonia vacdne produces
no reacllon In 60 per cent of those who
receive tt. For the most part, only minor
Irritations at the Injection stte have occurred In the remalnlng 40 per cent. And,
unlike earlier prototypes which offered
often questionable protecllon against
only four major strains. the new one pro·
teds agalnst 14 of 83 known strain•.
Long-terrn studies, Austrian added ,
wiR show more deflnhely the clegrH of
protecllon offered; research may also Indicate which of the rel)'lalnlng strains
should be Incorporated Into the vacdne
In the future .
The vacdne offers no protecllon
agalnst another type of pneumonia which
Is caused by a virus, or against types of
~ pneumonia ca11sed by other
orgAnisms.
.. ~·/_ ' ' '
.- ~.· • · ... 1 •;

Austrian said he has received the vaccine. He recommends that elderly or
chronlcaUy-iU patients ask their own
physlclans about taking it. too.
It's Ironic, he said, that ahhough the
search for a vacdne began over 65 years
ago In response to epidemics among
large groups of persons living In
Institution-like settings, h's only this
year that high risk groups In similar environments will receive mass Inoculations. -M.B.S.

Varsity Club
names officers
Brien Grow, senior mernber of the var-

sHy footban team from Massena~ and

HoUy Helfrich, senior member of the varsHy field hockey team from Amh.,rst,
have been elected co-preoidents of th"
Varsity Club for 1979-80.
Other officers are: secretary, Mary Ann
Buboltz. senior member of the varsity
bowling team from Kingston; and
tr..asurer. Ron Balter. senior manager of
the varsity footbaU team from Spring
Valley.
One goal of the dub wiU be to promote
Interest In the Intercollegiate athlettc program throughout the UnlversHy and In
the Western New York communHy.
The "Superstars Day" conducted by
the club last spring, which Involved compelillon between the various varsity
teams In a series of events. is planned as

~ap~uale:Jo~t!J).t.. .'

'' r

&lt;~

,. ,

'..J~ •r~

�October 11. 1979

4

· tn about retrenchment
Edit-.
.
I have rue! the .tlcla 4nllle.. Paltz..,;
the Seplember 30 ol !he llepMei .
wllh deep concern about Its tnac:curades.
It .. Important thai faculty learn how
retnmc:hrntmt was applied at N"ew Pahz.
the only campus where such cuts were
made this year. My case should be If.
lustratlw cl both how retrenchment was
undertUen and the way In which re·
trenched faculty are given ""special con·
sideratlon" lor olher positions.
I haw been teaching courses In European and Russian History at New Paltz
since 1961 and have had the rank cl Pro·
lessor since 1970 In a History Depart·
ment cl twenty I am second In length of
servtce. ltfth In senlolity In terms of con·
tinuing appointment. My book. published
by CorneD University Press In 1976, has
received excellent reviews; sections of "
are asolgned reading In a course at Col·
umbia University. I have had numerous
research grants, including three from the
SUNY Rewarch Foundation.
In 19n and 1978 I was the senior
nominee of the College lor a National En·
dowment lor the Humanities grant. I
have served on the Faculty Senate's
Research Comm~e as well as on
numerous New Pahz faculty committees;
I have been chalrper$on of the Organiza·
Uon Comm-and twice of the Commit·
tee on Research , Awards and Leaves.
In February 1978 I went off to the
Soviet Union for an academic year on the
SUNY Senior Faculty Exchange ~h
Moacow University. having been en·
couraged to do so by the college ad·
ministration; In early FebruiiiJ! of this year
I returned. On March 1 a colleague from
anolher departrMnt warned me that I
was due for retrenchment. I was In·
credulous; would not sen[ority and JOY
good academic reoord protect me?
Nevertheless. I decided to act and had a
meeting ~ the Dean and Vice Presi·
dent at which I provided extensive
evidence of training and teaching In
European History. Three-quarters of my
teaching load In my flrsi years at New
Paltz was In European History; In recent
years Hhas been one-third of my teaching
load. the other two-thirds being In Rus·
sian History.

To--n

Aft was to no avaU. O~h 27 . a

:6'was....!bf..:'
th:~~ office~d tZi
being retrenched. The reason given

1

was that less support was to be aJlocated
to Russian History. Thus the unit of
retrenchment was Russian History. a
group of courses.
I then stated that I was a European
Historian and could teach numerous
cou~ In European History that are In
the college catalog and thus. according to
the terms of the UUP contract. replace a
European Historian with less seniority.
The Vice President agreed that I could
teach many such courses In the catalog
but staled that speciolists In European
History were needed for them.
During my oral llrsi slep appeal the
repreMnlatlw of the college admlnistra·
lion stated repeatedly that I was a Russian

. . .u ..
:..n~....e

r:::.::: ~

...-In

loft. SuM~ cl Now Yori&lt;• Buffalo
~ olhoa . .
136 c:..lts IW.
Amhono T. , . . _ 636-2626.

.. Pubic Allon
.lAMES R DoSANT1S

Edooco-ln.Chicf
ROBERT T MAR1.ETT
Mondl'lodooclion
JOHN " Q.OOl1ER

-Edloo.

JOYCE. BUCHNOWSKI

w~~""'

Hlfi&lt;JIIII!,I-,..1 tii.t the~·
• -b¥ the
. - - , . , .....__ llie • I '(lll.ftlrenol&gt;·
; ; . H~·threi ~·of the

than....,._,

History Department ncetved letters of
retrenchment cltllerent
to
Dr. I~ J. Mendez and lllj/Jel. They
were retrenched tn History. that .II. the
1tnH of retrenchment was the History
Department. The College AdmlftiJiration
treated us differently; II did not want to
ind'ocate that our rellenchment was In
History for u knew that we had seniority
In the History Oepartrntmt. Most impor·
tant of aD It wanted to save the two most
junior memberaoal the Department jutl as
It had In 1976. Atthat lime a faculty com·
mlttee had recommended that they be
retrenched but the college administration
saved them and relrei&gt;~hed other facuhy .

What'• luoppeoed •lace

How have I fared since I learned of my
retrenchment? Not too well. According to
the UUP contract retrenched faculty are
to be given ""special consideraHon" for va·
cant positions for which they are
qualified . I was one of several faculty
members who was interviewed by a facul·
ty committee for the position of Assistant
to the Dean of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
owever. 'when the· Dean told me that I
had been given the position he added
that it would probably be cut out of the
budget the following year: If I were to be
offered the position It would be at a ligure
considerably lower than he or;iginally told
me. one that is about haM my salary.
At the same time the Director of the
Learning Resource Center was quJetly
moved lnto a position that was vacant
and that was superior to mine. that is.
Assistant Dean. No retrenched faculty
member was Informed of this new vacan·
cy: no search was made: no committee
was established to Interview candidates.
The Dean simply asked her If she would
like a job in his office. The above facts
form the basis of a grievance I have fUed
recently.
What have I learned from my ex·
perlence? That I have suffered from not
having gone along with the grade inlla·
lion of recent years and for having high
siandards. And that departmental politics
were involved In my retrenchment. More
Important. I have learned that ad·
mlnlstrators feel that the UUP contract
has given them corte blanche to fire
anyone they please. You too con be
retrenched. for a college administrator
can make a determination withJn ruuTow
Umits of what your speciolization Is. true
or not. and hold that it Is no longer need·
ed. Moreover you wtD not necessarUy be
retrenched for financial reasons. lw111 not
retrenched but replaced; the college ad·
mlnlstraHon was hiring while It was firing.
Of course departmental chairmen who
receive new Unes were anything but
angry with the retrenchment.

~beeellmd

Dr. James Roever. who was extensive·
ly quoted in the Reponer of September
20. Is pne such chairman. that of Speech
Communtcatlon . His department
benefited by retrenchment by receiving a
ltne In Radio/TV.
Dr. Roever. In defense of the New
Paltz college administration. committed
certain Inaccuracies. Department faculty
In those departments where retrench·
rne~~t was going to take place were not
consulted before termination judgements
were made. as he maintained. In the case
of the History Department. for example,
the college administration met only ~
the chairman and his hand·p~ed
designee.
Moreover. rellenchment and college
growth are not related even though I
would like to think that my firing did
some 9ood for the college as an enroU·
ment blessing, as Dr. Roever implies. The
Business Administration program. which
he mentions. has done well at New Paltz
this fall because It was finally approved as
a major this summer. not because of
retrenchment.
Retrenchment is a horrendous ex·
perience. For your own securtty and
peace of mind make sure that Article 35
of the UUP contract Is dismantled in the
next contrad negotiations: if not, college

administrators wiU continue to believe
they have a right to retrench you too at
wUI as at New Paltz.
-Jeremiah Sclaoelderman
Professor of History and
Assistant to the Dean
Liberal Arts and Sciences
SUC New Paltz
EdltO&lt;;
As UUP Grievance Chairman at New
Paltz, I wish to comment on the New
Paltz story In the September 20 Issue of
the Reporter.
Prof. Roever. who Is quoted at some
length In the article. is entitled to his own
opinions. of course. but they are not
representative of the faculty as a whole.
His position. which appears to be suppor·
tive of the administration's actions In
retrenching 21 tenured faculty members.
can be explained In part by the fact that
his department gained a new position as
a resuk of the reallocation of resources
made possible through retrenchment of
members In other departments.
Also, the headhne says that New Paltz ·
"profs... say there's been no ... unhap·
plness with cuts." I am quoted. along
with Roever. as one of these "profs." To
say this Is misleading Is an under•
statement-many of us are furious . par·
tlcularly about the arbitrary and
capricious way the cuts were carried out.
Your story picked out some of my com·
ments on the difficulty of explaining to
colleagues that their rights were en·
dangered. and quoted them as ~ they

constituted the main thrust of my
rernarl&lt;s. In fact. I am not disheartened.
and I expect that eventually our rights wUI
be restored and those whc.'&lt;.llere unjustly
terminated wUI be reinstated.
UaBl..... of 'trk:kery'
H•:re "a re some examples of the trickery
emr toyed by management in the New
Pal.z holocaust:
Ten of the vicUms filed grievances on
the Issue of seniority. The administration
""got" two of them by declaring their subject matter specialties to be "levels of
organization.. or .. units of retrenchment''
which were to be curtailed. despite their
seniority In the academic department. In
such cases. the President Is required to
consider retention by judging the
employee's ability to ""perform the re·
qulred professional obligation of a posi·
tion remaining in the academic depart·
ment." In these cases. the President
dedded against the two faculty members
despite overwhelming evidence of their
abtnty. It was as If Michelangelo were
fired because sculpture was cut. despite
his ability as a painter.
In four other cases. the level. 0 f
organization was the academic depart·
ment. Here. the retrenchees' seniority
was violated when junior colleagues were
spared retrenchment. In lhe Step 1 deci·
slon. the President's designee simply ig·
nored these violations and dragged out
brand new reasons. not given in the

retrenchment notices (another violotionj
for terminating these Individuals. Now It
is said that their specialties are to be cur·
tailed. as In the cases above. It appears
tb.at the administration, as an after·
thought. has found a better excuse for
perpetrating Its unjust decisions.

M....,._..._.

In four other cases, the individuals con·
cemed were retrenched from Inactive
departments. which they did not serve.
Ignoring their full-time service to other
departments. Three of them were rehired
as members of the departments they real·
ly served. stripped of their senlolity. In
order to keep their jobs. they were forced
to resign and submit to humiliating tenure
review so they could be reappointed in
their same positions with new tenure
dates. September 1979.
I hope the faculty will considerthe im·
plications of these outrages. If the
grievances are won. fine. If they are lost.
the faculty . and indeed the entire SUNY
faculty. has lost aU Its rights. Anyone can
be fired at any Ume for any reason or no
reason at aU under the guise of retrench·
ment, and neither grievance nor the
courts. I fear. can help him . In that case.
the faculty wtD have to dedde whether to
submit to Intolerable oppression or take
united action .
-Vk:torLaDdaa
UUP Grievance Chairman
SUC New Paltz

'

State UUP endorses local retrenchment stand
The State Delegate Assembly of UnHed
University Professions (UUP) voted
unanimously last Friday to endorse a
resolution offered by the Buffalo Center
(;hapter denouncing recent retrench·
ments at the State University College at
New Pahz and demanding that no further
cuts be made anywhere In SUNY except
for reasons of true financial exigency.
According to Buffalo Center Chapter
President Blll Allen . the resolution was
Identical to the one passed by the Buffalo
Chapter last month. except that an
amendment made the resolution even
stronger.
The amendment. Offered by Nuala
Drescher of Buffalo State. asked that the
State UUP organiZe local campaigns
against retrenchment and that all depart·
ments refuse to hire new faculty ~ re·
trenchment takes place . It further asked
that. when retrenchment occun. depart·
ments hire on a '"lend-lease·· basis from
olher departments.
Allen says he was "floored"" by the
vote He didn't expect some rather ~ -

servaUve members of the Assembly to
respond posiUvely to the original resofu·
lion. much less to the more powerful
amended version.
"For the llrsi time the union Is begin·
nlng to act like a union." observed Allen.
Also for the llrsi time. he heard union
members talk of "solidarity."
What changed people's ornions were
the personal testimonies o several re·
trenchees from New Pahz. Assembly
representatives. noted Allen. did not just
hear the usual abstract concepts about
retrenchment . but actually heard from
those "victimiZed"" by the process. The
"evidence was overwhelming" that those
present were retrenched because ad·
minlstraUve officials at New Paltz thought
" a good 0116ortunlty to ""get rid of the
people they didn't Uke ."
Another factor which made an lmpres·
slon on the Delegates involved reports
fTom union representatives throughout
SUNY that declining enroUments are a
common problem that will encourage
more retrench_m,~l .~ J_h~ . p~nt'!'~...of

tenure is not observed.
Votes weren"t cast from fear so much
as from ""outrage"" and ""real determlna·
tton" to prevent more cutbacks. asserted
Allen .
What happened w"\o that union
member$ "attacked their own contract. "
remarked Allen . "They finally were made
to realize that Article 35 (In the current
contract) Is not adequate to protect the
Individual.""

DOE, UT team up
The Department of Energy has award·
ed a $37 million contract to the University
of Tennessee to operate one of the key
development facilkles for the magneto·
hydrodynamic !MHDl system . an ad·
vanced method of burning coal cleanly
and efficiently.
As part of the five·year contract the
university will continue research on an
MHO concept which 11 pioneere d . and
wUI design .• ~?uUdan.d test "
•.

�c:&gt;aab.r 11, 1979

e.mputer majors
get ·pick of 12 jobs
I....... being able 10 c t - among
l2 poollloni·......, you .,..twa.

At U/B, for ...-...... . _ _ .
w...,_duale
don!aad
rwwB.S.In
_
_ II .,_, and a

Not for 1979 grad..- In the field of
computer ldenca.
Bued on lll8tllllcs gathered at the
Computer Science Conference In
O.yton, Ohio. last spring by Dr. Stuart
Shapiro ol U/B, there _,. 12 allllllable
poslllons In the field for every one applicant.
.
The year befoce, there had been 10
jobs for every applicant.
The confeMnc:e In question, Shapiro
reports, was devoted "nol to an achange of sclenllflc and technical Information but to the getting together of people looktn9 for jobs In computer sc1mce
(at bacbelor's, """"er's and Ph.D. levels)
with representatives of organtzatlons
Meldng to, hire them."

edtt.~authuollalluiiionpllpG.

~

eclance._ __

tent.y?

not mtiCh .. ...., being done by _ , ol

~~-·
allhe B.S.~
(lila..............,tothemoretnlllr-

B.A. !reck whir:h e now alleNd) II being held-up t.cau.. ol a lack
ol raoun:es. 'the new program would require more
Klllrlce ollertngo
than the B.A. curriculum (wbeno enrolment has been .-tcted I n - yanl.
There limply ....·t enot9i faculty
avalloble. ShepW, who- -.g chairman ol the department last oprtng, Ml'l· .
The . . . tnduda 11 State-flmded and
six .-dl-funded prolaaon (one ol
whom Is on sabbatical lll!s ..,......
wtthaut a ~ - Two addtllonal
lines - . authorized last year,, Sbaptro
nola, but various hiring " ' - preclud- .
ed Mng them. Num6ers ol graduate
teaching - n t s are Umlted by the fact
tbat here as eloewhere sllpends are
nowhere near as alltacllve as what a student with a bachelor's can command In
Industry.
At the graduate level, the U/B department (which Is housed at Ridge lea) currently has about 90 students-44 of
whom are fuU·tlme (191n their lint year) .
Departments considered large natlonaDy- such as the»e at MIT and
Wisconsin-have about 200 grad
students, Shapiro indicates.
Computer science has 138
undeTgr~~duate majors. And, reports
departmental administrative assistant
Josephine Wise as she thumbs through
an Inch-thick print-out, another 255 firstand second-year students came here Intending to be computer science majors.
Many ol them wiD be disappointed.
~

"""""'*

ltwlllt811a12-

So undermanned Is the 6eld that a national study of supply and demand (by
John W. Hamblen, professor and chairman of the Computer Science Department. Untverstty ol Mlstourl-RoUa) concludes, "It wiD take nearly 12 years to
match the need and production."
Four-- pr&lt;9am graduates In 1977
filled only aboul 17 per cent of the
-...~~led demand, Hamblen S!IVS· At the
master's level, the supply4 graduates
w• only aboul 9 .3 per cent of demand.
while at the doctoral level, only one
Ph.D. is produced for every four who are

needed. '
In New Y or!&lt; State, Shapiro estimates
that the ligures ...., about the same for
graduates of four-year and master's programs. At the doctoral level, though, the
-e·s seven known Ph.D . granting computer science departments (Columbia,
Cornell, NYU. U/B, Stony Brook,
Rochester and Syracuse) are estimated to
be providing only enough graduates to
meet 11.5 per cent of the demand.
Shapiro cites these additional
manpower-related conclusions from
papen recently published In the Communlcallons of the ACM, the newslettertechnical journal of the major computing
professional society:
• There Is virtuaDy no unemployment
among computer science Ph.D.'s and not
likely to be any for a considerable lime:
• The number of Ph.D. students
enrolled and graduating Is d~nlng, probably because of the exceUent job market
at lower degree levels:
• Academic year salaries of- fresh
Ph.D.'sln academia Increased from 1976
to 1977 by over 12 per cent to a median
average of $17,000 and should average
over $21 .000 In 1979: and
• An Increasing number of computer
science Ph.D.'s are employed In Industry ..

p .................
The situation Is filled with paradoxes.

t.ocally. there's hljlh demand and 1t&amp;!e
Investment In the resources needed to
meet lt.

Nationally, industry Is becoming more
and more convinced that Univenllytralned computer scientists make better.
more competent personnel than do those
who come from data processing schools
or from the companies' own training programs. Yet. Shapiro points out. they're
hiring away the professors needed to offer these programs, and seem to be
discouraging young people from the professoriate by luring them away frorn grad

schools.
As the nation's business (and Its education, industry. entertainment, you name

H) becomes Increasingly computerized,
something has to give.
Untversllies have to fln,d ways to respond creatively to .Aiie challenges,
~plro says understatedly.
.

600 oncaat fac:alty jobe
So attractive Is the lure of Industry for
computer scientists. In fact, that more
than 600 U.S . faculty positions (once the
traditional placement slots for Ph.D's In
the field) are now vacant.
This exodus from academia to Industry
will continue to gain momentum. an artl·
c1e In the September ~7 tssue. ci Compum1A&gt;Orld suggested. .
General obsolescence of unlvenily
computer fadlltles was cited as a major
factor for the trend. Higher industrial
salaries play a role, too.
At most unlvenllies. the Computer·
wo.ld article went on, "computer scien tists must compete with students and administrative data processing staffs for access to computer systems .. .. And typical
academic departments lack funds for the
procurement of the most advanced
systems which are needed for experlmen·
ration."
The compui\!F scientists who leave
universities for Industry usually continue
to do research-and ln most cases are
able to do more. the article said .

E - ' • a p a........?

AD these figures would seem to point to
one conclusion: universities !such as
U/81 which are experiencing enrollment
decHnes In areas with deteriorating
employment outlooks surely must be pursuing expansion in this high demand
field
.
Wrong.
pbl11ts out Shaplto , •f

••

'···~

SUNY group
R 0 blift
h. 0ft0r5
•
'

Chen's stance

called outmoded
E&lt;lll-.

"-..-....-~
Tbll !e.- .. In reopoc.- to the
Relying on ....nlloed pcMer pian~~ II a
_,.,.. o&amp;oed by Wan Y. Chon.
concepl • outmocl.d • ~ on Cll!lll
diNctar o1 the U/8 Nucloer Sc:lence end
Ioiii the-s!III"P· The«- . . c:laloe
Technoloa!l fldl!r, to the New York
die' door on the 20th centwy dalgn and
State~ 6.-gy Plan
end
..... the beMflla ol ........ eecb lnreprtnted In the·R-- Oc:toba 4.
. . _ . end Nlldentlel unit • en In·
In JINMI1tlng hll lalllmony Dr. Chon
cMpendent enllt!l IUIIIIiulna Ill _ ,
coo:-dY points out the hazards of tn- e!*IIY Meds. Tbll .. eC:hlitwible throuah
m-.g the - ol coal to bridge the gap the - ol .... end wind . - - . The
In - s ! l reMlUFCG produced by.-....
oconomlca - ol 5epeember 1979 ' 1ng petroleum supples. In turning to
been blouFt Into • . . - . which would
nuclear energy, which he as the . mo.-e than make tolar energy
111011 obvlout end safe
to lnmarlwttable, but .............
creaoe(l co'~ usagl,, he falls to point out
R-m.n .. Stanford lh4rwnltv
the problems ol tlie real world In trying. to
hew pocluc.d the llachnolamt Whk:h wtll
cope with nuclear energy. 1.-..d, he
rea~h In a COlt cut ol eboutSO.peromt for
rellos on the calculiitlons-as _parlormad
solar panelo. Wlnci...,.,..,....S electrtcel
on paper-by the ._,u of his field u
gmaaton ol meny V8llld claigns ' evidence that It is a sale souroe alenergy,
been proved tue:e:ellful for yan. The
"The analysis carried out for the oa:upaq . . - now is which is the 111011 eflldent
tlonal risks are extremely smaD compared
dalgn.
.. ~to the risks asaoctated with the power
Such qu~ be a-..1 thortproduced from fossil fuel."
ly, but we ere aftody In a pooltlon to
begin the -toward 11-.. ......,_

eon.n-

•IIana-

GNed c:u't ... calaolatlaCI
.
The problems the real world has to faoe
are more complex than any ol the»e performed on paper by the nuclear experts.
How can this be? It is because there is no
mathematical variable that can be .compared with human behavior. Witness: the
greed of construction companies whose
fauhs never show themselves until a
problem occurs, such as the tube In the
Minnesota plant which ruptuned last
week: the greed of the engtneertng companies whose designs of control room
fadlllles are comprehendable only to the
designer end nol the _.ton on dull! I• .
case being thoroughly lnyestigated In the
Three Mile Island probe) : the greed of the
nuclear waote shipment carriers, such as
caused the closing of the nuclear fuel
dump In the State of Washington by Its
governor on October 3 , citing among
other things: oversized shipments. fauhy
containment practices during shipment.
and too many shipments on any given
day exceeding N.R.C . guidehnes. AD this
without bringing up the spectre of terrorist
attacks and the like.
. There Is not aU that much one can say
aboUt nuclear fuel dumps' alter-we ·lake

~~~n!n':.!:k

=.~~"esst:;

wards of 250.000 years In containment
vessels whose half-life is from 20-40
years. Besides, who gave this generation
the right to Impose such environmental
factors on generations thousands of years
In the future?

c.u- ....

......_...flld

For Dr. Chon to state that ''no one got
killed" at Three Mile Island is somewhat
,-caUous If ~-silolt-li!lhted~ ~ ...._
•• Daodel A. Rd&gt;Jin •• Jr~ .chi!lrJMn.11r)il;•. ,1(fi~!!aiD vili~~y!Jig clcancacal~d
prestdeni ol Roblin fnduslrles; Inc .. was • • 6y their exposuie to Agent Orarige. It will
honored by the Association of Campusbe a few years before those ln.and around
Related FouncJations of SUNY at their
T.M.I.atthelimeoftheaccldentw!Dfully
first annual Awards Presentation In
know their fate. Ahhough he goes on to
Binghamton, New Vorl&lt;.
state that to stand at a cab stan41n Grand
Rol*n. a member of the Board of
Central v.ioukl.expose one to 200 milll·
T r u - of the University at Buffalo
rems per year, he should nol equate that
Foundation since 1967, was cited "for his
with the dosage received by rask!ents and
efforu and support given to public higher
workers of T .M.). for a very simple
educ:allon In Western ~ew York'."
reason. The N,R.C . -rnqted those
John M. Carter. president of the U/ B
ligures be!;ause 1Jllhe moment of tjle acFoundatlon, In accepllng the award for
elden! the machines used to gauge the
Roblin. said "Dan Robb11 Is largely
level of radioactivity "'""' off scale and
r.._.able for the ouiSiandlng record the
remained so for nearly three days.
Foundation hu achieved ."
In trying to fend off the use of coal Dr.
Ceder was also honored as outgoing
Chon said that the state "could ill afford
cilalnnao of the Asooclallon for his
the premature gamble of putting aU their
leadenhlp and guidance In the first two
eggs In one obsolete basket of 19th cenyears o1 the Association's existence. He
tury vintage: that Is. coal." However. he
was elecled to the two-year post In
neglects to point out that the known
September. 1977.
. uranium reserves will only last for the
The Association of Camp~Related
next·30 years. Whet then? Considering
Foundations IS a professional organlzathat would bring us roughly to the year
lion composed of representatives of the
2010, we should realize that our 20th
private foundations associated with the
century Tonka Toys will not meet the
State Unlvenlly of New York which are
energy needs nor the safety requirements
of a serlou••• oveW'OWded 21st century
0 '9!'...._. to promote private suoport for
iht ~ii\'&lt;!mtier lnstnuti6'As' · ' T , .
Eai1Ji. '· ~r · ·
·

u;a

sou,_-• tGpic Dr. Chon ~ u
"rather fuhloneble. but limited. - long
as no amount ol hard-earned

lax-payer's money is alocated for the
development ol tueh raoun:es." To
subtly imply that lax money would be
wasted In developing thae energy
resources is ~ ignoring the fact that
the Oepa..._nt ol Enagy has allocated
for this year more money for survt!lllanc:e
of anti-nuclear groups and opponents ol
atomic weapons than they -haw for
research. on solar energy.

·w_u.......t

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

And , by the way, !)WI much money is
necessarily allocated for oecwtty ol
nuclear energy ·.-cll and conslructton? Development ol solar and wind
power would rwqutre no tueh oecwtty
measures. This Is a point to be well taken
In thae Inflationary limes considering
survelllance and security operations contribute nothing and divert resources
which this country needs to aid the
slumping G .N.P.
In contrasllng the dtsadvantaguolcoal
power with the advantagu of nuclear.
Dr. Chon states that we "wiil eventually
be forced to maM! ultimate decisions on
this Issue: If not during the present ad- ·
ministration: \hen soon." The ulllmallo
cou,ld wind up littering our country with
unsafe nuclear fuel dumps, neactors
whose operaton are not equal to hend~ng the technology nor whe»e materials
have proved equal to the dellgn
speclflcallons. It's amazing! In the face ol
an this. a man with Dr. Chon'slnteDectual
ablhty refuses to even dlocuss the outlook
lot environmentally sound, economically
effldent, energy resources.

.

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

Graduate Student
Department of English

The Bull
wouldn't run
Editor:
I wa! disappointed IO read

jn the October 4Wl&gt;e ol\he Reporter that the U/B
Bull wiD not be displayed on the new "Improved" parking sticker. but If the Ink
runs on the new sticker H's probably just
aswell.
·
Anyone who has seen the 1979 football team in action knows the U/8 Bull
doesn't run . H passes-successtully.
-Lany G. Steele
Director. Sports Information

Foreign service
The Foreign Service of the U.S State
Depanmenl has opened its annual dri\le
to r~cruit new JUnior orfkers. The writlen
entrance eKam WiJI be given on Saturday.

Dec I. In 154 chles in the U S and at
Foreign Service posts abrO&lt;&gt;d Write the
-~fi~Mt!ift!r- ••

�•

October 11. 1979

n....._v-11

~-·
----T-(Aio.llt.
Ed·
lllo-cl-&amp;........-1

win

Golc*eln . . . - . lloponmml alllialogbl

CONC&amp;T'
..... - . - . . S q o n. 8p.ot.
11--52's . . londing and UUAB's .,.·em. tbo
CrumoiN.wW... -tltc ........ boMMh*·
do&lt; to be_, outoldc of Lodo Rock. The.._.
wtfl be~ tltc ohow. · -

epparano1

--"'onwo('

~.._....of

Pt/fiiiA ...

~ ~ ... "a. "'-"
Proi.....-P. GcMnd Menon. s.~of Gent , ~m . 2ti3 ~ - 2 p.m.
- . . ... be ...... from 3-3,3(),

at MeVen'•· poa'lhllwlo see this one. -

S3 for ......... $4.50 ..........

~·

lllo a..._ ol EAtioe Ul,oaoa. Hans Welte&lt;
GaiJior • .,..._ of Englloh. U - cl Munich.
322 Clemons. 2 p.m. n. - Spomond

Owmioory, UnMnly cl Mldogon. 114 HocholctIOr. 12,30 p m. ~ by the dcpott..- al
MlcrolooJogy end lliolc9tol Sdoncoo. [)f..-, al

Cd" Moloc:ulorllloloml.

-·

_
.....
r.....--.

CHENICAL_...aSEJIINAII#

by the Edward H. Butlet- Chair. Department of
Englloh .
•

~

DI5TI1VtE ON ALCOHOUSII
T _ _, _ t o l l o d o l

. . . . . R_..t C..clo. Ph.D.. Doportment
al ~. U.-.oty cl T.... at S.O Antonio.
Jnl lloor. 1021 Moln-- 2 p.m.

PHYSICS COIJ.OQUIUJI•

-

.... o..-tc " - of
~ o l - OrieJo ol .... -

Soli-

S,.... Prof.....- Robed Rein. Roow&lt;ll Podt
Memoriallnsdtuta. 454 Fronct.U. 3 :30p.m. Coffee

at3 :15.
LAW AND~ WORXSifOP#
11M . . . . . , _ cl the FodonJ T.-.de Coat·

- · · c.. ~ s,lwoJa. ProiWaloy I..Jobel«. UCI.A School ol Low. 706
O'Bdan. 3o30 p.m.
LEClUIES IN IIASIC ~CLOGY#
ODd 1\opecn of
V - - - · Dt-. Heinz Valtin. pro·
f...... and dtolrmon, Deponment cl Physiology.
Dortmouth Medical School. 5108 Shormon . 4 p.m
Refrnhments wtll lx terved outside the Seminar
Room beginning 01 3 '4S.

WOllEN RUNNERS'
Dr. Jan Fetters and Dr. Marilyn Coby, State

u.._ CoiJovo ..

llrodcpM,

..m -

-~-•wRu·
nus. Shennan Hal. 4 p.m.

T-

CEIL a MOLECUI.AII BIOLOGY SEJCINAR#
. _ . , . Jolbe-.... Md F...cdoo ol
R _ . b- TSH, ond I•
· - - · Dt-. LAonotd D. Kohn . Chief. SectJon cl
Biochemistry cl Ccl Regulotlon. N611onol lnllltute
cl Mhrills, Metabolism &amp; Dloula, Notional In·
....., of Hullh. 114 Hochsl....,, 4 , IS p. m. Ccl·
feeat4 .
UUAII FUM'

l l l o - Otely. 1979). Waldman Thutre,
Amhoni.•4,JO, 7 , 1.0and9,30 p . m. ~admlo­
S2; students $1.50.
Set In • bygone oge of opulence ond onla. thlo Is
the tll!.r of a kwe triangle between an anstoc:rat
(Giancario GlonnlnO . his wife (i.oura Antonollll .
and his .......,. (JcnnWu O'Ne;IQ.
MI. magazine rec.ntly toasted Antonell M a
'"talented and smsualltali.t.n ktral who is making
• __. playing angel-fi&lt;Cd ..,...,..__• She's
"the hottat thing on two contlnmu, .. Ma. raved
on
The fem&amp;nlst journal continued : '"In a decade

.

~::";~== men and nyrnphm.
FRANK U.OYD WRIGHT LECTURE SERIES'
AD. Brooke. professor ol an history, University
of Toronto. on Wrighfsuseol space . Abight-Knox
Art Gallery Aud•orium. 8 p m frft . Spionson.:
U/8'• Art History Program and Albnght-Knok Art

Frldav- 12
a-.

P£DIATIIIC
GIIAND
-- Dt-. 5hlomo
llloo4
...
S
T
Friedman and M.._ Doroohy Poflodt. Kln&lt;h
A.udlorium. a.ct.n'.s Hotpbl. 11 a. m.

U!C1UIEIDISCUSSION •
Eliott Carter. Ba1r9 Recital Hall. 2-4 p.m .
SJ&gt;on-ed by the Cent., cl the c.- ond Pu·
forming Atu and the Dcpartmmt of Music.

p.m .

QUIUJC'
Monha eo.-.JI cl the Envtronmcntal Studla
Center will show a ilidt: pracntation on the Love
Canal. 123 Wil&lt;aon Quad. Noon. Bring a "bag
lunch." s,on-ed by the Env&gt;onmental Studla
Center.

ORAL IIIOLOGY SEJCINAR#
Experimental Model for lnle.rbacterlal
Adherence. Christian Mouton . O.C.O., D.S .
Odont.. Doportment cl O.ellliology. UIB. Room
107, 4510 Main SUut. 4 p.m.

v...,..

research on Image quality measures. pattlcularly as
they apply to doc.·matrlx dtsp&amp;ays. He then wiU pre·
sent upatmental results dealing wtth the various
flat -panel dlsploy tochnologia which ... addrested
in dot·mabh fot'11'1aL

P----

CIVIL ENGINEERING liEMINAR#

&amp;ddlooo ...S
Bob.- of
R - e d Shcllo, Dt-. E. Z. Tatsa. 152 Parl&lt;er.
1,30 p.m. Re&amp;eshmenu wil be suvcd.
III£DICINAL CHDIJSTRY sauNAR#
M-Rocopcon;S...IIyAnEaChaDiot 1'hnMIIh Pbanaocologlc: E,eo. Dt-.
David Trlggle ,

c ha lrman,

Department of

Blochcmkel Pharmacology, U/ B. Cl21 Cooke . 2
p .m. Re&amp;atunmtl.

......_Is

SADIE HA--IIQCIAR Do\NCE'

Gooclyar ~- 9 p.m .
$.25
f&lt;J! faopayors; $.7Sb ""-· The colon . . M..
and Mn. Stadt. ~ by tho Good,.. and
CletMnl Funds.

UUAIIIIIDNIGHT ~ •
11M Can "'"' , . ....... · 1977),
Conf&lt;mlOO ~- Squn. 12 ntldrtWll. Genua~
. . t - S 2: - s u o.
The moYie lolliroa« P - Weir's flnl flm. tnak·
lng "' Buffalo .,....._, k's • -.e tale about a
small town )uJI elf tho-., poth which lu&lt;es the
unwary within Its borden few some good oki
faol)ioned auto-dnlnx!lon.

U/ 8 COUNCQ. MEETING
Council Coni.....,. Room. 5th flooo- Capen. 3

ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES COLLO·

INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR'
o._ Crltaio lot- Computu-G...croted Do&lt;·
Motrllt. Dloploys. Dt-. Hany L. Snyder. Human
Fac:ton Laboratory. Department of lnduJb'fal
Engln&lt;cring and ()p&lt;nllons ROMM&lt;h,
Polytech:nk lnititute and State UniYastty. 262
Capen. 1 p .m
Or. Snyder wll cover tome of his preVious

Brooldyn Cologa. 5I&gt;&amp; is a CAPS ~ this
- - Hu ..... book .. - . by out &amp; out
bocb.

PHYSIOLOGY SEJCINAR#

""-&lt;-a ond aa..- ollntcdocial Wotu,
Or. DuwayM M. Andenon , dean, Faculty ol
NaturalSdmccs and Mathematics. S 108 Shaman.

Satarclap - l3
CURRictlUIIII COM'EIIEMC£. •
Currlcala&lt; Mdl.e.-1.......- ol Drug Lrn
lu
Rdotod "' Keynote
prescnUition II by Carlos Carilaloda, New Ycxk
State Board ol. R_,u. O'B&lt;Ian Hd. 9 a.m.-4
p.m. Sponsored by the lleponment ol Cunlculum
Development and lnstrudlonel Media.

4 :1.5 p.m. Refreshments at 4 .

·= ! ' f· FIFTH

UUABFUM'
Thclaoocent (Italy, 1979). Coni......,. Theatte.
Squ .... 4;30, 7:10 and 9,30 p.m. Genuel admlosion $2: stude:nts $) .50.

To celebnltclts 25th~. tho [)oportme.t cl
Oc:oupotloneJ Tloenopy wtfl hold • day-long ...... cl
worbhops and medings, culminating in a banquet
honoring post chalrpenonl.
The workshop. will feature occupaUonal therapy
projeds ..ublished by the department In Western
N~ York, among them the £arty Intervention
Mobk Un•. serving handlc_..t prc-d&gt;ooleB In
several I'Unll counties; the OT PedLab1c. Clink for
IIOUngstftl """' lcoming diNIJililles; and the In~~ Uvlng ~ - which hq» clclaly people mnain Independent In lhelr own homes.
Abo IO be feotwed during the mo&lt;uJng ..-.,.
from 9 to noon wll be tours ol the Depertment of
Reltabill!atlon Medicine a! the Erie County MediceJ

THEATRE '
Ktnnedy"s Chlldra. Off-Center Cabaret ,
Center Theatre , 681 Main St. 8 p .m. Admis:sion:

S2. ADS """"""" accepted.
Sponsond by the Department oll'heatt-c and the
Center far TMatre Rne.arch .

.lUST BUFFALO POETRY READING •

.ao.. l.arldn. Alentown Communtty CAnter,
111 Elmwood Ave. 9 p .m. Admisloion at the door.
Funded by the New Ycxk StM&lt; Coondl on doe Atu
and Poets &amp; Wrten.
Ms. Larkin. born In Boston. cummtfy Uves in New
Ycxk City with het- da~ and tuches at

AN'\IIVERSARY PRO -

R-

Cente:r.

and open houM prccedlng the
morning program will be held In SIS Stodtton K;m.
bal Tower on the Moln Street Campus.
Group ..-Jngs and ol oc:cupOllonal
ther~~py ~ in the c:omnn.mly wll be held at
1,30 p.m. on the fifth flooo- al the Tower followed
by ""'"of the OT ltodlitia In T.,...,. and Good,...,Ha.Ds at 3 p .m.
Nande B. Greenman, Gertrude Or.y and Kent
Tigges, lonnu department " " ' - '· wil be
honored at a banquet at 6 p .m in the Tabe:rt Din·
lng Room, Am'-. 5pcdeJ guat opu1&lt;u will be
Mae HightoweT.Vandamn , president of the
American Occupo-.1 '"'"'- Aaoclodon.

SKYLON IIARATHOfll'

In-

The Sloth Skylon
Marothon .....
behind the l\b1gl&gt;t·Knox Art Golay. Noon. The
anticipated fttld of 3,600 tunnas-lndudlng many

faculry , staff and students from U/8-wll finish at
Table Rock House, N_. Falk, Onttorio, between
about 2: 15p.m . and 5 p . m.

WBFO UVE BROADCAST

--From

luk the
Nadonal Public Radio.
a 1M!. nationaJ cal·tn to President Carter. WBFO
(88.7 f'M) . I p.m.

GoAe.y

8rookt is c:ocuidered the ae.ding authority on
Pra!N. School ardutec:turc

AFRICAN GRADUATE 5ruD£NT ASSOCIA·

nON MEETING'
234 Squire. 2:30p.m. Doughnuts and coffee v.iJI

MS / 11 INDEPENDENT FILMMAKERS
SERIES'
Lect""' u-tng by And&lt;ew Noo-en of his Wlod
VariatloDa and Charmed Particles. Media
Studyt Bu.Halo. 207 Oelewere Avf. 8 p.m.

THEATRE'
Kennedy' •

C hildrn . Off·Centa- Cabaret .

Canter Thea11e, 681 M.ln St 8 p m Admlllioo
$2 ADS vouchcn occopted
Spomond by the lleponment of Thutre and the

&lt;Ant• for TM.ne ReMarch

be provided. AJI members are urged to attmd.

UUAB FUM'

GrUM (1978). Conference Theaue, Squire.
4:30, 7 and 9;30 p.m. ~ admtsolon $2;
Sl.udents S1.50
.,
After .six amazing years on the New Yotk stage,
GraM fiRaDy makes it to the big scnen . ..The best
way to approach Gru. Is as a huge parody on the
decade. a black farce . wickedly tongue· ln&lt;heek.
yet marvelou,o , infectious entertJinmenl "

-Pr...--.
John Travolta , OlMa

~on -John .

A p&amp;.y a001.n tM wrvfvon and Yictrms of the 60's
and their liva in the 70's

Channing. Jeff Connaway

Ric Masten

TOGETHER '
24()..248 Squire HaJI S p m. AI members and

rraxn

Stockard

INDIA STUDENT ASSOCIATION GET·

Rk Mas1~ brings his unusual poetry

lhetr families wek:ome

•act,. to campua for thre.e pe_rfor·
mances on Monday. the 151h.

FILM '
A Tribute to 50 Ynrs of the American MusiCal
FUrn, Pan U: h'i Alway. Fair WNtMr (19551.
storring Gene KeUy, Don Dalley. Cyd C h - ond
Michael Kldd Erie County Historical Socloty 8
p m. Admission charge.

�C&gt;c:t.ot. 11. 1m

7

l'hmla-ooldion . - 10 yoon llflor V-J Doy In
New York City to · - !he - . , «d."
MUSIC'
U/B Cloar. " - - o f d o o - -

quo. Balnlll&lt;cbiiW. 8 p.m. " -· Sponoond by
the Deportment of - .,

_m ___

- wlllbo
ol porlorrncd
!he Coriooiml's
(),The
.......rnojar
~
by ·....
UnNeolduetolobo-by
ty C... by Hm1ct Simons.
A1oo on !he

f-

ond DoW! Stott IJiudmts
ol Gaty Btugoool. ond .. - - oolo
cantata f a &lt; - · lobo porlaomocl by Adrienne
Twa&lt;ek-Goylo (Jiudont c/ Muriof Wol).
teno&lt;S Chrtoaopltcr Cttloli

DoWI Kuehn, ....__

111EA1RE'
Knae:dp't Ch.ddrea.

Off..Cc:nter Cabaret.

Center - · 681 Main St. 8 p.m. A d -:
S2. liDS ....-. ..,...,...!.
Sponsored by .... Deportmon1 c / - end ....
Center for Theatre Research .

UUAB COFFEEifOUfiE'
-~--Goimet~and
Dnld Ilion 8:30 p.m. Squn Hell
RathskeU.... Ad..- c:ha.ge.
UUAB fliiDNIGHT SP£CIAL'
The C... Thoo 11M ........ (Aumallo, 19n).
Conf_,.,. Theatn. Sqm. 12 mldnlghL General
admisskln $2; lludents $1 .50.

S.ndap - 14 1
IIRVNCH FOR NEW STUDENTS,
Fa.EIGN S1UDENTS
Wondering what lo do end sn In !he Buffalo
area? Come to lntemadonal College's flrlt brunch al
the temnler. In edcUtion to a sut.lantial meal a
slide .OOW wllllntroduco lhe hlsloricol. cukwel and
entatainnwnt highlightJ of the BuffaSo region. The
bnmch ~ al 11 a.m. $1.50 .,...... both lhc
meal and !he slide .OOW ($1 fa&lt; t.. -paylng
members c/ IQ. Place: 367 Red Jodi"- EVGJIO'M'
Is oonllally Invited.

TIEATIIE'
KnHC~v'•

ChJWra. Off·Ce.nter Cabaret.
Cenl., Theatn, 681 Main 5L 3 p.m. Ad..- :
$2. liDS """"""" accepC&lt;d.
5pontond by lhc Doportment c/ Theatre end lhe
Cenlft f&lt;&gt;&lt; Theatn Raurdl .
UlMII FlUI'
(1978) . Waldman Thain!. Amhenl.
4:30, 7 ond 9:30 p .m. General adm....,. $2:
&gt;ludcnts $1.50.
E\IIEMNGS FOR NEW IIIUSIC'

Works c/ Ellioa C..... Cent« Theatn. 681
Main St. 8 p.m. 'lld..ts avalloble at lhc dooo-. liDS
vouchers aa:opted . Sponsored by lhc Cent" c/ !he
Creative end Perl&lt;&gt;&lt;mlng Arts and lhc Department

oi Music.
Now in his 70th year. Elliott Cartft' stands; among
the kn:moR composers of our day. High!y inven·
1lw and ~- Cuter hos conopi&lt;uously .,..,.ed
cte. ol sucx:essiYf: musiail fa$hions, and remains e
towmng lndlvlduailsl.
Four workJ by this Pulitzer Prb:e winning com·
poeer are to be pres~mted

MUSIC'

Eric: Hll. dasslcol guh"""- and the Bullolo
&amp;.kar Qu.rta, K..tharine: Comd Theatre 8 p .m
Sponsored by UUA8 Music. Publldty and Cubwel
&amp; Performing Arts Commlrtees Tieken are Sl 50
for students. S3 general admisskJn
Eric Hil. an English recordk\g artilt. is returning
to the U.S after extensively touring Europe and tM
British Isles As one ol Britain·s ouu:tandiog c:lasical
gui.arists. Hill is noled for ..his ravishing tones and
wbde fingering which makes tlseening to him heve a
spedal charm ... Th4! Buffalo Guitar Quartet,
together fot" 1hree yean., entertains by Uilng a very
~ muSical techn}que. that iS. without the
U5e of any mk:rophones A rec«J))ion fo&amp;owl in the
Jane Keeler Room

To ltat fte1lta In the "Calendar,"
call .Jon Shnd.,.. at 636-2626.
Key : "'peD oaly to thoae with a
prof-loaal later- Ia the Hb)l!ct:
·Open to tbe public: • • open to
m-ben of the Ualvenlty. Unleaa
otlo..,.tae apec:lfted. tlcketa for
.,.,.,.. cbarwias admlaalon caa be
purcb-.1 at tha Sqalre Hall Ticket

Office.

M.oadav- ts
...~of
Y---. o.. GeiWMv.
11100-.v_,

........ ""'""--

Oopamnen1 c/ Bioohomlllry ond Moloculor
Biology. Hoovordllnivonlly. 2.45 Cary. 12 noon.

• FIIEE C9USliAN SCIENCE LEC1U1E'

n.

00... ......... -

M- Rooe Adams

God ....

WIIB.ms. Cont..,.. Theatn.
em-.

Squn. 2:30 p.m. Sponsored by lhe

Scionoo Cologo

a--.

PERFOIINEJIITROIJIIADORIPOET'

Ric - . nu.. perlonna.-: 322 Clemens.
2 p.m.; Woldman lnatrt. Am.hctst. 4 p.m.;
FUimoro Room. Sqube, 8 p.m.•
Sponsored by the English Departmenl.
Since 1969: Masten. one of tht fltW Amaican
poets who wori&lt;s In !he ooal tnodlllon end makes his
living at lt. has lectured , reed his poetry and gtven
c:onc:ert5 at over 400 coleges and untversftin ln 46
states. Canada and Eng.tand. He spends the college
yeo~ on the road , away from his California Big Sur
home. sharing his poems and thoughts on ~e.
death. lonellnesl. suidde. matrlage. sodaJ Jkob1m'ls. joy. creatMI:y and other mutual human
c:oocems.
1M Rod&lt;y
N_. says In an article
about him, '"His setf-c:onsdous poEtry. making up ln
emotion and freshness whot it might lack In literary
content, IPUks to the human condition. His woric
gives dignity to the simphl e.x.perlence:s he bel~
~aD heve ln common ."
He has VJritten three books of poetry, and cut 11
LP records~ his work appears In many speec:h/ com·
munk:ation telClbooks and English ant:hok9n. He
has seoved .. a poet In ...olence In collega.
He se~ his readings on the spot. editing as he
goa along . lalilng his,_ from lhe "vibnollons" he
feels. "lhe body language and fadal ..,.....,.,. of
the audienc::a.. in front oi him. This makes every
rudlng dtfferent. lhe feeling b that of being en·
gaged in conversation rather than watchtng a one·
man show.
In conc:ert. Ric usa his guttar and sings some ol
his poems.

-oln

SPECIAL CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY
SEIIIINAR'
R..,.._ oiR...., Secrotion by Chlorldo, 0&lt;.
John Galla. poe~..... of medlclne.
Untversity of Kentucky·L.exinglon. 108 Sherman . 4
p.m. Coffee v.tdl be served at 3:45 on ground noor.
5-15.

ARCHITECTURE LECJURE '
R-bertno
Robert Campbdl. · - a.chlt.a. Cambridgo. Masa. 335

P-.

Hayes. 5:30 p.m. Free admiss6on. Sponsored by
the School of Ard'litec:ture and EnvironmentaJ
Design .
·MEDIA STUDY FlUfl (FIIJII HISTORY)'
(Pudovtdn . 1925). 146 Dldendorl. 7
p.m. Sponsored by the Center for Media Study.

WOMEN'S TENNIS'
St-. C:OU.,.. Amhent Courts. 4 p.m.

a--

FIIJIIS'
Grond Wuslon (1937) . A Doy In !he Couotry
(1936) . 148 ~ . &amp; and 8 p .m . Free. ad,.._
sion . Sponsored by the Department of Modem
l.4nguagn: and Ltteratura.

Amherst. Fru edmission.
Steel Helmet is a tense was drama lelln Korea
concerning • besieged UN platoon.
1bc Cl"tmtorl Kimono c:oncems two dececttva
who are searching lor a murderer who spedalize:s in
beautiful women and who fall in bYe with the same
girl.

FICTION DICllON
AAIM Pltrone. a U/ 8 graduate. wOI read from
t.e. fiction at Hallwalls. 30 E.... Stt-. 8 :30p.m.
Admission Sl.

For more Information . caU

886-7592. •

LECJURE"

'"""'*'""

of English .
MEDIA STUDY FIIJIIS (SCREENINGS)'
Quidl BUlle (Ballle) . Cutro StrHt (Balfle) . 147
Dtdendorf. 9 p m. SpontoJed by the Center for
Media 5tudy

Tuesday - -1 6
BU1LEII CHAIR OPEN DISCUSSION '
KmDdh Burke. 322 Oenwns 3 p m Free.
Sponsored by the Edw.,d H Bu1ler Chao. Dopanment ol English

FIELD HOCKEY·
Otwego St•le College. Rotary Field 4 p m
VDU.EYBALL,

G.u.on
pm

eou.,., O.W- S...c. Ciarl&lt;

H.U 4

The..,..__.-

CHEMICAL ENGINEEIIING SEI1UNAII*

T - o . _ ol
Vay ....... o . . - - T . . . , . , D. W.
Wder, Union c.rbkie , Linde DMRon. The Ktva.
101 llakfy. 4-5 p.m.

ELECliUCAL ENGINEERING SEIIIINAR*
~ofMia
, ..... ~
Electrical~ . U/ B.
338 Bd. 4· 5 p.m. Refrahments Mf'Yied from
5-5:30.

Control, H. Martens,

FOSTal COLLOQUIUIII SERIES*
Tbe Potar·eroup Co·nfor••llonl of
~. o.. Hanu• - - E m-Zurich . .
70Achaon. 4p.m. Coff.. wlllbo-.wdal3:451n •
Room 50. Sponsored by lhc Department c/
ChemiiUy .

· Wednesday - 17
111m-DAY IIIUSIC SERIES"
A wkle veridy of mUSic from )au to c1auk:61.
Haas l..oungc, Sq_.. Hall Noon-2 p.m. F....
Sponsored 1&gt;!1 UUA8 Music. Cofffthousa. ond P•Studen1 Ac::tMt;es, and Commuter Affan.

ECONOMICS WORKSHOP'
A New Approach to Bara•lnlng In
Charoct- Func:don Gains, Elaine Bennelt.
U/ B. 210 O'&amp;lan . 3:30p.m.
SOCCER"
Fredoma State

eoue.. Rotary F.nct. 3 p m.

GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR '
lnterpretatloa of Gr•""Y Anomelia la New

(11)-l..onguoge ond Sociology. Kenneth Butiw!. The Kiva. Baldy. 8 p.m. Free. Spon·
sored by the Edward H. Butler Chair. Oepanment

may be arranged for Odober 18 by contacting the
Placement Offtce.

BUFFALO CHAJfllfH MUSIC SOCIEJY•
New York Chamber Sololetl kl a pr"Ognm of
Handel. Schubert. Bach. Beethoven. end Mozart.
Mary Seaton Room. fGeinhans Music HaD. 8 :30
p.m. StngJc llckm. S6: audents wllh ID. $2.50.
ADS vouc:Mrs accepted.

formlng Arts Committees: Student As5odatlon 's

UUAB IIIONDAY NIGHT FIIJIIS•
Steel Helmet (1951), 7 p.m.: Th• Crlmson
Klmono (1959) , 8 :35 p .m W~man The.atre.

Roo-... NY 14614 (716)263-5896. Int...,....

York and &amp;.em P•M}IIvan&amp;a. Frank Reveua.
Department ol Geological Sdenc:u, State Untwni·
ty College at Potsdam . Room 18, 4240 Rkige Lea.
3:30p.m. Refreshments at 3.

VISTA SESSION FOR LAW STUDENTS'
II you've ever coniidered woridns tn powny law.
where the pay a low, the hours kmg and the frustra·
tOOl many, then oppottuniy is fbout to come
knocking.

VISJ:A. Volunteers In SeMce To America. a
federal program for voh.lnteer service ln aU 50
stales. wtl be at the law Sc:bool at 3:30 p.m..
October 17. for a general information meeting in
108 O'Brian
Catherine Streck. VISTA recruiter and former
volunteer In Aorida . says. ..When VISTA
YOiunteers get together wilh community people and
luders to c:ha9 ttw injustk:ti brought obotn by
poverty. nctc1ng things 5tarl to happitn Seeing
change that you've helpm to bring about is a rather
spedal rew~ ln llSeU ..
fot" more infOflTllltlon about opportunities for
\IOiunteer MI"VVC« as • VISTA \ewyu. attttnd the
geoa-aJ lhfOO'I\Mion meeting. ot" wmte or cal the

VISTA Recn.•tng Offu.

~17

F&lt;d~.al

,Bldg .

IIIICROIIIOLOGY BI-IIION1HLY SEIIIINAR' H-~F-•No..o~

.....

N-'"""&lt; S... H-•d Q..,., M.D.. Ph.D..
assistant profestor of medidne and miCJobiok,gy.
U/B and Roswdl Pan. Manorial lnstllute. 223
Sherman. 4 p.m.

IIIEDIA STUDY F1L111 (FilJ1I HISTORY)'
Potemldn (Eisenstein. 1925) . 146 Diefendorf. 7
p .m. Sponsored by the Center for Media Study.

UUAB WEDNESDAY NIGHT FIIJIIS'
TheT. . oldooT-. (19421. 7p.m.. TheiiiO&lt;e
the Marla' (1943) . 9:10 f).m. Conferance
lneatre, Squire Free admission
The Talc. of tt.e Town stars Cary Grant, Jean
Arthur and Ronaki Colman . Gram is a fugtfive from
the law: Colman b a profa«w . but gueu who
"ams from whom when they meet at landlady
Arthur's house!
More the Nenift', with Jean Arthur. Joel Me·
Crea and Charles Cobum, is about ttre hilarious
complica»ons that ~nsue when a woman and an
aviation expen wind up &amp;e:ddentaUy sharing the
= I ~partment becall5e of ~e housjng &amp;hortage In

BUFFALO CHAPTER OF THE
ASSOCIATION FOR WOMEN IN SCIENCE
MEETING·
Blue Room. Facutty Oub 8 p.m Joanne Fisc:M:r
will speak on the worMn ·, health movement

POETRY READING •
Robln BlaHs', a wrfter associa!~Ki with the San
Frandsro Renaluance group. wt.ll giVe a poetry
reading in the Poetry Room. Special Collections.

Capen HaS at 8 p m
Blaser is the author and editor of several books of
poetry and tS profn10r of Englkh at Simon Fraser
Unlversily

MEDIA STUDY FILM (SCREENING)'
Caught (Ophulsl 147 Dldendori 9 p m Spon50fed by tfw Center fOJ Media Study

•See 'C.leod.ar,' page 8. col. 1

�I

·-

Odaber 11. 1979

•

pot With ilignity
u
.........,_
. . __

......

I

,-~.="

--

. . . . . . . . . . . . . or ..... _..,
. . _ . . . dlpk:tlng .... ........

...-« .........

,.;;.;.. _ _ _ . . Ill - . : ~

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

Hal,_, NORNL ....- • IIMI tul....... -whk:t!lt-..p~ngtolllllkell
. . . . for the~
whot one

..... _. ~ ........
....,. n-. Ill ...-oulac:bHd
mid 11108'a.

C8ft

........ lnt.ct.i-,.......a ....
.._.. dtNi' - - - at .. ...,_
~_.

• •.........,.. cluotng the Civil War.
Toot.,.
It noled
.n-tv
lor Ia
benellb
_. ...........
_ .... '-' techniallv

« -..........

__

"'aa-..r
.... Ill lhla
1930.
..Umated that oome 45 mUlto"
....,
......._._
11-16 m..,.. ol
""'-*\~ IInce

It's

~'-tried

c_ ._

..... ...,..•.chiaf ........ of The NeIIDNII ~ lor the Refonn ol
.._.. t - INORMU. told a small
........ al .............. that ......
lalllclplan Ill 1970. NORML ' - been

.....

liD~ ...........

!he much·

a.........,. on the Main Slnet
c.,...
- ..,........t "" the Student
~ SpaUn' Buruu.

..=

·~
IIIII ............ was Federally
'*'-'1 -..,. ol a "propaganda cam·
......- lllunched "" the Bureau ol Narcolca _. Dangeoous Dnogs. The Bureau
-~.......
Ill ~..........
wllh "ttght-wlngm'
and
who _.., deter........s lo
ufactuN • allis" to halt lis

uoe. Thec:ampalgn, ...,_charged, was
...... lnsphd and targeted - rMMirllll ........ who _ . primary users
ol ... drug.
Acl::cr*'a lo ....,_, the lllerature of
the '30'slllong wtlh newspeper edltorials
subolantiates that scare tac11cs supplanted
medical or sciattlllc data. Americans
wae told they would become ~zombies"
or ~lazy" If they smoked pol.

:=;~r:,

.....

when-··

vt.d.

.... Neald.
..,.
clrut ..._. aa OCXIIIIIng
"ordiMly,..,_... .. ~-

to....,...

d o - I n - olomoldng _ . .....

... ......,.._.., the privacy ol the
' - · ll'a NORML'a conlllnllon that the
5l8le cloa nat ' - .. right lo - - . .
that such lnllullon vloloka., tndlvldual's
rtglll ... pdv&amp;y.
In acldllon. NORML It

1ob1¥n!r

In

W.._.,, D.C. and ~-the
ftnl to outlaw .......,_ In
1915-for -~ ol penallies for Ill

~

t::.:

culltvatlon. Condoning cultivation.
.......... aomehow dells ~....... emotional ......,._. from logiolalon then
does dec:rlminallzatlo~. 10 M"l(ers
tlcularlv hypoa1licllllhllthe , . . . . _• . predlcta _ . . wtl be slow going. ........ 80 much _. _ ,
esllbllohing ............... Pat ..
~~ . . . i=*ldliHI
......a only to heroin Ill thlt ....-. he
• NORNL potlegaliz·
eel for edulls, 118!11 ....,.... He cautioned •
-.ted.
' - · t h a t there
and pleca
where smoking thould not be alowed.
~ .
becauoe
ol
the
~
ol
others.
One such
S!&gt;eculallna that the ............. ol
.....;..- wdl be • "slow _. hard" pro- Instance Is smoking while driving.
NORM1. cloasn't condone thlo any more
0111, . . . . , _ preclio:led II wtl be about
than drlnldng while driving, be aplained.
four to five !IUI"I befon any might
flelcl1ng student qu-.s, Meyers
consiclar II.
.
speculated
that llgallzallon ol pol would
Meior lllclorles, howeve&lt;. - often "only slightly"
1naeaoe Ill,__Many peo·
won through small betllea, 80 NORMl It
ediYely woridng to decriminalize marlpie 1111! "faaclnated "" lis prohilltlve
aspects". but once the mystique Is aush·
)llana poooesolon. Currently, 11 ed. he doubts a swge In use would occur.
hi
paMed such measures. lnc:ludlng
New Yo&amp;. What decrtmlnallzall In
He assured sluclants that New V ork
New V ork translates to, tr no jell
residents have ltttle to fear c:oncA!ming
sentence, a maximum $l00 fine, and no
miuljuana laced wtlh paraquat, since only
permanent aimlnal record lor those
&lt;&gt;M per cent ol available. pol here has
caught with less than seven-eighths ol an
been poOuted lly that dlem1cal. In
ounce.
California, however, the percentage
As a result of decriminalization In some
jumps to 12.8.
s·t ates. others "'routinely won ' t
Meyers warned thai studies show that
prosecute." ~ Meyers. What they
smoking pol laced with paraquat can
will do, Is put the user In a ~lint offender
cause fibrosis of the lungs. He said that

other chga.
. . . ..
.,.,_.paMnllal for ...... ...............
Meyen. For that . - . he IIndo Its-·

._

are-

...

Kevin Setlz ' - been named manager
of cluatfled employee relations In the
Personnel Department, Robert P~ .
aoolslant vice pre!ident and penonnel
director.'- announced.
Setlz. who holds both the B.S. and an
M.B.A. from the SdiC)OI of Management
here. ' - moot recently served as a per·
sonnel BS50dllte, providing
In
monkorlng profaoional appointmenll
and lnmpmlng the Trustees' policies and
the UUP agreement.
Earlier. he was manager of the U/B
Bookstores lor the Faeulty-Student
Assoclation.
In his new post. Seitz will be responsible for representing the Unlvenlty at conferences with union offlclals, and for
handUng grievances and notices of
dlsclpltne. He will handle civil rights and
labor law complaints.

.-nee

•Calendar
- - 7. cel. 4)

Notices

Tlallnday-18

CA1HOUC NEWJIAN CENrER JIASSES
- - . . v..tl: 5 p.m. - 339 5qulro and

PEDIARICII.aEAIICHIEJIINAII•
..... -.,._,Dr. -~­
Room, Ct*lnn"s Hoopool. 12 noon.

- s.Mor-c.no..
- Compla.
Main Slnol:
10 o.m. and 12 nocn -

~·
,..._.."' ' - - ' ............ A&lt;p, ........
~ prt&gt;l-.. o l - .......... Brown
Unhonlty. 322 a.m.r.. 3 p .m. n... Sponoonod
by the Eclwont H. Cholo-. Doponm.nt c1
Englloh.

p.m. - Newrnon
Mnf 1 Fti!M,. 12 noon- Newm.n
Moin 51. • ~Avo. : 12 noon and 5 p.m. -

Confaldon O&gt;opol; 8 p.m. - 51. Jooeph"s 3269
Moin 51.: Amhent: 9:15 o.m., 10:30. noon and S

Cenw.-

.
&lt;Ant•.

-.c.no...
9 a.m . - Newman Carta on both
~

"'"-~

173 COMPU1EII UliEIUi
ln...-IOwoodOUithec:onlo-.d•theC..-

PATHOLOGY IEJIINAII•

'.,..,...

Ir81SIIewhld&gt;'-boen-lcr--.oho

r-., "' ........... -

Dr. Joma
School. 178

- -· ·3:30p.ft\.
"""""""'· Hwvwd F

...._--(Monee.
Am-.

UUAaFIUI'

1977J. Woldmon
ThoOIIh.
3:45. 6:15 and 8:30 p.m.
Gmoni-S2: 01UdonuS1.50.
A cNrnOng. -

comedy ............. •

- - - -... '"""sucldont!l'*""
::::.=..;:::.-:a:,.,~
~
I1IOCIIEmS1WY

~-

-o:A-~ol--eo-

..... -

_ , . . &lt;All -

Dr. .loon

-o..-n- ol lliophysb and
~- v• u-.ly. 134 Co.y. 4 p.m.

' .

POEniYIIEADUtG'

LEC1U1E5 IN MSIC NEPRIOLOGY

Tho Deponmonb ol Pbysiology. · and
Phonnocology and ~ ol the .School ol
Medicine .,.. presentiog • aerntn. .sa1a e:ntlded
""IActura In -Nephrology•• organlzod ..... the
tupporl cl lho OMolon ol Gndua~e and Prola-

toni

llonal Educ:don unde Ill "Conrcnmoa in the
llloclpllnos" _
...
ol......t
.,._........,. durin!! the lei and ...... by

- -holooov
.. - he
In the .. t
Centnol
ton bo
. . . - b y . . . , . - . . . , _ .. theC,.._t/0
window. T h e _ ... , . . _ ...... ...-.v
baus 10 ll""' c:onlo 10. AI toni

dlodnguJohed -lo ..._....
"""' In
- themade
_
,.
contributions
Bold ol
kidney
... ..... ploco In the
funcllon . The Pbysiology ScmJn.. Room. 5108 Sherman .. 4
p.m. on~ -'ternoonl. • ..._ed:

o,..-.. OMolon ol
-

~

c:on,.,..tlng

.. - l i n g • _ . . poky. -

s.,..

""""*

-----boon-by
Doc:omber 31. 1979. ... bo ~ -

DElfTAI. tntlDY

..:X:~":!~.::"ol=..~

1 0 - - - s h o u l d - D r. - ·
mon...L. Conoh., 831-4412.
"""""""bo-the.,..olo-. P - b
wll NCefw ct.m.l euminMion Md ·~ to dntr·

v..._ .... ""'

min&lt; ' - much .....- _....,. they ·
Two . . . . . . bo fi'OI'Id.ed .. port ol the INdy by •
don.... Spon......t by the Doportmenl of
llohovlcroiSdonce.

_Tho-....-

Todoy. Octcbor 11-Dr.

mond

FACULlY
y _IIECITAL'
_ ,...... lloinllleduoltw 8
p m '*'-1 o d - $3. loailly. 01011. olumri.
Sponoonod by the

fWANK IJ..OYD ~LEC1UI£SDUES"

, _ ..... and ol lho
funk Lloyd W..,. · on the aoll o/lut
Gtoos ........ (eo In Ill...... '""""" -'ndowsl
""""" Knoo.Art Golay A - 8 p "' n..
s,x.-ed by the Art H"""" "'"""'""' and oho
Al&gt;righl K""" Atl ~. •.• '
• ,. • '

Quod. -

Compla.

GIIAD ICHOOI. DEAllUNE DAn&amp;
no...,, ~ II: Lu dey on whO:h
-

..., .. ...., c:ouna ""*- .....
ponolly. Fd s . .......... ~ 15: LM dey 10 flo dega"ft
toni ( - and PhD J In OAR for F...._
1980 """'"""''·
HEALnt OPTIOH PEIUOO
The Pmonnol Deportmeno t.. 'Onnounood ohM
N Y St.oto 11M once des9&gt;oled OC..O.. ..
the hullh ....,....,. ... pctod. Dume
tb1o month SUNYAS ..,.,..,_. mov thong&lt; """
haJth p&amp;.n or OCJbOn lo any other a~ plwt

H&lt;tnz Vallin. ...........

ond cheinnon. Doponm.nt ol Pbysiology. Dart·

mouth Medkal School. " Bioc:hembl and
...._ o1
Production ."

v__..

Nowmbo&lt;L5-Dr. ~E. Anclreoll.~·

, _ ol ......... Modiclne, U - ol T....
Modleol School al Houon. "llrivin9 Fon:es f"'
Auld~ In the Proodmal Tubulo.·
F...._21-Dr. W-.H.Dontder. pro1.,..,.
cl At-.. Ccllego ol
ol phyoloiogy.
Medicine. "Com- ol U...lo and PAH
T -: 51udln w1i11 IJOiaoed. P...tu.ed Renal

Un-

Tubula."'

Mon:ll 20-Dr. mnkln H. Epoootn. profaoor ol
medkfne.

· - -Gn&gt;up
- . ... opook
"'"" the
Son FUaJGHT
EX1ENllED
F.ondo&lt;o
R.-..,.
on "tmThe DosdMnoDEAllUNE
dolo fer tubmltline
oppllaotions '"'
........... ol p_, In Comi""'P"'''Y "-!~-· Fulqhi·Ho!IIA-hosboenOI&lt;Ian&lt;lediOMon·
438 a.n-. S p.m.
• doy. Octoloe 15. Applk:otions should bo wbmllted
10 the Ccomdl on In!~ 51udles. 124 I!Jdo.

-~monlo/Mutit
$2. · - $1

(St.otowldo. GHior Heakh Con Plon·HMOJ.
n... wllhlng to c:hongo must JUbml an app~co .
lothe Pcnonnol Ooportmcno no11eter
"""'Odcber 31 . 1979.
M.. Joooph . . _ hos lln8J1gOd "" ..,...
- - ol t h e - plano 10 bo ovoloiJie on cam·
.....Molo10 holp ..,..,._
..... ·
~ 2325qulro. Tuadoyand
Thundoy .......... 8-12. on 10/11. 10/ 16.
10/ 18. 10/ 23. 10125 and 10/30.
-~201- . Wodnadoyand
Friday momlngl. from 8-12 on 10/ 12. 10/ 17.
10/ 19, 10/24, 10/ 26 and 10/ 31.
1ion ~~

Chlorido

Harvard MedJc.J School, .. Aetiw

T,_

Lc.ons from CompMO-

Pbysiology.-

II£SEAIICH INSl11UTE ON ALCOHOLISM
5EJIINAil
On Oc&gt;obo. 19 on the 31-d floor. 1021 Main
Street M 3 p~m . Bern..rd CoYne. Ph D•• hiOC:iate

u-v

.,..,_ cl ~ .. the
ol Min·
....,.. 01 Dubh . ... opook on "1lowlopmom o1 •

h-.. .

:-~....::.......~ lnpotlonll..cngthso/Sioy
~AaDIIOUND

Upwwd Bound
and raurna for two

ol.,......
lniaruaot porltdons .00 fNe

"
"dhe
"'."""""""
ol_should
bo In
high
tchocl -. .....
Englloh
.. and
qu.abflubons ere • mlnknum d • Bechdor's d9H
and or.e year of tuching ~ · Tuton will

s·~~~~·~r~r~ ~ ~~~~ ~-.~~,_~·

English, and Molh. and mUll bo 01 ..... • ful·dmc
tof1ogo Junior In good otadcml&lt; st.ondlng.

F.tdo,. Odobe- ll.
Al~-bo---­
WilDING PlACE
The Wrlllng P1oto h • Ira &lt;bop-In wnllng ,_..,
" ' " ' - - . ........ olthe compoolng
....,.... Toke odvan- ol ""' qualfled ...t1tng
...... """' pnMclo &lt;aft!uJ ....,.... •• both haYing lroublo undenlondlng on ........,.

and

pol1ohtng • flnol dmt. Come .. In 336
1lolcly Hal on the Amhent Compus. 0.. houn lhls
.........,. ono: Monday lluough Friday, 12 noon un·
1114 p.m.. and Monday. Wednadeyand'Thuncloy
ewnlngl. 6 unlll 9.

WilDING 1U10IIS
F...... - . . _ Sc.oll: Coruidor IUioring In
the W&lt;~~ng Ploto. You wl be tomuJiy IRined lo

you-

hq&gt;OihentmJXOWthftwnllngwhlle
l/OUI; own. Conlad l!wbonl Gonion 01 636-2394.

&amp;hibit•
ART 8001( COU£CTION ElDiliiiT

n.. _ . Booll &amp;lolblo Will bo on dllpfoy In
.... Art Bock Coloalon ol l..ocllwood t.tn.v. Octoloe 14 dvough De&lt;emba- 7. nwlll bo on on Cldobe. 14 from
2-5 p.m. k1 LocXwood wllh a -.:ture Iii 3 p.m. in
106 O'Brion 10 bo given by Mortho Wlkon. dlo-oc:IO&lt;
of Fnmkltn Fumec., on "'The Hlll.ory ot Artilts'
Book MoverMnl ... Everyone Wdeome.
MUSIC UliiiAliY
. 10th C.W, MlllidMt Ia Llterllt. ., Mu*
l.bwy. BUd HoD. 11vouW&gt; Cldobe. 31.

POETRY Cou.£C110N EXHIBIT I
New~ by the U/B Poeuy/ Rue Bock
Colloalon: Rocenlly ocqulmt books. manwatpls
.-nd ~en tnduding peca ~Ezra Pound. Wdliam
Cados Williams and Robert DuncM . Abo a aayon
c h - by Raben Dunt:an and a chawlng ol Dun·
can bv U/ 8 An Profaeor Harvey Srevaman. Mon·

doyllvoud&gt;F.tday. 9o.m. oo5p m. ln420c-n.
llvoughOc:lcba

f'

On The Air
OCTOIIER 14:

0 : 0.. lnlno ~- ~•• - ·
.,..,...,._ FKUioy ol Educ.llonol 51udlos. "'The Ex·
&lt;honge cl ""-"- " WBEN 19301 II :05 p m.
hcerpQ from thii int«rvthh may be hord on
C.- Hlehlithto. WBCN.fM 1102 51 SoM·
dey. Oc:lcba 13. 5-7 • m

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�October 11. 1979

Campus vote
·on 'Ketter set
"Bated on your knowledge ol the
do you i!xpress confidence or a lack ol confidence
In the ability of tf.e president to con!lnue
as president?"
that's the quesllon faculty. staff and
students wtU be asked to answer In a
campus-wide referend um tentatively set
lor Halloween (October 30-31) .
According to Michael Place, student
representative to the U/ 8 Council. the
referendum Is to be sponsored by S A and
Unlvenlly and the preslc!.nt.

GSA.

Rodriguez: an 'anonymous' star;
_some weeks, though, that's _a blessing
Jim Rodriguez's name Is probably the
best known of any U/ 8 undergraduate

' who IS not : a) loco; b) a student government functlonary; c) the editor of The
Spedrum; or d) any combination of the
above .
As the pass-happy quarterback of the
football SuUs, the 21-year-old senior has
been lionized In 48-polnl type In journals
as removed from one another as the Bu/fa/o News and Thundercummt.
"Rodriguez passes the Bulls to a comeback," The Spedru"!. heralded on i'!
~nt page last wee_k ; Rodriguez Stars,
cried Thundercummt.
The _name may be familiar-but the
1 lace without the helmet and mask IS not.
The back without Its no. 11 is Just another
I back In the aowd.
I "No one who didn't already know me
has ever walke~ up and said anything
about a game, Rodriguez says of his
• relative anonymity off-field . He can eat
ju~k food at Burger King and nobody
even steals his fries .
It'a )loet . . ...U
Some weeks that's good like early this
week In the wake of a galling loss to
Canisius In the battle for the championship of Main Street
'We were flat.'; Rodriguez said of
Saturday's performance. "Gary Quatranl
(one of his favorile receivers) was playing
hurt. Frank Prtce dropped passes he
never would have missed· he got
smacked pretty good In the itnt half. 1
wasn't throwing wd. We should have
beat 'em ."
Canisius on the other hand .was skyhigh . "You'd think they'd won the Super
Bowl."
Did Rodriguu think he'd be able to
engineer one ol his patented come-from behind passing oprea to pull the game
out in the last four minutes&gt;
•
At first . he was confident ·but "we were
going Into the wind. 1 didn'llike that."
But "we'd win If we'd play them again
tomonow." he's sure.
Rodriguez's passing record on the day
was 171or 35 with 1 Interception. good
lor 145 yanls-jusl an average day for
him. On the season , he's 61 of 125 for
798 yards. Laot year, his first behind
center lor the BuDs. he threw 106 completioos out of 205 -mpu, good for
1,426 yards. a school record. He
attempted 41 aerials agalnSI Coast Guard

I
I

alone

Is he calling his own number? No.

eo.ch Dennis Mason calls the plays from
the pressbox . "Some ol our backs get
llcbd-olf" when Mason s1arts calling
nadllng but pa-. Rodriguez revealed .
II!' ~lnd _a ~ -"_ ~Y a

Bul "we

team man , the BuUs' co-&lt;:aptaln has high
praise for his Une and running backs.
He'd Uke to grab a big lead some day so
they could show what they can do.

him to finish his football career. She's
taken a part-time job collecting tolls at the
Grand Island bridge to help the family
finances. and he was able to get money
ahead by working at General Mills this
He came lor baoebaiJ
summer (unloading box cars) .
Rodriguez came to U/ 8 with the idea
Football and school keep Rodriguez
of being a baseball pitcher, but too many
busy every day until about 7 p .m .. leavcurve balls and sliders took a toU on his - lng Ume1or llltle else In the fall semester.
arm. He played mostly outfield his
In the spring, he may try baseball again.
freshman year then had an operation
perhaps remembering that the Bulls an (performed
the Buffalo BUis' ornual southern swing was one reason he
thopedic surgeon Dr. Joseph Godfrey) to
elected not to play baseball at Ithaca
remove cartilage from his elbow. It was
College.
the same day 0 .J . Simpson had his knee
Who does this former pitcher like in the
operated on: also by Godfrey. Rodriguez
World Series? He acknowledges that
recaUs. The arm didn't respond fully, 50
Baltimore has the pitching. but leans to
he turned to football . That was In the !aU
the Pirates because "they've got the
of his junior year U/ B's first tun season
power."
back on the gridtr'on.
Rodriguez Is optimistic the football pr&amp;In high school. Rodriguez had played
gram here Is going to become one of the
football . baseball and basketball but
most successful In Division lU across the
wasn't a "star" field general. In his
nation. "It's got nowhere to go but up,"
sophomore year at Grand Island, his
he submits. Coach Dando Is experiencing
brother was the first siring quarterback: in
success In recruiting top athletes from
his junior year, he played second fiddle to
Western New York- some of whom
Glen Llpp who went on to Bucknell. As a
could have gone to larger schools on
senior. he split tho honors with the
scholarships. Tim Najuch. for example.
coach's son. Most of the time. he was a
had a scholarship to play football
wide receiver.
somewhere In New England, but elected
(Rodriguez's quarterback brother. InU/ B instead. "Guys who play here aren't
cklentaUy, was also a baseball standout
getting a sports car to drive around: the
and was dralted by the Oakland Athletics
locker rooms are small: and the equiporganlratlon. This past season. he played
ment Is worse than In high school.''
on the A's Triple-A farm club and has
Rodriguez said. "But the promise Is
been promised a major league contnlcl
there."
next spring.)
.
U/ 8 Coach BID Dando's squad was
wide -open at quarterback when
Theproe?
Rodriguez reported. Eight others were
Rodriguez, is a fan of Joe Ferguson's
vying for the post. Rodriguez pushed his
but thinks Teny Bradshaw's rille arm Is
the best in football . When the subject of
way to No. 3 the week before the season
the pros comes up. he's bashful. He
opener. He won the slarting job by outbacks Into It by noting that at least one
~lning everyone during a scrlmm"!!"
starting linebacker In the NFL played colwith Ithaca. His heaving arm. If you re
wondering, doesn't bother hlm when he
lege ball at the Division Ill level-at Indiana. Pennsylvania. That's Jim Hasleit
" pitches" a football .
of the BtUs. Then he adds "Coach had
some NFL scouts look at my game !Ums
He c:aa III"Y .. a gnd atuOiaK
last year." The verdict was that Rodriguez
Rodriguez
graduate from the
threw the football too much like a
School ol Management this year with a
ba5eball pitcher. that he had a tendency
degree In business. Maintaining a 3 -potnt
to take a long wind-up. and released the
average In his studies. he wants to work
ball too slowly. Has he been able to
toward an MBA next. This senior year
change that? He thinks it's better. and
won't necessartly be his last with the
watches game !Urns aa the time to keep
SuUs, either. because under new NCAA
Improving his technique. At 6T' and
rules, he has one more year ol eligibility
185. he thinks he's big enough lor the
even as a grad student. Hc'U "probably"
pros and would gtve his best shot for any
be back.
club
that would give him a tryout. But
It's not .U that easy for him, though.
thafs not the primary reason he plays
because he's married. with a younl!
footbaD
. "It's fun . I wouldn't do 11 n I
daughter That's "changed things a bit.
didn't like II."
he acknowledges. "I have to make some
At U/ 8 . that's the only Incentive there
money sooner or latt&lt;r." Yet. he adds. his
~~-_____
w!fe_l~ p~~ly_ ~~ No, 1_ 1~~ ' ~n~ wan!'

bY

As spokesperson for the baDoting.
Pierce says the vote Is "part of the reap pointment process" lor President Robert
L Ketter.
Technkally. though. the process Is a
"review" oltuatlon and the guidelines lor It
(adopted by the SUNY T ruslees this summer) rule out taking advice from opinion
polls.
Pierce said the ballot will allow l6r a n
" ~ndecided" option as well as yes-no.
He hopes voting wiD coincide with the
visit to the campus of the panel of three
outside presidents who will e valuate Ketter. The membership of that panel Is expected to be announced at tommOrTOw's
meeting of the University Council
(Capen-5. 3 e -m.). Ketter's "statement of
stewardship, or "campus condition
report" Is expected to be aired at that session also.
Pierce cautioned the Buffalo New• on
misreading his spirit and Intent.
"A lot of people think this will be like
spring 78." he said. referring to actlon
then by the undergraduate Studt&lt;nl
Association whkh passed a vote ol "no confidence" In Ketter's leadership
abilities.
"It's not like that," Pierce said of the
upcoming vote . What took place In '78
was ••a groundless temper tantrum, and
peopkl got swept up ," he said. "We want
something people have thought out ."
As Pierce planned his refttendum, the
Facuhy Senaw Executive Commll{ee expected to see a final draft of Its questionnaire on the President at lis session
yesterday. It Is to go out Immediately to
faculty.
The Senate has projected a date of October 22 or October 25 lor tabulated summaries ol the results.
The Professional Staff Senate meanwhile Is holding the IMIOI live meetings
of Its members from various areas today
(at 4 p.m. In 1032 Clemens. for staff
me.mbers from core campus academic
departments) . These meetings have been
held so staff members could oantrlbute to
the review prucess by commenting on
several aspects of Ketter's performance:
quality of leadership, quality of problemsolving, quality of communk:ation, sense

of oammuntty and involvement. level of

support. and other general Issues
meriting diocusslon. PSS has also asked
for comments In writing as a further part
of Its attempt "to Insure that the feelings
and views of the professional slaff are effectively represented to members of the
review panel during their visit ."

United Way
hits 20 per cent
Early results from the University's
$130.000 United Way drive Indicate that
20.7 per cent of the goal had been raised
by Monday of this week.
While many of the 25 divisions of the
campaign had not yet reported , .,_al
chairman James R. DeSantls noted that
three units had already exceeded their
quotas: Public Affairs at 166.6 per cent ol
goal: the U/ 8 Foundation at 151 per
cent : and Research. at 111.4 per cent.
Among larger units. Health Sciences had
collected 36.57 per cent of Its total by
Monday: Finance and Management
reported in at 51.1 per cent.
Other divisions IU!ng reports Included:
Engineering and Applied Sciences. 7.08
per cent ol goal: Arts and Letters .. 05 per
cen~ law and Jurisprudence. 3 .2:
Management. 16.9 : Natural Sciences
and Math. 6 .2: Social Sciences, .04:
Academk Affairs. 19.6 : Student Affairs.
28.6 : Alumni Association. 86.6 : Educa!tonal Studies. 8 : Social Work. 5 1: and
U~lversH¥_~1~~- 14 . ~ -- __ · - -

�October 11, 1979

books:
'much acto
about nothing'
The myllerlous ''thousands ol dolan
In rare boob and artworks.• believed by
a Buffalo newopoper to have been taken
from Capen Hall, have turned out to be
~ leu than a major · a&lt;
theft, according to University

=-

. A - of reports was published-by the
C...rter.Exprea, following the cllocovery
of nine volumes pf art bocilcs belonging to
U/8 dUring a Drug Enfpn:ement Agency

know :the cMereno:e.

(DEAl inve.tlg,Otlon . 11&gt;e paper contended that many 01ore rare books and art·
works valued at thouoends of dollars

poetry manuscrl!!b. on the

were still missing.
The reports further contended that the
University was attempting to downplay

the loss to avoid ''embarrassment'' and
"negative publicity."
The nine volumes. found during a
DEA investigation and raid of a basement
of a' West side business. were taken from
boxes which had been In storage lor'

several months in the basement of Capen
Hall.
Prior to 1978. the boxes had been in
storage at the lonlier BeD Plant on Race
Street. They were moved to Capen
ahead of the regular library move.

'Rare' meant where, not what

Tau Beta Pi fraternity
presents U I 8 with rock
11&gt;e U/ B Chapter of Tau Beta Pi, national

engineering

honor

society ,

dedicated an Erie Canal rock on Monday, at a ceremony held on the lawn between Capen and Bell haUs. The large
rock, bearing the symbol of the honor
society and a plaque, was presented by
the U/B chapter to the Facu~y of
Engineering and Applied Sciences and
the campus community.
11&gt;e rock was obtained from the New
York State Department of Tra~ ·
lion's Canal Division . II was dug up durIng a widening and deepening of the Erie
Barge Canal lone of the area's major early engineering feats] In 1912-1917. A
three-fool braS5 "bent," the symbol of
Tau Beta Pi. has been Inserted Into the

rock.
A bent Is an underframe of a trestle, a
supporting structure. This symbolizes that
T.., Bates "uphold aD that Is worthy In
tha englneertng profession." As the

plaque on the rock says, Tau Bates strive
lor "academic excellence, exemplary
character, unseHish service."
The rock will be moved In ahl&gt;ut \WO

years to a courtyard between two
engineering buildings 1 now under
construction.
Dr. GeOJ'!II! C . Lee, dean of the Faculty of Engineering and Applied Sciences
who was Inducted Into Tau Beta PI last
spring, spoke at the dedication.
President of the U / B chapter.
chartered In 1967, isJlm Smisl. Other offleers are John Wilson , vice pre51denl;
Tim Beck. secretary, and Tom Hagner.

presently in custody on an unrelated
charge and who is an acquaintance of the
subject being investigated by DEA.
The investlgaloro theorize that the
maintenance worker, seeing the ''Rare
Books" markings on the boxes. removed
a number of the volumes in hopes of finding a buyer for them .
The books were identified by Ubraries
personnel as belonging to U/ B. independent of an Inventory of an the 200.000
volumes which had been stored in the
Bell Plant.
That Inventory. incidentally. was well

underway before any newspaper accounts appeared .
Conftlct IUid c..-r·ap7
What was reported in the Courier as
"conflk:ttng statements" and an .. attempt·

ed cover-up" resulted more likely from
general confusion. University officials
said .

membership. Among Its members are
several Nobel Prize winners, many
astronauts , nearly aU tha members of the
National Academy of Engineering, and
several recipients of the National Medal
of Science.

What was headlined as a "news

''counte rproducti~e" not to seek
R._eol.red..,_
Bunn oeys he Is meeting weekly wtih
deans to "sort out tha options" In the
event that a reduction of staff is needed.
In addition. 'he Is meeting with the Facul!y
Sen.la Academic: Planning CommitUe to
ensure that faculty are aware of his plans
and are being duly consulted. Believing II
yet premature to start thinking In terms of
spectflc: numbers ol relrenchees. Bunn
prefers to discuss "ranges of reductions"
with his deano.
fl. t.owe-. a fuD cut olstaff is man dated by 008 (dapite aD the qualiflen)
one could figure tha number of retrenchees by dMdlng the amount ol ohortfall
FTE's by 17 (IInce tha core campus
faculty-student ratio Is approximately I to
17] . The number of non -Instructional
support lines to go can be found by
dlvkllng 2 5 Into tha amount oflnstruc- ' lines dropped
How could faculty attrition affect the
problem? Bunn says that If attrition faDs in
areas anady expertenctng a shortage of
instructionalllnes. he believes II wou"!,b)e

The boxes were labeled "Rare Books"
because of their intended general location-the Rare Books section of the
library.
DEA and UniversHy Investigators have
traced the thelt of the nine books to a
former U/ B maintenance worker who is

treasurer.
Tau Beta Pi has a world -wide reputation because of its high standards for

• Too early for specifics
replacements in those areas. What attrition can do, says the VPAA. is provide
the flexibillly to ensure that "established
centers of exceUence" here remain that
way. despite workload dislributlon. II can
also act as a safeguard lo enable programs to develop In a qualHative manner.

More scientists
The number of oclenlllls and engineers
.,...,toyed by coDeges and universities In a-e.-! three per cent between 1977 and
1978. !I(XOI'ding to a survey conducted
by the National Science Foundation . Of
the 2.228 academic instit utions
surveyed, NSF said, more than 79 per
cent supplied uoeble data Including 90
per cent of the doctorate-granting lnstitu·
lions where two-thirds of aD academic
scientists and engiMer$ are employed.
The survey Indicated the total number·
ol oclenl!sts and engineers employed was
306.500. of whom 241 .i00 ·were
employed lui time. Of the grand total,
191 ,300 were engaged in teaching ,
57, 100 in research and development.
a!)'}. •17 .800 In, otl&gt;te~ pct!&gt;lttjes 1 , • ,

tfle repnoductions of
Japanese prints Included lnj ftve of the
volumes might-If prq;esslonally
mounted and framed-bring about S20
on the open m41rket. he suggested. But,
he said. H would take a specialist In
Japanese prints to bring tbls off. The
volumes were,Hemt which , had they J&gt;ol
been In -.go., I would have been
shelved In open slacks. Tloe' thlef didn't
value. Some of

The University'• I10IIIy Tille bc&gt;oka and
otlier hand ,
are stored in e5PilcJally-deslgned protec·
tive factiHles in- d!e Poetry/Rare Book
Collection on Capen-4. 1llete holdings
are protected In a number of ways: by
key-operaW&lt;I alarm systems. by devices
which detect botb sound end movement
and are ""l"!'ored in the C~~mpus Securi·
ty office . by in!detectlon monHors. ~ a
g115 emiqloo system l"hicli smothers lire,
_and by /ocid-proof folders for materials
kept. In file dr.....,.. . There is also a
maS5ift .Aiuh housing the more valuable
of the valuable. AU visitors are required to
sign-in and sign-out.

Carrier aad • - prlata
Regarding the missing artworks , a
group of Currier and fves prints which
had hung on the wall outside Mr. Roy's
office prior to the move from Main Street
·to Amherst are listed as missing.
The six prints. which also were stored
for a lime in the Capen Hall basement,
are estimated to be valued at from $30 to·
$50 each .
,
"Though the inventory is still being
conduded, we believe it's possible that
only a few other books might be miMing
In addition to the small prints, and that Is
about the extent of H." Dr. BerihoH said .

Wlaat mlglt&amp;- be mlaalng
Arllc:les that "might be missing" include

such things as one volume of a multivolume 19th century encyclopedia,
several unbound pamphlet-sized oral

histories of MexiCan towns. one volume
of a two-volume set of Wordsworih's
poems published in the U .S . in
1855- no more than 61 volumes In aD
(by last Friday's count) and none of any
major mbn&lt;ilary worth. It's not clear
though , BerlhoK said. that the libraries
really ever had these works. The original
list may be inaccurate; H's highly probable
that one book in a multi-volume set could

never have been received and that fact
simply overlooked .
BerthoK said he is almost "convinced"
this is the case with any Hems which may
ultimately elude searchers.
But, he added. if 61 Hems out of the
200.000 prove to be "really mlsllng," the
tiny peroentage of loss makes U/ B's
Ubraries among the safest in the U.S .

blackout" simply reflected the fact that
administrative and libraries offlc:tals who
had spent long hours with a Courier
reporter last week finally told him there
was nothing else to tell him. that he had
aU the information.
Saklldas Roy , director of University
Libraries. was on leave and out of the
'MIAing' carda
country when the story broke and was
A further misunderstand:~g apparently
not available for comment only for that
resulted from a card catalog drawer conreason . Dr. Roberi BerihoH. curator of
taining some 400 title cards which was
the Poetry and Rilre Books Collection.
labeled "missing."
and Stephen M. Roberts, assistant to Mr.
BerlhoH said that the cards in that
Roy. were and are convinced that the
drawer-cHed by the Courier ao furiher
nine books found in the raid and any
"evidence" of missing library Items-have
others which might stlD be missing were
been In the Ubraries for .35 yearo and l.n taken from boxes in storage. and conse- . elude cards from parts of sollections
quently not as valuable as the Courier
which were never given to the Unlverstl)).
tried to indicate.
The cards have just been lilting there. he
Further, as the inventory continued, a
said, because nobody knew what to do
list of missing books lint grew and then
with them ..They are In no way ,!&lt;eyed lo
was reduced , Mlllles)'lere found shelved
books which are supposed to ce In the
in other locations.
University's collection.
None of this represents any conflicting

statements or a cover-up. University
spokespersons contended.
The use of the terminology "rare
books" added to the confusion . The
books which were returned as well as
those which might stU! be missing were
labeled "rare" to indicate their destination
In the Libraries-not thei worth.

What'•

I1U'e

aad wlaat laa't

The nine in question. Curator BerthoH
emphasized, are "in no way rare" in the

~nse,. of ,bf_~~ ?_~ ·~~p~ry_t. m~~

Northwestern gets
grant for lasers
Northwestern University has received a
grant of $900,000 from the Owen L.
Coon Foundation to flnance construction
of a Ia-. laboratory that will permJt collaborative research projects by university
researchers. Construction Is to be corn~ed, ts'let~~ -- ·h.· J," .. ,-

�\

,_-'·col.

rived here from a weD-received national

2)

Theft-feU Ia
Then, with the dancers set, trouble
erupted. late last spring, both the
or:jgtnal source of funding and the Door
the CorneD Theatre feD through lthe latter
literally). Some quick hat-passing by Harriott and Charles Fogel, then acting ex·
ecuHve vice president, kept things solvent: SA, UUAB. lEU, Summer Sessions and the President's Office became
co-sponsors In addition to Cultural Af-

fairs.
The Cornell Theatre was salvaged as a
sHe for at least some of the events when a
portable Door covered wtth a Marley cloth
was installed by Amherst Maintenance for
use over the rain-rotted original performance surface.

A fundamental lncompaHbtlity seems
to exist between T erpslchore and the
Bureaucracy ,

Harriott

mused

In

retrospect. Episodes of temperament and
testiness exacerl&gt;ated matters. This, she
was prepared for from the artists, but In
most cases, she reported , It was the
University personnel involved who required a soothing, velvet touch.

.

.,.._.

By contrast, Merce Cunningham and
Co. were pussycats. With the inside
temperature hovering at 95. the formidable Cunningham and his dancers
stayed at Clark Gym 12 hours a day for
two days-without complaint.
Merce himself camped out In the smaD
gym, equipped with a roD-away bed and
his own macrobioHc food . To avoid prostration, his dancers sipped dub soda and
nibbled on saltines, while lounging in
Squire on their breaks. If there's one
thing Merce Cunningham does weD: it's
adjusting.
He's even revised how he dances, for
instance. Harrloit points out. The new
steps accommodate his diminished
physical prowess, yet are exactly right in
tone and feeling for a mature dancer. As
one crlHc put tt, "you noHce not that
Merce is getHng older, just that his company is gettlng )"'Unger."
Cu_nnlngham s pre.sentations are never
"easy" on an audience, yet those who
witness them often respond wildly. Here,
people stood and screamed with delight.
An estimated 300 people turned out
for each of the Cunningham company's
two events in the Gym ("events" are bits
and pieces of choreography from here
and there In the repertoire, spliced
together into a one·Hme only collage of
dance forms) ,. Tapes of some of their
video dance experiments were screened

at a third campus session .
Harrioit reported to an association of
college booking agents which keeps such
comments on file that MC Is "a great
man" and that his company is "flne" and
"dedicated." Everything was done wtth
consummate arttstry and professionalism .
ohe assessed. Working conditions were
hard, "but they were always cooperative
and aax&gt;mmodaung."

AdJft- ....

The Paul Taylor Cbiiipai\yCLiOI'Io'

ar)

1V performance-were another bag of
toe shoes. The management was difflcuk
to work with, Harriott reports , "because
of lack of coordination among them."
Each of several represenll!tlves presented
her with different shopping lists of
demands for props and other trappings. It
was the "Grape Leaves Syndrome"
revisited, Harriott lament~. referring to a
visit here years ago by dancer Meredtth
Monk who at first didn't "need anything"
for a performance, but at the eleventh
hour set up a howl for a backdrop of
grape leaves. "There I was at midnight
prowling the streets of Amherst looking
for grape leaves," she winced.
The Taylor Dancers also threatened to
cancel an afternoon lecture-performance
when only about three people had arrived 15 minutes beforehand. ·" Mr.
Taylor would cancel K if he were here,"
said one of the princlJ&gt;al dancers, invoking the name of the leader who chooses
not to travel with the group. Merce
Cunningham would dance for 3 or
3,000, Harriott thought to herself.
With some 50 people finally seated .
they relented, without reaUy warming to
the task. That same night before a full
house in Baird, though. they soared .
" A bit too arrogant , too self·

conjll'atulatory." That was Harriott's
upclose assessment of the Taylor band.
But undoubtedly able to evoke sheer
delight In an audience: a feat not to be
put down.

A lekl·bac:ll 'Jo(
Bella Lewttzky in her turn was a "joy,"
Harriott said of that laid-back Los
Angeles-based personality and her
~ - Laid-back. but meticulous, she
Ms. Lewttzky and group "perform wtth
an energetic esptrtt de corps that's
wonderful." The handsome company
leader (who Just recently has dedded that
her place Is no longer on the stage) Is
dearly the charismattc figure, but she slips
easily Into a playful camaraderie with her
associates. 1-jers Is the only major dance
group ever to be headquartered on the
coast-and it shows.
Lewttzky and company toyed with the
idea of creating a work for Baird Point
during their residency. She and Harriott
scrambled around the monument one
day. while also testing out a portable
generator as a ~ power. source.
Even though relegated to the vauh, the
generator sounded Uke a chorus of 100
lawn mowers and surely would have been
a distraction to both danoen and au -

dlences had It come 10 it. As two
maintenance men chortled, Ms. Lewttzky
looked alternately sympathetic and
troubled, ftnally noting diplomatically that
the Baird Point "stage" levels are just too
staggered In height. leaps would be
hazardous to her dancers. Another time.
another place, she suggested.

The dareat al Martlla Gral.a
Next summer, Artparl&lt; would like to
continue the coUaboraHon, holding out
the promise of an appearance by the
Martha Graham troupe as a-"threat,"
Harriott broke ln. The vision of "Medusa"
In Clark Gym Is too vivid for her.
Although this year's Festival was successful. although audience reactions
more than made up for logisllc4!
nightmares, Hanlotl thinks a dance
moratorium is In order until we get proper
facilities. No more .
That's final. then?
WeD. there was the opportunny to
book the Twylo Tharp Dance Company
into the Katharine CorneD Theatre, In
connection wtth an appearance at Shea's
Buffalo. By reflex. Hamott grabbed it:
they'D be there at 8 p .m .. Thursday. October 25.
Some people nl!ver learn .

Ophuls spe-n ding week at Law School
The character Woody ADen played in
"Annie Hall" was a Marcel Ophuls
obsessive-compulsive. He'd seen "The
Sorrow and the Pity" enough Hmes to
command noHce in the Guinnea Book of
Records, and was still dragging people to
see it.
Now . you can see it again - this time in
the company of Ophuls himself.
Ophuls, the lnternattonally-acClaimed
documentary filmmaker and Oscar
nominee (1912). wtU partldpate In a four·
day series of fdm screenings, panel
discussions. and ledures October 22-25
sponsored by the MncheU Lecture Series
of the Facuhy of law and Jurtspruaence.
The series wtU deal over-all with the rela·
Honshlp between law and social jusHce.

Taylor aacl N..,_bers
Panel discussions will also involve
TeUord Taylor. the disHngulshed legal
scholar who served as the United States
prosecutor at Nuremberg. Taylor's book,
Nuremberg and Vietnam: An American
Tragedy (1970) inspired Ophuls' third
major documentary, The MemOI'JI of
Ju5tice, also to be . screened during the
week.
At the core of Taylor's book was the
question,

uHave

the American atrodties

in Vietnam rendered meaningless the
United States' participation in the
Nuremberg trials?" His condusion was
that planned genocide Is worse than acts
of balt&gt;arlsm under pressure. such as My
lal (although men should be tried for
such acts) . and , in any event. that It is not
necessary to be guilt-free In order to
uphold the prlndples of justice.
On Tuesday October 23, Thf Sonow
a'n&lt;i'the l&gt;tty ~be shOWh ai'1 p~ m~ and

again at 7 p .m. in the Alden Court Room
of O'Brian Hall. That film , of course, Is
the shocker whll:h explodes the myth that
France stonily resisted the Nazis. Ophuls
argues to the contrary that .. France was

Httler's most compliant fief, " that 90 per
cent of the French people "cooperated
passively a not eagerly," that only a small
group of young people. lower-&lt;:lass
workers . and Communists resisted.
After It played for a week in Los
Angeles, tn December 1971. The Sorrow
and the Pity was nominated for an Oscar:
It made the ten -best lists of American
magazine fUm crlHcs after It went Into
wider dlslrlbuUon In the United States In
1972 .
When It opened in New York. Pauline
Kael wrote in the New Yorker (March 25.
1972) : "It's one of the most demand·
lng films ever made. . . . You really pro·
cess information . .. while you're storing n
up. There's o point of view. but
judgments are leflto you , and you know
that &lt;phuls Is reasonable and fairminded and trying to do justice to a gn~at
subject: how and why the French accepted Nazism , and then rejected what
they had done. so that It was lost even
from public memory."

w-1c1 - .w. It?

Writing In Life (April 21.1972).
RJchard Schlckel celled The Sonow ond
the Pitv ...a great human document" in
which "the heart of a great historical crisis
Is revealed .... " And ln that revelation .
Schlckel noted . the viewers transcend
spectflc circumstances of a distant place
and a distant Ume to eschew judgment
and ask themselves. "Would "'• risk !!'!In
and pr!sort a'ritf 'dei1111' TO.. 'oat bei!OfoP

Would we. under pressure. stand "with
the tortured or the torturers?"
The Memorv of Justice wUI be
screened, Wednesday, October 24 (1
and 7 p .m .• Moot Courtroom. O 'Brian).
and A Sense of LOA on Thursday, October 25. on the same schedule.
Filmmaker Ophuls is famed for his in·
novatlve.

trend-setting

documentary

style. He has worked with such outstandIng producers as John Huston . Anatole
Litvak. and Marcel Truffaut and with star.
Jean Paul Belmondo.
His most current work has been with a
Brittsh television programmer. Polytelln·
ternational: and with the French televl·
sion network. ORTF. He recently signed
with ABC· TV to produce segments for
20/ 20. only to lind It impossible to work
with American commerJ!allV.
Politically. Ophuls thinks of himself as
a "social democrat," as he explained In
the New York Pa.t: "I am not a Marxist
except In the sense that I believe there is a
dass structure which has to do with
economics .. . I made the film (The Sorrow and the Pity) to show that structure
(In France) . to break the boD. I am not a
fanaHc anti-Communist but I prefer the
West to the East.... Their suppression is
inlinHely worse than ours."
More details on Ophuls' visit will be
forthcoming shortly
.

Pollution research
The University of Illinois wtU estabUsh a
new national research center to find better techniques to control pollution under
terms of a three-year, $1.8 million agreement wtth the Environmental Protection

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•

COMP£1TTIVE CJVB. 5EIIVICE

Tvptst SG-3- Unive.rslty llbraries - H~alth
Sciences Library -Circulation : Un iversity
libra.ria-LML-Ctrculation; Poetry( Rare Book:.Univershy Ubraria: Am~ PhyK.al Plant: Derma.tobgy.
Data Entry M.c:hlne Operator SG-4-FacditJes
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NurK I NS - Nurse t. Main St.
Clerk SG-3-Unlvenity Ubraria.

'We're with
you,' Hoyt
tells UUP ··

Choir has
busy month

The U/B Choir, shown hue In
rehearsals undu the direction of Dr.
Harriet Slmono, will open Its 1979-80
se.son Saturday at 8 p.m . In Baird
Hall with a program of "Vocal Music of
the Italian Baroque" (oee c.~-•••
listing for detailo). Then, on Saturday,
October 27, the Choir will be host to a
high och._ool choral festival-the first of

.

,

. ,-. . ..
~

•

Its kind ever held on campus. Schools
participating include Williamsville
South, Williamsville East, Kenmore
West, Sweet Home Central, and West
Seneca West. Students selected from
each of the schools will rehearse all
day, then perform In an 8 p.m . concert
at Baird. A big day lor choral music,
and for the Choir.

NOIW'ro8t Org.
U.S. P...mge
PAID
Bua.Io,N.V.
Permit No. 311

Ahhough he feels Buffalo would have
profited more if U/ B's new campus had
been located downtown Instead of in
Amhei'sl. State Assemblyman William
Hoyt says he arid his colleagues In the
Assembly and Senate feel U/ B can still
become the "Jewel of the SUNY
necklace. "
Recently back from a 241 -mile canoe
trip in the Arctic Ocean . Hoyt brought a
message to members of United University
Professions (UUJ&gt;) recently which was
far from chiUy. He assured the gathering
that all Western New York legisbltors
"want to finish the build-out here."
What's more. he saki. the campus community should feel '"secure and
confident" that the build-out has blpar·
tisan support.
Hoyt even Insisted that his close friend.
Mark Siegel, chairman of the Assembly's
Committee on Higher Education. is "not
anti·U/ B or a staunch backer of Stony
Brook ." Siegel toured the Amherst Campus last spring. branding It "lavi&gt;h" and
"grandiose." and suggesting that possibly
some future plans should be modified to
save money.
Aher politely chiding faculty and staff
for being somewhat paranoid about
Stony Brook. Hoyt reHerated that Siegel
supports the build-out, then hedged a bit
by saying construction would have to be
modified somewhat from the plan
originally envisioned during the halcyon
Rockefeller days when enrollments were
up. and dollars more plentiful .
The Assemblyman emphasiZed he is
wiUtng to help any unit of the University
with a problem which he has the powu to
ameliorate. He must be told of the prob-;
lem. though. and in a timely fashion . He
recalled not beingjnformed about the re·
cent Dental School crisis until "late in the
• game." Luckily. he said, he was able to
connect quickly with the chairman of the
Ways and Means Committee who helpedsolve the immediate fiscal dlfficuhy.
,
Hoyt reminded those present that
legislators are "only human ." They read
to the manner in whtch they are approached about a problem as well as to
the clarity of information presented. The
Assemblyman candidly assessed that his
colleagues don't always gefa "comfort·
able feeling" when dealing with U/ B per·
sonnel-not like they consistently did
with E.K. Fretwell. former president of
Buffalo State College.
Concluding posHively. Hoyt said he is
"high" on U/ B's future and wants the
University community to know "they
have friends In the State Legislature" who
• rejl!jz,! the Unlverslly's "importance to the
. aty aod Weolern N..., York."....

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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a, u.da c;...,. KobM

In IDUihemJNew Hampshire, there Is a
hiD that ha been dubbed ·Amalea's
Stonehenge" Mea- al Ill lnlqaulng
s10MW&lt;Jrk chambes (IDIM with Cdlc~
like symbols lltChed
the lOCk) lhal
have been popularly --.uted lo the
lo
handiwork al pre-Columbian
North Amalea.
Does ''Myolery HID.. really bur
evidence al • Celllc people who lmleled
to and lived oo the North American conllnent 1,500 years IMI!ore Columbus' landed? Or Is H just another example of what
many sclentlsls term "pseudoscientific
phenomena," slories where truth and
fantasy merge , such as Bigfoot. the Loch
Ness monster and the Bermuda Triangle?
Two U/ 8 professors. one an ar·
cheologisl and the other a geologist. have
examined the so-ulled ''fringe'' areas of
science under the harsh glare of objective
scientific analysis and producec;l a book
which examines the pseudoscience
myths popular today.
The two scientists admit that the topics
of astrology. 11ncient astronauts. UFOs.
and Atlantis are scorned by many of thejr
collj!agues, who feel that such popular
myfhs are touted only by charlatans and
believed only by the misguided .

-on

·---...-·-s.

Education lo an obJe&lt;;tlwe
··one of our objectives." explains

..a.t

STATE UNlVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

1I

OCT. 4,- 1979
VOL. 11 e NO. 5

FTEs off target by 800, Somit reports
a, ~ Boochnowold
~SUit

Despite previous projections. ExVi&lt;e President Albert SomM told
the Pral-.at Staff Senate Tuesday
that U/8 ha missed Hs faD enrollment
target by between 800 to 900 FTEs.
Later In the day at the Facuky Senate
meeting. SomM lal&lt;ed about an 800 FTE
shortfail. and a 450-student shortfaD In
IM!aclcount.
TIM! budget ramifications of tiM! shortlei are notfuly known at this time. SomH
said. but tiM! prognosis Is obviously not
ecutive

good. More Information concerning fiscal
Implications should become available in
coming weeks after tiM! 1980-81 budget
hearing. the Executive VP relayed.
The major single shortlaU In enroDment
occuned In MIDard FIUmore College.
SomH aUributed some of the problem.
however. to conversion from the fourcredH hour to the three-credH hour
module. Because of H. students are taking about 3 per cent fewer credH hours on
average. This translates Into a "terrific
amount of FTEs." SomH explained.
To IM!~ combat the problem of sagging

MFC numbers. SorriH reponed that the
School of Management wiD conduct a
maiket analysis to detennlne how MFC
can better relllte to needs of area
residents.
A possible solution could involve shiftIng the enroUment burden from MFC to
other areas In tiM! Unlversltp which trad~
tionaDy draw more students. such as
Management.

Somlt

cautioned .

however, that the move Is a difficult one
because of the present stalling shortage In
high demand areas ll'nd the lnabillty to
change resource allocation over a three-

English Ph.D. placement among best;
all 17 ·a ctive job seekers have slots

---

., ..... a.-.
It's n o - that college and unlverslly

poolS, wMh more than hall in tenure track
positions, Carrithers reponed.

At......., ... "-

students have In recent ye. . been flockArbor
Ing to such &amp;.Ids as engineering, busineso
Or. Joseph I. Fradln, a professor of
one! the heallh ~. while departEnglish and coordinator d the departments o( English ond ocher humanllles . ment's piM:ement efforts, noted that one
dlsclpHna have been hurting for
al the jobs ludlng to tenure Is at the
enrolmerrls.
Un~ o( Cailf9mie • Berl&lt;eley, imd
But despile the economic downturn
two are al the University d Michigan.
and the scadly o( teaching jobs in arts
Six doctoral graduates secured posiand letters fields, the plecement record o(
tions at the University o( Maryl.nd,
the 1979 doc:tonol daso d the U/ 8
Virginia Polytechnic lntlltute, Southern
Department al English, current InformaMethoc:llst Unlvonlly, Howard University,
tion indicates, Is "better, we believe. than
Easlern Illinois Unlversily and the Naval
Academy
at Annapolis. _
d but three or lour unlwnllles In the nation," a&lt;cordW&gt;g to Or. Gale H. CarU/ 8 graduates were aloo aJ&gt;POinted to
rithers, department chairman.
faculty posts at Wake Forest Unlvcnlly In
About 35 car&gt;dldata recently received
Winston-Salem. N.C .• the UnlversMy of
PhD's In Englioh from U/8, or have nearOklahoma, the Rochesler lntlltute d
ly c:ornplaed their dissertations AD 17 d
Tethnology, and the University d New
thoN who were "prepared, acllve jobOrleans- aD d which are renewable for
seeking candldates" landed teaching
periods up to five years. Fradln pointed

out.
He said four one-year placemenl$ were
made at the University of W}'Omlng,
Mercer UnlversHy In Macon, Georgia ,
Pennsylvania State University, and
Wabash CoDege In CrawfordsviDe, Indiana.
Another recent graduate took a
teaching post in a private academy.
A ....... Ia ..._, _ . crlllclua
A reason for the placement success,
CanHben explained, Is the Unlverslty's
strength (both In English and In Comparallve Literature) In literary theory and
a111dsm, a conamlnltlon. be said, that Is
"not a strength al most other universities
In the Unked States."
"English departments," 1M! continued.
"tend to be very conservative, with their
horizons 'divided Into periods d literature.
Most universities rarely offer courses In

· -........., .... _

•. ..&amp;..

to four-year period .
Ahhough MFC has enroDment woes.
SomH noted that the Graduate School
met Hs target wHhln about one per cent .
The freshman target was aloo met.
Next year. Som1t announced .
freshman enrollment targets wiD go up.
"but not by as much as we would like or
as much as we can accommodate." He
told Senators .. life would be a l o l - " W
SUNY cancelled Hs directive to keep
freshman numbers to about 3,000. A
200-student Increase at the entry level
has been okayed by Al&gt;any. SomH
elaborated at the Faculty S.Mie.
To no one's IUiprile. Somtt said
students are moving In droves to the professional areas. Because o( M. there Is an
"Imbalance" between faculty skils and
students' occupetlonal lnlereRs.
He asserted ~ would be much las dillicuk to meet enrollment projections If
U/8 could accqt aD the qualified
students who apply to high-demand
areas.
PSS Chairman Tom Hurley announced tiM! President's Offk:e has
agreed to make a policy statement regarding which employees are entitled to
compensation for Inter-campus travel.
Hurley aloo told Senators that he and
tiM! chair-elect would meet wMh the
Preslden«al evaluation team · during Hs
visit to U/8. If time permHs. he will try to
arrange for tiM! PSS Ad Hoc Committee
on Campus Evaluation to also meet wMh
the oHictals.
•
To attempt to gain a consensus on how
the professional stall feel about the condition of the campus and President Keller's
tmure In oKlee. each of the Senate's five
areas will hold a meeting next week. TIM!
resuks of each will be Incorporated Into a
report to be made available to the vlsHlng
team .

�October 4.

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

eEagllahPb.IY•
lllawy theory ....t crlllclom ...... 11.- •
......... hileary ....... ay, A - * .......

20ih ean...,.•

Cantlhen "'*&lt;! lhal.-.1 I'Mfti!IIO,
moot avdlble umv..lly l!l8chlng jDbo In
Englioh oought ~ Wllh •
specialization In a certain .literary
period-Victorian , Renaissance,
Medieval, cte.
The c:unent tm&gt;d, though, 15 an empham on Willing bulrudlon aa well as
opeciallzMkvt In a literuy period.
Carrilhen added that U/8 admits lis
English ......!uate sludents "wry, ""'Y
carefuly.'-"-~ for individuals with
-~ promise who praent themselves
as wry lntarallng candidates."

Facalt9 - a f8c:t«
He furth. suggeoted that " vivid
- . y • to this quallly of graduate
otuclenls corMS !TOm the U/ 8 faculty,
which he credlls, too, for the outstanding
placement record.
Said Canithers: "Our facuhy tend to
• have wry visible reputations, and their
-.nony Is widely recognized and
honored."
Last year. four leading experts in compandlve literature joined ""' facuhy !TOm
Johns Hopkins, an institution which ,
along with Yale, Is U/ B's leading rival in
terms of succasful English PhD placement, according to Carrithers.
The SCK8IIed Johns Hopkins four now
teaching here are Drs. l.,l:&gt;iiis Marin,
Henry Su~~man , Carol Jacobs and
R~G.uche.

Cantthers Mid his department has
heard many reports of late that some well
established universities are having
"serious" problems with placement. Professor Fredin commented that "we're
dealing with a job market that is tough
and getting tougher." adding that the successful pl8cement of Buffalo PhD's "is a
oign that the local English Department is
extremely weD received around the country."
Canithers has observed that some
other state univenltles are finding success
In placing English Ph.D. graduates only
within their own state .

Grantham is
Switzer fellow
Dr. Robert J . Grantham, a U/ B assistant professor of community llS\/Chlatry.
has been named a Mary Swia.ir Fellow in
Rehablllt.allon by the National Rehabilitation Msodallon.
One of only four persons nallonaUy to
receive the fellowship, Grantham will
develop a paper on "The RehabUltallon
of the Mentally 1D in the 1980's" to be
presented at the Mary Switzer Seminars
in New York City, October 31 to
November 3 . The late Mrs. Switzer was
for many years U.S . commissioner for
vocational rehabilitation.
Grantham joined the faculty in 1971
alter receMng the Ph.D. in rehabUltallon
counsehng here.

What can _yo~ · do .
with a U/8 degree?
What can I/OU do with a U/B

~?

A lot more than I/OU might

think, acoordlng to a random survey
of both recent and older puates.
Although the Univenll)l boasts
thousands of accomplished physicians. lawyer$ and profeosional people, this list empbaolzes some recent
newsmal&lt;en:
•Wolf Blitzer, ' 70 , Is the
Waahlngton coorapondent for The
Jerusokm Post.
• Dr. Don s. Tleg, '66, pracllces In
Conncctlcut. but is a special vision
consuhant to the New York Yankees
and attends spring training regularly.
• Edward ao.-, MA 71 . a
former English teaching fellow. is an
aJtist-in-resldence with the Virginia
Opera Association where he recently
performed In the U.S . premiere of a
new "Mary Queen of Scots."
• Uncia Wachner, '66, is president
of Max Factor Inc . • the domestic dMslon Of a Fortune 500 company that
does 400 mdlion dollars worth of
business worldwide.
• Barbua R - . who received
her Ph.D. in renaissance literature In
the early 70s, is author of the besl
selling Book. of Quotes (N.Y.: E.P.
Dutton, 1979). a coUection of 3500
memonoble. sayings uttered during
the 1960s and 70s. Author James
Michener has coDed H "Bartlett's
Quotations for the New Generation."
Ms. Rowe also writes profiles for
People for whom she has interviewed such notables as Michener. MarshaU Mcluhan and Susan Sontag.
e Ellen FleyMer (Americall Studies
'66) is deputy ·po&amp;e commissioner
for public Information for New York
City.
• Gary Coho, a former campus
editor of The Spectrum, is a staff lnvesllgator for Waahington columnist
Jack Anderson. Anderson's staff of
12 lndudes two other Spectrum
alumni. Howle Kurtz (edHor In chief.
1973-74) and Larry Kraltowltz
(1974-75) .
Army Second Ueutenant
Brenda Berton (a mid -70s
graduate) is the first woman to be
commissioned in a combat unH in the
Army (In the Air Defense Artillery) .
•Bob Becker, '69, Is chief planner
for the New Orleans Capital Construction Program. responsible for
prioritizing over 100 milll(!n doflats in
public funds for 300 projects over the
last five years.
eAUeto M. Zwelbel, '72 (BA
Psychology), is the winner of two

•u.s.

Emm!IS for "Saturday Night Uve."
for which he Is a head · He has
also wrtaen specials for Paul Simon
and the Beach BollS. Before he
became a successful comedy
ICIIpter. he !ked baloney In a New

Yoric clelcateaen.

-

e Dr. c,rtJ H. Wac:bt is the foremic
l&gt;alholoalst for Allegheny County,
I&gt;a . cPiiioburvhJ. He was the only
meclical expert to testify agolnll the
single bullet theory In the J .F .K.

assassination before the House
Alsasslnatlons Committee this year.
• Sl8m Margaertte Dynoki, a
1970s Medical School graduate, has
swapped "the veil and wimple fqr the
surgeon's cap and mask." As chief
resident In surgery at the Rochester
General HospHal, she is one of only
four sister/ surgeons in the Untted
States.
· • .lucllth Blake Muzella, '65, is the
chief-In-charge of the State Attorney
General's office in Buffalo.

•Paul M. Schneeberger, 75,
recently purchased the Wurst Place
Bar across from the Main Street
Campus and has redone H as the
Third a- Bar.
eNick c_.. (MBA '70) . .lohn
Doherty (8A 70) , and Marlen Saffran Doherty (8S '70) are running a
hog farm In Central Maine.
e Robert Rich, '35 and Richard A.
Rich, '61 , are officers In Rich Pro·
ducts Ccxporallon in Buffalo, which
recently devised a new method for
freeilng (In which the substance being frozen doesn't become solidified) .
Word is that the discovery will
revolutionize the frozen food Industry.
e David Fr-.dlich, '68, is chief of
the Rackets Bureau In the Suffolk
County District Attorney's Office.
e.I.W. Maa--, ·so. is president
of Volkswagen Manufacturing Co. of
America; and
•"Helen M." is the October 1979
centerfold In Gallery Mag&lt;Uine. Said
Gallery, "Twenty -four-year-old
Helen is 5'7'h with dar!&lt; hair and
blue eyes. Her 35-24-34 figure won
her Gallery's $500 cash p - and
puts the University of Buffalo
graduate In a strong position to take
fuU honors in the play-offs against
eleven other monthly winners for the
title of Girl Next Door for the Year.
That brings with H more than $5,000
worth of cash and prizes."
And you thought H took an Ivy
League degree to snare featured biDing In a centerfold.

1979

Mostcollese

grads
with jobS

ed

Only one-thlnl ol calege and university alumni complain they are underemployed and pnfer a more challenging
position, aa:onllng to • new study
published by lhe Colege Placement

Council.
Survey Information waa oblained from
more then 3,900 gncl-ln 1977 who
were freshmen In 1970. n.e ltudy was
conducted for CPC by the Higher Education Research lnttltut. under a grant from
the National I n - ol Edtladlon, and
followed earlier IIUdla In 1971....! 1974
of alumni who were freshmen In 1961.
Most of the ...._ wad- viewed
their college educ:atlon .. useful In both
job and non-job rellud ways. For the
most part, these puates were at least
as confident as the earlier graduates. tf
not more so, about the usefulnas of their
coUege education despite entering the
work force during the mid-197!)s when
many college graduates had difficulty in
flnding jobs.
The study found that college prepares
graduates mostly for their first job alter
graduation. Tlws recent graduates were
more likely to use the content of their major courses In their work than the
graduates who had been working longer
and problbly had been promoted out of
entry-level jobs. The majors reported
most likely to provide _ . t i o n for jobs
were business , engineering. and
education.
Fewer than one-third of either the
earlier or more recent graduates entered
the occupation they had expected to as
freshmen . And. the longer they had been
in the work force. the less likely they were
to be working in the occupation originally
anticipated.
AD occupational groups recommended
· thai students build their communication.
mathematical. admlnislraHve. and in·
terpersonal sklfts. Training In business
areas wa' especially recOmmended
regardless of whether or not the
respondents had majored In business
themselves and regardless of occupation.
Job satisfaction differed considerably by
occupation but was not dependent on
age. sex, or, for the older respondents.
relatedness of job to major.
Recent graduates were more likely
than older ones ~o hold jobs related to
their major field . Relatedness. however.
did not guarantee job sausfaction .
Among the older respondents, the
researchers found , those still In related
jobs were among the least satisfied.
The most Important variable In explaining overall job satisfaction f..,- both groups
was the feeling that skUis were being fully
utlllzed. Also important were high Income
and job status. Above aU, the alumni
said, a satisfying job is a challenging job.
The 118-page report , College Eduoo·
Uon and Employment- The Recent
Groduatu, is $9.95 !TOm CPC Foundation, P.O . Box 2263. Bethlehem . Pa.
18001.

Psych Ph.D.'s discount 'sex' survey
According to a recent national survey
conducted by three Californ ia
psychologists and reported In the Chronl·
de of Higher Educotlon last month, one
out of ewry four women who received a
Ph.D. In poychology during the past six
years saysprofshe engaged in sexual actiVIty
with her
essors.
What's more. 30 per cent of the male
therapists or teachers In the study populalion admilled having sex with female
audents or clients.
The •udy. presented at the annual
meeting of the American Psychological
AMoc:latlon (APA) In New York, also
found thet a whopping 60 per cent of
female respondents and 14 per cent of
the males say they were the objects of
"seductive behavior'" on ~ part of
psychology professors, adm101strators &lt;&gt;&lt;
clinical Internship supervisors while in
graduate school.
For purpoaes of the study, sexual conlacl wos deltned as lntercouroe or genital
stimulation, while wducuve behavior
typically manlfaled ltlellin flirting. joking
about sex. excaalve anenllon. and
touching.

Approximately 500 people partlclpated in the survey. with women com·
posing about half the population .

Receat Plo.D.'e IMre ba,_'t -

It
Before there's a mass exodus eHher to
orlemfroalemPhps.ychoD
. s ilogyn
the' ffloeldur •rethlarue·veeofly '."fenmt
wn0
received their doctorates within the last
six years, and aU of whom are aboveaverage In comehness, say they personally experienced no improper advances
from professors while In their respective
graduate schools.
The Chronicle article notes that some
penonal comments written by female
reopondents lndlcale they were threatened with penalties like " holding back on
recommendations" or ••trouble with
dissertations" if they didn't come across.
But only one of the four psychologtsts In·
tervlewed here SO!IS she even heard of
such a case. And then, .:-hen the professoo- Involved was told to ··:-.wz off' by
the individual. he did so with no negative
ramifications to her.
The romantic encounters which the
four women have observed between

students and professors involved no coerdon or harassment. but were collegial
relationships which, through mutual consent. blossomed Into more serious ones.
The relationships were also not of the
dirty-old-professor/wide-eyed grad stu ddentlo tydpebet
, either. Usually , they
eve pe
ween young assistant prolessors and students dose to their own
age.
If any exploitation or sexuol harass·
ment had happened In their midsts, Drs.
Nancy Johnson , Kathy HUdebrandt and
Arlene Burrows say, they likely would
have heard about K, given the effec·
Uveness of departmental grapevines.
Also. as Drs. Brenda Major, Michael
RauUn (another recent Ph .D_), and Burrows view ft. It seems questionable that
the typical intelligent. aggressrve, competent female grad student In psych would
pul ~P" with any sexual overtures tf she
didn I want to.
f8Ctllty ....,.t .U-~1
"There's a realistic Umlt on how much
power a faculty member has to exploit
anyone," offered Raulin .

Caution must be taken not to view the
survey results as an indication that psych
departments generaHy are havens of
Ubldinous activity, the U/ B faculty say.
What's more, they also believe that If a
comparative survey were to be conducted of ~men recently entering any
business or corporate enterprise one
would find that academia, In relation to
these other institutions is hardly a hot
bed of hanky-panky. ·
On the contrary the women and
~aul!n feel . one wo~ld probably find less
overt sextsm on campuses because of a
raised consciousness and social sanelions
While the U/ B psychologists agree that
a sexual liaison between a therapist and a
dlent should be taboo, because of the
vulnerability of the patient and the power
dilferenUal. they feel uncomfortable with
a proposed revision of the APA's ethics
code that would ban sexual contact be·
tween any faculty member and student .
Such a revision , they feel , would be unnecessarily restrictive, since
would
preclude relationships that are11 not exploHatlve In nature.
-.I.B.

�October 4 . 1979

c-au ............. HII.'

• 'Great Mysteries Re-examined'

..__1......,

Auc:leat - - u t a

Charles J . Caleau. associate professor of
geology. "is education . We want to
people less gullible, to sharpen
critical faculties so they can spot errors
and make vaUd judgements based on the
evidence before them ."

Stuart Scott Jr., an associate professor
of anthropology, agrees. He adds that
while the hypotheses offered by believi!JS
in, &amp;ay, ancient astronauts may not

be so

outlandish. too often what they offer as
evidence Is.
·rm perfectly willing as a scientist to
admH that ancient astronauts could have
visited Eanh 40,000 years ago," Dr.
Cazeau says. "Some UFO sightings may
also be true slghtlngs. but the major
evidence is just oot strong enough to support the theory.
"This Is not necessarily the fault of
some of the more seriouS students of
UFOs." he Js quick to ad'd , "but a UFO
sigtrtlng Is not a repealable eJCpertment.
"We scientists like .repeatable eJC·
pertments," he smiles, "and lend to
doubt those that can't be duplicated."

~the

Bigfoot legend, which the two
scientlsls enmlne In a lair amount of
detail In their new book. Exploring the
Unknown, GmJt Mv-• Reexamined.
George Gill of the University of WyomIng, • collugue of the authors, compiled
more than 100 eyewitness accounts of
sightings of Sasquatch and analyled
de5triptions of lis helgbt , the color of lis
coat. and the size of lis footprints.
He found that as the slghtings moved
north from southern California to the
Canadlarr Roc:kleo, there was a pro~ lncr....., In the dacribed sloe of
the mori_. aod a llghterilng In color of its
coat from dark brown to tan.
"This Is consistent with the
characteri!tics 'ol mammals," Cazeau
grants. "As they move farther nO(th to
colder climates. they get larger and their
coats get lighter to provide betler
camouflage In the snow."
So while these detailed descriptions
rnlght lend credence to the exlsknce of
Sasquaich [an e-nce the two prolesson would not deny]. other evidence
Is not so strong. There are no clear
photographs of the creature and, Caoeau
notes.-a $100,000 award for the capture
of Bigfoot has yet to be claimed.

The belief that ancient astronauts may
have landed on Earth thousands of years
ago and busily created or helped to create
the Egyptian and Mayan pyramids,
Stonehenge and the statues at Easter
Island was Investigated by Cazeau and
Scott.
"A great army of people insist on thinking that we don't know how the Egyptian
pyramids were built," Scott, who has
taken archeological field1rips to the sHe of
the pyramids, says. "But we know exactly how H was done wHh the technology
available at the time."
Scott also points out that present-day
lnhabHants of Easter Island, to which he
has led archeologtcal expeditions, have
duplicated the efforts of their ancestors
and have completed partly-finished ancient statues left In the stone quarries.

AtlanU.
Even the Atlantis legend can be explained In terms of baste earth science .
"There Is one underlying geological
fact that accounts for the legends of lost
Islands and big floods," Cazeau says.
"About 12,000 years ago, the melting of
the Ice from the Ice Age raised sea level
300feet.
"Since most early cultures developed
along the shores. as the sea level rose ,
the people had to abandon those sHes
and move inland . Mythology developed
around this."

Benaade TrlaJoele
Both sdentlsls have also traveled
through the Bermuda Triangle-and
hved.
They feel those who attribute strange
mystical reasons for missing boats and
planes ignore true statistics and also
geological and weather-related explanations.
"The poeudosdenlists don't teD aU the
facts. " Cazeau believes, cltl~ one author
who described the loss of a ship, neglectIng to mention that a hun1cane was raging at the time.
And the ltnlnge etchings at Mystery
Aill? NochJng but natural rock formations ,
says Cazeau, who adds that the
chambers •e the work of early colonists
who needed root cellars.
What accounts lor the current
popularMy of these stories?
C1orioeltp

"Cur!ot14o," Cazeau

A8trolotJ

A twcHided enmination of each topic
Is provided throughout the book, which
even has a section titled. "A Good Word
About Astrology."
To feel he was being far In discussing
astrology. Cazeau IIUdied the subject until he was proficient enough to forecast
horoscopes. In his investigation. he
found many fallacla that cannot be sup~. but also some studia that do
oeem to oupport the presence of common
charo.cterlotics In person~ born Ill certain
times of the year.
I'. • •
, • • r_, .
~. .,. .r,

answers. "It car-

ries from the camp!We to the moon .
Curlooity is like a d(ug; people are never ·

satisfied with mysteries. They must have
answers.
" If no mysteries eJCisted, people would
create them."
The two professors feel the ltientlfic
establlshmenl may be partly to blame for
the - a l public's mistrust of "true
science" and lis eagerness to believe
populor poeudosclentlsls.
"The ltientiflc establishment carries
wHh H aU the ~tlve connotations of
any establishment Scott explains. "People feel they're on .~.fr!nge, .~t ~

is not something that can be made

understandable enough to the average
person.
"Humans tend to believe any alternative statement as long asH is counter to

the establishment point of view."
"We all have a great need lor security,"
C.....u adds. "In the lace of today's
semi-godless society, where religion is being rejected by many, people still are
searching for securitY- These myths of ancient

astronauts

and

supernatural

phenomena may offer security to some
by helpin!i to explain the world around
them."
A course JM'Omptecl the book
The Idea lor the book came to C.....u
as ll result of student questions during his
Introductory geology course.
"There's never been a class-and rve
been teaching introductory geology since
1963-that some student didn't ask
'What about the Loch Ness monS!er, or
Bigfoot, or Atlantis?' I was Interested

myse!."
Ca2eau estimates he read about 200
books while preparing his lectures and
conceived the idea for a new course dealing wHh such subjects. 'He approached
Scott and the two men developed
courses dealing wHh "mysteries," C.....u
In geology and Scott In anthropology.
They later combined the two.
The first year GeoJ&lt;:&gt;9l! 101 , or "Great
Mysteries of the Eanh. • was offered in
1975. 275 students signed up for tt. This
faD. reglstratlon was rut off at 500.
SolllethiDg mol'l! - - aboulcl
do
The two professors believe more scienHsts In ac.ademia ought to address
popular misconceptions about science In
order to counter the claims of pseudoscienlists.
"Most scientists consider H beneath
their dignity to debate the 'person In the
street' on what they feel is nonsense,"
C.....u points out. "But science has the
ruponolbl/ilv to communicate to the
average person.
''rve wrHten for a good number of
scientific and technical journals," he
adds, "but In my role as an educator, this
book Is more impor1ant than aU those
technical paPI!JS put together. It educates
and Informs more people."
Scott also defends the writing of a
"populor science" book against the carping of those who might consider H
frivolous.
"The book has got good baste science
InN and Is eo worthwhile as anything fve
ever wrltten . More ltientists ought to
write for the general public about some of
the esoteric things they are researching,"
he states ..
Cazeau feels ihat a commentary on the
whole American educational system
might be made on the basis of a reoent
national poU that showed that more than
half the U.S. population believes In
angels arid a supernatural basis for the
~~~a ~rian~~: ~ JX?!etoorS em-

phaslze that a major focus of their course
is teaching students to be critical: they en·
courage experimentation and original in-

vestigation.
"As scientists. we should be very con·
cemed about the prevalence of myths,"
Caseau says. "but the lack of response bv
the sclentillc community is understandable when one looks at the criteria by
which we are measured in American
universities.

The

average professor

doesn't have time to step aside and write
for the general public."

Aalmov reviewed It
Both men agree that during the five
years they worked on the book,
academic rewards such as research
mon\es and promotions were saatfked.
But H may have been worth H. Isaac
Asimov- no less-has reviewed the
book and called H "a thoughtful and rational discussion of Important fringe areas
of science, cool in tone and admirably
resistant to the temptation of counter·
productive sarcasm."
And they'll probably never run out of
new material lor future editions. Cazeal!
describes the latest pseudoscience myth:
"A couple of Russian scientists clalm
that the moon Is a big spaceship and Is
hollow inside, that H was run by ancient
astronauts and has the machinery intact.
"Maybe future lunar landings should
carry along can&gt; of 301 oU so we can get
the moon running -in," he says with a
laugh, adding:
"We're discussing the possibilities In my
class."

Delta Chi fully
re-established
The Buffalo Colony of Delta Chi
Fraternity became a full-fledged chapter
of its organization on Satu rday ,
September 15.
The fraternity was foundled at U/B In
1897 as a legal fraternity, becoming a
general social fraternity In 1921. II
became Inactive here when fraternities
and sororities became banned in the
1960s.
In February, 197l , a group of young
men set out to reinstate Delta Chi.
The fraternity's chartering banquet
featured Dr. Samuel Ponath and Dr. Ro~
Stein, assistant to President Ketter, as
main speakers.
Members of Tau Kappa Epollon Frlllernity and Chi Omega Sorority attended
the chartering events.
David B. townsend, president of the
Buffalo Chapter. said he sees the reemergence of Delta Chi "as a signilicant
step towards an atmosphere of Interest
and parlldpation In, and cooperation
wHhln the University communUy as well
as the other IOdal communlties to which
we belong"
Delta Chi Is again pledged to "promote
friendship, develop character. advanc&lt;
~ . and assist In the acqulsHion of '
sound education."

�October 4. 1979

..,_,_..._
~·v-:-s:.. ~o..

2R-"'-

AI&gt;ofty, How Vaok 12223

o-r Mr. ...._,
I woulclltke to lh8nk your olla lor this
opportunity for me to por1ldpale In voicIng concem on the _ . t 1~­

Stata Moler Energy Plan:
First, I would like to ~ your
able lhlff for the llpPIIr8ll diocision not to
pursue the coune of depending on oil
combullloft for our eneJgy supply. !ilnety
per cent of the wo,ld's oU ....-ve will be
exhauswd wllhln the next 25 yean, and H
should be preoawd as much 111 posd&gt;le
lor future generations as the source of
precious chemical and pharmaceutical
products. It should not be burned.

COIOd..._ po.e health hazards
We appreciate the effort of your office
which we understand has so far expended $200.000 lor the one-year study of

the future state energy plan . However,
we feel strongly that the conclusion which
your office seems to be drawing from the
study, of major dependence on coal
power, would pose a serious health
hazard to the 9"lll''',j population of New
Vorl&lt; State. lndeetl.'lhe proposed plan, if
Implemented, may unduly expose the
general public to a totaDy unacceptable
level of chemical poUutants and cardnogens.
Under the subject of Motive Generation , your plan states: "environmental

and health and safety comparisons of
coal and nuclear lactlhies are exceedingly
dtfficult to assess. Most comparisons eon·
elude that during normal operation there
are environmental and health advantages
In favor of the nuclear fuel cycle over the
coal fuel cycle."
Thus. your plan does not speU out
~ how hazardous the combustion
product' of ~-?'_a!'__ be, relative to
nuc&amp;ear power pwr~ation , in a dear-

cut. quantitative way, although this
should be one of the very...basic conskterations in arriving at a truly responsi·
ble eneJgy plan .
·
In this connection. we would Uke to
bring to your attention a recent and very
reputable worl&lt; pubUshed In the October
1978 Issue of /nu.mationol Atomic
Energy Bulletin as an example of the current assessment of this problem. Under
the tide of "A Perspective on the Radiation Protection Problem and Risk
Analysis lor the Nuclear Era," Dr. K.G .
Vohra concludes as foUows: " ... risk
analysis has also been carried out for
chemical pollutants, mainly the combustion products of coal, including the wellknown carcinogen benzo(a)pyrene. It is
found that the current (lung cancet) risk
from lnhalallon of benzo(a)pyrene In ur·
ban air Is nearly 100 times the risk of
radiation . . , . _ from a large nuclear
pc:-. progr8mme."
Or. Vohra further adds: "The analysis
carried out for the occupational risks of
the nuclear fuel cycle also shows thaf the
o-..11 risks aa extremely smaD compared to the risks associated with power
production from foail fuel."

...aam
c•mput eommunlly IWWifMPft pubfishe,
•odl Thu...S., by the OMolon al l'l&gt;blic AI
fllln. Sc.cc Unfvrnlit)l of N~ Yor1c. .a 8uffa5o
Ed;owlol oftkot- ~oc....t "' t l6 c..m Hot!
Atnhml T&lt;l&lt;pbon&lt; 636-2626.
A

Ointclo&lt; al Ploblc ""'""

JAMES R DoSANT1S
Edtocw .. -CI&gt;Iel

ROBERT T MARLETT

At1ondPr.IOH A CLOUTIER

-·Editor

JOVCE

BUCI I!'OOWSKI

WntdyC-U...
JEAN 5HIWlER

'puzzling, threatening'
..... c - _ .....

h may be ..-! here that the hang
death 111111 ... climbed up from
lflllro&gt;dmalely 1110 per mlllon me* 10
450 durlnQ the lett 2S !lUIS In tl\e U.S .A.
The rllk rate Is highest In coal-burning
Enaland and Wales, U.K. (owr 1050),

CllriCief

ani! the lowest In Nagpur, India (approxlmlltely 50). where coal burning is practiCAlly non...-nt.

You may note that we did not even
mention the enormous hazard of sulfur
dioxide , men:ury, and other poUutant
emisolons which coal burning brings to
the public In the above discussion. Nor
did we elaborate on the impouible
tech=ical task of developing a truly
mean
waste gas scrubber system.
The
m of dispoSing of thousands of
tons of fly-ash every day Is too weU
known to the pubUc.
There are some alarming vieWpOints
expressed also In your position paper;
that Is: "Coal plants can be licensed and
constructed faster In smaller sized untts
and closer to load centers." Since the
State of New Vorl&lt; Is densely populated.
this partjcular approach wiU eventuaUy
resuh in unaorm distribution of coal-burning poVJer plants aU over the state.

Anybody who drives frequently
through the Lackawanna section of the
New Vorl&lt; Thruway can vtsuallze qu ite
easily what this 15-year energy plan may
bring to this great state of New Vorl&lt; in
due course. A quick )ump In the lungcancer rate from the current 450 to over
1.000 (per million males) certainly would
make the Love Canal pale by comparison.
Your position paper associated with
the proposed plan qutte correctly men tions the ma;or uncertainty associated
with the eventual disposal of spent fuel
from nuclear power plants. Yet, one can
realize that this country will eventually be
forced to make ultimate decisions on this
issue: if not during the present administration, then soon.

s.cc-wldaaac:J.r-~

The maximum exposure which the
public immediMely adjacent to the she

Abroad, In such countries as France

got wulal than what one would get In a

........ achlned .......

w-

and U.S .S.R.. the high-level
vttri&amp;atlon plants are now eflecllvely
operating on a routine lndutlrlal basis
alter an exceptionaDy smooth pedod of
test operation. Ewn In this counlly, the
major arguments .., on which conslltutes
the most optimum form of waste
' (wasteforms). whether they be vttrtflca·
t1on (glasslflcation) . or other wasteforms
such as ceramics, super calctne metal,
etc., and not on the feasibility of these
methods.
We find U most puzzling that an "!leJ!!ll
plan which contemplates the next 15
years t.t:ould base hs ooncluoion on
anything other than a truly penetrating
understanding of the 'current technical
realities. Your position paper also correctly pointed out, under the title of Coal
Conversions, "During the 1960's, many
of these (coal-burning) plants were converted to oU due to a combination of cost
Incentives and environmental

regula-

tions." Truly, U we are to foUow the everchanging energy plans of this state, the
hapless utilities will be forced to convert
back to a coal-burning scheme after
spending millions of doUars on the expensive coaJ·to-oU conversion equipment only a lew yean ago. NaturaUy, the consumer had to absorb the conversion cost.

No one got ldUed
In spite of the well-publicized ThreeMUe Island Incident. in which everything

seems to have gone wrong, the basic
concept of "multiple-defense and high

year working In the red-cap stand of the
Grand Central Statton for eight hours a
day; thai Is, 200 mllli-rems. (The maxImum permllllble yearly close for the
general population is 500 mdli-rems.)
ln•leed. lour months altllr the Incident,
the JUblic IIUJIPOl1 for nucloar energy has
n!luunded to almost the pre-Incident
level, as the Hams Surwy recendy concluded during the tlllrVe!l of August 3-5.
By a 56-37 margin, the public now favors
the building of mere nuclear power plants
In the_U.S.
Meanwhile, the Preoldential commission on the Three-Mile ltland Incident,
that is , the Kemeny Commission, Is expected to support the continuing nuclear
energy development when they report
back to the President shordy. Your office
could Ul afford the prem11ture gamble of
putting all the eggs In one obsolete basket
of 19th century vintage; that Is, coal
' power.
As to the other forms of -alternative
energy sources, it is clear that they would

certainly be helpful , but will never be able
to supply the basic ene1'99 needs of this
State. We will therefore not be commenting on these rather fashionable. but

limited energy sources, a~ long as no excessive amount of the hard-earned taxpayer's money Is allocated for the
development of such sow:ces.
Sincerely yours.

-Wan Y. Chon
Director, U/ B
Nuclear Science and
Technology Facility

degree of redundancy" Incorporated in
the modern nuclear power plant worl&lt;ed.
Even the least-Informed pessimists and
some professional - inciters behind tl)em
will have to recognize the fact that neither
a single life was lost, nor anybody
seriously hurt .

Prue.nt~d ot the: Publk He:Orlng on 15 - yet~r N~w
York Stot~ Mostv Energy Pion on September I J ,

1979 at Sl.ou Off~« Building, P011. 4. 65 CoUrt
StTrft, BuffoJo. N~w York.

'Let the rea~ers judge,' Bander:a says
Editor:
I find the idea of being dragged into
one of Professor Schanzer's notorious letter wars, to put H mildly. repeDenL I wiUIngly admH that on such grounds I am no
match for him . I would give up In
desperation or disgust long before he
would exhaust his epistolary strategy.
Look at his accusation that f produced "a
clever arrangement of statements in dou·
ble quotes. single quotes. missing quotes
and no-quotes of self-praise," who could
resist such a rhetorllcallngenuHy?
Fortunately, this time everything seems
to hinge on how one will Interpret the
form and the contents of a letter submhted In January 1976 by the sertlor
member of an evaluating team to the

SED Office 'of Doctoral Project regarding
the Program In Comparative Literature.
So. I om submitllng a complete copy of
that letter for publication In the Reporter.

Let tile ........ ,.....

Let the readers judge by themselves
whether or not the concurrent "lmpresolons" (often qualified throughout the letter with such words as "lUong." "no
doubt," etc.) of the llx (not the usual two
or three) evaluatoro oonstHue a de facto
evaluation of our Program .
Let the readers judge on thetr own the
extent to which such letter answers Professor Schanzer's accusation that the
. .dation of the Program is based on .
" subjective" and " self-evaluation ."
(Repotter of May 17.)
Let the readen judge how "cleverly" I
arranged my "double quotes, single
quotes. mlutng quotes and no-&lt;;uotes."
(tl they care to read my letter of June
7th) , •d also how candid or how
"clever" Is Professor Schenzer's ilate-.
ment that the evaluetors limply offered
"some comment on a (bole!) social
meeting with the faculty tn the Program;"
In other words. by Implication. that they
did not comment on the Program as

such.

.

Two more thin•

To this I should add two things: First.
that In addition to the two-hour meeting
wHh the faculty of the Program tn the
Graduate Dean's ollice. and the meeting
with the three graduate students mentioned In the letter. the evaluators had ac-

cess to the same preparatory and
background material as In the three
language departments that were also beIng evaluated; likewise they had ample
opportunities to disc~ss the Program.
when they met lndividuaUy with those
faculty members In the Departments of
French . Germanic and Slavic. and
Spanish who were also members on halflines of the Program In Comparative
Literature. In fact, this overlapping of
faculty lines was one of the reasons why
the evaluators were asked for their opl·
nions on the Program.
Second . regardless of the way the
S.E.D. chose to regard the opinions of
the evaluating team , the letter 1 am submilling now for publication as weU as the
oral comments of the evaluators at a
debriefing session In the Provost's Office
have always been oonsklered as an
evaluation of the Program by everybody
concerned. including the Graduate Dean
and the Provost, and as such Is referred
to, for instance, by the Interim Report of
the President's Committee on Academic
Planning, published In ~ Reporter
February 2, 1976 from whkh I quote:
"The Program Is demonstrably a vHal
one. The State Education De,_,.,nl
evaluation commended the ease with
which otudents particularly moved In and
out of the progr8m and that these
ltudents represented some of the best In
Arts and Letters. Similarly, the program
has -acted distlngulshed Arts and Letten faculty ."
Perhaps Profesoor Schanzer would Uke
to suggest to the VPAA to hold his
tongue tn the face of facts at his own
unlvenlty and wah for lnotruttlons from

the S.E.D. on how to call those facts.
Sincerely.

-c-eo Bandera

Director. Comparative Literature

.,. ....., 27, 1976

Dr. Dorothy G. HamCoordinator
Office of Doctoral Project
The State Education Department

Dear Dr. ttant-:

in conjunction wtth the presence at the
State University of New Vorl&lt; at Buffalo
of SHe VIsit Teams for French, German.
and Spanish/ Portuguese, a two-hour
meeting was arranged on the afternoon
of October 17, 1975, between the six
members of the teams and represen·
tatives of the staff of the Program tn Com·
paratlve Uterature headed by hs Director.
Professor Eugenio Donato. later In the
afternoon four members of the teams met
for an hour wtth three graduate students
currendy In the program . In the
statements that follow I have tried to give
the substance of the written tmpresoions I
have received from my colleagues on the
Silo! Visit Teams as weU as my own lm·
presslons. 1 need not emphasize that they
are only lmpraslons.

Comparative Literature at SUNY Buffalo was part of the English Department
until 1973 when Professor Eugenio
Donato was appointed Director of the
Program. The P1'0!1111m then became
autonomous. tn the measure at least In
which programs can be 10 deemed when
they depend for thetr existence on joint
appOintments whh other departments.
Professor Donato's Is the on't;ppolnt·

~':!tt,~~!lv~':rara::': ::~:

In
gram and half In one of the cooperating
departments.

·--.·-·.---.,

A cleu ldeatlty Ia • • - tlaa

Under Profeuor Donato's guidance

�October 4. 1979

Feagans Is
Dentistry's
'Man of Year'
The U1 B Dental Alumni Association
presented Its annual " Man of the Year
oward to Dr. William M. Feagans. dean
of the School of Dentistry. at ceremonies
Saturday culminating the Greoter
Niagara Frontier Dental Meeting spon ·
..nd by the association .
5€verat hundr~d area dentists. spouws

and dental auxiliaries auend~ the three·
day e vent.
In presenling 1he award. association
prl!$ldent Dr. Michael Marfino noted that
Feagans. dean since 1970. has brought
about a clo"" relationship betwe&lt;&gt;n den·
tal alumni ond the school by helpi11g
establish both the annual thrl't'·day
meeting

""d

continuing

educ~tlion

programs.
-Serving as ~
consultan1 for Pro~
HOPE in EgYf; . Dr. Feagans aided the
univefsities of

_...,..,__

--~

The bumper stickers fade in the
rain,
we'll be getting new ones
The first lnklinq of trouble came when a
faculty member called Public Safety to
report that his new bumper sticker had
gone through the laun&lt;by In his shirt
pocket and had faded completely away.
Next came the news that heavy raJns
were having an effect on lllid&lt;ers which
were already on the cars.
John Grella. - n t t o the director of
Public Safety. thought It sounded
ominous so he drove through a car wiiSh
to see f lhe slickers could withstand that.
TheY couldn't.
The Ink used on the 30,000 bumper
sticken prlnled on campus In late sum·
mer by Centre! Oupllcattng apparently
Isn't _._.proof. Or. perhaps the
rnat&lt;n1a1 on which the sticken are printed
doan't hold the Ink. In any event, the
oilcken diori&gt;uted early In September
just won't do.
Public Safety olftclals announced this
week that an entirely new sticker. to be
produced by an off-campus company
specializing In that business (Weldon,
Williams and Uck Co. of Arkansas). Is
being ordered to replace the Inferior,
home-made version.
If aD goes weD through the labyrinth of
purchasing procedures, the replacement
stickers should arrive by Thanksgiving.

have come to r.eflect a sort of University
pecking-order. There's extreme jealousy
amorJll those who get the first 150
numbers each year, Griffin saki. He
noted that his own sticker Is around 106
(the highest number a Reporter staff
member can boast Is 2100+) .

compounds the problem by outlawing
any front or rear window stickers other
than official registration and Inspection
tags. That leaves oniJI the bumper.
Public Safety's Grella said that a survey
he made of other SUNY unlls found that
13 of 26 campuses contacted use bumper
~ers. Two have " Illegal" rear window
PeopleloowW
stickers, and the remaining campuses
each do R a different way. He saki camThe bumper stickers raised a howl
when lint Introduced because some peopuses which have bumper stickers
reported no objections to that system.
ple on campus thought they detnocted
Handicapped personnel at U/B have had
&amp;om the beauty of thetr cars. For those
who object, Gtllltn last week reviewed
bumper stickers for years. and have not
the reasons for the new system.
complained either.
The smd lllid&lt;ers which used to be
Initially, plans were to have the U/B
placed on the back of rear· vlew mlrrols
BuB displayed on the new, "lmprov¢"
proved over the years to be lmpnoctlcal.
sticker, but late last week that Idea apThey feD off, or were easily stolen . Side · peared to have been shelved In fall()l" of a
more "dlgntfted" .tag displaying the U/B
window stickers were line when aus had
wlng windows, but moot don't have these
book seaf- tn red for students and blue
.windows any more. New York State
for f~ staff.

ro and Alexandria in

es~abllshlng • via
dental cuniculum as
well as enlisting the talents of other con·
cerned colleaQues to their c~tuse. - M_ar·
fino 521id. "He helped estobllsh . and
cuhivate interaclion of U 8 students and
faculty with dental schools in Canada.
Chile. England . Iraq. Israel. Japan and
Paraguay.··
Feagans . a native of Missour i.
graduated from the University of Missouri
(Kansas City) School of Dentistry and

was In private practice before pursuing

the Ph.D. In anotomy at the Medical Col·
lege of Virginia (Richmond! . He was an
associate deon at Tufts University. prior

to coming here.
Also at the mooing. Dr. Ronald H.
Jarvis. an Amherst dentisl and • 1963
graduate of the School of Dentislry. was
elected president of the Dt&gt;ntal Alumni.
Jarvis. who served as an assistant pro·
lessor of fixed prosthodontics from 1967
to 1969. has been In private prliCiice
since 1973. He Is a Diplomate of the
American Board of Prosthodontics and
has served as a consultant to the VA
Medical Center here. In addition. he has
been on the faculty of the Eastman Den·
tal Center at the University of Rochesler.
Other officers elected at the meeting at
the Buffalo Convention Center were Dr.
Sam lnsaloco. vice president: Dr. luther
lee. secretary. and Dr. Alvin May.
treasurer.

• 'Let the readers judge'

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

the Program In Comparative Literature
has achieved a clear Identity In an
astonishingly brief time. He has S!&gt;Ught
ou1 those facuky members of other
Tile .._ __.. loold . . eleploaat
departments who are comparatists by
Public Safety Director lee Griffin In- training or vocation and has tried to
dicates his force wiD continue to honor secure thetr collaboration for the Prothe original stickers throughout the two- gram. He has stressed-and thls Is proyear period for which they were Issued .
bably the stror&gt;gest basis for Identity- the
Griffin obviously doesn't want to field
Importance of critical theory (a subsidiary
complaints &amp;om Individuals forced to area at best In departments of national
change stickers In the middle of the first ' literature) and; chiefly though certainly
snow faD . lnere Is another reason for the not exdustvely, the kind of literary In·
leniency : Although the campus- qulry advocated by modem Engtish and
produced stickers aren't colorfast, the
French criticism , particularly struc·
glue Is strong enough to hold an
turallsm. The presence' til the Program of
elephant-so there may be some difficul- such people as Rene ,Girard, Raymond
ty removing them. Gtllltn says that Mr. Fedennlm, Thomes Ka•anagh, and , .of
laurie Garbutt of Central Duplicating cou-. Eugenio Donato blmself; all
recommends using very hot wllter and
notable contrbltors to a1tical theory,
VInegar to get them off.
justifies the orientation the l'r&lt;9am has
Griffin saki he personaDy sees very little
taken. As one of the Stte VIsitors puts ~: ·
need for campus parking stickers. "The Program ... ls ... a major conduit for
Amherst has open patklng anyway, and
EUJOpan a1t1ca1 theory ln,to the UnHed
Security can check on a car by computer
St.IQs. Since American scholars and
tink wtth the Motor Vehicle Bureau much students- becoming ~-are
faer than It can look up campus sticker of such developments, the Prog,am per·
numbers. h's only at Main Street, Griffin forms an Informational IGvice of no
suggests, that stickers really serve a pur·
"""'"dlmenolons." b may bewicled that
pose- to separate students from faculty the
at SONY Buf·
Wo . . a ~ lot. The Sllio VIsitors
In reserved parldng lots.
Griffin recalls that several years ago he came -v with • llrong trropr.-or1 of
~ the Untvenlty might save
tbetr uncoaunon ability , their """'mH·
money by doing away with student ment to their talk, and their pride In what
stickers. but that the Student Association the Program bes been able to ..:oompllsh
.
opposed the Idea. Student leaders In so sl&gt;ort • lime.
The YD\IIhful vigor of the Program and
argued that the stickers enable one U/ B
Its fast~ reputation have brought
student to spot another "on the road."
Griffin saki . too, that faculty and staff about considerable Intellectual and '
_ , to enjoy the recognition or status academic actMty on the SUNY Buffalo
the sticker gives them , Among this group, campus: a regular lecture series, dloeushe noted, there ls Intense jockeying to get slon 9f0U1W Involving I~ and lbldent
1o&lt;o sticker nu~ - whlch somehow partlcfpallon, and occaolonal by

younger....._-

distinguished scholar-a1tlcs (some of
them, H seems, willing to appear with lit·
lie or no remuneration) .

Eac:eptJo.al IOtllde.ta
The three graduate students Interview·
ed (first·, second-, and third-year respec·
tively) were of exceptionally high ability.
There Is no doubt that, through a camul
admission poticy, the Program Is seeking
out the very capable and clearly-oriented
student. One of the Stte VIsitors writes:
"U the three students we talked to are Indeed representative of the entire SPOUp, H
would •m ·that many of them have
alruily a degree (M.A. usually) In a
given field before. joining the Program,
that they know of the particular orienta·
lion of the Pr~ II\ ~vance and that
they apply for admission on account of
that orientation." Another SHe VIsitor
states: "lnere Is no doubt that the department (ole) has been unusualy successful
In attracting top students. Some of us
may now understand t&gt;,t,ter why some 91
the best hterature students are no longer
applying for graduate study In conven·
tiona! langUage departments". I think this
was a reveabng experience."
"Jbe role that the Program In Comparative Literature plays with regard lo
of national literature Is a
,_about which the Stte Villton show
some dlopiortty of opinion. At preMnl the
!Tench Department seems to be the one
.moot of the bene!lts that can ac·
crue from .,.._ collobooetloD with the
~ - A member of the Sllio VIsit
l'eam for French Willa: "lbere Is no
qu- In my mind that Its role there
(I.e., In French) Is essential. The total staff
of French has been - t v cut back In
recent years. The availability of ClOUI'MI
the~~~

offered by faculty under the aegis of
Comparative Literature compensates for
a thinness which mJght otherwise tip the
graduate In French to the other
side of Ylablllty. I am . _ to be able to
report thai the graduate students In
French take advantage of these oppor·
tunltles frequently and regulerly. I hope
you wiD be able to Include (In your letter)
the praise I have for the administrative • ·
rangements that seem to make such
cross-oven easy for the students at Buf·
falo ."
The collaboration , In spite of joint appotntments, Is not quite 10 clooe wtth
other departments. The Stte VIlli Team
for Spantsh/Portugu- concluded that
graduate students In Hispanic Studies do
not now take lui ndwntage of the offer·
lngs In Comparative Literature, though It
feh that this slluatlon Is likely to be revers·
ed In the coming years. No reliable lnfor·
matlofn It .......... about the relatlonshlp
of the Program wtth other national
literatures, but one Site VIsitor who
praises the Program ~ observes:
"One can also expect some doubts about
and even resentment toward such a program on the part of the tradltionalli.Part·
ments, espectally at a time of· shrtnklng
enroDments and cuts In facuky positions
and departmental budgets."
The general lmpressio(l, as can be
seen, Is very favorable. Tbe Program In
Comparative Literature at SUNY Buffalo
Is weD-defined, weD-oriented, and of high
quality.
Slncerely,

_,... a..--........

It Kenan , Jr .
Un'-*Y Prolesaor

William

Brown Unlverstty

�•

' October 4. 1979

..

CALEND
.........__ u...·----1\prt.
--11011M.---MZAAil
··Club . __..Hala--.
._,_Room,
.--. COILOQI···
c..-

'11M -

II a.ia. • 5 P-•- l'll,d-. lor "Lood - ·

PEIIIA..CGMIID-

- - . '-- t&lt;...

al tho U/8
bo hold In

5quft
C.mpua.u.d-...,""'-'&gt;o&gt;dgoocb, .,...ap-

.,..___.,~*- . wllbo-. E_..

........S. n.

hours_. be 9 • .m. - 1 p.m.

~OIOICES-IUIVIVAL"

"-..,....,_,_on "Utban a-lor
. _ o n d . . . _.... - . . , . _ ...

,...aq,._. and

- - ond -

·

-·

- . . a t IM1tiUlE ON ALCOHOLISM
.,_ -

~­

~of--louis
Honey. U / 8 - 123
~- tz,_,_llotngabaelunch.

o.ann-t

JIEN'S~·

~

C.O.O. ~Courts, 3 p.m.

til' 's..lroitk

. . . . _ . Dr. SMidon Mk.

- - ~al~.
Meopollton .._.,._ Building u. -

.

.,_ T..._ 1o

H-,..

Goclornor ....... t h e - ..

-

t.lpdg, Frankfurt/M. and Helcld&gt;org. His major
· "TNIII ond Mdlod" (19601 , ~his
reputation u a founder of ..twrmencutk:..
pbllooophy whlcl1 oonln tho al Gernan
philo•"!" beyond tho boundarla allhougllt loid
by Dtllhoy and ~- Gadamor ......! ..
f"aldcnl althe Gernan Philosophical - . and
awanled ~-, Hegsl Prioo In 1979.

s,.- ~- Rouoy Flold, 4 p.m.

~--.

Genl

J..... ~ - MD.. PII.D. Board Room. Cbldmt'•
H_., 12,_,,

UUAIIFIUI"
n.. .. fttt (19781 . Conf........ ·
Squlto. 4:30. 7 and 9:30 p,m, Gonoral - ' $2: IIIUdcnb $1.50,

'

MSEaM~.·

St. ~- Doublchcodcr,
P - Flold-.1 p.m,

OIIAL IIIOI.OGY SEIIm'lll•
Seroewe Dllc:rtiNtlo. . . . . . . . .0

FJUI•

, _ _ of CllolcOII - . . of S. 1 1 Shlgoyuk! Hamada, D.D.S .. I'll.D .. Osaka Un'-·

Clw1la Chaplin'• n.. Gold R..... Woldman
- ~hen! , 2:30 p,m. ~by tho
Department al Hillcxy.
l'tiYUC$

- - - D r. John L J"""-.-..,
Labontcxy, - . . . Unlwnlly,

- """*'

454 Ft'CIIne:IM. 3:30p.m. Coff" a1 3:15p.m.

FRJI/IUCUS&amp;ION.
.lohn Cohen. faculty ......t.c. al SUNY • l'ln·
..__wll_hilllm. Q·-.322a....n., 4

. . PBS'-·-

p....
.... _ _ althollm_ .......... _

---.

......-hod
t h- o
- . . al . . . . . and tho Cohen
pn&gt;blcms
PBSn_l..,lV. H a h a s . . - - ~-- Hal5 . . a,._.......

..

ondhasprocl.....ra ........,al...,.,.oftr-..r
---~

----boinga-altholol!..-

-

--n.. New~
Clly by tho Englllh

Spoo-.1
a....

-·
~
-

_..._.

c;--c.o.o. _Courts_4p,m,

UUAII . . . .
111e Fill (1978l . Woldman Tbutrc,
,._
_4:30. 7and9:30p,m. Gonorai-

no

_a ___ . . . . .
S2, 11UdonbSLSO,

o..,.tu..
...._t.. Rloa ~
ondf.N
__
_s.....
._._.allhlo*"Yalpol?O"oA.o
. . ...
....... - -60'•- •-.e.v.

ldndal-nconlaltho60•• _

_._

-......_,by tho--

GIIAY ~ a.a:n.E•
..................... c

_,_,_ 1M-

-

,.,

,_,. w...,. T....... u . _ a1
- . ~- 438a...-. Spm. """"T......, is..,-.. al
of doe-

---·
$2.1\DS----

Spoo-.1 by &lt;l&lt;av 0.... al P.-y and ' - - t,

o..-- al Englllh
"--'V•

C!o~Yra ,

c - . -·

Olf.C..tcr Cabwct,
681- St 8 p.m . _,

s,.o.-.d by the Dopanmcnt aln..- ond tho

c-•--

... play - t h o - a n d - altho 60'•

and - - ntho 70"1.

--·

lily Dantol School,

r·~lallc..

Osaka. J_.. Room 107.

4 5 1 0 - -- 4 p.m.

u-

PHYSIOLOGY 5EJIINAil •

COILOQUIUII•

no.._..~....,._"'

~-5
......... play ...... Os&lt;ar Wldo by
fit&lt;.....,-~ 2 0 1 -

Spoo-.dbytho

aln-. and tho

--boob.-

~-ALOPOEIIIYIIEAIIING"
--~-- E~wolcomo.J

Eltn!ouod ,....,..._ 9 p.m.Communlly C...., Ill
Mondod by tho New York 5I* Council on the
""'_. P_ _.
a~ the door.

w-..-

.... " ' - (1971) , Conlcrenco -

fiD.D HOCXEY"

PEIIIAIIIICS IIESEAIIOf SEJIINAil•

011-e.nt.r ~ 51. 8 p.m. - :

-

Squn, 12 riWgtot, Genonl o d - $2:
PltJI.050PHY
,_
_ . ,·
a ......... of
"- Hons-Goorg Gadamor,
108 Baldy. 3:30p.m.

Buflalo Gonoral.._.. . 10:30 a.m. Relrahmenb

15mlnuta_.,....._..,._

681·-

$2,

UUAII JIIDIOGHT FRJI•

Bladtpollbond~

poloics. .....-~­
Oathnology and tho Bladt com·

.-y, U/8 """"-Fronk llnlwftwll daatJo
..,-_New Mopeo.-n. ai!M&gt;on Commu.-·
• .. ~ 6 - Downtown Bronch. Eric
Counly P.- l.ln.y. 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. dally.

A........,_E'

M.D.-

, .... - . a.l&amp;hn·• H.,.ool. II a.m.

---·

.....,.. cww...
c--.
liDS---'o..-c-•---

c-ui

oleo.-....._ Dwtae Euo--

- · Dr, Can Honig, Depamnont al Pllyoiolooy,
a l - School a l - and
Dontimy, 5108 Shennan. 4 p.m.

fiUI•
11M Rod T- ,(1969) , "lldlorium, Buffalo
M_,.m al Sdonc:c. 7:30 p.m. ~by tho
Regional Ccnm '"' ·Ccld lloglons ~
5donc:c Tochnology, tho M_,.m al Sc:ienco. the
Foculty al NMunl 5donc:cs and · tho
Counc:lon 1--...ISiudlos. ON! Media Study.
Thll s.--modo 11m - t h o _ , al .. · ~ ... dOiatio .. t h o - .. 1928,
u..S.the .......- al Umbodo Naltk a - - '
nthei,_NI"""'"ondaP'of-of
- - " " ' • tho u-.oy ol
~- The ....... owhod ..
north d
Splabewsn. - · · a&gt;nducillcollad .... hitd
- l--o
The
~~
__.....
.. . ,t-.od
. .........
tho -_ - -_al
}
...,.,..__
l
l

a-

f-. collad tho ..... """- o(~arid

......... -~--·

CIIC.oGAIIT~AL-·

c-.._..._._Q... 170MF,.c.
8p.m. $1 .35.
'
,
Inc- ........ .,_.- .. _...
...............~~ , .. - Q . ..
~-

hc&amp;aka.-..,.~~~ona

-~,....--_.fly ,
~7f·

- . . . . . .. -llullbloandl.oka
IASallo , ............._ 8 p.m.
Foa4bal .......... - - .. ond e&gt;oa&lt;l&gt;a w11
bo on hand .,tho lua. ""*~&gt; wll bo ..,.,_ by •

1KE--01

T - Hal.

5lgtM Phi e,..llon "-nnly .. --'"!! tho
rally.

--.oboe.

FIICUUY JIECITAL•
1001\,

---~bos- - H a l. 8 p.m. Gonoral-

$3: !acuity, . . ..
tNclonDSL

.mnl - - -

Jogging's father

$2;

lludonbSLSO.

Why - · · -

'
do younof a ,.... and - " ' ...

- - Dlotno.the P!-.al Flllh, tho Con- ,
al c:.m.llty, k·· oduo:ational. .... oll&lt;tlng
looson•ln hllchhll&lt;lng, f/111.........,, munlc&lt; ond n -

....,.........,._Sc).,.._.., n......otngand ......-

~

Iunny, INI!I0"11ow . - y mlnulo al

·Satanlay- 6
COIII'UIEJI SCIENCE OI'£N HOUSE•
Comput. 5donc:c ... hold.., Open House hi&gt;rn
9 :30a.m. to 5 p.m. wlh talu and dteno;dt&amp;atkw.s
11 4226 Ridge l..ea. For more mfonnation , cal

831-1351.
H011EC0111NG 7t, FOOIIIAlL •
cRo!My Add. 1:30 p.m.
11M 510,.. althe yur II aloo Homecoming Day
lot- alumni . .... half-time, a tiom«omlng Queen will
bo crowned. and Dr, Joseph R. Mandl and Don
new mcmben althe U/ 8 Spom HaD al
Famo, wll bo !ntroduced.

c:oa-.

G-..

UUABFIUI•
Walt Dimey'• ~ (1940) , Coni.,...,.
n..-. Squlro. 3:45, 6, 8 and 10 p.m. Genmal
S2: ltudenb SLSO.
"'-"'odlnthedaooi&lt;Dimeyttylc: kuhviluah,
~ltOfYandcharlld:en . and a~

mll5lcal..,. including the daui&lt;. "When You

Wish Upon a Star."
~Do\NCE

11M U/ 8 &lt;\1umnl ·, Homooomtng
hold n the T - IJ;ning
Hal, The pacbgo lnducla
codda1ls • 7:30p.m.. dlnnc'"' 8:30, dandng from
10 und 1 a.m . with • cash t. ~dinner .
Tho 1.1umn1-. llaloo ..&lt;t~nga SSodmisfor c1andng only. Tlclwts . , tho dinner ond
donco . . S3Sa .....,.._Nn. Conoi.b~ 11

oo..--Donoo wll bo

c..rc-.

al tho
.......
For - ....
831-4121.
Faculty
and..,
. . c:onllolv-..1.
--eM:~

c-.....,. RS11VAL
_ _flUIS•
Q... 146ilidon-

olorf. 8 p .m . - Sl.35.

_

fiUI•
... T-OoiOY. . . o f d o o - n.. Port u,Jack~
... - (19551 . - Bob- ond, " ~ - Eric Counly Hlolorit:ol - .. 8 p.m. M -

_,Gone.
_,._

MU5ical wnioo of tho famed ~ Ruud
.,..... altho -1111c (19421. 1M nolk&gt; bo confu&gt;od wlh ~ R - • llroodwoy mu51cat
'Wonderfu.l Town.-...., u.w bMed on rM ume

--

.,....._Goto?....,......,_ . -. - . . - .... &amp;om

Colu- . -

of -

and ....... in

ntEAIII£•

~a ~ - Off-Cent.. Cabo....
ec.- n-. 68J - -so. 8 p. m . ~ '
S2. IUlS """""-!&gt; .....,...t.
.
- ec.-r...n..Spomond by tho_
_ aln..- ond the

o..--

UUAIIIIIDNIGKT FIUI•

.... ~ (197\1 . eont...... n..-.
Squlto, 12 mid.._.. Genon1 o d - . S2:
•uclcnb SI.SO.

s-••"- 7

tHEATil£•
K-.MY• a.rwr-. 011-C.ntor Cabaret,
Ccntcr n..-. 681 - 5 1. 3 p.m. ......,_,
$2, IUlS oa:optod ,
Spomond by the~ aln..- and the

ec.-r.. n - . R - ..
IJUAIIfiUI•
Walt o.n.,·, .........._ (1940), Woldman
nw-. -'mhcnL 3:45, 6. 8 and 10 p.m. Gcnc&lt;&gt;l
o d - S2: o&lt;uc1cnb S1.50
Tel a .. end ~noM WOWS·

Jloaday - ·8
~--

.. doe No+. K + ...TP_ Dr. a.arta·
M. G.loham, Dopanmcnt o! a-..... U n al " -· 108 Shotmon. 4 p.m

-. . . _ . . Clwo--

PHAIIII...COLOGY A: THIEIIAPEUTICS

A-,...._,.,.. ....

~of Spoclollood

---.Dr. -.D . ~ -

�October 4. 1979

_._ ...... _........_ __
"'n.-

-.-....sonc~...----·-.

A-ollhoTownoiT..-W_W_
• . . _ "'"""" ongol-laood """"*-·· Sho'o
~--·
""'
*'* (ploooc- on r- Mlo c.-. "'*!l- ....
. one!.....,__
________
T h o " - ........ ...-...s:
T
.... Sp.m. Dirwwr. 7:1Sp.fii. AII. .II
... III!Mr.
-~~~~-·N-·•
-­

Don
c...-"' Undo ........ - ·
~ll!lthca...los.-.olthc

~~- - . " ' Mochonleal E:nginM&gt;.
~one!

13.

17: ........

........ $6; -

. -.all

F«
Chodos Sun. 1693-22801.
.. 2nd Lt. Edwonl "-odd (876-54541 .

11\JDY- ....... HISIOaY)"
c-. n.. Goo!. 0.. . . . . n..
146 Dlolencforf. 7 p.m.
n..-.o (1927) Is -.ldond oneolllu-

~

~:

...,.,__ no G..oL

- thc-.IUml
............. hllo&lt;k·
a.t w. - • c:fazy chooe
thc
thc
Gcnecol"l
goa.,._who

~·,lng -

-

comedy. Kulon "
OU1rogOd ......., lroln
loYa hlo ("Tho
and
k.

"'

WAll WEDNE&amp;OAV NIGHT FIUIS'
11M- T.-.h (19371. 7 p.m.: ol Fin
(1941) , 8 :4S p.m. Squn Hoi Con(...,.,.. TheW&lt;.

" - -·

In 11M T"""- !nne Dunne •nd Cory
Gnnl conoido&lt; undertolclng oomolhlng '"""' .....
dolocn !0&lt; 1937-d-.-ond cum lho whole
mas tnao • IOCial COIMdy.

.. Fin. -G-. Coopeo. lloroot.

-

sc.n:

wydt and Den~~ Andrews. is a~ tcnWbal com·

edy ........ "' stold """"""" who
&amp;om thc woc1d 10 thc
- - cncydopedJo qn slong.
burl a q u o - ond go.............. ond . . . .

ern.. .....

FACULJY RECITAL·
Leo &amp;.lt: alllocll. on lho plano and polymoog.
BUd Hoi. 8 p.m. Gcnec8J odm-. 13: F..,..ily,
llafl. alumni, .....,. c:t11oons S2. otuden!o Sl.

5KYLON MARATHON LEC1UI£"

n.. o--tt

~

as

~~owennon.

t...... u.s. Olymplc~rD&amp;Iieldc:oocllondolfidal
..... l47
Dlolendoof. 3 ,30 p.m.
- . . . . . coacNd • lho
Ongon
lor 2S ..... (1948-731. ~ .... ond lield
tAms won four national cftamponshipl. He
COiiChed more f\U\nCf'S to JiUb.-41ftlnute min than
ony- c:oocll In hlollrne (171 . ln 1972. ho "'"
c:oocllolthcU.S. OiympicTrodccum. ln 1964. ho
co-oodlocwod thc boc* . . _ (Gft&gt;Sd &amp; Dunlap.
-f«lhil-·o~Monlhon

u..-."'

~"' -............. Cliy"' ~ Notionol

-c-o.. 0.... Calfomlo. 102 Shonnen.
4 p.-. _ _ _ . . • 3:451n 124 F -.

-HOCJIEY·

So.-~- Ro&lt;o.y FWd. 4 ,30

p.m.

SAEDFAU.~-·

ln~ol-, ...... " - ' - ..
·-.,~- 33S~. Sol0p.m.
~~~~~ . . Schoolol-...ondEn-

'-•·----

-o..v..

w- - -~~-­
........ -...- -.-Young

fl'HII . 8 :50 p.m.

" - -·
ondfnnkNorgoo-lnno _ _ _ _

R..,_,.dr-.llv-........ - - _.,....who Win lowe ........... - - -

.. a.-.

Elhol - -· -

A

-

-

one!

ond .....

dlilk ......,.._ eboula mM on the nan for un·

-.w nudorine -

a... . ~"' English .

·

.,.~AliTa-·

no KWor lllllo-&lt;omody poo~omwmco end
~
~~~~----...!
Horry~
flO'
H.olwolo
Golay. 30 £... St. SolO
p.m.
s,..-,..J ~~~~- Study/BufWo

500CD·
s.r- ~- Ro&lt;o.y FWd. 3 p.m.

GMY~-

Ciorto - · C... lor Ae1na. U/ 8 , wll
.........
_p~onn~og 1 0 7 T 2p.a

--~·
&lt;AroloM pm

&lt;Alioto- """'""' Courta. 2

.,._.,ely princ.d In •

~

new-., wl-old&gt; II widely
thclo!l!llng"fod" -

11\lDY FilMS lfiUintEOIIY)'

c..·. en. flk~l - w.... (I(. . . . . . 147

~PHYSICS--•
........... "-ry af ._,.. · 0.. A.
- .. 24S Fionaok. 4 p.m.

Dlolendclf. 9 p.m.

----·
c - &lt;Alioto- -

. n . . - .. -~.

- - - - T - C o k D r. Ed-

~~-:;=-~~~c

0.. 12:30 p .m. Spontond b\1 thc ~ ol

-.o.\Y.,._;-·
Ho. !.Dw9. Squn IW. Noon-2 p.m. Spon-

~ one! lliologicol - - .. DiYIIIOn "'
Col &amp; Mcsloadorllialogy.

......d ll!llho WAB Muoic. Colloohoueoo. one! P•·

PHYSIC&amp; cou.OQII•lll•

- - -· one!

a._...af-O.....,af .... ' - - l'lol...,. 11-. Roin. Pooll
Mornorilll.....,.. 4S4 M-onaak. 3,30 p .m. Coflee

--Sou---..-lormintl"""c:.....m- ~-

~~--.,--joiZI0--11

F . . - · ....

636-2919.

who .. ~- col
.

IHool:
- 0. T. lloocNoyl.
' · .......
70 "
u.w..ory
" ' - '- 4"'
p.m.
-

o.,..rm- "'a-.,.

•

ClEOLOGICAL
laENCU
-·
a... ... ~
... ~..---~

llm6y. o.,..rm- "' ~- .......
oylyonlo S..O."Unloonloy. Room 18. 4240 IUdgo
lAo 3.30 p.m. C... ond ~ wll bo

-

.

..-~n&gt;mJpm .

Ill! the Gnd.... Studont

Spoo--r In -

Tloo--.

I IWFALO LOGIC COUOQII•JJI•
John Conxnn.
~ ol l'!!looophy. U/ 8 . 113 lloldY- ~
pm

atE18CALIEJkAJIRI.OO_,

-.,....._E.

Aa.-.1~-

........

IINoo Noumon. X.... Cor·

...,..-. 101 lloldy. 4 p.m.
~-3 · 30pm .

... . , . _ "-"'" of - -

Oil, IS.

I.ECTUIES IN IIASIC NEPHROLOGY•

FOnEII COI.l.OQUIUII..
~ ll!llho

-

~

·

wll bo

M&amp;t• iNDEPENDENT -FILMMAKIEIIS
SEIIIES"
Loctu..

"-Nann"'

tl&gt;owlnslb!l
hloond
Soudyflluffolo. 207 """"'- A... 8 p.m.

a-.- . . -. -

v-

l1EATIIE"
K....,..Yo

a...... Off.C.nlor Cobom.
c.m
.. · 681 Mm St. 8 p.m. ~;
S2. ADS vouct.on occopted.
Spontond Ill! thc Doportmonl " ' - ond thc
for Theatre Rat.llft:h.

~l.r

Nodc:ea
EDUCATDIIII ~EJIENCE

BlAQ(

ThoBiad&lt;Edueo~on-oiW-..­

Yorit b JPOntoring Its tbcth annual c:onfertn01 on
'""" Cliy Schoolo. Fndoy ond Sohm!oy. Octoboo
26-27. at the Sheraton lnn·Buff.UO Eatl. Jhis ~·,
lhcmc ... bo -rucillnsl thc Urban O&gt;ld..
•
Con!...... _ . . . . . .. .,.,.., lo thc .,.-.
R - IH . S20. induda • roooption on Fndoy. wori&lt;thopo ond lunch on S.curdoy. c.ll

· 883-nl1 for rnervetiont.
CAlHOUC NEWMAN CENIDIMAIIES
Solwdo, "-!~: S p.m. - 339 Squln ond
-.c.m.. EIIcoll~ .

s-My. Main Stred: 10 a.m. and 12 noon C..IOIIdon a..,..f; 8 p .m. - St. "'-""''· 3269
Mm St.; AmiMnl: 9 ,1S o.m .. 10:30. noon one! S
p .m. - N.wman c.m.. Ea::ott.
~12

...... -N...._c.m...

Main St. &amp; UniY&lt;nllyA...: 12 ._, ond Sp.m. Newmln CAnter. Ellcott.
Solwdo,: 9 a.m. - Newman ecne... on both
Cllft'IPUMS •

Cologo--·

COLIBlE ftACEIIEifT CONFEJIENC£
The~Fron...
lion wll hold • ~ ..... dowla¢lmonl
............. on Monday one! T........ Octoboo 29
ond 30 . • t h c - .... -...fool.
Rlcfton! N. Bola. ........ olthc-. . . . boc*.

_ _ _ _.c.-a.-..

wlllud thc ............. .. open 10 thc .,.dvouolo
odv....t ...,..._,_

SPECIAL-•

Courto. """'"·

---~ol . . !-.y. ~
oiT........ onW.W.'• -"'-- AbW-1~
Art Golay , _ . . _ 8 p .m. n.. S:&gt;oo-: .
U/ B'o Art HWory l'!ogrom ond -....~ Art •
Golay.
_School
_
_ ludlng ...ohaotlyon
&amp;ookslo-.ldond
the

-~e.v--A­

·niUSCiay-11

w.

Ta. . . .p-9

--having.......,_,_

now hu blcomc a way of life; for milions of

We4a. . . .y-1e

~-y--·
n o - - (19401 . 7 p.m.; -

- . - O..o-1&lt;. Goll

3 p.m. " -· Spontond Ill! the Ed-.! H. lludor

the 61 one oliN 1'1111 women ...

FUMIU.OVO_,LEi:n..-·

...t - o.. Heinz "-"'"
v
- ............
v...... .,....of
!....ond Medicol
· Dopodrnenc
"' Phyolology.
Donrnoulh
School.
5108 Shormon.
4 p.m.
R - 1 1 w11 bo ~...-tho Som"Rocxn boglnnlng 01 3:4S.

....... .,-.114Hodtii-.
4,1Sp.m. Cal"'-·"o.-.leo ..

WAIII'IUI"

__

--for-

~Jn thc Bola molhod. one! 10 .... .......
olonoloemplov. - o n d ......... _ o l

"'"-- .. -.-jab~.
.....~- .
cone""'-" one! lfe/- .....,._,

~

-~~~~...-.

Con(.....,.
5oophonlo
·
SUO.
UniY&lt;nlly a ( - Vorl&lt;
01 -...
. ~C .
lkdlolo. NY 14214: 831-S291 .

CONPUTE:a TRAINEE EXAM

The-Vort.S..O.~oiCioiS.W.
MnOU.non an lOP~.,....._.......,_

w-

ln-

n-.

T l o o - (holy. 19791.
......_. 4.30. 7:10ond9ol0p.m. Gononlodmlo-S2: -SI.SO.
Sot in • .._.. .... "'.........,. ond ....s... ""' ..
thc&amp;oloololowb1ongjo_M_
(Gioncooto GlonninU . ~ ""'" (l.ouo-o ~­
ond
""-~ ......,_ f.lonnh- O'Ndll.

.,_"_ ...

17, 1979.

~..t.oho......_
~.........
lonslo&lt;ln•-.
_
_
olocolod

•*-..

h4gl.. - ........ Applicollono I« . . . - - "'"" bo _ . - no
lotu Chon Oc:lob. 9. 1979. ~ 1"'- one!
10

Numbor.~~T-•36-781 :

........... lomw: XD-S

CElL
. . .AIIOLECUAIIIIOLOGY
_ . . . . ...... _
_ .F _·
af
. . _ . ... T S H . - T - _. lo·
. . - . 0.. '--word D. Kohn. chiol. Socslon ol
- . , ol Cd Rogu'-&gt; . NotionlllnoliMo
4.

Tho ................ oo....,..x .. _
.
...... lor,..,_,. ............. In t h e _ _10ond_lor.,......._
.......
-"ad
porioct Of - · 10 ....,.ole

F..m--

In 1iw
p......... ~Upon .....-..J .......
-ollhoone-.....-..... -wllbopo-

-cothc_ol _
_..,__
SG-14. - I \ I f l h o r -.

·-~.To IIR _

.......

.. I• doe "Coloeder."

caU J-. . . . . ot 636-2616.

Kor-.00,.0...., ............

1••1--- ..

.. f I
doe .........
"()poe to doe poeWk; • "()poe ...
_ . _ . of doe u.......,. u.a..
odlolwlee .,_.,...._ ttcbb ,_
-~
....

I

......

Olllce.

doe

.........
...
s.o... _
Hd Tldoat

�l:ocal UUP denounces
Members of the Buffalo Centu
ChapMJ ol United Unklenlty Profeaions
(UUP) voted ovawhelmingly last Wftk to
enclone • raolution denouncing reln!nchment,s at the Slate University College Ill New Paltz 8nd calling on the union
to ute the "'ui ~t o4 Its political and
publicly raouroes to prevent further
cuts In any SUNY unli _for reasons other
than lrW financial exigency.
The raolutlon-lloted on by about 50
union members gathered for a local
chapter meeting--was- written by Prof - . Art Efron; Anna "K. France and
Irving ~- l'r!&gt;lessor Tom Connolly
MrVed .. advisor. .
The text charges thai retrenchment of
21 tenured faculty at !:jew Paltz was
made ~without adequate consideration"
of seniority, attrition and "In violation of
the principles of · tenure , academic
freedom and job -.eCurity. ~
It dies a 1978 rq&gt;ort. Issued by the
Stele Auembly:s ComtnHtee on Higher
Education (Miller Report) which concluded that "administrative Jledslons" rather
than financiAl exlg_ency lay behind some
80 tenured retrenchments In SUNY since
1~75 (not Including the new Paltz
faculty) .
To ~ combat further retrenchment,
the reoolutlon asks that "every effort be
made to compel" admlniltrato&lt;S to prove ·
"unavoidable financial exigency" before
flmgs occur. It also calls on UUP ~

"unlllllerdy announce" It will OMk to
black hiring ol , _ facully .. - .
undergoing retrenchment, and demands
that the Chencellor, In conjunction with
UUP, "davelop uniform guidelines" on
retrenchment proca:lures.
The raolution asks that UUP's State
Executtve Board Immediately create a
Task Force on Rarenchment which
would, among other things, "mobilize
resources of UUP to prevent arbitrary

retrenchments," and

New Paltz cuts

te-..1

~7.-.

..

groups."
AnaUy, the last section of the reoolution, offered as an amendment by Professor Bernard Greenblatt, asks that the
union continue to give high priority to
lobbying for a legislallve bill to give legal
status to tenure.
The resolution now goes before the
UUP State Delegate Auembly for vote,
and ~ passed, to the State Executive
Board for Implementation.
· In addition to the Efron-Franee-~y
resolution , the membership passed one
offered by Oliver Gibson. former president of the Buffalo Center Chapter,
which calls for creation of a Contingency
Planning Commission to Identify major
problems lacing the union In the next

- trenc!unent .resolution, Is an attempt to

resolution was not addressing the lmrileCIIale concern of the membership In a
timely fashloo. H passed by a healthy majority.

.

-IS,-~Ior~l-4

Woshinglon
..---...

F«lnlonnalton. con~«ttheOfllcocJc..dll.n........,.,831-4:!01.
GIIAD SCHOOL DEAIIUNE DATES

~4c::;;...-r:t~~

duo-cw 7 doyt - I n - _ . - dote.
'Jioondor,
II: loll cloy on wiKh

Gononl M . Z-tO P-"' .. 4 - - ...... 7-10
p.m.. 4 - . . ..,..,_.,, 0.:..... 17: l.&amp;olbo&lt;
a.tt MMing . 1-4 p. m.. 4 weeks: Basic
~- 1-'1 p.m.. 4 - ., Qvllllng. 7-10

p.m. . 6 -: 0rigo.._ 7-10p.m.. 6....e..:Ba«

=~oc::;;: :l:;.~-.!:
· t-4 p.m .. 4 : F..........,... al
.lowolry - .. 7-10 p.m .. 4 - - . . . ,,
a.-111: Spoctol Child.ons Pactny Wodoshop.
10-12 ,_,_

......... woodoutthoc:orcls-.dOithoCAn.... s . . - - - - l o r ...... thc
Ope-.~

cJ

~~So:-­

Is -.tlng • mwwol polcy. Aclw cood
----lnbousunde-lholho hollwoy .. Cenlrol """ be
..........tt.,..._..,.,.,.._ .. thoC)ba-VO

.....-. In

window. T h e - ... !1M you rww. opoclolly
.....,...t boxcs 10 nnsj., )OOU&gt;' conls 10. AI cood

clockbouswNcnhownct"-'.........tt.,
llocembe 31. 1919. ... b e DElfTAI. Sl\JDY
p.,_ Who think lh&lt;y _. - dontol and
......ld ......... _ln~sludycJ_._
to II'OUIIne dental......,..tlhould t:on&amp;8cl Dr.. Nar·
moo L. c...h ot 831-4,412. V"""'-n muol net
~bo . . - ...... d - - Penldponts

..
r--. ...

...--...-one~

--

....,. .. - .

, _ ' - much ,....- .....;,.., lh&lt;y -

-

bofi'(&gt;YiclodO.- 'althelludyt.,o
den..._ Sponso..d -by ' the Doportmont al
~DEAIIUIID -

--lo-F6ooolslpolo&lt;
. - sludy lor·~--. .. oonlod
0.. ,._Hal. 548 Cipal't!ol. bolcn Clc:tot.o.
12. Dololo cJ tho ......... 1!101' be found In the
s.,s..- 20 ~ .. ·moy b e - hom
Dr. fio'
.
•
T h e - ... thO 19ilb-t l ) - lor
..-.... o.- .. Oclobc. s. 1979. The compus
FubWJ1 ~..,_II Dr. John Simon. F«
1n1onna1ton and - . . . . . .. conlod him ot ·

636-2191 .. ~ .

.

- T- one-&lt;loy
-~~~........,_
Aiql GETTING
on tiOo GIIANl$
aolljoc:t . .
-lorOaobo&lt; 1919o m. 104p.m l ond20

___

(10•• lo5pm .IUncloi_....,altheOfllco

~. ~5: Fol--poymmt

a.-

....... ..... chop .. ....... wllhout
0C8C1omk: pcnolty. Fol s . -.
....... 0.:..... 15: loll dey 10 ... dogrft
cood
and Ph.D.I In OAR !Of F~

c-.

1980confmol.
HEALTH CAll£ PIAN OPEN HOUSES
The
Pion ... od&gt;oduled • al
c..-. 120 GOnion-

-c.... -_....._..at

....., . . . _ West.~ - on W..tn.sdoys
llvough Doc:embo. 1979. 5:30-8 p.m.

would he go:ully _ _ . . . . ond .., tudoch-.

SIGMA lll-11110

.......... d~-al
-fe:bow In Sho
.. ............
,..._
.d.minlttratiOn
at lood*'9
~

W()f ·

lnl.....-.

a-. will...., -.-.a .....n....

the--

IIAUC DEinAL CAII£l WEU.. TEAll
fllfEDI YOU
TEAN Is o spoctolpiowom otthe School al Don·
l i l l ' l l - r r - - - - t h e -tunilyto-lno.........,...offlco-. H iUII ......, lor tho ocboo1 - · TEAN 11 acdwly
-

1«-oom-

. - _ . . . . . . . . . ~- dontol

mtnlmol-.g_.... ...... -.... _ _lnoddl-

bolng; lnckodlng an jm;.on.nt' ..!mal fu...-.
For morw InformaCion. cotitect: Row.na Adams
Jona'. Olftce - al Studmt Alton. 167 MFAC.

-

· 636-2348.

~olhas-thn

)OOU&gt;'

~- Cont,cl -Gonion ... 636-2394.

EJdalblt•

ART IIOOK COlLECnOflf ~

--·--wtflbeondtoploytn
tho Art Book Colocllon al l..oc:kwood lb-..y, Octob.. 14 llvough c....- 7. n....
will be
Octob.. 14 hom
2-5 p.m. in L.oc:kwood wllh a lecturlt • 3 p.m. In
106 O'Brian to be giYcl&gt; to, Martha Wilson. dftct«
al fToMin F""""". on "The Hlsl«y al , _.
Book Mowm~tnt. " EYei'YOM W~tlcome .
NUSIC I.IBRARV

10th c-.y N - In . . _ _ . , Music
l.llwa'l/. Ba&lt;d HaD. ttuough OctOO.. 31 .

New,.,.._

POEIWV COUECTIOII-EXHIIIIT
to, tho U/ 8 Pootty/ Rao-o Book
Collection: Ree~tndy ec:quiritd books. men~
and lettenlnduding ploca ~ Pound. Willom
Carlos WIDLams. Hltlm Adam .and Robert Dunc.n .
Also an o6l painting by Robert Duncan and en oiJ
pointing cJ Quncim to, U/8 Art Prof..,.. H..wy
tlftvonnan . Mondoy thiouglo Friday. 9 o.m. 10 5
~. m . m420~ .

On the Air
OCTOIIER 7
· Cn&gt;oo(. . 1: S.muol Sholkin. clinical - ·
prof...., al ""'lftY. "Cu...m Concopts tn Plutlc

ancl R - . o Sw9ory." W8£N 19301. 9:05

p_.m.
Cro.aall 0 : Alfred D. Price. a:uls&amp;ant don.
School cJ A.d.llectwo and Envtronmonlal Design.
. "lhban R.Wollutton Upd.oto on Buffalo.· W8£N

19301. II :OS p.m.

Exoapts from both m~ moy be hca.d on

c.-.. lflehlilhto. WBEN-FM (102.51. S.lwday, OctOO.. 6, &gt;7 a .m.

OC1'otu:R.

~lotheAm : Estt...-fnt...
Vlows pootRobcrt H.... Int.......... Cable !Channo! 101. 6 p.m.
.()CTOIIEJI 9

~lothoAns:Esthe.H......,Inta-

. - - ............ db-eet«althcS.IIo ...........
WRITING PlACE
.
Oa...,. Co. C"""" Cable IChannoiJO) . 6::!0 p .m.
Tho~~ II • hft drop-tn- cent., Aha on tM Hhh et 7 p.m. and the 12th at 6 ~ 30
thk~- .. --cJiho__
p.m.
Tolco ......_
cJ ""' quolfled writing
""""who poovtdo ....tu~....,..;.. 10 bachhovtnt lniUbfo u~ lon .....t and

::.-:::..!:".=::.~..::
=~~=c.=~:.'"..~
' - • . . . -. So, f rou do,_- doo. ., MondaY dvough Fndoy, 12 ,_, un-

-

-F...._, - . S.. Contldo.- In
_
_~
_
the Wrldng Pleat. You ...
bo _
CONiuly
10

Al--ai-.. . an--on

thy candidota lo&lt;lho Monte A. F - Awenl cJ the
Nodonol 5odoty al Sigmo XI. Tho oward Is Sigmo
xr. primary ._... cJ honoring dllllngu...,...
raorch tdmttllb who haw made "no&amp;able con·
triJutloM to motivation arid ~~ of
.-..dldvoughoducotion." Thooward--cJ
a medal and o $1 ,000-- Tho oolodion commll-.
tN t'tqufts a bkl ~ketch of the nomlnH: e list of
llvcclottenalsuppco1frompeenand/ «11Udents:
• and a list of fti .O.. Jtucknts. ~ aaodates o.KATHAIIINE COIINEl.L THEA'IIIE
i&gt;ott-dodol-ol I!Udents.
Tho l&lt;olhomo Comoiln- re- Comploxl . Clootng ~ '"' lho J98o nomlnotlons !t
Jl now tn ful ~ lhltU:I. RacMIIIionl .rt. t&lt;ovomba20.
F« ,...,.,.
contad 0.. Holm E.
bring~ for pedorm~~nca. c:onoats. de. for
the ament .::houl yar. Pl.-. c:aD ~2038 for G...,... Olftce al Gnlduato ~dia and R.....ch,
oddlllonol ..............
~ I-... cJ Technology, Manta, Gooogio
·30332. .
. .
I.DIIAIIYFINES'
l..oc:kwood
U/" COUNCn. IIEETING
the-OIIico at S t u d e n - ... ,_..... boob .
Cound ea,.tamco Room , Stir floc&lt; ~ nat -.nod .. .........!. to, Ocioba 8th.
Clc:tot.o. 12. 3 p.m.
H you haw any owtdue books. be an to grt
them to lho Clmllottoft Doponmont .. l..oc:kwood · UNIYEIISITV COMPUTING SERVICES
IIHOIIT'COUISES.
""lho8111.
SPSS,Io&lt;
Room 7, 4234 Rldgo La .
11ED1CAL EDUCATION YIDEOCASSEllQ
Octob.. 3, 8. 10 hom J-.5 p.m.
I« Conttnutng Modlcol fd~
., . _ . . T -. Room 7, 4234 Rldgo I.a .
~ Sela, T11p0 "325o Dn.g ~
T..-.. and Thundayo, Octobo&lt; 9 llvough 18 .
for 01ldhood Asthma; lmp&amp;.nted PftTMnmt C.- 3-5 p:m.
dioc P~ . lndbolons F« and F-.tlp: ,
and Tho OlllcTmtlol DlaQnools a1 """'-· IJNIYEJISI1Y IPONSOR PIIOGILUI
A - l o r -· Octobo&lt; I · 14 otthe Haith
F....-. P.....- lho U/ 8 .............
Sctotuslb"'JIModioR....._c.n..,, Soockton to, beoomlng • _.....- ~ ... noc oonKJrnblrl TOW'Itf, MSC. F.ar fu:rthe informldon. call sld~trcd acad~tmk advllon or prof~nal
_..
. . .They
, . .......
_ fulfil
......
and _
_. _
831-4614.
-........
cJ ........

ponons hom tho

on

Vbglnla Polytechnic Institute and State
. University Is provldlng each ol ill 4,000
freshmen a six-month subscription to
Atlanllc Monthly In an effort to expose
them to good writing they will want to
read eutslde of the classroom.

WRITING lUI'OIIS

Tho ~.. . - tloodod .... 8olrd Hoi
_ . . . . . . . . , ......... a l l h c - cJ the 0pon woo~&lt;~~.,p·, Cootumo Shop.
Tholol_.a ....... al-ono-odoponlond
ono.fui.«Vh _.. lo now In~ ond ...
...,.... up 10 l S o - a1..,_: AIIOyln ond . . ..
men·• and womm•s lhoes and boots rn.acs. brtfcn
1950oft....s.d.
Anyone who would . . to •c:ontrhrte eny
ondl« dolhlng tho! Is lft-.1950 "asked
tO contad Open Ooportmcnl Ccotu.... \IOglnla
-01831-5358.

INTENSIVE ENGLISH LANGUAGE INsmtnE
Tho , _ English ~ I - . . . .. In
need ol conYerMHon laden and tutors for foretgn
......... - - English . . . fcntgn ~­
Undevrod..... IIUdcnts and gnocl.- lludontx
-'come. UndegrodUOio cndil lo ovalloblo. H ln...-d. CAI636-2079""'-3-5p.m. Mondo..
llvough Frldo.. ond . . '"' Mlcholo Ann .

-.e .
....... -..,..&amp;.-.. u-.o.
- _ _ ..... lloo
a.,...
..t.o/ B.
holdsSho
N.A
. . .- , ...., _
,_U
._
,._......_
- - - b e podosmodtn lho TEANcWewtth o
lor~--~-

·vPI subscribes

1o-•

scnonlng- ........
SHOES- Tit£ OI'Btil ~

GnM:Iuatlt facuky . . requested to nondnallt

cv.a 171 co.u1EII . _

.

m~­ 101 con... why wall? Col us 01 831-2213 ony cloy' It 4 p.m.. and Mondoy, Wodneoday end Tho.ncfoy
botwoOn 9 ond 4::!0 ond- wtl be gled
ownlngs. 6 until 9.
·

~--! S85(1ndudcslunchand-.

p .m . . 4 -..eb: lneroduc:llon to Peony. 7-10 p .m ..
6 - .: l'lcturo F.._ I« lho lleginnco-. 7-10
p .m.. S-._ T-..,'a.-16: J.woi,y. 1-4

Ca6&gt;g. 7-10 p.m .. 4 - " ". Dr-. Painting.

.

Glboon failed with a substitute motion
to the-Efron-France-Massey resolution.
The substitute resolution called for
UUP.c..,tral to': 1) use the full weight of
Its pollticel ·...- -ngth to . prevent further
SUNY-wide retrenchment; 2) compel adrrolnlstrators to demonslnlte conclu.stvely
that every decision Is consistent With the
union contract; 3) explore additional
ways of maximizing pressure at every
governmental level to protect, enhance
and Increase the SUNY budget so as to
render retrenchment questions moot; 4)

. Slate funds going to ~ coiNn -.d
how this" disparity serioUsly lhrAienl the
continued viability of SUNY Institutions."
_Arguing for his resolution, Gibson objocted to the tone of the other
-med to "take a shot at UUP." He eloo
complained that If creation of unllanft
gllidebries on retrenchment proced(as recommended In the Efron-FranceMassey resolution) had been In effect •
few years ago during one of U/B's fllcal
dilemmas. President Ketter would have
been forced to retrench facuky Instead of
juggling until retrenchments were no
kmger necessary.
Those denouncing the substitute
resolutlon-lricludlng UUP Buffalo
Chapter President BID Allen. who stepped.cfown from the chair to address the
gtoup-essenllaUy fek H was a diluted
arill somewhat diversionary - t
which didn't realistlcaUy acknowledge the
shortcomings of tlie present conlracl.

""*"

..explore new
both. identify and gain a sense of consenmethods oi--putdng maximum pressure
on SUNY administrators." Thae may In- - sus regarding long-range problems that
..
.,_ _serious attention" by UUP;
clude "picketing, use of adverse publicity,
~ In light of the coming "ffscal
legislative resolutions, lobbying and od
crunch. .
hoc alliances with labor and student
Despite some complaints that the

~- ~

Tho Cnh c..- " alfcrlno lho ,........,
-..,.boglnnlng.on- "-" ....... 0.-

lnbrned of the "ditpande proportion" of

AccOnltng to Glboon, the resoiUIIon,
conceived Independently from the re-

eCalenclar
OlEAJIVE C&amp;V1' CEJnEII

conduct MJ ......... - - . a t camJ&gt;IIIIn oo the gener8l pulllc an be betier

years and ways of dcellng with
them.
The COmm-. which Is~ to
submH a final report to the Delegate
Auembly by May, and an Interim report
by February, w!1 elclt opinions from UUP
locals In oeveral Stale regions through
hearings.

~

�October 4 . 1979

Senate votes
to accept
skills plan
Opts for starting
in Fall, 1980
Alter a lengthy but tame debate In
which senators questioned the need for
and rationale behind the College Skills
component of the Genensl Education
Program. the Facuhy Senate voted Tuesday to acupt it. and rejected an amend ment that could have moved the im·
plementatlon date from fall of 1980 to
1981.
Senator and Mathematics Professor
Nicholas Kazartnoff opened things by
saying that. judging from the math ap·
tijude- of his student5. he feels the math
requtr~meOt of the skills component ls
too ..optimistic'' in its goals. He noted that
a good number of students he's encounte.ed possess only high school math
abilities. Many can't even handle elementary amhmetic problems.
Such Inadequacies. Kazarinoff was informed . would show up in the skills
testing

during

freshman

orientation .

Once discovered . remedial courses could
be suggested to better prepare students to
pass the math requirement .
Later . Math Professor Lowell
Schoenfeld told fellow Senators he felt
that some aspects of the math component stressed ski !1ll&lt;&gt;l particularly lm·
portant to ''the practtc.6f needs of every-

day lif~ :· while more pragmatic skills.
such as statistical inference and inter·
pretation of graphs. were given short
shrih . In addition . Schoenfeld expressed
concern that the large classroom size of
the math courses being suggested lo fulfill
the skills requirement would make them
unmanageable. and that grad students
would end up teaching most of the re·
quired math and English courses.
Othe. · Senators countered thai the
skills component could be amended as
program flaws became apparent. and
should be viewed only as a starting point.
Shoenfeld then recommended that the
courses be reviewed for effectiveness and
quality of teaching by the Standing Col·
lege Skills Subcommittee. The recom·
mendation was unanimously accepted.
Vice President for· Student Affairs

Richard Siggelkow protested that the
skills component would· further ··dilute
the pool"' of minority students the University is trying to attract . He rose again later
to reiterate hts message . charging that the
component may: increase attrition. be
viewed as "punitive and Inhibiting" by
students. and scare off future enrollees.
What the component does. asserted
Sigge.lkow. Is aeate a ··marketing pro·
ble:m •· at a Ume of dropping enrollments
and fiscal concerns.
General Education Committee Chairman Peter Hare responde-d that the com·
ponent merely represents the ··fun ·
damental skills" a student should have to
graduate. no more or no less. The fact
that they don't seem to currently possess
them makes a better case for the necessl·
ty of the program . he said . Hare added
lhatlt would be "educationally ilresponsi·
ble". for the University to pe&gt;mlt students
to graduate wijhout such skills.
Others noted that the GE program
would not necessarily put U/ B at a
marketing disadvantage because other
major schools around the country are
also developing similar efforts. A GE
Co-ee member note-d that U/ B has
no dJficwky attracting large numbers of
freshman applicants. and should not be
overly concerned that enrollment w!U suffe. because of the okUis component.
Another suggeste-d the okdl• requirement
would help retention sin« It could better
prepare a student academically and
poychologicaRy for the · course work
ahead .
During the debate. some Senators ex·
pressed concern that there may not be
enough lime to effectively implement the
component by next fall . and that moving
b up one year would provide nee-de-d
leeway for scheduling. budgeting and
staffing difficultin to be worked out.
Senator Wolfgang Wolck commente-d
that some lludent• view the component
.. .., entrance requlrtment and that the
n~ra time could be used to clear up any
mloroouoepttous and enoure that the prt&gt;·
vr- Will be presented properly to future
~ts

Wlnnerlkucc DoH (lelll

Student
is 1st in
Dental Run

om~o. .

Honoo.

Three U/ B dental students out ran a
field of 80 entered In the Second Dental
Alumni Run Saturday morning at
Delaware Park. Bruce DolL a dental
junior. captured · the lop award by
finishing the 2 .5 mile oourse in 13: 12.
followed by last years winner Peter
Purcell. whose time was 13:30.
Dental student Jim Matthews was third
with a lime of 14:22 . Other winners were
Dr. Robert Herzog. who finished fourth in
the race and won the male 30-39
category: Dr. John Nystrom. a Houghton
dentist who topped the male 40-49

Aa --ol-bruah"llood

R.....,.:

category. and Dr. Alan Gross. who won
the male 50-and-over award .
Suzette Knerr. a dental assistant for Dr.
Sam Insalaco. was first over the finish line
In the female under-30 category; wijh
Mrs. Mary Herzog winning In the females
over-30 group.
Dr. Herzog"s office staff won the first
place team award. sporting T-shlrts which
read "I Do It AI Least 14 Tlmes A Week"
on the front . and feature-d a large
toothbrush on the back. Dr. Chester L.
Stelski"s team finishe-d second. and the
··perto Pocket Pickers" from Dr. James
McMullen"s office we.e third.

Sheffer pledges support for Dental upgrading
New York State Assemblyman John
B. Sheffer II. who has led the fight In
Albany to seek additional monies for the
U/B School of Dentistry. told dental
alumni Saturday he will continue his
" 100 pe&gt; cent effort" wijh the legislature
on behalf of the dental schooL
Speaking al the Dental Alumni
AiSOCiallon"s luncheon during the
Greater Niagara Frontier Dental Meeting.
Sheffer nole-d that the alsls which unfolde-d earlier this year when the ~merlcan
Dental Asloclatlon wijhheld fuU ac·
credltatlon never ihould have taken
. plaoe.
"U/ B administration for yeaJ$ had
been Indicating there 1o11ert money problems (regarding Dentistry). but H feU on
deaf ears." Sheffer said. adding that ""the
State has to 'be dubbed wijh a a1s1s: to
take action ."
Sheflfr termed the $100.000 recently
afloaoted via the State l..egtslature and
supported by hi....tl ancf othe area
leglslalors was a "show of good faijh . a
ftntllep" In a continuing fight for support
for tha school.

Sheffer said that as forme&gt; mayor and
trustee of the Village of WUilam•ville. he
had run for State office because he was
aware of the extent to which the State In·
terferes wijh business. private Industry
and local governments.
"Currently there"s a bill pending for
mandatory dental continuing education
which would require dentiSis to take cer·
taln numbers of hours of credit alter
gradullllon. And while I see the merlti of
ihe btll. my lack of enthustasm lor It Is
besed upon whether H will achieve the
objective of making dentllls keep current
In their field." he ..ld . He noted the biD
does not provide for follow-up In the den·
lists" clinical prlldlc:e to see If taking the
oourses ""paid-off" In terms of Improve-d
patient care.
!'reading Sheffer"s speech. Dr. Robert
B. McGandy. a p&lt;ofessor In community
medicine (nutr!tlon) at Tufts Unlvenlty.
observe-d that gauging the effect of diet
on medical problems is more complicated
than determining how other aspectS of
l~estyle affect such problems.

DespHe difficulties. he ..ld. "some In·
terestlng observations about cancer-diet
links have been advanced In · recent
years." For example. many form• of
cancer whloh are wtdeopread tn modem.
industrial nations are unknown among
pol»'lallons of dev~ nations. And.
studies show thai Seventh Dey Adventists who adhere to a llridly vegetarian
diet (no eggo. no dally prodlldi) have a
considerably lower risk of cancer of the
bowel. bladder and pancreao.
Since the Adventllls don"t smoke or
drink alcohol either, McGanlly continued. ·•we would expect to find and do
sec a low risk of cancer of the lung'·
among the&gt;n.
In theory. antioxklanu (Linus Pauling"s
beloved Vitamin C to one) ought to retard
formation of nllrosamlnes which ore cardnogens. And green. leafy vegolllbla
seem to play a pootedlve role liQIIInll certain kinds of cancer. according to recent
research.
More studies-of humans-are needed. though. McGandy said .

-

�October 4 . 1979

U/8 made thl

senior &amp;om Broo
IMtn Lt&lt;Dih'a. whom -he descri&gt;es as
"a good spor-.or who gav.. me conlldena!." Pape aolflled In ~u«nt
relations and the drllftlng ol legislation.
Ont&lt; biD he woolced on-to self-Insure
Erie County employl!es lor health care In

If U/8 .._.. going to run a of
testlmon... ads on behalf of recrullmenl.
Louis Papa from Broolclyn Is the kind of
guy the lrnagftnaken would want to
feature.
He grew up on the streetS of Bay Ridge
that John Travolta made famous in
''Saturday Night Fever."' the son of a New
York CHy police lieutenant and an
11kmentary schoolteacher. And U /B and
SUNY have made a difference for him.
WHhout SUNY . Papa will tell you. he
wouldn't have been able to go away to
school: wHhout U/B. he couldn't have
afforded a major. multi-faceted campus
away from home. 'The profs here are
sharp: they know the ropes." he says
from experience. ''And they've helped
me out.'"

Where else could a guy from Brooklyn
gel to take a summer in Spain. complete

an Internship In the County legislature.
or be appointed to a dtlzens panel which
helped pick the Democratic candidate for
Erie County Executive in the November

election?
A senior Spanish and political science
major. Papa (who has been working
since he was 12) has received a broad·
based education In and out of the
classroom . A graduate of an all-boys
military high school. he's beM a den
manager. an usher in a movie tb_""a.stre. a
worker In a-pollee station In a Brooklyn
ghetto. a press box statistician at U/ B
football games. an employee In the Law
Ubrary and In the Pharmacy Department
on campus. an RA In lnternationar Col·
lege . and a New York CHy cab
.driver-the youngest In all of NYC for
quite some time.

Taaldrher
He drove days during the summer of
1977. "What an action -packed summer. ..
he recalls. "'Son of Sam was terrorizing
N.Y. C .: we experienced a blackout on
July 13: the F.A.L.N. terrorists blew up
paris of the cHy and the summer closed
with the death of my hero. Elvis Presley ...
It was "'one helluva wild time."'
That following Christmas vacation. he
drov.. at night and "that proved to be just
short of suicidal ... Durtn9 the summer of
I 978. H was days again. but only for live
weeks. "I then went Into an early retirement ." Papa reports. "'You could say that
I accldentaOy fell Into the job and luckily
fell out of K. One mlUion passengers later
(Including Jill Clayburgh whom he didn't
recognize at first). I had learned a lot of
lessons which made me a lot wiser ...
Papa wenr to Brockport in I 976-77.
where he dabbled in judo and the political
science club. and became Involved In a
paralegal aid organization called Help S
which offered him experience in dealing
with student problems and cuttingthrough red tope.

0. tiM SW.I
That put him In good_steod for o twoyear appointment to the U/B StudentWide Judlclary (SWJ) In the loU of 1978.
No campus hock. he didn't know any of
the SA pollticolleaders otthe time: all he
knew was they were taking applications
for SWJ ond he wos interestt&lt;d. After In·
tt&lt;rVit&lt;ws with Ron Dollmon of Studeqj
Affairs. Karl Schwartz of SA and others.
he was Mlected. Anybody who'd been
uposed to Son of S.m . assorted ter·
rorlsts. ond a Brooklyn precinct station
would surely be op to deobng with the
foibles of the campus community.
The caiCS he's heard on SWJ aren't
much of a lei-down eHher: ranging from
incidents of vandalism. to obscene phone
calls. to dt&lt;cidlng wherher or not Michael
lAvlnson should be barred from Squire
for truhlng 3 .000 copies of his arch·
t&lt;nemy, The ,$pednlm. He should be.
SWJ decldt&lt;d last spring. Just last month.
Papa -on Ihe panel that found Lev In
conlam!JI of that order.

··~

"lis Sp.ln and the Internship wHh Erie
County l.eglslator Leonard R. Lenihan
that I'm proudest of." Papa says of his

U/8 ca&lt;eer

The two-month Spanish offnlng.
through the U/8/Buffalo Stole program
ot the Unl.-y of Salamanca afforded

him the chance to live with an "average"
Spanish famUy . and completely immerse
himself In the cuhure. Classes ot
SolarNinca were bolstered by the opportunHy to travel 10 famous museums and

historic cities ond to Franco's "Valley of
the Fallen." He found women In Spain
particularly behind U.S . women in the
move toward equality. despite post·
Franco ''liberalism ."
Now. hes applying both his Spanish
and what he learned abroad In his job as
on RA working with foreign visitors to
U/ B In Red Jacket Quad. Some might
su!l!lest that even Gen. Franco would be
Impressed with his tough -line approach
to communal Uving there. Ave o.m . lire
drills ond threats to close lounges that
aren't kept dean are commonplace.
WeU. he grins. living together requires
everyone's cooperatkin: an RA has to be
assertive . On the other side to the coin.
hes pushed to help his foreign floor get
acclimated to American customs and to
the Buffalo oreo .

At County HaD
Last spring with the "enthusiastic"' help
of Prof. Mark Huddleston of politldal
science. Papa wangled his Internship With
Erie County Legislator Lenihan
(Democrat. 13th District) . Later he was
recommended by his depari.....,..t for o
slot on Democrat Joseph F Crangle's
commission to help ldentKy ~~nd recruit o
County Executlv.U.ppeful.

the face of inllilllonary Blue Cross-Blue
Shield rata-could have saved laxpayers $2..2 million In the lint year alone.
he contends. It loot. though. simply
because of politics.
"It Is my firm belief thai the Erie County
legislature ellowt&lt;d the poiHics to gel out
of hand ...-he wrote In a term paper
describing the project . "'Enough is
enough. but they have exceeded their
Umll. The Immaturity of these legislators
reaDy shines through quHe obviously.
They ar~ supposed to be elected officials
representing the people of Erie County.
lnst~od. most . . . appear to be seHcente!ed. egotistical political hacks only
concerned with retaining their stay in of·
lice.. Most of these legislators are qu~e in·
telligent; if they applied themselves.
without worrying about 'polijlcs all the
time. the quality of life In this county
could be enhanced substantially."'
That experience put Papa's political
naivete to rest. although hes still convinced the game doesn't have to work
that way. shouldn't be that way. In his
view. office holders-with a few exceptions such os New York's Mayor Koch
whom Papa places next to Presley in his
Pantheon of heroes - are always pre&lt;M&gt;
cupled wHh such misplaced concerns.
With the peopie
Papa's experience with the_63-member
Pi'nel 1o pick a County Executive candidate (on which he wast he only student.
and on which Milton Plesur of History
also served) was an adventure in a grass·
roots approach to finding someone to
stand for election . Popo feels the individual the people picked. Frank
McGuire. Is o weU·quollfied . capable Individual. But he probably won't do well
because he "'isn't pol~icol enough ...
Papa . who may graduate at the end of
this semester. hopes to begin an MBA
program next September and then to go
lo Law School. (For next semester. hes
bringing his faiJ.safe job hunting Instincts
to bear on the possibility of an internship
ot the U.S . Embassy In Spain. or with
some other government agency.)
Eventually. he'd like to work with an
\ntemational business where ''I can put
my Spanish to use os weflos working with
both the busineos and legal aspects of a
specific company or the government. I'd
also like to pursue international trade .··
In any case It won't be back to
Brooklyn . U/ B has given Louts Papa "'a
way out."
1
' There
are so many opportuni1ies
here." he says with conviction . .. lfs a
shame many apathetic people don't take
advantage."

Mirand a~ks ·for nomina-tions
for graduate dean position
Dr. Edwin Mlrond, head of the U/B
RosweU Park Diviston, Is chairman of the
screening committee for candidates for
dean of graduatt&lt; and professional educa·
lion Mirond has Issued o caD for nominalion~ to the campus communlly ond set a
deadline of November 8 . 1979. for
"'
nses
~e M~rch will be Internal to the
SUNY academic system. Mlrand said.
and candklatu to be considered are u peeled to hold currentt«nured acodt&lt;mic .
rank . Qualified wom..n and minority candidotn are parllcularly sought.
The dt&lt;an of graduate and professional
educalio!l Is primarily responsible for
monHor!ng and promOting the quality of
post~baccalaureote education at the
University.
The dun coordinates the periodic
review of poot-baccala_,te d - programs and 1s responsible for tht&lt; revieW of
courst&lt; proposals; r.omlnotlons to tht&lt;
graduate faculty, proposals lor new
degrn programs, the development of
mubidisclpMnary programs, and tht&lt; post·
baccalaureate fellowship program. The
dt&lt;an chairs the UnlversKy Board of

Sponsored Faculty Actlvbies which advises the _academic community on
research policy and administration In the
lnstbutlon . In oddKion. the dean choirs
the Executive Committee of the
Graduate School ond · approves all
graduate degree programs.
The dean reports directly to the Office
of the President ond Is a member of the
Preskl~nt's Academic Cabinet and the
Deans Council.
Candidates for tht&lt; position are expeeled to possess tht&lt; scholarly credentials which would qualify them for a
tenured faculty appointment . A
demonstrated record of successful
acadt&lt;mic, or related admlnlslrotive experience would be highly desirable.
Mirand said
·
l'lornlnations and appllcotlons should
be oubmittt&lt;d to: Dr. Edwin Mirond, cholrmon, Screening Committee. Dean of
Graduate and Professional Education
(SUNY / Buffalo). RosweO Park Memorial
lnstKute, Research Studies Building.
Room 408. 666 Elm Street, Buffalo,
New York 14263.

Ketter talks
about numbers
.uun. ~ 16
The mecmng was c-aUed to order at 2AO p.m. to
•he lollowtng og&lt;nda.

~Co..

co""""

ltan •1 ~~ ol Ntauta
The miiautes of Sqsmnber 19. 1979 were approved with the followtng correcUon· The date of
the Minutes (Unapproved) distributed we-re
misdated Septembft 26. 1979 TM conectk&gt;n was

m...,.

Item •2 Otfken:' Report
A. Thr

Pra~ctert•

Presidrnt KetteT r~ thl' current enroAment
In compari!on to ttw budgl"t targe'ls. He present~
the FaD enroUment data for this ~ar . the estimated
annual enroUmems. and the ungeled annual
~nroflments . TN nrirMtes. based on the fl'X·
perie:oce from Fan to Spring In PMI years. indicate
that ~ wiD fall substbntiaOy below targets in e~R

n:~
i!~':~~h~
ha11e to be =~==
WOJked out In our budget hearing wtch

the 008 thts Fall
One factoJ hokllng down enroUment ls the limit of
3000 Sludents on the fuB·tlme /ir$t· lime Freshman
enrollment To date. thls figure has Included 168
~innln~nu:A students at Millard Allmore and

~~~~~eote::8~re~!~· ~~tKe~e!~!~~~:

ra~ for theM 168 ~udents to be t:"Xduded from

~eer:! ~~~u~e ft.~~ ~:e~-i~ hB~ff:CSoel:~

reduce ks transfer target approxhrwltely 100 and
odd this number to tts freshman class. Nonethetess.

=~:::eT~~~is~~~r~h'!: ~

!:a:::";::
::~rr: ~=·~ ;:..~;:.
1r!9 The
to the
VPHS and the VPAA are to report

Praidmt tomorrow wlth their recommendations of
how to respond to the enroltment sho.#ttfafl

8 . The Chair
Ttw Chair wek:~ Dr LH Dryden to tM Executiw Committee. Or. Dryden. m accordaflC"t&gt; with
Art VI . Para l.A (4) of the Charter. represmts
the senat0f'5 from ~oral units who have fewer
than thltfy YOlfng faculty members
1ne Chalr reportd on pogres.s in constituting
Senatl' Committees. and asked for further nomina ·
tlons Nomlnations ~-e-re APPROVED for the Ad·
missions Committee . the Acade:mk Freedom aod
ResponslbUtty Committee:. and the Teaching Que·
lity Comml""· further nomtnations need to be
made nut week.
The Chair a5o announcid that Atbett Er·
manovk:l. SUNY Senator aod Associate Director ol
Nonon Union . is serving .as liaison wtth tht- Profes·
sional Staff Senat~
Committee.

Executl11e

ltem •3 Commlttn.Report•

com~:=' ~~e~':et:h~~of ~~':J
evaluation quesrionnatre,. A drah is noc yet ready.
but should be ready early not WHk The commit·
tH hopes. to prnent it to the FSEC on October 3 .

1979.

A letteT from Ptofn&amp;er Ooyno Wbl reacl. in which
tw urgn. that the survey quesfionnaire have coded

numbers so ttwn the results are -attributabk.- tie
fears that the ruuhs wiD be dismissed If this &amp;y~~erh is
noc used.·l.e . w&lt;l w\11 be gtvtng the Evaluation Com ·
mittee a handle for re)ecclng faculty opinion. Tlw
CONSENSUS ol FSEC Is 1hal1hls c«lmg dev;co ~ •
neither necn.sary nor desiratMe-noc necessary
because the reception of faculty v4ews will depeond
more on lnfor~t laden than on technicalities or

!%1::f~ rn:'eq~:~t

r::S'v ~~=- ~ ~~

Senate ~ember J1. and p&amp;nty because such
coding would reduc~ the nurnbeT of rtttums and
complicate the tabulations
hem •4 Okl Bt~MMM
Unfvtnity Commmee to Study Operational Proceaes (ProfeKOr Frank Jen. Chait) : Ot Jen rt-· ·
turned to this meeting for dbcuWon re~o his

~=~~~~~~b,;=-edm~!~

Executtve Committee es soon es t}wy are com·
pi&lt;I.O. The FSEC is •PP'cclariw o1 ~&gt;eng kopc In·
formed of what the Committee is doing and feel
conRde:nt this Committee will Jl'f09fU' in a se~
Item '5 Nnt &amp;.~new
A . Propo.ek for ad hoc committees on Continu ·
tng Education and Affrrmatlve Ad1t.on

m:;reU.~rt,h!'fs'Et =~~ ~= ~

presented to 1M Senate on Odober 2.
·B. Proposal to invtte Professor ~tt&gt;r to FSEC
After 10me discussion It w•the consensus of the
Committee to have ProfdiOf Slater first repoff to
the Faculty Tenure aod Privllega Commidee
before being referred to the FSEC
The mftliog adjourned at 5:45 p m.

'Immigrant wo m e n'
Dr. Maxine S..Uer, a professor In the
Department of Social Foundations,
Educational . Studies, has o new book
which will be .published this winter by
Temple University Pr.,... Immigrant
Women In tht&lt; Unitt&lt;d Slatt&lt;S. She will attend the American Educabonal Studies
Association meetings In Cincinnati and
present a paper on "Education and Work
Among European Immigrant Women In
the United State•."
,o·r,

�a

October 4. 1979

,.,

Government stlfllnt1,
Boyer tells educators

.!~:

Hoq1 Libraries rank

Tlw-

T1w ~----"'...a. ollhc U/ 8 ._..._ dumg lho- &amp;.e _ . .. _,.
.......... wtlh 104- - o l l h c " - - o l - ._..._ IARU.
lisood botow- ...dbvARL"' llonnuol ,.......,. .. . - _
,

College adminlsiJaton who have the
.. will and imaginatiOn" to lead their In·
sthutions are finding themselves lncreas·
lngly stymied by the Intrusion ol government regulatory agencies. In fact. they
ore beginning to suffocate under .. super·
judgments" which undermine their
leadership potential.
Former U.S . Commissioner of Education Ernest Boyer mode this observation
Friday while speaking to area higher
educators about the challen!1"5 of the
next decade.
.
Boyer's presentation at the Amherst
Campus was the first In an e~ht- part
series being sponsored by U/ B's Depart·
ment ol Higher Education.
Currently president-elect of the
Carnegie Foundation . Boyer !"C"l'ed that
In his tenure as Education Commissioner
he was frequently made aware tlult those
who Influence higher education policy
know little about Its Internal wotklngs. In
tM!r eagerness to develop theH own
strategies for dealing with problems. he
said . these bureaucrats often neglect hard
evidence and ignore ..conllnuhy of

~

Volumes Added CGooos!
TOIO!Microlonns Holdln9s
c....-Perioditols
P&lt;oi.-..J Sulf CFm
Non-pol-.&amp; Sulf CFm
Too&gt;ISulfCFTEI

On the financial side. Boyer said . the

JOBS
FACULTY
Ae.oclatc or f•U Pro(naor-· Biologkal
Sdonca, F-9092.
Aul•tult Pro(niiOt· ·Biologbl Sciences,
F-9093.

Aealttaat Prof. .ot·· Biological Sciences.

F-9094.

II£SEAIIOi
R-9041 .

TT-

Teclooldu (SG-9)- Ph!lliology.

~- ~ ~ CElodronlcsl

...
s..
R·'lOCl

~ ~---.

I.M

I.M
(ful·limei--Mediclne, R-9043.
I.M
(port-tim&lt;j - Med;cino, R-9044.
Labrwatory Tech•kla•··Pharmeco&amp;ogy 8t

~. R -9045.

R-9046.

~~ CPR·21 -~.

CONPETn1vE C\111. SERIIIC£

T.... ~Penonnol. ~ l.ibnum
(Hcollh Scienca l.Jg,y), Unlvenlly ..........,
LML-Docu...,...
·
Flo Cloot. SG-J..p.........

s - SG-J...u.u...oy Hou&lt;ing, FNSM Dean's
s.. " - Cloot. SG-9-Compus loW.

Ollioo.

s.. s-SG+~-S..·

-INS~ Huloh Sorvlcc (2)
a...~ lAooona

NON-COMPETm\IE CIVIL SERIIIC£

w._. Une
No. 32090, 3210112
M - . """* SG-6(1)--220 w-.
Une No 32289, 31319
Gr--.

, _, _
UneNo 31319

~1 1--220

SG-11--220

~.

- - - NochoalcSG-11--2 2 0 - -.
UneNo 31376
-

34342

SG-6-John Bone Coni..-. Une No

41
53

22

35
50
21
42
34
57
39
47
59
35
32
32

68
18
30
27
48
31
33

~

Salorios &amp;

w., ~· ....

T-1 Opon-aling &amp;pondltures
fc.tm..l Expmdllures

40"
12'.
5"

T...C kems l..ooncd
Too.ol h..,. Bonowed
CuJTenl Periodical &amp;p.ndilura

• Total nu~ of ARL Lha.ries in 1973-74 was 82
·' 1973-74 f~rn ncM awai&amp;6ble. 1974-75 hgum; given

-

The table below iDuRtalnthe comparallwe Assodalion of Rne.-eh Llbra!Ws· ranking$ of tM three
SUNY ARL Untversily Lbaria in lhe folbNing calegorin for 1977-78

c... ,...,..

and humanistic lnterests.

tm-71

49
23

"'-'oos &amp; Binding E.pmdlsu•es

memory ...

The regulatory procedure is at ~ "a
crude proceso... .assessed the former
SUNY ChanceDor. Confused signals and
uncle-ar governance designs cau~ turmoil.
.
Another major chaUenge facing
educators. Boyer said . is the task ol .. in·
tegrallng humanisllc and educational
values" on their campuses. In his estima· _
tlon . little attention and creative thinking .
have been devoted to how to ..interlock ..
enrollment trends In certain fields whh the
..tradhlons of liberal education ...
The ·!toue Is not one of .. mothballing
facuby.. In arts and sciences. he Insisted.
but rather ol finding ways In which liberal
studies and humanistic tradhlons can serVice the occupational Interests ·of
students.
The task is difficuk. but not impossible
since students. In Boyer's opinion. have
not expressed an "arrogant or callous
disinterest in questions of social
purpose." Strong leadership is necessary
for a sucoessful integration of vocational

IWS-74"

Voluma In UJrery

challenge will be In coping with the ..dual
crunch" of energy and deferred
maintenance. Ukenlng the maintenance
situation of campus buildings to the coun·
try's neglected bridges and railroads.
Boyer suggested lhat if steps aren't taken
soon to restore aging facilhles. a future
"fiscal dilemma" may occui that will
devour dollars normally Spent on human
resources.

Techaoloe loaa ch•..... thlap
Tethnology and the communications
Industry have drastically akered the "con·
nectlon between the student and the
system ol education ... observed Boyer:
this presents yet another challenge.
No longer are teachers and books a
child's only window on the world.
Because of their exposure to ahernate In·
formation sources. children are more
Ukely not to view the teacher as a symbol
of authority and to chaDenge what they
are being taught.
What technology does. said Boyer. is
to deal whh realhy In a "superficial and
impressionistic way." but formal education provides the nuances. debate. and
discourse which lead to Insights and Inter·
pretatlons. The most d!lficuk challenge in
coming years wiR not be dealing with
declining enrollment. offered Boyer. but
whh battling the notion that colleges are
mere "academic supermarkets" devoid of
brood social purposes.
Boyer recalled that educatlonallnsthu·
lions used to share a sense of national
mission with the country- most recendy
through involvement in the civil rights
movement. Today. he's .. not sure··
whether he sees that partnership. Colleges and universities 'a re currendy
viewed as ·possesstng ..no transcendental
purposes." possibly because the country
~seH Is ~rift and not sure whether II has
any.

•......... br.le.._
· &amp;oyer .believes there are national

issues

on Whlc:h i:olleges and universities can
hov'! Impact. 'fl1e chaUenge is to Jdentlfy
them : otherwise higher education will
" drift lnto.a i:ul de sac of IITelevance."
During his three years In Washington.
Boyer waS ''struck.. that no one ever sug·
gested discussing matters of social or
managerial significance whh an academic
authorhy.
·
The question academics must consider
seriously. he offered . is If they are being
"consumed with serving Individual
students.. at the risk ol becoming an in·
creastngly ..irrelevant part of the broader
social enterprise."
In a question and answer period.
Boyer urged State and -private educational institutions " not to take satisfacUon
In gouging one another so that one gains

at the e•pense of ohe other." He conceded that funding problems In the future will
likely lntenstfy the oompetnlon . but In·
sisted .. no one wins In warfare between

sectors."

C.oegorin

Albony

Voluma in L.hary
Volumes Added !Grossi
TOlal Miaolonns Holdings
Cummt Perlodk:ak

94

Prolosslonol Soofl IFTEI
Non·pro/oulonai.Soofl IFTEI
- T01a1 Soofl IFTEJ

72
72
85
80
89

76
21
72

Matm.ls E.xpcndJI:urn
Materials &amp; Bindings Expendku...
Solaria &amp; Wogos ~lures
Total Ope-ating Expendil:ura
T otalltems Loaned
Total hems llonow&lt;d
Current Periodical Expenditures

_

74
83
52
3
51

s.-,B&lt;ook

. 41
53

89
72

. 35

27
83
81
57
79
66
67
65
70
57
57
74

50
21 .
42
34

..

59
57

39
47
35
32
32

_,_....__

SUNV Binghamton Libror]l ff

no1 on

ARL Librory

Health option period
The Personnel Department has announced that N.Y. State has once again
designated October as the health Insurance option transfer period. During this
month. SUNYAB employees may change their health plan or option to any
other available plan or option (Statewide, GHI or Health Care Plan · HMO) .
The decision to remain whh the present heakh option. or to transfer to
another, Is entirely up to the employee. Those satisfied with present coverage
need take no action. Those wishing to change must submit an application
(PS-404) to the Personnel Department not later than October 31. 1979.
Mr. Joseph E. Lippert, emfloyee benefits manager. stated that this year.
because of major revamping o the Statewide Heahh Plan Option . the transfer
period takes on added signKicance. To assist employees In making a decision.
he has arranged for representatives of aU three plans to be available on campus
as foUows:
Main Street Campus: 232 Squire:
Tuesday and Thursday mornings. from 8 to noon. on 10/ 9. 10/ 11. 10/ 16.

10/ 18, 10/ 23. 10/ 25 and 10/ 30/79

Amherst Campus: 201 Norton :
Wednesdayand.Friday morn ings. from 8 to noon, on 10/ 10, 10/ 12. 10/ 17.

10/ 19. 10/24. 10/ 26. and 10/ 31/79

Faculty Club tour
On October 13, the Faculty Club will present: AS.. T - of tile City of
Booffalo featuring many historical and archhecturallandmarks and points olin·
terest, Including: St. Paul's Cathedral, St. Louis Church, a mini waldng-tour ol
downtown the Old West Side. Allentown. the new Erie Basin Marina , the
Delaware
mansions. Forest Lawn Cemetery and the U/ S..owned Frank
Lloyd Wright house.
.
8.-s 1eaw the vlshors parking lot on .the Main Stieet · Campus (behind
. _ · ..
Diefendorf HoU) at 2 P.M. and return at5 P .M.
A Rout Beef Buffet Dinner will follow at the Haymes Dining Room In Squire
HaU.
, ·
·.
·
Price: $12 per person .
A cash bar wiD be set up In the Haymes Room for your comfort.
Reservations required . Checks should be payable to: The Pacuky Oub and
sent with the registration form to 265 Harriman. 3435 Main Sir~. Buffalo NY
14214 not later than October 9. 1979. Umit 50. For furt~er information call
Marie Bennett at 831 -3232.
·

Ave.

-ro;n;~;;;;;,;;~-ci.:b·:suriYAii····--··-···-·oEA'Dl.iti£ocro8ER9: ·i979
265 HarrliiUIO tt.ll
Bulloolo NV 14214
PLEASE RESERVE:

_ _ _ __ _Places for me@ $12.00 per person.

Check for total amoun,t__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,.enclosed .
NAME _______________________________________
ADDRESS ____________________________________
PHONE ______________________________

~-------

�D

Blo~oglcal
The o..-m-t of Bialogfal Sc:ien&lt;es
' - inlnlduced • ..-.s u.............
~ which Nvlva the lela of a
lilngla, clepar;menaol ....... for lludents
punulng a bechelor's clegNe.
At the IPCiuMa level and In the realm
of -.:!\. diotlnc:tions bet-" Cell end
Molecular, and Environmental and
Organismalstudles mnaln, but the once·
spill clepertment Is now functioning as a
single unit, spokespersons Charles E. Jef.
frey end EDen Pine emphaslzied to ·the
- Repo~Wr this week.
Dr. Jeffrey Is uecutive officer of the
departrnent (which Is chaired by Dr. Om
P . Bahl); Dr. Pine serves as director of
laboratories and technical personnel.
Biological Sdences has 26 lull-time
faculty this semes1er, Including three promising young membets recently arrived;
four vacancies aopped·up too late to be
filled for laU. Several part·tlme appointees are helping shoulder the resul·
tant over-flow teaching load.
While a funded research program con·
nnues to develop (H reached the S I
miUion level last year) , Jeffrey noted that
a department ~wkle effort to revise and

res1ructure teaching has been underway
also for several years. As testimony to
that interest . in the past three years. two
facuhy. Dr. James LaFountain and Dr.
Clyde Herreid. have gained recognition
for teaching distinction. LaFountain won
a Chancellor's Award lor Teaching Ex·
cellence and Herreid was singl
ut by
the Student AssoCiation.
Approximately 750 U/ B undergrad·
uates are declared or undeclared biology
majors. Jeffrey reported . That's down
slightly from an averaae of 800 when the
department was located at Main Street.
probably . he speculated . beca use
chemistry-a handmaiden discipline for
those interested in biology- remains at
Acheson.
A 1$-hour con!
These majors will now take a single
core program In their freshman and

sophomore years (a minimum of 13 re·
quired hours) to equip them wHh a "solid .
common background" on which to build
individual special interests.
Three courses and any two of three

labs affiliated with them make· up the new
core . 1be three comprise a non-overlapping look at basic biology.

.,_

· Entoirlng freshmen are advised to begin
the core In the spring of their first year
wHh a newly redesigned course in
"Evolutionary Biology." emphasizing the
evolution of species across the ages. The
traditional approach to organismal
biology was according to classilications of
species. Prof. Herreid will be the lnstruc·
tor for this "BIO 200.''
In the sophomore year. biology majors
enroO in "CeO Biology" (BCM 20 I) . be·
lng taught in tandem by Profs. Lafoun·
taln and Steven Free, a departmental
newcomer. Some 250 sludents are tak·
ing the course this semester. Dr. Free Is
also assoCiated with Dr. T.V. Wang on a
completely - reworked "Molecular
Biology" (BCM 202). to be taught this
spring. In this new offering. the focus wiD
be on genetics. In future years. other
faculty wil be involved In these core of.
lertngs.
Ani semester biology freshmen or·
dinarily take no departmental courses.
but are encouraged to solidify their foun·
dations for work In the major field by slu·
dying Inorganic chemistry. physics. and
mathematics.
Changes in the undergraduate program were discussed with many sludents
. before imJ*mentation, Jeffrey said.
Response was good , with most
undergJads viewing the new core as
" simplifying" sludent decision -making at
the entry level.

c - lor otloen

The program just described Is for ma·
)on only. It has nothing to do with
lludents who need a biology course to
satisfy the reqUirements of another
departmental major. or with those who

October 4 . 1979

Sciences has a new look
~ *"PPil ... to elect • biology alfer·
lng to enrich their ovenoll UnlwR!ty expelence.

For the former F&gt;UJ&gt;, "Bask: Biology"

(810 1-19-120), ... "MrVIce - · f o r
non·.ma)on which llllrKb betwtjtn 550

and 600 stuidents each ...-er.
Those whoM Interests - Ieos focused
may select from among "Penpoctiva on
Biology," tailored for hurNirlltlel and
soctal odenCles ma)on; 810 loB, a nutrition coune (required for pre-nUlling
students); 'and BCM101 . "Licll and Jlidt
Drugs," which explores the effects of
drugs on human physiology.
The coming of general education wiD in
aU likebhood lead to new approaches lo
courses for non·ma)on. The prospectus
approved la5l spring requires two biology
courses lor aU. Dr. Pine welcomes this.
noting that .. no one shoukl leave a

University these days without being ex·
posed to biology."
For the major, the B.S . in biology is
neither a terminal nor a VOCllltional
degree; yet. Jeffrey pointed out. there

""..._..._

.......

In 1111 another MW thrult, Biological
SciencAII Is -.npt1ng to secure funding
for poojecllln blolotw ...-..
~
One poopoMI now before the NetiOnal
Science Foundation would undawrlte a
IUfllmer prt911111 to update high ochool
biology teacher$. This would both enrich
the schools In turningfaculties and out studerrts better equipped to handle
unlvenlty sclenc:e work.
A separate pooposal to NSF would provtde funds to bring 30-40 high school
biology students to the campus for sum·
mer work.

Biological Sciences currently participates In a BOCES seminar project
aimed at Improving science Instruction. It
has no formal "biology education" program. though , believing with the rest of
the University that a regular major, backed up with appropiate certification
courses. is the best route to teaching ef.
lectiveness.

New . . . . . In Coolce-Hochstcller,
while by no ......,.· utopian, '-• added
to the momentum In BlologiceJ Sciences.
Jeffrey and P1ne ..,.,. The mllion
dollars WOIIh of new capital equlpmerlt
for teaching and reMarch which came
with the buildings Is ari Indisputable plus
lor growth and for attracting new staff.
Outllders are also impressed wHh the
"nice enVIronment." Pine said of the
towers.
A major strength of the department
nowadays, Jeffrey pinpointed, Is Its
"balance." There's balance between good ~
teaching J)rograms and strong. weifunded research efforts. There's balance
between senior lacuhy and junior
rnembets wHh great potential. Almost al
recent incoming junior facuhy have
become funded wHhln a year of being
here. Pine noted. "That's our real·
growth ." she added.
And. put In Jeffrey. "we have the opportunHy to hire four more new people In
1980 to keep the program developing."

are growing numbers of job arenas for

which a biology major is very acceptable
preparation -governmental health
agencoes and an expanding number of
labonuory sltuaUons. to mention but two.
Roughly 45-50 per cent of aU U/ B
biology undergrads go on to graduate
and professk&gt;nllll schools.
Here. there ar.e 60 graduate students at
any one time. split between the Master's
and Ph .D. le vels.
Research and aemlnars

Re searc h activities in Biological
Sciences e mbrace both the applied and
the bask. and are augmented by a major
seminar series for scholars and invest tgators.
Between 16 and 18 facuh y members
are working on sponsored research projects. While most of them deal wHh some·
what esoteric basic science topics. these
projects have one very concrete effect in
common: They generate funding for a
total of 31 FTE personnel lines (including
19 graduate students) .
On the applied side . Dr. Bahl's major
work on hormones has resulted In l!l patent lor what Jeffrey described as the
most efficient and sensitive pregnancy
tes1 yet to be marketed. one which offers
"a real benefit to humanity." And Dr.
Morton Rothstein has significant funding
for studies of the biology of aging. an in·
creasingly Important and popular con·
cern as people live longer.
Dr. Pine Is espectally supportive of the
often misunderstood ..pwe research.··
"You can't have applications wHhout
basic research." she pointed out. "One is
buih on the other.''
Pine regards the Department 's
Distinguished Visiting Speakers series as
a primary source of intellectual enrich·
ment both for U/ B biologists and for the
Buffalo research community at large, Including scientists from RosweO Pail&lt;. Of.
ficially known as "The Division of CeO
and Molecular Biology/and Chemistry of
Biological Systems Si!minar Series." the
program Is funded in conCert with U/B
Einstein Professor Jui Wang (himseH an
adjunct professor of biology) . Nobel
Laureates and others whose work is at
the frontiers of scientific knowledge are
frequently featured.
Last year. lor example . Nobel
Laureate H . G. Khorana. known for his
suocess in synthesipng a gene . reported
on his more recent work on biological
membranes. Dr. Charles Yanofsky. aNational Academy of Sciences member
from Stanford, opened the series this
year wHh a lecture on his lnvesligatlons of
controlling the synthesis of an amino
acid. Another Nobel Laureate, Frederick
Sanger (from Cambridge. England), best
known for determining the amino acid se·
quence of insulin, will report in
November -on eunmt reseaTCh on
protein-coding In a bacterial virus.
Other visitors have been and wiU be
from among the ranks of the similarly·
prestigious.
Non -Prolit Org,
U.S Postage
PAID
Buffalo. NY
Permit No 311

Uotll--.. -

Bulls late again

~hn Z. • • bored om,. Three
ucl ~
U/B Bulla _.e dowa-8ppllf1!nl]y
hopeleuly-by a 28-10 aeon. The
. . let,~ crowd duD. He got
up ..... left Rotary Field, thlnldng no
more abooot It llril Sundav nJsht when
he ~ ~ Sunday papen. It's got to
be • mloprtoot, he thought to hlmaelf as
he read the Ina! oc:ore: U/8 29,
WII!IDftburg Zl.
It
though.
Bv leaving two minute Into the
lourth quwter, he had miMed all the
. . _ of another of the Buffo hean·

querten had COIIM ..... -

·-·t.

otopplng come-from-behind victoria.
It was that late In the bdore
quanerback Jim RoclrigoMz uc1 com·
panv decided to get It on tb!t w•v thev
can. Juot as thev had doae ._week at
Brockpon, thev opened up with a
furlouo ~ attack which put big
polnto on the board. Onlv th• week
lime didn't run out. For h .. belated ellorto, Rodrttluu was named Olvllion
Ill ECAC OIJenoiw Plalll'f of~ Week.
Coach Bll Dando liked the win, but
not the way It came. "I wllh they'd cut
It out," he lusaed. Winning early would
be better.

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                    <text>General__Ed panel ~ants University to
set writing, math prd.flciency standards
...................... .
SEPT. 27, 1979
VOL. 11 e NO.4

STATE UNl VERSITY
AT BUFFALO

Enrollment will drop by 15%
Recruitment
changes ·needed,
Jen suggests

·

•

·

Dr. Frank Jen has some sobering
thoughts for the U/B community:
I. Demographical trends indic~te that
in about five years, a drop of between IS
and 25 per cent will occur in the numbers
of young people of usual college age. A
stable population (or perhaps ~ slight increase) can be exped
ong those of
graduate school ~ge .
2. If U/B simply maintains its present
share of the supply of students, then, we
can exped a corresponding 15-20 per
cent drop In undergraduate enroUment in .

about five years. (TMt d&gt;op m~y be even
greater, Jen suggests, since other schools
~re ~essively revising their progr~ms
(in terms of both content and imoge) to
attr~ students, and we are not. I
Jen notes that U.S . graduate schools
as a whole f~iled to boost their student
totals during the 1970s, even though the
grad~te cohorts were then increasing.
the best we can expect at the graduate
le..el, • ""'1J0-111allgU -..rt.113bal.OU&lt;
numbers will remain stable or drop ~hi·
ly in the coming ftye years.
1be - n clearly ~ to a suggestion tt..l - have to "become more aggressive in reaulllng as weD as more aggraolve in developing new programs."
Jen noles.
lbere's a companion need to sensitize
the University community to the impor·
tance of betng adaptive.
1be alternative, quKe simply, Is a c
troubling retJenc:hment.

c - ............ llalf·baked . . . .

These slatements, from a report aired
last Wednesday at the Faculty Senate Executive Committee and scheduled for
early presentation to the Professional

t,ftr.-: a _ . . , . _
Staff Sen~te and various academic
deans, represent the "current thinking" of
some members

of

Jen's Committee on

Operational Processes. Half-baked ideas

Jen called them in a letter to the S~c­
trum.
Whatever you want to caD them, they
are not to be construed as any sort of in·
terim conclusions on the part of the entire
panel, he cautioned. The committee,
now functioning through a series of task
forces (see 50P"rale story), will spend the
rest of the fall r;crutinizing student recruit·
ment and hopes to come up with an in·
terim report by January 1980.

The Committee on Operational Processes was convened by the President in
1978 -to look at several facets of the
Unlversity. Purchasing was first ; recom·
mendatlons on streamHntng procedures
in that area were Issued last January.
In March, the ~nel received a wide·
ranging, six-part charge from President
Ketter to look at enrollment and admissions systems.
Committee Chair Jen, who is M &amp; T
Professor of Banking In the School of
Managemenfs Department of Operational Analysis, said that, wKh the ap·
proval of Ketter, that charge has been

broken in two. Student recruitment and
admlsslons are receiving top priority; the
registration and enrollment system will be
examined urly next year.
Two dl8tlDc:t .-~

Recruitment/admissions is, in tum, being looked at in two parts: the adual
recruitment process and the edu~tional
process (Including both academic and
socialization programs) on which it "is
based.
Jen's report on the"current thinking" of
the ~nel touches upon both areas.

·----.·-a.

eeL I

Peradotto seeks accord with the VP's
By ~ Boochnoonold
R-Sioll

Now !hat President Ketter has con·
firmed " the University-wide status of the
dean ol undergraduate education, DUE
Dean John Peradolto would like to meet
with Vioo Presidents Bunn and Pannill to
diocuso the "working relationship" be·
tween hll office and theirs.
What Peradolto wants, is a more "per·
sonal, Informal understanding" to
facilitate the trio's working cooperatively
in coming ventures such as general
education Implementation.
Conceding that it may be his " naivete"
as an administrator, Peradotto says that,
unUke others, he does not put a high
premium on ''elegant

ll'Kidels

&amp;nd struc·

tures of reporting." Models alone, he in·
will not make a university function
weU. Instead, he believes what is really
needed is the proper attKude.
"Where good wiD is Involved , institu·
tions are1uccesslul because of personal
efforts and cooperation ," Peradotto
stressed.
After the President's announcement
last month that the DUE Dean would be
reporting dir&lt;tdly to him Instead of to the
Vice President for Academic Affairs.
Peradotto said VPAA Bunn "graciously"
asked him to continue attending the
Council of Deans meetings He has n ever

sists.

-

been asked to attend meetings of the
Counctfs Health Sdences counterpart ,
but would gl4dly do so if VPHS Pannill
thought his input could be beneficial .
(See related story in this Issue) .

A 'policy' panel
As for the "advisory council" which
Ketter announced would assist the DUE

Dean in

~rglng

-

his duties, Peradotto
not~sthat Its aeation is facilitated by DUE
bylaws which already pr&lt;Wide for such a
body.
Preferring to call it a "policy committee," Peradotto toki the Reporter that
although he remains open for sugges·
tions, the committee will most probably
be composed of: one representative from

hractottO
~ch

bculty and school to be selected by
them: five at-large members to be
designated by the Facuky Senate Executive Committee with " due regard"
undergraduate

enrollment .

three

students selected by the Student Assocla·
lion, one of whom is studying In a profes·
sional area: and finally , one member of
. . . . , ............... 5 . eel. 1

�--·-

J

I

•ReC:ndbaeat

..__L...._It
_,to uciai• .._.:A.... McwU/8 '*'""'--· ......... h..iaun.l. cllloo\ on lltll .......... ' - · aaCIIINftllv hlndW
llww
....., 601 belnil puiiU8CI by . .

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

II

~

~­

otudenlo. Eaoh ol the . . . . . . , . _ .
........ paky ............. b y - . 1 0
. . ~o1~,1Doome

................... _ * - l d
be IOiwed by • jOint Fetulty
~ penel Hll group's ...,art wll
go no fa1lw 11*1 to ldenllly - . op~ open to the I.Jniwntty.

II

In

lRjll,

far tJne ......... ..... Gf

oortaf~~.._.,....

dldelel """ .. egmcy ol the lJrWeolty.
AI the greduete and profelllonallevel,
the clepertments themoclves oet policy
and do the lnlenlctlng wtth prospective
lludents.
Among undagl..tuata, freohmen and
upporduomen ... handled ciMf.......tly.
At the frahman lewl, the Prniden(s Of.
flc:e, 1n concert with a Faculty Senate
committee ex committees, establishes
poky. Admisolons and Records staff

s.--

Finely, Jen pointed out, some~­
menlo -.....! In new programs ""'''
not know how to go about dellgning
them. In this rapect, an Academic Program Center In the Office ol the Vice
President for Academic Affairs could be
helpful.
.

'Eat It'

At the ~-be gaY, the Faculty
Senate Executive CooNnlltee, Jen was
asked
what you do when a ~I
Identify cendldates and serve as
does everything "right" In terms ollmage
with some departments also
and new prograrm and still can't get
gelling Into the act. T ransfa5 come In In
students.
much the same manner, but when k
His somewhat flippant nesponse to that
COIMI to recruiting U/B upperdassmen .
was "you have to eal It," just as indljllry
for - . ~nlal majon, it's not
does
stuck with a product that
quite clear who does what. Very few won't when
seU.
departments to have active proThat
was
reported
as "you abotish it.~
grams aimed at attracting freshmen and
Jen wants to clarify that. There are at
sophomores alteady on campus.
least a couple of alternatives short of a
Some manbers ol the study panel cur·
total wipe-out : II a unit Is ol such vaJ.ue to
rently thlnlc there ought to be a cyx&gt;r·
the University that Its loss would adverse·
dlnaled U~wlcfe requltirig' policy:
ly altu the -essen Hal· shape of things, you
geared precisely to meeting enfOIImenl
can cut tt back to a mMe realistic siEe, or
targets.
make a decision to support H as Is by us·
ing funds · that could otberwise go to
growth
areas.
The reaulllng proce. has flaws. There
Trouble Is, Jen smiles, "you can't have
to be cltlliculties with "Image" proa large group of departments like that."
jection-with recrukment lkerature, In
particular; wtth ways ol identifying potenttal students; with follow-up procedures
among those who express Interest; with
the whole question ol flnancial aid
packages. The amount ol aid should be
Increased, some members ol the commUtee feel , and that which Is available
The SUNY Faculty Senate's Ad Hoc
should be better explained to students.
Committee to Review Retrenchment
New organizational structures may be
Policies and Procedures wiD be on camneeded, Dr. Jen anll -..1 members o( pus Monday Ifill Tuesday morning of
•his group suggest. TheM include: 1. A
nexi · W.ek~. Oct . f ·anii Z, "to meet .IA(i!h
Recruiting Center to consult with departfaculty an&lt;! staff .
ments on their Individual &lt;eaUitmeot
· Room 10 Capen has been rnaved.
needs and, potllbly, to serve as a
The panel ts visiting a cross-section of
monttorlng agent for the total University
SUNY campuses to meet with Interested
recruitment campaign ; and 2 . A
faculty and staff who want to share their
Recruiting Board to oversee and coorviews on how the local units' policies and
~ all rules and processes affecting
procedures for penonnel and programrecruitment. This board would also work
matte retrenchment were developed , "In·
on problems on a continuing basts, and
solar as faculty participation/consultation
might eventualy extend its purview to intook place."
clucle registralton .
The group is not conducting any kind
Jen feels k would be premature to say
ol investigation, a statement H issued to
dtlflnlloly where the primary recruUing job
the Reporter stressed. It Is, rather, "at·
Is lkely to fall In the futun! . One ol his
tempting to ascertain 'where, when, and
task fon:a Is now studying that. A &amp; R
how' the faculty-staff were consuhed and
will undoubtedly continue to play a major
partidpated In the discussion and struc·
role, he speculates-In terms of conlac·
turing of local policies designed to tmple·
ling proopects. Yet, H is the departments
ment any necessary retrenchment of tines
1
themselves who wiU have to design the
or programs."
kinds ol poograms that wiU attract
In Its stalrnent, the committee said H
students-using A &amp; R as a ~ marketing
"recognizes the-provisions of the bargainagency."
ing contract, and the role the UUP is to
perform In matters ol retrenchment."
s-JIIIe .... poor'......
Because
olthls, the statement went on, .
The social side ol U/B currently suffa5 "our fact-finding role will scrupulously
from an apeclally poor "Image," some of
avoid
examining
any individual case or
the rneJnbeB ol the Jen panel feel . Too
cases .... Essentially ... our function wiD be
. many ~~ organizations proto gather ~formation regarding faculty In·
mole too many non-ln~tad activities.
In shaping policies and proVarious student governments are respon- YOivement"
not covered by the contract, or
sllle only to themselves, and housing and cedures
by State laws or Tnislees polides.
food JIIOIPII'IS also to opaate "outA report of the panefs· lindlngs will be
side" any cohesive system. Busing and
submitted to the SUNY Senate's Exlac:k ol fadlllos pose more problems. ' ecutive
Committee.
Perhapo, Jen throws out foe considera·
Members ol the ad hoc group al'&lt;!:
lion, a new Student LJfe Board equid
Donald McWherter, Brockport, chair, the
coordinate theM activities, help secure secretary ol the SUNY Senate and a
ne.ded fKilltia, and take steps to create
member of Its executive committee; Nan·
a betler WilY ol llfe for students.
cy Aoster, Canton, former president of
A student union for Amhenlls a must ,
the SUNY Senate; Eugene Flood,
he feels. And we can't afford to Willi until
Binghamton, a SUNY Senator; and
Altany daslgns and builds one. Exlsling
Wtlliam Rogers , Cortland, a SUNY
speoe, such as oil ol Tallert Hall, coula . Senatoe, a member ol the Senate's exbe Ml9&gt;ed to that function "next year,
ea~ttw committee and former chairman
not ~yean later," even at the ex·
allis _....,ce comm-.
ol academic needs, he emThe panel II khedullng appointments
~.
every Mil hour beginning a1 9:30 a. m .
~
Monday, .nd continuing until noon; from
In ol acadaUc "Image,. Jen
5 p .m ., and from 7:30p.m .
ella a lac:k ol the neoo.ory "programs"
(not_._, to aiCracl bach a lalger share
T....Uy morning, appointments wW
ol ll8dlllocMI cohorta and new dientelo.
be scheduled every hal( hour between 9
......... II lrnpartant, but that "Image"
a .m . .nd noon.
hMID be b...! on something -*i.
Up to live people may sign up ior a
New ~...,...,_,.,.., IMjon and new Mil-hour llppOkllmanl If • !POUP would
OOIIIInUinll oducllllon _...... _... like to . . - with the commttaee.
aolecl for. A cantnl 09f\lllltlonal focus
For fl.v1Mr Information, contact AI &amp; -

.....-.s.

-ar

n-

SUNY Senate
panel here ·

........

1D

t..-...

dewlopment ol such elf~

!!f f:!;j.·

"""""""'· 636-2800.

(!

· ~27,1979

i

Jen has six
task forces .working
Six latk

b... haw been formed &amp;om

the membenhlp o1 the ()perallonal Pro.,._. CoonmmM and from the campus
community at luge to study various

facets o1 the recruitment process.
The sbt, their clwges and their
rneJnbeB are:
......;:--1. A task force to examine the oelfstudy on recruiting policy being con·
duc:ted by the Office rJ the President. The
self-study deals with how recruiting
policlesandtargetsatvariouslewlsolthe
University are currently formulated and
how they are to be formulated In the
future, from the Office ol the Presidenrs
point ol view. Based on the sell-study,
the task force wlll recommend to the fuU
committee where possible on how the
problem of recruiting policy Is to be
handled.
·
Members: F. Jen (chair) , G . Hochlield.
2. A second task force Is deating with a
seW-study on Admission and Records
conducted by A &amp; R and MFC. This sellstudy deals with how recruiting pollcy,
once set, Is executed and how the execution Is to be done In the future . It also
looks at how A &amp; R and MFC should
work with departments on both
undergraduate and graduate-professional
recruiting In the future , and how A &amp; R
and MFC should work with student·
support areas on student reaultlng.
Based on the sell-study, the task force
will suggest to the Committee where
possible, how the various probkms In ex·
ecuttng reaulting are to be handled In the
future.
Members: C . Flk:ldnger (chair), B.
Gebhart (co-chair), B. Ratchford, E.
Streiff, R. Dremuk, J . DeSantis.
3. Task Force on Academic Depart·
ments, Programs (Including EOP), and
Ubrartes. This group Is charged 14i!th
determining the current role 01 various
academic departments (Including offices
of the deans and the vice presidents In
acadamic areas) . programs, and libnrieo
In student reautttng. This Includes the
forrnullttion and execution of the
recruiting pollcy at graduate, professional
and undergraduate levels, and also what
the future roles of these units should be In
various recutting tasks. The task force Is
concentrating on evervthtng associated
with student reaultlng for these units (In·
eluding organizational problems) , except
identification and development of new
programs_and new approaches.
Members: G . Hochfleld (chair) ; M.A .
Piech, R. Stem, R. Oremuk, S . Cicarelli
(co-chair) , J . Naylor.
4 . Task Force on New Academic Pro-

!P"'' lllld ApproedMa. The dlorge here
Is to identfy ~ new JIIOIPII'IS and
new approer:ha ID be ofNred either ling·
I); or jointly by - . unlllln the Unlverslty for bolh lrlldJtional and nonlrlldltlonal studenls. The ... fon:e Is also
dealing with the problem ol designing an
organ!mtlonal c:onfl!lwation wlihtn the

University to Insure tfiat the process olinnovation Is conttnuools.
Members: L. Katz (chair), C . Welch
(co-chair), D. Andcnon, R. Stem,
Greiner, A . Cryns, J . Mayenohn, E.
Smithson.
5 . Task Force on Student Support Ser·
vices. Thn charge Is to find out: (1) how
such various areas as housing, financial

w.

YOUR INPUT WELCOME
0... Frank Jen. he8d ol the Unlvenlty
Comm- on Op.ratloael ~.
Invite. memben Gf the campus community to forward Ia ....... any comments, crttldl....,, or
about
student~

-z:•ldrw•

to
c:belr penon
or any Individual member Gf the task
Ioree _,.t llkelv to be coaeemed. H
you aren't oure wbic:h tMk forc:e lo most
appropriete, forward your .........
obeervationa to 0... Jen at 335 Crosby
HaD, Main Street.
'

aid , placement service, student activities, ·
etc., currently support the recruiting ef.
fort of the University for both commuters
and out-of-town students (both married
and unmairled) ; (2) what ihetr roles
should be, and (3) how their efforts
should be coordinated.
Members: M. Mann (chair) , R. Siggelkow (co-chair), R. Wagner, J . Plnn,
A. Price, E. Streiff.
6. Task Force on Student Opinions .
This group Is charged witb finding out
how current students on campus feel
about various services, whetherl!Cidemic
or otherwise. The task force Is identifying
the strength of these feetings- and wiU
recommend to the Committee and other
task forces concerning the priority rankIng of various problems and their possible
solutions.

Members: J . Plnn (chair), A . Kuntz, B.
Ratchford , L. Richardson.
Because a separate University Com·
rnittee on Alfinnallve Action exists, the
Committee chose to exdude the problem
of Affirmative Action Student Recru~·
ment from Its jurisdiction .

Manch, Gilbert to be inducted
into U I 8 Sports Hall of Fame
Dr. Joseph R. Manch and Don A.
GiJ&gt;ert wiD be inducted Into the U/ B
Athlettc HaD of Fame at ceremonies
preceding the U/ B-Canlslus homecomIng contest Saturday, October 6.
Manch Is a prominent ctttzen ol Buffalo
and former superlntendenl of Its public
schools. As an undergraduate here from
1928 to 1932, he was: a star guard In
football , heavyweight boxing champion
three years, heavyweight wrestling cham·
pion one year, and a member of the track
team.
He was active In other school programs
as editor of ''Stylus" , and as a member of
the student council.
Several years ago, Dr. Manch said:
"I wW always be grateful that, as an
undergraduate at BuffalO, I had the
chance to play footbaD and to learn 111 first
harid the true meaning of teamwork and
cooperation. I believe that lootbal helped
me to understand how to learn from
mlstaka and &amp;om defeat, as well as how
to acx:ept graciously the hulls ol vl&lt;t&lt;&gt;&lt;y."
Manch Is currently chairman ol the
U/B Community Advisory Counci.
Don Gil&gt;ert was an outstanding U/ B
football perfonner from 1962 to 1964,
Mttlng a school record for total olfense ol
more than 1,400 yards passing and
running .
Gil&gt;ert, who won live letters In basketball and beseball, was an honorable menlion academic Ati·Amerlcan
. From 1966-1970, he . .yed profu.
'• I

'"''

'\•

•I

'•

•'

o... ;. • o

~·

1

sional footbaD In Canada with the Ottawa
Rough Riders, Winnipeg Blue Bombers
and Hamthon Tiger-Cats, earning aD-star
designation twice. In 1975, he was Canadian College Coach of the Year when his
University of Ottawa team became Canadian coDege national champions. Cur·
~Jioan account executive with

w'lflN

The U/B Athletic HaU of Fame was
established by alumni Robert E. IJpp and
Donald B. Holmar In 1965 to perpetuate
the University's athletic traditions. The
first Inductees and their graduation years
were James J . AIMhger '25, Louis D.
Carriere '49, Daniel P . Dalfonso '38, Ed·
w:~ ~. Malanowtcz '32, and PhUtp D.

3

Nominations to the HaD of Fame are
made by a committee of the U/ B Alumni
Association. Elections are made by
another committee comprised ol three
alumni and three ex-officio members: the
directors of men's and women's athleticS
at the University and the vice president
foe athlettcs on the General Alumni

Board.

Coppens honored
Dr. Philtp Coppens, a professor of
chemistry, has been elected a CO&lt;Teopon·
ding member ol the Royal Dutch
Academy ol Sdences.
•••.. 1

••

•, , . ,

·.:··It

�September 27 . i 979

WWII inspired Polish 'courage, pride'
The Irony of Poland's entry Into World
War 11-40 years ago this month-Is t(&gt;at
It provided the raw material for a human
drama that inspired courage~ and
heightened both nationalistic and personal pride.
Local Polish and Russian historian,
Professor Waher Drzewienle&lt;:kl, who
served ,. a platoon commander in the
Polish cavalry during the war ,
underocored this bittersweet message last
Tuesday evening before a crowd of
students

and

community

residents .

gathered at Squire HaD to commemorate
the event.
The program was sponsored by U/ B's
Polish Cuhure Club.
Ahhough Poland was ID-equlpped
:nUharily to handle an invasion from the
west by Germany, and two weeks later,
from the east by Russia , it was the first na·
tion to actually take up anns In defiance
of Hitler's army.
Called the "Inspiration of nations" lor
their valiant efforts to thwart the Germans
(who outpowered them by 72 to one),
Poles fought desper &gt;!ely for 35 days to

resist their aggressors, rec;,Oed the Bul·
lalo State educator.
Losses Incurred by the Nazi forces were
severe enough to cause an eight-month
delay
In
their
attack
on
f'rance-"priceless months" that gave
fleth France and England a chance to ·
bolster their defenses, Drzewienlecki
emphasized.
"Because Poland absori&gt;ed 80 per cent
of Germany's Luftwaffe and Wehrmacht.
conditions were created for the aDios to
later defeat them," he added.

AIIJa did -tlllns
With what seemed mellowed vestiges
of resentment, the historian/ educator
told"1he gathering that although Poland's
aOies were ob'".r:d lo "immediately come
to her defense' they, in essence, "didn't
do a thing." Instead of bombing German

divisions It had stationed on the frontier.
"What is unique In the annals of
mUitary history.'' asserted Drzewienle&lt;:kl,
Is that evidence strongly suggests France
actually tried "to deceive the Polish Com·
mander and Chief" by · issulng false
reports on French counteractivity.

Because Poland was prepared to light
a .. war of coalition•• against any aggressors, it was especlaOy ill-equipped .to
effectively respond alone to a two·
pronged attack, he said.
Even when defeat became a reality,
Poles couki never .. accept'' it or .. recon cUe" themselves, remarked the former ar·
my officer. They Immediately organized a
complex underground movement. About
300,000 strong, It became the "largest
organized unc!erground .. in the war, he
added .

communication lines or preventing troops

Othen foUowed w!'en It wa, Afe · ·

from penetrating the Polish frontier, the
Bri!ish air command chose"' to "drop
leallets." And France, which supposedly
had superiority . over the Germans in
mUitary hardware, didn't employ the 100

HoOand. France and others · also
formed resistance mp'!ements, . noje:d
Drzewieniecki , "but only after it was clear
Germany could be defeated." Drze.
wleniecki estimated that Pola nd's

underground predated the others "by
three or four years.
Because of the vigorous activity of the
resiStance, combined with threats &amp;om
Ryssla apd · the allies, Drzewienleckihimse~ a member of the underground for
about a year-noted that Germany was
forced to keep between 12 to IS divisions
in the country.
Some 300,000 Poles who managed to
fle"e served on othe.r fronts abroad; in
France, Norway, Africa , Italy and Great
Britain.
The "greatest tragedy of the war,"
lamented Drzewienleckl, is that "aher aU
our efforts, after aD our heroic acts,
Poland was never permitted to regain her
indepe.n dence."
The program. also. featured Mr. Jan
Llbront. who gave a personal account of
a ~ra(Jllllic supply:drop mission he flew
!rpm lta_Iv. 19 Wa(sow, an.d ~~~Gradual~ .
Ludwik Sorel, who told of his ex·
P&lt;lfll'nc:es. as a prls!&gt;n"' o( 111ar. Crealive
Assppa" .Weronika Knittel perlormed
three violin selections by Polish com·
posers.

Old age now almost chic, Kuhn says
Maggie Kuhn wasn't just lntrodpced;
she was played on. Someone banged out
"Autumn Leaves," and "I Believe" on the
Conference Theatre piano. Then came a
rousing sing-along to "He Do Maggie."
When the song faded , the 74-year-old
Ms. Kuhn got right down to her message.
"Old Age Is coming out of the closet," the
co-founder of the Gray Panthers pronounced. " It's not quite chic, but It's OK ."
She spoke of a " new age" that's
dawning.
h's an age that wiD see a "confluence of
separate struggles for social justice and
liberation," she said. Old and young,
those oeeking clvU liberties, and those
championing an end to sexism wiD come
together to defeat economic imperialism
and the M&gt;b-human conditions It forces
on stereotyped groups.
J(s an age to be dominated by a
" demOSJI'phic revolution," a "graying of
the uniYene." UN population studies
report that In \970, 291 million people
around the world were over 65; by the
year 2000, 585 million lndlvkluals wiD be
past thai point.
Thlo new en wiD be forced to face lm·
porumt · questions neva laced before-simply becauoe people now live longer.
AI¥- -'ion to one of those Issues,
Kuhn said. Government at all levels, and
educationlll Institutions, have lootered a
notion of aponheid. The elderly are
shunted Into an underclass outside the
malntlrUm of power. They're "encouraged to be wrinkled babies instead of
acting as dders ol the tri&gt;e." In various
"Sun City" retirement communities,
young people are banned.
We're fed the myth that senility to Inevitable and that you can't learn anything
aflor 30.
Not so, argued Ms. Kuhn. Old, young
and middle-aged ere now going to school
together acroos the country.
Untvenlty clawooms (and the chur·
ches and synagogues) are actually

becoming staging areas lor a "new kind of
mixing ages , sexes, colors,
etc.--communes, co--ops, and the like.
In fact, she contended. the lamUy of
the future wiD likely be a type of support·
syst:em in which two or more persons
share resources, Interests and lile·styles,
by entering Into commitments lhat go
beyond blood and legal ties . Housing
codes in many areas now outlaw this type
of Uving arrangement, Kuhn noted . But
that's going to change--to the betterment
of our cities.
famUy ,"

c ...............

AnaOy, she sa!d, the new age wiD see a
restructuring ol work to make II enjoyable
as weD as prolitable. Early retirement wUI
go: ftrst, because retirees can no longer
keep up with Inflation and, second,
because It's a death warrant for some:
"Males In our society have been program·
med to work. When they retire early,
they die, because they have no other
locus."
The Gray Panthers are lrylng to
humanize the work system , Kuhn
reported.
She championed sabbaticals··at least
every 10 years··for "those who do the
unpleasant, hard work," ao weD ao for
college proletiOr$. Everyone, contended
Kuhn, needs an opportunity to explore
new Interests and skllk, to gd out ol a
rut, to step back and look at themselves.
One inlunlnc:c carrier In Ha111ord Ucady
has such a _ . ..m, she noted .
The Gray Panthers would aloo llka to
revive the system of _.,tlceshlpo,
Kuhn said. The young c::ould then ...,.It
dolely with the old to learn ndcs, whilo
also revitalizing neighborhoods, old
bulldings, etc.
Two persons sharing one job II another
alternative worth eiCJ)Ioring, Kuhn said,
as to the work-learn CCiflaPI for older
worlcen.
The lsoues of nuclear power and

chemical hazards should furiher unite
young and old, Ms. Kuhn urged. Let's
replace the "nukes" with "'windmills on
every city block," she suggested. If we
harness solar power, the wind. etc., "we
could be independent of the large energy
corporations next year.''
Our society has to stop "kUling · )he
land" with herbicides, chemicallertUizers,
and other forms of pollution which
ravage soU, water and air, Ms. Kuhn said .

"Lefs stop building freeways and a ir·
ports, and start planting gardens:·

The benefits of •I" .
Old age provides her with a trio of
benefits, the seff-styled "wrinkled radical"
said :
. 1: .She can speak her mind.
:!, She has QUtlived her op~ion.
3 . Reaching out to others gives her ac·
cess to new energy.

U/B ranks among top 100
in terms of federal funding
U/ B ranked 83rd among the 100
Ranked according to R &amp;. D funds, MIT
universities and colleges receiving the was first, followed In order by Stanford,
most lederallundlng In fiscal year 1977, UCLA , University of Washington
according to data compUed by the Na· University of Caltlomla at San
tiona! Science Foundation. Total federal Columbia, Harvard, Wisconsin-Madison,
funding received here during the period University of Michigan , and Johns
was $19,166,000.
.
Hopkins as the top ten.
In tenns of money earmarked strict·
No. l ·ranked MIT ;ecelved $91
ly· for research and development, U/ 8 miOion·plus In R &amp;. D fUnds this year,
was 69th, with $12,376,000.
whUe Johns Hopldns, ranked lOth
Stony Brook- the only other SUNY received $51 mUIIon .
'
grad center on the Ust··ranked 99th In
NSF noted a decrease In the concentotal funds, 73rd In R &amp;. D monies.
tration of funds among the top few
Federal departments and agencies universities and coOeges. Since 1970, the
obligated a total of $6.5 biDion to coOeges portion ol federal funds awarded to the
and universities In fiscal 1977, the NSF first 100 Institutions has dropped from 71
report said . The total, a new high, per cent of the total to 56 per c.:nt.
•
represented gains of 20 per cent In current doOars and 13 per cent In cor_nt
dollars over the previous year. As In
ENTRANCE CLOSED
1976, most of the new money funded
non-science prOgrarQ~-64 per cent. This The Main Street Entrance to the Main
Street
(the- at the light opwas led by the U.S. Office of Education's
dooed lor
Basic Educational Opportunity Grants poelte Red Barp) will beMonday,
Oc(BEOGI) program.
tober. l, the Ollce ol Facllltla PlannNSF ranked the 100 top Institutions ac·
cordlng to boch total federal obligations
IDtl
... - - to
Main Stnct thM dey wll haw to and total R &amp;. 0 funds. Howard Unlversi-'
apec:ted
ty, as In 1976, was ranked No. lin total
totabOII/.II-d.,.
funding because II receives oubslantlal
federal support for operating expenses.

Diego:

ea..-

r_.... .... other_..,

n- ........

other-· The_,._ ..

�September 27, 1979

'Notorious Article 35' called a plu$
Bylooephlne WlM
l4crnbo&lt; ol S&lt;ato UUP ~Tum

The recent stmy In the R..,.... on
retrenchment indicates that there Is much
concern on this campus regarding retrenchment as weD as considerable
misunderstanding of Article 35 of the
U.U.P. Agreement.
In order to understand the current
situation H Is necesoary to trace the hlstmy
of the Article. The idea of retrenchment
was not Invented wHh the inclusion of this
provision In the Agreement. The State
always has had the'right to retrench. This
was stated In the Policies of the Board of
Trustees prior to the 1974-76 Agreement
as follows:
"The services of any memben of the
academic staff may be terminated in the
event of financial or program retrench-

ment. If the Chancellor anticipates that
such retrenchment may be necessary. he
shall seek the advice of the Faculty
Senate concerning the policy to be
followed In the reduction of staff."
(I might add that professionals were
not mentioned in the policies' statement
on retrenchment because prior to there

being a Union all professlo
~ed "at
the pleasure of the president"}.
No one paid attention
No one paid much attention to this

clause during the days of expansion and
growth of the 1960's and early 1970's.
However, by the time U.U.P. was
negotiating the 1974-76 Agreement it
was becoming apparent that the Clays of
growth were over and that retrenchment
could become a possibility in the
foreseeable future . Since the policies
clearly established management's right to
retrench and there.. were no procedural

r~=:~r ;=:et~~':"~~eth~n:~:
within the contract and to begin to
establish procedures which would prot~ct
the rights of individuals that might be affected .
According to law , ilems to be
negotiated faU within two categories;
mandatory and non-mandatory. A man·
datory hem must be negotiated ~ one of
the parties wishes. A non -mandatory
Item can be negotiated only if both parties
agree. Retrenchment is considered a
non-mandatory Item . The first battle,
therefore. was to get the State to agree to
negotiate the Issue and thus have con·
straints placed on its power to ad in this
crucial area. Granted that the first version
of the retrenchment article left much to be
desired, but It was a beginning. If any of
these procedures were violated, the
employee could grieve.
The most important principles
established in the 1974-76 Agreement
were:
1. What had been a non-mandatory
it.em was now negotiable.
2. Recognition of seniomy rights.
3. Right of call-back wHhin a two year

'v

period .

4 . Special consideration for retrenchees for other positions in the
university.
'Bumping' and other gainl
The Article was strengthened in the

. . .Ell&amp;
A ampus community new5paper ~

hCh Thundoy by lho ~ cl Pubk 111t.... S... Unlwnily cl N&lt;w Yon 01 Buffalo
Ed~l ofticts •• toc:.kd tn 136 Crofts Hal.
~ T&lt;lcphono 630-2626

o..
...... "' Ploblio: Af!o.rt
JAMES R O.SANTtS
Edtla. -in .Chef
ROBERT T MARLETT

Art ond P&gt;od""""'

JOHN A

Cl.OVT1ER

-..u...

JOYCE BUCHNOWSKJ

w~~Edito&lt;

1977-79 Agr.ement when the principle,
of"bumplng" was introduced, This made
It more dlfflcuh to arbitrarily define "unHs"
In order to pin-point individuals. The
1979-82 Agreement makes tnanagement
more accountable and further protects
retrenchees by providing that:
.
I. The U.U.P. Chapter president shaU
be notified of the level of Qrgantzallon at
which retrenchment will occur and the
reason for such retrenchments, which
reasons c~ be grieved.
2 . An extension of the recommended
notice period for persons being retrenched and if the recommended notice
period Is not met, the college President
shall notify the employee in writing why
such notice was not given . whkh reasons

trenched employees with the guarantee
can be grieved.
that any unexpended funds are to be
3 . The period of special consideration
rolled over into the next contract year.
UniversHy-wide has been expanded from
Retrenchment is an unpleasant and
date of notice to six months aher layoff,
threatening subject for aD of us. Many of
requiring notices of vacancies to be sent
us would like not to have to face the realidirectly to the employee. Special consideration for college-wide placement . ty of it. Unfortunately, we don't have that
carried on for an additional 18 months.
choice . While the Union contract Is not all
4. "Same" position for recall Is now
we would like It to be, we look forward to
defined as a position in the college witll
improving it further in future contracts.
the same content and obligations
No one reading the current contract and
regardless which department or program
comparing it lo what existed before the
offers the posHion .
1974 Agreement can have any doubt
5 . The retrenched employee has the
that the State's power In dealing with
right to health benefhs for a one year
retrenchment has been greatly curiaUed
period following lay-off.
and that the State will be held account6. A $200,000 fund per contract year
able for its actions via the grievance
has been established for retraining reprocedure

All we ask is 'fair shake'
for WNY's major educational unit
Milt Joffe
Sports Editor
Evening News

'Joel Mayersohn and his administration r
for their interest in the athletic program .
I am aware of your dedication to WNY
athletics at every level, and personally
applaud your decision to assign Chuck
Korbar to the college beat. The coverage
of all our fall programs has noticeably
improved.
U/ B's goal is to produce the finest
athletic teams possible under Division UJ
guidelines, and to bring national recogni·
tion to the University, the Ctty of Buffalo ,
Western New York and the state.
We also hope to promote unity between the University and the Communi·
ty, with the knowledge that U/ B is

Western New York's major educational
institution , with students, faculty and staff
who are contributing members of the
Community.
The WNY media provides an invaluable service in establishing that rela tionship in all fields, athletics being one of
the most visible and enjoying maximum
interest .
Therefore, we are dependent upon
your consideration of our programs.

Milt:
Because of my position and working
relationship with the Western New York
media, it is appropriate that I comment
on U/ B Student Association President
Joel Mayersohn's letter to you, copies of
which have appeared in two campus
publications and The News , in reference
to coverage of U/ B football.
Best regards,
As a former sports editor of a daily
- Lany G. Steele
newspaper, I can understand your probOiredor, Sports Information
lems of staff and space restrictions, aod
realize that Division I programs in WNY
command attention over Division W.
There are , however, no Division I football programs In Western New York.
My apprehension over competition for
coverage with the University of Syracuse
has become fact . Slfs first game at Ohio
Editor.
American civilian support personnel and
State was staffed by the News and was
The m!Htarists and hawks, those armed
CIA personnel not in military dress. And
accorded prominent display on the first
forces and congressional front men for
what
of the divisions of American troops
page of the sports section on Sept. 9 ,
the military-industrial complex (such as
stationed In the Federal Republic of Ger·
1979, while U/ B's viciory over Cortland former generals Stnglaub and Haig and
many?
Do the people in the socialist
State was relegated to an inside page.
Senators Jackson and Nunn) , wUI seek
countries bordering that country feel
I'm sure you are aware that the U/ B·
any excuse to torpedo SALT U. FirSt, it
comfortable
about that 25-year-old
Cortland game drew over 6,300 specwas the loss of CIA "listening posts" (i.e., display of militarism? Furthermore, it has
tators, the largest crowd at Rotary Field
spy bases) in Iran . Now it's 2000 Soviet
been
estimated
that the United States has
since the program ,.ras revived in 1977,
troops in Cuba.
2.000,000 troops stationed in countries
and comparable to attendance at many
The fact that the CIA has ringed the
around the world . Why are we supposed
games In the Division I years at the
Soviet Union with such spy bases for
to be. concerned about these Soviet
UnlversHy.
· years shows that Its "hearing" has not
troops? Certainly it can't be because we
On the past weekend , U/ B won at
been impaired . Indeed, as recently
are
afraid of an Invasion of Miami Beach
John Carroll University and the game
revealed , the CIA has eavesdropped on
by 2000 Soviet infantry troops.
story was again placed on an inslde page.
American citizens right here at home! Ap·
The
American people need SALT II for
while the Canisius College win over
parently, the CIA places "big ears" before
peace and prosperity. In fact , SALT If is a
Rochester, which drew a reported 800
Constitutional civjJ liberties.
requirement
for the continued existence
spectators. and Slfs win over West
Regard ing the 2000 Soviet troops in of humanity itself! We should not be
Virginia received first page attention .
·cuba .. .it should be remembered that the steamrollered by well-fi nanced
Most distressing ;s the fact that
Uritted States Navy maintains, in Cuba, demagogues who place the profHs of the
Syracuse University has received and obthe world's oldest, foreign-occupied military-industrial monopolies before the
vipusJy will continue to receive superior
military base on the sovereign soil of
lives of the people.
coverage despite my earlier protest that
another nation·-Guantanamo &amp; y. As of
As has been said in the New Testa·
SU Is attempting to lure spectators away
1976, according to Prensa latina, the ment. one should not wony about a mote
from local college games on two future
United Nations Latin-American Press, In his neighbor's eye when there's a beam
dates this season without regard to the
there were 2800 active American military
negative impact at the gate forboth U/ B
Sincerely,
personnel stationed at Guantanamo Bay. in his own .
and Cantslus.
- Gene Grablner
Th~ does not count their dependents,
While I will not argue that the WNY
Assistant Professor
media should not cover Slfs two games
c:elebr~tte
at Rich Stadium , I question that the
obligation extends to games SU plays
outside the WNY area, other than the
normal wire service stories.
To celebrate hs 25th birthday, the
Medicine at the Erie County"Medical
I realize that the SU roster includes
Department of Occupational Therapy wUI
Center.
.
many former WNY scholastic players, but
hold a day-long series of workshops and
Registration and an open house
so do the rosters of many other colleges
meetings culminating in a banquet honor·
preceding the morning program will be
and universities, and U/ B can ceriainly. ing past chairpersons of the department
held in S 15 Stockton Kimball Tower on
count the .greatest number.
on Saturday, October 13.
the Maln Street Campus.
Incidentally, in addhion to U/ B's
The workshops wiU feature occupaGroup meetings and discussions of oc·
achieved goal of attracting area high
tional therapy projects estabUshed by the
cupational therapy programs In the com·
school athletes Into Hs men's and
department in Western New York
munity will be held at 1:30 p.m. on the
women'• programs, the support of the
among them the Early lnterventio~
fifth floor of the Tower, followed by tours
general student body for the football proMobile Unit which serves handicapped
of the OT facilities in Tower and
gram has been most gratifying, over
pre-schoolers in several rural counties·
Goodyear halls at 3 p.m.
4 ,000 at the Cortland game , and Is In·
the OT Pediatric Clinic for youngste~
Nancie B. Greenman, Gertrude Dray
dicative of the changing attitude of the
with learning disabilities and the Indepenand Kent Tigges, former department
student In relation to University life.
dent Living Project. which helps elderly
will be honored at a banchairpersons,
CredH for the Improvement must go to
people remain Independent in their own
quet at 6 p .m. in the Talbert Dining
Head Coach BiU Dando and his staff for
homes.
.
Room , Amherst. Special guest speakers
their SliCCel5 in convincing many of
A!"&gt; to be featured during the morning
wUI be Mae Hightower-Vandamn, presi·
WNY's best football players to represent
sess.ons from 9 to noon will be tours of
dent of the American Occupational
their own University , and to SA President
the Department of Rehabilitation
Therapy Association .

Russian Troops 'no excuse'
for undermining SALT II pact

OT Department to
25th birthday, October 13

�September 27, 1979

Long list
of speakers
set by SA
They'll range from
Jimmy Griffin to
'foul-mouthed feminist'
Students will be happy to learn that all
campus speakers booked this year
through the Student Association's
Speakers' Bureau can be heard free of
charge.
A second bonus is that the number of
celebrity speakers coming in 1979-80 will
be subsulntially higher than last year. And
to boot, they span the political spectrum:
from CqnservaHve Buffalo Mayor James
Griffin to reformed Yippie Jerry Rubin.
Chip Guzzetta, new chairperson of the
Speakers' Bureau , can take the bows for
the orchestration of this year's line-up .
Although his budget was sliced by onethird. Guzzetta-a sophomore who halls
from a "normal town" in Suffolk County-managed to increase the number of
speakers by nosing around for some nocharge personalities (like Griffin), and by
negotiating co-sponsored engagements
with departments and other campus
groups.
Guzzetta promises that, unlike last
year, aU speakers will be high,~bliciz­
ed. He's even arranged for ~0 to
cover the "biggles."
The next speaker, James Fogg, comes
October 10. Fogg (another no-charge
personality) is director of marketing for
Erehwan~ Inc .. a large national food corporation. His presentation will center on
the high protein derivatives of soy beans
and ·their future role in combating world
hunger.
On October 17, Harvard grad and
Rhodes Scholar Jonathan Kowl will be
here. Kowl, a critic of the American
educational system, wrote the awardwinning books, Death at on Early Age
and The Night Is Dark and I Am For From

Home.
Mayor Griffin will appear a week later,
on October 24 and bravely field questions
from the floor .
Next. on November 14. come Ron

Bonfilio and Luna Moore from the Solar
Energy Institute in Washington. D.C .:
then Jerry Rubin later in the month , on
the 28th .
December 5 brings Flo Kennedy, a
black ahort)ey/ actfvist who bills herseltas
a "creative troublemaker" and ''foul·
mouthed feminist.'' Kennedy is coordinator of the Coalition Against Racism

and Sexism and a founding member of
NOW . In addHion. she founded the
Feminist Party which supported Shirley
Chisholm for president in 1972. Last
year. Kennedy was selected as one of 50
"Extraordinary Women" by the National
Conference of Christians and Jews. Her
books include The Pathology of Oppression. Color Me Flo. end a co-authored
tome entitled, The Abortion Rap.
For a lighter touch . Frank Abignail. a
celebrated con-man and escape artist
who posed as a physician and perlormed

Flo IWoMdy

Oklt Gregor'\

dates are January 23, February 13 and
April 2. respectively.
Guzzetta is sliD firming-up plans for
Jessai Weinberg, a representative of the
Jewish Heritage Museum, New York
Congresswoman Liz Holtzman , and a·
representative from NORMAL. the Na-

tiona! Organization for Reform of Ma
juana Laws.
All events will begin at 8 p .m.
So far. except for George Himes, w~
Is scheduled for the Cornell Theatre. t'
visitors can be seen in the Ftllmore Roc
at Main Street.

Peradotto says he hopes to convene
"purifies" his responsibility as a strictly
the committee whenever .. issues of
academic one.
University-wide concern" need to be
Asked Uhe may reconsider his dedsion
discussed-issues such as grading policy
not to grant distribution credit to some
and general education. Any final deciCollege courses, the Dean responded
sions, however, will be his and his alone,
that to date, no .. theoretical justifk:ation"
since the committee has no legislative or
has been made ro back up such a change.
executive authority.
Adding, "but U it can be done, Murray
Peradotto "assumes" the President will
(Sc'hwartz, the new dean of the Col·
give him the funds he would have had at . leges) can do H. If the case can be made,"
his disposal had he remained under the
Peradotto added, ''I'll be the first one to
wing of the VPAA. As of yet. however.
endorse it."
he has not broached the subject with KetPeradotto noted , however, that the
ter. With,; guarantee,pf "some budget.power to actually grant the distribution
Peradotto says he will be able to give the · credit '' rests with the Faculty Senate."
go-ahead to projects-such as an evalua·
Last year, he was .. obliged to reaffirm the
tion of undergraduate programs-which
existing status of the Colleges as be inter·
were forced Into limbo when the question
prel&lt;!d it" beaause the Senate refused to
of his status arose .
make the--decision.
General Education
He'• g .. d not to have some authority
most challenging
In other matters, such as those invotv·
Hands down , Peradotto thinks general
tng the allocat!bn or reallocation of
education wtll be his most challenging job
resources among depertments. Peradotto
th,. ·year, and likely next. The dean says
says he's happy not to have line authorihe wants to get the College Skills part of It
ty. The laet he doesn't, he feels,
Implemented by next fall, but says the

stzuus of the rest is .. precarious.
Although the Senate targeted 1980 •
the date for beginning the themes corr
ponent. he sincerely doubts whether th
plan can be ; practically imple mented
within that time frame . More likely. he'
"sorry to say, " the date will have to b
moved to September 1981.
"I don't have the confidence that sue
courses will be generated in sufficier
number and maintained regularly enoug
for students to fulfill requirements. '' oi
fered the dean .
·
Even thqugh he grants that generi"
education is a complex issue. Peradott
still maintains U/ B is "desperately late'' I
getting together a viable program .
"I have 'a suspicion." he continue!
"that U the Senate had foreseen th
course of debl!te (over the issue) . it wou&gt;
have gone for a modesr. ulculatinc
phasing-in process.··
Alt hough such a Slep may not seem •,
admirable to some . Peradono believes
would have been "much better'' than t~
cune.nt distribution requirements.

surgery without any medK:al training , will

round out the semester, December 12.
Second semester will bring political
comedian and intermittent faster Dick
Gregory,

Mark

Twain

impe.rsonator

George Himes. and the ever-rotund and
hustling Minnesota Fats. Their scheduled

• Peradotto seeks accord with VP's
, _ _ l,coL4)

the DUE professional staff (a counselor) .
A ll representatives (except students and
professional staffi must be full-time faculty regularly Involved with undergraduate
teaching.
The construction of the committee 1s at
variance with the advisory coundJ pro·
posed by Bunn and Pannlll last winter,
after segments of the University com·
munity voiced strong disapproval of their
inihal recommendation to let the respon·
sibUity for undergraduate Health Sciences
educabon fall to the VPHS Instead of the
DUE Dean
Peradotto wru chair it
Unhke that advisory coundl. the Polley
Commtttee wtU be chaired by Peradotto
mstead of the two vice presidents. and.
according to the DUE Dean . its Health
Sciences representat•on WJIJ be tnmmed
to avotd "over weighting.. the area com·
pared to Its undergraduate enroHme.nt
{see accompanytng article for more
deratls)

.. . .

.

.

�September 27, 1979

Chaplin

rum

BIK:k La.- (center) and Bit ;Jim
order a-tie Oulplln'o 'l.IUie Tramp'
Into the bll....-d In 'The Gold Rush,'
here WedModay night
and 'fllur..s.y afternoon.
'

beint KJUned

CALENDAR
To--_...,...._,_...,.._
...... .._.._. .___
__ _

-----lw. .
__ .,. _ _ _ _ ..... c..
/1101£,

~

MS / B

INDEPENDENT

FILMMAKERS

SERIES'

Gorin ol hb P - ODd~- Media Stu,jy/ Bul·
falo . 207 Detaware

Awm~.

Friday- 28

D£NTAL ALUMNI MEE'IlNG"
- . . , ~ 1'hnohold ol the Eloh-- Buf.
f.&amp;o Conwnrion Center
~ hundred dentists. 1ha spouse$ and den·
,., audi.llries are a.pected 10 anend
5puMts
tho Soptembo&lt; 27 ......... whO.
wil begin at 9 a .m. WIIJ lndude Dr. Rchard Wynn ,
clllilrman of the Oep.nmcnt of Oral Biology at rhe
Unf\'ftlity of Kentucky (iAx~on) . on ..PreOperative and Intravenous Sedation." Dr. Paul
BMr. cn.rm.n olt~ Department ol Puiodontics
at the SUite ~ at Stony Brook. who wll
dtsa.au periodontal d!Kas.e tn chUdren and
aclolucents. and 0.. John Diamond. e Valley Cot·
19, N.Y .. dentist. on-o~malK~ "
O..UII •uxllie.y spe.U.. wtll ·bc 0. Sebmen
Ciancio, c:halrman ol lhe
Oeponnwnl ol

HIGHER EO BREAKFAST SEMINAR'
c.r-t ' - I n Higher Edu&lt;adon, Emat L .
Boyer, f011Ylef U.S. comml:ssiona" ol education :
o&gt;&lt;esident·dect. Cameg;o Foundation loo- the Ad·
vancement of Teaching 8 a.m
Boyft's presentation. to be held in ttw! SpauJdtng
Otnirtg Room at Elbc::ott. is the flrsl in an eight ·pert

Periodontics. on -QnicaJ ~for Dental
Awdliories." and 0. R~ l.obcne. d..n of tlw
For5Yth School for Dmr.el H~bts . on "'The For·
JYlh DmtaJ Aw.INry Program.ln conjunehon with rhe dental meeting, the Erie
Counly Dental Society will hold Its
lund-. on Soptcmbcr 27 Raben J
M&lt;Cool. ,......J .,.._ oiMobil 01 Co.p."s Noo-·
,,_. Region. es gual spe.oko.

IIASEBAU..'

Go...... St•• ~- Dou'bl.lwoder. Podle

Fieki. 1 p.m.

COMMUTER~ SXXJMC1L IIEEllNG :
337 SquWe. 3 p.m. AI ere weleome.

PHYSICS~•

R........ ~ o i T - k Hydr-. Pto1-.oo- Hany F. Klng. Ocpo.tment ol ~-

454 Fronczak. 3:30p.m. Coffee at 3:15.
UUAB FIU4'
Hwold and Mauck (1971) Woldman Theatre.
Amherst . 3:45, 6, 8 and 10 p.m. Gmeral admission $2; ltUdents $ 1.50.
~ the most popWa.r cult him of all lime,
tbroW -.d ,..... is a IMc:k comedy about a low
between ,....,.. Horold end
M.ude Hil hobhy is committing suicide. and hen ll
living tlfc lo ~ fulat.

sr:mlnar 5eries for Wes~ern New Yor-k higher
educators sponsored by the Department of Higher
Education at U/ B. 1lle presentations will be held
once a month during the academic year and are
m.de pouibk! by a want from the F~son Foun·
daUon
Dr Boyer. 51. was dumcellot ol the State
Um\lti'Sity of New York between 1970 and 1977.
He ho&amp;ds the Ph D from the Untwnity of Southern
California and rs the reapltnt of more than 20
honorary doctorates
Coontinating thk 5erieti is Or. A. We:sdey
Rowland . U/ B professor of higher education. who
can be oontacted at 636-2481 for further information .

UIB DENTAL ALUMNI ANNUAL MEETING•
Buffalo ConYention Center. AD &lt;My.
Dr. John Norris, attorney and editor·in-&lt;:hief of
the Ammc:an .loumol ol Law and Medldac, ..m
spook on "Logel Aspocts ol Oontistry. • and 0.. Rex
Ingraham , cNirman of the Department of
Restorattve OMHstry at the University ol Southern
Cel~oo-nla , will speak on the "Role of Occlusion In

~~~-~ataiak

and

~td\niques

EOUCAnONAL Sl\JDIES RESEARCH SYM·

POSRJM'

8 p .m

Tbiii'Sday- 27

ro.

speaker at the Elghth Dsstrict Dental Soc:iety's lun·

chcon .

Leetwe "-'"9 by mnch . - Jun-Pimo

in

TI)c ~ aux.liiuies' program Ill$ feature insnuc:don and Modvation ol PAtie:nts for P\aque ConITof" bv 0.. Emat Heusmonn, prof....,. d onJ
biology, and H•lm Bunncl. Ellzaboth R&lt;X&lt; end
SIWlcy Sheldon. denUII hygicnlslsatU/ 8 . "A Mini·
Couac on c..dJo.Pulmona.y Rausdletion- by 0..
S.O Scy.cl&lt; and 0.. '-l&gt;mcd Uthman. U/ 8 leculty.
wil also be presented.
Erie County Sheriff Kenneth Braun v.n1! be guest

Alooe lhc Way. Ajlp&lt;oxlma- s.-m&lt;tn S..
cond ' - ' - · A tm..-dey c:onl"'oncc
_ . . t bv the 0cpo.tmenl5 of Instruction.
linguistics. Modern Languages and Utmttures.
U/ 8 : tlw Prog.-om In 8 Wngual Multicuhu..J Educa·
tkm, State University &lt;;oaege at Brockport: the
Ocpo.tment ol Englili&gt;, Stet• Unlvenl!y College et
F.-edonla: and tlw llillngoal Prcgo-am, D"Youvill&lt;
College. Now Vorl&lt; Stet• Offlce d Educetlon, f)fvl.
slon d Bilingual Eduaotion . T1w Kiva . 101 Baldy.
Tluoogh S.tunlay. Soptombn 30.
Leadzng researcheR m the field of language
education haw been invited to summarize rese:arch
fmdings, evaluate the current state of such raeatch
and tcs future prospecls. and relate such research
wherewr possible to the field ol bilingual·
mufl5cuhural education.
Pa.._n .. end topic$ Include: 0.. John
OCU. The Unive:rsky of N~ Mexico. "The In·
fluenc:e: of Approximative $yslm1 Research on
U.ngu... Testing;" 0.. H..- Sel;go&lt;. Queens

College . Flushing. N. Y.. "Fnt end S..:Ond
l.anguego Acquisition-Ocvelopmmtal Stnotegies;"
Dr. John Schumann. UCLA, - The Pidga1~
Hypothais in Language Acquisition ;"' Or. Janusz
Arabsld. Unlvasity ol Sllesia and State Untversity
CoUege at Fredonia . " European Research in ApproximaHve Systems;"' Dr. larry Seainker. English
Language lmtttute.. Untvenity of Michigan. - lnte:rianguage:"' Dr. Christina Bran Paulston. Unfver·
slty of Plttsbongh .
ConiTests. Approx·

·em...

lmetlw Systems-A Summery.·
R - F..: S5: students $2.

Ulr;;-~!~lion

c:onted

the _,.oong

FIRST ANNUAL RICHARD A. DOWNEY
MEMORIAL I.EC1URE•
New T•cndo In Ch8d Heafdt ~. 0..
Raben A. Hoekelman, prof.- and c:hetnnan.
Oepanmmt ol Pedlatrb, Un!vmlty d Rochest..-

Sc:hool of Medicine. Kfnch AuditDrtum, Chiadren's.

The French .Kienlist Jolioc Curie Is credited by
50me historians for having been lnstrumemtal In tuT·
ning nuclear energy from fantasy Into fact. He latet
became a leader of the movement to ban nuclear
wea.ponl.

DISTINGUISHED GUEST LECI\JRER'
s;, Arnold Bw-gen, F.R.S .. d•ectoo- ol the No·

SPEAKER•

donal Institute for Medk:al Research In London .
England , will speak on F - Stot.. of
Muocartnk Recep&lt;on. 244 C..cy. 2:30 p .m
Sponsored by Unl\l'er$ity Computing 5eMces and
the Department of Bioc:hemlcal Pharm~ .
Sir Amo$d began his professional c.areer as a
physida.n. gr6duating with his medk:al degree m
1945. He was appointed professor ol physiok»gy at
McGill University, a position which he held until
1962. Concurrently, he was deputy d.-ector olthe
University Clink: at Montreal General Hospital from
1957. In 1962. he returned to Eng&amp;and to become
Shield P,ofeSSOO" of P!wmacology at Cambridge In
1971 , he: was appointed director ol the National In •
s.tilute for Medical Research In London and head of
tlw [);vision of Mole&lt;:uia• Phennacology. In l976.
he was knighted by Queen EJizabe!h tn recogni!KM'I

R-.,. b

lhc - b: the Meteoric
C.... ol Fndcrlc: Jollot C.W, 0.. Sponc., R.
Weart. d.-ector. Center fOf the Histo.y of Physics,
American Institute of Physic:~ .

Room

322 MFAC ,

sn.s SPEAKER·
Peter ~ National l.b-arians Al.5ociatlon.
directot of Alma College Unry. 338 IHD. 5 p .m.
AI Interested persons are invited to anend .
Jointly - e d bv the School ol lnloo-mation
.nd Lbary Studies and the SILS Scudml AsJOd,l -

of his scienUfic accomplishments and his contribu·
tions to the public: interesc.
• He will M accompa.nied on hts visit to Buffakl by

tion

Mr Dollard

Dr. We:a.rt ts aho assodated with the Niels Boh,
U:lrary and the pr-eservation of matma.ls documenting the history of modcn physics and astronomy

Hospital. 11 a . m .

so..,..,-olcf

.rrw

Elticott. 1:30 p .m . Sponsored by the Department
of Hbtory In ~tion with Va, and CliffOfd

rum.. coflegeC"'-

the found}ng prak'ent o1 NLA
and CUrTendy is editing ttw: N-'onat Ubrariaa. of.
flclol publicotion d the ~lion . He has had .,.
tlda published In the l.ll&gt;&lt;ary .loumal and the
w~ lJbrwy a.etla on the llatus of the profaaiooeJ liw~n and rhe place for a profasionai
organaution recognizing the educadonal requir~­
wat;

his Wife. Lady Judb:h Burgen.

ORAL BIOLOGY SEMINAR•
&amp;tram..,.. TJ'eftCk lq Grantam.,.hlp, Or.
Thomas Tarpley, executive leCrl!tbry , Dental Study
Section, National Institute ol Dmta.l Research . 178

nwnt for librarians.

Farber. 2 :30-5 p .m .

SOCIETY OF WOMEN ENGINEERS
NEE11NG'
' 206 Furnas. 7 p m. New rMmben are ~-dcome

POunCAL SCIENCE INFORMAL TAU&lt; AND
SOCIAL HOUR'
R-..cb 0cw1opm..., In Phlloooplly end
Polltk:&amp;l Sc:wnce .. the U .S.S.R., Vl.a&lt;:hm_. D.
O..isov, guHt schol.. Doctoo- o1 Philoscphkal
Sciences. U.S .S .R A&lt;odany o1 Sciences. 631
Bakiy. 3 ·5 p .m . Faculty and audentJ are cordiaBy

MANAGEMENT ALUMNI BANQUET•
lvmAnd J c.tdanil. chid a:ecuttve off~Ur ol
Niaiar• Fronti«r 5ftvicfti Inc . wi1 be honored "'
~N~ Frontier Executive ol the Year~ at the
School ol M.n,egemem's 301h Annual Alumni
A~ Banq~ Speaking wil be Ut B Pre:sid~t
Robert L Kcner. School of MaNgement Dun
JORJ)h A Aluno and Waller E. Kemc» Jr . preilcknl ol tM SOM Alumni A.stooatkxl Terrace
Room , Stade~ Ho&amp;e1 1 30 p m

lnvftlfd.

~~ INS111UTE ON ALCOHOUSM
Oewlopmmt of a New Seale lor Predk:tlng In·
patlcnt ......... ol Stay Joo- Mole Akohollco, 0.
Bernard Covner. a.ssoc:iate profeuor of psychiatry.
Univft'Sity of Minnesota. Budding U. Audaorlum .
Buffalo General HOlpital. 3 p .m . Refreshments 15
mUlutel prior to serrunar time.

Boyer lecture

LAW AND
MEETlNG•

Former SUNY Chanc..Uor and U.S.
Commluloner ol Education Ernest L.
Boyer klc:ks off Higher Ed's Breakfast
Seminar serla, Friday morning.

ECONOMICS

WORKSHOP

The: speaker Wid be Profasor Allan Meltzer.
Maurice: Fall Profeuor of Economic$ and Soael
Science. Grad~Utte School of Industrial Admin1stra
lion , Carnegie-MeDon UnrYeBiey He wdl presm1 a
paper on
Growth of Government in tht&gt;
Unned Slatn .. 706 O'Bnan 3.30 p .m

-nw:

'

WORKSHOP IN GAME THEORY IN
ECONOMICS•
1he: Theory of Monev and Anandal IMIIW·
Uont-A Game The«etk Approa,ch, Or Mar111
ShubM , Vale Universlly 210 o ·a,nan 3 30 p tn

�• .......,onof

The Office of
CulbniAtt.n

....._......,...._•tlla

Recent Acquisitions
The newly appointed curator of the
Poetry Collection, Dr. Robert J .
Bertholf, has put together one of the
most interesting and varied exhibits
we've seen. Called "Recent Acquisitions,'' it features materials connected
with poets Robert Duncan, Ezra Pound
and William Carlos Williams, and creates
some rather startling contrasts of subjects and rooods.
Robert Duncan has been a frequent
visitor here, and last March, U/ B-based
artist Harvey Braverman did a superb
drawing of him, which hangs on one
wall of the exhibit. Hanging on the other
is a pleasing crayon drawong by D~ncan
himself, whose talent in the visual arts is
also refleCted in some of the illu&lt;frated
manuscnpts.
One case is devoted to materials connected with Duncan's book, Caesars
Gare, and to one of hos most famous
poems, "Often I Am Permitted To
Retum To A Meadow." Bertholf bought
the charming and sometimes illuminating correspondence between
Helen Adams and Robert Duncan,
friends in San Francisco since the early
fifties , and it occupies a section of the
exhibit.
Another section is taken up with "The
Maidens," a group consisting of Duncan
and live talented cronies of his, which
convened in San Francisco in the late fifties for poetry reading, criticism and
their own amusement. Some of their exchanged correspondence and occasional poems are a bit precious, but
it's an enjoyable bit of gossip and
history.
There's a case full of poetry broadsides, selected with a superb eye for
contrast. Imagine, if you will, that World
War I stirre&lt;, " In Rand9fs Fields,"
printed on a dasign of pure kitsch, juxtaposed with a saucy postcard ppem by
Diane Wakoski. There's a large, commanding broadside by Duncan, and a
smaH, graphically imperfect one of a.
short, affecting poem by Robert Bly.
Three letters scrawled to his editor by
Ezra Pound wihen he was incarcerated in
St. Elizabeth's Hospital are in another
case. They deal with the printing of
Pound's Canto LXXIV, but a personal
note on one of them reads like a cry:
"Xpected all sorts of trouble, boycot
lsicl, stopping of cash etc anything EXCEPT - an accusation of treason.
That never entered my mind as
possible." There is also a 35-page
transcnpt of the Canto, with alterations
!some in Greek letters) in Pound's hand .
Perhaps Bertholf's greatest acquisition coup is a 1960 letter to Robert Beum
from William Carlos Williams, in which
his lunous reaction to an "explanation"
of his poetics set forth some 15 years
earlier by Wallace Stevens is
documented . Stevens' offending
passage reads, "The anti-poetic is his
spirit's cure ... To a man with a sentimental side the anti-.poetic os that truth, that
reality to which all of us are forever fleeing ." To whoch William Carlos Williams
storms in the letter: "Wallece Stevens
lin an introduction to one of my books
of poems) invented the falacy [sic) of my
use of 'anti-poetic' materials to enhance
the poetic matenals in my poems. And
every ass woth nolhfng to say has copied
hos diCtum."
Another omportant manuscnpt in the
Williams case Is a lour-paged, still unpublished typescropt, "The Measure." It
accompanies a shghtly later letter to
Beum on whiCh Wolllams theonzes about
hos poetry l"somethong I almost never
attempt") and concludes the loery letter
woth his 1118W of the essentoal element in
e poem: structure.

Bertholf has assembled a delightful
exhibit, and it's tun to browse and pore.
He did it singlehandedty, without fuss
and with obvious pleasure. '1t's the first
one I've ever done," he told us happily,
and added that he's now-planning the
next one - for another corner of the
Special Collections reading room - for
Jack Kerouac Day in October.

Many Butlera
A veritable pride of professors have
been, are, and will be guests of the
English Department's Edward H. Butler
Chair throughout this semester. Most,
though not all, have a special interest in
the relationship between literature and
psychology.
·

For example, the first Butler Chair
Visiting Professor this month was Joel
Fine&lt;nan, an assistant professor of
English at Berl&lt;eley, who !bolt his Ph.D.
at U/B in Literature and Psychology. He
was followed by Albert Hutter, a professor of English at UCLA and a
psychoanalyst, whose public lecture
was "Poetry in Ps'lchoanalysis."
Kenneth Burl&lt;e, who will be a .Butler
.Visiting Professor at ' varying • times
throughout the entire semester (nlore of
this later), opened his series of lectures
on Logology with an examination of
language and psychology.
Burke is a well-lcnown and controversial man of letters, who at a vigorous
and entertaining 82, is still going strong.
He has written in so many forms and on
so many subjects and with such an
eclectic approach, that reactions to him
have been very mixed. In a huge book
called Cririctil ResponSBS ro KBnneth
Burke, he is hailed as "the foremost
cri\ic of our age and P&lt;lf!ll!llS the
greatest critic since ColeridgeH aod also
dismissed as a "cractcpot . w ith a
panacea." IT.tle latter is in reference to
his search for a universal philosophic
system. I His approach to language and
to ~terature has utilized psychoanalytical
concepts, including free association, as
(to quote Burkel "a truly liquid attitude
towards speech."
Continuing the literature and
psychology theme, Shoshana Felman,
associate professor of French at Yale,
and editor of the Yale French Studies on
psychoanalysis and language, woll speak
on October 9. Her topic: "Rereading
Femininity."
On 1he oth9f hand, on October 4,
Butler Visiting Professor John Cohen
will screen his film"O'eros.'' which PBS
showed on NovtJiast year. Cohen claims
that it wasn't his "real film" that viewers
saw on PBS. but one whose soundtractc
was altered with Simon and Gartunkel
matenal. After the screening, he'll talk

about the two versions ot his documentary, plus other problems with PBS, a
about his making ot the film in t
mountains of Peru . Cohen, a facul
member at SUNY /Purchase, is also a
photographer and a member of the
Lost City Ramblers folk music group. No
literature and psychology in this quarter.
Another Colhen is tentatively scheduled tor OCtober; at this printing it's not
known if Ralph Colhen, editor of New
Litemry History and professor of English
at the University of Virginia, w ill be here
on October 4 and 6. Call the English
Department, ~2676, to find out. And
on the 12th, the Joyce scholar, Hans
Waite&lt; Gabler, professor of English at
the Unive&lt;sity of Munich, will describe
"The Challenge of Editing Ulysses."
Also in October, besides a retum visit
by Kenneth Burke, who will continue his
Logology series with a look at language
and sociology, the Butler Chair will
sponsor a two-day residency on the 18th ,
and 19th by former 11963-19781 U/B
English professor Albert Cook. Cook,
now professor of Comparative Literature
at Brown University, Is generally
credited with h#.ling built the English
Department into a nationally recognized
and brilliant department, star-studded
with such as Charles Olson, Robert
Creeley, leslie Fiedler, John Barth and
John Logan. Cook, a distinguished
scholar and writer, will lecture on
"Aspects of Image: Rilke, Pound, Arp."
In November, Kenneth Burl&lt;e will give
the third and final section of logofogy.
in which he'll treat language and
technology. Richard Wheeler, associate
professor of English at the University of
Illinois at Champagne/Urbana, will
speak on Shakespeare from a
psychoanalytic perspective, And in
December. Christophe&lt; Bot las. a U I B
Ph.D. in English, now an eminent
psychoanalyst in london, will be the
final guest .

�The remaining four~ of Kino
Polskie 2, (again at the Rivoli, -1109
Broadway, comer of Sweet Avenue) will
include a political film by Jerzy

lntett!St in Fmnk Uovd Wright runs
perenmal, and Jack Quinlin, ~
professor of Art History and an erdlit8otural historian with a particular intMWt
in Frank Lloyd Wright, has scheduled
fou r slrde-1llustrated lectures to be giwn
by distinguished Wright scholars . He
has asked them to talk about some
aspects of Wright's early work lc~rca
1900-19101, ·whiCh was the period that
saw a prohferation of Frank Lloyd
Wright architecture 1n Buffalo: the
Larkm Company administrati on
buildmg. the Darwm D. Martm House
lnow owned by the Un1vers1tyl. and
seteral restdences.
The senes, wh1ch w111 be given m the
Albnght -Knox Art Gallery aud1tonum,
gets underway tomght at B. wuh
Wellesley professor James O'Gorman.
author of ma101 books on H.H Richardson and Frank Furness. two vttal
forerunners of Frank Lloyd Wnght "A
knockout speaker," reports Ouman
Allen Brooks. prolessCJr of Art H1story
at he Umverstty of Toronto, •s con Sidered to be the lead1ng authonty on
Prame School archllecture, and on October 11 , he'll expla1n some of the
subtler aspects of Wnght's use of space
The third lecturer, Thomas Hemz. IS an
archttect who spec.ahzes m the restoration of Wnght and Pra~rie School
houses; he's also ed1tor of the Frank
Lloyd Wnght Newsletter and director of
the Frank Lloyd Wnght Association .
Frank Lloyd Wright's windows were
supremely elegant, and Hemz studied
Art Glass-makmg at the Gl8n
tudio
where many of those wmdo
were
made. Th1s craft will be the subtect ol
h1s October 1B lecture.
On October 25, the guest speak"' 1s
Davtd Hanks, curator of Amencan furniture at the Smithsontan lnstttution.
who orgamzed the exh1bltion of Frank
Lloyd Wnght's decora\IVe art lfurnllure,
wtndows, ornamental pteees and the
lrkel which opened two years ago at the
Smuhsonian's RenwiCk . Gallery and
subsequently traveled to New York.
Ch•cago and Atlanta. Hanks d1d constderable research here in preparation
for that much-pratsed show. w ori&lt;.ing
closely wtth Umversuy Archives director, Shonme Fmnegan. David Hanks has
wntten and lectured widely on Wnght
and on the Arts and Crafts movement in
Amer1ca, two closely-related subjects
which he w1ll treat in th1s final lecture of
the series.

Kaw~.

"Deeth of 1he PI8Sident"

(September 28-~. Jfli2v Hoffman's
version of the Polish love tale,
" Tredowata" !October 5-61 , two
classics from the fifties by Andre Wajda,
"Kana!" and " Ashes and Dl8monds"
!October 13-141, and "Love It or Leave
It" (October 20-211, a contemporary
comedy shot in Chicago.
All films are in Polish with English subtitles. Series subscriptions are $10; individual films range from $1 to $2.50.
More information on all of this is
available from Bruce Jenkins at Med1a
Study, 847-2555.

Film Note
As we always say, there are I happily)
too many films to be listed mdiv1dually
on these pages. Good sources of information are the UUAB pocket calendars
of film listings, available at SqUire lnfor.
ma\IOn !Main Street) and 106 Talbert
Haii !Amherstl . Call636-2919 for recorded mformation . Center for Med1a
studies also publishes a listing of the 1r
films available at 101 Wende Hall IMa1n
Streetl. or call831-2426.

Evenings for
Film

~UoydWriQhL

Polish Cinema
Two years ago a collaboration between the Polish Community Center and
Media Study/ Bulfalo, initiated by the
first director of the Polish Center,
Monica Polowy. and Thorn Andersen of
Media Study/ Buffalo, resulted in a
series of Polish films shown at the Rivoli
Theatre. The collaboration resumed this
year, w ith a second series of Polish films
!Kino Polskie 21 . which opened the
weekend of September 21 .

New

George Landow makes cute titles. For
his appearance as guest fi lmmaker at
this season's first Evenings for New
Film, Mr. Landow will screen such
works as his " On the marriage Broker
Joke as Cited by Sigmund Freud in 'Wit
and 1ts Relation to the Unconscious· or
Can the Avant -Garde Artist Be
Wholed?," " No Sir Orison ," '(which
smacks of anagramisml and " W ide
Angle Saxon. " There's also "Remedial
Reading Comprehension" which may or
may not be a humorous title.
In any case, Landow. who began as a
painter and sculptor, turned to filmmak ing m the mid·sixties and now his films
are in such prestigious permanent col·
lections as those of the Museum of
Modem Art and the Centre Georges
Pompidou . Here' s a description of him
from Film Culture: "The most devout of
the structural filmmakers and perhaps
the most sublime is George
landow ... devoted to the flat screen
cinema, the moving grain painting ."
Landow will be at the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery tomorrow (Friday) at B PM .
Next in the series are Gemnan filmmakers Wilhelm and Birgit Hein , who as
part of a nationwide tour of the U.S. w1ll
appear on October 19 at the Gallery to
screen " Verdammt In Aile Ewigkeit,"
wh1ch translates to "From Here to Eternity." The Heims write that it is " the first
step to overcome a crisis in our work,
whicb lasted for about two years." To
be able to con tinue as artists, they say
that they had to overcome the "narrow
borders" of avant-garde, formalistic pro-blems, and deal as well with "actual problems." The result is the "emotional
outburst of our new work ."

Th1s is the first issue of the 1979-00 magne~ the fifth year of magnet's
publication by the Office of Cultur91 Affairs. and the fifth year of a happy col·
laborauon w ith the Reponer, in whose pages magnet is inserted once a
month . Along the way, we've p1cked up a fa1rly substantial off-campus mailing
list too, so that magnet is able to provide Information about U/ B cultural affairs both to the University and to the community.
We are happy to continue our free mailings; but we want both to update our
mailing list and to determine your interest in continuing to receive magnet. To
that end, we ask that you clip the coupon below and mail it to us, or phone the
Office of Cultural Affairs at 636-2313. Those who have already called this
semester to ask that we put their names on our mailing list need not contact us

a second time.

,

-E.H.

To: The Office of Cultural Affairs
410 Capen Hall
SUNY Buffalo
Amherst, NY 14260
Good heavens, of course, I want to continue receiving magner. Could you
have doubted it? Please don't do anything so rash as to remove my name from
your mailing listl
I Signature)
(Address)
I City, Zip Codel

1

�Evenings for New
Music
Instrumental vntuosi, the Chamber
Orchestra of the Buffalo Philhaunonic.
and a program in tnbute to one of the
greatest living composers, Ell1ott Carter.
w1ll open the 16th season of Evenings
for New Music on Sunday. October 14.
Elhon Carter. who celebrated his 70th
birthday last year, was one of the guest
composers in the 1978 June 1n Buffalo
contemporary music festival at which
his three difficult and exc111ng stnng
quartets were performed. Highly tnvenuve and ongmal, Carter has conspicuously steered clear of success.ve
mltStcal fashtons, and remams a tower·
ang indtvtduahst.
Four works by th1s Pulitzer Prizewmnmg composer are to be presented
on the 14th. His 1974 Duo for Violin and
PIBno Will be performed by two
remarkable Amenca n musrctans, Paul
Zukofsky and Ursula Oppens. John
Cage wntes h1s most demanding VIOlin
works for Zukofsky. who IS a master performer of contemporary vtohn reper·
totre. And 1t1s qune probable that Carter
had h1m in mind. too. for this Duo.
whtch was gtven its prem1ere performance by Zukcfsky tn 1975. Pianist
Ursula Oppens looks hke a dehcate little of the evening will be the 1961 Double
gtrl in the Illustrations of a book of Concerto, with Ursula Oppens. piano.
children's stories; she 1s a d~namic Paul Jacobs. harpsichord. and the
ptantst , whose performances a
'ong Chamber Orchestra of the Buffalo
and compelling. Oppens won F1rst Prize Philharmonic. plus U/ B faculty and
at the Busoni P1ano Competition in Italy students. Conducting the Concerto w ill
and 1n 1976 was awarded the Avery be yet another virtuoso: percussionist.
F1sher Pnze.
conductor and U/ B professor of Music,
Ursula Oppens and Fred Sherry. Jan Williams.
c.elllst. w111 perform Carter's Cello
The Evenmgs for New Music will be
Sonata 119481; Paul Jacobs. his Piano held at the Center Theatre. 681 Main St.
Sonara 11945-461; and the culmination at8 PM .

Watch for ...
... a production of Ibsen's classic
drama. "G hosts," directed by Ward
Willian son. It opens Thursday, October
Z5, at the Center Theatre, 681 Ma1n St.,
for a three·week run.
... the second in the SIX-part Slee
Beethoven String Quartet Cycle lth1s is
the 24th ye.ar!f , with the Orford Quartet
from Toronto. Batrd Hall , Wednesday,
October 31 at B PM .

... The London Early MuSIC Group
!October 261 and Kenneth Drake. fortePlano !October 281. Also. another Slee
Guest Recnal of contemporary music on
Octobe1 25, w1th Melvyn Poore. tuba.
... and mus1c faculty rec1tals by Allen
S1gel, clannet !October 291 and Yvar
M1khashofl. p1ano !November 31.
.. . The Mus•cology Lecture Series to
be g1ven 1n the late afternoon 10 Baird
106. free . Call the Concert Office.
831 -3408. for ttmes and tttles.

for single f1lm . Sponsors: The Cercle
Culture! ·de Langue Francaise and
Media Study/Buffalo.

DRAMA
Kennedy's Children, directed by Tom
Dooney. See September 27 hsting .
Note: Sunday performance IS at 3
PM .
Tickets
T1ckets, where requtred , are avaHable at the Squtre
Hall Ticket Office ltn advance!; remaining ticket s at
the door one hour before. event. I. D. cards must be
presented in order to purchase ttckets at
Student/Faculty/Staff/ Alumnt rate.

September
27
Thursdlty

28
Friday

DRAMA
Kennedy 's Cht1dren, by Robert
Patrick. directed by Tom Dooney. A
play about the survivors and victims
of the 60's and their fives in the 70's.
In the Off-Canter Cabaret {the second
performance space at the Center
Theatre), Center Theatre. 681 Main
St., B p.m. Admission $2. ADS
vouchers accepted . ,.S ponsors :
Department of Theatre and Center
for Theatre Research.

MUSIC
Room 100 Concert: works of Buffalobased composer Rocco Di Pietro .
Works will be performed by the composer and by Robert Dick , flute;
Weronika Knittel. viohn; Edward
Yadzinski, clannet. Baird Hall, Room
100, Main Street Campus. B PM .
Free. Sponsors: Center of the
Creative and Performing Arts and
Department of Music.

DRAMA
Kennedy 's Children, directed by Tom
Dooney. See September 27 listing.

29
Saturdey

MUSIC
The Broken Consort. contemporary
music recital by visiting artists. Baird
Hall. B PM. General admission $4,
faculty, staff, alumni, senior citizens
$3, students $1. Sponsor: Slee Chair
of Composition . Department of
MuSIC.

WBFO BENERT CONCERT
Rock groups : " Davy &amp; the .
Crocketts" and "Extra Cheese" !with
Gary "Oil of Dog" Storm!. The
Schuper House. 1802 Niagara St.
!near Amherst St. I. 9:-sJ PM. Admission $2 .

HIStory, Wellesley College: "H.H .
Richardson. Frenk Lloyd Wright and
the Geological Analogy in American
Architecture." Albright-Knox Art
Gallery aud1torium. B PM. Free.
Sponsors· Art History program ~nd
Albnght-lt(nox Art Gallery.

R~ne~~September 27. 1171

2
Tuesday

3

3D
Sundlly

R~

SCREENING/DISCUSSION

Ouebac Film Day, - with FrenchCanadian filmmakers. Mireifle
Dansereau and Jean-Pierre Lefebvre.
Wick Center Auditorium,• Daemen
College. 2:30-10 PM . $9 includes
both films and dinner !reservations by
Friday, September 28 at 847-25551 ;
$3 for both films !without d1nnerl ; $2

ARCHITECTURE LECT\JRE
SERIES
George Dickie, Skidmore. Owings.
Merrill !Chicago) : discuSSion of work
in U.S. and abroad. 335 Hayes Hall.
5:30 PM .• Free. Sponsors: Schoof of
Architecture and Environmental
Design .
UFE WORKSHOP
Tuesdays/October 2. 9, 16, 23. 'SJ
Polish Folk Dancing. Main Street
Campus. 7-9 PM . Registration at 110
Norton Hall. Amherst Campus.
636-2008 on Monday through Frida\'.

MID -DAY

MUSIC

SERIES

Wednesday A wide variety of music from JBU to
classical. Haas Lounge, Squtre Hall .
Noon-2 PM . Free. Sponsor: UUAB
Music. Coffeehouse. and performing
Arts Committees; Student Association's Student Activities and Commuter Affairs.

UFE WORKSHOP
Wednesdays/October 3. 10. 17, 24,
31, November 7 Inspirational Writing:
Short Stories. 3-SI'M . Amherst Campus. Registration at 110 Norton Hall .
Amherst Campus, 636-2008 on Monday through Friday.

MUSIC
Gary Burgess. tenor; Lk Smic.
piano. Faculty recital. Baird Recital
Hall. B PM . General admission $3,
faculty . staff. alumni, senior citizens
$2, students $1 . Sponsor ~ Department of Music.

FRANK UOYD WRIGHT LECT\JRE
SERI~ ·

James O'Gorman, professor of Art

1
Monday

FILM/DISCUSSION"
Evenings for New Film: George
Landow. filmmaker. Albright-Knox
Art Gallery. B PM . General admission
$2 .• students, gallery members $1 .50.
Sponsors: Center for Media Study
and Albright-Knox Art Gallery.

UFE WORKSHOP
Thursday/ September 27 and October
4 Mime. Main Street Campus. 7:-sJ -9
PM . Registration at 110 Norton Hall,
Amherst Campus, 636-2B(ll on Monday through Friday.

October

4
Thursdl!y

UFE WORKSHOP
Thursdays/ October 4. 11, 1B. Z5 Play
Reading. Main Street Campus. 2-&lt;1
PM. Registration ai 110 Norton Hall.
Amherst Campus, 636-2008. Monday
through Friday.

UFE WORKSHOP
Thursday/October 4,

11.

18. Z5.

N~ber1 . BE~ngA~V~

ir!(land Doing. Main Street Campus.
7-9 PM. Registration at 110 Norton
HaA. Amherst Campus. 636-2800.
Monday through Friday.

.l

�.............

DltiiMA

K.,.,.,.•
Chlldtrln, dnc:lad by Tom
Oooney.
'Z71isting.

~Ocealler 11. 18, 25

See~

-~
Mein SIIWI C8n¥lua.
7-8:31 PM. Regill{alion on Mondey
,_.. fridlot.

FILM~

&amp;JaJWICI-·
John ca..: "O'eroe." 322 Cllmens
Hall 1Arnher$tl. 4 PM. F. .. $ponD":
Edward H. Butler Chair,
ol English.

....
12
Frldooy

Hans Walter Gabler, professor of
Engflsh. University of Munich: "The
Challenge of Editing Ulysses... 322
Clemens Hall !Amherst) . 2 PM. Free.
Sponsor: Edward H. Butler Chair,
Department of English.

13

MUSIC

MUSIC
VI 8 ChOir: Vocal Music of the Italian
Baroque. The major work of the
evening , Carissimi ' s Orator io ,
Jephre. will be performed by the
University Choir, directed by Harriet
Simons. Also on the program are two
Monteverdi duets sung by tenors
Christopher Critelli and David Stott
(students of Gary Burgess) . and an •
Alessandro Scarlatti solo cantata for
soprano, . performed .b.Y Adrienne
Tworek-Gryta (student of M~riel
Wolf) and featuring David Kuehn,
trumpet. Baird Recital Hall. 8 PM .
Free·. Sponsor: Department of Music.

Randy Wesron, live from the .
Tralfamadore Cafe. WBFO 188.7
FMI. 10 PM .

DRAMA
Kennedy 's Children, directed by Tom
Dooney. See September 27 listing.
~~t~: Su~day . ~\)rrnance is a.t _3

ARCHITECTURE LECTURE

14
Sundloy

UFE WORKSHOP

•

I

T..-.v

W.........,
10

LECTURE"
Shoshana FelfTIIJn, associate professor of French, Yale University:
"Rereading Femininity ." 322
Clemens. 3 PM . Free. Sponsors: Edward H. Butler Chair, Department of
English.

MID-DAY MUSIC SERIES
Haas Lounge. Squire
October 3 listing.

Hall.

See

MUSIC
Leo SmiL· all-Bach, on the piano and
polymoog . Faculty recital. Baird Hall.
8 PM . General Admission $3, Faculty,
staff, alumni. senior citizens $2,
students $1. Sponsor: Department of.
MuSIC.

Ol'llce of Cullin! Aff81ra
410
Hell. SUNYAB
Amto.at, N.Y. 1a.l

c-

16
Mondey

20
.s.tunboy

DRAMA

LECTURE•
Kenneth Burke: "Logology 1111
-Language and Sociology... The
Kiva, Baldy Hall IAmherstl . 8 PM.
Free. Sponsor: Edward H. Butler
Chair, Department of English.

MUSIC
Richard Teitelbeum Residenay: See· ~
October 19 listing. Note Saturday :l
location: Media Study, 207 Delaware·
Avenue. Sponsors: Center of th~
Creative and Perfonning Arts and
Media Study/ Buffalo.

21
Sundloy

WBFO BENEm CONCERT

22
Mondey

ARCHITECTURE LECTURE
SERIES

The Amhersc Saxophone Ouanet.
Katherine Cornell Theater. 8 PM . Admission $2.50.

24
MID-DAY MUSIC SERIES
W ...naaday Norton Cafeteria, Amherst Camp~• See October 3 listing.

26
~y

FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT LECTURE
SERIES"
David A. Hanks. curator of American
furniture at the Smithsonian Institution. Albright-Knox Art Gallery
auditorium. 8 PM . Free. Sporlsors:
Art History program and Albright·
Knox Art Gallery.

OPEN DISCUSSION•

arv.
U.S.Poetage

Non-Profit

PAID
BufWo, N.Y.
PennJtNo. 311

~

Jean Paul Carlhian, Shepley .
Bullfinch, RichardsQ11 &amp; Abbott
!Boston, Mass.l : "The Ecole ~s
Beaux Arts Educational System ... 335
Hayes Hall. 5:30PM . Free. Sponsor:
School of Architecture &amp; Environmen tal Design.

WBFO UVE BROADCAST
IJ'uffalo Chamber Music Sociery: The
Nf!W York Chamber Soloists, WBFO
188.7 FMI. 8:30 PM.
Kennerh Burke. ~ Clemens Hall
!Amherst! 3 PM. Free. Sponsor:

J

WBFO UVE BROADCAST
Jazz rock group Kilo, live from the
Tralfamadore Cafe. WBFO 188.7
FMI . 10 PM .

ARCHITECTURE LECTURE
SERIES
Roberr Campbell, Cambridge,
Massachusetts : " Remembering
Postmodernism." 335 Hayes Hall .
5:30 PM . Free. Sponsor: School of
Architecture &amp; Environmenta l
Design.

MUSIC

FILM/DISCUSSION•

Kennedy's Children, directed by Tom
Dooney. See September 27 listing.
Evenings for New Music: A tribute to
composer Elliott Carter. Center
Theatre. 881 Main St. 8 PM . Admission $5, $4, $3, with $1 discount for
students and senior citizens. Patrons
$25-$100. Sponsors: Center of the
Creative and Perfonning Arts and
Department of Music.

l

Richard Teitelbaum Residency: Concert performance of ekH:tronic music
with Richard Teitelbaum, pianist and
Robert Dick, flutist. Baird Hall . Main
Street Campus. 8 PM . General admission $1.50, Students, community
and senior citizens $1 . ADS vouchers
accepted . Sponsors: Center of the
Creative and Perfonning Arts and
Department of Music.
Evenings for New Filtff: Birgit and
Wilhelm Hein, filmmakers. Albright·
Knox Art Gallery. 8 PM . General admission $2 , students , gallery
members $1.50. Sponsors: Center for
Media Study and Albright-Knox Art
Gallery .

MUSIC"

Mondays/October 8 and 22,
November 5 An Exposition of Jewish
Culcure &amp; Custems. Amherst Campus. 7:30-9:30 PM . Registration at
110 Norton Hall. Amherst Campus,
636-2006. on Monday through Friday.

David Kuehn, twnpet . Faculty
Hall. 8 PM .
recital. Baird P
General adr.:
.•• $3, faculty , staff,
alumni.
"' citizens. $2, students
$1 . Sponsor: Department of Music.

19
Friday

WBFO UVE BROADCAST

DRAMA

MUSIC

DRAMA
Kennedy's Children, directed by Tom
Dooney. See September 27 listing.

Vocalist Mark Murphy, live from the
' Tralfamadore . Cafe. WBFO 188.7
FMI. 10 PM .

Kennedy's Children, directed by Tom
Dooney. See September 27 listing .

SERIES
Richardo Legorreca. Mexico: discussion o( wor1t. 335 Hayes Hall. 5:30
PM . Free. Sponsors: School of Architecture &amp; Environmental Design
and Council on International Studies.

Yvar Mikhashoff, piano. Faculty
recital. Baird Recital Hall. 8 PM .
General admission $3, faculty . stafi.
alumni, senior citizens, $2, students
$1. Sponsor: Department of Music.

Ask cha Presidenr-From NPR . a live
national call·in to President Caner.
WBFO 188.7 FMI . 1 PM .

WBFO UVE BROADCAST

•

MUSIC

WBFO UVE BROADCAST

Ronald Richards. oboe. Darlene
Reynard, bassoon, Faculty recital.
Baird Recital Hall 8 PM . General admissiOn $3, faculty, staff. alumni.
senior citizens. $2, students $1 .
Sponsor: Department of Music

l

Alben Cook, professor of Comparative Literat ure. Brown University:
" Aspects of Image: Rilke, Pound.
Arp." 322 Clemens. 3 PM . Free.·
Sponsor: Edward H. Butler Chair,
Department of English .

Dooney. See September 27 listing.

s.turday

~

LECTURE•

DRAMA
Kennedy's Children, directed by Tom

LECTURE•

UFE WORKSHOP

Mondey

Thotntls ~ architect and director
of the Frank Lloyd Wright Association, on the craft of Art Glass-making
las in Wright's famous windows!.
Albright-Knox Art Gallery auditorium.
8 PM . Free. Sponsors: Art History
program and Albright-Knox Art
Gallery.

professor of Art
History, Univer!llty of Toronto. on
Wright's use of space. Albright-Knox
Art Gallery Auditorium. 8 PM. Free.
Sponsors: Art History program and
Albright-Knox Art Gallery.

Dooney. See September 27 listing.

7

FRANK U.OYD WRIGHT LECTURE

Alfm Brooks.

DRAMA
Kennedy's Children, directed b\f Tom

Sundloy

,

8EIIIEr

FRANK U.OYD WRIOHr LECTURE

Professor Hilns-Georg G8dwner of

I
s.tunboy

, MID-DAY MUSICOctober 3 listing.

"--t/y's ChlldtwJ. clra:t8d by Tom
Ooonev. Sea SepMmber-'Z7 lilting.

COLLOQUIUM

Fridays/October 5, 12. 19. 26
Crlii8Cive Dance. Main Street Campus. 2:30-4 PM . Registration at 110
Norton Hall , Amherst Campus.
636-2006 on Monday through Friday.

17

Wlido. . ., Haas Lounge, 5t!uke Hall. Sae

DJIAIIA

o--t

Heidelberg: "Practical Philosophy as
a Paradigm of Humanities."
Gadamer's major worlc. Truch and'
Merhod I 19601 established his reputation as a founder of "hermeneutic"
philosophy. He was awarded the
Hegel Prize in 1979. 1lll Baldy Hall.
3:30 PM . Free. Sponsors: Graduate
Group in Modern German Studies
and Department of Philosophy.

Edward H . Butl8r Chair, Department
of English.

Com-

Exhibits
Marrhew Spancer and Kevin 'Fix: Mixed Media Installation. Alamo Gallery, Beck Hall !Main Strsctl .
Through October 2. Sponsors: VP for Health
Sciences and Art Department.
Recent Acquisirions" Poetry Collection, reading
room. 4th floor Capen Hall I Amherst) . Through October.
Jack Kerouac. Poetry CoOection, reading room. 4th
floor Capen Hall I Amherst) . October 12to November

2.

R~'¥1. 1171

,
t

�September 27, 1979

7

EMMA WOMEN'S BOOKSTORE PRESENTATION'
A ........ ol
P - . ...t F - .
Reading wUI be Cariene Pobce, auodete profes50r
of Englioh,. U/8 . Ruth G.U... ledum. Womon'•
Studies Colege. and Karen Pewrson . T rdanwtdore
M.in Filmore.
p.m.
Thts iS the .second in a .wries of readings 5PQn·
501'ed by EMMA. Women's Bookstore. The pur·
pose is to provide the Buffalo community with an
opportunity to experience women's pony and fie·
tion . Cartene P~e is the: author of Slater X lind
lho " - ol Fool Ploy a nd 11M~ ­
Ruth Geller 1s the author ol Seed ola Womaa. a nd
Karen· Pettnon is a local poet. Reading and
childcare free . Donations are welcome. For more
lnformalion. caU EMMA. 836-8970.

w-·•

Cafe,2601

at

8-11

v-.--•Dioc...._ta
p.,_--..

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR•

~~

- . , , J...,.&gt; J. Ubecht. U/ B. The Klv•
(101 Baldy! 4 ·5 p.m

FOSTER COLLOQUIUM SEMINAR•
s--a......voiTMotal Allolls. P,of...., J. H " - '""'· Iowa
State Unlvenily. The hOIII' 0 . T. Buchloy. 70
Ac:haon . 4 p .m
HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY•

N!.\!.!.~~;.t~a~:::c:k 1h~·~~r~

Neocortn:. Dr- Marc Colonnter. Labor.coires de
Neurobiobgie. Hopital dell 'Enfant J esus. Pavilion
Notre-Dame.. Queb«-. 245 Cary. 4 p.m.
MICROBIOLOGY BI-MONlltLY SEMINAR•
C-~loVuoiR..,..__Dt

H amu.d R . Thaco&lt;e. O.panment of Mi&lt;robiology.
U/8 School of MediCine. 223 Shennan . 4 p.m.

MINORITY FACULlY A STAFF ASSOCIA·

nON*
Special meeting of the Minorily Faculty and Staff
ASSOCiation. Blue A.oom. Faculty Club. 2 p.m AD
members urged to a ttend .

YOM KIPPUR OBSERVANCE
Both day and night clauet cance:hd.

UUABFIUI'

Harold aecl Maude.

Conf~mce

Theatre.

Squire . 3:45. 6. 8. and 10 p .m . General admtssion

$2: wdents $1.50
UUAB MIDNIGHT FIUI'

C.ub'-ea (1 942) . Conference Theatre .
12 midnight~ General admission $2:
... - .. $1.50.
Dhded by Miehoef Curti&lt;, music by Mox
s....... with Humplvcy Bogart, Ingrid s..gm.n.
O.ud. Rains. Sidney Gruns;treet and Peter Lc:wne.
Won an Acade:my Award fOr Baa Picture.. Best
DirectiOn and Best ScrunpJay-an inspiration fOr
Squh.

Woody Alle.n's hit film " Play h Again , Sam .'"

Ingrid Bergman conMckn this cu)t cJassk': one ol
the: worst fUms she ever made: the script was written
as fiJming progressed and nobody knew whether
she wouki leave Bogart or Slay with him until the
lui: hamr: was shot. Yet, she reports, the sound
wmt off one night at a -=reentng she attended at
Y.st and sever.J Rudents got up and redted the
dialogue from memory. Mow ova. Rocky HorrCJi..

w.......,.,.

FOOTBALL'
U/ B w .
College. Rotary Field.
1:30 p.m.
The c.lflU defeated Bulk return home.. d4!:ier'Ving
a wildly-.enlhusiulic reception for the way they
didn't fokt up when Brockpoc1took a big lead laR
Saturday. '"We didn't really Ml.se that game,"' Coach
Dando said in reference to the U/ 8 comeback,
. ""time just ntn out."
U / B FOOT1IAU. UNIT£0 WAY BENEFIT '
Beginning at 7 p.m. there will be a n inf01"11\a1 gee.
togethe&lt; wffh playen, ooacha. fomOies and friend•
of the U/ 8 BuOs, with a special appearance by Ed
Rutkowski. From 8-midnJght there wUI be liw music
with Uh Aftu. Fillmore Room , Squire. Drinks will
be: avaJiable . A $2 donation will go toward the total
Unrvesstty-wide United Way drive. Sponsored by
UUAB and SA.
UUABFIUI'
Brud ond Chocolato {Italy, 1974]. Conferenc•
Theatre, Squire. 3 , 5:15, 7:30 and 9:45 p..m .
General admission $2: srucUnts S l.SO.

MEDIA STUDY RLM (FILM HISTORY)
Blnh of A Nollon IGriff•h . 19151 . 146 D;d•ndori. 7·9 p .m. Sporu;ored by tM Center for Media
Study.
This sikmt film epic. stih contro\lersial in It$ treat·
ment of the Civa1 War and Reconstruction . has been
called "prodigious... by the eminent Critic BmJey
Crowther . Said he. "'the sudden emer9ence ol this
picture with aD iU cheuvtnistic fervor and power ol
intimate emotional penuasion, was as though a
superb symphony had burst from lhe mucic or
primitive music wtthtn two decades after the inven·
Uon of the hom .
fl

UUAB MONDAY NIGHT FILMS '
Underworid (1927). 7 p.m.: Sc:arilce-ShatM
of a NMion 11932) , 8 :30p.m. Wokhnan Theatre .
Amherst. Fret admission .
u..cter-ld b di&lt;ected by Josef """ Stomb«g
from a sconario by Ben Hecht. with Geoo-g. Ban·
croft . Evelyn Brent and Clive Brook. Hecht won an
cncar fOJ scripting this bw·budget yet elrtrenwly
5UC:CUS~ul box~ice hi!:. h w.u; the first film to use
gangsters as heroes and established the gangster
film vogue that lasled through the 30s:.
~- Hecht and Hawks triggered olf a
wtde 5erirs ollmit•tions when they turned out this
ftlmic chronk:le of an AJ Capone·llke gangster who
ltved end died by the machine gun . Look for
George Rah as ~ Little Boy" in this classic film unseen in the U.S . f01 decades.

MULnDISCIPIJNARY CONFERENCE•
Gynocologlc.ol M............ Dt . Edw• d S.
Hendenon and Or. Steyen M~ Piver. Roswe:U Parte
Memorial lnsh1ute Hll&amp;eboe Auditorium. 4-5 p.m.
SponSO&lt;ed by the Schoo! of Mod;clne .
MEDIA STUDY FILMS (FIU4 HISTORY) •
Swedish Cinemo CloMic:s, Ch.ptln !;lm•. 11M
Rink. Euy Stt-Ht. Th• lnnaiF-. The Gold
RU5h. 146 D;dondorl. 7 p.m. SponSO&lt;ed by the
Center for Media Study.
UUABRLMS'
It's A Gtfl (19341 . 7 p.m.: Nothing Sacnd
()937). 8:25 p.m. Squire Conference 'Thutrt.

Free admission.
ll's A Gtft. wtlh W. C . Flekis. Kathleen Howard
and Baby l..e:Roy, is consid~ed by many to be
Fle.lds' finest fUm . Aetds is the beleaguered common
man who is pitted against a badgering family ,
troublesome customers v.rho are destroying his
~. and the dreaded Baby Le-Roy. An:b' con·
' tempt lor - Baby" and vk:e vena are hUarious .
Nothing Sacnd ..... c.,olo l..ombo&lt;d and
Fredric Mardl . Apparently noshing is sacred to hoi·
shot reporter March who tries to ex.pkMI the lmml·
nent death ol a 9irl from Vft'tnant. A desslc com·
edy.
MS/ B ELECTRONIC ART SERIES' .
VkteotepH, video equipm ent. a nd las.en in pa·
forman« and installation by Mary Lucier. MedWI
Study/ Boffakl. 207 Delaware Avenue. 8 p .m . In·
stalatlon continues througtf Ottober 17.
MEDIA STUDY RLM (FIU4 THEORY)'
Soorplo Rlsing (Angnl . 14 7 D;efendoo. 9 p.m.
Media Study.

Sponsored by the Center for

Since its Italian debut. this bittersweet comedy

Saturday - 29
tf/ B DENTAL ALUMNI ANNUAL MEE11NG•

T oday's events begin a1 7 a.m. with the
Second Annual Dmi.al Alum ni Run at Delaware
P•ri&lt; t..l&lt;c.
Aher the Nn. rt's back to the Convention &lt;Anser
wflto.re Dr. John Naughton, dean of the School of
MediOfM, 'lllll speak at 9 a.m . on "Sporu
MediCine,' f...,_ by 0.. Raben ~ndy. P'&lt;&gt;-

feucx ol community rnedidni (nutntion) at Tufts
UnWenity Medical Schoo!. who will ddcvls ·p.,.

.ooa!O.....,

H- ·

John B Sheffer II, N ~ York State auembtyman
for the 14 ht District. wiU give the luncheon ad·
choss. ' A Leg;olative Penpe&lt;tNe.'

WORKSHOP FOR HEALTH PROFES·
S IONAI.S&lt;'
The ~ment of Medbf Technology lo off.,.
lng a wotkshop for health professionals who UM
e~tnllrUmmtatiOn . Room 1358u!JdingM.
CUnk:al Center. 462 Grider St. 8;.30 a .m.·5 p.m.
Wiliam Hlrwa. irunudOJ ol J'l'llltdical tedlno&amp;ogy.
Will op&amp;.m how to use bbic. e1ectronic let~ equlp-11\ent, induding d~ mukimewr and ~.
and basic test procedurn on drcultt. He wll
d~ate how to build drcuitl and wt11 exp&amp;.in
bo..c mathematlcol &lt;&lt;latiOnthops of elodridty
Worlc&lt;hop ,....
c.a 831 -8321 '"'
formation.

sJO

r-... , .

MENS TENNIS ·
Gene.eo Stete Colkvc. Amhent Courts 1 p.m
BASEBALL·
C.nlsM Colkwe. Ooubld\of'Mie PuU. F•td I

pm

ha5"coDected OYU a dozen intemationaJ honon. It is
a touching, humorous account ol a poor ltakan .
whose ..,... cannot bo cnuhed despite the .....,.
number ol setbacks he recrlws working In fOf"'tign
Switurland . Tile stars are Nino Manfredi,
Anna Karina and John Domli.
HOLLYWOOD FILM SERIES •
A Trilute to 50 Years ol the American Musical
FOm. Put II ' ThoGimn Mllla-S...., 11954! . ...,..
ing Jarna Stewart and June ADyson. Bu.ffalo &amp; Erie
Co. Historical Society. 8 p.m. Admission c:ha.ge.
Sponto&lt;ed by Media Study/ Buftlllo.
SentirMnt and big band musk mingle In this
highty romanticized btography-or me famed band
~ who was lost during Worid War II.
UUAB MIDNIGHT FILM'

Caublanca (1942. . Confe-rence Theatre .
Squire. 12 midnight. GeMtaJ admission $2.
students SJ.SO.

the Center for Media Scudy.

Tuesday- 2
NUCI£AR FACBJTY GUIDED TOUR'
Tow olthe N.......- ~ ond Technology
·Fadlftv wil stout lll 4 p.m. StucW1ts. facuky and
lleff members who are intere:sted tn the tour must
cal 831 -2826 for raervations. Futur~ d•u~s and
hours wil be announced .

M-

THEOREliCAL PHYSICS SEMINAR•
Equollon lo&lt; tho
Suoceptlblllly of
Weter, Or. E. P Day. 245 FtOI'lC'2oak. 4 p.m.
WOMEN'S TENNIS'
Houibton
Amherst Courts. 4 p.m.

Thiii'Sday. ~ 4
RESEARCH INS1lTUTE ON ALCOHOUSM
SEMINAR '.
A,_..,..~ s...tv of 1ho
Fotol Alcohol Syndo--, 0.. Sheldon Millo&lt;.
chairman. Department of Psychiatry, Clewland
Metropolitan HO$pifat Building U. Auditorium ,
Buftak»Gmera!Hospil:al. !0:30a .m Refreshments
15 minutes prior to seminar time.
BASEBALL'

St. Bonawnture Untwntry. Doubleheader
Peelle Fie.kt . 1 p.m

FILM'
CNrtte ChapSin's "Tht' Goad Rush . Woldman
Theatre:. Amhenl 2:30 p.m. Sponsored by the
~.,.,, of

Hlstooy.

Cone..

Sunday- 30
S C HOOL OF MEDICINE TENNIS TOURNAMENT
The School ol Medicine will hokl IU fifth annual
tenniS tournament and ptcnic . The entire U/ 8
rned..caJ community and families an&gt; invited
Amherst CourU 1 p.m.
UUAB RLM'
Brad and Chocolate (Italy. 1974) Woldman
Thutte. Amherst 3 , !US. 7~ and 9 ·45 p m
General .dmlision $2 , students S J 50
INTERNAnONAL POTLUCK DINNER AND
COFFEEHOUSE'
•
Second ~loo&lt; Lounge. Rod Joci&lt;et Q uad Elhcon
o 30 p m 8nng a food dah II&gt;'Jih ~u hpon10red
b; lnt"""'tx&gt;n&amp;l Cofle9&lt;

.·

MEDIA STUDY FILM (FILM THEORY)
0... SWh of the World (Vmov). Kino !Glaz.
Vertov) . 147 Diefendorf . 9 · 11 p.m. SponSbfed by

RElD HOCKEY'
Houghton College_. Rotary F'aekl . 4 p.m.

LECTURE'
Fmtln.._ Crltldlm : What Nat?, Ultian Robtnson . 208 Norton 4-6 p.m. Sponiored by Women's
Studies~ . American Srudles Undergraduate
Oub and the M.L A. A receptiOn foOows Everyone
wolcome.

PHYS ICS C OLLOQUIA•
1
Or . .John L ..JohMOn. Princeton Plasma Physics
Uiboratory. Princeton Universlly. 454 Fronczak.
3 30 p.m. Colfee •t 3· 15.
•
WOMEN'S TENNIS'
Genneo State Colleste: Amherst Courts. 4 p .m

·-~.--·. ceLl
To u.t ewnts Ill the "&lt;AAendar," call

Wednesday - 3
LECTURE'
N~ Left Marxism Today: A Reply to Or.
E&amp;on, by Dt Paul O....ng Po&amp;.oc.! Sa.nce 109
0 "8nan 3 .30 p m SponW&gt;red by the Prt~oJr•m m
Literature and Societ~ at the Otopanment of Engjsh:
and the ~ Workshop on Mand5! Studwt
Or Arthur Efron. Englrsll. end Dr Dale R ~
Phi&amp;osopny. \4IUI react: lOme prewntauon

olean Shrader el 636-2626.
Key.
..Jy to daOM wttll •
JK.,_OIIIIIID- ID doe Abject;

•a-

·o- to tile
• •opea to
_ . _ . at t11e u..._...,. umpo~bllc;

otllawiH epeclfled, dcket8 for
.-to cherwlal ..._..._ an be
pu.rcheMd et tile S.•IR HeU Ticket

OtBc..

�•

September 2:7, 1979

Bonn, Pannill can ,live with DUE chang
Both Vice Presidents RonMI Bunn
(Academic Allain) and F. Carter Pannll
(Health Scle!&gt;cal anticipate no problans
In developing a productive working relationship with DUE Dean John Peradotto,
now that the matter of his status has been
settled by the President.
In retrospect, Bunn says he realizes
that the recommendation making the
dean responsible for undergraduate
education In just the Core Campus and
not Health SclenGOS, put President Ketter
in a .. severe dilemma- more than
anybody appreciated at the time, but one
which became more apparent as groups
deliberated it."
The VPAA candidly admits he didn't
anticipate the extent to which the DUE
Dean was viewed as an .. important sy:m·
bol representing an Integrated campus ...
Some campuses. he notes, don't even
have the post. He thinks he may have
misjudged people's sentiments partially
because of his relatively recent arrival on

campus.
Because of the way In which the DUE
Dean is viewed, Bunn says the recommendation to split responsibility unfortunately seemed to feed the ''continuing

fear that Academic Affairs and Hea~h
Sciences are not able or willing to re~te
to each other in response to students.''

•Cale ndar

Alii&amp;_..
Bu"" I&amp; a bit -resentful at the way the

him an a regular basis _.,!tng "broad
recommendation was pegged as a
quatlons of reooun:e allocation and pro"power
play" _ In
campus
gram development." In addition, Bunn
media-espedaOy The Spectrum-and
plans to conllnue seeking his counsel (as
maintains he "never tried to sandbag
anyone." He says he tried to be as open • _.as that of the graduate dean) on matlieJl trrvqlving promotion and tenure .
as he could and asked the President' s Of.
............ _ _ d _
lice to be the same . Later in the controversy. he says a communication proPannlll points out that" he never had
blem obviously developed, but he feels ,
objections to an earlier situation (in the
at that point. the initiative to correct it
late 1960s) where the individual respon·
should have come from the President's
slble for aD undergraduate education
Office.
reported directly to the President.
What Ketter's decision essentially oes,
Pannlll says he will likely touch base
says Bunn. is return the DUE dean to an
with Pe:radotto once or twice a month at
..earlier condition:'' one with .. functional
various meetings they both attend. but

disadva ntages
and
symbolic
advantages."
The VPAA still believes that a " more
consequential leadership" would have
evolved If the DUE dean had become an
exlension of his office. More consequen·

lial because the dean would have had line
authority an&lt;t would have been held accountable for his decisions.
"The place where responsibility and ac·
countabiiUy normally mesh is in the
budget process . When this mesh occurs.
a finer quality of leadership emerges."
Bunn contends.

Now that the die is cast. Bunn hopes to

does not see any point in the dean's
becoming a regular member of the Health
Affairs Council since the group discusses
very specific issues which impact exclusively on the Health Sciences. like
hospital affiliations. At times. however.
when

University- wide

matters

are

discussed by the Cou ncil. he will invite
Peradotto. he indicates.
The VPHS says he hopes Peradotto's
Policy Committee will be "sensibly constituted;" he will, in fact , "forcibly insist"
on substantive representation for Health

Sciences. He rejects Peradotto's idea that
the committee should be constituted with

respect to enroBment of students In
Health Sciences undergraduate ~

grams, contending that the tlvee Health
Sciences undergrad schools have different administrative stru-"'res and ~
blems. "You can~ bulk them together. Irs
like comparing apples and oranges," he

.........

PannUI plans to work closely with
Peradotto on general education. Because..
of student Internships which usually occur
In the junior and senior years for Health
Sciences students and special course requirements Imposed by certification
demands. Pannill stresses that "careful
logistical planning" will be essential. He
hopes the dean wiU look favorably on a
"modified'' general education program
for students receiving bachelor of science
degrees.

Feldman has
new book. out
Professor Irving F""ldman's latest book ,
New and Selected Poems. is being
published today by- Viking-Penguin.
Feldman , a professor of English , Is author
of five earlier volumes of poems, two of
which were nominated for the National
Book Award in Poetry .

r('_

cr---7,col.4)

CEU.. MOI£CULAR BIOLOGY SEMINAR•
Dr. Keith R. Porter. Oepanmem of Molecular.
Cellular and Developmental Biok»gy, University of
Co&amp;orado Tide to~ announced . 114 Hochslener
4 · 15 p m. Colfee al4.
UUAB FJUI•
TM Big Fix (1978) Woldman Theatre.
Amhersl: 4:30, 7 and 9 :30p.m. General admisSIOn
$2: students 1.50.
Rkhard Dreyfuss. Susan Anspach . Rita Karin
and f M Abraham are the stArs of this S1ory of pot ·
smokJng Mosel W..-.e. 60's aaiviA at Berkeley. who
become. a
un\que private eyr tn the 70's A
kind of Yisual record of the 60's generation and the:lr
uneasy absorpooo by the system

s

,_,her

GRAY CHAIR LEcnJRE'
lmaginaUCM'I of P~son In Contemporary
Arneic.an Podry, Warren TaOman. Umverstty of
Sntish Columbia 438 Clemens 5 p m Professot
Tallman IS co-ed1t01' of The Poetks of the New
Amerk.an Poetry.
Spontored by Gray ChM of Pne1ry and Leuers.
Oepanment of Engbsh

Notices
BLACK EDUCATORS CONFERENCE
1l\e Black Educaton As.sooalion ol Western New
York i.S lif)Onsoring ils sutth annual ronferenc~ on
Inner Crty Schools, Fnday and Saturday. Octobet
26-27 , at the Sheraton Inn Buffa&amp;o East. Thb; year's
theme '4'111 be ~ T eachiJ"'g the l)ri)an Chlkf ~
Conference registration • open to the public
Registration fee . $20. mctudes a recepcion on fri·
d.y. worluhops and lunch on Saturday CaU
883-7717 for reservat.ons
DENTAL sruoy
Pet"'If\S who think they need dtntal work and
woukllike to take part in a study of pat;ent response
to routine dental treatnwnt shoukl contact Dr
Norman L Co.-ah at 831 · 4412 V~unt~ers must
noll currently be under the care of a dentiSt Par
dr:1P4nts '4ill r«C!M! dental eumrn~~Iion and x..,ays
to detnmn'M! how much routuw treatment they re
qun Two filkngs will bt' prO\Iided as pan of the
study by a denhst Spon10twi by the Orpanment of
8m.vt0fal Soence
FElLOWSHIP DEADUNES
~udems uueru:ted In Oanionh Fdiow5hips for
gr.duate study for 1980-8 1 are ed\lfM!d to contact
0t Andrew Holt. 548 Capen H.tl , before Octobrr
12 Det•lls of the fellowships may be found _In dw
September 20 Reponer. or m~~y be obtauted from
0. Hclo
1M deadhne for the 1980·81 compdn.on for
Fulbrigb1 Grants as Octobn ~ . 1979 The ~pus
Fubnght Ptogr&amp;m ad\:1ser as Or John Sunon FOJ
inftwm11tJon and advr:semmt, COI'Uacl hun at

GRADUATE SCHOOL DEADUNES
October 1: Deadline for : automatic: waiver of
continuous registration for those students who have
completed an degree requirements for Fall 1979
conferral. submission of Ph D. statement or programs to Graduate School fat June 198Q. conferral:
submission of Ma.ser's ~tement of programs tO
Graduate School fOt Febuary 1980 conferral.
GRAD snJDENT GRANTS
Money Is available for graduate student rew.arch
designed t~s the final project for e1thet a Mascer's or
Doctoral degree .
The Graduate Resource Acces.s Development
Pro)ect of the GSA has generatM enough funds to
prO\Iide up to S1S0f0f Master's students. and $.250
for Ph 0 candidates .
Appicat10ns are availabWr tn the Graduate Stu ·
dent AssociatiOI'I offce. 103 Talben Hall. and the
deadlme for receipt of completed forms for the FaU
program Is Friday. September 28. 1979. at 4 p m
Model applkations an.&gt; available for r'-"\llew m the
GSA offk'e
•
Sludents from all f«uhtes are urged to app)y
The applicatk&gt;n provides fuU instruCtions on what is
fundabk! and hol,r.r 1o prepare the applic::auon
HEALTH CARE PIAN OPEN HOUSES
~ He:ahh Care ~n has scheduled a serles of
"opm hou5e5" at its MedK:al Untet . 120 Garden·
vlBe Parkv.ay WHt. Cheektov.•aga . on WM~wsdays
from September through De«&gt;mber 1979. 5 ·30·8
pm

HOMECOMING DANCE
The U ~"B AJumm Assoc~ation·s Homecoming
Dmne:r -Oance "''til be hekt Sawrday. Octobet 6 . m
the Taben Dinmg HaD. Amherst Camputi. The
package includes cotktails at 7 ·30 p m • dmner at
8 :30. danong from 10 unul 1 a .m "''lth a cash hos
foDowmgdmner . Tbe AJumni Assooat100 tsalsoof·
feting a $5 admiSSion for dancing only Tkkets for
the dtnnet and dance are $35 a couple Mrs Constance Gtce\I&gt;ICZ IS cha1rWOman of th event For
ticket . caU831-4121 FKUttyimdstaffarecordtally
invited
INTENSIVE ENGLISH LANGUAGE IN ·
5TTTUTE
The Intensive English Language Institute ts In
need of conversabOf\ leade'IS and tuton for fore~gn
studenu; studying English M a fore.gn Language
Undergntd.uat studentti ar-d graduate students
welc:oi'M Undetgraduate a~n no available H ln·
'"'rested. caD 630·2079 between 3·5 p m Mondays
through Fridays and ask for Mk:hele Ann
KATHARINE CORNEJ.L THEATRE
The Kathanne CorneD Thearre (Elticon ComJMex)
r.s now 1n fuU operahonal statul. Reservations are
bemg .cct!pled for performances. coooens. etc for
the current .k'hool year P1ease cal 636-2038 for
adduJOMI tnformatiOI'I

636 2191 "'8J6.Bb9t!

NEED BASIC DENTAL CARE? WEJ.L. TEAM
NEEDS YOU.
TEAM Is a spe&amp;l program et the School of Den·
tislry ""tuch g.t\'\'S M'nlor dental 'utdents t~ oppor·
tumry 10 \lo.ork if1 • Simulated offk:R ~log Having
t..eng- .... dooatlo lcnlly. 636·2288 IUJI a.rtt'd for the iChool ar TEAM no actwe.ly
io«ktng rhow Pft"M)nS from the Unl\letilly com
Appkabofa muto1 be ~ to Ch..rla Colman Of
be of Antemoucww.l Prow am' ULB 36 SU1\'Y muntty ~ specibc nH&lt;is are for oral a.amiM·
Al&gt;ony I
WMhongoon Aw Abony I" Y
tion, df:aning5 and fUllnss . Ttw.w&gt; tvU.I ln« d.ental
M:n. JCa can be pniormed 6n dM TEAM clu'\IC v..~th a
12222
mtnlri'Wll \loa.mng penod and at mu14mal cOSt In addi·
'----------------"-""·-~_._.._TEA_M_
Sept~ 30 b the dudl1ne for fACUky members
to •pply for appotntnwnt os teitd.nt director of the
U 8-SUNV A~y Progn.m
rht Untver51ty of
Gr~ fOI' next yur Or Plene Aubery of

•t

......

"benefft &amp;om the advice and npr.tence
ol the DUE dean" and will consuk with

...

make aD routtne dental car• ati comfortable and as
tilreu·free as possible. So, if you do need basic den·
tal care ..• why wait? CaU us at 831· 2213 any day
between 9 and 4.30 and we wiiJ be glad to arrange a
screemng appofntnwmt for you.

NSF POSTDOCTORAL FEJ.LOWSHIPS

IN

SOENCE
Engibility requuemenlti : For persons who are
citizens or nationals of the United States as of
November 2 . 1979. who wlll have earned by the
beginning of their fel&amp;owship tenures a dodoral
degree in one of the fields of sdence llSied below, or
have had tesearch training and experience
equivalent to that represented by a Ph .D • and who
will have he~ the doct~at~ for no more than 5
years as of November 2. 1979. Two tenure options
are availabk! ; (1) FuU· time tenures for those "''ho
can aiTllnge to devote aD their effort 10 the cOnduct
of a fellowship program . (2) Part·t1me tenures for
those With family, financial. or such other obl.ga ·
liOns as may pteclude thew pursuit of a full·tim~
fellowship program .
Awards are for postdoctoral scientific research
and study rn the mathematical. phj'5lCal. rnedk:al.
biological. engineenng. and mc:lal sciences. in the
h.story and philosoph!.' of SCience. and 1n 1ntet
di!Oplmary areas. Awards Me noc made m cbnlcal.
~ucatJon . or busrneu hekts. nor m hiStory. sooal
wOfk . o.- pubbc health Numbet of awards; 50 or
more full ·ume: and pafHime feUo~ips
Applk:anon matcmals available on reques~ from
The F~llowshtp Offce. Nauonal Research Counol.
2101 Constltut.on Ave . Washington DC. . 20418
PSST
The Program for Student Sutte5ti T raming
(PSST) has added rwo area.s of emphaStti this fall
which deal wnh developmg leadership a"d
organizattoNI skills.
PSST. whiCh debuted on campus m Spong of
' 78. previOusly offered only modules on pertiOoa.l
devebpment
Designed ~eciflcally wtlh the needs and
schedules of students m mmd . the new credn ·free
SC610ns begin Oct 2 and run through the end of
th~ month Most modules are two houl'l long and
cot.ter a wkle variety of topla "''i1hin the sub~
areas
R~nrtion . at 110 Norton . "''111 be on a fD"st·
conw. fn~ ~St!'fW baSIS . On)y current)y enrolled
students are eligible
Fo.- more informatkm. call Mary Jacobson a1
636·2809
READING ORCHESTRA
The Depanment of Music and the Un/vertiity
Philharmonla lnvrte area musicians to take pan In
the Metropolrtan Repenofte Orchestra . a non·
performing ensemble . whK:h wiH meet on Tuetidays
bc.-gtnning October 9 from 7 30·9 .30 p m tn
Goodyear Hall Band Room. under the d~rechon o(
Paul Schmid
This ensembk&gt; is umq~ an that It provides the on·
ly opportunity in the commumty to sight ·read stan·
dard orchestraJ ltterature The Reading Orchestra IS
open to the general public In thio past it has lndud·
ed htgh school and coUege students. teacher$ , doc·
ton and odwn from a variety of walks of life No
Plt&gt;•reg15tr4tion is n&gt;Qutted and admissiOn to parudpate-is free
IGMA XI AWARD
Graduat~ fKUky are requested 10 nomm~te WOf·
thy eandidain for the- Monk&gt; A Fft'R Award of the
National ~y of Sigma X1 Tbe award If S'lgma

_.
c_.,_•_•_,_•uc_h_•_f....,_oon_.._ •o__x_.-_• ...;p_n'-~ry means

research &amp;dentists who have- made "notable con·
tribuHons to motivotkm and encouragement of
research through ~ucatton." The award consisl:s of
a medal and a $1.000 prize . The selection comm~ ·
tee requires a bio sketch of the nominee: a llsl: of
three k!:ners of support from peers and/or aude:nts:
and a ltst of Ph.D. students. re:sea.n:h associates or
post...:iodoral S1udents.
OoUng date for the 1980 nomination• ts
NO\Iember 20.
F~ funher information . contact Dr.' Helen E.
Grenga . Office of Graduate Studies and Research.
Georgia Institute of Technology. Atlanla. Georgt.a

30332.
TEACHER EDUCATION
Students Interested in obtaining secondary school
teacher c;e:rtl!icatkm must be admitted to the three·
semester Teacher Education Program prior to
enrolling in any of tts courses . Applications and in;
formation may be obtained fro m the Division of
Undergraduate Educational Studies. Office of
Teacher Education . in Room 320 • Baldy Hall.
Amherst . Phone 636-2461. The deadline for ap·
plieations to begin the program for the spring
semester IS October 1. 1979
U / B COUNCIL MEETING
Council Conference Room . 5th t1oor Capen.
October 12" 3 p m

UNIVERSI TY COMPUTING SERVICES
SHORT COURSES
SPSS for the Novice -Room 7. 4234 Ridge
Leo October 3 . 8. 10. 3·5 p .m
UNIVERSilY SPONSOR PROGRAM
Faculty, 5talf: Personalize the U/ 8 eKperie:nce
Sponsors are not con·
s1dered academic advisors or professiOnal
counielors They may fuHiD a variety of ro&amp;es for
students relating to therr sooal and academe wed·
being. including an Important referral functM)O
For more information. contiKI: Rowena Adams
Jones. Office of Student Affairs. 167 MFAC.
EUicott. 636-2348

by becoming a sponsor

WRITING PLACE
The Wnt~ng PlKe tS a free drop·in writing centf!l
that welcomes wnters at any titage of the composing
process Take advantage of our qualified wnllng
tutors who proVIde careful response to both those
havmg trouble understandang an assignment and
thOSl' polltihing a final drah Come VtStl us ln 336
Baldy HaU on tt- Amherst Campus Our houl'l thiS
semest~r are . MondayAfhrough Friday. 12 noon un·
til 4 p m . and Monday. Wednesday and Thur5d.ay
~~i nC]i . 6 until 9
WRITING TUTORS
Faculty, Students, Staff: Consider tutormg in
the Wnting Place. You will be caut:fuDy trained to
help others 1mptove therr u.rriting v. hlle you 1mprove
your own Contact Barbanr Gordon at 636-2394

O n The Air
SEPTEMBER 28
ConVC!f'Ndons in the Aru: &amp;th« H•rrlotc m
t~ WOllam Gau:, promment A~n
""" "' Couoi&lt;o Coble !Channel 101 b 30 p m

of hononng c:L5tmgu15hed

·-

�•

Seplember 27, 1979

Revised projections to spur building?
The SUNY Trustees this week projected that U/B enrollments will remain
stable in the next five years while other
State campuses in Western New York experience declines.
That may mean a shot in the arm for
construction. some campus
rces
be~eve .

The Trustees adopted a revised master
plan which pr~ fewer students attending SUNY liberal arts colleges, and
stable or slighrly larger enrollments at the
four university centers- here, and at

Binghamton, Albany and Stony Brook.
The master p1an raised previous enroll-

ment projections SUNY-wide from
154,182 students in 1984-85to !63,862
students that year.

U/B's enrollment , now budgeted at
21.475 FTEs, including 2.975 in health
sciences, was projected to remain stable :

21,544 FTEs in 1984-85, including
3 , 189 students in health sciences. Buffalo State was projected to drop
from 9 ,050 to 7.800 students in

1984-85; Fredonia , from 4.700 to
4 ,060; Geneseo, from 5 .000 to 4.400;
Brockport, from 8.150 to 7, 150. and the
State Agricultural &amp; Technical College at
Alfred , from 4 ,300 to 4,000.
The

rev ised

figures

called
"hopeful" lor U/ B construction by Dr.

John A. Neal, vice president for facilities
planning.
To keep the presently-booming construction at a steady pace in the early
1980's, Neal told the Buffalo News,
SUNY, the governor and the State
Legislature must soon approve a start on

designing four other buildings, costing an
esHmated $34 .5 mUiion .
Putting numbers Into a master plan ,

Dr. Neal said, is "aU right as far as it
goes," but he said getting money from
the State for continued construction at
the Amherst Campus wUI require constant lobbying by U/ B officials and the
Buffalo-area delegation in the State
legislature.

Stanton F. Biddle has been named
associate director of University Libraries,
Mr. Saktidas Roy, director, announ~ed in
the current issue of the Library News.
Mr. Biddle will assume his duties
November 1 as the number two person in
the Ubraries, a position which has not
been occupied under Mr. Roy's ad ministration and which has been redefined "to augment the service provided
by the Director's Office," the Libraries

figures are taken from new SUNY

Institution

State-operated lnstkutloni
Univa'llty Centers
Al&gt;ony

-

Binghamton
Buffalo

Scony Brook

u.-.uvCoU....
Brockpor1
BuHMo
Cortland
Empire State

Fredonia
Geneseo

New Palu
Old Westbury
Oneonlo
Oswego
Ptau!bu,.n

POIJdam
Pu.m.s.
Haith Sckncn Cen1en

Buffolo
Downstate

Scony Brook
Upstate

78-79
Ofticlal

79-80

tlt).31

8~

P ropooed

t62.278
53,301
t3.244
9.411
18.428
12.218
67,525
7.985
8,958
5,415
3.219
4 .569
4.994
5.427
1.921
5 .858
7.158
5.529
4 .238
2,254
6,595
2,773
1.401
1.519
902

t64.635
54,374
12.775
9.845
18.500
13.254
68.461
8,150
9.050
5.400
3.325
4.700
5.000
5.171
2.325
5,880
7,030
5.480
4.300
2.650
7,008
2,975
t.502
1.561
970

165.727
54,1147
12.875
9.900
18,800
13.272
68,669
7.1!00
8 .990
5.400
3,325
4.616
4.900
5.396
2,600
5.850
7.018
5.772
4,202
2.800
7,141
2.995
1,554
1.594

998

84-35

"""'

163.862
57,262
13.135
10,300
18.355
15.472
65,020
7. t50
7.800
5 ,060
3.800
4.060
4.400
5.000
3.200
5.150
6.400
5,200
3,950
3.850
7,7¥)
3.189
1.490
1,925
1.136

Garver asks·faculty
for views on Ketter
It's .. absurd" to think that his views
could represent effective consultation

publication report:d .

with faculty on etther the '" condition of
the campus'' or the leadership of the
president, Faculty Senate Chair Newton
Garver said in a letter to senators and
alternates this week.
Garver will be called upon to make a
presentation on beha.H of facuhy to the
committee of outside evaluatoB who will
assess the president and the campus
under new SUNY guidelines for
presidential review. He termed it "an affront to both the principles of democratic
Biddle was asooclate director for
research and planning at Howard, from
1973-76.
His consulting eKperlence focuses on
Afro-American literature, in which field
he has undertaken studies for both NEH
and the NAACP. He Is currendy assisting
In a project to develop model libraries
and case studies for use in library
management courses at Berkeley.

SAT scores decline againAverage scores of the million 1979
high school semoB who took the
5cholastx: Aptitude Test declined slightly.
according to a report issued by the College Board
The average verbal score dropped two
points to 427. after hoklrng steady for
two years , and the average math SCOI"
dropped one potnt to 467
Robert G Cameron . program service
officer for the College Board's Admls

equival~nt

Master Plan enrollmen1 projections:

were

Stanton Biddle named
Libraries' no. 2 man

The new associate director is eKpected
to provide particular eKpertise in bolstering the Libraries' public relations and in
attracting grants and outside funding , Mr.
Roy said .
A native of Rochester, Biddle took his
B.A. at Howard In !965, the M.S .L.S . at
Atlanta University In 1966, and an
M.P.A. from N.Y.U. in 1973. He Is currendy a doctoral fellow in the School of
Information and Library Studies at
Berkeley, and plans to complete his
dissertation while here.
His first professional position was with
the Library of Congress where he was a
preparation assistant and library assistant.
From 1966 to 1973. he was associated
wtth the New York Public Library in
several posts, finally serving as director
lor a National Endowment for the
Humanities (NEH) project at the Schorn:
burg Center for Research in Black
Culture .

Enroilment projections
These average annual full-time

sions T estlng Program said the latest
decline is "disappointing in light of what
many schools have been doing to
improve educatton. bUt since there are
many causes for the decline. schools can not e.xped to reverw the trend quickly or
single-hondedly."
The scores have shown a general
downtrend since 1967 and 1968 when
the average verbal scores..were 466 ~;~nd

average math scores were 492 .

governance and traditions of academic

coUegiaUty to give the Sena:e Chair sole
access to the review committee."

,

He asked senatoB to help him be
prepared on two counts:

"I want to be able to name other faculty
who. for solkl reasons, deserve to

be on

the schedule of the review committee
during their site visit; and
"I want, if necessary, to be able to present in the~ words the 'views' (opinions, concemr, satisfactions) of faculty
membeB who may be denied access to
the review committee ."

To argue that some group of faculty be
heard by the committee, Garver said, "I
need to ha-re good reasons why they
should be heard. One perfectly good
reason might be that they are the elected
representatives of 100 professorial faculty. The reason would be stronger If these
representatives had had a general
meeting to discuss a preliminary draft of
the main points they Intend to represent.
No doubt there could also be other sound

reasons for faculty having appointments

with

the

review

committee.

What

they-rightly, I believe-will wish to
avoid is a tedious recital of Isolated com·

plaints or lnddental praise."
Garver noted that the guidelines
specify that he may receive Input from
faculty in oral or written form, but that it
must be attributable. "This would
preclude the use of opinion polling or
survey procedure, .. the guidelines go on
to point out .

The Senate Chair said he feels that
perhaps too much has been made of the
notion of attributability. Elsewhere in the
guidelines, there, ls a requirement that
"conlidentiality ... will ap p ly to
discussion ... and to written documents

other than the Presidential Statement on
the Condttion ol the Campus."
To him it seems clear, then, "that the
sense in which submissions are attributable must be compatible with the
names of authors being withheld."
Garver

plans

meetings

with

·• a

reasonable number'' of senotors and their
colleagues during the first two weeks of
October. He emphasized that the
"credibiltty of the reoults of these
meetings depends on their being
reasonably representative."
Garver indicated he will begin setting
up a schedule for such meetings this
week.

"The challenge of making an effective
and reaoonable facuhy Input to the review
process ... ls... a challenge worth taking
up," he emphasized .

�•

September 27, 1979

,-

College Skills Program would begin
for incoming freshmen in fall of 1980
I. lntroduc:tlon
Surveys conducted by the Genenl
Education Commhtee early last year indicated overwhelming support for a skills

Writing and Math Exam.
DistributiOn of Coune RecommendatiOns
Orientation 1979

component in any general education pro-

gram. In March, 1979. the Faculty
Senate approved, in principle, the skUis
comoonent called for in the Committee's
February Report 10 the Faculty Senate.
Acting on this mandate, the General
Education Committee has developed the
College Skills Program described below
and proposes implementation for all In·
coming freshmen in !aU, 1980.
The College Skills Program is intended
to develop students' sk ills in
mathematics, writing, and library usage .
These skills are needed to gain fulladvan·
tage from college level work and are
essential for any educated person .
The College Skills Program consists of:
(1) an examination system to determine
inco m ing students ' levels of
mathematicl&lt;\1,. writing, and library skills,
and (2) requ~ courses designed to give
competency in these skills. The average
student would take the equivalent of
three courses , one in ...mathematics and
two In writing (one whh a library component) .

The examination system differentiates
this program from one which might only
Impose

course

requirements

in

mathematics and in Eng1ish composition.
We believe that the examination system

has these advantages:
(1) It provide• a clear means for exempting well-quamied students from
course requirements, and, on the other
hand, a warning to less-qualified studeniS
that they should tackle rQffiedial courses
first .
(2) Even among studeniS prepared for
the required courses. it prov,ides a means
for creating sections of varying difficulty
or emphasis.
(3) It seiS goals for achievement in the
skills courses (and can provide secondary
schools an indk:ation of our standards for
entering students In the skill areas) .
(4) It provides a context for monitoring
the effectiveness of skills courses.

II. OrgeniDtlon
Each entering student shall be placed
by examination in a level in each of
mathematical and writing skills, according
to the following scheme:

Jllafhemotlcal Skills
I. Eumptod
ll . ~te

ULDddmt

Writing (and Ubrary) Skll,_
l~od
u . ~el

nt--.z .
IY . ~~-Io...toU

_

......... -

.... libc-ory.)

In each ol mathematics and writing,
placement at a level beneath Ieveii (exempled) shall impooe on the student the
course requirement (one course, to be
spectfied below) for that level and. In addition, the course requirements for each
higher level.
No IIUdeot ohall graduate without
ruchinl lew! I In both lkllls: this CAn
be doH either by - ' n g appropr!Me
- . . - « by retaking the eumlnatloa.

...

m. ~of sa.ml.eftJ.
~

lAwl ID wdents know only the lint
two yurs ol hlgh school mathematics, or
lea. Level II students can perform cer1ain
llllnCiatd ..vhrnctical-algebraic routi,_,
up to and including some now taught in
N.Y. Sc86e Mathematics II (third-year
high IChool course) or our own
M8tt-llcl 115 (which Is equivalent to
N.Y. ~ II) . Level I students have
a1oo an undentllndlng ol oome basic
abotract mathematical notion• such as
thOH

of

functiOn

and

graph , an

WritiDg
in two of 10 orientation sessions in Summer 1979 freshmen took writing exams and were subsequently given recommendations to pllrticular courses.
These recommendations were distributed as follows .
Number of

Course

'JI. of total

Corresponds to

8.0

Level IV
(writing)
Levellll
Level II
Levell

students

ULC 211/212

_)

31

English 101
103
26.6
English 201
128
33.1
English 221'''
125
32.3
Not a writing skills course, but a literature course:
0

0

and how to use the card catalog by
author , title. and subject to locate book,
pamphlet , and non-print material. They
know the type of information found in
periodicals, Including magazines, journals
and newspapers, and how to locate and
use indexes and abstracts to find articles
in periodicals. They know the purpose of
reference sources , incl uding encyclopedias. dictionaries, almanacs.
directories , statistical sou rc es,
biog raph ical sources , atlases. and
bibliographies, and how to use these
sources. The knowledge of these library
resources and skills will enable the
studeniS to use the libraries in a logical
manner to meet spectfic information
needs.

•

Matbematlc:a
In a different two of the orientations sessions, entering studeilts took math exams and were given recommendations to math courses. These recommendations were distributed as follows.
Course

Number ol

ULC 146
ULC 147
ULC 148
Math 115
Math 121
&amp; above

8'
21.
21'
47
207

'JI. oftotal

Corresponds to

2.6
6.9
6 .9
15.5
68.1

Level
Level
Level
Level
Level

students

Ill (math)
Ill
Ill
II
ll/l"

'Closer study of student papers, including analysis item by item of the exam
and study of work done on spaces provided in the test book, Indicates that these
recommendations were probably optimistic. More reasonably at least 58 (of
304) or 19.1% might have been sent to ULC courses (Instead of 16.4% above) .
Alllong those recommended for cak:ulus, the students at the lower end of
the scale were only prepared for a course wh\ch wouk:l involve some algebra
~eview (as does our 121 , particularly) . As noted above, our exam was not
designed to separate Levels I and II.
0

0

understand ing of a type achieved by the
best studeniS in Math . 11 but often Dnly
realized after subsequent work .
More specifically. Level II studeniS can
do the arithmetic of rational numbers and
rational exponents . They can do simple
algebraic manipulations and solve linear
inequalities and quadratic equations. correlate linear and quadratic equations with
their graphs, and do simple problems in·
volving logarithms. exponentials and
similar triangles (or trigonometry at the
mathematics 10 level) . The multiple
choice examination prepared for use this
past summer. and mentioned in section
IV below, consisiS of problems that Level
II studeniS should be able to do.
Level I students understand the notions of (I) a function on the natural
numbers, and (ii) a function on the real
numbers . They understand such notions
as increasing and deaeaslng functions ,
inverse of a function . composition of two
functions. etc. Under (i). they have some
basic knowledge of permutations, combinations and fin He probab!Uty. Under (ii) ,
they can solve modelling problems
iword problems") which require finding
the zeros or maximum/ minimum vabJes
of quadratic functions, or the solution ol
simultaneous linear equations; they can
graph simple rational and exponential
functions and solve some problems involving such functions (e.g., probiem,...,f
exponential growth) . Level I requires a
strong background in about 7fs of the pre·
sent Math 115.
Wrflfng
Level IV students can be identified as
not yet having made the transition from
oral to written form . This shows in a
faUure to master the mechanics ol writing
(punctuation In a sentence, proper
sentence form , speOing), uncertainty
about the standard forms ol verbs· and
uie of preposltlons, and an tnabilhy to
maintain consistency ol verb tenses.
Students at Levels lJJ and II have a
reasonable control over the mechanics of
writing and grammar. Sentences,
however, remain undeveloped In their
length and fluency. The writing ol aU

studeniS in both levels inhibits their ability
to present effective erguments. Level II
studeniS are distinguished from Level Ill
students mainly by the coherence of
argument maintained in their writing and
by the flexibility and originality their
writing d isplays. Level Ill studeniS write in
abbreviated journalistic form . Their
arguments are organized as a series of
claims lacking subordinate structures of
evidence and illustration. Level II
students structure arguments more effectively, but fail to be convincing b,!cause
they depend on clicheed language and
lack a rhetorical sense of audience.
Level I studeniS write well-organized
papers with structured argumeniS and
some rhetorical skill. What weaknesses
they have in precision, analysis or
orlginalhy of conception are best addressed in university courses that will present
specific subject matter to challenge and
improve thetr ability to organize evidence
and draw conclusions.

Ubrary
Level IV studeniS do not know the
variety ol library resources nor the purpooes of these resources. They do not
know how to gain access to book, pamphlet, and non-prinl material through the
card catalog. Nor do they know how to
gain access to periodical articles through'
indexes end abstracts. They are unaware
of the types and purposes of basic
reference sources.
Students at Levels II and Ill know some
of the basic types ol resources available in
an academic library, but not all They
may know how to locate book, pamphlet, and non-print material by using
author or title access through the card
catalog, but not know how effectively to
use subject access to get the same type of
materiaL They may know that one
general periodical Index exists, but not
that specialized Indexes and abstracts also
exist. Thelf mail know about some types
of reference sources but not others.
Level r stUdeniS know a variet:r of
library resources and how to find an use
them. Spec:lfically, Levell students know
what kinds ollnformation can be found In
book, pamphlet, and non-print material

IV. Determlutlou of SkUI Level
f:xamfnadono
Once the College Skills program is
under way, placement examinations in
mathematics, writing and library skills will
be given to aU entering studeniS. The bulk
of the examining wiD occur during sum·
mer orientation. As rapidly a possible,
students will be notified of their levels of
placement. lnevhably, this wUI result in
some changes in scheduley. O ne answer
to this difficuhy might be to provide a
team of examination graders at each
orientation to rate the papers overnight,
allowing the studeniS to receive resuiiS
before the end of orientation. Or, sections of skills courses might be scheduled
in parallel so as to avoid major disruption
of student sched ules (e.g., sections of
English 101 . 201. ULC 212 would be
scheduled at the same times).
After lnHial placement, a student will
progress from one level In mathematics
or writing to a higher level in either of two
ways: (1) by passing an appropriat'
course. or (2) by repeating the placement
exam and achieving the higher leveL
A student may skip a level either by
taking and passing the course specified at
a level above her/his placement level or
by retaking the placement exam.
In summer 1979 a pilot testing pro·
gn~m in mathematics and writing was
conducted during freshman orientation.
In two orientation periods, a total of 387
students were tested ira writing, and in
two other periods a total of 304 were
tested in mathematics. The results. summarized In the accompanying box, form a
basis for our recommendations concerning examinations.

Scheduling of Examfnatlono ·
Examinations wUI be scheduled during
summer orientation sessions, again just
before classes begin, and also at the end
of each term . Provision will be made for
individual testing on demsnd (e.g. , in the
case of a prospective transfer student at·
tempting in the spring to arrange a fall
schedule, or of a student appealing his
classification) .
Admlnieb'odon of Examfnatlona
A Standing College Skills Subcommhtee will assume responslbiiHy for the
preparation and administration of exams,
as well as for other operating details of
the program . Exams will be prepared
cooperatively by the units involved so as
to meet the guidelines s.-t by the General
Education Committee.

Examination Jllodea
We propose a writing exam similar to
that glven this summer. This exam wUI
aUow studeniS 60 minutes for a single
task in persuasive writing.
Each studenrs paper Is evaluated -.y
two raters, following procedures used • v
the Educational Te•Ung Service • 1
evaluating student wrlti"jj. A detaileu
report on this last summers examination
has been prepared by Dr. Cl)arles
Cooper (learning Center, now at
U.C .-San Diego), Dr. Stefan Fleischer
(English), and others. (Report on the
Writing Abilities of Regularly-Admitted

�Scplembe- 'Z7' 1979
f.

the om.. ol tha 0... ollhe Dlvloion ol
UndaiJ611w* ~. the Olllce of
!he Feadly
In the Health
Sdenca. Lockwood, au~
Librarla.) The ............. Center end the
English ~haw t.-1 the raulls
to advise entering
of this freshmen whet courses to talc&amp; this fall .
Appended to the 60-minute wrtting
test will be an ~ve (ahort answer or
multiple choice) wm on library oktUs
(max. 30 min.).
The 90-mlnute math """m given this
summer Is an amalgam of the learning
Center's math placement """m and the
Math Department's screening test, used
at the beginning of calculus courses. It is a
60-questlon, multiple-choice exam. Our
standard placement exam should Include
in addlllon some problems to be wori&lt;ed
out and graded In detall by experts. It
seems clear that this would yield better- In·
lonnalion about Individual weaknesses
and would resuk In more accurate placement. Furthermore, this summer-'s exam
was planned to discriminate between
Level II and Level 10 (and within Level
110 ; It needs reworl&lt;ing In order to be effective In identifying Level I students.

s.n.. .....

Emma .,. Coone llfOflftMa
The exam syslem appears to allow an
easy check on whether okiUs courses are
meeting their goals. It ism~ ~CCUn~te to
say that H allows an easy check of
whether- placements by exam or by
course completion are consistent. For instance, If students emerging from English
101 are required to retake the writing exam and If a significant number of those
with course ~cia Cor above (therefore,
presumably at Level U; see below) are
found by the placement exam to be Level
Ill or below, then Investigation Is required. It Is foolish to put b~nd reliance
on a single test O'oler the judgment of instrudors who have known students lor a
full semester. But H Is also unwise to ig·
nore the posslbilily that instrudors' standards lor grading may not be c:laar,
rigorous and ~ent aaoss aU sections

of the same course.
We would propose a lair amount of
checking of this kind . It may be un neceaarily lime consuming and expensive to examine every student emerging

from a skills course, but In any given
semester a significant sample could be examined (e.g ., aU those from Math 116
one term, all from English 101 anotper
term, etc) .
-

V. COURSE REQUIR£MENTS
For students not at Level lin a skill, the
standard procedure lor attaining that
level Is expeded to be the completion of
an appropriate sequence of courses
(although the examination option will be
available) . Through advisement every ef.
fort should be made to encourage the
early completion of the skllls re·
quirements. Programs may wish to make
such completion a prer-equlotte lor admission to a major.
The courses Involved will be offer-ed by
several unHs of the university, including
at least the learning Center, the English
Department , the Mathematics Department.
We propose that these courses be
graded A-B-C-No CredH. That Is,
students wiD receive one of the three letter grades and three hours aedH, or will
receive NC (No Credit) . which will be a
non - ~ng mark not affecting the student's gradepomt average. We want to
er-nphasla a8uevement as our goal.
Existing courses can be used to yield
this approKimat!on of the desired
program:

r

dr

of

a

4 I a _,.

or Lew! U students: Math 115 or 116

(these courses differ only In that 116 is

slightly more llbotract) or etc. (I.e ., Math
121 , or any calculus course of higher
numberj
For Lew! m studenll: ULC 147 (The
leasl qualfied would nead ULC 146 as a
Pl'ellrnlMry W&gt; 147 .) plus Level D re·
qulrements (I.e ., 115 or 116 or 121 ,ctc.)

..................
··c
,,

For
U (writing) students: English
201.
For Leve!IO (writing) students: English

101 1'1!11201.
For Level IV (-.g) IIUdenls: ULC
212 (The IMst quaMed would need ULC
211• • pNIImtMry to 212.) pU English
101 end 201 .
The mathemallcs courses 115 and 116
haw had the PIII'POM of providing a fiQn
ground for an lnbmslve calculus course.
The Mathemallcs Department will adapt
Math 116 to emphasize the topics
deocrlbed under Level I ikills. The
trigonometry will be sacrificed; the course
might be daatbed as rational and eJ&lt;·
ponenllallunctions, their graphs and applications. Some calcuJus conc:ep1s at an
introdUdory level might be involved. This
Is not a major shift and does not require
alter-ation of the 116 course description.
Alternative tracks for Level II
!Matbemallcs) students will be provided,
In Computer Science using C.S. 101 (or
113 or 1911 , and In Stalisllcs, using
Stalisllcs 119. C .S. 101 and Stat. 119
are accessible to Ievei i! students. Careful
planning could provide that each of these
tracks produces the same core of Level I
skUis, which could be measured by a
single exam. However, we recommend
that three versions of the mathematics
placement

examinations

be

available-the standard one, one
specializing in computer science, and one
in statistics. We anlidpate Uttle need for
these alternatives among entering
students; those with high school
backgrounds In stalisllcs or computer
science also In gener-al have strong
backgrounds in the standard syUabus and
should win exemption by the regular
mathematics placement exam. However,
ther-e might be e&gt;&lt;ceptions, especially
among transfer students, and in any case
such exams would be useful lor course
monitoring.

There may be a need to recognize fu r·
ther dlslindions In student abilities and to
make appropriate groupings In the
English 101 and 201 courses. (This has
been done in the scoring of the placement examination of this ~ ~,summer . )
But genenilly the emphasis In IO 1 wiD be
on the development of grammalical and
rhetorical techniques wh ich allow
students to wrHe more complex and ef.
lective sentences and paragraphs. This
requires eJ&lt;tensive and repeated pradice.
English 201 will require longer discursive
papers of greater- rhetorical c:omplexHy.
This will require some supplementary
reading as weD as writing pradice.
Level I students who wish to take
English courses wiD be advised to choose
a Uterature course at the 200 level. These
courses all also require substantial wrHing
but will have llter-ary texts and questions
lor their subjedS. This Is not, however, a
requirement

for

these

exempted

students.
The English courses will have to be
modified to provide time lor the development of library skiDs . We propose that
library training be a part of English 201.
One reason Is that we anlicipate the
wrtllng of a research paper will be a part
of the 201 syllabus; thus the library okillo
would be practiced ooon after being
taught. Another reason Is that this Insures
library training lor those eJ&lt;empted from
101 but n91 from 201. One possibility Is
the develOpment of a wori&lt;book which
would be presented by a librarian In a
class session and oompleted by students
outside class. The preparation of this
worl&lt;book (In many versions with probable frequent revision) would be a major
project lor the library; Hwould have to be
locally produced (as other similar
workbooks are elsewhere) because n
must reflect our own library's organization
of Hs resources.
We note that the Learning Center
courses In writing already include a library
component appropriate lor Level IV
(library)-s!Udents.
Level 1 (writing) students who place
below Levell In library okllls would have
the option of learning the library lkllls on
their own and passing the ll&gt;rary exam to
complete their exemption from the 201
requirement.
.
Level u (~dents who are
placed 1n Lew! I
I could be eJ&lt;CUSed from the library
component
of Englloh 201.
With C:OUI'MS changed .. dacrtled,
the
Sklls course requirements
would be as follows.

eou-

''I

~

•
C:.S. -

-

-.u•

._.,

4oo IU. ltll

la.Cit7 .... - · ...

--(I.e.,-~~·­
Itt. •-I•IC.S. Ill • - Uti

..,... ..., UIJrwy . . , . . . _...
IAN II....,._
_._1

-..,

..._~

&amp;,o. IOI
lANDI_,:
lANDI~:

Lew~ I\/~:

..

~-1
~101 ....
101
ULCIII ....
Eooolloh tOI, 101

VJ.R~
This
m will demand a sign~lcant
commi

ent

of resources.

At present, the University Task Force
on Implementation Is trying to estimate
the probable resource requirements.
(1) The English department anticipates
about 500 additional students In
101/20 I and thus about 23 additional
sections (at approJ&lt;imately 22 students
PeT section) .
(2) The Library with Hs present re·
duced stalling will be unable to provide
time lor the preparation of workbooks,
for presentations to sedions of English
201 , and lor the checking of the completed books. One way to assess the
Library's obligation under this program
would be to see Has cllarged with about 5
to 7% of the teaching responsibility lor
the total English 201 enrollment (which
the English Department projects to be
about 2000 annually of an entering class
of 3000) . This could yield an estimate of
required faculty FTE.
(3) The Learning Center would have
an lnaeased workload. The projection
from this summer's pilot math exam

--ad be ............. "'....,.,.,.
In IIMIIh (&amp;om .bout 250 to than
S(Q.
(4) The deparlmenta In the
mathematicAl ...._ would ............
inc:leued worldoadt, but this Is hard.r to
- . . . .. Only ebout hal the un-.ry's
unclerjpdll8ta COfr4llae a ~ pro~ requiring ' • mathemallcs c:oune.
Vet the Mathemallcs ~nt alone
enrols ewry faD in Hs tOO-Level c:ouna
appro~ the ..me total as the
number of entering first year ltudento.
Dropouts and changes of major apparently we the major reaaons for this
discrepancy. One could gu- the In·
crease In workload In freshman cJu.s at
anything from 0 to 100% . We haw been
unable to oblain a count of the number of
baccalaureates In any given year which
went to students who took at least one
math course, or any other- figure which
might be used to estimate the Increase In
math enroUment. Vet wHh their high
student-faculty ratio (27 .5 In the Math
dept.), which Is already prtnclpaUy In firstyear courses, the math lldence departments are at or near capacity.
(5) The examination scheme proposed
wiR not be very costly. For a writing exam
of the type proposed. grading requires
about one day of lull-time wor1&lt; by a
graduate student rater lor each 100 examinees. Some addHional time ( + 15%)
Is required lor training and bookkeeping
details . Similar ligures apply In
mathematics. The figure lor the shorterlibrary exam might be 40% of this. Further, as much as flve weeks of lacuHy
lime would be required , two weeks each
from a writing eJ&lt;pert and a mathematics
expert, and one week from a librarian.
Some additional budget would be re·
quired to maintain the "on demand" examination option ; we note that our proposed eJ&lt;amination modes require In both
math and writing that grading be done by
exper-ts (not by machine) .

Break-in, theft, rapereported to Public Safety
A high-speed chase that drew the attention ollocallV cameras resuked from
a break-In at Women's Studie$ College,
108 Winspear Ave .• about 8 a .m . Sunday.
Public Safety officers said that a female
student In the house at the time reported
the break-ln.
When olliceTs arrived, the suspect ran
from the viclnHy of the house, got into a
1979 station wagon (which had earlier
been reported stolen) and attempted to
drive away.
Campus Offlcer WiUiam Sural, later In·
terviewed on Channel 7, pursued the
suspect. Sural was "haH-In and hall-out"
of the car as It drove away, other officers
reported. He was dragged along lor a
whUe, his nightslick and keys somehow
ending up In the vehicle. Sural was taken
to Erie Y,..nty Medical Center- where he
was treated lor leg abrasions.
U/ B olliceTs chased the suspect to
Main and Fillmore where polic.e from
Buffalo's Preclnd 6 took O'oler a highspeed chase along cjty streets. the
SU$P"d was finally apprehended and
taken to Preclnd 6, not before the car he
was driving narrowly missed some
pedestrians, however-.
The suspect, 24-year-old Maurice
Johnson, was chall}ed by U/ B wkh thirddegree burglary, second-degree assauh,
escape, unauthorlad use of a vehicle,
resisting arrest, operating a vehicle with a
suspended license, and J)OiseS1ion of
stolen property (Officer Surars nightstick
and keys) .
Johnson was also wantad on an
outstanding warrant, Buffalo Police said.

A U/ B coed who lives on campus was
raped urly Sunday morning alter hitchhiking a ride from a bar nar Main and
Amherst.
· The victim reported to Public Safety of.
llcials that the driver pulled Into a
schoolyard and Mtacked her.

A young man on a "shopping" eJ&lt;pedilion was arrested by campus Public Safety olliceTs In the second floor lounge of
Ellicotl's Fargo Building 5 last Thursday.
Public Safety officials credited the arrest to a number of phone calls from
students report ing a "suipiclous··
charader trying doorknobs In the building
and the quick response of their person·
nel, who ended the "two-and-a-hall hour
crime wave" in

Ellicott.

The 20-year-old man, a non-student,
was spotted quickly by officers respond Ing to the phone caDs, Wayne Robinson
of Public Safety said. He was cartylng a
brown shopping bag which, on inspec·
tion, was found to contain two tape
recordeTS. Also In his J)05Iel5lon were a
$500 ring, a number ol aedH can:ls,
about $200 cash and approximately one
ounce of suspected marijuana.
Arresting officers Jim Loga and Donald
Dimmick took the youth and his loot to
campus headquarteTS where, wHh In·
vestlgator Kurt Hermann , they charged
him wHh a veritable shopping list of oflenses: thr~ counts of burglary, possession of stolen property, one count of pe11t
larceny, two counts of grand larceny and
possession/ theft of suspected marijuana.
The young man was later taken to the
Amherst court where he was arraigned
and a baU of $500 was set . At last report ,
he was still In the Erie County Holding
Center. ·

FaU In Australia,
headed /or Nigeria
Dr. Charles FaU, a prolessor In the
Department of Social Fo.u ndatlons,

Educational Studies, Is on sabbatical lor
1979-80. He Is dividing his lime between
LaTrobe University In Australia, where
he wil be during the !aU · and
the U/B projeCt at the Alvan Jkoku College In o-rrt, Nigeria , where he will be
In the spring.

-

�FBI raping. libert.i es, Kuntzler ch.a rges
We'-re too busy watching 'Mork'
to realize what's up, he frets

-

r

While America "bums," "we sit around
like ostriches with our h
l n the sands
of nothingness, watching the likes of
'Mork and Mindy.' " William Kuntzler
complained on campus lost Wednesday.
GeHing older now, Kuntzler is still the
liberal zealot. No mellowing here. despite
graying hair _
The FBI is running roughshod over
American liberties , Kuntzler de ·
nounced- not because the Bureau
represents an aberration of the system but
simply because it reflecu "the desires and
concepts" of the ruling structure which
controls gove.mment.
()f course, the Bureau harassed and
impugned actress Jean Seberg. driving
her to suicide. No one should be surprised -or
dt1armed - because
spokesmen lor the agency now admit it.
The FBI used character assassination
~ MarHn Luther King , too; wrote
letters urging King to commit suicide. It
tampered with the jury at the trial of the
"Chicago Seven." In the 60s and early
70s, II dispatched hate mail about Jane
Fonda. about activist priests, wherever it
leh it oould cause trouble or loss of
credibility for these individuals.
Me.IDg wllh the Mda

Now,

despite official denials, the

BW'eau is using anonymous krtters to in-

cite key members of organized crime
against one another.
You say messing with the Malia that
way Is OK? Not so,· said Kuntzler. It's
neuer OK-for who's to say. where it wiU
stop?
Most Americans are oblivious to these
sinister undercurrents. We don't even
care. In Kuntzler's view.
Every one of us is thinking "I must look
out lor myself." Students are lost in the
competition for grades, the competition
lor graduate~hoof. The only thing that
seems Important, Kuntzler said acidly, is
the chance "to pursue the American
nightmare."
WeU that's just what.lJniversity trustees
want, he thundered. trying to bring the
Fillmore Room aowd alive . ..They want
you to go out there like good little
ciphers. They urge you to be sure to vote
lor Tweedledum or Tweedledee . They
want you to shut up and keep your nose
dean and only worry about No. !."
Instead. Kuntzler urged, "we should be
thinking beyond creature comforts,
beyond lootbaD, beyond 'Mork.' to
something realistic, In • political sense."
The realrty Is fearsome . Kuntzler contended .

The Seberg case
Because Seberg helped raise money

...

lor the Black P.anthers in 196!!, he
charged , the FBI leh it had to destroy her.
It "used" a reporter to plant the story that
the baby she was carrying at the time was
fathered by a Panther.
When that baby was stillborn. Kuntzler
recalled, Seberg held a press conference
so reporters could see that the infant (laid
out in a gloss collin) was white. Every
year aher on the anniversary of the baby's
death. she tried suicide. This year. she
succeeded.
The FBI philosophy. Kuntzler said, is
that "rt you're on 'the side of the angels',
(as they define it) , you can do anything
you want- including murder-and it's

OK."
In th is context, he suggested,
Watergate is only a pimple on the body
politic. Far worse has happened In the
name of "right."
This kind of attitude, the weD-known
aHomey lor the Leh charged, can be
compared with Hitler's. The people are
told that they are bein? "protected," and
won't wake up to whals really happening
until "they hear the jackboots."
The FBI's so-called counterintelligence program , Kuntzler
elaborated , Is a seael operation which
permits them to destroy any Individual or
any group they don't like.

Take the "threat of' Martin Luther
King.
The system, through its handmaiden,
the FBI, used wiretapping, bedroom
eavesdropping, smear campaigns, let·
ters, the cutting-off of grants, you name
it. Tapes of King's allegedly making love
to women other than his wife were
played in the White House lor Jack Kennedy's amusement, Kunt:zler said .
J . Edgar Hoover thought King would
become "a messiah" if he received the
Nobel Peace Prize. He had to be stopped. King was urged either to commh
suicide or face the public release of the
love-making tapes in "a leHer dispatched
from the highest levels of our govern-

ment ,"charged Kuntzler.
The final report of the Select Committee to Study Government Operations
(the Church Committee) contains many
of the leHers he alluded to, Kuntzler add ed for the benefit of those who care lo
"look it up."
Yet, he lamented, here we sit, doing
nothing.
Kuntzler reminded his audience he had
predicted a return to complacency alter
Watergate. because the "American people have no memory," because .. it's
always darkest before the yawn."
Kuntzler's appearance wa·s sponsored
by SA's Speakers' Bureau.

Blind student plans
awareness workshop

Person ." The regular Instructors are
Bill Szymczyk has been bUnd from
Dorothy Byer and Bam Wood, both
birth , but he "sees" a definite problem In
nurses who bring a medical o~tion to
how sighted people react to the blind and
the classroom. Szymczy~s another
to the handicapped.
dimension
, he feels, beCause he· is
This Saturday, In the College H lounge
psychologically_ and philosophically
in Porier Quadrangle,.Szymczyk hopes to
oriented to problems of the disabled.
star! doing something about the problem
Szymczyi&lt; is on staff at College H this
by holding a "blind awareness workshop"
semester,as he puts it, strictly because of
lor resident advisers and other students,
his own "persistence." He fe~ his
mainly from College H .
· Individuals attending will lind out what . background In student personnel work,
his experience with projects lor the blind, .
H's "like" to be blind . Participants wiU be
and his hisrory of having done film narrapaired. One member of each pair will be
tions and lectures on h uman services
blindfolded and asked to do a series of
2400 hate letters
qua!Kied him to be of value to a Universimple, everyday actlviUes- actlvlties
Anonymous letter·wrlting is a favorite
sity unit concerned with delivery of heahh
which become something less than simtrick. Kuntzler recalled that his wile gol ple when sight Is removed . For example,
services. H~ thinks he may have
one reporting he was having "sex all over the blindfolded subjects will try to: make
badgered College H Master Lee Dryden
the South ," while working for Dr. King. change at a change machine, do a launInto taking him on because he "must
Another letter Informed the husband of a dry, take a bus, deal with a vending
have contacted him a hundred times."
white woman affiliated with a St. Louis machine, find a food service area, etc.
Dealing with people who are blind or
action organization that she "was having
who have other handicaps, Szymczyk
The second person in each pair will be
sex with aU the block men in the organizafeels, is a matter of being honest , open
asked to act as a facilitator , much as one
tion." A divorce resuhed.
and at ease. He recaUs a session with
would ~ he were trying to help a blind
Kuntiler alleged that oY'r 2400 of person In these situations. Then the two
parents of disabled children that he once
-these letters were written, covering the will swap places.
organized where a frightening range of
country like a rain of locusts."
repressed emotion linaUy surfaced. Some
Followin\1 the exercises, the group wUI
They Incited to murder and "were discuss the experience, and be asked to
of the parents were bitter; others report"4
responsible for Incredible harm." Nine- make recommendations on how the Colbeing despondent, sometimes to the
teen deaths resulted, he charged.
point of suicide. One has to get these
lege H physical plant might be changed to
The power structure that the FBI assist the disabled.
feelings out In the open and deal with '
serves, Kuntder went on, is out to con·
them. Szymczyk contends. On the colSzymczvk promises both fun and Inforquer the world economically. These . mation . The Idea is to aid sighted College
lege campus, he feels students need to be
power brokers are the people who deter- H students. many of whom are studying
educated,1 not In a textbook way, but
mine who stands for the preskiency. lor careers In health and social services,
through actual experience in interacting
That's why you get to choose between a to learn to be comfoitable around, and
with the handicapped .
Caner and a Ford . Some choice, the at
People should know, lor example, that
Interact more effectively with , blind in·
tomey suggested.
there are certain things that drive a blind
d ivlduals . Everyone gains, says
person to distraction . For example,
Szymczyk. who is serving this semester as
a lecturer In College H .
The King 'threat'
Szymczyk notes that most Individuals
when they realize he is blind , have a
He has a bachelor's in social work and
When people raise angry heads (as in
tendency to yeU when talking to him.
the 60s) , the economic system draws is completing a master's in student perAnother pet peeve of his is that people
sonnel services at Buffalo State. On that
back a tiit to save its skin . It tries tokenism
point when giving him directions: "lf s
and co-opting to mke the edge off. If that campus, he did an internship In the
won't do. the power bloc resorts to Placement Office where he organized a
right over there , they say, as if I could
discrediting the people's leaders- to program to train people to read lor the
follow their hand motions."
murdering them , even , Ku ntzler charged . blind, and to act as guides. He also made
More frightening is the tendency on the
·a 511!dy of the Butler Library there .. pari of volunteer guides to leave a bhnd
person alone in a strange setting, "just for
recommending charwes that could
Non-PrOfit Org.
a minute." It's very d!llicult to be left that
facilitate use of the library by the blirid .
U.S . Pe»tage
way with absolutely no reference point,
Later this semester In CoUege H . he
PAID
Szymczyk explained. Then, there are
hopes
to
extend
the
concept
to
include
a
Buffalo, N.Y.
people who grab and start pulling In a
"handicapped awareness" session .
P£rmlt No. 311
certain direction . "Sometimes I don't
Szymczyk Is assisting In teaching a
even want to go that way," he adds.
course in College H. on ·'The Disabled

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

SEPT. 20, 1979VOL 11eNO. 3

)

U I 8 seen"mature
enough to cope
with hard times
U/B is not poor - but Its Stale·
supported budget in terms of real dollan
is shrinking: the 1979·80 Sta~ budget of
$98 milllon Is worth only $59 million in
1970 dollars - $3 miiUon less than was
appropriated In that year.
ln the lace of this sobering economic
news and the reality of a declining pool of
traditional college-age students, Prest·
dent Robert L. Ketter said In his annual
Siate of the University message Sunday,
U/ B has achieved the maturity to make
fundamental trade-oils in budgeting deci·
sions, end has begun to "display new
attitudes'' in teaching ,
public service.

research

and

Ketter suggested that a similar display
of maturity on the pari of both the public

duce savings to purchase a dupHcating
machine or add resources to one unit by
denying them to another, we are

demonstrating the resolve to take those
actions which have to be taken ."
Research funding growing
In the realm of resel!rch activityA this
translates to "an increased wUiingness on

Can Murray Schwartz, a bespectacled,
mild-mannered English professor at a
large metropolitan university become the
stron~, aggressive superman of the Col·
leges.
You can forget about him bending steel
in his bare hands, but yes, Murray
Schwartz, the new executive officer of the
Colleges, says he will be aggressive , "if
aggressive means being articu.late and Im-

mediately countering misinformation, er·
roneous Impressions or descriptions of
the Colleges." And if strong means "clear
about decisions," he'll be that. too. What
he won't be Is a leader who "permits the
Colleges to be 'mlsrepreoented'."
.
There's a combination of "vitality and
Intellectualism" lurking In the halls and
classrooms of the Colleges, says
Schwartz; he's glad to be there to share
the excitement Besides, the new dean
-claims he "doesn't mind being under the
gun," and actually finds the experience
"challenging."
The post wiU certainly offer challenges
galore. Schwartz views his most lm·
mediate ones as Integrating the Colleges
Into the mainstream of academic Ule and
"encouraging sober reality· testing" on the
pari of faculty regarding their attitudes
about the unconventional units.

no other ~e way, they are a source
of intereste"d, involved, committed

students at this University. Departments
can~ afford to Ignore this fact "
Schwartz wants aU teachers In the Col·
leges - current and future - to have a
"need to teach the course," that Is, a
"personal ~nd individually meaningful
interest" In the subject matter. Added to
that, must be a desire to "explore
knowledge with others." Finally, he
wants a "clear description of credentials."
Having a Ph.D. or years of experience,
In

his

view,

doesn't

necessarily

"guarantee" anything. Instead, proper
credentiahng will be decided through an
examination of " individual commitment
and qualifications."

the part of a larger number of faculty to
a;:;e..&amp;:,;:;s""nsibility lor seeking external
f
• T..Ms
o~on which
started last year is continuing.
During fiscal year 1979, the President
reported , 718 propos~ls totaling
$64,146,979 were submitted to outside
agencies, an inaease of 9 per cent and

and

industry

of

Individual

A public University hao no choice
In the field of public service , Kener said
institutional activities have inaeasing}y
come to reflect .. a mature acce.ptenC:e of
what we are: a major public University,
not a private institution that has a choice
in whether or not it acknowledges a
public service obligation.··

As a major example of this. he cited
the recently inaugurated computing pro·

gram devised for the Buffalo high schools
(ReporUr, September 13) .
One important outgrowth will be to
develop an Interest In the natural sciences
and engineering among students who

otherwise might not elect mathematically·
oriented disciphnes. "The need nationaUy
lor minority and female students In these
disciplines Is well documented," Ketter
pointed out. The program, he believes. Is
"a demonstration of this University's con·

27 per cent, respectively. An additional

tinuing commitment to equal opportunHy

84 proposals were submitted to the

and, especially, to the creation of a
valuable pool of minority and female
students In disciplines In which they

University

Award s Committee

and

Ch;mceUor's Fund.
Awards received from external agen-

des increased 12 per cent to 477, with a
value of $26,551.280. a 19 per cent in·
crease over 1978.
Still, Ketter saKI, "we have con·
siderable strides to make for a University
of our size and stature. There is still a
great need for activity among a more

varied faculty base."
Two recent decisions should help en·
courage this. One was the decision to lm·
plement those recommendations of a

University Commltee to Study Opera·
tional Processes which deal with easing
purchasing

procedures

for research

presendy are under-represented ."

U/8 is active thrOughout the com·
munity, Ketter , summarized , in the
economy, the environment, and in many

professional areas, such as health care.
"We also ~re a vital element in the
cuhurallife of the community. and our In·
volvement is likely to become even more
Impressive. For instance, two of the

building projects now under construcUon
on the campus are a Music Building and a
Chamber Hall. The Division of the
Budget also has requested additional
Information concerning the proposed

·--eiU/a: -a..-.1

California educator
named to head Nursing
NationaUy-known

nursing educator

and author Dr. Bonnie BuUough was appointed dean of the U/ B School of NursIng by the SUNY Board of Trustees
yesterday.
Her appointment wiU become effective
January 1, 1980.
Dr. Bullough Is currently professor of
nursing and coordinator of the graduate
program In nursing at California State
University at Long Beach . Before joining
CSU, she was a lacuhy member and
chairman of the Primary Care Section at
UCLA.
She has written nine books and
numerous professional articles covering a
wide range of subjects In nursing.
Active In research, Bullough has been
director of a variety of projects, including
geriatric and pediatric nurse practitioner
tnolnlng trograms, critical care nursing

Mutera ... _lei be J:e~U.Iar faculty
Dltala...,l. . del-~
If Schwartz can accomplish these tasks · The only exception to the rule con·
cems qualifications lor Cpllege masters.
through an abundance of " honest talk ,"
Realizing he may get some flak on the
he feels he wiD also succeed in
decision, Schwartz told the Repoi'Ur he
" of the
"diminishing the defm ·
wants aU masters to be Ph.Ds on 11!9\llar
Colleges.
facuhy appointment. He conceded,
Oth\'1" challenges he hopes to tackle
however, that It Is " not always possible to
this semester include resolving an "in·
find such people."
tolerable chartering situation" in the Col·
Asked ~ he feh any recent criticism
leges; conducting searches lor three
an~~m~s n:::.'dra:~":.~Xn':'"io
leveled against the Colleges was justllled,
masters, and "regularizing" search pro·
the new dean reoponded "some kin4s of
various Institutions and organizations, In·
oedur . By year's end , Schwartz says he
criticism
have
some
justification
."
But
eluding the National Cancer Institute, the
will have evaluated aD mastom as well as
, ,l,png Beach . V&lt;:teronJ Admipistratiol).
each oourse and Instructor.
l

·--·-tt.....

will depend almost exclusively upon the
faculty ."

be to disconnect phones in order to pro-

ll«poo11&lt; Stoff

cautioned, "the progress the Institution
will maki In fulfilling its research mission
initiative

At U/ B today. Ketter said, " Whether it

In his evaluation of existing courses,
Schwartz explained he will pay special at·
tention to how they are descriptively
represented to the University community,
as weD as to their "special role In the cur·
ricular mission" of a college. Further, he
will examine the "relationship of the
course to related disciplines."
One purpose of this review will be "to
see whether, and to what extent, the Col·
leges can and should make use of regular
faculty," he noted. Adding; " U depart·
men is and lacuhy will offer support to the
Colleges, we will do everything possible
to cooperate. If the Colleges ore seen in

of productive scholarship. the President

going to be necessary when the pressures
of enrollments and the economy force

the question of closing weaker colleges

By Joyce Buchnowskl

question is now being organized." Ketter
reported. But while this individual win be
able to do much to encourage new areas

and private sectOrs of higher education is

and universities In favor of stronger ones .

Colleges challenging,
Sch\vartz submits

Investigators.
The second decision reouhed from one
of !hi! last major a.slgnments the late
Graduate Dean Gd Moore was given, "to
study the question of whether or not the
Researcll Office of the University should
be merged with that of the Graduate
Dean." Moore recommended not , urging
instead that a productive scholar and
researcher be found to head the Research
Office. "The search lor the individual in

Medical Center Nursing Service, the
California Department of Public Health
and the Cal~omta Nurses' Association.
Bullough Is on the editorial board of
Health Values , has served as referee lor
articles In such publications as the
American Journal of Public Health and
Americon Journal of Soctology. ami has
been a book reviewer for Science, Nuru
Educotor, Journal of Nursing Admln •stro·
lion and the American Journal of Nurs-

Ing.
A member of the American Nurses'
Association, the American Sociological
Association and the American Public
Health Association, Bullough Is a FeUow
in the Amoirtcan Academy of Nursing and
a member of the Council of Primary
Health Care Nurse Practitioners.
In 1976, she received an award om
the Los Angeles Nursing Fund lor Lon·
trlbutors to Nursing Literature, l:.ducation
and Research and Is listed In Who'• Who .
of Americon Women, Who's Who In the
West and Personalities In the West and
Mldw~$1• • ·

�~20.1979

l

Cohen .'ecstatic'
over attracting
major Center
Harold Cohen was enthusiastic.
No, that's not strong enough.
He's always enthusiastiC, a man who
can make the impending shift of the Architecture Ubrary from the north wing of
Hayes to the south end sound like the
second founding of the Library of Con-

Kotter

• State of the University
Cfl--1.-.4)
Theatres and GaOery project , Information
they feel is needed before they can give
their final design approval. When these
projec15 are completed, the University,
without any question, wiD become a
major and easily identifiable cultural
center In the State of New York."

A ,_ concern lor
Ketter said he has detecie&lt;l on campus
"a new concern for teaching." Prompted
In part by the spectre of declining
enroUments, the concern ext£nds beyond
this lingle Issue. "It also Involves a
renewed assertion by the facuhy of
confide~ In Its own academic judgment
and a genuine and deep concern for the
education of those students who form the
ba5ic reason for our existence as an Institution."
Rigid Insularity Is being breeched,
Ketter report£d. Numbers of crossdisclpUnary programs and couroes and
dual clegJee olierlQgs are Increasing. The
movement toward General Education Is
another example: "The, Facuhy Senate
and the General Education Committee
have gone beyond ... a simplistic caD for
a ncv~ set d d.istrlbution requirements.
1hev are attempting to shape a curriculUm that will be more encouraging to
croa-dllclpbnary efforts and that will provide both students and facuky a great£r
opportunity to Integrate teaching,
reoearch, and service In the education
that Is available here."
K...... abaluco
Ketler rekrated his opposition to the
removal of enrollment caps In high
demand profasional areas and the
subsequent swift transfer of resources to
those disciplines: " I have been
reluctant • . . bacause I beOeve we have
to look to the long-term and Impose
rasonable rates of growth upon such
currently popular programs In order to
preserve the basic nature of the

u

lverslty "

lmlead:

•

he emphasized, "as I have
suggested, we wtlf have to continue to
design more attractive programs.
~ In low demand areas such as
Aits and Letters, Social Sciences, and
Millard Flllmon Collevc-" This does not
mean "the trivlallzation of higher education. Our otu.dents will always deserve
better; and In the st2ps we have so far
taken, I believe we have protecled the
academic lniA!grlly of our programs. This
Is extreme1v Important, for ~ Is our
strongest defense before any crllic.
Moreover, It Is a mark of maturity that we
have maintained this Integrity In the lace
of short-term Interests to the contrary."
Ketter spoke of increased concern
about retaining students. 1lle numerous
recommendations of the Attrition/Retention study panel have been placed In
priority cxder, and the President pledged
"lmplema&gt;tation ol those recommendations which we can successfully under·
take."

More c-petldon
U/ B Is not alone In being affected by
enrollments and the economy. "CornpetitiOn belween the public and private
sectors wtll .become more pronounced,"

Ketter predicted, as well as competition
among inllllutions within both Metors.

He said ll's his ln!Aintion "to continue to

strive to a~te a new attitude among the
pubUc and its eleded officials toward their
public Institutions. These Institutions must
be seen as the critical, front-Une force that
they are In providing low-cost education
to the d tizens of this State. Their
enroUments should not be determined by
the desire of the State Education Depariment or others to maintain an artifidal
balance between the public and private
sectors.''
State University, Ketter said, needs to
develop "an attitude acceptant of instl!u tional closings so that strong Institutions,
such as -our own, are not continuaUy
drained to prevent the closure of weaker
ones." Wltile not poUticaUy acceplable at
this time, he acknowledged, this may
have to become acceptable In the future .
Stat£ financing lor City University Introduces a third element in the competition for funds for higher education, the
President pointed out. "The proportion
must either be Increased or there must be
differential funding of Slat£ University's
University Cent2rs and the senior Institutions of CUNY. I Intend to work as
forcefuDy as I can toward these ends," he
pledged. In view of City University's consbuction needs, Ketter said, we have to
see that the priority won lor Amherst and
Main Street from both the Trustees and
Regents is observed "as funds are made
available."

The State Education Department,
Ketter suggested, "wiD have an opportunity to expand lts own role In higher
education If H can stand above the com·
petition of the two pubUc sectors and the
privet£ sector In the role of peacemaker."
We don ' t need an expanded
bureaucracy, though, he urged. There's
already an excess.
· Concluding, Kett2r predicted U/ B will
make continued progren .. toward
becoming one of the nation's distinguished universities. The pace may Indeed be more deUberate; but the destiny
before us remains the same."

Nadear panel
nmeaAbbott
The U/ B Nuclear Safety Committee

last month rejected a proposal to store
short-lived low-level radioactive wastes in
Abbott Annex.
The puopose ol the storage would have
been to allow decay ol the material to a
stable non-radioactive state and aUow lor
It to be disposed ol conventionaRy.
The panel unanimously agreed that the
planned storage .. would not have
presented an unacceplable hazard to the
University community," a statement
Issued by the committee on August 22
said . .
However, the statement continued,
"the comm~e decided not to Implement
storage of this material at the annex
because of Intense community concern.
"The committee fek that storage ol this
material until Its decay provided the but
means of dispOsal and requested the
Radiation Prot2ction Department to lnvestlgaiAI other storage techniques . . ..
"Any future proposals will be reviewed
bv the commltt2e before being lm·
plemented."

grM~nday, he was several notches
beyond enthusiastic a walking
Vesuvius erupting with delight.
As Cohen stopped to collect his
thoughts, the vlsttor's eye was attracted to
a mass of memorabilia which decorates
his office:
Behind him was a display of bugs showcased specimen of some trip or
other to the Jungle. To his right , a
barber's chair commanded a wide circle
of space. You could just Imagine him
reared back In it, letting the ideas flow,
giving vent to his latest plans lor the
Theatre District, to schemes for tropical
new towns in Venezuela.
· In front of him were a sheaf of papers a
foot thick: books, pamphlets, other
specimen representing the work of tbe
Center for Integrative Studt2s, his latest
trophy.

Mrs. McHale has turned out reams of
publications In recent years, Including a
world data sheet prepared for the lnt£rnational Year ol the Child underwritten
by the UN's Population Reference
Bureau. Another volume, Basic Human
Needs, A Fromeworlc /or Action, deals
with planning for a blotter life throughout
the world. She prepared a major paper
for the World Futul'es Studies conference
In · Berlin on "Women, Children and
Technology," and has a new volume,
tentatively titled, Bforesources for
Deuelopmen~ due In early 1980.
The Center for lntegrat£d Studies,
Cohen ticked off rapidly, Is:
A dala resource utilized by scl1olars
and governmental agencies from
throughout the world, particularty the
UN ; a clearinghouse for Information,
reports and journals generated from
across the globe; a convenor ol major
conferences on world planning problems.
and a center for the study of the future.
John McHale, who founded CIS, encouraged that particular Interest. He is
the former editor of "The Futurist," and
wrote what Cohen describes as "the great
classical piece on futurism," The Future
of the Future. Mrs. McHale Is vice presi·
dent of the Rome-based World Futures
Study Federation.
The Center Is also a medium for supporting graduate seminars; Its resources
will be thrown open to scholars and
students In a wide range of related
disdpUnes at U/B: PoUcy Studies,
Management, and the Law School, In
addition to those In SAED's three depart- ments.

A bombebell
The news that that agency, now at the
University of Houston , Is headed lor
U/ B's School of Architecture and
Environmental Design, was tossed out by
President Robert Ketter during Sunday's
"State of the University" address. Ketter's
off-the-cuff announcement stole the
spoUight, and missed being the lead story
In Monday morning's Courier only
because a clerk: had been murdered In a
downtown church. It was-a bombsheP.
()ely coliKtloa of Ita IWMl
1
&lt;tohen feigned distress with the a~t.o,­
The Center's primary contribution to
quent media attention. He'd spent the
scholarship Is that lt collects and organizes
morning, answering the Inquiries of the
piles of data generated from Uterally
News and two radio stations. Now In
thousands of sources-data often
mid-akernoon he had the Reportc and
unavailable In any other central location.
The Spectrum together to go over H aU
It also makes available Information gleanone more time. The man from The Speced in studies ollts own.
trum understandably was jus! the least bit
The focus Is clearly lnt£rnational, as Is
smug; he'd have the story fust no matter
the focus ol SAED. Cohen pointed out
what.
that hls School has an Interesting mix of
The Center for Integrative Studt2s Is
both New York State and foreign
reaDy a one-woman dynamo, Cohen
students, including the only Fulbright
explained. It consists of Magda C .
scholar on campus this faD, an archltec·
McHale, 57 filing cabinets of research
tural student from Japan. Professor
data and 8,000 volumes In the fields of
lbrarnlm Jammalls developing a special
architectural design, world resources
program lor lnt2mational planners.
planning, world ecology, new towns and
He, himseW, Is conducting negotiations
dties, and population planning. It also
boasts a repulation that stretches from • wUh five VeneA~elan universities toward
development of a cooperative cenm wUh
Caracas to Krakow. But mainly there's
U/B which would focus on planning soMagda McHale.
caOed new towns or le!:hnology centers In
She and her futurist huoband, John,
the tropics.
who died last !aU, were a powerful team
Mrs. McHale's lnt£rests are similarly
who established the CIS at SUNY
cathoUc: the use of resources, trending,
Binghamton In the early 1970's before
planning
heakh, housing, food and
moving it to the Univenlty ol Houston.
storage facilities for new settlements.
Cohen's a550dation with them goes
"The people In Venezuela will be very
back 30 years. "I brought them from Lonexclted to hear this news," Cohen
don to Carbondale about the same time
speculated, "because the McHales are
Bul:kmlnster FuOer came." Those were
weD-known there."
golden days when the old .master FuOer,
Cohen and other young architects and
planners were dreaming big dreams at
Spedfk:e wUJ bllft to walt
Southern Illinois University. They were
Specifics about what kinds ol projects
- and sUD are, as Cohen puts H, "a chain
Mrs. McHale will launch here, what kind ol
ol people Interested In seeing the world
funding they will receive, what sort of
work."
major confpnces she will convene, etc. ,
The Center lor Integrative Studt2s will
etc., wiD have to walt until she arrives In
move here after the fust of the year and
October lor a visit. Cohen absolutely
wUI be housed In the north wing of the
refused to defuse the excitement that visit
first floor ol Hayes HaD, the twf that for
should generate by discloslng anything
so long was the U/ B presidential suite.
now.
Graata &amp;om ID-doul eoarca
1lle Center has no ful~time staff other
than Mrs. McHale . It conducts projec15
under grants from international a9encles-grants which ln tum fund a
constantly-changing coterie ol graduate
assistants working on specific topics. Staff
tan vary anywhere from 7to 10 graduate
assistAnts, depending on funding. In the
last few years, Cohen estimat£d , nearly a
quarter of a milllon dollars In grants has
flowed Into the Center, from agencies
such as the United Nation's Environmental Program, Aspen' sln~te ol HumanIstic Studies, and the Club of Rome.

He was not reticent, hCV~ever, to em-

phasize that the addition of Mrs. McHale
and CIS will: provide SAED wUh a "win·
dow on the world;" present a powerlul
role model for the women who make up
some 30 per cent of the students of
SAED; and be another major step toward
developing "a si&gt;eclal kind ol school lor
arcMecls and planners."
"It already Is special," Cohen said,
" and jt wiU get better."
"What does aD this have to do with the
upcoming acx:redttation visit for the
Department of Archltectu.r e?", The Spec·
trum asked.
"Absolu!AIIy. nothing," Cohen said.

�Seplomber 20, 1979

U/8 again
at top of· .
pay~ .

Harvard, .Mit,,
a few ethers 1 ,
aheaq of us

�t ~ ·.;

: ~20. 1979

7

Isn't pede~ tnft :what_; is? ·
.
..

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

,

$iCl:~

·From ... . - . SALT 0 ha been a dlf.

flcult .one
IIIII In
t.helf
cl ·
thewn.tetleaty, II Is
notmay
a dilarma..,_ hilly. It cdingo lor •·
·clbut
.._
ihe and
roudur
_....
-theunder
IJnled
States
the

So*!
Union..-. permlllild to Wane,
Pretldent C.. has rapond
eel to ~-"*'9 oppooillool to SALt with
promiles c l - wapon ~~~*""Ike the
$33 billion Jo(X ml!lllle. lnitialy, these
developtnen~ tempted many peace advoc:Ma (lftl/ld Included) to .,.,.,._ the
treaty. But es .r111ht-wtng oppositiOn
mounts, poolllonl Change. Now groups
lllethe IN-.. New York Peace Center
lind themtelveo woridng actively lor the
raalltallon of SALT U.
SALT 0 .. cnocllll
While II Is clfllclilt to be enthusiastic
about SALT 0, Its ratlf;cation "''''UJS to
be aucialto eftons to slop the anns f1SCA!
and reduce the likelihood of a
catulrophk: nuclear war. Those taking
this position need n
should not
overfook the treaty's
uac:les or endorM Carter's misguided -egy for
"oelllng" II.• Suppcxt for SALT D can be
baed oolely on the well-founded belief
that wtlhout the treaty the climate and
proopecb for genuine disarmament will
be .....,. worse than they are now.
Consider: U SALT 0 Is defeated, obviously beneficial treaties like the Comprehensive Test Ban treaty may be Indefinitely postponed. If SALT D is
defeated, secrecy will prevail and neither
superpower will know what the other is
planning (ploaing?} . Suspicions and fears
will intensify and Cold War altitudes will
define the politics of both countries. The
defeat of SALT U will also mean a victory
and added strength for the arms lobby; U
will relnfon:e the position of hardUners

wllhkl the Soviet Union as wei. UncMr
.._ condllons, ~ will be • lhlng
of the past and the ......... Is lllcely to
got!hM milCh more expensive and out of
control.
aore, I lhinls • ....,._.._
When !Men together they ~ a
legllimale rationale for 1U1JP9111n11 SALT
D.
thee Is a dang.r In ldewlng
the SALT tJ:a1Y In ilolation. It should be
viewed as part of a larger~ that Includes undat.ral.-..tnt (no MX, lor example) and more lignlllcant I n among the United Slates, Soviet Union
and ad.- counbia.
A
ofacdoa
/
~the Peace Center ha had
meetings wllh aides In the local offices of
both Senator Jacob Javlts and 5eRalor
Daniel Moynihan. Now both senators
know the Peace Center's posllon on
SALT U and new weapon systems. Their
positions, however, stiU remain a
mystery.
.
In addition to encouraging individuals
to send letters to JavUs and Moynihan,
the Peace Center's program of action includes a petition drive. HopefuUy, by October 1, two thousand people In Western
New York will have gone on record In
support of SALT 0.
Whlk neither senator has publicly
taken a definite stand In favor of or
against SALT U, "Senate walchers" are
lisHng_Javlts as a "likely yes" vote and
Moynthan as "undecided." Rallfk:aHon of
SALT II requires a two-thirds majority in
the Senate; In order to get that many
votes, nearly aD of the 29 senators llsted
as "undecided" will have to vole for the
treaty.

n- ,_.

H-.

S~theMX

ObiectiOns to the MX missile system
are manlfold. They include the fact that
Its highly accurate warheads are unnecessary and make H appear to the
Soviet Union as a lirst-sbike weapon .
This, af course, prompt. the Soviets to

Ndprocale the 1lftat and develop ...... '

_ . . of !heir. own. Thll process
undermines ..,..,.....,., scurlly; yet

claplle Its dangers, only a lew voices of
pro1at have been hard.
- SomeUtn. dollan and cents _.,)o
louder to peopr. than can dire wamlngl
of doomoday. ........ the 8-1 bomber and
the Triderlt submarine, the MX Is an In·
credtJiy apcns1Ye weapon. To show just
' - ' expeno1w It ls, the Peace Center has
relea,ed figures (based on Internal
Revenue Servtcc datal that lndk:ate ' - '
much~ 1n dfferent Western New
York comrnunllla-IWIIJ !lave to pay to
cover their share of the Ml&lt;'s price' tag,
$33 bllion. The llible below provides
some examples:

would requn both countries to make
subolanllal cull In !heir nuclear arsenals
by. Dee:emt&gt;.r 31, 1981. This appears
"dovloh." but Its effact would be just the
oppc&gt;lle. H ~. II would

thrust a

c:ornpltaly ulllelllloac llmelablo upon the
SovJ.llo. In IUbolanllallv allonng SALT II
Sen.olor Movnlhah's amendment would '
In cllect, .,..the - t y.

Thus. lfi;e P-. Cent. Is uldng

•

in·

divid... and IJOUPI to urge Senator
Movnlhan· to wllhdraw hlo amendment
ancf ~ .SALT 0 on Its own merits.
II'• ~as milCh as one might have hoped
for, b6l no harm wtl be done In ..-.,g 11
asH 1s c:urrendy lormulatad.
If-~ Moynihan Is oerious about
wanting to NYerM the anns race, there
·options open to him . For
Tu--11..-.
statlen, he can vole against the MX
(1979-l'"l
missile-an unneeded and dangerous
. -........ : ... : ....... 1 7 4 new weapon. He can caD for a more farT - - T -........ 1 1 7 - . reaming SALT 11 treaty and a
...... .......... .. 1 1 5 moratorium on aD new weapon systems.
~: :::::::::::: : ~:::::
This is a sound approach, one that liberal
" ' - '...... .. .. ...... l l 4 treaty alllc Senator George McGovern
T.,ai,Edo/N._. .... . ... U l 7 has apparently decided to ToUow Instead
of
Jeopardizmg SALT 0 with crippling
These costs are striking considering the
universal desire for lower taxes and the amendments.
budgetary aunch many non-military Into • ...,...wa,
stitutions are currentDy experiendng.
U the-cwrent flep over Soviet troops in
Here, then, Is one powerful argument Cuba proves anything, It's that the double
for ending the arms race. Facts and
smndard bves on' and that the arms lobby ·
ftgura sud&gt; as thae generate support for
feels threatened even by an extremely
both SALT II and a moralorium on the
modest anns control agreement. Since
development and deployment of new
the demagogy Is bound to get worse as
weapons.
the 1980 Republican primaries approach,
the quicker we can get SALT U ratified
A hawk Ia dove'• cloth...
~hi better. HopefuUy, we can then gel on
Arms proponents have devised a
number af strategies for defeating SALT to more slgnlllcanl Initiatives to tree our
planet
from the ash black shadow of the
D. A partk:ularly devious one has rightwing senators joining liberals like mushroom cloud.
Senators McGovern and Hatfield in
·1 We t.ve troops in countries ringing the Soviet
critk:izlng the agreement for not going far
Union and Itt allies, but these are not mentioned in
enough In the direction of actual disarmathe ament d&lt;bote. N - . , . the U.S. M4rine5
ment.
stationed at Guantanamo Base; they. too, are in
Cuba' and lhcy ..., !hen! - " " ' the wlohes d the
In line with this, Senator Moynihan has
Cuban goo..erTUMOI.
proposed an amendment to SALT U that

- rnanv

ne ......

Concept of conscience foreign to some
(Note: In the courw of Its effort thJs lost
moke abortion ""'"'"'!I" In the
mandatory lludent heolth Insurance
opllonof for reasons of conldence, the

veor to

of Buffalo Righ ts of
Conocience Group mode the discoue&lt;y
that manv lludents ore unfamiliar wUh
the oery concept of c:onsdence. Again
and again In .,.,.,ch and In writing we
heard ourselues coiled the "Rights of

Unluersltv

Consclouoneao Group" or heard lludents
liallr about "mv conodous.-." when thev
meant "mv conldence. • It was ~mpllng
to put down this haav !lfOSP of so fun·
domental an Idea. But certofn/jl U Is
disturbing, and In the interest of that
"!l"rM!IOf educotion" to which the univerJit)l Is gluing nmeUJed
we offer-,
the folo&lt;.o/ng alflcle.}
The experience of conscience is
uniwrsal, par11cularly In the primary
experience of"""""'""· Thus iii Euripides'
a.-., we find this exchange:

-nlion.

.-.aalta
A c.mpus community ~ published
uch Thundoy by the ~ d Pubic AI·
loin, SlAte Unlwnily d Now Vodo ot Buftolo.

EdltorW-.. - ..

136 Oolts Hoi.
A...__ Tclophone 636-:11626•.
Dnctao d Pubic Allon

.lAMES R. Do5AHllS
Ed-t.K:h;ol

ROBERTT. NARLETT
Mond-

.IOHN A. CUXll1ER
-Edllo&lt;
JOYCE I1UCHNOWSI&lt;I

w......, Colondor Ettooor
.lEAH SHRAOEll

Orestes, I call II conscience. The certain knowledge of wrong, the convk:Hon
of crime.
Menelouo, What do you mean?
Orestes, I mean remorse. I am sick
with remorse. (II, 395)
As the psalmist expresses it, "I am
anxious because of my sln." (Po. 38,18)
In the Bible, this experience of
conscience Is Illustrated In the accounts of
Adam and Eve, ~n . David, and Job_
Hebrew had no specifk: word lor
conscience, but the concept was contain·
ed In the word for heart, leb, whk:h
means mind as weU as heart .
The word "conscience" derives from a
Uteral latin translation of the Greek
word, svneldests, whk:h translates litetally
as, ·a knowing wHh (oneseH) ," that is,
sd-knowledge . The word was used to
mean both consciousness generaUy and
conscience, the self-knowledge that
judges self. In the sense of conscience II
referred orlglnaUy ai.Nays to judgment of
spedftc acts of one's past. Its function was
pain understood as foUowing from Injury
to an order In things, whk:h order Is also
lnbinsk: to the nature of man.
From this .understanding conscience
came late to be a teacher of morals, the
word referring not only to remorse over
past acts, but to antecedent judgment of
the rightness or wrongness of acts as
For Ck:ero and Seneca, · consclence
defends as weU as accuses the seH.
Pa.re co.tltbootloe
But H was the Christian apostle Paul
who did most to Introduce the concept of
antecedent con&amp;dence into common
thought. Consc:tence Is prominent lti
Paul's teaching l!ecause he Is c:oncemed
with how his teaming concerntng
freedom from the law Is understood. For
Paul, consclence Is a universal element in
human nature. It Is not the law but
wttnesaesto the law so that a person who

wen.

has never heard of the law may follow it.
A person's conscience may be in error,
but Paul emphasizes that even an erring
conscience must be obeyed.
There were those who would not eat
meat because the guUds of meatcutters
olfered their produd to idols before sale.
Paul declared lreedom to eat II, arguing
that God has made all food to be eaten
with thanks, while the idols stand for
something which does not really exist.
But If a neighbor's conscience does not
aUow him to eat meat and he should
point out that one's meat has been
olfered to Idols, then , Paul said, do not
eat II rather than offend him or worse lest
'he might out of human resped be led to
eat what his conscience teUs him sttD that
he may not eat.
" If a man eats when his conscience has
mlsgMngs about eating, he already
slzlnds condemned because he. is not acting In accordance with what he believes.
Whatever does not accord with one's
belief Is sin." (Romans 14,23} .. '· .
Christian tradition has constantly
taught the principle that conscience must
always be obeyed. Thomas Aquinas
wrote that ills sinful for a man who holds
It wrong to believe In Christ to remain a
Christian. Scholars doubt that Luther
ever said, "Here I stand. I can no other,"
at the Diet of Worms, but he did teD the
emperor, "'I cannot, and wiiJ not, recant,
for to act contrary to consclence Is neither
safe nor honorable."

H- ...oWd doe Stata react?
The problem occurs of what should be

~ response of the State to those whose
consciences reject Its laws. In the plays of

Sophocles, sympathy Is given the Individual whose conscience Is In conflict
with human law. n... accusation -lnst
Socrates that he was not honoring the
smte'o gods but lntrodudng strange gods

was based on his belief In doemon, the
power af his conscience which he
understood as a kind of possession.
The problem of conscience became
acute In Europe during the wars of
religion following the division of Chris·
Hanity. Then men of all religions called
for liberty of conscience. Sptnoza, locke,
and Bayle declared that peace required
H. Thomas More who died for his
conscience described In his Utopia a
society where aD were free In their beliefs.
It was In America which became a
place of refuge lor people of so many
diverse beliefs that respect for conscience
became established In public law. It
foUowed that If freedom of religion were
to be assured, aU other rights had to be
guaranteed as weU so that, as Justice
Hughes declares, freedom of religion and
of conscience are the bedrock of our
freedom .

Flnt ,_pect 1.. c-.:leDtl-

obJectl-

Mo;! af the colonies made provision
for conscientious objection to war, the
world's ftrst governments to do so. After
Independence, every ilate constitUtion
had a protection of conscience clause.
When the First Amendment was sent by
Congress to the committee on
formulation, H orlglnaUy read, "Congress
shaU make no law establishing religion or
prohibiting the free exercise thereof, nor
shaU the rights of conoclence be
Infringed." The last clause was dropped
because H was held that the free exercise
clause ltsd protected the rights of
conscience. Thus Justice DougJas has
written, "The Implied first amendment
right of 'consdence' Is certainly as high as
the 'right ol alloclation'."
.
Our law and court decisions have

·-"""etc---.· .... 11, eeL I

�~20.19%9

ew Paltz

Profs from there say ~ere's
been no enrollment upsu~.
o~ unhappiness with cuts
Oaplte IWIKlll to lhe c:anary, ad·
........... oowas at lhe Slate lJnlwnl.
ty Calega .t New Pllllz ....... wflh
....an-t f9ues ..ylhe .c:hool
·an unapedod 1111ge r:l

=Med
1.

'-not

lllldlttonal enrolees this faD.

(Rqo.ter, September/13.)
What ' - OCICUll'ed Is that the college
' - ~ Its taJget goals for
frahn.l end banllers by a MJbolantlal
m.gln. The 1a1get numbers wee 840
and480Nipedtvely. To elate, New Peltz
' - 892 peld freshman depootts and 520
lranlfers. lbe cologe's total enroDment
hown aJOUnd 6,800.
Some U/8 faculty who heard about
lhe nunored emolment bonanza were
concerned since New Paltz had retrench·
ed 18 feculty and a number of profes·
sional staff last year. They viewed the upsurge in enroDment as evidence agalnst
using FTEs to j1151lfy !laffing levels.
Over the summer, four fai:ulty here
wrote a pooition paper and resolution denouncing the tennlnations. One part of
the document recommends that retrenchment never be undertaken as a
resuh of "cyclical" eniplrhent trends. The
resolution will be voted on at the next
Buffalo Center UUP Chapter meeting
Sept. 27.
John Mandryk, director of Institutional
Research at New Paltz, contends that this
year's enroUment does not support the
notion of a major change In enrollment
patlems. According to Mandryk, the col·
lege experienced a continuous decline in
enrollees over the ptSI four years, 24 per
cent since 1975; alit! in the six years
before saw only "gradual growth." He did
concede that the new ligures "suggest a
reversal of a downward 1rend."
Ahhough enrollment is up, Mandryk
• relaved that the numbers of applio;ations
at New Peltz were down , as was the proportion r:l acceptances to applications.
What made the difference was the "stu·
dent yield." He atlr1butes that Increase to
"additional efforts" made by the college's
A &amp; R staff during the "later part of the
admissions cycle." For example, a
telephone campaign was used to re-ignite
the Interest r:l applicants.
Mandryk's opinion was .ohared by
James Roever, prakling ofticer of the
New Paltz faculty and chairman of the
Speech Department there. Roever went
one 5liep further to suggest that the co~
lege's retrenchment may be one'reason It
is now experiencing growth . He explain·
ed that retrenched ftnes were given to
programs hard-pressed for more faculty

end to new one (such as Buolnea Ad·
mlnlslrallon) which appeal to a new IIIU·

dent popullllion.

AJ111o191 Roeve says thai some UUP
olllcialo at New Pallz comploin at lacully

-.g.

that retrenchment occuned In
an "arblbary and caprldous" .......,_, he
~ aach llllk liS union rhetoric. He
penonaly beliews the. • .....,.._t and
d~ action- decided on by the
New Peltz administration l)ll)y alter due
consuhetlon with faculty. "I personally
dkln't detect any facuhy hostlllt\l about
the consuhallon process," he added.
Recalling late-night meetings r:l ad·
ministration on the subject, Roever
relayed that, to his knowledge, depart·
men! chain! and faculty In aU retrenched
areas were conaalted before any termina·
tion judgements were made.
Retrenchment was made using senlori·
ty and/or program cuts, he said. Program cuts were the most "controverslar'
among faculty. He noted that depart·
ments which experienced the most
casualties were also those which "tradi·
tionally" received the fewest number of
students. Terminations made because of
short-term cyciJcal enrollment trends just
didn't happen, he emphasized, adding,
" the argument Is fallacious."
Using attrlllon to accompftsh retrench·
men! has Its problems, Roever said, since
It tends to "tie the hands" of departments
and prohibits effective planning and proper utiliz.ation of faculty .
New Peltz faculty did pass a resolution,
he reported , which requested that any
new position made avallable there be
"advertised locally first." Roever said he
has received word that the SUNY Senate
is also sending an ad ' hoc committee to
"study" the retrenchment process there
and at other SUNY units.
Victor Landau, lJlJI1 grievance officer
at New Paltz, explained that, for a variety
of reasons, faculty there have not done
much organized complaining about the
terminations. F'trsl, the "quiet," complicated grievance process, which may
take years to resolve through the courts,
tends to stiD any discontent whUe matters
are pending. Then, there are faculty who
are just happy "their necks were saved"
and do not want to make any waves,
Landau observed. There Is also a con·
tingent who feel the "old-timers" are
deadwood , anyway, and should make
way for youth. Still others object to facul·
"'y with seniority being transferred to their
departments. "It's a divisive issue,.. Lan·
dau concluded.

Schanzer still insists
Comp Lit not evaluated
Eolltar:
In the Rep&lt;&gt;rWr r:l May 17, I ques·
tioned the best&lt;&gt;lll'lng r:l the label r:l na·
tional leadership on the Comparative
Literature Program without a complete
evaluation procedure. In his reply, In the
June 7lslue, Prdeuor Bandera, the program dln!ctor, Insisted that Comparative
Literature had been "evM&gt;ated by the
SED" In the fall d 1975 by a team of
dlsllngulshed evakuotors. Also, bv a
cJevcr anangernent r:l statements in dou·
ble quotes, lingle quotes, missing quotes
and no-quotes r:l oel-praiM, he made It
appear that such statements were part of
a formal SED dosoier.
The facts are quite different: Com·
parative Literature was NOT evaluated at
the time the Office r:l Doctoral Project
conducted the evaluation d the modern
language departments. The on-site teams
r:l evaluators had been chosen for the
sPecific puq&gt;ose &lt;X inspecting French,
German, and Spanish respectively.
While they were on the campus, the
Dean d the Graduate School Invited
these di5tinguished men to meet briefly,
one ahernoon, with members of the
Comparative Literature Program.
When these visitors lat« oftered some

comment on this social meeting In their
remarks on the doctoral programs In the
languages, the State Education Department, on February 9, 1976, called, their
reactions "gratuHous advice,• stating "We
are not evaluating Comparative
Literature at this time." Dean Hull, in
transmitting this SED covering note and
comments to both Arts and Letters and to
Comparative Literature, quite properly
labeled the comments "only reactions
and Impressions ... not a formal evalua·
lion ."

It is aarprlslng, therefore, that Prdessor
Bandera, contrary to the documentary
evlc;lence In his files, would publicly assert
that the Program had been evaluated by
SED.
.

-&lt;&gt;-.e 0 . Scllaaae
Professor of Spanish

.
WIUTEUS
Your "Viewpoints" and '1.etten" on
matten o( campu1 concern are
welcotH. Pleue be u brief • roc-1·
ble. We welcome con!J'Ibu&amp;M from aD
members r:l the caiDpua communitY,
otuclents .. well .. faculty """ •taiL

UUP -eaders object
to story on cutbaCks
~
We rud the arlldt ~In
lhe moot recmrt
wflh c::onccm about both lnaccurades and
- . . . Further conarm from
the wrong b1~11 end underllandlngs that
erticle foolen. Our
comments below .,. nol a lui analysis;
rather, teveal d the more blalant points
.,.. aclciJ.-dThe
.,~ • and SUNY Ad

R_..,. ......

1.

,...II!
mlnlstra·
have always had the right to
retrench . Through the succession d
negollallona, AJIIcle 35 now severely
restricts the rights r:l Adminiltrators. The
new State/UUP agreement'- furthered
that restricllon by requiring reasons for
retrenchment.
There was an example at our own
campus of haw Article 35 was adhered to
last Spring when two professlon!ll
employees whose function was discon·
tinued were placed In other positions for
which they qualt!iecl
2. The caD "that UUP provides funds"
overlooks the fact that . the new
UUP/State agreement · providl!ll Sto~
funds ($200,000 per annum) for retrain·
log.
3 . The framers of last week's arlk:le
suggest that UUP pubftsh Information
about retrenchees. UUP's Voice did con·
taln _this Information and UUP Chapter
presidents were furnished the names and
discipline of those Involved. ,
lion

4. lAJP al ewiY ...... ' - always
oought q,ut from ow ~ for
Mg011a11on purpi*S. Wherw ....,. the
eulhon r;l the document rne-.1 In
the Reporter arlldt w'- this procao
was being concluded?
5. "Uniform guidelines" - wtii each
department eccept aach rlgldtly? Would
this have worked to our adv811111ge or
disadvantage In recent budaet cruncha?
Will the various dei&gt;lrtulenll here
eccept retre""'-s from New Peltz?
6. It WaS through the dln!ct clfort r:l
UUP Central that retrenchments at New
Paltz were delayed a fuD calendar year
and tJUP participated In those
developments which Jed to a Nducllon In
the number r:l thoae to be retrenched.
It should be noted that the New Paltz
faculty would not go along with UUP
Central on the Issue of no Jilrlngs while
retrenchments _,. taking place despite
UUP Central's uiglngs.
'
Article 35 lacks perfection but forward
strides have been made and wiD continue
to be made; It fixes upon each d us the
need for a complete knowledge and
understanding d our contract and how
the process works
·
- R. other Glbeoa, State ~p
Executive Board
- J. WIN, State UUP Negotiating
Tearn
- J. Drew, State UUP Treasurer

Attention local media:
We play football, tool
EDITOR'S NOTE: The jolloU&gt;Ing
...,. uwllten ouer a monlli ago but ~
......... --~~ /t1r- otlter , _
than the Neu' Sunday'SporU toeet1on
burled a aiDty on U/B'o olc:tory at Jolin
Ca"ol/ lnolde, Ullille heralding
1111n ouer Rocliater on one. That'• beaJuae the Bun. _,., on
the road ond Cont.IUII ot home.
you .ap? Bull, uoe .ap: U/8 at
home /oat ..,..,k ond attll got .Jiunted
,.....,., And llie Bun. played IH:fore
6300 Ullille Cont.IUII tlnvl fKIO.

eanw...·

Editor:
The' enclosed letter to the Buffalo
Evening News is not only directed at the
News but is typical of the lack of coverage
received by the U/B FootbaD Program
and is a culmination of my displeasure
with the Western New York media. The
local media does little for a sense of com·
munlty and for the Unlverslty by preten·
ding that the U/B footbaD program does
not exist.
The students of this University are con·
stantly looked upon In an unfavorable
light. It Is Ume the media focused some
positive attention on the University and
espeda(ly Its ever-developing football
program.
The Student Association and aD the
components of the University are more
than wilftng to be part of the media's attempt to bolster the Image d Western
New York, which includes the University
of Buffalo.
Yours Sincerely,
-Joel D . M_......., President
Editor:

a.«a1o E - . . N -

. Milt Jofte's column of Saturday,
August 11th entitled "Home Away from
Home" is another example of the lack of
attention that the Untversilty of Buffalo
football program has received. The

=

.~ :~tr~~~ X'~!"~

New York Sports not the troubles of a
college team who has the problem of
l&gt;laltlng one-year for the completion of a
50,000 seat dome stadium .
The University d Buffalo f..Jays its
!Pmes not In a spanking new actlity or
mammoth Rich Stadium, but In Rotary
Field where half of the stands are unfit for
pubic use.
Mr. Joffe mentions that U/ B offlclals

are not delighted with having to compete
with Syracuse on fall Saturdays. Well,
Mr. Joffe, they're nOt and the local media
should have spoken out against this in·
justice, Instead, we are subjected to the
weak analogy of Syracuoe Athletic Director, Jake Crouthamel, who compared
the number of competing !Pmes In this
area to the Jersey Meadowlands. Doesn't
Mr. Joffe realllze that the New York-New
Je~~ey metrQp&lt;&gt;litan area has considerably more potential fans than does
Western New York. Mr. Jofte writes of
the financial considerations d Syracuse.
Poor Syrac:uoe University must spend
$300,000 while they walt for the Stale to
spend $14 millton r:l public funds on their
stadium. Such a bitter pill to swallow!
The final lnsuh to the Unlvenlly and Its
footbaD program came when Mr. Joffe
suggested that perhaps "U/B ollic:lais
would be placated f the 8ulh were d fered the opportunity d booking • !Pme
Into the dome agalnst one d their State
foes." U/ B does not need this form d appeasement. Instead, what we .,.P Is the
support .d the local media who are
sincerely concerned about the ...cis d
their community and who do their
homework.
·
Youn Sincerely,
-Joel D . ...,._.._ President
Student Asooctation

·3 &amp;om U/8
tapped by HUD
Three U/8 students have been tapped
by the U.S. Department r:l Housing and
Urban Development to pailk:lpate In
HUD's• College Cooperative Education
Program .
lbe two graduate students and one
undergrad were oelected by HUD for the
work-study program from a list of can·
didates submitted by U/B's Regional
Economic Assistance Center (REAC) , an
arm of the School d Management.
The grad students are Richard Dye,
who is enrolled In the Department of
Geography, and Bernard Fenler, School
Management.
The undef!J"'duate is Carolyn Boldt.
Under the program, the students w!ll
ahernate a semester of woil&lt; with the
government and a semester of study over
a two-year period while earning credits
toward their degrees.

m

�Potemldn

A....,.....,. ........... ., ....
..............

............ ... onlered to- ..........
,..-~
ct.ik . . be _...... .., -

SMJ, MoooU!I-

CALEND

~Cot ... -lfnnao. 19'181. CooMnnca

- . Squooo. 4,3(1, 7 ond 9 :30 p.lll. Goneol
- 1 2 ; - - $ 1.50,

BASE:MU."
U/B-RIT. ~- -l'lol!t. 1
p .m.

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._

.... .,........,Opobl_
...... N. Ptoood,

-~~~----Dr

~ ~. U/8. 454 Fronczok. 3,45

--c.-..
p .lll. echo .. 3,30

LEClUIIE5 llf 1111S1C NEPHROLOGY•
T......,.._T_

_. . . ~

~ Or. J_.t, s.
Hondlor, ' - I, Socllon on McmlnnO

· l.AI&gt;orMay
al Kidney " Elodrclylo
- .,
Nollonoll-a1Hoallh.
S108

~- 4 p.m. RoiNoh"'"'*wllbo,.,_.

DIIAMA~

n..-. U!B c..- lot- -..d&gt;,
: $3 _.J;
- 5ponoaNd b\1

681- St. 8 p.m. Sl.SO studena o n d - thc~aln- .

GOLF"

~and~ Edueollon

undor IS

... a&gt;noill al .... - - during tho

-

folond--b\1-...-who how modo~_...,..,. to
k.-Jodeo kl tho flold alldd_...., function .

foronco - · Squooo. 12 ............ Goneol
- 1 2; - - $1.50.

TAL ENGDEEIIIIIG SOIINAII SERIES'

r.,....

Dovld - · SJ.an
ond Eric ClwlstJNo
stotklthlsl*iouoond- .... althe
~-- al" _
......._Giont
. . . , _ .. tho U.S, ouddoni!l110 bonorit ond
....... a rolgn "'"""' .... clalrudlon-.aoas tho
land, ... and....,~-

!ilr.-.1 .... - - al

n..!ilr.-.1 -aiCop.

No. . . -

..- c - , Dr. Hony B. Gny, who II tho W.R.
~- "'·· ............... Collomlo lnduteal
Tochnology. 70 A&lt;hooon. 4, 15 p.m.

1lUAII FR.N.

Cal ...t - - .. Wc*lman lhutre, Amherst.
4:30, 7 and 9 :30p.m. Gcnorol odmllolon S2;
students S1.50.
,-., enc::hanting who-dun·l where nothing il
q'*- whllt It..,... to be . An u~ poke
~ • caled 1n \0 ddaminc the cauM o( •
ma:w..n'• dealh and so begins an exc:ling g.me
a l k l - -.
alf-thc·wol dua
and romank lnbiguf: .

red'-·

IIA SP£AKEIIS MMEAU MfEI1NG'
114T...... Hal. 7 p.m. Thilllthollnt ..-ng
to plan the coming year. AlttuOmts inter~ are
weed to attend end }oin the conunltter. Your klus
_.. needed 10 mllkie lhis ya.r our most m~

!«_........

Satanlay - 22
IIASEIIAU.'

U/Bw. ~~- -Aeld .

lp.m.

n..-. UIB CentoTfo&lt;Thone R......:h,

681 Main St. 8 p.m. A d -; $3 - a l ;
Sl.SO studena and . . - .-ns. Spontooed b\1
the Doportmont a l -.
1'hil ~ ebout r.a.n and irnpNontMnt In
Soulh " boln!l dftcaed b\1 Ed Smith al
U/ B's Blod&lt; Sludlos and Thwre Ocpertmenc

COFFEEHOUSE'
- a n d .... Ollw&lt; .... 2nd Floor
.....,_, p....,. Quod, Ellco&lt;t . 9 p.m . Fnoc wine
and munchies to f... , . _. Spontooed b\1 Collogo B.

n -. Squft. 4:30, 7 and 9:30p.m. Goneol
- 1 2 : studmlsSI.SO.
Thil fllm . ..... w...., ~- bolh tho dnotor and ..... pb 8uck Havy ond Jule a.-,
....,_ Muon and Dyan Cannon, Is a romentlc
~-about a Loo 1\ngdos

_...,summoned Rams......-

to Huwn b.,acolestlal
acort. "" h returned to urth .. tho body d
another ITWWl; faDs in lcwe•wtth a beautful women,
and acapa Mttmpts n..dc on ha We -M-u.~
datod ..make altt.. c -

Mr.-

DRAMA'
The w..L U!B Cen'"' f0&lt; , _
681 Main St. 8 p.m. Admllolon: $3 gonerol;
Sl.SO 11Udents and..- dtluns. Spontooed b\1
the Depenment al Thutro.

R...-.

AFTY YEARS OF 11lE A.MEJI1CA.N
MUSICA.L FR.N, PART D"
Donen's
Bcot!M:n.
110n1ng Jene Powd and Howonl K..t. Buffalo
and Erit County HDtorical Society Museum. 8
p.m. Sponsored b\1 Media Study/ Buffalo. Admls-

s.- -lots.-

UUA.B MIDNIGHT FlU4'
A.tuod&lt; cl the Klllo&lt; Tomat- (1978) . Confcronce Thu~c . Squn. 12 midnight. GenenJ
. . . _ $2 ; lludents $1.50.

IIA.SEIIIW...
o-.os-~

Doublchcade-. Pcelle

U / B ~ CAUCVS MEE11NG'
567 Copon. 11,3(1 a.m. Tho ogmdo wtl '"'*"lo
c:ommlltH reportl and • "'et..ring" IIISiion In whic:h
IMIMn al c:onc:em to women on c::ampus wil be
~ - AIU-.oy--kl..tlod.

BMliWN IlliG WIIICH COl.LOQUIA'
- -

-·
Sl&gt;emon.Quod
En·,
Sludlos
c-.,Man:
123 Wil&lt;eson

Elooott Complex. 12 .....

_.,...._lllrw ...
- D r. JoE..,., -

ORAL BIOLOGY SEMINAR'
Nooy

~

P.t.

Momorloll-.oo. Room 107, 4S10 Main 5uoot.
4p.m.

----"'

FOS1EII LECilJII£•
M

EJec:nll T.......
Hony B. Gny, who 11 the
W.R. Konon, J&lt;.. ,.,.... ot the Collornlo Inal Tochnology 70 1\chaon. 4:15p.m

-

I

.........

·Dr.

PHYSIOLOGY-·

Un-

......,...n

O.W Ka... M.D .. topic to be announc:ect
Klind'l Auclllortum, a.ldNn'• Hotpkal. 11 a.m.

---todoellclollooi.Dr

Amoo/11 S I 0 8 -. 4 15p.m Colleo ... bo
.....tat4

~-

n.-

UUA.11 NOIC)A.Y NIGHT FILMS"
T..... (1935) . 7 p .m.
v.. C..l T... I I - v.. (1938) . 8 :45p.m.
Woldman , _ , /llnhent. Fnoc -

r-·•

... Edw..-d G. R..._,, Donald M-It, Jean IV·
thur and Woleoo Food, lrlYolvtng • coa...
-.,who's mllbobn !0&lt; Pubic: Enemy Number
Ono and the cor6utlon that folows .

v.. c;.;., r•

11-

v-. _...,_

Stewart, Jean Mhur and Uonel Benymort. Is a
--about.., Idealistic• ..,..!ric lomJiyllando .. tho- alprogras.

CONCERT"

1Wio1o- F.....: Cheryl Gobbet·

tt. fluto; John Hun~ t.o.oon, and RIYka
Mondefkcrn, violin. BUd Redial Hoi. 8 p.m.
GenenJ A d - $3; !.......,, staff, alumni and
..-dtlunsl2; studmlsSl.
., -

tru,_.,.

l....,owd b., a FO&lt;Uity Rocttol bY
O.Yid Kuehn, (a al the leculty and tho
Buftalo Phllbonnonlc's trumpet prtnc:lpeO , the
Mwk: Depenment klwed el mombcn al the
Phllharmonk to tab part bt • concert or concerts
featuring them as sob or chamber playas rather
than In the reletlwly ononymout setting althe
11/mphon• . T h o - - to this .._
has ...wted kl tho ochedullng al low ex&gt;n&lt;:at&gt; fO&lt;

p--

1979-80.

MEDIA. SlUDY FlU4 (FUM lHEORY)'
{Eisensttln). 147 Dlefendorl. 9 p.m.

FOURlH A.NNUA.L EOP AWARDS
CEIIEJIONY'
Sixty oludenb ... NCOiYc "high the
Op...... nl)li'l&lt;9am and S3 good.- ... bo
- - s--wldcSpodal~A....-ds.
Dr. Kennc1h O.ylos, Buftalo.,.,.,..,
U/ B gooduote and f..,._ EOP lludent, wtl bo
....., ~- An alumni ew..-d ... be poaented
to a "Fftcnd al the Educational ()pp011unl)l Progoam.• Speuld... Din... Room. 3 p.m.

_........--from
a

Ed...,......,.

"""'"a

--

. ..oo ...,..a

c----~
SINit photosppher lrYDgiO win the love of an

MGM..m.y.

Hone F...._ is • M.x Brochers film with a
fenteotlc oodolend th&lt;
DcllnJiolyo
onen
al __-· bat.
~ -

-"a

Launl .... Hard. comed. Launl-thoiWWIIId-on-twenl)l
_ . . - k cndod ~ - . Honlv brings him
....... and.,......_.,. begin .
MEDIA S1UDY fUI (FU( HISTORY)'
1 1 M - Cloodot ~ - 19131 : SenR.ol. 146 Dtofendorf. 7 p.m.

-

......

FACU.TY RECITAL"
"• • •
--so.~ooa-.
BaWd
Rtdtal Hoi. 8 p.m. Gcnoral- $3; U/ B

F......,, Stoll, Alumni ond s..- Cttlzons. $2:
Studcnll. S1. s.....-l blithe Ooputment ol
MUiic.

MS/8 El.EClllONIC ART SERIES"
v~ b\1 Fnnch
Jun-Luc Godard ond Jun-Plone Gorin, with
dlocuoolon b\1 Gorin. Media Study/ Buffalo, 207
Delaware Avenue. 8 p .m.

rodlcol_..,.n,...

MEDIA. SlUDY FR.N (FD.JI11lEORY) '
~ (EilenMin) . 147 Diofendori. 9 p.m.

Thanday - 27

?9:,........
"'lhc
c.n....

Tuesday - 25

MEN'S TENMS"

U/8 w:. lk6io State.. Amherst Courts. 3
p .m .

BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAR•
Where Shall We Go Todo,? The Natioeol

-?.

Gallery"' the""' ...t Spoce
Dr.
Den K011111n, Ocpertment al Bloche""""', U/ B.
108 Shennan. 4 p.m .

Wednesday -

~6

o-y
Elebtla. Bul·
falo ConYCntion
Among .....,ts futured durlng tho..,_....,.
con(.....,. d bo the Seccnd A.n,...) Dentol
1\lumnl Run (Sopt . 291. 30 tabk dni&lt;'S, p&lt;esenta·
tions for ckntists and dltmal ~. m1S and

.

=-~nm:;".:::.::::;:.=!':'dental
ouxJiiorics- expodOd to - . I.
Spaloco&gt; fo&lt; tho~
wh;do
wt1 begin at 9 a .m . wt1 '"'*"lo Dr. Richerd
Wl/"n. c:hotnnon al the ~ al O.al

?:1-.

l!iology ...... U-.oy"' Konlud&amp;!l {l.cxlngl....
on "Pre-Opaatiye: and Jntnwncius Sedation;" Or.
Peul a-. c:hotnnon d the [)epamMnt al
Palodonaa .. tho s . . o e u - • t Stony

lln&gt;ok,whod_..........,..._ ,n

chldm\ a n d . . . _ ...t Dr. John Die'""""·
.v-.~. N .Y .. . on"Dcntol

Dental.......,_.....,.

KlneoioloJw .•

Dr.

Thll WMk'• event • being held bt connection
with • Comm.utas Affan Btcakful. Fi1tnoft

d be
Sebestlan
Ciendo, c:hotnnon altho UIB ~ al
Palodontla on"Onlcool ~for Den·
tal A~," and Dr. Ralph Lobone.
the Forsyth School fO&lt; Dontollj~. on

Room, Squn:. 9-lla.m.
Forlnf......- on who Is playing, call
636-2919.

County

~AY

MUSIC SERIES'

dun.;,.

F~
=~· the Erie
Dental "::7,.
Soddy ... hold IS luncMon on
Z7 wllh R-. J. MGCool, _.J
al M... 011 c..p:s l'lorthall Regton .

Soptombor

DIIAMA'
llMlolud. U/B CentoT f0&lt; Thu~c R......:h,
681 Main St. 3 p.m. : $3 ,........,
SI .SO studenll a n d - - . .. Sponoond b\1
the [)epamMnt aln-ft.

UUAIIWEDNEaMY -FIU4S'
11M c - - (192111. 7 p .m.; Hone
~ (19321 . 8:40. (19381 . 10
p.m. Corlcnnot n -, Squiro. fRe Admb-

DENTAL A.LUNNl NEEliNG•

Student Voice Rodtal. BUd Recltol Hal.
12:15 p.m. Spontooed b\1 the Ocpertment al
Mwk:. fRe .

NEWMAN a..uB PK:NIC'
2-5 p.m .
Cenw, 15
A...,ue at N-Fols Boulcv..-d.

PEDIA1JUC GRAND ROUNDS'

u-.c.r-

211 P -. 5,30p.m.
R - d b o . . . - 1.
5ponoaNd b\1 tho [)epamMnt al Civil

CONCERT'

Sunday- 23
Arid. 1 p .m.

Friday- 21

Ding.--·

SolldW-o...- .... ~R...-y,

llcjlnon!G.T.

-~ .

n._T_.Iso-JOsC&gt;OIIIed!l....,.·

UUAIIFR.N'

-charge.

DIIAMA'

WA1EIIIIESOUICES AND ENIIIRONMEI'I·

MEDIA S1UDY FlU4 (FD.JI HISTORY)'
n.A....... c--&gt;o (Gdftth: 1914).
146 Dlolondorf. 7 p.m.

- C . . Walt (19781 . Conlennco

FOS1EII LECTURE'

.1oM Flohor. Audubon

Couno. TBA..

5ponoaNd b\1 tho~ al ~.

-cornr..- .. tho~-· Tho

--St.

lloaday- 24

UUM1 MIDNGHT FUI'
_af ... _T_(19781 . Con·

..-tl.os..-Room ~-3 ,45 .

- n d· ond
l'honnocolo!Jv
ond ~­al
o
- .....
tho-altho~

UUAII FR.N'

- C . . Walt (19781 . 4:30, 7 and 9:30
p .m. Woldman ~ ............. Genenl od-12,111udent1Sl.SO.

GEOLOGICA!. SCIENCES SEMlNA.R•

* '*

The R
of t..ke Elk. Angelo ConIglio, U.S. Corps al ~. Buffalo. Room 18,
4240 R;dgo
3:30p.m. Coli.. and
doughnuts at 3 p .m .
I

w.

me._
........
..,.......
IIASEIIAU."

o - 5eote eoaop. Doublchcod&lt;r· Peollc

FlU!. 1 p.m.

CHEMICA.I. ENGINEERING SEMINAR •
11M""-cl~- .. ~
T - Scnw Eoonsdon, Cootol D. Denson,
Chemical ~ llep.tment, U n - al
Dclew-. 263 ~ - 4 p.m.
Rolreohments wll bo seved hom 3:30 to4
p.m.
FOSlal COIJ.OQUUM •

- -.. -.-.G.y

Mtoltjo, Indiana U -. 70 Achaon. 4 p.m.
Sponoond b\1 the [)epamMnt al o..m..try.

UUA.BFIUC'
_ . - (197l) . Woldmen Thoeb'C A'1'hcnt. 3:45, 6, 8 ond 10 p.m. Gene&lt;al odmbS2: students SI.SO.
Prabobly the
IBm al ........
Hwold ......... Is • b&amp;ack c:omed911bout a

----cult

.....
-...._-Harold -and ao-,..,old -..to. His ballbl/11- sulclclc. end
...... Is IIYingWo to the

o.AJIA.•

~0

fulat.

ca.wr-_ dnctod b\1 To&lt;n ))oonell

�-ioo-...

--. --...-.

- - -· 103T-.Hol, ondtho
........ loo- ..... al ........
Fol
fdolotl.~28.1979,
ot4
p.a.........
_....,.,_,.
_ _ loo-_
tothoGSII-

..."""'- .

n.......-...-... -

__ ____..
~

· - - - .. - t h o .......... .
~ PIIOGIIAJI
DIIIECTOII
... t h o _
al _ _ _

_..,..

- - a l t h o - U/8-SUNY/-.,
_ . . . .. tho~ al Goonoblo ... due In
- . , n o - than~ 30.

""'*""'"

- . . - .. Goonoblo loo- t h o - - ..
lui~ ..a lrtngo bmoflts. Tho ..... al dulla

....

II ~..!uno . ""'*""'"
hold.,
--onaSUNY.,._,and
be: ......... In Fnnc:il, knowlogooblo about

c.n.... Cln
...
~
·
Tho
011-e_
_
$3,....-..ond
_
~
lllo ""'-SO..,
Loll l.oungol
. 8_
p.m.

---·
R-50.

~

., tho U/8 Oeportmcnl al

Fronco, · - - - · ond ... _
.
a
d - -· Ho O&lt;ft wll: - I n
noulllng and .....,.._loo- tho_..,,

............... altho foatlty and - ·
who ....... ""' ... jolnod tho Club, t o Foculty

Club..._ .. . ...

.........,.now.

lludcnto,---..

bo tho lotoon alllce- ~SUNY and Goonable, C&lt;&gt;UJWOI tho Gronoble- on tho . _ . al-

.,.........,.loo-prty..,-._~

- Cofteo Is .......... tho
- - - .. Ha-riman dur1ng tholpnch
how- a n d . - - ond ............. boon
lrWalodln272~1oo- ....... Wb ...........
O&lt;&gt;ly.
Tho odwdule alcwnts now plonnod Includes:
~ 30, "wolcomo bock brunch .. tho
Foculty Club.
~ IS. Exploring tho QuMn Cloy. A bus
tour al tho . _ londmoda al Bu&amp;lo, ond
- a n d ...... -

- · INDEI'£NDEPIT FII.JOIAIIERS
..__..-..., f1ii,d,- .......Piono

all-..._ ... . . . . _ _ Sludy/Bu&amp;lo. 'Jf11 0...- A ....... 8 p.m.
Garin

SUE GUEST REOTAI. •

--c-t-onoal_._.,to
.. ~ ... Sioo-al~

... ...._...._IAjonn Hllor.-

-Hoi. a p.m. 5poo....t b, tho o.-t·

-al-

Goonoblo, and
-w. Colman,
- i\pplc:otlons lhould go .. Charta
Olfloo-all-~.
Ul.lh'l6, SUNY.-,., 1400
A -. Ahny, NY 12222.

w...._,

H£AI.ltf CAR£ PIAN OPEN HOUSES
Tho Health c.. Plan hoo ldlodulod. al
· - - · .. I t s - c..t.r, 120 Gordon.... Pod&lt;woy wa~. ~ on

-·

Woclnadoot 11om~ ........ Doc:omb01

?7, IIOQIImo to Dioco. "hioby al
" - - - . . ond d -.
- 1 4 . Holdoy Pony. 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
ot tho Foculty Club.
A...,. oountry . . and lxundl, • - ond

1979, s,J0.8 _p,m.

~

Theln-Entllllh~lflllllulolsln

... - -

~---..........
_ . P h.D. In•--fltldln
an A - ~w:hool. f«lhe .,..._ a1
. - . .. a&gt;logo- ond- who
c:omplrood • - · o r .... 24 ,..d
~and ert ~ 1n • Ph.D. prospm are
ellt.&amp;e. 5apmds . . for one-year, and . . bued
01t need, not to c:xc:.d $2,500 for lingle tn·
-...... "'$4,000 ... mon1od- al
'-holds ..... dopendonls. ~ 25
,_cent aiiOO -.11 ~ wll go to
0.• ..._Holt, -.g Gtad
School dcon, 548 ~ Hoi, bolooe 0c:to1oc. 12
far ddaal. Submla6on of tnMeiak must be mad~
"' October 19.

-

-eo..-

IIEKTAI. STUDY

F\onono who tt..lc they nood denial work and
....uld ~~ca ....... .,... ... tludyalresponsc to routine dcnialtrutmmt ahouJd con·
.... 0.. L. Corah .. &amp;11-4412.
Voluntan must not c:urrurtJy be under the care
alo dcntiol. P - . , u wll.-vo denial a ·
alllination and IC"'f''IYS to~ how much
- - t h e y - Twofilllngowllbo
~ .. pan altho s t u d y . , . - Spon- . , tho [)oponment aiBoha.bol~.

DOCUNEHTS CJNIC
The Go.ommont Documcnbl&gt;orportmmt al .
l..od.wood l.bwy .... _
.............. "Doc
dur1ng t h o - al~ 24. nwloo enrol wlllum ' - t o - and uoo
_ . ....... publtaotions.
The Doponmont ... ~

230,000
......._. b, tho Unllod S&lt;osa, New Yad&lt;
and tho Ewo......
Economic: Community. As In - - - ·
onlyofow-lotodlnthoc:a'd-"'e.
lnf&lt;&gt;&lt;mot~on . . . - In documonll Is altcn tho

- ·and c - . - ·

~-mooe-for~-...
~ "-I!Udylng ............ ~. mony

-.. --""'""'--.

~ ond

a....-.. -

-IS.

S&lt;otowlloloobo~. H - , - l n·
ltftlled In ~ IIOUICa, 06 otMn ~..-~ In

t'- El..lt'Opan comn..nlly or c.n.dian colec.1kHll
.,... moN

_,w

reMNe iplea, *'c:e al....,.

Col636-2821 to
wil be ~ to

""'""'- pooplc Foculty . . oloo '"""""·

T h e - ... bo hold : ~- 24, 2-4;
s.,....- 25, 10-12; ~ 26, 2-4;
S.,..- 27, 10-12; ~ 28, 10-12 and
2-4tn"""" 110, ~ Docu-

o..-m....

Locl!wood l..tnoy.
FfoCU.TYCWB
The Foculty Club -.ld Ilea to Cldond a conllol

studonts - H - -- llndortPdu*
....... 3-5
ovaJIJblo.
_ c:al~2079p.m. -............,. , . _ ond .... looMlcheloAM.

fUl.IIRIGKr DEADLINE
T h e - - ... tho 1980-81 ~
for Fubight 1J0ft1S II Oc:lcbo&lt; 5 , 1979. The
... - f o r pduatc tludy o r In oc:adcmlc: fields and fO&lt; pral-...1
training In tho aullw ond palorming orts. It ts
""P'dOd thai - t e l y 500 ........ to 50

countna wll be av.a.bll few 1980-81.
The ..,_.altho ~nts Is t o - mutual
undcnlandlng -...., the ~ al the US and
oounbia through tho...,._ alpcnons,
k._todgo and oldlls. They .,. proylded und..
the terms of the Mutual Educational and Culb.ual
Eachango lid all961 (Fubfght-Hays Act) and
by fcnlgn goyemmcnts, untverslties, ccxpon.Uons
and private donon.
Appltconts mu11: bo U.S.
tho time al
application; gcnaally hold a bochefor's ~ "'
Its equivalent bol&lt;n tho beginning dote a1 tho
grant; and in molt cases, be proftdmt tn h
to._ al tho holt country. Eoccopt fO&lt; 0111a1n
spec:fic awards, canc:Udates 1"1'\ay not hold the

Ph.D. at tho t1nw al ~tion. ~ f&lt;&gt;&lt;
1980-81 ... iMilgtie for a -want to a country f
they ..... been doing pduatc "' conduc-

n. u...-u..y would 11ca., do.
display"'--..,..... .......,_ tho wldo
voriotyal,__ovotloblotostudontslntho
UGL colectlon. Any attnK:tive c::oven cl
b, tho UGL from 1J1e to New
Yook to -l.ampooa, otc:., otc:., 11om yow
pononal c:ollodloou, would be IJ"Udy _....tad.
Ple.aM send them to: Gemma DeVinney, UGL,
~ Holl, Extcnllon 2943.

._.,,.. """*

NEED BASIC DENTAL CARE?

ting racarct. in that country for lix months or
mooe during tho,_.,.,... oc:adcmlc: yuo-.
Crattw and performing artists are not rtqulred
to haw a bicbelor's, but must have four yean; o1
p - . . . J study"' equlvolont-nce.
SodaJ wcdc epplicantl must haw et 1a1t two
yun al pral-..t
.U.. the M.S.W.
cMg..;- c.and.id.laa in rnedic:ine must hew an
MD. otthotimoal~tion.
Soloctlon II boJod on tho ~(• oc:adcmlc:
and/or,.-! ....,..S, thO vddlty and '
f . - y al tho pn&gt;poNd tludy plan, " " -

-nco

and pononOI quolflcoliono.
Prclerenc:. II gtvcn to c:andidaWs who hew not
hod-~ I"' -ndod study or

..-.....-.
c:a""'"'

Fubjght f&gt;rowom AdYlloo- II 0..
Jciln Simoo). Fe&gt;&lt; lnfO&lt;mOllon ond od-....nt,
""""" him ot636-2191 , "' 1136-$698.
Appfbllor. I"""' . . . - In tho olflco a1
Quod,

WELL. lEAJI NEEDS YOO.

TEAM II • _,w program 01 tho Schclol a1
o...-y-----tho

...!dng---

opportunity to wadi: ln a simulated office Mtttng.

Having)ult started for the: school year. iEAM tsac:tiwly

flwopology/l..ow In

P.--.

GRAD S1UDENT GRANTS
Monrry II av...._ for graduate: IIUdcm
-~ .. thofinol...-for-o

- · o r boCionl doweo.
Tho Goaduoto

R.......,.- Dow1opmont

" ' - ' al tho GSA hoo - - mous;. funds ··
to pi"'''ffde up 10 $1.50 for MMkf'1 students,. and
$250 for Ph.D. . . -.
App~cM~on~ . . · - I n the Gnd- Stu-

... fO&lt; -

...

routine

dental . . . . - con bo porfom&gt;od In TEAM's c:lnJc
wtth • minkn.IIJ wdtng period and a1 minlmal COlt .
In addition, we at TEAM open~.'-: ~ such • fashion
as to make d routine: derMI c:cw: as comfonablc
ondu-fnou..,..... So, lyoudo...d
bastcdm!Aicon .•. why walt? Coli u..t &amp;11·2213
any day between 9 •nd 4 :30 and we Will be g&amp;ad to
arrange • ICI"ealJng llppatntmmt for you.

N£w 1.IIIRAR'Y COPY MAOt1NES
Tho~

l.horla.,. ploOMd to on·

nounc:e thM fk...oma phomcopies .,. now

4-1-

avalllble in moet Wlitl. In eddJdon to the three
x..... 4000 which he.. been operating 01

tlw Low l.bwy IInce lolt ~ping. II , _ x...,.
3 1 0 0 - hoYO boon ob&lt;olnod ond - t a d
.. folowJ:

Lodcwood !bar;,

~"

~ Lhlf\l, I ccplor, UndoriJoduoto
; H - ~ l.bwy, 2

l.bwy, 2 -

-

; Moin.5troolU&gt;rlf\l,

La Lb-o.y, I copier.

~Complex.

Two altho U/8 opp1c:anto I« tho yuo1979-80, Wfft aw.rded SPnta by the Intune·
)lonollfllllluto al E4--Kevin · to
tludy EngliJh l..ttonotwo In Englond, ond J....,n
c. G.oMnlck, to study Sociol • Cultu..t 1\n-

tho~

-.-... .... -...Those
community whoM tpeefJc -

NewR!dgo

NEWMAN CEM'at MASSES
_....., IIIII: 5 p .m. - 339 5qun ond

Nowrnon C.....,

~

Compla.
s-dor. Noln Str.l: 10 a.m. ond 12 noon C.ntolldon Chopol; 8 p.m. - 5&lt;. J....,n'1, 3269
MM, St.; Amhenl: 9 :15a. m. , 10:30, noon •nd
5p.m. -NewmonC.....,Moa .... FrW.v. 12 noon - Newman CAnter,
Moln 5&lt;. I&lt; ~ AYO.; 12 noon ond 5 p.m.
- Newman Contrr. ~_ . , 9 a.m. - Newman eon... o n compula.

n..

PSST

-to5pln~GI

_
a l _ l n _ _ tho _ _ _ _
~~-lhe-ond
-begin
Oct. 2 and ....
tho. .
01111
...
t
h o - . Mootmoduloo
_ ......,
_ ..._
. OIId

. . - . - ....... a l - - t h o . . . .
- . . . _ - . . . , "CGo66: . _ .. u...

~,· ~vouw..,...,

.........

v---•
•
__

~--..-~_ o n d . . . _ . . . . . . _• . _

1luclgdne 516;" --~
GropNcf" o n d - - .
~Eoc:ll_ . . ...,..........,._.. ..

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

tion .. _ _ ondl.. . . - - - - .

a...--... -.--. ..

lad.,-

""""""'*'~"""""· TNIOct.IS- . . bo

Hortlad, - - a l ...

OOody-.

Nlogon - · ...... ~oo- ...
pic:-. al T--...1 Ano!!o*. ~~~- . .

______
'-·

~
. .._
11
0 -. . . bo .......
.....
. . ._
Onlya..onJtr...-

F a r m a n -. c:aiMory,_ot
636-2809.
READING OIICIES11iA •
_ _ _ _ ., ..... .,...to

..........-.- ...-..

The 0 . , . . . a l - -'"""1-..oy

tho_..,...~~·­

-aiPoul~ .

n.
- ...............
fiiV"'dootho
_
_
__n.-,.o..
O&lt;&gt;ly -"'""!~In tho"""'- .......rood

-. . _. .. e....-...-. ......

-d-·-"""--·-"'
..

poJO.

hoo lndudod ~- ond a&gt;logo ..........

No ... · - - · .._ _ . ond

a d - .. - · -·

MAGAZINE C011ER5 NEEDED

-...,at

lntomoflonal Studies, Room 124, Rlclwnond

·

£d Hennon, t h o ... conduct t h o -- ~-documents
wllbe ~. but"- -b,NewYad&lt;

' " ' -· ~-andpduatc

s.r-.

The

amcnt ·~- WI* some Ida In the

-molt

" ' . . , . , _ _ _ - ond hiDI for
fonlgn lludonloi!Udylng EntlllJh ... fonlgn
-

Tho Club II locatod In Hantman Hal, Main

FB1.0WIHPS

lotho.. Danlooth
GoM.~
.. be -.lod.b,
tho Don·
Foundodon al 5&lt;. l.oulo In ....... 1980. •

PSST.--..... ..

~-aNy-

Tuoodoyo boglnnlng Oc:lcbo&lt; 9 - 7:l0-9:30
p.m. In~ Hoi Bond a - , _ ...

lHIENSIVE ENGIJSH lANGUAGE JN.
511TUtE

:::...,~~==tsforthoiOIX&gt;O&gt;d

....

::::.:=:~ loodonWp and

r....,..

Prowom f&lt;&gt;&lt; Students.IPSS1l hoo oddod two .... al ....,...... thlo tal

50tUSSMEIS1ERS 510 am

59o ""f&lt;&gt;&lt; your Sid CW. - - . I n Room
7 S.,W... Col831-5445 ... """- Siootlo)g~-12_ ........ ..,._ ...
our annual Mnnil: toumlil'tWnl
SQUASH a..uJI
AI I n - playon, loculty ond - . . .. mMt
at """"' In Ood&lt; Gym on Monclojoo and
Wodnado111 wakly 11om 5:30 to 7:30p.m.
TEACHER EDIJCA110N
Studona
lntooatod
_
_
_In
t io1xo1ning
o n _ 10C0nC1aoy
bo_to
tho tlonio- Toadoa- Eo1uco1ion 1'n9om
polO&lt; to onroling In any a l b -· App~tc.o .
tionl ond Information moy be ob&lt;olnod 11om tho
DMston al Und~uato Educat~ona~Studla ,

~AC:.~'-:'2:1~~~
Baldy

for appllootions to begin tho _..., for tho
- - I I October I, 1979.

lEACHING ASSISTANTS
Tooc:lolng--to-..-

dasaoom . . . . . . . . . . irtvllled 10 alllnd ON
d two 1().- .......... - . , the Stu·
dent Dovolopmont l'n9om Ollloo-.
The two-how- ~ ........... to bo hold Oil
tho Amhont a n d - - - . . . ..
pion
and·- to's" .......... - ·
lldontly and ~to-.... loodlne

JUdo-

group-.----"'
..toone .. -

M*y, wading ...... and
al
tion, tho_wll
_
_ In
_ oddi........
lind ........
bodvaaoodo.

foatlty, ond, In-~._.,
avoid IOochtnol
..,.._

nlfnl - o n tho Amhont CompuJ 11
Sept. 25, 11om I p.m. to 3 p.m., 201 · AI
Moln Stnot, .......... bogln Sept. 21 , 11om 10
e.m. to noon. 7&amp;5. H..nman.
For~ and man infOI'mlldon cal

"'drop.,

636-2807
110 UNIVEIISnY ~ SEIIVICES
SHOIIT eotasal
~24 . 26 - -­

. . . R - ~- Room 7, 4234 Rtdgo lAb

3-5 p.m.
~ 25, 27, October 2 ~ !BEDI. Room 7, 4234 RJdge

........ Ta1
LAo. 3-5 p.m.

WHO'S WHO

-··-"--·The 0-.oty hoo .....-.dy to
- . - . . . - " ' -· - · a n d
,.- for 1ndooJion In tho llln80
~

... c.e..-,

·-~·-a.-.a

�From the air:
It • - ' t SKY-SEVEN, but the view- just u good u Public Allain
r._...,._ Ed Now... IMpped these ohota of Amhent aacl MaiD
s..- fnlat a helicopter laot week. The MaiD Strea view ahowo the

oubway excavation.

100 object to stickers,
Griffin says that's nothing
The Penonnel Department reports
being "flooded" with lett£rs protesting the
r&gt;n~ bumper-sticker-style campus parldng
permits.
About 100 letters have been received,
accordJng to Robert Pearson, diredor ol
Personnel, who has forwarded them to
Lee Griffin, diredor ol Public Safety.
Personnel Is quick to add H was Public
Safety's Idea to have the parking stickers
changed.
Griffin acl&lt;nowledges It was his unit's
Idea, and dismisses the complaints as
minimal (100 letlers out ol 30,000
otJckers Issued anm't very slgn~lcanl. he
suggests) . Any time you change things ,
Grilin says. you ere going to get
complaints.
TIMo Public Safety director said that the
Parsonne.l Department was not aware of
the hundreds ol year-round complaints
which Public Safety routinely received
about the old-style stickers. People on
campus complained that the stickers
didn't adhere well to porous materials on
the bad&lt;s of their rear-view mirrors.
Because they didn't stick very weD. the
otJckers frequently fell off and were easily
stolen. Faculty especially were Irate
when , as a rauk of ouch mishaps, they
were given a summons for not having a

sticker.
Grilfln said the style of permit sticker
used years ago was best. That one was
affixed to the wing window on the driver's
aide of the car. But cars don't have wing
windows any more , and you can't place a
sticker on a window that rolls up and
down .
"We have been looking at the sHuation
for years." Griffln indicated. He lists
several advantages of the new system:
First, the bumper stickers are being
Issued for two years. not one. This saves
a lot ol bother.
Second, they adhere weU to car
bumpers and are far less easy to steal
than the rear-view mirror variety.
Third, they.make H easy for an officer
to Identify a car In a parklng lot.
partiCularly In winter.
Griffin said the Unlverslry has been
using bumper stick"" for handicapped
indMduals for Y"l'fS. and has never
received any complain'S.
"I know one woman who just can't
bear to put the new bumper sticker on her
Corvette. • says Griffin. She loves that car
and just won't 'deface H." While he can
empathize with that point ol view, there
Isn't much that can be done for II.

•Calendar
l l n - - 7......,

""'""'ndlno

ohould haw
.-....do ol
aawlcmk achlowmcnt - . . I by G .P.A. and by
other appropdatc ac:complishmenb such as awards
Of pubaicaHons. Scholastic suc:cas wtl be •
necessary quallftedon for all norntn... ln addition,
c:omtdemlon will bo gtYOn to ludenhip In lludent
and other Untvenity organlzatk)ns, eontrb.ltion to
c:ornmunity projects ~ to other appropriate ac·
and ac:compltohmmts.
U you wtsh to make a nomination, pMase smd information on the )unkW, seNor or graduate student
to the appropriate oftict: (undergJaduata to Division c:l Undergraduate EducatSon; gmduatc .tudent
nomlN.tkMu to the Gradu.ta School) . P\e.aM
enc:lole supporting docummts showing ~. acttvtia and awards. lnformatkK\ must be ri!IC£ived by
s.pw.ber 24 in order to meet the public:atk&gt;n
dudlnc.

WRmNGPIACE
The Wi'Dlg PIKe II • free drop-ln writing center
that wekoma wrltas at any at.gre of the compoling
procaa. Take advan~ d. our qualfied writing
l u - who pnMd• conlul . _ to boCh having
u~ng an assignment and
thooc polilhtng • final chelt. Come .. In 336
Betdy Hell on the Amhent C.mpw. Our houn this
temestcr are : Monday through Friday, 12 noon untll 4 p:m., afl!l Monday, W.tnadey and Thursday

ttou--

~ngl.

6 until 9.

WRITING 1\JTORS

F....... 5 -. S.... Consid., Moring

In

tho WrillnQ Plocc. You Wil bo eo&lt;oluJv ~- 1&lt;&gt;
hq&gt;Oihonlmpn&gt;Y&lt;~thctr-whtioyouimpn&gt;w

your own . Contad

Barbwa Gordon at 636--2394 .

&amp;hibits
POE11IY A RAREIIOOKS COUECliON
Tho [)epenmcnt wt1 how on ..contty
acquired books, ............... and - .. Included
... - b y Emt Pcund, w•m Corloo Wllams.
Helen Adem, and Robert Dunaon. 420 Cepm.
Tlvough Septombor.

THEMATIC CATALOGUES

Mwle l..bwy, 8olrd Hoi, through Sepoomba

30.

,

Oa The Air
SEPTEMBER Z2
~ llllhiPoo; Dr. W-11. F (OOS), dean, School ol Donttmy, " O.ntai Education in Egypt."

Dr. B. Kttot.l, esodete prot...,.,
0oportmont ol Poychology, "Tho Biology ol Mote&lt;·
net BohaYio&lt;." WBEIHM 002.51. f&gt;-7 a.m.
SEP'ID!BER Z3
C._... 1: Dr. M. F - (DDS).
dun , School of Omtiscry, "Dental Education in
Egypt ." WilEN (9301 . 9:05p.m .
Cra.tall U: lk. Mark 8 . Krt.&amp;al. astodate pol....,. , l&gt;opemnmt ol Psychology, "Tho Biology ol
Mat.mat BohaYio&lt;." WilEN (9301 . 11:05 p.m.
I

...

�Septanb.t 20, 1979

.,: _·.CII.Im

th011e .......
fuU clentw• ,
p................ cl . ......

_ _ _ Sdoo...,
....... s.-

..... llllnod bv many

.,.....__ A leading

Wl*l U/B ~ Or. Erwin
"-.,..,. ... the u.s. !ram Ga-..y In
the n*l-19301, FDR- Ptaldeat and
the Milan_ .............. the . . .
crltheGN.I ~~ crl"""*t-- which would
........ ehod , . _ .... lllllkiag a ftl!llh
crl the lllu INl World Wwl had lieen the

- · he hopes tNl a
C8D
I lll')duc:8d In the future
wNdl_ .. ...,.,.....,...-cl

,._
=bedorla
~ -~ crlteadq,~
wHitt' olten caUM

n--

E

-.
-_
Ill __.
end - -bv· "-tee
And . . w-..
anooy crl
.

r.-.. '*-*
.............................
..__
ilruck -

Ia the

crl

~and....,.,..,.....
Of .. hll ~.he Is par-

and

A ............... In medlcai ~IDIIII!I. "-· wholl-.g
&amp;om U!lrtil month, _ . . 1936, the
yMr

lkWiady proud ol the journal, lnf«tion
_, ,...........,, which ~ &amp;om rather
JnCI!IIIII,\IIelanlr'IJIIn 1970 "'hen he was
tta fclolridr8~ to become the
Mvenlh moat widely-died microbiology
journal ln. the world.
"I ha~ -ached It grow, just like a
child," he Mid pniudly.
H.-s also IJieued to be chairman ol the
newly-established American Board ol
Medical Laboratory Immunology, and
chainnal) ol the Coundl ol -Biology

h e _ ... Bu&amp;alo:

Pneu.-1111-.ld .. Ala! to the~
and ............ .-lv alw8yJ - - ,.,.
liliolica, wl1lch a decade . . . would ..
)lenlcle4 • "wonccer drugs" .....
more !hen mold iclenlllled In a Bctlllh
labcnlooy. Hundreds crl lhousands ol
home &amp;ont llva and war cuualtleo would
IIIII be loot bafore penlciJitn and Its
"cousins." the myclnl, would be widely

w.....,

legionnaire's Disease, caused by a
bacterium which was virtually overlooked
for decades.

Heiclellag, when he c:ame to Buffalo at
the IIJIIIIOIIon ol his former tloacher, Dr.
Emai-Wit.biky.
An Internationally-known Immunologist and laler chairman ol U/B's
Department of Immunology and
Badertology, Wbbolcy had, lib Neier,
fled the lnaeaslng pe.-ullon ol the
Nazis. Buffalo became Wltebsky's home
at the urging ol Dr. Komel Terplan,
himself a leading physician and educator
at U/B.
"
·
Slttin In his oftlce at Children's
H
oecently (he's bacteriology director
, Dr. , . _ related that his father
gaw him life twa. Once, biologically;
the Mcand time when he urged young
Netor to leaw Germany.
ru the Nazis' voracious appetite for
countries and victims grew, Neter was
only one ol many talented, skilled scientists and educators who would come to
lhe U.S . But aftar the War, he was also
willing to re_.....,blish scientific collaboration with colleagues In his native country.

Dr. Neter also warned that ewn as
wonder drugs klll the bacteria which are
responsl:&gt;le for many diseases, some ol
the surviving organisms become resistant
to medication.
uAiready there are drug-resistant
strilns ol the bacteria respons!&gt;le -for
gonorrhea, and for urinary and 'staph'
Infections. And others may emerge In the
future," he said. He pointed out, too,
that betler matching ol appropriate drugs
to organisms 1o becoming Increasingly
Important to the bacteriologist as weD as
to the physldan .
•
"Some patients, allergic to penicillin,
must have their bacterial Infections
treated with other spedlic drugs. And a
few anti&gt;lotlcs have such potential for
long-range, damaging side effects that
they're recommended only In certain
disease states as drugs ol choice.•
Neter cautioned that since bacterio can
change through mutation, and because
these mutations are often adept at survival and propagation, antibiotics should
be used less lndisaimlnately now and lrf
the future . He also su~51ed that new
anti&gt;lolics be developed and that the use
of others now available be restricted .
"As medical science has solved some
problems, those very solutions have
created others," Neier pointed out.
Because we now keep many people aUve
In spite ol serious Illness, the Infections
they_ contract will contin-ue to be a
problem. Their Illnesses make them
susceptible to what are termed "opportunistic Infections."
"These Infections will be with us In spite
ol and In part because of medicine's
triumphs," Neter observed.

!IV. . . . . . .

ite ......

Now 70, Netitr 111111 a recent medical
graclueta ol Germany's Unlvenlly ol

A,_.,_la~

Honoring !hose oonbt&gt;utlons Is a
framed honorary medical degree from his
alma mater, the University ofHeldel&gt;erg,
presented to him In 1974. Earlier this
year, he received the Federal Cross ol
Mertl, the highest civilian award the
Federal Republic ol Germany can
bestow.
·
Neter credits modem drugs - particularly the anttJiotics - wtth revolutionizing medical practice, especially In
lesoenlng the seWrtty ol bacterial infections. Fatal bacterial pneumonlas (as
opposed to !hoot which are vtraO, "strep"
and "slaph" lnfedlons as weB as tuberculosis take fewer children today. Before
the "wonder" drugs were available,
h&lt;&gt;WeWf, the physldan (aided by the
bacleriologlsiJ hail few alternatlws In
treatment and dlegnoois procedures.
U a child, lor Instance, was lhought to
have pneumonia, laboratory had to
determine which ol the 30 slralns ol the
diseaM was responsl&gt;le. That had to be
done within 48 hours ol the symptoms'
onset. After the spedlic antigen or strain
was ldenllflecl, the child received matched antibodies from prepared horse or rabbit IGUm, and physician and parents
could only hope for the best. The treatment 111111 .......UV effective If the child
hadn't J)MMd the alsls.
There were, of course. other
treatments and remedleo for other
sutpeded bact.erla1 ~. and always
the bederlologlot played an Important
role In their ldendk:atlon. But cllognosis
and lrealnwnl - . neither as fall nor as
effecave .. they . . today.
Even thOU!il drugo have radically
changod medical pndlc:e In the past 40
years, the fight 11Q81n1t bact.erla1 Infections, and the need for their tdenttflcallon
In the laboratory II far &amp;om over. A good
example, Or. ,.... polnl8d out, lo

.....

..
, It IW~ Mach aad In U/Bs
lftllllb......,..,.Never
Ill~ .......... heolten llayed
aftar a king day to povlde extra

~

.....

u_....tq..uoDr . Neter pointed to many
unanswered questions In the fields ol
bactet1ology and microbiology.
"We need to learn why some people
are susceptible to a bacterium and others
are ~tly not, as Is true ol the
Legionnaire's bacterium. We cannot say
a person's Individual Immune system is
surely the only factor lnvolwd. But what
are tile others? How lmpcxtant are they?"
But even though he stresses there Is
much yet to be learned, It should be
noted that during hll 40-odd years In
bactalolo9Y, he has been among those
who have provided answers to questions.
He was a plonMr In .the pasoiw
hemagglutination teat which lo used to
help In the dlagnools ol • varlety ol
enteric or "guf' bact.erlallnfedlons. He Is
also credllad with coWng the term
"enteropelhogenk" lor certain llralns ol
the normally "'friendly" • · coli bacterium
found In the gut which can cause disease
In Infants.

-

T...,...., ....

~

......

In recent years, his research has focus-

Editors.
Dr. Neter

ct.. .the!~- .... Mot-. . . . . ...,....,-" ... ......t, tt.e'o a....,._
. . . crldenlure..-,...ttbeU/Bd.al

.....

Or. John Nct&lt;.nna, clndar crl ~
......_, and ............-. . . thai,

..-...who NqUft ...............

... .-.-Mel.
The School's 90 juniOr . . . . . . . . . .

two-

requiNd to ......
ol ~
~ durlftg the vur, with .. equal
number crl _ . . Ill ciomplola
three - - A lollol crl 450 complole
clentln ..-.... . . r..s.d lor the y.ar.
p - "'IPP!!Ing to the - - ...,
should be available Mondayo,
Wednadays and Fridays from either 10
a .m. to noon, 11o 3 p.m. .. 3 to 5 p.m.
Because ol the dlnk:'o eduo:allonal
.._,t, the lolal-llme.,.... 10
to 12 weeks. But ......... a - . g
experience for the oludento, the ~
are provided dentun!s Ill a f• .._ than
cummary In the prtvio• denial - "In the past, - allan had a - . g
list." Dr. McKenna oays, "but people
=td~ their teeth to t h e - they

Even people who already have denhas been preoccupied wtlh
tures may be canclldMa for the dnlc.
"Dentures should Ideally be replaced
National Institutes ol Health. He Is author
about every seven .. -w&gt;1 yMrS •
or co-author ol more than 300 publicaMcKenna explains, "becauoe ~ ~ •
tions and has collaborated exll!nsiVely
resori&gt;s beneath the denture liMe,
with others In the sclentlftc community.
accelerating changes In oral tiNcture .
But he's not been alool to other conSuch
changes can make the ~fitting
cerns:
dentures feel uncoMorable aftar --a!
He's served as president ol the Buffalo
yearsclwear."
Chamber Musk: Society, Inc., and has
Patients will be needed during the
· been both their avid supporter and a connoisseur of fine music. His coDeagues caD
remainder ol the ochool ye.ar. One !POUP
will begin treatment In late November,
him a "man wtlh no enemies." U/B
students and faculty haw always found
with another beginning In late January or
early February. Treatment for !hose
him accessible , kind, warm and
requiring complete dentures It conducted
dedicated - a real gentleman .
Neter spoke warmly ol his wile, his
by junior and senior students under the
supervision ol faculty from the Departson, Stephen, who Is with a California
engineering firm. ol his friends and col- . ment ol Removable ero.thodontlcs.
n..- lnterellecl In ~ lo the
leagues here and eloewhee.
"1 am grateful to this country," he add- denture dlnlc should ca8 831-2720 beted, "for the opportunities rve had - I still
ween 8:30 a .m. and 4o30 p.m. Monday
through Friday.
have much to do."

his research, funded for 23 years by the

Candidates sel~cted for 2 posts
Extensive searches for two senior
University Ubraries positions have
culminated with the selections ol Stanton
Biddle as associate director for planning
and development and WIUiam Prince as
head ol the Undergraduate Library.
Both Biddle, presently pursuing his
doctorate at the University of California at
Berkeley's School of Ubrary and lnfor-

matlon Studies, and Prtnce, presently
Head of the General Reference Division
ol the Virginia Polytechnic lhltitule and
Slate University U&gt;raries, have acxepted
tentative elfers, Saktidas Roy, director ol
Libraries has announced.
Anticipating the favorable action ol the
University on these appointments, both
should be here In November.

Insurance notice
s-

To: AD
Agenciel
.
From: ~ a-uance Section, State ~crl CM1 Service
The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court has Issued an order requiring
the State Hea\lh Insurance Program to provide maternity benefits lor any enrofled female employee (not a female dependent spouse) whoee tn9""ncv
terminated, etlher normally or other than normaDy, on or aftar April 1, 1978,
regardleso ol whether such an employee was enrolled for Individual or dependent coverage. The order further directs the State Health Insurance Program to
provide, "for the payment ol an amount equal to the difference between the
benefit, If any. heretolore paid under such Health Insurance Program on account ol hoopttal and doctor bills In connection wtlh such pregnancy crl any such
female employee and the amount which would have otherwise been paid under
such Program consistent with the benefits then in effect for such employee for
expenses arising &amp;om Illness or disease."
Please advise all your present female employees as well as former empi&amp;.ees
::t=.~ affected by thlo determination to file claims before A....- I, 19eo,
Hospital bills should be submitted to the Emplovee Insurance Section, New
York State [)epa.rtrnent ol Civil Service, 1220 Washington Avenue, Al&gt;any,
N.Y. 12239. The biD should dearly show the employee's Identification number
and, If employed by a local unH ol government, the group number. The biD must
show number ol days and dates confined and should be an Itemized statement.
These bills will be transmitted to Blue
lor payment under the Statewide
Plan.
Blue Shield dalms for physldans' services under the Statewide Plan should
also, Initially, be submllted to the Employee Insurance Section for conoklentlon
b9 Blue Shield. After that carrier has paid, any balance charges should be submilled to Metropolitan Life as a regular major medical claim accompanied by the
physician's billing and Blue Shield payment voucher.
- GHI claims lor phyoidans' sav1ces should also be lint oubmltted to the

c..,..

Employee

Insurance Section.

Eacli claim submitted must flearly bear the notation "WoMoon C.." at the
top ol tha clalm. -

�5lpletrlbe- 20, 1979

U/
_......
. , ... c.lla

. ,~

0

................. lnl971-

~._......- . . . . . . . . ln
0

...... . . 6ool' .. the .....

~ 1*111. lha ~...... In
........
wliiloolot-· lnd ...... who ollwwloe
IK.Il . . lnlllvldu.! ...., ID flincllan
. .

~lnthe--cl•.

a.tha N. Co*'-, who M
- · - cllha Campaa Olllce cl Set·
. . dw ~ • .,_'furhr
...... that In
l-jab:
"You nat onJ, ..,.... dw door for
. . . . . who
"-lloapped," ....
...,., t 1 In an . . __ "You -

.......a

~~wclioa~·;.. piOIII8IIl. Nn.

Ollchlr llid - Jndkt'd,tbe:' _....,
............ ~...., .-1 timely

~

..

,· 1976, dw U.S: Deport·

• ,.._ r ....._ Eduadlon anc1 we~....

..-.~=~~~

b. !,~': dw Mrillk:IJjlp!cl.- lhe
dlllce lhe now head&amp;. The lour.&lt;yur

1

•

.,-fnlmHEW'~OIIIcecl~ex-.• _

=-:.=..s
. ..:.::..w...:
..
~~r;~ ~and~~.,..d~~~~ r~~~~~IO~
=~~~ ;.
s,.d.l·....,; · · ==
•:

.......\ug.3,,19110,and~

., • ·'-+' ,

.

,

,

.r;

.

·•

':'".!·=:oat'U,::r~ She
::=:a:.::::=.-.~=~--~~.~~~~..:::..
~
...., ......_
~
llilpt "'·. lllllltwmMiral
•

•

•

. .n. .... -

J

0

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

that •
cl
IIUclenls who rnWit - ".1lt Jail-.t
"IIQ!ol)l handicapped!' line ct.uelaped

,,.. ·~ :.C.~~....,_/,; ~nee~

She~

IIUious

··l

-·~

· -..,

llaiiiPad."i OIIII _...... c:anw

~at !JIB who-~

i'.:d

da!l;

,br,

J

long

~~ '

&lt; .-y

JObn A ... Neal,
vice pmoldent' b
~
-~ dwt the

~"::..-..Z·~

..

lncbSa,_""-lm9"tacllie .... _lnCut- .
chc'.a clllce Ill Goodyat tw: lho-maps i

~~-~~~a· hand!. ,

specialeducatlonal~entandtopay

WilD_.. .....7

7

~ one fa, the Mains- Campus and

aRd ID ......,_ what , each naods.
.,.,.
_ _._,,:_ , · • ·
~ 11 to dewlap ....t provide "ap-.. · apped penon II '-·-~any
ptqlltMe ecluc:etlaNI~ S!l*mS-" . ~~~~~..~
lm·
The thW 11 ID prowlciC an academic
pU!Mntw""'"~'._
one or
climate cO'nohaeive to "optimum
""'"'""""'life~ \:"~~ ol
-.....:- •
.
llld&gt; an Impairment, "' .:.,...~ as
!'h,*al pm.t modifications ouch as · having ouch.., ~1.
_
pu~h-button auto ..atlc doors and Special ....~
t: a
wt.e.lcbalr 111111p5 have been 8nanced for
dkd
'
·
the . - pert by the Unlwmlly llself.
Moot o1 the $500,000 provided-by the .
Now, howewr, State aid Is on ile way.
federal gxant, Culcber said, II' ~nt for

u-wor.-

~ - - - . 1 ~ ..............

elbow·

'

n.:~-

prcWan

~ 1he ........ • the IIUdart~

~~

explaiMd oome-JII&gt;den1s .

-... tloino to _ . . , . ,...,.,..... of~ . -4k!er
•.--· .
......_~
JW • • ••-Act cll-973.
c:llld !be~~-.--.nd
n... - ,._ ballet tl!r-* 19 &lt;beconle an . , . . , . _ u!l llllng •
Cuii:!Wa U/JI......,.. One 11 tob:ate
. . , . , and hand
~-

I

lnd

Campaa~ferblad~.. ~ The_..,tll*&gt;ut~~·~

'-· IDAprl,i97i.;o._HEW....S~·.. "'PY';:......_~~":
_ the h

'

•

plantdiNdar, .....-lth,t"" l.Jnl.,..-

UU. ~ llly.boi ... IPMII about $50,000 ~
,..-.-bulldlngo·
and ploctl;; · ~he~ !Ill both~ to
~.'1_!!'
"'• . ~
.., . ..
or .~ ...,_,..__ a
· tJnoMr the 5111111 funding JIIOIII'IIIII, ,

8IICIIf..r f.,. Amlwnt 'bb:ks io
cl ·sirtnQ as.~ays.
bln&lt;l

fotalli:ll~
-:..-•
! _.._,_·_ ;
DoMd R. -Rhoadi, an-t...._...

mobllty 'll&gt;iip."" cllhcr In Bralle or large
pl1nl.tona. . . .'Oncampunlterleam-

.RIIoalisald-a~couldbeaw.dad

forthe~~byJhllflntclthJ

tngasr-rooteJli&gt;Cier.thesupmrlsioncl , li'W· TheMairi

' [l'project.t..~,

11 In a laHomplelll~ cl design. ·;·
an&gt;ons !be 22 . CWcher, who laoi' ~ an
·~ bllncf" oi!Kfcmb aicled by -her ~-..vlc:e award-&amp;omJhe'U/8
clllce this Y!W'. b\10 rec.ived ~IIOfld : £oundatlon ~ · a 51Me -IJniuaslly" c;!

an .Instructor.
, Cu~ recallecHhat

.·

d~. One was awarded " rnAq's
degree In social well..., and the ""-• a
Doctor ol Jurtsprudenoe from the l.iNI
School.

~-

New York (SUNY)
Awiid,
poin!8d ou1 thahriany c4ber cologos and

~ have-_, up. progr8tnl fer the
hancllcoc&gt;Ped
based on the U/8 Dilol
·project. Information~ the focal
program 11 ~--(! by S{JNy to aD
units of the ~ ai well as to other,

· for the .cl .........,. aida. She
To llllloe conlac:lwllh the'handlcapped
noted , however, th&amp;t many dauroom · Sipen ud _ _...._.
and 1eam what their J&gt;Mdo &amp;re, Cutcher . aides ~ on a volunteer basis and th&amp;t
wltll' hearing lrnpalrmerils,
l&amp;lld&amp; ~ en!ltring student a card In the 1 some of the special equlpiN!nt, has been
the Office of Services lor the Handltap- aampuoes .lhroughout the nation.
1111111, ~ the lludent to return It II he
given to the University on "pcm~~~~ncnt
ped provides claisroom help In the form
,
.,. the ~ an lmpalnnenl· and wants
loan." ·
.
..
' of "llgners" and "note-takers." The .T be ................ tD aa,, ...t. ..
......,_,She ra.d II IIIOUid be a violaTho s- ComrnlaiOn for the Bllild
former co"""unlcate with the hearingHaving speerhaded the .c;unent prolion c1 !lllldents' civil rtglds to seek such
and Visually Hand~d. far lnslance,
Impaired tluqugh' lign language and lip gram Culcber 1s corildent 11 wll conQnue
Information on admlooion forms.
has tupplled a machine that._.... the : movement; the Ia- mice lectur!' notes to tu'nc:tion el!ecllvely, even . . . lbe
a...... the card ¥111m II llrlc:tly pr1n111c:1 won! up to 40 times. It II one cl as a beclwp.
. ·
·
preMnt
•plla next year.
voluntmy, CodclwJ: Mid thaN'• rully no
t~qe filCh mac:hrnes al!'alla&amp;le''"';o.n
When a rebAblll!ation.agency spona&gt;rs
Of concem ID t., ' - · 11 a - t
lAY cl ~ 1-.- many haDclicapped
campus.
·
' .
·, &lt; a deaf student, the agency IIIIIBIIy
U.S . SupnmeComtnahgthallimlbthe
..,dents are actually enrolod.
.
·
Cutcher also ~d she has•llled a ; dofrays costs ol a "signer" and "note- ellectiveness cllhe 1973 Rehab. Act.
Some place the numbers ol
.wahl app11c1111on fer a newly-~
taker. • U a spoooor Is lacking and the
The high court ruled unan1mout1y on
~ otudento about tine pe&lt;· • "Jading IDIIIChlne" whose ~obot IIOice
llludenl·ls not eligible for such .....,nee
June 11 that handicapped ......,... .._.
cent cl.the generalotudent populadion.
.,..,. te&amp;ei a printed page aloud at':,~ ;,l
from ,&lt;&gt;!her SOI.Ita!S, Cutcher said, the' no legal light to aJtend 1cboq1o If they aae
AppljoiQg that formula, U/8't ~!!&amp;dent
up 1o 225 words a minute. This ~ of
Unlvenlty gencraly foots the bill ' - • unable to . . - phjlllcal quallllcaliono.
body cl about 25,001l.thould include 750
~ alone canles a Pj1cf '!'9 cl ' unless vOlUnteers ..., available.
The court even ,_u
f• as to !p«&lt;fy_
10
llanclapped lndiW:Iualo .. But there .... . than $20,000.
.
that schools oiNring dinlcaJ
balnlng ""'
far fewer c&amp;ll for ..w.nc..
Much cl this equipment paid the bbnd
~
•
. under no legal obligation to make "ooftrs.-s .,pp~ec~ by Clllchu show and llght-lmpioired II ~ In a
A !fpeCiel bookld en!ltled Access- rnative ..tforts" to reshape c:ou.._ to
that her omc. piOIIided .rvtce lor 162
Special s.r- Resource Room
AblliiY"- as a guide for aD handicap- , .eoc:ornmodMe tbe hanclialpped.
tludanlt d1llln!l 1977-78. Incomplete
Loc:kwoocl.lbaly.
ped students.
The ruling said Culcber ' "'s Mthout a
_..... fer ' 1~79 lncllc:R that the
The room Mo "9"!alns a 3&amp;-;volume
Published by the Office ol Services for doubt a
lA our efiods ID g1ve the
nwnbor- about the tame.
Brdle dictionary and a ~n
the Handicapped , It proyides a complete handlc&amp;pped a chance to becoiN!
Cutcher attributes Pitrl of the
Braille thesaurus. Together·, tljeyvtrtually
rundown on special raoun:es as weD as competitive."
cover a 12-foOI-wlde MCtion i:l wall.
lnfonna!lon on the whereabools of slnlc·
The..,_ sloe beliews will be action
dioaepeDc:y In numbers - f the 3 pe&lt;cent - I s accura1e- !o a poodJia
Deok-llze electronlc calculf~Qn that
twahnodlllc:atlons. The bookldeven lists by c..._ ~ amend the 't -, tt.en.by
known mobility. barriers that the allowing fer 8 broader inllllpnlatlon of
handicapped ..., - " ' to avoid until
the Jll;!!s c1 the Mndicapped as "Inlandouch lime as thev.am removed. ,
ed In ihe lint place."
.
As anolho!r aid, the Unlverslty's library
As far as U/8 Is concamed, Cu!chet
system has developed a bcochure pointed ou! that handlc&amp;pped otudents
describing library oervlc:a lor the have always been &amp;a:epted here on the
'The ~ Fuods Committee lor the ADocatlon of BRSG funds anhandicapped . This publlc:ation, also "same competlt!ve academic buls" as
nouncaa the Fal 1979 ~- Facul!y are lll'!led to c:on1ac:t the approprla!a
available In Braille and on recorded lllpe, the abie-boclled.
1acu11y chalrpenon fer further detallo. An announc:ement with extenRve lnfor·
provkies information on resoun::es,
mat1on will be forwarded to the Dean of each Faculty.
special
anddozen
lists "contact"
pe&lt;I
sons
at services
each of the
llbraJy unlls.

ror ""-

H£W.,...,

, :-

/

at

at

....a.:.
1

,_.

Institutional funds

.......
-:..-·.__
...

..
--._
._

:';

-·-

Career horizons

810a.m...

636-2564

116~

1131-.5411

305P-

113!.5641
1131·5106

416lloldl/

6S-2465

BodolW
4150'IIrlon

636-2071

lllfloar~

m:~

11.411 c...tov

109CooM
212llol

636-ra:!
636-2!412

38~RL

831·1605

2D.._A

831--

;-

• ' . t··.-_,,t

5 . . - 1 -ud"k:......
Manwhlle, ttnactwaJ moclillcations to
lac:lllta!e handicapped aa:as on the

carnp11141i ..., quite llppllrenl - ~
wheelchair ramps leading to buildings
imd at cud&gt;-level; push-button automatic
docn wide enough to accommodate a
whaalchalr; railings •ncl "grab ban." fer
oupport; spedaJ l*kfug areas; drinking
founlalno and !alephones at w!Melchalr
level; fauCets with ~ handJos th&amp;t
-..!

..,_

-

·

.............. -

-'•

·-

From October 22-26 the Unlvaslty's
Comrnun11y Advisory Council will aponsor a - k-long event entitled
Horlzotis- The YearaAhaad." Between
10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m . each day,
there will be a kevnote addras on a par·
!lcldar field followed by student
consultation with repraent.tivcs &amp;om
llliJious oegmen!s ol the employment
rnarketpJac:C,
Det&amp;lls will be announced soon.

·ear-

�~20. 1979

U/8 trio testifies
against dumping plan
People ....,. booing, "-'!! and
cheering. Good thing the local reoidents
dldn't bring tomatoes.

The

was an animated, now
record 1G-week-old public hearing In a
IteM

fire -haD In Youngstown , New York. The
Slate Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) "produoed" !he show.
Luckily, the "good guys" In the unfolding melodrama were three U/ B facu~
ty "expert witnesses" who test!fled (to
cheers) that a chemical company In
Niagara County had Issued a report containing "iruufftclent information" to back
a request to dump up to one miDion
gollons a day ol treated c'-"cal effluent
into the loweT Niagara.
Actually, the story " - " this summer
when the State Attorney"l&gt;eneral's Offioe
was asked to represent !he people in the
Youngstown hearings. The State lawyers
soon found, however, that they lacked
the technical expertise to handle the case
unassisted. Enter UIB doctoral student
Steve Capp.
When It came time for expert
testimony, Engineering Professors BIU
George, Ken Kaiser and Dale Taulbee, all
knowledgeable In fluid mechanics,

•Schwartz
..__l,cei.IQ
"globaT' a1tlclsm concemlng
courwes, teachers, or mission ,
neither "accurate nor utelul."
For example, the notion that
leges ""' a "financial drain"
University is "rather absurd."

College
he finds
the c~
on the

Gnde looftatloD?
Does arade Inflation run rampant In the
Colleges~ Schwartz maintains the problem Is no more oerioul there !han In the
University departments where the most
llitrtolk: College a1t1cs teach . He will,
howewr,
the - t o ..,..
what !he pradlca ol the Colleges ""'
regarding grading, and- "a need exists to

exa-

confront tile IIIUe." For the record, he
"doesn't anticipate a problem."
Analy, raponding to the argument
that !he Colloga have olf-Oeat courses
with limited ecfucational value, Schwartz
i n - the million ol the collega Is to
offer untradllional counes ..,hlclt Ideally
should not be found In other dirclpllnes.

Coursa, nonethelao, wtlh oubstanoe.
"There's a auctal lnlelledu.l mission

Involved In the kinds ol COWMS the Colleges teach," he offers. Some must be
"far out" becaUM lfs the function ol the

Colleges to creata these types ol courses.

If they were "close-In," ..,. wouldn't need
the Colleges.

~ their time. r...t - - . the
trio ......... and •rtgorouo~v• CIOIO-..dln two -.lng -..luang
from 6:30 p.m. to elmoll 1 a .m .

WUtftal..-'r •'allutodowltll
It

Whai does fluid mechanics haw to do
with chemical dumping? The dumping Is
supposed to take place at a location called" Peggy's Eddy. Separation flow, which
oa:urs In a river eddy Is also a common
phenomenon In fluid mechanics.
What happens at Peggy's Eddy, is that
Instead of the water meandering down
the Niagara on its usual course to Lake
Ontario, H gets caught In circular cwrent
movements. This poses a problem for the
dumper, SCA Chemical Waste Systems
Inc. Its engineering report (done by a
New 'York Slate consulting fum) assured
that the chemicals could be safely
discharged because the eddy waters
would undergo a cornpleuo dally tumover.
U/ B professors disagreed, arguing that
without theoretical models of the
phenomenon present In the eddy, .
calculations regarding diffusion rates of
the discharge would be Impossible to
estimate.
They ued ftlma aDd their es·
perleDce with boettle daNa
To explain their points, George and his
colleagues used audio-visual aids, In·
eluding a short fibt) usually presented to
undergraduates taking fluid mechanics
course work . The purpose ol the aids, according to George, was to "elevate the
level ol understanding and discussion" of
the DEC and the Youngstown residents.
From what the judge/ engineer told
George, It was the first time he had seen
such materials used at hearings tQ explain
complex issues.
Fortunately, chuckled George, "defending theses and holding the attention ol
llostile c:lasMs" prepared · the men lor
their gruesome aoss-examlnallon.

A frteH flew Ia &amp;om .....__
George was also responsible for per-

suading Prolessor Roger Amt, a ~nal
friend, to fly to Buffalo to testify. DEC
paid for the flight, but Amt volunteered
his time. He heads the St. Anthony Falls
Laboratory at the University ol Minn - . a leading oenter ol river research.
Amrs testimony subslantiated what the
U/B faculty had previously slated.
George feels U/B's participation In the
hearings has helped the DEC to better
understand what lnformaHon and
analysis must be present In such a report
In order for H to be considered complete
and accurate.

Volunteers needed

.

For the U/ 8 Rtghis ol Conscience group

(the law ol the Con·

A- -(Sottofll

dcloying reg;stnotlon.
The MCOOd conoem dull wtlh w•ys of improY·
log our .,.-..m regif.traHon systan, ewn keeping in
mind tho poodtillly tho! • nilght bo fundlonlng ..
weB a that found et many peer ln5tltutions. U/ 8,
0.. ScxnO said , hos an cxtmncly flcd&gt;io •&lt;~n:&gt;p­
ond-add" procoduro, ~ crullng pn&gt;b1ans

--

- Tho
for -, _ . . lm·

-

In ~ lo a quadon, 0... Somil saki a
Mrious cnrolmcnt shordal could hew con.·
- l o r focully-Oiall -.,gdt wiW:h mJght bo fch
for the next SC'Yaal yean. In NI$)OOM to another
q - about tholmpad d a pcool&gt;1c mojo&lt; ohM·
fol on otall •.,ggit. 0.. Somll said tho~ f this,...
10 ""-"· Mmlghllud lo tho .....S for oornc .-.due·
..... A dWd q - daa1l the poob1cm cl
ddlnlng
ond cl focully CX&gt;I'IIUbtlon In

·...,..m·

tho.....,, cl the .....S for otall -.nchmcnt. 0..
Somit .-.-1 the Jl)eiCUiatfw Mture d the qua.

"'"' but cmphaslotd the! " - woold bo lui con·
.u1lation- focully
t n _t
., h
_o
_

en-.
_....,._
..,.eom.

mlaft

mombor recommcndod -

-

lor

ltUde:nts .a:cwdlng to P'f'C¥8m or ocher pl.n. and il
.... noocd this had been pullnto cl(oct .... previous

w o c l t c l -.
In ..--.riO t h e . . - clwhcn we -.Ill haw
...... . , . . , _ relating 10 twglllallon
ftgura , • ..._oad tho!"""- I'll Monday,
Sopoornbe- 17, but thet, at tho and cltho "dn&gt;p and
add" pcttod, Scpocmbor 2l , lnlormadon ... bo f•

-.

.....Further..-- Senate-

10 the
tho previous day, ~- II, ._.tins the
noialn:h from .... Student Al!ab Olftt:e.
lltk projodgttYC _,.for ll\ldcniS nol-mlng
10 SUNY. a..llalo one - · In -..:. cl
lnlonnallon about how tho lludy , . . done, or
~or not IChook utibecl for c::ompMilon were
indeed com.perdYc .. 10 c&amp;a. . .. . real c:onoem

a- a........natbtaoad.

0..conluoad,
Somll - V.P.lltol
"""- two been
~· " 101 Study" and
the Wttromann Sbody dono I'll A I&lt; R. Tho
Sbody ..
doc:u ..... one! . . .
q.- further doo1llcotlon. It ... then bo made
10 .... EucuiiYC ~ ond ....

s.......

•. a...

-Robert WIN

reque11 for 101M hlltoricaJ
-~nd
~d .... Gonmol Educaolon
Resclullon, the Chu ..-.!tho Schw- Commlaft In 197S. 76. mulling In a . - ..... u.g1ng
Adminiltratk&gt;n to prooHd with a Gcnmal Educe"'"' l'rogrom al this 1-..11on. Tho,...... General
Education Commlnn wu then ~ted to
dcwlop .... PfO!Pm . s- this lNonnotlon ....
useful to me:mben: of the Exlle\ltfw Cornrnln., the
Chair will prepare a wrtuen tiMmwnt MJmrnwtzing
!he hislo.y cl the Resclullon for s.n-. and wll
also .,.taco tho Octobo&lt; ScNw ..-.g a
simlar nplonallon. Tho Chait- one! 0....-Elact ...
follow through on tho Gonmol Educ.llon Raclu·

any-

"-"*" ..

The Owlraoltad for
roiatlngtothe
ScNw cl the previous day. II ,.. noocd
lltolthoEucuiiYCCom- ....... t h o c~

c.duto. prcvlouoiy mdonad I'll .... · n.
talk tl IO be ........ to a c:oinmluN, udldng the
_......-oudnad, ondtoropoo1beci&lt;IOtho
EucuiiYC Com-. , . . ....... f - . cl
._.nne the ,.-y cl ........ - ..
this""""""" tho 1-. pon cl Saptcmbor. I n -m c n t w l i l t h e - a t t h o s . . - -.
Sopoornbe- II, 1979, 10 haw a , . . , . _ implement Raolutlon •1 ol the Ad Hoc ComrniNc on
PreslckntiaJ Evaluation Ptocedurn, It was
AGREED 1 0 - t1w k&gt;lowtng ~ 1 0 on this ComrniNco ~ Thcodcn Mlla,
W........ Wok~(, eo.-..- y.....,.. and BNoc
Monda.
0.. Siggoloow ... forwanl the ............. tho
SUNY SenMe In the near futute.
As a ComrniNc .....-10 tho Pcnonnol Poiq/
for the SUNY U-..ry S......to .,_,on Ft&lt;day,
~mborl4 , .,._Kungoought.....,.,.,.
datlona the EucuiiYC c:om.- ._.tlng
Focully s..- -........ obout tho Rooolulion.

· Sopoornbe- II,

-

.....

•--•ow.....
eom..-,

lippr'C)W'd for .... k&gt;lowtng

Teaching Qu.lity, Unlvcrlity Govemenc:e,
Admlnlstratlon Review, AthlcUct, Cohege1,
Faclilla Planning. Grading, 1111.....-.. A Lbory
R.....,.,.. and tho""""- a-d.
Nomlrud:lons wll be rMdc for the rtmalnlng cotn·
-inlhefuNre.
T h o - adjoumad at S:SO p.m.

• What you make

....__

.......,

for only about 3.6 per oent ol !he total
varianoe In salary for aD Unlvenlty facul .
ty; about 10 per oent for sodologisU.
• Reseatch productivity, wlille accounting for just a amaJI clfierence In
salary level, is still more llgr6:ant for
both suboamples ol ooclologlols than Is
teaching performance, public llnllce, the
ability to obtain grants, or ..tmlnilldllve
apellence. In fact, lor eoc:lologilb,
having won a teaching award or having
been an administrator "oeems to have a
negative impact on oalary." For the aBUniversity sample, however, !he oppoolte

Is .true.
• For aii-Unlvenlty lacully, publicalions efforts ioc:count for an a - ol
$1 ,000 In salary acrooo a carur;
administrative savloe, lor about $1076.
Numben ol articles account for 1.4 per
cent ol variance In salaries; boolcs, for 0 . 7
per oenl
• For aB soclologlots, publications
rauk In about S1753 owr a car.r. For
University soclologlots, the ftgure is

$2232.

Tho Chair woloomad w.... Ham1on 10 Rpioca
Jaltn
Sdoool cl
_Thomoo
. ,from
....the
"'*'-c:om-.

....,.....c1 01 the 5cNw -

cl SUNY. Tho Choncolcr one! Tho a-d cl

Tho ropoo1glwn I'll"- lioN IOthe s.n.d-.....1. h .. .. lode cl
undonlonding I'll s.n-. ond . - for
dorficotion for the "'*'- eo....-. b deddod !hot the a... -.Ill Prol..ar Hore .....,, .... Oclobor - -·
-tho-IOfocusononeclthearus of dw Reeoludon rather than 10 cowr II
raponte

Spuldng In p1acx cl 0.. Katie, 0.. Scxn• commenllltd on two topics ol urgent .dmlnlstratlw con·
cern. Ant. registratlon, where the totak; are
JHU0111ly running slightly behind tho COtl\pO&lt;Ob1e
1978 flgura. This could be due in part IO delayed
n9stration ruuhing from tedmical computer problems. The computer was ..down .. on sevaal occasJcms; on othen, blasling fOJ the subway atne broke
communication bctwem the Matn Street Campus
and the Complltu Ccnler, again inlmuptinQ: and

-

u-

In
to a
~--ond

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

In other ~nt . !he courts have
ruled that school cNidren ca(lnot be

w•

fedaacy did not at tnt, but apellenoe
with !he dlfllcultles ol bqlrloonlng objectors led to b c:h.ngel . In 1970, the
Supreme Court extended the right ol
~ntlous objection from those ol
particular religions to any whooc moral,
ethical, or religious principles are pactflst.

--1om-.'._..

not found
.. would
.uom.

t979. Tho a... _..... the
rnanbln IDf~ • ...._apN!IIIIInecoranwto

ThoP~Poiq/c-•woiOIIo­

r -.

"""""'"'cl--_...tunlil
mornbon cl tho Exocuaw ec.n- had on
- t o - t h e m.
Tho Chait- ._.,ood dtonglng the ...... Chait-·
"*' toChu-.
MlnU1&lt;S o! A - 8 and Soptembct- 7. 1979
w.. lippr'C)W'd as corrected.

~,

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

)ec:tion to

lbololowtoll _..,

Fcbniary, 1979forthoPnaldcntiai-Pro-

required to salute or pledge to the llaq
against c:onsdenoe, Wori&lt;ers cannot be
required to join unions against conscience (!he policy ol !he AFL-00 even
before any coUrt decisions on the rnatiRr) ,
nor can medical profeaionals be required
to perform abortions or hoopilal admlnlslrallons be required to provide
fadlities for abortions against their conscience.
The principle ol cOilldence Is now
respected In the law ol much ol the
world. The United Nations' Universal
Declaration ol Human Rights Includes
guarantees for "freedom ol thought,
conoclenoe, and religion."

upheld the righu ol conoc1enoe wherever
there Is no dloruption ol public peaoe. In
!he CMI War, the Institution ol the dralt
by the Union permltled CONCient!ouS ob-

__......,._.,_

-~...-11
The ....... Cllil8d to order al 2,:30 p.m. IO

-

...
- -·
10 a...
- . . . . cl
.....
Com-•
• - Aa:ordlng
., bo
small
. ond

Each year the Olllce ol Environmental Health and Safety conducll American
Red Ctou cedied counes In tnt aid and heart n!SUJcitation for members ol the
faculty and siMI. Before we schedule classes thls year we_would like to poll the
Reporier raders 1o claamlne Wthere are American Red CI'OIO certified instruc- •
ton who would like to share the teaching &lt;Jl ·a course. Volunteers would
probably devote no more than four hours to any one course. We would also be
Interested In the names ol persons who would be willing to become Instructors.
Couaa ""' ochedllled during regular working hours. We lly to set the time
for Tuesday or Thursday from 3 to 5 p . m . A lirst aid course extends over a
13-week pertod. A cardiopulmonary resuscllation course runs four weeks.
Penons wishing to partldpatto should call Robert E, Hunt, director, Office of
Environmental Health and Safety, ~ 1-330 l.

....• Conscience
_...... .,

Pos&amp;iblbty of cuts
aired at FSEC session

on

When
other factors - ............... ol
performance and rank ~ are figured In,
experience alone Is still worth S337 a
for aiiiOdologisll; $348 for
slty sodologtsts, and $144 for al University faculty. Thuvalue ol each lingle
year's experience is lllgnlficantly lowered
when rank is figured as a separate
variable. A closer study ol rank ,
however, oeems to suggest that It may
not be true that performance factors are
the ones which inDuenoe promotion. So
here again experience may be at play.

year

u--

AU- ...S to bow Ia lloow 1-.

Lewis, Gregorio and Wanner condude: " We can predict salary more accurately by simply knowing how long an
individual has been around than by havIRjl so_m e detailed Information about
scholarly actillttles.
" It ha1 fOr the most part been taken for
granted that universalism, merit, a commitment to Ideas and the We ol the mind,
and aD the rat determine !he dlocrtJution
of rewards In Institutions ol higher learnIng. There is little In the way ol hard data
to support such a conclusion."

-

�u

Seplember 20, 1979

Flood
tide

Heavy rains triggered by what was left
of Hurricane Frederic dumped over 5
inches of rain on campus Friday, closing down classes· ao the Town of
Amherst declared a state of emergency, Snow we expect-but hurricanes?

-.

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Who was that ·m asked man?
SEPT. 13, 1979

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

VOL 11 e

NO. ~~

So far Ia good - with qualifications.
That -ms to be lhe meuage President
K - gave to lhe Faculty Senate this
week regarding enroDmenL
As of Tunday morning, Ketter

reported , 22,488 students. were
registered, lhafs 242 more than last year
at this lime. There are 123 more DUE
studen• and 289 mo&lt;e In lhe professional schoall. MFC, however, Is down
81 studenll, and lhe Graduate School is
elf by 89. K.- urged caution about !he
increaMd ~ ochool enroUment,
since lhe high figun! rellects these
schools' efforts at early reglslnltlon_
The President explained that u/ll•s
budget Is bated on enrollment figures
sent to Ahny at lhe end of the third
weekofclaua.
Turning to registration problems, Ketter told Senators that the Intended
"liberal" and .....,.. design of lhe
regfolratlon proc:edwe has caused a certain amount ol coo-..atlon--apeclaDy
among lludents who got stuck In back of
long linn walling IO&lt; tbooe ahead of them
to go through multiple drop and add
cO&lt;npUier transaction~ . Four-hour Bnes
"tum elf" a lot Of students, he added .
To help rectlfy~the situation, Ketter
said, the Academic Cabinet Is studvlng
lhe problem. CO&lt;rectlve action wtlL be
taken by next
he promised.
Some pood&gt;le oolut!ons may include
etlher revelting to the old system of
allowing students to make only one transaction • day 0[ having students report
for changes In alphabetical order, or according to schoolo. Ketta said he will
report more on possible solutions next

-ter.

month. The President relayed he has just
received a report which attempts to pinpoint once

more why non·retuming

students decide not to come back.
1262 srudents who didn't return to the
University last year were sent questionnaira and asked to· grade (on a scale of
one to three) 4 7 factors which might have

· - -· - •. ...a.•

Couacd M-ber Scoaien:
names for the
music halls.__ ,

Couacd Chatr.aa MWoazl:
he's delighted with
the rule change _ _........

.U/8 ask~ng'State for $108.5 million
Money for the lim year of a three-year
plan for meeting accreditation needs of
the School of ~ntlslry Is being treated as
"an adjustment" to the Univ~IIJI's basic
1980-81 budget request , President
Robert L. Ketter told the U/ B Council
Friday_
Ketta Informed Council members that
the $717,000 being added to the Dental
School budget Is the first Installment of a
Master Plan to secure full accreditation
lor the School once more. Total expenditures under lhe plan are expected to
exceed $4 million. The 1980-81 Installment will enable ~ntlstry to add live
faculty and live support stall. Some of h
will be earmarked for a phased-In raising
of Dental School salaries, currently said
to be In the lower haW of dental salaries in
the nation . Th.l:s was a key recommenda tion of the accrediting agency, Ketter
said . Some of the additional funding will
go to purchase new equipment.
Ketter reported thatt~e basic Universi ty budget request for the fiscal year which

begins

next

April

amounts

to

$108,574,500. This Is the figure being
supported by State University during
budget hearings with the DOB (the State
Division of Budget) , but Is not necessarily
what Governor Carey will recommend In

the executive budget request next
JanualJI. Although hearings before DOB
are slated for October, Ketta said U/B
wiD not know what Carey will approve
untU January.
·
The montes ~i!'9 requested reflect an
Increase of $5,800,900 ova the total
1979-80 budget. Ketter cautioned,
however, that only a small portion of this
total Increase Is earmarked for
improvements or upgradings. Salary inaeues mandated by contract settlements
with employee unions wiD command
$1 ,771 ,000. Anotha $2,350,100 Is earmarked for Inflationary Increases In Une
with formulas devioed - In Albany: so
much for utility inausa, so much for
minimum wage: Increases • .so much for
other price hilces. That leaves only

$1,679,800 In "new money" to be expended as follows:
a . lncrund Iundt for library
acqulsltlono, 1585,000 (see separate
StOTj/) ;

b. Plant

maintenance operations,

1450,000. This sum wiD lund 52 socalled ..;oumeyman'' positions for the

physical plant. These include electric:lans:'
carpentas and otha skilled workers, a
categOTJI of employees In which , Ketter
said, the Unlvaslty Is currently deficient.
c . Savlnp reduction, 1150,000-

This means, Ketter explained , we can
spend $150,000 more of our total appropriation than we can this year. A set
portion of the budget Is always commandeaed for "savings."
d _ The Regional Economic
~ Center (estabBshed last year
to

provide

technical

_..

exJ:. ... J h se

for

redevelopment of the Buffalo an!a
economy). 190,400. This goes for 4 .5
·-~ ,-....·

..._.

�·~18,197~

... a..
STATE IIIIIVERS,lTY OF

lluD8E1::

U/8. union members have drahed .
a position paper.on cuts they want·
to have adopted by State leadership
&amp;,~ll!lw·

TOTAL STATE BuDGET
OIJECT OF ExPENDITURE

a NIOiutlon

lX&gt;Ih ~-and lhet ollwr NtNnched
faculty- hlamd back by thelr·NipC!Ye
dapeaba- wtlh a !c.- ol Mnlorlly.

lion IICUiidiWiids, _ . g CJIIwr tbJa9,
lhet Article 35 ol the ~ union contract "not be ...... .. • ltUidllid ad.......... procaluae, but only • a lui

......... Repaot
The document also cites • aepaat
llluad In .Jem.y 1978 &amp;om the
Aaaaaa/s Comanlllee on HIBha" Education, chaiNd by Melvin MJJ.r, llllhlch con·

'l'lne llnMillty laaaky who - - . ol Unllod u..._.. Prole- - (UUPI ' - wrtllmn

cleaylng tha NINrlc:h...n ol18 tem.nd
faculty It SUNY New Paltt. The raolu·

._.. uncle c:ondJiions ol "bona fide
algency" and lhet "q.dcal
11-*- In enaollment"- be ........
............. .......,...,_.of tenuaed per-

an.ncw

"""'*·
The aaolullon,

which

w•

-dy

~ 1D UUP Buflaolo Chlpter Pres!·
dent Wlaan Alai, has bMn put on the
. . . . of the nat union ..-g,
~ 1:1 Ill 3 p.m. In the Tllhat

If·-

a....Room.
wtlh approval
ol .......... Ill !hit lime, the document

wtl be taken 1D the OciDbor 5 UUP
~ meeting In Syrac:ute

ancllaom theae

ID the SUm Exocutiw

-&amp;.rd. Its authon aae: Paofe.on Arthur
E&amp;on, Irving

mnc..
~octad

~T BuFFALo

.....

~-

Dol.!llllm

1181 Yollit

ReDum UB0-81

~

and Anna K.

PrOle.or Thomas

Connolly

.. advllor.

Shaatng the agoncla Ill the September
1:1 UUP meeting will be Aaemblyman
Bll He¥. a meanbea ol the As.mbly's
Eclucallon commlllee. Hoyt Is scheduled

ID opal&lt; Informally for about a half-hour
on '"The Uniwnity and the leglolature."

c-llf'• ....

The .... ol M01g .. anolution prolallng the New Paltz teamlnatlons was of.
ferad by Connolly alta about a doBm

faculty, at a June ad hoc ..-.g of
tJUP, ...-! conc:e"TI OWl' what they
felt • ........, awli'GICiuMnt." According to .,..,. awpoail, one out of
eveay 15 New Pallz , faculty was re·
trenched; ...,. ol them had almost two
dacada of ..w:a.

The Buflaolo ~ complained that the
SUte union~ ohould haw talum
an "unequJvocal -.d" In support of the

..-.cMa and, &amp;om 'the ....a. shoold
haw lnforaMd the ~ UUP membea·
"""' about the via the olflclal
· "The Vollal." I.-ad, par·
tlclpanll 111 the June 0/B meeting
chaag.d, the UUP leaden took a
"ma..........,t poolllon," l1lllonalloed the
flalngs, and puapooely chooe ID Ignore the
11oue In tiMir publcllllon lor far II would
~ delk:alm union contract negollallons
or opur the membeaship to aejecl the new
contract.

The contenSUS M8iMd to be that If the
union membenhlp had been notified
about the eaaller, th"!! ·might
have had time to a.gantze and put more
me111 Into Article 35, posllbly making K
more cllffk:ull to laminate tenured
employees.
Many of thae ume sentiments were
expr.-d a few weeks later by otMr
faculty at anothea ad hoc meeting called
by outgoing UUP Chapta President
Olver GlboOn to daalfy terms of the new
union pad.
AUow. ............ fac:oolty cJo-.
A. Article 3S ..OW lbmds, facully com·
plained, II -..,tlally alows adminlltnl·
t1on to Ignore senlorit)l because I pamls
the Chanaollor or his dalgnee (which
could be a local official) to dec:lde what
.,.,._..a "unll" for -.nchment pur~· Some faculty ~ conccm
that a "unit" could well end up being an
outlpOican faculty membea whom admlnlllaallon feelo lo rockJng the boat and
would ... to dump.
In - . • l1llllonale lor Is resolutions,
the ciocu..-1 deVIled by the U/B faculty
1r1o poinll outlhet In the N.W Paltz case
.......... acmcMmlc faeedom and ordlneay
job -=wily have bMn endangaed and In
~ dalao\lad ......... admlniltra·
tlon ol Article 35.• The docu- aleges
lhet -laaaky had to taka prolallonal
..... pomlltoDM ............... ........of
oalory- a llllueilon ~ "Ufllala': .ID

s-

cludmd 1hlt :'financial exigency or budgot
account" for the ~­
ment of Ill Jaot 82 tenuaed facWiy In
SUNY linea 1975. This number ·c~oa-.not
include the New P,allz IJI!UP.
·
This MliJer Report ~Ug~M~. that CUNY,
hiced a much more Mlioul to. of funds,
but "did not aaench a single tmured
cull did -

penon." In addition, the Miler Report
chaag.d that "SUNY Central has .con·
ICioully elected a policy of oelactlve
relaenchment In order to .obtain 'ad·
Other Tban ~ Serrieea
mlnlllrallve llexiJillty;' that the canylng
$13,~20,100 (12.5\)
out of thlo policy was left unaa:ountable
by allowing ~ for decisions to
s-!Dp _
bounce between SUNY Cenbal (where K
T _ . - y Servicoo (J!qul.or)
$1,-.06, LOO ( 1 . 3\)
was explained lilat decisions.were made
$2,1611,100 (2 . 0\)
locally) , and the local inJ11t1!11ons (where .
H was said thlll cuts had been mandated
T _ . - y Servicoa ( Inotructionol.)
&amp;om above) ."
$1,8.0, 700 (1. , ,)
Tha locaDy-drafted a.olulon aslw.
that UUP "take an organizational poolllon
reganiJng Article 35, beyond that of lang
!JievanCa;" that "hlalng ol new facully
eCoun~ll/budget
never occur at an lnttltullon thlll Is
undeagoing retrenchment;" that If ..,.
needed; otheawtoe ·a president simply
trenchment occurs for "bona fide ftnan.
additional Unes for Individuals to cany
continues In olflce.
clal nec:aslty," )I shoui!f be handled ,our the Center's opeaatlons.
• The Cou~ learned that flile addiunder "uniform guldel!ries for aD of
e. Gl'8duate lollowoh~. $69,000.
tional campus buildings are either com·
SUNY and should nol be left to· the In· This represen1l for the first time a major
pletely planned or are In the planning
dlvldual administrations to c:my out as
State con1ributlon to funding these
~ a computea cenlor, the Ed~~ca·
they see flt." These guidelines, the
fellowsblps, most of which are cuaaendy
tional Communk:atlono building, a sturesolution recommends, should be
picked up by U/B Endowment funds.
dent ac:tivltles building, the first phase of
developed by the Chancellor and UUP
Still, the total represents only one-half of
the Social Sciences complex, and the
during monthly labor-management
what Stony Brook receives &amp;om the State
second phase of the Health, Ph!/Sk:al
meetlng5 which are now"mandated under
for the same puapose;
Education and Reaeation complex. No
contract aules.
'\
f. Buolng, $200,600. Busing costs the
steps have been talum, however, to
Unlveastty approximately $1 million a
aeJease funds for actually constructing
Let WllmaWa . . _
year, Kettl!r said-a mllllon that could be
these buildings. Four additional structures
In addition, tha Efaon..Massey-France saved annually If Albany would complete
have been approved by the- Legislature,
-ement Ilks that UUP paovlde funds
the Amherst Campus. Tha s- cummtbut funds have not been released for
and a&gt;WIMI to retawnc:hees who want to
ly funds only about $700,000 ol the total.
planning.
In this group are : the
pursue galevanoes!Q the aabllralon stage,
This extra appaopiiation will help bridge
theatre/gallery complex, a second stu·
md that the UUP praiclent Inform aD
the gap, but there wiD sliD be a deficit.
dent activities building, the second phase
chapten when aetrenc:hmeitt for aaiy unK
Savings generated In personnel Unes
of the Social Sclenoes complex (which
Is being considered. Fln.llly, the docu·
across the campus (If a replacement Is
will Include space for the School of
ment . uages aD UUP chapters to take
paid less than the former empl()llee, or If
Management) , and a Natural Sciences
some action oon the recommendadons
a line remains vacant for a time) have
and Mathematics building. The President
and let the ChanceJJor know about their
taaditionally .been sequestered to make
said the Master Plan for Main Street re·
endorsements.
up the shortfall; the President said. That
development is due this month &amp;om the
Public emJ&gt;Iol/ees are baaaed &amp;om strik- · paactlce wiD continue.
Cannan Partnership, and promised the
Ing by tha taYlor Law, and the State,
Council a briefing later this faD.
under teams ol the UUP contract, does
g . New building openln••·
• The ftve health odences deans and
$51,300-·for 10 maintenance personnel
not have to negotiate -.nchmenl5. But
~vice president for health sciences
to cover these buildings;
Allen feels union members are not
relill'l'rted on the wide range ol public ser·
hamstrung since "the State must stiU bema
The libraries will get an additional
vice activities ol these unKs of the Unlyer·
$70,000 for more tennlnals tieing K Into a
the burden of public opinion and the
sity (see next week's laue) . In response
poltticaJ weight of the unions."
computer cataloging system and the
to an lnqulay &amp;om Council member
campu's-wide work/ study program W!U
Allen Is hoping that , ~ the retrench·
George Measer, Dental Dean Willian
receive an additional $8,500.
ment resolutions are appaoved by UUP,
Feagans said the Dental School. has two
· they will gain the baclcing ol the New
Thebudget request provides for no ad·
yeaas .t o make up the deficiencies pointed
York State United Teachers and the
dltional FTEs for faculty or other than
out In Ks accaedltation report. Feagans
maintenance and REAC staff.
AFL-CIO, both affiliates of UUP. Allen
said
the aocredltors realjze that"the major
was at a loss to explain why the MWer
Other so-caDed "adjustments" beY.,nd
problem of factllties cannot be Instantly
Report received so ltt!le daculation and
the base budget include an appropriation
resolved;
they are merely seeking
was given so ltt!le alentlon by SUNY
of ,1 ,723,900 for the Educational Op-

(--··-•&gt;

Central and State union leaders-except
to speculate that K was llkely shelved
becauoe of Ks controversial content.

SAED enrolls
rec'o rd total
Tha School of Architecture and En·
vlronmental Design (SAED) this faD has
215 new otudents and faculty, the laagest·
InKs histo«y, Dean Haaold L. Cohen~
announced . .
Cohen said the -5chool has four new
fuU·IIme facully , and three new pari·time

faculty.
More than 137 new majors have been
eruolled In SAED's three d~.
and~~ aae In thlo year's

::~~~~·~

-....en that the State is going to
allocate money for necessaay lm·
provements. "A letter &amp;om the President
saying we are looldng Into It simply won't
Other dewlopmeata
be good enough," Feagans' noted. He
In ott&gt;er developments at Friday's
emphasized that shortcomings Identified
meeting:
In the acaedKatlon report have nothing
• Student representative Michael
lo do with the quality Of the school's
Pierce began his second year on the
faculty and students or Its educational
Council with a newly acquired right to
'program. It Is a matter of inadequate
vote bestowed through an amendment to
facilities, the Dean said, and inadequate
the State Education Law this summer.
salar1es. The report was highly com·
• Council Chairman MUionzl explimentaay of faculty and students. What
pressed delight over this new privilege accould hap""" If the aocredltation agency
corded the student representative.
Is not sattsfled after two yeaas have
• President K2t!erspeculated that the
elapsed? Conditional accredltatlon could
review process which he is undergoing
be continued , Feagans said, or the
this faD (see sepaaate story) will be comSchool's status could be Joweaed to
pleted before ThankJgivtng. Ketter emprovisional.
phasized, that, In the case of a favorable
• Mr. Frank N. Cuomo of the law finn
.......anent, no action Is required on the . of Hellerer, Cuomo and O 'Connor took
pan of the SUNY Trustees. Under the
his seat as a membea ol the Council for
,_ . ~"" ~ · lhc , Tf:u.tus
the fklt· tiroe. s;uomo:., wm,.eJ!Pir~ . Oij
ll&lt;:t • wl!f,&lt;w~ ,4CII1)e 1'411'11.,..·~·11
August 1, 1986. . ~ , ~ .~•. ~ .,..1 •.1" ·, •.· ;~·
portunity Center d~wntown and
$837,001 for the campus·based Educational Opportunity Program .
•

�September 13, 1979

Call them
Slee &amp; Baird,
Council asks
The Amherst Campus musk: building
will be known as Cameron Baird HaD and
the chamber haD wiU be named In honor
ot Frederick and Alice Slee- -~ the U/B
&gt;Council has its way.
These names for the two structures
which are both currently under construelion east of Clemens were approved by
the Council Friday. This "recommendation" now has to be forwarded to the
SUNY Trustees lor official action .
A twe&gt;-person subpanel of the Council
.-Rose Sconiers and Chairman Robert I.
Millonzl--selected the names.
Cameron Baird, who was long active
In the musical life of Buffalo, organized
the Department of Music here and
developed H into one of the University's
strengths. He served as Its chairman until
his death in 1959. The present Baird HaD
at Main Sl!£et was made possible by a
major gilt provided by the Baird Foundation. It honors Frank Burkett Baird, the
lather of both Cameron Baird and
William C. Baird, who is chairman
emeritus of the Coundl. William Baird,
present at Friday's meeting, said he Is
"delighted" with the selecllon of the
name.

Frederick and Alice Slee were Buffalo
mu
ifldonados who bequeathed the
Un nlly an endqwment of $900,000 to
underwrite arlnua1 performances of the
entire cycle of Beethoven string quartets.
A Slee professorship was also established
In order to bring to the Department of
Music composers of stature who give lecl:uretf concerts and seminars. Aaron
Copland has been a visiting Slee Professor as has Virgil Thomson . Lejllren
Hiller currently holds the Slee Professorship.
Sconiers noted that naming the
chamber hall for the Slees is doubly
approprjllte because the bequest for the
Beethoven Cycle recommends that it be
performed in a haD of 700 seats, which Is
the capacity of the new lactlity.
The Council expects to schedule a
comerstone·~ying ceremony for both
buildings sometime this fall.

Baird Point
getting power
The power outage that has kepi Baird
Point dark since last' March wOI be corrected this weekend, just In time lor Sunday's annual Outstanding Service
Awards ceremony.

While

the

no - power

situation

prevented use of the open -air am-

phitheatre for formal pre~ntations this
spring and summer, Baird Point
nonetheless proved to be a popular spot
for Informal activities. People could be
spotted there aU hours of the day and early evening--sitting , meditating, clamberIng around the columns, perhaps even
snuggling.
The corrective electrical work Is being
done by Ferguson Electric Construction
Co.
The lights went out at Baird Point
when unusually high water and wind
swept water Into the electrical aypt under
the stage through air dud passages.
Just why the water In lake LaSaOe
rose two feet higher than nearl&gt;y Ellicott
Creek remains somewhat of a mystery to
Baird Potnrs architect and contractor_
At ftrst, It wa5 thought the flooding
resuhed because the Greek columns and
stage were built· at too low an elevation.
U/B crews, however, have now confirmed that the facility was ereCted above the
"100-year. llood level," John Neal, vice
president lor facilities planning, said.
In order to ward elf future dllllcultles,
Neal said that before spring, U/B must
get a general contractor to seal the door
to the switch gear room and create an
alternative II&lt;XlftS. Bids for that project
should be out within a few weelq. The
' work Is expected to cost under $10,000.
Over the past months, several groups ,
Including UUAB, Inquired about uSing
Baird Point. ~-units even considered
H lor graduation exetdses, but the lack ol
power lntavened.
In August, an alternate power hne was
put -In for a -dana c - . bur that line
has now been deactivated:.
' • .. ·.. •· '

ThD Metch Illustrates NPR'a new Interconnection ayatem. Programa an
beamed to the WESTAR aatellite tom a main orltJinatlon terminal. The
aatellite amplifies and ...,.tranamlta algnals tu ground 'dlabes' like the one
being built on campua.

More power, satellite 'link for WBFO
WBFO wUI be 21-years-old next
has .about 1,000 members who conJanuary.
,
tribute funds and In return receive a ~
That "coming of age" Is being marked
monthly program guide. Audience
this faD by two major technical Imresearch estimates project that the station
provements. The projects are giant leaps
reaches a cumulative listenership of some
forward for the station, the University,
15,000-20,000 individuals) weekly with
and lor . Buffalo, station spokespersons
Hs present signal strength. 11 the ratio of
suggest.
, members io listeners holds, paid
On or about December 1 of this year,
memberships could conceivably double ,
WBFO Is slated to incr~Zase Its signal
\00.
strength from 770 watts to 21 ,400 watts
The new signal strength won't be a
and ' double Its .. potential listening
cu re ~aU for pockets of poor reception
audience.
which exist within the current coverage
By November 1. the station expects to
area. Mark Fruehauf, WBFO's technical
be Interconnected via satellite with the
ditector explained . How would he
National Public Radio (NPR) system.
describe to a layman how reception will
Work began early this week on Initial
be affected? "Much better In most places;
preparation lor installation of a dish-like
no worse, elsewhere. "
satellite receiver to the west of Pritchard
Hall at Main Street. This ground terminal
Satellite tranamlulon
will receive NPR signals "bounced off' a
Workmen stlJrted pouring concrete this
WESTAR communications satellite from
Monday lor the ground terminal which
a Washington, D.C . origination point .
will enable WBFO to receive live National
Public Rad io transmissions in high fidel Power lnc.reaH
ity, stereo sound.
The power Increase has been In procThe satellite receiver--part of a SIS
ess for several years now. First, studies
million projed linking 192 public stations
had to be made to prevent an increase
throughout the nation-- will make possible
from Interfering with certain Canadian
a much wider choice of programs. Eventelevision signals with which WBFO's fretually, up to 20 program channels may be
utilized; by the end of this year, lour will
quency tends to play havoc. Then, plans
be operational.
had to be approved by both the U.S .
Federal Communk:ations Commission
In add ition, 16 " uplinks" across the
and the authority regulating Canadian
nation will each be capable of feeding dir·
broadcasting. Some two years ago, an edly Into the network . Although both
nouncement was made of a $76.000
WBFO and WEBR/WNED will have
grant from HEW to underwrite IMJUipsatellite reception dishes locally, the
closest "uplink" or feeding facility will be
ment necessary lor the power hike and
other Improvements. Since then it has
located in New York City.
been a matter of getting Albany to let a
contract lor the work.
1
It wm chaage 1111Late this summer, th.e State contracted
Satellite transmission will essentially
with the Broadcast Products Division of
change the way public radio operates.
the Harris Corporation lor construction
NPR Is now connected with Its stations by
and Installation of a new transmitter and
a telephone line that transmits with little
"directionaf' FM antenna on Kimball
more than voice quality. This connection
Tower at Main Street. Target date for
Is used only for a portion"" pJogl'ams,
completion Is December 1. The HEW
most notably "AU Things Considered,"
grant has to be matched with approxthe network's news magazine which
Imately $26,000 In non-federal suppolt
WBFO carries weekdays at 5 p.m. Most
lor still other Improvements.
material--especially music--Is sent
other
"Direcllonaf' means that WBFO will be
through the maDs on tapes.
Increasing Its signa] strength toward the
Satellite transmission of several pr&lt;&gt;east and souili ol the transmitter.
grams at one time by the network lmStrength beamed north and northwest
pooes a need for more production
wiD be hmlted to avoid Interference with
factlitles at WBFO. More high-quality
broadcast signals north ol the border.
tape equipment will be a must to record
Aocording to David Benden, program
for
rebroadcast In full fidelity. Most ol the
director and acting general manager of
equipment now on hand Is reserved for
the station, the new audiences which
the
station's local productions-a major
WBFO will lie able ·to reach wiD uncomponent ollts broadcast schedule.
doubtedly ha.ll. some impat:t on the staConnecting
WBFO to the satellite
tion's programming.
system costs approximately $72,000 and
He noted, though, that It Is Impossible
to pre-judge what preferences new . Is being paid lor by the Corporatfon for
Public Broadcasting:

=~~u~"::~~~

w..,.

dtldll4111trtt Mecnbenhip
following
the fl&lt;!Wer'lnl:r41Mi! .·CIIlrently, ~he statiOn

ty of New York and administered by the
U/ B Educational Communications
Center, directed by Gerald O'Grady:
(There's only one comparable station
within SUNY--WRVO at Oswego.) It currently sends out a stereo signal just
beyond a six-mile primary radius.
centered on the Main Street Campus.
The station has evolved from a
student-operated, 100-watt, 18 hour-day
operation to Its present status .., -a
professionally-stalled, 24-hour service.
Stall Includes seven full-ttrne profes-sionals, 15 port-time paid employees,
and over 60 volunteers who are Involved
In operations, engineering and programming. These vohmteers include lawyers,
homemakers, faculty, business people,
the unemployed, students, factory
workers, and professional musicians.
In addition to approximately 35 hours
a week of NPR programs. WBFO
presents information and features on the
arts and humanities; hve and taped
classical, folk , and jazz music; public affairs and special features: opera; comedy; old radio shows; and radio drama.
On Saturdays, three-and-one-half hours
of Spanish-language cultural and lnfoi-mallonal programming Is broadcast for
the Puerto Rican and Mexican-American
populations ol the area.
About hall of the annual operating
budget of $200,000 Is provided by the
Unlversity .• Addit!onal funds come from
the Corporation lor Public Broadcasting
listeners, a smaU number ol corpora~
supporters, and ~ic pr&lt;&gt;g{am grants.

Libraries will
publish a
magazine
Credencu, a llttle magazine which
began publishing In February 197S, wiD
become an olficial publication ol the
Poetry/Rare Book Collection ol the U/B
Libraries, beginning with Its tenth Issue
later this year.
The Llbraries are matching a granl for
the publication's development which was
awarded by the National Education
Association this summer.
EdHor of Crf!dencu Is Dr. Robert
Bertholf, recently named rurator of the
Poetry/ Rare Books CoUecllon, formerly
of Kent State University.
The magazine publishes poetry, prose,
reviews, essays and checklists ol contemporary poets.
It will be adding a aection on lbrary
matters, to Include- essays on
blbbographical topic&lt;. publlahlng hlotortes

"=:;;.;.a~;..;~o.~·~ ~~;.r=·~~~~-~~.~ ~

�.·

SAED Friends
have raised
over .$20,000

New Wome n's Caucus will promote
equal participation In campus life
Edllor.
During the pall few morrt!)o, women
faculty, llaff, end students have been
meeting to 1011!1 a new U/ B Women's
Caucus that wll aclchu ltMif to a variety
of Issues ol inend c:oncem to female
membas ol the U/B community.
The group hM illued II* statement of
purpooe to aplaiP Its mlollon:
The c:onoept ol a "flawecc democracy,"
which ' - been vMdJy daat&gt;ed by Bella
Abzug , can be applied to aB structures
and ~s that were established
without awareness or acceptance of the
equal and de mocratic rights of women .
These structures are "fla wed" In the
senoe that women were left o ut of both
Initial and subsequept decislon· maklng
and were not afforded equal o pportunily
to partlc1pate - indeed, often that op·
portunily was a ctively and vigorously o p·

7) Participate wtth existing groups and
units on Campus to reach Its goals.
women haw made In many areas both
We stress thai the Caucus Is open to all
Inside and OUIIIde the University com·
women In the Univemty communily,
regardless of status or classification. We
munlly, the U/B Women's Caucus has
been formed to:
encouJage the participation of fuD· and
1) Promote the fun and equal partlc1pa·
part-time students at the undergraduate,
tion of women In all areas of the Unlversi·
graduate and professional levels.
The next Caucus meeting will be held
ty , among faculty, staff and students.
2) Provide a common meeting ground
Friday, September 14. at 11:30 a .m. in
for the dlsculllon ollssues that are ol par·
Room 567 Capen.
tlcular q&gt;neem and Interest to women.
The group wUI also hold an informal
3) Serve as a forum and a voice lor
gathering In th.e Faculty Club's Blue
women In the University communily.
Room on Tuesday, October 2, fro m 4 to
4) Act as a resource for women who
6 p .m .
need Information and/ or support.
AU Unlverslty women are Invited to
5) Determine and utilize channels
both events.
Anyone who wishes to obtl!ln more in·
through which to achieve Caucus goals.
6)' Develo p Indepe n d en t a nd - lormatton about the gro up can caD
cooperative workshops and programs to
S hirley Harrington at 636-2266.
help women at U/ B adva nce their status.

posed.
And so, while recognizing the strides

• Senate

..__ .......,

contributed to their decision: Enough
students responded to compose a valid
stit!Jtical sample. In desce nding order of
ImpOrta nce the reasons were: U/B Is too
large and classes are too large: transferred to a college with a better de~rtment ;
dissatisfied with the level of ,teaching;
transferred to a smaller coUege; dislike of
the busing situation : lack Ill faculty advisement: inabiUty to understand faculty
members; excess emphasis on grading:
Ina b ility to und erstand te a ching
assistants: lack of DUE advisement: too
many bu reaucratk:. proble ms, and , finally, dlsappol)ltment over low grades.
Ketter said the report will be forwarded
to the Attiltion/Retention Srudy Group
\. chaired by Vice President lor Srudent Affairs Richard Sigglekow and to other

By next week, the President continued , a search committee will be formed to fill the position of dean of Grad uate
Edu cation. Dr. Erwin Moran of Roswell
Park will serve as chairman .

Two new coiamltteea
Faculty evaluation of Ketter planned
Alter some debate, the Senate voted to
distribu te to faculty the survey questionnaire developed last semester by the Ad
Hoc Presidential Evaluations Committeeand Co rTUllke the survey's results known
to any Interested person or group.
The vote can be viewed as a type of

.......

said he remains commnted to the notion

A contpUt community ~ publl•hed .odl Thut'Sdcry bp the ~Wilon ol
rubl,c Afloh., State UnWeni ty of ~
Yorit of Mfoto Edltoriol oH;ces ~ lo_co'-&lt;1 Jn IJ6 Croft&amp; Hofl. Amhersl. T•l•

,.... 636-:1626
Oir«tor ol l'ubl~ Affol,...

JAMES I O.SAH!IS

&amp;litcw-fn.Otief
KJIST T MAAUTT
Art orwJ l'rorAKtlon
JOHN A aouro

Solkoff proposed that two new ad hoc
Senate com mittees be otganlzed; on Affirmative Action a nd Continuing Education . Solkoff would like the Affirmative
Action Committee to ''provide an .
organizationltll structure for aU afflrmltltive
action groups on campus and to present,

Some of the resp&lt;&gt;nsibilities of the Continuing Education Committee would be
to: develop st:rltltegies.... for extending
Univel"9ity resources to new eonstituents;
to consider methods of expc~ ndin g creditfree programs; and to evolve methods of
greater pc~rtlcipation in instructional programs offered by indusbies and corporations and in professional certification and
licensing procedures.

The resolution will be voted on at the

some voice in the process.

The Senate also voted that Its Ex·
ecutlve Committee " advise the
Chancellor and the Trustees of their extreme concern at the severe limitations

placed by the new guidelines on the
securing of faculty opinion:" and that the
Senate chairman utilize the group discussion format for eliciting such opinions
which w"s recommended in last
February's report from the Evaluations
Committee . Finally, the Senate voted to

~~=: !rt~:~n~'::}·s;an

New road
opens Monday

~ he

relocat i on

of

ar~~:/fr.': :.':.':Je":,~~~=se~~

of Lake LaSalle, Includes a connection to
the Coventry &lt;:;ampus Entrance near

Bissell Hall, the U/ B Department of
Public Safety headquarters.
-et&gt;nnection to the Flint Campus Entrance, which Involves ramps and bridges
still under construction to the north of the
Maple Road and Millersport Highwoy intersection , is expected to be completed in

Whafs wrong with the Senate
Solkoff said he would also like to

early October.
The new Millersport route begins a t the
Maple Intersection veering first to the

develop a questionnaire in conjunction
with other Senators with expertise in the
area, which could determine : sources of
disscstisfaction over Senate meetings;
methods to reduce Senate absenteeism

and / or lack of interest. on the part of
Senators: optimal methods of conducting
Senate business and encouraging mean-

ingful debate. and methods of influencing

when a presidential successor Is sought.

administrative dPcision making.

Faculty Club Brunch
The F acuity Club is pleased to announce a Sunday Brunch on September
30, from 11 a .m . to 2 p .m . In the dining room of the Club Harriman Hall
Main Street Campus. Adults $4 per person; chUdren und;,. 16, $3.25. In:
!ants will be adml~ed free .
Reservadono are required. Checks should be made payable to: The
Faculty Club and sent with the rescrvodon form to 265 Harriman 3435
MainS~ .• Buffalo, N.Y. 14214 not later than September 26, 1979. No' tickets
will be ISSued - present your name at the door. For further information phone
831 ·3232 between the hours of 11 a.m . and 2 p .m . No sales at the door. ,
ro~r;~~i~-ci~b:suNv"Aa-·····-·················--····-·····-···-······i·-····
265 Harriman Hall
3435 Main Street
Buffalo, N.Y. 14214

west of the former roadway and then pro-

ceeding east and north past the Coventry
Entrance and Lake. croS!&gt;&gt;~g Ellicott
C reek a nd North Forest Road and re·
e ntering the old Millersport Hwy. just
north of North Forest Rd . near the
Beechwood Home.
The new right-of-way wUI contain two
lanes In each direction, a directional
signal with left-hand tum lanes at the
Coventry Entrance and a maximum

speed limit of 55 mph.
Jack Carone, DOT englneer·ln·
charge, explained that lor a couple
weeks , access to the A m herst M anor

Apartments (at the Maple and Millersport
intersection) and to the Audubon Recrea-

tion Center will be by way of service
r08ds connecting to M aple.

He added that the Frontier (Skin·
nersvUie Rd .) Entrance, located near the
Lake,, will remain open as wiD a portion of

the old Millersport H.wY. north of the entrance, allowing traffic to connect to the
new route via North Forest.
The Coventry Entrance connects to
Augspurger Road which parallels the
Campus Academk: Center.

Please reserve :

- - - - . , . . . Adults for brunch @ $4.00
_________ Children (under 16) @ $3.25
Check for total amount $

Is enclosed. •

DEADUNE SEPTEMBER 26, 1979
Name __~------------------------------------------Address ___________________________________________

p

OUR APOLOGIES
The Issue of the Reporter
scheduled for last Thursday,
September 6, did not appear
because of technical difficulties
at our new contract printer. Today represents an effort to catch
up on some of the material
which did not make It Into print
last week. With luck we expect
to be back to normal with next
Thunday's IMue .
,.

-:· .

permanen t

MUiersport Highway (Route 263) near
the.Amherst campus will go Into use late
Monday morn ing, September 17, It has
been announced by the State Department of Transportation.

next Senate meeting on October 2.

ask the Trustees to assure that If and

or

that the Individual selected should be a
''producing scholar." capable of "commanding the respect cif faculty" and ac·
ting as a "catalyst."

Norman

interpret and discuss the implications of

cess. Most senators felt that the survey
was a good way to gauge the sentiment
of faculty and to~nsure that they have

funds, he noted.
A seZ!Irch committee for the slot of vice
president lor research will be organized
by September 24 . Ketter announced . He

Chairman

court decisions.

nounced by the Board of Trustees in late
Ju ne. The revised guidelines, wjlich
Senate Chairman Newton Garver rl!ferred to as a "challenge" which chonges the

DUE dun will report to Ketter
The President rea-ffirmed his recent
decision regarding the starus of the DUE
Dean. He told Senators that alter much
debete, counsel and consideration of
recommendations by the VPAA , the
VPHS and others, he is convinced that in

officers" with regard • to assignment

V ice

protest against the revised guidelines for

''focus and mechanism" of the evaluation , preclude the use of surveys and opi nion polls in the k&gt;rma l evaluation pro-

University, the DUE Dean should report
directly to him. A council composed of
h&lt;lalth sciences and academic affairs
representatives will play an advisory role.
He said 1he. DUE Dean will have the
awesome responsibility of i(Tiplementing
the General Education plan. along with
full responsibiUty for all undergraduate
education . In addition. the Dean will sit
on all policy making cOmmittees because
of his status as a "staff officer." Both vice
presidents are still considered ''senior line

Se na te

presidential evaluation which were an-

com mittees for analysis and recommen·
dations.

order to preserve the .. unity"' of the

the search committee contain .. predomi-

na nt facu lty re presentation" a nd that
facu lty on It participate In interviews with
the cand idates.

The Friends ol the School of Architecture and Environmental Design (SAED)
have raised more than $20,000 lor the
purchase of new books--a key criterion •
for gaining naHonal a=edltaHon lor the
School, according to Dean Harold L.
Cohen .
The tibtary, currently housed In the
north. wing ol Hayes HaD at Main Street
wUI be moved September 24 to the entlr~
south wing of the building.
Planned In November is a visit by a
team from the Nat!Qilal ArchUecturaJ
Accrediting Board, chaired 1.)1 William
Porter, dean of the Schoof of Architecture and Planning at MIT.
Dean Cohen explained that the visit
wiD also require an exhibition of student
work.
The dean said a report known as the
Education Development Pian, developed
by U/ B Professor George Anselevicius
a nd graduate student Cherie Wen.delken,
was sent to the accrediting board in May.
He noted that Robert North, formerly
a ffiliated with the Buffalo and Erie
County Public Ubrary, is serving as chair·
man of the Libtary Development Com·
mlttee and has been assisting in the coor·
dination of the book purchase progmm.
A great deal of worl&lt; on the library •
development project has be en

,

• .!

. • c .... ;;:,-

�s.,....., 13,

1979

Cohea: 'a
man of

Hanev: 'unstinting
In giving of
her time ... .'

enormous dedication'

Corbett: 'the

Daniela: 'an
assistant to
-everyone who asks'

person who
helps minorities most'

Rleleg: 'a
cdurageous explorer
of new methods'

Kunz: 'he has a
willingness to
assist students'

-,

c.p....:•a
commitment beyond
what Is required'

Staerka: 'a
steadying Influence
on others'

.Nfne to get $1,000 awards from ()/BF
Nine members of the U/B community
will be recognlzlild for "outstanding service" prior to Pnllldent Robert L. Ketter's
anr•.uol "State of the Untvenlly" address
at Baird Point, Sunday afternoon at 3.
Their awards, consbtlng of a plaque
and a check for $1,000, were made
poooible by contrbmons of alumni and
other &amp;lends of the Unlvenlly through
the U/B Foundation, Inc.
The nine winners Include three faculty,
four profaolonal llaft and two datstfled
servial employees, uch of whom was
nomlnalll!d by his. or her peen.
Faculty are Harold L. Cohen, dean of
the School ol AldDtedure and Environmental Design ; Elizabeth C .
Harvey, an -.elate professor in the
School of Social Work, and Gerald R.
ru.ng, a prol'essor in the [)epartment of
lnslnldlon of the Faculty of Educational
Scudles.
Proleuional staff members to be
honored are Josephine A. Capuana, a
pre-profeulonal ..clviser in the Dlvlslon of
lJncler!Jadu~~te Education; Frank J . Corbett, ~ of the Office ol Uiban Af.
fairs; How"'d L. Daniels, assistant to the
chelnnan ol the Department ol Reaea·
lion, Alhletics and Related Instruction;
and Walter N. Kunz, associate dean of
the Division of Undeigraduate Educe·
lion.
Classified servial award winners are
Grace B. Staerker, senior stenographer
In the Gradullle School office, and
Valencia Zielinsld, supervising janitor in
the Custodlal Services Department.
John M. Carter, president. of the U/ B
Foundation , wiD make the awards
preNntalk&gt;ns.
•

o-a CoMa.

-

. -. -

Harold Cohen Is being cited for his in·

volvement In the Mayor's Committee on
Arts and Cultural Affairs, the Entertain·
ment District Project, and the formation
of tho! Friends of the School of Architecture and Environmental Design.
In a statement supporting hls nomination , he was aocla!med as: a "man of
enormous dedication;" an "Inspiring
teacher" whose freshman lectures draw
100.150 students each term ; "a s1rong
believer in University service," who has
developed a nationally-recognized
School of ArchHecture during his
relatively-brief tenure as dean; and a man
who "has effectively married the lntellec·
tuallife of the School to the needs of the ·
Buffalo community" through appl;ed
reseatdl/ co!"munlty service projects.

Ellalleda ltuwy
Or. Harvey, a member of the School of
Social Work faculty Iince 1964, has been
the ochool'a liii!Odate dean and has
worked with the BJind Association, Meals
on Wheels, 11v VIsiting Nurses Associa·
lion and the .fewlsh Family Services. In
1978, she was the school's "Sodol
Worker of ·the Yew."
The statement placing her In nomina·
lion emphasized that: "Elizabeth Harvey
Is admired and respected by students....
Her counsel is frequently sought and she
Is uJlJI!nting in giving of her time ... .It is
not unusual to find (her) meeting with a
student Ill 8 a .m . to offer her keen and
humane counsel before the rush of class
tehedule catclies the Student up In a busy
day.
"(She) has been a gentle but steady
mentor to new faculty and has helped
them as they began their academic

I

and good sen!e , commHted to high quality which Is always tempered by
humaneness, (she) has In no smaD way
had an enormously positive Impact upon
this School of Social Work's development."

GenldR181ag
Dr. Rising has served the University as
.., member of the Executive Committee of
the ltaculty Senate, as chairman of a
Scudent-Faculty SubcommHtee of the
Presldenfs Scudy Group on Attr!lion and
Retention, 1SS a member of the Faculty
Senate ad hoc Committee on Presidential
Review Policies, and as chairman of a
Task Force on Teacher Education.
Zleu..ld:'a
He Is creator and director of a National
one-person
Institute of Education research project
United Nations'
which Is developing materials for the 1mplementatlon of calculators and
microprocessors in high school math In·
.,._.,.... c..,._
structlon.
1
Ms. Capuana, who joined U/B nin
The statement nominating Rising
years ago, bears sole .._..a,dlly fc
elaborated:
saeenlng aD pre-~nal oppllcan
"Professor Rising has had a major lm·
pact both nalionaUy and intematk&gt;nally
in the Division of Uoo.g,aduate EdlK.'.
lion and for au1st1ng them with prole
upon the mathematics education professlonal school admission.
slon .... He has been a strong, clear and
courageous explorer of new research · In 19n, she founded ~ha Epcllo
Delta, a gatlonaJ honor society ft
methodologies
within
the
professlon ... . He has created lntellectuaJly
students with above-average scholallchaDenging curricula and through hls
ability In the rillluraJ ldences.
scholarly writings bas encouraged profaMs. Capuana's nomination emphast
slonal mathematldans, educators,
ed her commitment above and beyon
philosophers and psychologists to begin a
the confines ol a job desctlption. She hl
dialogue to procluee wei·received in·
traveled to help recruit students and wr
structional mater!als. In addition, he has
an early advocate of the Idea of sped.
been responsllle for organizing and concounes for the ocience-ortented .
ri&gt;utlng to conferences In which parAn M.D. graduate -that " I foun
tlclpants are forced to conhont some of
her to be more that&gt; an advisor.. ratho

~~-~-;..'ch ·;;,nd ~~ag,;;e;t-- ~~~7i~=-~

.~ . "!";'•.a. -~' - ~}!leJ!dl.

·--·-~.

....

�i

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

- w h a m I could tin Db en-

:

~7..dwha

...

Gl .......
7

die .by
I cWinitIna
• 1n1e
. . .·
. . . , _ ..,.

'......
*""· c.t.a

......

CDinpeMuoi

....r IMIIIvlty.•

Fwlk Coobelt, In eddlllon to hevlng
-....! on the fecully ol !he School Of
Soc:lel Work, has adviMd Un1vm11y edmlnilllaton end llelf on .......... All9lnQ from c:onllnulng pcolaoional educelion to ftnanclaJ - . . . to 111811uate
lludents. He hM been fliCIIIty ailvllor to
the Communly Action Corpa (CAC) for
nine~.

As co-dlelrman ol !he Praldent's
P... for the Review ol Sean:h ProcediiNI, he II said to have "helpod trn- l v In creating on campus an
awareness of the goals of affirmative action as well as a willingness among the
vasr majority of people to strtve to
achieve these goals."
Through the Program In Applied
Public Affairs (supported In part by funds
he has obtained from federal and state
sources outside the UnlveBity budget) ,
he has provided educational Internship
opportunities lor aspiring public admlnlstrlitors.
He has used the Offlce of Urban Affairs, one faculty member said, "as an effective means to bolster the outreach
goals of the University" and Is "the person at this University most Identified with
steps" Ut help minority Individuals overcome both overt and subtle barrters to
progress.

HowerdLDealele
Howard L. "Dan" Daniels, desaibed
by one olliclal as an "assistant to
everyone who asks for help," Is being
recognized lor the many services he has
provided to both campus and community
groups and Individuals. He has been
chairman of the Social Committee for the
Western New York Convention for the
Health , Physical Education and Recrea·
lion Alliance; he has annually coordinated the Buffalo Sabres U/ B ScholarshJp Fund Game; he Is a member of the
President's Community Advisory Council, and Is espedally well·known lor his
work with Rotary and with handicapped
children .

In one instance, an academic ad·
mlnistrator recalled, " he provided extraordinary effort on an Independent
study project which enabled a student
-who otherwise might not have made
It- to graduate on lime.
Daniels, who coordinates athletic
events and Is responsible for aU business
matters asoodated with the recreational
and athletic program, was described by
those supporting his nomination as "consistently sunny and even-tempered,"
always wUiing 1o accommodate , and "a
good man who gets little thanks for all the
good he does .... "
Wett.Kau Walter Kunz, a veteran of nearly 14
years of service here, Is desaibed as havIng "personally Influenced the Uves of
thousands of University students" in his
service as acting dean and associate dean
of DUE.
A colleague noted that "His deep concern lor the welfare of our sludent
population Is demonstrated on a dally
basis. He never permits a student problem to go unheeded. He generally takes
" upon hlmseH to make the coun~ess
phone calls and write the exhaustive letters and me~ that are required to
resolve the everyday Inconsistencies evident at all levels o our lnsttiullon. His
personal professional goal Is to ensure
that he Is never In a posttton of having 'to
pass the buck.' ....
"By his willingness to personaDy assist
students through the system, ... Kunz has
done more ·to solve this Unlvemty's attrtllon ,problem than 'any other single person .
Kunz II a past president ofthe Professional Stall Senate and the Western New
York chapter of the American Association ol University Administrators.

G..ces...loer
Grace s-ica has been with the
Unlventty for almost 30 years.-:as
oea...-y to the director ol admissions lor
some 15 year~, and now as Knlor
·~In the Gradueaa School 01-

'"'.ficc ... .... .
••

~:

•

•

1'/

...

'JI

.,

~13,1979

i

~

,Compliance with Carter
..:-:=:~::'zrM~: :. _
may make you sweat
Mel-~~-

aap 1 ....,,
on olhes '

"Wec:Melapecttobe-uncom-

Men,.;, llllillant " - 8 . . . - , -

............llloi -

8bout her • has
IMCie •-.pt~ona~ ~ to !he
Unlwnlly
•tt.r ~ wt11 not 11pp1111r on .,
c1nct1ws or polldn ,,.. almoot .:_
VWIIbly her advice wtl'bi IOU!fool and her
sugga11ons welcomed before !hey .,.
promulgated. •
Cunently raponstie for maintaining
and oveneetng !he muer coune file for
graduate and prof~
ohe
has ....teed exten-'v with~~tal oftlces and the au~()i'k;."j~
straighlen out problems which snarl paymen! of graduate fellowship · and
asslslantshlp awards
She has been ~ member of the
Women's Club of the University and the
Presldenfs Committee on Reaultment
and Promotion of Women and a
member and chair of the loc.d- camp
nominating panel for the Cha=t.
Awards for ExceUence In Professional
Service

v-•-.:.-

~ Zlelluld
'Val" Zlellnskl has a history of Involvement In community religious endeaVOB,
lndudlng the past presidency of the
Mothers of Altpr Boys Society, membership In the Life In the Splrti of St. Matthew's Church of Buffalo, and membership In the St. Luke's and St. Matthew's
Church choirs. She Is also a volunteer at
Roswell Park Memoriallnsttiute and Is active In
the Tenth Ward Taxpayers
Association .
An employee of the University since
1951, she began her work here as a maid
and progressed to the rank of custodial
supervisor In 1973. Recen~y. she earned
a two-year Managerial Practices
Diploma.
Known for her abU!ty to organize her
stall and herself, she Is "a real take charge person," one associate said. Active In her union for many years she Is
desaibed as "extremely consclenHous In
her duties, ... always wrutng to help out
and take on additional duties."
To know Val Zielinski, a clergyman
associated with her lor several years
wrote, .. is to know someone who does
the work of many people and to know a
person whose heart Is bigger than most
others. In h!!l" work at SUNYAB, Valis a
person who cares about her feUow
employees and Is ever concerned about
their needs. She has the ability to create a
lamUy feeling among the employees. Val
has the great gilt of bringing about unll9
and oneness among people of · differences . She Is a one-person Un"ed Nations."
A Certificate for Pbyllla Kelly
Also at Sunday's award ceremony . a
special certificate of appreciation wUI be
presented to Phyllis Kelly lor her service
on the U/ B Council from 1971-1977.
A 1 p.m. luncheon In the Spaulding
Dining Room , Elllcott complex, lor award
recipients anCI their families wUI precede
. the ceremony. A public reception Is
scheduled at Batrd Point afterwards.
If weather Is bad, the program wiD take
place In Talbert Dining Room.
These U/B Foundation Service
Awards are given annuaUy to "recognize
those members of the University stall
who, during a given academic year, have
unselfishly 9iven of their time and
energy."
Screening of nominees and selection of
winners was handled by a lour-member
panel consisting of: Dr. Selig Adler
Department of History, representing th~
Faculty Senate; Ms. Pamela WtnfieldEdel, University News Bureau, representIng C .S .E .A .; Ms. Christine W .
Weckerle, representing the Student
Association; and Mrs. Bertha M. Cutcher, coordinator, Offlce of Services for
the Handicapped, representing the Professional Stall.

New unit
The School of Architecture and
Environmental Design (SAED) Is In process ol Mffin9 up a support services unH
to be called ihe SAED learning Center:
to . - students who may be experiencIng difficulty due to some academlt deficiencies :~~&gt;:liM* pmdous «ioocallon .
,,·~.

'· 0

;c1r1

•' • :

I

.~

f

jlf,• 1 t ~'l

,.; ,,,.

~ 111M - have bMn In !he plllt,"
-£.W. Oalp, vlca pNiidentforflnance and
management, alerted campus ad- I n a memo on~.,.,._...
vatlon dmllaled this ......_
Doly empi-.1 that U/B buildings
.,. cowrecl by Praldent Carter'• July 10
po;oclamalion atablilhlng heating and
cOoling temperature nlllridlonl.
That ~ requlra that no
bulldlng be operated with conditioning
control devices above 65'F In winter
and/or lower than 78'F In summer.
Doly said "!here are specillc exemplions lor certaln areas, such as thooe used
lor residential purposes (thus dormitory
rooms are exempt, though not the public
rooms and coaldors In the dormitories),
the sleeping accommodations In hotels
and other lodging lacillties, the patient
care factllties of hospitals and other health
care facilities (though not the admlnlstrative areas), elemenlaly, nursery,
and day care teaching areas (though not
admbJJI;Iratfve areas and specifically not .
pool-secondary teaching areas), etc. In
addition, exemplloo may be granted to
special purpose fadllties, such as the
computer room (though not adjacent ol!ices) of our Computer building. Justilicalion for an exemption must be made by
the user."
A certificate of Building Compliance
has to be prominently posted In each
building as soon as possible. Doty said
the Physical Plant Department Is already
In process of adjusting temperature controis, building by building, to meet these
mandates. "It will not be easy nor 1mmediate however " he said "because we
have a 9reat varteiy of heating and coollng controls, lew of which are matters of
simple adjustment to these new
temperature restrictions We shall
however, be doing the best.we can as tasi
as we can."

Doty said discomfort levels will be particularly high "In the FaD and again In the
Spring when seasonal changes pose dally
and even hourly temperature variations

with which our systems are pretty
generally unable to cope.'' Everything
possible will be done, he promised, "to
adjust existing equipment to maintain as
much comfort as possible .... "

consumption .

Meln Street co....,.,atlon
Over the past months, heat-timer
devices- which shut off heat ·when outrise

Z!lbove

55

degrees - have been installed in four
buUdings at Main St. In addition , more
lights have been removed from Clements
and Goodyear haUs, although not on any
roads or walkways anywhere on campus.
Stickers are also going up by each thermostat to remind those tempted to tinker
of Presld.ential guidelines.
According to Dave Rhoads, assistant to
the director of the Main Street Physical
Plllnt and coordinator of the energy conservation pr6;ect there, a new comput_erlzed energy management ~yslem
whteh recen~y went on-line wiU also help
energy conservation efforts. That system
turns fans on or off according to demand ,
outdoor leJllperature and time of day , he
explained.
Since 1976, mainly through conservati&lt;ln measures, the Main Street Campus
has decreased Its electrical consumption
~~te~bout 2 .4 million KWH , Rhoads

..

'· . ·... :.·''' ..-·.. : ·~ ·.,....
~ ...,..~

pliance says that campus'
Plant
Director Dean Fredericks.
the
summer, hts crews raised
temperatures from between 55degrees to 70 degrees, making air
temperatures In most of the buUdings
hover around 78 degrees.
Frederick's crews have also been busy
trying to cut down energy bills. Last year,
lor example, U/ B saved about $100,000
when overhangs at Elllc:ott were caulked .
Unlike Reinig, Fredericks says he has
,feceived very lew complaints regarding
unpleasant room temperatures--opt th21t
such complaints would have any effect
on the temperature adjustments. Both
men emphasized that the effectiveness of
the energy conservation program
depends on the cooperation of · the
University community. If people tamper
with thermostats or, In winter months,
use electric heaters in oflices, then con·
servation efforts will be greatly under·
mined.
Those believing they are qualified lor
exemptions must write the Physical Plant
at their respective campuses and explain
the reasons why. If the justification falls
within guidelines, it will be automatically
granted. The plant administration then
lUis out an exemption form and sends it to
the Department of Energy. No validity
checks are made by plant employees. If
however, federal regulators Inspect
buildings and lind fraudulent exemptions.
then the Individual (not the institution) is
subject to a line--up to $5,000 for a dvil
penalty and up to $10,000 lor a criminal
penalty.

Card transfer

To help cut down on gasoline consumption, l&gt;hystcal Plant Director Ray
Reinig said his crews wiU experiment with
doubling up In work vehicles. Cutting
down on gas will be dtfflcuk, says ReinIng, because his men are responsible for
maintaining the University's satellite
, buildings, so m.ust. llo a !jood amount of

. ~.~ ·~· '·'

Allr.._. . . . . . can t''i'mee
t•D Amhent buildings .,. now In com-

Work wiU begin In coming weeks on
"encapsulating" asbestos-filled ceiling
tiles In the basement of Baird HaU with
sheets of Owens-Coming Fiberglass.
Fiberglass panels eight-feet long, twofeet-wide and one-Inch-thick wUI be affixed to the ceiUng using T-irons.
The $9,960 contract lor the work was
awarded to Mader Construction Corp.,
West Seneca.
According to Burr Fc!ts, assistant vice
president for physical fadllties, the new
ceU!ng material was scheduled lor shipment late this week. Once tfs received,
work on the project wru begin promptly
and should be completed within two to
three weeks.
Since January, some students and
faculty have been actively complaining
that asbestos flakes emef!Png from badly
worn ceWngs In Batrd are hazardous to
their health. Air samples taken In spring
confirmed !hat the asbestos fiber concentration was too low to cause asbestosis,
but some members of the University community and representatives of the' New
York Plil)ic Interest Research Group
(NYPIRGrmainlalned that enough particles may be lingering to cause a type of
cancer known as mesothelioma.
Baird's basement contains about 40 ·
practice rooms situated along three corridors. Each corridor wtth Its respective
rooms will be sealed-off and worked on
separately to minimize disruption, Folts
relayed.

Meanwhile, Physical Plant crews on
the Amherst and Main Street campuses
are doing their part to cut energy

temperatures

s-

Baird" asbestos
being sealed

Doty asked each member of the cam·
pus communilty "to be as tolerant and as
undersmnding as possible as bur Physical
Plant people endeavor to respond to
what is now the law of the land ." He also
urged everyone "to choose your daily
~~~~.g with the new temperatures in

door

LMII!IIInsl, Gclven«C:....,ordereda
10 per c:.nt ad beck In the._ o1 SIIIIOiine
(as wei • Nllunll gas and elect!tdty) In
lac*la and vehlc:la due to a 240
per &lt;8111 aunulatlve lnaeaft In COOls.
Except lor the Health Sciences
bulldlngl, aD olhers on Main Street are
now wllhln Federal guidebnes. Reinig
said he II ocheduled to meet early next
w.ek with VPHS F. Carter Pannm to
discuss compliance and possible exemplion ........,

I

The massive transfer of the Libraries'
union camlog cards from old cabinets
brought from Abboti during last year's
move, Into modem ones purchased
espedaUy for the new Lockwood began
August 23 and was completed last week.
John Edens, head of the Libraries'
Central Technical Services 'directed the
shtft .. ro ,:
.,... ,. !
'J I
, '.. ·, ,J
.~· ,•
J,·,·~

....

�Scplomb.r 13, 1979

7

Sex, dlug
courses uid,
'Ineffective'
'Facts only
not enough,)
U/B prof avers

•

A majority of drug, and heallh
education courses In !lie ochools ere Ineffective because they're too "fact
oriented," llfgl.les a U/B profasor and
health educator.
Dr. Jerrold Greenberg contends such
courses would be more effective In stemming drug and alcohol abuse, teen
pn!9n4nCY, ve,.,-u! disease and other
health problems among youth If they provided students the tools to make positive,
rational decisions. The ~Information
-only" health cour.;e, full of facts and
statistics, he submits, may only encourage experimentation with drugs and
sex by arousing curiosity.
"Low self-esteem, a feeling of alienation, loneliness, peer pressure and a lack
of assertiveness are among at least 30
factors related to drug abuse," Greenberg
points _out. H students are not taught to
Identify these factors and their Influence
on behavior. they will continue to elect
pattern~&lt; hazardous to their health and
happiness.
Studmta MouJcl be taught to be happy
The author of Student-Centered
Health lnrtruclk&gt;n and Health Through
Dts&lt;:overy, slated lor publication in
February, Greenberg believes students
should be taught how to take control of
their lives in order to be happier, healthier
individuals.
''Of aD the factors that contribute to
behavior which is destructive - either to
the individual or society as a whole low self-esteem Is perhaps the most important," Greenberg emphasizes.
" H a person feels poorly about hlmseH
or herself, then the stage may be set for
olher factors to come Into play which will
ultimately lnftuence unhealthy or even
hazardous behavior."
In various workshops glve.n by
Greenberg to health teachers and other
groups, he emphasizes use of behavior
exploration and modification exercises in
the classroom . Interaction between
students and teachers In these courses Is
a must, he says, in order for them to
clarify values and Identify factors which
contribute to health.
"Health education courses should aim
at prevention, but In a manner which encourages students to learn how to solve
their problems and make responsible
decisions," Greenberg emphasizes.
"Obviously, If a student Is addicted to
drugs or alcohol, Is pregnant or
ernollonaly disturbed, more professional
help Is needed than can be provided by a
health educatiOn course."
But If such training Is designed properly
and begun early enough, some of these
problems can be avoided.

e.ch chid Clllllrlbula"oomethlns
"Evet If children are very young, it's
~lo ask them what they provide
to their familia," says Greenberg. While
In terms of tangible contri&gt;utlont, a chlld
may feel he or she contributes very little,

chiklren should be aware they provide

love, laughter and a range of Intangible
benefits to the family of which they're a

~A child

who can think of no way in
which he ot she Is valuable to someone
else Is off to a bad start In life, lor Ills the
ba9nning of a pattern of low self-esteem
which may-continue to grow."
lntavention tachnlques, which can be
included In the health course a ' early as
kindergarten , m"Y help such a child learn
that he or she does Indeed have worth to
others.
Most health educators should look to
an old proverb to see how to make their
courses more effective, the U/ 8 pro-

leuor suggests.
.
"Give me a 6sh, and I eat today; teach
me to fish and I aa1 forevet" Implies thai
giving the "fish" or "facts" on health Is not
enough to be of lasting value.
Giving chlldren the tools to learn ho10
to fish or make good d«&lt;sions about
health behavior Is

benefldal.

far more desirable.~

'The thrill

of.victoq~'
It sure the heU beeta the -ny of defeat, a theae otudenta
clemc&gt;ulrated In the waite of the Bulls' 17-13 come-&amp;ombehlncl win owr Cortland before 6300-pluo at Rot&amp;Jy Field
Saturdloy.

Environment now more vital to the 'good life'
People In Western nations may be
changing their minds as to what conllllules the most dominant considerations
for weD-being and quality of IKe.
A study Is being undertaken by a group
of IOdal scientists from three nations to
defermlne ooclety's outlook on whai
makes life worth ltvtng, and evidence is
already In hand that environmental protection Is becoming more Important than
socio-economic gains.
One of the oclentists Involved In the
study Is Dr. Lester W. Milbrath, director
of the Campus Environmental Studies
Center.
Mib-ath said sclentlsfs from the U.S .,
Wat Germany · and Englaiid are Involved; Australia and Japan may join.
The current partlc:lpants are the International lrulltuta for Environment and
Society, which Is part of the Science
Center In Wat BerllnM
·
Sociology
Department at the U
of Bath In
Englana, and the U/
en~l
center. Milbrath said the lntennational in-

stllule In Wat BerUn provided the inItiative for the study as wen as initial
funding.
'
Milbrath plans lo spend a sabbatical this
semester at the Centre for Resource and
Environmental Studies In Canberra,
which Is affiliated with the Australian National Univaslly. He said he will " share
much of the thinking" that has gone Into
planning the three-nation study wtih
Australian colleagues In hopes they wW
join.

The collaborative study, as explained
by Milbrath, wiD develop a comparative
look at the public's environmental and
IOdal perceptions and. beliefs.
The leaders of the project, said
Milbrath , believe .that these beliefs are In
transition, that many people are departing from a dominant belief In sodoeconomk considerations as the most Important ~acton In ~ good life," and
moving toward an lnaeaslng emphasis
on -~CCMIIIWrlllli:Jtls:&gt;t'&gt;o'

Questionnaires will be mailed to obtain

responses from approximately 2 ,000
"average" persons In each of the nations
Involved, Milbrath said. He added that a
special sampling, using the same qutionnaire, will sollclt ans_.-s from public
olfldals, industrtaltsts, environmentalists
and media leaders.
Prdminary testing for development of
the questionnaire was conducted among
students at U/ B last spring. A follow-up
pilot study was subsequently conducted
among staff and faculty members.
The pilot testing at U/ 8 , Mlh-ath
noted, showed that 66 per cent of those
questioned listed environmental projection as being more Important than ·
economic growth; only 14 per cant took
the opposite view. The other 20 per oent
found K dlfflc:ult to choose.
"Every society," Mll&gt;rath observed,
~ Ill own belief on how the world
works bat. Predominant at one time
were such factors as Independence, InItiative and free entbprise. But noW litternative Ideas seem to be developing . . ."

�AdiOI F_.t'o drama about rM:IIm In
Sotolh A1nca opena tbe Center lor
Thntre: Re:aearch'• Haaon, on
Tbanday·lS. See listing lor cletallo on

-·

~ play 1111d on the entire theatre

'

CALENDAR
Thanday-13

Moore dubbed h ..con1emporary classical music to
just the lnteDect but the emotions as

c:haDenge not

Friday- 14

well."

BASEBALL •

A publichoaring
to PUBLIC
·

U/B ... C..loluo C.U.,.. (2) . PeeDe Field. I

tho Stole Education

n:

=:·~.::::',g~~

p .m .

UUA8 FILM.

Ktva, 101 s.ldy. 9 a .m.-5 p .m.
Wrftlcn and oral statanenfJ \loG be acccpled at
tho tw.tng.
The report, "Tcaching as a Profession," was
authorized by the SUM: legis&amp;eturt and the govemot
last fall and wes prepared under the direction ol
ComrN~Moner

~-l"be

COUOQUIUM•

of Education Gonion M. Ambach. It

Recent

dmna the bsua to be ~ In a proposed
- o f bnslng ''"""'""and analyzes allema!No
Other hearings have been scheduled in New

Yon City and tn Albony.

PHILOSOPHY SEMINAR•
The Rlghts and Responaibllitia of the Mental-

Ul!AB FILM·

Movk. Wok!man Theatre,

ly IU. Professor Stephen Wear, visiting professor,
U/ 8 . 684 S.ldy. 3,30 p.m.

Ar.hent . 2:45, 5:45and 8 :45p.m. General admis-

u!,!;::":e

pia~

lion
s;;.olt's a bird. It's a
It's
Chrillopher ReM and Margot toddl!f and some ol
the bai
~you ~ saw.

AELD~·

U/ B va. Bulra&amp;o Statr: (lcrimmage) . Rotary

F"teld. 4

siry. 4p .m.

FACULTY OF ENGINEERING a APPLIED
SCIENCES STUDENT GOVERNIOIENT
MEETlNG'
260 Capen , Amherst Campus. 7 p .m. Each
sodety must send three olficers. Budgets. phone...,.

lhon and other p!ans for the semester wiD be
discussed All Engineering Sludents are invited
tend. This is your student government!

The bland. U/ B Center for TI\ea.tre Research.

681 Main St. 8 p.m . Admlssion : S3 ge.neTaJ; $1.50
student~

and senior cldzens. Sponsored by the
(H:panment ol Theatre.

The w-1. U/B Cent., lor,._... Researeh .
681 Main St. 8 p.m. A d _, $3 goneol' $1.50
students and ...... - . . .. Sponso.od by tho
Deportment of ,.,......
This ploy llbout and tm,.-unent tn
South Africa ;, being dftdod by Ed Sm;th of U/ B·s
Block Studia •nd n-o Departmenll.
n.c ....... will bo followed by tho _ .... ol •
MCOnCl pafonnance spaca .. 1M CAnter l'heatre,
The Olf.C...ter ~ (o. tho '""""' Stage Left
Lounge) . wtth o pnxluctkm ol Robert P•trlcl&lt;s
~· ~ dnetod by Torn Dooney
ond nmnlng hom s.,...- 27 thn; OetOO... 14.
.4Jio on the IChedu•:
On Oaobe 25 thno Nov.- II, one of thO
fiJUI dMik::l of the modern theatre , Hmric. JbMn's
Gil-. dncted by WO&lt;d Wiliomson.
On Nowmblr 29 thru Deoember 16, Eve Merriam's ddghdul muolcol no Cia!&gt; di&lt;ectod by S.ul
Eldn. 1lte C:W:. •
.n .._.,.. men's dub at ttM
tum of the omtury-the twilt ha-e il thet aD rhe

Saturday - 15
VOI..l.EYBAU..
Big Four (tcrtmmage) . Cla.rit HaU. 10 a .m.

SOCCER•
U/ 8 w. Oaemen College. Rotary Ae:kl. 1 p .m .
UU'II FILM .
Supermu - The Movtc.. Confer~ Theatre ,
Squire. 2:45, 5 :45 and 8 :45 p .m . Genera! admission $2; students $1 .50.
DRAJI(A •

Tbe bland. U/ 8 Center for Theatre R~ .
681 Matn St. 8 p .m. Admlsoio'" $3 goneo~ , $1.50
students and senior dlluns SponKWed by the
Oeponment of Theatre.

Ml'"

mm.,. ~by women

On FobNMy lf&gt;.l7 and 22·24. The Zodioquc

UUA8 I'IIDNIGHT FILM'

uncle. the dnctlon of Undo
on ...rung ol new donoo

The Te:J~".W Chalnlaw Musacre 11974}. Conference Theatre . Squire. 12 mktnight. Genfral admillion $2; stud~l$ $1.50.

ploca.
Tho ....... ... conclude wllh the Buflolo

ol Lanl - · !...- ...... and
Bendey. Tho ploy
tho lut
the We of 0tcar Wikle . A guest lUll' actor
... bo . . _ . . for tho &lt;entral . . . ol o.ca. w.de.
Other ewnts at thrt Center wW inclode: CutJw
.... Oaobe 14 and N........,..IB; Tho Em·
pn S6oe
15 and 16; Tho TOY
-

~ In

~.

duls-

Balot.o.c.mt- 22·23 and.,.,..,.,.. 29-30 .

To 1111 - I S In the "Caaendar.• caD

....... - I n the oubject; •Open

"' IMIIlben of
tlla Ua-.lty. Ualuo otherwiH

"' the poolollc; •• -

.......... dc:Mea lor

events charging
............. e-. ba parchaed at the
s.pre tw 1'lcUt Ollce.

DRAMA '
The kland. U/ B Center fOf Theatre Research,
681 Main 5!. 3 p .m . Admission : $3 general; $1.50
stud~ts and senklr cttiz:,ens. Sponsored by the
Department of Theatre.

I'IFA RECITAL•

Anne Altenburg Mool, piano. Baird Redial HaU.
3 p .m . Free admlstion.
Works by Beethoven , Scarlatti, Debussy and
Brahm1.
Ms. Moot anended the Royal Conservatory In
Toronto and is weD-known In 8uffe,k, m·usk: drdes.

u=~~:!~;=~~etterwUJ

deliver h is annual State ol the University address.
Outstanding Service Awanh wiD be presented to
nine U/ 8 faculty. prole.s.sional &amp;taft and da.ssiRed
savice employees. See separate story.
The: U/ 8 Wind Ensemble, under the direction of
Frank J . CipolLa , wiD perlorm musical w:~
from 2 :30 to 3 :30p.m.

" public reception follows.
Roln location ' Tolbert Hall.

oWm Valby. Fillmore Room Squire. 9 :30-?
Doors open 8:30.

•

Tlckc:tJ: $2 .25 advance: $2.75 day of concen.
Proof ol age required . Beer wiD be toM for S .25.
Umlted ticktU.
Sponsored by s.gme Pi fraternity.

n-n. w.,- by Gcorvo ~~uctmeo- di&lt;ldod by

kea Shnder Ill 636-1626.
Key: "'pen only to thoee with a pro-

UUAB FILM•
Superman - The Mcwie. Woktman Theatre,
Amherst. 2 :45, 5 :45 and 8 :45 p .m r General admission $2 ; ltud~ts $1.50.

Sanday- 16
CONaJIT•
WUUam Hellerman. gurt.vtst. South Park
Botanal Gardens. 1:30 p .m . Free.
5ponso&lt;od by tho Cente. of tho C...!No ood p_..
forming "'!! and tho Oty of Buffalo.
Tho sor,..-&lt;&gt;ld South Buflolo ....-domed
' c..-.•..,. detigned by tho funod F•edcrick
Law Olmstead , anms an appropriate ~ fOf
- musk: whk::h Hdcrman dncrtJa as asenti&amp;By
"med..!No" tn quolity; "meditotive-."
'' madltatlve -rcflecllve " or .. medltall..,e ·

-

.· u....,.hosdncd&gt;edhllm"*u

"'tucinatlng, dluytng, • oompWt.Jy different
• ..._... • Writing lp. tho ~~~~lop "Voice, Connan

Monday-

rl

,

I'IEN'S TENNIS·
U / 8 VI . Canhlut. C.nkhu Courts. 3 p .m.
BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAR•
Yt:Mt Viral RNA's tt.w Hete.-ogmeou~ YTe.:r·
mlnl, Dt- . Jer_,y Bqlenn, Dtpartment of Cell and
MolecuW Bioloo\NJ/8 . 108 Shennan. 4 p.m.

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR•
Catal,m W - In Triclde-a.d R.....,..,
Agooilno Gian&lt;tto. U - of Tcxtno. Italy. 263
Copm. 4-5pm.

-·

PHARJIACOLOGY

a TliERAPEUtlCS

R-

ond ~ to the Phor. - . , An o-vt.w, Jooeph P.
Buynlskl, Ph .D. , director, Phl'rmacological
Raarch. "Bristol Laboratoria, 102 Sherman . 4
p.m.

HAYWORTH NIGHT AT THE

UUAB MONDAY NIGHT FILMS •
GUda (1946) , 7 p.m .; The Lady From
Shanghai (1948) , 9 p .m . Woklman Theatrl'.
Amhast. Free admllslon.

Gilda ltars Rita Hayworth and Gkmn Ford The
Rory of a gambler who rnem hil boss's wife. who
turm out to be a former sweetheart.
Lody &amp;om Shonghai. with Rl1a Hayworth •nd
Orson We.Ues, 1$ the ltcxy of an Irish saUor who
becomes a pawn In murder whlkt accompanying ~
beautiful woman and her lawyer husband on a
au !H.

BunER CHAIR LECTURE·
l..oeolotw (I)'...._ ond ~ .Ken ·
neth Burke, Edward Buder Professor, FaD )979
The Kiva (101 S.ldy) . 8 p.m.
K~enneth Burke may be the fOfemost literary critic
in America or the: English-IJ)Mking worid. In over
haH • C&lt;nlu'lf ol pnxluct!ve writing. he hos .,..,.
duced a vast variety ol wodcs: short stories.

panlblos. poel'lf. lite."'Y - · soo:lol and
political..,.\11. •nd gmninallludla In philosophy.
psychology and aathetk:s. Among his many books.
such
as
(1931) . The
PhilooophyofUt....,.F.,.. (1941) . AGrommM
ofl'l.-(1945), A Rh-'&lt; o f - (19501 .

won..

c----...

u..u-

CONCERT·

Two pial" wM1 bo produced tn tho H.mm.n

Neal Radioo on Nowmba 8-11 and 1[&gt;.18, and
J.o . . . . . P..,dt. by Sean O'Cawy din!ctod
by Donk Can-c&gt;bd. 1\pri 3-6 and 1().13.

ror

UUAB I'IIDNIGHT FILM •
The Taa. Ourlnaaw Mauac:re (19741 . Conference Thutre, Squire . 12 midnight. General admiSsion S2; 1tudonts Sl.50.

DRAJIIA•

-""Ell&lt;

10 at-

DR.UIA•

COU.OQUIA•
VIICUUm Arc Plum•. Profes&amp;Or Dennis P.
Malon&lt;. Elecoricol Eng;neeinjj. U/8. 454 Monaak. 3:45 p .m. Coffee at _3:30.

eor.-...

pm .

WOI'IEN'S TENNIS'
U / 8 vs. Niagara Uniwnlty. Niagara Univer·

SEJONAR•
~ With Thae: P.._....,.. on Diocre·
- . , Dedoton·maldnt In Criminal Juotico,
Kdlh Hawkins, senior research fellow at the Center
lor Soclo-l.ogol Studia. Wilson College. Oxford.
England. 706 O'Brian Hal. 3,30 p.m. Spomoood
by tho Baldy Cen"' lor low and 5odal Policy.
Or. Hawldm h6&amp;ds an L.L.B.. Ph.D. and the
dipk)ma In aimlnokJgy. He has done extensive
research and writing on penal law. criminology. the
IOdQ&amp;ogy ol deviance and JCXio)ogy of law. A
manlber of the parole board of England and WaLes,
he is currently working on a monograph, - The
Meaning of ParoW: ,"' which naminn the: e'lterc:i5es
ol dlscr&lt;lion by .,.,... board&gt; •nd tho Impact ol
ru)a to gu6de dlsc.ution.

O.nco
Swtniuch wll -

Ocwlopmmtl In British Polit.k:s,

Michael T. Ryte, cleric of se:iect committees, British
House ol Commons. 224 Cleme.M. 3 :30 p.m.
Spon50rtd by the Department ol Political Science,
U/ 8 .

solutions.

s.p.n.an-"''M

MOYM. Confere-nce T'tlutre,

Squin. 2,4!;. 5:45 and 8 '45 p.m. Genaal admiJ.
..., S2; students $1.50.

A former CoNmbla Unl~ fBCUity member,
master .spedaJist wtth the Uncoln Center student
program, and U/B Creative A.s.sodate., HeUerman
has been active on the NRW York music scene for
many ~ and has perfonned and been performed ilttoughout Eu._ and tho U.S . Among
the composer-guttarisf1 many awards are a CAPS
Grant, a Martha Baird Roc:ke:feller Grant, a National
Endowmpt Award and the Prix de Rome from the
American Academy.
Helk&gt;rman wUl ~m "Distances/ Embraces"
for iOio guitar. a piece he composed in 1972. J oin·
ing him in the program wiD be vibraphonists Bruce
Penner and Edward Fo&amp;ger with flutist Robert Dick
reciting , In " Local EJc.lts" (1976) . "'Long Island
Sound" wiU also be performed by Dick, Werontka
Knittel on violin, Joanne Lowe on 11\ola, and Edward Yadztnskl, clarinet .
The concert marks the tnt time the Center of the
• Creative and Performing Am has sponsored a perfonnance In a city-owned facUlty. The pwpose. ac·
c:onbng to the Center'l Business Manager Monica
Polowy. the originator of the Idea . ts to "dnlw anention to University resources" and to attempt to seize
upon a new audience. city residents who woukln't
ordinarily make a special }aunt to the University or
Art Gallery to hear a concert of this ~Pok)wy used Coundlman-at-Lal-ge: Richard
Okoniewski as a sounding board for her kiea. He
helped fadlitale Common Coondl approval for use
of the site.
Beskia using the Botanical Gardens to draw new
listenen, Polowy has also sched u~ two E...enings
New Mus.k: October 14 and November 18, at
the Center for Theatre Research downtown . The
October concert will feature works of EUion Carter
conducted by Jan Wllliam1 with soMllsts Ursula
Oppens on plano and Paul Jacobs, ho,:psk:hord .
Michael Ttllon Thomu, the former music dtrector
of tht Buffalo PhUhannonk::, wiU condud .. Parallel
Line1" by Monvn Suba~ in November. Other
works to be--~~ _~hat night wW Include.
"Kontakte" by Karlheiru Stoc:kflausen . ahd ..She'1
Down the Road by Miss Wlnnk!:" by Netty Slmo_95.

Rmnh...,...., 3,45 tn 124 F...t-.

· ·'' --··

and
u · - Actloo (1966)
utablilh and demonstrate hll encompassing
theoria ol mind, language, and hurr:.n motivation
~ Buder Professor of English tHis semester.

~::u::rt~~e~:~~~:::
week during each month ol the M:mester.
FACULTY RECITAL •

Do~. ha.psichonl. S."d Recital Hall . 8
p . m.
admisaon $3; UNvenity faculty . staff
and aJ
2: .llude:ntl Sl.
Tho f
of the conco11 of lwpsichord mud&lt;
will bo from ihc Louil XV .... Tho """""' half ..,;11
bo tho Beethoven Sonaoa. Opus n . No. 3 ;, C .

Taesctay - 18
BUTLER CHAIR LECTURE •
P-.y to ~ : Hopldno. Rooettl.
Winnk:ott, A1Mn Hutter, UCLA. 322 OerMns. 3

p.m.
Abert Hutter il aaodl~ profaeor ol Engl:ilh and
aho has a
Ph.D. tn ~"""'the Southan C.lf&lt;l'·

cornparatlvc litmarur. at UCLA. He

nlA P1yc.h01nalyuc ln1tltute, and practK:e:s
poychoanalyd&lt; thonopy ;, Loo Angeleo. H• hos

�.·

Hellerman

R-

Thursday- 20
SPEAKER•
ond ~ ol
"' M - . Solido. 0.. p..., N. Pr.od,
Chomiotty lleportmeot. U/ B. 454 Fronczolt. 3,45
p.m. Colfoc 01 3 ,30,

Opdcol-.

LEC11JRES IN IIASIC NEPRIOI.OGY•
Tt~ T . _ ...t Ito Controj,
Stutlloo C.U. "' c.ltwe. 0.. Jos.ph 5.
Hondlet, hood, Section on Mombrtono Motabollsm.
laboratory ol KJdney &amp; ElectrolYte Metabolism,
National lnstttuta ol Health . S 108 Shennan. 4
p .m . Refreshments will be HrVed outsid« the

Seminar Room beginning at 3 :4 5 .
Sponso,.&lt;d by tho ~&gt;opon.,.n,. ol Ph~,
Medldne, and Pharmacology and Therapcutk:s,

and organl.ted wtlh the support of the Divls6on of
G raduate and Professional Eduaulon under 1tJ
"Cont........ In tho Dlsciplinu" p&lt;ogt"Om. Tho
series wm conskt of frve presentations during the fall

and spring tmns by distinguished ~dentists who
have made Important contributions to knowledge in

the fiekt of kidney fundk&gt;n .

FOSTER LECTURE•
Stnactu ral and Mec.hanlatlc Studlu or
M..olloprot...., Th• Sln&gt;CIUtal No,_ of Cop.
per Ca1ters, Dr. Harry B. Grey, who Is the W.R.
Kenan . Jr., Professor at the California Institute of
Technology. 70 Acheson. 4 :15p.m.

UUAB FIUI'
C.t and MOUN. Woklman lbeatre , Amherst
4 :30. 7 and 9 :30 p .m . General admission $2 :
studenu $1.50.
DRAMA'
The bland. U/ 8 Center for Theatre Reaorch
681 Main St . 8 p .m. Admtssion : S3 gene:r-.1: St .sci
students and senkM- citll.ens. Spon10red by the
Department of Theatre.

Notiees
published ....,., essoys applying psyclp-anolysh
to lberaturt, and is currendy completing a booklength otudy oj Charla Dlck•ns.

GRAY PANtltER SPEAKER·
M-srgte Kuhn, co-founder of the Gray Panther
actMSI organlultion . Confermce 'Thutre , Squire.

M£N'S TENNIS •

7:30 p.m. Entcnatnme:nt is aiso planned.
Ms. Kuhn, who has appear~ on the. Johnny

U/ B w. .St.
p.m,

Carton '"Tonight Show.'" is coming to U/ 8 under

Baeo-.. Amh&lt;nl Coum.

MINORITY FACULTY AND STAFF
ASSOCIATION MEETlNG •
Blu• Room, Faculty Oub. Mom SttHt Campus.
~~--:~~to attend . The meeting wiD be

R-

CELL A MOI.ECULAR BIOLOGY SEJUNAR•
...t A t t - Control ol trp
a_.,. Eapraoioa, 0.. Charla Ya nofslcy ,
ol Biological Scienca, StanfO&lt;d

o..,..,_,,

University. 11 4 Hodlltett«r. 4 :15p.m. Coffeeet4 .

FDS1'ER I.£C1UII£•
Structur•l •IHS Mec.han.l.stlc S tudl.. of
Mot...,._, Solo&lt;~. 0.. H""Y B.
Gray, who is the W .R. Kenan, Jr .• Profeuor at the
Calif~omltl lnsllut• ol Technology. 70 ~15p.m.
. Gny lint waobd on tho ~of;, .
Ofgllrric subltitutlon ructions with Fm:l Baolo and
Ralph G. P•anon at N001hwatotn Unlwnily where
he-....! tho Ph.D. ;n 1960. Tho folow!ng yoar he
was an NSF PoetdoctoraJ Fel&amp;ow et the lJntwnlty ol
~'-"- where h e - - ..... Cad J.
Balhausen on Rudin ollhe dectronic Sb'udWU ol
~ """"""""· From Copen'-" he went to '
~- ~- whero he was pro~._ al
chcmistty, and 10 the CallfO&lt;nia , _ of
Tochnology In 1966. 0.. Groy has published 240
-...,....and 10 boob.
Fnt ol IOU&gt;' lectwa which will.bo glv&lt;n each
oftotnoon 01 4, 15 p.m. ttuuu,lt fridoy , September
21 Spontond by tho l&gt;oponmmt ol Chom!stry.
POLISH CULn.E a.ua
FtH ioctwe/ pancl one! night ol
fativttia in comme.mort~~don cl the 40th annMtr·
'"'Y ol Worid W• D In Europe. 233 Squ .. Holl.
1· 11 p m
F.._ Poloh eovolry bo1godiot olficor and Buf.
falo
~ w.... Daowloniodd
W'llectu,. on the w.. Afterward&amp;, an oc::tet featurIng Moniao Polowy wGioong traditional Poloh ""9
and ........ W - K"""" wG1 perlonn Poloh

s.... - .

:::::-- An

lnf""""'

wino ond cheeM

pony

the auspic:a ol the Gray Panther network, or
chapter , at the Unlvenity.
As national Uder of the Gray Panthers. Ms.
Kuhn recentfy made a 10-day *ture tour in
Austrda. She returned lO the U.S . on August 26.
Jacob A. Kramer, co-convener ol the U/ 8 Pan ther network. polnted out that Ms. Kuhn's Buffalo
vilil cotnddes wtth a workshop on ageism spontcXed by the Gray Panthers and the University's
TolstO\I College (College f) . Tho
workshop is bdng conducted from 2 to 4 p .m . on
Tuesdays. Sasions.,. conducted at U/B Panthu
headquarters In Room 107 Townsend HaD.
Kramer Mid the wori&lt;shop ~m is fru and
open to the pubk.. regardlas of age, for those ln-

..,...,.,_long

-ling

letatod In
without - · ol college
aedtts. He added that participants can obcaln cd•
aedits by enroiiJng as U/8 students and succaofuly canytng out • college-a~ ageism
projocl.

Ageism is defined by the Gray Panthers as the act
"' ptlldlce ol d-mlnollng agaJrut
boeouse

,..,r.

of their age. Kramer, A U/ 8 graduate ~tudent at age
66, obMrved that both young and old are subtect to
ageism.

The Gray Panther organll.alion dac::rba itMif u
a national mo~t "'dedicated to Improving the
quality olllfe I&lt;J! all people ."
Further information on the Maggie Kuhn Wit and
tho ageism WOtbhop moy be obtoiMd by cont.ec·
ling M&lt;. Knunet .. 688·2158

Wednesday - 19
SPINE 111'1GUNG EVENT•
.........,. Campus. I n - · Copm ond T.....,
Hda. AI ltudents, f..::ulty and staff are lnvlled to
"sond clown the Acadomk Spino, ~
wth lunch at 11 :30 a.m . out*le on Founders'
Piau In frontal- (tom
The Bul Pen

loco-.

In Tolbert). Aside from tho usual fMe ol hotdogs
and hamburgers, there wUI be beef on week . Dine
with live mulk: from •.oon-2 p .m.

At

1:00 and 3 :10 two 1\Jfnd Hitchcock

spinechffien will be ahown In the Woktman Theatre.
free of charge: Foreign Corrapondent and North
by Northwest.
At 1 p .m., the Creative Crah Center will be
demorutnollng the .,. of pollety, -lry-mok!ng
and weaving on the ground floor of Capen, near
the Information Desk. On the 1st fktor ol Tallett ,
the Crah Center wUI sponsor a sa&amp;e ol its products.
lnere will be music to re:lax to In the Senate
Chamben (lot !loot Ta!l&gt;ertJ from 1'30 p.m.-3:30
p .m.

CREDIT FREE PROGRAMS
R-tlon • now bdng conducted f« tho fall
sc:hedulf: of courws offered by the Untvavty's
Cted•-F... ~m . A
11ot1ng o1 all

com.,..,__

Is avallable from the Credit-Free Offa
Abbott Ubnuy, telephone 831-4301. A~
courws suggested to be of 5pt!dal lnterat to the
U nlvenity community are the foBowtng:
lnttnllw .louraal Workahop - You will lum a
method for hqJtng draw your life into focus by
means of keeptng a detolled journal and atablishlng ~
a pallem !01 dolly life. Thlo lpOCial WOibhop .....
meet Friday, Septemba- 28 from 6-10 p .m., and
Saturday, September 29 from 9 a.m.-10 p.m.
RHow IOplen to
make your retirement yean the moet ~and
prnducllvc ol
lie.
wofcomo. Tho
lead... Gkxla Bourn.., • eootdmotOt o1 tho p,..
......,.,. Planning Projoa et U/8. Thlo WOtbhop
meets Tuadeys. October 2 throuaf&gt; Novombet 20,
1·9 p.m., Morn sv..t Compuo.
COUfHI

Plonolsoe--

Y"'"

ENERGY RESEARCH SEMINAR'
New Partlc:H fonM tion ln the Praence o1
A&lt;roools, S.K. Friedland... Chemical Engtne.ring
Department, Untwnfty of Caltfomie at Los
. Angtin. Hl l Baady. 4-5 p .m. Refreshments will be
......r from 5-5,30 p.m. Spon....d by tho Feculty
ol Engineering and AppU.d Sdmca .
SOCCER '
U/ 8 w . Geneseo State. Rouuy Field . 4 p .m.

WOMEN'S TENNIS '
U/ 8 w . Fr-edon!. State Collqe. Amhent
Courts. 4 p .m

FOSTER LECTURE•
Structural a nd Mechanllllc Studies or
Electronlc Aboorp- Spocsro
ond Mota! Slat Structurt, Dt. H""Y B. Gtay, who
Is the W.R. K.nan, Jr .. Profasor at the Catifomia
lnsllute of Technology. 70 A&lt;heoon. 4, 15 p.m.

M.....,...,...,.,

UUAB WEDNESDAY NIGHT FIUIS •
Collcgc (1927) , 1 p.m., Tho Stroot! Mon
(1926) , 8 :15 p .m.; Lodv w.........·, Fon
(19251 , 9 ,50 p.m. C.,.,(...,.,. Thcotn. Squ••·
Free adrrtlssion .

VISntNG ARnST RECITAL•

. ......._.no

~ ~
and Poul
O'dono. lute. Bolnl Recltol Hall. 8 p.m. Gcn..al
' O d - $4; t.culty, Olaf! and -.,.,..... $3 ;
atudents Sl.
The program wil cor&gt;* alutfv musical' Jolin
Dowland , Joltn Don~"!~ . l.wz-.lwzetchi, Glulo
Cot:dnl, llottolom.o Tn&gt;mbondno ond Mo=

c....

· •.J!.

AI - ...

Acdotl lor .... . . _ . . - Donahue, a fdow ol the C.n~er for Than
R.......t., • tholnsWcl01. Mondays, ~24
through Nowmtw:r 19, 1J a .m .-2 p .m.
0ownoaosw -· How to cruse your own down
pcnonality and how 10 uoc • .--ty; o1so o '-Y
of the dra.ls. Wdliom A. Prudden, a rn.aer down
and a member ol the Unkl«niiy .wf, is the tnstructor. Wed nesda ys, S e ptember 12 through
Novo...,., 14, 7,;j()-9:30 p.m.

w~, ""'--! - Dalgned f«
t.hoM: who have had some cxperienc:. tn mlnw.
P&lt;!A Townocnd, a ~ ec101 wtth tho C.nodian Mime Theatre, is the instructor. Thunclays,
s.pr....,., 20 tluougt. Novombet 25, 6, 10-8 p.m.

eo........., - - 1or Co.t~o.­
OwDen: ·- How to cope with the growing tNnd
Iowen! Individual ownenhlp In ......,...,. unlls.
Ruth V. DeRoo, real at.te consultant and praJdont ol tho W-.. Now York Choptotol the CO&lt;nmuntty Assodattons lnst!tute, 11 thc lnstruc:tol-.
Thwodoys, Sepia...,., 'Z1 ttuuu,1t Nova- 15,
8:15-10,{)5 p.m.
S..0.. " ' - '"""""' c_......

Food

~ -- a- mombon wlloton- own buying
dub, an ~ wa y to cut cott1 and incruM
food quality. LDuquln, ooordlnoiOI o1 tho ,
M UW 'Food Co-op, Is tho """""'"'· Mondays,
Soptombcr 17 dvough Novombet 12, I ,30-3,30

p .m.
~- -- A lrl&gt;utc to the king altha

- ........

Boot~ ... the lOth ·~ ol hlo
dulh, lnc:biJng o "'-'ng al "Pul My Delojl." JO\I

.

·-~

...

�•.

Fallfest
·-

·~ ·-

.

•Calendar

-

(to.-_,, .....,

Wah and Mich&amp;el Basinski, edit&lt;n of .. Moody
lrrogulws,- ..,;u COO&lt;dinat• thk d.ty-long
Octobe- 13, 9 a .m.-4 p.m.
T ..... w._ Worbhop - t....m to writ•
obout the ...., _ . ] ol the
Fron..,. and
how to market travel ..nda. Four free-lance writers
HSSion, Seturday,

N_.

will &lt;X&gt;Onl;nat• thk ono-d.ty - · Satun!ay,
Octobo&lt; 6, 8:30-2 p .m.
Wntt.e Your ~Y -· All ages ere
wek:ome. Mary Jacot.en, a U/ 8 Ph .D. candidate;
tn Englilh, wUI be the k'llb'udor, Wednesdays,
5oplcmbu 26 through Novombe. 14, 6 : 10.8 p .m .

DENTAL STUDY
Ponons who think they need dmtal -

and

woukllike to take part bl a study ol patient response
to routine dental ttotmenl shouJd contact Dr.
Norman L Corah at 8314412, Voluntn:rs must
no1 cu.rrentty be under lhc care of a dentist. p.,.
tidpllnts wtl rec:ttvoe deniAl uarnlnatlons ~ a-rays
to detcnntne how muc;h routine lrUtme:n1 they req.... T--..wtllbo,.- o s - a/the
IIUdy .... a - Sponocrilby the Ooparunont ol
BohoWniScionca.

-

............ - . -

G11AD S1UDENT G11A1m1

..........

dalgned • the &amp;.1 prq.ct for either a M.st-'s or
DocoanldogJoo.
Tho c ; . - ~ Oowlopmont
........ ol tho GSA hoo--....,.,.. funds to
"""""" ...... 5150b - · - a n d $250
bPI\.D. . . . -.

·-

The Law and Economk:s Worbhop 15 s:upported
by the Beldy Center ror law and Soda! Policy.

NEW UBRARY COPY MACHINES

Tnt: Untwnfty lbarla are p&amp;eued to announce
that frve-ce.nt photocopin an now avadabk! in most
units, In addition to the three Xermc 4000 coplers
whk:h have been operating at the Law Unrysinca·
last spring, 11 new Xao»t 3100 ~ have been
obtaNd and d.istrb.lted as- folows :
.,
Lockwood U:&gt;wy, 4 Science &amp;
Engineering !.Jn,y, I copter. Underg&lt;oduate
Li&gt;ra'JI, 2 coplno; Health Sdenceo l..baoy, 2
; Main SU... !.Jn,y, I New Ridge
La !.Jn,y, I "'~'""·
AD ol theM machina wUI produce excellent
qudty duplk:ations et onty five-cents per copy .
Unria Oirec:ux Saktidas Roy says 'We have Jong
ld that JUCh facilities are et5ential lex our raculty
and students. We trust that the new machines wiD
make your UM ol d~ lJ:nria more conven•nt
and dfecttvc .....
NEWMAN CEN1B MASSES
~ \/loll: 5 p .m . 339 Squke and
Newman &lt;Anter, Eacott Compla..
5uada¥: Main Strett: 10 a.m. and 12 noon Chapel; 8 p .m. - St. Jcocph'o, 3269
Main St.; Amherst 9 :15 a.m., 10:30, noon and 5
p .m. - Newman CAnter, Ellcoct .
-.s.,..Frtdoy: 12 noon - Newman Cenm.
MalnSt. &amp;UNvenityAw.; 12noonand5p.m. -

Con-

Newman

C.......~.

~-cleo-.
Ollloo, 103 ..
TthO~S&lt;u­
- . Hoi, and tho

ca...,......

_ . . lll'rltlo!l, ~ 28, 1979, M4 p .m.
........... - - f c r - .. tho

PAilAI.EGALS NEEDED
SUNYAB GTot~p l.eeal Scrvkn nuda
,........., J - . Sign up at the Gtoup LAgal
ScMce Otftco, 340 Squiro, Main S,... Campus "'
col 831 -5575. An "'!!"nizallonal meeting will bo
hold Scpoomber 17 at 7:30p.m . ., 340 SqW..,

1--

-b-ol~lormofcrthoFol

GSAStudms '""" ..

urgod to apply.
Tho.,....,.,,..,.,- l u i - . , on o4.ot 1o
fund.tlolo and how to the .,....,.,,

HEALTH CAllE PlAif OPEN HDU&amp;ES
n...-hC..Pionhoo_a_ol
120 Gonion·

--...._..."'-eon..

.. """'- w... a - - . on Wodnadooo

'""" ~ ...... Doc:omt- 1979, 5:30-8
p .m.

s.twdllv: 9 a .m. - Newm.n Caucr on

both

PLVITSALE
Hundreds ol buutlul plants, common and
node. wfl be on W.ln the:~ Room, Squire,
~ 17, 18 from 9 a..m. to 9 p .m.: and
~ 19, 9a.m. · 3p.m. Theprogracnilbe·
lnSI ..,......... by the two &amp;ahmon hono&lt;uy
· Alpha l.ambd.t Delio and Phi Ela Stgma,
., conjunction with the I l l - . ol Student Aflm
Reautson/Pft9am Offiol. For more informetlon ,

cal831-3547 .

PilE-lAW ADVISEMENT
A~ for P~ SOmcc majors at ProfeNOJ
Charla Lamb's olflor:, Room 625 Baidy Hall on
Tuad.tyo and l'hund.tyo fnxn 3 :30-4:40 p .m., ..
ool'rltlo!l. 1:30-4 p .m . All PoHcol ~­

.,.. we:lcome. fOC" furttwr Information , cal
636-2133.

the CMI Engineering Department offiu at 127
Parker, Main Street Campus, 831 -~. for additional details.

nominations to the: Graduate: School) . PSe.ue
e:ndo.e supporting doc:ummts showing grades,
ac:tivltk!l and awardt:. lnfcxma6on must be received
by Se:ptembrer 2A In order to meet che publk:ation

READING ORCHESTRA
The Oepari:me:nt of Musk: and th• Unlwrsfty
Phllharmonia invite area musidans to take part ln
the Metropolitan Repertoire Orchestra, a nonperforming ensemble, whkh wdJ meet on Tuada.ys;
beginning Odober 9 from 7:30-9:30 p. m. tn
Goodyear HaD Bapd Room. uoder the dk~ ol
Paul Schmid .
This e:nsemble i5 unique in that h provides the
only opportunity 1n the community to Aght-t'Ud
standard orchatral litenturt. The Reading Orchatnl hi opm to the general .publk:. In the: past lt
has included high school and oollege otudents,
teachen. doctors and othen from a variety of waits

deadline.

of Hfe:. No pre-regi:stnltion ts required and adm1s&amp;ion
to partldpete is free .

SCHUSSMEISIBIS SlU O.UB
Sign up for your Ski Club membenhip h\ Room 7
Squirt. Call 831-S4451or further kd01'1'Nl6on.
Starting September 12 we wiD lake sign-ups for
our annual tennis tournament.

SUIOIEII SESSIONS MOVE
n. Summe:r Seaiona Offloe has moved to Abboa !.Jn,y, Main S,.., C.mpuo. The
teie:phone numbus are 831 -2235, 2236 .
TEACHER EDUCATION
Students in-..!"' oboalnJng oocond.t.y school
teacher cmtficatkln must be admitted to the threesc:malcr Teacher Education J&gt;rosvem prior to
enroling in any ol ttl courses. Applications and informetion may be obtained from the OMUon ol
Undcf'!Pduate EducaHona! Studies, Offloe of

Teache:r Educ:ation. ' in Room 320, 8aktY Hall:,
Amhent. Phone 636-2461. Tho dud!no f«
applications to begin the progrem for the spring
Kmester is October 1. 1979.

UNIVERSITY CHORUS
n.. un!Wnlty ChO&lt;us " _., without audition
to faculty and .mft as wei as studants. It rne.ts on
Mondays and Wedneod.tyo from 7·9 p. m. In ISS
Goodyear. Fntw'ed in the !J'OUp's December concert wiD be the womm of the chorus ln Britten's
Ceremony ol Carols. In the spnng Mmater, the
chorus wUI pr:rform ~s St. John Passion with
the Unlvenfty Orchatra. It's not too late to join.
Come. to the nat rehanal, Mondey, September
17. 0.. Hornet Simom ol the MUJic facuhy conduds.
WHO'S WHO

Tho Unlv&lt;nity hoo ....mJv bHn ..ked to
• limt&amp;ed nunile ol junior, se:nlor, and

~te

IJOduate otudento (O&lt; lncluolon .. the 1979-110
Who'o Who " - 9tulloato In , . _ _
and Coaogw.
NorninHs should hew outs&amp;encbng records ol
acaclemk
a...,od by G.P.A. and by
olher approprie• ac:compWunenta IUCh as awMis
or pubkadona. Sc:bol.lk JUCCe~t. wil be a

u..-

-mont

Exhibits
THEliATiC CATALOGUES

Musi&lt;: !.Jn,y, Balnl HaD, through Sep,.mber
30.

On The Air
SEPTEMBER U
AM BuBalo: 0.. n.om. E. Hoaclric:k, dean,
Facuhy ol law and Jurispn&gt;deo)co. WKBW-TV
(Channel 7) . 10 a. m.

SEP'TEMBEII 14
AM a..lo: 0.. u.-.1 A. Kau, .......,.
dean , and other members of the Schooi of Medicine:
faculty and OUI!f, "Whafs New., Hulth C...: Tal&lt;e
Ben&lt;. C.• ol You...V." WKBW-TV (Channol 7) .
10a.m.
Dr. KenMth Condrdl. clinical udltant ~
feuor ol ......,..toy, "Child Raring and the
Poobloms ol Growing Up. • WKBW· TV (Channol
7) . lO a. m.
SEPTEMBER 15

c.-..

lllgbliohto: S.._. - · M.D.,
D.D.S ., c&amp;nkal usoc:iale/profCNOr, Surgery,
"'Currmt Concepts in Plutic and Reconstrudiw
Su'90'11.· WBEN-FM (102.5) 5-7 a.m.
Alfred D. l'l1ce, ........,, dean, School ol
ll&gt;ohltectwe and Environmental Deolgn, "Urban
Rovltala- Upd.t,. on Bullalo.• WBEN-FM
(102.5) 5-7 a .m.

SEP'TEMIIER 16
en-.. 1: s..-.1 Shoddo, M.D., D.D.S..

--·•/pro/
.....,IW!IC'll. "Cunont Con·
cepts in Plastic and Reconstrucrtve Surgay ...
WBEN (9«)) . 9:05p.m .
~ U: Alhd D. Price., auistant dean,

School ol Aft:hltoctwe and Environmontal Deolgn,
"lhban Rovltala- Upd.ttc on B..tfalo." WBEN
1930). 11:05 p. m.

S£Pl'EtoiER 17

SEPTEMBER II

c:.o.v.n.tton. kll the Am: Esther Ha.rriolt inter-

. . _ . - Howanf Wol. Courtm Cable (Channel
10) 6 :30p. m. Aloo. Scpoomber 21 , 6:30p.m .. and
September 19 at 7 p .m .

and other Unillenlly cxganl&amp;aliona, conlrtlu.lion to
community protedl and to Olhe appropriate
ac:Ovt6a and ~menu.
If you wtsh to make • nomlnadon, plnsc tend ln-

SEPTEMBE1111

-- ~-·•t«o i..-'IJili.
ol ~;..,. Educo-~p.;..,. otudent

to tho

-

H......,.,..,.

~ Ia tbcllna: Esther
views Linda Kent, U/8 alumna and dancer in Paul
Tayb- Company. International Coble (Channel
10). 6 p. m.

.-.o.yquolflca-IO&lt;oll-.lnoddltion,
conoldoo-.- wtl bo s;..n to IMd.tnhtp .. student

- o n l h o -. -«groduoooOiudont

•

~

AM a..lo: Cachooloe G. - · PhD
candldato, Hoalth Sdenceo. "Pho*oJ -•
WKBW-TV (Channel7) . 10 a .m.

h

IA.,f ,J 1;:;.~- ~~~: :. f,l

1

~

0• :-~1\''i. 'I"'C"

�n

September 13, 1979

D

~ysis

Somlt back in vP post,
had ·a 'productive' year'

U/B is one of six centers
testing new ambulatory treatment
for patients with kidney faUure
The Department ol Medldne's Renal

f'n9am lo one ol 36 -ndelndonaly
which will evaluate a new, ambulatory
dialysis treatment lor patients with
chronic kidney lailure.
'
By continually cleaning patients' blood
of toxins throu~ ...., ol a special solution
circulated through the peritoneum or
membrane Mnlng the abdomen, Chronic
Ambulatooy Peritoneal Dialysis (CAPO)
promises patients freedom lrom current
methods requiring external machines.
Both hemodJalysis and the curren~
used method ol peritoneal dialysis requlre attachi~tients to machines
many hours
to perform lunct!ons
no longer han
nonnally by their
kidneys.
Sponsored by the National Institute of
Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases, the
study will collect and evaluate data on patients receiving CAPO at the participating
centers.
Drs. Rocco C. Venuto and Basab
Mookerjee, co-Investigators of the local
study, saki a mlmlnum of ten patients
during each of the next three years will
receive CAPO at ltie Veterans Administration and Ern. County MedJcal
Centers.
Machin.. disadvantages
Hemodialysis gradually removes
patients' blood, passes It Into a machine
where lfs cleansed by a solution and
plastic membrane, and returns It to the
body, explained Dr. Venuto, a U/ B
assistant prolessor and the director of
dialysis services at ECMC. The "old"
peritoneal dialysis Involves plating the
solution Into the abdomen through
surgically implanted- tubes, depending
upon the peritoneum to remove the
toxins.

A main disadvantage of both , Venuto
said, is that patients must be attached to
equipment at home or in a hospital on a
regular basis. This restricts their freedom
and independence. Hemodialysis requires up to 18 hours weekly at a
hospital-based dialysis unit; the old
peritoneal method, at home or In a
hospital, requires as much as 36 hours
weekly .
Dr. Mookerjee, an assodate professor
of medicine at U/B and chief of hemodialysis at the VAMC, said that although
end-stage kidney failure patients are
prone to other medical problems resulting
from their disease , it's often their tre~Jt­
ment schedules which force them to quit
working.
"Few employers are willing or able to
shift the renal patient to either less
strenuous work or to a schedule centered
around their treatments," he saki. Even ~
the patient Is unable physically to work,
four to six hours of hemodialysis three
times weekly or 12 hours of the
peritoneal treatment method three times
weekly, restrict sodal and family life. ·
CAPO allords llalbWty
CAPO, on the other hand, allows
patients to put the cleaning solution Into
the abdomen themselves. It remains
there until they drain It Into a bag from
which K is then disposed of. They can
work, go on vacations and lead fairly normal Uves with only the slight Inconvenience ol having to empty the solution
and replace It with a fresh supply about
every six hours. The &amp;.linage pouch, attached to surgically-Implanted tubes
emerging near the patienfs navel, Is virtually undoctable under clothing when
not In use.
Dr. Venuto said studies elsewhere In·
dlcate that the continuous toxin removal
used In this method may be more effective than the Intermittent removal of other
forms ol dialysis: "Al\hough there's no
hard evidence yet, conUnuous removal
may make patients healthier and perhaps
lea prone to other medical problems
which may ecx:ompany chronic renal

failure."

The primary dloadvantagc ol CAPO Is

beHev.c~ to be an lncreMed IJMiihood ol

inflodlon which may readt If pelienll .,.
carelao In draining .,. replacing the solu-

tion.

OtiMr matbodo ... .....w

But even f CAPO II proved to be as ef.
fecttve as early Indications ouggat, Its
lncreaoed ...., In the future will not make
hospital or home-based dialysis units ob-

solete.

"Patients who suffer sudden kidney
failure or those with perKoneal surface
adhesions -or other problems which
preclude using CAPO will still requlre the
other types of dialysis," Venuto
predicted, but the size ol hospital-based
units may decrease. Currently, there are
live hospital-based hemodialysis centers
In Buffalo serving about 300 patients In
Western New York. It Is estimated that
each year, 80 new end-~ renal
patients per million population require
dialysis.

.

Dr. Carl J . Bentzel, chief of U/B's Oivi·
sion of Nephrology, noted that the local
Renal Program's early Involvement with
peritoneal and hemodialysis was
probably considered In Its selection as a
center In the new NIH study. "Although
It's too early to say, CAPO appears a
promising form of treatment for many patients now on other types of dialysis - a
treatment which would allow them to
lead more Independent and less restrlc·
tive lives." he said.

2 win grants
for cancer work
Grants for cancer-related research
projects have been received by two
Health Sdences faculty members.
Dr. Arlene D. Albert, a research In·
structor, has received a two-year
$25,000 fellowship from the Leukemia
Sodety of America , Inc., to support
studies of a substance which binds to the
surface of various cells.
The substance, lipopolysacc;haride
(lPS) , Is composed of both fat and carbohydrate and produces a variety of
responses when It binds to ceO surlaces.
Interaction between LPS and cell surfaces
has mysteriously halted the rapid cell division typical of cancer In some malignant
tumor cells In experimental animals. But
LPS' Interaction with normal blood cell
surfaces has the reverse effect of accelerating the maturation of a certain type
of white blood ceO.
Dr. Albert's research , to be conducted
In the Department of Microbiology, wiD
focus on the Interaction of LPS and cell
surfaces and what reaction occurs as a
result. LPS is produced In the outer cell
membrane of gram negative bacteria,

such as E. coli, a bacterium found
naturally in the human digestive system .
Dr. Albert, a native of New Orleans, is
one of 27 researchers In the nation
selected to receive one of the Leukemia
Society's fellowships.
Dr. Barry Eckert, assistant professor of
anatomy, was one of three scientists In

New York and New Jersey to receive
support from the Alexandrine and Alexander Sinshelmer Fund, established to
aid promising young researchers under
age 35.
A three-year $45,000 grant from that
agency will underwrite his studies of the
cytoskeleton of cells.
Dr. Eckert, who joined the U/ B faculty
two years ago, explains that researchers
are attempttng to learn whether the ar·
rangement ol proteins In the cytoskeleton
·of malignant cells differs from that of nor·
mal ceDs. The cytoskeleton 'ttsell, the
structure which maintains the shape of
the ceO, Is known to be akered In malignant ~ermlnlng whether the protein arrangement Is different and hew
such change oc:curt will be an Important
contribution to basic: science research.
Much of the preliminary work on which
Dr. Eckert's current research II based was
funded 1&gt;11 a one;year gran~ ,from the NatiQnal

Sdt""' Foundation,
_,.:.-_•_· ·-

••

_L_. _:·::

•

·
: ••• : • •

Dr. Allert Somlll bKk at hlo desk ..
.......... ............... ollhel"-""ly,
folowlng • ~· ....... • ....
Netherlands Institute for Advanc:ad
5ludiD In .... Humanllla Sodel
Science (NIAS) - • Europe...,.,..,...,._
port ollhe Palo Allo Canter for Adwnced SCudla.
I t - a buov and~ year, the
U/B pollllcal ...,arts - one
devoted to . - d l , lectura - -.gs
In ~ ol hlo favodla fields ollnquky,
Including the hlllooy ol pollllcal oclenoe,
recent developments In and the lutuN ol
that dlodplne, and the study olbiopolltlcs
("what the biological oclenca have to tell
us about political behavior").
Somk chaired a panel on blolo!lll and
politics at the triennial meeting olthe Intemallonal Political Science Association
In Moscow In August.
Whlle based In the Netherlands, he
gave lectures at: the University of
Helsinki and Tempere University (In
Finland); the universities of Mannheim
and Munich (Germany) ; the University of
Warwick (England) ; the U.S . Institute
and the Institute for Polittcal and
Economic Studies (U .S .S .R.) ; the
universities ol Vienna and lnnsbruck
(Austria); the University of Tel Aviv
(lsn!el) ; Copenhagen and Aarhus unlversities In Denmark; and Leklen and
Erasmus universities In Holland .
At the first meeting of the new Intern•·
!tonal Society of Political Psychology,
SomH gave an Invited address on
"Biology as a Key to Poli~l Psychology:
How Far Can We Tum the Lock?" The
papc.r was an assessment of what the new
scientific enterprise of blopolltics has produced In Its first decade, where it seems
likely to lead, and when .
The biannual Congress of the
Organization lor Economic Co-operation
and Developmenfs Programme on International Higher Education (in Paris) was
the setting for another paper, "Data Based Management Information Systems:
Neither Par.!ldise Gained nor Paradise
Lost."
Somit also attended a meeting ol the
European Consortium o.n Political
Research In Brussels where he served as
consultant for a group currently laun·
chlng a history of European potittcal
science.
Still another of his activities Involved
organization and coordination of a study
of the Impact which the recent
"democratization" of governance In
European universities has had on the
capadties ol these Institutions to carry out
their educational missions.

The study, which will focus on
developments over the past 15 years In
Holland, Germany, Ireland and Anland,
should be/completed by this coming OcIober, Sorhtt said.
Without meaning to prejudge the
results. he ventured that early data seem ·.c.•
to Indicate that these Institutions have
been "hard-hit'' by governmental Jnsistence on affording everyone (faculty,
students, secretarial staff, etc.) a vote In
determining policies.
Somlfs work at NIAS will result In
several publications. The paper on
man-ment Information systems was
published In the /ntematlonal Journal of
/nstltuHonal Management In Higher
Eduoation In May, and the one on
biology and psychology ·Is slated for
publication this fall . Another paper, also
written durlng the past year, will shortly
be published by Cherlon. A fourth Item,
dealing with the .sociobiological Ideas of
Edward 0. Wilson, Is scheduled for
publicatton In the Jouma/ of the /ntema·
tiona/ Society of Political Psvchology.
Anally, Somlt wrote a chapter on
"Human Nature: the Central Issue in
Political Philosophy" for a volume to be
published by Temple University Press.
The executive VP saki that while he
didn't accomplish everything he set out to
do, he made reasonable progress; that he
is happy to be back, and thai Charles
Fogel deserves the plaudits of the Unlverslty for a "superb job" In acting as executive VP last year.

New test for niale fertility
devised
by biochemist
A new, relatively Inexpensive male ferpossibility of creating an organism which - ' .
tillty test could be available locally if
there's sufficient Interest In the medical
community, Its developer Dr. B. Jane
Rogers said here In August.
The University of Hawaii biochemist
said her test, considered by many to be a
breakthrough, measures the ability of
human sperm to fertilize, making use of
spedally-treated hamster eggs. Other
sperm tests typicaDy measure sperm
numbers, motility and maturity and can
produce deceptive results, Rogers saki .
Sperm may pass muster on these counts,
appear "normal," and still be Incapable of
fertilization for reasons not yet known.
"If sperm appear normal using these
other tests, the female partner has to
undergo a series of more Involved and
expensive tests to determine~ she's Infertile," Dr. Rogers pointed out. Her test.
used In conjunction with results from
other sperm analyses, could eliminate the
need for testing thelemale.
"Unfortunately," Dr. Rogers said, the
male Is olten tested' last In fertility cues
because It's usually the woman who is
more anxious to have the chlld. Using her
test on the male first would be simpler
• and less expensive, she saki.
The Rogers' test exposes patients'
sperm to some 50 spedally-treated
hamster eggs; the nl!mber ol eggs IUC·
oessfully penetraled Is the measurement
of the sperm's capacity to fertilize . After
feitlllziti6n,
the
'!!fgs• ~~.
pr\!dudr1&gt;9:the
,Jfl
•
•
••
•
•
......

would be hail-man, half-hamster, she
emphasized.
Although the University ol HawaH
maintains Its own hamster colony, Rogers
noted H would be more expedient to purchase six-week old, female hamsters
from laboratory breeders lor clinical ·
testing.
Rogers' test Is currently available on a
routine basis only In Hawaii, but at least a
half dozen dties on the Mainland are
planning to offer It soon, she reported.
The new test could be a boon to physi·
cians con&amp;onted with apparently ferttle
colWJies who can't have the child they
desire, but Rogers concedes Its accuracy
can also be traumatic.
"Males who measure their seH-worth or
virility by their ability to be ferttle may be
shattered ~ they learn they cannot lather
chlldren," she explained.
Another potential advantage of her
research. centers on the Idea that If H can
be determined why apparently normal
sperm are Incapable ol fertilizing, then
more can be learned about making a
sale, effective, temporary male contraceptive.
"The subject ol human fertility Is obviously two-sided," Rogers nailed. "There
are thooe who wish to avoid pregnancy
and those who desperately want
children." Her reMalch efforts "'"Y ·
uliinlately help both ,.• ~·~:· ! -

.

�Sepomber 13, 1979

0

Gener~l Eil

Pa

el
ts crJterla
R1itll Opl~r
G 8IHS have to ~ to be IQcl•uled f~stafl
to .... aoen..iEdal:lllonrg
,_

1n ploce 811111 ...,__..

-·'*"

Sepllillblr..-acWW~~

ltd

the~~ Ill
_....
...... _ . . . . ... ~ 'al ......

'lOIII be •
IDIII)d 'o ltaclllllly,
.
. -....... c.n..r~
- - - · ~- ............ ...._.
c::oar.. 81111 o-., and prlndpllllor

==-

12• ...._m.IIUbmi...J..cf
n-.,... would'- to be ....,... • Mn. ·1bllh L. ()pier,,._ tnJanna..
IMdllne
'Willa c:ioune ~ tad thrpugh coopaa~~.,. plannloa · . lion
the U/B Hee11b ScleriC*
paak,
l ~and peer ~..-,.-doand~ . ~wholDr.MMvlnK.~
........... l(lha9- ~•
.
afag,oupolfacuMvandlllldcnls. n.y: died
, Auguoi.31,111R.....
·,

13. In .:: ~ ' ...... ol
...:ctdng . . . . . . ar')ioo. ~

, to I, -

oba1 IUbll!i'a 0111
_ o l .... ~.
'
14. Coune
CXIIIIIIIn a
~ ol
method
--...
and • o1 ~ ~~
n..y obal aloo lit*.,_~ and
-.dardo for wac!Jng ~.!": /.
I
15. Coune ~ ..... be lilbmlt·
ted to tha O.U.E. C~m Committee
whale chairmo!j wti be raponolble for
monitoring reView proi:edura. The
General Education Cornmlttee, """""-·
~ conduct the suliolantiar review of
, coune proposals and apply tha above

r:::;:

..,..._.ID

would
the
=COIIJIIIUIIIIy'
became

..... ~..-.She
'
,
•Mn.Opler,who-toU/Bin1972,
· In charge . ol' the lnforinatlon
~Service at the Llnrv until
· 1974, providing --='- and lnforma.
lion for Meith pro~ao~ona~&amp;ln w-..
New York. Pllor to comklg to Bullalo,
she had been • ......dl......,. for the
F&lt;Jie91 Polley Dlvloion al thd.eaQu&amp; ol
Women Voters In Wuhingkln and had
aloo walked Ill The Brooldnga ~.

"center ol ..... &gt;Momolllll
59.

and thould be ....
lnnolunt,theGECIII!II.

~t~.-..-forap-

prowl ol an.allemallw core:
l· ... ......,. on..,... ol subject mat·
~ with lha 1p1r11 o1 lha stan·
clanl prqpm" (V.8.4. Report of, lhe
~~ Cornmtaee on Gmenll Educotion;lr.v1:V9/79) . TheCornmlttee urges
latitude 1n lha lnlelpnlalion
ol this allollon. There are few ~
prtnc:tp1es which, wtthout distortion, cUt
She -received tha B.A. ~ &amp;om
IIClOII aB IIIII knowledge areas, and thole
Hunter College, Jnlljorlng In Spanilh.
which might do so wiD randy be able to
Suboequendy, she was a lectun.r In tha
devote equal attention to all ol tham.
department ol Spanioh at tha uru-y
general alterla.
.
Knowledge simply cannot be structured
of Southern California Ill l..oo Angeles
16. Course proposals shaD state the
that way without extreme abstraction or
and reviled and directed tape nocordlng
frequency of the course offering and In·
distortion. The Commtttee can only
of teaching material for uoe with tha text,
dlcate what arrangemeqts have been · recorrimeiKI i prudential mean betweet) • Colleae SpallleiL Ova the years, she
tha GEC's next report ~ not
made for Its regular offerjng.
the two eXtremes · of sulistanallesS helped edit and prepare rnanu,alpts In
tcha:l
ntil October, Hare said the
17. Substantial chan!les In course
generalitY anfnarrow spedllclty.
, . • tha lleld ol. medical physiology 'with her
- " c:oruidered K ·~!"· to get this I syUabl shaD be subject to review.
2. "Tiie: provision of reasonable 1 lalo flrsl husband who was 11 physiolOgist. 1
~ to fatuity so.jhey can begin for·
Since there Is no mechanism for identi·
guarantees of the availability of the • Her ~olarfY writings included papers
mulating ldeu.
.
fving faculty -members interested In
couroes necessary for the completion of
on medical librarlanshlp and a recent
To be'lncluded In 1he overaU program,
General Education, nor a way for them to
the proposed core program" liblcl.). The
chapter In a book published by Oxford
a course shohld meet these crtterla, the
meet and share plans for course develop·
Committee feels that this crtterion1 University Press, S......... Aa A 5ecoad
GEC says:
ment, the committee su9sests that course
though Clearly dlfflcuh to achieve, is
l.aaguage, In collaboration with Wilga
proposals be maile pubUc and allaUable
essential. What constitutes a ..reasonable
M. Rivers of Harvard.
I. Natale aad Coa._., of Couna ·
for
University-wide
1 q:&gt;mment
"This
guarantee''?
Jhat
question
has
no
easy
1. AD general educatlqp courses shaD could provide a mean$ for 1 faculty
answer In a system where courses may
MS&amp;om
USC
be proposed as appropriate to one of the
members to discover others with .tmdar
have to be suspended or deferred for
Mrs. Opler received the M.S .in Library
.. knowledge area" categories of the
Interests
and
to
promote
schemes
for
budgetary
and
other
reasons,
where
staff.
Science
from
the University of Southern
General Education program. Courses
inter· disclplinary and team-taught
lng may become impossible, permanently
California in 1972, prior 'to her selection
may, In addJtion, be proposed as fulfilling
or temporarily (e.g ., through leaves, In a national sea'rch for the job at the
courses."
\ resignations, adverse tenure decisions) , H&lt;ialth S&amp;nces l.ilbrary. She remalned
a
~'btn~lble to aU Theme.
The GEC believes the themes compo- ' and where a student may be closed out of on the staff until 1974 when her illness
University students without fonnlil course
nent caDed for In the February General one or more courses necessary to a core prevented her .l..orking luD time, acc~­
prerequisites, unless those prerequl5ites
Education repor1 Is essential If General
sequence. The responsibility for guaran·
ding to C.K. H4ang, Health Scienoeo • j
are themselves Gener,al Education
Education Is IQ \&gt;e more than a series of
teeing availability shaD Ue with program Library directoi.
courses. This does not {Man tO' restrid
unrelated d~tion ~ulrements . To
proposers and supporting document.aliorf'
"Mrs. Opler
res'pected by
courses to an elementary level !but to pt~..
foster such lnt'gra~ve ~9 •. It sug· 1 may be required of their administrative those she served In tha\heakh ~ com·
vent their being designed for spedaUsts ot
munlty as weD as her ilbrary coDeague.s,"
majors. (There Is acknowledged value in
=rsethc! {h~'just~:~rta for a theme
su~C:r;vindng evidence that the facul· Huang said. A warm, fdendly person,
Integrative senior seminars as capstones
I. By using a framework of concepts or
ty proposing to teach a core program she added a special dimension to her job,
to a General Education program. The
principles
a
theme
course
or
course
have
engaged in, and will continue to and was admired and weD-liked, he add·
Committee may, in the future , create
cluster shall Integrate in an lnteUectu.Uy
engage In, regular consultations on the ed.
such counes Umlted to students with
coherent
manner
varied
disdplinary
material
covered by constituent courses
She married Dr. Opler, U/B professor
senior standing.)
perspectives and modes of analysis;
of the wre.
of psychiatry, sociology and anthro3. Couroes shall establish a context for
2.
A
theme
course
or
course
cluster
4.
Normally,
cores
wiD
consist
of
nine
pology,
In 1974 and had coDaborated
their subject either by presenting the
shaD address a topic of pressing concern
courses, which may be broken down Into with him on the organization and collec·
methods of Investigation and proof aptoday
and
of
lastin9
signKicance;
clusters
of
courses.
t19n of his work which comprises a dozen
JXopriata to tha material of the course
3. Where possible, a theme course or
5. The qualifications for Instructors for bOoks and monogtaphs, and over 200
and by explaining established ~d com·
star.dard general education courses articles, boOk chapters and alliques ln.
course cluster shaD give attention to the
petlng theories In tha field , or by a
(given above) apply.
major concepts that will organize future
anthropology and P,SYChiatry. Aklcd by a
historical ravleW of developments In the
discoveries and technical changes;
The commlttee document now being grant to Dr. Opler from the Gralnick
field that establish currant question! or
4
.
A
theme
course
or
course.
cluster
drqllated
provides
detailed
examples
of
Foundation, this project included aid on
practice.
shaD deal with open questions, fun·
such programs. Selected courses from the latematloul Joamal ,., Social
4 . Counes should seek, where possl·
dament.al
questions
for
which
there
are
anthropOlogy,
science,
philosophy,
P..,.,Jaiatry,
edited by Dr. Opler. Mrs.
ble, to relate subject matter to other flelds
no definite answers today;
poUIIcal science, English, tingulstlcs and
had been chairman of Voter
of knowledge.
5.
A
theme
course
or
course
cluster
psychology
could
be
blended
In
a
"Modes
Registration Programs lor tha League ol
5 . Courses shaD seek to foster critical
shaD stimulate students to evaluate the at·
of Thoughr' core; several depart· Women Voters, Amherst, and was a
thlnkln~J and the ability to pursue in·
titudes and convictions that affect the way ments-from biology to art histo!J!- member of Planned Parenthood of Buf·
dependent Investigation.
they lead their tives.
could similarly contribute to a core on falo, tha Unguistics Society of America,
6 . Where appropriate, counes shaD
A series of examples of thames are
"Human Nature and Behavior;" geology, the Albright-Knox Art GaUery and tha
encourage nocognllion of any moral or
suggested, such as Ethics; Order and
biology, geography and art history could Medical Ubrary Association,
social problemo which may be inh&lt;lrentln
Disorder In Social Systems; Domination
provide components for, .. Evolution of
tha subject or presented by practical apand Subordination (the relationships that
Man and His Society;" special couptings ·sum-.
~U:~djl!~f'~dea~o exist In present soclely with emphasis of humanities couroes could be arranged
In addition to her hljlband, she Is sur·
given to stigmatized groups); the evolu·
for engineers; special groupings of the vived
7. Courses~ raqulre tha Ule of
_!&gt;y three daughters, Rachel
sciences and social sciences could be Hyman; ~Uade.lphia, Pa.; Mrs. Martha
lion, current status and future impact of
mathematics and/or writing In order to
odenllflc thought and method with par·
developed for Arts and Letters majors.
davalop effectiveness In communicating
Friedman, Cheltenham, Pa.; an4,.Mrs.
ideas and llllting results and conclusions. · tlcular emphasis upon technology ;
Deborah Abram!, Vancouver; two other
Beyond Survival: how living systems
The GEC proposals for alterla for children, Dr. Lewis A. Opler, Stamford, .
develop new capabilities and directlons;
overaU general education program ap- Conn ., and Dr. Ruth Perry, Cambridge,
U.~oll---.
Man and the Transcendent (examining
proval and for themes were approved by Mass. ; and six grandchildren.
8 . lnllructors shall be eminently
the nature , history and Impact ol religious
the Faculty Senate Executive Commlttee
Memorial services wiD be held In
qwoliflod-ln terms of knowledge and
experience
and
expression
as
seen
in
inIn August. Approval of ctrculatlng the Cheltenham, Pa. Donations may be
training, In terms ol "'-room experience
stitutions, rituals, Uterature, etc.).
crtterla for aU three areas to faculty came made to the Ruth L. Opler Memorial
and technique, and In terms ol personal
from Vice President for Academic Affairs Fund being establls/led through tha U/B
and JXo/-.,al Interest-to record
Ahenate C«B
subotantial achievements with respect to
While the introduction ol required Ronald Bunn, Vice President for Health Health Scieru:eS Lbary and fhe Departa1lerla •3-7 above.
themes Into tha general distribution Sciences F. Carter Pannill, and Faculty ment ofAnthropology Museum on the
Amherst Campus.
9. Coursa and Instructors shall be subsystem seems tha only feasible way of Senate Chairman Newton Garver.
ject to evaluation by both student and
providing a chance for tha majority ol
extra·~tal faculty review as weD
students to recognize Inter-relationships
as departmental pear review. Courses
among dlsclptines, the GEC views "alter·
that do nol maintain tha Intent and em·
nate core programs" as another "e~cllue
.,._ ol tha original JXopOSal or courses
approach."
that are poorly taught shaD be subject to
As. envisaged by tha committee, these
The School of Social Work has moved
In another major •hilt which took place
RmOVal from tha program.
alternate cores would serve Hmlted
from Foster HaD to Hayes Annex A on
over tha sumrner, Abbott Ubrary has
10. If a naw Instructor undertakes a
numbers of students and would be
the Main Street Campu•. The ad·
become • Contln~tion center
previoully _.,_:I coune; his or her
distinguished from tha !l"nerol dlslribu·
mlnlstrative offices can be reached at
housing offices and
for studen~
q...wlcmlons shal be subject to review.
lion system "by clearly defined cur·
831·2526 or 831-2928.
In that division. Locat now in Abbott
riculum structures, Interrelated and se·
Another department which moved In
are tha Division ol ContlnuJng Education
DL ~ Proc:edoa•
quenced In a logical, systematic fashion .~
August Is tha Department of Political
Office, tha Office for Credit-Free Pro11. Couna pr_.als shaJI be aocom·
This, tha GEC feels, avoidS duplicated
Sc::ience, now at horne In 685 Baldy HaD.
grams, MIDard AUmore College, Summer
ponied by ..... eot..bliohing tha quallllca.
and extraneous study and permits a
~ental faculty offices are located
Sessions, Urban Extension, various adlions ol tha lnslructor(sj . Such Nductlon In the number ol ntqulred
In adjacent spaca on the 6th floor . The
vill!ment counoeting services, and a
tPoul4 nqlf,aamed degrees, awerds and courses
c:lioltnctlona, and expfrience teaching program.from tha standard distributional ~~. JOumbeo tmnetns&gt;.the-' same, reading room. AD are open from 8 :30
a
.m. until8:30 p.m.
limllar courses.

cleo9*t8 •...,._ core

pr&lt;91IIDI"
._....., cll&lt;:uiDed to aunpus academic
• ~by the Geneml Ed...-n
c - IG£CI.
GEC
hill oobd-=!&gt;
unl hoad to ....,._ tt..lhformllllon to
facuMv a 100ft as P&lt;*l&gt;le "' teacbers
begin to &lt;onlkla:
al
cxlltlng courses meet tha
..-;
bj which couna could be modified to
meet them; and
c) what new courHS could be
dav.laped as part of a General Education

a."""" ....

'*'

""*"

1·

coo.....,.

;theme:::.

w.. """

!?J&gt;Iet

Social Work moves to
new Main Street location

I

-

�•
oving ID:
the way It is today
'Whm I all to ........ a 40-ioh
'oldtimer' "-d ~. 1 took the
.....
wllb In
oaly
• Well,
-•
loodoc:br
_ _.
lima.....
haw
changed. Todasf• dorm cJweJJen come
with pllea of ....... and.........._.

awrilowlnll• the
family tnlck
otat1onIn
·
requJrtnt
U-HIOJDe
cuea. There'• the bib, the ~er.
the atenfo, the apeakera, the 1V, the
milk CMe lor ahelwa-..._ It
taka to .,._ a home away from
home. lAbor O.V we8encl oome
5,000 fullv-«qU!pped U/B atuclena
HldlDg In lor the aemeater with tbe
help of familia and lriencls. Thae
--from Goocnon- typical.

�·.
September 13, 1979

H

U I 8 is bringing computer
instruction to Buffalo public schools

......

..,~'=""Stall

The Buffalo Board of Education and
U/B have developed a new educational
1""9am which wtll provide city high
school teachers aroi students wllh basic
computer programmlhg Instruction and
also Integrate computers Into almost
evey area of learning In the high schools.
The program, which school and U/B
repreoentatives have worked on for pwre
than a year, wtll begin this month. In·
strumental In its aavelopment were
members of the Community Action
Organization's Educational Task Force,
headed by Florence Baugh, president of
the Bullllio Board of Education .
''This program '!'ill provide lm·
measurable assistance to teachers In the
claaroom," Mrs. Baugh said at a press
conference introdudng _the joint venture
which was held Aug. 28. "The Introduction of a computer system Into the
presentations of
teaching areas wtll
play a valuable role In assisting teachers
to present matertal to students."

Housing could
have used
500 more beds
The University could have used an additional 530 dormitory spaces this
semP.ster, Housing Director Madison
Boyce estimated in late August, just as
the residence halls were about to open
their doors for the fall.
Boyce said that by early summer the
5 ,000 available beds had all been spoken
for (and deposits paid on them) .
The 530 person "overflow" can be
divided Into 'three groups:
180 students are being temporarily
tripled in double rooms and quadrupled
In three-person rooms , in antldpation of
a normal number of no-shows.
Then there are students new ·to the
- --u,niv·ersllllr thls fiill. w ose liomes are
radius of the campus;

they were automatically excluded from
any consideration at aU for dorm space.

an

A -aJor co-ualty commitment
U/B President Robert L. Ketter feels
the new ~m Is "a primary example
of the manner in which the University can
extend Itself to the cort
nity In an effective and cooperative ver.ture.
"We don't know of any other such
wide commitment by a leading university
to a major school system anywhere In the
country," Ketter oaid.
Baugh noted that the cost of the program-approximately $50,000 for the
purchase and rental of equipment-Is "a
minimum amount for a program that will
have value far beyond Its worth ."
Mlaorltleo aucl w o - are apeclal

w-.
A prime objective of the new progtam,
Dr. Walter Madntyre, director of University Computing Services who led tts

development, pointed out, Is to provide
Buffalo high school students, particularly
minority students and women , with experience In using computers before they
leave high school.
"An Increasing number of suburban
school dlstJicts and other etty school
systems are providing such Instruction,"
Madntyre said. "We hope this program
might help develop an Interest In
engineering and the natural sdences
among groups of students who otherwise
would not choose mathematicaUyorlented courses of study.
"There are few major universities that
have made a whole-hearted attempt to
contribute to a large school system such
as Buffalo's," Madntyre continued. "This
program wtll be of ~eat benefit to the
schools and ultimately to the University,
since many of our students come from
the Buffalo schools. These freshmen
entering U/ B wtll have a certain level of
competence in using computers. ••

Bea..U.

Kene~Jttrton

baft direct

llool&lt;-ape

An average of six or seven microcomputers have been purchased by the Board
of Education for every city high
ochool-except Bennett and Kensington .
In each of those two schools, 10 comp-. terminals which Interact wtth U/B's
CYBER 173 have been Installed .
Two different applications of computers 1ft involved In the new program,
Macintyre explained.
The lint Is the training of teachers In
the elementary BASIC computer
language. More than 300 teachers are
be9nnlng this training, which Involves
eight houn of lnltruc:tion et U/B's Computing Center, this month. A "very enth.-" of about 20 teachers
compldod the c:ouroe during the sum·
mer, Macintyre said.
After complettng the training, teachers
will be able to Instruct students In BASIC

~. more unique , application

will involve c:ompuWn In the teaching of
jull about subject In the high school

cunlculum, indudlng non-moth-relll!led
oubjec:lo IIICh .. opeang and hlolory.
~!)In and hlo staff have deveiDI&gt;ed
two computer ~mo. r1dher ol'lllllll:h

David Murphy, left, of Unlwnlty Computing Servlcea, demonatnlta thecomputer program for the Bulfalo public hlgti ac:boolo to Florence Baugh,
praldent of the Buffalo Board of Educadoo. Looldng oo arc (from left) Wllltu
Madntyre, director of Computing Servlcea who cllreeted the development of
the PI&lt;!S"•m. Butralo School Superintendent Eugene Reville, and U /8 Praldent R'obert L Kettu.
requires a computer language, In which
pulers don't "teach" students, but merely
teachers can develop their own "teaching drill them.
modules" for students.
"We still need teachers," he said.
These "teaching modules" are simply
In addition to providing a method of Inlessons programmed Into a data !Ue,
struction, the iniroduction of compul&lt;mi
either U/B's central computer or a
Into the schools perlorms another tunclion that Is becoming frfcreaslngly lmporcassette lzlpe for the micro-computers.
tan!: helpinll students overcome the
Students using the modules sit at the terpsychological barrier of working with
minal and "mlk" to the computer through
a keyboard. Questions flash on the termachines.
mlhah video screen . The student types
"More and more, the abUity to use a
In his or her respo~s. Teachers can
computer In the math and sdence profesaUow students to make any number of
slons Is becoming an absolute," Madnmlstakes before the computer flashes the
lyre said . " We're using applied
correct answer on the screen and moves
psychology here. The more the students
use the computers, the less Inhibited thl!y
to the next question.
When the lesson Is over, the computer
will be."
tells the student how many correct
A year'• wolk
answers were given and how long it took
The idea of introdudng computer prohim or her to complete the lesson .
grams Into the public schools was born
Students at Bennett and Kensington
over
a year ago at a sdentifk: career day
(which wtll have access to U/ B's central
for minority students sponsored by U/ B
computer) will be able to use a greater
and
the
Community Action Organization.
number of computer languages and proSeveral members of Dr. Madntyre's staff
grams.
• workshop then on comconducted
Orientation sessions for teachers to
puting careers at which they set up a t~r­
learn how to develop the modules are
mlnal for demonstrations to the students.
also beginning In September. Different
"The kids were yery , very enthuslorientations will be offered for each
~. " Madntyre remembers. "Some
teaching dlsclpllne by University staff.
stayed through three sessions. We saw
The Faculty of Educational Studies wtll be
how eagerly chUdren can soak up this sort
deeply Involved In this orientation proof expemmce.
gram .
"We know that a whole section of
Old-faabloned vtrtuea
academic life-the mathematical sdences
Ironically, thl$ modern human /
and englneering-tradltionaDy has not
machine Interaction may lead to the
been attractive to minority students and
return of some "old-fashioned virtues,"
women," he said. " We must start in the
· Madntyre believes.
schools to teach how easy ft Is In fact to
"The program makes the student very
use computers in many different ways."
careful," he explains. "It Imposes on the
"This program Is indicative of this
Jtudent a level of discipline teachers don't
University's commitment to helping
often use anymore. The computer is ab-develop a larger pool of roinorlty students
solutely heartless. If you \l've the wrong
with academic Interests In engineering
answer, It will teD you so.'
and the natural sdences," Ketter said.
He added that such sub)ects as spelling
" The cooperation of the Buffalo
and history, where nothing will substitute
School
Boa rd
and
school
for rote memory, can be made more in·
superintendent's office with the Universiteresting to students wtth the use of comty has been exemplary, and we look forward to the continuation of this strong
pu~~ has been a period In the relationship," he added.
schools In which subjects such as spelling
Serving on the committee to develop
just haven't been taught anymore. The
the program were; Dr. Madn!F,; Mrs.
students don't like the lessons and the
Baugh; Dr. John Boot of U/B s School
teachers don't like teaching them," he
of Management; Dr. Hlnrlch Martens of
said:
the DePartment of Electrlcal Er&gt;9neerlng;
Dr. James Mciver of the Department of
Chemistry; Dr. Eugene Reville, Buffalo
Good
·
'obllllaa'
"But l think we can gel the students'
school superintend"!'!; Joseph Murray,
imagination stimulated If the computer . assodate superintendent; and Susan
c1rt1s the stUdent, say, In opclllng. At a
R~, director of mathematical Instructime when the numbers of teaching aides· tion for the Buffalo school system.
In the achoolt are being cut because of
This commltlee edvlsed the Board of
tight budgets, l'o conceivable that the
Education on the choice of equipment to
cornpulen can taka over some of these
be purchased, and leased and supervised
drtlllng functions .•
,~lopm"'!' ,'*:tfe._w~.... -~
---Mac1r1t9re qolddy added ttmt the com- .~
grams.

Approximately 250 Individuals in this
category have aSked to be placed on a
walttng list for any space that might tum
up.
.
Finally, there are another 100 out-of- .
towners who have signed up to wait
Almost without exception , Boyce said,
these are individuals accepted to the
Unlversily late In the summer, or students
who did not bother to apply fO&lt; residence
- haD space In the prescribed manner.
Boyce emphasized that the tripling and
quadrupling are temporary, and expressed hope that some local people can be
accommodated after about a month . By
then , the 100 out-of-towners on the
walttng list will undoubtedly have settled
Into other local accommodations which
they will not be able to move out of at a
moment's notice, he suggested.

Smooth oltuatlon

The housing director said that, as far as

his office Is concerned, the campus hous-

Ing situation Is running smoothly this fall.
There was no great crush or pank:. The
in-t.o wn students who couldn't be accommodated already have places to stay, and
the out-of-towners on the waiting list
knew they could not be. accomfnodatea
before they came here.
Approximately 100 beds were added
to the residence hall capacity this
serriester as a result of the move of
departmental offices out of Building 6 in
Spaulding Quadrangle at Ellicott.
The dorms offic ially opened
September 1 at noon, but some 500
students were settled In even before then
- students In Medicine, Dentistry and
Law whose semesters began efrlier thao
the res! of the University, students who
are employees of the Housing Office
(f{As, etc.), and others who hold student
government posts.
Off-Campus HouaiDg
Meanwhile, business has been boomIng at the Off-Campus Housing office in
Squire Hall. Evelyn Burgess, a fuU-tlme
employee there, estimated that about 65
people a day have been serviced since
mid-July. Durfng late spring and early
summer, the office averaged about 40
people daUy:
Because of the amount of print and
other media advertising wed by the office
this year, It has been able to maintain
about 200 listings of apartments, rooms
and efflclendes located In Buffalo and
surrounding areas. According to BwQess,
rooms In private homes rent anywhere
from $20 to $50 a week while flats go
from abdf.t $150 aU the way up to $400 a
month.
Burgess relayed that students are often
forced to compete with other applicants
when they apartment hunt. A landlord, d
he has an unusually weD-kept apartment
for rent , may decide to Interview several
students before choosing one as a tenant.
Students complain that they do not like
"being put on hold," Burgess noted.
They also get miffed If landlords do not
check back with the office after renting to
cancel their listing. This makes for unnecessary phone calls or vlslto.
When asked for advice on how to
_.unent hunt, Burgess tells students to
view the _,unent and neighborhood
during the day and • n In early evenIng. Looking for proximity to drugstores,
supermarkets and laundromets Is akq lmpoortant.
·' ~ ·· .-.. ·, -.,. .,., ,.,
-·· 1

�.·
s.p..,.... 13, 1979

II

1

K__., eampas willa ·

&amp;qJ&amp; mvlew,_

but there's no more 'term' Of office
The new rules
..
.
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locolc-d...S . . . . -. - -.

..... Councl .. "'"a...- wllh any ....
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n..a....-...slhopoooiclont-.Jd
canlorlboutlho..t."•-clocunionl. ...s
"'"a...-. ........ wllh"'" ............

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Far """" tlwt • ~. lj&gt;eculatlon had
.,_, rtfe, both on 8nd olf c:ampus, eboul
"What the l'lalclent ~do. Lilli opmg,
the &amp;rlll&gt;lo E-.r ,.._ ~ &amp;ont
J&gt;lll8 -....... ~ the! Kelter
was looking far • houoe In the ..bulbs
end woald oot be M8ldng eno4her tam .
Thlo Augus~: 18, the c--~
opeculatecl K - would opt to conllnue
In alllce, nottna "'"' he had ' - " buoy
"buiddng ~e wents to llllly on to
- Amlient
• the Courter lllld.
Courier reporter Nick Meeon quoted
Joel~. pnlicMnt ol the Student
A.oc:ldon, H aylng that U/B otudents
hope SUNY CMncdar Clifton Whorton
~ Influence Kebr not to run.
~......... St8te ol the Unlvenlly ed·
dna, ochedulecl for Belrd Point on
Septemb. 16, would likely be the place
Ill which Kelter would divulge his decillion, the c - opeculated.

-·---

. . - - - "'"sutfY -

·
who . . . . . tho
Olonoolao'• Eod&gt; ...
_ _ _ ................ tolllo

.. - - -

- t o devolop. dlodulob ....... to lndudo-- o n d - wllh ampul .,...ann~~ .,., ........ anful.-ncnt

"No one Is perfect, end Dr. Kettu has ·
had his problems, attributable In large
part to the attacks made on him by
students. Two yean ego. sludent aosoda·
lions pe_.t raolutlons of 'no con·
fldenc:e' In his leader$hlp, end there WIS
division among the faculty over his
JlewMdshlp. But tha college council geve
Dr. Ketter a good grade. He certainly has
demons~nted that he cen fight hard for
the University, Including the completion

_ _ .,.. _ _ _ to_
~·-----~--·
_""""""*~~·

~-four-ollha­

""*"-101ol2 ....................
-.dy ollha . . - - gulclolnoo -

dono . . . . -

"' . .

sutfY- ol T - to c o n e - .

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

- - ......... -

unclor . .

old

Tho gulclolnoo - - _...., II¥ •
Cb.nc:dot's Committee on Pr.klcntlal
Rcvlowchondlo¥Pnoldont-W. Mac·
Vllllo "'"'" Calo!lo .. ~ ond Including.
Wollon Brown .af.Jt&gt;o Caloilo ot

~-

O'Loory"'"'" ~

Ccdor .. Aloony. ond St.oo;t -

"'

G.-, Communlly Calo!lo.

Tbe
"Co.ter'
..._ 28,
.. -Ex·
Tuaday,
Auguot
the Courier

laid that the ennounc:ement that
Ketter wents to continue In olllce "Is

prao

heartening MWS.
"We know ol no good ruson why a
change should be made, end he should
receive • moot favorable conolderatlon
&amp;om the State UniYenlly ol N- York
(SUNY) Board ofT~;" an editorial
ln,~PfP!r,,fjdd .,tl'~ '· . , •. ,
n

•ncCouiierconnu

:

•. ,.._~~-~

•

"Over-all, his accomplishments In serv·
lng under various chancellors and gover·
non outweigh his shortcomings, end now
that he has expn!lt4ld a wish to continue
as president, we hope that he wiD be per·
mltted to do so."
1he President's seH-evaluetion ol his
accomplishments In office Is due
sometime this month, and wiD be printed
In Hs entirety In the Re~.

periodicals by 98.8% during the same
period. Mention ls"mede ol the need dur·
lng 1978-79 to dltcontlnue suboaiptlons

\0 over 225 joumels and periodicals.
"The Request also ecldresaes the
gel\efally Inadequate support provided
for acquisitions during the 70's, a level ol
support which has mede H lmpooolble for
the University Ubrarles to approech the
level ol collection building deemed
mlnlmal by such estlmetlons as the
Voight Formula, a formula which as the
report Indicates, was wed by the State
University In preparing the supplemental

bu~. ~ publication celled the
staffing needs situation "fruslrallng": "for
without adequate staff, oervlce must In·
variably ·suffer, ,..nderlng the collec:tions
less accessible no matter how good they

......·

WATCH WHERE YOU PARK

Perldootl

In .,... ........... lor the
t...dlcapped on aua..- lo .-tc:tecl to
whlc:la bariatl the Unlvenlly'11 of.
ldel Macllc8p perldntl eddr.er. Ap.
.........,. lor th- opecleJ ....,.ala, or
parklnt permlte, are
thrOOIIIh the Ollcc ol PIIWic

::r,::rv

Sal.ti, Blold Hall, 1749

~

~.......... ea-,ortheOf-

b

ol $ervic,. lor the HanAk FF I d,
149 Gooc1!1eu Hal, Mein sa-t.
Haaclleepped perlllat areao ere

:t:z

patrolled ad vlolaton wll be
•,

. •o

..... J t

"'

) • Jio~ ;

l,.t'.'•1

Norma L. Haas, e U/B ....,aoy. for
29 yun, lo rwtlring this month: In moot
recent yean, Mn. Haas has
ecuUve ...-y to the eo.n- on
Flnandal Aid to Sludenlo 8lld • Ollce
Meneger · of clerlcel a.lf, IIUcldl
end CETA ~ at the
Office ol Flnandal Aid to Scudento. In eel·
dJtlon to ltlrll supeovlolon, she ' - had
rapon.tbllly far ovenNing the lJnlveal.
ty's Enclollled end Unendowed Scholar·
ohlps end Lo.ns Progown.
Norma Heas began ._ employment
with~ UniYenlly ol Buflelo In 1950, at
Mlllarcl Rllmore College, then loceted·on
Nlllgei-a Squan. In 1952, ohe came to
the ~ Sbeet Campus to work far the
VdmlnS EdiOCalional s.rvtce 011\ce". She

.......I••·
-;ac

_..nts

llludenlt •

v-. Adontn-

Library acquisitions are

1he Unlvenlty Is seeking a .35 per cent
lncreue In the Llbrarla' acquilltlon
budget In Ill prellmlnery 19110-81 budget
request, Sektldes Roy, director ol
U...., Jeported recently.
An ertlcle In the lJbrary Newt said,
howewr, that the~ staffing sltua·
lion which has "been eroded by 1~ FTEs
diulng the past yean doa not figure as a
priority" In the UIB requat.
1he Lbmrles had lllked for 7 addl·
tlonal FTEs to offset pNVIout loaes, to
pn&gt;VIde "adequate service In the expend·
ad Amhent fec:llllles," and to make up for
!Inc FTEs needed to operate the Metn
Sbeet end New Ridge La libraries which
opened lest year.
Being requested for acquisitions Is an
additional S394,710, along with an lnfla·
lion lncreue ol $152,000. This would
hl&lt;e the $1 ,521 ,704 1979-80 book·
buying budget to $2,068,604 In
19110-81. 1he lnaeeM Is - · the
lJbrary NeUJa said, "'f the Ubraries ere to
SU&lt;Xalfully ..pport the muklple programs al SUNY/ Buffalo end continue to
function as a ~ and 11111111 bary
resource."
Commented the lJbrary News,
" It Is heartening to note the UnlvcrsltY.'s
recognition ol MVeral ol the dlfllcultles
which have In recent yean had con·
liderable edveM effects on the Lherla'
acqulsltlonl lXO!P"'· 1he Prcllrntnay
Budget Requat diocuJMt In tome length
the effects o/ .tnllatlon In the publishing
field, lnftatlon which has lnaealed the
~ ol hard ~ and technical )?ooks
bY~t ... stnce 19,4 'and' ale'~·';"

-

·is retiring

acted H en edvllor to end was 1a1oon to the

of the new }unhent Campus.

Kd8'•Just !Inc deyo later, on August 21,
getting top budget priority
Kelter looued the following statement to
the cempus:
"During the past tcveral months, at
their request, I have ~ with meny
from the University community member~ ol the Unlvcnlly Council,
alumril, faculty end IIIII! member$,
students, end~ ol the Foundation.
I also ~ the Buffalo lituellon with
a number ol the leg(slotars &amp;om Walan
New York. Lut Mondey, August 13, I
met with Ct-.oelor Wharton. Sued
upon al ol " - consultetlons, as well as
others, Chancellor Wharton end I agree
that there should be cerTied out this com·
lng fal the review ol the cempua that Is
required by the Boenl of TNJtea. It Is
antldpatecl that the visit ol the panel of
oulllde praldents wiD take place In late
Seplember or October and that the entire
revieW proc:aa wiD be complebld by the
middle ol the fell semeater."
The Spearum rushed out an Extra.
The Neun lllld "the action apparently
llgneio a dedolon by Dr. Kettei"to oeek
another tmn." ll&gt;ere was no further af.
flclal comment.

Norma Haas

.,ll'o.l

. ( . : _ _.;I

lslrallon In relation to IIICUrlng beMflts for

these students.
As ..-....· educetlonlll beneflb ..,..
the fon!IWlners to todey's ...-ve flnan..
dal eld PI'C9VI'I, H w• qW.. natural for
MIS. Heas to be lnvolwd In the eslilb8ohment ol flnendal eld counoellng at the Unlvenlly. One ol t.. prlnwy
tasks wes to publicize flnenclal .-..c.
prt9BIIIS, to ruch out to proopectlve
benelidarles, through p8l1ldpatlon In college dey end night .......... .,._..
mental workshops, end community
dlocusslons.
Mis. Heas has served for oomc time •
executive secretary end ex·offlclo
member ol the Unlwnlly Anenclel Aid
Committee. For oev..r yean, ohe
directed the United Fund ceft1)8ignl
either as chalnnen or c:o-chalnnM.
Norma end t.. husbend, Jeck, ere
tailing up resldenoe In Flortda.

Dental juniors
rank high
The junior claos et the School ol
Denllstty has - - . to be proud this
week-they scored In the top five per
cent nationally on Part I ol the National
Dental Boull Examination .
•
• Although we don't know the group
scores of the ott.. 59 dental ochools'
juniors, H would be safe to IISIUme If
we're In the top five per cent we're one ol
the top three In the nation," lllld Dr.
William F._,., dean ol Denllstty.
He noted that 90 per cent ol the junior
claos scored above the national average
ol 85 on the one-day, four·part e:xern
and that 60 per cent of the U/ B students
Individually had scores ol 90 or higher.
1he U/B claos' total a - - In the four
subjoct....,.. wes 90.27, F . _ said.
"This year's junior duo has made the
best ohowlng In the hlstoty of our School
ol Denllllry on Pert I of the cxamina·
lion," he edcled. "Their ocor• not only
reflects - • on them but also on the
faculty memben.• 1he exam deals with
anatomical oclences; biochcmlstly/phys-

=·'?#~(~~:,:. ~":

_.J

�~-

Playday nets $2,000
H...,... were on hllnd for the Dental School'• 'United Wav Pia~,'
Satard.y, partlc:lpatlnstiD uc:k recn, a roller akate clabv, pogo atlck boun·

dna• ....tocher-- A buSot wu aerwcl under a tent In the Farber ParkIng Lot. A unique ldck4 for the aemater and for the 1979 campus United
W.y Drtw. Some $2,000 waa ralaed for charftv. .

.

Several new appointinents are announced

s.-

1be fo1J9wing appointments and reappointments were announced since the
last Issue of the
Reporter.
K*h R. .lo"- has been named
director of Credit-Free Programs In the
Division of Continuing Education, succeeding Richard L. F1elocher who has
taken a similar post at West Virginia
University. Johnson has been . - t to
the dean of Mlllard FWmore College for
the past 11 years.
Dr. Gerald M. Goldhaber Is serving a
tine-yew term as chairman of the
Department of Communication, from
September 1 of this year, to August 31 ,
1982. Goldhaber has been an atOOCiale
podeuor of communication here Iince
1974. A former vice poaident of the International CommunicatioN Association,
he Is author of oeveral books In the field,
including the first college text on
mganlzational communication and a new
work, Information Stratcglea, New

Pathwav•

to

Corporate Power.

Goldhaber Is president of McLuhan,
Goldhaber and W!aams, Inc., a consulting firm $peclallzlng In polling and
marketing raearch oervlces for executives In politics, induslry and the
entertainment arls.
Dr. Al&gt;at T. St....,....., k ., a professor of anthropology, Is the new chairman of that department lor a three-year
term starting September 1 . He has been
on the faculty for 13 years oervlng In a
number of administrative posts In addition to teaching and research. His ten
grant awards have Included funds for
studies of phenomena as diverse as how
the Alonquin Indians of North Canada
adapt to cold and how stature deter·
mined behavior In colonial America. 1be
latter Investigation, just underway, is to
be based on recently discovered military

records dating from 1757 to 1781.
Dr. Saul~ has been reappointed
chairman of the Department of lbeatre
lor three years. Elkin, a professor of
theatre and the director of the Center for
lbeatre Reoearch, carne to the University
In 1969. He was awarded a Chancellor's
Award for Excellence In Teaching In
1973, and is best known lor bringing Innovative dramatic productions to the
general public, through the Center lor
Theatre Research and his Shakespeare In
the Park series.
Dr. Wan-Y0119 Chon, a professor of
engineering who served as acting director
of the Nuclear Science Technology Facility for the past year, has been appointed
fuD-fledged d.irectoc of that unit. A native
of Korea, Chon taught at McGill University In Montreal before joining U/B In
1967 . Besides being responsible for
reoearch at the Nuclear Facility, Chon is
dtrectlng one of the largest nuclear safety
reoearch effocts on an American university campus: a study of the thermohydraulic mechanisms Involved In advanced emeigency coce cooHng systems
lex nuclear reactocs.
Dr.
Bandera. professor of
Spanish, has been named director of the
Program In Comparative Uterature. This
unH of the Faculty of Arts and Letters is
designed to provide an opportUnity for
cooperation among related branches of

c-eo

the

humanities, such as modem

languages, classics and the like. Bandera
joined U/ B In 1969, coming here from a
faculty post at Coenen.
Dr. Robert E. Mates will liead
Mechanical Engineering for a three-year
term starting this semester. In his 17 years
here , Mates has fulfilled several
University-wide responsibilities, In addition to deve loping a natlonally~~cogn i zed

research

program

I:\nn· ..rufi ltlt)!.
l \ S.

Pu ~ol ~c

l't\lll

Ruff:alu, N.Y.
Permit: Nu . .l ll

in

oiOengi"""'ng. He served as chairman of
his department once before, In 1967-70,
and has been a member of tlui Presldenh
Review Boord. He Is one of six senior Investigators
look ing
at
the
" Pathophysiology of Cardiopulmonary
Dysfunction" under a flve-yew $1 .75
million grant from the National Heart and
Lung Institute.
Dr. Om P. Baht wtll be chairman of
the Department of Biological Sciences for
a second three-year term, ending August
31 , 1982. BahTs years of "leadership
have been marked by continuing
academic development of the department," President Ketter sold In announcIng the reappointment.
Dr. J. Biuce Frando has beeh named
director of Undergraduate Educational
Studies In the Faculty of Educational
Studies. In this position, he wiD exercise
admlnlstrative responsi&gt;illty lor programs
In teacher education and the University
learning Center.
Dr. Anttl Talvltle will chair the Department of Civil Engineering for a three-~
term, ending August 31 , 1982. Talville is
a significant contributor to the development of transportation systems analysis.
Transportation engineering has become
one of the chief areas of research
spectallzatlon and external funding In the
Faculty of Engineering and Applied
Sciences.
Dr. Warren H . Thomas is serving
another three-year term as head of the
Department ol Industrial Engineering,
beginning this semester. Recognized by
SUNY as a Distinguished TeaChing Professor, Thomas Is the developer of the
U/ B Human Factors laboratory.
Dr. C.P. Yu is acting chairman of the
Engineering Science Department for the
laD semester. A fun professor In that
department and In Electrical Engineering,
he joined U/ B In 1964 .
Leo Rlcbardoon, former U/ B basketbaD coach who most recently has served
as an Intern In the Office of Public Affairs
and the Presklenrs Ofllce, joined the staff
of the Office of Affirmative Action and
Human Relations on August 27 as a
human rela)ions cpordinat6r. Hi,s duties

will include developing projects and programs to enhance_ Inter-relationships

among students, employees, and units of
the University and, In particular, behwen
the University and the community, With
special attention to Metro Buffalo.
" - Nub. - n t vice president
for affirmative action and human
resources, has resigned from that post,
but wiD remain i!WM-posttlon until a successor Is named.
Clllfenl B. WU.O. hes been appointed as manager of the Office of
Student Accounts, replacing Mr. William
H. Calhoun who retired eader this summer. Wilson has been wtth U/B Iince
1968 oervlng In aeveral Houling administrative capacities, including head
resident, assistant director and IIIIOCiale
dtrectoc. In September 1978, he became
business coon:linatoc for the Educational
Opportunity Center.
Since graduating from U/B in 1969
wtth a muter's In counselor education
and throughout his employment here, ·he
has been involved In many ....,.ell of
Untvenlty oervlce, including the Profes- '
sional Staff Senate where he oerved as
senator, member of the Executive Committee and chairman.

Harry''·

Appointment of Dr.
Sukz as
dean oj, -t he School of Health Related
Professions has been recommended to
the SUNY Trustees by President Robert
L. Ketter.
A wldelv-known epidemiologist and
author, Sultz has oerved as acting chairman of the School of Medicine's Department of Social and Preventive Meiilclne
for three years.
He received world-wide notice three
years ago when he reported a possible
Hnk between mumps virus and juvenile
diabetes meDitus: More recently, he was
project Investigator on the most comprehensive study on nurse practitioners In
the nation and primary editor of Its
Uterarv outgrowth, Nurse Practluonero,

USA.
A native of Buffalo, Sultz has served as
a consultant to 20 local, state, and federal
heakh organizations.
.

�88.LY DNfCIIfO

Fall1979
Registration
Begins Monday,
September 1 7

~

27.,_ I/ I:IJfiO.IIOO ,.,../,..,_

-...co...,..
u.r. Cllrol Sllplwftaoon. , . .
...,.,,......~.,_._

Warblwlp~
l1tft .. ~ lo..., tho

-

a.~n

~begins~.
Sop1iom11er I 7.

lime.

~~~~/laaures

KCI/'IDAUJfl l'OOA
~/S.C.~

~

-'
111/onned
of,schedule
"
-- lhaltho
,._
.tho correct IIUinbor of per·

-{or_,_.._accom.

I :J/&amp;00-1101! p.m./lllaltl Sbwt

~

_ . , . _ _ """"""ofpeo·

CREA11VE DRAWI/'fO

pie. You IMIII'efill*r In peraon 01' by
phone (I( 111ft II no 1ft). AI that lime

~/Sopt.~

16/:J:00-5:00 p.m./Alnlwnt

c....,....

___

-""',_-with~ In·

~17'/J

Leadttr. Joe ,.,_ Flacher, DlrrdDr of
Oullur CnJ/1 Cen&amp;r, U/8.
Wotbllop Dac:rfptlon:
-Eicperlence llw jog of drawing/
-Become""""" of your aullve
abilities/
-Oel daJdDplng your sldiiJ
You will ~ lni10duced 10 INuk design
lheoly lllld ledlnlques which. UJIII ~
demO&lt;Uinlled by llw ,._,._ En~ will~ provldl!d to prac·
llce drawing • range of 5ubjecl
(potlralla, land5capes,
animals, cartoons)
UI6'V- medlalnducllt\g pencil.
cllarcoal.
crayoia.Illde.
,
.,_
provldl!d
tho flrsl

~ Sopeemba- 20

.. · gou will need 10
pcur:/lax wpplla (01' llw retrullnlng

(onrvdJon .udl .. ......... 01' "'f'P/Ies

,..,.-. ,..._Worm us llllhll -

If-"""""...,~ - . c e
,._
flOUT....,__

- l o • ,..,..... Aloe&gt;, rtal¥!Jusl/
~
IDishlo-

In

•••••••••
-Of'

phone
110 tlottDn Hall. AlniiOfsl, 636-2806

"""*""·

When:

will~

B:JO &amp;m. · 7:00p.m.

B:JO &amp;m.-5:00 p.m. Hottdllf/-Frld4j/

saolons.

···~·····
'*'**

QQILniYO
..,..,_.../&amp;pt. 26-0d.
:JI /1:00-9:00 p.m./Alnlwnt

,...., -.a lo all t h o -

_c.npua.

lllld

IMdorw _.lo llw ,..,.,

.............,. *""""'

Leadttr. l'la/ICfl - . , _ qullllng (01' 5 - . ,_ ~
qulllng lllld
10 tho Amhorot

twJp 1 0 " " " - poulble. SpedM.,.

bdOtwo

~ -11-.dedloHMJI

.........
- .'sprogr81f1.11wUFE
"""'dewloped"""

Quitters GCJ/Id.

WORI(SHQP.5 Adulooty
haw-.~

lnQ ....,art

CDtnmill«
hdp(u/ln offer·
10 tho pro-

wad..,_

, _. - - DIMna Der1talr.
Peg Dundon. /(-. Finger, LnM
Gild. ~ Gtodon, Scoa Helland.
Ann - · Urmtt Hodde, DorotJw
l'lartc!l Hannaros, DuMjl

Lewis,

Mllt:r,Gall~.­

~ Helen

WJ/anl.

lllld Slirphanie

ZucJoonn.n.

~~--~~~--~------~WotbllopDac:rfptlon:

StarUng out with tho INuk $111ches,

8ECJ111111110 KltiTIJIYO
. , _ . . / &amp; p t . 26-lfoo.Sbwt
:U/12.oOQ.I:OOp.m./Haln

end of the IDOlbhop. We will cflscr=
llw ·
-·--·
color
- , . of-··-.,_.,, ..._..._
-..~
~ lllld qul/tlng tecllnlqua.

,__,.,.,Ri
ta wa~~.erlllld.Josle
c.pu.n.. - both e..q&gt;e'tts Ill knllllng.

Astrology &amp; ·

ea...,....

Dt/al Stwla Khaba.
y..,.
- -

Leadttr. -

-'""'*'
Wod~Mop~

"Deudop . . _ , . . , - fllaiJor
{leJclbMfJ of~. roJitl {rom - .
derporand more M&amp;ud- of con·
~ lllroug/l- poelu1e,
btuthltrg l l l l d - - Bmg01' blanbt l l l l d - - /II1Jn(J
clolhlng.

KCINDAUI'fll'OOA
~/S.C.

27./foo.

15/6.oOQ.7100p.m.//lfat-~

See-

{or--...,.,.,.._

POLISH FOLK DNfCII'KJ
,......../S.C.~

:J0/7.00.- p.m./lllaltl Sbwt

c.npua.

w--.
lllonces,--_,.,_

Leadttr. .Jwna Hewlltlllld , _
both bdotv to tho While
•&amp;gle
Pet"f&lt;Kmlntl publc/j/ lllld tudJinf1
polkh (ole-.,.
,
Worbllap~
Folk dllnca are not . . . fun and
good~ ~~'"~~-"""'·-of
~- dou8cplnQ ptlde

In---,_,__

--tho

~-Include-.

lMnca

KnolroulW:. ahould-. ~
Pole&amp;
Pllrfic:lpanlo

......rmw:
-

-

01'

w~ Dac:rfptlon:

Lam how 10 kniL 7lw IDOlbhop will

EXPLORJ/'IO ART: VIEWIIYO
Al'fD DOI1'KJ
,.,..,...,~/Oct. 4-lfoo.

__ __J__
. _,_____
v...-ro

be • Leadrtf
,.., IMdln ,.._ nca:.ect If.- ,..,

......... 1/w,.._"""""_o(
1/w_...,__--.,.,,.,_
~

.,.

-~_.............__

tlw

,....,.. Md ....

¥.,au~,.... OTU•

(11ft..., a:tp6i:- . . ..-:am. ...... k conCiCIII'Ud,. LJFE

_,.,1/w __/_ ·--

,..,... ,.,.,., .r« ~

~Q)b(JIO-

4J6,2808).

8/7:00-!1:00 p.m./ / l f l l l n -

ea...,....

Leadttr. SlA/f ltubuciDr (rom tho An·

on-Skprogr8fft.
Wotbllop Dac:rfptlon:

o.ln. grul6~ of
. llrf "'""""*'s*'s.
-rewan1s
·
~
lllld tho personal

ofatUslk ._..,._~In
cooperallon wlllltho M-on-S/2 pn&gt;,.m of tho Nl&gt;tfghl -Knoic M

OalerJI, tho . . _ , . , ... Include

--~~2-D
lllld J-D) {rom tho 9allev's LlM1I Ser-

,..,.._.,_.__,.._
SiltY/_ _ _ , _ _ .. _

M:WlOfl . . . . . . of,... dfrw*~

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

c...,....

how
r=--==--==:......:=-_:::::...:=:t...::.:::..__ _-l palticlpanlo
desCn lllld .ahould
. . . , """"
. " quUt
by10tho

""" Ill Wtchlnfl boQinneto tho ~.
but"""" adJJanoed knlttBs may
C'Ot7le I( 111ft ,. sPa«~

...

wtofl'flddleU....-.,.

.. ~oflhllh

dance-~ In.,_ lllllw-

~

c:ob'• . . IIIXOTGJft-

- «(,..,...,.._- . . -

-ln.,--

. - . In -

10 . , lllolotJIIIIId .,.

~~-a&amp;obcln ­

using.
...new o f - -1/edtniquu.

Watbloop loc:at*&gt;n ~ COUifajt

of.(J(JMMVL.Gaiii:QJ 219.

F'rldl&gt;fla/Oct. 5-0ct. 26/ I :J0-3:00
p.m./Ainlwnt c....,....
Leader: Irene Frlti, member of tho
~ Federation of Aslrologe13,
hu IUI'1Ikn numerous 11/fldes lllld fec.
lw"ed on atro/ogJJ on radio and 7V
and llluarlous groups lllld colkges.
WOI'bllop Dactfptlon:
Gain an ~ of utrcJiogy,
4$ " UNIIJ of gU1Ing IN/ghliniO tho
penonallly• . . " too/10 ~ tho
p5!IChe. lllld u. of aelf-hdp.
Format will Include lectin, dfsaLt.
olon lllld open shM1ng.

JEWISH CULTURE 6CUS'I'OlfS: A/'f I!!XPOSIT70I'#
~11/Sopt. 24, Oct. • ,. 22,
lfoo. 5/T::JO-!I::JO p.m./202

~/Sopt.

:U·Dec.
14/Z::J0-4:00 p.m.//lfllln SU.I

ea...,....

Leader: Cllrol KamlnMt. ~

dance-.

Wotbllop- ~

.u.

p~- ~Introduced 10
dance ~ wllllllw &lt;mp/1.ull

(abn.,-

L.eader/COOtdfnalor. Rabbi '*-On

on--...,.,..._._ Each-20of.......,._ lllld UOIII'does

~. ., -'""'*' - -

. . - . . . . . . ... ....., wllllllme,

"""""lid. AmiMrwt c...-

-·

-----·....-.......---- -.,.ce-

- . . . . . Dac:rfptlon:

~

olon ...

~lo,....~~ ..
,__~

.

-----

�................

.-----------=-=---, • ,.,..,.,. .-tfloDirp.t ..,..,.

,..,..,.._
,..
-,.,_Mil

rltovltl ....

ID , . , . _ . . _.....,

1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - l ...... .., ........ lor,..IIIIIIZ
ALTI!RIIA1WE fORJIIS OF
f!1ll!ROY

manr11o. • ca1aM1ar t¥ ,_eer),
ponalll, elc.

W........,.l-.c,»&gt;cc.

1717,00.-.cJO ,..._,,..,..,.

---,.,.,
c...,....

COIICemetl-......,*.wt.,

, _ , Clwfa~ . . . . . . ...
,.,.,..., Sdonca. It .........

.wt

""""*"--·
..........

,_,..

~

WMIID IIIWtllllld. opalr more
~--......,-?
Thlo """*"""P ... proulde fiOU lrll'&lt;&gt;nMilon on l l t t ! - ' fomu of

Mil_..,.,_
'*"'"""-public .......

-~,.._,_

o(bulc , _ howl/wq/.e (ormed. - , . .... .

1111111.

ene1J111dloica. W£wll,..,_

lltt!~o(-~

...w
,__,
IDhd....,...,.-.................,_.,-ollwn.W£
-

_...,.., lndudlr1g

dfKua.........,.,

will .r.o
con·
amslnrelallonto"""'liit-"""'a
look 111 _,., ....., IIP(IIfMdra ID con·

-buldors 1111111.
""*"'llomoouonrn.
- - b y lndluldual
PRACTJCAL WAYS TO
COI'ISI!RVE f!1ll!ROY

~-

Wotbllap o.crfpCion:
11111 lhrouflh o( the basics, we

Nltt:r •

... get tlloliopb .m .. rile odds

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

o( eta.

-

plefjlng II!CIInlques

CHESS
~/S.C.

27-oct.
I 118:00-~p.m.l- . , _

c....,...

' - - : W0111ne Clrlldl. US.C.F. , _

a-Oub.

Wotbllap Dacrfpdon:
Lam the basics or lmproue II""'
sldl1 an. hour /nsbucllon perlodo will
be followed by 11/1 opllonal. 9111M

JOOOIIfO a.JffiC

Is•

.............,Octolw

Data,

c.mp;u.

The......,,_WOibllop o.crfpCion:

not /laue to
be. · - · ( o r fiOU ¥ fiOU...,.-

u lllroc'f1h CM'O{ul. C»ffMM'·

..m.. ,lnl/nlng pragram5, - .

-

~ and

r.fflt:*ncv o( II""' home

will be dlsl1fbf.lkd hour to applg ene~VII ·
_ . . . , lec:hnlques ....,. . . caulk·
lng, lnsulallon, etc.
wll also

(etWIJIII -

~-

1111 AClJ-1 tounuoment.

W"'*Map o.crfpCion:
Frisbee Is (or fun 1111111. .,att}l..eem the
basic throws;-lrnpt'Due fiOU' acx:uniCII
and style. lnslrucUon on aduanced
discuJorlc ~ will be proultJed
(or-~ pl.ofpl. Tum
~ Will be organlzled 1111111. plaged I{
tMn Is suffldml- lntetal.

RACQUI!1BAL/... FOR
BEOIIf/'tERS

bmdll&amp;. lrJ/WJI ,...,.,.uon. wann up
the relaUonshlp be·.

W..,......,•IS.C. Z6.()ct.

tweeri ~th and uerctse.

3/3:00-5:00 p.m.//llfatll -

--·

'~
- - : Tom HurlqJ, ·IIU'• . ·

w.

~,...,..o(~

-

other c:onoen&gt;allon lec:hnlques.
FCKmal will Include lecture. dlsaJ$.
slon and demonslraiJons.

W"'*Map
worlcsllop w/1 the m4Jor
sources of ltJ/WII, IJOlualnl fiOU wllh
~-help lechnlques (e.g .. taping
technlquu), and teach recognlllon o(
probltmS requtrlng lrealmenl by a

Finances .&amp;

doctor. For beginning and advanced

Fl/'tDiffO FUNDS FOR YOUR
RESEARCH
.
.,........,~

lllhle!DI IUlllh!fS. Format willlnclud•
leclure, slides, and demonstraUons.

9/3:00-5:00

PATTY CAKE

p.m.IAmlw'lt~

Leader: Shirley Sloul. Asslslanllo lh•
VIce Presldenl for R-.rch. has had

Tuaodejj/Septembcr 25/6:00-7:00

p.m.IH8Jn Su.t

years o( ~ worlclng wllh
grants and ...-.:h.
Wotbllop Dacrfpdon:

/lnanclal ~
General Wonnalion will be glum on

resourc:es -

how ID ldt:nllfll ..,..,.._ applg for
grants . . . . . , ...:p/anllllon o(
how to anwtge for lndluldual con·
sullarton on fundlltg (or rrsarch pro·
}eels through the o(flce o( the VIce
Presldt:nt (or Rereardt.

HONEY /IIIANAOEHEIYT
CEI'iTS AND l'fONCEI'iTS
Sat&amp;an~aMoiOct.

U 1111111.

Oct.

20/,:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.l/lfaln

-~

Lader: A . - Haded Banb, has
had 25 flU'S ~"' adu/1
economlco .OOC.Ilon Is
currenlly emplofjed . . . /'t&gt;andal.
~

W"'*Map Dacrfpdon:
Lam •

olmpl¥ltd,...,--

to
penon.oJ- f-"41 ~- An In·
formal. leatn-bfl-dolngllfJIX'»Ch to
~"""""'"!hal can_,., fiOU

---·-"""*-fiOU

how oHecUw ~can con·

"' the qUalljj o( flOW life. w.
Will - Ute Salle- Spend J\Qenda.

-

c.mp...
an ...,m.nced

l..ud£r. BIUy RyiJII, 15
paUy cake lnslruciDr.

GatnabdUr~o(the

role and ualue o( rrsarch within the
the community. Lam
where and how to find Worma/Jonal

UJ1/uers/lfl -

CAT'S

CRADLE

T-..,ls.,t.nber 25/8:00-9:00
p.m.IH8Jn Sltwt Campta
Leader: Bll/g RyiJII, pa/tiJ cake In·
stTUdDr who wanted to add a new
-

10 his repertoire.

Wotbllop Dacrlpllon:
Do fiOU gel .rude on the same old
repealing uarlattons of lhls stnng
game} Here 's your ch.tna! to up/ore
more lnleresUng uarlatlons and
various '6c:apes" which lead to new
uarlatlons. W• nuoy also up/ore a
few simple "string (igun3 ·· such as
the ·v.. bn&gt;om ", "Elffd Tower", and

''Jacob's L.add6.•
~SPORTS

INJURIES:
REqx:JNITIOI'I, PREVE/'1TIOI'I, TREA THEIYT

.,_.....,Oct. 2 - Oct.

'17:00-8:00 p.m./H8JnQiillpua
Ladera: Skphem RfiCIJM. H .D. and
Ph6llp C. Cu!JftDn. D.P.H .

W"'*Map Dacrfpdon:
RIJIII1ttiS-otlterlllhletac.nleatn
- t o IIUOit l q f u r l a . - ~
~: --!he OlnOWII o(

-

• tMr:U to' gd bade tiiiO lldlvlqj. .

~

u~ the

The

Worlcohop DacrlpUon:
Explore the "new giJIJ1eS • concep1 o(
non-compeUU.... fun. Partldpana w/H
team various pa111J cake lechnlques
and aocompanytng .songs 5UCh as
"Oh UU/e Play male • and ''Miss HIUfl
Hac". By the end o( the session par·
l/clpanls should be skilled enough 10
pa(flc/pale In a group "cake".

HIKING: A CALL TO
F/TI'tESS AND FUN
Wednadeii/Sept. 2617:00-,:00
p.m.IH8Jn SIIWt Campta.
Aloo oiJc - . t d.ata and lima
to be ,.,..,.,.., bjj pattldpant.o for
o{f-amp~U hlkao.
J..ead£r. Sal HutOUI, has belonged to
the FoolhJ/Is H/Jdng Oub for five
fl£l~FS and has lead hiking and
b«&lt;&lt;pacldng trips on the c.,...,....
Uon and AppaladUan Tra/1$.
Wotbhop Dacrfpdon:
H/Jdng 15 a wa11 of IJf•. • c:l1allenge,
and a ca/110 fltness (WL W• will
meet """" to discuss the basics o(
dofhJnQ and equ/pmenl. followed by
siK~or~,_

.. ....,.

places as the eon-tlon T,.., or
Hunlets Ctftl&lt; Parle. ~ upon
t h e , _ - - o( al&gt;llllil o(
WO&lt;bhop~. A l l l l e n-..,W£UIIIIcbcua ~

lng -

-

""

•' ' '

background "' plwslcal.and has laugh! Mndball. r.oqudball
and squash.

to 1nc:Juse CN tnlie.tge.

dlocuu -

111111 be

, _ , Ci.nld Hlnclclqj, o(
the 0/B F - Tum- ...,.,.of

about.jogg/nQ, Including equlpmenl.

u.llon.Lamhowto~llle

IbM""".....,.,.

,.,..,.,. at ............

1017ioo-IO:OO p.m./Amlw'lt

, _ , JiK:Jc · Asoodllle
Professor of Pftyolatl Educallon
Wotbllap DactfpUon:
Euetylhlng fiOU ever wanted to flnoW

-w-"*"' ~lefor years.

.....-.it con·

~CWesllllld.llma.
FRISBEE-

.

~-"'~
Sludles ,_ been follouJin(lan
to deal with

au paola and eslabllsll

~-Vk:ePreslden!o(UIB

-

CMtpua
'--:~C.....

15/'hOO--.cJOp.lfL/~

c...,...

, _ , Skw Slwluel. has been l'lall·
1ng Ill lite.............., lewl for 2 -!S

period.

~10ct.44d.

2517:0fHI:00p.lfLI

BACICCJNif#lfOIY
,.,.....,S.C.~

rur.s and develop·

priiCik:lng sldlls lhould. help

fiOU plajj and "'!/01/llle Bring II""' racq~t"llllld. dress ID play.
No prior knowledge o( the game 15

H ealth &amp;
Nutrition
FOOD FOR THE MORROW
AND TODAY
Tuac~eMa/Oct. 2 -ffoo.
613:30-5:00 p.m.IH8Jn &amp;~wet

eampu.

l.uder: Jean Sdwllz, Home
Econom/sl
Wotbllop DacrlpUon:
Ms. Sclwltz discusses the 1ntpottanoe
o( grains, ~- (lber foods
for be/16 nutrltlon the lmpllca·
t1ons o( nulrlllonal habiB on -w
resources and personal-· Lam
10 make -groin, JIOUI. 1111111.
q u i c k - -how to coot tWirl·
UonaUI/ wlthoul tne111. A free capfJ o(
the c:oolcqoo/c. FOOD FOR THE
MORROW AND TODAY, will be
given to aU pa111dpana. Riguu.uon
will be COfl/irrn..J. upon the pajpnml
o( one dollar (cash only, please) to
C&lt;&gt;Ve' food costs.
SEXUAUTY: FEEUNOS.
PHYSIOLOGY, AND HE/'I'S
AND WOHE/'I'S HEALTH

.,_.....,Oct.

2-ffoo.
I 316:»9:30 p.m.IH8Jn -

CAmpus
l..uder. Slwnv Ells, 1Im HorfsMv,
and Jodi Goodman. .,.. Counodlng
Direclots Ill rile Se.walllu Educallon
Cenler, U/8.

W"'*Map ~
Here Is~ dwtoe 1D become beiJ6
"lnlorrn«fibout ~.nil

�~._coo( human-~-

lnc:idlrW........, _ _

and.........,.._ We ... - -'&gt;out
- - (eelqp a n d , _ . """"

_.,., o( ~on the
_..,-~of~-

-

-r-wa,
- --.a_,.,._for11'01.--.-.-..s
_,..,.,_, -..........,,
-'&gt;oulbltlh con-

and

Ollwr !Opb. SatbfJJ JIOUT
-arixallll
- g e l the dwtt:e to
dloaao -.alii/ In an Wonnal. open
~-

STOP SlfOICII'IO CI./I'IIC

,..,.,.,.,.,S.C. t..,,

,.,...,,

~st

T

24, .M, 27

~,...........,/Od.2-3

........... Wst h"/Od. I and
JO/#IWit acr.t CMipu
Thlo ptognm ,. bmg coot"•

~

- b t l c - Krauss-Ezzo o(

the Anwncan ~ .soa.q,.
-......~
Want liD IIIDp
Hete's hdp.

.....,..,.,?

a.-_.,..,., {fms a n d - -

U1hti--

... be..- ... ,....- becornte
o(
ll"",,.,.,a.
UlhtiiiO'I"*Iltoqull..
loowto

~-~the­
to~- The bders o( the program are
who ""'{lllflllillr
t h e , _ o( I1JI*w to qui!
... be..,..,.,_ to

u.-

~-

SORVIVAL FOR 7HE
SPeCIAL DlE'IER
~/Od.J-Od.

3017:30-J:OO p.m. I~
~

~ .su-.n. Grossman, R.D. ,
M.P.H., Ia IDit1t !he Erie Counll/
Dopanmont o( Hulth.

WOibMp~

Llulng on a prex:rtba1 diet can mean
~your lfe &gt;fllle. L.eam loow to
lnll!f1r* JIOUT - with JIOUT dally
11/e. Ouercome fun, reolstances, or
unhappiness usoc:l4led with follow·
lng a 6p«faa dJeL L.eam to adapt
meal p/4nnlnQ and to CCJP#' with
ordetft1g In ratauranls. 1're1Ja1bed
diets cooered will Include weight con-

COMEDY SHOWCASE

1'1uuada!1•10ct.

11·/'loo.
1/7:00-1:30 p.m.//lfaln Straet
Campus

•

Leltder: Joel Napach. /uu gollen his
ad WgeiMr In preulous comedy

worlcshops.

Wolbhop DacrlpUon:
Have you euet" seen an act on TV and

though! !o yoursel{, "I could do beUer
than !hal7 /-!ere Is your ~ to
trol, -~. hypoglycemiJI, and
(lnd ouL Whether you haue been savhypertmslon (eilh6 !he patflclpanL or
Ing
up tnalDial (or years or wan1 to
a {arn/ljj mDnber shoold aurently be
begin lmproolslng, get your ad
on a ptQCrlbed diet {or one o{ the
WgeiMr and show u off, Gel feed·
proc:ed/ng).
1 - - ; = - - : - - - - - - = - - - - - - j back and Ups from a Uue audience.

MIME
t------"''----"---""'---;----j 1'luuada!l•ls.pt. 24 -Oct.
417:30-1:00 p.m.l/lfaln-

BLACK AIID WHITE

PHOTO PROCESSif'IO:
~ls.pt. 2!J.Oct.
3016:00-J::JO p.m.//lfaln Sllwt
Campus
~ Jarna D!VInoenzo, photo
buff with tuchlng ~ and
Bud4l/ Korolkln, another photo buff
wl!h opeclal. printing oHL

WOibMp Dacrfptloft:
L.eam bale deudopmenl and prlnllng
~(or tuck and U1hlk (IJm. as
well .. op«::aa ~ In the c:ameno
a n d - . p~ mus!
haue '~!"'US to • .,.,..,.. ( - than
• 110 pocket. l!IP&lt;) and pt'OUide !heir
own 11m a n d -· Reglstrallon Is
be~ upon
P41/f-.t o( 15.00 (c:aslt onl&amp;t./IID
cowr the coot chernlcM. The(«
lncluda ,_,.,.,.., In the U/8

,_and ...

o.b-of

- t o !he
uae o( 1!11! pariiTqom /'1 fddl!lqn
to ,

l'ttotD

"""*""""limo..

'.

Campus
~ Josq&gt;h Gold/ield, /uu sludled
mime with e;q&gt;efls and leaches mime
(or !he Theakr DeparfrrNmt.

Wotbllop DacrlpUon:
L.eam !he buk !echnlqua and gain a
sense o{ !he playfulness o{ mime and
pan10m1tne. We will cover .some o{
the buk llluolotu such as the WaU
and Pulling a Rope and get Into some
trnprovlsa!lon, and Will discuss !he

underlying prlnclplu (enchanlmml,

lens/oil. and ilhJslon) D( corporal
mime. Form/Jl will Include lecture.
d&amp;cussion and demonslra!lon,

PU. Y READIIYO

,..,.,.,.,..,S.C.

27:-/'loo.
I!J/2:00-4:00 p.m.//lfabt-

~

~

Liz Edotrt. Ia aluchlng

(dow In !he Theakr Dopanmont
/uu a&lt;Jied In - • plags.

and

WOibMp~

L.eam to rud ,..,. aloud
UJitltouf~""'--

. ,.

. • "ruiillv .a~ou~tt ~...,. gaCR.

•

�....................
,...,.,
.........................
.,.....
.................
...._.,.,...,....,
....... =:rJ!'.:..

..-...: IIM8MGE I'Oit . • . '· ~ ,;..; .................. , ['
~A_,.

P1B.1C IIBA1JDflll A
MIIBt I'Oit,. fllt8X
•

.,.,...,.,....,,.,..,.
~lN)d.

....

~

,._.,Nile,.._,.H.IJ.A.,
far PRC

~ ...._,~

, _ . , T.....,,

Moo,._ far

c..llpM ea.,.o.R-u Smllll, Dhcllor o( ~
Nile~

Sen*a.

,.._F...

HmaUI

Hedblc.Mr

a..ta Hulrlu. Dhcllor o( o-lcp"""'-NIII:~ a-....,
CNiedc--

y"""'

,....,.......,... ....,... .
_...,
,.,.,.....
,_.
.........""""
...... ,.., .. ,...

.~To-~

-. ...
__,_ ..,.....,.
.....,..._a...,...._..,
.............
................
,..,._.,.
........
'I.....,..._...
f
_...,11M. .......
......
,..........,.,_.
-·
.................
,.._
.....
,....,.,..,.
-part.,............_,__.., .,.,.... ... - - -

. . . . . . . .- - - - -

a...a..r..-..a.-. ...........

-~.,-·

...... lit ................ _

Zl!lf NfD

J!J/. . . .

c::..op.

Daft .. , . . , _ 11&gt;

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

~

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

~---*·
-.··--~Mil
,_
by
,..,..,...,...
on.,.-·
a..,
•
......, IMfl or-.e..ro(,.......,

-......

..............u

.. ,__..,_who
_,,.,,.,.,.
....... ,.,....,., ...... .........,
,_,.,........of'·
,....,.,...-, of--._._
~""

~....-

,.,

-lite.....,.._.,--,..., . .

DDIYSTI1'YIIfO THE
LIMARY l!XPf!IU1!1fCE

............ o( _ . . . , ...,.,.,.,.,. ,

- . , . . ..... llw

_

...--.~

~10ci.4MII~

c....,.

1117~~p.m./Ainltlnt

...,_,.., you .,.. """"' ~... lite ......

-llw~---llo(

""'*

rdllllons .... pro(aalon. """'

u.s. IOcY&amp;/. -

.. ..,__"""'to lJ'Itl

public

~of flOUT~
lltrou(lllllte , _ o ( - - public
rdllllons. Fomwdlrtdudt~

,__, Oommllllel'mo!l. IWf&lt;:rmce
LAnrfM at CJOL. loan - ' a t

,_..,..--for

put3U/1lg
per-..llnleresls.

"""*"w In • llbr8IJI.oetU11g.

-

topic- b e - by pto{esolotulb
~by lite PubUc Relations
Sodetil o( Amo!rloo who /laue also
,_ _ . , . , . tucNng.

dllcusalon with """"' -

I 5/7z00.8:30JJ_m./Ainltlnt

c....,....

a..,ton A. Sl.hlra. fCJCJt&gt;Mr
clouolopor o( ~ Sdf·

~

-

---~. llulauQhl

-....roree¥~ to
, . _ _, llu-.oredabookon

"""""""*W
~­
- a n d pub/lshl!3
a monlhly sdf·

~--

. . . - - . DacrfpUon:
8uld flOUT 80¥-oon/ltXnce. oelf·
tap«!. dlocover flOUT creallue

polmiiM. Tills 4 - wort:.hop
d couor llw following lopk:s:

C1ntJ&lt;nUnd Y&lt;&gt;WWV Betl6 and Tah
C1Yrge o( Your Life; Rlx i\booe Your
HUI'ta· WOf"II/~· The
st.ho; Doudcp ~ RdetJonshlps

wllh F...._,,

Frlmds,~;

DfocovorYour-- Tum Your
~Into-/

WO/Ifl!1f A1fD ALCOHOUSif
~ls.t. 25·/'loo.

1317:»-t::JO p.rn./3$2.,.,.
o--, R.N.,
._a wllh Alcoholism Serulces o(
~R-

En&lt; Counqj.
Worbllap DacrfpUon:
If fiOU are ~. """**v wllh. or
lnl&lt;ralodln- conoom/l1g
"""""" and alcoholism. II"" IDIII pro·
t&gt;.biJI (lnd this wort:.hop lnterallng
-.-.~to lnc:ruse

" " " " " " " ' - pet'OOMI......-.ness,
lite worlcshop wll ptO&lt;Jide WonnaJJon
on~ lnmu&lt;nllon,-

lite f~ alcoholic.
a.- _-.o( (rom
uarious fld&lt;D

-

will c:onlrlbuJe their apettloe - ·
- - on lite IOplcs. lndudlng
medical atp«&lt;s, legal atp«&lt;s, ID&lt;&gt;ITWn In lntWstrJI. In - . _ then:
will be a spaJm- from J\lcohoiJcs
~-•fllmf~on

lite -

o( crisis, lntm.omllon, -

rdlabllaatlon(orllte._.mlddle
class fem.je alcoholic.

Skill Development
Al'tYOI'Il! CAI't JOOOLE

-...,.ts.t. 24-0ct.
I 517:00-t:OO p.rn.IH#IIn -

c....,....

~ J«:k Pmc.oJc. •.}u(J[Jkr who
,_ '-flhl. lite - to matlil·

............. DacrfpUon:

71ltocJf1h .......,._by J«:k_ , _ . - prat:•
____ ..,....,loJut/tllltwlth

~.}u(PIIn.

....-....

Three--

- - - Br*WJur/llllnQ - t o
l l w " ' " '.....
--

- - _,_m to......,llow

Doudcp e/1lclml slraiA!gia.
Fomw w11 be WorrrvtJ ~ and
lion;

preaenla·

touro of c.tmpUS libraries or of

opeclal- (1.~•• compulu
~~ w/U be WTliii(J«J accorcllng
to patfklpaJtllnletat. Should be par·
llculatW UM/ulto """' or rel1unlng
-who want to(amJIJarfzJe
rllemsdva with library use -

raowas.
llfSPfRATIOffAL WRITTff(J:
SHORT STORIES
W..,_.,.o/Ocl. 3 ·Noo.
113:00-5:00 p.m./Ainhllt-.t

Cempuo
Luder: Don Boolh. free larttt wrlle
for 20 gun, has pub/lshed ouer 200
stories -

be,_...,.,

o( llbtWJI

-...cllocomr- com(cxW*- c:an/1·

- - dlscusslon. E«h o( lite
( O U T - will(~ on 8 4/f~

SELF·IIfPROVEifEI'IT
Handlralala..u.oct.

o(..,..,..,... ... ~ lm·
porfiiiiiiD - - . . . . . . . , IWjWa
~..,an aport. w~- ompltlu a

~Worbllap DacrfpUon:
Dfocovor lite -

lt/tlcles.

.

,.....,.......,._
7.00,.._,,.. ....
........ .....,._,.....,

lfAIIffJ!!IfNfC

~

'-

OF

~

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

Lam llw ....... llano/rom lite uperiL The _ . . . ,
. . glue- gmi!Rlln(-

It .. , . . , _ ... llw

,. , .

, ;.;.,

. . . . . . -~ ..... 0...

....,..., .....,.,.,., . . , (llll

""'* ,.,..

.,.

,..._..,,.._.. __
... ...........
......
.........,_
n.Mrr

.

awpt• ,...,. .. ._......,
s.. ....... _ __.. ...

things worlc. ..
l i t e - - - 1-qMk....to .,,_.
lldpanls (I.e., ~ flOUT own btoloon

/ltiYSTERil!S CiffDl!R 1HE
HOOD: BASIC Acno
/ltll!CHA/'IICS
~ls.t.

27-/foo
1/IJ.otJO.I 0:00p.m. I Jlmlwsl

SWEDISH COOKI!RY -

Cempuo

n...fap/Octlllw Ia!nl1:»t:!IO p.rn.ll!n,.,.,...,.,, Aluinlll Aaoc:fatlon

~Edward Spdman, ajurtlt:N'

""f'orlng In Hechanlcal ~
with an A.A.S. In Aulomollue

O(fb .
Lader. Donllld L.atwon. • thrd

Technoloslu.
Wottcsllop DacrfpUon:
An lnlroductlon to auto mechanics
which wlllenablo f10U lo undenrtand
lite engine with ,. Ita lnlerrdated
parU- suppott ~ With this

- -accompl!s/led
~"""'"'*-­
I..M3on
s.wor
will,_-·
.so-....,._.

So-. rulslne. O n e -

-~-candoyour

l i t e - classic

own roullne ma1r1tenance and minor
tw1o ._n. Futtlwmwxe, II"" will be
able to diagnose f/fedlueljJ com·
I71UI1IcaU your c.r dment.s to lite
g a r . g e - when- /laue It

Wl1fl! EVALUATIO!f Al'tD
Wlffl! lfAICiffO

-

l'lflllllla/Ocl. 5·/'loo. tl:J:00-5:00
p.rn.IH#IIn- c.m,.o..
L a d e r . - Noonan,-

C/lfDeRSTAffDI1fCJ YOOR
CAR'S l!ffOIIYl!: BASIC
Acno RI!PAJR

w..,_.,..,Ocl.

3·/'loo.

14/IJ.otJO.IO:OO p.rn./Hatn-

Pto(asor, Dopertmont o( ~.

UIB and wine COIIIIOiaour.
Worbllap Oacrfpllon:
'

~Michael H. &amp;uher, Is cur·
rently emplofled . . . aetVIce aclulsor

, . . previous e.o:petfence leading
• worlcshop.

5eSOion - . . . ..

, . . , . _ - - chuply al
home- lncTaueyour _ _ , . ,
and'etJiollmml o( wine. Rf(llslrallon
will be aJif/ltmed by llw piJIJmenl o(.
!m dollanJ (cash only) to cover wine

costs.

-

WlffE WISDOM
l"llulwdaMil/s.pt. 21-tfoo.

816.otJO.I:OO p.rn.IH#IIn Cempuo
Lader. Cieoffrey Schall, • COI1 ·
nolsRur
Worbllap DacrfpUon:
Each 5eSOion ...., be to the
wines o( a dlflermt region examining
houJ wine Is
regional
characktWks, ~ labds,
and laslillg o( .umpleo. Counlrles In·
eluded""' France, Italy, Spain, and
~ Getmany -lite United
Slalu. Reglslrallon will be COtl/ltTned
by the piJIJmenl of $12.00 (cash
only) to cover wine costs.

FIRST AID Al'tD
Pl!RSOffAL SAFETY
Sa!JudaMols.pt. 2f.ffoo.

rna«.

11110:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m./Hatn
SIIWI Cempuo
!Lader. Professor Anne B. Anderson
Is • certl(led Instructor with !h~
Am&lt;rlcan Red Cross.
Worbllap Dacrlpllon:
This COUF5t! will glue uch participant
!he M1ll3 """""-""l In first llld
sllua!lon5 and In prrventlon o( IIJIW!J
acdden!.s lmown !O OCCW' /n
•IJei!I~Y 1/{e. lnstruc:Uon will be pro·
ulded In ,_... !ra~Upoftallon
l«hn/qll6, taplrlltoty emetpetteles,
wounds bleeding Clll1&lt;, spllnllng
band.oglng, care for poisoning
- shoclc. Pf'OPB (lrst llld for bums
- frootblte. lite correct policy In
heal eJdwWion -heal siTolre care,
spec:l(lt: 111/UMs Including gun ~ •

lfOK COOKII'IO

•

~/Octlllw tl1:»t::JO

p.m./Off Cempuo
Leadc: Mimi

~..anion ,

has had lessons

In CloineMl cooldng u.oa a wok
rogu/arly for food proparatlon.

Wotbllop Dacrlptlon:

NuJrlllon and economy wiiJ be • " -·
ed In this worlcshop which will ,_.,
fiOU lite ......,_ o( lncotporat/ng
CloineMl foods In euetydaj) muls. In·
ciJ.J.d will b e - o( wok

drurl-.-

cooldng l«''ln1qwa -

subst.noe- fralnt19. Aloo, •
dllcusalon on (rxmMc u It

sampling- o(

dlsha prepared. Rf(llslrallon . . be
con/Inned upon llw payment o( one
dolar (CDh only, , . _ ) to couor
food cosll. Fomwr pet1Jdpanla o(

A!laleslollte(lnt.-!slnduded./1
Is .._,m that &lt;:&lt;&gt;tn{otfable dothlng
p4llfldpiiiJon ..
~~II'III' .CI&gt;!!IPicle ..• •

which-

-..~,..,...,., llllilenablofiOUlo

Worbllap DacrfpUon:
Leam llow flOUT car's engine worl!:s
so that fiOU can proulde II with Pf'OPB
Clll1&lt; (eedltlg. The worlcshop ..
aimed at people with IIIIJe or no
llnowledge o( auto malnknance. should enable you to petform simple
maintenance~ - t o rruJh
better Wormed c1ecWon ,_-ding
rq&gt;a/r worlc on your car. Format w/U
Include ulsual ald5. Sessions 1D111
begin with womw ~ec:~wa followed
by quatlons and.,..._.. w/U
progress al lite pace o( lite group.

be wom. .....,. -

H.uefiOUaie-wlshedthatjiOU~

a better Wonrted ~of wine?
, . _ - _,./wid l l w - to ITJI
I'Niking your own !Dine? Here lsiJOCIF
oppottunlljj. Partictp.aon Ill this o1.&lt;

Cempuo

profound

family

III10lher

cool&lt;.
Worbllap DacrfpUon:

•

this wort:.hop -

- - nollo

~..,.n ......

.. .......

�</text>
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                    <text>r

WB-Artpark Dance Fest continues
Don ' t forget about the terpsichorean pleasures still to come during the
lJIS.,-.rtpark Dance festival which began July 31 . This afternoon raul
Taylor's master classes will be taught from 1-s: Tomorrow (friday) .
. the Paul Taylor D;inc;e Company (pictured above In a scene from
" Dust" ) will present lecturMeo:&gt;onstratlons at I 2,30 noon (Cornell
Theatre) and 8 p.m. (Baird Hall). Saturday. the articulate Merce Cunning·
ham will screen and discuss his vi deota~s created especially ror
dance. That free event is In the Kiva. Baldy Hall , at 8 p.m. On Monday.

Fairy
tales

Blind student 'reads'
graphs with aid of tape
By Mary Beth Spina
Edi1orial Asaoc:iate. Health Sciences

As his classmates studied graphs
flashed on the screen, U/ 8 graduate
student Edwerd Ernst , guide dog Lyd ia
at his feet, literally had the same
material at his fingertips.
The microeconomics material was
just another course to lhe other
students, bul to Ernst, who lost his
slghl lo diabetes lwo yeera ago, il was

Bettelheim says
they're good th.e rapy,
aren't sexist
By Paul

Chlmert~

News Bureau Staff

The ·prince In " Snow While" Is an
Idiot.
•
Violence In children 's lllerelure
should be ellmln.ted only II children are
willing to atop pulling Illes 81Wt .
And story tellers who ww to do
away with wicked stepmothers and
violence ere "stupid ."
·
These -mlngly disparate convlc·
Ilona . .re spun Into a cohesive web aa
Bruno !lettelhelm, the eminent child
psychol'oglat, spoke about "I magination" befa&lt;e a crowd the! spilled Into
the alalee In Waldman Theatre laal
week.
Hie wu the fourth lecture In the
live-part Educational Studies Summer
Forum.
Or. Bett elhelm, dlatlngulahed awvlce
profeeaor ernerltua of education,
psychology and paychlatry at the
Unlveralty of Ghlc.ao, lliced hie nMrly
twcH&gt;our preMfltatTon with fleahea of
humor u he eJ&lt;tolled the role of
Imagination In our 11\'M.
Not )uat lor cHidNII

"We need lmagiNitlon dMperately to
allY alive and to lunctlon," he bellevaa,
lidding that Imagination " Ia lm,portant
tor ~nolluat children .
Ha defined thai elualve quality u
•.-nenta of ,_.lty put In au.nge
forma together. • For example, he
lanlonally ._tad,~ of the
cngona ..... · Mclwn .., prot*&gt;ly

August 6 , 8 p .m . is the Bella Lewitzky lecture ·demonstration. " Tbe
Art of Dance: · in Salrd Recital HaiL This Los Anft.eles company wi\1 also
teach master cla~s. conduct open rehearsals (See Calendar. page 4)
and. w i th a little luck. cap the Festival with a performance at Ba ird
Poi nt-subjec t t o various power problems being solved. Call the Office
o f Cultural Affa irs next week to find out if Lewi tzky &amp;. Co. will dance
by the lake on Friday. Aug~st I 0 .

=e~ha:..reot;::~r~.!~ l~~· ~~~1~~
ments seriously.

Emsl was used to getting material tor
his courses via taped textbooks and
)ectures, but Rhodes' course In tha
SChool of Mana~ement presented a

~~~lle':.~cJhe1~u~':'o0~m::,~~rc

relallonahlpa ernong households, bual·
neeses and Individuals, Ia tredltlonally

encountered u teachers.

.,!~~~~~~l":lie ~::0~11:~~chd~~?;

Orthogenic School-a realdentlal treat·
men! facility, for - . l y dlaturbed

chlld~i;~tge

'1:. t~ 18r,.ou': 0~

rm:lnery material. But, he ..ld,
children's need for Imagination becomes greater In order for them to reap
lhe beneflla of dnlemlng and fantulz·
Jng.
.

Imagination and ~
Ha related liNglnatlon to drMme.
Uke f happy ending In a fairy tale, the
hepP-Y ending In a d,...... can reault In
one a waking refreahed , with new
atNngth, vigor and hope.
" Plato ufd the dlfl..-.nca between a
vlrtuoua and an avll man Ia the! the
vl&lt;tuoua man commlta evil claacM In hla
dnlame." If an avll perwo/1 oould ba

....

~...,.-~ -·. cot2

=~~ m~~~ale.g~~~:o h~~

converted lhe course to lit Ernst's
special needs would have required
complex calculus and algebra, making
It more difficult to grup the concepts
praaented.
unlike some Who might panic at the
thought of a handicapped student In a
classroom , Rhoclea ..w a challenge In
the situation . Aller conaultlng with
Ernst and U/B'e Servlcae for the
Hand~ped. he thought a solution
hed been found when he lewned the!

:aa:,::;:,:~!no=rl:t ~~l~

:=:, ~~~man-=':,~":t'W, ~'J:

-:'lng,
fingertips In a
to Breille.
The ooet of maldng the mora than 50
grepha - . . y for the oou- would
ba virtually prohibitive, though.

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

APPf'C*:hlng the Educatlohal Corn-

mun lcatlons Center, Rhodes learned
from Don Watkins there that raised tag:

~~gll~':gg~~r.,,c;~ ~~~e~~~~~~:..,..

as a simple and Inexpensive sol~tlon .
Simple as It Is, this technique can be

~~81to~~=n~~~!~ 1n~~g"~'t'lll~~

lines or curves. What's more, any
sighted person can convert such visuals
for use by the blind las did ECC artist
Jane SunJ , using a ruler, a scissors and

tape.

In the beginning , Ernst , who gave up
a career as an accountant when
blindness struck, wondered how ha
would be able to keep up with clua
mernbere who could the graph a and
visual aide. But with Rhoclea' concern
and help from ECC, the situation waa
happily reaotfed.
" ll'a true, " aaye RhodM, "that we had
a sort of unuaualaltuatlon, but any time
students have difficulty getting lnfor·
matlon In clue for whatever .-son,
thet'e a challenge for education."
Although Ernat, who rKatved a
Ia the
wall-earned " A" In the
first, Identified handicapped atudant to

cou-.

~rr.:. :~:,. ~a!1l..~tiersRrn"'1:
fm'~~en~~o

had

subtle

hearing

131 curNntly--...olled
According 10 Art Burke, ...latent
coordinator for U/B'a Services for the
Hancl~lled . 131 currently enrolled
students have Identified themsel\'M u ·
having some type of Impairment. Of
thle number, a dozan are enrolled ln.
cnduate or PR&gt;f...ionel progrwne,
fncludlng social work, engineering , law,

==::;~· c:~:.rmr.no~~y :;~
mates, too, that theM e,ll·ldentlfled
·- ·--~· -2.col.1

�August 2, 1979

New buiJd.i ng
VA, U/B officials will dedicate
ambulatory care building
on Thursd~y . August 9
Veterans Administration officials aa
well as those from U/B and local
government will participate In ceremonies dedicating the new $7 million
Ambulatory Care Building at the VA
Medical Center, Thuraday, August 9, at
2 p.m.
Or. James C. Crutcher, chief medical
dlnsctor lor the VA, Waahlngton , will

~\\~,theor"'a~ed"f'c'!\es~~c.\W'Rl~~

scheduled to speak are William E.
Lawson, a BuHalo native now executive
director of the Veterans Federal
Coordinating Committee; Dr. F. Carter
Pannlll, U/B vice prealdent lor health

~;!en~~~~· Jgrn ~:lfc7~~~ · ~n~~
Executive Edward Rutkowski, and
Buffalo Mayor James 0 . Griffin .

According to Joseph Paris, VAMC
director, the new facility , expected to

~~~~ecfpe~~~ D~m~~~~:,;',f~::

radiology , pharmacy and out-patient
clinics.
_
Some 155,000 patient visits annually
made to VA out-patient facilit ies have
been decentralized up to now. An
out-patient area on the first 116Qr of the
new building permits centrst zation
both of most clinics and of patient
scheduling so patients won 't have to
waJt more than a reasonable t ime to see
physicians, Paris Indicates.

Memoria I rites
held for Johnson
&amp;twerd ErMt UettJ with Profnaot Rhodes and guicM dog , lydia.

•Blind student

''"""-'·col.•)

~~~:r:~~~=~t. ~r.t&gt;" ~:~?~~

aa Identified In 'F-.ol Gowmment
·definitions.
1

1

,;~~ ~~rr::en~ !,';,1J. 1Fr!:Yt! ~e ~

more major life activities," Is Included
under the definition. This means
victims of cardlovaacular disease and
other conditions which may not even be
visible, explalna Burl&lt;e. Hie oHice Is
aftilable to aaelat even theee "nor&gt;vlelbly" handicapped, auch u a recent
cue In which a woman with hMrt
dl-needed a change In location for

~~~ t!'ffl~~ ~~ t~ !l'O::t~~r

of a
Burke concedes It's not unusual for a
faculty member to panic when
confronted for the flrat time with a
hendlcapped atudent In clue. F - of
the unknown, Ignorance or even
snJudlce may be the cauae. He finds It
enoour11Qit\g, though, that some, like
Rhode&amp;, actively aeek to help In
minimizing the disadvantages to auch
atuclenta.
Since most U/B handicapped etudenta have, like Errtat, been nor&gt;hendlcapped moat of their lives, they
.,. lea&amp; willing to "give In" to

:=l;."'1~ 1 ~t!"~·.::'.r":t=n:~ ~?hlu~~

Burke believes. Ernst, married and
father of three, trlea to Inat Ill the desire
for Independence In othen with loss of

A _ . """"'""''"' . . . . . _ , .

pub-

lished - " n...ndoy by tho Dlvblon of
~ AHoh. Stot• Uni\IIW&amp;Ity of ~
'l'orlr of 14/HoJo. fdlforlol offices are lo-..1., ,,. Crolit Holl, AmMnl. To/e-

f&gt;l-.._2620.

Ohctor oll'vl&gt;li&lt; AIloin

JNNS • . DeSANTIS
fdltor-4tt--Chl.f

fiO&amp;BfT r. MAitErT
Arlond-lon
JOHH A. aOIITIEII

AI;,,,.,.,

&amp;Ill«

JOI'CE~

........ ~Edlfo&lt;
JlAN SHtADOfl

I

sight as a volunteer with the Blind
Association of Western New Yor1&lt;.
Technology aaaiata
·
Tech-nology's role in helping to
minimize the handicapped person's
impairment in the classroom and other
settings Is growing , Bur1&lt;e notes, as are
changes In bu ilding codes to provide
access to those with impaired mobility.
For those unable to speak due to
· accident or illneas, there'a an artificial,
Voice Writer into which a student
punchea a code; th is, in turn activates

~'l:..m:,t:l~~a~fon·.·r~~ltl:.' \~'\~
1

tapA nscorder, heavily. uaed by the blind
and the visually impaired, !hens's
another machine which nsada aorne 200
type lacea, allowing materlala not
a)nsady nscorded to be easily accesalble. Forthoaewlth vlauallmpalrment,
other machlnea magnify up to &lt;40 times
the alze of the original; and for those
with Impaired h~lng, the Phonic Ear
ut111zea a tiny microphone worn by the
speaker with a matching earpiece worn
by the ilatener.
Services lor the Handicapped at U/ B
will also provide notetakera for those
with hearing problema or other Impair·
menta not ~patlble with exlatlng or
available eq
ment, Bur1&lt;e pointe out.
"Aa mons acuity w~h handicapped
studenta In clue, and mons handicapped studenta themaelvea learn how
lmpalrmenta can be minimized, more of

~.:;l!t':.:~~P.",:'.yu1s J~~!uggestlons

Research group
wins
renewal
At Reporter deedilne, It waa learned

that a research group, under the
direction of Or. Alexander C. Brownie,
proleaaor and chairman of blochernlatry, hu been awarded $717,802
In a !&gt;-year competitive renewal of a

=~of.=.~.::=,~:r:,:a~~!:'~ ·
Heart, Lung and Blood lnatltute. This

~~.ul!fnf~~~~pll~;;'~~~~,:.ff~

the pathogeMSis of forma of experl-

.

=~n hJ':!~,:.. ~:; ..to dysCo-ln-tlgatora of Dr. Bro.wnle'a are
Ora. Samuel Gallant and Peter
Nlc:l&lt;........._f{om the OePIIItment of
Patholog ~and Dr. Joeaphlne Alfano of
the oepartment of Blochemlatry.
,

Memorial services for Or. Wayne L.
Johnson , who was killed In a plane
crash, July t2, were held July 19 In the
Children's Hospital Kinch Auditorium
and July 22 at Fonsat Lawn .
Memorials may be made to either the

Renovation Fund of Children's Hospi·
tal, 219 Bryant St., Buffalo, N.Y. 14222
or to the American Association of

~r::,tng)~nsr~~ ~=.'oV~ts ~gd;;

Ave. , Buffalo, N.Y. 14222.
Or. Johnson hed been chairman of
the U/B Department of Gynecology/
Obstetrics since 1973.

The new building will serve to
maximize the relationship between the
VAMC and the U/B Health Sciences

=~~ 1 stiep!~~r:r:•• ~6~~ "SSb g~;~
0

health sciences students are receiving
part of their education and training in
the VAMC. ln addition , the Departments
of Neurology, Urology and Nuclear
Medicine as well as tho Division of
Gerontology are physically headquartered there.
Health Sciences VIce President
Pannlll notea that the VAMC Is "one of
the most valuable teaching hospitals
affiliated with the Uolverslty," citing Its
proximity to the Main Street campus as
conducive tp continuous Interchange of
students and facu lty. "The new
building ," he saya, " will add an
~~~~~ant dimension to th is relationThe building's basement level ,
already OJ)eratlonal, contains an In·
patient pharmacy, medical records facilities, a maliroom , and offices lor personnel. who handle Insurance claims
and central scheduling dulles. The first
floor , ~earlng completion , will have 32
treatment rooms, the main ~"ut·patien t
reception area, thnse eye clinics, and an
out-patient pharmacy. After pharmacists fill prescriptions, they'll take time
to counsel patients on medication
Instructions as well as on possible side
effects, using private cubicles nearby.
Also located on the first floor will be a
live-bed emergency room, fully equipped lor cardiac monitoring, and another
area designed for minor surg ical
procedures. Some routine laboratory
tests will also be conducted.
The second floor of the new building

~n~,:ts0 ~1ths~~10cnorr~?P?~:In&amp;.~f..~:

extend ing space for laboratories and
radiology.
Expansion of the dental clinics will
be possible In the near future using
space In the old portion of the Center
previously occupied by out-patient
clinics .
"When the VAMC was built In 1950,"
Director Paris adds, "It was not

!';;~~1=mt~~~c~u~-g~~~~~~ ,;~~f:'a~

method of health care delivery for our
patients."

$1000award
•
WJnners

Nine members of the University
community will rece ive U/B . Foundation Outstanding Service Awards
lor 1979 when Pnsaldent Robert L.
Ketter glvea his IU1nual "State of the

~~=~~t~~~.Fm~r ~t6 ~;~~:.}.lnt,

The nine wlnnera will each
rece ive a commemorative plaque
and a check lor $1 ;000 at the event .
They are:
Claaallled Service Employ•Ms. Grace B. Staerker, senior
stenographer, Graduate School
Office;
• •Ms. Valencia Zielinski, supervls·
lng janitor, Custod ial Services
Department;
Proteaalonal Staff
•Ms. Josephi ne A. Cepuana,
pre-professional advisor, Division
of Undergraduate Education ;
•Mr. Frank J. Corbett, dlnsctor of
the Office of Urban AHalra;
•Mr. Howard L. Daniela, aaslatant to the chairman , Department of Recreation, Athletlca and
Related lnatructlon ;
•Dr. Walter N. Kunz, aasociate
dean, Divlalon of Undergraduate
Education;

Faculty
•Dean Harold L. Cohen, School
of Archltactuns and Environmental
l&gt;ealan·
•Mo.' Elizabeth C. Harvey, uao-

elate professor, School ol Social
Wor1&lt;; and
•Dr. Gerald R. RlslnH, professor,

~ erc,~~~~~n~~ ~t~~r;;. on, Faculty
The U/BF outstanding faculty,
professional stall and classified
service awards are annual prizes
designed to "recognize those
members of the UniversitY. stall

1

~v~ ~~~~7H:hp~v;!!e"~~~eTr ~:'.;

and energy."
Nominations were solicited from
throughout the campus. Screening
and selection of winners was

~~~/::Jngy ~: lo~~~m~l:r f3~~~~

Department of History, nspresentln!l the Faculty Senate; Ms. Pamela

~~~~~~;:g~sen~~~v~~t~.A.~~~s

· Christine W. Wackerle, represent·
lng the Student Assoc iation ; and
Mrs. Bertha M. Cutcher, coordina·
tor, Office of Servlcea lor the
Hand icapped , repreaentlng the
Professional Stall.
A luncheon lor the 1979 award
wlnnera . and their families will

~~~~~p~~~ !~ p~.'arr:&amp;

acheduled Immediately followi ng
the event at Baird Point.
The awards, Intended to reward
dedicated and merltorloua or&gt;-thejob and communi!)' elforta, ware
lntroduced laat year when 10
members of the carnpua community
_.e cited for their achlevementa.

�August2., 1171

. . . . .1111
•Bettelheim champions fairy tales
lfrompogot , ccl.2)

sion followed .

helped to have evil dreams, Bettelhelm
suggested, he wouldn't have to be evil.
Therapy
·
The 76-year-old professor has used
llter~ture as therapeutic fantasy satisfactton for children with emotional
problems. The most meaningful stories

for this purpose, he has found , are the
old-fash•oned folk and fairy tales. What
had usually been recommended as
m~st beneficial was meaningless, he

ro~n~y~~t. and " perusing It will tell

The use of folk tales for therapy Is not
r"!'ent , he noted . When the early
Hmdus couldn't cope with life's rigors
they'd go to an old wise man with thei~
troubles.

After studying his "client ," the wise
man would carefully select a tale and
read it. Soon the troubled person would
realize the story was about him or her.
The tale would suggest solutions for

U/BF names
new
accountant
James E. Tangelder of Amherst has
been appointed senior accountant by
lhe University at Buffalo Foundation,
Inc.
A 1975 accountant graduate of the
00

~f_B..~~rd fan~~~d~anw':He:'nr~sp~,!

stbTe for producing various financial
statements for the U/B Foundation , a
private, non·proflt corporation existing

lor tha benefit of tha University.
Founded in 1962, the Foundation has
generated more than $37 million in

suf~ef'de';':!'rved as an accountant
with the Chemical Bank of Buffalo and
with the Buffalo accounting firm of P.G.
Bixby &amp; Co. before joining the U/B
Foundation office at 250 Wonspear Ave .

Enrollments dip
slightly nationally
Total enrollments at higher education
Institutions last fall dropped .2 per cent
from the 1977 level, according to final
statistics released by the National
Canter for Education Statistics July 5.
It was the second enrollment decline
since 1976. The 1978 fall enrollment
total for all institutions was 11,391 ,950,
41

h~i~~v~~.ua~cfrB~W~~e,m .

·· this is

still going on In Indian villages, and

~~:~;cs~~f6~~ry~~~~o:,~~~:g:~~~~~~

to problems . There's hardly a human
problem that hasn't found expression in
such stories ."
The author of several important
books incl uding his most recent, The
Uses of Enchantment (1976), Bettelheim surveyed selected literature to
point up lessons relating to si bling

rivalry (Joseph and Jacob), Freud's
theory of projection , and so on.
" Fairy tales were not invented for
ch i ldren,'· he stressed in allud ing to
works that offer cautionary elements
and associated bits of enduring
wisdom .

Artificial dlotlnctlono
" Children 's literature separates adults
from children-one of the modern
insanities of our time. I'm tempted to
say that 'children 's literature' (as a

compartmentalized category) •s a
crime." We have anlficlally broken the

~rs~~n~fbe\~eeO:~~~?~~~~;.s ?Cte~ t~;~.~
1

and "adult literature." .
A better distinction would be one

~~w~gr;,.;r.od~~ a~~g~~~~ ~it?~at~~:i
which has stood the test of time, as
many fairy tales have.

~~~~~nH~~ i,~ \~~~i J:~l~~· ~ft·~

while public Institutions' enrollments
declined. There was a 1.6 per cent gain
for tha 'prlvate Institutions, giving them
a total of . 2,548,749 students. At the

own ," said Bettelhelm , "you have to

enrollments

Increased,

~~ilc d':'o~.ltut~on:, t!:\:;e ;,as ~a.JJll'{
students . In the private sector,
enrollments at universities dropped, but
Increased at the four-year and tw~year
colleges. At public Institutions, declines were noted In all three
categories.
The statistics also show that

8

:~~~~n;~nt.oft~:l' ~~~.~7~~:5

rur

eruollment of women Increased 2.2 per
cent to a total of 5,664,116, putting the
two sexes almost on a par In college
attendance. The male attendance
decline was 3.4 per cent among
full-time students and 1.1 per cent
among part-lime students. Attendance
of women held steady, for full-time
students but Increased 5.3 per cent for
part-time students.
Overall enrollment of first-time
freshmen dropped .4 per cent, to
2,422,398, tfie result of a 1.4 per cent
decline among freshmen men, and a .6
per cant Increase for wom

violence? , one woman asked.

Bettelhelm suggested archly that
television and newspapers should be
thrown out , too, if such a vlolenc.free

worbd
roles

~ tou~tro"~nt~~r C,::~~~~~male

an~

stereotypes In children's

g}:~c:,t~::e B0e~t~!~~~w re:Jh~red~nd'itrh:

Seven Dwarfs. "
"What did the prince do In this

~l~;j,i.;' o~~ an~"!~,; b~~·=~rJl~Pi~

one who should know, they were all
wrong .
" The prince sees the princess In the
glass coffin and carries It away," said

life's crises ... In order to come Into your

~;~ohuo~~~~~~~~~l?.~

great crisis

pt!'~:fr~ Cl~~:~~~~sonl~f aft~~isund!'r~

going a great crisis,

amounted to

something .

In Jack and the Bean Stalk, it was
only through Jack's ordeal with the cow
thai stopped giving milk (haven't we all
gone through this mother-child deprivation crisls1 he mused) , and only after
Jack's mother handed him the a• to cut
down the stalk himself, that ha was able
to see his way back to reality.
Said the -renowned speaker: " Maybe if
we listened to these tales, there'd be no
need for all these scientific discoveries.
1 don't know-you be the judge."
A fellow of the American Psych~
logical Association, Bettelhelm concluded his formal remarks by encourag-

ing the crowd to read fairy tales "as
stories l'lll of deep wisdom, In concise
and poet!b form ." Children, he advised,
" must ponder them , and read them over
and over again ."

(from page 4 , eot 4)
students $1 .50.

Stamng""'- McOowell . Raton Richanl-

son and Rachel Roberts. This ts director Lndsay
Andefsor,.s most ambitious~ to date. a mtXture
ot asperabon . energy, wickedness , fun. humor
Md fOlly H follows the hero on h&amp;s ,ouney
ttY"ough a not so lucky life

questlo~and·answer

ses-

UUA.BFlLM•
O' lucky Min (1973) Conference Theatre .
SQuire 4 4 5 and 8 p m General aanass.on 5 2 .
stUOents $1 50

Saturday -

18

UUABFILM'
Smiles of e SuftVMf Night (So¥eden. 1955)
170 MFAC . EIICO" 6 15 CW"Id 8 30 p m General
~$2 . students$1 50
Smiles •s dtfectea by lngmar Bergman , With
lAa .Jacobsson G.rn&lt;l' B,omstr-and. Ew Oohl&gt;ecl&lt;
and Hamel Anderson A sophlsbcated comedy
concem•ng a ......eekend party at a country man·
SIOJl at the tum of the century The Berg·
ma"' film whiCh InsPired A Little Night M..-lc.
FlLM•
The Pirate ( 1948) A technloolor ta'ltasy d1·
reeled by V10een t Mlnell Wid sta-nng Judy Gar·
land Wid Gene Kely Buffalo &amp; Erie County
Histoncal SoCiety 8 p m Actrlsslon $1 50
Soonsoo-ea by Media Sludy/Buffolo
This IS P1Wt of Media StudyiBuffakfs '·A Tribute
to 50 Years~ the Amencan Musical ··

MEDIA SERIES'
~nd: Nicdu Collins and Ron KuiYHa ,
a concert of ~ useng e6eclronics and micro·
computers Kathanne Cornel Theatre. Elicon
8 p m Adn"¥sston S 1 Sponsored by the Center
lor Media Sludy, Media Sludy/Buffolo and !he
N Y S Education ()epa-1ment

~) . R-9029.
Trplot~ , R-9028.

--4.111-···--4.111-···-

FACIA.TV

~. F-9078 .

'

~. F-9075 .

&amp;

•
&amp;

----·-·~
~

~~. F-9074.
-

F-9073.

..

•

Anllyois,

p~~~rgeus, W~~t ~gyj~~S OJ~~'t fu~~

good l iterature. "

·

Aug. 1- '·LNoe Nu'nbers, ·• Dr . John e.G. Boot.
Aug. &amp;-"Health Ca'e Management," Or. Carl
Pegels.
Aug. 13-"lntematJonal Marketing ," D". l..aTy
Orai&lt;e
Aug. 1s- ·· American Womcw'l in Business," Ms.
Susan Stevens.
Aug. 1&amp;-··k'ldustrial Development in the Buffak)
Area ." Mr William Donahue, executive director,
Aug. 17-·'Foretgn Investment in the U.S .,"
Mr J&lt;mes Michaels . editor. Forbes Magazine.
Aug. 21 - ··eustoms Exempted Areas Wor1d·
Wide , Foretgn Zones in the U.S.." ~ . George
K. Keitnef . executive director, Foreign Trade

Zone
FREE MATli TUTORING

Colege of Mathemabcli Sdences, 108-109
w•keson Ouad. Elicott Monday ll'ld Wednesday .
10.30 am -4 p.m ; Tuesday Mel Thnday. 10:30
am ·9 p.m , Friday, 1-6 p m Sponsored by
Summer Sessions
GRAOUATE STUDENT RESEARCH

GRANT APPUCA TIONS
cnduate Sludenl ""'""""" G1wlt appliCations

we now available in the GSA office, 103 Talbert.
Grantng level tor master's and Ph.D. CMdidates
IS up to 51 50 and $250 respectively . Completed
applica.tiOOS are due by Friday . September 28.
at 4 p m M y QUeStions SohoiAd be directed to
the GSA office . 636·2960.

HEALTH CARE OPEN HOUSU
The Health Care Plan has ~ a aeries
of "open hOuses" at ttwW Medic:al Center, 120

Gardenvlle Psl&lt;way West. " - " ' " " -· cUing
the sumner. WeO'&gt;esdays, ttvough August 29.

5

30~

m -8p.m.

UFE WORKSHOPS SMOKING CUN1C
The Erie C&lt;x.&lt;ily Unit of the Arnoric:loi Cance&lt;
Society is seeking eHmokers to serve a \iJIOUlteers tor a U/8 SI'I'ICikng di"lic. AQPiaw1ts rrust
be 18 yeatS of oge . Ex-....,..,.. .... "'*''I giYen
priority cons.deration since they best ~
the problem of those wtlo are tryng to give
..., the smoldng hal&gt;l. Vok.rlt"'" for SIT'oOkng
w;lhdn!wal leaden; lor the UIB """""""'Y should

Americ:on Cancer Sodety, 570 - ·
HltonHotel. Q.AtaAo, N.Y. 14202 a-CIII856·1625.

contact ...

Sunday-19
UUABFILM'
Smiles of a Summer Night (Sweden, 1955)
170 MFAC. Elioon 6. 15 IW'Id 8 :30p.m. General
admission $2 : students S 1 50

- - Clmpia: &amp;may, ~ Cantor

(3233 Main St.). 9 :30a.m. and 11 a.m.; Weekdays, Newmon Center 1"'-'" Fola Blvd. &amp;
Main St.), 11 :45 a.m.
....,...., C.mpua: - - Cenl8r, Frontier
Rd. n88J Elicott. 10:30 a.m. and 12 noon
!Sunday): 8 a.m. and 12 noon 1~1 :

5 p.m. jSaturday VIQi Mlssj .
On Aug . 15, Mass for 1he o1 1he As·
.....,..,., wll beceletnled .. 10(;_, Hoi.

Thursday- 2 3
FILMS'

The Passenger (AntontOnl. 1975): Shcwts,
N.U. (AAtonionl , 1948) 146 Oletendor1 7 p.m
Sponsored by the Center tor Media Study

Saturday- 2 5
FILM'
On the Town ( 1949) A. 1andfNw1( musical
d&lt;ected by Stanley Ocnen and Gene Kelly,
starring KA!Iy, Fnrok Sinatra,
and Belly
Garren. Buffolo &amp; Erie C&lt;x.&lt;ity Historical Society
B p m _......, S 1 50 Soonsoo'ed by Media
Sludy/Buffolo

SURGICAL CONSULTATION fifKlClRAM
The Emoloyee lns&lt;nnce Section, N.Y.S. Deoa-tmenl of Civt SaMce, has lrlilClUlCed that
a New York State Tol Free I"UTber has been
established for the use of enrolees !Sider the
State's Health k"lSUWlC8 Prognwn. The runber
enrollees may c81ts 1-800-342-3728 to 8I'11WlQe tor a second ltrgk:al opinion or to receive additional Information about. progwn.
Employees enroled In 1he Pion
(local HMO) shoUO

.-e

c..

oimitw . . . . _ , . .

ttvough lh&lt;W~ Medico~ Center (847-

14801.

Exhibits
HANO-COLORED PHOTOGIIAPHS

S&gt;oplionto r - . Also""""' by LP. Lundy.
llwough August 8 . Alamo Golery, Bocl&lt; Hoi.
by the V.P. for Holl1h Scienoes IWld
lheDeporlmontofM.

_.-&lt;Jrghzation

Nodces

Sc&gt;onsored

OOYsSEv: RECENT ARCHAIC P06TCANIS

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

EXECUTIVE PROGRAM-IN MAHAPEJIENT
AHD EHClUSH LAHGUAGE
Usled bebw ir the sc:hedUe for a special
kK::tl.re series M lectu'es wil take p&amp;aoe in ~ · .J
WFN:. , Eiicon~• . fmm7 -8 : 30p .m .

&lt;;_,. Mondoy-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

...........

F·9068.

~

t..bcntory r..-n-SUNY ~ Cente&lt;

,

AESWicH

- - &amp; Pclicy,
F-11071
.
Aallstlnt Praf-.a« of Human Reeoutce ·~
&amp; Reso&lt;n:es.
F-9070.
...................... cl Orgonlutiof&gt;-.&lt;Ji'gani
zdon &amp; Reocur&lt;:es, F-9089.
A.alstlnt Profeuor of Humen "-outce Ml~
.

lo Chotnno......,._, PR· I .-

_

8-11029.

Aulatanl Prof..S0:-Envirorrnental Analysas
&amp; Pclicy, F-9072

sar.l'

NEWMAN CENTER SUMMER MASS SCHEDULE

Am"""'

I'ROFEs8lolw. STAFF

superior to women (as some audience

members Intimated), he submitted that
the prince In Cinderella Is "absolutely
!~'a'~d~= ;a~·~~d~l:!,e J:,h~~ he loves,
Bettelhelm
much of literature
" fits our own prejudices. And then we
blame this literature for reflecting these
prejudices.

EClOA

Friday- 17

Vlolenca and otereotypes
A spirited

Bettelhelm. "What's he going to do with
it, the Idiot! When he stumbles, the
poison apple Is expelled from tha
princess . But the prince was an Idiot.
He was perfectly satisfied with a dead
body In a glass coffin I"
In funher l!l'gulng that males In fairy
tales are not always ponrayed as

•Calendar

passages from the Bible, Cinderella,
Jack and the Bean Stalk and other

co;s8r~s~~~~t1~&amp; ;,;g~ t~~n;ivate
Institutions'

1

1

What do you say to parents who don't
think children should be exposed to

_.,_.,~
............
F-9087

~~~.-~.

-~. F-9085.

Aug.

2-·-

Aooo.irces ....._...,,, 0.

"lli&lt;&gt;m¥ G. Gut!eridgo,

Aug. :1-'~ ol ~.- Or.

.J
Cchoo
Aug. &amp;-p Riclwd ~ . Yioo pre••·

-·- ~-

-.T-Pfi*T\IIia', St.PILI. tmor Golery, 5tll floor

llwough August 31 .

SANTA AHA~ INYITA110HAL
Worlisby 12localonlsts. August 8-~
10. Alamo Go!I«Y. Beck Hoi. Cloor*ig"""""""'
August 8 . SQonacred by 1he V.P. tor Scienoes, Depor1mont ol M .

.·

�Augult2.19711

U I B-ARTPAIIIC DANCE FESTIVAL •

1 . - , o.- ~ open Como
peny Clasa. 2:30-4 p .m. Free •.but nust register
with CU1lnl Altair's, 410 Capen, 636·2313.
Presented by the Olficeol CUII.niiNtoira.

i
r

El.ECTRONICIIiRISIC~·

CALENDAR

Thoat.etol-onlho .~ol~.

INDEPBIDDn' F~ERSSBIIES'
Clary "Cants From Noon! ,..""Y
Woo1&lt;a" (1 975);
Index" (197779); ~- (1979); ''&amp;JaijypU"(1978).
170 WN:, EJicott. 8 p.m. Admission $1 .
~ ,by lho Cen18r lor Sludy and

"Poor-··

Thursct.y- 2
Ul..vtTPAM DANCE FESTIVAL •

,....,.,..,_~""--·

ModioSiudY-.

3 - . from 1~p.m. -

OOnce Sludio
(-~In Clor1&lt; Qym). ~by the
Olllce ol QIUo!Nfan. For rogislrobl i'lforma·
1ionc;ojl83t-4301.
Tho 1 2 - .,.,.,.,.,. is known for Its
energy, liltH4icilm .rid frequent touc:hel of ZMi·
,..._ They'ye been CW1 teleYilion •
deaf.
.-.lly oo PBS tos1 Soft.&lt;doy night, live
from The Amor1ca1 00nce Festival In Dt.riwn,
N.C.
Tho Cor_,y wll pr_. 1-.o loctl.ro- h o r o F r i d o y, Aug. 3 .

Gary - . . holds a B.F.A. from Comeg;eond an M.F.A. from l1le School

MIIIon~

"' the a.,_ Art · He hos assisted
and taught a1 _ . . &amp;.mw Am lnstiMe
Wof1&lt;shol)o at -.,.,.., Colege In ~· .

-..

"eat

SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK '
Ado About Nothing, &lt;hcled by John
Mo&lt;gan Dolawano Par1t. , _ Garden (be·
IWld lhe Abight-Knox Art Galery). 8 p.m Free
~ by the een... 1or lhealn!
and the Ooc&gt;nnentol Thealro.

-ch

WAIIFIUI'
- - lhoWind (t939), Clor1&lt; Gable.
"""""~~--OIYisde­
Conference ThMnt, &amp;Jke. 2 IWld 6 :30 p.m.
- - S 2; aludontiS1 .50.
Mloa Sc:ol1oll .,.; , _ ,.fight 1ho CM
w. to e. t&amp;.ne" r..·• Theme. Att« 40 rears.

U I 6-ARTPAIIIC DANCE FESTlVAL •
Cunningham: Yidoodtw1c:e saoonlng 1

discussion . &gt;Wn' -.:e~anda-s
Atlas. The Kiva, Baldy Hal. 8 p.m . Free. Pre-

sented by l1le Office"' CUt1X8I Alt....

if. . . . ~ .
flU(•

Sunday-S

llodoioo.t (t964)(""*&gt;nionij. 1460ief..-t.
7 p.m. ~ by 1ho Cent., lor -

OPEN~·

up-

St. 50.

will Diet Kallloa

Outdoor open -

• I'NSter ol cenwnonies from 7 to 10 p .m .
at 1ho ~ T..._ (Moln S1Toet) . Signlor ITIU!Iidons . . - ·at night of

· wll be sold.
oored
by the UUABColfoehoose.

SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK •
Mucll Ado About Nothing, &lt;hctod by John
Mo&lt;gan, ~ Pw1&lt;, , _ -

Garden (be·

I101d the Abight-Knox Art Golle&lt;y). 8 p.m. Fn10
Center for lhealn! Re..-ch
-the-oiThootre.

Soon·

~ by the

FUII~IDIICUSSIOH'

--.~-. 170WFioC ,

=...::.~=•
St . attheMuseom
~ by
.... _ _ _ _

Monday-6

"' Art, ... v.Ntnoy - . . .. """ the
Anl'dogy Flm - I n New Yort&lt;.

U I lh\RTPAIIIC DANCE FESTlVAL •

IHAK-INTHE PAliK'

Olnce," •

-

--.
-Par1t.
..
. dinlct8d
by John
Mo&lt;gan.
,_
--(b
e·
'*'d lho Albright·Knox Art Gallery) . 8 p.m. F&lt;oo .
~ by lho Cen1or lor FleOeM:I1

onolho~oiTheotte .

1 . - , Oo- Company: "The Art ol
~lion .

_ , HaOI 8
by tho Office ol

~.m. $1 . QAra!Aitoira ond Olflce"' ~ F&lt;oo Ptogrwno.
The
second
ol l1le. .Donee
will
be to ' tho L.oo
. , ___FestivalBela
Lewitzl&lt;y Cor_,y,
Bela L.awitzXy is well-known on the West
Coast where she was one of the two great
~ (the other, the late Leston Horton)
dance .
Togo- will Mikhal ~ she won
'the 1978 OOnce Mogomo Awwtl. She uses
arcl&lt;tectiral and ICUptural I!IOII&lt;ImOilt desigls,

"'modem

Frlcl&amp;y-3
U I a.AIITPAIIIC DANCE FESTIVAL •

Pout Toyb ~ny: ioctue-domonanlion. --Cornel Thootro, Elicon .
12:30 ._,_ $1. Presented by the
Olfice"' QIUo!Nfan.
A.lllc.ture *= "'*•tkw• .... alto be ....... et

1....,._111--IHol.- $ 1.

WAilfUl'
OoM lho - . Conference Thealro
~. 2 - 8:30 p.m. - - $2: .
- $ 1 .50.
.
---INTHEPAM'
- - - - .. - b y J o h n
Mo&lt;gan. - . Par1t. ... - - (be·
'*'d tho Albright~ Art Gallery). 8 p.m. Free.
~by
Cemor l o r - -tho~ol-.

tho

'Sl

and l"ltegmes cost1.mes Into these patterns
This is done in collboration with the ftmous

d\lllgner Germoic:h (tho ong;notor "' unlsek
lashlonsj , ....., h o s - such lt*lgs .. Q.ootaods
-&lt;&gt;nO doslgnod lor ,..., da'lcers-&lt;m
other ngen6ous fabric atructJ..res that stretch
end contract as the dlwloer8 move.

--·
--·
-.g.,.;

t1C1 -

- 107 T--.1,

- - ~ 1 p.m. 2 1 - ..-only,
- - - . . - . .. Col 835-3904 for

--·41!~. 8:30~
'

8'.30p
.... - . . . ........
S2; - $
1 .50.
Theloll
. , _.. _
_
lotz.

• c&gt;gu&lt;:H-4-

-"'tho-"' ...

Tak)o-. ~--ond­

l o r - . g O I . _..

C... Girl (1M4). A - cdor

produclion

-- ..._.,-Kolly-,.,..-

....-.a-byn _ _ _

~.£rio C o l r O y - _ ,
ep.... - a u i o. _ b y _
lkfyloiOV...ol
.. _
_ -A 'rllllill .... o
i - ._
. . -..

1 . - , o.- Compony: master clas·
- Col83 t ..301 lor reglatndion i1formalion.
TheM ,...... dMaea cootlnue throughout

Thursday-9
U I B-ARTPARK DANCE FESTlVAL •
Bel .. lewttz:ky Denee Company, Open R•
hNrul. Free, but f1"11.1SI register with Office ol
CU1Lni1 Allan. 410 Capen, 636·23t3 Presented by 1ho Office ol CUt1X8I Affen.
Woodat:ock (t970)
Conference Theatre .
SQure. 4 and T'. 5 p.m. General aci'nission $2 :
students$ 1 50
The most ecdaimed rock-n-roll movie to date.
Woodatock won the 1970 Academy Award fOf
Best IJocunentcwy feature

-SHOI'·

~.....,__

..

Elori · Ph.D. ~ In E41ca1iono1
Paychology and lrRudcr In the Colege. 325 WF/oC, 8oott. 4-6 p.m. s.or-oc~
by the Cologoa,

_"'_·

_ _ _ , . . I N THE'AM"
- - - - . . - b y .John
Mo&lt;gan. - . Par1t. , _ - - (be- . , . Abiglll~ Art Galaoyj, 8 p.m. Free.
~by tho Cemor l o r - - . ,

_...

-Y--·
--·-....,.--.-.
t.IUAI.------ .
Wednesclily- 8

--~ Caoanond _,. ._,,
12 ,_.., p.m, F&lt;oo. ~by

Cloudo- lly (1946) . .. bic9BPhY "' Jerome Kam -.tng Fnnk Slna1ra,Judy Lena Home and Kathryn (byoon,
Buffalo &amp; Erie County His1or1atl Socie1y. 8 p .m.
- - $ 1.50. Sponoored by Sludyl
Bulf'*&gt;.
This is pert ol Modio Sludy-'a "A Tribute
to50V..,.oltheAmor1ca1Muolcel."
ALM I I..EC'IURE'
Tho

Vldoo- and lho Arlo: lmpllca-

-tor Production,- and

-Siudy-.

Dloploy, ·

Gone Y.....,._, 110 WFioC, Elloott . 8 p.m.
~ by the Cent..- lor Sludy and
Gene You&gt;gbtood loctl.roa widely oo the ponew technc:*&gt;giee for atiiJting a com·

tential of

~- .

thestaljoctol

a forthcoming book, Tho Vldeoopllore.

and tho IJoportment o( ~··

Sunday . :~. . 12
UUABALM"
/ ,
Mocunalrno (Brw1( 170 WF/oC, Elicon. 8 :30
and 8 :30 p.m. $1 .50.

'

$2;

-

•""*''"

SHAKESPEARE IN TltE PAliK"

Much Ado About

-..g.

direclod by John

Mo&lt;gan
- · """·
,_ Gorden (be·
I101d
the, AlbrlghH&lt;r&lt;~x
' Art Gallery) . 8 p.m. Free .
~ by the c.nter lor -n-tre -.:h
and the Oepertrnont oi.Thealro.

OPENMIK£'
Ou1door open lftcrophone with Ok:k kotdes
as master of ceremonies from 7 to 10 p .m.
at l1le Squ;re Hal Terrace (M¥1 Street). Signup sheets for ~ availab6e at night of
performance RetreatYnents will be saki. Spon S&lt;&gt;nld by the UUAB Colfeehoooe.

Wednesday- 15

INO£PEHOENT FILMMAKERS SERIES'
Buffeto FJinwn.aken Group Show: Tom Busch ,
Kathy Higll , Marcelle Pecot . Ken Rowe, and Jan
SutciYtf. 170 MFAC, Bltcott. 8 p.m . Sponsored

by the Cen1er lor Media Sludy and Media Sludy/
Bulf'*&gt;
This &amp;election ollilms by live l o c a l - t
filmmakers is Intended to illustrate the diversity
of t~ and formal concerns at wcwk within
thellulfltlo~"""""'-n't . ThebeeJ1yand
conceptual potency of the Hms .-e said to
" exemplify l1le level ol quoli1y wor&gt;&lt; be;.,g In·

Thqtatheftnel ~~

SYMPOSIUM OH CHIUl AIIUSE'
--· -· ~bythe
Colleges. There wll be 1-.o sessions:

-ists ••:

10 a.m.- " Local Aspects of Cl1ld ·"
The
Gonold Seilt, U/8 taw School;
Asseml&gt;lyman Robin~ Dovid Ganrd,
County Proeec:utor's Olfice; Oetectrre Sgt. John
FW&gt;ey; Ruth f\Jssel , prinQpol ol Harlem Reed

School.
2 p.m.- "Soclal and - . ; Aspects ol Child
AbUse," Robert A. Wlilon , chainnan o1 Erie
County T:ask Force on Chid Abuse ald repre.
sentative ol Pa--ents Anonymous.
Open lo the genenll public.

...,.._,tly f)rt&gt;duced witl&gt;n!Nsarea "

YIDEOTAPE PAESEHTATION I DISCUSSION'
SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK•
Much Ado About Nothing. directed by John
-gen. Delaware Pat1&lt;, near - . Garden fbe ·
tw.d lhe Abight·Knox Art Galiery) . 8 p .m. Free.
5ponsored by the Center tor Theatre ResecYch
and the OepEw1ment ot Theatre .

Frlday-10

UI B-ARTPARK DANCE FESTIVAL •
Bello 1 . - , Oonce Compony: pertormance
d 'WOr1&lt; created tor Bai'd PoWlt, the G"eekpl.wed stn.Jc:tlre beside the lake near the EJitcon
Complex. 7 p.m. Free.
by l1le OlfiCe
of Cutbnl Affairs.
Note: thla 5a aubfect to ct.nge. The rein
dlte la Auguat 11. ,.__ cal tht
of
Culturol AHIIIra, 113&amp;-2313 tor lni"'""'Won.

"""""lad

omc.

~

WOllEN STUDIES PAESEHTATION '
Tho Ccimrtb&lt;o- ol F..,.nllt ScholaBhlp to
T-1
Uz Kennedy and Go11

Dloc"*-'

Kely
8p.m.
, -e....,.,.-...
·· - Colege, t08
· -

-

SHAK-INTHEPAIIIC'
Ado j, &lt;.nCiod by John
- · Pw1&lt;,Art, Gallery),
_(be-.
-Mo&lt;gan,
tho Abight-Knox
8- p.m. Reo
~ by the Center tor Thealro Reotilii:h
lndtho~ol-.

Satwday-11

-

FIUI'
Tll ....

ALM'
8 1 - (1966) 1An1"""'"') 146 [J;efenctorf.
7 p.m Sponsored by the Center for Media
Sludy

UUABALM'
Woodstock (1 970). Conference Theatre ,
ScJ,tlre. • and 7 :35 p .m. General aci'rission $2 .
students $1 .50.

Tuesday-7

gold c:olns, • glint ~ • liled swittmlng pool, • CIWri8 rnonnaid .

SHAKESPEARE IN THE PAliK'
Much Ado About Nothing, &lt;hclod by John
Mo&lt;gan. Delawln Par1t. , _ (be·
I101d the Abight-l&lt;no!&lt; Art Galely) , 8 p.m: Free .
Sponsored by the Center lor Theoln! Researeh

lho-byreglalniWonllftly.

-

l

SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK •
Much Ado About Nothing, &lt;hcted by John
- -· Delaware Pat1&lt;, near - . Gorden (bo&gt;·
I101d l1le Abighi·Knok Art Golle&lt;y). 8 p.m. F..,. .
Sponsored by the Center for lheetre Resewch
and the Oepcw1rnent of Theatre.

-

1 . - , - ~ open Como
pony CMo. Oonce Sludio. 2:30-4 p.m.
Free, but ..... register CUt1X8I ""....
410 Capen, 636-2313. by the Offic~
oiQIUo!Nfan.

GAY Y I I U T H - -

""""""""'
doslgnod
by Ryan and
-·
used for textlnl
and compos;tionaf
PtJ"PPS8S.

U I 11-ARTPAIIIC DANCE FESTIVAL •

-

U I 11-AR'TPAIIIC DANCE FESTIVAL •

Satlwcky-4

..--e """' ..

UUABALM'

WABFlLM"
Slraol of Shomo. 170 MFAC. Elk:ott 6:30
IWld 8 :30 p.m. General edt'nission $ 2 ; students

lkfy.

Ryan. - - Con:&gt;el · Elicon.
8Joelp.m.
Sponoored by the Center fa- Sludy, Sludy9Jft'*&gt;. and l1le N.V.S. E'd.oca·
l i o n -.
Joel Ryan dkj
physics
at Pomona Colege, studied gnWelo philooophy
at the UniYeraity ol California at Sen Diego,
and r&amp;cenlty received an M .A. from the Center
lor Cooi""-'"V Musk: e1 Mils Colege. Tho
ett,et « HolM is 8 We etedronic music per·
lormance oo an Aries S,.,theolzer with digital

el INs ono more In a tile ol q.oconce tool
In Rio. There's l1le poor SUddenly
1l.med Into • blond prh:e, the -~.lle-thitldofeades "

a..tcheU Kriegrnen will present a se6ection of
....
short
c:anedk: - . . . · 357
MFAC,
Elicott
8 p.m. ~ by the Center
lor Moda Sludy and ModaSiudy-.
Kriogrnan , a 1978-79 CAPS Folowoh;p rec;p.
lent in video, is a lree·lanco writer ....., began
"""' In video with The Director's Wort&lt;ahop .,
1975. He has been ortis1-ln-&lt;Midenc:e at the
Television L.ebon&gt;tory, YW&lt;ET-TV In Now Vorl&lt;,
for the past three year.a, .-ld atso ertist·5nAISidenco ellhe ZBS FCUldatlon In Fort Edward ,
Now Vorl&lt;, where he produced a o1
stories designed lobe-'""" the telephone,

Thursday-16
FILM'
Z.briatdoPolnt (Anl..-, 1989). 14801efen·
dot!. 7 p.m. $ponaorod by the Center tor -

Sludy,

INDEPEIC&gt;EHT~~·

Ave lms by SCoct- 170 WF/oC, Ellicott.
8 p.m. s.or-oc~ by tho Conlor tor Madlo
Sludylnd Moda_Siudy_,
"'Jf-iiCIInOin~"
Scott Ba11ott born In · Goorgio,
lndAdodllrnand

oa-

video at Sen FfWldac:o Slate College. A
ol vldoognoph;c: lim, he lo boat known lor lilms he
· - 7 2, nolably
- -. OFFON, 1 - , and 1170.
,... ~haw
and have
'-'tlh&lt;Mnln.-yrnojorllin-lnAmartca

modowon....,_,..-

rode.._,

WAIFUI'
0 Luelly Mort (1 973). Conloronce Thealro,
~- 4:451nd 8 p.m. - - $2;
·s.. · c.~:

pegeJ, cot. 3

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1389922">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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                <text>1979-08-02</text>
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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                <text>4 p.</text>
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                <text>United States</text>
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                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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                    <text>Who
enrolls
here?
Demographics,
where parents work
affect the outlook
A serious population decline In the
Ci ty of Buffalo and a similar, -1hough
less .extensive outmlgrstlon from
- Western New York are among a series

~·~c~~or~r:~~~·na.r~~r ~~o~~~~:

slons and Records, seld this week.
Dremuk said, too, that U/B suffers
from a general, growing dissatisfaction
and weariness ·with )lureaucrscies and

g;,~t~~i~i~~~ngec,~~e~y!!, ~~ :~~~A
=m';'f~~~~~s!~~ ~ ~~~:-~~

more choice• for smaller schools on the
part of those students who want to
avoid the hassle of big bureaucracies,"
of big anything .
Thwughout New York State, Dremuk
poled further, there is a drop In the
18-year-old population.
· Also , U/B has to avoid P-Irating·

Riding ·lessons are inore th~n diver~ion
.fot a group of handicapped youngsters

-

.,..,._

tor a gooup of local younoawa Who
. - cntnJ palay.
.
For ttie n'lne ctolld..., - aged alx
tlwough 14- '-tllng to ride horMbaCk
la-,.rt-al a unlq• ~Y pniDf8m
~fleally daalgned to atrwnau-&gt;
..... muac:lea, rlald ..... and
lege, and help them aclil- a or-ter
~ of balance and' coonllnaiiOn,
aaya progr8lll dnctor Lydia WIIIQate.
An ualatant ~- o( pnyalcal
lherllpy at U/B, lAra. Wingate no!Mihal
while riding hal~.-! for therapy
for IliON than 20
In Europe, thla Ia
bellewed to be t
flrat ~uch program
offered In WMtern New Yoo1&lt;.
" Lewnlng to rldf," aha points out,

;::rt'notdevloe.
du=ed ~y· : ; : : : ,
And '-tllng a eoclal
0

8

man-made
111&lt;111 not alwaya ~by their nonhandicllpped pewa provldaa a tremendoua booat paychologk:ai!Y for
thoae with phyelcallmpalrtMnta~ •

C...la~

'

Sponao*~ Clllldlwn'l~1
e-nter. .,n...,.;:

Rehallllltallon
Wlnaale II dnctor of phyelfcal lherapyJ
I O~
the,.,....... program rune rom July fl
10
~.=•,:... ago,
Mtllbllahed a
almllar rtdlng prog..., held at SkldmoN
College
for clllnta ol Wilton
State o...lopmenlai Center. The
progrwn, operaiAid In ~junction .,tth
Albany Medical College, 10
- l u i that the 8We Center hal
~tlnued It M a 1*1'**11 adjunct to

ah8

a.-..

....

"':-a:!'-::~P':f:'•
llkeptlcal that youngatera

1-

of
with ·

poor balance, ~ and leal
than normal control -of ooluntary
muact• would Ill cepable ol lelmlng
10

-

~ child will Ill ~ by
voaun....... "" up, "811d they

cnlh hefi!IM* 8lld .-~~bee~
' llllta .-.«~ tMir ...... 10 'the
..,.._. _, hOld onto ttwm • the
around the riding
wiD -

..,._ - ..,Ud

""a:
"nil ~" whiCh altowa the
to roem llbOiat. WW Ill permlttlld.
,._

to 3,000 (still the largest freshman claas
_ In N- York State) .
Dremuk was surveying a ,-lea of
B'oblema and .,.,.SOxes which affect
~~11;:"!-'"7'~ before

unto _ _ _

..=r:.,:"8,.',~~.:!, ~=

CNidiWs

~=s e~:lln:~~ .!!:.' ~lm~~

rl' 11

~~~
c . - ..... .,.=-~~

·~.
~. ICICial ~at~
R8habllltatlon Center," Wlngate. aaya.
0

Partlclpanta' llrothers and alatera are
alaoencourageclto attend, aheedda .
In eddltiOn to the 15 oolunt..-a,
Center ataff fl\8Rlbera s-ty Hughes,
a PI'YIIcal theri!Piat, and occ'upatlonal
tt.aplat Oebble'SIIarp wlllasalat.
' Wingate hal ._... pralae for Nancy
Blochtal, owner of Bechtel Stablel, and
lnatructora Sandra Wolf • and B.rbara
Courtney who will give the lesaona. Me.
WOlf hal alrMdy lntroduoecl the horaes
to vertoua equiJlll*lt the child..., may
bring with them wheelchalra,
crutches, and the llka - 10 they won~
be ·Startled by II . Bechtel llaff and ,
volunteera atao haW attended ortent•
lion and training -lOne to· familiarize
them with flie children'• phylk:al
llmltaiiOna.
"It should be noted," aaya Wingate,
"aome elabiM wa contacted frankly
turned ua down · for all the obvious
raaaone." But Bechtel Stablel, which
already hal one rider with oerabral

Pllvalcal-

·fo determine the pcogreu made
during 1he program, phyaiCal .......
menta of the youngatera before
~ l c l pstiOn will be compared with

;~:-~r~heCX:l:i•:.~~-~= ro

11

WM~&lt;a. l:u~lngate aaya since thle Ia a

pilot project, five """""' may be
sufficient to note aome lmpro_,.,t,
She hopes fund ing can be found _to
enlarge and expand the program In the ·
future:" Results of long-term programs have
helped children with cerebral palay walk
better, · gain Improved muacle control
and atrengthen muacles," ahe notes.
And children with oth.er problema have
bean helped
throullll therapeutic
horseback rtdlng .. wen .
In one program, an autistic child who
heel
apokan before ,uttered his
first word during-a riding lesiOn.
" Hora&amp;, " he aald .

n-

students come from, !hair I*W\tl'
backgrounda, · and a lhortaOe of
on-campus housing.
•
The Admiulona and Records director

:::~~~~~t ~e:-~u:::OC~ceu~

hu bMn here, "-r y - Ia dlfftnnt;
..-y ~ Ia atrange."

......,g, i:ountJ not aalnlnll
Many maJor U.S. cliles wnlch " '
loalng population have outlying metro-

City

lfr~~k ~tO:hl~':.t. '1n ~;}~g:
though , thf:lla notao.lhe county 11 not
taking up the alack u tlie c ity lo-.
A major exodua hal bMn noted
among younger working people, who
are leaving I~ U Pia!&gt;ll cloae or
layoff• occur. Thla group, Drtmuk
explainedr hu always been the prime
market grouf, for Millard FlllmoN .

~-\.,":l':..,~;Yn:=~-~~
decline.

Looking harder . . . . . . .
c
•~ ~
As a noault of local population dlpa, ·
the Unl..alty hal to look harder for
0

at=Y~~.-:Oncs

largest faadar

area for U/B freshmen (altar Erta

County) Ia Neaaau Coufttv In metroYoo1&lt; Cltv. Soma 211% of
politan undergraduate. atudenla call Yoo1&lt;
City and the four aunoundlng count1e1
holnt- Part o1 the .....,. for thla,
Dremuk aald., Ia lhat U/B an~ a aolld
reputation there; another Ia the d l - ' -,
factor. "Buffalo laeafw-y trom Haw
Yoo1&lt; City M you can gat and IIIII Nmaln
In New Yoo1&lt; State." fn ~County,
IIOIIUiatlon Ia epowlng.
- . AmonQ£rta County atudante, SUNY I
Albany 1a U/B' a ~competition for
atudant8. Albany Ia attrectiya Ill
Western Haw Yorl&lt;era, ~ auggaetild, ''baceuae It Ia far f
horne
and hot ciON enough lo ''""" art' City
to get mllglad." Erta County aehdi
lftCIIa.lly no
at all to SUNY at
Stony ........ NPQrtad .
Nell Ollly .. the college age pool
......_ . _ . . ...... U/8 and other

_..,Ia

:.;::::"= ~ =r "'

. .llllllliftt-'IOIWMtolloewlllla~

e:r

le-aii-INU/8
: . . :for .... Yoo1&lt;
the
Valier Nglon
0

-----·-t.ooL1

�......................

A U/B historian hM &amp;-1 lrwlled to
join t11a P.hnadelphla Social Hlatory
Pnlject (PSHP) In an unpreoedented
In terms of graduate number&amp;, · oomputertzedd s.!_.ud1
d~al'~~l ':::
Oremuk aald tlla pool of proapec:tlve
new an acc:u•-8 v• .. ....,..
,
atudenta fa declining· ee It Ia at other
development of the Arneric:wl city, the
- . . U/B will , _ to ~ 111
family, and cfaalatructure, end ullllrth
full-time grUiale enrollment by attn~ct- Information about the natu,_ of social
-.
,
- fng more atudenta 11om eleawher8 In ~ mobility.
lhl United SWII f!1C! lhrOUgiiQut the
Dr. Michael H. FriiCh, aaaoclate ~
Mtlon he aubmltted But he lUI "we ·
profeeeor of history and American _
Sdanoel, -'*..
studies, will a oentral role In the'
-wlv ~ng enroffrl-1 llhon- · , _ piobl.,a In thi8 .... wblch · , _
forced ua to. load up on local part-lime
unique 1'8M81'Ch, funded by the National
feAa.
a a major perwlox,
atudenta • The egocentric
of ~ Endowment for the Humanltlee (NEH).
tllougll, • c.tdl-22 u - t: we can no!
moat g'*tuate educatioiJ ,.,..,_
An award of $349,100 Ia the moat racent
. _ any men out-of-town atudenta
makes 1~ difficult tar the Unl..,.tty to
grant In -an eight-year history of
....,_ of limited dormftory epee.
conalat!'"t funding of the PSHP project
mount an organlzad coiiiCihle effort In
focal -'dentl .,.
by vanoua agencies, Including lhl
graduate iecrultment.
_
CCiftiPI!IInlng being cl..-1 out.
Aa all II anotllei' factor Impinging on
National Institute for Mental Health
Why cait'l mono -atudenta from thfa
Unl...,..lty enroiTmenta, Dnamuk cited
(NIMH).
._ NCnllted for llltl&amp;nd eclencee
the receaalon/depnoaalon which moat
Begun as a study of the population of
flldl? PIOblbly they can, but lher8 .,.
economists agree we h... afnaedy, or
an lnduatrial 'city in ~he 19th century,
two major hullllea. Firat, Oremuk
soon will be entering. Admlaalons
the PSHP. has since l:&gt;ecome the m&lt;!St
moat of t11a aludenta from
people . used to, say that 'ta 'good'
extensive experiment In computerlhi8uffalo- who come to U/B.,.
recession boosts unl-alty enrollbased social-historical research In the
"flrat-generaliol:l" college atudenta; that
Ia, they . . lhl first In their famlllee to
country. In the opinion of some
ment·" this lime llfOUnd how- will have to walt and
scientists, It has alffl9dy started to
ltllnd an fnatltutlon of higher lewnlng.
revolutionize both our knowledge of the
~ f.,lffel ........,. them to use
American pa,st and the world-wide
colllga - • of get1fng a good
Shouldn~
tum
to
llucbierlng
study of history.
,
Job. "A good job," the A &amp; R director
autobiograPhY her8 or thtKe, according
Dnamuk said these problems and
The project, which utilizes a team of
Mid, , _ , . a major In a ffekl such as
paradoxes affecting enrollment pos.;
toFriiCh.
scholars from a number of disciplines,
Malt!&gt;Now for the flral lime, a 4uller,
opportunities for the UniVWIIty, cllalseeks ways to gefviriually every kind of
.....,
ns Where U/B fiiCIIIIIes
broader social history Ia beGinning to
.lengea that have to be met through
information about people ar.d the
. . an.ly owertaxlld.
bring
together a breadth of Interests
environment of Pl)lla.delphla from
and their envlrooabout how
~
1850-1880 Into meclllllet&lt;eedable form .
"We haven't yet artlcufated the real
As new bits of lnletmatlon surface,
Among men .ntl*lt, auburban
f.:.!"trom hla poat at U/B, Frisch
message of the benefits ..Df lhl
they are plugged In and Integrated v:lth
I.,Uiea ia a g - Int-I In
university experience In general, aa
the entire archive. This break-through
arta aciancal flelda, Oremuk
contrasted to the narrowconcemsof job ·
ability to link Information of wide
g~W~tad . But yOUng men and
education, • he _,lured. Also, Dren)uk
the University of Pennsylvania for lhe
woman .,. encourlllllld to go . _ to
diversity will enable Frisch and hla
next stage of work on the team project.
the ranka of high IChool guidance _ associates to reconstruct the social
-='-'· A major unilerlytng fiCior, he 'aald,
counlllfora have been declmailod aa
He notes that Important models and
.Ill story of forgotten people- blacka
achool district budget&amp; h... been cUf.
Insights ' from. lhl project will be
and worl&lt;ing people who didn't write
Aa a reeult, atudenla.,. raceiYing much
appficable to a wide range of Industrial
memolra or get their names In
1aaa help on what to look for In
centera, Buffalo Included .
newspapers - In almost house-byselactlng a college or unl-alty. Mora
. . owned. ~ lndfvlduala , _ few
In 1975, FriiCh was part of a
housedetall.
of this now lalla on the colleges and
till to Bulflllo or to . _ York State.
We will learn, says Friach, not only
cooperative effort undertaken bEemunf..altlee tllemaeiYea.
They ...s t11a1r dltldran beck to
bera of the American Studlal
ram
that our -.ncestors lived on a certain
Higher education Ia no longer a
Michigan, Wlaoonaln,lndlana&amp;nd other
her8 to study unemployment In B alo.
street, but what they did, what kind of
IIIIer's markal, D....,uk .obeerled.
Big Tan un'-altlal. -Oremuk uld, for
Thelntervlewa tt•e~· COQ.ducted with lhe
f::ylcej-o~:J. m~rearv.at !~ ~lu~
Admlaalona offlcer8 have to do· more
-pia, that t11a Unl.-.lty of
unemployed reeutled In· an article
Mlcllllaln
.. .Nttr
Albor
-'darB
~~":C.u gatelcee!&gt;era to
.......
_al
.. .
,_
..... _
=~~i ~~~h:lpaln:l~~ featuned on the ~ of the New York

-m.a-

Wltto Elle CouniY'a tolal
collega f*tlcipllllon , _ felling, II
doeai\'1 ...., a ci&amp;IMJVM! to that
._York City fa bacomlng a mono mono~mportant recruitment ground for
till&amp; lnatlt-...
Not only that, DNmuk oontlnued, but
New York- at-..a . - to
._particularly f n - . d fn ·tlla Arts-

u-

f-

,.ura

n...

e..n -

-

-'*'·

see:·

'

anglnee;;:::t-.
.............. M

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

=~r.:.lg~~h~~:r=~

~~

=Ia

~~~ o~ ~~~ru=~Po~~/~~

=·.-..:::--':=·:' ..=

"'"7.,u':'aiJ
ff':'orl::

~

~m=n~ffl~at;,:~~~

8011-.woae..

T....... _. . . . ...._..

.

Tranafer . . _ ,. . . tlllother cat..

gory In Wlllcll . U/B hM aufferad
UMXpaCtlld anrbllment ~Ia. The

~ her8 Ia a notabla dactlne In the
numbarl of collage-bound atudenta
oomlng out of tlla SUNY Community
Colleae ayatem- syatam which fa
lnt...aed to _,. ee a feeder to SUNY
- ar.tuate oenter.. wa cnw aorne
tiwlaf. . 11om four-~ ICIIoc&gt;ts. "but

ee many .ee possible .to come .through
the galee.
Yet, he cautiol:led, U/B, u well u
other collegee and unl-.ltlee, muat be
ceraful not to fall Ylctlm to the
huckstering, hard sell, and radical
currlculum-&lt;:llangee which, loom as easy

~e"":t:u~~t r:~:o ~1:!,':, ~~

1

atresaed. "That would be dyafunctional ."

Football forecast
With 80 .......... beck, Including 10 atartera on offense and 10 on defense,
end Heed Coech Bill Dando entlclpellng another t.nner recruiting year, U/B

=

1

•n:-v:=.=='=J::.., ~rlguez, who eel live all-lime

-.11; epeat1y apllt and Gery Ouatranl,)ouo: raceiYlng "*'&lt;a and
- . 1111 IIMfon'a 111M kickoff natumera; halfbeck Marl&lt; Gabryai,
'-1111111 rua11er 8011 lor two atralght ye-.; Outat&amp;ndlng Offensive
u . - ~tm
~-2. 245ii0Untl gl*d· 11.-.r st~.- Cuney,
lied&lt; who led t11a Bulla 1n tackl11; and tackle LMry

v-.

.

~u..nan.

a untlen:laMmen are flanker F - Price and
tulllleiJita Gary Falll811t1 John Blet:k, tlglllao\1 Kevin Pratt, offenalve tackl8l
~ . . . . _ 8lltl Jlal PIJP.a,~.-cr Bill Dewev, and oenter .Joe
and ·R&amp;ndy Refilaff, tackle DaVe
AoN11, ,...... _.a Melli Dilul, ony DeD&amp;nte and llnebeckera Marl&lt;
DF c-a ..ro. 'leoclllal (fnlund for nooat of '78). Alao, ~ ­
and Tom Hartl, and ufellal Kent Keating, Bob Coatanzo end

........ 0.--. ..... ,..

FNI!k.....,._
.....
~

-

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

-tl........
......
··,=-·
.................-In,.......

.

s - ~luk ... beck, too.

...,._ . . . - - a n d pleceldcto,er
A _...., al '*- 111111111 _,...,. ........, 8lltl ......,. et.MtS prowlda -

ut-lve duty, end lnoomlng·
more depth end c:hallenga for

Willi 1M' ~ lhlowlng to ~I and Price, and G8blyal
.......,~,_ . . . . . . . ._8IIICIIlnlonol'-llgeln. The~•la
and~U.IIM, aolld 1 - n g•

,.. ........,U/8

. . . IDA ....... •

lebltglll.
-...-:tedto._oneoftlla
1111 iat Ill_., Willi NCAA Chempionahlp

.

::tT~':~ ~~~

employmant
Other queetions to which the PSHP
seeka anawera 1111: What was the
relallonlhlp between ' jobs and educa~lon? Which came flrat? Was II the
availability of good schools or the
availability pi good factory jobs that
determined residence?
1
Up to now, social scientists liave had
to rely on lite!!!)' evidence or on an

'~!':~=~ ~red~e

of Tufts.
FriiCh holds the. M.A. and Ph.D. . from
PHnceton and received a Fulbright
Lecl!~reehlp In American . Studies In
·t973-1974.
Prior to joining U/B aa an ualstanl
history profeeaor In {989, he was an

==t~9vf::r197t~e :::.:to~.

ic;:.,~rW's~~s ~~·.he

P.rogram in

Jain headed to India,
then to Fraoc4! on Fulbright
Dr. Arun ~ Jain will be on leave from
Hyaerabad, and at the Unlverslt.y of
his post · hare for ·more than a year to 1 Allahabad wh8f8 he received biChelor's
lend his expertise In the fle!d Of
and master's &lt;legrMSin 191U and 1966.
marketing research to educational
respectively. He holds a master's' In
buslneea from Berlteley and !he Ph.D.
fecllllles ln India and France.
from the Unl-alty of PennayiYanla.
Jain, an uaocla!e professor of
Jaln'a Fulbright award calla for him to
:;:rn~! "':.1 ~~r;:: :~
teach mart&lt;etlng planning and atrategy
, _ heretfils week for a sojourn In his
at the Europaan lnatlluta 61 Business
native India. In October. he will travel to
AdministratiOn,. at
Fontainebleau,
~:"~:~
consumer .
France for a y - •·•tay 11 a Fulbright
l.i~
· ~n delcrlbad t11a lnllttute 11 the '...
ICholar.
In carl)llnp out hie mlaalon to India
largaat of Ita kind In lhl world. He noted
that atudenla from 35 natlona are
under a $1,000 grant · from the U.S
Oepr.tment of Health, Educalion and
enrolled thera.
The F.ulbrlglll grant ewardld to Jain
·Well.. (HEW), Jain will d...lop a
atudy program In marketing manageIa the flrat '-'ved by a U/B
ment at v.loua educational · lnstltum~t ICholar.
Ilona. He said the.bulk ~I hla lectures
Jain tlaa written nU~~~eRWI reeearch
• and aernlnan would be conducted at
papers and attlclll for PUblication. He
the Indian lnatllute of Management at
noted thai he had 111 auch papers
Ahamdlbad, at the Staff College at
publlaha;d during 1g111-N.

1

=..

F

ni'VIna~ r&amp;a1PP10inted head

nearing
• teedltng 8nd a. ""'*'' lntamahlp
C:::..Willi-~~~~ for aenlor

.:.....~~=

..........
..........
8lllbuiWa
~~~~~ally
to llllhll!lwllltlldmum

-·.;-;m,
' " - - IWMd
..,.,...... e1 1111 Y_.. 11r allldenllln
T• . . .

=-

Ul8'e ~~~~~~--'-Dr

=•IUNY~~~=

;1f:icPs=~

�.

Dental S bool needs $4.2 miUion for u
To get the Dental School fully
accredited again, $4.2 million In State
funding will be nMded over the next
three years, a plan presented to
Western New YOII&lt; legislators here last
~!~ed:s reported to have recomThe plan, which was not made public
by President Robert L. Ketter, was
obtained by the Courier-Express followIng l! luncheon meeting and tour of
Dental School facilities attended by
arell leglslalors and U/B and State 'officials.
·
The funding outline was presented to
the lawmakera, but Ketter said It was a
dreft which has to be cleared wi th SUNY
Chancellor Clifton Wharton bef6re ·
being officially announced .
Nick Mason of the Courier found out
that the plan , aimed at correcting 37
.....__cited In a May report by the
~loan-Dentpl Aaaoclatlon, calls for
the Dental School's State budget, a
little more than $3.4 million this year, to
reach $5..4 IJiillion In 1982-&amp;. The exl!ll
funds are earrnw1&lt;ed year-by-year for
raising -faculty salarla,
and for
hlrtiiQ
"""""
-buying
· lot
equipment and auppllea.
No' expenditure eatimatee for facllltleo are Included, Mason said, because
architects are otill otud~ng dentol

(,.

. ainic:

On . NOf'YMn Mohl, Wllillm ~ 11nd F. C.rtw P.nnil in

'

rading

school needs .
According to the Courier, these are ·
the highlights of the U/B plan Jor
restoring Dentistry to unqualified
accreditation: •the budget for teaching and research
operations, under the plan , would rise
from $3.3 million th is year to $3.88
million next year, to $4.66 million In
1881-a2, to $4 .81 million In the plan's
final year,
•the dental clinic's budget, S14t ,000
this yeaf, would go to $235,000 next
year, to $450,000 In 1881-a2, and to
$590,000 In the final year.
•Pay raises for faculty would
command $1.6 million of the total;
the raises would be awarded during the
first two yearo of the period . The ADA
noted that U/ B salaries, slightly lower
than national norms, are depressed
eYe!' further by the high costs of living
here, and by high state and local taxes.
•Ten clinical faculty lines would be
added , aa the ADA ou.ggested (five next
year and fi'(e tlle~extJ.
_
.-..p,ll&gt;n

poelt- {l*ttit! h'rilleti"

lata, technicians and sacnstarles) would
be hired o - tlie 3 years-28 for the
dental clinic.

ob=.;~.t~~.:t ~~~ ~~~~

PltotNby .......

equipment, to be spent about equally
over each of the three years.
The Courier said Dental Dean William
Feagans and Health Sclencea Vice

Management picks Tops officer for annual a~ard
I

He serves on the boards of directors
of numerous -organizations, Including
the Buffalo Area Chamber of Commerce, Buffalo Fine Arto Academy,
Marine Midland Bank-Weatem, Greater

~~~~~o~r;~;~~n~/~';;f ~~

Arts.

B~er::rtr"..ot'!!,NI~~el~~r'"'~

awarded an honorary Doctor of
Commercial Science degree by that
unlverolty In 1964.

Further Information regarding the
banquet may be obtained by contacting
John H. Shellum, School of Management aaslotenl dean , at 831-3843. _
"Niag.,. Frcintler Executive" award
winnero are chooen through a nornlnatingJ:::::ure conducted liy the School

r.:..,::;::n~ ~~:=d!n~~::,; -

Unl-.tty. the M~t dean, past
reclplento, offloero and. boera members
of the alumni uaoclalton, 8l1d the
president of the U/B ~oundatlon.

Weaken8d bacteriafCiefense
.may be'icey to gum disease
A weakened defense agalnot a type of
bact- implicated In ·periodontal
(gum) dl..asa may explain why some
adults have thlo condition, ..-chere
at U/8 and UClA have found .
- Perlodontal' d l -, which -.ns

f~m;..~:':l~~~!UWu.'! ~..Tu~~oO:~

tau. It' a eat I mated aome 80 per cent o1
thoaa ~ 30 have eome form of the .
di - .
"-riodontal d ' - Ia a puzzle. In
general, - people get old«, they
typically pnxluce g.-ter numbers of
antlbodlea or "flllhlera" againat apectlic

bactariL

~icelly. the!)

the older

one aeta. the~ clef-lie or aile

abOuld have ...... the gi'MI Mll&amp;llve
bclarla Wlltdl Ia lmpllcMail In
pertodonlal d'--.
.

....

Tbe~lathe-.~-

......

_._....-'

ln lila U/~ ..Wy, Mllbocly

..._..,Ill llww 'groupe ol .,...._:
...... _ . wiiiii*IOIIDn'-1 - - ;

.....__.,WIIhilulllle,.....,..,

· ==..~ ~ whO~ ll!!t"w.fOUIIII . . . . . . . dal..... . . . ,

ln8llltlbtlclr ........... -

,..•

J

bacteria,• says Or. Ruasall J. Nl...,_
·ganl, U/ B profeaaor of periodontology
and uaoctata prol-r of m~

=~herllcllh~r.:.:~ ~.::~

wortc agalntt- bacteria than did the
young ildulla.
Yet, when amounte of er-n negall..
bacteria ln the mouth antlbody_
levala _ . lg&amp;lnal each
other, each ol the Una gRIUpe had a
relalivaly WMk ...aponie. Thoaa with
periodontal e l l - had atantf'-ltly
greater numbers of the bactaila ~
• woUld be axpacted.
"It -ukl ~.· .aya Nlaengard,
"thallboae witll periOdontal d l - are
unable to fight oil the gnm negative
- l - ."- Butlillall
- ~to
thoae without
the
d
lhllr
fight gr.m
poaltlva bacteria. on the ocher hand,
...imP'INd. _ , Improved with

••

Olhara irwofved In the atvcly ...._Or .
..~ " - · . . _... prot-•

U/8 - a . .-atenta
~ Ann Mallllr Dabble .. ~.
Tbe. . . - , . . , ., • QrWilfrOm
- ... NllloMII ' . tielltula fOr Dental
UClA; -

.........

�.1Uiy28, 1878

British TV

VIEWPOI~TS ·~

will film

- '

dancers here
Southern WASP falls In treatment _
of
Jewish calamity, Fiedler,says of Styr..oR _
· William Styron Ia back. His Sophie'•
Choloe has 181 the literary world on 111
ear The Times hp pronounoed It the
fiMi fulfillment of the promise of Lie

nsrrator, comes to know. 'Southern
writing es a force Is going to be o-ln a
few years, • Nathan announces. 'Jewish
• writing Is going to be the Important
force .... ' When chellenoed to give an
Down I n o.rl&lt;neaa The Book of ·the •
Month Club has boUght ln.
example, be names · ~Tiow, lesvlng
Now U/B critic Lealie Fiedler, who
Stlngo whose life history Is Identical to
championed the same aut/lOr's The
Slyron1s own, with a terrtlled vision of
ConfMalons of Nat Turner when some
himself . 'runn ing a pale 10th In the
didn't hasasaayed It In the pages of the
literary track.--: eating 'the dust of a
July 'taaue of Psychology TodiJy.
pounding fast-footed horde of Bellows
Styron tie •finds has " faded In the
and Schwartzes and Levys and
'
Mandelbaums.'
atretcti ..
The
falls Not because Styron
bee.use hi 8 am bfttoon
A beHie will! Saul Bellow .
._. nerve, b ut
" From the start, Styron has used
outatrtpa his wit and cou~.
mouthpieces not unlike himself; but he
To understand the work, ledler sets
did not hit upon the device of making
!~el onJ.o~"\h~~~~~~tth~Y Is~
his own writing career an essential part
of his sPOkesman's prehistory until The
American goy," one who sees the death
camps as moat Gentiles do, as an
Way ol a Warrior, a selection from
episode In the •eternal human strug!lle
't~7J!r~l~ ~gV:,t;'(s~c\'.!ea=~~~~
:r:,:,.g~.~~~·;h':~~~~~~ ~~
or postponed) , Styron carries the
of oaqlllllam - I nat Judaism...
account of his battle with Bellow up to
Fiedler " - ~"':;:
~:l!;.re':,'/nt~~~ a ~::'·~::• ~~~~fir~
Y one •
o-~·
~ness, signed only by Initials, which
the "-ggadiJh: or not
ria., up aga/nar us, but In every
(1«1¥at/on there are aome who rise up
his not-qult&amp;-fictlonal surrogate specu-

his fir11t lay In the midst of strangers
whom he lusts for and feara , lo- and
hates. Only once before had a writer of
com~ble ambition and talent , attempted to rander the plight of the
lonesome young South,e mer amid the
Kingdom of the Jews. T~t was, of
cOurse, Thomas Wolfe, wtiom ·S tlngo
tells us was a favorite of his and his
· mother's and , as he does not confess,
also of the Nazis. Styron Is aware,
however, as Wolfe was not, of th&amp;
absurdity of the view of Jewish women
that kindled the y6uthful eros of his
master and ~Is younger self-enabling
him to write what Is for me the hilarious
high point of the book: a description of
the failed seduction of a Brooklyn
cockteaser called Leslie Lapidus, from ·
whom ~lingo flees , baffled and
enraged.
Jews ere ahadowy
Fiedler laments that In a novel

noVel

·r'oea ::Jn;er••

0

~,.~'Itt; ': ~:{h!~~=t a~~~~~~ 'f,!~

~~h.::;,~~ . ~~~&amp;~~ t:pe ~~~r . .o~

=. u:rct;·~~er:~ ~~~pl~htu~l~~

~~~~~~h~~~ain'uil.~~~~e'J'::l:J:

-.a

gypeles
died In the ovens, along
with tha anti-semitic Pot..,• Styron

dlff....,t from thet oJ ala- In Styron's

~~~l~a~l Je~~~ee~mt;~~he~ J:~}~l:~

plies, and

joyless

Talmudic

renaissance.' Ironically, however, It Is

~Uch

me;&lt;~e

Talmudic I typesd who I

Aur;:,~w?:;_~bu:h.~l~tira~~co':::l~ ~e~

plck~m

comically,

thank

God,

rather than

~'=; .:!.~1 ::J~..-&amp;c:rt!"~~~'!t~

~~In the late11170., !!_~_htl(lg ·o ut a

·-...~ - - ·

ol

:':ts~~~~s~·.~r

his book Ia In lerlle part about It . . . .
"Why elee has he Mt a novel about a

tt!~ec~on a~r=

me, only ...s.med by being
_.,.fWIII, through the
Polleh IUIVioor, who Ia portrayed aa a
compulatve llw. They - ·contained;
report.c~

=:;.:::;..
•--~~.lndlng ua that
....

ar.=.ob::'=/:::
thell ~ ~ .
· - · . . ....._
··-• e11out 1e e1eo e11out the bur'-Gue.
atruggle (that for Styron's ~lon
and mine lOomed ao large) over WhO
to become the • - of late
~ ~ the IJIWIJew er

So hi

~~~~e. ad~ ;:,n.:'"~nh \~~:~a~ne~~~~

=~~:m::fc"~ w/!~~~~~

0:

bya::

-~~~

"'

___
--.-"'--•
. . .a .. ,....

1

·WI.1l~

..

- - .............. DloOolon of

...
,._

-AIIolro. -~.,-

-~

-.

. . . . 011111 -

· - . .. , _

selfIf you do, YO'\' may'!;:; just what the

Lt'S:Uon~~'i'l:.f~gi!'11r..'~~~~~8·

Fall otf8f'inga are being sought. Under
the aegis of the Division of Student
Affairs and the Undergraduate Student
Assoc iation, Life Workshops are a
• series of credit-free, generally ed-

~~J~~~r?:.u~~~tJf."n

to U/ B
Voluni"9J' workshop l....,ers - who
are welcomed from the Buffalo
cor(lmunlty as well as from University
ranks - are also entitled to take
courses.
Life Workshops spokeswoman M~
Jacobsen said additional areas of talent
the program hopes to tap Include music
and film appreciation, aato mechan ics,

"To be sure, Sophie returns to death

~~~t'!~=~~~~ft~~~~~~~n. with
Life Workshops was · bl&gt;rn out of a
desire for groups of people with similar
Interests · to work together toward
cllmmon goals " which would enhance a
sense of community and enrich the
quality of life on campua, " Jacobsen
explained.
Anyone Interested In teaching a
workehop ahould fill out a leader
proposal form which can be obtained In
110 Norton . All proposals muat be In by
the&gt; end of the firat~ of August,
Jaoobaan noted,
r
Purther Information can be obtained
by calling the Life Workshops office at

years 1&amp;181' mocks Stlngo'a callow
response· but thus to have reveaiN:rthe
dark ambivalence that underlies both
Styron's youthful ob-Ion with Jewa

="!~Yttn:wo-:!.t ~:_ 'l::"there~:~";:

~~~~~U:O~o'::~ ~~~::::~

a

novel,' requlnaa wit and courage
well
as ambition . Had he Proved juat a little
leas ambitious, a little mora witty and
courageous, he might haw been able to
see the whole story sa ajbke not just on
Stlngo, but on the unrecleamably
Innocent cult una th=:; him; ending
with the antl-ill!rnact fliMnaJ- a.mon
dell- o - thil
of SOphie and
Nathan by a •aynthatlcally - ··

f~~..:r:lfiCa~~·::. ::.igm.

:w:h~~~.~...:!: =~:n.:h;

nowt made It onto the bMI-eetler llate
Uncoln, Ralph Waldo Emeraon, -[)ale
and won for Styron the PulitJ!er Prim
Cameale, Sl&gt;lnoza, Thomas Ediaon,
-...c1 further proof that he had , __ and Slgmuncl Freud, while a 'whining
~.%t~!'ged In the .-lm of High • ~~nd organ' P,lays Gounod'a 'Ave
-

"Styron, h o -. Ia not able to leave
It at that (It Ia perhaps a final joke on me
that I object, wanting aomehow to make
the book my own), going on to evoke
hi• Irrelevant names, Lao-Tze, Jeeua,
Gaul8ma Buddha, h/a lnad4iquate
benallttes: 'Lit yolK love flow out on all
living thlnga.' And he cloeee-wllhout

Fiedler continues:· "1, on the other
hand, wu deaply- by his worll for
the firat tlme-lmp&lt;eaeed by the .._.
cltutu&gt;ab of tha lllt8!ftpl. Picking up' .
Sophie'• Choice,
I found
myaalf hoping that he hed not In the
ln-lng yews loet h i s - ; aa 1 ~o~":and--r d:..,:na~j
clellghled to. ,.,art, he 11M not-mowing
on to a aubject -ldlnd by l!l'lllllltied
daath/but woke at dawn to -/In glory,
" - • u~ by., outatdar aa
the bright, tile morning Iter'; tliough
..... Nbelllon hed -...c1 to bleck
they ...-lect not joy at tne moracu10ua
militants In the tale 1810a: a eubject,
para~.- of lerael or_, the triumph
of ~lty ~ abeolute ..,II, Only the
· that
&amp;aut Bellow hed el..-ly
OCIIIInliited
In Mr.
wrlter'l eelflah ~ that one, at
"Tille time, ho..._, Slr}'OII ,_. not .leaat, lies lived to tell the lel-and It Ia
tried til ... hll 81ory of .... . _ llllaCity • he."

ia":-:+me.-

Have a knack for massage? How

~bj'.,"~..~~~~Mo:~~~ ~~nguage,

k~Y~~ ~,;. ~~eh~t::O"h~f:'otansl:

ofJ-ThomasJoyoewo_lie than to ,!he example of

1.- ........ the -.c~ou- of •
~ ........ vlctllll, . . heclld In the
OllitflleeltiMot N• T - , • -

Life Workshops
-s_e ek leaders

HaF:l't~n:!,::":,~r-'•

badly, turning off.even the kind of critic
.J who had originally hailed his esPQU&amp;&amp;I
of 'high style' as a welcome relief from
· the lumperr proee of 'realists' like James
Jones, but who now beCame uncom-

s.m..... ,.,.,._

nlt~'.l'o~'~~A wl~~.!~~~~~~.;
·~ere the Event Is

=.:.-stinn;!~~&amp;r~\h:n~~:;'!~~::::

~ke
. S.~~~'7fou~~ry~}t::C,.g.,"::,:.:S

-ore.

!'lu,'ral:~ovt~ ·~:lf,'l~"!~n~ah~~Ps~

good about Jaws at allr

~~=~.~~: ~~V::rlt'Jh~~J.;~

The_ ........

~~r ~~~:C,~\~!hdea=J'!:~I:,t~~~

.. Nathan had everything that Ia bad In

the......_..

&amp;ndlalld In flM7 by N8than IM!deu,
1tw fllwt New Yorll Jew 011t1om StlnOo,
the IIDOII'e 11ou11-.n ~

he

st~S:'·~Je~•• ~ .ro!:'l h~:~~~~ ~~

·" Many crlttca · therefore, reluctant to defend Styron against the
attacks on hla next book, Fhe
' Confeaa/ona of ·Nat Tumer, made by
offended black national lata and Jewlal&gt;WASP."
American eoclal eclentlsts jealoua of
'ftlll atn1t1g1e Ia, of Allllftl, Fiedler
hlatnvulon of a hiatortcat ten1tory they
....,..., · - over, the fiMI victory of'S) conaldenld thelra by virtue of a prior

=.........:r:

lth

~·~.:=~~~~d~~~·~~ ~ f?l~~~tr!~E,~Y;)~~~sdt~,:~

·~:·~ 1d! 0'f~row~h~a~::d':"~~~

for

vl~~~;r~J·1 .;r.he~~~e·~=1~;t~

faded In the stretch Is hard to say. In - her, subjects her to a list of Indignities,
part, ~·· because he has not
"seduces her Into mutual suicide."

::-"....:."~: c.,ret~~~~· t'l:tor~

cof.fe""lour- rson London Weekend
crew will fif: a complete dance at

un;;:~~~g~iarl:,~~j~' l~e':;,'' Inverted
~dy of Jewlsh&lt;Genttle relations.,

figures, from J.D. Salinger to Kurt
Vo.~egut, Jr.
h.
1
~.:;,. ~g ~~..~~

Amertcan literary mavens who annually

:-:;::,:OJ 1~cam~~~
-r J)llllloa t h a t - 1 lnMI*&amp;ble !nom
::::!tt:-~ter~ut :.C::.e~

~:!(:"'~· aco~l:!:'ra~. w~~,;.:;

~,:,;·~~~.g :Y 1 ftt'f~er=:~ ~ult\

. .:".:l:w1:00:·
clllldren, In tha United States of tll47

~':"=~~-gi!:~

survivor of the camps who, however

assl~

0

clear'' to Its viewers
taking place."

~l:'~~'f~~\'ris~-1~~~~

up .except on class

~~\~~~~~~~~nw';:red~lt~ :J::

who are "tliiiwlnclngly and deeplft
portraAed are Gentiles: Sophie herse I
~':!,h;/l~lph Hoss, comm~"" of

~~~~~
~~:;\~aft~!~~~~w: ~:S.'
t e t~d ~a~~~J~I=1 ~';'~1ft ~
written by Irvi ng Malin , who In tact
welt as passion : the guilt of a Gentile
~:.Cnheara~er~~e)~~~!,~m:.rc.~~

~ert=anc!.~

although t~ere Ia tha possibility that a
small portion ol a . Cunningham
Company " Event,'' (one Is slated for
Tuesday and another for Wednesday

-•raJ
~

South."
elruggle . . . _ ~ and
Thus, aaya Fiedler, the' Holocaust

~=~~fr:'

ct::,:"ltn
Dance will be lntercut ·with Interviews

portrayed Is a superartlculate, psy- .
chotlc, sft""" ·freak-one Nathan
""'""
Landau. The Jews who.suffered In the

~:h:C~~~~n 0~~~~":l'~h~~

eyes,

The British are coming-to campus
next Wednesday - to film Merce
Cunningham and Dance Company who
are partlclpstlng In the U/B-Artpark
Dance Festival (see "Calendar'' for
details).
Esther Harriott, director of cultural
affairs, has been advised that a
production team from London Weekend
leievlalon, one of Brltaln's lndJ1pendent
channels, will be here to fllin the
dancers In rehearsal.
The local footage will be Incorporated
In a 50-mi nute documentary to be
shown next year on " The South Bank
Show,'' a leading weekly arts program
networked througho;ot Great Britain.
The film will ~Spiel the Merce

636-2808.

FEAS dean mov~
·

The Dean of the ' Faculty of
Engl,_,.lng and Ml!lllad Sc!Mices will
hofd an office-warming party, Frtdsy
August 10, at 3:30 p.m. In 2111

~:,On~ ~?:..e:'J.'"at~~~;:f.'lnlatra-

Dr. George L.. and ataff haw
occupied about 3,000 square IMI of
apace on the aecond floor of Froncak
where they ere expected to ramaln for
• ~M~YWBI yews. New engineering bullcl,nga under conatructlon along the
Amherst spine have-no facilities for the
_office, FEAS apokeapeflona

=·•

.=

~ln~7·~.Y..M:,-n~• ·~ ~
Mathematlca and Staflattca gred stu-

denta r - t y houead In Hayee Hall.

End of summer,

.·

.

=:-:--===--~~':':.-i~-::~.:::-.=
.
'

�Juty21,1t711

. . .uuta

Plants-on the go
Plants, hundreds of exotic and familiar varieties of them, were

car.,fully truckood from Main Street to Amherst early this week ahhe
noow l'hlllp Corshelmoor Laboratory Greenhou"" was QCCUplood.
Plants were gently packood and loadood from the ola greenhouse
facility n.,ar th., Health Sciences complex. with special car., devoted
to those In bloom.
·
Thaddeus Bieniek, greehhouse technical assistant. supervised the
move and the task of getting the plants comfortable in their new
environment.

Deslgnood by William l. Long AssociateS' of Buffalo . the 6 .800
square foot greenhouse tali contains four separate greenhouse units

wi.th envlron&lt;neltSTanglng from tropical to 'crisp, " plus a growth
chamber and botanical t.,amlng lab.
The .,.,rlor shell of 45 per coont aluminum and glass. similar to •
a traditional greenhouse, has a remaining exterior of masonry whh

a brick facing. The bulldll)g Is located just to the west of the CookeHochst.,tter Towers.
Undergraduate and graduate students and fac.ulty members will use
the fac.lllty for Instructional and research programs In biology and the
botanlc.al sdences. Th., separat., Interior units will permit the study.
of different classes of plants requiring different t.,mP,eratures and having
different growth cycles and oth.,r r.,qulrements.
'
Roosearch and lnsti'U&lt;!tlon In plant physiology, plant pa~ology . plant virology. plant anatomy, morphology, oocology and entomology will
be posslbl., as a result of th., new facility, Unlv.,rslty spokespersons
lndlcatood.
The n.,w facll1ty, which has twice the space of the old one, will
be Ope{&gt; to the campus community weekdays from I 0 -2 as soon
as It Is completely ready. AO announcement will be made . There
will also~ an open hOuse In September to mark the official opening.

�July2e, 1111

- -'! ·

Farm-City ·--~­

WOmAn

group gets
back tQ basics

·science,
survey finds

-

cl~u\ a :.,S~~~f ffiAJ' st~de~s ~
0

. :::.ar~~ c~:~~r7an~ ~.;~u;;
0

the University. The focal point of the
projeCt Is In deVeloping "appropriate
· technologies," for farming , a term for
18MWable, low co st and non-polluting
energy sources.
The Collective has been In exi stence
for almost a year and has promising
plans for the future. Spokesman Chuck

~~:~r~gnl~vor.:f~?nrac"J:~

he hopes to have closelll 100 members

by the end of the summer. ln.addition,

the Un iversity's College F will offer
courses related to the project in
September.
As of now, a quartllr-ecre of laQd has
been cleared in an area northeast of the
Amherst campus with five hundred
square feet of soli dug up and planted .•
Into vegetable gardens. Collective
members are designing small windmills
which are being tested, an&lt;l are also

.

w:~~~~~g,.'!'I~Ye~af. ~a'r~~~my~·!;,::~

fields, the committee said it Pound that
men's . academic salaries overall ex·
ceOOed women's by approximately 20
per cent In 1977. At the level of lull
professor this amounted to-a difference
of at least $2,500-between the salaries
paid to men and women , reaching a
peAk In chemistry where the dollar
difference in median salaries was as
high as $6,200.
. The "?mrr,ittee found . a steady
mcrease on the numbers and proportions oj women serving on .Niltic&gt;nar
Science Foul)datlon advlsory commit-

ex~f';,":J.'!gs~~~!': ~!=~~1fc!~glias

1

provided $1500 to aaslst the Collective.
The pooaiblllty of raising funds through
aluminum and meter recycling has been
discussed. Material donations for
constructing a greenhouse are also
being sought.
.
In the future, Collective members
plan 1o drill a well and build a geodesic
dome of ferro-concrete for a central
meeting place.
' Anyone Interested In becoming
involved In the projeCt, or in donating
materials, can contact Collective
members at 836-4189 or 837-5086.
People and matetlals are always
needed, Schwartz '!,J)'S.

. , \':'sp-;r u~~~m ~ig~~~'"f'~! lnN~~itn~~
Research Council did not fare as well only live per .cent of NRC committee
m
tee
members are women . The
recommended that · NRC
dUct
periodical monitoring of its committees
. to Insure an appropriate number of
women scientists.
The study found the proportion' of
women faculty Who receive tenure lags
behind that lor men, and th·e committee
recommended all public and private
institutions be required to Include
salary lnlormatlori and tenure comparisons In their aflirm'ltive-actlon teporting . The panel also recommended
the establishment of career development- awards to help Increase the
numberof womeri on science faculties .
Lilli s . Hornig, executive director of

1

RadciiUe offers
( research stipends
RadciiUe College has announced a

new program of support for scholarly

="' J_,~nd~~

a ~.:i,~;r::. T':
encounige scholars to revise and enrich

tz

lhe Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger
Utnry on lhe History ot Women In
Amwlca and at the Radcliffe Date
RMourceand ~Center.
In partlouler, echolara will be able to
upon IMM raeourcea In de'leiOp-

~~g..H!?'W.-~~~~~~~S::.~~~~
committee. Its report, Climbing the
Academfc Ladder: Doctoral Women
Scientists In Academe, Ia S8 · from
Office of Publications, National Apademy of Sciences, 2101 Constitution
~fe~· N.w., Waslll.ngton, D.c .

ina,_~to~in

ccillllle and una-.11¥ curricula.
·
Sc:lioWa ere Invited to eubmll

~ CI'VPO,.... Claelgned to make _
ellecthe of metertals ln lhe
&amp;chlealngerLibfWy, the Date c.m., or
botH the Llbnry and lhe Date c.nt..
Radclllr. 18 eaptCiall)' • - In
a . ,.o)ectl thel Include ....
--'yela Of · -*'•ly unueed or ·
undliruaMI INilerlala .tid that tn1111e •
aubelantllll ~1oM to • better
uncllr.sandlng of
In American
80!!fely.
for UIIIG·81, lhe Redell"-~
SchOI. . Prog,., wUI -.11 stipends
to as mehy as four acllol. ., enabling
tt.n to WOit&lt; at ~lfle on their
- . : h proj-.
.
Appolntmenla will ba lull-time either
tor the ec:adeMic
lor one tarm

·Michael to head
iDstruction uillt

w-

Ed Mlc:haal hu..baen nemec1 director
of basic Instruction lor phyelcal
education In• ~~~e•ov,Department of
' R«riatlon, ;t;thleflian 'llfd Related
Instruction.
In lnllking the an~t. Dr.
Salvatora A. EsPOalto, chelrmeri of the
department, said lhe
will
be effective Sel&gt;t-ber 1; 111711. Mleheet
replaqea Vioiel. Diebold, who resigned
• the position but will ...,...n In lhe
department as an aaaoclate proleaaor.
Michael has . been .,.. -latant
professor In the department and 11.-c1
coach of wrestling since 11170 and will
continua t o - In both -'Ilea.
The ~oal of lhe Unherslly'a basic

-m-

. ·~=~;:~·Ill
•

~

The number of women scientists In
faculty and advisory posts has
increased .- primarily because .of equal
opportunity laws - but seit differences ·
In salaries at academic lristHutions
remain a serious problem, a National
Researc;ll Council committee reported
to th,e Office of Science and Technology
Polley.
.
The report by the Committee on the
Education and Employment of Women
in Science'and Engmeering was the first ~
to look at the status of women
scientists In academic Institutions
since enactment of Title IX of the
Education Amendments ol1972.
The committee said. the number of
women on science faculties grew thre&amp;
times faster than totar faculty -growth
from 1973 to 1977 with the most
significant gains occurring In the top
. rest!jlfch unfi(Sraltles which hlive traditi onally employed the fewest -women.
. lhe ·committee said it was ill}portant
that women accounted lor 35 per cent of
the growth in scienc.e faculties at these
"pace-setting" research universities.

proving It to be a viable alternative. Wit!&gt;
dlveraHied Interests, they are coming
together to devote their energies to
turning unused campus acreage Into
productive farmland .
The Farm City Collective started out
with a proposal to the U/ B admln istra-

=lns~~~~~~!:l:l..

:• r '

-lotlba
,.quire

:rC:'t:=loO:::n::'~"':l:'.:

program of Mlecled activities whlctl
will contribute to their
mental,
emotional and aoclat -'opment. The
prog,., -Phaalzee' a ..taty of
lndfvlduel ectlvltlee deelgned to equip
students with knowledge and skills lor
...,..tlo.oal pertlclpalion beyond college life •

J:yelcel,

.._.of

.
.
.
.
--.
.
.
.
---·

the~~,......__

............ and

"Orouhcla
.ttlle
_.,tlle_

........... .....,.. -.og
-....ctfl.w.ln_......_,._,,.....,_.........,
..
o..-.-·eot-....-~fotanollll

-~eo~:--

tlle ........................ plue.

........ ·...

·~·

..

�.~u~y21,

1m

7

seeks hew ways
~d=~~m:w:r. ':::u~-res~ '~

Certain 11- and k/:fney aliments not
always pinpointed by conventional
testa.

wo~l~u!=n.t""!~e~:-~~Ia~~~~~~

several days Incurred .when physicians
·rely on conveotlonal tests.
Or. Mlc:IIMI A. Anbar of UfB says the
key.to the teats being developed may be
· the mass spectrometer, a sophisticated
piece of equipment which Identifies the
molecules of 'a substance by their
mass . •

u~t~~~~',j!'~tff~~Pv~ ~~~~~~~~

aboot the concentration of patients'
metabolites, byproducts of body metabolism which are found In urine or
blood . Characteristic concentration patterns may be associated with such
diseases as Infectious hepatitis, cirrhosis of the liver and viral or bacterial
pneumon l as~.

Pattno haft to be determined
Before the tests can be devised, says
the chairman of the Department of

~:~h~~~e~'i:l~~e~:r.::~~ ";,~~~

terns are Indicative of specific disease
8

st~~ identilylng metilbollte composition In hundreds of patients who have
been posltl~~ely diagnosed as having a
disease, Anbar and asapclate professor
Dr. James McReynold's are establishing

dl~,"~!t~.\':~l:'!xarnple, a group of
six metabOlites show a much higher

:~~':iorn~o~:"l.~~~ui':Yen~!
explal~s, ·~hen

the same elevation of

OdetoMerce

\

to dia~nose -ailments .

last_night I saw Mere~ Cunningham and his_ ten amazing dancers

these metabolites In new, undiagnosed

dancing for eighty mlnures wirhour a bn;ak in rhe college gyni.

~.=~.would Indicate they have the

Anbar notes that ten
would have considered

)'tars:ofago,masshe

I am ttying ro tell you how ir was
but of course there are no words
for being wholly enclosed in a space.
a tight cocoon without ch inks
"'\ so none oJ _the wonder wil lleak.out.

UIMI

!r;:k%~:!Z~!I:';!.Jn~~es

" But ," .he says, "ten years apo the
cost of the test using the equ1pment
was $100 and the patient's daOy hospl1al charge was only $50."
TOday • the situation has reversed
bec;luse of lncnaaslng hospital rates
and decreasing cost of the equipment.
Then, too, the quicker the 'diagnosis Is
made, the sooner the patient gets out of
the hospital.

~r:o~l:~~~~~nd:n~u~~~,; :{,~ ~~f!';

'

-Exc.pted from LIHI Muetter,-l'he Now
Yorlcer, Feb. 16, 1976. Merce Cunningham
and CompanY are here Tuesday and
Wednesday .

-

•Calendar
(from pr~ge e. COl. ..,

General admission $2: studenJs$1 .50.
Miss Sca1ett ~ friends re-fight me CMI
W• 10 the Ule of Tara's Theme. After 40 years,
lt'astilabk:lckbustef'.

(3233 Main St.I. 9:30a.m. and 11 a.m.; Week·
&lt;!BYS. Newman Center 1"'-" Fob Blvd. &amp;
MW'I St.), 11 :45 a.m.
Amhem Clmpua: Newmlw'l Center. Frontier
Ad. ne. Bioott, 10:30 a.m. .-.:1 12 noon

!Ys~p~~~s .r~.:r~~ ~~~~e~~s~~~

ALM•

(&amp;may): 8 a.m. and 12 noon 1 - y s ):
5 p.m. (Saturday vog;o Mass).

- - (196A) (.,..,_1- t46 Defendort.
1 p.m. Sponsored by the Center lor Media

PSYCHOLOGY EXI'SIIMENT

="a'l"edb&amp; ro~~~::;pm~ab~it':s~n lor
" Analyzing each metabolite found In
human urine," says Dr. ~nbar , " would
be terribly expensive and time-eonsumlng , but the mass spectrometer efficiently surveys the patient's entire

Study.

into biochemical causes of many di-

:Jl~!~ • trnli~t":ea:n'o':m"a'',~ie~ ~~~~
11

1

~

- - Qynoooiogy·Obotetrico, F-9062 .

- - - P i w n ' c y. F-9063.

I'ROFESSIONAL
STAFF
--Continuing
__

i_,

Wiard Fillmore College, 2 _ , ., PR·1 ,

-

S.9026. B-9021.
COMPETmYE CIVIl. sERVICE
Typloi SIW- Clr1nopedics, Erit&gt;Cot.my Mod·
leal Cenlor. UnMnitios Dt.anea 16): Music .
Scioncerod ~­

-

.l.ocl&lt;volod.
Caoaloging. -Science.W&lt;rt.
Cld 5(W- General Cliniall Donlistry.
Slonogoopftor SG-5 -

IJnMnlly l..lbnwles

1~: School of ....__,., Phomla·
cology and~ . Pl'lllt'dal SefVices (lull·
tlll'le. ten'lpo~Wy) .
-

Typist ~1 -

-

U"-aity l..lbnlries

- __...,.,.,._S(H -

(I.Dd&lt;wood Ref""'""")gel Olfico.

•

•
IJnMnlly Bud-

Cahi• 114M - Offloe of Student AccouniS

IIUI·-

. lomporwy).

Jr. - I C H 4 - Gynecology·Obslotrics,

Milo General.
~&lt;;!~VICE

s;-:;:--- -~- ~

no.

51., LN -

M o - . ~12 - Ml*1 51. , Uno no.
31288.
~- ...-·~14 ~51..

--

- Line no. 40&lt;102.

~
-.s... Uno no.
30110
-

-nle

~ ~1- Almont,

~12

-

__..,..... ~12 - Olfico of

llirOCior, t.JrW.11ity~-·
- - - . . . . . . . ~12- Offloe of

~---·

-...w.~~rllff'

--..._~ (-.

~Coanl.~-­
'

of~PR-2, 8-9028.

-......
FAQLTY

ln~t~te~ntr,;si:C,~~::~~ ~t';,Gu~l: ·
t"'f8~~~~·~~~'!;i\f·meet Tuesdays and
Thursdays, 3-3:50 p.m., during the fall
semester.
Departments are encouraged to have
their new foreign teaching assistants
enroll.
Course objectives are~
• to improve the oralfaural proficiency
of the foreign TA In his/her field and In
extemporaneous speech ; •
•to Improve readlngf wrlting ability
lor graduate wor1&lt;;
•to perfect' classroom teaching and
interaction techniques appropriate to
the U.S. university classroom;
•to .offer understanding of the
educational and phi~
. lcalbasea lor
the U.S. uniwraiCy
e and unde&lt;gl'8duate curricula
lch the TA Is to
transmit;

:::

university ..Smlnlatratlve ~ureo
that affect theTA, matt?l'8dlng
and telling,- and the
camrnunlcelion netwofl&lt; of
. u~

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

==~~~~ :
CAIIDO!f THAIIU

:..u.::"..:.:!::- -~-

CHANGE OF ADORESS

-

-

~

Art lt&amp;looy has lllOYed from ltle Elicott ~·

-==-===
~ ...... -~

Through August
~-

Gele&lt;y,

-·Frido9.9 a.m.·S p.m.

Jloor

SANTA ANA SUMMER INVITATIOIW.
W011ts by t 2local rials. August~
10. Afemo Galery, Beck Hal. Opening reception
Augusl 8 . Sponsored by the V.P. lor Health
Sciences, Deportment of Art.

to 605 Clemens. The Slide t.Jtnry has moYed

to

5Q8.S 1 o

C1emens

Phone I'UT'Ibers r8fi'IUl

the .......
CHILD ABUSE SYMPOSIUM

A~ SymojOs;um on Child Abuse is t&gt;e;ng
held by the Colleges on Aq..ost 15, in ltle _ ,
Theatre, Norton . AI 10 a.m.. partic;::ipMts from
ltle legal p-ofession, e' local legislator. a police
olficef, .., elemenlaty school ,mdpee ...
discusslegalaspectsofltlesitualion.
At 2 p.m.•- social a'1d ITIOf1lf aspects of child
&amp;bose wil be airod by • representative from
f&gt;lnniS Anonymous, Betty CaoPele. of
Chldrans SefVicesof t h e - o f Chldnln, a ......- of the Task Force on Child
Abuse, Or. Elwin Jomson. pn)feaoor of ..,.,..,.
pdogy, IWld scmeone trcrn the Medlcl!l' ~ Rlr more infonoaflon, oontoct
of
the Colleges.

Kevin-

FliEE !lATH TUTORING
Colleoo o f - SclencM. 1()8.109
Wllk.eoon Quod, Eliootl. MMdoy- We&lt;Nodoy,

~~~u=r'~tt':!:'in t~~nl.:.,~

slty community and In the classroom
teaching situation which might cautMI a
. communications failure In the course of
- the TA'a teaching experience;
• to try -to anticipate, through
Interaction activities and role playing,
the typeaol situations moat likely, to be
encounterild In the U.S . claatoom; and

........-~--.o

ttl.

tor-

._T-.-.st
-.
-.
31 . lmer
5th

CHAHGE'OF ADOAESS
The Offtce of \kben Atfak'l has moved to
, 9 Q;efendoof AMex. The phone .....-. wil
_Temllin the seme.

Division of Graduate and Professional
Educati on , Is again offering a special
orientation course for new foreign

·: a.•• •otma......._R«rlT.
_...
,.....,..::- .,..,
....... ....,_,......,.__ t:..-::IC' .................... .
..........

~OREDPHOTOORAPHS

&amp;Oa!Jhanle T - Alao WOIIal by LP. I..Lndy .
Through August 6 . Afemo Gele&lt;y, Beck Hat.
, Sponsored by the V.P .
SclencM rod
OOYIIIEY: IECENT AIIOWC~

Notices

OOW:u~
fla --~ CCIIIIponenta: oaU_. ~ ......,.

. . . . . . . . 4 ... ~ .... -.,.

~-Knox Art~ -

t h e - o f M.

~·~·
~-~.....,.,.-.

Exhibits

-..g, - by John

~ (be·
8 p.m. Free.
Sponsored by the Cent..- for n-1re - . : h
rodthel)opnnentofn-1re .

IELI offers course
for f_oreign TAs

ot;tt~8 prg,v~r,.anf:'u~t=::gln~A~

SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK•

-Ado -

and the Whittaker Foundation.

Praleeeor,,..........,........

in need of both men ..:t women 10 take prwt
in the proc,wn. H interested, cal831·1386 tor
more lntonnation.

..., the

~=rc~ro:r,d ~1-:pm:~JCo~S,::~c;:::

in a

to -

E1olo G o h r , - · 110 WFAC.
Blk:olt. 8 p.m. •$1 . Sponsored by
ltle Cenler for Media Study.
·
H;s fJms have been ..._, al ltle Museum
of Modem Art, the Museum. rod ltle
Anthology- Archives in New YOI1t.

Morgan. Oelowwe1'a1&lt;, , _ Ao&lt;oe

11

;::,':":;.: ~t:.:

We .... seel&lt;ing SlJbjects

~~

~·

haven't produced overt clinical symptoms, and be cost-effective as well ."
The research conducted by An bar and
Dr. McReynolds Is funded through

FACUlTY

...

feeding outside this window.
darting and dropping and zeroing ln.
assuming positi ons in groups of threes
or fours, to break up and form
new patterns, other groups ...

Cultures toke much lOnger
·
An bar says·many tests currently used
require cultures of suspected diseaseproducing pathogens. These cesults, he
fast , accurate diagnosis.
"Use of mass spectrometry to Identify patterns" evident of specific diseases among the more than 1,000
metabolites created by the body normally and In response to disease can
also lead to better detection of 'carriers,'" he notes . " Carriers" are persons
who have a disorder but not Its clin ical

,

Instead, I ask you to watch Qle assorted b irds

On The Air
JULY21
.
AM Bufflla: Dr. Leonard A.. Katz. associate
dean, and olhe&lt; members of the School of
Medicine facully rod staff, .
in Health
Ca-e: Tel&lt;e Better Ca-e of Youroelf.' 1o1JP Dr.
Kenneth~·. clinlceleseisllnt
psychiatry, ''Ollld Reoring the Problom of
G-owing Up," WKSW·lV (Chomei 7) . 1 Oa.m.

.....,..,New

"""-of

c-ootlonalnlhoAnl:--

- - p o e t - -- Couier Collie (OW&gt;
nel10). 6 .30p.IJI.

JULY 21

c...• Hlghllghta: Dr. -

;.r..o:•IQ.

10:30 a.m .~ p.m" Tuesiloy rod~ . 10:30
a.m.·9 p.m.: FriOa:y , 1-6 p.m. Sponsofed by
Seloions.
. JUl.y 21

-

_
_Pa1&lt;way-- ~during
the """'"""· Now ~ . . inYited
lo tmg lo the Center

- --·

lorat&lt;utndlo-thoir~- -

The

"Lolce -

c...• t

-·

--.~ 102. 5).

Dr. - -

pial-. oO·

•. _ . . , - Todoy."
has..,__ a-· -WBEN(93Q)Ql . Englllh,
9:05p.m.
•

HEALTHCAREOPEHHOUSES
The Health C.. Pion
of "openhouees" atthWModcoiCenter, 120

•

- . pro-

-Todoy."
· of Englioh, ·Raicll
A1ao O·. Aatpll R. · ~, civil

tciloowk&gt;g

~:

Ia llo -

21, 5 :30p.mAip.m.

11 :05 p.m.
~
JUI.YIO

Cenlor"a Open

"""""'"'-'

__ _

c...•
1: Dr. 11a1p11 ~ - -~ Erilt."

civil

.....

- poet John
(Chomei 10). ep.m.
.ria.Yat

Ciordl. -

-

· ~.

(930) .

Cllllo

•

~ G. - . ft,O.

------,.-1 . . _... __ __
-----..

..-.- -."Fttlooool--"
All -

-1VI(Jwwlal1). 10a.m.

c

...... - - .......

.
10).
.11:30p.m
. - -. -- -

-CoutorCIIIIo fQIIotnol

1

...
- -· nulc. CoutorCIIIIo I(Jwwlal
10).1p.m.

�•

July26,1871l

'Much Ado'
Richard W - - Vicki Haino11re

- - the principals in the

O.W.re Park production of
'Much Ado About Nothing,' the
MCOnd of thia 1ummer"a outdoor
U/8 Shak-re events. It

opens next Tuesday.
/

To llat - t • In the "Calendar, - can
.... sm.der at 1138-282111.
Ker: IOpan onlY to tlloM with • pro......,.lln-ln the aub)ect; "Open
to the public; ..operllo membera of the

Unn.altv. Unleu OtherwiM ~lied ,
tlctreW !Or - • chllralng eclmlnlon
cen be IIUI'Chued at tlle Squlra Hall

ncblofla.

CALENDAR

'*·
v.,._..,,.._....,donol
;s
Rober1

l"bursUy.......:. 26

Ths

w11 conduct. Scores ""' be
briog lllelrown.
1he ccncludlng . - t of h. U/B

&amp;mnerChonll DinlclonJ -

~fESTIVAL•

·

~FESTIVAL"

--·m-~,..l*tid­

•ln--.....-.ofe.~

~. 220Cionwls. 6:30p.m. Fnle.
~byllo--ofEnglish .

UUMFIUI"

,

(1971). Confereroe ltoooire, Sq&lt;ft.
$2;
• :45, 1 IWld 9 o.m. -

. . ---dona
--.--are

- 1 1 . 5 0.

- - - • .,.. Geofvilo)by 1920. lhe aad

-

~oiiW
..
- I n IWporoinga.

1.S~ .

L....... (11182)(-.,.

7p.... ~byhCenlartar-91udy.

_____
-UUMCOI I EB:0U._A,_.

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

-

ScJn

T. . . . ..

E-y

- 7·10p.m. Dlck-lolloMC.

_,'L'Luldly.-

Sat1B'day- 28
GAY YOUTH PEER GROUP
Meeting IWld nop · 107 Townsend.
_ , Street Campus. 1 p.m. 21 and ..-only.
New .......-. are welcome. Colt 635·.300.
for more "'formation.
CIWIUE CHAPUH FESTIVAL"
Tha Cloaa (19211; Tha lOci (1921);

A W - ol PlrLo (1923). 170 MFI&gt;C.. Elicoll .
5 and 8:30p.m. - - $2; atudents
$1 .50. Spor-..d byWAB.
WAS giYea you tho cl1lnce to rodisooller
tho geriua ol ~. Tha Cloaa lllowcases
tim ~ • ciJII rde - lrw1'lp .00 mlionalre .
Tha lOci hio tn1 - . . tonglh work;
~ lniroclJood- ~ IWld ~
-----ln1976wttha
I!Uiicll oc:c:J:e by ~ ; K lll'ows a IOriouo

_.....

'*" •••.

~-'

~ln

... lily(11M3j. N I - -

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

..... -. .... :--.. :::=. :::::~,=
p.m. -

. . , . . . . _ ..... _ t a r . . - . .

Socioly. 8
b y - S U I \ t -.

$1 ,50. -

This io ,_, o l - Sludy/Bullalo'a "A Trilute

..... Oorpnor Cenlar, .,.._., lJni.
-.lEy. 110 tEN;, Can6a. 6 p.m.

IDISQ,Y. . . o l l l o - -.·

-11.

FIUII~I lUDEll"

~by

o.ntor""- 91udy, -

.....,.._,N.Y.&amp;-~

---·-

" - " " - a.t(o

~.

(of·

a-- ..

~ IWld-..........,
,..LIM•---ol--'it&gt;
--

IDOWIIL Q3 . . . .. 8 :30PAI.

'

- .- 2 0- 7 - . . A
v·-e. Bp.m.
1.
U/8
· - $Sludy/

andlhe~ol . - .

. , . _ . She
deafiog with female psychology, sexuality IWld ra·

"" ""' -

- :':..,7-X:~ .."::,..~. :
Ollh«e fo&lt;

UUM-

=~~..,:

_,.,, ~~-·--·
p .... _- - 1 2;

-·1.10.

4:a. 7 - ·

= t=: ,:::.~~~

A-

d)nctera' actions na'in the pastoral forests

the

~

t::.i

..: , ct.k
Jl,.lll·
$3; U/B tacufty,. · by""' Office af CtAUaf - ..

ll!erce

Cu1nlr1glao -

=;

$2. "'-'led

fgnonld "' hoclded

fa' _..,, ""'" wldly accloimod at homo- .,
llwcoe&gt;ilolaoflhewortd. ~. hejuat

dlnclng IWld chooeDQIOiltOIQ m In·
f)uondng ~ chooec&gt;Qnpheo 1, like Twyta

lc"'JJ on

llwp,"""-,_
lor.

CIJnnO&gt;ghom's ldaea hml·
•

"""""'*&gt;Qradlc:afwtslonoflho~of

dlwloo. -aayathat
C&lt;ooa;
tar ""' more
·~r-, _ ldaea tar ~ por1omwlce then .any

..a..,..
........
-"""""Ynuolc--"---~

....... and oMlg/otd

Tho~ Houoe , 180;1
NogontSl 8 :30p.m. $2 aldoor- WBFO.

---I'
Dl1VAI.·
•=• &lt;I-

-

A-

Clooo (1e21t. -

ICitl (1821);
(1923). 170 11/FIC, ·
12;

IIIII 8:30 p.m. -

a1""'

UniYet8ily of Michigan ,
shcf ...-of t h o -· Paychology ol Woman
IWld Paycholo!lleal Conftlc1 ond the Lleproduc-

hos- .....,..,.,. -

=ot":",;.~":!.: ,_._of""'.

f--.

MIDOAY MUSIC SERIES"

t..nownce Trimm,
FouncleB' Plaza
(be'-1 Capen r.d Baldy Hafts). 12·,1 p.m.
Free. Sponsored by UUAS, Student Affairs IWld

-AcliYitieo.
PRESENTATLOHIDISCUSSIOH'

"by
ol V-San - 322· •WFI&gt;C.,
~
...,nc
Edln
Ellicott. 8Yidoo
p.m,
Sponsored by 1te een... for Modio Sludy m
Modio Studylalffalo, IWld N.Y.S. ~De­
psr1rnent (offered lfYough Media Sludy's &amp;Jrr.SChool ol F'.!n\/Media).
To . . - lh;l , . _ , _, V - IWld hlo wife
chartered • plane to fly from City to o gnMif alrstip on 1he A..,tic
c - t fanyW!g - I W l d !hoi' equipment viii dl_,t canoa to tho - . , of IJa1upu

-e

month-.

they IYed fa'_
..
flmy, aludyroglhoi'
_ . CUno
. , _.
~liTHE

-

Ado -

PAM"

- . . . . dfrocled by John

==-~~e~:.
~ by' llo a.ilar - - .., . . _ o f _.

-.vnl'ARK DANCE FESTIVAL~

-~·-~
by

"Event." Cion&lt; Gym. 8 p.m. $3; U/8 tacufty, atudenls, aWl S2. Office ot Gultlnf-..

Yethtd-•~-anda

w.o~~·

Sunday-29
.

·

cleYer. faif1y C2'31&gt;1e, IWld...., 'real·

of Arden when! romantic folly can get out of
hond. certainly there ;s no mogfc In Ado
Abau1-ng on t h e - ofHltlllt'• DrMm. tnatead - ..., P!'OPie
In relatively situaliona, oopO-og tho
proCtOms of underStanding eacl1olhor1Wld ·
latty ""' confusion which oddS
to luTian
relatlonaNps. Critica ctain that ., Elizebethan
et.gt,m 1te won:t 'nothing' afoo IWl a as
• I"" .. """"' 'noling.' MJCh ado, tllen,
about tow we see OU' reel sefws .-.d beneath
_.......to thotruennre ololhera."

Y-.

'*""' """'

oller ctoecviP'• ...

One CIJnnOlghom

..,-

'*'"""""'"
irlr1oVatQl

Is tho -

Ullh\RlPAJIIIDANCE FESTIVAL •
PoutToytorDeJQ~oy:-- .•

3 aec1lons from 1-B1&gt;.m. Donee Sludio
(with In Cion&lt; Clym) .• Spor-..d by ""'

Office of o..ltur1lf Alf1ira.·For r1lglstration.flf""""'
lion cai83H301 .
that he aoiiiS
In tho usual
Tho 1 2 - ~ ;s known for ~
ol- C001llola wcr1&lt;s
"""'0'. athtotfciam IWld " - toucl1ilio of ZMI·
pn eac11 P101JWn. Nl ""-"" 1o an ness. Thtyw bean on _ , a greet deol,
oo PBS's ..Dinoe i1 America"
~ of - - ol Clrr1inglwi1 #moat ,reoenlty
IWld they wtl be lll)lng • eaoond "Oonce
· - - - - I W l d . . _ . ,.- _
o 1!U1ic11 ""'" l*1om'ed ' only on tllOI
In - P'- jual priOr, .. !hoi' here.
ocxaoton . . . _ . . . . ..,. · IWld oO&gt;ce
CIJnnOlghom . . - hio """ ·In 196•.
Tho~wtl---­
done Will OWl' 200cl twn. •
deloa•-·hent~. t.ug . 3. -..
•

catOgory .. ·-e-..
"'- ...,, -

-

frlday-17

=

-mo of Beatrice m.BOoedict&lt;.

Spor-..dby._a.dy_.

a..ovr- -

-·dean

IWld

-.vnl'ARK DANCE FB11VAL •

FIUI"

2 p.m. Sponsored by 1he FacUty ol Educalional
SbJd;es.
•
Judith a..dwlck .;s a professor af psychology

SHAKESPEARE IN 1l&lt;E PARK •
Much Ado Abau1 Nothing, cirecled by John
Morgan. Oelawore Pot!&lt;, , _ Rose (be·
hind tho AbiQN.J&lt;nox Art Goltety) . 6 p.m. Fnle .
Sponscred by the Canw for ThoUe Researc!&gt;
Director MorgM offers this note on thia the
second oUttl9ot Shakespeare fa' , 979:
"Artisticaty, Much Ado Abau1 Nowng nooks
as one ot the most mab.J"e and sophist;cated of
Shaf&lt;eapeare's comedies. T h e s e - ::!so
deaat&gt;O the oontent of the play. Elements soch

PullliclocUeby_C._,,_

of - - IWld ""'-'
-3p.m. F!'M.
· ~ of 322 Clemons.
S!&gt;or--sbyllo ~of English

Transition: lhe Effects of Social Change." Wold·
rnil'l Theatre, Norton (tectlxe) , 10 a.m. Question.
a n d · - Period. lhe Kiva. 101 Haft,

Tuesday-31

.. lwWIQ •

giOlO)

he-

-~~~. ao-byUUAII.

-·--llldUoftln

~-­

wMFIUI"
Gol'!---~183ej, -Cion&lt;-.
-L11111. ~-ololiC~o~Ho-. .
Conlanonoa - · s.n. 2 m e :30 p.m.
.....-

.. .... 7,ooll

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>BRIEFLY
Dbpite Jimmy cart8r'a call for
thennoatat Nttinga in public buildings
to be no tower U.., 78 degrees,
air-cOnditioning : ; : s at Amherst
will nmain unc:IWI
for, the time
being, Pet• Bi
, mainten-.,ce
aupervteor too: the Amh- Pllyatcal
~.-aeldthiaweek.
·
· The air-conditioning syst.-n opllfat·
lng at Amh.-at provides air cooled to 55
degowa through the Chilled Water
Plant. A 55 dell,.. t.-np.-ature is
- . . r y for coonng apecial uee areas
' (ooml!utlng, machln.-y areas, etc.) and

=-~bu-:-la~ 6:.t":~m~at~
~;=,~r~'l:'t~'~~

about 88 degnaea,f the Unl-.jty hed
to reheat that eir to 78 ~. It would

=yr;:'~~.~o;,z=~-and

For this .-...on, U/B Ia awaiting word
I rom elth• Albany . or Wuhlngton
COflcemlng the altuatlon,
•

~A~~y~ ~~,:..~:''.:'"J'n •::

Many bulldlnga with centrlli chffllng
facilities Which have been deeignad in
• the lui etght to ten year. . . beeed on
thla aeme principle.)

Traffic signals
being repaired
The Oillce of Facilities Planning hu
announced that electrical contractors
.,. now repairing traffic aigneta on the
AmMm~pua.

On Moncley, July 1e. - . began
woril .on ........ at the in-ion ot
Flint Road and Audubon PartcwaJ. The
repeira are expected to tab two weeka.
On July 30, aianai repalra at the
lntereection • of Aenach Road and
Audubon Parlcwlly will llegin.
The Flint Cempua 1 Entrance Road
makee a connection with Maple Road
and the Renach Entrance Road
connacts with
Home Road.
During the .-Ira, algnala will be
turned Off ~ell-way atop• algna

s-

g:':fat.
io-:!~~7e.n ~'y:
lntereectiona.
Dr. Addelman
deadat46

Memorial ..,..ioN w. . hetd Wednesday for Dr. Sidney Addelman, 46,
chelrman-elect of the Stetlatlca Depan-

ment.

Dr. Addelmen died Sunday (July 15,
187Q) In hla Wlillamavlile home.
He jOined the U/B faculty In 111117 and ·
had p!WIIIoualy taught at Duke Un'-·
air. and North Carolina State Un'-·
al .
n 1873 he became vlce chelrman of
the Statlatlce Department and scheduled to beoome Ita chairman In

SeDtemb.-

.

Addelmen' Qr&amp;duated from Catteton
Uni_.Hy In · Ottewa, .-lved a
muter'a clegrea from the Uni...Uy of
Delaware Slid a ciOofoqte from iowa
Stele Unl..,.lty In 1810.

Dr. Johnson
cles In piMe crash
Dr. Wayne L Jollnaon died leet
Th.,... (July 12) . , _ hla elng...

=
.
__,
.....
..........
..

engine ~ _ . _ . willie ~

ing

p.......

lba

Airport

-

~.... --.Dr.,__.,

__..

tlla ,....

-

.... ......._- .... ot tlla
Dl;:al

E

... Olllelltla8 and ~
llll.alot~and-

10 ............. . . , ol
................... 10

-~IIOIIIIICIIItilfll.
Dr. ~ 1111111111 U/8 In 1t71,
0011111111 , _ from llldiiM .........,

._...CliMer.

Hllllltll ... M.D. flllllil
. . ........, ol Vllllllll 8aiiDol ol

.........

UIB.getting ·d ata . on
.
how·freshmen r.e ally write .
At the plaCe where you wori&lt;, a woman M5 Juot quit her Job; lhvlng
vaunt the COfJ'IMI'y's only executive

position ever held by-.a female. The
Board of Directors has stated their '
preference that a W&lt;?""'n replace her
In order to fulfill an Affirmative
Action quota. 115 a member of the
fllrlng Committee. It Is your lob to
help choose a successor to the post.
The only woman wh6 has applied
for the Job seems competent and
meets the written quallflc:a&lt;lons for
the lob but she Is dearly less qualified
than both of the men 5he Is competing
with. Members of the .Committee disagree about wha&lt; should be done,
some say hiring a woman Is absolutely
necessary for breaking down employment discrimination: others say hiring
a less qualified person would be
foolish as well as unfair to those
working undPr the new executive.
· To have a full hearing of all views
on this crltlc:al Issue, the Hiring Committee has asked each member to
~e a carefully written statement
to be distributed In advance of a
meeting to discuss~ Issue. Write
a statement which" ~ts your
position In the matter; making It as
loglc:al and persuasive as possible.
Your -ltlng task Is to persuade the •
Committee to adopt your own view_
and to vote on theiob candidates
In accocdanc~wt~.~r view.

regularly-admitted

men."

beglnnfng

tmt&gt;-

recommending - OO!l ol four Englleh
Choloea inckM!e . ~
coureee on.red br lilt

courMS;

The teat - of writing ability which

brueh.up

~:":,~~~~~~1 ~~~.1!!=-

=~ns~tl=~ll::.t= 1co~reea~l:

pilot project for a way of determining
and recommending to each Incoming
freshman the level of English course
wori&lt; for which he or she seems best
suited; and 2. To provide data for a
~~~l/r.' study" . of how freshmen
The 400 students who attended the
July 3 and 10 orientation sessions
participated In the project. Each of
them Is being mailed a postcard

score a student r-Ived on his or her
writing semple will determine the level
of placement.
How acoree W.. det.mlned
The, compositions were rated on a
sce1e of one to six using holistic
scoring procedures developed by the
Educational Testing Service, Cooper
expla]!led. The system, he aeid, yields

·-·- - - .·-2,ca1.2

20 Asian businessmen
learning US customs
program are the· president of the J Brldge Enterprlea Corp. of the Republic
of China; the executive .-..:tor of the
Federation of Korean · lllduatriea; a
manager of the Natlonlll Company of
Mechanlcei Construction of Algeria,
and a manag• of tile v...-ua
Shinnlhon Steam Ship Company ot

Japan.
Also Included are managera from
companies In Colombia, Indonesia and
Venezuela.
In addition to clauroorn ectlvltlee,
the managn will hold lnt.nahlpa In
local bualn..... for about two daya a
-'&lt;. The lntemehlp Ia uaueily related

t~.~~~-='.Jint~~j~

'1

-r,:r.-nad

felephona and Telegraph
with
New Vorl&lt; Telephone.
Companies that . . p.-tlcipllllng In
the lnt.-n progra~J~ Include Marine
Midland Inc., the Carborundum Company, Flaher..f'rloe Toya, Grephk:
Controta (lie., ~y and E~
ment, Bethiehenf ..'al8fl, the Bullalfl
zonll, and lhe Erie
Foreign
County·~ o...lopment Aaaoclation.
The ._....,·will aleo be Invited to
apend ......... in l b a - - of ioc8l

T,_

;:,r-~~~=

Tha r:.:::
0 ...
- -,;.•lntlllllltlltour
....._Willlocal
........ ,.,II
j

-

of

o!--

~-:-...- • ...,goal ol
tlla ~

whlall

:a. -

11!\att - .
"111--.....lll lilaMIWII!
In
IIW- and !111M 1M luiOMI !or

.._._t oppartuftltlee."

�........

1

---

a,Peuta..-a

tc'--'

A--.

.

=:=::.=..~~·~=
tha ax ""1811 .......,.Y on what hi

CIWgaa' Ia ~·a domination by
corporate 1-.ata. He lndk:t.r thl
Hlw Ole! of tha '30a for •uaumlng that
tha corporate lntrMtructure wu

. aourid," and dacldlng that government
would not lntruda except to allow the
.,..,.. 1o work.
· '""-- 8kylab llaaco wu a timely
lllllltqllon of H8n1ngton'a point. Sald
Ita:
a pn&gt;lound portent or
aopll
technOlogy not aubject to
polltloal
IOCI8I conliola."

5';:..., ............... __......
~whathevl_

.. _

polltal
:;uc::::
~Df:1on~ A~':,;
==:-...::=
.
a11or1com1nae Of ~ra New Deal,

eclantla1 and ~kan

tha

~ "aoclally
Clinal lnlgacly Ia a
d~M*IC In point of 1tow thla
thl'*ino Ia feulty, Ita aalel,..notlng that
Low cenaJ Ia juat one of many auch
"time bomba."
11ecauee or ladenll IUbaldlzatlon of
corporatlona, w81th In America Ia u
ITI8ktlatrlbutad today u It wu 30 or 40
yeera 11110\" Harrington not.r. Ha eald
tha ability or l.ge corporatlona to
~ chalcontrol pOOII haa langad, and thua thaYve manlpulat.cl
the .Nina of aupply lllld damand.
Mow ...... ~ llta third
- ' o n alnoe' thaJahoojon ~
prumlaad there'd ba no more aconomlc
clowntuma of auch magnltuda, hi '

&amp;.-

tkit tha

retary lor thl WOil&lt;era Defenae League
eald most or the worklra he's talked to
· . . not ao much ooncemad about
wao• or benefits u !hay are aboirt
hal ..:;
whether or not tl!elr oompany Ia going
..uwkedlorfhapoor. to .._ve town. "Tita corporate power
H8n1ngton oonclamn.cl Prealclent
must ba limited by democratic power."
~a on Import Quota Pro:
Harrington ~ U.S. develop.
~. Claiming that lka'a .clmlnl-lon
ment of ilolar eMr!IY. "But thl techno~
w.pt ~ oTI out of the U.S. to allow
ogy must be adajilabla to the Third
Americ8n companiM to aall llta 1.-1 at
non-compatltlve ~k: prlcaa. ·
World u wall, Ita lnalat.r; the one
• What ~ ot-....,lorwiiOm?
thing Tanzania lind Bangladelh are rich
Tha -.hila campal~,!t Robart
Admitting there Ia iio "Jn---n::aan.cl"
ln. he polntactqut, Ia aunahlne.
.
Mure, the 51,r-r:Oid ~s Collage
While hi , _ h8vlng the u.s.
two
aald lila 21 at Cenjury Ia
c.rter, whom Ita oallad "lnalfactual and
deYelop a publk:ly:ownad oil and gaa
lncompatant" - a .major problem at a
corporation, Ita ~lonad thai "any
time - . "bold, radical, dac:lai\Oe
Idiot can nationalize," but we mu1t aim
made polltiCIIII~ polltlz.atlon of
laaderahlp" Ia aorely naedecl.
to "democratlia and aoc1811ze."
the economy Ia
ble. •
H8n1ngton aald a, kind
hatero:
The kay to 11ta 1811Da, Ita believes, Is
The
kay
.
_
.
.
what
klnda
o!
geneJty hM M)lfllld hom thl watfare
creation of a , . _ . _ , or the .
pl.nnlng will taka placa, b)(. whom,- and
majority
paopla. Gtv. thMI - not the
.c
- '·-·anymore.
....... cliaa
poaltlona . . not ao
lor what?
We no longer Jullt .have
corporatlona - · tha . . thorlty to aat
wol1&lt;oenl, Ita explain.cl; now llnaa . .
popular priorltl•.
dra"n bat_, old and young w011&lt;ers,
Tile gu...m,a at ~. Ita added
: . " blaCk and w.hlte, ~ . ,..d 11 approach, thl other a "bottornrup" Ia Cl.fQMIDd people -capable oi
uaertlng their will. Anvthlng 1aa1
"'?='iop-down syatam, Ita envl~lona
What, be muoect, wu thl ind_,;
bacomea a program of "ellle manlpul~:
a glganllc ledaral govemll*lt progrem .
dent truckers strike really about:
lion."
which will hire the private .ctor to
truckera u bulin...peraons lighting
develop
synthlllc
luela
to
offaat
thl
lor batter wagae, br !Ita lannara~htlng
ctlsla that lhl private .ctcir created In
""~lf~:.' ~~~.get..!.'ft'."'Je noted, tha first place.
He looks. at this IWdonk:ally: "I can ·
where the middle and the bottom
_i magine Exxon daveloplng aolar anergy
ciuMs fight ~ other, whlla thl top
gets off "acott lrea. "
by buyIng the Stata or Arizona, covarlng
The M.cllcal Feculty Council elected
It with a lafve rellactor and pjugglng
Or. Evan Calklna aa Ita c1181r:elect faat
everyone Into 11. And It would ba
Spiritual dllailtme
week.
A long-time , active ITIIITibar of the
A further conaequance of the
carclnoganlcl "
.C9uncll, Calkins lta.ra tha Olvlalon of
creeping aoclal and economic problams
The audlance laugh .
GeriatricS and Gerontology In the
Ia a aplrltual dllamma, Hmtngton
Bottom:&lt;a_p
~mant of Medicine.
,
oba«wd. 'WI*I people doll'! The bottom-up approach wouia
public aolutlona " public woea, they
tum Inward." Y
mollt _people, hi
require mobilizing mernbare of pro:
year whan Dr. Murray Ettillger steps
contandad, no klntW ellactlv.ty baii8Y8
a..npla, !hare
greaalwo groupa. Aa
down lrom the post.
lnGod. .
.
fa a bill In Congreaa, Ita notacl, that
Profilaaor Benjamin Sandere of
would atop majO( companlaa from
=(~tho':'~~:~:~
Blocllemlatry wu a110 alact.cl lor a
y'!.r.~~g:l:, w~utw~t~~n~
Con_...tlwo Kevln Phlf/lpa), Harring:
tWo-year term u -..y.
ton aald religion ua.r lobe "the logic or · defending the aOc:Jal collts or auch a
Other elactlon -ulta . ., Ora. John
thl world In popular rorm." It wu a way
move.
Moran and Michael CohM, repreMntafor everyone to come .to grips with "a
tlvea to thl ExecutMI, Commlttae; Or.
de~~~~ ~k!~'t ~u~~conF:,~
world that Included evll and' death."
Raid Heffner, pre--cllnlcat - t a t l v e
subald~ (II~ tax lncentlvea), bill to the St-Ing Commltt•, end Drs.
baan
would remain lrea to laave- with tltalr · John Edwan:la ilnd Marvin H~, clinical
religion, Wid "moat ,paoPia.,don~now
ownmonay.
•
=::."tatlvae to tlta _llt~ng Com,
--.hallhaY balt.weln.
H..tngton, -OftM~
ll88dl of tha privata oil corporatlona, he
"BIIIIona haw baln -colo

While 111-lal.r SkYIMI plutnmeled
_ . cloNr on Ita CDI!leloft _,.. with
e.th, A....nca'a , . , . _ IOCiallllt
~ a ldnd of "fell out" or h\a own
-a-~
crowd In Aldan
Court Room IMtw.dnaeday.
Mlchaal Han1naton, pn&gt;laaaor of
political
New YOIIc'a a.-..
·Collega and eut/lor of tha 11)Uch
lw8kled The Otlw
ahow.cl no
....nlnt In clllmlng t11at humanity Ia
"turning M ltlatorlcal coma(' and
~MiMing tllat "the lona-run Ia nolll' u
w Journey Into 11ta 111110a.
A cltaniplon ofllta aoclallat/collactlvlat pltUoaoplly, Han1ngton - tha

--

A fonner c1181rparM~n of tha leiillue
for lnduatn.l Darnclcncy, H8n1ngton

malnt81n.r that what he calla thl
~~ waif-. atata Ianda to follow

corporate prlorfllaa. Ha clt.cl houalng,

::,.,~~=·pol=--act.Jrcr:
If\"-lion In tha aac1aty."

Thla can ba - · Ita illuatret.r, In

:::.r:;m:::;~:-'::r."Pc..of.!:'~~
181

::':1o':';.,wo;:-.!:Ofn ~=

damand.
H8n1ngton ctltk:IDII thlrtl-jwty ln....,. In our ha81th ~-. wheN "no
ona eMil about ooata or QN!Ity. Wa . .
llft..,th In lnlant ~lty In thl
world,. Ita ctltloiz8d, and . . . . . apand
more on IIMith -thM MJIOM • •·
.
"Tllla Ia oatneaoua·- mcnlly lind

.
.
.
.
.
.
=

_. econorn~:•

_,.

.fldded.

-~lW!dla-=--=

~·=lit-:~

:YJ=~

of

Calkins headL, _ ___ _
medfaculty

..gu)'!n='

~.!

::.:'!II

,:;-u::."=lt=!.

l!Nft-1,cal.41
reaulta" u rellabte and lair_to atudants

~w"?rf!~..po':l~~~ ac;.'l:::":..~~

- Learning Cent..- director reported -

::r.,.:r~ ~':,:' :C::~oc::"J

thl raters.
Two leculty (Cooper and Or. Stelan
Flelacher of Engtlah) and four doctoral
atudants (two ~ lrom English and
E;ngllah Educat ion) lonned lhe cadre of
aepeclally-tralr\ed evaluatora. Each
paper wu acorec1 by two or thlm.
Where thl difference batwMn two
juclgee wu more than two points, a
third rater aattlad the dl~t.
Ratara ....._ requl,... to read eech
paper qulck!y (within two mlnutae) and
to than IMka a belanoad judgmant on It
, ae a wllola. TMI Ia, CooDiir clarlllad,
both a wrltar'a mac:hanical prowaaa In

~~:-=--==~=
lAnd poor In '
viCe'--"'
could ba

might.__ high
INChanlce, or

ill • ~

' ~~'a:.,:':.'=-~~=~~
- . . iJidaad
,,._

methods,

Cooper

alleeaad, It Ia poaalbla for axperlenced
,..,.,. to PNCty wall aclllave._
ue In ecorlng liidlwld_. 'Wrltara. Soma
eahoola, Ita noted. uaa
multiple ohoiCe laata lof E:llah
ecnentno !llhlla ot11are .... a oom na:
lion of Objlatlva lelia Md a
ttno
aMipla, COoper . . . woc1dng fnlm a
............ IIIIa ........ you 1o
the Nil tiling." A muttlpla
..._ ..., aMI you only .n 'idea of
ltow.n . . . . . . . . . . . Witte.

mach..._..,

A _ _ _ ,..._

:::n,~~.::-...:
=r._.,
~.: ;.;,.w::;: ::.::. .-:-;:.
..........
.-A.a...

_,

0~

•How freshmen really write

Ualng

-·"'*'
..............

c~r::;.:~~~~~=e~~

an

not ~nat
Individual .......-. . . . and allndan:la.
but rather agalnat 1111*8 In the
group.

_

y::g

of~~:,~'=- ":0 ~~~

~

_, _ ,

- rot-:

~~.':n.~~~~~y~

of

llllltllleallla -

__
-·--

Conaequently, many paopla haWI
t..,.S to a kind of IIIIICiaalsm or
~ llllllclaoplly,_~ Ita put It, In
order to ttee 11ta ana~a. "The Playboy
lllllloaoplly ta• p!Ofound __.ton of
ourllmaa, aalf-CMI_., and hetloniatk:,
but more ertac:tlve INa organized
reltalon"- -.condition Ita..._....
Wlial about the tuture IIICI poaalbla
aolutlona?

•

- ..-nNIIi, making uM of deacrlptlve tools
from syntactic and dlacouraa
analysis. "We will· ba abla to ...Y with
confill8nce wbat our belli freahll*l . .
doing and what our weakaaf onaa ara
Jailing In ,!' Cooper exp181n.cl:' Thl
report will embody atrong conclullons,
though not neceaaarlly any apeclllc
recommendations. Thl s "atatua atudy"
can then ba ulad by DUE, the General

~=10~\~~:~··,=~:.~~~~

. recommendations aa appear approprl,
ate and necesaa(y.

A._.wa'mocla
the mode or writing ulad In the

:~ taa~~~s.::,!.

;g:-

=:'.::

shown
student&amp; are able IP write
batter II given both a definite l.ormat In
which to work and a notion of thl
audlance to whom the writing Ia baing
add....-.:f. In !Ita U/8 Iaiit, tne format
11 eaMnl1811y a memo to a hiring

=~,: ='11I!Ye ~~::"~ ~~

Thla Ia qulta almllar, Cooper l•la, )o
tlta ~aile Unlvaralty Writing
uaigllll*lt. On .n -..y examination,
for axampla, a student muat ba abla to
davelop argumanta qulckl!&lt; and In an
-organlzad faahlon In a llmlt.cl number
of won:la. ,
Tha lreahll*l _ . allowed ona hour
to complata 11ta tuk, 10 thare wu no
undue l)reafure brought to bear. The
- - .clmlnlatarecfflrat thing In thl
morning 1o both g-pa Who, eccordlng
to CooPer, _...., both in*-lad In ·
tha aaaignment and ooopaqttv..
•
Wbila tha ........ daaorlptM pt-.

oflltat.e~laa~, eooperlhif*a H IMl' be fll
llta future
1o , _ . , .._..1111 ,...,._ taka •
ability for
allnllar t..e

of_.:::...
................
...,
............ ... \ta'==--~dol~
, . , . . ~ . . . . . . . . . . 60

==-~,..ttt
-::6::;:&amp;
=
.....
...... ......, .......
....
~

~---forr..'lliC:In.,

~' lllllls ,.:wlli

~~~~~--...

.... ...... llul Ita ...... llta lmooNid _ ......... WWih "· and
onalnlr WOUld be In IIIII....._.. of IIte

t:.i
.........,
~·
...::,~~'*f:"~

Oillalaft ,

~

~

-=

rd!:--·~011
-.ltlplaalloJcit-

The ltnpllc811ona for 0.... Education
Both efforta we retat.r to the
determination
balk: akllll levels on
which to build o-at Education

of

~'r."~~!~'';= :c!:r8n~· atarr,

who la.Jiao a member or tha ballc akllls
subgroup of thl o-at Education
c:ommltt•, notae that that panel will
aoon have to recommend requirements
In both Engllah and math which
atudants entering In 111110 and alter will
ba aakad to fulllll. Thla summer's
taetlng 11 expac:tad to ba of value In
aattlng reallatlc levela.
II the necaaawy approvals ara
received, Tarbet aohoaa Cooper, all
future freah"** will ba ICfM!Iad to
del-Ina whather !hay ahould take:
only required coureae, requlrad plus
remedial worl&lt;, or only --.oma or the
requlrad pouraaa. A law may ba
exempt.cl entirely.
Sucoaaatully paaalng the required
- couraae will •
wtclenoa of
aatlalectory ach'--1 of 11ta dell red
akllla levela. Or, Tlrbet aald, It may ba
poaalble for a atuclant to Cflallenge his
or her plaoamant and taU MOther exam
to d6monatrata pn&gt;llcl«&lt;cy . •

John W....-en c1es

w-.

At Raportw daediiM It laamad
that John R.
11, diad
W.clneaday morning • •1oc81 hoapital.
Ha had ~ hoapltalizad on Monday
-alter bacomlnglll In lila office.
Warren had baen a fec:IIHiaa program
coOrdinator .... aiQOa111111 and . . . the
lim lnd~ to hold that kind of
POeltlon, balole tile merger with
IMata Umver.tty and tile "'blaquant
oonatructlon _pragqm. Bef.ln that

==-·.=:.-~~::

.n ~ Dtor- In 11ta School or
Ed...tion. tte to UJB In 1868
fnlm llta ._11 Ill EIIIIOIIIon--al the
Unl011181ty of~. Pttor to that·tlma
Ita had beM I Dool euparl__,.l,
~. OOIGII_. ~In 8~ •
IUinola. HI 1ta1c1 tile I.A. fiOifl Ohio.
~~M,a, , _ lolllhlm tlllnola,

_._JJ).fnlmU/8:

1'-.r ........ beltalcl Ff1diy at
~fnlmtlle . . . . . . ......,....

�a publication of
The Office of
Cultural Affaiis
Eodtw

a...-.......-.....

U /B - Artpark Dance
Festival: 'to See
~
"Nowadayo, an opening by Merce
Cunningham I( Dance Company io apt to
bring out eveeyone from Jacob Javila to
Aady Warhol.· oboerveo New Y&lt;&gt;'* :lime•
diiDCe critic Aano JGaoelsoff.
Merce CIIDDiDgbam _wu igDored or
beckl!ld for Je&amp;rl, tbeil wildlj acclaimed at
- ·· and in lhe capitals of tbo world.
Meanwhile, be jullt kept em ~ and
~ aDd iDfl..-!at- JCIUIIP&lt;
~ like Tw,la Tharp, wbo

bave made~·· ideal familiar.
Yet be otill boa a reYolutlonory impact
·aDd a ccatiaainl l rodieal viliOD of the
poooibJitieo&lt;«~ ArleDe
daDoo
critie fer llle }(., . y

"'*""·en-.
..,.. iclau
""'

"Cunninlbam bao iDitiated _.. -

fer lheatrical performance llwl ID1 other
.
One CunDinrbam inDovaticmlo llle opecial
atepry daDoo pe~""' be ealla
"Evento.·n..e .....' t - i a l l l e .......
- « baviDg a crouP of ClDIIlpille .....U
em each prosram. Aa "Event" il an
~her."

«

~~«--.of

. Cunningham claneeo, - -·with frub

material aDd olwayo with a ~auobl _.. .
performed onl7 ... tbal O&lt;CUion. "E...to·
are Dot Npeatable, and Cunningbam .
ereated bla 1ira · -· ill 1ll64. be bao
doDewollonrllOOm-.
. Two "EWato" will be pen bJ .......
&lt;Juuilolbam. o.-~1 ... 31111 "11
aDd A11(1111.1 Ia Clark G,... (8 PM), aDd will
mart llle openiDg olllle Jlllf 11-.bpot 10
'biB-~ na- ~ wldclt II
beillr ,.. .. ..,. llle ·OIIIoo ol Callanl
Alloln (willl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . StMe.t
Allllh. UUAB, Olleo el U. ............
LE.L.L_.._.. . . . . .,_. .....

--

......... u. ................. u.

~~.u.--t-

....... -- ·~ ,..

..........~11111-llle Paul.
Ta7lar ~ ud llle Bolla

To

keep track of
_UfB's cultural ·
events throug)l,
Augllllt 31, save
this magnet

Lew:itzky DIID&lt;e Company.

'

The Paul Taylor Company makes Ito U!B ·
petfoM!Wice debut on Friday, Aliguot 8,
with lecture--demonatntions on both
campuses: in the Cornoll· Theatre on lhe
Amherst Campua at 12:30 noon, and in
Baird Hall on Main St. at 8 PM. TheM will
trace Paul Taylor's cboreogrspby tbrouP
eseerptl from the J.opertory, beginniJic
with "Three Epltsphs" (11166) and eooclad·
iDgwitll "CCoven XiDgdam" (111'16), a
aatire «-~urban......_,_
The~ oompany il - . fer i1a

••op

-rv. lll.hloticiom and~ touebeo of
-

· , . , ... beool- telovili!ID a put
•..-U;, em PBS'o "Oanee in
AD.rloa" ..tea; .... IIIey will be tAping a
-"" ·o.- Ia ~· ......... ~·
....-lo tllelr arriftlllere.
.
t '' r 0 -·
()De « llle ~ -bon. il LiDda
Ka.t. .................... r8loed Ia Bulfalo
(bor faml7 .UUII.- ......, ..... pte Plul
Tar.. Ia IJ'7Ii ... llle Jailllaril 8clloal Ia
N- Yarlt ud - . 1
a priDdpol
daDoor witllllle AlviD Akr D.- TbN&amp;re.
Mi1or1J1r aloar ,_ FridoJ...Auplt I te
Saturda7, Aapot '· briDp ao te llle~
-niDg .... ......... ""' will be
eollduc:ted bJ ...... ~ (wbo
bappeDI lo be both attieulate ud
~•m1Drl1 doWII·ID-eu1JI) ud bil Yldoo
and lllmmakiDg coD- a.artoo Atlu.
u im't ourprillllr tbat CmuliDrbam. wiUI
bil ""''ueaebatile c:uriooitJ for ....
~ Ia daDoo. became intenowd ill
ielnilloa. All.er t.akiD,r a 1HI" olf lo .....
Yldeo ~. be made bil llrlt
YidoodaDN with Cbarioo Atlu, and llley've
made oe..-.1 othen · Two of tbom will
be - - . d and dixuoeed tl•e eveni.nc of
Aupol.
Studio," a oalo by Moree
ciumiartwD.'II a wHt7 alld~ul pieee
wllidl . . . . llle ...,..w apodtioo «
Yldeo Ia a wq ........ tJ. The olbor io
'»relit b- Tlllevilloo,• prodnood . for llle
"Oanee Ia ~ ...... aDd io ..
"EVent" Ia the ,oiol.: ...... u the two
"Evento" deocribed above. Tbil

dooJ. -

,_,..a

,.- Blue

-

-·ta··

�When people ubd us where we ~re
goiDg lut Labor Daj Weekend aod our
re1p011110 ~ "fook daoee eamp," reaction
ranged Cne aoldten to ehortleo. Let tbem
ebortle. Folk daoee eamp ia DOt for aiuies:
it's r.r the fit ODd tbe brave! Folk daoce
caDIPI'" areu avid aod rigorous a group u
tennis eampen; lbe main dllfmenoe ia that
they like to do lbe1r aport to music aod
prefer commuoalitJ to oompetition. They
also like food a lot; groaning bauds are part
of the tra4ition- Afl.et- a
of daoce
worbbopa aod ao evening of request
daoeing', loot c:alorles • are cheerfully
refunded via ethnic baffeta refleeti!&gt;g tbe
euJture ..._ are empbaaiD.I' on
that particular·~-

""day

For e:um"'", next Labor Day Weekend's
folk daooe eamp, c:oonliDated· by Vaerie
Tenieff, director ol U/B'o Balkan Dancers
aod ,n old band at' organizing sucb
oc:c:Uiooa, will feature Polilh aod MAoodon iaD daoee ·inatnlctloD (given by Morley
Leyton aod At&amp;liu IColaroY'.ki, respectively) aod Polilh aDd "-doaian cuisine.

Camp will begin wltb a pt-aequsinled
party on Friday eveoinr, August 3L These

are fun beeauoe lbe erou aectioo of
"campers" is ao ~ieotiDg lnix from
Cauada and the U.S .. and usually fairly
hea'll)' in aeademie and profeuional types of
all ages. On Saturday aod Sunday there will
be moming aod afterD«JD dbaes, with

parties in the evening. Monday morning is
forreview.
·
Tllere are also wpoded trails for hikers ,
an Olympic-sized awimming pool, pingpong, volleyball, et al. The eamp is lodged
in Wataoo Homestead (that's the ffiM
Watson) aod offers a huge wood panelled
room for danc:ing aod eating, u well u a
dormitory arraogemeot or buolt-bedded
rooms. It's a atone's tbrow " - Coming,
N.Y., whieh ia fun to vialt, bot.b for its
r.mou. glaaaworka aod f.., its boutiques.
The $80-per-person fee covers your care
aod feeding, ao4 of course, daoee
instruction for tbe holiday weekend. A
number or S40 aeholarehipa in exebange for
ligbt kitehen duties are available . .For more
information, oont.aet Vaerie Terzieff, 44
Victoria Blvd,,

tioo il CWTOilU, IICbedulod for the Kiva,
Baldy Hall, Amberat ~· it may be
moved, ao pleue watch Cor notices ' in the
Reporter or call tbe Office ol Cult;ural

AHain. 636-2313.
'!'be IOClODd week or the Dance Festival
will be devoted to the Loo Angele•bued
Bella Lewil.zlty Company, which will
-·~ a lecture-de111&lt;1, "'l11e Art. of
n - ,• oa Mo~, Aopol6c 8 PM in
.Boircl U.U. Bella Lewil.zlty, who will
D&amp;tT&amp;te CG that oceuioo, is welJ~known on
the West Gout wbere abe wu ooe of the

m.-.

Doo 't let the requirement frighten you: the
the Paul Taylor Company. From 9:80AM to
11, ao intennodiate/advaoood technique - Lewitzlry CompanY, is very flexible aod
accommodating.
claas will be given in Harrimao Dance
Again. it's Harriman Dance Studio for
Studio, while aimultaneoua1y a beginner'•
choreography with Miss Lewil.zlty aod for
~hDique claas will be held in Clark Gym
repertory, with simultaneous oecood
Daoce Studio.
seetions in Clarlt. (Uofortuoat.ely, DO
For dancera with aome pervious
simultaneous .....,d Bella Lewil.zltys; but
esperieoce, choreography will be taught by
good teaching by a senior member
the
Miss Lewil.zlty aU1:15 AM - 12:30. This is a
Company.)
.
rare opportunity to work wil.h a darioer who
Tbese week-loog SMSiooa eost $80, aod
hu beeo a major force in dance edueatioo;
all arrangements for regiltratioo are to be
Mias Lewil.zlty also plaos to visit _each the
made through the Offic:e foe Credit-Free
other d - at leut 01100 during the ........
Programs, 831-4801/ Mary Ellen Shaugb·
ol the week. Frun 1:SO - 2:80 PM a dus in
oessy (aod others) of tbat offioe will be able
Lewitzlty "repertory will be giveo, opeD to
to answer your questions.
those wil.b previous experience in dance .

two grul pi.....,.. (the other, the late

LeltOD Horton) ol modem dance . .
MiA Lewitzlty, who t.optber wil.b
Mikbail Barysb.Dikov, woo tbe 1978 Dance
Mlguioe Award, woes architectural aod

or

oculptural movement deoigoa, aod inte·
grateo the- ooetumes into tbMe patt.ema.
Thia is doDe in &lt;Oilaboraioo wil.b the
WDoua cleoiper Radi Geroreich (the
oricUWor ol llDilu Caaloiou), who bas
deviood aueh thiop u duotards - . ODe
leotard cleoi«Dod
two dsoeen - aod

or

r.r

oiJMr iDplioul -Cal&gt;ric - - that
~ aod CODtroct u the dsoeen move.
Throogbout that ·Aopol 6 week, the
Bella Lewil.zlty Ccmpao)"''rill teoeh a lot of
master~ (reod oo), u well u give two
open ClDIQplllf ~ Tueoday aod
WodDoscla,y, Alljllllt 7 aod 8, from 2:80 to 4,
IIDd &amp;DopeD l1lbearul OD Tbunday, August
9, aloo " - 2:311 to'·
ADd tbe Com- will ~b a
dance _ . u y for Baird Poiat. the place
with the willie Greek piiYn bMic1e the lake
OD tbe AmJoon&amp; C..,.. to be . . . . .ted at
1 oa the enaiac or f'tldlly. AIJIUIHO. This
ril be the liulo of IJoair reoWo8ey OD
- . aodoltbe U/B-ArtpukF~.

Films
A. usual, the riehneu of the film
program results in 1i1tinp that are too long
for ._t. However, broc:hureo of UUAB
films are available at Squlre aod Capen

~:;:,;::: :e~:r:~.:

study a1so pubtisbea a broc:hure: ea11
847-2565 if you would like to reoeive one in
the mail. And 'watch the.Reporterealeodar.
poi.nta OUt, were 'bOt a eoaaeientious
aoalyais of tbe ligoifieaoce
bridal
ceremgoy; the cliaeusoicm turDecl out to be
something like a group therapy aeuion. For
her film OOUDdtraek, Sotdlffe distilled and
manipulatod the reoordod remark&amp;, so that
tbe reoult ia a croa between fietioo and

or

doeulllelli.V7.
Another sound e o - t ia orpo music
played by tbe filmaloi&lt;.W:O ID&lt;Ither, who,
eooveniently, t.._. to be a chureh
organist, and wbo pi"CWidod lnditiooal
~odcling muolc:
the lilm, aldncl ol bride's
hit parade. Satdilfe odcla that another
imporiaot elemeat iD ber OOUDdtnclt is

r.r

•

8tll Jaa liwldllle'o
"'1oo BrW,o,. t.t... by
StepM.IeTooWoe.

llilence.
'!'be 16-mill,.._ lilm wu iD bladt aod
white, bat calor wu llllo*l by a tODing
-.1 in tbe pr~Dtiac. Tldo dooou't
make It look lib a calor -w, the elfeet is
rather lib t.lW or oopla-toaad JlllatolrsPbs.
~ that tbe ..._ .ol eolan Ia peater
IIDd , ...,.. to a &amp;:tioo iD the film."
&amp;Rdillefadda.
•. Her Wlow lilmmaken iD the group show
are Tcm Busch, who will
his
abotraet "7 Sbarta;" Katby wp, whose
"Cow Study" employ&amp; lollimatioD eombined
wit.b drswillc; Marcolle F-. who
Dllliaa photosrapkic aoimatlon iD "Self:
~ 1;" ud K., Rowe, a ereator of
"!"nil: films, ......, o1JMr 1.binp. who wiD
be ....,..._ted bt hia "IbiD( iD lbe Heart
ollbelleut;
'!'be fila. ....,... .from 6 to 15 millutes
- " · IIDd will be lllown AupoU at 8 PM in
170MFAC, Ellieotl.

...--t

2

..,._,....,a/JIIIJlt,ll'lt

�The Levi-Strauss of

Vid~

uns.

1n
Edin Volea. a Puerto Riean:bonl
videomaker, topther with bia wife,
chartered a amlll plane to lly from Pouma
City to a tiny gravel airstrip oa the Atlaatle
.,..at. From ~ they fezriecl themoelvea
- and their video equipment - to t1ae
ialand of Uatupu. Tbia ia one of the amall,
~n ialanda dotting the PID&amp;ID&amp;Ilian
eout., where the Cuns Indiana live and
maintain their unique, ancient cult~.
Edin and Ethel V-elez lived and worked
for a month wiUI a Cuns family. and out or
that experienco eame "Jmaps or San Blu,.
Edin Vela's work for three .simwuclwmelo or videotApe, in wbiclJ be
to
portt'ay "the physical beauty or ~~ae ew.a
and the rhythm or life they have ma!DtaiDod
forconturiea ."
_
Vela :will ..,_n &amp;~~d. diacuaa ihla work
J&gt;eit month, u well u bia earlier billck and
while tape, ':On the ROod to Atitlaa,"
reoorded on a one-day trip outalile .
Guatemala City. He will aJoo ~about the
atyliatic: deveiopmeDt of bia work in what be
terms crooo-cultural video.
Velez, wha atuclie'd at the School of FIDe
Arts, Institute of Puerto Riean Culture, bu
been makinf videotapes for len yean.
Besides document.ariea~he'o al.oo producod

-a

abstract computer-~ tapeo. l.fia
works have been exhibited widely,

including at the 1978 •American Anthropological AssOciation convention in LOs
Angeles, the American Museum of Natural
History in New York (1979), and in the 1979
Traveling Show of tbetU.S. International
Communications Agency·.
The presentation will be in 322 MFAC,
Ellicott, on August I at 8 PM.•

-'

J..uti. M ............. ia FES &gt;~
_..,., W........y,A..-1.
'l'iduU
Tieketa, where required, are available at the -Squire

Hall Ticltet Office (in odv&amp;DOO); "'maining tickets at the
door..,. hour be{...., eveat. I. D. earda must be presented
in order to purd&gt;aoe licketa at Student/F aeulty/St.aff/
AIUJIUii rate.
FIC'I10N FESTIVAL
1/m&amp; StUmtick and George Clamben in
11
'l'llondoy diocuuioo wiUI memben or the Graduate
Coaf.,nco. 220 Clemens. 6:30 PM. Fn!e.
Sponoor: Deportment of English.
IULY

DRAMA
S/14kerpeare ;, De/4ware Pork: "The
Comedy of Errors," directed by Saul Elkin.
Delaware Park, near Rooe Garden (behind
the Albnpt·KDox Art G.Uery). 8 PM.
Free. S~: Center for Thea~
~andDeportmeniofThea~ .
·
DRAMA

~

;, .De/awan! Pork: "The
COmedy ol Errors, • directed by Saul Elkin.
See Julyl9llltiD«.

%1

s.a..y

DIWIA

-~

S/14ke._.e ;,. ~ PaNe.: "The
c-.~y or Emn,• clirecled ijy Saul m;,.

See July 19llltiD«.

DIWIA
SAah
.. ~
"Tbe
Ccaedyol.·
Emn,.
clirecled byPaNe.:
~ul Elkle.
See Jaq lt liotilocFICI10N FE8TIVAL
· 1W
Vllu IWMrdt """'-"·
UtdYerlltr o1. w-.m at llilwaabe:
clioeuooioB willl -.bon ol. the Gnduale
Tile Kiva. Baldy Hall, Amherst
~- 81'11. Free. s,o-.-: ~t

a.-

c-r.r-.

........,
15

oi.Eac!Wo.

OPENING OF INSTALLATION
U/B alumnus: "Double
Narrative" and "The Queen's Rules
Suapended." 8 PM. Admission $1. Media
Study/Buftalo, 'JJJ'1 Delaware Avenue.
Spo080r: Media Study/Buffalo.

Bart Robbett,

IULY
31
'l'loooday

FIC'I10N FESTIVAL
l1w.b Ba.,art, public lect~ on post·
modernism. The Kiva, Baldy Hall, Amherst
Campus. 8 PM. Free. SpollliDI": Department
ofEnglish.
.
FICTiON FESTIVAL .
Public lect~ by Matei Calinercu,
profesaor of Comparative Literat~ and

West. European Studies, University of
Indiana. 322 Clemens. S PM. Free.

DRAMA
~
S/14kerpeare ;, De/4ware PaNe.: "Mueh Ado
About Nothing," clirecled by Jobn MorpD.
Delaware Park, near Garden (bebiDd
the Albnpt-Knox Art Glllery). 8 PM.
Free. Spo010ra: Center for Thealre
Research and Department of Thealre. -

U/8-AR'Il'ABX DANCE FESTIVAL•
Merce Oouuailoglam &amp; .l:laAu Com-:
"Event." Clark Gym. 8 PM., Ge-.1
admission $3, U!B faculty, students, stalf,
$2. P,..nled by Offico of Cultural Alfaira.
AUGUST
1
Weda. . .y

DRAMA
S/14kerpeare ;, De/awan! PaNe.: "Mueb Ado
Ahaut Nothing," clirecled by John Morpn.
See July 31liating. .

Sponsor: Department of English .

FIC'I10N FESTIVAL
Ioo.. Hanan and Matei Calinui:tt will
participate in discussion wiUI members of
the Graduate Coarerenoe. 220 Clemens.
6:30 PM. Free. Spo080r: Department of
English.
MEDIA SFJPES
Peter H..UOW: recolllly filmmaker-in·
reoideDce at the Carpenter Center,
Harvard UniveriltJ. 170 MFAC, Amherst
.Campua. 8 PM. A4misaioo $1. Spo010n:
Cen(fr for ·Media Stuoly, Media Study/Buf·
falo, N. Y.S. Edutatioo Department (of·
r~ tbroaglt Media Study'a Summer
- Scboolof~).

MEDlA
Bart Robbett, U!B alumnua: f'ilm,
PerformaDce, Sbdea. Media Study/Buftalo,
'1111 Delaware Ave. 8 PM. ·Aclmiuioo Sl.
Sponoor: Media Study/Buffalo.

WIIFO BENEFIT CONCERT
111...,..... witll "Poplar Ridp." and
awiDcfold l:ime/ couatry muaic wiUI Dick
KoWu, Bricao and w- Stcpou.
The Sdwper u-, 1802 Nlapra St. 1:30 .
PM. S2 at cleor boDe1ita WBPO.

WEDNESDAY SUMIIIEil fORUM

·w......,

Jvditl• M. BoriiVJick:
and ¥en in
Tranaitlon: The Effeeto of Soda! Clwtp. •
Leet~ at 10 AM in Woldman 'l'bealft,
Norton Hill, Amherst Campua. Queaiwand-anawer period at 2 Pit In The Kiva,
Baldy Hill, Ambent "Oampua. .....
f?Poooor: Faeully ol.~ Studiea.
MJD.DAY MUSIC 8EIIIEII

Folbinger r - - 7\&gt;WM. F.........
Plua {betweeD
1loldy lbllll.
Ambent ~- 11...,; - 1 PM. Fr-.

c..- ...

Spooocr: uu~. ~ A&amp;lro,~
Aetlvitlea.

MEDIA SEIIIES•

.

Edit&amp; Ve/u: ~ ud dlaeuoolo. II
"'mapa of San Diu, • a vidooworlr.. •
1I4FAC, Ambent Campua. 8 PM. Admloolla
$1. Sf&gt;oa-a: Ceater ..... Media ~.
Media Study/Buffalo, N.Y.S. ~

Department (olfenod t.JuooaP ....
Study'a Summer Scbooloi.Film/Jiedi&amp;).
UIS-A&amp;'I1'AU DANCE FE8TIVAL•
Merce~U.·~~:

"Event.• Clark Gym. 8 PM. Ge...a
odmiioioD
U!B r-tty, lltadeata.
$2. "'-tol.,t by Otllee ol Caltural Affaln.

sa.

*"

�Center for Meclla Study, Media Study!Buf·
falo, N.Y.S. EdueafiaD Departmeat (of·

fered thn&gt;ugll Media Study'a
School of Film/Media).

AUGUST
1
n.r.lay

a-

DRAMA
.
Siakc _..no~ Part: ':Much Ado
About Nothillc." dlreeted by Job Morpl).
See July S1liatillg.
·'
Utii-Ail11"AU. DANa: FES11VAL•
Birll4 Lewitzktl Dlaoce ~: muter
clauee. See Aupat &amp;Jilting.

utt-.U.W.um

DANa: n:ft1V.u.•
Bello Lewitzkl! Daace ~: open
l'&amp;beanal. Free, but resloter wiUI
Olfioe of Cultural Alfairl. See A,.u.t. 7
listing for cleWla.
FILM
lMffalt&gt;

~ GnltqJ S&amp;oto:• 170
MFAC, Ambent Campa&amp;, 8 PM. AdmloaioD
$1. Spoooor: C...ter for Media Stud}'.

~0

Friday

DIWlA

-

. S/otlke~Pf~JN mDda1Darw Part: "Maeh Ado
About Nothing," directed by Jolm MorpD .
. See Jul7 S1liatillg.
U/B'Ail11'AJII[ DANa: PE8TIVAL•
- Bello Lewitzkl! Dooiee Cooopaolr: muter
clauee. See A1J11!1t &amp; liatillg.

AUGVft

I
n.r.lay

DL\IIA
Sk" -

• ill D&lt;/lnoaro Part: "Much Ado
~ Nothillc." directed by John Moopn.
See J ul7 Slliot.iag.
Ufii.Ail11'~ DANCE

~

7'a)'lqr ~

-ure

AUGUs:J' U/II'Ail11'ARK DANCE PI:STIV.u.•
6
Bello Lewitzkl! Dlaoce Com,..,.ll, mut.er
M-'"y
c:liaRo. See Highlight in this -t~
831-'801 · for registratioo informaliile.
Preoented by Ofliee of Cultural Affairs ADd
Offiee of Credit-Free Programs.·

FES11VAL•

~11:

U/lli-Ail11'ARK DANCE PE8TIVAL•
&amp;/14 Lewitzkl! Dlaoce ~: perforol work ereated far Baird PoiDt..
Baird PoiDt Ia the Greek-pillared
beside the lake on the Amllent Caq&gt;uc. 7
PM. Free. PreMntecl by Ollio:e of Cultural
AfWn. Note: This Ia adbject to elwlp;
pleue call Olliee of Cultural Affairs,

muter

a-.8 -uono fn&gt;m· 1-6 PM. Eocb clau
$5. "'-nted by Olfioe of Cultural Affairs
aod em.. of Credit-Free Programs. Coli

U/B-ARTPARK DANCE FESTIV.U.•
Bello Lewitzkl! D&lt;mce ~11: "The Art
of DODee." a lecture-demonstration. Baird
Hill. 8 PM. Admission $1. Presented by
Offiee of Cultural Affairs.

8314.801 fOI'registratioo informatioo.

636-2318.

u

DllAJoiA

Saturday'- SlwluiPfllN m !M/aum-e Pttrk: • Much Ado
About Nothing, • clirec:led by John MorgAD.
See July1111isting.
LEC'IURE

GeM Yoagblood, meclla t.beoriat: "The
Video Revolutioo and the Arta." 170
MFAC, Amhent Conlpuc. 8 PM. Admiaion
$1 . Spo~: C.O..torlor Meclla Study. "' .•••

FILM SCIIEENIN~/DISCUSSION

l!JriM Gdr, filmmoker. 170 MFAC,
Amhent "Campus. 8 PM: Admiaoion Sl.
!lpoob-: C.nter for~ Study.

7
Taeeday

DRAMA
S/otlke~Pf~JN

m LM/aum-e Pttrk: "Much Ado
About Nothing," directed by John MorgAD.
See July 311isting.

DL\IIA

.SkU._.. no ! M - Part: "Much Ado
About Nothing," directed by John Moopn.

See July 311iot.iag.
't],.,.;utTPARK DANCE FESTIVAL•
Pal' 7'a)'Wr • Dlaoce ~11: loc:ture·
clomooatntion. Cornell Tbeotre, Amherst
CoJQpua. 12:80 DOOD. Admiaoion $1.
Preoented by Offiee of Cultural Alfairl.
Ufii.Ail11'ARK DANCE FESTIVAL•
PIJol 7'a)'lqr Da.toe ~: loc:turedomonotratioo. Baird lhll. 8 PM. Admia·
11ioo Sl. ~ by Olfioe of Cultural
Alfairl.

DL\IIA
Skkc - • ill ~Part: "Much Ado
Ailooa.Notblltc." directed by John Morpn.
See Jalrllliotiac.
IB2JIA 8EIIIE8
G.ry A4A:iu, lllmmobr. 170 IIFAC,
A.-. C..,... 8 I'll. Admlooiaa Sl.
a,-.: 0 . . lor llodla !l&amp;lld7......

!l&amp;lld7/BII&amp;Io, N. Y.B. ~Deport(allorM tJoroaclt ..... 9tadi•
..._. ....... ofPia/lledia).

u~ua~n:rnw~·

,_,.~- ~~/ ·

Can....,.._

. . . -. Wi&amp;b ......
ucl
a-t. Alloo. Tile K!Ya, Boidy lhll,
MoMnt
8 I'll. Free. "'-""'
.., 081ooofc.bnl A&amp;irL NGU: '--loa
il....,..lo ....... Cloedt~or..U
Olllee of Galt.nl Alf.aln. 611&amp;-2118.

c..-.

'
....,.

DL\IIA
S'd
;

cilt~Part:"MuchAdo

• Alloool Nodlllot•• olreet.d by John Morpn.
S..JIIIJilllotiloc.

. U/B·ARTPARK DANCE FESTIV.u.•
&amp;/14 Lewitzkl! Dance Componlf: muter
classes. See August 61isting.
U/B-ARTPARK DANCE FESTIV .u.•
&amp;/14 Lewit•kl! .o....ce Componr: open
CompADy clASs. Harriman Dance Studio.
2:30-4 PM. Free, but mUll register with
Offiee of Cultural Affairs, 410 C•pen lhll,
Amherat Conlpuo, 636-2313. Presented by
Offiee of .Cultural Alfairl.

12

· . DBAMA

s-lay

Siakc.- .... ~Par*: "Mut)l.Ado •.
About Nothing," directed by John MorgaD .
See July 311isting_

MEDIA SERIES.
15
Wedaeaday M'&lt;tcllellKriev-. Scree~/cliJcuasiou of
videotapes. 357 MF AC, Amherst Conlpuo.
.S. PM. Admiaion $1. Spooaon: Meclla-..
Study/Buffalo, C.nter for Meclla Study,
N.Y.S. Education IMpartment (offered
I
•
through Meclla Study' s SlllllDlef School of
Film/Meclla).
MEDIA SERIES

16

8
DBAMA
Weclloecday 5/IGkupearo m !M/awanJ Pttrk: "Much Ado
About Nothing," directed by John MorgAD.See July 311iitmg.
.
U/B-ARTPARK DANCE FESTIVAL•
Bello Lewitzk1! Daace ~11: master
clauee. See Aupat &amp;liot.iag.

'llnarcday

ScoU Barl.le!!: Screening/ diaeuuiob of
filmo. 170 MFAC, Amherct Conlpua. 8
PM. Admiaioo St. 8J&gt;oo-o: Center for
· Meclla Study, Meclla Study/Boffalo 1 N. Y.S.
Educatioo lMpartment (olfered tbrougb
Meclla Study's Summer School of Film/

18

MEDIA BEIIIEB
•
.
A..,.........d: Nieolu c;otioiu • Ror&amp;
A OOIIClOrt of worb aoiDg eleelnGioa ucl
microcomputers. ComoD Theclnt, Ambent
Conlpua. AclmiooioD St. Spoa.n: c..ter
for Media Study, Medlo !l&amp;lld7/BIIIIIIo;
N.Y.S. Ed--. - ~ (~
thn&gt;ugll Media Study'a !luDulw'8ebool of

Meclla).

x....-...

SaQordcy

UIB-AJlTPAJII[ DANCE FESTIVAL•
&amp;/14 Lewitzktl Daace Com,..,.ll, open
Com~"DJ ·duo. Free, but mUll register
wiU1 Ollio:e of Cultural Alfairl. See Aupat
7~forcleWla .

MIJ).DAY IIUBIC 8EIIIE8
Aeouotie Rock by Dovid Sdomeidkr &amp;
~ - Foimden' Plaa (between Capen
ucl Boidy lhlla), Amherot Campuo. 12
..._.1 PM. Free. §Pan-: UUAB, Student
Alfairl, 8tudeat Aetmt.lea.
MEDIA 8EIIIE8
Joel ~ "Tile Etreet of Noioe on \he
Sleep of ChildreD," AD eleetrooic muale
perlormaJ&gt;C:e. ComoD Theatre, Amhent
Compos. 8 PM. ~ S1. ~:

',

NoD-Profit Qrc.

U.S. Poatap
PAID
Bulfalo~ N.Y.
Pwmlt No. 811

Fllm/Medla)-:

FOL&amp; DANCE CAJIPO -

31
Friday
1i1rwp

SEP'ImlliER
3
Mc.olay

.

-no..-.·
Aloaal!Abor IJ.il c-p.
W&amp;taoa
Pclaled Paot,
Com!Dcl. S80
wort
v- Tenielf,"
Vid«ia
B1vd., lte....,..., _NY 14.217, 877.al!ll.
~.

(near

($40

ahipc) . Contaet

Exhibits
• ~ Taddeo, baod-eolored pbntognpha, u c l by L .P. Ladr. '1'brough Aupot Alamo Ga1Jo:r1, Bock
lhll, MaiD 8tlwt Comp~. Sponoon: V.P. _far Health
Sc:ioDeeo aod lMpartment of Art.

e.

s.- 7lllltooa.,

printmabr .from .St. Pcui, ~
"'dyaey: a-t ArdWc: "-nni." July 1&amp;-Auguat
81. 1nDer Gallery, 15th floor Capen lhll, Amherct
Campus . .......,. · i'rlday,I.DI-5 PM.

s.il. A• s--r ~ by 11 loc:ol
- · ......... 8 ...,.,......, 10. Alamo Galllor7. Bock
lid. ~ .-p11De A..... I . s,.-.: V.P. 1or

........... o.r-"'Art: .

4

N.Y.
adoalar·

�Downtown
theatre face
lift planned ·

Haro ld Glov~ didn't get an M.D., _
but Is now·an admired teacher"

U/B's Center for Theatre R_.ch at
68t Main Street downtown will get a
new , _ and - a J&gt;8'ii name, the ·
Courier-Express reported Saturday.
In tact, bOth ""the UIB theatre and the
Studio Arena at 710 Main Street will be
gi"'n new facades within the next few
•
months.
Some $60,000-=:from federal grant
funds- Is being made avallable for the
U/B theatre, accibrdlng to · Harold L.
-cooen and Peter A . Wutle. Cohen Is
dean of the U/B ·School of Architecture
and director of a . proposed major
lac&amp;-llftlng for the entire 800 block of
Main Street. Wutle Ia euo&lt;:lated with a
consultant firm ln¥ONed In Theatre
Dlstric1 ~opmenL
C6hen told the CourlM that the Idea
Jato rip allthe·okl material off the front
of the U/B theatre and "create• feeling
of openMU-one elegant, clean,
presentable approiiCh eo you can see
what is going on Inside the theatre from
the outslde.
Sewral different concepts are being
considered, the Courier reported,
ranging from natural brick and glaaa to-low-maintenance materials. Architects'
&lt;enderlnga for the project wwe to have
been submitted to Studio Arena
offlclala on Tueeday and to the Theatre
District · Board on Wednesday. The
Studio Arena leUea the building-Ita
old home-to U/B.
Ptana are to -..pleta the new front
before the fall - n opens In October.
Saul Elkin, cheinnaln of the Theatre
Department, eaJd that the Center for
Theatre R - a t will be ehortenlng Ita
nama, aleo before the fall season
begins. The CouriM eald It will likely ba
known aa The Center or The Center
Thr't':econd grant of - 185,000 Is
earmarked for coemetlc c:hangaa on the
front of the new Stuc!lo Arena to the .
north of the U/8-occupled facility. The
ldaa there Ia "to mlllce the theatre look

m~~ ~r,:O:" u-, the City haa
announced thaf de!Mgecl, v&amp;e*lt buildIngs In the T . _ Oletrlct will be
boarded ~Y· The '*"&lt;*1M
will be
II)' munala to be
executed by lex* ..tlata. Thll actiOn Ia'
preparatory to 1.-lng, renting or
ieillng the atr\ICMW aa pert of the
renewal effort.

High schoolers
take math here
II aoma of the atudents hanging
around the Ellicott Complex this
summer eeern uiluaually young, It's not
because ega haa altered your perceptions.
·
Thirty-five of them ere rather young.
They're high school atudenta ~lclpat­
lng In a u... week aummer program In
mathemallca and -..putera that will
run to August 3.
·

Na':~~ ~~·~~=~~~

:::

program 11 a-ad to Introduce
mathernallcelly-lalented .high school
atudenta to ooltege-leval ciUaroom
Instruction, uea of computera, laboratory wort&lt; and llllthematlca projecta.
The . ..
ealected on the
bull '. " · ~tc schievamenl,
teacher •racomnWiidailonl, put projects, and an _ , ..
Three ..udenta from Buffalo wert recruited II)' U/B'I Talent Search~
Program.
Ten of the atudenla . . rrom W•tern
New Yortt; o111en . . from down~Yta,
Pen~... la. eon.-tlcu1, New Jerlo, Merylend 81111_ MaaeachLI-

udeot•--

::h'a.

. The out-of-t_. . . realding In the
College Of Melhematicel Scl8111)81
heedquwtera In Ellloott.
s t - l c l l ' - Ia director of the
aummer .,..,.,_, which Ia funded

~.~~
of
wtlo •• .,..,.,_
~.

~Ow. - . t h e offloer ot
Col.... ot

1.

....._.leal

the
llc:lencee, will

llfOWiclllllllruallon.

Uz&lt;"ol
off to Welt Point
Uz QoaMM 11M ....... • U/B'a
_ . . ..................... coech

10._.
........... - ..
........ 101111111 . . . U.S.

MilitarY

Aaadllllv .. ~f.

Point, ellactlwe

7

As a young man, Harold Glover
V(allted to be an M.D. He came withi n
an eyelash of enrolling In Meharry
Medical School in 1941, but World War
II Intervened.
Today, Mr Glover may not have an
M.,£_. diploma hanging on his wall, but
he n!!l something eQ!"'IIY aatlalylng to
him stored in a Fruffo can. -Opening the
battered tin, he produces a dlmestore
statue with the Inscription, 'World's
Greatest Guy."
"That's "Yhat they think of me," he
beams. "That's what my students think
of me."
lnste!ld of treating tile medically
needy, Glover devotes hTs time to the
educationally deficient at 'the Educational OP.portunity Cent&amp;(, at. 465
Washington Street In downtown Buffalo .
·
His academic field is science, but he
does more than l:oaeh economically
and educationally deprived stud,.,Is for

~~~ SC::~:..:'d'\."ir~e~r,::.•·H~r d':~
more t~an tutor interested students on

an individual basis at nights and on

~....~g~~. ,~~~~~~~.h~?:"cc::~g,;;:,~~!

beyond the classroom and lab: "I'm
trying to help lhem make something of
themselves, " he muses . .. , don't want
them to have the hard time that I faced
0

in ro~~~~ ~i~ ~f~orts Mr. Glover was
honored al EOC's Achievement Day in
May with thai agency's first Directo(s
Award for outstanding services. He was
the unanimous ph olce for that
recognition aa determined by a vote of
his colleagues on the Cente(s faculty
and staff.
Depression graduate
The " hard time" that Glover refers to
began during the Depression when he
graduated from Hutch Tech. (His fam ily
had moved here from Texas when he
was quite young ./ With the 6 ld of a
small scholarship rom lhe Litmus Club
of Buffalo, a stipend granted on the
baala ol his grades In high school, he
enrolled at Knoxville College In
Tenn-ln the fall ol1930.

~~~:;~,::~~~~:·of~~~~:u~~~

working his way through school in
"Roots." During the regular school

~~· ~~e,~~~sed~J~~~:hio~tl'~~g~~
:'~~~~~r~n~n~i!i~:~ !!'~;i~~ru~r~~~:

around the college, doing painting,
carpentry and garden work. He wasn 't
able to return to Buffalo even once
during his undergraduate days.
His small scholarship and salary were
augmented by what contributions his
mother was able to send him . Getting
an educatipn Was very Important to him
and his family.
With a bachelo(s degree in math,
Glover returned to Buffalo, got a job
and saved money, eventually landing at
Ohio Stale University where he received

After the- war, he remained In the
Aeserves,-eventually achieving the rank
or Warrant Officer with an MOS In radar
and electronics. This, of course, was
possible only after the racial barriecs In
the military service fell during the
Truman administration .
The war behind him, Glover was only
one of millions of ex-Gis seeking to lind
a spot in the overcrowded classrooms
of American colleg es~nd universities.
By this time he was nearing his
mid-30s, and there was no hope for
medical school.

can fl~ him In on ~unllt)'l. holldaya
and SUndaya."
"I just make myaelf available at the
students' convenience," Glo- aaya
off-handedly. He even m - "house
calla" If lndlvlduala have trouble getting
baby sitters. There's prJOCtically no llmll
on what he'a willing to do to aid -a
student academically-If that ' student

~~~i~::::::J' 1i~ ~~ g~~~lnPas~ n':!~?.;; ~

81

augmented an already Impossible
workload by taking on two evening

~~·~:.r~~~~~~,:aus~· uc=.~~~=-~

Wednesdays, this increased his' load to
17 years as a research chemist
seven classes a day with about 24 to 25
He found work as a research chemist
enrolled in each.
with Dupont, in Buffalo, assigned to
One of his EOC alumni has been
products such as cellophane and tedlar,
accepted by Cornell ·Medlcat School
an exterior laminating material. He waa
where he will enroll this September.
with them for 17 years. When Dupont
Although Glover never made It, he
closed Its local labs, he declined a
obviously takes great pleasure i n
hla m~!:;~;" =~~-n~~o~rac,ro
transler to Richmond, Virginia, and
1
0
took a job as a salesman at Squl~ Ford.
thing
In the Interim, he waa employed
Looking for ways to supptement h1s
at National Anallne (now American
about his extra efforts and dedication.
Chemical) and at American Magnesium
income, he applied lor malntenflllC&amp;
It's hla colleagues who tell you about It
work with a federally-funded JOb
(where he Inspected aircraft ~· prior
-and his students.
to the outbnlak of World War -It).
program . He was referred to Buffalo
In January of 1941, after ·som$ effort, ·• State Where, luckily for today's EOG
A plzu 'roliat'
Glover received an accep~ce to
.students, personnel officers decloed · _
A biology clasS he taught In 1976 is
Meharr¥ Medical Collage In Nliahvllle,
that a man with a master's and 17 years
typical of how his students react to
as a research chemist ought to be doing
T e n - . lor the fall claaa. ;l.treedy he
him. One evening alter clals a student
something other than swabbing ftbors .
consldenlbly older than the average
asked him to go to Eduardo's for a
He was referred , Instead, to Dr.
entering medical student, but he had
achlitveP his dfeam- or so he thought.
Robert A. Sweeney of the Great Lakes
Laboratory, who,· at that time. ~as
surprise "rout," aa 811 the memberl ot
deVeloping a trainlf)g program on
the claaa took tuma rlllblng and
Uncle Sam hed other 1-• ·
conjunction with the State Uni-soty
praising him. fhat'a ..,.,. he got the
Uncle Sam hed other Ideas. Gl~
Urban Center fecl)lty on Delaware
Fluffocan.~th&amp;yh~ltto
offered to spend the rest of his life if
Avenue. After a brief orientation period,
me, I waalooktng lorajoick-ln-thii-box,"
necasaary as an M.D. In the aervlce of
Glover was assigned to teach .science ·~ - he says. But ln,ateed, there- the little
the Army, if only ~e could be goven a
this program which waa d'!Sillned to
statue with the meaaege that meena ·eo
deferment for medocal school. It could
equip students to hold down tech·
much to him.
'
'
have been done under the regulations.
nlcW.s' /·obs in the fields of alr and
A member of the American Chemical
• t needed a friend," Glo- slghl. But
water po lution control . J:le remained in
Society, Glover hlinaelf haa - . taking
there waa no one. H' was told coldly
that poat until the Urban Center and the
cl.._ at Buffalo Slate recently, with
thlt ''the U.S. needs men in a huoiy.•
Cooperative Cof~e Center(whlcll 'wu
an eye on eventually _.....,lng a Ph.D. in
AI the fall . , _ began work at
a unit ol Ul8) were merged · into the
biology from U!B .
Meharry that year, Glover found himself
Beyond that, hia plana lor the future
aaalgned to a military support unot _ ...preaent EOC.
are rather Indefinite. He will nsach
whiCh followed behind oom~ troopa .
maA&lt;Iatory ratlrement age In two y-.,
in the South Peclfic. Their . - : to
but doesn't expect to slow down. "I
process unllorma with a aubat&amp;IIC8
would be 1011 If I hed to atay In a
m.nulactured by Dupont whlcll pr•
~1 ch~,· he says. "I will be doing
..... ed pol8011 1181 flollt penel~lng the
llberl of the clOthinG. The ,unit movea
Prot!'!:'tlllll eomethlng will have 10
from~ toihaRu-IManOS
do woth.,nr. concem lor YOUn(j peopiii.to the Plllllpplnaa, handling Cfol,_ for
Unaoubtedly, he wtllllill !&gt;8 loOking tor
bOll&gt; tile Marl,.. and the Navy. For na
waya to, aa M.pua-lt, he\11 them "get
- work, the unit NC8ived a . lji8CI8I
preaidentlel citation -ong
eoma - · 1181 rid of the nonaanea,
and get off the II~ . •
Glover II genuinely prow 01.

1'.:!1.

k"f..~:ndll~=- J~~~u=~ : ~1-g

j

~:~~~~.:,n ~':" ;rt:'rBc:~n'':n~

�i

i

Juty It, 1170

i

Tnaetonte
M - CAl Peclno) tak• • gun to •n
- Y In "" ltallon _u,.nt In 1tolo
- f r o m '11M~-· which............ ,.... Me In 8..-Jyn thlo .
· UUAB lo ohoMng '11M Goclmher'
tH.y-tomonow.

Tbursday-16 '
FUll'

L'Eolflloe (1962) (Antonlonl). 148 Oiof..-,.
7 p.m. Sponoored by !he Cenlarfor Medlo Sludy.

-Is

W~COFF&amp;HOUSEPRESEHTATION'

~ T""""". EYwy
!he MC.
w11 be . . - for ....-,.

Opon .... -

ll}&lt;ndly from 7-10 p.m. lllds

SiQrH.o&gt;

.-.a

..:h~tswllbeoold.

UUABFLM'

(1971). Conhnnca · Sqoft.
4:.S. 7 ond 9 p.m. $2;
studonts$1 .50Ni&lt;o f'troonw'i was a !TOOl Georgioo1 prtrritlve
_ , wl1ooe -'&lt; was done by 1920. Tho sed
QUIIitieO of No ife - poverty, reflected In his paintings.

-

,...

Notices
CHANGE OF ADDRESS
M ~ hos II10Yed from the Elicoft C&lt;lrr9ex
to 605 Ctenals. Tho Side lbwy hos rriCMid
to 508-510 Ctomana. P.hone' numbenl"""""'
!hesamo.

CALENDAR
8HAKESP£ARE .. THE PARK'
Tho c..-y "' Emn, &lt;hcled by Soul
Bdn. - . Plo1t,
llle Abtght-KnoxArt ~ - 8 p.m. Free. Spon·
by . . center for - - . , and

._--(behind

1hursday- 't9
UUAIFUI'
- - (1972).

eonr...c. -

·

Oopoolmentof~ .

~ . 4 ond 7:30p.m . - - $2~

co--

Dr. i.Jiwrence Sout!l-Md&lt;. profossor, SChool of
. . . _ , l 363 MFN;, EJ;oofl 7-8:30 p.m.
by !he Int..- English Lllnguoge
lnsti1ute and llle 5chool o f . . . _ , _
This is lhe four1h lectu"e as pa1 of a aix-week
progrwn for intematiooal buslnNa ......_,., ond
.. ._, to !he lJniv9roity OOtTWTUlHy.

- $ 1 .50.
T..-.ty,ll
IDe&gt;.....
11m a l_
lco
- ' l_
1 lof
e...
....
_

- -· -I,_

___
--c....

t.:f ""-_..of ex-

=.,:::!~.::..,~:a..=~

coat

fomly . ..

_....,.-·IIIANAOEIEfT
...
""'

EXECitTlYE
ANDB~ai.a!.__,.CIE'

Ilk. Henry Coonll, , _ ,_
Price Toyo. 363 WFN; , Ellccll. 7-8:30
' p.m. CcHipoownd by ""'
English

"*'-

.__-...,""'School"',..._.,..._
Thlo lo . . ...., -

"' • · - - progrwn

:-~~-- andioc-.&gt;

FI.JI'
... (1960, -Anloriori). 1 4 8 -7 p.tn. Sponoored by . . centor for Medio
SUI\!.

bo-

UUAICOFF&amp;HOUSEPMIBITATION'
Opon ~ TOtTOCO. e-y
'Jhurodow- 7-10 p.m.~-· llle MC .
SlgiHip- w11
for......,.,,...,_, _Wflbeoold.

--·'llEPMK'

c-,

ol &amp;o.o, dftctod by Soul
ENn. 0.0... Port&lt;. ,_ - - (bol*'d
'l1le

lncfuding Bene DIMs, 1oM · OIMa
do - . c t. Ida lJ..&lt;*Io. Ht.wrcltreY lloglwl, John
G.field and Em&gt;l F1ym -1he ontn Bros.
payroll ol that ora. Buffalo &amp; Erie C&lt;ulty Hs1orical

Society. 8p.m. - S 1 .50.
Thla ;, pool of Media Sludy/Buffalo's "A Tri&gt;Jte
to 50 Y~of 1he American Musical ."

WABALM'

.

HMrt ol Olo10 (W. &lt;lemaly, 1976). 146
8 :30 and 8:30p.m. Genenll admlsoion $2; . . - $1.50.

!lief-.

Room C-31 , 4230

Ridge Lee. 1 p.m. Sponsored by 1he Gni!Ute
l'syci1'IOgy- and the~
"""'of !he Psychology Oopoolment.

Wednesday _:....15
~AYSUMMERFORUM'

Bn.no-~-'TlYol.Vl
L.Jterature." Wo6dman Theatre, ~ · 10 am .
(lectu'e) : 2 p.m. (questioo-and-.-.swer period) ,
!he Kiva, Baldy. Free. Sponsored by the F.oculty
of Educational Studies.
!lettelhelm, Stela M. Rowley Olstingulshed
Professor Emorf1us of Educat!Cn, Psychology and

,:=.:=:=

-

Critics Ch:fa Aw.d for Ctftlclsm.

~~

. ofproohecy, o l h - - .. 8ldof

~of..

dis-

turbed · His,_ recen1 booi&lt;, The u"'~won !he 1976 National Book

·oucf;on:&gt;el

-

b y - S t u d y -.

&amp;ldAy-10

fNFOAMAI. 'DISCIISSION'
Soclol and _
, Contut al Jooec&gt;h Eyer, Oaprinenl of Biology,
~of PennysyMnio. 11 11.m. Aoom C-31
4230 Ridge Lea. Sponoored b)t the Gnoduate

-....Dr.

NEWMAN CENTER- -SCIEDIAE:
- - c . . , . , _ S r d o y, ~Canlor
(3233 Main St.), 9 :30 ._.,. and 11 a.m.; Weelidaya, Newman Conte&lt; (~ Fols BIYd. &amp;
Main St.), 11 :45 a.m.

Amharot ~ Newman Center, Frootle&lt;
Ad, l'l8ll'" Elicott, 10:30 a.m. Mel 12 noon
(Srdoy); 8 a.m. and 12 ,_, ( - . ):
5 p.m. (Satu'doy l.1gl Mass).
PSYatOLOOYEX,
_
We . . - . g Nljocts 10 priclpate In a
psyohotogy oxperimenl A rninO'run payment of
S3 wll be pold for you- pa11clpation. We are
In J18ed of both men and woman _to ts1&lt;e poo~
1n !he progrwn. W - e d. col 831-1366 for
more infotrr.tlon.
•

· .IUI..Y II

Alii--

Ply&lt;:hology--..

~

Emn, by Soul
Bdn. ~Pork,_-- (bol*'d
:::..~~~- 8 p.m. Frao. Laat

11172). Oor-.co -

·

............ 7:30p.111.--$2;

Sponoored by the Canlor for -

ond~of-

UUAIAUI'

----AT-~

c--

-~-··-

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

-

Cll -

aorn..y,

1978). 170

cO-

by ""' intloniiYe Englioh Lllnguoge

lnstii&gt;JtoondllleSchoolof~

Thlasthefiflhlac:tln•l*tofaoiJ&lt;·

ondiocpon1olho~"""""!''tY-

10). 7p.m.

......-.,..

c-...---

r.cuty '8ld · - - · New In
-MedicineCare;,
Talot Care of Y -."
WKBW-lV(Ctwlnaf7). 10Lm.

Dr. K.n-.
feaaor
of ~. "CClld ~ ond tho
Probfarnsof&lt;lrowlng Up."

.IUI.YJI

........ ...._ .. -.cfroo.

~
lor. ~--"Tho-~0(

.

To 11et- In

1111' "CCIIenc*,"

cetl

11.,: liOIIIIt .... 10 . _ wllll •.JIIO"

~.u.e.e

........ - - .

' 111111111 t i r - .........~
_.........
1'111111~

~

e-ta.-·
. -.-.

Bofhs.-" WBEN-FM(102.5). 5-7a.m.

............. ln..
·•gpen
.... 111111111: ........ ~ ··~'\., . .

Monday-13

Hon1olt

Gl.w1tharjazz
eo..- c..about
(Ciw'nol

.IUI.Y22

• - ·· - - . d a r f a l n o l

eo.... ~. .

-

•

(W.

In .,; Alto: -

lnlpvlews - and""*'*-- rruaic.

'"""'· ond ofhor - - of ' lho School of

_,

tEN;, Ellccll. 8 ;15 ome p.m . - aion$2;- S I .Sl.

Legal

.lUI.~~"--....;,__.,~._,~

tion. 363 ~,.,;;. EJ;oott. 7-8:30 p.m.

.. THEPNII&lt;•

E.-.....
.....
c...ont

~.

EXECUTIYE PAOORAMIN MANACIEIIENT

-Conceplaai~Educollan,
Mr. --~ &lt;lOon, COn1loiJing Educa-

,.,. c:-, "'

Dr. , _

Faculty of ,__ ond

'llle---""----·1.110.
----..................
_....,._llt_OIIIIIOOIOJ!Id
--....
____
... ___ _
..
.......
_
....
-----lonelg.............
-..--.,.,- =::..•-·•·•-rr _... ......., .... ....
--·p.lll4--

I

.... of !he Psychofogy_~.
AND~LA~·

Sunday-11

..._t

Topico. WKBW·lV(Ctl&amp;w1nel 7). 10a.m.

• coloctlvemogic."'A"""""mono-...,11s

· Philp and Ou,.la - - , ·~ 1he
AcU."
and "BBock.
and $1
- . Sponoored
·· .170 .
WFN:;
, Elicofl.
6 p.m. --

-

tlon, Dr. . - , Eyer, Oopoolment of Biology,
lJniv9roity of~·

a - .....- oen1ar for - a y

~-:-.:=.~·~~ - YIIEO~·
~"'--

s-. -'-&lt;~m,_. anc1 Social Organaz..

Tho 11m "' • ..... Goma1 """" 1ha1
l h o - ol ~its"'*"'" nbf ~.
Tho 1um 1o """*-· nuder, and
mogic In a.._..., o1for1 1o """"""its pu-e
-· ~ lvl - l i m for""*"'

==:.:=:'- " :

Plan,..-.-

29, 5:30p.m.-&amp; porn.

COUooutuM'

SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK'

,.,. c..-y "' Emn, dFoded by Soul
• Bdn. Dolawwa Port&lt;. , _ (bol*'d
!he Abtght-Knox ArtGalleoy). 8-p.m. Free. Sponsored by the Center tor Theetre Research and
Oopoolment of Thea1nt.

s..rmer Sosalons.

HEAL'Ill CARE OPEN HOUSES
T h o - Care
of "01*1 _
.. at t h e i r - CO!IIa&lt;. 120
~ PM&lt;woy West, ~ cUing
the ourmw. New state~.., ln-o1led
to brtng their lo 1he Mocical center

• fora-ondlo--~-·
Tho f-.g io lho Medlc:af c.nwa Open
~' ~. tlwoogh

Tuesday:- 14

AUI'
Thonlc Your t.udly,...,. (1943) . lvl ol-star

·-~afmo-tok.aliby
"*'Y • ., aplc _ , of mcnfily and

-

Saturday - 1 t

FliEE MATlltuTOIUNCi
College of SOoncoo, 100-109
Wllkeaon Quod, Ellootl Monday and - - 10:30 s.m.~ p.m.: T.-toy and Thndoy, 10:30
a.m.·9 p.m.; Ftklay, 1·6 p.m. $Qonaored by

.

(f-.
)pc.-..
otoo.- -

t Dr.lllory

-

~of~. "TVSoop

(830). 9 :06p.m.

.

~1:--

Adult - . "Tho $olLIIIf ..-.., "'
- -" WIIBI(830). 11 :06p.m.
.U.YM

M -

CIIIIMolr- Q.

-

I'll D.

-·---~-·"

-lVCO!onnoiT). 10a.m.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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CSEA files
grievance·on .
waste-hand I i ng ·"The University has until August 1 In
which to respond to a grievance
protesting procedures for handling
toxic materials tiled last Friday by Local
1602 of the Civil Service Employees
Association, Inc.
The grievance document, submi!ted
on behalf of " all employees holding job
titles l n-:t~ e operational services unit on
campus, was hand-delivered to the
Office of lhe President by Ms. Barbara
J . Kauffman , grievance chairperson of
the Local, for local President Robert
Smith and the organization's Board of
Directors. It will eventually be rouj ed to
the Personnel Department for response.
The complaint, also releaeed to the
press on Friday In a departure from
usual union procedures. charges that
U.fB I@. !'.,tolation of Article 3!1.1 of
the contfJI!it ·between CSEA and the
State. That section of the peel calls on
management " to en~ to provide
safety stand!ltds for the protection of
employ-· well-being commensurate
with ttroae p...._,Uy In effect In the
private sector and , within this context,
to provide and maintain seta and
healthful working conditions and to
lnltlate and maintain operating prectlcesthat will safeguard employees. •

~y ~akespeare
U/B ector Jim McGuire 'oporta' ywt enother t.ce M Dromlo of 5yrKuM In 'The
Comecly of Enora.' the ..,.y Bhek_
_ , ~ , _ lit fuU tilt In

--·-·~.

~o~J..::~~=rm ot"~m~~

New rules

from Personnel D liector Roberl~n
asking thet the union Identify em·
ployMS Involved In the PCB cleanup
who would llu to have a phyalcalaxam.
"We thought h odd thai they didn't
know -who~ employMS are," ahe

Trustees delineate revamped
guidelines for evaluation of
individual campus presidents
~

CSEA'a poaltlon
CSEA submits that violations OC·
curred when maintenance employees
hed to cleanfi a transformer oil spill
leal fall- a
ore whi~!L~'!P!lsed tha
cleetHip .,._ l'C8a (poty&lt;:li!Mfliiliiil ·
biphenyls), chemicals llnkeCI to cancer
and other- disorders. .Regulllrly-uaed
procedures for handling radioactive
wastes are also improper, the union
claims.
Accord ing to Ms. Kauffman, Local
602 brought the charges to the attention
of the Uni versity (through the Personnel
Office) as early as Aprtl 26. The. same
concenla were again dlacueaed at 'an
Informal meeting on June 14 with
repreaentaUvea of the Environmental
Health and Safety Office (Mr. Robert
Hunt) and the Redlation Protection
Department (Mr. Mllrlc Pierro).
Kauffman aald Personnel had been
Informed repeetedly following the June
14 meeting that the union expected
some definite anawere by~ 1.

sa~nton ~

csEA

Smith said
has been " diCkerlfti.· Wtth" the lldmlnla·
!ration for ·a ))um&amp;er of years about
WJ~IJ handling proceduraa; but that II .
~lfy them In particular lnalanceS._. _
was not .until Ita ctlarges were made
public that "PIOI!Ie began running
around hera to CheCk thlnga 9111•'' Smith
A. Prlnclplee
.
aald thai the oomp181nt heel certainly
The ~t'-1 rwlew prooeaa Ia
done nothing to make him popular with
dlatlnct from the lnh'-1 -a&gt; prooeaa
for a "'-olden!. In the latter, the various
admlnl-• • ljlut thai he was
C91'alhuenta of . the campus loin to- · conc.ned only -about " my PIOI!Ie.
Unleaa the uniOn ajlllllka up, the
-a&gt; for, and the College Cou11cll
recomll*\da to the T , _ , the beat
-Unlverelty~•lt p l -.·
Initial unofficial commenta by Unl - ·
poaalble oendldete or candldatee for the
poeltiOn. The -a&gt; Ia extanalve, and·
ahy ~· are that all..
the - l n g prooeaa may be both
hazanloua handll(lga and cleenlan'gltly and CompleK. The Chanoellor,
tiVougll hla , . . _ . . ...., offere
guldailoe and .......,__ The major
federal agenclel.
work of the - l n g p&lt;ooeea
Pel .................. .
a OIII!PUa uncMrU*JriO, .-cl Ia ooordl~
The PCB clean-up · ~a (jenaraltng the
aled by the Coi:.Q9uncil.•
- The ~aid
IWWiew . . ;noel-.
dlffere from ... powoedlfl8 In that the
In a memo to " - - " " DINCtor
llnMd
...._.Ia nota 11Gb, for
,._.,. tol~ the JIIM 14
the~Minl ..,.,..., Ia ~
Kauffman c:twDell ttunt of Envlfvl&gt;. ·
to
it. or 8he ,_ ai!Wy
mental Hllllh . . ...., wiiiiMina '-.!
belt_....u.r"and"'l-"~ .
- - under the CIINaiiOA 01 the BoiRI
01
and the .Qianoeilor • u..
..- - ~
- • totn "11w
ulwty
Of..,.
,_.,.,
the PCB
-....,p.

:::or:'...:".J:'..:~ :,v

--rne

-a.

all_......

-lng.

r,-

' aiiW adlllllllllniiM of"- of ...
GMIPUL The _... le a T , _
hniiiDn and ..,._. Initialled Ill' ttw
CIWIOIIIor In ....... of ttw 'T,_.
..,_lila I'Naldlnllllo ... ln-..cl
dllllng tile P,I'IOd of ..vtoe will\ varloua

·---.·-1,011.1

" ' - - ' Neponclad tcr that memo ttlla
..... noting thet In hie . . . C8EA heel .
t... "aurpilalngly aaar-lve" IDout
Hunt and auvgaetlng -11\at neither aide
benaflta by Impugning the motlvea of
the other. ,

CSEA contends that during the
Incident at Fargo Quad laet October 22·
1. Six workers with no prior training
direction In dealing with such a
situation were directed to clean 'IJp the
spi ll; 2. At least one and probably two
stepped Into the eontamlnated su~
stance. 3. Although workers were given
rubber boots and gloves, no masks or
face sh ields were provided 4 The
materials
collected
(coniaminated
clothing, barrels of contaminated oil,
vacuum cleaners) have been stored In
the Chilled Water Plant since Octol&gt;er In
unmarked containers of questionable
safety; and 5. That no training has been
provided to those whb will be expected
to clean up future..oll spills.
The union asks.alx remedies:
1. That safe barrels be obtained In
which to store all the contaminated
substances·
2. That the contaminated clothing be
either destroyed Of' stored In drums·
3. That the -terlala be. rem'oved
from the Chilled Water Plant and stored
In a separate facijlty [CSEA says EPA
regulations call for each of tnese steps
to be taken) .
4. That all personnel who will be
expected to take part In future cleanups
be provided with adequate training and

or

·-·csu.·-7,ccl.1

Friedenberg ~ys
its role is
to serve authority
Edgar Friedenberg hasn't changed a
whit-notthet anyone would want hi m
·
to.
There he-was In Talbert Dining Hall
Monday afternoon, .lull of bite and

~~~~'kfnil ::,~mo~~~. ,l,".':,k,tam~t;
stars that "culture" Ia doomed (~here

are th ing a I'll mlaa_, . , _llu ocean
liners and the T_,tleth Century
Umlted," he chortled).
, The family es we know II Ia your local
"Scared Straight" progqm, aUIIIIIIIed
the renowned ado!-' aoclOiogiat
whose ....,.Ia ~-blazo~
ed on an altiomat!Wo aCiioot rn Rhwaide,
caut. It Ia charaed wltlt (and Ia
handsomely fulfiiiTnill- I~ reeponalblllty of turning out aubn!laalve,
apprehensive, browbeaten gina and
boya, ready to do the bidding of the
patriarchal ayatern, c:reampuffs who
quake before Jlllthorlty. '

No MCIIp8
The family h-, In fact, _ , grantecj
legal monopoly ·to do jull thla,
FrTedenberg submitted. " Alternative"
...,.tgamenla are not permitted. Ita
children are "prieonera" without rtghta;
they _,'I endOwed with the rnoa
,bealc right, to · - . · TfUIIIIC)' and
NMing
from the . . llbulive alt,_.ion-.So Ia
aulclcle. The latter, said F
blrg, Ia
uatortunatety on the I~; _ ,
~ young ohl)driln thoM aoclclent.l
poi-.lngl may f1PI always be

away--

II=

mletellll.

· An ·~ng.'' nOIH81etlld
edult oannot "'lllllor a runaway.• The
family Ia alwl)'l ~ aa "'*nngn;"
"olllerl" ~!~ ~.!'- out only to
"exploit or molaet a child .
In the ....,, of dl ~ , .thor chHd
raNiy has a aay on whlctl - t ha or
a11p, wtlltlve wlth-and cwtalnly Cll)nol
lhe ~,"want to fly with.

=.:.or

Llwa prot.ct the familY rather than

.... ~ · -l,cat.l

�•New rules
.,__1,ooi.Z)

•

conatltuent ~~~ on ~pua, It is
both .,..roprlata ..wl dealrable that, in
conducting the rwlew, the Chanosllor
Wid Truat- conault with the College
Council and, that epproprlate coneultatlon ~ao be ...ured with ,..,_tatlwl
. apolcMmen of the fec:ulty, the 8dmlnl..
tratlwl ataH , and the atudenta. Can!
lhOuld be t8ken to provide input to the
proosea by llumnl
non-leeching
iJ!Oieeslonala, ctualli8d · emplOy-,

~ ~cc:"~~~lt?hr~!CJ

.. of the
Boenl of Tru•t- 111711, the Trust...
• have defined the rMpOnaibllitlea of the
chi.t 8dmlnlatratlwl officer of the

~. ~~t~~·efl~r:.

: : ...
-will be rwlewed.
The principle of confidentiality will be
ob....cl throughout the r8Yiew proceu. Thlo will ~ply to dlscusalons
among ~lthoee who participate; and to
written document• other than the
Preeldentlal Statament: Condition or
the Campus. The team report will be
ahered with the c;ampua followln'g its
rwlew by the T,-uatees.
With l h - principles to guide the
· =iah.::J~ following process Is

•. Procedural a...,.
1. The Ch.,.,..llor shall contact a
eelected number of presidents to
eeUibllah a no8dlnees for a professional
perlormanoe rwlew. The contact shall
be within a live yeer period of the
· Initial ~polnt,_t and/or a live year
period from the lui perform.,.,.

-·

The - · ahaJI be conducted
periodically. The ~- ahall be
deWmlned by the cr-oe11or and the
"'-lccent In oonl_.ce. The deelgn or
the periocllc ,.,tewa· lhall be flexible
arid~.

2. The Chanosllor, with the Preeldent, ahaJI eatablilh a achedule lor the
perlormanoe ,.,lew activities. In no
ceee ahall the rwlew proceu exceed
lour montha. The on aile schedule shall
be developed lor a period when the
oollege Ia In operation. However,

~::::=~:.-completed

a. The Ollaino.llllr lhall rwquest· the
~ to ,.,.._. and aubmlt a

Prelldential Stat.....,t: Condition of
the Campua, with .J)Mticul• retensnee
to 8dminlatratlon Iii racent put, lhe
pnaoent and the immediate lut...... The
Statement lhall be no lcinger than
twenty pagee. The Pnsaldent may
decide to ~ neoeaaary and
app&lt;Opriete materiel a. Such documents
uthe Preeldenra annual report and the
cun.nt Middle Stataa Aaaoclatlon
eetl-atucly nport may be uaed u
tiPP&lt;OIIri81aln t h e -· The contenta
liddlwae!lln the 8...._,. muat relata
to lrwt8ee' crtt.rta lor pnsaldentlal
NIPOflalbillty.
•
b . The
t ahaJI aubmlt the
~to the
· lor, ..wl, at the
-tlme.to
~olthe
College
• Tile
&amp;hall
beoow:-' puiiiiO~ment.

s.-

~

':..&amp;:..~-

..... oaplee
of .... Council. Tile
of the eou.g. Council

---..
the

...11. Alllr ...........
~":i::.:.'f.,C"lhe . . . .
~-a
:-eou:.c":~..:,
wlllt IN .........,. on lhe
of • wlaltlng laam from •
lllaCIIIIIODIIagitMII ~

or OOIIIflllibly _..IOICI

...-. ' - out8ICie of IUMY.l'ha.....,
IIIIIIIIUIIIIIar . _ , wlllt lila lldclltlon of

:::=,":'""'
......

who ... of IN

••

a-.oor,

.. n. Clwallor lllall appoint ~--·-:.~~~··c:.a=:
fl lila Calllpua. . . CqunDII a.!r-

. . . . . . of . .

Qall=""""' ..
=-~.:.---·
.........
........

. . . -........... Mil .... ollw

==·~

.,__,.llr
IN.¥1a1t!!1c1
.f..W
. . . . . . .of
..
. !IIi

~

• ...
CllliiiMCIOIICIIIIIIII
1 -oi
· ·. IN
of

and conatlt.-ta ~ n - . . y by
the laMa-Cioalrpeqon to obtain an
accurata lmpnaaalon of the leader8hlp
and campua condltiDn. Campuat-*s
may N08Iwl lnpu1 from IIMMf c:Onatlluenclee In cn1 or written form. .
Eval,..l.. lnfonnatlon 'tllua obtained, 11
Included, muat be attribUtable. Thla
would ~lucie the ... of an opinion
polling or auowy procec;lure far
conatlluent Input. The turn Chatr- ·
poQOnahall be ,.ponalble lor drafting
a taam report to- tha Chanoell:&gt;r. The
aener-1 approach and format lor the
ilwlew will be almllar to, but not
Identical with, a Middle States team
vlall and report. ThNe ahall be an oral
report by the visiting team to the
,President Prior to leaving the ~PUJ.
h.'Thel'nsaldent, upon reoelpt or the
written team nsport, In drat1 form , shall
sh8re a cbpy with the Council
Chalrparaon . The draft turn nsport shall
be reviewed by the Pnsaldent and by the
Chalrperaon. Queatlons of fact and
such other matters as deemed
appropriate by the Pnsslllent and/or
Chairperson s~l be communicated to
ll)e Tum C~rperaon and , to the
President and Council Chalrperaon. The
Chairperson of the visiting team shall
then pnspare and forward to "1118
Chairperson of the Council a final team
nsport on the presidential review and
condition ol the campus, with copies to
the President.
I. The Council shall transmit the finaL
team nsport to the Chancellor, along
with any appropriate commentary.
J. The Chanoellor &amp;hall discuss the
final report with the Pnssldent In
conletenoe. A nsport shall be m8de by

::::.~rfo":~'rru::!:~ed by the
3. The Cloanoellor lhall lh.... the
report with the campua altw the report
liOoa been - t e d and dlacuhed with

the~ruat-.

CoJieges' dean

will be local
A committee to scan and recommend
Internal candidates' tor the position of
deen of the Colleges has been
established by the Office of the Vice
.Pnssldent lor Academic Affairs.
The Reporter has learned that the
panel was set up, with Or. Claude
Welc~ as convenor, after external
~~~n~st~~rJ~st had been turned

Wale~. who was ec:tlng..dean of the
Colleges last year and also serves as
associate vice pnsaldent lpr academic
atfalrs, aatd the aeerch has a
somewhat urgent natuns to It because
the hope Ia to name an Individual to the ,
poat by the beGinning of the fall term.
The panel wiD be ~PY to'f8081ve sell
nomlnatlona . from Individuals on
~pua ·u well u
nominations I rom
lhoee who wish to suggest someone
else. The deadline lor auch nominations
Ia Friday, June 20.
Welch aald rwqulnsmenta lor the
lll*led out In detail In the

=..,..

=

they ansuau:;
~=.,a,lnt~.:e .
appointed ahould alth.,. hold or be
capable of hcllding a tenlnd faculty
poaltion at the UnMralty, and that he or
abe llhould be 1-..ted u wall u
competant In lntanllaclpllnary ..,..,.,_
lc and . .ldentlal actlvltlea

~·· wanting more
ahould oontact Welch at

Seminara set

•Friedenberg

·--1.ool.
4)
the child, Friedenberg aummarlzed.

fl'!OPie don' cans whether or not they
can spell cornsctly ' ("noilther could
Sh8kespeare" becauae at that lime
there were no agnsed-on rvles oi
spelling).
•asked who would really want to iurn
to the state lor protection from anything
(even though the American State
probably does the beat lor Its own
people of any atataln the world) . 'When
the polloe come In the dOQr, every1hlng
=J~~~u!J~~ wln~ow...,lf It has. any

Where many other cultures don't
understand (or even heve a word lor) the
CORClll&gt;t ol "my child," the Western
bourgeois vieW of the family Is an
entrepreneurial, proprietary one'. Parrents are the " produoers" of a "product"
on whose "achievements, " they will be
judged . The oppnssslve, but uncaring
elders of Dickens have been rep'ec:ed by
sollclt,roua manlpulalor&amp;rwilo .;care for
their Kids like they would lort~'llr car."

,;,oraa

No
than a Marriott .
Friedenberg dlsmlaaed day cans as no
mons or less alnlater than "Marriott
~tels" inot Hy!llta, though, because
the atriums which many units In that
chain feature In their lobbies remind
him of Milton's vlalon of hell In
"P~ '0:: Lost," and that Is harmful) .

Have a nioe day
Thanks to Behavi or Modification
everyone Is "jolly;" only those emotions
whoch ar~ " acceptable " are displayed
Children can't tell II they're loved or not:
can't determine Whether the " love1•
they're olfe ed is a "'natural reactlo.n " or
a "conlo'plled response." ,
The entire situation embodies an
lnsultl,ng disrespect lor dlgnltv In
Friedenberg's view.
·'
Schools are similarly repressive
Here, children learn that while they may
in some aensa be "apecl~" at home
they . have to " m8ke It" in the -·larger
world, according to its rules.
Parents play aloog lor lear of being
labelled as " unwilling to cooperate with
the schools, " the lfioat damn ing
l::,dgmentther.!:' reoelve. Horne Ia "no
m;::;;. In a
h world, Friedenberg

1

•counseled people not to be guilty
about not feeling aomethlng they're
"supposed" to feel . Guilt Ia better
:·.r;oot feeling something you
1
•noted that the problem wllh TV Is
not ao much Ita content as the
assumptions II encpurage• 'Viewers to
m8ke about lhemeel-. TV leeches
children not to.anaww back, to all and
watch. paut..ly_, to.noact no dlflensntly
to aomathlng ttoay balM In than to
aomiolhlng ltoay dlaagrae with . It
heightens cynlolam.

. r:;:} f:

ENn Socnotaa waa a whl.;.p

HateeHOWMI
Anatty, he condamned the Idea of the
TV anchorpeo aon or oommentator who
has to lnterPm _.,uo1ng lor the
~- 'vn.l Ia tt1e role 01 Howard
~J'l" loa Mkad. "A Greek Ctlo(ua, he

Our herOee ·ana thoee who
"triumph over aeo;ul.,. au1horlty " he
lament8d. The1:00l and oornpetani
who their enamlee drink the
hemlock or Gle on the croaa that wee ·
_ , lor lherit, don~ baoome lagaoda.
Information
.6cicralea, concluded Flladenbertl,
WQIIId ' - couneeted thoee~ at
the SloMwall Inn dunng that htatorfc
raic!, to 110 quietly to jail .
Socrafee, afte( all, waa u beet roe
could be "both a lamlly man lind a lOyal'
_ cntzen.
. "They go togather then u now;

-a.-

a--

8311'2!182. ·

Eiftlerlalllll.. ........

.

Aiwaya pro-two. eeldom talilng to
be pungent, F r l = u - of the
allil;a In U/IS'a
u n l - ol
aca!lamlc lumlrwlee In
... 181101.
He left heR In 11110, aft.ol
the worat unreat In tha htatory of the
::,~·· with • typically outapoken

..J!!

. Alter toumeelly no8ding through hla ·
jnparad paper, Friedanbera antert.dn~a='~;:=.,~ aucJianoe with _
"Go to Albany and ...., ao-nor
lhe ... Mil whet
-vad • profeelf tfle ......
)

.........
---to
.................
......,._...
on the

r-ny.

clol....

waa, he aatd, "alolc8nad by the
.. _ment acoorded •.• ool~ who
look part" In a ail-In In H~ Hill.
Forty·flwl faculty wtoo aat 1"- found
themaahM bllhtncl bare lor 11 •
He fall ha oould no I~ llwl with an

J::n-•=.on)

lodmlnlatratton.
which had not •
•
of
~ human laallflll tor .., o1
ua 'In lhe cnata- ...._ .,..,.

=-~ "maaa. or ,_.
8lloca U/8, he hu .... at Dalhousie
Unlwralty, Halifax, NOM Scotia. There,... Mid, ha .... '-Mil thet ldllege
~ ~ be· brutal.
Flloldanbafg Ia beet known lor hla
bocJka on ~· which .._
become clualca for educatora. The ·
Ado..._,l, publlahad In

VMiali,:S

..~3:..1:.::~
.::.::,.Yw:.
~··Work,

�....sum

July12, 1171

Bateson
Renowned social scientist
reviews his work at seminar;
'It's got to do witt) or.d er, • he says
Gregory
Bateson
properly
rumpled , unrelentingly British - was
puzzled.
In tones which Margaret Mead, a
former wife of his, once described as
unmistakably " C&amp;mbrldge," he sald'he

=~~:rnr~h~~~~;?~

a

of organlutlon, of love and hate, of
evolution, •!and so on."

It's about oymrnetry and asymmetry,
about realeYents ll(ld the calibrations or
"rules" for behavior In the wake of such
events, about structure and function .
Are there rules In obedience to which
events occur?- Are there · sets of
calibrations like thermostat settings
which set oH fluctuations In behavior

gradua~

But this was a general aud,lence so
that wouldn't work.
Bateson - In Western New York tor a
maJor address at Chautauqua - had

(li~u~~~ r,.r::,~~ ~~~~)?he

Is
worldng on the (81atlon between
m!lnlal process and evolutionary
process; on the links· between genetic
control and adjustment of the organism
throughout life.
.
The famny · also has controls,
calibrations and rules which are fairly
stable and to which It must adjust,

~"0:,~~ ?~rr'ffu~:a:s to,;,om:
mid-morning presentation fn Talbert

Dining Hall. The event was part of the
Colleges' aummer program on the
family.

ln:~~a.c:~~ r.":t l'o~a ~~~y~:;;

his ectlvtties from '~he mld-1920s and
since," an Impressive body of thought,
reaurch and dlooovery careening from
blolog~ to psychology and anthropol-

:~~~h~~J.:~;, l~rfhb~e~~b~tlo:::

are made to adjust to life.

·

..~:3~1~~~ :a~/:'~!:~~~~ w~~;~~~ha~
6:30, although her husbanJ' didn't get

~~~~r~~ ;,~'!=-1/f~~~~ro· ~~1

and New Guinea.

oH work untl\ 6:45. He was always
"late" and there were always words.
Whethletethercld
When these relationships get out of
His father, William Bateson , was a
kilter, he noted, you wind up with
Darwinist who founded and named the
monsters - monstera- of anatomy or
science of genetlca; he wa tha Brttiah
monstrous relationships.)
diSCO\'-, translator, champion and
In either case, It's \rouble.
pop~larlzer of the work of . Gregor
Hie claughtw gotH wrong
Mandel, an Auatr1an monk (for whom
hlo oon wa .named). The yQUnger
Bateson was · accompanied by his
Bateeon cowwed all thle, too, noting . , (and Margaret Mead's) daughter, Mary
hie father ultimately became
Catherine, who poead a question/
dlelllualoned -with Mendelian genattca
comment at the end of the presentation,
and bequeathed him many major
apparently to focus his rambl i ng
queetlone.
·
remarks.
All his work hal dealt with order, With
A· flne ~uestlon, Bateson responded.
" Only you ve got it backwards. "
form, tha author of Ecology of liAind
aummarlmcl. The Book of Ganeals tells
Through the laughter, a confused
listener could be heard whispering to a
, of a world without form , being formed
out of chaoa. He hal oJudled how that
companion " My God , If ahe can't get It
straight after almol1 40 yeora of
torm.1...,... became oubstanoe, has
been p~upled with the dividing alld
lletenlng to .him, whatara we to make?"
eortlng that le ''the cenl{al theme of
Engllah born and educated,· Bateson
has taught ethnology and aoclal
Intellectual puzz-t In Occidental
culture."
·
anthropology at - . 1 American
Geneala le where all biologists
universities, Including Harvard, Colum?-long, ~.aald with .convtctlon.
~:'d
Un~~~ty ~:.wCa!~::,r.:~
11'1 all 1 M .
emeritus at Santa Cruz, and resides on
Whit - tha ...lgned topic again?
the West Coast. One of his books,
Baleeon aUcl. "Oh yea, the family. It's
Ecology of Mind, 1972, demonstrated
all the awne problem, anyway."
his multiple Interests, oomblng psy11'1 about making eenM of anatomy,
chologyandanthropology.

'hat

d::.

Elderly assistane;:e project
wins si_x-month reprieve
ctn ~_pentshdenaveuy at homheelpecf
. In aornto.!.~ s.
""'
been
·-·-·
their living quarters to make utenells,
cfothlng, furniture and appliances more
easily acceaelble.

1

A uts-*ed project which. has
helped elderly Individuals with phyelcal
llmltatlons remain Independent at horne
will continue tor six more months, says
111 dl..ctor Mer1ena Glnllhar. H had

~lyot=.•:~n~~- June 30

at=

~~~~e:'~u~~

to give the lndepen
Uvtng ProJect
$15,000 for lhll ~ ~ the next
ebl I'IIOiltha, r •
' 4llfldlng
eouroee whlcll may
Prdject to
cootlnue on a more permanent balls,..
Will be explonld.
" EHor1e of County Leglelator Joan
eaz.,, Allentown CornmunHy Center
dl ractor Ron · Malar, end County
Executive Ectwanl Rutkowlkl . . largely

w

:=\'.:'=~!"'

.=, P::~rng~

r,

St_. 8IICI tha

-'"»nt

tlle

Community Clntw1 111
ElmwoOd Aw. A ~ty of c:~Jenta,

Allentown

s::~r..::~-:"-==
11110 DUral

, _ . . wtiiiOUI

. .-:...... .::~ 111ft ... .,.
lludlnla.

llfV'IIIId

by
~ tMAipy

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

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

1
":

!lhysiclana. And they have togaed many _
hours preeentlng health lalko to

=~u~l~t~~.ro~~-.:~lf~dth.=
want to know how the)C .can remain

at home.

•

"If !ld&amp;Pted cooking utenells can help
the. ~hrttlo •lctlm continue to cook
safety at horne_or a more convenient
apartment layout can aid eomeone
confl'*l to a wheelchair, It's a email.
price to pay consldertng the expensive
anematM-Ihe nuratng home." .said
M~n
when H was ,.nqunoed
there was no rurther funding tor the
Project, Me. Glngher said It w• Ironic
that Natth lneU!ai\C8 would pey 1M tab
If cllento wwe lorood Into nuralng
home&amp;. But lneunonce won't pey tor
many !lame provtded by the Prolect
Whlcll help 1:1lente remain indepandant

&lt;r.r:.=;,,

·

==

.: u=. ~ :..., •

~"vts= cl~~s t'~Y.

=a P':,ldl~rt~upa~=

Me. Glngher, ...letant profMIOr of

aleo noted thai pubHcHy genwated 1ly
the Projeol'a th...aaned ciOIIIng, _which
-announced In FtbfUary, ,_more
people - - of the 8II'VIoel which
would be IOat If tha Project 00. out of
buelneel.
Some 1116 aldartY lndlwld...l In the
bOIInded
F'cnM A - . Main

08

at~ etaif'._ wortied ooo~
tlwly

wHh aganclea euch •

tha .-

Nekihboftl~~.~Ina~
lllel~ ·
Meele on ..,_ .... otllar
,....

=~8II'VIoel

to...

y '"'

"TTIere - more IIWI 210.000 aldarly
lndlwidulll In tha ...... ' by the

Prollct." .............. Q~ "iMny

of tMIIIMIII- ........
Altllougll ... - County funding Ia ........-r.... Mid, ...... ~

.........
::::=..:~1:.1."..::.= ......
:c-..=.~-~ .....
tor It llld -

10

- - 8IICI

_

to " ' - -

�July 12,1878

4

VIEWPOINTS

SUNY Press
issues Sanes'
cancer s:tory

~WeD-done' summer art series

APhysician Faces cancer in Himself
a compilation of -articles about how
long-time U/ B faculty member Dr.
Samuel Sanes struggled with the
r~et~~~~e~.e~tly been published by

termed worthy of support froln University
By Eather Harriott
Oinlclor. CUiu'IIIAfflinl

Two Spanlah movies. were tha double
bill, as the Evans Theatre In
Williamsville gP! Into the ,third of Its
6--'&lt; Summer Art Series with Luis
Bunuel'a " Trlstsne," a perennial favorite

~!.~&lt;;~~

a:'.! "~~~~;:i~~

:...: :'1.~ot~n~~z~.t.o~ec~-~
reaction to the complexities of tha &amp;dull
world around her, ea sha did In "Crlal",
the superb Spanish film shown on
Buffalo lest year.
The setting Is 1940 In a primitive

~=hcr~l~ar~..:tix.:w:csta~~

slater. Isabel, live with their troubled,
beauJifur mother and tlielr trou bled,
Intellectual father. We know he Is
lnlellectual even though he doesn't say
much, because he spends his sleepless
nights writing allegories about tha
beehives he tends by day. The mother's
· time Ia pretty much taken up with
1

~~r~~~er"'!l~~:Y .~u!,Jh~ ~r r~~=

youth.

.

-wtl,":~y~.,:S are dr.&amp;rtad from tha
~::.;.,~r~~en~~~e ~~~~~~~, ':"~

:::"::~~~~ 'l'novth":' .~'1.'::il~nAt&gt;,ra t[~~

}~~"l,~~~ and1 ~~ ent~~ed Ua;;~~

version) end part\ cularl y by the scene
between the monster and a little girl. It
seta off her preoccupation with this

:::r~-=.~ ~e~~.;~.t~

ttwn

u-~..__Of than the

=.•ui'Ba'-~=~
~
Pmlo).

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

___

"88llrrt of the llelhM" lllglna with
conelderlobll
1!11. JQ..

prom.... ....

,...
__
_...,.,
.... _.,_
___
_
_..,...,_
.... _____
,._ __
_., __
,.

,

-

·i

iIi

-·---

.. ' " Ciello -

- """""'"'· , ....

-+Otlol

~'- -'"
AlfaftdJOMNA aotll8

.rora-

......,cw.eor
....
-I!,IMI!II

~~h~~Ve~~1o~'l'm':. in others most of
Alter years of study, teachi ng , and
vo lunteer work, Sanes learned at age
66, that he had reliciJ/um cell sarcoma
and that It "'41"' disseminated . As a

~~~~~~~~re~hTt".r..:n:'~~~T~~ ;::·g.~t~

be delay@il . To that end, he underwent
rad iotherapy, chemotherapy and experimental immunotherapy, w"h all of their
distressing side effects.

le~~m~~~~~~~~i~~ :r,.i~~ ~~~g~~f~

~~:,t~ha fr~(l'p ':!~h j~~'l::t~hatrl:~

.

~; t~~?~\~neOn~l~gf l~~ m~a~eJ.:J

~over to

ottier union s) has been for
ideological ' political purposes. Think
about that for a IJlOment.
There Is,
course, an appeals
process, agai n determi ned by the union
itself, designed Jn Its Byzanti ne
sinuosity to d iscourage anyone except
the. most stupidly persistent fri&gt;rn
continuing his appeal.
More Importantly, the union consistenlly refuses to supply any appellant
with a statement o f its rece ipts ·and
expenditures; thus making absurd any.
legitimate attempt on our part to
dispolle the union's own self-Interested
claims.
.

=:=

N...,

=:'Aooonl~
...---·a·=~~b:
mon...,_ ~
to

the

OOIIIt

-

·

taxpa~a well as hla
grind
their 1
• In 18Ct, the good doctor ha

u'*

=
---

m8dl
from hlaiiiOIIIclre and in
the , _ made • mon1&lt;ey out of the •
~ ......,.,.• The f-.1 •
hid 8pllft80ntd lila -

c:::: .:a =t~:,«
PRibllalaof

.._In"'- ...... lor
~~-~~~..-

....

As a patient, Sanes real ized there was

m uch" to be learned about how cancer
.Slltlcts patients and the families of
patients ..
·

or

m~ ~~ngs~~h-::,t~ ~~eln~~~ie ~~~
~~e w~~~!l~~e ::0~ 1 ~a;·A~=~h~":;~

caught in the power of this union are
· ri!garded by il as sheep to be shorn , and
that UUP's pretension to j ustice and
fairness is mere empty pos)ur~~~-cerely'
- Tbomaa C. B8iry '
Associate Professor, Classics
Director, Religious Studlei Prograrn

Court rules Proxmire isn't '
he cries
'ffeece~
immune-wtuJn
The Supreme_Cou ruled th is week
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger,
that members of Congress are nol
Immune under the speech or debate
cleuae of tha ConotltuiiQO from libel
suits concerning their press releases
and newsletters.
/
The court acted In a case orlginatfl(l
by a r-.chllr who said h8 waa
damaged In hla proteaslonal end
~ lc standlr g by • "Golden Fleece
Award
lasued by Sen. William
Pmxmlre (0-Wla.) In Aprll1975..
_
In ruchi'!Q Ita oplnlonr tha court
~ •t he JUCkl"*lt of the U.S. Court
of Appeals for ihe s-.th Clroult .,d
remanded tha cae to that court lor
further proceedlnga.
Ronald R. Hulchlnaon, 811 experlme&lt;rtal paychologlat who dlntefor
of reeMrch at tlie Kalamazoo, MICh.
St8te HoaDital, eoughl S8 million· In
from ProxmiAo and Morton
Proxmi~=at=:W to
· the federal agencytMo bel._ hea ~~
llag_-tly ·Willed public lunda: dlr8018d at the Nat~ Science
Foundation, the National Aeronauticaland 81*8 Allnllntatt.uon, _. the
~
Wlllch
Office of
auppor18d Hutdlin8Cin'a _ _ , on.
~ behawlor wlllch Included
II'IOIII&lt;eyla aubjecta.
.

wh icl1 he wrote his obse-rvations . He
talked to othar patleots and their
fam ilies, there and elsewhere, to
validate Impressions gained from his
own experience. Than he wrote about
tham. He continued observing and
; writing right up until the week before
his death, when he co_uf~ no longer hold
a pen and had to d ictate his thoughts to
his wife.

return should be seventy-six cents. In
short, the union believes that less than

¢g~n~~o~: ~nw ~~:cf~o::;e~~~U'~,;

indeed, all money used by the un ions
who benefit from this gold mine (UUP,
NYSUT, AFT, AFL-CIO) tor political or
id~~~~~u~':,'~~ course, that the
union determines tor Itself what portion
of th e total oo_llected should be
returned . Their decoslon? For up to $ 250

.

rvr~~s~~~i~c:: ;:;~~i~~c'iia~r~~:~

sparse.

Edi~!~d

_:".:o:nt ~ha~~\':"~~~! ~!~a;;,·~~~~~~
f~Ji!.f~~~r.'nfJ F:" r~~~~":3 1[~mt~~~~

Caught up In ., 11118111nary world
For the flrat two thirds of the movie
are caught up In Ana's Imaginary
~rid . But the dkector, Victor Erlce, Ia
overly anc:hanted with the visual
aspects of tha movie, and as tha camera
lingera mont-alowly on en andlesa
seri88 of striking lmagaa, the film starts
t feel like a tour of the Prado.
- -rame . alter frame of gorgeous
~
eeux In dimly l='**arounda,
w•• n a a t - of au
oolden light,
slow the .,._, which wa very
dizzying, to a hall. Mont
union- 1e his -..nlllng to
a t - _ , trlc* In the GO!hicT - ' - ' I a n - ..... .._you think
lhel Erlae ... uad ~ but a
creak:lr..~·
11e- a~ door.
h'a
, . , _ . . Ana TOIYWifa

The publishers give this account of
the work:
The book is.an honest narrative ol a

Good job d-.-..._..
·.
The programmers oHhla summer film
fest ival are doing a good job, and at
lo.wer than average ticket prices. Thay
l:ertalnly deseove · University supPort,
and that's probably the only way they'll
be able to continue bringing lhasa
Interesting movies to Buffalo.
Wllh the exception of the Polish film ,
which attracted a large Polish audience,
tha houses have been discouragingly

In your 5 July Issue a short
report on the extension of tha sO-called

1

own fertile Ymaginatlon and by l ha
loneliness that pervades life In their
ruined mansion and deaotate vliiJige.
She yMtna for end a monster and l inda ·one In the person of a
wounded hobo with a gun , possibly a
Spanish resistance guerilla; we're not
told, since lh"il director's mode Is
suggestion, not exposition. ·

directed and photographed. Currently
(lhrougtrJuly 18) the Evans Is showing
tha reputedly outrageous and, brilliant
study of tha4fll[mer Ugandan dictator,
" ldl Am ln Dadr.'
.

Prof. Barry thinks _unions
consider us '~heep to b~ -shoro'
claimed that this extension would allow
us "to understand the inherent fairness
of the legislation ... ".
I find I cannot let this pass in silence,
for it has been my experience that this
legislation is a mass of inequities, and
lor the benefit of those who are
mercifully unaware of the situation in ,
wh ich we who -have no desire to join a
trade un ion find ourselves under thi s
act , I must contradict the NYSUT
executive.
. For example, the Stale of New York .
uneasy perhaps at the thought of
placing in the power of a trade un ion
many prolessiooals who find trade
un ionism and the political , economic

two small daughters. Ana's fanlssy life
Is the center of this fil m, and
demonstrates the eternal attracllon t hat
horror tales hold tor young children.
The film opens with tha Impoverished
village's only orqenlzed en tertainment ,

eloQuent._. 1110 mucll- effectM

treated to many fascinating scenes. Tha
director hes a marvelous sense -of
atmosphere and of the sensibilit ies of
children. But he needs a ruthless edllor,
someone to rem ind him that less Is
mOf'e.
_
The opening films of this Evans
Theatre-seri es were Wlm Wender's new
German cinema exemJ!Iar, " Tha American Friend," paired woth Alain Tanner's
"Jonah Who Will Be 25 In The Year
2000," an enormously good humored
and lnl elllgent Swiss film lhat leaves
you feeling unreaaonably happy. This
wss tollowe&lt;l by a Polish movie,
Krzysztof Zanussl's " A Woman's
Decision" : lha famil iar m ld-llle crisis
thing .again, but sensationally acted,

writing the court's majority opinion
said a speech by PrOxJlllre In the Senate
" would be wholly lmmuoe" but that
" neither the newsletters nor tha press
r e i - was 'essential t6 the dellberationa of lha Senate' and neither wea part
ofthedell berallveproceaa."
Burger elao rejected the argument
that Hutchinson wea a public figure tor
tha limited purpose~~ comment on hla
· ntc:elpt of ·fedenol lunda for research
projects.· Burger alated, among ot!Mr
things, " Hutchinson did not thniat
hlmeelf or his views Into public
contro-.y to Influence others. R&amp;spond&amp;nla he¥e not Identified such a
particular contro-.y; at moat, they
point to -.:oncem about general public
expendituree.. . But thet concern is
shared by -moat and ntlates to moat
public e~dlturei; It Ia not aulflclent
tomakeHvtcl!ln.on.apublictlg._.. ~... "
Six juatlcea joined Burger's opmlon
In the case (Hutchlnaon; v. ('roxmlre, et

~· No . 18-880).

Pedestlians
overlooked?

34 y..;. on t.,ulty
As a .member of tha faculty. of the
Schoo f of Medicine for 34 years, Sanes
wanted to.. communicate what he wa s

-~~:,r;.y st~de~t~~~o !~~:a~~d :~:

physiolans who did, treat cancer
For five years, alter he was

~tlents.

•

.;:,~r.t~e ~~~~e ~~~\~;~;;bf~e tb~~taf~
~%~~fn5cf.~Y~".J~nfu~C:tl~~ri~~:

entitled " A Phy$ician Faces Dis- ·
sem inated Reticulum Cell Sarcoma in
Himself," detailed whar he was
learning .
.
cancer had been the focus of much of
the community volunteer work of Sanes
over a period of 30 years In the Buffalo
area. He organized the- Cencer
Detection Center and the Central
Cytology Laboratory In Erie County,
and was a fouf111er of the Erie County
Unit of the American Cancer Society
which he setved twice as president in
tha late 40s. In 1962, the Erie Count y
Unit honof8d him with the pnssllgious
Gold .Sword for Hope, for 15 years of
voluntary service and In 1968 he
received the American cancer Society
Medal for dlstlngulahed service in
cancer control. In 1875, lha New York
Stale Qancer Society, of which Sanes
hed elao S«ved as president, named Its

=.".!1

a~~a~~I':Pe :;~0 ~~~

flratl)and , the -'lona the Qeneral
public eaked about cancer.
.../
Since Or. Senee h.cl always believed
thel education of tha public was as
.much a pet1 of his reaponolblllty as a
phyelciM u .clucatlon of members of
Malon, he applied' his
.
•
edQt! to hla experience
as a pat t In a ·manner l!!al clarifies
... many aspects of cancer
both lay
. persona and physicians.

~

ror

About Clrli'll
This book Ia llbol!l dying of cancer,
but It Ia primartly about Nlationahlps.
At the center Ia tha relallonahlp of
phyaiclanL f~!!l:., and 111.00. to tha
r.;uant . 1hroul:;~ut, a.- •edmon-

=~.:Sdl~;:':: ~~

• d l - proceea 118811 Jndellendentiy of
the peraon. The ntlationahiP- between
the p~a1cian and tha patient a l...,lly Ia

~'::.n..: t!ept~..!m~~t,C:OC
allows unsuspected ramifications of
1'- ntlatlonahlpa end provtdea lnalght

it11o the personal aide of rnattgnant
d1M888 ' for physicians, patients and
t...,lllea.
·
He h.cl been retired less than two
yewsandmarrl,o:l only 15 months when
he '-ned that he had en lncuraQ.Ie type
of cancer. Thua, 11• h.cl _ , oancer
from llta vt. .lnt of a student, .e
pathologlat, e c.nc:er 8ociety volun~- and a jl8tiant. Two · weeks after
,_ng proofalor theiaot of the llrtlcles
t11a1 coinprlee this book he died.
The volume, ln. hwcl co-. aello l or

$12.15.

.

�July12, 111'1

5
(

\

The result of over a month and a half
of planning by students, Summerfest's
success proved to be well worth the

I.

'

'

time and energy.

Whether because of the rhythm of tbe
music or the rays of the sun. people
were drawn to the MO.in Str:eet Campus
In droves last Friday (June 6) ~s
Surnmerfest went Into action.
The CO!nblned efforts-of-the-Studen,r-- - - - - - - - - - . Association, UUAB, and Squire/
Amherst Divisions of Sub-Board I Inc.
provided good times to over 800 people
who turned out

The reggae sound of Bahama Mama
started - the day, offering a lively
backdrop for a craft show., volleyball ,
frisbee, s[dewalk chalk drawing , and
other activities . Not to mention
cheap beer.
The musical talents of Dr. Jazz and
the Ukelele Ladies followed, leading
into a performance of another local
favorite, Argyle Street Band .
Mingling with the crowd, mimes
enchanted people of all ages. Alte r the
sun went down, Ring of Pain brought
the audience to their feet with classic
" Rock and Roll ."
It was an all-around good time ,"
summed up SA's Barry Calder, director
of student activities and services.

Upcoming evel\ls planned by the .
Student Association Include live music

from noon to 1 p.m . every Wednesday
this summer ,pu tside Norton Hall.

�........

July12. 1178

. G~bhanHe'll jojn a Norwegian~pedi~ion
studying the Ar~tic ice pack;
grad group for,m ed to study cold regions

--!11oft

ByUndeG..-«obea

'

~.

An lntemationial scientific expedition
that will study the Arctic Ice pack this
Sept- will Include a U/B re-

-a.er.

.

Alriong the 20 scientists from around
the world selected lor .a Norwegian
~ment-sponaonod research mission on tne " Dynamics of the Arctic Ice
· will be Dr. Benjamin Gebhart of
the Department ot Mech..,lcal Eng i.-tng.
The group will 1 - Tromso, a

=

tl: ~'}.~,: F~g;:a,r~

-~=l':fto'~,:"'A~~~ctTa~l ~'t:'~n"'\1'!
f::'t~h!""N~~~=~el~~ :0\':

expedition Ia expected to take 25 days,
with 10 days travel to the Ice pac1&lt; and
beck.
Of gen«lll l n - t
While the study of the Arctic Ice pack
Ia of partlcullll' Interest to the

="£:~"on-=.,~e~=s. ~~:: ­

~~;. ~~ ::'d ';:"r""'!n~;~

atlernptlng to gather fhe F.:lonnation

'"i::r

~:?.
lo':.,r:"J::J"eda:id
stability.
Whether the Ice ~k Is melting or
freezing and how quickly It Is dolnp so
are aome· of the major quest1ons
sclentlata hope to answer.
"There are still a lot of unknowns In
. the Arctic and An'\arctlc, " Dr. Gebhart
notes. "A lot of these unknowns
"-to do with what's happening to the
lee-and with wha any changes In the
ocean and In the atmosphena will do to
the Ice.
- ·A llllllor c11an11e In
lll'nDUnt ot Ice
regtona would make major
changes in the entire world," he adds.

the

·I

Towing Ice to • - Nil...... ?
One IIPPIIcalion of the knowledge
galned In pow Ice research might be
the delerml,.,lon of the feaslblllty of
towing large of Ice to warmer
regiona -er Ia needed. Such a
Ill--' ha8 ~ mede by the Saudi
Allibtan 110".1"""'*'1. but not enough
data Ia ~ ...uable to anaQUMtlona IUCh u how feat the Ice will
melt ult Ia towed througH increasingly
. . . _ . - o f vwylng salinity.
,
Sclentlall would alao like to predict
the etfecta.Qf '-08 oil aplna or climatic
wwmlng trendl on
Ice pecks.
But belote long-range predlctiom
cen be mede Mlout · the Arctic Ice,
aclentlata muM first determine whet Ia
atlecting It . - . whlcll Gebhe1 points
OUIU the ..eon for hla participation In
upcoming expedlllon. _

i

I
I

the

the

~~-at
ooncem
Ia the melt!ria end heclng of Ice In

DOW -Mdln f...,. and Nllne-ar.
His poevloloa concema convective .motlonl In cold, fnaeh and

............
though the

temperature

£-..

~

-er
mey be belOw o•c, toe still 111811•. ll\lt
. . - o f tneltlng, Which hu not ~
4llllnoinlcl lor 111 conditione, · Ia
:'::::..~!elora u the Nllnlty

"We hOpe tO . . . . - . . g i l -.....
menta to c:alculelt Wllat'a going on,"

~~Nor-olin

aaaoclates will
_ , . . . . . , . , . . _ In the Ice and In
the ...... vwtoua aurt.. ltWT&gt;per&amp;, .... 81111 the ullnlly of !be water and
the ~~ IIN!IIdlately. under
,,. ... 81111 tile .... olthe
TN 80Nnl1811 will a.mp 1111 the peck
lo .... .,_ ~ IIIU!MIIUII In
llldlllol IO lila . . . ........, In tile

'*"'· .

cold regions research. They -are Dr.
George C. Lee, dean of the Faculty of
Engln-lng and Applied Sciences; Dr.
DuwayneAnderson , dean ol the Faculty
of Natural Sciences ant! Mathematics;
Dr. Chester C. Langway, chairman of
the Department of Geological Sciences,
and Dr. Ralph Rumer, professor of civil
engineering.
The polar regions hold Important
knowledge of the past and great
promise for lhe future, " Lee explains.
"The 'Qiobal heat balance and atmospheric circulation are Intimately
related to the nature and extent of snow
and ice cover on the Earth's surface."
Lee adds that In recent years there
have been increased Incentives lor the
de.velopment of the energy and mineral
resources present In the Earth's cold
regions and ttlat these Increased
incentives have created the need for
accelerated research Into these areas.
The environmental consequences of
exploration and development of the
polar regions must be determined, Lee
says .

Nearly hall the land masa Is a cold
Nglon
Nearly hall of the land mass in the
northern hemisphere can be classified
as a cold region, Including areas In the
temperate zone which have such
probtems as wlnler navigation , snow
~d~~:~'l'e~:~ wi nter highway and
For this reason , Lee points out that it
Is nol surprising that U/B has
significant faculty expertise In this

area. .

Each faculty member currently
Involved In CREST Is conducting

~:O"l:c~ec~~~~o~et.e!sl':'!ng~ f~~~

--·

.on

structures and Rumer In the
formation of Ice jams In rivers and

Anderson, former chief scientist lor
1/le National Science Foundation 's
Oivislon of Polar Programs, has a
special Interest In permafrost, the

~a:eni~y ~~;n r~r:~•• be:::,~ ~~:
expertise extends beyond the Earth's
Ice and snow.
As a member of a NASA research
team, /le Ia Involved in studies dealing
with -ter and Ice on other planets. He
helped analyze data sent to Earth by the
Viking probe to Mars and .Is currently
working with NASA on the Voyager
missions to Jupiter and Saturn.
A pion- In the atudy of glacial Ice
corea, Langway aarves as curator tor
the world'a lergeat collection. ·61 these
corea obtained during National Science
Foundation · polar expeditions and
houled on' the U/ B campus.

ol~-.1~·:''8.:= ~rd~=
~T will ~ coordinated by· Lee
and Andenaon .

.. Nolan named
in Medicine

ectlng c~lrman
of the Department of Medicine, has
~ named of that depart- . according to P,.ldent Robert L
Kettw.
Named acting chelrman'ln Febrl!.afY,
1978, Nolan Ia aleo Qh!M of medicine at
Buffalo G - ' Hoapltal. Pnor to
joining the U/8. f = ' t In ~1183. he -

.Dr. JIIM8 P. Nolan,

:.=.=~y=cl1n::-..:::,=~

M.D. He holcll the &amp;.A. from Yale also.
He completed 111*C1oCtoraJ training at ·
. . _ Holpllll.
Holan Ia ~ Pr-ldant of tile Buffalo
aan.r.l Holplllil madlcal alaff and has
..-on the adltortal adw~ bolll'd of
lila Joumal II llletlloiM (Elqierlmenlll
81111 CltnaQ. Mucll of hia .--ell,
wlllall . . . . wllll lila ....... been
Pllllllallad In ~ loilmall.
... .. • OlploiiiiM of die ~
ao.def I.-nat Mill~ a Fallow ol
G~ew

t:aklng shape
· The Individual halla that will compriaa tha Lecture Hall building betwMn
Capen •nd O'Brien •re taking ahllpe a cOftlltnlctlon work gelna momentum:

Personn~l. plans

more workshops
embers of Professional Staff

for

The Persennel Department Is extenGIng Its series of workshops lor
professional staff through the .end of
July.
"The University - A Secure Env.Jtonment" will be discussed from 2:30 - ·s
p.m. , Thursday, July 12, by L.E. Griffin,
director of Public Safety on camous for
two years and assistant director for five.
His law enforcement career spans
twenty-one years, including service In
the Armr Security Agency, and as a
New York State trooper lor t~m years.
For the last eight years, he 'has been
Instrumental In up-grading campus
security services throughout SUNY.

These two worl&lt;ahopa will be held In
the Human Reaources DeYelopment and
Training Center, Beane Cen(er, Am·
hers! .
.
•
On Tuesday, July 31 (~. Spauld ing
Cafeteria), Kenneth Conklin, the dlrec·
tor of proleaalonal employee relations,
who was Instrumental In_ the establishment of 'SUNY's claaalllcation system
lor Proleaalonal Service employees, and
Joseph E. Lippert, manager1 clualllca·
lion, compensation ana benefits
edmlnlstretlon, will talk about " Profes·
slonal Service Clasalflcetlon and 58181)'
Polley."
,
For Information ~ contact "Rosalyn
Wilkinson, manager, Human Resources
Development and Training, Personnel
Department, Crofts Hall, 636-2650.

Un~'!.~si~~a~~71~tl':s~ ~1,\"/,'!'~f:~~~

Do you haft ., apartmMt, room or
housa lor IMI?

0~\~rs'ft~rka"n~Pcri,;~u tre~";f~o~~r :::
past five years; the Public Safety
model and the university; and lntemal
and external security measures for the
adminlstratorl
Ti}llrsday_,July 26 (2:30 - 5) by Dr. John
N.... l. v1ce president lor lecllltles
planning and easQCiate profeaaor of
civil engineering. He carne to the
University as an assistant professor In
1965, and In 1970 Joined the Fecllltles
Planning Division where he held various
posts before • being n&amp;n1ed vice
president In 1878.
Partlci;)ants at this session will be
briefed on: the steps which dell- new
or renovated facilities to the unl_,lty·
the s~ justification procedure; and
~~~lfn~~':.':phy and method of apace

I hOpe

.,.... . . Malle
ln-tlleiNion
ol .................
~--.,lllal

-=-~

William Lobblna, associate director
· of U/B's O,fljoe of Urban Affairs, has
been electecUo a flw-year term 01\o the
Board of D\rectora, United.. Way of
Buffalo and Erie Cou'nty. l.Qbblna has
been a voluntMrwlth the locel United.
Way for tbe past five years. He alao
serves as Evaluation Commiltee Chairman of United Way's gency' Review
and Support Committee.
t ap lntment, he
Prior to hls
· served as H
SeN cea Division
Chairman lor three
. In that role,
he helped admln ater a $5..'\5,000
budget, supervlaed e&lt;Y . community
volunteers and staff, and ..evaluated
programs and budgets of all alxteen
United Way-lun~ed health aarvtce
agencies.
.
He has alao ......:! on lour ~ ·.
commit!- which 1 ought to Identify
end recruit plannlna and'budgetary ataff
membar8 lor OniMd'Way.
I:Obblne ha8 ateo been appointe so

=/~~

==~=vail·:=~~-:=.

. . . . . ~--· ollolenae.

(=

r: ·the--c:I1CI"r':7'U~ - Ialk

lnatltulll lor lhben Affalta

.......~of tile~ ......... lor

The U/1 Olf.campua Houalng Olfloe
Ia aeeldng ,.... llatlngl of ft'allable
housing lor atucllnte loi the upcoming

ecadeailc , _.
The olftoa, opeqlad by Sub-BoMI I,
Inc., a atucllnt eww1ca 0f81111lutlon, Ia
o:lf*' . from· 1:30 a.m. to 4:10 p.m.,
- , a tlvougfl Wadnladaye 81111 on
t,~£j,~ on Th~a from noon
. . . , _ who ..... apartmentl;

hou- or,_. lor 'IMI.,. llkad to
Nit the OHioe In 843 Squire, or call
131'6502.

Lobbins is elected to a 5-year term
on directorate of area United Way

=
::=::"re:K-=-r-ro:--= -- __ ............ =:-..
.. .,-:
===-·
eo,....:Ea::..-fal,
_..,.. .....
111111111

~"ft ...

ROOM FOR RENT?

alternatlwi urban aflalta - ~ucat'iOn
progl "!''l~Nflectlng the nature
o ~' _
atuelles at the
ua a, l'lduata, ptol-lonal,
ulld
octorata Cta throughout the ·
c:c;!Untry. •

-¥

I

PROFES$10NA1. STAFF
" - " ' jo -

-PA·1 . 8;9025.
Science 4nry), -

1-- 1o
•

Oireci&lt;&gt;r of
Science Lba-y,

RDENICtt
-

-

~ . R·902&amp;.

II'R-11, Office 01 Medical

, se..- . . - ,, Office of Medical~
R-9025..

_

·

•

.

The Counctl II a llallon-wlda body o1
urban lludlal ICholarl 81111 admln~
ten who eaall to IXII{IIOie 81111 llulda the
lllvalopllwot ol ~ educellon
...a. 81111 llniiDa fiiiiiiNIII&amp; In urbali
etfalra. CUIUA Ia CXIIJIIII'-I 'VI ..
170 public 81111 . . . . ... . . . .,..
locelrid In the 0.8. 81111
~CMI,,IIMCC
Thelalkl-wiMCIIwalope..,._ol
......_...........,SG-12.~.
_
.
•
" 8 --·-·.U. No. 30110.

c...::.

�,My12,111'1

7

•CSEA grievance on handling wastes
(1nllft-.1,cal..,

aafeguerda;
5. That all

containing hazanlous mater1ala be l-Ied In accordance
with requiiiii1MIIIta;
6. That the men who w.,. contaminated by the PCBa c!urtng cleel)up be
given apJWOPrtale medical checkups
lnd that appropriate 1'11C0rda be kept for
the appropriate time.
arMS

Hunra poeltton
Hunt clerlfled to the Reporter his
position on the matter. He contends the
union may h - eome hidden "ax to
ll(lnd ." 'We have tried to explain to
ihem," Hunt aald, but "they aren't
having any explanations. They have
come Into maetlnga with their minds
already'mede.up."
•
Hunt said that when he received a
call about the tranaformer oil leak last
fall, " we didn't know for sure whether or

~~t~~~ ~~~W ~~~'r."a~":.:.'d~ns~~~~

a&gt;&lt;trema precautions were taken with
the men who cleaned up. They were
laaued rubber boots and gloves and
given detailed Instructions. All the oil
that was picked up was Immediately
stored In barrels. Certain otlier
materials [the boola' and gloves, the
sorball used to wipe up o il residue from
the floor, brooms and vacuums) were
stored In plastic bags, which, he
relfrrted, have not leaked.
1

noth~: u : : ~~·~l::u~~~tanS: gi

the substancea Cleened-up can be
thrown away. They have to be stored,
Indoors , until auch time as they can be
property dlapoaed of. Proper disposal
means bumlncU~_an Incinerator which
can heat up to~· Fahnlnhelt.

It IMJ.be 10r--

The Uni..-.1\J has no auch facility
and probably won't heve tor up to ~en
years. This •mMM long-range storage
of all the m-lals.
The Chilled Water Plant- has been
chosen, Hunt submitted, because It has

r~en:r ~~ :o:c;w~~S:~at"~ rn~~
with EPA requirements -

the materials

~~·'In t~lef(.;~ ::·~al::d.r~
and the equipment uaed In the cleen-up
(the vacuum c l - . and pumps) has
to be cleaned ltMif ~ Thls cleaning will
be conducted under controlled' conditions and the naaldue from It will also be
stored . Within the lalt - . 1 days,
Individuals who ere actually going to do

Mazzaro elected
to Dante council
Or. Jerome L. Mazzaro, a professor of
Italian here, waa recentl~ elected to the

~=~~.t~":..to:'r: !,~?~ema~~:r,
organization devoted to the atudy of the
limes, life and works ot the 13th century
Italian poet .

Mazzaro became a member of the
Society In ta71 and was just elected to
Ita governing board · at Ita annual
meeting lor&lt;:einbrldge, Mass.
Dante Society PYMident Dr. Nicholas
llleacu, p&lt;oteeaor of Romance Lan-

~.:l=n:

t.:f'r~~tet~

tn=·
founded bV the poet Henry
Wadaworth Longfellow In 1881 . One of
the original allpulatlons wu that the
Society atwaya be heedqueo;tered In
Cambridge, JhO\Igh not neceee.11y at
Halvan:t,llleecu pointed out.
~ ""·
LongfellOw hlmMII did a - l c
-.tlon Df Dante'a moat famoua
~ Tlte0/111118Comedy.
.
· U/B'e " ' - o Ia a widely publlahed
poet; men 111en 70 o1 hla poema 11aoe
~ In _ealll*rly jOurllela. He ~a~ F-.hlp In
Poetry In !114.
Ha 11M had 10 IIOoka publlahed and
"- - . 1 men In manuectlpt or In
pNM. He holda edltoMI poet&amp; with at
- ' elx iiGIIc*r1J DUIIII'cellona, and
. .. ... lllen • Jourrllll artlclee

Pllbllllled.

Ma.ll ,...... hie

beallelo(a and

:.::::=.:--a=.':.-=
._:oo.:
lolnad U/8 In
1114 and .._,. a full pnJielaor In

Unl..... o1

lleDtlmber, , • .

.u •

~ 'ol llellan,

'**'-

118 .. a
....... ol . .
ol Modlm
~ and u.r.- of the
F~Of..._and
........
. __
caunoll_
..... _
_
Hll lllllliool 10 ... Dante loclelv'l

thla work haoe bMn ldentlfled,-Jnd
befO&lt;e they, dp It, 11unt. lald, theY will

=~.:~~d~h~IJ.:~ to do,
Eventually, when all the matertals
and substances lnvol~ have been
placed i n the proper drums, a curb will
be conatructed around the barrels 1n
order to contain any ':":!~• that might

:::r:~~~:=:.....~~ brought

"-JbodJ ..,_. what'aln them

Hunt acknowledged that the plastic
bags stored for the last - • • months
In the Chilled Water Plant were not
property l-Ied, but , he aald , there Is
not one person working there who
doesn't know what:aln them.
. 'The environmental officer emphasized that procedures followed to date
and those wh ich will be used In
handling the PCB residues are those

~~f~tnl~g~% gp:~e t~xlc s,::~:.:,~;

more. In fact, however, he contended , It
is more likely that the substahce
involved contains 6nly about 40%
PCBs.

......

ol

•

......

_.....1!111

~

Pierro told the Reporter Tueeday ''he
had not _ , the official glie'lance
document, but that his office Ia
embarking on a Mrlea of procedunaa
that would, In hla view, aeam to satisfy
the requests. Pierro said Radiation ·
Protection has been trying since 1a76to
have a truck assigned exclusively for Ita
use with a trained Individual as Ita
·futuns,'
-drl-. " It looks like, In,the - will be able to Khleve ' th la," said

~::'ritT~~~~ m:"C:Wchof~~

domly-asslgned fnatntenance crews
pick up redloactlve materlal on campus.
On Insuring the aalety of wastes

l:!.c~::lr~ft.~~~n~~rit ~:Oo.~gf~~r.:

all principal Investigators a statement
on new ·procedures for pick-up . Under
this new set·up, every request for
radioactive waste pick-up must be
channeled through Radiation Protac·
lion, and not directly to Maintenance.
Following such a call , a Redlatlon

Danger only minimal
At the 40% level, Hunt said , PCBs

~~~':f~~~tb"Ci.e~g~::.lv~Pw~~dc~~~f~~

on the
Ingestion or

~e ~~~.~~c;.,gt~ ~~a:orde~::.~~~r~~~

0

po~h~ ~P~!~~~~~~~· center
effects

of

repeated

long-term exposure-to fumes, neither of

which occurred In this case.• The
longest lime any of the clean -up
workers was exposed was four hours ,
he said .
The union 's contention that one or
more Individuals without proper boots
may have stepped In the PCBs Is
panlally correct, Hunt agreed . One
person splashed oil on his shoes, but
was sent home, and told to wash his
feet thoroughly and t urn-In his shoes.
In any event, th is cjldn't constitute a serious exposure, as Hunt Interprets
-that term.
As far as having physical exams for
those involved In the clean-up, Hunt
confirmed that the union has been
asked to Identify the people who want ·
them . But , he added , no one Is really
sure what a physical exam to determine
effacta of short-term PCB exposure
would constat of. There are, Indeed,
• regulations for physical examinations,
1

~t,...t"!~h ~Lson!~ ~h.f"':C:,~, w~
contended .
All workers potentially concerned will
be schooled on how to handle

cl~~~r.! ~~~ f~~~",;.~;, ";'~~- union
" Ia not Impressed." Environmental
Health and Safety, It contends, "should
have followed-up on the two most
Important aspects of th is situation,

:~~ng.,=.,~e b::::s ~~:adaar~

October of 1978, It Ia now (mid) ...
t979."

Radloectl.. wutea
CSEA'a concerns on radioactive
waste disposal ens four:
1. All members of the campus

=·~e c;~:=~= ;.3u~~o~

edequate training;
2. Any available truck Ia ueed rather
than one specific one, thus laedlng to
the poaalblllty of contamination of
other truckers and hel~ and/or
mechanics who work on the trucks,
without their_, being aware of It;
3. Not all 8hlpplng orc*a alate that
the materlal to be moved Ia radioactive
and the material Itself II not always

. marlced;
· 4. The radioactive · mater1al to be
moved Ia not always '**-'1 aafely and, In fact, there Ia the poealblllty that
there haabeMII.._.
.
.
The union wanta tli8M remedies:
1. That a ~·· martced ti'UI'k be

safe for transport. Pierro admits It may

=

comply. But, he said, it would not be

~nc~n:~~ue ~~ -~!t~:';.~\ ~

any major proor..':ns," he pointed out,
but that doesn't,mean that change Isn't

flrom-8,col.41 1

Or. Eye&lt;, DeQar1menl "' Biology, University "' l'enrlsyMria, "" ''SO'ess Relaled ..... and
Social Organization," Tuesday, .JUy 24 , 1 p.m.
in Rocm C.31 , 4230 Ridge Lea. Dr. Eyer will
aiso lead an inloonal discussion on the Social
and Political ConteJCt at Academic Reseen::h on
' Wednesday, ..Illy 25 at 11 a.m. .-. the same
location.
CRAFT WORKSHOPS

A WCl&lt;1&lt;shop on "Camera Use and c:Jp&lt;ntion "
ls sc:heO.iedforTuesday, JlAy 17-. 7·10 p.m.
A six·- Bali&lt; WCl&lt;1&lt;shop t&gt;eg;ns Tuesday,
Jtiy17
Sign 1.4) lor either or both at ltle Craft Center.
120 1/FN:-. Ellicott Phone 636-2201 tor lnlor-

maoon.
HEALTH CARE OPEN HOUSES
The Health Care PBl has schecUed e series
of "open houses" 81 their Medical Center, 120
Parb.1ry West.~. ctrng
the a.mmer. New state employees ..., lrwfted

--Con..-:

NEWMAHCENTBI~IIASSSCHBlULE

amo,., ~Center

(3233 - . Sl.l, 9 :30a.m. and 11 a.m.; - ·
days, Newo1- Clln1er ,,..._. Falla Blvd . &amp;
Main St .), 1 1:45a.m.

•
Amhom Campua: - . . . . ; Center, Rd. neer- Eflicott, 10:30 L m. and 12 noon
f&amp;.ldoyt: 8 a.m. and 12 noon
5p.m. fSetu'day\ligl,_) ,. ·

c.....-..1:

IOICh

. . , 1111)' . . . . . 1 0 - 8111'1Mte111118

IIIII they be11ewe 10 be unulety
~ or llllfMII- 11'« _ . . ,
wwtt Olden for mdiMCIIW .,.......
OOUid
• - --.lied
_ _ -.taln
. ol llllpnlpll'ly
or

"*

.....,_.rnaylleNfuaed.}
...

Pleno

ol . •

=

wr~ehn~~ ~:r:.Jo ':&amp;.-:~:

~:~~~ ~~:~~~ralo=:1, •
will app'olnta hearing officer to '*Iller a
decision. The third level of g.._,.,. Ia
to the State's Office of Employee
Relations.
CSEA's Smith said he " fully expects"

:::e~r~~~~~~l ~~i':ntoC:n~o =~!~~

lion. If a resolution Is reached before
that point , he asld; It will only be
because of " the noise" CSEA has made.
Pearson sounded a somewhat different note: " It Is evident that CSEA
considers employee safety to be an
extremely Important Issue to Its
membership. I think It right and proper
that the Union take thl! position . I am
0

:Tn~~!~Y.\':.r~~~~t"tit~ :~:· !~":

that of management."

AobOrt Hosa. Courier Cable !Chnlol

10). 7p.m .

-

JULY13
AM Buffalo: D&lt;. lo«&lt;ard A. Katz, asaodote
dean, and other rnerrbets "' the School ol
Medicine faoJty end staff, "Vv'hat's New in Haelth
Ca'e: Take Better Care of Vowsell." Wt&lt;flN·TV
tc:::narnet 7) . lOa.m.

clinical-

Also D&lt;. K...- ~L
~- ''O&gt;Id -

prolas8Cl&lt; ol

PnlblemsoiQowlng u,.-

end ""'

'I

JULY13
•
Corweraations In the Arb: &amp;ther Hilniott
lnlerviews poet ACben Hass. Cou1er Cable (Ow&gt;
10). 6 :30p .m
JULY14
Croostalk Highlight&gt;: Or. WclfgMg Wok:k.
chalnnan. ~ ol l..lnguistics, "A~ at
theV/ry&amp;ffalonillns~. " WBEN-FM(102 . 5J .

JULY15

C r -· It D&lt;.

Wolfvanv

Wold&lt;, -

·

~loll..lnguistics, "A~attheWry

Buffalonillns Speak." WilEN !9301 11 :05 p.m.

.aJLY17

.

C81~~c::-::.. ~0;
v,(ff\'HV fa.mal7). 10o.m.

=-Gun--

cJULY
17- . t n t h e

-.o

__ _

lnlerviews
jozz
and ''ll*d ........ ...,.;c. CcuW C8llleiboul
fQtrl1ol
~ 0 ).

6;30 p m;

__ _

.IULY1 S
We ...
~ to l*\idPIIte In •
poychology ~ .
poymont of .
$3 wll be paid for lfOU' l*1iCiPOtiOn- We n
1nr.-o1 bolh men ll)d womenlo-1*1 TQIJi&lt;:a. WKBW·lVJa.mal7) . 10IUII.
In 1ho progrwn. H · ,.. 831·13861or
~
JULY
11
more intormltion.
·

F~-::::t=.:..~=

A"**"'""

......

T 1 i i - Engllah ~-­
_...,
_
_
or.._.
. _bY
--an
d
"*
" - .1.-n
-

3- 5 p.m..

--,..---lor-...
M._CCIIa.t~
.......T_ _ _ bl-.t..P.

Linly.

--~­

~~~~-

-o.--oiM.

-

OnlheAir
JUL'ftl
cc..--...

Redf.rlon

Smith- State1181tina lnvol..a
Under the rift CS9. contract, the
first step In the grievance proced~n Ia
an appeal to local University 1118ft11D8-

PSYa«&lt;lOOY~

~~:.:U~u:'~
~ri;.--- ......;,..., In

=:.'~n~ul~~-:.~~~ ::.~:~

drivers can- them .

to bring 1heir to 1ho Cent«
JULY16
lora"-'andtohavelheiroue-.s....-.
eon-..11ona In tho- &amp; t h o r The lolowing is the Medk::al Center's Open • inteMews Robert Dick; CreetNe Asaocillte flute
~30~~.:.~· 1l1rolq1 August ~- lnl...-c.M fCiwYiel101. 6 p.m.

2. Thet a afllgla cnw lie asalgned to
thl~ duty and be gtwn epeolfJC &amp;.lnlng

pl&lt;*upe 81111 ....... 118 lntonned tllat

which are alreedy lasued to drtvera
making hospital runs with radto.ctlve
mat-ts. How thaae fllmatrlp badgali'
wont tom-ureradlatlon expoa~n will

5-7 a.m.

/

collng- .. 83&amp;-2078ll)d -*'!10 .. 838-3382.
"

;:;.,.~edge ao that they cen
_,..... wJI8II a plclwp may be

\,,~·g::'~..:·.~ c!::ect":; ..:rr~

lnlerviews

COLLOQUIUM
The Graduate Psychology Association and the
cinical-convruni1y ..... "'the Psychology Deoort·
menl wil sponsor a c:oloQuUn to be ~ bY

uaed f9r all p~pa ~ del'-lee ot
radloactl.. materlala jthe marking
would g.-d -.atn~ m ahilpa In the

-~of accklenl) .

in order. He emphasized; though, that
levels of radiation' in the matertala In
queatlon are low.

•Calendar

lVTOIII NEEDED

.....__........
~.. =;::.,--=

tlolle

~-_..otwllleiiiiiOf.

Protection Department whom the union
calls "concerned, succinct, tmowiedgeable, and responsive" to Its concerns,
flndstheaa proposals reasOnable.

.,. _ _ _

- . . . . . . , . . . . Gunl&gt;or ~ ll&gt;oul jozz
,.,.
10)."third
7p.m.-

· -

/ · Cll:uW C8llle fQtrl1ol

�.luly12, 1178

(Flint Loop-~ Plaza), In' Iron! of Norton
Hall (Armerst). 5ponsored by UUAB, SA·Studonl
Aft~ in corl~ with U/8 s.udent Activities.

Sunday- 1-5
Thlnday-

MFA RECITAl.•
PauJ Schmid, contrabass Baird Recital HaN .
8 p .m. Free. Sponsored by the ()epartment of

11-

-. ·

._POETRY FEIITIVAl.•

~POETRY

- - a n d - - open office

en., an _
gWe rnusic1&gt;&lt;&gt;ftY ·~ Rud·
mon
Ia a ycu&gt;g poet-critic. The St.mrne&lt; Poelry
fUl6 "'""9&gt; .!dot 13th.
._POETRY. FESTIVAl. •

SUMMER POETRY FESTIVAl. •
Jolin Fr.clorid&lt; Nlmo: -

·

by a reception in honor of the poet , 436 Oemens.

3:30p.m.

._POETRY FESTIVAl.•
. . . ~ poolry ~ · 436 Clornens.

- · - (S&lt;xneoe, 1Q73). Conference

Wk:'brt, coordinator of rhe Festival, is a U/8~poet.

._POETRY FESTIVAl.•
--~K-...JohnF.Kamblumio~and·-aiT~e

Monday- 16

DANCE AND SCULPTURE VIDEOT APES•
Dorio ChaM, New Vorl&lt; video and film artist ,
... present
(197$-79) and her
moot reoant ocUptue video piooes. 207 ~

ACnON FESTIVAL •
Author Ron Sukenl:ck kdures on "Digressions
on the Novel." 322 Clemens. 3 P.m.
.
Fnt event In a two-week prognrn devoted to
lhe fiction of such IOJlhora .. Beckett.
John Bar1h and Calvino. and critics

·-·

Avenue. a p.m.

- l n - -.-.ln-tobeing

This Is pot! ol lhe ~t ~
Series scxinoorod by lhe Center for Study
andMociaStudyllluffalo• •

WMFUI

typca11y--c-.

DINro, . . . _ ·
Dn&gt;Yo
in a
of Me
In lhellig City- New Vort&lt;'a Utlo Italy. Violent,

-

-·-"...............
~~· ~

.. -

· has -

Up.

Out

-.. - - t o ....... -ln
Sc:r-*9~--. Inc.,

.. - - 2 0 7 - -

,..._ ._. ~by . . eor.rtor-

~-~lltutly-.

~ FACUt.TY

Tllo F.- (F...,., 1959);
IIIII ( -. 1970). 170 IIFAC,
• Ellcolt. Cll 836-2G19lor-- -s~-11 . 50.

·

ATruiiUFea!Mtlo
TheF_ _ _ Iolhelllooi-

-·THIP-·

-·-.Port&lt;.,_--

Do;olnola ~--old ocOOolboy facing--

--reeding

FICTKIN FESTIVAL.•

8""""'

from
in Jl10119SS,
"Tho Long Talldng Bod Conditions Blues.· 410
Clemens. 8 p.m. Ree. Sponsored by the Oooa-1·
mont of Englilh .
SHAKESPEARE IN THE PAliK•
Tha Comedy "' " " - &lt;llrecled by Saul
Bkln. Delawa&lt;o Pat!&lt;, ...,.
(behind
the Albrig!lt·Knox Art~) . 8 p.m. Free. Spon·
sored by lhe Center for - . : h and
()epartment o f -· I

Rose·-

Thursday- 19
ACTKIN FESTIVAl. •
a--,.~~ from.- of lie·
tion in PI))OI8SS. 322 Clemons. 3 p.m. Sl&gt;onoored
by lhe ~tol Englilh.
Cl1ambono Is ~"" .Engi!oh .. ~

UnM!nJily in -

author ol two """""'·

-

The~ond--

ACTION FESnVAl. •

in

- - - a n d George~
discus8lcln with rnomboJ1; of the ClnDJote

.... (1 960, Antonloni). 148 Oiol-.
7 p.m. Sponoored by the C4lntor lot. Mocia

.c·p.m.

ElC110H FEIITIVAl. •
-- in~wllhrnombo&lt;oof

eom.....

of

Study.

IIEETINO

the _ ~

~

FILii·

AND STM'F

ew Room, Faculty CU&gt;, - . Street Can1&gt;us.

WMFUIS•

attend this - · - oplll)-00: perforpalc6.
5ponsored by lhe ()epartment"' ·

p.m. Fioo. Sponoorod by lho
English.

--y

Sauday- 14

WORKSHOP CONCERT•
Tho UIB Bond !llr9clors ~ (w111ch runs
20) .._,,. 8 oonc:ert by lhe
Gn!nd Island sixrmor Bond oonduclod by oom·
poser end cOnductor w. Fnrlcis McBeth' Bassett
Pat!&lt;, Amhenlt. 7:30p.m. Tho~ is lnYited to

"'""9&gt; .!dot

Conl0f11r1C8 (Englilh 695). 220 Ctomona. 6 ;30

Tuesday- 17

'

tor -

by the Center

~

liLI, andDMthallhe-andOthorThe Festival is ~ed Ill' Pro!. Raymond
Fedonren, ()epartment of English.

()epartment
" ' -·
Bring OO!IIOll1ing
to eil•on.

--.~

L'- (19110 . ~ . 148~.

w. -

to c:larily ''lhe oboan octivitios"
ol evant-gordO Wl1ting .
Suk1Jn1ck. profeooor of English al the ~

ol

· by. SolA
-Garden (behind
lhe Abl!trt-Knox Art Gallery) . 8 p .m. Ree. Sponoorod by the Center lor AooM-cl1 end

aan. ~

- -. S2;- S 1 .50.

FILII"

Port&lt;. .-

SHAKESPEARE IN THI PARK•
The Comedy al Emn, -

(ScorMM, 1973). Conforance
· Squn. Clii636-2G19 forllhow limes.

... -

· Squn. Cel638-2919 for show limes.
- - 5 2; studonts$1 .50.

diWlCe-

-and WlcUrt ~- •• . 322
Clemens. 6 :30-8 p.m. Free.

-

Tha Comedy "' Etfora, di'Octed by Saul
Elltin . Delaware Pat!&lt;, ..... Rose Garden (behind
lhe Albrighi·Knox Art Galle&lt;y) . 8 p.m. Free. Sponsored by lhe Center lor Thea!re - . : t l and
DeponmenlofTheolfe.

UUABFtLM•

3--4p .m.Frw~

-

WAS ALMS•
the Four Hundred (France, 1 959);
Sed and . llootd (Frmce, 1 970). 170 MFAC ,
EIK:olt. Call 636-291 9 for show limes. Genenll

SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK •
Ct8r Poelry

- . ;. 438 Cternono. 2·3 p .m. Free. F -

· (;ljcago Cirde.

- - plcluic:lcrog and swmmg. a.ses

-$2 ; ~ts'S1 . 50 .

Friday- 13

- - open offtee ""'"· 427
Oemerw.
10a.m.-ncxw'l.
Nlms, noled for No ~-lyrtcism. is prolessor

of Engloh, UnivenliiY of -

FESTIVAL. •

Anselm Hollo Met Allan Koonblum: poetry
reading. 438 Cernens. 8-9:'50 p.m. Free.

holx. 436Qemens. 10.11 a.m.
Holo is a F'm ..no teaches at SWeet

lEU EXCURSION•
k!ave Porter Quad, Ellicott. at 2 p.m. !fld O"et\nl
5 o30. Bus fin $ .25. Call Kathy ~ . 636·
' 2017 . 5ponsored by lhe Intensive fr&gt;glish IM&gt;·
~lnslilule .

(Englilh 695). 220

Oemene. 6 :30p/n:

IWIAICWB_DIIQ.._.
The !W1a1 CU&gt; ri. SJI«M ... hdd tnlonnal
-aboutlhe8811olfaltl, o n -

WOI1d religion.
!roo 16 .... --

n - - ... -

ond
_• 234 ~.

.,. ....._

8p.m.

Port&lt;.,_--

SIW(EII'QIE . . , . , - .

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by SolA
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aan.

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tiOf1ld by the Cooter for -

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ond

fUI•
The Qong' o All .... (1G43). Bullalo and Etle
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Sponoorodby

!Uby~-to~pn;l&lt;i.Jction

. . - highligiM h - - ol
flloeF- ondllomy &lt;looc*lwt.

,_,-.

---tor.-.ytt*&gt;g,...?
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Mn~tw'o olllg nigltl tor Ilia ono. ¥IIIII' not ,
'Yo-.....plcricprtorto . . ...-?

sored by lho C&lt;i1ter tor
OeiWlinontol-.

UUABF1LM'

.Weclnesday- 18
_,.Y._FDIII*•

John

~=

"Whal . _ , . 1n a Pooillr

;· 10 a.m. (lecture) ; 2
. . ~period) , lho'I&lt;M, B!Ody.
F,... Sponoorod q. l1o Faculty ol ~.
Cioldl, _ _ _ . , . _ . . . , _ ,

p.m. -

by SolA •

Comody al Etfora, by SolA
(bol*&gt;d
lhe Ablght-Knox Art Goloiry). B p.m. Ree. Spon-

Ell&lt;in. - -

IMI)'

· --

tor -

·· .... -

-

....

.i

Tha (1972) . Ccll1lor.- ~ . Coil 636·2919 f o r - - · -

·

- 5 2; otuQ!Inta S1 ."5D.

T-topflmattiCII_ T l l o _
(PatlBI &amp; R)
ollie
lis . . . . ol ox·
.. U/8,
not"""""""' here in _.... 5o here • Ia,

eo "tho- ,_tim
- ··-I,_
11m

a..---

oplo...,.

8mony
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-.cling
~b.

Ia'. pool. -

-

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by
o l - marllty~

ond attic. The
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--~....- ... "AJo'Y," ho-.
Nodces
"'olhe-.._.t.tln---·

.... -

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c:ou.a.OfiiA-T'ICN.~

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_ lot_
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ond - - - - .
1.. pJJt ; ~ lflelllll.ndiiO. 1'8 p.m,:
"""-' HI p.m: 10$-1011 Qal,

.,,_.._._

a- -

.........

-~.· -7,eoLI.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Change
New features
spruce-up orientation;
U/B 'turning-around'
Ori entati on 'T9 offers some new
features to help ~repare freshmen for
Unlversl)y life and allows eddltlonal
opportunities for them to meet one
another on an Informal bests.
At last week's first 2Y.o -day orientation session, one of the most welcome
and well -tecelved ) nnovatlons was the
Resource Room where raprasentatlves
from about half of the undergraduate
deparlments met with students to
answ~r questions regard ing academic
programs.
.
A "consumerism aspect" was evident
there last week, noted Orientation
Director Joe Krakowlak. Students
seemed to engage In longer, more
meani ngful conversations with rapre-

~~~~~l~~:. r.!:dsa1~~n~t

hesitate to '!Pk

ba~!'cj't~e~ ~~~~hn.:C,~i~sw~ ~h":s~i~~
Games Foundation. Games should be
"nsd lscovered" for the " fun of It" rather
than played exclusively for competftive
reasons , this theory holds. o- half the
students at the fi rst session showed up

~~~!_YP~~~:':'dc':~; ~~~':J~~:
ites.

"The games gave students a chance
to meet, relax and en/oy each other
without the use
stimulants,"
explained Krakowlak.
A ki nd of Psycho-Drama format was
used to convey the " University
_perspective" on what type of experiences and personalities freshmen may
encounter th is l all. Thla Involved a
20-mlnute skit resented by Oflentat n

HerecoJDes
the-Class oft 983!
,..,.._

"'-ay,lofce~
~

A group of excited young people
wearing blue jeans, T-shlrts ana striped

~;,i:;:.,s&amp;::'~ ,.:;r::::;~'1or ~h~ f::;::

session of Freshman Orientation '79.
Wt&gt;lle some sported the lraoltlonal
variety of numbansd athletic jerseys,
othere showed more originality and
flaunted the. muscular Hulk, Jl. demure

Mlct&lt;ey

-

ttw

o

~

about disco, ln glittering lettentl The Reoorter wanted to know why
these students chose UI B, so we asked
a few.
Deb Skinner frQm Brocton , New York ,
through! UIB her best choice because it
offers. a four-year nursing degree and
happens to have a good locale. Just "far
enough away" to let her assert her
indep~ndence, " yet close enough" to

.rjeit-&lt;ht!r larnlly wh. - -wants to.
Wanta Dental School
Louis Surace from Lockport wants to
get Into the UI B Dental School and
feels he can get a foot In the door by
doing his undergraduate work here.
Brooklyn lie Michael Flick - who
admits he " bombed out" on one section
of the SATs but ~wears he has a great
grade point :._ safs UI B was his choice
because of his Interest in business and
law. "I thought I'd go to a school that
offered everything, " he said. · Besides,
he heard that U/ B " has a good
f~~~n1.:: :· and SUNY Albany wait-

A 'genius' ·
Fellow Brooklynlte and friend Eric
Friedman agreed that U/ B's reputation
is tops and added that his rel atives

~=pt':;s ·~ ·~:::·fr'::~~~ ';:~~
something," he asserted.

Wi~~!'c';:v,~:ml:st,w~,dg~'f ~asfr~~
1

only " affordable" school In the State

~~t~!'~: t~~~e~p~:r,nn~0 d~1~;
Clarkson, but decided he dlan't want to
be $28,000 in the hole when he
graduated. ''That's like a down payment
for a house," he exclaimed .
_

Low coat Ia a factor
Ross Bayliss from East Northbrook,
New York, told the Reporter that "even
with all the snow," he decided U/B was
for him because It's • cheap" and has a

"g%1~reJ:c~S,:~nS:td

about the same
thing. She applied to Daemen but
decided U/B was tha batter bat.
Shar/Jl Shlege/, whose cl aim to fame
Is that the New York Tim es guoted har
on her opinion of her wnlor prom,
confaslled she "d idn't know much"
about U/ 9 when she decided to apply.
As a matter of fact , she waa ready to go
to Oswego. When her U/ 9 ecceptance
ceme, though, Sherle oald she decided
to J&gt;aCl&lt; her t.ga-tor Buffalo.

-OoodMiectlonof.._.....

Kathy Brbnner lroril $Yf8CUae aeid
she wanted a l8rga Wllveralty Mttlng
and one that olfenld a good aetectlon ol

rnra:•g~B ~:'.'rhecho~.

Sen,.,_,

Kathy'o h igh echool mena, lillie
WhO -tually wanto to
enter U/9 Mldtc.J School, -'«!
Ia
l m~

wltll lila "d'--!ty"

he

the

-'CIIOOIIIt-.· -Z.oal.l

f
This year, students 1111 a1eo taking
math and writing testa to provide a data
base for the basic skills component of
general education. The Information wi ll
be used to give faculty an lndlcetlon of

l~t~er~~g~~~;r.:,~;~:~~ey can _expect
There wil l be 10 orientation sessions
, this summer, with the last beginning on
August 1. Some 2500 freaflmen will

pa~i~:f.a~~s ~t':o;i~l~t~· during

the

two and one-half days.
Breaking th e i~ by referri ng to
himself as the " Director of Wildlife

•

~r~fJ:~1~~·;t~~~'rif~f;!'i~~.e~k.;'o';;'

•=

a more seriou s note wh ile tell ing
parents at UI B's openi ng Frashmen
Orientation session that the University
"has Its problems," but that It waa the
first SUNY unit " straightforward enough
to point out its weaknesses and
work to correct them."
Reading short excerpts from the
recently completed .[Sport of the

~~~ve!~~Ytti~~;~~d.z;:f~~u~onc~a~;:~

•See 'Ctwngea. • page 2. cot. 1

-Here's
·101
ways
~a ke~p

them

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

· -- . . . . . - - lllghlgllta "'"""""

�,.".,. " ...

...a ...
1Parents

found-caUse of'
psycho-social dwarfism

An elght-yeti~ld bOy ia the alze of a •
tll&lt;M'Old He Ia tllken 1ro11r hla
l 11 ~ d · put In a "prutectlve
- am
1 .. A ~ later he II nine
b=.,alf·l- taller.
. An 18-J--old whose bOdy Ia that of
a tb.--y-'-Oid Ia admitted to · an
Institution for 1he mentally retarded.
His IQ Ia· about 30. Within three -r-a,
the patient has gruwn 18_J!Jl;bea..and.
deYeloped language alillll; he now teats
at an IQ of 60.
An orphanage has an Inordinate
number of physically-underdeveloped
youn~stera residing thent . .A new head
11 urae Is hired, one who Ia jovial, relaxed
41nd affectionate. Within a short time,
the children exhl.l&gt;lt a remarkable
chatige In their rate of_ physical
"'1t1'ft.~';b phy~ictans at one time
would have thoug'ht that the children In
these examples suffered from some form of hy~pltultarlam, they now

J

::i

"2:,

~wt&gt;!h"~u;:rc~~S!?"..:..:ar:,r:;;

Aller 8om.i political squabbling and
lnterpariy manueverlng, the State Legislature has voted to extend the

~rr~:"u~~~r~~·~.~~~~~~
wl~-y

==-

-

tlt

:'kt

peranta to taka
~clllldNn will have a voice
In aMplng the~ and a "ChanCe
to tuni tlila ~ aruund."
If and when their child,., start
complaining about U/B, Siagalkow
aaUd - . to tell them to "hang In
tt.r. ...~'We'il do ..arylhlng wa can to
.._ your klde hera," ha added. To
undarXore hla meeaaga, ha told
peranta to penoonally call him If a son or
da41ghter talks of dropping out.
To help combat IOMII- and the
1mparaona1 amblanoa of a larll8 acate
...._,.
·~·
parents,
a ealtfflg,
University
naor liifotmed
Program
was recently start
thrtlugh his
office. It hooks · up a new student
with a - "*''ber of the faculty or
prulaealonalllaff who can befriend and
lntwceda for him or her.
•
He went on to llat _.,., problein
and what tha retantlon report
recommends the Unlveralty do to noctlfy
them. Among ..commandatlona he

~~~lceW:,.,O~w=t!·"r.:,:t t~"!c~

.. ·=t

bureaucratic

~ ~

red

tape"

by

finding

~~g -~~

unnacaaawy legwork, ha_noled .

. During tha q.-tlon-IIIICJ.anawer period, one mother •.....-..cl concern
becauaa h.- deughtar (frcim Buffalo)
not gl...., a room In the dorms.

~'tnat-:.a:"tc:'u~~~
"dl8cttmlnatlng ag.inat local

.=

at~ts"

by giving preference to out-ol-town
freshmen. She aald aha was originally
told rooms .._ . on a fltat-come,
flnlt-aerve baala" and ~sed the
Houolng-Offlce of "ch. . .ng the rules
In mtd::.atraam."
'
The woman aald her~ughter
rejected admlaalon Into twoother SUNY
echoola1&gt;efore finding out she couldn~
get a ruom here.
What aggravates the alluatlon, aha
noted, was that her d~hter was
aaelng other atudenta (at orientation)
get ruom assignments.
Handling the situation Uke a true
diplomat, Slggelkow gave a short
history of why the housing decision
was made, agreed that the situation
was Indeed unfair, accepted fu ll
reaponalblllty · for the matter, and
sOothed any ruffled feathers by
promlalng the woman that her daughter
would get a ruom by January.

•Class of '83
l l r - - 1, coLSl

Unlverally offers .•
Finally, ~ one young

·==

man

from

~!o;~~~~Yg~~~ u~h:
~ ~':o~~:"~"f~! ~~ =~: :~~

~teat?'' the
Report.U )nqulred.
Would I go to a low quality echool?" he
smirked . "lt'o the all time greatest."
Thera was one other tiny factor: "I dido~
have the bucks to go anywhere alae."

::r:emlnatrrUh . profeaaor of
1
pediatrics a. -Chlldren a Hospital .In
l&gt;ltlaburgh and the Unlveralty of
Pittsburgh Medical School, told a
gathering In Alden Court 'Room last
week that when he ~ parents of
these children talk JbOut their aymptoms, " It's like listening to a btokan
record."
of DE:~rtr':o'!:"td!~''lr~ll~~
Emerging Adolescent, .. was the first In a
flv.part, admlaalon-free Sumn.- Forum sponsored by the Faculty of
Educational Studies.

So~~~!l:.:r,':"!-~nlzad

for his
research efforts in the area, Draah noted
that children suffering frum this

rel~~\:~ ~:r:~~sl~'= r~r.:;

to the polnl of vomiting), drink an
nordlnate volume of flu id, and at times
Ishow
" bizarre" attachments to food

substitutes. For exam.frle, they maf.,eat

g:,'!its~o,'l,e~o~e :.o~-~tt~. ~~

prone to night wandering, exhibit a
minimal response to pain, Inflict
self-Injury and ere often charaeterlzed
as mentally deficient .
As a resu lt of In-depth question ing
of parents, Draah and hla colleagues
have found that mothers frequently
have a distorted relationship with these
children, claiming the children "didn't
like them" from birth. Consequently,
the Jnfanta received little "mothering"
or ~xtern_al stlf!lulatlon. Many children,

::'...~'~!%'.; ~tz::,ca~r.== ~:

child . Because of their own suffering at
· · the hands Ill Inept parents, the parerlts
of these children don't understand the
concept of nurturing, Drash explained.
When the children are removed frum
the home, Drash said "almost all"
experience tmprovemenl; some show a
" dramatic Improvement ," while others
08\'&amp;r catch ur.· · with their r.::::;-s In
Ketter, who wUI have to decide by fall .
~X~~~ dave opment or anguage
whatlier to eeak another term (and thus ,
undergo -luatloll), told the Courier he
has "no feeling on the change one way
or another."
P..,ta retuct..t to let u.n go
A committee of four SUNY praaldenta
Although these children r-IWI little
and D. Murray Block, Wharton'• deputy , love and care at horne, Ironically, their
parents are extremely reluctant to have
for campue liaison, racommandad the
new prucadure, the Courier reported.
them rTJ.Oved to another environment.
Moat caaea ended up In CQurt, Draah.
It's a hybrid of technlquae ulad In
CUNY, and the Unlveralty of Min-a
aald. While aacll court caae Ia
ayatam, one almllw to accradltatlon
approlched with " great trepidation," he
ravtNa, Muon expla,lnllll.
acknOJIIadged, - a l to a pru111CIIve
envlrunment Ia NlerJI~I If tha child Ia
to maka any olgnlflcant strides .
Attampto at parental behavior modification and counaatlng have proven
"diaeatroua" In thea8 altuatlona, Draah
reported. ln ~ Whara pllyalclana
relented and parents ragalnad cuatcxt;,
Ia not noqulnod to raflact
thea8 vlewa, oo-. . '
the patients axparlancad gruwlh atop-

Wharton, Ketter deny

r:umors of a 'gft~

. =~ ~tn:~~ew:'~
1::
=..-:.=r
wll~lll~~~~:.tr: ~
~

'**

Under t h e - ayetam, evaluat"'k&gt;na
muat be made~ IIYII ~. but can
be dOna men nq....,tly. Thera Ia no
specific I._.., but ~ IWiew mual

lour.._.._

11118.-o- . .
IUNY'a lloGk IDid . . _: ·rm ....
-

J*lll!aontlla 8._, GMIIIU8 will

=Df":...,ctyiMIW::..,.y"=
tna. lt'a ft,Wt a colnall•nc.. •

....._
_agen~y

environment," that Is, by a lack ol
nurturing and stimulation In the home.
The first scholarly book on this

although much more Ia known abQut it

41

Aftar sq"uabbtes,

fee
d
law IS exten· ed

toda~, the Information has not been

•Chaf!SI!S -

social w011&lt;era have found that foster
children are frequently accepted because of the monetary rather than the
humanitarian conalderatlona.
"II' a an Indictment of our society that
there are no long-term placement ·
facilities whent these children can be
housed," he chatged.
Draah emphaalzed that school nurses
and teachera can be Instrumental In
Identifying children . suffering from
paycho-soclal dW81flam. He recommended that echoola take annual
measurements of their pupils and report
-any abnonnalltlea. 'We currently are
not using the schools as we should, " he
concluded.
-JB
·

PTri.

=·

he
..moved ffom the unhMithy bciiM anvtronmant, the
majonly Ill the patlanta DtUII ..
Initially admii18CI to ollronlc d......
M&amp;pltala, and . . than _ , aiMwha!a

Gr.et-.-

bttaMn" child,., ....
pl&amp;l*l with ro.a. peranta, Draall
cautlollad. Ollan, , _ hCimea "*IJ.- to tile arwl-t" the CliiUCI
Dralll ..,_,.., that Plttaburgti

. II!'·

•

"AX~rn-:·

~~~ Y"ft:;.

'row fl'k!:O
Teecher] an official 'publication of
. NYSUT; tfle union "overcame extremely

=·'~'~f~~~~

-;:;~:

by
tiona" to ~n 1he vlctOf}'~nlted
Unlveralty l'rofaulona (UUP), the
bargaining 11Q811t for faculty and otatf
here, Ia a NVSUT affiliate. ·
The ..Jaglalatlon gt.M a dealgnated
bargaining agent the right to have duea
deefucted frOm employee paychecks
- ~- of wheth.- or · .not an
tnalvldual emDioyaa formally belongs to
the organization.

M2::~nat 1l;h.=le,; M(IB?aZ.h~=

pushed a blll that would make the
agency ahop permanent and broaden It
to Include em~loyeea of local govern-

::;'~ts0~~b~l ·::u~~o~y~~o~~

State School Boards Aaaoclallon , who
claimed it would add about $4.8 million
to NYSUT's cdffers. Opting to go for his
bill or nothing , Ohrenateln had his
Democratic allies join with Republicans
to vote_down an exte[lder bill (similar to
lJ:a~:'Ju~~~~~ finally passed) In the

The union paper quoted Dan Sanders,
1

:::=nu~l~ v 1':' ·~~1~r~~~! ~M~n~

time provided In this extension will
allow all other parties Involved In the
public employee aector to understand
the Inherent falrneaa of this laglalatlon
so that It can aoon be made s
pemnanent lllature of labor relations In
this alate."

Friedenberg ·
back for a day
ut~dp; o~e ~~':':'3..':~ 1 a~~~r~

by the Colleges. On Monday, July 9, at
1:30 p.m ., F"rledenberll will present-his
views on 'Why the Western Industrial
Culture Ia Hung Up on the Fam ll~-" Th is
address Is open to the public and will be
held In Talbert Dining Hell at 'Amherst.
Friedenberg's own educatlonel back·
ground Ia of lntenaat, Collages' .spokespersons eald. He hail little formal
education prior to enrolling at Centenary College I rum which he graduated
with a B.S. at the age of 17. Two years
later, he completed an M.A. at
Stanfor!l; he recelvedbla Pit. C. from the
' University of Chicago at the age of 25.
He taught at ChiCliQO . from hos
graduation untll11153, then moved on to
Brooklyn Collage where he taught
sociology for 10 y-..
After three y-. at the University of
California at- Davia, Friedenberg ac- ·
cepted a jol~polntment at U/B.
Between 11i87'and ti70, !I• taught In the
Departments of Sociology and Social,
Philosophical and Historical Foundations. After l-Ing hera, he went to
Dalhousie UnlveraHy In Halifax, Nova
Scotia.
Friedenberg Ia beat known for his
books on adol~a which have
become claaalce 'for educators. The
Van/airing Atlo,._t, pu_bllahed In
111!58, ancl Comtlfg of Afl8 in Am~rlca.
. publlahad In 11185, '-fiNn compared
to and rag8nlad aa lha equal of
Ooodman'e - . Olowlnll Up Absurd.
A mora - 1 book Ill FMd8nbero'S IS
7Jta Dlipoaal o1 U,_,., anti Other
. ltlduatrial WaaNa.

�Tess Shea: She's~ one woman 'building boom'
Tess Shea builds houses. ·
To d@te she has constructed' fifteen,
Including a Queen Anne replica , a
typically VIctorian home, a colonial
Greek nsvival 'house, and a gothic
church.
.,
She's neither a carpenter nor a
contractor, though; she does her
building In clay at the Creative Craft
Center at Ellicott - lavishing on her
miniature l;onstructlons as much care
and atten!lon to detail as ·any
cornmercia1'1\bme builder would . More
1
some might say.
One afternoon last week, · this
glllndmother,' who worked for ll number
of years as '8!i Interior decorator, was
executing a detailed pattern, measuring
and cutting . out wans, windows,
and a roof for wlia"t will become a
replica of an English Tudor house In
Fairlee, Vermont. In that house, her son
runs a- nsataulllnt known as The Third
RaiL The replica of his restaulllnt will
be' a surprise for him.
All her houses begin with a lump of
clay, which sffe then rolls out as one
might worlf with dol!llh, and culs Into
the -lous component parts. The parts
ans· fitted together, allowed to dry and
then flnsd In the Craft Centers kiln.
After an Initial firing at low temperature
(1800"), she decorates the exteriQrS
with colored glazes and then flnsa the
houses again at high temperatuns.

t~~e!~t ~~~f;:,~ ~~~~~g~~~

and the feetunss of the building are
bei"ll reproduced to exact scale.

She

works

In

metrtc

m-.unss,

~m =s:J~~N=t~:.~..:,..,..:,~

and Inches. While the houses are made '
to ale, they ans not necessarily exact
reproductions ot homes she has seen.
A Victorian house of hera which was
being finsd . at the C'lfUAnter last week

:y

1a~l:r.t~ rn"~~~lo~~So~~

::,
Carolina, but dnsw up plans for her
· -slon" of It from memo&lt;)&lt;, not from
any photographic study or sketch she
had made on the spot.
DollhouThls Victorian house will be, as two
others of her cnsatlons are, a doll
house, open on one side and
~:J:r~~tely decorated In miniature

-

This phase of her w011&lt; with pottery
satisfies the lntereat In Interior design
which she followed for a time at both
the' Cape Cod · Shop and Sofas and
Chairs. The Interiors she dreams up ans
matched to the era of each of the doll
houses. Her English Tudor, for
example, Ia filled with little nspllcas of

harmony , unity and contrast, " Ms. Shea
features only one or two colors
0

1

~~~~~ ~~ ~~~~r:s~u~u ~h:/~ft~ f~

~~~'1,"~e ~~~?~tu~~~~ature drapes
· Anywhere from a month-and-a-half lo
10 weeks are required to totally finish
one of the doll houses. About those
weeks are necessary for the. houiea to
dry completely before firing ; " Interior"
work takes another three weeks• .
Agothic "church ·
To date, Ms. Shea has confiDed her
tfulldlng "prin\arlly to antique houses.·
The lone exception is her gothic church
whlc:h the Vatican deaths and corona-

1~~~1r~1~e~fotc~e':.'fe~~~e~~u.':.~r. ~~:

a copy of any particular church, but

rather e)(llresses a style of ecclesiastical archlt~ure . The most noteworthy
example , of the genre would be the
Church of Notre Dame fn Paris.
The twin spirea of Ms. Shea's church
are adorned with " saintly figures,
copies of religious stalue.s," ,also
"hand-built from clay." To achieve the
effect of lhB.Steeples she pelnsteki;:P.Iy

:'no "l'~

;~~~~es,ntr 1~ ~&lt;1 ~rx:
1

=··a O:.~~y h~~~~~e~rn; ~~

srchltectuns, 81yle and the feeling .she
wants to convey - some are smooth,
some textured, some shiny, others dull .
She employs glazes also to suggest
shed ow a~d perspective.
No exhibit• yat
.
Ms. Shea makes the houses as a
hobby and has had no exhibits to date;
nor.has she participated In any of the
area craft shows and sales. Why?
Because she does It for the fun of it.
The doll houses she has mede will
0

::"!':X~ o~ h~~ fo~s~J:Jd:~~~e;,;
In her husband's office. She would

al~o

':b,e Department of Curriculum
Dewlopment and Instructional Media

:r.:~~~~ ~':"~~Zt~~.the1 ~:w s";~
~~r.e",::~ ~~e':n?o~att~~l:l~

1

==~~c~ ~~~~t;~~~~·,;~
::;'~:.,CS.J'!9bu~t.P~~kc"~tt1~~~-lg~

U1ing

or2~":!"!.,~\:inandate

the

"daalgn

prlnclplee

ot

r~,,P~~~~g:~al ~~rk~~p ~~·~~cr:ft

Center later this summer or In the faiL
Center Director Joe Fischer notes that
Individuals who see her works-inprogress and cOmpleted houses are
uniformly bowled over.

,

Han1el o;,d Gretel
Eventually, Tess Shea wants to
develop for exhibition a 5-foot-hlgh
" Hansel and Gretel ~ house which small
chlldren will blr able to walk lh(ough.
This kind of major constructl~ would
obviously hav~ to be fired In sections
and puttogett\er In ll different way from

her small 'creations. Beyond that, she
would like to try reproducing classical
architecture. notably the Albright-Knox
Art Gallery building . She worked there
as a docent for a number of years, and
is eag-er to attempt a replica, complete
with miniature versions of the caryallds
which decorate the building's facade.
.Ms. Shea sterted 11slng the Craft
Ce~ter 21'.! to 3 years ago when, with
her those children grown and educated,
she decided she would go back to
school -parl-tlme. Because she had
worked with ceramics earlier In her
life, she decided to take out a
membershl~ In-tile Craft Center just " to ·
putter." Shit comes to campus about
-two___djoys a week now to pursue her
building Interests, and frequently can
beJound totally absorbed In the work. " I
do It for the pleasure of ll." she
emphasizes. "1 9QUid do It for the rest of
my li fe. My grandmottler lived until she
• was 96, so that could be a long time." -

l.m pact of1aw on 'education is focus of new_prOject

Conferences In the Disciplines Committee to develop programs .and curricula
to study the Impact of federal and state
law on education.
g~~e~~~~ul:'~~':'r.hi':J::O~~o~ ;;::
This effort, In cooperation with 23
Early Amertcan wing chairs. Like the
other colleges and universities In
houses, the furnishings, aol}'le 9f which
-lemand central New York State and
the New Yorf&lt; State United Teachers
(NYSUT), will be dlnscted toward
coordinating and planning ImplementaShea can meketham .
tion of naw approaches to leaching In
She uses an assortment of upholstery
·
·
these ansaa.
fabric swatches tor both wail coverings
Topics· to be developed In one-day
and rugs and has been known to buy •
and restyle littit toy trees for front yard - conferences to be held In the fall of
1979 and the aprtng of 1980 will include •
such Items nslated to the Impact of law
In education as,,_.,
atlcl&lt;s Into -smaller plecea and then
1. ,liow do - dial wtttl druga In the
tapering each mini-picket by mM~~a of a
achooll?-lnformln~danta about
pencil aharpener. Little mirrors from a
~lnant t - and
lng curricula
llah ball •tore dreaa up aome of the
badrooma; ahoe buckfaa double Jor

ec:oncn.

like to donate one to the University tor
permanent display in the Craft Center.
Her work has all been experimental,
trial and errOr in nature, because there
Is no right or wrong way to approach
this unique ceramic art form whlcl]_ she
has practically Invented . ,She may,
however, share some of the techniques

~a,:,~~!· ,,!!,;Jo~ ~ff ~~~drlndth:

simulation of Wylng buttresses. The
church 's glaze was tired at a particularly
high temperature, said Ms. Shea, in
order to give It a look of antiquity. She

for malnatr.mlng handicapped

at~

dents and the lmpect aiKt the awareness
of the provision~ of Public Law 94-1427
3. How do we Identify student rights
under the law and how do we make
students and teachers aware of these
rights?
~ - What Is the nsaponalblllty of
education and educational personnel
under the law In such area as child
abUse, counseling, confidentiality of
school recorda , etc'?
•
A pnsllmlnery meeting has been held
with college nspnsaentallvea to plan an
organizational atructuns for the group
and to begin pnsllmlnery planning tor -a
fall conference. The Department of
Curriculum Development .,d Instructional Media Ia serving aa the local
educational agency.

.~::.~~ ~~~:,C::."i:"!

continuing at1ort on the pert of the
department, the Unlveralty, and other
higher education lnatltutlon• In the to work with leader8 In !Neher
education "In ., attempt to further
Improve the quality of prog111111a In
tMCher preparmlon and to provide .,d
Introduce rai-l .,d .-tngful

programs

and

curricula

Into

the

·~n:,e~~~=~-&amp;.:h=•u~ In

accordance with the Ierma of the grant

~;l_e~~~~~~~r:-:~~

by ~ Benjamin An8nswa, attorney,
and has as Ita members the Honorable

Y~C:.~'o~tl:lili!·'~~::,~f= -

Law

and'assoclate dean, Faculty or
.,d
· Jurisprudence, State Unl-.lty of Nft

~~r~~u~~~~~ D:i ~~ao~u~:
.U.s College; Dr. Lola Hailer, dlvlalon
chairman;
Psychology-Education,
Houghton College; and Dr. Rober1 H.
Roaaberg , dean, Educational_Studies.
The program Is coord lnateo Dy ur.
Arthur L . Kaiser, proleaaor .and
chairman, Department of Curriculum
Dewlopment and ln11ructlonal Media,
U/B; Dr. Anthony M. Delullo, professor,
eecondary education, State Unl..,.lty
College at Fnsdonla; and -Paul Wlatlg,
taecher, Amherst Central High. School
District, and aaaoclate ' Department of
Curriculum Development and ln1truc- :
Ilona! Media.

�"We - !,q, -tws .... "'""'to," ~ the
8 2 - Final Ropoot of the brood-booed Unlvenlly-Wido
Study Group on A_,/Rewnllon which wos focwanled to
1hc Presidont on June 15 by the ponfl's chailpenon, Or.

inclividual effO&lt;tJ to ochleve greater visibility and accessibility

""""" "Foculty, olaf! and ~ 1ft of high quality.
~ , they are not a coheslw group, with the ruult that
their effedf-.e• is Umited . Major efforts should be
undertaken to nanow the communk.ations gap' among and
between faculty, otudents, and admjnis~JatoR."

FM:OIIIv
c.a.d ·
I The master
keyfoo-KeY
alleviation of student dropout
problems Is 1hc faculty, 1hc repor1 suggests: "Ahhough
further verifk:ation i5 indi:ated , too many reports have
surfaced about some facuhy , who, by the~ actions and
c:lassroom performance, strongly suggest that they do not

the several student governments, the FliCuhy Senate and the

participation in University-wide activities . •

6 . A committee, with balanced student and faculty
representation , should develop a University-wide teacher
~Nalul!ltion Instrument designed for rnandal'ory use in all
undergraduate and graduate classes.
7 . A Faculty Senate / Student Association co-sponsored
committee shou~ be charged wtth responsjbility for the
improvement of ~nstrucdon. .
..
8 . A University reward system shou)d be devised that
assigns coequal aed.luo teaching and research.
9 . Faculty members should share responsibility for

The

ac.!lldemlc advisement of lower division students until such

time as the students are accepted as department majors.
10. Advisement 12_rogram.s for minority and foreign
students should be monitored to Insure that response
avenues are available to meet the spedal needs of these
students.
11 . Continue distribution of undergraduate grade reports
to departTTJe;nts .
"12. Reinstitute a system of mkt-term grade reports to
identify individuals In academic dJfflculty as early as possible
iO that remedial and oounseling help can be obtained.
• "13. Reinstitute a procedure of exit interviews for
withdrawing •udentJ.

..._

--Niatlonahl!lo.

e-

-·•

,

I

...

on.

~- arw tr-..Jiy lllow to rupond, but
"- - when their fnll&lt;llvcment Is m05t needed to
combat depenonalization and to JpOniOI' values and a sena
of human ""(11h," the Student-Faculty relations sub-group

~·others ~
·u

reaponsiJillty, this sub-group

continua:
a otudent who hasre&lt;lelved good teaching and
good OC&gt;UnMiing leo- this Unlvenlty because, lor example,
a sea-.y has been rude 0&lt; unre_.wve, he leaves just as

loa a hole In our enrollment - - .. •

.

The ~ muot .... - out that become
hnlmteed inlo a _ . , of ac:tioO, the panel's repor1
~- Thor. has to be bette communkation, most
nolallly .-dod Is an erthanoed "feedback oy5tern" to
provide olijoctivc rudJngs on the poyc:OOiogicol health of the
""""''W''ty.

Pl¥ct ala .. c.a proWaae
~. 1 h c - ponel emphaoiaed, many problems
hore ... ~ - Prolonged contlrudion of our
Amhonl ~ tondo to aut&amp; a apirtl of apathy and
lh:ot. while IOIIIcVolhod undontandable, l!J1ores 1hc
mulllude of Unlvonlly - Further, this lllmOiphere ,
-many ..__
u~ and lmp[pvement in
ways. Feolingo ol indill.,.noe load to neglect of our
&gt;hyoaf _ , _ and. far too frequently, on&lt;:ouroge

--...,,

~

"Major """"""'"' of the environment 1&lt;e excellent ,
1hc of the oub-group on that - . oontends, "but
andllory c1emants namlln delic:ient. N- ca"""' buildings
.-o . . . . - . but 1hc slgni daignatJng them are
~ Building . . _ _ .-o lltlnctive, bul few
~hove added thoae finiohlng touches that cnate
• ~ .,1/Wonmont wllh which people can Identify."
"Tho rul tat1 of dloctiwness loo- any educational
- ·" t h e - - on, "d ultimately resu on what
~ M rnoUa in the development of'each indlvidual
would not have '-'&lt;d olbcrwise. What do
thoy- to loom? Who! do we wont !Mn to lMm through
aJnicullr and ~ programs? Do they keep on
looming. and do ...Y 1oom to cant? How well are •uaeru
and gooil being met? Thae questions belong at

•-!hoi

lhc-forolofua.•

Tho ...........,

loovo (mombonhip 32 to 35
porliclplnbl ponol a-.1 by Praidem Kater in February
1 9 7 8 - - - Into llxsub-&lt;:om-. each of which
. - • - - rwpOrl on of conoom lo it. Thae
-.dod: I. Sludut/focully relationshlpo, 2.
Stofl!-.vfocully ..........llhlpo; 3. The physical

-=

- 4. ltadomlt
~
loldo; !"&gt;.c-.
......... -- -; and In
6. Out-ol-dos
- ~--- Tho-' cl each of".......... ......._ . . . . cl ........

... , .. .,_, ....... penol. - - : w . .... - , ... ...........

-

-

ProlessX&gt;nal Stall Senate.
5 . The Spectrum and Reporter should exen lnaeased
efforts to promote and support student/ fl.c:u lty/ staff

care enou~ about the University's educatk&gt;nal lmpacl on
trudents and the caliber of Instructional progTams. We hove ,
Inevitably, neglected such !J"Oups as older, nontraditional students-who ere not Interested In traditionaJ
academk: patterns- and their concerns still require future
oonsideration."
StudentJ !eel that this Is 1101 a friendly place , the panel
found. Many who complete theJr degree requirements here
"develop no love foo- 0&lt; sense of belonging to U/ B.•
1he indMduaJ has to be singled out to receive personal
concern, the committee suggesls.
·entire campus has to
become more aw•e of -&lt;each other as indJviduals, more
cooperative In dealing with each other, and more
CO&lt;lliclonH of one another.

!"'!""'

-

2. University social and academic units should encour•ge
and -help currently Inactive students lnaease their level o1
lnll&lt;llvernent ariel pa.tlclpatlon In University off~ and
events.
_
3. An .updated listing of available ~dent activities should
be published by the Student Association and widely
ti!stributed to encourage broader partk:ipatlon by members
'
of the student body.
4. University-wide activities designed to bring members of
the academic community together in non-academic settings
should be cooperatively developed and sponsored through

Richard A. ~. 111ce praldont lor sWdent allain.
The ~ has much to recommond It, 1hc

"Untii faculty from all cllocipllna realize the Importance of
a teoching mothoclology that is d.istlnctfy related to human
the Unlwrllty wUI continue to merit
)uoll8od _ , , " lhc J*&gt;e)'s tubiJoup on Student-Faculty
~ - oubmlts. "Concomitant with bolter lnslructlon
_..,and man atnce-e 1nteat In the recipient of
poocao. UnloA a hlllf- propOI1lon of faculty become
In llludonla, nothing of much s9Uflcanca Is
gbinjj to '-&gt;· Such concom Is lorelgn to most teachers
on - .,..,.,._ today.
"k II aloo lnt-.g to nooe how lew undef!J"aduatesonlf aoo-ne graduate JtudentJ-can ftnd a lull-time faculty
mombor w!&gt;&lt;&gt;
!Mn sullldcndy well as individuals to
o1uin a ...mlftncc lor- potontial employment liter
graduation. The- with lllhlch . - JtudentJ coull obtain
IIICh lolom of rol......,. b knowledgeable appraisals of
- . ocademk ~and pa-..1 and profesolonal
-.~c~ bo
-..J Index of 1hc qually of

ltudents. .

to

'Students feel
this is not
a fr:iemfly place'
hOld that our obligations should prtmarily concern Meady
enrolled students; several other major Unlverstty-wkle
commtttees were already reviewing various facets of

recrultrnent ."

:

'Comlllunlty' aeeded •
We need a !J1!aler- serue of community , the panel
emphasizes: we should have more campus-wide events; we
have to build tradition, custom and1he kinds of actlvtues that
develop loy61ty and aiJe9ances.
As an examplo, the paQel fe]! Qeneral Commencement
should be "clarified and nurtured" as the occasion to
recognlle students who hove very suocesafully completM
their pt"ogTOJnS and "' - elled!vely dramatiz&gt;e the symbolic
culmination of the academic e:xpierience ..,
More use should be made of the opedal attrllctlveness of
urtaln laciltties, such as Baird Point or the Katharine CorneD
Theatre. Annual oventJ and week-long festivals should be
"""""'-d• perhops centering on orientation or on a spring
week that ooiJld lead into Commencement. Maybe there should be eventJ such as a yearly strawbeny festival oo- an
energy fair, or a drama forum, the report .goes on.
Or perhaps the University should encourage ceremonies
relating to past chancellors and presidentJ, as Is 1hc case of
the annual Abigail FtDmore Dinner which some dorm
Jtudents started on their own a couple of years "90·
_
The"Unlwrllty ooiJld thin)( obout establishing a "welcome
wagon~ a orxps of vo&amp;untun who could vtsft new students ~
faculty and .staff J.o ltmlgthen penonal oontact and
unlcatlon . Acado- ~entJ should be
~to get involved In recr~tion and sporU eventJ.
A system ought to be devised to recognize and acknowledge
~ and apeclal oontrlbullons to 1hc Unlvent!y.
· Too much paper
Students should receive more truthful and less
"cumbenome Information about the University , the r..,OO
recommends. "A typical student, hovtng eruoDed , hos thrust
upon him oo- her pile of printed matter dose to two inches
thlcl&lt; (not including the unde¥Oduate catalog) . We believe
the student receives too much rnat.eNI for the amOunt o(
lnformatk)n to be presented . Without a mechanism for
,. central coordinaUon , It would not be surprising if some vital
lnform-n Is nol Included, while other material may be
duplicated . Further, much of this Information seems
organized for archival pUrposes rather 1han audent use .
Since the effe&lt;;t~veneos of such data depends upon its
decislon-making value , chango,s In the format of e&gt;&lt;isting '
pull&amp;atioris should also be considered." ·
AI tn aD* the panel says , there are 101 ways to retaln a
student;
·

/E

a

14. Faculty, stall and administrators should recognize
their responsibilities for meeting the needs of students .
15. Develop a policy to delay until the following semester
the enrollment of .OOents who are now admitted a.s Late as
alter the lim week of clasaes. (Tho current "shocking"
polley ropr-b o "callouo clllr-egord" lor the welfare of
indlvidual otudento, the rOport of the tub-panel lor this

""'a aD-.)

16. Voluntary faculty partlctpatlon In Orientation
progams lhould be encouroged and aultllbly recognized .
17. Orientation should prepare otudentJ foo- cultural shock
dwtng thm first week of school by providing realistic
expectations, an ind.ication of potential problem areas .. an
understanding of differences between high school and
college, and an klenti6cation of the means and re10urces to
oope with the transition .
18. Follow-.up Orientation activities should extend Into
the academic year.
1
19. Give attention to spec:::ial concerns of the substantial
number of students who elect not 1to attend the voluntary
Orientation Program .
20. Initiate a P&lt;ogTam of peer assistance (The Colleges.
student llides, ffaternltles, and sororities), designed
especialty lor newcomer&gt;.

Stali/ Student/ Focufty lnter-Relatlonlhlpo
21. Seriously consider 'a registration period of sev"eral
days preceding the lim dey of classes In the Fall and. Spring,
In conjunction with "a return to the gym" registration
process.
22. Establish a P&lt;ogTam - to recognize "Our Own "
laculty/ stall/ s1udents for significant endeavon that Improve
our envb'onment.
23. Develop a prowam to- share outstanding
achlevementJ of the Unlvenlty community through media .
exhibits, and other techniques .
24. lnitiate a poster or buniper Jtk::ker program to convey
a messoge of pride in U/ B.
25.. Ina-ease current effOrts to recogniZe srud€mt
achievements-Including Dean's Lilt announcements which can be reported through campus and Western New
.York media, a.s weU as in the student's home area. ·
. 26. Establish a network of department contact penons
with responstbtlily and authority to provide qukk solutions to
. student prob&amp;ems.
- 27 . lnstitut.e a free-hour once or~ each week , wtth no
JCheduied classes .or formal requirements.
•
28. Und,nake efforts to clarify rules and procedures
directly affecting students and lending strudure to their
Ul)lverstty ex~nces.
29. Focus mort! attention on recognition prowams for all
University empk&gt;yees.
'
30. Encourage faculty and staff to enroll ln credit ...and

non-credit courses.
:

[Recom.......S.t.lono lnclentilied with an • were propooed

bodl by 1M - a l body and or more of the
........._,_-.mledo
._tao-11
·~

........ _.. - .-but - -

- - o"lpedllc rec:ommmdlotlon waa odopted
lormal1y .

..--~~~~-~- n.---­

......... Gilly by die~--.)

~/F...;..IW_Ipo
1. Foculty and . . . . . _ _ should -

lholr

·

31. Expand office hours' for service departments to
meet the "heeds of. •udents who are unable to be served
during the traditional workdey, Including those in
Continuing Education.
I

Ph)'Oical Environment

32. Changes, delays, or altemions In construction planJ
as prwlously publicized should be shored ~mediately with

tt&gt;e enure Unlvenity communlly.

33. Railings and ropes should be installed where needed ,
bus sheltm should be lightecl. and bus

........ ana

�j

shelters should be heated, and lndude telephones.
34. Increase and improve signage, .both In amount and
clority, porticulady on the Amhe"' Campus.
35. Pedestrian and v~ traffic patterns should be
studied to identify parldng problems and the need to install
additional shelters.
36. Expedite pusent programs of landscaping ond
interior design 10 hasten the enhancement of the physk:el

separate distribution In areas where students.. congregatetables in Squire Hall, Norton Hall, dormitories and •
cafeterios, ., well ., off-ampus 5p015 frequented by
students.
84:. That State expenditures on co-curricular activities be
compared to the amoonts expended through , and general
practices of, administrative programming at other State
units.
85. That the mandatory fee syst~m es presendy
implemented In this Institution be reviewed .
86. A t'!5k force from the Budget Office ond programming
units should analyze budgetary operations as th'e.se
specifically relate to co·curricular attivities.
87. That the Division of Student Affairs, in cooperation
with Student Association , m.ake available to campus
organizations a centralized voluntary consutting service for
programming.
•
88. That the Student Association , in consuJtatiOn with the
Division of Student Affairs and the Office of Cultural Affairs,
consider how to fund , on a regular basis , training workshops
for members of student government who have the Buthorlty
to decide upon . and the responsibUity to plan for,
out-of-class and co-curricular events.
89. That the Student Association consider appointing an
ad ~isory grolJl&gt; to Sub Board I. , lnc.. comprised of a
representative of the Office of Cultural Affairs , .the faculty,
the professional staff, the Division of Student Affairs, and
student representatives .
90. That the advisory gro up to Sub Board I, Inc .,
(recommended in 89, above) establish criteria and provide
programmatk: suggestions,. for a matched-funding plan by
which the Student Association , the University at Buffalo
Foundation, Inc ., and the Office of Cultural Affairs coukl
cooPerate in supporting major cultural events.
91. The Pri"sident and Board of Trustees should seek to
advance the targel date for completion of die
Gollery-Theotre comple•.
92. That the Office of Facilities Planning continue to press'
for completion of the Field House by Its targeted dote of
Summer, 1982.
93. Current plans for the deve&amp;opment of additional,
decentralized Union space and the renovation of student
facilities, should be reviewed by the Office of Focilities
Planning.

environment.

'37. Review routine custodiol responsibtllties tn the
residence halls to develop procedures whereby residents can
more easily assume greater responsibUity for control and
improvement of their own physical environment
3l!. Oversubscribing of residence hall rooms m;,.t be held
to a minimum.
·
•
• • 39. Institute a study to redesign residence haU facilities
to make them more attractive .
· • • 40. Re ·kxAte, as soon as possible. all residential 5 ~
presently utilized for academic/ admlnistrative offices.
"41. Devek&gt;p , encourage , and implemem summer/ year·

round outdoor programs and activities, pllrticulariy on the
Amhem Compus.
42. Re-estoblish • Untvemty·wide Loke LaS.IIe Commit·
tee . [to study fb development for recreational UM:]
43. A more aPpealing and attractive atmosphere lS
recommended for Food Service areas .
44. Structure core courses and other group activities to
bring about lnaased Interaction among freshmen.
45 . The adminislraiJon should share and communicate Its
intentions and goals clearly with all members of the
University community.
46. Appoint a University Committee to study how
accountability and responsibility of faculty, students, and
11off con be reoli&gt;td throughout the Unive,.;ty.
47. Modernize and improve the University's communica·
tion network to disseminate more extensively Information
about tervk:es, ~ . raources, programs, and
events.
48. Produce a Sltrie.s of TV programs, for internal ampus
use, including interviews with University ad ministrators ,
foculty, ond stall.
49. Commission • lludy by the Unlvenity Educotionol
Communicatk&gt;ns Center to update and Improve
academlc/ Mnlk:e campus mu.ns of communication.
50. Establish a permanent University Environment
Commlt1ee to tnc!ude students , foculty , and stoff.
51. That Boird Potnt , as weU as such other oreos ., the
fountoin cowtyord ot Squire H.U and the Ellicott Plozo , be
developed .
"52. Establish • "Ciun.lJp ond Beoutily Doy.""

Some current
policies represent
'callous disregard'

Out-of-a ... and Co-Curricular Experience
73. That the Orientation Program should explicitly
emphasize the relevance of co-curricurar activities to the
educational experience. and enhance ways by whK.h
students can influence programming , or at the leaSI , be
selective, in choo,stng out-of&lt;lass programs.
74 . That Student Affairs , In consultation with Public
Affairs and the Division of Undergr111duate Education ,
publish a "Guide to Co-Curricular Participation" to be
disseminated during the Orientation Program .
75. That the student press maximize its role In alerting
both faCulty and students, not simply to the spec:ifk:s of
events, but of their general importance in fuHilllng teachtng
'and educational ob;ectlves.
76. That the University sponsor .an Internal University
Cultural Day. under \he auspices of the Offices of Cultural
......._ Affairs and Public Affairs , during which co-curricuJar
programs of various student., academic, and administrative
units are dispiZIIyed for the ben~fit of members of the
University community.
77. That Student Affairs , Publk: Affairs, Admissions and
Records, and the Educational Communk:ations Center, in
~a lion with The Colleges, develop a fUm and/ or video
tape on the relationship between .. bving'' and ..learning" In
an educational setting to be used for admissions recruitment ,
orientation programs, and freshman seminars and coUoqula.
78. Thot faculty explicitly oddress the process of
educating students to ways of supplementing their formal
curriculum with informa l learning experiences.
79. ~ That the Office. of Institutional Studies provide
definitive data on the relationship between OU1 -of-class or
co-curricular experienctS and a) the retention of students; b)
educational benefits as perceived by students and graduates.
80. That the Division of Undergraduate Ed.uca,tion , in
conSukation with 4eJ&gt;artments, The Colleges , Sfudent
Affairs, jmd Student Assodalion, Initiate pr091:ams and/or
workshop~ thot would enoble foculty ond students to identify
ways In ' which co-curricular eYents can supplement
classroom learning.
81. That coordination and disseminaUon of Information
on out-of-class events be 055igned to • staff person """'
would research and Implement various solutions to the
immediate problem of Lack of centralized 1nf0(11lation

60. Encourage academk: units to - examine admission
procedures to e.tlminate unnecessary or unjustified
complications ond encourage d iverSity In student ct&gt;otces of
mojo&lt; 6eld.
·
·
"61. All departments , ~tn ocodemtcolly
competitive areas, should re-examine acceptance criteria, as
well as notify student oppUcants oufficlently eorly so os. not to
penolt.e them tn their seorch for oltemote profes ~ono l/
academM: career choices.
•

Commuter Student Concerns
62. In order to develop a more adequate: communication
SVR-em for commuteB, continuation and elaboration of the
Com millet Studmt Ne-wtlerter ts recommended , along \Nith
the development of other areas for ..communication for
commuter :students, such M Comtnuter Area Groups.
63. Continue and expend presem publk:ity campaigns to.
project • pooitive tmoge ol the University , Involving medio
throughout the W~te:m New York ·area .
"'64. Establish an Office ol Commuter Student Alfotrs to
PfOVide • focal point for the development o1 services ,
ac:tMttes, and programs for the commuter population.
65. Make available to the c:ommuter population a
~te lillq,g ol job opportunities on compuo.
66. Secure add-.al lod&lt;.or
on the Amhe"'
C.mp"' for commu!ln!l students.
67. Wilh the poUntial for tncreued gas prices o!M. the
frustrotlon aooodlhd with llmlled ~lng fadhties, the
ontour.gomoN ol commu.ar cor pools, occomponie!l by a
~ a1 .,.._ntlal porldng spaces for particpants tn
thet lion. II rccm~
68. Spdiod -=urtty or mlint
V«hide• should be

Other Recommendations
·94. That efforts continue to enatNe handicapped
students, faculty, and staff-an important resource-be·
come an integral part of the mainstream of campus life.
· ·95. Appoint a "Traditions" Committee to reView and
consider events that- would ultimately contribute to
University-wide rnoraM. and encouage sodal, re.aeational,

equlpped to assist students and steff when cars are crippled
because of weather conditions.
69. Encourage the development of a strong sports
progrt,_m to serve as a rally;ng point for the many diverse
9")Ups within the University .
. .... w••
•
70. Implement o untvenol and full·tlme Untverilty Guest
Policy for commuters.
·
71. Enclosed ond lighted wolkwoys should be instolled
near parking lots and bus stations.
72. Consider the feasibllity for constructing a centralized
Student Uniori on the AmAefst Campus , even If funding
must be derived from other than Slate resources.

Ac.demlc Opportunl- In CompoiltiYe Fields
53. Creote an Office of Studetrt lnformotlon io coordtnote
and distribute printed materials to assist prospective students
ond undergo-oduates rnoke criticol ocodemtc decisldhs.
54 . Reauttment. admissions, orientation, advisement ,
ond public offoln inlonnotion should Include on oppropriote
di5cusslon of the role of this University Center within SUNY
ond the speclol role of a unlvenity tn oodety .
55. Encourage more .facuby invotvement and cooperation
in recruitment, orientation, and advisement In order to
continue to ottroct the quality ol students U/ B hos
traditionally reautted .
56. Require a personal inventory or questionnaire from
eoch occepted lludent to be used os o bo5l5 for ocodemi&lt;; ond
other advisement.
57. Schedule • University -wide ""MojoB ond Careers
Day" eor!y tn each semester.
58. Encouroge otudents·to develop an offtciol or unoffidol
affiliation and kienti6cation with academic departments or
progroms as eorly os possible.
59. Moke ovollable to .U students the DUE 101
"Freshman Seminor," the EOP "Unlvenity Experience"" or
equ.ivalent courses.

"*"'

-

systemS.

'•

I

82. The f. .slblllty of • COI11Puteitzed lnformotion center
on out-of-class IICfivities should be tnvatlgated .
83. Thot the Office of Cultural Allain ina..,. its
run ol the Magnet to proYide·oufflclent additional copies for

po-e.;.

onct cultural • ..-von.

'"96. Appoint • ''Trodilions" Commlttoe to and
conskler eYents that would ultimately contribure to
University-wide morale and encoun9m:aent of positive
educational endeavors.
• • 97. That necessary measures be taken to-tnsure that
the English-spooking obtlity of faculty (lnqudtng Te~lng
Assistants) is at least at a level so as to be understood by class
members .
''98. Review and re-evaluate the current General
Commencement program to aeate a more meaningful
experience and tradition .
• ·99. Support and encourage action-oriented research
grants to further-the study and ldentification_..of policies and
practices designed to aid In student retenUon .
• ·100. Student support areas , seriously effected by....
severe financial constfaints, should be adequately supported
and maintained In order to remafn effective as retention
agents.
~
• • 10 1. Consideration should be given to the
development of the 500--acre FSA parcel for alternative
land· use planning , to Include recr.-n and education. ·

PaMI..-..
~of the ~- pone! . ., Dr. Rlchonl A.
SiggeB&lt;ow. chUpenon; Pablclo Sober (otudonq • . . . _ , ,

---·United-

I'

Mr. Dona Cowan. ococlen-k - -· 50JCiont Union,
"'-""'' Mrs. Joanne Plunkell. - - . OMolon
of Studont All....; ~to His#&gt;er
E"ducotion; Mr. a..les Brunsl&lt;il, Untwnlty Polco; Mr. ""'""
W. Burke, asstst.nt c:oordinatc:r, Servk:es for che Handbpped1
Ms. Plllr\cla M. Colvon:l. -.nt dean. Faa.lly of·SocloiSdences;
Dr. \Wiiom Conroy • . - , - · Housing; Dr. Thomas
Craine, I"'W executive vice president, D'Vou•. formerly -'stanl
vice p.estdent. academic off- Mr. Erlc Doh""" ( - ! l Y e
of hondkoppod studenlt); Mo-. l.ony A. !JIM.- (commuter
saudentl: Ms. Patricio Gill fMFC saudentl; Mr. Joooph Glavin
lraident student) ; Dr. PelefGold, ac:adenic: program coordinator,
Rochol Conan Col!ege:'Ms. Alyco Gro.oo, Ovil SerW:e represenlo·
t!Ye; Ms. Tent HaD. (__,fTalernltios student--""«);
Dr. Anchow Holt. awoclate dean. Graduate and l'nll-..l
Educattoo; Ms. Venita Jenkins. .......,. lborian. Low l.t&gt;noy;
Mo-. Kflth Johnson. assitlant to tho dean. Continuing Educotion;
Dr. Mld"eel. Mot-.. ........... Modern ~ Dr. John
Milligan . ........... hiaory: Dr. M. Urther.M..-...,, director.
IJnM&gt;rsity Health Service; Ms. I.lnda J . Nennl, director, annual
funds. U!B Foundattoo; Mo-. Thomos Knight. pnsident. l'llor·
Reoldenco Courdl; Dr. Mllton Pleatr. ........... hiaooy; Mo-.
Don Pu1n11m. Jludenl: Dr, Guold R. Rising. [)oponment
of Instruction; Mr. Michael RtYera, assistant to tht dtrectoc..
Adand Reoonls; Ms. Sore R - (studen~ ; Ms.
Kath&lt;yn A. s.wn... awoclate _ , _
clrbl ..........
Doporttnont of Physical Therapy; Mr. 100mos s.-. commuter
Jludont; Dr. c.de Sorith.f'elro. awoclate dean, , . Collogos;
IJr. Ron¥f H. Stoin. to'"the ..-,.., Mr. Gunawan
s.ao-,, lonigo lludent ,_talivo; Ms. Juonb Terrd.
to cholrman. ~ ol l..lngulsdcs; Ms. Michelo
T""'"!"Y. ~ IIUdont ""· Rb
8CACion* odvhor.
DUE; Mo. Dodo - . cia!&lt;. lAw l.bwy; lOw! Mo-.

w-.
"-\Mtpomonn.- -.-·nd--

�•

July$, 1178

'·

-·: . :V,@rkshop to C&amp;Jl~r~ _o~
,children's read1ng

They're as natural as breathing
but getting the message is tough,
U/B c~assicist maintains

--SIIf
By Milt Carlin

Everyone dnsams - It's as net ural as
breathing - but getting the message Is
torllelhlng else, according to a U/B
"dream expart."
Or. Ronald A. Zlrln, sasoclate
prof- of claaalce, believes dreams
are aelt....nt meaaligea which can be
helpful to .an Individual if properly
Interpreted . He quickly adds, however,
that meenlngful interpre\ atlon should
come from the " dreame(' himself or
herself, rather than from outside

aouSc"J:ilflc maearch has established,
Zlrin aeld In an Interview, that everyone ,
dreams about four · or five times while
sleeping eech night , but an Individual
may not remember all of the dreams, or

~:n~~:..:~id. or Important, the
dream • . the more likely it wil l be
-nam8mbered, Zll'ln explained . On the
other hend, he added, " we tend to
forget the things we don't want to
remember.'' ··

Pllnloloalc* -orlng

-. flow c8n you tall whM a person Is
dreaming? tJainV aclentlflc procedures, ·
sleeping ~ can be monltore&lt;i for
vartoua physiological signs, including
rapid eya movement ~Rf:MI - An
electrode on .lht eyel_ld si gnals REM
activity.
t
, ...
" II a pareo~ l ~,!!wakened while In a
rapid eye-movemiiit phase," Zirl n said,
" the peraon _u,uai!Y will confirm that he
or she hsa been dreaming."
There are four or five distinct cycles
during a pareon's sleeping period and
REM "occurs during each , Zlrin related.
The belief that everyone dreams Is
baaed on this type of research , he said,
_,. though the· 'JI&amp;rSOn who falls to
=•~ mlgh\,1nalat there were no_

0nsarn lntarpretatlon Ia hardly new.
At a professor of clsaslcs, ZJrln related
that ancient. 0&lt;.- literature abounda
with atones about dreams thought to be
prophetic meaaages from the Greek
goc1a. Even primitive tribes, he added,
consider certain types of dreams
alanlflcant and requfre the reporting of
"blg dreama" to tribal chiefs.

Nlalti-

Aa everyone knows .. dreams some-times become nightmares.
"Trua nlghtmanas," Zirfn aald, "occur
during deep sleep rather then during
REM, and aenarafly cause the llreemer
tow-uplnapanlc.
·
·
" Recunent nlghtqi818S usually deel
with an Important unsolved problem In
the drealnar'a Uta. •
'
"Anyd- you remember contains a
meaMQ8," Zlrln added. "It tells you
torllelhlng about yo"""'tr."

He ~~=! ·da,:.,.;·:r.
C:::::.
118f*W, formulas for lnterpretetlon.
-

Urnaliatlc end absurd dreams tuCh at an lndlvldua• -lng himself or
herMit living ttvough clouds without
benllllt of-al~ - .._. ...- of the
thinG ttm mytha end fairy tatea
are made Of." Zltln o-..ed. " But these
a1ao deal with baalc human condltlona."
•
Thua, ha polntad out, dreams must
~ conaldared "symbolic" In efforts to

A---,..0.
,1..
.........
• --·

~ br , . o1
l'uloll&lt; A-.; ~ o1 f!!ow

lloltod -

Yorio Gl ...,..._ fdlloria(- . . lo-

..-., ,_,. c.lhfloll.
,_._..._

A~Mw&gt;•

-o«l'uloii&lt;AIIolri
_,_. OoSAHTIS
-

-.....a...~
1

MAaETT

,.,...--

JOYa-:::::::::..JOHN A

aouna

- -.

r-. - -. -

How can aducatons make read lng

more ett.-.ctlva to studenta? lathare anY.

Interpret them . He .conceded, hoWeVer,
that "some dreams are more symbolic
than others."

wfadom In ti'Ook banning and vigilante
ectlont" What abOut the effects of
television viewing on reading?
Thae end other quilstlona will be
explored during a WOI1&lt;Shop, "Teachln~

=l:n~~~~~~~~~~g~~:\.

,.

elementary achOOituchare to dwell too
-lly on whet El!e&lt; ealla. the :•meet
end potatoes" of reading material., He
seld chlldrell need to experience new
and different kinds oJ read_lng - " the
salad and ~ aide dishes;" sa he
putlt.
"Many students do not emerge with a
~ry great dealre to real!," aald Eller,
adding that 1ttelr v6)ullljl . of . reading
"falls off sharply once they leeve
school."
One of the solutions, he noted, Ia to
make fl!edlng more attractive In the first
place. This may help ensure Its
continued enJoyment alter graduation.
The workshop, which Is also being
coordinated by Phyllis L. Schneider, a
U/B lecturer, end Br. Sam Weintraub,
U/B professor of education, will
Include semlnara on the. use of fantsay,
sto/Yielllng sa art, television and Its .
effects on reading, and several
additional discussion topics.

1
JUiy9to27. .
~
The worl&lt;ahop, which will carry ·three
· graduate· credits, Ia designed fbr
Hoa edvlce to the dreamer looking for
• Jeachara, librarians, communication
interP.f'8tatlons is~ to make a conscious
specialists and others who may have an .
effort' to pay a tenlion to dreams and to write down, as soon sa possible, · Interest In elementary reading .
More · then 20 experts f;om educaeverything ) hal can _be remembered
about them.
1
In keeping a log of your dreams, he
according to Dr. William Eller of the
further advised. try to recognize any
·similarities, ahy reoccurrences.,
~~:;'.;,'!_\lg~, E=e~r'a:ean:.!_~~
"These th ings are important to you ,"
coord_lnatons. The format calls for
he emphasized .
·
lectunis, demonstrations, practical
How did a professor of Greek and
applications, panel discussions and a
·
Lati n get into the dream world?
book fair.
In teaching a mythology course, Zlrin
related , he .pointed out to hi s students _
· Partlclpenlt
thjlt my ths were a symbolic form of
Can't- tha lcnatlor t h a Among participants will be Lea
expression . He then asked his studenls
Bannett Hopkins, author and antholto keep track of their dreams to show,
ogist; Dr. Bill Martin, author-Inieachlng - cblldren reading, " Eliar reas he put it, that their own dreams were
residence . at Holt, Rinehart and
"doing for them what myths did for
mar1&lt;ed. " Some teachers are so
concerned with_teaphl ng vocabulary for
~~~g~~~!"r.::h~~u~. ~:!: f~~~
ancient cu ltures.
" A myth Is a dream of society," .he
'Thursday .ihe 2.3rd,' " he addS.:: :~ giving
Buffalo, and VIvian Bennett, editor of
said, " and a dream Is a myth of ana somewhat tongu&amp;-ln-cheek example,
ChlldJen's Choice and- Scholastic
Individual ."
"that they .mlaa the question of why
magazines.
'
. ...
An example of the close Ilea between
kids are Ieeming to reed?"
Bruno Bettelhelm of tha University of
mythology and dreams. Zl rln. said, Is
Eller aald II. le .the content of the
Chicago and author/poet John Ciardi
shown in an ancient Gr:eek relig ious
reili:fli&gt;g end '"ltt.iJ&lt;!amiDg Implications·
will be part of tha worl&lt;ahop sa well.
belief. As the story goes, en alllng
that are the ~e)ill)li)POIIIS for teaching
Both of them are lecturing hare sa part
Greek was ~ pll radv•sed to go to the
,...si~~J!. ancf llOl'j pfQnunclatlorr and
· of the edmlsslon-frae'"SUmmar Forum
Temple of ~§kiep!ua to .sleep: The belief
voCai&gt;U!Jry,, both o¥ wlllch he believes
&amp;~~ries
sponsored b
Educational
-s that tlje God· Askljlpius •would
·
receive l(nd~!' emphasis.
• •
Studies.
communlcatg.to the. sle&lt;lper on what to
Further lnlormatlor&gt;&lt; about the workdo aQ&lt;&gt;ut h' s lllness qr d l s~ase.
•
Sal8cl lind d...ert
shop can be obtained by contectlng
TJ,iere's a temptation on the part of
Eller at 636-2455.
• -·
l'ayfhlc iactor~? ·
·•
- ~rln was reluctant to talk about the
possibility of any ps.ych lc factors· In
dreaming , saying he. neither believed
nor disbelieved In paranormal powers.
On the other hand , he expressed the
belief that dreams deal solely with basic
C1ort&lt; SG,3--{)eneral Oir&gt;cal llenlistry.
FACULTY
Stenographer SG-5--University L.ibrarie,s crs..
human conditions,. such as a person's
"A.aadato Proi....,-'Oral Su-ge&lt;y. F-9057 .
own lifetime experiences, and are " the
Ac&lt;&gt;JOiitions Dept. : l'harmacetJtiC:: School of
Anlstant. .Auoclate, or Full Profenorreflection In that person ot the history
~t : Pharmacy; i.Jlw School; Peroonnel.
~, F -9058. ~
Sr. Typtat ~7-tJnFversity Ubriw'ies; Lock·
of humanity."
wood l..ibr8ry-Aelerence Dept.
RESEARCH
Zi rln 's courses .at UfB' deal 11\alnly
CliniCII Phyaldan SG-344Jniversity Health
Assistant to Dlrectcw (~ - Assist.rr'li}with the ancient cultures of Greece and
Service.
Medical EO.Jcation . R-9021 lhal1·1ime).
Rome. Linguistically, he teaches Greek,
51. SIM&gt;o SG-i---UIW...oty Budge I Office.
· TJIIiat-4'taonax*'oy &amp; Thenlpeutics. R-9020
Latin and Sanskrit , the language of
tport:JiDe).
ancient India.

K~alog

-~= ~Y~r~~:~r.;ufe'~~c:~:~!~~

,o:.~~~~t! \=-~~e~ ~~~=-~~

JOBS

~~u~~,;g;. Po~gl~e~~~te'!:\:~g;

Zlrfn
psychology to better understand
dream world-. _

s T~:o;~s=.. ~~":;~llolned, are
open to the public end usually Include a
general lecture about the phenomenon
of dreaming, guidelines for rememberIng dreams end dlacuaalon Q.f dreams
sa related by partlciPtf\11.
_

.,:~y~n!~n=~~n =:r~~n~n

Zlrin'a office, 636-2329, or the Cliislcs
Department, 636-2154. Somewhat akin
to the -subject of dream Interpretation,
Zirln mused, he wll "get the massege."

Petrie takes
brad postI . Associate Deen Andrew
Roll haa
= h s:,rv~~R,: :~,: l~v~lnce the
'

..C:~·:='ln::::.:.':~1~:'f',!1~'::'1 Ro;
Ketter

aald

Petrie't

paat

::!t'l:co~':n,6~ :,~~~~:~~
School will enable him " to. provldt
:~~~~~~~~~~!.~·~

variety of
Petrla, who holds the Pli.D. from
Purdue end the M.A . end B.A. from

~~ ~!.~~:.;'usrBwl::'lf~!~

aaaoclete proteaaor of apeac:h.
He waa c;halnnan ot the Program In
Speech Communication hare for~

=:'~ona~=~::=-~

L----------~··l""t- - tlon.

NOM-COMPETITIVE CIVIL SERVICE
Vlhicte ()porotar S 0 - 7 - Faclity;
l.ockwoodl..ibr8ry .

(Muolc);
University Ubr8ries CTS-Acqu;sltions """"' lJni.
verslty Ubnlries. ~ ; I.Jniv&lt;nHy Ubraries .
Sdence &amp; ~ ; SOdol Work.
Slonographor SG&lt;I---Poroa-nel.

NOK-COMPETlTIVE CML SERVICE
Molntononce Aaalatonl (Electrician) SG-82 2 0 -.
COWETITIVE CIVIL SERVICE
Typlat SG-3----lJrWe&lt;sty L.lbrao4s CTS-CaiO·

l.b'aries.-

loging Dept. ; ~
Sciences
lltlnvr.--..n;ty l..lbraries (Music Oept. J; University Ubnlries CTS-AcquisUions Dept.; Lock·
wood l..ibr8ry; 5dence &amp; EJ&gt;gineering l..ibr8ry:
Social Work.

Laboo..-~220WWtspear.

Ransotn Is
executive officer
Kevin Ransom haa been appointed
executiw officer of Clifford Furnas
College, effective immediately.
Pending Identification and appointment of a Msater, President Robart L:
Ketter said, f'lansom Will work with the
Board of Fellows, the Deen'a offlcs, and
the studehta of the College In
continuing the furiher devalopment of ·
~'rc~'-denllal end academic ~rogrems

-f3e a patron.

or. Chartes R. Petrie, Jr., of. the
Department of Communications haa
been named ecting_ 114S&lt;tCiate deen ·or
the Division of Graduate and Profesalonal Education , effecOve September

L.

TY!Iiat-'OraiMecic&lt;le .

COMPE"TTTIVE CIYIL SERVICE 1
TYPist ~ Ubnlries

Want to be In a -'tahop?
He also lectures on dreem Interpretation as a member of the U/B ·
S=ars' Bureau end c&lt;inducts work-

bart

- h Clor1t---5ociology.

~ Is

Subscriptions are now available for The Center for Theatre R.....-ch's
1979-1980 season .
A Center P.etron Paso, available for the low prices of $25, entitles the bearer
to a number of banefits at the Center's downtown theatre.
•Gatl!-holdirill patrons and their guests are permitted to ten admissions to
Center productions, both mainstage and In the new cabaret /l ounge openi ng
In Saptemtler. So far, plans Include a revival of Athol Fugard's The faland,
directed by Ed Smith; Eve Merriam's musical The Club directed by Saul Elkin ;
Robert Patrick's Kennedy Chlldf811 directed "by Tom Dooney; an evening of
one ect plays w·•tten by Sa.rnuel Becke\t and Eric Bentley s production of

.lo!d Allrad'~---J
•Canter patrons will recelve Jree edmlsslon to special events at the th eater:
guastiK!urers, seminars, workshop productlons, _classes, and the like.
•A monthly newsletter WIU be senUo patrons describing fu lly producti ons
end events at the Cantar .
•A' s_pecial , . _ . , Hotline wi ll be set up at the Center'• Box . Office.
Patrons can call in to arrange guaranteed t icket reservations end exchanges.
A Cantar Patron Pau will prove valuable for the discount It allows on the
a-ard ticket price end for the number of _frinQI! benefits attached .
.
For further Information write to: Cantar, Patron Paa, 11111 Main Street ,
Buffalo. NY 14203.

�. . .aJ..

EWPOiNrs;~ ~

.,

Jolrit majors better
than Generai .Ed 'fraud'
Editor:
•
. dlaclpllnes, e.g. chemistry and paintWe should face the fact openly that ··
Ing, could be Interesting to the same
this unlv8&lt;81ty Is In a financial crunch.
Individual and could' support each
The state has been tighter because of
oth~r. All people are multi-talented , 1
their financial crunch . . Students have
beheve. We lend taget stuck In one-way
, decided not to commit themselves. to
of Identifying ourselves.
liberal arts majons because of their •
financi al crunch. The quality of
Joint major or college major
•
undergraduate education ·has suffervd
The guideline mignt beihat a student
because ""f lack of money on several
could either take a joint major or major
levels. I th ink that the talk about
In one of the colleges that actively
"general education• while we politely
:::'~:r v!:'t~ul~siR~I~s.o' ,.\:'t"P~f~rron;:try to look away from the -economic
nalure of our problem ~~, Is a pious f raud.
community structure that Is felt, by the
very natur~of the shared concern, to be

to':.:;:~~~~ :!:~~:~~~."!;:'~.'\!:

nol pretend that ~uddenly we feel this
need to give students a real liberal
education by forcing new distribution
raqu lrementa " for their own good" when
the fact is that some dipwtments need
lncroeaed en!l)llments for their own well
being . Again. th is Is nothi ng to be
ashamed of.
Thla unlv8&lt;81ty can find a way to deal
with our problemathat are economic In
origin; -can encourage enrollment In
the Faculty of Arta and Lett8&lt;8 and
really Improve undergraduate education
without m.klng lni"OIIda on academic
freedom . All thilt'a needed Ia the basic
aalf-reapectlng confidence that we can
lind tha 1110at aenalble and morally
aatlalylng cou,.. for ou,..lvea without
any neceaaary refar.nce to what other
unlveraltlea may be plannl.ng In the way
ol "general aducallon.• We will not play
fashionable ~· There Ia a lot at
ataka 'here.

Enlo,...llhere
•
I enjoyed my education here. I believe

that I could not have found anywhere
elsa In the world taacl]era whO turned
out to be as Important to me as Robert
Creeley, Albert Cook, Evelyn Smithson,
and Michael Sltyerman. I )uat carMned
lor .......1 y-. through Eilgllah
COUrHs at linll, and then claaalca
courses and I finally plied up the credits
tor two degfM8. Degree requirements
meant very little to me. I took exactly
whall wanted to almoet avery aemeater
1

~b~~~~~ -rn''t~~o~~J:it·~n~hc~\~ ~~

what cou,... to take Ia, I believe, a
dead hand on Intellectual life and
Inimical to the purpoaaa of education.
A good education has got lo be a
lhlng that _ , , to go on Ita own
power. That Ia, It Ia a record and carof a student constantly casting out and
taking off In new directions, ultimately
~~ ~:;"r,!",!:::,.:~ent's Individual
While departments must milntaln
their own Integrity and stay together on
tormal linea to p1'8Y8nl dilution or
dislortlon of'the tradition, the student
is an interdlaclptlnary cr~~&amp;ture who Is
really working on'deVeloptng hla or her
own sty/a by following alncetelntereats
lha! bear on what the Individual acjually
wants to do. The Interconnectedness
may notbecomeappsrent until alter the
fact, but everyone should have the
freedom to attempt to build hla or her
own Interconnectedness. To me, that Is
what education Ia a~u1.
How about

a_...~?

How about a macro"Tn.iNd'of a micro

==I~~np.:~th~..~:':l:;

sametlmaopenlng up poaalbllltlea fora
real booat In the Intellectual Integrity
and en)oymant ol undergradllate •
education?
The university could lay down a broad
guideline that every atuderit ahould take
a )oint or double major In any two
depart,_ta. Hopefully the Faculty. of
Arta and Letten would lind more
atudenta turning up-with an honest
Int-I In 111-ul'll and languages,
oertalnly a lot mono than they would
lind by te/Ong atud4inta, llka a bunch of
f'I'8PiniOr)' 8CIIooi atudenta in 1812,
·that they muat !W theee cou,.._:Jfor
lllalr-~

aood.''
The joiril majOr Ia ona of the moat
...aul'lll and IUIIatanlial prog,.,a of
atudy. Relat.s eulljecta, ilka illath and

COIIIJII*rE!lollell
-·
lea
and
hiatory,
and FJWnclt,
Engllah
and~. tiiOIOIW and pllplca, etc.,
reflect 110111 on eecJi other and develop

.... otllilr .......................
At 1M frontier of ~. lila
~--..._, dleclpllnea
...

-~~~--. -~

Ultl'lllatad

Argyte StrMt bend: n Summerfeet, Fricley.

n~=~s [o ~~er~t d~.:~~~~~~·s
0

8

Studies College more than any other
offers students a chance to get a real
liberal education and at the same time
have It add up to somet hing personally
meani ngful .. They can approach practically any area of life · along the
productive lines of lnqulry:llow do
women fit Into this -picture? A Black

~:::~;r!n~~~1:. t,::,aJ ..?f~~h~.~~~

under one roof and · at. the same time
could QOalesce with the Bleck Student
Union would provide place for an
academic and polltic;al center and
answer a real need among students
whose college educations would
benefit from community organization .
I would have liked to major In a Judaic
Studies College, II there were some
substantial JSC that croaa-llsted with
all the llten~tu re , claaslca, relig ious ,
language, history, etc., courses that
have a close or remote bearing on
Jewish Identity and culture.
The university should set up these
colleges, BSC and JSC, for which there
Is a demonstrable felt need and
enCourage students to come up with
ideas for other new colleges. At the

~e ~e~~ ~:r,~,e~:~~~~~nJ,

have to cross-list with more department
courses and draw up baccalaureate
programs with a high number of
department courses required. There
should be a wide enough cholca of
courses In any college for a student to
be free to use his or her discreti on to
follow his or her Interests exactly,
choosing smorgasbord style every
semester.
It would raduce attrttlon
Real and honest improvements would
reduce attrition and attract more
transfer students. We could respon d to
economic pressures by actually lmprov-

in~':~1du~I~~~:Trsity

On exhibit will .,.; the works ~I iocal
B If I rt ' I . ddltl I
It
f
u a. o a ts ~ · m a
on o po ery o
the kmd U/ B s Creative Craft Center Is
known for. For those who become
I nspired by !'II of this artwork, chalk will
be distributed for the creation of a giant
sidewalk art mural
- ·
__Refreshing cold on tap will be
sold for only 25c and proof of age. But
most Importantly, says UUAB, "while
you 're there:. relax and partake In all the
excitement!
Ralndates are the following two
Fridays , July 13, and July 20.

conversation leaders -.d

(tn&gt;m - ·· eolC)

tt1e Albright-Knox Art Galie&lt;yj . 8 p .m. Free .
Sponaored by the Center tor Theatre Research

- - o f -.

tutas.

Learn how you
can eam ex1ra money or a-edt tNs SOO'Im8f' by
calling 1-«t at 63fr2079 between 3 m 5 p .m .
.and evenings at ~3382.

SOWER POETRY FESTlVAL •

ARMhn HoUo .-ld Anan .Kornblum: poetry
r&amp;Qng. C38 Clemons. 8-9:30 p .m. Free.
Y0&lt;610 pool Ko.--.n is tt1e . , . - end
printer at Toothpaste Press i1 West Bninch,
Iowa.
UUABALM•
Melin str..ts (Scorsese. 1973). Conference
TheaD'e. Squire Call 636-2919 lor show times
GeneralaD"rission , $2; students $1 .50
Robet1 DeNiro, Harvey Keitel . Cesare Oonova
in e typically dc7Mlbea1 Scorsese view of trfe
il tt1e Big aty - New Yor1&lt;'s Uttle ....,.. Voolenl .
beautif\J , pf'OYOCatiYe.

Exhibits
HAHI)(X)LORED PHOTOGRAPHS
. Stophonlo T - AJsi:J wor1&lt;s by LP. Lundy.
Aia'no GaDety. 8edl Hal , Mail Streel Carr,lus .

:::0 ::"~~.1~:·= :":
llepartmenl at Art .

On The Air
Conver1111tlona In the Arts: Esther Harrion
interviews Oindi l.idge, dancer. Courier Cab6e

JCI\annel101'. 7 p .m .•

TUTORING PROGRAM
Summer ho•xs:_ Mondays end
1·4 p.m ; T1·n~ Mel lhl.rsdays, 1·9 p.m.:
Fridays, i \, I ·•' 108·109 W*eson Ouad,
Elicott C.r-r&gt;;'e&gt;.. Amherst

w -.

-~::.c:;~o';~~:

"unmatrlculated graduate student"/
college bum

CONFERENL ~ IN THE DISCIPUNES II
lmmunO"''
istry of HMne Proteins. F.J1:&gt;er
26. July 6, ~- p .m.; July 7. 9 · 12 . noon .
• Sponsored by ""' llepartmenl at Biochemistry.
Caltt1e-tlorde-.

Music story·
irked reaaer

HEALTH CARE OPEN HOUSES
The Helith Care PW1 has SChecUed a series
of ....... houses" ao !!"* Medic:ar'CI!nler. 120
G.oenvlle-. West . ~. during
tt Sl..m'n8r. New state ~ ~re invited
to bring their , _ 10 tt1e Medic:ll Canlef
tor a 1011 and to have their questions a'l8W81'8d.
Tho lollowilg is tt1e Medic:ll Canler's Open..
House ~ : ~ - IIYough August
29. 5;30 p .m.·8 p.m.

Editor:
.
I was offended by tha article by John
Thurston In the June 28th edl tlon of the
Summer Reporter. " Pop Music: Does it
lead to drugs &amp; sex?" was, I feel , a
rtdlc~lous, sensetlonalist article that
11pread a self-righteousness among this
University's "holier-than-thou " commul}ity segment.
Of course, history lends a history of
rid iculous judgements on artistic
forms . The _ twenties called the
"Bieckbottorn" and the " sh immy''

NEWMAN CEHTEJI ~MASS SCHEDULE

t.._.11

Moln -~ Sinlay. ~Cenlat
(3233 Mail SLi. 9:30a.m. end
a.m.: -

een""

loose.

The waltz waa considered Immoralbecause the man held the woman

:Z~I!.~.:'e':'e:::..::s'!e In~~~. on,

-l'llcoi~ez.~'&amp;l'r::;

frisbee
dem~tratlons ,
volleyball
games, mime plllsentatlons and the
~~~~~~~ of the movie, "The American

•Calendar

COUEGE OF MA THEliAneAL SCIENCES

students Implicated In the " general
education" program?
I Invite discussion and criticism of
my suggestions.

uee. My quarrel Ia wltll your "yellow
joumaiiam" approach, that'ln this caae,
Is anti-art and philistine in nature.

(UUA!I) and Squire-Amherst Divisions
of Sub-Board I, Inc.
Non-stop, live music will beoin with
the l ively reggae beat of "tlahama
Mam • 1 1:30
"A 1 S
~ a
·
p ..m .
fg.Y e treetband
follows With orJgmal tunes
rangmg from folksy blues to country
rock. As the evening arrives, 811;.. wi ll
Bing of Pain's" explosion thrOli'iffi..a....-satile repertoire which haa been
known to get the crowd jumping 10
sonos ot such groups as CSN , the
.
Stones. and Talking HeadS:
There are a numbeF of scheduled
activities throughout the day, Including

Notices

:!t',~flo:~~;,"a)~rs ~~f!'::H~ m~~'l[s ~

I hope you -llzti that I am not

e~lv~~s~ty St~~~~~ ~~~1:r~~on ,Bo~~~

JULYS

full of students

::!'~~a~o;~Drtrav~tz;:,::=~

Summertest Friday
A campus-wide "Summerfest ," Friday, July 6, Is bemg jointly sponsored

deya, Newnwn
Fals BIYd. '
Mai1 St.), 11.45 ~.m.
· ~ ,.,.,.., Center. Frontier
Rd. neer Elioott, 10:30 •.rn. end 1.2 noon
(9.Jndoy): 8 a.m. end 12 noon (weel&lt;dlysl :
6 p.m,-(Soturdoy VogiiMeoo~

~a:-~wo:: 10 ~ il a

·

poychoiOgy

e - . 1 " ............ - 1 of

sa w01 be poid 1or your porticipllion. we ••
1'1 need of both men n:1 wornin k) tlke part

"tho- •more~.

·""

831 -1386101'

~~::a'English LJnguoge lnstli.1e needs

JULY&amp;

•

AM BuffeJo: Dr. L..eonatd A. Kett, associate
dean. Md other members of the School of
Medicine IBCI.Aty and staff, ..Whal's New in
Health Care· Taile Belter Care of Yoonelf."

WKBW·1VIQ\annel7). 10a.m.
AJso D&lt;. K . . - Condtol~ dinicol -IWll
professor of ,.,.aiatry. ''Chid Aeoring end tt1e
PrOOiems of G"owlng Up .••
JULY&amp;
Con v~

ikwts in the Arts: Esther Hlw11ott

illeMews Dincf Udge. JCI\annel10j. 6 :30p.m .

·

eo...-

Callie

JULY7

c-.111 Hlghllghlo: JoHph Y. F Ph.D . . . . -. ~ofEiigloh_ . . , _
fiction. WBEN·FM j 102.5). 5-7 a.m.
.a,tLYI
•
er-toltl M: JoHph Y. F - l o , Ph.D.
c:andidete. Deponmenl of English • .., ldonco .
lic:tion. WilEN j930j. 11 :05 p .m.

JULYI

. c-u-.

In tho Am:

Es-

Hoorioll

naticnol Callie JCI\annel1 Oj. 6 p.m .
'"-~-.---.
Inter·

JULY 10
.t.M -.to: Cothorine G. Anoulnl, Ph.D.

Candidole , Heol1h Sdonces• .., pl)yoic:ol WKBW·lV-(Ciwlnol7). 10a.m.

·

~ In lho Esther ..,..,..,.. ...... pool. Caxlo&lt; Callie
(Ctwv1el10j . 6 30p m.

eon---.

JULY 12 •

lnleMowS
1 ~7p m -

In ""' Am: Esther
-

-rt

• · Courier Callie (Ctwmol

�/
July 5, 11111

.Comedy of Errors
Then mixed·up twine are the tocua of
zany mix-upo In Shak-_re's 'The
Comedy 6t Errors.' .o~ng Tu-y In

,ololewere Park.

•

CALENDAR

=~~====

Tbursday-.. 5

Frlday~6

. . -iooElllv FESTlVAL.•

SUMMER POETRY FESTlVAl.'

- -' """" office rou-. 436 Cle·
mana. 10..1ta.m. Free.
Sllllord. profesoor of .English et ,_..... a1d
Cla1t. won the National Book AwenJ in 1963 tor

...-.

his "*&lt;! vo11.me o1 ooetry. T.-lng Through

COUEQES._ PROGRAM SPEAKER

eo-..

a._,
noted anthropologist a1d
· w11 opend part ol his \liSt to 11)0 Western
New YQI'1( .-ee at U/B. At 10:30 a.m. he will
present _. address on ' 'Contexts ~ the FM'IIy. •·
This Ill&lt; Is open to .. in. the T_, • llinhg
- .· The _ ......_part of the Colleges'

summer Pf't9'M1 on lhe

,_.,.y_

Bllteeon, in adcfton to his field WCW'k with

tnx~~1~:~.opel1~
.
.

DePARTMENT OF MANAGEMENT SCIENCE &amp;
SYSTEMSSBIINARII
•
I
Tolal Unf.-.lalfty, Prof..,.,. Klaus T -.
lJnlven;fty of Te"'!S ·et Dalas,. rnosentty at -the
lJnlven;fty of Waterloo. 114 Crosby. t p.m.

SUMMEJWEST*
. ,'
Picnic with music, food , demonstrations and
- "· S q u i r e - Area. MaioSin!et Ca-noos.
1:30-9 p .m. Free. except for food. 5ponsclt-~
by the Student Association. UUAB, ~ire/Am ·
he&lt;st Divisions of Sub-lloerd I. Inc .
SUMMER POETRY FESnY Al. •
Gerald Stem and Mlirt Rudman: poE!try reading. 438Ctemens. 3-4 :30p.m. Free. _

his oonducted
finot - · oward-wiming
anthropologist, .hoe
_ ,. 00 Mood.
ochiz·
optwaU. This 'NOI'k was based on .his observa·
tions .., IWl8lyals o1 ve1eno1s suffering from

... ~--

CEll&amp; MOLECULAR BIOlOGY SEMINAR*
Func:Uonel Properties of the Acetyfc.holine
Racaptor Protein From r'orpodo, ~- Jean Pkorre
~- Depo&lt;tment ol """""""" Biology. The

EnQI;oh bom a1d - e d . Bateson hOs taught

=--~~~~c:=

Pastels lnstitute, - Pwis. 114 , Hochstetter. 4 :15

su.ER POETRY FUnvAl. •

WABFilJII•
111a "-'can Friend (W. a..nn..Y. 1977).
COOl......,. Thet!lte. Squire. C8ll 636-2919 lor
show. times. General 8tdrrission $2 ; students
$1 .50.

the UniYaoity ol California .. Santa Cruz .
He 1o now profesoor emeritus of the UniYaoity
of Colifomia et Cruz • .., . . . - on the
Wool eo-1. One ol his bool&lt;s, Ecology ol Mind,
197~ . domonstrwled his nUtiple_.interests. com.t&gt;nng poychology- ant!Ycpology.

-

Ft,dorick __ ., """"
Clemena. 11 a.m.-(lOOn. Free.

p.m. Coffee at 4 .

office hour. 427

.mer..-

The &amp;.mner Poo4ry Festival ...,. ..,ti July
11th
of the Engtisl\ Department's
a- Qlair, 5UITrner Sessions - Poets and

· W:::~ed

for hts ..sWeet tyricism" Cs

. fesoor of Englsh, Univ&lt;tsity of -

a-coo.

Satbrday-7

- Ct1icogo

,.- . AntidpotiM ol Night (Bnlkhoge) ; Way 'to
~ Gar*n; Flosh ol M«nnng (Menkeo) .
214 · 2:30p.m. ~ed by the Cente&lt;

-·

•

cru."a. MOI.£CUlAllBIOlOGY

WOITBlhOo&lt;t, army · the "'""lily ot
marriage. Wf!l fnCJ'Vies, or the great AnWican
institution of tootbal ."
Oonakj Suther1and~ Eliott Gould , Sally Keller·

\.llllrahnin; an trofl..Contalnlng, Purple GlycoP"C*ln tnduc.d br ·~ In the Porcine

~ UWuo,

Or. R.

Michael-· ~~

of

B;ochemislry, ~ty of l'lorida. 114 Hoch·
&amp;tetter. 4: 15p.m.

a.MIIER POETRY rESTIVAL·
Wllllom StaHord, Raymond
- . . , llorO Rudmao: -

man.
FILM'

s - Boot p 936) . , . ...,.. version
o1 ~the Jerome Keffi..()scw HMwnerstein favorite.
with Helen. Morgan. Irene Oume and Paul Robe·
son. Buf1alo &amp; EOe CU...ty HislOfic8l SOciety.

I

Pattanon, Gerald
&lt;bcussioo I.

322 Ciomons. 6:30-9:40 p.m. Free.
Is dinlctor of Eb::k Poets Readmg

Pa..,._

8p.m. Admission $1 .50.
~.. by~ Study/Buffalo.

i'K:•• lind author of Twenty-six . Way a ol Loc*lng
M •lleolt Man.
Will non*-led for the 1978 National
Book Cri6cs Ci'cle AWlVd for hie most recent
book of poems, luCI&lt;y life.
_ . . , ... )'OU!lC..,..-&lt;ritic.

s..n

-

Sunday-S,
ntRD ANNUAL CHICKEN BAR-8-QUE•
Ne-Mnan Chapel, Fronber Road. 1· 5 p'lll. 'richiokan, $3.50: $2 Jor dlldn&gt;n A hMdcratted
atghali wit be raffled:' plus ot!1ef .prizes Sponso&lt;ed by the CathoiC Ca-npos Ministry

U Qrldo (NIIcri&lt;&gt;nll. 146 Oiof..-.. 7 p.m
Sponsored by tlleCenoerlot Media Study

w,:'!!.,.. F- w Gennony, 19~.

UUA!IALM•

Conference - ·· Squire. Cal 636-2919 for
· $1
- .50.-

- --

-

$2; . , _ ,..
- . . , Friend ,_ a complex $rYiine
~., ordintoy Homtug
becomes-

..-.who

'

til·).·s·w (Aitmtll, 1970). vo MFAC. 9oott.

Cal 636-2919 lor show tines. General adrrisslon $2; .,_,,. $1 .50.

~becomes ...........
atars

Darris-

.

Monday---9
ALMS•

Younv
A-

Mr. LlnC&lt;IIn (Fonl, 1939); Man With
c-. (VOI1ool) . 146 Diefendort. 7

p.m. ~bytheCant..-tor-SWdy.

..................
leer:.,_.., lo--...._..
...............................
__ ........._.............
...........
To ... -

lit._ "Ceeiond.,• cd

....... liiiiNM ..........; "Op8n

..... lllllllc; ··~· ......... . .
~

=.:~·d

SUMMER POETRY FESnV AL •
lrYing Fetdman: poetry reading. 438 Clemens.
3~ p.m. Free.
F"~,ts a JX&gt;PU1ar UIB·based poet .

mens. 6:30-8 p.m. Free.
WICkert. COOf'dinator ol the Festival . is another
Uf8-based poet and p-ofessor

SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK• •
Tho Comedy of Errora, di&lt;eded by Saul
. Bkin . Delaware Ptrt. near Rose Garden (behind
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery). 8 p .m . Free.
Sponsored by the Center for Theatre Aese¥Ch
and ()epertmenl ol Theatre.
Bring something to sit on.

FlFTH ANNUAL ITHACA VIDEO FESTIVAL •
This tOlling eXhibition present;s a selection of
the finest independent video produced in the u.s.
It Is a progra-n of Ithaca VIdeo rro;ects, an
independent non-pnjfl1 media ~ cent8f.
The 20 tapes which are P8r1 of this year's
Festival were selected by a penal of national
experts . The festival tapes, neMy 4 Yi hOI.n in
total ~th. w-e being presented as two prognms.
Each prognwn wiU be sho'Ml twice - once at
Media Study1Buf1alo (MSIB) and once al UIB.
Program 1: Juty 10, 8 p.m., MSJB. 207
OeAawa-e: ..k.iy 18, 8 p.m .• 106 O'Bri8n, UfB.
Progr~~m II: Ju+y 11 , 8 p.m • MS/8 , 20 7
Detawa-8; July 17, 8 p m . 17G MFAC , Bfi.

SUMMER POETRY FESnVAL •
David Jgnatow, Vlrgtnla Terris, Anselm Hollo

=~ ::~~~~cfiseussion. 438
Hoao is 8 Am who teaches at SNeet 8r\ar.
an ava-t1e garde music·poetty exPerimentalist.

Th~y-t2 .
SUMMER POFmY FESnVAL •
John Frederick Nlma: open office holn. 427

Oemens 10 a.m. -noon. Free.
SUMMER POETRY FESnVAL •
Anselm HoUo and Martt Rudman: open office
4360emens 10.1Ja.m. Free.

con.
SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK"

roour

The Comedy of Errors, directed by Saul
Elkin De&amp;aw..-e Pcwtt, near Rose Garden. (behind
the Atbright-Knox 1vt Gallery). 8 p .m. Free . Spon.
sored by the Center for Theatre ReseMch and

SUMMER POETRY FESnVAL •
Max Wickert poetry readng. 438 OSmens .
3-4 p .m. Free.

[)epartment of Theatre.

the

---rock

a1d COUllry.

COI.l82 ..FIIJI•

In tho 1110'1, Hormgton,
"'"'-of odonco, ~ Cologo,
City UniYaoity of v...: - {Moo!) Cout·
roctn, O'Brian - · ,__.,_ 10 a.m. ~-

Blloll &lt;lould and 6:30p.m.
oft·llroodoooy-

Squire.
-·a -~.
.g
-.......--O*&gt;anoquoly...,._..,.._

am.·OOCI'l . Free.

SUMMER POETRY FESnVAL •
O.rid ~natow and VJrglnla T-::..-rls: poetry
reading. 438 Clemens. 8 .30-9:30 p.m Free
lgnatow wmes moving verse which oertectly
capti.Kes contemporary urban ftfe Terris became
aputxished poet in 1976. at age 59.

FES~FOAUM•

· COnloronce

hOUr. 436 aemens. 11

SUMMER POETRY FESnVAL'
John· Frederick Nlms: BuHer Chair Lecture
II . 4380emen
~ Free.

~loo-foW!y-aiU/8.

.... - . -

SUMMER POETRY FESTIVAL.
Oarid lgnatow and VIrginia Terris: open office

' FILMS•
_
PIOITO! lo Fou (Clnemascope. 1965) (Godard) ;
Two or Three Things I Know About Her. Con·
terence '{heatre, Squire 7 p m $Jx&gt;nsored by the
Center tor~ Study.

Wednesday- t 1

-

Pov:%,.

been .,....-Amarica's toremost social·
ist, and his l::loc:*s have been translated Into more
than a dozen languages.

tVna-.

Do-rid
Vlrglnll Tents, Jolwl F Nims, Mu. Wickert Butk!r Seminar II. 322 Qe.

THE COlLEGES PfiESEHT AliON
Whr ,.. WeStern lndustrtiJ Cuttur• •re
Hung Up.., !he Family, Edgar Z. ~ .
~ of educahon. llalhooSie UniYerotly,
- · - . Scotio. author of Vanlalllftlland CCiming d Ago In - . T_,
Dining Rtlom. 1:30-3 p.m. Thill Is
of Tho
Colltoges 1979 prog~~m on the fimty. l'lofessor

'*'

Harrington is a ·noted politicai-&amp;Cientist whose
rne&lt;esls have rWlQOd from . . . . . . - - in the
Cc:wntTlttee for 8 Sane Nudear Policy to a study
ot - l i n g 1n the enlerlainmant indUstry.
His ..dume, T11a Other "-'&lt;:a, has been
widelY credited wittt ~ Pn!sident Jolwl F.
Kennedy's attention to the iSsue of poverty.
Hanington, cllailman of the Democratic Soclaflst
Organiz1ng Committee, has long been active_In
Rberal and trade union causes . serving as a mumbe&lt; ot Dr. Martin L.ut!1ef King Jr.'s advisory
convnittee in the 1960s, and as 8 member of
President Lyndon 8 . Johnson's Task Force on

FILM•
L'A,_tura (1960, ~ - 146 Oiof..-t .
7 p .m. Sponsored by the Center for W. Jdia
Study.

Everyone's fao.oorite St.mner enter1ainment opens
tonight . Director Saul EJkin has given this Shakes·
pea-e c:omecty !OUChes of the contfM'11)0f'ally and
the Bizabetnan He's added 8 group of roving
zanies to speed up the action . '
Ray l.esk!e's always smashing score will b&amp;end

. . - - . , . . . . _ . ol ~ rw&gt;gongfrom
fc-.ger lo 8 pomo ffrrmaker. a"ld who

... *"

Tuesday-- 10

SUMMER POETRY FESnVAL •

UUABALM•
M•A•s•H' (Aitmen, 1970) E5ccll 170 WFAC.
Call 636-2919 tor shooN times. General adrrisaton $2; students $1 .50.
nme put it this 'Wfr'/: "tf . rhe Marx Brothers
were all stiD aroUnd and an audacious saiptv.'liter had dr,ssed them in white SU'Qical uniforms and set them near the front in Korea
dt.ring the wt:r and told them to n..r1 amok, the
results would have pr~y tlmed out something lil&lt;e this saucy. outrageous. lrreverant fdm
Nothing is sacred: not n)Bdical Stfgery. chastity,

~

FIUIS·

lotMedioStudy.

The film -~ as .., important doament of
the violence~ New YIJI'1( scene. 5ld what
t1.n1s the average citizen from apathy to militancy .

ALMS•
Vompyr (Dreyer); stagOcoach (Ford) . 146

Oiof..-t. 7 p.m. ~ by the Cenler for

~-Jolw&gt;Wayna'a,....blg-:

· 2 p.m. ~ by tho
F . . - r o f - -. •

•

tNOEPENOEHT AL-AKERS SERtes•
Screenings by Women/Arti~. -tnc .,
assoctab created to promote lnterest in
lim made by """""" artista. 207 Oellware
Ave. 8 p ,m . $xinaored by the Center for Media
Study and Media Study/Buffalo.

an

MFA RECITAL •

Paul-.--·
_,Freo.
by the oep.tmanl of
Hojf.

-.-.-- --

8 p,m,

~ed

Music.

SUMlER POETRY FEsnvAL •

......

and 111u Butler Seminar Ill. 322
c:oe.-.
6:30-8 p.m. Free.
-

~IN TIE PAM•

• Comody d Emn, by I*"
9dn.-.Par1&lt;,.---(.
·--~~·,...7.oaLI

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                    <text>-1
flt I STING; AOA[)oW.YS
UNDER &lt;OHSTl!UCTION

·Roadwork: campus snarls·mean progress Bolli the .......,_then-ueual traffic
arwta thaf h - been dewiloplna 81 the
In-loll of !Qple end Mllleraport
thla week and ·the lntermlllllble _,,for
e left tum off Millersport , onto
Auelspurger Ro.d .,. symptoms of
::S~J c:emJ!,Ua p,.,nera h - _as-

so-.,. the arwta and

lncorwenlencea

~ by construction et Main and

BeileY end on the front lawn of the Main
Straet campua.
None of 1'- projects Is the work ol
the Unlvwalty lteelf or of the Stele
Unlvwalty Conatructlon Fund . Two ere
Depertment of Transportation (DOT}
road building efforts, end the thlrd Ia
· under the jurtedlctlon of the Niagara
Frontt• Tranllit fluthorfty (NFTA).
The roadWOrk et Am'*al J111P_,t~
the final ateae. of conatructlon on the
1*J1181*1I 'Millersport H lghway relocetlon. The! "'--or route Ia being
redi1'8Cted around the periphery of the

c:empua.

-

Aa the eccornpenylng dl.....
allows, tile .., _ . MIU-.por~~n be a

,.....bed

==
;:r:-

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

underway within a year or ao with the
Mlll&amp;nlport-M&amp;ple lnt.aectlon work
comi ng along j uat a bit lat•:
Two separate projeCts ere underway
at Main Street:
·
/

A •.1.-.ay left'

Mr. Frank Sullivan of the Stele
University Construction Fund field
office on campus estimates that et the
rate work Ia now dewloplng, ~

The ffrst Is a so-called "Jersey left"
sysiem which will eliminate backups

said Sullivan, If It's not finished by the
time the snow seta In this fall, It won't

north on Main which wants to tum left
onto &amp;alley will ,.... right off Main. At .
the Intersection of the new lad end
Salley will be a traffic. light synchronized with the existing Main-Salley
light. Thla will gl¥8 traffic a free left
onto Beiley and speed It through the
Maln-Beil8y lnt.--:tlon.

l:~~,:~~~h=d J:'~t,t=.lnR

:t=t.!:'
1t:, f~~~ f'd et date f"J ::!.,:: =:, ~bel~ con,.:-:
completion Is March 15~ ·111110, but,
campus P8rklng lot. T.':T,Ic ~
~=r :'.::.'ta~:llnt!\.netM.f~u!ln:~
To speed up work on the road surface,
the conti'8Ctor hea established a
concrete belch plant on campus
property,_ the road building site.
Until the new road Ia open, and the
final version of the Coventry entrance Ia

~~Jl=~~ ~m~n="':.=

u•

to the 'campus tum left et Maple Road
_ 8lld
the F11nt Entranoe oft !Qple.
Tumlng left acn&gt;aa traffic from
of
Mlll-.port onto the *"flOIWY Aljgajuat north
end then '
purger • A-' . Ia all ~
north ,to ...,ld the
Ia p8lh will liM It under the
lmpoealbla
It traffic
will beoorne
.one
wMn -tlle!Miavy
fall
beglna _
under oon8lluollon on
ln.Sepl.n*.
Augspurger A-' end

:'!r,:.:= J:"=
ol....,._the~:
'-II -

-'menta and the Am'*al Recreation
Cent•. (Thlala ecttially a portion of the
-current Millersport rOad bed~ ) Other
aectlons of the current Millersport will
become campus roadways.
-

.... t o _

:

You might think once the

.- ~

=~~ A:;::-Wtllu:
ower. You'd be WIOflll. 81111 to come Ia a

major -otr-1"11 of the MH-.portIQple ln-..ctlon (one will be etewaled
fC4IUa ....... ,..... than acn&gt;aa, the
other). In addition, the llrat link of the
~
wtll llwohe a
dti'8Ct on/off IWftP ·In 1M ~
- o f the~ aoulll of . . . .
Home High ~. ihi8 wtll llflll'lde.a
~lon t o - fnlm the YOUIIIII*In
.... the Loc:*port ~. Finally,
Audubon ......., wilt be ......,.,
~ Ita ~ ln-..ction wtth
FtoMler A-' (Jual of Ellloott)

e-

Elltoott C... WIUI· thla oonnactlon It . . be .,_tbla -to drM
ham the C M i p l a - the c:r.tt Into
the Auchlllon ...,. Community or onto
North ' - "'-1. Two. of theee
additional lad projecta ahould be

Farther down Main Street, the
NFTA's Rapid Transit project has
claimed the former AbbQtl Lot and · a
~lo,n of the campus lawn. Main Circle

south~ = '8f'~• =w.:~ t~

1

11

compensate for _the lose of the :{j,bott
Lot, the NF'f~ - hat conetructed a
two-tier parking lot east of the Beird Lot
just north of the old A~tt fae~lty.
Tunneling wll begllj.A huge wooden bwr8cade Ia now
being .ectad IIIOUnd the form. Abbott
Lot and the lawn . . . NFTA will be
using. According to Sunday's BUffalo
News, work will Degln August 1 on the
flrat work ahef1 for IUbway construe- -

~~.'::"v.:=at ~7

~~

·-·-·-2,-4

::.'ll!ron
Will literally chew their way 7300 f•t

AAUW sa1utesWB
for·aiding women:U/8 today '{T~Inday • .luna 28, 1878)
one of only five. Wl'-'ltlaa In tile
country to ..-t.. en - . 1 ham the
Amartcan Auocl811on • of Unlvwalty
Woe'*~ (MUW) for lmpiowlng 8CJIIIty
for _ , In higher -.ciUC8111on. The
made f$urfng the
AAI/W Nallonal eor-1on being held.
1111a..-1n ~.New Mexico.
Pllyllla Kelly of U/8'a Comn)unlty
Advtaory CCiuiiCII Ita corpor.~ to AN.M, wtll accept the
...nt 81 .a beiiQual being held In the

.,._.ton -

~~

o.m.r.

Dr. M. c.lola a-,~ to the
~IW W. .......... 811C1 U/B .....,.. tor the honor prl-'1)'
- - - of

Ita

hftllllr _ , . . .

Wof'*l'a 8tudlaa ......,.._

--'lad

In pubtlahlng 81\d
a- adclad.
She eald olhW llll8ftllllee of tnettt...
tlonel " support for' '""'*'• euch •
ln'IIOiwmant In '!be U/8 Council, fumiallad to tile - . 1 alectlon
committee u wall. U/8'a Untwr.ll)':
wlda Affimlaltwe Action eo-.tnaa and
Ita g u - Ngardlna .-dl ~
dina ~ crtl8ila .....ead fir AAIJW, --.!Ina to S...
·
.
A national AAf1N ~ plalned th81a.atudy of 100 oollagea and
Wl'-wltlaa oonductacl to ...,_
mlna tile
of'""'*' on Amartcan
Cllinpu-. Some PfOIII'8M has ~
....... the atudy fqund, but lawiP8Ciflo
Studies-has

ot~ achofarly ~Ita.

-ua

ctwiQM. . _ actually taken .,....

l'lrat.....

s=-,Ui

.

Aa a ..wt ol the survey, -atng to
the 11101
Ribbon T...
, _ for . , . _ . .
!tY - formaci
to auifVeat aotlon
could 11M to
-aos greaetr•ty f o r - In
higher education. The national awarda -

-·-.·-2,-4

�•AA.UW

VIE

~-1 , c:GI4)

'Any way you slice It, w~ lose,'
Management prof says~of U~P contra~t .
EDITOII'S NOTE: Allor . - . , . collo

- - _ , . . , . ttw -u.e
--ttw -

=::'::'':

~~· ~octS::

":..,. ~-- opMk to

-

•

118 , . . - -• .....,.., n IIIeY _ .. 10
_,_ta.O..AMWifomlMScbool
o1 . . . . . . , _ t _ . s llbflt W-leln.
11 1 UUP'"'-bor.

w...-.

• • •

•

"Anyway you alice II, !he only effect

o1 the contract Ia to guarantee that, In
the aggnagate, SUNV .employees will
auHer
d
1 real Income "

oonct~ ~et':..teln,

assistant

=~ .:J:.M=r,::"'~la~~!1 ':,~

the pact which were reoenily eent to

... ton "*"bera.

To m...-e hla paint, Welnateln
ueed an el!81T'Pie of a hypothetical
~ who cumontly groaaa $1,000
- Mfcj-'od . The aum was picked for
~
If the union negotiated
contract almply to protact
tltla'lndfilldUII from Inflation, Welnateln.
the em~ would hew to_.,
000 Jen•_, 11171 dolten over the
,_. 71 PIIY-.,.lotoda. Jan...-y 11178 Ia
Iliad • the ...,__ IM!e bacauae It
... the m~t of the tat contrKI
~
AUuintna Inflation runa e con~ II
per a.tt from July 1, 11178 to September
30, 11182, Weinatetn ftgu- that with
the lltOI)Oeed raJaM the employee will
, - . . · only ebOUt $70,11110 In 1871
doll. . . "'n other worda, ~ three

:;;;;,g.
attV--

:;r.:

• t(!! 8.!'!'!8lioaa,_!(lyieed

Wetnat~l~.

T:
reason Is that not only do e err
dollars lose value In an lnflallonary
environment, but employees also 1~
from not having the mon~y In han
despite the. fa.;t that theyandve a 1read~
earned it. II cant be banked
t can
be Invested ; employees have no C\)ntro 1
• over l t .
Another factor worthy of conalderalion, Weinstein said, Is that while salary
Incrementa continue to push employees
1 1 higher 1
brackets and force
nheom to pey ::,~~oney In taxes, their
1

1

rA~ ~':.::'~~p';t'l.:i':fe~~~"'lr~~

..ttnp, the contract found In the UUP

~~light Sta~t, 8 ~lend~l~
:::da ~~';"$20~S2~ J~~Y of 1982,
after ralees. Regarding thla example,
Weinstein cautioned: "At no point
durlnt the life of thla contract would
..... ally
leal
this ypothet
amp1oyee _ ,u

=~·'=="~.':':f'd!j~\.:";:l

chu~k of the added compensation for

come until th- months
11182 won't
·
f the
1~ •
after the exptrat 1on
con ·-··

°

NoWh'rlght'atlttoallebolxpactla __..n to la .that the
union allould hew held out for more
money, right? Not quite, saya Welnateln.
"It Ia not a1 all clear that fculty or
ataff have a right to expect to get
pR&gt;tacted from Inflation. Aftet all, If the

=:-to':.
~~'--~~ve"':'!=: :!r.f :!.}':f...~~~.,:.~:
-made In Jan'*)' 11178."
ree8on to believe that this should be the

:'~~.ft}~~~ =~se~~~f~~e~
1 rewarding non-llf04uctlve Inspen
w lnsteln said there Is less
~~r~~·ke:'p senior and junior level
faculty who are "highly valued." The
system also results In a decreased
incentive to produce, he explained.

go.._.,..

The good wiU
" Remember, the contract doesn't
the salary of these
18811 ~ determine
high~
valued people, only where theyearn . By spending money on the less
productive the Ulllon guarantees thai

:~=~~~hi:~~\:W't~y ~~g~ to~

pretensions of being a high caliber
Institution, will go elilewhere.''
,
Weinstein also rejects the unions
acceptance of AAUP'a "six yeara and
out" philosophy regarding tenure. He
notea that auel\ unl~ltlea as Chicago,
Rocheater and c.meat.Mellon do not
follow thla policy. 'For axamrle, In
Chicago's Gneduate School o Bualneaa the only tenuned poaltlon Ia tun
p10ftiaaor, and It can be 'quite a while
before one attalna thla ata)ua.
·
If good people want to atay
tMM:a,lor an extra yew or two withOUt
ten'ill'e, and they h - the bleaainll of
thelf dean, It would be tmpoNlble
undet the .y.t~P guldellnea."
.

·sa.even

w,_ l.,..pt ...tldll'ol-

Wefnateln alae feela the union hu
lost Ita per81)8Ctlve on tenure - which
hlatorlcally, he notea, beetowed to

~u~:4::::.~~=en:~ 'r.:t~'ry.;;

But surely UUP shOuld be able to
negotiate a substantially better contract
than CSEA? Wrong again. Says
Weinstein: "The baale justification the

equivalent of blue collar job ..CUrtly.
Although he'a '" not llirprieed" that It
occurred, or that the profeaalonal staff
can also get tenure (permanent
appointments), he doesn't 11QN8 with It
nor with the ra. that faculty and ataff

:J':i~·~y-=....-rrm:.~tc;: _ ~li.:~ktt;~~r:.ei:o~cfA~~t;

=\~'p,:... v=~~: .:U::

If tnli811on n.. to 10 per cent,
w.tna.tnuyathevalueofthaoontract
c1rope ebOUt 11f1011ter 11.000. "No mallet
the poaltlve ratf of Inflation,
~ toea." The main r - . Ia

::,~o:.O:::::~'~

_,. Tn pey raleee for tha last two

contract

~·

~ol...,.

Welnateln Ia critical ol the delayed
payment o1 cost of living lncreuea also
found In the pact.
to the
. edJuatHlgllllgllta Statement,
- - _ , t o "eliow the State
to , _ the flnanCiltl oblklationa
coming due for N- York City in
1..,_.1 and to avoid any ~ without
..aary ·• Welnataln countera:
"It Ia not at ell clew why a union
negotlal.lng a contract wllere only one_
SUNY campus Ia locata(J In the Clty
(Brooklyn Medical Cent8rl, and when
aelary Ia ·oomlng ftqm the State, should'
rnllke IIIIa kind of ..tionale."
B u t - I f - w e r e not
dll.,.s and lldjuatmenta _.made on
July 1 ol.-ch ~. Wlll..-etn contend&amp;
the hypothetical employee atlll wouldn't
_,.out alleed. The ' - : ~ the
life o1 the contr8Ct, 11M .a~Pioyee would
etiU to• ebout 18,340 In Jan...-y 1979

"::;s

CIOIIara.

.

The deferned edjuat"*'ta coat the
-ptoyee. an llddlllonal 11.000 In
-'-ar\',111711 diSUara or 1.3 ~~of
hla real Income. Weinstein aardllnlcally
rafera ' to thla as the " Nolw York City .

Tu."

........

IIIII an -.unate
Yet, this Ia still an underestimate of

com""""tt _,...,...

pub·'
l...hed .odt ffw.wsdor by tf'le -DIIrlslon of

A _,.,.,.

Mile Affo•rs Dot• Ut»~Jry of New
Vri of luffol.o Ed•torfol offlfts ore ~
eo1..S
t36 Croftt Holl A""'-'"'

, _ 036·2626

.

0...-.ctort:Attubf•cAffow.
JAMfS. O.SAHTIS

ldttor in Ch1•f
toeatr r MAitfn
1\rlmwiJOfiH A QOIITIY

-fdlto&lt;
.10\'aiUONMSIO

.........
~~ ·
_.....

T•'•·

caae."

~'rttat;rn!,"gt~"'the~~

Ia ridiculous. The power just Isn't
there."
But there .,. points about the
contract; and about the union Itself,
which pertlcularty Irritate Welnatetn.
One Ia that UUP typically negotiates a

~.l,~th~h~~_,calrallaeesfor relwlathtive 1y tll~y
-~

•

18lo8

.....,_u

/

·

•.1lv
·

~~.~e'f~t:.'rmuntOn. ~

Inherent conflict b e t - managernent
and worker. " It's an us-against-them
mentality, but nothing can be further
from the truth. Administration cannot
function withOut the support of the
staff. If the staff doesn't like the
edmlnlatratlon, they vote with their
feet . Those who.,. good just leave." ·

L"lbrar•"ans who won awar..,a..,.
are f acu- lty' not taft

Uj)

$_

Editor:

Tf't! =r~a ~~~~~ ~u".r~::

on
and ataff of the Unlveralty of Buffalo at
the end of thla IICIIdemlc year.
In your deacrlption of the Chancellol'a Awarda for Excellence, you start
off by saying that "Threa University of
Buffalo fiiCUity and staff members
'*»ived Awardi for excellence." I
would like to call your attention· to the
fact that the two llbtwlana so honored,

Shonnle Finnegan 81Jd C.K. Huang, are
member&amp; of tile Un/Y81'$/ty Faculty. The
words "and staff member&amp;" In the
sentence quoted above are therefore
redundant and Inaccurate In their
Implication.
Sincerely yours,
-Judith Hopkl,.
cataloging Department, CTS
on behalf of the Library
Faculty Executive Committee

Carey signs bill authOrizing
SUNY to award honorary degrees
SUNY has llnally been given authority
to grant honotary degrees.
Gov. Huph L. Carey signed Into law
earlier th os month Assembly Bill
Number 438 which gives the State
system license to do what other
Institutions In the State have done as a
·~o
hOnor
matter of tradition outstlltldlng men and women for
achievement in llelds such as public
affairs . llnance, the arts, business,
phllanlhropy and social service."

• naf::lnd~~~~,~·~~!i~e~~.:r~
onappropriate for a
tate-linanced
Institution to c6nfer honorary degrees
upon elected officials during thelr
tenure rn office."
He said he has oow received
assurances from the chairman of the
Boaril of Trustees of S UNY that
"awarding ol honorary degrees to public
officers wiiA.occur only under unique
and unusual ci rcumstances which
would fully j ustify such action and that
rigorous procechne will be adOPted to
tnaure th.r the -.:ling of auch
- - wtH be _ . . s by atandeRI8

oi8IIOelleMe..O~
men1
w111a1t wlllnGiude
by
.......... of
-

lty and thereby preclude any abuse .... "
Carey said he signed the mee,aure

=~~~n~: as~rr-:'hc:· :~~~r.:m

secretary to the Governor for education,
the State Education Department and the
As sociation ol Colleges and Universities of the State of New York.

Thf Supplem~nta l
brings some funds
The State's $105.3 . million supplemental budget, passed by the Legoslature in a flurry of adjournment actiVity
early Sunday, included two items lor

utN~W~Vnt~~!f ~~~r-oT.Ps"

fu nding (money for ~upplles and
equipment). Accord ing to the Buffalo
News, thla came with " promises that
Albany will cooperate In a three-year
effort . to restore full ccreditatlon. "
" ' -ldent RObert L, Ketter hed asked for
a6me $500,000 tor the dental schoOl.
2. $611 ,000 for " lnc:reaaed construe·
lion coats" of a communications
btllldllll at Amherat. [Thta building 11u
not r-t gone tOIIIdl, tllotlgii.J

..

-..
- --·

_.., Instituted· for the first time this
y-to recognize outstanding strides in
this area.
More than 3,000 people attended the
AAUW National Convention, Including
representatives from the other four
award-winning schools: Ari zona State
University at Tempe, Michigan State
Unlverslty at East Lansing, the
University of Missouri at Columbia and
the Women 's College Coalition of
Washington, D.C.
LMgeat end otcleat w__,•,
Ofll8lllzatlon'
Mra. Kelly explained that AAUW Is
the largaat and oldaat national
~anlzation for women In the country.
Its president, Dr. MarJorie Bell
Chamber&amp;, served an lntilrfm stint llS
~alrpenson of the National Advtonno
ttee or
1 1
···'
. Commit ee on Women, rep acpng Bella
_ A~ug who waa fined by resident

==en~~~r:·g~orlnhC: ~~b':

daughter of fonner P-ldent Lyndon B.
John8011.
'
•
The purpo- of AAWI, Mra. Kelly
noted, .,. _ . t , lnc)udlng advocacy
action, ~. ' lifelong learning and
Improving the atalua ol all w__,, Mrs.
Kelly herMif the flrat woman vice
chalrperaon of the U/8 Council and tha
flrat woman prMident of U/B'a A)umnl
"--aaion.
AAIJW bu . mede conalclerable
fiMOCial support -'table to women,
Mrs. Kelly pointed out, through
fellowehlpe, ~ PfOiecta and
oilier ecj~MI and public aetVIce
prog~WM.

lpealflo"AAIJW Ia oonoamlld with specific
mattera auch u
quality vooetiona, day care, -lam and
conau,_. protactlon," Mre. Kelly
explained ·u well u women's general
pertk:l~ In 80Cia!~ political and
economic~.

Alao et the AA'IM COIIY*Itlon:
ocarotStuU of"""*-!, a member of
_ U/B'a Comtl)unlty ~ Cbuncll and
put prealdent of !lit Nft York State
CNtpter o1 AAIJW, ....aJeo IICC8Pted an
1

,. =~=t:=e:n=,::
'"!ftre~ ~:Q~u~':: ~~ilamavtlle

accepted all ret pt.. netlonal award on
behalf of AAIJW'a Buffelo branch for Ita
public Information progown.
-Paul Chlmero

•Roadwork

--------------

Jlr&lt;&gt;m-1.col4)

under Main Street to .Amherst 'Street.
This tunneling will atart approximately
January 1 and will take 12 months to
complete. Work will atart In 11181 on the
rock tunnel subway station on the Main
Street campus. Sewer and utility lines
under Main Street have already been
moved out of the ~th' of the tunneling:
Original word was that the main
entrance to the Mlll.n Street campus
would be closed once tunneling work
began. However, campus traffic will
continua to ahara that entrance with
NFTA construction vehlclee throughout
subway construction. Thla may pose
some . difficulties becauee It Is
estimated that at the height ol
the. tunneling work trucks filled with
lock and dirt will ~ In and out of that
entrance every flve .mlnutea.

Staff members
are interns
The Office of Institutional Studies
now has In the Office three Interns who
are members of .the U/ B professional
stall. They are: Marion A. Dickson,
assistant to chairman, Departmeno of
Anthropology; Anastasia K. Johnson,
assistant to chairman, Department of
Sociology; and Dorothy C. Wynne,
associate director of advlsemen),
Division of Undergraduate Education.
The onterns began on May TO. They
will be working to descriptively
document the Interrelationships of
academic program, admin istrative processes, and budget, Rober! J . Wagner,
assistant executive vice president, said.
It Is expected this will result "in a
documenfation of current practices,
which will be useful in producing both a
record about this aspect of University
operations, as well as lead to an.
opportunity to explore changes,"
Wagner Indicated.
•
A completion date .Df Septemlli!O' 1,
11179, Ia projected . Tlie Interns were
selected from a volunt- group
aollclted by the Professional Staff

Senate.

·

�a publication of

The Offiee of
Cultural Affairs

Fiction Festival
Raymond

Fedennao,

fietion

writer

Wot&lt;bt. or Notloillg, Tw It or Leave It)
and profeuor of El&gt;glilh lit. U!B. bu been
teaching a Graduate Cooferenee on the
problems ol reading IU&gt;d writing poetmodern fietion.
.
What is "pootrmodernj A baDdy, if
negative, definition might be "writing that
departs from oonventional noveliatie plot,

ebvaeter, punctu.tion." Writers like John
Barth, Donald B,rlhelme, William 'Gus,
Raymond Federman eomolo mind.
aeeording to Prof~r
Federman, !be erities are booOming
"""bverlod" by pool-modern fiet.ion, oo that
criticism ia undergoing a radieal ehllllge. ll,
l.oor is beeoming self-reflexive, self.
eonacioua and fietioni!ed . ~les: Tom
• W&lt;llfs essays or Roland Bartbeo' book of
Uiticism wbieb refers lo himself u "he,"·
·r.~ "R.B. ." IU&gt;d wbieb, after analyzing bis
· owil work, then Jlrocoeds to review bis own
.- aDa'lysis.
Federman is aware that we , the general
_public:, may be put oft, or are, 11 least,

.. .And now,

·

_-_apprehenaive about reading post-modern
wcrks, IU&gt;d ao lo expand the audienee for
•eoo.tempon.ry writing, he ia preaenting a
"10-day Fietion Featival. AD interesting
gnJUp of novelilts and c:rilica will 'lttempllo
clarify what bu been ooosidored !be
..obec:ure activities" of avant·garde writing.
The ealendar of events, an of wbieb are free
IU&gt;d open l.o.tbe public:, is in tho magut
diroelory; but here is oomo '*"ground on
the visitors .

.. , l'be

novelist~

s~/

are Ron
proleiOOI' ol Ea,liob at tbe UDiveroity f
Colondo at Boalder, who bu writtetl p,
o.t, ~- 6 and.Dooli of 1M N&lt;W&lt;lStoriu. Sukeniclt willleciture oo the advt!,
u weU u read from bis now novel in
progreu. Georp Chambers, prolOIOOI' of
Engliab at Bradley Ulliveraity in Peoria,
lllld autbor ol two novela, n. llo!aoyclAbber IU&gt;d N.J..Sct (bia tit.leo alone will
need oome exoplil), will read from a work
in progreao and will join Ron Sukeniek in a
diaeuaaioo about novola. And Raymond
Federman will uncloubleclly lake "" aetive
part in t.bMe ~. and may read
from bis newoat ..OVel in prosreu (which by
then will probably be a novel-juot,-finiabod),
ealled n.'l'tDt!fo/4 V i .
After tbe noveliall eome !be erities: lhab
Huan, Mate!. Calineaeu and Maa'ud
Zavarwleh (iniA!reoting names for analyats
ol Englloh writiall wbo will give leeturoa

I n --

and'participate
lhab Huan, VO.. Re-.eb Prof_,r of
Engliab and~ ~-at the ,

UDivenlty olW~waukoe, II, like
r-lie Fiedler, a maJor llpre in A-an
lite....,-.-! Bat be bu
gradually abifted ................... the
avant-pnle, almallt., -dia.Jlo Raymond
Federman, "into IIIJWIIdom.
is aloo
in~ in the .......,_ aopeet of
lite....,- eritleiom. AD e,._,te Of thio wu
ooe of bia reoentleet..,.. ... which be wen
• maak, wu wrapped in block, and earriod
.o-n and • book. Aa be t.alked. be ealmly
&lt;Ill the book into obrodo. PvUpo thio wu a
grapbie illuotntloll ol one of bia oWD works,
n.~ fi/,OrpMv. Rio other
boob indudo ,.... IJJtdall- ,....
LiUnJttlre of s.z-: H~ Jlilln to
BeeUU and ~ I ukod
ProlOIOOI' F........, the ~ between "pareeritidom" a n d · -.·
"Mota'• olt top," be aid, "ppra'a em the

·:a-an

side."
•
'JlAi4j ~ ...... ~
Ul4iratm-e and Welt. Earopou Stadioo at
the Ulilftnlty ~ IMiana. IDII hu writtet!
F.-qfJI............
Aad - ·• z.......w. from
tholftnlty ....._. tW ...,..at ....... the
-lldloa _... ill . . book ,....

If--,
_
......

s,-.-

~..-..

liMa

tD GWwwtlly.

... .,.., -J~i.V ............
.... ...,.. IWtR-..11!-IMw .. ill •

,.. -

_

~~

.

To keep t:rae"k ofU/B's culturaL
events througli
July-28, save
- this magnet

�As usual, the .w.- of the film
prognm reoults In liotlnp that are too long
f o r - t . ~or. broeburoo •oftJUAB
lilma are availollle at 6qljlre aDd Capen
informatioo COWIIen; or eall 686-2919 for
re«&gt;rded informatioD. n..i Ceoter for Media
StudY alao pobliobeo a broebure: ..U
847·2665 if )'Oil.....ud like t6 rec:eive one in
the mail. ADd watdl theRoporUr calendar.

U/8 Poetry Festival
"Traiibbazen and ~· ia the title of
thiay-'sU!BSummer_Poetry Festival. A
group of eat.abliabed poets, each one paired
with an 11p-and-&lt;:omjng d&gt;lleague, .will

~te In rOodinga'bd cliacuaaiona from
Juf;, s through the 11th ..

The Big Name Poets ~ John Frederick
Nima, William St.afford, Gerald Stern,
David lgnatow aDd Anselm Hollo (with
putic:ipatioa by a resident U!B Big Name
Poet, Irving Feldman, aDd by Festival
clirec:tor, Profeuor Max Wickert). The
junior visiting poets are Raymond
Pattenon, Marlt Rudman, Vu,pnia Terris
and Allan Kornblum.
Jol!n Frederielt Nima, professor of
English At the ·Univrity of Winois,
Chicago Cirde, bu won many~. such
u the 1968 American ·Aeadomy of Arts &amp;
Letters Award aDd the Brandeia University
citation for pooj;ry in U174. 'This poet,
oebolar and critie bu "a Vftr1 real gift for
irony, for oolloquial wit," write&amp; J.P.
Clanq, "but his finest talent is his pure
aweetlyriciam."
'
WOllam Statford, born In the heart of
Kanua In 1914 aDd edDCated in the
mid· west (Ph.D. from the State University
of lowa), wu plaoed in c:ampa for
&lt;ooacientioua objeetora duiing World War
It wu the re that be began to write, and
bepubliabedhiliirstbook In 1947. By 1963,
with his third book of poemo, 7ravdilog
7Tm&gt;olg. IM Darlc, be won the NaLioual
Book Award aDd publie ~n . He was
eouultant in Poetry to the Library of
~ in uno, chuiDc a yeu'a leave
from I:.ewia aDd Clark Collep, where be bas
been profeaac.-ofEnclioh ..._.,..1980.
Gerald Ster;n, oae ot 1ut summers
Poetry Festival
..00 both the
Lamont Poetry Prise (1877) aDd a
nomination for the Nalional U0.. Critico
Circle Award (19'18) far -Ilia reeent
book .ol poema, lAd&lt;r Lifo. Poet Hayden
C-erruth ....._..., "It ia -...meiy
·diflicult to brine olf tbe ldDd of poem Stern

n.

.-a.

=·

:;Joomoa.r 111D0111f tbe triqdes and

David iplolow, ...._ 1978 summer

ol the coimtrr:. veat poets:
hil. many volwneo ol1iPt, D&gt;Ying v perfeetly ~~urban life.

guest, is -

He......_~ of~ playfully of
despair. In 19M the Nalional lutitute of
the Arts aDd LoUen ......,ua..ct lgnalow
"far a lifetime elf ereative eflort;" aDd be
was bGDored by a lloliapn !'rile in

1976-76.
•
Anae1m Hollo; who, lib Stern and
lpatow, wio part ot 1ut summer's
Festival, ia a Filla wllo ....,.a to tbe U.S. in
!S6'1, .and wu a viaiiDc ............ at
SUNY/Butfalo that r-. Be teochea
at Sweet Briar ()oDap, Md ia active in
writing aDd traaolatinc· SojowMr Alien&gt;·
(19'18) ia h i l - . - t volume, an4
be ia a muole·poetry-~ who
.....,_theaY&amp;IIl-pnio.
As for the ~· """""""'ying
the

"-.a,"

~

Pal:tionioa.

who

will be jllind willa Willlaa 8talford. is
cliredor elf Blaet l'Gota ......,, loe., in
New Y..t
the alllllow ol 7Watr-..Z
of~ ., • . . , . 11-. Gerald
pert_. ... liMo toeliftl il Mark
...._, a ,.... rile IWa 8IIMI.J •of the
.-lr7 ol .....,_. U/B ,...._, Robert
"-.will - . be .......... iiD ~

w...,.

a-·.

I

*

�• Ameri&lt;:aD Poelly Review") aad editor of
Food Service (25e per slua ol beer)".
n.. - - - dllld wbooe
poycbialtlat uid
"Pequocl" mopzi.ae. ADoolm Hollo'a eobart:
Tbere'D be far cloacii.c. ... far writer
work willl
A!IAD KorDblum, author of 1lruWdl ud watehing potlery ~ lideW1IIk • ellildna bu '-'led in ooveral hoob,
editoT. publlolber-...d pdDfer ol-Tootbpute .clialk artist&amp; aad ...-. A pieDie mllll haw iDcllllliaa a atud1 of life in a ~ will
Prell in Weot ilraDch, Iowa.
.-t Jal,y 25 ... "Fultuy SaliofadiaD
volleyball ud friibile, ..a .-rby David lpotow will •ork in taDdem with . lmoiJa ..m be the plqinc ...... u 'l'llnlup Ut.erature.. 'naia Ia ...... of the
u
Vorginia Terri&amp;, who though bam in 1917,
t.be exhibit area. lor friabee . - .
oubjocta explonld ill s.wlbeim's ne
Admiaoioa is free to the "Summorfoot• of ~. wbidl WOil the lt'l6
did D&lt;lt publish her first hook of - ·
7nJckilog, until 1976. "Haviag beea horn
which will begiD at 1:80 ia the lfterDoaD oa Nalloul Book Critics Circle- Award for
and raised in a time when women's roles Friday, July6, with a raiD &lt;late oi.July.l3.
c:riliriom.
.
were much more restricted than t.bey are
- n.. format for- ....... is a loduro
now, I wu first wife ud m -•'"
·
~by. ~ speoker u 1.0 AM llld. after
bmcb, a :i1'J£ ~-md.........- period.
college proteuor. and ..... ~ am iaaiatiag o•
being •hat I aet out to be in DJT extreme
n.. loOalioD lor both IDOl"lliDg ud
youth, that ia, a poet.·
lfterDoaD evento is Court in O'Briall
Fer additioGal informatioa, if DOt printed
OruJn
Hali(Amhent ~~ in this_.., direetory, Cf)l Mu Wiclr.ert
The Wednesday Sommer Fonua, a aerieo
at 636-2599. Aloo keep an eye oo the
ol di.stinguiabed f11Mt loduroa ~ted
'
ReporUr caleDdan aad OD thea in the
by the Faeulty of Ed.-tioDal Studies,
Bll/fult'Newo' Gv.toaeetlOa.
bring&amp; Michael HarriDctaa here, Wedllesday, July 11. Harriactaa. best lmowD for
•.. ....,;; Sbok_.-.. ill Dela....., Pari&lt;,
his book, 7k OtJ&amp;er AMCrial, is a profeaor from July 31 llu-ouch August 12 (DO
of Political ~ ot Q.-.ia Colleae. perfOrm&amp;DCell MoadaJ- aigbla), wW&gt; llvi:A
CUNY. 'lTie"OtJ&amp;er AMCrial Ia the Ameriea Ado Abotlt No!Jaiojg, t.be -.mel eomedy of
Summer ia for pleniea,\..d a super·picni&lt;, of the poot, -&amp;Dd this famoua oocialiot is t.be 19711 ...... (t.be !irst1s ne
credited with haviag drawn Preoideot eo....tr of Emm ealled "Summerfeot..~ is being planDed liy
aee ~­
Keaaecly'o atteatioa to the iaaue of poverty Higblightl, clireciecl by Jobn Morgan.
Studeot ~. UUAB, Squire aaa
u.s. Prof_. HarriDctaa will apeak
Ambent Divioioaa of Sub Board L Music . in
•.. t.be liiW lecture ill the Wednesday
on .. Americ:a in the 1980'a."
will be ....W.uoua, with four . baDdo
Summer Forum aeries (see ma.gMt
Providbol varietJ: Ring of Pain (rock &amp;ad·
July l3 is a' chaaP of.,..,.., with g.-. Higblight). "Womea and Mea in Traaoition:
roil), AJvle Street Baad (folk) , Bahama
J obn Ciardi, autbor of over "'o dooea book&amp; Tbe Effects of Social Chaage" is the tlUe of
of poelly, many of them fer childrea. Judith M. Bardwiclr."s August 1 talk.
Mama (~) ud Dr. Jazz ./l Co. Tbe
Ciardi. who believe&amp; that poema should be Bardwiclr. is professor of psychology at the
"""""' of &amp;&lt;:tivity will be the Squire
Fouatain area oo the Main Street Campus,
written to appeal to general audieaceo, will University; of Michigan , aDd is .especially
........ food (bot clop, ham'burg.n) aad
answer the question be has- posed as his interested in the psyeholoJQ' of women .
drink (soda pop aad !leer) will be oold by
tlUe. "What Happeaa in a Poem?"
... the U/B-Artpark Daace Festival,

-lloltelheim.

u-.

-'"-+-- - - - -

Wedne-·..1-y Sw:.........e·r
F
·

.

Wateh For ...

Swiunerfest

the

......

Tidtea, wbere required, ...., aniW&gt;le at the Squire
Hall 'l'ic:bt Ol6c:e (in advaaee); romaini.ag ticlr.eu at the
door..,. hour before event.l.D. c:orda must be presented
ill order to purchue ticlr.etl at Studeat/Faculty/ Staff/
AiumDi nto.

10

"

11

llUIOIERPOE'DlY n:sttVAL•
2lDvid lfi"/JUN&gt;, Vorg;.ia T....V, Jol"'
-Nimo, Moz W"dert: Butler
Seminar fi. 322 ClemeDO. 6:S0:S RI(. .Free.

Sl.JMJIDlfWI&amp;I,_GML•
AucloooH,.. _. .... ~ JIOIU7
....uag. 438 a.-.8-9-.JO I'll.,.__

a.

_ _ _._'W"_Bollor
&amp;o.iaarJILII2a..-. .......... ,.._

.MuSIC
PaJ Scboid, ........... (MFA ndlal).
Baird Recital Hilll. 8 I'll. Free. ~
Depaltmeat'otKailie. -

Parle: "The
by Saul Elkin.

8lJIIIID POE'I'ItY FES'11'1!.\L•
SWiford.: .,... ~ hour.
a.a-..
10-11 AM. Free.

~

_Free.

a.a-.. 11 - --Free.

oiJiee hour. 4ZI

SUr/1or4. RarMOIId

Patl4rlolo,

a-.14 Stcno, ..,__ Roudlallle
L azz &lt;lomoas. 6:80-8:40 PM.
Free.

See J ul7 10 lloUac-

a.-.

IIUJIIimt POE'I'ItY n8IIVAI.•

lleceptiaeiD.._..,
416a.a-. .... , .....
....,.,
~-__

14
s.a..lay

llltAIIA·
Slloh-• ia ~ Parle: "The
ComedJ of Emn," . . . . . by ........
See Julr 10 lildac-

15

llltAIIA•
S'aw _ . . ;, ~ Parle: "TTie
ComedJ of Emn," directed by So»' ~­
SeeJulylO...U.,.

!i.day

a.-.

.

EXCU11810N

SUIDIEa POE'DlY t'l:81'lVAL•

-

OBAMA•

~ .. .r;w;,_.. Parle: "The
Comedy ol Emn,"w-t.ed by Saul DID.

IIUIIIIE&amp; POE'DlY FE811VAL•
J o A a - , _ , a.dor Chair Paelry
lleailiotc- 438
U PM. Free.

OBAMA•

SUIDIEa POE'DlY FE811VAL•
- David lfi"'JUN&gt; ud v-org;.;. 7Mria: oiJiee hour. 416
11 AM- 12 ......., _

suiola POE'I'ItY J'E8'I'IVAL•

Jo4a ~ Niaa: -

IS
Friday

~ a. De,....,.,.. Parle: -n..
Comedy ol Errors,. directed by Saul Elkin.

WEDNEsDAY SUioOIEil F()IUJ)lO
Jlidoael B~ "America in the
J.liiiO'a.· -Court. O'llriaD Hall, Amherst
Campua. 10 AM - lecture, 2 PM • queatioD
u d - period. Free. ~ Foculty
of EdaeatioDal Studlea.

SUioOIEil POE'DlY FE811VAL•
w;u;.. St4/1f1rd ud RarMOIId Pattnaoa:
poetry reodin(. 438 Qomoas. 8:80-9:80 PM.
Free.

_

SUMMER POE'DlY t'l:81'lVAL-.
AuciM Hollo, • Aa.. ~ Jo4a

See JulylO liitiag.

SUJOO:Il POE'I'ItY FE811VAL•
WilloiiM SUr/1or4. RarMOIId Pattenoa,
JokFftJ4cridtNil!u, Mu W"d:m: Butler
Semiut L azza.-.. 6 :~ PM. Free.

•be•

488

lilJJDIEa POE'DlY FE811VAL•
David lfi"'JUN&gt; ud v-...,- T...,:,: poetry
&lt;eading. 438 aea-.. 8:80-!1:80 PM. Free.

w.......y

i-;taky, ud tbe7'D be·iD our midst from
Jul7 31,
Me...., Cuaningham &amp; Oaa&lt;e
CompaDY preooat aa "Eveat." ill CJaril: Gym
(8 PM) IJu-ouch August 10 (also at-8 PM),
wbea t.be Califoraia eompaDy ol Bella
Le-!ritak7 perfarJu-- a ~ especially
cbcJreocraphed c1uriDg their week's reai·
dobey bore, for Baird Point. tbe Greek
atru&lt;(ure aear the lake 011 the Amherst
«&amp;mpus. 1a b e _ , there'D be a seeoad
gym "Eveat" by the Cuaningham ()ompany;
a _video-danee sereenlag aad diaeussioa by
Meree Cwmingham in.the Kiva, Baldy Hall;
"'0 loduro-demcmotntioDO by the Paul
Tayler CompaDy, at the CcraeU
Theatre aad·oae in Baird Hall; aDd muter
c:laaoes in HarrimaD ud Glark Hall daDce
studioo, giVea by the Paul T.ylor aad Bella
Lewitzky oompaaios. Broehures aad m"!'" informatioo are available from the Office of
Cultural Affairs (636-2313), which is
arraaging the Festival. Registration for
classes is doae through Credit-Free
Programs, 831-4301.
·

SUMIIER POE'DlY FE811VAL•
Jrvitog FelifmaA: poetey · &lt;eading.
Clemeas. 8-4 PM. Free.

the Albright-Knox Art Gallery). 8 PM.
Free. Spouon: Cent.er f..- Theatre
a-arch aad Depaltmeat of Theatre.
I

s

ud ................ Tbe inter-

Mo:z: W"d:m: poetry ....uag. 488 Qomoas•

Delaware Pari&lt;, aear Rooe Gardea (behind

........y

ooelolmed--

8-4 PM. Free. .

DRAMA•

SUioOIEil POE'DlY n:8'I1V AL•
JollaFftJ4cridt Nr.u: Butler Chair Lecture
L 488 a.-.. 3~ PM. Free. Spouon:
Eaclish ~ Batler Chair, SUJDJDer
Seoaiooa, Poe1.a A Writerii.ae.

~

-.u,
are U.C. ol
......... ~PaD! Taylor ud Bella

reading. ~~DI.S:OO-UOPM. Free .

~
~
Comedy of~ ," directed

IULY

- ....-.me ot Artparl&lt; this
- · 1&lt;1 bodl. U/B ......,_ lor

suMMol POE1ItY FE811VAL•

SUioOIEil POE'I1lY n:8'I1VAL•
Gerald Stene ud ~ poetey

........y

"'Whic!l will briilg three of the modern dan&lt;e

SUIDIEa POE'DlY FE811VAL•
Jokl'noderick HI-: BooUor Chair Lecture
n. 416 &lt;lomoas. a.. PM. Free.

a-- J.--........ - ~...._....

litJIIIJlEa POE'DlY FE811VAL•
David !gMtoto. V~ T...-ia, A Holil&gt; aad Alia Konoblooooo: Roudlallle
......-. 438 a.-.. 8-9-.80 PM.,.__-

~-~U!:.L.L

. . _ ...... ...... Q.d., El1loo&amp;l
Comjllu, ot 2 I'll. ...... 1:111. 25e ....
!are. CaD ~ DollaR ....... Ill
PICTION n:8'I'IVAV
l'lllllic I . - . by . . . ........, "DDpwNont." 112 a.-.. a PM.
Free. 9pouor: ~of Eactioll-

...... .., u.e

,....y
1%

17
........y

8lJIIIID POE'DlY FE811VAL•
A . . . . --Iloilo ud .JIIri . . - : apea
oiJiee boar. 416 a.a-.. 10-11 AM. Free.
SUioOIEil POE'DlY FE811VAL•
JoAai'NderidtNr.u: .... olfiee .... 4ZI
&lt;lomoas. n AM-12 110011. Free.

llltAIIA•

~ .. Dil...w Parle: "The
Comedy ol Emn," diniSad by Saul Elkla.

SeeJody10...U.,.
f1C'I10N n:8'I'IVAL•
Row .s..wMd: i l l - with - ol 1M Gradwo&amp;e eoar.r- {EDcliab 8116).
2210 a-- Hall. 6:80PM. Free. 9pouor:

o.s-u-ofEDPU.

. 3

�~·

Silo' - · ,;. ~ l"ark: " "'nne •
c-.17., Emn•• dinletecl by Saui£Wn.
See Jab" 10 llotiDg.
1.

WEDNESDAY SUMMER FORUM•
Jolu• Oitlrdi: "What Happens in a Poem?"

s..e Jab" nlilting.

l'lcDON FESTIVAL•
Rm&lt; s.lcnick, reading from A novel in
- progrea, no.; Lot.g 71JlA:illg Bod Cotodititml
.llboe•. 410 Clemens U.U. 8 PM. F'Ne.
s_. Department of English.
19
Tlnonday

DRAMA•

SA4/u- in ~ Porlt: "The
Comedy of Errors,• directed by Saul Elkiu.
See July 10 lilting.
FIC'110N FESTIVAL•
George CAamben , reading &amp;om a work of
fiction in progreaa. 822 Clemona. 8. PM.
Sponaor: Department of EDgliah.
•

.

FIC'110N FESTIVAL•
Rm&lt; s.lcnick and George c.\omben in
dixUaoion with members of tbe Grad~
Conferenee (English 695). 220 Clemena.
· 6:30 PM. F'Ne. SpcKUIOI": Departmeut of
English.
20

Friday

21
Satarday

DRAMA"

SMkupeore in .Delaware Porlt: '"rhe
Comedy of Errors, • directed by Saul Elkin.
See July 10 lilting.

DRAMA•
SA4/u1pe""' in .Delaware PrJr/C "The
Comedy of Errors," directed by Saul ElkiD.
See July 10 lilting.
.. •..

VIDEO SCREENlNGAND DISCUsSID,..
Pltilip and GuJ/4 Ma/Jmy JOfiU: "In the
Pictures" and "Biaek, White and Martiold, •
170 MFAC, Ellioott Complex, A,mherst
Ca1npus. 8 PM. Admission $1. ~
Media Study/Buflalo.
c.•
22
Saaday

DRAMA•
SMkupeore ... .Delaware l'rJrk.: "The;
· Comedy of Errors, • directed by Saul E1kiD _
See July 10 lilting.
.;

FIC'ftON FESn'VAL•

..;;

1Mb Hao- in ddc:uaaion with membon o(,·
tbe Graduate !CGDf.......,. (Easliol&gt; .e85).
220 Clemens. 6:30 PM. F'Ne. SpoDJOf:
Department of English.

Z5

WEDNESDAY SUMMER FORUM

W'"'-oday 9nuao "Bette~Utm:• "Fantaay Satiafa&lt;:tion
Through LiteratU!'e." See July lllilting.

FIC'110N FESTIVAL•
Publle lecture by 1Mb Hao•tm: "Postmodernism." The Kiva, Baldy Ball,
Amherst Ca1npus. 8 PM. F'Ne: Sponoor:
Department of English.
-

OPENING OF INSTALLA110N•
lJGrt Robbell: "Double Narrative" and "The
QuMn'• Rulea SuapeDded." 8 PM. $1
admission. Media Study/Buffalo, 207
Delaware Avenue. Sponaor: Media Study/

Buffalo.
Zll

,_,_y

FIC'110N FEsnvAL•

Public: leciuro by Maul Caliloe1cu,
prof- ol. Comparative Uterature and
Weot European Stadlea, Umvermy of
Indiana. 822 ae-. a PM. FNe.
Spoa-. ~oi.Enj;tiah.

FIC'110N FESTIVAL•
1Mb Hao-, Maul Caliloucw and Mu'wl

~...::=...~~

6:30 _PM . . F'Ne. !!poll..-: ~ of .

EDgliah.

FILM SC8EENINGIDI8CU8810N
Peter lht1&lt;11c _ . and .u.cu- hia
filma. 170 MFAC, Ellleott. 8 PM.
Admlaoion: $1. SpcKUIOI"! Media Study/
Buffalo.

Z8

~J'

MEDIA•
lJGrt Bobbett: Film, PerfOI'IIl&amp;DCe, Slides.
Media Stuci1/Bufralo, 207 Delaware Avenue. 6 PM. $1 admilaloa.
Media

BWdy/llaftalo.

Nc.-Pra&amp;(q.

u.s. l"aattp

PAID
lloo&amp;ID.- N.Y.
Pwmlt No. au

s.&gt;oa-:

.

�r

: I

Pop must·c.: ·does it teadtodrugs&amp;.sex.

-·- By John Thurlton

tu~1~"l!l'll~~~:rr~;w~ :~~~

.ctlvlty and drug use, the actual lyrics
probably aren't causing .OOieacents to
pertlclpate In drug and sex-related
ectlvlty, a U/B pro[..-.or has found _
But acme other aspects of pop music
just mlaht be.
Dr. Waller Gantz, aaalstant professor
of com·munlcallon who, In September,
will join tlie lndl- Unlvwalty fecully,
hu u~ compl.ted a study focusing on
the eoclallzallon Impact of progr&amp;Nive
rock, t~ rock, and eoul music on
the.OO-t.

A_._...
1a

" Pop f'lualc
an almoet constant
companiOn to a malorfty of adol-ta
as they listen morning, noon and night,
mono than four hours eech waalcday and
_ , lOnger on the w......,da," Gantz

~-Information-

the .OOiea-

·cant !*»Iva during thla dally tuning In
8nd turning on of radiOa, recorda and
tapaa? " Anawera to that quaatlon may
provide conal - l e lnalght Into the
role of pop muaic In the adoiMCel)t
eoclallzallon Pr-e." he . . _ .

Hov;=ln~!!.hberg~Cl~:''tl:!
bow, Gantz collected data from 886
junior high, eanior high and college
students through eelf·admlnlstarad
queatiOnnalrea which Included a re.ctlon to a serf&amp;l of short "cuts" of
progreulve and t~ rock and soul
music whim~ held high national and

'oc;:~::.-~~~:-"C:,~\!jl~

In the
data coll.ctlon Included motivations or
reaeons for listening; patterns of
exposure· such as how often, when

r.;c.::lri.n=~e :S'r.:.C,d:~nl::SJ

Impact, and a survey of attitudes about
the effects of pop music baaed on
opinion and exp&lt;lrfence.
" Pop music appears to be a verr,
functional ectlvlty for the adolescent, •
Gantz explained, " but not necessarily
because of words or lyrics. •

Are lrrtc. Important oi not?
Three-fourths of the students considered lyrics to be equally Important to
music and beat and Indicated that they
paid attention to lyrics " moat of the
time," or, as In the case of more than 40

ll:iec;:l~~· =e~~••a'~':fu.~ft:..~hli~

suggest tHat adolescents are gain ing

k~~~~~~0r~~~,:~·t~· m'Q!Ivatlons
~~~~~n~o~~fre'du:!fu:~f~~n~

lyrics which may in tum minimize the
cognitive gains and ultimate socialization impact ol exposure to II," Gantz
said.
•
The study Indicates thai the most
important motivations triggering exposure to pop muSic appear 40 be
diversionary.
Motivations wlllch were rated " somewhat" or "very important" ~ a hiP.h
percentage of the students were.· to
help ma pass the time or relieve

~~e:~e-:,~ ~~ c~~:'Jin:.'~~~~~h:,.~~

pass the time when there's nothing e l to do," and "to relieve my tensions or
take my mind off things that are
bothering me. •

rea~: th:~t~ ~~~~l.ar ~~~:~o"Z

relating to song content appeared to be

ret~~:;-~~n;:=;,rng

or thelyrtcl''
and "to 1'81111e the aong'a
to mY
lila" were mentlonad as ·-..y 1mportent" ....ang leU tlw111i per '*II of
lila aludenta.

maa.oa

Pleeaurable but notiMIII\Ingllll
Another aspact . of the study dealt
with knowledge of song 111181 and lyrics
and InterpretatiOn of ,_,lng atteched
to tho songs. F.ctora affecting the
knowledge responses Included prior
exposure to the song, content
repetition and, to a large degree, the
amount of "air lime" songs received on
the radio.

=

s:n"~ . ·~~~ kno~::r3!-J.r

among the studenta and aonga In
category, songs which had ~ played
moat on t~ format radio statiOns
were the . .lest for respondents to

Identify.

~n~~~eo~~~~

-responaa levels were high only with the
frequently aired, content repetitious

=~~R:r::: ~=:t~

the eong rather than juat Ita content. ·
"The general Inability of the students
to provide even minimal feedback about
song content would sugg&amp;lt that the
extensive &amp;mOU(lt of tlqle spent
listening to pop music may be
pleasurable but not meaningful.
" Or, It may well be that our youth
extenalvely US! pop mu~ic and 'know' It

viell without Internalizing, or knowing
In a different sense, any of the many
messageelt offers.
" Knowledgll of pop music lyrics may
be akin to knowledge of songs like the
'Star Spangled Banner.' You ·know the
song, you've even sung It hundreds ol
tlm&amp;l, but try writing the words.''
Some room

tor-·

But while the .ctual lyrics of pop
music may appear to be Innocent of
"col'l'IIPIIng" ' today's .OOieacent, all
cause for concern Ia not eliminated,
Gantz pointed out.
In the final aectlon of the questiOnnaire, studenta were praented with a
list -!If possible effects of listen lng to
~'ltlu aic. They .re aakad to agree or
disagree with -her they thought the
effects ectually occurred . The college
students were additionally asked to
COJ&gt;ment on eech baaed on their own
experience or that of a personal friend .
More than 50 per cent of the students
either somewhat or strongly agreed
with the statement that listening to pop

:;;.~~'C..1'~rr;~·=.:x':':".!'irn~~r:d

that pop music has had tr:::t , effect on
them or a friend .
A high percen'- of . . . . _ _ .

....._
le I t - - . . . . . . . . . .,
Gantz nolad that the ~
methode did not whether the
respondent a "-'1- that pop mualc
actually caused these elfecta or was an
activity that gooa hand n hand with

them.

This Ia one of a number of
unaniwered quaallona 'Which he concluded would-auggeet the 1!80888ity for
further In-ligation.
•
"The adoleecent apencla mono lima
with pop .muaic than with any other
~nor thing during the Clay. What Ia
ot doing? How Ia It functiOnlna? If Ws
oot the lyrics, I all the mualc? l'ha beat?
A combination of these? Or 11 the
function and Ita effects eomethlng
beyond tha r~~uaic itaall?"
, -queStion~~~~~ need aoawere.

There's good and bad news about .. _
enrollment, Ketter tells Staff Senate ·· '
Pr&amp;lldent Robert L. Ketter shared
some good news and some bed news
about enrollment projections JNith the
Prolosslanal Stall Senate Friday, June

22.

The good news is that freshman
enrollment Is likely to exceed slightly Its
3,000 student target and that 8,173
stUdents are return ing this fall. The
returnee figure, Ketter said , Is " more
than expected."
- On the downbeat side, estimates are
' that new reduate student acceptances

~Ts~?;~= ~=~~~~~ ~l'ft;/~~~~~ :J

per cent, Arts and Letters down about
25 per cent and 11eallh Sciences, down
10 per cent, he said . lndlcatl6ns are,

::~r.-;:eb~-::,o:,r, s\~~~ tr~· :~~

Millard Fillmore Is not expected to. draw
any more students than it did last fall .
Ketter spec;ulated that SUNY will
probably reexamine Its mandate that
university centers limit enrollmenJ so
other units can gain students. .The
reaeon Is that New Paltz Is currently
experiencing a large drop in applicants
and (rumor has itT that Stony
Brook-despite the limits-Is approaching open admissions.
Ths Trustees and the presidency
The President also rap e 'd that the
Board of Trustees. at its '. 't meeting,
will protlably decide ...,hether or not fo
prohibit acting presidents lrom being
considered for permanent pres dontial
stotc::
'II thJS proposal. which is backed

by

Chancellor Wharton. passes aM Ketter
doesn't • - reappointment, U/B could
have three presidents Jth•n a two-year
period .
Also under consideration by the
Board, Ketter sal!l. ·are changes in the
current Presidential Evaluation Procedures. There is a reportedspllt on the
Board over the matter, he said . Some
Tru&amp;tees favor ndt having reviews every

five years since presidents serve "at the
pl-ure of tho Board" and can't be guar•nteed a five-year appointment
anyway. Others feet the review
procedure should be oontlnuad.
lnataed ol prealdentlal reviews, 1IOfll8
Truat- want to aubatltute a type ol

Institutional evaluation every_five years
by Ill' outside group, Kotter said.
Tha budget: no frflla
Preparation ol the preliminary budget
request for ) 981 Is now underway. This
year, Ketter said, SUNY told campuses
" there are no boundaries" on what can
be requested for funding._ Th' requests,
said SUNY, will be ludgeol on "how
realistic they are and how well you can
defend them." Last anyone misunderstand, Ketter
added that ·the idea of no boundaries
doesn't mean additional lunda. New
York City must float billions In bonds In
1981 , and the State has made it known
it expects a " no-frills" budget from
SUNY.
Ketter said he asked each vice
presidential area to prepare budget
requests, but that when he end the area
representatives met to discuss them,
little was accomplished .
Hard declolono coming
The Presidant warned that "hard'
decisions" will have to be made In t'
near future fo ensure there is suffir'p •t
faculty in areas with lncre .ng
enroflment. And General Edur "tion
' isn't likely to help the situat ,n, ha
I eels. Accordiog to Retter, "no najor redistribution ol faculty loads'' will occur
bocau~ of it. In fact, 1&gt;e suggested thet

~r~a~~~~.:S~;v~u~in~,~~~~r~'/IO:~t. n

0

"It will not be an · easy next two

r=.;;lat~utu"r!'.d.:w~~~nqt y!r h~
the screams," he a/Jded.

Greateatneada

Responding to queatlona from
Senators, Ketter said the great&amp;~lneeda
at the University in terms of funding,
are for: the Dental School; support
personnel (&amp;lpeclally maintenance);
equ~ment replacement; and Unl--

~redco";~~nlt~~ice..~1~~·· t :
approximately $500 million will have to
be spent o - the next three yewa to
upgrade and rep!- equipment throughout the eyetern.
Later in the -ung..,Eiill Wilson,
outgqing chair of the t'l&gt;S, said the
Dental School, the RegiOnal Economic
Asslstanoa CenlerJ grad&lt;*te fellOwships, llbrarlea, and the computing
center, among o"lllem, are get ling
priority In the 1881 buelget proposal.
Wilson also rtPOrtecl that at a recent
Academic Caliliiat -.Jng, 1\ was
noted that bol-n 20-30 faculty

rros,;,uon~~y

=

~·~~~.~ad~~=

experiencing heavy enrollment growth.

At ReponJttdeedllna the SUNY Truotwere ollll dellbenoting chang&amp;~ In the
Presidential Review pr-.. Check
other media today.
'

Jain gets $1 o;ooo Buffalo Savings grant
a

rnu:;;~:;;~g d:::~~.9.'fleW techniques

recognition of achievements in marketing research .,nd other business areas.
Jaln, associate profes~or of market
ing and operations analysoa In the
SChool of Management, ·was cited by
the bank tor hie 811JVicea to botll the
University arid theF-tunlty.
atiOn to Jain
In making tbe
and to Or. JOeeOtl . Alutlo, of the
School, Ed~ K. Duell, Jr. t.....~lng
olfl- • 8ufl-'«! ...,lnge - · aatd
the grant -lei be iiiiiiDcl to IMtruct

Ouch was joined by Robert B,
Rakoczy, the bank's research director,
In presenting tha.$10,000 check and a
plaque.
Jain, whose marketing research
techniques are widely 'IICOQnlzed here
and abroad, has served as a manage,
ment consultant for Buffalo Savlnga
Bank and other lnatitutions.
Since coming tcrUIB In 11173, he hal
conducted- _..., jn-depth studies
aimed at ...ttalizinQ netghbortlOOd
dlstrfcta In the city.

Bulfalo Savings Bank ha_. awarded

~~~etnl~;""~d ~or'.":ruo~~rJ~,n f~

�i

4

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

---a..
--

i.

i

.

........,l!r .... "":.---·-!HICh&lt;&gt;O&lt;*I;........
-~-·· ·-tNIIn!all·
:.,...a:::-. ~~JII.--bvthe.

\

-:

. . . ,... _ __ 7 . . .~,.,_

~-n:=:~=-_.....~ of. ....... - · .. - - Olnllr. 120
:t=.""':~=

..

~1111-(1117111-_Tlm_.

f~y-3

-t:!.-.$.1..50.
llliotlmlllallvoiyllu-.....,.q,thedoya

-

,... ~~rata •-Irradiated In

1t1e IIUCIY· Tile first llfOUP receiVed a
Mng~ecloeeof .1R; the - d . a single
• doee of .05R; .,. lflln:l. two do- of
.O!Ifl abc c1ey11 .-t; ...., lhe last group,
f o u r - of .025R durlnO a _,..oay

&lt;""

,. . . ., t~-

,...... 1111• t...alatlon,

the

anltnlll8 . - bled to produce an anemia
4 - tCJwNc11 the nwnM -lei be forced to
~- In uni..-dlllled, bled an;.
wlllcll receiVed only
.05R, there- a f10r1!181, eudden jump
In n u - of red blood cell precursors.
"But 111e animals wlllcll receiVed .t R
or Ita equlval_red._lon ooer a period
c1aya .-not able to produce normal
nuiJibera of red blood oell pracuraora,''
aakl Gong, .., - - professor in
the 6ciiOOI of Deiltletry.
Altflougfl Dr. Gong pointed eM that
the ..,lmal - . a.~not Immediately be
applied to h - . , It ceuMS him to
~ that arbltfrt ...,... of "aale"
I radiation expoeure tor humans may be

of

-"'tlllghshould be .8111ptlalzell 11181 although the --ue peraon
aboUt .tR -=11 ~. or the amount at
whk:h mllrTOW ~- ~ In
the rata, the anlmal8 got thla amount
.,.,. a few @aYe ~ than o- an
extended pllrlocf," he aakl. Aleo, the
animals' entire bodlee Irradiated,
1 unlike hu,_ .,.arenta wbo.., exposed
to dlagnoatlc x ...y only on Isolated

race"""'

bod~8dd.cl.

that -the
used In the
deeigrwd for
rnulmum abeorPtlon In bone, but
diagn0811c red1811on (..-cl In routine
x...,.,-;. ~ to • greoil• dl!gr88
by bone In .....,.. to I)IQduCe . - - - y
though,

thenlpelltlc rw!Wion
animal etacly ian,

o o n t r u t - aolt lind hanl-tiaaue.
AlaO, there's ..ndenee hu.......,
may _.rty be more aenalti¥8 to
rlldlatiOn axpoaure than reta, Go~g

~bel- the -.ge in the mllrTOW of
lherata~atlhe.1Rievelmay

be • .,......,...... ~Ilion," aald
Gong · w11o pi.w lulthef -a&gt; In
thla ' - . 1118 prominent British

.,_..IOiolllat ""Dama· Allee S t - .

-a&gt;,
... ~- tu~ellould be

Who 1e t.mllllr

With Gong's

a.;c:.=t'&amp;o·......... " ._..of

•, . . . . . _ ........... for~
,...., pRiclualng no INngM in

--·---lndaed
_.y..,.
......

-·- =.!:«

· ··· Gong Mid&gt;
- . . . of~·
lnl0i1111111111'' ~ be u8ed to
Cllllultr ...... .,. amount of

........ ~=-ly

of ......... - ...

-~x..,.·

c.r...-••••

Dr.
MnK. IIruia,_...~

:r:.':cT:
Md tecllnleii .........
1

of ana&amp;any;
!Mrtln Kane.

aub~

-...

.. -

Dr. C
1' • ~nn.,
cf . . 'NA I lei
• ~

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

..,.~.,

Clultlcr

........ - -

Pta•m•
,.. ~..,_
.. ~ae
.
- ; C1w11e
G
, .

-

""'._,._."'~--­

8--2 07

I.e .... -

~. ,.,..,e.

[)olaware.

~ (1927). ~PI'.-.­

. . . , - Calhorine .-..g,

-Huggins.

.m

5l)onsored bv Media Sludy/Buf·

"""·

--~$nloy.~Oinllr
(3233 _,St.). 9:30a.m. .IIIII 11 a.m.; -

.

Union d - - 'Hionbo.fveno

COlLEGES

Frlday-29

SUIIiMER f'ROGIWi SPEAKER

Gr-. -

noled altl'ropologlst and
· wil - " ' pari of his 10 the Western
New York area at U/8. At 10:30 a.m. he wil
present., .xress on ·:contexts of the F~ ."
This 1alk Is open 10 ol In ltle T~ Dining
Hal, Mfoerol. T h o _ .. pari of the Cologos'
...,..,.... prognrn on tho1an'ly.

OIW.IKlt.OGY SEMNARI
-farlnlrinolc-..a~··

Dr. Thon'es VanOyl&lt;e, ~of Oral Biology,
UJB. -.107, 4610-.Sinlet. 12noon.
-AIIDOnmUIFOftASAFE •

· In .add1foi\ 10 his field Wor1c w;th hlo-- ........._._,_,.
has oonciJC1ed
on octiZ·

-a......_1Jiuo

op1Yen1a. This wort&lt; b!ISed on his liona and ...tyaia of.........,. aulfetfng frr&lt;n

TOMOAIIOW
__

.....,.nlghl.a-eenouse

King ..., - ' " " " the Clomlhel

Joivo Briidy. 8:30 p.m. to 11 p.m.,
bv • bOOgM! feotLmg Free Buffalo &amp;II·

-

· IJni1loiln lJroMnolisl Ouch, ..., Forty. Tho donation .. $2. -

--Wax

moniii-. SI)onsoredbv--·

-

UUAIIFIUI"

(1978) . ContenJnce Theon . SQUre. COl 636-2919 1or """" - ·
- $ 2; - $ 1 .50.

awwd·"""*'*' """""""

bOm--ed.-

thia~dioordeo' .'

Englloh

has 11ugh1

:=..:::.~·=
and tho
of Colfomlll at S..la Cruz .
UroiYerol1y

Helsi'OCMorolesaor~ofltle~
of Colfomlll at Sonia au., .-.d on the
-Coast. One of"" bool&lt;a. &amp;oioOY .. Mind,
1972. dernons1r81ec{hls orulliPO Interests. com·
t*olng payd'oology ..., Mlhropology.

AUIS'
Antldpatkwl of Night ( - - } ; Way fo
- -; - o f Munlng (- }.
214 Wende. 2:30p.m. Sponsored bv 1loe Centerlor-Siudy.

Saturday- 30 GAY YOUTH P£ER GIIOUP -

..s rop · 107 TqwMM&lt;!.
. _, She! ClfTclus. 1 p.m. 21 IWld . . - oriy.
Meeting

New members ... welcOme.

Cll 835-3904 for

. more information.
iiE8T1IY T1IAMil10N -IIHOP
167 1/FK:-, Ellicott Complex. 1·4 p.m. For
slucll!rtB ...., ...
reUnlng 10 1hoi'
tone """'*Y aoon. ~-toy ConP1Int 10
F&lt;n1gro _ , . .-.d Set-. IWld the Fcnlgn

be

--lor-·-.- fonllgn

UUAIIFIUI'
of F..,..... 111114). 170 1/FK:-, -

$2; _

..

$1 .50.
ln .. ~r1clo---1111oe
CWIIOiiln ial&lt;""""""' lnooolvlng-

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.
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stetter. 4:15p.m.

114 Hoch·

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M Qrldo (An1onlori) . 146 Diefendorf. 7 p.m.
• 5ponsoredbvltleCen1erlorMediaSiudy.

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.

.,~ .

~·-·
---~-- _ . .. 6 :30 .....
-~~~~~--~--

"",._.,__... ... - . a
10 hlo

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(SuodaY); 8 a.m. and 12 noon ( - . ):

_

p.m. ~ -

· $3.50;$2 lor ctoldrwo. A '-&lt;1-

...

-~
be-· '*'"-~-­
Sponsored bvthoCIIIholicc.r.&gt;ua MinloOy.

.....

.COUBIEOFIIA-TICALICIBICES
lUT--

..., ...

paychology expotlmen1. A "*&gt;!nun paymen1 ~
$3 wil be , _ lor )'OU' porllcipa1lon. We ""

1n ..-!ofbolll men .-.dw&lt;&gt;nWlto...,parl
1n 11oe prognrn. H interealed, cal 831-1386 for
more lnlormo1ion.

lUTORSNEEDED

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

"""""'"*'"
- and t....
'*'
extra money credt
1u10r8.

elm

Of

hoW )'OU
this tumWJr by

calin9 N(o" 636-2079- 3 .-.l 5 p.m..
and'"""*'*aat636-3382.

'

Exl;llblts
JAZZEJOBT
- - of jazz musicionS In perlormlwoce
In
201 a.u. _,St.

am... -lJbnrr.

On TheAll:.
~.21.un- Ca1i1ar1ne

0. - , Pto.O.

...- . Health~. ccHooat-lor entire

prognrn. WKBW·TV(Chomei 7). 10a.m.

-~&gt;WJ OJ.' ~ ..... Kotz, deon.
..., .....-. of the School of _ , .
lacuitv .-.d slaff. "Wh..'8 Now In Health Cln:
T- -Core ofYoU-oolf;" - O J . - . ,
~ Clr*:ll- ~of fJOtdwitry.
''Child ~and 1loe Prolllenwof~ Up."

----(plrlll}.
~

In lha AriS: Eo1har Hafriott

,

~Y-OJ.HarbartL-,pro­

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JIJt.YI
~I:OJ.-F.-.ioopre&amp;i­
dan1for.-..::-.. "PP'ccllamaonolCJi&gt;jjOrlu·
- - forUIB." WBEN (930). 9:0ll p:ne ·
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. 10a.m.
----~-.­

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....,_-a.Jazz

_...,~ .

1-4 p,m. ; T - - · 1·9 p.m.;
Mldaya, 1-11 p.m. 106-1011 __,., a.t.
BooiiCompiex.-

~-r~,.,_

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

F.- ;Vi. Garnwo , 1977) .
ContSMOO Thoan. ScJn. Col 636-2919 for
- - - - - $ 2; $1 .50.
"
"' ordlrwy Ham· '
A complex storyline lug ...... ...., booc&gt;n*- with lin rmry
of gangataro rw&gt;glng irom ... . , fOrger to •
porno~- and ...., .......muety -

~~CHICKBI~
-~ - --- .ll"!8.1 · 5

., F.,..1111141.
170 1/FK:-,
- - C -o l 636-2919 ....
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Fila IIIYd.

COurier C.. (Qwroal1 0). 6 :30p.m.

Notrees_

SundAy ---1

• -

CELL I MOL£CUlAIIIIOlOGY
SEMNAR

WAll FILII'

(USSR.

Col 636-2919

(Niaglnl

PS~==to~ lna ·

-

11yo1uncit1oo In Locallnd .hmhl.. Poriodontitla,

Cenllr

-.St.), 11 :45a.m.
•
•
~ Nawnwo Cenlor. Frontier
Sp.~. (-~Masa) .

Thursday-S

Monday-1

if.;§Gi!E?!~~~

doya. Nawnwo

--

In the ~ er'd 40o using of lmwniazz port"""""', ouc:toaal.ouia ~ -

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coot of - I a. Col 835-3904 for .....,

-

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....

Wednesday- 4 Gay -

~~.'d'=-~.iiou pro-

PeoliY
Lee.
Duke Ealglon.

"Cilnllr .

o!fedlloo ~- tho ..,. of tho l'llydooioglcll Clink: ... to tho ~
ioglcll ~ Olnllr. -

to capture

STUOY SI'£CIAL EVENT'

8

. . . . . to . . -

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om -

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All--"Facul·
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.............. .
..........................

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.................................
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~Oflloe•

�</text>
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··-~;~
.00~::

...~T-·~"'- !~u~l:ra

-

told quarrel-now' "In
system" lor
"make a Case"
IICI!ll8d ' with \he

•
" outstanding
Don't Just all lh. .
Fredonia President Dallas Beal
the
advi eed that, regardless of - budget,
have the "personal relations skills" to
&lt;:banlll! can and must ocyur II an
articulate ·the budget in a way that can
insti.tuiton is to maintain its integrity
-and not fall into " regressive" _pattems . .. be understood, Beal · continued. Cam·
pus.1 - . llhouid also·"anticipate the
He rejected what ne called the "sit still
demands and restrictions" of the State.
and hang on" phnosophy now being
exhibited by some faculty and
Politics •• imporlllnt
·
.administrators, qubblng .it a " prescripBeaf' advocated an emphasis on
tion lor deterioration. •
•
political lenoe-mending. Let Albany
Change should be " clearly targeted
•ioe•z.o.-,•-2,caLS
and _ understood," BeaJ said , if "not

~~o':l'~:1;;.

~~!Y:aP:~

.

,·UlBphy~'''• .-~e~ere~·- ~e.-~ ·l d1sutgery
.:._..

I'

I '

were either benign or !Miignant, and
non-malignant leaiona of tha _,lx. ·
Why the Buffalo group ..:.. ..ong with

acatter.d ool,_.,.. .....,_. ernl:ncad a tachnlque at a time It giwn relatively little 1101108 by othera
hid to do with thalr , , _ . In
da'laloplng , _ ~utic app&lt;oachM

lor oertaln problema.
·NDt .......... loall

•

.

"Many phyelclana healtate to con-

=

~:f:,r::c:.:=~lh=lt=

trained to uae at.nc1an:1 toola of the
J)l'bfeaalon. Liquid nitrogen applied to
lisaue with a probe or apray ill 1101 one
of The
thoae,"
aaye.
tecllll ua
lnvoMi .... Ill a
gaeoua llqu
- liquid nitrogen or
Rltroua
oxtcll ~,upnooreel
to _,.~
- 1'11111
fl'onl -410 to
·1te--C. Appl
·oftheeaent

on the~ d._... ttaeua oontln ....
until ., a Will lonna.
-n. tlleue Ia dlellvyecl within
mll)utel or IIOIIndt. dll*ldl!.'ll, !IP(in
the ...... CIIDCh of111eilllon, a-

....... ,... dlld ............... ofl,

_.or...._

a

lllllwlng ~ ol' ttaaue Within
8alll n.IN ttmefeW---to MIIIUGIIM tanllllmltM
- - ~ . . 18110Nd to the

.

-----.·-t.co~.a

�...

r

Gjosurgery

know you under8tand their financial
-problems and .... "apprec:llltive" 'J)f the
aaeisanee you ,_,.., he edvlaad the
bu-om-s.
(
"'--onia, he aald,
high
premium on credibility" IIIK! faala II le
not to Ita eilvllntaga to be "overly
cloww''ln tarma of budllal raq-.
"Fredonia doaan't alii&lt; for the moon,"
or •cry wolf," he Nmaf1&lt;ed. Tile latter
often inal&lt;eS It lmpoaalble to Qat money
when e desperate situation do. occur.
lnateed, 8eel said, Fred0!11a :uwoa-ln on
a f - arMS which muat get funded In
order to avoid "monumental .-xpendlturea" at a later date.

·p- •

Dental r~rchers present
promising ·s tudies of new uses
at national conference held here
raported tMt the eupercold technique
may help preveot the permanent facial
'paraJyele which often occure following
removal of a dl..-1 parotid gland' I;&gt;Y
conwntlonalaurgery.
Or. lj...... l a..,tte uld tMt U/8

::~:~":.=~~
while deltroylng the glaind which Ia

located In the heed ' lind '-* - ·
The prellmlnaty atudlea, which he
reported, auggeet tMt application of
liquid nlllogen at temperatura of -60 to
-«1 c1egr.a c for fbllr to alx mlnut•
~troya the gland but do. not .ppeer
to Impair tunc11onal ability of the nell'by
._,th , _ which controle facial
expreaalona. Conventional aurgwy for
removal of the parotid by exclalori, on
the other hand, po- a definite rial&lt;
this n..-.. will be -ered. If the parotid

-~~~ =:.,~rg-!,n'c\'at1 ,;:.~

their rewardaayatem. Often, rewards do
not have to be monetary In oroar to peril
up the morale of faculty and ataH, he
ob~ . "A good pet on the bacK, a
kind thank-you or a letter of
appreciation helps.':

Bulfalo Stata alked ltaalf quaatlona
Bill Licata, acting vice- president for
policy and planning at Buffalo State,
reported that his campus recently
completed a management plan by
essentially asking' and answering the
following questions: Where are we
now? Where do Wll wish to go? What are
the weya of getting there? -.;_...,Ill we
know once we arrlve11n orCiarlo11et the
netVel~ conalclarably.
right answers, Licata aor8eclwltb Beal,
· 8euett,e aald that Immediately
a unit·must ~now Its own priorities and
following cryoeurgery on normal
those of Albany and -must have an
I*Oild glande In two R~ue monkeva,
objective way of ~ng; each
there wu dlmlnlahed function of !he
facial nerw. !Jut within a
developmental phue.
...
Rigidity, fear the unlmown,"vasted
month, full natVe function appeced to
be naatored.
Interests, and lack of trust -that others
"The facial nerw at rial&lt; for damage In
are dealing honeetly with you are major
perotld aurgwy Ia a myllnatlng type
, obstacles to chliiiQe, Licata aaid.
autTQUnded bV~ a protective 8haalh
To help sur'fnount them, &amp;tate's
which contalna an f~lon of lipid
directors Degan to .roeet on a regular
(fat)." he explained. Dhnlnlalled u.w. _ ~Is to share the)r problem!!. Often,
function Immediately attar cryoaurgery
the actions of one area '-&lt;I poeltlvely
on the_ gland wu due to diMoiVIng of
Impacted on others. lncraaed comthe llplel by the ext- temperaJur.. It
munication brought a higher degree of
~.
though, tMt the R'Did
trust, Ucata noted. The group ~ raallz8CI
gredually r.turna with no damage to lhe
they were all worl&lt;lng toward the same
natVelnalda the protective Jheaih,
objectives" and all had problems
acfllevlng'tllem.
"If the nerw Ia daatroyed, u
~

=-~"'·of r,:''a=~~~,:.

of

-uo

""'.:bt

:cs~a:.c:::."·~nal~~m:

not be allla to eml.., " - " or PI'Oduca
...,., Wllal &amp;IIQIIW8iona on the aida
lllwohoed In the ~dl'hle affect
may alio aM~IuaiiY pr'of;luoa~ 'droop' In
muacl•
on the .tfeqted altte ot the
teoe.•
' II :otVi
Although the prellrTflnwy ~~atf
U/8 ~ promlalaO,
a
~lonad that furttwm ~ Ia
~.This pro~- also funded
byNIDR.
·v:.&lt;
4

.

.,J:,

~~=~~the
meeting
which atnctact llhYalciMa anci aol'

entiat&amp; from .rQUrid tlia world, .........
raport..s that . otlw U/8 · . - e l l
auggaata that aallv.ry gland tlaeue
other tlllln the pllrollclgland can also be
~ ualng oryoaurgary,
Thla ........_ tMf Cl'yofurgary may
wall be an .,_... farm ot traatmant
for aallv~rOIWttoa, which, whHe' not
.....ly
IWII, oan Invade the
jliwboile
pellite, leading · to

-

,.....,..,..._ .. ...-.i .
In a -.c1

paper;

the U/8 ,...,

....

=

I aeld IUIIaiiL H4i elao

8111

~-~to

,.,. In.....,_
-. flolla!.ta Roaa....lolnid
.........
Ma.

.....,...,~

the dental

- a . . on thethlrd,atudy.
'Sl
•

·AcJdelman begins term
In Statistics .this

-

~mton

teara. the 'd-.... men- .

fC:~i.=~=--~::s:'kJ~c: c::a:=~
,:;;Jl

ton, insisted that faculty and
must
" shed their dlnoaaur mentality" . If
chanv,e .ls to Oc:cur. " li'eaelmlstlc

~= ngt~'~,;..-tl~~c!~!",!~~g an~

explained.
•
Woodard also reported Blngh,mton
Is eealng the pain of -retource
withdrawal In certaln areaa by •tartJng
support programs· In the community
and university which WI the gape.
For ~ example,
that cainpue Ia
attempting to "Cl8allvely" eliminate the
problem of overburdened counf81ora by
' .asking specially trained cle.ical and
pro!_aaelonal 8!ftploy- lo help man a

counaallng canter, Woodaril aald He
beltevea the couneellng c:8ilter
be
-*!ualety and -property etaffed without
any negatfvelmpact on job productivity.
The unit mey alao al8rt atnlnllthenlng
Ita -roaa. ha aald, by c:hargTng a fee
tor certain outr.:h programe. •
Ult~aly, Woodard-bell- SUNY
can mo~ and Improve morale by
employing tacllnology whk:h decreases
the amount of Plll)arWOfk reQuired or
empl~. Tlma apent doing these
choNa can be uaed mOte productive~
.......,.,., heaa~ed .
Other waya Woodard listed for
lmpJOylng the financial picture ol
lndiYidual unlta Ia: lncreaaed grantsm-lp, aharlng of reaources with
other campu-. and hiring sllpended
"general student aaelatanta" who can
be employed In multiple roles on.
campus.

can

~~~::::~t~~~i':."'~':w-

lon Garver told the buelneaa officers he
bel'lews, that with cum~nt enrollment

•.

r.'~~· z~r::a ;:.;~u4'~; :~r~~
"~!gr~~~ied what had been said '

previously about the Importance or
political connections, particularly since
competition for reaources Is becoming
keener not only among State schools
but between public and private
Institutions as well.
As this competition lor hinds
becomes mora -!Qua, Garver believes
SUNY will have to take a liard look at
~It Ill reallocate Ita money. When
this haPpens, he said, It's Imperative
that judgements be baaed on "quality of
progama and .-ltectlvenaae of del Ivery
to students."
Garver laid-It le "c'-f' U/8 will lace
academic· retrenchment In the-future.

~ftt-~nlr:~lKtY:~~ :::: ~~~0:.':

enrollment l!fld flnanotaJ ~Ia without
cutbacks, he c:o.,cluded: He noted that
retranc:hment will be ''v~-dlfflcull ,"
but he feela It can aleq be vkiWlid as "an
bpportunlty for CtMtlve thln~.h'E .
~campu-mlghtgo ~-

Garver aald

he

""
do., n&lt;IL think

~~ll'berat.=;~~~=~~

decreaaed enrollment Wid ··tundp. He
aald he "would be aurprlaed" lfSUNY
- gets through the next clecacJe" wlthout·
eacrlflclng some campu- In 'oitler to
retain a quality ayatem. ~ -- _- _
A ·member of the audlenoa · asked
Garver If he thlnka ratranc:lliiilii!t (and
the upact of baing judged on-Q'uality)
will txW faculty Into amps and
deatroy morale. Not Pf'lltii!J1Ing to
· respond for the entire faculty Garver
said he paraonally thlnl&lt;a the 1111swer
dependa on the ''degree to which
faculty undaratanc:t what are productive

:::J ~~lflca:n~~a.~1~nff
done in an"Pntelllgant way," he edd&lt;id.

•UIB pioneers
the VA and Millard FlllmoN hoapltala In
the awry~ of~ ta -uy
adaptable to apaclfle araaa of tha body.

~~-tonally

· ~ L~ it•=

l,n , O&lt;WifllrMY Ia
growing,- bal...,_,
•
"TileY coma to meattnga llu the ona
~ted by the AmeriCian Collage of
Qyoaurgwy ~ ltaalf a,_ cqanlzatlon
- and ra.n the tecllnlquea; t11ey alao
obaaM their cotteaouea performing the
· PfOOed-alaawhaia,"l!!,..,.rna.

~~::...~~iJ~

and lnatruiMntlillon on .,..., gjlatln

and _ , ~. aM~ 111am the
."faal" for Of)'OtUtVar)' Whlollla - t l a l
balorw !hay,u• 11 cllnloalty.
"CryoJUr'gary will not , . _ all
' - of fU~,· eaya ~J "IIUI M
Wl'll llftPIO*I8 dantlata
:::." lniiiWd to .• it In
It claaWra dl-.cl tiafUe ..
an.ctlvaly u ow. be dona by axclalon
with • ..tpal... •
-

u--

Reappointed

' .

eo.-tJna Y.-18

hU p.tt
~ Chalmw~ of the oapertmaill of 8oclology for a ttne-year
Or.

*'"·=~1.111711.
In an
the licllon, ~t

Aollart L.
aeld tllalln hla yen U ·
Gllalrman, y.,..q .... "'lMn •
~· ettaotn. .......... 10{ Socl-

oonan~~m:l ~~~

·d• eloiMtetlt.•

�Soviet scholars
.cOining here ·
again this year

~

.Out{each bus
, .threatened with
abandonment

A QfQUP of 37 acholare from the ·

Soviet Unloo will arrt,. at U/B Sunday

. Tha bright, fully-equipped mobile
unit which hu been providing· special

(June 24) to begin an elght-WMI&lt;
program_ at the lntenalva Engllah
Langu.ge Institute (lEI-I).
"It was. llnprecedented fer us to be
choaen to host the program fOr the third
year In a row," Dr. Stephen Ounnett
director of the lEU, aald, eddlng that 1i
the request of the Soviets
themselves that U/B be selected.
-~ exchange program Ia edmlnl&amp;t.,..., by the International R-.:h and
Exch&amp;ngea Board and funded by the
U.S. Department of State.
•
" Buffalo Ia the moat hQipitable city
In the Unltep States, '
Dunnett
contended, "and thlala one of1he major
naaaona we were selected above
. un lveral!lita from all over tha.couotry.
, "During the So•*•' stay, we fuat
can't achedule enough aoclal activftiea
to •tiaty all the local groupe who want
to hoat them." he noted .
Tha acholare, all teacher~ of English
at Soviet unl..,..ltiea, will spend their
eight weeks hera a)udylng American
methode of teaching Engllah as a
foreign language. Duilng the put two

="*"·

'

~:"g~in~~l b':.rv~~~ ~~ Gorovlded
schoolers In Livingston, Wyomr.::
Genesee and Steuben counties. At least
half of those served during the 13
months the Project has been "on the
road" have multiple disabilities, Kent
Tigges, project director and a professor
of oe&lt;;up.;otlonal t.llecJipv, fiiPO!I8d .
Although the Pr.o)iiCi .wu. auppoled
to'have been funded for three yeara by a

~=-:~::' ~~ ~:r'a:·':'tD~~~~t:!;

. Developmental Dlaabllltlea, Congraaa
hun't appropriated the' promlled
money for continuing It and other
special programs put Sept81Uber 30,

~~np ~ ~~':,;,, .

he emphulzed,
"If for lack of funding, thla Project
ceaaaa to exist." The Projeci daalgned to naach out to rural pna.
school..., unable to travel to obtain
servlcea they 1188!1. such servlcea may
be located mora,.than 50 mllea from
thelrhomea.
- ·
,
The bua staff.; - an occull&amp;lLonal
therapist, a apeclal education teacha!
and a speecll 811!1. hearing therapist '!!
work with children lndiYiduaily at le&amp;f.l
once and often twice weekly. Tlggaa
said that for man)l.ol the parents one or
two weekly trips to services In Buffalo
and Rochester WOI'id be a burden. .
· By ,_,•~.:r,::lal services bel&lt;&gt;&lt;-

almoat 80 acholtn h -

~~~~ ~,=:J',; ="~~

the
Complex,
Quri!)Q their vlalt, the Soviets
J*tlclll&amp;le In a wlda vwlaty of·
actlvitlea, Including hOITIMtaya with
anaa...tamlllee. ln. eiddltion to viewing
local ecanlc altniCtlona, lut )'Wa
group waa heated at a apeclal picnic
and 9fivale concert by the Buffalo
Phllhalmonlc ~ra.
.,.,_ . expertenoea don't heppen
an~but ln a clty like aulfalo,"

o : n : M t e r of the lEU II thla
)'Wa .. aaalatant Soviet program coord ll"lPC...

l::.~ ~ter chin~ot":et~~~~~

vt.~~!!l;,:,.tha~r~1~~!

the
June 24: Arrha! at Buffalo ' International Airport on Amencan Flight
/21!1. ~ p.m.
•
,JCIII,l25: TQur of tile AmiWat OMifU8

~lll:l,l~orRl~P=:n'aitat-:;

beg(t)JI~

at Elllcolt'a Newcomb
TeiTiil!e'111 :30 p.m.
Jun. ·211: Tour of the Main Strwt
cam~.. - led I!Y Robert Schaefer,
~lnnlnj,•ltO a.m.
.

eou'f:w ~~~;-=r~p,gt~'f ~~t.~

Tha Sovleta will be gUMta at the home
of P~"""' and Mra. Robert L. Katter
for a NO&amp;Ptlon at II p.m.
July 2: A rwoeptlon In ·Spaulding
CafaWia from 7 to g p.m. with
ll*nbera of the Un lvaralty and Buffalo
World l:loapltaflty AeaoclatiOn attendIng.

aucceaafully attend axlating achoola lrl
their communltlea..

Someone's watch~ng
Cynthia Hamberger; who will r-Ive
l&gt;f!' p .F.A. ill OGmiDIIIIlcaU!ll)a daakln
thla ..,mmer, 11M wOn lllflod pl1ze In t'he
18th Annual S)udant
Dealgn
Com~ltlon aponaonad by Print mag.
· zlne, the leading llr*Phlc/comn)un)Catlon perlodlcal-pubOII'ied In theU.$.

co-

Wt.~ .E.o":~ :t~ ,::g~pat~i

l;:uropMn countrlea u wellaa Asia, was
to aaak · a 'CO\Ier •.dealgn for the
· Se'ptember/~o~c1Q71! lnue of Print.
Enmnta were dealgn e)udents completIng tliilr .enlor year of collage.
Ma: Hamberae(li Clealgn, a photo
mont~ge •h.OWing a biiJbojl('d. ..Q88I'
Gataa Circle - In Buffalo, wlfi be
~yced lnatq&amp; the magazine's

Selit~b,o'/OQober laaua,

tr.

__ _

her~~hlcafly

"-'~"""' . tllj llllltiCIIinl lllil
glaring eye~ ot a ,.,.,.·~ , _ looking

clownoo·a~trfan.

Donald E. NIChola, U/B profeaaor of
art, noted &amp;lnltl'Ma. Hambitraer'a wort&lt;
relatea to .US'JI'pervaalve ln!)uenoa of
advertlalng mwlla u they surround us
In our evllf}".aeli¥fty and conatantly keep
ua In their locus.• ,
She deacrlbea It as a ..ure on

~~~fag ~~~::;-'.'out'

that

U/B'a

0

~.::~==~~ f~u~l~

pul five years In Which the University
hu entenad the competition.

2~ research_~f$fUil¢t.ed internalfy
-a.

T..,~four
Q~W~t p&lt;OpOaala
_.. lunded In tha aprlng round of
competitiOn fOf lntamal -rrionlaa ~
duclted bY lha Un-.tty-wlde com-

_

lunda
and U/8
ion eaed
=-=~~··=

~lng to tha Dlvlalon of a..4uate
and ProleNional EdUCMion, 22 ~
POaala for ~ - a .

lolalfng 1&amp;4,417 ...bmit1al!i .33
propoaala for atudlel In Olhel' neoda
-ntedto•1.111. ·
Tha BRSG panel allooated 131,1142 for
13 PfiiiiOMII; and lhe U/8 Fqundallon
eaed lriCIMY group aaleatad 11
IIRIIM*!Ieln the amc!Unl ot ftl,117 . The
!J/8 FoundatiOn allooated- to lund
of ~ tha ' ,....ntna lq~,~r
,....., lriCIMY thtQ\Igll tha lleail'l

:::1o~n!~~~~~ ~~00~:.!

York may be abandoned after September 3Q because of lack of money.
Known as . the Mobile Early Intervention Project, and sponsoA!d by the
U/B Department of Occupational

EnilliiaailtoD (SfO 821ll
0 . · ,Bid'oilik,' Civil
'*-al

B'p rile

~~..
· ~ic: ' l

w_.. ·.ncs

Englnaarlng,
Com-

~,e/.~!1·
~·~""'ii:'

Do.orJ,..J~.

Fire
tun':i.
11780; D. T..,IIIM, ""''lnaarlng SCI.,_, Flow and TIWieilolt In lha J,.ung
W.ilwiiP, (BRSG), S2620; and P.
"ttu-, ctwnloal Eng'-1ng, TraneIIOft of .~ · thrU ~ at tha
011/W_I,.,_, (BRSG),I3710.

$1200; ·c . Laurendl, Biological Sciencaa, A Cytochemical Study of the
Falgellar · Surf- Coat o~ · Chlemy1 ~1. (BRSG)', mJI; Mlt Marlh*lm~lf!hyaf&lt;*l; Moaaba6ef •l!flec:'t"St0dlea
ot Rare &amp;rth Mixed Valence Systems,
(Dean's lunda), $1802; M. Miles,
Biological Sciences, Unilateral Nuclear
Mlgr.tlon In the Baaldlomycatea,
(BRSG), 12411 ; C. Privitera"' Biological
Sciencea, Aapecta of unto.genetlc
Blosynthalla of Phoaphollplda from
·Normal and Qystrophlc Chlckena
Erythrocyte Plaamaiemmall, (BRSG),
13000; and H. St1'8Un, Biological
Sclanoea, Effect of Raalrfctlllll Enivme
Claa-.ge on the Tranaformfng Activity
of DNA, 1BRSG), $3000.
_
. . . . ..._($8342)
M.C. Al:r;, LlnQI!IItlca,

The

regular classroom.
The Project staff

has

centert In Rochester and the four- ·
county area regarding referrals of
children for ... Istance.
" Parents of the children who using the aervlcaa," Tlggea •ld
proudly, ."h - held bake aal8l and
rafflea In their communltlea to help
ral"! money to try to keep the Project
rolling.•
Ironically, In the ahaclow of no money
to continue It, the Protect aalacted
by HEW u one of f7 damonatratlon
pro)ecla saluting tha International 'l'.ar
ofthe (Hafttllolllioed) Child. ' I 1.'1 II
"Obvlouafy, HEW Nala the ,_...,.
hu great 11\&amp;rft," aaJd Trggea', · -:'biii
Congnau almpfy haen't appropriated

~':t,~~ co:.=,t'/:.=c::
be funded put a point at which the
communltlee conc.ned will hopefully
pick up aponaorahlp,
r
"We don't know what tha futura holda
for· tha Prolact," T[Qgea noted, ''but It
wo!lld be lerrlbie rr lha children . .
- a n d others who 11181' be ralarrad In
the n - tunn 8Uddanly Qnclonad just
JII'OIIn&amp;M· Ia being
made."
I
f
Right now, though, thera'a no

:_

"'*'

~~hat~::e:uy :,nted..:::

.cll..wtlo'*Y-"' JUnGe.

- ~of~~Skllla

their projacta

--L&gt;~ .~~~ Dean honored
= ~~~
-·~-~~-

-=

By tacui\laa, grant naclplanta .and

~: (o-'1 , . .•.,~

-Ollonln,IIRIGts:=. .

,

~

lei-

---=-:~

~~

~
IIBtar

Ill

lliiiiiiiiiiiiD

Oom~(8MCI).S1

.

.
.

re.celved

:;:~ra~~,:,:n :dys~~~:~

;~:, ~ ~11=-rol~~ ~

any montaftarSeptamber.

-

o-;e S. ~--of the U/8
SchOOl ·of lni'CirlMIIOD and Utnry
Studlee, ..-.ntl)' deaign8ted . . .
Dlltlngulahad AI~ II)' the 8choot
of
~111 CMa
flaaenla
ln.CIIftland.

w-

The ' - "
liMn 1o Dean
Boblnakl • • '-GIIIIIIerd In Cl...cancl

=:~: 75111 .vi=~

• c..
-

. : . The &amp;llectlon
made IIJ •ll*llal Olllllllllltee.

�JUno 21 , 1878

4
1

'# . t~

&lt;

'Little Romance' review·
gets a little flak
writing." I agree, too, that some, if not
~
J
•
•
most, of " the other people were very
The Review published In the June
good" and that "tire photograph y was
edition of your ~r of the movie A
excellent," although sln~lin~ out
Little Romance' was nothing to be
photography _tor special praose os a bit
proud of as an example of that
of a lett-handed compliment , like going
questionable form of writing. It seems
backstage after a poor play to rave
to- me that your reviewer, who also
about the makeup.
seems to be, of all things, director,
I also must agree with Mr. Lascelles
Cultural A Heirs, - co.uld not possibly
that the " moments of very funny
have seen theJilm. humor" were funny; I'd even go so far as
hi•- Harriott says the film was In
to say tllat humor Is always funny . As
French with .English subtitles. The
for my having no sense of humor, it's
movie was In English. Outside of th is
petty detail, the review seems pretty
~~~o~~n~~~~gC::. h:~~~JI. ~~ ~~:~:;
superifclal. The film was not the
area. I've heard people own up to being
· .....-st but there went moments of very
seffleh,
unkind, bad tempered. - you
lilnfty humor. Maybe Ms. Harriott has
name II. But have you ever known
no sense of l)umor. L:ord knows the .. anyone
to confide, ''You know, I have
great Olivier did not add much , but
no sense of humor''?
·
moat of the ot~er people were very
I do admit t!lat I am · not "a very
good. The photography was excellent .
, experienced reviewer," and that I "could
1 doUbt Ms. Harriott i s a very
so louse up a review" (although I'm
experl.nced reviewer, but It might be a
gratified that my lousing up " fascingood Idea to tell her It Is customary for
ated" my reader).
P89Pie In this line to see the films they
My mea culpa continues: Lascelles'
.,.....-lng.
protest that the .movie was prlmaril y 1n
c:orn.orf. admit 11. Esther clld not see
English Is comoct. I now recall noting
the movie. There-was a little In French
somewhat Idly, while watching " A Little
at tt&gt;e very bligln.(llng, attar which your
Romance, " that It wss unnatural for the
·reviewer left, or fell asleep, fight?
two French boys to con-se with each
The courtes~ o a reply would be
other In accented English, rather than
fasclnat!!d how
appreciated. fl
chatting In their native tongue.
anyone could so lOUse up a ~~;;-tru ly,
With onlr one accusation of Mr.
Lascelles must 'I take exception. I did
-Chartee B. u.c.~r Jr.
not, as he speculates, fall asleep. No
SAED, Hayes Hall
tlft~ 1 W~,;,=;p~o!:.;"~~~':,\' ~Y.. ~
MI. H'amoH ..plea
, relentless Insomnia, wh ich, ~esplte the
1 nave to agree with Mr. Lascelles
~~~e;: o~~~=~~~~re~uve quaiconclusion that my review of " A Little
'Romance" was nothi ng to be proud of ,
-Eather Harriott
even for " that questionable form of

.14

...

...

88

He represented a
a blac!t &amp;.. white world,
says;
Plesur would fly on a DC.-1 0 with him
v.rr

llltle _, be eald about the
''Duke" that haan 1 been
mauthecf or read In hundreds of articles
and TV tributes In the days since his
death .
John Wayne has been called a hero
and an Institution. Many saw him as the
"quln!Msentlal Amertcan ." Yet, the
same man met severe crltic1sm from the
~egenC~.-y

l:l:a':"'~:X:~~~m;:~
e- though millions know

the details

of hi11lfe 11nd death, what mad9 Wayne

t!Q&lt; remains an enigma. ·
.
'rwo U/B profeuono were asked' by
local news teams to comment on the
lmPK! Wayne haid on the. country.
Having _ , one ShOrt clip and having
heard about the demise of the otller (It's
reatlng on the out-take pile), the
Reporler asked the men to elaborate:
Hll•¥-otood•bleckMdwlllte~-

For Norman Holland, dliktor of the
Oenter for the f'aychologlcal Btuity of
the Aria, "the Duke" was an ~or .,.
enjoyed one who rep-lid a
•paatorat to a almpte world "
.....,. " IICtlons and decl1lona - . .
-blaCk or white," Instead of muted

"':::0.,
Holland, Wayne beceme
llg,... after Woncl Ww t1

......
----.....--------·

a lllllonal

he "'filled a need;" he
lrllcu'-lad the tdeu of • QI'OIIP of people
had had a
._...

wiiO

__ _..,.., .... __
A _

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

__
_,-·-

,..._
..._.,

- - .. ,. Oollo-. -

. . . . ._,
GIOI
_

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

~

- ,_

uup_

spokeaper8011 and "'JJIIIIIIIIf them Into
the mainstream." Far from the Cary
Grant Ideal of the Eastern sophisticate,
war,ne was .a "ruadold;g'ltlnefy. Individual at" who couid'QIII&lt;lhlrtgs done. He
told Americana they 'llOiuld be " strong,
relleble and mQrally ....,..ltted" at a _
time when they ileeoded ..illearit.
Wayne's Image, salduMolland, was
"created by us. • It :1 :•consolidated
aspects of our national character'\ and
" ratlected us to ourselves. We found
-ways of re-creating ourselves through
him ."
Neither Holland nor resident Hollywood buff Professor' MUton Plesur of
History can see any actor on the horizon
with the ability to flit ''the Duke's"
shoes. Wayne, It seems, was a product
of a particular time and need In our
history that can't be replicated .
PIMur -.ldn'l get to him
Pleaur, who has lntervlewl!!l many

~o:~~,~~~y~""t:
came

was h&amp;Mng him aw- In his
olflcoi. ThoSe toe 4ld lntervtepw. thOUgh,
thought WaY."! " a fine representative 'of
Hollr:=- ' At least, that was their

~~:.:".Jews ~oee

rua

not to
P!Mur'a .clip In their tribute to " the
Dulle." Plaaur grinned that It probably
had - h l n g to do with -lhe floct he
tOld reporter SUSM Banks that the only
way he:d get on a DC-10 was If Wayne
the pilot; thal'l the kind of
canf....,_ltleman·prcljeCtad. Aller all,
nwaad Pleaur, he landed • crippled
pl.- In "The High and the M~, "
i1ghl'l .
.PIMur aya the Turl*lan Frontf!or
Theala ID Ailwtcln Hlat9'Y ~

upertenoa. "So·
;:.;;,=~-born

out f/1 ...

--

tD the

.,.:-:::=...•=

,_-=~~-wiiO ~

=

........,
fiiGCMby 81111
- be-eo
lrllliiMII to -1M blet*l~
IIOIII*rwllh tha IIIIIPttr of~.
wllll " - Old .-gil tQ •
HoiiMd ~..,.. the public
Cllcllllll--._ ... ...-11'-'1 or
.................... ln..,.,.....,
IIIII II IIOII..hllll llolpllllad 1118 ftWI

.
Me!Jibership

~i.,'Jr',!~~h=.,'"'::r:::t:':~~~uled with

he~ ping

AMHERST CAMPUS

· .June22- 9 a.m.-11 a.m . Pres. Gibson and John Ber1&lt;houdt will be available
at Norton 107 to help members. on the Amherst Campus with questions-they
mayh&amp;Vil. .
•
.
•
11 a.m. There will be a meeting at Norton 107 for those who wish to meet
topQther to discuss the ag~ment.
.

I

MAIN ST. CAMPUS
June 22- 1 p.m.-3 p.m. Pres. Gibson, Pres. Norman Corah (Health Sciences
Chapter) and John Ber1&lt;houdt will be available at the Academy Room (Health
Sciences Library In Kimball Tower) to.belp members on Main St. Campus
.with questions they may have.
_

Gibson outlines-proc·ess
for contract vote ·
the state wor1&lt;1ng out a service contract.
The Initial decfuC\lon Ia Increased. But
the ceiling Ia ralaed greatly. Hopefully,
one will not be t.-t with oalaatrophlc
health expen-. But, If one dOes face
It, the proposal will help greatly. That is
where help Ia aoraty needed .
_
No specific propoeal came from th is
Chapter to me for atr.ngthenlng Article
35 In ratrenchment. The proposed
revlslono, In my judgment, strangthen
the Article In lmportanl ways, especially the s t a t - or level of ratrenchment and ratiOnale with grledbillty.
'On the whole, In my judgment, the
proposed i g , _ , t ~ our
support by., .rtrrmatl..e ballot. If there
are·waya In wlllcll . , .-ment can be
~
~ made more~, now Ia the tlme to
•tart working on IIRIIICI8ala to b8' readY
blllot.
aR811g81118nta. may be
the next iOuncf of negotiations when
made ., ceiling tl)e S4!ctMary. Ed for
It c:onlea.
• .
Alfonaln, at"tha UUP offlca ln.Aibany,
Plana twve ~made for meetings at
Some-...,.'-'~
which - rnember8 o:nal. -uk further
~ltle -.....-t. cnnt.d, It-de:.
~alftheywt.O .. .. raywl~~held
1101 lloaap up fully with Inflation
u. an
June 22 on tt. AJnlleqt Clonipus In
.
.
u-.
And, a.c.u. of - U. morning and on....., St. CloniPO• In
r-.a ,..., u..are e~~~aya.
1M~- A notioe of the meetings
... aattllnWot Ia . . . . tlwl tbat 01
..,.,_. In thla , _ of tha ~­
CliiiQ ..... lnollidlng dl-lofwy
WhMeH might be helpful to h&amp;Ye'lhe full
lunda, .. ellghlly aiiCM '-In! . text, u. "hlghllgllte". gl..e U. ,subguldeiiMa. A l i i - - 01111111181...
and, ..... . _ 1111-ra, tlwJ . .
that thll tetter
~and the lllellinga· wUt help ln .:lhll
ratification ~-•
The ltlma whldl
1
my -.on,~

Editor:
I, am

_
writing about

the

current
called
• conlractj 'biltween OuP and the State.
Several queetlons have been addressed
to me. It Is hoped that th is letter will
help the ratification process on this
campus.
. •
·
The ratiflcallon schedule Ia as
follows: Highlights have already been
mailed and ·recelvad. The full text Ia
being checked between UUP and the
State, then .grlnted and will be mailed
June 22. fhe "'--ean Arbitration
Auoclatlon wiU mall bel lola. to. UUP
memblnhlp on ~!18 25 to be ratumed
to AAA b)' July e: Anyone who Ia goJng
teol41!~ :1Qreement 1(~monly

_, at,::.u': "::.:.18h
~

at

H-.

::::.- ....... .., ... ......, .... ._.:r=brouahtto
HaiWI!Ielnedgutaylllltilthe..._...

the purpose oi

members understand the agreement.

-T: ::!y":,=·

-.AMII ,_ ...... .....,_,areoom
lncluclld.

, _ .. contingent

upon

-ll.oe.-...~i

Bufflolo c.nw CllaPI~. ~~p

�Juno 21; ,.,.

Envvri:~can YOU do with - a degree 1n

~rlve a cab or tend

· puler science Is " VIIry good" (a degree
ln . that field "glvaa a graduate at any
leVIIIa batter-chance for a)ob'1;
•Proapacta tor geography m~ora .,.
"faYorable" \many will find posltlone In
urban plann ng, environmental control,.....,
health planning and cartography);
•The "neceaslty - to locate new
sources of · minerals and natural
energies will play an Important part In ~
the expansion of positions available to
the geologist."

bar, soma of the

dlalllualonad might answer.
The Englllh l&gt;epartment, how-.
hu SOlTNI dlfferent ldaaa: enough to till
three ~ea ln the latest edition of the
U/B Guide to Undergraduate Majora
and CWeenl," prepared by Unlvenltty
Pl8cement and Career Guidance and
Unlteralty Publications.
That~page paperback, Intended tor
proapectlve students and thoea who
lldvl• them, CO¥enl the employment
outlooK, expected atartlng aalartes, and·
other things helpful In making
deelalona ebQut 54 major flelda and the
Collegee, In d'-clpllnaa r811glng from ·
Anthropology to Women'a Stud lea.
Information In mepy . , _ wu
tumlehed by the departments them..._, 8lld while none of them edvl- ·
" enoiii&amp;Yfte of-w011(, thenlla a rna&amp;fllni
· of c.nclorabout Job proapacta.

Loolcalaawllara

• A "momentary oversupply of lan~t­
uage , _ . , . exlata In the northaaai,"
but demand Ia greater In oth• r.glona;
• Mualc Ia "a -.y cornpetltiYe field, "
where "peraonatlty, ent~ualaam, .obilion ~d ability to ~!1P'!l- In a
poaltiVII taahlon,
,
any wall
skilled musician tar
.•. ;•
~~ ~y Ia enjoying "good ,ex-

_

0
~

••
future amplof'ment
look lor
Ph.D.a In rhlloaophy Ia dlacQUraCIIna.
Still, wei qualified and atrongTy
motivated phlloaophera aaam to gat
)oba." Und-or&amp;duata maJora wquld do
well to develop parallel lntenaata.
Phlloaophy graduataa "can make
excellent social worken~ ..•;"
•Ta..:hers pr.partng tor Mc:ondary
school a should "go aoutliW...t."
•A whole new field Ia opening. up In

writing In all

sociological tb"'!PY.

::'.'k::W~O:.~n "=J,~nwn~~
~ public and p~vale;'

:~~~~~ll'h ~~~~~r:c~~ba~s

~ ol !:n:='n~""'~~

=leh

:.::::..

-Coplaa ftlll).abW .

.
The statlstlctf data on sslarlfs,
employment · l"!!'da, and commaeta
found throughOUt the guide wwe
complied -by the UniW11'81ty's Pl~t
and car- Guidance office. Supplemental data,
appropriate, wu
provided from tile Bureau of Labor
Statistics to complement U/B sui'VIIys
of graduate Pl""'''"ent.
In many lnatances, aalary and
employment
·nol &amp;Yall-

aa an
major I w• fortified with
a atrong bua for communtcatlng;' a
radio IINOCI_.Ibroedca.t•commented
that ·n~nlng .. a major helped
'primarily In wl111ng and - a . akllla.'
Aa ona atudant In a Qf11du.la JIIOIIIMI In
aoclat- 'WOrk put It, 'Facility with
lanGuaae and writing ability mean a lot
In riiy.llilld.'" •

·

w-.n

lnaum , adaf.&gt;.!!tmantal~n

::·.,;,~ed ~r!m. ~·

,

'~!!'I

No ........
Right,up front , for example, English
-.owladgae_ thai "Joba reQUiring an
EnaiWI ~ . . acaroa at pnaaant ."
Buf If YQU think that'a dalaatlam, •
on.
.
"The edv~ of having a beckgrQund In Engllah," lor many poaltlona,
Ia -o~Jrioua, the cMperlment writes, but
thenl ... "unexpected" appllcatlona: " A
cr.w '-lar In a rubber plant reports

YOC&amp;IIonal entarprlaa."
Students armed only with an Engl'-11"
Cf1lderltlal have to " u• Imagination and
lnltlatiVII In appro..:hlng the Job
mar1&lt;et", but the teak Ia notlnaurmoointable.

&amp;ocWae.e.What about

aoma of the other

cunwotly "1-Jhan-popular'' fields?
Hlatory, the ,..,... flnda, "Ia taught
to anhanoa the atudanta' aciphlatiCatlOn
ebQut thameal- and tllelr cultu- aa
producta of tllna." lt'a a "field which
encourii!IM ~lactlon, noflnaa
of critical anatyala, and lntorma. •
Good enough, but what doee Ganen~l
IAotora -think of It? today's mercenary
YOUth might lniiUI,..

po-•

..

~:O : " ' p =1• lnt~~~~~~~ecf.~
Hlatory grw!W. "Ctaarly a algnlflcant
minority prooeed to additional unlwralty wOI1( - probably 25 ~ cent In
fact . Soma atlll go lrito public ecllool
NUOn to
ta..:hlng. While we bal.,_ moat . . emp~. we alao
rKC~~~nia thai
IIIey may not lie
amp1oy.s In the flalda of their Initial
c:Jtoioa.

M

I

.

t.

H~te"'fGGCIMn4ad~ ,_~It

ba .. ;; Pfl~ to job Wining of a
apaclflc llllhn. Rlilher, It Ia off- ...
to dellelop •.• a ttulbla, cMIIad and

~~~In

l*'tlcular
.,.Informed t11eee lldllt don't hurt their
chanoaa In tNt JIOPUJ•, thougll
glutted, rnarbt. •

!!Oclolallr?
The

~haa

.

"no fig..,..

lncllclllnD . _ well our tiUdanta ...
... wttlla B.A.
- - ·-· Tliwe Ia ...... ~lftlr~

~~=~==
~.: aut 11,000 tllnlughOu!
the U.B. In tm.

.:a~

-,

:.:-..=t

pa,................ .

lalld ......._..,. UIIIIII1IIWI
:=--=~':=_..In

•::r.llca ..,.

1--·
-"""""""

-

=e~r~~tl~:\~~~~~-~

and environmental a~; and with the

public'a heightening vl"auat· aw.anineea,
the employment outlook tor the
weli-«1..-ed , artl~t contln.- to be

~~·"
"Deeplte the

tight mllri&lt;et, employ1198nl oulloolf ... Ia good tor thoea who
t(ave combined thelr wor1&lt; In F,.nch
with another major In areas such aa:
English , history, American studies,
management, economics, engln-'ng
and, of course, the traditional p~
teaalona."

Wide range of •tartlng aa1ataa

Scannfng the careers guide, you ean
also learn that:
·
• The Fedenll government starts
W(th a bachelor's In anthro:

...

I lc

· me12t

pology at~ 511;303 and $11,523;
•A maater\ain -hltecture waa worth
$20,000 a ye..lft11178;
•Most at.-ta In liberal arts fields
"would be *till :.advised to strengthen
~~ :\'o~~tu,:~al skills" and look
•Chemical · engineers with undergraduate degrees "enjoy some .of the
best opportunities- or employment
upon graduation;"
•The lob mar1&lt;et In communications
Ia "difficult ," and competition Is
"keen;"
•It Ia likely a knowledge of Russian
will be an lncraaalngly valuable
qualification In obtaining positions In
the area of International business (the
aame gOes tor Spanish) .
·
•The employment outlook In com-

lbanallonalauMJ.

~ .-uitlng actE!
the.,.bachtlal"t....... not 1
-to

~.

Mlrtall l&amp;ld.

...... oliOlpllna ..,...,_ ... 1a

~llllltl-lnofWsancltcllntlllc

'* C*ll Qllln.
............... and eoclat - - cbclllllnlll'lllla 17

E

Onty

nqtalllnlntha.....,!Nnd.
11RJUP ancoantarad a I per ~
.
.

.•• i\a strx./ at the Or~du!te ' level ....~
different , however. Com~ with the
March 1978 report , the number of offers
to master's-degree candidates declined
9 per cent and the :-olume for doctoral
candidates decreased 23 per cent.
Women continued to make sllghl
·gelns In their proportion of offers. They
received 20
of the total number
of offers reported at both the bachelor's
and muter's leYels. Thls-waa -up from
19 per cent ' and 17 per cent,
respectively, a yaw ago. Compared with
~at four years ago,
the gains
women are significant. In March
1 otheyaccountedforonly11 ~cent
of the bachelor's total 'and 10 ~cent of
the master's total.
The- Coiii!Qe P - t Council
~. now in Ita nlnatMntll ,.., Ia
lilaad on offers, no1 acoeptanoee, rNde
. Jocollaga atuclantaln ealacted curricula
and areduata progr:ama _ dl!rlna _ the
llilnNJ-fWCIUiflng pirlod, 8apNmbijr to
.luna.Da!A ... aubmlttldon.,onoolno
*~• by 1111 eollagaa and . . . . .ltlaa

per"""'

hb-.

lllroutllloUt the u.s. Tint .......,. .....
taauea a.a. , _ - In .lalluar)'•""-n:h.

811d.lufy,
In tarma o1 c1o1w
t.:IW!or'alaYal,
continued to

--a-Hthe

baS:::::at ,.,~,.. ~ng

~ ... 8-per cant 1 -- -

·• cloaing ~The~
taum eng.-11ig dolllir - . COlttlnuee to ba higher than !Ill\' ol the

-

the

-~.:!Yt~ ~=:o t~gLr.c~~ .
Guldanca, Room 15, Capen Hall.

Demand for-engineers con.inues strong ,, .
• • Cornpetlilon lt&gt;rbrid:atlnb engl!l86fs
t:ontj nues to· grow In l ntenalty. There
just are not enough of them avallable~ n
this year's grac;tuatlng class to meet
employer de111and. As a result, many
engln.aririg candidates are being
defug«&lt; with job otters.
Data just complied by the College
P I - t Council document what ls
happening : In an effort IQ meet their
needs, emploYenl h8Y8 made 40 per
cent ~ .often~ tc7 prospective
angl~ at the bechell)l"~ree 18VIII
then at this time laat yair. · And' last
-..-,., wa a peak year In college
..-ultlng- the - 1, In fact , alnoa
'the latW Slxtlaa: - ·· ~:;~ • _ .
.
~ lndl~ q1 tha engl.-tng crunch
'- thoi feci thai ~lnelrtng olferiJ
_,flltd lor ef .,et:' "cent of all
._...,.. ottarw raportec} In the Ooftege
" ' - ' - ' ODunclt'a teGOnd ·• a.leiy
a.- report of the ,.., ~lng to
E..l. Martaii,'UfB planning it
~cii-. U/BI*Itclpatecn

a......••

In YOC&amp;IIona fllid
too n u _ . to
data In a guide of thla type. The guide Ia
=.,ed to proylde an o...laW of
lc de~rnents . Spaclflc co ....
descriptions and requlremanta .,.
detailed In the r.guler catalogs.
Tl)e guide, In Ita aecond yaw of
publication, . has met with excellent
•response from students and the
Unl-slty community, the foreword to
this edition saya. II . offers epeclal
commenda1!on to Arthur W. Burke who
Initiated the Idea for the text two years
ago and to Karen Whitney for. her
continuing 11ffort Jn coordinating and
.compiling the preaent_edlllon.
Cop lea ere aYallable from P - t.
Questions or comments .,. Invited ·

I

.

,. '

• aY&amp;Iages ~~ he master's leW!. dhem~l
engineering-was next at S1 ,633, a gain
of nearly 8 per cent. The lowest dollar
aY81'11ges were reported for humanltlea
majors and other social aclence majora,
both at $911 .
All but one of the15 employer groupe
surveyed In the pi1Yate aactor llho..S
lncraaaad activity o - last yaw, wtth
the M&lt;Oapace/elactronlca/lnatrurnanta
groupe_registering a 70 per cent rl• In
volume. TJ_Ie lona exoaptlon IIIII
petroleum and products gf'OIUI which
rNde about lhe aame number'111 ott..
aalaat Y-·
The moat actiVII -.ultera wwe
employers In the manufacturlna/lltduatrlal group. They atenclad ¥ ~
cent more olfenl tlwl "'aat yaar and
accounted tor 71 -per cent of tile

baChelor's

total

offers.

··

Yo!-.

Buat-

. employers m8de 17 per cenf

.-a

In the public - · .....,... ~
"*"
hed • • ~ ciill ,.iIn
off- and local and ..... gcMmrnant

'*"

Nlllattnd a 12 per
~. bllt
lllilwMWJIIIIImlftd.
_
•
Mll!a ......a lallll, - ~ In
~- ~ by a11 bul
mrw cwrtcula.
galnt wwe
llho-.by MIIA't
fiOn.technlcal
UIICitriiNduata ........ tritclwtlcal gl'-'lng, and ~ca. Chemical
ang.._,ng again '*XInled 1t19 1\IQhttt

:::t!

doller...agawlth$1,7411 ~monttt.

�~21, 1178

!

. .

..

-Human error: 1.n
.building being studie~·

---

what they have" when II comes to
structural safety. In San Francisco, he
related, such tests show that residents
Tolllflshuman .. .
•·
That'a the motivating Ioree of a S\udy
~~~J~":,.:'~n~~~~~w tg.,~~::lofg
being undertaken at UIB on how to
make their buildings more eepeble of
compenaal'e ' for human error In conatructlon. ~- atructurat safety ls - wl)l&gt;~~a.:J.'!!"Qa~~~:/'~Odel" on huthe .ultimate goat.
•
man error In construction will be baaed
Or. Afldrzej S. Nowak, assistant
on cost and effect - the cost of
proles\lor of civil engiOMring, . has
co'mpensatlng for human error and the
.._,., a spacial award from the
efleet, namely what you get for yqur
ReM.ch FoundatiOn of the Stele Unlvenlty of N- York, to develop an
'cost.:.Od-effeet principal will be
"analytical model" that could be applied
applied to design , construction , quality
to building codes to seoount lor human
control , maintenance, the expected fall·
error In determining needed structural
ure rate and demolition . The fln111 Item
strength .
. would apply to the time when a
Nowak pointed · out In an Interview
structure has outlived Its usefulness.
that existing building codes generally
Rationally, Nowak observed, a buildfall to taktr Into account the possibility
er "llhould spend part of his money on
o1 human error In establishing mlno·
control to avoid as many human emn
mum ~~~qulrements for structural safety.
as
believes It's Impossible,to
Tacoma N8nows Bridge
totally eliminate human error and that
He cited the bollapse In 1940 of the
~therefore, you must design to comTacoma Narrows Bridge as a classic
pensat8'."
example ot structural failure due to
The grant for Nowak's study provides
human ·error In engineering . The toall$2,000 for a two-month period.
mlfe.long span, the first suspension
brtdge built across the narrows of
Pugit Sound, fell apart In the lace of

., . . c.tln

m'ft,y~

ru.~~b!r;.~

·::l~,.!t"rhat"';'~•m..l~~s~a~:.

Orash opens FES . · J
forum &amp;h-t~ona~
series Wedtlesday ::~"
~

a;;-::
.
w:J.:.. ·~

• 111a Faeult of

ell

'

Btudlea
10

~Y

-.far ~·'.·-·411

wni

•
..-n-.
e1 the • - ,....
not yet
111111 ........,_ _ The Initial .,._,..

tiOII lalalad rar nax1 Wadneaday, J11ne
211wlllbe held In lila Moot Courtroom ,

011rt.n Hall.

The eohadult lncluelea;
J - 21:· lmplloarlona ol EntlocrlrtoiOflloal RaNM:h lot lha Emerging
AdliMtoMI - Allan L. DrMh, hf.D.,
pnlleaaor of I!Bdlatrlca, Chlldnon'a
Hoap11a1 of f'l!'allurgh and the
l}nhinlty of Plttablirgh - Mtcllcal
" ' - ' · a wldtly .--gntacl andocrln~- It uadar lila dnotlon that
• eo,oa Madall Study - comp1e1t11 10 pnMda , _ medical and
aduciiiiiOMI data tor emerging ac1o1ttatlll~.
.
Jf/ly H : A~ In the tiiiO'a -

MlaMtl

~

Harrington._

aoltnoi

p r o ' - . of

. _ . . College,.
aoneiiMNd- 01 Amartea'a '-'Oat
......._ Harrlnaton het ...., act1wo
In 110111 ....,.. anil ...,. union -

-·~~~~~'
~it·~.~';;I;'.FR
...... o1 ..-.r. Hit 011wr worke
......_DiiAOIIIIIanWCMtutyancl The

.,_,,_,ty:

Poor.
:
,July ll:dl'lhet HftPPellaln •

...

Poem~·. -

==:c..:=.
two-- c ...~:.-

the lleoond .Aahn Clanll former -'ry editor -of

A~ 111

t1w

wortct-.

or )IQM!y,
for
ehlldnon, he bel~
d(lal a.-.y
general
auc:tltnce must .
pealed to.
" Poetry," he saya, "I
t ,.,gaged
art In any madam
lathe habit
to Invite It to tha
.but only as
an atttndant."
Jlllr 25: Fantaay Sa ae11on through
UIWat~~~e - Bruno
1\elm, dtatln- ·
• gulahad profeaaor
ua of tdueatlon, paychology and paychlatry, and
diNCior -'fua of the Uni'&lt;eralty of
Clilcago'a Orthogenic School, a realdentlal IAiatment cant.- tor
dl....-..c! chit-.. Battathelm Ia known
for Jlla worl'&lt; on chlldr.n:a emotional
d.waiopment and aoclalgrowth, and the
application . of payehOanatyala to
adueatlon. Hla ~t ..-nt book, The
ol Enchantment, won the 1816
NaUonal Book Crltlea Clrelt Awwd for
Crltlclam.
Allfluat 1: Woman and . Men In
Tnanatt/on: Tilt Ettacta ol S«:'-1
C,.,. - Judith Bardwlok1 prolasaor

:c ,

_.,Y

u-

~a~
~

-'liar of F- nine ·
lty In
Conlllt:t, and ollha n-ly ......_,In
Tnanallion.
·

LETTE · s
eraport entranc eeps .
niovlng; how abou a ·sign?
Enal~ng Mel- them dMlgn Mel
build a atgn? It might begin with a
modeat - t - IN - ancl on, Ilea lila road, to tlllthar complexity.

Aaapectf~

o.c-tiiiMiot~

(_....._,_Mil~ -

structlon llllled to provide sufficient
flexibility to wlthstan&lt;j the Ioree of the
wind.
On the other h
• Nowak pointed
out, the George Wilahlngton BrJdge,
one of the gat..,.,ays to New York City,
was ·designed with an eye 1o human
11hor1comlngs. He said this particular
brtdge was over-&lt;feslgned beciauile 1he
designer felt maintenance In future
years - such as painting - would
prove to be less than adequate.
Using "sophisticated calculation ,"
Nowak said the probability of structural
failure Is generally rated anywhere from
one chance In a million to one chance In
abllllon .
•

~~~ ~~~ t~~h·~~~:'~it:"~~~u~

h"m~ct"f."~·~allu,;,,

'"deiJned 'by Nowak, Is a situation which causes a
structure lo be "unable to fulfill Its
function . • Thls could range anywhere
from • dangerous condition to partial or
total collapse.
Nowak attributes tiliman ' error ·in
construction to two basic laelors- tack of knowledge and negligence. ln
the latter category, he Includes efforts
by builders to take shortcuts and the
use of- materials of a lower "grade than
specified , sc?mellmes with enmlnal Implications .
Ron•terror
He acknowtedqes that there's ample
opportunity lor 'honest error'' by all
parties Involved In a construction projeCt - architects, suppliers, builder'&amp;,
and laborers.
_
For example, lnacellrate matherli&amp;tlcal calculations Can occur; numer&amp;fli l n
the crease· of a folded bi...,Pftnt fnaf'be

~~t~~~n:'v- ~l~~ '~~=

bMma and plok up the wrong one; there
.,..., be too ,_ stf181 ba-s In relnloo'Ced ·
~.:&gt;poaelbiY' beclaliee or tack of
supervisiOn bel&amp;. 11\8 coner.ta' &lt;Ia
poured. Thellstls tong, perhaps never-

ending.
'
TheM are the typea of errant Nowak
believes should be considered In establishing building code structural standards.

~~~~d=n ~~~~t!'fg;

the poaalblllty of t~ls kind of. error ·by
setting up guldellnaa to mMiure the .
quality of firms In the .Q01181ructlon
lnduatry. These p,uidellnes left what to
look for In a I rm by l!atlng erl~a
Oonaiderad 88MIItlal lor good ~or:
manoa, auch ..
exxo l&lt;ino8,
paat performanc:e, and tnt
ty . .It's a
way of IIIICIJXI"'I a yllfdatl
to a llrm
before~ acont..ct .
Nowak firmly bell- thlol tha "lowMI bidder" lao1 ~ly the bMt. •
Ha. alao conc:adaa thai tha more
!llhlyiluiiJ Into a ati'IIC1ur.,~. IJig/)er

years orori{f.

!11&amp;0081.

-

How IIIMCitldo. . . .

-10..,

•

lor?
In hla atUCIYj ~~ana to
ealculatt lila ~latlc" _,
I axlatlng atruct- and to
how
mUall ~ _ . . ,..,ly and at
w~~~t ·~~~~ea.
flndlnga COUld lonll
... Willi ot . . . he - "'--e.ttc"
..... . . _, he added,
that
. . ~ aallellad with

n.e

~,:;s.

Two U/B profs
on Medallle board

Two U/B f aculty membens will
continue to on the Board of
Trustees at MedaJIIe College, Buffalo . •
Dr. A. Westley Rowland, profeuor of
· higher education and former · vice

~~~~!J~ u~t':S~'lat'~~lon:r ~

Medallle Board. Rowland haa...w:vect as
chairman of the Coltege'a committee on
deoJetopment and public affalra and a
member of the exeeutfve .. oommlttee
since his election as a truet... ln late
19n. An .authority In the' Tleld of
Institutional advancement; · ftOWiand
has been at Ut B since 1983. · ,._ "
Dr. Milton Plesur, P " " -' of
'history, has been na-etectad.:.t.: the
Board . A faculty member at 1178' slnee
11152, P*ur ~ a Chancellor's
Award for excellence In teaching In
1975. He was vice chairman of the
Medal lie Board two years ago, and has
been a Medallle trustee aloe, 1(1~, He
1s chairman of the Commit~ on
AeademlcAffalra.
._-_· -.; :.'

Schneider s·ucceeds
Howard MOnctd.ri~......
Edward

P.

Sehneld!IN' ·

tW.:-,been

. ~rft"~~
a~F~'=~~n~lt:..,~he
Foundation Pnaaldant Jbhn- M.
Carter, In announcing the appolntinant,
said Mr. Schneider wlll asaull)e hJa new
·duties on July 1, lollowlflg the
retl~ment of Howard S. Moncton;.:Who

hei.J.':I::'~~;::~~':J'!:~ 11~ &gt;;;':a.

a&amp;!'lior · accountant, appointed
t?ualnM8 manager In 18n, anc1 ll8ll)8d
assistant eecratary-trMaurw In 1878.
Pnwloualy, he was a Mnlor -..tant
at Pea!, MIIIWiok, Mflohlll &amp; -ComDany
}11 Bunalo. He , . . . hla B.S. In
accounting from Canlalua anc1 Ia

- ~u~~ ~·~e
As MCnit~~ Ill wttr be
naaponalbte for all financial anc1
aocountlng IIIQulrwnenta of the U/BF.

JOBS

�. j

____
..__
._
_
II-..,_. .,

I

i

o.r.kf O'OtNy (Wt) 8nd

Contrr-men John lAFMc:e flank Mr. end MN, •

R . ~BiddloloovlngMS/ 8-.

•

•

What's Media ·s tudy/B·u tfalo all •bout?

.....

.
----~---al ·
_--............. _Tiolo_
..,..._; .....
EII!Tai:S.IIDTE-

_,..._
Wo ,.. -

.-1
.

1o -

1M ''llopartor'o"

lluiiJ~ 'Iool- -

a

-....~-O'lhdrll . .

altlle-.....--,.~·

~~-v
f\ 11"1.

'

•

••_.lt

lt'a an unacceptable
cont!WIIctlon that
teleYIJIO"ol' ..-y night, but almoat no
one Ia gl_, the opportunity to cteate or
atLJdx.U,::_ eayi Garald-o'Gredy, founder
of M«&lt;la::atuCiy /Buffelo.
"The development of new I!IOdll of
cornmunle8tlon haw made reeding end
writing only part of what It rn.nalo be

"I

lhliik

-rona -

=1~~~~.&amp;~cenr::y

lo the ability to 11M the oocle8 of
e~on end Information tranafar In
&lt;;ontemPOIWY IOCie'ty." ·
Tllla Ia tile preml• upon which
O'Gredy '-'dad Media Study/Buffalo
In 1871 under a grant !rom the New Vorl&lt;
Stata Council on the Ane. One of Ita
chief functlona Ia to provide 11M! public

~

~~
and
10 eptlclq,
movie - video packs,
· · -·
BOUnd equ Pfl*ll, and to teach the 11M
of theea toolo. Media Study/Buffalo
Iandi, without char"ge, more than 5,000
p i - of equlprilent to about 1100

~ at• f9'

people
.. •
"TTIIIw

Ia to

out Wastem New Vorl&lt; since 1972. The

"rehearsal arts" complex . .Plans call lor

allegory lunctlorlild In medieval Ill;;;.

telavlalon; aponiiOfll Marc Chodorow'a
"Kino Eat'' for redlo; and Ia completing
"An American ~rail : A Study of the

media fact Ilea lor direct playback of
rehearsals, and a study oenter to receive
programming from all over t~e world via

he 8tlll Ia, a p - of,..
message t~ of an art He'""Owfta
one au it,' one palr of ahoea, ·and w.ra
them until they .wear out. He doeen,

Bird.

services to the community rastructur·

::"l~~.:,~~,a~!.w1:' =~~
::.:;~l~nab:or:"'f;.nfl~ ~~ ~
·

·

pa~~~~~~~~~: :u~~an;=· 1~ :'!t,

In mld-cllaM
· O'Gredy came to lila mlaalon from the
~ket
.r. atart
p . Hln g '?.~. oQin medn~~
....... 1-v11 1
11
0
nono

whlle12CETA_...._,nnout,
~~~~ peld.!'.!!_~n • a1&lt; ~q~.!"'-1
"Ct- · - ,_
uya
O'Gredy. " Media ,_.,middle, In the
middle of everything, In mkk:haoe.
Study means focus, etrong ooncentratlon with enthusiasm and zeal."
Perhaps t}leae deflnltlona explain the
vlalon which unlflea the bewlldertng
range of lntereata, accompllahmenta,
and plana of IIIIa young organization.
Media Study/Buffalo Ia a pl808 where
people stand In
rea - In the
middle of things- trying to bring them
all Into focus, and tnanamlt11ng a vlllon ·
to a public which may become, . . .

journal.
· ·
Media Study/Buffalo alao dlffera
from. other media oantara In bel~g
""--anding. 11. Ia affiliated with no
un'-alty, mueaum, oorporallon, or
networl&lt;. Funding Ia, theN!ore, always
a problem. O'Gr.ay and the atefl go, hat
In 11-.d, to local bualn-. wn~ IIIPt
ll!rQPOUie, .aawi!IMor •~~Jo ,.ec~

forma . He came to clnema,
television, and Giller lmege arts as
contemporary dream forma, mediating
the lndlolldual and a changing
eoclety ·tn much the same way dream

second-roond Arts Endowment dialIMge grant of $100,000 to .be used lri
IMYing off an accumulated flellclt,
starting an endowment fund, and
settlngupn-programa.

a_,..

eo
=~urn~ryandsr!~~aln."'yltt=

::a:':r.:.·rei.~ra:o:T:i ,.,~~

"'--oan wtn . _ .-..s ntne ,_.
of l8larlllon ., tile tflllllle •• • .
.
"Yet ........ liD CMfiiiUiulllln !ft8ldno
llnagea,. croo.tr DOinl8 out. """ ....
ldd iiiiO - . . . . lo n01IIe • tldao-tlpe
'-110~~ Ill •
-d
.

~~ft'c!t~~~~~-,.~"'=J:

f:n
about five jloura ~tday .

eventa and developing a atudlo for the
production~ ~alon and
liiild ·
-d cillili
televfaton
lng. The r c:eble
tarmlnal~l
I 'the center access to
mote than 1 ,
homes In the Buffalo
- . Tile
~ cable facilities will
relay In!
• from couRiy and city
offices to tl~publlc· will provide
lnformetlon·&gt;B
entertainment for
visitors to IRfl alo'a new convention
-oenter; and •lill- o •Gredy hopas - .will
draw people- back downtown to a
revitalized entertainment district.

cult .... "
O'Q..cty l"llltlea off atartllng - latlca
to 10111ca lila point. In tile leet election,
110 .,....... d Amertoanl got all their
lnfonnallon about the -.clldaNI and
the ..... efrom
attoa.11w
to1a1-.wt~~on.
ot 3S million , _ . of
telailllon laat ,... An . . .

--ailed

Its

at~lassor

photographers; lnvltas vlaltlng film·
•-411Dw~w~..the
Flliii "PnjjaC! d
Hew
lch ahowa non-commercial
fllma "'n achOOia .,d oommunltlei;
helped found the Buft./o Projective, a
group of local lllmmakera eeeklng wider
audiences; eponaored nine national
film conftnnee~ and a.nlnara; regularly piJIMiita lecturea on film , phole&gt;graphy,·and related fields; collects and
~ wor1&lt;a o.l Independent filmIMkera; hou- a lltnty of books and
artlclee on film; ..,.,.,_. An Oral
Hlatory of tM Independent American
Film,
of videotaped Interviews
with filmmakers; hoeta the School In
Film/Media, a alx·week progr8ll1 of
~ope lor
lllgh achool atudenla

1.:"rS::'lft~~:-=~
to
year," .eaya O'Gredy. "We 11... no

ae1ect group -.wte the mec11a, ...,
thay haw '-'doua l n f l - on the

sa~::::~ Study/Buffalo wlli expand

.,:~ ~~~~P~~a111~~&lt;!t~r::~ -~!~~~ ~:bi~g,.ntvcl'!~

learn," uya
. "If yocr= to
take mualc or art teeeone, you oould go
to a atudlo In any town In Amartca and
get them. But tt.w'l no public - .
to the media. An ordinary cttlun
afford • 110,000 So • ~

can,

1

~"9~ uH'::'"p~ .':::c~ ~~.ru:u~~

endowment yet and limited waya of

-"'!!11J.I!.&lt;l2.me·"

Aalalng !1!11ft8Y from p r l - donora
'bttng~apeel*l problema. "People ara
happ to luppoo1 the eetabllahed arts

lllca t

eymphony, the blolletJ and the

ere -

one."

to contribute to

~. the -

hae lnCI..-.cl 1n"''" --''""
. buclglt
from
ao,~
" to aao.ooo
Jrr 1m.
Nine Medle 8ludy hae p i - for
.....,.ahlng IOa.l ~ ...,
fOundattolle In a morw ~ way,
.._ -.ldn, alai wlttlout 8tale n
,...... luncllllg.· layt

....

York Alta Council
the

~analllw-211.,.........,

AltaEIIdOwoollftl13para.ot.)

the floor; llla breakfaal a doughnut In a
jilljier'lllli!--OIIIIIillllt!CiiJIICJf ......

001

medlaa

rea~:!dJ::=~~~~=•11::,._, a

~~A i~ ~mae~sist•ntYPAA !i
Dr. Pierre Hart, asaoclata professor
of modem languages and literature, has
been appointed acting assistant vice
~sldent for academic affairs, effective

1~tng to VPAA Ronald Bunn ,
Hart has accepted the post on a
temporary baala until a full ~~~ lor a

I:J:,O::::'t,:'~~;,l~· .IT~',u~91s

as an ACE Fellow.
Dr. Thomaa Craine, formerly In the
poet, has joined D'Youvllle College.
Hart llaa been on the faculty hera
alnoe 1887 and hila been acting ohalrman of Germanic and Slavic end ...,_
:,.
ohalrman of !he Del)artment of

hold~3."o. end two maatera

r=s ....,.......,.,

......_no =-~===
Nw
,_
IIUIIg.c wlllll tile

dl........1 1

=:'on~,:::an~~=~~d~au~

papers and booka-evervwhere, phone on

He

0

,,

from Wisconsin, and did lila undergraduate worl&lt; at Antioch.
He has been edminlstratlve liaison In
curriculum planning to the G-.1

~~1~~~~":lf~ee while servtno

on

�i

CALENDAR
'1'-

---.. . -end~
_,clng ollomoono wor1dng In . brothel .

Z.. ~ . 1848); L ' - (1949).
148 Dlllnbf. 7 p.m. !ll&gt;&lt;&gt;noorod bytho CerJ1er
lorModloSUly.

-:c-c.nn~~-

1.-. ~:ze-. ep.m.

. . . . . . . ~y-Z4;
WMFlUit:"
do
.

___........... ..

(,874) (...U"'*"J, by
(11130 USSR) (-.t/

-

...... flollol*&gt;n, -

-·Hot

...

___ ... __ _

-~--·-!'"""'*-·

Cot'o ~ (Brolchoge):

0..-Ffonc:ioco-.
TNo - · -.me Aov -cnfour
· Bruno

--friyhopoal-ioiO

cMolng.)Lolgll-.

--

ol -

,..., 200 -

COlLEGE Of' MATHEMATICAL SCPIEHCES
TUTONNO-

,_.
Summer
p.m. ; TIJOO!IIYI
houri: - ll'd -ll'&lt;ndoys,
end - 1·9 p.m.;·
F&lt;ldoya; 1-6 p,m, 108-109 -..on &lt;&gt;.m,

( -); -

---148 . - -. 7 p.m. Sponoored by tho
·~).
Center

CRAFT CEHTBI W()fti(SHOPS
Tho CroeiiYe Ctol1 Cenlar ,_~four

,., ... "'lix-- ·

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

FILMa"
" " " - (1982~ Ero -

... be • Pcllo!y -

,._.yaet8 tlr -

- · 1.10.

-

-

2

' '

... ,_,

-=

f'!oce: Toronlb. S 14 p.- poaon, lncbloo -

27

-~

:=:!. '.J!., ~=-:

~ Ollchn'a

HoopiloP"'-

borgh end ... u.w-.lfy ol Plflolu'gh Moot Coum&gt;om O'&amp;iori Hoi. 1{) a.m.
end 2 ·p.m. Cl!lon 10
~ et no clwgo .
Spqwawdbyllol'oaAiyoi-SUios.
Thio lo . . Cli&gt;OIIIne .. tho 5-loc\.no

h

, _ (eoc-.): ...., ol •

c - , - ( - . ); - w c olli), 148 - - -· 7 p.m. lii&gt;C&gt;&lt;*nd by ...

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

.

c.nlorlorModlo SUly.

--II!B)IALEVBT"

- - m 7 - .. 8 p . a by-~

porfalion, pop on the bul.'"

rncw.Worrnll'an.

u.s........
PAID

..... N.Y.

....... 811

· Wo ...

~~

' .1. . . .

,.,.-

o- o.J.,.O~

TUTOIIIINIIDBI

•

-lnlonaMt £nglaf1 ~ ,_,.,_""""'
~ ll'd luloro. Lo.-n how .)'OU
money or aec1t IIW _ _ . Dy

c::.1 . . ,

~

..a.

N&lt;1 oP 838-2079 _ , 3

~P4,

.., ""'"'*'11011838-3382 .

Exhibits
uzzm.rr

-l.lnry.

~

ln aAIIIo.

ol ) l z t - .. par1omwlce
201

-.,,-.St.

On The Air
.AJNE21
AM

-ola:

Dr.

~

E. ' - - . - ,, •

Fac:Uiy d Law end .:..taprudanoo, ''Cimln11.8ga!
Tcplco." ~·TV(aw..o:!),'

10o.m.

.AJNE21
~In

. . Alii: Ealhor · -

.,_ Oindi l.idgo. ea.- c..
10). 7 p.m. Nao on June 22 at

ca..nne:

10 Iii end &amp;
~ time is 11 a.m.
Lol, _ , St.
(op-

-...,youreon...

.ue22
AM-Dr. ~A.Itotl,­

. - ,, e n d - . - a i . . SclloaP&lt;f-

from _ , Por1dne
u.w-.lfy "'-~·
10 C .S.E.A Tnwe! ~ . P.O. Box 16,
MI.
~Hoi . -.St. eon.,...

facUiy
end Core
- · al"Whol'a
- -·
InT
- V (OWl·
Core:
T
.... Bella'
YD&lt;nol!."

--lo.June27.

-ci~Up."

COria-.

HEALTH CAllE OPEN ttDulp
Tho_C.._,__,_

""·--..,--..--... "' "cpan -

c.m.r. 120 .

- ot- -

- " " " ' - - a - - . dime

""-- --~

IOIJrlne--10110'-c..r-

'tho - . g io

lw Cenlar"a Cl!lon
: !Undoy, .U.. 24, 2 p.m. · 4
p.m.; r,-y,Nil :ze, 8:30a.m 11 o.m,; - . . . - . . oUII 27 lft&gt;ugh /l&lt;qlll 29 (IX·
-

-

0

ciocll..,•). tl:30p.m. · 8p.m.

c...-_ - . AI¥Jnl_ _ _ ....
_
-8olllr ............ -

.. -

------FOIIAUR
.......

.....CooiiDuo.

......... C!r..

_._-:or

.:.;..-=-':

~~=.w~::.t':"

nol7). 10 a.m.
-

._, Dr. ~

.

~

-- ----...,...·~

, . . . .. . ..,._
. ....
-_ . a.tPo
-28-e:ao
. . Cloolobol

_ ... , ...... - . . , ....... --.a

CcnlroiP.--

ol poy&lt;:hloliy, "Chid ~ end tho

JUNI!Z4

- - 1: Dr. - - . pn~~_,..,
Depnnerll ol Hialory, ''Populor ClAn tho
-..:SCOne." WilEN (930) . 9:05p.m.

___ --.. . --··-1111. ....

FES &amp;lmior Sori!oFILMa"
Loo -

$3 ... bo Plid for your -

6:30p.m,

, _ - ...,. ... - . .lily

~y-;-

- '- " '

-

~

CIEA~llll'

by . . ~lor-s.ldy .

..

- • - . 170 t/NtC,-. 0111136-

·

p.m.---

A,._ (1964 ,

-.. 148~ . 7p.m.~

WB!NEmA'I'si-fOIIUIIII•

23

.u.. ~5.

from 1·4 p.m. Wedr!fOdOYS, ll'd a Slildlery
end Aj)pliquo Worf&lt;ahop, --*'11 frodH _.
Cllll36-2201 f o r -

_by_&amp;Wy

,... .... . . - lncblo ~.......,.
..,...,.,..._,._ . . , 11301 _ __ -

"'

lloglnnlng June 25,
lhanlwil , . . P c l l o ! y - from 7·10 p,m.
..:11 Monc:lay, ll'd a Topeofry Woo1&lt;·
ahop, from • •• ,p.m . - - - SlarllnOJune 27

Tuesday-26

-&amp;Elllca..ly . _ ~
. 5. 7 end
_
_

10 begin the -

-

&lt;Hf1f

-IMIYIPI!CIAL-

A mPnlnun

poychalogy -

El!ic:oiiC&lt;ln'ollex. Amtwat

• lorModloSU!y.

friday- 22
·~lll .

--

Notices

.,....
-.....-. ,..._,,cM1ro lllrM\(-):
- . ,_ JIIIMr,-""
y-

·

~-""""..__job"'

.....doyl

san

---··----·
--·--u..w.---·

5p. m. (~ll!gl-) .

~~ EXPEIIIIIi!NT

•• We ... - . ; ll.tljocfS 10 porllclpola . . .

Wu (1978), wl!h rm Mcintire,

.--. rd! .... ccrildor..s- ~
10 the mc:nl ~ "' the ··
)IOUll). Tho otory .......... .. end out "' the
~ . newly ~ wold ol recording
8\Jdiol, recording
ll'd hcpohJs 10 ClllU'O
11oBI*fl- - " ' t h o 501.
.•

_,u.--_'1'011&lt; '- ·-.,....,_.._
(1878). ConloNnco lor.50.
· - 1Cll
2;838-2818
-51

~'by tho

TNo 11m io • PIYoly leU 6ocli ll'&lt;ouqh

:- ::.... ·
.,..__,·-

-

'

• -

......,. _ _ .,. . . _ _ ln ..........

-

P,fll,

::;.~.,;,::..~~~~ lorohow!'- ~

- - . e p.m. _ b y _

·

-Ad.
· ,_.
~
10:30a.m.Cenlar,
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�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>TNo-ofJhe city'a okytlnewuukenfrom the 'Mieo Buff81o' during
atrlp - g h the herbor and up the Buffelo River Mondey morning.
The occaalon wa• • ~·r tour of grain· efevatorw led by Prof. Reyner
~m of SAED. See pege 5.
.

The BUffalo SkjUne

FSA
E.quity from Bookstore sale
partially rmarked for campus programs;
t 0-member panel will decide on activities .
1 1

m~ ~ ~f:s.8Jo~~~~~p,.;~~

equity which FSA has realized from the
sale of Its bookstore operations to
Follett' s Inc., under a plan approved by
the FSA directors and U/8 President
Robert L. ·Ketter. The r,roposal Is now

a~~ltl~fl\7~ "':g«';a~~l.;.,.shot

~~.!._I~ ~.• ectlvltles going to the

~~~.J:::~~

appropriatiOns to a new Unl-..ltt-wlde

~H='&amp;i, o:y"l!!fe'7~1nnlng

Under a concept developed by senior
English major Joe Darcy, who was
president of the FSA board last year,
the activities to 119 scheduled by th is
panel will Implement recommendations
of the University Study Committee on
Attrltlon/Retentoon chaired by Vice
President for Studen t Affairs Richard A.
Siggelkow. The reasoning Is that since
thi s study group has Identified areas in
wh)ch the quality of student life here
can and should be Improved, FSA funds
should be dlnscted toward providing
activities which will help bring about
lhet Improvement.

---Mel-·

make the decisions. On the panel will
be: the vice president for student
affairs, representatives of '1he under1

~~~~~~~ S~~o:.;:,~t As~~f.:\ 1~t~~nMIII~~

Fillmore College students, the minority
student population, foreign students,
the Inter-Residence Council, the faculty, and the professional stat!, and the
president ot the Faculty-Student
Association.
·

F~... ~-

:r,r-,: ,:,:,ry

charged wlth · fonnulatl~g and Implementing Unl-..l!y-wlde actlvltiea pn&gt;
grams starting this fall . II Is required to
holll monthly . meetingo, to provide
minutes of Its actions to the FSA, and
· to Issue progress reports In December
and March.
The group will select Its own
chairman or coordinator from among Its
membersh ip.
Snyder will be calling a group
together for a meeting some time later
this month to begin dealing with the
charge. He has been In touch with each
of the constituencies to be represented
concerning their selection of a member
for the committee. The board is
expected 'both to develop Its own

~~~~inpor piJ::':dl~d ,,'g..;~~
•Seof'SA,-7,c:ol.2

Dr• . . . _ M . -·-~of biology and

rwklent-

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........... on meklng a Jon.- _.,,.Or. Sidle up181ned .

The_,.,..

-118-tolldle'o--ln notlmewll become U / -.

Local group to write position paper
denouncing New Paltz retrenchment
and the 'unacceptable' Article 35
Efron, Who celled the rMetlng, aald
he • • told Ill' the UUP grievance

olfl- at N- Politz that eome 18
teculty (th,_ ,_,tly rehnd) end 13
proiM&amp;lonal atalf ,..,. flnld . He a1eo Informed lhlll ~ Politz Intends to
hire nine- feculty for the 181.!_:

~:C:.t#

.

Plf'Wiy oonllnned the
onfGrmatlon - ; : : , - _ . . ..tng a
-adlna
tfi.-YcriT~

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

for • . _ , . . . f80ulty poaltton
........ lhelw. Cllllng ttle New Politz

111aa7-

adlnln181111110n ... the fight, under the

.
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::::.====~=

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· 10
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l

Major FSA grant to _u nderwrite
arts events over next few years

·
11ecaUM the Feculty-5Judent Aseoelation no longer Mila bool&lt;.a, the
Peking o.,... very walt may appear on
campua ne~rt aptlng.
It's not thAt the Mainland Chinese
demanded that FSA narrow Its locus to
food SMVfce and land management as a
prerequisite to a .deal lor a cultural
exchanGe.
If a a1mply that the non-profit FSA
raallzed a tidy aum from Ita aa1e of
bOOkstore operations to Folletfa Inc..
and wanted to ahara~ of the
' windfall .
- Eath« HarriOtt, director of cultural
affalnl talked heneif Into $25 000 of It
as a • grw1t tor campus • c;ultural
programming .,_ the next - a l
yMta. China 11 the theme around which
hopes to develop a senes or
programs next s~ng - and thars
-.the Peking
may come ln.
When news that SA would share Its
.-lth was flrat circulated, Harrlot1
"'-"ad · big. She proposed that
between $50 000 end $75 000 be
awwded to a eampus Fine Arts Council
Which could use It both to pay lor arts
events and to Invest In interest-bearing
time depoSit certificates as an
endo-tlorfu1ureprogrammlng.
She Ia happy with the $25,000 she
got, though. It's the largest single
amount FSA handed out to any otller
campus agency; It beat out a costlier
popoea1 tor rectWatlon equipment;
and It noprasenta the moat money the
Cultural Affairs ot11ce has .,_ had tor
campu.-wldearto programming.
She can &lt;1o the aame kln&lt;U of things
with the $25 ooo as she could with a
largeraum '
,._..... ~
HatrfOII got the money as the res "
o1 a well lhought-out proposal which
pointed out tl'iat U/B tenda to apnsad
too thinly the somewhat leBB-thanprincely arts rasourcea It does have.
lha result Ia diffusion and duplication
"ol MtVicel, ol money, of events
therneet-; she ~ - competition
lnataad of cooperatiOn . What - need ,
.. - - . - t J y conlllnclngly, Ia
a "ciitriinttlia ·-.ctu,., both to pool

recitals, nssident enaembias, an~ S!~
Beq"""t-fundad visiting artist -•asli/B
At praMnt, Han1ott pointe out,
Is allocated a very small portion o1
student , _ lor proleselonal art ~
events 90mpared to other unlvera1t 18• ·
nor Ia there a U/B Foundation pollc~ to
raiN lunda lor this purpooe - hB
foundation at the UniYerSity o 1 11 11 no1~·
by contrast, gives that unl-seartlty s
Krannert Ane Arts Center a Y
Y
budget of $100,000 lor visiting ~~Is
(separate from staffing and mateo s.
Whlcharepald1orbytheStatel·
Eventually, Harriott feels, 'the U/B
Foundation might raise matching funds
(pertlcularty whtin there Is !J, concrete
Fine Arts Center), a Friends of the Ars
could be esearttabllshbeed llttoco~ /:
donal1ons, a y
Y.. ne
arranged, and so on .
With the necessary capital now
available, she notes, there may "':
"enough to pay the lee lor a 'big name,
the revenue from which could subsidize
the kind of non-&lt;:emmerclal events
appropriate to the University. ·
The grant also repre~nts money
Which Is free from the cumbersome
State restrictions which make programmlng so difficult - I.e., the lengthy
bidding procedures, endless P.aper
wor1&lt;, eljii&gt;Oratejustlflcatlons, etc.
Altar Chlna, maybe the 20s
Harriot1 has severs!, conc"!te exarnples of the types of themes which
she has In mind. Given burgeoning
Interest In the People's Republic of
Chine, next year's spring semester can
easily be devoted IQ an ongoing China
Festival, she feels. In a future year,_she

·

= a~\';='l~ nsaouncea, and to
It dldn' hurt that President Robert L
Ketter wu Interested, too, In FSA's
In-ling a portion ol Ita bookstore
_
equity In the arts.
. The fact that Jce Darcy, an English

major~~:. ~:--rr;:Ss-:~e~~

; : : : : , of FSA was another plus in
getting money lor the plan out of the
F'SA board.
In tha final analysis, Harriott says, If
Joa Darcy hadn't been there, there
probably wouldn't have bean a grant.
Harriott notes that within _
,
years U/B will have what It has never
enjoyed - "a physical focal point lor.
cu tU&lt;af programming." That will come
In the mld-elghtlee, currant _eatlmates
. .. with complelloo ol tha oo-&lt;:alladt
Fine Arlo Complex, a lecillty which will
Include a atudlo ~... a gallery and a
..-fum ~ -lng 11100 or

- =

It - • 10 her, and ao - .-onad
with FSA, that "1he belt way to aeate a

:.Tty~=
:'.~1
~~~=IUCII a1 a Unl. . .lty-wlde Fine Atta
Council, wlllcll would plan annual

~ta-nd a u.M."

The praooaed Council II to be made
up of ttnit faculty and 81udenta,
with HarriOII "M a norHOIIng,
- I W .,.,_. Mem-.hlp will be
IOialed e.y lbNa yew~~ at for
'-'!tr; atudanta will III&lt;AIIy change
-!Nq.-tjy.

...__...,...,..
n-atJc

~can

IJe.reatrlc-

tiW, H8ntott aallnowledgea, "but they
provtcfe callealcNo find can 1nvo1.. and
rwflact 111811)' dlecllillnea and lnWralta." ,
The llllpla ahDUid be muall greater
tlwlthlil allordld "by lila ~t Style
ol __......., ... . _ pWnning," -

-,:am..c,
.. l*8lble of the
gr..t wHI be -..cl to UM

original
U

118811

money for programming when the Fine
Alta Center Ia .-I)' for u•. Harriott
~-or

more will beraiaad.

Slle eJCiuclal the Millie: Bulldtna/
awnber Halt , _ ..... ooncapl ol "tlie

:::.:=-=..-::::;:
=:
"0:..=:-'ll.

11r
..
...., be

~tl~·~ 1/~~hlh~o f~~lco"r'~

could focus on 'Images of Childhood'
(hera she can envisage Truffaut'a films
end George Crumb's music] ; or It could
be 'Hispanic Arts.' " The possibilities
pose large parameters.
Ne~t year's China theme will likely
begin with ,a ball and banquet on the
Chlneae New Year. ll all goes well,
there c:Ould be Chinese artists and
.tlllel18 (with Peking or the U.S. State
eep.rtment picking up the tab). Other

!::~~~~~~ d::~: h~~~e~ P~i\:\'~,;
• end philosophy (provided ~y depert-

and wMt w.y
for IIIIlCh \InNer-

purposea,1hay erred by " skipping ova('
non-tenured and temporary employees
when firing decisions were made. An
Imbroglio devaloped over this and othatISIU8S which culminated In tha
nsa~netlon of New Paltz's president, ha

=

a

ts) · dispa.ys of Chinese art, and a
nss!:!;ncy of a Chinese
muarc'lan artist or playwright.
Harrloti catalogs thaae early expras1 eagernese to participate: Leta
1
~~~~~.
manager of the AlbrightK x Gail
Shop, has Indicated
w1'\1ln nessec:s:o set up a Chinese
boutl8ue· Or Constantine Tung , Ia
•
er to draw on his contacts with
ll~makera and playwrights, as well as
lse the P.reparatlon of a
~ 1 .:::':"banQuet" [Dr. Tung Ia " an
exceptional chef • Harrlot11nlorma] ; Dr.
Gerald O'Grad • wants to praaent a
les of m.J's from tlle People's
~public · Dean Harold Cohen has
talked about temporary pagodas, as a
project that could be done by tacultysupervised students In S.A. E.D.

aalAiihough there has been a reported
drop In FTE enrOllment at New Paltz.
the local group felt that the union
should have taken an " unequivocal
stand' ~ In auppbrt of the retrenched
employ-. Instead, the group believes
that UUP leaders took a "management
position" by rationalizing the firings
end dismissing them as an administrative problem. Even with the drop In
enrollment, Connolly- personally believes that the situation at New Paiiz
was no mora serious than what
happened at U/B [whera there was no
retrenchment] .
Massey warned Professor Oliver
Gibson , outgolng president of UUP's
Buffalo Center Chapter, that faculty""'
beginning to "seriously distrust union
leadership," because of tha way In
wh[ch they responded to the firings .
Massey accused the union of " mulflfr~g
response" to the retrenchments and
"falling to provide the defense needed."

eoo.,...jlon needed

It would req" lra a lot~ol planning ,
Harriott admits and a lot of
cooperation. But, aha adds, that's what
she had In mind to begin with.
" At a time when ·a ttrition Is such a
concem, and In a physical climate that,
during so much of the &amp;cademlc year,
contributes to a lowering of morale,"
Harriott .argues, "a program of
Integrated cultural events (In the
broadest sense) can create an ambience
of liveliness that could go far to
counteract both the weather and tha
lack of a commurl~ of some. sort of
center, that Is so ottjtl exprassed as a
problem of our split campus."
Harriott assumes Ketter made the
suggestion lor an FSA arts grant
" because he, too, Ia sensitive to the
need lor the peneral enrlct&gt;ment of U/B
campus life.'
.
Also, she feels. " a profeBBional
cultural program (next to a winning
football team) Is the most visible aspect
of the Cl\(llpus to the surrounding
community; and as a public Unl-slty,
we have a commitment to thaf
commun ity."
She looks on the $25,000 and tha
actlvltl,._lt can make poUibie as "a
bnoeklhrough In lhla .,.., and a
significant contribution to creating a
cultural atmosphere that Is an appropriate reflactlon ol the rlchneBB and
quality of a major unl-.lty.''
Bring on the ~eking I

i!!e,:t"~~r~~r:,~hp;~~~u~~~
0
~~~ t~ ~-:f~ir~~uft; :C,'(~, ~n 1 ~

to

The feeling was, II this had happened,
thlsxear's contract negotiations r~anl·
:~~ue=~ could have ~n posit valy.
A bit milled, Gibson told the group
he doesn't remember seeing many o1
their lacea at UUP Chapter meetings.
He went on to report that State unfon
olllcara have been mon itoring tha
retrenchment matter right along and
fought lor thoee retrencl\ad to be giVen
one year's nOtice, Instead of being
dropped Immediately from the State
payroll.

ChangM In Article 35
In the new UUP contract proposal
(which will .be sent to members In
coming weeks lor ratification), Gibson

~t~al~~lc~~e35c'l:.=:~r c~n~~

=~~ ,l:':~.J~rt~fl re\~:rtf~!~

The decision can be grieved . Currently,
faculty and prolesslonel stall seem to
lind out.pnly de facto_Information about
retrenchment end the decision Is not
grlevable.
'
Professor Edward Hovor1&lt;a protested
that faculty should have been Involved
In the declalon-maklng process . TermIng Article 35 a " menace," Efron
suggested the State should be forced to
prove financial exigency before any
retrenchment occurs.
The position paper to be developed,
which ~opefully will be presented to
Buffalo Chapter UUP officials In the
coming weeks, will : 1) ask tha
Chancellor lor a " uniform and more
reasonable method of applying retrenchment•• which emphasizes that
Article 35 " not be used prescriptively,"
but as a " minimum reality" from which
to wor1&lt;; 2) call lor unit pnsaldenta to
retrench In a way which does not vlolata
union principles, atreaalng due proceaa
to ensure that aelected leculty are not
"picked-off" by the administration; 3)
take a stand against uslnP, enrollment
(Which Connolly feelo Ia •cycllcaJ" In
nature) as cause lor ratrencnment; and
4) urge ail other UUP Ch~tera to follow
suit · by IBBulng position p =
rJ~~e~~!'!~ ~~ =~!f way In w lch
While Gibson noted he doaan~
peraonall,)' feel one can "completely
overlobk' the decruM In 8f!rollment at ·
New"Paltz, he termed the po~ltlon paper
an "eminently aenalbie" way to voice •
protest end attempt to effect a change.

Roc~ller gift to make possible
1V shOWs on SUNY's arts resources
Television will be used to make the

I rom the center -will produce television

under terms of a $150,000 matching
gran~ from the Rockefeller Foundation.
Patricia Kerr Ross, director of the
Unl-slty~wlde Programs In the Arts
which received the grant, seld the award
w111 make possl le production of
programming which will televise offerlngs In the arts at a number of SUNY
carnpu- and Involve talented students
and feculty .
Two of the ~ro\acta. which the grant

other arts and sclence~ege campuses, New Paltz and Fr
n .
David Watkins, dlr
of the
Educational Television
er, will
head the moblla team which will
produce - programs at the 'three
campuses . Taped will be the Verdi
"Requiem" by a chorus and orchestra at
Fredonia, a New Paltz thelltre produclion, and a chamber ensemble concert
at Purchase.

nssldence at the Unlvwslty Center at
Buffalo and the Arts· and Sclence

Anel conl--sl8tad
.
The projact will conclude with - a
Unl-.ltfu,wlde conference In the fall of

f:!~r~~r~~~f ~!':·,~~et~ntlh:r~~t,f~

1

~~ .;,~ wllr'~~~~~
~liege at Purchase!.
~

to

film' a.tM

.ta

~...,.
'
Donn Alan Pennebaker, weiHmown
docuinentartan, will cnaata program-

=~ch .:~~ ~ ~

c..tiW and Performing Arts. Won&lt;lnft
In a fUm journal Btyle, .Pennebaker wl
reconla wide range of mualcal ectlvltles
during the comrng academic v-- - · ..._.... end lm.vlewa
with the .tlita. S~t ~prentlcea
wilt WOlle with the .tlat-ln-Naldence
throuCIIIOul the project.
A! the College at PurchaM, tum-

=

HII:T:''mwill~l~ wl~~

bloc:lwnlatry, dance, mualc and vlauel
.ta to produce i WOlle wlllcll c:onveya
the oomplexlly Of orw ol the body's
INIIabollc. ~- Thtough dance,
-.nd and color, a metaphor lor an
Intricate end delicate enzyme process
will be aeatad. Students from
~· DfOfeulonal danCe training
program will perform In the WO&lt;k.
Molher part ol the Rookefeller
Founda&lt;tion-luncled Dnliect w i l l _ .
from the~ l'Mollalon Centw
wllicll IWO S.. um-.lty
orycol'- at ComeU ~ty,
lege ol~ Ecology and the
ol Aaricultlft and Ufe
llcllenCea. A mciblle production ...,

............. e

~DIS
b~ IAI'a . . _ . nlgllllr parfor·
_
........ Ill._..., llllllbldanl

•UUP
,...... _1,col.2)

~f'm~:'2.'::.~~~~~ ru~or~~':n':t:':~

=io~

1

will'': s~ad~ '/:g,'":=
shared and methods discussed . Later
that fall, the telecas1s and lllma will
become available to State end national
educational end commercial TV.

~~t~~:~e ~"c!:k=erapfc:'~~~~
tlon-5tate University projact. He will

ovaraee productions, devalop avenues
of dlatl'lbUtlon, plan tor lutuns projacts,

end study .the Impact of production
act])!lty on the educational programs of
the State University end the communltlea served.
Laballle Is chairman of the Humanltlea/Telecommunlcatlona Department

Wage..,.__,!

I

Turning to UUP's tentative wage
agreement with the State, one faculty
member argued that In 11~1 of the
" unsettled economy; It Ia crazy•• lor
the union to tie Itself up In a ttuee-yaar
contract at only a 7 per cant raise (at
beat) per year. Employ-. according to
the pact, can r_,... a 7 per cent pay
hike only, II the Inflation rate ill 9 par

:: r-:6~~ ~': dlc;:::~c:'lll~:
and television programs and has been a
National Endowment lor the Humanlties Fellow lor Summer Study both at
UniYerSity of California at Berkeley and
at the National Theatre, London.
Laballla hu served as a panel member
on the theatre/cinema/video programs
IHorumantheltiNeaM.'-1 Endowment lor the

~

cea',~ng~:'Pialned that terms of the
proposed contract are similar to ones
contained In the new pact with the Civil
Service employaee. With merit money
not Included In the 7 per cant, Gibson
said the boost In oaiary act~ally
exceeds Praaldentlal guidelines by a
amall·margln.
Prot- Blll.f&lt;llen, president-elect
of the Buffalo Oanter Chapter (w~o
anuma office next .month), ,n
Europa and could. not be praaen ·

�June1C, 1879

. . .£1...

Agency fee
bill down,
but is it out?
State workers who choose not to join
the union which represents them may
no longer be required to pay an agency
shop fee equivalent to dues providing a bill, defeated lest Wednesday In the State Senate, stays off the
floor and remains deed .
Accordlng·to an article in the Buffalo
Evening News , over three-&lt;lozen Democrats and Republicans joined to defeat a
bill that would have mede It mandatory
for non-union members to continue
making payments In lieu of dues to heir
bergalnln9 agents. Tha bill had a
two-year hfe span.
· ·
The article noted that Democratic
Minority Leeder · Manfred Ohrensteln
favored making the agency shop
permanent and broadening Its provisions to Include school teachenl and
employees of local governments . This
led to a conflict with the State ScHool
Boards Association . That group claims
the bill would 11.tten the coffllfS of the
New York State United Teachers union
/
by about $4.8 million per year.
During tht debate, Senate Majority
Leeder Warren
Anderson warned
colleagues that If the bill lost, hewould
not let It on the floor for a second vote.
All Buffalo area senators, except
John ·e. Daly ~A-N iagara Fall$), voted
against the lag alation. The News wrote
that Amherst Republican Walter J.
Floss circulated an editorial written by
them which opposed the measure.
Sunday's New York Times had an
article wtych noted that Ohrensteln
plana to !lrlng . up another bill, which

=!.:.~~~~~~

WMk'a vote wu a calculatad political
move orcheelratect by Ohnanateln, the
Times concludad. Apparently the

~::::,tyv="'ir~~h~,~~~~~ ~.i~~~:

agency shop permanent gets to the

.ttoz·
an ad hoc uul&gt;
Friday, Buffalo Center

meeting last
UUP Chapter

~~:.~~~f=~~~~r.':.rl'~~:~~~~~~

UUP'a operations and services henl.
Currently( UUP maintains an office In
Baldy Ha I. Gibson said both the office
and support help may have to go.
Professor Tom Connolly, a member
of . the UUP Delegate Assembly,
predicted that defeat of the bill would
likely cause union membership on
~pus to plummet.

Duryea heads
campusAAUP
Professor Edwin D. Duryee of

the
Department of Higher Education was
elected president ol the i:ampus chapter
of the American Association of
Un'lverslly Professors at the organiZation's annual meeting, May 17.
Professor Edward Hovorka of the
Department of Psychology will be vice
president for the 1979-1980 academic
year. Professor James R. Sewusch will
continue to serve as secretary-treasurer
on a temparary baSis.

Jo~~rln~J;(~'/:'n P,~/"thJ"ife'~.::~~~~~

Psycrology hePd the post of president
and Duryea was vice president.
Sawusch served as secretary-treasurer.
Professor Thomas E. Connolly of the
Departmeri't. of English will continue to '
serve as chairman of the local AAUP
Committee on Academic Frsedom.

Carey vetoes
'reasons'
bill
Gov. Hug·h L. carey

has vetoad
legislation which would have called for
a written statement of Jpeclflc reeaona
for denial of lenura or retention upon
demand by public college or university
teachers jn the state.
In hla · veto meaa.ge, Carey aald,
among a number of raaaona, that the
bill ·~ends to cnaate an expectation In
continuing employment," and that
argument• oould cauae the oourta to
beCOme "unduly lnYOived In passing
upon acadamlc judgmenta of the moat
aubtle and aubJIICIIW c:~~e~Kter."
Prtwlalona of the bill a1110 . . the
aubJIICI of collecti&gt;lt bargaining negotiations bet_, the state and
amployeea In the Stale Unl-....11~
NeW York aystam, he -'4. c..y
lhlll a nav1ew -"'ucled 11Y hie_,_
lor adueellon concluded IMI
y.- !hill theN wae "no ewtdenoa of a
...... of d'-11111111111011 In the a-a 01'
din'-' of temn" ellher In the atata
aya!MI or the City Unl..,.lty.

_.ery

us d.oesn-'t care if buildings wo'rk 'or not
The Importance of post-occupancy
evaluation In determining the suitability
of a bulldlng's· design was comically
underscored here fast week when
architect and U/B faculty member
Michael Brill told a conference of
architects staying at Ellicott that , for
the ·record , they should note their

only 31 dld post-occupancy evaluations
(POE's). Sweden , said 'Bechtel, leads
the way In utilization of POE's because,
unlike the U.S ., It has Incorporated
such evaluations into Its svstem and
revises Its building designs according
to their outcomes.
In the U.S., most POE's which have

had asked the designers of the complex

$5,000, and were done as class projects
by architecture students , Bechtel's

only to be
" una-iallable...

later HUD projects .

~~~y1a ~'r;:.~~fegot lost In the
Sard~cally, Brill reported that he
0

~d~~~~~r ~~~fa ~n~~~~~~~~~~
Informed

they

were

Q .JV ' '

....

ln.6

During one session of the four-&lt;jay,
lOth annual confereQce of )he Environmental Design Research Association
(EDRA), environmental psychologist
Robert Bechtel released the results of a
"!Iurvey commissioned by the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban
Development wh ich has been kept
under wraps by the agency since Its
completion over a year ago.
Bechtel , president of lhe Environmental Design Research Fc)undatlon at
Tucson, Ariz., revealed that he surveyed
over 3,000 agencies Involved In federal

~~~~H to'~A':!"~~u~~:.. ~sd ;~~~~ i't.~~

~~ a~~nf97'6~r~adc~~:,!~ge~~~:";,~

~~~~hs ~~w~ . slg~~N~~~~~~'Jact ~~~
co~ru~~:-"!h'i~~~::r.,:-:~~~[

at accountabllll)', " lamented Bechtel.
There Is no built-In "feedback loop" lor
housing professionals , so their Involvement frequently ends after construction

ceases.

Bechtel suggested that one reason
why POE's are seldom used is that " it's
profitable to make buildings no one
needs;" especially for banks which
make money from a large turn--over of

=~! ~o~nesv"'~ :r,a;;:,~pt "~~~:?;~~~
11

except the taxpayer," he asserted .
In an opinion survey spanning various
profes_slonal groups associated with

federally-subsidized building proJects,
Bechtel found that most respondents ,
"except for builders and bankers,"
favored the Idea of POE's. The majority
of those who supported them lett they
should be undertaken by "I nterdisciplinary teams" and also agreed
that " owners and owner/ operators
would profit most from them ."
As far as their financial benefits are
concerned , Bechtel reported that no

~~Y. ~~u~:e ~~~s g~t::f=. h~':

recommended that a demonstration
pr~ect be started to provide a cost

peln°=!:-c~~a:.,~s~. mlaflf'betbulldlng design an(j function and to

~':;f:,~e a!~:;,~~ec~t~ede'h."ll~!Yun~

projects, Bechtel suggested that social
science research " be Incorporated" Into
housing research . Currently, there Is •
little Intermingling of the two because
HUD administrators " have not been
trained to relate social research to what
they are doing," Bechtel offered. "They
simply don't know how to deal with II ."
The national conference was hosted
by 1he Department of Environmental

~sli~c~~~~;;,ntn~n~ 1 ~n~l~~n~:nfal
Design.

Headway made vs. electrical pollution
A U/B professor and three collaborators have been credited with a scientific
breakthrough In etfor:ts to clear the air
of "electrical pollution ."
The recogn ition. came at Rotterdam ,
the Netherland~. at the Third Symposium and Technical Exhi bition on

Elect;':::~~:;:~c &lt;;;:'.':~~~~y: :J~

!?tomputer:;t.lded Analysis of RFI
E1fectJ;in ~atlonal Amplifiers," won
8

'f~e a~ard g~~er~ie~~·

to Dr.
James J.' Whalen , associate professor
a{ electrical engln-lng, who presented the,paper. His collaborators were Dr.
Joseph G. Tront, who received his
7

:-~ ':~~r~~ :ro-r~~:~~r=c":

engl.-lng at VIrginia Polytechnic
Institute, and Curtis E. Larson and
James M. Roe, both of the McDonnell
Douglas Company of St. Louis.
lntagNted clrcul.. mlabahne .
Aeaardlng the "electrical pollution"
brallldtvougll, Whalen axplalna that
Integrated circuits In alectrlca.l devices
tend to mlabellave when axp&lt;&gt;aad lo
nadlo frequency ,Interference (RFI). In
aome cua, thla could be dangerous,
-fatal.
For Instance, Dr. Whalen pointed out,
RA from a mlcrow... oven can affect
the Integrated clrcult In a '-1
~· Signa proclaiming thla
potential &lt;*~gar . . now poated In
public aetlng pl-. where m~
_ . . . lnuae.
RFI comee from a multitude of
Including nadlo and TV
t,_.mtttiiR and 111~ radar
and -ther tnanomlttai'a at airports

aowc.e.

Even those popular CB radios add to the
problem .
The Integrated circuitry in an

:0~~~~~~~~ ~u~~;,~n~ngr~t~~ ~~s~

such as audio signals In radio, by the
Integrated circuit , or op amp. The
converted signals, he added , are
processed by the op amp In the same
manner as the desired signals.
"1'he result ," Whalen ~.i1. "Is that
the Information at the 1op "!!!Jp _output
can ~ tillse. 11 the op a'W? Is In a

f~l~S::~ce":~s~"ucr'!~~;;;,.,g!s ~

~evers

0

tern could fall prey to RFI with tragic
results , Whalen noted.
Aside from the potential daogers ,
there are annoyance factors . Whalen
the electronic garage door that
sometimes falls to work because of
hlg!l frequency " fllllout. "
TOe paper pre"ll"led by Whalen In
Rotterdam provides a computer-aided
analysis procedure which he said can
reliably predict the capability of a given
Integrated circuit to withstand RFI.

A tool for manufact-.
The procedure, aald Whalen, Is
Intended aa a "tool" (or manufectunara
of electrical devices to use In order to
construct Integrated circuits able to
reduce or eliminate effects of RFt.
"The technology Ia f aval~le ,"
Whalen obaenlad, "but whether manufactunara will apply 'the guideline ~Ill
on the competitive factot· \hal
y demandalow-&lt;:oat production."

=

~en~~~~feft~r;u'~

f"J
their study waa an-operational amplifier
(op amp) UMd In a wide vwtaty of
electronic ayatama to amplify WMk
algnala. Integrated circuits al110
known as "chlpe"- ..-una about one
millimeter aquano, ot leaa, and oontaln
about 20 tnanaltllora.
What happens, Whalen explained, Ia
that lntaf1erlng high freq..ncy algnala
-.conV«ted to low tr.Quancy elgnala,

;,o.::;~'!r,;c!r~:~cesu~~ch

~=a~~

!s
or valves, su~h systems can
operate Improperly."
As Whalen sees It , the next step Is up
to the electronic manutacturlng Industry . .
Meanwhile, Whlilin Is ·$62.50 richer
~his share of the $250 prize) - but not

bo~~~~n?0 rH~ 1 :"~ 11~e ~f.?:~et~~ul~~
Hollan~ .

Research awards

top $21 million
The dollar volume of University
research awards Ia running about aeven

~u:rrl~~~g~~~-:.~.7~r ,~

=•".:!

research, reported this week.
· .
In the first 11 months of the current

y::;;.:,:u~1 "'!!::r!~

totaling $21,72&gt;4,442, Fitzpatrick said.
The number of awarda la-.2.4 per cent
hiYl:~han \:: y = a tlmeiod. 650
-~'!.9. totaling $67,~,506 have
~bmltted to prospective aporl'aora. Tht.a ~ta a 11herp rise In
ectlvlty. The total number of these
proposals Ia up 11 .1 per cent; their
value has Jumped by onHhlrd.

�.....

4

_

Coorsesfor
Italian&amp; -

VIEWPOINTS

_u~~!! !l_!lys~Yb,,ng uta

Hochfteld guilty of ,·M ortimer Adlerlsm,'
• dlng.course_S
Newman Ch ar'Ge5
In d et,eft
0
EdiiDr:
GeorgeHochfieldatllld&lt;»an'tlllcethe
Coltegee - - d i d , , _ will: In his
laleet
!ella ua that 1) the
cour.. ....... 2) the 8tlllf Ia bed, and
~ . . bed. Thia being eo,
~ that we get tid of the
whole lot 8Dd.~ aome , _ Mliatant
~- -=:~:. "
The llllnl erw-t Ilea &amp;1.-dy ~
......., 1n iMae pagea by Irvin!!
SpllzllargMd,....Gokf: theCollegaa
tlbolll on par with lhoaa fiom
Aria Wid .....,.,. and about the only
thlflll to be aeld is that, from the
viewpOint ot thl Sc:leneee, Aria and
~ •
Willi u
the Colleges
. . - t - g u t coutMa, attractln'g
at~ ·~ ~ A'a and gentle'
B a.
Aa to the aacond ow:;ument, I can only
r8IIIOnd from what rknow of Tolstoy
Co(llae, and hera I muat aay !hall think
our alai! Ia pre.nlnentiy qualified to
teach What we teach. Soma of our etaff
11, of course, qualified In .quite
con-t~nal ways: they have Ph.D.'s
and M.A. s, they're faculty members or
grw!uate stud•ts In a varie'i! . of
dapatl,_te. Others- I think of ruce
Beyer, obviously are qualified
rcauaa lheylalhave taklenl
lcalan active role
n some aoc
or po 1
movement,
have naad widely about tecta, lsal!lls,
and
and as a consequence have
~::y.,:.oan"J'=lncarryg~nP.g..:C.~
with Ideas The unexamined lrfe rna
not be wotlh living, butlncreas~n ly In!
post-«J's era of cynicism des r and
scarcity the unpracticed t'llelsn't worth
living either
·
Abllltl• the! can't be pigeonholed
And, finally, !hera are fOITl8 members
d
01
11 .••
our 8 1a wno 1 1mp1Y emonstrate
abilities that can1 be ·easily pigeonholed; one such person, who begaJ) as 8

...._be-

arm. ..

men,,_ •

v-.

0

IIPPfl*:h

depends on apeclfic paycno.n.~ytic tran.wor~ta w110ee term-

one. Firat It wUI be-the Colleges, then
the Hum8n.U. w111 be cut~*'&lt; naxt

fiauoec1.

':.';;g~~":/!~.· ~~~T,yth~~l'!!f"t~

_,...,
Plato- maybe not George's Plato, but
there's the rub ... .)
Finally I must say something about
George's 'nteboat ethics- the Idea that
one of us hsa to get ou t- of the boet If
the .rest of us are to survl..,. My own
feeling Is that either all survive
together, or
be rubbed out one by

-·11
IIc lied I Imon Iala by a·-faculty
·
'La"Hie· Roman· ce' has
~==I\~-::·
s~~~~!~i,t&lt;'~::!,~ II"Hie to com
' mend a"t
by his queatlons and llecfagogy, is
=~"':C. =rd~ ~

unao

pleasure of the Board of Trustees,
which makes appointments
on the
recommendation
of the local councils.

est

something extremely valuable at the

wry core of recent .--rch In the
faculty member's own apeclallzalloii.
(We dldn1 know all that when we kept
hiring "X" - we juat kn- that he was

por.l~w~~l~l

argument, thar •
College COUrMB era bed (mere fashion
boutlq... of the mind), 1 would like the
llbarty- of dealing with two which
concern me as a member of both
Tolatoy and the English [Mpartment.
....... Rolee _ , , dlflarant
Firat, I should point out that the
"Man's Aolea In_ Recant American
Fiction" malcea
claim to baing a
literature cou_.&lt;-a Gaorlla lmpll•l or
ot COmpeting with Engllafl Department
material. It commlta the cardinal aln of
tha literary critiC - I.A. Rlcharda
called ..,........,., JIIOClatlons and
atock raapon-." It aaya that a novel Is
lnt-.ting not bacauae we ~ argue
about wtoat the author b7 rt but ·
rattw bacauw.- can explain why It Is
important to ua, It _ , , to ~
ua. N- _,. ,__fBI!IIIed English
teadoara do hika _,lnO like thla
~ In oL paycloologlcal
(only) raapon- to lltaralura, _but
wtthln the Engllalo ~ that

no

__ _..,., .. _a(

.i
"i
~~----,....

_--__

,...-.--.....o(,_......_ _,
YM . . . . . . . - - ......
- . , Ia 0w11o - - - . .. ,..._

.

the Soclel Sc:leneee will be
Olflcera of the ltallan-Amertcan
-eoon.ltd&lt;»an't--malceany-lo
Filc*atlonandagrouplntheFacultyof
nMI to aingle .out one ~ or _..
~· and Lettera, under the Dean's
and hope that b7 sjettllill till ot It, -."11
lrectlg lo:'.ic.,~ty ~g out a plan to
diiiCOWW a • ., t o - the rwt of ua,
.. n
' - " ' couraes In the
a.,onc:1 that, I thi,.lt'ac:-.tlla!U.. _ oanterclty, tor credit, In~ of Italian
Collegee do ,..,._, eoniethlng
language, 11-ura. art and/or music,
lndiapenuble within the~- a
Ketter 881d .
notion of goklll beyond the II'IM!IIIL
If thla expert,_. Ia aucceaatul, he ·
bouncs.laa of 'lila t.-.dltlonil -:-....
lndlcatad; theideaC9111dbaaxtendedto .
ctplln. alttw by lntenlieclpllfWY
lither groups.
·
·
~ byi,_,.lng the poaaibiUty
The italian organizations · have eat~
of-.- dladpll~ or by finding new
mated there eQUid wall be 1200-1500
1..uea to 1ocua on,' and by providing an
, _ atudanta !Ming 8IICh cou.-- for
acadamlc atyle Whf9h moat ~credit .
, _ . . c*&gt;1 provide· amall erwlron-'
Ketter &amp;leo filled in the Council oo the
,_.8 for , _ torina of thought, · actlvltlee of the Uni..-aity Commlttaa
brlclgaa find connactlona betwean
on Operational Proceue1i (chaired by
atudenta' neada and the aba!IIICI
Dr. f'riM J•) Whicll h• been ·
acadamlc ,__orl&lt;s they otherwlae
aetabllshad to eumlna a variety of
encounter
burseucratic function a of the UnlverTl1ant is- nsk In all this: the
ally.
- experiments may not pan out they may
The first .,.. to be covered was a
look silly to the ll~lnformad 'they may
review of the procaaaas In the
meet the hostility of the entrenched
eurcheslng ~,_t. At leeat one
disciplines But that's a phenomenon
change which had ~ suggested In
not pe&lt;;ulliu- 10 the Colleges· every
the - repon on that area hes been
ecademlc department can polni to the
adopted by State COmptroller Regan,
freaks and ~ thinkers of Its past
Ketter reported. Some othenl have been
who (In some• eases) have only now
propoeect which . . dealgned to
been legitimized b7 the I'IHWBiuation of
alleviate rad tapa.
the discipline
The Jen Committee Is now beginning
The Colleges represent one commita study of the procaes of registration
ment by the Unlveralty to make that
andWh enro
.henment of stud~a, Ketter said.
11 fl 1 8 tate contro.. the number of
procaes of experimentation a parmanent and respectable one, within the
atudhenta we can enroll at th-. freshman,
Institution, not a bootlegged operation
sop omore, tranafer and graduate
rom without. And the hope with the
levels, lie eliPialned, the committee will
Colleges too Is that what they do today,
atudy the PI'OC88MS uaed In attracting
departments (or n - departments) will
t,.._studentstotheUnlveralty.
be doing tomorrow: today' a "boutique,"
Erroneou~ reports · that he has
tomorrow's departmenl store.
decided no, to seek another rerm as
-Robarts. N-man
President promrted Ketter to discuss
Associate P•ofessor English
tha presldentla review process. He
•
•
1 decf th Co
11
_
¥aster, Tolstoy College
;:::.ld.nta o? SUN\n~nlt'!":"'..::.rsat':J:

lnology and -mptlona become
auctalfordlacusaionalnthecoLn8.
Again, thla lan't what "Men'a Rolee"
attempt&amp; to' do - tar from It, It trlel to
aay thai atudlnta In thillf ordfnwy
language , _ aome _rtgllt to explain ·
what a n6wot ,_,.to them In Ierma of
their experten._ • , _ or women.
And further _ that the -type~ of
rnen'aandWOit*l's- whJc;h peraiat
eo mlaclliiM&gt;ualy _ , In lhoaa rooat
dadlcatad to at..-tng them can ·Only be •
dealt with effact!¥81Y b7 IOoklnQ at n.
paraonaJ ways ·In whicll they root ·
lhllmaal- In .our behavior gMII our
polltlca our economic aa1,ngemant1
and our'social vafuea.
' ~

Marti,_ Adlertam
George also rnocka the;_, 111-unt
course.Thlsto me Is utonlshlng. In an
era where boolce on homosexuality are
challenging our notions of what Is
normal and Is " perverw • and
where Masters and Johoson tell us
heterosexuals that we have something
to learn from homosexualltles (now In
the plural), It appalls me that Geor!!!
singles out this course for attack. Its
ssuclmplya coMotlu.!~erelboAdwletlsPslmatotoouaatoyfthethel
h
·way, any more than It would be to say
that a course In Barth or Barthel me
would do so. (I might edd that when
Tolstoy-College first offered a course In

programs ln. arts and letters to the
Buffalo ltallan , communlty are now
P ...ldent Robeit L. Ketter
~~lr May _m.ting of the U/8

. underway,

-hesOutlining
!he
for review that
been used In the past, he Indicated

beautiful

(her spoiled - and --man-crazy mother's
third husband) Is a millionaire
corporation executive, headquartered In
Parts. They meet, tal} In love (lhelr

procaes
!bat changes are currently being
considered. One such proposed change
Involves use of an outalde review board
whose report would be mede available.
to the chairman of the council. Another

pre-taenagara to II . Those are the
only thlnga I can thlnk.of to aay In favor
of a film currently playing at the
Boulevenl Ci_,.., "A Utlla Romance."
The operative word hera Is " little";
one can't veher11ently condemn or

and that their I.Q.'s ara In the160 range,
reminds me of Woody Allen's shotl
story parodying a romance be!Ween
mernbera of Menaa, that International
organization whoae entry requirement
Is a high I.Q.) and run off - with

review to the report to tha. Chancellor·
and lha Board of Trust-. should take
no longer than one - t e r , that
preferably It should be completed In
one monK-terh .wl-~- to be~-~~~ for
11 ...
·- · - -~

that even the graateat actor In the
English-speaking
world,
Laurence
Olivier,. can give • beef performance.
Olivier, In the role of the elderly
pickpocket with a hurt-ol-ijold, mugs
and overacts to an emberrssslng
degree. The ch~n~Ctena In tile movle are
auppoaad to find him a tedloua old
man, but a good film wouldn 't portray
that by boring us:
The prot revolvei around a pair of
thlrt.,._ys8f,olds, a French boy who
Uvea Wlth hla coaraa t~l drl- lath«
and an American girl, Who• atapfathaf

this, according to a myth, tliey must
klsa under Venice's Bridge of Sighs, at
sunset, when the bells of the c&amp;riipanlle
toll.
Their adventures In reaching thls
destination constitute the action of the
film_, and we know that, despite all
obataclea, they will 'ICCOmpllsh their
mlaalon. The scene at the Bridge of
Slgha Is qulta affecting, and-there are a
,_ other moments that are amusing
But all In all, the movie Is too slow and
too cute.
In French, with English subtitles.

S.,.t11mber of 71170, eo Indicate to the
"Council and the Unlvarflty COmmunity.
He aald that ha Ilea not · really
conaiderect hla deciaion at this time,
but that he will do eo during the
summer. · It Ia Important that the
Institution have a forwenl thrust, he
suggeated, whether or not he will be the
person to laed it. He told the CouncH
that If, over the courM ot the summer,
any · member faala It ~lrable and
wishes to dlscuaa I~ matters with
him, he would wetc:on.lt •
in otherbulin-., ttwrcOuncll:
•wrote Into Ita mlnutea a resolution

ily Eathw Harriott
Dlreclor. CUbnlThe photography Is of

~~;;.::.,-,.'•8oV~--~:e!.no,:~

:~~~~ed~b~ ':l!~;,~.~:i~~~

:~~~e':l:l::ega~d~~=8m~~~~~

_,
a-=:::!,
.;;;;.-,.-llrm.u.ctM.._._.__1,
...,..._,...,.
1_.._

ot ~ Z.C.~
IIIIIIOa. He hoicla 1M Ed.D from
~
·
Dr. ...._
11M bean

Coll:rJ.

"==-rJmO:......~

::t.'-....,
Mel.,...... 8lpMm,__,
~ ..._. U/8

..

SUNY1Albllny.
·
D
r. Marceline Jaquaa has been
named to • th,_,_ term aa chairman
the llepartmelit of Counseling and
uman Sarvicea, effective September 1
Dinlctor ot U/B'a rehabilitation
counaaling PIOIIfMI, ahe hes been
actively
invot..,,_
in COnducting w~•......_ -~
"'~
::;::r _,.. .-n.. -. on the topic of
_,,
Ia co-direCtor«
the LifeTrwlaltlona Canter, a.
IIIAOial
. •--• ~~of the Facul
_ ty ot

-fl

=:;:-

= =:.

Dr ....... ~ ......... ,_.
~
• - · '""' _, , . . ,_...,
tor outiUndlng -.rvtca at

:a--s

In,_ a

an

~.:...--:.":.::

1

~/':!:;r~:r..~r ~!:'is ~~~":,~W: -~~~.~g.JC:,~·

4 FES d epar:tment heads appointed
Th'* profaaaors.Jn the Faculty of
Educational Studlee (FES) ' - ~
appointed one ~intecf, 10
c~epart,_ 1 ch8lrmanshlpa b~ ~ldant
Robart L Ketter.
Prof- IMor Callehan Ilea been
rwnect chaltman of the ~ of
o:-.11111 ....,_,.., Ed·~ .... for

~~~::8:'e ~~:.=~1t'~i"~1:

£duall..,_81udla
~ "~

•

""· ,.,.,., 0 . llenllihl w i l l - ·-

%,~=~H:=o-

:= ~

=o~::.'~&amp;rec~":.t.~;

Gllbatl
•nominated Mr. William c. Baird for
the Dlstlngulahad 8erYioe Awwd of tha
AaaoclatiOn of Council Members and
Collage Trust-;
•nominated Mra. Phyllla Kelly for the
Council
Service ~ward of the
aama_ aaaoclation, 111111 ateo com·
mended her "for 1:1ar tire!-. efforts
Whicll ..
-~COm mun Ilk_ ~~,,. Uru-atty De~ the axoeptlonaf publ
relationa_.lt_ .•
•'-IS that
Rot.! Mlllonzi
-Mrs. Roaa a-.. .. ectJng as a
building _....,.... tQ...D.yiew
bulldinga now under conii(Uc!ion
Whicll wlll . ba , _ , tor completion
during tbanaxt two~,and

ear-

Chlllrnian

~-:"t:"a1.1n ,. . • ~ -- ~-::.~·,...._7,1ot:_-Jr!_11eiCI

~ of lliaiWr aducllltlon. He Ia
- 1P- liaab IIIII a _,_ ot
bookeiiiiiiii!UW ...... .ntalea.
Altlla=r-•ta-.rnadeon

N1iiiii
lila

c.._."

M I

- -. . . . .

. ,.. .,._

~

-=-~-.:. ":"Tto."': -=~·_:: a;;:~=1~

�U/Bassists
dental lab
program at ECC
Dentures, crowns and other restot'8-' lions can be made by dentists but mora
often are fabricated to precise "prescriptions" by dental laboratory technologists.
Until recently, Western .New Yorl&lt;ers
who sought training in- this rapidly
growing technological field had to go
elsewherJI. Now a two-y- ·program In
dental laboratory technologr Ia available locally at Erie C&lt;immunoty College
South campus, thanks fo a concerted
effort by a number 9f groups; Including
the U/B School of Dentistry.
Acconling to 1&gt;r. ·M..-In Herman,
director of the ECC program, 25
students enrolled IIi · thli September
class. Upo~&gt;-graduation", 'tlley'll receive
the Associate of Applied Science

~":'ll:n t!~lfs:~~~f.t~~~~~
exam to become natlonallyeertifled .

"'-li&gt;tlonolor fabrlcetion

-

Dr. Sheldon Winkler, U/B professor
of prosthodontics who . helped ECC
Implement the new program, notes that
while dentists must know how to make

~~~~~r;r~~7~ns·~hefor o~~~"se s~iedmsth~~
dental technolog ists who do the actual
fabrication.
" The success of the restoration," he
says , " depends upon how well the
dentist formuiatoo the r,rescrlplion and
::~;~n~~ii~~~~ ij was ollowed by ~he

the
mego-.r
-o
f t h e _ _ _thet
_mtde
__
II
. ,_
. t'h
-e
·_
a_
- _u_unuauel
.
_
_

Interest in developing a two-year
dental technology program locally has a
long history, according to U/B dental
dean Dr. William Feagans. Not only
does its availability enhance the quality
of dental technology performed locally;
It also ~vldes Western New Yorl&lt;ers
with a h1ghly marl&lt;etable skill.
" For at least a decade." 'he points
out, " dentists from1he Erie County and
Eighth Distiict dental societies, local
dental laboratory owners, officials from
ECC and U/B dental faculty have been
provldi88 input for such a program.•

whiohlo.ab up to tllit -

Gerald Berkowitz fnlm the v~
Adll)lnlstratlon. The VA'a lnt.ut,

1-

ln-ofgf81n-..agroupof
. . . . _ _ , . _ _ upthe
atuoMnla -·
In
II.,. -1'4 the 'Miaa Buffalo'
1hla - · chlly, l'8lny Monday morning.

'"-r- -

old-.

prlme -examplee of

· The CnJIM

-.-not•oum-flelde~

-..--··lnd-~
_ . . . by the llcMol of Archltectuoe
-Enwln&gt;n-lo.ign.

~$~ra~to~th~

~;.,~,!,Yret~o :.,~~~ ~r!fn1~ t,C:~

field available for handicaP!&gt;ed veterans. Consequently, the ECC ·dental lab
is equip~ to accommodate five
whealcha~r-bound students.
Ten-sattheVA
In addition to coursework at ECC,
students will also spend ten weeks
, during tile summer between their first

::"'hs:ifu~~ar~t:.::,e.n'fd~~:~U:

Medical Center and the VA facility In
Batavia. Some of. their training this year
was taken at the School of Dentlstry'a
Department of Dental Materials under
~re~uc,:~~O:. of Its chairman , Dr ..
Dr. Judith Crowley, the ECC North
Campus · academic dean who coordinated development of the new
program, notes Interest Is high In terms
of applicant numbers. At least one ·thlrd

0

~~~,:' ofcut~:nt~oc~rt&gt;l~"!..ne~:
~tar's prograll) which provides

beckground coursewor1&lt; In
dentlatry.
"Obviously." -adds, "this program
couldn't have gotten off the ground
except for the help·and enthusleam of
many people - eopeclally Dr. Winkler
who Implemented curpculum development, dlnscted IIUfChue of equipment
and helped us obtaip top-flight faculty ."
general

l~boratory

Health~

honors

-

. Troy

VIrginia M. Troy, diAICtor of nursing
MrVIce at tha Unlveralty HM!th Semci
alnc:e 1983, reoen.d the Rutll E.
Boynton awenl for dlatlngutehtd
·MrVIce to the 1\merlcan Colleaa HM!th
Aaaoclation (ACHA) May 25, at the
Auoclation'a annual ~Meti ng In Wuhlnaton, D.C.
l1le lirat Weatem New Yorl&lt; reel plant
of thla ewllld, Mre. Troy haa bein
.,\CHA'a rioe prwldent tor
fducatlon.L. lind chlltrpiaon of the
Nuratna Section. She haa baM an
lk:tlva ACHA "**lber Iince 111115.
A vwtety of dlactpllneo M1 lapre~ by ACHA'a mora than 1200
IMIIItlera who Include: phyaiclena,
clentlata, nuraeo, haalth .,ucalors,
IIIIIIIWI health paniOIIMI, hoepltal
admlntatratora, envlronmentlli health
and aatety _,,..,and a~ent~ .

.-a. -

�JuM14, 1879

Vann named
head of
Lockwood
Or. J. Dan~l Vann Is the MW head of
Lockwood Memorial Ui;n:rY., Mr. '
Saktldaa Roy, director of Ljbnlries,
announced this week. V4"n ~an work
In his new Jl081 June 11 .
The new Lockwood Librarian , the first
permanent head of that uhlt since 1976,
takas o - duties which have been

~~b~~~M~~~~.:
Starn.
He Is responsible for administering
the programs, services, and operations
of Lockwood Library and Its branches,
the Alchltecture and Environmental

Deelgn Ubrary, the Ubrary Studies
Ubrary, and the Main Street Library.
The combined collections under
VMn'a supervision will total over
1,000,000 volumes, Mr. Roy pointed
out. Twenty-IIWI professional and 29
aui&gt;I&gt;Ort staff will report to his office.
The varied and demanding requ ireof this poallion necessitate a
opeclal person with expertise In many
- · Mr. Roy said. " Dr. Venn 's
~tlala fit our needs, and I feel
confident that he will provide us with
l::~:S~u~'.~!!Ciion needed In
Venn received his Ph.D. in medieval

"*"•

June
Jazz

~:0"1r:i;; 1~4~~ . ~ !"~ ~~~~~r~
1

81

=:far~ ~nas c~'l:f ~:, ~:

the Staten Island Community College
from 11171-76.
11

~~e! ~h:e:a:'o~ w:~ fn~~sf~~

tlvough the Council on Ubrary
Reeourcea Academic Library Management Internship Program ; he spent the
year working with the director of the
Stanford Unlversity Libraries. He has
held librarian ~Ilona at Keuka
College, the
_ 1st College at
Cherl•ton1 ,and the ewt&gt;erry Library In
~ · ne 11--. taught hlstOI)' at
Calltomia Baptlat~lege and Campbell College.
He Ia currently a member of the

"'-*""t U..,. .-~on·a

Mem-

_ . . , Promotion T_, Fon:e and of
the IIMnl ot adltono of Cholctl. He Ia
aiiO the chairperson of the ACRL
Membership Committee.
·
In announcing the new appointment,
Director Roy medf specific mention of
"the Invaluable help provided during the
put IIIIYefal YMill by Diane P..-er and
Madeline Stern:• Ms. Stem's "effective
hendllng of the preparalion and
execution of the massive move of the
coUectlona from Main Street to
Amherst" was applauded as was Ms.
Pa!Mr'a "efficient organlzalion of the
:::.,;.~ facilities' In their new

25-game

slate listed

1
The men's VWllity buketbeli achedule tor 1IIN-a:l has been announced by
Alllletlc Director Ed Muto.
The Bulla, under aacond-year Head
c-:11 Bill Hug/lee, will play 25 games,
InCluding hocQe-and-hQroe contests
with 11-.-ott.. W•t Dlvlalon members
of lha Stale Univwalty · ot New York
Athletic Confemnoe (SUNYAC),.
U/B will al.o oompete in a holiday
tourr~MW~t a( Indiana Unlwrally ot&lt;Ra..
e1ong with
Cottage and RhOde
laland College, and will make a Florida
trip In early, ~. 11110, tor a-mea
the U~ty of South Florida
~~ and 81ebon Un'-alty at .

o_.

-'nel

Tha _... wllto' lha Un'-alty of
be .......s, one of 11
home~ Ill CWII Gym.
RlwalriM with w..a.m New York toea
~witt

CenlatuaMCI N....,. oonUnua.

Tha 1ft.ID . . . , . . , awting !liMa

IP.;m . ..,.Mnoted:

,

Now.aD.IINIIIgala.
0.0. 1 Qnionla Stile;

1

IWI, II....._, Pa.,

T-'.

'·

ef

xn.

T-

.1M. I, II 8aulll Fl""- 7:30; I, Ill
BIIDI!IIort at.le; 15 II

=~

1 ll'o.-S..D-.11

..._ . .

Cllllllul. 1:311.

~=n::, h~:~~!,~J~~

Intellectual vigor thai Is bestowed on
classical masters.
The repertory ensemble ot Chuck
lsreets and the National Jazz Ensemble
pertormed classics of the decades oj
the 40s, 50s and 60s during the first
week of the jazz event. This provided
the necessary opportunity, Patrick

- - jazz with all the..,.respect and

critics tried to explain In workshops the

Gunther Schuller who . strealled at a
WOIIiiiiK&gt;p last week the neecn to

II f'lll18llulgll
818118; 30, •

..........

- - 1, ............... Aoolleet-

,. . . . . . 11. IU.T.; 1S.III
, .. 11 ........ 11,

me,gic of improVisation.

feitiv~~~;:;~::~ ~,;g;:~~~.n~~~ ~~~

~~d ~~~~st'~t~':!~~ ~~.!,~a~c?'S.~

~~~~· ~j~,~=:s~,= ~~ .

Falzone, saxophone, lecturing on "The
RhY1hm Section ." On Friday, e concert
et8 p.m: In the Fillmore R·oom with Don
Cherry, Colin Walcott and Nana
Vaaconceloa will mark the • close· of
"Jazz in June."

Test can detect if fetus ·has sickle cell

--·-Sciences
By.._, Beth Spina

The loy of impending parenthood was
marred last fall tor a Buffalo couple who
teamed that the odds were one In four
the! their unborn child had sickle cell
anemia.
'
Familiar with the autterlng caused by
this genetic blood dl-.e, Bruce and
ElolM Lewis had seriously considered
an abortltio. But .ll ne•, experimental
teat Which detects tlif dlaeaae In the
· unborn indicated that tt&gt;e Infant did not
have the di-.e. Alter Angela Oonse:S
birth last week at Children's Hospital
further testing collflrmed the validity of
that new test (which was developed by a
Callfomlasc]entlst, Or. W.Y.l(an).
The LewiMS' ~tory bef~an. lui tall
when the mother-to-be aought s:':Jic

~='~Pg~~:m~': ~~~ ¥1:':

who Inherit the trell fo(, ~'*" celllrom
both parenta ·produce abnormally-

=~t'/nbl~heceil:uC::~g!n~ ~a~~~

carrlaa oxygen _in "the bioocll . These
cretoent-ahapad or "sickle1' cells,

.unlike normal oM&amp; which are round,
tend to " pile-up" In the blood - I s.
'ftla "pile-ups" produce clota which lead

On the other hand, FrledmaiU'
explained, " Dr. Ken's • test utilized
amniotic fluid drawn from 1he uterus
and could be done here In Buffalo with
virtually .no risk to the unborn child. It
appeared to be mbre acourate, too."

Le~~~e~o~~v~'ifed~a"n~t~: ~~

~~===....~~"

from only one parent can pasa It

C'.=lt:.lhalr olfaprln~i.y
·~~e~cn Dr. l~rledmen told
• lbOul IIIIa tee1 which oould
. , _ wllellw- unbom billy '*' the
" ' - ·• ..-..cllha IIIOitllr: .._ '*'
Frlld!Mn, _ . . . , . , . _ Of
.......,_ • U/B, Mil 1111111 of lha 18el
. . . . by Or. Kan In .._,, a

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

~.

CINilfllelllllllllllr
IIIOIIIIJ, Older teel

-n.. -

un=

=

wlltah

WOIIIIIClddc
.._......,the
lied
cell; l'r1cdmctt'
•
1
..... the~ waulcl . . . lied
IDti!IID . . . . lar It; It......,_

·........
=

=~=-==~
Ill .... , .
Of - t hIIIDrtlon
e

..WID--

"Kan'a- , _ o n

a--

fnltn
the~"' 111a un11am ohllcl
found In &amp;fie -'otic tlulcl dian fnlm
the 1Mru1."IIIII ,...._,

...... .... '*'- lloth.:;

~~~t g:~r:.a.:r.'~!h:~~J ~! -=~e~
-

f~O:t· =.~~~b ~r~~~m~~'r.:~

the trail.
I

oo.;.,..

Tin par c.tt Of blaclca C*Ty the trait
About ten pr. cent of blacka ¢Mry 11\e
sickle oell trait, with some nine out of
1000 having alther a major or minor
form . Of the d i - . TypiCally, the
quality ot mUCh of their red blood oells'
t..noQiobln Ia faulty. And the coda tor
thla abnormal conatructlor) of the
~Ilea In lha DNA which peaeee
1n1orm111ton tor !Mklng the
Bela ohaln of l!lJinOOIOIIIn. Nonn.lly,
the t..noQIObln Beta chain Ia prodby a apecltlc~ ot amino aclda. •·
In alckla oell, the.-.lxth amino acid in the chell\.la eubatltuiDd tor _ , . . which •
parmila the abnormal ~ion to

oacur.

Angela, therefore, could have received
two chromosomes (one from each
perent) which contained the trait - and
could have had sickle ceil anemia. Had
she received a chromosome trom one
"carrier."

who was-willing to pertonn~he MW test
on- the liuld shipped to· him trom
~ autfalo. Some two weeks after Elr. Amoi
Lele, asslstanl professor of gynecologyobstetrics, dnsw and shipped the fluid,
Kan called with the news: the unborn
beby didn't have the disease. Neither
did atlecarry thetllllt .
' ·
"We were all delighted," remembered.
Friedman , " for the · mother-to-be was
nearing the point in her· pregnancy past
whloh abortion could not have been
per10rmed."
Although the test is still highly
&amp;lperimentai and•conducted now only
by• ·Kan, •Friedman believes It has
·
tnsmendoua potential .
'When .pansnta-lo-be know whether
the unborn child hea or does not have
sicklll ceil, their decision on-whether or
not to have an &amp;bortion Ia basad on
facta and not mensiy statistical odds, "
he noted .
,
,
..

dloldld to . . . the *'lion." Or.

........... -...; .. 'BuftMI SW.; 10.
lh*; 11, Allleny 818le;

Y~

1

For James 'Patrick, organizer of 'iha
two-week event
"Jazz 1n June"
represents a basic idea he would like to
see 11ourlsh in a university jazz
curriculum: the i ntegra!Jon ot performance with lh801)' and hlatory.
Patrick, who teaches jazz studies In the
Music O.partment, feels jazz should be

r

Ill the '-Ia - ·
and'
ohron
gena
wHit lhi1NIIIIId .... wltholit it • .

T•t highly
Although the Kan test Is , highly
?&gt;ffiPiex, the DNA -lially Is cut
mto hundreds of tiny plaoee by epeclal
endonucleeees.
enzymes known u
Th- plecee are run end ~ on a
gel with the aid of an etectrlo.t cui'TIIrtt.
The . piece Of DNA whlcll- 'COntains
information tor building lhe Beta chain
of hemoglobin la detected by -,.
redioectlve piece of DNA which ecta u
a ·~ag" or marker and Ia known to
contain normal lnatructlona tor building
the Bela chain. The two plaoee then
combine on the get. The point to which
they migrate on the gel danot81 which
of the genes Ia preeentin the unborn either Beta S or Beta A. The abnormal
genets BetaS.
Tha Kan teat also hu been shown to
reveal pnasence of another blood
di~ In the unborn- Thal-Ia.
For pensnta who carry the trait tor
alckie cell or t h - ·other blood
d l - , " said Friedman "the mons
dellnilive test developed
Or. Kan Ia a
bl...ing."

ll'i

I

~-ldbe181up ....
"The equiJMI*rt oould be 181 up In
Buffalo In a mai1W of monthe,• he
..,.._, ·u theN Ia aufllclant 1.......... • '

Willie Kan gets a 1..-ge ..... "' the
on 111181!1fant'a 0.., F'*'-'

~I

nNe If Allltlfa't moiM' IMd liCit been
_ _ , lllout the ..-Jbllllr

ohlld -~~~ , _

'*

**'- Oell, 1M might

nat '-llcdllll..uo .........m.lly.

"WWille llllil1 IIINIImlllcrJ
IDCI8 IDWMCIOniiD
........ IIIMNiaa
llak, tha KM teal 1MJ . . . be , _
.., the tllllc tittle AltaM Ia olcl
GlllldrM of

-=.,eoJINC!.IIItld.
,_

r. - .·

�.......

Junol4, 1t7t

'

DISTRIBUTION C?F-SUNYAB TENURED FAc!uLTY BY SEX AND RACE ACROSS FACULTY RANK AND SALARY RANGE, FALL 1t71

. .le
White Block

HI!'P:

Apl.

PROFESSOR

$19,000.24,9911
$25,000.29,9911
$30,000 and above
TOTAL

"""

4
79
326
409

89.50

0
3
3
6
1.31

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
6

ASSOCIATE

s~~R \

TOTAL

"""

ASSISTANT
PROFESSOR

0
3
21
24
5.25

Am.

0
0
0
0
0

"0
4
1• •
30 - - 18
6 .56
3 .94
0

e

24

- -

F.,_

II ln.

T-

0
0
0
0 .
0

Am:

Apl"

Block .Hiop.

-

0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

0 .
0
0 .
0
1
0
1
0 .23

0
0
0
'O

Subtotal

Subtotal
Am .

llln .

Total

Block

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

4
83
340
427
93.44

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
2
1
0
3
0 .70

1
1
24
194
137
"47
394
92.06

1
12
2.80

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

2
9
1
12
100.00

0
0
0
0
0

Hlop.

Min.

Apl" lndiMI Tobl

G&lt;Md
T-

..

Mala Fema..

0
0
0
0
0

0
3.
2l
24
5.25

0
0·
0
0
0

6 .56

96.06

0
L
14
18
3.94

0
0
0
2
1
0
3
0.70

0
. 0
0
9
1
2
18
4.21

0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0.23

0
0
0
20
11
3
34
7.94

0
0
15
159
129
49
352
82.24

1
1
9
45
19
1
76
17.76

428
100.00

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
7
1
8
66.67

2
2
0
4
33.33

2
9
1
' 12
100.00

1
0
1
0
0 100.00

1
1
100.00

0

"3
3

6
1.31

0
6
24

4
65

~

30

- 89

364
457
100.00

/

$10,000.12,9911
$16,000.18,9911
$19,000.24 ,9911
$25,000.29,9911
$30,000 and above

$16 ,000.18;9911
$19,000.24,9911
$25,000.29,999

- -

7

..

0
0
15
141
119
48
321
75.00

1
10
2.34

0
0
0
2
1
0
3
0 .70

0
7
' 1
8
66.67

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

s

0 .
0
0
0
0
0
9
1
6
0
2
0
17
1
3.97
0 .23

0
0

0
0
0
18
10
3
31
7.24

.()

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0

-o

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

16\
148
3
41
1
H%·
80.47
1.73
0 .32
4.42
0.11
O.la Sou-: SUNYA8 Pwoonn~ Fmun Fllo u al 12111178

61
6 .56

TOTAL

"""

o·
0

0
0
0
0
0

1

0
0
0
43
2
18 .
0
1
0
73
2
17.06 0 .47

J

9

2
2
0
4
33.33

0
0
0
0
0

0
•0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
8

3

0
0
0
O·
0

IIITRUCTOR

$18,000.18;11119
TOTAL

"""
m;:Jg::

OTHER FACULTY

$19,000.24,.999
TOTAL

"""

o-

1
8
1
8
27.59

0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0

OIIAND TOTAL

1
"-1
100.00
0
12
9
21
72.41

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

117
12.82

0.22

0

. 0
0
0

1
1
100.00

0
0
0

0
0
0

1
1
24
204

148•

50

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

1
18
10
29
100.00

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

1
6
1
8
27.59

0
12
9
21
72.41

1
18
10
29
100.00

1'
0 .11

0
0

3
0 .32

863

16
1.94

3
0 .32

42
4.53

1
0 .11

64

93.10

6.90

807
87.06

120
12.94

100.00

..

921

( • A•lll!I/Pac/flc l•lander)

urley, Johnson, Cramer head PSS. for 1979-80
•· Anutaala Joh.-n, aaalatant to-the
r tn aoclology and long-time .ctlw
ber of the Prof-lonal Staff
a, hal liMn elected vlaM:IIalr-

Y:::'P

=·cllals'~lectwl81 g:.e
P~
cllalrperaon In 1880-111 . In the eame May

=~c.
=~~ t~1a1:" ~
Undql'8duate Studlea, - . • -

1

secretary.
The two women will head the Staff
Senate with Tom Hurle~ho aeeumM
~'::'::~h~u~~.~~~-y
S«Y8d lor a
A current .member of the ·pss
Executt.. Committee, the Community
Advisory Council, and the UUP
Del:tate Aaaembly; Johnson helped

~~~h~~~~~.:nc:~: ~opl~

In addition, ahe hal ~ed on : the
Nominating Committee lor the Chllllcellofs Awards lor EKcei ..nce In Adm lnls-

~!l:ie'~=~n=~~ eo~~~l".,"l~~

..
the Proleaalonal Employees Clasallicagenerate Interest In the PSS among its
lion Program Procedures Committee,
new members from tile U/B -Toundaand the AHirmatlw Action Committeelion, the Faculty-Student Association
Statewide.
and the Research Foundation Johnaon holdl a mutefeJrom U/B's
employees who were added to the
Anthropology Dep&amp;ltment Where she
Senate's membership this year. He also
hal alao completed all course. WOII&lt; lor
~ants to lncruae the number of
the doctorme.
Uni...,.ily intemahipe avallabl( lor
An OriGinal member of the PSS
pr.oleaalonal staff and, in 1!!"~1 .
ConatltutiOn Comml-, Cramer .-ved
pledQMio work to Improve the 'quality
u a - o r from 11174-711 and from 1978
of life" of his constituents.
·
to the ~ . She hU also liMn a
· One way thil -'fly can be
member of the Senate'• Et.ctions
enhanoad, Hurley. belr-a, Ia through
Comml-. ......c1 u the UUP liaison
the Senate's Education Orientation
off'- to the Exacutiw CommittM, and
Committee which advi- the Personnel
WOrk8d on the DUE Curriculum
Department on llllltera which impact on
Commi- and !he DIYialonal Commitpn&gt;leaalonalataH.
tea on DegJw ReQu--.ntB.
_
PSS coordinated _.,., auccaaalui
hold&amp; an M.S. from -Buffalo ~pn&gt;leulonal daoeklpment programs
lui ~ through ita Human Raeource
State and hU t&gt;Mn-wl1h the Un1VIItlll1y
ainoa 1807
~
DewioRmenl Committee; but naaponsTom H~rtay. aaaJetant c;tlnactor of
lblllty lor the1r continuanoa hu ahilled
Uni-.My
and
Paraonnai. PSS still plana to
Guld8noe, hU liMn an .ctt..· member
supplement IIi- programs, howewr,

c.-

...-....I

ear-

~==-=M=~'.:.Ohem~
••-or.

The MW Chair Ia aatlaft.d with the

wy tn wllich the

Adlnlnlatq~ton

a-

the put taw~. Ilea aoucr.t coun•l

::;n.:..,u: ::,.,.'::.,d=a~~
policy mMtera.
Now 111111 the PSS, attar

a ttw.-yMr

·~==,:,
:.~u:: ~~="~
Ilea ,._18tlon . on all major
poll~~- Hurley

WWI!a IO

contlllw .... ~"- lhla ln'IOiw-

=-:.-=-to.=~"':!
- I l l .......... ..__lealion --·the PS8 ..

_..:n

118

~~~~:.-.:.~.
~
10
vlt8l role. •
Multer

iiMIIIIIIIe

tlllnka

lllall -

~

will

Ill hla
be

to

~~dr':,'~=n~:gfes!f~~~~ 11 :t!':'s ~~
0
~~~re ~s~~~~~=\.~"t!f~e/':v~~~

1

Include guest speakers on the agenda
of business meetings but wil l schedule
tl\em separately at other dates.
II preslder.t Ketter seeks reappointment, Hurley will be involved with the
Preeldential Evaluation Committee. it
will be hie responsibllity to get a
concensus of opinion from his
constituents . on Kettefs ~orrnanct

=u~n ~het~~~~-1 ~U:.:';I

'::

confident that he and the Executive
Commi ttee will devise a way in which

~:!~:lra!r~h":l':r ~~;~

another term.

_

The new PSS oHioera will be inducted

at thlf Senate's lUI achaduled meeting
of they.,-- June 22 at 3 p.m. In the
·Jeannette Marlin Room. Capen-5.

.•..:F_SA=~----.,......-..---------------(ll.--1 , cal..l
.thi s property lor the next liw to eight
yeere in order lor ita value to lncrMae,
camsr'~':/:1' ~: ='~~Y~~· com· ~ ~~t~ ~~· u~:r,..,~~=
mittee Ia expected to continue in future
=F~~ .::...e:~'~r:~

from thai portion of the tlookatore aale
equity ,_,.., lor .ctlvltlea can be
uaed IICf08II the next liw to eight yaare
lor auclllunding, he aald .
Quel •ldo• ....t lor a. future .
After thai potnt, It _,s lfqJy FSA
wtll be able 10 provide a . quaaifar .ctlwltiel progtM~mlng
to -future --'IOns of atudenla.
The . . - - r wrn be INida poaalble
~ prooaada from the -tual . . Ill
the 500 Ill ~ land
F8A - t t y OWfta tn the TOWtl Ill
Amharat. The lntwltlon Ia to hold on to

..._1

bookstore aala ~l126,000) hu been
earmarked lor managing the property
and paying I&amp;Kfton it.
Still another 5260,000 from 11&gt;6
booketc;;e aala is baing tranalarred
Internally within FSA to lllrengthen
other . . . of ita oparattone (food
..vtoa, NOrton Hall, etc .), particularly
the Craft
Which tl'8dltlonally 1
-.Ina larva_,_ ..:11 ,--.
While 0811110nlng ttw IIlia entire
prag_rwn must . . . . . final
1Iom c.ntral Admlnl-ion in
1y, Snyder lUI .. Ia ~
wtltl the MCpaCIUtlon 1M1 .,.,.... wiR
be ~ blfoN the 1na achool
,_- bagln1 in lleptiJlllber.

r

c.n•

JOBS·.
FACULTY
&amp; EnvlrawnontiUleoigA, F-905) .

- " " - ' " --M::11i1oc11.n

CIVIL SERVa.

I I

Clorl&lt;~c:ar-o.--,. .
·--Ciorl&lt;~'oOIIIoo, -

~-.u.-.·~· -

~~~; ~t.Jirwloa.cTs.

Callloglng ~ ~ : ~
~. ~(~ .
. -~ofConlnuingE4allan ;

Muolc .

~CIVIl.-- --llolpor--220~.
1M.............. IICM-220
a...acw-221 I MllnSt.

vm.c-.

Fl-·locuo-lnh-

PIIOF&amp;IIONALITAFF

a:.-:-~~~~
offico In . . Ollloo of . .

__
_ond ____ on_
--10--ond--.

llloo-.
...
of:

1. --molyoll.
2. -lnllyllo.lllllio&lt;:lontond-.

3 . -~.

Tho_ . .

.._ Conduct ldont.

• ooaigrled by ""' bo _ _ t o r _

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

ofinlormllion . ~llo-ond-·

... o f - tor

-...

-~-

policy-, ...

... -.-preol-

-ln--... . .ond--

o f -· -

..... -

.. pricl-

...:...-..=:.~~7-=
Hoi.

,

�- Alley dancers _
n . . ( N n o t - - , but-Aloin

···-·•lluft.lo. .
" " - - . . In

Alley - · tonight -

,..tonnlnt

t o - f1llbt.

-

rd AI&gt;PIIque · llao --.g ...,.,. 1-4
p.m. """' MM. c.- 638'2201 for dolo!lo·

TI"e- Con

HEALTHCAIEOPBI-_,....._
_
~
lbtng
Pion
...
- . -

a~ ·--··--c..-. 120

............--~-­

lobrlng--lo .. _ C . . .
laralourrdlo_.,...___

-

- . ; lo . .. . - Conlar'a Opon

~~.:.=-t...u;,~·il~p-: :

8 p.m. ; &amp;rday, .... 24, 2 . p.m. • 4 p.m.:
T.-y, .U. 28, 11:30. am. · 11 Llll.: ond
- . . - .. . . . 27 trougli , . , . . 29 Ia-.
capt-Uy4), 5:30p.m.· 8p.m.
•
_ _ Colago _ _ _

wc...-s

c:twlgin(jal_ .....,... _ _ .......

-·----·
__ .... _
----·
l(..t--- --

Saturday- 16
'111ursday- 14 GAY YOuTH P&amp;R CliiOUP
AI ,_,-rd _ _ Boird- Hoi .
Mooting In 107 T--.d, 1M! 51. C1n1&gt;J!1
~.30 p.m.FrM .

....

-.OciY~II

.- A ..Ao,lwd. G-28-. 8p.m.

c:-v-- -

(187-/oculd);
(1877---.., ..2 0 7 - .. &amp;p.m.
_...,.., llr SOJdr- ond 1he
Cor*rtor-SOJdr.
- - - o n d - 1"011
_ . . . . . . Cor*r lor SOJdr. He

-----.. ..

-- -~&amp;&amp;loCo. ,._

Ubray. 3p.,. F r M -.

UUMfUI•
-.Cai836-21119Jor
_
__
_ MFAC.
T11o- Harp CJ1!*1,
1958).
170

.

Thlaloaw•.-•- a1

--..-.Ho&lt;&gt;.n01111)'....-

pr1YiOe- on . . - " ' _,ally
~ • -*'II place for . . _ . . . "' 1"011
-

_ ! * 1 - _ l n _.

836-211191or
_ _ _ S2;
T1lo-_
CCnfwenco - · Sql.b. Col

Sunday~

l1.601or-.

wt.afUI•

.._.,_.,...__

--~~~~-1he ... - lo-~-'igo
lo olhono . .
"' ..._
ond por..w ldonlly• • -

.......... lor

pr-.g

U/8.

Room 107.

~.OWOv_,.,

,

--Or.

5p.m.(~~-).

Tile- al " -'• ond OALT
Ind..- al s-.-, and ~

PSYCHOLOOYEXI'EMENT

In t1oe

-·_ _

""""'""' llr Oral -

-

A-__.

We ... - . g aA:jocto lo In •
poy&lt;:tdogyal
S3 ... ba pold "" your pdcipllion. We . .

.....,..,.

&amp;oplwo J . ~.
Guy's Hdiopftol - -· L&lt;nm. 4510

ln.......,., _,...,rd_lo_~

In 1he progrwn. H -

..

~~rd~=----=

3and and -*'IIIII

C8'l

~tfUI•

--·c..-. --~.·

not--·-.
. --.llg
......

d S I I -. Conlarwlc:e .- ---·r8 :30p.m.

• A..-yactoda.yal a--..nolo

.fridAy '-: ""' 15

1160aa.«-.

...

~~·

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

-·--------.... -8
C.J. -.,..no.G-211-. 12:30p.lft.
_ . . . . . , _ _ _ _ _ ond

......

Qpntrol . . . . -~

:-.:=:::~- ~
·

......... (1974) ( _ , , llr
Hollo ~- (1930 USllAI (alantl
&amp; - ). llr ......,_ · 207
- . . Ave. 8 p.m. 5ponecnd llr Moc1a

u.- -

'

. &amp;p.m.

tim--

.,

.... c- ... ~-.

... c:dovo.-·-., .. - .....
•

..-A.-.-lcAiy--.
_. . . .

.ME II
A I I - D r.

.-

aiY-." Aioollr.~~­

~"'

rd h , . . _ al
(ctwwoel7). 10a.m.

5oull\-

(930). 9:06p.m.

-TV

1: Gr. F.

C.W-. lr.-

- ~. --. --Con

Notices~

.w.-.

an h (Il30).
Sioux11 :()5p.m.
·WBEN

CIEA-.L TIIP
T - - - - . - . - U ) ' 1 4.

· -: T"""*' .·.I14~-. --­

-

· -"'--ond-&amp;
................ .. 11 ......

-

-

- . . ld. -

~~

~Up.~

~ai&amp;VW\ -n.~-.·WBEii

....

~

.. ~.IlEA -

_,..,; "011111-.g .

~tllr• .,_,_~,

edt
" .. &lt;f.
lo
for ha!&gt;e
. . . .._....
job

"'~ '*" 200 -

. _ . . _ l n _ O o n: - - - O o n

-

Roy ~. llru1o

and~-·- on i&lt;M

......---.
.
--ll07---.
...:::...-:--..=.=-:=- --·-17.
~-- In

---be

(1878). Conlnnce -

Thla - * "· ..-mg

...

- .. r d - - a l . . _ a l

.

___
_., . . . .______ _
~ o....,.
.......

~~~~

......

Sq&amp;ft. Cal &amp;3&amp;-2911llar-- llllooloilonl2;-11 .~.

- ._, - .

Wedll.e sday -10
.-

81.

~~ 101. 7 p.m.
Aloo• .U.15. 8 :30PJII: .

- -· eo..w·CIIJio

- . . K. !&lt;oM. G-28

~---·

Boird.-

.uE14
_ _ ,.,......lnPwtlalo--

--~··- and-­

anc~-.y~ ..... -

--=.:...-

-----~·
-

'*·

On The Air "-.

Sludy!IUIIIQ,.
.
- - - iooneallho-. wlllch . . . , _ - .. . . . . - .. ~··
~-- Tl"e
In . . form.
lond al
Yor1&lt; rd lo will\
lyrlcol • .--~ .
._..; oiillula _ _ .__....._

Qw,.

Tuesday~ 19

cndl

~"'jazz ..-In.,......,._,.

In lluftllo. hUIIcUbray, 201

UUMFUr

--~--J
G-211-.
&amp;p.m.

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or

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�</text>
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                    <text>Ailing·
· D.D.S. program needs more space, .
equipr(ient replacement and high~r salaries
if ADA is to continue full accreditation

--·-Sciences
By Mllry Beth Spina

-

U/B's lour-y- dental program Is
alive but alllng . beceuae .of Inadequate
space, aging equipment and salaries
below the national norm for dental
schools.
These are among problems besetting
the D.D.S. PfOG"'r.' WhiCh resUlted In
conditional status being Qlven to It by
the American Dental Association 's
Commission on Accreditation which
visited the School of Dentistry earlier
this spring. The conditional approval Is
In effect for two years .
Advanced programs offered by the
School which were granted full approval
were thoaaln «a1 pathology, periodontics, onhodontlcs and fixed and
removable prosthodontics. The advanced Programs In endodontics and
~sl=pro':'.B[.e granted only

... - u.

Faculty.
Boston U. president has some
blunt words about projessors;
they're too busy 'gardening,' he frets·
· ~AM Wllllahw

~--

lloeton Univwalty--.k~ent Or. John
R. Silber offwa a allnl'fe f""'""- f«
ellolliNtJng feculty lnl)lil: One, fjll 111zy
t.zy. Two, lftlorm thoee
wllo-"-e '1oet their ol putpOea
~ ' - loa! their o1

,__,they-

~·~-·lng

-·

' - _,.., 1M 52.._-old Silber a
,.ution far --...._ end Wll Ill Ilia
"""" ' 41"c,_
crttfdam ol In
- ...-,tend
._...
acediMic~
.-v.Amer~c:en higher educ:Mion.
Occaalonally fOIIdlnt and dl...-vlng
a flair for the acid ~. · Sftbar
strongly crfttctzed faculty unionization
dul'lna a May 25 II&gt;MCh befoq a group
of FUlbright scholars. atudylng In the
U.S., here for the 1979 Fulbrlght-Hays
Eastern Rag·1ona1 Conference.
Outing a question-and-ana- perIod, Silber offered thla analysis of
"faculty ldantltycrlaea:•

._.oolleglllllty, ~of.,._.....

·n.a management crfala In universi-

ties today may be In managing the
personal Identity crfaea of the faculty ."
Silber aald he saw Instead a need for
" painful and honest• examination of
economic realities and other Issues on
the part of college facultr,.
"Nothing can be ga ned by bogus
leg~ty .•

~
snber

can I
.

old the Visiting scholans they
from mistakes made by the
e development 9f Ita system of

J'll~ereducatlon .

The lack .of planning may have
a diversity In American
education . But It has resulted In the
wldeapi"Md duplication of facilities, not

ensured

~or~~:." V:::e,~W~~~~~

thoaa In the Independent aactor - but
within the atat•aupported aector Itself.
"I am In the rlght atme to dlacuaa that
question; he noted cflyty. •
•
Pointing 'Out the! a ~lion
with MIIU htglier ec1uc.uon fa
, til tljle oOuJ!try, Sll!*'.-ld ~lila. '

.-u11ar

.Nor a5U.W,.,.,...e

~ .ilffo&lt;d • ttmtw J41d!. ar

an~~
.'
.
'"

.

lon
tllill by diplOma ortdeg,r11e:

Wiled plulnbera .... • .._...,.......,,

lhe
"'lquul .

'tte '
. .•. '
.

'•

...
-.-·~.t

"American hiQIW echlciiiiOn;" he
" no longer lulfll'-&gt;-... wae

C«~llnued,

-ance

once Us brightest promI - that It would

a student's station In Ole far

beyOnd that of his parents. And the

flnanclalargument for.golng to collage
11a1- liMn weakened· "when plumbera
_ , more than teachera."
Developing nations, Silber con- ·
· must be more aanslble In their

pt~~imlted

economic resources of

the developing world dictate a careful

The acCreditatiOn t
tecommanded
the advanced oral s~'lgery pfOJiram
institute mMSUrea to provide stulfents
with a greater spectrum of s~rglcal
experiences at Buffalo General H6spltat
and the Erie County Medical Center. On
March 15, the School will submit a
report to the ADA Commission
Indicating the status of etrons toward
solving this problem.
Recommendations for the advanced
endodontics PfOIIf8J11 Included hlflng a
full-time or at least part-time director,
eatsbljahlng a - - e Department o1
~ In the ;Scl\ool, and

Mlectlon of tlloae cltlzena whom they
wllteduc.te.
"SIIoukl they propoae mass education on the Amerlclln acale, they will
pu.-- Jntellectuar If not financial

bMicruptcy...
Silber asaoclated the rnalalaa of
Amerlc:en higher education ('We speak
now of poat:-.dary educ.tlon In the
U.S. alnc:e mlll:ll of what 11088 on In
higher - • Ia ·no tonger hlQIIwt 811YIIilftll.1 with the dramatrc
Jn- the ecoaomlc atatua of

r=.,
A
~--.
ll'a ...

~~~
perao~"= at....~~
18
0
~== of
A f ~

...=on.rc:

•

:::Jt,end lhe gllfdenlng ' that

~that

will be made by the Schoof to there.foA
regarding the status ·of these recommended changes In December, to
determine If the "provisional status/
Intent to withdraw" label given the
program will be altered .

~

8CIIdemlca
only a
rnedlen Income bet-n 1800 and 1950,
Silber aald college professors _,e
118'181thelesa enthualastlc and committed. "No one In college teaching was
In It for the money, • he aaa«ted.
" But by 1976, professors were
earning an Income In the top 10 per cent
of all oal-.1ea paid to American workers.
College teaching had become attrectlve
for the money; working conditions were
also favorable.
" Not only did college teaching now
Involve [like the Boston · politician's
descrlptlon of an Ideal. lob to a
supporter] all Inside worl&lt; and no heavy
lifting, but one could get by with a
30-hour wo~\Week .
" There was substantial time to

'No gro11 IUrpriM'

U/B President Robert L. Ketter,
maldng public the conditional ' status
given the School's foul'year program at
a press conferen"' May
said the

2•.

Commission's report came p.s no " gross

surprise." But, he added , the tone (of
the repon) was harsher than we had
e~pected based on the accreditation
team's exit Interview In March.
· U/B , while aware of th.e problems

~~~~~ ;~~"Jl~~nal~a~tafu"; t~u~

given . A task force, appointed by Or.
Ketter last year, complied a report In
August In which similar conclusions
were noted. Although that repon was
never made public, It was given
SUNY
Chancellor
unofficially
to
Wharton end reputedly to Gov. Hugh
Carey's Committee on Dental E(lucatlon. The task force was composed of
dental educators outsldeU/B as well as
several faculty m'l"'bera In basic

r.:'~~~e~~ ~l~tl~~~~~ ~:~

directly on one's scholarly worl&lt;.
" It's amazl ng how many ex pen
gardeners developed In the professorfate In the U.S.," he mused .
Ironically, American profeesors began to feel both alienated and exploited
even as their working conditions
lmprOO(ed, a development whiCh flllber
tied 'fC the arrival of collective
bargaining &amp;gents on campus.

Far1Mr8 need unlona; faculty don't
Farm worl&lt;ara, he aald, deaperately
need union repre.ntatlon alno.e they're
often poorly educated and lnwttculate.
But-untoeralty:fllpu. lty, amona•the ~oat
hlilflly edUCIIfed Mel Wltculate 1&gt;!, all
~. - ~'aupe(bly_5
' •to·,.-:·

.., wltft !Mif~
·n.. ,. lib

....en 'W

CIIIVIOI'ttlfectlwllr

. , '

, ~union •; •
~l2 ..... 1111fiC&gt; •. '

.~. ~r'of .Whom ·'iWidJthllir-d&amp;Y•
tljjll\enlng a\nllillr, Hnfll J&lt;leqtlo_at bolts.' ·
•felllllty memlleis Ptrl011"
•
· h'!JIY~ndlfldual\alika . 1 •
·
COnalde&lt; 11111 workers ettact\lng
heeclllgllta to a car. The ranee' Ia very
IIIIITOW and oantered · on the 8dequate.
And there Ia.no way to attach headlights
·
at the tewl of genius.
" But ten faculty may apen the range
from InadeQuacy to genlua, with all the
gradations fn bet_, ...
Sllbar, a phlloaopher wlih numerous

' IJU!" 21000

1

~=l~':'.'n:r.u'l:or"~l'=r ::~~~~

on

nlvwalty IliUM, aald universities
•Sao 'Focutly,' - 2 , col. 1

sciences and clinical areas In the
School of Dentistry.
The ADA report , which Is expected to
soon be released In its entirety, cft81:i:
\he InadeQuacy of the Main Street
dental faclflty, noting It currently has
hall the space It needs to handfe the
number of student clinics. It also
criticizes the fact that the SChbidl's'
Division of Oral Biology and Behavioral
Sciences Is geographically separeted
~~.~"!~~n Street Farber Hall facility

Equlpinent , . . . , _ naeded
And, the repon states that at least 15
per cent of the equipment currently
used at the School nseda to be replaced
Immediately, nOting that In cenaln
clinic areas lighting and ventilation are
also Inadequate. The report reC:ommends funher that an equipment
replacement program be Instituted.
"New York State did not h - In 1972
(the date of.the last ADA visit) nor does
It now have a ~ to provide for
replacement of equipment anywhere In
the SUNY system," Or. Kalter pointed
out. And since 1912, the State hos
provlde&lt;rJsss than $50,000 for facilities
and equipment to the School of
Derrtlstry. Moat of that which was
purchased
obtained through
alumni contributions, capitation funds
and apeclflc grant monies which
all~wed for equipment to be bought.
.
The e q u l - ' ~-.n&amp;nt problem

was

~~~

""'- bytl:r.v~~ ~~.:.':

cam- •tcMW.-

emDh!'81zecl. "end 'lit Jact It hal been
estlmaled- to bOng all...,._t-«1
SUNY'a.
&lt;aqulre ., expendilur'e of SSOO. million
overath,..~~.·
.
Also crftlclzed In the rapor1 was the
level of dental faculty aalariea which are
below the national - norm for dental
schools. At the full professor level, U/B
was said to be deficient by $lo400
annually; at the associate professor
level , by $2000; and at the assistant
professor level, by $2700.
4-y- program hat atr.ngtha, too
Despite these shortcomings, however, the ADA repon cited the four-year
program as being • very good" and
noted that U/B dental graduates have
been scoring In the top qulntlle on
National Board examinations. It · also
praised the strong pr~ram In the basic
sciences as well as the committed,
enthusiastic and highly qualified"
faculty . Tho team pointed out however,
that In many cases. clinical /acuity are
cerry lng a wortdoad which makes It
difficult for them IQ engage in research
and publishing IIC11vltles which are a
"must" for promotions.
- Also praised by the team was the
"highly-respected, stature nationally
and Internationally" of research con•
•Sao ' Donllo1ry,' - 2 , col. 1

�r

Wa"sbUII
He's re-elected president of UUP,
but 'things will change,' Allen says;
dues raised for those over $20,000
United University 'Professions' Incumbent president Sam Wakshull and
secretary Ed Alton sin were re-elected to
office last month at a meeting of the
-union's Delegate Assembly In Eruffalo's
Statler Hilton.
Before the close of the two-day
conference In early May, UUP delegates
also voled to cut dues by one-tenth for
those earning less than $20,000 per

~"t,fc~~~ c':fn ~ ~:r..:,~~o~'r!i&amp;~
wl~~-~~~':1\~~a:r::'l'~ ~~~~ 'l:'aW~~~:

_..
•FacultY
(lt.--t.ool.:!) •
.,. both agents of change and of
p&lt;M*VIIIon.

.........

TIM u"'-alty 11181 C8pltul8tu II In

a::r.
::'ytnot~ =·~ ·~;rit :::t:::
of

"Unlwf81tlas .,. necasaarlly agents
since IM80n and the ·

..

=~=~ ~~:- ~~f.~ J!ro~

and Clmbr1dge In the 18th century.

to":::!' ~'=Z,.r.":,,C::,~\~
IIIII It beCome 1 aociiiiiCIIon agency,
would be aometlllng leas than a full
.,,..,.lty.
•
Silber defined acldemlc freedom as

~~ rl~7~ 1~..!1 ~fth::f r ex~u~ ~
ort~xy, cited the globa"P-qua:::r of

~s~e'::,~~~~a~~ ~~~a'!r~in ~~1ture~~

and stated that the existence of political
prisoners Is an offense to acldemlc
freedom.
He also lamented the spiritual

~=n~n ~~=lron ~ ~'!n~
11

university education.
Silber's address was followed by a
talk on the need lor more humanistic
content In the curricula of American
schools of management , by Or. Thomas
R. Horton, IBM director of university
relations.

•Dentistry
--t.ool.4)
dueled by faculty In oral biology and
oral pathology.
"tn terma of ~ling reeurch funds, "
llld KMter, 'the U/B School of
Oentl1try 11 tlt1h notionally." In 19n,
lor example, the School was one of only
two n1tlonllly nomed u the site of a
Peflodontol 01_.. Clinical and
R - ' 1 Center under a $1.8 million

c~l f'W'~~a~= l::~~·h~:

received consl-le grant monies for

:=.: ~~ ~avr.:l ~.Y:::l

biology, oral medicine, periodontics
and oral pathology.
"The accredltotlon team also recom-

=• :

.::~~~~n:,:., ~:, f:.fu~!~Y.

· lllld President Ketter, "not all of which
would be limited to the four·year D.D.S.
5

1

~~-~ f~:! ,)!~ ot ~~ p':,~ 1~n!~

"They (the team) don't ask that
solutions to th- problema be found In
two v-a b~ly that we make major
movements and plana toward solving
them," Ketter ernphallzed. A report
muet be made In one year and again at

~':?.:'1o~~~~ ~~oAP~
piOgf8M toward

solutlono.

WldlnllrwiOIIdooi" By tlie 1ummer of 11181, the Division
of Oral Blolociv and Behavioral Sciences .
lhould be able to mow Into Foster Hall
which 11 to be ...,.,.led," aald Dr.
Ketter, "moving that unit from ~10
M8in St .• Contr8Cta will be let for~

,!:'S:l:l!::'r:!:i~

=ned

...ooatlon of Saulrl Hall to houae the
~11111tj0r clinical .,... can not be
-"JJIIIhld tor 81 leMt two v-a.
"We IUbmltt.d • master plan In
October, 1875; fell fall, · Cif~non
!Wt-.lllp of Gl8lld 1118nd was hired at
• ooet of S1.111!'JIIIon to plen the dental
leclllty In SqUU.," K - reported. It
...._ 81 leMte.,.... for the deelgn to be

CCI!:"=·

-'•¥ '"- poalblllty
Cennon 1ft8Y lind Squlrl ClftouiUoble," he

::.;.,':':= ~~~.:::~
~

lor -'&amp;In typeo of

- : : : ' H 180illtlel . . euiUoble, ,.peCe
!MY be 1oet through IWIO'Iatlon.
Aooonllng to Or. F. Certer ...,nlll, Jr.,
wtce PN8Idelll of he8lth IICienOel, some
35pera.!tof IMI!*llln Foeterwill be
loet of building oocle chengu
..,_ 1118 ldlty oonetructed In

were created in large part by lack of

=e~~~~ ~teru':~~~~o f~~~~~g~~~

g.

pointed out, but
said area legislators
are Interested In probleme at the
School .

conr:':re~. b~ ~~~.~a~a~~~~t:~

William M. Feagans, dean of the
School , met with area legislators John
B. Sheffer and Walter J. Floss Jr. The
legislators Indicated they would try to
wrest $500,000 from the supr,lemental
Slate budget via the Legis ature for
Immediate use for faculty salaries,
need.;d equipment and additional
faculty positions In th' School. A
meeting was scheduled Tuesday by

~lW~~~~;:o~.J~:~e;;;.~~~sol ':"~

State Assembly's Ways and Means
Committee.
In view of the financial facts
highlighted in the ADA report , It has
been noted that lhe State provided $18
million to build a new dental school at
the Slate University at Stony Brook and •
also made a commitment to retire
bonds on a new dental school build ing
at the private Columbia University, to
the tune of $350,000 a year. There aie
currently ~tudents enrolled at Stony
Brook while there are some 468 at the
U/B School of Dentistry, the only one
of four dentll schools 111 the Stale 'west
of Manhattan.- Some observers have

· state
~"J~~~~:.\~e ~~:h?~~ero:'~~
old for the two prlvale dental

schools at a time When lf/B'a School
direly needa fullda.
"It 11 to the credit of our faculty thai

currently represented by the bargaining
agenl' 'and about $75 leaner · over the
course ot a year for senior level faculty
ani! staff. Tl)e new dues structure will
ba effective; September 1.

1

8

~r.;::;py•ia~~'..J~t majority,

1

• noted,

TheY opolte -lno} W-ull

Allen and Professor Gerald Rising ,
former vlce-presldentlacedemlc o.f the
Buffalo Center Chapter, candidly spoke
against Wakshulllast fall when UUP, an
AFL-CIO affiliate, and an NEA/NYEA/

::~~:~;';{',":·a

~:nRJ~~ ·~~~~~

w::,f
and professlona? staff.

Allen pledP.ed

:::'a.i'o~~~ t'A1~~~·~~~~~~d~a~1~ul8n~

thinks "contrary to what Is expected
from an academic." Rising's recent
resignation as vloe president, however.
had nothing to do with Wakshull 's
re-election , bul rather was agreed
upon before he took office last year. He
goes on_sabbatical In 1979-80.
Allen and Rising called Wakshull on
the carpet last year for what they termed
a "weak" retrenchment clause ln the
lasl UUP contract. Rising said Wakshull
blamed the negotlatl~g committee for
it.
The two agree Wakshull won r&amp;eiiiCIIon primarily becauae there were
no strong candidates running against
him . " Despite wide canvassing, no
acceptable counter-candidates were
found for the slots of president and
secretary," Allen reported. This resulted
In the Incumbents' "overwhelml ng"
victory, he added .
Allen explained that some delegates
chose to stick with Wakshull 6ecause

~"eft~~~~. r~. ':.~,~· .::::~:~;:\·;~~

~.{"~~~:,;:~n~~~~u~f ~s \';
excel len I wort&lt; and remain committed to
tjle School, " aald Dr. Fe~gans.

mid-stream " wltltout an acceptable
alternative."
The one other candidate was Ed
Wesnofaktt, an Oneonta prry!essor who
once served as president of the State
Unl-slty Federation of Teachers
(SUFT) , a forerunner of UUP. Some U/B
representatives to the Delegate Assam. bly claim Wesnofske Is too unpredlct·
able and sROke Irresponsibly during his

Enrollment dips
at State-schools
Totll enrollment at state unlven~llles
and lend11ran1 colleges dropped four

~~~!!,uPn~n·;~utig~.;,a;: "I.:'Je~~~er~

~~~n~h~~~\ !"r:~l:.J

IUtvey.

1121 .

~.:=~I

llld of land11..nt collegee.

the~:..~~::~..=.:

• Although It appears on the surlace
that the job would also mean a cut In
pey for senior le'i'el faculty, Allen
relayed that the $26,500 annual salary Is
augmented by "fringes" and certain
other perquisites which would leave the
Individual at just about the same level
financially .
'Things will chlnge'

All~";. ~er."'~H·~~ ~~ec;;,~~ g

5

revolution overnight." But he thinks
thlogs will definitely starl to change In

~h~P, ~~~~:~ ",:~m~':J~/r a:~~~

centers . Faithful to his pre-election
1

~\f~~"ro~~: ~~:n8~":. ~~~=~~~.;

two constituencies lnlo a voting block.
Since Reform candidates "swept" the
State Executive Board In last month's
elections (other than the president's
and secretary's positions), Allen Is
confldenlthe " boys on lop have gotten

k~t ~~!:~•,::! ~~"::R~~s~u~~~,;:

"This Is the beginning."
As president of the Buffalo Center
UUP Chapter, Allen says he will

~~f!:r 1:".,::c;:,:,~ th.::~ft~~- !"~:

also wants UUP to edopt a "bottoms·

~r~· ~~~~~~ l?o~~~~~:~-:.!k~~~-,;~.h:

club," he lamented .

Honorary d~ree
Dr. Eric Bentley, renowned drama
critic, author and . holder of the
Katharine Cornell Chair In Theater, has
been Invited by the Unl-slty of East
Anglla, Great Brlllan, to receive the
degree of Doctor of Letters, honoris
causa, In July.
Bentley was appointed to the
Katharine Cornell Chair In Theater, a
five-year poet, In September, 1978 .

-~~:.'gorB~t~%'s ~~'irs ',fv:, ·~AB':.~f~
"Wannsee" and " From the Memoirs of
Pontius Pllale."

Ad Hoc UUP Meeting

.

The survey, conducted by the Nation·
Ill Aaaoclatlon of Stole Un!Yeraltlea and
I.And--GrWII Collegea (NASULGC), r&amp;_.1 IIIII 0118rall enrollment et Stole
llld land11rant universities dipped from
3 1382,84eln 1&amp;nto3,231,9481n the fall
or1t78.
·
.

WIN beeked Wakahull
On the othllr hand, Ms . Josephine
Wise, vice-president/professional ot
UUP's Buffalo Chapter, believes thai
during his first term In office, Waksbull
"brought the union from an am~~teurish
operation to a \lrofesalohal Dtganlzatlon
which commands the respect of lhe
SUNY !idmlnlstration.
"Unfortunately, some pecple ~ook-= at
Image more.than capabilities . Often the
Individual considered the 'right type'
doesn't know the first thlno..:abeut
labor/management relations," asil&lt;ii'led
Wise. Oth8f University delegates "1o
UVP share her opinion .
Wh~ the dearth ot '}:'allfled candl- '

Previously, faculty and professional
staff represented by UUP paid one per
cenl of salary In dues or agency shop
~~!fs w~lf~ o~:,~hlr(j';jp ~~~,:'~aln:
fees up to a maximum salary of $25,000.
•eager for reforrn,"they slmP.IY are not'
· This meant no person plld more than
$250 a year. Now, those earning. less . the "bureaucnotlc type," nor are they
than $20,000 will pey nln&amp;-tenths of one • willing to make the necessary eacrlficaa
for the office. Since 1he UUP heed must
per cent of salary In dues while
reside In Albany, the position would
employ- eamlna more will continue
mean disruption of family life and likely
to pey o~e per cent, but up to $32,500.
professional goals for most candidates.
During his or her presidential tenure,
Profeseor William Allen, president of
the Individual would "haYB to give up '
the Buffalo Center Chapter of UUP,
research , teaching and gra!Juate stucalled I he structure still " regressive,"
dents," Allen polj)led out.
'-~ ~or~ "'/~l:b~~~~~~=~~rrn~~~~
Another llmlflng factor Is that,
lower lncdme earners by making them
according to the UUP constitution , a
"pay more proportionately." Actually,
candidate tor president · must ba a
Allen supported a 10 per cent
member of the union's Delegate
across-the-board decrease In dues with
~~;" b~ . m~::,':,'!'.Y· there are only
no maximum. He voted a'l,alnst the

Wakshull could run for the office, under

- . 1 years, they have continued to do

candidacy.
A delegate from Potsdam rationalized
his vote for Wakshull this way: "Better a
.
hack than a kook."

Frldly, J -

a, 1 p.m., 410 Clemene Hill.

Issues to be dlacuiMd:

k.

-

=\~~~~s:f:,~ Including 11 tenured ·faculty at
Ill. Reports of new t"'-yearcontnoct agreement.

~'few Pa!tz.

�Commencements ~79: Ideas 'dangerous,' Bllnke~ ~warns
The "virus of Ideas" poses a "most
lnaldlous 1111d lrrealotlbls danger,"

=~d ~l~kl!?ru~=~d o:~~~
awlds of UI B gr.duotea at the 133td
Commencement exercises,
Sunday, May 20.
Bllnken quoted John Dewey: " Anyone Who has begun to think, places
some portion of the world In jeopardy."
"You have been creating rtsks, " he
told the Class of 1979, " becaUse you
have been exposed to .•. Ideas. These
ldaes are far more fundamental to your
future thllll all of the accumulated
uncertain!~ you may have experienced
In this envlronm,nt of great quality and
opportunity, but occasional shortcomings."
Memories of " the potholes on Route
5, the w(nter gale-force winds on
Putnam Way, the snowdrifts barricadIng Ellicott" will pass lind bs forgotten,
he ventur.d.
What will remain Is the potential of
the Ideas which haye been met here to
chllllge the statua quo, to provide the
most meaningful reeults for the largest
number of PIII&gt;Pie-.

General

.._.rigid Ylalon
~
The Idea of a great public unl-slty,
Bllnken said, "Ia In lteelf neither riovel
nor revolutionary. " But 11, too, hu Its
dllllgera. " In Buffalo's cue, u In lillY
great Institution's, the d1111ger Ilea In
fmpoalllg a .rigid vision of order or
ayatem of thinking upon an entity
Whoae very size, diversity, 1111d
I'IC&gt;lutlon aet up Inevitable contr.dlctlona, tensions, 1111d uncer1alntlaa."
Thla lut dacade, Bllnken recounted,
has aeen· our Institutions "criticized,

"'~·~~~ ':'Ja~r.:::=~"'::i;~ken

said, the promise of the 70s has yielded
to disappointment: " The Idea that a
great university could smoothly and
effortles~ marry· new facilities In a

r~~~~~l~n.Tanw~l~~~lt=pa::.

carne up against another set of Ideas,
less visionary, and certainly less
0
1

:::!f' ~~~ l~nao~alfl~;:'um':-~ ~

new aet of Ideas expressed Inexactly,

but vividly, by the term 'Propoaltlon

13."'
Or, 81 a recent r~r:um of ac.dernlc

~ c;t&gt;~= e~~~~· ~rg~::~~~

Go..nment can't do everything
So does an understanding "that there

:~r~~~tr.;r:hs~fen'm\~
~~~::.!f;~~~? t~~ !~.~~ ~:

do. For example, It can create and fund
a great State University. But government-cannot prescrlbs subject matter or
supply Intellectual content. You have
also ""''" exposed to the Idea thst
rnvemment resources whether

noted: " Higher Education must deal
with the growing burden of governmental regulation ; the need for

general · jlducatlon, and the growing
pressures of job-oriented professlonai-

ISA"'."

lnalltutlona.,. fallible

m:~~~~en;e wtsN~~=~~~~ov~h.::~

~l ~~l~~rig"~.Zsedt~~~ ~~:.,~:~:

have learned to live with Is "the
realization that Institutions, like Individuals, are ' fallible and unpred ictable. Progress Is not Inevitable and
Improvements do not nacessartly flow
In a linear sequence. Or, as Zola

:ffe'lss~at 1 ~e 'n~t~!';g n.\::lf~~tlc~

novelty bscause the march of progr11ss
represents the Irresistible surge or
some auperlor or divine ortnclpfe,' ...
Some compromise or wllllngness to

~Is'= ~-:;,aw'.,~~.l:la"lt'::.'!1

GuC~ ~~ana. Bllnken said, brtn
home the

not~n

that "our ldaes

:Jl

~::·h~e=~ .~x~ ~ur::~

by emotional, not only rational ,
lmpulaes.
" And, racent events In Iran also
suggest that other kinds of Ideas .whether ·religious or secular, contemporaty or anachronistic - can, on
occasion, o-.lde our notions of
progreas. Perhaps we should not bs
surprised, however; since our ldeas
about the role of government In the
West do not necessarily conform 1'1
those of much of the rest of the world.
The Frsedom House list of 'free
countries' remains illstresslngly small,

::.~~~~~~ 1~':.!~~~'n'n~f.:t~a~hl1~

much oflhe wor1d ."
An underatandlng of history, thus,
has great rei8YIIIlce for our time,
Bllnken noted.

are things government can and should

you~~~ h~..r.:r::~n~ur~ i:::.'l~;,~~

are dangers Inherent In total dependence on government.
."A university, whether public or
ortvate, Is not a financi al or Intellectual
Ivory tower - It never was and 'It
certainly can not become one In the
future. A university must take sole
responsibility for sorting out Its own
ortorttles when Intellectual or academic
Issues are at stake."

Soma ' ldaaa' for tt. future
The SUNY chairman suggested
" some other dangerous Ideas" to '1ake
with you when you leave here and move

on: ...

,

" You may• want to consider, for
example, that not only examining the
Ideas of others, but occasionally

=~~~g h~~ ~:;,'oed~;

aou;lg,"wo';
maturity 1111d not a cause for concern.
" You might wish to reassess the Idea
that qovernment In Washington (not to
mentoon Albany) does not represent

~e;g.rel~~~,!,~~u;::;-t~~~~

=~:r; co~u~r:ra

!fh=rae"n!,t
effecting constructive change.
"And, you may want to contemplate
ths dan.Q!rbus Idea of merit - the
notion, as one writer put It, 'that a
complex society like our own , alter all,
depends on the skills of the Individuals
composing II. Cc&gt;ncerns of human
sslety, convenience, and the Quality of
our collective life are of as great
consequence as our concern for equal
protection of the laws ...,,

5,000 daar- -

lila Chancellor's

Madal
Ut B President Rober1 L. • Ketler
conferred 5,000 degr- during the
afternoon ceremony. Included were 19
associate, 2,980 bachelor'a, 1,198
,_.,.. and 7113 doctoral' deg. . ..

About half of those receiving degreet
were present.
'
Ketter also presented the 197£
Chancellor's Medal - UIB's hlghes·
honor - to Manly Fleischmann , •
Buffalo attorney who served for 13 year•
as a membsr of the SUNY Board o·
Trustees . ..
Established through the bsquest o·
Charles P. Norton, chancellor of UtE
from 1909 to 1920, the Chancellor'!
Medal was first awarded In 1925 as ar
honor to citizens who "personify clvlc-

::~l~i~t:"flgv~r/~Y ,r.,b~"~: :::~

Buffalo."
'Fleischmann, a partner In Buffal&lt;&gt;anc
New York City law firms, has long bser
Involved In world affairs. He wet
assistant gen«al counsel of the WIJ
Production Board In the early yeara 0 1
World .War II . later, he accepted •
..:ommlsslon in the U.S. Navy and w..

=

~Y~
wl:'er!h~e
Buffalonlllll, General

5

~~th =~

William J. Donovan. He directed eaplontoge actlvltlet
with a corps of the British Army lr
Burma and India, for his work decorated by the governments of bolt .
the U.S. 1111d Thailand. f.\.
. ·
In 1951, Preeldent Harry Trumar
appointed him Defenae Productlor
Administrator. At the same time, hi
was named chairman of the Inter·
national Matertala Cc&gt;nfenlnce And wa:
sent to Paris u one of the AmeriC81
representatives In dlacusalona whlcl
led to organizing NATO.
He held ...-a! other otate an&lt;
national posta through the 19501 an&lt;
60s. In 1981, he received a citation Iron
the Buffalo Cc&gt;undll on World Affairs .,
" Buffalo's Outstlllldlng Citizen In Worl&lt;
Affairs."

c~f:'m~1S: \~u~e:sr;0 "'he s~~:

Commission on ihe Quality, Cc&gt;st anc
Financing of Elementary and SecondaP

:3 'r~:

~~~~~~·N"e'l~~"~oci~~?!\r.~y

State Board of Regents. That panel'
report, published by VIking Preas, I
popularf,.Y known u the "Fieltlchmllllo
Report.
He was one of the original trustees o
the UniversitY' at Buffalo Foundation
Inc., aervlng on Ita 8oanl frbm 1982 tr· -·

· -tt,coL ·

�TS .

..

I
'

Hochfteld:
h~;'..:~,~~ ~as~e ~~?.!!o~~~.:e~~r~~ ~c;!.r~hth!!~o~!aes
r
Editor:
As a Teaching Aulaiant In the
Department of English, and as cunent

might llka to oortatn 1111888. For
example, while the Department of
En llah offers some courses In black
Pre:::J:.',on"' n'W,~ =:.-en:.'~~J :3tor women writers, there are simply
~ ....,.
hi
not enough funds to Implement
uu 1.,..... to wr1te at t a t 1me, 1n
Intensive p&lt;9Q18rns In either area and
•fesl
.eidP!'snartselclleo _P]_&lt;;ocatfesalonrg tGheeord~':.nHluocllonhstill malntahi all of the olher upects of
.....
fr-.
the curriculum Unilergraduates and
o(RfepotherterCoiMs'-o, at _1hls University , graduate studenis alike ofi&lt;IJ) tum to the
y 10. 19791
. Colleges as a resource In the Instances
I would llka to point out that
Where other ~menta of the UniVersity
Professor Hochfleld's article was
....,.
T
consummately and commendably. ac- • ~~nu':l'~ .:?t=l.::.e~ ~=:·be::::
curate In one raspect, at least: at no
unconscionable disservice 10 students
time did he Imply that hla position Is
WhO would like to study both Joseph .
~tatlva of the attitude of the
Conrad and Environmental • Politics,
.Depowtment of English, as a whole. In
VIrginia ll(oolf and the Impact of
this, I am compelled to follow Professor
soclallsm on Clllheae peasant women.
Hochlleld's leed: I make no claim to
speak for 8llerY graduate student and
......._lctra-1 nell?
"meV«'Ynt. fHacuow~ 11 aeeberm~nl,:perae~:"
. ai
......-am'; of d.~rse, .;-king here of
this time, uj;;' remind the Unl-sity
"serious" students and "sel'lous"
studies, riot '1he casual, the amateurcommunity that there has long · been
Ish, and the mediocre" masses ·of
sll!nltlcant support for, and Involvement
faculty, graduate students, and underw1th, the Colleges throughout the
d t wh
hav
aced 1
Department. Professor Hochfield himfr:. ~~.=,~ un~:;:ethe ~'s~ces of~~
self was instrumental In the founding of
Coli
ccordl
t
Prof88
~"f.u~\~rtu~ .S::fa~ °i,c J~
Hoc~i:Tcl. ~~ thengex.:nse ot r~

1

~

mern'

01 1

among graduate students
Department of English.

in

==~ghl~f ~fc,:n~~u~~"ltir~

the

fundamental ways that the Colleges
manage to "wute" University tunda:
trl¥11'1 courses, unqualified staff,_ and
unethical grading procedures.

Moald~

In llghl·of this, ProfeS80&lt; Hochfleld's
article Ia moet dlotreaelng, as It ia this
vry of sup~ which his
~"*'t _ , . designed -to -erode,

m.:l~~ n~~":'~~~ ti~~"J;

College offerings, no rMntlon ·Is mede
of precisely What those courses entail.
This past semester I taught a coursa

~ ::!tg~1:f~ ~~~lo=p

between declining enrollments In the
FIICUity of Arts 8J)d letters ·end the

?,: 5~:~~1os,::~~= '.?J'~r:f.:',·~"':,~
1

ex:-=~~~ 8YJ:,e,;:;,ot~l~feasoi

whether we wOtl&lt;ed on Avon paperbacks
or Finnegan• Wake.
•
Even more dls~urblng Is Dr. Hochfield's refuael to justify the assumption
'that stud lea of " Black Matriarchy-,"
" Modem Gay Literature," or "Women in
Contampotary Society'' ara lesa .than
-..!catty leQitlrnMe,an_.,ptlon
that pervades hfs anlcle. It would seem
~~~~:ru:~!s::pecw:'~c~ :::-: ~~=.~~

Hochfield would tolerate the kind of
spurious logic from a student that
permits him to mAintain that an
undergteduata who finds the study ·of
1

~~io t.:::'f:' .;':!!;.

-u1ea tola&lt; a - would, In the

absence of such a course, tum to a
study of Joyce as a viable alternative.

1

us are intrinsically connected to the ·
humanistic tradition. . Further, the
wor1&lt;shop courses which can be found
throughout the Colleges provide an~!':n,~';:~~~ant connection - to the
The '1undamental reason tor the low
Intellectual quality of the Colleges,"
however, according to Dr. Hochfiefd, Is
unqualified lnsUuctors. Is . It really
necessary to ram lnd the University,
- In, ol the fact that Women's Studies
College has ~lost" two faculty members
to prestigious awards and that another member of the fiiCUity was recently
awarded a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship?

FOICM wlllcll ahape our ~&gt;Uitura
To be sure, It Ia not my intention here
to take Issue with the Important

=r.:~~~?.!~~.:e.o'll~~.~~~~

fellows as Joype, Merx, Darwin, .or

~.s.or"":!.J.,~-~n~:~~r·:~

making studenlll .alii- ol the foroea
Which have atw&gt;ec1 o.ur culture. It Ia
Indeed thla vwy lntel~tual commitment wlllch oblig88· a . University to
eddreaa It sell • tb (iacli , complex and
problematic las* as.wclal structures
In the black COIJ.Irnunlty, the Institutionalized ·o pprauloo of worNn, ot even
the evolution oflhe lonn of oontempotlll'f mualc. Theee- am, aa well, forces
Which shape our culture.
· Furttwr, •our culture" haa neither the
Mala nor the -tnt.gratlon that such a
term might -IDJmply. Therefore, It

~~~ !.r.'::'!~~f ~~ i:,'!n8~~~en~a~J

English FTEs are generated from
courses taught by graduate students? Is
~~;c:::::Sg~vt~~...'haval' upeoab'P1e1nwsiltghhouts',

vvv•-

~~hat·~ be~p.:!'r.: .~

--...,£)..

___

..!:~UO:~r• .J:.~:~-:. :~~:'if:

..

many departments from devol-

,....,._

fe8

c!:.,t,

~~

Colleges cannot recruit nationally
because their funds are so limited?

=r,.,,thl1nt::~'::.:, 'i{dtin~:

prevent

•,..,.

=~tlv1~1 • ·~~ls~~;d

- Unl-.tty for inllo¥ation, lnterpretlttlon, lll1d ~~ - Indeed, we
would~st likely not_, have studies
of Joyce, Marx, Darwin, or Fraud If
educatol8 In the PMi heel not usumed

·

Ubeloua, tnaultlng
There may be abuses of the grading
system In the Colleges, · as Dr.
liochfleld chargee, but that charge can
neither be proven nor ratuted unless
each Instructor Is polle!l as to his or her
motivation for asslgniod each student's
grade. Until that time, this accusation
may well be bordering on the11belous.
In addition, the Implication that
undergraduates participate In the
Colleges , solely to enhance their

I'IMnolor
,., ,. OMsJon
___..__,,
ol - ol

lf..no~'ifr.wit~=rc-~ an :;:su~th\~

Yor* of a.Molo. - - . . , . lo-·
.. 116 Ctafto - · - .•. ,.,._

Unlve18lty. AI a le.:her,
would be
wlltlnli ID
to the conjecture
lbal there mll':;'t Mil be studenta In

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

,......,...__ .

-·__-

~--­

,

..........ov.f

. - r r.-.trr

..........

JOHIIA.qcxnB

r

con-

=:'l':u.;: :="c!t~~~
aa .-foullY as .,. mlgiit liu. Should

M, then, dlaaol .. 1M llllllra Unl..-.lty
and put the lunda Into the Computing

Center?
•
With all due r-.pect to Dr. Hochfleld,
It doea n o 1 - to - lhM U. an-ID ~:. thla Unlver811y'a problema Ia
the
Ullon of the~- On the
OCher hand, COQPIIallon
any
~of the FIICUIItM ' of
the
~ and the QDIIIIIIII WOUld

. . . . . . , =._. ,.
we-.

...__..._._..
-

lftiUIII ..... ~

.· ...:.·

.·.- ,·,

opportCih-

their Interests and energies together,
anH, generally, utilize the Intellectual,
financial, and mat=resources of the
University more be ell lly.la Sherman
Teaching Assistant
Department of English

His 'attack. smacks
f - 60
· -d t
0 preS ffiln Se _

Editor:
Professor Hochfleld's attack on the
Goii!!Q88 and his description of what he
considers a more valuable education
harttens back to the pre-1960's when
patriarchy at the University was readily
acceptedAOd the profeSSOI; w_
a s looked
up al ti!S the all-knowing authority. In
the late 1960's students rajected these
hlel8fChical arrangements and demanded both an Input Into their
clas8es, and course's releYant to their
Immediate lives. Ra:her than be
lectured at and Inundated with material
not applicable to their problems and
aspirations- they wished to. directly

_:,'i\'~~!~~ ~ ~~~~~~=ji.c'f.

s

they studied.
In fact, these kinds of Ideas and
contributed to the original
of the Colleges and sat '1he

~o ~ te:.~h~1ru~:~e~~:f3:la

differ from Hochfield's desired regre$slon It should suffice to respond to /list
a few of his more lllatantly el _tlat •

=:."Jsn!\ 1 ~ht=.

his letter certainly

It's alack of Emma Goldman, not Fraud
Contrary to his belief, the problem Is
not that "our students have never nsed a
dialogue of Plato· they do not know If
the Middle Ages 'came bllfore ot alter
the French Revolution; they may as
wnelwl,hmlcohstMo 1zartthe.mD,arw~J1nvt,ngarxlna,Fwreortudd _
1 M
and Joyce never existed." Rather what
thexamy phlea,ven. '1 beethen _:: xpoltarsedlan tov,lll•fore
e
16
-• 8 lit•
~g
communities which existed during the
Middle Ages, or the Paris Commune as
an attempt at a non-authorltanan social
arrangement, or the Spanish Civil War

1

0

~M'ect11~~s.anfoCh 1~m~0 j~~ne: ~~

historical events; and they have
probably ne¥er heard of, much less
read, Bekunln, Kropotkln, Emma
Goldman, Genet or William Morris.
These aublecls and Individuals are
consciously gnored by an educational
system Intent on training us to function
more elticlently and effectively In a
society which needs complacent
statisticians, social wOtl&lt;ers, and public
=::;;:.:1~:--certalnly not radicals
How much longer will the University
continue to be designed to mass
_ produce Insipid automatons who know
all the questions they'll be asked and
just those answers they will need,

~~·~':::'~me~~':!nit.~h~~~~~~d~~~~~

demand the answers?

Proteaaor Ia a grandiose title
To maintain that the staff members of
the - Colleges are unqualified and
Incompetent Is completely consistent
with the elitism of Hochfleld's
.reactionary diatribe. Obviously, what
makes one qualified Is a Ph .D., and
nothing else will do. If you accept his
description of valle courses then you
must also accept his qualifications tor
an appropriate instructor; but If you
think courses like " Community OrganizIng" or "Life as an Auto Wor1&lt;el"' are as
Jmportsnt aa " Advanced Rhetoric" or
" Behavioral Modification," then the
significance of life experiences vs.
acedemic credentials becomes, at the
vry least, debatable. What Hochfleld falls to awteciate is
that the Colleges are not so Interested
In characterizfng their staff as r,rofessors as much as tl:ay are determ ned to
eradicate the elitism of sUch a
grandiose title and office. Time and
tQAin - have, descrJbed our task as
lnvol-t In a !earning proceea aa
wetl as a teaching one. Not IIII&amp;Uming
we alnsedy know all there laiD know on
~ gtv.~~
au!Jiect, .,. ara QPen to
- .. lilg ......... 'the student. .. ..
the experlenc:e.
.
Some concluding ramart&lt;t muat be
eddreaaecl to .Hochflelcl'a extreme ·

as.

measure o ow much one learns ana
how .hard they worked. How many
students have f89!1ved poor grades
=~ ,'~~u~~~~e~g~~ ~ith t1hheir
he
f ork
ore an
t
arnoun 1 o w
required for the
course? And what about ~hosQ . who
·Obtain good grades by Bither 11ilc1t
means or kowtowing to that esteemed
authority, the professor?

0

Educatlon-lalllce buYing a car
Rather than Idealize the function of
grades at the University we must raatlze
that education. Ia a COIJlmodltf ~d
grades -l1awl the aarne purpose as
money In the society at large. It y_pu
want to gat ahead lf1. this soclety:-You
must cohform, comply, grovel ,-biown
nose, steal ·and . proatitute yournelf1o
general, just as you must do at the
University.
.....:::
Paying tuition for a foriheorillng
degree Is susplcloltaly synonymo~W
with buying a car on time. Unless~
realize the profound almllerity we will
continua to see the University ..sa
haven from society rather than jost one
more, though extremely significant·

~r:~ th!ii~.WC::~'~~r~pr~,:ss.~
'!n!
1
1
of 1 18
1 ~· 1
Colleges pose an Inescapable test ol
Wh
heat uweturereauy a nhd serUinou_.!!! t hyl.~kbaubot

1

_,s as epproprlate, and certainly

~::f=~v'~n~=~~a~~n~~~~~ ?~

examine the specific place of ths
Colleges in that op~lve scheme . .r
01Wi9Ualy, the "'Colleges ~ . tdb

~~~~~~~.!!' ~~=-~~"~~

thai poweriul socializing agent, · ths
Unl-slty. The Irony Ia, that In- many
ways the Col= could bacome just
another appen
of · the University
contributing as much to the "repressive
tolerance" this society so desperately
needs and manufactures as they .do to
actually engendering •the radical -entlque we as studeots and Ind ividuals
need to'overcome o·u r manipulated lives
and dictated values. Thus, not only Is it
time to reevaluate the Colleges, but
more Importantly 11 Is time to reexamine
the University as a whole.
-Poter F. Murphy
Staff Member
Tolstoy College (F)

His logic was
'sloppy'-Corcoran
Editor:

lo~~~~~:s~~oHn~~'i't.,~~eu:f~b
~=. ~~~::,bl~s a~~~~J'~~~::

When _doea a hlgher-than-uauel pe,r·
centaGe of As In a couree Imply hat t~e
gradellaa been devatUIICI? Ia It no longer
foglcally posalble· tor a hlgher•lhanuauat perCentage of Aa to Indicate
.better-than;uaual performance?:
Hochfield'a ' latter was replete with
fallacious and farfetched Inferences
drawn from unsupported oremlses . For
example, from certain alleged deficiencies In the Colleges, Hochfleld
Infers that the Colleges should be
abolished.
.
-Some of· Hochfleld'a allegations are
probably true In some measura. But
before denouncing the Colleges,
Hochfiald should make aure that his
own Department-and hie own faculty are
not open to exactly the same charges.
It would surprise me graatly were
Hochfield able to show that a
significant amount of the teaching In
the Colleges Is lees competent and less
responsible than that which takes place
In any one of _ . 1 Departments
(Which need not be named hare) .

lm~':.lh:~~~~~~:'rrfe~r:~·~~

the Unl-.lty _ _ . .

·
-John Corcoran
. Professor, Plilloaophy

Doesn't he have
better things to do?
Editor:
George Hochflekfa blanket .condam·
nation of the Colleges (May 10
Reportavj doe. the entrre University a
di...-.Jce_ ~··· this man have
anythl!lg better to do than "rant and rave
and beha.. liMa fool?
Sincerely,
_ -Wall• Slmpaon

... :-.:..:

...

...

~- ~.:,

�'"""

LETTERS
camp Lit
_answers critic
Editor:
While we, In the Comparatove
Literature Program , felt a moderate
degree of satisfaction at being singled
out favorably in V.P. Bunn's plan , we

~~ertie~~"'j~~ ~~t~k~ln~;"':,~~t ~f~'~.;
g~~l~~~~~~ ~~r.on~~~~n~fn/h:ttr;~ohg::"'a
~~;~•• hl~~:~r~~reem~~tl::'.f"~~ce:

might have otherwise 'perceived . At any
rate . Professor Schanzers expression
of futile resentment [Reporter, May 17)
~~~~~~~....~~~mf~~ than I personally
Just one point of Information: the
Comparative Literature Program was
evaluated by the SED at the same time
the Department of Spanish , Italian , and
Portuguese, the French Department and
the Germanic and Slavic Departments
were evaluated In the Fall of 1975, and
precisely by the same on-site team of
evaluators.
As a matter of fact , the senior
evaluator of this combined team was a
most prestigious Hlspanlst, Professor
Juan Lopez-Morlllas, William R. Kenan
J r., Umverslty Professor, at Brown
University, who, I trust, Is periectiy
known \O Professor Schanzer. I quote

~r~7~. h'~ :~~ab~rtofd~~o~P~!~ :

Grain elevators 'nationally-Important'
The massive graJn elevaiora which
.dol the Buffalo waterfront will be the
focal point of a conference planned for
Monday, June 11, by a U/B professor.
- Or. Rayner Banham , chairman of the
Department of Design Studies In the
School of Arch itecture and Environmental Design, has arranged the
day-long conference to stimulate
Interest In .U.S structures which
symbolize BUffalo's one-time promInence In the.graln milling Industry.

st=~~IY:,o~~~~n~ot~~t~~·
Importance."
The conference will start with a boat
trip through Buffalo Harbor. Banham
explained that access by land to most
of he remaining grain e levaton~ has
become difficult becausa of deterlora-

~~urf a ~en~ra:'~ r~~at~'nR~;
quality" remain along the harbor, he
aald.
Two elevators of 1897 vintage will be

11

spotlighted during the conference.
One, known as "The Electric, " is a
steel-bin type. It Is now Idle and owned
by the city, but at one lime was owned
And operated by the giant Cargill
grain-handling firm of Mi nneapolis.
The other, owned by Pillsbury aQd
believed to be the oldest In continuous

use In the nation, Is a brick-box type
, that gives the appearance of total
enclosure.
Banham said the mechanical grain
elevator was invented In Buffalo, but
the eartleat ones were made of wood
and none survive.
Among those expected to partici pate
Jn the conference, besides Banham , are
Frank Gohlke of Minneapolis, a
photographer noted for his pictorial
Brain elevator collection,
Melvi n

R::"..::Iso~f of~':;~~. ~~ ~~~::,~

tural historians.
·
Buffalo Mayor James Griffin Is
expected to attend and to proVIde a

downtown meeting site.
"The whole affair will be open and
experimental," said Banham . " We hope
to hear many voices and viewpoints. "
He suggested that an association

might

be formed

to

further

grain

elevator architectural and hlstor\cal
studies end possibly to promot~ their
preserv-ation or recycling .

The conference will coincide with
Banham'a June 4-22 summer fieldwork
program for students. The program Is
part of ll sarles on " Buffalo: The
Industrial Heflta~e" and will be devoted

thl~so"s':;"]~\!:'..~t:J'"l~n ~:a,:g{~g the
June 11 conference should send .a $10
reg istration fee to Or. Banham to cover
ooerating expenses; The address Is the
Department of Design Studies, U/B,
Hayes Hall, 3435 Main St. , Buffalo,
N . Y . 1~214 .

F•Jrther Information on the conference and the summer fleldworl&lt;
a~tl'I -~tal ned by calling

G'.::ll,r:::;'

1

~~,fen~'!.:~~~~~~~~ 88 !:lr:!:

many public school systems.
"The very high rate of professional
placement contlnuee to aurprisa meny
o b -a," the FES Newsletter article
pointed out. •our atallallca seem to be
IT)UCh more Impressive than moat other
large school a of education." ,
The Faculty of Educational Stud:.S
awarded 56 doctoral degrMS In 1977-78,
of which 28 _ . Ed.O.'a and 30 _ .
Ph.D.'s. Twenty of these now hold
tMChlng poata In colleges or un'-altlea that Include SUNY units In
Buffalo and Fredonia and such
lnatltutiona 88 the uniYW!IIIea of
Toronto Pittsburgh, and Alabama, the
Unlv.eraity of Alaska and a unl-.lty In
_
the desert sheikdom of Qatar. •
FES graduates aleo hold admln ratlve positions In - a l colleges end
achoOi ayatema. ElghtMn ara employed

~~rrT;~~s ~l:'t~~~· J':~~~~~i

~'a::~~ :~c~~~c!'~o~~ra~.,:;

position&amp; as director of special
education for BOCES, national director
of ITI's Educallonal Services division ,
and 88soclate director of the University
Council for Educational Administration.
One graduate Is textbook director In the
Ministry of Education In Afghanistan,
while another serves on the senior staff
~~~:::',~ll\~.!r'ra~f Education of the lmo
Fifty-nine per cent of the 229 master's-

~"l'clu:J~,~=~1~i~f~~ 1rf::~O::f

systems and colleges; another 13 oer
cent are school counsalora. Four per
cent hold a vailety of degree-related
Jobs, and 8 per cent are full-time
students worki ng toward advanced
0

0

~~-~~~tad~ Jo~ ~~n~ ~g
the FES Newsletter, and 3 per cent

;:"'b.:~~Y :~eun~;:'J'.::lY~e \~rtt~~~
many

of

these

master's

~~~~at:,~ a':C::;'.fr~ec:h~~u~~o~~~f~.;
nat ion .

According to the FES article, " the
excellent record of the Faculty of
Educational Studies ... reflects well on
the qual ity of Instruction In the Faculty.
Further, It calls Into question some of
the pessimistic obsarvera who have
predicted a total collapse In tha job
marl&lt;et for teachers and other education
professionals."
Dean Rooert Rossberg pointed out
that FES graduate enrollments have
hald steady In the recent past and that .
various , outside evaluators have consistently given the F~ulty high marl&lt;s
lor program ~uallty .

Health Sciences Library t of 3
'picked for national program
The Health Science• Ubrary (HSL) Ia
one of only three of Ita type nationally
to be JWMd • an Intern lralnlng site by
the Council on Utnry Resources Inc.
and the Natlo...r Library of Madlclne.
The program Ia cleelgnad to llllln new
health ac:- library dlr.ctcn. Other
health aclencea llbrllrlM Mlectad aa
training all• ere the Unl..,.lty of
Wahlngton (SMilie! and the Houston
Academy of Madlc ne-Texaa Medical
Center.
U/ B'a Intern, June E. Bandemer, will

begin a on•y- program, September 1,
C.K. Huang, director of1he HSL, laid.
Bandemer la aaalatant director of the
Falk Library of the Health Prof...lona
at the Unl-.lty of PiltlburJih.
"The Mleellon of our f!Onlry aa a
tralnlnll aile for thil ~ram Ia a high

~~~·f;.~:· :=~~n~~~.

l:!.,..u::r'th ~=:arr~
~ ~-

be added that the younger comperallsts

;\t~u~~~~~;;tt~~~!:~~1;1~~o~i~~

Impression of their uncommon ablllty,
their commitment to their task, and
their prlde In what the Program has
been able to accomplish In so short -a
lime.
"The three graduate students Interviewed (first-, J18C0nd-, and third-year,

~~~t~~~~n~..:'~r~ceJl'~~~f~.':~~
'There Is no doubt that the department
[sic} hes been unusually sucoesaful In
attracting top students. Some of us
may now understand better why some
of the best literature students are no
longer applying for graduate study In
conventional langua~e departments. I

th~ntt!,h'~:; ;re'~~:~.~':·'be

rs

viewers, and a few were not seeking
employment.
While

Program performs an Informational
service of no mean d imensions.' It may

~· ~a~.Z f~=~~ r:,e ruott~~f~

Education jobs n·o t all.that scarce
Despite ominous predictions and
an
contrary to national tnsnds,
overwhelming majority of graduates of
the Faculty of Educational Studies are
employed In education.
An article In the Spring Issue of the
FES Newsletter draws that conclusion ,
based on a comprehensive suM&gt;y of
1977-78 m88ter's and doctoral grad- uates of the Faculty. T~ auM&gt;y shows
that "81 per cent of the master's
graduates on whom we have lnf~
lion and all but ~ of the doctoral
recipients are working In prolesslonal
positions In education."
The survey covered 229 of a total of
248 master's holders and 56 out of 56
doctorates.
FES graduates wort&lt; In a variety of
jobs In all parts of the United States and
se.veral foreign countries. A sl~lflcanl

The State Education Department: " As
one of the Site Visitors puts It: 'The
Program ... Is ... a major conduit for1
European critical theory In the United
States. Since American scholars and
students are becoming Increasingly
aware of such developments, the

for unl-.lly library
management lntemahlpa.

falo
well-defined, well-oriented, end
.
of high quality." ·
Finally, I want to thank Prpfeaaor
Schanzer for giving me t his opportunity
to write about lire widely nscoglllzed
merits of our Program. Thesa menta,
however,'are not only a credit to us but
llkewlsa to the wholef'learted cooperslion of so many members of the

~~~:.~~=~! a~d ~~': ~~H~~~~~

mont , without which the Comparative
Literature Program would have never
come Into existence.
.:....c-eo~

Compar~~~~~O:.':f~~

Blau named
to State post
Dr. Monte Blau, professor and
chairman of the Department of Nuclear
Medicine, has been appointed chairman
of the Medical Advisory Committee,
Bunsau of Radiological Health, New
Yorl&lt; State Oe'partment of Health by Dr.
David Axelrod, commissioner of health.
The Committee's function Ia to
provide advice to the Bunsau, upon

~~de,

og,u:: .-~f:";'d, t~

protection of the
health and
aafety, In tarma of the
uletlon and
of
llcenalng or i'8glat
radlonuclldes and
IIIII
In for mad
equipment on hu
.-rctt, dlagnoala and treatment of
d l -. The Commltt• aleo provides
advice on heetth and aafety conaldefatlona presented ~lal apphcallona

~~~~~

:=xo:.:I::.J::
and/oron h u -. The Committee acta
In an advisory capacity only.
·

�...a ..

.luno7, 1171

AtArtpark
Unila Swlniuch and ho&lt; Zodloquo Do nco
Co. will o - r at Artpork, Frl~ night.
oo gu- ortn1a with tho Butfolo
Phllhormonlc.
·

CALENDAR
~~~$1 . 50. Sponooredby

Thursday-7

,.remount is
11m direc:lcnl. -

JAZZ IN JUNE SEMNAR'
PoWid&lt;. direclor at jazz Ill UIB.
-~ .., Bebop."" 1M! musical
~BiirdRec::it:IIHal

3.30p.m Free
PIW1 of a festlvaf &gt;M1ic::h oontirue!s ttTough JlX\e
18. Sae ...... story. lhilisaue

an extravaganz.~ utiizing a dozen •

""'ouch-

hools.
IIMlf·
ites os . . - Arthur. C1in Bow. Kay Fnncis,
Powel. Frederic Man:handGayCooper.
One Hour is chcted by Ernst lLClilsch and

~ and

George QJicor, ""' S!ln Jeonnene MacDonald.

WAS FilM'

r... lho Monoy end """ Coria"erce Thoetre
5q1&gt;re Col 636-2919 lor show times. General
acm.aaion S2; S1.5blor students
~ lhll. Wool:ty Alen's first directorial effort
the aeeds of , . aJCC8SSfU comedic style are
revealed to tUious effect Woor.ty plays Vll'gi ,
8 c:onvk::t, 'Nho is 8 fW'Cl(k.ld d ., unhappy
cl*l&gt;ood. beOlg a Yk:1m 0( glasses.
neighborhood btMes, bickar1ng parents. acute
c:e1o ple)4ng . and a fl8U'Odc tendency to wr1 a
gil b y - . ; money.
FACUI.TY AEaTAl'
"'Music at Vision and PlnllaJ(' by Ynr Mlk·
hoolldl,lacUiy - . Boi"d Rodtol Hall . 8 p m

-dlizons$2;
$
1 . 5ponaoredbylhe
-$3;
lacUiy.
· -""'
Dopor1menl a t --

.... at-le~oltlYI1y
" - - . E. - .. G-26 F . -. 8 p.m.

Monday- 11
JAZZ IN JUNE SEMINAR'
A tlrtory ol Jan In Buffalo_ JoiYl 1-U'lt, ·
popular hos1 ol ""Jazz 88"" on WBFO-FM. Baird
Recital Hel 3 30 p .m Free
SEMINAR M
Effects ol Qulnktlne on the Asympithetic
NorYoua SYstam Du~ng Digllalls ~
Induced Anllylhmloa, Or. Claire La11l&lt;n. assist·
ent proiOBOOr. Medical Collooe at f'emsyiYtnla .
Pllladtllphia. 102 Shorman. 4 p.m.

-Is

In 124 F8f'ber et3:45.

Frlclay-8
llflllJIIOL(IQY I..ECTIJIIE f
_ Tho HLA ar-, K. Kens. G-26 Ferber.
12::30p.m.

JAZZ .. JUNE IWIICSVISATION WONCSHOP'
AI 1to1g. plono. Bolrd Rodtol Hoi. 3:30 p.m.

Fnoo.

CQU.EQE B FLM'
It' a A Wonderful

ut.. etwnng Jlmee Stewwt,

Donne- Uonel l!arrymcn. ference Theelre. 6:30p.m.

Conr

W&gt; llllo. F.- Cl!n lim. a man foclng ruin
\llfto has had a herd tme al hts &amp;lfe, is sent
help from above., lho~ at.~ anoel.

a-

·

- $ 2; $1 .5 0 1 o r -.

DANCE'
8p.m
__ _ _ _ ._ _ _
Tho lodloquo Co. wll portcrm Ill ..

School ..lou ~- mora Room. · 8 p.m.
$3; -ls.$2.
~OOYL£CTUAEI
~ lnwnunlly,

s.n -

- Fa·

Gonenol-

P.C.

~-

G-26

Tho ~ wll bo i)oemiorlng
~
,..;wor1c 10 T~aCoprlcclo- Tho
piaoo Ia cluoogoophad by Linda SMiuch. and

- -·Tom-·-.

Hain.

-·
Tho Zocioquo
Co.Boon...-llldM&amp;.SwlrUtl.
II ,_, at lho Cenlor lor Thee·

. .

JAZZ .. JUNE COfiCERT•
~Hale Trio. Room,

s..n. 8

- - $ 3; - $ 2 .

p.m.

--ollho"-lle- ·

Women.,

Exhibits

Buffalo Chap!..-. - f o r
Scf.
once .-tin;. Blue Room. FocUiy CU&gt;. 8 p.m.
NAssertiYeness 81 ... Attitude .-bout Ycuaetr
wll bo led b y _ . , . - and""" F.!1t

JAZZ.exterr
Pl"ooiOgniclhaatjozz....-W&gt;~

., Buill*&gt;. OoUolcl.bwy. 201 Bolrd. ""'*'St.

~ R. brf:h. G-26Forber. 8p.m.

TUesday- 12
JAZZ IN JUNE_,.,
Jozz Dlacc9oPhY Tocloy, tlto1 Morgar-.Edward Berger. Boird Hoi. 3 :30 p.m.
Fnlo.

I
· G-26 Ferber.

Thursday- 14

.DE7

JAZZ IN JUNE WORKSHOP'
AI Tlnnoy. Bolrd- Hoi . 3:30p.m. F!M.

(c::t-.onlol7). 10a.m.

WABFlLM'
638-29191orfhN/ _

- ·- -Cal . ....

~

l l l o l - . . _ -~170
NF/OC, Elloall. Cllll 63&amp;-21118 lor
- - S 2; S1 .5 0 1 o r -.
- t&amp;rrooo 01iYior
..s11lol
1/hWl
fA4ah. w-...
11 ..,. at OIYior'a boal rt&gt;loS.

_""lit - -

,... -

All

1hal

___

loroa.,"""""

at -

Rice, •

ho -

... ll1llgo roll

A. Katz,

,...
·· lacUiy
- Toke
Tho IOpic
wllC.e
br.
...,.,.,.,
New
W&gt; . _and
, dYotnolf."" v.1&lt;BW·TV (Chlmel7). 10a.m.

c.-a:

l h e - at algettl
Or 80 uys one en.dte reviewer.
01heB MY I you 8ce 10 t.. a lil1lo girl
a.a 1r.a a sa1or a wMch eomeone ttvow up In

c-.....

In ... -

Ealher

H.TIOt1

lnlorW!ws Hollo " ' - '· Pan I at a, fwo.part
lnlervlaw. ec..lor Cllllo (Chlmel1 0) . 8 :30 pJI1"

JUNE10
~ t Dr&gt; Frwcl II. - . , proleoaor•
~ adancea. '"Mon'alnlluance on lhe Climala; long-ronge CllnWe ~-- (930) . 9:05p.m.

•oo.Aar'oa.lytlm
· Ia • good -.ction 10
worlc.
--.-l&amp;rroooOivlorandJoon

...

-lo: Dr. '--*11

- .. School a t - . .. p U - merTOn of

-boalfwe-loolhonltn
1hol con an.c&gt;IIO fNOf'J veaUge
at oalf-oonlnll .., . , . _ ldenlfty. ft • • malll&gt;hor lor prMWog payd1lc on&gt;&lt;ietios ..

-loloat
. ._
Engliallllld
... _
U dhero
y _Lcrd. . . _ot

PbM1ghl. la-Oivior ........

-le

,_,lntoMow. ec..torCIIIM(Chlmel10). 7 pml.

$1 .5 0 f o r -.
Linda- • Rogan or-ott .... jull10101her
... cHid but .,. ., · - at

·

In 1ho -

-Ealher ...,.,..._ Hollo " - W&gt; Pan I at a lwo-

__ _ $2;

Tho Eltorda. Conf1lranoa

,' ..

~Dr.;...;"::;:~~ -

horror--.

_,...

~ Fleyrwd. G-26 Fatbor. 8 p.m.

-

8p.m. Genoral-. $3; - l s. S2.
ASSOCIATIOH FOR WoaEN IN

On The Air

" - Dloordora, M. 8p.m.

SAturday- 9

-..ot.OOY I..ECTIJIIE II

Forber. 8p.m.

~OOYL£CTURE

· )'0111 eonly bo 00 lho fron1 rot¥.

.tlrid -

JAZZ IN JUNE CONCERT'
Pllll - . Quartet. Filmore Room. Sq.ke.

~YL£CTUREI

._,..,lo,

oo-a-n.

Tho 1'1111 Wood&amp; OuoNI. Boird Rodtol Hoi .
3:30p.m. Free..
•

saEHCE MEETING'
JAZZ IN JUNE CONCERT'
Tho
Jozz WOfbhap- T..-.da Hgh

~":!';.....,..I-.
Cortloton:&gt;o s..n.
Cllll 838-21118 l o r - ---

-

Gene&lt;BI--S2: $1 .501or..-.

PHARMACOlOGY AND THERAPEllllCS

~YLECTURE.

...

Sunday- 10
UUABFilMS'
That Htmltton WOfMn: The Entertllner. 170
MFAC. B.cort. Cal 636·2919 for show tmes.

~11:11.~-.-.

·-corooo C..·

I.JniYetolly._, SoMce ,
pua." WBEN(9:l0) . 11 :05p.m.

~~nw'l~to,..

-

•

~ln111o-ealt.or~
..,
.•,
_ Cllllo
- U/8 ...........
1»1&lt;11 Lldge
• -(Chomel
-

10). 8p.m.

................
To

let_....,....

~:..,.. ......

"Ce~Mder,"

.uE12

cell

a-'wllh ....

c.--.

In 1ho -W&gt; Parl Ealher
-·
FIW!IpiOn
ll.of a ,....,.,_,
- - - ec..loreo~M(Chlmel 10). 6:30 ~.m.
W&gt;hlnllewtl -

....... ...... Ill-......-: •open

. . . IIOIMID: ............... , .

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

UIIINNI!r.UIIIIIil ..................

;:,:~ 81 . . -~ Hall

. 'Take the Money'
w-, Allen Ia uaual Ia troublod by
thln1,10 fomalo In 'Taka tho Monoy and
- Run.' UUA8'a movlo, tonight and Friday.

�-7.1119

. . latta

7

Full array of cultural events scheduled for summer
The Summer Sessions 1979 offer a
melange of dance, music, theatre and

~~~u"/:af"!~~~l~e~ough to whet anyone's
1

k1cl~ ~f¥~ ri'isDr'ifu':::to~n!c~i~fti:~r~t1h

its "Jazz In June" festival. Now three
days underway. the festival Is bringing
noted musicians here for a two-week-

~g~':t:"oP~f x~nc:~~shs~~~n:~in:~

are scheduled for 3:30 p.m. In Baird
Recital Hall and are free . Concerts are
. '" the Fillmore Room at Squ ire ($3
genersl admission and $2 for students) .
Today, James Patrick, director of jazz
studies at U/ B and coordinator of the
festival, leads a seminar on "Charlie
Parker and Bebop." Tomorrow, AI Hal g.
a pioneer of modern jazz who once

~i~re~~it~~u~~~~e~t~~ ~~e~~~iz;~
improrisallonal workshop, and , later c
appears In an 8 p.m . •concert with his
Trfo.
J&lt;&gt;Jln Hunt, who . directs jazz
prog[llmmlng for WBFO, will conduct a
seminar on the . history of jazz In
Buffalo on Monday, June 11 . That
evenl'lf,· The Tonawanda High School

~d.;:,~~~:?on ~h7~':e~~ ~~~~m~~

8.

Tuesday, June 12, Dan Morgenstern.
widely regardad as one of the country's
leading jazz critics and scholars, and
Edwan:l Berger, an authority on jazz
discography who serves as editorial
assistant for Journal ol Jazz Studies
and curstor of Rutgers• Institute of Jazz
Studies, will lead a seminar on '"Jazz
Discography Today."

a~~rt~o~:•PRff'~~s."':stllst,;!l•~~

hand . with his quartet , Wednesday,
June 13, for an Improvisational
workshop and an 8 p.m. conceit. The
next day, locsl jazz pianist AI Tinney
will conduct a rhythm section workshop.
Wrspplng up the festival wil l be Don

~~· ea~y ~":rmFno~ ~~~

tlons -with such names as Ornette
Coleman, Sonny Rollins, Albert Ayler
and George Russell. Cherry will lead an
lmpr0¥1satlonal workshoP during the

~~ · ~7t~he~~'CY•~~:Lpe~'7ab\~
and sitar, and

Nana Vasconcelos,

percussion.

Poetry and the NOftl
The Dep8rtment of English and the
Summer Sessions are presenting a
23-day program of poetry, flct fon and

~:r:dY~~;::~111°~nncfuc~~.\"~1s::::

free, public seminars and give lectures.
Poet John Fradette Nlms will be In
residence between July 3 and 13. On
faculty at the Unl...,.lty of Chicago,
Nims Is a noted editor of anthologies
and an acclai med tranolator.
Also coming to U/B, but for two-day
periods are:
July 3-5: William Stafford, author of

~';"~!~'P!lf.:O.,~~~n=~rl~~

educator and author of 26 Ways of
Looking at a BliCk Man.
July, fHI: Gerald Stem of lafayette
College, author and regular columnist
for Tna American Po.try Review, and
Mlrk Rudman, whose works have

g::,

Atlanr"k'1::Z,,~~

Shokeapeare In the Park
For the fou!lh summer, The Center
for Theatre Research and the U/ B
Theatre Department will present two
Shakespearean plays In Delaware Park.
This yea(s Shakespeare "experience··
will feature "Comedy of Errors. "

;~~r~~:av~:~~~;~;::~~~; ~~~~;,:~

the California-based Bella Lewltzky
Company, will give master classes In
dance studios in Harriman and at etark

of
Errors" prom ises to be a memorable,
original adaptation replete with a
chorus of "zairies" who Interrupt actors
with othe.r "bits" from Shakespeare they

experimental films made by members of

the Office of Credit-Free Programs.·

Women/ Art ist / Fi lmmakers.
The majority of these everns will be
held on the Amherst Campus. Adm is-

pany will perform two " events" at Clark

N~~hi~fu: diE~I~ed ~{yt~h~.~;:'y

prefer.
Ray Leslee will create a sco.re for the

;o"'s~~r~':~;:p ~Forh~~k ~~~~*

sensations . As In last yea(s "Shake1ipeare ln1he Park," Donna Eskew will do
costumes and Lewis Folden will handle
set design .
"Comedy of Errors" will run July 10 to

22 .

'"Much Ado about Nothing ," runn ing
from July 31 to August 12, will be
"relocated" In Paris In the late 19th
century. Dlrector Morgan feels this time
period best lllustrstes Shakespeare's
playful message.
Media avanll
Media Study/ Buffalo will offer one of
its most extensive summer programs
e-. Over 80 films will be screened,
along with aome 60 videotapes. three
multimedia Installations, two performances and two lectures. The
summer progrsm Is divided Into:
Video/ Electronic Arts, Electronic Arts/
Buffalo, lndependant Filmmakers, Spe-

'6:~~~~"lsfri ~'1. t~'}'/ftys~~~gof t~

American Musical F flm. "
The Video/Electronic Arts events
began Tuesday and will continue with
weekly · events through the end of
August. Celebrste&lt;t electronic com-

,~,t~~~~~~i:t~s,?n~~~~~:~.;

1
w'm r!:"
progreao, July 19.
Post-modernism will be discussed by
lhab Huaan July 25 and Matel
Celinescu, associate professor of
compw~~~lve literature and
tem

Diana Dosch , entitled " Thi"IMI'Monltor
Circus." Bll! Jungels fo llows with a
presentation and discussion of his
video work.

0

r%m a~ =~~~ will
~~~~~¥~ B ~t~he~nf."::',.e tr~~ Th! ~:'.1
be a multlmedle" presentation by

;~\°C,!~\::~td.";'.'an• unt...,.tty •

er:~~~r=rn".Jnu~':ffSw'W~~ ~!'~!::i

readi ng 011ec:tU!e should ch..-,omfng
laaues of the Repo~ for further
lletalla.
·

presented by Kurt Felchtnielr, on stall
at Media Sludy/Buffalo. Felchtmelr nas
exhibited at the Collective for l iving
Cinema and Mllleoium In New York City

Thoao~ lnt-ted In attending any

~~~~ "G~~;, f~~:;s A~k~~:t~ndHu~~':,~i

demonstrations In ihe Cornell Theatre
that will include excerpts from the

Bartlett . Doris Chase, a film and video
artist , will also present a package of 10'

~,0~;, ~~es~nH.,.~1~~IngGeo~~

w..

9

~~O:::k":u~~~~~~.:;,~ ~~'":~~ ~~~i

In Harper's a% The
~:f:S ~~l?ns B::J"~ ~~~ii:Y!ftj
July I(J-11 : Poet Dlvld lgnatow,
preaent their works, along with
winner of the coveted Bolllngen l'rizlrin ·· vldeomakers Philip Mallory Jones,
1975, ond VIrginia Terris, poet and
Gunllla Mallory Jones, Edln Velez,
author of Tracking.
Mitchell Krlegman and Bart Robbett
July 11-12: Anaelm Hollo, celebrated · Gene Youngblood , author ofcExpanded
PO&amp;t, translotor and authority on PQelryCinema, will lecture on " The Video
music exparlmentltlon, and Allan
Revolution and the Arts: Implications
for Production, Distribution and DisKornblu m, author of . Threshold and
avant-genie editor and publisher of
play." Youngblood Is a research fellow
Too thpaste Preu.
of Buckmlnster Fuller's Design Science
Unl...,.lty poete Max Wickert and
Institute In Washington, D.C., and ·of
MediaStudv/Buffalo.
Irvi ng Feldman will also contribute
r&amp;ldfngs.
·
Most of ihe eY&amp;nts In this series will
Fiction will gnab the aPQIIight later In
the month. 0, July 16 and· 18, Ron
be at Media Study/ Buffalo, 207
Sukenlci&lt; fectunea on " Oogresslons on
Delaware Avenue, with an admlssfon of
.$1 .
the Novel" and reeds from a work In

8::f~~~:

~~?ativ~~~ ;~e~~bli~~ in ~~=~~a~

..
Issue of -,criss·CrosS Art Communica·
l ions.
In addition, the series~lll bring in

sion is $1 .
Four programs are scheduled under

"Special Events" : a film "Tribute to
Summer""

on

June

21

at

Media

StudyiBuffalo (MS/B); a program of
Hollywood animation from the 1930s
and 40s at the Historical Society; a
double-bill of rsre silent shorts by the
late Jean Renoir and a selection of
animated shorts featuring famous jazz
performers at MS/B on June 28, and a
multimedia event , "The Moon as

~~Ia.;~ on.,;~~brs~o:heolas~h1: ~~R
anniversary of the Apollo XI moon
landing and will Incl ude original
broadcast footage of the moonwalk,
NASA films, fantasy. science fic11on ,
and avant-gan:le films , videotapes and
audio pieces.

Finally, the Hollywood serie'l. being
held each Saturday at 8 p.m. at the
Historical Society, pays tribute to fifty
years of American musical films . Part 1
will focus on musicals from 1929
through 1949. The second part
continues in the fall and winter with
musicals of the '50s. '60s and '70s.
Adm ission Is $1 .50 for adults, and 50
cents for children. Watch the "CalendS(' for additional information.
•
A dance r..uval
U/ B will be the scene of a summer
dance festival featuring three major
dance comr,anies who are performing at
Artpark th s August : the Paul Taylor
Cof11pany, Meece Cunningham &amp;
Company. and the Bella lewltzky
Company.
Their campus appearances are Qelng
facilitated by the Office of Cultural
.Affairs.
Tayl9"s C&lt;?mpany wil l give lec1ure-

Gym on the Main Street Campus.
Registrati on for the classes is through
Merce Cunni ngham &amp; ,.Dance Com3

~lv'::n~~ . J~~~ s~~~~~u:~d ~~~~-~

lions of movement which differ at Mch
performance. Cunningham , along with
Charles Atlas, will also explore the 1111
of video and dance In the Jane ~
Room (opposite the Cornell ThM!re) on
August4.
Although not well known In the EM!,
the Bella Lewltzky Company 11 well
regarded on-the West Coast where they
pioneered modem dance. Lewltzky and
Mikhail Baryshnlkov last year nocelved
the coveted Dance magazine Annual
Award , symbolic of the highest
achievement In dance.
Lewltzky and her dancers will be In
residence from August 6 through 10.
In addition to master classes ,

~~~i:,ZnkY.~~I i~~ari~:,O:.?~~~~~~\~~j

cogo~f~;{,fn ~~~-;:nin8t~~fus~~iher
Harriott has uked Lewltzky to end the
week's residency by creating a piece
especially for a Baird Point performance . Lewltzky responded positively to the challenge.
For more baCkground on the dance
companies, read the May 3 Reporter;
check, the "Celendar" for further
rem inders later on.

Creative c.. tt eant.
For those who . would like some
"hands-on" creativity this summer, the
Creative Crsft Canter at. Ellicott Is
0

r~~set~~~~~xa !":!:! :o~~.rk!'J:l~~· ~~~
crsfts such aa jewelry-mlkl ng. pottery.
floor 1oom weaving, plootogrsphy,
stitchery &amp; applique, leather beltmaking and children's pottery, among
others .
Cell 63$-2201 for Information .

JELl offers IQw prlce__trjps
If Inflation and the gas crisis are
crsmping your trsvellng style, take _
heart; the Intensive English Language
Institute is offering a aeries of short
jaunts this summer at low prices.
This Sunday - for 25 cents - any

~m~h ~ 1t~~~~~V:\~ 'lro~~~~:r,
at Amherst to the Allentown Art
Festival. The bus'Willleave the Festival
around 5:30p.m. for the return trip.
On June 16, IELI will be hpadi ng for
the Buffalo Zoo . Buses leave at 2 p.m.
(from Porter and for 25 cents) and return
around 5:30p.m.
A day at the Beaver island beach" Is
planned for July 15. Departure time Is

0

1

~n~~~ref ~~~u~tr!Jkf~;:~ePi&lt;~ie." 'a

musical playing at Artpark, ·Is ached- .
uled for July 26. The price Is S4
including transportation. Buses leave at
6:45p.m.
Duri n~ August, tELl wfll arrange trips

~~ ~,\ o;,:at~eT"l1t1~~ D~1~e ~'l'.,S:.,/t

Artpsrk. The dates are August 1 and
~~~up~:: ~!',"t";t~.ly . Buses depart at_
Finally, on August 19, buses will
leave at 2 p.m. for-the Albright Knox Art
Gallery and return at 5:30 p.m.

sc~'i!i'~~~~v~~~~~~g,th: ~!·i~~lYaf~

Bison baseball games and, maybe, for
some semi-pro soccer games.
Those interested In any of the trips
should call Kathy "Oe Mart at 638-20n
as soon as possible.

�Alumni salute 7 at annual awards banquet
~~h:L~x~~~~.~~~~:~~~

IWIIuel P. Clp8n .tJumnl Award during
the Aaeoclatlon's .oth annual Install•

tlon .,..d Awarde Banauet. June 1 at
Amherst. The C8pen prize Is given
.hnuaily to a gneduate who has made
:lf;"lcant contribution': to the UnlverTha

late

JaiMs

E.

Peelle,

the

Cooke

Award

for

=..ot~~B~a,:~·~f!c,~p&gt;r:

the

Walter

P.

oul=:r.:..~~br.:,~tfr:g~~~··

lumnl" w""' rwned: Charles M. Fogel,
U/B acting executl¥e vice president ;
Jamea W. Mclemon, president of

~f'~= M,ro~'·~.ma~~ c:r~:~~

eurrogateol Erie County; Dr. Leonard T.
Serfuatlnl, chairmen of the Department
of Health , Physlcel Educetlon and
Athlatlce, Glaasboro State College,
New Jereey; and Dr. Phil ip B. Wets, a
Buffalo surgeon.

Aabert 1. lllllonzl

Mlllonzl Is chairman of the U/B
Council, a trustee of the John F.

:.-'w~&lt;;;:: to~=~~ 'i':.:

Plaldenfe 8d\1a0ry committee on the
ana for the Kennedy Center, a member
of the Tuk Foroe for Judicial Reform In
Hllw Yorl&lt; State and of the Task Force
. , tile Arla for N - Yorf&lt; State, and a
.,.,.._ of the State Power Authority.
l.ocefly, he 11 chairman of the CQwlcll
of Trull- of the Buffalo Philharmonic
..S Yloa chairman of the Buffalo Area
a.mber of Commerce's Cultural
Afteks Cornmttt-._
In addition to hie law practice, he Ia a
dtnactor or c:ounMI to Firat Empire State
Cor!&gt;ormion, the Manufacturers and
T..O.. Trull Company and the
w.tem Hew YCHI&lt; Savin go Bank.
Mlllonzl alao - t h e UniYerllty as
a .-nber of Ito Council on International Studies, and a member of the
Corn.-noratlve Arts Management
Committee.
He ,._lvad hie t.:helofa degree In
11132, and hie LLB. In 1935. He was
pnaaldent of the GenetaJ Alumni
Aaaoclatlon In 1113&amp;-37.

.._ ......

money from alumni and other friends
which enabled many athletes to go on
to earn degrees ln. medicine, dentistry
and business.
For these contribu tions to the
University, its athletes and other
students, Peelle was honored with a
host of civic citations.
Called on ~ 3 pruldento

"=

Fo':,tinP.u
a:~~~· ~~!lesu~epresldents have called upon to fill
critical vacancies In the administration .
He Is now acting executive vice
president and before that was acting
!dean of the Graduate School.
With two degrees In physics from
U/ B, Feral taught science at several

~~~~~y~~~ ~~~~:~~~~~ In~,~~

1944 to 1946 he was a research engineer
at Union Radio Corporation In New
Jersey, returning to U/ B as an assistant
professor of engineering. He rose
through the ranks to assistant dean,
director of the Division of General and
Techn ical Studies, and assistant to the
president.
of F~Pv~~ h':s~~l1~1~~ ~~ut:~~::a;~
engineering societies, and Is district
go_,or for Rotary International
(Southern Ontario and Western New
York). He also serves on the General
Alumn i Board .
Head of Volklwagen-Amertca

James W. McLernon, president of
Volkswagen Manufacturing Corporation
of America and a 1950 engineering
graduate, started his canser on an
automobile assembly line In Buffalo.
He also moved through lhe ranks, rising
to manufacturing manager tor General
Motors' Chevrolet Division, responsible
for OP""'tlons at 26 plants In 1• cities.
Mclernon showed Initiative while a
student, helping to organize the under-

B=~ ~~~~~~H:or~et~ ~lv:
x::.:tt:tig~- the E~glneering Alumni

Young people will benellt from the
J.W. Mclernon Superior Student
Program which he recently established
with the U/B FoundaUon, Inc.
,

Surgeon and fencer
Dr~ Philip Wels Is chairman of the
Department of Surgery at Millard
Fillmore Hospital and a diplomate of ·
the National Board of Medical Examiners. He earned three degrees from U/B
and has been closely associated with
the School of Medicine since his 1941 _
graduation, currently as a clinical
professor of surgery.
Wels Is a member of 13 medical
societies and has developed eight
research projects since 1958.
During and after his undergraduate
days, he achieved prominence in
athletics as a l encer. He developed
U/ B's first fif!t(ng team, coached It
from 1~ . was a member of the 1936
United States Olympic squad, and Is a
member of the U/B Athletic Hall of
Fame.
.
He Is a trustee of The University at
Buffalo Foundation, Inc.

N~fo"~/'":'~

Alumn i Association 's
annual awards dinner, Mlchllel F.
Guercio, '52, was Installed as president
of the General Alumni Board , succee&lt;!lng Ernest J. Kiefer, '55.

Lecture Hall project
draws interest along spine
Although the lecture hall going up
behind Capen may prove to be one of
the more unspectacular projects now
. . . under construction at Amherst, It has

generated a great deal of Interest
among staff along the academic spine .
John Neal , vice president for facili ties planning , speculates that the Interest may have something to do with the

~~~~~p~~ wrtehnl;,a~ n~l~t~d vf~ra:rg~~

created by Its construction .
For those who wanted to know the
Identity and purpose of/ the long,-wavy
slabs of metal burrowed Into the ground
at the construction site, they are sheet
metal pilings used to prevent tl)e earth
from cavlng~ln near the excavation .
Neal explained that at some points. the dlgg lnR comes within two teet of a
utility corridor of underground power
and sewer lines. The sheet pilings
simply allow worl&lt;ers to excavate close
to the lines without the earth giving way
and damaging them .
When the S3 million building Is

completed (sometime around the.
Spring of 11181j , II will connect to the
Norton wing o the C&amp;pell complex on
the ground and first floor levels. The

Frl~~~~~~e" tga~ ~~Ttt a~t~~~ ~~~s~

and O'Brian .
The new building will have six lecture
halls: o~e seating approximatel y 450,
three at 225 each , and two at 75 seats;
each will have projection capability and
a preparation room . The " prep rooms"
will give faculty an area In -)Vhich "to
assemble classroom demonstrations.

bu?t~~.·!~~~~~Wbec~:!e~'i.tt~ir~h,';
~~~t .:m~~ le~'!ll~~eow~n~::.~

~Yts

:;:,e ~~~~~~g :o~~~h~==:, ~

match surrounding structures.
In terms of landscaping, the south
side of the building (toward O'Brian)
will face a concrete area; the north aide
(lacing the engln-lng complex) will be
flanked by a grassy ania.

Erie County Sunogata
William J. Regan, a 1938 Law School
Mra. Jane Peelle accepted the Cooke
gneduate, has been Erle County
Awwd In honor of James E. Peelle, who
Surrogate since 1963, bringing to that
diad In 11178. Peelle arrived on cempus
post an openness which has been duly
In 111:W, following a career as a star
recognized by the legal profession and
quartert&gt;ack tor PUrdue UniYerllty which
others Involved In Surrogate Court
he led to a Big Ten champlonehlp. He .,_ matters. Recently, Regan was given an
stilted aa an asalotant football coach, -" outstanding alumnus award by the Law
becoming heed ..:oach and athletic
School Alumni Association which he
dlnactor In 111311. He held that top apor1a
oi&gt;ce healled .
fa:~ until 11181l. Hla 1M and 111o17
A member of a number of

~~~=t':"uJi ~f:ti

and hla 11183 and 111&amp;4 - 1 teams
In national tournaments. Peelle

~

' :r.e

c..:• tf:~ld c:..,do~lt
t';!i
t:.ckatop at what Ia now Peelle Field on
the Main StfMI Cempua.

=

o/h¥!'n~=~fl~.:'n~~w;: 1t1~e !"~
ceught In a rii!Md transition trom a

::..'='ln~lanan....!the.,:'t~
notebooka he C8fTiad In hla poc:kat, to

~=~~~~ Co=~~o,;::nder ~~~p,:

Amerlcen Legion and has been, tor
more than 20 yeara, pilrlotlc chairman
of the fourth degree Knights of
Columb.us.
Wlmlng baakatl*l coach
Dr. Leonard T. Serfustinl's name Is

~·m~t~:f'~."':""~~h~":'~!:;

~~~·J~~~:'':'~ ~~:tt::Jd :gs~~

National . Collegiate Athletic Aaaoelathe modem period In which atudenta
lion tournaments. He was also ¥ar.alty
took control of the athletic budget .
golf coach.
HPwlle wllo quietly Integrated ·
Curnontly, he Ia: chairman of the
aporta In a.ltlmcwe In 11142 when
Department of Health, Physical Educe......., Jonea, Jr., played for U/B
lion and. Athletics at Glaaeboro State
pnet Jollna Hopkins. It alao
College In -Jersey, a full profesaor
PMIIe wllo turned dOwn a bid to the
t,.., the tennis and golf ca.ch, and a
TMglflne Bowl, U/B'a only bowl bid
popular epeM« and conaultant on
. . . . . . of a etlpulatlon that a
phrlcal "'.....
bi8Ck ~ _,ld not be ellowad to
-.lty player lit U/B where he
panlcipMa.
ewnecl thnae degrwa (In 11148, 111150 and
A gruff, blunl-epoken man wh&lt;&gt;Mo.. . • 1858), Serfuotlnl drww up plano for the
. , . . , _ IIIMMd a al,_.. - " ' tor.: yat to be conatructad phyolcal
hll atudenl..-..-, Jim Pwlle often
adueallon facility at Amllerat. L.ut
=.:...~::.:c::::':l~ !::W.:.~amed to tile U/B Athletic all

C

Award winner
Flm .....,_of ttoe eoa.g.· Nancy Welch Awanl to \llftllnla, " - t (ohown •
.,_. Cleude ~ lleftl and lrvlng·llpitzbergl. She diNCtor and
....,..._ofttoec-..B...-.et~on of .. Godopell .. thlooprlng, •nd h e o - a
...-..... In "'- of tile Coll8ge • playerw. , . , ....rd (honoring
Mra. Wetoll who clled In M8yl......,.lly to • otudent who heo ITNICie

be.,._,

_.....,. -•trlb141ono to tile Collegeo.

.

�I)UP, State
agree on

7 pe~cent
Last weekend, according to reports In
the Buffalo News and Courier EI(!Ness,
State and United University Proteaslons·
(UUP) negotiators tentatively~reed on

!~~e~~~~~~~~f f1~rs1JNv.

faculty

The contract provides for up to a 21
per cent Increase over three years,
Including

a

definite

7

per

cent

actfesr::,dt,~ ~~e :~~~h":,\''l'~o:lr.;n,

Increases for the second and th ird years

can range between 3.5 and 7 per cent.

The 1 per cent maximum will come If the Inflation rate Is at least-9-percent.
In -addition , the contract will aii9JN
one per cent of the peyroll to }be
distributed each year,"at the discretion
ot the State University Employees, "
acCQ(ding to the Courier.
Also provided, according to the
papers, are improved medical and
matltrolty benefits identical to those
~other State employees.
billll8ted cost of the contract for the
fldt:p.ear Is 524 million .
· ~y dlltalls of the pact appear to

~~~~:'l~e ~~~e~,:W':~?~~
~longing to UUP wHI have a

a - to ratify or reject the contract. A

·ulJP. .apokesperson trom the Buffa,o
Center Chapter said a copy of the
contract plus ballots will be mailed to
members In early July. UUP was
lll4daed. not to provide definite
lhfb'IIIUotion on the ~t until-later this
..._ , that spokesperson told the

Reoorter.

"rna

ratse will be retroactive to July 1,
when._ It finally appears In employees' paychecks.

Engineers overseas
U/B will be represented by two Civil
Engineering faculty at two overseas
conferences dealing with transportation
research.
.
"Papers prepared by Dr. Robert E.
Puswell and Or. Anttl Talvltie wlll be
pteMnled at the Fourth lnfematlonal
Conference on Behavioral Travel ModelIng at Gralnau, W. Germany, July 1~.
and at the -seventh annual summer

=~~~=t~d~~tu~~~.:U~t;:

sity, England , July 9-12.
PTRC stands for Planntog and Trans-

::::.~~~~ecf'~r~~u~:~~~rch~:

and practitioners, Is described as the
only one otlts kind In Europe.
At the W. Garman conference,
Paaawell will present a paper 0 n "Travel
and Act1vlty Needs of the Mobility
Umlted.." He e&lt;plained that " mobility
limited" relates to that segment of the
population - the poor, elderly; roung ,
llan&lt;Hclapped - whose persona travel
..ads are thwarted by transportation
inequltiM.
At the session In England, a peper by
Paaswell and Or. Joseph Berechman, a
visiting ra_,.ch sclentiat In the Depart-

'":!..,~ ~~~.,o:,~P.c, af~ ,.~

C:....,at Tel Aviv Unlwralty In Israel.
Talvftle.ftlans to preaent a technical

~r'"w~ G:a'~:-!~~~.rt.:.:

authoried by himself and Or. Paaswell.
In E~~gland , Talvltie will present his
own OIIDN.-on ';Transportation System
M~t In San Francisco."
":::\

JOBS
~CMLIEIMCE

.._,--John-..
u. No. 34872.

Oonter, - - . ..

- - OpotoW,- - John--

Cenoor: ---1-N No. 00002.

c...- .
•. -

ICH1ft ·
Na. 40001
. John

a-..

~­

-, U.0Na.
- .........
- 220
Miin81.
40430.IMM
0
,.,.. ICH - 220 Win- · -III . LNNa. 40382.
_ . 8(H - 22H Mlin Sl., I.N No.

32348."

'Cute' babies have advantage; study
finds adults seem to show ~favoritism'
By Joyce Buchn&lt;MSkl
Reporter SWf

There are few people honest enough
to admit that some Infanta are more
attraoctlve than ottoa..; .,d -er still
. who will confide that aome babies do

nol~=S,.S ft t'=Y ::'~\::':!~ectual
0

charllde,~uat seems mons approrate

~~tion~ -;,~o~ ~f'J. ~~~~ta:~:

that all babies are cute.

m:~r;,~ol~\~~ ~~~e~d~ac~~~

conducted studies which show that ,
despite what people may say, they
nevertheless do make fine discriminations when II comes to j udging baby
attractiveness.
In one of her stud ies on Infants ,
Hildebrandt showed college students 60
pictures of babies at aiK age levels
between three and 13 months. The
researcher found that students r)lted as
cuter babies who had a l&amp;r"Q8'foreheed,
big cheeks, big eyes and a small nose
and mouth.

These are the same facial features
which make puppies and kittens appear
so Irresistible, Hi ldebrandt mused .

People ex{l8CI more attract' - .
from female than from male ln. . . . Hildebrandt eKplalned, and likely ~

The cuteness st81"100lype peaked
when the Infants looked the most
babyish; at 9 months for girls and 11
months for boys. The age difference,
eKpl alns Hildebrandt, Is attributable to
the advanced physical attractiveness of
female Infants.
The same study also showed thai an
Infant of unknown se• Is more likely to
be labeled as a boy, while babies

photos, babies who were ~ . .
cutest by subjects _ , lootc.d • . .
longest, and conversely, thoaa ·...._.
the least attractive got tha . , . _
glances.
-

considered the most attractive are more

likely to be conslderad female .
Results from another ·study conducted by Hildebrandt supported the
eKi stence of se• stereotyping of Infants
based on physical attractiveness.
Hildebrandt found that when seK of
Infants was made known to subjects,
the infant's cuteness rating was
adjusted accordingly. In other words,

:rde~:!g:';~~~:~..,~~emwa~ b~".;
more-.than.cute male.

fer.,at:~:o~=~~:s~~

It may be th&amp;l adult behavior OM be

~'W~!~~dt b~otO:.,h~. l~s

.where several Infants are gathered
(such as In a day care center/ ,

~:t'e'\':r~~r.l'fr:~~~e~ ~~ ~~~~~~

terms of vlaual contact - to thosa they
feet are the cutesL
·
Adults can be made aware that they
respond to eKl8(11al c4.es with Infanta as
they do with edulls and o lder children,
Hildebrandt said. When" they are
educatad about such reactions, they
can then adjust their behavior to avoid
preferential treatment. ·

U/B - Found~tion support up 'dramatically'
The U/B Foundation, Inc., recorded a
fourth consecutive "dramatl~ Increase"
In gifts during 1978, the fund-raising
agency's annual report (Issued this
week) reveals.
During the calendar year which ended
last DeCember 31 , the U/BF received
$3,211 ,067.45 from alumni and friends,
·:t".J."'sldent, John M. Carter enumer-

$235 , 108 .~7 of the gifts total was
unrestricted; 52,711 ,153.51 was earmeri&lt;ed for specific, restricted purposes; and $264,805.67 went for
additions to endowment.
_
The distribution of restricted funds
by faculties and other units was as
follows : Archi tecture snd Environ ~

Thls Included $675,200 In support
from alumni and 52,535,867.45 from
other sources.
.
Alumol gifts consisted of $35,510.47
from the Annual Fund (contributions of
up to $49 per person); $15,923.72 from
the Loyalty Club (Individual gifts of
between S50and $99) ; $139,338.77 from

ies,

00

~ .~.~ry ~~~'::; \t~ ~est~!/li

Aasoclatea (maJor donora of $10,000 or
more); $100,160.10 In bequests;
$58,289.81 In alumni dues; and
$125,013.23 In earnings from endowment provided by -'ler alumni gifts.
The a2.5 million In contributions from
"othera" Included: . the Corporate
Alliance (an on-going program of
ln-"**t by local corporations),
~-7 .1111; corporate glfta and grants,
~, 1311_,~ f~lon gifts , and
Q!Wita, ~. 188.:?!i. orgentatlon gifts
and tnnta, """174&amp;:15; frieilc:ls ,
s11s,•.a;
pro~.....,... MMc:a pey- · tt,1117,1110.14; and ....tng.
from
PI"O¥Idad by
alumni aowces . $10'7,548,17.

..._,t

non-

'Lit~~. tt~~~ .t~·J~~~lo~~·s~n,1.
$lD,191 .80;

~ineering

· and

~f.:~~s~tfe~'i:&amp;-ss1 :~~; ~:~

- $150,098.03; Health Related Professions $10,453.84, Medical

~~48. 11,_Nus~~~87o-:"2s, S3[.;~·~

$1 ,239~.69; Law and Jurisprudence,
$15,014.54; Management, $121,705.07;
Natuntl Sciences and Mathematics,
5218,237.61 ;
Social
Sciences,
521 ,522.05; University Administration,
$388,280.49;
UIB
f.oundalion,
$91,633.63; U/8 Alumni Assoc/et/Dn,
$77,809.34.
Cerler llated these highlights of the

y-:

•The dedication of the Baird ""Point
outdoor amphllh- at Amherst.
• The dedication of the Dr. Bemhardt

&amp;..::~·,:=~·=-a.::?'
•A - . 1 lnqMN In

~'==:!/'Ita

~t

ancl ..... lona
•The aatabllall- of . . EloecutNe
Conference Center In the School of

Management through the generosity of
Mr. Calvin T. Kraus, '35, and the C.I.T.

Co!ft:~a~~~abllltation

of certain facll ·
ities within the Medical , Engineering
and Dent~~Schools to further enhance
the educ~~nal process.

e•~~:nc~r ~~nta~~~~vl3~al -~en~~

faculty and University staff.
•An Increase In undergraduate library
~~u;~~~~~N~~~r..r:3. money grat)tS
• The dedication of the Unlwralty
Council Room and Capen Hall Inner Art
Gallery .
Since Its establishment In 19112, the
Foundation has received $38.5 million
In private gifts In behalf of the
Unl-slty.

Carden heads
·

Medal~mni -

Or. Lawrence M. Cardi.n, a Buffalo

~~~·~f ~ad~=. ~'!!.'!, ~~

president of the Medical Alumni
Aaaoclatlon.
Carden, an ualstant clinical profaor of urology hera and a memb« of.llle
tacutty alnca 11153, Ia ~lei of •
Oepertment of Urology at • Mllq'
Hoapltal aa wall aa a member of Institution's bowel of dlractora.
,

·· •1·-

• •·. , '

""'' '1--:

�DOCUMENTS
Computing panel lists
timetable; procedures
The Computer Allocations Committee
iCAC) has assumed responsibility from TAP
1

~~~r~ fn4j~rar~~ :~~u~~~n~e~~~c~&amp;
}~~9~A~d:~t;/e;a~ an~ su~~::Ss~~
r~:vk~~~;;;.~ported In the May ~7 Issue of

wii~h: 1~!~:~7gu~J=~13~~~~1tP[~;'g::~~

timetable and procedures to be followed th is

~f~r

·

=}:~~~~~~~~ t~N~r~~n~~~:'bef~~;~

1%fa~';'1;y t~e,,:~'~hew~~rre~t ~~~~~~~
but without any money and without any
users validated thereunder. Add itionally, a//

~~ns~s ;~~~~~~~rr:o~~;,c'e~~!f:~ ·~~

~;o::e: · 1979 unless rea.ctlvated prior to
8

ld;0~tc~le: ~t?oo~f~~~r:v~~~~~~~:"

September 1, 1979. When .NEW BUD

is

:~~~·sdJ~~~r,,:,~::,e g,~::{fV:Sste~,~~i

:!: ~rf;~~.~~b'(;~ed:::N~~~n~t~~~T~t

rut these allocations will be strictly
the new master file and NEWBUO will be
segregated from the research allocations.
unBYallabla. 1ransactlona....agalnaHhe· new
Th&amp;.f. have always been separately alloc~Htd_ _master-flte-wlll be processed, as usual, once

~r ~~:.~~~_:~:a ~f:c.~~:u~~·~~~~

eag~ ~~r;·24 to July 21,

• Allocations for RESEARCH purposes will
be made on a departmental basis. Chairmen
will be asked to undertake to pay for part of

1979-80, both INSTRtf~TIONAL and NONINSTRUCTIONAL.
•
7 . .July 30, 1919 and Thtlfflafter

budgets In their departments. In 1979.8()',
the Panel proposes to allocate up to1 $7 In
research computing services for each $1
purchased by a department. In order to
assure chairmen of the continued availabillty of Research Foundation funds for this

suballocated to charge an~roject numbers
and that User IO's are validated under
project numbers. It will be nac•eary ..to
reactivate a charge number or...;j)roject
number prior to doing this. Use the
NEWBUO procedu·re.

::~d~~cf~~~~b~~~~g system. has ~~

Ketter-opposes Siegal's
·plan for CUNY operations
' Assemblyman Mark Siegel's "have
your cake and eat it, too," proposal for
the future tundlnlf and governance of
City University of New Yor1&lt; Is based on
political expediency, not on "any real
educational reasonmg, " U/B President
Robert L. Ketter charged In remarks at
the Engineering and Applied Sciences
commencement, May 19.
Siegel, Ketter explained, "has pro·
posed that the state, which now
provides 75 per cent of the funding for
the City University senior colleges,

~r.~~ sl~el~u:!~~~s ~~a~J..'ria~r:-~~
~~~\~~~ert~:u~:~onu~~r~i~~

eenlor colleges and community col·
leges to be maintained in a unified,
::-..::., •r.~ln~f topu:li~:fh~;
1 - -inlecl ~ both the Mayor
llld Gowwnor "and weighted to reserve
a IMjorlty of seats for New Yorf&lt; City
rwldenta," Ketter explained.
It Ia simplistic to have one
Stail..tundad public higher education

::rt~ ~t;!,t~ fie~IJ.nother
11

for ~e

~ =:' ::eg~~·· ::~c~::,~..-~~ -

clllled for appolntroent of .a study
comml..lon 1o evaluate various aolutiona which have been advanced.
:S1eQe1 ral.-1 local hackles ewller

this year by calling the Amherst
Campus "grandiose" as It stands today ,
and suggesting a pertng of future plans.

n... Ia a ...,ona!blllty

City Unl-slty Is distinguished and
the State "does have a responsibility to
provide appropriate higher aducatlon
within the City," Kelter acknowledged .
But , he said, a great daal of study has
been given to this problem already.
Ona was that dona by the Wessen
Commlsalon In 19n; Ita recommendations - . t "far-raachtng and offended
- many entrenched political and bureaucratic Interests," Ketter recalled. "TheY,
- . t therefore succesatully opPQSed.'

::~~~~. ~~':lV:.:Or.::o~e

ona of Ita principles: that Is, . "the
recognition that In highly ~ verse
oyat11111a such as State Unlveralt)l and
City Unl..,..lty, Individual units . are
dtaalmllar In acope and quality and,
therefore, have reason to expect
dlaalmllar financial treatment. "
The Board of Higher Education which
.liOW governs City Unl..,..lty expires on
June 30 of this yew, Ketter aald. "For
tllaJ INSOR , many people would like to

:;
'r:;::'~u::'. 'l"'.,g'%':~~~:V.~~
thla would be advllntagaous to public
higher education . Therefore, I would

~u.!=~~~;~~~~~:n~=

lor an *'&lt;llllonal year, hopefully under

curTIIRI financing -.ngements."
Ketter proposed further that the
Gov.nor appoint a naw and lndapen•
dent commlsalon to evaluate the
var'lous ~lutlons which have been
advanced In regard to the future of City
Unl-.lty. He urged that "this
commission study these raoommendatlons In vi- of what Is tlest for pUblic
higher ed.-tlon in all of the State of
Vorl&lt; and not just In terms of what .
Ia beat for City University end Y&lt;&gt;ri&lt;

Cit "

llddtttonatly1 . Ketter aug~ that
the commiMIOfl define ~te

~u~~:;:a'~r '1,~;:,ut~~:.~~h d1:u~~=tl~

methods for dissimilar financing of
dissimilar Institutions so the strengths
of this State's University Centers can be
maintained.
. Finally, he would want the commisslon to recommend to taxpayers
"whether It is In thetr best Interests to
have a low-tuition and low-aid public
sector or one which Is based upon
high-tuition and high-aid ."

~~~~se~io Pr~n0~~t»t!~ve;~~J;or~ro~ll 1 ~

as to whether certain of those that are In
college are qualified to remain Is
relatively easy,' he said. 'It can be
made, and made justly, If the moral
~r~f~e of the faculty can stand the

non- instructional allocation. It must be
emphasized that If subsequent additional
funding i s approved through CAC , these
small allocations together · with any

1

oaTh'=s':! Yu:,~=~"fng ~.Ill:~'~:!

s!:.~~,;,~~!':S~~~"F~~

tty" w.. chosen as this~umrmir's focus
.,.. pertially In recognition of 1979

~~~·

~:::. ~rr~~~fwl~

·-:::
Unl-.lty and commWIIW appeal.
r,

numbers and project numbers not ,._
activated will be phyelcally removed by
UCS.

fe%~:3,n~~Ti~~~83,n~gb{g ~'6TStrlbu-

Colleges focus
on the family

Scotia. Hla most widely-read books ·are
~;;~;, o~:o~!s/!.tmerlca and The
TantatY.ety scheduled for the end of
July Is an open symposium on child
abuse and an· August lecture which will
give an International perspective on
childhood. _The July symposium will
feature local social service experts
while the August event w\11 likely bring
In out-of-town speakers .

La:e~n:~~: ~~~~~~g;~~~~~ 5W~~~ ~\~
an~~h=o~c:ls:': ~~~:er. ·~z~~c::rr:~

small allocations may be requested
DIAECTLY at the Computing Center at any
time from the CAC coordinator.
Finally, It is recognized thaf1his policy
may wo!i( undue hardship on some
departments anll lndtviduals. Substantial
allocations will be made to the VIce
Presidents of Academtc ·Affalra and Health
SClences for the relief of such situations
throuQh the normal academic chains of
communication .
nmetab..
1. JuneS, 197g. Distribution of materials

moral courage of our electad leaders
can stand the strain and they can act for
the Interests of all of the State. "
It Is that same type of moral courage,
Ketter told engineering graduates, that
"I hope each ot you graduating will take
today from this Institution and exercise
In the practice of your new profession. "

1

for Academic Year 1979-80 will then replaCe
ttle existing one.
·
8. Saturday, September 1, 197tr
8.1 The year--end procedure to close· out
the 1978-79 allocation petiod will commence
at 12:01 a.m. No users will be allowed on the
computer until ~hla is completed .•-.Nonnal
usage Is not ex~ted to resume until 9:30
a.m.
....
,
...J:!
8.2 All paying accounts will be transler-

=~~o~=~~~~~~;,'.~n;~cttn~dt~~l . ~h!~

"In the same manner, the answers to

R.:,l~~ef!::l,[::' fnt~~~~~n'atch~t

cof~u+h"egCAC

~~~en~' ;~t~g~.e +~: ~.·~t:',\~er:~ :r~

1

l~~n~u~~u~.:': ~~~~rr~=· 'ftn tl:

spectlves, Mothers and Daughters, arid
the Family as an Institution are among
areas being explored .
Non-cradlt, public lectures are also
alated. Plans - . t just finalized for a
July 9 appNr&amp;nce by Edgar Frleder&gt;berg, the Internationally-recognized
educator, scholar and author who
taught at U/8 In the late 60s.
Friedenberg's topic will be "Why the
Industrial West Ia Hung-Up on
Families,"

approved allocation win hot
be usable for computin~ until SeptembM 1,

7:1

~~~~r~m0~ut:;8 r..:U~~~s ~~~~~~:f.
11
~~~o:·':~c,~~: rnm·~~e· ~~~~e~~l

~=(~S.,:~C:.~~~:~~~~ ~l:.'lo~

The Colleges are conaboratlng this
summer to offer a variety of courses
which focus on thefl\mlly.
The four-hour courses, offered In the
first and thlrd Summer Sessions, will
explore the fiinlly from a variety of
~spectlves . Parenthood Education,

the assent of the chairman and the Director

this
rat io
Small allocations of $100 or less will be
made to any faculty member requesti ng it,
whose total annual request does not exceed
this amount. Sim ilarity. graduate students ,
who request it , will be given an annual
allocati on of $50 or less provided that they
produce a letter signed by a faculty member
m their department supporting the reques t.
These small allocations are intended to
minimize the red tape requ ired of those

remind~ "of what a former Chancellor
of this University, Samuel Capen , said
In his Inaugural address about

pri~~ ~~c~=t~~bs~~~~.shf~:~ ~ c~~cf:t~

minimiZe any interruption to one's access to

~a~~g~~d~~~;e~~~~J~ars

~~~ely..~~n \~~rp01ft',~f~r~:~. ~~~~
~Pn~ !~f:~o~~~re'[te~f..!rde~ee :-:~

1

se~ ·!o~~~tmt: ~A8~~~~~u3~~~u~~

conlQU.Ing service lines In their budqets

orsa:,c~bt:~f~~ ~r\~~~ ~~~cfsu~f11 ~~~~8

It take. COUfll9e
Such questions "are difficult ," Ketter

1879 • Noilncauon

~~n ~~~=me~~ c~::r~r:=;,g~ th~

to
tion to and collac:tlon of materials from
faculty membere b!' Departmental Chairpersons.
3. July 9, 197Q - Preparation of the

-

;~~=t7~~ s~::,r;:~t~~~~~ Fr;:;::et,~

Departmental Chairpersons and ~ranamls·
slon of all materlale to CAC.

~: ~~7r ~~ t~g~~~~~~~::·~~putlng
0

:::=~~~~~~':,!'r=. computer

NJ~-~~;~ur:r.g~~~~r=r~~~;. ~~

proved by CAC, will be eal abllahod.
5.2 Departmental charge and project

Fulbright competition Is open
The Institute of International Education announces the official opening of
the 1980-81 competition for gt!"IS for
graduate study or research abroad In
academic fields and for J'rofeaslonal
training In the creative an performing
arts.
•

a~!)3.efrsg'~u~~~~.~P~mx::~~~

tor the year under tei1T1s of the Mutual
Educational and Cultural Exchange Act
of 1961 (Fulbright·Hays Act) and from
foreign governments, universities, cot~
porations and private donors.
Applicants must be U.S. citizens at
the time oJ appllcatJon, must generally
hold a bachelor's degree or Its
equivalent before the beginning date of
the grant and, in most cases, must be
proficient In the lanQuage of the host
country. Excapt for certain specific
awards, candidates may not hold the
Ph.D. at the time of application.
Candidates for 1~1 are Ineligible for
a grant to a oountry II they have been
doing gr.duata wort&lt; or conducting

research In that country for six months
or more during the academic year
1979-80.
Creative and performing artists are
no~ required to have a bachelor's, but
must have four years of professional
study or equivalent experience. Socl~l'
wort&lt; applicants nwat have at feaat two
yaars of professional experience alter
the Master of Social Wort&lt; degree·
candidates In madlcine must have a;i
M.D.
\..
Selection Is basad on the academic
and/or . professional record of the
applicant, the validity and feas lbltlty of
the proposed study plan , the appll·
cant 's lan9.uage preparation and personal qualrficatlons. Preference is given
candidates who have not had prior
~J'.'l~~c'::1br~ . extgnded study or
Information and applications may be
obtained at the CounciN&gt;n 1ntemallonal
Studies, 124 Richmond Quad, Ellicott.
The deadline tor submission of
applications Is October 1.

�•

. .Ibid

SENATE
Loubere
panel reports

TO : Faculty Senate Executive Committee
FROM : Senate Comm ittee on Academ ic
Freedom and Responsibility. Chair: Lao
Loubere
RE : Activities during 1978-79 I

th:r~'·,/tFt~~ t';, :n~d~·~~ X. bO'~i ~'=
11

11

activity consisted of closed heari ngs In
order to discover evidence of violation of

.

~fi1~~~m~ce f~o~~C:dt~:P~~~df~ore~r.~~

hearings In the Reportfk and the Spectrum
and i nvited both faculty and studente. Only
one faculty member appeared In the first

0

==·of~:ar~~~s ~g~ n ob~~~ l n.,.tt;e :;:';.~
loformatlon and therefore have not profited
from the heartn8s. The one witness who

mr~~u~~r!~~~~ ~~~=. ·~:era

campuses other than our own and was
therefore Irrelevant .
Several other cases were brought to our

- ~~~=~~~h~~ !~ 0 .U~P~ -Pt,~~:-=·o~yd o~:
8

case that involved us In greater depth, the

~~:~~he ~h~s1~~d~~~.~~~~~~ 6~~~'~:~~
0

airing of this case before the Senate
Executi ve Committee, we recommended
that the departmental grtevance committee
continue its review of the case, this time

•Commencements '1-9

~~!nYn l~u~~~~t.ig:tl~~dt~ ~~e t~~~~~

~-l,cal.4)

1965 when he was appointed to the
SUNY Board, a post he held untl l1978.
Other c o m - t •

At other commencements:
-one hundred thirty-two graduates of
the Scllool of Nuratna were warned they
must take charge of changas likely to
occur In their profession rather than
being content simply to naact to
changes. Nursing Professor Judith
Ronald predicted at Kleinhans Music
Hall, May 13, that nur- will find
themaalves employed more and more
outside traditional care aattlngs - In
such places as the home, nelghbortlood
clln)cs, schools, Industries, and healthrelated facilities. Growing numbers of
nurse practitioners with edvanced
degrees will function In Independent
and group practices, she said. Also,
computers will become more Important
In health care oper.atlons, offering
benefits In terms of scheduling,
ordering, keeping track of Information
about patients, etc. Sut, Ronald

~~~:~~ni.rn"':l! ~~~~ ~f~~~~~~

efforts. Eighty-eight nursing graduates
received B.S. dea...a and 44 others
were awarded. the~ .S.

•Congraasman John LaFalce urged
72 graduates of the School ot
ArchltectiA and Envkonmer!UII Dealgn
to further a " renaissance In the world of
design and architecture." Pay more
attention " to quality and conservation,
to preservation and to the human
environment," the Congressman counseled . Twenty-nine graduates received
the Bachelor of Professl;;nal Studies In
Archltacture, 33 were awarded the
Bachelor of Arts In environmental
design, and 10 received the Master of
Archltecture degree In ceremonies at
. St. Joeeph's Church , Friday, May18.

•Dr. Francis J. Turner, dean of the
School of Social Work at Wilfrid Laurier
University, urged 57 graduates of the
U/B School of Soclal Work to be
motivated
a basic respect for human
dignity: AI SQCial Work graduates
recelved the Master of Social Work

or

~{:,ine ~~fi·Th~~e a~EIIi~tt. the
• "The Future

Requ lr~ength

and

~:~e~1;:1ty ~=ce~.:,~e h;J~
1

Sunday, May 20, at Squire Hall in

~;~~~:~~~~o~ .:lJ''We'!ie~~u~e:~• .('~~
colleges and universities this spring .
Community service awards were presented to minority community leaders
both on and off campus.

I

•Wilson Greetbatch, Inventor ol the
Implantable cardiac pacemaker, received the 1979 Dean's Award for
engln=.::hlevement as 467 stuEngl..-lfta end Applied
dent&amp;
sa- deg.- , Salurday, May -19.
Principal apeeker was President Robert
L ~-, (liM aapwate atory.)

•One hundrad twenty-five ~tes
racalved degnaas from the
I of
~. at Klelnhana Music Hall
(ti,;'B.!i.~ay 20. Sawnty-elght received

~~-~;, ~,~~~e;.Yih~M-~~

and 11, ' the Ph.D. Nine students
received Pharm.D. deaiM8, Including
RenM A. Oedarlch of Bat.vla whose
diploma WD conferred poathumously.

=t'et.'=::i?~laa::~l.~~

In her memory to be p-ted to an
"exceptional U/B Pllennaey student
recelvlng the B.S. c~eg,.. who has
choaenfo pursue the Pharm.o .•

0

~~~~~"s7=dsJ~:\~'~. ~~~~~h":.J

emphasis away from spaclalization
toward the more generalized area of

:::''~~:;,uc;::. ~~~~r;/ ~~esJ.,o,;,~

professionals themselves must develop

continuing education programs for
practitioners . Here again, he warned, If
dentists themselves do not take the

~~~:~~~· r~7~ t~ o.o~~gh~~~~
111

and two were awarded maste(s degrees
in dental specialties. Sixteen others
received post-graduate study certifi-

cates.

School's larges'Jraduating class ever

~::~~ ~=re~~!'t.:-~~~~~~~r?~~

•Judge Matthew J. Jasen welcomed
234 Law Schoof graduates to whet he
celled a world of ·•extraordinarily rapid
change" at exercises held at Artpark,
Saturday, May 26. Changes going on In
the Law, he said, make It Incumbent
upon the Class of 1979 to join In
crr!atlng a new order. No law Is too
sacred to change, Jasen told his

l~~a\!)a~~~ar~~o ~~~':;,_\\~~~ ~~

:a'1d~n":;8 Th~~1acl~~1~ ofJ~~-~es,T::

Europe and Japan . We heve to Improve

Constitution should be a tool to serve,

•Graduates of the V oool of
Management heard a • I from
Representative John LaFalce tor more
cooperation among workers, bosses,
and govemment In order to combat

our performance to remain competitive

In the International market , LaFalce
said at Kleinhans, Saturday, May 19.
• Two representatives of the graduatIng class of the School of Medicine
reminded their colleagues of both the
opportunities and the challenges of
their field, S·Jnday, May 20, at
Kleinhans. Robin Adair called attention
to the diversity of the graduating class
and to the wide variety of opportunities
open to .them In medical practice and in
research and administrative roles.
Some class members, she rredicted ,
11

• Two hundred fifty-nine students
received degrees from the School of
Heellh Relel«&lt; Profeulona at Kleinhans 'Music Hall friday, May t8. Dr. F.
Carter Pannlll, vfce prasldent of healt h,.
. sciences, conferned the B.S. on 1~
graduates, the M.S. on 41 , the M.Ed. on
22, and the Ed.O. on 7 others.

and ufll9t~S will surely ba created . He
urged.¢aduates to " fight for the right to
perform many types of dental pro-

~1111 ,::~~e1;heo\~no~H/~e.'t:' ~~

practice of medicine; some wi ll have
very little Impact. N. Joseph Gagliard i
called upon his classmates to remember that each patient Is a universe of
three Interacting galaxies - emotional
and spiritual as well as physical. The
Med" School yearbook, The Iris , was
dedlcat.ed to Ora. Alexander C. Brownie
and Murray J. Ettinger, both of the
Department of Biochemistry, fn recognition of their teaching abilities and
contributions to students' education.
The·lrls also saluted Dr. George Thorn,
a 5()-year medical graduate , now a
Harvard professor. The medical class of
1979 .nnounced -purchase of a sign

:r:e,h~nto:~~~f Hta~~ d~~~~tl~~

Medicine. One hundred thirty-seven
students received M.D. degrees and 30
graduates wwa awarded Ph.D.'s.

• •Too much spaclallzatlon· can be
dangerous, 116 graduates of the School
of Dentlatry heard from Dr. Joseph
Natlella at the Buffalo Convention
c:.&gt;ter, May 20. Natlella noted there Isgrowing prassure from outsiders to
create comprehensive dental care units
· to serve maximum numbers of people.
If private practitioners are ·not sensitive
to th- needs, he said , clinics
sponaorJd by government, Industries

not a master to enslave. Jasen spoke of

a future lrtwhlch computerized research
and other elactronlc aids will be more
important to legal practitioners, In
which private practices will dwindle In
number as prepaid legal service plans,
legal clinics and " paralegals" multiply.
Econom ic pressures will mandate
delegation Jof routine tasks to legal
technicians , he predicted , following a
trend already established In the
medical, dental and engineering fields .

Pautler to join
VPAA' s staff
Dr. Albert J. Pautler, Jr. , professor of

curriculum development and lnslruc·
tlonll) med ia, will be joining the staff of
the vlce president for academic affairs,

:~~~~e.~~~,f~;na~d ~~n~·sf~~W~
has announced .

While continuing major academic
responsibilities In the Faculty of Educational Studies, Pautler wJii work with
the vice president In "areas of current
policy Interest. Precise duties remain to
be worked out directly between Bunn
and Pautler, but may likely Include
liaison with various spacial programs,
particularly those In which vocational
education figures prominently," Associate VPAA Claude Welph suggested.
,
Pautle&lt; will be the second VPAA
•acuity associate. The competition for
-;;,,.., associates remains open.

Pautler joined the faculty here In
1970. He came from Rutgers where. he

~':t '::'t ~:OCo':::.rmo~~~~'fl ~~fi~~~~

Education. In -1976-n, he was on
·sabbatical as a research associate with
the National Advisory Council on Vocational Education .
He holds the B.S. and M.S. from
Buffalo State and the Ed.D. from U/8 In
vocational education.

examination. As of this writing , the case has
.not been resolved . We are water! ng the
procedures closely and mJy make some
recommendations after the outcome.

an~sr;~~~~b~~~Y~~~:~~~f~~~ J~~:!:

1ind the need for addit ional statements. The
SUNY Senate resolution printed In the

j~fu'f~7~)n:~~~e~~8qv~~ie~· ;~-d~;ur~

AA~P " Statement on Professional Ethics"
of April 1966. The committee specifically

d~::i~~ Ws~ ~~o~~!:~~sl~~:wa~8o~a ~~

faculty are prone to commit. Each act , It
tell, must be judged In light of general
principles and university regulations. Thul
f~~u~~a':e!~~~:?e . for example, faculty who~
Responsibility for sending In grlldM
before the deadline Is a concern of the

~~~~t~~~o;:~~~U~~."~~ra,:lt:::.t~
has been

lm~osalble

to convene a quorum;

~:~g:~Pn~ a~su.!~1f.'V:~,'~:'C~~

Cas

Who
decided-to walt until the Fall to take ,
up this matter. By then , there .-should be
more data available for the new committee
to measure the seriousness of the problem
and the~uses of it.

Workshops for
professionals
A series of Professional Development
workshops for professional staff
employees will be conducted this
summer by the Personnel Department,
featuring a series of campus administrators.

The programs are being offered by
reservation only. Employees have b&lt;Min
asked to fill out forms IMicatlng which
of the sarles they would like to attend.
Individuals will be notified If their

r~~·~~~re~ ~,c;,c:~~Y.

Thursday,
June 7, with a publlc affairs workshop:
"Changing Perceptions of the Untver-

~\~~o~~uC:~ ta"ti~~s o~~\f.;

Affairs. Slated for t-5 p.m. In the
Human Resources Development and
Training Center In the John Beane
Center at Amherst, the workshop will.
look at how perceptions of the
University are changed, who the

~~'fa'1~'X~se~~~~~n~ri ~~o~~aaa

Tuesday, June 12, In Spaulding
Cafeteria (from 1:30 to 3:30 p.fll.), Dr.

~t~~~;,~ ~lPa~~~k~;, v~~~~:~d~r~ th'~

University-wide Study Group on Attrf.tlon/Retention, will talk about " Stall
Involvement: Student Retention and the
Future of the University ." Slggelkow
will present findings of the retention
study group which are· pertinent to
professional staff .

T.:1~ewlfr't!~fsc:..=, ~~=;
afternoon , June 19, by James Carrier,
director of the Administrative Comput-

in~ee;~:.,·:.1,g:,ac;e~~~ -~~~nJ:'ri
Beane Center, Dr. Thomas

.G~tteridge ,

~~~8;\~:::~~~~o~fAI~:~~..!i
to Know about Individual earDevelopment but Ware Afraid to Aak."
The -les has been arranged by
Rosalyn Wilkinson, manager, human
resources development Jnd training,
Personnel Department.

�........

GOvernment cfocuments imlt called 'beSt In region~
Lockwood Libnlty'a Government Docu,_,.. Department Is the best In · the
N~em United States and Eastern
~ according to Mr. Charles
=-~lonel ,...._,uotlw of the

with pride, Is that If · a government
document has been Issued ln tha past
!~-~earsce, ,sthervealllsabanle s"awfmew
ullyeregoodn11
8
0
0
~-·
h
campus. The coHectlon tries, too, to

Canada, also sfnce 1963. The ~hllos·ophy Is that Canadian and u .s . lstory
are Inter-related and that, by collecting
documents from both countries, the
library can prOYide extensive lnforma-

l i o n - - Cln .t .:llltles- organ!-

depository.

tha early exploration and settlement of

~ th":/:=:1~':=/':;,N~

::'~~uf,.,f~~e hr~~~~of~~

~ froollhel*t

zatiolltfboeeln tt. libraries of many of

::'tt~_:o~~~A~~~~=~~

0

..

'Project of the Library of Conaress from

which It receives thousands ol relatively

~-- ........;;.:;r~ng a

..;;;;:r
~ · on how to
looal Clllllec1ion 'lor teaCIIInO

~~='~,e:=,;.~:rt;"B!

use the

CIA, news" releases from many parts of
the gowmment, a'ld reports to Congross from the General Accountto.g
Office. Lockwood has also acquired a
large bound set of numbered Congresslonal reports and documents
known as "the serial set ," and has of.
rQicroiiJm all known ConQreaalonlal"
cbmmltteehearingsdoW!f"to1113.4. later
onesareavallabielnotherlorms.
The collection subscribes, too, lO a
service which proVides mlcroprfnt edtlions of all documents listed In the
government's. Monthly catalog. This
Service began In the 1950s and makes
available a complete "blickup set" of
materials In case originals become lost
or damaged .
" Subscriptions like this are extremely
costly," said Henrich, " but we believe
they pay lor themselves by making It
possible to lind Information here In
Western New York that otherwise would
require many trips to Washington , New
"York or elsewhere."
As budgets can be stretched , mlcroform documents in the "grey area"
between federal and private are col !ectad: reports and contracts Issued by
contractors, universities and others
working on federal grants.

and ,.,_
~andtor-..munlty tnrOfiNI!Jon.
Tlw -'«&lt;ns laatufed panels of local
and 'Milling ~ta lltwarlans, and
......sed ,a.y 8ppr()ximalely 100
and hldl¥kluala from

......,,acuity,
•
ntW..__ ___,
~

~

l--• •• -·

~

-

,_..,forpublk:aliona ol the federal
110 JMNnt, has since 111153, deIn thoae 111 _.a a file of
Merna. Documents are , _
by the.U.S. without charge, on
. . llfll'lao that they . . open to public
atudy and use. •·
In lhe last ·years alone, Lockwood 111111 rec:el* -.! to other
l*ta of Un'--'ly Llbreties still another 141 ,000 bllla and 84,000 otherf-.1 documaota,. ,
Last year, 33, 874 U.S. documents
_.., receMid and ·processed - -35 per
cent more than the year before (indlcatiw of the~ever-lncreaslng flood of
-wtllch laengulfinJ!gOvamment).
The move to new lacijties in Amherst
last summer marked the end of an
eight-~ period during which space
shortages forced the Documents Department to kl!eP an ever-growing part

!!!

-~l !~~t.~~~~~- !r ~~rdl~~~

T.......,

hlr lhe-..-. time
~ a
- •11\e 0 ·

~~ake ff~~s 1tl: 1~~

the new

1

:.~'':&amp;\~'-;':,~~~~~&lt;;'~ '::.,~
patrona can -what we have " Henrich

rJ~iii~

for

Finally, Lockwood's resources extend to documents of the European

HowtoflndH
The docu,.,ts confenonce at L:&lt;&gt;&lt;*wood !*'ltered on how to loc.lll and

11m-

1

11

J

t

slgn or veto a particular· r,tece of
leglaiatlon. They ~sually conta n copl~
of reports from various commltt- of
the Legislature, correspondence between the Governor and other State

f~~~';.cm,c~:::,~\~~rt~er::,'.,ce..;.!~~: 1~

Information available, an urgent need
exists 1or adequate lndexJng to show
what the University has and where It Is.

~~~~~~~ th~~~.lat~~e ~~.~~~~f"w~t~';~=~.:r,~:~·cr:
" bllljacketa" for each administration are
not made available until a governor
leaves office; Carey mate]iais are not
yet available.
What's at SEL and HSL
IIi the Science .and Engineeri ng Library where Mr. Thomas Lindsey Is In
charge of micrographics and technical
reports substantial holdings of documents irom the National Aerona~llcs
and Space Adl]lioistratlon and . the Atomlc-Energy Commisslort raslde. Sel· , • ;.l , •
, , ,

of the State government documents to
be distributed to depository libraries,
he pointed out .
Although that Ubrary Issues a
monthly checklist of documents, only
about live per cent of materials listed
are autonlatlcally dlstnb,uted; anotber
10 per cent are available upon request ,
but "80 peo: cent are not available at aU"
throuol) t~ ageocy.
. ·
~n aald :~fpends ~~ W'
cent Of b1s time ri~ng with ond ovldual

-.., -'. .16olijng
, .,Eaeii11 the iil!ualj(jn aomeiNhat:·t~,..
I · . · • Is I ~at tll!rvlc;e Wh~h Ill~.
Henri"!!

all"'..uy:
-"--'"""=c..c.. : Jo ~ 'we don t
~ •• a reuon
..teet thia Item. but rail;!
Ill.- fa ~Y reason why
~,.y M1act ft. The reault , he said

in

eff~:.r;~~:~~':~~:\~,bcat,.

rg:~~"'J~r~~:rro~~ ~~~~r:,~?attro

'l.lnkno n "
Both Henrich ·and Edwans Heiman
Indicate that the Government Oocuments Collactlon is more than willing to
provide special worl&lt;shops lor any U/ B
Instructor who wants to bring hll or her
classes Into the library,. These two-hour
sessions Include an hour and fifteen
minutes' lecture on raeourcea awl!lfable
and a ~lnute practical otQrC!Je in
documant·ra)!Mval .
i

, ,.

,

, ' ,,'

r~':~, :• ·, ~~~.;:;~~ Ui ~. ernpting to, Obi~' :-T'~~:to,SJ:lP:tY ~~~~let· ~--!

,--,::~~~='~
to r,. ~teetive
~-~tlft!~~flilwifNtt~· ' S. 4ocuments.U
~··
•W.l10m-among large

•

again ,
has a large nssource of materials con-

inneth efearft..JI1ew950sde
. poThesltoUr/lesB llfborrary Is
lng census deta among com~ah•
0
·~
· Proholdif)Qa. Lockwood has on 111jc!vfti1R
ceedlngs of the European Parliament
10-year cen- reporta from 17111
and Council of Ministers. There are also
through 1950 as welt as a ..W. of
documents from Eurostat and' other . apec181 reports through 1~ 1.:atar
agencies. These, Henrich laments, are
material Ia llftilable tn bound ~~
not avallabteforlmmed)ate ..,.because
A ~tatlve of t h e - uaiof,'! !ffic.
there Is as yet liD aeljafactory claaalll- · of lha U.S. Cenaua told-thoae ~..,_
cat
brariionansystth"'"oug·Wh., ltllt~ actbeloren by. ay
the conferenoa· that lha major~~!!"
11
·-• - ·
adll
lor 'lhel agency at the - •
hr
obtained.
~lng lha 1980 count If! .ithlch
Documents are housad In other units
apeelal use will be , _ of n~lribnty
of the Unlv.....Sty Libraries. Under the
enumerators. This Is an attllft!l'l, to
L~~Ieusn' orsgsanselzaparationealfroplman ,heache
Locko!
Improve on the undercountinga aet~er1
1
"''""
''
ally ogreed to have taken PIIIC!' Tn lhe
wood Ooc"urnents Department , not slmlast three C&amp;fi&amp;Uses, particularlY 81'nong
ply a branch ?f it.
minority citizens.
,
Whal Law hao
Ms. Judith Cohen, Census ,Bureau
At the documents' use conference,
representative, emphasized that can sus
Ms. Karen Smith of the Law Library
data Is more than a headcounl for the
h ld
apportionment of Congressional seats.
noted that her un11 0 s an ex 1ens 1ve
The ligures are usad In political de0
Wafrc~:. ~~d ~~;~~~e 1 t~l ur~~~ cis ions on revenue sharing for comY
munitles, and other economlc ' and
repos itories for a collection of " billsociological purposes. Over 2,000 cenjackets" concerning New Yorl&lt; Stale
sus reports are IssUed evrif:y ' 'f!JIJI
laws (dating from the 19208 through the
containing approximately 200 . mllllon
end of the administration of Malcolm
pieces olin formation .
.
Wilson) . These~keta,;• compiled
This profusion of census lnlormatioa
8 }a • hecontain
by each go f
polnla up what Librarian Henrich called
:::,~o~~n:.':. ~::"~~In: ~he!~~ one of the most Important concluslbns'

~i~rrcui~~n ~~::in~~rr:Jni'=r ~~

Indicated
'
A UMi no longer has to ~estrict
hlmaell or herself to items looked up In
a bibliography or catalog , lhe docu- ·
,_,ta Nbrarlan said, "Instead, once you
find the .t&gt;ell holdi ng the documents
iAued by the agency you )Ire concerned
with, ~can often lind some docuIt .--lvad that Ia ~er than
,
~fnthecalalog ."'
faclll~ .-c&gt; mede tt

s~~';,; Sciences Library,

~,.;:::nn,:~ =~-

=ro~de~o~ ';l:.,lo~,:~c:,~,?:

~b~~~~~~~l~o~l~~~~~

1

11

d

0

Trouble with the state
Lockwood wants to build a com parable file of New York State documents,
but here, said Assistant Documents

_.., in storage.

f th SEL' h ldl

~vl;:,n,.,;'t ,:;....envajusr'
:Jfp~ 1 ~h:

l:!: IW6t=:.,~wrac:':;,:~

===:t~!: ~~ !"'?.:'~s~u..:.ia 1x~~l: . !:1a1~=.,:~,~~~et~~r

Whicfl. . . located In the ~.1 , Dr.
F,....... ~=~! ~.-".!. the

entitle and engineering research reports

::;",ce!"'.,!!i J~~mr'~.~!. ~~:

,•.

·

1 ;:.;; • •

.i.

C

t', ,, :

.• It Y®'d liloe fG st~ ln ~··llt:tller
~on ~ ..,u~-~
l(la:SUN'(Eotdbanoe·Firogr~m~wtth'_..,. ',
' ' /.
'l)it;li
- · .~uf11:8111 Of'. II!" ·ohect(Jist and aell&amp; !
s~ate ~mllilrslty )l7 f~. 11 o¥tis. ' • tact 111 A~y't, . ~y 1 ' '
mtclrOIHtp•copoesc .L?&lt;"'ws&gt;Od has sub)ne (j'~ lo.stiltt·tl11t:'l&lt;lo:'lt'~~ it. ,.
tn_.lGNI Rf0arinia •• 4 ~·~ ,. scribed alnce 1974.
•
• .
..t\&gt;e · JirOOIMI, ·eslllbli~h~ "l\'t 1876,'. • t&lt;inlve: NhlinJ,l~; teltJ!h
.l&gt;rovld"l' lor., ex~-q~~ tlve "' . 4157-867ih ;;;:::-,~
• •1 • .",~~ ' t
'
ca.,.dlallll{ld &amp;I~ -tartala • ·
ten-Qr8duate studentSeaqh''}'881' and fo( • · SUNY-Ik'.nfY
"l'tifit~i:) elloJIII,!i~~:SOm&amp;&gt; foreign dQCuments are ._:V"'1•
exchange of.tooth junoo/ IIJid·senlor lac- : apply I~ iii!Y-',disclplin'l ~811 by t~p
able in the department , too.
ulty.'
.•
., ·
host lnatltutlbn . Ea!:b appllel!ht rousl .
L~kwobd has been a selective deFor graduate students, \he program
have a scholjlr1y projeb! defined In gen-'
posotory lor federal documents from
is open In any discipline offered by
erat tenl'la at the time of sllbmltllflg an
Moscow State University, provided the
application. Interested facultY .are enNoo-Profit lrg.
student Is capable of taking Instruction
couraged to telephone the Albany olflte
u s p
In Russian and engaging In th~ desired
mentioned ebo.., lor detaned inlorma• • ootJ ~
research project.
lion. The d..OIIne for filing faculty apPAID
Applicat ions, outilnin'll the exact napllcatlons Is October 5 of-fhls year.
Bulfalo, N.Y.
ture of research to be- undertaken,
The Individual to contact in Albany Is
should be submitted by Oclober 15 of
Mrs. Laura Petrochko, 473-4291 or
Permit No. Sl}
this year. Forma are avaliab e froiJl the
457-8380.

•• -

, ·

·cew

•

'

�</text>
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                    <text>. . ,.

-·-

Heres
to the

Class
Of'79

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

MAY17, 1979
VOL.10 • NO. 31

COtnputing
Time has come for researchers·
to pay for the service they get;
revised allocation policy has that aim

Bella
Wo'fnen are still denied equality
she tells SILS graduates;
society suffers accordingly, she asserts
Bella Ablug dgmlle ·s unday as
Gerald Sl!lelds,
ant dean of the
School of Inform on and Llb&lt;ary
Studies read her press notices In
Introducing her to an expectant· crowd
at the SILS commencement.
She's been described as tough,
Shields reed. BeiHgerent. Noisy. A
fighter. A pain In the neck, llut
"ioYNble."
"If 1 had been born a man," AbZugnded in her Bronx twang " thoae
=ptlons would be different.' fnsteed
1 being known as braSh and strident,
'1
lied an outapokan candid
ld :':g:Usandforthrighti..der."
'

cou

So much , she ..ld, for how the
eo-called " '"" press" handles "truth. "
SILS grads should do better by way of
~ing and disseminating truth, she
auoee~tad ..
••
·

A....._. for Mother'a Day
It was Mother's Day, and Ablug, lor
the occasion, centered her ty pical "no,
· nonsense" remarks on the theme of
. women's rights something she
' . knows a lot about, hevlng beep recently

~~on!~ ad~ o.:.,:~m'!:~n ~';;;,~

She was r7red for being " too
abrasive," and she didn't deny that.
"I was the first to call for Nixon'S"'
resignation, " she reminded t~ audience of graduates and friends . It may
have been ' tx;,aah and strident ,' but tt
w~ the truth.
I opposed the Viet Nam war, and
thet was 'brash and strident' . until the
majority of ..Americans finally came to
the S8Rle .position; f heve fought for
women 's rlghta and heve been accused
of l:'e~or~~~!~~gs. "Into ( the women 's
..... _,.,. _2.CCII.t

The time has come for research
grants and contracts to begin paying
the full cost of the computing service
they receive, the U/ 8 administration
decided this week.
'The resul t: a revised computing
allocations policy for 1979-80 " to
encourage such a development. " Funds
derived from the charges will be used to
additional computer hardware and
software.
Accordi ng to Charles M. Fogel,
executive vice president, the new policy
has been discussed in a number of
arenas and somewhat modified as a
result. It has been approved by
President Ketter for Implementation in
September. As a result of its use in
1979-80, Fogel said, " modifications
may come to light that would Improve
the process. For now, however, this ...
seems the most workable and helpful to
the i nstitution generally." Administrators, the Faculty Senate and Individuals
all will have Input Into further changes.
- Along with announcin9 - the new
allocations policy, the Prestdent moved
to widen faculty consultation In
academic.computing affairs by expand-

~Jvl~~erym~:~~ ~Jh:s~~s'l:l'~~

two new panels: a Computer Allocations Committee (CAC) and a Computj&gt;r
Polley Committee. (See separate boxed
announcement, page 3.)

111
%!":tlf..!:iY by Walter M. Macintyre,
djrector of University Computing
Services (UCS), the new alloc8tions
policy Is aa follo\va :
First, allocations for instructional
purposes will continue to be handled as
before, but th~ wRI be strictly
segregated from research allocations.
They heve always been separately
allocated, but there haa been substantial use of Instructional allocations by ·
research users, Macintyre said. The

:;fu':n'.!ed~r:~'h~biflt!\~':"'
Second,

allocations

for

has been
research

~rr~~~ wd\~a'f'r:.~e.,;:n -:.e=ent~
undertake to pay for part of the research
computing from departmental budgeta,

or from Research Foundation budgets
in their departments.
In 1979-80, up to $7.00 In research
computing services will be ail6eated for
each $1.00 purchased by a department.
In order to assure chairmen of the
continued availability of Research
Foundatioh funds for this purpose,
principal Investigators will be asked to
encumber the computing service lines
in their budgets when they first request
computer service. Disencumbering of
these funds will require the assent of
. the chairman and the director of UCS. In
subsequent years this 7:1 ratio may be
gradually reduced, the UCS director
Indicated.
Third , a small allocation of $100 will
be made to any faculty member who
requests it. This allocation will not be
reviewed by the allocations panel and
will be provided on application.
Simllarily, graduate students will be
provided with a $50-allocatiQil provided
A._~t they produce a tetter from a faculty
, a;:mber In their department supporting
' Tr:'::':~all allocations are Intended
to m1nlmlze the red tape· required of
those members of the academic
community whose requirements_ are

!IT'o"~!:uo~:"~,\rnot ~- ,n~rue.:, ~r;:;~
58

the departmental non-Instructional
cation Is computed.

all~

Other purposaa Several things must be emphasized,
the UCS director said. " II Ia fully
recognized that there exist a number of

~:r'Jc:'f~~~~:'~1;tl~a~W'~u~.
in addition to buying service at u~.
These Include maintenance of laboratory compuler equipment and purchase
of services oil-campus that cannot be
provided on-&lt;:arnpus. Such requirements will be t-n Into consideration
When funds are encumbered or
disencumbered. Furthermore, the University has a responsibility to encourage lhe development of Ideas, and
personnel, not yet eligible for external
support." The department chairman is
In the best P9Sitfon to evaluate which
Ideas and Per&amp;onnel we worthy of
' ·- ·~·.-3,eol.l

�' May 17, 111711

•Abzug champions women's rights .
--1,C&lt;l2)

issue, she looked at her record on
behalf of "all the people of New Yor1&lt; State" while a "conpressperson. •
While In Washongton, she: talked
against the Inappropriate use of
technology; brought $6 billion worth of
federal progr8ITIII Into the State,
programs that create Jobs; came to
Buffalo to support rapid transit; chaired
a committee on government information and Individual rights; championedthe freedom of information taw; and
authored the first Sunshine statute
which requires government to operate
out in the open.
So much lor the past.
Today, Abzug finds that disillusionment Is eating away at Americans. Only
37% of eligible voters even bothered to
cast ballols In the last election. And
why not? The economy is stagnant.
Inflation Is out of control. Taxes are
high and going higher.
·The country club metorlc" calls for
removal of all governmental regulation
on business and the economy as a
acea There are others who
~plo'n the dismantling of all social
programs as a means of combating
Inflation . Abzug doesn't buy either
approach.
Ctlttlng social program• won't do II
'the middle class has been told it has
to "tighten Ita bella," said Abzug
(adding proudly that she has been able
to lighten hera recently because of a
diet). The poor and the minorities ha_ve
been told that In this new age of reality
they will have to do with less. 'We have
a// been asked to make sacrifices," she
thundered;, " But nobody asks Exxon to
makt.a';,f.:'{and gentlemen, she -said .a
she got down to business, "the cause~
of Inflation are not social programs.
Inflation Is fueled by the high cost of
housing , energy, food and health car~ .
These are costs controlled. by bog
corporations and monopoly onterests.
The federal government's social spending accounts for less than one-tenth of
~ one per cent of the Inflation rate, which
is now hovering at the double digit

1 1

year I was
born), that women got the ·right to
vote," Abzug reminded .

Who......_ cleclalono Let's look at who makes the
decisions in this country. sho aug.
gested: There are 16 women out of 435
members of the House of Representati-. One woman alta along with 99
men in the U.S. Senate. There os not
now nor ever has been a woman on the

- - coolt

" I tumed to my mother," aha recalled.
a women's movement
then eo - turned to our mothers a lot .
" My mother Mid, 'why do you wan1 to
go to ~ anywey? It's too far away
and you don't h - the car lara. Why
don, you go to Columbia; It only &lt;;&lt;!;~Is
a nle:UI aet ttleno on the aubway.
1b81'a wlly hU always been a
ctwnp1on o1 low coet public: transportation, -quipped.
"We dldn, -

to

~~~~~

d•llllled

0eep11e die fact the! women now
, . . up 30 per cent of the
111U11enb In IMIIY lew IICIIoola, &amp;a a
llf'MIP -

,....... economically

iiiMdWW ...... Alllug pointed ;::.;.
&amp;omel1,._ Of I~-:::-'
merrled
get only eo cents
·
--.c1 10 men's
the .,.,.,., ol
wort&lt;
: : : . : : : . . . . . , In low-PaY Jclbe.

...,_, ":.r::-.

the-··

-~~~,:to~

~-geti!IOO.
cent o1 liiJ .._ IMng

=-. ~w~~~.~1.,

IWI

-.'-.t'\it'

Chairman of SUNY Tru'"Stees will
ddress General Commencement Sunday;
a t 1 otller ceremonies are scheduled

18% of elementary school principals

era

principals
female, and the AAUP
says that fewa" women are collage
professors today than &lt;Wer before.
"We light for the Soviet dissidents
and the Chilean peasants; why not lor
American women?", Abzug demanded

~~~%::Ft/!u:l'ory of a woman friend
of hers who hed loughtlor endorsement
of the ERA in a state legislature. One
dey on&lt;! of her male colleagues told her
"This is all a bit oJ nonsense. Women
should be kissable, cuddly and smell
good." Abzug 's friend turned to the man
and said archly, "That's what I've
always thought men should be, aod I
hope r,oo're not as disappointed as I've
~n-~akes you laugh , but it's not
funny, Abzug said.

Men will benefit, too
•
Her fight to Improve the conditions of
women is one which " will improve the
conditions of men also, by makln~
society more caring and humane.
Women she said, could and should , as
a majority of Americans, " bring a whole
new dimension to government policymaking, could rr'ake government more

compassionate.

_

_

- Weare told, Abzug 18.!"ented, that we
cannol afford to contonue the socoal
oroQrams that are In place, let alone
expand protection to the displaced
homemakers who need to be trained to

acquire a sknl so they can support
themselves. We can 'l provide child care
tor women who have to go out and
worl&lt;. We can't exlend Social Security

We need '• aoul'

We won't get any of these human

programs untn our society .. has a soul ,"
she :ig.won 't have a soul, until women
are allowed to be full partners in making
the major decisions which affect us all.
"We women have been here since the
beginning of this country. We built the
fi rst homes and Iough! on the frontiers .
We love America and we want Ameroca
to love us to recognize us for what we
do and what we can contribute."

U/B's 133rd General Commencement
ceremonies are scheduled for 3 p.m.,
Sunday, May 20, at Buffalo Memorial

Au~~:~mM_ Blinken, chairman of the
sUNY Board of Trustees, will present
the main address.

Undergraduate and graduate degrees
will be conferred on students lfOm the
Faculties of Arts and Letters, Educational Studies, Natural Sciences and
Mathematics and Social Sciences as
well 88 those from the Divisions of
Graduate and Professional Education
and Undergraduate Education, IncludIng s~lal majora and associate degree

rec~een~~lveralty will also hold 9
individual commencements and two
special awards ceremonies:
Friday, May 18
SAED Commencement. Congressman John LaFalce will address
graduates ollhe School of Architecture
and Environmenlal Design during
commencement exercises. St. Joseph's ~
Church , 3269 Main Street. 5:30p.m .
EOC Achie•ement Awards E•ent.
State Secrelary of State Basil Paterson
will be QIW~ speaker at · the Sixlh
Annual At:1'11evement Day program
sponsored by the Educational Opportunity Center. The program will honor
oulstanding EOC students and will
feature the presentation of several
awards. Audilorium. Buffalo &amp; Erie
.County Central Library (downtown) .
7

'::?e~;:;:·

Related Professions Commencement. Dr. F. Carter Pannlil, \lice
president ol heallh sciences, will confer
degrees on 259 graduates. Special
awards will also be presented.
Kleinhans Music Hall. 7:30p.m.
Saturday, May 19
EnginHrs Honor Wfiaon Grealbatch.
Commencement exercises for the
Faculty of Engineering and Applied
Sciences will feature the awardlnp of

~~gdeg::,~san~~~J'r1~n':~~~~!rl~~

Achievement '" Wilson Greatbetch,
inventor ol the implantable cardiac
pacemaker. President Robert L. Ketter
will present the mal n ed&lt;jress on

" Public Higher Eduo;;ation in New Vorl&lt;
State." Lawn, Parker Engineering
Building, Main Street Campus. 2 p.m.
(In case of rain, Clark Gym .)
._.rgtat Man-ment Class Graduates. The School of Management will
graduate Its largest class ever - 840
students at Its 52nd Annual
Commencement Exercllias. Congressman John LaFalce will deliver the main
address here also. Kleinhans Music
Hall. 7p.m.

Su~:~f.~armacy's

Class of 1979
will greduate at )0:30a.m. In the Mary
Seaton Room, Kleinhans.
School ol Social Worio: C.romonies.
Dr. Francis Turner, dean of the School
of Social Work at Wilfrid laurier
University, Waterloo, Ont., Will address57 School of Social Worl&lt; graduates and
their guests. Katharine Cornell Theatre,
Ellicott Complex, Amherst Campus. 3
p.m.
Honors lor Minority Students. The
U/B Office of Minority Student Affairs
will hold Its Ninth Ann4al -Minority
Commencement Exercises to honor 250
minority students graduating lrom
Western New Vorl&lt; Institutions. Guest
speaker will be Carlene Polite,
associate professor of Eng lish al U/8_
The theme of the program is "The
Future Requires Stranglh and Courage." Fill more Room, Squire Hall, Main
_Street Campus. 5:30p.m.
Medical Students Graduate. The M.D.
degree will ba conferred on t 37
graduates of U/B's School of Medicine
who will be charged with the Oath of
Hippocrates during Commencement
exercises. Awards will be presented.
Kleinhans Music Hall. 7 p.m.
School ol O.nllatry Commencement.
Dr. Joseph Natlelia, U/B professor of
oral r,athology, will address School of

ge,J',~f~'to~::n~f~~sc!~~e/~e:~.uests.

Sa~~~c:J,~Convne~cement

exercises for the School of Law will feature
an address by Judge Matthew. J. Jasen ,
U.S. Court of Appeals. Artpark,
Lewiston . 1:30 p.m.

Saft uolrom 'unemployment'
Seventy-one graduates received the
Master of Library Science degree at the
ceremonies. Giving the invocation was
SILS student Glenn Wolke, an ordained
mlnlsler, who implored, " Seve us, oh
Lord, from unemployment: A film about the 1978-79 year in the
library school, prbduced by SILS
$ludents Steven Davidson, Donald
P&lt;K:hediey and Philli p Lazar, was

sh~~iclpants and guests gathered at a
reception afterwards in the O'Brian Hall
!obby.

Sufn"l".: =18d Bella, when shegotlt
into her' head to attend Harvard Law
School afler llniahing Hunter College,
Informed %that august'
=~ t at "we
n't ecCe~

I

Commencement

are. Only one per cent of high scfoool

coverage to women who have worked all

no!t~ :~ hu'::'t ;\ \t~~(t'he

.._,

1

1

their lives in the home. Yet, we can ba
ripped off by the oil companies to lhe
tune ol $70 billion, while they reporilhe
largest prolit levels in history.
We can support a$137 billion military
budget, but not programs to light
pollution, or to extend health care
benefits and public transpprtation.

m![l',;tll we ~tart to fight lor the middle
class and the poor," Abzug said, our
problems will get worse.
The real lssoe, she proposed, Is that
we live In a "flawed democracy'' - a
democracy from which women '"have
been systematically excluded . "Our
forafathers developed a great document
whet) they drew up the American
conatltutlon, but they d idn't give a hoot
about our loremothers." She recalted r
that when Abigail Adams politely
inquired of husband John If women's
rights w- to be taken care of in the •
constitution, she was told, in effect ,
0

sc~tl~ '::: ~~~n~ ':rn~~

~

Fulbright scholars

will meet here
The Fulbrlght-Hays Eastern Regional
Conference lor 1979 will be held {II
Amherst May 23to 26.
Dr. Khalry A. Kawl, special assistant
to the president lor International pro-

s::".;..o:-~~~~~1 ho:ted·~ ~IV:. ~~
~ ":!:""'~f~~arvl~one of

- three organized annuallr In the u.s. to
bring together Fulbrlgh scholars from
abroad who are studying here. About 50
or rno&lt;e Fulbright scholars studying in
stat•
expected to attend .
The conf...,..ce theme Is "The Unlveralty: A National Institution· in Time of
Globallntardependence. •
Kawl aald the Fulbrioht echolara will
jOin -.out 25 Arn.lean lind other
8CIIolara In thalr dlacuaalons.
U/B was eelacted aa the site for the
conf...,..ce by the Council for
the International
of Scholars ,
the aponeorlng organ
on. The event
is funded by the International Com-

-•em
-•em

era

Ex=

~='~unate In having bfien
selected," seid Kawl , who ape&amp;lt&gt;eeded
LhJs~IM to bring the conf81!11!C"

!O

~~~~!,~.Mtr~j-

Sculpture show enlivens plaza
Sculpture students from the Art
Depertment have coordinated an outdoor exhibit of their work at Fouriders'
Plaza, the grassy .,.. between the
Caoen Complex and O'Brtan Hall.
A 111&amp;-slze plastet' gauze swlr.;; set
and child was contributed by uiana
Gagnon. Patti M.-glls reprnented by a
piece ahe calls "Continuous Wall,"
triangular shapes arranged egalnst each
other. A sertee of lin- transitions - a
grouping of geometric planes - was
crafted by Susan Rory. Alvin Frega was
resoonsll!le lor 'Ill\ 8ye-catching giant
llo1118r, Qa!l. ll~mlay . {lfO'Itded _a, •

"'!!t~·~~ ,~\!\(C_ftl)rli.; .•~ ~;j~(o

Arnold arranged a piece made from
found objects.
The students collectively decided to
exhibit at the Amherst Campus.
Gactnon aald In order to remind the
unrv.-alty cOmmunity that the

t.\1

~~~~~~~~ 1;~ !tr~~~~ well '

and a viable part of the University.
Although the art students have their
own gallery at Bethune, they fell the
Amherst Campua exposure woulct allow
a gr.e&amp;!er variety of people to vl~w the pieces .
The exhibit _will continu,8, ~.ll'W~...-

W8915··,•.- "•'"•'i

• '•'•"•

'~'~"·'"'

,•j '1-..":r, ....;

~t: t..

�.......

lloy11,tl71

•Computing
(IIUn -

-1. col. 4)

development and he should have the

=~~re r:::;:.~:~

In his hands,
It Is recognized, Macintyre said that
th is may wor1t untlue hardship on Some
departments and Individuals. Substantial allocations will be made to the
Vice Presidents of Academic Affairs
and Health Sciences for the relief of
such situations through the normal
a.cademlc chains of communication .
What we lack
The computing service offered the
academic community here Is restricted
In some ways, Macintyre said. The
Cyber 173 has provided, so tar,
adequate capacity and .high reliabil ity
for conventional computation. The
provision of some 40 public terminals
has made available, for the first time,
lnteractiYe computing to the academic
public at large. However, the Cyber Is

:fs:'fh ~nf~~~~~~ ~n~~
1

\:!

expected to support more than 40
public terminals without serlou~ degradation of the Interactive service to
the other terminals In research
laboratories, departmental offices, etc.
Furthermore, even If the Cyber
configuration were to be expanded , he
said , the relatively primitive Control
Data operating system would still
restrict the range of computing services
UCS could offer.
To Illustrate the sort of service UCS
should be providing, he listed these
major shortcomings of the existing
service:
(I) The minimum number of Interactive pons needed at a campus Uke
ours Is about 250. Dependi ng on the
mix between public terminals and the
others, such a capacity would support
30()..500 terminals.
_
(2) The central computing facility
should be able to support hlgh-quility
Interactive graphics, Including color

gr(~r~~~eAt=:art~~~~~o\.aclllty

!~~~~~ a~dto g~:~~~ ~Po~IWe~~pu~i

appropri.!'te prices, that can be selected
by the user. At present, UCS cannot.

sy~~l.m A s~~~rJI ~e~r~'Jtd~pe::~~

relieves the user of the burden of
manipulating very large arrays. With
Control Data's existing operating
systems, UCS cannot provide such a
facility. ·
(5) A mini-computer networ1&lt; should
be provided linking the various minicomputers, and micro-computers, on
1

:,~reu~e~?r..:r~eto~~~ o:~~;~~t~,s~r~g

UCS communications facilit ies and
Cyber front end capacity are inadequate
to tllia.Jask.

Albany won't help
Academic Computing

Is

gravely

underequlpped not only to provide the
old-fashioned type ' of computing
service, but also to offer the other types
of service that can be expected from a
modem facil ity, Maci ntyre emphasized .
Quantitative an.d qualltativelncnsases In
demand for compuH,og services are
healthy, normal and to be expected.
" However, despite lhe steady fall In
the cost per unit of computation , the
increase in demand Is so high that the
herd ware and software expenses of the
Computing Center must Inevitably
Increase. State budgetary officials,
however, have made It abundantly clear
to the University that they are unable to
finance a continuously expanding
computer budget at SUNY. Furthermore, although Buffalo was fortunate
endugh to obtain a modest increase in
our academic computer budget this
ear, It was one of only two campuses
n the entire SUNY 1!lystem to be so
favored. Last year, no campus received
an Increase in appropriation for
computing equipment. It would be an
Irresponsible folly on the part of
Computing Center management to rely
on further State appropriations to
finance the enhancements to )he

r.

computing service that we need."

There are two separate th ings to do,
Macintyte said.
One is quite straightforward : " We
should think before we compute. For
example, /low j ustified is It to use
around 1 ~our of Cyber CPU t(me for
each student in a class so that each

~~~~~~.':ai~s~ t~: :ae.J:a~~Ja~

as only one of the class assignments?

Wh ich one of us has not carried out a
computation which on reflection was
seen to be unnecessary? Computing
intelligently, thljrefore, can delay
saturation of thee!&lt;isting facility ."
Where are the research funds?
The second step, that of the revised
allocation policy, he acknowledged , Is
less straightforward and perhaps
somewhat contentious: " For many
years, principal Investigators have
signed statements that budgets of
proposals submitted for the approval of
the VIce-President for Research have
full provision for all computing costs.
Budgets are often trimmed by tne time
the grant or contract is awarded, but a
.substantial sum is provided each Y.ear in
~rant or contract budgets specifically

g~nt~ ~~gti~gntr':e~"'::;ld ~~lu~~~
0

~rsonnel,

a total of $160,000 flowed

B/~1/~J• s~i~\ry rr~:S1g ;~,',;! l~~

9

m~i~eres~;:~· in ~~e ~~p~~~g

Center. In the current academic year
$1 ,650,000 from University sources
were allocated to faculty members and
graduate students in support of their
.research computing ."

.l

Advisory p~nels
The Office of the Executive Vice President hu looued thl1 etat11111ent In
connection with the Unf-afty'e A..-nlc Computing Commltt• etructu..:
User advice is · important to the successful operation of an academic
computing facility. This has been provided at this Institution via an Academ ic
Computing Advisory Committee JACAC) .-This is a constituency committee,
w1th one faculty member on the committee representing each school In the
core campus plus one faculty representative from Health Sciences, a
graduate student member, and an undergraduate student member. Th is
committee has performed the function of reviewing and passing comment on
computing center policy as developed by the Director of UCS and the Director
of-Academic Computing . It has been.a very valuable body of opinion against
which to measure user response to a given policy.
A few years ago, there was developed, as an offshoot of ACAC another
body called the Temporary Allocations Panel (TAP). The charge given to TAP
by ACAC was to develop a mechanism whereby the available computing
resour~s could be dls.trl buted In a reasonable and equitable manner. TAP
has a I me record in the allocation of resources , but it could not arrive at a
mechanism or algorithm that wou ld automatically exec ute an allocation
process. Each year brought novel problems for resolut ion that required ,
considerable discussion . Furthermore, we are again entering a period in
which the demand for resources appears likely to exceed the available
· ·
capacity. Some very difficult decisions will need to be made.
Given the above r.itts, the President has decided to widen the extent of
faculty consultation in academic computing affairs.
Th~ Academic Advisory Committee will con tin ue to perform the same
f~ncllo n as before, possibly with its membership augmented by
representa~ ives from add itional schools In Health Sciences. This will broaden

the ~amphng of_ faculty opinion available to the Director. That body will

contmue to provide a mechanism by which users' needs and reactions can be

brought to the attention of the Computing Center management. Its members
Will continue to be appointed by the President on the recommendation of the
Director of UCS and the appropriate dean .
The Temporary Allocations Committee will be rep laced by a new
committee that IS being called the Computer Allocations Committee (CAC).
The Computer Allocations Committee, wh ich will be independent of ACAC,
~~l3~:t~~ ~n~. members appointed by the President in consultation with
The President will also app~i nt a third committee, the Computer Policy
Comm1ttee (CPC). Th1s comm1ttee will consist of three facul ty members
api!Q,II)Ied by the Pres1dent and selected on the basis beth of their computing
ex~se and the1r appreciation of the Un iversitr-wide responsibilities of the
Academic Computing Center. The function o this committee wi ll be to
advise the Director of UCS and the Director of Academic Computing In th e
development o'. new policies and the modification of old policies, with the
Academic Adv1sory Ccmmtttee being available as needed to provide
suv~Jementary user reaction.
'
ACA~ :membership of these committees is as follows :
John Boot, Management . chairman , 2nd semester; S . David Farr,
Educational Studies, chairman , 1st semester; William H. Baumer, Finance

G~~d~:r:~~~1 ,' ~~~~::3 f~~~~~e~W~es~~~~~!~~~~~~:·F~"~~~~~~ ·s~~~~i

1

Sciences. Richard Orr, Colleges, Frank J . Ren·s , Social and Preventive
Medicine, Anthony J. Rozak, Art s and Letters , Stuart C. Shapiro; Natural
Sciences, Reid Simmons , Student in ComRuter Science, Anti I P. Talvitie,
g~~~ring, Robert Wagner, Prestdent's Of ice.
.
..
r

Ted Wallace,

M~ement,

1

Chairman; William H. Baumer, Finance and

~.r~r~~nt~r~t. R~~:.~~i c~:;;:'s'a~:C:::~Fh l~st~:r!~nsez;~gi~:r,:,~;
Anthroooloov: And row W. Holt , Graduate School (ex officio) .
Computer Policy Committee:
·
Hinrich Martens, Engineering , Chairman ; Ted Wallace, Management; A
th ird person to be appointedl And rew W. Holt , Graduate School (ex officio).
If is difficult to support the idea that
over 90% of the research computing
carried out at this University cannot
qualify for external funding , Macintyre
said .
" It is still more difficult to come to
terms with a situation In which only

20% of the available funding actually is
available for the purchase of centrally

~~~i~1th~e~;~~. .. ~J c~~~ra~~~u~~ih
approved funding for computing services have no corresponding account
(user ID) at the Comput ing Center. "

Metcalf-Hatch ·repeal poses threat to res arch here

--

By Joyce Bu_c hn&lt;Mskl
If the State Assembly should vote to
repeal the ~year-old Metcalf-Hatch
Act, officials at U/ B's Animal Facilities
predict re1!l88rch costs will soer and
:'J."jects here may be adYerS81y
The Metcalf-Hatch Aot Ia a eectloh of
the State Pu~ i c Health Law which
mandates thal;)atray, unclaimed dogs
and cat a be given to authorized realiWch
facilities for use. For y-., antTviYIsectlonlsta - those who oppose uatng
animals In any ...-ell or teaching
endeavors - have lobbied tor ita repeal ,
but their efforts were bloclcad In the

borne by the taxpayer and wil.l present
"considerable anxiety and hardship to
faculty and students of all health
science schools in the State," assesses
An imal Facilities Director Shaheen
Nakeeb.

po=u~ ~:ivF.j=~nlft~ ~~ o'ftt':
~~=., .'!fJl~at ~ ll;:~~~fe_er~::

fewer animals have been offered to the

~~\:J'I~8c~~~:Sakt!.u~e1~1~':;:;;;:e

about 25 per cent of Its l1l1!l88rCh
·animals from high-priced commercial

sources.

The repeal of the Act will serYe to
further curtail the number of animals
available and will Jack prices higher, the
adrnlnl otralcn lear. Thio worries
Nakeeb and Velasco because about $10
million of bi&lt;Htlldlcal research at U/B

by the U.S. Department of
!culture
and have been accredited si ce 1986, by
the American Association for Accredita-

l~n~!l~ra:~Zr A~~',';~n:::S:~t~ns~1~!
An imal Facilities must adhere to strict

e~~ei:::.eJ :Y~~~a. ho~~~'ou=

federal inspections can occur quarterly,
while State inspectors visit the facility
abcut twice a year. Accreditation teams

in'fof~;"';r:,~:;.ear:m toy.eef' t~ke
~ederaf, State

grest pains to follow ali

~u:c[~'}:!::~ut;'1t~';Y no~u~:~~~~

Jeopardize research fund ing from the
National Institutes of Heslth , Nakeeb
emphasized .
Animals purchased from area pounds
are those not claimed for at faaat five
days. At U/B, they are quarantined tor

~!':weeks ago, h o - the Senate
passed a repeal measure. The bill now
goes before the Aaaembly, where It has
been previously supported and Is
~::...-~.~:ci,f n~':J~~~~~~ ~oJ:'! ~~:i:r::"' =~sY!ve'!,'!\•te:n~:.
considered likely for paaaage.
No opposition is expected trpm the
per month are needed. Preoently, he
vaccines as well as1reated tor parasites
Governor'• office since Cwey, while
aaya, the University has five in its
or qther health probll!ffia. When weather
campaigning, promised he would olgn
pel'lnlta, they are also allowed to
the iepeal blll If It clewed the Sellale.
- lnm': :tiu is passed by the Aaalimbly,
exerciae.
Before unde(going any medical
Laat year, U/B, the largett u - of • Velasco lamented that U/B will have no
choice but to rely exclusively on
~ animals In the State, purprocedure, the animals are properly
commertlal sources and " pay their
chMad approxi mately 2,000 doge and
price," or at.O Ita own bieeding
cata from area pounds lor about $3.50
m~~St dlepoaal procedures.
.
colony - an unworl&lt;able altematiYe
alnce the Unt-slty hu nalther· the
According to Nakeeb, ' lhe "ultimate
~ Facilities, uya the Unl__.ty money - the apace to accommodate aoal" of the antiviYiaectionlata is to
f~ly replace reeeach antmeta with
such iln oparMion.
will be forced to rely .olel)' on either
Although moet granta contain clau.models or computer calculations. Their .
commereial dMiera or brNdan for Ita
goats, he feels, . . ..,tltlletlcal to the
• whlcll 8clcnowledae the poaalbUity of
anlmet aupply. Llclneed ~
Ull8lq)8Cied coets, 'Vetaeoo uya then Ia - waya In which ~ ·Is properly
....... c11ar11e b e l to ••
a
conducted and to current IQC!Icee in
"no o-antee" •
will o-1
dog and 8peclal ........ chlrgl
ext,.. money to complete a project If
medical education.
.
- - 11110 and
eldl. Cilia "'"
~ anlmet c o a t s i -lboull200 eldl.
""Uf8'a Anlmel FIICintiM In llcanaed
The boost tn ooat will )lltlnillely be

:==:~._,rg!~llbC::lan~~u::

- -~~~~~ .=t:t.~~~=eg,
m

uoo

oo

-a-

w~ttr::=.=a:::...'::~

:,~ar;:',:'it,~~ ~:~ile~~~~y~ by f~~
1

thousands in pounds throughout the
State, but those mar1&lt;eted by commEifCial dealers will meet the same fate .
Tina Redler, Erie County . SPCA
Executive Director, says she is
"constantly amazed" how this Issue
"radicalizes" people; she contends the
question "is neither ali black or white"

!;v~!~. ~~~als~~~taot':rc~al w:~~~

antlvivisectlonlsts as being on one
extreme ' of the spectrum and Dr.
Nakeeb on the other.
" Many people realize that some
animals are necessary In research and
teaching but are against wanton use of
them," she asserted . What Is needed,
said Radler, is "regulation." She
believes controls are abSent now.
Instead of having the law repealed ,
Radler savs she personally favors
rewor1&lt;ing II.
Redler and Nakefb agree that repeal
will likely increase cat- and dog-napping

~h.;~'sor:nl"n:l':'t~,~~ %':'C

secured through illegal or unethical
measures.

the~:.JI:j•F'!c~&amp;~~r:::::~~~

in the Unl-.lty community to launch a
letter-writing ~_P.!Ign to State repre-

=~~w:'lol.;:''g~-~~~

=s:

lett.. rwcelwd from aupportera were
Insignificant
to the '"''
.
and lett•-wrfting
elforta conduct by agencl. . WO(Idflg
tor Ill r.peal.

orctleatr..s

�........

4

wsc

Women's College is as multi-faceted
as those associated with it;
it's more than a place of affiliation

---

By Joyce Buchnowsld

It's a haven of aorta for some; for
others, It provides a support commun- .
lty, a structure for academic growth and
acholarty pursuits, an opportunity for
community invoiYement and a catalyst
for~:o=·~'Wt;;'t.i. College, In
short, Is as multi-faceted as the women
associated with It; deriving Its strength
from them, growing aa they grow and
evolving In a way that meets their
changing needs.
Yet, there are threads of commonality
which bind Its participants. Although
the women who benefit from fts
programs 1&gt;!!11 from various academic
arenas, they seem to express similar
sentiments regarding WSC, and, In a
way, to share a common Identity.
. As Marilyn Matis, a graduate student
in English puts II, · wsc Is much more
than a simple place of affiliation. " For
her. it has provided a .. true and active

~~hf~;v!~t=it~~~~:r..::~~~ti~::

her graduate worl&lt; at U/B; one which
renders the "Intellectual support" she
needs to write a dissertation with a
feminist critical orientation .
Feminist pedagogical method•
Malls' exposure to feminist pedagogIcal methods through WSC has also
affected the way In which she teaches.
While remaining a laadar, she now
delegates responsibility to her students
so that they become more academically
self-sufficient. Because of this decentralization of authority, Malls says she
no longer feels like the "good mother''
or a ''static model." Her students listen
to her without perlormlng for her.
Because of WSC, Malls feels she hes
broadened her perapectlva to ponder
not juat theoretical conoapts but Issues
which directly affect people's lives. She
haa become an active participant and
likes IJ. Moreo-. she noW" feels " mora
a part of the Buffalo community''
through participation In WSC-sponsored activities and "less claustrc&gt;phoblc" because she reallzaa she also
ha4 a support community outside the
University.
Llkewlae, her colleague Karen Peter-

.

~h.~=~ed Yt\:ct;~ p~~~~~ t!';

with the lnoanllve to continue her
f1rwluate .studies along with the
continuity" lh8 needed for personal
MCIIICIIdemlc growth .
Peterson found the rotating chair and
the emphula on personal histories
employed In WSC cleases to be
"difficult but good for me." . These
devloes mede her"slt back, shut-up and
listen" to fellow claaamates lnst81J(! of
conoanllatlng on what ahe wanted to
conlrlbute.
.,.,...,... • proteealonal--=t&gt;
For graduating Ll.w student Laraine
Kelley, "It made an lncnedible difference" to be able to attend a
prof-ional echool at a university that
hid "ongoing work" In feminist studies.
Kelley says she needed an "outlet" and
women with whom ahe could work, and
that aha found them throu~h WSC.
Hopln,p to prectloa law 'on behalf of
women, Kelley credits WSC with

.

=~~~~~~~ ;:"~to:'::/!~

='n:.:~='~~
~~=
,_.
" - t o either be a bitch at the
~

offloa or gat walked on, • eo they adopt
• maleiPPR*&gt;h Of etyle, aha oo-vad.

Ketley' a affiliation with WSC "spurred
a eetf ftaluatlon" which led to a better

..-standing of how wants to
conduct - f aa a profeaalonal In a
field dominated by man.
In addition, W8C bro&lt;lght her to the
,_.lzalion that •only a
limited Impact on aociatY" In the
~ofaupport - . · w h i c h
Impact moAI directly on lila community.

F....._..._ ... _

Dallra Luapnltz.. clinical peychoiogy

~ ...... Who Ia jual ltnlehlng

"" . . . . .ton ..,. ...
W8C ..

•

tlllla

--

·--..~~~c~· due to

eougllt out
lett

an llbaanca o1

-faoultrlllhar-aiU/8.

~c..T,.=~-:;
•
Clllllld ,..... . . . . - an ~~~~~~~~~......- -. ~··

lives. It's not that the faculty refused to
help, but more that they hedn~ lived It,
so they couldn't really understand II,
she explained .
In WSC, Lueonltz found a unit which
"operates on tlie ldeallt es~uses" and
one which sup~ lied the 'Institutional

'ra;;:::~~ ~~ rfn~'!intellectual

climate more stimulating" In Women 's
Studies courses , Luepnltz plans to use

!!'~en f:::'e'~:Ch~f~~:~ t::fJii~an".!]

s1ructure "'doesn't encourage critical
think ing ," she observed . In the feminist

~~\':'a~iz..d'?.w8~ear.!r;~ar~:::a ea~
person present.

RlaorOus scholarship
Alexandra Bakalakl and Florence
Babb, both graduate students In
anthropology, echoed Luepnltz's comments concerning . " ri~orous scholar-

sh~~~;. 1,or;;,~n·g,~~ 5e~;~~~rn~oh~r

dissertation , maintained she "couldn 't
have pushed along with her research"
without the femin ist backing she
received from WSC.
When she decided she wanted to do
research on women, she couldn 't find
common ground with faculty in her own
department. Through
conferences ,

~r '~:::rnar.::r ~n!'rt.~~~'1~~o"~~
0

her association with - Professor Liz
Kennedy, Babb found the encouragement and support to continue.
Bakalakl, a native of Greece, said

~~ ~~v~~ :~~nP&amp;mT~~:t ~~f~!~t1

"aharpens the skills" of students. Under
more traditional methods, students
remain " mystified" about such eca-

=chrn~~r~. o~ho:r~~~~ ~~

a complicated text, she assessed. In
WSC courses, these problems are
dissected In class.
Exception. to Hochfleld
Diane Carr, co-eoordlnator in WSC ,
and Trlsha Franzen, staff member, took
exception to the criticisms Professor
George Hochfleld leveled against WSC
(and the collegiate system In general) In
last week's Issue of the Reporter.
Firat of all, the women felt II was
"mlsl
lng" for Hochfleld to "lump all
the
together" . In one unit ,
conll-lng
have separate goals
and different
proeches to the
educational proces .
As far as. Hochfle ' cor.tentlon that

~~e fn~1afl~":' ~ co snf:.JW.'!~ .!~

courees speak to your II " and •
use
lnvolwtment," then you t
o" o

~:~~pa~~:

:~ o~ ~ac

ro":~:J'. ,Pivea students the motivation

-:,~~~o:!r~~~~~· t~~':' ~~

feminist studies, Carr ralayed. The

~.::"'sy~l~bu&lt;;"/!~!':Zs ~~~;

throughout the country. WSC(was also
a (Qundlng member of the Women 's
St!HIIes Association, she proudly
rePOrted .
WSC'a leiodershlr Is not dependent

~':feS'"t:.,~y~ ~7~ orWC:~~hi~:::~

phaalzed, but Ia Inherent In Its
structure. WSC now haa Its own
"momentum" and will continue to
remain In the forefront of feminist
_studies, they predicted.
A lA cun1culum
Futuno challenges for WSC, the
women eald, will center around meeting
changing educational needs, keeping
of the Impact feminism haa on
the dleclpllnes, and maintaining viable
community-oriented programs . .
Efforts .,.. aleo being targeted on
-lahlng a BA program . WSC haa
- . working on the proJect In
conjunction with the SUNY Chanoaj1or'a Advisory Committee on Women's
Studlee. Sl8ffera are seeking Input
18gardlng the curriculum from women
In the Unlverwlty community. All
: : : : : : = , : . . . = . . : = ,.to
Although they hope to -..p... the
~=CMI
by wiU
J1M. .woman
It IIUiy
lla _
,_.
'

~

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

/

lloy 17, ltl't

Bertholf will head
Poetry.Collection.
Or. Robert · J. Bertholf ha8 been
named curator of the U/B Poetry/Rare
Books Collection, Mr. Saktldas Roy,
director of University Libraries, announoad this week.
Bertholf's acoaptance culminated an
extensive; International search to
permanently fill the vacancy resulting
from Mr. Karl Gay's retirement in

Aua~~:,..;l~, arrpr:~~~~n associate
professor at Kent State University, Is a
78

~;~he~~~~~~~'n::'wod~itro~t'J,;

will be responsible for afn:lnlstering
the Libraries' world famous collections
of contemporary American and English
poetry, manuscripts, and rare books. In
this capacity, he will be actively
engaged In organizing and preserving
the existing collections as well as
planning and implementing continued
growth .
Bertholf rece ived his B.A. from
Bowdoin College In 1962, and his M.A.
and Ph.D from the University of Oregon
In 1963 and 1968. Before /olnlng Kent
State In 1968, he was an nstructor at
Oregon. In addition to his teaching
responsibilities, Bertholf was an
assistant editor of the Northwest
Review from 1968 to 1968, and has been

~~b~3~~ ~rr,~~~~'l: ~e A~~tr::~

editor of Credences since 1975.
He won a Distinguished Teacher

~::;~~~~e~r~t~e1e"i1 Af~rt~r~

he Is a publishing scholar with an
extensive list of articles, reviews , and
books to his credit, as well as a
bibliography of the modern poet
Robert Duncan, which will be published
later this vear.
Mr. Roy expressed pleasure with the
new appointment and his confidence in
Dr. Bertholf's ability to Influence,
direct , and extend the collection " with
the same energy and creatlvicy as the
former curator, Mr. Gay. " At the same
time, Roy expressed his thanks to Mr.
Eric Carpenter for " the excellent job he
has done during the paat year aa acting
curator. It was under carpenter's
supervision that the collections were
moved from the Main Street to the
Amherst Campus," Roy said. " It was

also C!u'penter who had
problems of organizing
while continuing
and operations.
Bertho,lf can
functioning,
I
largely owing to
conscientious efforts
as acting curator."
Bertholf Is expected to begin wort&lt;
heiJtAugust 1.
John A. Edens, fonnerly of thfl
University of Georgia, took over the
Libraries Central Technical Services',
April 1.
.

~~P:~ud~~ar~~p~ri ~an?~~~!~~~~
and proving their athletic abilities
through bowling . An enthusiastic group
of ·students has been meeting for the
past seven .weeks under the direction of.
Associate Professor Viola Diebold with
assistance from Patty Wheelock and
Barb Schwind , freshmen on the
Women's Intercollegiate Bowling Team .
While on a sabbatical last semester,
=1 ~. ;:~~\~ s\':ie ~~"';~tyWe~:
Seneca Development Center to observe

slow at first,
according to Diebold, has grown 10
eight members. They 8.re Paul Riemer,
Kathy Conners, Jane Denton , Eric
Dahmer, Colleen Miller, Ed Newton,
John M~Ewan, and Brian Hobbs. 'for
many, this Is their first bowling
experience. Riemer explained that a
great amount of balance Is Involved and
ft varies from person to person
according to his or her own handicap.
Competition, on a friendly basis now,

coor lnator of the Office of Services lor
the Handicapped, and Ms. Colleen
Miller, a freshman whO bowls In a
league for the blrnd, explored the
possibility of bowling. With the helP,
'and cooperation of Charles "Dusty'
Miller, director of recreational programmlng, a ramp giving access to the
Squfre Hall alleys was buill and balls
were provided.
·

compete against other lntramunll
teams.
Diebold hopes to continue and
expand the -recreational program for
handicapped Individuals next year.
Blllards Ia a poaslblllty. A new bubble,
provided for In the budget for next year,
~lng · to Or. John Neal, vice
president for facilities planning, may
opan other possibilities.
.

1

lelsur:1 ~u,z::~~rs.u~har~~~~:

~~~= :,r!o~!,.'d~~:;d f~';,t~

�Moy17, 1171

5 (

AWards
End of academic year brings
·a flurry of recognitions for
both s~udents and staff members
Geology presents Pegrum Awuda
The Department of Geological Sciences
annual Pegrum Award for outstanding
seniors went to graduating geology
students Glenn G. Zinter and Richard
Batt. Zinter plans to attend graduate
school at U/B and Batt will continue his
studies at the University of Wyoming on
a Hill Fellowship.
The awards were presented at a
ceremony Tuesday, May 8, at Ridge
Lea.

maste(s In physical education and a
career In teach ing.
Kleeman, from Jericho, N.Y., earned
a 3.64 GPA In biology, In which he will
receive a Bachelor of Arts, and plans a
career In medicine.

A lour-year letter winner in varsity
soccer, he was the first team member
not recruited by the coach to serve as a
co-captain.
Kleeman was especially lauded- tor
his leadership and dedication to his

s~~IOmbaro,

History win.,..
Winners of the annual essay contest
sponsored by the Department of History
wera recogn fz.ed at an awards ceremony
last Friday.
Or. William S. Allen, professor of
history and chairman of the essay
wlnnftrs selection committee, explained
that .course papers submitted by U/B
undergraduate and graduate history
majors wera judged on overall excef·
lence by a committee of History

De~=~~~~cihn

T. Horton Award
for undergraduates were:
Elaine Reynolds of Lockport, a
graduating senior majoring In history,
whose topic was " British Public
~non and the Congress of VIenna; "
U/B junior Johanna Oreskovlc of
Lackawanna, whose - Y examined
"The Standard of Living Debate In 19th
Century England."
•
The award Is named In honor of John
T. Horton, former chairman of the U/B
History Department, now retired .

ho~c! ~"S,e''~'~~~~id~r~ t~

::w.muel P. Ceoen Chair In History, went
to Doreen Canton of Williamsville.
Canton Ia a candidate for the M.A. Her
was titled "The Origins of

~

allam.•·

e Graduate History Association
Awud went to Paul A. Rodell of
Buffalo, a Ph .D. candidate, for his
~~rn cr.;::,~.\lonallsm and Moderniza.
Selection Committee Chairman Allen
noted that the Horton and Adler awards
each carry a $50 cash · prtze and the
Graduate History Association award
. carries a $25 prize.

Fu1118aaw..O.
Five varsity athletes have been
selected to receive Clifford c. Furnas
Scholar-Athlete Awards tor the 1978-79
academic Y8111"·

.,:~~~n~u~.:.he ?u~~~

'l: $1 ·~
Pal~aro,

Kleeman, Anthony C.
Edward L. Tyrrell, and Michael J.
Fischer.
~;nuaen on the basis ot academic and
athletic excellence, they were honored
by Mrs. Furnas ·and U/B President
Robart L. Ketter at . a luncheon this
week, and also recogniZed during the
University's annual Athletic Awards
Banquet.
The awards wwe established by the
late Or. Clifford C. Furnas, ~B
president from 11154 to 1986, '"to
• recognize outstanding undergraduate
performance In scholarship and athletic
prowess. "
Seniors who plan to enter graduate
work ara nominated by h-' coechee ln
the men's and women's Intercollegiate
athletic prog...,a. The C.C. Furnas
Scholarship Committee, which reviews
nomination• end recommenda award
winners, Ia chalrad by Dr, And..w W.
Holt, aaaoclate _ , of the Olvlaion of
Graduate and Pfofeeelonal Educ.tlon.
Ma. Fultoh of
talned a 3 .23 Grade Point A. . . In
phylloal aduc.tlon and • • • meinber
of the . . .lty fl*rOO!Ieglale bOwling
teem tor two~
A t,.,.ter from Etle Community
Collage,
~*Dad In ltlrw l'lllllonal

r--. "*""

n

lndlvteluel ChaniPIORahlp tournament&amp;,

winninG the doublas title In her eeoond
y.- 11l:CC and as a junior at U/B, and
llnlahlng eeoond In .u--ta during

~~~It bolll U/lt and
ECC, Ma. F~
llla_loP all-time -

II~- of

ath..... • the

untt.raiiJ. 81* plana lb tllofk ~ a

from Endicott, N.Y.,
earned a 3.85 GPA In human science, a
special major that has prepared him tor
Dental School.
He waS a two-year letter winner In

~
•
~

~

~=ty Jlu~\~gan~,: ~~~: ~dth:_~(!
seasons, playing the No. 4 position.
He plans to attend the U/B- School ot
Dentistry starting in Septembar.
TArrell, ot Williamsville, had a 3.27

~~:ns'~:!:l'u:f::,'~\n~~~V~~~nt, and
A four-year member ot tfle varsity
wrestling team, he never missed a
scheduled practice during his Intercollegiate car- and compiled an
outstanding record in the sport. He was
an NCAA Division Ill Ali-American
(placln9 second In the National event
his eenoor season and qualifying tor the
NCAA Division I Championships) , won
a State University of New York Athletic
Conference title, and posted an overall
record ot 59 wins, 27 losses and two
Ilea.
Michael J. Fischer Is a record-sett ing
cross-country runner who Is already
enrolled In the. joint B.S./ M.B.A.
~~~~~s~~~~eu~h~~~ 'i!,~!Y,~";';.:&amp;

and six-mile events as well as the

=""~~;: ~~~t&gt;";~m.~

though he wl~ em=lng on the
graduate phase of hill program next fall.
Fischer has an overall 3 .54 GPA and
holds a 3.9 average In management.

C'*&gt;Cellor'a A..-.Ia
Three U/B faculty and staff members
received Awards lor Excellence In the
1979 SUNY Chencellor's Awards competition.
Recognized by SUNY along with 68

ru,h,:~,et~~~~;&gt;;:~ u~~:er:Yt~t:'cht~~

C.K. Huan~. director ot the Health
Sciences Ubrary; and Judith S. Ronald,
associate professor ot nursing.

,:''/&amp;~ft~:: ~~"TT~":;f~~~~wa;:~

Ronald received
Teaching award .
Presented lor

an

Excellence In
.

jbb-r&lt;~latad_.. achleve-

=~~~~~~::::~Yn!No~~~~~~m:

by each of the state's 64 campuses, theawards carry a sllpend ot $500.
Finnegan joined the U/B library staff
In 1967 as a research assistant. She was
named Unlveraity er'chlvlat In 1986.
Sne receoved lier B.A. from Trinity
College and her M.A. from Cethollc

~~~t~~m=~~~ ~~~~

ot

the American Association • of
University Professors and the Governlog Council ot the Society ot American
Archlvlata.
·

~~f. j~l~:'!t!nhe :!~If~~ 1r:n:
director of the Health Sciences Ubrary
ln11170.
•
He received hla B.A. degree from Far
Eastern Unlveralty In Manila, a B.S.
from the Military Academy of Szachuan,
China, and hie A.M.LS. dagrw from·
the Unhwalty-ol Michigan.
In 11177, he was alectad chalnnan ot
the Medical UbrW\' Aeeoclatlon'a Inter·
na11ona1 c-atron Committee.
Mrs. Ronald joined the U/B = I n
1188 and was named
te

prof-In 1174.
.
8ha ,_..., her B.A. from U/B, a
B.S. from Columbia Una-ally, and an
M.N. deaiW from the Una-ally of
FlorldL 8ioa Ia ~tly -'&lt;Ina on an
Ed .D. ~ In curtlculum dioovelop-

-·

Active on a number of Unt.-.lly,

QDIIIInUflltyand=~-ltteea, her
tMnlbanolllpe
the ~
Ntnas Aaaoclltlon, N- YOitt State
NurMe Aaaoclatlon, and the Aa8ocl.-

tlcin ot Rahabllltallon N..,...
.
A total ot 41 f-.lty rnem~~eq, 24
non--te.chlng ~ and alx

~-=.r::::.az:
~=
progqm- atarted In 1173.

Schotarahlp Aw..O. for11178.
Bianco Ia a anoduate of Moofe
Hlah Scllool whwe maintained a__, -.ge and played on
the.,_. 8oftball teem for ltlrw yews.
She Ia amployad In the lllbofatory of a

Catholic

'-Pita!·

Nlr Ia ~u.aana from Ambaiat
Cent..a High SchoOl . and will l8lca
8olnputer 8cllnce· •

)

U/8 ~

•

�-

__

___...

May17, 1R79

Let's get It straight a~oilt the asbestos ·s ituation
Editor:
Your reporter at the asbestos
demonstration noted all too accurately
that by the time 1emerged from my talk
with !'resident Ketter, the cameras (and
most of those media-folk In search lor a
catchy story) were gone
It is
unfortu"nala. that only Daniel Parl&lt;er of
the Spectrum (t!lat overly-m~ligned
newspaper) cared to set down my
arguments In any clear fashion
Since 1he Reporter even misquoted
me on one ,p oint, let me ..et the record
straight. 1 have not resigned from this
University Nor have t agreed to renew
my contract as of tflls lime. My .
challenge, In a signed statement
correctly quoted by the Spectrum was
as follows : "I cannot In 'good
conscience continue to serve th is
University unless the asbestos hazard Is
removed."
What does it mean when ~a faculty
member threatens to resign over an

:::~~~u?ls"i~s~ou:~f~Y"f~spe,:r;~

::~~"t~~~iln~"{;'~~re~;;'~

frustrations. But the spirit of a
university demands more of its
members than initial reactions, even as
the spirit of good journalism demands a
greater sense of devotion to complexities.
My initial reaction to the dangling,
exposed, .asbestos-contaminated ceilIng, when I came to Interview -last
summer, was one of disbelief.
I remember telling_ Dr. Thomson that
were I one of the students, I should
have protested for lt.r Immediate
removal. He said he had been told by
the administration that II was to be
replaced somellllle that summer.•
I came In August and It was still
there, yet I neglected the Issue until
January. At that time, NYPIRG's

Then the delay. The ~istaken .
assumption that the samplinQ agency
represented
the
"experts. '
They
sampled what they were told1o sample,
according to techniques established for
asbestosis, not asbestos-related cancer.
·
And the April weekend I spent In the
Health Sciences Library. Friday nightno dinner computer print-outs,
30Qoarticle bibliography, Saturday's
readings, Sunday's' xeroxing, the letter
to the Reporter written that night. I felt
htlmanly decent for finally, utterly
committing myself to the Issue, and my
arguments were as solid as those of any
theoretical article I had ever published .
My asbestos file rested on reserve in the
music library.
But again no response. The adminis-

tration was awaiting their samplings,
be called to a meeting , as prom ised by
· Tselmmeeslewras vreur", nlnagl opurot;teswl ilhw
. 1uhled
President Ketter, when tile sampling
0
0
,;
results arrl~'l; I'm leaving May 20 lor the
subside. I led my students, wl)ose
summer ... have a right to be very
anger and frustration I had pstlenily
angry .. · I he fight's not over
my
attempted to contain for so much of the
students believe in me, my colleag.ues
semester, to Ga~n ·s fifth floor to noise - support me, even my parents were
the Issue of their health. Vice President
appalled w~en they inspected the
Fogel met me at the -pass with ceiling ... whether I'm here or not
surprise! - the results of the invalid
there's enough evidence to force ai
sampling, received over the phone with
least a valid sampling · · · I really I ike my
·apparent ease. (I had tried earlier lhat
teaching here, and would prefer to stay
week to find out from Hunt and Doly).
but my wife is with me on I his - we
' President Ketter received me with lavish
aren't afraid to leave for what we believe
boredom , refusing even to listen to me
in, in spite of its cost.
read my Reporter letter (4/26), it being
Has anyone up there read the Yale
of a " type" he chose not to read
article?
himself! (The paradox is nearly
·
-Robert Hatten
obscene.)
Visiting Assistant Professor ol
Does anyone here li sten? I have yet to
Music Theory

CARASA reps don't know·what
they're talking about, O'Shea contends
Editor:

0

9

11

Rer;'oe,.~ayro~ ' s~ ~r'!it&gt;t!~ ':.'nd ° F~~~

1

contains several er:rors of fact and
lnterprela110n regarding the recent
survey of students on health insurance.
They quote only part of the survey's
results on the abortion option and make
various misleading statements about
the conduct of the survey.
Because of the campus controversy
over abortion coverage, several questions were included to gain students'
views. The answers may be summarized
as follows. For the Bought , two out ol
three wa,nt abortion covered, and of
those who want It, three out of four say
It should be optional for persons who

want II in the policy and half don't; of
those who do want abortion coverage,
three out of four say II should be
optional for those who feel the abortion

~~~~:Y:. !~;g~m:t ~~!~mc:n~s~~c;g

:'r~~~~f~~m;ri~~ ~~~~~;':!'u~:~·:~~

option. On the contrary, opinion is
heavily in favor of an option .
With the given sample sizes (284
Bought, 314 Waived) and the magnitudes of these proportions, estimates
are within five per cent of the t:-ue
values in the two populations (with a 95
per cent certainly).
I conducted this yea~s survey, as I
did the previous two. on behalf of tne
Health Insurance Advisory Committee.
Five members of the committee,

Including two student represen tatives
from Sub-Board, approved the wording
of the interview Instrument. Indeed 1
postponed the Interviewing until we
could reach consensus on the questions' wording.
It Is not the wording that Schreiber
and Fisk dislike, lt's·the result s.
Finally, calling the law students'
advisory referendum a " survey" is a
curious misuse of the notion . Like most
campus votes, only a minority cast
ballots. To compare a suggest ion box
8

6~~~ ~ r~~~g~~:~~~: t~!t~~,;~~~~~~

Fisk don't know what they are talking
about.
-Robert M. O'Shea, Ph .D.

= t =~ed~r..~nll6 an~~~~.nitro
-demand removal. Thinking that.the only
effort required would would be a strong
show of support for NYPIRG, I hed no
trouble collecting 50 signatures to that
effect. But no one -med to be

Atkins charges doctors ignore nutrition

to "radicalize" me. First the senseless

By Mary Betb Spina

lls{,e;'~~~·a series of Inexplicable events

(81)&lt;1 dangerous) spraying. Then the
1

~C:~~~!'~~- ~~ ~":i~ "Sa~~

downstairs to post warning and urge a
singer not to practice there. She
probably thought me odd, but she
llatenedl

Who evaluated
COmpllt?
&amp;fllor•
President B1Jnn's live-year plan
..-lved some favorable comment tor .
refraining from alng_llng out specific departments. How-. among the
counted lew named In the document is
the Comparative Literature Program. on
wllicll, In aplte of the dlra atralta of Arts
&amp; Letters, have been l ..lahed faculty
and student linea, and praise. Inasmuch
u the Comp. Ut Program, unlike the
Unl..,..ity'a other greduate programs,
, _ _,.. to h - gone through a
complete evaluation procedure, one
may wonder Whether the Adml nlatratlon
Ia wiiHng to bestow labela of neliQIIal
-tenee on the bula of pndiie or
aetf.at,atlon .

vlai

___
..
•=•·
____
___
,.._ ___ . ·--of
_.,_ _

-o-g.o . ......_

Proleuorof Spanish

,.,.,...
____ -...y..,_

"'

--~

- " ' 1:111

o.l!t - · ...""""""'· ,..,..

JAMOt. o.sAHnS

-.....a,..,

.-.r.~

/lllf..,_

----

I()HII A. QOIIIIEII

XJ'Ia~

.......~­

::~~~~~c~~~tl:W~lv.:'J,a::!ut'g::;

EdtoriiiAsaociate, Health Sdences

Nutrition and diet can often success-

~:ZI~I~~ ~~~~Wuf.::~~~ ~~~i~~~~~!
shu~
nutrlt
prevention

In treatment and
usa they see It as a

~~!:::~r '"Pc,~:a~~.e~r ~W~~

ph
ertAtkln$.
Atkins,
r of two best-sellers ,
lncludl
The Diet Revolution , ,addres
the Buffalo Academy of
Medici e
y 9 atthe Statler Hilton.
"T
nstream of medical thinking
abo nutritiOn ," he said , "ranges from
those who see-It as quackery" to those
who feel that, at best, nutrition can be
only poorly echleved by those who eat
what they want anyway. Phys]clans'
general disinterest In nutrition and-diet ,

l:,,~edb h~e !';'ann~~

Industry whl~ heavily edvertlsea In
medical publications.
"Changing the diet and giving ·

:prlt!te :!::"'~~ ~~r~~era~~
~tiiQe of "'!!dlcal problems succaafutly, '' Atkins asld. The same
- " can also p.._,t other
d l -. Both without the side effects
uaoclated with using drugs.
Atkins bel'- that medicine's
general reluctence to emb..- nutrl·
lion's theraPeutic potential also stems
from the,fect that physicians Mltaught
to think In terms of alckneaaf not In
terms of maid~ .....,tiai.IY we I people

=

~·~en,:le~mJ~ r:C~

atudlea wllicll can demonstrate the
raeulla of drug tlleraoy mora easily than
effects of ~eel lifestyle or diet, he
=\'l~s.
to thr~w out any other
Furthermore, he 18ld, It's almost
tmpoaslble to get adequate monev for

J:ut

m:"':'d::'c:-1
~~~~
dlapoeai haa noeuch difficulty.
The phyalcien told. the audience he
control of blood sua- can be a
key '-:tor In
CJIQDIIma.
Ha eleo bel
lhlllmedical
a high

bel._

rellwin=IOme

~..... of

croclla"

l!r

Pllllnta

~~~~~

. . lllblled
...S

who

complain of depression, insomnia and
irritability may have low blood sugar.
He reports that a Poughkeepsie
doctor has anecdotally observed thet a
high percentage of patients with
Meniere's Disease [li s major symptoms
are hearing loss, ringing In the ears,
dizziness and, frequently, nausea} may
heve low blood sugar.
Aikins believes that while control of
blood sugar may be the key to aiding
some medical problems, pharmacologic use of vitamins and minerals
may be the answer In others. These
nutrients, he claims. can trigger some

Associate Profe ssor

body chemicals which can, In turn , aid
a percentage of certain types of medical
problems .
By restricting total carbohydrates and
sugar in the diet, Dr. Atkins claims,
some 90 per cent of his hypertensive
patients have been. able to lower their
doses of medication without adverse
effects.
"Some people have headaches
because of low blood sugar and others
may have them because of food
allergies," he told the audience. The
most common food allergies, he said,
are linked to com_, milk and wheat.

Article a fa lee, says Ketter;
he won't decide until fall
II will 'be September before he
informs the U/B Council whether or not
he plans to seek another term as
president, Robert L. Ketter clarified on
Monday.
Sunday, the Buffalo News had
reported on page one that the Ketters
are looking lor a " house In the country. "
A sure sign Ketter has "likely" made up ,
hla mind not to stay on as U/B
president, the News headlined.
"Sources" "close to" Ketter have
Indicated he has given signals he's
decided to return to teaching, the News
safd.
" Literally fake" was Kette~s reaction
to that story, as reported In Monday's ,
Courler-bpresa.
He bas not made a decision on
whether or not to -another ll..,_year
term, he said. [September Ia when that
decision Is due.} He Ia not househunting "In the country," because I'M!
alraedy haa a farm in Allegany County
he pointed out.
'
e- If he were houa.huntlng he
said, It wouldn't mean anything
tar
aa hla job Ia concerned, because
"- ' other praeldilnta of state
=:=.~t live In hOUMS provided
The Courier couldn't lind enyone who
"'- -..y "inalde" Information about
Kelter's ....lng.
"Ha'a ,...,.. taloed to· me" libo&lt;lt it,
U/B OQuncil Chairmen Robir1 MIIJunzf,

u

uld.

"We haven't had any discussions
about it and I hedn't heard anything
about It until now," Mrs. Phyllis Kelly,
vice chairman of the Council, told the
Courier.-

Petro objects
Editor:
Dr. Hochfleld's aaaumption that only
women would take a course In the
" Psychology of Women", as reflected in
his comment that "any woman with a
psyche must surely kilow something" •
about the subject Ia blatantly -almost
hopelessly - aexlat. I wonder if it ever

:,Cu~d: ~':.:::,~ =ft~i:,t!~;"~~~·
1

He apparently knows - or cares little about the fundamental concerns of
psychology, such aa learning and
motivation, or about the deficiencies of
the science of psy~:;hotogy as a study of
human rather than male behavior. His Is
Jndeed an lmpoverlahild point of view !
Sincerely,
-Carole Smith Petro
Instructor, CEO 590
Psychology of Women

MORE COlliNG

IIIII-. . . . , . _ 10 Prof. Hocl&gt;-llald'a Ylewa 011t11e Collagel wiU appear

~J-7.

�Moy 17,1171

7

VI.EWPOINTS

Hochfleld draws return fire from the Colleges
Editor:
Professor Hochfleld Is on his
(spotted) white horse once again riding
into battle against the Colleges . He ·
hopes his attack will loosen the hold of
the Colleges on a small part of the U/ B
budget, and that the money will be
spent on other parts of the University in
desperate need of resources. HIs
propose! Is nothing less than another
attempt to transfer funds from an
·

0

~~::.gr:~r~~et~~R~u~ h~~sr,ig~

priority at U/ B.
·
Contrary to his assertion, If the
Colleges' budget Is redistributed, the
.entire University, 11nd particularly the
undergreduatea will be the losers.
Il l s ironic that Professor Hochlleld's
arguments about the lack of appropri ate
coursework In the Colleges Ia presented
0

~rsf' ~~ c~~~.~~ th~ ~n~~!or~.;
5

dog. Does he really believe that the
Colleges are ao powertul that they

~C:,";~l~~e ':f~~a"r:';,e~~~? B~:~~~ fe~f;

believe t~at a student: faculty rat io of
37:1 (a consequence of many teachers

'fo"wrk'~~r~f,~~~t~ay~ '~l:::rca~u~:,!~

Does he really believe that, If his charge
is cornict, the University faculty who
are unable to-exercise their responsibilIties In College chartering will be any
better able to examine undergraduate
curriculum In their own departmeots?
Professor HDchfleld simply requires a
scapegoat for the problems of the
University and for the difficulties which
face departments, such as his, which
have been unwilling to examine their
raisoo d'etre and their responsibilities
to those who pey their salaries. The
stakes are high, for If students continue
to avoid parts of U/B, those parts will
be retrenched. II Ia far easier to blame
the messenger.
Wlwlt.,.. wato meka of It?
What are we to make of Professor
Hochlleld'a "data"? Course titles make
good reeding but tell us nothing about
quality. What could we posalbly know
about, say, Writing I &amp; II? There is little
lnf()ftnlltlon conveyed by title ajone.
Yea, Collage courses are often taught
by R'eduata students but then again

~;'! ~~~t!\!aa1~~:k~~~o.!:.!•~~

such a counae and has ne- taught
such a course. Enough about titles and
the alleged differences between courses.
Gresham's Law does not &amp;lerate,
contrary to Professor HocTifleld's
assertion, because the competition
which he - I a nothing more than his
Idle speculation about why students are'
not attracted to (sell-described) centers
of exoetlence. The Colleges are
restricted , by practical considerations,
to offering non-major couraea without
prerequisites. The vast majority of
students take onlr one or two College
counaea (or none . This Ia In marl&lt;ed
contnut to the picture painted by
Professor Hochfleld which conjures up
vlalona of vut enrollments In our
counaea. We do not compete for
students. A.a a aldei!Qilt, we are not
stuck ~~tlth poor teechef5. We hire our

:=':..':. :C~r1&lt;~~':iO:no:
appropriate currk:ulum and are al-ys
prepared to demonstrate the

com-

petence of our tNCharl.

Ad... IIDiwri8Ctlc
The ~hlng crttlclam of the
Colleael' grading IQCtioea (from which
only l'otetoy and Racllel Cweon ate
•cueecllla • d-.ioMtY tactic to keep .

the casual reader from asking about
grading practices In the rest of the
University. Those who have examined
grading practices (by visiting OAR) will

Editor:
George Hochlleld no longer deserves

!g:ie;!~uih~85~~!ge~~ ~~~e~~:.ri ~l~

~~;~~r e~~(.a~~t h~::'a 7~; Re~n La (~~
1

-though

English) . The curious reader will
compare the percentage of " A's" around
the University and not simply be
satisfied with contaminated and politically inspired numbers .
Enough of these sloppy statistical
manipulations. I confidently predict
that a careful examination of grad ing
practices and course titles In academic
departments will reveal many nonmaJor, no-prerequisite courses worthy
of Professor Hochfleld's suspicion. Will

I

no

longer

have

official

responsib ility to respond to his
misrepresentations, I would like to
indulge in the luxury of directing your
_ readers to three poi nts in order to
provide perspective on the Hochfleld
spleen-venting.
First, whi le his reports on grading
seem quite factual , they are not
comp~red with any other faculty and
deve.,1\f!d over time. Although I do not
have access to recent statistics, the
grading studies done by my graduate
assistants in the Dean 's office for four
years documented the fact that there
was no significant difference between

~o~!;"~ff~~~g" .!:..~e~.e ~~:. fi~~~

and budgets or will he retreat behind
the cover of tenure?
The Colleges provide exposure ,
context and breadth necessary for
undergraduate education which the
departments choose not to provide. In
principle, the departments could
&lt;:hallenge us directly by attempting to
meet the needs of nonmajors both In
class and out-of-class. However, they
generally choosa to put the money and
effort Into graduate programs Instead.
In those cases where department and

~he ~~'::1~ng .::,"Jtert~~~~ th~f Co~~~;~.~~
Hochfield's own Faculty .
Second , George's condemnation of.
Colleges' Instructors stands in star~
contrast to the conclusions of those
who have looked at Individual Colleges
in the chartering process; and his

~7~::'.!: t~~ft~1~mart:'.:''cd~glu~~';O~~

the extemat review committee chaired

by Professor Chandrasekhar, the
distinguished physicist froln Carneg ieMellon University, In ~ay , 1978. The
difference is that the chartering and
review committees carefully studied the
facts firsthand before making judgments; George has not been near the
Colleges for over four years and has
never bothered with the facts anyway.
Finally , his rhetorical flourishes
pointing out ,the alternative uses of
money spent on the Colleges must

~~:tl~s~~::?Yra~~of~:.;:n~~'lif~~~':tl~

joking when he claims that releaslno
Colleges' money will benefit the U/B
undergraduates. Our budpet did not
cause the enrollment drop m A &amp; L and
our money cannot restore those
students.
·
-PeterS. Gold, Ph.D .
(Acting) Master
Rachel Carson COllege

sound quite attractive to some Reporter
readers . My major response Is to

~~~~~s~r tt~e fa~~rth~~a~he;s~~!~e~~~~
addition to their favorable evaluations

from committees of regular faculty here
and elsewhere, have been strongly

!~~~~~~~s :rth:~t~~s~r~~~oo~~d:~d

homes. If this University Is to avoid
severe retrenchment in the next two or
three years ... It must maintain and even
enhance this attractive feature of
campus life in order to reduce attrition
and increase the commitment of
students to SUNY / Buffalo .
I support George Hochfleld's devotion to general education and even
(surprise George!) many parts of his
own vision of what a general education
program should be. But the best way_to
implement such a program Is to use the
Colleges, which have understood how
to motivate students, to assist
professors In George's faculty In
reallocating their time to prepare new
general education courses which will

~~~sn~ t~~!:t.s~~~:,~lf al~ot:i:'o8= them actually to learn 8Q1J18thlng from

th~~~;~~~~":'uk Is to a11ow

professors like George Hochfleld to
reallocate their lime to constnuctlve
teaching of general education counaes
for our particular student body, rather
than for three or four seniors In their pet
courses. Happily, most .of my friends In
Arts and Letters understand this
opportunity and will not be misled by
George's broken recond .
Sincerely your '·
, tf!lng J. Spltzberv, Jr.,
&lt;"m!nd of the CoOeges

There's little in Woody Allen's 'Manhattan' that
wasn't done-better in his funnier 'Annie Hall'
By Eathar Hanrtott
oroctar, c.Ab.n~Nfolra
Is Woody Allen's ·~anhattan " an
enjoyable movie? Does Buffalo get
snow? But as for Ita being a giant climb
for Allen on the ladder to the pantheon
of greal film directors, which Is what
the reviewers seem to be saying: hardly.
lo fact, there's very little In "Manhattan"
that wean~ dealt with better In Its
predecessor, Allen's " Annie Hal l."
That Includes the love affair wHh New
York, which we are told thls__movie
celebrates. Despite the romanticized
shots of New York's skyline and, ·to the
middle class, moat characteristic •
~®allons. from the~Ruaslan Tea Room
to Bloomingdale's, Allen's paa_slon for

~':.'n~\Z ~:.~n~ra:;;tll'!'ft.~ a=~~

while photography,together with a lush

~:W~~f ~~:'!~~Ya'=~~~en~~

That'a what II Ia
Which Is what " Manhattan"
Woody Allen 's filmic alter ego,

Allen's nostalgia tor an earlier, lovelier

fven

PI=

movie.
If the Intention was Irony,
H doeeJI't work. t kept wishing for Fred
Astake and Ginger Rogers: lighthearted
atyllah- belong In thla ambience,
not the anlllety-rfdden lnh.t&gt;ltanta of
Allen's New York.
But the main problem Ia that
" Manhattan" Ia not new. II' a essentially

fat~ rt~::!:a~le ~·

=ho."t ::::
. matW!oua - · like the dlaptay of
unapoken edglneaa at a symphony
OOIIO!'t· among. \he principals of a love

Is.

Isaac
~:'~·~~~f-rre'~~(
~~~~==·
~~
disapproves of •xtrarnarttal affaire,

=~~tanj~ho::h~~eg:~":.n~;,u~:::

~without,.._

triangle, Allen, Diane Keaton and
Michael Murphy. But nothing to
compare with the vignettes In " Annie
Hall," which combined howlingly funny
situations with just enough fantasy to
make them brilliant.
The actors In " Manhattan" are playing
types this time, rather than characters.
Diane Keaton, as always, Is superb. But
Instead of the fully realized, daffy and
enchanting character she developed as
Annie Hall, here she · Ia only an
exemplar: the brittle divorcee, lmmereed In Intellectual chic and unhappy
relationships. Another fine actress,
Meryl Streep, plays Allen's ex-wife who
has just written a best-seller about their
marriage, In that overdone genre of
confessional memoirs. She;" too, Is teas
a character than one of the humors of a
morality play.

~~~:~r!:,":,• =!Zt;y
lam, disposable relationahlps 1"1 think
people should mate for II e, like

'

pigeon.- or Cathollca'1, Intellectual
pretentiouaneaa, material lam. ''People
create theM unneoeaaary neurotic
problems for lhamaalvea to evold

::~::..:'~~ t::fy~r:.~.:..~.::

commanta early In the film.

He Ia emphatically judllft*ltal In a
80Ciety Which Ia coming to ~~ any

kind of morality. When Yale (Michael
Murphy) Impulsively leaves hla wife of
12 years to rpove In with M
(Diane

~~~y~l=l.n~.~ r. b~ co t," I~
counterS with uvou're 00
y on
younaelfl " This leads to
central
speech In the film In wh
nta
out how lack of prlnclpl
In
retallonshlpa leads,_.!
ly, to a more
wldeapreed corruptibility. Integrity begina at home.
·
Too glib, too shallow, too mucll of a
mother?

The trouble Is thai Allen, for whatreasons fear of aenll"*ltallty,
perhaps - has given a very " " " treatment not only to hla charllct...
but to hla obeartatlooa. Hla one-11_.
are funny, but on.ll_., by their very
nature, ere at oddtl with CIMp oo,_.
They are distancing clevtCM: awlfl and
superficial. they neatly evold ral
examination of an lasue. Allen and hla
sbbject matter are morally and·
intellectually too profound for reliance
on the gllbneaa of tha qulck quip. He Ia
capable of satire, of the deep humor
that comes out of pain and outrage.
Why ao much more Ia being made of
" Manhattan" than of the mora original,
funnlilr and more moving "Annie Hall," I
can't Imagine. And when.. It gets to the
point that the ctlllca decfde that a
Woody Allen movte ahould be as
Immune to crttlclam ea fleg or
motharllood, I worry about-what's going
to happen to the Important atatetl*lt&amp;
he'a trying to make about contemporary
eociely.

�Moy17, 117t

13 Faculty and $taft members are retiring this year;
Thlrieen members of the faculty and
staff who are retiring this year will be
honored with certlfic:ates of appreciation at the annual Commencement
luncheon, Sunday, May 20.
Including physicians, a social worl&lt;·
er, a philosopher, fl~anclal administrators, a dentist, a linguist , a nurse, a
bi ologist, and a speech pathologist, the

13 are:

&amp;nl8's Health Systems Agency. He Is
affiliated with a wide range of
professional associations on local,
atate and nationalleWIIs, and has held a
series of offices with the New Vorl&lt;
State Division of the American Cencer
Society.
Dr. Bronk shares hi s University dulles
with Mt. St. Mary's Hospital of Niagara
Falla [In Lewiston] Where he Is
pathologist and director of laboratories.
Ha .has also been associated with the
Buffalo VA Hospital.
He graduated from medical school i n
lS38 only to have his residency
Interrupted by World War II . He saw
military duly In both the U.S. and the
Philippines, and was a Japanese
prisoner-o f-war orf Bataan and i n Japan.

Eugene J . Llppschutz

HowardS. Moncton
Howard S. Moncton Is closing out
eleven years on campus. He joined the
staff of the University at Buffalo
Foundation, Inc., as business manager
in 1966. He became treasurer In 1972,
assistant secretary later that aame year,
and secretaryllr"'!llurer In 1978. He has

~e~~~~s~~ta~~~~: a:~·~~a~~

assisted In plann ing the Foundation's

Eugene J. Lippschutz came to
Buffald In 1932 as an intern at Buffalo
General Hospital. He gradualed 'earller
that same year with an M.D. from
GeorQelown University where he also
did hiS undergraduate work.
His first affi liation wilh the U/ B
School of Med icine was In 1934 when,
hevlng .completed his residency at -

S:~llllng ~ger

cllnl~l

Is a
aaalatant profesaor In the School of
Social Worl&lt; where ahe also serves as
director of admlaalona. In llddltlon to
admlnlstratiWI duties, she has taught i n
the echoor s human behavior and social
environment MqUence.
She has blle;n,._Identified for many
yeara with "'"""llltatlon of cancer
patlenta 8l1d cancer education from the
aoclal WOII&lt; perapectlva. One of her

=:=::,.::,. ~~ fo~~

~ unlta of the A"*'&lt;:an Cancer
IOclely In Hew Y or1&lt; State. 5he has
..., called on to bring a social worl&lt; ·
.--tlve to programs In rehabl lll•
lion · offered by the U/8 Office of
Continuing Medical Education, has
..., Involved with the lackawanna
Community Health Center and In local
planning programs for the medically
dl-.ntagect, and was for a number of
yeara a field lnatructor In social wor1&lt; at
Clllknn'a Hospital.
Ma. Berller ~W»ivad her bachelor's
8l1d M.S.W'. degreea at U/B and took
clinical tmlnlng at Roswell Pari&lt; and at
tha Paychiatt1c Clinic, Inc.
Altar her official retirement, she .will
oontlnue her alfillaUon with the School
of Social Worl&lt; on a part-time basis by
helping establish a new training unit to
be located at Holy Trin lty lutheran
Church, downtown.

William Calhoun
William H. Celhoun , Jr., came to the
campu s In 1957 as the first University·
wide bursar. Before that , Individual
areas of the Institution each had their
own student accounts officer.
Calhoun said he has watched U/ B
develop from a small private Institution
to a large state university )'lith all the
accompan ying growing pains. "In spite
of frustrations and amazingly slow
Improvements In our operations," he
ventured , " it has been exciting and

Generil. He has remained on both the
General staff and the University facu ily
since that lime, and Is now associate
vice presiden t of. the Facul ty of Health
Sciences, a professor of med icine, and
vice president of the medical staff at the
hospital.
He Is a diplomate o f the American
Board of Internal Medicine In the fiel d
of cardiovascular dlseasas, and is a
found ing fellow of the Council on
Clinical cardi ology of the American
Heart Association. Dr. Llppschulz hes

~~ :'.;;"~~t~e f~trv.~.~~rt~~ ~=

Association, receivi ng Its Award of
Merit In 1966. He hes written widely In
the field of diagnosis and treatment of
heari disease.

::'nc~~\':"~of'W,!,~!fP~'fPal~~~e~

~~~~mo'l".:n~~~na!~~c~rv~tl~n in
- Before comJiig to U/ B, ne sarved for a
number of years as business manager
for local oparetlons of the Buffalo,

~~C:; ~~ths~~~~~a ~~~~~~~/J~~~~:

starling as a proj ect engineer and
moving Into administration and management. He joined the corporation j ust
before Pearl Harbor, and parilclpated in
Sylvania's early wor1&lt; with radar
systems.
Mr. Moncton holds a BS. In physics
from Un ion College, and Is a member of
saveral national management associ•

~~:· ~~ ~~~~~~ v'!'l~~~f~~~=

Foundation's financial management,
U/ BF spokesparaons lndlcate.

re~~~~~P.i~g.

he has asked that credit
be given to a "dedicated staff and to the
patience, for the most pari, of students
and administrators who have helped us
•
over some critical times."
Calhoun graduated from Yale In 1939.
With the exWctlon of a tou r of military

~~:~ ~~f.g G~~ ~:' ~:d ~~=

with a major electric utili ty company
from then untll 1957.

Ruth E. McGr.th
Ruth E. McGrath Is completing her
•1st year with the Un iversity. Throughout t hat long and d istinguished tenure,
she has been affiliated with the campus
facility for" early chil dhood education
~ru:m;~: which has been known by

Joelph QlollftD
Joeeph D. Glovtno, a well-known
Buffalo exodontist and oral SUfliSOn,
holda deg,_ froro Canlalua, the
Unl. . .ity of Louisville Dental School
8l1d the Dental School of Vorl&lt;
Unl. . .lty.
.
He hu baM In private prectlce In
Buffalo alnce 1848, following an
auociatlon of -- ' yeara With the
E.J. Meyw Memorial Hoapllal. He has
taught at U/8 Dentah School during
much of that time.
Dr. Glowlno Ia a f i t - buff Who
"baud pro'-ionally until my mother
and lalher put • 8IOp to lt." He lalght
boxlna for almoet • decedl at lhe
YMCA, and oonttn... to 1*J handball
tine llmee a Wlall to 1r.-p In good

'!~'!~~: .•,

'•

Erwin Neier

A native of Heidelberg, Germany,
who did both unclergreduate and
medical wor1&lt; at Ita Illustrious Unl-·
slty, Dr. Erwin Neter haa pursued a
·career of sclanllllc study here alnce
1936.
II was In the! year that ha came to
Buffalo from the Unl-alty of Cologne
Currently the unit Is the Early
to undertake a bacteriologic and
Childhood Resaarch Center, and Dr.
Immunologic residency with the dis·
McGrath Is lis di rector. Indicative of the
croae-d lscl pllnary thrust o f her worl&lt;, - llngulsh8d Dr.~t Wltebeky.
He has
as director of
she Is an associate professor In the
bacteriology at Ch ldren'a Hoapltal for
, Faculty of Educational Studies and a
more than 40 yeera, haa bean a
clinical assistant professor In the
consultant to Roawell Pari&lt; Memorial
School of N urelng aa well.
Institute for a almilar apan, and Is
Dr. McGrath did her undergraduate
profeasor of microbiology In the
departments of Microbiology and
l'*'latrlca at U/8. Ht Ia alao a member
Uni-.Jty of Buffalo. In addition to
of the campua Canter for Immunology
directing the - a . f110ility, ahe
• member of the American Board oi
offera gr.Suate 1e..t couree lnatructlon
Pathology for the Prectioa..of Clinical
and dlnertatlon guldanoe to atudent~
Microbiology 8l1d ot the American
from auch d'--e tlelda • pe}'chology,
B0M1 of Microbiology. He has held
phyalcal and occupational therapy, and
offlcea In both local and alate
• apaech therapy, In addition to thoee
profeaalonal aaaoclatlona, has ..-ntly,
from her own ~ta .
comrlated a - d term .. edltor-lnchle of the journal, lnf«:tlon 1111d
In , _ , yeara, aha hu written a
Immunity, and has edited -and contriawiea of volumee In a publication ·aet
~~r: :/!,~~umber of other publications
'*ling with the CleweloDIMnt In young
Juat thla month Dr. Neier l'liCflved

=

~B=~~~dCo~OOd~attft!

- ~.:~~~~~-~~h,

--.·-t,CCII.2

�........

lllyl7,1i71

Soikoff eleeted
vice chairman/
chairman-elect

•Retirees
(from-I,CCO.C)

the highest award that can be gtv'en a
civilian by the Federal Repu lie of
Germany for his contributions to
medical research, the Federal Cross of
Merit. In the past several years he tlas
been honored with the Wyeth Award In
clinical microbiology goven' by the
American Society tor Microbiology, and
by his alma mater In Heidel berg, which
awarded him a Gold Medal.

Norman Solkoff , professor of psychology in the Department of Psychiatry, has been elected _vice chairman/
chairm&amp;IHliect of the Faculty Senate.
Solkoff takes office this July 1 as vice

~::f~~~catr;d~me~u~en~ie d~:

man for a on&amp;-year term.
This represents a change in Senate
procedures.
First, It marl&lt;s establishment of the
position of vlce-&lt;:halrman with official
duties and responsibilities . There will
now be two people working togetherin
the Senate office, rather than just the
~[j','!j ·nopd~~~~sly, the chairman-

Paraguay, from 1965 to 1968. Before

~':."~~rs"or ~~h:t;,',~7:~:, ~~~

tor Medical Center. She also held a
.clinical faculty appointment In the
School of Nursing there for some 14
years.
During World War ll ; ahe was an Army
nurse captain , and saw duty in Iran and
India.
She holds the M.A. in nursing
services administration from Teachers
College, Columbia University, where
she also did her undergraduate work.
_,_t U/8 she has been assigned to the
Department of Adult Nursing, and has
been a member of the Faculty Senate
and the Health Sciences Faculty
Council. She has been active In the
American Nurses AsSociation and the
New York State Nurses Association .

Second, the term an Individual will
serve as chairman Is reduced to one
year. Until now, chairmen served for
two years. "It required a total commitment of three years," explained current
Senate nead Newton Garver (including
one as chairmlllHllect) . "That's a hefty
chunk of time."
Now, an individual will be elected
each spring to serve one year as
vice-chairman/chairman-elect and one
year as chairman .

v•

Phi Beta Kappa
will initiate 150

Wl~la~~·'\reta Kappa raduate of
Columbia College, Or. WilHam T. Parry
received a Ph .D. In philosophy from
Harvard In 1932 with a dissertation
written under the direction of Alfred
North Whitehead, one of the most
Influential philosophers of this century.
Aftereamlng his Ph.D. , Dr. Parry was
awarded the Sheldon Traveling Fellowship for study abroad, a fellowship

Omicron Chapter of Ph i Beta Kappa
will induct some 150 new. members ,
Saturday afternoon at 3:30 In the
Katharine Cornell Theatre at Ellicott.
All the new members are undergraduates from the traditional areas of
fiberal arts and sciences who have
achieved excellent scholastic averages ,
ac:IX)rding to Phi Beta Kappa guide-

'3t~\7~gu?~~est~~~;a~:d ~~vi~~~r;

ling~:

~; ~~~~·R~C:r·~~ea~o~~

Claude Welch, president of
Omicron Chapter, wi ll praslde at the
ceremony. O'r. W. Leslie Barnette,
chapter ·secretary, will Introduce Initiates and present awards.
The Samuel P. Capen PriZe, which
carries a stipend of $50, is to be
awarded to Joseph Darcy, a greduatlng
major In the Department of English , for
a group of pcems of which he Is the
author. Darcy's sponsor is Associate
Professor Max Wicker1 /
Dr. John Penadotto, classics professor and dean of the Divi sion of
Undergraduate Education , will apeak on
"Humanistic Education in a Consumer
Society."
A reception tor initiates, parents and
friends In the Jane Keeler Room ,
Ellicott, will follow.

Library panel
seeks input

=

The Faculty Senate

Godel; i n Warsaw with Alfred Tarski,
and In Cambridge with G.E. Moore and
Ludwig Wlttgensteln . it was from Parry
that Wlttgenateln first learned of
Godel'a work.
•
A distinguished logician, Parry is

~~~~~i~~~~~W~n'?fl/:' .::,f!;:;;,,:~

logician Alan Anderson wrote that Dr.
Parry's "i mportant paper In 1939 on
mocfalitles In various systems o f modal
logic has served as a basis for virtually
all the work on the structure of modal
systems which has been done since
then ."
·
Most recently Dr. Parry collaborated
with Edward Hacker of Northeastern
University
on
a
book
entitled
Aristotelian Logic, now i n Its second
revised edition. He has also published
numerous Important papers outside
logic. He was the first managing editor

~u~~f";? tTa~~~r'~r~~·,e! f~~~~o~~
Libr~.

the late 1930s.
He came to U/B

Com-

!,~~ t=.lf::n~r::;.\'~c;',/~a;gi~
:l'f~~";;:~~~e~e:!,~~ !\\"~

lion.
1

~~~so~Jn~~~~~:e,:: f~~r!n~

1

ga~ering facts

1946 after

major reforms In the structure of the
department and Ita graduate program
were lntnoduced.

on ~h":!er ::'e~~~'.a)1:.," ~~1\':: ~~
begun

in

~~~~n~:t H~~er ~~~: N~r y~

at various levels

::\.!re~r~s fr~~~c ,~l!\'3u!r 'r~~rr~

members and/or department heads on
how these Issues i mpact on particular
disciplines and on possible forms of
rem..:ttatlon.
The .Unlveralty Libraries support our
effort In th is regard and strongly urge
that faculty members expresa their
concern about the Univers ity Libraries,
the"fr collection and services.
You may also, If you wish, consider
tt)Js an open invitation to comment to
the Committee on other library matters,

for members of the U/ 8 faculty and
staff who shared her Interest In Italy and
thing s Italian.
A colleague of Professor Vella's has
said that she "has been Involved over
the years In every intellectual activity
held In this area for llallen-Amerlcans
- often speaking out In the forefront. "
She has helped keep alive a tradition of
dignity and culture for ltaii!'"·Amerlcans In Western New York.

Gordon Swartz
Gordon E. Swartz has been a member
of the U/ B community since his
undergraduate days. He received the
B.A. here In 1939, the M.A. in 194t , and
later earned the Ph.D. from New York
University . He returned to Buffalo as an
instructor In the Department of Biology

~~~c:.'l~ 1~. "t:'~c~~v~e t~:"r~~

of ,'~'~G~~e~~ ~wartz was awarded the
Chancellor's Award
for Teaching
Excellence by State University, atlesting lo his status as one of the
·University's most widely-respected
classroom teachers. At that time, one
of his graduate students said that of 300
teachers she had had , Dr. Swartz stood
out as most exceptional: " He not only
teaches facts , but also encourages one
10 thoroughly understand and appreciate the beauty of life as seen through

0

abJ~. R~~~y~ "known, too, for his
sensitivity In detecting whether or not
students understand the material at
hand, .for his patience and tolerance
toward slower learners, and for his high
but fair standards.
During his 33 years at the University,
he has instructed a large number of
students who went Into dentistry or
medicine and are now practicing In
Western New York. One of these, now a

10

r!~·~g co~~~! (n r::~:;::.;gy ~~

D. Kenneth Wllaon
Dr. D. Kenneth Wilson joined U/B In
1961. as a professor of •peach
pathology. His dutlee here have
Involved speech .00 hearing diagnostics and therapy, and' undergraduate
and ·graduate Instruction In araaa
ranging from phonetics to audiology.
He has published extenslwly, reflecting
research on such concerns as atutier-

Many University Instructors have
been known to advise their graduate
students to request assignment In his
courses so the students can have the
benefit of first-hand experience in
excellent course organization, end In
proper and closely-supervised Instruction.

adolescence, and general speech and
voica therapy problems.
Before coming to U/B, Dr. Wilson
wa.S associated with a speech clinic In
Jacksonville, Florida; with Northern
Illinois University; with Washington
University and the Central lnstllute for
the Peat in St. Louis; and with Purdue
University where he received his
master's and doctorate.

151

having prepared him especially well for
his professional studies, "not just for
~he Information obtained, but more
:~J:':n:6't~~~~~.m the poi nt of intellec-

Anton ina Vella
Antonlna S.

Room 538, O'Brian Hall, Amherst
Cempua, or to any of the other
following members of the Committee:
-Eric Carpenter, Lockwood Library,
John Duskin, Mathematics,
Jorge Gracia, Phlloeophy,
John Larkin, Hillary,
Amy Lyons, Health Sciences Library. •
BlakeR-. Phyaiology,
Gordon Silber, Modern Languages.

Vella

joined

the

:~:.~;::.,~~r~~/:emf~?~ ~C:

~:&amp;-:,:.,~~u.(e';,"~';:u~i"j'~~~

tulle! Reed

laabel Ellison ("Rusty") Reed Is an
asaoclate pre&gt;leaaor In the undergnaduate program In the School of
Nursing,# position ehe has held since
1968,
Her first aAilelatlon with the
Univaraity wae ae a consultant In ·
~ ~llfSIOG educ;at!fl':\wltb.., Ull!,~t at
• ' tile 'Nitlohal 'tlnt~lly ' Ill ·li-.'uricion,

').

ot He[h~ath1frs~ n~}~fa~~:~~~rc:,a: o~~
graduate from Canlslus College at the
tum of the century. Her mother studied
at the University of Turin and also
taught Italian for many years after
arriving In America.
Prof. Vella hopes to travel In Italy
after her retirement .

to that, she taught English - to
foreign-born Italians through the adult
educational syatems of the City of
Buffalo.
She has also taught Italian at
D'Youville; Canlalus, and Buffalo State.
At U/B, she has been coordinator of
Italian courses and has worked with
graduate reading examinations · and
cOllege credit exams . In 1952-53, Prof. Vella held a
Fulbright teaching grant · at · the
University of Bologna. She is a member
of the Modern Language Aaaoclation,
the Oante Society of America, the o.,te
Allghlerl Cultural Ci~b. .00 other
organiz.atlona. She hae trawled widaly
In Italy and lor ~ yewa COflllucled
a apeclal language lhitructioh ptogram · '

~~~h c~~a~~ul.r;~b= =t~

~~':;,~e~,~~~~~~::~~

several years as director of the
University's SPeec:h and Hearing Clinic,
a community ~«Vice and educational
facility which offers teetlng, remedial
instruction,
.00 hearing ther~~~dr:,;'~ndread~! . .-~&lt;;as to bOth

•ct'

IN DISTRICT PlAYOFFS

U/B'a Ywslty ~ team hea
achl- • goef aet .....Ina the 1178
-aon: a berth In U. ,,,._ Eaetem
Colieoe Athlellc A..,...on (ECAC)

New 'i'ork-New Jeraer~.,J!•rolfs ·

. _ COMih BUI
a BuHa
- . aelecteclto the ........., lleiCI on
the beela of an_...
25, Loet-11

;:rs....,.end -.:=::·On ....
PleJ In
~':i,
~~~~, ,
•': •

,......tourner

r

�.........

•

llly17, 1871

SENATE

Series of concerns aired at end-of-year _se~sions
(1 0) Elections. This committee shall
review , report and recommend to the Senate
rules and regulations tor the conduct of

-~ . May1

p.~=~r;g;:ec:!l~w1~a'=3!:2:1 5

"f.' '!!""'"~J~~b ~,:.tnu~':'uger)

and

13-27
the regular meeting of Aprll Jrd ,
with the deletion of Rising from the list of
thoM preeent of the meeting of Aprtl Jrd.
The motion PASSED.

A. The ,.,..klenl
The President ~·n by review Ins the past

e; •n:~~t;!lV: ·~~n'-:,r" z,,::.,r,::
Ed~,:\~'::icternal factors
1

•Ketter tells Senate we
may miss enrollment
targets again .

have also

~~r:,:ct~n ~~~~~~ t':."~·ta t~ £~:d;~~~
=~ ~~~~~~~ :ar:~~~~~~v"er~t7~~
1

~~t':t~rr~ul~eel~~ur!~? ~r:en:d

regulations promulgated by the Senate and
by this Charter.
a . Members of standing committees shall

~:~:b~\~t~~J,~:.~~1~~~~~~ ~~

•Purchasing study
recommendations to be
implemented .

~=tat.!!Wo/ac¥~~

outatand,lng achievements of the past year
haYe been the lmptementatlon of the
cont8Ct/ctedlt hour policy and the first
atage of the development of the General

consistent with the provision s of Article IV,
Paragraph 2 of this Charter; ond shall

•Decisions.still pending on
whom research VP and
DUE dean will report to.

•Executive Committee
urges continued faculty
involvement in
presidential selection
and review.

om-s• R - 's

:-'':..Self:;:!

:r.:~~t"~n~~~. c~nsi:~~io~~~ A~~re ~~~
==~r::ul~yan~e~~h~~ ;~~aroe:~i ~~~~

ond

~~~~D~? t.l: 1 ~='!i')M~I:p~n~~

11M! f2

~~ull~o~1 fiV~~t~andto~fer~~:: J~~!~~~r~o

Highlights

such number as the Execut\ve Comm ittee
deem s reasonable. The c·halrperson of each
stand ing committee shall be a member o f
the Voting Faculty and, where appropriate,
the faculty membership of each standing
committee shall be generally representative

~l ,t~: Vi,~~~~ ~C:C~~~~cs?:~~r~~~~~~~r,~:

•Senate adopts standing
orders. sets roster of
standing committees.

may establish subcommittees and appoint
the members thereof.

sh;il A~ re~~~~lt~~ st~~dl~~e co~~~~=
COmm ittee of the Senate. for transm issi on
within reasonable time to the Senate, with
or without comment. At least once each
academic year. not later than March 31, each
standing comm itte of the Senate shall
provide the Execu tive Comm ittee a written
report signed by every member of the
standing committee.
It was MOVED (Metzger) and SECONDED

One aueh actfon is the decis ion of Deputy
Comml ..loner Harrison to change the

·=

=~T~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~~r:': ~fl~~

edmlnlatratl'lely, without the express
conalderatlon of the Regents_. It furthermore

~~~~~}~~c~~~e ~r~:~~~;t~ic:orr!~~d~~~sr~~

awkward rather lhan convenient.

Health Sciences; the other Is that the Office
of Research should be Incorporated within
who
the Office of the Graduate
already has University-wide powers . The

~~r~. ''::n.~~~~~ ~~~~:fo~
evaluatkm organfzauon s, and therefore Is

~ble~rdseOec~m.~~ b~~ w~~~~~~~~:
~:"~~~~:In~~ric of r~~~Ti~.:~~~~utl¥~:

Prelldent expressed hie firm bell&amp;f that It is
Important for this Issue to be brought out
Into the open so that It will be openly

debated. Such open debate, he feels , can
only be to the long-run benefit of the public
sector In higher education .
Admtulono Update
The Prealdent gave the senate an update
on the Admlaalona picture for the Fall ot
1111. In view of some concern about

=~ =·~ f~ 1::'f~ftt~.':'':s,tg:~
:'~~~=~~~t~J~~{!:~h :~h~nth;:

.wgular admi ss ions proce.aa: any accepted
student rpuat have a high school average of
at teut 88% , must be In the top 17% of the

~~bt=rlT ~~:.!'ot ~~.must have a
The President Ia confident that the
ecademlc quality of freshmen will In any

=-

~;:.r:,;ex~yearn\It~,~u t~trn~'Y .=~~
1

=:.~m~~~~~~~~~~~~;~o~~
and pertly Wause the number of
~k:atlon• I•;!· The anaJyst• of students .
:l~l.=~~ ~~ ~ed~81

tr,: F:~

r~=· ·:~~ ~g-:~·~r:,:.ac~~:r .~!

Faculty o~atural ~tencea and Mathematics, with all other faculties losing a part of
their proportionate share of the enrollment
of freshmen .
Applications for the EOP oro up 40% this
~ ewer last year, with the consequent
ex~r:auon that the quaJity of EOP students

-',n-'.::r!'~::8nrollment pk:ture for the

Foil toob good In the greduato and
profeulonatechooto.
The two.,... that do not loot&lt; promi sing

::,.!,heb~~~~ ~~.":~!~· ~:rn.o:,~

18% .,... last yar fcomoared with' the
SUNY-wide decline of 18%1. In spite of

nacru:~,.!'¢ =•=".;::,'·~
clown~the budgeted enrollment figure

_, _

:"""

=-~·~~·==· :~::or~~~

eruot"'*'l by tncreulng freohmen enroll,_t, we may have trouble meeting

...

==•~~-~~~~ deal will depend

~~~~~~~ tC:~~g;,e~~::,:en~%';~e~~~c~

and the efforts will simultaneously be
continued to determine the appropriate
administrative relations of that person.
In answer to a question about the current

~the procna of tmp-t.atlon to

be . - out ond announced Ialor this

""::"· eloo opo~&lt;e III&gt;Out two other
-Studies
- . .. the
tnetiiUIIon81
the Olflco
Olflco of
of

and

-.:~~ . The Olffca of tnotltu1tonaf Studies

-will
~
•loWlY- t h e - ·
-·lie in lull-lion

NXI _ .,

-~-whlcllle~

::.:- ;,:-oifj;;.~

........ lit' .,

·=:·.::a-

:=:-.;.=.:::=.= :.,.";:
Acting Vfca -

for

B. The Chairman
. The Chairman explained that his aim (or
the Senate remains what It was two years
ago, namely to strengthen the organlutlon
and procedures ot the senate rather than to

-----aline- .~ .. .~

at=

another term . Since there Ia now a
story to the effect that the guidelines are

=

~po~:~e ~~el~ht:" 8':~~

Education Committee, In accordance with
the resolutions approYed at the special
meeting of the Senate In March. This delay
hal been due to two factors , one a desire-to
be c._,. about the priorities that the
Comm ittee must aa a minimum come to
terms with by Its .report In tho loll, and the

~~g~g~of~~~r~;~s0~~1nv~~~nfu~:~u~~~

of the Senate, should be invited to sit on
committees .
4. Jurisdiction of Committees of the .
Senate. Any topic reasonably within the
scope of the charge to a committee of the

~a~em::Jedbe t~ev~~~ed s~~~t;epg~edth~~
committee , lfrespectlve of other action
concerning the topic taken by any other
committee of the Senate.
Tho motion PASSED. ollHl-0
C.

.. R-'•

A. Adlftlaelona Commm.t
Profesaor Ratchford explolned that the
Admlulona game hal: changed from one ot
eeteetlcmto one of attraction, and also that
dato In the OAR Ia not currently gathenad so
u to provide usef(ll lnformatlon. The
recommendations of the report are therefore
Into two categoriea, having to do
reapectiYely with recruitment and with
Information gathering. ProfoiSor Ratchford
ernphaalzod thot both these effort, _wlll

~C:,~,:n:tea~3";~~~=i~V ~~=~~

ap~'!";!a:.:8:~~~·Hobbe)

~:.n~~~~~~: ~~;rr~~~o~~ eommlt·
(I) tho comm ittee explore with the Office
of the President , way a and means of
developing Procedures and devloes to
produce accurate and approprl•te evidence
on teaching performance as a high priority
pr(/{):he committee explore atrateglel for

~~~ngof8 tg:n~~k~n ~~~~~t~n~ntt:c~~fd

~..,:.;r:.tt~anc;&gt;nf:rnJ~y..,::,:~t~:~Wt,~':.

and ~·
zat

for the formation, ,...
or dl•tolutjon of academic

(8) Bytawo. This commlttM shaft ·
'-'and~ to theSonote mattera
concarntng _,.,.,_,. to the Cllartor of
the Faculty arid to the Bylaws of the
Voting Faculty,
mattera concarnlng.

and

,,

Pmllege•

and ECONDED
(Harford) to amend recommendation 6 to
read aa follows:
6. Recommendation concerning teechlng

r~:r.c1:'!:tu~~g~~:~r a~s~nlverslty

:.f.:

and

Professor Greenblatt presented recom·
mendatlons of the Facufty Tenure and
Prtvll_. Committee .
It wu MOVED (Hyman) and SECONDED
(Trice) to accept .the recommendations of
the Committee and to transmit them to1he

(8) Acadornlc Plannlng.,hla committee
•hall rov1ew, report and nacomrnend to the •

..,.:~'\:dml=8f wg"lck~ECONDED

Tenure

CommlttH

=r~r;t~\ g=-.!~ ..~~:~~~:ul~

thel the Senate spprow and transmit to the
the RecommendatiOns on fie.
ctultlng .
-Connolly called -'1\lon to the
opctet to ' - the nu"'bor of
to nacrult vtgorousty In that

Faculty

~:~7;; ~~rr~ fa~m;~:~ora~;~~~

~~ fi:N:(t:~=~r~: :n~~~~~~nrn:~~

1

-·

~~6:~~~::gr~: ~~~\~ ~:~~:s r=~~~n ~~

jurisdiction of the Senate. Each commi ttee
shall be provided a charge stating the nature
. of their assignment and the period of the
committee's lite. Committees will be

and ecadjlmlc reoponalblllty.
•
(8) Admissions. This comm ittee shall
' review, report and recommend to the Senate
matters concerning admissions to the
University, to departments and to major
fields, and matters concerning the recrultmenf of students. ·
(7) Educational Programs and Polley. This
committee shall review, report and
recommend to the Senate matters concernIng academic policy in the University,
Including (b&lt;Jt not limited to) under"ffraduate, graduate and professional degree

matter was the most difficult , and both

......·

b~':~ncH~~~h~"l~no~~~c~:,~~r~~~~~ Charter
3. Oiher Committees of the Senate. The
Senate may establish other committees to

and ResponsibilIty. this committee ahall review, report and
recommend to the Senate matters concern·

=1~«;:.;ft0o ~ha~':o ~"ou~:_~~

be

b~~~r ~~ ~e'r:~~ri~~~~t:~nttfth~o~~~hM

un:~)· Academic ·FreedOm

~~~:~~r:,•r~at~.·~~~~:t:.m~:~::~~

to

=~~~!.i '¥~1rn~'th;rh;en~~ec!i~~r d~:n~:~e:

creative activity; funding of research and
creative activity; and responsibilities and
llabtlltles of researchers .
·
(4) University Governance. This com·
mlttee shall review, report and recommend

bel~c~~~m~~~~~~~••mt' p='i~
-C'
:he moat Important . The CO&amp;Ir mentioned

commiUEtB

committee of faculty to"; and Article V, Par.
3 line 2-..by deleting " to". The motion
·
PASSED. 46-0-0
It was MOVED ~Berdahl) and SECONDED

sh~f r:~~~~~~po~u:g!fr~~m::rr::,''~:

~cabl~r =u~hue~~~:,S~~~~=~~~

appropriate

~::~~;na~: bAn~~fe s~n~':r.to3 ~~~r~ t~~

faculty rights and privileges.

should be effectively Involved In the case

"an

~=~-sp~~~~J~y tr~~ ~~ra~~~~a~~~~

Senate matters concerning the conduct of
teaching withi n t he University and procedures for the evaluation of such teaching .
(3) Research and Creative Activity . Thi s
committee shall review,
report and
recommend to the Senate matiere concernIng University policies, procedures and

:::0 ~~:Ju~~::i~~: ~~~rrt!~:~c~eh~~

'

for

~~~~i~~ ,:g~~~~:n~ntma8~~:~~~~rn~~~

bee~:~~~~ Et''ci'~~~~~~~a:~~~~:sfa~:l~:

and

~:l)~o~~~~~ ,!~.'~,i~fJ' a~:r. ~~~~~~~~

~by substituting ..the Election s Committee"

recommend to the Senate matters concern~
lng standards within the University

during the past year, but much remains to
be done. With respect to matters that have
been considered and passed by the senate
during the past year. the Chair noted in
~lcular that the ad hoc Committee on

-~---IMbollel

1

f~~~~lngt~n ~~~n~.a. h(~} ~:;!e":o":~~t "a~~

Retention" after " Ad missions" In line 1 and
" and retention" after ''recruitment" in line 4 .
The amendment PASSED «-0-2 and the
main motion PASSED. 47-Q-0

co~~~f;:lt)'s~:~ur~S:re~ 'Pr v~!~BJ· Ta~~

~~~ C~J'o~~~i~':~ ~~~=~ . T~~a~:~~

---b-=-~
of
tlor

.
... ,_ -.-te-tllevtoe

motion

l~se~ngL .. ~~~~~g~h~c,, ~1~~~;~v::ron =~~
Library Studies ." • The mot ion PASSED .
.7-ll-0
1
Eti (~a~~~Ea~~~~n~~'l6/e a~~ ~;~~N~
substituting the following text in Its
entirety:
2. Standing Committees of the Sena te.
A. The standing committees of the
senate, and their general char~es , shall be :

committed to the princlpte of a unified
University and that it may become necessary
to move toward a type of University Provost
arrangement, although he was not proposIng It at this time.

com~m

the

be approved . The motion PASSED. •1-0-0
It was MOVED (Berdahl) and SECONDED

r:~r~.en~~e ~~~~d~~~~~at~s~~~~~:n}:

ttem u

the

and

8 . Brt•ws Committee

reported that there have been a number of
consultations with various parties but that
no decision has been reached , since there
remain tour Incompatible solutions that
have been proposed, each with Its vigorous

tiona lbout purchUlng. In -

called

Professor Hbman MOVED and Professor

~t~~'::g~~~~~~eo~;un~~~~~~~ otfh~he ~~~fJ'e~!

~~t

lower

Professor Ratchford MOVED Rising
SECON DED that the senate approve and
transmit to the President the Admissions
Committee's Recommendations on Information Gathering and Research. The motion
PASSED. 53-ll-0
The committee was thanked and
commended for a useful report .

parties to these discussions are agreed on
one main conclusion : that there Is no
consensus about this Issue at the

about the updated charge and the personnel
can be made next week. (See Reporter, May
10).

j""""~~:-'~~~m,::

~~~D. sf~

Dean,

The President &lt;-'ed on the current
atatus of the flrat r - ' of the Committee

~='J~ wh~· .:=:!nd'Z

that transfers are admitted with

~~?:~~ss !~fras'~:;~~~ 1~7~1s ~~ea~r~~

Academic Affairs and the VIce President for

..

'=-~~·:'-and._,.,_ ~

perform Include: locating proceduret and
devices yielding accurate and appropriate
evidence on teaching performance that have
been developed at ottfer colleges or
universities or, producing such proCedures
· and devices; researching the ahort and
long-term relationshi ps between competent
teaching and student performance; and
developing methods Of transmitting teactrln ~ skills.

the ~a~o~~n~~ ~h~~~~~~~~~E=1 and

=g

0 . Al-fttlco CommiiiM
Profoasor Medlgo Introduced the motion

~:'l~=n~'!tu':' been .
H wu M~VED (Med lgaj ond SECONDED
(Hymah) to an&gt;ond !he definition ond
.-gulatlons conoomlng yood academ ic
=ng~l~atthehew::
tlon" the fpf~na.-toncao ; .

-~~

�11

. . . IZLIIW

=:

SENATE

Any student who is declar8d to be not In

present It together with a recommendatfon
whether to undertake lnvestlgatloll;'to the
Executive Committee of the Senate for their
review and determination at- a regular

~standing because of failure to meet the

rwqulrements of Items (2) or (3) of the

:.~"~i,:, :~ tin~ ~~~~
S1andards Committee , or other appropriate
1

~~~~m'lnr::=·~ r~':'p~=~"e~
Written notice of complaints accepted by

8

~~~7n~~~ !:-i&amp;~l~s~n~ :~~ ~~~~~

the Executlye Committee' for Investigation

tlon of the Committee that the semesters
inadequate performance was the result of
unusual circumstances not likely to be
repeated. and that the student wiU In all
probability complete satisfactorily his/her
course of study. Reviews will be held three
times a year, within the first two weeks of
the fall, spring, and first session summer
semesters. COmmittee declslone· will be

=',~r;::;:~;~z ~J:~v~d~~~~tn~?~~
~~~~~h~~en~ ~g~:~:~~~(:) ~~~l~n~

respondent(s) Is inclUded.
c. Withi n five academic days of the
Executive Committee's acceptance of a
complaint for Investigation, a panel of three
persons selec\ed at random from the roll of
elected Senators will be convened to
undertake the Investigation. The panel will
select one of their members to serve as

~~~:~ra~~at!~~~lo~~

the Dean for
The motion PASSED. 26-3-1 •

E.

ENCutl,e

collection forms

CommlttH

,.

Ch3.i~~el shall

Qr8de

accept and/or solicit,
but be without power to compel product ion
of , material evidence from any party
reasonably able to provide such_evldence .
Each complainant and each respondent
shall have the right of self-selected counsel
and representation by any one person at any
given time before the panel , and shall have
opportunity to review and to challenge all
evidence considered by the panel. The panel
may seek counseJ concerning the cond uct of
the Investigation from the Executive
Committee and / or the Comm ittee's desig-

It wd MOVED (Schoenfeld) and SEC-

ONDED (H ovortc.a/ that the Senate·authorize

d:=~~"rh~~~~~,r~~~·,~n:~~::,o a
for the Instructor to check regarding
person responsible for g.rades and If grades

tre

were determined
student .

by

instructor

and/or

The motion PASSED . 27-1-&lt;l

lt•m 14 Adjournment
The meeting adjourned at 41 :45 p.m .

=~~

1. Parllam•ntMian -

A Parliamentarian .

ti;~h~ b~~~~ ~~o~~h~e~~i~gwft~c~~~

1

~:i';,!~!~n~n~~~n t~~tlf~~~: ~~ ~~=

3. Publication of the minutes of mHtlngs
of the Sen1te a. The Secretary of the Senate shall cause
edited copies of the Minutes of all meetings
of the Senate to appear ln the Unlversl-ly
Reporter or In Ita successor publlcatf'ons
(hereinafter "the Reporter*') In au'fficlent
detail to report the substance of the
rhenu::Jc o~e~~
substantive lssues, and to Identify all
unpublished portions of the Minutes such

:f ~~~~s'!~~~l!';l~~t~ ~e::~s,ci,' ~m~~~fe:

F~g~:~w~th1t~8 ~:po~:de~\~ "~'eJ:

rollowlng the meeting , not counting weeks
between May 30.and September 1.
b. The 5ecret8JI¥,0f the Senate shall cause
(1} copies of the'Mlnutes of meetings of the
S&amp;nate u edited for publication In the

~~~::'::i,'fm ~~~fJ'~ g.: ~~ .::r:~:~

portions of the Minutes- unpubf.shed In the
Aeporter, to be mailed to members of the

~ot!;~_racu~y,hw~herey::~c:" ::~:~:

requesta"Por (tf aboYO will be honored for the
academic year In which such requuta are
msde, ond standing requests for (2) and (31
above will be honOred In the discretion o

the Secretary.
4. Complal8tl- """~~~"by altd -htof
facoltya. The Senate ohall make Ita!~::' offices

::1,~::., toofwh~~~J/or c~

l:::':.':'t~~fn':'~~~~~n:':'~:'i~

the cont,.,..,.y excluding grlevonoH which
llo within the oeope ol a -lnlng
Agr-t r-"ed by the State wfth any
agent of a bArgaining unit In whlcll any party
to t/le controvasy Ia Included.
b. The Chairman of the Senata will
entertain au wriHen compJalnts addresaed

~~,r,:~':ur!~!~~~':&amp;J~ fl'h:,~~
di.Ys ol NCeipt of the complaint, first not fly

all respondents and then luoe a finding
'* t\ethertMcomplaint tiM wlthin Of whhout

tho .cope = n y applicable bal'mnli
A-t
...,~ • • • •

ncUiiG; Mfcr.&amp;it

w

r;c~~~~~tf.P~~drt~r~~e~ir~rt~~r~~ft~u~

ex::t~ee~~m'::!~"ea::f ~0

order af 2:35
p.m . to consl9er the following agenda:

ttom t1 Appionl of Mlnutn

Minutes approved as cln::ulated .

~~/:~r~~~~:~~afr!n~C:~T~r!~,~~~~~~~n~
r~~~ ~~~~~':;d)~~~~~~i 5 p.m .

Attachment 1
TO : Dean Thomas Headrick, Law School
FROM : L Michel, Acting Secret8f)
RE : Law School Standards
I am directed by the Facu lty Senate
Executive Committee to transmit to you the
advice contained In the following resolution:

.

in presidential searches, with respect to
both the Identification and screening of
cand idates, and also &gt;'1ith respect to
further assessment of primary prospects through interviews with carefully
selected representatives of the three
constituencies, and other appropriate
means for evaluation and consultation
designed to assure informed Council
awareness of the views of the major
constituencies of the colleges and
university centers concerned.

sus~~~~!~ of~r~~~~~~nh;:~~~::'c'!,~:

lor; Chairman, College Council SUNY
Buffalo; Chairman, SUNY Faculty
Senate; Also possibly: Faculty Senate
ChairperSORS, at the several SUNY
colleges and university centers.

8

an~~~~Y,ebh:~ ~~~~~t: ntr~~~~~sJ~n~!:

addressed the substantive questions of the
Law School Standards and their ra\atlon to
the University's PPCFPA, that the Law
School requires prompt action, and that the
FTP Committee recommends that the Dean
of the Law School make a formaJ request for

~'S"E~~:;~th":==~=~

~~~~~tcfe~r;:dt~ =~'.:,=
PASSED unanimously.
The ExecuUYe Comm ittee wants ft to be
clear that this action does not exempt the
proposed Law School Standards from Sen1ate scrutiny, and to that end wants you to be
aware of the following add itional resolution,
which was adopted Immediately afterwards :
Resolved that Recommendation 12 of the

~acu~y !rn~~~ 6j~g ~vn:S~~t~":~lt::

Law standards
are addressed

fo~wlng slightly amended form:

2.(a} That the Faculty Senate develop a

Executive Committee, May 2
The meetln~ was called to order at 2:30

/

~-~ t;&gt;1 ~:!,::,tr::o~~:~r~.a~rn~~~~

Item 12 Olflcers• Reports
A. President
The President was not in attendance.

FSEC concerned
- over review

H:~~~ ,1:~:? ~3t ~~ ~&amp;;~r:m:eon~~

J. F
Presidential Eval uation Procedures} to ttave
access to rna
alln the University Arch ives
on former Presl ntlal evaluations .
Secondly, It w ag reed that the Ad Hoc
Committee on Presidential Evaluation review and revise Its recommendations In the
light of the new rules announced by the
Board of Trustees .
G. G. Rising asked that a report on the
implementat ion of Item 13.C. of the Senate
meeting on 1 May 1979 (on appeals mechan ~

m:it~~~ti"T~~~~!3 p~li~~o~~~n~nfvse~

~~~Tn~hnc!::~ t~~rr:::: .~3~::ri~~~~~~:
who seek Senate representation thereon .

mailed to every member of the Voting

to the Committee on Governance. Schoenfeld's motion to refer (A) to the Commlt1ee
on Governance failed for want of a second .

sity regulations , within the primary
responsibility of the several Councils,

1979

~~n~~t~"~~~tfttet!~r a:spg:~::e~i!~

u described Immediately heretofore wiV be

=-~~~~~~~~t~r~~ ~g"~ f~~:,:'(~t

Presidential Evaluation Procedures.
Resolved :
The Faculty Senate Executive Committee of the State University of New
York at Buffalo; deeply concerned with
assuring an appropriate and significant
role for faculty, staff, and students In
presidential appointment searches and
reappointment reviews , respectfully
requests the prompt attention of the
Board of Trustees to the following:
1. the importance of preserving, as a
matter of Trustees' policy, formally
established procedures that assure an
opportunity for the meaningful participation of faculty, staff, and students in
the process of reappointment reviews of
incumbent presidents;

:ft~~~::;~r~fJ~ h~~n~~~~~~~h~;~~r~nf~
~ha%t~a{c, ~~d;~.~e~~~~:!.'e~h!h~o~~

Sena,te representation thereon ; and they and

~r:~~:~~::re~r~~~h':;c:!t!t~~~~=~~

•'fr'~O:,:m~~pr~os~~~~it!!79 · on

r:

1

~~~~:~~dl~f

t»~J

Governance.
E. L. Schoenfeld distributed a Iotter
requesting Senate study of two -matters: !A)
lntra-def::mental dissension and strife; B)

:~g:r~~~ p~~~p~~ (Jr:ncf(~~~~=

electoral unit by the Secretary of the Senate,
an election shall be conducted to fill the
unexpired term. ·

Richard

ATIA9!MENTA
PropoSed Resolution regarding faculty
participation In presidential 111¥1- and

panel's recommendation(s), which disposition shall be reponed to all complainants
and respondents.
t. At the meeting In which the panel's
report Is presented to the Executive
Commit1ee, the Commlt1ee may appoint a
second panel of not less than two members
of the Committee to . reinvestigate the

g. For. purposes of this Order, academic
time Includes Summer Session. Any time
limit stated In this Order may be mod ified or
waived by the Chairman of the Senate upon
written consent of all complainants and
respondents .
5. CommlttH on commlttHS The
Executive Committee of the Senate shall
serve as . the Senate's. Committee on
Committees . Absent express action by the
Senate: the ExecutiYB Committee shall
determine the size and composition of
membership of all committees of the
Senate; they shall appoint all faculty
members and appoint or ratify .the

Segal,

governance of university communities and

Executive Committee or, If necessary, a

~~~~~~~rr;~r t:;:YSeb!teta~~~m t~~=
~~~~ve 1~mt'::~ttee~~Z~e.Se~~~':fs ~=

reiCftlng

g~~~~~~~~~r. ~~~;:s~As~~O'g~isl~~

Erwin

Si~~~~uent on Prot . Hare's wfthdrawal

acclamation.
The meeting adjourned at 5:00p.m.

rg:c:~~ m~~n~~~:~en~s~~iW~n P~F~e

Order.

~~~e!t~~ Th~"C~~~~~~~e"Ji~~~~~~

:ro-rr:::~~~~ro~o;~eg::a~~i~~e:,~~~!
dah~ 0 ~f~aAt~~~d w~=p~':!ts~Oted, and
~~s~d;!~,:~~~~=~~ea n~~~m:~

~~d~~~~~a~~ 0: r;::~f~r ~~~r~go~,'rfh~

~~~~~~fed m~tlnS,~ ~~~:to~'~~~~ unn~:

be Invited to

Barbara Howell,

5

0

establish procedures for the designation of
the Alternate , the Senator shall name
his/her Alternate from that unit 's member·
ship. No person shall serve as Alternate
concurrently to more than one Senator, nor
shall any Senator serve as Alternate to
another.
b. If an fleeted --senator and his/her
Alternate are absent from two consecutive
meetings of the Senate, or from three
meetings during the academic year, without
explanation of such absence satisfactory to

~:~~.ement Systems) will

8 . Approved was an Ad Hoc Nominating
Comm ittee to Initiate durin~ the Summer of

~~n ~~~:~~~~0ti:P~l:~ ~~~u~~~t~~~i

complai nant(s} and / or the respondemt s) to
the Chairman of the Senate within five
academic days of receipt of the report from
the panel. The report, together with written
comment (II any) by the co mplainant(s)
and / or the respondent(s) and / or the
Chairman of the Senate, shall be presented
by the Chairman of the Senate within ten

~e"~:e:!~\~e,~g~~~ :b:e':a: gr~~~s~~~~~

for

proCesses . (Attachment A} Motion PASSED
unanimously.
A. Siggelkow moved (l. Michel seconded)
an expression of appreciation for the
Inspired leadership, tutoring, and lrremlssive, though gentle and unnoticed, control

~~n~~e ~:~~ ;~~~m:~~~~~rrr:J~er~;

consent of the Executive Committee , to
serve at the pleasure of the Chairman .
2. Attendance of senators at meetings of
fhe Senatea. Annually each elected Senator not an
Officer of the Senate nor a SUNY Senator
snail forward to the Secretary of the Senate
by September 30 the name of the Alternate
designated to exercise at meeting s of the

Committee

Item 15 New Buslneu
J. Hyman moved '(G. Rising seconded) a
resolution, to be sent to the Board of ·

nee(&amp;).

ORDERS OF THE FACULTY

SENATE

~srJ':a"Wo~a!:'nd ~~~

e. A written report of the panel 's findings
of fact, their conclusions concerning the
merits of the complai nt , and . their
recommendation(s) of action (If any) to be
taken by any party whether or not a party to
the investigation. shall be s"u bmltted with in
six academ ic weet&lt;s followinp the convening
of the panel to the complamant(s) , to the
respondent(s ), and to the Chairman of the

Note: Append ixes A and 8 to these minutes
are the recommendations of the Adm issions
committee (see R&amp;porter, April 26) .

~~~~~~~fp~/.u~;:~l':al~~mf~'cr-

for perusal and advice, it will be remitted to

25,

~~~~:v,;~t~;aPr~~o;s~ur:~an~~~ TC:rt•:~

1

poin tment , promotion , and tenure from
specific Departments, Schools, and Facul_ties;

In Item 112.A, add parenthesis before " by"
in line2.
Minutes approved as corrected .

(b) Toward that end , that the Facu lty

~~~:~Y fex~~t~~d ~~~:'~~~?~~~~
propose a set of procedures i!nd ~ terla for
review of such proposed standards by

September, 1980;

crA~~h·~~~ d~c!fd'~~~e r~~po~~::
:r:ru~~ ~~re;l~no~:S~il: ~~c~h~~~
~g~\=· and e(i~~~~h:'en~~r~':s" .~~ft~

B. Chairman
:._
The Chairman reported on a luncheon
with· area legislators, and submitted a
memorandum, to be distributed to the
legislators, reviewing the d iscussion . The
report will be sent also to the Senate

m

stand~ appointment, promotion , and

CoT~~i&amp;S:~~~a~~~~~~(~~alf

tenure;

of the
Secretary) that the action of the FSEC re
Law School Standards for ~polntment and

(d) That In developing the propoeed
procedures the committee consider the

=~~~m~=t:S~o b'ean ~~t~:k r:t~

reapectiYO roles of the Faculty Senate, the
Faculty Senate ExocutiYO Committee, and
pertinent commlttee(s) t~eof; anq

tachment 11) .
The Chairman , reportin~ on the status of

~~fn~~~~ ~?u,:~o~m~~ ,:~~

thereunto. secured approvaJ to alter the
:composition of the General Educatlpn Committee to Incl ude a member froni each

~~!t~n P~~ ~~~~C:Tu

~~~=;

wr!!:.nan
three members from H.S. on the Comm ittee)~ The following nominations were ap-

proved:

~~~ereor~s; P~~~:r~~~~,,~u!~:~

John Fopeano. Health Related Profoealona;

Donald WatBf'S, PharmacY; Theodore Mills,

Sociology:

ttemnc-n..-~

The Chalrman diatrtbuted the annual ..
report of the Senate Commi ttee on AcademIc Freedom and ·R e-nolblllty (eee.
..,. R~PQrte~ J~ne 7 . )
•

ttemi5N_Bv_
A.' A draft of The- Funding of llao...-c/1

f:m~~~~.;~~'b~~~ ~:: ~~~:_

~~t''!;t·~=~r:.

-

prog::sed

(o) Thet the
pol l~ , criteria, and
~~~~:,.~ ~~ mltted to he Senate for

0

PASSED unanimously.

Court Ignores

ltall.an's pi~
The Supreme Court this week
tlecllned to revl- the case of an Italian
American who cbntended he was
discriminated agalnst when the Unlver·
slty of Colorado Law School nttuaed to
consider his application Iinde&lt; a spacial

=s~\~:.~r~r:;, 0~et~g l~~

Indians. 'The """· Dileo v_ Boerd of
Regents {No. 78-793) _ was initiated b)'
PII.UIP F. Dileo, who sold he had a
cultoit'all)'- and educationally depr1ved
up~rlnglng In New York City'&amp; "Little
Italy\' .81111 delerved •SJ&gt;ee'al· conslde&lt;a-- .•
lion by the law echool _
__

.,

�u

lloyt7,11711

. . 12211&amp;

.I

C..hmere Ellla end Laverne Cloy are teetu.-ltd in Athol fugerd '1 drama opp&lt;eeolon in South Africa, opening et
the c.nt.r for n.e.tre Reoearch, Mey 24.

CALENDAR

SCHOOl. OF ~NAGEMEHT COMMENCEMENT
l&lt;leW1Iwls Music Hal , - . -AOOHorU!1, Sym·
phony CWdo, Buffalo. 7 p.m.,

.OO . . .TRY~
AorOIIn·"'-=iolln: A Sponn Proloolytle En._ .,_
- . D-. -

for Mo...,.ll1n F•-

~

Educ:alion.,.

Consumer Society." Kathlri"te
ComP.I Theatre . E5cott. 3 :30 p _m.
A rece('ltion I&lt;JiooNs in the Jane Keee' Room.

istic

'lhlncLly- 1 7
F. Plnioh, School of Mod-

lctle. ~~ . St . Louis , Mo .

108

!lwnwl. 11 :30a.m.

Sunday-20

, . _ IIESEAIICHREPORT"
nool tho F-.y SyoDootllg . . F1n1 - - . ol I Phyol-

for._,

011-&lt;:&lt;-.-. ~
SIIW'I Hoopi181. 2 p.m. In-

~crete . Buffalo.

""'"""' -

"'*- .. the
..-.

"""""""" Deok for ""' Room

-=

-..--·
-"
'
·
...... -.-·-··""'
- a.d -

-

- A l i, YOCOII; ...,.-, Aobhlon, ~ .

SCHOOl. OF MEDICINE COMMENCEMENT
IOolnlwlo Hal, - . AOOHorUn, Symphony Cirde,~. 7 p .m.

MUSIC"
Okl and New Poll1h Mu1k:. PoUsh Com·

FILM~·

.....

nuVty Center, 1081 Broadway new Allmore
7:30 p.m . Sp:)nscred by the Centw of the

n-.-hillfimTheOf~ T,_ ol Ju.-,
1 ~ aby of 8 famly cUing the F....:h
Algorlor. conftict. H - t h e C&lt;itic'aPrUe
. . . 1962 c.w- fh FeltMI. I n - with

Cnlolive Per1orming Arts the Pcfish
Comr!u1ily Center. $2, gonenol admission: $1
students ..::t serD" citizens
The concert, OOSigned IO hoghlighl the Polish

1 --.c!C&lt;Inler.
8p.m.
-$
1 0.
fiVIoh
-- AucilaUn,
oc:r-*'CI for-~~ for the

--~-. wtl-­

-

lnto the e~ectrcnc realms of the 1970's.
A selection of Renai!ISIWlOO madrigals poojms wt1 be performed 1&gt;11 the Pdlall Vocal

-~~for-srudy/Buffelo .

.

-AIITIIEHT
IPEQAL-·

-

clrocledbl!Edward Wllul.

Weronfke Knittel, Violinist member of the Center
ol the Craollve Per1orming Arts, ta drown
._..,., ., .......- to perform "'Ctromo1X:a"
"'TIIIT'Oburella" by Adem
" [)jyert;.
rTB'llo .. by Feliks Janiewk:z end one SlOflymous

Jan-.

OF IIIICROIIIOf.OOY

o l - on AocoptOO' Aellwlty
If 1101 _ , . , . . _ . -lotion ol EA(IgG)... ~ ol E&lt;'lco!*n. D-. Clltma- FOrster.

-of""' lliwOQUO period
Bectrc:lnk: music of Wlodz:imierz Kolcnski. for·
mer YisiiOlg Slee professor ..,e, Kr&gt;yszlof Knittel,
former Creative Associate , and Bohdlrl ManKek
wtl be ployecl'
'
The concert is partially supported funds
from the New York State Councl on the Arts.
-

ol El&lt;permeolal Pathology.
~ of Vlemo Medical ·School,
- . 223 Shormon. • p.m.
El£CllUCAI. ~lNG SEMINAR
A c:..al Syotom -lgn, Juetgen
E. ...,...,...,, ~of · 338 Bell.
3:30p.m __......_.,308Bellll•:30.

LECTUREJSUDE SHOW PRESENTATION"
Slyrla-The Coro ol Aullria, Ka1 l&lt;oet"jdorfer,
Austrian 1nsti1u1e o1 New York. lniOinational In·
· 11&amp;4 ~ Ave. 8 p.m. 5pc:&gt;r-..d
1&gt;11 the F - o1 Vienna. R o - lollow
the 1oc1Ln!.

PHY~OGY-·

Cllnlolelculw Limitations to Oxygen Tra,.
part. Q-. !liMO R. _ _.. 5108 Shennan .

4o.m.

SCHOOl. OF DENTlSTRY COMMENCEMENT
Butfolo CO&lt;wention Cenlilr, CO&lt;wention Caller
Plaza. Buitalo. 8p.m.

1C11001. OF AACMTECT\JIIE a EHYIROK-AL~~

Sl, Jcleph's Churt:h, 3289 _ , Street. 5:30
p.m.

Monday-2·1

-~

_

. _ . . . . -lllAfolo.- 7:30p.m.
· AudilarUn, SymphonyQda,

CCIIICIIIr

..oe- --. __

. .-. . . . . fllpwd,
"Tho lMt - Clllp"

· her ool·
~
En·
-~.,BIInl-HII . 8o.m.

tocaAty,
· aUml
o n d- - $ $3:
2; UIB
-$
1- ~

_,

-COI.OOY &amp; 'I'HBW'EIIT1CS

1'110 _ , "'-tiee ol .... Rabllll
- . . . . . .._ ol Honlo, D-. IJwry c. Stoner,
of l'l1yoiology College o1 Modlcine,
SUNY lJoAolo Mocica1 Caller, ~- 102
~· • p.m. Rolnoslvnonta at 3':45 ., 12•
trbw._
I

Alno-. -..
-

·

- -. . be-Kohno.

Tuesday-22
~y-·

Satwc~Ay-

19

F'ACIA.TYOF BCIII-IG&amp;API'lEI

-c

......

-School. 223 Shennan . •

p."''l.

VIDEO SCREENINGIO!SQUON"
Vlbob s...n..., ~ for Medio 5rudy
gaO.Jole: 'Vodoooelol"

Md "Moleculeo."

srudy/Buffelo, 207
s 1 ' Sponoored"" -

p.m. Admission
srudy/Buffalo.

~

-~.-.-.-­
CIIIII). - - 2pJIL

PIIIPA_A
1 1 0 __
. . .,._
_ _ __

~~D-. Jof1n Cronan,
~of Midcblology, ~ o l •Ut~mL 1~~- •p.m .
~FACUlTY

a STA.FF IIE£n«r

Tho ftUit'ly
fllll8ilolg
ol . . ~
FacUiy_
_
,..behold
.. thellluoAoQm

o1
of )'OU'.,._.,.IIbolb
• p.m Urgent ... hbe Foeuty
_ CU&gt;
_

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

Dr. -

of
.. - o n , _ ,·

Torn OeWIII, filrrmel&lt;ar: "Aimosf8a'," ' 'The
.._... "Fal," "Zlerol In Dulle Space," Media
srudy-. 207 Oelaware. 8 p.m. Adrrisslon 51 .
Sponoored""- srudy,

Saturday- 26

CAREER DAY

FACULTY OF LAW &amp; JU"ISPRUDENCE
Ca.ta~CEMEHT

''Tickets to the Future... the al-day event wil
be held In SQuire Hal's Filmore Room trom 9:30
a.m. Reglstration wil be hetd from 8·9 am
Sponsored by the Community Action
bon
o1 Erie County, Inc , U/8.
Dr Kemeth GayCes wil deWar the keynote
adchas: Florence Bough, president ollhe Buffalo
Board ol Education heed of the eonwn.nty
Action Clfganlzation'a Educational Teak Fon:e. Ml

Ar1plr"k, M8in AI..Otc:wium, Lewiston , N.Y 1:30

pm

o-v---

-=

Wednesday...:... 30
VIDEO SCREENING/DISCUSSION"
Tho -~~~~ lmogo/Stalewldo: VIdeo oroonm·
mer Jo1Y1 Minkowll&lt;y win show and discuos

be the lulcheon
and cloalng remar1&lt;s
'Nil be made by Robert Pamer, director ot UIB's
Talent Selweh Program. For further Information ,
call the Comr!u1ily Action ~lion •• 881 .

5,50,

tapes - - "" prominent Yi&lt;)eomakOI'S. Media
Sludy!Buflalo. 207 Oelaware . 8 p.m Admission
$1 .-llPonaorod "" Media srudy/Buflalo, l.k1ive!silywide Corm-illee on the Arts.

/

BIOOiEMISTRYSEMINAIIf

AfooMiy31.

ft

of;~ ~:;,:.=~~.
·~
:~&gt;r===========
San
108 Shormon.

sny ol

..

Colilomia,

~

();ego

11 :30a.m.

Notices

MEDICINAL CI£MISTRY SEMINAR I
SyntMo11 o1 Alkololda, D-. Cube. Szanlay,
profiiSaor o1 Clr'giWllc cllemislry, Tecllnlcel urn-sny o1 Jblopesl, ~- 121 Cooke. Amher&gt;l.

ANNUAL MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
SYMPOSIUM if

--,Enzyme

CherrOalry on
·
will hold
;u; The
20th- IOWlU8I sympook.wn
"OnJg
Action
-

BIOCHEIIICAL PHARMACOLOGY SEMINAR i
Mode of lntracetlular Communlcdon In the

Design:

lnl)lbftora."

Moot oO.rtoom, O'Brl8n Hoi. May 21 hOugh 23,
9 a.m.-:6 p .m. For fl.nher ii'ltcJnNtion, contact
D-. - - · 6 3 8 - 2 8 5 0.

- . s;......, D-. Jeffery · NINCOS.
- · ~ ol ~. Maryland ,
307 Hoc::hstetter. 3:30 p.m. Retrestwnents a1

-·

5CHUSSMEJsTeRs 51(1 CLUB

-3: 15.

now for our V,He Water Roll trip on
12. Slop ., Room 7 Squire, "' call
831·5«5forde-.
!lotdle for a&lt;bnlt&amp;1g reservatior"e Ia .Me 15.

Sign up
JUy " -

Tho flflnd, 1&gt;11 Athol ftJgard-. Caller for~""
- . : t t, 881 - .. 8 p.m. GerMnl admlsoion

loltrld"--·-

-

·

"Tho
condlllons"
a..ctionedbli,Souii!Afrlcofsgoyerrwnent.
To be 1&gt;11 Ed Srrilh, U!B ~
prolaaaor ol """""'· the production is a play
within a play.

Exh1blts

Two polillatl . . . -. JoiY1 wmton.
prepwe fdr a rehea"sal of ..Antigone.. tor en

CEPA PHOTOGRAPHIC GROUP
Aloma~. Bec:l&lt; Hal, Main StrOI!I c.nt&gt;us.
May 1D-JLole 8.

· ooroM. Antigone's p l i g h t - lhel
of the two men nl
1110 "iludoe
~ ccndifionllogoly- by

- . - c.nt&gt;us. May

-leasaid.-

----- we_ _"" __ _
the South....,_,-~ -

Coatmare
&lt;:Or1Yicll
•

a;a -

u.-ne

Cloy -

o1 Soulh Afllco'a ;11 the irrepressible tunan reftex tor suMvll,the
said.
Fugord . . - the play it ~ with
. - , Ka"i- - . -. the two
olwllom-._roteaofh""""'*"on
~ ..0 won . . DOYeted Tony A f o r - - . , ..

..... .. -~"""
oe--""

-

lM1I, " "Tho

~ Knof' ..., "Sizwe -

~PAPER WORKS

Aloma Galery, Bec:l&lt; Hal.
1D-Jlole 8 .
Gallwy hotn . .. Mooctey to Friday, 10 a.m.·

Movglo -

5p.m.

the

e&gt;q:Jioolwt lunar
Is . .. •JCill&lt;ntion of the psyche

-

-.on

N•·Profit Ora'·
U.S.PaoU!p
PAID
lhdfalo, N.Y.
·I'Wiall No. au

shows here -

ALM SCREENING/DISCUSSION"

Media

M opporb.nity to kwn about careers i'1 sdence
and technical .-eas wil be offered to 8uffa6o
public school aludenta lhei' oerents. Tolled

"Tho loland,- -

..,.._, - . llMiion

~-.

'"""*'o

Thursday- 24

- - - anq

-

Detawt.-e. 8

award

The production Is be«lg lunded ., pert ""
Arts llewlloprnent Services (ADS), public funds
from the New Vorl&lt; State Councl on. lhe Arts
and CETA the City of Buffalo/PAL Spec;al
Projocls M1*llalration.

~:~~.;,o:',;

$3: $ 1.50 for llludenls- ADS-.8CCOI&gt;Ied.

of the ~ . . Polly

~.
"'-~ond,....
-ondfiVIoh-.
...,

MICAOBIOI.OOY SEMHIONTHLY SEMINARk
Mechllnlsmlln LE S.nd Testa. AMCtlons of

-

~--

''The l!ollnj" , . , . Thuredays through Sundays ,
May 24·27, May 31-June 3. Cu1aln limes
...., at 8:00 p.m. Thursdays llvough Saturdays ,
and 3 p.m. on &amp;n:iays.

2p.m.

1C11001. OF HEALnt IIEUI'I'm

""

Wednesday- 23

SCHOOl. OF SOCIAL WORK COMMENCEMENT
l&lt;8tfwt1e Cornel Theatre. Elicotl3 p.m.

·

- . g - . . -~ a&amp;&gt;CDilhone:'
5obu ~
AbclA-Rif'rnon Qodr ar!d

friday --- t 8

is

10:30a.m.

GENERAL COMM£HCEMEHT
Memorilll Aucitoriun. Buffalo. 3 p.m.

IFA IIECITAL •
8p.m.
~iltree.
lllnllolpll
-. -

-·

SCHOOl. OF PHARMACY COIIMEHCEMEHT
KloWwls Music Hal , Moty Seolon Room ,

JAPANTOOAY

'

. . , . _ ~ Prfnll: from CaiiQrlllhy 10 rr&lt;&gt;dom art. Golay, 5th floor.
~ . 'l'1Yolq&gt; JIJnll 1, Gollery , _ ., 9 a.m.·

~ of the carrc&gt;ua - - - of -. - .
Todly," -

1&gt;11 the CciOOcl

on "'OO:· ·

~ -----Englill&gt;~lnsti­
-

· - - Colego, Offioe of Cullu'al
· eeo--of Art Hslo&lt;y.

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
-AT BUFFALO

RIPOIIIHI

MAY 10, 1979
VOL. 10 • NO. 30

Insurance
Most students polled endorse
mandatory-with-waiver program;
results seem to favor option for abortion
By Mary Beth Spina
Edltonal Associate Health Sc:~es
A recently-conducted student health
insurance survey Indicates that U / 8
st udents favor retention of the man~a t ~ry-wlth·walver insurance progr~m
1nst1tuted three years ago . are satisfred
with their coverage, and feel 1t should
be continued .
But most also feel that abonion
~overage , tncluded In the current polICy , should be made optional for those
5
wh8r ~b~~~et~ i~?Sh~~.ra~~6uc~dn ducted
the survey, noted that while the current

policy

see~

through

Higham-Whit ridge

to reduce students ' problems
with health care providers and remove
~rriers to care, many students remain
1gnorant of policy coverage and don't
know how to file claims .
In the survey conducted for the
Student Health insurance Advisory
Committee named by President Robert
L. Ketter. 284 students who bought the
mandatory policy were questioned . Another 314 who are covered by other
insurance policies held by spouses,
parents or themselves and were subse.
quently "waived " from purchasing the
U/8 policy were also included.

Gil Moore
Courageous grad dean loses
battle to disease, leaves both
inspiration and impact on U/B
" Gil Moore was a cotKageous man . He returned to this university
to accept a demanding position In spite o f the illness that had
already attacked him . He brought to his tasks a keen intellect.
great energy and high splrHs. an ingrained sensitivity to others and an
Incorruptible Integrity. In a few short months, he had a greater
Impact upon this Institution than most persons have had after years

What was paid for

~h~h~~~:; ~~ t~fgh~~e~~~~~rr~~~!~

who bought the student policy saw a
physician at the University Health Ser-

" He was particularly adept at helping us see ourselves In a fresh
light and at stimulating persons of disparate interests to action toward

vice than did those who were "w aived ."

~~~! ~.r.•! ~a~~~c7,.?~0 ~~ t~1r ~~~~~:

some joint purpose.
"Gil Moore, when he returned here last Fall. came home among

anca and 20 per cent said entire bills
were covered. It atlould be nOlild that
care at UHS Is free . Median out-ofpocket expenses Ia&lt; physicians' bills
were $30 tor students with the U/B
policy and $29.93 tor those who were

friends, for many of us had known him In earifer years In his
faculty and administrative roles . We know he lived his life with
uncommon grace; and we know his untimely death Is a loss to each
of us and to this University. Yet we know , too , that we will not

forget the Inspiration he has left behind." "
-R.L.Ketter

"waived ."

Some 20 per cent of each group had
used either emergency rooms or out-

Gilbert D. Moore, 53, lost a long
battle to disease Sunday al Roswell
Part&lt;.
He had been dean of graduate and
professional education here since November 15.
A familiar figure at U/B, he was " the
top cholca" tor the post on the part of a
search committee chaired by Dr. Ches-

lf"eol*~"lcl~~c~~-e H;&gt;"~~;~lv~

broad endorsement from the vlca presidents, provosts· and deans, and graduate students .
Moore became dean of the School of
Education al SUNY/Albany In 1974,
following a 1~year association with
U/B. During that decade and one-hall

~~fn~t'ia':?v~:,~~~~g~~t~~rlety
He was:

lt;~': .7t"\';'.nc':,'~~lt~:~Jlf7~~te and
1

•Acting provost, Faculty of Arts and
Letters, 1971-72;
~
•Chairman of the Department of
Counselor Education , 1966-67; 1969-70;
•Spacial assistant to Acting President Peter Regan , Spring 1970;
•Exacutlve assistant to President
Martin Meyerson , 1966-69;
•Acting provost , Faculty of Educational Studies, 1967-&amp;.

as'!."':'~~~~~ ~~~~~~!'o:"6',u::Ju~~~~

achieving the rank of lull professor In
1974.
Before coming here, he taught at the
State University of Iowa lor two years .
He was an -elementary and secondary
teacher and counselor In California In
the1950s.

0.... from Berl&lt;eley

liloore held the A.B., M.A., and Ed.D.
from the University of CalllomlaBel1&lt;eley.
He was a native of Massachusetts. •
Hla professional activities Included,
among many roles In national and state
asaoclatlona , service as chairman or as
a member of various committees of the
American College Student Personnel
Auoclatlon, the Amerl
Paychologl-

cal Association, the American Person-

nel and Guidance Association , and the
American School Counselors Association .
He was president of the New York
Association of Counselor Educators In
1967-&amp; and president of the American
Association of Counselor Education
and Supervision In 1966-69. A member
of the Commissioner's Task Force on
Teacher Education, New York State
Education Department , from 197~n .
Moore was chairman of the New York
Council of University Deans of Schools
of Education lr. 1976-n.
He was widely published In educational and counseling journals, was
director of national leadership training
1

~l~ ~f ~~u~Y~~~~n~gJ~.r t~7"o. u.;d

1971 , and was a Fulbright Lecturer at
Reading University (England) In 1965-

66.

Fo~~~~tsc~~~~ fht:~~:nc~~t"~~st~~~:

1

visits was covered by Insurance for 55

per cent of the " waived " group but lor
on:rc 39 ~~;:n~~~ ~.::r~~h ~~: ~~~
Fz"ed /five per ceril of students wit~ the
U/B policy; three per cent of the
"waived" samp!e) reported that Insurance paid tor most of that cost.

known as a " university man" -

one who had a concern not just for a
narrow Interest area, but lor the entire
Institution .
Dr. Moore wu a member of the board
of the Unitarian Universalist Church,
In Amherst.
Besides his wife, the former Maryly
Burchell , he Ia survived by two sons,
David of Chaoel Hill , N.C. , and Richard,
a student at the University of Calllomla,
Bel1&lt;eley; and a daughter, Miss Linda
Moore, of S11'8toga Springs .
Memorial services were held Tuesday
In the Unitarian Universalist Churc/1 of
Amherst.

with the U/ B pol icy said all or part was
~overed

by their policy . but- the remainIng 50 per cent indicated " none" of the
cost of prescription drugs was covere~.

They think It's a good Idea
" No matter what type of insurance
coverage those questioned had ," said
Or. O'Shea, "some 80 per cent of those
with the U/B policy and 85 per cent ol
the 'waived' thought the mandatory-

wi~~·~~!~~~l.ic~i ~~~d6:~~· ·~I

those

who "'bought" and 95 per cent of those
" waived" ' said they had no difficulty
getting the health care they felt they
needed . Their answers to questions

about what kind of coverage they held ,
" For example, only 11 P:er cent of the

'bought' group and 16 per cent of the
'waived ' claimed they understood their
insurance coverage 'very well ,' 41 per

~~: g,' t~~ ·~a~~· ~~n':R~~ ~~~/ci1.r,:;~
0

understand It well at all.

What's needed
'What seems to be needed here," Dr.
O'Shea noted, Is a II8Y8raJ ,Pronjl~
commlfnloiltiOn -..l*gn Wltlclf mlgllt
Include a "plain lfo'lluage" bfochure to

~J:Ia~~ t~h"t::':r.:'J~
:~ .sXfs~e!~"; ~~t.::,ur;.:m~n:;·;.,~
timely notlflcafton of Insurance enrollment , periodic ads In The Spectrum,
and using students' visits to the
Michael Hall University Health Service
to give Information on the policy.
Abortion
On the Issue of abortion, 84 per cant
of those who bought the mandated
policy and 47 per cent of those "waived"

~~~~~-hf~~:rw~~Ya~~~~r':Jr.~~~;~ ~~i
~':r~·ih~~~~~e:~~::·th~~ t'~7~th:n~r[;

Peter Hare takes helm
of General Ed panel
Dr. Peter Hare of Philosophy Is the

some-

In th~ area of prescription drugs.
those wtth the U/ B policy were more
likely than the " wa1ved '' group to have
all or pan of the cost covered by
1nsurance. Some 50 per cent of those

•See 'lnaur•nc:e,' PIID• 3, cot 4

new chairman of the University Com- ·

Solid reputation
During his earlier tenure at U/B,
Moore developed a solid reputation
among all segments of the faculty.
His appointment In Arts and Letters
(despite a background In a totally
distinct field) won strong support from
a faculty group which had opposed an
earlier administrative selection .
His service lhere and In a number of
equally challengi ng assignments across the campus resulted In his being

they believed the studenl health policy

should cover injuries incurred In trying
~~~tei[c~artlcipating in intercollegiate

~~6~g:bo~r~,~~ot cs~~iig:r;:~:rJ.nor·

•

Results show that slightly more than
half of each of these groups had visited

of labor.

that their insurance coverage is inadequate in terms of dental care. The vast
majority felt emergency dental care
should be covered: to a lesser extent ,

mittee on General Education , the Faculty Senate Office and the VIce Presidents
for Academic Affairs and Health Sciences announced this week .

uv!~~d t~~:!t~th~~~~;e~e~~~=~~~~

also named to the committee: Marlene
Werner, Nursing ; John Fopeano, Health
Related Professions; Donald Waters,
Pharmacy; Theodore Mills, Sociology;
Peter Gold , the Colleges; and Richard
E. Vesley , Mathematics.
The Comm ittee received an updated
charge, directing It to translate the
general prescriptions of the report

~~~ ~~t~h:~'rn~~~r~~~t:nd"a~

tiona.
This will, In tum " require the ImmedIate formation of a tuk force and of

~~.::,m;::lt~Jeo'~=':ir..~:

In several areas," the charge directed.
''Tha VPAA, VPHS, and the chairman
of the Faculty Senate shall establish a
task Ioree to examine the flacal and
physical Implications of Implementing
the general ·education program . This
0

H~e':f' t~~a~~~t~~?erch~~e~ ln~n:n:

:;~e~!Jl~U:~s~~:lb'l:C~~~~:::,~~or~

Instructional respons ibilities among
units, and the like. This task force shall
submit periodic reports to the VIce
Presidents and the University Committee, the first being due July 1979."

th~~eghu~~~~::.Vm~,:~~t::!;, ~'.':,~~~

membership but "supplemented where

~\~r;~t?s~r.~rr:•t':l~ or ex officio
1. Propose adaptations In the general

~,::~•or9W.OI~~;, n!m~er ~~~.s.,g;
which fulfillment o'fgenersfeducation
requirements may pose special dlfllcuf- ·
ties. These groups Include, but are not
necessarily confined to, undergraduates enrolled In units with extensive
major requirements mandated by accreditation standards, transfer students, and Millard Flllmont College
students.
~
8

yp'Af~~~~ ~~~-:;~·~= 19~
~.:ro~~~~. ~=f:d :pl~t~~=

OYerall requirements reoardlng knowledge areas and baslc"aklna component .
These actions will entail specifically:

-·Qen..

l£d,'pogo2, col.1

�May 10, Hili

1

The budget
-:::: 'Earey favorably disposed to UIB and SUNY,
Dullea says, but there are oth.er demands; .
Anslow outlines SUNY's survtval strategy
gives the City of New York control.
What will happen to the community
colleges of CUNY Is a question that
also remains unresolved .

Governor Carey Intends to see the
Amherst Campus completed , "regardleas of what Assemblyman Siegel may
say from time to -time," Henrlk Dullea,

:J:'/~e~~~~0h;:e1r/3!y~~;;'~~o~

Aid for pert-time students
.
Tuition aid for part-time students wtll

presentation on the State budget process before a group of administrators.
Dullea said Carey Is moving as fast as
po~~Sible on Amherst within the constraints imposed by the State's bonding
s~uation .
.
Assemblyman Mark A. Siegel , chairman of the Comm ittee on Higher Educa1lon was here this winter, pronouncIng the present campus "grand iose"
and suggesting that future plans should
be scaled down .
No way, said Dullea.
Dullea, who was pan of the U/ B administration In the late 1960s as an assistant to President Martin Meyerson ,
outl ined several "extemal variables"
Which affect the annual State budget-

be a focus for budget -related debate
in the next two years, Dullea predicted :
There 's strong support for this in federal
circles he said, but the State hasn't

joined 'lhebandwagon because of the
cost factor. With more and more stu·
dents taking courses part-time, though ,
public support is growing,. Dullea thinks
" ttfat's the way we 'll move."
also foresees schedule chci'nges
for " so~alled independent students."

He

This group has grown dramatically from
about 13 per cent of all students a few
years ago. Now almost 40 per cent
claim to " have no ties at all with mom

and pop ." This is a problem to be dealt
with , Dullea said . " There are large numbers who really are Independent, but
we're going to have to develop defini-

~~~~r ~~~d ~fa~J·'s

economic
outlook and expected revenue patterns.
made In September and Oc.tober of each
year within the Governor's office, set
the parameters for the next year's
spending plan . The realities of the
State's P.Oaitlon In 1975 ("It was hemorrtloglng , led Carey, who hed been a
free.-ndlng social program advocate
In the Congress, to take a meat axe to
New Yo% State's budget, Dullea ex·

tions to determine who they are."
In a related area. ne commented ,

the Higher Education services Corporation which administers the Tuition As-

sistance Program , has thrown a monkey
wrench Into education programs for

State prison Inmates. HSEC decided

~~~ :~~r:~t~h~~:J':~·~;r~~en;:n~~

ent students; It has absurdly required
them to get their parents to fill out Ji-

1::,~~~-balleo~~':~o':~cl~Y ~~ 't'oa'fe~

nancial information forms . As a result ,
many community colleges are not re-

duce the tax burdens Which were driving
buain!la!"'a to the Sun Belt.

ceiving checks for these students and
are threatening to wipe out programs

U~ ~s Loop has cut

Into State
Unl-aity'a budget" also, Dullea offered wryly. That Is to say, the State's
school age population Is declining.
Despite talk of reaching " new clientele,"

:::-c -:!Y ~n~~~~~;u~~~~;:~~

group. "Fewer teenegera as a percent-

concern about them," Dullea suggested.
Yet , he said, ''the continuing development of State University remains a cardinal position of this administration ."
SUNY has been "well-protected" In
terms of the cuts other State agencies
have absorbed, he contended . Paul Veillette, SUNY's budget-examiner within
OOB, has fought well for State UniversIty against budget examiners for other
...,.. of government, Dullea aobmltted .
OOB, he said , Ia not the "nuty" villain
many think.

•General Ed
cn--•.oal.4)

'\

J

~

a. definition of both the criteria and .
mechanism by which new and' exlstmg
oou.-- ate to be evaluated for lnclualon In the general education program;
b. deoelopment of criteria for aca demlcally colleAint cons programs that,
If auoceaafully completed by underaraduat• would !'*-by exempt them
tfom further fulflllnwtt of the six
knoWledge arMS;
c. deflnltion 1..-~~oonjunctlon with
_.,.,nate
1 unlta, of basic

1Jn,....,

strengthening).

Nonetheless, Anslow said, the ~n i·
versity has had to resort to · reducing
funding for programs because of both
fiscal austenty and enrollment fall-offs .
Where there have ooen enrollment

fall-offs or failures to meet targets , the
Albanl administrator explained,

" we

haven t cut budgets in the same proportion as they would have been Increased
had the numbers gone up ." This repre-

sents "a conscious policy by the central
staff to be humane In terms of retrenchment. " Over the long haul, he warned ,

the lull necessary adjustments will have
to ..be l aced on these campuses with
enroUment problems.

The Trustees , Anslow noted, have

elected to Increase tuition twice during
the current period of austerity , In order
"to prevent substantial retrenchment."
Using tuition funds In this manner has

~~~e~~e~f~a~e c,;'g~~ . construction

to

?!!~~~tin;.~ ~~r;t.:;~~h~~~r~~s~g~~~~
tlons Rave made State planners more
sensitive to program costs , the mix of
students, faculty co sts, etc. This has
" caused grief" at some campuses. •
Research , extension and public service activities command another large

CUNY will be the twe&gt; most significant

chunk of funds at SUNY units , An slow

ml~:t~~~~0h~~lv!:!!lht~:~~~~rg:~;

policy of the 1960s under which State
planners first projected "what they
wanted to buy" and then tailored a tax
scheme to produce the necessary revenues.

Now, he said, the State looks at exist·
lng tax patterns , projects the adjustments necessary )a-making the New
York business climate more attractive

and then " squeezes" expenditures Into
that framework .
State plans for higher education have
traditionally set forth only high-sound·
lng ~oals with no Information about
what these goalo will cost or about al·
ternatlve ways of achieving them , Dullea
observed.
Given present constraints , he predicted, we'll be seeing more focus on
quality assessments. Judgments about
higher education funding , he said, will
be based more and more on "how well
higher education Is doing Its /ob and on
1-f&gt;w much It will cost to do t better."
In a lighter vein, Dullea urged adminIstrators to "beware" delegations from
Albany. Just as you should be skeptical
of someone who tells you ''the check Is
In the mall ," so should you beware of
anyone Who says, "HI, I'm from State
government, I'm here to help you ."
Chances are; he said, they're here "to
cut your budget."

explained . ln this area, expenditures are

heaviest at the land-grant colleges at
Cornell and at the University centers ;

~:~~iloit vJ~:rt~~urh~~ar ~~le~~~
r~:~5~~~ ~~~~~i:t~~~r· .:~rditures.

Third , comes funding for academic
support services (libraries and com-

puting services fall under this heading ; ,
Increased library acquisitions and automation are future fund ing priorities,

Anslow Indicated) .
A fourth division of SUNY funding
goes for general Institutional support
(maintenance,

administrative

costs ,

~i/;J~NYa~~~e~o ~~~m~~~~ewh~~~t~
throughout the system . Maintenance
and other costs vary with special needs
of Individual campuses . U/B, for example, requires a large appropriation
for busing which others do not.
Student Affairs command another

significant chunk of the

bud~et,

Anslow

noted, but here appropriations are made
·
on a ~rcapita basis.

Status quo
SUNY's approach has to be basically
one of status quo budgeting with

~f.'~:~~t~re e~~~~~e1.:;:'~~~~ess~~~

10 per cent over last year's base - 7Vz
to 8 per cent tied to inflation, 1 per cent
to completion of activities already un·
dertaken, and 1Vz to 2 per cent to pro·
gram enrichment, enhancement and

ekllla · oompol*lta In Engllah and In
oomputatlonlll al&lt;llla, Including identification of dlfferMtt ~. deialgn and
provlalon
appropotate ~. and
or-.na tor..nptioo;
d.
new courMS for

SUNY'aplan
SUNY has a definite plan for weather-

change."

cellar for finance and business and
director of University budgets, said here

VPM

For "the duration,• Analow told a
calnpua .clmlnlstratore conference In
Waldman Theatre;
1. SUNY Is _,milled llrat to meet·
lng 1niiMionary ~ (with an lnfiatk:in rate bel-. 7 and 9 per cent , this
,_,. an I~ of from_$70 to S90
million a yew). Sinca thla QQel hasn't

so=I~Ren~~ru:t 'rsotherro~~··lt Is
subject to expen~lture ce"//fngs and various vacancy control limits. You can't
spend everything you have on paper, he
cautioned . ·
Long-range academic and capital
construction plans are Intertwined and
impact on annual budgets, Anslo-..
said. When SUNY has to make " quick
cuts," It usually Imposes gr•ter savIngs on larger units 'Where tu11101r« Is
greater and mons flexibility exists.
Smaller units absorb their aharea over
time, he pointed out .

of

::::::r=::! of

-Fine

"'\~c::::L.
Mel VPH&amp;, ~

1110, on the

lmpllelrtlona of ttW - - education
lor the exM!Jng edVIeement
udell In t1oe DIYialon of
.
Edllcatlon.
1be ~of~ UnlweraltY Corn--~.,... _ , _ with the
the

--

_,---of

~~-=:e-'"
..................
~

••

the

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

~~~:~~\~!. c~:\.:!SC:~ ~~~
Frta.y.

~"'rr:it~= ~::,~~~
~

able to fund only a portion of the

~ ~~~ . !~ ":'Pfl!lee ~ ~~ltljoa ..

McConnell
meets students
Dr. T. Raymond McConnell , chancel·
lor at U/B between 1950 and 1954, ad·
dressed the th ird dissertation workshop
for doctoral candidates in Higher Ed·
ucation last Friday.
McConnell discussed the administra·
tive organization of universities, the

Tuition hikes

the property wealth of a given district
determine the level of school funding .
The Governor agrees It Is both unconstitutional and unfair, Dullea said . This Is

More •-•menta of quality

the Gowmor'a office Ia now working on
a costly, four-year plan for full State
funding of operations and construction
costa at the senior colleges of CUNY.
A governing plan for these units Ia
still rn negotiation, he said, but Carey
obviously will not go for a plan which

strengthening of pro-

~~~ ~~~~~~ I~ u~~n;~~~t:~;~~ t~l~~

drains on State revenues in the future ."

CUJ:.1t!:
~~::- P.'~~ture threats to
SUitY'a position" despite the fact that

~ · Selective

Anslow said 45-50 per cent of ex·
penditures at State-operated campuses
of SUNY go directly for instruction
and departmental research . Thus, most

P~'n~~~~ ms~~cd=t~'a!.~~r;d~~~

-

1

grams eleady In piece has been trted
(money for equipment replacement ,
library acquisitions and some program

forA~~~~ref:Ctor of major importance to

education funding in the next few years

age of the population means less public

2. The University Is aHernpting to
m•t Master Plan goals previously
Identified. 'We've tried to complete the
capital plan" (the Stony Brook hospital,
the Binghamton clinical campus, and
the emerging campuses) , he noted .
About $100-$120 million a year Is
required for this, Anslow said-a ~oal
which hasn't been fully achieved s.oce

.. :~. ~~~g~~t.:.\s ~~e~~~~~·':~.~
framework of the executive budget,

trials and tribulations of presidents and
deans and the constant threat of
externiination which faces innovative

pr~~~nell

is founder of the Center

for Study of Higher Education at Berkeley .

More than 20 doctoral cand idates
attended his luncheon lecture.

Ketter hears
'Asbestos Blues'
President Robert L. Ketter and Executive Vice President Charles Ill. Fogel
were serenaded with "The Asbestos
Blues" Friday as 30-40 student musicians and a professor turned up In

Capen Hall· to demand removal of what

they claimed is a " hazardous" asbestos

ceiling In Baird .
A petition with some 1 ,000 signatures
was presented to Fogel by Robert
Hatten , visiting assistant professor of
music theory.
TV cameras whirred away and flashbulbs popped .
Hatten later went Into ·Ketter's offics
to discuss with him both the petition
and the professor's letter about the
situation which appeared In the Reporter, Aprll26.
"Did you read that letter?" Hatten
asked.
"I make It a point not to read letters of
that sort," Ketterresponded .
Ketter assured Hatten that the report
he received from Environmental Health
and Safety Indicated the ceiling poses
no danger. "If there were a danger, we
would replace It," Ketter said . Otherwise, he noted , there's no money
available for any repairs because n_ew
music buildings are coming on ltne

wl~~~t~~o 'fe~~:~ated the dangers and
read from his letter atiout what scientific reports have to sli'y about asbestosis . Yale replaced a similar ceiling , he

sa~ cameras whirred away and flashbu~!..':.":~; In the outer reaches of

the Presidential suite, the students

we~~~~~~~~ea;.~~~;1':,':~~~~~9.·sound

like?
,
" It was like they were all tuning up,
one observer said .
Fogel kept expressing the thought
that If there were a danger, " we'd do

so~~h~~~~~~~~n your age," he said
of himself BAd other administrators.
'We're concerned ."
Alter a while Hatt.en emerged from
the President'·• 'office to read a statement about the University's lack of
sensitivity. He said he hed been olfer,4

rh~~·=~~~t,u~~~eu~t::!,ly~r~.~

of concern about students," he "can't
come here again."
By that time, the TV cameras and
fiash~lbs ~ g&lt;&gt;r_~e· . "
.. _

�May10, 1t7t

Commencement

Global perspective
vital, conferen~e h~ars

Bella gets the ball rolling with
speech to SILS grads Sunday afternoon;
Nursing exercises·set for Sunday night
Two commencements will be held
this weekend , marking the beginning of
the 1979 graduation season .
seventy-one students will receive
Master of Llbra."Y Science degrees from
the School of Information and Library
Studies In ceremonies at the Moot
Courtroom of O'Brian Hall , Sunday,
May13, at3p.m .
Controversial
former
Congresswoman Bella Abzug, who spent last
Sunday at the anti-nuke 2all In Washington , will be principals
er.
...SILS Dean George
oblnskl will
confer degrees on candidates presented
by Prof. Gerald Shields, asalstent dean.
A motion picture covering the aca11emlc year at SILS will be screened by
students.

Phyllis Karp,_ pres.ldent of the siLs
alumni, will make a brief add~s .
A reception follows the ceremony.
The necessity of professional nurses
to • have a 111&amp;-tlme commitment to
learning Is the topic of the address to be
given ~~ the School of Nursing comlflencement , May 13, by Mrs. Judith
Ronald , associate professor of undergraduate nursing education.
The highlight of the ceremonies , to
be held at 7:30p .m. In Kleinhans Music
Hall, will be the conferring of 132

~~~!e ~ceM;;~.~:'t~"r:O~&amp;ek ~\~

be awarded to 88, and 44 others will
receive the M.S. Five students will be
• presented special awards by U/B acting
nursing dean Dr. Ruth Gale Elder.

Foundation lists criteria
for $1 ,000 award nominees

The disciplines are and will remain
the ·~undamental basla of organization"
In American hlgher..aducatlon, and It Is
through these natural' lines" of organization that an International perspective
can best be fostered.
Professor Burton Clark, director of

~~~e~~ a~h:r ,.,!tde~"'t~'orhe R1~::"'o'f

~~~" ~~d'J',"~~~ag~ln81~!~~~:

ment of Social, Philosophical and Historical Foundations.
Clar1&lt; and Dr. James Perkins, chairman of President Carte~s Commtssi9n
on Foreign Languages and International
• Study, gave the two ·keynote speeches
at the event, which was Western New
_York's first regional conference on the
subject.
Promoting an International perspective Is part of a discipline's " natural
behavlo~· and is accomplished through
widely published and read articles ,
student exchange, international meet~
:::,~~~~ '6fa':\.me"xnlf;.'l~:'. with foreign
But how ellectfvely the disciplines

~:::."~~. ~;~~':' d~~~~~ ~;,~ec;~~~

lalo Foundation , Inc., 250 Winspear
Avenue, Buffalo, New York 14215 by the
deadline.

encase a " systematic body of knowledge" with agreed-upon concepts ,
methods and approaches, and the na-

announced .
Awards of $1,000 will be made to wln-

Criteria
. The following criteria are to be used
In determining recipients of the award :
(a) An overall evaluation .of the Individual's -past contribution to the Un iversity and to the community will be
made;
(b) The evidence must Indicate that
the candidate has made an outstanding
educational or c ivic contribution to the

:dad . Barriers

19

::~,:~"t:::~r~te':i~n~\ !~!'r,'~~"J~:

silled service employees.

,tJ~~~~p~~~~u~re!ol.::~r~~~~

employees of U/B and must have
served lor at least two years. •
Candidates must be nomlnatad ell!'h

r~ o~~n;:.n;':~n;.,o~~-nrn ~~~:;

~:~f~~~~ ~in\~:,~:~~?;\ :~~j'::,',~

ed II It appears that an Individual has
taken any action which amounts to a
direct or Indirect application for an
-ard. Anyone wlnnong ar&gt; .award will
not be ellgoble to receive another awara
under this awards program for at least

11

":,T:Inatlons and supporting doc•
umentatlon must be submitted by June
15.
The following documentation should
accompany each nomination : (a) The
nominee's Yltae; (b) Thnee (3) letters of

r~Jlert..~f"~~:llsA~c::,":t~':::l~~ ~~r :~:

award. This documentation should not
exceed one typewritten page.
The person or persons nominating an
lndlvldual must secure all ..documents
and must submit completed packages
of documents to the University at Buf-

0

un&lt;~6'~~~ ;e\?gJ~~s~c'::~~~~~.

scien tific, educa:lonal , artistic , literary or
civic accomplishments warranting sp&amp;clal recogn ition will be conslderad.
Selection

Selection will be ma(le by the Executive Committee of the Foundation. In
making selections, the Committee will
review nominations and documentation
received . A IIY8 parson screening committee consisting of a representative

~~~alh:,~H~v~~~~~~~'\r.'eth~.f.~~lre"d

service stall , and the Foundation , will
review all documents by August 1, and
will recommend up to ten (10) candl~~';.,'fJ~nslderatlon by the Exe&lt;ffitlve
It Is antlclpaled that final decision on
the award r~lents will be made by
1

~W~:~e'g,·~ ln ~e:r,;::,a~,r;=~~~~

lor about September 15.

State imposes ·new job freeze
The State's job freeze Is on again,

E. W. Doty, vice president lor finance
ar&gt;d management, notillad U/B vice
presidents Monday.
The freeze waa placed In effect by the
Govemo~s Office, Doty said.
Alf.. currently outst11ndlng employment commitments will be honored,
he noted, "but specific APP.roval In
ac1Y11nce Is needed from the ~vision
of the Budget lor llnY future commit·

~\f~ld he had been tota tnat tne
ground rules will be the same aa they
at the last employment freeze, but

ihat ''we have not as yet received the
grouiid rJ,!1eS IJI writing. • He pladgad to
pass th4!10 along "as soon as we get
them."
The vice president sald he "easumes"
1 0

e:~~:~r::c~,rr: o .:'e ~r~r"t:r..;'fei

exceptions, but he doubts ''there will be
=k~reg~~ exceptions In the
At Reporter press time, there was no
lndlc.atlon how long the freeze wUI last ,
nor of why It's being lnstltutad at this
time.

Libraries win fight for ·
low-cQst,-upgraded copiers
Alter alx months of neaollallona with
Albeny by the Untvwal[y Controller's
0ft1ca. U/B will II!)On get two S-cent
copy IMChlneelor the Law Lltnry. If all
goee well another 11 will be Installed
lhrougllpUt the Librwles a y - by

~a
ll'lolon -

y-.

~alul efforts to

obUill the ,..

~fijiiy ........ tllem.
~

c:onti'OIW Will,_ ...._

~~~=-===
i!:==~oltt.

.... 3100.

3100 because of Its dependability and
high quellty reproductlon . Cumlntly,
the Llbrariea have - . 1 t&lt;k:eQt copIers, but they ere older, lesa reliable
IMchi,_ which produce low quellty
COV::unlveratty aublftlttad juatlflcatlon

Ubrarlea ljdmlni• - tor . _ of the mora expenalve rnaell"- end ell• negotlatlona AI!*IY
expresead truatmioll .,....

c~~~nea. ~~~"":T.u=

l,,br8rree

ted ....

un:::z :-'c:':; '1f =.:,:.u...,..._

ctolrwe, 8XIIIIolned ......., rwwot.. •

rDWid 1M f8ct tlllot U/8 muat "e.Mbll8h •

....=:.::r..ac.a ol .........

\!!If IMchl..... wllf be
,_.
llr onaowr gloiMIIad
thnlugll
- ·to&amp;~MD
will not~
Jilnll!t ....
UnlwMity
8ll6llclla

end ~

co.ta .

linj~~~~g~x~:'· ave official sanction to the CommlssPon, It has mat with
only "mild" Presidential support since
its Inception, Perldns chargad . The
Commission, however, does not d&amp;-. ·
~nd on the Chief Executive lor Ita
nourishment" but gets It from the
ecademlc and Intellectual segments oT
• '
society.
The Commission's main job, he r&amp;ported , Is to raise the nation's consciousness about the need lor Infernational studies and foreign language,
to point the way to future growth.
Formerly president of Cornell and a
former vlc&amp;-presldent of the Carnegie
Corporation , Perkins listed several pre&gt;blems currently. being explored by the
Commission.
One major c:Oncem Is how to generate continued funding when lnflatlon1s

lntemattonal studies, made this observation last week at a day-long confer-

Nominations for the U/ B Foundation's Outstandln~ Awards ~rant lor

~~m~~d:rt':." ~~~Y~~~fde~\. ::S

· provision In the 1975 Helsinki accords
which callad on countrle8 Involved In
the treaty to Increase their citizens'

~~~.."f~~~~c~Y~~~~sa~: ~~~-

tid~!1t1z ~ ~"F'~i!~'':Jluc!:Wo~~~~~
~c!r as ..
..~urn~~b~~~~~~. ~~

amp e Is the
on foreign travel by
scholars who live under authoritarian
regimes. More locally, such barriers can
take the form of "bureaucratic rules"
severely restricting out-of-state or out-

:rf.:'~~~~n1i;er~1~gu~Y!:~~d 1~a~~~~~

pressing domestic or International Is-

sues.

Interest lacking
Another concernds lack of Interest In
learning a foreign language on the part
of students. Since parents believe there
Is " no pressing need" to master any
language other than the vernacular,
they do not .encourage their children to
taKe a. second language. Surp,lslngly,
this attltOde Is also prevalent in International corporations and diplomatic
·establishments.
Perkins suggested the recent tragedy
In Afghanistan which resulted In the
death of the American Ambassador
might have been averted II the Americans Involved had known how to speak
the lanJIU&amp;ge . _As it Willi_, discussion~
were held between A ghans and Rus0

si'J!'es~~~:~f'nl~ ~,','t t'/,"a~ecine can deal
with top level foreign ·business and

oi~~~'6J~~gles are more " subtle"

In
nature, said Clark, but still reduce the
flexibility needed.
He cited ciVI~ ewvlce requirements In
countries with natlonfllzad systems of
higher aducatlon as a "potent" case In
point. For example, In France and Italy,
scholars are discouraged from traveling
abroad because ·~ 1me away from the
job" can have a negative impact on their
grade classification.
Clark observed , too, that understructures - or the Individual campuses - can also hinder global awar&amp;ness. In European countries, or where
there are educational systems basad on
European models, chalrholders have
misused personal power and created
"Inward-looking clusters." These chairholders " seriously weaken the disciplines, " lamented Clark, because they
"restrict the free flow of communication" within them .
When this occurs, an Individual Is
" forced to please a local boss," Instead
of seeklng. recogn ltlon from other colleagues.

g:'ft::'~~f~~r~t~~

=·=-=

~~ lr-w.~.~

munlcatlon wlth1111 but a 8lllall m(norlty
01
ft:'Pb':,~,;?:lg;: ~~.::so eicplortn_g
how a foreign language can best t&gt;e

Amarlcan-baaed program• he'te grown
On the other hand, Clark believes the
International pen~pectlve on American

=1\\'os: ~:s.,;~r;.w;.Jt!:~~~~ !rR:

top 100 Institutions. Even the community colleges have experienced
...some progress."
To,.underacore his point, Clark notad
that over \1181lUI two decades the U.S.
has ex-'enced a growth In the number
of foreign acholara.Jnd atudents, and In

:.::~:~:.:~a!='r,s~,;

-

ana

comparative studies within
'disciplines, despite a decline In funding
from such aourcea as the Ford Foundation .
Further change In the w•rc the country

:Wuc!t~ ~lrr:l'~::!,f.::,~~~nature, Clark concluded; but "'evolu-

ll:"'k~ ~~;;,:~~

deflnltiona of MII-Jnteteet lind lncenwilt not be lnextrlclobly tied to .
the nation's cunent prlorttles or t,...ma. "The underatructure of higher
education In America now .haa a momentum of lla own," he llld.

~· and

,..... :z:-•................

~=n=..
......
ua.............

~~~~~!it~~~~~~ag:;w::'n"\~:":t~d~~j

the foreign .culture and Its oral 11nd
written language. In addition , the Com·
mission hopes to develop academic
examlnatlc&gt;ns to t~st oral competence In
foreign-languages .
International exchange programs
must also be monitorad to ensure that
American students heve adequate linguistic Interaction with people In host
countries, he -said : Over hall of the
Individuals who participate In such
programs do n6t return with the lln·gulstlc competence · "one would expect."
.....

ye~~r~ ~~ :C;,~~s~~n b~~g~l

=~~~~~~u:~:~~

g:, ~~~';.:~~~nrc~:::=~~~
~~~~n~~...~~~ Y~~~~

native tongue.

-JI.

elnsurance

......,

~--·
should hanooe thoMatudants who w11nt
the student policy but feel abortion
covaragela agalnllt1helr conscience.
"To thla queation," explained Dr.
O'Shae, "74 per cent of the 'wllved' and
72 per cent of those who 'bought' the
student policy fell Mlortion COI(eriOIII
In the m11ndalory 1&gt;()tlcy' ahoutd be Op·
Ilona! lor conaclwlfl{&gt;u•ol&gt;leCtora."
·
Those lntervlfted who reapondad to
this queation, he'contlnued,-. " askad how atronQty they felt about their
position on the opllon, ...
"'f thoae who ~
· · 54 per cent
leit_atmnoly, all' dill'
cent of tlw
'wi!Ved';"" llld Dr:· O'
. He aald
about 90 per c:eM •'Of bolt\ groupe aald
tt&gt;eyJelt either "'*Y·itrongfy" or "fairly
atronoly" Mlout'tlltlrl!llaltlon.
Dr, 0'~ Ia ~ profeaaor In

Social end"'-''""~

....................,_
.....""":':~~--=•.,.,.~
.. ~
......................... ....... ..,_..
0

'-

---·
I

~

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

• -...

llle prMie eector to 1M up to a II'MII

,...

•

I'INM. . .IIIXTWEIK

~~-"

~.._..... .._,_
/

•

�...aaa

4

Mty10, 1878

VIEWPOINTS
The Future: gloomy forecasts ~annoy Anderson
EIIIIOa'S NOll.! An lnte-estlng
debate Is going on within sdentfflc
and political drcles these days on
Just how pessimistic- should be
about the future and what courses
-should take to ensure, not Just
our standard of living, but our very
survival .
·
Two -..k5 ago, George Wald
spoke on campus and presenteda
very bleak outlook: " If we c-ontinue
our current course, our chanc6 of
reaclilng the year 2000 are 50-50 .

,at best."

.

Dean of the Faculty of Natural
Sciences and Mathematics Duwayne
Anderson sees a much less hopeless
picture. The following are remarks
he delivered at a recent meeting of
the Ovll Engineering Honor Society:

Everyone wants to know what the
future will bring . Nearly everyone has
an opinion and some are firmly convinced thel they do Indeed know. Most ·
of us are uncerlaln to some degree and
would like to Improve our vision .
The degree of surety and conviction
with Which one holds a view of the
future Is an Important determinant In
planning a car- and In living one's
fffe. Whether to begin on a note of
optimism, or passlmlsm , a note of
activism CK fatalism. often Is determined by the view of the future that one
deYelops during childhood and the early
f&lt;Kmatlve years. However, changes In
that view are Important at any stage of
life and may be either Invigorating or
debilitating , depending on circumstances and Individual makeup. A positive outlook haa advantages but not at
the expense of reality.
.
1 wu at o.rtmouth fn Hanover, N.H.,
dunng the early to mid 70's wnen the

gpr,r,:tt,.,v:::r. s.!.':''!::tn':s~~~~f..Jl~~

Dennis Meadows and the "Club of
Rome." f found myself both Irritated
and offended by It, Irritated because
their sweeping conclusions and generalizations aobout limits to grdwth , at a'
moment In time When were engaged in a
tremendously draining , lmm&lt;Kal and
foolish war, seemed, like the pled
piper's music, to have an almost hypnotic atti'IICtlon . I was offended b&amp;cauae their arguments were .b'ased
partly on Incorrect 0&lt; lncomplellH:Iata
and ·questioned and denigrated mankind's rational search for Increased
knoWledge and dominion over the earl h.
Mora fundamentally, I was offended b&amp;cause lhelr arguments completely neglected the tremendous energy and
vitality of humanity and its Incessant
will to survive, to build, to destroy~
nsbulld, to discover and to explore. _

Y-daa-

11 Is rernlnlacent of the Old Man o
Belem In Louia de Camoes' poem
e
Lu.lada." This poem Ia about the
voyages of Vaaco da Game. As this
aadentary, 118t10W and mentally shrivel-

:!,~~~~~·,:,~=-

MIIIng - · · "/: .Rtadlcts that the
caniiOt aucceed. The

~ expedition

Portug.- may find , _ Ianda but the!

no good can come ettiMir to the newly
dlecowWad lnllebltainta, the d l _ , .
or to Portuo-1. Thewllcileent~ae. he

"'

___

...a .. ,....

------·
-

___ _,ol_
.... - o f

,._,_....,~

........

- " ' •• o-. - · - . ..

-··Nf--.....

ot.-ol-.. Oiol
-- r..n

-A.~
,

-

-~

r•

"Bieek Mill c~eepere~e. Unless revolutlonary chAgli8S are soon m!"l", the
2181 century will see ·the greatest
catastrophe :Of hliilory" resulting from
larg&amp;-scale damage to the environment
There is no htgh or fa1eful enterprise
and to the el:ology of many' &amp;reas. by fire, steel, blood, heat, _,c old though It
Billions will die of hunger, pollution
th:;!~~~ of man hive ever left untried.
and/or wanr 0 shrinking resources.
Desperate condition, late unsanctl fled . .
Other billions..will have to be oppressed
. by harsh authoritarian governments.
Grave and even DracOnian measures are
t'/:
mood? · In the
ustlfled noYV to alleVIate the extent and
sixties It began with uneasy
ntenslty of future ~ollapse."
W
feel nga that things were nol working
"High optlmlam end confidenCe. e
out and feelings of guilt. The disparity
cannot know mank~'s ultimate :;oats,
between the affluem and the poor
but they Include a lar cl,vlllzatlon and
seemed to be widening . "Conspicuous
a utopian notion f the quality of life
consumption" within !he rich nations
on earth. The pot lalltles of modem
began to be perceived as unseemly. The
technology and ec omlc progress are
rlcli were seen to be selfishly and
just beginning to be visualized. Dsngers
wastefully consuming the world's "nonexist, but they alway~ have and always
renewable" resources at the expense of
will. There Is no need for faint heart.
the poor and at an ever Increasing pace.
Man should face the future boldly and _
Not long after, serious concern about
openly because the future Is his to
environmental deterioration and poldetermine-and to enjoy."
lution began to feed doubts about
The two Intermediate possibilities are
society's ability to sustain Itself. Concharacterized .as contingent disaster or
fidence In the ability of the leaders of
success depending upon whether or not
the wO&lt;Id and the world's Institutions to
the nations of the world, Including the
successfully deal with the problems
now developing nations, bring about a
associated ~lth an ever more domlnanl - post
Industrial economy In which most
and threatening technological society
beaan to drop sharply. Doubt and fear,
~~~~faf!:l~~~~~f .~;er: ':f~"e':~v~o~t
adaed to the disillusionment resultl~
remaining problems will derive from the
says, can only end In futility. B'u t at the
enc: as much In an expresslon of moral
'diUpproval as an acknowledgement of
Inevitability, he says:
.

~!t
eartr,

~esent

l

:d"a·~~re~~n:. ~~rrd~!!.c:~ ~~-

World wide Inflation erupted. Ineffective
bureaucracies proliferated. Unrest and
red tcaf · movements among the young
led many to believe In the justification

:'h~r~"!;:'l:.~~~~fan~;~,W~~h:~~~

of governments were then beginning. A
belief spread that a turning point In
world history was at hand, a turning
point that was expected to bri nq aus·
terlty and an authoritarian discipline,
both most undesirable, or, some other
dramatic, unpredictable change In the
world.

tlo~s~~::. ~::,~ghh~~f;;::~Jn~~~~~

formations , C&amp;r)nOI realistically be expected to cope with the problems or to
sustain the continued growth of the
Increasingly anlflclal, technological
world society . In this atmosphere there
emerged · a wide belief that mankind
must slow and limit growth In order to
limit consumption and to cauti ously
guard and carefully distribute t he
world's shrinking natural resources .
Is optlmlam lnsen ltlve?
It Is difficult now to espouse a more
optimistic outlook without sounding
Insensitive to the InJustices of the day
or blind to the Ineffectiveness of the
world 's growing b'!reaucracles, without

~~~~3 ~g~·~~~~~~~~~~t"'~~~g:
lems related It&gt; future supplies of

::~~. =~~":~.; ~~~sh~;~ar~?.;

judging the fu\ure capabilities of science and technology and finally , without giving the Impression of calling up
unreallstfc assumptions regarding the

~",'J:'!eln~~n u~~anln~:'JI!

:g

;:,~r~~i'ofa~~~\Y~~~~!att~~'ru'xu~.d

Two great mlleatoneo
Until now the two greet milestones of
human society have been the development of •agrlcu!)ure Which was first
begun about 10,000 years ago In the
middle east and the Industrial revolution which began In northern Europe
about 200 years ego . The Industrialization of the world Is still In progrl!SS but
Is projected .to be largely completed In
another 150 to 200 years. After that will
come the development of a post Industrial world society.

tht''c:,~~r,::~n~~~r':.'i.t~~Pol0h~~a!.~r;

due to nuclear war cannot be ruled out
as a possibility, a vary real one; It Is,
however, for a number of reasons , very
unlikely.
Let me now deal briefly with four of

f~~~~~rl'.l'~a:;~~~;r:~~~~=rs ~,..~

:::
natural resources, energy , and food .

W&lt;Mid population
Despite earlier alarms , alarms that
were qu ite justified at a time when the
growth In world population was per-

~!v~te1~f~r~~~~e~:~~g.:~7~Pi~~~~:

The t ime requ ired for transition to very
low growth rates was 150 years for
Western Europe and North America. It

;:;:oro~arJ:~~e~r~~e~ ul~l~n ,a~~~

there was a decline In birth rates for 15
developing nations and what seems to
have been a decline In 8 others. The
1960's, therelore, probably marked ine
_transition from an expon~mtlal growth
curve to an a shaped curve lhat will

there Is an abundance of raw materials
for future g!neratlons as well as for the
age we live In, and the more mankind
develops economically and technologically the more will there be. Economlc and technological development
through the constructive use of abundant energy will continue In the future
as It has In the past to create additional
wealth for mankind.
·

~lt

about future supplies of energy? When early man learned how to
mike and control fire, fuel became
important. Many of the world's most

:r~~sw~~ "::.!:Y!~~ ~~~~~~ g.:::

tructlon o'f foraats even before recorded

~~;,t;r~e~~;~o~ f~~H tlf'r::s"P~

fuel. Factory fires of the early Yndustrlal
revolution .caused even more wldespreed depletion of t!'le world's forested
areas bef&lt;Ke we progressed from wood
to coal . We are now using stored petrochemicals and hydro oower for the moat
pan and have tentatively embarked on
the use of nuclear fission. These, also,
fiYe will find are only temporary sou roes.
The world soon must enter an age when
power will be developed from sources
that are virtually eternal and inexhaustIble. What are these· and how long wllill

~ersn~ewhea:"s~~.lr~~·~o~ef~:C:~
~a'~~~~~~;m:::,~si974 estl~at:

of fhu:
of proven resources of the five major
fossil fuels, oil, natural gas, coal, shale
oil and taraands, shows that they IRI
sufficient to provide the world 's total
energy requirements for more lhan HlQ•
yiiars, allowing for a growth In toiJI
energy -demand of 15 times the present
level.
During this period, Implementation of
'current pJans - for the utlllzatlon of
nuclear fission power could add sutr
staotlally more capacity. Arguments
against the extensive development of
nuclear fission, however, have raised a
number of-difficult questions and concerns t)'lat must be completely and
satisfactorily resolved before public
confidence can be justified and restored. Whether this can be done Is
uncertain . The matter Is belnQ debated
now In the wake of the Three Mile
Incident.
In the long term, however, a gradual
transition to essentially Inexhaustible
energy supplies such as the various
forms of solar energy, geothermal energy and nuclear fusion will occur. This
transition should be nearly complete
within about 75 years. By lh ls time
fossil fuels we are now burning wil l be
used almost entirely as raw chemical
materials for synthesis Into refined
products and manufactured goods.
E.fflclency of energy conversion,
transmls81on and use will gradually and
continually Improve by a factor of aboul
4 during the next 100 to 200 years. The
deYelopment of functional heat sinks to
. store waste energy . will contribute to
lowering society's energy consumption
and also to eliminating environmental
pollution by waste heat.
.._ •n.e ~~ture,' page 11, cot 1

of
Insure the survival~ well being and the
perpetuation of our species.
Neverthelaas, I must do so because
the evidence that has been presented to
me end that I have seen o - the years
cau- me to believe that the present
t*slmlsm has gone much too fat and
haa become an unhealthy, unconstruc-

pr~bu~lro~e~t ~~~~ ta5 s~n\'1~n .w~~~
lfudson •Institute reporl demonstrates
that world rofsources, diMIIopeble supplies of energy and food , easily can 08
sufficient for a world populatlon ·double
this figure .
There Is room In the world'lor all of
these billions of people In an lncreas-.

fO&lt; a m6re hopeful and
poaltlve outlook for the future can be
foond among other places In a recent
publication of the Hudson Institute
entitled ;!.The Next 200 Years." I took the
title of this lecture from their report .
This book by HenNn Kahn, William
Brown and Leon Martel, examines the
moet ..critical aapecta of all the maiO&lt;
problems and concema the! now bi!Ht
us and alao the poeelbilltlee the! exist
to Ml with u.n. Time will not r:::lt

EdMO&lt;:
style. The real problem then turns out
On March 8, 1979, the. Reporter
not to be the raw population density but
printed my llllter ol request to facully
a problem of IndiVIdual spaca and · and staff for reasons of disinterest In
property structured communities .
the Intercollegiate athletic program dat
the Unl-slty, specifically non-atten Ml-ala and natural ,...,....,..
two replies,
Most Americans believe that a short-· · one the result of an earlier reques! to
age of materials In the world Is being
the general student body through The
compounded by wasteful uae and ConSpeCtrum, suggesting an approach to
sumption . It Ia true thet we are being
new atudants through the Summer
wasteful In our use and disposal of the
orientation procesa,
world's ml-.ol WMith, but what Is not
The othe!" argued t~e value of fan
taken Into account Is the fact that given
attendance to the. student-athlete.
SUfllclenl SOU(I)88 'Of enerQY, the oce...~
Cons.lderlng that 1 have received on 1Y
and lha ..tli'a cruat contain more
six r:eplles from students (out of a
than enoUfll mlrwa~ - l h of all types
poaalble 22,000-plusl, faculty-staff r~
td auata1n an _ , higher 1-1· of
:
s e wes proport onately better, •f
I~ than we ~tly have.
" " " - ' · oon-lon and recycling
In the towel.
.~*~ ao ~the world'• ...llllble
Plans lO&lt; an lmprowil, more visible
supply of ml.,...a tNt only a amall
Mhletlc progranr are In progress , and
addftiOIW fraction ol the =~ avall- h will be hlippy to welcome you on the
:t;.:e.::.:;::.~
cruat
blllldwiiQCHI at any fut~~ O. Sl8eie
Connry ~much af IICIIMAr tlloueht,
Dlraotor, U/8 Sportal~formatlon

t~~"t.la

::r:..-~o:.~:~

wfU not be
In the time IIWIIIt.ble
to ua tonlgllt to Outline the ]uatlfk:a.
Ilona for t11e1r OOIICiualona, conclualona
!hot I - - - . . raalllttlc: and
goela the! I -- quite
wftllln llllllty to raecll. IMtead, I

:_-:~ .!::~v~r.I!='J
rou to.- Mel-'-·
111g11

_ _ _ _ _ ......._, . .1 . . .

FOtno..,, ... - - - lour1ona
.... _ _ , . ol . . two--...

:::el~~~r:ur~~:!.C:~ .~t.::ft\'.:

Despite disinterest,
sports will go forward

~~a~.rr:eh:'~:C.Ived

"3u~~=~nfhrowlng

�. . . .1111

The Colleges and the University's future
By George Hochfield
Profe ssor ol EngliSh

The College system Is an educational
failure that costs the University nearly

half a million dollars a year (th1s year's
budget amounts to $488,591) .
In a time when most Faculties are
unable to replace Instructors who leave .
and deserving young teachers are de·
nied tenure and dismissed , the Colleges dispose of 17.80 FTE teach ing
lines at a cost of $248,652.
In a time when some major departments have barely enough secretarial
help to sort the mall and answer the
phon~ . the Colleges have 8.25 FTE

surrl'~7,~~e!~e0nrtrh~ t1g;~ ·has cut

marked declines in enrollment."
Perh aps more Important, however is
t~e indirect conflict provided by "bOu~
t1que courses ." Why take a real sociolo·
gy course where you might have to read
Weber or Durkhelm when you can take
"Women in Contemporary Society"
taught by an undergraduate? Why study
h1story when "Anarchism in Everyday
~ife" offers itself so much more tempt·
mgly? If we cond uct the University
something like a supermar1&lt;et , then
Gresham's law will operate in Jt to
devastating effect: the cheap and Qasy
will drive out , or force compromises
upon, the hard and costly .

1

its
subscriptions to scientific and scholarly journals; when the Chemistry department lacks materials and equipment for
instruction; when the counseling staff
has been reduced almost to the van ishing point; and every support function of
the University from computing to purchasing has been cut below the level ol
adequacy , In such a lime the Colleges

~~nsdu:~~~{l;;a~~ ~t'i/f'o"ri~n~;r'ces

~h~~~e~~~ul~lmg~o·:~,~p~~~.g

of
course, solve the financial problems of
the entire University . But that is no
reason to waste them . Even if they were

D~~er~~ty1 mfur~;t~o~~~~e~"~s ~~~~rtf~~

•Computing Center, we would all be
substantially benefitted . But as It Is the
Colleges measure the gap between an
understaffed and underpaid Computing
Center and a first~rate one. They are an
Increasingly · expensive drag on the
University's by now somewhat ex~
hausted pursuit of excellence.
Furthermore, as educational endeav~
ors, they represent the very antithesis
of excellence . Alter ten years they
remain committed to the casual , the
amateurish, and the mediocre . They
debase the intellectual currency of the
University In courses from " Roots of
Rock Music" to " Your Self In Fiction" to
" canoeing " to " Black Matriarchy" and
''Women's Auto Mechanics" ("boutique
courses ," as Kenneth Lynn calls them ).
Our students have never read a
dialogue of Plato; they do not know If
the Middle Ages came before or alter
the French Revolution ; they might as
well , most of them , be living in a world
in which Mozallt, Darwin , Marx, Freud
and Joyce neveNxlsted. But we permit
them to earn University _credit In the
Colleges for " Modem Gay Literature,"
" Marriage and Its Alternatives" and
''Women Locked Up ." Not only do we

~~m!\~~=~fswa~~bh~~~a~~~~~e\~:r~

courses In the fall 78% got an A orB!
Let me add up as clearly and simply
as 1 can !he reasons why the Colleges
are an educational failure and a waste of
money:
Students are diverted by the wotered-

clown

1) They divert students from the
possibil ity of serious learning by offerIng watered down and debased versions
of subjects taught elsewhere In the
University. Colleges teach drawing ,
mU81c , photography, writing , lltereture,
political science, biology and law In
courses that conflict more or less
dlnectly with oth«a given In the departments and schOOls of the University.
Most of these, It will be noted, ane In
the fields of the Faculty of Arts and
Leltere where, as VIce President Bunn
has paint
out, "there hi~ been

Most staff members are unquollfled
2) The fundamental reason for the low
intellectual quality of the :Eieges Is
very obvious: they are staff
for the
most part by people unq allfied to
teach at the university level . This is

~oa~:th~~?~~~~t 'i6thp~g!~pli~ a~d ~~~~~
journal , but it is true and we all know it .
Most of those teaching In the Colleges
are graduate students or more usually
ex...graduate students , eking out a living
by turning their hands to whatever is
permitted them . The fasc inating "Anar·
chism in Everyday Life " was taught last
semester by three such persons : who
would have thought that such special·
ized knowledge was so widely dis·
tributed?
It Is especially noteworthy that the
casual expertise of the Colleges is
rampant In the fields of literature and
the social sciences . Some subjects are
hard and the possession of knowledge
in them may QUickly be verified , but any
man who has read a few books might
well feel himself able to teach " Men ~s
Roles In Recent Amer ican Fiction , .. and
any woman with a psyche must surely
know something about the " Psychology
of Women ." The Colleges are a realiza.
tlon of the latest stage in the evolution
of the American democrat ic dream :
anyone can be a professor!
High grades ere used to attract students

3) The quality of work In the Colleges
must of necessity remain low because

~h~~~~;p0es ~~~habsr~~~:lyindecfr~~~er~

attract stu8ents . T~ is is well known
throughout the undergraduate body .
Students who are in danger of being
refused admission to a major take a
course or two in the Colleges in order to
boost their grade point averages . And if
they exercise a minimum of care, it is
almost Impossible for them to go
wrong.
A course called " Basic Concepts of
Body Functions" In College H, for
example, rewarded 39 out of 49 students with A's last semester. " Marriage
and ils Alternatives " In the .same college gave 14 out of 18 A's; "The
Disabled Person" gave 20 out of 3l A's,
and one section of "Human Sexuality"
25 out of 29. Indeed , College H, which
1

~~~~~e:n~il~w~9 ~uJ!~~=s~~fv~~~

gredes

last

fall

in

non-erossllsted

~J:j~~~ ~h~ ~~:ri~ r;;~':: :~~

health of their averages. 49% of the 669
got A's; another~% got B's; less than
10% did C work or worse.

th;h~1 pe~~n~~· ~e :;,~t ~~~~~~ :~

Women•:lltudfes College last fall (Including those crossllated with the American Studies Dept. since almost all
of these were taught by non-members
of that dopartmenll were A'a and 30%
B'a. Almost 53% o College B'a gredes

were A : 48% of Cora P. Maloney's were
A, and 38% of Urban Studies'.
In an unusual burst of rigor, only 35 %
of Tolstoy College's grades were A but
this was compensated for by 43%' B's.
Only Rachel Carson's grades followed a
relatively normal pattern .
In general , the seven colleges that
have slgn.lficant numbers of students
averaged about 73% A's and B's·
putting . aside the more than 10% oi
lncompletes and some 6.6 % S's , fewer
than 10% of the grades in all seven
colleges were Cor lower.

Independent study
But taking a course is not necessarily
the best way to insure a good grade In
the colleges. The best way Is Independent Study . Most regular faculty are
rather choosy about the students they

~i:fut1 ~~~ :~~:re~~8t~o s~~~~ !t"~n~~~

But in one college last semester two
non~faculty Instructors had 35 students
doing Independent Study between
them! Of these . five were so devoted

~~ ~ert }~ u~d~~~~eJf;"~s ~~n~u,;t
0

cal means of acquiring an education.
Except for two lncompletes, the grades
of all 33 others were A , B , or S . In
another College, one instructor gives up
to twelve hours of credit for Independent Study . Last semester this
instructor qave nine students 51 cred~
its; all rece1ved A's .
The meaning of these figures is not
hard to discern . The Colleges are,
contrary to Vice Pres ident Bunn's asser·
lion . an " alternative university." They
are plainly an intellectually degraded
alternative . They will continue to grow
- why should they not? They provide
what many studen t s, meandering aim·
lessly through the maze of undergraduate education, think they want O{
need or are willing to settle for:
marginal content , lax grading , lnco m~
petent teaching .

We have to face the question
The question of the Colleges has rrot
been faced for years, not by the
administration nor by the faculty; not
by all the Chartering Committees nor by

i;J's o(ft~~e i ~t~~de ~v~~a!~"c~ ~~~~=
mittee was simp~ a scandalous wh itewash produced by carefully chosen
friends of the Colleges) .
But the financial depression that now
grips the Un iversity makes the Colleges
a focal point for the key question that
confronts us all. That question Is: can
this University, under this admlnlstra~
lion, make the choices that will preserve and enhance what Is best in It?

15

1

w~~~et~b~ ~t'/!w,;::;~ Is that for the

past few years we have been sliding
downward. The practice If not the policy
of the administration has been to evade
choice, to let circumstances dictate
response , to talk· endlessly about plan·
ning while doing little more than lighten
the vise of student~faculty ratios .

P In
m~7~'::J~g ~~ ~~mfo~rt!J~~
w~e a potentially invigonotlng new
Idea like General Education Is launched
without the slightest prospect lor the
kind of funding that will make It more
than a boring and mediocre set of
distribution requirements .
Do this administration and University
really and seriously think we can pey for
General Education and also pay for

,!t;ris

;~~f~i~/"a~dDr.w~~e·~T~d 1 1: :J:e,~;;

System''? If so, how long can such a
delusion continue?
The Colleges pose an Inescapable
test of what we really and seriously
think about the future of this University.
If we try not to think about it, as we
have been doing for some time now,
then the future we will have Is very easy
to foresee . it will be a diminished and
'demoralized version of the present.

Taxpayers don't 'subsidize'
SUNY, Blinken clarifies
Editor's Note: The following letter from
Donald M. Bllnken, chairman of the
SUNY Board of Trustees, Is In response
to 1 news story on "subsidization" of
the State Unlversltf.~Y taxpayers.
Robert H. Giles, Editor
Rochester Democrat ond Chronicle
O..rMr. GIIes:
In a recent column, writer Richard
Benedetto tries to place the current
SUNY tuition controversy within a larger context. It's a noble goal, but I fear
certain misconceptions prevent his accomplishing II.
To begin with , Mr. Benedetto re(llarks
that State taxpayers " already subsidize"
the sixty-four campus system. The·
word subsidy Is Incorrect: a subsidy Ia a

p~~~~~uEl'~~d~u7~~dt~ :r,~rl~~~s~r~'}!',;

dollars that make their way to . the
"Independent" colleges and universities
can be viewed as genuine subsidies.
On the olher hand, SUNY Is a state
university, receiving taxpayer funds for
the same reason as any state agency that Is, because it provides dlnect and
Indirect contributlona to the citizens of
New York . As Chancellor Wharton has
noted, SUNY Ia· a public Institution created by a conscious public declalon
to IICCOmpllsh public pui'JX&gt;8", and for

the public good . The State shares the
costs of higher education In New York
because policy makers recogn ize that
the State shares the benefits .
Mr. Benedetto also suggests that
State taxpayers are more than $2 billion
In debt for SUNY construction . In fact,
taxpayers do not underwrite our constnuctlon debt , wh·lch Is paid almost
exclusively from student tuition ,..

~~t"c;f ~~~~~lydl~h"co~i~~u~e lvr:,s~;

physical plant expansion In the 1980s,
but It did not "relieve the taxpayer 108d"
of building debts - because no such
Iced had ever existed. This amongement
has been established through agneement between State University and the
State government , and to Ignore it Ia to
present a serious distortion of the real
situation.
The central question, however, Is
whether the citizens of New York
believe In the State's responsibility to
provide the highest quality education at
the lowest possible costs. Whatever
final decision Is mede on the present
tuition Issue, New York's citizens need
to take pert In the debate. I commend
your effort to extend needed lnfonnatlon to the~ubllc with objectivity and
accuracy.

~o-ld M. an~n:,e'cU~':i·
Board of Tnuet-

�•

.........

May 10, 1i7i

C-U Day draws
thousands to Ami
By Joyce Buchnowakl
Reporter staff

at;~:,~:. ~~~;;:~t~ sre~~ ~~i~~~

Deaconess Hospital employee, when
asked her opinion about Communi?;-

~7~T~~le~~Ye

~~~~~~e t~!st~ie~

:nh3
at the Presidential reception particularly
palatable.
Ms . Maxim was one of thousands of
faculty, staff and area res idents who
visited the Amherst Campus for C/ U
Day , Sunday - r one of a number of per.
sons interviewed who had positive comments about the afternoon's activities.
Wh ile some, like Ellen L=sand Jan
Nowak, two West Seneca Silnlor High
School teachers, came s
if ally to
enjoy the culinary delights of the champagne brunch (which included ham ,
eggs, chicken livers . blueberry pancakes and shell macaron i with sauce) .
others were here to browse thro ugh the
exhibits and enjoy the parade of bands .
One tiny band watcher was fourmonth-old Carrie Robinson, daughter of
Department of Public Safety Ass istant
Direc-tor Wayne Robmson . Bundled in
Wilt and pink for the fall-like w'!a:ther ,
CarT1e seemed un impressed viewing her
first parade and yawned through mnst
of it.
Indoors, spectators young and old
seemed entranced with the gla -

~~e";;i~~~stde~~~:tr~~~~~n~YTh~h'E,~~ ;{'_
ment of Public Safety's exhiblt-whi
included underwater rescue equipment ,
a breathalyzer and a composite kit used
to render sketches of suspected criminals-was popular as well.
Chevy engine and balloons
9

Ch~~~~~~~s ~i8a8r~~at~;~ :ngrrn~ ~e~~

sonnet from the Tonawanda plant were
on nand to explain the difference between the CltaUon model and more
conventional engmes .
One little girl said she "liked the balloon best." Not the BIQ E hot-air balloon that was giving ndes to youngsters, her mother explained , but the free

1

~~og ~fn~h:w&lt;;'~~~~/ct ion Corps
Elght-year-ol;{ Gerry Christensen ot
Amherst said his favorite was the
" square dancers upstairs ." No doubt he
meant the Gray Panthers Dance Troupe
About 200 people visited Fronczak
Hall to catch a g limpse of a laser demon stration and see how a scann ing etec.
Iron microscope works . Mr. and Mrs
Raymond M lskuf of West Seneca, who
came to see the science exhibits . said
they wished the open house had extended into the evening . " There's so
much to see In such a short time," of.
tered the Sierra Research employee.
The Miskufs expressed disappointment that they pro bably would not
have time " to. see and find" the Moog
Synthesizer demonstration run by the
College of Mathematical Sciences in
Ell icott .
.
Some people did manage to get 10 the
Ell icott Complex. Bu ffalo attorney Francis Whit cher and his wife Ph yllis enjoy
activities In the Creative Craft
Cent r, particularly the potter's wheel
demo stration . Observing the crowd,
lhe c uple noted , "It looks like people
are
ving a good time ."
Is band loft without him
One young man in a Cheektowaga

~,;:~~~ ::;'~~~~~\~~=r~~~~c:;igJt~

window and heard the beat of drums. he
yalled o ut, " Holy sh--, there goes my
band! "

�lby10, 1178

7

/

UUP announces
election results
for severa I posts

aerst

The results of the elections recently
concluded by the BuHalo Center Chapter of United University Professions are

asfoltows :
Treasurer-Sam Crisante (Social Sciences); Vice President, ProfessionalJosephine Wise (Computer Science);
Membership Co-Chairperson , Academlc-N . Douglas Raber (Li brary) ; Membership Co-chairperson , Professional -Edward Salndoux (Budget); Com munications Co-Chairperson , AcademIc-John McGorray (Library); Communications Co-chairperson , Professional

-g:r~~:;,~t~~\;a~~~~~.,e~~ar termThomas Connolly (English), Stefan
Fleischer (English), R. Oliver Gibson
(Educational Adm inistration), Gary
Hoskin (Political Science) ; Alternate
Delegates . Academ ic. 2-year term-Lee
Preston
(Policy Studies) ,
Lowell
Schoenfeld (Mathematics) , Harry Suprinick (Mechan ical Engineering), How-

ard Woll (English); Alternate Delegate ,
Academic , 1-year term-David Gerber

(History) , Gordon Silber (Modern Lan guages).
Deleg ate , Professional , 2 year

tern~

-

~~~e;teG"6'~?!al~s~d~~of;~~?oun"a9~s)~

year term - Jacqualyn Cramer (Academic Advisement). Agn es Tiburzi (Ad·
ministrative Comput ing.).
President-Elect W illiam Allen (History ) will take office as President on

Jurh~· 1~:,; 1. 1 ~1~ster~ w~li~~un ~r~:?~:~t .

Academic , and Secretary became vacant due to resig nat ions . In accordan ce
with the Bylaws of the Constitution.

Gary tioskin was appointed by the
Execut ive Board to fill the Vice Presidential slot for one year and Martha
Mann ing (Library) will assume the
position of Secretary for one year .

Award honors
Nancy Welch
.The Colleges have established an endowed award in honor of Nancy E.
Welch , former res idential coordinator of

Rachel Garson College and former chair
of the Colleg iate Residential Commit-

1 .:....1'

tee , whose "commitment to and efforts

on behalf of the Colleges serve as a

\

model for studen t participat ion ." [At
Reporter de•dllne, It w•s learned Mrs.

Welch died Wednesday morning .)
The aware will recognize each year an
outstanding student con tribution to the
development and implementation of a
program in the Colleges .
While Nancy was unable to be in-

volved actively In the Collegiate Sys-

tem due to serious illness, she consulted with the selection committee in
setting the criteria for the annual award .

m~n~ry ~~~~;m~~~t~ a ~~~~e:~;tro~~~~

8

year's award. Nominees will be judged
on the basis of the following criteria: 1)

~~~ ~;:,~:~m~~t:.'ise tfvr~~~~o~i~"!f~

the quality of the nom inee's contribution to the program ; 3) the degree and

~~~~~X~lrfl~~l~~~~~ebrio~~':; ~):~:
qua~ity

of the learni ng experience en joyed by the nomj nee In the course of

~~~of~n~d.f;:?o~n;gt~m~~n~w~r~ , P[~;
winner's name will be inscribed on a

plaque to be located In the Dean's
office .
Individuals wishing to join the Colleges In showing appreciation and
affection for Nancy may send a check to
the U/B Foundation-Nancy Welch
Award , 250 Wlnspear Avenue, Buffalo,
New York 14214. Any questions or suggestions should be directed to Barbara
Kauffman at 636-2316.

lsrael'i trip
near
sell-out
A limited number of spaces are avail-

PubllcAff.W.I"'rotOJbyNot~~~t~k..

Sum,.,IIMtutdC.rlc.

able for a 49-day excavation field trip to
Israel from June 24 to August 12.
The excursion , which offers practical
and personal Instruction in excavation
techniques and Interpretation of finds ,
can be taken for up to ten credit hours.
Faculty, staff and community resi dents not Interested In academic credit
are also eligible.
Tloe tri p costs S800 and Includes
plane transportation , food , room, tours
and entertainment .
Fdr further Information call Dr. Sam11111 Paley at 636-2154 .

-

I

�........

•

May 10, 1979

LETTERS
CARASA upset by
move to permit option

Knox wfth bun by Anthony P•terson .

President's Associates
salute Seymour Knox
Seymour H. Knox has been associated with this University for 59 years ,
President Robert L. Ketter recalled as

~~u~~iv~~=~~~~t~~r~~~~~~x ~~~~~

last Wednesday .
It was Aprll27 , t920, when Mr . Kno x
was elected to the Council of the
University of Buffalo. In June of 1949,
he was elected chairman of the Council,

~~~~~~!n:~~ai~~'E~!~ItJ:Srs
- To commemorate Knox's service and
many benefactions to U/B , a bronze

~t~Is,~~~~w,:,c~.~~~~rd~~~~~~~ ~:~~!;

and U/8 Foundation Board Chairman
Daniel Roblin.
The bust has be&lt;!n placed In Capen
Hall.
Knox, a Yale graduate, received the
University's first Walter P. Cooke Award
to a non-alumnus in 1961 .
Six years later. he was the recipient
of the University's highest award , the
Chancellor's Medal, for " his dedicat ion
and generosity and in particular for the

~~~~~:~~ ~ ~r~~d~do~~ec~r t~~

wor1d's finest coHectlons of contempor-

ary art ."

Buffalo " and, indeed, the world remain indebted to Seymour Knox for the
generosity which resulted In a new w ing
for modem art at the Albright-Knox
Gallery," Ketter said . ''Then, as now , it
Is the most exciting art gallery In the
country, a tribute to the taste and
foresight of the man we honor tonlpht ."
Knox continues to serve as chamnan
of the Board of the Buffalo Fine Arts
Acedemy, which he joined In 1920. He
is honorary chairman of the New York
State Council on the Arts and a trustee
of the Yale University Art Gallery.
President Eisenhower appointed him

to the White House Commission on

" Education Beyond th~High School" In
1956; and, in 1962, U/~warded him an
Honorary Doctor of Fine Arts Degree.
In addition to his service ·to the
University and the community, Knox
has been active in business , serving for
many years on the board of directors of
Marine Midland Trust Company, as
chainman of the board , and now as
chainman emeritus. He has also served
on the boards of the F.W . Woolworth
Company,
American
Steamship,
H-ltt-Robblns, Inc ., Niagara Share
Cor!loration , and the Penn Central
Railroad .

~x~~~:t':';1 ~~.:1,~~ ~;:: r~ey~:

splcaclty to invest In his friend's dream
~~~!ni;,!,~~..n - magazine which we
Knox, Ketter told the pathering ,
epitomizes the Institutions · support
which the President~ Associates help
proYide for the University.
Pnldlctlons for the long-term are
always riaky, the President said. " Nevertheless, es we look ahead to the next
decade In higher education, at least one
prediction can be made safety . Private
phllanlhrophy will continue to be a
ctltic81 factor In tt"""Jnanclal well-being
flaxlblllty ot i1SJf lnstltutlona. It
alwaya hal been , whether It be an Elihu

1

5

renamed itself Yale, or a Thomas
Lockwood , who supRiied the half-

~J:~o~ ,?ti~!~s8~~~~~t~i~e~:Ft~~~slon to

One might even extend this predic~
tion , Ketter ventured, to say " that
privat e support of higher ed ucation
during the next decade will be more
important than it ever has been 1n
ensuring the health of our institutions .
Th is may come as a depressing statement to persons who have spent the

~!~sd~e~e~~~~~:~ ~~c~1:~~U~~~~~
1

in~e have been struggling for ei9ht
~~r~~sv~~a;~i ~~ :~o~i~~e~ocf~;e~n~:;,~
bers of the University community. Had
we the strong arm power attributed to

~~u?J n~~ 9noa~t~-:~~~~~n~at~~ ~0t~~

0

seg~;rnt;a86 t~~u~~~~e~~ 9c0o;:r:sni~ere

~:d~ t~tr;~~~~~ll:~i:fe ~~~ . r;Jh?ch
0

com mun it y . Leavy's efforts to involve
the admintstration in a student debate
reflects a total disrespect for the rights
of students to determine policies that
affect their lives . Furthermore, Leavy's
supposed " mandate" to pursue optional
coverage comeS from an SBA decision
which was made despite Law School
survey results favori ng mandatory coverage .
The SBA decision to Ignore the survey resul ts was supported by this same
Sub-Board delegate who IS now attempting to overturn a settled decision
on the grounds that the results of the
HIAC survey have not been considered.
For abortion opponents who are sup~
posedly concerned with moral principles and preserving the- right to decide,
it is more than ironic to observe their
latest attempt to railroad student opinion, parliamentary procedure, and
established channels of decision-mak'-

Editor:
• As students of this University, we are
outraged at the latest elfort by certain
newly elected Sub-Bo_ar_d members to
circu mvent student opm10n by atter:npting to overturn the decision to contmue
abortion coverage in the student health
insurance policy (SHI).
This pol icy, which has been approved
by Sub-Board I and the Health Insurance Advisory Comm1ttee (HIAC)_. 1s to
include abort1on as a regular. bas1c part
of its coverage . Presiden t Ketter had
given strong indications th~t he would
give his approval to the pol tcy.
Only the irrespons ible actions of
Ton y Leavy. the Law School summer
delegate to Sub-Board , have caused
delay ol this final approval , probably
unt il we are all gone for the summer.
The process for determining how
abortion coverage would be treated in
next year's SHI has been _a lo':lg on~ .
During the eight months 10 wh1ch th1s
debate has been waged . there have
been inn umerable letters , guest opinions and editorials in all campus newspapers , massive petitioning campaigns ,
two public forums before Sub Board,
campus maili ngs , and d iscussion by all

1

~:Ju~t~~:::it l~~t~~r~~~h~~ t ~~ec~~~~~

Nevertheless, Inflation and declining
numbers of colle~e-age applicants presage a more d1fficult time for our
inslltutions . This dlfliculty w ill be compounded for the public sector, for

Pn°c~~~~rr,~n~r:~s~~:7o ;~~ ce srat~~d~~

1

1

growth and expenditure . Therefore .
support by alumni, friends , and business and indust ry will be re lied upon to
an increasing degree."
U/B, Ketter said, has a fortunate rec ·
ord of support and confidence from
many persons in the community both
during Its years as a private institution
and as a part of the public sector.
Seymour Knox. he said , "Is one
whose family has believed In the future
of this area since the 1890's." His
mother provided the first endowment
for the U/B College of Arts and
Sciences - a gift of $250,000 in 1915.
He has enlarged that tradition of private
support for the public good in such
fields as art , letters •. and education,
Ketter said. " He 1s one who , in the
words of former Chancellor and Presi-

~~~me~r:or~o Ft~~na~~g~~:~a~r:;~s ~~~
accomplishment .' " He "is an art patron , civic leader, banker, businessman , sportsman, benefactor of the
commun ity , gen ial friend , and gracious
gentleman ."

SILS fellowships
The School of Information and LIbrary Studies (SILS) wilt award three

master's level fellowships for 1979-l!O,
with high priority going to economically

~~~::'~:g~ El'~g~~~~~~~~t~~~~~~~announced .
The fellowsh ips have been

~anted to
t e Higher
Successful candidates , who must
have U.S. citizenship, will be eligible to
receive a stipend of $3,000 for 12
months , a dependency allowance of up
to $600 for each dependent and a tu ition
waiver, Bobi nski noted .
He said applicants must meet SILS
admissions requirements for the Master
of Library Science degree, and will be
expected to successfully attend full time from September 4, 1979, th.rough
the 1980 summer session .
Appilclltion deadline is June 1. Furt:W Information and application forms

k~eu~n~~A'c~do'\r 1~~ l~f

~ ~~ ~~~~. ~~;,tfting

Bobin-

tial destruction of the declared wishes
ol a majority of students on th is
campus.

collected in support of continued SHI
coverage of abortion without an option
system. and the overwhelming number
of students at bo th public forums spoke
in favor of the policy as since approved
by both Sub-Board and the HIAC .
The majority of Sub-Board members
voted on this issue only after discussion and direction by their respect ive
student constit uencies. No one can
maintain that the decision of both
Sub-Board and the HIAC were made
without a vast amount of student input.

Attend meeting , May 17
We can't let Leavy 's ignorance or the
... actions he has taken prevent us from
having the reg ular abortion coverage in
the SHI. We urge all students to go to
the Sub-Board meeting on May 17, at 7
p.m . In Squire, and show your support
for the SHI as already approved. The
new Sub--Board must not and cannot reconsider this question anew!
U/ B / CARASA would like to thank all
those people who helped us in our wort&lt;
this year. We received a tremendous
amount of support from many different
areas of the Un iversity community. We
hope to be back ne xt year, continuing
our fight for aborti on rights and against
sterilizati on abuse, and took forward to
your support .

Vote being challenged
Despite the fact that the decisi on of
both Sub-Board and the HIAC were
made after months of informatio n gath-

~~~~j ~g~e~~~-~s ~~n~ ~ h~~:~~!~ ~g;

0

0 8

failure to consider a recently conduc ted
insurance survey . This survey. conducted by the HIAC , polled two groups
of students (300 with insurance coverage and 300 without covera9e), and
contained 3 questions concern mg abortion and an option system . The ques-

- Susa n Schreiber
-Arl ene Fisk

lor UBICARASA

JOBS

~~~fa~~s:~~e~~iev~~ienn ~Ya~e~p:g

~t!,~~~ - ~~~erti~el:~s~~:~~~h:~~t~~

which reserved approval of the SHI
pending conside ration of the survey results , voted to approve the Sub-Board
decision .
Clearly, the survey results reflect no
more than that any question can be
phrased to yield the desired answer .
The fact that nearly 50% of students
polled favored some sort of an option In
an open-ended question orf abortion
coverage is hardly a mandate In itself ,
and Is even more meaningless when the
size of the sample and the wording of
the questions are considered .

COMPETITIVE CIVIL SERVICE
Typist SG-3 -SOcial Work , Amhersl PhystcaiPianl
Credentials Aullol,llnt SG_. - Admlss.ons &amp;
RecordS.
·
Steno SG- 5 law ; Music ; Affirmative
Action .
Sr. Steno 50·9- law.
Sr. Account Cl.,k SG-8 - Facully of Afls &amp;
Letters·.
SuperYlsor B ectronlc Computer Operator
80·18 - Universily Computing Services .
(2nd posting) Typist SG-3 - University Ubrarles..CTS , Serla.IS .oe&amp;mment ; University Ubraries..CTS..CataiO;{nQ Department (lemp . ) :
University Libraries Lockwood Orcutation (temp.)
Sr. Li brary Clerk SG·7 - University L1·
brarles..CTS-cataloging Department (full-time.
temporary).
Stores Cl.,k SG-5- Central Stores .
(2nd posting} Sf . Stano SG·9 - Unrversity
Budge! Office.

gr~~~cfrn~~~~~~C:ri Fn~~~~ t7~ ~~eb~g~:
1

sequences of an option system, al·
though this in formation was one of the
most important factors that went Into
the Sub-Board decision . At the Sub-

~;[i~u~ee~~p c'7;~~~~g~Pgro;~rtf~n~hi~

was pointed out ttiat an option plan
could not be developed to Include only
those with moral objections to abor·
tlon , and that In future years the cost of
an option could escalate to the point of
jeopardizing any form of abort ion coverage. These are not groundless fears .
Once a form of coverage becomes tan-

H:~~~a~h~[ ~~~\I ~o~~~~~·o~t.ls

NON-COMPETITIVE CIVIL SERVICE

Secretarial Stenogreph., SG-12 of Managemen1.
PROFESSIONAL STAFF

very

Students now preoccupied

ov~~~~~~i~;, t'::;~;~a~~wof'"t'~~ ~~~e~~
~~"l~~%~~~~1v;f t~;:;re~:'i&gt;~~~p

School

,

Dlreetor of lnatHutlonel Studies, President ' s
OtHcePR-4 , 8-9018.
Technical Speclalltt (Computer Systems Engineer), Oean' sOtftce-FEAS PR-2 , B-9019.
Assistant to Director (coordinator/careel'
guidance &amp; placement office) . Edvcalional Opportunity Center PR-2 , B-9020.
Admissions Counselor , EducattOnal ()pporIUnltYCen,ter PR·1 , 8-9021

opposed at the onset of this debate .
8

1

:':'~~~gs~ 2~/;~~~J'~ 1~~ ;,~'k1~~g:

decision over the summer to avoid stu·
dent Input, these same people are now
not only encourag ing the reversal of a
student decision , but are doing so at a
time when students are _in ! he process
of taking exams and leaving for the
summer.

le.'!~a';."!~"!ft~~pt~~ :u~v~ ~~~~,:gP-

slon-making authority of the student

FACULTY
Assl~tant Professor, School ol Soc1al Work .
F-9041
Assistant Professor , lnstruc l!On (English
Educ.). F-9042

RESEARCH F!)U NOATION

Auocllte Cur1tpr of the Central k:e eo.--1
Storogo Foctllly, Geological SCiences , R·!I014
Aulolanl, Dopotlmont of Modi·
dno (C.rdloputmonary Research l..1bS), A-9016 .
Typlot , Sociology Depsnmeot. A·0015 .

-ell

�. .aa•ra

""y!O, !tl'll

MFC ·students toast
faculty,
staff, peers
.

--

Several students, faculty and staff

~~~:dfn"gh=r~ t~uat~~ ~~~r~·

Allmere College (MFC) at the annual
awards dinner hosted by MFC's Student
Association (MFCSA).

~~: ~~ea,;;~~!alorr~~d~/~e ~:
munlty who have shown particular
Interest In or achieved spacial honors

th'fh'~~!!';~;~:~~;'~~e ~~f9rl'.:"ihe

Faculty Club of Harriman Hall In t~e ·
Club's dining room , site of the University's classic oval mirror which once
belonged to Millard Fillmore himself .
The MFC Studenl Association had the
mirror refurbished by D'Arcangelo Fine
Ans of Buffalo. The gold-trimmed mirror was originally donated to U/B by
Edwin B. Spangenthal.
Recipient of the Carl Naish Award at
the dinner was Walter Prowchonlk,
adjunct faculty member In the Department of An . The award was Instituted In
memory of the late Carl Naish , a former
MFC student, for "selfless dedication"
to the College. It was presented by
Keith Johnson, assistant to the dean of
MFC.
·
Senior Gloria Long received the Phil ip

John M. caner, Jr.,. president of the
U/ B Foundation, Inc., will be honored
1

Manufacturing Data Systems, Inc., Ann
Arbor, as a research and development
programmer; Richard J. Batt, who will

and adviser to the
Student Association .
The Dean's Gold Ki!y Award recognizing the outs•andlng MFC student who
has contributed the most to the College's Student Association went to
Angeline Janetakos, presented by
James H. Blackhurst, dean of the
Division of Continuing Education .
Ms . Janetakos was also recipient of
the President's Gavel Award for completlon of a one-year term of office as
president of the MFCSA executive

verslty College· of Education Alum ni
Association at a dinner, Fdday, May 18.
_ The selection of caner for the award,
which was announced by the MSU
Alumni Board of Directors, Is one of
two made by the boafd this year
A 1959 raduate of Msu; Caner
served as ~!rector of alumni affairs
there ,before joining the U/B Foundalion In 1969.
Jie
ed
tl
1
•
dent ~"'\h~~oun~~'if~n
v~1f':~d
president in 1975.

F.enowahlp.
';
Other finalists were: Robert Full, who
will work toward a Ph .D. In comparative

Japanese educato.rs to visit,
wil1 consider exchange program

FNSM . .n OuwayM Andenon pr...m. aw.rd to Thoma• Bogdan .

'!Wt

phAf~~s. honored at a recent awards
luncheon were six fi nalists for the
FNSM honor: Ray Beach , who will

~f~~~·J'~l~e~s~:e~fs ~~g~n~ !n"';.'~~X

l:~~a~~~~t1t~ 1~~lerht'1.':;P~t~~en

G"ld-

In microbiology and molecular
at the Harvard
I

~~~b~!edu"~~~r::i~~~e~r phystc~eTJ

~~~ ~~e~~ti

Gordon

slon .

who

~~?m~=~~ r3~"ro~t1~~~xt~~k

a'k
fairs; Peter F. Gruen, chief justice of
the student-wide / udlclarv. and Johan-'
na Juene, editor o M/dnlg~( 01/, MFC's
monthly student government publication.
Ms. Juene also received the annual
editor's award, presented by last y.ear's
editor Laura Crawford.
.
Eleven MFC sch; larantp winners
were recognized at the banquet, too .
Gues=saker was Dr. Robert Daly of
the De
ment of English, who s oke
about lllard Fillmore, U/ S pres~ent
from 1850-53 and chancellor of the
University from 1846-74.

Carter honored ·

FNSM honors its
outstan~ing seniors
Na~~:;,te~'i:'o" Mga~~~l'.: c!ith a
joint major In physics and mathematics, will attend the University of Chlcago next year as a greduate student In

~~'!Y~; ~~o~~ ·ded~:fJ~ t:O:susr~da"nnJ

~':v~~ !~~:.;, ~~g~ f:rY~e~~~~~, ~~
11

~~~~ ~ P.r~=~. ~Fbh~s~'f.fa~t j~~
continuln'g~cation

1

~:~'::::'~~ "w\~utl:.:::r:..!f S::'Y!~~

terms of office on the MFCSA execu tive
committee. Recipients were: Janetakos; Katharine Stiffler, vice president ; ·

acedemic reasons, has faced the most
obstacles In pursuit of his or her
0

Thomas J. Bogdan of Corfu was
presented this year's Dean's Outstandlng Senior Award In the Faculty of

committee.
Special awards went to Dr. Clarence
Dye,_associate director of student affairs and services, and Dr. Ronald...
Stein, assistant to the president, for
their continued sup~ of MFC.
Dr. Eric Streiff , MFC assistant dean ,

~u~~lo'~'?.U:,~t~~~ 'i.l'tc~~lb~t~f~"u~~

vrn

, Or. Hideyasu Nakagawa, president of
International Christian University In
Tokyo , will tie vlsitlnp the campus May
13-15 as part of the ' Japan Today" Observance being sponsored by the Council on International Studies and other
UIB organizations (see "Calendar" for a
run-down of scheduled art lectures,
lilms, and exhibits)..
Dr. Nakagawa will be accompanied
by the director of (he Educational Exchange Program at his university, Professor Haruo Tsuru .

or~~~~~~ i ~~ l~eMJ8pr:;,k:e ~~~~!!n,c~i
0

UJB. the two are going to expl.ore estat&gt;lishment of an excnange program
between this university and ICU .
ICU Is a private institution supponed
by the United Methodist Church . It has
a liberal arts and graduate level curriculum which provides a chance for both
Asians and westerners to become f~il­
lar with cultures other than their own.
While In Buffalo , the Japanese educators will attend a series of lunches
an&lt;t'dinners to be given by various Onl-

Prof. Nekapwa

verslty officials, and will tour th.
campus and Niagara Falls.

Senior who works as. nurse
wins $19,000 Lehman grant
Curka and Fulton are
'Athletes
of the Yea-r'
baseball
Paul Curke '79, wrestii11Q, and Sue
Fulton '79, bowling, were named the
Outstanding Male and Female Athlete
of tile Year naspectlvely at the.annual
U/B Athletic Awards Banquet at Klelnhani"Mualc Half, Mondey night.
Ma. Fulton won the women's award
for tile second straight year.
Other awards and their recipients

_...
c.c. Furn•s Soholsr-A ihlete Awards
($1,000 g,.,t OIIICh for gnad study): Sue

Fulton, bOwling , Berry C. Kleeman,
_ ., Anthony C. Palornbaro, golf,
Edw8nl L. TyrTell, -utng.
ECAC M«UI of Merit: P8UI Curke,

••:::-E.PHIIe
.

Aw•rd (OUiet

· ·.\

lng

player): Michael -Groh '78,
Edward Durkin '78.
, Mulligan 's Cup (to outstandlnQ football ptayer): Jim Rodriquez.
· Special Recogni tion: to swim Coach
Bill Senford for 30 ·years coaching; to
Paige Miller, '79, for servfce to Athletic
DeP,artmen ~ and Sports lnform.tion Of'
flee.
,
All-American Awards : Wrestling
Paul Curka. Tom Jacoutot '80, Ed
Tyrrell 79; Bowling - Sue Fulton , '79,
Cindy Coburn , '79.
Sllllflr Bull A ward (for contributions
t.o Athletic Depanment): Stan Barron ,
WBENRadio.
SuperstBrs T""'m Awards - to Men's
Footbell , Women's Field Hockey.
....... ••
• •' • ~ '· . ·'· .
'•'·'-"'t '·"' ~

A 22-year-o ld U/B senior, who works
nights as a licensed practical nurse, has
.won a $19 000 fellowship for four years
ol grsduafe study.
Elaine A. Reynolds of Eggertsville Is
one of 30 winners of Herbert H. Lehman
Greduate Fellowship' In Social Sc[ences and • Public and International
Aflalrs.

~=~~~~d~~r gl~:n ~gh:Je/~~':1!

State, Is ooen to ·outstan:rlng college
greduales from throughout the .u .s .
who wm pursue graduate stu dy In a
college or university In this alate. Of the
30 winners, 19 wens from N- York.
Among 32 alternates named for 1.ehman Feliowahlps WU' U/B .aanlor
James W. Carey of Amherst . Alternates
may receive an offer of a fellowahlp only
if win,_s decline.
As a LehiTUIII Fellow, Mlaa Reynolds
plana to study Englllh history at Cornell, starling In September. Sha will
graduate from U/B In May with a B.A. In
history.
·
·
Hef Leh~ award, Mlaa Reynotda

said , provides $&lt;1,000 for her first year at
Cornell and $5,000 for each of. the
succeeding three years.
'
She pointed out hat hef graduate
studies may take aa long aa alx years
because shfi want a to ewn a Ph .D. Her
chief Interest, stie added, llee In England's J'Bth Century poiHical and dlplomalic hl.atory.
She hopes to become a· COllege-level
teachef and a writer.
A member of Phi Beta ~a . Miss
Reynolds currently aa president

•

~r~~ ~~~u~~:e !::eat"!ru~~nc~:

r~~

Oxford University In England under a
&amp;Cho~h i p from the Institute of Inter-

1,

M~~~~~lo::r.nlul no.lse, Miss
Reynolds Ia employad on the night shl"

1'1 the Intensive Care N~ at Chilo-

nan's Hoepl~ . She atudled nursing at
the Millard Fillmore Hoapftal School of
Nursing during the 1975-'1'8 and 197&amp;-77
achoot y_. , with 80f1!e of her time
~I studying at UIB. Silt entered
U/B on a lull-time baala In tlie fall of
1877 .

,

�Mlly10, 1178

.. . IEZIIW

For the record: minutes of _General Education debate
Following . . mlnules of the various

Faculty Sen•e eeealone on ~
Education.

111e.,..... •....,.•

r

111- o1
3/21Jtn,ll27171

of S/131711,

ff:et.:.~~~"':!r;p; ~ ·~"'=~~
ore depoaltod In the F*'ulty senate Offl&lt;:e,

=l:.~hey may be consulted by l.nterested ,

(2) The three oasslona have.been reporteo

r.::~~t~~~the~=~~,r;m~~:
ff, Vol . 10, No"iJ. 3/15/79, ':91; ~ll'Vm,
~"n::~~~3,J,}19)~'~%ori....p~or. 11~:
~~: 2"-tl,'~:,·,~; 1-~~S~m~~l!;

Continuation (3127/79): Reporter, Vol. 10,
No. 2•. 3/29/79, p. 3; Spectrum, Vol. 29,
~to:ioJ:i.~~~~. :fi . t ; Vel. 29, No. n ,

ro~~'?"vo~ "/!:/!=:"~~1r~,::
1

-

attendance.carda) on all aubat81lti¥e actions
tak. . at the three aes1lona are deposited In
the Faculty 5e~te Offlce, where they may
be conaulled by Interested part tea . ~

The meetln24 was called to order at 1:35
roWowf~o ~nd~rcl! 1979 to. consider the

=.:.ore::..:,~ Stondlng Commlttao on
MOVED Baker, SECONDED Connolly:
thot the Report ot the Com1111ttee on General
Education be adopted by the Faculty
Senate.

tr!?~~t~':::ild~~f~R~~ ~"Iff~~

"Committee oft he Whole".
•
A-nt oblee11on, SO ORDERED
- The Senate dissolved Into. a quasi
commllteaolthewhole at 1:45 p.m . on 3113
and reconvened at 3:00 p.m. on 3/27 to
receive the report of the quasi committee of
- the whole .
- MOVED Connolly, SECONDED Wickert:

oo;:'A'Ws~y acclamation.

"

••
The meeting adjou!!l~ at5:00 p.m.

'

Mlnutee of the Ouaal Comm ttt.. of the
Whole

14) MOVED Millo, SECONDED Bunn: that

co!~nJu:l 1~m~~~ ot 0~~~~79w~?t ~
1

Newton Garver In the Chair.

1) MOVED Kelly, SECONDED Wlcl&lt;ert :
that the Report be amended by addition as
~~~~ ~a:!~~~~:R: theorlglrtal Section
tV. AFFIRMATIVE ACTION COURSES
1

pr;~m "~r'':U~!hew~~~araJs=~?J~

-;~=v~ ::,o'rort~"~~~~~~~~·h, .s~~~~

courses , wh ich would fall within the general
framewori&lt; of knowledge areas rather than
being ~dltlonal requ irements, respond
most directly to deepening one's acquaint·
ance wi th the diverse elements of our
American cultural Identity, with the forces
and principles whk:h have affected Its
development, and with the b iases of race
8

~~a~x ~~~~~n~ ~~e o~;c,~:n' ~~ai~fs

curricula are the objectives of freeing
stOdents from a personal provi ncialism and

~f P~~T~~Wn~he~~r ~ht!'~~n~st ~lym~~

!!;~~~i~~nl. ~~~~:~~~ of1 ~~rr~:J:

M~~~ f~~~~~~gf (~~~.groorams.

not only provides crucial and often ignored

~~~tve,:fs~ ~~fc~fl:u'g:ran~fre~:S"uC:S

the won:ra ••t~Y8
1

or'

Mter the word

~~p.,:h~=~~~tt.·r.!~~ ~s:~~~~
~~~iet~ .:J~:=~r~for~o,:ua,~n ~~~
know~ge

area.a, - the

exact

number of couraes In each area to be
determined In the October . 19711 Faculty
Senate meellng In _relation to the
development of themes, skills courses ,

etc."

ond by deletion, In poregraphs IIHvl), o1
all ret_...nce to number of couraee .
Amendment FAILED (17-49-1)
MOVED R l aln~ , SECONDED Kelly : to

am::'
:ft~~~~r;:~~tl~ ~=tt~h
19711) faculty dlacuaalorr on the Genarat

Education Proposal, for o period of throe
- ·· no f - than throe pUblic forumo be
held to - t and dlocuos tho Proposal.
Tho,..,_ of tho forumo - I I be to lntorm
tho otudent body of tho - 1 Education
,.,_.. and to otudent Input In
~to 11. At 1 - two faculty mombers
ol •tho 0-rat Education Committee shall
be _ , ot ooch forum, ao will the
• Exocutlft OH!eeR ot the Underg...Suate
Student Aoaoclatlon.
·

f.!:,~ha~~l!l ~ ·:: ":l::
Unclergr8duMe Student Aotitit:latlon shall
-•1111
t h o - l - I o n Commlhoe
to - - _ t to Jhem - t i o n a

._,.lnO

tho plan, booed on otudent body

-lble

?t~:tu~~i~~~C:ev!:. ~~~~:r'•tte th~~ud~~i
:na~u·~c:.n;s ~~,ru,!nda~~ntt~~~e~~

__

~~~o:ion~ub:~ue1~~0~~0e~ P~~vJee:'e~~

19) MOVED Dryden, SECONDED Scott :
that Section IV. B. be amended by add ition

Committee develop the
criteria by which the success of the General
EduoaHon Program may be measured and
that such crtteria be published prlor to the
start of the program. Resources which are
necessary for continuing evaluation Shou ld
be · made available to the Un(_verslty
community. A Commlffee on Ev•luatlon,
Independent of the GEC and reporting - o the
Faculty Senate, abould conduct period ~

~d''~~~~-: ~~l:~,f,'g.,s=! .~~re r~

1

the University through publication -In tbe

r~umbering

8 .4 as 8 .5, B.S
..

~~r:~em;~~~~~ ·~~n1~:nl~::uv:tu':

admla.alons and faculfy/staff employment.
In Its June 1975 " Report on Affirmative"'-

~~n ~'1~:~;e: :~tr;~m~*: r~~~~
1
~"?:gm ~t~·=~~U::~~n:'~·s0~t~~:::J

advisability of Instituting faculty-student
academic advisement. "
Motion FAILED {1 6-37-2)

ca

~~:J:!J~!fll!!.~~:~st.heH'=~r~~~ ~111th~~

22) MOVED Metzger, SECONDED Segal :
that the Murdock amtndment be' amended
by ' subatltullon: under ty.A.1.vl, for

g!,~,~~= :~"tent~;~~ec~~t.J~
~~mm:e. u;~~~~YateA~~~~ ~l~~

coursn)".
Motion FAILED (22-26-8)

Increase the total number of courses
required nor will th~alter the d istribution

'

th:§~W:nER-.~-~~~u:r.,~~;a~Nb~~diil::
adJ.:~"Ytfa~nf~~a~~::.~f~o~~slder the

21) MOVED Murdock, SECONDED Danford : that Section IV.A.1 be amer'Ried b y
deletion of sub-paragraph {vi) "Foreign Language courses) ".
Motion I'AILED (1_7-32-1)
__

comP:Onent as part of thdlr th irteen required
Genera l Education courses. Since theae two
courses / will be Identified within already
c:Jeslgnated knowledOf areas, ther- will count

8

2

~~=g~ La~::a~ an~ FC::~~J~urer:-&amp;

courses already being offered by vartous
departments and programs. In conjunctton
with the Unlveraltl Afflrmattve Action

23) MOVED Segal, SECONDED E.
Kennedy: that Section IV .A. t .vi be amended
, to re.:j:
" Cross-c ultural or Foreig n
!,!lnguage.Study (2 courses)" .
'

oom~llng

Studies, Puerto Ak:an Studies, ancjt Natfve
Atmrk:an Studies), and other departments

, ECONDED MI2•) MOVED Con~oll
chel: thalthe Segal a nd nt be emended
by subatltutlon, to
"Foreign Cwlluroe

commitment to affirmative acUon pri nclplea."
Motion PASSED (52·1~)
_
2) MOVED L. Kennedy, SECONDED T~ce:
that (original) Section Ill be amended by
adfoHdoltwslon_'7of_a Pllat~emarophlcalheadSclelnnceg
(n ~_text) as
Mat..
Motion PASSED (&lt;10-29-2)

continue to deWtlop procedures for defini ng
8nd Implementing new affirmative action
courses and progroina. "
that Section v be aroended by addition aa
peraBg_I!JP
' ethc.B .4,"ftnumber1ng B.4 aa _B.5, B.5
80 8. e
.. 8. The blues of eex· and rac8 are still
-Y much a part lif today's aoclol reality .
Having encourogad the beglnnlngo ol an

ernie atudlea" as a means of advancing our
afflrmattve action commitment. Consi dered
'1A the light of the overall untverslty mission

~-::ufC:~Y"~~,:d:~a~for~e;a~s~~~~
mlttee

~n:=e·tt'~~~~' rr~t~~gcan:~~!~s

recommendaHon aert"es as a
lmpetua for a currk:ular

=;::nen~~~~kmwou~mee~~~~oaJs~~

1

fn'd~r_~~id':'~:,~:!·~:"'~~~meeene~

1

th'F~g~or:~:~

at

".1!~'-:f;....

rec.aed 5:40 p. ., to be r&amp;-eonvened
1:30 p.m., Z7 Man:h 1~9.

at.

~~1Yea-:~7,c~~~~~~,W:~~~t~~

Unlveralty muot now take the IOsjlcal 'nexr
,tap: the -opment of a comprahenalve

::'u"J:\~"r~ Jl.~rn::l~'::. :~u~

lq

curriculum would orient students to the

~~~r:r~!~~~~·w~:.~u:.=,~~:

culture are not · the only workable and

=:~n: ~·~,:,rr,er:~~ ari~~~

';!~~~:o·~::~:r:t=~t·,:
:.::·=~-r:..~ ~:e ~

~~d.
BECOHD£0 Rlolng:
_ . _ I V . &amp; b e - by -ltlon of

.\.

16) MOVED Kelly, SECONDED Brown:
that Secti on IV.B.5 be amended by adding
..criteria an~ " after .. establlsh"ln line 1.
Motion PASSED {58-1-2)

~~~pd~E~~o~~~::~t:ll,:~!d~~=

n curricu lum
emen_t broadresponsibility
approach to

.... final - - by .....llutlon, ldr
"lhould be ._,..lble lor", of "will-'&lt;
wltlltha offlcero ot tho - t Aaoc!Mion
ln".The-ttolhe_t_
ACCEPT£0 without otlfeetlon.
Amendmont (aa - ) PASSED

=~~.~~~~~ ·~~~~~~

by
" That the Committee shall take care to
develop a theme focussed on women and
minoriti es."
•
Motion PASSED (55-4-4)

R"t:~~~n.FAILED (16-38-3)

mi norities and women to be composed of

a~lrmatlve

17) MOVED E. Kennedbe SECONDED

2

Important modification wh i{h mi ght In·

SECONDED Wlcl&lt;ert;

-~be

paraOraph 8':4,

finding no

a.s.ptra¥~a.~t ~~.

as,\·.~ et~at · the Committee define an
r~~~u·,;i~~ac~~odn ec~re~:! ~1a~~0er~~

~-of t h e - Ectucatl~n
e::r=or~':.-11;"..
for the
MOVED Connolly,
-the
Altlng

1

1

Chal~s

:~~~~e;n~h:~;~~~r,.~vS:n~ence~mended

th~tt~~?~~~~vK~ya~:n~~~Dad~n~~~~~

18

for teadershtp
action requl
An
ens the scope of Instit utional
by creating an educational

1

H

r,:s~~n 0 t re~:~~81 ~ur:f'~1~~io T:r,
::S~:W~n.l 0~~~~~ut'u~,f~s es~.~~~~~:·~~
~~~n-lty

16) MOTION by Dryden, that the phrase

;~~c~~~·u ~1~sPf~~~~~~v .~~~~a:'~Q

ORDERED upon the
objection In the House.

~e~r'!~!~~dnd t~ef~'!,~d~o~nrci',~~lo~~~u~~

precisely those whose afrlrmat tve act ion

that
Section IV.A. 1 .be amended by substitution ,
IOrMd :
.. That all freshmen Ini tially enrolling

folloWing

~=- :,~~~,;s,na~~g~f~a'r~~:,:f,n::''h:

for non-majors, and have

lm~l~~~~~~~rl8(!~s~}'gle di~lpline ."

9) MOVED Boker, SeCONDED Metzger:
that Section IV. B.6 be amended by add ition
of the following :
"In particular, the Committee does not
Intend that the General Education requirements be Imposed Ofl students In units with
the effect either or jeopardizing the
accreditation of those units, or of expanding
in · any substantial way the current
baccalaureate degree requirements for those
potentially .. Jeopardized· programs ; and
consideration shall · be undertaken In
~Junction with the executive officer and

tlo~~·; ;on FAILED ( 3--49- )

"!o;i!_!'~,:;:ni ~~LED 111-49-2)
MOVED Kelly, S~NDED Rising:

cr;;~~h~~o~:~nc~~J::~~~:;~~~~~~9

be designed

recess.
. ..
8) MOVED Baker, SECONDED Murdock:
that the Report be- amended by deletion ot
Section IV .A .2 .
Mollon PASSED 1•7-3-5). It was agreed to
mi nute the statemeRt " That it Is the
Intention of the General
Education
Committee that all c ourses be eligible lor
lnclusk&gt;n under IV. B.2 and fV .B .S."

been partially developed and Implemented.

~ l ng

t5) MOVED O"ryden, SECONPED Schoenfeld: that Section IV.B.2 be amended by
addition, after the first sentence:
,

P- ~~eo~'na;: ~~~ tg ~:~:n:t f~~:

reflect the -cultural experiences and
eKpressions of American minorities and

by

Motion FAILED (17--45--4)

. worn " un1ts" In line 3.
Mollon PASSED (35-12-31
The met!llng was recesMd at 5:30p.m., to
be re-&lt;:onvened at 1: ~q p:m ., 20 March 1979.

and by det.flon In accordance with motion
1

~~1ett~~~~he ~':dn~A~~~ca~"l~~~~~

7) MOVED D'Xden, SECONDED Metzger:

~~at~~~~~~~;lnc~u':l:n~mC'~~:.~x :?t~~~~

~~o:"~da~km~r;~~~a~lnco~~t~~~
~"8re~ '1lanlord,

Motion FAILED {6-56-6)

:

Moll on PASSED (53,4-21

10} MOVED Aelsmann, SECONDED Scot1:
that the Baker amendment be art'Rtnded by
totaJ substitution, to wit :
" If any aspect of the General Education
Program Is i n substantial conflict with the
accreditation demands of professional
programs as authorized by-the State
Education Department, the executive officer
and pert inent faculty of such programs shall

til
SECONDED Hyman:
thai Soctlon IV.A.1 be amended by addition,

areas, from this component. "

Mathemetlcal Sciences and Tecnnology l 2
courses)..

about whk:h the student will leam to make
r~evant judgments, and to discriminate
among vatuea. "
.
The Intention here Is to correct a seriousomission In the educati onal opportun it ies
afforded the majority of college and
university students. The beg inni ngs of an
aftlrmattve action curric ulum In the form of

the who1e, to wit by addition In accordance
with motions It , 2, 6, 9, 16, 17, 16, and 23

/

MOVED Connolly, SECONDED . Mle~: ,
that the -CornmlttM be thanked and

4) MOVED Kazarlnoll, SECONDED T~ce:
thai !he Rlelng - - n t b e - by
to Slctlon IV .A.1 of a f)Oiallraph
"lwlil Malhematlcal sa- (2 counoea)".
lolcMJon FAIL£!) (218·41-1)

-It ion

5) MOVED Trice, SECONDED Ebert: that

:c=,rv"c~l~~

.=

:=,.or Ill) .... Alai -...,_ C2
-.:=;_FAILED('I--.11
w.n.. UOOIIDED lWfonl:

, ... , •
by
...,...10_"111)~-

...

=rre"r3p=:=~:.~ ~

r

His opinions
were his own

, oil _
.. In fhe -lety would be tho chief
I)OIIIa of., lllflrmatlft action cumcutum ."

Mo119"fAILBltl--1)

12) MOYEO

~.

SECONDED Kazar- •

-==.................
_
.......
=:":'..;."'r=:'~":"'=~.:r-.~

twoliouon FAILED (21•i1-4)
-

.

~~DEDCunan:

be-*cfllllhe

"AI..-.... ...W ..... to tlllte two

---~

.._..

Eclllor:
This Ia to publicly state that the

oplnlone exJ)&lt;MMd In my Jetter to the
~May . 3, fll79, regarding the
_ ....._.
Wei"- .Aoalnet Violence
.._nat_Women
eol.Newa8
_ ~ton-ly mlae 81111 not
IlioN of the Unt.walty

· Thlllkrou .
-PeuiA~

�n
el"he Future
I'""" pogo 4 , col. 4)

requirements are better understood and

:'r,~"':v~tJ:f~~~e1 ~o t~~o~?s~~~e';;f n~~

By 2080 an observer looking back at
todaY will likely regard our energy
conversion and transmission systems
with tolerant amusement becau se of
their Illogical combination and crudity.

world. Future utilization of hydroponic,
and th in film techniques to nourish root
systems of plants grown for food and
fiber will perm it water conservation and
recycling wi th an efficiency that guarantees our ability , even under condi·
tio~s of cli matic change, to orovide
reliable harvests for all ....
Everywhere, sunligh t can be col lect'!'l. food can be grown and modern
techniques even permit the substitution
of artifical illumination for sunlight.
EventuaUy customs and tastes probably
will change to favor foods derived by
more eXot ic production techniques .
Single cell protein suitable for animal
food can be available on a large scale by
mid 1980. A decade later palatable
fOOds for human consumpt ion could
eas1ly be wi th1n reach . The potential for
adequate food and nutritiOn clearl y is
there .
C1villzat1on has made a commitment

~ ~~~1~;,::'g_~exm1'lf.~~~L ~~e~¥J,~~~
x 10"

BTO over the next 200 years,
.compared to the current known global
,esources of more than 2000 x 10" BTU
for solar and geothermal energy
sources. Thus it Is seen that the outlook
is really quite encouraging and this
does not even take Into consideration
the possible use of nuclear fusion
which would add at least another billion
x tO" BTU's.

Fcg?ven the assurance that energy
in tens ive agriculture can continue to
develop and spread throughout the
world , food will not be a limitmg factor
in future , just as it is not a factor now .
Proper and equitable distributi on of
food has been the world 's only senous
problem since the development of modern agriculture. Current fears and pes·
simism , where they exist, have been

~~n~~~~~;c?s a~~~ev~~~~~~~ 0 o/ho~heat wehs~
sug gest stopping or slowing technological progress are not giving us the
whole story . They do not take into
account the fact that populations and
human aspirations grow . Thi s growth
cannot be arrested easily and the
continually rising aspirations of indivi-

~~·~~~~da~ron~e~t,~~~~~g d~~:;,t!Wi:~

'1he plight of the few by making il
appear to be the curse of the many :·
(Kahn . et. at. , p . 108) . Nutrit ional

•Calendar
(from ~ge 1 2 , cot 4)

CONCERT"

LJttie Shop of Horror• (Corman . 1961). 8 50

Bullalo Pt·utharmoniC members Oav•d Kuehn .
Charles Haupt Carolyn Gaatll ana Laur•e and
James Kennedy Batra Rec11a 1Hall 8 p m
Solo sonata and chamber mustc by Mozart
Tardmt . Enesco . Oet&gt;ussy and Hut&gt;ean wtll be
teatured

p m 170 MFAC , Elltcott. Free admiSSIOn
The UnlnYited , With Ray Mdtand ana Rum
Hussey . is one ot the all-t1me great ghost stor1es
abOut a woman haunted by the apoar1110n ot her
dead mother
U ttle Shop IS dellnitely one of the strangest
products of the Roger Corman hOrror factory
The film ooncerns a qua1nt shOpkeeper ana hts
adOrable pet plants that l1nd nothtng more tasty
than a niCe tender human betng every now ana
then

Tuesday- l5
tiSTORY LEC TUR E •

SI•M Re'f'Oht In the Age of ReYOiuUons,
Eugene 0 Genovese . ctKurman of the Depart·
ment of H1story and president of tne Organtza·
hon of Amet~can Histonans Moot Coumoom.
O'Brian Hall 1 p m Sponsored tJy the Graduate
HIStory AsSOC18II()I'l
Dr Genovese IS a Mar xiSt htstouan whO deplores ••the WJidemess of dogmatism . romant+cisrn . ana humbug" among the orthodo~t ot tne
Old school . whO calls lor ·· a brea k w1th na1ve determmiSfll , economtc interpretation . and the
tnstpld Qb'thcatl()l'l of the lower classes .·· ana
wno tS not very tc»erant of ··cowara1ce . laztness .
ana ~tndedness ·· or of "resort1ng to oohhcallormulas tnS1ead of proceed1ng w1th nonest
research ··
It ts Professor Genovese 's optnl()('llhal ··tne
'rote· of the soctalist historian ts to be a QOOd htS·
tooarT," that ' ·beiOQ a good htstooan tS luii·Ume
INOrk ,'• that ••the QueStiOn of ·relevance · tS Irrelevant to anythrng of 1mportance beyond the egos
olthoSe 'Nho prate abOut it:· and that .. ideologt·
cally mouvated rustory 1s IJad htstory and ultimately reactionary history •·
Hra own ftekj is SOuthern history and slavery .
St.bteets on whlctl he has previQUSty p00!1shed
numerous books and arttetes Among these are
The PoHUcal Economy of Sl..,ery. The Worid
the s.&amp;.weholdert u.cte , In Red .and SIKk , and

Roll, Jordan , Rolt
ELECTRICAL EHGtNEERING SEMINARI ~
The lnterde~ndence Among U11r1 of
Mwttlp&amp;e AccMI Channel , Professor Anthony
Ephremiohs , Department of E~Hica l Engineer·
ing, University ot Morytand . 337 Bell. 2 p .m . Refreshments at 3 in 308 BeU.

Thursday -

l7

NURSIN G RESEARCH REPORT"

FILM SCREENING/DISCUSSION"

Jam•• Bl u e , documenta ry ltlmmaker
screens and d1scusses his 111m Th• 011•• TrH•
of Juatte.. a moVIng story of a !amity duung the
French Algeoan conthct It recetved the CutiC s
Prtle at the 1962Cannes Ftlm FestiVal In French
with Enghsh sut&gt;tttles Mar me Mtdlancl Bank Auo·
ttooum 1 Maune Mtdlano Cemer 8 D m AO·
mtssiOn S1 0 Beneltl screen1ng tor Nattona t
Enoowment tor the Arts Challenge Gram for
Medta StudyfBuflalo

Notices
COUNCIL MEETIN G
The Counctl of the Un1vers11y wtll hold tiS Ma y
meettng , Friday , May t8 al3 p m tn theCouncrl

Conference Room . Capen-5
FALL REGISTRATION : LAST CA LL
Registration tor the tall 1979 semes1er for
students currently enrolled IS taking place m
Hayes Annex 8 until May 1 t StudentS may Obtain registratiOn matenals 9 a m -4 30 p m
Students who do not register by Mll y 11 will
not be ebee to do so until Auguat 27 .
Milla rd Fiftmore College reg1stratl0fl lor fall
1979 wHI t&gt;egtn on t,4onday, July 16. 1979. m
OAR .
~OREIGN STUDENT TUITION WAIVER

Alkyletlng " · Non·Aityl•tlng Reecu ..
............ from Todc Oruga, Or . Jerry R
Mitchell, professor and chief , Section on Hyper·
tena6on and Ctinical Pharma~, Department
ol lnlomol Medicine , Bayfol College ot Medicine ·
102 Shermen. ~ p .m . Th'- &amp;eminar is made poslibleby~ffomPtiz.erPMrmacNticals .

MATlllAB
The Math Lab wtll termtnate us servtees ef·
fectMt Mar 11 and will reopen 1n the fall .
f&lt;x informatiOI'I . caH .the Learning Center .

PHARIIACOLOGY I TliERAPEUTICS

636-239' .

.W ednesday- 16

Drug-··

\ ..--I@EDICAI.- ~~~

-~

........- 10

tho

PfiZer lecture on Qink::.ll Phat'Y1WCOiogy. Jerry
R. MttcheO. M.D .• Ph. D., prof- and chief .
Section on Hypertension and Oi'rical Pherma·
-.;y Doportmont o1 tntornal Modicino. Bayo01
~of lolodlclnO. Room 110&lt;.
t..teda~Cente&lt; .

!2 :30p.m.

Bu«ato v A.
""

the types we are beginning to witness
now throughout the world . This w ill be
a troubled period of moral and ethical
value transit ion and adjustment. A con·
tinued feeli ng that nuclear war or even
large co nventi onal wars are mean ingless and without value to both victor
and vanq uished and , hence, unthi nk·
able, probably will prev~ Clandestine
nuclear powers , howev , are to be expected to create great pprehensions
and perhaps attempt by coercion or Intimidation to extract lim ited concessions .
Thi s period will see the development

~~o~s~:~e~~ld ut~~~~~~:~n~Y o~h}~~
~~~~na~ e~~s:~~~ ~~~~~hari~~~tac~~=

poration'S will have increasingly crucial
roles of leadership and responsibility .
Although temporary alarms and cri ses
related to environmental pollution and
the local availability of natural re-

fciu~~:.a~~e~~e1~~~~;11~~~~s~fr~~ }g~g
term. world-wide catastrophes . Instead,
there will be increasing problems with
The orga01zat1on woukl llke your help tn the
collectiOn . they'll lake care ol tne redtstribut tOn
May t1 . 14-18. 6-8 p m . May 12 . 13 , 19 ,
1·50 m
Please Drtng Items to enher Fargo or Wilkeson check-out ~as Wesley wlll nave tables at
each area
Laundry soap or canned gOO&lt;ls you can 't
take w1th you w111 be apprectatea as well as
clothes small appltances . plaStiC bags , kitchen
utenstls totlet paper . etc

PI..AH-0 ON TMROWIHG OUT JHINGS WHEN
YOU LEAVE?
Wesley FoundaUon (United Methodist Campus M!nJStry) is willing to cotlect those ttems
which afe generally lhrown OU1 when you leave .
They pt.an to grve what they conect to various
c.onvnuntty organilattons : Sin¥Me Gifts and Peopkt in Cr:isiS are homeS lof women In u~ w;th
their lwes . BuffllO Food Shelf it run by the Council ot ChureflOS . n .. Massa-tts Community
Center it kx:ated .n and he'P5 thoSe who live on

tho tower West side ot BuffalO.

what Kahn calls ,.an educated lne81*!1!Y
that will ge,_e Impassioned , 111..- .~
sloned, Irrelevant ·and Ideological argu- mentation by lntellectual elites thai will
threaten society w ith confusion and
paralysis of w ill. This period will be
confusing and very d ifficu lt to cope ·
with .
Increasing wealth and leisure wi ll
make It more and more possible for
individuals as well as lnstltullons to
undertake projects and activities for
their own sake, that Is for their own Intrinsic value. Thus It Is Important for you

~~~ !~ :!'~~n~~ ~~r~~ ~~8~ ~rv~~

and caree rs. Inevitably, there will be a
mul tiplici t y of moral and eth ical val ue
systems ....

The last frontier
At this point I believe that manki nd
will seek to explore and move out Into •
space . Not only will this be stim ulated
as the space shuttle now Is paving the
way, by the search for new manufactur·
ing tech niques and the acquisition of
raw materials from asteroids and oth er
planetary bod ies. bul because It will be
perceived by vigorous minds as the last
great front ier.
And just as the Portuguese went forth
under Vasco da Gama, so fu ture genera..__
tions of men will set forth to explore
and colonize space. No doubt then as
before there will be those of limltE!d
vision who will sav. " No oood can come
of it." Bu t men will set forth , go o ur-to
live among the stars.
WRITING PLACE

The Wr iting Place is not for ··poor· · writers ;
not glve
tt's a free service tor all writers
yourself the advantage of receiv1ng feedback
about ypur wrtting? We' re at 336 Baldy Hall ,
Amherst Campus . The hOUrs are : weekdays ,
12-4 . week mghts . except Friday , 6-9 .
The Wrtting Place will dose May 18 and will
reopen tn late September . 1979 For Information
:all 636-2394

»Y

EISTERS SKI CLUB

up now lor our While Water Raitt up on
and 12 Stop 1n Room 7 SQu1re or call
831-5445 lor oetatls

S

APPUCAnONS
Appttca11ons lor the Summer and Fall 1979
semesters are now avatlable at the Ollice of
Financial Aid , Room 6, Butler Anne~t B. Ma1n
Street campus The deadline lor both semesters
is June 1st . Student s must be on an For J visa In
order to appfy lor the waiver

~SEMtNAIII

l:i~t~~r~~~dur~~=~~~:: ~:

SCHUS

The Need lor Support of the F•mlly System
During the Firat Seventy-two Houra of • Physl·
cal lllnMt Crlsla , Thelma HenrtQuez . Graduale
Nurstng student Stster ·s Hospflal 2 p .m tnQUtre at the tnlormatK&gt;n Oeste. tor the room
number

n

duals and human society simply w ill
not be stopped .
The period between now and the year
2179 w il l see several decades of h igh
rates of economic growth and the fu ll
emergence of the post lndusi rial world
economy. The post World War II political and economic systems will have

1

STUDY SKILLS LAB
The Study $lolls Lab wtll term1nate liS serv·
1ces elfecuve May 11 and wtll reopen 1n the fall
For 1ntormatlon. call the Learmng Center .
63&amp;2394
TEACHING A~ST ANTSHIP OPEN
The Graduate Group on Contmutly and
Change m As•a and Alrtca nas opened competl·
lion lor a teacnmg asstslantshtp lor a graduale
s1u0en1 Interested 1n ourswng a cross~uttur a l
and mterdlsctohnary program on As1a ana Afrtca
m 1979-80
Aool•canls shouiO oe atreaay enrolleo tn a
graduate program and tnterested m ourswng lhe
Ph 0 tn hne w11h the goals of me Group The as·
SISiantshtp wdl be awarded to tne applicant who
can oest demonstrate hts or her seoous mterest
and ~o tS Quahfted to ass 1st tn courses on As1a
and /or Afnca
The asststant wtll oe enrolled m a regular department and w1U meet all lhe cond1110ns of lhe
deparlment He or she should expect to take Poh!lcal Sctence 722/Htstory 627 . "Comparative
Rural Pollttcs . as wen as othe' relevan t courses
gNen oy lhe Group faculty The d1ssertauon will
oe wntten 1n a stogie departments and may be on
a smgle culture area. but is expected to reflect
the goals and methOds of the Group An assiSI·
antstup 1ncludes a sttpend of $3,701
The Graduate Group conststs of faculty and
graduate S'!udents tn the Departments of Pohtteal
Sctence . HIStory. Anthropology . Philosoptly and
Soctal FoundatiOns . and 1n the Programs of In·
ternattOnal Studtes and lnternatiOflal College
Members teach graduate courses . dO research
and wr~te on the vaned cultures of the hall of.
humamty hVIng 1n Asia and Aloca The goal of the
Group IS to foster awareness of and research tn
the ma~y cultural S'!reams Whteh are now flowtng
together to create a common workS culture .
In lhe past . the Graduate Group has hela
Conferen ces and Conversations in the Otsc+plines on such toprcs as '' Rebellion and Revolu·
lion in China and Atuca .·· ··The Rural Community
and Political Chanoe in Asia and Africa. " and
current !acuity research on Asia and.Africa .
Past teach1ng assistants have gfven their
own courses on Asian and Afrk:an his)ory and
pollt ~s Group members are also active in bring-ing outskle speakers to the campus , developtng
trUer-university programs w ith Rochester . Cor. nell , Syracuse , and Oswego .. part icipating kl
SChOtarty e~tehanoe programs w;th klstitutions In
Afrtca , Japan and the Republic ot China , and effec1ing addresses to the Buffalo schools and the
communtty.
for further information . contact Professor
Ctaude e. Watch , associate vice presidEtnt for
Academic Affairs , 562 CaDen HaU, 636-2992 . or
Professor Roger V. DesForoes. Department of

HISIO&lt;Y. RedJacl&lt;et . EUicott Complex . 636-22.50.
Appi;Qtion forms shoukt be picked up ffllm
Wek:h . fitted OU1 , and returned to him by May 20 .
Winner WlN be announced June 1 .

Exhibits
CEPA PHOTOGRAPHIC GROUP

Alamo Gallery. Beck Hall. Main Street Campus May1 0·June6
HANDMADE PAPER WORKS

Meggle HNdrick. AJamo c;.llery, Seck Hall,
Ma in Streel Campus . May 1().June 6. There will
'"-.
t&gt;ea reception , May 10, from 7-9p.m .
Gallery hOurs are . Monday to Friday . 1
a m . -5 p m

J

JAP AN TODA Y
J~o p•n•M Contemporery Prints: lrom Calligraphy 10 modern art . Inner Gallery . 5th floor .
Capen Through Jl.Wle 1 Gallery hOUrs : 9 a.m .·
5pm
Pa rt of the campus observance ot .. Japan
Today ."' sponsored by me Council on tnternattonat Stud1es . Intensive English Language
Institute. International College . Otfk:e of Cultural
Affatrs . Department of Art History

OUTDOOR SCULPTURE SHOW

By U 1 B Art Department students John
Arnold . MIChael Curtis, Diana Gagnon , Patty
Mergi. Susan Rory . includln·g a giant slylized
Uower. a kid on a swing and other interesting
creations . On grass area be(ween Caoen and
O' Brian (near Flint LOop) .

On The Air
MAY11
CON VERSATtONS tN TlfE ARTS: Esther
HarriOtt interviews Ethott Carter , composer.
Courier Cable(Channet 10). 6 : 30p.m .
..A Y 1~

CONVERSATIONS IN TME ARTS: Esther
Harriott interviews HolliS Frampton, filmmaker .

Pari I of a two-part interv~ . lntarna11onal Ceble
(ChMneJ 10). 6 p .m .
MAY1 5
CONVEPSATIO,NS IN TME ARTS: Esther
Harrion Interviews WilHam Gass. noveUst. Courier Cable (Channel tO). 6 : 30p.m . Aiso 7 p .m .,
May16 .

EMERITUS CENTER NOnCE
Em«ttua Cent• ........,.... will not be
upected •t 1M Cent• on June 18 to

_ . Ntumlng Alumni bec:8uM of
ch8ng8s In Alumni Aaoc18tlon ~PIMM not• 11118 ch8ng8. ·
_

I

I

'&lt;....._

�n

May1 0,1878

Playing Wedn~ay
David Kuehn (right) and Charleo Haupt
will join Philharmonic colleagues Caro-lyn GadUI , Laurie end Jam.. Kennedy in
en end--of-a...ori conc8rt, Wednesday,

May 16, a t 8:30p.m . In Baird Hall.

CALEN.D AR
Thursday -

10

liEN 'S BASEBALL·
U/Bn. C.niaiu.t (2) Peel~ F·eld ·omDEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAPHY LECTURE·

&amp;p.tlal Poput1Uon Structures. Profes::;or
Robert Sol&lt;a l. Oepartmenl ot Ecolog"' &amp; Evoru1100, SUNY at Stony Br~ 211 Talbert 3 o m
Professor Sokalrs VISrtrng the Geograony Deoan-

ment under !he ausorces ol the SUNV Faculty
Exchange Program

soeak1ng 1nctuoe Drs Thomas E Starzt , Um·
versuy of Colorado Med ~ea t School . and James
F Hollana dHector of Mt S.na1Hosp•tal Cancer
Cemer U/8 !acuity on the program are Drs
HarOld Semnaro assoc1ate professor of medl·
c1ne W11l1am K1nkel. chmca l professor of neur()K)gy FranCIS J Kkx:ke and RIChard V Lee .
professors of mediCine Sidney Ant hone chmcat
professor ol surgery ana John H Se1gel . ore&gt;fessor or surgery
In adchhon to the program SC1ent1hc exhibitS
Wlilt&gt;e diSPlayed'" thf: Statler H1tton mezzan1ne.
and several U/ B Med1cat School class reuniOns
are scnedu~ Those obserVIng reun10ns InClude classes at l1ve-year mte rva ls hom 1929 to
1969

BIIFFAI.O LO GIC COLLOOUIUMI
Zermelo , Skolem , Godel : A Fintt.ry or lnflnl·
t.ary log k: for Set ThiOf'Y? , Gregory Moore Uni-

versity of Toromo 2().$ O.etendorf 4 o m

ohy Department by the College Workshop on
Manust Stud1es
DEPARTMEN T OF MICROE!JOLOGY

SP~~p~~~~~R!

lmm unotogleal On togeny

by lrr1dl1t1on 1nd Bone M1rrow Tr1n spl1 nta·
tton , Or Fehx T Rapaporl , professor, Depart·
ment ot Surgery . SUNY at Stony Brook and
pres1oent , The Transplantation Society 245
Cary 4 p m

~ee t·

tngl14 .
FACULTY DEVELOPMENT SEMINAR"

PHYSIOLOGY SEMIN ARII
Th e R~ e of Oxytoc in In Extracellular Fluid
Volume Reg ul1tion , Or Robert 0 BankS . Department of PhysiOlogy , Un1vers1ty of C1nc1nnat1
CotlegeoiMedtclne S108Sherman 4p m

Teechlng the Ad ult Le1rn• rs me theme ol
this event , schedukM:j trom B 30 a m to 4 30
p .m ., under sponsorship ol Credrt-Free Programs . SS per person . ,ncludrng lunch
The program tS geared to admrmstrators rn
continuing educatiOn , training programs. and hu·
man resources serviCes They will hear presentations on successfuJ modets tor faculty deve~
ment. share the insights of successful teachers
ot adults . participate in small group workshops.
and share the e~q&gt;er iences of cxAieagues
Keynote speaker wiR be Lore L Heath , a pre&gt;gram admimstrator at University College of Syra·
cuse Umv8rslty and chairperson olthat agency's
resources task Ioree . which IS concerned w1th
inprovlng the quality of teaching 1n continuing
educatk&gt;n classes
For further lnformatk&gt;n , call831 -4 301

MAMA"
The Fall ot the A.muons , by Eric Bentley .
directed by Saul Elkin . Center tor Theatre Research . 681 Ma in Sl. 8 p.m . General admisSion
S3, students and senbr citizens $1.50. ADS
YOUChers acc81)ted Sponsored by the Center lor
Theatre Research . with assistance from ADS
.:nd N.Y. State Council on the Ans .
A*», Frkilly and Sl:turday at p .m.; Sunday

au .

a

MUSIC"
BH1S Contemporary EnHmble: K~rd
Mutk, with Yvar Miknashoff and Jan Wiltlams .
directors. Room 100 Ba ird . 9 p .m . Free admis·
sion. $pon80fed by the Depa rtment of MUSIC .

Friday- 11
IKHEREDUCA
A-~ot

" · Reichley . vice pres
Uons , Brown Untverslty.
ville Collage , &amp;a.m.
Last tn 1 series of eight
Contact the Department
(6J6.2&lt;111)1or exacllocaUon .
ANNUAL MEDICAL SPIIII'O CUHICAL DA YSI
What 'a tugftt wtth Medicine G the theme .

Statter-Hilton Hotel , today and tomorrow . Spon·
oored by lhe U / 8 - 1 Alumni AssociaUon
and the Department ot Continuing Education .

~O:y~~~. wh~insat8 :30a.m.,

wt11 locus on past . present , and future. advances

01 eigl11 medical and wrglcal subspecially areas.
Included are lnlectlous dtseases and neurologic
ciseases, cancer chemotherapy, renal disease.
1fansptentetion, criticll care medictne . cardiovascular and gastrointestinal diseases. Those

SCHOOL OF NUR~ NG ALUMNI
ASSOCIATION AECEPTtON• •
The SchOol of Nurs1ng Alumni Assocl8taon •s
~soung a receptiOn tor graduat ing students
1n the Faculty Club . Ma1n Street Campus. from
7·9 p m All graduat•ng students and lacully of
the School ol Nursmg are 1nV1ted
CONCERP
Collegi um Muaie um . Ba~rd Rec1tal Hall. 8
D m F1ee admiSSion Robert Wit1oughby IS the
vocal director and Barbara W1se 1S the Instrumenta l dHector

JAPAN TODA y •
A HIRorical Sketch of Japan ... Att , lecture /
slide presentaUon Professor Yuriko Ikeda . Wa·
seda Umvers1ry , Tokyo 214 Talbert Hall 10 30
am -noon. andl -2 30p .m
Part ol the campus observance ol .. Japan
Today , .. a nation-wide series of events designed
to heighten American consctOUsness of contemporary Japan.
Sponsofed by the Council on Internationa l
Studies . Intensive English Language Institute.
lnternaUonal College . Office of Cultural AffairS.
Department ot An History
AJso an eXhibit and a film screening .
tomorrON .
Prof. Ikeda Is an exPSrt on ouental art She Is
an assoclate professor in the International Dfvj..
slon of Waseda University , and Is a visiting lee·
turer this year at San Francisco State UniverSity .
In 1968-69. she was vishing curator of the Avery
Brundage Collection at the M .H deYoung Memorlal Museum. San Francisco
HISTORY DEPARTWIENT AWARDS

The John T. Horton Award , the Selig Actter
Award . and the Graduate History Assocla.Uon
Award witt be given to student essay winne rs
HistOfy Department Faculty Lounge 5th floor .
Red Jacket Quad , Ellicott 1 p .m AU are invited
toanend .
MEN ' S BASEBALL •

U/ B
tp.m .

n.

Nlegara Unhwslty (2) Peetle Fl8k:l

ELECTRICAL ENGII'EEAING SEMINAAI

Sequential S.Onll Oetectlon: Parametric
end Non·Parametric. Professor John B Thomas .
Department of Electrical Engineering , Princeton
University. 337 BeJI. 1 : 30 p m . Refreshments at

2 :301Q308Bell.
CIVIL ENOINEEAIHG SEIIINAAI

Etrthqueke AeeponN ot Bulktlngs with Non·
proportional o.tnplng , Professor David Tang .
322 Acheoon . 3 :30p.m.
MARXIST WOIIKSHOI' PRESENTATION"

A Debet• on HUII\Bn Rlghta: Professor Marvil
Zlmmerman , U/8, and Or . Howard Parsons ,
chairman ol lhe Deportmanl of Philoso!lhy. U ni-llly ol Bridgeport . The Kiva (101 Baldy).

3 :30p.m.

·

Retreshmenta

~I

be served afterwards in

_ , 684 Baldy. ~ed wi1h lhe Philooo-

Noo·l'!ofit Org.

U.S. Poot.oge
PAID

Balfalo, N.Y.
Pormil No. 811

SACRED SERVtcE PERFORMANCE•
Tempte Beth Zion 8 p m The public is invlled to attend the serv•ce to share in the presentaton of a sacred masterwork , The AYOdat h
HlkodNh (Sacred Service) by Ernest Bloch
Pre-serv1ce rtt es 1nclude Bloch 's Organ Preludes Nos 1 and 3 which will be ptayttd.by
Temple Organist Michael Burke who is also dtrector of music prC?Qrams at the Untversity.
Cantor lmre Rosznya l wdl sing a Max Janowski
''Candle Blessing' ' lor the lighting of the Sabbath
candles and a traditional " Kkidush ."
The Untverstty Olorus . under the direction
ot Marcia Giambrone . and the University Philharmonta . condue:led by the director , Jame'
Kasprowicz . w ill perlorm for the service. ~
ists lor the Sacred Service w iU be bass Andrew
Schultze . who will sing the cantorlal por1k&gt;ns .
sopranos Patr icia Yannello and Maralyn Smith ,
mezzo-soprano Patricia Oreskovic and tenor
Bruce Bell
SponsOfed by the Depa rtment of Music and
Temple Beth Zion
lAC FILM ('' Blazing Saddles'') CANCELLED

Saturday -

12

downtown Sponsored by U / 8 and the Erie
County Public Ubrary No charge , but pre-reg1s·
trahoo requ1red Call85~7525 .
Workshops on resume wr iting . 1nterv1ewmg .
sell-assessmenl. and maximizing sk11ls wJU be
g1ven Thomas G . Gutteridge , director ol the
U / B Human Resources ln&amp;tit ute . Will be the
keynote speaker
SERBIAN FOLKDANCE WORKSHOP"

Bor1 Gajlcld, a former dancer w1th KOLO .
the prmcipal Serbian ensemble 1n Yugosiavta .
will t&gt;e presented by the Balkan Dancers F1li·
more Room . SQuire , The workshOP will Include
morn1ng and afternoon teaching sessions . beginning· at 10 · 30 a.m. and 2 · 30 p m . and an
evenmg folkdance pa rty beg1nning at 8 p.m
Adm•ssiOO is $2.50 for each or the 3 sessions or
$6.50 for ttw.enlire workshop . Supported in part
by an Arts DeveloPment Services re-grant of
fundS !rom the New York State Council on the
Art s
For f urther i nformation , conta ct Vaeoe
Terz ieff . 877-4626.
JAPAh TODA y•
Two films : Farm Song by John Nathan and
Shinto: Nature, Gods , 1nd Man In Jap1n. 170
MFAC. Ellicott . 8 p .m . Free Introduction by Ms.
Takako Michll, coordinator . Japanese Program .
Council on International Studies .
hrm Song Is one of the trilogy of documen·
taues , cotlecllvely known as " The Japanese ."
which Nathan has produced lor PBS . II oocuments a year in the life ol a rural farm family whO
live 400 miles northeast of Tokyo . where they
work ten acres or rice paddles . Life for the fa r~
ers never quite emerges I rom the somber shadaN of its own pa.st .
"Shinto: Nat.-e. Ooda:, .nd Men In Japan ",
pcOOJced by Peter Grilli who ts the director of
educational program and communication at Ja.
pan Society . Inc., is a film which introduces the
fundamental philosophical. ethical and aesthetic
beltefs of the Shinto tradition . It takes the viewer
on a journey to the heart of Shinto . to Japan's
most anctent ritual sites and most sacred
shrines . to prehistoric ceremonies still per·
formed today. to kK;al tes1iva ls and seasonal
cek!brations .
lAC FILM (" Blazing Saddles" ) CANCELLED

MFARECtTAL•
\
Mart Vona , ptanls~d Recital Hall . 8 p.m .
Admission Is tree . Mr . Vona is a student of Frlna

Boldl.

Sunday-13
BFA RECITAL"

ANNUAL MEDICAL SPRING CLIN IC AL DAYSI
Whit ' s Rlght wfth Me&lt;tlclna IS the theme
Statler-Hilton Hotel Sponsored by the U / B
Medical AJumni Assoclatoo and Jhe Department
ol Continuing Education. School of MediCine.
Negat •ve aspects of growing governmental
regulations In health care , changing concepts
and ustng cost of health ca re delivery will be the
main toptcs of loday's program which begins at
8 30a .m .
Or . Edmond Gicewicz. clinical assistant prolessor of surgery at U / B, will beg in with a dis·
cussion of " Health Maintenance Organizations."
!allowed by George B Allen , president ot the
Hospital Association ot New York , whO wilt dis·
cuss " Bu.reaucrallc ReoutatiOOS and Hospitals ...
Other speakers during the morning will be Dr
Raymond Robillard , president of the Federation
of Medical Specialists (Quebec}, who wilt speak
on " Natlona.J Health Insurance :" and Dr . Keith
B. Leffler , assistant professor of economics at
the University of Washington (Seattle), who will
discuss " Government Policies and the Rising
Cos1 of Health Cere ."
The annual StOCkton tomball lecture , a highlight of Spring Clinical Days , will be pcesented at
noon by lhe Honor-able David E. Sanerfield ,
representat+Ye tor the Third District of Virginia,
U.S. House of Representatives . Topk: of his
pcesentation is " He81th and Gowrrment ."

Amy Surrett\, soprano. Baird Recital Hall.
3 p .m Admission Is tree . Ms . Surrette ts a student of Gary Burgess .
COMMENCEMENT '7t

Schoo4 of lnfonna.Uon and Ubrary Studfet.
Sella Abzug Is speaker . John lord O'Brian Hall ,
Alden Moot Court. 3 p.m .
Tickets required .
COMMENCEMENT ' 7t

Sehool of Nursing. K1elnhans Music Hall,
~:a;;P~l!Ofium , Symphony Circle , Buffaloi
MFA RECITAL"
~ ~ Weinfeld , pianist . Ba ird Rachal Hall .
8 p .m . Admission is free .
Philharmonic 'lioflnisl Diana Sachs and Creattve Associate cellist Ken IShii will be the assist~
lng artists . Ms. Weinfeld is a student of Stephen
Manes.

Monday-14
MEN ' S 8ASE8All"

U/ Bws. luffaloState. Peelle Ftek:l 3p.m .
UUABiriONDAY NIGHT FILMS"

JOI HUNTINO AFTER
9 : 30a . m .~

001

12 : 30 p .m Erie County Library ,

Tho Unil- (L. Allan , 1944). 7 p.m.;
.S.. 'Calender;" pegc 11, col. 1

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                    <text>_ T~ ns~t-Ofl~y: ~ldeto €-UDayand
_V PAA Bonn's Acadettc Pl~ng _statement
STATE UNIVERSITYAT BUFFALO

VOL.10 • NO. 29
MAY.3, 1979

Innovations
School of Medicine mulls two:
'guaranteed' admission for some freshmen·
· a program of 'social selectives'
'

-Stalf

By Joyce Buc:h-.kl
U/B's Medlc81 Faculty Counoll will
soon decide whether or not to endorse
further exploration- of two Innovative'
programs. One would Quarantee high
school seniors and college !reshmen
admission to Medical School, and the

~l~~~~~~d p\:~'l!,.:~.W!try"%s~~!~

selective curriculum" lor ln-&lt;lepth
study.
.
The II t:opJOOram , referred to as the
"Medical Uloool University-Wide Degree Granting Program," was developed
by the Council's Stujlent Affairs and
Academic Standing Commltteo, chal(§d
by Dr. Henry Staub. It has received the
=s;::",!~' of the Courrcll's steering

-

According to Dr. Leonard Katz, associate dean lor student and curricular
affairs, If the program receiY!lS final
epptpval~ 11\e mecl. school, lt.l soon as
1981 , would guarantee admission to a
SmaJI number Of 11tudents. These StudentS would then be free to " puraue

pr.ogram-s8ems to have been bolatby the results of a ,_,, Medical •
School study whlch.co.ncluded that U/B
med students Who majored In aclence
perform no better 1han those who
majored In other fields but 1\ed a good
smattering of science co ursa.
Just how these beat qualified students would be Identified at the high
school level Is still to. be decided, but
Katz speculates .Medleal School reore-

-~~~~:"~w~cfo~Ythvls~l.,~

counselors. He:·aeema 'COntkPent that
high school seniors "are mature
enough" to make a ~ choice. He
estimated that about 30 1!81' cent of U/B
medical students reatlz8d they wanted
to pursue medicine before entertng
college.
Initially, the medical faculty committee was lnvestlgatln~ the poaslblllty

~:0:='":;:;6~ ~~"~~

-

~!=.~r.f"'.:O~=~:.l!.~~
a efrlct science
tatlon -would -keep

them out of ri&gt;adloal achool. Altii9U8h
not reetrtcted to !Naatem YOflc

:.~~'1.~=~=~ =,:

candidates from this area.
•
Both students and the·. Medical

;::'r,'k:~ul!tt!:::~tJ~~~!'.=~

raii!IVed of some of the

(

'We're living In a lethal society;'
says Nobel Laureate George Wald:
We can revolt-or perish!
"I reject all natural law that says a
. , Llllde ca.-«-.
IIOCIMY rMCIIIrog our point of. techno-

---

The moat lewful nlghtmarei' ot our
_ . enumerated by Dr. George
W.JIId, pOlitical activist end Nobel laureate, to a dlacOmflted audience of
1iat Thuraday _,lng

:rr..:::::O.f:1

~

loolcel ~I must destroy It-

- tMill." ha uld. "lila not l,_llllble."

Tne tnduaQ:Iel Revolution which at
lira! pt011118ed _llbunCIMCe has turned

;'J1J';:::"~'1i~m':. ~r.r.sti.;~~~~~

m-.tlle, trtvt.l 200 yeera of '""
The J*lla of nuctaar energy,
' lnd\iatrtal Revolution have brought
humans to the brink of aell. destructhrMI of nucl- - · the or-JY cor-.
ponde alrucllft that he controlling
tion."
o
1t1e u.s., to•lc and redloactlvoe poisonWald ~ ltle growth of "agrting of people all over the world ,. the
bu81MS8," ltle mechanization of agrl- .
. _ . of overpopulation, the laallng
culture all over the world.
of lialplaaaMSS Upreeaacl by many
people, eapaclally the young - Wald
~ ..-...urd
r..tawed the greatest leers of modem ·
"We're replacing. the muaclaa of
human• and wolmala by l'fi8C)IIMS,
civilization In hla apaech.
And ya~,, "I've oome not to depress
whiCh r,leld food with i&gt;na'lllth the
-vY _, u the fuels that want lnlo
~."he ..ld, "butto arouse you.''
. Wald poicee fun al h!J Image u a
producing It," Wald aald.
"ifoom prophet••
• N« only Ia thla maana' of lood
proc!uctlon wuteful, he noted, but It
~ laada to the a181Yatlon of vut
.DI,IIIIbara of people -In the Third Wortd
~my beat lrlanda Celia me a • 'Who,
loroad to move to wt&gt;wo cantn,
at...a ~there Ia no way lor tbeln
'IICICiftHIOpl
" ,.. - aartoua
·
But he Ia•• deadly
about the
toewnthe ~to buy food. Feeding
. . - tor people to beco.fTI8 ...., of
the wortd'a hungry Ia not a "dlatrtbullon
lfleaaf)IOI&gt;Iama and to lace the unthlnkproblem" u gowmmenta often ..Y,
_.. wltllout giving up.
.
Wald noted, bulat,.gedy cauaed byihe
Looldnll ralher llka • lanky. grlttlad
WaeCIY Allan when he amltaa, draeaed
-~~Profllla8'1811able, dlatrltn ...,.._ W8ld ~n~«t• humor Into bla
bullon can be 8nangild," ha aald with
dlelllll deacriptiofl ol WOI1d probltma
lllriJCIIdOIO full .. 0111 ~·· wltlc:ll
Wel4 111ao poltllted out .U. ..., - ........... llfV8IY i'onneil ~~
"-lnD .,.. ol beef In aatemtzlng
-llftd~ ptGPIO'"*
.
-'Miall lllao laadl 10 llunQir'
tflt
hla - " lllr
adding that lha -unt of . . being
vielonl that ltle

.

h_,_

-·

·-..-....·-a.-·

Intense
competitive pressures of p,...mecl type
courses and the olede trauma usoclated with them. Tliey could enjoy more
· liberal arts-oriented courses that could
contribute to personal enriObmeot. Tlfe
Medtc81 "School , on the oth8r" hand,
would profit by drawing top-notch
applicants. In eddltion, the program
would give students a chance lor eartler
Involvement In area h811lth programs, a
bonus lor them and the eommunlty.

Boi.....S by • atudy
The decision to ')lropose such a

:rt~ ;~~1u~-co::::~~=

tlve-year cun'lcuTurro. That plaii., t&gt;owever, wu not VIewed favorably by eome
membere of the Council who fall that
shortening ltle Medical~
would lurttw laolale

. . . . -=w.---·

~~--

·

~fl!!'*IL

Moat of 1t1e ~ w111011 arr.r
shortened
several v-a ago whtn lila -.ntry8Kp8rtanclng a ~ ol cloCioN.
e&lt;plalned Katz. No ~ axfab

lima,__..........,_, ·

today.

.

~·

-

.

Th8 second lnnovallvoe PfOIIIWII being
considered by the Council Ia ona which
Katz has peraonall}l eng.,_., &lt;it« ltle

~~~~=~-.!.~c:::n=
tum" Is lo Introduce "lm.C:• -*11-

~.:.'~tfMt":.~y=•
~edpfopoea(now

atancle, flnlt·---.·;.oa.oo~.a

UIB reactor 'safe,~

Chon ~ssures Council

corroded troin the ~. Cl"!'l.~·
prOVIId to be o~o$" _...........

The U/B Nuclcfar Reactor has only
1!1000"ol the power of reactors ouch u
lhoae a1 Three Mllelalaricl, oroduce&amp; far
.... heal, and could not melt down-- •.
II aU cooling waler Ia loat .
•
-

'The . -

contained In the concrete structure

==~c=~~
NSTF'=
reported.
.

t~' ~w ::;.=.:;e =~g":e
hou~~M£:::-y~~

gave

~~-

reaa-

aurancaa about the cam~ua Nuclear
Sclenoe end Technology Faelllty (NSTF)
to the U/B'Councll last Frtday .

F.... lnlortnatllla
The NSTF dlnoctor QDV8I'ad lour..,...
of oonoem while a atudant, who ~
acrtbed hlmaall aa "a phlloaophy ma· ,.
)or," hekl up a placard urging lila
OouncH to " " ' - " ltle Buffalo Synclrome-Cioae the U/B Nuclear Reector."
Chon aald the etucllftt'a -.-n mlaptacacl ancHbal •. _ anti-nuclear

~~::-;,. = n g . . : :
and "• past-..-..~.

Fer.~ Pll'lod, ' * - 1175
and 181'7, foiSTF lied a poOIIIam with a
llf*tng plpa ' thel . . . loW~

.....,oooung-.
Hlpalra to th&amp; pipe,_ whiCh

II~

ly -

.,UI

down lor nine
In 11177-78, ao
pipet oould be totally NP\~Ced. The
new pipet .,. .,._
and

C"::•

Chon aald the tbal 1oat
8llilp8CI Into ltle ewtb ~~!~den-" ltle
reactor building, The ol low
etlvtty . and cOntalnad allol'l half-lila
matart.l. Samplaa of ground .....
collactad n - the lfclliiY ."riiOWCI
extramety email'- fft aictMty. The

=~:.::-~
=''=-~
and ...... agencllie, ,.. flliauled
.
~

The problem WM lcnown 10 •
IIICIIIiiONCl, by - . . . . DlllefUI)ant of
.ncs (NRC),
ltle . . . . . .
Commlulon
Qlan . , _ .
The ....... ai80
llr lila ICIOfll
media. There- no "cowW.up." and
the ~ no longer alata.
The NSTF Ia an~ facility
wltlc:ll prad- low ..... abort-lived
laotope8 for ~ lllbortloflaa on
cempua and f« -IIOapltala 10 uaa In
~· and.....-cfl. Chon explained,

'*""

....-s

.:==r

�•'Doomkopf' W-ald paints 'bleak' picture
power, he said he didn't believe the
excessive temper,tures needed could
be safely contained and· also thai the
!l8f'lll problem of radioactivity exists as
!~ !•r:~0 ~,1:::~;, ~~ ..a lethal society,
Asked about the recombinant DNA
controversy he became Involved tn at
Harvard, Wald said, " It's too late to hilk
about II. But I think the formulallon of
new patho.logical organisms through
tl)ls research Is as 'Impossible' as an
accident In a nuclear power plant. "
_ Wald then listed the corporations
Involved lr the "business" ol nuclear
energy and nuclear power, noting lhat
these Interests make up a $10 billion a
year business which you "need a
revolution to stop.".
• He also pointed out " who mi\&lt;es
H,vd.;ogen bon)bs" - companies as
' famllllir as Singer, Westinghouse, and
MaBen.
•
Alter the lecture, a number of persons stopped to thank Wald. He was

pro. -1,eoi.ZJ
lad to cattle thrOughout the world could
feed 11 billion ;le(&gt;p~ .

1

~ _...,"• ttnotenlnG'

f~n.=!ruct~o~ta'i,';;'\':',~n':f~

==.~~~sa~:."'~~~:: r.,:~

being the threat ol aa:ldent and the
p&lt;Oblem of nud- waste dleposal. He
noted thai American Insurance compwtles have refused "from the beGinning" In 1957 to lnsuranuctearfac:Jlltles.
lbe passage ofthe Price-Anderson Act
laid this reel&gt;onslblllty ,on the federal
_.,ment, which rMans the buJk of
liability falls on the taxpayers.
"One of the principal activities of the
govemment today Is deceiving peoete,"
he said of the waste problem. 'The •
_.,ment tells people In en area
choe«&lt; to acoept nuclear waste that the
only be 'tBfll~·~·

repoe!!:l.c,Wfll

=. .... =~.:~.._.~r· ··
..:S~':.-=~e.~~:"ain~~~~

lion.

The argurnanttllal coal and oil energy
production polluting Is tru!', Weld
-Ita, but the CIUIIIIIIIII¥8 dlrrerance
' * - fOMII fual .,d nucr- ppllution Ia- nuclear
"fo..,_,•

ha.Jf,:C:.~

-are

238 ha a hall-Hie of
24,000 yawa while the whole of human
civilization has existed lor only 10,000."

1

~~·=h~s f.:'l~Yu~~Yn~~~~~a~~
0

II'/" atte, Ia on hie Itinerary.

ofl'8dletlon a person would be exposed
to fn the Thnle Mile Island accident Is
. equiYalent to a ''trip to Denver." Wllat Is
not~. he uld, Ia that the high
..Sfoactlvft\lln Den- Md other places
. like Seft Lllke City Ia caused by the use
of uranium mine residue In construe-

1

Audience NCIIfw. ctr.ry ,........

an
energy: Is being done In the U.S. only ·
by the government lor military purposes
and not by any commercial companies,
•
he said, end

n~.!:'~:,'w/:~~~'::'l/i!:~~~ 38t~
1

40 years, Is not considered In evaluating
the so-called benefits.
But, Wald said, by far the MOST
hohilylng, threatening sltuatlo~ Is the
threat of nuclear war.
"Nobody can asaure young people
that they'l be alive two years, live or 10
years hence," he said. "A hall-hour
exchange between lhe U.S. and the
~~::,=~can mean curtains for ~he

There will be no winners, and. not
even any neutral countries In a nuclear
war, he added. ''The people In New
Guinea wlllj,ust walt a little longer, till

thYn~=t ~~~~d:mcg::;,~ t~~~~~r~
weapon• now stockpiled by the malor

~~~ ~~~".,~~ '::.tl~e

lor him or her. Wald Said . The · bomg
drbpped on Hiroshima which caused

!.~~~~~~~~aW· ~~i~y~r~~d;:

and now would rate as a mere tactical ,
and not strategic, weapon , he Said .
What to clo?

-

now. out of control of their lives and
government ," he said. 'What can we
do?

~:m~.~ !'ll~~f~c:a'!~~~g,;

was bom In e revolution . Revolutions
that stop sre lost, they retrogress. We
have to kf!ep.llolng."
Wald retrlid the maxim that "people
get the govemment they deserve. •
"Ttie problem Is that the government
we voted•for Is not the government we
get. All J?Oiillclens sre populists while
thev're running.
"Who Is the master of our flovem-

ih:"~~~sof%':: .!t~~~~~be~~~

•
others. Every government in the West Is
an agent of corpo@te power. And those
on the other side ol'the Iron Curtain sre
no better."
Waid continued: "Our cri sis Is not a
crisis of Information but.ol decision .

~~rf~'=~~~: W'u~u~ ~~.:n f~
:n;·~~oW:.e~~d':,.=~ W~
do."
.
He feels the anti-nuclear movement,
which he says he has seen In operation
.. , over the woricf; will be the unifying
and saving Ioree lor humankind. He
urged the audience to attend the May 6
anti-nuclear march· In Washington, D.C.

By that time the · audience seemed
Fualon and .--mbllwlt DNA
thoroughly depressed. Wald seized the
'
Alter his lecture, Wald took quesmoment.
tions lroln th' audience. Asked his
"I never dreamed of finding Americans feeling as helpless · as they do
opinion of the feasibility of fusion

p()rtunlty to Inform and educate the
public on nucleer matters."

llabol8ge
Aa was reported In a Courier-Express
article NC8ntly, Chon ·._tad that the
greatest poasfbillty of rlak at the reactor
etema from the possibility of ubotage.
But, he aald, extreme eacurity precaution&amp; are taken around-the-clock,
INMI!I daya a weak. He notad, too, lhet
the reector'a alx cl&gt;'IIIM opwatora an.
reteatacl ann...rly and w011&lt; with at least
ona otllar operator at all limes. Stuclanta unclefVo axtanalve training before
!hay . . aiiOwad to under1ake expert-

-•.
· All uaa of redtoactl¥8 materials on

campus, fn the reactor and In laboretonaa, . . cloaaf.l' checkad 11r lha
Radlallon Salaty uepart- whoM
two full-tlma monitors kaep a oonatant
wtalf for C0111P.Iiance wtlh State and
~ ._gulatlona.
lnapectin from the NRC also make
- . J unannounc:ad vlalta to the ,....

=~~===~t:ld. ~~t~
NAC'a

~ton

Prueaia. ....

I offloa

/

~King

of

In ·Naponaa to a queatlon from a
atudant, 1'Naldant Kalter~ 111a1
NCtor ~ oou&amp;d be I&amp;CU!ad
tllraugflllla Un._lty ~ the Ft..
11om Of lnfomlatlon Act~ oont~

=.'-:"&amp;:n.-=::1. ._, R

'llle ..........
eo..ctl ..__, Mk:IIMI Pierce Mkad Cllan Wplulonium Ia a byprociUCI of •
U/8 ......., opelllllona.
"Who . . ,wr, Cllan cNIIengad.

~ Plaroe- alagltllnele
......... .. lila Counoll IIIIi N8TF
. . . . . . . . . . . . . ~- ..... of

=-....~...:.~.-..

That'a

Any amount Is too mucll, Pierce
responded. "It's a terribly lethal element. That's why they named It alter
Pluto, till! dog o hell ." One gram can
cause lung cancer, he charged.
Chon cited evidence from Geneva
("because so many of you people dlsirust the fJgures from your own govemment"lthat coal Is on.hundred times
more hazardous In terms of lung cancer
than the plutonium generated by nucr- reactors. As to the possibility of
aomeone stealing f.lutonlum from r\1-

.

=~~~ !:t~~.:;."t:r.~ ~~
. such
=:on~~Y~~~:~~~~~a::,n~~~
a thing.
GrWid Central Statton

He contended lhet "a trip to Denvef'

George Wald's reaction to this
!n-Dr.
a separate sloryl would be more

of Naflve Ameri"4"S , In New Mexico
where one of the major Issues will be
uranium mining, now done largely on
Nallve American tend.
- V'{ald expounded more on his views ol
how to save the human race. He truly
believes the present course can lead
only to destruction. Several young
people, whom Walt.)i as the hope of
the future and also generation whlci1
almost has no hoptf, sked Wald how to
. beGin.
llagln&amp;~~ywhara.-"Begin anywhere," he Said, citing as
an example the protests of the 1960s,
where young people just took to the
streets.
10

by~~':! ~~o·~~'11ie;'~a':g~~
hope of the future within the exlsllng
power structure.
They sre beGun by ordinary people,
like the· Love Canal Homeowners . who
are lacing an .llnreeponstve govemmenl
and being forced to live on Poisoned
land.
. By the wortdng class, suffering from
dioxin poisoning, black lung, brown

lrnnJ\;,:S~st~sc..'~Cfo"rer,/.':,?;P~;,~

from the corporate structure or the
government .
By middle class homeowners In Salt
Lake City and Den-, whose homes
end schools sit on land made radioactive by uranium mine residues.
By students, and young people who
have little to lose, end little to ·hope lor,
II the threats of a holocaust or of dying
from poll~tlon loom as the only vision
of the future .

hazardous than the amount of redlatlqn
which populations cloee to the Thres
Mile Island power plant were exposed
to. Spending a day In Grand Central
Station would also poae more of •
threat, Chon aald, beeauea the granite
from which the alation Ia made gives off

::J!:tl~w;!a..:'~ ;::ara~=~~r:

went on. "Thla ..Slatton hyatwla is anlllntellec:tUal," Chon &amp;ald . Ha added that

the public and etudanta . . "mlsguld!1'1" In their oppoaltlon to nuclear
energy.
President Ketter aald It may be
misunderstood axactly what the purposes of the local reactor are. It Is
strictly for experimental uee and for the
production of redlolaotopea used in
medicine. Ita facllltlea hawe been used,
lor example, to elate artifacts from
archaeologlcalexcavatlona and to determine such things as the mercury level In
fish from local lakaa.

• Med$chool
CfrOM _ , , .......
•
year madlcal atudents thla ran. will be
required to· pick one of the following
.. . _ lor In-depth study: alcoholism
gerfatrfcl, nUUitlon, environmental anci
OCCUpational health, coat affactland quality - o a . human values
and madlcal ethlca, and cancer: To
dale, four of INM llaft received
81d1Wnurallundlng, Katz reportad.
The Intention of the program eJCplalna Katz, Ia to "create optloni" for
atudanta bul elao to lnlfuanoa tha
and quality of OON OOIHM
mMarlaiFor which retat• dl...:tly to !ham.
If a atudant choo- a
aha ODUid .':'.
than
or

:::=:::· ':o:"lam,

ha
..._, .... WOUld:::~-==

=-~~

- og~. "apln-off benefit" from

t~e selectlwecurrlculum would be an exposure to
"'"*II claasroom alt...rlons and "heightened lnter~~C~lon" between students and
faculty, noted Katz.
.
Cu!Nntly, YWioua aducatlonal com""'"- wtthln
Medical School are
~:Y~~· lila syllabua lor these
Aa far as Katz c-. datermloe, thl~
typa of ·~rrtcular programming
will be unl- to U/8 Mtid SchOOl. He
,_ ,._,.,Y 11aen aaUc! to address
other rnadlcalllfOUpa on the 0011!"'1'' ·
Hooafulfy tile Madlclal Facultj Councu whl -·on lha two matt.,. at Its
naxt ...-thly -lng. The bodY was
8UIID08ad to .,_ aclad l8et TueadeY.
bul · ~ of lack of a quorum, nq

tha

--~·

�-AthletlcsKoren heads panel investigating
possibility of offering ~rants-in~ald,
doesn't care if it upsets-Albany
'u/B Council Member M. Robert
This was becauae EOP g....ite ~
Koren feels tile Council should find
then the NC,\A - atloWa lllhlele8 to
ways to help assure that tile Unl-receive. We ·told IIIII, lllthougb
ally's Intercollegiate sports are "not
_ , IIChoote do thll
thing, u..,.
embaiTassing."
~
do so "pri-ly." ·"We __
too hof&gt;.
Koren was appointed Friday to be.... est, ... Ketter said, ao tile NCAA had to.
chairman of a special subcommittee of
puK16ifGiery saalyaowetooold ~·Cot
~- he. ~8 tt
the Council to look Into w.ays of
"'"
-·~
·Cj~d~'jQn~~lng for athletes on tl)e •., ~'mJ~ro~~tat:, u;:-~ T =
"It's worth the risk of IIPsattlng
Trustees reconqidarPrOhibiiiOIW.agaiMt
Adolbanne,Y. hteo ·onsseelstedlf . S&lt;?"191~lng can be
State funding lor ·Intercollegiate sports ,...
and athletic echoltf'8hlps. Only .one
• At Friday's session, the Council also
trustee ( H - t himself) voted to conapproved the 1979-80 student rules and
slder any such change Ketter said
regatatlons, l ooked favorably on comCouncil Member' Koren ""u .1101' i:6fo.
mfsalonlng a'n original musical compovi need. "Nobody wanta. to move U/9
slllon lor the dedication ol1he music
sports o;&gt;ut of Division Ill, • ·Koren said,
bulldlng and chamber hall In 1981, and
but many alumni Individuals and others

..me

11

'=

·~~~~~~ ~"F:'~i;a:~~M'~

needed on what rights and ~esponslbllltles the U/B edmlnlat.ratlon .has and
which prerogatives are reS8Mld to
Albany.
Dlwtilon Ill , _ low kaJ
•
• The director of Men's (nt&amp;rGOIIeQiate
Athletics, Edwin Muto, gave Council
members a capsule history of U/B
sports from the early 60s to the present,
noting that football and b88kalba11 ·were

l:"te':. ~lofJ~:Ji.:"t~~~1:~~:."~;

~~g;~er:,s~ego ~av:!'~~m'2:m~~_:

posslble~· U/B should .a t least be·able o
do as well ~ State Unl-slty at Albany
!Nhich was :a finalist In the Dlyfslon Ill
• natlonal footbatlplayQfts '8. year&lt;&gt;! two

ago.

· Koren said !be ·eo~ncll should proceed " with caution andolntelllgence" lo
help the At~ Department lml!fOV8

\..!

~= n~"Fo:::_

1

Controller'II Office and Athletlj:a 0 see·
if -it's f'OSSibJe to ' deoelop !iSSJ&amp;tance
for athlelaf within S\)NY
Ketter r-ted ,he has ~o funds

outlawl"8 Jrante-l!Hid for athletes,

.r.;:odelra::::s.

•gnonta-ln-ald, except thou issued on
the besla of financial need. A Divi sion
~. ~ 1 ca":i':kr 7:W..:....:'n~~C::..'\ °!
an! given); U/B h•• elected to run · fts
baseball
"" bl 1
'
1

pointed out, too, that Chancellor
Wharton decl&lt;ted 118 rec8hliy as Ibis
spring . not to pusli for
88p8{1lte
student lee lor athletjcs that would be
ed,mlnlstered by the Stat!&gt;.
· .
Nonetheless , said Koren , "policies

~ou8~ill~ ::rf.::r.'~ ali Its sports to.
At this level, there are no mhletlc

1

1

Gnonts-lrf~'i'S~:veS.:~ cJ;;~"/~:";t~~~

than State funds.
&gt;!IN' need ·
·
Sewral things are necessary to'f!lake
~{.! .~~~ ~i'.f.tive and more com~t1. Student control of funds for
: athletics ailo~ld he dona away with , he
•feels . student contrOl does not give tile

wh.t

e.e:...,~~:~ ;o~~":~/r;

~6e

a

~ :es":loa::g.~ ;. ~~. ~~~~n~i~

Bobert Millonzl asked Koren to set up a
committee from among members of-the
CuUOJcil .
·
Rules, mu.Jic and-AI~ny
Tlle CourcU routinely approved Stu-

=:lnRgu'':r.~~t ~=r~on: ,!g~ '.g~

Sun screens, ~eights_ are liealttl . F.air · topic:s~- ·
By.RenM Barber
P.\dc ""*P ln18m

Sun "SCreens and -ight lifting lor
=.n"'ft'on

w:-tlle~~~

~~:~~.tn:..~=~~6.; -:.e
dey extravaganza. Tabies and- exhfbUf
filled the Fillmore Room in Squire wlilo
all forms of health news. ·
' •
The 24 exhibitors ranged from the
American cancer Society to the Wattlaufler Eye Clinic.

~::·.= s:-~~~7 ~~~f~~ P~t~f,; Student ~ember Pierce to have certain
order to secure State funding :~. Muto
provisions o~the Bill of Rights appendsaid . This could lske the form either of
ed to the Rules. Council member Rose
a line Item boldget for sports I!'Ograms
Sconll!rs suggeated that , .since tile I
(as Is-done in many other states), or of a
Rules already !IJ&lt;plicitiy incorporate tpe
leave th.e ri&gt;om to smoke a ciii8J'. "I
separate student athletic fee payable
Constitution and federal taws, to select
wouldn't ba able to enjoy It in there, " he
directly to and controlled by the head of
a few lor specific inclusion would be
said.
•
_ At half-hour Intervals health capsules
· the Institution, to ba used exclusively : ~~fJ~':.::un~~~~n :C,e~ f ~~~~;, ~~
were
scheduled
.
•
r~r&amp;:::v;::n:rate sports (asis'th~ base _ said . " Stud&amp;nts sh'ould know the Bill of ·
Edmu~d t&lt;leinbr,M .D. , aisoclate chief
2. We should establish priorities for
· Rights themselves.~ Chairman Mlllonzl
those areas of sports In which we wish
agreed, urging Pierce to "publish it in
~!~,f"'P~~ ...ld~:rn:o~~~"/lrp,~~
"Sun Sc""!"s and Cosmetics.':
in academic..-, Muto said. He noted
Blll ·of Rights are not germane to the
ltuaetobeadiagr·
Timu have certainly changed, he
..
.•
-noted, 'Ourlng the pre-Victorian a
....,..
't
._
CMatitutlonal provjsions would InVIte
suntan was considered a disgrace_,_ At .
in a ..-1 nationwide SUIWY1D' .dater-.
speculilollon that the Unl-slty hall. not
that· time, lilly white skin was tile ~lgri
mine tile top five academic departments
previously been abldlng by them. ,
01
In 88Ch of - . 1 fields, 80 per cent or
President Ketter, finding 1118 Council
~:nc,::,':.'la,s' beComing ihe "In
• OTIOI8 of the unl. . .lties cited for acareceptive IP the ~ of commissioning.
thing," more .,.cr mO&lt;a caaM of skin
clemic excellence also have b11J-tlme
-~f-=~~~~e':"'J:t~~.,cill';i!r.
=-~o =~~~:a-: ~xppee
int~~"',l',::Se:'f::muu, which new would get beck to them 'flth aomathin'g
;A -.ubatantiat amount of ao'f!r owllacampus ~Jon wttl _,tuatly
!)'OI'&amp;,dtfinitevery,sllortly. ~lthl!&lt;!Gb .lt!ll
llo'n, _ul):ravfolet illlhtkle,llbaorbed In
11111$1 pro'!lde. ' ·
·•
· music building dedication Ia 1!"0 yews
pZone lilY*'. But,
fllln warnedWtllt s.
4. We neecl moN - " " ' .Kh,ed·
away, it takes that amounl of !lme for a
:::;:;,~ ~· . . not .JII&gt;aorbed .' ~

eff~r ~~~·,~"tid~.:.,~~:::~.'~. ~~d '~g

8

1

~~·~":.=::!;1 ,&lt;\~.~hw:~;:

~ :l:O:.~:.f#~· ~rJ::. 'gg:nt~a':t ~~

at~ hatl.:l_~dhon\~g~mmlf_~esutt,hhe~po~tportn~jo:::,ut"d,

~u~l ~~~~~.~:~i~~ro!itn~

=''r!

f'!-

· r~it=':'.l.~ ~:"~~·· ~

•

n-

lhoulcl G8 some kind . of
IJ'MI~ I!RIOIWI'I-pertlllps uln tile
t.y l.elogue ......,. aolhletlc IChollldlllps
- g...,. on the bMie of need.
·
Muto said aporia . . Important to the
QUIIIty of mudant tHe. oould dl&gt;.mJICII to
combat attrition m the Uc&gt;I!Mr8lty, and
to to
rilake
tile Un'-afty
.w.ctMI
proapaclive
atlldanta. OTIOI8

11.

·w:!~~u:o~~ =ro.~.
c,:r~~:
write tile piece.
known compoaer
· • AS to'(luestlons of who -to
whom within the SUNY system raised
bY Pierce, Katt8f suggested thl;la good
pi- to start loOking lor-- -aid
be a1 a campua.&lt;:onf--.on bOw the
budget Ia m-... scheclulecllor Frk!ay in

~~~manlor
det"""atlter.~Qaa)
.
~~
__.....

"'tl' ~ fall ~ :*..!. v1oe -SUNY unit has
i::'.oce~~:n=, 1or -J: ·c~-.ptreeze profecl
~t~~pa.lf need Ia .:.:,cnt~J~eM~
IIIIJit8 lbtllty •
OM,
~Kefter~:'1Wouldll_'l
w.nt to OC1 to court on t111o1 ~

r-:y=In-• -·
_..." HelndlolleCIIW~
,.._ · - -

· A groap of ~at tile SUNY
Coltaga of Agrtoulture 8lld Life

~at Conlell-'" ~In
__,.. to .cplolt wlnter'8 mflllfY •
_, ecianolnlcal ~~WilY to

=

:r...::ra:~
.. r....
~··

==. ~

1M ...... . .

~-llf a

been
-IZII

~&amp;..=. ~; :.:::,:;"':::.7-Z~

lor

'*' tn lfiOIU

.-o.tna lftdltiiiUIII

..,... to Ulla

~-

room.

time ...... ..,.... ... frOm tile

1

atatae -

The Soulll-11""
tile
highest 81T10unta ot 1oo1.r owllation. The

Buffalo-,'nortllem~Stjta
and the OQUI of CJr8a9n, .-lve

the ' - ' .mount"'

n.....rihthat , wmer
Tf1e
nt~

suntan or blim Ia
Klein contended.

lncrweMI a
d:!,..':.•·
a myth,
water ab-

:=:' .::.=.
"":'JdcnoMinCI•
....

=~~~~ ~

w- rn
~

:==..
.. ==:- Tll8
::-...=:.
=.::-=n.:
nci

*!l'·...-""&lt;
X:
=-~
=;:,.,!;:-a.n ~~
...
~-

1'tle

l'llln*lt tn
=r.ird:
II:

Wlltah.Gi.v~u• any light

Wllll!l . alllt\-,
IIIII. II

10

a.For thOse who don't . . . . . . . . . or
protection,

a

pound of etn Ia on.n

�Anti-nukes overlook one.thlng:

.,lliltll...........

related coats rose so fast that the

having the second lowest possible
theoretical energy output per Input of
eapltal goods - labOr, raw materials,
machinery, omergy - of all ~u~tly
mar1ultable energy sources. In com~ ­
son, fossil fuels are 2000 times more
productive; fission and earty commerclal lusion over 14,000 times as efficient. But as we shift to e~ergy sources
with lower levels of technological develOpment , we must necessarily divert
massive amounts of cap1tal from in- .

Fudaf pollcl•
Zero growth ollcles used to exten
.. d
this pertod would have to be applied to
human reproduction. Pollcs state policies would hSYe to provide for a gigantic
bureaucracy with sole authority o•er

otn-lse contracted.
The q - llgalnat nucl- power - economy
Solar energy Is -distinguished by

. . . _ -~ 200 veers of
ICIIntlflc
to m.lke room
for lrt!I*IMII ton of "-wroprlate
IIGIIIIOIOgtea. • People who advocate
title • • 8Qiutlon to the ·~tern· of

=="~ ~u:::..,n~ ~rr

llmlt.s -

which the human
Ia able1o "exppoit" In order
doomed to
~pollute and &amp;M ourMI- out
of.......,., we mull!,_ to the most
t.1c mode of ex1a111nce to fcnetell the
-*~Jon

1o · _,.._ 8lnoe we -

po,r.M.tlhualan WOl1d outlook reu-nts bumene as ueeless con•umers
Ml(l producera of - · In effect,
~ng cattle. Thla view does not
recognize the creative aspect of human
existence.
A resource Is defined by the quality of
the technology end assoclat,a culture
of a society at .orne definite point of

a

exlat~at~=na.::ir.~f~ ~=

one form of society by more .c!vanced
- - Thla dapanda on a "IOCI.t surplua" cMracleriZ8d by quwrtltatlve InIn energy thfoughOut. These
" - prod~ the qu8lltatlve te.ps
wlllc:tl t-.
hom ewgm.Jraeource
Cliloulllllana to eniiNiy Oft concep01 ~ItY. the I a of
tl-iiii-..'Gielaii•-•IIMIIIftl&lt;•lllltt. as reflected
...
and the like,
. . . . .._, dnct
of
. . . . . and ... cleDiatlon of re- - - 1bla Ia the Clllal I'8UOII It
oa.lll 10 RIUIII to ~ the problem

.

"*'

'*'•

IOIIIW-

.

T. . ....,

All ~ alllllty to grow Ia
~ -...-..to chenge8 In the

--~~~

-up..
~-~
0111

gooda

~·

r='.:
:='::..,~'II': ui1'i7c
aa..aon, "' WIIIGII w.qw IIIII

other

·gnm:...

.

- ~~=~~~ ~~~~lh~r.~~~tl~~~~

.-.a

exi.tenoe In thllt specific

=df~~o:.,o~"::~~~~~~~~=~

thing whfl
~uldn't be established
wlthout.war. Policies geared to production of coal woukl, of course, pre,suppose· 0tave labOr. Gains In energy
security would be lost In terms of
~~:~h t1.'!."'~e';'J'~~~;::o~
freedom , and Instead of our grandenergy. Solar energy Is aeemlngly
children having to go without energy, It
would be ou• grest grandchildren. ·
chesp because ltls.aJI around, but It Is a
There have always been people wlllconstant drain on social productlv~t
· because of the msssiWJ amount o
capital needed to reproduce that energy.
dlvlduals Clon't resllze .that If )I weren 't
fortechnology's ablltty to advance and
concentrate society we might alresdy
13
have consumed our environment out of
nuclear power
existence.
plants lnlhe U.S. provl~e 13 per cent of
Environmentalists created the _ m9our nation's electric energy, serving
rpentum needed to shut down civilian
mora than 25 million people and lndua- 1
tries, targelr concentrated 1110und tllghly Industrialized areas• such as the
Reich in Nazi Germany, Hitler created

t:'ve~~::!~::;.tln

~ly~~ ~m(We ":!\~"':,'l

cont
mode.

P
_

::;,~l~~=f.~~~~· ~~:!'.:-~~~ \~~

l:l?:f~tz=.t~l~~~ ~=

and
(:Uiture, It must
y daDiale the basl8 for Its

.we can't _tum back

Fossil fuel stocks will be used up In a
tew !lecaaeo.
I

~~h":~i.N~~~f..Owp·:~/~re~r:

electric power; New Jersey, with 31 per
ceht, and Illinois (with the largest
number of operating reactonJ .of any
state), 28 per cent. All these Illinois
plants are operated by Commonwealth
Electric which eervlces the northern
third of the State, Including Chicago.
Illinois leeds the nation In agricultural
exporte and Ia lhlrd. in ,manufacturing
exports, some $6.6 billion wQrth - ol
which $3.4 billion Ia produced by the

~~:::,~'f~~ld ~:u1~rn"!t.~

inatlon of up to 50 per cent of 'the
electric Jiower for thle part of the state.
Simitsrty, Wisconsin gats 32'per cent

~.-=1~ ~~.f~f ~u=

=~~
=tf./mn::!t!.~lst~~
nucl- pow.- Ia the equl-t of 500

million - · of on ~veer. $6 billion
In Imports at curran{ OPEC prices. To
ahut down or 8¥81\ neduce nuclear

==.:~ :!:'l:r:h'!o:~r

_.....,to_._

eco-

N.Ucleer capabflltlee give electric ut)lltias 1111( mergln to - ' disaster by
~ &amp;*Itching from coal or oil; It also allow&amp;
them to sell excesa.. electricity during
..-gency perlode to utilities With no
nucl- capecltlea. During t/le 1977-78
nlltlonwlde coal atrlka, It w• this
north _ _

. ~lcn=~'ll!Jl:: k:w~
rwult of

r~'~r::~~'::lt~n:~~~~:~~~:

ment Agency to bypass constitutionally mandated Institutions in favor of the
Imposition·of military controj&amp; over the
economy. FEMA, which consolidates
all federal disaster control, civil defense, anp antl-terrol'lst Junctions under
. one superagency within the National

Security Council. went Into operatloll
''when tne lncldent began" at Hamal;)urg. Ita perionnel atege-mani!Qed e~ policy declalon ana screened atr
Information allowed to pass to the
media, and were, therefore, responsible
· for conflicting atorl,s and the conae_quent anti-nuke hyal.erla.
Slbot-a-1

sh~Ja~::' f:~st~ht~:fn~u~~~";~

Incident at Harrisburg has producad
paranoid responses which threaten to
shut down ttie nuclear Industry aiJd
create that energy shortage. We hiM
·seen the-creation of en ~nconstltutlonll
centralized crista control center, and

~!~~~·~~~.~~'fll"~:lo~~t:.- t~~
~~~1,'! ~hu~~~ft ::;t!h~ ~~~~~~~~
gf.f,~~~n~~!u~~Y~~~\:"rr!~fty~~~ ':l!

conclusion that the '!accident" W{IS a
resull of direct human Intervention -

~~~beretely refused here to . account for the paranoid feara of the
opponents.of pJOQress. The' answers for

!~~~~tyo~~~t ~:o~~~ ~ -&amp;JPeul~?
~rwo:::~e~ p~o~ ~ ~~·~o~~1;, T~~

the whole proces)l of 'l:uman deveYopment. Einstein said atdm power has
changed everything but , the way man
thinks; yet, n spite of this, he wor1&lt;ed
on theoretical nuclear physics because

l'!':re~t~:::,~~~~~~~:: !~~~~

Women (agains• Viole11ce
'pornographic~ themselves
Editor:
Many of the women who attended the

~~~: t:tt~~~~~~:.~~~eg~

en were long on abhorrence of pornography and 88l&lt;lsm-and justifiably sobut very short on manners.
Not unlike many public forums of a
controversial nature, this . one was·
marred, Ironically, by a kind of dot!!&gt;le
• standard . Those who spoke un9Qutvocally against mes!la exploitation of

~~fu'd~~~~~~~r~t:w.J~~~~!~":

their piece.
•
The Nfl!8 was not true for the few
spokee~s !oYhP.ceballen~~e~

mind wlthou.t group condesce11slon or
·condemnation. It Is one thing to disagree, another to denigrate.•
If the University, almost by definition, Is .-place where a free exchange of
Ideas can Hourlah, then no one should
deny that right just becaUse he may dieagree wlth another's opinion . That can
be just as pornographic.

- Paul R. Chlnift
UnW..ItY N - Bure111

pare"1s,ar.• .

better educated

. .,

"- 1 The 'educaHonal attainment ol par:
polntat made by the Aoehester · group
eota, reported on birth Certificates In 4-4
and their proponents,
•
stat• and'the District Of-Columbia. hU
When one professor ln..tbe audfencs
questioned an attorney's definition of
censorship, for Instance, ha was
~lon.t Cent• lor Health Statlattca
prompt~'( ~'for "gattl"g oft tlie
f11110rt on #natality
subject. Another man who admittedly - ·~ 111 Its
did go off on a tangent was mat with a
o1
blr1ha to
of
IIIUQhter and, by one
realdanfa 01 1 ' - . , _ wano to
woman,- abutlhNIIY Indicted ae some
rnothenl who " - oomplated 12 ~
klncl of blithering Idiot.
or mont of formal aducallon. The
Neither
dla.graed wtth the ,11!111- • .proportion of bllblea to fatii8FI with thll
,...,. of the IJIOUP; 11811181y,thM tha'iior8IIIOUIII-~- _..., paroent.
llayal Of - I n pomogr8pbic lllilraTile prt_port~on of llk1h• to IIICIIIImfWhO
.... and ~ng Ia Pledol!tl•
OOifaDe ~ tncr..act rom
IWIIIr ~-!at.1 humlllltllng
1,11 par cent lti 1. . to 12.1 ,., o8ntthlln
llld on.ij- I
, neither. -11177. The - - . I l l • ' - - •
.........
~10..-lfnot
.,.,. ·far ....... - '""" 18.4 per

:he~::::' ~"':va)=.~~:

nnat
at~tc; rgr~~rths

roar NrdQnlc
"*'

c=:..-:.-u;-ci~~-4:...,__
.

~w\l:";r'inallon

Ngl-..tn 1871.

~I

Tille--:::.=
flw ltlrtha

!i~V:iJ=
.........
~'T-· =:r..-.-....
'

�}IIIOy$,11711

Academic concerns top
Mayersoh~ 's SA agenda

That's what men's porno magazines
· are pll about, spokesperson for
Rochester \VOme!'l's group contends
Eighty-six per cent of col~ men
' - ' " Playboy" or " PenthoUll8.' This Is
the moat Influential group of maiM,
contends Ms. Martha GeYer
1*8011 for the
ochester'
omen
Against VIolence
omen.
Grier and other Rochester feminists
addressed a capacity crowd n Squire
Hall Frlday evening.
The Rochester group Is affllleted with
the Ber1&lt;eley, Callfomla, Womt~t~'a Center and Women Agalnst VIolence In
Pornography~d}oledla. (WAVPM).
The Rochester women visit groups In
hopes of educating males and fernalea
_about the port.(ayal of women In pornographic media forms . They also want to
cteale an understandiOQ, of the results
of these violent portrayals of women .
In . male entartalnment magazines,
women are portrayed as being evil,
passive, masochistic; blackS are over-~
sexed ; whites ar:e aexuallv rtpressed.
These portrayals, sa!d Gaver, have a
nscun1ng themf1: bondage, the material
manifestation of dominance.
•

By Marcy Carroll
Aopor1or 11-.

With a stress on ecedemlc Issues and
a ooncem for a more personalized-as
.opposed, to bureaucratic-lev8! ol In-vofvernent for etudents Joel Ma1'8t'110hn
· has begun hla term as Student li.sooclatlon (SA) President.
The Spring Valley native haa aii-'Y.
conceded-' one thfng: "there aren t
enough hours In the day to gat .-y-thlng accomplished."
-

1ee1ie of "Huatlar" IM'OVId&amp;a a co...,..ple. IIYIIIQ!ne thla: a woman being
fed, head first, Into a meat grinder.
~ion of women Is
present
In psychology Gaver charged. Freud
defined mUOChlam aa being tnuly femInine.
. ·
.Alld don't flt!leve lor a mlirufe that·
only alck .men 1-' these magazines. Training period
Capable men In the bllalneas wor1d ar:e
Meyeraohn. Ia well-schooled In otu_ , patrons or thla literature.
Many or the stortea In these publicaHl.!!fcl!:'n'l'
Ilona are lacking In plot and writing
what he termed his ·~rafntng period.''
skills, but the photography makes up An Interest in a contlnue&lt;l Involvement
l()("lt, GeYer pOlntedl!llllllJ aha sl}owed ' ln- 11\e'SA"'ecftollla deCision to nun Tor' •
slides of photographs used lor. visual · the student QOI!Jimment hot seat . The ·
stimulation.
·
transition of edmlnlstretlons smo9thly ,
Gaver concluded by stressing that accomplished, Mayereohn assumed his
Images ol women In bondage are dulles last month.
·
~here . They're a product ol our
" In Of"der lor U/B to maintain ~lgh
culture and force women to l eal shame academic standards," he feels, " we
and Ignorance about their bodies.
have to address other programs that
would Increase the quality ol student
Firat amendment wloletlon1?
lila and would make student.s want to
Audience reaction
stilled at first.
come here."
but finally the Issue of freedom ol
Mayereohn calls lmflementatlon ol
speech and the Firat Amendment came . the Springer plan a •mistake by the •.
T.Utheup.
University, with no sound mechanism
lhe corseHs an historical exampl e of
As an affiliate ol the WAVPM group, for Un l~lty credit ." He sees problems
these women feel the!, " pomogr-..hi ls
~.~:~~ ~u~;,~a!::erbe~~~ an
abuse of the right of lraed
Qf ~u~ncPem~"~~~~!~tio~~
speech, that the Firat Amendmenl as ules." It will taka at least a ruH year to
~~~~r,':,ncomfo.~~ ,
_ Intended to protect material that complete the transition, he predicts.
mobility In a corset Is : e d . not all
wndoneo and promotes violent crimes "Students have a voice through our
women wore them. PrOstitutes and
agalnet any group . •r.. " The topic was representatives on the Cun1culum Comlllbo&lt;lng women were the exceptions.
~~j=::t~l~mls~ as, "getting oil the mHte end a new SprlnQI!t' ImplementaThe theme of the coi'MI 18 atlll present
tion 2emmlttee," he aald.
Some women expressed their feelinga about " being victims of a male G-IEd
baing bound ~offered whlleahowpower structure."
In the area ol General Education, the
lng alldea ol fashions bY. St. Laurent.
Another
women
offered
this, SA Prealdenf feels It Is Important that
&amp;en the faahlon8ble h gh heels are - "Through dlnsct action and education, "people be mede aware ol students• ,
exarnpl... of bondage.
women will have to raise their own positions." He, lor one, thinks the ~ 11 often !Alated with an element
COlleges ahOOid play an Integral part In
lm~.;·lde show
dlacuaslon was. Generll Ed. "They pro!lllde cou.-- th8l
of humor In man's ent-lnment magashow non-traditional areas of academlc
zm..
ehe claimed •. The constant ·eocilltlon of ~with violence In ~o­
nre-oommunlty, ~. 81111
gr8pha laedtl to death. The June 1878
W"""':''' Studtea Collage.
RB •. ooclal18a.-- wellel tllelrllllftloNI
areas." In regard to dlalrfbullon OIWdlta
lor college ooureea, "TI\IS ~ to a.

~gains!

E

even

:"Ws"':~~~'v:~

~~

wu

'~I~.:S~ -r~;:~:t.gr~o"men

and

cor~..:~ c~r,g:·~~.::;~

on how It Ills Into the academic

pr~raro·· the Health Scteni:eJb.u .E.
Dean dilemma, Mayersohn hopes that"
the alternative SA Iavere, 'the creation o~
a Unl-alty-wlde Dean _to _Initiate
t~':.'.c~~!tlated. "but that's
Anotl\er priority llliue lor Mayer&amp;Ohn
Involves teachlno .affectl-s. 11 financially poaslble, he hopes to " re- ·
"kindle the lire" lor a SCATE ·(student
evaluation ol teaching) "program , aa well
as help create a teacher developmeltt
center.
A former campus editor ol The
Spectrum, Mayereohn Ia particularly
aware ol numore of Spectrum/SA Involvement. "The numora will continue,"
admlta a 8erloua Mayeo:aohn. But "the
SA hes more ln'lfiO'tan"\ thlnga to do
thlill dlecuss Til• ~actrum's bylaws or
wii!Un I f.

r:vt::r;·

=a;J;i

'Ttie Spectr:um' is best,.
·its new editor aver~
.

The spac~num-wlll aaln a~

aa well aa a , _ edTtor.fll-&lt;:hlel es of

June t. His n.me 11 Oenlel l'llrl&lt;er, end
he Ia quick to' tell you that "TIIr
Spectrum Ia the only quelity campu•
~·"I

•

• Parker h&amp;a been a II*Tiber of The
Spectrum staff alnoa 1878, movt11g from
•tall writer to carnpua . editor to his~~ poaltlooYaa MWI editor. He
reeched the dec181on to nun for edltorln-cl)lel "after a gnlll deal of thought."

The,.... ... only .......
Whl~ Parker can "appraclale" !tie
other ~ on C*ftpua In that
t h e y - aa a clleck on The~ .
the ..f'ort Waallillgtofl, Long laland,
rwldent f...a '7lie Spacltu'!! Ia fer
-stronger than In
==tve.,.._to...Ptt that w.t-~
Parker bel'- tllld The~ ..
quality (not to..-ntton 1111" ....., to
otter _.,.. cNdll tor wrttlng) will ealt
belt In anr.ctiiiO
Tba , _ editor-In-Chief . . . . to ..

.:.:r..-=:=
_.118ft .,..,._

"an ellectlll8"edmlnltitrator." He wants
to delegate more autbority to his
editorial stall aa well . Parker Is In the
proceas of selecting editors . lor next

~-~umlng his duties, he'd ·like to
· "expand the tcope of Issues here to
broeder iaauea that are gaining slgnlll~ In national politics." The creation
or :w,:lal Specrrum - publlcatlon)l will

:"~~j =l'y T~=~ru~

dates far student AMOclatlon elections
wfU depend upon a coni\IIIISUI Ol
opinion from hla editorial etaff. Parker
...., hopes •o " - more dl.,..,llng
oplnlona In the editorial pages.

Tba .......... ' - *

"8eeedea bl!ing a quality MW&amp;paper, "
empMalza ,..,_, "The Spectrum's
OCMr-aa and •penpecttve Ia much dll...,. than the Alpomr, or Worlds or

HWO...One.
,
'71te s,.:fnlm'a Oledlblllty hea lmpnMid•• he Nlnllllne. ;'More faculty
..., The Spactrulllllwl the ,...,....•

"';f.dug.

.

.

~

.

~~~,;:=
of

e.tart. or IMY ,_been clone
... br ... tlrltl8h. 8oOtl uld he .. nat

_________
to ... ..cl"",.....
~
;;t
......• ............
,..
_.,-riel-' .....
U/8- '-alae ..-th-

....... I n - - viCinity

a...-whocnnt*l
fkWI

-

... .,..... tD

aeo.
• will ......... to cto. • proper
~Ill~:--to,_
'
.............

-

~

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I'IIOoiMII.

........

trort~fa

_ .. .,......_...of.._ .c....................... - . ...
_............. ·--·of.,_. .... ..._ ....
........
-M.~

111111a
ad

=..................
. . . . _. . . ·-r:--..........
. . ..............
. . . . . . . . -. '\_,....": . •.......__. . '
..... . . . . . Fwnaa~l

U/B anthropologists report
major find at Old Fort Niagara

tarlolil .... In Hol'lh Mwb. 8oalt

,._~

�Amazonwu
Eric a.ntley'a 'Ftol ofW _ , _ •....,.

~

throue1l ~. -

.,.

c.n..fo&lt;.,_...
__ •_

- ...t.iltthe
R_....._.tt

of the Trojan ..... In which "love
concjU... nothing."

CALENDAR
f

•

SIGMA XI MEETING

1he ~ .-;ng of Sigma )(I wll

be held In
the .FaaAty Club Dining Room. A buffet dinner is
aviJiabte from 6 to 7:15 p.m. There wil be

ThurSday-3

inftiatian of new ~ and Dr. Chestl'f
I.Jingwily, chairpenlon ol Geology al U/B , Will
give a ,., and slide presentation on ...,_ tee
Cote meotigations."

DEN11STRY SYioFOSIUM I
Annuof .... _ A. Eft9"1h Sp&gt;-

The -

poolam ~by

tbe- of Dentis1ry ...

a prognon
o
n
- {abiHy
to conlrol_toos
_
_
_
•etrol&lt;en)to

"' UUAB FlLMS!- ~
.
,
• ()ont!oiOorl...-~ (1953). - - .
y.., ttch (1955}. Conference Theatre. Squi'"e.
Col63&amp;29t 9for showtlnleS. Mnlssion charge.

--.....v300-frorn8CitlOSthonaliJn.
Tho~ honora ... - - (196().70)
ol t h o - acllool. Holldoy"lm, Grand Island ,
8:1Se.m. to4p.m.
·

· statTing MMiyn Monroe and JMe
Russell , is the story of two lhowgirts who sail to
Fr8lC8 seeking ridltu!l&gt;onds. or'" least cknonds.
In Tho s...n v - hch MMI}'n Monroe plays
thewho keeps h e r in the refriger'ator and always pn:mises but never
delivers. For a New Yor1t pubfisher (Tom Ewell).
this is frustration ; he fnds 11 ncreasngty hard
to stay on the ~ and naTow while his

ltOCHEIIISTRY SIEMHARI
~~ StucfiM: of Trantfer RNA BlnCJIoogtothe-Dr. a..tleniO. Wels.
ol ~· Johns Hoolljns Univer·

blonde-

sfty. 108Shermln. 11 :30a.m.

-·

a

DEPAIInEHT OF INDUSTRJAL ENGtNEEJIING

wife

........, Ftldots luuea In tnform~Uon System
Doolgn, Dr. Pew, Clf-1 of Hunal1

Is away .

F""""' Sociefy. 2 0 9 -, AmheBI. 1 p.m.

~ ENOINEEAING SEMINAR*

Frlday-·4

-.... ·lor tho Monutocturing
- - . Prolesoor Alex · Iowa State
~ . 206 funas, AmheBI. 3 p .rn, Coffee

11!2:45.

The-

"5ECONO SYIM'OSIUM FOR
ADMINISTRA TORSM
The state Budget · Mlklng Proceu.

'

The State budget renects public policy deci·

SOCIAL WORK OAy•

ofSodaf--

Association

~~:..~:n=.~· .
~loel2p.m.

·---·

1lorothy H e m . - Clfolesaor o1 psyciUatry
at Mc:Mieta" lJrWer'.aty,
8QI8Ik on setVice6 to

..e

WOIIIUIIG' ON PROOIWI

noome:-

~~

255 c.-. 3-6 p.m.
3-4 p.m. - ,.,..,
PMefists will
~ _ , IIIOir ~ and experiences
accolloiOdllioogtho- ln their pro-

11""0_,toctivf!loo.,_fromtho
Olfico dl SIMcoo lor tho HlndiaoR&gt;ed and the
llcalpollonil ~ ~ wll ~In·

on a-.. -.
-.g
... ~

10 accommc).

"'--·-·of
-wll
..-tn-.-.

t
ho
coollt&gt;oAe
to -.
dis·

&amp; P41L - - dl 1M WCIIbllop:

~~ ... bedialr1buted10 al

~of1he

-....~-.a~ .

-.u ..

liMo · IJnlversity lJo;oon
Jor«M.,. ~-been
adMoly-

ln~Jo-- .. ~-1 1 0 4 - - N:&gt;. ol 1973. MMa
.
...
. .p. ~agnoal--""""*'1)
_ _ _ ,.,..,_onltaoflorts.
lnll)t_di ... ...S, Iooi.Jni¥orolty'e1104 Tael&lt; , _ I It ril*fng t11i11 plot WOil&lt;shol&gt;

blaol.ll!tontl..-...-.;

'

cc:.- ~""lOWlY and

-....--.
.. -.-- ...
-·

- o f l w -'lllolar.. and Toahnology

eo.na.--Hoi.Bp.m.- -.
...... dl . . oa.--ot

~
--l..ljoron-.nolod...._and

-

dl .... U / 8 - ~ facdly,

, . . . . . . . . . . - . by &amp;1C llontlay,
-b}'IIUB*LO..Iar--.

-....-----N.Y.-

_
_
,,.eo. MJ6.....a.
,_
- a..
e.,....
.... sa........ . . _ . b } ' . . C . . . I a r -

Cud ..... -

will "' begjn

to adaress

stwr.:

The sc:heWie: 9 a.m. - Coffee and registration :
9:30 - -.tk Dullea, special ...,;stant to Gov·
emorQny for eduCation InC! the ens; 11 a.m. -

ENGINEEIIING SCIENCE. AEROsPACE
ENGif!EEIUNG IHJ NUCLEAR ENGINEERING

William -

SEMINAR*

&amp;itybUdgets-ai-Theatre, Norton.
12.:.30 -kl'lch; 1:00- 1"'- Honorable Frenk
a, ~ &amp;, State Delegate 10 tho Maryland
Genonoi Aaoa!tiy; 1: 45- Henrfl&lt; Oulfea -all
T_,llooquet Room.
~ ~ors from vice presidents to

PHYSIOlOGY SEMINAR I

· SUNY asooclate vtce chancellor
for finlllce ~. lOCI &lt;lirectorof Univer·

-

&lt;W:45p.m. •·-·-~~~~- Each
-ln-•botncaidodln·a.....,.
-.oP lo an OOIWig problomo oncounteced

--ID-..

........

aspects of this topic.

,.,...,..tion:

4·

past pa1ormanoe Md the strength and Wording
of the actual budget req.JeSt, aci'TWllstrative inter·
•
pretations and decisions in execution .
Major ~t&amp; in overall resot.l"ce planning
... tho: projec:tions of
ol the

SIBle andlho""""'Ymorlu!l:fedenol-an&lt;l.
A~ATlON

FOil THE iWIIIICAI'Pmll

A~

sions. public opinMJn , political considerations,
~ in State priorities, interagency rivalries ,

d!IPanmont dlolipeloons ... """"""'ed to ........
~

by the DMiion of Gnlduale and

Oototmlnatlon ol Regional Deposition and
Rotonllon dl Aon&gt;ool PllltlciM In the Lung, Or.
W. Stahlhofen. Geselscheft Fur Strahlen·Und
~~:. to.b&gt;chen. 112 P - ..

Tho Elf- dl Oxygen"" lho Conllorftpl..te&gt;&lt;y

S\'Siem dl SliMp, pr. Sedy Mal-. SI08 Sher·

Pl'clessional~ .

man. 4: 15p.m. Coffee'lfillbeserved::-t 4.

MEN'S GOLF•
UJB WL Rocheatw Tech. Audubon Course. 1
p.m.

IRCAUI"
laat T1ngo In Paria. with Marion ·Brando.
146 Diefendorf. 7 and 10 p.m. $1 for non·
feepayeo$
-plays 8 -.aged Amerbon who meets
e. yooog French gir1 whie he's aperiment hun~g .
One of tho few wklely - e d r.n&amp;, incidentllly,
that ctear1y depictS anal; iltercou-se Md e~ots
the ,virtues ol butter. One critic called "Tanoo"
not a sex fim ; yet it is the first sex rim. Brande
gives one of his most mcwi'lQ performances of the

v-

LECl\JRE'
CoroaclouoMu and t11o
o1 the Mind,
...llAia'l Jaynes, research psychologist, ~ton
~ . 108Baldy .· 3p.m.
~byPiogsnoln~UteretU"e .

FaaA!y dl Arts and Le&lt;t..,., and Deportment of .
Ps)'Cioilofly.
,
Jaynes IS author of The Origin of Consc::iou ...
,... in the lr'elakdown at the Biu.merel Mind,
e aet:fT*9Y esoteric topiC, but one wNch he
. - ~ tnt.,.,.,;ng In a discussion on "Dicl&lt;
Cevett'" thia aeeson. Min, he submits1 was not a
I\Jiy conocious bo01g lor oructo of his e&gt;Ostence .
Ho , _ , "voioos" ...., , _ cirections from
"god&amp;," whiCh in r~ were lirr.ply imputses from
h OCher Pert of • mhd which was dMded in
'

Mo.

A--.

Joynlo ... ~ .. 8 p.m. In the thi"d
loor....,....,
d/ the MW frio County Medical
C..W(-~).

- ----.A

CML BJIIIJEEiliJO~
C.. Sludy, Pit&gt;-U/B. 322
. -._3:30~
, _, a..tEnglo-.lng
- ··
.m .

--?

-~CQU.OQUUIIjl

--=...eo:=::.:r.=r~=
I

--~og.Dr. -

u.w-.

Room 41 . 4226
I.a. 3:30 p.m. Cdfoe and douglnJts
... bo-e131nRoom61 .

• Adgo-

· Sporty

FB.I.OWOF.,_11001Al COUEGE

llila•
__
u.s.,......__,,
C......,
... - __
LECTUIE
A

d/loo--

Algllla: The K_,.

Legoj

-Aagtwn.
-·
3.30ji.IO

~- . 108~

-·

WHAT' S HAPPENING IN ljtCARAGUA1' .
•
September In Nkaragu1, fltm. Speaker. lrart1a
a .._ and-,8 ..,.,.....,. on
Guatemala. 1&lt;48 Diefendotf. 7:30p.m. Donation
is 51 . 50. SQonsored by the 1'lWd WOfld Student
Assoc:.iltion, lnlemationel Affairs Coordinator SA
Glynn. Also

POOER. AZTECA, Puerto Alcon StOOea.

NaW

l..lwyer$ Guild, .-ld other student dubs and organ·

.

~OOM .

Also being ~ et 2 p.m., Slturdly, ... ,
~~ N'-lle,. . .neh Ubrary, Porter 1nd

UoCTIJRE•
~ Schl__. and "" Orfgln

~by the Pmgram In
erature, Faculty of Arts Md LeHers. end

mentof~.·

MUSIC~Nce'
" - - """"'*"·In~--·
Recital Hall. 8 p.m. Free a&lt;lmlssion
by the Center ·of the C..eatiYe Md
Arts and tho !lepwlment of Music.

Mken's residency here, wf1iCil began
concludes the thai brought
DIMd Gilson, Jimoo Tomey, DIMd
_ _ _ and _ _ _ ,. ......
- lo camout . . NatioNIEndowmenl!ortheArtS.
"Now

Music Concens" -

·

~~..to--;;.;;;~.;;,;;.v .;.,.-

-••nd c::..idi:

has ""'-'"
ttoe Unified

oen.

CACFLM•
~• ..,., Woody Allen and ();one Keaton.
170 WF/oC, Ellcol!. ll and 10 p.m. are

of

...... J&lt;illo1 Jaynes, ......,j,
P!\'oc:elon Unlvenitty. Erie Cotmtv Mecfoca
3&lt;d Fl:&gt;of Auditorium. 8 p.m.

""'•"""-· - •

tna l

:..:r-...=::~

St .501o&lt;-;S 2 - -.

1n1o the use ol more 1
traditionll methode auch as the use of ml

Ariotoo.efllnodi'ectadbythem&lt;Atl1alented
Allen, his nutty Yi!ion of tho futl.re. Met
.-going an
Woody ;, frozen and

"IPOCS"
-as -an 1n1ega1
- pert ol ·OOi'JWlC)8ltiOn
tho utiization
'""' I
~.

'"**"'·

-ln2173tofind,.,_lnl~slale,

:a~:~• is to

Wleh rer'U'lS of

Thia,.,_,_..,.,.Woodywasjuath.my.
-

loll -

-

having

led tho

major

c:rttica "' hall him .. tho lli'ealest American
~ . ~ 1r1 Men film 18 now an

- ·-·
~ - - - . . .. -

-

oooAd 0111&lt; fo&lt; more?

~.""""' .,.._, dl modern

Jozz lnd -

· - - Studoo. 8 p .m

Md 1a1w -

-

olin~~~.~"'==,::,

st.rcing -"""' to
..,....

the """"' ol

ean.,;an

0

UU.UFU15'
- - -(1953). Tho SO
v- - (1955) Conlerence Thes~e. $ql
Col ~-2919for IIJOWtinOS· Admissic&gt;o-

UIBGAY - n O N FRONT"
C d f - 107 T -. 8 p.m Ever/

-=orne

�•'

..

The Next· Five .Y ears
A Statement on Planning.and Development
in Academic Affairs
I

In tho -

~. ~.

· foreword

=

_.nng to President
rnaclo ~to tho complotlon by tho

lhll folow I am

eo...- on Ac.demic: 1'1onn1!!9 (HuD-Yearloy CocilmK-

=:::::='~J:~'1'~
AI!Ut. It II lmporlmtt to nole here c:.rtaln

aMUmptlonl and unclorSaldlngs I brtno to thlllolk.

of tho

I how lntapnted broedly tho Praldent't ~ by
dovelaplng a ""*=*i ..noa. tho majol' c:ondutlona
my

olllc:e- hM t-n ollie to ruch obout

planning and

~ r:-._::-:tt!'-.·: tl ~

!fur
Yearloy eon.-, I hove nelthc rWd tololy upon
them In .mvlng ot my conduolons nor dell&gt;orately oouvht to
mpond, 111m by ltcln, to tholr findings and ...:ommcnda-

tlonl.
I how not bdcwd I . _ y to deYot&amp; a contlclaablc
pcrion of thll to .... _.......-... of ..... this
unlvc"llly, 0&lt; tndeod . . . - . ,, II obout. We ore on
~ of ocholors, with . ol "iNt II imDIIeCI by thll

-· Some of us, ~-"'- ol us who . .
augoriaod u ttudcntl, ore In ndollvely -1\1 lf"'JJO of our
tcholarly deWlopment; othon of Ul, apecloljl thoee of us
who . . cotegoriled .. !.cully, how p-.1 ~ _ . .
. _ ol O&lt;ll- tcholarly ~ and how _.._t
~
Mru, through and .-.:11, to than

among.,....._
'"'*"

-our~ not only
and our
lludentl but with tho lolger communlll of
we ore a
...,. Tho- ol us . . ~ .. ~ and
~ ltaff with ,_......_ which~f uncle-·
lllood, too from tho ..... ol
and . .
monho1lod In tho " - ' and nurturing
ocholooty
~- Elal&gt;orMionl olthoM words- auroly ........
- * I bo llnpoltanl, I expect, In · -..._ Marly
ftnd I _.,.,.- In tholr -·111110
. plonnlng-- to . - I n IIICh
tho
mO&lt;Oiiinlted-althll- l hownotlelt I

*

......,._,lor

~-

1 how not tried In thil t o - ~ ,_
and feoluro altho life and IOIOii&lt; ol tho DIWian of Academk:
Allain. Thto dlvlolon II no ._ thon tho oum ol tho ocholooty
and lumll1ll IICtlvma ol b facully and . . . . .. In •
~- ·-do not In ............... tho llroke
.. ~plan and~- .. ol tM. They . .
Nll'll!l dhelc, and they beolcaDy - . from tho lntdl-

..,_,_lnltiattva. .....

ond............,.. ollndMduelt.

~I howettornpi&lt;OIInthil-to O&lt;lllnc who! I

......... to bo tolilnt pl'Ciblel)ls and ~In J)rOIIIdlng'
- - for un!IJ and
wllhln which thoto
~occur.lhove not

ftMottt..~or

tendJie to praume In thll statement that ·W.. cenlnllly
doW:nnino and "plan" all of thae d!Jaete ac:IMUes.
I how ..umod that a -.nent of planning dilodlons
and parameten, however pnfu11y formulated,. II not a
subotllule IO&lt; continuous judgment and leadership . A
11a1cment can IOCUJ our attention on wgont · and worthy
objedlva; I cannot ensure that we will attain thoto
objedlva. For thil we ore dependent on individuals wile
enough to oelect the moot appropriate paths by which we
J"'!!ND toward thoto objedlva. k II equally true that no
planning lltalament can anticipate aD of the conditions which
will hove to bo evoluoted, ot a g!IIOn moment , In advancing
our-goals. I how ther.lore asoutned In thll statement tho
prtmocy of tho procea by which we leCUIIlngly plan and 1
cvoluotc our _ . . ., preferring to believe that good ·
jl.dgmcnt, even more than good plans, will bo dedslvc In
shoplng our future.
I hove boon pwpote)y ICiocttve In tho changes I have
suggated. In my un~ olwhot we ore and of what
ol beoomlng, neither mindless
In
, Piiadlna under tho bonner ol boldnas, nor tho
,· ollor..:J uncle- tho illllc ol rullsm , II on
d ~far our devolopmcnt. Tho changes that
1ft here propoaad In directions and empiiMa .... modoot,
asltlCOIUred by tho scale o(all that we currontly do;
thoee who .... negottvely aflectad by ~~,. . changeS
edjultmentl and uat8on will, I am cure, bo mcasur
Tho shifts outlined In t h i l - l n tho.,_.. ol ,_....,.
........... .. oomporad wlth· tho
ol
lotol ,_,.,_ within Academk: Allotn; yo! tho rooloc:otion
o l - t o - - ll~lartho o&amp;oct.d unb .
T h t o - . 01 t now -~ hos t-n ...-dad by
two eorllcr &lt;hils. Tho ,q~na~ dnll, ~ In August
1977, ,.....- and ~I on by l:leont and
Dlr-.. who . _ . dndly my olllce and oleo by tho
fllcultv s..-'1 Academk:
eon..-. Tho
MCOnd dnll, roie.ed In Apt 1978, more broadlv
cmdaled on .,.,_. o.-.. ol
hold will

~

:l

._,...de

-.a. _..

dcpertmentel
and tchool · ·-wllh - -of~IM:ulty.
student,
and..,.!
Dlf-lar
tho ol my tllta-.g with them the and

IOCIIJing~larb~.

- Thooo CIIICutotont, .-..linjj over a sbt month&amp; porlod ,
oapeclaly holplulln..._ my ......_. . . ol
tho probloma and ..,._,. ol bolh-laa*y ond tiUdcnlo.
Althous;ll hove no1 ~alloowd,ln ~IDol dnll,
tho majol' pnmllel and principia eilunclleod In tho pnvlous
clroltl, then .... _.."'-'"~ and In 0...
of ~ lhll thould bo .-...!. In a nUDbr ol tho
..-ng. ol tho p a l l _.. month&amp; diocutolon - * I quickly, and not curprllirl8ly. to tho nwanlng and .........
fer ~ unb ol the principle ol '"""""'"
-

-R-"'F.a-

�••we wiD c:Oatlaae and
strengthen our develop~t as a University Center ...
with inteDectual and
p~tic depth."

1n1111ution lhol _ . . . . lhol wllhout " broad llmiY ol
prolaolonol oc:hoolo and programs lis lao then a \II\IWntly
and lhol wlhOut a vtgorous """' ol arts and scienC&gt;eS
dioclplines I Is not a_ ..-sty ol oil. Of oil unlls within'
SUNY, 1ncludlng tho ad&gt;« tine UnlvelltY. ~~
SUNY/Buftalo 1s by_,. .......,....11w most QeYOIOPOO
center ol higher leamlng andThe principal task
facing SUNY/Buftalo Is not one ol conlfnulng to """""d'lts
range ol programs; ltls lmlud to tho quality of Its
_ . . , . and to onsure lhol within tho design of Its
programs then Is sufficient flexi&gt;illty to change whenever
need and good sense suggest we Change.
To ....nlhol we shall continue to be what we are now . a IJroi!dly ckveloped University Center - Is to assert that
both continuity and change will choracterlZI! our futw:e . The
responses that we make and the -changes that we
contemplate Should be ones oonslstent with our purpOses fS
a Unlvenlly Center. But changes will occur, or ought.Jo
occur, as we respond to the future . Among the directions
tho5e changes will take, four will be espedolly Important to
usoll .
-

......m.

do'!"~=·~m'f.ourselves.;"~~~

and proposals which will, ] -believe, ~ an Improvement In the quollly of what. we do. But individual soHImprovement Is, and always has been, the k£y to our
development. Without troll that we say and plan will be -of
litde consequence.
Second, ~ to SUNY/ Buftolo will !Nove to be
mono conSc:tOO.iy Interpreted to ,Include. opportunities for
"non-trlldltionof' students. It Is
the lnterpremtion ltseH·
that will be new to us. It
~· lmplernentm!on ol the
Interpretation which will be new to RUI(IY of us. Its
lmplemen-n will not be ac:rompanled by a compromise
with the quality of our programs or our mlsslon as a
Unlvenlty Center. It will mean , however, that oontlnulng,
In-service, and mid-aueer education and , In a votlety of
ways, part-time students will be seen as normal, not
~. aspects ol the life and responsibility of this
campUf. Opportunities to serve non-lraditlonal students will
!Nove to he consciously llCiclnssed In our developmenl .

ed~~..t'!ithe~~:m t!'ve rr.=~.::

to the~ and develc?Pments within tho larger system of
which we are a port. This sensltlvlty will expreso ltseH In

::i.:'.;'.~~. ~ulrC:..us to oomm~~

programs~

cause us to plan our
attentlor\ 110 their
-oonsequenees for campWIOS, etoedallv SUNY
campuses1n Western New York: 1 w~Q lead U. to delineate
more dearly the ways In which we can cooperate with other
Institutions and community groups; H will , flnaBy, keep
before us what we have always known - that the quaiHy of
a unlvenlly Is determined not by the oheer number of Its
programs but by the exodlence which broadly chamcterlZI!s
Its efforts. We will not he excellent in oil IIJOBS, because we
will not 'hove programs In aD ....... We will..be excellent In
tho5e .,.... for ·which we take responsibility as a UnlversHy
Cen~ .

/

Fourth, the expected .eontlnualion of a lev.eltn§ all ol
6nandol support will require greater attention to the means ·"
and . _ by which wo advance tho qUollty ol our
~· H ~ are to avoid, through default. further
- . s ollociol authority and responsibility we shall have to
be bolt. ocademlcs a n d -· Oloices will have to be
made lhol add rac&gt;urca to-~""" deny them
to · Dodolons will be reoilllred that diminish tho
....,....,.. of ~ to that cithon_.may be

=~~haw::::~~tt.!=.:::

do.

lao!&gt;laoGons ol whal we do, o r - to
The ~
bv wllkh - pion, thC ........ that shape lhol proc:eoo, and
t6o
oonlldonco
able
to.
place
In
proc:eoo will
beof&lt;*llnl ........... tothodowli&gt;pincnl ofthlac:amPiii.

this-·

_.-In

Tboglnning to"'--" lor
I
llllo..tucb ..... ond dlredo&lt; ~ dlredly to my ofllce
to.,.-110 - • - of~. wllh an eye to tho
fubn, of their . _ _ Schools, faculties and l'rogramt.

==.:~. -~........I
l . . . . COIIItllllle .............. .., . . . . . . . .

- . u.Mallr c - ~~ ...........

-

r:::=~~ .... --l.lllo...,_ .......
--- l-...,ID_...,._
;

='-='- ....:..._.... ..........

..........,.. _ .. .....,...,.o&amp;rlo.
.:...:=-_.,.,. ....
................

.--......-.
. _ __

s. ................... _,., ....
; : : - - . . : ID .. lwr..

.5.

1D ....

- .......
.................... - ....

......,_
............
_:;r.;;
=-=
....
A.a~fii . .
I

I

S..UaMnllrfii._Y_.

8 l J I I I Y - ..... ....

UnMnltY will mediate r.mae.

a:!a"':"" asked

to

~ avallablo to tho
fiD.

oubetaatially Increase In the

.

-

bO ~ attentive to the_following

1. Programs ahould be
and~.
2. ProgJams ahould

....u c:oocelved In th&lt;ir -

~~,lnt~-re1at~

teachlnlf, raearch. imd public~·

of

3 . Pr~ wblch rate hJslhlllin the oomblnatloa of
.,uaHty, otudmt daDaacl. and cmtrallty to tho
Unlwroity'o m1oo1oD • a Uolwntty Center oboald
be expected U&gt; haw t h e - - claim to resourao.

4. The q!!!'lliY of a _...,.., students and applicamo
shouidbe an lmpor1aot meuure of the quollly of
the program.
5. The potenlllll for faallty dewiopment and leadership within the unH-tbould be taken Into aC&lt;:OWJtto
~g th,! unit'• pcl!tenlilll for quantitlltlve develop.
Alter receiving Initial venlons of these mission statemera
my s!!lff and I revtewed lndivlduaBy with the deaJU- inc!
directors their assessments and recommendations . Th•
reviews usuaBy resulted In the need for additional lnformttlon or elaborallon. By June 1977 we Md, with few
exceptions, on initial mlsoion statement for each Schoof,
Faculty, and l'rogrllm as - d by Its appropriate dean ..
director.
•
• •
'
.
Concurrently wllh the preparlltlon of these statements, my
office assembled data proll!es ol the InstrUctional units within
Academlc Affaln, focused In time on tho last five years and
measuring In a votlety ol ways the cbaracteristics of the unlls.
We were lntereoted In bolt. ~· data and Informed

~:=::.:~~~~":=
and tho interdependency ·of tho progwns within tht

Untversfty. Enrobments, InstrUctional and departmental
raeard&gt; suppoot , raeard&gt; funding, patterns of resource and
faculty deployment, class stza, degree productivity, and
other descriptive dala were analyzed and compared.

~=:':d~!:'::.l~t=~

votlety of souroes, lnch\(llng graduate program revieWs,
IOCCf1!dl!allon ~. s e H - t s . ·tho Hull-Yearley
lntenm Report evaluallons, and repu-al surveys. The
deans' and diredon' mission statements """" also asked to
br1ng to our attention measures of quollty.
These analyses and mission statements !Nove been ol
oonslderable Importance ' In ..-.g my office In assessl!ig
our llCBdemlc strengths -and potential. They oonstitute tht
baols upon which a number of ooncluslons, presented below
In Part IV, F have been drawn .

Ill. Goals and Principles o~
Development

=formulated

The goals of this
Self-tlucl'y and realflnned
submllled by tho Pnoldenl to

In Its 1972
In a million statement
Central, .... these:

1. The I.Jal-.ll!i . . . - ... ......._ tonnlo

==:::...~:nh'.:....:::C::
theach
,., .................... tuch..
and-..:h lnaoloclad ~ .... p.otoootooal
~.

....................l,-rwr·~7'-=
=.-.:.."':!:.:-·.!
.............. _...........

l . The u-.-. .. . - lio _ , . . the
~

ob~

-~.,

. . . . . . . . . . . . ·=--~

........ . _ _ . ........
~to
the._..cfll . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - .

s... -.,., ................. _ .........
........ p c ' '

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

..::~~==-=
-,.
andto ...... _ _

......

fll futuro ............ 1D 6o UallanllJI and to

'

.

4.Theu-...,wli-~
· mit·
-.tto..-.....: ........;11
..-__.

I_ID..........,.._

.

lty.

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

.................. _. _ _ _ . . -..I

ols-............................ . , .
~

.......

~~..=.ofalotlng resourao mUll
7. The totJII pbyllcal op.&lt;e

....................&amp;7~

loa..,...,--

5. In lto.....adoade - · .......... and orpnlza·
- . .... l.'-ollr 'llill
and
............ .,....,.._ .............. bolh
_
... . - - - : ... II . . - - l i g h t
. . . . . . . _ , _ . . . . . . . neodto
.......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . the .......
"'

....__... ...............

~

�-

--

-----------~- . __,.

_____ :__ ____________ ~_:;____
'7~e

University will make
significant efforts .. _.to .create
what might-be termed
national centers of excellence
.. : in the arts ~d sciences."

koowled~. understanding, and abWtia algnlfk:ant
and valuable to manldnd.
.
6: The UnlvonHy will recognize the Importance of an
environment conducive to learning, toacblng, and
raearch; H will &amp;eel&lt; to provide tho ladliliOa, ._.,...
::;,.,":,d.:_""nal examplea which create such an

7. The Unlveralty will continue to recognize a apedal
rela.tlo.,.hlp wHh the community and region, and H
d!~:.:~
according to Ito lica-

m:=.P

1

8. The Unlvaslty will never be bound to the traditional

forma of higher education; It will be wllllilg to act

=~~~ua:a,:;~~~

-In

of Ita -lratlona, purpoaa, anc! goals.

their Facu&amp;y and School budgeb; Internal reallocations
within Faculties and Schools WID be necessary to enable
thae developments.
•
3.Self-~

In all cases lndlvldual and departtnental self-l(nprovement

9. The Unlvaslty wi!Latrtve to organlu and gowm
aucll a manner aa to make the moat productive 11M o f - raourcea entrusted to H by aoctety
lor tho achlewment olth- goals.
These goals are os relevant today as they were when they
were first formulated . Academk: Allllln Is committed to
them. What Is now needed Is a coherent strategy of
development, consistent wlth .th..., goals, that will odvance
the quality of what we do and provide sufllclent flexibility to
take odvantage of new opportunities lor reallzlng these
goals.
Several principles will be crucial, I belleve, to this strategy
ol development. Certain of them are appropriate at any
tUne; dben of them ere required by the ._.:tatlon that In
both .-1 enrollments and financial resources the next
wveml years will be- considerably less expansive than In prior
years. Theprlndplaerethae:
•
1. E.at.bllahlng NatloMI Cmtera o!Excellenoe
Thts university must do more than sustain programs
already recognized 0. eaentlal to our mission and , through
selective development, target them over time to move to
oddltlonal thresholds of quality. &amp; nuut comdously attempt
to~ to levels of performance and achlevement
that
y merit national and International attention. In
ihli ort we shall have to grocead seledlvely and In stages.
Ithat steps be taken to ldentlfy a relatively smaD
number ol departments, or clustera of relad programs, In
whk:h the unlvcnlty will maka ilgnlftc:ant efforts, spread over
a three to fl~PZ year development perk&gt;cl, to create what
might be termed national centers ol ex.cellence. Upon

t:':!:'~:J.~J::r~~eO:.~~~~e=~~

~~ -be broad and consequential throughout

oe!::!" !"~~Is=:::~~~=;,':,"':,
&amp;om

clust.,. of departtnents, being drawn
the arts and
sciences dlsdpllnes, underscoring properly, I belleve, the
•centrality of the arts and sdenc:es to the future of this
university . Departmenls or programs selected should have
doctoral degree ~;
excluolvely under·

an

::.~~a~ ~~~~ith':'~t~~K.".:;

.

program or our rplsslon as a University Cenler.
Selection of units for development as national centen of
excellence should resu&amp; from an open , Informed assessment
of qualllicatlons foj this deilgnatlon and the c:ommltment H
entails. A small number of students and ~ lacl!ltv
~ whh the Groduate and Undergraduate
ans, will. be
'c::,Y olflc:e to assist In odvlslng me In the designation
of the
ters of Excellence. The combination of several
oonsidaratlons will be decisive In the selection: th~ degree ol

will have to be emphasized as a requlstte for development.
Several c:orollaries accompany this principle . At each level of

review, extraordinary cere and rigor will be n~ In
evaluating facu&amp;y for tenure and promotion; standards that
were acceptable In the past In some Departments, Schools,
and Faculties may ·nolonger be sufllclently 11gorous. Periodic
reviews of facuhy on term appolntmenls will have odded
Importance, not only as a means of ensuring~rigor later at the
tenure review ~ but alSo to ensure th'Bt., prior to the
tenure review stage, .Individuals are J&gt;!Operfy adviSed as to
whether changes are.contemplated ltl~ development
whk:h may odversely affect their ~ lor continuing
appointment. There wtB be a premltilh on departments' and
schools' continuously reviewing thelr prograJnS , trying to
anticipate several years In advance the directions and
changes whk:h may be necessary In the stafllng and design
of cuniculum. Appropriate opportunities for external finan cial and grant support will have to be more broadly pursued
as a means of supplementing university support for research,
equipment, and graduate tratnlng .
The principle ol seH-Improvem.mt also obligates us to be

=
==lunda

for
· pmrt
I.~Oewlo
In~ 1o ~

and choaen for
.......,._ as _ . . . ....,.. ol a&lt;:illlonca, IIIII other
~and prospma should apoc:llo be choaen lor
~. but tbolr number.

clawlopment:::t
~-...

-

~tbochlngo~not---......-­

the.-lflveyaan-·..........
.,_
and goala. ~ tbo J!OR'IIII ...... ·the
extent to wbldi any lurthor ahllt _....., .......... be
affected by rulizatlon of enroan-t la'gols, furtboi . . .
-

expil&gt;rin9

~
Instructional raowoes,
k. we Implement resouroe decisions In aupport ol priority
ereos, H will be Important continually to montlor, lor
example, the dlstrtbutlon of lnltructlonal FTE's among the
cations ol pr1odty areas, and our ability to -

the

=.re~::::~.:.::~~~

FIT's among all units (AguN 3), the distribution of our total
student FTE workload among all units (AguN 4), and the
relationship between these last two meaaures (AguN 5) . The

4 . ComplaDentarlty.
The . principle ol complemeniMitv will have to be
consciously employe9 as a means of qualtt.aHve develop·
ment . Several ri&gt;oc!els already exist on this campus. One of
thae Is the Graduate Group mode of uosearch and program

-

-

=~,;~
~~~d~cc:h=':!~!mt:
essentiaJ if we are to remaJn·sensttlve to pur commttment to
programmatk: breadth and diversity of values.

FIGUREl:
Percentage Dlatrtbutlon oflnatructlooal FTEx betweel
The Arts and Sclencea and P""-lonaa Areaa •
FfE (Annual)

-

Arts&amp;~: Ptoleaalonal Areu:

1973/74
68
32

~

100'1.

TOTAL
Includes T eachlng Assistant Positions
Prior to Base Level Reductions

..

,

1974/ 75 1975/76'. 1976/77
67
67
68
33
33
32
_100'1.

1971/78
67
33

1978179

100'1.

lliii%

100'1... .

100'1.

...
FICOURE~

66

34

~·~-

.

Arts "'t..etwrs

Nalural Sclonca &amp; Mathematk:a
I

Soda! Sclonca

DMalon ol~ Education

' ' (Including the

-

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

TOTAL

.

.

"
Envlronmcnta1 Dagn
Ed.-..1
Sludloa

-

~"
Applocl Sctoncas
lnlonr.-. "l..lnry Sludloa

!.-&amp;~
=:::

.

1974[75
33

28
36

37

~nc:WaTeachkle-~

28

2

2

lliii%

100'1.

3
33
30
3
11
13
7
~

TOTAL'

..

1973(74
34

I

3
33
29
3
12
14
6

r~~.,l 1976m
·33
28

32
28

~7

37

2

3

1977sf'
28

1971/79
33

36

.36

-

3

.

lliii% ::liili% liiiir
4

33

' 29
3
12
14
5

~ . 100'1.

28

3
100'L ~

6

4,5
32
29
3
12
15
4.5

4.5
·31
29
3,
12
16
4.5

~

~

~

..

,

- ~~==:tFTEI~
Arts.&amp; Sdoaoea:

lunda.

tho developme'ntallundlng
lewlofl. Sinoe
alao mean that reao=eo cuiTently lllllgned to the
or School cannot provide al tbo - v oupport,
will have to be ....,..ud by my office

of proposed
One measure, but by no means the only measure, of a
university's eommllinent to ..!lvenHy Is found In the division
of resources between the arts-and sciences programs and the
professional programs.
'k.lndk:ated In Figure l, the proportlorl.i.._-n ol
Instructional FTE's devoted at SUNY/ Buflalo IO'olhe erts and
oclences dlsdpllnes, on the one hand , ·a nd the ~-.I
~. on the other, In Acadernk: Allilln II currently
66(34. &amp; has shtlte!l two percent over the paat five yaan.
further, !naemental shtfts to the proi-..J arau becaUM
of enrollment preiiUl'!S should be expected, but In the

oommttments elsewhere who might wish to )91n us. at least
temporarlly, to contribute to our academic ~ and
stmu&amp;aneously lind opportunity lor furthe!lng their own
scholarly and iesearch development.

thai-we! Ndound
wllhln the....-.-.
. .
Tho ~ ol the commitment that would acc:om~
the deoltJIIIIon .. • national ol excellence
In each ceie, on the department or program .--._
. In gonaal the commitment would carry with H a

.....

=.::~~.::..=.~

I&gt;055Ibllltv of a special visiting scholar program whk:h could
be ol paitlcUlar Interest to minority scholars with long-term

; the marginal odvantage
to tha benefit of other progran)S

ol ~ prlollty for dewlopmmtaf
h would
ontlclpate that the level ol funding lor the aelected
deportrrwmt will oceod nonna that ~oil within
the Faculty 0&lt; School. h would recxJgQIIo
em&gt;Uments
and facu&amp;y/student ratios, though Important, lhould not
determine to the exc1ullon ol other ~ the
department'a claim to pr1ortty for dellelopmont. It would
requlle a parlodk: review of the ~- It
would~· a limo &amp;aap. lor the
" ' -·

balance or breodth, the value ol dlveslly will have to be

~=ij,~~v~;,!=~ut~~
my olflce In cooperation With deans wtB be

.

The principle of programmatic breadth must be oomc:lous-

:fy=e~our~=~r~:~rtunofltles~

taking luD odvan":tr,ol rOJOurces made avallalile to It; the
feasibility ol the p
of development subm~d by the
deportrrwmt and tha degra to which ti successfully combines
teaching and research
~vlty In the studio and

=

5. Programmatic Breadth

ly observed In our development . In times ol marl&lt;edly bmlted
growth In enrollmenls and resources, H Is e5!'"C!1111v
Important lor this university to ·ensure that In our responses
to enrollment shifts, market corislderaHons, and career
educatlon we maintain our commitment to a broad range Of
Intellectual Interests and values. The Praldenfs Committee
on Academk: P.lannlng also vok:ed this concern and directed
attention to the ooncept of balance. Whether ti Is termed

raponsibdity is our afftrmattve action program. We can
reinforce this program by intensifying our commitment ln
ways for whk:h we are espedally qualified. We should
strengthen efforts to recruit, ·particularly ot the graduate
level, quall!led mlnorhy ana leq&gt;ale students. ()pporlunltles
lor faculty and llafl to particlpatR more .directly In 'tho week of
the VPAA olflce will be enbanoec1 by a facu&amp;y and llafl
assodate program whk:h has already been implemented;
other offices within Acadernk: Allalrs wlll.be ~. as

:l,~~~~~~~~nl~ele~=j,!;
perlormanco areas) In Ill

~men!~
. . brlclgln9 orgonllal[onaJ dMoions and .
combining d
ery capabllilles, such multl-diodpllnary '
~· f
on a fleld of Inquiry or o Ml ol relad
problems , hnld toriilderable - pr&lt;&gt;IOISe In enhancing tbo
quality of nesearch and g&lt;oduate 1n1truct1on and In aullng
new patterns of nesearch and program dewlopment.
Another Illustration of this . ~ of development II the
mul!l-dlsclpilnery degree prognim, a number ol whk:h
alreidy exist within Academk: Allalrs. The avatlablllty ol tbo
M.S. program In 5odaJ Sciences and thri4.A. _...,. In
Humanities has ~ been · extended to tbo --*'11'
atlu&amp;, patt-Hme itudent. The M.S: dqee ~ lri
Natural Sciences, In cooperation with Rolwell Pari&lt;, hOid.
considerable promise. Joint degree programs; fllultroled 1151
the J .D.-Ph.D. programs, present opportunH* lor pooling
existing resources to form new programs and provtdtng
, oddltlonal perapectlves 1e Jaculty and student alike. MUlti- _
dlsdpllnery and joint degree opproaches do not, In
.themselves, convert weak lingle dlsdphnary and degree
programs Into strong ones. But oolld d~. progrargs,
and'lhose who partldpate In them, can throligh deliberate
combinations of efforts odd Important dimensions to the
quality of the~ nesearch and lnltructlon.

~le oi seledlve development Is required by the
expectation that ~ Increases In State fundlrig wtB
not be forthComing . Several atleria wtB be crttlcalln selecting
programs lor. acfdltlonal mOoWt:eS, lndudlng the likely
student demand, the ex11t1ng student-faculty ratios, the
r~l4tlve prlodty ol the program within the Scl)ool or Facu&amp;y,
the Interdependency between the program and others the
• - degree of Convergence between the purposes or' the ~
program and the broader purposes of this campus os a
University ~ter, and the prospects o. f the PfO!!"""'s being
able ~o QPtin)lze oddltlonal resources through matching
lunda and "''..emal funding support. Faculties and Schnols
will be expected to fund this selOctlve d.,;elopment through

28

'

29

3

12
18
4

~

Ptlorlo a-J...eW~~

,wlllbave'?be ........... Thll

'\- -

,'

.

........ ,~.u.nrs-..s--/M8vS,1979

"'t

s

�---·-."The prllldp~ of resource reallocation
will have to be emploved both •
within Faculties and Schools
and among Faculties and Schools
to provide resources for priorities."
FIGURES

......__Dtoatoatlaaof~FT&amp;-dl.m."

1973/74
23
19

24

1.

1974/75 1975/76". 1976/77
23
22
22
19
19
19
25
25
25
I
I
I

I
11
9
I
4
4
2

I

11
10
I

4
4
2

I
11
9
I
A
5
2-

1
11

9
I
4
5
2

1977/78
22
19
24
2

1978/79
• 22
19
23
2

I
10
10
I
4
5
2

2
10
10
I
4
6
I

.

roTA!..

" lnduda T"""'*'&amp;- Pooltiono
• • Prlcwto- ~ R.dudlons

(Noce: Cumulol!w ollect of ro.mdlng Arts and Sdenca and Prolealonal Area result In _ , . t e !-a different than
- I n figure 'I to.1973/74.)

_. .._

NobniSdoncool:~

Soc:lol Sdoncoo
• Dlvlolan o f : : : : = Educ:allon
~the

-

1'1-.J-

~ .. EnvlronrneniZI)

Design

Educotionel Studla

~~~&amp;=Studies
........ Jurloprudonce
Scboolof~t
School of
Wade
lUTI\1..

a-d on F1lll ~or Enrolment Dola

1973/74
17
19
30
5

1974/75
18
20
28
4

1975/76
18
20
28
4

1976/77
I7
20
27
5

1977/78
16
20

I
9
5
I
5
6
2

1
7
6
1
6
81

I
7
6
1
6
8
1

1
7
7
1
6
8
1

1
7
9
1
6
8
l

100'1.

100'1.

100'1.

tOO%

~~- Wpport lewis pro\llded for similar disc:lpUne,
and IJIO(aolonalorus II peer~;
•The levels of oupport required to ensure the opportunity
ol achieving at least a thrahhald of quality, by national
standards, In aD focultia and Schools.
The targeted lludent/facully ro11os are displayed In Fig,..
6 . They have bMn dlocuoMd wllh the Deans and Directon 1r1
Ac.odemlc Allain, tho Counc:ll of the Univentty , the Faculty
Senate!a Comrnlllee on Academic Plonning, and the FacukV
Senate and wee &amp;rot DUblobed In the February I5, 1979
Issue of the Reporler.
shoUld permK us to ltlly
-.1th1n the _.pe 17/1 llludent/fac:ulty ratio cumnt1y
established by the State's funding pottorn as well as rnalntoin

n--

AGURE4

P~ Dlotrllution ofT-' Student FT'E Worklo.d"

lllrtol:._,

'.

our academlc planning objoctlva. They establish the base
condition; they do not cnsure-·-menf for tho Inter- relationships we IMk among mltllon , quality, and relsowces. For the latter we depend on extntinuow judgment
and assasrncnt. .In the at8bliohmont of those target student/faculty ratios
I have talwn Into account oewral alte!\a and .applied them t~
uch School and Fecully.
•The nature of-1he prindpel modes of Instruction
employod , ouch u lecture, IJ:ldl\lldualized Instruction , clinical
tnstrudlonal components, IODOfatory based Instruction etc ·
•The pottorn and trand In the division of lrutruc:tion~ ...;d
~ facully adllilement ellort ~ the undergr•duate and
graduate lewis 01 indicated by such llemJ as degree levels of
enrollment an'd degr-. .-dec!;
•The division In inltrudlonol and fecully advisement
responslbllltle ~ lludent majors and 5e1VIce to other

" 26

5

.._____
100'1.

IYJI/79
16
20

25
5
2
1

9
I
5
9
1

ouroommllmenl to lnadlh and~-

Thts prtnclplo ol .......... realocollon, gukled by st1lllentf
faculty ntiol, will not _ - . our dotenninatlon to secure
Increased support &amp;om the State. Indeed our sue&lt;ea 1r1
soa~rtng Increased Stata· suppoot aMntial for a quaky
, un111en1ty Is portloiiy. dependent, I believe, on our dernonstratlnsi our capacity to make Informed, difflcuh dec\IIOns
about our priorities and to respond to. the realities ol on
enrollment driven budget wllh academic and lnstitulionil
Integrity .

100'1. .

I

Unit

785/F
12.31
12.66
15.96
22.37
23.46
18.72
18.36
13.87
13.33
14.I8
33.76

A&amp;L

FES
FEAS

Law

SOM

FIGURES

NS&amp;M

Ratio of" T-' lnottuctlonal FT'E to" T-' Student FT'E

1973/74
1.35
1.00
0.80
.0.20

1.00
1.22
2 .00
1.00
0.80
0.66
1.00

1974/75
1.28
0 .95
0.89
0.25

1.00
1.57
1.50
1.00
0.66
0.50
2.00

1975/76
1.22
0.95
0.89
0.25

1.00
1.57
1.50
1.00
0.66
0.62
2.00

1976/77
. 1.24 - 0.95
0.92
0.20

1.00
1.57
1.28
1.00
0 .66
- 0 .62
2.00

1977/78
1.38
0.95
0.92
0 .40

1.00
1.42
1.10
1.00
0 .66
0 .62
2.00

ss

1978/79
1.38
0.95
0.92
0.40

AED

SILS

s.w.
DUE

Explanation:

Column 1 presents the student/ faculty ratio obtained 1
CoiU!"n 2 presents til!&lt; target student/ facuhy ralio l ob
Colurt'.n 3 suggests thelnaease ( +) or decrease H In I

1.00

to retaJn its present number of FTE Instructional Unes and

1:43

1.11
1.00
0 .80
0 .67
1.00

· Column 4indlcata the Increase (+Lor decrease (·) I
question ~e to rctaJ.n tts present FTE student enrollmen
NO~ore, oolumns 3 and 4 .--nt the range and~
•

• Columns 3 and 4 are derived &amp;om daul which do 1
State authorized budget. Thase reductions have been as

~-;-~1lnd~:d~s:ri~~~

strength , since the number (24) of required Une reductiO
vacating three additional lines.
• • A strict application ol the crbria suggests that the I
loin; to achieve a more appropriate ratio by 198I , ~
need oontlnuously to review and monKor these targetl
permit .

F

•

SPONSORED RESEARCH A(

~~~~~·.~ -~ .and~m

• Of top 53, SUNY/ B ..-In focully- .... . .... · ..
• c:lf:top 53, SUNY/ Brank In Ra:O S/fecully .... · · · ·
• SUNY/Bo-Ra:O$/Iacullv .. .. .. ........ $
• A-Ra:O$/facullyfo&lt;top 10 ... , .......... $'

B. F....ity wllh EDanol Suppaot:" •
Naaonol sample ol nine cloportments .-_-nted In COl
IN: 66-114)

For same nine departments, but,only those rated "dlstin!
~~Roc.a-Andenon, 197Q:

- For e:ne nine cioport..- Ill SUNY/8:

• c..;.,.,._,

~ et lJnll,oetsltles and (

~; Vaol&gt;ookollilglwEducatlon, 1976-77;
" " Dora 1011rta: A1a1ook onc1 Gornborll. Focully R&lt;

ponol report 't29, ACI;, Wlllhlngton , 1976; data are
-.lol ouppon; SUNY/B dola .,.. &amp;om the Researt
J!llndpol ............ ~lnc:lu&lt;l-.l.,.. : Che
Geoklml. ~. f'hlooico, f'¥holoiiY, 5oclol&lt;&gt;!l!

�.. .

4

'Maay departaaeia~s and prOgrams ...

·

.
are not securing levels of
external funding commensurate with

·

the -capabilities of $eir fact,dties and .
'.
.
the availabilitY of funds:"

8. Plannlnt Review
. Planning, properly conceived, Is subject to continuous,
review; H also recognloes the Importance cl
phasing, to ensure that programs not tmroildlately W9ef.ed
lor priority development may be considered In the future for
prioritY development . To In the process of reviewing
our plans and their lm!&gt;lemenlatton, a system of oonsultation
at several levels will hove to be established so that ample
opportunltlq ore provided for the obortng of lnformotion and
the testing of judgments. Students, faculty, staff, and
odmlnlslratcrs wtll all hove to be brought Into the systim

reguladz2d

consultatk&gt;n.

·

....

·

'

Campus

.
.
FIGuRES:
SPONSORED RESEARCH ACTlVIlY: SUNY CENreR COMPARISONS
SpoDoondRaan:b &amp;pmclltuno'
Spoaooncl R - ~

.

1976-77

J&gt;uJ--'•ftE••

1977-78

ARTS AND l.ETIERS _

$120,581
$143,590
65,001
65,748
15,047
27,469
134,812
137,884
&gt; SOC1AL SCIENCES
.$1,203,558
$1,190,341
..'!02,670
242,079
1,115,490'
3,011,154
1,141,521
884,612 ..
NATURAL SCIENCES AND MAlliEMATICS
4,140,392
3,5§7,233
2,452,719
2,736,644
4,586,075
6,132,998
824,203
1,099,908

Buffalo

of

Albany
Stony Brook
Btn!II)Omloo

Buffalo

.

=-=

IV. The Development of
Academic Affairs: Problems
ami Opportunities
·

Albany

Buffalo

Albany

=..,~

1976-77

19'77-78

$ 563
474
211
1,079

$ 644
473
· 114
1,061

...

4,872
1,729
5,070
5,599 •
14,865
- 22,141
26,509

4,960
2,162
13,383
7,135
18,874
·16,486
34 , 84~

8,768

11,457

2,650,122
2,175,818

19,038
29,359

27,3l!l
32,967

EDUCATIONAL STUDIES
573,430
473,110
819,182
760,412

5,959
20,480

4,638
19,010

ENGINEERING AND APPLIED SCIENCES

1,827,645
1,937,685

Buffalo
Stony Brook

Buffalo
Albany

~onyBrookn

211 ,665

llingllomto

262,916

Data Source: Expenditure f'&gt;OIIIe IV and Expenditure Profile. V, YUTS ending June 30, 1975 ond 1976, The
Research Foundation of SUNY, Albany, New Vorl&lt; (Indicates both direct ond Indirect oosts)
• • Dota Soun:e: lnstrudlonal FTE data wore provided by SUNY/B Budget Olllce.
'
•

spi!dfic dime-nsions

of

the relationship that affect our
For the p05I several

copodty to plan our development .

r;:""· lor ~· the methods employed~the Stale

~al~d~en~R=~s~;!:

of Acodemlc Alfotrs (and Hs counterparts at the other three
University Centers) "hove resuHed In on authortzo)lon of
oppro~eJY one fuU·tlme equivalent tnstrudlonal Une for

1£"6

:AcadoadcAilaln

3

.6.

2
'81 SIF
15/1
14/ 1
15/ 1
20/ 1
23/1"
18/ 1
19/ 1
17/ 1
14/ 1
14/ 1
37/ 1

S.FlE

+582'
+135'
·92

~

-39'
-10'
+6
+5
+I
+7"

·99

·30
·126'
+145'
+63
+13

-4

·I

-5

~~~~t~o~~~~~=ili~

effects ol this d istribution on our eruollments. I! programs In

- -2 '

=ed~f!~"J'U::,'!;"~=~ ~e~~ds~: ::Ob:~J

conslnllnts which ore not oorrespondlngly offset by other
programs which, though able to accept more rnl.l}ors, arc not
able to attract them . The net effecr is a lower total eruoDment
and a lower toi4J budget In a subsequent fiscal year. Our

1978;

mt FTE thm would have to occur if the unit tn queRion were
eve the target ratio;
E Instructional lines that would hove to occur K the unH In
I achieve the target ratio.'
nations changes required by the target ratios In ~umn 2.

of

dlect ln$trudlonal Une r~uctions required by the ,1979-80
od (In the number. Indicated) to the following Schools and
nal S!udles (6);-Notural Sc:tences and MathematiCS (l) ; and
is three more than required by the authorized lnsttUCtional
ad to be occomponled by a salary amount necessitating our
student/foculty ratio for the School of Management is 100
is not o r - goal . This problem undersoores again the"
d to reVIoe them as Judgment requires and opportunltfes

~~NATIONALCOMPARISONS ~

• FJoc.J Yeul976: •

;J

!4

17
iO
!2
mpus:

tbe---'•·

~~~~n~r:.. ~ .:-ho~

.s·

+65'

' time data wore analyzed for the Fall semester
tleved by 1981;

each 17 fuU -time equivalent students "(graduate, professional, and undergraduate eruollments combined) . These
Unes- poovld..!, In
to Academic Affolzs. It

IDitr. FlE

39.1'1. . 79.9'-

60'1,

54.9'1. -87.8'1.

73'1.

7.1'1. · 65, 5'1.

33'1.

ld" or

es by 5ourt:e crl Funds: Aocal YUT 1976, Notional Science
""'&amp;-to 0\ib, 1976-77
1!, Leuel of AdiPIII - Choice of A...,, Higher Education
~ who - ' 20'1. or more time In raeorch Md hove
Ice, Md - 1&gt;-.l on facully named os project directOI$ or
~- a-.Jolry, Economlco. Electl1col Enginftring ,

.

~~~~~~~-:~:!'dq~~eo~
wh~ lines in low demand programs are tenured .

These several concerns place inaeased emphasis on our
obillty to rec:ndl and -.a undergraduates with a diverse
range ot educational interests. No one should dlscoum tt-"!
d.iffic::ultid we face in thls effort . The inclination of many
proSj,edjve coDege students to seek undergraduate professiOnaJ , career , and pre·professional programs shows no
S!gn of abating . Wtthln SUNY, the University at Buffalo Is the

Th:
=~7\b!e~ ~~J::~~~:
that without concerted and deliberate
efforts In the
reaultlng

tiberal arts lncruslng pen:entages each year of our new
5tudents (freshmen and transfers) wtD .1!&lt; ~ng the

=-=::::ro.of:"foc!~ ':..':'~~

additional faculty Unes cannot be e.pected to be provided by
State funding , slnce our total enroDment Is not expected to
lnaeo5e . -Hence, pressures for more faculty In professional
~ programs mean pressures for furt:heL reallocations of faculty

tines from b'beral-.rts progr0f11S to ·lli"Oiaoional programs.
Through a combination ol SlJNY/Central and CllmPUS
projections, Academic Affotrs at the University arlluffalo can
expect , at bat, only modest g,owth over the next two.years .
1n lis total eNollment. Thereof~«, gradual and modal
dedlnos In our total enroDments ore pro)eOed. Within thae
total enrollmomts, If ~'"'""t tm&gt;d&lt; con~nue, ltUdent mojon
• In Monogoment and En&lt;Oneoring enrollrrwnt wtll - ;
lludent mojon In Ed~ S!udla enrollment will
expor1ence·further. but modal, dedlna; lludont rDIIjan In
Law Md Jw:llprudence wtll - · II bat, OOOiblnt;
IIUdent mojon .ln Jnfonnatlofl Md ~ Sdonoos will
mnatn -llolly con-.&lt;;lludont mojon In~
and Enll1ron..-tal Oalgn and In Sociol \Nook wll sllghdy; Pr-.. of bolh - - IAIOrlcJo.d lludont
mojon In the and ..,..,.. . . problematic.
General E d . - ......... wll o&lt;nl!l .-....... "' ..,.... •
woddood
--...........
~lludont
wllbln
. . . and -......;
wbothor
M wtl
· woddood t11Dbn11 the d-. Focultles of the . . WMI _,..,..
is more q.-.-.ln- oflludont ,...... there 111 11
p:OMnt, for bollevlng thll tbe declniqg In
lilts and~ hao vel run b coono; Sodol Scilnooa Md
· Natural Sdonca ond Malhornoli&lt;:o - ~ - · II
best oonllmt.
•
~projections ol
-.tlol • ,...
plonnlae II to SUCC&gt;M&lt;I, wtl noqun ""'" ~

-·student

enrollment-.

ooordlnotion and oooperotlon between Academic:' Alfotrs,
and · Hs -.ubdlvlslons, ond the Olllce of Adm!Gons Md

=~~ CliC !"~'":, ~n'i~!:

commltfee, which Includes In Hs membership o8lcers from
Academic Alfotrs, the Graduate DMsion, the Under·
graduate Division , and Admissions and Records. Central·
lzed oc:cess to graduate enrollment dia will be necessary .
l..eodershlp from the Dean of~~ Education In
developing our ocadernlc advlsernonl ~ ~be altlcal.
5Pedal efforts should be undertalwn to il!lroct -undor·
!PC~- ., In lllljadlll lrl.lho ...... .. .
""""· 5podflc r-.dllng J1108181!11, ~ ,II bolh dlo
community collogo and high .:hool popuiOHons, . . ~
under dlscusolon and Jnitial ..._ are .being lloken thiiiPinll
through the cooperotiOn of Ad(lllooloN'-'&lt;1 Records, dunO
the"arts and-...... FaCultla, andJiiy alflce.
In addition, I would w:ge the etllabliahment, ~
'-. unr..oricted egdowment Income, of on undergraduate
tiberal arts fellowship program olmed at provkflog mertt
fellowships, on a highly c:ompetitiye basiS, to high ochool

of

~~~~~~tly~~.=:

ottroctlvenj!ss; they should bO renewable far each ol three
subsequent- years~ provided o strong academic record is
sustained and the recipient remolns enrolled In a liberal degree program. Financial need would not be a alterlon for
these porticulor fellowships. This program would relnfo&lt;te
the University's commltment to quality liberal arts programs
on~our detenmlnotton to afford highly_~ students an

~~=::;;=~~.;~~

oits. Dotalls of !tie PfO!Pm sbould aloo Include orrongo·
ments by which the fellows con be uoured ol working cloMiy
with distinguished Uberalarts scholars on campus.

�"There eaa IN ao-relasatloa in
our determination to have a

~and vigorO.}s array pf

arts and sciences instructional ·

and research progiams.~ ·

D. U~Educallon
H !hare lo a lingle cum!nt at the moment In Ameljcan
higher education, tt Is the reassaornent of the nature and
purpooaof undergradualeeducation . Few campU!eSin this

oppoltunlllel may be for developing nationally distinguished
PI'IP"''of ~ encl.--iodi.
~ ln«MMF..,._ and Schools of.Academlc:
Nfaln, ond , _ rwgularty Ill the FecultY of Engineelng and
Applod Sdonceo, ......-ch !Pnl JiroposaJs a&gt;ntaln an tt£m
~ the funding to pay a fraction of the
pdnc:lpll lnvelllgollor'. academic year base salary. This
i&gt;ortlol.-olorY r«&lt;YYO)) IIIT8l1giiUimlls a DOIJT\III feature of
.,.,t edrnlnlolrltion Ill a number of unlvenllia; there Is no
- · In potndple, why ~ shdUicl not be ~ at
SUNY/Bu!falo. Tho untversiiY.• ccot-sharlng obligatiOns
woWcl-... to have to be met:. calegoria Of exceptlon5
to the poky may be nac:essary; lurids accumulated through
lhll ..._,.m and aedlt.ed to lnc:ocrw Reimbursable
_ _ ... have to be~ UHd and accounted
far. I~ to be woddng With t&gt;eans'encl other~
..._ onil lacul!y com- on campus In developing
011 of guiclollna a the bolls lor a rapomlble campus-wide

country are better equipped than SUNY/ Buffalo to
eiamlnc, clarify, and ~ necessary, redefine Its purposes at
1he undergraduate level . We have the l&amp;enm broadly
dlspened ihrough our arts and sciences and professional
schoola·necessary to the undertaking . There appaars to be a
~ of !acuitY oomrnttment and determination suffldent to

me effort.

office, has already pointed the way to some prOmising

avenues of change. My own vieWs on the lmportance of
general edUcation and the ways In which we might apply Its

o

pul1)0ieS to our under .)'ftduate cwric:ula are outlined in a
statement reproduced "' the Reporter (January 19. 1978) . 1.
om confident that through the effort. of the General
Education Commtttee we ShaD soon be ready to strengthen
general education opportUnmes al the undergraduate Tevel .
Attention must &amp;so be given , however, to other aspectS of '
undergraduate education. Campus-wide perspectives , espedally between Health Sciences and Academic Affairs, need
to be more deliberately placed Within our curriculum review
processes. Responsible experimentation by &lt;lepartmenl&amp;
and laeulty divisions, an Informed assessment of teaching

poky In this--.
Facull)l wortdoad standards provide favorable opportun·
far NMach adMIIa end ,xofeS&amp;ional development.
~. In the caM of junior, beginning lacul!y tt Is

~. •

a ,_

&lt;X P&lt;&gt;llcv.

that they be accorded

doa1nfl tt.lr ecly yaars a reduced service load to provide
them ecldllanal lima lor ~ leclures and counes
up ~ end inStrumentation, and launchtnS
NMach _.us. Both Junior and senior !O&gt;CU!ty
lhould - ' consideration lor subslanftally reduced
. luchlng and Mr\IIOo reiponll&gt;illlle at !uD salary, lor llmlted
ond spCIIiod lima periods when exlraOrdlnary commtt-

-.a

of lima . . required ~ exc&gt;epCionally pro.tu$mg and
..-touiNMach projocb. Allhough I would Insist that no
..-.bor of our laculty lhould be tertured Without having
damoumotad llrong commltmant to and achievement In
both '-"lngand .-arch (or artistic aeat1v1ty In the studio
'""' podormonoo flolds) , tt Is entirely possible that some
loallty, alracly tanured, 8nd decreasing llltisfadlon In the
.-arch modo of ochollnhlp but a IUDinad or growing
.to the tachlng modo of.ocholarshlp. In these
-.c., I may be appropriate lor them to be assigned to
on aollqod '-"lng raponslbillty and a corresponding
Ndudlon In lima .-..1 expec1at1on1 In the reseaJdl orea.
Polcla In . . _ t of theae anangemanm will have to be
daoooloped ID .....,. appropriate 8ncl c:onslslent ~

effectiveness, released-time opportuntHes for

-~In _.,.ili,gthom.

.

•

teachln~

and

courw development , and a stronger linking of !acutty to
academic advisement should blo high on the agenda of
anyone who takes SeriousJ ilbr commitment to undergraduate education.
•

-

·

The University Committee on General Education ,

OllllOinl&gt;ed jointly lao! year by the Faculty Senate Executtve
COmmittee, tha Vice President lor Health Sciences, and this

E. Continuing Education
The Division of Continuing Education will be expected to
provSdf inaeased leadership to our instructional efforts over
the· next several years. It will be a lead.,.hlp that does not
displace the authority and responsibility of Instructional u nits
for the quality and content of programs. Jt
however' be
asl&lt;ed to war!&lt; closely with Instructional units for the purpose

wru.

of enabling the:m to respond to the needs and convenience
of part-time and evening students. This leadership will
.-require first rate academk: values, a taste for the unconven- .
=~~:~t:.:Udloersity of people , and a
Combining the adrnlnlslratlol) of our summer .....ton with
the adminlslratlon of oontlnulrig ooducation has now been
achieved through the appolnlment of o dean with r esponslblltty for both operations. Connections between continuing
education and both the Educational Comm1.01lcations
Center and the Office of UrOan Affairs also warrant further
examination .
...;
In recent years, enroDment has grown in the aedit-free
area of continuing education while measurable declines have
been experienced In credit-bearing operations. ln&lt;:rtased
attention must be given to designing programs In more
lJttradlve time and content modules end to Cleveloping
graduate evening programs to capttallze upon this lnslltu·
· lion's role In Western New York as a bn:Ood·based Untve'rstty
Center. h Is expected that oontlnulng education will have
Increasing Importance also as rellcensure requirements In the
professions become more commonplace.. ,

F. Academl&lt;: Units and Programs

~

The development of lnttl&amp; rnls11on statement. In 1976-77
by deans and dtrectors pmvtded Important background
material In"preparing me lor this statement. It Is an actlvtty
th,at will oontlnue to be euentlal as Sehools and Faculties
plan and re-examine their priorttles for develOpment . It.
should riot be surprising that schools with prole511onally
focused and defined r~ lind H possible to
dallneate. their "rnls11on" more sharply than Faculties with
dlvene dlsdplinory purpose~. These differences, and the
reasons lor 1hem, must ·be oonstan~y recogJ1jzed In any
planning exerdle . In several Instances below In which my
comments are responsfv.e to the earUer missSon statement:5
&lt;Ubmltted by deans and dln!ctors, there Is. I am sure , a
corresponding fluduallon ln ·degree and level of detail , but In
all . , _ I have tried to 'address three broad cat\!gorles of
concern: quaatles of particular strength and weakness
enrollment trends, and dewlopmental Problems and possl:
biBtlos. I there Is an overriding oondusion I draw from my
reviews of all ochools, lacultles, anll programo h Is this: a
heightened 1en1e of prlor1ty of development Is critlcJ&gt;I ~ we
~· pver time, In the goal of . qualttattoe

Ano ..... Sdoaceo

A key~ of thll planning llalement Is the centrality
of tho- and ldonc:a dJoc:lplt,_ to the purpose~ and future
oflhll Unlwnily. Allhough there can be, and lhould be 1
think, ~ lholpontng of loc:ul' and men attention to
. """'*"of~ !'*~lin Facultlos repnsanttng these
~ dlodpllnft, thon can be no relaxation In our
-

==~~vlgorounrrayofartsand

·

(lnd.-the......_.-thO..,_,
......,_

Anaond--lnav~~almodes

......... - . . . . . ~- Nallher tho~ model
model t..lntr!Uallly all
of
of both mocWs can eully-be
laund .._....,... tho country. Amana the four SONY
llufolo, Slony Brook, ond now A&amp;ny
~ tr1podlo model; ~ to be

:!:'.-:!'C...,

..-y ~~tho Horpwpojlk~ of~
............ lndlona.~ ..... ~how
.-..I tha . . _ , lliooW; " - ' s- ........._ Slot.
SIMiwa ...... lbd Punluo ' - -.j,Md.i:"~

model . Ohio Stat'- ap~ to try tO blencf both approaches
with ftve separate colleges (arm, biological sciences,
humanities, mathematical and physical sciences, and oocta1
and behavioral sciences) joined Into a loose conlederal
structure c:alled the Colleges of Arts and Sdenoes.
The administrative division of arts and sciences into three
or so separate colleges or faculties has beeil prindpally
proposed as a means of reducing the span of admlnl5trative
attention of the dean, and , more lmportendy , of strengthen ~
lng the capacity of the dean , by focusing his responsibility on
related ~plinory areas, to proYida knowledgeable support
and lead&amp;shlp to tbe development of the disciplines wttliin
the deUmHed college or &amp;.culty. The unttory arts and sciences
model, typical of American unlventties untO the late 1950's
and early 1960's (although there were Important exceptlollS
even then). Is -customarily defi!Olied as a means of
enoouroglng and facilitating the Uberal learning philosOphy
within tfie undergraduate cuniculum . Tho administrative
division o! the arts and sciences during the 1950's al1l!
1960's by many large un!versltles either paralleled or was In
responk to · the Increased emphasis at many of the
unlversttie.s on the d~ve:lopment of their capabilities at the
graduate and research levels.

our~~'du!~~Jc':r:~~!"!=~d ~~nr~

on general education at the undergraduate lev,~ the
developmental advantages dertved from the tripartite model

~'iti~

~:':u5:I ~~':dTt,!~

:,'ji'Jt;.f:da
Sciences and Mathematics. Moreover •• arts and sdences no
longer, ff they ever did , constitute aD the lacultla and

==.~~:;.~::O':ns~~~~ ttil:~

and sciences, we can, I believe, secure thiough an
Invigorated ofllte of the Dean ol Undergraduate Education
the aoss-dlsdpllnory and aoss-faculty !Oadership euentlal
to the purposes of general Cllucallon at the undergraduate
level.
.
·
AIU and Letter.. Certain of our existing programs and
department. In the Faculty of Arts and Letters are nationally
recognlud IQr thetr quality. The prominence of the EJlgllsh
and Oassk:s Department. Is recurrtngly reflected In oulllde
evaluation reports and reputational surveys. The Compora· ·
tive Uterature and Media Studla Programs will lncreasll)gly
. provide national leadenhlp In lrulruction , r-tJ .ioQc1
cwriculum developm,nt. Of Its type the Critical
Program "Is highly regorded . These achievements and
others within Art,; and Letters , can be viewed with prid~ .
ln recent yems there have beeii maiked declines ln
enrollment within Arts and Letters. Frotn a 1975 laD
semester high of 3 ,417 FTE student. (Including 590 F.TE
graduate otudenm) enroUmenls have d eclined to 2 688 FTE '
student. (Including 4 76 FTE graduate student.) In 'the 1978
faU semester - an overall decrease of 21 percent. These
measures are not the only ones whkh should be considered
In viewing the future of Arts and Letters , but they cannot be
Ignored . Conftnued efforts to stabilize enrollment. In Arts
and Letters will be required .
Furthe- re.vlew should be given to the breadth of
dlsctl&gt;linory and area coverage currenily attempted by Arts
and Letters, to enable resources to be more clearly focused
on those areas considered to be primary and compleme.nt~
ory . This review must realls1lcally con.tder antiQpated
graduate student demand and pJacement over the next
several yearo . It will abo entaU fuither study of endowment
resources available: to the Facuhy to ensure that where we
have flexlbOtty In the~ use, we are directing t~ -raowus
to development&amp; priorities. A m011e by Arts and Letters this
year to shift more on-load faculty assignments to ~ ·
Rllmore College courses will strengthen· the enrollment base
for their facuhy resources. Ma)or enroDment problems
persist, however, giving urgency to more lntenllfled
reauttment by the University of quallfled studenta. ,
Ahhough the record of the Faculty In securing Individual
grant. and leDowshlps Is good ,· oomporative data Indicate
that the Faculty neads to lnt~ Its effort. to obtain
external support for ,Program development . While we must
~- ~eoogntulop that there ore substantiaDy fewer utemal
;;;, men!&amp; funding opportunltla here than In most
areu, tt appears that In neely .v.ry dlsdpllnary .,...
In Arts and Letters we are being oulpatformed by
oomporable department. at one or more of the other SUNY
UniVersity Centers. The supplement. to department&amp;
faculty, and student support to be gained through appio:
r,:acultyte"f"'"sored activity and private gilts w!ll be vii&amp; to the
s O?ntinued deve~ment.

Lang;,.g..

Notuml Sclenc:a and Mathematfa. Allhough I do not
~;.\lyexclusionFory view, which oome ha110 altr1bUted to
· earlev uture Repbrt, that ....,_ prOYide the
1locus for lmmedJate and lntenstfled developmant of SUNY1

Buffalo, H to clear that the progrorns comprising thll Faculty
~-altlcal to the mllslon of this campus. There Is, however
u11.te room for complacency In vte.wing future enrollments 1~
thlshas Fd~~~Between laD !975 and fall19781ts "enroDment
_..., by lour peroent, from 3 ,620 FTE student.
(Including 495 FTE graduate student.) to 3 ~2 fTE
stu~ta llncludlng476FTEgraduotutudenm) . '
,__ quality of o~ ~ progroms and dapartrneom, at

=,,.,

.._ by llandards common to. graduate and raaarch
Is mixed , ranging &amp;om the generol mo:aDcnce
erlzlng a.emtotry ond Cell and Moleculor Biology to
~~of .a.ngth and -"nnOl charoctnlng the
~~and progrorns within tho Faculty. •

--=~uad~
· "'~·
o f -ax&lt;:ellenoe
- ' con·
•
toword

"-'"&lt;IAodamlc~PI-.g S~t/Mav 3,1979 ·

�"For Engineering and Management,
we do not intend to force
internal reallocation of'a dimension
that will jeopardize commitments
in other areas ...."
In the sdences;

(1} the

~

to ~ - - wttti other tcboOis ol
education In the ~. and ,' In a v.-lllly ol onas, •
INnhalltng ol Its .....a. c:ilplilillllit -.round- por*lng
theoretical and oonc:eptual problemt. The
locatlont ol the Learning Center must alto be .-wed and

oocalatlng COitJ cl supplies

necessary f&lt;x operating lnsttuctionallaboratorieo and (2) the
constant, and potentially ~us. drain on raoorces for
molntalnlng and ~acing

""""*' ...a

lnsttuctional equ.lpment and

~ - More efled!ve utilization ol raources
through shored technJcal service facilities will hall)! 10 be
explored. Reallocation of SUPPQttilmds within the Faculty as
well as wllhln Academic AlfaJrs will be oeceaary ~o help
address these problemo. Un!venlly system-wide attention ,
however, mUJC be given to · ~eloping comprehensive, ,
long-term plans to~ and ~equipment acquired
espeda)ly In recent yeaiS through CCF (cOptiafconstruction}

more catefully planned.
While-- total orirollments In Educllllonal Studies have
dedtnod &amp;om.1,336 FTE'sln 1975to 1,223 FTE'Lin 1978,
or teo pezx:ent, clellberole redudlons Ill the under!Pduata
level have been {llorel""""unced. ExdUcltng enrollinento In
the special purpose lAamlng Center located wllhln the
Faculty, und_,.!uate eruollments have dro!iPed 62
- t In the last two yean from 250 FTE's In 1~?5 to 97
FTE's In 1978. Although reductions In lnsttuctional staff
have been nec:essal)l, the Faculty continues to enjoy a
favorable level of Instructional support when compared wtth

~

=

e&gt;q&gt;antlons can be expes:ted over the next
Ave yeaiSin lines currently provided In the Facultv of Natural ,
Sciences and Mathematics. Space loc&amp;lons ancf accommodallon5. dilrin&lt;l the transition to the Amhent Campus, will
make more dllflcult our developmental efforts, partiCularly In
the blologtcal ~ - Renewed and expanded efforts must
be asked of the locul!y to secure external funding to aS10st In
the qualitative upgrading ol graduatl and research pro-

:r=~~nso!:":~~n::.,evel

acttllltles Is disappointing, airuldertng the Faculty's
!ties and research orienlllllon. WHhout -an expanSion . of

extemaltupport, the Ftoculty will be sev.Wy handicapped In
Its future progrVomatlc and qua!HIIItve_development.

~= ~.~~e~ ~:,.an~
:rr::,":'nci~~~ ~=~ ~h~
Facultv oi Natural Sciences and Mathematics is not securing

In ;~a~~~~~~=P~

a level ol external funding commensurate with the needs
and r~slblllties of a quality ocience facultg .
_

engineering education and research and a range of lully
acaedHed programs leadJng to licensure, SUNY/ Buffalo
has special responsibilities and opportunities In engineering.
Priorities wllhln the School are being placed on graduote
educaHon , the further Improvement of-externaDy funded
research , • more sharply focused research effort In the

Sodoi sd.nca. The Faculty ol SodaJ Sciences is Iorge

~~:!.~~~Zuru~.,:a:r;

!lui hurnant!ios. The Faculty IS

comprised of twelvt
departrnenU, five oenters and two tnterdloclpBnary degree
_...,., and Includes several __.,. natlonaDy recdgnlzed .. being strong. Ccrlaln d~ here, .. In other
faculties and~~- ~- almoot !dally tenured and, In a
-..g ofliable or aeauung enrollments and resources, must
~;. faculty appotntrnei&gt;ts to ensure

experimental areas, 4lRi. Qxp.nding Instructional and research efforts tn the eiill of energy, environment, and
resource studies. A m.-re of national visibility has been
achieved by the School In of Its actlllltles and
programt.
.
In Engineering enrolll'Mnts there Is a surge phenomenon
that warns against too tight a c:onellllion between long-term
commltme.nts of resources and year to year enroDments. But
wllhln these peaks and valleys of eruollments there Is a
strong and continuing demand for engineering education

=.v"':lj

SodaJ Sclonca Is ~ a Mrious cledlne lri
.............. From the 1975 fall Mmesler to the 1978 fall
owrol emollinents docroaMd from 5,426 FTE's to
4,331 1'1£• ~ a cledlne of 20 percent In both
graduoie Ofld undergraduatelludent FTE's.
The Faculty-wide majors 111 the baccalaureate level and
the~ . . - ' t clqee programs ore promlsl:ng
opllonl far rapondlng to -.tudent needt. The
development ol these opllont "-ld continue to· lllentlon . In odc!Moo,
to be gtwn bv
several of lhe dlsclpBnes to .-evttaiUing, particularly with
IOI&gt;IIIIed """"-· their own master degree programt.
· In sum, the 'Faculty ol SodaJ Sciences will oonUnue to
share with FNSM and FAL a oentral role In them!-.. and
purposes ol SUNY/ Buffalo. To move seleclively from
strong to outDnding prognms, 1\irther reallocations 'within
the Faculty appear essential.

~ress: r~. ~~e:'~mmltmen,:: &amp;ff~
have lnaeased 36 percent, from 1.1st:1."J&gt;1. Viewed

1973 alsjo;r~.::,· ::: =-~ha~
occ:wnod

contlclet-., .-.

-

~=.:~:!:r.e't&gt;!o==~:r=-:~
Academic Afton-.

Equipping and maintaining laboratories will be espectaiJv
Important to the future development of engtn~:.S well
as the natural tdences . Without a plan for «Placement Of
instructional laboratory equlpmen~ we shaD be facing In a
few yeaiS tome~ depiondson OTPS·funds.
•
lrlformatlon ond Ubrat)l Studleo. Estal&gt;llshed In 1966 as
a graduate professional school, the School of Information
and Library Studies was 110credHed In 1972'by the American
LJbnuy Association. The School's Mission Statement is
sharply focused, dellntng particular areas oflnsiiuctional and
m&lt;iarch responsibilities In Information retrieval , technologies ofknowledge tranJier, and the use of media In library
and Informational services.
A. a prolational ochool, SILS is small (lipproximately 9
lnJirudlonal ·FlC} and , for Its slot, relatively diverse . ·By
~ oooperat1ve ·relotionshlpo with _.al F~.

"""*"'"

~. .!.,en~ed~~~~~.,!j
c1e!JMs as wei as the MLS. Ext:ept tor 1977-78, Hs

.

Tho School'a _ . r fKully *-'8th ol 22 f1iE piAca I
111n0n11 the llllllloat ol our . . . . _ Wilts. ~ quallry
,.__,._.,....,.. Ill liD the t.cully . _ - made In

· ~~~~~-=~=
!I'IOQIIored; as .woll as the eR.ployment m.-bt and

plooiinent cl QJOduoles. Although the quality and capabilIties ol the School fUIIIIOII I Is time to contider the

-Ard-....
-.....
The·-.dllollon
forIIthe
ol
-~~-.~loat~
"'*'&gt;me
will
the School's lqtwe. A modal
- - ol...,...,..,.,..... ....... ~lP&gt;ool"'.
low! ol CliiiiiiiY ond .,..,..,_, .........- o l l l - and

law.,..__.._..,

cloWN program, bolore ...y
can be modo futther tludy ~ ol lhe
need lortueh.- and the ovolloblltty o l - for

elloblahmoot of • - -

"'_............,.,.....,._

commitment

IIIIUI'P""-

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

. . - . . . a ........... odiDCII ol . , . _ , 01 SUNY/Wfllo. Ito . . . . . . - - - ..... In .... ol thlt

.._.llta.a..,._..,....,..,. ..... .

..

on~y
..... ......,..o~
--~"'
..............
. . . - -.......
--..&amp;panlloool
~~~...-----.-- 11-llloolyto be )ullllloblo.

A. _...., a .-aclu* achool ol ed1ICIIIIon M It the moot
~~~~SUNY. ""--· t h e . . . - , _, what
n the m001 ....,._ _.ac CCXIIrtiutlont wlilch .our
o1 ~ Sludloa
make1o prolottlonal
educoilcm In . . ahead andJ- c:an • bat orgonJoo Its

.__., .

'*'

--o8ootalormoldngdwM~?

~

- * ' « lhalt.cully,'lt
-

- c.....mly being
~-lhal ~
Faculty ol tlllplloMI

Doan Ofld
would
broad....,.,...._..._,.
lor tho
Sludloa ........ lndudo 11-.g .. .,..._..... -

oduclllan ....... but ..,_.

quallly - · . further

_--.a_ .

~

-

has-.

=ts~~ln=~~~ on the soda! and public

policy context of law and lr-'lll
instttutlons. Although a number of the l1'lOl'e conver.!f.. .J
and lnidltional law schools have also .recently broadened
their pwposes, the differences between the two models, I
believe, Uesln the pervasive and Integrated manner In-which
the Buffalo model proposes to serve these several owposes.
The Buffalo model is one that I support not onbl because

=~:~c::.=Y.!:~~ela~'1~

and related areas for Its developmeril. However, the Buffalo
model is-by law school standards an expensive one, calling
for a richer. mlxture of faculty resoun:.es than we have
heretofore been able or llillltng to provide. lmplemenUng the
- Buffalo model will require additional faculty and operating
re5C?urt:e:S even at CWTent enroDment levels.
Management. The School of Management evidences In
Ito Mission Statement a clear sense ol purpose and priorities
and presents a reasoned assessmept of Its needs K H 1$ to
realize Its Immediate objed!ve. In Its reputation the School Is
reglonaDy strong and ls beginning to reoelve national
aHention . The School has been espedally careful In
reaultlng and evaluoUng Its faculty; lts'lenure ratio Is among
the lowest of any unH on campus and provides tlgntflcant
llexiblllty In properly planning jts future_. The Ph . D .~
In management Is the onlv one of!ts'ld!\d'ln SUNY.
-Basically, the plan ol development advanced by .ha
School would result by 1980 In an und_,.!wrte/gradUIIa
mix .of 60 pen:.ent/40 percent. Projected ore tltght

~::.~=~~C"-a::

students In Its Ph.D. pnvarn. Limftalld'na.., both day and
enrollments at the ~ level muot
cq&gt;Unue to be set and per1odicatly .-wed.
For 1977-78 thnee new facultv lines .were added Jo the
School of Management, with. live more lnos added -In
1978-79 to ensure a continuance ol Hs aoaedlled status. If
the Schoo) Is to enhance Hs quality "!'d expand Its
~

"'C!':'~'b:..'lo~~q=...

well .. In
Engineering that '"'! do not permH enroDment pressures to
force a prooess of tnterna1 resoun:e reallocation of a
dimension that will jeopardize our commitment In Academic

~~:=~~-~throughout the

Opportunities In continuing eduation, part-time programt, and In career training piograms are apectally

pronounced In ~t. High on the agenda mUll boa
...detennlnatio ol how bat to .organize these efforts and
fadlltole ~·responding to these~­
particularly through "Mttlard Flllmora College, In a manner
consistent wtth II ngulw _
.lnolrudlonaf end .--h
~Aa:ompanylng adclllloMI -

Man_.-,!. will be the
'Faculty, through their -

to the
lhal the
o8oota, will try to
......,...t. Whk -

~

lncn.-d lovof af..-...1
noted, slgnlllcant ...,.__ill~ be ,;o,ghh.

.

School al

Dean and
..
..... -

the~~~~~
-~~In 1977-78 II'*&gt; • direct ._tina nlollonthip ..
Vi;"'

Pretldent b Acadomlc Allan. Tho IIWnlng ol
proloiaional oocial ........ .... School'• . - :
llold . . . . - - - t o sndado-

the

_hal_....._ -

- from t.idng..,._ln ........ ol the~- Unclorll
aunnl leadonNp .... ..........s ol lhio ..._..
. The Schoal ~ ':"",Nililooollo- ........ In -

'-- _, ,..........."" A. the -l&gt;Riy low achool lri
SUNY, the Fac:ultv oiiAw Ofld ~ It _ , g d
with fPI9ol
Ofld _
........ _The ......_
In wlti&gt; . . . . . . to theoe _ . . . _ and
. _.............. to; (11 fulure .......,_ - ; (2)
salary tlnldun; and (3} ~ ol the mode
end~ ollogol oducodon .
'
1\Jthough eri!-ollrnent targota In iow must remain to our~ In SURY In having a low och601, we
c:ondude lhal from both ........ and Mllonal ~
we should motnto1n the . - , . n...- ol - · or
poodily nod-Ibis llgure ...... rathor than •
continually~~- 0..
... quality In our odmlatlont may bo orodecl f
.....,
continues to " " " -: ft Is alrudy the hlgl.a
ol any

....--....................
a::-.....
&lt;a,_.,
wl
!"'l*'d. .....
..... ..-..
..............

tllldonts, tndudlng 30 - 40 FTE -

Pllmldv loaloiid on the _.aon ol MSW cl.haldoa~thelr ......... to be o8lclod by ......... ...
domondb ........... loc:tal_._.'

~

P&lt;*nllllll
the--loodon ol . . . . . ..............
~ loiliec:ounlry. lllt 0011111!1 • ....-~. with

~by . .

...--ed

ensure. a broad array ol qua!Hy programt throughout

Arclrltedure/Emllronmentol ~- The School of
Archll«ture and Envtronmental Design Is uruque In SUNY.
hIs aloo the youngat pro(OIIIo)IOI school on campus, having
been eotabllshed In 1969. Under tts cunent lea&lt;lenhlp, HIs
deYeloping add foundation for the future. In addition to Its
primary retp&lt;&gt;lillbllllles In the education ol prolastorials the
School hat en ~ conlrtiutlon to make to general
education, , with an:hll.cturW hltlory, wlian environment
and llhllly8t, end regional plonnlng,_ for example, being
relevant to both~ and~ opproaches. The
ol - " " by the Dean · delineates
~lor--~ withln the School,
and
~ lndiiW'In terms ol expected
lewlt ol ....._, ~ pniod, and spontored
adlvltloo. Ill cunlcUium li ciogonlaod lo uplore cllmenslons
ol the .........,., ol " - ' lcnowledgo lo the design and

F....,

for

and · degowe
produd!vlty
and qu..-lmprovements1l001blne
to justify
a oommltrnenl
ol l!mfled·
additional reoo...,.,.. The extent ol this commHment, the
schedule of Its dehvery, and the enroDment mix which Is to

P r - . ! Schooltudf~

~olthe bUIII.....troruMr4 .

Ill the undeograduate level. ~ enroDmO{It

· •IJNII!Iv lmp&lt;Oiwil,_-.1 ol funding

FaCulty ol Law and Juriaprudaica hal loot - " oompellt!ve advan'-1 may have onoo m)oyod In II lllllly
.mucture. Hs comporattve advan'- hat moot ~
slipped 111 the entry level. A.,.,__ anolyaa.of-'aaloril
. dale
completed ana uted tn tuppoot o1 our NCI'*.I
to the Stote to permit a change In the talary litnld1n b •
faculty. Even d we SUCCM&lt;I, the poCiom rcnatno to funding, eHher from the State or tlwouQh Internal .......
lion, to give aubttanci to the new talary ttructure.
The Million Slatemept advanced. by the Faculty ~
us a choice In oonceptualiztng Hs fulure _ , the
•Gardoi.· Vorieiy" rn&lt;&gt;&lt;l&lt;l ancl..jhe "Bullalo" model Tho
Garden Vmaty model .._us -.Jiy the - - a n d
practices of most law tch0ols 1_ ¥udlng auch bliihlv
reputable public uruvenlly law ICl&gt;OOIS as llerkoley, Miihigan, UCLA, r ....... and VIrginia. The Bullalo moc1o1
combines the tnodJtional purpoae of legal education, foaM
on developing analytic rl9or, wtth the pwpooos o1 poovldtng

~~~!':v:O.::

~lewl.

There 11 tullldon! .wlenoo, I below,

01
-

-~
IIJIC!or.

_.,wtlhlha

_ollhetP I

~tn t1oo Schoal
~--.
the ~utng need for ...........

I

e

.......

$--. ..
nac

ililr!.

......... Extcnal ~ ... b e - - .. . ,
- ~
_ , ol the tntiWCUftWI
• •.......
--.............
hat-mocllil.l
- l t - v l l a l t o l h e - oltheSdlool, . . . . , _
mocloa-af pdoaoloneiclao alo;:cw w11 '-"'be clollnacL .
' /Vi .......... ....................... but .-tt., ol
&lt;XIIIIIdonltan • t.cully .,..,..,_, and lbMiont need Qll be
eallbWwd, '-.111 be the - * ' 9 ol a ~ Ph.D.

=::::,
:..·=::..=!:
.::!'r....=
. _ to be
HoweY., the &amp;:hool ... eoplcnd.

�"With 8DCO--OD eftort, some
patience and a measure of devotion
1
on the part of many people,
the University at Baffalo will one day
be one of fhe
univer$itles."

:rat

Olfloe has utilized ~. developed from both
eXternal grants and tntemal respun:es, to support qualllled
students who might ~ not hove received IInandol
osststance. The Ol!lce'-_ _ . _ has been shilling toward
lnslrudlonol programs. For example, In .Qdlllon" to a
number of undergraduate counes c:Oordtnated through this
office, u has recently begun, IJ&gt; cooporallon with tlie f"oculty
of Social Sciences, a smoD, experlulenlallnlck In the MS bt

ellorl$ are of central tmportanc:e In planning the future ·of

EOP.

-

1.--tionol Sl&gt;odla. The Council on Intemallonal
Studla hM aclmlnlotrot!W responsi&gt;I)Hies for a variety of
od!vllla. Some of INM od!vllla ore common to Iorge
...-a, and are usually ro-d In lnslrudlonal unHs:
examples IAdude sovenol oveneas otudy programs for
students 1n ~and lltemwe, oru itudla, aun...
and ocher ~ lnllrudlon, and inteniiW Eng!i,h
~ lnslrudlon . Ott.r od!vllla carried by the Coundl
.., dlotlnctlve and uniiiUOI: exomplos here Include the .
Special Studla 101\es ol publications and the support tt

~~=J:S'th.,m~~~~

Identified In purpose ·whh lntrucllon, c:ladftcadon oi Hs
ocodemk role reporting raponllbllltla and budget func:!!on
cotegcxy ...;;; be necessary.

~c::usa:':.r.::..~=~

raponsl&gt;llltia the luD of od!vllla thai could broadly
be denoled as lntemotlonol on this campus. Spedol
odllisement of lonOgn. otudmts Is carried out through
Student Allan; on llttemotionol College operates through ·
the collegtote ll/5lem; deporlments , sdlooiS, and Focultles

V. The'Next Step
Aprimary purpose of this statement Is to provide a set of

take primary responsibility lor developing International
aspects of their programs and cuniculo.
·
The Coundl takes pride In tts achievements. Foremost
among these, I expect, Is the provision ol a collegial and ·
support1w environment for reminding us aD of the
lntomallonol dimensions of what we do. "'This role, and the
spirt! the Coundl brings to H, should be preserved.
.
However, I hove to conclude that conHnuous responslbil·
Hy for lnslruc:llonol programs 1s ~d within the .
oppropriola lnslrudlonol departments. ll.us, raponslbil!ty
!0&lt; foreign language lnslrudlon belongs within Arts and
Letters. The special nature of the ·Intensive Enalbh
Language Pro9ram, which · Is a nallonoDy dlstlngulshed

parameters which con·!jU!de the Academic Affairs Division In
planning Hs development over the next five years.
Contained In the -emen~s several parts are allerla for
determining ~ priorities, Focuhy and.School W9et
student/loculty ratios, ~ for each School and

~=llo-:: ~les~~:.:,p~~~lwili':

steps of aumtlaUve development , an outline of overon:hlng
concerns · that aD Faculties, Schools, and Unb shoul(! .
address .. they plan their spedflc progremmallc develop·
ment, and the Identification of a number of ~ and

~n~:e ::by~~~·ts""~

~..;:'::w~~~":!~~

llll!llicallon. dellbenotely and promptly, by eich School,
f'"aCulty , ai&gt;d Untt repoctlng to · the Olfloe of the Vice
· President for Academic Allan. For certain Schools- and
Focliltles and UnHs this application may entail lillie more
than a refinement and extension of the ~ statem.ent
submitted 1n 19n by Hs dean or director; 10. othci Sctiools
and Focultles, however, either subetantlol revisions or
mlln!ly new statements wiD be~ln aD Instances I
shoD hove to ask that tho uolt
apply the bud
and resource constraints outlined bore,
I dioploy In Hs

to the untvenlly by focusing on those oct!vllles that
tranocend those of porticulor lr\siNCIIonOI unHs. h might weD
take greater ~or foreign scholon, for fadlltotlng

~dunlll =:r~ ~a:,~~

it.ti':v.~~ ~-!'n::S,:&gt;;,ti,':!,! ts.;::::;.:a~~~
raponslbllt!ies for

overseas study programs.
I

'

Summer &amp;:alonl. For several yean, Summer Saolons
hM pr!dod IIMlf on being one of the largest and moot
Innovative sununer MSiion programs In the UnHed States.
Enrollment In the summer montbs provides undergraduate
ltudents the opportunlly to IICOIIenste completion of their
~ . or to oample on area ol the cilnlculum nonnoJiy
unaYIIIoble to them .
~
~ . there hM been on lnaeoslng gop between
lliOiedlod and octuoJ omrollmmts. The operatlng budget has
bMn reduced. The ~ of summer salary
ochedulos Is being challenged. Some orus hove uceptlonollv. high lnslruc:llonol .-. for this type of J&gt;19!11Ul·
Altmtlon muot be given to m&lt;&gt;r11 neoltstk: proj«::lonn of
lludont onrollments, to a c:andul and oeloctlve budgeting of
- · and to • reconsideration of the of the
. ..nnmor · In pumulng the latter, the admlnlstroltve
merg« of this unH with Continuing Ed.ucallon may assist .

plannlngan---~totha~IDiho'

aggregate , between enrollments and - . Md il'lr
employ rigorous judgment In detoimlnlng, through the
combination of atterla IRJ!I90IIOd In this - t , II
priorities lor both quolttitive and~~­
would expect u- ~ to be lnltiiUd -tv In "'"
1979 loll semestor1 and ihelr _.... In the form of •
lXOI)OOed planning aocument to be submltted to my ollloo by

March l, 1980.

Each dean and dlrodor Is expecled to provide ~
In this step; opproprlate consultation by tho dean with faculty
and otudenl repreoentaftves In each unH wtll be These revised and newly formulated Faculty/ School plans

wiD be reviewed by my office before they become
opemllonol. Advisory to me In th!s review wt11 be an
Acodemk Allan Planning R.WW and Advisory Board,
of a srpall number ol faculty and ltudents
by me; both the Graduate Dean and the
~ate Dean wiD be oslu!d.to partlctp_ete as members

idE

~~The Olllce of Urban AffabS has conHnued
to develop b lnslruc:llonol role while stmultanaously sorvlng
as a bridge to various COIJI!IIunfty ~and groups. The

"Afterword
Academic A-. em.n the future fro~ a position oi
llrenglh, not ........ RangJng broadly thl6ugh our faculty

are tndivlduolo ol unusual t8laii and ochlevemenJ. By any
8wldard Mveol of our programs, distJtbuted over a number
ol dloclplinery and ~ ..... .... among the
IIJongOit In tfw and nation . Our lludenll, divene In
~and--· claeJw and demand the best.
Whlo I ba not ._, poootie to realize In a timely fashion
tbe ,_ cempus, ..,_ -.1 ladlltin conHnue to Improve.
Our,_ IKIIIIos !1ft- the - I n the country. Many
conllnue to llnlllt1le to estol!ltsh a grodwrte
odueollon lond t.oollly ......eli copablltty; ours· ls olreody
.nd commllled to quolity .

~

p..;_

howev.;,

No goOd
Is Wiled,
by Ignoring the
~ that face un.__ In finding
oulllclont . . . , _ OVf!Cthe next - . 1 yearsio match their
,....,........,. .nd ....,nllbnl. INithln this SIMe and region
" - cllllculttoo . . eopecloly poonounced. Not only Is the
Sbtle, not uniquely, hovtng to .-.... m-"eddy Hs funding
ol ol _...,., but aloo I Is _.mlv commllted to a
polcy a! liUIJPOIIIng ~ fundi· ptlv* htW&gt;or
odueollon ........ ihllts
In the .... ol nlllonol and
economic
~ ... aninUOIII.....,., of fun&lt;lng
in8111on,
- • s;.;;;. polcy of oubotanllal pubic funding of pt1vote
~ odueollon ClOIIIblnc In New Yotl&lt; to make our struggle
enonnout

n. ......

atr-.llnory= .........

lor State funding exceptionally hord. The combiallion of
these three conditions may lncrullng(y tempt tho $tale aiwl
eventually the Division of the Budget to ibondon quality
higher education and costly graduate .edueollon to New
Yotl&lt;'o pt1vate untvenllla.
can~ will also
Intensify the cOmpetition In Jhis Stole ~ privlla and
public lnstltu!lono lor public funds, a compo11t1on In whidl,
_t oCtange asK may -m to those In othor po1t1 ol the cOuntry,
~may hove lew'pO(itlcol odvan._.

n-

I

Yet, wtth ~mmon effort, tome patience, ·and a
measure ol devotion on the pili! of many DOOI&gt;Ie, the

UntveBtty at Buffalo wiD one day be,l am conYtnc.cl, ... of

the great. untv.,.mes. Its greatn~ wiD be teaiUed, llnaly,
not 6ecouse of the guolfty of tts academic planning, or ol Hs
administration , although H wt11 more qulcldy achieve
greatness )I they too ate charocteilzed by qualilleo ol
greatness. h Is by the achievement ~ I&amp; faculty and tludtnts
that the woe!&lt; of the place wt11 be meilountd. In tho munt1me
H Is weD to remember thai optimllm and confidence - .
cheap commodltleo In limes of expending budgets, The
• better test of our mettle lies ahead .

-Ronald F. Buaa
April, 1979

•

"-'tor/ AcademlcAifaln·......,.... Stmm«nt/M.y 3, 1979

�- ~ •• a...-~.OO&lt;l'
- - !WnfRad111Hal. 8p.m. Free.
The pmgrwnls- "Moo11y
Souons."
-tobe...-.o&lt;!
__
_
by Thornoon, c:llalnra\ of ll1e U9 Music
llopartnwol. who has &amp;et the text ol Edilh Hart

I

Mooon.
OVEIIQROUND ROAD SHOW'

-

Chalflo -

-

cndltional """

blues) _ ,

(!&gt; and 12-afrtng), guitarists.

Cor·

1)011
-·
8 :30p.m. S1 - Sf)ono&lt;nd
by EI!I&lt;&gt;O\f.
ColeQo B.
-

WABALM"

' lnlaitor.. Coni....,.,. - - Squn. Cell
838-29)9forohow-. ~charge.
'

l

Monday-7
ELECTlUCAL ENOf!IEEMIG SEMINAR.
A MUltiple Adapllwe 0..01 ConltOI
A.lgor1thm - - , _ , . , Y. e..-~.

UniYenily ol Comecticul. 260 ~ - Arnh&lt;nl.
2 p.m. Refreshments at 3 :30 In 308 Bel.
..

WOMEN'S SOFTBAll• •
U/8 n. Community College (2) ..

WABALM"
ln~Wlddirt!dedbyWoody

Coni~ .

Show limos.-

Woody's

........

5QLire. Cal636-2919 for

serious,_, chwge .

Sharp wri1i'lg , """" "-Y. '"" !ll&lt;*t&gt; performances alow the viewer to get direclty to the
rraTOW of these ~..fidden fiQI.Kes.
Mat..-een ~ was l'lOflWlated as best supI)OrtJng actress lor her role. AJso stars Diane

Kee1on .

Sunday-6
/WrJM
UIB~
- - - wl1h - etc. Atmerst
· ...,.
certs,
tot.n.
eJChtits, Qef'formlnoes.

WABIIOHDA Y NOHT FILMS'
• The GAul Ker. 7 p.m.; c.....,_a Holkler,

1-.;,g lhe Show

TI!O

~-

-

-

lk""*&gt; &amp; Eila c:o..roy

Co.; Gay IIOIMa,

~ Linry:

Or. a.li

w'!f

be 1t1e club's own

Kim.
as
,_
_ _ _ . . , . , . _ _ k.rlch·

" " " " - trom OMICoro. 64Q.6850, ""'
10 or 1124-53110

a!UO-ALCOHOL _ .

.

...

-.,. -..Or
by • - -

~...,--

.....

-

ol clu&lt;:tl
'""profMSO&lt;
"""" groupe
. . U/8
ono

.,.,._, "' . . Eila c:o..roy Sooe&lt;y'l
eo..- ... --Dn.og~
onallr F Conor-UIII.,.,..,._1for
9676-.a

~
"'-'"~~'"'
Cloowolo
&amp;•"'
·'2.._ 01urd\

~~

IIICFllM"
LooiTa-fnl'aria. _ _ _ _ i70

Dmilr'juk. "Chorllmlflyna" has ...,., 8
8WWdS for at1isUc excalence, the lalett

,_..

Olhor - " ' ' I wil ... " l)ooa;" hom
Rochester end '"Kityna, .. • chidren's group, tr:om

U/B'a'1nt....-Fiosta" fhdput _

-

one at

_

- ~.-...__,.wllbe ploniot

eo.... -

·•

muolc mojor hom U/8. David wll
be -..no-...~ music .. -

•hisownc::ornpolljlion.
The "Echooo ol ............

scmo _ , oe mooem

IOU'""- - - - Sluclio.S1 .501or
s p.m

.wFALO-'SSCHOUUISLECTUIIE"
-ea..·ai.MelllrllllraV,..T_a_

-

. . ClaM ... _?~---~
ol ~. U/8. Fin&lt; 1Jot&lt;1 W11g1o1 ·

-

Eqlloalool. •

--bo~all10door .

: S2QOI*W-

FAC\.l.TY IIEOTAL"
_ -~Wld-­
_a.a _ _ 8 p . m -

~~-1 Siatt.ll6u'nni .-ld~
f

INTBUIAllONAL COLLEGE PIIESENT A-noN"
~nt~rt... ' 71, • otMtntJon ot
end
1n recogrrion of the tnternatiONI v.. ol the
Chid Ka1hlr.M Cornel T'he..lnt. !liicon 8 p m
_ , S2 50. - " ' J2 ....,.,._go 1o

sona

UNICEF

oanoe

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

.

A THL£TIC AWARDS BANQUET
Mloy Seaton Rqom, Music Hal. 7:30
p.m. Co-tponoored by 110-\J/8 All1lelic ~

and"-ligln'sCafeandNghtdUb.
'
Anno Simon, aports ,.,.._ for WKBW-TV,
wt1 aerve • fMSt« of ceremonies.

123.-"-"-Y- 7:30p.m.
Welutein wll CllleC:rt.e her ld¥Mtur1ts - •
-~ln~.
. framllao- _ -~
_ _ _, . . .. JIIIIm.
.-

....

br-.. Sho
-

ll1e James

E..,_

Aw.d to 111e 01-.cting
t.Uigln'l CUp to

~hom 1978, .,.

-

lhe
~
- , who
player,
""' -a9f11ican1
llul
Awanl
to .., - .
,_ ...oontrilutions to lhe athletic progr~m , and 110

--

... -.,..,....,...,
her"""..-.

Coochea'
Awards. Clulsbold01g -

.....

-

----how . . _

.... - - . , .
OC!by-inacionce11nd

,_
In
to

._
o l...
_ __

oe

· - .. -noor .. - -

-

-

o l l h e - - .. honor ol
- - - a n d c o a c h a i U i l l.
Alae&gt;. UIB's ·1978-79 ~Arnirtcans

...

be

~--·... b
e -~10
_ , . whWig the UIB Vwolly
CU.'o
.....Oey~.

IIFAIIEOTAL'
_ . . _ _ _ _ Hol. 8p.OI.
_
.. _ _
..
~by

""'"*'

;a .,. mojor
""""'"'""yewtotlhe~S!OOMICI!b.

DAJICSIS' ·~·

• blg-&lt;:ily

Chri....... Holiday, o....na o..t&gt;01 and
Gene Kely, Is baaed on a Somorso1 Maughjn
novel about a nice girl "going wrong" to help her

Special A.wards lncfodo 1t1e Clllord C. Furnas
SdOa--.__ 110 ECA.C Medal ollolerl,

~=-~~~iCh!,~

S2.Qoneni--

Alan Ladd 11\d Veronica .

........ "-'lga1ion -

~"":."'t!~,t8lntert:oflaglft

Conollex.

1.e0111frcwldotf. 8.-ld 10p.m. rJCMtswe$1 .50

. Tho Glasa Koy, -

l.IJke. ill a 8tOfy from a Hllmmetl novel. that

_campaign_

.._

l-"'.-ersllylley,

- - . . beprtMledhom lheEIIif;o!t

lot-

8 :45p.m. 170 MFA.C, Elioott. F r e e -.

UKRAINIAN snJOENT CLU6

e.-.

lrnm8·;l(la"'.-3p.m.
~ ... bo .... Betty - ColoDon
~.. Mrr Lyona, U I B - Scooncao Linry;

7 p.m.

ATliLETIC DAY"
Baird Aeki. 2--4 p .m.~
Facully and
ollhe School ol MedDne
wil play ..,.._ ..o bladdef bal. have races,
etc. A choc::oate chip c::ookie bakir)g contest w11
be judged and lhe enlries ,...,..,.,_ conoomed .

SPRING CONCERT"
altha Ukralna, 1"""-""10 local lJI&lt;ranian
dlo1dng """ rruoical falenl. SWeet Horne Conn~
HiQh 5GhQOI AudikwUn ..3 p .m. FOf dorm reaidente.

----·
-

~-

MEDICAL sa&lt;OOL SPRING

MUSIC"

c:ACFUI"
- . _ , witn Woody·......,'"" Oione l&lt;ealoo.

(llre«l: Our lMI' .. ...._ .......

_,llle~-Siudy.

U/8 Wind En_,., Frw* J . Clpola, ,director.
Kathame Cornel Theatre, Slicott. 3 P-"1 Free
admission Ooe of the featu"es of Communtity/

•

......
--70

for-

. . - . . ., ~2genetaladmis81on .

~ .. ~- Ule. The-·
. _ ... bo ... .,. 3r&lt;l - - ol Bel ......

-:r'~~~~H

(,.,.._): Fal (lle-J. 146

OAN'CERS' WORKSHOP"
Oence Explotlon. a spring concert of modem
jazz. and balet . Ha-rman Theatre studio. 3 p.m.
Tocl&lt;ets may be purchaSed otlhe door. $1 .50 lor

III.S~AUCICIATION

4p.m ,

C...... 1·5 p .m. ~.,_- ......,;, fhd issue

a.-..

WN;, 9cott. 7 a'ld 10 p.m. $1 for non ·

lac:tlon, Or. F. Wiliam ~. Brookhaven Na.'
lionlf .__.,..,.., Upeon , N.Y. 178 Farber.

SEMIHA.R.
Behnioral and Neurochemical mnuences on
Alcohol and Dnog T - Kolan1, M.D.,
Ph.D.. dOeclor. Research mont, and heed. ~Section. Addiction
Re&amp;eerch FOlMldallon. 102 Sl'lermefl. 4 p.m. Relreslwnentoat3:451n12•Forller. .

• ~-vNIYERSITYDAY"

Saturclay-5

Aohesoo Field. 2:30p.m.

IIIOCHEMISTIIY SEMHARI
Ilana ~ AftOI'IIaetariophaga T 7 lr&gt;-

~

oe-.

.Tuesday_- 8
EXECUmiE- .
Or. D. .......,, ol . .
- - - . . - C o "' .... Aftgalao. CU., 8 o30 Lrn.lly - - ~by . .
-Inc. . .crl.

..

---ond

110 U / 8 -

._...,~-~

.

~--...-COIMIUnily

----.o-~
IOI&gt;ic cr1 Mulphy'a

,.,.. lr1cl.Wy" ,.. be " '

·--:-n.llll.t

�Moy3, 111'9

~

Nazl.s
Should they be outlawed, or
must we put up with them?
Law·fofum hears conflicting views
By "-Bartle&lt;
AoporWin-

Genocide Ia the worst fonn of ott.
scenlty and atiould be put outside the
as

~m of the First Amendment,
~raphy has baen .

~~'I'!f.!~~corn='~:r:;:.~a:~

life calculated to bring about its physi·cal destruction In whole or'1n part, 7dl
Imposing measures intended to pr-nt
blrths within the group, (e) Forcibly
transferring children of the group to · ....
'11110ther group." Conspiracy, lncltement, attempt, and complicity In gano-.

cl~~ ~;~~= ~~~nleexpreased

First
'Sieasons lor not
thla convenHugh " Buck" Devls spoke In favor of
n. Davi s reported the good senator''
as
ying that ratification of the conpropoaed.leglalatlon which would make
advocacy of genocide subject to crlmventlon would: ba used against troops
Ina! penatltiea. Devis Is a Detroit at-·In Vietnam; deprive public officials of
torney whq; Is counsel to the Labor
free speech; and require the U.S. to go
to war egalnst genocide.
Community l nter-Falth Council Against
NaziJI.
. .
Davis ·streased the Importance of
Professor Jacob- Hyman sPOke on
ratifying th is conventlon~and encourbehall of the political and constitutional ·
&amp;gild other soMions to the problem as
ramifications of anti-Nazi. legi slation.
wan .
.........
Hyman Is a professor of constitutional
Professor Hyman took the other side
&lt;:&lt;&gt;ntendlng 1hat anti-Nazi leglslatfon Is
law here.
In pointing out similarities between
a violation of the First ~mendment .
- Detroit and Buffalo, both economically
In the 1820s, the Supreme Court statand racially, Davis seemed to Imply that
ed that the provisions of the Bill of
the Nazi party could spring up here, as
Rights pertain only to the Federal
It did In Detroit. A recent organl~ed
Government . There were lew laws i n the
appaaranca of the Nazis in Detroit was
constitution which restricted the states.
the establishment of a bookstore In one
In the "18605, the implication that
corall\ilpity in 19n.
States are required not to interfere with
f'e!&gt;ple of d issimilar polltlcal"backfreedom of speech was made with the
ground joined together to have the store
.adoption of the 14th Amendment which
closed . After three months ol dally
states, " No State shall make or enforce
clamonstratlons and weekly meetings,
any law which shall abridge the privithe concerned cl tl~ens won thelr battle
leges or Immunities of cltlzens of the
United States: nor shall any State deand the slore was closed .
Another bookstore was opened in a
prive any person of life, liberty, or propdlfferent .community, how-. a-few
erty, without due process of law_; nor
months later. Street confrontations led
deny to any person within its )uroadi~to the closing of this store, too.
tiol\ the equal protection of the laws.
On Labor Day 1978, a rather peculiar
Bet- 1925 and 1960, the Supreme
The Y.ralty football and field hockey
wrestling; ninth , swimming &amp; diving;
real estate office opened . An anti-NIW
Court tightened the provisions. of the
teema won men'a lltld wom~~~~'e tltlee,
tenth , basketball .
council member went to check It out .
First Amendment
saying that mere
~Moly , In the Inaugural " SuperIn the women's division , swimming ~
Advertisements within the office P,leadvocacy of an Idea without the InciteDey competitiOn sponsored by
diving f inished fourth with 2034 points,
lured headstones tmerinted withi ' We
:roent of violence is not a vloiJtion of
the U/B Varalty Club, Sunday, April 29, _ followed by ~ lleyball and tennis.
kill our competition . ' It was ev dent,
free speech and should not ba punished '
111
said , that real estat.e was not the - by the State or Federal Governments.
=~
a Mrlea of eight
t~::::·s ~~:~~ h~eon:r.,~~o :;.; · Davis
business being carried on. Nazi" literaHyman feels that the language-of the
- t a , conducted by heed coaches ens!
Tony Smith , end captain Kris Schum
ture was all that could be obtained.
genocide convention does not specify
lldmlnlatratore In the Deplittment of
was the lone women tennis player
Community action egaln pushed the
that only Individuals who Incite violence
AecrMtlop, AthllltiCa and Aelllted Inrepresented.
Nazis underground .
,
will be punished . According to the
atructlon, wltlr10 men's Intercollegiate
The premiere event Ql the afternoofi,
convention , the mere advocacy of genoTime and egaln these extnime rig~t
,...,. end six women's teams entered .
the fug-ol-war, was won by the men's . wlngers have tr1811 to spread the "cancer
clde is punishable and until the convenIn the men'a division, the football
wrestling team end by women's swimof wnat they have to say," to the general
lion Is rephrased, It Is unlikely the U.S.
,..., aconad 52'h llolnts to defaat
mlng &amp; diving . Men's cross-country end
public. The organized public power
will ratify It, Hyman explained.
MOOnd P'- j)aeeball, which complied
women's field hockey took the bicycle
should aay something in return , Davis . The National Lawyers Guild and Law
44. Ice hockey flnlehecl third with 42'h
grand r.rix while men's football and
contends, thro~h ·adorztion of leglsla- · School-sponsored the forum . ,
.
pointe.
.
women s softball won t he relay-race.
Field hockey took the women's crown
The event was enthusiastically rewas no.
wtth 31 'h points. Tied for runnen.-up
celved by athletes; plans 1101 for an anprovision in international law for the
. . . bealcetball and softball , with 21
nual competition betWeen varsity
protection of minorities. Since that
~~~
time, though, the U.N . has endorsed
-v
Oilier ~ In the men's competlFollowing the contest, competitors
aupf&gt;lemental conventions against slavProf . John M. Thomas haa been
tlon: fourth , eoooer; fifth , tennia; alxtb, . enjoyed food and relre•hmenta In The
ery, aiKI genOcide and to protect refnamed
of the Canter for Polley
-.country; _,th, golf; eighth,
Bubble.
· uo-. In 11188, the U.S. ratified the Studies,director
effective September, 1979,
·~ and refuges oonventions.
.
School of Management Deen Joseph
. Many moves have been made to ratify
Alutto has announced.
the genocide convention, t6o. But, so
Thomas succeeds Prof . Lee E. Preefar, all attempts have failed, Davis said .
ton, wllo will continue aa a member of
Under the terms of the convention,
the Administrative Committee and
"genoclcla rne,na any of the fDIIowlng
teaching staff of the Canter.
•
n.
T,.......
ex'-gotba- -s ," ~lnC8penHall
ects committed with Intent to destroy,
At the .-ne time, Alutto aald, the
*hole or In part, a national , ethnical,
ectlvltlea of the Canter wHI beCOme
aaldnie Truste8s rejected the nomination In
racial, or religious gr-Oup, as such: (a)
more formally lntellratad Into the overall
of Pond, the Times ret&gt;orted. because of
Killing lftem'*- of the , group, (b)
program of the Scliool of M.,..gement,
"dlv~a" on the Stohy Brook
C.Uatng -lous bodily or mental harm
although the lntardiiCiptlnery nature of
to metn'*- of the group, (c) Delltieratethe dOctoral ptOgram will be main-,
have a atrong desire to
ly Inflicting on the group a condition of
talned.
ae1ec:t the poaalble _.on to lead
Stony Brook... and Dr. Pond he8 been
a 1111t0f architect In bullellng Stony
Brook," Bllnll.wl Mid • .rter the bOard

Arntn1tlment~pr1119.

....,_
·G.rld, field hOc:k~y teams
win battle of·'Superstars·'
.n.n•
fl:

ratlfyln~

.

br

-

tlo~:a:~sw:,~d o~:v·~-:,o;:·

.

Thomas named
. ·
P• ....licy Studies head

Trustees hike tuition, but
reject Stony Brook selection
~Trvat-

~=~y and dlvl- - - among faculty, atudenta end
wllllln the Council, pnaclpltated by .
1M Poncf
and by the Counclraldlon,
poorly fOr bla pteal-

_,.,nation
arou.

a.='-a
.

·.=.;
-t
.. _ cllaeDOOintad,
laauacl •

UJ)ng tbat
bullbiiiMICIIWCI

1M . . of fliMIIng

ptMidant ...

..-..-~-·
--~:::-:.a::.
'Wy

IIIII ClaDiaiDn." The

~.~..:=
;;;n:..;.
-n. .......... of ... aaleclion

_ ...

pco-

...,~.·'*-~-

...... .,.. boanl iiiiOUid . _ gaM
__ _._ -.,....-,._,..,
0

= "

a10at
w1111
1M OOUIICII'a
- ·
!t'l . .
offlae
of 1M tllllldanOJ
lllid
~ -tile ........... CMIII-

::~-T~.--ot.: :.·. :·. . .-::. =.::

. . -=.........
.

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

ftnaltlllr.

~-

.... 1ft . .

.

~-~--

Civil flights· visit

U/B has been notified that two Investigative teams from the Office for Civil
Rilllrta, Realon II, of the U.S. Department of Heelth, Eduoatlon, and Welfare,
wiD be vlaltlng the university from May 7 to 11 for the ~of oonclactlng
a "compliance review" regarding non-&lt;llscrlmlnatlon/aqual OPPOrtunity Iii .
lludant o.-11attona under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 111&amp;4; Title IX of
1M EduoatTon Amerldmenta of 1972; 1111d Section 504 of the Rehabilitation
Act of 1173.
Title VI of the Civil Rlglrta Act ol1984 apeclflcally4tataa that:
"No per.on . .. allall, on the ground of r-L ~. or national ongln be _
excludad from 1*\lclplltlon In, be den lad the Denel'tla of, or be ~ '
aubladad to dlacrtmlnation .•. • (45 CFR IIO.:t.) .
Title Ill of 1M Education llrl'lenclmenta of 11111 apaclflcally prqhlb4ta:
- "CIIaorimllllllon on the beel;-of aex In any edUcation program or activity
~ Fadallllluanclal-'atance •.. " (45 CFR
&amp;actiOn 11M of 1M flababllltatlon Act of 1973 apeclflcal y prohibits:
- "dlamtmllllllon on 1M beals of handicap In any ptOgram or activity
~ FadarW fiiWICial aaalatanct." (45 CFR 84.1).
Tllla cin4lte ......., 'IWIII Involve IICheduled lnterllewa by the people from
HEW wtth -'lltlvM of ..toua U/lt atudent organlullona and with
~ orflcMia who work cloaaly with them. In addition, lharw wiU be
"dnn!Mn llmea achedulad for Tueaclay ettamoon, May I, and 'Qiuraclay
_ , _ , May 10, dwtng wbldlln,ane wlatll(lg to oonaillt wiUIIM Federal
~...~ lnqulrtlil, or IOdga 11"-- Nlatlng te Tille VI, TlllaiX, or
leation 1118J do ao.
II Ia
thai Myone whO wanta to aboulcl a.ll 13&amp;-2281 lor an
of lite ......... WIH tak8
In 0apan Hall CorlfeNnC8
, !!Ia '-Ill and flflll
Weclu•day attamoon. May
.. wben thar will be held In lqulle Nil.
'
.

18.11··

~~==-

-

�lloyS,1171

Six undergrads win
community recognition
Awards to six undergraduates tor
outstanding volunt- wor1&lt; and the
election of Or. Joseph Mancil as new
president of the University's Communlty1.Advlsory Council (CAC) hlgbllghted
tne- sixth annual Community-Student
Awards Banquet at Spaulding Dining
Room last Thursday night.
Students honored were Sue Masters,
John A. Zogarla, Debora K. Lindquist ,
Francine Tenzer, John W. Loewy, and
Edward P. Oravec.
Joining Or. Manch, Who was Buffalo
superintendent of schools lor many
years, on the slate of CAC officers will
be: William P. Ackendotf, vlce&lt;halrman; lawrence Edward Baldwin, se-

:'J~i~~at~· M~.lheo:;r,:tr::u~:
Sterne, Gondon N .~llllng and Josephine J. Holmes.

The atudent win,....
Student award winner Sue Mast ers, a
U/lf junior from Poughkeepsie, has

!l:~a~~U:~::!e:~~~g~

ment Center and the Senldr Shultle
Program aponsorad by the Commun-

Ity Action Corps. The Senior Shuttle

escorts senior citizens Into the community lor stropping, banking, etc.
John Zogarla of Kenmore, a junior

:%0:~~ i~B~w:~:::.~~ i~~YIJ::A~

Fn~-;.~~/:')l:::::;;,e~sc.12~~!: bo~

He Is, the Be-A-Friend organization

~~~in:~~~

c~~n~n~~o~~ ~

tW
most he possibly can lor both his child
and the program as well. "
Debora lindquist of Buffalo Is a
8

:r.,~~:':1n:rJ~~~t ~.~g:~- a~ !
supervisor of educational programs at
st. A.::Jlustlne's Canter, where she has
1

~u~~ fo~t:!=~ ?w~~

:n=. g::~~

also responsible lor recruiting and
orienting new tutors In the center's
reading program.
·
Also affiliated with St. Augustin,11's
cenrer Ia Frllhclne"Tenzer of Bay!lde, a
junior maJoring In English . Together
with Ms. Lindquist, she was responsible for coordinating the tutoring program ; she also tutored a teenage girl

twice weekly.
St. Augustine_ Center officials have
indicated they "are very grateful to all
the university students who heve participated In ourReadlng Program lor poor
~eaders, " pa'rtlcularly to the tw~ award
winners.
,.John Loewy of Queens Is a senior
studying mathematics. His volunt""'"
work was with the Outreach Service, a

~~~l~ ~,:~n~~~~~~h!h';,rlr! ~;,'":~·~

Involved In crisis lntarventlon counsai-

1"Lward Oravec of §mlra Is a junior
majoring In political science. He was
responsible lor coordinating a group of
Community Action Corps volunteers
involved In tutoring children at Friendship House In lackawanna and was
- also responsible lor taking children on
field trips.

The officers
New Community "Advisory Council
Chairman Manch retirad from his Buffalo schools post In 1975. A U/B
alumnus, he received the Chancello~s
Medal , the University's highest honor,
In 1~ . A well-known photographer,
1

~lay ~,rer~:"'l~l~-1Po~r ~~:e'e~:

Christopher Baldy Hall on the U/B
Amherst campus.
CAC Vice President William P.
Ackendorf Is general manager of Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation In Buffalo . He Is the 1978-79 president of the
Buffalo Rotary Foundation. lawrence
Edward Baldwin, the new secretary, Is
executive director of the Crippled Children's Guild . Bernard F. Mulhern, treasurer, Is senior vice president of l iberty

~~~~~\e ,;,~s ~et~W~~~~rslo~

"Amonp boand members, Dorothea.W.
Sterne &lt;S executive director of the
Niagara Frpntler Industry-Education
Council ; Gordon N . Schilling, a U/ B
alumnus, Is assistant vice president

:'~~a~f9,';{ngk!~:; ~~~~~~~f~e ~~

Holmes Is a medical social worker at
Buffalo General Hospital's AmbulatorY. ·
Care Canter.
President and Mrs . Robert l. Ketter
were special guests at the awards
ceremony.

lOrientation to have more
faculty participation this year
Increased faculty partlclpallon and
emr=la on student "survival skills"
_:;1 ~~~::.!,~11H~8 Summer OrlentA~ng to Orientation Director Joe
KrMowlalt, each undergraduate department hu been asked to-send a faculty
or admlnletratlve ,.,..aentatlve to a
two-hour program designed to acquaint
~ new students with Unl-alty o_fferlngs.
Brochures and small displays will help
elucidate each department's wor1&lt;.
_
In addll)on, 10 apeclally-tralned ~
edviSOB wl11 aaa1at a crww ol18 student
aides In explaining UniWJrSity program•

1

0

~::,~~~~r;;:: ~Ur/1~~ ~~:

paled quntlona on General Education
and Its Impact on undergrads.
Also thl• year, "active" recreation (a
two-hour " Interaction eVent~ geared to
Improve studente' SOCial aklllsJ&lt;:..wlll
replace the traditional rock band 'don-,
C8rl during each session . The workshop, baaed on New Games Thsory,
will be conducted by Maureen O'Mara, a
doctoral candldale in clinical ftsychol-

:~av:'u}aasOV:Y:=t ,:;~:J.ro-

ln -.other workshop -ion, Krakowlak oald, an eudiO:Vfsual prM&amp;ntatlon
will be shown Which attempts to examine eJ&lt;pi!CiatlOils of freshmen . The
audiO JIQrttOn waa made w'- student
a1dee ln Student Affaire vleltad high achOols and asked _,~oq plan. nlng to .._.. collage !My expected to find and explrlenOit.
The
will hopefully "open
up INilll- 10 a ~ potential

..-.-ion

..

===-~~~'=.:.
!Y~
bolnl" 10 dlacuR both ....ltlee arid

,.,.,..... of al*lemla. Any atudent
........, during the WOII&lt;IIhapwlll . . - . . 1 during -.lftlng

.,......._.,...wilt
a
_._.IIIII
ortt:='.:::a;c- Wilt be hllld
be

tocn will
........... .....
!Ills,...

of

1ft

...

eltott 10 . . _

a._...... ---

to . . . . -

cepted lor admission. This Prelude '79
contains articles about student life and
personal growth -and gives Important
U/B dates and deadlines.
The second Issue will be sent only to
serious applicants Who have paid d&amp;poslts. It will give Information on
libraries, study space and ecedemlc
requirement,.
·

188~:o~~ak8ar~~~~:u=ap~:;

geared to help commuters move Into

!he mainstream of UniWJrSity life and

dispel any negatlw sell-Images.
.Krakowlak and his staff are experimenting with using the newsletter to

1

:'~!e ~~~"Ji.ro¥:· a~~ Ia ~
specific city and ~ub~rban locals. At
the end of the month, an Ice cream
soclal Is being held which honors
students from the Lancaster-Oepaw and
Kenmore-tonawanda areas. All undergrads, however, ahs~hvlted .

Woroen's Club awards
schol,arships to 29 .

Twenty-~lne sophomores are reclpl-.
ents of Grace Cepen Scholarship Awards for academic excellence lot 1979;
the presentations were made at the
lnstallatlon Luncheon of the U/B Wo~~:'c,~~~b,ln Spauldlryg Dl!lln_g Room,
To qualify each student 1)1Ust· have:
(1) completed three semesters of lull-

~:~4 ~~~e~r~11(2~ maintained an
The ~lowing are ~ award reclpl-

ents: John 0 . Boerschlg ; Kath,Yn H.
Caradorl, Curtis J. Kranmer, Michael
D'Angelo, Aaron F. Fishbein, Joseph V.
Fritz, Frad L . Gold, Carlos M. lsada,
Mltche11- S. Kaplan, Emest - Kommehl ,
Rein U. Klrss, S~n T.. lau, Janina A.
Mackl~wlcz, Patricia l . M~. Donald
l. Merrill, P8111 T. Naspar, Beth A.
Pease, Kurt S. Rothenberger, Wendy J.
Sandbank, Ann M. Sjillg , Marianne
Simpson, Th&lt;?mas. A.; ~rrento, Raiche!

IE. Spector,

Justin B. Susla, Thomas J.

Svta, Donna G. Weayer, Mary E. Weiss,

S!ttPhen J. Wqjnarowakl, Alison Wong.
Proceeds tor the Grace Cepen Scholarshlp Award are raleed by the Club's ·

:!:~'=·~~~:.!sot~~=~~~

At the Spring luncheon, tlw lollowlng olflcera WtiAIInatalled: ..,.. Nar-&gt;

~~~:~;,iil:t~~~i/=

::

Nelson, conupondlng - . r y ; Mre.
Edgar Vlnalke, IW:Ofdlng aecn~aty.
A Polynesian t'-'1 was cen1ed In
the menu and the IQI-Tal punch, which
wasaervedthrouQilthecourteeyoi.Mra.
Robert L.
the club'l Honorary
· President. The PfOIIIWil conaletad of
Ph111pp)ne and Hawaiian dancM per. formed by · young ,members of the
Filipino-American ·o.nc. troupe. M,._
Anthony Avellanoaa was program coordlnator.

K-.

300 staff members aHend ·riAA/CREF seminars
between
TIAA and CREF were the local points
of a series of seminars attended by
more than 300 faculty and professional
staff April 24&gt;TIAA/CREF Benefits Plan
Coordinator-Douglas Bumetlwas guest
speaker lor the forums Which were
aponaored by th,JI Personnel Oe~­

menJ .

T~ lnabranoe and Annuity Aaaociatlon (TlAAl ji&lt;O¥idea llx-.i.lncome
, -.ultlea baaed priiNrlly on bond and
mortQil08 ~rMnll. It haa shown a
ata.ly growth Int.-! rate from 3.33
· per_,t In 11152 to.8.311percent In 11177,
Bumett said.
•
On the otloer hand, the Collage Aetlnlment Equltlee Fund ICREF) 18 an account~ by ~s In a
btoldly Clltieralflad portfolio of etocka, and 18 aubjeal to -'*lone

Program Is available lor new, full-lime
facully and professlonal -· ernp_loyees.
New members of these two statts must
elect the program withln"30 days, of the
effective dale of appointment. II a
choice Ia not made, p'-rnent In the·
Tliachera Retirement Syatam progqm
will automatically occur.
·
Alter July_ 1, 1~ &amp;mllloYMe
who elect TIAA/CAt:r" contribute fhnle
oer cent of their annual ealary • .,.,. a
.3-t •.onth -tlng petlod~theOnlverelty
- will conlltbute nine D
cent up to
~8,498; 12 !Mil: cent tor
S18.500 and 1411.500i~ per a.rt

n

"*Jor

Forlhoel wiiObegM the JIIOIIIMI . .
~"'-of-··
foniJuly 1, 11711, the
ut• 12 per «**t on . . ;'ili.IIIDI!ri1Y
=.
-:..1t.f:. \-.:::.. ~
:.0:."1:.~~ ..,.,
. . will be . . . . . . . . 81 'iii".ai6
July 1 of thla ,...
etoc:b.
Tbe TIAAICRI§F

'

Ofllron.l ~

Un~90111rtb­

Tile _ . of OCIIIIrlllullll -

be

brokefl down
the two_piMs or
put exclualvely Into juat one. The mOll
popular breakdowns amona pertlcl- pante .,. the 50'"1!!!1: oerot TIM-«» IIIII'
cent CAEF and t1'18.251* cent TIAA:.-ni
per cent CAEF.
,
·
The puiJIQM ot the TIAA/CAEF eolnblnecl annufty, Butnel1 said, Ia 10 provide • rwtlnarnent Income that Is more
rMponaiWI to - l c c11an0a than a ·

nx.d-dollar annuitY ,Idona IIIICITIM !IOtatile 111an Juat a ....,.,.. _,ulty.
8houlcJ a ~ ~ the Unl~Of the world
prwnl111118 «*~ be contlnllil!l an en I~
...... "tMindMclualla eiiiDiallld
11v ~ unhwllty w11tc1t1 Cloia tlol ·

of-..-.

olfer tflla optiOMI ~Nt. the .... of 1111, • 01111' .....
PIIIIIIIIIY- the ..rue« .. OAEF 10cumullllon to~· Tl6&lt;' ~.
11AA _ . . Gill ........fo

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

puoa-. CAliF-. .......

�Tenure and Prlwlleges Committee, the
panel which was responsible for a
• report on the activities of the President's Review Board. He feels , as an
ciutgrowth of this experience, that the
Seriate should conllnua to explore how
the PRB operates, and should try to
Implement racommendatlons made by
~.f'f~~fo,~lng changes In how
As pa1t of his concem about tenure ·
and P-romotion, Solkoff 'believes teacnlng' must ba evaluated and weighted ·"
l)eavll~ as anything else4n these dec:
sions. • But, he notes, " the evaluaUor;
of teaching sllll eludes us." He would
like to see the Senate's T.eachlng
Effectiveness Committee nsscflvated .
As Senate chairman, he would go-1iven

In the ....,, fw tllle
_._.• .....,
........
electioN.
.
• Baing~ -the poeltlona of
....,_,..._ alact and .-..y:
Tlla~-ltllhlll
CIIII*IIY - ,_ p!1or lo '*-'lnO
. . llalid flf . . Sanoita tw a ~
wm. CIIIIMIIIIIIot for lhlll PM! .,. Dr.
Clnld R. RIW!g, ~. o.&gt;art_ . of lnalruciiOn Faculty of Ed~ea-

. ..... -

ll:

1~-~koff.
~,
In the Oepwt,
I of Medicine.
~of

tor~-= Prolee- - Paler Hanl, Plllloaollh't; Colelta
~~:and Willian\ MIUer, Oral

All ~ the IIOI!ng faculty ""'
ellalble to panlclpale In the baiJollng . .

~y~~~:';. tg.~~~~~=-~~~~~~:n~

llaJiola mual 1111 ralumed 1o the Senate
offlca, 405 Cllpen, bY 5 p.m., Thursd!IY,
May 10. In Older to be counted.
Below, Prof-.. Rising and Solkoff
dlacuaa thtlr poattlQtls on vwloua la-

===.~'!:~'fnt=;

ad via IMphane.

......: ....... and lnllmldatld
I am lloncnd 1o " - bean nominated
tar lhla Doal, lunhlr hononlcl and not a
lftle lnllmldlllad 10 ftnd myaelf running

...,...
mr "-tad
lillnd, Notm SQII)ff.

colleague and

I urge . . . . lo -'der lhe Faculty 8IMii llld Ita laadlnhiD eerloullly, for

. . next

...-J ~will ba crttlcallor

!1\18 unlwralty. Immediately lhead we
"WDe the _ . of Pnlaldent Ketter's
.ntr.:l or the - !fanaition to' a new

IIIIIWmty adminlatralion. We lace sertoua decllnaa In the quality of admitted
IIIUdenta, ~Ions suggesting that
woi may not future enrollment
quotu _ , If we accept
student
applying. Even more eerloua because
- h e r e would~ to admlsaiona problema, we ' - th- of
INe ·entering students dropping out o.l
our uni.,...lty. We alap lace problema
of faculty and student morala, with
quality of lnatrl.lCfJon, with research
:f.por1, wllh threats of further staff

-r

-r

vl~ct~:'.:'pu~'.t'!.m,e .Y.:Of:J's~:~~~~od~ -

:=er~ra~ t~~ ~.~"'l~ ~~~i'l~~~~~~~~

at best uncomfortably long .
What would I bring to the Faculty
Senate leadership that would help to
raapond to some of these serious
problema? I have had to examine myself
and my experience to answer. Perhaps
my best QUalities ""' my firm belief In
the aolvablllty of moat of our problems
and my commitment to and my willing,... to WO&lt;k toward those eolullona.
O..the J!U1 two y_.l·have·had the.-.ur. of W«&lt;tlng ciQeely with Jonallwl Aelchart and Newton o.r-; 1
- ' d auppo11 and leek to mend the
...,.,_ they " - Initiated. In patti·
oullir I ..,_. their --'&gt; to wor1&lt;• lng wlttl · tha ~ration of tills

::":'·o=...~ ~~

admlnltotiatora
com_ . . . . the _ but '
..pNnlgllt'or

Ita fDiae - IIIIIICIIdea lllld gadfly.
We Mad-~ • -•· One
that Ia of particular concern to me
Ia !hat of faculty morala. Until now -

,_baM! forclid

by~

ID

-==...-...t

tooua 011 ...... "' -

problama lhlll
dlwlahe: thai . . t..llty agalnel
faDulty,
depart_. llgalnat indlvtdulllllvlllaiM wUI not go away.
a point, I

'TIW
a.
- ' - - ....,_,
.....,., at whlcll the~ ... ao

.... that tiler - alllllllollld blain to
. _ ua fOIIIII* - faculty, atudilnta,
; - " · and ldlnlnlahiiDn. w. Mad to·
. . . ..._._.,.... _,.,.,.. fonla .

All w o1n11a ......... to IW8IIOnd

to

.. ..........--

...... oulatde
- - IIIII*,
gain In
..._lalaila.
elllll Gllllr
In

-~_,

.

activities to open these lines within the
Faculty senate and In cooperation with

~'/:na1~1 S::,'':J,~nih!h~n~~~fy

edmtnlatratlon.

·

·

Since this Is eupposad to

be a
campaign message, I should note that I
have pattlcj paled myself in a number of
- e and other university-wide activities. I heve been on the Faculty Senate
Executive Committee lor two years and

g~~::,~~~d~~~t~~=~

O&amp;nlial Review. This year I heve also
served as the Student-Faculty SubCommittee ct&gt;alrman of the President's
Study Group on Attrl\lon and Retenllon
and as a UUP officer.

Which leads to one last 'point : This
partlclpetiOJrhas ,brought about a substantial Increase In my respect lor
faculty colleagues. I have seen so many
of them give their time and energy
unselfishly to university tasks from
Which they stand to gain little or
nothing but the satisfaction of a job
well done. I take thl&amp;- opportunity,. to
lhanllf these colleagues and to urge
others to make known your will ingness
to join In the~ most impOrtant endeavors no matter how or even whether

you vote In this election.
-Gerald R. Rising
Oepartmenl of Instruction

llveness and research In leaching . Such
an agency, he believes, -could be partially lundad by outside monies and
partially by SUNY.
Solkoff wants to find ways to Increase collegiality among faculty and to
provide faculty with more reedy and
1·
mi!8Aingful access to administrators.
Solkoff: no platform,
He laments the . fact thai our " best
but ao~ obMnatiofta
-faculty," when asked to serve on lmNonnail S61ko
oesn'l beliilve In ' .portant committees; rafuse. The he$1- platforms. Since moitf of them~ never
-lancy stems flra1 from the feeling that
translated Into effective action , he
time devoted to commttteee· lnterleres
contends, " they 8&lt;4 mor~ sell-serving
with acholatly activity, and second from
than proouctlve."
a bellelthat whalevec work may be done
Rather than come up with thet kind of
by-a commlttae will, In the long run, fall
statement In suppor11;1f .his candidacy,
to ef1ect any change Whatsoever. ,SolSolkoff preferred to mlike some general
koff feels the Senate needs to woil&lt; at
obserVatlons 'aboul what he feels Senate
finding out why this feeling exists and If
priorities should be In the nex1 years.
It Is true. 'We s!lould' strive' t&amp; work
He has been an active-member of the
toward the day when people will be able
University Committee on ~eneral Eduto believe, based ·on herd !lata, that
cation throughout that panel's deliberaoommlttee work does have an effect."
tions, this year and last . As a result of
It happens now lrragularty, but Solthat activity, be feels strongly that the
kolf would like to find-ways to encourUniversity must expedite Implementation 9f a high quality general aducatlon
~.!ll~n~~:::,~~n'=~~~ t~o~~~u'.':~
·•program .
·
Council of the Medical School , and the
Because of the size and complexity
Faculty Senate. He sees a definite need
of the lnslllutlon, he grants that some
for a better system of-reporting the
compromises may be necessary m
~~t~~~~~ a::,~~~~~~~~~~!~ts of !'ach
Instituting such a plan for all students.
But he is adamant that any deviallons
SolkofP Is "aware that,- to a large
not be allowad to emasculate the overall
extent , what goes on at this University
general ad proposals.
.
~~ diR~~~~ ~y 1~h~~ls~:0~1n~fn Bu~~f~
Another " marvelous- thirll!'' that both
the Senate and the Generar Education
contralnt, however, he believes.t~ere is
Program can and should do, SolkoU
still plenty of room for creativity on the
contends , Is to encourage Interrelationpart of Buffalo )acuity. Yet, he says , "itships between separate ·units of ihe
a faculty member Just selfishly pursues
University, units which have never
his-or her own activities with no Interest
before Interacted meaningfully .
In what is happening In the University a1
Up until the last month , . Solkoff
served .as ch~irperson of the Senate's
~ft~.~·u,l't~saJI.~~~~ ,\,"at "gr~~n~~~/? ~

Ketter consider-ing t,he Jdea of a. pro·v~t
Preaidi.nt

J&lt;ett.;. told tacui;; TuesdAy,

and

any reilular admits who: have a hlgbfaculties. The standards
proceschool average below 88, are not In at
dures should be specified In ~Tltlng ,
least the top 17 per cent of their
made available to faculty, and lorwardgraduallng class, and do not have
ad to all i\lgher faculty review bodies. ·
t:omblned SAT scores of at least 1040.
•The FSEC adopt an affirmative
Applicants for EOP have risen by 40
action review as pan of Ita procilas of
per cent Because of lncreasad appliesmaking nominations for the PRB.
"ilona, Kdtier pradlctad the EOP student •The Praaldenl adopt an affirmative
profile should Improve. He said a
and representative action ravlew aipart
concer1ed effort Is belng made to
of the process of making appointments
bolater numbers ol transfers and
to the PRB.
Millard Fillmore College applicants.
•The Senate suggest to Ita committee
Currently, 'both categories are ~lgnlfl·
on teaching quality that It explore, with
canlly down In number.
the President's Office, the "waya and
A search Is no'l" underway lor the
means ·of ·developing procedural and
DUE Dean.
di"'!'lor of Institutional Stuqlea and will
deYicesto -produce accurate and approWiu-t going Into apeclfiQI, Ketter
soon begin for a 'vlc:e · president ' for
priale evidence on teaching per1oraald tour poasible eolutlona to the
raaearch . A merger will not lake pl'4C8,
manC!'" of faculty Which can ba usad by
lllluation had bean ~tad to. him,
Ketter said , ·between the Grsdt~.ate
the PRB. In addfllon, the FSEC should
tlullhllllhe two vlca pnaaldenta backed
Dean's Office and the vice president lor
"explore illralegles tor funding a center
only one. The
aaJd he perraa.rch .
on competent teaching."
aonally doM not W*lt to "the two
The Sena1e approved recommendaThe recommendations will be for·
unlta of the IIOUN to.aeparale."
Ilona from the Tenure· and Privlwarded to the Ptealdenl for conslderaln an mt.vlewlaat 1'*'-Y with t1ie
legee Committee. Among other things,
lion.
,
Reporter, F. Carter Pannlll, vice P&lt;MIthe pane) calls .on 'deans and chairThe SenatealaoapprovedanAthletlcs
danl b Haalth 8C*Iolie, said he was
persons to Inform candidates lor pro&lt;::ofn(nlttee racommendatlon Which pro~ te lila ~ of the DUE Dean
mollon or tenure of lhel' right to
vldefi that upon notlfloallon of acebaing teepOM!bla ID the VPM lind yet
eumlna their personnel .W.S before
demlc probatiOn, a atudent may aj)peal
llllltllio authortt)' a- the heelth they .,. eent to the Pnlaldent'a Review
the p&lt;Dbalion to an appropriate com- ~- He
that "no ,.., can
Bo8rd. 'rile committee also calla tor the
mlttee desiGnated by the · Senate. · A
H autllorfly eouldn~
procedurea of the PAB to ba comm'l'li·
atudent can be reatonsd to CIQOd standbe aplil -..how, Pannill said he
cated to faculty via
University press
tng upon proving to the astlafactlon of
- l c i - M I going back to haYing and through an updated Faculty Handthe commltlllit 'that the semester's
- u.w.ai!Y-wldj academic officer to -wok.
Inadequate
was due to
w1an the DUE Dean would report .
Other naoommendations ""'that:
•unusual circum~ not likely to be
l&lt;atter notacl that dabale a- the
•The PRB make ltaalf aval)able to
f8PMiad." B8vlawa wftl ba held lh{ee
laaua hea llftMikad ..._., dlecuadeena and chairpersons to dlacup
tlmee a y.- Commlttes cleclalon wm
Ilona". Ha ai80 IDid Sanatora II -loo
axpaclatlona and procadurea for ravlew ~ ba aui!Ject .0 the approval of the DUE
........... to ttlalr euppqrt lOt .... of doallera.
•
Dean
•
.....,.._ . . . ..,til he ~lldae dlacua•The Senate Executive Commlttae
T!18-senata dlacuaad the report from
!1111'11 ~ •
and the Prwldanl dlecuaa the "nya,
Ita Commlltae on Admlaalona and voted
_..,
thll tor lila ... time - •· ~lbilltlea and tlmelablea
to approve n. NCOmmendalione. See
....,. . . blganhla.....,.Mf'Naldenl, · for lm~llng -.qunn.tta" that
Apoll2e"-ttw ttllaopaaadamend. . ~ ._ • mlnimllnt atan- l*taln to tanura or promotion of tacutty
merrta 1o fta blllinn naoommended by
111111a tar adllillaiDit. ancl..,.ll not accept
In _apeclfk: department a, llchoole and
the ByfaWa Oommltt•.
.
.

at a combined Senate and an filial voting

faculty meeting, that he Ia considering
eawbl'lal)lng a pnovolt poaltlcn at the
Unlwralty [not-. In the sense of the
former "provoats of facultlesj " but as a
Unl-.lty__.de academic o fleer] . He
aald he Ia havtng a maellng with Albany
ofllclala later In the month to discuss
whether or not reiJlstltution of ~ch a
·poeltion Ia poealble.
"- Kattar's aurprlaeannouncementcame
11\' .....,anM lo.a q.-lon from Senator
L-.11 ~feld ,_..stng the con:
~ aunoundlng ihe status of the

,.,_,dent

--tad
·-IIi~
-two_....
~ ........

m,

i*iorrnanoe

�n
QAnl ,.,. .., tt.~ol AttHotory.

Flriwlntormation'*"bo_blf_·

·•Calendar

lng Mo. MiChl at 638·2076 IX 2078.

(from- T. col 4)
Ullt. He is eJCP&amp;ded to discuss recent court
"*'tllonFhl-rightoofl!le.-and

~

to -In·gOnenll
• -and tfle ..--&lt;orm1Ullcation
allocting the econarrrt
- ; , porticUoo'.
t.4u"phy, a 1941 graduate of the School of
ModiOi&gt;e at the ~ of
has
been aervlng as Tmes """"" chalnnen since
t968. Tomes """"" holdings Include the Los
~ Tmis. various o t h e r -· pmtlng
~ and TV stations. Western New York's
GriQhk: Controls Corp. Is a"""'"* of the Tmes
Mmrlamly.
On the
lroot, Murphy '""""" as
ci81COflor of the unv.s;ty of Kansas rrom
1951 to 1960and aschancelorof the~
of Celilomoa etl.os Angeles ~om 196&lt;1to 1968

Pennsyt-.

""""""*"

SPECIAL SERIES ON EFFECTIVE
LEARHfNG FOR UNOERGRADUATES •

i1 a vital way In determining our environment end
In moderating v.iaOOns and " Is
also 8SMI'lti8l to life as we know It everywhere
IMng thngs have been loood to exist. Water and
Ice we k.noNn to OCOJ on other p&amp;anets. Reo

oriy: the Voyooer _ , . crah tranomltted ' " -

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

of me Icy moons of Jupiter that open up new
dimenSionS of thclt.qlt ald eJQ:lloraton ., consider·
no the pos;at,My of Iii'~ ~en the lnverse.

- -roles
v-thll-

RECITAl"
Bllrd Contemporary EnMmbte: Dart VJsion5,
Mualc cl Myatieat lnspho11on- Yvor Mi&lt;·
hasholl and Jan W..iams, di'ectrxs. Balro Recit..
Hall 8 p m. Free atrnission
Guest 811sts wil be \Wiam Kit1q)atrick. dancer
ond " " " ' - " "· AobOrt Dick. llu1e. and the
8erd Aute Enserrble with Maty l..uetYsen. dl"ec·
tor.
SoonarxeO blf the [)eportment of Musoc:

on a f)lonoWy IICIIo . Water

p10ya
on olhorplonetary bodies.
~hall,_ tronsiTIH!eO
Tho
" ' - of lhe Icy ,_,. of Juc&gt;ifor ond next
yoor wll the Icy ,_,. of Solum .

-~-10b0mucl1tesa

"""'*""''

on edl. Tho signifance of this .., """"

-

~wllbee~ .

VIDEO SCAEEHING/OISCUSSION"

IIOCHMSlliY~M

~vioaldoa: SlrucWro and FuncH. Ke«\, I.Jilotatory o f Biology. Notionol c.nc.r lnstiMo 134 Cary .

11on. Or. 4p.m

to

..... -Immunology, Or.

::.p. Engellriot , of ~tnmunohaM\8~0~·
. ogy , Cenni~ . --Cn:&gt;os
BloodTIII10iuelonSeMco. Arnot........ The Nethet·
lsndo . 223~ . 4p .m.

IIFA RECITAl"

AdtlonnoT-~, ooprono . BaltdRecitol

8 p.m. Free llopor1mon1 of Music.

-

Brflr1 . - ond Ed Hugett) of tho trxoos
Houston. Texas, speciNclly an attetT¥&gt;t

~

SPECIAl.-·
~

•

Blue, Ooc&lt;.montsrv ,....,_ "Who
Kll8d """"" - ·. Media Stuoy1Bu1toto. 207
lletawwe Ave. 8 p.m. Admlssaon S' Sponsored
I l l ' - Stuoy/Bu11olo.
This made-tor·TV doeu'nentr;
follows
the ..
in·
.-tigldjonblfttno,_
_
-

()EJ'ARTIIEHT Of' 1111CR08101.00Y AND
CEIITER FOR --.oi.OOY

· SponarxeO by the

Ch&lt;.rt:h Home. 24 -..:! St .. Buftalo, take theal to the hcmes of m8ll rec:ipienta.
OrNer$ w1 remain in the c.- 'Nhle the server
dEiiYin the
For more information. cal tt.
Aed.Cn:&gt;os Office ol Volmtaer P&lt;nonnol. 888·
7500, ext. 348.
·

me..

""""""""IOOSiclan becomes Involved

Water is a,.,.._. subsUI"Ic:e to Us. tt is involved

nee Che reeaons tor deterionltion of a historic

black~

in the downtown secbon
N. the ..,. tl'ne that the tml studies the
problem, using a comllination of oeteclive story
fcwmllr oMth ., obr;ervational approach , it wallS
the audience against aocepti'\g what it sees as
being an)'IIWlg , _ a perception of the
fW'rmlkers , This anention to the subfectiYe natl.le
d taevtsed r.tonnation, to the way media for-

,...,osthomoaning. lsong;,aaondOnportant.

Prfnt by .tudent 8erbara SehMfw ln ahow at AC
o.lwy, thr'oUih tomorrow.

MUSIC"
Balrd~En-:

K~

v.. - - and Jan ...........
lhclors. Room IOO'Bord. 9 p.m. F1ee-

Mualc, -

SoonarxeO Ill' the [)eportment of Music .

Wednesday- 9
50-YEAR CLASS AaiNON
5pUdlng Oinlng Room. Biooll All day. stllrtlng
1110e.ut.
·
Tho U1B """'"" wll honOt the Claas

of1~29wilha-ofactMtiea.

The-

it•tolowl::
10 a.m. - regiA"don; 10:30 - retnon
: 11 :30 a.m. - ~ fiX .....,:
noon-....,._,: 12:45- l&lt;.llChOOn Pf'OiliW!'.
:.-bblf Joel Mayotoolll. . . - o f

..

MEN 'SIA$E&amp;w.•
W8 wa. C.nlllua 121. Peele Fie&amp;d. 1 p.m.
DEI'ARTMEHT OF GEOGRAPHY LECTURE"
Spolal _ _ ......... - ....... Sokal . ~t of Ecology l EYOiullon, SUNY
et Sk)ny Brook. 211 Tllblrt. 3 p.m. Profeaaor
Sokalla vlallinQ ..... -

Dopanmon1..tho . . . - of tho SUNY FocU!y Exchange
Progtwn

~---Ernest
Klel«
• .,.._of t h e - Atutml
lhe , _ of 59-- diploma Ill' Cl&gt;etfel

IIUFFAI.O LOGIC COLLOQUIUMf
Zonno1o, Sl!ofotn. Godol: A Anltoty IX lnflnllaty Logic !IX Sot n-y?, GrooOtY Morxo.
UnM!tSifY of Trxonto. 204 Oiel-. 4 p.m.

Bootd.-

-Oft-

~~~~::rn~·= Mooting.,..

- . 6:30 p.m. c:oc1&lt;1o1 1*11' ol the Fnlnl&lt;

of
· Bu1111o.

FACULTYDEVB.oPwm-At
TMC'*'t lho Adult tMtn. Is tho thOrne of

thiiiWIIWC. ~Iron 8;30 a.m. to 4:30p.m••
...W ~of .,_·Ftee l'n&gt;gnwna S5
per peraon, lncluding ........
.
••
Tho progrom 10 _ . . . to dninlslniiOtS .,

· Bllzclo. lab &amp; Cllltlon of

-AI.OLOGICCOUOOUIUIII
Mall&gt;
Logic 1110, "'-'" ~~.
.

-··1&lt;*"--.
.
--

-

~

on eucx:eaotU models lor locU!y oe~t.
-.fhelnoightsofOUCQOUI\A,_of

..,.._~, U J B. tO.C[)iltendol"t o4p.m
~_.clbythO

_
,,""'*"' Pf0C11'11&amp;, .... MtVicel. They wl hell' preaentations

_ __

-.~in-~-·
..,.,_ ..... .-ofcolteaguos.

~ -wlbolDtw L . - i. aprogrom
• UnM!tSiiY Colege of 5ytKuse
...._..,. of lha1 _ . .
~ teek force . Mliet1 is c:oncemed With

-

~--:IES·JGSEIMARI
Tho T._,clc:a.- OtoaidO 1ft~

______ -·

~lhequatityol~lnoon­

. - - [)apot1rlfl1l
~U/8.262~
4p,mofCIIon**
Re,_·

aducalion-.

Frx runner lntormation . ce1 83t ·4 30 1 .

........ , . _ . 3·30

~·DEPAIITIIENT

FoatiiiCOILOO'••-U
T_ _
,_, ,

.. ,...
.

T_T~

Or ..,.., _ , . . _ Cotumbo&amp; Un·
VWiity 70 ~ 4 ~m Coffee • 345.,

-

..,...60

•

Tho Fal cl lho ~ blf Eric Benllt!y,
-blfSoLAa..ri' C... tor~·-·
681 _..St. 8 p.m G i n o n l - $3 .
_
__
eobytneC...Ior-

"'""'lrYiio-tocoloctthooel1emawl'ic:h

ANNUAL SPRING CLINICAL DAYS

Whlt' l R5ght With MecUclne Today is the
1M annual Sc:wing Ctlnlc:* Days to be
1· 12 at the Staler Hlton end sponsored by JSle U I 8 Medical Alumni Asaociatlon
..... the Schocl's [)eportmen1 of Conmulng Ed·
topic of

held~

ucallon

More detllls in n..t wMk'a luue.
ANIMAL RIGHTS
The Ani'nal a.th Control Society of Western
New Yottc. is seeking hetp for itS SQey/neuter
InC! edueational,programs. Mecrberships are avai·
aiJ'e aa tolows: lffe member. S 1 50: QOtd l)lltron

......-. $25: lamly · $10: regular
member. S6: associate merrbef . $2: youth mem. S2
Checks 8hoi.Ad be maied to: Aninal Birth

Control Society of Western New Yori&lt; .
Oe&amp;ewwe'AW!nue, Kermore, N. Y. 1-421 7 .

3773

l/oll.rlte«WtnOy col873-4500.
FAll RE&lt;JSTIIA11011
Registration kJr the hll 1979 semester tor
Sluder&lt;SC11f81111y . . . , _ , - ptoce in Hayes
Anne.&gt;&lt; B Lnti1 Moy 11 . sn-.ts may obtain
registration matfiiWs 9 a.m.-8:30 p'.m. on Mondays
end TuesdfYS; 9 a.m.-4 :30p.m. on Wednesdays ,
Thursdays.,.
Students who do not regl1ter by Mev 11 wtn
not be ebN to do 10 until Augul1 27.
MikeS Filmore IColege registration 101' tall
1979 w01 begin o n -· My t8. t979 . in
OAR.

F-.

The month of May d be taknQ on a dis·
tinCtty orient.li navor as UJB joins i'1 a nationwide
cetetnllonofcont......,...Y.-..
rrtiecl "~Today ," the nationallest.Mttes.-e
being __.,.:l Ill' The . - . Foundation and
The . - , Society,

... genenly thrown out when you .......
TheY plan to give wha! they coloc:t to convnunl1y IXganizafions: 5mple Gll1a ond 1n Crisis •• homes far women in trouble with
thei" tves. 8uttak&gt; Food Shetf il run by the
Councl of Ctucl&gt;oa. The - . ... Com·
munity Center m bcated In and helps thole
who live on the lower West side ol ButfiYo.
The Orvonlzation would like your help In thO
colection: lhey'l take care of the redlatributlon.

Mey 11 , u -ta . e-s p.m.: tMv 12. 13,
19, 1-Sp.m.
Ptease bring i1ems to either Fwgo or Wlkeson
check-out area. Wesjey will have tlbMs at

eachwee..

•

......,._, . _ IX c:anned goods you con,
take wfth you wll be ~ - . . . . . . .

utansla. \olet
etc. · clolhoa,
.....PfiPe'l'.
SCM T

-

· -

Taa 8ICI ClW

Sign upnowforOU'- - - """"
My 11 and 12. SlOp in Room T · IX col

831 ·54451or-.
STUOY SKllLS LAB
The Stuoy Lob at the UniYorslty Leaning
366 Baldy Hal, ia opeo few Momg n

Center ~

-Tuesday - twld study
·11Hotn
: Mondly.
Thlndey,
a.m.· I010p.m.:
Wed-

nesday m Friday, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. The lab la
open to all UIB students.

WAmNGPLACE

•

)'he v.11t1ng Place Is ,.., fiX " poot"' wrilora: M'a
o - ..,.,..,lor el Wlllora. v.11y no1 give yoonott

the of tocelvlng · - about your •
-.;7 We'nl ot338Boldy Hllll, Cotrcxa.
The ho&lt;n oro:
12_.: nlghto,
except Friday. 6-11.

-vs.

tnc. ..,.. heighten 1\mericen

consclouoness of oont~ . - .:· Profosaor Tlkako MChi • . _ - o f the.-,.
eae P\'ogfw!1 of UIB'sint..,;w, English~
lnltitute(IB.J)
•
Much of Professor Michi's collection of contempc:wwy ~ prints wil be on vNtw from
May 4-June 1 In the mer All Goloty tocateO on

c.-

..... filth floor or
Hllll ot A~me&lt;st .
The uttition demonStt1lles the wide

rlnQ8 of

- "'-Y t o - · catt;grapNc
tochnlquea.
oont.._.-y-· '"""-

Exhibits

-·- ·----AC OALLEJIY Ex-T

Woo1&lt;sof-U / B~-Jolw1

Shokoll. .,m-.. AC Oale&lt;y, 30
T1Yough Moy II .

e:-x

AIITHROMUIBJII
" " - of tt. toc1t .,..;ngo or~­

On Friday, May II , Y&lt;ri&lt;o ll&lt;ada. aaoclate

~

--- ttwoug11~. 11a.m .

wllond oiMio demon·
.·A-Sketchoi--AII."
To be held il 214 Talbert. Prof. tkecll'alecture
ia ac:hedlMd from 10:30 a.m. to 12 noon .-ld
again~ 1 p.m. to 2:30p.m.
On 5atlroay, Moy 12. begmlng ot 8 p.m..
filma. Farm Softv Ill' JoiW1 NoiNo1
ond Shint.. - - ......... ,........ 1&gt;1'
Peter Grtli . ... be screened In 170 MFAC.
Ellco!l•
F..., Song ...,.._ JoiW1 No!hln wu the
-torofthe ....... Tho ...... WhoFoiFWl1ll 1ho loa. Ill' Yul&lt;ib Mial*na. wllicl1
Nnotlcona in • ,_, -.1ng Klia

to 4 p.m.• and on......,..,, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

a....,..

Pl'ol""""' of Orionlll All et Waaocto
T~.

two.--

On The Air
IIAY4
COIIVEMA~

II THE AliT&amp;: E-. Hor-

riolllntoMewa~T..ioy, -

c.M(cnannat 10). 6':30p.m.

•

· eo.rtar

IIAYT
riolllntoMewa_,._,
COIIVEMA- II THE AIITS:
_
EMI1or
__Hor·.

Kriltofteqon,

Aa . - ... t ellgion.
~..,..of
_
_SIW!to
_ _-

tocils lot -

Ita

Into - - . , - y; M hall

-·
., - ---·

unlty•wol•atoa..lor-~ .

Tho..,abouiM-~-

~=:::;::::J~"'=

_..,....,-.sl60 - - -

the- -lortt. · Tho
-pr-...ry-ona.-ondMo!dco
U 1B't ~ k-1 . . Clllllnllan Ia beftQ

- - ...-ce Jrom AD6 ond N.V

-blftt.Ccunclon-. . ..
tho reu. ~. .. 0111ce or

Stete Ccunol on 11&gt;0 All:l

~ In orgenlzlng a ....,.. · coloQuia
and In c:oordinotion of r-at In the teochlng of
,..,.,.,;ooca.-lullherlntormation. contact Or. PaA
L Gor;;n, ~ of the group, 01 83&lt;&gt;
2177 .
YOU LEAVE?
Wesley F.,...,.llon (UnlteO Methodist Compur--

Notices

in

lJolo&lt;l~
Pow1&lt;w'..oy, lhehOIM
oftheU/BAiumri-.
~ J. Ia c:tWmon of tho 50111
~-.t. Hoiaa-lnthe--

NEW GRADUATE GROUP
A o.-- Group i'l Semk&gt;tics haS been estab1ished on ClfT'CJUI and has receiVed the liP"
...,.,.. of the Graduale Schocl. The group wll bO

PUUINING ON TliiiOW1NO OUT ..-a&amp; WilEN

JAPANTOOAY

Thursday- t 0

F-

The · uolng Rod ()osa vohidea. wll
pick up ~ the looCI .. the EpiscojlOI

Wltl1., Lnstable petrones&amp;,

8p.m.

licOnOOd-"' -

volun- - - 1or the Moeis·On·- Pmgnwn or
m Erie Co.• nc. DiVers . . needed on
ond
t..t-. 10:30 a.m.
S'ld1 :30p.m.

rac:rulting
' Buffak)

the..,...-

Wet• and Ice on the Moons of Jupiter and
S.tum. [)' Ouwayne Anderaon . dean. Facutty of
Nah.nl Saences Md Mathematics 70 Acheson .

- b·· ~
· Tho
wrtou&amp;loono
of wale&lt;
ll'ld
ilto vapor
lnd ice modl.iate
.......,..., ahiltsi'l the_,.,'aclimolo ttYoogh

IEA1.$oON-WHEEI.S PROGRAM
Tho Gr- aJIIalo Red ()osa ~ 10

million.
Philadelphia Story, Katharine Hepburn,
James Stewart and Ca-y Gralt. Is a witty, en·
gaging story of upper-dass Hepburn "'""""
by ex-hOablnd Grant and col\.mnisl Stewart.
Otten haied as cne of the most auccessful of ·
CClfTlll&lt;hs of the 1930s.
Humoresque sun Joow'l Crawford .,d Jol'vl

GEOlOGICAl SCIENCES
PEGRUM LECTURE SEJIIES"

Or. Mdoraon'stolkwiiC&lt;Mifthelolloww&gt;Q:
w.r.- ..:Hoe ttxett a mljor Influence on the

-

UUAB WEONESOAY NIGHT ALMS•
Phlladelphle Story, 7 p.m.; Humoresque,
9:05 p.m Conference Theatre, ~e . Free ad·

~ . ~~Center
A !mOly toPe.

QEOI.OGICAL SCIENCES
PEQRUM LECTURE SERIES"
PlaMtlly Watw and Pollr Proceues, Or
~ . . , _ _, . - ,, FocU!y of Natural
Scloncelond Ma!hemotics, UIB. Room 5 . 4240
Aldga Lee. 3:30p.m. Coffee e1 3 .
Or. ~ ~M&gt;gwoy, choinnln or Geology. will
preeentaco•••••oadtwe ecrol and s~d to the
-.cino Gooiogk:ll 5elenc:ea S«lior(s} boiiXe

!rom 10 a.m.·3 p.m. i'l Room 343 -

"""""oe&gt;ermion lor some easy money.

-

tutomg .. oftered Ill' the Moth com• tt. l.WYeroily ~ Center rWv
Ill
.JuotWIIIk""'

Free -

-

guchl . . in W\ off-beat dfwne .tlclut • group ot
Americlna il T'*Yo who set up a Protection

a..foeld ""

How To Tal&lt;e T - Michael w•lamson. Quan.
Nv!tyflla Laboratory. 282 ~ 1·2·20
p.m. Sponoonld blf the AeadWlg and Sludy Sl&lt;lls

MATH TUTORING

AlM"
Houao cl Bamboo (F.-). t46 Oiel-.
7 p.m. SoonarxeO blithe Center lor Media Sludy.
Slack. RyM .., SIW1ey y....,.

-

c.Mrcnannat Hlt. e p.m.

MAY I
COIIIIEIIIIA ~ II THE AliT&amp;: EMI1or

~-

r
io
ll-0:30
-o.m.
·eo.rtar
c.M
(cnannat
101.
Ntlo May
e.
7p.m.

�lloy 3, 1171

'I

Dance
Cultural Affairs plaRs a
summer festival witn Artpark;
3 ·major companies will visit
July 31 through August 10 will be a
summer dance festival at U I B, reports
Esther Harriott, director of the Office of
Cultural Affairs , wh ich Is arranging to
share three m~J or dance companies
wlthArtpark.
The companies, slated for Aug ust
performances at the cultural center In
t-loton , are the Paul Taylor Dance
Company, Merce Cunningham &amp; Dance
Company, and the Bella Lewi tzky Dance
-

~dfi1ce of Cultural Affairs has
WOI1&lt;ed out, wltlj the financial help of a
number of campus organizations, what
It hopes will be the first annual summer
collliboratlon with Artparl&lt;.
.....1
..,_,

Tartor: a . - t - o f Martha

Setono organizing his firat company
21 ,_.ago, Paul Taylor was a soloist
with the Martha GrWwn Company. Hla
choreOgraphk: signatures 8ra speed,
aw.tiCiam and, freq.-tly, comedy.
Cunwntly doing a thlrtl at the
City Center In New York City, the Taytor Coillpmy 11M toured the United Stales
- *Oec!. II Y9U " - ' t - them In
live performance, pemaps you caught
u.nonTV.
.
Taylor ~ a wor1&lt; for
Rudolf Nureyev ..., Taylor company
- - Bettie de Jong , whk:h was
111own on
WNET 11M brl*lcMt a
ilocu-181Y. "P8ii1 Taylor: An Artlat
..., hla Work"; ..., • parJormance II¥
the Compeny lor the PBS .,.._ In
"--ea" . . . . aired laat yew.
cr1tk: Clive
has called
Tay!O(a group •one Of the moat exciting, lnncmatlwl- deiiQ_hllul dance
_ . . . I n the world ." ~ K!MelaOff, atao writing In Tile N- Vorl&lt;
tl-. eahoea thla: "They . . among
lha In the wor1d, not lilmply In
ol tectlnlque, bulln their commit•- ' to art ."
In Augult, the Paul Taylor Company
will do laclu...-nonatratlona In the
Cornell TheaiN which will Include axdenc&gt;carpta from Taylor'a _ ...._
• · Muter c l - will be g'-1 In the
denca atudloa of Hamman ..., ol Cln
Gym on the Main
c.mpua. Tha
...... . . wall ........ cleuM by the
Balla t.wiiZII¥ Conlpany , _ belowl.
. . belflg ~ tiVougll the Offk:e for
~~hom which Ng-

cas·

o.-

a.m.

a-

lalllltall...,_ .. .......,..

'nle"-'T...,~ya-wlll
be held on AUIWt • 1 - 2:10 .m.,
2:41- • :11 p.. . ... · -II p.m. t::;e

.,....

pnlllloua ......... Ill - - .. , .

Cunningham plans ' Events' In the gym
No one outside of Martha Graham
has Influenced modem dance as much
as choreographer-&lt;lancer Merce Cunningnam, who, with ·his company, will
pertorm two " Events" at U/ B, on July 31
and August 1 at 8 p.m. " Events" are an
assemo lage of sequences and combi nations from the Cunningham repertory ,
and are diffetent at each performance.
(One " Event" was broedcast on PBS's
" Dance in America" In 1978.} A gymnasium lends Itself particularly well to
this form , so the " Events" will be
danced In Clar1&lt; Gym, not at Artpark.
Cunningham, also lni erested In video
technology, has created worl&lt;s especially lor this medium. 'Westbeth ," for
example, Is a video piece d irected by
Chartes Atlas and Cunningham, wh ich
explorea the combination of the two
forms , and shows choreognsphy craated for the camera. A new way of
looking at danee emerges, and the
results are both Interesting and beautiful : the sculptural effect of massed
bodies seen through the tens , the
-ract patterns and textures created
by cloaeups of the material ol leotards;
the way the camera can vary the
enlr1lncea and exits, the foreground
and blockgrounds.
Cllartea Atlas..., Merce Cunningham
plan a video-dance - . t, tentallvely
echeduled lor the J - Keeler Room
(oppoelte Cornett Theatre! on Augult 4.
A•1MIIectlon of videotapes of Merce
Cunningham &amp; Dance Com~y (from
the PBS ''Oance In America series, as
well as "Fractions," "Blue Studio. "
"Weatbeth" ) will be shown, alter which
Atlas and Cunningham will discuss the
partk:ular problema and challenges of
combining &lt;*loB and videO, and will
an- questions raised by tHe audience. Even II video (or dencel doesn't
partlcular1y lnt-t you, It's a t11111t to
· liaten to one ol America's creative
giants, Merce Cunningham, who speaks
In 1111 U!IUSUmlng, articulate lashlon .

c.tln:"'~:::='L11a

Lewltzky
Company Is not as wall knowl) In the
East as the Tartor and CU!Inlngham

=·d~'
~t~C:O:.f.'~er~~
Bella Lewltzky, together with Mikhail

Baryahnlkov recefved the American
dance world1s equivalent of an Oscar:
the Dance Magclne Ann~ Award .
Mtas Lewltzky has exerted a ~olound
effacl on &lt;*loB education In America;
. H Ia thus both IDDrODriate and fortuitous, the Cutturar Affairs Office savs •

'Noo-Pn&gt;fi• Org.
U.S. P PAID
Buffalo, .Y
Plmnot No.ll l

Mere. C....nlngt.m'a

that Lewltzky and members ol her
company will give an extensive series ot
classes during their residency on the
U/B campus throughout the week of

A~::::.:· classes

In technique (one
series lor beQinnera, and one lor Intermediate-advanced studentsl In Lewltzky repertory and In choreography will
be g iven , with Miss Lewltzky teaching
the chOAIOgnsphy classes heraall, e.:
wall as visiting each of - the other
clasMs at least once.
• All classes will be given from August
6 through 10, with reg istration through
Credit-Free Programs. Miss Lewltzky
"!Ill also present a lectura-demo, "The

..._...me.'

Art oJ Dance," with the full company;
th is will be In the Cornell Theatre on the
evening of August 6. In eddltlon , the
company will be giving seminars, open
rehearsals, and company classes open
to observers.
The piece de resistance to end the
week's residency, ,uggeeted by !'ather
Harriott, will be a dance created es·
peclally lor the Greek-pillared structure
beside the lake, Balrtl Point. When
Harriott explained to the Lewltzky Company manager that Belrtl Point Ia solid
concrete- I.e. would H ruin tha dancers'
feet? - the manager uaurad her that
they'd be delighted to tackle the project
In sneakera.

•TIAA/CREF
( k . . , - l, col.4}

Annually, all participants receive a
statement ~often referred to as a " blue
and yellow') showing a breakdown of
contributions, the present accumulation In the account , and the anticipated
annual Income, were the account to be
settled now or In the future. Burnett advised all those who have not yet racelved this year's statement to contact
the N.Y. ol(lce at (212) olll0-9000.
As reti rement becomes an ectuallty,

=?~~A: o~~~~~~~ ~~~~~';ll.Y~

oftlce six mont~s prior to retirement Is
suggested . During the appointment,
projections and estimates under each

option will be provided.
As a '!!lp&amp;rate part of retirement
Income plAnning, a tax deferral annuity
(TDAI program Ia available to all employees, Including · Civil Service. At
least five per cent ol an Income can be
deferred. Burnett shoWed that tax deferral can Increase savings o - a 20-year
period some 70 per cent over a regular
bank savings account .
Booklets describing the TIAA/CREF
program and the TDA are available

th~r~~~~=l ~~f:,~~~~=~~inars

l or discussion ol the TRS and ERS retirement plans In future months.

Tlme for Holl.day pay waivers
Holiday Pay Waiver forms wh ich en-

::~c=:::.=cc:l':n";,P~J"r~r ~~~It

clays worl&lt;ed are available through each
employee's department , the Payroll Oe1&gt;&amp;'1ment Indicates . These forms need
not be completed, P~oll saxs, " II you

='.: royw'~~~t&gt;!'~~~.tf~ ::..r:
compensatory time Is binding toe all
holidays worl&lt;ed during, he entlre fiscal
year- from Aorll 1, 1979 through March

31 , 1980."
For those employees elec!lng com·
pensatory time fn lieu of h6'11day pay,
the original form should be. fO!warded
to the Payroll OHice and a c:PPY Ntained
In the department's Illes. The deadline
lor electing compensltory time for holidays you may be required to work /s

Ma~~!t!mploy- cannot opt for
compensatory time and musl be pald
for any hollday_s worl&lt;ed. ·

�''BOOSTING BUFFALO'S
RENAISSANCE''

,_ .w ·e lcOme .t o
..
· IJ/B'S
_ Eighth A•nQal ·:_·__ _
om-..uili--ty/
Univer~ _
.
Day
'

I

-

Sunday, May 6 ~ 1979

l
j

Aaaherst .
Campus .
State
Ualversity
of New York

.atBaf.al

•l.JnMnily at Buffalo In the )11!111'5 "'-i
To thelltaally hundreds of membon ,
of the 001l11TU111y, the faculty, staff and
studllnts we expn115 our '-rtfelt thanks
lor l11lllmg this Conrrunity/I.JrWonlty
Day a 118)1 opedal on&amp;
Tagottw we will' Boost Buffalo's

IWIIIiiNnce- and-~.....-!.
.............. Oiolrnwl

�-A mherst Campus

�11

CU!JU!NS IIAU.
L-GO-S:OOp.-.

o..-tmrt ol El9lsh Oprn Houk
p.a, Slluorman Reading llo&lt;lm Rm

'

318).

_- 1 3 STATLERCQJOIISSARY
1:00-S:OOp-::.,.

Oprn Hou..., tours, baked goods . . .

c:arr.- bus tours step at ConwrasMy,

17 lllJIIIILE (I'll~ E.illac:atloa
FaciUtv)

· 1:00-S:OOp.•.
Athletic ~ and specta,tcr pertldpallon l!lll!l'lts; YMCA of Buffalo and
Erie County pbysical fitness exl-iblt

18 NORTON HALL

1:00- 5:00p .•.
Academic Arena, Cormullty Exhillts,
~·Exhibits (Ground floor!.

1:00-S:OOp.•.

_

Musbl enter1alnment (Waldman Thea- ter; first ~ Pro!Pnr African Cultunol
CenU!I:! Perfaman (100 pm); ArMerst
Sweet Sixteens (I.:OOk Amherst Varsity
Singen (200t Gray Pllnthers Dance
Troupe (2:301; Spectra Perforri&gt;g
Ile ~ (300k U/B Music Department Master Oass (400~

n-

S:OO- 5:00 p.-.

Room.

.Presldenrs Rea!ptlon (Ilffln

Ground Floor, Norton Hall).

19 TALIIERTHALi

1:00-S:OOp.•.
Academic Arena, Business Fair, Can-

~Exhlbb~jlc&gt;orj.

A

•

j

·•

FOUNDERS' PlAZA (eo-to
pant ...._.. C.... HaD (6)
_ . O'llrlaa HaU (7)
1:00- 2:10p .•.
Concerts: Sweet Home Senior Hl!jl
. School Concert Band and Stllrpoint
Wind Ensemble.

S:OO- 4:10 P·•·
Conoerts: Panama Centr8l Hl!jl School
Concert Band and Niagara-~
Concert Band
4:10p .•.
A....-ds Ceremony, Marching Bands
In ti1l! 1!111!1'1! of rain, ~ bands will
perfam In The-Bubble.

B

FLINTLOOP
1:00-S:OOp.•.
laf-•doa Ceater

C

IIAJIILTONLOOP
1:00- 5:00p .•.
Campus bus tours. Buses nm continually, departing from East side of loop,
Other stops at 'Ellicott eorr.&gt;lex
Stat"!_~.
•

a

S:OOp.•.
Tug (Y Waz Contest U/B Athletic ~ .
partment vs. U/B Depm1ment of-Public
Safety (on field near Loop).

'

.-

0

PlJTNAIIWAY
2:00p.-..
l'alade
~ 5nor Hil#l Schocl. Nllg-

..wt.lfllld.

T--

a---.

Gnnd w.id. NQrlh

.c.. &lt;Anini. -s

c-.1,

l..ockpart

~School MIRNng Binda.

Nril

s.nar

I

l\

'

I

�Schedule Of Events
AI.L AFTERJIIOON

1:00-5:00 •.•.
Communtlv'Exhlblt. - Capen, Talbert,
Norton Halls, !JOUI&gt;d floor
Academic Arena - Capen, Talbert,
Norton Halls, !JOUI&gt;d floor

Business Fair - Capen, Norton, Talbert

Halls. !JOUI&gt;d floor

Athletic competitlons: opectator participation ewnts, physical fitness exhibit -

The Bubble
Open House: Department of lndusbial
Engineering, tours and demonstrations
-Bell HaD
Open House: Department of English Oscar SIM!nnan Reading Room, Rm
318, Clemens Hall

...

- Ubrary tours - Lockwood Memorial
Ubrary, Capen HaD Ubraries (Science
and Engineering Ubrary, l!nder!J'adtlate
Ubrary, UnlYersity Archives)

Open /-lo~ Department of Physics
(imddemonstratlons)- Fronczak f-!all
Campus bus tours - Depart from Hamtlton loop (glass shelter, East Side, facing Capen Hall) Joseph Ellicott Complex
(tunnel stop near Creative Crafts Center)
and Statler CommisS81)1 (main entrance,
near comer of Kenefick Place and
Sprague Road)

Balloon rides: Erie Sa~Bank "Big E"
Balloon rides - Fleldnorth of Fronczak
Hall (wind and weather pmn~tting)

First Aid Station - Rm 51 Capen Hall
PsychO~

exhibit. children's

story-

telling participatiOn - Mobile Van,
Courtyard between Capen Hall and
Fronczak Hall

me

i:oo- 4 :00p.m.

College of Mathematical Sciences dem• onstrations - Moog synmesizer (Rm
1007. Wilkeson Quadrangle. Ellicott
Complex~ computer terminals and pr&lt;r
grarnma.bje calcula~qcs. (Rooms 110-112
Wilkeson Quad!

l:OOp.m.

me

2;)0p .• .
Gray Panthers Dance Troupe - Woldman Theater, first level, Norton Hall

3:00p .m.

Concert, University Wind Ensemble
(continues through 4:30 p.m.) - Katharine Cornell Theater, Fillmore Center,
Ellicott Complex· ·
Tug 0 ' War Cohtes~ Athletics Dept vs. Public Safety Officers - Held near
Hamilton loop _-

Concert. Sweet Home Senior High

Panama Central High School Concert
Band- Founder's Plaza

School Orchestra - Founder's Plaza
(first .level courtyard, between Capen
Hall and O'Brian Hall)

1:30p.m.
Amherst Sweet Sixteens· Choral Group

Broadway Review,- Spectra Performing
Theater Company- Waldman Theater,
Norton Hall

- Waldman Theater, Norton Hall

3:00- 5:00p.m.

1:40p.m.

R~ U/ B President and rv'IIS.
Robefl L Ketter and staff - Tiffin
Room, ground floor. Norton Hall

Starpoint Wind Ensemble -

Founder's

Plaza
3:40p.m.

Bake Sale.pnd Open House - Statler

2:00p. m.

CommisS81)1

Parade of Bands: Putnam Way (Roadway nearest Amherst Campus Center~
Featuring Lackawanna Senior High
School, Niagara-Wheatlleld High School,
Oleektowaga Central High School,
Grand Island Senior High School, North
Collins Central High School and Lock·
port Senior High School Marching
Bands. Master ol Ceremonies: Stan

Crofts demonstrations -

Cmative
Crafts Center, !J'Olllld floor, Fillmore
Center, Ellicott Complex

-

Mm~~ am~~
Museum ol An~.

~

Second level
aplanadp, Flllmore Center, Ellicott

Ban-on .

Niagara·Wheatfield High School Concert Band- Founder's Plaza

4:00p.m.
Department of Music Master Class (con·
tinues to 5:30 pm.) - Waldman Theater, Norton Hall

4:10p.m.
Marching Bands Awards Ceremony F.ounder's Plaza

Joseph Ellicott Comp~x
LEVEL1

~

8 :00 p.m.

.

Concert, Onlverslty Choir Main Street Campus

Baird Hal~

_

FIRST AID

· Amherst Campus Center. Attend·
ants will be available all afternoon in'
first aid station in Room 51 on me!JO.lll&lt;i ..
floor of Capen Hall
_
Ellicott Complex: A University Health
Service clinic is located in Room ll3,
Porter Quadrangle (ground floor, near

a

me

World Premiere, Fall of
Amazons. a
new play by Eric Bentley, U/B professor
of Theatre - U/ B Theater, 681 Main
SL Downtown Buffalo.

African Cultural Center Performers Woldman 4neater, first floor, Norton
Hall

(

~

PoetJy Reading: U/B English faruity
memtkrs wtll read from
works of
~te Ruthven Todd - Special Collec·
lions Area, Room 420 Capen Hall (visitors may take Undergraduate Ubrary
elevators to fourth floorl

Gane Terrace~

AID FOR THE
DJSJ\Q\~:1) . !., w.-, 1 ~
Information on .a-ccessib lavatories,
telephones. elevalors, fountains and
other modified facUlties may be obtained
at a booth operated by U/B's Office of
Servi&lt;;gs for the Handicapped cin the
ground flgor of Capen Hall To locate
the booth, enter Capen .1-jall thr~ the
triple doors on the North s. i r Hamilton loop) and take an irn
· te right
turn.
The Ellioatt Complex features modilied public lavatories on
first floor of
each quadrangle, and a modified telephone on
grotind floor of
Millard
Ftllmore Center, across from
Katharine Cornell Theater. There are no
modified drinking fountains. M outdoor
esplanade on
second level connects
all six quadrangles. Ramped exits on
both sides of the Creative Crafts Center
lead to an underground service road and
bus stop. There are curb cuts leading to
parking lots near Newcomb Terrace
(Wilkeson Quad). Gane Terrace (Porter
Quad) and Moody Terrace (Richmond
Quad).
&lt;: ,_

me

me

me
me

me

me

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

VOL.10 • NO. 28
APRIL 26, 1979

A better recruitment effort aimed .
at attracting more qualified stl!dents,
urges Faculty admissions panel
' .

~~~~~=!..~~3~-

to get better Information on variables
crttlql to edmlaelons policy; the 1'8port
of tfle Committee on Admissions~ to be
aired at next Tuesday's Faculty ""'nate
· meeting, .contends.

Ex~~J:O~me~~rs ~ ~"''J~

Senate to back a series of specific
recommendations.
·
'{o raise the quality of .the ,applicant
pool, to bring the University a di~IIY
of atuden1s, and to persuade the admitted student to actually ~tnroll , the
panel • haa
daflnlte
views
on
what 'Should be done~
•
,
1. There should be a greater commitment of both financial and human

Capra

ra~ug;:!os'~!:'l~tlt~~·ra· aaeul'8
that there Is maximum coordination

bet.W.n vartou'-lndlvlduala and offices

His faith in the 'average guy'
remains unshaken; if that's
schm~ltz, then sue him!
about a feud the two
had li1 the 1930s.

~

In the reCruiting prooeaa. Possibly a corn,mlttee on nacrultlng could
be formed to~ affo&lt;ta, or poaal~
ly a full-time COQI"dlnato&lt; would bel most
effective.
.

moYie

3. Particular

~t

should

Immortals

ho-:c::~~~~ocr~~~~·;;~~

=

be 111ven to facultlea and ~-1810
·partlc=..~lvely In recniftment.

4.
follow-lhnlugll ehoulcl ...
made with admitted-·
"ThiS can take the 1onn of ~
contact from faculty, allllftnl f611d/ot
edmlnlstratlon, of IIIIIN elfwctiiM- ol
scholarahlr. monay 10 attr.ct
1ty studen a, and o1 ~
- by departments t.o 8CCII*_nt
~~~Y l~~ edvan_. ot -.ling

15

..

Information gathering . . . . . .
_ The panel ildmlta t ' - recommanclatlons are vague "beceuM 1ll.e Ia eo
little hard ~ either on tht en.ctlveneaa or cu!Tellt rilcl'Uitlng pottct.e.
or o~· f~ora which dlff..,tlale a
auccesaful from en uneucceealul student once he enrolle hera." Exttilslve.
Information Ia naqlllnad, they uy. It Ill'
Imperative thai further attention be
given to the following, the penal rwcommenda;
1. -Study of tha ralatlonahlp bet-. ·
aclmlaalona crtterla and a l'8ft08 or
, per~onnence- lncluclng - -

-·-.·-......

belL
Or8ndfllthlr' not gociMthlr
·
In hla ap_.,ce at U/8 last ltwll2-yew-i!ld ~ wu more
MIW than • godf-. mono ·

. . . . -.~mlgiW!t, wflo at- hla
peek cll....:ted a clutcb of fJime which

::1"forc:: -~Oll;::cr~.=.··=
Regents
clarify
1-year rule

hete
two days of talks, Interview&amp;,
and offiCial mMla .wtth members of the
departments of History and. Media
Studlea. The Academy of Motion
Pictul'8 Arts and Sciences wu the
sponsor.
Ti me and again during those two
days, Cepra confirmed and realfinmed
hla enduring, unalterable faith In the
basic goodneae of the av81'8g0
Arnertcan.
Given all that's happened since he
was lut ~lve In movies (allenallon,
dlslllualonment, Vlatnam, Watergate,
CIA ecandala), could he sustain that
• gnaat faith" today? someone uked .

...=:o~d.Jm~~~~~~t!t'ron d~~
~~~ ~~~~ry ~~at.:O~iaae~llton

Cepra flelcled question after question, aori&gt;etlmee wanclertng off, aome-

=-~.::=:t&amp;'S:.y,

but

What's'*,_.._...,

"lt'a a Wonderful Life," he aald, juet
Mhealwayaen- lllal question. "It
l)fObllbly uya what r·.. '*&lt;! trying to
' uy In film better then eny other, and It
uya It Ill a plot lonn Of eiNalulw wllk:h
hed nbt ' * &lt; ! - or"-11 belora." The
- a look a1 what might , _
hliptlened had tha hero - juet en
-.geguy---bom.

They make a University,
alumnus Earl McGrath says
at pedication of· lockwood Library

..... . . . .. . . . of . . llelto'
""-TV ..... of
tMI • • 4lhlctl
Into a .....,., Of

....... c.:r- ...

• ...,.. :,:-::: to dO what they

_,t, but I think 80IM of tllem . . nuts.·

. . • . They'd be better off dOing
- h l n g orlgiMI."

..,.. __ ...... ...,..on

"' dOII't 1111nk I a 111m I'd
thloW .-y. Too muoll
tnto It,
-tttt'aaflop • •.. tw _
_,a
'bed' film, only ' u - " ' 1 ' - . •

a-

Harvard Ia the J.P. Morgan of
Alllllric=-n higher education. It t .
hundrada of mllllona.
But lt'a nat called H.-d aa a rwult
ot one -.1 of all - Clllll .

ll'att~'*:r"::~

p:-prawtdM lila";a.: lllnfy~

............ ........
...=....
. -c..-"·-.
. .'" ,r. "'C.
.
..,,0
"WI.: ;:::....:,
--!EH
.......
w.wy._._,,..._, ..........
"'*-•1118 ...... for Ita tllhialllciMI

thla
lit
...........
-~=

Juat «*tulold 1ft • -

··

..... 8:' ...........

,.;;:,•J ,,cr.::.=
:.s-::..:
. . . 'Ca!IM.'-11,-1

~:ar~J.

--ol

~.

u.s.~

~

In piQWicllftg hla ,.,_.. atlllaollon to

,

�l
.c• .

~

- - -....

I'QII

111'1
1977
1916
1975

&amp;-

%

113
63

31304

29119

3614
3353

22al
1723

~

368S

2002

54

---- - ·- -

- . IUf -~-~ OFFADH1191 EIITBIIII&amp; FIIOM HIGH SCIIOOL

• • Jl

AO
49
55
60
51

1C78+ 1255+ ~
1031
1030

-

7056

All

1177+

)

1213
1268

-

Adllll

10929
9445
8370
9058

12418

19
16
-18
18

1539+

90
66
56
64

794ll
7156
6647

8814
10925
11903
11089

1

Appl·

%

Eo-

-%
App

%

14539
15256
1437-4

Tllll
%

App

,.E•....

All

88
65
55
63

3017+
2432+
2212
2269

28
26
26
25

..

+Poicldo!*llt:-.-1-didnol-:

A.pr-1126 , 1~7~

-

...

%

-

eSenate Admissions report
~-·

......,

=~~=. '::l~:l~P.:r~~:~~\~

EIIIIOWIEIIT OF OUE ADMITS IY FAI:IJLTY

.-...cl~ofatudy .
- ~-"Hopefully, the Unlwnlty will agaln
become ela to be more ...ectlw In the
future, In which caM appropriate admlalona criteria will again become en
llnciONnt laaue."
2. Study of tha nature and effectlve,_ol_...avltlnt«meggee.
AmariO
would be "a m - t
.....,.. atudy. .. . to how thl
UnhOnlty 1e peroaiWid by potential
atudlnta and by parenta, counsel0111,
and olhara who may Influence their
-ofadlool."
3. Study of lectors related to attrltlon/-lon - "specifically whether
the lowerltlg of admissions criteria

FrtAm•

525
41'1
406

IUnagomor&gt;l
Nat SCI&amp; Ml1h
SocSCi&amp;Adm
Artii&amp;EnvDos
GeniUn
EckcStudies

358
182
45
939

105
450
466
267
' 331

154

28
362
3

%
5.8
24 .9

373
462

25.8

203
384

14.8
18.3
8.5
1.6

%

%
7.0
21.1
26:1 ..
11.5 ~
21.7
12.0

124

i12

161
398

• 0.6

0.3

12

8.6
16.2
24.8
18.3

162
168
153
239
182
267

201
498
272

20.8
-1$.7
10.5
26.0
14.2

357
6

0.4

265
172
170
191
282

376

296

M

-

1171 '
%
18.9
8.7
11 .9
20.8
10.6
16.6

1976
%
12.6
11 .6
9.9
28.4
13.5
11.8

li77

13.0

12.7

111

5.9
18.9
23.0
24.6
. 11.2
140
2.4

58
186
227
242
110
138
24
199

Atts&amp;lefters

are related to

Eng&amp;Appl Sci

...._..,
-SCi

NatSci&amp;Milh
SocSd&amp;Adm
Arch &amp;Env Des
GeniUnl¥

103
194

296
218
142
210
24
131
7

Educstudies

11 .9

17.6
2.0

12.9
20.2
15.4
22.6

466

17.0
11.0
10.9
12.2
18.1
29.9

1.0

167
14

6.9

13.7
14. 2

155
0.6

11

%
117
13 0
92
30.2
10 8
12.0

'

Tflftlfn 1

llitrttlonand-tion."
4. Compiling better data on graduale
adml-.
~ Adllll ...ona panel doesn't went
to undertake this wortc Itself. "However,
• lila principal body for deWIIoplng
SUNYA8 . a:tmlaalpns pollclee, this
oommlttee should be lnvoiWid In thl
daalgn and execution of thaae studies
~vy to their resulla,• the report _

a &amp;&amp;Judes EOP &amp; F«eign Studen1s

report=

DICIIMIII..-..,
•
The
there wu a
decline In
for .Fall 1978
beceu8e of en
ly large freshman
and a 15 per cent drof In number
o f = - - · "Aa a resul ~per cent
of
~admitted ."
Since
will be limited to
IIPPIO : ;
In ~ember 1979

MEAN VALUES OF EHTElUNG OUE FRESHMEII 011 SllECTBI ·QUWTY MWUIID
YIAII

a..

011111

llh JD

SAT

;!.,~n.._: W'a~~.::l!:io':l'a ~~
IMIIImenta

1975

1916

1977

%
4.7
25 .1
22.8
19.4
17.1
8.7
2.2

518

Ms&amp;Ltttn
Eng&amp;Appl SCi
HoaldlSCi

~~~~~ ~~:r~w:

be more .....,...._ But, lila panel says,
It will 8tltl be - v to admit about
ao per c.~t of ~lcenta ( - on a
~io of
to admlta of
The_,..,._ found "aoml deer ne"
In lila -.ge C1118111Y of entering
....._, In lila yall'e lkloa 1972. (See
Tllbla.) The flrat wM of 11711 admits Is
llbcM ,1171 but below 1877 In ..-age .
quality, IIIey My.

Na~ %

·

1171

u-

by admllllona policies

1

wAiitt

VERI.

MATH

89.1
86.3
88.8
88.2
90.3

8~.0
78.4
SJ:8
82.5
811.9

508'
482.1

581
556
575
568.7
592

n

n

88.9
84.3
90.8

89.4
90.5
90.9

n
88.4
87.6
89.8

!Wilt

90.1
88.8
89.3
88JI
90;5

85.0
80.9

•

9\.6

.25!:

91 .5'
91.3

S~T

&amp;"'-

GPA•

VEJII .• MATH

494
489
499
491

83.4
"&amp;1.3
87.4.

.5()9

561
550
558
556
577

5iil
500.9
521

•

88.7

86.0

•n

90.3

·'llllors., appiclniS wllo WWI - " ' · ln&lt;IJ!ding 111001 admft~ wt1o did 1101 enrol.

entering In 1976, about "four per cent
IDove what mlotrt be expecte.d'' given
our -us, leWI1 of Mlectlvlty and past

~=~~~~
~u=:: :~
1877-78.

hu found that

•A natlllnal -

r~==~ :=:.:::.1.:~
to drop out • thoaa wttiiiA -.ge of
B

Of aboWI. "The Implication of
&amp;IJHYA8'a- to admit 110101
C llUdlnta Ia OIMoua," the panel

~ 8ltlttiDft.,;. CMt, • raalll!-

WOuld.....,. the need to admit
...__,_ ..._,,

tlc811111,

additional freshmen Who are not as
qualified as the panel ~ould like.

come begging for admlaalon to one of

F- apancl four a11111aht yeera here
•The case of a lreshman entering
here directly from high school and
g_olng through four years to gnduajion
Is the exception rather jhan the . rule.

of all those who apply !RUSt be admitted
to meet enrollment targets, there Is nol
much point In dlacuaalnQ.. policies for
eliminating lll)t)licanta from woslderatlon. ~If Would- more fruitful
.to direct our -vtae toWIId determinIng ' - to find tietter lljlpllcants, and
tow.d llow~o
tt.n once they
..-.oil. The
mull deWIIop a
~ lltqtegy for Ill
INking Itself
-.a... to ..,.,... and Informing
protpecttye ~lcMta of what It hu to

~~~v:~~ert.i~~rn ~h. ':"U:

numbers.''
- '
•"Because of the Shift In tha supplydemand balance, the lmportanl admlsalons queation hu changed froo;n
how to,.,tect the moat Qlllillfle!l trom a-.
pool of applicants who would

•oe

~'1.1~~~ne:~r~~'lr'ao-~lidS:t~.~~

off•."

.one-year program registration .
a~of the ~t'a findings lor
,..... and oonectlon of fectual errono.
If, l!fW ...._.118. lllalnatitutlon's com..-a ... , tha oapartrnertl ooncludes

nc::,:

=:.~=~~ ~~

lion 1 tt1an _.., t
"""''. apeclfiC

ubmlt
rwqur,.;,.,
•• ~~1....wm .

'=~ programs Into1 con1
wl
:t',=~ ~ 1~

J!:

eco.ptat~

plan Ia not lm............. Ia t1w IMtltutlon formally •
~-~ ~=~ of t!'e pro.---... · - .,... _
Ia not
. . . . . . . IIOJIIW IIUIJinta . . to be

._ a......,_ ,...._.ion

. . . . . . ---- ............ allllldy -

...... 1111 ............ - . tn torca

•
~ of OOUI'II offerings
_..........., foi
oomptatlng

""*"'•

.... -"- 11ila "-'I"""'"' _.tlnulng
..

IJIIIOn Oil a limited ballt lor a
If ~ lblllanta~

...,..

llllllllft'l., .

lar II

.,.....
11011....

-

_,

IIWIIfarof

111111111r .....,_ or lnelltu-

· 2.Thechange /n term does not entail
more frequent fMIIUatlon.
"The schedule of evaluation visits Is
determined by the number of staff
evallable end tha resources provided to
lha Des&gt;artment, together with such
external factors .. the liming of.-valua-

~r!~l~s.'!Y

¥Oiuntery accrediting
3. "The one-year tMn reflects the
equa/atatus of aft registered programo .
' Registration Ia bued upon a finding
of • program meeting minimum quality
standards aa outlined In the Regulalions of tha Comonlsaloner. A program
... thermeetaatandardaorltdoee-not . ln
Ita -uatlonr, 1M Deper1ment does
not ,.,.k lnatltutlona on tha baala of
QU811ty. Howe.er, In the paai,1Wglatra- ·
tiona lor dltlerlna petiodallfiWIIha falae
lm-'Dn, enG- IOmlllmea mlalnlerpNtladto-. thai Q118lnat)tutlon
- o f hlglw !lllallty 111M another. An
~Wit* programa naglat- for
.......,._ -lmal per- - •'*no of 'hlghat' quality than
programa naglat- for only
yawe. Infect, lila~~ did
IIDt IIWia auch oomparl10111. •
4. No lnaflfutloM/ ectlon /a requirwd.

-._wllll

"An lnatltutlon wilt not 8dditlonal paperworlt. h will not h - to Initiate
re-registration. The chenga to a oneY- term ..• does not mean that an
Institution must annually apply for reregistration or aubmlt any new InformatiOn. Reglatratlon of all program• at an
Institution will be IWiewild by the

~~.: ':,"'.Jl:

=

r. :::::~

prior notice - hu _ , made, unless
an Institution lnalructo the Department
to discontinue tha registration of a
program the lnatltutlon Is tormlnallng .
A program that currently has an expiration date later than September 1, 1979,
will remain naglat- until Its current
reg lotnatlon !II'Pires. At that time II will
be automatically ,...giJtered lor a
one-ye,er term. ... EAich Institution
should aaaume that thlraglstration of
allexlatlng prognar111 will continue u~!ll
an _.UIIIlon vlalt hu taken pi8C8 .. ..
5. Tile apeclal .,.,.e of profttssionol
prog,.ma - t l y registered without
term Ia at/1/ ultder trill•.
8 . The BED Mlt"CM~tinue to publish
aJ• ...,lila /he In-tory ol
leiWd ~·· which /e used to
1111 TAP .u,JI&gt;I/1/y.

=

�Apcil 26 . 1979

. . . . .1111

•Lockwood dedication
(from page 1, cot 4)

tiy priv~te citizens and contain priceless
collect1ons of matchless value. What Is
now the famous New Vorl&lt; Public
Ll~ary was originalr composed of the
~aJ:~~~t=~~6nx~ .? John Jacob Astor
McGrath . a U / 8 alumnus who served
here for a decade and a half as assistant
to former Chancellor Samuel Gapen
made two " personal observations"'
about " the great debt" he owes the U/ 8
library and Its physical forerunners In
Foster and Hayes Hall.
A part-time /O b In the mid-twenties at
the University s first real central library
enabled him to earn his bachelor's. In
those days, he recalled " modest rooms
In one end of the first floor of Foster
Hall housed the entire library facilities. "
MOTl! significant, said McGrath "was
the contribution that the library mi.de to
those of us who studied here." He was
talking , he said, not about vast bodies
of modern knowledge developed In this
century , but about access "to the
treasury of great wor1&lt;s which throughout the history of Western culture have
perpetuated the humane tradition . Even
in those days when 1he holdings were
only a fraction of today's collections ,
they were adequate to opeh to us the
literature which has shaped the minds ,
the characters, and the spirits of our
people. In this connection It Is
~rtlcularly pertinent to observe that
1

tio~n;~61u~~sk~a~~s o~~o~alti~ 1':;;
works."

Tho principal•
McGrath , speaking at a podium
decorated with floral displays In the
Wold man Conference Theatre In Norton,
was Joined on the platform by an
assemblage of University admlnls·
trators, Library officials, students,
alumni, and Council members. Mrs .
Charles D. Abbott , widow of the University's first director of libraries, was
there as was Lockwood's widow , Mrs .
Margaret Lockwood Lacey .
Using a wheelchair for a series of
trips across the acedemlc spine area,
Mrs. Lacey was a bubbll no, Indefatigable center of Interest at a series of
events throughout the day. "I'll w.ear out
long b8font she does," sighed a·younger member of the family as Mrs. Lacey

bs:t.::~~:.~~~~~~~~~

oVBrtan Hall on her way to the dedication reception In Lockwood Itself.
There, a spread of finger sandwiches
and the babble of excited guests who
were renewing old acquaintances and
taking tours enlivened the usually staid
searches going on In the adjacent card
catalog .
The day'a eventa
" This was one of the nicest days of
my life," Mrs. Lacey was heard to say.
That day began at t0:15 a.m . with the
unveiling of the first of two portraits
which she presented for the occasionthat of Charles Abbott. Abbott 's daugh·
ter , Jane, spoke at brief ceremonies as
the painting was placed In the Friends
Room of the new Lockwood . The
Abbott portrait was done by North
Carolina artist Bet/l Tumer.

Later, Mrs . Lacey' s own portrait by
Pal_ Fried of New Vorl&lt; City , 'was
unveiled In the Lockwood Special
Collections area on the fourth floor of
Gapen .
Next came a gala lunch (beef tips on
rice , fruit salad in a scooped-out
ineapple, lemon mousse) in Talbert
lnlng Room , with dedication prlncl·
pals.

g

Brass and jackhammers
Then on to Waldman Theatre where
the sounds of the University Brass
Ensemble and jackhammers driving
pilings Into the earth for ·a lecture hall
bei ng constructed next door added
zest to the dedication convocation .
Frantic administrators and campus
Security officers chased out of Norton
across the plaza to the construction
fence , arms waving wildly for the
construction crew to stop the noise for
a few minutes.
"Jeez, I thought somebody had a
heart attack," groused the construction
foreman , surprised by the gesturing .
" Nobody told me about any ceremony."
The· hammering stopped briefly , then
started a9ain . Time Is money In the
constructiOn game.
Sounds of that continuing progress
were an appropriate accompaniment to
dedication speaker McGrath's question :
why uin these times when buildings rise
so steadily In acedemlc centers , should
the opening of a new library mar1&lt; the
occasion for special public recognition?"
Simple. he answered .
''The library directly provides the very
life blood of any academic body and
indirectly the intellectual sustenance
without w' .ich no society can In this day
survive ."
Today , McGrath went on , " no college
or university could operate effectively
for 24 hours without extensive library
facilities . Research would be very
quickly devitalized and soon aborted;
teaching would become sterile, and
learn ing would be deprived of that spirit
of advef)ture essential to exploration In
the world of Ideas. It Is unnecessary to

?:it';:~b8t~l: d::lo~~~~f!

oC,: altlhe::.
pects of the lives of our people.
Advances In science, public policy, the
health professions, transportation,
communication , and personal well·
being would soon be halted from the
want of the various media of
communication which libraries uniquely supply ."
Books are pleaauru, too
But there's more.

~':!~~~"!~~:.r~:..: o~f E~;

H;f?:
life as a longshoreman and seaman , to
realize how much access to books can
mean even to a person of humble
cultural origins. The hours he spent
with books not only broadened and
deepened his Intellectual perspectives .
they also Immeasurably enriched the
pleasure he gained through contact
with the great thinkers of all times.
Thomas Lockwood obviously realized
these p~sures and through his
benefactions wished to extend them to
the thousands of other human beings
who use this library."
"We salute" him , McGrath said.

INS sets tighter controls
on foreign students in US
The Immigration and Naturalization
Service has ordered tighter controls on
foreign students In the U.S . INS
Commissioner Laonel J . Castillo announced the new procedures April t1
and said they became effective on April

1.

The actions, spelled out In a
memorandum to the Justice Depart·
ment agency's four regional commissioners, Include spot checks of
Individual students and schools for
possible violations of Immigration laws
and INS regulations , separation In INS
files of student records and those of
other nonlmmlgrants, and monthly

jurisdictions to review student files and
determine whether schools and stu-

~~':, ::;~ ~::l~lt't~.W.!r~~~~~~r~

put all records of foreign students In
separate files to help determine the
number and geographic distribution of
student violators.
Cestlllo ordered field offices to begin

l'f".="t~~~ I~O:~~s;tS:,~~g~lo~!~t~~~~

~W~~. to olNS~?:,1~~art~'r blor~~~

the terms of their edmlsslon to the
United States." He said such violations
would Include failure to attend school
full time, failure to leave the country
after completion of their studies, and
wor1&lt;in~ without INS permission .
Cast111o directed that students not be

students.
castillo said all INS field officers wil l
select at random each month one per
cent of their active student files for
verification. SchOOls will be asked to
confirm In writing that ttiese student•
are In attendanoa and maintaining a full
oourae of study . If students are not
attending school or attending leas than
• full time, attempts will be made to
locale them for lntemewa, he said.
INS offlcera also will vlalt onoa a
month at least one schOol In their

Technical violations would Include such
acts as Inadvertently allowing their
permission to remain In the country to
expire while they are attending school
full time.
The directive also states thet
students who contend they cannot pay
tuition and are unable to attend school
will not be allowed to wor1&lt; full time to
ralsa lunda and will ba required to leave
the country.

~~~~a·~.~.a~~~n-~rerh::-ra ;~~:~r.

'

�Apri126 , 1979

4

VIEWPOINTS
Nukes: two opponents say Billings is dead wrong
EDITOR'S NOTE: Thla fa the MCOnd
hell of a I'MjiOftM to a lett• by E'tfc

=..:~~m.~·c~i:.':.:r.~.~:.r~

BUIInga' ~nr piece which liP'
.,...-.c1 on April 5 strongly pron~- aometh~'N this writ• I• not.

0.. Mr. Bllllncla

The occldenf al Hamsburg Is just one
In a -lea of nuclear occldenls thai
have occumed over the years. It can be
argued that the madla I'8SPOOdad with
S«~satlonallsm; however, I don't think
so In llghl of the fact that Information
was co-ed up by the utility. Even the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission didn't
know what was going on much of the
time. Also, lor the first time, very
detailed lnlonnatlon on nuclear powas made available In a form under·
atandable by no,.technlcally-tralned
people.
1 make no comment about your
•nucl- nightmare" paragraph except
to say that your comments about
=:,:,,:"~~reme and ridiculous.
Radiation w'as released from the
Three Mile Point plant in the form of
nadloectiWI steam vented into the
atmoephere and nadloactlve water

~~m~ntg1 t~~:"~"':t':i"'t.:'~~:

nadlatlon anyone In the plant vicinity
was exposed to was 100 mllllrem ,
except lor lour workers who received an
overdose of gamma radiation . In the
days that followed more radiat ion was
released . It Is reporled that there was
1200mlllirem per hour In a ateam pl ume
aboWI the plant site and that ground
18WIIs were up to 25 mllllrem per hour.
Hl..,.,lma and Nagasaki
The elfact of nadlatlon on the human
body Ia a subjact under a grnt deal of
actentlfic argument. There are levels of

=:~~=u:~::s~~=: :::'~eie~

radiation causes cancer wh ich begins
showing up alter a latency period of live
years or more. Sad aa It Is , the
Harrisburg accldenl will provide a greal
deal of Information on the effects of low
level radiation \much as Hiroshima and
Nagasaki prov ded Information about
the effects of high levels of radiation).
The Unit One reactor at Three Mile
Point shut down as temperature and
praaaure began rising because of loss
of coolant. fllglnleat spread damage to
over one third of the reactor fuel rods
and created a bubble of explosive

~:n~~ ~/t t~he tl~

g,t

t~t;:

former AEC and NRC officials.
Who'a uneducated?
For a person who has made as man)'

errors In a paper as you have, I am
amazed that you can say that other
people are uneducated . II it is true that

1

~r~ are ~~gel he~n~~;~t~eabf~~
reasons? ~ption by government and
Industry? A lack of Information for the
masses? Scientists and engineers

~~~~n~ a::;:,t ~ r~~~e ~ot mt~~

have up to now: all major
technological decisions were made by
business with some help from the
oovemment. Now, however, we the
people have to make decisions about
things that effect our lives. A strati fied
society just cannot work any more.
People must gain control of their own
lives . This can occur only when they are
they

0

helft:~~~ ~~ t=~ :~~:-e:~

nuclear
power and billions more are planned.
Compare this with the money spent on
research and development of appropriate technologies and you see the
fallacy of your statement that more
money Is needed for .. nuclear answers. "
Mydemondo
For what it Is worth, th is is a list of
my "demands" concerning the nuclear
Issue:
I - There must be a moratorium on
all new nuclear construction until the
l:'.,~l!'!'s:::s~:r~~nt storage of high
II - All nuclear reactors in operation

~~vt!~~~a~ ~~~ a~ut~ ~~~d~~~~b~~~~~r~~~
1

safety of their systems. Dangerous
plants must shut down , regardless of
the supposed effect on the economy .
Ill - Public utilities must be put
under public control.
IV - As much money as needed must
be diverted from other sources to the
permanent storage of nuclear wastes .
V - Large amounts of capital must
be diverted from other sources to
research and development In appropriate technologies which it has been

!~:'~v:1 ~ ~~~~u~~~~~~~~z~ ~~~u~~~~

1 1

0

modes.
It Is wrong to stifle Inquisitiveness by
creating an atmosphere hostile to
curiosity. We attend this University as
part of our personal development , to
help us fulfill our potential. Your
contention that the only reason for
attending college Is to get a job falls
apart considering that many students

H~~a~ln~t:.n~~r~f ,/:;,~lt~nolt~e~~

· writing, the core has cooled to 280' F
and peopla are starting to relax
conoemlng a core meltdown. Meltdown
was a poestblllty either through an
explosion of hydrogen gas or If the gas
had expanded In volume as the raactor
cooled. The gas was Wlntell and
catastrophic results avoided. The
reactor remains aerloualy damaged and
:~~:~=t~.;:w IonS! II will take

working population actually are· em-

Thlala aort of a definition . The Union
of Concerned Sclentlat Ia not a group of
thuga from among tha lntetegenala, but
haa aa · Ita membera aclentlats and
engl..-a deeply conoerned about the
dangera of nuciMr po-. _lncloo.:t In
the group are ~ 2500 nuclphyalclata, nucteer englneera, and

backa of my co--wo~ers . I refer to your
stabs at the group of wh ich I am a
member, the Farm City Collective.

'

. . 1221111

... _ _ _ _ pub-

br , . - - of
-...- ..
Tloundoy
,.....,..
s-u.w-.~~yol-

r"'* .,

fluffojo,

fdllorlol -

.... lo-

-.d .. IJ6 o-oita Holl. """'""'· Tol&lt;t-

f'l-f,J6.-.

Drocoor oii'OIIoll&lt; AHoln
JNfo.U I . OoSANTIS

-----

-~
IIOIPT
r. M.UUrr
JOHNA

aourra

xna IIIJCHHOWSI&lt;I
.........,~

JfN4

......

r~fX~te ~1~~~~"+'~~~esl ~1s u;~~~~~
0

mundane, automated , boring jobs .
Industrial utopia? It really Ia not very
attractive. Yet, you want to see the rest
of the world IIWI the homogeneous life
we are forced to teed .
Knlfaln tho back
1

tig ur~~d k~?.~ ~kem~ ~r~d t~h:

~~cft~':.l~r.':~~ ~:::':~r~~"l'~rha

law but to conduct research and
development In technologi es which can
be used by people living In Western
New York to Increase their local
sufficiency. Our projects Include
construction of passive solar structures, wind power systems, organic

~ml~t~ers~~fr~~=· lsbl~nJ:!l~~
ment of low-&lt;:aat systems usi ng local

~.'t:fl~ededu':itl~la~~rse~ ~
others, not along t::::l!tlonal linea we
are subjected to at this Unl-.lty but
with hands-on, prac11cal experience.

tha~:..a;a:~ ~~g,tr~':.t.\~~re~;!

uplifting" will occur only when human
needs become more Important than
lnduatrlal prollta or male ego-atlmulallng macho mllltarlam. We are rapidly
depleting our nasoun:ea while at the
same time destroying the enVIronment
that keeps ua alive. Two aeta of
problema call out to 11a: short-term
onea and long-term (15 to 20 v-a In
tha future) . A.pproprlate technologies
auch aa ,._.,able energy aourcaa,
con-tlon and ..cycling can make a
great Impact In the short term. Aa lor

the long term, new technologies are
baing developed. Fusion power Is just
one of lhose technologies that may
solve long-term problems . But fission
Is not equal to fusion.
We must develop all our energy
sources Incl uding wood . Your reaction
to burning wood was not surprising bul
1 think you don't understand the lull
situ ation . No one Is advocating fell ing
large quantities of trees to be burned to
provide heat ; however, trees are a
resource that can be used In a
decentralized nature. Take Farm City,
for example. On the northern end of our
site i s over ten acres of woodlot.

:~~:~o~.f m~~~~~s ~~: klrf~'C:,?/~~

other

trees.

A

good · management

~~~a~en t'~~~rfe":vl~~ ~~~\~t =~~

lor building and fuels . We would be
fools not to use this resource . Burning
wood is not that bad .
Holes In history
The history of civilization is filled

~:~~w~~ . ~~~ri' t:: ~:pl!~emM, ~\e';f~~
1

1

aqrarian, maternal society (and diety)
w1th an aggressive, hunting paternal
one, man (and I use th is In a non-sexist
way) sowed the seeds of his own
destruction . Rejecting the false trapi)ings of the past does not mean

~;~~~~"But ~~~iOnt~ ~! ~ a sul~~j
1

0

15

path?
All I can say to you, Eric Sven
Billings, is look around. The worfd you
visualize does not and cannot exist.
Don't live tor the past . Create for the
future . It 's the only one we have left.
-Charlea S. Schwartz
P S Oh . and also please get your
facts straight

Einstein was
right: trouble
looms ahead
Editor:
I am writing In response to U/ 8
engmeenng student Eric Sven Billings'
assessment of the energy Issue and his
cnticism of the anti-nuclear power
movement. (Reporter , AprilS) His views
are , in my opinion, not those of a real
scientist - an Informed, open-IT'inded.
skeptical individual concerned with
truth and bettering life. But rather he

:~~~~ ~~0o1fsa~~/~~~~ f~~~~c18~~r~
in this case, blind faith In technological
"advances" regardless of their costs.

no~~fr::~'6f~x :oS:~r~ '?6r~:J,~BO~e ~!
8

is not afraid of nuclear proliferation, i.e.

~~~ !fr~~~doi~~~~~a~t~~=~?s"!;h~~~~
1
~~~~~ :,~~gm!~h ';;';~ .' ~utdf~~ ";;;g,~
than willing to admit that I am afraid of
these things, desperately afraid and
with good reason .
I think Mr. Billings would do wall to
take Albert Einstein's warning seriously . Einstein had an intimate knowledge
of nuclear energy and a passionate
respect lor life. From this perspective
he said : " The unleashed power of the

~~~mw:~: g~r~l~in~~~~~g ::c:r~

drlltlng toward a catastrophe beyond
comparison . We shall require a
substantially new manner ol thinki ng II
mankind is to survive ."
Tha world hao changed
Einstein tried to tall us that nuclear
energy poses a new kind ollhreat to our
lives and our planet. Mouthing tired

;~c~~~ !l:m'n"~s t~!~~~~:~tp~~e~::

The trouble with Mr. Billings' line of
reasoning Is that It do6s not recognize
that lha worl~ changed In 1~5 (when
the A bomb was developed) and that our
lives are, In faet , in danger.
.
I cannot di smiss th~ :ecent Incidents
at the Harrisburg nuclear po- plant.
Is It hysterical on my part, es Mr.
Billings contends, to be frightened by

~-.:'~~~a'a:wt~:aJ~r:.:t"Mitl~e ~~~~~~

plant, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) did not know what was
going on or how to deal with It? The
released tapeo ol the NRC' s closeddoor sesalona quote NRC Chairman
Joseph Hendrie aa ..ylng, "We are

operating almo st completely In the
blind ."
Concern ing the hydrogen bubble that
threatened to blow the reactor's containment vessel apart, the transcripts
revealed that neither the NRC nor
the Metropolitan Ed ison Company (the
plant's operators) knew what to do
about it. Catastrophe In a most literal
sense was close at hand and one NRC

!.~~n~c8a~ a~~:~~~ i~~u8~~h:snt~ingi

which have never been analyzed ." Only

by ignoring the facts and abandon ing
reason could one say, as Mr. Billings
does, that " never once was the incident
out of control. "

A~~~t~~~r~"!'~~~=~Yracy at Three Mile

Island? Mr. Billings thinks so and so do
1. But we describe II differently .
Ignoring the nuclear industry's
history of breakdowns and near
disasters, Mr. Billings suggests that
the P.lant could only have broken down
if 1t were sabotaged . I'm more
8

~~n~~~'r:!s ~~~~~:t~t~~~~ego~~h~

start by the operators of tRe plant and
by various government officials.
The NRC tapes reveal that the
regulators consulted continuously with
White House public relations advisors
(Jody Powell and Gerald Ralshoon) to
make sure that only " reassuri ng "
informati on reached the public. Thus ,
thousands ol people had their lives on
the line and they were systematically

~~s~n~~~hFs~!~ ~Jn:~~~~~t~~~inTs~

the public and I don't th ink being upset
about it makes me irrational , as Mr.

~~~~~~~~~:h~~ro~;.d~l~~~t ~~~'::'d~e to
The issue here Is not : technology, pro
or -con? The real question Is what kind
of technology do we want?
Nuclear power must be ruled out
~~:e ~~~~~~ d!nperg~s ·J~~~~ucf6~
tho usands of years. It spreads the raw
materials for atomic bombs. And the
reactor itself is I ike a time bomb. It Is a
needlessly complicated procedure for
0
g~~:~:~tR wl~~~~!~'~Own~~~~3 whce n"1t
does. unlike more forgiving technologies, it can produce havoc on a vast
scale, killing tens of thousands of
people and contaminating many square
miles of land . The Harrisburg scare
taught us that much .

There are alternatives
Luckily , there are alternatives to
further nuclearlzJng our society : we

~~n'k7~~~~gt~ ;:::~:: ft~~\ ~,U'al~."~:t~~~
energy technologies, but as physicist
Amory Lovi n's and . others 'have
demonstrated, these energy forms when properly developed - can go a
long way toward meeting our energy
needs.
Indeed , alternatives become especial·
ly apparent once we appreciate the
potential ol energy conservation. Our
economy has grown up on cheap

:~~~~im':.7~1y a~?'n~r :~ata~:
consume. The change-over from an

:m~~:~ra~r!'u w11f ~~~t,:'cean t:~:ro~;

1

1

thousands of jobs (Imagine j ust
insulating all the houses In Buffalo) and
permit us to say, with conviction , " We
don't want and we don't need nuclear
power."
-Wallar Slmpoon
Coordinator, W.N .Y. Peace Canter
lnslructor, Rachel Carson College

Joyce story
had errors

Editor:
I would like to correct a few errors
and wrong Impressions created In your
article on James Joyce In the USSR :
Error: Ulysses Ia baing translated in
two (not various) Soviet (not Russian )

Rel:Y~:::'~raaslon:

Your reporter gave
the Impression that the Soviet government Is encouraging the Russian translation of Ulysses . The opposite Is true:
the go-nment Ia- giving the translator
no help whatsoever and would probably
prefer that Joyce had -never existed .
Yours truly,
-EmllvTall
Assistant Proleaaor of Auiosran

�LETTERS

Asbestos

.- Faculty panel finds ·-athletiCS 'essential'

Music professor a.sks everyone
on campus to help get
the Baird Hall c.,ei.ling removed

Editor: •

to the Un-ty con• • flbers/cc standard Is taken to task. The
~ llelrd Hall•-toa:
reasons~ 1. the 2 llbers/ cc standard
was · t ded f
~
n.er. era no federal standards of (~s ~ ~~~t 1~~h~utaso~~:o~~
An open lett.-

lllet~/llaz*'d lor. places such as Baird
Hall which are not legally considered as
I.e., a pi~ where

wotN&gt;l-. -

:!':.:.::,r8CI~':'=~- ·as-

On 111111 point Robert tfunt and 1
IIQrW. 11 lillY 111 .-aJ ~ befJ&gt;RJ
such ~~ a~.a H On 1~
de. then , It .,.. lllr· ...,pt
~fna
grouilde,
ng
ehow.ci..-.-..Q~mcntllan2flbera
cubic ~ (the ,_. 88•

1:.

..,~ ~
~
,.,_ In - .,.,..,n 1n 1 ....,
an d
autla-allllltfr ttml mopted bY federal
IIIIIIICiee .. our=), the \1nlveralty
to ,_._ the
lllafore
atancl8nla _, be ea.,.. dMI IliON -.x:h
~

:111::. :;,,]£':__
r,.. ·~
ITIIIntalll
•

- -·-r

==~------.....

~ to

~~.:;;:. ~T.:c:t

- l f l c b!*ifiWita and etudlee, along with tile eclucaMd .PfOieCIIOna of

::='t':'~-;.

=r: t~

Baird Hall mualc atuelent. That no
ltlndMI exists c.ncl lhua no

=~~

r.-.... 1818

''if:"'

not Indicate t at

bestoa!s); 2. evldance exists that ex~'!"
sures within the 'present standard m,
still cause excess cancer deaths, and 3 _.
the sampling counts only those Jlbers
over 5 microns In length, whereas "the
size dlstrtbutlon of esbeatos particles In
human tissues studied by electron
mlcroacooy Is In most part Jess than 5
microns."
Ylle removed tho ceiling of the Art
and
Anchltecture
notresults
because
of negligible
air building
samplings
In
. b

-:~~~1 6f ~J::1~':." 1 ~{,.:~:;•p: 1't)ff.f~

which every conceivable disturbance of
the ceiling was simulated - Including
contact by wort&lt;ers repleclng light fixlures, students un-tlngly scraplng the calling, etc. T?le
samplings
8howld
ssed
rdl
1
ately hlgh~~g~c!n:n?.ue
' tno n-

Spring- umpUng •
Tha recent sampling of Baird Hall
lodk p i - over spring vacation (I ) as

=~ce!'Y ,.::{f.d H~~e !~":..~~~~
from a tympani (20 min. out of 6 hours!

~m~n~yt.~~~o"Zn~:=,y;:- ~~:1~ -n~u~~Y
to pollee Baird Hall such that direct ·

Mr. Hunt 11aa told .-a1 people
a w.t wlltl- whO were force-

ebout

re..n
~
11 ~-r::..: rnl~
~~

.-nount of
•
88
with IIIOther ..,_, car·

.,.. IIIQniiOUe

to cut doubt on lhe lnnall hazard of
aabeatol fllllra, • OIIIIOI8d to 1111
abnllhil IMlert 1
~~~. .,.s _ 1111, ~~m.:
_.lat of
~~~:"
....~. ~

~.:;~,::11~1=1~~? ;..:CC:=~aft':!
P

glertng example Ia the ac.-plng· of one
practice room ceiling lest February. In
which the remains were swept up Into
=lclonbllgo1 ~'!!_!!!~t1 d 1anly danarddsl~ d~~ ..
_..,
moval of aabealoe-&lt;:ontalnlng materials
tw ·wart&lt;era(l)
·
On tho basta of •II o~ tho above, antr
on behalf of my atudanta t appall to all
~ta of tiM Untver111ty community

11

0

1

&lt;•u:;s· admtnta='ionaut~veCC:: ~U~g ~

lncNMed lnaldiiiOI of _ .
Dt--', ~ ~·-=mol
bued
I. • Will -~
1
papulattona, •
~
_...., _...,

011

tiOna. Thua Mr. Hum• ••• __ , .. _,
almplybedlamtlledul,....,...t .
tttatruethalthetoflvertheaHP:S
:::..g=~~ ::.'i:l~ o:no,. In-

1

Baird Hall. The pnsaaure to be exerted
comes from a sense of moral -oonalblllty, based upon clew precedent and
)ulllflable concern. Let us not w~t.for
tegalatandardatocalchup .

-lloblrtH....,, -

1

educationprogrammustbedeslgnedto

Se~~.: ~.:::::ure..ee~g·Am~ti~:cu~~
proved the attached statement and

Visiting Aaat. Prof., Music Theory

gr~~:off"-!1~~·t:~s::.T~v~.~-~

· Committee supports this premise: Partlclpation Is a key element and athletic
programs can be an Important part of
this at this University.
.
The above remarks relate equally to
the needs of all students at this
University. Physical activity Is lmporreqT;,~tedmonnthps.u.t agroom.,.,.theldenUtnlverKett
erY - tant for men and women. It Ia Important
81 1
fl
lor varsity athletes and the r.:,aon who
represents the consensual position of
fact that the normal fundln~routea do
the Faculty Senate Committee on Athnot exist d
t
t t
need tor
oear~!.:.!_\
no nega •
letlcs.
at
~~hpproga:
doaa
__ , notrorelm ieYe
he
1
The Committee feels that athletic
~-g h
_ . . , 1....., 8 1
mpetftlon Is desirable and should be . responsibility for provlaiOn of opponun~" 1 th u 1
11y . w e bel~o
e n vera 11 Y•a comm 1tmen t 1o
""" t he Unlvwa1ty should
meeting studant needs. Strong Interconsider the direct and Indirect benefits
~~~de~~~=;::~~~~~·~ IICCillllll from atron~ Intramural and
Indirect benefits lor the participants
.
and the University co"""unfty: There Ia
strengthen these areas.
a tong and positive tradition for athletic
,.:.=rat unl..alty Ia grat _.._,,
--~~ In £ - - ' - •-'-11'..._a~ .... ___.._ of the
_,.,_.
·-·
...· - - ·
and
cottegee.
cammunitrfn wNall tDdet8. To igllan!
pr~~:aa~ ;:!rtW...!'~ ~.=r
the _ . . ot
directed that It be released 10 the
University C&lt;&gt;mmunlty.
.
.. ' -John Medlve, Chairman
Faculty Senate Committee
, on Athletics

1

f{t1~::'u~~ty 1"t:l~~,..~~hl~~sco:

~o~r'io:1~ui::OO~l~ta~'r.:..

1

1

a...- '

.

~=leg:~~e ~...:~~ ~-

-p-... . .

development of char8Cier,

·-

letlca provide opponunltlea for the
acquisition of experience and skills In

~~\~.!:"~'WV.ti:? e.~~

Editor:

·.~lr~ ~~nbrly':llu~o ~:na:tt:;nt~

Dhva)caJ conditioning. In some casas

a
anticipated enrollmentln the Master of
Social Wort&lt; program (Reporter Val 10
127, Aprtl 23, 1870, p. 2, 'col : ·1: .
"Graduale Programs").
tt was reported ''the Miller of Saclll
Wort&lt; program w(ll be I~ bY 15 • •
atudanta par -jew, bllglnnl"ll. In 1117880." This Ia lnoorract. The Soh®~ of
Social Work will be l ~lng Ita
full-time atudant enrollment bY 15 atu- ·
dante for the acedemle ~ 1G711-80.
~.It If not our lntant to oontlnue
to incrMM our futl-tlrne IIIIVIIment

~~~e:~r;r;:r,:~lt\:'"~ :=~

One does not need to be • "gnaal"
athlete to gain benefit from a solid
athletic -program. Strong and exciting
fntercollealate programs In athletics
aenerate fiealth-,i competition 1111d teach
ihe pattlclpantl the value of effort as
related to paraanal and teem outoomea.
· One need only 111 1 caMel a1111ner of
apor1a programming on lelevlalon to
note the Impact which collaglme apor1a
have upon students end oommunlty
alike. While the poaalblllty tor exceu

~~ •rnf~:=;X::~~

....,._!

.. -

F"
ff
l_
g ures 0 '
Ill aerie wrl"tes
M

Mii''Ni~aree,

:.,s~~!?'~~.::;~~ :c:-:.~

fumnl, feculty and the community.
, - - certalnly
groups for
which positive Identification with the
Unlvwaltylaeaeentlal .
There la a need to Include • well
defined Intramural segmentlrthlellca are dlacuaaed . Any phyelcal

,.._

~~~1:, ~ucr-.:,r~,;.:~

1

oHice, the 8cboal of 8oclel Wortc wtll
hold lla filii-time IIIIVIIalent et 180
atudenta (80 tlnt-yer. 10 -~)
atl-forttoefoNnl *fuiUN.
-~lilly,
_ _ _ ....
0....., 8oclet Work

• - the expoaurwe, the ~ the
~of dNiha f(lllll ear-a.

ofretatlvel:·.~~~uc:.:.:~~n=
- Lockwood dedj cation called 'insu_
l ting'
One woman NIMNted

~

.

by

kaff worlced u a~pelntut•
-'&lt;sCI) ,.mile ehe •
lllldent. She died at age 41 of pleural

To the Unt-*J Coln.-.ltr: .

Another fine of Inquiry c:oncema the
8YI*VIatlc eff8CI of ubeatoe ~
with either envtronmental.poftutanla.
,_ alraadY '*'&gt; c~emonatraled that the
OOIIIblnetlon of .making aad aabeatol
IIIIPC*!IW rleld• llluc:h higher _ .

A cleciiOatlon c1oae not make •
building 8 library. Certain!~ not a great
one or even a lioad one. lt 11 people.
,..,.,.. who Collect, errange and
lnt.-pral the of the library.
Moat ot .._ people . . behind the
-.
of 111e pelroM that
benlflt 110m their elforta . . a1 the ltfUIIIIeia .encl l!lllllea wttll poorly

•hlllcw-.1 such •

the

~-

=

:;.o::,.=~ :.'1!:""..::

Buffalo;:.: daa~P-d.II!IIIC'tng,.,.......budgale,
Mil~-· • ·
_,..,..,=·
~ ....
::-:...,..:
In ..., - " " ' lllldlalrabte.
......... . . _

- t o .... t!ddltlonal

-

toiif~M~e.a.

==.....

a..,.

.cr= ·

axlata .;. _ .
tile "1101'1

ol llelnS_...::.'!:;.~)II¥

~

v.., ._

-~ &amp;paiUIW In

~~'!'j..

EliiWII-MI

1iiiiU'.w-~--::~

:-·or
NODII I-· ·-·
~ w:----~~~~~=

~

no
on._....._. or~
i!Upeiflcla!,
_... ~ 1M oontn-

........ •

. tlllit OOCMion

....... ol .... ._.,

~

.;;:. u;;;-..1 ~
.

-.
llllal

an accaslon. Instead the Unt-.lty Adllltlef the -.1 not om, a Jowl
ministration choae to lg11018 Ita own
one 1.:-r;,;~.
librarY ataff, many people who- h1ve
Pel1lapa the moat llwMful Alp8Cia
decades of ...-vice to the Unl..,.lty
of the alluatlon the ~...
Utnrt• and the Unl..atty.
- by llllacted llb&lt;W1ana ancl ...,
The
llat waa not onlr Insulting
mem..,_, In cleclleatlon-'- IIIII, In a
to the n-ty'a IIIMWy ataff but lliea
caltoua, painful, and ~ ll&gt;dt~ed a I a of IIIIIIIWcletlon tor the _ - · excluded lhelr aotllllg-.
atetpe and role Of tile Um.nttty
Common - · OOIIItaey, and
u.,._ and Ita ataff In lila netlonet
per1111pa - · not mucill, rnor111
-.rageraqutreden
lnclulled ...._ ln.allu1lon8 end
Utnrtan

s-

-~~ ==-~!::

=~

..blllliopllllciiMfLConl*YtoiiOIIIIIar
•

. .. -...-.
==:
===-'

Dr. Mann g

r,a--'ntment

~ol Oletile
ol
eiiCI
t1a1 '*'&gt;

far • term,
8lptelpller1, . .
.PNU!ent Rollin L. l&lt;4ltMt laid the!

....... .,. . . . . . of lila Deperlmenl
tn _ . y-. hla ........ a
llllll'8lllnG of . Ita IWIIanal

-'lnuad

~~ ~

~

.... ,

........... en -

......
~

�Whew!

---of_,, . .

-ln-v,.....,._
........
For.-oomln,_

The....,l8nMr....Stherv-!118onto •

te.e•rtot-.

lthe
-_

u..-.

Follr - . . . . . . _,..,_.,youllll:k
1t. We'll

INIMI• vecatlon.

---·----c...-·

-

Ill' .. - - - "' llynoallogy-Obs.

~ - - · U/B, andProgr....,.ln
Conlnulng Educltion, Me~ Un!nr111y.

...lfiiiM&lt;--Giuup.
-.

lln.4'-miii118HEI BUCAniJII•
/11-fll!- · Thulre, Nor!Dn, ond
---.dirlaorof1111YIIt ~

wilspoal&lt;at 10a.m.
o n " T l l t - t a r • l - -" - ln

_nioon_

___.
--·

11-- -· - - of l'nlsldoltt Ci11e&lt;'S

~

Slucly. . . -

.. Ftnlgn~llldloloma1ional
.. TIIt-5Copeo1Amerl-

...

""'"lgllor-:'-1-2p.m. al.,ln1111--

_-"-"·
.

...... toDr. PIIII4P6.-. U/8..-ollllglla'

Tllt . . . . . . . . . ....
U/l'j·~-- ... OIIlclotiho
SUNYYict~lor--. Sta!J
~c-..
CIIIIQI, and

- -u,.-.-........
- -

.

111tCIIooo,...,..(IJldia. 1m) . ~Tboa1re.

caa ~2919 tor stMJw tlmls . ..ldmts~
d\lrge .
.
'
.
Tile backg!Oilnd ol 1M tUm ls Luc!'-, lndillo ~ 845

Squire.
-TIIC:AL IICIBICD LIC11NIE"

'

!If.

lJo II 1 ~ _ , ,
George ·Wille!. Nobel
l.alruto and sall-llj1td "P&lt;OPhll ot doom... 147
Dioflndoff. 8 p.m, SpOIISO!Id Ill' 1111 0opat1ment ot
Bii9"Ysical SclonciS. the Biopllylics Gl&gt;duato S1udent
As-'llld the Envlronmontli Studies Comer.
A recipient with two"""'~ or the 1967
Nobel f'rile in l'!lyslotogy, Wale! .Is a political activist
w11o has spoken out on wllat he 1;00s as the 11\ijor
lltreats to modem .-y, pollution, population growllt

wl'oerOanendtessseriosolchess-- ploc:llbe-

- n two comlcdy cmo.!SOII, ·ollilcllessly decadent
Moslem-noblemen.
This Is Saty~tt Ray's llrst Hindi lll1uro: ft tmpllas(zes the Indian experiera

HIIHEII EDUCATIDIIJEII-•

-~--.-.Go.-.JdM.

Gotdhaber. 1SS0C1a1t pniessor, COflllllt1iclll. U/8.
Center, ClniJitis Ccttege_ 8 a.m.
Sewonlhlnanolghl._ _
1111
U/B ~~~~ Cll Hlgllor EdUCIIIoll.

_..bJ

-

• hctutswllltlhiGreeHrqan-ataiiiCIIMIIInl!ls-

iiiiMIIIIT UIIIMIEI131MIITEE . . IILJ I:Ou.M

to&lt;y-.atniOI&gt;of~sold!IB_.onthe

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

t l ' k - - . IIIII poaato

IW!i boll\

1&lt;11; ...,.-~"'"""to""'-·

Tllty-loitlllr~?""'lllllrumlnatl
fNfJK . . . ttnctian.

'

-to"'!''&lt;ftout?Wiolcllonoilteaw&gt;hls/tw~· .

talon to join lhe other? The ~ -ot the two-career

·.

UUIII ltllr. leo 5&lt;'llt. pn&gt;ltnor of Mule, U/8. A
porlor1nlnco of piano ploc;OI Ill' franz Uozt. wl!h a
11-.g of ~iO&lt;s ot dassleli, . - and blroque
ItAly. Secona Fklor, BethUM Hall . 1:30 p."" ~
tolowlnQ the perlormance.

. . . . . . . . . . ~ .JobnA . W!Igtll.

~
,_

· Palhology, U/8. 182

_ 'llloC:..II-.-

-....

-

..,._II .. . . . , _ tl Vocalional-

l-~-U-,CollgoatBu!lalo.

.............-....... ..

111 ....... 3,....

~-·,...

-

...;-J:-~1~-=-~
~~~-;1!,~: :...""::.!'::'.:.::

II 1M -~· Open to 1M pWI~.

'

MnfOIIUM•

marriage.
--toundof11andtlllllheonlyW1Jhe
. . lllallllllljoln ~Is ft one captures him.
He pions to IIIII&lt; batlll urwmecl ., IIIII this may be
~. His......-. \llysSIS, - a t the
prospoc!CII losing his best soldier, Int....., to sabollge the rornaoc:e.
Lorna Hil, Jim M~ulnt , and llaYid Lamb. Music by
Aoyllslol.
.

Bllllune Hill , 2917 Main 511111.

SpOIIsored Ill' the U/8 Art ~I 'and 1M Photo
Club, wlll&gt; Halwans and CEPA ~•
JohnMinkowslddescrlbes_..,.andl-ionsol
Media Study/Buffalo, 11 a.m.; Mlclllof Morin. side
presentation on his paintings, noon: panot dltcussion
on " SurvMng as an Ar1tst," 1 p.m.; The Vores lf1CI
_George, art rock bands. pertonn II 9 p.m.

Ll-

~IIBITAL ITUDIQ CBilEII COUIIQUIA"

I'IITIIIUIIT SEIIIM.O., ,..,_ and . 3:30p.m.

1111111··-~

Dr. YlrJIIII oi'Wiyne Slale Univnly wll
openaconlerenaeooii!JOCISol11llf'Singre.rtft
otudles 'Sf'I!"SS''d Ill' U/B 'o Gamma l&lt;lllPlChlpiW of
Sigm&gt; Tliefo Tal, nlllcNI oollingUII 'sGlarM!Manor. Clarence, alday. For1Ur1111f lntarmaiiDn. COI1Iad"" School ot Nulling.

-,.Sam-

• Cen1er 1of Tboalre Aesean:h. wllh.assiiWIC:e l!om ADS
and ~ew Vorl&lt; SUte Coundl oo the Arts.
The play bas boen clescrl&gt;ed as a tmcf.Df . - , ot
111t ... wl!hlfocusOIIW001011'SioaJes.
•

-

ilndet antish colonialism.

friday- 27

""..!~~~n ago~.sf

andHe
the VIetnam
Waf and Was 1rrvoiY'a:l ~·,lhe~COI'ItnMrs:y owr ~
iWII-ONA.researcllln tambrlclge, Mass.
•
Dul1i1g the recant nuclear crisis at the Three IItle
ltland plant, Wald and two Cllhef sclontiSIS held a pntSS
oontnncoat 1M sitedtulng Wllldi.Wald stated, " Every
'close o1 radiation ~· an oyonloso."

-~-- · " " ' l tuml out I I I I I - lll-1llilftiG'Io

MU$IC"

1

UUAI ALII"

~~=.:..=:;.::::~~:.

--111'

"'"IIIII- 4:30p.m.

pruduc1ion .

OlAllA" •
lloofllllfllloAIIIiMI.IiyEricllentley. Ill'
SauiEUdn. CintwJ..-Thel1nt-. 681MalnS1. 8 ·

-l'llllolllllllilllll-~wholoco- - - " ' .. Dopnnontof SOcial.

ardlnll*lgltll-•.
, . . . . _ illllllgln II t:all a.m. I I I I I - wll

-

tingS ot Ills lyrii:s ond poetry bJ ....,.... Kutl WeiR,
Hanns Eisler and Paul Dessau ~ mlleriallor 1M

Thursday- 26

H- Auditorium. Prl&lt;lgl11111ion
......... ForMthof~--lnulng
fducdal. 2211 11U1 51 .• 831-5525. Span-

'

EVEI1tiHil
Rll fiLII•
Mlllt ffiiiiMI ·SCftllfll lnd cHscusstS sectims of

his.•
wOO&lt;, "llagellan." Albrigbt·Knox Art Gol~ry.
8 p.m. Gennt . S2; w.y momt&gt;ers.
11-S1. &amp;ponSO!Idby !Itt Clntor 1of- Study,
Albrigiii-Krll&lt;' ~ Galery --~ S1udy/!klflalo.
Ill~ .LS:lUIE"

l-'• -

-.. Aictwd t&lt;aga~~.
Hamline
8p.m.

hal--·
_.,.._rlgllls..,T-.

~. Min- . 1•8 ~lfldOrl -

~ . who~hlsi'II . D . Irom1111UniWrsltyof

Dr .. on " tee Co!t Aesoarcll." 123
WIM&lt;I!On 0\Jad, Ellcol1. 12 noon. •
DIAL-t10UI8Y IEMIIIAit
L,....,_IHAolol _ _ lf_lyslo,Or.
Jerry Pollack. assoclalep(titesSO&lt; Cll orall!iJ!ogy, SUNY
-at Stony Brook. Room 107, 4510 Main Street. 12 noon.

__

COUNC1LIIf£Tlll8·
The Coundl ol the Unlvelllty wit hOld fts April
liMing. 3 p.m. eoundl Conlnnco Room. c.pen-5•

......,

--,
---·
.................. .,,_,..,._. .-.--·
-----·:IDp...
----.L·----·
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..................
_
........
_
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. . . . .........
C..lti'--··--AOS
.___
..
__
___ ....,.....111'
__ _
lll&gt;tiiiW-- ....... Iirllll.,.._of

.......,...U, !las .;lilldlalwan throe times- most
_ , l n - 1 9 7 8. He
Willi
III-...AQ-1'"CIOfnolnc:Yihere. ln1976 •
Ill _ . . . the u.s. Congmo Ill lootily

.

&amp;pooald bt'6$A.
tftllnll'jonal
Nlln-alldiiii..-CIIHiotory. ·

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

........,.,.....__ " - - 4 pJO. I:I!Ill

a.-,.

...
____.._,iwo..
_..., .. ,_!14
..........
......... .

l--·SA

...... . . . . ...., lor 6rlup L l g o l 1111 I.A. 1111 0'-. I p.OI. s,oo.ll1 Ill' 6rlup

L.-1- ... ..-.

.... llr. . . . . .

en.. to~~oeo. - to ....

-C...,....,,IIIIni_Hall.lp.m.

4;15,.•.-••·

fill.
-1111171-"' llllllllnl-·

-=-=·__:r·., .........
-...._......,
....
............
•
••1.10•

Dlliwr•ui ..

.. - -· !If. Jolin-· ~ Rlglonal
-

-

eent.,.,._, ~- 114

. 3:15p.m. Ael-113 .

T_ _ _ _ _ _ _

tanaM·

.

foolltlll,_.,_ -·lle-~·
-·
IIIII -

· -........
_.,_.Siilo -,.
llltflot.a
- - -. . . . . Or. lfllllc.ll&lt;. Clntpol-

-41, 4228

3~

- - - - "' ........... Clubotl ......... -

'lltlo___,
..............
_._bt'
..,.;...._.
""'

Alltl- . . . . -......llf. fllintont!D.

' - - · - , . -, . _ _ al Clwl
~. sr-~-

p.m,

3 2 2 -. 3:30

'llloflllll . . -.llrfllc_,,_bt'
Slulllltlfl. Clttlorltl' _
_ . , . . , .... 51. a
p.... -...._.a_....,...,._c~~•
-11 .50. AIJ5 _ . ....... ._.... .. . the

alldM .Y.-c.doniiiiML

__
----to.---·-.-··-·
...........
. . . ..........
.
_
......
-·.........-.-----..
----. --....-....... -----··--1111-IIU.IIfW._'NUCi
·
---'lllol.l.llll&amp;
a.-

-fll!lly.ee.,l.

-·

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~

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...._
Lidllll*

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...,

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P·'"·

::..:--.....:....-:.'...........r_;: ==:.- 1~=- ~:.::--

.......

·

11111 ..._..

.

a-,tor-

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

Ell¥ii011EITAL Alii

·

!f......

11111111 ....... W.J. Y... - . . , t1
. . . . .. I ....... . , . . _ . . . _ .. 3:30.

~...,._ plonlll. Clalsicli music and~
lllltor-pllno.llllnlllactlaiHIB. 8p.m. Getwal
•nlordtiJins$3;

_ _.;._IIIII.•'""'""
•-1
..,...Ill'.
.... _,_

__...,..._,

1111 Depa.-rt ot Music .

1. Spoolinll

., ""'-"""'·e-.g Ubrafy, 233 Squiro. 8 p.m.

fill s,oo.111 Ill' 11&gt;1 llrloning Llt&gt;r1ry. Emma
~WittMo·o - - ) . CEPA. IIIII Women's Studies

co;:~;II.Y.

-

sMi tllllr purposos

... ........... loglltll-lnPtrnoUrJPIIY

lOll . . . . (IIAWIII. 1 -

-

~~.=::-....

..- ...
with the

�'-In

Rlctlanl Orty1usslsa hustlng JIWIIh
tho
-""' at lilt
exuberant, hilarious,
-Sidllm.,....onlhlllonlocal81&lt;111er
110¥01. llchl« himlel1clliltlle saeenplay.

_fartles_""

-

-,__

_fl...,._, Squil. 8 p.m.

Adml- charge.

Spon1«&lt;d by UUAB. fQ1

"""""'·
Faolumg- Woll, 0... Van - ·
&amp;Scar111t,
will
Helin Sc:hnlyer

at

two

Jim IIICC....
lllcl Sdlnlyer

..cl-'-hln Dor11nt, Tom~ oneS 810'-Y·
Jlm-IIII .C.
=S3-fltldlll51ariWidoytlcUI(stu-

...

...... "-"'-" v ...... ..,_._,,

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

--

Wild, El Kaulmln (CIIol 18).

2:011-4:311 - "Aitemoan concort" ""' ~
Ward, .llrTy RMn &amp; Don IIKkelt, Eric Nagler, ond
"ser-0 S1rtng Band " (Aimore Room): " llorrls
Dancing," "MI\mored duldmor," m " aiUII1ry
-'&lt;shop" (Has Lounge); "Low SOngs,"

T-

Songs"(CIII118).
oneS " ·
&amp;
-"Efll Clnll
Fa1c Songs"
~·- C..Uhlry music ...~ (F.IImore Room) . '
5:ot- SUing Prajocl (Haas Loungo); Chorus
(CIII118). '
s:so- Pad&lt;•lnstrumants-(Aimcn llllom) •
~ Olldlrecllon •ol Raz ll.,.,.n, ihore,wtlllol
hoc:flld,..'s.,.lnOIIConWLoungo. Ewnlslarthl

'Fllry-

-·o-n:IUIII--AIItffe--'--':00- ftlk
- -JIIflllllll: 1:00~·s~l:GO-S_:_topooy-;

COIIaahaula. 107 Townsond. 8 p.m. Ew&lt;yone wei-

UUM FILM'
1'111 ~(India , 1978). Conterenoo Thoo1re,
Squh. Cal 636-2919 lor Show times. Admission

3:30 - Cooney eo.-! tar kldl; 4)(10 - ,
Chlldr«&lt;'S Craft Hour.
MOVI!ll 011 JAPAII'

u,.~il,!~=:.,~.:.::::-~ '

IIIII. 2:30 .p.m. 5ponwM by 1ho Council an , _
1ional Studies, l h l l - Englllllu._m lnternallonll Cologo, UIB . Freo admission.- f&lt;lt
UUM -IIHT FILM'
,
turthll inlonnolion!' a&gt;ntJ&lt;t Tel&lt;akD lflclli, .....-..-.
1'111 1111111 fl lilt Utlot (1968). Cont«onoo
Japanese Program, C..Uncl on lntomatloNI Sludln,
12 ~Admission j:hargo.
Tho original Pllsbu!Jih wit dassll: wl1ictl hos
636·2075.
..,.--osslmilaticm. Thlsgrislytillool.-..:ld
IU!han, biographer " tho Japanose , Yutlo
.Mishlma, and lranstltor cA J~P~nese noYIIs (includJng
wll trlghlon you lnlo11ts.
llisltlma's " The Slllor Who Fell '""' Groce wilh tho
su. •• wiNCh Amef\can &amp;ldiences saw as aram~
tion , wi!ll Kris Krls1aftnon u the load) Is dlre::!or at 1
IJ11ogy ot &lt;tocumentallos. "The Ja~se ." " Tho BineS
• SW'dlllllrl"blrllllhlslrllogy. Thls ·Mn11sa..-

tfllrvt.

-

'

· Squire.

-

Saturday- 28

-tor.-

- Do you
IITITBI\'
- Tako • clay out lo retu n .
anjoy suiprjoos?
IOjay ,....tt. .IDio •tar
..cl
bus

I""'"*'*' Ill.,._

rido. Landllll .......

loOII-dJ-A!', wlllchlltglnsllly11 .

•cAUl'

T.,llrlwlf,wlthRobor10oNiroanciJodltFoller. 170
IIF.AC, Ellicott. 7 n 10 p.m. $1 tar non-

,._._

.

Jackton , aneta bl1lle -llltm dMiopl•lotllekntll11onshlpwllbe.

UUM . . .IIHTRLM'
1'111 ......... . Utlot (1968). Con1nnco
Tholl,., Squire. 12 INdniGhl Admission tllargL

Sunday-29'
lllffALO fiiU( fUliYAl'

.

_ , - ....... ~-, 54o*I-H

_ . . , ... . , . _ . . , _.... .. 1'111 .....
p.--~---

_Strlllg __ .. .....,_...,.,

RIKITIIL'
....... . - - U I . S p.M.
klo. 111s1 u _ . l s a - " - Pyno.

-·and-

DIAUUTII&amp;'

SoiA~':.=-=:=-~=-,
p.fll. GtnorJIIdlli- S3 ,
ell-

zOO$ $1 .50. ADS -.oudlor1accoptld. Sponooiod by tho
Canlor tor Tholl"' - · wl1h ass1s1anc:t 11om ADS
n
N.Y. Slalo Councl on lhl Ar!L

_,_ __
--IS;

LECTUIE'
Ari-T-:1'1111--NUI&amp;pOII-

H-.- 3protouor
ol Engllll, p.m. froo. s_., by 1111

· John
Collogo . 201 -

cantor"" .. ...,..,....... Study at 1111 Arll, Program
in Lllrll&amp;n Md Saclaly•

__ .._k!O;_Dii:I&lt;,T--

n

CUlls

w -. ~

Ar1 llollly. 1
UIB -.oily, 9fllary

p.m.

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IOCII*d.
Sponond
IIJ Ill
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IAIJ8
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~'
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-••:so.
C:. _,

.

I1UO pot .......-~ . . .

,_ -

· -

ciiOd&lt; ...,_ 10 CSfA Trawl

~P. O .IIII1l.

IX fiLM•
. , _ . . , . . . . , _ 1 4 6 -.1
IIIII J0 p.IL ; 11.50 - · 12 _ . t
"'~

-

fiiU(

fBT1PI..

-- ' - ' d. c..,. &amp;I
•• Tr1diiii,
TlltJoylloi.._Sirlog_,
JIIIn_&amp;
11ootoo11. ...,
Did&lt; Trto. Silo Slolplfw

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-11.511. ADS
IIJIIII
....,..... " ......, , ... _- c:.n.w,. o·..........
A t . - - T i f i ( L S A T ) ......

-~.,...,CIIII!II

-.IOOiplld. . , _ . .

""·....... ~· "'Faly.

uqMIUI'
(1V11).
Sqoa. Cll
636-ZIIV"' - -- - - . . .

c...c.-

· - - - Squh. I P-" ' - -

-.- ---~--

~---jiU

Crlalloo IIIII l'olflnllllg Alii.

Monday-30

,...... .. Claolf - - ... lr.
~alilollllgo. 1 · -- II:JOL._

_..,

-'IIIIFliAU.

Ullft.llrlo,..,.;-..- ( 1 ) . -

Alld. 2 pJIL

'

t . . ..50wlll
_, _ . . . . _ u i i -. AIItlll1

--.....

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. . . _.....- . fN-.QI!I&amp;
.

...... , .• . _ . 11.50 - · - -

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.. _ .

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' -,

~

...

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1:118-" ..............
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,

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-.......... -........
Sqoa.

....... _.....,..__...... ..........
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, . _ . . . . , . . . . . . . .w . . . . .

O'IIIIIL I:JO p.a

a..Mt~r.

.-.

~

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1.._...,_ ........

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.

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..... fiiiiii!IIM•

.

llilllllltL7 . . 11p... . 1 - - -

.

.._._

.. -"

�. . .sam .
Transfusions work better
since Innocent VIII died

April 21, 1979

Beck
Brecht 'strikes every chord'
in her system, says this actress
who is staging a one-woman show·.
ThMplana can enJoy reeding or actIna the WOib of 1111111y ~. but
wfth only a few can one feel a pereoti8J
communion. 'lllla ....ally h8ppena
the WOftt aomehow etlmuletee,
: : '~ .wtth on.'a own Intellect

8

a.to1t Brecht h88 this effect on
LUcia Beck. As she puts It: "Brecht
alriUs ~chord In my system."
tl'a bec8use of her feelings about
llfechl lllld her strong Identification
with hla charactera and the me888gea In
hie playa lh8l Beck choae to do a on•
- · multl-&lt;nedla lhowbued on the
WOit&lt;a of the controowalal German

~·alx Children alone

for

~ht

:':.
=~r."::!!.t~ ~~'= ~~?-:
c:tw.:t... Beck h88 h8d her share of
0

lumpa, eepeclalty from the courts.
Courta, ahe feels, .,. unaympathetlc to
dhlorold women ·with -&lt;:hlldren - especially unaympethellc, If the woman
, _ . , . not to be holding a "regular"
job, but Ia a gr8du818 student In
8011181hlng • untr8dltkmal If not "frivOioua1" ee theetra and music. At times,
Beck,_ felt the oourta have·reapond8d
to her acting ~ • though ahe were
"whorrng."

AIIIMtloll ........

.-t

poltrta out lhld hla WOfttrl)ftan dNI
with 1118nlpu1811on 8nd oppreaaion of
""'" by
8nd ln8111utlona, and the
commMt.ry llbout thla la bitter and

difficulty vi8Wing her acting them .
For the future, Beck plans to audition
for a summer Job at the Bristol Valley
Playhouse. She Is also thinking about

"*'

t=

un~.':J .!~~~~
ter 18 8lwHe from '"The Good Woman

~~~~':
=~ ~~~~~1~ ~~~
campuses.

s.tzUM." llec8uae the playwright
Beck r&amp;I&gt;Orla ahJ! h88 ~ done
portray~ "a whole paraon," Shen-te Ia
anything of the m.gnltude and scope of
-•a8!Rinii-Mllnd proatltU\8 who
"Beckon Bracht.," but -..,ystlieactreas:
le torced to mMCUIIne cll8r8c-"I'm accustorn8d to taking risks."
"Beck on Brecht" opens tonight at
l8rtallca to IIIMwl. o.N&gt;Ite her profeselon, - · ahe Ia
portray8d • a " 8:30 p.m. In the Katharine Cornell
"aolt, lovely woman."
Theatre and runs through Sunday.
ManY. thaalregoers are tum8d off by Tickets are $1 50 for students and
Bracht a .. _ . language," but Beck
senior citizens: S3 for the general
=~
=.tol~t=t,::;;
public.
often, particularly by American audl-JB.
- w h o prater to romanticize.
Ona e!1f111 ahe alnga In her show
called, "TTMi Ballad of ParaariiPh 218,"
IIIIIMd lifter the -=tiOn In Ger- •
"*'Y'•
CDMtltutlon which outlawed lllaltlon. Consldldng the aub)act
At 10 p.m. 11181 Friday, correcllonel ltlll . _ . fire today, one can only
offlcera from AFL.ciO Councll82 aet up
lmllgllie the raeponaa of an audience
a picket at the Amherat .campus Coven~~ao~·~ try Enlr8llc:e on Millersport HlghWI¥.
The mldnklht shift of the Unf-.lty
Pofica decfd8d-to honor the picket ..
they are members of the eame council.
lncllul*lln her IIIOw . . - - from

a..t'"

..::J•

uta officers

join st{ike

w...

:e:.:--._:r

.

:*.._.~~~:-~·~
mm..
. .
~

"Good

Woawl,"

=.~=:v:..~=
lha
Unl. . .tty or lee Grlflltl. It Ia an
action agalnet tha Stete of New Yort&lt;."

.....,.,_.

" " - End • . , . Seven
~ ilina•• lirid . , . ·...._ · · en,• ~ othara. &amp;a alao do. a
,._ Glwld'• IICMI, llolhar. n.
. . _ ....... rnualc " - Kurt w.IU,
..... 0 . . . _. ...,. El*. Clwlaa
Cllftan, a.,..m.t,le I I W - I . t .
~.

--·-ScioncOO

~~~~~ls~';jl~~~~n=~ss~~~f ~~

'lllla feeling of OCCMional alienation

of

lleth Spina

In 14112, Pope Innocent VIII was-given
mus quantities of blood teken from
three youngsters In an 811empt to eave
hTs Ufe. The effort faliedt'li&gt;e Pope and
thechUdrendled.
A certaln Antoine Mauroy wu
transf~aed with a liter of cairo blood In
1868 by Prof. J. Denys. The outcome In
thlscaae wu only slightly better- the
call lived but the hlll)feas Mr. Maoroy
died.
Today,,blood transfusion stories have
much happier endings for donors and
recipients alike lncnoased knowl8dga
and technol~y have enabfed a more
compatible match" between donor
blood and Its recipient than was
draam8d of by physicians attending
Innocent VIII and Mr. Mauroy.
Outlining the history of blood
transfusions. Dr. P .L. Mplllson, • a
plon8(1( In the field of blood transfusion, noted It was several hundr8d years
after these Incidents before transfusion
became safe and rather routine.
Dr. Mollison, whose expertise helped
laed to perfecting methods for safe
storage of blood, delivered The Ninth
Annual Ernest Wltebsky Lecture here
- last weal(. The Lecture honors the late
Internationally-known
Immunologist
and first director of the campus Center •
for troll!unology. The Lecture Is cospon~ by the Center and the
Department of Microbiology.

tr1ggef8d Beck'a lnt..t In Brecht. She

~·

.8y....,

Aa of Monday morning, P8Ribek Aid

there . . . 40 members Of the Unl-.lty
Pol to. -.rt,_t honoring the picket.
FWobak, not wishing to dlacu• the
polltlca or iegelltlee of the oonnct
which

•

~

Aptll 1, Indicated lhld

:=::.:no::l~ir!~r.'~1 backing

Council 82 Include. approximately
. 11,000 mMibera, IICIJIIOICimately 7,000 of
whom . . oorr.:tionel offlcenj 8nd lhua
"awwnCC the conttiiCI vote, • ona atltking
offle« lldclad.
- ~ to lee Griffin, dlractor of
Public ~ 81 U/B, 38

r,:'!icSna '-'

~~.:r;. "=•:?ton': =io!::

- - . . , .........~. provlalonal8nd

:m:.,C:::::·of the U/8 fonle
::: ......

of the Council 82 llllgaln-

Muatc for Olympics
er.. 8dloot of

...,....,..
..,_...
-er=·Pall~~Mm­
r.r ...
1M

Muelc 81 the

nuiC
1
Wlnllr 01~ ..
L*fll8cld. ow. ........ _. '-"Y

Donor h8d to be thara
..
Mollison said that for most of the era
.between 1827 and 1915, blood was
transfused alrectly from "donor . to
recipient; the two would lie sld&amp;-by-alde

:.':.c\:'~,~~~~~~\~~~~~r'o~'!.~c~ t~

blopd flowed. Later, blood could be
drawn from the donor In one room alter
which II would be taken lmmedlatelx to

"rn°fs't'~~~~:V.uve was develop8d
~W~':!:r..t&gt;.t~,~\~~~~p=

1

preservative, acid citrate dextrose
(ACD), was develop8d and later
modilled to permit safe storage for
some 21 days. Today, In special cases,
blood may be frozen for ·stO(liQe, but
the A&lt;;:D preservation method Is still
considered superior lor general use.
" World War II probably provided the
greatest lncentlve for speeding up
_research," Dr. Mollison j)Oint8d out.
lndaed, It was lti his native Great Brftaln
that " blood tranafualon depote" _ ,
established Just a few steps ahead of
the outbreak of the War to provide for
antlelpat8d civilian and military needs.
"There were no blood banks for
storage at this time except for a small
unit In Chicago." Mollison recall8d. By

~~~·s~a,:: ~~I:Sub~

cells which could be used for tnaalmet~l
of aneml• and other civilian medical
problema; the pl•ma w• sav8d for the
wound8d.

.

Bdtelo 11M ftrat netlonal progr8m

Gnsat Brlteln 1a cr8dlted with having
the first, practical, national blood
transfualon program - one which oti!W
coontr1ea emulated. In Britain, .. -n
• In other Euroj&gt;ean nellona, blood
donors have been almost axclualvely
voluntaera. Only In the U.S. h88 the
Alf8CIIce of paid doi)Ors been wt~
apread, and even here It Ia on the
decline.
Despite 8dvancea m - sinO. tn.
time of t n - . t VIII and Antoine
Mauroy, lhWe rsmaln problema In
human blood tranafuelon.
"Attllough blood taken from donors,.routinelY clleckad for Infectious or
aerum hepatltle which could be
pauecl along to the naclplent via -1he
tr-'ualon, onty about on.tourtl! of ·
lhoee wiiO - - - hepatitis C8lrlera
can be Identified with CUfl'llll teeta,"
uld Molllaon. Adclltlonlllty, eclenti_.a
bal ... there typN of hepatitis
celled ..,__... and noHt"
which no
wt
ICII to
Identify their - I n lllood.
Another blood illoblam whicll may
occur Ia mlalcllntftklllloll of c1a11or «

.......,.,_,..,_.found

for

· =-TIIIe~laetl10t:=

Iii~ ==-. .

for-a:=~

blood
.,._ ......... llutiWI -'--·~of .....

10~=-..:
=:.;r:--,. IIIIa
Jll'tlt....,.

Multiple .,_fualona
There .,. still problema In cl\sea of
multiple transfusion which , _ the likelihood of Jncompetlblllty and
aerfoua medical consequences. While
few advancee have been m-In this
area. Mollison noted that techniques
for Identifying p81ie1Jta likely to be
affeoted by nape818d transfusions have
Improved aa well • methods for daatlng with 1111)' naaultlrig medical compllcallons.
He also said that within the put three .
years, a new teat h• been developed
lor cross-metchltlfl blood which re- quires only ten minutes Instead of QIJII
hour. This development Ia of special

l~e"~~r:: ~~ .'i:':.;~

of the on&amp;-hour 1881 could be uead to
give physicians nec:-v lnformatiQn
on sensitivity, but the n- technique
gives m6re conclusive reaulta juat ..
qulekly.
"One area In which there haa been
relatively little progreas Ia In the field of .
blood substitutes," MQIIIson Ald. "If
people · need whole blood or Ita
componente today, that blood atlll hM
to be. taken from another human being
-lust like In the old days."
• On the :;arne program with Dr.
Mollison's lecture, three students were
given Emeat Wltebeky Memorial Awards for 1!f0tlclency In microbiology.
They -re medical student James J.
Czymy; dental student Richard S. Oerr,
and giJI(!uate student Cht1stopher J .
Pap•len.

US said losing
health care war
-~'":.'..,~ ~~re.~ ~-=

Care Ww baing ~ In the u.s.,
acconllng to Neal ~~ · nml-lly- known health law _ . , . . , 8U1hor, ·
and CBS 1181110 oommMtator.
. ~
Dnc;ttblna hlmaelf u "one who
spends muCh time on the battlallald."
the Boston-baaed 811~ delivered a
~=gp,'!'~~:l.";' at the IS SchoOl of
· "The enemies," he satd, "II- removed the Incentives of pride, dignity
and financial compenution · for the
provldera of haatth care white mandatl!lll more 8nd more controls." The
-utt Is a bunlaucrstic nightmare. But

~~"c:t~lt~t ~c:,\rol~l

provldera couta put health cara out of
the re.:t. of many.
It could be poulbla to provlda qualIty, lair '-lth a.. 8nd 81111 allow the
r,::~c~era to make ITIOII\IY ~ back

aprofit,

~=!\:s:;~ 81.0

..-.lve

He auggeeted 111at hoepltela could be
oommunlty focal polnt8...fpr
'-'ttl GMt 8nd 111-;- ~ng
money-making Cllnlca In . , . . auoh •
Obaelty Mllfltr.e In on1er to generate

prolf1a ..... GOUld aubaldla

caratoru- unabla 111 ~.

~

•

•t don't Inial 1M CIWCIIblltly of lnformetlan g!wn to ,.. public allout the
health cara crtala ,._ QCMI'IIIMIII, _
phylloieM, hoepltal8, lhi ~ or
ao-oaitecl .clwocldee aua11 • Ralph
Nader," Cllayet Ald.
. "We're not living In the day of the
consumer." he aalcl, "but In the day of
thf ~
_,ona Ia

.,_e-

fn~=~·.
=-~.,;'o~
are telling tl'le un'*-d INth about

health cara problema to the public.'
The only hOC.::.
health' GMt tn lha

~I:Iaofcntlcel,
the'~
he CIII:Nr8d.

com_lng

"I like to oompara the curNnt '-lth
care ltfuatlon to Wlneton Cllurchltl'a

J:"::~s::m~

w ...~.,:;

'The Grand Atllanoll'." aeld ~ ·
Only by a "gqnd altlanoa of patfenta, phY8ielaila and thoae pao'\a

of

the healtfl •yatem IMity ooncemec1
llbout good health oare can the U.S.
avoid-- government te1&lt;a-ovw of the
ayetam.
"To be - r u t , the 'alllanoa' muat
apeak loudly, a.wtully 8nd ctewty ." he
added .

:'ll:
....................
-::-.z=:-_. ...........
anu.liOTm

Tha oltlalll ..........

of

�&gt;ril2fl,1871

RIPIILd :
MFA Show .
This oculptvre by John Nlh.on 1o fMtunocl

In • three-......,n eXhibit which opena

Sundey et th.o AC Gollefy. Alao ...,Preaanucl will be worka of prlntmokerw
Borbere SchHter end Ruth Shokoff. See

Hat111111n "Exhibits."

•Calendar
(from page 7, col . .C)

Theall'!, Squire. 4 p.m. l=ree admission.
SponSOfed by Modem Languages and ll'leratures.

FILMS'
-

Scorpio Rislllg, Artlfiolal light, Word llowit, l'llet
/ EtMI War. 146 Diefendort. 7 p.m. Spoosorod

by the Cemer lor

Mod~

SIUdy.

""AIIIONDAT NIGHT FILII'
~ II WIW- r (Germany, t97S) .
Conterenoe Theal:re, Squire. 7 p.m. Free admtssion.
After.,. court-ooltlnJd sl~nce .- 30 yean. Richard
~·· doughler·ln-low lr&gt;nl&lt;ly rotll~ her close
nUtionsllip with and great odmntian lor Adoll Hider.
A IEI:ITAL'

F.:-:,=::':;,.':!..~:!~~~·:g

lf!lsts will be Ctuis Pidkarneny. tlute . and Roben
lhhooey,

perwssion.

, Tar$ NUTIIITlON utTURE SEIUESI

--·-~.Dr. Jolln Robson,
prolessor of nutrition, Medical University of SouTh
car~m. t44 Farber. 12 noon.

MFA IIECITAL'

Dl- - ·· Yi~lnlst. Cllapoi .- H~y Trinfty
lu1heran Church , MHl Street near Nonh. 8 p.m.
Al:tmlssion tree. Ms. Werss is a student ol Rowe OUNtet
~inistAIIIlneDiCocco.
•
I'GmiT lEAD•&amp;•

luo lloo. •ulllor ol Wllllllloy '"" Sow toM; 1977
winner ol lhll Edgar All., Poe Prize given by the
1u6emt of American PQets as the most promising
young poet Rod Room. hcully Club. Harimon. 8-p.m

Wednesday- 2
STST£11$1
All .. _

IN

Wil..,...

lnformaUon , Washington, D.C.

WNI 111111 Ulthlnublo Hop"""" Horo?. a locolly
prodUCf&lt;l slide show. •bout lhll ellects ol • nuclear
bomb on Butlalo.
.
• Conference Theatre . Squire, 12 noon. US Oiefen·
dort , 7:30 p.m. Free admission. Sponsored by the
W.N.Y. Peace Center and the CAC.

UUAI WEDNESDAY NIGHT FILMS'
Portnl ol Jtnnlo (1949) , 7 p.m.; Lond ot 11M
l'tlorNhs (1955), 8:4D p.m. 17D IIFAC , EJI~t. Froe
.Jdmission.
Pwtral tl J•M• stars Jennifer Jones, Joseph
Cotten, Ettlel Barrymore and lillian Gish . An unusual

citizens $1.50. ADS YOUChers accopted. SpOnsonod by
the' Center lor ThNlre Researct1. with as.ststance trcrn
LIM at tM Pltlr•M. with J.Jck H.Jwkins. Joan_ ADS and N.Y. State Council on the Arts.
Colfins and Dewey M.Jrtin, is OWl epic dram.J abou1 the
OOIIding of the great pyramids. partly written by William
UUAI AlliS'
Faulkner and direded by How.Jn:J Hawtts. lnctudes " .11
cast of thousands ," ~teraly .
Gtal.... · · - (1953).
hth: (1955) . Conference Theatre , Squire. tal 636·2919
for show times. Admission ch.Jrge.
MUSIC'
GeRiemen. starring Marilyn Monroe MKI Jane
011 PtrcuaiDD E••mblt. Jan Williwns, director.
RusseU. ts the story of two showglrts who sal to France
wilh assisting anists, NiaO.Jr.J Br.Jss Quintet Baird
seeking ricb husbands, or at teast diamonds.
Reatal Ha•. 8 p.m. Free. Spcw~sored by the Oep.Jnment
d Music.
lantasy·romanc:e between an artist and a woman who

background/Interest In the general project areas. AI

appears older each time they meet.

applications MUST reach the Envlronmentol Monogo-

Tloo·-· ,..

Tuesday-1

WOIUCSHO~

ALII AND SUDE SHOW'
Ww WltMtlt
a film about the dangers of
nudear war .. Produced by the Center for Defense

IIANA&amp;EIIEIIT

SCIEMCE

AND

.. S - lor C..roctlrlltil: Fuocho

a.-.Protossor Elaine Bennen. 140c Crosby. 9 •.m.
DI'Ell HOUSE'
.
Educationll Opportunity Center. 465 Washtngton
Street (• MeN~ . downiOwn. 10.J.m.-7p.m.
The public is Invited 10 tour the tacflhies of the Center
Which prcM(tes tuition-free proo11ms tor quaWfied
Sludents in 1reu such as Q)lege pre~tiDn . high
school equivaJency, dental assisting, secret.Jri.Jl
science. keypunc:ll. graphics. 0nc1 phOiography.

IIEVIEW OF FBlEilAL IUD8£T'

Conor's FT 1110 a.tot: lotllicolor
Nae Tltll; Or. BenjomiA Chinhz. Rand V'ISitin~
Prolouor ol Urbon Studies, Sd&gt;ool ol Monogemen1. and
Dr. Richard P. Nahon. senior toaow 0nc1 lui o1 the
Mooltorlng Studies Group, Broot&lt;lngs lnst!ution.
Embusy Room. St.JIIIr·Hilon HOIIl. 1-Sp.m.
Sponsored by tile RogloNI
Assls!Once
Co-, U/ B, •nd the Clly ol Bun•to. Pree.

Eal"""*'

Chinltz. -Is a U/8 tor• fll r, ls~ professor ot
oncl • tottow. COllier lor Soc:lol

"""""*'
Anolysis. SUNY/ Binglloml"'.

NotNrl. WhO served u woctolll director ol the U.S.
Not""" A&lt;Msoly ColmiliSion on CIYII Disorders In
1967. wtl bocamt • proltssor m public ollolrs "

Pr-on r. September.

IIEOUHICAL IIQBICU -INAIIt

e-. s-

~

~
Ill · G. V. Gibb$.
lloporlment ot Goologicol
Vlrvtni&gt; I'Uiyte&lt;:hnlc
lnSlluto. Room 18, 4240 Ridge Leo. 3:30'p.m.

.

· ~·

S:S.*.:t:.\:•4=....~:30~m~:'=

fnglish Dlpor1ment's Gray Chair.

DIEIIICAL
-~~~ - .......~-~oii"'C
.Dr .
Edword A. ~ ins . T.R. Evons Rnurdl Centfr.
Dlomoncl SIIMnd&lt; Corpor-. 262 Copen. 4 p.m.

~~t~~ u~:~~c!~~r;: ~:~=~

ALII'
Rtyrttr 8anlu11 LMu: lM Altllfes. Made in t972

f)r

BBC Televisi3n, directed by JuHan Cooper and Wiltten
and narrated by U/8 Professor Peter Reyner Banham.
335 Hoyos. B p.m. Free. Sponsored by the Schooj ol
Althilecture and Environmental Oes.gn .

SCHOLAftS SCAN THE SELLEJIS•
Wililftl AscMr. Oeparlment of English, wiU review
by Alex Ho~ . Sponsored by CrociHree

FAU FOOTU.LL SCHEDUU

l.aslln a series ol discussions on recent best sel~rs
by members of the Department ol Enghstl.
$3 tor indMOual sess10ns. Call 831 ·4.301 tor
regish·aiJon. room numbers, bmes, ere.

contests.

llOCHEIIlSTftT SEIIINAftl
AIUri:KtftCI S1udia If Tr1a1ftr RNA Blndlng to the
. .. .. Or. Barbara D. Wells, Department of
Biophysics , Johns Hoptclns University. 108 Sherman.
t1 :30a .m.

WO RJ(SHOP ON PIIOGRAII ACCOIIIIDDATION
FOR THE HANDICAPPED.
255 Copen. 3·5 p.m.
3·4 p.m.- Panel Prennlltion : Panelists will speak
about tnelf k~ and exper1ences With
acccmt'I'IOdal•no the h.Jnc:lic.JPJ)ed '" rheil' programs and
activities. Representatrves from the Office ol Services
tor the H.JOdiQpped and the Ck:cupational Therapy
Depanment will present information tr1 creative
appro..Jehes to aCCOfM'IXIating the 1\andicapped.
4-4:45 p m. -Prtblt~t-Stht•t Sesli•: Ea::h person
in attendance wHl be ioduded in a smal group to work
on salVIng prob6trns encountered in program
acccrmmdation of the handitapped. A handicappeCJ
par1iclp.Jnt wiU contribt.ne to diSQJsslonS in uch group.
4 : ~5-5

p.m.- -

II

.,

w.ruo.,:

Questionnaire malerills wHI be distributed to all group
members to assess the etleC1iY8oess ott he Workshop in
meeting your expeaalions.
According to Kevin McKee, University U.Jison ICJ'
504 , " the UniWirsily has been ICiivtty iovoh'ed in
allemptlng to assure its compli.Jnoe With Section 504 of
lhll Renobii&lt;Ution Act ot 1973. It "" •tready
oc:complisllod • grg deal '"""d ruclllng lhis gaol and
has been commended on ils ettons. In the spirit of this
trend . the UniWirsily's section 504 Taste Force II Is
offering thts pitot wortc~ fer fatutty and professional
SI.Jff "

SIGMA ll llffi•&amp;
•
.
The spring O*ting ol Sigma Xi will be held In the
facully Club Dining Room. A buffet dinner is .Jvailable
from 6 to 7:15 p.m. There will be inlliltlon of ·new
members. and Or. Chester Langway. ct\Hpefson of
Geology .Jt U/8. wtl give a flin and slide presentation
m "PoW Ice COre lnveslioltlons." -

Ret-... It 3;30.
COIICEIT'

thO--·-·-dll elti i OO- -·-13.

fUj•

- · . - (Sirk. 1957). 146 Oielon&lt;IOfl. 7
P " · ~by 111 Center l o r - Sludy.

-H-onclloUflllllocol.,.mlhil
. -Oonlllly ll•toneonciRobertSIKI&lt;In
- - Oorallly M...., won •bllSt~
.,...,, A-.y A-d lor her ponroyol ol • - ·
......, nell ort w11o . _ . to cle$Ovy lw
. . . . . lhl ....... c:owtts

-ZOJII!I IIOO

Notices

Progr&gt;ms.

Thursday- 3

~ MOllie
COmpositions o1 toc:uny and
Sludetrts ol the Muslcol Sdence •nd Technology
Courw. Biird -Holl. lp.m. Fra- .
Jolln MJIIil ol
Oepomlonl tuchts
the court~ . Jotlfl Ames is lhe grldulte 1ssiSIJnl nt
l.ejnn lflllef, n o t e d _ n _r .-the U/8
MUSIC llopor!mlnt loculty, Is tl1o guest ltctum.

IUIIA'
TlooFolotiM · by Enc: Bent~. dtre&lt;tocl by
S.ut Ell&lt;ln. Center lor TIINire - c h. 681 St.
lp.M
..-.oncl -

::

ret.rtgera:tor .Jnd always promtses but nevet delivers. For
a New York publisher (Tom Ewell). this is a fru~ration ;
he linds it increasingly hard to stay on the straight and
narrow while his wife Is awitf.

The 1979 varsity football team win play a ntne-ga-ne
schedule . Athletic DirectCJ' Edwin Muto has announced ;
the home S8.Jsotl at Rotary Field will lndu6e fOllr
The Bolts wifl resume series with two aid opponents,
Westminster Colege and St . la\mnce Unfwrsity.
Westminster was NAtA Division II Natiwl Champion in
1977 , and St. Lawrence was an NCAA Division Ill
pYyoll P.Jnicipant in 1978.
The schedule·
September 8. contand State , home: September 15.
at JOhn Carroll ; September 22 . at Brockport State;
Septemner 29 . Waynesburg, home ; October 6,
Caois1us . home : October 13. 11 SUNY Albany: Odober
20 . at Westminster: Oaober 27 . St. Lawrence. heme:
November 10. at Altced.

MATH TUTORING
Free Math tutonng is offered by the Math component
a1 the University Learning Center daly from 10 a.m.-3
p.m. In Room 343 Baldy at Amherst. Just walk in.

MEALS-IJN.WHEEUi PIIOGRAM
The Red Cross needs volunteers In all Its .-eas of
service but light now there 's a special need tor
volunteer dnvers to assiss the: Meals-on-Wheels
Program.
The Greo~~er Buff.Jto Red Cross Chapter Is recrufting
licensed drfvers to ~nsp«t.wokmt•r serwrs fer the
Meals·On ~Wheels Program of Buffalo and Erie Co., Inc:.
Drivers are neaMid on Wednesdays and Fndlys
between 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.
The drfWirs, using Red Cross vehicles, wll plctc up
servers and the fooel a the Episcopal Church Home , 24
Island St.. Bulloto. and !Okt them to lhll homes
ol meal redp6ents . Drivers wil remain in the car Whie
the server drivers the meal. Fer- m&lt;l'e klfonn.Jtion, cal
the Red Cross Offioe ol Vokmteer Personnel, 886·7500,
ext 348.

SCHUUIIEJSTBIS

-·
Sign up

$ICl

CLUI

now-tor our White Water Ran trip on July

and 12: Stop In Room 7 Squire . or

11

call831 ~5445 '•1 or

SUIIIIEIINTtllllllll'$
Several lnlem.Shlps in EOW.Onmentat Prqtection/

ment Coord Office on er I;Mifore May 1, 1979.
Successful applicants wil be notified by mall on or
before May tO. Address applications and lnquifes to:
Erie County Environmental MaMQement Council, 95
Ff11'lklin Street , Room 803 . Butf.Jlo, New York 14202.
The phooe number~ (71 6) 846-6895 , 7879 .

STUDT SKILLS LAI
The Study Skft~ Lob at the Unlverslly Learning
Center. 366 Baldy Hall . b open lor tutoring In r10dlng
and Sludy skRb. Hours are: Moncloy, Tuesdoy Oncl
Thursday , tla.m.-1 p.m.: Wednesday and Frid.Jy, 11
a.m.·3 p.m. The lab ts open to al U/ B students.
WlffiN&amp; PLACE
The Writi ng Place is not for " poor" writers; It's a
tree service tor all writers. Why net give yourself the
.Jdvantage of receiving feedbactc about your wrilloo'
We're at 336 Baldy H ~l. AmheBI ~s . The hours
are: weekdays . 12-.. ; week nights, except FOday, 6-9.

Exhibits
At GALURT EXH•tr

scuv;::, o:r=~~!'":"~,:~

pnntmakars. AC Gatlery, 30 Essex Street April 29
through May 11. Opening reception: Sunday, Aprl 29,
1-4:30 p.m.
AH three students are candidal:es fer the M.F.A. and
recently exhibited in the Western New Yonc invftational
Show atlhe Albright-KOOK.

• ACRTUCS EXHIBIT
Acrylics by AaM Aok are on dlsploy througll
AprH 29 at the Rosa topton Hane &amp; lnfirm¥Y. 10
Symphony Circle. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. dally. Ms. Fink is .J
destgner/edilor in rhe Division of PubUc Affairs.

ANTHRD IIUSEUII
An exhibit of the rock carvings of E.Jster Island
continues Wednesdays through Fridays, 11 a.m. 10 4"
p.m.• .JOCI on weekends , 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in The
• Anlhropok)gy Research Museum localed OI'Hhe second
ftoor of the Fillmore Academic Center in EUieott. The
exhibit consrsts of rubbings oo ckuh. objeas and
pllotogOIPhs .

On The Air
Al'llll 27
A.M. IUFFALD: Or. Leonard Kotz. liSSOCiatl HeaDh Sciences. WI&lt;BW·lV (CIIannel7). 1D • •m.

·

UIIIL27
COIIVBISATION$ IN TMf Am: Esther Horriot1
illlervlews EDIOtl Clfler, - r. C.Uiitr C*t

(Channel 10). 6;30 p.m.

APIIIL21
CIIOSSTAut J: Or. f'tler G~. odjUocl lllillllll
pr.-essor. Biology. "Energy lor the Futtn ... WB£H

(930) . 9:05 p.m.
AI'IIILJG
COIIV£1SAT1011$ IN TMf Am: Estllir Interviews WMI~ Gm . _.._ l - C*t

Monagemenl Areas wll be,.alable tor lhll period J une
(Channel 10). 6 p.m.
4 · July 27 . 1979 (the wa elgh1-k time period Is
negot~ble) . · with the Erie C.Unty Envtonmental
IIAT1
Monogement C.Unci.
COIIVEJISATIIIIII IN TMf Am: Esther Horriot1
Uodtrgratuate Of Graduate students majofing in
relefant Naurot or Soc:lol Sciences'" lrMiod to 'IIPIY· , lnlervlews J...., Tenney, . . . _. .touritf C*t
Interns will be dtroctly .._,_
tor p!lljecU 1n
(Channel 10). 6:30 p.m. AIIO, lily 2. rp.m.
narural resource itMnlory. urban planning , or tolid

w.JSte mwoement
EJch Intern wll wor1&lt; unclw the supeNislon .- Erie

eoun1y G...,,_ sun ' ""'"' ~
....._.ICGullc:II-.. A inol repor!OOoo:ll

projec1wll beproporeclllld-bydlo l..... to
the C&lt;JUncil. Stipend tor tile ""' mont11 prog11111 Is
$1.000 The ptOgrllll Is 0H1gnac1
pr1C1co1
eocperoenc:e In Coutoy llld-

to,..-

M..._.

Applttlnts are rtQUIStld tit .-... 1 trill (two-PIOI
"""'""'"')

-

ly -

•....,.,
IIIIIIIJio8 lor Oncl

typeci - . Tioo~-

,..ct(l) . . . . .

�........

•

Modernization can be ·
a trap, Chinweizu warns

-

Dr.-Qon-------··

Nuclear safety project
is one of _the largest
One of the lwgeat nucl- safety
conducted on a

.-.:11 projecfa -

5

=~ut~~~"':~ 8o~ht;'r;,~

~~~~~~~i!swr\':~':'.,~'~~:/'~~,;

Germany and Japan and bY a lew
reactor vendors In this country, but the
EPRI - U/B project t,!he only open,

the Electric Po- R-.:11 Institute
(EPRI) of Palo Alto, C&amp;lll.
_
no~~~f!'Ji ~n~he c~~~~~~~t~J;, of
Tile U/8 Nuc!Mr Science and
the previous studies, Chon said, and
Technology F..:lllty has Just been
wl)i result lrf an Improved un
awwded a $245,864 contrllcl by EPA I to
sl&amp;ndlng of the complicated physl
continue Ita ln-tlgation of the
thermohydr8UIIc mechanlama Involved _ njodela Involved In the reactor reflood
·
In advanced. ~cy core cooling • --pt~enomenon4
The worst possi ble reactor accident,
ayatema lor nuciMr reectors.
Chon explained, Is hypothesized as
The , _ contlllcl lor the "Jn-tlgahappening when the primary pipe of the
llon of Alternate Emergency Core
reactor undergoes a double-eoded or
Cooling Syatema" will fund lhe third
guillotine bnsak. This sort of "Loss of
~ of Qn-11011!11 .--ch on nuclar
Coolant Accident" (LOCA) Is hlghl}'
utety which
In 1875. Total
unlikely, he asserted , adding that II ol
aupport aw.rded
EPRI lor all three
did happen, the reactor would aut~
~of the .
ee now amounts to
matlcaUy shut Itself down even without
S870,000.
activation by the normal reactor
Or. Wan Y. · Chon, Dtoleeaor of
ahut-&lt;lown system.
engtne.lna and acting dllllclor of the
Fuel fods In the reactor would
NUoleW 8olenoa and - .Technology
contlnueto generate haatln the event ol
Flllllllty, eocp- that the new
a shutdown due to the decay of their
contlllcl Ia to Ul In eetabllahlng
llsaion products. But th la hast would be
IJIIY8Ical modele lor potential advanced
only a small fraction of the power
PrMeutlziad
~.,.Emergency
generated when the reactor Is operCaN Cooling (PWR-ECC) ayatema.
.
Deeplte .._,, _,,. at Harrisburg,
ating.
Or. Chon atreaeee that p_,. aalety
" In order to pA1'18nl a temperature rise
, _ _ I n nuciMr reectors are quite
In the fuel rods, we would reflood the
core through the ECC sys)em," Chon
adeqUate. He notea that the object of
the atudy Ia to poaalbly reline
explained. "Through our 'Current ,..
search with· EPRI, we want to
~core cooling ayatema and to
understand whether we can do It even
1
1
:=er
faster than the seconds It now would
take."
mechani8nla Involved.
Ph8MI of the reaeerch project, which
EPRI was organized to promote,
conduct and sponsor research and
EPRI funded four yeera 11110 with
-opment on the production, trans1204,000, a preliminary atudy on
mlsalon, distribution and utilization of
~ M*gency core cooling
•tn)ectlon hOm a lower and upper
electric energy.
plenum of the reector pnauure -..1 .
Chon Ia asalated by Dr. N.S. Llao,
A mtn extenehe ln-lgallon of
asalat.,.,l profeuor In research; Dr. C.
oomblned ECC lnjectlo~ wulnvolved In
Addilbbo and other rasearch aaaoclites
, . _ H, which EPRI contnacted for
u well. u graduate students.

:t£
.

w-

=.,:

April 26, 1979

tr:'.~ = ~YuJ3' 11~':

People must re-examine the value
placed on symbols of modernization, or
what Is done In pursuit of them can
bring "damage beyond the point ol
recovery" and feed to . "su l ci&lt;~&amp; of the ·
species through the destruction of the
booaphere: "
These apocalyptic predictions were
altered last wee!&lt; by the poet Chlnwelzu
In an address on ''The Modernization
Trap and Modern Africa."
His appearance was the first In a
three-part series sponsored b~ the International College 011 ·'Third World : Perceptions and Mispercepllons, Change,
Power, Values and the American World
View."
A member of the Alr~Amer lcan
Studies Department at the Unl-slly of
California at San Jose, Chlnwelzu lamented that people place positive values on symbols of modernization, such
as skyscrapers and automebllee, -Willi,..

~~~a~~'r:,';'~al.::!~1::tW~~~~ ~~

primitive.
·
The biases become Internalized .,.,d
lead to an "egocentric" phlfosophy
which espouses only one correct way to
achieve modernization , he noted.
. Ia It logical?
Chlnwelzu questioned the loolc of
pursuing symbol~ of progress whTch do
little more than disturb environmental
and ecological processes and take a toll

::,~'/: !'r~"l~reJ'~~~e.; ~~Pz':l~

trap; they are led to believe It's "more

P~~~or.~::,s~~ t,~ Y~V:n'!l'u~;·~~~~:·1~~s~
" frenetic,

high-pressured,

rapid-lire,

h"'J!e;'r..::,'';;,'~ernlzallon with Its value

manpower are not being used for their
benefit .
''The resources of the world are being
assembled and cannibalized to feed the
appelltds of the dominant West. " Chin_.
welzu calls this the "political side"' of
·
the modernization trap.
· The poet/educator said modernization and the capitalist system are r~rt
and parcel of each other. The Soviet
economic system Is " just a different
shade ol II' because they adopted a
Western view when they chose to
subvert their original goals In order to
surpass the productivity of the Western
- world.
To the dissatisfaction ol a few members of the audience, Chlnwelzu refused
to give advice on what Africa should or
shouldn't do about II, except to say that
its people should " W'C"nslder their
notion of modernization."
·- He said It was "Intellectual messianIsm" to believe Intellectuals should be
singled out to play a particular role In

~~~Ins~~~ ~=''!\1,':i. t~!~~~·~;

urged the audience to "get away from
the elitist hang-up" and recognize that
all people must work to rectify the
situation .
Solutions will " flow from the understanding of the problem" and from
"people correcting what hits them directly.:•
-'-JB

Bunn offers.
internships
for staff

system and ·symbols Iii being exported
to Third World countries by multinational
organizations,
observed
Chlnwelzu. Such modernization Is "tailored to the specific needs and requlr&amp;ments of the so-ealled advanced countries."
Unfort\lnateJy, thelnternatlonal)&gt;ualnesses In question are obsesaed by

• • A new Staff Associate Program for
1979-aO has been announced by Dr.
Ronald F. Bunn. vice president for
academic affairs.
The program Is Intended, Bunn said.
to serve the basic purposes of (1)
encouraging members of the University's fulr-llme stall to devote a
substantial portion of their lime, for
either one semester or an academic

:n~=":':. ~h~~~':~;i.t~~·~~

~r;"~ 1 ~-t~vl~~~h and o'r~~~~~~c'!!:
responslbllltles ;
(2) providing
academic edmlnlstrative experience
~r-;f..::;'~'i:fr. to members of the

~lli~' .:,dut~~man~ro;,t~~=

a type ol hit and run situation; cornJl&amp;nles get what they can from the
people and the land while they can , and
then pull out .
Unless the Third World puts more
emphasis on social accountability and
less on " profits lor minority lntenssts,"
he predicted the debllltallng trend will
continue.

1

3

·

ar:.O~~~~~: J~~!~~~ e~~~~~~~o g::

considered . II Is expected that one
assoclateshlp will be eslabllahed lor
1979-l!O, either lor the fall or spring
semester or for a full academic year.
Nominations and self-nominations
should be submitted directly to the
VPAA by June 1, 1979; selections will

~n~~c~~f~~~~ ·.:=~~·~~~

):
be negotiated by the VPAA Office with
the appropriate divisional or unit
of11ces.
Areas- to which assoclatea may be
assigned during 1979-80 are (1)
personnel policies, (2) academic
planning efforts, Including data preparation and analy-. (3) program quality
-sament methods and atandards, (4)
budgeting procedures and practices,
and 15) physical apace resource Issues.
Staff wishing to b&lt;i considered are
requeated to submit a formal letter of
application. Indicating areu of particular Interest to them ln wort&lt;Jng as an
Associate In the VPAA Offlca, the
1979-80 aernea.ter (II lese than the lull
academic yeer) In which they prefer to
hold the Auoctateahlp, and the portion
(if leas than lull-time) of their full-time
rssponalblllllea they prefer to devote to
the Aasoclateahlp.
A complete resume or currtcutum
1

1

, ~!\:~
':r~u=rs~ ah='J':
forwarded with the letter of application.

Letters of evaluation of the finalists will
be sougbl by the VP/!.A from lhe
candidate's supervisors and referenCes.
The selection of Associates will be
made by the VPAA on the basis of his
juagment of the candidate's potential
lor (1) contributing lo the work of the
VPAA Office, and (2) securing

~~ a~;!': th~es:1g~al8 n~~ce lni~~
8

ieclual deveFopment. Minority and
female stall are particularly encouraged

~~~ft~g ~th s~~~~~ 5ft;:''~':l;

~ others, will assist In the evaluation ·
of candidates.

ud~~~~~~d r::~~gr;:.;,:;3 F~G~

Vice President for Academic Affairs,
582 Capen Hall.

�JP.olonia
Buffalo's Poles have been here
since 1870; they're used by
politicians, should guard culture

!

ha ..1\_. offered a course In Pollah

Most of Bu~·s Pores ortQinally
emigrated from the southern portiOn of ·
Poland alter t870and aettlad around St.
Stanislaus R.C. Church, the flrat Pollah
pariah .
For .-ly the entire historY of the
city, Poles 11M composed about o -

thl,r;:' ~'':J:.:!at.!::n;.Buffalo Polonla" sponeorad by U/B's Polish Club( Or.

--stanlalew

Dabrowslll,

a

prom nent

~~no! ~t~ls~:.,unr~.:l\:S~

noted .that wlthln 20 years after St.
Stan~ was erected, l!olas had eatabllahad over a JIOZ8n ~ltural eocletles
w i t h = confines. Moat were drama
singing groups. By the end of ·
the 9th century, Poles had also starred
· some 50 local newspapers published In
their Mtlve tongue.
•
.
Currently, only · one Polish weekly
exists In Buffalo and It Is printed In
English .

Polish Room rededicated
in-ceremony on Sunday
The ·Pollah Room of the lockwood
Mernortai-UinrY - a center of Polish
culture known worldwide for Its
collection of documents from the Royal
Court of Poland - was rededicated,
Sunday In the Moot Court Room of
O'Brian Hall.

the'"r~c':'::i~~=-cer.'~

An exhibit of royal documents of t6tn
Century Poland was on view on the fifth
floor of the library for the occasion .
Colr.ctlon'a purpoaa
~:!'~ ~unrpo
tllledse on1 the PolblsyhCCohanlleccet roor
n
1 1955
11
- - de
F11mas, who said , " The Polish cultural
her1tage Is dlstl ngulahad , ·lll1d a Polish
Room,whlch the University wHI provide •

~uage problellla
.
t.fost Polish rmmlgrants choae to
educate their children In Polish pariah
schools. By 1890, Dabrowski relayed,
St. ·.s.n·s hed over 3,000 students.
Sln~iPt&gt; llsh students were Initially
Instructed In Polish and also heard It
spoken at home, Dabrowski believes
0

~:~~:1~u~~~~~~0t~

-lahment of the Polish Chelr tilers,
-Independently sponsored, he lllld.
Dabrowski PfBlsecl 11/B .IIIICI Buffalo
~ lor maintaining POll~ .n:~~r­
IIIICI for offering Pollah-orlelited co..,..
wool&lt;. He qualified his oralee, ~r
by Informing the audience that the
OOUrMS ere In jeoplrdy IIIICI may not be
offlrid next ye. .._... of budget,
faculty and enrollment problema. '

N"r'.!,~~a dlacuaalon abOut the
neoatr.. way In wtlicll (IIIOple view
PoTes, Dabrowtkl t.aav.d thlit Polllh
psople and, In l*ticuler, Bulfalo Po-

lonla, have IUifered at the hand of ·
"unqualified - ' - who ~
apeak on their · beMII." He lnojadea
polltrclana In thla group along with
those who uae nationality to ..., products like aau~ or klelbua.
If Poles don t begin to organize
against attackl In the media or agalnat
thoae who 8lllllolt their nationality,
Dabrowski predicted theywlllalweys be
haunted by cultural sj urs.
Dabrowski, who osma to America
from Poland In "1950, admitted he
persoundernaallylagfesthals,.. ~~nfoortablt 8 2!!' 1 ~~
II
""""
JKO -· -·
lndlvldual'anatlonaldlgnlty . •
'

1

Clubo, hal .-.try..., moved to n quarters on the fifth floor of Lockwood
1
UlnfY at Amherst. It was formerly
the audience that
housed at Main Stnaat.
~~~t~ce.g~~~.h~~~~~ u: , :ttrh'; . ~~~~ speak and underatanct_t~ : ~~he~~~:teg~~j.;!"'.!'::r,:m=~~- .
Among officials pnllkllng at the
ceremony were Saktldal Roy, director
general public."
i'l,wards ttie Iauer parr of th~ t890s, a
"Insulting remarka'~lch appeared In
of Unlveralty Libraries; ~ Pari&lt;er,
Since 1955, growth of the collection
Pollatl citizens committee approached
print Public sym
y grew for the
acting head of Lockwclbd Ubrary;
has been drematlc.
•
the City Council for permission to have
group after 1111 lmml
t was clubbed
Bronfslaua Trzyzewskl, prealdent of the
· Once 1)1odest holdings now Include
Polish students In public schools Into_d8ath In h1s home
the pollee, but
Polish Arts Club; Or. Eugenia Fronczak·
8,200 volumes, according to Stephen
structed In their ancestral tongue. The
then took another dl.. It waa
Bukowaka, chairperson of the Ubrary
Roberts, assistant to the U/B director
request was viewed cntlcally by t11!1
' IQ!Ind that Pr8elilent McKinley'aCommittee of the Pollah Alta Club; and
of llbrarlea.
press and the oommunlty and was
sin waa of Pollah elrtraotlol\.
·
William Bordacz. curator of the- Poll.ah
·, J.l!4! PoJiah . R&lt;&gt;q(TI BI'QUI"'I' ~an) ,.a! .veloed by t11!1_Councii •.. Aoperdlng, lo
,Aa a reautt of community QUtnige
• Robnf. •
Ita bOab illrOujjll an ~ with tne
DDowakf, thePolae mede the '-Qowor !fie -!nation, .a Polflh ~
Chariea M. Fogel, tctlng -..live - Pollah Academy of Science, Roberts
.._... they wanted lhelr chllelran to
IIIICI fwtlval c.IOIMCI • the ...,
.vice p&lt;8aldent of tlie IJnl...rty, nacallad
uld. and substantial QonatiOIUI are
nstaln thelrculturalldenlityand IIIQuaht
Alllertc:.n Expoeftlon. IJ liD * the eatabllahll*lt of the oollactlon
-1'eoelvad from the Pollah Alta Club and
thi s would be facilitated thrtiuufthh 1nPolee from - - 1M ~ liD ·
some 24 ye.a ago, and ren.r.ted the
the Po11ah Community In Buffalo. ,
structlon In PoliSh IM!ead of Eng Jh.
Bufflllo. Since 1181, 11'8 ..., • ~
Uniwralty'a poelllon that It II a raRoberta noted that the COllection Is
In 1923, the practice of PoUah Inflgllt up
aource of 111)8ClallmportMos.
viewed frequently by vlsllora from
structiOil ln pariah achoole was banned
~ wwned Polea not to .._.
County Exacutlve EdwMI Rutkowski
Poland; numerous Ph.B. dlaaertatlons · entirety by a cardinals' Conference.
thelrat..':.~~.:~~ng It~
haVe been baaed on Ita holdings.
Since then, Dabrowski lamented that
- ....., _ _ , "" Ita ~
preeented a oertl~ fnlm Erlll County
.
couiaes on Pollah culture and language
fumes 'and food. • He lll8o tofil the
In honor of the , _ f8cllltlea, IIIICI noted
11op1 clocunMnta
• have had a poor showing In Buffalo
audience to guard against merging
that the Pol IIIII "--I "Ia our hletory,
Since Its Inception, the Polish
schools, whether~hollcorsecular.
!;'OIIah studies wlth,!he other ~lecl
our roots . It tetla who . . - · how we
Collection has housed unique 16th to
•·
,
· ethnic movement• whers the\! would
got here, and whers . . wiH get to be
Swipe at Canlalua
~ose
their dlatl r-a. He clted the
t8th century documents from tne Royal
tomorrow."
Court The6e royal letters and written
Outspoken, Dabrowski took a s
decls
Marla Col~ to
Also an the prvgrwn _ . musical
prrvrr8oes l*laln to the hlatory of the
at · Canlslus College; 1111 Institution
their
book collection the
l)laosa , by concert wlollnlat Waronlka
city of Grodno and ere of parilcular
wh(ch baa. graduated many Polea but
"ethnic collection ," as a OSM In point.
knlttel ofW- and the Pollah Vocal
Enaembte.
•
lnteNet to the atudy of the poalllon of
_
.

l~t~~ ~~ ~~~ri~~ l~~ ~h:

~W.r~ R~~~~':i!:'~t r!..:~'~~ ~,:::=;

M~~~~c:1!,~~~

=.,

U/~~~=-~cx:: .

=~-====
... ,. .. __ ,,.......,..In

Club.

O'Brlan •• ~haidlnthel'lalllll...........
·

Mra. , _ .... - - ...........
wife of the........_ . . . ......, Artl
Club, CUI !lit ...... tD . . . . . . ..,_,
opening.

t"'~~ro':,~~:.~lnaletters

In Pollah and Lltln by Pollah Kings -.
Slglamund Auguat, Stefan Betory, John
Clialmlr, Auguat HI of SMoJlY, and

-=-~=.'W'"~
docltboOI&lt;a on hlatory,

. . - . , photognlplla,

art lfdtllaal..... ,_.._ and

~ .wteot•

=
.

Nlatad to Poll

0111ture 111eo _. contained In the'
...,_.4Cfoollectlon.

Seminar will focus.onPollah·Amerlean
stu_
d ies ·
·
· the CCIIIIriiiUdona of
~

'

the Pollah lmml-

J0 BS

==---·--.;...,...,...,...,.._____. ,;;_________...,_
FM:ULTY

•

•

~...,.....

tl!Ry)-ij_gr_

1&lt;. ,._~.,-~ (Head of

l.ln!Y,

-114-l.nr-

CIIIII'OITMI:mt. BIII:E
~~.

~; -

H031l.
•
~~~Antsa-.gy, H031 .
• , _ , - . - tlvl Engl.-log. _F-9032.

.,. M7 .,._ • • 11111 •
~-(!).
.
•1
- a f t •• , .
.., ...._

Ynlogy)-f'lllolrics. F-9034. ·
·
- P I T • - - (c.d / -. As&gt;t.}-Cologt H, f ·9035.
(Aelidon1ial

~a..-~;

==~"'::i!;.~...

- -..rr...,.-

'""'

por1mOn1

aw-u-..v tlro.--cn;-.,..
( , _ . , );

_..,

'--.c!S-

U-.fty IJ.
bra:ios ~ ' * - ~ ·

Co&lt;Jrd;_,-l:olge H, f ·9036.

to ..toua phaea In the

IIWII of Amertos. Focua will be

011

...

~loll

of

currlcufUIII

111111ar1a11 Nlalad to elbnlc heritage
-e-.emrow wur be lllraoted by Sister .

E1tn Marte Kuznlakl. C88F1 Ph.D ..

~ofeoolal.,..._, VtllaMWia
CIIUIOI; the Ollll'loulum ~
ODIIIIIOI*'I wilt be tauoht by Or. Arthur
~. ftlnnan ol .,. Currloulwn
Dl
.,.._bllallt, U/8, and Dr.
.... • = - = = - a t _the

rf. .._.

~~~~--the
.. BuftB,

l'olllll ~
. .7111.

umnier Math Study

�.. -

.

Cll-

The U/8 Commu(llry Action~ .._ .. In- communitY al year: tutoring,
helph:lg, lending,; hand to both- ~ Did. 0...
It"""'-ldcla h - and to oome to
tor a day of..fun. And fun they
,...,., • - ...,_, t8kenatltR&gt;*y'aCAC c.Nv81, - ·

The kids had fun~

at their camival!~
.cap.: 'Schmaltz' doesn't bother hjm
....: ,• • ;;
,
.
111M lie hie to 1111111 ._.. _..,.., 115,
_. t1.- go~iDII , blfqjt

IUIIiiiiiiiiiD

1

llla.ll'a ~

· .·

, onectoee-upon~tlon;ndwyoucan

tiiQI a station wagon and ·!Nke an epic
hallway around 111e wor1dl"
Wllat ..._. DOIIIIcel _ , _ , . In •

=-·J;=
..1:.:.,~ - •rmtor!Ne~.
... "Chfna Syndrome?"ldon'tglvea
~~411-~llifl!ollllllflfo"!.-,W.•~"=

--===onlp -

· You 111001 -

ector'a

-lllougll they may
•
. ~the plct~n. You
' - 10 do IIIII and ,_AIIaln • flow;
INI'atlle moat Cllffleultj*t.

-"Y.:"J:or-" :::•;.~

film 11111 w.y. -,:::.. lt1a dlr.ator; he

~~ ~t~cilr.atofa medium.
::;-..""~:,=.::.~ ahlp. It

damn Wlfal your pollllca are. The
they as
"You can make 8 political film , and
people may aey 'horeeshlt:' It might be.
In a free country, It doesn't matter.
"Most polltlceJ people don't like the!
[In particular) woutd
like to have .wyone think alike; they'd

rnr:...:·~~~~~·. Are

t~~emment

:=,tt~ou: r~. llk~r~~sih:,:or.;
myaelf .. ..
"We. don't have complete freedom
here, and It's getting less and less with

=·

1

~-rn=-ual~ ~u"6f!

time, but you can have an effect. Swim
upstream -lnet thoee who want to

control you . . . . T!)at'a whet my-fllma
aey."

offlaltlr.=

How did
abiO hie
l*al ..a IIIII
In 1_.a Mllr.
. . . . Ooei ................
"-oDDe welkecl out on tile .,...,....
~ ....... ~ofltMif••

...
._..._done.
E:
our

~Fora

and -

to

about
all,
half

"'"--cnca.
~ Waalllngton prwa corpa which

Ia ao high abaft tile ott. prwa (!lr ao
lharllltnkl ............., llgM!at lt.

"FFlm Ia ~ 'acomy' on the
Eaal Coal!, ..., w.y; lt'a not tabn

--=:f~tngton- ~

by

'Mr. Smllll.' ~ lcMd It IIIII It

~aer:"-

iN that I t - - "
Olllnlga,lhat It lllouldn, .. ~. but
tile people loved lt..
.

c..?

._ . . . . . . . . lllut . . doeM,

a-.

.......

..., ...........,.a,....

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . fl

1,

..................... a..allllf

The ..... lll8de "undlr the
..,_ of a majOr ~..:

:n:.r-..:.r ~:':: r:.
young aoldlara,

-

to~

fDr
tllaln .....

liomelllllll to flgllt llbout, 10 . . . .

111M1 wily'IIIIJ baing 1110! 81. Wa
.... only NG IIIII ,...._ fllllla 8IICI

,.,..,..,.. 011V.S.ra-F
PAID
~

a-·

. . . . . M.~ _.
fellllttloUJ I

atatements-unabrfdged There wail no
editorializing, )uat thelf own ·Words.
That's all It took.
"If ldl 'Amln. for example had
A-bombs, I'd do the aeme tlllno to
knock him off today. Hitler aod the
Japaneee- the ~!valent of Amln::

ott

How'd ...
lntc tile .........?
· Through " hunger and accident. My
background was science. I graduated
from Caltech. I didn't know a director
from 8 janitor. But I thOught orie man
should make 8 film. not a committee.
Up m that point, films were made on an
asse'!)blY line to supply product to
thea:res which 1t1e major studios own .
"I waa t on 'skid row' at Columbia.
They had no theatres; nobody wou!:! be
found dead ther8. I fought -Ina! the
assembly line and made hlts which
UPP,ed Columbia to = r status.

-M~!:.,:n':'.l-&amp;~rge st'!..~~ci ci.:
Into eorumbla to ![lake their films ."

tr!."'t.t~!rnaf~ti~ t~~~~T:::
1

are as many waya to !Nke a l!lm aa

the m~. the lyna and the dancing
ahoee.
~
.
.
He's still ill awe of lj, IMpaCts It:
"No alngla par-. . _ had • much
aa a fUiflll!lll&lt;ar, holcllng
- ~s~f~la dlr.atly for two

=

In his autoblographt, the NaJM
Abo.,. the Tille, c.pra eald he retired
from Hollywood In . 1987 w11en he
realized he had loat his .po_.·to make
last decisions. "Thet. little cockeYed,
one man, one film flag I had ralaed, In

~~'fo':nci~~C:~ ~.~·was

~ , had helped create the golden era of
films."

Schmaltz

cto.n't bolhar him

"Friend," he concloded the book,
•you are a divine mlng ..mangte of guts
and stardust. So hang In there! II doors
Opened for me, IIley can open for

an~~~;ltz

Ia a

.;.,rd

that doesn't

~m:. ~~ a~.·he eour1.rs
What a - ' - 1 1
young woman at Pleaur's

o'*-d one

there are people.
"Film Is the greatest arttorm ever
ln-. ted, " he charliploned. 11 waa the
first new art fonn In tans of thouaanda

cl-.
00::.
'I:
ftl~~:m~~==~
a mldciJ.aaed _ . obvloUaiY put off by

the mu- have hunq a '*-11 next to

- t o ma, alld IIIIa-... guy.

~~;s~.,::~~~edart':.':Jo~

baing In tiM ~~~ilk ol ~
"I ~·t tell~ wt.1 your fllma-

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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  <item itemId="85719" public="1" featured="0">
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                  <elementText elementTextId="1716049">
                    <text>They're not the
primary purpose of
plastic surgery, says
U/8 surgeon Samuel
Shatkln. See page 5.

New library is ~ing
dedicated today:
history of the unit is
recalled. See page .

12.

F....ias

Solar energy?

lelia

Sparkle Furnas has
devoted-a decade
to a collection of
memorabilia of the
former LI/B
·
president: It's being
officially opened,
too. Seepage-.3 .

Buffalo proves not
tbe best place for It,
as you may have
suspected. See page

She's the
Commencement
catch of the year:
Seepage2.

8.

VOL.10 • NO. 27
APRIL 19, 1979

STATE UNIVERSiTY
AT BUFFALO

Enrolllnent
Five-year projections call for
slight overall decrease in first half
of the t 980s: a few_areas wi II grow
Overall U/B enrollments will .._
tly betWeen the IIIII of 1_,

~

'lwe.nd~~ -

nonet-.

-~ en
lne&lt;eaaeo-1978 enrQ!lmenta.
Two _.,ta flve-yeer plana Were

Tl!e figures,

-oped: one for the Heelth S c i Center and a aecond for tile ao-&lt;:alled

~
=~· :C: t': 11u~•=
slightly, offset by a somewhat lerger

llOf8 campus clecreeae.

Projectlone are made In Ierma of what

~rv:.-:.:::::\':.! ~E)~ut+:

Main St., tool·

numbers, a · C0!11blnatlon of full and
part-time load, ere lower than total

head counf enrollment figures, and

The Main 5lreet CMnpus hAs tlwlt tom up look now. too. as Western
· New York's blgesf cils since the Erie Canal (the Buffalo Rapid Transit
protect) Is finally underwey. The dust and noise mean prosress.

higher than-full-time enrollment flguru

alone.

,

For ex.nple, the 1., core campu8 ·
AAFTE Ia projected at 18,800 etudenle;
total head' count for that yew for the
unite Ia proJacted aa 22,488. The
Health Sclenc8s MFTE Ia proJected at
2,8115 far 1.,. (The Health Sciences
raport _.a only In equlvalant FTE

andthere'smareroc.omebothatMalnand~t.

Foster Hall

flat . .).

burlng the flwl yews from 1., to
1984, oare campua AAFTEa are
expected to dip s11ahtly to 18,355 by the
fall of 1984 (bMacf on a prolected "-!
-. count tot.l for that yew of 22,21111).
Graduate flguraa are expected to
1...,._ but not enough to of1aat
~ 1 -. ln ~sa-,
the to181ja axpeclad 10 In~=
8IICh yew for the 11-yew
,
- n g • .,.... of 3,1811 by 1
.
(Sea cl*la.)
Theaxt.torwlll p~ be cleaned,
For tile - - CMIPU8
1978, the
' -• 81111 lie wtndowa 1'8111aoed to
AAFTE 18,307. The fall head count,
- - a y . The .............."
21,1111 .
hOpefully looll alrnl18r 10 the 8l&lt;latlftg
wtndowa, .........
...._... ...... alldad to ..,..
floor, It .... - of wllldl will .. made
~oora~
_......~
to tile rwnp
-~·
In
additiOn,
wtn
plaCad
ciWta ...: . - c*'-1 "one of

$5 million renovation work
slated to begin next winter; _.. . .
plan for an of Main Street due soon

In

c.....-....

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

=1':-'.!J::'• J

..m~.::.
. · - ="=.lillY
,..,.._,"by 8enfood D. Gonion, IUNY

- · ....
-o
f tile main.-....
IIIICII.
l!nlnnOe ~ Will lie

~-uctton~le

•
wt,_, Ill~ ltllllil FOitar
wttl ._..to be NIDOIIad
tile ......... ClltlllpDa.

--lor

_.......on

Ml&lt;l--. cannon DaaiOIIInc., a
loolil aldtllectlnl
IY

linn, will tublnlt •
of tile
liniiN Main 8llwl Cllnploa. "-'!~
to ..... tile ftllll!l'llllellilll~ .......... tile lllc*IOft of

1)'1111of

........uon

..........................
....... ...........
........ Htlillll ...._

...... -

-TtlfiiY

H.ll.P.

IIEIIICIIIE

~

TOYM.I

--.,

-~: ~

2.-311

Ill..

I tiD
.13

IIIII

718
577
&lt;101

!'at

710

.15
331

U2
363

etO

325

3.0M

.23

~

Ut

511

5113

3.-

3.145

..,.

-

Ul
..7
735

• 28
3112

3.1811

�r
Afot'11,111f

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

,....
_

- ,.,

--

lorFTV

-lorFTV

1?.. .
12,11118
12.353

13,1311
12,(135
12..,.

p,. ,

12R7
13.223
12..,.,
12,!04
12.0111

12.MI
13,2118
12.844
12,5117
12,138

u

,.,

COIIUBII- I'AU. fUU...lWE UIIOBIOIIADUATD TO
-UALA-I'TE
AAI'TE
A.A.I'TE
.....

~AVERAGE:

1.0111

-

,_

3,138
3,148
3,1.

1177

A.A.I'TE
lorFTQ
3 ,255
'3,031
3,050

_,-eo AVERAGE:
3,37!1
3,471
3,!101
3,!111
3,572

1-

3,2511
3,384
3 ,413
3 ,481
3 ,483

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

_ , . _ . , - . PIOCI'IIm In MFC
... t.ltlliociUcld In,....,.
Tile IIUIIIber of etudenl8 edmltted to
. .... ....Ung ~ ' * " * - t e

~

etudenta.

'l:r -'!:."'':&amp;

:~ ~

CINdloMI .......

Tile ......,. of llocW Wortc Pnlgram
wtH be lncNMid br 15 students per
~. beGinning In 18?9-ao.
Tile Clledu.te Prognam In Archltec·
tift wtll - - ., 8ddltlonal 25
etudenl8 fall begiMing In 1819.
Tille Nlrnber plua thoee retained for the
MCOnd ~ will 1 - to . , lncreued
loed of 45.1* ~ hom-ll80 on. A new
IIIMt8r'a IM'IJIItWft In Utblln PIMnlng,
now going tllrougll the State'a _._r
8dd enother 27
8ludenta
tile full-time arwluMe
IIUdlniiiOCIJ In AR:IIIMctlft .ti.- 1881 .

..-....to...,_ to

==·~.::.:Z'::.~
....._
min
. . ,.

field ...lch _
. . "--cM Pfenning
the_.. tlme, demand
far ,.UIIui- II llfOWinG rliPkiiY, the

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

Arroc'.UO.L

............ pnljecalin 111M points ouL

AIIDIIIer a.- ,...... to full-time
......................... _.ron
if . . ...... ol I.Jinry 8clence
. . _ _ . . . ,Olin.! and~.

. . "Unnoolnntr ..,... to ..,. ,...
:=:.==.u-...r::.lnto~

...

In . . ,.. ol1180, and tiWI ..... oft to
• - - . . IDad of 15 beg!Ming In

t:l'

-·2,5011
2 ,655
2 ,499

lorPTQ
1,289
1,222
1 ,095

2,584
2,872
2 ,71 5
2,747
2 ,758

1,188
1,224
1,243
1,258
1,263

and Statistical Science Program In MJ:C
Is expected to attiiiCI about 15 students
by 11184.
Tile Master of Social Wotk Program,

:=. ~.rr:':Ns ~ ~rJ~~'l:

In the fau of 1979, a tlguns expected to
growto301n t983.
Other new part-time H,raduate pro-

=~allns~:':::.!eld;.asnof~~'Y:/c!ll~
tlgi.Wed Into the plan because they are
geared to offset other expected
raducttons elsewhere.

"-10111mproNIMftl

Tile core campus enrollment plan
predicts retention lmprowment at all
- · o-the next flw years. Stetistics
are offered Indicating that this Is
alnaedy 'beginning to take place. As
more Amherst '*"Pill bulldlnqa ...,
open, and the IIMd· tor b~ng Is
........,, "tffe llnptowement Will be
otwloua to all," the report aays.
Adjuat"*lta on thla baalo, howevw,
we not edded Into the projections until
t.t.
Financial aid for part-time students,
llkaly to be 8n11Cted br the , _ . .
~ment, Ia expected to lnc:r.M
IW!entlon .mong llnancially strapped
l*l·tlme studenla elter1881.

-~='~f:::"~u::y 'fu:

out to be a very modest r8te, Md may

.a.o .,...,.. to be unclerataled, the noport
lncll-.

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

The Helolftl ~ Center enroll~lona lo&lt;* t o r - growth
In - . J . . . .. Moet will occur In

~~'=:: :'m"::on~

--=

Only a llllall portion of the I~ Is

011.::o.dlgl: PI=-· Aeteled

to

1'\ol IILI•, _.1111
ftle NpOft,
~ ~
• - Thenlpy
bechelor'a
IJIOIIWII
In
a a

,.,.,_ion

•FoaterHaU

O.G-4

0.3858
0.381
0.381
0 .381
0.381
0 .381
0 .381

1,380
1,3115
1,415
1 ,434
1 ,471

3,8223,8111
3,714

!;()NYERnNO FAll FULL·TIIIEORADUATES TO
ANNUAL AVERAGE I'TE
Fill
AAFTE.
eom..ro..
Port-nRollo tor FT Q
1.0370
0 91128
0.91128
0 .875
0.875
0 .875
0 .876
0.875
0 .875

0.381111

1,248
1,330
1,314

3,2olll .
3,!!81

,

-c.......

PTU

torPTU

UAdLt=-·

1.0015
I .CI05
1.CI05
1.005
1.005
1 .005.
1.005

_

_..,
....

~!.!'
PTQ
0.5140
0.4585
0.4382
0 .458
0.458
0 .458
0 .458
0 .458
0 .458

1~:=

13,728

14,321
14,884
14,258
14,001
13,809

Total
Onlduot•
FT&amp;
4,544
4,253
4 ,1 45

4,479
4,808
4 ,858
4,749
4,746

continuation of Erie Community Col·
lege's associate degree offerings In t)lat
field . The Department of Physical
Til~ Is planning to Implement a
m
a prognam. The E.D.D. and
M. • &amp;areaa In the departments of
Physical lducatlon and 11ealth Education will be con¥erted to Ph .D. and M.S.
degrees; the conversions are. expected
to feed to eddltlonal enrollments.
Nwrelng proposes a doctoral degree
pfogram, and Medicine Indicates If will
Implement a B.S. In lflophyslcal
Sciences to Bhhance the general
~sJ~ee;;:s ~~ng M.D.,
In DenusPrv, the grea"Pest growth wtll
come In the Maste(a of Oral Sciences

lrtf.r':r

pro~'W"unclergreduata enrollments will
remain constant, except tor the new
baccalaureate program In NucMedlclne Technology, which Is 111'0!Cted to expaod from 8 to 24 by 1984 .
8oth Medical Technology and Occupational Therapy will take ln mont
graduate studenl8. Phr,llcal EducatiOn
wtll expand pi'OQiallll n gerontological
fltneaa and exen::lee eclence.
CllnlcJI enrollmente In Medicine wtll
remain about the same wtth basic
eclence enrol menta In thlll echool
expected 1o Increase because of
program growtl) In the other to..- Health
Screncea echoola .

~~d~~~~o 8"':t~~~
enrolled by 11184), N..-alng l&gt;'t&gt;lects a
very modAI8t lncreue at the ·undergraduate occasioned by the
fermlnatlon of the diploma program
with M - Hospital.
The B.S. Program In Pharmacy wtll
remain the aame. Phann.D. enrollment
Is expected to doubr., from 15 to 30
graduate students by 11184 In nsaponae
to
IIMda, Md mOdest
I~ . . piMned for both Ph.D.
and tour-~ undergraduate programs
In lotedlclnal Chemlatry, Pllarrriacet&gt;t!CI, and Biochemical Pharmacology.

'!,em'"\::·

man_.

Bella

ToUI

u~

She' II address
SILS commencement
on May 13
Tile SchOOl of lnfonnauon and
Lltnty StudiM has pulled off aom&amp;thlng of a ooup In lining up Ita
commencemant ~lor this spring
Tile controwerafal, lrrepnsssible Beni
Abzug wtll deliver ftle SILS 8ddresa at
graduation exercr.. achecluled for 3
p.m., Sunday, May 13, In the Moot
Court Room Of O'lltlan Hall.
According to SILS 0... George 5
Boblnald, atudentl selected her
their firet choloa ... Md through
persistent, periOIIal contacts finally got
her to agree to come. •
Bobinski eald Abzug has liMn asked
"to 8peM on a topic dealing With any
asPIICI of llbrariM and llbniNnahip.• .
Nothing abOUt Jimmy Carter?

u

FolleH's slates
June start
GroundbfeMlng for Follett's BOOkstore on the Amherst Campus Ia
acheduled for June with the stora
expected to open a lew weeks belora
the beGinning of aprtng - t a r F18XI
year. The exact date atlll has not been

set.

According to John Balagna, regional
manager ofFollett ,' he, along with the
firm's corporate and divisional pres~
dents, will probably ai!Md the grountl-

=~ng ~=- ~:"ar!"~

:.':~u=lcal~~g- that, • he relayed

asAl~~out..,lldl:,~~pl~ ~~~
Balagna said the store will be on one
- · and, aa expected, will contain
belwMn 20,000 to 25,000 ~ feet .
Balagna also aald the store will bs
color-coordlnaled, will haw rugs, and'wtll be d8corated with vwloua woods
and Mil~ oblecte . .Windows
wtll o'¥ertook l.8Q USalle.
Balagna g~ ftle store will
have apace Ml Miele for Cllaplay of nor&gt;requlnad booka and noted that academic
departmMta . . now being asked to
compllellsta olauch books.
Balagna predicted Follett. would bs
the 111'11 construction started on Parcel
B.
Balagna does not expect the s1ora
will 8Jipand, alnce the total apace of all
Follett operatiOns on both campuses
wtll equal about one aquw. tool per
student. a figure he Ierma "very
adeQuate."
.
While Balagna waa not aura If
. Follett would hi,. aeldlttonal personnel
to run the Amherat store, he wu
emphatic that ·no
employees
would loea thelt lobi.
Unlike moet of Follett's bookst0188,
Balagna eald, the Amt~eqt store Ia
specifically~ned
hou• a retail
bookatore
ion. The majority of
the chaln'a other outleta uee converted

-t
to

apace.

Ciancio' heads
national group

�After tO years, the Clifford Furnas archive is a reality
By Joyce Buehnowskl
ReporterSIIIIf

During theae times of Inconstancy,
fleeting romance and ruptured commitments, It's good to lind Gibraltar -

so:r~~~~ ~:,.~e=• end

now
almost tO yeara alter his death, Mrs.
Spart&lt;le Furnas, wile of U/B's ninth
chencetlor, remains a woman very much
In love with her husband . That dewtlon
'1M driven her to spend the last decede
PerPetuating his memory and preaeNIng· his worl&lt; lor generations of future
U/B atudents.
Next week, the Cllftord Cook Furnas
Memorial Conference Room In Capen
Hall will oftlclally be dedicated . Spart&lt;le
Furnas can at last relax.
• The Fumaeea met one day at a
Sunday SchOol picnic In Happy Hollow
Pari&lt;, West Lafayette, Indiana. Sparkle
notiCed a handsome young men being
luaaed over by a cadre of admlters; she
wanted to know why, and more
Important~, the Identity of the mystery

;r,:n·
~:;; ~~· po=~~'O:ased :mJ:::
Furnas, a PuJua undergrad recently

returned from the 1920 Olympics In
Antwerp, Balglum, where he repr&amp;eantad the unl-.lty ·In tnack end field .
&amp;p.1&lt;le waa curious enough to do
eome __..t lnwatlgatlve wort&lt;. She
ceaually atrolled up to the young man
and Initiated a con-ion. A~J&gt;ar81ll·
ly, he waajust as beguiled as spande,
.. he eoon offered to pull the
burra off her aklrt, then left his data to
lake her home. Not 1o&lt;111 an., the
oouple....., engaged. se...l yews
they they
.....,met.
milfrlad In the J*1&lt;·whet8
~ ............... a ......

Bpalkle, named aftet a heroine In a
,_.. authOred by her mother'S
obat81rlclan, aayt ahe doeen't think
F - woutd be eurprtaad at
10
"labor of Jooe," EmbeiTMaad
fiiiiYba, at .....,,"" hla
Mel
prom!Mnlly dlllliawed In the
Unl~admlnl_lwe_ - · bUI
notMrs.
began to oollacl Mel
orgenla
~ .-~~. only
....,. an. hla daatll. llha acted qulddy
. . . . . . aha '-*' 'hla effacte would
be loll or cllmll8l!! by fiN or floocl, . . _ ola ~ Pur'dua pNIIdant Mel

'*

v-w

_.,.,Ia

FurN.

'*

a:::;c:-"·
_. _ _ , Mrs.

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

F- -

--

to dale:
~~~~

-~=-:as;;an
.=.,~,...:.

...

·~-,_,..,... tllnlllaa;

(liar
........ •

IOn of ... the

Chencelior's Medal award speeches
from the 19208 to 1975, the 50th
anniversary of the award; end gathered
and had bound some o400 pcems written
by her lather-In-law .

beiCop~I~~~~~Fi:,"\:,~11:~;'~

out"H..: country lind the eight volumes
of his writings are houeed In CNer adozen llbrarletl, Including the Library of

Congreas.
Displays
Since last May, all of Mrs . Furnas'
considerable energies heve been concentrated on coordinating displays in
the memorial room. The room's papers
and lumlshlngs, to a large extent, have
been underwritten by memorial contributions of lrlends and former
colleagues of the Chancellor. One of
the first such contributions carne from
Horace Lanza, a 1901 U/B Law School
grad who made a fortune In the wine
Industry. The couple met Lanza on one
of their many trips around the country
In which they promoted the creation of
active U/B alumni chapters .
Mrs. Furnas was also fortunate

~~~~~st,O su~ a:S~~~edUirl~~. :,~~

Til Smith, Mrs. Marla Porter, and Mrs.
Betnlce Fogel - to name a lew - ·who
helped her complete her "labor of love"

~~'1'R:'hf~~n~~ ~r t~~~~~~~~.

deeth .
She wanted a room thet "reflected the
whole man ." And Indeed, It does just
. thet. It shows his roots, Inspirations,
accomplishments and lo'IIIS. ·
Even the outside window d lap lays are
part of the panorama. On the windows
are pictures and graphics depleting the
deYeiopment of tha Unlveralty during
Furnas' 12-r-&lt; tenure from 195ol to
1111111. Guiding U/ 1! through Ita delicate
tnanaloi'mation from private to State
status, Furnas was responsible lor the
conatruction of 22 buildings on
campus. In addition, he greatly
lncneued ~ lunda end the
number of faculty, and established the
U/8 Foundation, Inc.
Mrs. Fu,.. mai&lt;M no bones about
the feet that
huabMCI wlahed the
Uni--'IY could namalned pmate .
Wllan he was told, h o - . that
SUNY's maat• p-. Included oonatruotlon ot a tult~fNI Unl-.lty Cant•
In BuffeiO, aha uye he capitulated to
the IM'IIUible while U/B was still

'*

eolwnt.
C..ol•• ......
lnalda the IIIII. lly

3011. room, one

F - ' olflca deak,
8IOnO
wltll _ . . ~- of
"*110111b111a
llnlllg the right Mel lalt
walla. Tha rltillt wall oaaa end wtlmmade...ly -

display above It contain many of his
honorary degrees and medals, awards
and citations . One of them Is the
cCNeted Big Ten Conference Medal
which he won In 1922 lor scholarship
and athletic prowess. This area also
conlalns some very personal keepsakes, like lhe Fumes mlll'rlage
certificate, Sparkle's most cherished
place of memorabilia.
Another of her favorites Is a gold
medal which was given to her by the
Chancellor of the University of Bologna.

~,r:~:':l::,~u~~~.gF~a~~t
lt .

=::z

The medal carne with a card that bore
this message: " It Is altogether fitti ng
and proper thet the effervescent,
affectionate; little woman behind the
dynamic young chancellor of the
world's best university should wear a
gold medal from the chancellor of the
world 's oldest university. " Bologna was
found In 1066.
Among other special objects In the
esse Is a notification (sent this year)
thet Furnas Is Included In the Morgan
County Hall of Fame In Indiana, and a

entitled America's Tomorrow, his
predictions lor the country's future led

~~:::: ~~~~ ~~ ~~~~~~~k.e~e;J~~!n;,:

that followed, The Next Hundred Years,
a Book-of-The Month Club selection
Drlnted In flv&amp; foreign l~~~~guagea end
ot a
braille, tha Olwlcoillor coming energy ehortage, a· pollution
problem end a population explosion
which would bave adverse eftecta in
8

;::JYct!fi1.~t ~Im~8w=hian~ on•::
~=s~~':,'~~ r~~t ~~":x=Ju~.
~~~n~~s ·~n'darn~::. ~~: .:;.o;m~~

begin to conserve and protect his
natural resources.
Gilts of delicate china, hand-carved
wood, crystal and leather from about a
dozen countries edom other shelves.
0

de~~~~~g ~~~ g'1"ve~~~ ~~~~. ~~~~~~r~

~~~~~=~~~~~~B~~ ~%~n :X~:'tf~C:.

1956 by the wile of the Italian
Ambassador. Other notable gilts
Include a Nandutl lace mantilla and a
hand-embroidered shirt given to the
couple In 1963 by the Ambeaeedor of
Paraguay. During that period, the
University was Instrumental in 8181stlng

~~~ru~:r!nsq::~:e::, ~'t:i'tl~~

Gloves to box Albany
A miniature pair of boxi!'IQ gioglven Fumas.to "battle Albliiiy" Ilea on
a shelf near the old UB-1 I I - platae

the Chancellor was on a 14-month leave
from the University during which he
served as Assistant Secretary of
Defense lor Research and Development
with the Elsenhoweredmlnlstrstlon.
Eric Sevareld , along with a. panel of
the U.S. In the deYelopment of space
technology.
Shortly alter the Chancello~s death,
oftlclals at the Eleenhower Library
requested thet many of the records
pertaining to his government aervlce be
sent to them .
At the opposite end of the room rest

~~ V.:~m'!. C::..:l~h=n::

deYoled to model planes, which Furnas

~~~.:='ut~=t~~:_":!\:;
when It chenged hends, the Cornell
Aeronautical laboratory. Furnu left a
faculty position at Yata In 1942 to
accept that poat; he namalned there
until 195ol wllan he atanad his tanuna at
U/B.

~~~~~o~~rsPn~~rc ~~n~
medical curricula.

~~ :~~~t:u~=~=::r.:m

ee:~.h~~~ ~.~::'~u=

and
personal library, the Memorial Room
also provtdea gllmpaea of the , _
casual, prime man .
Neat led In one of the bookcaaee Ia en
unpublished worl&lt; ol the Chancallor'a
Which tells the story ot his croeacountry, camping honeymoon with Mra.
Furnas. The couple made the journay In
an old Ford they bought lor sao and
sold later lor $25. Alw8)'1 lnduatrloua,
the duo made 1200 on the trtp by
collecting ....,plea of molding iancl.

..

~~~~ It·~=

=r

~=

=

1
&amp;-=.1=":ents the room "to
s~ for the lila" ot the man ahe IoWa.
But although aha doeen't like t o - It,
1M room IIIIo epeaka lor
F..,.. llwed, . . -.pie wort.d M a
--aunlt.R _
_....,
then, ttlal 1M Cllllonl ,umai ..........
. Room will - • a trllluM not only to
one of tha Unhflnlty'a moat ~
- . , bUt to lha wonw~ whO atood
bMidehlm.

'*·

.,Ita

�Aprll11,1t7t

4

VIEWPOINTS

Nukes again: Supporter said 'misinformed'
EDITOR'S NOTE: &amp;lk SWn IIHIInt'a
delanM ol .......... outngacl -u\lr
U/1 -~~~~--- atudent. n.t at...
dlnt'a ......,, ,...,.,._ wiH ba ""' In
-wlahea,
f*la llr
- .1111sand next. It he
. . . . . . _ , ..... a
soo--d .-....... lllit that wiH heft to
bathe end of 11. We could clabata It until
we run out of ol. •••
By a-teaS.~
UIB~-

Thla Ia an open letter to Eric Sven
Blllln~a In neaf'l:nae to hla latter In the

A~th':~~Ehhe~~:..e..e. talk of

eltematlve "'*VY aocroee Ia going a

:..,.:
~n;::, ~~fo"l~alr:,~
oil ernbwQo In 1873. Realr,Y. a lot further
heck, Indiana lived n cliffs for a
reuon (to utilize aolar heating and

back;

~~).:d c-.~r:;~.:- f~·~~~~~.:~

the advent of ciiMp energy, gas and oil
replaced free "'*VY aourcaa auch as
aotor and wind but. now, with energy
coma going up Iuter than the rate of
lnl'-llon, they .,.. getting looked at

"":.,~"normally

1 wouldn't write In
thlo way, your letter cella for a neaponse
on a point to point baala. I'm aorry to
say thlo, Eric, but you noally have many

=a~l=e:::~dt":'~

moll- In wrltlng thll.,.. not to att~
you or your ~lnlona. lt'a juat that the
......,._ the 1teporter gaw you lcwoee
me to do II. Bo lel'o get at.rted. Flrotly,
.... not talldng abOut alternatl¥e
-vY but a larger field C811ed
appooprtate ~ - A dllflnltlon
coutc1 ba glwn heN but Ia qultalong ao
lneteed I 110pe that the !d-. come out
ln-"-1.

.... _.....,

y - ......... a big point about
-w -.oloOiea not
- - -vY
....,.; only
' -one
·
you mintloned
8Peclfloally
end for .wgy, tNt for
lnclu8lrlll . . . - . Actually lncklllry
41'!1. o1 the ..aon•a -w

00. end -

lncluda .....
end
oondftlonlng
i-3'!1.}, ~(2.5'!1.) • ..._

~on

(2e.ft.l •
-WCIDIIId ....._. _ .--.w-.
_, .-:),

____
.....

ol IIIIIICIIIIIIIJIIIIMI• -1M '"
,_. " a ....... 001-411CM blitz
-~ Tllla

OOUid--

-.,
---_.,
__--·
_-.__
..

:%:'
WnP. ~~~~~ ~~·, .~:v:.,~~"'~
ment?

=

Solar energy repnaaents one of our

,:~~:,.otis~~~~ ~~~~':ipr~

application of solar energy at this time
Is not because scientists and engineers
don't believe It will be a serious
contender (this Ia only your opinion),
but because energy monopolies will
heve difficulty exploiting 11. As Raleh
Nader said In hla recent speech here, If
Exxon owned the sun, we'd have had
solar energy a long time ago. " By Its
very natuna, aolar energy Ia decentralIzed and not easY to caah In on, though
I'm suns that the companies will come
up with ways to do lt.
Solar energy Is limited In two ways
but In your discussion I can't tell which
ou are naferrlng to. The first limitation
a the amount of energy that actually
can hit the ground at any time. Though
this mar, seem limited, It Ia enough to
heat a fat plate collector to o - 200"F
or a concentrating collector to o 800"F. In addition, aolar energy can be
paaalvely ueed aa low grade heat In
bulldlngo Cthla Ia built right Into the
building). All of thla Ia quite different
from yo..- concaptlon of aoW -vY ..
flelda of ao1er ootlectorl or . . - .
lllleltl....

r.

..........

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

,.__
- .. ,. o.-. -

__
--·-

-·Qiof

__,,_.,
..,.
IOIIIIA.~

JO\OOIUO-KSa

· ,.....

to get rid ofthaae wastes. Now, moat of
these materiels .,.. dumped Into land
IIIIa or Into the ocean.

and will only pay back to atockholllera
In the electric company. In lifetime
electrical coeta appropriate technol·
ogles wUI coat S1400.1500 per kilowatt
va, $8300 per kilowatt lor nukes. I
realize that you question theaa results
but how can they be any leaa accurate
than computer simulations of risks
from nuclearpo_..

SoHdwaataa
The use of eolld wastes as fuels can
be extnamely effective If tied Into a
congeneratlve power plant arrangement
or total energy system. As you may be
aware, the typical centrellzed power
plant Ia extnamely Inefficient (33'!1.)
because It rel811888 waste heat to the
environment and :rom transmission
losses. By generating locally and using
waste heat, the efficiency c;an be
brought up to 7S-80% .
The next two thirds of your letter
discusses nuclear power and the
Harrisburg accident, a subJect In which
I feel I have a good deal of knowledge.

Samoa Jolla
You could have a point about service
jolla but tbere ere holea In your
argument. As you say yourself, uranium
supplies ere limited - moat of that
which remains, It turns out, Ia located
on Indian Ianda and In auch
objectionable pl-.s as South Africa.
American Indiana have bean exploited
beyond bella!. They ere living as a
displaced people because we pushed
them off their Ianda. Where •h=ld
push them now? When will we
?
Also people building nukea are. hlg ly
akllled workere uauelly Imported Into
the region lor the duration of
construction. Thlala very different from
the lOcal lobe created ·by aQPIIcatlon of

~~~t.~a~ :.r.:~~~~1~:.~~~

as I can about all aspects of · the

rnf~~ion ~:00, ~~~ onh~l"!ldea~

the polltlcel coin. This way I feel that I
have melntalned the Impartiality needed
to make Intelligent decisions concernIng my feelings about future energy
speclflcelly and aoclety In general.
I'm afreld thet you hed another
mlsunderatandlng In your · quote of
NYPIRG's statement about nukes. I .
think what. you are trying to say la-thet
" nuclear power was created to relieve
the tremendous guilt feelings that

~·:;~'~\~ ~~::.~~~~-e~~·~~

quite a bill difference betwMn this and
your statement. Of course, naactora

r:''~\':to1~ oo1~"r.;,'!\,1e w=~~
needed for the explosion.

""&amp;ro~:•.:':,~~~~':'.,~~-United States
haa the moat lnveated In nuclear
technology. We have been exporting
nuclear power for yeare and In addition
corporations In the nuclear lnduatry ere
all large multlnatlonela. Efficient
productfon and consumption would do
wonders In balancing our trade dellclta
and would employ P80Dia world-wide
(nuclear bomba are ·proliferated under
the gul... of power plants not bec:auM
the technology Ia but beceuaa
naactora ProdU08 llaelonable materiel;
over 1 per cent of ell floalonable
material Ia unaccounted lor) .

-

The - . 1 limitation to aoler -vr
to do
the ........ 1lul tie It
- - - ol (Ill...,.. lllleMU brb
"facc" tNt.,_ the- 1811'1 ~.... It
Ia windy. Wind .-gy
1J*1
~- 11wa . . . ...,.. ol
deelgna PQeliltlle 8lld .,_, ..
baing .......,... The ..tab~ . ol the
wind" (and the
-*I ..,.
tl&lt;COI1111mpel_,l8lilled_ for bit eMiiDY IIIOtlilll
.
tec:tlilologlea. Aa liebw, )IOU only

We cloo)'t know muoll about It
Moat of Ul living In Buffelo hllwellttle
conoaptlon o1 the naeda of Third World
1!80Piee. ~,.:r Stldath
Raqlphal _ ,
of the
Brttlah Com
and a former
mlnlatw of the Gur- aov.mment:
" For too lonG, . . hllwe been braln- ' * 1 Into Dellawtna that the beat
education, the ball lechnotogy, the
11a11 ..,...loaa, the 11a11 lntellacto, the

poeetbllltlea. ~ wind . . .
C8MOI ,..filii , _ _ lend ,., ....
llllldng lllat -lllpllon), ..... the
wind cen ..,... e 11*1 11111*:1 011
COiftiiWCial end NeldentJal .......
leawlng to.ll luata lor lnduR1III

=

-

approprtela

7.1'!1.1,

ell areas of the consumption spectrum .
What should we do: pay out billions
In fuel billa or employ technologlae that
will pay back their ln-tments In a few
years? Surely you cannot ba agelnst not
using a natural resource when we don,
have to. In a world filling to the brim
with people the correlation between
productivity and energy consumption
can no longer ap.ftly. Why use

-&gt;

~~ol-:g,~

~and

y- blon-. -

t.datoc::lla.

-vr

of
from
lncndtllly blailed end
lncamplale, allowing jU8t , _ little )IOU

=-.;,~=~~
lnolude dnct COIIIIIullllon,

Ollwa

~

.-JOlla, femwltallali to

eloolliol, end moltan IIIII Jnlllllode. In

=.ltlan.-.":':~~==

~':on-=-~===~
""*' .....

, . .. 11wa . . ..., 1111 million
..... ol Cllplllc aotldti "'
....
llllllloli-of .ligrlcul1lnl
·
• mlftlol\
ol
. . . . 1110million
ol lnCiuelrtal ..... C40'!I. Olganlc
Ill lllllllon- ol ~

_..,aNI

=--=-~--::.-....,..
011111110
............. ........,..._

.... ,...au. • ..., ..... .......

far • .. cnp. 1ft ......... UllnO
.............l ............ dentlft
......................... lir Mwlng

l::.:r"~=-==~~
nnt Ia c.l. All tNt Ia urt.l Ia

that Ia

batter. All that Ia IoNian Ia llall.
out lntellecluallilng to the
, ! " - not1ona retain a
alrW!Giahofd on the ~~
to ba

con

:::e.!d w:::':-m-.:J:.•

don~~ : - · . : : . .~~"=

. . . . Our role model N811y lan't ell
that good. Tlllrd World OOIIIItrlea . _
to
with tec~~ng~ogr. liPPfO"
prlale to 1helr ....,._ TileY need ow

-..op

llnowledaa end ......,_ to rnal&lt;a

Intelligent declalona; . . , _ , they do
nol Mad t.cfinology to help .. gat
r1oher.

Med ed wrong?
Dr. Steven Jonas, 'aaaoclate proleaof community medicine at Stony
Brook, hel oelled for a major ovemaul
ol medlcel education In hla newly
published book, Uedlcal Uya~Wy: TM
Training of Doer.,., In the United
Slat•. Tha medical school emphaala
on d l - and cure rat/111&lt; then on
~th and the ~on of IIIMU
craatea, Dr. Jonaa otated , a aertouo
conlr8dlctton ' * - what Ia baing
taught and what people naelly need.

�Plastic surgery: facelifts are only a third of it

--·- -

occulonally fatal aa silicone pertlc'drlfled from the original alte to the
bloodstream or other "'.'-!!'· "The
Implant," aays Shatkln, 'f111Mina In
place.•

ay Miry Betti Spina

.,.,!; ~~~~.J~ngater
8

who

was

d~~~~J~·~f/,f~~~~.f;:'.~t~~~ with

Qrafll end f1ICOflltniCtlo

And forme! Firat Lady Betty Ford all

Rlald pieces ot silicone.,. aleo uead
by pTastlc surgeons to build up facial
contours which haVe been darnaQad by
'accidents, lost through cancer eurgery,
or are entirely mlsalng ~ Of
certain birth defects. But l'll&lt;ft often
skin or bone Ia taken from one pert of
the patient's body and mCMid
to be uaad I o the noconatructlve elfono.

~~:'ll:!~~n~~~~ =::.':ia of others,

have been Improved physically and
emotionally by the techniques of one of
medicine's fastest growing specialties

el_,_.

- &amp;~~~ a~l~'\';'~~~~':~"''o~~C·uel

!)halkln says there's no doubt the highly
pobHclzed facellfla of Mre ~ Forll and
other celebrities Increase the public's
.-.ness of cosmetic plastic surgery's
benefits.

ak~~~~~ f:,:'.!.,;"~~.,.:"'U: on~

very clo18 examination can pinpoint the
nearly Invisible scars left by the
procedure. Those whose faces have ail
but been obliterated from being thrown
through a car windshield have been
stitched so carefully that only they and
their surgeons know the extent of the
original ln)ury. And cancer patlente
who've lost part of their faces and a
·great• deal of their self-Image to
Ilia-saving surgery can once agal~ look
very much as they did before, thanks to

~~t;,:ru~~~~.;;,~yb~~~!~

of
plaatlc surgeons are cosmetic in the
sensa they Improve upon essentially
normal conditions." Instead, most are
aimed at correcting damage and

~.!:~:':':::: {;~~~~9e~:r.~ldents,
Those procedures

~P':f "ft
1

whl~h

result In a

.::::a a:::.J:i

or
benefit to tl:. patient outweigh normal
surgical c1aks. Or. Shatkln, a clinical
associate orofeaaor at U/B School of
Medicine, stresses that haying cosmelle surgery should not be viewed
as a casually-approached procedure for
Improving one's appearance.
According to Shatkln, plastic surgeons carefully evaluate each c;ase apd

1

:::~~~r:~::.·r~~~~c:."'oe;~ ~s,::n~

per cent of those who seek cosmetic
surgery are accepted for treatment,

~~':'~~~~~~8~~ ~fcu~~~g~:~~~~

West Coast.
"The parson's physical condition may
not warrant the risks of elective
surgery," he explains. " He or she May
haVe unrealistic expectations as to what
the surgery will accomplish or want II
for the wrong reasons."
Can to-r--oklo look lib t...agars?
Slxty-r--olda who - t a - f l
or rhytidectomy to maka them look like
teenagers have both unrealistic expectations and unreasonable motlvailona for cosmetic aurgery. Although
aurgleal removal of excess akin from
face and neck can erasa perhape

~r'!~ l~nP:::'Jct~':.'a.::"~k~

::'
dwtlcally as these people wish.
Patients •may also be rejected If they
bel leva looking younger or more
attractive will magically change their
lives or solve deep-seated emotional
problema," the plaatlc surgeon. adds.
Those who suffer more from poor selfImage than from an unattractive facial
feature also stand a good chance .of

~~':'~~::ic aur~ns admittedly
aren't tflllned as peychologlata, but
they beCOme adept at ferretln1 out
reasons which motivate people to
con alder cosmetic surgery .. Those
whol8 problema appear to be ..roua
.,. often referred to professional

cou~= wa. admit

it or not," says
Shatkin, "a youthful appearance Ia ~
grlzad commodity In our society.
People who leal they're more employable when they look younger may
conoequently exude mono ealf..:on1~ when job-hunting, he -nowladgel.

~~~ty, better known · to the
public ea a "noea jOb," may be equally
lmport811t In d.-tlcally Improving a
.,.u.m·a _,_teem. Otoplealy • to
- ' grouly protruding or ml•
....,., . . . mey be perfon\led for the

-:::-=cUea.

a patlent'a owerTidtng
ll'ledlal problem may ,..,...nate
- * l c ~. Shatkln points

out

'

li·a ~n~e_ t11e1 "heaVY~roopc:L,~~:

c:en IIIIM ~~ er
COIIOedea~ oi_IICI .... mey

=lcllly
. . . ......
:e
u:='.:= ':;':
tndlolleCI ..... Ute ldded

,...... . - or CICIIIIriiMdll to
................. l'llllltc*d . . . ."

..,........_~-=-"=

eucll .. ...._..

......... Clf

... or..... ...-PltliiC ......
:=""Pr~...:..,

c:en

1

r~n!1[.u~~~e ":.n ~~i 57 different
procedures utilized by plastic end
reconstructive surgeons.
!llrthdafecto
In the area of birth defects, plastic
surgery has been Instrumental In
helping youngsters regain function as
well as appearance, especially In casas
of cleft lip and palate. Children born
with this condition In Its most severe
• form have an elongated opening where
the two parts of the upper lip, palate or
both have failed to meat when they were
developing In the womb. The plastic
perform procedures to shift the jaWbone
back or forwarll, resolving the occlusion

~~·~~g~~~:t:~~~ a~r=
Shatkln·sar.sthe plastic s u r works
:~J'on"t;~t the family
tlst and
Once patients are accepted for
coemetlc or niiOC&gt;II8INCII.. proceduretl,
Shatkln, like many plastic surlleons.
deftly sketches "before" and after"
pictures In profile and full-face to
Illustrat e how appearance will be
Improved. It's not enough that these
medical specialists be .competent
surgeons; they have to be creative,
Imaginative artists who can visualize
their llnlshed wor1&lt; In three-dimension.
long before they enter the surgical r

su~~uently, patients on their first
visit to the plastic surgeon ask for a
nose or chin like that of their favorite
celebrity.
" Although Raquel Welch's nose or
John Wayne's chin may look fine on
them, they don'' look good on

~,:-;;~~~:;;~k~~·emphaslzes, Is

designed to Improve, not drastically
change the patient's _ appearance.
Perhape one test of the surgeon's skill
and talent Ia whether the patient looks
1
better but not different.
Most people who've had cosmetic
surgery aren't shy about it. In fact ,
many refer their friends to the same
pl•tlc surgeons.

Not )Uallo&lt; the riCh any-.
While cosmetic surgery may once
have been -.ed for the very rich or
the very famous, today'a patients cross
virtually all economic, social and

~'::t~:!,ll'=.

bulk of cosmetic
procedures In Buffalo are perfonned for
medical reasons, most are covered
r.:!'Y or entirely by patients' health

n~=h the plaatlc aurgeon•a
preparation for OMmetic and noconatructive proceduretlll olt~ tim•
conoumlng than the aurgtry ft~f, It
lhould be noted th81 a f.cetm with
eyelid tucb and a .necldltt NqUinoa
- ' Y thnoa end oM-111111 houri In the
oper1111ng room. Theea IIIICI other

=.

=It

~:..r~
'".,r..::1181...-.
,. o-11811

by

ltaelf-- Gilly llboul- ....
I lheopnllng- n mey Ill
under. kiGel ...-....c ln a

lose elasticity which
88

causes

more

P,l'~gd~~~n"';~nf':::·and neck surgery,

conditions elsewhere on the body can
be corrected by plastic surgery; these
may also Improve appearance but are
done primarily to rectify medical
problems. Body reconturlng, lor in-

:r:;,o:;d~maybe~

=-·=_:ctper-.:.::'.r.

nancles may also be mad~
Indicated.
a-at problema
" Breast reduction ," says Shatkln,
•may be performed on the overlyendowed woman whose excess mam·
mary tissue leads to chronic backache
and general discomfort in neck and
shoufders."
In selected cases, local plastic

to do more
for many of my dental pellenta than
dentistry trained or allowed me to do,"
he explains. After graduating frotn
medical school In 1958, he was a
surgical resident for four years and took
specialty tn~ln1ng In reconstructive and maxillofacial surgery for an addltiO(lal
two years. In orller to be considered for
cec1iflcatlon by the American 8oatd of
Plastl_p Surgery, three years of general
and two more of plastic surgery are
required . But moat plaatlc and

~r~~~s~~o~~~~~a ~~~~~ ty:

plants for women who have lost a breast
to cancer.
"To most , loss of a breast Ia almost
as emotionally traumatic as having
cancer." Shatkin points out. Many
women never really gat accustomed to

=~~a~~~~la,m=:ic~1 ,:~1 ~

clothl~g choices. But sadder atlllla the

feet that a mastectomy can make a
woman faeJ 1eaa feminine and - . l y

"'%~t':.l: ~dPd

=

11

Ideal candl-

='!"h~
==::h:=.
maatectoiny, . . !rae of cancer for at

least 18 months tollowing eurgery and
have not received poat-operatlwl nodlatlon treatment," Shatkln points out.
Ideally, he oaya, the pleatlc awgeon
should be conaullad prior to the
mastectomy If MOther eurgeon Ia
performing Initial aurgery. SUch cooperation Ia _ . . y ao enough okln and
uaaue Ia left inUicl to permit the plastic
ourgeon to reoonatniCt with the Implant
later. The alllcone Jlnptant, uead 111 thla
procedlft .. well in ....t
aug,_tallon, _.,._ac'-pieatic
baG filled with a C0io1t81a but fluld gel.
'fiii Implant Ia aate. 811lcone lnjeettono
n 11ag11 In 1111 U.S.
lor

=

caNfully 8I1I*VIIall ~ 1Jtud-

.......ll'8dleli!l . . ..

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

Cllllld

~

were born.

mA~~end~~~~llt

=~~

:::~!., "7~ro~~gp~~~gerc:,t;'ctures

uead

_

In

wiiiOII
.....
Clf . . .-. . . .......
.
. . ., -. . .
. ......,
. . to
atnlllllr~·

...

months later, says Shatkin,
On his desk are several photos of
youngsters, now grown, on whom he
performed plastic and reconstructive
surgery for cleft lip and ~ate years
'8QO. Thelramlllng faces don't . - I the
- • disfigurement with which they

peUents have _gained and lost considerable weight. Removal of exceaa akin
and fat as well as lightening abdominal

IIIMII'OPIIY
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pl~t~g~~.jg::,O;:-,, wanting

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�........

Apil11, 1171

'The Chessplayers'
Ray'o tint Hindi , _ , . om·

8ooty8jlt

...,__ tho lndlon . _ - unclor
llrltloh CobAIIom with condor oncl
'*-"'·tho.- Nil uo. 'The c-.
. . , _ . will be ..,...,..t by UUAB

-

-.ttng ThurMoy. Apri121.

CALENDAR

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Dr.

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FlLIIFBmiAl"
Cycle," oon..
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Iron: "Tho Sol." Morva ·
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Squire COnlerwoce · 8 p.m. Gon«oo adS2: - 1 1 .50. SQor*XOd by lntor·
Cclogo, COoocl on lnlomollonoiSbJdiol,
--Englloli~lno-. WAS. -

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Bultalo.

·-.....,"Tho

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S\ldy/llul1olo.

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- a ayo- in wl*:li on e&gt;CI)Iol1od young
men, ~ lo....,. l*&gt;od for hil ~
..... becclme the oxplollor lo . . . -. a1oni
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lJnloMolly "' Cllif&lt;r.ola, Son Oligo. 100 Baird
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Croolhoon!Perfon!*lg -

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the Form City Ccloc1Mt'o

-

No. 5, n-'o"\.a-."

, _ OlfY CCIU.ICTIVE"
-

Squire. 7:30 p.m. Music, clonc*1g, beer,

ole. -

--eon..-

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-II

Who'l ..... h _ , 110 IIFw;, E11co11. 8
and 10 p.m.
11 .50 tor o-.to:
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Continuing -

U/8. C121 Cool&lt;a. 2;05 p.m.

_.
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---~~·-··
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eonw onc1
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"" Oopnnont o1 Clild Poyclllo~
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Educotlon, U/8, 0opnnont ol

Continuing--·- . -.
0:::"..: T--. 0ntotio
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VICO COUEGIE

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- NllgoraHolol.
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f'ro.roglo- -· For
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I n . . - ond ~. ond tho CCiogo -

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p.m. F&lt;M . .

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IIUIICOLOGY
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"Tochnology ""' tho -

-

-

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In

Confenlnco by tho C.Oior

WOllEN'S TIIACIC &amp; REUI'
IIIII .._ lnlclopcort ..... -

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MEN'S TIIACIC &amp;I'IELD'
Ulll ... lnlclopcort ..... -

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Study.

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�Apll11,117t

Medalist
Dr. Robert Good is recipient
of the t 979 )ac;ob Schoellkopf Award;
panel cites his surface chemistry work
The 1979Jacob F. Schoellkopl Award
will ba presented to Dr. Robert J. Good,

m'~~::.~~~~:~ =~~='b: ~~

Western New Yor1&lt; Section of the
American Chemical Society.
The award will be given to Dr. Good
• tor his ploneerlll!l research In surface
thermodynamics, the theoretical chemIstry of adhesion phenomenon, the
factors controlling the penetr8tlon of
liquids Into porous solids and the
physical aspacts Influencing the aggregation of living cells."
.

~:.::? ~~· hfa~o~~l;hu~nf~

A.!"ard
represent not only a significant advance
In the theoretical understanding of
adhesion and other su{face phenomena, but also point the way to practical
applications In such diverse .areas as
more effective adhesive§ and more
efficient recovery of subsurface energy

Sunshine not answer
to local energy needs

--.,.c.tln

8

Younwy haVe euepected It - Buffalo
raiN 1'81her poorly .. a place to oollect
eolar -oy. But It's at least sunnier

u.n Clllc-oo.

Tille of affalr8 hM been
docuiMnted ectentlflcally on the Main
Stt8et Cempue, where two small solar
oolleetOn, which look like mlnla1unt
flying ....-.. bean faithfully
m.Murtng eotw ..Siatlon for nearly two
~
-·
The collectora, eech ~ut the atze of
a all- dollar, . . ~ by a glUe
dome 8lld . . embedded In the oenter of
a "aaucer'' about alght IncheS In

dlametw.

The cMolloae on the roof of Par1&lt;er
· ~~~~~ Building, . . J*t of a

At~'1'::.1r~ b&amp;..!t':
(ASRC) a1 Stata Unlvwalty at Albany.

1 ' - ,._ ....... . . ._.....,
..... Ml!llllriiiG "'~~~~~ ........
bean a.vlnQ In a '00/UntUIB

. _ _ . , tole for the

solar

:;::'~~a11on since It wee Installed

Clllllba to ... roof
One of hla dulles Ia to collact prtntout
cilia fnlm monltora lnatde the building

==~='~~--=::~
PlrUr-a.-to-acuned
-.a ....,..._

bencl" ao the! It
~ lhlllcle OM of the oolleclonl
'""" ... ciiNOI ,.,. ol tlla ..... the
1JM1t!on CIWigea In r.l8llon to

_...a
tllaaun.

Tile~ ~~-expllllned by
.....
"'* min- rwdlnga tha1
...... to otllw .._.,.., birt IIIIa

~ Ia nai ' Uied to c.loulele
............ IIC*ntlll.

Tile .......... fll!llll'llllnl dewloa
,_...._--..,oltllaaun'a...-tn
ol.......,. to olllllln wlllll Ia
-.n •• "'IIII flull ..... Tile aDCual

*""

.... oallacllrEtlle
...-.._
.•
..........
:it_,
-r.a:--_,~. . . . .
~

Ill
1111111'
-... I'Nal8lon
.......~
....
............. Clime, In tile-- ol

.... -

.....
._

011 Willi

--

~~:.·,;~!~nlght cycle and

Intervale

of

cloudlnese,

dally
=~:n1'~!, l~f ::;,eu~~~falo area Is far
As recorded at UIB, solar data for
Buffalo for the year ~)~,ginning In
August, 1977, and endln~ In July, 1978,

=~= a,::,:;~e

the

w~~ntrr';

oflo.:St
average for the year wee 34 watts In
December, 1977, and the highest, 2&amp;4 In
June, 1978.
Translated to BTUs, !he annual
average wee 44 per hour, per square
foot, will) an aver8ge of 11 for
December, 1977, and 84 tor June, 1978.
Sticking with BTUe, Palka edv1sed
the! an annual average- of 46-..18
considered "fow solar · ..Siatlon." .,...,
average of 76 would ba considered high,
he lidded , and 61 would ba r8ted
medium. One BTU represents the
amount of heat needed to raise tlie
temperwture of one pound of -ter by
one degree.
Compared with Buffalo's 44 are these

~!cYera':v=~ .:m~l~\'!\~: bbhl~

go, 42; Boston and Ithaca, 46; Miami,
69; Los Angeles, 74, and Tucson, Ariz.,
79.

What you ctn do with It
How would you put that 44 BTUe to
wort&lt; In Buffalo and what would you get

r.!':l

for,4~.:'!
up about 30 square feet '
of oollectore at hla auburban home at
362 · Enemlnger Road_, Town of
To-.Onacleereummerday, hie
equipment reoorde 200 BTUa per hour

..:=.

rru~~n.:r. :~~:~h~f

hour8 from about noon to 3 p.m.
But the actuel uNble energy for
tt.clee hCMir8 Ia about 4,000 BTUa, Ill!
explelned, beceute of loee due to
"lml*fact ebeorblfon ." As figured by
Pd&lt;a, hla collector ayatem .a~- the
temparatu,. ol t11a water In his
awtmmlng pool by about 5 deordurlng.,... houra.
Looklng a1 It another way, Palka
ea11- 11181 !500 eq-. leal of
• oollecltor liQUid be requlrwd In this to - ' r about -tfllnl ol the eneriiY
IIMIIia: to ~ a well-lnaulaiiiO,
tint
rWICh home on a yeM)I
•Ia.

'*'-"

~~----11o:iD';w1.i=~~.Sr:
:=&amp;:.~a::'::ild'"=

._to.-,tar~or~to

:ur:, .:.T:

00:::

llonilll fdlty
be • , . . . . . .lon .... tank lor 1101
..... ,...., •400-oublc: loot..,.. n~~ec~
wl1ll ..... roclla to CIWIIa • hot •

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

lnlllll

~
. . ooet ol
ol

~~

......
_.0111111111 ..

resources.

-

Amherat, Bllll&lt;eley and Michigan
Dr. Good received his Initial chemical
education at Amherst College. He
~e lved his master's In chemistry from
11\io University of California In Ber1&lt;eley
and his Ph.D. In chemls~ from the
1
un~~~Y ~~~~c;!'~nt~r which he Is
receiving the ,award was done at the .
University of Cincinnati between 1956
and 1959, and continued white he was a
S8WDr scientist af General Dynamics'

~~os1~~~~!d s,:m~ ::ll~/e ~
1

0

1963, c;pntlhulng his research efforts.
He Is a member of the American
Chemical Society and many other
profesalonal and honorary associations. He has been Invited to speak at
technical seminars and other scientific
symposia the world over.
Dr. Good hee written river 75
scientific papers, and has provided

. ~~n:'e"~:l~gas:;=!~.'~:.'riY~~,:&gt;J

petroleum companies. He was visiting
professor l or the Cheml atry Department
of the University of Bri stol, England, In
1970 and at the City UniV8r81tY of
London , England , In 1971 . In 1978, he
.was awarded the prestigious Kendall
Award tor Surface and Colloid
Chemistry by the American Cha~ l cal
Society. From 1975 to 1976, he served
as chairman of the Buffalo Section of
Sigma XI.

Awandllddreaa
Dr. Good will make an award address
on •surface Chemistry and the
Difference between Search and Research."
•
In that presentation, he will reason
that " It Is rather hard to find many
natural phenomena or procuses that
do not Involve surfaces In a major way.
Adhesion Is an example of a process
that Is largely - though not quite
totally- a surface phenomenon."
Two or three recent discoveries will
be described, In the fields of eurlace
chemistry and adhesion. One Involves
the surface tension of liquids and the
surface energy of solids. An application
of this wort&lt; Is that It makes possible
the prediction of just which liquids will
spread out In continuous films on a
particular, flat solid (as Is eaaentlal In
~~g~~ro~~ ~r3.trate spontaneously
A second problem Involves adhesive

~:~~g;.bl!'l:'eatt~ere.:!~:%.n \~~
~~eri~P.. l':!~:~s~%~::'.e.'r~~~~

the two bodies are brought Into contact.
As regards " search" vs. "research ,"
Good will say, ·~he former Is the
~s by which we come upon novel

Study appUc:a11ona
His new laboratory In Furnas Hall at
Amherst Is one of the few places In the
world equipped to measure tha surface
tension between oil and water at high
pressure, such as that which exists at
the bot) om of an oil well.
Hie studies have pi'IIC!Ical application
In devising methode to retrieve more oil
=lbl:.elle than wee previously

0

a.!':~i,;;, o~ by ::'.J1~ity. bthe y;;~
Is the process by which we establish
whether or not a partlculw Idee Is valid.
If It Is not found to be valid, _,..,h Is
the proceaa by which we sometimes

;a.!'
JI:~;,o.m~ =-k~~ectw~~
reached the! goal ."

In another field, Or. Good has
collaborated with Dr. Karel Van Oae of
Microbiology on wort&lt; which hea
resulted In a major oontrtbullon to the
und8r8tandlng of phagocytosis, the
procue by which white calls deYOI6
foreign bodies (bacter!a) tn the blood

=ed

Two faculty.
receive honors

81...,.

Honcn " - bean -.led to two
U/8 E~~gllllh ~A Fulbright~ . laol\nllhlp has
been -8ndeid to Dr. o-aa HochJield,
The'Hochflelcl f.,.lty wlllltw I n durtna the 8pctntj , . , --.r.
Amerfcan Llterlit.,... will be t11a topic o1
Hochfleld'a lec!IIIW at tlle1JnlwNity o1

The Schoell~f award, conaletlnP. of

!llr~
In the

!'l ~~oc::'~"d

T...- Room of the Statler
Hilton Hotel, Tueeday, May 15. The
medalla1 will be lnii'Oduoed by Dr. Saul
Weller ol tha U/B Chemical Er&gt;gl~ng

Detwtment.

Rome.

I

Dr. Maltc llhechner has bean OIWitDcl
• IICholarllhlp from tlla ""'""-'
Council of Laarned Bocletlee ........
wtll be on . _ fol' the ,.,._.,
academlo echool _., during whlctl
time ha Will ttnlall hla book """""'-'

~r. ·=.u..:he 49th conaecutlve .
~=~!';.~':t=~J~7~

MIHon E. Abtlham, chairman, Dr.
Plltlllp D. Heffley, Dr. ,_.. Nllrthoolt,
Felgar 8lld Or. Waller
.....,tne
the
_..., fortlla Jury.
PNwloua U/1 aiolrd win-. lnclucMd ........ Gllnlon Hams On\

J - N.

au.v- -

eon..,.

~.c.=·
..,. ........, . .

=F.
Y.
==== ... ····.............
r..
li~~
....
-. ... .:.m .MIMDI!Ia.::..0
....... ,.... ... tile

Schosllkopt, Sr., who pioneered the
establishment of the chemical Industry
on tha Niagara Frontier. The Award has
bee!l presented each year elnce- 1931, at
which time It was presented to Frank J.
Toneo{ the Carborundum Company.

8lld

l-

~toDr.

GoodiiJ Mr.
~

lall::eiiiDpf

:'-* 1'.

it:;;;;;,.-

laftiiF

w u..

t=:"t"e:~~~!!'ellectual

.............................
~

a

lr.

IIJ

~..=.-=

Hlatory

LONG •LAND NO lifiill
llle8..................... ....
............
tllll!ftll
....
. tile_
.. ....,._
... _ ~
... _ ..
_
. . . . . ltiiOIIL.a!tt ....... - . . . . .

!!Milia_..... .. .......
.....
1.!!!1........ .
.. ....
............. 1111'1

.

I

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

..... flllllll ...........

.

�~ I j

· j

USSR is lifting
ban on Joyce

.,

~

.....

f'IA&gt;IcAII*I.,_

~

The ~ on James J yce'a controwralal worl&lt;sls gradually being lilted In
Dl(ls ott he U.S.S.R. A total ben, which
listed 40 years, was lifted In 1976 with
tb~irc~~ ~t,;;.f&gt;:. Portrait of the Artist
"Ulysses," one of Joyce's most
controversial worl&lt;s, Ia now In the
process of being translated In various
Russian republica. This . past fall,
Assistant Profesaor Dr. Emily Tall
-led to Russia to discuss "Ulysses"
wtth translators. Tall's stay was part of
111e Senior Scholar Exchange between
111e American Council of Learned
Societies and the Soviet Academy of

Sclencea.

Victor Hlnkls, one Russian translator

=;hu~~s;:; :~~aiJ 1~~~~t!x~ence

tlon of the Idea to do the translatloc;,er.;

111118, Hinkle has apant many houra on
='!
trMalatkina and nawrltes. Many
been • ,:lea .::J.C!':'t~r&amp;fJ~I'm ha:

•Calendar

:er.!.~ci,:e A~S! t~~ af~'lP. ''!~~~

Clnm-7,cal.4)

Russian tranalation should have the
11010 affect on the Ruaslan reeder as
thaorlglnal had on the English reeder."
... Translation of auch a claaslc Is also
difficult becauaa the Intended audience
Is the elite. The Soviet government
feels, thoullh, that It ahould be
translated for the entire Russian
population. Thla 11 where publication

atetter. 4 :15p.m. cottee at4 .

1

Ar1hritis and MeteboliclliMoaM, NIH . 114 Hoch·

~·~'L~n~-~~~ f.:::'~lor~d

on him,
Professor Nloo Kiaaaahvlll Is another
translator ol "Ulysses." Six episodes of
thl novel have bean publlahad In '
Georgian, the language of the Republic
of Georgia, as tranaleted by him.
Klasaahvlll " Uiyases" as a
"revelation of yet another remarklble
worl&lt; for the Ruaslan I'Mder." But, he
warns, you hive to gat used to Joyce's
style.
Kiasashvlll Ia 1 professor of English
at Tblllsl Stele Unl-.lty.
This weekend, Klaaaahvlll will be the

s~~~fo;~~..~u~l~~~=::~

Studies. He will examine the Joyce
collecUon et U/8, one of the four
illrgeat In the w011d. Klaaaahvlll will
also telk with Joyce axper1a In the
.
English Des&gt;-tmant.
This June KIMuhvill and Tell will
mllke P..-allone at the International
JameS Joyce Symf)oelum In Zurich.

~. ~A.&lt;Iy­

~of­

Colod F - I n 11132 thai A Ia allfblj ~of tho pfgr!.a In tho oye'a
--hanca . la~ln~--

838·2394.

competition end a student of YII'N Mikhashoff.
Thla oon"'"-"&lt;Y progwn wlllnc:Uia a wa1&lt; by
W&lt;os Foaa In wllich Calabruaa wll be by

UUABFIUI·

diac&gt;ollonld-~tn- ..
-

plano. Baird Recital Hoi.

=..Squire.

Tho C'-aplayan !India. 1978).

Conforance
Cal 838·2919 for show times.

The~

Adrfomo T_.ek-Qry1a; Deborah Ungooo,
clortlot: Ken lahi, oolo; Michael Pugliese.
percuasion. Katlhelnz Stockheusen'a Nr. 12 K~
tatte wll use Bruce Pemer, percuasion, -

l:!"g~~:~~x:r~':...~=~':,~ r~

Central Committee of the Communist
Party), publication can occur, but may
be limited In accea to certain people at
different levels of the claaslaas society.
This Is a common occurrence,
according to Tall. Hlnhle aald It was
hard to asy If " Uiyases" will be

a-

·--llonalong

Sp.m. Free.
~ .. a 1979 ......... of t h o - eoo-1o

Jamaa e a -.

doaan' ault the government

u.s.-

atyto _,.,. at tho ~ c.ntor LJ.
txwy/Lab, 38e Baldy Hall, Amhorlt ~- N.
we 8'l8llllbAe tor ci"ctMtlon. We . . open Monday·
Friday from 8:30 to 5 . Tho phcno ,.....- Ia

MFA RECITAl •

ro~~~~~~~,..u ~nad8 th~u~ti~h'e .

translation

-of

Waid rooailled tho Nol&gt;al Prtza wfth K.
tho
Aagrw Cftnlt o f lor hla WOfl&lt; on tho "'*"'alry of - .. He had

-t

Zak, Blue
· .. assiatlng
artista .
-.o
Dovla'
In Cl&lt;wn
and Stan Getz·
_ , Old Stacftholm, with U'ng
Hans
Holt, wll complete tho -

·

DRAMA•

Tho FeU of the Arnuona, by

Eric Benlloy ,

dlroctod by Soul Elckl . Center for- ,_.., A&amp;-

· 681 Main St. 8 p.m. General -.a~on
$3: a~ta ..s citizens $1 .50. ADS
""""""'- accopled. - b y tho Center for, _... ~ . with aaalatonc:e from ADS and
New Vorl&lt; State COUncil on tho Arlo.
The hM .,.., dNcttbed - • .... of
rewrtte ot The rled wtth a focua on wcmen'a

-·
n~

wtth the Greek· Trojan

Pen-.

~IDWOfi&lt;Kout?WNchonawll-­

betWon "' join tho olhor1 Tho -

-nwrtogo.

of1he

.

-

...... l o - l h o t lhoonlyho wll ·be "' join - - .. h aho
copUM ...... He plana "'tonlar battle unarmed so

'*

!hot
may be OCC&gt;OII'C)Ishad. Hla - ·
~. - ot tho proopoctofk*lg hla boal
-.-.-to~lhoromonce .

Lama Hll, Jim McQuft, - b y Roy~ .

OOYid LMTb.

_.........,_..S_-=tana

"'*' """"·

of hla
·~ .· Abfghl.l&lt;ncJK Art
Gallery. 8 p.m. Qonaql $2; Galory
. . . . - .. $1 . ~by tho c.ntor
for SU!y, Abfghl.l&lt;ncJK Art Gallery ..s

Moclallbly-.

-.cAI.8CBICDLS:TUIIE•
Ulo . . . L.w _ , , Dr.

Oaorve Waid.

-~-aal-flf)llld"'&gt;nll&gt;hotofclocn. "

147 Dlalandorf. B p.m . - by._ Daporl·
-

~
A......,.
____
of

-

-childlosslydecadentplace two comlcaly
nolllemon .-

and

·

, _ . ., - 8:30p.m. Also: """ 27
28.
Pianist Choofea Clifton wll be tho ~.
- - o f - b y 1 9 3 0 a . - F - -.

Grosz-......,talion.

wll be used In tho~
Song , donee ..s -try . . In·

eluded .
- · prtndpol playa aett1ngo of hie ly!lca -"Y by - . . -.
· tww&gt;a Elsie&lt;- PaA DeauJ pnwfdo

Kl.n -

mat- for tho JlfOduellon.

-Colaga.--Colaga-lucia -

-

Conandolg&lt;.e

Unl-.ity of Buffalo, going

~.

on 1o -

_.

wfthlhoCcutyJrd
She Ia ,..,.ntfy a- , _· In tho U/8 Oapnnont

ot -

· '-"1ng ....... I n - acfng

gfYing-.,.,.ln~oxerclaao.

..s

,
Notices
COUIICL IIEET1NO

.

-?

. ...=.u~~.:;~;.:ln":~
Confwencolloom,

c:.--5.

T- o doy out 1o relax
or;oy ~- . - ua lor o mom1ng aflomoon bua rfda. IJ.Jnc:llat a plauant roollluront
toracfollclouomool.

-

. . Bli&gt;t&gt;hYOICa
oflho

- . . Erwlron-

_
_ _ _ _ outon-ho1987--tn~.
- ... . . -

fn:m 10 a.m ..a p.m. i\ Rocm 343 a.dy at

Amhorlt.Juat-ln.

STUDY SKLI.S LAB
Tho StlJdy- Lab at tho tJniYeralty ~
Cenlar, 38e Baldy Hal, Ia """" lor tlJillinllln
reading and atudy · HQra ora: !.onday,
Tueadlllyandll'luradey, 11 a.m.·1 p .ni.; We1nel·
Cl8y and Fndey, 11 a.m.-3 p .m. The lib is open to
aiU/Bs~ta .

nne -

8 :30 a.m. do!&gt;nn from llatd Pattdng
Lot, reUn at 4:30.
Coot- $12.50 p o r - ~ ~ ..s
kn:hoon)
Fortlcketa, aond chocl&lt; ~ 1D CSEA TrwYOI
~. P.0. 9ox1B.

-t

UNIVERSITY '--ARIES PIIDCIRAII

COMWTTEE AND 8llS COlLOQUIA
COMWTTEEPAfSENTATIOII•
L.b.ry and l.lbnory 11M, Alton I&lt;Aint.
tJnivaralty of ~- 112 0'1111on,

.. __c..,., .. __

a.,-.19127. 10:30 U\.·12 ....... " " IIJncl-. wll folow In 415
at 12:15.

~lor

()pan "'tho pubiC:.
WIIITINO PlACE
Tho v.of1fng Place .. not for- "poor" _

, ...

· - - l o r a l -. Whynotglva~
tho ·atof336
receMng
feodbacl!
- a.,-.
JIOU'
-.g?
We~
Blidy Hal,
Tho 11ouno are: -..yo, 12·4: niQIIta,
-Friday, 8-9.

Exhibits
ACIIYUC8~

Acrylca by -

CSEA MYSTBtYJUDE
Do you orjoy

~28, 1979

~FQII-FLM•

-a
. -.
-

a-a -

IIECK ON BRECKT•
lJJcia Beck kl a one-wotnln lhow. Cornel

wer at a moment

In tiatory • . _ of ~
8IPP88I'W on the outakirtl ol the betlefteld, and
prtJC»&gt;da "' fight both armlos. confronta
tho of tho AmKona.
bot h
tlJmS out of fighting to kll, they
becomo -tlcaly dnlwn to - " other. They
rer.t to h* reepecl¥e arnpa end n.minlte
CNef It* atnction.

~.India In

of tho filnlla
1845 where an . . - . . - o f

lilATliTVTORIHQ .
F1M Moth tlJicrng .. off- by tho Math

"""-""'tat tho UniYeroity ~ Cenlar dally

A - I'll* . .

on c1ap1ay

ttnluclh - 10 ~
211 at tho Clrt:la,
&amp;
lnflrrlwy,
9Coplon
a.m. ID- 9 p.m.
dally. Mo. Fink ... daalgnarl-ln tho Dfvlafon
of ~'\de- .

An- the,_

ANllMD- .
of

&lt;*VIrlga o f - -

con-~ ttnluclh f'rlclll'o,, 1 Lm.
to4p.m., Mdon.....,.., 10Lm. lo3p.m..i'l
.
. _ _ of . . _ _
-~---on
ln_Tha _ _ of-.goon

a.-

cloth,ol&gt;jacla..S~.

T--. ... -..__
.... ._of
fNo-.tom
FACULTY DEVEI.OPimiT-

8 :30 o.m. ID 4:30p.m.,

ll'luradey, Moy 10, -.,......of~­
Fraa~

llipor-. -....gUVlh.
Thopragownla_.c!ID-In

GAUIIIY I l l _ , ~.,.,_,acult:*n..S-.go. ­

tory 219, 8cJ*e Hal. 'llnolgll- 28. - 11a.rn.-2p.m.

,
__
_11'"'1' .. - - ~-~-and­
on

--lor -.ay ........,._,

..... inllgl'lllof--of

--and--ln
_
_.,. _.. =::......,.,
In
---·-·-f'Gr--. ...
-·--·thealaeutng---·
----·
----·-ln-.1-.·
--·liii--Hor·
- .ecuw
-.v•--..----.-In-ln-. . ---T-.
..........
_ ......
. , _ _ o_
,, PQIIOion,
_ _ .,....,
f_
__

Ho_a..,._........,.,. ..
,_-DNA... ....... .._
In Cai!DIIIga,

~

*' - - -.....

..s
.....
_ _ of......._
· c-tiOfpala

~..-.wllbo~L-.apragown

~·~~ota,.­

~-a..-ot---·
of

-*'II

-*"*''I

131-4301 .

-

-

· "Ewoy - o f -

.... -

·

·------of-~can

bo--

~

. . .-... . -. ... going"'

.-~·
A - of- Vorl&lt; Clly ..Sa~

ot

-YCII&lt; ... ~-.-bogan

=t~-

........ o f . . . . - - . . S -

A.IL

~-A111*a

n. .. nr a=t o.n. tor . . ..,.. at
Acllncl-bo......- .. -~....

OOranloiDgiool&amp;oololy
lnglon, D.C., - - - 2 0. 1878.

1..-.g

-10LM.
· -

-ALO: Ill'.
-

~

IIMI.-

· WlqiW-lV fQwnat 7).

·-----

~IQwlnai1CJI. 8 :30pJII.

. . bo
:za.:ze.
18111. -

...-c.na~A.M

On The Air

.

lor-"",_ .. ---

..

..-.-.._......-.._
"':..."-1V IQwlnal7). 12:30 p.m.

i

·I

I

I

�. . lELIA

Aprl1t,11n

DOCUMENTS
DUE Guide to Springer Report Implementation
Furnas, 9-5, except MWF
9:JO.t2:20and Tu 8:3().

-DFATHIJICLAUSII -

...:.:=.J.-•-:-•IIftllll1ill'"!llfii1J115IIt~1:=:,=.'lr.:."r:.'::~':"...!) !~

·:=.~':--==~=~==~'frlculatlontl:
a. ldllle-"''ll-tnllleFIII11788nd/or8prtng18711_,Mietjo).
b.

...,

o/,.-on-.,~ot ,._,:..lor either or both the Fel119~ or Spring

-~~~

-.,:_"'::O.n:=-1

:O::':t'"~na~=~·~~~'l::.1~'}':/'1~~~-:a:sb~.:::;

1M_,.,._

- ; : , - - 1D IIIlo , , _ . , lfH lila Fill ftlt - t a r will be

11r
clauMII they reglot!lflor the Fali1V711 eomeoter. Transfer
ltudenta edmttfed aubMqu.tt to the FaJI 1979 eemeat« will be excluded from the
grondlaU..ct.u•.,.,__.
GRANDFATHER CtAUSEAS STATED IN DR. KETTER'S MEMO
OF MARCH 15, 11n
1

c.!::.::~~r;:~=.~"t~~s":n~:r.me'1.: r.:.r:::.ro~ ~~~~~

anmnnnf.

IGtMd to by VIce Presidents Bunn
Undergraduate Oean
~o 'Met the other members of the Academic Cabinet. They have been
~merMt.d M the faQat way of dealing with students Involved In the tranaiUon to

COmmiHM 8nd

the new ayatem. TheM clauMa are approved effecttve September 1, 1979.

I."'"-'"' ~Ide . . _ _..to :
01

A. ~=.:.~~h ~t ~.,:.:H~fs~~od ~~~hours by September 1, 1979 will
B. Any otudent with at laMt ~ cornplat:J crodlt hours by September t. t979 will
nee • mlnknum of 124 ctedft hours to gr8duate.

1
•
11

CIYtiEng_,ng
ElectrlceiEngl-'"11
induetrlel Eng-ng

.:or.:=~~ ~%.,C:.~·'1n1':~.=\ r:=~~

o/he gmduatM. Studento will eloo be conol- maintaining

~

9:20a.m.

A.~ ~~mtl :.:~:~~=--~--:"~: to be expllllned In terms of requ ired courses If
B. ~~~~=oneoJ.:!~t':"'.ixepted In a major by September t , t 979 , or who

haft oompteted • cr.dlt hours by that date may not be requ ired to take
morw tMn the current number of couraes required In any major.
C. Studentl who hllve completed 56 credtt houra by September 1, 1979 cannot be
required to take more than two addtUonal courses beyond t he number

&amp;ac~=:!f~= ~:=~nt or program

ENGLISH
GEOGRAPHY
GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES

IV. T'-- provlalona ahall apply to the students In question u long as they maintain
contlnuoua m.utculltlon the untveratty.

m

w=at•

II. The O.n of the Division of Und81'\)rwluato Education Is empowered to mol&lt;e
application and exempt!~~ from theM clauses for atu"enta In Mil lard
CDIOIIJie. DIIIICTOIIY Of' IIE80URCE tNDt\IIDUALS

..

q.::=-.~~ .:::.rJJ:'=~.:Ig~~~ ~~~~ /~;'::,~~~~

fm~ntatlon fllllle Spring.- Reporl. A DUE advisor for ooch oru Ia also ilstod, In
the__,, the depertrnental repreMntllllve cannot be oontected:

Ext.

DUE
ActYiaor

Dr. Rober1 W. Spr1ngor, t08
Parker,

~~~~w?J.~~:I'Il:'.:..n.

HaJI
•
Dr. Richard Mitchell, «3
. Fronczak, Tu, Th 2:3()..
3:30p.m.
Dr. Dennis S .

Hodie, 4240

Dr. Francl sV . Hanavan, 712

HISTORY

Dr. A.A . Bowler, B4n Rod
Jacl&lt;et, Dr. John Milligan

LINGUISTICS

ntENT

Kimball Tower, 9 Lm.-5 p.m.

D~~~~i~A~~~g(n~~\·o
~~~~0~-~-

Mra. Ar1ene Bergwall , Olr. ,

MATHEMATICS
MEDIA STUDIES,
CENTER FOR
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY

MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
MODERN LANGUAGES

French

Gwmen

Bldg. AA , SUNYAB Clinical
Center, 462 Gr1der St.
Call for appointment
Dr. Leo R. Fedor, 457B Cooi&lt;a
Hall
•
Dr. Michael M. Metzger,
Aaaoc. Chair, Mrs. Dol ores

~1~t~:n:ns:~!~ r.hn~'ttme)
Prof. Pierro Aubery, 9t0

~~~~~ldMG~~~~-.m.
t033Ciemens

Italian

Riiaalen

Cramer

83t -2246 Dlngeldey

Kubala
PHARMACY, SCHOOL DF
PHILOSOPHY
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
PHYSICAL THERAPY

83&amp;-a:MWeltw

Rlazko

636-2t9t

Rlszko

838·2243 Rlszko

Rlszko

636-2t87 Rlszko
83t·5830 Blatt .

Hall , 9a.m.-5 p.m.

4

s3s-se69

Copuana

p.m. Bailey Avenue

~.';,;~t'f~.v~~~;,~?t7

83t·2536 Walter

~~r;;.~~~:~~~k~, ~ ~5

831-5270 Copu~no

Prof. Robert H . Gumtow

83&amp;-2833 Walter

01

C543 Cook•Hochstatter

83t-2133 Kubala

636-2850 Waite&lt;
836-219t

636·2t0t

4:30p.m.
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY
PHARMACEUTICS

Capuana

8

Ms. Ann M. Stevea, N.M.T.
Program Coord., VA Hospital,
Bldg. 15, Rm . 215, 9 a.m.-

NURSING

83t-2426 Blatt

~r.FHe~~Ric~a~ •. s11

NUCLEAR MEDICINE a
NUCLEAR MEDICINE
TECHNOLOGY

Th t-4 p.m., F 9-t2, t-4 p.m .
Mro. C. Flicking«, Aoot. o- 83&amp;-211123 Walt*
t26 Cooke Hall
M·F 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m.
~~~~a~~-'t&amp;~.w Baldy 83&amp;-2405 Dlngaldey
W1t-t, &amp; F tt-t &amp;2-3

~~~~~J~~-~·p~.Ciorl&lt;

MerttynJ. WIIII. .o,Aoot.
-.817KimbeiiT-

~~~tfu~i

83t-2841

Kubala

831-3342 Cepuene

131-31411 Wallar
83&amp;-23113 Wllleoo

PHYSICS

83&amp;-23113 Wlllaoo

NYCHOLOGY

Mo • . . _ Mother, 4230 Ridge

831-17&lt;13 Hewt&lt;lno

131.- Hu1chlnga

"'EIITO IIICAN STUDIES

83&amp;-2547 Rluko

83&amp;-21113 Rluko

=::ftJ::t:~•

Mo. - 1 0 . Ctump, t013
Clamana Hell, e a.m...e p.m.
Dr.S....

83t-21138 Copuena

POLmCAL BCtENCE

83&amp;-214t

c:nem.r

131-13&amp;1 Wlllaoo

- - - c:nem.r

238 Froncul&lt; Hell
Prof. Fnlderlc J. Floron, Jr.

:r,£g~~ ~:~ldg . 8)

83&amp;-20112 tlewtdna

••

n

6~:~811:;, S. Hamilton, 81t

Clemens, Tu ,Th9-11a. m.,

83t-5481

---,···----

636-2t

838·2t85 Rlszko

~liE,

Blatt ·

Hawkins

~0~~:~!~~~~::. Co'? ·

Clemena, Tu, Th 11 a .m.-

t2 :30p.m.
Prof. Michael Burke, Baird

83t-625t

636-218t

831-8321

Clemens, Tu , Th 11 a .m.·

AIIT_..I

83t·234t Wynne

~:it J~~~~~::~~ Wende
Dr. John Fopeano, Room 107 ,

MUSIC

83&amp;-2435 Blatt

83t-t854 Hutchings

83t·2147 Wallace

636-24t4 Dlngoldoy

AIIT...nii!Y

638-2284 Hawkins

g~nn~'~::~~~~dergrad

Dlrector, tt8 Dlelendor1 Hall
MWF tt a.m. -3 p.m .

AIITHIIOI'OLOQY

83t~

83t·5472 Hutchings
636-2579 Blatt

Student Affairs, Dr. Howard
Foster, Associate Dean
t5t Crosby or1 t4 Crosby

Spenloh

...........

838·2357 Hutchings
838-2583 H~tchlngs

\Summer), Tu , Th 9:30a .m .-

636-25ol8 Rlszl&lt;o

Kubala

83t-5223 Hutchings
838-2422 Hutchings

~~~~~~: ~m. 43

HEALTH SCIENCE EDUCA·
TIONa EVALUAnoN

It
shall be permitted to reQu ire any
number ol llddiUonal courMe thlt are necessary to meet Its minimum accreditati on

otenclanlo.

Hell, MWF 9a.m.-5 p.m.
Dr. Warren H. Thomas ,
Chairmen. 342 Boll Hall
8:30 o.m.-5 p.m.
Dr. BenJamin Gabhar1,
Room 309 Furnas

2-4p.m. M,W
ENGINEERING SCIENCE
....._aNuce.no-~

MANA

.r.~:,:,::,ID~ ==.~ntly otatod lor all programs.

Dr. Ralph R. Rumer, 3 PA11&lt;er

~~nlo P. Malone, 228 Bell

~:~ffl-4p.m.

toreR. ~Ho,

300 Clartc Halt

.

t0:30 a.m.-e p.m .

dalll,

=~~~ M. eley
IIWF1:.11 :t h.m.
Dr.IIQbert Genylnl,
123--.ENicott

~Tr...~~~..:.':'..\d~

83&amp;-2017 WynM •
83&amp;-228t

Cramer

83&amp;-2154 Rluko

--Cramer
83&amp;-2At7 C&lt;amor

~...:':'~. Chllrmen
=~~
c:oo.e.orot
..._,t
T~. -'-ldyltall,

~~!.t~I01
_ , _ , WWFI-11 a.m.

a1 43411 Bien

�n

... am

r-----~--~------------~

Guggenheim's top 6 ·
The 10 lnstllutlons awatded the moa1 Quggenhaim appointments for 18711
with the number of faculty aelected at Meh·
'
1. Unlwralty of California, Bertcelay
·
o
Colwnbla Unlwralty
g
2. Cornell Univeralty
8
.._,.,eettslnstltuteol Technolooy
8
Ullhwalty of Mlnntl80ta
U"'-alty of Pennsylvania
3. Unl-.lty ofllllnola at Urtllon.champalgn
7
~;::~~~~ WUhlngton
7
4. Untwratty of a'.lllornla, Loa Angela
U~oiMichlgan
·
•
8
&amp;Mnfafd \Jnl-.lty
8
U......._,.ofWieconaln-MIICIIaon
8
5. ._.........,.,,._Yclltlatlulfalo
5
IWVft un-.lty
Prt.-onUnlwralty~
8. Brown Unlveralty
4

SENATE
General Ed before FSEC;
April agenda put over

Z

1

~

~of~-

4

Unl..raltY of Southern California

4

rwody

v....

the

the.,g:;.~~~·=o-- ol8ulfelo

hu halpad 11r allowi~IM ColltetM to ·
buy ...- at mlnlmal - · The
ltuelenta - lloDina IIIII ...,_.

Wtlfllllp 11r IOMinO or
PI'OWICIIna ...._. .........
Macllf..,, ....... a tNctor, plow

and OOIIIp8llill

-.

-

will

.
ba

tile

oltogethat' cleor who has
- t o make
theae appolntmenta: prevktua ~ntm.. ta

range through all of eclence, echolarehlp, and the arta, Including atudles of
the development of American pent~
mime comedy, Japan's modem transformation, a critical edition of the work&amp;
of James Joyce, a study of the playa of
Eugene O'Neill, a book on the
conservation of library and archival
collections, a atudy of the photographs
of Allred Stieglitz, and blooraphlea of
Samuel Johnson, A.E. Housman,
· George Santayana, Archibald Ma&lt;&gt;
Lelah, Henri Matisse, and Eleonora
Ouse.
\
The great majority-of Fellows teach In
American colleges and universities.
The Committee of Selection conslated of Benjamin DeMott, professor
of English, Amherst College; Mark Kec,
professor of mathematlca, Rockefeller
UniWIIlllty; Arthur Komberll, professor
of biochemistry, Stanford' UniWII'tllty
School of Medicine; Nelson J. Leonard,
professor of chemistry and bl~
0

=:8i;~~~~~rlc L ~~~~~~,.J~

profNaOr of history, Columbia Univer-

sity; Rober1 K. Merton, Unl-.lty
Profeaor, Columbia UniWIIlllty; and
Charles Muecatlne, professor of Englleh, Unl-.lty of California, Berl&lt;eley.
The IICIY!sory committee lor applications from artists was mede up of Oore
Ashton, Richard Dlebenkorn, Jim Dine,
Robert Hughes, and Roberf·Motherwell .

and trucka, can be used and the group
needs basic tools such as ihovels,
axae, slcklee and rakes.
ReCycling Ia an Important part of the
group's goal, so donations of recyclable
materials such as twine and rope,
plastic sheeting, lumber, elumlnum
cans, car redlatora, muonry, glass,
1araa oil drums, Insulation and fencing
·w1f1 be gratefully accepted.
·

Under apo,_._lp of Or. Wan Y.
Chon, profaeaor of engl.-tng aclwllo taachae a oourae on solar energy,
the Collective Ilea applied lor grants
from the U.S. Daparll!*lt of Energy and
the DeDartment of Haatth, Education

......

The Colleatlwe lias . , ollloa and
lllnfY.In room 1CI!i Townaend Hall on,the..., ..... Campua.

-~~=~~·~
.......1• .
~CIIud&lt;8chwartz

Payroll notice

1&amp;1.- thlo

tile

=.;,~:~-':*~~It f. ~

Farm City Collective has plans
for 50-ecre Amherst farm project
The Farm City Collective, s group of
about oiO .wc1enta and commun lty
members, la pt.nntng to da¥elop an
oroanlc farm thiiiiUmmer on !10 _..of
land on the ..tam anc1 of the Amharat
Campus.
With the partiCipation of people from
.,_ ao d~ ao .-chltecturw and
biology, the Collect!.. hopei not only
to plant anc1 ' * - ~ of
organlc8IINJIVWA ...,...,._, but elao
to conelruaiMd operMe . . Information
"b.__.. - to ooncluct WCifbllopa
onthealte.
8tructurw lor OOIIeatlna aoW -vY
and oonatructton of a wlndmlll - ln

of

.._v:

tranomltted to Prao- K.,. 'ind VI..
PrMidanto Bunn and PWtnlll. Tha lmmadlata

Five UlB faculty among
1979 Guggenheim winners
Five U/B faculty . . among 291
..:110'-B, eclentlata, end wtlats In
Cenada and the U.S. Mlected to receive
Guoganhelm Fellowahlpe for 18711.
11/B ranked fifth In the nation In the
number of Ita faculty receiving awards.
In all._128 lnatltutlona we rep,_.,ted
by at -tOM Fellow.
Acconllng to the John Sinton
Gugganhelm Memorial Foundation,
2,074 lndlvlduela IIPPIIIICI lor grants In
this, the fifty-filth annual competition.
A total of $4,855,000 Ia being
awarded to wl nnera.
.
The live from U/B and the purpose of
their awarda we: Dr. Robert Daly,
associate profeaor of English, for a
study on English Puritan poetry; Dr.
Norman N. Holland, profeaaor of
English and director of the Center for
the Paycholootcal Study of the Arts, for
a atudy of ShalceaDNr8 s paychologlcal
strategies; John 'B. LogM, poet and
profHIOI' of English, for poetry; B.
Woody
tka, ¥Ideo artist and
uaoclata P&lt;O'- at the Centw for
Media Study, for video - " ; and Dr.
NaomiWelaateln, pro'-o• psychology, for pavclloohyalcal atudlee In
vfaual peroeptlon. ·
The Fellowships . . awatded on the
baala Qf demonstrated eccompUshment
In
plat and strong promlae for the
future.
Projects PfOPOMd by the Fellows

fi,."'&amp;::'~~tile tot

~~~=-=hi·~
..-lng of ....., 13. :m. 27,

.

=~r:::u.o::~~&gt;J.::: r~~:"' ~ .

:::r. =::~n:~

:llbt1~::-i,f

will try to gain the .,_,lon of the
-oprtoto admlnlatrata.. In mll&lt;lng
oppolntmanto, ond will report bod&lt;.

tile

1

eo-_,.,..,

ltomtaComml- " - ' A. Admlalolta

The report of the Adml11lona Commlttoo
(pr0¥1oualy clrcll~odl. wu dlacuaaad. II
wu MOVED
Ill and SECONDED
(Micheij that t
oport bo transmltt'!d and
recommended to the Senate.
It wu MOVED (sa-nfoldl and SECONDED (Siggelltow) to pootpone action on

c n.s.c_,.

The 5ecretary announood that bacauoo of
absentaalom oJx _,atorlal _,. heW boon
Y8Catod ao of 2 April 111111, and that· aa a
consequence

torty·eeven

\"7)

memberl:

presentatthlo ..-Jng conattute a quorum.
The 5ecretory reported that aa of 3 April
the Howell motion to the meeting of 18 ......_ onlr twenty·two (22) nominating muota ten
Aprll, at which lhl)a Admlaolona Director
110 for VIce-Chairman Elect ani! _ ...' (12)
Dromuk will have provided oddltlonal dala
or 5ecretary heW been - - In
on attrltlon by type of "leavens," GPA•a,
Senate Of11ce, and of theoo no nornl- has
correlotlon with high achool a - . etc.
more than four wtea. Sines ten (10) wotoo
Motion PASSED.
we naodod for election ollglblllty H at - t
one nominee for uch poat doea not achlfte
11om t4 Old BuaA. Nomlftatfona
:,~,t ~:"ro bJ., 5·='~';-~he=::;

tile

1. NomlnaUona for the lndMduallzed
Admlaalona CommlttM w. . approved .
2. Nomlnat\ona for replacements on the
General Education Committee . . . ap-.

-HN-proved .

r~u~~~=:.•::rta/":

.

lng that their

nomlnt~ea

agree to run( and

=~ =~:,\'::S~t whh n the

a ~~==:::·,~.:.c;;r:n'"~r~
atudant grl..anoo concerning one of hla
grades had been extandad too far and too
wide. It wu ""'""' thatthlo cono-atlon,

u well as the

cum~nt

lnvolvem.,t of the

Senato Comml- on Academic Froodom

and Rooponolblllty, hal been Informal; thet
It Ia unc.taln whether the cue comee under

the Jurisdiction of the UUP conu.ct

P=r':t.::'=~..~ l:-!:~:,art!

Executive Commlttoo will decide whether to
It 1111~ or to .-.tor It to the Academic
Freedom and RooponolbUity Commlttaa (or
an ad hoc commlttaa) for further

odl-~':'.::w.;g adjourned a1 5:46p.m.

•Sotar energy

Next week
Next week, for the record, .
the Reporter will print the
complete minutes of the
various Faculty Senate
sessions concerned with
General Education.

__

,_..,.....,.._,.,.__,
.,..,._,...,.,, ....,.
-~~­
r-.n

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

-•-PPI:--&gt;o4DII
_ _.._.
..

�Lockwoo" Memorial Library_:
a gift that keeps on giving

..... ........
.. ...._Ill-.............
WololooM
"--Hill I p.a.
11oG116. UIB ....... ..._ u.a. c - ....... IW!alloa. .... U/8
._.C..,.._
.. ,__.. ......_ ......
·-~...._...Lionoy

~,._.Ill

..

I

•

Atlucled Comel and Yale - 'Thomas B. I..ockwood was born In Buffalo In 1873. After
{J'aduotlng from Yale In 1895, he -nded Cornell Law
School and was admlltad to the tiw In 1897. FoJiowlns a
decade of pradlca In hta !other's Jaw ftrm, he was 8ppointed
' pork c:ommlsloner of 'Buffalo and betarM adlve In
Detiiocntic party alfaJn. He was the Danocratlc condidote

Dr. Earl J.
of

.t

•

....

-

...... ....

A
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . of .... _llnry
~-

-......._
•••

... Uouten.nt Goownor of~ Yootc san"' the o~ecaon of

-1.

, _ B. l.od&lt;Wood, """" -

the Lodlwood
......,......_,lothe~.
Bullalo
_ , and ........ tvn. the .......... of • farally
-.cline In the ...... of EM County the early

w••--

JtoOo.
Ao a llludMit.r Yale. Mr. Lodlwood ..:quftd a low for
. , _ and boob !hoi enchnd lhn:Koghout hiJ lie and
on U/B...., today. He _,t
houn In IIIII Yale -...y, -.ling. "'-'!~ among boob,
lndlng , _ ..,_and ...,.lklollghb on old orws, "I ...
.-....1 than lrom any olber *9c
fad..- In mycalago....._. beoe-lold h!Jfrionda.
For ... . _ *"'llllnnl ~ of Bulalo, jull
..................... _
. . . . . onMatnSnet,

-to'-.,.......,
._.,_II*

""'""*

ho..W ........... lllllllglor thla- ..........
"' ......... "'"dodlil6r'
lllillldho_...-.llllbltl...sa-ofalllrav
lor

!he.,... ... _ ....

..... "' -

.-y ._..

w-oo ....... 11.-...,

bit gil of $500,000 In

1919.
.
11IIIIJIII. ........ of ....... and bit ...... Naogont

. . . t..oct.oool, - I n - of.._ W.... Danlol N.
............. ~K. ....
O.W~a...._C a
n,_thla
. . . . . . ....,_, "' ....... - - . . t a.a......
.................. a...., Doooocnllc
blt ..... ln the
......................... -(ONiklont of lho

.c . - .. - .................
.... .._ ....c.~

-

1913. Named to lho CoundJ of the Univenlty of Buffalo In
1919, he w• a trustee of several locallnslllutiOns.lnauding
lho a.-enor Unry, the State Teachers College, lho
Bullalo ~. Bullalo ~ Sodoly, Erio County
SaW&gt;ga Benk, . and Manulactwero &amp; Ttaden Trutt
Com pony.
Jn 1942, five years~ hiJ dulh, Nf. J..ockwood WM
lho r&amp;iplonl of the Cl&gt;ancdar's Medal aw ed for
dbtlngulohed seVIce to BullaJo and Its Univenlty.

In makingthataword, ChanoollorSamuel P. Capen noted
that Mr. Lockwood, through hta "princely donation to the
Unlvenlty of a mognlflcenl Bbroly and one of the c;ountry'l

" ' - c;oiiections of rore bool&lt;a,• hod "immeasurably
onrtched the cultlpi life of the community~ and "dlgrillled
Bidlalo In the eyes ill the wotld."

Tho . - I..ockwood Memorial I..ibr8ry on the Ambml
of the 5an University of New Yoolc II Bullalo Is
slluiYclll t h e - of the U.-y's academic cont•. 01
COI...._ydeolan, the llx·level- of red brlcik and
.... blonclo the an:hlteclurai style of 1191gbbodng
~

-

- 7,000
Wllh holdlnal of over 900,000 bound vojunws and
..w.. Lod&lt;wood Unoy houou- coiiecllons In the
- a n d ooclll · In odd-., u contalnl the
,_can~ ca~oo 1or the totol u~ ~ oyo~em, •

::"*"-to 1,810,698 voiunla In ton - •
Tho new I..ockwood

~

a book copadly of one mlllon

"'*-.lliaoog 30 ma..of thelve (&lt;:omplnd wllh 10 mJies
Mlln.StrMJ . Tho rnoC!em

---...._.,...sable.n.... .. , _ - ..

........ alonls ~ three -

as much total

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

---...ton-2100.

a-t. D. Abbott

Tho lint Dtrector o( Ubraries,

~·

D. Abbotl. a

- profe.ar of English at the Univenlty. wu appointed In
1.934. A Rhoda S&lt;:holor with ~ lrom Havafbrd,
Columbia and Ox!Grd, he wao known • a "diotlngulohed
book coiieetor both prtvllaly and ~.· In 1935,
he founded the Polllly Coiiocllon, and In hlo ·"In this
one field- would c:onstruc1• ~· ........ "He
~ the pion lor ooJiadlng .,.,... '"""'"'-"·
manuacrtpls. Jet-. and tnt editions. Tblo tnldltion t .
been continued, and today the Pollry Cclloctio!&gt; II wool!!

renowned .
. Owr the ye~n. Lodtwood Unry _.ad several
tlgniftcantcolledlons. In the 19501-.- two~
by loqii, donoR of mollriala by and relating to J - Joyce.
Tho 'il'eyco Colloctlon tndudos 49 ~ Wob
noteboolu, lJ1voraa manuaatpb a(ld ...,.. editions, • well as
letters. oome of Joyce's pmonal ~ and the aulhor's
penonallillary .

•

In ._aton of the -nty-llfth annivomafy of the
I..IJraoy, the poetry m.nuoalptt of Rebert Gnlves, the
English poet. prae11ed by Mrs. l4ldNd I..ockwood
Lac.y, widow of Thomoa B, I..ockwood, the mojo&lt; donor of
both the u...y building and ...... collodton. Tho Gnwes
malerlals, along wtth the Polllly Colloctlon, .,. now houaid
In spocially deo9&gt;ed fdttles In C... Hal on doe Amhent
Compui.

been--

I..ockwood Unryt.beenthe ................ ........
................. and
Ftlanda af Lod&lt;wood
Memorlall..lbnry,agroupofpeiiDno,_lllllb_and
community. A FrioncloRoorn llano of the lpOCIIII...._ of
the new fadltty .
A Polish Room wao dedicated In 1956 In hanor of lho
Polish pOet Adam Mtckawlcz on lho ono hunchdlh
annw.s.y of his death . Mnow- • a - b Poloh
cultural history.
In the book ._tel. Tbnlo9llbelldlvltles hew
by lbe

Dcadeof ...... . By 1960, the original coJiodton ol66,000 hod .......
360,000 volUrMS. Tho ciecd , _ 1960 ID 1m
marked the~- aingle-"""" paotodby twin the '-Y
of the Ubrary. Ao k oulgrew the original booldlooe. ., wes aaaehed to eaoe
oondltlona and a .-....I
portion of the c:oleotioll-ploc.t
With Its lllOYe to~~~- ~. Lodtwood Unoy ...
houat all ill collectlano under ono tool far lho tnt - I n 111n
years . AJll'fOOChlng Its tlllleth ..........,. the Uary Ioolls
fooword to continuing- to the u - y Comnwnlly.
lo

Boob on omngod on tbc lowlo. Tho buiding c.nt. . on
a lw-tlclad. ~ court .and Is oon.-.d to the
~Baldy and a.-n. halo by bridges II the second

.....

Dooollnool by Honv w- .. Aooodlleo of Chlcogo and

~

Arts and Sdenon. When I..ockwood ....., _...t. the
entire coJJect!on numbered -lllmllaly 65,000 volumes.

251bA-,i/ft

About the Library

In the -.Iy ~ t.dJity at

collodion-of the Unlvenlty - the boob far the CoJJege oJ

c.lno It AID:!-. of Bulalo, the new l!bnwy
_........,.ola-oft9.S m...,lor'i!!bullding ltlelf
IIIIISZ .....

tor...,._.._

lll~farUure--alongltsooultl wal. onci

.. - ................ IIIOdom.......,.., .
...,._..._.

""""'*'

In-..

... . _ . . _ . . obout 100.000 ........

lb.y

,.... ........ Lodlooood• • four.-y- of
~ aod-.. - . . - I In 1933 on the Moln
SINo!&lt;:-. b - ~ ID houM the geMA( book

Tours planned
T. . . ., ..................
UMoop
t

.._...S~-

-·-

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ , ••••

..........................................
.......
..... ·
... • ..... -

. . . . . _ ... (noonllllr, . . 19).

Ulnlllloii ...........,. ...... "' ...........

~
ClGIIIVI-..::tl
......................
..................
0
.,._
nc
..... ""' ....
8

1

I

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-

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>l

STATE UNIVERSITY
ATBUFFALO ·

He has
this-th_
e ory:

UUP '99% sure'
rank formula
will be abandoned

--&amp;!afl

UUP sources In Albany _ , 'W%
sure" Tuesday morning that tlie
so-cslled faculty rank . distribution
forr(lula, uaed by tha DlvlaiQn o f Bud~

A general formula for calculating tbe
m.anetlc fields of heavenly bodlea
wlllclt, If -lfled, could ald scientists In
Ntronomlcal .--ch has t.en d&amp;WIIoped by a pre-doctoral student here.
D.V. Ahluwalia of the Depertment of
f'hYalca and Astronomy, using data
.m bllck by the Voy~~ger 1 apiiC8Cf8ft,
has calculated the ~netic fields of
Juplter'a four Gall..-., moons, lo,
Europa, Oanyrn..cs. and Catllato, aa well
a U,. m.anetlc fiel&lt;la of Saturn and

~':!"(~z~~~g&amp;f~.:~~: w~geta t Ia •
alone), was to be ellmlnatad'f=rr:!~
llnal budget document.

fu~:; ;~=-:~ad~~~ly

the
Of course, "we won't know )or . . .

~':m':~."':x~~t~31~ o~J:
~/:~';:wide United University Profee-

UlMus.
.
·
!.ut year, the distinguished T.Y. Wu,

The Report,., could not get confirm•
lion from any legislator by deadline.
Ms. Hartman, though, said that her
information was baaed not 011 Idle
speculation, but on "a direct- under-

who rwc:ently retlnad from the Physics
o.s-tment , and Ahlu-lla published a
~ deecrlblng their reeeerch lnt9 the
reletlonahip betw.n a body's rotation
·
and ita magnetic-fielJl,
"Dr. Wu haa t.en my Inspiration,"
Ahluwalia says. "Our orig inal collabora:::.~~ to the development of this

next_,

beck.IP ~h .

.....

==

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

~:~~~~~ .=~~~~~~r~

-

::r~~ :~~,0~
paat10v-a.

At that -lon, Andereon noted that
data will be coming back from VOYIIQ8C
for the next decade.
"There Ia · much opportunity to
participate: he said then , encounaglng
at-ta and facu_lty alike to come u~
with new theorlel that can be teatea
with the Voy~~ger data.

J~r:.~~·,~n:.~

...:=t:t.JC::
on the maaa and rotation of the Galli an
moon a, from which - he made his
cornputatlona,

!fa~J'p.&lt;;k~':et".ri".:::' ~~cr~~-l n eddltion

Ahluwolia""!l--loU.-1.

~~s 1~faul~lot7~e'!'~t~~e g;"'J,':''~~\~ -

defeloped theory and some appanant
relationships, and extended the theory
and pr~aed r1- explanationa for the

He believes that the magnetic field of
Saturn Is about 10 limes that of the
Earth and ' that of lkanua, about thtlmes that of Earth.
-..
A native -of New Delhi, India,
Ahluwalia has t.en the recipient of
....,nsl awards. He was . named a
National Science Studanl Scholar by
the National Council of Educational
Research and TrslnlngJn India and allo
was named one of the Top 20 Inventors
of 1974 by the' National Research
Development Corporation of India for
his invention of an Improvised Klpp's ·
Apparatus (a glass lab apparatus used
·ror generating a gas) .
·
·

-~~~~~~~~done, the FNSM
deM- explains, Ia "taken an ·lmp8rfectly

&lt;

::rti.\'~~':.':'~ota~/ng r=~R .

Anderaon lidds n Ia seldom that a
detalled pnadicllon of such a natura can be' .clvanced and taated so quickly, as
will be done when Ahluwalia's flgunss
ens matChed with those of the J PL
.It has been observed that some
relationship exists bet-n the known
rotational propertlaa snd the m8asurlld
magnetic fields of an extnsmely wide
range of heavenly bodies, from the
extnsmeiy fields of s.m~l moons .
to the lmmanoely strong fields of
pulsars.
·
·
No theonstlcal under~tand ln g of this
relationship ex let&amp;, however.
Ahluwalia predicts, 2" the _basis of

=

of the higher educiflon committees In
the leglslatuns.
,- U/B administration sources said
" Monday that they hed " heard" a similar
report that the distribution quota was
being thrown out. "We couldn't find
anyone -to confirm It, though ,~ a Capen

- Substantial aJep forward - If correct
•u this theory Is proven correct, "
Anderson states, "It will repnasent a
-v substantial step forward In

-

Duwayna Aooer.Qn, of the
Feculty of Nalunal 8clenoee end
MathernetiCII,
a- showing
I~ tha Physics
of fllma of
Jupiter and Ita moona .m to the JPL

-

Gone?

By Linda o,.ce-Kobaa

Scietltists now depen,q on lnstramental meaaurernenta·to 'ileterminll the
magnetic fields of heavenly bodlea.
Theorlea that h - been -anced so far
to pnadlct the strength of magnetic
fields .e not well develO!Ied.
Ahl uwalla'a formula utiiiZIIII tha.maas
of tlte body plua Ita ~f rotation tC&gt;calcufate the INICIMIIc field . · The
formula wlli ·be -.ffled or dlaproved ln
the
months when aclentiata
at NASA's Jat Propulalon laboratory
compute the data Voyeger I has ~~ent

-

VOL.10 • NO.~
- APRIL 5, 1971

Mcon; that Europa and Ganym- have
magnelicAielda five times that of the
Moon, and that Callisto has a field
tfP~~Imately two IImas t'J_at of the

1

Ah~u~=~~~~e ~~ ·~b~i~ h'~s~rs~O:~~

::::~e ;r~~tl~h'!'f'~~h_e..~~n::
:;:~:'r:~ .the data sent back by Apollo

to assurances the union had received
from legislators, UUP also hed been
lnformfl(l J&gt;y SUNY. Central that th8
formula 1\_ed t.en abaildoned, " thanks
largely" to the union's efforts.

har'":,art~~~u~d ~~Y':! ~ =lnft
reaclnded . ~e Indicated, how-. ttiat
_neither lha union nor SUNY had Tound out just what model had been
uaed to compute. tha IID--call,cl formula
and to !J18ka the adjuatiRerlt. "No ona
knows what It-~ on, • ahe aald.
All that aald that the
SUNY faccllty had ' - l cNIMnlnad to
bll ·rop ~· 1n comparl-. IQ. "other
lnatltutloi)S.'
'

'Another.._.
Hartman cautioned that tha money
Involved Ia •another Issue." That Ia to
say !hat, although the basis on which
the money was cut has been eliminated
as a budget. device for this and futuns
years, some sort of action Ia needei:l to
restore-the money itself.
She said some Aaeembly leaders hed

:~dl~t':l:~om~~:Yt':!J.he~ 0--:.=:fl~:

~ed.

"we don't know how II will

· ·-·F...;.,.......,._z.ciol.a

Ketter flays Sta~ Ed pollcl~s
t...ur Vlallad the Un._.lty at Buffalo

and aalled our halt-complaad camp..
'lawllh.' Thla Ia the gentleman
who would not vlelt ow Dental School. .
~ of the a m ' * ' - ' t thla
for him In ¥law of h.la
might - ' for SW. elcl for prt. .a dental
acllilole. • For thla , _ , KMter aal!l
ha 1101*1 , _ . . , l p of~ll
commlaalon "will not be
- as
all OU.IImllar _ . . . .
- so

~In fllworofJhe~-·

for the creation of a quality of education
of which we can all be proud~one
which Ia eecond ·to none." '
Two principal State programs aaalat
the private aector ·ln N-York, Kattar
noted: tll.e Tuition Aaaiatance Program,
or TAP, and the Bundy Aid Progf8ITI. ~
TAP
TAP ewl..cl from tha Scholar
Incentive Program that th;t · 81ala
adopted In 1111 and proWdel _.,.,_
acalad on "'-. IIMia of need for New
York naaldanta with tuable famUy
1~o1
Aw..se
be eppllad to tuition at either Jlllbllc or
prf- lnatltutlana. "Puulllc aludanta, ,_,.~not.~, •c.~

ao,oooor._.

may

_..of ...

,..... aa the lll8llfnuft only the
tuition. Till .,..._,

:::::-~n-=:.r::r::a

the .....
Hucllllon
~-"to
·"
•
to
anabla the lnd-ldlllt ltJetltutlone to

OCIIItn. 10 - n MCJ . . - eludalll8
... the low lulllon pullllo ~~~
. . . In IIUIIIblr and . ...

PW!Io . . . . . . to
rr~!r=·==
ll'tlilll
.· ........ .........

-of
the
~ ....... For ......,IM,.._.

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

The . . . . . . . will not be
published next Thursday,
be(auae of the Spring
Recess. We wtll resume

'publication l'IIUrsday.
. A_f!rll19: Enjoy!

�.........
•Ketter flays State policies

_,__,,ool.ll

leCIOf l*»&gt;..cl 113-mllllon In TAP
lunda tor 111711-77. Tille _,nt
lnCnMed to 1111-mllllon In 1m-11;
Mil 1t1e _...lon II lllcely to continue
_ , 1n 1 period of dlcllnlng
anrollllllntl, for • the prl- eector
,.._ tuition cllervu In the , _ of
lnfiMion, the 8C8Ie must !llcrMM the
'-11 of 1111811Cial - I stance In order to
=!~ student accetis to the private'

Elliot on ... pdlllc Thllalluatlon Ia e~ted further,
IW aid, by the effect upon the public

eector. To fund lncraaed aid to the
prt- eclloola, the State must either
' - the· percentage of State
,_...,.. alloCated to hlghOV education
or MIIH allocatlofta within a relatively
atmle overall allocation. "The latter
courM hU ~ Choeen,"• Ketter
POinted out, "lor the percentage of
Illata ,_...,. epproprlated to all of
higher education hU remained fairly
oonatantln ..-1 ~at about 12 Pfl(
- Aa a -..11, lfle percentage of
lllate aupP&lt;Jr1 for Ita own State
Unlveralty twa deetlned while aid to
prtvate lnatltutlo"' has Increased both
In dollllr amount and as a proportion of
the total."
· Once aRM~Ion In State supP&lt;Jr1
bllcoiMa - . enough, Ketter went
on, the public eector Ia forced to ralae
Ita own tuition-as It has. "Thla, of

=:In...::::~ l~d~~d'::t ~~:

-

whYie alao running .oounter' to the
lllate'a commitment to low tuition
IIUIIIIc hklhar education . What we haw
lnateed la a mora axpenshle high
tuftlorHilgh aid formula which-the State
Ia folltlng upon taxpayers."

...... IJiaelead

The argument fa that studenta must
he¥eecceaa to the dlveralty provided by
the ~e eector; much of "this
dlveralty has been auppt led throughout
the yews by eectarlan Institutions," the

=~.:eaal~.u~~lort~::Z: fu~~~~~

provides direct Institutional aid to the

prtvate eector, can only. be obtained U
these Institutions become aecu/ar/zed.
·Mole and mon1 of the aectariiUl
lnatltutlona haw Chosen this course;
and a highly touted diversity Is now
largely mythical In that there Is little
dllfarence b e t - such Institutions
and the public oommuJIIty and arts and
letter&amp; colleges."
Bundy aid lo allocated to private
lnatltutlons according io the number
and types of degrees awarded . This
totaled $88-mltllon In 1978. Since It Ia._
given without regard tQ. thl student's
p i - of ruldence, Ketter pointed out ,
about 25 par cent of thia total was for
thlt eupport of out-of-alate graduates.
grants and there
18 no public ecoountlng for their use.
OM mtgflt think tllat thlaald would help
hold down tuition tne~MM~ alnce It is
by fw the waeat amount of public
IUppCII1 given fo the private eector by

..,..__-ad

any atate In the nation. Suclt a result

:::1.' benefit the public ~r. • Ketter
Not Mid down

Nevertheleaa, the State Education

~ ht~Tu~ed !r.:~·t=t~

tiona haw been able to ~old tuition and
leelncreaaea at lower levels lhan'Out of
state Institutions." Tm repeJr1 thet

~c= ~~t~l~l~n :.';.~ r:..~p;

all Bundy Institutions was approx- lmately eight par cent, which ls
comparable to naflonal averages lor
Independent Institutions."
Bundy aid has ~scalated rapidly ,
too. In 1989, no grant was-given lor an

~~~~~~,.~.;l~~.r:".·:.~sf.~

lor the doctoral~! . T/le awards have
slnoe Increased, and today legislation
Is before the Legislature to raise Bundy
aid to S500 for each associate degree,
$1,120 lor the bai:helora, $650 for the
master's, and $3,700 lor the doctorate.
This Is proposed without regard to
lnstltutlonal nel!d, · to Institutional
quality, to the quality of entering

~~~~~l!: ':&lt;eW.!h~0~~:'~:J.J! tho~e who
Billa pendtne lor the prt•ate lector ·
Although TAP and Bundy aid are

~:feY !f=~!~~~l:l'l~.~~g.~7~

l::;f~~a:.~:C:~~x~~~ l~an~~~et~~~

Jlsted the following bills now pending
lor the privste sector:
A: One which provides a $20
ual
payment to private Institutions fol' t ach
student receiving a TAP award or a loan;
B. One which appropriates $2,400,000
In matching funds to private Institutions lor use In matching federal
worl&lt;-study funds;
·
C. One wlilch appropriates $14mllllon to the private sector lor library
acquisitions; and
D. One which appropriates $250,000
lor a contract with the Commlssl~ lor
Independent Colleges and Universities.
to be used, as the Commission has

~~~~:,8!~~::~ ~~or:,,~": ;:'.:'J~~r.~~

the privati! sector.
'
The last Item, Ketter observed, "Is a
particularly Interesting use of taxpayers

~~~rv!/~'i,'ig9,',e~~~~f~~~!!Y a lobby

Private Institutions are not accountable lor their use of the .publlc ·purse,
Ketter said. They are therefore able to
be more " flexible ." Public Institutions have no defense agalnat State
Intrusion into their management, ·•tor
they have extremely limited flexibility
lor moving funds from one budgetary
category to another. Additionally
.,
nearly every expenditure ·a publlc
Institution makes during - a • year,
whether It be 19f paper cUps or a

=~,teri.:l'.::r~.~~a~~ug~n1"\~va;~

Executive B,ranch ."

£

AprilS, 1878

Earl McGr:ath to·· speak
·at Lockwood dedication
Earl J. McGrath, former u.s.
Commissioner of Education who
framed and wrote .much of the 1947
report ' of the llrst Presidential , commlssiQn on Higher Education, will
present the keynote address at a
ceremony dedicating the new Lockwood Memorial Library, Thursday, April
19.
.
The dey-long ceremony will COIJI·
memorate the opening of the new livestory library. The 'structure Is named lor
Thomas Brown Lockwood and Marion
Birge Lockwood who, In 1985, esta~

ll!:'edJ~~ orl~:~::tLo~~~ou~ la~~lty ~~~
University.
.
.
Mr. Lockwood'S' bequest of rare
books and first editions,· Including
1
rt8 t works by Shakespeare
~lftgn ~nd Chaucer, also provided th&lt;i
basis lor the present library's special
'collections.
McGrath received his bachelor'~ and
master's degrees from the University of
Buffalo and hfs Ph .D. at the University
of Chicago. He holds honorary degrees
from 45 colleges and unlver$ltii!'S.
· He was. a member of the UIB
edmlnlatratlon· from 1930 to 1945,
serving as a closeedvlsor and associate
.o f former Chancellor Samuel P. Capen.
He was U.S. Commissioner o!
Education from '19411 to 1953, 'PIUident

•Faculty r

'Turn-around' potential
Hartman said UUP opposed the
faculty rank distribution formula ' because of Its potential to " turn around"
the status. -of University _centers a.nd
other units whose programs are
dependent on attracting top quality
senior faculty.
The State Education Department, she
noted , often points to the lapk of such
natlonally·k~own scllolars as reasons

~~~~~.nii'S"ti~Jl/~~~~c;~~n,g~~""'~

hire new faculty onl v.rat )ynior ranks,
they would t:!l)OSt , ~lnly lace
difficulty ·on -~~~· soore; Hartman
. ·
suggested.
Then, too, she sad: there would be a
questiOn of morale. Young laoulty
would be hired · with no hope or
expectation lor movement upward.
Bunn- threatening connquencea
Lo::al reactions to the faculty rank
.
formula are also downbeat:
II the formula should continue in
operation, VPAA Ronald Burin predicted the University · will lose the
flexlblllty needed to plan suc;cesslully
lor Its future development.
Bunn agreed with Hartman that the
formula will alaoJI..., a " leveling ellect"
which will .preclude the poaalblllty of
any SUNY campus "dlstlngufahtn9
~~~~~~tlo~ . a leedlng educatlona
Obvloualy, campus officials are
agitated becauae the 008 lormul•
would atrlp UIB of approximately
$218,000 this flecal year. But what
,..... the ptlt _ , mora bitter Is that
the 'Unt-.lly (as -v0111 elael has
1101 ~ totd.tlout criteria 008 Uled In
..,..Iaing IIWithelattoof Mnlor tift!
fqty Ia too rtc:h ~...., with pen
Nallfljr hU ... """'-"' d t - . d
=~~~~ ~~ .-r lnatltutlona
had had an Informal
~I trit!1 SUNY IIWia 30-30-3010 latlo IIOIIId belllheNcl to'by SUNY's
caltegea.~
Ia, 30 par of the
'-lily w
belli -'t~ lha top three
rarN , _ . . . and Ualatant
~ ....., - ailil 10 per oent at
tile ln8lnlctor or leciUrw level
. _ _ , . . . . . . . . . tacit .,..:
Mini IIIII ~ - - - WOUld be

For,...,=

=-=-

KansaaCity,lro(ll1953to 1956.
McGrath was&lt; professor · of higher
education at Teacher$ College, Columbla; chancellor of Eisenhower College
In Seneca Falls, N.Y. from 1966to 1968:
. and director of the Higher Education
Canter at Temple UniVersity from 1968
to 1973.
Author of several books and articles
Or. McGrath, 76, Is currently executlw
director of the Program In Liberal
Studies, Office of Research and Study
J\'rl~~~~~t~~~~ion, at the University of
Also expected to be present at the
Aprll19llbrary dedlcetlon Is Mrs. Arthur
Lacey, Mr. Lockwood's widow, and the
donor of the Library's prestigious
collection of Robert &lt;il'lllles' manuscripts anq materials. She will present
the University with a portrait of herself
painted by Mr. Pal Fried of New Y011&lt;
City
•
·
A· portrait of UIB's first director of
- INiborarrthleea•
· roCiharlna'aaartiAstbboBettth, paulmnteedr anbyd
T
given to the Unlveralty Libraries by Mrs.
Laoey,wlllalsobeunvelled.
The formal dedication ceremony will
begin -at 2 p.m. In Woldman Theatre,
Norton, Guided tours of the new library
wlll .be .condu~ted alter the dedication
ceremony.
·

3istribution,

'"""'- t, col. 4)
look." Hartman aeld the f~nda might be
restored to each Individual campus, or
- might be returnecfln a lump sum•to the
Chancellor lor distribution as- he sees
lit. In the latter case, she speeulaled
UUP would be Interested in seeing
some of the funds used to offset the
Impact of "retrenchment."
She notBjl that the College at New
Paltz is being particularly hard hit this
year by retrenchment of persons. That
'!nil has to make 20 cuts'Which It cannot
come up with by turning-In vacant lines.
TwentY people there are going to lose
their l1&gt;b1, HartUlJin lndlce~. some of
whom have tenure and have been on the
faculty for up to 18 years.

-~·i'li

and chancellor of th,e· University ·of

!.'!.~end would
autonomy In

.About two years ego, tne historic
pattern was abandoned; bos called a
halt · to . some promotlo.ns here and
elsewhere throog~out SUNY. The
.

::!~~~~~~:~~~ha!~h':,~;:':~:i'a~~te~~

senior level faculty. -it was an obvious'
attempt by DOS to control the number
of lln·es as well as the total amount of
money devoted to faculty salaries,
- .
Buon protested.
DOS allked for a.,_ llat
WhQ9· university centers started
comRiainl~, OOBJnvlted SU.NY ·af\d.its,
units to,dev•se a list of pear JrstltutionS"
so an analysis could be made. Along
with the list, DOB asked lor criteria
used In identifying the schools.
Somewhere al&lt;&gt;ng the war,, the StaJ,e
Education Department a so became
Involved anil was asked to contribute to
.
the analysis. . ·
As a result of the new formula which
It devised, DOB sought to slash
approximately $1 million this year in
faculty salarjes. Stony ·brook was the
• ~~~:ts:::,~e~tth a $230,000 cut. UIB,
· Bunn relayed that a DOB representative, who spoke on Campus after
the cut was announced, reportedly
Indicated that this year's cut was only
the "tip of the Iceberg," that OOB plans
. to cut another S2 mllll9n from the
university centers In coming years.
U/B'apen
In a November memo to Jerome
Komisar, SUNY vice Chancellor for
educational · services, from Charles
Fogel , U/B's ectlng executive vice
president, the following schools were·
given ;as some that could property be
considered our pears: the universities
of Wl~naln, Mlehklan, Minnesota,
llnd Waahlllaton, Beriiei.Y,Cotumbia,
Cornell, UClA, Texu at Austin, and
· Michigan State. The llat contained 23
Institutions.
According to the memo, the aehools
were ploked becauee they ware
considered to ~ a oomperabllt. range
of dlaclpliMr)!, profeaelonal and graduate prograltls and w- tnatltullons
with broad MIVIce I'Hponalbllltlaa as
dell ned by an enrollment .of at least
15,000 students.
At the PrBII!II time, Bunnsatd UIS Is
"not denying promotlona if merit
Justifies them" ' and Ia not employing
quotas for eenlor faculty. the Unlwialty
Ia alao continuing to propoee counteroffers to Mntor ' - ' 1-.lty who haw
' - ' offered poeillona by other
lnatltutlona. ~. thoee who do
Choose to • - c1ap1te counteroffera
ara baing rwp'-*1 by junior ' - '
faculty, explained Bunn.
Bunn acknoWledGed thlil "llklmmlng
linea" at Ute wtif not produce the
$218,000 ooe Wlinta to cut from core
cam1111a utariM. Aa a ruUtt, he
~ DOB may ~ funding
el~ In theUn.,..lty'a budgat.

n,,

1

formula
~~~~~:nn
"tt'a an -Y anumptlon made by
people fwaway from 1tleUnfv«8iiy."

�?

April ' · 1178

l

Want to be In broadcasting?
So do 1 5,000 others, he says;
'It takes guts,' he ~dvlses
By Marcy CaiTOII
Aepor1or lnl1lm

"This weather, i n the vernacular ol
today, sucks."
Not exactly the type of· rainy day
report fOU'd expect TV-2 weatherman
Barry Lollis to present when he's on the
air. But as a guest of the College of
Urban Studies (CUS) last Thuraday
Ullla "let his hair down" before
delighted crowd at Porter Cafeteria In
Ellicot t.
Tiaht job marl&lt;et .
The ~2-year..ofd Lillis, known lor his
unorthodox - II somewhat frenetic weather reports, revealed his formula of
success lor students who are gradual·
lng and are Interested In the real world
broadcasting Job market: It takes
motivation and communication, he

a

~~;·.~~~ ~~~~~:~£4::11~ ~a.'!l

.Censored ..
'Blacks Brltanntca' was banned
in Britain, censored In Boston,
says filmmaker who couldn't be neutral
" A goad documentary doesn't compromlee," ..:cording to fllmmeker DaYI.d
Kolf.
So after he went Into the Black
communities of Enaland to 111m B~cb
Brflenllica, an e....,lnatlon of noctam In
England irom a black/worl&lt;1ng claaa

~~~.:ry
=~~taelf.....

=-ct:: =~. ~
w:-•,rcn"~

l&gt;onutly~

brutality and of "the struggle of the
oppressed to fight beck ."

'Black' targets
A acene where British policemen are
ahowrr shooting at Black maJe targets
· during target practlc;e waa cut as well.
Thla re-edited -.lon, which Kolf said
resulted from "'rwellian censorship, a
Ia ffiiU, • combined rearrangement and
transformation of various Images within

=

the black/working
claM struggle -'n•t raclam, flit ~off.
· In no way could Tt be nautral .

~~celaat

Friday, the
~ucer and
dlnoctor of the
controversial documentary pi'M8!11ed
the uncen-.d version of Blacks
Britannica, and dlacuaaed Ita euppraak&gt;n and centof8111p. Tha evant waa
· aponaored by the Graduate Student
Aaaoclatlon, Third World Student
Aaaoclatlon, and the Student Aaaoclatlon International Affaire Coordinator.
Co~npleted In June, 1918, Blacks
Britannica waa cenaored by the Brltllh
tllat ...... yew. Scheduled
a1r Ofl national public televlalon In the
u.s. the! JOlly, I t - C*IIOred. well.
·a- In mind, a1 all ti!Ms," reminded
Kolf. "that lt'a often .,... you don't get
10 that Ia IIIOiil Important and
• algnltlcent then that which !My do let

110-'""'""t

you~:..
much dl-ouated by the
lllm'a can~lp - -*IailY In the

U.S., whenl he fall thai the Nllion• to
the doellmenletY was etronger
then In Britain. The lllmi!Woer commissioned by public t-.ton In
Boaton to do the 111m. Ironically, wben
, . , . 8rll8tlnlce aired ·In Boaton,
It a C8II80Nd ..,..on, mlnua lhe
mlnutaa that Included dlap~ of pollee

equipped and will end up 'tlorkl ng with
McDonald's," he said . ·
Lillis, Who teaches .a publ ic spe&amp;king
course on the Main Street Cempua,
noted that-lor the 15,000 broadcasting .
majora graduating, only 700 jobs are
available. The competition Is eell·
evident. " I you've got the guts and the
drive, and want It bed enough," though,
you maybesucceaalul, he said. ''That's
the motivation BJipecl."
•
'T.-rlflc deejay'
Lillis wOfl.hlmsell his first lull-lime
"on-the-air" job by sending a fan letter
about himself to the Buffalo Evening
News' " Celebrity Mailbag" column,
lauding " this terrific deeJay In Salam.,..
ca." He was a part-time employee then.
Calla from the News lor more
Information about the " populaf' radio
personality were relayed to Ullla'
producer, and It wasn't long before he
hed a lull-time job - at $80 every two

-:l~~-

a, Lillis receives " feelers"
from WABb tel8'ilslon In New Vorl&lt; City,
as well as WLS-TV In Chicago, stations·
Interested In his style of weather,
But, he grins, "I got my first
=.~~~~;.J~.:tr.~~~ ~.=l!:,'J'i:; -' reportage.
lull-llme~ob" with a little deception.
Indicates.
Some ml t call It chutzpah.
An an mated apMker, Ullla also
" No one · - · Blacks Britannica lor
the tlrat time," explains Kolf. " Everyone
who vt- It for the flrat time In the
spitting out words. In that case, the guy
common things
United States they've understood befont."
who can talk regardlea of
qualifications- will get thiToD.li'i.ifl
While Slacks Britannica waa conIn how you come ecroea." 'rhara the
demned by the British govemment, It Is
still shown by achoola, and antl...-eclat
communication aspect of the Lillis
Succeu Formula.
church ~roupa to mobilize sup~ for

~O:'icJ,~~~rh~':..:·~.~.;~u:·~~

~~~:.~nt;ai~~~BI~d:r~

annlce,' " baaed· In Boston, haa .been

=~~~~J.t~~~~~:~u~~~

While the unoenaored ..alon Ia not
supposed to be lhown to more than 19
people at a lime, ICCOIJ!Ing to an
Injunction egalnat the INm, maaa
ac:teenlngs, such aa those at Diefendorf
last...-. heve been continuing to raise
flniiiiCial" auPDOrt aa well aa spiritual
conlldence, ' the latter In the form of
petitions .-·
•
Mewlwhlle, David Kolf Ia thinking
about hie next film endeavor. Among
lila ~ : "Tha U.S ...south Africa
connection." The veteran of eight veers
of filmmaking al80 linda It "lmporlant
to look egaln at the Whole q~tlon of
the r.tatlonehlp olthe pollee and the
111inorltlel/majorlt ea, on · an Int..,.
tlonal acale. •

-IIC.

School of Management names .
Marlene ·c ook assistant dean
a1eo held poata with the Olfloe of
Adm!Diona and Racon:la at Buffalo
lll8ta and with the Ac8demlc Altalra
Olfloe at Ella Community College.

She ~ved her Ph.D. In educallonat

=-=~~~n~~
Buffalo !Mala.

AI a IIUdent, ehe *'--' In
_ . , with .,. "-"""I DNielDn of
the ao.ll of~ Edoaltonel

a.vtoaa(~n
El1eCCounly.
....
ofthe~of
KlciNr FOUIIIIIMon of
w..mNewYOfiL
. . . . . . . . . . of lllillrMI' ~

diNCIDra

==~~.:..!:~

In his two-and-one-hall yews at
WGR·TV, Lillis must be doing 1101111&gt;thlng aucceaalully. The TV N rallnY,!.'!t race has t!Yhtened conalder·

~~FI n:' =~ :-;:Chan~~

=

audience lhllrll; WKBW: a 3'r('Newa-

:r~~
~u;~~~ W!:.'= ~~ :::
present ratings race, job secur11y

Ia
poor, Llllla laid. "My Job depends on
ratings ... you do what you heve to do to
get the ratings."
.
·

Peotll• need• frtencl

.

Ullla knows It would be easy to do
the -ther In a "normal" fashion . "But
to be an aaa every night Ia something ,"

=na"'17v~ty ;;;':;~,.;,..~~~'eel.~· ::!

explains. ''Thel'a why I'm doing the
-ther. People .,. , faced with •
preaauraa and strain ev~. whether
lt'a on the lob or at horne. I -n to be
nloa and friendly 10 theee people - to ·

ft!:"o~~or~=:::.~t!t":;...., If
. Ullla' Mandl)' ~ has ...ned
him phone calla hOm . _ _ . ,

~~~J.~~-==

One woman called the~ WDncler
to report a murder, and a mtln plloMd,

~~~Pu~':!~~~~P out claath

In ending his Candid IPPMIW'C&amp;.
Barry Lillis wllhed hla audience well but he never did give ua a IORQ-fWigot
loracaat.
/

Sanders, Philharmonic are
working en a 'Phonic Ear'
Dr. Denik A. Sanders, profeaeor of ·
communlcellvedlaordera and a c l - .
Ia Cumtntly working with the l!ulfalo
Ptollharmonlc Otoheatra to develop the
potential of a Ptoonlc Ear. •
The re~h Ia being done under a
$14,000 grant aWIIrded to the "'lllw·
monic by the National Endowment for
the Arts. Sanders Ia being aaalatecl by
two graduate students.
The Ptoonlc Ear Ia an FM unit which,
eaeenllally, Is a peBC&gt;nal radio alation
lor I he l)earlng lmpalnad.
The - a .- proposal sprang from
the llhllhermontc'a desire to rnelca Ita
conoer1a enjoyable to hewlng..lmpalrad
peBC&gt;na whoM atanderd heWing -aida
. . nat .taquate to fully portray the
sounds or the - . a .
Technical, educational and toalllttclol
Ia being conclllcteclll)' 11\e U/B
I_,, Although the Phonic Ear lou
cleollead l o r = parcaptlon, , .
~..
Ifill toc~Mennlne If
a unit 1*1 be~ wllloh WOUld be
ror - 1n n....,.no. to
truly

r--.

mualc end whll 111...._. IM8it1¥111M
mtaM be buNt lllto .w lclaal unit.
Onder study . . . . . . . . . _ _ . _
tlon of~ fot . . . . . . wltll
the elllatlna Ullit . . . ... liluncle
t h a i - hm v.. llllllaa .._... be

=.':':.: . - ..

About eo Phonic Ear unite . .
~ly-J!Mng uead In .,_.. by
"--ng Impaired chlldlwl In lulflllo,
. Erie end N.....,_countiM. VI'*' a child
attanda a oanoart, thMe unite . .
lmmetltately aclliiUble 10 .lila eun.lo
PtollhermOnlc .,...... by the adclltlon of
• amatl oryatal.
A mualc --'allon ~
developed with ·fila lwiJI 01 aaaiiUinoe hOm the U/1 Del*llftlilt of
Mualc, lnctudaa eudlo
IIIII
written npmertala wllloh will be
to

=.;:-•

t~aothltyl*l

be

eoc-.

..._

=

the Q\lldren'a
"lJitlfNtaly," ..,. ....... "wallopl
to be lillie to , _ wldao 111-liiiiDU

:c'auu.:,.:-....:r ::

· Ptollhanllolllc. •
Wofldng In -.juncltloll w1111 1M Ull

~arid~~·---

::m~~~;y,..t9=-'-J::
.WOUl
d be ln........ Ill"'::"..IIIIIOr
In the -lma,

::-=..:= ~bel-=.=.-.:

==:.:::--::......:~
In the OOlllliiUflltY .. . . . •• fot .,.
Ptollhennonlc - - . . . .

II)' nllllo

--The
. . -·peal11111111*1
of fllllonlll
l!8r.......
1111111 ao

~of . . . . . . . 6ir.li
lending lleiUIIIIOft ............

lila 'city Woulil be ..... to ...., - of
nltllll
of ....
, ......
_
1111111 end
piDk
. ._
...
. ._. ofiiOI Oil . .

The

H.C.

Elealnllllo

eo...,

_..lluytng . . . . . ..., funallllillil

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

The_._.. .. ,

-·

__.....
liiloi.....,. - - Wllloh_,be......._ • .

~

be . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...

�...u ..

General Ed
Hochfleld, seeking 'integrated studies,'
would have preferred different approach;.
Connolly thinks the pla':l is 'promising'

.,-=-=-..

'""-a-ge Hochfleld, who tut

. - ClenounCed file o - 1 Education
rwport In a attntna eddrea before hla

OOI~";.~u:r 1111\ate, feels he Clld
not m
the plan by relen1ng
to lt u a ~ eel of distributiOn

requltenWita. Further, he lnalats his
plea to the GE Committee to ...,_
examine Ita ~h to General
E4Ueatlon not baled on a distorted
of lililtlam but ratl)er on grounds

of I:':'W::~'";;rotesaor Thomas Connolly, a·ootteag.. of Hochflald'a In the
Engliah ~ment , thinks the report Is
promlalng.
·
Although Hoch/leld concedes that a
certain amount of distribution requir&amp;"*"- have traditionally played a
algnlllcant role In General Ed programs
and ahould conlln.. to do ao, he
objecla to the U/B plan because It falls
to guarantee that areas of study will be
ayatematlcally Integrated Into a meanlnQful educational experience. The
•nat... of . the studies will not have
more than an Introductory chara&lt;;ter,"
he feels.
"I don't believe that when you start
out on the wrong foot you have much of
a cl1ance to change the dlrecUon you're
going ," he said.

~~ll'e"::r=ld

,

rather have
seen from the Committee Ia a plan
reMmbllng what the Schwartz Committee Report on GE proposed two years
ago. That Ia, the Institution of a type of
pnot 'program In which a GE program
would first be deviled for a limited
number of students. Then, depending
on Ito aucceao or failure, oer;tain
elements of It could be modified,
8XI*Ided or duplicated, and ....,tually
offered to alatger aegrMAI of students.
Another possibility, but one Which
would requite more time "preparing the
way for General Education," would
ln.olve lllllabllah"**l of a "faculty of
liberal atudlee." Such a faculty would
be picked by the CommiHee from

~=-=~~~~~

tlon. They, and not the GE Committee,
. would be taponalble tor planning and

orc:~o1Grec::::. did l~eed.

'-ted Hochtlelcl, wu to "tll&lt;e the
-

of ~ _ . . _ and

mal!e .(10

clenWICII on anyone. In tact, the
ftrwt ._, ol the ~ In~ no
ae..-1hll; tMI'a
tlleConlmlftee
~·pgct~Q~." - - - ' ·
MIDuall ... rwport aelfj fur -

OIIUNII lD be~ to ~

Cit-==-~
IIIII. HI

tllllllriUnd !rom..,_
tar 8Uall d•••a~lta

..

..

1M ...... In IIIONMad
............ HOOidlllcl. Ia

~~to~·
Q

•

I
tile GE 11111J1111 did . - I In

......... -

to "tum the

floor of the-senate Into a kind of bazaar
In which various parts of the University
bargained lor the future of student
credit hours.
What Hochfleld would prefer Ia a plan
with fewer requirements, one which
emphasizes th&lt;i quality of study. He
favors the development of an upper
division GE program, administered by
the faculties, In which "students would
receive the opportunity to understand
their major In a larger context."
As Hochlleld sees It, GE should
"educate a student to participate lA the
world of contemporary thought"
through development of a critical
Intelligence.
" We must lnltlat&lt;i our students into
how modern Inquiry Is carried on, and
how modem thinkers look at the world,
ask questions about It, and then look
for answers."

This, he Insisted. cannot J&gt;e accomplished by courses based on texts
which "render people Incapable of
thinking," but 'hither by co ursa work
which shows the significance of an area
of -.tudy and how It relates to, and
Impacts on other disciplines.
_

Do U/B greda live In_ the wortd . of
thought?
Hochfleld questioned whether students educated here have the ability to
read a serious book or journal on a

~~~t ~~':tw~~e~~~~,;'~h'.:\~~~o~~~

student$. really "participate In the world
o~ thought" once they graduate, or II
they become Insulated professionals
who " lose touch with Ideas."
Thera comes a point, Hochlleld
: observed, when an Individual realizes
that disciplines are not " mutuaUy
exclusive," for, example, that science·
has a strong "artistic component" while
artistic endeavOts "are not without their
rigorous rational elements."
What bothers him Is that distribution
requirements , a.s encased In the current
GE report, do not provide a connecting
link, but rllfher leave aleas of study " In

se~::W~x';!;~s

he and the Initial
GE·CommiHee Chairman Norman Baker
are essentially aiming for the same end
product - that Is, an Integrated mode
of atudy _; but that their approaches
are different. He hopea only that When
tha Committee encounters reslatance
from • tnatltullonal or departmental
habits,;· It does not lose sight of the
ultimate goal. , •
-

Connolly .... mlltt
.
While Hocllfleld wouklllke to the
! - ' ~ and tha CommiHee
begin - · hla COlleague, Profeeaor
Tom Connoiht ,-thlnka otllefwlee.
Connolly Ia •lmlatlc about proe1*111 of aetabllehlng a good GE

rc;:

~:et..~the ~ .:::...
IIIMtlna on o.n..l Education, he
voloed lhanke to the Committee lor Ita
•
diligent elforta In the....

CGwloiiJ lleiiiMI Hochfleld hu
"wwld argu"**ta" ~ the lm~ 01 cleoelcllllnO aorttfcal faculty
- . IIUdlnta, but...... hla atance
'-no ...... on the ,.ue olthe GE

1- ..
.
'--=£=ie

OE . _ t be.-8 ICI to the dlatribution requlra-

ffom tlllll to 1•.

doeenol..,.eiMI

...,_... '"

....... Nor Cloee he -

an,tlllnG

:=:.=-:a.=-.:::~
Uildllgiililu... pR~g~WM.

aald==awl.'lll

Coilnoltr
,_of
IN
pia!!
tiel 1ft ltl
ol ...._
I n t i - undlrlta
112. H IIIIa
.. filii ~........ then

==...,"':..c.'te jull.:r.=:

. . . . . . . ~ ........ to

~~':=

.......
$lj......
=--R..,......;-:......
.,..,.........
~==--Fa::
.... PIJIIICtilil,
.

Aprils, tan

Scientists exhorted
to restore 'meritocracy'
The

EDITOR'S ttOTE:
iotloMng - - · .
wat~ comment" wlllcil ~In

lhe 11..., U 1 - oi _
. ..__
-lnouon:• Daen Duwayno II.
-o!Notumi-ondllmotico
"The ...._._or rMior·
1ng lhe cndtbllily of ococlome tn lhe UnHod
St81M," A-.on aaya, "ccnnot be - -

bel-.

-od."

•

Isn't It curious that anti-IntellectualIsm Is so common among educators?. I
refer to tha dlsmel.ebblng ol standards
that we have permitted to ocour at all
levels of American education , especial·
ly during the last pecade and a half.
Intent, ralher than per1ormance, Is now
so well rewarded that the moot common
grade given In many of our universities
fsan A.
Full credit can be obtai ned even
though nothlrlg may have been learned

~rs"e~ ;~~~~~t:na~!or:~,n~.'a:g~:

and fly fishing often carry the same
college credit as quantum mecbenlcs,
cell physiology, and physical chemls-.
- try.
'
The Super1nteodent or-Schools for
Hawaii announced · thet a diploma
should be given on attentlance - only.
When a guerrilla g(Oup of educators
returned a county school system '"

~~~~~~sl~.as~6"c'l:~'~~~m~':it':1l

a " new Idea" and "an experiment," and
reported that educators from all over the
country were so)eklng Information about
this Innovative program .
The once great City College of New
York, which for 54 years produced more
graduates who went on to earn
doctorates than all but one other ·
1

~~~~';J's T~ J~~: ~';,",e,"'',:'aa!~~~~f~

regain some of what they voluntarily
gave away, tl!oy demand from entranto
a ninth grade ability In .math. Clearly,
the professionalism Is· gone from our
profession . To rectify our follies and
restore the public's confidence In us are
our most pressing tasksJoday.
One way to restore our credibility is
to reverse grade Inflation - a sickness
that h&amp;s reached epidemic proportlonJO. _
For the past 15 years, as ..Scholastic
Aptitude Test scores have steadily
fallen. the number of high grades given

~

virtually

~

university In the

~ntry hu atlllldlly Increased. The

eclipee of excellence In education Ia
widely 18C0Qnlzed, and universally
criticized (often In cartoon form) by
~ responsible jOurnalists.
This falee certlflcatlon In lndlvfdual
ctanrooms culminates In the graduation of uneducated students lrom srta
8lid science programs and nonjourneymen from profeaslonal schools. Armed
with only laethereHe aheepaklns, many
· cannot hold down jobs "reserved" for
graduates. The truly worthy graduates
whosa grades are often Indistinguishable from those of the Inept are disillusioned when prospectlva
emplo~ are unlmpreaaed with their
credentials.
_
News stories call allefltlon to the
poor job mwket tor college graduates
, and the number of graduates working In
poaltlona previously filled by people
who had not attended college. In how
many of these cuea Ia the mlsmalch
between the greduate'and the dlpl~
ratt&gt;tr tban the grecluate and the lob?
We have•lrlledy t.-,naferred some o o..-

:;:r;:,~·;~~:~ ~:ro~r=~~~~~loy-

••en

Unless we reverse thla tnand .
more of our grecluates will have to be
evaluated by b'uslneaa and government
tests before they_ - .and we - are
certified competent. Businesses are
already spending millions to provide the
training that we have Jailed to give their
work force. Although our- students are

nof~'!"~~~~a~~~t~=·.h::J~o, all
educators Is that of reinstating
standards and reestablishing credibility
with the public. Accomplishing the
former will result In the 1atter. Of all the
academic ~lscipllnta : the sciences and
engln-lng have relaxed their standards the least.
ft Is logical then tHai this group could
most easily b&lt;jgome the lnltlating force
In an effort to restore an academic

:J~.:;~rnst:tut~~ a 'I: ~gle~t~~

will rise and feed the rest of their
colleagues In returning Integrity to
ped•gogy. '
-.
- -John D. Polmer
Chairman, Oeport(Tlent of Zoology
U. of Massachusetts, Amherst

Spring·recess scheduling
ioterferes with holy days .
Dear Dr. Ketter:

.
We feel a nead to communicate to
you our feelings &lt;in the University's
decision to resume clasaeil the day after

f:~~ tot~l~er~~1~~':!~~t :'~

holyday and a family dev'' tor many or
mlsa class the next day. We urge you to
decJareforthe.racord that no. at~t Is

~~ ~~.~~.~~~!~~ ~~ o:e~

observance of Easter.
Such a decl-lon does not really
solve the problem, flo-er. Clasees
miaaed ara hardly a -solution. It fa the
aplrlt of thla decision to resume claases
on Monday that Ia the reaJ 'problam. To'
give a qllg ious holiday olt In thIs
manner Ia to begrudge ua a religious
hoilcley. We M&gt;uld nope that In the
future thla attuatlon will not naoccur.
We would hope, too, that a spring bnaak
that lncludea . . . . _ might be

scheduled to Include the last day of
Passo- when observant Jews cannot
attend classes.
At prasent Unlveralty - policy Is to
schedule aprtng bleak ao u to Include·
both Easter and~ in y-s when
they fall near enough. II '&gt;ot then the
break Ia SCheduled eo u to Include
neil...- on ~ 1"-Y that this Ia
lmpar\lal. TheiChool might explore the
posalblllty, h~. of scheduling tha
bnaak ao uto InClude I'Mao- some of
these yewa and Eaater ~- Wherever
the solution liel, the Unlvwalty s~ould
have a policy that ,.,.cia religious
feeling mora than Ita p_,t policy

does.

•

-Fr.=--~\!;

N~-=~~~~:1!
Hillel

Arlo~ .

Lut~pua

Nau

Ministry
IUahanl A. s o United Mlnletrielln Higher Education

Sixteen high school banCJs . .

coming here for ·testlval Saturday
Sixt- hlgll achoot Jazz liianda wilt
compete for prtzea, Saturday, April 7,
when the DlpMment ol Mullc hoeta
the Flm Annual Juz Feetival In the
Katherine Cornell Theetre.
Free lltCI open to tha public the
lwtiwl-.pMttlon will run from e' a m
to II p.111.
. .

......~~~~~ high ~Ia lncl11_de
:;;;;...-&amp;.1

~ tnatT~ancsa. · st.

~~ ....._

,,.,., Niagara-

- - - · Eaat Aurora,

A""*-1 ,

lliiii*Dort, Maryvale, G-.\tt!Ma.

=-~~ ~~~

Tonawanda
Judging · tha benda on overall
-'ormance will be LM Bash of the
'Natlonai.Aaaoclatlon of Jezz Educators; •
Sam Fatz-. a local jGZ mualclan, and
John Hum of weFO.f'M .
Ptlzee n
tilinG 16rnlalled b~ the
• [)epwtii'!Mt of Mliale, M &amp; T J58nkHt'l
Kandor MUIIC, Inc., PNntlol- a
Pubillhing Co. tha Nat'-! Aaaoclauon 01 .~au ~on ..-c~ Selml&lt;
lnat._U:O.
·
0nctor Of the FeetMI Ia , _ S.
"--rtak, U/8 .-IIWit pRII- of

~~heed 101 the -"11..

Jazz

�Apfll5. 1t7t

I

LETTERS·.

Nukes: Opponents· paranoid, student avers
By Eric Sven Billings
UJB~-·~

the stagnation caused by envlror&gt;·
creating an atmosphere hostile to 1helr
working for a fruit!
1
mentalist sabotage of nuclear power
u economy. Nukes.
curiosity. We ara suppoaedly In a
and conflicting regulations out of
offer a centralized power source naeded
University that leeches us to be skilled
Schlesinger's office ma~.!lrevent this.
to supply various Industries In the third
workers to do our part In society. "fhat
Co t
tb
• world . We are not Imposing our
means that we must have access to the
n rary
what N lAG will ~ell
technology on anyone, they beg for it.
most advanced technology available. 1
you , nuclear power Is not a government
The only way we cen get peasants out
suggest that people w/10 are here to
~eject to prove that the atom bomb can
of back-breaking labor and Into more
learn how to · five with one another
u,sed as a reliable energy . source.
productive forms of life that we are
and I or how to grow crops for a few 1n
That s already been proven. Testing was
thankful for Is through more advanced
done throug/l research on a nuclear
techno!
1
~~ fity Collectives are In the W(Ong
reactor long before the first atom bomb
ogy, or example, a tractor to
was exploded.
.
replace 5p men with hoes on the farm . '
Aedloactlve waste dlspo
a
We want Nukes , not for blackmail but
Nukes not tolal an-•
•
problem we are told of' but the fallacy
masses from slave labor to
Nukes are not the answer to our
In Whet we are told Is this· We have the
. problem. They are only one step In the
uplifting of s()!:lety ~ There Is only a
technology to produce n~clear power
Sabotage? .
limited amount of uranium ore In the
mechanize agriculture and put men 0 ~
With the release of the .film " China
world. The next step will be fusionthe moon ; to think that we don't have
Syndrome.. and ..the " accident" at
power. There Is alm ost an unlimited
the technology to teke care of our mess
Harrisburg , th&amp; IJ .S. population Is
Is Insulting to man's Intellect With
supply of fuel for fusion In the oceans
under the • most massive public
of the world In the form of hydrogen
breeder reactors worl&lt;l ng , nuclw waste
brainwashing by the ~&gt;ress In history.
ore-water. Brit If funds are cut off from
can be processed to produce more
Withi n hours, environmentalists and
the present nuclear power .program
nuclear fuel with a small percentage
other paranoids were . hopl&gt;ing all over
then we will n..- have fusion .
'
actual waste. This could be bufled as a
the place. These people advocate
When the world's oil supplies run
sale measure. Burying does not mean
everything that Is remotely possible and
out, we will be.fhe only count,.Y -that will
just digging a big hole and covering It
generally unverifiable since nothing like
have to C810rt to burning wood tor our
thi s has ever happened before. This
up out ol sight. •
energy. Environmentalists who can1
With proper funding , waste .disposal
"boogey man" mentality will most likely
-the decimation to the ecology of lhe
can be a science. Waste could be stored
produce the ·same mass hysteria that
U.S. that this would cauee ahould go
n virtually Indestructible containers
was created by the broadcast of Welles'
beck to flrat g . - and ._, ed&lt;lltlon
lal d out In compartments miles
"The War of ~he Worlds".
and subfrectlon.
underground. • These Cf&gt;mpartments _
This •mrctear nlgftunare" was not
The hlatory Of CIYIIIDtlon Ia Ch&amp;NI&gt;would be easily accessible to technlcaused by faulty technology, but by a
terlzed by ...-tve end prog-'Ve
clans for routine checks and redlstrtbuseries Qf "colnclde)1tal" water cooling
breakthroughs lq teehnolotjy ..,..,le
lion. Union carbide 'is wortdng. on an
valve. mallunctlons that should have
to the labor of ....:lety; from the flrat
alloy that absorbe neutrons. If
been picked up by routine checks on the
mention ol brass and Iron In Genesis tv·
succeulul, the hlilf-11fe of waste stored _ system. The feet that this human error
22 to nuclear power of today. Are
In containers made ol this alloy would
came just weeks after the premiere of a
going
to fight over whal'we parcetw to
be greatly reduced by multiples.
111m advertlslng the paranoid dangers-of
- . clecompo.ltlon
Wind be, end reverse hlatory, or are we
nuclear power, suggest, In my mind
Wind energy would be good for a
willing
.to work to produce more and
False
assertions
that this Incident may have been
place like Buffalo, wouldn't It? Wind
better ~hlnga for ftle tutu,re?
The assertion that ·nuclear power
result of direct sabotage to perpetuate
energy Is also nothing new. My
than
plants
would
employ.
leas
worker6
anti-technology
hysteria
and
shut
down
grandfather used to Irrigate the fields
almost any other way we spend money
Industry.
·
on the farm wtth lt. In order to run
Is false . It Is true that a Nuke will only
someplace ll~e Bethlehem Steel bn
employ
a small n.umber of highly skilled
wtnd power,- Buffalo .would have · to
thrMt
small
Redlatton
technicians end englnesrs but what
construct windmills all along Its
To relieve pressure on the cooling
about the lobe-created by services we
perimeter. The wind Ia not always
system, low level redloactlve steam was
• can't -?Production of Nukes Involves
reliable. If I were working at Bethlehem
releaaed
Into the atmosphere. Th,le Ia
people who mine and process uranium
Stesl , I wouldn't want to .qult work and
standard procedure far all Nukee In
ore, mine Iron ore, meke high grede
not get pal(! because ol a calm spell .
such a situation; never once wae the
stesl, transport raw and finished
Anaerobic decompoeltlon, of eswage
Incident out of control. Evacuation otmaterials, and process the waste, not to
Is corporate crime a hot topic a1
to produce methane gas Ia another area
the town was unwarranted elnce one
mention people who actually construct
U/B'a 1- IICIIOOI? Or at any olhar lliw
In energy ..-cit that could ' be
would have to be In the Immediate
school for that matter?
~
..
J.':n!~c
.
like
archl\ectS,
welders.
Improved, but It's not the answer. It
perimeter for five dar.• to be ..xpoeed toRalph Nedar contended In a cempua
would be exoetlent for colhmunlty
100 mllllrems ot rad atton . A vlelt to the
leolure Tueeday morning thai ,....
The U.S. was the laader In nuclear
j)Urp08IIS but not too good lor Industry.
dentist will expoee one to 75 mllllnlmo
technology. We could have • been
school&amp; fllflect tile jOb lll8ltlat end
In one minute. The thleat ol radiation
Anaerobic dec:omPOeillon talcea place In
balancing our trade deflclt and
concentrate on - ' a l end
two st11Q81 ea certain mlcfo-ofgenlsms
. cancer Ia lit~ly greater while
ment · law rather then _ . . . . ,
employing millions of wllfkara If we
watching the newa coverage on a color
were continually 8XJ).()ltlng Nukes.
protection atatut•. ~ llUdanta
T.V. than It Ia at the actual site of the
become "embnllled In tile fine tuning of
Thanks to the non-nucl- prollf-lon
down complex organ~ molecules Into
disaster.
..:!, otber . countrlea like Enaland
technical jargon end mi• tile DR~~~~Mn•
~ haeltll _.., mflllililtnln'l of tile
Ft'8!1Qlt, Germany, and tha Soviet lJnlo~
are balancing their t,_ deflclta and
~· end the ledk of _ . to
lllaltdowll?
IUiflctent concentration, a eeoond
aald NIIMr.
employing millions of their WOIItera a1
The
pl8nt
at
Harrlaburg
Shu~ down
8ttaln of becterialeede on -.lmpler
The oorponl8 arlme epldemiO 11111 ..
our expenae. lhls act pasl8d so
Immediately. At'thetimaofthla wrlflng,
molfOUI• to produce met/len8 gee.
nuclear bombe would not be proliferthe
oons
had
been
cooled
down
to
200
aWIIIIf)lng
IIIIa
- " ' 18 JICII_,Inll It
~uclng bacteria are ...,.
ated under the guise of po- plants.
Pollution, clallllad Nitlllr, 1e a ·e~~ent•
degrMS Fah,...helt. !1000 dag,_ Ia
clelly aenalttw to enVIronmental oondlcumulative form of vtolenol. •
Aa
Peace
Center
propaganda
·
needed
lor
a
meltdown,
llut
we
atlll
tiOM, Ideal being bet_, 110 end 85 _
tha Union of ~ad Sclentiata
lhe
~of
teal~
Feh,...helt. BecauMt eecll
In Conglwa,
he aalcl,
"'t..
to
edvertlatng the poulblllty of a core
. . , . . . _ - ' mon!M to complete
They ,:tell of a 13-yew-old honorS
rneltctown.
Ironically ~h. thougll,
-twmon-MIIIO'
-poilllloil8 that Ita~ met"- could not be r81llbly
8Cience etudeilt who 1'*1 to tuckmali
theM
aclerttlata
who
h
.oqu...., from just ons belCh. The
the city of Ortlndo Ill' tll_....ng to
fOflll ol . . . . , _ ...........
concluded tllel tMre Ia 110 dnct
--a&amp; u.tment pl8nt tllel ooukl run
twm .• Hadar cltad . . . . ,
uee en atom bomb that ha daelgn&amp;a on
c:oo.iatlon ~ tile produCtivity ol
ltltltl4ll*ll Bteel would 11e tile alze of a
paper.
the eomiOIIIY enCI !he ~ of
Company
• • prlnlt
clly. '-'PI• bOast that the ajiCh -polatloil. "Coo
._,
~y .
IIIOCiuced by ons cow In ons yew oould ·
the ~ of ..... llufiWI balnga ....
Thoee whO ~ tile ehutdoMI ~
be oomerted Into met/len8 · In the
, . the'-11181 ~ feleehuman , _ _ all
......
....,...,.
I*Wiofdll
tllird
~of 50 gatlona of guotlne. Of
UICINedar.
.
-..-.
...., ~ about that Wllleh
world oountriel don't need OIICie._,.., you can'f gat It all at once, you
lhly pt01118e. NIIMa ~ t• per
power. Then we are tOld of Mateo
' - to well tor tha cow to CfiiP.
cent 01 tlta .-ar -.mad by the
concluding nuciiW tfWie da8le wttll
.
I
belng ahutoutOI=- ..... ...::
U.B. T'*- are a few eng~ In U/B
l'fwiOtt, I CM't bell-that 1118)' WMt to
NYII'IMIIIWNIIII
duetocoatendtt-et.mallli.
u.s. CenlmiiDd -ar
whoare-'llldlltfttlaltenlale~­
In a IMati'!Q In Vorl&lt;, W. Aekl
~ a .., to CICifMft till
end t-...lllilllltoiiii,.O- but
~ II¥ ...
'""'"-• ciWrmen of the~
tMre .. a ... .........,. wiiO " - tllat
_ . , of the llllrd - - Into
Eleclrlc , _
said that ·~
lnclullrlal
~ INIIIIIIIed - - . .
•
only..,.
wac.~
find
t
1
1
a
to
1100"1' pWrlta ac:heduled to come on Hne
~ "fl"ll*m" le II we ·IUDDIY
AAW.,_,_.,....ot.~
Mecllli'*Y
c;an . .,.,_.
. tile - ol
miiiiOM ol~
who-"
Ill ... yeera the
Into. ."!~ .cllnllflc . . . . .
poMftllltl ~· enough "*VY to
tllalr wti01Ii IMe •• Tllla will ....,.
81
11'1--. to ............. _ . . , .
tnllltona to ... ldiialled enCI ...,

_.,.._ • .,._,,
·With an OPEC price Increase, talk of
al!ernate energy sources will be going a
mtle a
I t
II
al
m nu e.
we hed developed
ternate 11nargy sources In 1973 we
wouldn' t be In the exact same sltuatlpn
now as we ware then . carter wi ll
probably· Impose som.e ridiculous
measures llke rationing and/or Import
- quotas that wllllnclte runaway Inflation
and massive unemployment . But I am
writing abou1 alternate energy sources.
Solar power Is purported to be the
energy of the future. The reason why
there Isn't widespread application of It
Is because a vet mall&gt;rity of scientists
and engineers don'tfielleve 11 can be a
-lou~ contender for producing our nations energy.
Becauae of the 11mlted amount of sun
In the world , solar power can only be
regional and uaed as a backup at best.
To generate enough power-to run one
city, one would have_to use hundreds of
. square miles.. of solar collectors.
V~Jon would to be sparse
tJecau• .of tile 1018 of 11ght to the
coflectora. To economize on land,. we
could build collectora In spece and
transmit~ vta microwave. If this
became wldeepreed-lt w~Ald have to
be to generate for 1he entire
globe-who knows how we might alter
the global ecosystem by the subaequent rl• In air temperature caused by
the microwaves?

0

;~l~l~fla\:'~r

we

a

·Nader charges
. schools shun
corporate crime

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' '

April 5, 1t76

Re.dy for Rorlda
A hint of oprlng l8ot found otu· '
outdoon-l&gt;onlng 8th1Mic- .... del oldlo - no' doubt ln-entlclpetlon of
fnollcldng et Oeytone end Leud· durtnv &amp;!&gt;ring a . .k Which beglno
thla-~

CALENDAR

--$4;tcUiy.-.- YIIITINO AII1IST8 ~·
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10:30a.m.

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by""' De-

por1mento1Muoic.

"-"'&lt; Is one of fMo ...,. of a dis-~-·
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Puqulor ofwnty,
l " " '111e
Pooquior
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Regis

Puqulor din ... pmduood . . . . - . . f o r -·
lo add lo lhe rjol:y ol F""""''a mus1c11i

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AND

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Puqulor , . _ for hlo debut ol ""'
United Slates In 1987·68 ond ... since retume&lt;l •
_ for ......., .mora. His debut wl1h lhe ~
On:I1Mtra under George Szollt.lo ....aona' later
- - f o r .., .. juicy, ""'*"'&lt;: --In""'
VIolin eo.-io. He ._ _ . . : !
. . Pltlllu'gh~ tnd ... Now OrMlS
\

Dl'.o&amp;.DCM:ALIYSTIIU

Dr. Do¥ld - . ~ of
of Tecllnology.
11 4 -. 4 :15p.m. CCI!M ol 4.

-.cw.
-

Saturday-7

FACUlTY Mal'AI.•

-erRoceaaboglnaolthedoeeof-..
... glosMawllbe..........:l, ·""" 18.

_ . . . . , . - "llno- forY&lt;&gt;u&gt;g

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- .- .- - $2;-$1.
-

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by NrolrCopby

lond, ornngod for

~a p~on~o~ v-

Bord , .
foaAty,

Sl&gt;ol*ndby ... ~toiMuoic.

PEACE CEHT£11 CONFEIIENCE'
~ lnftallon and Sec~ Tho Impact
of lho AnM Race lli!WOOI.rn Vert.
!,lAW""""'" Hoi, Locol 774. 2039 ~
Street, TO'Ml of TQMMnda. 9:30 a.m.-4 p.m.
$2 &lt;eQIIIrltiOn fee. $pOn8orOd by the Western

ltoll\ ........ Conllr tor- 9Uiy -

~.=~-=~.~~
....
.- SU!y-. o.-.

207
Avo.
8 p.m. FfM. llPol*nd by · .,. Centor lor

aoma"""
carnpueaftliellona.
F - go.-

apookera w11 lndude Jeff
~---ol-ond
......_...,.. ~ . Columbia, 10\d Berte
IIQno, 1&gt;\.dgat ~-for lho Coollion

-SU!y--~.__

for. Now Rnlgn ril Mlilory Polley, Wllehlng1on .

IIOCII a IIOU. CCIIICIIIT'

8~~1~·

D.C.

-torC'*Ot a-.-pnjg,.,. Cornell

-

(Roodl): ~- (T,_,i); u - (_,_146 !lief..-!. 7 p.m. $pOn8orOd by the Cente&lt;
)or-Study. •
-

Now Yor1&lt;- Center ond a group ol _.ciea,

FUIICIIIBINII~'

UUAa MONDAY NIGHT FILMS'
. OabrloiO.Wiho--,7 p.m.; Dolour,
8:-tOp.m. 170MFAC, Ellcott.. Freedniaaion.

· -M1hbiUrTe
w- politicol
HustonKaren Morley,
Is - the ,_.
ccrnedy ·...,_ A
...-u.s. ~·· chlngod lnlo_- _-

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i1forn1111lon... Clll

835-407,3,

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Free.

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U/B. 2:!'9--- 4 p.m.

-

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TOPS IIUTIIIT1DIIYCTUIIE'

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MoclaSUiy.

Mcl&lt;anzla-. -ol~ond
modleine, .Jalw&gt;a Hopl&lt;lrw Medical SChool. G-28
Firbor. 12 ,_., llPol*nd by the Dopor1rnenl
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~ 7 _p.m.:

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• VOICE STUDENT IIECITAL •

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...

MFA RECITAL•

-

R. Gooctnool.
248 c.y,

Wednesday-:- 1 1_
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~B .....-... Cornell Than,

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WednesdAy-

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�April I , 1tn

7J

Exhibits
ACRYUC8 EX..-r

.

""* ...

Acr)'llco by """' " on dlaplay
IIYough Aj)r1l 29 •• lho Coplon &amp;
1nfirnwy, 10 5vn'c&gt;honY Cln:le, 9 a.m. 1o 9 p.rri.
daly. Ms. Fink Ia. de0ignarleci1or in the DIYiam
oi~AI!IIira.

con-

AHTifRO IIUIEUIII
"" · - ollho rock caMngo of Easter Wedneodaya IIYough Fridayo. 11 ·a.m.
to 4 p.m. , and on WeeKends, 1 0 a.m. tO 3 p.m. fl
The NltiYopology -.:11 1.t.-..n located on
lho _,.,...,floor o l l h e - - . . . : Conte&lt;
in Eliootl. The exhibit. oonsls1s of rubbinga on
qoth, objects ond photogrojiha.
LESCOPAIIISE~

Tho

P~

Eye !recent pholbgrapha) . 35

v - - Avenue, Buffolo. 'lhroogiiAQri 21 .

Par1ldpotlng -~= -Lay­
men Bozelon , Bruce Jod&lt;aon, Mllon Rog&lt;Mn,
WaHe&lt; F. Staflotd, Jr. end Donald Lewis SulmlOf.

On The Air
APIILI

---

~~-'l'ljlrlolt---·""""""'
-Cour·

-·

lerCCM(Chomel1 0) . 8:30p.m.

·

CONYEMATIOIIS .. TilE AIITS: Eathar -

aaalotontol1lpa .... . . _ .. lho um..Hy
'--'*lg Center, 384 _ , . Hal.
ITUit bo lnlerosllld in lho looming pr-.a ol

""""'*"" _,0

. .,._ oologo------

Notices

cUbnly
diYenlo bac:I&lt;Qr&lt;uld!. T-=lling and
lrOining Ia in .-ling, Mlting or matllemab.For~~c.-.638-2394 .

-

~=~

bid ..... ~ by lho Buffolo - wllbohold
·-·con-ol~.
Aj)r1l 18-20 on lho -

-·

sq...~ .

Thursday- • 9

NIA'Io.cAL _

1.-.-.

_,.

.,....,...__

I"'IJ $ 0£11_..._ ............
Or.
~
160

.. Fwt.. • p.m.

c:Ell----1101.08\'-

~MIICIIA*CAL-

UCTWr
Or. H.O. - .

~ 01 1i1o1o8v and
O!an'iRy,IIIT. I 1 4 -. 4 :15p.M. Col·
..... ,P.nt..

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- ....... _. _...._

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UUAII. ~--­
Siucl!l-M WLCGD¥auM4 .... al oarruplon, . . -

- . .,_. .. _ _ ....... 4Wir18-.

UNIVBISITY HEALTil FAIR

of lho ElicoH

10 a.m.-7 p.m. wl1h $1

T.-y-FtQy, Aj)r1l 11·20 -

-.v

10 a.m . .:30

p.m. FrMectmillkJn .

· CPR w11 b o - ctumg lho
&lt;!IY .. - .. Tlli Chi Chuon . " ol
preoonloliona ...-bo . . - by . . - . . on lho
-

, _ D bookl wll bo oorted Into 60
- 1 flctlo&lt;l, chben'a,
~. fino .... nohnnce, '""· medicine.

aotegot~oo . inCluding

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200 dtimps·
here;.32,000 .

Love Canal: now what?'
'

==---. .

., Llnclll ~. .

across.na\ion

Owing the Erwlronmental Studies
c.Mr'a 10u11h and last forum on Love

Billions are required
t6r clean-up

~ -=~o:~~re;yt~ -

_ . . Md not -....:1 Ita leUOif on
the -..of toxic and radioactive waste
cllajioal, and that It will be an uphill
llglll t o - e change.
a.lrad II)&lt; Pwterl;old, IICllng master
of Alcllel
College, the last
- " " ' Clqw an Mldlence of less than
100, a l8ct lamented by Gold and other
.....-.. H , _ , the forum was
competing with the highly publicized
do&lt;:Um.rtary, "The Killing Ground," on ·
ABC-lV, and wu plagued with a rash of
flnl 81erma that aounded several times

By Renee Berber
Pt.bltC Aff&lt;Ws lntem

There are mor~han 200 dumping
sites for chemical wastes in Erie end
Niagara Counties. More than 100 of
these sites are contaminated with
hazardous suDstances. The State's
Interagency Task FOrce on Hazardous
Wastes, under the coordination of Peter
Mlllock, will reveal this .and many more
alarming facts In a soon-to-be released
report which stemmed from r the
controversial love Canal Josue.
That's whet those attending the third
Love Canal Forum heard last Wednes·
day.
The third forum, "Is Thla Just .the

c.-.

~=:.~· In

a trash bin In'
Cllpen cauaed the alarms and the
moving of the session from the
Woldman theetra to O'Brian Hall .

1

~~~~~g!;:1d:.:'~t w~~~ht~:~~~=~~~~

o.ty _....., eltend
Slate Senator John Daly was
ec:heduled to apeak but was locked In

toxic dump sites
the U.S. Panel
Helling from the
. ment; Michael

=at~r=~~c~· ~Je::'h~~

-amant which called for more
atringent legislation on toxic waste
dl~l .

IMJy chalra a State Senate sut&gt;commlttee on toxic waste and · Is
-.,ping legislation to control !Is
dumpln~ . He feels New Vorl&lt; State,

=:" o} '~,:'~~,!.~ ~~~~~~· ~~

~~~.111:~t~~~'; =~~lsposal

altea which are financed through users'

f-.

Daly bell..,.. that while the State
should b&lt;icome actively Involved In
toxic waste disposal, redloactive waste
Ia and should remain a problem for the
federal government to handle.

Lafalce: IMe, but-vetlc
Congnuaman John Lafalce 1111'ived
late to the -ion and presented an
-ueJic deecrlptlon of the federal '
~ maa •ttlch prohibita any
:=e~J:n:an·m- dlsLafalce has aponaored and lntr&lt;&gt;-

=

&amp;ntzr'.f~an t~~S::f¥~

the Re.ooun:e eo-vatlon and Recovery Act (RCRA), which would '1111

aorne of the gapa"left by RCRA.

Specifically, Lafalce's addendum
...,uld allow the federal government to
atep In when a dMgeroua altuatlon Ia
CtMied by put mlahandllng of "'!&amp;lea,
Ia the c-. with Love Carial . It
would call for the ln-lgatlon and
llandllng of potential dangerous sites
with the coat a-Id by f-. collected
from permlt~dln who oj:*ate
'-doua WMie t - t and atorage
~lM bill would alao c..- a

""*"

con~':':J !:':. ~~~-=t::!n~

~ lor atO!IIjje facilities, and would
au111orta the t.denll gooenarnent to
tiring ..... aatton llgelnet t'-e
,.......,. for IMngeroui attuallona.
UFaloe
Cleclered that he Ia In
._of the "allpertund ooncept, .. -

.-o

~11001~-of~tobe

Wid In loft C.WIItuallona. One way
al flunclnD lhll pool, he aald, would.
lie to CNIIIot a tax on 011 ~-/or on

...... o-. two........_ WIIICh . . .
prlnwy in the lftlll1ufacture
of _ , CIIMiilllla.
,

ment from the grassi oots on up to solve

same th ing at meetings with other
groups, some In the forum audience
claimed.'
Two aewers -both here
John SchJ71Itt, council man of the
Town of Porter In Niagara County where
SCA operates a toxic waste dumping
ground, spoke about the need for local
ell Jzens' action to bu lid some controls

ov~e'~~t'e~n~~~~~'.Jg;~C.."{.~~e~. rates
a dump for toxic wastes In the ~n of
Niagara, and SCA are the only. two
companies in New Vorl&lt; State licensed
to handle hazardous wastes.
"We have two sewers In the State," he
said , " and they're both here."
Local zoning ordinances are one way
to control these companies, Schm itt
said, but added that small towns
uaually do not haw the r..OUrcea to
en(orce lhem .
He criticized EPA and lhe State l or
allowing firms like SCA, wh l c ~ has had
documented spills of hazardous waste,
to operate almost -uncontrolled.

t~~~~~~~it solutions have been mere

tokenism. Our rate of deterioration Is
ll._raater than our willingness to Improve.

~~~.e ~r:J~~~~ \~~{~~~r:·n"::!

ways. If we cannot succeed in .some
small measure, God help us."
Milbrath: gentle
Lester Milbrath,

the

32,000 dump altea
.
On the national level, Desmond said
the federal government Isn't doing

levine aaka ectlon
Adeline Levine of Soci ology called lor
action.

chemicals). It would cost ~ blll.lon
·just to clean-up the leaking altes.
The Environmental Protection A-gency (EPA), Desmond said, ~ • Ia a
government agenc:Y which eeerna
unable to get out of Its owh way." EPA
l sn~ expected to go out and discover

"We must care for the land. It Is still
our most nourish ing and precious
aspect. " He cited the nll8d for new
legislation and social Invention and
management.

w:~tel~r~ ~~ ~~J'/:t ~.!~t':::~~:~~:h~
:~cat~~.;;.~. w~:"Jon;u~~~ a~~

try to belp."

Snell cites 'frontier mentalfty'

at~~t"edSV!o~~t~n ~~~~~~~~!

Sciences
"We have a frontier mentality - rape,

'::~~'~i!d. ~:':i..is~o~r:~!\r~ie .ei~~~~

globe where It Is not lethal to live?"
Snell also pointed out, " I have not
heard one .concern for a form of lile
otner than human. Thls l t\lle arrogance
of human beings. t1ow many rats,
fnq~~~;·~~'f:? grassh~peers are mired
"How many bees drank some of that
toxic soup that allowed them not to get
back to their hives?"
.
Snell called for people to be the
"curators of life," and saod we must join
together to stop disastrous ways of
living.
.
.

r~~~C:::l:.l'~~~~~Yiuation

at .
West Valley whenJ 30,000 to 120,000
gallons of radioactive material are

st~ In.;'.un~:r,_~u"'!~an~ncraeslng
by

of

. ~~~~~ ~~~i g~eJ~~~~ ~~:r~l~:::•ure

Lalt from the Manhattan Rroject
Hamilton de.crlbed the situation at
the lake Ontar'lo Ordnance Worl&lt;s In the
Town -of Lewiston which hold approxImately 10,000 pounds of uranium
residue left over from the Manhattan
Project. and several pounds of radium ,
one of the highest concentrations In the
country, In a decaying concrete silo and

Intrusion on our · liberty
meterial a," aha wwned .

director

toxic

EPA,..,_

William Ubrlzzl , chief of hazardous
aubatances lor Realon II of EPA. apoke ,
~· hla .-..-b emphasizing the
1
"\sr::OO.:i::::.n:ooo chemical•

:::

Whattodo?
Audience discussion then centered
on what to do. ~hmltt pointed out that-

trv.:-an "Imminent th._,, .. Md.evan

nail pollah, he said, has aa )Is primary
Ingredient toluene, a major carcinogen •
~.. ~~~nd in greet quantities in

=·

~x~~he~o~r;

::

!nc::~

:1:'~::.":..;:. :~~:~

~~~~~":tn::S t/:.:&amp;cuJ'ou~1~~

~no ::.!.~t~d~o~yth'fngt~y -

AbOUt 150 billion Ia ..-led acroes
the country to d..a with the problem,
UbriZZieeld.

People must be educated on the
effects of the chemical society, he salll .
After general comments that we are
all to blame for Love Canal t&gt;ecauae of
our synthetic· clothes and greedy lives,
one audience member rosa to defend
tNJ'common ,..._ _
"Blame doesn't fall equally on
_,one," he laid. " I feel - lefl Into
:l:.~ aociety without knowing

a-t_...,

"'r:=-~ :r.:.:c;:!lt~~emouona.

....lelpanla tlltough a roUnd of varying,
lntClw1ea K.\1. Eben of Geogriphy-

anaz. ..

::::

lacing a nlahtmwe, • he ~d
"and Ngllldl-. of what p o l eyatem WI heft, WI . . utterly ...... II
WI think W .can tlllnga by
ctiMglng the .,....,
Ebll1 noted tile! .... toxic nl~ Ia being 1-s -.mer the

1

H

~nowlng the riaka - that - • to
be the flrat atep In coming to gripe wtth
the problem.
Oi'ganiZing lor ectlon Ia the next atep,
and I!Qundlng go•nlllBI~ olflclall and
agencies tf\at heft 10 far been •
un~ to begin to protect tile
::.:.~~
they auppoeedly

•

wOftd.

ctu..,.

"Pollution Ia a!:'~ d ' - , " he
muat ~ a total commit.

aald,

:W•

Sllorlna on guanlla the Nrdea1 tuk.
~ of lila" - - •

Stewart named

Dr.
M. . _ . 11M ....
__...to._,._wm
• dlrwctor
.. .. . OlwlaiDn
Enwtnll-lal
Keo$111

of
a.......-~

existing elsewhere In
members were leo
State Health OepertDesmond ·from the
Courier-EJtpress ; Lester Milbrath , director, Environmental Studies Canter at
U/B; Dick Lippes, attomey lor the Love
Canal H qmeowners' Association ; and
Peter Mlllock.
With SOO ·known dump sites In New
Vorl&lt;, Helling explained the State Is
having problems placln~ blfme. Because of this problem, H s not easy to
get the money ($30 million In the case·
of a 180-mlle stretch of the Hudson
River) to clean up these sites, Helling
contended.

ai
=

and

-

.tgll and parflapa • lhenfcleas
1M II~ ot .._and
aqulrrN and the

=
-.
the

Alfie

lluman...._oan
•16raof ....

(S'IJhl~~ to~fc'h u~~·~~mp r~;~~

:=t t~!~·fo~~;,. ~~~':d~ doesn't
When federal government regulation
is a~ a minimum, st..tes look out lor
themselves , Desmond Indicated. The
Governor of Louisiana Is willing to
make environmental tred&amp;-offs with
Industries In order to bring jobs Into

~~c!~te.tt~:V: ~'Jl~n~~m~~~

wastes, they: simply pay men to come lpand fill thelftrucka •lth PCB and dump
It aloT\g roadside ditches.
•
Desmond isn't aura citizens realize·
the Importance of this Issue. He _ .
hla role aa a member of the maaa media
as one of educating people to the
problem .. /
Lippes pointed out aeveral ahoulders
on which to place reaponalblllty for
Love Canal. Hooker Chemical Compa~~y
Is the most obvious. ·While Hooker says
it followed all laws and rwgutatlons
when It dumped wutes Into Love
Canal, Lippes pointed out th-...,. no
regulatory laWI at the lime. The
contention Ia that Hooker knew the
dangers of the cllemlcala whon IIIey
sold the 'land- to the Niagara Falla
School Board for the IIIIth Street school.
Why 411ae would they have hed a
statement or no rwponalblllty In the
deed , Uppea wondar8.

The City and the aohMIIIGMI
The Board of Education 11 ~
r!&amp;Sponalble, Llppee c:NnMd.
bought the land' agalnat lhi ailvlo,
their lawyer. And when oonatruct1on of
the school began, the builder hll eolt
spots and
pocketa. When he

A

;:o;r:drno!.c, 't:~to;'.!r:c;

ordered that no baement lie built under
the achool .
flle ·,CJty of Niagara Falla Ia held
raaponal~le becauM of Ita •urneponalvenfta to tile cit lana of Love Canal."
Llppea pointed out that any municipal
QOVWnrMnt Ia ~Npo~~llbla · lor ihe
health and protection of cHizena.
llppea augu-ted the federal govemment hea the potential to coma liP with
clean-up money. Prlorttlel " - to be
set. UP1188 continued . The ooet of ..a
coupla of aubmlrlnaa "uala the coat to
clean-up toxic waltl.
Milbrath concluded that 1*1 of the
raeponalbiHty lies with the eoclaty we

:~::::~~~-l:i~~=
ltMif: "

�'Q~nd

Expert on
transfusions
speaking here

Biology

Tp say intelligence Is.determined
_once an~ {or all in the genes -promotes
raciSJTI, sex1sm, class structure, Lawler argues Blologlatic lnteipretatlort~ · of the
cepe! tift of Individuals resu lt In a tendency to le!lltlmlzereclst, sexist and
anti..worl&lt;lng claas Ideas and practices,
Dr. J - Lawler, professor of
philosophy here, contended In an
address on '1Q Theory and the Concept
01 ln1elllgenoe" at the Fourth Marxist
Scholars Conference In Cincinnati
.-ntly.
Lawler's new book, IQ, Heri tability,
and Flllclsm (paperback. International
Publ ishers, 1978), propounds the same.
theme: tile theories of Arthur Jensen,

argues It Is not, tl!en " follows Is
not resignation , pahlvtty, fatalism and.
despair, but _ recogn Ilion Of nsal
possibilities; an active approach to
education, outrage at the Injustices
committed, and determination_ to light
lor the_educational rights of the people
and the~chlldren ."
·
Unfortunately, he says, "many If not

:::f~l~~~~~r':l'...;:.;,:-:tatt':t,~'~l::

can appropriate for themselves the
Intellectual wealth made possible by
social and· cultural advances. The
reason for this failure Is not in the
children Jhemselv&lt;!s, In the absence of

~mn:::: =~n..~~~~;s ~~:i"f~.;

level of Intelligence wae. decided once
and for all In the genes are "a
reinforcement . &lt;lf reel am with the
prestige ol science."
Highly technical arguments that
• Jensen marshals forth to establish the

;~~~~!t~ 1o~~~:l.s ;'~Ro~~v~

students ancl the· lay person who reed

~~!r" ~~~z.~e ·~u:"rr:ic_.!'~~~h;r.;~

Jensen drris filters down Just as
defi nitely Into the pollution ofn~elsm . "

Clau qu•tlona The starting point Qf Jensen's
argument, Lawler saya, "Is that there Is
a consistent finding of reclal and class

~~:C~wc::'tt';'J~ Jen~~~t':f~

cb

on "elass differences."
attempt to
•explain" on biological, ralher than
sociological or "environmental" bases,
the U/B phllosphercontends.
These theories raise both race and
class question, Lawler says. 'While the
racist edge Is foremost , the theory and
Its applications cut Into the educational
and SO!;Ial pros~ts--of the majority of
~~~~~.T:~~h ~~~.are wh!l\ you were
If the tllologlstlc notion of lntelll·
pence Is alloweil to stand, LaWler said
on his Cincinnati speech , the doors
remain open to ~uch othet approaches
as E.O. Wilson's " aocloblo~y" which

:~~~mdlt~u~.~~~:~he ,:;w~~"l'~

destined to cauee a great deal of
mischief, Lawlerauggeetecl . ·
Lawler crltlcl- ra llesta, ·because
the deflnlllon of wh81 they measure Is
limited, fuzzy _ , , 'We " - asked
what Intelligence Is, ao that we might
know how to meaauns It and hue been
told that lntelllaer- Ia cMtlned by our
manner of ,_urtng It," he writes In
summary of a r..- of aome IQ theory.

~:":':.~....:.;-.

take the 'View
that thr definition lntetllgence Is
something that dole not cnanga as a
child tewftl or growa.older. Y81, Lawler
argues, the IMJIOI8 of an !tducatlonal
syatem, according to -.net common
sense, Ia to *-011 tile lntelllgenoe of
chlldren:'Tlle q-Jon lollowa: "tl they
don't come out With a 11101'8 devilloped
lntelllgenw than they came In,
what the point of all that elfott?"
Theae rigid tlleorlea, thua, ''attacl&lt; the
central 00111 o1 till two~~&lt; of -r IChOOI

system ."

ln Lawler'a view, JenMI!'I article
" How Much C.. We a-.10?" played
anenormoua'-on-bacauae It arguad llllalnat the ellfctlveneaa of -.u1-r ecl-lonal MWich-'
~-,._~-all
-~~ong~

;'i~~:' :'l~~~~~"r,;· s~~~~r ~~ g~rd~i

school."
One likely cause of this failure Is " the

genetically superior individu-als or In the
f~~~~~c::,~s~f ~~~v~~~a:;:r:;r~~~i~~~~~~
Jmprovement of environmental condt· competiti on, which has been the rui n of
!ions for the expression of already
both smaller enterprises and less
existing abilities. Rather, he argues,
developed nations, is Imposed 'on
" fundamental changes devel9p through
children at an early and sensitive age,
the selection of superior external condi· ' when Interest In· the world of teaming
lions and superior organization." Inner
can easily be crushed. Tho theory of
capacities develop on this external
Innate mental abilities plays a maJor
basis:
role In justifying this system ."
.. For example, human evolution did
not consist In the selection of
mit~:~.~" r:wl~~tf.;;r:.'~!J.e~h~~:~~::;~
Individuals who have the genetic .
kind ofl&gt;ractlcal Import which Marx had
capacity for using Iron tools and
in
d when he wrote that 'theory
consequently replace Individuals whose
beC&lt;Snles a material Ioree when It Is
genes program or Incline them to the
grasped by the masses ."
use of stone tools. The social selection
of Iron tools over stone tools as a result
of the ~superior potentialities of the
Blacks vs. whites
former Is a, process that has its own
The concept of . the Intellectual
specific order of determ inism. It Is a
inferiority of blacks , for example,
specifically human lorm of evolution
encourages whites to figh t blac~s for
and cannot be reduced to biological
shrinking educational opportunities,
laws. "
"rather than to defend the legitimate
special &lt;t.emands of blacks and to
The Intellectual tools of "conceptual

:~~~~a~' :~~~t~c"i.;"~e:Y.s!~~~·. a;~

not "preprogrammed" In the genes,
Lawler says. " The Phoenician alphabet
enormously simplified the process of
literate. acllvlty, compared with lhe

di scussi on of " educability and group
differences" Lawler submits, Is a
surplus of Intellectual abilities which
"cannot be absorbed by an economy
~~~re~ss g~apnating and slipping Into

actlvlty became liCcessible to larger
numbers of people and at.lhe same time
the Intellectual potential of society as a
whole l ncr~ased . Today'a revolution In
science and technology opens the door
for an analogous expansion of the
practical and Jn.tellectual potentialities of Individuals. The li mits to the
'expression' of this potentiality are not

·There are two main trends which
emerge in this context, the U/B
philosopher concludes:
'
One emphasizes hierOR:hy or " meritocracy" - with the implication that the
few on top got there bacause they were
born 'with brains, while the rest have

~~rn~0~~~~~ sr,::.:d~ ~:~roEil:."~

\~di~~ual~~a:t ~:nt~t~c .~f~rt~~:te:::

Itself, which divorces the maJority of
Individuals from the ~maln means of
1

::ra~:~~lYii;"~fco;;!eq::.:'~'6.:!'f ~~

actively participate In today's social
· potential for practical and Intellectual
growth."
A -sHy to light_
11-lntelllgence ~s not inl)ate, as Lawler

they do liD! booll IQ. But, proteeta
·~ wiiM
~

an

~ oOuld be cll'llwn II we
"-UNCC the of 011&lt; entire

educatloMI
lt8ndWd... . .,.._

"rou.,....,.

""

the

-

'

thla, u.~.....
lchooll "-ld nol be
01
.•
llfOVIdlng Ill ...ncttln(l
...
• ......_.. ... "'lut alloUid be adlultld lo tile funclllon o1 -'Ina oul and
...... 1M 'tlrlghf ' - " 'the dull' •
~"" ...... and- beiiC8IIy
rellaGieil In ~ the illllallng NCial
Ill.......

U.............. ~LIId
a-llr
- ....
ol llt ........ ~
.. ,..,
ill .... ge!IM. ltoll ..

:..:t

~In

........ ,. . . e-- ..

.D"II ~-ol ......

1

on{{,~hgi~~;~:~~~:~~rther advances

In the democratization of education,
respond\Jlg to the real needs of
deveiOj)rtlent In modem society." That
view locates "obstacles to th is
·development not In the people as a
whole, but In a socl.o-economic system
that subordinates the needs of the vast
maJority to the private Interests of the
few ."
The second Is · obviously the more
ratlonal ,,n hls Yiew.

NET COSTS OF ATTENDANCE FOR TYPICAL LOWER DIVISION STUDENT
IN RESIDENCE AT SUNY CAMPUS, 1177-71 va. 117~
(ll.aeumed Oroaa Fanilty .._,.110,000
New'Yor1l S - TaMIIIesuiio '
• _1177-71

Two-Y-Coatr1978-79

8Qoka
Room

IIOMI

, fl'eraonal Exp/ T.-1

....

TAP
BEQG
OtherGran1a&amp;
A.-da"

.... C... of
IIIII fl II

+S410

$3420
750

T0181Coab
Tuition
ColfeVeF..
Student F..
Health Fee

~

+50
+35

-11111
570
578

-56
-25

ol65

$1-

+1~

....

1t7f.IO

1979-80
13130

+150

25
70
'15
2t0
750
1100
700

+10
·15
+ 10
+50
+70
+40

,..-

-150

·112

1100
25
80

0
230
800
1020
7711

-121164

778

1313

11271

..... :::T.- ~OM ltlb-76 .., , . o/5000 IIUI»tlll 618--. 11-llf
::t:..,!;;,."=.,~,::;,::.=;'.:...,~.,:::;.~:k~.:.-=

--·

~~:~;:s~pa~f6~~"J' ~~= t~=
t~:~o~e:,~~rlss1:,':..~,~'!!~':'!.-'W".:

-

7nlfnlfessor
Wd~~rCB~~edr:,~/~~~111~n~~u:::
. of- hematqlogy at • the
"~!s~r f1 ~~=;s

~up

research

In human blood
honore.d by U/B'a
01

f~~. l'=s~ ~~v.rt'r~ o~ ~
9

Mo7l/:on
blood cells whose hemoglobin carries

ox~~=n \~~~ t.t~;:s·wlll deal with
patients who have received blood
transfusions from many different
donors. For although blood transfuslonot are routine and relatively sale,
some patien ts: may have untoward

i~:;!\~~fons ~~om t~rJere~~~~ors':'l:

likelihood of Incompatibil ity and
serious medlcal consequences Increases. Some have received so many

~~~s~...s~~: l~a~.:,~,v:"~"r!ry ~~rr ~':~

blood .
Three students will be presented
Ernest Wltebsky Memorial Awards for
their prollclency In microbiology at the
April 18 program . They. are medical
student James J. Czyrny; dental
student Richard S. Derr; and graduate
student Christopher J. Papaslan.

William Gass
will
visit will be
Author William
~ass

the

~~~~ \~~ Pr~1~~1~~·fhe .,:,:r of~';,-~\

16.

a r~~fn~i~rg~e ~~orrc~~~ l~}~':~r;.~
101 Bal dy HaiJ.
One lecture, "Fiction Today," Ia at 4

~ilos:&amp;~~ an'J ihe a~ ~~eFtc'fr~·1

Is at 8 p.m. April 18. At 4 p.m. Aprllt9,
Gass will read from a novel In progreu,
"Firat Winter ol My Married Life."
Gaasls beat known for hla flnLI novel,
"OmeAaettitr'a Luck," published In
1986, and called by one-critic, '1ha moat
Important work of fiction by an

A~':'!':," ~~~Is ~~.==onri~ort

-.Cost comparison

ment

LaWler,

opf~:e t~e"ar'c'f~':!yst~d~~~~~~sm .;he

Dr. P.L. Molltaon, whoee . - c h
contributed to aafer and moN unlverul
uee of human blood tnLnafuaiona, Wilt
dell- The Ninth Annual Emeet
Wltebaky Memorial Lecture here /l.prtl
18.
.
The lecture, to ba held at 8:30p.m . In
G-26 Farber, Is aponao!Wd by the
Department of Mlctoblology and the
Center for Immunology. Dr•. Wltebeky,
one of the world's feeding lmmu,...
gists, dleil Jn 1969. He waa the Center'a •
first director and a dlatlngulahed
professor In bacteriology and Immunology at U/8.
"Some Consequences of Red Cell
lncompatlplllty In Blood Tl'llnafualon"la
the topi c of Dr. Molllaon's lecture.
Director of the MRC Experimental·
Hematology Unit at London's St. Mery"a
Hospital Medical School , he Is one of

storlea. ·easaya, and an~-tal
novella, haa bean com
to Joyce
and Fautknerln the way
proae.
He won a - lor ..... t.nce In
teaching at P..-due and at WMhl~
Unl¥er~lty, wtr. . ha Ia a prof- ol
ph lloeoplly.

Nurses plan
Research Day

·

The flnll aom.l ~ Day In
Nuralng, ~ by Gemma Kt1ppa
Cheptef of Sigma Tblla T.u, natloMI
nursing honor ~. will be lllld
Friday, April 27, .t a.n...ra OIWICI
Manor InCl._.
·
Dr. Ylralnla a.IMcl ..-ot- of .
nuralng,...W!f:,..
Untwwalty, 1111111
·~ on "
and Prlortllea In
.Nursing "-oft" to open the -.Jon.
" Nuralng "'--dd Studl•" will be
dtecuaaea by Dr. Marlene Ventlft.
aaeocta1e chief . of nuralna ~
~IIIIo Yeterana o(clmlnlllralleft
c.m.r, a member o1 till
~ N~nea "-latton Commlellloll on Nuralng " - " ' '; a n d =
........... ~-late •
Sei\flcee ~ and ~.
YAMC.
"GGwwta: IdeM, PlopoeaJt end 1111111
Oen' Gil You tile Fundi" will be tM
topic ol .lullllll A. Uuahlln, ....._.
~of ntnl,., UTII. and .1a11n J .
Gilbert Jr.• of the CAO.

s-

�•
Aprll5, 1979

Computing, Gen eral Ed
(traw attention of .FSEC
Eucuflft CommiUOO lllnuiM 21
The meeting Vl!_as called to order at. 2:40
p.m •• to consider (he following agenda.

"~h~m~!f~:·=ng of 21

March

1_.979 were apprOYed as circulated.

·B. Alhfollco

ml';[~· :,ed~?~le~:.' ~.:e"~1.::Je 1~: ·~~:

ground leading to the resolution regarding
an appeal process to be added to the ru'-8
governing student ~lc stand ing, to

wlf:,

"That the following be added to the rulea

~~:Wgn s~r~e':la~~i~o:~~~~~ ~r~

·nwml2

~heR~7d:~f~~:::.'

current efforts
to upgrade academ ic computing In- the

Student In Good Standing and Assoclaled

R~~la~~~~ed

after: 'A

atudent not In

~=~~zn.~{~~~,t~~ ·~~n:r.ra~.~~~ . g::' ~='!,.,w~:.,:::11~11,fled

as to whether the university can .!\ford to
continue to provide free computlng time for
dePartmental arid externally-sponsored research. A proposal has been made to Initiate
an Incentive for researchers to Include com8

g~\~~ tC:1~~u~ ~:r\ ho:dfu~df~:~~~

are made available to the com~utlng center.

'"JJ':
fr~~~~~,m.~~~:!~ a~,·~~ ~~
mlttee , to present these proposals to the

FSEC. 11 was agreed that the Chairman
Invite Prof. Wallace and Dr.. Macintyre to a
subaequ~nt meeting.

Capra

~h.R~=df::[r;::.;d

mending UUP action of lha alleged asbestos
i n Baird Hall and on the Faculty

t'::'lem

One of Holl}twood's most famous
directors will be here April 19-20; ,
he vaulted to fame.on 'witchery'
"I hAted being poor. Hated being
a peasant. Hated being a Krounglng
newskld trapped In the sleuy Sicilian
petto of LO$ Angeles. My family
couldr.-t reAd or write. I wanted o\Jt.
A qulc.k out. llopked for a device,
a handle. a pole to catapult myself
tracbfnlm
habltat
of nobodies
to myKUrYy
the affluent
world of somebodies.
''I tried Khoollng. a technical
~tlon. That polf broke In the
middle of my - l t . pondered other
quick IHps: bootlegging. prfLe
fighting. the ball and bat. con gam~.
When I finally found my \&lt;allltlng pole.
It was not made of bamboo. glass,
or metal. In fact, It - • not a pole
atall.lt wasamaglccarJ!.e~-woven
""""the coils and rl~of a
_._.peel of limber plastic,
- ' - f u - t s catrted the pneric
code of all the artS of man, and from
wllldt the abrac.Miabra of science
~up die hopes, die fears,
the....._ of man-tile magk carpet
of FilM I valhed to f - on Its
witchery."

.

...

.

,,,_

_c.,.. .. - . . . - -.. '-"

copies of a

1etter to UUP ,.._lclent 0. Gibson , com-

movies, " State of the Uniori" and " It's A
Wonderful Life," 1&lt;46 Diefendorf. Capra
will be present and will discuss both
films.
Frtdoly, Aprll20:
2 p.m. - U/B Professors WilliamS.
Allen of )he Oepertment of History,

...

- ~~~~:; r~.~~~~ ~d~
about his documentaries. Location not
yet determln(ld. Capra directed the
'Why We Fight" propaganda series
during World War 11.
·

man ~:.~uorr:d/~,\':,."':'.:· ~~
memos recenlly ,_lved: (I) from· Prof.

~.::;J~~~v'.blJ~

lty of lhe report of the Committee on
Operational Prix:esseo; (II) from Prof.

~~~~=:~ :::-:.:r;&gt;~~r.:.,:;r~
p:3_ EMich's COI)'ImiltH; (Ill) from Mr.

Dremuk, requesting- aeleCUon'of memben

for the Individualized Admissions Committee; (lv) from Prof. Segal, requesting advice
on i matter of confidentiality; (v) from AXVP.

~m'~':'~R~~on:,:~~~:.~~
year, and to addlllonal offlos lpece, but

~~~·~~=~tar1C:,f'::fnv briefly

wltft VP Bunn ebout next atepa folloWing the
adoption of the Report of ths General
Education Committee. Two steps were

dlscussad. Ths

one-third

flr.~t

Is lhs rsplacement .of

of the members of the Committee

andu~g::.:=.;o~~~6 ~~~t:~"J,~~~t

~teaollclted from
:l:':'/:~l8 .~~m~":!l.o"lt:'~t~l~~
:::c:Ao~f:...rn7.~!~'=~%;aS:~~:;
ru,;her ausgeatlons .....

A _.w cataJos of Capra fll192i-Ballad of Fultah Fisher's
Joardlng'House
·
1926-The Strong Man
•
LongPants
1929-The Younger Generation
1931-Piatlnum Blonde
1933-The Bitter Tea of General Yen
- L.ady for a Day
1934-lt Happened One Nigh
1936-Mr. Deeds Goes to Town
1937-LostHorlzon
1938-Youcan·t Take It with You
1939-Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
1941-Meet john Doe
1944-1\rsenlc and 019 Lace
1946-lt'• a Wonderful Life
1948--State of tbe Union
1950-RJ91ng High
1951-Here'Comes the Groom
1959-A Hole In the Head
1961-Pocketlul of Miracles

=

funds that can be committed to the en-

~~~~ 1ex:g:.~ ~';'"l~h~'lPo:"t~

committee 10 be eelobllshsd by ths end of
the semeater.

C. "-'!of- S.Cm.ty

The Secretary

,..,t.,....ld. hla

annOunc»-

~l'n!!:,' ~ot~lla~.o~::,/:.:
lion that FSEC Commlttoo membenl take
ths lnll ..llve In aecurlng nomlnatlono for
theM \WO ottloeo.
•
-.,~,._..

. A.--~-eom

.-

E~!f:~\\':'0:: :!..::: =~·:~~

FSEC wished his Committee to puroue the
oeoond pert of Ito clwge, provlolon IO&lt;

=~~:::'=t~~~=~or_::

ad In lhs afflimellve, will\ lhe additional

~~~..:,':r",~~o~f~

by leiter o!

"l,Ppon notification of probation, a student

::~=!:.-~~on ~p:~~r~ ~~=~

by a committee d~nated by the Faculty
senate. Reviews will be held three times a
year, w1th ln the fl111t two weeke of the fall,

f~r~~Bo~~u:!:!.:~r~~~ !,~:n~-:u:J':t~~
~r:;~ bn~X the, Oelln f·o r Undergraduate
1

N. Baker,MOVED, J . Hyman SECONDED,

10 lronomlt ths Medlge reoolullon lo lhs

Faculty 5enale.
J . Hymen MOVED, N. Bokor SECONOED,
amendmeat of the Madlge text, by oubatltullon,ufol-.:
"Any lludenl who lo - t o be nol In
• good olandlng bec:auH of fllllurw to meet lhs
roquii'BI'*'to ol llomo (2\..0&lt; (3) • of ths

="'meO.fl=t"'~ot o~Pu'lt

s - s 2'on!':hnee, 0&lt; other appropriate
!acuity committee to be ~orad to good
oland!ng upon -llohlng to .the aatlifactlon of lhe CommlltM 11'1111 the oomeote&lt;'o
1.-quatto perform81108 wu the rMUit of
unuauel cjn:unist- not likely to be
-tad. and' 111a1 the atudent will In all
probability oom~&gt;~e~e Nlllfaclorily hla/hsr
OOU&lt;M of-atudy. - w i l l be held thrae
times a yMr, within the llret two wHka of
ths fall, aprlng, and lim _.ion summer
~era. Commln. -lslona will be
oubjact to ~ by the Dean ,.,.. u.-.
g&lt;edulle Eduostlon.

,.,.;·~),.~.=n~=:~-:r. ;~.;
o&lt;
-~ and 3) fhe atudenl haa a continued
rwoon1 o eemlng 75% 0&lt; ....,.. of the cnodll
houro fO&lt; which the student nonnaii,Y reglo-

t"':r:
=~~~"/,~~The motion to tranamit, aa amended,

PA,F~~OVED to recommend the
resolution to ths Sonata; lhe motion FAILED
for want of a eec:ond.

I..... M O l d . _
A. _ , . _ - FeCJIItJ

""·•-·eom-

.r..a,.

aiHf

L. Sc"-'leld .,._nlad a olato of noml·

~~~te~:.~:.~·::~

CommiHM; w~lch wu _.,....,_
Tho meeting wu ..s)i&gt;Umad at 5:30 p.m.

· MII'N&amp;Uke.bound

The U/B ~ bowler&amp; ..On lhe
AIIIIOCiatlon 01 College llnlona International (ACUI) Sectional Tournament
at Roxbury, Mau., In lata March to earn
a berth In the National - Collegiate
Chempionahl~. Aprtl 25-21 at Milwaukee, Wl.c:. ·
• The Royals, OOICIIad by J - Poland;
placed third lft theptWtlglota a'lent last

.

t;_~~ ';:e ~= o~.:,":'!;~

quallflad tor the tourney, two . .. from
Buffalo. Erie Community Collage won
the National Junior Collage Championship earlier to aleo adYMca_.

Frosh applications
up here, down at' rest of SUNY
.
Belons Newton Genoer was forCed to '

--u~ adjourn

the Feculty Senate

-lnO Tueaday beceuta of a lack of a

QUOnllll, PrMid8nt Ketter owportad that
U/8 Ia lila only SUNY unit which
exparlanoad an I~ In fr.ah~
epplle*lona for thla fall. In addition, 15
eppllcanl8 have eelected
U/8 • their eo1t1 prwlennca.
On a flllllltlwl nota, the tora/
nufiiiMr ofiiPPIIQillona to lila Um-alty
clacnMad thla y-. b)' 1.7 par cent, but
wa --.. 111a lowMt parcent~~ga
~ axparilltOad by 1111)' of tfla
IUNV
«*!tara. The total
..,...... of epplioanta to 811 SUNY unlta

per_, -

u..._...,.

8acnMad lll'U per-t.

.......
..._,_...
......._ .........
.......,
::,- ,-=:"•="a:a:..=

Tile ~ of . . . . . . atudenta·
_,..... U/8 "-IUNV rn.tllutlona
_ . . . P-.Iper_. Moflllaencl

~---oftN ........

class for this fall by 16 ~cent, KeHer
seld, means U/B's new· enroll- will
have eomewhat betteriiCIIdemlc credentials than their precl-..ors. Their

,=:::!;.':!;

g~~C:~
.J~ mean
Although the Un'-Sity Ia still
experlenclng an attrition problem. thla
the retention rate for fnlllhmen
ncr8Ued for the first lime In - 1
~ - 10.7. per cent of the fre8111118n
class did not retum ~llOfllplate the
eecond - · thla y-.. Two yeera
11110
Th.lila~'~:,~~~
coet
far jlllbllc Mil pr~Wte

r.-·

comparl-•

:='!On

lnattt~'Y~brlllalltala

Edualllan DtlpMriwtl ~
......... - - .... Orlglnilly, fi
-NPGftaclthalllle~illlat , _
, _ ,..., far -.uN\"a two dantal
~ ......, fiDin
In
....... ID
lnatead,

==·

t111..:-o:::..r:·•.1•

:.a~~~~..-....0:.:
.. u1a (lllalldng w11111n.......,. - ·

fringe benellta, phplcal . pl8nt, 11brarl•, etc.) !tom ll!ll,!!l2 In
1975;-78 to $114,211 thla yew".
.Based on thla erro,_ua Information,
the Stale Ed Department...., lor mono
capitation lunda for NYU Mil Columbia.

Ketter explained that the flgUIW mlar - t e d ectual ooata 81 U/B
becauaa It probably -.gee! tn tha
expenaa Stony Brook Ia lilcurrlng In
alartlng-up Ita dental prog,.,...
Kalter· seld he will give lila .ccurala
f i g - to State,._tatlvM.
Senate 11acn1tery L.auNnoa Mletltl
owportad that he hM , _ , _

a:::.r..a

. =:'~';.U:~ona. .,J,
urged " - ~t
to aublnlt
adilltlonal _ . _ _
......
Faculty who._ not • ,et. NoaiYad
bei!Ota In lila 111811 for lila riomiNIIIona
allould Cllll
Senate olfloa. MIChal
lndl..-cl thai 1lla April I dMIIflne far
nomlnatiDna ..., " : / : . : 8lllaflded
becMIM of tha poor
·

a.

�......
?

6,1111

J

n

WB Is major participant 1_.
l"terna~lonal diving research work
I

U/B will be well repr-nted at the
rth U.S.-.IIIP8nese cooperative re- ·
h proJect on saturation diving to
held IIlia summer In Japan.
Four .-cherll lrom here and three
the Unl-slty of Hawaii will
,..lclpate In a 1~ay simulated

m~tp~ 1!t~.,'das~t~

~~~~:' et c:='l'IIPA~x=~:n~l:.:

-.ld Technology Center (JAMSTEC) In
Yokoauka.
u.s. l*ticlpatlon Ia being funded by
1hl National
and Atmospheric
Adminlstretion.
•Underwater technology must be
explored by scientists," Pr. •Suk Kl'
Hong, U/B profesaor of physiology and
prtnclpai in-lgetor of the project,
explafns. Thougll the major bse of .
deep-sea diving Is now In oil
exploration, Hong believes In the future
tlla ocean will be harvested for food .
The technology of deeP'water diving
must be edvanced to meet future needs,
hesays.
•
Scientists from UH 8nd.JAMSTEC are
now meeting-at U/B for ·a wort&lt;shop to
prepare for the summer experiment. The :t
entire project, lncludlng~ory
Meeting on c.mpue to prep~re for the upcoming U.S ...Japan cooperative
..:1 follow-up
run from
dhlln~ experiment ere (!Tom leftl o... Yu Chong Un of the University of
July 24to Seplember 4.
Hawoll.
HldMkl Nakayama of JAMSTEC end Suk Kl Hong end Cia• l.undg...,
tn the experiment , four JIIP80888
qf U/ B'o De"!rtment of PhyoloiOfiYmate dl-. will be kept in a chamber at
31 atmoa'pheree (ATA), the pressure
,~~ b
found at an underwater depth of 1,000
· Cardlo-reaplratory function a
Depart me ·
of. Physiology at the
feel .
The third major area of study wll i be
University "iii Hawaii School of
cardio-respiratory functions .
Medicine; he developed the .collabora" We know that when a person Is
Two
subjected to high pressure, the
Two basic queatlona which scientists
frequency
of the heart beat decreases,"
and developmeiJLior JAMSTEC.
have oot ~t anawwect._ the focus for
Hong states. "Why? What are the
the ~alive atudy, Hong points out:
consequences?"
FIYe-year plan
"One, how deep can... human di-s
In particular, the researchers will
go? Two, how long can- a dl- live
examine how the ~eart functions during
under pressure?" The scientists are
exercise at high pres sure.
was conducted In Japan in 1973. Four
trying to determine the future limits of
"We will also study the mechanics of
human diving, he sayo.
~~~~~~ 1~~e,;~ ~'::aJ~~ha~faa~"u~"~
respiratory changes," he says. ~ we' ll
Hong notes that the purpcae of the
puaN the subjects all the way to
feet , for one week.
experiments Is not to define the
determine their maximum wor1&lt; cape" This was the first sophisticated,
ultimate depth of human diving , bUt to
city.
Cen
they
perform
at
this
high
serious saturation diving experiment lor
see how humans can adapt to their
pressur~
the Japanese," H6ng notes, " and we
environment .
•
Hong nofes .that at op to 18.6 ATA
developed a wor1&lt;ing relationship."
·"The cfurat!On of the dive rather than
(the pressure at 600 feet underwater),
the depth is our locus," he explains.
H;!~?, J_"f:.an~~73c'fo';stp,~avy~~~
researchers found no great differences
"What happens to the body during a
In work capacity. But they don't know
cooperative experiment, In wh ich· five
long underwater stay Is what we will be
U.S. divers were kept at 18.6 ATA,
how the body will perform at a pressure
found at about 600 feet seawater depth.
ol31 ATA.
•
dive this summer will
for 17 days. This wes one ol .the longest
Another feature of the experlmelfl will
put Its subjects at a higher pressure
saturation diving experiments.
,
be the study ol heed-out Immersion,
than was experienced In prevlows
"We studied basic human physiology
that Is. when a subject stands In water·
studies.
at that pressure very extensively," Dr.
with only his head uncovered .
" The basic dulgn of the experiment
Hong says of that dive.
" When a person stands In water,"
Is to try to Identify as many' factors as
Th~ th ird cooperative research dive
Hong points out , "several major
possible related to the . actual diving
wes held that same year at JAMSTEC,
changes take place. The lung volumes
experience so we can come up with
when research subjects remained at 11
decrease, there Is an Increase In urine
meaningful results," Hong explains.
AlA, -around 300 eet underwatel, lor
flow and a redistribUtion of blood In the
"We will examine hpw humans 8dapt to
eight days. In this experiment ,
body, where the blood Is pulled to the
the kind of high presaure environment
researchers were also lpterested In
chest.
that Is found at~ depths."
·
studying head-out Immersion at high
"Oo we resPI"'d 'stmllarty when the
pressure.
enflre body Is uildet hlg!t pressure? Are
en.gy~
there
eddltlonal
cllanges?
That
Is
what
In 1975 also, Hong lett-the University
Hong notes thet one of the areaa to ~
we'll be looking lor." •
of Hawaii tor U/ S, where he had also ·
be studied Is the body's energy balance
The cooperative U.S.-Japan experibeen a member of the physiology •
-what the body' a energy requirements
ments began In 1972, when Japanese
faculty from 1956to 1959.
araln a hlah pquura -lronlll8nt
scientists were beginning aarious
· one or the P&lt;Obtema of exlstlnu In
Last year, U.S. and Japanese
human diving research , Hong Indicates.
high presaure Ia thet the body loan
At that lime. he was chairman of the
r~'i:'~~~~~~':ti~ "~ the upcoming
heitt ~Idly IIICIIs very aenaltive to
slight
In temperature " Hong
· Accompanying Hong to Japan In July
says. •
c.n IW• the enviro'nment's
will ba Dr. Claes Lundgren, U/8
temperature, llut _.. 11 thla Ia done,
physiology professor who himself Is
till energy met.bollam of the body
under contract with the U.S. Office of
ln c r -. Mora aryoenla conaurfled 10
Naval Research to study health rtsks of
more energy ta needed .
deep sea diving; Dr. Leon Farhl, U/B
"There Ia a 10 to 15 per cent 1 - - .
prolusor of physiology, and Rlchwd
In lhe body'a .-gy requl-'1 IIICI
Morin, technlca! specialist.
the , _ for IIIIa elevation of
metaboll., Ia ao f.- unilnOWn, • he

ac.n1c

l

-lone.

q-ua.

~':,~oh~o ~~~:~de.~r~~ ot~~

de~el~:;:.;v~ t:O~~~t~~uf~~~ :i~!

st~~~~~n;ulation

adda.

Another -

ltudlellhOW that -'*'

-

live In alllgll ..-ure •rwlroloment -.,
put out , _ wrtne,• Hong UDialrwr
"We to looll• kl...,. fulletlodi to
lind out why ttlfala 111 IIICI If thll ....
to lola"* IIOdJ ......•

teeth as tl::: moat unattracthle form of
dental nialocclusiOft. After lhat oome
tooth gape, overjuttlng upper /awa, and
" buckteeth," said Dr. Tieh-Hs ng Wu of
U/8, during the 57th General Sealon of
the International Aasoclatlon for Dental
Research In New Orleans this week.
Problema sucll as prQtrudlng loww
jaws, open bite In whl~ the front teeth
del not meet, and laclt of
(midline deviation) In the front teeth are
seldom regarded as very unattrw:thle, .

symmetry)

~ fo~':io~:· '1':fft~~e

sugr::z .

Research, Is designed to develop
methods to understand how people
view malocclusion problems. It labelng
conducted by a group of sclentlata
under the leadership of Dr. Judith E.
~~i;gt' ,S~r;t~loglst at the U/ B

0

Untreated maloccluaton oltefl,-CIIUMS
psychologiCal problema, the U/ B '
research study lndlcated ..Therefore, the
motivation lor seeking and persevering
In long-term, costly treatments for
moving teeth or changing bone
structure Is believed to come primarily
from Pl'fC'!ptlons of unattractlv~~MSa .
Albloo fllllirda recognition of psychological problema related to malocclu~ slon as particularly Important when
public funds are being apent lor
treatment and only a limited number of
cases can be accommodated . '
At the usual ege l or orthodontic
treatment, some young 'edolliacents
Ignore considerable deviations from
Ideal facial patterns; while other&amp; are
distressed by one crooked tooth. • l
However, Information about the average •
perception of the seriousness of '
different types of malocclusion has
been scanty until this study. Also, little
wes known about the perceptions of
edolescents compared to those of
adults. Do youngsters with malocclusion seek treatment because ol
self-awareness, peer pressure, or
parental insistence?
·
The Buffalo ni5earchers studied 183
junior hign children (13-1• ~ of · •

1

0

~~~od:.:til t~~l'm":t w~thr~ann.~

months were e«&lt;led lhe clinic group.
The olhers, a lj8nersl sample, were
selected at random lfom - a l
schools. ParentS and, when possible,

~~eol::f!~1!'~:f~~h~s~e~~ 1~
ch~dren
!:'ec:~~~~stu~( ~~~fr P~~~=
tionnalres# In addition , the

conllguratlon.
They were asKed to rank the
attractiveness of eight line drawlnge of
children with the .common types of '
malocclusion as well as normal

~ .l':c\ ~ith =chiC,~= ..:W:.

1

0

~nally,

the.lroungeters were alkad to

~~"dl~~jy;:::..,~~~:...~

. The Investigators found that bOp IIICI
girls generafly agreed on the unattractfveneas of f-.. Although boya
of .all groupings more freql*!lly lilted
deviation In the midline ~ the
upper front teeth u atlghtlr more
preterabla than the Ideal 811a~,lla 1
girts consletently preferred the _ ,

==

::'"~o'!,~~o~":'
unattracthle type 0{ matooo;lu8ion.

Wine &amp; Cheese party

to...- etudled Ia the

~---·
•

Uneven, crc:Mid8d
teeth called
'the worst'

ci.-

lour

The Faculty Club will eponaor M _,lng of fine wine and
lor
pleasura. The --.t Ia echeclutad lor Friday, May 4, In the d ining room o the
ctubat Harriman Hall promptlyatlp, m.
Burt Notarlul of the Preonter LiqUor Corporetlon will ~I alx ljllle\llly
- W I , _ and e_,_.6ffiMimDortecland~tlc~.
"-eo,..IOM WIH 'tal laMn on a flllll._.bUia with· a llmh 0{ fifty
ContM:t the FIC)IIty Club,l3t-az32, for further ln!Orn*lon. ·
.

Malt with dMdl paylllle to:

NO IALD AT THE DOOII

FIICUity Club

- Hllnlman
Hall
3438
Main Streel
lluftalo NY ~411'

NAME
/

~~------------~--~--~~·

�More evidence on
Vitamin A &amp; cancer

A~ the III!CIInga of Mettlln, Dr.
Saon G - end Mya Swanson - .
t11at cerrota end milk apPMAid to llave
the ~... protective effect. Mettlln
.-ned, " -• thllt among
llloee- with adequate VItamin A ,
emoklng IIIII -n.. e .-y ~lgh rlek of
tung cancer. In eddltlon, "he cautioned,
_ , . . V118mln A can be twmlut.
MM!IIn Ia en M80Ci8te cancer - c h
ICientlll at RcMwalt Park end en
MeOCiata - a . proleeaor at the
llnl-.lty.
The epidemiology atudy focused on
rwttoepM~tlve ciiM.-y end amoklng data
olltalned. !ram 212" male patients at
RPMI wiiO lied _,firmed lung, tlliChea, .
or llnlnOh• _ , __ 01 thla group, 97
per - t cu,.,t or former
amoure. 1n ttoe -.t~t g&lt;OUp
801
RPMI patients who had non-

....r

malignant , non-rPsplratory dfseases. Of
the ax~trot group, .80 per cent - .
cum~r~t or formerci!J8r811asmokers .
Intake till VItamin A by ii!CIIvlduala In
_ both llfOIIP8 waa calculated by uklng
them their ..-! c;onaumptlon fr&amp;quency of 21 different foods.
Among older and heavier smokers,
-.:hera found the risk of lung
cancer four times greater to those wno
Ingested tow levels of Vitamin A was
four times greater than among their
counterparts Who ate adeauate a, .
mounts of the nillrlent. SUII L all
smokers have a rlek of lung can6er 12
times g&lt;eater than those who don't

sm~.lln poln.;., out that other
r-chers have conducted" studlea
Which show similar correlations be-tween decreased rlek of cancer and
levels of dietary Vitamin A. "Deficient or
marginal levels of Vitamin .A or Its_

=oy:·r:~~ ~ rn-~·7~~~ .

suacepllbllity In -the nsaptratory tiact,
bleddar end colon of rodents," he aald.
Hlg!) doses of ratinolds have also been
shOwn, In soma ~tudlea, 19 Inhibit
cancer In the atom~~eh, vagina, cervix,
tung ai!CI fonsatomach of hamsters. Still
other raaaarch, however, falls to
confirm this beneficial effect.

(

_Zoo story
UiB is providing employee educati o n
program fo r _Buff_
a l o zookeepers;
increasing-breeding is o ne aim ~
By Sandra Roger
Public Alfeinlln!&lt;lm

As part of a c;ontlnulng effort on the
-part of zoo management to provide
educational opportunities to zookeepers, Mike Noonan, a Ph.D.
candlda1e In biology-psychology ar
U/ B, Is presenting a 12-week course
aimed at increasing successful breed-

lnt~':;:n~su~':J;.'fs· part of an ~verall ~
0
~;;"J:~":rs, ~':::Jl'.:'atecf' ~;amAc;lf~~ '

lf.a species of bird naturally breads at
the equator, for example, and Is
conditioned to wanner temperatures
and longer deys than are experienced In
Buffato, ·heating and lighting can be
regulated to simulate equatorial conditions.
\
But If an animal requires 1000 square
miles ot-graee Jands-ln which to bread,
thet Is physically Impossible, obviously.
" The Buffalo Zoo has a very good
track record In breeding animals ,"
Noonan notes. Zoo personnel are
especially concerned , with those an-

Master of Rachel Carson College Dr.
Peter S. Gold, who hired Noonan to
teach the course.
"Reproductl~ Is a sarles of events,".
Noonan points out. "It Is not Just the
Is always ' room Por Improvement. The
act of mating." The program fncludes
U/B-eoordlnated program Ia aiming at
studlaa of migration patterns, the
achieving "an even better )ob .perestablishment of territori es, chemical
formance" from the keepers, he adds.
signals sent oil! from the male and
emale of the s~las to recognize each
Futura tnedlng .. the t •t
other, the mating act , the pregnancy
Zookeepers receive a oertlficate _upon
·
period, birth and parental care.
completion of the PfOQram, but, more
Noonan, who -worked as a tookeeper
Importantly, they achieve a greater
as an undergraduate at Notre, Dame, , understanding o the factors behind
and Dr. Mark B. Kri sta!, associate
reproduction and the succeaaful aprofessor of psychology and heed of
chievement of animal reproduction In
the Biopsychology Program here,
captivity. The success of the program
studied the rast three weeks of
will be measured In the future breeding •
pregnancy and the actual birth of a baby
success ot tne zoo.
~Irette , born 4 y!Mfa ego . This was the
Despite different levels of format .
aducat)on found among zookeepers,
• ~~~~~~;\'o~b~~o~~~~pt:;~::.!·~nblt~
and Whether their backgroui!Cia Involve
giraffe house durln11 that time,
college education or personal exobserving the motner and fllmlng"'lhe
perience, all can relata to material
birth.
.
- covered In the course.
"The zoo staff Is experienced In
"The keepers with teaa education
raising abandoned young with many
contribute as much as the keepera with
8IICC8J&amp;es eacn-year," observes Noonformal education," Noonan o~ .
an. But he emphasized that the focus of
A- &lt;M)or ~oat of the program Ia. to
the course Is to taac/1 the animals
reconcile texttlook expectations with
themeetves to cate for their young.
personal ob...,..lona. At ' ' - · texts
" Another aapect of _ successful
breeding Ia environmental Influence.
The zookeepers· must team to control
recognized and 8Ckno~ In
the environmental stimuli so they can
rn'r"~t1~ar.S:~.clerlfiCetton of
simulate the seasons, ... says Noonan. _

.I

~.-;~C:!~

.

&lt;BinfnnciNptU•
Birds and reptiles are penlcularly
affected by tl)elr environment Even
though the phyalcal laltlnga end
limitations of the zoo'a setting must be

:::~~~ttF::::=ao'=..~IICII-

:n ':!ro~:r:d t:r':

~X~===~~

"With emp~ education - lmprOY«&lt; Job mcnle lllcl Job utlaf8c&gt;
lion," Nool*l not-. "Yet 1111 -.11
goat Ia to help pentclpantl" batter
und«8tai!CI the INIIY 1 - till
reproduction end how they .,. :r~~~'"'*' by the conetralnla till zoo

- syracuse students_have
objections to dome a~so
Two

sy'-... 11oa1e • - . . -

aclleduled tor Rich 8t8dlu!n ..,.. '-II

o..ne~~~ fola.d to pier
et-llera while dome conatruotloil le
aotng on,.
both conntct,wllll
1\omi con1..1a.

(the

.. o,..

~

u.s.-.
PAID

Buffalo,N.Y
-itNo.~ll

...

AIICI

U/8

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                    <text>Sull)mer
They might do
better by SUNY t han
the Division of
Budget, says New
Jersey education
chief Edward
HoUander. See

page3 .'

The how-to-do-it
man uals have
tucned it Into
something
mechanistic,
without soul, two
soci ologists report.
See page 5 .

One of them ' s
birthday is
celebrated with
· appropriate fuss.·
SeepageS.

Registration opens
Monday. A variety
of special events
are in store.
Seepage9.

He's coming
Tuesday for a daylohg visit. See
'Calendar' for
details on that and
other events, page

12.

.STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

.

VOL.10 • NO. 25
M~RCH

29, 197__9

Ok,WB
HEW commends
program for
h~ndicapped access
.. The ~merit of 1:1eMtn. Ed...;..lon ·

~~~~

....

- dent
~~-~L
lilicJIJC ltlr
letterthll ......
KAIIt.r -

The 1 - -.rt on to nolll ,...
submlaalon of U/B'a N¥IMd IIMIItlltn
and Mil -.!..-Ilona pllina • .........,

=.t:,r.,:~· t~':'~n:.'*'o, reg:,

Rights (OCRl came to the unJ...Ity
last summer (or a surprlee on-Site visit ..
Accord ing to provisions of Section

~~l!:.Uni=~Ytl~ u~/!::t J=~~

At the &lt;lpf'nlng campus forum on the Low Canal problem,_!Gt Wednesday,
Charles H.V. £bert presented a serl es of slides depleting the history of
Love Canal ccinstruetlon and remedl•l work •net Infra-red photos which
lllusttated the presence· of chemk:als In the canal and In swales wblch ·
cut across It ,
.
The photo at left. obtained from the National Archives, was taken In
1938 and shows the original. chemical-free, Love Canal. Note that the
area Is spusety R«Jed. The second photo, taken In 1951 and obtained
from the Department of AgricUlture. shows the dumping and burial of
c1rum5 filled wtth chemtuls. The region Is now much more densely
popUlated. Note the s-le cutting across the north end ol the~-

Love Canal: a history-of irresponsibility
,

0

showed how It was meklng strides
towards Dhyslcal and programmatic
aocesalblllty for .,hendlctlllll8d Individuals. In addition. a Hlf...llluetlon
should pi so have been complelad which
dlscuaeed how the Unl..alty meuurlng up to Its 8CCtiulblllty pa
·and outlined What further IICtlone 11811 to
bs taken .
When the 1.-n from OCR ~ .
U/B atlll h.:! not completad the Mlf·
ll'lllluatlon . Al80, the yielforl diCI not
~rove ot the format ueet1 In the

u.nelllon p!M •

.::;r:"\.:oec:'"'~·

.,=:

J-N8811,_.._.Yiol ~for
efflrrnatlvuallon, GNINd, tlllllllntoo - - ' In lllbn 81111 ~
SUN\"a .norta In OCiftllllrlnll ...,
Section 804......., of 8IYinl .......

*-*tU/8.

�llotcll2t, 1179

l

•Section
...... ., 504

to 500 more families
naovecl from C.ui--Palgen
.,....,.......,

aleliiiii--...Dr.f!llllliPTay!Dro/lbe

. . . . j._.~....,_ledged
. . ._
"-Y .,... "
f'lllllen, ctwvlnU lbe
5I-. · ._ IOQC . . . . . . . , . il¥alualed

--~- ,.,._
- 1 * ' - !IDD - lbOuad be
....-..cl lrOIII lbe ~ Clnlll - .

-.Ina to~" alliologlat
llAMMill...,.

-

~. conlendl be¥0ncf~tworlnga.

towa-c:onc.nlngak:-and

llle ~ c.llll belllg ....,._, on
c.lpiiS loy . . El•lroo-•lal Studlea

OU.. ..,.... on Thlnday's paoel
M - CUcldY, coon:llnalor, State
~ can.! T - f:'on:i; Joe Fogarty
tram the o.p.tment ofJrwwportatlon;
and Adlllne lllwlne, aaac1a1e protaf80CiologylltU/B.
Fogorty explained the lengthy pocesa af relocating families within the
lnt two tlnga. Beginning with :s7
femlllel, the.......uon numt.. aoon
-

c.llr(EIIC).

......., - . t e d IIW a 30-iJ9
....,, l....s loy lbe - - . .., to .:~
"widu lloi-aflbe~probloma"
ll~c.n.l ................. - - .
-

..,__ 1o ~ the

-

'-!lanll.,._.. theSWa,.,.,..., for
caoofld lllllltt . _ _ .. Palgen

-=..... -

~ ....ey

af 1,ANO,..... In bo4li ~
and --•~- louncl a high
af
lltlll blrttia, birth

:i£11iiUW.

. . . . _ -..tlvlly, and ..,__

Alllllointa

.. -

-

of ~ c.nal -

....-..s

"- 11131
_.aad
_..__........,..,..,...,_
,...... ....,artllellhe

·.-theory"

'of """ . . , _ of ~ion
...ang In ......,, , _ _ _ , along

bftGnd 111e 11rw1 two tlngs of
(1b blocb- and - o f the
lends exist

-

..........

Dr• ......., ..-.. a lbe _ , . , of

'

1

~-,

legialaturaf~Pf01*1¥ o _ . beyond
lllellrsttwo
.lf~,theJ!Ian
offerS tax rei
a.. a period of one to
,,.. ~. or longerlf need be.
Leodne and a group of U/8 graduate
~IS haW 1n1...-ad Low canal
families. The families are "all Victims of
.:~uncontrolled Ioree, "l,.evlne aaicl ,
The enflre situation of relocation,
'-lth 11...-ds, property settlements,
and lnsu~ has led to high
frustration. "Low Canal II a sto.1J:.!
slow aw.-.," Levlne added.
people the state u withholding
help."_
c.iddy views Love Canal u "a
problem we've oome to grips with and
won~ let ,PC! until- hllY8 answers we'ie
"'" of, answers that aieo "aaflsfy '

~ ::'~ ~ -~;~='~fr~
forum, "leasons
lor Society" will be held at 7:30 this

_ , _ _ Temponry housing had to be
found. The Stille pR&gt;Wided and payee! tor
ail m&lt;Mng, a well a siJ&lt;....antha rant.
Durtng thla time the owner's property
, to be ~-with no reflection
of the lm~ of the C8nal eli-«. and
property - - I S completed, II
0WD8111Wisliedto..U.
"'-'&gt;' ltl@!itloned the tax
was . - t t y PfOPOMO to tne State

pl.,-

-.lng, Woldman T'-lle, Horton
Hall,
Guest speeker8 will
include State Senator Jolin Daly, .two
~tatiYes of the Emironmental
Protection Agency - Richlrd Dewtlng,
deputy regional administrator. and
Willi.,. l.lbr1zzl, c:lilel of 11...-dous
II.CIIIlances, and Conllf8UIIIM John

Amh-.

LIIFaiCO'

•Lore Canal:. sad history

. . . _._ • • c

lliiR ,.., In loy . _ , and edj...t

.... tar It, . . . . . . . . . 8dpullldon

or ,_... with
_ _ . . _..., . . lUll thiN. Thl!re
-1110

..

1111

•......,..::,:eliooli«
......,..

, _ .., lliiiiiiiJy tar

~

....,.. . . _ . .
....._ {n. .....

!Deluding

~ and
..,..... liiiiiiMy' af ~ frOm the

-... ,....... -.:e of contu.ion), In
811f-. aldloof- buill. Hurldnldl

af . _ . . . deY8IDped in
addition toaodlllJIII on..
..,.........
""*-or Clwles Ebert ol the U/8

•
'----

~==·

coooomed

c-'Canal- ·=:~

==

the

.........w ~~~callecl ...._ · cut
c.n.J and - r of the

.......,
..
........,.. lola In the - . Wet....,... ~ the ...._ pk:lllng
1111 ~ fnlm the Canal- The
_ _ . _ . . ._, eeoap Into.
....,... or tom large puddlaa on the
. . , . . . . _ _ . ,. . ......._.on. ,
a.t lllln 11--s ,......., 1111o1o..
......... In wNdl • II balk?\

- ..
&amp;
...._ 5 ._....._.,....to..
....., .....,..
........ tllltlca-*'
I

-

I

ldlnlllled, ,......_
_. ... . . - af toxic
~. In or uaad

M "- -

. . ....... a.t ...._.

....... Iii li•IWIIIIilll ._ . - - ,

_ ........ ln.._... __
..... ..._ r:J -.__. 1
-

..,..._ lllll • - a.. 111111 ._. -

__........
~
-

af . .

'EM-IIIII

~-=
..IIIPIDuBII...,tllltlca

ill .,...,_ ......_ Gila point ..

........

r•

and at 1e1at

one

~ yet

PfOY8Ii

caclnogen,

tOok 110 authorltat...

ac:tloii: OEC suggested 1o 11Mt CI!Y of'
Hlae-a Falla, whlcli ilally
,_aible for ...-bating
baZ·
.... thalli lake action.
DEC, aome - feel, should have

~ed ~ tha City, will! leu
resowt:es than tha S_tate, and largely
dependent DO Hooker (a subsidiary of
Occidental· -f'ei!Oieum) for jobs and
taxes,woufdnottakeelfectiYeactlon.

The......._...
The laclt of ~mental response to
questions and demands of Canal
noaidents was·expressed~· Gibbs,

:::::"~h:~~ust

bdHcr;::

-ifylng In WMhlngton, Mra. Glbbe
told • lrulllnlling story of palemallsin
on th8 pert of locel, state, and federal
officials. The recommended splitting of •
lamlilel by the State, the frantic young
rnotliera and pregnant .women, and
aepectaily the lnaldious uncertainty of
the ,'-tis led to a clin&gt;nically tense
• and lrlglitenlng liYlng oondltion lor the
raeiclentll, slielllllil.
ThiM joUI'nallata _ . on the panel.
Tile - . 1 Paul MacCI..,... of the
8uffalo E-lntJ Nrft plaoed the Low
c.n.J ~nc~cMntln the~ oont~ of
owoon-Pllira. waMilful eocillty. Hia
callallgue Diloa 81i11bm111 8libl&lt;e ol the
talluiW of the - 1 media to u.p the
IIIOrY going strong. Mike lkuwn !tom

pointed out. Ebert and MacCiennan
erophallzed thai -:r. all (l«tlai!Y
responsltile lor any - - I l l
mishap due to our - - - '.. demands
oo neture.
Olacosslon from the llildleiloe - ~~
dlcat!"f vatylng OI!Jn!Qna on . _ a i blllty. A oouple of men from the
Worker's World Party and the Sociallal
labor Par:ty urged direct and author1ta-,
tlve .action against Hool«&lt;. Others
agreed that ooiponlllons ne,.:l to ...
more accountable to the public, but
would not take radical political action .
Flnally, there Ia a clear gap betwaeo
legal and moral responsibility. Shouldn' t Hool&lt;er have "'evenled the sale of _
the Canal or m'llde a pu.bllc luue ol the
totdc ......-.sa? the ~ of
oorporate responsibility and policy
Implications wUl be discussed et the
final forum tonight, March 29, e! 7:30
p.m. at the Woldiilan :ow-er In Ho&lt;to!l

The Falla' poelllon
The lectures we being boycotted by
Nlegara Falls ctty officials. Acting on ·
the adYice of attorneys, Fails41ficials
said " - ' - decided against
pertlcfpating ln any of the -"&gt;nS the
N/_,. G - ~'
JOMPII I!AcOc:iugall, city project
li\aniiQlll' lor the Love Caftai, auppoe"!f'"to hllY8 partldl&gt;atad In the
opening I!&gt;Nm, but wfthckaw. He
attsllenendedtl
. t"- ~· ~. silting
lbe HI.,_. oantle, wtio- cloiz-.
Y·
af - ' - on the Canal, Ybclteroualy
A NII!Qara'F-'Is Jegal conaultwrt said
.........,
Ills .,.,_. oomments - with "500 to 1,000 claims filed
111ou1 Hoal&lt;ai'a ~"'-Poneagaln81 the City, It was our dectslon
· lbllt)'."Titougli • a good Joumallat, toe
that something In litigation sliould·not
c.r.tul to dlalll)gulali lila.,._.,.
be discuaeed outside the oourtroom."
ttonoflaclafnlm-...................
Thls- apo~&lt;aaman said the City has
..--- -.:.--·-;·
nothing to hide, but that It woulcl be
~ ponaitliilt, Ia an "bMI• both athica-wise and legal=wfH
lmpoitant and
of
not to hllY8 any city employee touch on
the 'LIM Canal lN!gedy, .......,.
=~.thatwlll-.tuailyoomeupln

"':!
•

... ...._,,
-•b-alal
•

1

l

)i

,p

"J

IIICQIRD81ent doctors:· what happens?
said. And II phYalciaM, thus, lind It
tough1o deallllfectiYely With incompeltliiCII prw:lioed wllhln the COIIIIIIM of a
hospital, 8eo;l!8r noted, It II YirtUf)ly
• 1111-'ble to apot Incompetence
pqctloed In a physlclan't.office.

Not~ be pointed out," Slid
sa., "that pliyalclana we,

Dr ·

ai't« ali·
Ia *IUaJiy

11U11Wi baing&amp;. 1vwJ no one
alllelant and ~ngIll peak CIIP8CI!Y
al ... lillie.•
Mlariilg the flelil
oiiNCIIclne, lia
• aliould not do .
ao bllloiwtng. thai lia or Ilia wiH , _
...................... _ o f
~

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

~e:~·

"'!
-:~"01Jrf'jn. 1

::' ·. -=. . .
P
...

==-~~"'=·
•

;..,or
lllllr .-ctr ...

-=-~
~~:,s

of the 504 Committee chaired by
Warran, ia now pullhing 101 accesslbiRty 1o CIWI&lt; Hall , Ita locker rooms
showers and swimming pool- 1~
addition, the committee wants a room
In U/S's Health Services to be equipped
to accOmmodate handicapped students
along with one ol its bathrooms
Warren predicted -that wonr In these
areas will be completed by the end of
thlssummer.
•
According to Warren and Cutcher
much of the cnldll lor providing
aocessibllily goes to U/8'&amp; maintenance and lacillllel planning crews who
used their Ingenuity to modify existing
structures. The UniY«Sity has " really
been trying," ue«&lt;ed Cutcher and has
.. come a long way •.,
'One of the -~
Tony Serra, student representalive on
the 504 Commlttes and a member of the
Independents, .:~ association of handicapped students, agrees that real
prograss has been made. He Is
concerned,
that since the heal
is off from HEW, U/8 will not continue
~~~:~lbllity, but will stop In

how-.

Serra noted that a HEW representative told the committee U/8 "was the
best" In Region II in terms of 504
compliance. He just hopes thai the
Uni. . .ity conllnu. Its efforts. One
thing that he leela aliould be Improved
Ia file Uni"!'Wity'a coortlilllllion In
lmpten.lting C811ain acceuibillty projects. For eUmple, lie noted that the
electric opeilera '-1 _ , instal led on
the wrong doora In aome buildings,
:::,~~'*l::.~tlons by
··'Serra ctadlta Cutcli« with lief ping the
Uni""""Y get out of the "dark ages" in
terms of aooeealbllity and aleo praised
Warren ICir "extending" himself i n
. behalf of handicapped. stu-.,ts,

,U/B amongtop twenty
in selectivity

-=-

U/8. Ia emong the 20" ritost selective
state-8sslsted lnstflullonl • of hlgl\l!f
education In !lie u.s., iliccOrdlng to a
recent report by the Higher Education
~~ Institute of loe Angeles
HEAl used what H called

•a

revfsed

=--IYity"~~~=i:
,;'4~~
lnstltutiona._
•

came In 14th In the nlllion
to ·the cak:ulations - 1411
ollJCLA ancl.a.tr.aley.
lnstltut- aeltlciiYity, en estimate
of the
~ of a oollege or
U/8

~

_.,ic"-""*'

unlveralty'a

clau,

was

u-..d by - I n a entering freshman~

on the1lcfiolaatlc Aptitude
Teat (SAT) or Amar1can Collage Test
(ACT). The liMn ,... ex.preuMI In Ierma of Ilia -'&gt;111-plusmat'-icat - w i t h a range of 400
to 1,100. N~ one on the liatoJNas ,
the 8Wa Un. . . . . of N- York at
Albany 1,210. T'.-rtiatli Wll the
Unl~ of Coloilldo a1 1,105.
Tile top 2 0 1. State Un=of New -'fOil&lt; at
Albany, 2.
of VIrginia, 3. .
Unlwamty ot c..
"' Banta Cruz. 4.
Iowa Stale ~. 5. Unlver.lty of
loflcli!P,n, 8. UftMriity of Hlir!OIIi, 7.
Uni..r.lty ol c.llfornla at DaYls, 8.
Unl. . .ity of Gallfamlllal Ban Oleao, 9.
UniYWiity af c.afonlla at Banta
Barllara. tO. UniWIIIIY ol ~u­
setta at Amlleial, '11 . Autger.TheState-Unl-.lty, New Jeraey, - 12.
Unt~ of Noit11 c.rotlna, J3 .

- 15.
~-=·,.~~~:
UniYerllty of c.utomla lit Loe
~. 18. l.lnMraiiY ol

c.utomla at
~. 17. Miami Unl-.lty (Oiilo),
11. ..,...,_ or Wellllngton. 1e.
Unl-.tty 01 Clllfunlla II IMM, and 20.
UniY8raltY Of Calorldo.

Flnt In the nation

8UN"Jc.::f

The facultr of
of
~~- and Ufe
(at'
Ccimllll- ..._... flrat In . . 11111011 In
lilllloUltln In • . _ . MIJonal ....ey of
4;ll00 fplly ....... .. tour-year
collaa.IMdinl...._.

DMilnllnltlona ol nallonal ....... lllllllln aaciUif 11 llllda.
·
-In "" 111t101111 ~ oonducted by
e..! C. L811111_ Jr., and ~
Martin Upeat, 41~~ ol lila
~ ... 'Jii'""".ici'P- ancll.lfe

~J:1s·,. cl!f .w:r..at

lllatlniM'ftllcl.

.

�-.itH, 117t

"I vi sited the rest of your new campus
last week at Stony Brook," Edward
Hofl.nder, chancellor, New Jersey
Bawd of Higher Education, reported ~lcaiiY. to a group of U/ B admlnlatratora Fr day.
• t want you to know It's· doing well ."
'Hollander, a friendly adversary of
President Robert L Ketter, U /~ and •
SUNY during his years as deputy commi ssioner for higher education in .
the New York State Education Department , pre~ent ed the keynote address at
an administrative ~mposlum on ".State
~~~~~:~ l.!cy an ls_sues In Higher
From tiM. discussion which i onowed
his remarks, it was clear l!e and Ketter
continue to differ over the rote the
Board of Regents ought to play in
governance
of
State
University.
Hollander, now heed man of the
Regent s' counterpart agency in New
Jersey, believes a state-wide coordinatIng board remdved from the pOlitical
process Is t he best model for governing
public higher education.
SUNY Insisted that the Board 'of
Regents keep out of the .budgetary
process, Hollander reminded Ketter and
the audience. The SUNY Truot- and
central edmlnlotratlon did not want to
deal with etllf another layer o1
bui'MUeteey. Yet, Holfander argued,

-=~~~:...~'::.!~~~

the Budget. · 008 .-.a funding
dec!....... and, - .......tt. definM

educatlonal policy. Hollainder Mid. He
~ to ..... a tluffer ol lay peraons
~ the aducatlonal aatabliahment
and the political Mtabllahment.

...........
.....,
,.,:=.

.

ro-'the~'tt~J~o::

eclucatloNII _ _ . . Hew Jeraey'a
Board of Higher Education calla
har , . . , - a t t - of public and
.ate Institutions to delennlne alloca-.
Ions a.:h ahould l'llquest from the State In a gl_, year. • Onoe this
"oolleglal" determination Ia made, only
IQinor leglat.ttve-.nodlflcatlons follow .
SlaM fundi . . ,......., to the
lnotttutlona to ....., as IIIey deem.
appropriate. I n -· Hollander Mid,
Rutgers wdrl- up In a Brink's truc:k.and we give !ham 110111000,000 to put In
the bank." Thta gl- the New Jenay
State Unl-.tty ultimate llexlblnty In
using Ito funding . "JIIefele no lln&amp;-item
bUdget for Rutgere. " Hollander told the '
U/B~ . -handoeretlad by
just 11181-flecai-The ..., cl collegial epproech
to~ an Q!lerall tundlng I'IKIUIIII .
- whai !hi Regent• had In mind for
YOlk S~e laid Hollander, wl)o
undoubtedly _1 . , . SUNY made a
mlateka In noalatlngJ t.
Holl8ndW CtWdlted the ...... Jersey
'a-d of HIGher Eclucallon with yat .
another bleekthrough: Hew ,..,...,. no
will fund ill lnotllutlona of
"
1.-nlng ..-clualvaly on the bula
c1 enrollment. "To do 110," Hollander
Mid. "Ia ebeohrta n o n -. • Enrottmant-drlven budQata •uch eo thet
~ on SuNY . .unpty lead to
competition tor _.,.
· 01 oouree. HottancW laid,
"Wt illon't know to do 11 yet,· but a
fonnuJa ~. baing cle¥elopad. ~ .
he Mid, 8Kh lnetitullon will be
~teed annually a beae budget,
with an eddHional ~'- to

C

=
cut--

fluotua&amp;a according Ill .wollll*ll.
Right fundi 1t1a1 would onllnlrlty
be toet to ·lnotHutlona
on the beala ol
enrottll*ll
balnQ channel·
ad Into an "academiC~ and
lmpi-nanf fund."
"

-.u... ana

o--tlaa.....

'

~ oellacl oo-nment the
~ atngta t - tO aducellonal ·

..,,.._• • oo-n-taee 10 than
1M ~ time, he
NCIIIIed,
the1yptcalll*llbw of •
. - teglelalure lookad • !be annual
~Jar lltgMr aduoiiiOn '111111
. . . ~and--"'· Aellad

n.. -

""*'

..... .,.

..... Willi

.... ..., -

•

and Ullhilnlllae ...
buillgala. ltlal JealaiiiOr

not , _ . , ; . , . ,

..... and I don't--" Mow.........

~-· .. - '*::r..::
:=n
~..-=~·
_ _ 111 ..... 4

.. . ,

llllng

-~·
tni'IMit.
NewYCIIII...._
a 111111on
dol..,.
......., on
8lllllllllon.
•

~lilanotlll~~

E:t.:~1:-wm~n'::

"=

In the thin! and laot. epaclal Faculty
Senate
on the Ganenil
Education
, Sanatora dactclecl tel
IMka .c:rou-cuttuntf and fonslgn LM-·
guage Study one knowleclga - · voted
to OCHJ)OIIIIOI' tllnta publiC forums wttll
the Student Auoclatlon , on GE, and
·acoepted the rapon eo emended for
further conald-lon this fall.
·
Before adding ~ultural studies .

:.::::r""'s:::!~~,t.oratJ.'l:::s~

amendment which would have pi'0¥1decl
for thil study of lontlgn cultures strictly
through language.
Some Senators again voiced the
contention that lan'guege Is the moat
.efficient means to obtain a croucultural perspective. others, how-.
.Including Professor Freel a-Jng,
chaltman of Anthropology, felt there Ia
·nothing Inherent In the otudy of a
foreiQII language to make an Individual
more perceptive concerning that culture.
.
•
.
Those who supported the croaacuttural alternative "Yiewed It as a
how aoctety · wlll t;,.,k 30 yean~ frOm
the decision for Itself 10 years earlier.
now ; Jlovemment Ia not convlnoed that
Other llawo In bargaining
today'a faculty and otudenta know beet
The bargaining .prooeaa has olher
about eheplng that futunt. Students we
flaws, Hollander argued. In New Jeney
vlewad by poiltlcl ena ea baing lnteres II) New YOlk, the governor Ia the
eeted only In high . gntdea and low ·
. employer - -.llh whom the union
tuition; faculty, eo wanting only hiQb
...... and tow ta.:hlng loads; encl lf&gt;e
negotiates, ~~ the State Unl-.lty
8dmlnlotratlon, eo almpfy -'min
- ltaeif. The pereon In the Gooernor'a
offloe responsible for negotiations Ia
" - the pa.:e.
Higher education ahoulll not be aurthus mons tonoemad with prooeeathan
prleeil to be getting a proportionately
with aubotanoe. Cert-'n llellla get puf
smaller.,._ of a smaller ntiOUt'C8 pie,
Into contracts "ceauall):." because ~hey
don~ "cost the State anythlng".and yet
Hollander aatcl. The 1880a boom
give the apPearance thfal the union hu
~.,. , to be aunt. But hlghlir education
.won something: IQ Hollander's view,
that Is how such Items eo academic·
f reedom , l'llquirementa_for promotion
around. Tha youth age constituency
and appointment, etc. get put Into
(lhe 5- to 25-r--ofda and their parents)
.contracts, where they don't belong.
were the domlnent force In American
" Imagine treating academic freedom as
=\~ ~r:::.; ~=~ecl~'l::c:r;:~ -If II were negotiable," .he wlnoeel.
has ahlftacllnto the hando cl an older
population more tQiereeted tn Medtcalil '
Hollander and K In the mini dabata following
and MedleaN, 1n Ntlrement bal!eftta
Holland.,.• ,-.t!on. he and
and ooclai a.:urlty, than In higher
President Kellar cordially _.,., their
ecllucallon. Htgher· education has to
advw8erlal ..eatlonehlp. In fll'lleul.-, ·
compete 1\atdior for f . - JI(JIIara.
they clashed a- the' Intent of the
" Nonatheleaa," Holilllder' pointed -out ,
Puaey Commlulon which etucllacl the
"polio continue to ehOw that the public
future fuild lng cl private higher

j~~~.':'.r.::::~f~n't~r,::;,;:

:.,:~u~c:'t!"':.!lR'::f~u~t~".,';
society, other than tbe

=t!'~f [~ =..nY~n. ':'t!i ,.:

military .~

report a "sellout," becauee, In his view,
• ft pleclgad the State ol~ew York to keep
all private lnotltutlons •float at an)'

t-'laln~

Ill-defined and dlffulecl power hell
al110 weekanecl academe, Hollaoder
contended. Declolon-m.t&lt;lng has be-coma more and more difficult, If nol
lmpoealllje, at the vary time tough
declolona ..... to be ~- He IDict1lla otory of en Institution In
'"-...._ whlc:h hu an 86% tenure
flndt ltaelf with a major 'ahlft
In otudant ~ - The faculty at that
1&lt;*001 will not vola agalnot tenurlng
8ddltlonal prcleaeora. They continue to

coat.

Hollandel' dloegntecl. Hl a Interpret•
lion of the Puaey Report Ia that the
comml11ion · was saying the Stote
llhould be --handed- In financing
higher ed~,~catton , "that the Slate In Ita
funding ohould not actively attempt to
Up the balanoe bet_, public and
private. Beyond that, Hollanclar laid,
there wu no oommllmMI to ahorlng UR
tnstltutlona which cannol survive on
their own.
,
The U/B President alao dtsputecl
Hollande&lt;'a claim that the Regents ere
atrlctly nonpolitical laymen. Kalter
cDargild that certain nom!- to the

'* but

=It~~~
fa":. ~1:8
heat for pruning faculty In .,.. of tow

=·

enrollment 110- faculty can be added
In demand .,.._ The minute the
pnnldenf attempt• to make ouch
decisions, though, the faculty union .
fllaa grievanoel Mil a long, dmw!Fout
aertea of hewtngo and " ' * - t o•
follow, Hoflanclar nolad . The· fiDIAttr

fgrolex:~~~~::r. .

befono belnQ'approwad for appointment.
He al110 argUed that the Regents In 11148
'dernonatraled e blae _.net p i - for
de!leiofll!*ll of -e alate u~ II)
New YOlk. ~ollandar oountaNcl tNi the
blaa had long etnca been buried, but
Kattardldn~ buY it.
A "*"bar ol the IUdtanoa lnquiNd
about the wtadolll ol the Flagantl' incM
1aa1 weak to limit Nglitratlon cl
academic prog- to one ~ ratbar
thea 11.. • Ilea been the In the
put The ,..._~ NQitlndione tradltton.IIY been
by
IWMft ot the ~ In QU&amp;IIIon.
Obwlouety, ~ ~ In t}:la ....
. . . , . be ......... _ , ,.... How

-:::a.c~theof's:'.:. !::r:

t.,._ oowrute the pnlf]dant. The
situation Ia not confined to that one
lnotltut':?, ::.•UJW:~but
bargalnfng which Ia galntng
~on IIIMY o.npuaae today.
._.,.. of thla, fecutty conelder
.,.,_._ ....... from the lnatt-tutlon illelf and 111t..-mlnltlndlon."
'I IMka tOUQb- dlclatona, .
ng t~lel do it."

::S."!&amp;i:;i

:::S:IYa

=

"

_...,lad

of ................ ..
decldea ..
. . . . llul

. ~

-*f"1tollanlllr -

~••

wltllln

....... n.ra....,..._.onMICII
. . . . . . . 011111 llll-'ly
.nil-ita. ~ Jllnll!l8 and

.,...,.atOll ID . n . - l l l i f t l l fnllll out.eda ~ ldllljiiiiGn.
QJIHY .......... -. Giallo .......
ltDIIINIIr .,.......__ Tile dlalllon ID

!:::5::.! .:r:.

It ..:.

=

':.".: .-

~oe"'=~~~
-=~~~"1t
Section B-2 of the noport where It woul~
be developed aa a "theme" to be
Incorporated In undargrecluata ~ ­
He ~ the lanQ,:_:Juirement

=...,1 In~ progrwn andolu.:'~ ·

"dlminlahed" the number of free '
electlvea by adding more l'llquirecl
COWMwork.
. '
Jlelore· Senatora volad, Proteaeor
Geor;e Hochflatcl gave a etlrrlng
eddrMS In which he edmonlahad the·Commlttae for tta lack of vialc!ll In
conoldarlng ·Ia tnvolvad In a goorJ • •

G~. charged that

tha Con!tnH·

t..:S propoea.Ja amount to nothing men

~:~~~clu'%'1:s'fntl:"~ .

=:•.._...

or • beat, a "Minimal

form"' GaMrW

~.,

~·ff ·~~~a,.porra..,a

lm=-~

and

t::r•

i...tn. tn . .

~~,.:::=::=·==

lhouQhr and "'lllll'eeop • or111a.1 ,_...
of lntett~.. Ita queetlonad ...,.
Senat9f8 . . . "'tccccllng around" '"""
details like a ianguaCia reQuirement
much broadtlr
and more
lmpoi'tant
!II\ __
.__._

=-

~tona---

Baker oountered by MYinG Hocha "mUtaaluu ml•
fleld'a

r:=-s-t':'.::,:===.=
.....-r ..
reminded Hocllflatcl that what had liMn
..-tad 10 , . WM
~ lor etuciY which wcillil be
refined lf . . ' 8enata gave the

=?':=r·,::=::.c.~nr,::

epaech -tel be::::: the fall,
then he (Baker) -tel
thaHha
Committee had _,.led" In meet!!lg- ill

~umber

of afttor. ,_

..........
....
Comm~·.:.:.::-..:.1:"..::

toa11 a

atenll an the ~- ~ Bob
~
,~~

=-

the
euah ~lone. but .......... 10 . .
llotll~andT,_....._. _ _ •

' clacldedtD_IIItl_aaltlar.,..tt.
that II tlie
&amp;ll*lclacl
acoeptad,
nallllllg
IIIUIIIi'

evolve.

would

n- aiii!IIOitlnll lila . . . - ......

lhata~lil.......,tafiM

ComlllltMa to liantlnu. .. . . . Ill

·::::g,na :-;: ~-n.::
- - - alao

:=.&amp;.G..a

that " _.glee
. . .'t
Cammlttee
•n laftna..
- ~- Wll......

.........

111
•

...... ofa::..-=
......--a~··
.................
,.......,....., ........
-=-==

~

. ---·lt-- ==- _.
----.ltiiiii!ICIII...... s=;
-

. . lartiler - ..*-"1-*ln .... YCIIII
dDn\ " ' - ~ lllout

)liat Ill . . , . , diCIIIIII.
~

•,~,·=:-=--=-"'= .
==.a;~=.·::

• . .,. , . .

~~r'!.~t~~r! ~~na~ltu~:U

GE l'llquiremerua.
·
Norman Baker, chairman of the GE

ild.

~ _. . ,

-lflllltoa

.........

. . oould ....... ....,

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

NQliiiiiOn . . . . . . . . ......_ . . .

Ill .._..._ ............. lo 1:
=~~~
NQUIIIIoila. ==--..=-ralill
.

---

.....

~
....................~-­

.

"'

�llotc:h 29, 1871

UlB student
wins Washington
internship
The Presidential Management Internship Program attracts postqraduate
students with _public admlmstratlon
backgrounds from · Cornell , Columbia
The Maxwell School of Public Admlnls:
tratlon ... to name a few . " Then there's
tne !nom here," smiles U/B's Marllena
Ampnl.
Recently, Amon! became one of 254
gradu.ate students nation-wide to earn
one of the pnsstlglous- tw~year
lntemshlps.- which come from the
Federal Off!~ of Personnel Management.
A graduate student In applied public
affairs studies, ·a satellite program 'out
, of the Office of Urban Affairs In Crosby
Hall , Amon! Is the first from U/8 to win
one of these Internships.
The former U/B undergraduate has s
B.S. In management and a special
major B.A. In urban affairs. This
bacl&lt;ground ga11e her ~·a broad basi&lt;&gt;
knowledr. of public ' management, as

we~h~·~~~ro~.:;,

the M.s . In social
sciences In May and has recently
completed a research design for
monitoring local Community Development Blocl&lt; Grant Programs funded by
the U.S. Office of -Housing and Urban
Development.
Her undergrad worl&lt; In the Commun-

~~=o~~Ci~-~ ·~~~~'a:!

· well. Amon! views -her Internship as a
canser de¥elopment &lt;that will lend her
•maximum expoaunf" to all , levels or
·public: policy - and offer a ch8J)C8 to
-just how pollcy.nsfatea to people."
Just how did competing for the
fnternshlp wlth 2,000 applicants feel for
a SUN~ 11f0duct?- Amon! edmlts the!
public: management Ia a very com,P!IItive field. But "I felt very qualified, she

IIMS. St.- etedlla

f'n&gt;leaor Frank

Corbett, dtrector of the Program In
• Applied Public Affalra Studies, with
being of graat assistance. Corbett Is a
cperaon wno made her feel aa confident
aa ahol Ia polished In the pub!»
'management-- "Yet It's all a mattllr
of timing .. .. l:d been lool&lt;lng for a job
for four month's I"
~
Getting her Internship
one t ~l ng .
Placement: In one of- 41 . participating
- departments Is now up to Amon!. Sha Ia
still looking l~to It, with no result as of
yet. The internship practically assures a
- June or July move to Washington , D.C.,
where naarty t~thlrds of the Interns
are placed . And the --present .
pressure Ia still on . " Two years of on
the job training high pnsssure
training, that won't let up," she sighs
happily.
After her Internship Ia o -. the Long
Island native will be l&lt;eeplng In touch
wltb her graduate program. ~lYing It
Input and nscommendatlons. T,hsy've
done ao much for me."
·And on an even ·more positive note:
•or the 254 appllcante chosen ." adds
Amon!, " forty-five per cent were
women, flit_, per oent minorities. It's
gattlng beller ~·

w.,

e eommlttee marks time on ·a variety of issues

�-eh2t,ll7t

Conference on
prisons slated
for Tuesday

Too mectiaQistlc?
The New freedom has taken the warmth out of
·sexuality, two sociologists co~clude from review of manuals;
'The .e~ergent, spontaneous quaiJty of sex is lost'

A campus confarwnce on prt- and
r.ison con6truc(Jon is- ac:hlldulad for

~=tytt!~"Jn~ ~.:,~aT~B~

Urban Studies College and Cora P.
Maloney College. ·
)'he conference will focus on the
controversial "Olympic Prlaon" willch
the Federal Govemrriantls conatructlng

I

Sex isn't viewed as work as much as

it used to be.
In fact, most Americans seem now to

~r~~~~~~9.~r~~~~~n~~:1x ~~~osf~~~j

\~;~~~erat~~Pl:ll~\~urt~":

~utton

has made mundane."
At least that's the conclusion reached
by U/B sociologist Lionel Lewl!oand his
cohort, Dennis Brlssett tprofessor of
behavi oral science and sociology at the

Plans. are to c:on.-t1he facUlty Into a
federal P&lt;faon altar the ga;Ma.
S. Brian Wlllaon, formar d l - of
the National Moratorium on Prl-. '
Construction and CUINrllly a marnbar at
the New York State Moratorium on
Prison Col;lstructlon and the STOP

~n~~~r..~~ ~;~=~~r~~u~m ~~:~

" lo..,..maklng" manuals.
Their findlngs are reported In "The
Big Toe, Armpits , and Natural Perfume:
Notes on the . Production of Sexual
Ecstacy," a special feature In the

~~PR~:~ymp/f.,~~~~~~~

the Judlclal~roceaa Commlaalon and
ectlve with STOP, will spell&lt; on national
and statewide efforts to atop thla

11

J~~/ '::,':Ju:Ja'::tt~ ~~~·7~:f ~~ieex

manuals a decade ago for
thelt aoclologlcal implications, found
that the new bedroom how-to-do-it
booka " reflect changfa irf the Amarlcan
cor~8Cioua,_. .... They con¥11y a more
ratlonal-intellectuat pr110CCupation with
aexuat vwlation : They emphasize the
right of every Individual to choose his or
' * own typa of &amp;eJ&lt;uat activity,
unfettenld by' the wchalc con¥8ntlons
of an .rtler age."

veyed

s.n......... without·-"'

At the · lima though, the
IIOClotogiata note, today's sex. manuals
cloae to fulfilling a prediction
made by Max Weber more than thrM-

coma

~~:!~a=~~~.=a~~

blown, mechanlatic capltaliam, Weber

~::a.awi.!\ti~.'!:~-:;tJr:e=.l,s~
withoutha.t."

noftr..l':.':,O~~~~·i~=•~:~

..-=:;:

ani! apaclflclty with willch the authors
at!lle
Claacrlba analYtically
the,......~~~--

..r.tJona;

Nor could one mlae ""~latlc,
IIIC!wlal- lmlgary ttwt Ia uaad to
dlleetlba ..uanty." T"- wllo the booka ·~ to ba l*flcularty

adroit In aaparatlng the .xu&amp;~ I'M1m
from ol'* apt.M of human axl•
IBIIC8," L.awla and Brl- found. "Sex
~ functtorwlfy autonomous In
the pagea of the manuals. Aa Joeepll
Epateln haa rwnwkad llbOut-otoglata
In ganer81, the a u - of the manuals
do not ~ to ba talking about
human~ at atl , but rathar, libout
tha activity of the aexuat appwatua that
Incidentally la~ound In hum~a . •
A ...ntarpretatlon
In encountaring these· n - sex
manuali, the aoclologlsta report, • one
quickly naaliZOitl that he or aha Ia
embar1dng on a large scale reinterpretation and redaflnitlon of human

::uat~r~. T~a

=-1==- ar:

~t for current problema: "Moat
...,_ who suffer from orgasmic
Impairment . . lnnooent vlctlma -

~~~::,~ =::rmo~d:'~
FliU:Ien In How 10 Get tlore OVt of Sex.

The monogamous .....,.. of mamage
Ia dllbatad; the vtrtUM of axtrwn8rltal
aex, axtOIIad. Sex oulllde marTtage Ia a
.......__., lmpoltant - • tor
;.;;iii:~~'"authora Jotm and 1111111 L:obafl
at;ue In ona of tile volumea cited, The
Comp- Hellflboolc for a Sexually Free
...,._ The Lobelia, In tact, Would
- . g e"ttlat
auch!hera
llani&lt;NiankY
atmply
on
fi"*ICia
Ia __
apeCfflc
.,.,_ ~ . . JU81 dying to go to bad

Willi. "

.
11c1me at tile .,...rta arelllg on faqiiiY
l*llaiDillon. l.8wla and Br1Matt foUnd.
The ........ _ . - .... -.,.. of
that
...,... IIIIIUid 8ldllllltos-1-.1 thalr

.,...... --ill......... . . .

~-The~-.,_.

...........,
.c.u. ... goni&gt;n
_.-Oft.Clllb'a
_ 10 .10M. OM nf:
~~'=
... ":,•.:!.
: - :.......

::: a~"'":~x:rro~g~~~s'~Y~~. ~:::
Scripture Is 'Your body Is the
temple• of the Holy Spirit.' This
means very· simply that In the
sexual ectlon ofJour liYIISioget'* '

';:i.~~~:n;:7ac=nid~
~ko,:'r:,~ ~~.; ever m.;,e

eloquent than the same author's
conclusion that:
"Tt.v Is a clear resemblance of
emotions In sexual and religious '
passion . Sexual ji&gt;y comes very

~ ~~l:'~~w ~~s e~o~~~~
l~h In life and thoae of sex In life
1

are often identically described.
When you apeak of 'ecstasy' or
=
· o n' or 'rapture,' you may be
l ng of Paul halted on the road
to DamMcua by hla encounle&lt; with
God, or of two-loY8111 baited at the
coital parWyata of

by·-

orgaem."

CIDoclllw . . cITP'IJd Dll
•
Bax Ia "good lor yo,. complexion. It
kaepe )'OU young . It keepa ~ happy.
lt'a good for tha hMtt (if you do II
regularty~lng to the Lobalis.

~. ,..,:, C/~'m."'.:,~~J~~
happy man gets a better Job, more
money, and a bettar houae .... "
"The face looks more reoted and
...,_," agrees Rachel Co~lan In The
Sexually Fulfilled Woman . 'Compulsive
overeating often Is diminished and a
hoot of other changes take p l ace . ~·

TrufJ ....,_.lc ·
The' liberated sexuality .of the
~uals Ia nothing if not democratic.
L.awia and Brlsaett came across
ua~n~~cea that every man can bacorne
"a truly mem&lt;&gt;f8ble lo-." All II takes Is
a little exercise, a change of technique,
-hlng dlffanontly, or, perhaps,
nothing more "than a change of
perspacti¥11.• For example, notes
LeMon Clark in 101 Sexual Problems
AMwered many man erroneouaty feel
they are bnderaizad In compwlaon to
ol'*-. The problem Clarl&lt; chirps, "II
that when a man glances down at his
own penla, he - s II foreshortened,
~~~'.:if:~~Jiiar man's organ,
Bax can ba dramatic, too. For thoee
who doubt It, the manuals provide
whole acenarloa for rot•playlng.
B r l - and L.awia ella outn.- !Or. a
·-game" ("litarally rljl ,_ lhU off'
klae ,_
tear off'* pantlaa"),
and a •
ute game" ("IMuH '*;
ma11a har do _.ty dirty
tall

=Y·

___

thl::. .

.. ..

one of the manuals, "i t's too hard on the
arches." Readers are also exhorted to
try ft with hands tied behind the back,

to use the big toe, 4he tongue - every
orifice and appendage.
In How to Be Perfect, Masterton
suggests a sort of Olympics: Practice
self-stimulation together and who
finishes first (a prize to the winner) .
The books open new horizons for
where to do it. Among racornmanded
venues are: in a restaurant (under the
table, the foot can wort&lt; wonders wh11e
"all four hands are fuUy In view"); In a
camper; in the kitchen; in a closet; on
the plano (lfa called doing a " Helen
Morgan"~; In a limousine; at the foot of

pr~:"wli?~r:-:nworklhopa one the
prison abolitionist position; the "need
lor a national moratorium on prtaon
construction;" alternatives to lncaroara- .
lion as outlined by the Monroa
Altemali- Project (MAP); ahd afforta
by local coantles to halt construction of
jails.
The conference will ba held In the
Moot Courtroom, O'Brian Hall. Identical
worl&lt;shops .,.. ac:hllduled from 2-5
' p.m., and 7-10 p.m.

Law Competition
, $Chedul d here
Law students lrolli .acroaa the eut

will

~~:;:,e,~~~~':'~':n~ 1~~~~g:;

think they'ra putting you on, Lewis and
Brlssett offer a source for each • special
plaoe" suggeateQ.

,_I
Oaaplta

,

::;:~~~~·~"fo':'~,!
1
~!'1/!lr ~~~:~~~ : \ru~"::,~

explain to our four1very inquP.Itl..,
~hildren .... "

ClaluatlaneE . .

~ dultng-flla
oth.--

'**

~~~~ro':j~hff ~ ff'n!~ ..~-ha~=~f-;;j
aphrodisiac." Another racornmanda the
male to " purr Ilk&amp; a tomcat, growl deep

In ~~r{:~a:,:l~g.l1r~~~~-;;.
•equi pment" are ..-led to the careful
reeder not to mention the rapturM of
the "water plk." Or the use of
pheromone-aaturated hankies. You

=~~~aW.':::~~~:!:~~':i

lurid, and frequent, as B r l - and
Lewis document.
So I'(IUch Ia now poaaibla, ttiit aoclologlata agree, that nothing any longar
-·good enough .

Aaldnt
From- a n)ucll
sociological-

point of view,
BriNelt ano '--Ia- conclude, .._
Ia
baing aalcad to carry too t-r a
bunlen. n 1a bOIQ aar.t to prow1c1a ttwt
wlllall .__..,.the t.nlfy, Ot'QIIIlUd
a~.._._the~

. . .•• :a IIIII- . . . ol• _.,.

lnm*"¥GI•r.....,.h_...,_..

lcM. ....,. ,.., ~· ...... olf •

.... lllelloOr. ,...,.,

~..........
lilnaCiona
.
.
·. _God. .......

.....

arefWIIIIId.~WIIIeo=

~\:'::. «:::-~Or ella

...........
~9,"1------two

................
. . . . . . . . . . . and

i:t''=
.............,--_...._
..
·-lar01111118nt
_;

~.::....... . . . . . . . . . . 10
lftMIIalla L4!1

..,..._

I . . liP

1M

1M lila ..... - .

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

- - ,._• W?bNIII
qullltJfll..._
...............
loll ...."

- _,,_ -IOftffoal_...._..
The 111110011

• In the Unltad Stalaa.
tllln
prapared and ._.. a bt1ef 011 aide of U.. ' - ·
A U/B lew achOOI apd&lt;eawOnWI
noted that the 1 - Ia puNiy
hypothelic.tl, adding that It Ia auppoaed
to be on appeal as II bef6q the U.S.
Supreme Court. Nell'* aide haa any
r&amp;lll ad:l;tage, she noted.

Crlaa and moana,
·Cries and moans are often ·integral
~s of the new sex. One author Ia

...., ...... - ........ iiDDDrdlna
to .......... ..., . . , . . . do 1hi

"lW

TM lll1)lllan- . . _ . . .

laW-piO,_ Kantlllll 1'..........

,_ alla'a alouay- ancl ___ clown

Mllaltlrl--.dupiOIIIe .... bllt
with yow . . . . . ....,.._.,_ w.r a
plain, tl...al "'~:;.Willi the
out
out eo t1111 ""
o1 ~ ,.. and

Mugel Tax Competition In O'Brtan' Hall.
Students ~~~~~ 18 oollagaa
and unlveraiU. will be hypothetically
confronting the 1ncoma ·~ax
quencea that would artae on lha "--Il

--

=~- =.'l:u:=::~
nta Wll,l
help one
,...,...
1:.:-U:~a:.:
and allat*ltiQ

s.r;:.-..

perauallve

or a , _ . w11o flail ..., ,.. . . . . _

new aophlatlc81ion,
though, some of the manUih ,....
liltty caution agalnat !"- that are too
4118

far out. Paula and Dick McDonald nota
In Lollltlg Free:
"Recently. a ball aalllng how-to
book propoaed lUling the bathtub
with Jiljt-0 lll)d making to.. on top
of llaftar It had hardened. Now this

put their skills of

~~=·
(~~"Zo :"J 3i,~ ~
U/B Law School hoala the annual

.,.-;\;-----=............ =e?
...... _
...
...........
..............................
.....,.-wdelt ...... . .
............. ........ ··............ _
........
-c......
E

Into
baCk Willie he Ia

.

-

~

ma':'~

~.=::

n:r,:u::!i
and the IRS, will ba hald, Fr1clay,
beginning_.! 2 p.m. In vwloua rooma In
O'Brian and Baldy Halla.
Semi-final a, In willch the oompetltora

:.:.
t;.~ r~~. ~n ~
-r:.
and t07, O'Brian.
1

1

M
..
._lfi
e 0/_of
CompetltiOI) flnala !lallln Ill 3 p.m.
Saturday In the Moat CoUtt;oom.

lna the flnalt wnl •
Ina

nUtl
BDactar, a

Albalt R.
alll ·

ttftla

wllll

•

ol

Clalma, Walhlnglo!t; 8tlll a U/

.._

=::.m:...."=:'u-r.

IRS In WMI!IniiiOft, lnd
ft.
Johna!O!I, aped~~__ tdll ,ll!dfe wllll 1M
u.s. Tax Coiltt, 'WalllniiOih

Among._. ...._ . _ wlllt
, _ lrilm the ~DIIIalt,

-.. . OIIM.~ ......
....
....

School, the
Syracu.a
Ainii1CM
and Brooklyn

a:·..,..

' . . ........

·'='

giWI!ft for . . .

ball lndh1dlllt Gnlle1, . .

wimlng ..... 81111 . . . - u p.

�March29, u 71

Elecdon reform was.his soie motive,
~ wrtter responding t~ Rosen
...... ...,_,. . - ,..._. 1ettera lest

=."'ui!$ =~Ions_:
, they rightfully
en oplnton column.

..,__

IDOk . , . _ . ot
While I bel..., JJie Sileoftvmt alde

men, I .-a ..,_ a dfm view of the
rlwlortc In ......._ llltlwa. Though I·
bel.... Mr. ~ - - more
opllllone INn'-, H _,.to me that
the ~vi the ~alon column Ia
IIIIIWII Editor MlriMt a defense - and
1111 only
Y•, lilr..Aelss, the"-twwftl print
""""-'ty MJtNng" - Including your
,.._. ....... H II IliON difficult
I ..,.. IIIIIW llmHa to
,.,_.. .uct., .but Mr. 'Suimeelf •
to
ot lila
mada himself
BDOOIJR....._
IIIIa ct1wge Ia
eubalentlalad, albeit minimally It would
' - llaen ~for Mr. Marlett
10-lllaleiW.
"'-dom of lila powa mu.t allow for
~; IIIIIW- -ma to take qn
~ o1 "uneubo
~
...call how last

1-.

.

a,._.

-.--,.,
uae of
Ha own "Deep Tlwoal" 1108flla, to try to
ouat I'Naklent K -.
·
Mr. ADNn cuta Into · Ilia own
cradlbltllf•a..aponatbleedltor, when
118 f - - IliON tor hla
fiiiWPIIoa of anatMr edltol'a mot ~oM
then for the 1 - Itself. That same
CNCIIblltty It the basil of hla argument
..._ 118
hla c:r.dlblllty to the
former Senate's.
e..n with thla weakening, _ _,
the two 118 Ia bt far the mole a.dlble.
Gt- 1118 a.iouaneu of Mr. Sullawan'a
ctwgea, I don't blame Mr. R - for
not printing them; nor do t blame him '
=--~ MnoYMC!II at Mr.
on . g1ounc1a ot l ~louf.-ly tfQd. hla
t11a1 Mr. M.n.tt ooulcl haw
.run
-..plaln.t • a ~-news
atory.
81111 the - · I f8Uit Mura. RoMn

com-

endRalaafor===-~d
....,_tMir
18m.
r
, _ _ , . , wlall to edH tll8 Rlportw'a
..._. Nmlnda ot Nlmn'a c.m-·

IIOdlen '1-.lon": "daatroy arwny

....._.._ •

Till

brule

faol

of

oMIIalllon Ia IIIII to " - a public life
,..... 10 , _ 81111081 011111111 orttlclarn.

fNIIII-.:.-=-~1dC:::W'
Fonl,
111111,
• end
Emperor

~and~~-::::rli

..........

IIIIa fact.

.
~~

...... vi~..:::..-.;.~~
Mr.............

my~

~~-~'-~~·
''c.L-=
........ 'r:'..,_.
~

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

~i
M~.::s
=-=.::..-

llolll
==~ .=:.~c...~

~

alto. me

to

lnfOfll) . both

these

delayed printing It only because of

them. I would not be wrltlnq th s Jetter,
II I wasn't COI)CerTied only about how
they handle the forlhcomlng election....:1 the Reporter's right to handle any

did not "snatch It," since The Spectrum
never possessed It, as far as I was
"allowed" to know. Again, I don't see
why . The Spectrum couldn 't run It
anyway. However, I also understand Mr.
Rosen Is not legally obligated to
respo d at II But now he lgn s
acriticism meant fn
University's Interests, which necessarlly Involves his reaction . To such
criticism, he mentions passlngly In an
egocentric context.

=l::":"~wo~~er"~~ 1tr,hl~l

concern.

·

Excitement
over GE plan
'short lived'
Editor:
1 approaciMid with excitement th
"General _ Educatioo Report" In 1
Reporter of Merch 8. My excitement
was short lived owing to what 1
perceived to be gross exclusion In Section Ill "Knowledge Areas ." The tacit
and explicit dualism among educators
approaching the 21st century Is dilflcult
to comprehend In a decade which has
accepted a phenomenological gestalt
as the basla for 20th cent
metaphysics and epistemology.
ury
· The aba6nce of an understanding that
'"' body Is the access to the wortd
would _ ,_ to reflect a somewhat
Jaundiced reading of and appliCation of
Phenix In Ita focus on and Inclusion of
symbollca emplrlca, and synoptlcs In 8
program of general education with only
secondary or tertiary attention to
esthetics, aynnoetlca, and ethics.
Realizing that there are perhaps
greater polltlcal problems than educa-.
tlonal problema feeing the General
Education Cpmrritttee, I do not wish to
use this apace to preach nor to attempt
to educate the University community
about a broader epistemology wnlch
views man aa embodied and the body
and Its movements aa a source of
knowledge.
Yet, I do feet aome responsibility to
correct the view --ihat the body Ia
Invisible, which Is an em-pirical
lmpoaalbtllty to begin with, and to
advocate that ILI.s negligent to Ignore
both the phlloaophlcai and expel\. mental potential o( moving as knowing
• In the ech&amp;m$ of general education.
Polanyl has arvued that If we are to
study man aa he Ia, then we must
formulate a new kind of knowledge, one
which Ia primarily personal rather than
technical . What, after all reflection Ia.
,completed, 1)1 more personal than one~ t
body and the knowled~ gained through
objective use and au ectlve experience
of It? Pragmetlats, p enomenolog lsta,
8l}d extatentlallata have wgued for an
eplstemlc. correlation "which results ·
from tile Interfacing of the Intellectual '
and experiential .
Perhaps Van Kaam'a description Is
representative of what _ , , to me to
be a missing perspective In the general
education acherne:
•
"My moYing hands , _ , to me ·
• .basketball aa spherical, solid and
leathery; my throwing hands unveil to me Ita bouncing quality; my
pressing llanda discover Its alas·
tlclty. Bodily behavior as gesture,
mover11ent, ,..,d language /s my
belng-lq-the-World, my Immediate
pn;sence to people and things .
Bodily behavior Ia not a ll)edlatizatlon or symbolization of my sell
01' my dealrea; It Ia I, my behaving
body-which I am-la...the locus for
the approprletion of--..nse and
m..nlng." .
I have no quarrel w(th the ldentllied
knowlad
aoge-.. but rather wlttl what Ia
perce1ved as an error of omlaalon, moat
likely baaed on a Jack ot understanding
by my academic collallaues of tha
cont[lbutlon of IIIIYslcar activity to
man a unc~ara..-rng· of hlmaelf and hla
world. "Phya ed". lllil..llOine a long way
In ectuallzlng Ita potential as a
qualltatire and 8J&lt;~*Mntlal contribulor
to a oa-at aducatton and I urge
conalderetlon of thla domain In any
format wh~ Ia •opted.
•
Sincerely,
• -Dr. Qrolyn E. .,.,_
Aaaoclate Professor

~:o-u\~o~rV~t~~- n~~r~:e;';'~J~e~~=

·

11!

Lacking In his or their crude
clualncatlon of my letter, and In their
em&gt;gance towards the
Is
'acknowledgment of my letter's contents. True, my letter Included criticism
of Mr. Rosen; but It went far beyond
that. By thla time, I originally_ had
•xpecled to hare ct1tlducted • serious
public dlst;Usalon, If only wHh Mr.
F_.,.. to 'The Spectrum' ·
Roaen, on flow to ffifO&lt;m SA elections. 1
t haw an urge to summarize my anhad not expegted to hM to argue,aa 1
alysis
In public here, for hi a benefit.. But
am now doing, about . where that
no;
lhe problem Ia his attitude, not hi~
still-needed dlscusalon Is held.
Intellect. I am totally puzzled by Mr.
1 withheld my iettet's publlcatlbn In
Relaa' thinking. Mr. Sullawan cited the
the Reporter for one week, to almost the
deadline hour, by making what 1
thought of all a courtesy call fo The
tiona In the laet five y.ra went The
Sp«&lt;rum's managing editor (In Mr.
Spectrum way, while 83 per Gent of all
Rosen's absence!. Since ahe said It may
elections followed ault. He added that
be printed In The Spectrum, I held the
M~~~ aald thAI theM officials_..,
Reporter back for that week. Meanwhile
"p •
y appointed." Mr. Reise Ia
the SA elections -mecl to be getting
c:orrtil:s; II saying that Mr. Young did not
clo-. and I wanted time for my use
theM euct words. Tile copy editor
election plan to be Implemented. After
states: "In feet Mr. Young)laa merely
two. weeks, l_thougM The Spectrum hed
Indicated that The Spectrum 's end~
. long enough of • chance. I decided to
menta are a powerful Influence."
.
resort lottie Reporter, yea, that hideous
Btrt what Mr. Reiss lalla to recognize
....:tum of cii&amp;MOt. Worlds later also
Ia that Mr. You~ did uae the phi'Ue
provided ''refuge" for mr views l'eb.
• "undue Influence_ (The SpectrumJ Oct .
27).
·
27). In the November 1 edition, Mr."
Wilen the Raporter " anatched It up " I
Young bllintl,l' stated that he wlalles Jlfa
did not think that this precluded 'us
figUI'88 will anger" the voteral If Mr.
publication In The Spectrum. In the first
Silllawan's lettar t._nof the product of
sentance of the revised flrat part 1
fermented anger, whet Ia?? I IWnder
state: ''The following letter was sent' to
aurprlaect.Maara. fltoaen and Relaa
Tile Spectrum -on February 1. It has not~ .• how
_ . when they read In Tha Other One
~printed, though for all I know, It
~
22), an~~!IY Patrick Youn~_.
m.,.~lla.."~..._Mr. a-&gt;flnd
~ - 1lntlti8CI _ , , . a . -.• Haa
any "ed"ded Insinuation," from the
they understood that Maara. Young and
~,.,.. editor or me, that " · He'
Sull'-.wan'a wordfnga a/ways mean( the
cenaoled It·?"
same, they would not.)lave been aurprlaeo. It Ia. Interesting that I aald the
motile
.
181118 tiling In the reckless Reporler
Somehow, I bel'- Mr. Roaan knows
(Feb. 1!1) that Mr. Relaa . wishfully
that my latter ta not ctltlcal of hlni
believed Mr. Young aald.
marwty for that aalce. Yet, 118 almply has
For Mr. Ralaa' benefit , I " mitigated
not edmttted thla In print. Now, how
Mr. Younp'a charge by easing the moral
I to avoid crtttctzlng him? Election
tone of undue Influence.' The heavy
reform Ia my motlft; TII•Spectrum has
pnlldical Influence Ia still theri but
.,. IIIIIMIIdllbte 1018 In atectlona; owr
(with poaalblyJ d...- cause," f6ough.. i
tlwpaatfew,...thtp.pethas
uaed Mr. Young's pn;mlaes, I artlvecl at
overrun that rota, cleeplte lta Intentions
tentatlre conclualona favorable to The
not to; I theretore defined Tha
Spectrum. t even showed how The
-$peclnnn'a 1018; I tllerefont had to
Spectrum's Influence can be more eccrttlcla ... r. RoeMI. I showed how SA
curafely gauged .
11M llaen nagtlaant. I atao allowed how
Agalnil believe The Speclrum would
SA llloulcl lnoika Tha ~'a j!&gt;b
mature I Ita staff looks more closely at
....... I apoU In Tile Sllaclnim'a
the arguments, and not at what they beduring 1IIUcll of Part Ona. I alao
lieve are the participants' and outside
edttora' motives. When""thla day hapRoaan~~~ about Mr.
pens, I'll be happy to dlacuaa my soluclatalted lolutlon Ill my' J~ tion to SA "8ndoraementa, with The
tetter," 8QUitable to .-yone. So w11en
Spectrum editor then In charge. Perwill Mr. Roaan drop lila lbaolutlatlc
haps, the riotous eventi of thla YM(a
"-.!-them" attitude ~
student government underatandabl
lattat'l Coulcl It be he linda my !heals
clouded the better· judgment of thl~
~!!"'·
won't admit It? Or .could 11
_ . . editor. Ironically, It · 11 future
11181 tha aolutlon
eventa like theM that my Ignored aolu- ·
lion Ia aimed at preventing. ,
may . -lob Lombardi

~rter,

const~uctlve

~~e

~~8..:l~.'l':d ~~~':..:~.~.~~

Election..,_-...

:n•

my

.-

-.--:::"J.,.....
.• ........,"f:':!

Convention breakers
,!: _playwnght's Intention Ia ,.,
!uctten'ceYellrom
never totally alienate the
the ectlon or the
=teCI~hosa lives are being

-

Ch~. Depart"*'! o~l:.'t":~

"Farmyard" and "Miclli'a Blood"
being dlrected by U/8 mteter'a

School of HM!th Related Profesalons
Faculty of Health Sciences

~~· Jeck Huntar, a fellOw of

u,. ......ter

for Thaa!N

~

= =
=.
:::.S
11M ~ In Off-off
~.r..""""•tona and In TV

New. Power source?

Stuclenta Glenn ChaproM end

J::r.,:•u be CUI 1n !be
tn "Michl'a Blood ~ary IWP8CIIYaly

The "Farmyanj•
awlaa Ciotta 88

CUI

wife.

0... •

Ill en unuaual 11f018C1 which rould
beooma a pro1otrpa for a new power
tiOUtC8

:..

P
o.v~the

Bappi,
and LOUann

~n tlma 111

the

-.lng 1e I.
P- • ~~ ednlllalon tell; 11.110
lor atuclenta end~ 0111-a. •

--~ooun , .-rchers
Ute Sciences

atSUNY'a
~ •

I

-

lhoW bolll IOflcultuN
~

.

altemptlng to
oan bioaaom

....,. lila umlnlla of urban

poRIIilnta.
Tha I8MI ta -'dng on ~lng an

81111111"':~._
11181ptenta
_, .use
.
.,..
. _ powtr
liS
the . . . .
elf Mil for crop

llleduoiiGII tn wJnMr. Till DrOleCt Is
· ftMIIIttundlra._,_l'leo.OOOgrant.

�-.

...,.. 2t, 1171

.7

VIEWPOINTS

What's so dullabout U/B sports?
EDITOII'I ·NOTE:

Tho-... -

::=..::.t! ,.:z_,..,
dlopttollod Ia

the U/8

--·

Ita -

woo In

lllol

I am dlamayed that the 1979
"Buffalonian" will not Include a
"dynamic" aporta eec:tlon, _ , more eo
bec:auaa of your Mluatlon that,
18

~~~~~ s~r:m~

oec:tlon "will not rnat.alla because
thla Unlveralty'a aporta tMITia .., •eo
dull'."
Dull?
What Ia · dull about a women's
bowling teem that haa won elaht of the
nine 10111'1181'*'11 It entered thla - n
and qualified for the eecond straight
for the National Collegiate
n-~nahlpe, ~It placed third In

s:ri,
19

Dr Sue Fulton, who waa a Collegiate

All-American bowler last v- and
:to:,~~~!~..!'!' National Individual

~Ci'r;;;;&amp;a~ •• --Ina ~

AII-Amertcana, en NCAA Dl.talon 1
entrant, after an NCAA Ill Championship end four AII-A"*"-lalaat y..-?

Orloe~
.
Or.., Ice
IMm that competes

on the NCAA Dl alon II 1-1 despite
the lack of athletic granta--ln-ald, and .
which haa qualified for the ECAC Dlv. II
playoffa for two ltralght -.,a?
Or a women's awlmmlng &amp;. diving
IMm thai had Ita b e l t - In yew11,
6--4, ll(ld 181 17 Individual University
recorda with a squad that Included only

·--lora? /
Or~

rMn'a - b a l l team that
. played T3 NCAA Division I end II

~'r.:,~~~v~~=-5~ ~l~
...on of com~ltlon9

flrlt

17~ =~ ~Ju~~cf.'1t.:

1978-78 con'-'&lt;» title probable,
which playa a Dlv. I achedule without
the beMflt of ethlatlc giWita and Ia a
pnnnlal ECAC -n-and plliyOif

eontencWP
Or MM'a golf end tannla, and
- ' 1 •Ilia - • thet won Big 4
c:hemplonahlpa, going
In man's
teMia, 1~ In women's?

•1

Dr a soccer team that was Big 4
co-champion, two other Fall teams
finishing second and-third?

Forgive me, grandpa, my not speaking Yiddish.
Only you could have read my dreams,
my longing to stand In wheat fields

15recordaln football
Dr a footbal l team that sel 15
Individual and tellm offensive records
end won three ~ames, lost four by 10

I have never seen or caressed.

But I was too wrapt In the America
you never found on Ben's cutting room floor ... .

~~~n°{h!e;r~dl~o~trn ~f~~ ~~~son

For_gtve me, grandpa, thlstmpleJ¥,
letting you die watching a late movie .
I will bury you In time
and learn my Hebrew name.

Dr a Spring baaeball team that h
the potential to ba one of the best In the
East, Divi sion I?
Dr a 1979 football team that has
aapirations for an NCAA Division Ill
National Championsh ip?
Soma haft loalng recorda, aura

- - · - -.' byH-Wolf

Guilt

88

..Jucr;Bw.ral:.f!a1;"tJ~~~·!n~u\ ~fv

because the student body and Western
New York community have Indicated no
Interest In succeosful athletics at U/B .
- It's Interesting to note that, among
malor states, N- York atone haa no
vlsfble, sucx:et~~~ful Division I athletic prog,.,., at a atat•eupportecf lnatllu. 11on.
•

U/~~=~d::y~w::~ ~0~~

It's the literary heritage ofjews'who have forsaken their past,
contends Engllsh: s Howard Wo~f
s-

By
Llpnuon
reslc!Wa and New York State's
Editor,BuftoloJewilh~
govwnor end leglalltora. As an
Guilt.
administrator for an official campus
It's often the literary heritage of
publication, you should ba Interested In
American dewlah writers who have
the promotlon'of all facets of University
forsaken their religious heritage.
life, Including athletics, which Is one of
1
11
the most vlalbtr" aspects of the ·
Uni-alty.
~
_ American J-lah writer.
.
And you ohootd be aware that
Wolr says an author such ao Phlllp
athletes are atudenta, who might be
Roth ("Portnoy's Complaint") mocks
Interested In purchasing a " BuffatoAmerican
Jewish values because he
_ • •
}1ian."
feels alienated . from the culture he left
Had I known you considered U/B
beh ind.
athletk:o "dull," I .might haw had
"It's a complicated sub)ec:t," Wolf
says. " I'm not sure' I entirely underatand
!:\fd;\~ug:~=~~ro~l~hy~~~
It myself. Many J-lah wrltera feel
some gull\ ... a toss of community with
their own origins."
equipment room, at the raq- of a
The J-lah writers who deal Jn
member of your ataff, then handlec:ular eubjec:ti, or who t,..t Jljdalam
dellvwlng the roll of film hlken, and
from a eec:ular vl-lnt, feel that they
lnadowtenlly left there, to the "Buffalo-·
- l e f t the aecurlty of home, he aaya.
nlan" office.
"They .,. haunted by eorne ancient
t h a t the f.,.,lly Ia the corn-one
~u::,~~
ofhlatOfY.
Important or "dull."
"In some aanse.,Jewa alwaya feel fl
·-a..r,G.......
clangeroua to be outside the' home.
Director, U/B ~ lnl~
Home Ia What's not alli'n ."-

Pr~s:!" H~~ 'w~la~~m~'lf !::

=~·

MaL;Inates Ollvencla

for

I have become a Jew for the first time,
too late, though·. to honor my grandfather
who R)ade buttonhbles for forty years
and died alone, In a hotel room
crying for the embrac;e of mother Russia.

o Clemente Award

=·

:d.~ =·n~al,

?-a:..=!.'!":.':

CIIIttniiJ........

•

-

Wolf, 42, aaya he t. "culturally
J-Ilt-"
.
An expert In -moclam M*lcen
=-·Wolf aaya he Ia "nota .._.Jb

,.%;,But·~~~- aut"QQ

:::='of

A
IIW U/B '-"ty ella
1817, he •• • aut1tor of thllla
ec:llolarly "'!Olea, Mil two boOIIa. Hie
lateal bOok, " Forgl.. the Fatlw," = Y pubtlahed br New Republic:

Moat of "" wrtttnae .... 111118 audl
.. ~lion and" Group ov-na"
or "T1te 0... fll H-llfn" or
-~ lJieqbft and
8oalal
~nulty." But, he IICIInla - ·
,..... "' lila WGb _..... ... ~
( - . f t ) " -·" Ha WIQia • .,..
ciltlal-.fll...., .............

...:.."&amp;~ t'itW' lanot .. -ay

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

n·a •
Wolf'a
llte-acllllelolllle1..,_11M...,._
flllllollallnd _...., fll

• ootlaOa Ill"'- and . . , . ..cl

ell~--, . .. Tlla tl8a .......... 10 lila
....... wllom ........ for' - ~-.:::.ne:::r

humor of Jawa, the fronlea of J - , the
Jewish common _,..," Wolf aaya.
"The narrator haa the J-lh of
~~ult~~poaalblllty of eac:.plng dff.
The title, he says, reflects a common
theme. "I think moat Jewfah wrltera
lend to be gulltrldden If they do
something In their life that tends to be
dlaruptlve."

A

ataf.m.nt Or

apology
Wolf graduated fri&gt;m Am,_ Cotlege, Columbia Unlveralty end the
University of Michigan. He won the
r~ Hopwood ~wanl for fk:tlon In

In 1872 he -

poem~ ....

•p~upcn." the

Wolttan two ,.... attar the &lt;~-"' of
hta Orthodox pldfalller, It Ia a
- - of lipology by a thtrd-.llon A-an ,.. Who rejactad
lila u,da'a Ylddlllt IIIJIIU1118 end
~ II) taililr Of U.S. .

=

WoH aaya hit ,_ ..__ _ .
Zlonlatfc, , _ . . . _ . fll t11a Jawlllt

.........
·='"'-~·
-~......
·-=v.-ol::
--·~-~..:::.

... IIIIDrfltClOII'Heltor

. . . and

11J.."::""M....at. . .fftanda In
\111--.: ...... ._I._ a
IIO .........

.

=~$!.:=-. rm. _.,...

�·Aid for
lonely students
on the way
College atudente are 'the loneliest
population segment In the United

!~~~ea:tcd:~l, g~c·~W!n~ns~~e
Even lo~eller than widows,. transients
and divorcees.
Why? Likely because many leave -..
relatively stable home environment for
an all-too Impersonal life In academia.
with
Sure, classes are bulging
students, but they don't really interact

tl~~."t'a'i.~ ~~t~ ~':f,::::.'Y. put In their

\

Happy birthday~ ·oear
Franklin Roo.e..lt'a · Inaugural
ooup was a bit bland , Professor
Milton Plesur of History snorted,
"but that'l typical' of Eleanor
RooMwtll." Her Idee of a big meal,
Pleaur recalled, was to ......, up

=~~-dl~-~~t-always

~r':,.oo=~~~~C:~

Fillmore birthday dinner held by a
o1 Wlllmak:al Ellicott reslillnta 1M! Sunday In Speuldlng
Dining Roam.
The llllldiRI lon:8 In thla ywa
dinner,'• 1111 v-ra, U/B'a
~ Firat IAdiM
~· Cert 8famlzza. Sferrazza'• "'loolby'' Ia ~Iii
wl- and White Houae foH&lt;Iote
(l'lllllotllr, 4/20178).
.
h IIWIU, ~ by S1erruza
and .,._-.cl l*fldy by atuelenta
and pertlally by Food Servtoe,

aroup

/

·-ct..

igaill

Included a wide array of White
House recipe favorites . Lemonade
Lucy's Lemonade conjured up
visions of the somewhat dowdy
Mrs. Rutherford B. Hayes. Calvin
Coolidge's favorite pineapple salad
found a place next to LexingtonGlazed Onions, a particular. favorite •
of GeorQe Washlnnton's. In special

~~:,ut,:.:~::;8rl~~~t!!o~c::'~ec~'~a:e~

stuffe&lt;l tomatoes a Ia Buffalo were
...-..cl . So were ·Jackie Kennedy's
potatoes auzelle, a CIIOCOiate
mou- that Jack KennedY doted
on, a champagne punch ln-fionor of
tippler U.S. Grant, Teddy Roosewtll'a "good to the laa't _drop"
coffee, and VIrginia egg bread from
the J - Monroe era. A "aherrfed
filet of beef a Ia Wan-en Hardfng•
-the main courae.
Ablgllll Fillmore's portrait was

displayed as the centerpiece on the
tables, and Sferrazza brought along
his collection of First Ladles dolls
which he handcrafted, ·and which
landed him In P119ple magazine 18
months ago. He Introduced each
course with a- bit of lie historical
background . Plesur added In an
aside that the reason onions are
associated with George Washington was that Mar1ha looked like
ona.
'
Joining the students at .the party
were Mar1he Lane, food editor 9f
the Courier-Ex_., who waa
dj&gt;lng a atorv on ~ White House
cuisine, President and Mns. Keller
and Oean of Students Richard A.
Slg~elkow.
.
Slggelkow thought the 6\lent (a
mlld-aazlneas, to be sure) the sort.
of activity the Unl-.lty shoold
encourage to maka U/B more fun
and lesaen the allr1tlon rate.

To try to counteract the loneliness •
and tile depresalon which result from a
feeling of personal Isolation, Maureen
O'Mara and two - other doctoral
candidates In clinical psyc:hoi9Qy will
conduct a free three-aeaalon "meeting. '
skills" program beginning next week
whlctl Is geared pertlcularly to dorm
students.
Much of the "trouble In the dorms" Ia
cauaed by "eheer boredom," claims
O'Mara; she feels one sure-fire cure Is
meeting new people.·
·AI the end of the program, O'Mara
plana to hold a big par1y where
participants can practice their new
social skills. - ·
O'Mara has col)ducted similar work- shops owtr the past sewn years with
• the Office of Credit Free Programs, Life
Wortclhopa, and In the Cj)lllmunlty. &amp;ale
Ilea taught the same skills to mixed
groups of participants In Washington,'
D.C., - groups which Included VIet·
namese refugees -and u!&gt;wardly-moblle
newcomers to the nation a capitol,
Each of the aesalona scheduled lor
the dorms will be one and one-half
hours In length and will hawt --.1
sections to accomii')Odate different
achedulea of Interested atudenta. Since
sections .., limited to about 15
~clpanta,
Nglatratlon Ia on a
llraH:ome, first....,.. bula.
The aesalone .,. not meant to be
"anxiety provoking," eXJ!Iafna O'Mera .
lnatMCI thay win ba Informal" and

"fun."

• The flru will emphaalze how to
approach atrangera (without caualng
anyone tenalon) &amp;lUI begin ~
IIOIIJI. P8rtlcll*lfe will fawn how to
r-e mora poaltlwt encountn by
asking queetlona whose - - - are
Interesting.
•
The technique of politely awltchlflg
con-ion toplca will be co-.cl In
· the second -ion, while the 1aat will
focus on ending cen~s grw»!::::l~t~~~~n':o~~ "feels good" to
- The aesalons are not .--we! for
those who categorize thernaalwta as
shy, Instated O'Mera. Gregarious
peo~le have also profited from her

~t:h:~l=-=t::r. =:~~~~
~~o~R:'Pnt:=rr:~"' f'~re~~~i

,_sarlly
mean
poa_
l tlveexperl
__ thoae
_ • lnteractlonall(8

O'Mara h,opea to Incorporate the
program Into freshman or1ernatlon
aeaslona
a move which, aile feels,
might help bolster retention ratas. Far
more Information, call831-3717.

'*-•

Women's rally
set for Saturday
The CoalitiOn lor AbortiOn Rlghla and
Agalnat .SteriJizMIOn AlluM Ia lllanlllnQ
• demonatratiOn 1ft dOwntown· BuffalO
on saturday, March 31, In auPPOII of
woman:. reproductlvenghta. CARASA/
Buffalo Ia made up Of _groups 111&lt;1lndJvlduala "working lo protect abortion
rlghta and fight atarlllzallon a~~uaa.ln the PMt ~ and a hall, the
organlzallon hai apon-.1 a number
of ~IOna, aympoaluma and
. rallies In an elton to rftolii!IZII btoadbaMd oommunlty auppott wltll r.apect
to theM 1 - . a~ Mid.
CARASA ,_ ._,. daaply II!VIIIftd In a

~~ "m.m.-=-:-' ·~

=="•

tile

"SWI= llbUIIIIICI
In
~
IJIIICI
to tha ...
_,__lntha-'
.••
CARA8A ......_..on tha c~amo~-.
abortiOn rlghtt . . . . .

IIOnillp.

-TIIa ~ IIICI raiiJ . . plafl!lfCI lOr •
1:30 p.lll, In Niaaara &amp;q-. "8tuccann

8UPPOit

can maU thll ._...,..Jon

.._..,ut.•

tha CMAIA ....,_.
Mid; tha 11101111 \llllet auppOI1ara to
brlna blllnin IIICI ......,., ll..,..on,

anci"•-., ,..._.you can."

•

�ummer: sign-up
for varied program begins Monday
,
.

e sun I s out regularly these days .
e snow Is gone.
aster approaches. •
·
e University Is thinking ~pring ,
'd say.
rong.
ring is about shot. Spring Recess
ns next weekend (April 6); and
classes resume Monday, Aprll16,
'II be only 20· class days before
als.
Summer is where the planning is.
Registration for Summer Sessions 79
s next Monday, April 2, and
llnues throughout the next several

a.

.

·,

s · usual, there will .be three
applng terms this yaar: Session I,
" 4-July 13; Session II , June
August 3; and Session Ill, July
August24 .
e 1979 Summer Sessions offer a
range of special features .

g lhem:

_.ion Forums
The Faculty of Educational Studies
II again present a lecture series at 10
. every Wednesday durinq the
nd Ses•lon. At 2 p.m., the vositors
I chair an Informal questlon-andwer period.
Wednesday series will take place
the Moot Couri In O'Brian Hall.
aohedule Includes:
une 27: Implications of Endocrin-

=.,~rz'..J"L. t~':'".1.~~-

, _ of IMICIIatriea, Children's
ltal of l&gt;ttleburall 80d the
..ally of Pitt.burgh lied leal Schoolil
y ...cogt~lud endoettnoiOII!sL
under hla diractlon that the BOyce

.!,~= ~=~~

da
lor en\erging edoleacent educauly II : Am.,ic.o in tfJa 18110'11 Harrington, professor of

~-=C:, A=~. r~':i

lallsts. HarTington hU been active
both liberal and trade union eauaes
25 years. His first boOk, The Othe;

er·

•:.O":f:' .'!ra;:

, 1 1~.£-:.a

ue or pcMWty.

Hla other - .
luda The Accidental Century and The
st Majority: A Journey to the World's

Juiy 18: What Happens In a Poem? n Ciardi, former poetry editor of
urtMy Revi~w, poet... translator,
yiat and crhic. The aUihor of over
Clozen books of poetry, many for
lldren, he believes that a general
lence must be appealed to.
ry, " he says, " ts the least engaged
tn any modem soclety. It Is the habit
Invite It to the Wedding, but only as
attandant."

it:,:.;
~~~~::t:::~~::,~hd~~Pn':
lllled proleaor wnwltus of educa-

' peycloOiogy .nd PsYchiatry, Jll1d
M*ttue of tha Univwalty of
'1 Orthogenic School, a raaltraalmant cena. for - Y
stwbed chlldtlln. Battethelm is known
Ills work on children'S' emotional
1 .nd eoclal growth, end the
llcatiOn . 01 psycltOMalysls to
IOn . His most nocenl book, The
of Enchar'rMttt, won the tll76
101181 Book Criliea ·C ircle Awn fJ)r ·
tk:lsm .

T,!,1;::0, I :Tll':o":t'.cr.endof M~.'l
- Judith llanlwlck, prot..aor
paya~~otogy, Un'-alty Of Michigan,
thougllt-pruoold~loglat. "Site
Ia the tiOttlor ol ,.
· ol WorMtt,
IICi-ultiDt of Fwrl lllne
Iffy In
COIIIW«, and of tha newfy releeaed In

'-"'•·

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

All !Njor International ~.
both on c.npua
.ndlila- Councft· are
_..._..
""-"
on
~lOMI 81u1Jiaal.126 Rlcltmond

.._.,or
, . . , _ De

Su""'*711 . .:
Elludk» Hl-ico.
(T.,..,.: J - Z7·A...-t 11).
- - . c ! jointly by U/8 end BuHaiO

ifiY:_. _

• oldlll end - '

......... of.

..=s~~=
SC*n-ita language,

1

llllrahn. .rt end cuthn. Tlla program
.._.""' &lt;"-the atuellnllllthe '-1
111 &lt;&gt;.a~e. • ftllloll llaown for Ita
...-.nt apollan . . , ..... Ill culttlf8,
~- IM!orbl ......... end Ita
~ciiiMia.

Pracilcum in Field Arohaeoiogy,
Emeq H&amp;fer, lsrHI (June 29-August 14,
Datu Approximattl) .
· this Is spensored by the depanments
of Classics (Judaic Studies Program),
Anthropology and GBQQraphy, the
Sum(Tl8r Sessions and Council on

Tlla Art.
Summer lnstilutti-Media
SliJdy
(June 4·AU{JUSI 24).
The Center for Media Study has
scheduled its.:i:fl\th Summer Institute,

;;:::~~The ~~l't'::~~~:.il::: .

~J~•tl~~ua~~ud~~~- ~~r~:~:;::
~~~!,il~ci~ ~~st~::/ g~rag:::Ctf~
training

in

surveying.

~~!~n~s s~':::ls*~"r/t: ~?~

excavation

tec~~u'lfer!'rd ,:o/~~::fr,"::a:~niower
11

~l!tn~n~~~~~A~vte[":~~r:,~;:, ~~=o~ t~~~-

of Netanya. The central archaeological

~~~~~:~~~uc:l~~~~tf~ll~':,,;~

f~~en;n,:,~r ~'W~onB:g,i~, e~~~"r~ltee1

lfsHar will be the focus of the program's

~~~lonth~ttu~~s~e:r t~~.:l~tor;;hrd~

T:"'rwo"wa'Jd

connected the ancient civilizations of
North Africa and Western Asia, this
program offers the additional possibll· •
lfy for on-si te study visits of many
Important archaeological sites including Caesarea, Carmel Caves and

M'\ll~~d~-Credit courses will be oflered:
~;s:~;r' .~~~h".l'".rr:c'\'lc:~~~"'l)~~~

, Archaeology and Soils Interpretation.
Students will have a chance to put Into
lmme&lt;llate practice, both In the field
laboralory and oD--llle archaeological
site, the theories they will have learned
in the classroom. Organized field trips
are planned to nearby places of Interest.
Long weekend trips are arrang
or
JeruJ&amp;Iem and either the Lake of a
or the Dead Sea.
Costls aoproxlmately $1300.

Offerings Include: .
•
• 2 - - programs aponaored by -(ha
Department of Music In the flrel two
weeks In June;
•" Jazz In June" featlval (Ju"' 4-16l
on the theme "Jazz: Then 80d N-.
which will bring to campus big bands,
be supported by the National Endow)au ensembles, jazz scholars Mel
ment for the Arte u a project of the
historians.
.
• a poetry festival In the flret two
- s i n July;
study In schoole and colleges and In
• spacial muter workshops In printinstitutions engaged In regional media
making sponsored by the Department of
development. The Centerlnvttas artiste,
Art;
teachers, programmers, graduate and
• parformances of two Shak~
undergraduate students and members
plays sponsored by the Department or
Theatre in Delaware Park In July and..
August- "Comedy of Enors.'' July
film and video creation, history, theory, .
10-22; " Much Ad9 about Nothing," July
analysis and interpretation.
31-August 12.
.
There are ten credit courses In the .
•joint programs centered on an
creation of films and vldeotapas and
.understanding media. More than 200. ~~g~~~o~~
films and tapes are shown and a series
Wars" ·and the Progrem In Art HIIIOIY.
of 30 lectures by vlslti'lg faculty and
distinguished ~uests are ~lanned .
Outdoors
Geological Field Training (May
Yo~~s~t!~e""tu"m~~: J~:~x~7'(!,~ ~~~
30-June 27) . An Intensive COunl&amp; In
for seventy-f1ve of the most talented
applied
geologlcat lleld math~. Tha
students in the State (July 15-August
course operates from a mobile base and
25) sponsored by the Bureau of Visual
is structured • around four one--week
Arts and Humanities Education of the
New York State Education Department
r;~,~~:n ~::.rclses In . the w~stern
in collaboration with Media Studyl
Archaeology Field Camp (June 4-July
Buffalo and supported .by the National
27): Professor · Ezra Zubrow· of the
Endowment lor the Arts as a project fer
the Alternative _l;,~ucatlon Program.

..

1

Art oni1. Letters Special Summer
Programs: The Faculty of Arts and
Letters will repeal Its spacial program
of "distinguished visitors, lectures,
colloquia, and other special events.

~~~~~ :.:'~".:.':'~.'!: f:'~;:

undargraduates and glll!duates Interested In arcllMOiogy and related
disciplines. Tlie "program will be given ~
at the U.nlverslty'e lleid staflon new
Buffalo.

Summer Institute of Japanese Language, Culture and Thought (June
4-Augusl 24) .
To further develop an Interest In
Japanese language and culture and to
Increase eross-cultural aw:oreness b&amp;Americans an~ Japanese among
the students and faculty of U/B and
residents of Western New York, Is the
urpose of a tweiY&amp;-week Summer

a~~::of~~~·~'%Wn~:.R:C~W!~~

• Institute will otler an inten';i'J,
Japaneselangu-program ,and courses
in Japanese history. soclo~gy •. anthropoloRy, mana~ement , c.Tstma, .. t:oml:~.t ve educat on and!'~ steal educaCertifi~te Program in Management
and English Language (July 16-&lt;9ugusr

24) .

The School of Management and the
Intensive Engli sh Language Institute
will offer a six-week summer certificate
program In management and English
language foo International management
executives from abroad . Objectives are
to provide Intensive training In English

~~~~:Pr."i~~ie[~~1"Ma'=~e~~~ ft\';;
1

U.S.A. and to Introduce lnternaliona
executives to American culture. Highly

:,~f~~~~~~n~ill w~b~:lt~lasrc;
industrial plants, business firms and

='l':"·~=~.:o=.nToi
ld-. .
Latin"Ameri.,.n Schol.,..hlp prOg,.,
(June 4-August J 7 and July~Auguat
17).
1979 will mark the aixth ~ for title
offering . Two sepwsta groups 01

~~~=rnr~~~~o\r ,';:'~~~u=

80d orientation training program this
summer directed by the ltaff of the

~~·~;: ~s"u.~ne_~e l::::.':n

countries

will soend either. twaiYe
.,.... or atx WMka at lila Uni....Uy
depending upon their lang~~~~ge IWOII·
clency. A total of 40 lcholanl will be
repntl8rlled .
J_,..., EngliSh StUdy Program
(July 16-August 24).
Tlla lnl_,.l.. Engllah lAnguage
Institute will hall a group 01 ....,.,_
graduate atudenta from flf!Mn un'-·

~~~~':r'tc:....:= ~

J -. Tlla Japa- atudente will IIYe
In the Ellicott Complex end partlcipafe
In a apeclal lntenat.. language and
eultlft progrem organizad by lha tELl.
Tlla J - lluilenta will aleo be
eiiCOUniaed to lnt..-at with American
atudani~uclylng In the tntenal..
J....- Progqm. Alt!Ghlv - ' u l
.,..... Night organiZed 117 the ....,......
IIUIIanla wiH ba ...,...., aglln thla

v-.

UAW Day

.a....... ............................
_"'*._.. .......................
.....................
_.
..... _
__
,......._
- . . . . . .............
_....
,....._
e1

An
UAW '-'!II'~,....._ •
-Dlvlolon.of,...
....._,, ........
lly_
UAW.
U....
""'-*¥Plata
..... tlla .
..........
_
.........,
......... Ill
_ •• ......

......................"--w.c.....

p.........
........ ..... _.... .................................. IIIIIFI,
C:... .

&amp;..n~Mt

t11a ..,. . . . . .ca.iiJII"-illr

�March 2t, 1171

Rehab medicine
- Restoring the.ability to function
-.i s the goal of a relatively
new specialty for physicians
Restoring the ability to function to
people handicapped by injury or
disease is the goal of the relatively new
speciality of rehabilitation medici ne,
says a U/ B physician and educator.
" Much of the public and a great many
physicians are still unaware of the

benefits that a comprehensive, well-

g,cg;~~.at~3~ha~~:tat~1~,fr~~!~hac;~

chairman of the U/ B Department ol
Rehabilitatio~ Medlcfne and nead of
Rehabil itation MediCine Services at ~ he
new Erie County Medical Center.
.This lack of awareness of rehabilitation medicine may be ,attributed to the
fact tnat lt's a " new kid" on the block
among specialties. sucll as surgery and
Internal medicine, Gresham explains. It
_..emerged durinq World War II to meet
the needs of inJured veterans.
Today, its services areh't conllned to
the war-wounded • but are available to

~~~~f••.s~r~~~~at~~m .~~~~~- c~~~

strokes, as well as degenerative
diseases which Impair the ability to
function .

Get tough wit~ inflation,
former
IBM.exec-urges
.
ofT~"=~~~h~

photo with

attaoo

oontrOII

"'-~dent

Kett8t); called
policy the key to
lnftlaon In a apeach al _a

e;-:""*"

=:-'ttw=g.::::xec:u0. wy oo-nment ooukl

A medical .~ty with Ito . own
provr•m "'
· Most rehabilitation practltioroers used
to be ge~erally trained In other medical
specialties and garned their rebabltlta-

go.wnment to control prtc.s and
~. IIO!Tlethlng which Carter Is
attempting to cto Informally now.
The current t811111aters' union negotlatlont will be the big test tor \'Oiuntary
controls, pnadlotea L-eon . The
teamatwa haw \'Oted to strike April 1 If
thelrwagedemanda are notJnet._

~~.e~r~~S:mth~;'.,~~ ~~~:;,a'e~::fn~

the lield today, how&amp;Yer, complete a
three-year residency -,;, physical medIcine and rehabilitation such as that
offered through U/B and the County
Medical Genter.
"There's tittle doubt," Gresharn
points out , " that when a patient's rehab
potential is .carefully evaluated, more
types of services aimed at restoring
function wlll be used. Many physicians,
however, continue to undetutitlze
services from which disabled persons
could benefit.
" By falling to adopt a comprehens.ve
approach, the physician may unwlt-

oontrol
~. ~ 8akl, would be to cut
L.eaiaon was brought to Buffalo by
1-* on 1M _,._ of doltara In .
CIIOulltiOn. He clt.d atudlee Indicating - ~";But:u~~n°:o~~~t
thll tor~- per cent r.ctuctlon In
of executive forums. He was Introduced
U.._.y IUIIIIIv, Inflation dropa oneby Prealcklnt Ketter. 111ft o f - ... Oeilt.
Tile llld IIIIWI ta t11at unemployment .
Or. franklin D. ~urphy, chairman and
~ up __,.., of one per cent. The
chief executiYe of the nmes Mlrrcx.
Corp, of Los Angeles, will ilpeak at a
A-sp·
wfiUng to
a11e up
s In exchanga for leas
almll• forum on May 8. Times Mirror Ia
fnn.tlon,
aald.
the parent compeny of Buffalo Graphics
Anotl• ~ would be for
Control Corporation. _

:".!l:.':

don,_

~t~~~~;.i~:~h~~~~~~~ ~:V!:td~ t~~

most physicians who take care of
· petients' medical/surgical needs don~
have the expertise to accurately
evaluate these individuals' loss In
function i ng ability. Nor do they Mave
the time to concentrate on this aspect
of treatment.

Chemistry receives DuPont·gra.n t
which IIIey hotel ow Chemlatry students
and the l.lnw..J~aln ec~MJce
and~
• aald
.
Dr. llanley
n, cllelrman
of the ~ of Chemistry, lndltlw . . . . would be uaed to profellilonhlpe tor Mlected

full-timer-It would be &lt;l)Ot'e convenient and
feaalbte to refer the caae .to a rehab
center such as the one at Etle County
Medical C&lt;mteo, Gresham suggests.
"Here we llave !lOt on~ three full-tilll4
physicians on stall specializing In
rehab medicine, bU1 also 85 employees

~~-~.~
aluillliila. 'We _.. ablj to help Clllfray

.,._. . . . , - to the prwtlgloua
WIIIDIIWI lnelltuta lrr ..._. for one of
~ atudenta with money
from ......... ~.·,. .added .

!Jhe• = h of t~~::'··a':"~llon~psychofoQical, social and YOCIItlonal
services. 'These Individuals work as a

=.,.~~.,J:.:Z~ ~.~~~~ w:'~, t~

-

services under one root, things 818
more co""enlent both for patients and
fill' the (llhab physician wno works With
the other speciatlafs on the t811111 to
·closely monitor and edlust treatmttnts

NoJ.,I,~~~ :~~.J,'rnfa~lon

use to focus on
the young and vital , today It' s also
geared to hell'!he elderly. For many
older patients, .a comprehensive rehab
program can literally mean the
difference between remaining independent -at home or being admitted to a
nursinQ home.
•
" There's no reaso~ why a broken hlp

_~r~u•~,;;;e~~t'h!'e~do~:e"nn i ~~~r.en~~~l _
happens ," Gresham says. "When the
patient is older , rehab efforts should be·JUSI as intensfve as with the young. "
Although'patients are usually rei erred
to the Erie Medical Center's rehabilitation service by thei r physiciai\S ,
Gresham encourages those who feel
they might benellt from such coordinated care to call 898-3217 .
•

1

Anyone with difficulty may benefit
• About 25 per cent of our current
patif!nts have spinal cord Injuries and

='~e~:,roe~ ~-~!rec!~o~::,:~~1ts~

var~ly ot medical probl&amp;!ftS," he says.
Evaluation and treatment can be
provided for virtually any patient who
baa difficulty In· lunctlonlng, -whatewr
his or her medical problem , the

ph~=".d,nd.,~=· that the Center:s
R-bllltatlon. Medicine Service is the
only comprehensiVe multidisciplinary
ln,patient rehab service In Western NYori&lt; available to all~ The VA Medical
Center ..llere also. hes__ an excellen_L

¥1,~:;: u;~~=~a..~i~i v~::~:

Jtation Medicine, consultations and

· ~:r:,•;:n'at~~~e~~ a~dov~g~fal~
Gene~al Hospitals.
. -MBS

Adolescents ·
wanted for study
Some childhood and 8doteacent fears

~:. n=-:.=..;~ Cl~ ":it~".!
youth's ability to function .
Serious, Intense faara haYe been

~~~~~.:~r:.:~~:~~t ~~'l:'~

partlcl~ated In a f - Red~ctlon Pro)ilct
In the Department of PsyChology.
ReaMrehera .,. now seeking \'Oiunteera between the agea of 12 and 18 to
participate. They . . partlcui-'Y Inter·
eatad In adoleac:ents with aPIIQlflc faara
of the dark, of nlght-tlmtt, and of ~lng

alone.

Dr. Anthony ~. ~ of

lr:U'::.~~jecta:':.VJ,_-::a.U::-:1.

chlldnan'-eomef. . .. Moet elf.,._

:-~ld=~~=

~oulnQ9/B 81udy'TC~C~~.aon

men l....,aa ,... and on ,_. that
..... a longtime.
Adoleacanta wtllla- ,_,., or their
~ts, can conc.cl Dr. GraJ.no or

rllembera of hie - a . '-" a1
831-1832 or 831-1833 from 1 a.m. to 3
p.m. MO(Idaya tluouall Thu..-,..
Work!Rg ....... Who cantiOC oontact
.. needed • •
project ~ t,. clay can call
thoae numbers from 7-1 p.m. on
Mondaya, Tuaaclaya, or Thlndaya.
-t·~~-~
When the parent 0( adoleacanl calla,
" R41Nb111tation medicine specialists
a project member will expllllfl tt.
. . ,., miracle worken," Gresham
program
and, If the c.11er Ia ~.
emllliaalzes, "and - can~ restore the
patient to eXM:tly the way he was before· · will set up . , Initial ~ with
beoomtng disabled. The rehab t811111
the p8(811t and a d o l - to ~~~­
the problem and the - ' - of IIOth
can,
patients to adapt
and ' - " MW ways of functioning ." . · youths aod paNII!s.
Two lmpottant goals of tt. oonttnuFor • ....,pie, wiiMtchalr-bound peraoos Who ffnd kltcm.n appliances and ·. l::tf"'mrc'· ChzlanO notaa, . . to glln
c.bii!Ma too high to ,_,., may need to
that
,... their kltc:hana. ~ by. an
OCCupational IIMnpiat. A pallilnt
....

-

ho-. -

!:..- .!I::C, ,::.u-::Q.CIMiop

.,_afterh..mg. atroka~
could .....,It from p
leal

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

_ _ ol ...

...._

couneeltrlg ...,_. aa much aa
thonpy to halp him or her ..._, to
.... k.
.
.
"Some patients ~ to Ntam to
!hair tom.. oocupatlons mvat ~
counwllel lboUI In which the)'
,_~ude lnpnlarto . . . wort&lt;

o.wn.m. Allout eo to l"'

aldlla, ._.
per CMit -ol h

..

Medlc8l CenWe

~-~~=-=
...,,_..olelolftCj.

E:..~

=:..

ado.._... pi~ '==
":u.. ..... IOn llfiiiiiWII

�I

.

-

aumer briefs PSS on how budget cycl~ works
From the governor's perspective, the
knowing Its contents until II Is
State's budget process Is probably "one
presented to the legislature.
the best tn the country" because it
U/8 has often received funding
tives him strong control over Its
through this process,. but sometimes It
outcome.
may lle allocated under unusual
University Comptroller Dr. William
categories. For example, Baumer noted
aaumer offered thJs comment last week
thaV o~e year U/B received suppleWhile addressing the Professional Staff
mental appropriations under the headSenate on the '1Jnlverslty Budget."
ing "agriculture and markets. •
The annual budget cycle starts with
Finally, there Is a deficiency buaget ,
preliminary work on campus about
In which money Is •llocated to projects
eight months before the Govemor
which received Inadequate funding In
proposes the executive budget for a
the other two budgets. Although SUNY
Oi"'" year. Revenues and expehditures,
"has come close" to asking the State for
under state constitution, must balance
more money In this budget, Baumer
111 the final spending plan approved by
said he couldn't remember a time when
the teglalature.
II did. Only "ei'Qergencles" are
Since deficit spending theoretically
consjdered .
lin' allowed, legislators can only linker
10 much with the dollar figures offered
• Steps Inch~ tile budget
e., the state's chief executfve, and even
SUNY holds onformal hearings each
!hen, their figures must balance. II
year from May to July to decide whet
should be Included In Its final budget
t~wmakeno decide they -want additional
lunda for a particular project, they must • request to DOB. It's the msponslblfity
Identify how _ the funds wlll be
of Ketter, the vice presidents and deans
ten8fllted. Ukewlse, any deer- In
to decide whet dollar figure U/B should
revenues must be accompanied by a
::r~'m::=l~ng~ln.~,t;'~:~~~~.d~
corresponding decrease in expendljustification . lmprowment here may
llAS.
mean funds for expanding or shoring
up operations and Includes appropria'*'-lredlllll'
tions for such things as addltlorial
Whet this means, explained Baumer,
.
supplies and libraty acquisition a.
la!hal "a lot of ~tnadlng" goes on

~~o1~C:~~~'1.,g1~:i, 1~~~~

lha number of "pet projects" It can
f-ibly support. t..wmakera have a
.loophole: they can circumvent . this
fln...cilll chaCic to
extent by
eomehow determining that the governor
h&amp;a · eltt. ~- or underestimated

some

ex~

us~!~·~~u~~~bs ~t~~~~~~~f.
~e~f~a:;t~gf!~~~.:,.;~~\: ~~~

may or may not result In additional
dollars, but at least II provides the

r=~~~':i,!::Jr:='::r~!':~~:

8111'marl&lt;ed for State ~urpoees and those
lor local assistance. Funding for UI B
falls Into the Stat&amp; f&gt;UfPC)IIeS category.
When the legislature decides to cut
spending (\O make possible a tax cut), It
usually slices away at State purposes
funds,, although these appropriations
comprise only one-third oL the entire
budget. Local assistance commanus
two-thirds.
·
Legislators, especially those lntereatocJln stating In Albany, are not likely
to support cuts In local aaalatance
because this would naault In an lnctllaSe
In real estate taxes for af11111dy tax-laden
State residents.
all a little edgy here
"That's
until the legislature adopts the budget,"
Baumer explained.
Technk:lllly, the executive budget has
to ba given fealalattve approval by April
1slnoa New 'l"ork'a flecaf v-r runs April
1 through Mwch 3t .

why_.,.

Oilier budglla
Next comM the supplemental budget In thla budget ectlon, Items are
gtven linenclaf support that _ ,
Ignored In the exeCutive budget. The
budget Ia uauafty WOit&lt;ed out between
the IIO*'"or .net lealafatlve IMderl,
with no one, except tlle political elite.

critical becalllle afterwards, DOB makes
recommendations to the governor
regarding what SUNY shOuld receive In
the executive· budget . Most of the
bigger units get a private hearing.
Once· Informal hearings are over,
virtually no budget dlacuaalon occurs

~'//;';,.,~,.ren~~~~':~~he't"ni.:~~

Influence the closed.OOOr decisions
Is by keeping a close liaison with the
009 analyst who handles U/8. The
University strives to keep this analyst

~~{g'~.!:':.·~~..a-hel~C811!fWe

~o.::.:.t

very much depend on the analyst to
..

to

confined

=::mern;::::r ~

llbles (self-funding progrwM). State
.budget , _ do not altect " dollars; h o - . t~ . . subject to

carry I~ ball for us."

epeclflc

=,::':'~.::,Vg~~::•

.

State apprOpriations come In the
form of money for people and lunda for
other than personal services. The
number of faculty and support
personnel who can 1M! funded Ia •
specified. Dollars allocated to people
and those for other-~~. cannot be

office and

fu~~~~dJ:~~~':sheu~ ~.,:

lion In Albany which admlnlatera ell
apon~ ..-.:11 at U/B ·and othlir
SUNYunlto,. '

'

-JI.

CAMPUS AUTHORS
There wl; be a apeci8l disp&amp;ly apace for ~s

-....--

5 p.m. ~"""""" W1tereotod in portlcipatiog

...

~-.·~
----byAprtl4ol836-2626.
L.E.--o CENJ£11 LJIIRARYII.AII

~lor_on_lo....,.,.,..you­

~.

-.;._ond....,

-?Youwl lhl

agoodooloction o l o n g - a - . y o l ond ll)la ............ the l...ning Center ubriryi\.ID, 366 Blidy Hoi• ...,_..

eomp.... N.

. . awllbM for ciraAation. We .-e q)WI MondiY·
Frtdoy from 8:30 "1 5 . t.londoy· n.....y
e'oiOnilgo from 6 to 9. The phone .....- Ia.
838·2394.

----=

I.EHTDIIIIAS8ES
. O n - . . ~Len1 .

...

-

bo

.lll noon and 5 , p.m. -

-

1 2 n o o n - - c . -.

15~Ave ..

Center.

~ ~ bw ... moke (loy.
en"IOt)IEiicolt rou&gt;dSI.
.
•

--~ ·

in-..:1\~
in10~ol12: 10pJn.

........ bo . . . .

- - ( T - QmtUum
~T--Progrwft.
F·II027.Dnclorl

,_

...

-

Progrwft.

F-e02•.
--~--

Fct. CIII'Df'll Mullo,

F-1025.

.,. _----~-·
_, J-. F-1023. . -·

......,._.,

·~·_, -.F-11122.

c:iowaiiiMCIIIL__.
"""' . . . . . . . . . .. Qllol -

. . . . . ._

...

. . . . . . . , _ . . Qlloe, 011110 .. -

.__,......,
EGalaa . - . . . . - · -

STUDYIIUU.SI.AII

c.=.~~~=-~

~

Tho

I I U / 8 -.

- a.u. .S:W.I'ROCIIIAMS
~ --.-,oiiAnl. _ . , . . , - ....

__ ,_·-·· ·-.

~
(T_ .__.
__

( T - ce*&gt;ll

Compua
...

b o - .. 7:30p.m. .... -- l a Conlor.
a a~"Second:"A_cl _

!IOU'-...

..........
-conlltinoon
__
lhe..,..ciWuai. Arop-on
.,.,.....I.C&gt;inCiwill."

On , _ -*"'" during IMt. .. 8 p.tn. ,

~--~

....

...

i n -. T I I e - - c l . . - . . ...

by the -

lomllorot . .luat-in.

...---..--c..
Tho~--,.._

•

· Holn p.m.:
lotonday,
11a.m.-1
W...·
doy and Frtdoy, 11 a.rn.-3 p.m.
Ill&gt; Ia - ' " '

FACUlTY

T_ _ ,.,.,_, F-ecl211.

~Moira. 112Qooby, 831·5131 . tiona . . dueApr'l 13, 1979. '

TueedQ.-.ct~.

· ~:~~~~~

0

engag&amp;s In

~'l!o~:~~:~~:~i:,~~ ~r:~~-r~

IIUthots and lheir bool&lt;a on Communlty/Unlversity
Ooy. Sundoy. May 6 , betw.n 12 noon end

IIA1H TIITONNCI
Froe tuloMg Ia -

Olloe.

&lt;equests; · then, by mid-August, formu-

Funda

•

Notices

--·--by~.

-

~~:r:r:~:'~.t~~~ J~\~~1.~':i

purpoeea

•

organized activities In support 01
instruction (I.e. dental clinic); OIQIIIIized research; public sefVk:e {La.
extension programs); Student Aff81ra
and S.tudent Aid; lnttltutlonaf Support
Servi""' and Auxiliary Enterprises.
Funds received under pne of the
categ.,ries cannot be used In - " " '
without a lengthy · and detailed
explanation to the State. Any "'*affects the Uni..,.lty's budget &lt;*tillcates - which give It authOI'Ity to
spend money In particular.-.
Since the Unlvenofty cannot "-'-'
funds freely, Baumer atr8Uad IIIII
controls must be r,leced on 8jlelldlng
which occurs with n ..:11 cawgory. H
light controls weren't melftt.fned,
departments might find th.,.,..._
with no money In the coff- to pey
their blllaatthe end of the flecaf r-"·
Besides legislative epproprlallone,

summarYiy dismissed by SUNY.
U/B's preliminary bu~et request Is

Jat~s f=1~::;, ~'(l'~~

"

tio~llar:,"Je "J'=:!:'~a1for~

•Calendar

~wlbo-boloreond­

_

interchanged.

~~~lul~ff~~ i~~e;rls ~;'!Tt,~a1:

revenues.

The executive budllal Ia divided Into
funds for operations and for capital

·-

.Klminlstrallon the opportunity to pitch

TEACIMO-AHT AI'PUCATIONS
- - "" Paf"1879 ~ leOCNtlg

- l s h l p o .... ..... 1-..y
l.-*'CI eon.... 36&lt; Hoi. must bo in . . learning . . - . ol
cologa " " - lrom - ~

- ·.......-""'*"'""""

LDCOPAIIItTIIe , . _ . . . . , . . _ . . _ _ . 35

........... ..,_IAW_.
-F.-..If
---·---

- - · -· -31-Aprt121 .
&lt;ll&gt;ao*lll--31nl-1,2-7p.JO.

-~-'-"

.........

For--nollor----..
. -.a-- -·-· ............ .
ond

~ in.-.;.
odoQor ..-.
-nlning Ia
tiOcl&lt;grounCia.
T-=tq ·
-

emalica.

c:olll38-23114•

_,_~

.

On The Air

-==---1111~-Hor·

niiiOI.
e:allp.oiL
-- - - Cloollorl*-to--

wr.no- Ia
· - -...... . WI'I'nolaloa_...
--a~
waur
-vrw.
..... -..., Hoi. -Ooolpoa.
Tile

- .-.......-n.-....,_
........
-

--·..........
---·1111-.. . . .
-------.............- ........ .' --.a---.
.......
-·
-....1==-----...-. --............
.........
...
.....
....... . -...... - .... - -----a..-·
...........
-....
-............
....
...,,
-------·--_.................. -- ....,..,,....... 0111-·----....... .,.,_.,.,, ... "*"*Y' ... · - · . .
--Compua-~. 1 &amp; -·

n . - - . - . . . 1 2..: -

...... Frtdoy ••••

.._
_..

_..,.,..,..,....,..-~.. e
• • ..,

- •.a:ao .......:30p&amp; n.toe••"'

...........

831-4301 . Qienl0 . . ..._.,

. _ ._ _ ...UC.tW.-

~

,.,.._

- ....... -. ... - a . . ..

......

~AUttar. --.--

-QoMatQIMIIIICII-.....

AalllaiiW _ _ _ _ _ .....,.

,. -~-·
...... 10---Clnlt.
........ ....

-.

~-·1111-

--~-

torQIMa !CIIIi1nii'IIJI. tao ......

.

,.._ .... _...,..01 __
--.......
..............-•o..... a.,. . . ·

torQIMa ta-nll101. 7 , ...

.......

�CALENDAR
Monyoflllio-'a c:uu~~-.'" lisled i'1
.,. _....~·the con1&lt;0rof todty'o INue.

ThursciAy- 29
.:lC8-ihf~lf
.._..ole ~.._

1ft

o.t.vonts

-~~-Dr- -L~.
~ of -....ry, Duke lJtWaolty

Frlct.y-~0
MD LUNCH COU.OOUIA - ·
~- E'tlo Coo.roy logillllor. w i l envi'omentlifpolicyln"Et!ol;o&lt;ny. I23Wikoeon.
Elicolt. Noon. SponoQfed ' by ... EnW"""*""'
-Comer.

----·
---.. ----,,Dr. Pllllp A.-*· ..

- C . ..245City. l1 :30o.m.

.
.
_.,......,_.ondll&gt;rlry-.
..,....,....1BITALK"

---.-..-.--~
-u-a.

-Englond. -and - .· o
..-..y
of lllr!M&gt;glwn,
- ~325 Bel.

-e--.~

3p.m.

1 * . - -. - o f M o t r o T - I J .
tnry. 3311 - . 11 :30 o.m. Sl&gt;oo*nd by lhe

EI.£CT111CAL~.....,...._ . , _ . , _ t - - ,

.. wry-_.,...
- al- - ·

-..

'lllo-Tor"'*&gt;LI&gt;rlry l o - o o e o f
ofllbrwy---,.,

--____
a n d - -·

pocplo._

-,....... .. - - D r. lMTy .

-

...,...., c:omp.,y

of

ear-.

l.Mied.
c.nlar In~ Onllrio. 206 Furas.

-

... ,.

.3p.m. ~al2: 45 .

,.AntOI.OQY -~

- _ , ..... -.-._.,Or.
--. -~ofpolhology.

182 F -. 3:30p.m.

~saaca-•
·
_ _ _ _ _ _ Dr.Frril..ongo.

--alc,-• .. a..-

..-..yof-.110F-. 4p.m.

_ . . . , . - ...
-

~ ~

Daly:~

DoMing.

Slate

Jam IAFolce;

-..r regional

-

·

and
- . llogionlolh_Pr
I..IINal. ctolol of _oub_

Agoncy; and . . . · !She! cnon Col·
·_
7:30p.m. cenror
• ' -·- -·
_
~by.,.

- - - o n m o l l . _.
• FNI-Ine-oflou-.

- -.....,.,.,..11&amp;00_

fACIA.TY fiECITAL •

-..-----.Jim.

H111. 8p.m.

,.__._.
-

·

~. -!!Wig I n - Yeti&lt;, ...

-""'-~--.-·
'" .- " - -." "X."
end -

:::..,~~~=·.s:;:=:

St . ~ . ._.,._od by the Conlerf0&lt; Modio Sludy ,
Modio8Uiyl9uftalo•.Hbright·Kno• Ali Gaiety.

1MIA1'11E"
8
-

~
p .M.

Calogo B

c1 LMw

Vldx&gt;r

-lkMI&amp;IIyof~Ann - · 338
Bel. 3 p ••m. Refr.-10 to1ow In Room 308.

Saturct.y-31

FilM"
Blocb llthlonlco. 148 01e1...-.. 3 p.m.
and 7:30 p.m. SponoQfod by SA i'ltomationat
S1udem
Aaaoclation.coordioiiiOf end TlWd ~

tiiC f1LIIS•

ll"ectod by OrMct Koll. ll1is Ia a film obout
end -lnot ractam wl1ich wu ...........SIn BrttaJn
to&gt;dlnlheU.S• .JoMJ. O'Conhoi
. -York
~celodn"~end ~ ...

- -·nice -- ... ~ar::·=:.~=:s-~
muoiiY~

c:omunderatlndlng of.-net response to racism

context of llritioh hlllc&lt;y, m the of the llrlliiii ' KonOm)l. " . .-

aoy "the

aioes

~ - Comol-.
S2 . ~ . - end .

a.--

---·---foncli.:-

S2. C8/IIIC ... . , . . _ b y Calogo B.
~-..gt&gt;&amp;undoy. . . . 1 .

Sl .50.

00..---- ~-.
.._.
._
- ----2111tlor _ ___

olfiQloiY by ... Britilh

I)OYO&lt;iWI*l!.

Court-&lt;&gt;t&lt;lerod ~have been used to pre·
vent ttl public exhl&gt;itfoJt.
·
F~ lhe 7:30 p.m. stiowlno. !;)ireclof·
~ OrMct Koll ... proaent a liltk. Koff
.,. """ a , _ confe&lt;enee. i'1 232 Squire
at11a.m.
aYI.~-AR

_,.,_YOttt_..,..Conots~ .

frlrlot&gt;i&gt;rtall

State Dopw1rnont ot

'fl'-0"·3:30P.m.

iNiyot. Now YOII&lt;

T . . _ - ,,

-y. 322

·

I'HYIIOLOGY - ··
- - end Rogtonol
llllyooonllol
Potfuoloa,
DogNe "'
-

-·

Or. RwncfaJ. Kioclla, - o t,Medicine.

genius."- - ·

TheprogtWnwit-~byvoriouaUJB

donee ~ by · - o f

=~- student

en&amp;«&lt;''bkt

directed,.~

A liaco ... be~ folowi'1Q lhe perf""""""".
F « l n -. cal Jocelyn Mulet838-2135 .

_..

critlc, wil..,....ono&lt;dc-tow . ~

0-

CoutToom.
Hill. 10 o.m. Fnoe. ~
by!Aw'o~--- - e buoy dey: epnoM -.'-&lt;a
.t the Moot
1 1 :30 a.m. wtl faa. on

eo..noom•

-oppro-.fY
1 p.m.
'-on.

the8Q1ft
Love Conol.
a1
Hill a1 -

. . . . . ~-

he ... -

SPECIAL 011 EFFECTIHCI ~
FOR-'IIIUATU"
OrMct A.
Jjyberg. - o f Soclol, ~end
_ __

-..-,_,._-Dr.
2e2~ .

CACRLM"
Who'~l Stop the llo ln. 146 Oietendort. 8 to&gt;d
10 p.m. $1 .50 tor atudeniO; S2 tor othe&lt;s.
THEATRE"

1 · 2 : 20p . m .

Jock-·

GEIIOIITOLOGY - ·
-"'~Dr.
~ ol Poycnotogy. 330 · 3 :30p.m.
5l&gt;oo*nd by the~ C«ltor '"' lhe

..,Study of Aging.

0oc1-n: Col._ e Ptoyero. Comol -

·

8"p.m. $2.50, otudeniO end
ainlor cl1izena $2, CB/IAC IH poyers $1 .50.
- b y C o l e g e B.
Nightly tm&gt;ugl1 Sunday, Aptt 1.

UFEWOIIK-·

UUABF1LM"

-

onc1 Chocotofe 11a1r. 19741. eon--.ce
Theotre. !;qui-e. Col 638-2919
Adm!aion charge.
Sincelts--.nln 1974. thioCOI11odyhU
gamerect aver a dozen lntornatioNtll'ooncn. A den
- o f " ' eeay-golng - - opnt .,_.
-cornea his Constant defeats whle 8a"l'WtQ weoes
., Swher11nd.
A "muat·&amp;ee."'

u--.v ,..,._

0n1go (e.g. Hal·
tuc1nogena ond "onti-ctazy" drugs). ,;!34 Sq,Me.
7 p .m. FrM. For more lnformation.-conblet 110

· 638·2808.

'"'show-·

UUAI MtDfltCIHT FILM"
Mertl...-( 1976). Conference Theatre. Squir&lt;.
12 midnight. Adm;sston ehorlltl .

.Wecllnesct.y- 4
DEPAR- CW 8TATIITIC8 COI:I.OOW*j

· ~·...,..·-~·-.
ProtJomeo M. Olcl&lt;ey, ,UIB to&gt;d IJnlve&lt;Wiy

c.,._ ot W.O. Room A·15, 4230 Ridge Loa.
11Lm.

CHEMICALENGtNEEIIINCISIMHARI

_ , Appllcotlon .. . . -.... OrMct 0 .

Cooney, of Cllemtcal ~.
Clarlleon Calogo. 282 c.-. 3:30p.m.

S..108Shemwl. 4: 15p.m. Coffee at 4.
tiiC F1I.IIS.

... D&lt;oeon. with BNce Lee. - :n...o
-.-c-'-' "e~. rm
IOp.o~. $1 tornon•loepoy&lt;n.

1&lt;.-&gt;g _Fu end flnge&lt;O i'l_

f!!e

-

eye, .. on the

. CACfll.lll"

-·--'"----··
llle-IRIOCWcl.,...,,..,_ . . old
- - . . . . - - --.aloQioll

on the

........ endbylheotate-."
Since itS COITIIJ(ellon ,., June 1978, the film
hU boon lhe torgot ot epwnpoign o f . . _ . m - · " " ' ~~&lt;oducoro c:twoe. no oched·
IMd broodooot on nolionel pUblic - I n the
U.S. - - In JAiy 1978. H hal boon

Cbww Hill,

PURE CULlURE M"
A night of aong, donee, m ~booed on the
lhema o f No!·
IOn, 7:30 p m. 5ponoOfod by Phi Beta Sigma

oltoclta

. . . -.--maodlt

t.AW~VISITOII8-·

plus :n...o

170 MFAC, Blicotl

7an_d 10p.m. $ 1 fornon-feepeyera,.

pooiO -

end

.. Tuesct.y- 3

Entw 1M~. with Bruee Lee.
~F-.

. ttl produc:oB
within the _ . .

--.o m-.cr

condomnod

--·-·

-

10

w-enow-;no
er,
-prot-. ~

_ _ _ _ _ _ ... _ _ _;1MUUA8--..

•

C&gt;C&gt;011fUlity, In lhjo t.co of conllnui'lg
._, H by orgenizod , _ ........,.

LOft CAIIAI. fOIIUII•

-Jam

Syed,

-

- · · ........
- _
170_
11/FN:..
·8
ood10p.m,
SU501or-S21or'-.,
--i'leat.-no
_-e _
-

; . _ - dwngod .... T.-y

- .100.

1MIA1'11E"
........ Calogo 8 PloYoro. Comol ·
8 p . f t i . - - S 2.50. - -

-_._bJCalogoB.
&amp;2. C111111C 1M -

S1 .60.

. . . . -...-.&amp;undoy. Al&gt;&lt;tf1 .

Sund•y- •.
lETAlETA TAU
Organlzaliqoal meeting. 107 - . ..
7 p.m. M Interested pereonelhookt contact"Mike,
836-i11DorStu , 836-41•9 . .. ..

lMIATIIE"

~ c.,._ B 'Ptoyen. Comol ~e .
8 p.m. - - $2 . ~. - end •

~-

--~ (ttlly . 1974) . Cotllor..-

c.. 838-2&amp;1&amp; lor
-c:twoe.
· SQih.

F,_........,_,

.,.._

11oa11er - a -

IIIII

,.,._, __ e.,... .... ,.....

__ _ ------Oiotadi_____
- -~. (1flll .

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

---·
........"""_
_...-.. ..........

_ l n _ ... _ l n . . 11001.

107 T - -. 8p.m. Ev.yone •

(1878). ~ 12 ....... -c:twoe. .

... ......·e~7p.m.; -,
- . . , e:10p.WI. ~-. SQih.

Cogney ond _ ,

WAB .....

U.GAY~'IIOil-·

..........

UUA8-Y--·

T------1
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ohow- --..,-----..

$2, &lt;:1111RC toe poyoro S1 . ~.
Sl&gt;oo*nd by Calogo B.
~IOi)IQht.

-

FLM"
Vall Only LM Once (Fritz I.Jing) . 148 Oie·
7 p .m. Spono()fod by lhe Comer tor
ModioStudy.
Ci'~ ~In lmOCenl fiW'I to be
- t t o -. ew.tobeunad_e_. The
~ oro!Wwy Fondo 111119yhll Sltt&gt;ey.

t...-..

· SQih.

~-

MOnUy-2

_.......,

--C1Iudl-(18311).

DEPAII1JIEIITCWSTATIITIC8COUOCIW*il

..,.

,_....,I
..... M
. lhunday.-5
IMIIIIIII-..v Coloao c l -. Room
4~

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_,, Dr.l.GI'O. Lwto. _ , _ _ . ,

fll.lll•

...... -~ . 148- . 7
p ... ....,_by ... Collier l o r - liU!y.

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Pmah N&lt;&gt; !II

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av • ..-..y 01

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CILL6...-A~~IIOLOCI1'MD

_ , . . . . . . . , . _ 'llloolalycle-

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12,_

l oNp.a. u·ow.~e. -. --.

Nun.fotruf11

,.ydlopl••

.

....... _ . . , _ I n

~011--......_..TiD II

to

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I I

......... Dr. - -. o....-cl

· n•-.....
•. 1&amp;P'"· ~···
•Ce~eM~~f,• ..... ''· .....

�To keep track o'
U/B's cultural .
events through

Mat3l,save
this magnet

..
Women~s Lib among',
the Amazons · ·
Saul Elkin, Theatre Depaltmenr chJir·
ad.or, d.i.rect.or and . mover (e.g.

man.

Shakespeare in Delaware Park). ,...
~ d.ieeuasing with EriC Bentley, critic,
pla)'WI'icltt and professor in . the Theatre
Depuiment., the !od that there waa a lack
a! plays dealing with inues of crucial
.,..,.,.;m 14 women and which offered ~hem
intereating, strong roles. And so Professor
Beat.ley.....te "Tbe"Fall of the.Amaz.ons,• a
kind ol rewriting of n. Iliad. with major
attentioo paid .to tl)e Amazona, that m)'l.bic
1rlbe of larger-than-Jife women who weie
_fteree wanion. Dr. Elkin is diredlng it.
"TTie Fall of the Amazona,• which opena
at The Center for Theatre ae-r.h on
April :IS, deala with the Greek-Trojan wit
at a moment in history when a troop of
A........, aoldien appeara on the out.skirta of
the ~ttle!ield, and proceed&amp; to light both
armiea. Aehillea coafronta the leader of the
A _ . , Pontbeaalea, but itt....,. out that
iDotoad of ligt{ting to kill, they become
1011U111tlcaU7 drawn to each other. They
retreat to tboir ~ve campo abd
rumiJaate over thil attnction.
Aehllloo i.o attnc&amp;ed to · Pontbeaaloa'a
fighting ability and oJ:traonlinary pononality. She, on the other hand, bad long qo
mot an aiel_,. who propbeaiecl (u tbey pro
woot to do in myths) that obo wonld one
ciiQ' - t a man who would chango the
" - a ' phllooophy. The _. poe her a
portroit of the man. and, of coura, it Ia a
portrait of Addlloo. AdUIJoo al.d Pontile~ arbowledp their low for oodl other.
'Bat .... to It aat'l Wlolda will
1oaft blaiMr looit&amp;IIIOD to jolll ... otber'?
~

.......... ,

··ll_publicatio~ of
The Offiee of · ..
Cultural Affairs
Eodoor liurloct,

Wi ltw -

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

AdUIJoo to ......... lllat ...
...., - ......... allloloJiibo ~
iolf..,.ap~mMIIiiD.Be,.._to_
botlle
00 jib&amp; tJdo
be

.........t

-r

__,......., _ lila .............. ~.
tbo .,.......sol...., .. beat
IOidler. ......_ to IIIJoYp the
- ~Notoltloeplaydeolawith the
................ 1eadilll to the ~·
~at

...U..-

.

The " - In tbi.o prGduetion ....
DOt pb:r*al17 bup. But Dr.
EniD ........ them look like ficbtera and
I1JII*. ln the -.pMriC .....-ld of tbi.o
play.'tbe Greob repreo8nt the Eotabllab_.., the""'- are the .....-...lture.
Playinltbe A......... loader, Pentbeaalea,
io Lo111&amp; HID. Jim lkGuiro il Adallloa and
'David '--1&gt; plqo Uly-. Mooique
llojlea,
Scl!ulto. J uHe Kittealey and
Mary Eli&amp;abeth Brown portray the upper
echeloD ol the Amamo army. There are alao
eipt 11-year~ (lirla in the cut
("AmUooetteo." aaya Dr. Elkin).
Coatlamoa are -bY Judy Emllllnp, sot
-.,.by Lewio FalcleQ. ~pby and
- - are by Sieve Parter, andJ!Ay
l.aleo lou composed lbe aeore.

olmaaali

a.m.

Overground
Road Show

�J-Bi.e
tary for lelnilioa; "Who Kiiled Fourth
Wordr' Tbe film followa the illveollgltion
by tlueo filmmokea (Bhoo eallaborated
rill BriaD Hubermu ODd Ed H.,..W of
-the {oroeo ~ Bouolon, Tens,
spec:ifically an attempt to tneeibe "'""'na
for deteriontioa of a hiatorie bladt
aeighborbood iD the downto'li'D -non.
AL the aame u-·that the doeumontary
audieo tbe problem. usiDg a combiDation of
deteetive otory format witla an oboorva·
tloDal "''P"*'h. it lrarDI the . &amp;Ddienee

apiut: aeeeptiDg whot a -. u being
anytbinr otber than a peftiOption ol the
lilmmalr.era. Thil-tioa to the 111bjoct.ive
' nature ol televiood ildol"lll&amp;lioD, to the way
_ , . ......aloleo tho IIINIIIDc. il oriciD&amp;I
IDd iDiporWI&amp;.

-t

oa the hillory· o1 J - a n by Yuriko
Ikeda. p,.or....,r ol Orioalal Art at Wiloola
UDiveralty, TokJo, ODd the -m, of
films - Peter GriDI'o "SIIlato. • an
explorodoa ol that
rolipD of
J&amp;paD, IDd Job Na&amp;llu'a "Farm s.a,.•
Mr. Nathaa, ............. of the J . . writ«, Millllma, ... b'allala&amp;ar o{
J....- DOYOia (iaeJollhc lllablma'o "The
SIJior Who Fell , _ G... with the Boa,"
whicb Amerieu ......_ aaw u 1 61m
·adaptatlaD, wflll Krlo ltriotGilcnoD .. tho
.._., Ia .ur- of • trilatr1 of
clocolm.Urioa, "Tbe
"Farm
BOa(' Ia &amp;vm Ulio UiloQ, u io "Tbe BliDd
Swonloman"; Mr. Natllla wll......, IDd
dlaeuaa the latW ill the Woldlull ThoaV,
on April 28. u a ,........ to tho
of
Art. ,mJcb bolla&amp; .. .OJ 11.

J..-.•

w•

J....-

Special Note
Nqt4ld outlier WilbD G- will be tho

Eoa\ioh . . _ . , Batlor Vt.jtlng
~

,_. tk ..-of ApriiJe and wiD

clve two public leeturoo and

Wadi.......,._,: .... detolls. one .....ting.
~~~a.tm

�..,...

16

Tiebta, where required, are available at the Sqlllre
Hall '~'ida Offiee (in advODCe); remaining tiekot.o al the

~,

AIICIIIDlCTURE LECTUJIE SoUEs:

IIUlUIING WOIIO&gt;WIDE

MosA.e So;fdie. arehitect, Harvard UniVer·
sity, "Mus'llou.!ing Projeets: An ArdJi.
teet's Experienees in ~ North Ameriea,
Puerto Rico, Israel, snd Iran." See April 2
listing.

doorooe bourbeforeevent. l.D. eatdsJDust be preaented '
in onler to purehase liclte~ at Student.,/Faeulty/ Staff/

Alumni rate.

DRAMA ~
"Fannyard" and "Miehfs Blood" two
one-ael plays by ·Franz Kroetz. Harriman
Theatre-Studio. 8 PM. General Admission
$3, Students $1:'50. Sponsor: Department of
Theatre/Donee.

17
'lloeaday

" MUSIC
Frina Ar~chmuka Boldt .and K01twvn.Boldt,
duo-piano; Ltu:a DiCeeco, eeDo, A!ldn!w
lfoLI:er &amp;At&lt;ltz, bsriione (Faeulty Rec:ital).
Baird Recital HaU. 8 PM. General
Admission $3, Faeulty/ Stafl/Aiumni!Senior Citizens $2, Students . $1. Sponsor:
Department of Musie.

DRAMA
"Farmyard" and "Michi'o Blood." See
Mareh 29 listing.

COLLOQUIUM
Saadra M. Gilbert, profeuor of English,
University of California a1 Davis, aut hor of
A ell " of Attentio~~.: 7Tte Poem• oF' D.H.

FILM SCREENING/DISCUSSION

Media Study
grsduate: "BaUybon." Media Study!Bulfalo, 207 Delaware Ave. 8 PM. Free.
Sponsor: Media StudyjBuffalo.

Lawrntce and eo-author of 7Tte Madtoom&lt;l!t

David Steward, Center for

mtAo Attic NmeteemA c-.., Literature

Br Womea: "Costumes of lbe Mind:
Trano,·eatiom u Metaphor ." Clemens (10,
Amherst Campus. 1 P M. Free. Spoooor:
Gnduate Program in Literature and

FILM

~ty .

and Performing Arts.
DRAMA
"Farmyard" and "Michi'o Blood."
Mareb 29 listing.

MUSIC
Bv!folD PhiJM,;.,.;,..tM-Gym. • Fare·
weU apP.,arance. of _Miebael Tilson Thomas.
Clark Gym. 8 PM. General admisaion $5,
Faeulty / Staff $4, Students . $8. Spoosor:
Office of Cultural Affain, with ...istance
from Sub Board I.

MUSIC

APIUL
I
Sudey

DRAMA "
"P'armyard" and ")foehi'a , Blood."
March 28 lioting. _
MUSIC

.

~

MUSIC ,
~
•
NetD Yonl: c.-orl /t&gt;r -Poetry tpod Voice
!Visiting Artist Series). Baird Recital HaU.
8 PM. General Admission U. FaeultyI
Staff/ Alwruli/Senior Citizens SS, Studeats .
St . Sponoor: Department of Muoio.

5
Tllaraday

~

FraDeola Truffaut., . director.
oal&gt;-lltleo. Dlacussion by ~n
H....._. "--ate Pralesior, Center for
Media Stud;J. lM DuD Seotwl Hall, Daemen
Ca11op. 0110 lbiJI St. 2 PM. General
AdiiUaloa 12. lll.udoats l1.50. Sponaor:
Cerele Culturol de ~ Fnnc&amp;ise.
Modi&amp; Stod3'/ Buffalo.

EDclioll

Bukito, orpn (Faeulty Rec:ital).
Pint ~ a-eh, Symphony
Cirde. 5 PK. Free. Warb- by Bach.
Bastehude, 8oiJit.SMu. Coeur Franek
ODd olhen. ~ DapUtmeat of Muoie.

......
__............
'

•

~~J-~·

JIOCI[

._,, 1

6
Friolay

II
W........y

PIMo . . . . . . . OrdMiilra..
"' . - pluilt, Yvar

......... ,... ........ P.ala.tor.(b.
-Ditl. .... be . . - .
AMC8iliL. . . .

.

...c:n--:

a-

~:.""~~~ DoaigD

VIDI10 J!IESENTATtON

~"AD

Exam·
iDaiMm of Media ia AppllcotioD ... lobe a,...
Pelf.,..,._ aod l()'lllal Opon&amp;ie F-."
Media Stud;J/ Bulfalo,IOT Dela-...- Aoe. 8
PM. Admiaaiaa St. 8poa.-: M.dla
FILII~
Kn /IDvJe, CeMm-.,.. M.dla 8Uody
atDdent: 10 lillns ......... tile ......... of
"Eeho ill tbe Luaell8oa" ... .,...,.,. .. tile

u-t., lobe ............. l!tlldJ/AalrUt.

107
(

~

Aw. 8 I'll. .,_..., 111et11o

lllld7/11161o .

aod Friends of

/ MuSIC

s.-nt&amp;.le. ,...,._., .......... at
University o( Callfonlia, Ban Diop:
Compoaet'-in:lleoicleolee. Balnl HalL a-.
100. 8 PK. F ... 111-: 'l'be Ceater of
lbe C..tive aod PwfonniDg Arts.

EXCUBSION

....,
II

8tllll1 /Bulfalo.

II
........y

~

New Yart.
..................... Urlouialllllo: Ala... Afrlea.. . . . . . . . . . I'll. ..,..
. , _ , o.-1• .......... lluolloa.

o-M . . . . _

w_, v..,.,.,•

s_,

-

FILM

MUSIC
&amp;gil P!Uqtder, violin (Vioiting ·Artist
Series). Baird Reeital Hall. 8 PM. General
AdmiAion $4 , Faeulty/Stoff/Aiumni/Se."

sa,

FILM FE8'ItVAL

huiM l~ "The Sealed Soil." Marva
- Nabili, director-, wiU be present t.o dieeuos
his film. Squire ConfertiDce Tboatre, lbiJI
Street Campus. 8 PM. General A_dmisaion
$2, Students $1.50. Spoosors: lnternatioi!J!I
College, Council. on International Studies,
Intensive English Language Institute,
U. U.A.B., Iranian Graduate Student
Association, Media Study/ Buffalo.

A" EVOiti"ff of Film.• bl/ Ckarlu and &amp;r
Eamer. Ten short films by two of lbe
foremost designers o( the twen~
eentury, introdueed by Profeosor Peter
lleyner Bonham. 336
Hall. '8 PM.
Free. Spoosors' Sebool o( APebiteeture aod

A ROLL CONCERT

nior Cltilens
8tudoats 11.
Departmeot o( Muaie.

.,~--~=

'

•

Benefit for CoDoge B's eoncert program .
CorneD Theatre. 8:30 PM. Admission·
eharp - . eont:aci College B.

- . ,._._ Balnl Rodlal HaD. 8 PM.

c:--rtD ...

%0
Friday

Progrsm ineludes the first performanee of
''Three Pieces (or Young American.'· three piano pieces by Aaron Copland,
arranged for string quartet (for lbe
composer) by U/B music prafessor/ pianist
Yvar MilthasboH. Baird Rec:ital Hall. 8 PM.
General Admission $3 , Faeulty/ Staff/
Alumni/Senior Citizens· $2, Students St.
Sponaor: Deportment of Music.

w-:

lllJSI()

JIOCI[ CONCERT
Pr-eulll Gad . _ . rCanleiJ
Thoatre. 8:30 PM. AdmlsaiiiD Sl!. Spoa.r. .
College_B:

Qowe String Qvartet (Faeulty Recital) ..

FILII SC11EENINGID18ClJ8810N
1'Niod Fil"": "Tbe Man Wbo Loved

JftJIIC

fiLM SCREENING/DISCUSSION
,
KeitA Stm6om, Center for MO!dia Study·
• stude nt: ·•plaza Hotel,""BuHalo Time and
Temperature," "No VacAncy, " "Radio/
isotopes," "Material Belationo." M~
St udy/Baffalo, 207 Delaware Ave. 8 PM.
Free. Sponsor: Center f&lt;ll' Media Study and
M.edla Study / Buflalo.

.MliSIC

.

Ga.,. cluaiea1 woodwind group (3
oboeo, 2 - . , Engllsll horn). CorneD
Theatre. 12:30 PM. General Admisaion St; Sludent.o $.75. s.......,..: CollepB.

f19wirw

FESTivAL

Iftlilh Iran: "The Cycle," Darius Mebrjui,
director. Squire Cooferenee Theatre, Msin
Street Campus. 8 PM. General Admission
$2, Students 11.50. Sponsors: International
College, Couneil on International studies, ·
Intensive English Language Institute,
U.U.A.B., IriDian Grsduste Student
Association, Media Study/ Buffalo.

MUSIC
David. &amp;A""""'· COOipooer·in·Residence:
Lecture-Demo. Baird Hall Room 100. 8 PM.
Free. SJ&gt;oa-: The Center of lbe Creative

y_.JNcJwuAoff:· • Ameriean Piano Musie"
(Foeulty Recital). 20t.ti cent ury musie.
·f eaturing Buffalo Pftmiere of "l!iano
Wal-" (1977) by a number of eontem·
porary ~:e . g. "Minute Waltz (or,
8/4 ! 1/8)" by Milton. Babbitt. "JCodern~
Love Walt&amp;" by Philip Glua, " For a Happy
Oceuion" by \Tirsii Thonuoon, etc. A1ao
worb by Chriatian woilt. Iomes 8ellaro ,
(dedicated to Yvar Mikhubofl}, Henry
Cowell, Georp Anlbeil , Charleo Griffeo,
Clwleo lves aod Birwn McLean. Baird
Rllc:ital a.u, 8 PM. General Admission $3,
Faeully/ SI.affi}.lumni/Senior Cithenl $2,
Students $1.

MUSic·
College B musicians. CorneD Theatre. 8
, PM. Ffee. SpollliClr: CoDege B.

......,
II

.

Bu !rip ID :r.-ID; laoaladoa Yiolt to
Oatario Beleaes Comer. Betara Sada7,
loaviaa T-to at 11 lllkiiiiPl- C.U
. Colloge~llle ....,....,, 111&amp;-41'15. lor dNII.

v•

�...., =
~

II

ltiYa. llll4t JW. 4 Pll. rr.. a,-..
Gndlllta ""-'- •. ~ uil
Callop ........,. - .........

IIAY
4

FrillaJ

---.o8Y YC'ftJU
Aloa Jl'wte. ......... ol _ . It Y*

·.u,..u oi!IIQ1MIIa . . "AIGul-- ol

MUSIC •
5
sa-8y JlicAal A......., Gild J - C...ta/laol,

......... ~ ............ llorloo).

. . ..... Bal. 4 PI(. " ' -

u..--tol .....

a,-:

duo-guitar (F...wty Recital) . Baird Reeital
HaD. 8 PM. Geaeral Admiosioa IS.

Faeulty/Stalf/AIDIIIDi!Senior Citizen~ 12,
Studeato 11. SpoD80f': Departmeat · of
Musil:.

A8CIImiC'nJD LllCnJIIE iiau:IJ,
IOitlliNG WOIIUJWIDE
NeMol .llaooli, 11'&lt;111-. Kauoo State
thltrwolly, "Uoer PortldpetioD iD tlri&gt;u
........., LoadaD ODd a.pdod. -See April2

• •

.........,.

....

IIU8R:

~

no-,

6
!;uday

borp (Faeulty Recitll).

MUSIC
Overground Rood Sil&lt;&gt;w: guitarists Jerome
Barber (traditional and blues) and Charlie
Stiffer (6- and 12-&amp;triag). Cornell Tbelt.re.
·8:30PM. 11. Sponoor: College B.

Ccnel Tlleolre. 8 PM. Free. SpclliOr:
n.-atM.,.._

PW:IIIY IIIWJIIIIG

~ . . . . The Kiva, Boldy Hall 8 PM.

FJw.

a,._..,

~ ..

Eapob Deportment &amp;Dd
Writen, IDe.

FIUI8011DiJNG/DISCU8810N
~ /l1r Nt11D llfblt: HoUia Frampton•
...... ODd ~ MCI.ioos at his epie
work, "Jbpllm. ~ Albrigbt-KDox Art
Gdory. 8 PM. O..ral Admisoion 12,
Gollooy Mealbero/S~ 11. SpclliOn:
c.ter lor lledla 8tady,.Aibrigbt-KDox Art
Gollooy, Media 8tudy/Bul(alo.
ll&amp;UIA
"TTie Fall at the Amaa.a,.. by Erie
...,_, ditwd.t br Saul ElldD. 8 PM.
'11lel&amp;n a.oardl, 881 Main St.
a-..1 ~ 18. 8tadenta ODd Senior
Cllilna SUO. ADS ........ IICCOJllled.
a,.-: Cealar for Tlleolre ReoMreb,

c.. ...

wllll-

r.- ADS ODd N.Y.

Ceudloo tbe Ana.
IT

·r.w.,

·

g· ,

'l1oo-N- Yon c -

28lilll!lc.•

of.._, ...

\(lice, loore April4.

Spo.......: CouDcil 00 lntornationai'Studiel:
· (Jap&amp;D- Program), IqtoDOive EDglisb
Languqe lnltituto.

.

BUFFALO FOI.J[ PE811VAL
Room, Squire Hall. 8 PM.
Spo-: UUAB.

.

c

~
. VloliD ReciW. Saini
Recitll Hall, UJB MaiD Campus. 8 PM. .
GeDeralAdmiaoioa$1.50, U/BCommUDity/

Ststo

ll&amp;UIA
"TTie Fall at tbe ~... .,. Erie
a.t~o1 • cllnqed .,. Baal mm. Soe April

MUSIC
Frank Cipolla,
direetot. Cornell Tbelt.re. 8 PM. Free.
Sporioor: Department of Musie.

U'/B W"Hid Eru.... bk,

Senior CitizeDI/Stgdoats $1. ADS voolchen ·
...,.pled\ SpclliOn: The .Center of the
CrMtive ODd PerfonniQg Ana abd •
· ~t of Musie.

Z9
s-Jaj

MIWALO 1'01.&amp; PE811VAL
CoocorL rm-re &amp;om, Squire Hall 8 PM.·
·Admiloioo. ~!pour. UUAB.

DR.uiA

"'The Fill of the Amazons, •• br Erie
.Beatle7, dirocted br S.ul Elkia. Soe April
28 listing. Note: Suaday performanee at S
PM.

Buffalo.

10
'11nonday
te
13
Sada7

Friday

SoWrday

Berio, llobe!-t Dicit, • Tobiu Pider &amp;Dd

Gallert- 8 PM.

tEcruu:

.

IIIAY
........1

17
~--y

.

J - . H - prol-.r o(EDglilh, Daemon
c.llop: "Art ODd Totollt.arianiom: The
Soriot ODd Noli Experitmeea." 201
Clemeaa, ~ Campua. S PM, Free.
st&gt;o-'1: Center lor the Pl)'ehologiul
StlldJ of the Alta, Procnm in Literature
ODd SocietJ.
MUSIC
•
U/B P....,....,. Eru... W., • Jan Williams,
cliNdor, with uUtiag artists, Niagara
B~ Quilltot. Baird Recital HalL 8 PM.
· I'We. ~: Deportmoat of Musie.

......• , .

ll&amp;UIA
"'The FaD of the " -·.. br Erie
a.u.,. . . _ .,. !Ja1il mm. Soe April
• liMIIJ. NOTE: SwodQ-

PM.

,...,..,_a

Naa·Prollt 0.,.

u.s. Paotace

PAID
.
Bdalo,N.Y.
l'lnd&amp; No. 111

JAPAN TODAY 8EIUEII•
· •
Filma: "Farm Soul" b7 Job N4tlt4a aad
"Sbiato" by Peter Grilli. Woldman Tb.atre,
112 Nortoa.Hall. Ambent Campuo. 8 PM. . &gt;
Free. Spoaoar: latoDOive Eagliab ~
laJti&amp;ute, CoUDCil on Iatorutlobal Studies.

FILM SCIIEENING/~,SSION
JllffUI ,Btu.

doenmeoitory

cmc-· hla film

lilmmiker

"'The Ollvo
Troea of Juatic:e." Moving fltery ala r.lniiy
during tbo Freoeb Alprian ....niet.
Reeeived Critic's Prue ot 11112 ean- Film
Feotival. 1a Freneb witb Eoigliab IUbtil.loo.
Beaefit oereeniag for Notlo.W E . . - - t
lor the Art. Cballe...- Grant for Media
Study/Buff&amp;lo. MariDe Midland Bank
Auditorium, 1 MariDe Mid1aDd Ceater. 8
PM. $10."

oereeDI ODd

·

VIDEO SCRD:NJNGIOISCUSSION
Vi~ke s~ Center for Media Study
graduate: ·v;~· ODd ·~.·
Media Study/Buffalo, 207 Dela......., Afo B
PM. Admiuion $1. ~ Media
Study/Buffalo.

FILM
"ReJDOr Bonham Loves Los Angeles" made
in 19'72 for BBC Television, dired.ed by
Juliu Cooper and writtoll &amp;Dd narniA!d by
Petet Reyner Baalwa. 335 Hayes Hall. 8
PM. Free. Spo..-: Friends of tbe Sebool of
Ardllleeture aad Eaviroameatal Deoign.

3
'nona7

JAPAN TODAY SEIIIES•
Yt&lt;riko llcMJ4,' profeooor of Orieapl Art,
Wueda Univenit)', Tokyo "A Hlst.criul
Sketeb of J~ Art." :W.. Gallery, 6tb
Door Coj&gt;en Hall Leeture ;. in two porta:
10-11:1!1) AM ODd 1-2:80 PM. Free. SpclliOr.
'Intensive EDg1isb Langup laJti&amp;uto, • 1l:l
Council OD lnteraational Studieo/J'~

Prosram.

- lZ

Cborleo ' WuoriDea. Albrigbt-KDox Art
Ge-.!Aclmiosim IS, U/ 8
CommUDity, Gallery Membora, Senior
Citisoaa, Btudeato rib ID eards $1.' ADS
•oaeben aeeeptecl. Spo-. The Center of
the CrMtivo ODd Performiag :Arto.

28lillling .•

falo.

. 11

"""*'"""·

MUSIC

DRAMA
"The Fill of the Al!latoaa.... by Eric
Bentley, dired.ed by S.ul Elkia. See-April

FILM SCIIEENING/DISCUSSION
10
'l'llanda7 Robert Polidori, Center for Media Study
student: his reeeat film, ",Erb&amp; Lunga" and
reeent video 'worko. Mr. Polidori bu bad a
number of 1-man abo~~ neb placoo u
tb~ Whitney Muaeum iD N.Y. aad the
W aliter Alta Center in 'Minneapolis. Media
Study!B~. 20.1 Delaware Ave. 8 PM.
Admi.ssi!la ll. Spo.....: Jbclia Study/Bof·

• MJPPALO FOI.J[ FE8'I'IVAL .· ,
Coatty danCe
Fillmore Room,
Squire HaD. 1-4 PM. Free. SpclliOr:
UUAB.

Ewtag•for N., Mtuic: Wow ofLuciaoo

VIDEO SCREENING/DISCUSSION

Wedaeeday Jamu m.e, • doeumentary filmmaker:
"Who Killed Fourth Ward?" Media
Study/Buffalo, ro7 Delaware. live. 81&gt;M.
Apll!lllio,P 11. SpclliO!: Media Study/

FILM 8CREENING/Dtllctl8810N
Tom De Witt, lilmmllker: "A...._,_,,"
"The Lellp," "Fill," "Zierot in 'Ooltt4
Spaee·.· Media Study/Buffalo, 207 Dela·
Ave. 8 PM. Aclmlaoioa 11. SpclliOr.
·
· ..Media Study. ·

ware

30

w......,..7

VU)E0/8CBEENING A Df8CU8810N
71e Moviflr ~/S~: VIdeo
JII'OIII"UDIDer Jobn Minko.,.y will obow
. and dile.. lapel made by prominoa!
vidoGIIkero. Media Study/Buffalo, 207
Delaware Avo. 8 PM. Admiolioa 11.
l!!&gt;oun: r,fedia Study/Buffolo, UnivordJ·wido Coaunluee .. tbo Ana. Aioo Ma7

31.

Exhibits

.

•

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>SiATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

VOL. 10 • NO. 2t1
MARCH 22,1871

WB seeks policy
on admitting them:
Cabinet studying it
., .Ioree llucll-.ld
AoporlorSIIII

•

Deciding If end when to · admit
ex-offendera on perole to Institutions of
hiD'* adUC8tlon hal traditionally _ ,
...... whloh mllkee..., more -ooae
clvllllberterf811ollll'-lt. The t.-.gady of
the IMry c.mp0e11 Incident only
~ the difficulty lor admlnlatralors or . . . colleges.
Juat how lnatltutiOna can . , . _
the constitutional tlghto or ex-offender

_

~1c81111

wet take idequate -ureo
to protect ihe aafety 811d property of

other lluclento Is a QOmplex qUeoflon.
Tha U/8 Ac8demlc Cablnat Is tackling It
thla a.M~ter.
·
Ron Stein, ....JIInt to the Pnlaklent
8lld a ,- fi*Tiber 'lit"" the Cablnat, Is
the dellbelallons.
Unlltc. _,.. 01'* achooll In WNY,
U/B cunantly hal no pOliCy In the - .
According to Stein; BONY'a .S~a .
-'loMtOn farfll -di!JM ..., elicit
lriro.m.tlon about crtmiNII convictions, 10 It Ia difficult lor the Un'-altv to lind
out II 811Y or Ita atuclento " - a ctlmlnal

...,_,lng

long la$tl

reoons.

At tlrMI, perole off'-"' Inform
otflcllllaabout the ex~ - u a of
a atuclent, but, In genn, aucfi
oornmunloatlon efforts . . "apotty at
beat ," up Stein. More freQuently,
.IOICIRI juat aMI out In the dOnna, or a
atudeilt'a cilmlnal reoons 11 d l - . 1
by .:elden! by Unlverllty Pollee If sort of un-.cl check (I.a., to 1.- the
- . h l p of
ate.) II naood«&lt;.

........

a-·

..,.._Main, thai

811tutad , _ N!11fdlng
ex-oftlndlq
·1,.... of the lnatllutlon
- ...
- the
the
rlghta of the lncl~. II will not bl a
rMcllllllam thai Cllprtw. mlnorttlaa of
811 educellon, • he lnalllld.
e..n ataunc11 civil llbertllrlano gen..ny .,._ thai .,., Individual on Dlii'ole
II "on~ In aoclely," ~teln .

Co"rfstruction contracts are awarded for
first phase of physical ed_uca_tion complex,
$3.5 million Amherstlecture hall "facility

-......---"""""·

8J John T. Thurston

area and a number of offices.

Two lon~walted Amherst facilities
got theJt&gt;ahtled this wee!&lt; with the
a..O
oonetructlon contracta for

The lectu,. hall
The twa-.tory l.actu,. +iall, dealgned
by Hamilton, Houlton, Lownle, lllchl-

_...,
Education

8lld Reclwmlon

"Colllplex 8lld I L.:IUN Hall bull ng.

~ the oontracto from · tbe
Stall Unl--'tv Conatructlon Fund·
..... the Sllafried COnatructiOn Com1*1}'_ of Buffalo, for the $12..9491000
HPER fact lily, 8lld Le Cesae Drot-..
Contracting, Inc. of Rochlater, for the
$3,474,000l.ectlft Hall .
Construction on both Is el(p8Cted to
begin durlllg the next .-...1 weel&lt;a.
Tltgatadcomplallondateaaremld-1981
tor u...t.actu,. Hall and ..ny-1982 lor ·
the HPER building.

=
==
=..:,. ~,!ri!ct
u:.=~wc~
lnltltutlonal

liability,

1c Clblnll thought II beat to
-sort of policY"-·
Tha Ceblnll ,...._, aeya Stein, that

the

-mctlon lor l*laln ctlmaa hal llffla
br no bllrtng on whethw .an exorr.ncler Ja admitted to the Unlverllty,

=::,--the~~~'::...-=,;

:r:.

--'ing llllohMiama wlh g-dUII ~ 8lld ptO¥Idl for a

atructUNCI lippaala prooldlft. .

HPER

'

DaaiQned by ..chltect Robert r.
Coles of Buffalo, the multi-story HPER
otructute will oontaln a field house-lor
buketball, volleyball and a track. It will
- a ,_.lng capacity of up to 10,000.
Alao houaad In the complex will be
alx hendball couna, a therapy room,
1oc1&lt;ar rooma, an equipment check-out

of~ICIm~rfalx leolu!W

halls wrth CIIIICitJea fWIIIIng
from 75 to 450. Each of the 1001111, four
of which are octagonally lhapld, wlllheve Ito own projection booth end
acoeaa to one of .-...1 spacial

pntn~;.:~r~~-:.· equipped

with, a fuma hood and "wet 181&gt;"
utllltlea, will enable each of the rooms
to be used by all University dlaclpllnea,
according to Jamea E. Rozanski of the
Office of 'Facilities Planning . ,.
Containing approximately 20,000 net
square feat , the otructura wllll'Oflolot of
e steel frame with buff-colored prwcaat
concrete panelo1 dark bronze aluminum
framing and ooora, ·and a bronze.
tempered -glass. ~tlng copecltles
Include two rooms at -76, three at 225
and one at 450.

loon to Ganenll Education
Dr. John J. Peradotto, dean of the
Division of Underqred~ate Educallon,

cOmmented on the tlmell- o1 1111
l.actu,. Hall contract . - d.
"The MnQUriOIIII*It of the naw
l.:tuN 11811 building Ia a gocl...t

I....,,..=·
-o.n.w
ft..
~'W.:'.. '=:\
r..:r.:J ==~IIURICI-::=,

oornlng at tllla ttma, -.111n . . ..clae!ll!

~~~,.;

·-=

ell. . . . . . til

the-

•

~..r!m ~- ~s.::..,Hal~

.:

1-1• to the Mal end of Capen'a Nortor
wing by a CCMNd pedeatrtan walkway.

Central, d_....nThe basic deaiQn of the HPEf
building, which contalna 98,000 ne
square feat, oonsllll of a oantral, a-.
span open opactator auff9UIICII&lt;
on the north, Mal and - ' by tlnl
1-'• of other ~ for !hi
Department of Raine~~ on, Athletic!
and Related lnatructlon.
•
The llret 1-' will oontaln loaM
rooms, the equipment check-out- r
.... 'CGAI'

I

' .... 1.111. 1

General Ed II: ·Language still pending

�_......,, ..... ,,
tha Nllglra Frontier which II composed
of two ~tati¥111 from -="
IICMOI. Th8 conaortlum consideR
comDiated 81 laat one ,.... of colleela
level atudtea
1-.ah ona of their 8chools while the
olfencMr 11 etlllln prteon. If ettar.eemng
his or her earttenoe, a parolea wenta, to
continua his or her etudlea on campu:,
then a th~ commlttea reviews
tha application. The declalon to accept
mu8l be unanlmoue.
Betore allowing ex-&lt;~lfendera on
campua Cenlalua nwtews tha appllcenta . .n tht'Ough an lntemal
atructureo Aocordlng fo l.arO)I Mitchell,
dlrtiCior of Special Acadarnlc l'roiiiW!Is
there, tha collega "automaflcally
retacts" MX offenOin. Also, when
acreenlng .,Picanta for the second
time, Mitchell noted, the review
comm~ rei lea heaYIIy on recorda and
recommendations p-led by the

---whO "-

•Conati'uctlon proJects
of the Oepartmeirt of RecrMtlon,
Athletic&amp; end ~eted Instruction, aald
thlubout the new building :
"We"- been walling a!Qoa time for
thle ftiCIIIty u one whl~·· rs IICII'ely

~'!:."'!x-olfendar Ia accepted for
admlaalon, he or .she must malnt..n
commutar status. The consortium
-leta the etudent In securing an .
apwt11)81'1t tnd furniture and also
provides aome money to help get him or
her established.

whO

IINab a CYCia of dapandeuca

Robert ftauarath,
admlnlstera
the consortium out of Deamen, relayed

=~· ~~et"::c,,• o~y11 w1~1 ~

=m:;~f.t~ -=~~~me.~.:

among students pwtlclpetlng lit

want and nead more~. "Staying
on campua doesn't ---~e cycle ol
dePendency. It's Important that exolfendara reaffirm their IndependenCe,"
he explalned.

generate a

more receptive

feeling

vwlous recneetlon and athletics ptO-

grwna."
The steal-frame atructure will have an

:'=.rs~ll~:~~o '::,":~=~~

tha Capen-Talbert-Norton buildings and
almllar In color .to those used on the
Cooke-Hoch'etetter towera.

•General Education
be addrwaad under o8-2 and 8-5. The
-~ttWDIJIIIIIIwd .

~~·rr.~d.r.J,':20e~~~t=

olf~~~~h~!r~~~~ual~ :!:3:;

f~ C::::~s~~:c1/~l::'J ~-m=

Dunne noted that applicants to
Niagara convicted of sUch crimea 81
'IIP8 Of Braon WOUIQ
likelY not be admitted.
So far, nine ex-&lt;~lfendera aaaoel&amp;ted
with the · con~um have graduated
with B.A. degreM whl'- atllloln Attica;
IIWI haft purauad and received their
degreea on campu-.
Hauarath, Dunne. and Mftchell '!Pree
~lng,

~~~~::.,-. ':ucY:'t~l~f~~~
tlon lbout thel~ criminal recorda Ia

:::: ~t:";C :.:~:.:=:...~~J~
volunt- the lnform8tlon to fellow
students. ·

Buffalo Stata'a pollq'
.
Since the Campbell lncldent, Buffalo
Sjate haa Instituted a Screening
Commlttea for Special Neada Applicants which revlewa the applications of
ex-&lt;~llendera . Previously, the -review

~h~n~~e:ec:&gt;! =~:"~~~~~~
lee.

According to Kavtn Ourl&lt;ln, State's
A&amp;R dlrtiCior, tha committee generally
does not accept any appliCant who haa
not been released. for at Iall one year.

~~ee~~~=t~ear:'~~3:S" :re~!

parole offloera nO\IIY echool tllflclala or
the application contains references to
course woflt-takeA~n prison. ·
Ourklnhaaalso found th81 even when
parole offloera Inform the college of an
ex-olfendar, lila almoat lmpoealble for
the committee to ~ what the
lndlvtdual w• chargacl with l:!efore plea
bergalnlng took P'- or the history of
the Incarceration. When an ex-&lt;~ffender

~~~.~.~g:r:_~~=m=

spacial counaetlng) to Improve the

chancea of etaylng ~rolled.

~':Sbt:.':e t~~~ts automatically

vous activity occura In dorma where

ECC

~~~~~~·1~~~.:.anc::~~~::

does not have an admlaalona policy for

which gives a second scrutiny to

.ex-&lt;~ff~er ~~~ac!:.,:l;i~~"~
Bilker IIIIo propoaac! adding one
~ to tha tat ot ~ that stated
~berated, the final decision Is made
tha GE Comm~ had no Intention of ' by Or. Robert Marahall , o_,•s
"Jeopanllzlnll thl accreditation atatua"
president, and at Nlaoare, by Father
of ..,.., unlf at tha Unlveralty or of
Joseph Dunne! the Unlveraltys execu...,ding any unit's degree require-. tive vice pres dent and Ita representative to .the consortium.
11*111. That puled.
Hauarath aaya that at Oeemen, the
Profalor Herbert Relemann tried
nalure of the criminal tiCIIvlty doea not ·
uniUCCel8fully to amend Baker's
preclude edmlaalon; rathar, special
propoaal with one which would give the
consideration Ja given to ex-&lt;~lfendera
axacutl.. officer In a unit the right to
_.pt 81udentl In that unit from GE
, . . " - t • that conflict with mainFr. Dunne, 'hun't experlencad any
Wiling accreditation. Before tha vote,
problema with ex-&lt;~ffendera, ao the
~n w.med Senatore that If
Institution feel&amp; an additional acreenlng
-"-lna _ , , axemptad from
Isn't - . . r y . "l don't like to make
aaine of the rwqulramente, tha unit
'rules unleaa . they' re neaded," he
mlgllt be lorwd to ''bacotne a purely
explained.
prOfeaalonal achool."

=~~~:!.\~~~.~. =:~ f~

10 myths refuted ,
general ed that requires It to be
lmprac;tlcal or unworidly, J..IIYine
countara.

5. '"=..r':".::.e:' !\':.:
C
llhould look to othera for
lneplration, llhould not Ji.ust borrow

'7'JI:i.lng for.ganaql ad ahould

blain w i t h - - cur..ntty .....
offirad: No, aaya LIIYine; define

QOala llrat, then design coureea to
fill the bill. That l!llkM for a more
coherent program.
7 . o.n..l ad ................
IlDia pallllcal - . Ita 1111baWioe
may be aducatlonal, but "MIIIng It"
and carrying It out 11 a political

......... __.._
proollf8.

.....

I. On!Ja--lalllldadto

~ Suoll Illata makae

•.....:=-=..
..
.._
.......................
:......._
IUDII88Ia II "-111 be a-W11 to
wliliiMw ..... ollludlnt lillllraly to
Pfl)llt . . . . .......,. the

oantlnulnget~~ma~~on---.

.........
=::=c:.-::
10.

t.11 In • ••• _.. •

--~---= Aolually,
............

...........

.-::..:

.::::-'
. . . ::::..•,_ 111111111
IIUIIIIIII._ C111oDtL

,nit\l~.~'"o'rr~tT!~: ':0:~ ft:~

ex-&lt;~ffendera.

According to Dr. Judith Crowley,
campus academic dean ECC Ia a full
opportunity college so .Ia mandeted to
admit all students who have a high
school diploma or equlvlllency. If an
applicant does not have the acad&lt;!mlc
credentials to gain entry Into a
pwtlcular department of hla or her
choice, then he or she Ia ~ted Into

~ J':;'.!:~l~~leeao~~eild~ lJ:

other students, have to acramble for
apwtmenta ,_.the campus.

AAUP

'str-ike~'

at Boston U.
· The AAUP threatened Boeton Unl-slty with a •warning" atrlke late lui
WMk - marking wliat Tile NrN York
Times deacrtbed u "yet anothar angry
tum In the lnc:r.alngly blttar relations
between prohlaaonl 81 the nation's
fourth largeet priY8te unlveralty and
John R. Silber, Ita outapollan president."
BU ctalma aalary 1 - demanded by MUP would "drift It Into
bankruptcy and prloe It ~ tha
...., of many atudanta." tfla T/mu
0

~.

that

Prealdant Silber arguea, too
faculty must gtw up their "ndluciiial
quaal-manaaertal roW' In axallanlle for
"the protactiOna of untonlam." No more
pear nwtew ot r.x.ttJ Input Into
currtoul•"""-·
he.,..
Silber hea callad tha faculty
~ colfeahouH unionlata," They haft
branded him .. .,.. •autocr.t."
Silbar hea - - ' faculty unionization at BU for· !he 1111 two r!l&amp;fl· Hla
actlona "-drawn oltatlona for unfair
tabor practtoaa from tha National LabOr
Ralatlona ao.d
°
The •
action achadulad for

._,.Ina.
and toclar
0

~

•• Glllad a

poalporiamanr by llllluiiY; 11wr lnMnd
to IIIIM tha dey8 up 81 tile ani of the
- . . But, If tha actiOn
budge Stlbet, thlrt ,..._ for a
lult-eoale ....... lllellnnlna-AIN114.
BU 1acu1tY _.lv ac:aftld.down their
,.....llllllldlnwltlatoacallfor14per
Ollit In 1111 OIIINIII ,_, wHh 1111111•
~In till nat two.
. . . aye lila OnMiwtly ..,, alford

*'-",

11 ancllhlll MOUICY 110110111 -

ontne au

a . ....::.
.
~Iiiii will - I t In ~

~

.. 1101 .... - - of oonatruGtM
~~~~told .... ,__ "It •••
....... - o f ............. "

.

�-ZZ.1t71

__

,._.. .._..

Soaps: 'Escapist' or determinants of social values?

Nile...,... .......

llr ...........

"Televlalon hu to be reeponalble for
the trwnendoue poww Jt hu ewer the
eudlenoe," uya Sw8h Felder, who
~ 8loblwi on the ec.p open~,
Rjan'e Hope."
.
Felder, Mel a ·comiWI)I of four;
~lcfp8ted In a panel dhlcuaalon,
Inside L()!lklng Out ~ How the Oleat018
Loc!'! m ~ OpeNs," taat Friday.
._. HutiiWh "Who
Joining htr nr. Ed a.., Dn "The GulcllnQ .
Ll :" Mary Mllnlatlerl, a wriiW· for •
'• Hope;" !Iober! Drt-'1, former
•
producer of the canadian aoap opera,
"High Hopea," and F,.,k Zingale, vice
prealdent In cNrtle of diiY!Ima IQma at
Young .,d ""'*=--NY, the advwtlalng ~ Whk:tl ~dt.; "AIIolhet
Wortil." Dr. Saul _Elkln-tt-tcn:-" o(
U/B's o.p.r!mant. of
Mel a
formw 8Cior on "The Edge of Night,"
wu Pllllel moderator.

Crltlca..ld--.

Latw Friday, WEBR newaman John
Martin moderalad a penel of crtttce anjl
Panelists ware Ernanueti
&amp;o.noa, author of. "The Soap Opera
Book," Jon-M~I Reed, a arndlcated ·
.columnist whooe cojurnn, "The 50IIp
Report" ap..-aln the Courlet Elqnu,
Eileen DouahartY, a rnembar of a
community {._... group aile! a ec.p
~ Jan, ..-:! three U/8 atuelanta:
om Raid 'KWr, Harold Goldberg, and
Rou Cllapman.
1
•
•.
Reed, who haa . .~ JIIICI wrl~
~·:lliiiD•JC!f ,the...laM. eight-::"' lor ~ the t'-lilcil QUitfaa_ II!

pt!'

.

~

'

~~JI!~ra
"JecWrtz~Aa" In - . . . . . . .

The dhlcuaalon . . . 118ft of •
two-day conf.....ae apon.ored by the
Program for the Study of Daytlma TV
and the o.p.rtment of Communication.
Theconf....,cedlrectorwuOr. Mary B.

c.aata.

Spon-. have theuy on'"-'

dec"t'
d: ~~~zo:,or, ~'tat"i':ue rn':
etory, the Idea hU to be claared with
0

the executl- and th' edvartlslng

r.c,:;
=~~=-the~=''~
the aponaqr,"
Hufawft r-""&lt;1

lndlcatlld that hll lgency
usually doMn't say no to an.· lssue
unteN, ''they 1n11't sure of Ito
outcome.• Once the Idea hail baen
cleared a'l the executive 1eoet, wrttwa
ant than prMented with It and asked to
develop II.
In the caae of "Another World ,"
Zingale explained, It w• decided to
develop the 1 - of child abu•. One
writer oould not adequately develop !he
tuua, so the Idea d10PIIed for
awhile. Anothw wrtter aaw a illtt.....t,
-~approach, so now "It wtll ·
ba
, nor lmpooed on the
clw8Cier, uyaztnpe.
·
Zingale

....

'-..w.rrtnato-~
Mkl,
"""-' . . , ,
..,

.,.,.,

thOugh~·-·...­

"Anofhw World" Is the flrat to adopt a
90-mlnut. format . Felder, whose
"Ryan's Hope" Ia one of the lew
hall-hour soaps remaining, contends,
"EVerYone gooe • Insane plrttl"'l.. a
30

ttomeelc...._ ......

:::&amp;~
=\':O:re u~ ~":~ h=
good quality too."

1

PaG

Pnx:Wr and Gan!ble sponsors five of

the 12 networ1&lt; .-p Of*M· Hulswlt
lhla apon- (hla ~ • a
"rathw unkl• ~ · they're not
the big bed wolf. He expltlned that

In an lnfonnal' poll of a)uclents, Kerr
reported , he fOilnd that atudenta u• TV
· to the transition from htah school
to cottega. Although vlewliiQ tlmt
dWindtoe to only one or two
~~J f~ ;-udents, • •
from home for the first time, · fiMitlte soap u the only r.m111er thing
In their riew envtronn.lt.
. Aakad If - Ia approeched r-tty
In the .-pa, Raad tuQII8atad honlaly
Isn't thaq~. The~ Ia, why
Ia - uldJ
uaed Ia
at all?
the alm,P.I!
-·
Reed
..,....
II .nr.cta
~

=

u;,~tsw~,:tr,:•:;:::: ;J~~ ~~~n~

thouaht It Impossible, • Hulewlt
continued. "I'm atilt su~ It can be
done.• Hulawlt explained that the CMX
machine, a videotape recorder, mede It
technically possible for the on&amp;-hour
format .to be done !n one day, s day
• which Ia anywhere from 7 to i 2 houre
long. Zingale aald the! "Anothw World"
--.t to 110 mtnutae becauae, "1he
program hU enough aubatance for lt."
He eont•decl !hay "never would have
gone longer If It would have reduced the
QUality.• At tile lima of the conference, •
tt.e had baen no atudtoe of audience
response 10 the tengtharied format.

It • one ot the

-...,.,
ratings,
Aead aoap operu.

J::r::''·

AudlencareeCtton
For both Felder and Hulawlt, atiMI
enoountwa with eudtencea occur often.
Hulawlt rataYIId the usual experience:
"Are ,YOU? What . . you dol~ · hwa?"
Hulswlt'a reaponoe, "E.wyona s got to
be IICIIMWhera." Hutawlt wwnect: ''You
to be • excited llbQut -·~

=-~=o=::~~
tabooa."

NOW SMied In the....,.._,--

.._..her

Feld« woncllqd Why paople . . . .
.-pa. She ..... y
own
q.-tlon, "They (the 801111'11 .now.ua to
,..,Ina 011!'
F~ lh Ia

own--.

....e
lmportent - . . . . lt'e IIIIIIIJiilllk!n.•
l='::l:.r.. ~r:.,r:--=.,.-~. ~tka She_.,
on to::· "8aalpa -~~~~~ AC

~':,!~,=.ot::n:'f~.~

peraon.

=:.':t.=c...-=....~

S!tries of lectures on China scheduled

�editors outraged by
'false, person~l' . attac~
M.arlett's 'recklessness' called 'shocking;
Ro§en suggeSts 'Reporter' editor has had
'too many years In the same job'

llf:n ._ __, Hby --"&amp;!
o-

...... =-·of
......... ..,..._,

~.-.phcy
IIPP8f'8lll
~1M s-111 for this

tltiill -

llr

~It s:~al~

. :• . , . . .
.....
~ clwgae, -'911• dlstartlona .,., outright falllllhoOda that
OIIMIItutad .,.,._. llttacb on the
illllalltr Of Jolin H. Ralea, ClCIPY editor
Oil 1h ·s,.ctrum and Bill Flnkelst~n.
8oth . . quite
Cllllllla Of c!*ldlng .....,....,_
• _..... tllla ~:::t'ltgance on
M;, llllrlalt'a pan.
aftacl&lt;a on
...,...,, Wltlall Jonnad 1M - . of Mr.
............... " - . , . , will
~10 . . l)ltntad In Tire St»ctnmr.
• - _,.,.....,. of our editorial

a..- .........

. . : =if::r
,.,....,

Mr. Sui.......... latt« had
10 my own alleged
IIIOia; I WOUld !law been
falaad to .... a diffiCUlt cllolca: do I
prtn1 Mr. flullllnn'a 111111, libel myaalf,
.ncl 811ow Ollllfttlaaa students to
.....~- It? or do I Nfuaa and
t11ue 11
a ollerge or oanaonahlp
far 11r r. 8ullawan and hla co~.Mr. Mal1attfalt no
8111111 .-drY' far he
the
_ . Of botfi optiOns by pttntlng the
tillar; and he -.ld not- 1n11a1er a
- - , pllone Qlt 10 nollly me of Ita

cc 1111 -

---

_..ned

story. Youaakmehowl knowthla. l NY
I know becauae aomeona told me. You
llsk me Who. I refuse to . tell you. You
aak me when. I refuse to tell you . You
aak me In what CQntext .l hla Incident
allegedly occurred. 1refute to tefl Y')u.
No aubatanO&amp;tlon asked far

bu~u~g~,se.\:'~~.~~rll a~"~~~

Suppose further that I had been carrying
on a spirited campaign to destroy your
publication, .along with Ita assistant
editor, and thus· had every reason to
distort the truth. What do you do, Mr.
Marlatt? Accept my letter as . a
legitimate opinion? or demand some
substantiation of my P«SQnal attack on
the Integrity of your assistant?
Then suppose that the same letter
appeera - to your total surprise - In
anoth« campus publication, complete
with inelnuatlona that you censored It
to save your skin . Suppose all. those
things, Mr. Marlett, and you might
begin to why I feel alighted by your
utter caiiO\Isness In rushing the letter to
print. I miQht add that Mr. Sullawan's
lett« Ia onfy the second latter critical of
myself that has not-been printed In The
Spectrum . The other, a marathon piece
by Bob Lombardi, was not rejected but
held for a week until you anatched~t up
and ran It In three parts, lncludlng more
Insinuations that I cenaoAid II.
II you tall tbat Mr. Sullawan's charges
_,..,tad print, than the fairest thing to
do would !law been to make a news
~ &amp;tllrY Of It, IJIYIDII. ~Olin H. ~else, Bill
Flntlalstaln illd' myaalf the ch8nce to
oom"""t on these allegations, as well
as aiiklng Karl Schwartz for hIs
r.collactton of the Incidents. But that,
of course, Ia more time oonaumlng than
accaptlng Mr. Sullawan's unrefuted
Innuendo.
Now, as lor Mr. Sullawan's " charges"
and "evidence" against me:
I can only easume that comparing
Tile Spectrum and Ita leaders to "a
dictatorship" and the .S hah .of Iran are
: ". : , :..m~lef~:'.ce ~e~co:"~
courts, the praea, the executives and
the leglalatora of lltllir student republic.

1

'

Not ......... wllh IMirulh
We lun\ then to Exhibit-A, my alleged

:=

=~
·~
3:"'~n~'f~
~·a~ta
had atltched

:::-'*vtct!.:"'~-tl:.~~: .

:, ;-: =

becalaal ballewad that the victors _ ,
the qualified candldatea, because

::0rae.:: :=n:n":n~

t.o.uaa I looking lorwllrd to
WQrldng with tiMm In 1M coming y_..
n.i
no flat~ng .on my
out 'We did It" ea
.-.-c ~--.::..:.._
was the real
colorful
a· oonepiqcy
.-ty as

lnglydestruCJiveleglslallve r11C0rd. This
lectlc has ·been taken to extreme
lengths, so that It Is now aale lo say
that Tile Spectrum has probably
.-lved more clue-huQIIng ocrutlny
than any other student organization
over the past lew yeers. Ills unfortunate
that the Reporter, Instead of exposing
this Agnewesque ploy, has played
along, becoming another courtroom lor
an Ironically-twisted lnsurrectJon.
Serious questioning of motlfta ·
The recklessness with which - Mr.
Marlett supported Mr. Sullawan's
vendetta absolutely shocks me, to the

~~n~:J![~s' ~o':f~e:e:':lYto~"~r·:~~

Reporter. From all that has appeared In
the Reporter this year, I have begun to
conclude that Mr. Marlett somehow
enjoys seeing Tile Spectrum and Its
ed tors roped to the stake.. This
smugness would be more understandable I he Spectrum app8ared willing
to re
- the favor. But Mr. Marlett's

::'1-%''1~~~~~~.~~~1d~~ ~~ .

hope- speak for themselves •
Too many years In t he same loti can
make a man biller, Mr. Marlett. ll&lt;now it
all too well.
Sincerely,
-Jay Rosen
Editor, Tl&gt;eSpectrum
Shall I clean out my desti?
-RTM

Reporter will
. print'' anything,'
Reiss adds

Editor:
A few notes regarding Gunawan
Sullawan's delightful attempt at fiction
and story weaving which appeared In
the Reporter on March 15.
Firat, let's pay tribute to . Mr.

~~~~~~ar~!, ;'a'Wtck d$;:&gt;:,gg'1,':YiJocH~
mented that elected Student Aasocla-

~n r,::,cla~~~~·~ ~~~

represent the newspaper and not the
atudenta.ln.lact, Mr. Young h.as merely
Indicated thet Tile Spectrum 's endorsements are a ~ul Influence In the
eltictlon procasa, but has n - held
that the elected officials become
puppets of the publication. This Is a
crystalline example of Mr. Sullawan's
hard noead efforts to twist facts In order
to ceat The Spectrum In a maliciously
unfavorable light.
More interesting was Mr. Sullawan's
account of Jay Rosen'a rh&amp;llSOdlc clles
to me of 'We did It, we did It," alter
learning that all but one of the
candidates endoread by The Spectrum
had been elactad. The anecdote Ia
!"-ioualy entertaining, brilliantly
tmeglnati~ and glorlouaJy aocurate
- l o r Qne small yet rather significant
detail: It never happened. The story Is
both a baseless and dal!gerous lie;
baselaaa lor there Is not even a morsel
of truth to It, and dangerous In that It Ia
almad at undermlndl~ the Integrity of
l:,~adad~~?~~--e Spectrum and
more disturbing Ia the Report_.. apparem willingness to print
virtually anything under the guise of
"opinion." r do not auggaat that you
..,.ly the facta sw-teclln lett. . sent
to you. I do auggea~ that you cerefully
-.Ina and conald« lett. . laden with
1*'8011&amp;1
attacka
Mel libelous
-the
·
,_., before
you ~
them to
Uni-ty community.

e..,

-.:'~

. . . .,.......===..
iWCAi illiiCAL liiiiiiJil

UU~wants

asb4tstos, DOB
looked into
Those who pay
fee but don't join
urged to sign-up
UUP wanta to llrie possible &amp;abeatoa
• hazard&amp; atudlad, COIIdernns OOB's
so-called "faculty rank distribution
adjuatment" which resulted In a loss ol
S218,000 ftom the U/B budget for
1879-aO, and wanta more people on
campus to join the union In order to
give U/B Interests more representation
at the State Jeoel . (State delegates are
apportioned according to actual, not
potential l'rfemb«a.)
A....toa
/
Members attending the UUP spring·
meeting on campus last week pasted ·
this resolution on expoead asbestos:
"Whereas the presence of asbestos
fibers In the air has been established as
a cause of cane«, and
.
"W'-s there Is medical opinion to
the effect that any amount of asbestos
In the air may be dangerous, and
"WhenNs there Ia expoead asbestos
In at least one Unlv.slty building (Baird
Hall), and
"WhenNs this poaea a clear dariger lo
our members and others who work In,
or ans even temporarily present In Baird
~~

.

Therefore the-membership meeting of
UUP hereby resolvaa that:
a) ThJI University administration
g~~~~~~~~n='ia~l"':l'e tests in
b) II any asbestOs
are found In
the alr, the University should remove
the asbestos .hazard Immediately.
Debate on the Issue atreaaed that
EPA standards lor ecoeotable minimum
Jeoela of asbestos are ambl~ou~ . The

11b::

l'::~=e~
•==·~~ th':m~~~
ln~Jvad was cited.

threats

DOB
.
A motion denouncing DOB's cute
read:
"WhenNs the Division of the
Budget's 'Faculty Rank Distribution
A'djustment' formula Uftlalrly discrimInates against Unlveralty campuses that
:~'i't~ Improve the ~uallty of
"W"-a at SUNY /Buffalo this has
reeulttlll In a curtall..-1 of thla year's
'pperatlng lunda by 1218,000, thus
Imperiling our lnatructlonal and research capeclty, and
"W'*- the effect of the DOB'a
action will be an '.-bitrary loss of faculty
and an Irrational curtailment of
promotional opportunltlaa regard leas of
,Individual m«&lt;ta or need,
"Thetefore The SUNY/Buffalo Ch~
ter of UUP hereby condemna the DOB a
actions and calla upon the S lead«ahlp of UUP to . - t Ita lull
lobbying and political atrength, In
COOP«&amp;&amp;IQn with the 8tllla AFL-CIO,
towns oeualng a - • of this
pemlcloua policy."
·
The 008 oollcv. UUP memberS
contend, will "requtrw continued cuts
In faculty poetttona at the aenlor level
Plua their IWP'-'-t with beginning
Instructors until 1M DOB, rather than
any SUNY or U/8 euthortty, Ia aatlafled
with the distribution of fecutty ranl&lt;a."
Though exlatlng lmbelanoaa may be a
COOHqU8f10!1 of prior admlnlatraJive

=

[fn\';.,~'aa ::.:.:::In'='~~::

slnca Ita contract eatabllahaa · criteria
and prooaduree for promotion, which

thla action rendanllrrefeqnt ,
Clwpt« ·Pnialclent Oliver Gibson
atrwaed he would -cooperate with
Faculty Benata Chairman Newton
o.r-tn Pl'88llna tba 1 - ; It was also
atrwaed t11at •. , . _ 1M Senate has
only the loroa of _,and perauulon
In 111 elforta, UUP he&amp; legal and
pollllcaf 90WW Wllloh It lntenda to use
In detandl!'ll the oollectl.. Interests of

lha'-lty.

The-tton on 008- ~
wote at teat waalc'a UUP

by tmMfiiiCIUI

~9. ==-=-_Jng_
......._

........ tiJIIIrB.Ito
-

. 81eo

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

_
C itlpelroun.tlly-

urged

to

join UUP

.r.:

Ul8'eUUP

..........

�LETTERS·

Abortlo~ lnsuran~e: two opponents comment
Editor:
I would like to comment on the
abortion Insurance controwrsy as a
Catholic student at this university. I
know eome bellew that no one Is
qualified to apeak on this Issue unless
one can • - that one Ia not now and
has liMn . a member of the
Catholic Church. But I would ask to 1:&gt;e
t.wll as an American Catholic, aa one
with deep roots In thla land, my-

~=~ "::e ,::~

=.

~~·:~

colony of Maryland .
This time of yeer my lhougbls go

="·~e't;:,:'~~ ==~ ~-

On Mweh 25 the colonials dlaembllrked

on an isi8nd In the Potomac there to
gl.. thanka to God, the Catholics
celebrating Mus an~ the Protestants
offering up their prayer some distance
away.
Lord Baltimo~e Intended the colony
to be a land of sanctuary for people of
all a.lltla:..!:!f..~llh the colonlala a
... 01 ~· -..~~ng how

:::!:'::~
"' ~~~~~f!~::: '":.~•
dlacouraa u well with penalties laid

down for vtotatiOna of the aplrlt of
t o l - -.
·Helping him draw up theae lnatruca
prleet
More, a
tiona ~"1J'Widlon Of 1M
Tllomes
Tile I'OUIICitele on wlllch they
. , . up 1M tnetructlona and wtllch
with 1t1e co1on11ta to be
~· council ...,.. be -.n

,_,It ma::;;::J

u-.

~•e-aatown~ty.

tM OOIDIIIM8 * - IMIIItl :115 to
dllldlllllll elld .... tiiiiU ...... on

lhla ..., • . . , _ 1M conaeptton of
,_,. nlrw 111011t11a '*- 1M Ollalntton of 1111 lllrlh 81 Cllrt-. Knowing
of IIIII ~ heipa otherl
underltand aomethlng of the Intensity
of 1M concern which Catholics feel for
the life of the unborn. Many Catholics
uy ~~~- t i - a day a prayer which
comrnamorat• 1M moment of Jesus'
conception. II I ' - the bella ... those houri, It Ia my prayer.
To~ dwlng 1M yeer Mary's
conception on December 8 and her birth
ntrw monilia later, and 1M c:onc:.ptlon
and birth of John the a.llat and Mary"a
help hie motller Ellabelll at

r:&amp;:

--. r...:~··.:n,~

Mary, ,......, Iaiiie fruit of thy . - b"
- 11 to acquiN qu... ...-rt flom lba
Cllurall'l moral ~tno • far ...

.._,tie.

W11M a oiOielll -.:ion of COl&gt;~
to be forced to help
pay far abortion praoactu-. Alld how It
goea ~~g~~ne~ ~ tradition of
phnltam and
to continua
1UC11 a policy of eo.lllon. Tile' - '
lend oflllllrty .._.,.. lllltlr. Aa I told
lilY !emily .. ~. o..- people

" •• "*'

......
.__..,.......,IIIIIIUCII
• "*'8 _... , _ .
lind
-

In ....
IIIey
. . . . . to. •.Would IIOpa IIIII IIIIa

......., Ooulcl lind II to - '

..........

000. . . . . . . . . . . . Unlwrwlty . . .

Ia ......_ Ia .......... to IIIII out of
.......... t - . ..... f a r -

. Wt ........ , _ . . , too

IIIII o..-

=-=-

conscience, you ~ free to buy other
Insurance on the marl&lt;et" (twice as
costly at least). If there Ia any University
of Buffalo tradition of pluralism and
tolerance, we will not tolerate any
furt her coercion of the consciences of
those of so many beliefs who hold
human life sacred from the moment of
conception.
-Robar! Wile
Editor:
·in a classic move to divert attention
from the real Issues, a.group of faculty
In a latter to the Reporter (3/15/79)
seeks to dlacredlt the University of
.Buffalo Rl9.hta of Conscience Group by

:::k~.:m~:: po~~~ ·:;,~=! f~ .
the controversy r.:'volvlng the mandatory
payment lor Abortion coverage In the
student health Insurance plan. I am
utonlahed that a group of this
unlverslty'a faculty could make such a
racklell and un!Qunded cherge. I
aJCDeOI batter from faculty persona .
We can -ura lheae people that the
U/B Rights of Conaclence Group Ia a
home-grown m o - t concerned a-

~'m'~e~"
~~J:1calthe~~· cl:r~
"suggest" links to the outside. We have

twice stated publicly that the money for
our melting came from contributions of

1

=·

:.':1:'!
'1..~:'.
"f':a ~
beCause, for 1M conactentiQua objector

·

to abortion, It lnvolvee 1M paramount
matter ·or human life and muat,

~~:n~f~~srlah~'lr.~~~~·t

t~~:;:~:;::c~~

::V.lenoed

J:.:::_

Diet groups make you happier, not slim
"Thl n Ia In and atoutla out."
In American society, fat people are
stigmatized and oatraclzed, · U/B grad
atudant Arline Leah- contended In a

=..r==.: o., ~=·~r~~.~
~lorlaatweek .

Where do these piople tum? To the
diet clubs.
Ma. Laahner looked at whet goes on
Inside theM organizations which ha..
proliferated .In . - 1 .Yel'l u aourcea
of help and havens lor the overweight.

r:"'
I::Uc:' ::0: ~an!~~~~
obealty."

Her concluetona - - . 11181 the
organtzatlona have two goala, which are
"tOtally Incompatible."
The flral II to nlllla a proJit. That Ia
.......ty baing attalnad, .... aald,
notloQ 11181 one major walghl reduction
corporation - l l y eold to H.J.
Heinz, a food lnduaiTy gltni~-- -

The ~ 11081 Ia far - - - to
toee...wrt anGlO !Minlaln 11181 weight
toee. "Tiile Ia 1M rttetorlc IJIO!'!!C.! by
_,one In u- groupe, LeahMid. Bulll'a a goat which la not baing
alllfoed. Site ........ one of 1M
why .. that .,. two goall
conflict.
._..lhl bu..._ Ia eo luclllttve,
......,..,..., II not -'Y lnlaraiiOd In
'-lnO OUIIoiiWW baOome tlllri far
good. tndaad, Me. Lelllftlrnolad, . . _
MIO run lhl CIIIIIIIIMione .._
~ !10 ......ialblllty far-~-~ loa ..... up 10 ....
~. IIIey aay. "We onry proolda

~-·

..

Her conclusion: '1hey join to be with
others who are like themselves.•
Overweight people In our aocta:y are

~~~~~:1~·~=-~r;::n.:!'.'!&gt;' w~~ ,:

worship, Ms. Leahner .said. Overweight
women, especially, are encouraged to
. think ol thernaetvea aa worthleea. The
ability to stay on a diet .becomes the
meeaure or "good or bad."
One person lnt81VNiwed told her
"when you are fat, you faet Inadequate
- you can't do what others can do
aaally. You have no aaiH:ontrol." But
_ , whan the . dieter Ia aucceaaful, ·
Laehner oblervad1 ehe Ia related lo not
aa 1 thin periC)II, out U I latty who has
loll wetaht. lhla trtggera the familiar
cycle of fat-thln-fat·lhln-lat, .... aald.

Wbo'lfat?

•

U:":.o~'J:!:h~~...;_:

: - : 111 whatMr he or 8he Ia two or 103

pounda ~- -w. tt .. In •
~ wherl you are - t o o tllln to
be fat .
Even 1M m•llnga of weight
raducllon organtratlona, 8he ,_,..,
provlda a aat11ng far d'-!mlMIIon
lhagroaaly - - " " "· Aocord-

-nat
=.·~·~u:.=:

accordlog 10 fat, fallllr, fallaat. '
AI 1M meatlnp . . well M .a llometf

::a.:-~_...of":i ..

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

........,.
• .
dllllna
aa..
.....
..........,
. . ...... _lhl

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

Olub
- - - . . . . . . . - .."llltiiiD
..ttoa,.W'Iadlwlllull
-.

• itlll ...

..........•

Of

fonlllltr ......... ..,

-·~toella.tto-011111

:':&amp;:t~~-~

iiiiiiiiiiih•..........

--

.. .....

We are -lng thai the
for
abortion coverage be mada optton81 for
those who conaclentiouaty oblecl to
abortion. This Ia the policy of fWvard
University. Are we to &amp;eu- that
Harvard gave way to our ·off&lt;ampue
polltloal movement In deciding on lhll? No, It aaw thai reepectlng conectenoa
on thlalaaue Ia a compelling conoam.
lhla faculty group •YI that 1M
Rights of Conactence Group ,~uaiiY
wants everyone at• to live by thefr
beliefs." On the contrary, we are
against a policy which dole not permit
many at\ldenta to maintain 1M trugmy
of their bellafa. We cannot aooapt

. ~Jl:.=n!.~tw~:• ~~-z!Y ~'1,:.%an7t
~~
~21;
before?
..•
· - atullantswhoU.~-PI!!tfanlhe Rlllhla of Conaclenca Group has •
-~ •
'" ~~Jlmada II clew all along that o..- conown
' -· · - Ia not the abortion laaue llaall, but the
~Cif
· ~latton or the rights of conaclence.
RIQhDof~-.

........ le not .,.., .. ~
........,.. llut ... .. .....llltloMI
~,...... ............... 7

1:"-tiJ:-:E'~i.E
....=.=:te
.......
.....
.:r
.....
;:...
,..

pavmeoL

bout a real laaue on thla e&amp;m.PUS. There
were those In the university edmllifatiilion and In student govemment who
warned that If a payment to coabortion proceduras were mede com·
pulsory that there would be a protest
against II as a violation of conscience.
And ao there Ia.
I _myself wrote the first protesting
letter about !be mandatory payment to
Specltulfl and I alerted the petition
dt4liil against II. Soon, other students .
joined me .• No outside organization or
r:novement has bean Involved. The
group did not ha.. to ,9.0· outside the
university to lind the determination,

. . . . _ ........ 10 . . . . . . . .

.., ........ ..._@i(iM~

=:=,1:7-n
:,~

.. . . o f . . . . -

··~~·-~

...

�-

I

S:

IQ~!d l!llil'i' Jki nqunnrl UJiiiJIIifl:ilil Jl!ll'lliiJI nJiJil U!l ilil(·
,~.•JDi !~,- i~!li,~ U! 1Jf!1tlflinl iUM ~~~~~~~;i!ii'll!i~ 11!'1., ~· 1!ni 1Ui !1 ~:
''II ' rt•t ; .''' ·~l !iii' t'UII .· aj~~~~ ~hit 1~~~ ,. &amp;!JI1 ~~ 'I1..
llt! If blr n .Ht,:~ il:l! m. bMJ J;i· Uh . dnl Ia f~ I " .
- -;l)lll!tU:I·1!1! ~~~1 t(i IU!Jrllf;li~ fi!fl 11_ inifl fill Ut!~·l'l!jl i~~- !!rl Wtl iiQ l il ~;; U!J

· 1 i!

.I

tl!t 1,~

~·~ ~~ rf!i~l ~~~~~

If

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ltz•~i· f;l i~!!l IIi~ I

irll

nr

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I

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~~
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Ist · ·: tr!J .tl ·(J at~~ f li;t
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Ui'11,.f1 J1fi"I·J
UffJ
'i! r r&amp; ih 1· i!.I.HsfJ;I f'f;hl Ufilll ih~ lfl! U
1
I' .··~ ·~ ,. t .t~fl ·Jfl1 riidi~~i
flf~tjf~ I·hls-1 ~,.~~~r .,if. 1-~ . .,
u~ !f h~i-! i!~ ·ib ~
11i- !l ;J! I! hi~r;,~
1
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f

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t~df

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i&amp;!U • .

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·fp .
~

�?·
1 I

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i

Houulnwi-Sildo. 8p.m. - - -

ALII"

Johnny Guitar(- Ray) . 146 Die).-,.

bylhe~of-.

The ~ala giiUUng proprietreaa who
has bult her establilhment on a ralroed afte .-KS
earns the resentment of the IO'M'I. Join Cnrwford
ond Slertlng Hayden--

Nightly lhrougll Sl.r1doY. 1.
FILiolllilsc:us•
e_ _ . . , - ,_ vncent 0non1or, flmmoker, a..-, oow tmg_ In YOII&lt;, wll

UUAI WEDHE80AY NIGHT FlUIS"

0 - and - . Muir, 7 p.m.; - - . , 6:55

---

p.m. Conference
· SQin. Froo at.u1ng Gone Tlemey, flex IWutaon uund
George S.OO.., Is an engagng comedy of a
women who fals In love with the ghost of a dead

a-.

Sitttn is a fim advertised as a eemk:omic,
f11111d.
imaglnotiYe hotl'tlr li1&lt;Mo In the The - . ... Margot Kiddar uund Jennifer Suolt .

portmontoi-; IAuut.--. Center, U/8; Rlclwd ~- allomoy,

UM~Cunf.m-..n• Asaociolbn; r d Ooomond, AIPC)rterfarllo~-.

men-..- ·7:30p.m.

~ed by lhe Envlrotwnentuul- Center
with --oouundotf-campoa.

ll*tlln.- of foUr.

r - - . , . . . . . . . , . Pilla, Mu- Rolu·

ouuct- Moeto 7·8 ·p.m. ln 234
l n -. oonlact 110

· 838-2808.
Ct1A111.D ~ _ , . L LECTURES•
.,_.,.,.·CIOull,-llle-lnlho
........ .. - , , - Dunca\, poet: 112
O'Bt1in. 8 p.m. Froo. St&gt;oneored by tne English
!leportunent'a Grwy Choir o1 Poetry ond Lett&lt;n.

-·

Ni(1&gt;lly lhrougll

s.mov.-

1.

~n

UUAaAl.ll'l

.

......

-~~~....-.--Coon-.-,.,-~­
'Squft.
Cll630-21118 f a r - - -

~aotlnliton..---·­

The ,..,. ..-..ogy ol ... flm Ia to ... old
We~ dying •lhe - Welt feC:hnologlcal

""-·

SCHOLARS~AN

Notices

THE SEllERS"

Myfea Slotln, Dopor1menl of Englioh, wll review
Tho Wornan'a " - by Marlyn French ; Si&gt;orJaonocl by ~-F- Prcguwns.
Sooond of s i k - o n - . t boot~
~momboraollhe ~ol Engfioh.
$15 f«th41-; $3 tar-.. aoealona.

Col831 ·4301 far~ . room.....-..
tinea, etc.

•

-----·--

CA-...NW£B(EN0

lng • ~ ~ Moren 21·24. -

IUChocUoll:
' TIIuuro*y, -

.

12 -

A ,.., pUnch

I*IY .

floorloungo,- · 8 p.m.
FrljloJ, n - An. 11-c1oy- uund cnfta
- -· Center l.o&lt;olgo, SQun Hoi. A CIAni
-

s.-, -.Aocon. llp.m.

c.- ·

T1lo . . . _ , , _ _ ..... -

~ ol ~. Cdlogo o l -.
SUNY ~- COnlor. ~- 102
Shomwl. 4p.m. - - - 3:45.
~~

-

ond

$1 .50.

MUSIC"
C..._a Forum.lloi'll Recltuul Huul. 8 p.m.

I'H&amp;W•ca ocn • '-""''lnca
- - - . . . _ .. - . D r. Laooy

Ooclapoll. Cologo B Playorw. COi'nol 6 p.m. - - S2.50. -

e

-

L.IF£W~

THEATRE"

Sc&gt;o&lt;-.d by Cdlogo B.

lo Thlo .lull tho llogtnnlng?: Peter ·
ol Stale 1nter_,cy- fon:e on
t.uz.dot.e - .., Leo Holling ol lhe Stole Oo-

-

onto,
SQuire. Froo. For more

,.,_, uund " lntoltour lnlerfaro, .. .''WOII&lt;f
In Focuu," "Whhe .- "X." uund WOII&lt;s. Abfghl-l&lt;nox Aut Oolory. 8 p.m. $2, golory mombora rd $1 .50. Sponeored by ... bontw f a r - Study,
~Study-. Abfghi-Kno• Aut Oolory.

- - $2 , C8/IRC ... -

LOVE CANAL FORUM"

STUOEifT IIECtTAI. •
lloi'II-HIII. 12:15p.m.

$3, - - - - $ 1 .50. Sponeored

7 p.m. St&gt;oneoredbrtneCenterfor-Study.

Wednesct.y- 28

-··Conoopt ..

STAn.TICSCOUOOIMN I.ECTUIIESEIIIEll II

~l.-

lot. Dlokey, U/8 ond ~ Cdlogo
o l -. Aocon A-15, 4230 Ridge La. 11-12

-·

--,, -14- A-

Thursday- ~9
IKICHEIIISTtiY _ . , . ,

..._.... al •
and~

v-.p-

Colchom

dlnco luogln-

'*&gt;gol8pJUI.In . . -.Aocon.-a
- -- - - - - · 2 - C I I
636-4871 f a r - .

In Dotoreents

Dr. L Doon,
OoportuJiont ol ~- Oul&lt;o UniYoralty
Medical Center. 245Cory. 11 :30o.m.

~CIII'IBI..-YilM

..... ....

1.-.glor-Oft"""'lo .......... ,.,...

.

.-.o. ~ ....,~~~~~--v

..-""-----·---....---- ___
.. --y----··---"'""...... _....
__
. ____
_
__
_
-__
........._
.....----·.....,....-"'
_...... ..
____
____
_
___
· ·- ----7:liOPJUU. ---...-- ..... ------........
... . ..
Finll-·--·__ _
..........
...............
.. .......
......
.....
..................._·--·
T........ T..... Ill,_,.

lor~

-~0..---~.
--.lilT.
3tli "--"·
6:30p.m.
Counc:IOft
___
_
-

,__ ....,..._ 1Jr 11AED ond

thO

FILII•

Doyol-~. t.e~. 7p. m.

~br8&gt;oC:...Ior-llludy.

noon.

nlk.Loa----llo~by-T-poutoumod by . . - - _
_Roportooy

eon--. 8ql.h Conlouwnco - 1 2.50. ~by

- · - - . . . . . . - . 7 p m.: I P•- 170 t/IFI'/:;, --

cr-.

IFA IIEIYAL•
- " - - - - --- - H o l. lp.m.

_,--~.--

m••-"'
a.-.-..--.----eon. .. ...,... .........,

-.

-.-

---r-'1.7

-:::a::.:.··--·C.~t041'!

....

- I p.m.

.. ~
--ol9pou*&gt;ondth0'--

-~In Nil-Simon

..,.. *'1110

ol l"oo

IUUSTIIATmTAIJ("

~.

80COninQ, lo

Tllo-Yiliitlnuuu.a.
All p.m, llo Aaperlory ~ . . portorm

............ -.,. ~-­
-CII1711-15-&lt;1·1or-

----.--.-Hoo~

Mr. Jam dnclot ol Motuo Toronlo Llbrwy. 338 Bol. 1 I :30 a.m. ~ br thO
Sctooolol-uundl.lbrary-

,.THOLOOY-·
_
_ , . , ... ..__.
-.er.
...................

__,_,.,..,._,IIUiiiiDiolft',

1 8 2 -. 3:30p.m.

·

LOVICMofoi.FOiul•

~--..--­
oaov---..clopuuly
....... -.__,
-.
- - Doly.

-toU.-.Dr. IOHong~.

42.0 lldgo La. 3:30 ......

Aocon 18,

. ._
_
...
- . l'llgluuuuiGI
Lbulal,
._
,~ond--....... a.-CIII-

...._..._ .. En••= ........ c..

....... ..__. ...........

I'AQLn -=tYAL•

...........

ogood_lltlng_a.....,.alond ~ - - ............. c.. ubrwy/Ub, ~ .. Clllupua. Ill
Frtcloy -

-*'110 636·23114.

.......

8;30 .. 5, 8 .. 8. -

............
-- ..

,
On...._.*ftuQ.....__..
......

LBITIII-

12 noon and 6 p.uo. -

-~,.._, _

-

O.W,

..........
..--~
___.
eau- .. _ _ _ _ ...,
1 2 - - - - . ttrlluiloMIIIr-.

. In 100.,.,.12:10p.-.

_....,., _ _ b r _ . _ .

._....

llr.'lll~

.._

·- •oaa-a...._ .. _

. . ..._ ..

... _._ , .,
..........._...
OI!IIIr··. ·~.......-~~.

...,...~

�•

-22,1878

DOCUMENTS

Springer Repc;»rt .
'Grandfather Clause,s'-

TO: MemberS'of the Unl~lty-Communlty
FROII: Robert L. Ketter
.
RE: Implementation of the SpTij\ger Report: Grandfather Clauses
The following grandfather clausea are baaad on recommendations millie by
the OUE Curriculum Commlttea, endoraad by the Springer Sepon
• Implementation Stearlng Commltiee, and agreed to by Vice Presidents Bunn
and Pannlll , Undergrlllluate Dean Peradotto, ilnd the other members of the
Academic Cabinet. They have been recommendllll aa lhe fairest 'way of
dealing with students Involved In the transition to the new eyatem. These
clauses are approved effectlv:e Septemfler 1, 1979. ~
1. In Reapect to un....lty-wlcla Rilqul..manta:
a) AnT atudent with at least 88 1:0mpleted credlt_houra by September 1,
1979wll n8Qd a minimum ol122credit hourato graduate.
b) AnT student with at least 24 comphlled credit houra by September 1,
1979wll nead a minimum of 124 credit hours to graduate.
.

11. In Reap.:\ to Dlatrlbutlon Raqulrementa:

Distribution requirements remain as currently stated for all

Easter Island an is focus
of new show at Anthro Museum
The petmglyiJIIk:

.n

Robert Koll~ho was able to t&amp;ke only
ed for the work with him
the paints n
to Easter sland . Because
lis
remote location, It was not posslbr. to

(rock carvings)

of e...rlttlirid will be the focus of an
Ghllllt

01*\"'a..:' -MUMUm
28 at the
at

AniiVOpOiogy

~:Jilh~ ~~~~~e ~~~~:~~~rc~~~~~~:.;

Amllnt.
World ...owned a the aile of ·great,

===-=:::=~
e::~f'f.!
Soulh
Coul, In PoiYneala. It

sacks he could find . These
bleached out, stretched over the
and held In place with tape. Tile
was then rubbed across the
feattiiiS.

~

~=of the moat laolated of Inhabited

on

· 1be U/8 exhibit will conalat mainly of
rublllnga

cloth, bleck and white

llllllle*llt-llinl...-.11111&amp; end obJect• from the

IMler -

-

erct.ologlcat plec:el
P.:lflc, -

--IIMII~Imlilf:·

~

~""=

were
rocks
paint
relief

Open to the community, th~ Anthropology Research Museum Is located on
the second floor of the Fillmore
Academic ·Center at Ellicott. Hours are
11 a.m.· to 4 p.m., Wednesday through
f:[ld!IY. and 10 a.m . to 3 p.m.,
~=· For more Information, &lt;;all

. . the . . _ . for the

.n.

The pqlllatorlc cervlngs on the
bouldlra n Ill nlllef. The f"UI)btnga
t111m lnctuellld In the ShOW _ .

}Ct

Or. Sluart 0 . Scott, as;;oclate
profesaor of anthropology and assoclate director of the museum, said
present plans are to continue the rock

~.f~ ~;;~=i'b~k;bll throughth.eS~Ing.
If

vou "-',

been In the Art 8oolc

IUI'IIrtiiiL Ori dlep'-lf far the

tiiM • 0/8 n

28 ,... medl-.1
.......,. .,..._, !Minly. ..,_ from
.._.,.._. dlllftl fl'om lhe J2111 to

11111....._~....... ..___._, Art
u
•

1111......_ ____

'1:·=~.:;-'.:,
cllliPIIr 1111111 ADrtlt.

=
....,. _......,on
=
;OIIIIJIIe ,..,_..at
....
111111, •

pU, 811 1n fine condlfl'om ..... e&lt;.rl'a ...,_.

......... n . , - WI ........, •

Art Olntlr 111 -~ ....._
Clllplay,

8'

=ed

Rev. Kern, an avid art-collector, has

1~rne,.C:~se:"h~~~~~~~~;

o!

deflnltlwt book ·on them.
.
On the auggeatlon of Dr. Dorothy
Glasa, asaoclate profeaaor of art history
and Mra. Flcnnol o.Lulao, 11rt
tlbrarlllll, reaponafblllty for ~hlng
end aurwylng the exhlblt glwtn to
Gretchen·~. a ctaaalca (Latin)
major lnt..ted In medieval atudlea.
Her ~ work will be lidded to the
exlllblt ·on Mwch 25, the 1aat week of
the allowing.
The Art 8oolc Collection Ia op8,
Monclay-Thurllllay, · M ; Friday and
Salunlay, ~; end Sunday, 2-11.

Hagain: .

,..~next Thursday

~~1 ! ~~~~=rt~t :J'cJit?==,!.': &amp;::'=' ns~'ro'":..e:' 1\~

1

minimum accreditation standards.

-

•

IV. Th- prorialona ahall apply to the atudenta In queatiOn lia long u they
maintain contlnuoua matrlcufation In~ Un....lty.
.

V. The Dean oi the D!Yialon of Undergraduate EduCation Ia empoW..C. to ·
make appropriate application and..-xemptlon' lrom tMa8 clau- for atudanta
In Mlllml FlllmOf! COllege.

Anatomy·prof has made career of
reading magazines to the blind
th2~sai3~~1 ~88Jt~~r~nc'!:Sst~J~~
~~~~~~~~R:~a!~lwS:J:J:s~;;

Blind. With the change, Dr. wart.~ wu
switched to Family Health (formerly
Today's Health) which he has taped for
two.yeare.
Physics Today was like reading a

contributed to the education of
thousands more he's never met, as a
volunteer reader on tapes for the blind.
Currentlk, he records monthly Issue&amp; or

~0:~~ ~~~~u·~~~W w~:~:::oro~~~

sasslons. This publrcatlon, written for
both professionals In health and tha lay
pUblic. contains .news and faatuf88 on
medicine and health ~ llllvancea.
•r always learn new thlnge myaelf In
e.:h lsaue I read," he uya, "and the
topics .,. lhoM which othera would
find lnteraatlng." Acoordlng to Ae,
corded Periodicals, thOM WlfO aubICtlbe to the Family Health CUieltea
cut actOU many W8lka of life phyalclane, atudenta, "-t~Mra,
and othera In a drlety of oocupattone.

~=~~~~~~~ ~~~~~"ne ~'f ~~n':

on display at Loekwood
Colllicllon~ln U:..,~t~h'i't

~ograms.

Ill. In Respect to MaJor Requnmanta:
.
a) Current major ~ulrement~ are to be explained In terms of required
courses If they are not now so explained.
~
.
b) All upper division students accepted In a major by September 1, 1979, or
who haw completed 88 credit houra by that date may not be required to take
,
more than the current number of courses required In any major.
c) Students who have completed 56 credit houra by September 1, 1979
cannot be reqlllred to take mora than two additional couraes beyond· the
number currently required In any major.
·
-

Services lor the Blind In Philadelphia. ·
This· non-profit organization loans
cassette recordings of current Issues of
some 23 periodicals to sublcrlbera at a
nomlr.al fee . Among the publications
taped lor the organization by rellllers
like Dr. Warfel are Faml/y Circle,
Science, CB, Broadcaatlng, Popular
Mech11,nlcs and Consumer Reports . .
Nearly 1,000 bUnd and vlsu~::::ra::~=~~~nd the w . d
Dr. Wartel 'a volunteer work u a
reader began nellrty 20 years ago when
he answered an ad In ·American
Scient/at magazine. Plaoed by a group
called Science for the Blind, the ad

=~~ vo~::er-::r~~;~.:~
periodicals and textboOks.

"'*--with phyalca

Materials asalgned to Wartel for
taping ran the gamut from children's

science textbooks to eaoterlc journals,

moat

notably a publication

called

PhP.,ica Tcxny.

I knew very Jlttle llbout physlca," he
recalls, "and dldn~ understand hardlY,
anything I wu ralllllog for that Journal . •
He wu ao unsure of ~unclatlon
and pllrutng, In fact, that he regularly
called on lJ/B physlca l.:ufty to
Interpret for him!
"It would h... been detrimental to
the flat- - who prol)al)ly wu a
llhyalea te.:her or student - to h...
hie or her llaln of thought broken by
ettr.. my stumbling or mlapron~

Bought hla- aqu1p1Mnt
_
"When 1 II rat . began ralllllng and
taping lor the bllnel," recalls Wllifel, "I
uaed rMI-to-reel taj)e. Now I UN a
machine which malcN a 1011'-lnlek
master tape." Warfel'• dedloatlon to hla .
unpaid WOrk and .lila dean to DIOYide
the beat quality tapa IIIII film to
pUrchase ,_, ltnpRI'ilad raconllng
equipment out of hla own poc1181.
While the U/8 profaecir pJap down
the Import~ volume. WOrk,
officials at
Perladloala uy
that only becauN of ,_,.. 1111111 u
Warfel, .,. the blind end hlndlcapped
able to " - up with ~
pUblications. Far aome of lhe 8Ubscrlbenl, It Ia the only - • lor
to keep CUINIIt On llllval-'a In
· their fieRI of WOrk.
Warfel, who wu barn In the
Mld--t, has no regional acoant and Ia
conalderad an exoallant ,_.. for
taping the written word. But, he llllmlta,
. lit hu to be conacloua of wn1e like
Waaltlngton whiCh h e _ _ , _ t . a

="!:wexpl:'"=-=
. paiWit:=
Any

Plllhlza: ralllllng
ll'lllklnll It
Jn....alng . . not • . . , • lt may
~-

Diiaplta the U/8 ~~

pre. to

the ~lon to and him_...
wltll iiiiiiOII he Mil famBIIrlty,

:::r=-=: :w~
r=
Job
~ 011 lhe lillie

........
..::r!Y£..:.:.-:
doing.

.._.eo lhe

he -

.,....

ror the

u.n

tendency to pronounce ·~lnton"l

Heftleil,too
In lllldltlon to hla achllllule • U/B'a
o-tment of AnaiOmloal . . , _
which tnctuclea t-"lna nuratng, ~
and ~RP atudenlf lhe baiiOa of
anmomy, Warfel IIIIQ1Jnd8 ttme to play
lha oro-n end pilot·~·
"Ten Jllft . . I deoldiCI f ....... to
altuelda, ... Without
talllngm
otllfiWI!IIIt81-.l,...

_ _a

...

•

....,., AJrparll

~!!-~'-·
-~. lhe faml!r . .

lor

-nd

~~~==~~=

�Salary data
going public
in Archives

Wl's first black graduate was
an Inspiration for Marcus Garv.e y

As of April 1, Information on the
ealarln ol all University employeetl will
be on file In the University Archives
(Capen-4). The action comes as a result of a
recommendation bY the Executive
Commltteea of the F'aculty Senate and
Pro!HIIonal Stall Senate and an
.mcnement by the Academic Cabinet .
Although State-funded salaries have
a matter of public record for some
time, an Individual seeking the
mlormetlon previously had to file a
Freedom of lnlohnation request with
U/B's Dlvlalon of Public Affairs, and
theft go to Payroll lor the figure.
President Ketter 'raised the question
o1 aoceaslblllty at the Academic

C::,':,: ::- tl:~t~~~~~n:"~r':~

reactions of their respective groups.
Employees of the Research Foundation, the U/B Foundation end the
Faculty,Student Association will be
excluded from the listing since their
ealarlea are not paid with tax dollars.
In September, a more current listing
will be placed lh the Archives which
better reflects the 1979-80 budget year.
Once a year, 8lch September, an
updated document will be flied .

International
unit seeks head
International Colllae Is seeking
cendklatn lor the poalflon of Muter to
succeed Or. ·J. Ronald Gentile,
aseoclate prol81101' of educational
psychology. Gentile will leave the

=:=:
~~

='~~~~.:'~~~~~~~

lng a major UNESCO grant Involving the
Faculty of Educetlonal Studln and a
college in Nlgarta.

lnt=='~~~.:~:~l~~~o ~~[Jg

together lnternetlonal and American
studento to maximize the educational
I n - In the unlveralty
population."
By "developing en International
microcosm" In 111 11111dentlal setting, It
has formed the nucleus of a truly
croas-c:vlturel living-learning situation
on a luge oampua. The residential
upec:t Of the College Ia complemented
by course o11ertngs which apeak to
croaOH:ultural Inquiries thet hive not
been mat In other unite on cempua.
The Maeter, chJII ldmlnletratlve
ollloar of the Collage, hu the
reoponolblllty lor long-&lt;ange plennlngl
budget, · peraonnef, coonllnatlon o
programa, and functioning of Internal
govlmlftOOI. The term of office ahall
normally be two yewa.
.
AI&gt;PIIceliona Mel nomlnatlona lor the
position IOhould be addreslld to: Dr.
Rueeell Stone, chllrmen of the ·-.:h
commiHII, c/o The Office of the Dean
of the ,l::olleg~~ , 3!10 Poner Quid.,
Ellloott COIIIplalt, Buffalo, NY 142111 .

DOcuments
session
slated
Plana .,.
lor a two-clay
~

oonfiNnoli 10 lllualllill thl -'th of
110*11"*11 ~t materlall Itt the
U~Uinrlll .
~. to be ljiOftaored by

n.

the ~ Oocumenta

,=.

011*1·

lftlllt, . . be ~ 10 '-tty and

_ l t y _ . _ _. ttwlll-

eo-a-~

cfoauaMnl-- _..
!ISI..ollcwOOd
IIIII

Ulnry
unltl.
fiiit.tM
- call lor a 8ir1ile of •
lour ........ durlna thl momlnal .,d
. , . . , _ 01 Aprtt n ..d 11. Juclhll w.
em-, a Cilia - aervloll ot11o1r of

lnallllt

.,. u.a. . _ of t11e c.-.

reatonel_.....

11111
Clwlelw.lle..
ot eoar:ul•ilf fillonMifon IIINGe,
lnc.wl . . . . ~.

-er with other black 1_,.. In the

An early ectlvtst who may h8ve
helped shape the vtewa of the " Black
Moaes" of the 19208 wu the first black
to grlduate from U/B, Information
recently received by the .University
Archives suggests.
For years It was the conventional
wisdom that the first black grlduate

1920s.

AIIMI... In8uff81o

In 11178, Love left s.v.n~ M i l to Buffalo. Ma. Lumllden eoecul- he
muat h8ve ~ BIShop Coxe of tile
Dl~ol WMI,ern. N- YO&lt;tt on - o f
hla vlalta to the Nolth, end lrmxeued
the Blahop with hla ebHit.... He 11U1 In chwge of St. PhUip'l ChUICII,
Buff1lo, end wu onlelned In 1877. He
left thlt poet kr 1jl78 .......lillie hid
begun hla oour11 et Buffelo MMal
School end gr.tu.lecl Ill 1880. He llllr "'
wrote 01 "h8vlng epent · of tile
hlppleet yewa• of hla 1111 In Buff81o,
Ms. Lumeden hu u . - . 1.
Locei111C0nla do not Indicate .........

.=l~ehl~ ~.:81~HZ~~~r-s~~O,: ~f
~~k!~o~~'bi~":.f.'b'?~d :~~,;

until twenty-seven years later (1918)
when Henry H. lewis received his M.D.
Now, however, University Archivist
Shonnle .Finnegan has learned that
eleven years before Dr. Watkins, ln.
1880, a Dr. Joseph Roben Love-a
native of the Bahamas - gnaduated
from U/B Medicine.

'=

~t~ls~':'w~=t
:-..:::..
to· worl&lt; u a niedicel mllelonlrY undlr

a~~~ L~.;;,h~~~~~7~"f:o~a~o:n ~~~~

of the Blo&lt;;k Studies Program at
Danmouth College. Hill was seeking
Information about hlm In connection
with a biography of Marcus Garvey, the
~harl smatfc leader, who organized the
first lmponant U.S. black natlonaUst
m~ement. Garvey had come to the
U.S. from Jamaica In 1916, and
apparently had had '8ome contact with
Love In the West Indies.
In answer to the Inquiry from
Oanmouth , Ms. Finnegan could verify

fr:''r~t ~it \ra~ ~~ :~~ ~~~m:1

" Philosophy of PFWc;al Medicine
Vereus Empiricism." Afthat time there
was no Indication that Love himself was
black or whet his connection with
Garvey might have been.
In the summer of 1978, though, the
Erie County Clerk's Office referred to
the Archives a letter from Ms: Joy
Lumsden of Kingston, Jamaica, who
has unearthed .additional Information
on Dr. Loye and Is attempting to prepare
a thfsls on his activities.
lrf response to Lumeden's Inquiry,
Archhllat Finnegan · found that Love
was listed lor three years In the "Dean's
Book," a student register kept In the
Office of lhe Dean of the School of

~-~'8.":u~!.r~ ~en1,!'~d..~

paid 1818 of $125 by note and $30 cash.
In 1878 he Is listed as In his second
year, with "University of Buffalo" as his
preceptor. In 1879/80, Dr. Jamea Platt
White, one of the Med School's

;!.'::e"'=.·~:rttkc~~~~c~~~~a~~T
1880, he appears 11th In a class of 52.
Flnnegen notes that this "may reflect
academic standing since the names are
not In alphabetical order."

a noted public apeaker, end gave
se-al eddreasn, Including one on
Toussaint L'Ouvenure, the leader of the

:l!:tl~~n:h~..::,c;r,;;;~v;;:n~ge

. paled_slfYOt• ~d eatabllshed Haiti as a
blacki!&lt;&gt;vemed French protectorate.
Love left the Bah8mu either In
1865-6 or 11189-70. He may have

r~~'l&gt;~l':d~'/:hT:'~~~~~~ro~::

years, Ms. Lumsden speculates. In 1889
he went to Jacksonville, Fla., where he
wu mada a deacon In 1871 (the llrat
black deacon In the dlooeae) and
"served a colounad congregation at St.
JOhn's church."
In· June 1871, Ms. Lumaden's
research profile continues, he preeched

r,~rl~:~f~~~;;.~~ io'1o -~~"~~

December 1871 $0 June 1876 he was In
Savannah, Georgia, where he aarved
first at St. Stephen's, a oo1oured
ch~n:n.

ana • n- est8bf 18lj~iP Sf.

Augustine's Mlulon. He was the llrat
black men put In chlrgl of en
Episcopalian congregation rn the
Diocese of Georgla. · He apparently
quarrelled with the 'll~-aklnned

::'.&amp;~~on s~t f~ou~~':·a ~ f~

darker memberS of the church. Love
established a school, and hlo Ohurch
flourished."
· Interestingly, It wu Marcus a.Yey'a
condemnation of dlacrlmlnellon bY
. light-skinned Negroes against thoee of
darker color which got him Into hot

SAED studies

'open ~chool'

BIShop Jamee r . HoNy, tile ,_
Eplacopallen BIShop of Heltl, MCI a
well-known black spokesmen.
This arrengernent 1:11d not leal, M1.
Lumeden oontlnuee, •u 1 turtoue
quarrel broke out ~ Low MCI
Holly, which wu CMied - publicly
with much bltte&lt;MSs and melle». AI a
result he wu depoaecl from hll ordi!S,
end 1SIIhop HoliY macle It hll bllelto accumulate ali the atorlea he OOUid
lind of Love's Immoral ~r."
Moral 11p881, the BIShop cllllmed, had
been the cau11 of Low's dlamiiAI from
hla -loua putoratea In the United
Statn.

~tm:."L~IIden
report~ve, ,.,__J.i
who hed started a medical pr8Ciic» In
Pon-au-Prlnce In 1881 , aarved u en
army doctor with the HaltiWI army while
It wulrwolved with surpresalng a r81101t
.against l'fwldlot Sak!mon. He loat
moat of his po-slbns In a !Ire et thlo
time and becwne Involved In 1 long
e\ruggle to get compenlellon from the
GOvernment . He became lnYoiYed In

::::t:..l:nill:lcai~:1111)1.,
PQII)ll

lte~J

-=.if~· rr.

war

'

Ayppollte wlio . . ~
,.
Nlxt,he-10
which he had vllll8d IIi 1
..... he

~'=.:=.::.~~~~:;:

J.,....

a political figure• end In 111114. .e.tld
his weekly ftiiWIPIP8I', Tire
Advoatte. He camoalaned lor gNeter
paniclpatlon by blecb In Jam.lcan
polltlcel life .,.d wu the - . c l black
men to be illecled to the Llallle!IYI
Council, Ma. Lumeden hu Te.ned.
"Unfortunately eoon alter hla election In ·
1108 he
111 and wu ulllble to
play a 1ignllleant 1*11n Council alletrl.
He died 1n November 1814."
.

'**"'

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

.

In Jamaica, Low ~ly .-:t!Cid
i'llltallrld,
.. far. tile-== 0111 ftilcl. Thla

u a doctor, IIIII -

=~=~~~~~~..:-..:::
-not~.

Althougll ~a II atlll
..-tlonld In lllli!IOrY boolla, MI.
Lumllden
4al;lly IOI'QOtllll. llid ·lndllll tllll ,.
peiiDd of Jirnalol'a ~ ~
ment haa ._., ft1Y midi neglecl8d.
Bhe'a wOfttlng on con.ct~na the!.

reporta..,...-.......

Professor Vella

to be honored

011 1M ooa.lan of her lllll!llnlnt

ret.._taftar- u. 3D . . . . . .
_ , _ ot ........ Anlonlaa 8lrlo

Valla will be lloncnd IW tile Ollila
Allghlarl Culturel Club of 8uflelo • a

GIOidall P~J~Yoalatunlay, _.11, •
lllaln•••lllnlllttltltulli . .- - .
/we.

n.

�Undergrad ed decision coming
soori, Ketter informs the FSEC
FIEC ......... - 1 4 '

The meotlng wu called to order at 2:40
p.m. to-:cone l~ the following ~enda:

11opo 41 Appronl 'of lllnutM

The mlnuteo of the ITKIOIIng_ of i -March

11179 • .,. approwd aa clrculatod .

8. TIN CIMI,..n
The Chalnnan dletrtbutod a report on the
Acodemlc C.blnet Maatlng of 3/12/79
~ottachod ).
.
It wu AGREED to charge the Acodemlc
Planning RevieW Commltte.e to otudy the
........,..;dum rwtoned to In par-og&lt;aph 4 -of
the cat&gt;IMI meotlng report. to 00/llment on

~~:~~:n.
~~n.~rtall=t~
Acodemlc FI'IIOdpm and Roapontlblllty

Committee .

.,.,. ft Commlnoe ~

Electloni lor olflcera of the Inter·
lilealdence Councll wJil end tOjlay,
Thursday, Merch 22.
Balloting Ia being conducted between
4 p.m. and mldnTght, at
Cafe
(outside E.l llcotteeaen), the Student
Club (Ellicott), In front of the Grub
(GovemQ,.) and In front of the
Underground IMaJn 811881).
Olllcera wll be Installed April 1. ·
The.- - thl'llll alatea of candldatea
and ., Independent-on tile ballOt.
R
IIAQ the "C)rvMIJied Crime
hul Cumm!nge, lor
Bob ".Hair a-" ErtiiMcl lor

Porter

executiYI vJoa pmlclent; Matfhew
Meatel 1 torYIOa~t lor IRCBi.Lorl
Craft, ror YIOa ~ lor IICIImlea,
lind Larry LAat«, lor tnaaaurw.
On the Del'- "-t\1 tloket -

A.-a.(,IA)

Put .,.., ~~!II next moetlng.

Jazz ID the night

.•~•:,~-::='- ""$ptlll,., "-"'
of octlon by the Acodemlc cabinet
dlacuaoiol1 ..- -

:.':y~

---~
.
...:t~~~':.t~~=:::'..:
.

the

--.ry.

h Will rnctudt the BylaWI

~~~~'46p.m.

TO:

Text ordera due

- l c ~ .... 3/t21'71

1. ~-""--·
-.-.Tile-·-"'"""
.... ·UB
B!11C1k ~
-

fund

end B1ony

t:t:-....:"-:"':..~1.:.":..c.. ::

flllludlc1al
=-=~~=
illtltllt (llllf: ~

-

Tom Kn;:fr:=lcl'":tr .:tf~ f:

executiYI vice prealclentl· Rldwd Koh,
vice prealdent ~ lli:t vltlea; abnlly
Tomaz, vJoa ,preeldenl lor lAOB; lind

• Eugene Dublt:kl,}or " - -·
~of lnd&amp;pendente running_.
not ...ai'-ble.

Varsity Club formed
.byU athletes

1----------------------------1., _, ~~the
o..
liE:

Don 8/lore, tor prwldent; Stv OJ.mond
lor executtva vice ~· Herry ·
Wllld, vice p&lt;wldent for ectt;m..;';K,
~Cennon. v1ce ~ ;a.-fAC&amp;.

lo

A U/ 8 Va..lty Club, lor members Of
lnten:olleg'-te atllretlc ' - It the
Unl-alty, llln the formation at.ge.
Six ..,.tty team captalna - IIMng
on an org.nlzlng commlt!M: Roii
Couche, baseball; S. Fulton, bowling;
Holly Hellrtclt, 11. . ~ "-iy
KuiiMk, aoltbelt; John ,...,..,
, bUeball , lind Tony 81111111, buUttllll.
One Ill* of the 011111 w11 lie 111
-..op IIIIINII In 'J!..~

=r"'--:'L~-l:.'".::

....

~u. . lprlng

=:,;~OI'O*Iflltlon 11

�.i

us now pushing

non-traditional education

The Federal government views the
'fiOillrol end supP?rt of education as a
"et&amp;le end local function" and "Ia not
eiG« to get Involved," although It gives
ftn8nclafbacklng to scores of education
Mlaled programs edmlnlsteredtby some
40 1Q81ic:ies.
Or. Allred L. Moye, deputy commlstkln« of higher and continuing
edUCII!Ion with the U.S, Office of
Education (USOE), noted this last week
1n an 8ddreaa on "The Status of
Continuing Education" at the North
(;Mipua of Erie Community College.
The ~tattoo was the slxth In an
t
..tea coordinated by U/B's
ll*lt of Higher Education .
former faculty member and dean of
.tudent affairs at the Unl-slty · of
PtHIIburgh, Moye told a crowded room
of educatora that federal education
dolln - cwrently being targeted lor
prog- wlllch II8MI those wllo
ilorlnaJIY would not pursue a college
education. Bolatertng retention efforts
end providing quality education lor
dlsadventagecl atudenta · are alaq top
~lea
.
SpMidi.g from a Federal p~npect lve ,
1o1oye contended the emphasis In

Mora apeclflcatly In tha area of
continuing education, Moye reported
that federal money Is .Iundin~ consumer

:'~t'o:t 7..-:l~:·~dw '~Jte:;::

current continuing education undertakings.
.
The government wants to make aura
It dlasamlnates Information on practices and programs "that wort&lt;,''

~~~~ed .!'~b1nes0n~~ucrnt~~i

education and conlinuln~ ed, geano

~~~~~~~scfe;':,ot~~'t~v~.!:~

~

=':.

to education" 80 they In tum can
encourage their children to pursue
higher educational goals.
Recalling hie years llt Pitt, Moye aald
the highlight was Instructing edult
learners. Adults are eager to learn
because they understand the "connection bet wean work and education."
A aoocl combination! work 8l1d atucly
Since statistics prove that those wllo
work and attand school persist longer,
Moye said cooperative education and
work study pfO!Irams will continue to
receive strong government backing .
Although the d&amp;l&gt;uty commlaslo,ner
called the future of continuing

~~~co':~~~~~~Y

~nd~~ ;;~~~Y.~r:::~::O~ ~~

living, 8l1d the daYelopment of skills lor
eoocatlonal puqulla. Education must
be l'nOf8 then ~~~~~ for II job, ·
aaaerted Moye, ' It lhoukl prepare one
lor life" 8l1d be .-gniDd lor the way
In whlcll H "enhance~~ the quality of
life."
eurr.ntly, the U.S. Ia financing a
number of progrwna to train educators
trom culturaify diiiiCIVantlllled backwho wenl to · teach
atudenta. Only 10 per
cent of the lunda, h o - . go to
lnltltu11ona of higher education. Tha bulk olluncllng Ia ~ to elementary
and MCOIIdarY progrwna.

program efforts In the area and to make
the Internal edmlnistrallve structure
more responsive to the needs of
contlnumg ed.
If the Department of Educat
•
becomes a separate entity as President
Carter has proposed, Moye predicted
that duplication and buraaucratlc
tang lea that now exist will decrease. He

=-thoee

80

Of'keed'tn~~:,eves·,t!\'1~) ::'a~~:.:J~

" lobbied themselves out" of the
department.
Not a nvmbers game
Moye warned that the status of
continuing education "will not go very

16

~~ao aupportln
programs wlllch brt~ .:n "lnternatlo~
~wl,vr;'os=. ~t~

1!..
Y80J,~~~~~~~r~~~~~~ :~~
and reali ze that education Ia something

tllel ahould be IIUf'8II8C! "when you want
it.• He lnatated that continuing
education will not make any subatantlal
~na until academlca atop treating Jt

~

o1 peoptea" and the International
ramlllcatlona of reallllea like poverty
and Wit.

OBS

.:l::..1onelm:'
:, ~~:;- t~:.o~
earvlcea (like counaeflng and medical

:&gt; ~==•ns,..ed ~=~s. ~

'ACUI.TY

--.~sa.-.

"remain vital," even In the Ieee of
enroiill*lt dacilnaa; If they are willing
to ~It and sarYice lncreaalng
numbers ol black college age youths.
In response to Questions from the
audience, Mqye aald that:
oCitiea like Buffalo, located , _
International bordera · would make
. excellent placea to Initiate lnternatlbnal

v-..----·

,..,_lnd-~ . F-1101&amp; .

, . . _ . . - . ()porlloho kWyrla, . . . _
,_F-11020.
F·11021.

"":!.---:-:::.. ~

"'-'1 (;,...,

at=rc::e.vlcea for · tha nontraditional atudent will not be funded by
the USOE.
•
'
•Senator Daniel Moynlhan'a T'ultlon
TIIIC er.dit Bill -no! aupported by the
viewed
Adlnlniatratlon becauaa If aa lnn.ttonery 8l1d 1eaa helpful to
llllldente then the Middle Income
Student Aaati!MCII l'nlgrwn wlllch

j!

ft.,_

i

•s

SA honors Herreid,
Shames
top teachers
Dr.
Clyde F. HIII'Nid of the BloiOIJy
Dr.lrYing H. St.mea 01
the Bchool ol Engi'-'!111- recalved
"Taechlng_ Awwda"' hOm the underCll*luale Student Auoclatlon, 01.- M.
Eade, dilwc:lor of academic aHai,. lor
SA,huannounced.
·
According to Ma. &amp;de 111 prqfeesora were nominated inl1~ field
was cul"1o ttve on wrttten
from
students, coureaand teacher evaluation
records, and OOIIVerMtlona with atudenta In the lndiYicluala' claaMa. Me.
Eadealao all In on c t - anonymously to evaluate lectures.
Scheduled to become en • annual
ortze. the SA Teaching Awwda basad on a prol.._-a:
1) Approachability - In and out o1
claaa. ·
~tend

2) Availability - office lloln end
otherWiea.
.
3) RaCeptl-. to lndiYidu81 atudent and cta..·wlde problema _
...
ated with hls/hll clua.
~ Advisement ability.
5 ~lorcl-.
6 o...JI teaching~·
Ability- to relate to Nil'*
atudenta, enthualaam lor the
matt• end lor the teaching and
exoertence
8) AttitUde of .aoep- of atudenta' worth aa thinking lndlwlduela,
ooupled with the ability to ~ ~
~ lor his/hll kilowledgi · end
~ng al!lllty.
.
II) Ability to communiCIIIa the
aublect maH• In a -marul end
aophiatlcated, yet uncler8tandlible ,_..

=·

ner.

Defense Department official,
. former U/B prof, will speak at 'Y'
Deanne C. S l - . general counsel
lor the U.S. Department of DalanM~
a member of the U/B Ln
faculty In 11174 and 11175, will apaek-at
the YWCA Leeder-lunchaon, MoAday,
Aprtl 2, in the Stall• Hilton Hotel
Golden Ballroom.
The - t will .-gnize the
achi8YM1ent of ,.omen In bual- 8l1d
their contrtbutlon to the ;;;;;,;tj, ol.
commerce end lnduatry In ~v:--Tha
YWCA will honor an outat811dlng
woman emrloyed In a local linn, and
will presan .an award to one compeny
lor providing Innovative programs

~f!!,~c;&gt;ur.;p~~~ ~1\F\:::Sud.
1

comments on the I~~C~MSing importence of an active role lor women In
bualneas, her auggeatlonslor the better
recognition ancf-uae of WDn*l aa
resources In bualneaa, end aome
personal anecdotes.
.A native of Orchard Park, S i greduated with honors from the~
W!8!!)RS~tl!l' .IJniYera!tv In 1!_12. liid,

-and

took'* LL.B. 81 Hliwnl Lnln t • .

In her~ poaltlon~-:r'

811 legal MP80ia of the
of
DlileriN, Including the aujiMIIIoa of

52110 lftyera, 8l1d the liiiUtlly end
clwlllan atafl of the ~. 8M
Dnlnl...,. the LAglaiethle ftlhNnoa
Servioae, which JWWidl8 lft.lormlllon to
eana-, 8l1d on the lnduetrtal
Scniintna a-d. Bha Ia alao In oflwge
oftheDafen•hwwtlgatiYeServloa ••
For Information or .....,..lona,
contact the YWCA MetropOlitan OfIicea, ~1211.
·

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l'hundlly, lllidl 22, In 2M ._..,., 1~

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�...;,22, 1t7t

-- He's Overturned
Senate, wants
good·go,temment
By Marcy Carroll
Reporter Intern

" I always get Involved. But I said,
'David, sit this one year out.' 1 really
wanted to, but circumstances .. ."
When, he's not busy with his Job at

?r~~p aL.ep:~=ce~e::cl!~~

str~ throat bout at Michael Hall, David
Hoffman Is making an effort to ravamp
the Student Association -senate. His
referendum to dissolve the Senate

:!~o:~l~~~~~~C:~~~en

ballots
A far cry from any type of political
Involvement In his native Huntington,
Long Island . .. and he's "only" a
freshman? "Yeah, a freshman," muses
Hoffman. "Everyone tells me It's not my
place to do something, Or whet do I
know about student government as a
freshman?"
·
Read the

p.p.r, ..,,

to the Senate
Hoffman's first taste of undergraduate political life at U/.B came
~omlnantiy from reai:l lng The Spectrum . After attending the first S.A. bus
trip. to Albany (In protest o.f the
propoud ·tullton hike), Hoffmfl!l received background mat erial about tne
S.A. Senate from President ' ·Kart
Schwartz. In his conversation with
Schwartz, the Idea of a referendum was
tosaed around. Then, there was
homewOfl&lt;to ·bedone.
" I went to . a couple of Senate
meetings, $poke to former S.A. officers
and with some senators to hear whal
the Senate's aide of The Spectrum
stories . waa," said Hoffman . After
_r eytewlng t)le situation, a Tuesday,
March 5, personal deadlll\8 for studs! I
~!?~~~mo;.,: ~::!~on callln~or the
" At first I thought I needed 600
signatures (5
cent) of the student

l.:'{
~-~~~~f~loct C:::.,:~e!,u~:'d::Jtt~~

the petiUOns, I would haw~ had to 1tat1
all o - again.'' The stgnatunsa collected
during the lnttlat period would have
been nullified .
. One hundred·titty slgriatunss short on
the deadline datjl, Hoffman collected
the final needed ones In an hour and a
half at Squire Cafeteria, rushed back to
the S.A. office In Talbert Hall on the
Amherst Campus, and gave-the petition
to S.A. Vice President Joel Mayersohn.
"T.he S.A. and The Spectrum were very
supportive of \he whole Idea;• Hoffman
recalls. Elut II waa his Idea. He thought
the old Student Senate wasn't being
nsaponslve to real Issues facing
·u.[ldergreds.
Voting took place on Wednesday,
Thureday and Friday, Man::h 7, 8 and 8.
In order to allow for eddltlonal
viewpoints as well aa schedule public
debates (not to mention to ..old a
threatened Student-wide Judiciary ,....
straining order sought by an S.A.
Senator), voting wat extended through
March 12, 13, and 14. "I'm not.aure how
much that accompllahed," HoHman

.,~tee were finally tabulated on Friday
evening, March 18, after a temporary
restraining order from tha State
Supreme Court, acquired by Michael
C.VInaon, was lifted. ''Thirteen sixty·
..-. to two fifty.- - baautHul
numbera - and . . _ ~ona, "
smites Hoffman. '1 want to ttwtk thoae
abet&amp;~~Uona. At tMat they
voted." Voting apathy, a long ttme
problem, bethera the wiry fraehman . '1n
six days of voting, liMite ahould have
been more QeOPte." The .wgettc
Hoffman Ia now lOVIng with a more
convenient voting plen wfllch would
afford atudei'lta the opportunity to vote
on a alate of 1 - ae thaV go to
validate thalr I.D. Clll1la- but thai Idea
Ia ahalved for the tla18 baing•
.... Senate -Monday
. M-hlle tha new Seriate will maet
M~ to begin drnlng up a new
Conatjfutton . And Hoffman WIU be thanl
as a provlalonlll Senator from SUOBoard I. Inc. Thanew Senate, -.ling
to the Referendum, will conalat of 38
Senatore 127
of clube .
and organiZattona within S.A. Dlua the
11 .mambarl of the~ Commtttae), The new Conatttutton 11M a
NoNmller .30 completion daldllna ·
Which .HoHman daetgned at a ....,.
guard to tnaUN prognau.•
• Jyat tall ~ to be OIIOII*athe, he alljba. "'OInga WIIJ work out
.wootllly by the time 1grw!u.te."

,._tat,...

u.s. !'ootiJ&lt;
~~·~
PAID

· 11affalo, N.V
~INo. llf

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1389555">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1451435">
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          <element elementId="44">
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            <elementTextContainer>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1389544">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
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                <text>12 p.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="116">
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            <description>Spatial characteristics of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>United States</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1389552">
                <text> New York</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1389553">
                <text> Erie County</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1389554">
                <text> Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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                    <text>STAlE UN-IVERSITY
ATBUFFALQ

· VOL.10 • NO. 23
MARCH 15, f979
'.

--"--!

...,.p;;o;..-;;,..;;;;o.-..o;;::

G·e neral Ed: confusion, calls for .c hanges:greetreport
The G-.1 Education plwl got an
efflrmMIW Ktlon 8111811dment, mathelllllkll- acl\nowledged • a eeparate
l&lt;nOwlldge In one aM:tlon but not
In another, and the Colleges .-Jved
"NCOgnltkin" • the FIICulty Senate
llagan.golng .,..-lhea--1 Educ:a!lon
propoul Tueeday.
Tile dellbenlllone continue next
T~. at 1:311 p.m. In Weidman
""-re.
·
·
~menta galore. EYin
., ~ to an amendment. At
tlmea It -'*' that even the moat

n.. ...

. IDIInt s.n.tora ~ .,_.
WOIIIIll8 ..S fllllllttc.tlona. A few

Senator Nicholas Kazartnoff from
Mathematics. complained that math

the Scleoce and. Technology knowledge
area was "too large of an umbrella" and
repsated his desire to haye math stand
alone.
~ Senators spoke pro and. co.n ·
on Kazartnotrs amendment to Rlelng's
proposal.
Whlln the Y6te was filially tallied,
Kazartnotrs amendmen.t was defeated.

had been given short shrill by the

Committee. He then mOYed that
mathematics (to Include courses other
than those taug~t In the department,
.I.e., computer science)- become a
seponte, -enth knowledge area. The
GE Report outllnee six. _
. .
The motion brought a deluge..of
comments. DUE Dean John Peredotto
noted that math can be offered under
ctlle Physical Sciences and Technology
knowledge area and need not have a

~!"t!-J.-:~Rfslng's ~amendment

(which mandates that students take two.
courses In four out of ~lve pooolble
knowledge areas outside tt&lt;elr major) .
Volclflg supPOrt for It, Student
""-&gt;fallon Praolden! Karl .schwartk
Ol
Senators Jbat • IMI. .fe818 Jhll
............. i8 ilaftlllillltAt wllll . .
w..dtb of knowledae concapt wNcli
undet1,1.. General Education, but that It
also provides fordttPth In course work. "'
The amendment was. soundly a.
feated . • •

_...category.
.
Wickert alec apoke agelnst the

-~-~~== --~~~~~
exl**d-Actu~~tr.w.....,.....,_a

- I I t i e of lhe whole In order to
CGnlllder lhe ...,art. the Senate
ltglrlfufly 8IICOUfllged tttem.
~ a.tore lnY cfi8CUUion- began, Senator Norman BlUr, chairman of the GE
Committee, outlined the report'e
ratlon8le and propoeals. He told
Senators thai eome of the narrow
-lttee vote counta, In hie opinion,
"dlcl not Indicate • ra11t illfference In

=~·~~-:=,::::,:

1ng .-tiona cono.nlng lmpt-v•

tlon.

··

concluded

BlUr

bY

UY.lng

he

--:=:;r:t~~ea.n.aecwoilleprove

•
wlllcll ..,.....cl In the
.....,_ .... -wlllallc.lled the
~ - .. ~of-.tng

._.... tt.ldame
· -pRtng

-

-

tDgelher lit' 1
."ltgote'-'ah.

Aethe..,.-~-ldmlntland

...... ...toue -

~ tliMe IIIII

"

dletl;;-t.ctii-

,.llli..~~~

_._.., 1n1a11t on either. - - --:.&amp;jjj..
li!i
.....,._.

or •

111

-~~m
......... of tile~

-=miiiiiJR,
~ '=

:=-=.. ~W::,~

•

.....

- - -..-....,
---·

ftret

_ . . , . 10

~

llllould ,;;;ei;-~;&amp;
reMfttwi to "1!1-.IY Include" -math.
K.-tnon said he would agree to the •
change to hiS amendment.
,
-sen- Janice Trice reaffirmed what
Kazwlnoff eald llbout the- Insufficient
• attentiOn ·given to math, but said she
could not aupport an amendment that
InclUded It ·with Phyalcal Science-and
Technology. She Insisted on a separete

category.

es=.!l:f~~m~=

:•

·

:2::a

~tIn ·=~!Y sa=e

area, but that failed~
Senator -ctlaries Ebert favored the
amendment ~ltlng that mathematics
·can bit-considered a ·~ypa of language"
and that requiring language wlth no
other option 1.- unduly punitive to
students who bright but haW! a
tough time with thlal:'lculer subject

=

:out
· under s.c8on Ill of the = r t . the
• philoaophlcal aM:tlon. Tbla, h~.

would be IACiuded under the lmple......_.lon IV

r_nentatlon ~. - ·

•

ill

.

....,.._tlt•ta:-.:: ~.

·

Senilor
Spelkd_ll
..___.
o..l R ng on..cl en ••-oumenl
Nqlllrlng etudenll to elmply t.M ,_
COUIIM In four knowledge Olllllde 1M major, ......, thM · !he

:=·

dlelrtbullon- elxlalowledge01111ec1 lor 1n tbe original
Tile

=-:~~~o"::
atudenllwtthleMIIWI15credlla.
Rllllng_tolll Senatore llllllle'IIIIIIIMe
theSE'Raporl•la.~lillttl

~u:':';;;t-'"7'u~
&lt;•

He
COIIIjlllllned tNtIUbmltted'
the Ill--'
GE
NIIUINII*Itl
by !he
committee) wn1 take 1111011t -'lllnl of
...~ IC*I cndlt houri, end tllal

.... ~ -

.........

juat "too

~
-~~~~~"'""
~
by 8lnldor8 ...

IIIUCI\.-" "''
-

.=::.r-=a:.:rs:i
~~,.. . . ==

~-=:!.=--==
r:'
.......":.;r::...-m

==-.......al-·•

.............................
t
-=
.................
.................,. .........

~flut ...... ,....._ .....

~~~lh~~t,P&lt;~~ t':!~'~:=

; ,

:r.!:s~ a~:.rYot":~e at :U~~~

groundwork to really make _use. of •
fanQ118g8.

-

.

motion w.. ~
C~~Mglng one of the Section . IV
knOwledge . to "Phy*ic81.- end
~feel Sclenoae and Tecl&gt;
nology."
Finally,

a

out of the room and others alerted
yawning, a ~lve from the
Collegea propoeed an amendment to
Include ll!oae unltaln 8lll:llon A-2 of the
GE-Report. What the additiOn reelly did
lnaure thai College ooureee ~ld
be CO(Ialdered for dllllrtbutlon require-_

menta.
.
_
Senator El~ K«1nedy eupported
the amand"*lt ' - ' - ahe aiel Jt
"-ellmlnat.. the tWo-tier eyet- of
~· and legltllniae all couraea
taught at the Un"'-*Y ~ .
Piptesaor GeotK. Hochlleld end •
rnerrlber of the - ~ o.p.tlnen!
fiiCUlty did not ~1110DQ8111 .. _

==::·
:u....

•"" CoHeflt8- M~tfled" ~
I.MtNCian whO, tiler

.. n;·

_ _ _,_

·~Anohr..-

felt .... -collegle . . . . . .
PQtenllal for eervtng tbe ~ QE
and that the rnaiMr cif ~JIIiQuellfted­
lnotructors should be~ -.nother
body to ln-Jgme.
Balcer ulcl the ~ had
envisioned that the Col~ would bit
considered u!ICW -.tlon 11-6" of the
Report wtilcll , deela wllh the eecond
ph- of Ita lmplemen\lltlon • .He eald
that CUITIII'IIIy, only _ , _ thai . .
rec;:ognlzed far dletrlbullan credit by the
DOE 0..
be Included In Qf..
In
-wouldbe
!ftOdlffed to eult

cwo

�Mereh 15, 1171

It's the lrltlsh In me, Pierce say~ . .
as, he petitions Soviets for relief ,

Law blasts
·proposed hike

in tuition

~nc~....d In the faculty senates, but'
ln.;&amp;-Jo!nt -ement laaueC:t ~ooday,
. here Wltaon · noted, prot.alonels
OeM thomas Heedrlck of the Law
~;;;;!erted to go ahead on our own. wa
School 8lld Lealie Wolffe, pn~aldent of
Do-NoiNng , . . . _
•
cllciii't want to be a small part~ a big
the Student Bar Aseoclatlon; strongly
Plen:e was untmpreaaed. "Won't · pone!" by being thrown In with faculty,
crttlctll8d the propoeed 10 per cent
anyone take reaponalblllty lor this
he reported.
•
tuitiOn hl!&lt;e lor. tht law schGol which
Unlwnlty'l", be Imp~. "We can't
For
years; Wliaon 111Callad,
would ralae raaldent tulllon to $2,200
'just be content with new buildings," he
rnember8-&lt;l the pmfeaelonaJ atafl on
raaponded to Ms. Kelly. ''There are
campus wera not lnvoiYad In .decision·
~~n:ld:t ~"ia~l::.·~~ln~n~
•
making, had no official chenn~ . for
'distorted P,lorltlea In Albany."
expreaalng their v i - on Un~ll
The 10 per cent hike which was
M-1-&lt;-ll+y
·
'iicillcletl. Yet , he pointed out, theee are
Cliff'WIIson of the Professional
the very staff members who l!ave to . -roved by the Executt.e Committee
. of_ the .l)UNY Board of T~tees on
ld ••- U/8 C
/mplemenlauch poliCies.
.
5 ta If,_
...,nate to u"'
ouncll
In us seven years of exlater)ce, · · March 2 will come before the filii Board
this story he heard:ln Albany last
Wilson ..kl. the 1'roleaslonal staff • of Trustees In April. Meanwhile, efforts
underway ID CC!f~VInce the ' State
week.
Senate has been Increasingly- lnw_lvad ..
Legislature to • lncr.H the SUNY
A certain father of two sons asked
In advising the administration on such
t&gt;udget In 6nler to-avoid 11.
each of the boYs what he wanted
majOr policy questions as 8QTIIog
~n l:feadt1ek ..ld "Irs hard to
for high schoql graduation.
~pus Security, accreditation, the
undaretand the :?llonakt lor this
" A Lear jet," one said:,. A Mickey
• Academic Master Plan, the Springer
Increase
lor ' thf law school. We are
Mouse hat, .. said the other,
Repor1, et,c. PSS members are ~
already the moat expenalve slate taw
The father complied.
sentlld on atf major University commit·
schoo In tt&gt;e. eountrv. Our ,ability to
. tees and on all· search commlltll8a, he
attract quallty stucliints Ia bound to
When the two finished college,
• said .
suffer as ll result of this Increase.
he again asked.
• Acroaa the nation," ..td Heed rick, •
" A place to land the plane, ' 1 was
·Tha dill...,_'*- fecui!Y'and staff
1
now the request of the flying son.
Wilson attempted to pfnpolnl a
=e
"AMickey Mouseoutflt, "was
difference between faculty and proS1 ,000. Oure has. been the only one as
fessional stall: .
.
what the se&lt;:ond wanted.
noted that 38 other
The man bought the ftrst son the
prl~~ t~mm,gl~~.fnf·to'~~ hJt~
state law schools t&gt;ave out-of-state
Council member Aoae Sconklre was
Albany County Airport.
clplines. Tl)e prolasalonal stall memtuitions lower than the Present ln-state
~..1 COIICIImed , by
Pierce's
For the other, he bought SUNY
ber, on the other hand, Ia committed to
~ ...,._, aa she de8cdbed II.
tuition at tile law schoofhere, .
Central .
ttie Institution. These people tend to
Thai cteuaa of hi a rwotullon -ad lhet .
stay longer, and are devoted to ~IPQ
The neediest tend ID be the bitst "the tuttton • - wtlll)urt moat the
oft the work of the Unt.erelty Itself,' IMI
"In a ,_,I study we found that
middle and lower 1noome famlilea."
other, more distressing shortcomiNgs."
saltl.
.
students -with the gnaatest finanCial
a.lld on ela*llente made by
For example, 4 have to track to the
The PSS repiilsenta some 500 Slats,
_
at SUNY /Buffalo law school tend ••
Clle!lcellor Wharton and olher raaponsUnl-alty of Toronto to get certain
funded proleasj onal staff members' on
to be the superior students. Ail a
lllle Unl...wlty olftolala, Sowllera aalcl It
research journals tha:t I · . -. The , campus and an additional 285 NTPs
• · -&lt;:onaequence, fncraaaea In tuition are •
librariaha
{hare
consider
our
libraries
to'
- , . . .. - af
........
- and
through'
paJd by such other ·area~~- as tl)e U/B
· likely to cut ·Into the quality of the
combination
TAl'"'aJd
BEOG.
Foundatlbn, thJ AeSear:ch Foundatlotj,
student ' body which Ia . one majbr
granta, lcMnr ..0 middle Income
l::'rJ~stt~:l~~!~~~r,up h~~
and the Faculty"Student Asaoclatlon.
atuc1en111 wtll , _ w pay no men (and
·determinant of the quality . of lhf•
the "Oo-Nothlng Parliament of King ·There ere approximately 1600 : tacui!Y
~1," ..ld H811drlcli.
.
Cher1es.• _
I n - - · P8III!IPI
than they
members.
"In addition to the detr1menta1 effecta
are peyii'IJ now. 'tidon'l I ka to ,. ·
the tuition hike will have ·on the law
lower anclllllddla labome-I)8C)I)M 'uaed'
ThePSs
Other bu\IMU , _
school, ·a 10 per Cent pdce IRCIU88
In this way b)'~
-""*'
-to the
The,Counell also '-rd Frlilay from
Also at Fr1daY'a aesalon, the Cou!lcll: · exceeds· the Preeldenfa Inflation
Cliff Wilson, president of the ProfesPhyiHa ~ly ·ot ~ Council aug:
•heard a report from Praaldentl(eUer
gllldellneof7 1*'*'1."
·
sional Stall Senata=SS) who was
·gealad to PfeR=e that the tuition
on the net cost 1o atudllnta of the
- Wolft-, a llrat v- student, aocu8ed .
Invited to present
und on thet
tuition 1 - - (the f'nllll~In lhe t
r - '1• a leal - · There Ia no oqaanlzallon and to llat concerns of propoeed
dent quotlng_Chancelto,r;Whertprr~ld
wftti artmral1ty !lilting lhe
Ita mernbere, as facultY and student
-'!11th
"" haWig
~oOI.flaeled.
~·
engry
... •, ...
"Wit
anvii'liident""'osef!iinllyeamsS20.00b
sct&gt;oola wllh a 10 per, oent hlk•. • - .
leaders have done atllltel1t s~lons .
oughltooome out .for completion of our
or l!!§S will be unaffected by the hike};
there Is no. proposed tuition hike for tile
• J:~~hera t'W'rad~.~~~'ren!:bles7 ~ a~
A""- 1c.r.ua. lnateed of. backing
given an organlzatldnal chan of - · academic graduate schools within , the
this -t':~lY -=knowledged thel
preiiii1'8CI ilmply to notify the Council . University administration which mem- . ~IJ.~~ sybst~. ak
th Chan
. ~·
Pleroe'a pleM hell been eloQUII'It, but
bars had asked lor In order to
"'e Uvvelm era 1n e
....,...
lhet the PSS and tbe staff members It
Cllllad upon the Covncll to be •much
understand who reports to whom;
lor's office have justified not raLslng
more poaHive." .....-ape, our students
•receiVI!d
a
report
from
an
Informal
tuition
lor
graduate
students
on
the
~~~s
~co,:.~~e;'~o~y=
mlgl'll be wUIICIIJ t0tl8)' men If Amhem
. beals-that graduatt students have a
w&amp;'face. You already know what those , committee ollenng the opinion that It
Clll be completacl, . . . apaculatad..
&lt; problems are."
does In fact seem 11fU&gt;ropAal8' · to
hard lime getting jobs when they get
cons.lder naming .a campus building for ~ out of school and that their. 'flret job
Buffalo was the flrat Institution In
the late Nelson Rockefeller (the CoUncil
Income Ia generally low," aaldWolfle.
the country to have a repraaantatlve
organization for Ita non-leaching PfO'
has 8 81anc!fng committee On buffd.fng
Not I
- . ..._...............
'
names wl)lch makea r.eommendattona
• _ , _ . . - .... f88llonell, lhe Counell leMiad •. Cur·
H may surpr1aa eometo know that
r811tty wltllln SUNY there Ia but one" to .the&amp;o.doiTruat•)·and
Oilier profeaaloiW ltaff Ol'galli,zallon ·
•learned of 1he raalg;,_.lon of Mra.
~:~=~::»,=:;
lllSUJIIY Blnghamtail. On lhe rw1 of the
Lydia J..ai!lb ;llllllo Mil I:Jeen a · Collncll
time In getting jobe, end lllll " ' - dwy
SUNY cam,.._, prot.ulonala . .
IIIM'Iblir for the put two
do, lb8 typiCel ' ......, tor_ •- 118111ng_
"It's lhe lk1tleh In me," student
Mlchaal Pleroe told last
Friday's UJB Council meeting. '1 am
Claflnl I won't give up!," he aalcl of hie
- ' t l o n to lncnellelftultlon.
'In fact, tauntecl Pierce, Iince the
Council prwlera to do nothing while the
!Mile of New Yorll Ia menacing
atudenla, IMI Ia ~ylng to the Foreign
Ministry of the Soriet Union lor aid for
all aludenla II UfB.
--. .rn matting the letter tOday," he
MIOrted. "Hopefully we will get it.
"St~e won't be stretched out on a
eroea of tuHton hlkea or natlad to 11
eroea of cutbacks," Pierce Intoned.
Pierce edmlttad he was boqt&gt;wlng a
fl(oy from the residents of 11 small ·
community In West Virlllnl&amp; who,
1-.g been denied fundi for a bridge
by their local and at.~e governments,
lied to thll USSR lor foreign ald.
mmedlately:got their br1dge.
,
•a t'-lrlce came aher_ the
Council, In a AIP.IaY of Ita February
.-ton, had aglil'n bruShed aside his
NqUell for a atrona resolution -'nsl
tuition ~- fila motion lalfed to
eecond, but did prompt
~Yit.e

concerned
echools."

only
·

wtth
-

prol.atonal

manr

are

==:
......... ...,..,

~rde~r.:,~Jo~

~n ~~~

hl~~fcl.~;;;,

8

leaal

,__..,....

=

"=

.

1

01

•were

:J 1

yen.
Urban Studies elects Harriman, -. . =:.:·::;::.:.~:.~=:
adds 10 from community·to bOard =-~~af~o~~'
atuc~na.
to'""
Ml
a. un.n-8ealllll
~ ... •

C:OW.. cif

. Lew18·

1': .~"o;:.:tef:':i~

-=n&amp;,
-=i==':t="'.
:...
_....,
,_,,.
:=:~ael

..

t-oe ecleel d8bl8 8lld cjf

::.:,.lhelr .-~y yen ar_~··

. ot

~

·=n-..:..
~'!.1..,~·-:

....fto.

. .......
zEF .

. - ~......
Jti..:S-~ar
.-~~~=li
::..::.the~who ..

.

. l i l t - Muc8llon ,. .. . . . . . 111111
u.tlilucll ~.·alii.....

.

�March

u . 1171

CSEA, State
reach early
pact accord

A tentau.. agreemenf was reeched
thla w-end ~ the C&amp;nly
administration end the Civil Service
Employ- Aaaoclatlon JCSEA) which

~r:-.~'ft:'e "=~·of ~=r: .

contract end a3.5 percent booat for the

~!,"Jl~~~rd~~· coat of" living
ln . , _ by 9 per cent or more within
~'U"p.S:t:. .::~a r=·~e~h:':ll
~J::J'~c:~~
~

J::::rl=

According to en article In the ~o
Ewrrl ng NtiWI, ral- for the laet two
contract years will be Issued at the end
of eec11 year. Tl\ls bit of flacal

-

maneu¥8fing will help the Ga..mor

belance the '80-'81 budgets.
Alao the News r.ported thet the pact

=~~aJ~
:;;er:,~ ':1 ~m':.:' ::...~
devoted to "Increments" will be ueed to

fund mertt -awerda for exceptlonill JOb.
performance.
·
The News noted that since the new
system would resylt In cu1bacl&lt;s In the

:=~!~t'l:'o~;:,:WI'~ r~~~m~ ~ro~

--""'-·

A s s e m b l v m a n. f l n d s A m h e r s t
~

'Iavis~,'

~:::· going

Info effect, the
agreement must be appro-.d by CSEA

'luxurlo~s,' 'gran_dlos~f' 'beautlful~-----lD:~'W:III!:![!!ht:~"i:?e~i!i~~#~
- St8nding In ffQIII of the patched and
-'"a~ Within a etone'a throw
of-the Spartan, half-flnl.tled acadllmlc
· 8J)Illa~st .aou the from the

~ t:!~C::te!!ug:t~==

5 1
wiibl'~i&gt; ...-ft·~tah':""'durtnu
i:i:

~gy~'!!.-M~~pu
. ~ Statcallede ~

"luxurious," "beeu11ful / and "gr'ndiose," as a puzzled band of onk&gt;QI&lt;9r8
blinked to see If they were In thll"dfoltt
place. .
.

opposed to the tuition· Increase a
detaJied plan on where a matching
amount of economies can be mede In
SUNY or.eratlons. He said he ·was
::-f.~~~~~ opposed to the hike , bu1 tl)al

t~~,~o~~sn~ saJl~n~t~ "'/i~d~ng1~

• C.,..y era. In moat YMI8 the Go-.rnor
has tilken I' tough stance on bargaining,
r,uahlng CSEA officials to the .waJI In
rantlc mane..-lng. Once there 'was
eve~:~~~~~~~ at1ltude was
"leaked" from Alban¥ earlier thla ~
The rumor wu to'"' effect that ;-;986

Unl-a(ty's future construction plans,
~~~~~~~ :~.P'W"~C:~ ~atelrg,r,: ~e:.;:'o;:,~~e:'n~lV:~omtrh':·
..
the
and/or modified to
Council, Michael Pierce, expressed
Ae_,bly'a Committee on Hlg'* He also announced legislators would
~~:~::!=~~ ~~~er!h:!,~,;'.,"";.;~t keep him within national anti-Inflation
Education , also ueed ouch adjectlvoa u
- be happy to receive l!!'!!' stu_..
de::en.c:t.::.
• - ..:and
= ,_,s,.p,_,u_,
tt::::
ered
=...:
; l::.:h=.
e .::
C=.
ou
:::r:.::le:r:.::ch
= - =:.:·_ _~.J'.uldellnea, but would-also gtwe him the

wh~"?~'~'::,~ ~~cil

J}; -

~~·m":':.lldated

.

U. UP, State ope. n contract discussions·,
union suggests 12 per c'nt pay hike
Neuot'-llon• . . . . _ united u.u-Prot.aiona (UUP) and tile State

llty

"":*~~~~~·Initial round of
piOIICINia, UUP II .....,. for among
otherthlnga, a12per_.,t pay iroaMM,
....,.........,. of ..minimum aalwlea for
pro'-lonel and eoaclamlc ..... and
no IIIUimulnl, "-tuition for .-nberw
of tile bWa8lninll unit, theif ~
and ohl~ • ....J ftwe paraonal daya a
r- which can be liken _ when
lncteoo.rt weather • p,_t• acceea" to
the Unhle!'ifly.
The State, on the other han!!. IS
llllklna no a a t a r y - ' lnltlaJiy, but
Ia a.iklnll a ricHitllca. c l - which
lclrblda uoP to "engage In, • "C811•."

;:.,.~oiher
~

::roo.,

or:=-,;
..,.._, of aatary
of frtnoe
beMIIII by thoae who do not return lo
tile ~tr. for a t - - . , . . after
a eabbatlca ' and lmpoeltlon of a
monthly p..t&lt;lng lea beeed 011 coat and
0111111111on of ,_.twe p..t&lt;lng loti.
"1n llldttlon, the State 11 cantng for a
~ from 20 to 10 per cent ln
mu1n1um etlpenda tor ~t
CIW"'*' and cooniiMiin (baed on
_.,.. lllarlwl 'MIG _ . during tile
_ . . , . In their ..n1n1.-..e ro181
lllld muat IoNgo other · emplo"'*"
within tile Unlvltllty.
Since WP ..,_tall- . . bWNd
from diKuleinG hOw negotlattone on
tile propoeata . . proceeding, 11'1
811J0118'• guea• _ , . , either or both
pan,.. . .
&amp;Dout thalr propoeM or . . hl8l playing nago:lallng
II"*· WMn 1M llfllllj and UUP finally

_,oua

..,.. on a

con~~K~,

n

wtH 11M

.nact

tlile July and rvn tlnllgh June,.,.

d~ttvough

.........

.:::1:;a.::;•!:.c, _,led out In a
.......,.__,UUPJ.~:

. . . . . . of two and onHourth

=·-=....

......., ..,. .,. fiiOI'IIh for -CIIIInda"

... ~..,..,.. wtiO " -

"':&amp;:'X'lV =eo
............
-c. ......
..,...,..,.,." ..
_,_.... ..., to

....

c~ay~

....-on
to

~

1-

DIMipllne, eu~p&amp;nlionl
In tl)e area of d iscipline, UUP ·Ia
. -lng a statement "encouraging" the
President or hla designee -to meet with
the employee In order to "help reaol..

Coocernlng - . to ,.,_onnel
FilM, . UUP has ~ that ern-

~~':J!:nla~n0~n:.~~~
~~~~t~~~~lft~

r.-.:":e

taJned. ,
Where 11181 In acadllmlc reviews are
submitted to the Preeklent for
conalderatlon , the berpinlng unH
propoMI tllat the emplgyee h... the
r1a11t to, examine the file M -11 u to
flfa a lfatamant In reapon• to any ltllfTI ·
contained In 11.
·
The State wanta to delete a 11m11ar
pnlpCielffolr pro'-lonal ~ .
AcldNalnU Nl~meni, OUP Ia
lnal8ilng ·thlil lel\'lpcnly appolntll*lta
. . . QUalified ..... appolntmenta IDuel
be WtniMMd bafoN, My other
. . , . _ .... IDled. The ot tile
order lor llllwlchmenl fotlowl tiWt of

:'~~r:!f:~:::Of.',~·~;!~gr~=.\'.:!
=~rea o~!': t~at "d~lpll::?' :~

discipline," then he/ohe hal the rlght to
repquntatlon.
Another--' atlpulatee that prior
to the leaurl!ll· of a notice of diiCir,llne
or oompla'tlon of a dlaclpl rwy
~ proceduN, an employee can
6e aulp&amp;ndad only with pay. lMt _ . .
. . , _ , , parmlta auepenlion wfthout
pay. Tha change Ia uUd for
when deellng with an employee charged
wltllacrtme.
F!MIIy, under .an article on "Information Mil CIMa." UUP~ ~ the
PNelclant ol . . .
.. manclll.cl
'to prowldetlfl Uftton w ciMa NI8IMI to
tile admMMtreti9ft ol tile_..,.,._ 8uch
~111:1 . . .
UUP ' ...,.. ~employee who Ia - lnfonMtlon _... ....... llut not be
llmltad to, d~ lund ........
~to for ~ ~!1-rl:
lion, .......... rat dllpwbUMI cNira
and _ . . . _ , , _ _ . . . . and
.union llfOIICI&amp;&amp;IItlpu~.,_ an

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

.......
IIDiilfiwl ....... -;:.'i;'
~.lwCII'Ihe
.., .. AllcOnlln8 .., tile

- - - IIIMia ....

::.r.tr.='.::s-:::::

....................bllltr• .

.

•

~=~~t~~fd~~:...cw:~-:-·=~*:~
IMIItl-· .wltll ... .
Accordln~o The&gt;N- Yorl&lt; T/mn,

UUP also lnslata thet en Individual
oCornpaneatlon for comp8nJS81ory
receive special consideration tor re- time which can not be lcheduled wlthfn
employment for four y-. after
two month&amp; following the extra wad&lt;
-&lt;l!lrenchment, Instead llll two, In a
date, again If the empiC!)'88 dealree.
posltloa "Unl...altl·wl. . . ,r which he
•Accrual of 11ck ~for academic
r- employMa at a rate of two and orahelaquallfled.' '
The union Ia asking l hat the State
one-fourth daya per month, after the
proVIde $200,000' for the retraining of
•
fifth r- of employment.
employ- retrenched In "low enroll•A maximum &amp;ry'lual stipend of $300
ment areaa:" A committee of UUP and
too: profnalonaJ employ- required to
SUNY representatives would review
-uniforms.
applicants who apply for such lunda.•ln
•Payment of heaJth and dental
addition, UUP Is s88klng a Pledge from
Insurance for a period of one year for
SUNY to authorize a "minimum of 10
employ- who are retrenched.
per cent of available sabbetlcala for the
•Uae of a maximum of 10 ' daya. of
same purpose.'' .
accruad elck - · lnateed of n.., by
Another proposal calla for full-time
antployMa who muat be abeent from
work becauee of deeth or Illness In the_ employ-. retrenched within, three
years of retirement, to be able to retire
with se-ance pay and benefits
lm=m:!:r~rc..
of u to 12
comP&amp;rable to what tbey would h...
months, Instead of olx, at futf or part
nacelv8d had they remained on tile job
aatary with approval Q! the ~I dent.
untH retirement age.

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

~~~h'1e~~~i~rJoer,;

.--:fling
8llde
worbra, the T/mee eetlm.t.d111e ooat
· could .--:11$150mllllon. -· - ·"

UAW Day
slated here
March-25
Memberl of the United Auto Wotkanl

end their familiae from the Waetam
Yortc-,.... ~~till be lrwttad to U/B
Sunday, March 211 for tile Un......tty'.
flrat anhual "UAM-IIy DaY."
Sponecilad by UAW, Utllfad Untvw·atty """-alon1 .., tile Olvlelon o1
Affalra, tile awant Ia dellllllad to
acqUilnt auto WOIMra and their firnlllee
with the aducallonal opportunlt181

- Public

awtlable'-.

Schaduled froln 12:30 to 5 p.m. In
Baldy Hill e1 Amllerlt, 1 ' - wAI be a

ganeral eeealon ... . . . . . lnforma.

-rna

Jlo... worl&lt;lhopl,
admlaelona,
financial llld, union baneffta, ....,....

=:ns=~-:n~~
of the Educattonaf
- progrwn1
ltyeenter.
Opponu~

Preoldant Aobli1 L Kelter, ~
Fricano., d l - Of UAW ~
Nine, R. Ottvw Glbeon, p!Widll!l the
Buffelo Center Chapltr, UUP, llld
atudent . . . . , _ . , _ win . llf'l&amp;nl
welcoming Nlllllb .a t11a Dl*llnll
-'on.
•
.
Baglnnlng at f. p.m., the u.wtlng
Center will Oond\lcf clocupallonll lldlli
&amp;urVIY8 houlty, Counlllorl Wilt be
awalllble t o - QUeltlonl.
"UAW Family Oily lllfll 111(111 the
balllnnlng of a twcMier ~
tile Unhllralty .., .......

or

=--==
.::.::n.:e.:
lclantlatlle
_....
.........,.STVIIINn
.......
........
................
.,..
...................
..,....
......_.
..
.....
.
--===:c·
..............
............ ...,
'*-

femjllaa ...

awalllble .to IMm

ol•

Iity," , _ R.
public.,.,., ~ ·

h the IJIIW-

1, cllrlctor

.

.,.,_. ... ooniiiiUOIII IIIPolnl-

.

~...,

....... -..._1M CNIIJir.

ol

-

�March 15, 1871

4

VIEWPOINTS
Wes~ Valley:

$200 ·reward offered
for r,turn of carpet

Don't watch 'history being made,'
do something to protect future,
urges Writer who favors clean-up .

.,-.WIIV-C..,
.............
-.-c::._,Colego-

witt only lncnue the tieallh hazard.
Who'l~

A _, of NewaWHic
lftiiOIIZIM (J.n. 1. 1m1Yexplalned that
"In 1•1, - . the Atomic Energy
Commle.ion begen -lng nuclear
1NiipOII8 In tha ~ ~. olflclalo
--....aed people In .-by Utah and
Atlmnlllo ovt .nil 'history

:=..,~· :r=~=d=1~"m .

morning to welch tha fierce whHe
,,...._ to.-1ng mushroom

cloudl"

The ertlcle m.kea mention of the fact

tNt while "a W people lett Ull888Y
about tha naddlah-plnk clouds tho!

drifted ~ their homes a lew hours
.rter -=t. teet, tha govwnment
continually ilownpla,.ed the danger."
What hoppaned to th- trusting
-,;:nwtnd IYom then...;._,. test olte,
In tha town of 1'-an. Ulah,
that a group of
.-t~y called .wy name In
tha phone boc* and d l - 1 175
CMCir wtctlme, out of a PGP'!Iatlon of

,_...,._ ._u

on~,c:;..~ .,lcle .-de like a
honor story. "You can't )ell .,vt&gt;ody
how bed It Ia ... yqou'l..r.'otop thinking
about deeth," 8lild Dennis Smith, a
· 28-~-old IJ1all:) 'rwfdent Who haa
• auff....:t from ~ !yp!IS oA cancerous
~ 1umora tn the Jllllt lour y..,.. l:oa
Joh1'18on, a
teacher who loot her
"daughter to .......,Ia, turned up the
of 75 loCal canC« wtctlma many of whom .,.. children during-the
leall.
S\
w.t~. unauapecttng pee&gt;-

""'*

~

~~~~~

Atom
'*DY Commte.Jon to secure
the
'
ue bleaatnge of atomic
flaafoll.w 1'
.

~
be

tact

,• -~~llhould
• lt'e more tlw'l limply the
a

=

portion of the
at w.t Valley . .

large

......

. tha .-It oA nucleer -.pone production. tho ~ . oA ~

:-=.,~Ia,=
==of~n!-=A=
EnlrVJ Oolnmlaalon: And tllniual'l ltl

lor the
....... Fuel . . . . . . ~ and Wee!

a

....., 1 ........... _ . . 1-'r
lillllon
IIIIa ,_, IIIII 118 III'CM'IUOIIIil !*e. the
Oepiirbi•ll oA EMniY OMiaa on th8
AIIIMio
£ -fiir'-1
. ~··
lladltlon
cl
ciiiNganl
..,..

1111~. w.t
1M ~ of

y.., .....

,_~~~!'

...... &gt;-=•

Eniirgr'a _,.

................
fiiiCI... ....,.... and .........._.w.
·-·-·
llliiliii.:.T:
=::...:.=r... ..:
fl

I

'Ha• ... W.Vtller ..... and

~·J·~~

............
lnlaiwt
_ ~
........
_ I n t o 8flnolnCI
__ _
111
w.

w-..

Who o going to foot the cte&amp;J&gt;-up bill?
Surely, Nuclew Fuel Servloes, and Its
parsnt-comp.ny, Getty Ott, should be
forced to aaoume their lair share of the
clean-Up costa, but our area congressmen can help too. If they oponoor a
"tranoler amendment" to the FY80
budget that would halt the conatructton
of a otngi•Trtdellt submarine, we could
use the $1 billion saved to fund
programs opaclflcatty designed to
remedy the dangerous ottuatfons tho!
exlot In Western New York· at West
Valley and Love Canal.
Our security can only be enhanced II
theos - tous health hazards are
properly addl'8ssed. Moreover, at a time
when both our government and tho.
Soviet government have · long since ~
surpaoosd the point of being able to
annihilate everyone, -reducing the atze
of the Trident fleet , even by juat one
submarine, can only be a step In the

rt~t~ ~ ~.\\itlon merely hili 11-t the
tarHer laaueothat are connected o West
va ey. The nuclear power Industry,
through Ito friends In the Department of
Energy, would like to uos taxpayer
money to lind a dump site lor Its
Increasing amounts oJ rad ioactive
wastes. In addition, the Carter
Administration's lneffactual non-proliferation-program would make places like
West Valley the dump slteo for
radioact ive wastes from reactors all
aroun~ the world .

1

cOell Thlo Ia

1

toO highthe
~e

coats of nuclear

~~~o~1 ~0om:e ~~ ~~~h~u~~ ~~

. otherwise would be to follow the tragic
. example of the people of . Parowan,

Ut~;-11\e

time of the 1951 A-bomb teats,
the Atomic Energy Com min ion p&lt;alsed
the comelacency of local people,
saying,
Youw accepted the riok
without fuao, without alarm , without

1*'1~~. panic mav nOt be the .,;.., form
oA action, Ia! ue not 1at the

~ment

If you bet .... ~hlng you hear' on
campue, lull .t&gt;out -rene here IS'
either looking lor or hal nocentty l.,ded ·
a job In California.
Yet, a nocent front-page atory In the
a.trNy llldeJ&gt;endMI and Gazelle
- " that on-.uy of California
admll)latratOfW ...,. r811ed concema
about "a brain dr8in" or n~ht of
:::=:m~-~ tnatitutono In

-

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

=ce:~~~ty=
dlacuaaad."

oAf_,

......., ~ aeld !My doubt

..., .-.lor~ wilt"'-"

.-r 1 - , IIIII 11i1r ,_a Pftllllema
.... , . . ....... !My didn't ""

V"""·~~
.
ol::*::'::'~

and

........... lll8lllullona . . ......., Ia
lllllldof?

As • an International studenl ,sometimes taet thjlt It Is not right 101"
me to perttclpate In the sludent
govemment. But es a student, like other
students, 1 am touched by whot the
student government or the University
admtnlstrstlon decides as policies.
Therefore as a cpocemad. s.tudenl
and S.A. se'nator, t hove the right .,d
even an obligation to express my views,
both pro .,d con, regarding any lsaue
tn order to- build a good student
government and a good University,
which are responsible to the nead.s and
Interests of students. ·
Lately, t have been disappointed and
even di sgusted by what haa -na,:.r.entng In the S.A. This under- ·

and dts5otving the
elected executive committee positions,
first consulted The Spt~Cir:Jm about hla
decision, and .--!vee:! speclllc advice
from The Spt~Ctrum . A general election
wes called. .,d nearly everyone. Tilt
Spectrum. endorsed was vlctonoua;
Once again- there exists a S~sctrur~
S.A. "8X&amp;Ci/tlve committee.
Now, ~· think 1hal thrO\Igh David
Hoffm., a i'aferendum.~, The Spectrum Ia
trying to aboltah lha110.A. Senate. It
not enough lor The 5Peclrpm to con
the exacutlve lnnch of S.A.; now
want to control the leglalatlve branciL
Their greed, out of control,
expanded to daal1'8 absolute dlctat
ohlp and control o - all S.A. matt..,
with their edltor-ln-chtef ~n commanct.

needs. It Is because of a tack of
leadership and vision by the · elected
S.A. executive "appolntad" by the

Fellow students, this dictatorship Ia
not only contradictory to democrat
process and· freedom , but It Is
enemy.

~r~!~e =~~de~.~~'"'roents:~~nt~

ffPf.(r:~~h~~~: \~e';,~~8~~e~:~!~·-

an~~~~~n~~~~: ::;e:~~~~~:n~

~~~~ty •p:eres&amp;g:::::~"(~ th~~

1'8l~. lor ~~:==~~~,:.

Poor planning alob hinders attempts to
lif,splre students at large to panlctpete
In :and support the efforts oJ the student
liOvernrrient, espaclalty concerning
fasues auch as the Springer Rei)Urt,
General Education, and the tuition hike.
Despite all theoslaltures, our student
government executives have been
Interests) .

un~~.,~ut~h.:lotth':" =~~~fl\cf~~
=,,e:,~~·:r .:r~~red T~

8:'.' 3;;!:~":::::~

:·
endorsements won by a l.,dotlde, Jay
Rosen , now eilltor-ln-clilel, wes wltnesaed by -eral people, beating hts
tloto on the floor, .,d then turning to
John Retos, a CD-ilndorolng editor,
saying "We did It, we did ill" Clearly to
all that heard Jhlo, It lnllllnt they were
ouccesofut In putting In power
whomever lhey'W.,Ied. Patrick Young's
letter stated that over the test live y...-,
Spectrum-endorsed candidates won

~ ~;e"ci,~~e!::"~fflctal,

ovr.
not
neceaearlty In the S.A .. told mo thot In ·
the h"t of .,.,gument, Jay Rosan told
Kart Schwartz (S.A. President), that he
could put Kart out of office any lime I'll!
..,led.
3. On November 15, 1978, when I wes
In The Spectrum office trying to put an
'advertleement In lor "lha Thin! World
Waek 1178," Bitt Ftnkleateln, Specfrtlljj'a bu•'- """'9r told the
(~ andoraad) S.A . IIXIICuttve
¥lOa llfWident .loaf Maywaohn, "I put
you In offlca and I CM put you out of
oflloa
Bin Flnldaat.eln atl!O

anru-."
:w:'"llllto,., =..c.~..t"lhou~

=..=.
o=.:'"..:..'"':
====-::~u.
a.A.,......

== .

.

.

~~d.e(grad 'S~!~.~:tt1on

=·9!'1:nth~~e

Berteley 'fairs'
U/8 pay seal~&amp;

Consequently we feel that Inform•
tlon may lnadwrtently come to the
attention ol oQmeone 'within the
University famny concerning this
matter. Wtt offer: therefore, a reward o1
Two Hundred Dollars ($200) for
k
ledge leading to tho
now
recovery ol
ou~~!;,d ready at all times o1
to pick II up whereve 't
'
course,
r' may ..
found, with no Ques~=edM. Hlfrla
·
President
•
Faculty Club

SA official blasts·

of Energy lull ua Into a fill8e aenae of
Patrick Young's letter to 1!'18 ectttor In
MCUrlty. Let\Ja not make the mtotake'of
the NO¥ember 1 edition ol The
truetlng • lhoaa who .,_ not ohown
Spectrum . Therefore, Instead of being
lhern8lil- to be trustworthy. Instead · ·· elected by Md then 1'8pnosanlfng the
otUdento, they 81'8 In fact 1'8presantlng
of watching "htatory baing lnade" at our
IXf*'l• · Jat ue act neaponalbty to
The SP«Irum . Let me ohow you further
evidence:
protact the futul'8 ::. for ouraelves .,d
our ohlld1'81'1.
•
1. On March ·3 1978, Immediately
alter the reoulto o{ the general election

Wllttathe Barlcalay P811tf dlaput• the
, "Chin," H doaa aclmowltidge that "UC
pay , _ fallen behind the other top
unlver81t ... In the coumty.• ,California
alMa olflclala . . Quoted • actmowl-

--..-

Editor·
· 2s
"On ihe weekend of F~ 1 •
Just past, a very valuable flo
~
l'erslan carpet wes removed from 1
Faculty Club by persons unknown.
This carpet was purchased with club
funds some -years ago, and hes a
major Ingredient In the beauty and
comfort of our upotal.- Red Room.
The Faculty Club Board are. ~nVt nced there must have been tnsode
advice" to 1he perpetrators of this
outrage -the whereabouts ollhe carpet,
how to get tn, when to carry out tho
theft, etc.

be
onbut
lhla
-IIIIII'8Ciale
· 1 like
811'1OfiiMI8ad
Iii~.
I donof

-.eatlty. lncldanfally, But

-

....

Man:ti

. ..

~

ICIIt

........ "'--ion frocn

IIIII fllcill Mott, ax I.A.

..... olllciatly IWIOillng

unfold be?ora ui, swallow us up, and
regur.qllate ua Into a ayatam whei8
input•s non-.xlstent, like Iran under the
Shjlh
Th{o fetter was 1'8l&amp;eted for Tilt
Spectrum 's Monday Issue and after I
modified tt, becauoa of Jay Rosen , Tilt
Spectrum edltor-ln-chtel'a older, It still
Coordinator, International Affairs, S.A.

Agency fee law
now up for renewal
Editor:
I thought that aoademlc andprofessional colleaaues ahou ld ..
reminded that the legletatlon authortz·
lng agency ahop , _ (deductions from
aalar... to finance the union) expt. .
thlo year. It 11 expacted that legtolatton
to renew thla authorization will ..
Introduced ahortly. ApPII*'Ifly action lO
thla and on tha ~ of the legislature
will take pi-thla Spring.
It Ia very poutbla that neither publiC
haartnge on the propelled legtotatton
nor ., effort to ellcH opinion on lhl

iaa=~:.- ~'.:tduala

cpncelhed
about thte fee ohould think aboUt
writing to or contacting legislators to

e x c their ~:::"·alternatives appell'
poaatbte. ~ would be a continuation
ol the agency fae legislation. Another
would -be etlmlnatloil oA agency fee
deductlone. A thin! would be legislation
which limite dedllctlona from the
aatariea of non-union IIMIII'IberO to an
amount which auppona only,the direct
costa of negotiating and administering
the COI'IIIact .nil -tlaJ 111Qui1'81T'181'111
lor union orgarilzatlon. Thla tatter
alternative would allmlnate uae of
agency ahop deductiOns lor political
action, lnauranoa pollclee, vartoue
pubtlcatlone, and other matters pert·
pharal to tha ,barllalnlng process .
Unl- aoma oppOeltlon ta fndlcated, it
.....,_. v.y POA!IIIa 111e1 the leglal•
hn will con81der"only the...,..... ol
the agency allop authorization.
~ 18 OM other conalderatfo!l, I
bel ...... A 1.-ga union lllllllbenlhtp wilt
.... .. ,.,..._ In IUPII0'1 ol agency

~~~-~

c::r'~~ wlall to conllder this
-LD. .,..,_,
"""'-· Edtioal101'1818tudleo

�lllarch 15, 117 ...

t

.i i

Fa~ulty

group ·suspects
outsiders at work here ·,

Erotic fantasy unfolds with - wit and charm; moves from
slapsti~k ~o complex~ reflective
,
Oepardleu, a d riving school Instructor,
whose lantern j aw and pri zefighter's
body combined with a facial expresslor&gt;
~.vaclookuou_s sweatnesa, give him a comic
ou'lp 10
Carol Laure has lew . linea • but her
beauttturtace Ia eloquent iit(\ .(811ects
her reactlona to the men'il ~leuberant
efforts to p i - har, In subtle shadings
of dlagoat, apathy. melancholy, lntt•
tlon. And we, - lng her througll the

By &amp;tiler Hllrflotl
Oirwclor. CUII.nl-.

1

Lut Ju,., In the OOU&lt;8jl of hla week's
rwlclency 111 U/8, the dlatlngulahed
FNnctt novelllll Mel fllmrnllker, Alain
~IIIII , gave a IChol.ty expllc'aIIOn after the 8CrWI!Ing of hla film ,
"Eden Mel " " -·" It ciiCI nothing to
dluwde t111a vlenr that wlllll • had
111111 en exploll8lM and
'-110111 male tentay movie that

~;: :r."i1~"1. '::;.f_:~?~a ~

~to'-~madebya -·

. Just

don,

c:Qmlfllly pllrytnglll the

..,._.,.end origin.! llllihlon,

·

"*'
=-~...::£t:. ~-='their

Ilea

neiGhbor (

' SerraUit). It' s a
axwnple of Bller'a ability to
fmptOifl• and elabotllle on a cornplet•
ly off-beat Idee; the reeuh Is comic '
perlactlon.

1

camp for underprivileged children
(where tha trio haw! takan jobs aa
oounaalora to give the wife some
country air), the movie develops from
,_Into something mora reflective
and complex. •
The turning point Ia the Introduction
o1 tha 13-yaer-old eon of an Industrial!at, whO
to cernp IIY his !**Ita. eo that he will expertance life ;
among the loww ~ - hie future
·

Ilea-....,,

...

:;~.:-~ '1::'.~-::.-:::~

aflde; he amuaaa Mel touchaa her, and

jllttmataly, although he looka llka •
balw1y ~t child, wtth shrewd
menlj)ulallpn ha manages to aaduce
her.
8ha Is radiantly IIMaformad, but ..
Wilen CllnP •• - · .-talOlW former
Har l1tiO "huebanda" daclda that

PocUt lloc*GIIIIID&amp; thai .... _

publl&amp;ll&amp;d {10110
HeMnlnCI to ~

~

-

Mel .

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

· =:"~-~:::

lnnunamed

.......ntVP

not, we would like to .,..,_. ow
supporl lor the preaent Insurance.
system.
Att~~eke on the right to safe abortion
commonly bagln with attacl&lt;a on
funding . Hera on campus, the compulsory Pr&amp;Q118119' IIIO'ftll'll8nt Ia ua_!(lg the
plua-wonla " Rtghla" and "Conaclance"
to mask their llllacl\ on health care
·rights through an attacl\ on funding .
In fact , they want to make this
particular health care right lnacceaslble
and Ioree women with unwanted
pregnanclee to undergo the horrors of
beck-alley aborllon or abandon their

of the

nMure ol her ..ad for this-·

The Nlll of lila movfa lll!flli!IIIIM the

NjaDIIng

with en ulldeniurrent of
mall*, • ...,_, •

,., =

,_.,__ Within Ill&amp; oontiXI
....Walanecy,

~

Ill&amp;
th&amp;-,.... ..,tact
01

:=.~...:.c=·':

IIIII

-.~.::

=r••==:

and

ao •

laugh

bWI"?
'\'llil~OIItYDwMalfl
............__
.,

......... . __ _.
===:c::::.::..:

~-1

educations and bear unwanted children:
If abortlo~ coverage Is m - optional
will soon beconfe Impractically
llxpenslve and unobtaln~e - the real
goal of the &lt;;pmpulsory pregnancy
people. Christian Scientists, Jellodh'a
Wl1neaaes and Sewnth Day Adventists
know their premiums go to pay for
medical procedunss lor others which '
they personally find unconscionable
but they don't try to dany cara to others :
This group, while prOClaiming lndlvldIt

::~~~t.:'r~tst~~· -ro,. else to

All students who want lo protact their

accaaa to health cara and their personal

lraadom should question the sponsorship and lundlllf' of ·tha "Righta of I
Conscience" g~ Sub Board should
view the gi'OUp'e claims to be oothlng
but a bolla fide auaent· group With a
great deal of llkaptlclem. Oeaplle the
actlona of thla 'V"!IIP. a woman's
termlnatln~ ahoukl-

~':...":~-..-sin~ Sf

-Mana...._
......-

-_ .........

-

any

Excutlv&amp;Diractor,
cal Clinic

~ "'*t Plo J
Ill' Lew &amp;
Liz K......,, AUoc. " * - o f
A~

Clerlaa ....,._, • - -·

Adellna LMt•,

...

- ,..._
-·

~--

•

='~'"J

II;:(Lell,., Plol&amp;aeorof=~

-~..,.,
- . - . . o c. Prot-ot
Engllah
N&amp;Dflllw.taeillll, ProfaaaOr of
.
P8ychology

Women sa ld spen
· dl ng Iess IIm.e
·as mother.s,
more ~
time
.o n-th•Job
llaltlar
..., _ _ of .............. wftll
-

__ _

aald, -.y women

,.... a all · thar·-

__.....'-r..... llnlca to th&amp;

=~~~~~~r~
legal ~ion for all wolniln, wlialthy or

~ul

r:o::·
c=
..
,
..
--~­ th&amp;::o*'~~=::n~~':
--·K..:J:=oo...at~n~-=
th&amp;
. .n, • "- ._t
..... .....,.
..s•="*
~

wiiiDh

:::...~s~..:::-::;

Tlle.__lellacthle
When the acene ahllta to a summer

.,_,t

her to -"..
but.....
lila an
- anoagl~
do.
baooiM
Jill&amp;, and

~ sent

~~~~~·~
...,._.., ~~ tum, pilrwarta hie ·

'*'*"'*

·~-Dewaln doaan't luooead In .galling

en!Qmatlc

~-=:-:.hal' ~

end

to auaper!d ow disbelief Mel
allow puqeMa 10 . . C*rlad along .by .
Bller'a Wild IMp&amp; of IINginMion.
The movie~ In s orowdad Perla
, . . . _ . - t h e young . hileband
(GerM! D.i*dleu), beald&amp; hlmaal_l
- ... his adored wll&amp; (Ceroll.aunl) Ia
, oontlnuoualy depreuad, ennouncea to
her tNt ha lowe her eo mucll lhlll he
w111 melee her a
of a .fallowdl- whom he thinks She's bMr\ eyeing
over lunch .
Ha Introduces hlmaall to the other
· men (PIIIrlcl\ DewMre) and, explaining
hla wile's emotional condition, lnlllt•
him to bacom&amp; her looer. '1f you gat her
. to emile, you11 ba my pal," tha ....-!
Depwd..,
- - lila bamiiMd young
men.
.

Her

- a ..... ofht..,oua_..... o..

ajt.eloM, Mit It unfoldi wt1t1 IUGII wit
cllerm lhlll It would .. ooerllmplltylng and unfair to c:t.elly the

---~10;·
.._...tiled~no

dumb?

::-..

=~'=·='
~~lhlll,.: .
llllounde wllli ~ .......
· sWIMI'-tle.~. It COI\'IM • ·~
lhlll the entire film .. fentay. Wti ,_,

plain

. behavi.Or frustrates. the pals, but they
get fed up. She )a treated as an

Mlpl~- ~. In "' lnllnltaly '

men

~~:~~ !:'~~~r':,u~~~~~ ~ ,!:

an expensive mailing to SUNY /B
students and lists 13 t&amp;culty "and
others connected with U/B" as an
object, but not ol contempt, rather of · Advisory Committee.
· ,
WOnderment. lhey dallY her.
Of these, only two hold full-time
• Their -Unsuccesalul attempt&amp; to
faculty appolntmenta to SUNY /B. The
tm~e th' wlfa they 'have
group
shown a dlllermlnatlon, 18ft!
clec:fdjd that IMir unn=nna comes •
of political experience Wid effluence

lntelltctulll.
.
The - ' c t.ntaalea of another
I'Nnoh IICM!Iet-dnctor, a.trend Bller,
. . IIIUIIrlllad In ''Oel ' Out YoUK
~

~leta.

Editor:
.
- .
·Last Thursday, M&amp;n:h 8, Sub Board
held a four-hour hearing at wtilch some
400 students b841'd arguments for and
against the present system of abortion
COYerage In student health Insurance.
This would &amp;¥&gt;pear to be a question of
conOII(n prlmlirtly to student~, but the
possible Involvement of an·on-eampus
po fltlcat movement makes It an
lmpOrlant Issue for the entire SUNY /B .
community.
Opposition to the co-.ge Is
organized by the "Rights of eonscience• group; Ita spokes""'" claim
that such Insurance co-.ge should be
optional so that those opposed' to
abortion would ba abltl to exclude
0

0111
... - ,_ _..
..._
unc1ar a
'llfOik. ·And 111a tranc1 1e

Y'&amp;l!'

~.

�-15,1878

Summerperson
J11n MoOu~ Ia ona of the 'Summer
......,... In lha ~ play on ataea
,..,.,._.,-Bunclay 8t -the Ceniir for
~11.-n:h.

CAlENDAR
TIHnclay- 1 5

-II&gt;

IOAI'OPEJIA COIII'EIIENCE~
• ~ •• . _ Opor8~ . 0... u.ry CaoN!a,
U/8; ,.a.m., A ~JIItfo
the
..., 0,00.. o... Koinnot11 H.,n, Monmouth
Colloge; 11 a.m., A_....,al .....,.._
IB ' - Opor8a, 0.., sw.t Sur11o.
~ of WI-. 1:30 p.m., WhJ

.._,.,,
'· •-a••-.....
....... --.Dr.R"-"'-lo

Coraol~ 2:30p .m.,....,~
,.._
..... ,...._.

-c

-«..~

......, ,_,. - - - · &lt;ml, Cokun·
b1o ~ Hoopltal, Yorl\;
~F-. OTA, Equ~tmr. Ute.

- ~-~~-J-Keoler

Room, . . , _ F l Cor., .
Ellloal1.
~ IIJ the,.,_, fO&lt; the Study
of .,.,_ 1\' tile Dopolt!l*lt or

. .

- ~

~..._._.

F0&lt; - l - - I o n, contact 0... Mcy B.

Clwllll-

~-.._

lolo, 1111

dtnoclo.-, SUNY/Buf·
Bokly Holt.

__ _
•anuaCIIIIUI_
LKTURE"
Otn wMI be tile topic or Profeuor
~ .R . II.T_..

_ , Dolly, .,._..,. of Enollott, otter a
......,_, al1 p;ij11118 HMrlmon, Moln
c.mpuo.
~.. coli the
. 3.
Emorttuo Centar,
.
0
ITUDEIIT AIBOCIA,_ I'IIEaS
COIIFERENCr .r
The St_, Allitoclatlon will oponaor a
pnooo oon,...,..lon "TuHlon Hlk•" In 2.34
Squl,. all p.m. St-ta lro.-n other SUNY

--'""!!""to-

~

like 18th century Ruaatan nowla - a
rich -my of dloeroe 'ctwxt~. who
ooiHIJe, fUrl, cornploln and uiUmllfoly flee
the dilemma of what to do with tllelr 11-.
With the eXCiiptlon of .two women's

declabna, the queetlon.remalna unrnolved .

L&amp;:allla"

c._,
- . . . , _ _-;' Prof- Bemodete
Alpect8 of

- -. 8-Un-ty,Cempi-.
-• - • -. 3p.m. ·

~·
.
'lite .._ al .,. ._, Lucluo C.Hiach, a
- o f tile 8 - clol8gatlon to the ·
~-.._of""'- eont...nce . .

D O'lkWI liaR. 3:30 p.m.
- the

~

~ by
on l-Ionel Studi!IO ,
the Mitchell

--.._SOciety,
latin-.

a.GLOOY LECTIIIIE"
_,..... I .,..,, 0... ouw.yne

-----=•lao.
.......
,.,... .......
_
.....
....
-.-.
~.-.

~ofU/8 c- t l,

- a-.. .,.,

GEIIOIITOLOGY SEIIIIIAII"

ee:\loi&amp;"'L:~;e'o~.=":~ ~~~~~

SCienoa Oeportll)OOI. 330 Squire Holl. 3:30

p.m.
~

HIGHER ED L£CTURE•
,
The lbluo of bonllnufne ~ .
-AIIrod L Moye, deputy commlooloner Jor
hlghor and continuing education, U.S .
Gttloo of Educetlon. Cant.luo• Coli-. 8
~m . Spon-..:1 by the t!'lti"'ment_ of
Higher Educotlon.
••
Exec! - location available from the
~mont of Higher Education, ~481.

Room :!Q, Diefendorf Annex . 7 p.m. ·

NEWIIIAN CLUB SPECIAL EVI!NT"
Overnight ouJlng: "A S'-lng Bag Day of
Recollection. • Amherst ~pus Newmon
Contar. Coli 6111-2123 lor addHionol
information.
lAC FILII"
The Outlaw. JooeJ Woloo with Cli nt •
Eastwood. 148 Dlel.endorf. 7 and 10 p.m. $1

• SOAP OPERA CONFERENCE"
lO a .m. - lnlkle Looldno Oul: How the
C..Otoro Look II ~ Operoo, Claire Leblne
and Paul Avtla Mayer, creators, executtve

admiaalon for non-feepayera.

CACFILM"
The Drlwor. 170 MFACC. Ellloott. 8 and 10
p.m. Tlckata ora $1 .50, atudents; $2 general

producef11: and head writers of ..Ryan's

Hope;• Actreoo Sllf'llh Felder (Shloban) of
· "Ryan's · Hope;" and Robert Dnacoll ,
-!dent and chief executiWI offloor,
Sklb!Mir.n Productions, Ltd., CenodL
2 p.m. - 0 - L_.,. In: Wllollhe

8aJ

admission.

DRAMA"
Summe&lt; Pooplo by Moxlm Gorl&lt;y, dlrwcted

About What '!boy

..., Emanuet. SoeNa, authOf of tM SoepOpor8 - · and en 'editor, Crown
Publlolllng Co.; Jon-MI"""" Reed, syndJcated oolumnll! "The Soop Report; "
.Riclwd Flelacher, dlrej:lor, CredH-Frea
Pn&gt;gromo, U/B. Kothorlno Cornall Theatre
and Jone Keeler Room , MFAC, Ellllcott.
Sponoonod b~ the Program lor the Study
of Daytime TV ond the Deportment of
Communication.

·

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SElliN ARt
~ T_.....~ . 0... Gabor T.
Herman, profMeor, com put« sclence. U/8.
325Bell. tt a.m .
ENYIRONIIENTAL STUDIES CEIITEI'I
COLLOQUIA'

,.,..... In C:O.III GeolooJ of the Grioot
· LoUe, Joen Pope. Envlronment.t Studies
Cooter, 123 Wllkooon Ouaa, Ellicott. 12

L.--

IIIDIA STUDENT ASSOCIATION PARTY"
Dlnnor "!Ill b e - - P I - oome : and
rnM:e It a aucc:eas:-' Bring your apou ...
along I

Th1a Ia the afxth In an eight tec::tunt series
oponaored 11J the ...,.-rment and held on
College campuaea throughout Wf't!Y.

,_

.

SponaO&lt;ed by the MuHidlaclpllnory Contor
tor the Study or Aglno.
-

noon.

QUAIIMA'IlVE AMALY. . LAI
CAliA. 213 Bold~. 12 noon~ 11
- -· call 1131-2110 and lei ua know
_.,._,,no, but don't
becauoo
you forgot
call. Brtno • -lch If you
uu; we'l! tumlah--~ _

•'-1•-

_ ~..,

................ -~Ciubo

Barbara. A Foster Lecture. Room 18, 4240

· Ridge Leo . -3 :~ P ~ ·

Friday- 16

to

p .... E&gt;tlooWoiii ..ll

..._....__

, OEOI.OGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR"
toot-, Le-, 0..0, 0 - II.
Tilton, Unlvenolty of California, Santa

UUAB FILII"
· Conlorwnce Th!IO!r9, Squire.
Coll838-21119 lor ehOw tim•. •
~udla Weill dlrocto her flrot looture film,
which or.. Molanle Moyron, Anita Skinner
ond Ell Wallach.

Cllllco -

-.l'tl•••••at:af

CIVIL ENGINEERING SEIIINAIIf
Ugh! Roll Replcl Tronall 8,..... Ia&lt;
a.-, Daniel Hoyt , dlrwctor of plannlno
ond environment; Eric Collall; dlnoctor of.
orchHecture and englneortng, Nlagora
Frontier Tranoportatlon Aulloortty, BuHolo.
322 Ae-on. 3:30p.m .
·

ln Ruaa&amp;a at the tum of the century, whk:h
he caJted ac..a r11ther than a play. reaulta
In

by Ward Wllll.meon. Center fpr Theatre

ReoliOreh , 681 Moln St. 8 p.m. General '
admlaafon $3; students and aenlor citizens
$1.50. ADS vouchero accepted . .Spon-..:1
by the Center for Theatre R-rch and
· Theotre Deportment.
U/8 OA't'LIBERATION FRONT'

Coflaehouoo. 107 Towneand. 8 p.m.
Everyone ~lcome .

UUAB FILII!.
. _Girifr1Mda. Conference Theatre, Squ)re.
C&amp;ll 63&amp;-2911i» for .ahow times. Admlaalon
charge,

MONTE CARLO NIGHT"

•

Wllkaaon Socond Floor Lounge. Ell lc!'ll.
9" p.m. Free .:tml11l on; free beer, free
refreshments . Gamee auch as Rou lette,
Blackjack, etc. will be pl.,ed. Prlzoa wor1)1
u much u S15 wUI be.141Clloned oft.
SponaO&lt;ed by the College of MothemO:t~Sciences (CMS).
UUAI IIIIJICIQHT FILII" ~
Dorlt (1874). Conference Theatre,
Squire. 12 midnight. Admlooion cherge.
A cuH ac~fl cluolc dacrtbed ·u . _,
with a..., .. of humor."

.IC*IT -AIID
-Def'T.
ENGUtH
LANGUA8E
'lllanTun
OF L*GIIIITICS

COl LOQI ......
1lle . . . . _ Cltllft UN of -

a.__.. .............. ..__
a...ttlllf. OolooAio Ke~Mr.eoe..o, u. of

-....

•

Ann

Al11or.

Dlac;uaoant:

~
· Dooper(oDont
of
CtGe .............
~. 1:30

...........
~-

p.IIL Fwfur11W~ ...I1131W177.

-...w.CH--AM
•.-l'le,U/8. Ctt1~ 1:415p.m.

-

••
II 8CBCL UIIOIMCE
• II . . . IIIUCILIIIII •••
II
'lite . . . . . . . . . .

..............
- ......
...............Ooottlllltlttl
Dr. 011111 U..UIB.
,.

- -.1...... ,..._..,. _ _
Clllllaa-.

STUDENT RECITAL •
llualo Ia&lt; ' - ...,...,_, a recital by
chamber muolo-pleno duo otuclinto of Alilll
Arachenaka Boldt. Mno. Boldt and her
husband, Kenwyn , will aleo tlike part In the
perform.nce. Baird Recital Hall . 8 p.m. Free
admlaelon.

UUAS FILII"
--.o-(Fronce, 1877). Conference
T-trw, Squl,., Cell e38-2Qt8 tor show
um... Admlooion charge.
In' Poria, a ourvhor or Auachwltz Is paid
lor ralolng the child,.. of proatHutea. An
unueuat Md touching relatlonehlp devetops
betwoon !lola ox·proatltute ond an Arab boy
placed In hercuotody. The film won the 1978
Academy Award fO&lt; Bnt Foreign Film .
Simone Slgnorwt ployo the lead.
UUAS MIDNIGHT FILII"
Dorl&lt; • •· Coni.,....'"-"'· Squlra. 12
midnight. Admloalon c:Mrge.

~y.::_ 18
IIEWIIAII CUIBII'IICIAL I!VEIIIT"
Su--, trtp to St. Stepllon Church for •
' Byzant... RHo - J o n. for further
lnfonnatlon, oou ~u .
DIIAIIA IIA1WI&amp;"

SaturdAy- 1 7

.,y':';:"'~~!:dT=

IIIC,..., •

- · eat ..... 81. 3 p .m. G-.oL
-loolonS3;-- -lor cHU.Os

1lle Ootll8w - . , W- with Clint
- -· 170 MFACC, Ellicott. 7 and 10
p.m. St adl!&gt;loolon ro;r-non-r-,.,a.

$1 .!10.

·.

Ill' tile

ADS---'· &amp;poneored
cam.

for ~ - . t 1 and

Theetrw~.

--·
......___
-._,._
-·........-......
.........
..................... -.--...
------0...8. .
CACI'IUI•
111e · t48 Diefendorf. a 'and 10 p.m.
T - .,. 11 .50, ol-ta; $2 _ . .

,._
_.,;w...._.. ean...... .......,.
.,
--.
.,....__
Ill' -

- . 111 -

St. 1 p.m. - . ,

~OOntar . . 1 ' - ......... -

a...~

......-.·

._,.

.............. -IUD

...................... of.,._,

~

-

P'OII . . . MUBIC.

..... .. Clltltlll ..... c.t ........
T - , , ......... V - . per- '

lormetiiiJ~ottlleC..Otl.e
~ A ............ Art Qallory. 8

p.m. r-.: S3 ...,... -~Bolon ; S1
- t . gallatr - · U/8 _,un)ty
and -lorolliiiiM.
~---·
._.,.....,
llie OOntar
tile Clwtlve and
...._,.. Arte ond .1110 ~~ of
~

.

of

tuABFIUI•
......... 1~. tW11. cOntorence

r-. .....

0111 ....... lor -

�.C'

Glrlfrlends_
-nle

Mayron and Anlt8 Skinner are
friends In tha UUAB movie,
T!MrnGyand Frict.y.

the

Exhibits
ALAIIO 'CALLERY
Sarah Dewlclman: Palnllnoe and Tine
011111 A Naomi R - fltonll.. Prinlo
O..Winga. Alamo Gallery, Bock Ha[l.
Through April 4. SponaO&lt;S: VP lor Health
- ~lances and Art Department.

Notices
Media Study.
SCHOLAIIS SCAN THE SELLEIIS•
Russia's greatest director used all his
Tho Sl-lkNreby J .R. Tolklin: Robert .
cJnematic m8gtc to t81t the epic tale of
Daly Department ·of EJ'gliah Sponsored by
Prince Nevlllty and his heroic stand ogj'"
ln~str--.;:;c"
rea
:!U'ri:~nams. · .'
German Invaders during the 13th century.

CARIBBEAN WEEKEND ~
The Weat Indian Student Association Ia
sponsoring a Cari-n WeeMnd March.
·
21·24. The.cheduta Ia:
W-y. 21 - Panel dlacu ..
slon, with Molefi"Asante, 232 Squlns, 8 p.m.
~y, .,..,., 22- A nim.punch porty,
~
aocond flOor lounge, Red Jact&lt;et, 8 p.m.
Friday, M..,., 23 - An alklay arti'11nd
i:nollo exhibition, Center launge, Squl"'
Hall . A Cultural Show, Flllmoie ·Room . 8

Firat of six dlscusalona on recent best

BFA RECITAL!

sellers by members ol.the DOpartment of
English .
•
·

Tonr Mlrwtd1, percussi on. Baird Recital
Hall. 8p.m .

sessions~

$15 for the ·aeries; S3 for lndtviduaJ
Cell 831-4301 for registration, room
number&amp;. times, etc.

Tu~y-20

p.m.

ARCHITECTURE LECTURE"
Traditional Archltacturw In lnclta, Gea&lt;go

OUANMATIYE ANALYSIS LAB BAG
LUNCH SEMINARf
PYedlctlqna from . -- Factorial- Causel
Pau l Lohnes. 213 Baldy. 12 noon.

-1.

.STUDENT RECITAL•
Baird Recital Hal l. 12:15 p.m .
SPECIAl SERIES ON EFFECTIVE
LEARNING FOI'I UNDERGRADUATES
Making Sanae of Your Natura l Sclanos

~ n selevic lus ,

details.

VISITING ARTIST RECITAL"
Trio dl Milano. Baird Recital Hall . 8 p.m.

Cohen,

and

Sherry!

Weems,

-0:

Unlwrsii,Y Leeming Center. 2!12 Cope n.
1-2:20-p.m.

MICR0810lOGY SPECIAL LECTUIIEI
Aut-ted , _ _ , . . . , ·or. Robert
F. Ahchle, med ical ell-, F&lt;&gt;Undallon 10(
Blood Aeaoorch; Scorborough, Maine. 2o4e
Coty. 10a.m.

General· admissi on $4; U/ 8 facUlty , staff,
alumni and seni or citizens , $3; students-$1 .
Members of the trio are: Bruno C&amp;nlno,
plano; Cesare Ferraresl , violin ; and Rocco
Filippini, cello.

BIOCHEMISTRY - - A R r
Roll of Upldoln- cell - - Adonytota Cydole ~ . Dr. ~lchael
Glue&lt;, Deport-! o1 Blochemlotry, Unlwr·
slly of Ill inola. 1D8 Shernw't. 4 p. m .

Are..,.

HAP PRESENTA110N•
Who' Wa
W!m We Do, a panel
discussion and displeya of the different
disciplines In the sciloOi of Haahh Relllled
P"!leulons. 2«1-2411 SqUire. ..e p.m . Panel
dlscuaalon 1t 4;30 p.m . Alfrnhments will
bh..wd.

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
R - 0...-.llve from Kleinhans . WBFO
(88.7 FM) . 8:20p.m.

ZuokennWI , Plecement Couns•or, Univer-

sJty Ptaoament end c.n.or Guidance, U/B
and B• Roth , •slatant director. Unlverslly

INTERNATIONALIIAIIACiaENT a
POLICY ANAL- GUBT - E l l
SERJES•

,_..__, . . ~lnU.I.F......

p,._

Pelley,
Rolpll . . . . . . . - nat ional ~ ~ CUNGilY
vlah lng ~.---of__.., .

Room 1-. -

Cromy Haft. 4 p.m.

~ Center,
•

T-......, ·In,_

IJNGU111'1C1 LICTUM"

of

...._..-........-o.~.

Un"'--ly o1 ~. U'91111101 Lounge,
Spauldl. . o.L ......... .,. .... . _ . . .

,__
-_.......__
........................"""'-...
bythoa.....~Ciub .

A~~

~- ...... .......,c..llill

---·

Collaat. ................ .,.,...... ,..

-......
.................
p

PATHOLOGY SEIIINARI

.

Tho Hlata&lt;y-ol Boctn&gt;n Ml...,soopy, Dr.
E.L. Benedetti. lns-utut • de Blologie
Molec~la i ns," Un l....,.lty of Paris. 180 Farber.

gnaduata atudents.

CHEMICAL ENCJINI- IIEIIINAAI
C.lrllc

~.

Lawnsnoo Ken·

3:30p.m .
CELl a MOLECULAR BIOLOGY SEIItNARI..
Structural and Functional Analysis of
YUit Genes, Dr. Ronald Davis, Department
of Biochem istry, Stanford University School
of Medici ne. 114 Hochstatter. -4:15 p.m .

New Dlurwtk:, Dr. Jared J. Grantham ,,
Uillverslty o.f Kansas Medk:al Center. S108

Shenl'an . 4 p.m. Coffee at 3:45. Sponsored
by. tho Departments of Physiology, 'Medicine, and Pharmacl&gt;logy &amp; The,_.tlca.

F-

CHARLES_OLSON IIEIIORIAL LECTURES•
Tho t h o - aatho
of 11-1()n.OOing · ··
lions:
~
of In Pn&gt;jectlooa, R~ 'Duncan, - 1.
112 '0'Brian. 8 p.m . F-. Sponeorwd by tho

_ !':3'~~~:~ment's G.-y Chair of P""'!Y
'-

nedy, .Qjoplftmanl of Mechanical EnglnMr·
lng . 2112 Cjlpen. 3 :30p.m .

DRAMA·

OEOLOGICALIICIENCD IIEM*Aft•

· 111 Main St. 8 p;m. o-al
adml..lon $3; atudenla and aentor c~­
S1.50. ADS _,.,.,_. acofpted . Sponaored
by tho Center lor ThMins 'nd

_...,

-

- . Will- R .. F.,.nd,
ol GeoloGY and M'-Oiogy,
~I}' .of M~. 18, 4240
Ridge \--00· ~:30 p.m.
~

AU.•

- - a y- -

ue

Dru.--

.

Department.

MUSIC•

Asw

_,,
.....
........,..to--...--

.

Juz ~· dtrwcted by Phil Sl!ftO.
Bai.,S Ailcltal HaR. 8 p.m. F-. ~
by tho ~ol Muatc.

- _"""'_...........

(Fonl).

Dllolendoff. 7 p.m . ~ by tho Center
for - • SludY.IOIIn w.,.sa. J 111 a - ' " V Jolin Fonl ~-,

Sum- Paop1a by Maxim Gofl&lt;y, directed
by Ward William-: "Center lor T -

~Ins

$ a _ _ _ _ _ _ ..

...

a . . . . . _ . . . . _ . , . ........

uuu......oa, ...,....

-

UUUfiUI•

~ (Fnsnoe,
~
Sqv~N. c.11 ea.att~ tor.

~ , ... "'_.,.., 7 p .m . ; . -

,....._Tile.,.....

- ...
of _ _ _ .......... -

a

Squh.

__..-.
.......,.
.............
...., ...__
__

.....,....

-·

t

of . . _ _ .

....

,., ••••••••
.

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

I

11178).
r-... ·
- - .Adllllellln-.,..

'

=~~~-~~=-=:
831...,.12: Volun._. muet- - l y
IJa

under the care of a den11et. P.,..lolplnta will
receive dental examinations and "j'-1'8Y8 to
determine how much routine t,.1ment they
nsqul ns. Two filll~go will be prb¥fiMll by a
dentist aa part of the study. ·~ ,,..:;;

LENTEN MASSES
On weekdays durln'g Lent, m.asis'WIII be
celebrated u follpws:
12 ooon and 5 p.m. - Newman Center,
Amherst Campua (Newman bua wiU make
Governors/Ellicott rounds) .
12 noon- Newman Center, 15 University

Ave.. Main-~ •
In addition, each Wadnaaday there will be
a meaa In 10 ~at 12:10 p.m.

mac~":~~~:~l=~:'~"'.::'..:~~

UFE WORKSHOPS
T . - , , 11on:tt 20: . Pain Klllere and
Narcotlca (a.g. aaplnn va. morphine).
• ..,._,, - 1 1 : Fat: Fact Fiction·
end Fada.
·
For.. mons
contact Lila
Wor1cahopll, 110 - · e31-21101.

•-ton

IIATH TlnOIUIIG
F M - tutorilllla "'!- by l i l a c o m - ' at lila Un~ t.a.nlng
Center dally .._ 10 Lm.-3 p.m. Ill Aooon
3C3 Baldy at A -. ~om ln.
I'

-

IP'!IW

.....

NEWIIAil CLUIW'IICIAL PIIOGIIAMI

-

w-.:.r

of Lalli • ipaCIIa?
pnognam wUI ba II 7:30 p.m. at
the Amlwal CamjiUI Clnler.

Enll--~
-bad
a: "A ,........

!1
ol _...-

..,.._,
-...on '-ICIIN -...o-t
_ _ _ t!la_oi_.A
on yowlftg up In Clwlll.•
On Tu.clly .........,. durinG '--. II I
p.m., a..,..of...__...-iona . . . .
l!loet8r. on Mil, on
on llllltl.-y"

nap ......,

..
-·
.
.
---.
.
.
.
--lo.
----·
c.......-.
__ ....,._..,
......,_
_________ ............... -.........
----·
_..........

.
UUAI_'f_,._.
........ t . . . . . . . . . . . . .
..............,.-.cc,-.1'-

•

__ _

Counaellrtg Service, U/B . EnrOllment lr

Umlted to cumtnt1Y enrol'-d U/8 uncter-

.- a-

and would like jo_ ~.Qart Jn~ • .a.t udy of

LECTURES IN BASIC NEPHROLOGYI
Vanedate, an ATPue "'hlbltor end Po-.nt

PSST PROGRAM
- ' - ' " SldHs lor tho job MarUI. 232
Squtns. 2·5 p.m. Loaders ora: Stephanie

please call §36-4194.

FRi..~!~~~~ :?!~hJ~ ·need dental work

Thursday- 22

Colleeat 4.

WedneSday- 21

FIRESIDeS PROGRAM~
Informal Dlacusl(ons on tho Bahal Faith.
Tuesdays at 8 p.m 13 ln . 262 Squire;
Wednesdays at 7:30p.m. In the Jane Keeler
Room ~
Ellicott Coft\Alex.~ For , more
lnlorm~tlon

~

CHARLES OLSON IIEIIORIAL LECTURES'
Tho p - of ' - " " " '
tho
Poem •• en 1ntertor Play, Roberf Duncan,
poet. 112 O'Brian. 8 p .m. Fnsa. Sponsonsd
by the English Deportment's Grey Chair of
Poetry and let1!f5 ·

·

- - - - - - - - - ---1--1

Telltbook. Preeenlera are: Ann Assam ,
Steven

.

Sai...:Oy, ...rch 24 - A dinner dance
beginning at'S p.m . with a faahldn ~and
with dinner; $2 without. Cell 636--4879 for

SAEO. 335 Hayes. 8 p.m.

:-::::'1•

,_ ;:!.:..~;~u=..,":"..=____ _......,to..,.to

Ylolafta
.,.,
· - · ,......
. . , .~
.
brdip. ·
but .

.

........

I'IIOM.a IOL¥11111 WOIIUMOP

__... _...,.
"CNMM',._..........,
Ad.AppntMIIto
tw Dr. -"utt'' .....,,
...--~,.......

CoawiLU tallll.r'

I'

eo.t?lelllld?le ~ Clli . . . . . . .
II:IOLa. . . p.fll.
. . .!* ......

'

u--.-...,
· .... .

........................ CN!?It-

,.. ............... o..~- ­
~:,...u.aaLa

-

�Works_L

~ays

New journal treats literature
and art in-their social contexts,
affords students ch~nce to p~bllsh

ourt'-.
.
When · Engll.eh gad student Glenn
a-man - 6olng work In antllroj)oi- - -AIMI , _ . . , Ia a paper ·on tilth
OIIY llf OxiOAI teal year, he M1!1 taken . ~"*1'1111-urebyVIckl Hill:
"No
WclrMn E-' Wrltea: The
. WJ!h, that· ~lgloua uniVenllty'a
PoiMICa
lclty. •
journal of facultY and student workS
There
t1x poema, Including one
wlllcll flncl8 111 way Into llbrarlel around
by laalla Fiedler entitled "To Cllukl, My
.... Old~. Who SllpjM!d
~~~~!;id do wl;ll a slmll8f 'fllroture s.-taen-'v
and Fell . ThtQugh the Ice of My
Pool on 25 January t1173 he~~:Soard adv!f11sed II was · SWimming
And Ia Gone," and another by Gall
interested In funding more publications
Fischer more simply titled "Montlcalon campus, Bowman saw an opportunlo.•
Ity for his Interest and theirs 10 mesh.
Finally, readers will be treated to an
He offered a proposal and they bought.
edited transcription of the symposium .
So did Poet Robert Creel&amp;)' who puf up
on
"The Arts and The University" held
$500 from hls Gray Chair funding . .
on campus last fall, with John Cega, .
The reaull wolf be a ·new lnterdlsclpllnaiy journal called Works and
?e:~~
R~-:;;:n"a':• ~ort~

g7J;~s~g~:r~, t7,i~~ur~o;~'d7~s~o;~'
-~~~:;rt,1~sh:;~~:.~~~it':r: t~~~ ~~e

Inventory lists 179·
public service proje~ts
Unl-.lty t.culty, -.If and students
_ . ect... In- 1711 .public ....-vice

'*-

Januery 11117 and
~lng to a new Inventory
compiled by the

sors and the Involved agenclee In the
community Indicates a strong partnership- between the two, the rePOrt
suggests. Tile partnership Is particularly reflected In programs sponsored by
community agencles but which make

r=' ~~v~lty~~~~"W T~r~',~

\

Assistance Center, which has a spec!a~
relationship with the School of
Architecture and Environmental Design;
and the many .agencies whk::h utilize
manpo- provided by the Community
•
.
Action Corps.
AIIPro•lmatety 925 I8Culty, 220 stall
and 8,920 students were Involved Ill the
programs de8cribed In the lnventd,ry, · ..;
The fuodlng sources of the pr:ograrns
lnclueled the Unj)leralty (stale) '(46 per
F-.1 Govwnment (12 per
local oontttbutlona (11 per cent),
pr1- toundallona (111 per _cent), lllld
lncllpelldlllt fund-ndllng_ (12 per~\) .

cent\,
cent ,

,,

~..,.....

otyEdnM-~"=1~ ~=

-'8tentln the Ofllca of Urblln Alfalra, "
saki "tN Wort&lt; o! bulldJng .harmoltloua
'I~' ,..8tl0nllocally la.t!U not
In 'hl~h gNr.l In Order to IIOhlelle that
..,... o1 ~ll'llnl. there needs to be
a arM~• ..
ol lhe lJnlvwalty's
public ....tee Wo!11. II\ lhe proceu,
dloplltt,_,a and programs must
constantly atrlft to ~ ..-.Ices
that .._ the gneateal eubat8nce and
Impact. Al80 - and thla Ia 'Gtremely
Important lhe Unlvwalty must
8llpeilcl Ita efforts to make ..rary.
eaar-t
of !he coaununlty olthe
IIWIIfOICI ~ th8t Ill feculty, stall
and ........ _ dally rwxlartng to help
" ' - the quality o1 life In Wwtam
New '\'alt. A ltrMIII atlampt to
cantrlllute to m.llnQ the&gt; lat1er
~letha priiMry purpoaa of IIIIa

.,.,alon

h•;:.~"llallllon .. IMilllbla ,;.,.,

the

Ofllaa 01 \JII)In' Allan, 112 Croab\1

"--L

-of March.
.
.
The Ideals to produce a vehicle which
will allow .students to break the
psychological barrier agelnst getting
published -while also serving to put the
world on notice about the quality of ·
work being dOne here.
' Volume I, Numbei' 1 will contain 120
Pl!iles. Some 2,000 copies will be'.
liW.IIable at Information booths, con-·
cession stands, and departmental
offices on campus. 'We won't just
dump them like The Spectrum .00 the
Reporter," Bowman grimaces. lie
thinks too highly of his magazine to
haVe l.t blown around In pll~ and end up
In the trash. You'll have to qk lor one.
About500 copies of the Initial run will
be mailed . off campus to various
Institutional. libraries In ho~ Works
and Days will build liP a subacrlptlon
.
Hst. l
,
The ntw jourrljl! Is billed as an
InterdisciPlinary one "which will e•,
.pi ore the Interaction of art . and Its
cultural and hlatllrlcal cont8ktl.• T'ha
forma 'calla tor iuua to Include
- . 1 critical studies• of art, Ideology
and aoclaf-context, f011r or fl"" poems,

.

~ofu~~ea~: fl~\':''tCI:=-blll with ~
•ealectlon of artlclili' ...,glng frOm
- Y I on Cooper and Com.ct, 'to a
revieW ot a Harold Pintar acrwnplay
baed on Prouat'a R.,.,btwlce of
Thlna- Past, which Bowman uya Ia
one of - \he great un~ films of

M:

.

Albrlghi-Kno• Art Gallery.
For the second Issue, which has an
early April deadline for submissions, at
least one major article Ia already sat, a
lengthy Interview with the American- Cuban poet, MargaN! Randall .
•
Future Issues · may be deVeloped
a'QIIIrd epecllk:: theQIW, Bowman says.
The 19th.oenluty thama In the first Is
"largely 8CCidenlll," he notes.
·
Joining Bowman on Worlra end Days'
editorial board K.A. Bnsuclllar, an
M.A.H. student who won lhe poetry ·
prize sa an undervr-duate here; Br1an
C8raher, a gladuate student In the
literature and phlloaoplly Pf'OIIIWn In
English; and a U/B 'English gladuate
Craig MOler, who Ia a allort
wrtter
and pi~'WI'Ight . '
To g8t material for the first and

atoty

:l~~~:: ~='~~~

asking for 18Culty and student . aubmlaalona and aleo l8n an ad In The
Spectrum. - The naaponM wM not
overwhafmlng but did result In twice as
many articles and poema as could l;leprlntad.
Will Worka end O.yo be one of 'h~ ·
IIHie journals whlcll crop up Or,
twice and then are forgotten? ,It .

hap~!~~ OS:,:~~

expac(_IO

keep IIIIa going _
...... the adltotllll
board memberS -~ gone their .
- a t • waya. Many so-called 1111~
magazines whJcll were started here In
the last ten to fifteen y...-. ..-.. still
flourishing . Telos Ia one« them, and
"that Ia our modal," Bowman fiii)Orta.

You· ~a~

help 'coach'
football' Bulls next fall .
-

U/B Head Football CoiiOh Bill Dando
noted lor addlnt, a different,

~l~~~~~-=1J::..:... -1"

It usually lnvoloed a IIHie raul•
dazzle, more than one hand-off, double
peas, a deep reverse, and - more often
than not - It WOikad. The foe was not
~ ~::J• so the alght.of lhe-

dl'::ttc!:"'~tad h::'lt..'':,t.::.'
side of the line.
Dando,'wllo fovea wide--open football
(the 1978 Bulla " ' 15 peaalng and
-oa), hu not run out of
Idees, and he **nita 10 picking up a
, _ play or two from U/ B ,.,__

-.tno

fol':.:i.':~~...:1=.- -v Bulla'

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

........... of-the U/B ,_lty football
· - wtlletart eollcltlng adofwtl-·
tor lhe 1171 '-Ill g~n~ea _ , l r
. . . - thla weak, and an "Honorary
Colicllea Club~ calegory .... been

added.
'
Far • -~- -rtllatlon (1101 a
U/B 1an wHI"- hla or her-~­
on the wec.hea Club" IMIII8 Mel will

ateo . _ 111e IIPPOittmltY or8UIIIIIfttlnO
all!ay.

()ria -

5

•
will ............ 1111110111

to .... home . . . . . . fiGIIry

IIIII 8 t - polilt In
..
......
.,..=_!lllalndllt
_
_
__

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

N t M _ . _. . . M .............. tlllt . . . . . . ..

.,.. ..

:z.-:.~

... -

~- ....... -.-tl!e

thlrd·year Bulla' mentor makes one
provision:
"I reserve the r1gllt to call the play
~
when I want to." ·
Would Dando aanc1 In liOIM crazy
"llea-lllckar" with two llllnutea to play
and his Bulla tnslllng 13-7?
- "Sura," he aald. "We'U IIY enytlllfto to
win. Wa'W run pNtty unusual
piQaln tllht 8IICIIL"
.
Dando.. own INildr ._,.,. has
had a poaHI\18 .rtect ~ lhe U/8 . . . , ,
which tllluHI dallght In ~ llP a
normally dull, routine p...:ttoa ..aJori
by working on the COIIoh'a play Ollhe

- "·
No 011-taclde......
.
Dando joined lhe U/8 1W1 In 1118 u
lllltlbaCicar COIIoh. The Bulla IIIIIUd In

three Top 10 NCAA..,_..~·
1es 1n thM and tollowt. . - • he
had gained a NpUI8IIcNI fOr .........
Soutliern MathOdlat prior IOtllel.
But; Denclo'a QUICk to 1101nt out1 _!was offanal\18 ooordiMiior 8t _
,
Carroll Uni\IBralty tor four ~
tol~ by
'-ll 01*111;
durinG hlllllgll .._,, oofltll* and
::.~ daya, h e - a -lng

one-•

uart::=\..,~1111.:1
_.

With ....

....-ninO In tmt -

~s--CGIIW
-~ twD

~-~
(WI......_.-,
- .......'=
...............
ll'e CIIIIIDul U/8

,....
Coeatlli

-cr

.... "HonorarY
_.._ ..... .

�.i

' 'i

--Labo~

play gets
reading f»" .Friday

. EDITOR'S NOTE: A • . _ ...... of ~

~~.::li.:~.::::'~....:
~.- 11, at 1:~ . . KM, 101

=~:-J:~-=

wlll-ontheplayet11rwant. Till
.-..,wllbaper1onned by t i l e - . of
t i l e , _ DOt-tment, - t h e - of Dr. S.UI Elkin, ·
c::o--'ne
the tile n..tn
DopOrtment, tile 0 - ........ In

=u:.-=~:.::==::::

llhfxlatSI-.

The following Ia oxc.pted ·~rom en -Erte WrltWI.
by Nancy
- of which
of tile
" ' - -In
"
• .._lon
apt)Mred
N. E.W. NEIItflllettor.

By Nancy Barnes
Emanuel Fried was bort' In Brooklyn,
on March 1, 1913, and has lived In

~~~o:~~'1s ~.!,":" HI~~...H~~
actor, a factory worl&lt;er, .and a union
organizer. He has sold life lnsurance,run lor Congress, and served In the
Army. He now teachea creative wrtllng
~tu«t~. 5f~~~u~n~~~sltla~'~fte.!'~

Workshop

he has done · much

to •

~r.~:.the arts among labor groups In

threeder. Hi a sense of Identity ·wu so

Fried Is -a prolific writer:
lull-length_ plays, six novels,

~:a~:'roa~'r:/a 1~,'~~:::~1::

1

ten
and

11

~~~~'1,'~ ~."~:~ilt'!!nw~t~t {.:

slltutes In the neighborhood of the
ord Hotel (now the Richford APIIri·
menta), where he worked as a bellhop.
His. brother, Incensed by the subject
m':\~erw~~~ior and co-publisher of
Upstate, a Western New York literary
magazine that was publishild In the

:1\~'!;,l,t !~~~~ciht~ ~~.';!d~f1 t 1 ~~

the first publication of Its kind In this
f~ ~dw~~ af:,oa;ea ;~~~~lr.,~~
Lead
bll 11
f th CIO
Storl:~ tt!t
;,'tth'f...,gr lss.!s -r~

.f.:'a11

=~~~~~~~'?·T'l:: !::::"~C:::!"el'i"~t~

than speechea, • Fried aaya.
O(le of hla plays, Mark of Success,

~~~~~~~t1~1~11~~~~:.,A~";=

later, In 1962. In 1963, It was performed
at Catawba Coii&amp;Qe In Salisbury,
Nof},~ ~~'J:an.t. wrttten In 1965 ar.d
retitled Rose In 1970, won the Weatem
New Yorl&lt; Pl~ywrlght's Contest In 1965,
t~~~~ ~po~~~. th~t Ju=
!*formed oft-Broadway In 1970. The
Peddl,r and Brother Gorski have also
been performed In New York. His latest
play, The SM:ond Beginning, was
completec:llast year and Ia unpublished.

0

The Dode lint

Fried' a beat-known playa, Tha Dodo

Bird~~ .~"tf-'!t:'r:':.iJ·= c'l:::
!:".:..
Kanaas
where The

alate, Toronto, an_d
City,
Dodo Bird I&amp; now playing. .
The-4eltlng lor both Ia "the ginmill
acroaa the atraet from the plant."
Souncfe from the factory are - PIM&amp;nll·_!:_ underlwo_!?lnng thethe -parvastlheve
11
01
lnfl-..... 0 1
•~ 1
crw.ctera, punctuating the vlo!ence
and brutality of Ita effect upon them:· In
feet, the bar Ia an ajlpenclage of the
whera the
he pi
1 I
8nd
union ..-lnga..
The world that Ernanyel Fried deplete
leone In which the woilcer le robbed of
humanity Ill' the- euperatructurea •of
technology end~lam. The fragility
of "lleeh and 1... a are UMCI&lt;riowledged, end tha'
gle lor rune»-

=·~ie ,t .!J. thel~ecka.

=

:X~~:ru~:.=~u:!:

became obSolete, ·hla world fell ~.
Havfng succumbed to alcohol, he no
ltohengderenou~clatt1o8n~echhat 1 i:.,eryi~~'.".~
-~

~o repilea: "But I worl&lt; with lt. I move·
lt.' Bull Blatter says fo Ruaa Nowarl&lt; In
Dodo's presence:
~
..
" You should a8e him, standing on the
edge of the founC.ry roof, flapping his

~:. ~~~t~:'.!t:ry,'~~':tJ'~i,:';l,'i,k~~

by~,hat couldn't fly, his

Bird . That's a

~~~~:'::i~~:tl.t·~~~i ~0 11':, ~~~!

Dodo Bird Is gon,. be. This Dodo Bird
Is gonna fall off tl'il,t foundry roof or that
crane rail-and b~ his neck." _ __ ·

The craft ol the Playwright

Ia frledt.(&amp;thatlha theiTle o!.hla play I!. ~
~
, ~ ·'

obJ~u..r.'f't.':~~~~ iln ihefr

own , untainted by tha !!!~ of the

:::erci.:!:~: n~J~1lJC.\:
social, political, ormol'!ll~ha." Both

::.=';.~!~;"~ .

Drop Hammer and The"t$.:1 Slrd are

11;'.,:\1 ~:

their natural environment 'tlod. placed
thitm on the atage lor a little while
,without Interrupting the flow of their
Uvea. Thla etfes:t lethe reeult of Frled'a
skill ~ selecting lllld- r,::tlrig

~lut~ ~=ion.:-'~':S

!'lr

ending a p"", not
r.olvlng the
atrugglee of \he~. lllua tildlna

:r=.,~tc..!:inon:..~=

their llvea wlllt.lce nut.
Crltlca In tile labor lon:a have
atteated ·to the authenticity of hla
portrayal ol thl worl&lt;lnGIIWI. In ai'W'IIaw
of The Dodo Bird, Na!IWI Cohen ol the
Toronto Deily Star llld that "the moat
.dt.!!C".!!!"..!'.Id
•.. agalnat ttgure
.... ~
. . ,.
... ~8aldom 11 n w v per.c&gt;n ol -lnaful human ,.._, a
true Individual ancfmember of a dlallftct
and large group."

Conalatent, but 1101 IPIDIU llillr -

-

Emanuel Fried haa enjoyed a IMI)'

not a
auccaeeahaan'
t
hill
an
oou.-, JIIMOitOIIIr,
comaa llowly
a
·::'... U:: =.::=c::: :..=
conalatant,

~.

If

of
lm
~

Of

hla-"

IliON

for

'MIItir,

lar:s

~ the ~ of production, · · world, anc1 the wor1&lt;ar
wor1&lt; COnditione, the po_. ol ~ - - l c flgUN. In ~. we
10
end labor poUtlca. Both play.
ourwl- Nllected In
.
. . . 10 Cllplct Nlllellcally tile .... of
~~too cloaa.
-'diiiii*L ...... by Ill* .wtronto ua eo that w OM ¥lew _.....
IMIIC, Iller 1111111 .......... oljlnag!Mfnlm a d.._, • If ~ a
t.....,-=aplng "-It Ill Older to.....
Nleaoope. FrWa CIIWaDIIrl fonlliUIIO
..,.
.
.
.
.
.
,
.....
_
'
.
. ciunllvea
• do.
lhlit . . unlfrlnill ind 10 , . . . to ,...,
•If tllloughmagnified
allllor'oaclllpe ••••

"*"•

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

. A---·- .

'1111 'Wat~l$ M

.

Aa

a ..._..

~nt.--OiliiiiGtlll~la ~~-~---

s.-.. . -..

~=sm=
.......
of....
...... 5f·=:...~
...............
5i
tile -

._.

•

I

_.............. -·
~.............

wllll I IIdia 11111111.• Ill

-too

, llllllto

~L~rt'lt

-

--

1DO

~

�.......... .
SENATE

'Pol(cy Issues' ·symposium
.......... -lnl!!-.,......._· ·-:a(_ _,_,_

-=

c;o'foe ond rwglot11111on, Toi1?«11Jin1'ng Hoti

~l:'t!t~

Woklmen Thootro, ·Norton

~-c=.~~~uc!.":."M,~·

FSEC seeking nominees
for faculty officers ~\
Executlft cOmmlttM mlnutee, -

Edwllrd HoHonder, choncollor, New Jeroey Boord of Higher
EdUCIItlon and forn,er deputy commissioner lor higher educa-

_,.3

Lunch provided· Tolbert Dining Hitt
•
Speol&lt;or: Mr. Henrll! Dullea, oxecutt.e aaslotant to the GOY-

1:4&amp;.:1:"

Olecuaafon Groups..

Z:~ : .S

Ft,.J Panel Presentation, Woldmen Theatre, Norton 112
~ ffom
Oporotln9 UnHo

12:3D-1:.t&amp;

.......,.~

2:35

,...,.....

2

=:.::='li::~.::::=~y, HJohor ~

:::;1d~m,: ~~ =~~~:..,~'rio"n"Jl~
and~

Or. lrring Froedman, deputy to tho chllncellor_ for state

end 1oderal relations, SUNY central Office, Albany

ltamt5-·- -.

~l.e~~~= :ft~'f'~~lng of 28 February

A.~- to.SptlnQO&lt; ll_.t

1979 were approved.

lm5Mtelioe
See report of DIJE Curriculum Committee

.

Or. Molly Breed, executive aaal.stant to the

c.hanc~llor

The ~tatlon1 will not be "how to ~
do It' -IOna wnh "a technique
oriented~:· rather, Moono ~.
"!My . . - t to chal*'ge IntelleCts;
to bring perapecthe to wide pOlitical
1 - and to help uc11 - of us
underaland mont adequately what the
potential de¥elopment tor higher
.,_lon may be In the coming 15
ye!IIS.

"This dtwlop"**l may be very
dlf,..,. from what · mcef have
experienced. We can no longer look to
the past tor the pattern• ~ behavior
.., successful for so
which have INIIY of ue. Pemapa eome preparation
on our 1*1 wm help ua In responding

·

!OJ:edlng CommiHeo rooter.

•

--of

reoull from lila I m p - of the
Springer Ropoo'l .
• ·

.Committee,
co~'.RfnY~ report of -the senate Byt8wa
proposing Blending oftlers on

..

Than~

mattw.

you for your attention to this

,.,_,..

four lten'ls of Senate procedures ; and

~~=~=·fa ·.~h :!:~!"~~-

Door--=

concerning Senate committees.
It was agreed that the issue of distribution

Thenk yeu fa&lt; youllelter of ~ebruarv 27th
and for sending me • ·~ the. Reeolutlon

~~~• .:: u~!r~~on&lt;\'!''H!: J'~\~.,':

~::;!,:': ~;:c~.:!t at Bu~.f~. ~s,:~
l:,~reT'.!:,~!,:III ohero these Yiewa with my

to place the Bylaws

Committee report on the agenda for next

~~~~~~~~~ benelf of

the t.......,_r.tlon Of .}I:.

=:=."'l="=~'':
leculty -~~-..,.,.,., lllat wlllcll wHI

81

0

on

~-.._-:":.~~~"~

=u= ~~n\h:~~~ ~~!~~~r t~f!

Admlaalona Committee about their report,
· which will be on the~ olthe May t979

vote

=~~~!=~l~lonrec:;n~-

r&gt;!.~WZ ~::.'!: f~~ ~m') tg.~

wl[~• ~~= re~~!~~~t':ahaso'r«~

r.cent

- · educotl~
01 SUNY[B._
' H - . the camm
membera
atrongly
urve the Faculty·
-'"
"
oommlto _ . .and
_ lilalila
- 'u

question of dlsttiDutlon credit for Coll&amp;gee
courau.
9. Chairman's request to Acti:11! Executive

agreed

commttt~•

=t~,M~ ::r.,:.~~mmltteo 01 ttaThe"l,:nnger Implementation Ste.lng
Committee oupporta · lila principle ol

President's Rovl- Boon!.
7. PRB Executive Secretary Copplello's
reply to 6.

It was

•

:'.i!:::/'~tal,'f'or!~~fft:'!\~":,\:

mendations section of Report on survey of

w-.

Mon:h 2, tV711

.

- ' educetlon. N.,...heleoa, lheSpring-

Educetlon Report .
5. Chairman's reply to ~ .
6. Senate COmmittee on Faculty. Tenure
end Privileges Committee revloed Recom-

~ •

1

~~!~;f.·K~ tz=~ Dean.

executive

-

.

Rof."L'&amp;tt'!r~m:~;t~~'t.,!2o, General

Old Bualnosa} .

p.m.

AeeoJutlon • Springer lmptementatlon S-ng Comlnlttoe
Thla , . __to yop, to be paaoed on to
your executive commlttM, Ia late and Ia
'therelpro ~- - l c gl- the

3 _ ~.!!:a~~=:~~;;;m~~t,~~~:;

1

Newton Garver

Re :

=~~~o~ ~-t~~.th;u,~~Y ~~~r!::e~(:.!:
Ap~8'~ circulated the following

•

With all bOOt withee , I ain,

-DoMidi..•..:..~~·
Boerd of TrultMI

Scouts honor
Physics' Hurst
pro,_

the
- a r y:
1. A memorandum hea been ci~C~Jiated to
all electoral unlta .,.,_.,lng the rocont
,._tlonment of $enalors by unlta
(mlnut"" of FSEC m.dng 1/17/711}.
Robert Hurst,
In the
2. The proceao Is now beginning lor · ·
Department of Pflyalcl end Aatrvnomy,
- 1 electlone of Vloo-Chelrman Elect of
fho Votln\ Fecuity (vlco-Chelrman and

~ort':1v~~~.t.,~•~a'~i
Facu~ Senate}; end one S~NI -Bu;)'alo

tile

~tt;"'s'-t~.w-""'~tlve to t~
All fl'*l1bera of the electorate are urged to
1

:='0: ::::0~'1a~ :"!':!t ~~:'l~~ufgh
cir~~:,;'t'!rt-r::n•,~:~rn:~~~~ug.~
- n Cem1ft'- "-'"
...:...,;,..-:r
.:::r"~:" .,.,.,,,._ NCOm·

~~="..==.:~~~':.'.=i
:~~=.e.M':!!:. .:2~

Andr.w Holt, Donald IMaon, Oeorve

j("Ji:w=,Ad Hoc commlneo (Gervwtclt,

::,';li:~~.:r~~.IID-

Date:

1

eympoala

more elfec:tlvely. •
Member~ of ttie ~panel lor !he
are JoMplt AfuttD. Thomas
er.lne, JaM DISalvo, Ruth Elder,

From:

received a letter from Donald M. Bllnken,
Chairman of the SUNY Board of Trustees,

umenta:

5: ~

~lxA __.....,

To:

~Z'Itt~~=rt ~:e~·~~~ A~e hid

d

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

some rationale for certain of the propoSal&amp;. ...

• Th_! meeting ed)oumed et

The Cholrmon reported lhol he has

RefMihn:aont houf. TallHtrt Ban~et Room

Moore and the pthera set out to
organize an intellectual IICttvlty that
could offer admlnlstratora some Insight
and und-.tandlng about br~r
problems, luues and concerns. A small
--.clvt-r group formed In conjunction with the Graduate School, the
academic deano and the vice presidents
lor IIC*Iemlc: llffalr11 and Meith
IICiencetl. That group Is pa.nnlng the
sympoala - ' " · tbe flrat ot which Is
aclledulad for Fridsy, March 23 ( box).

tho DUE · Cumculum Committee will be
Invited to attend end provide t~o FSEC with

receiYed a letter from W . Ku~ for the
Springer Committee concerning the -Implementation of the General Educ;aUon

The Ho®rable Willard A. Genrich, vice chancellor and former
chairm., , PQmmlttee on HigHer and Protesstonal Education~
New York Board of Regents

pettlclpatlon, but at Urnes a very low
of - stablllty, continuity and
Institutional memory. As a result of
these IIICtora, the ~mon -data and
ldMS which might be available to a
more stable Institution are often
unaval a.ble or restriCted to those
r81ativety ,_ oeopte who ·have an
Int-I In the broader perspective' of.
hlllher education.
•
Upon reflecting about what I thought
I was '-ring, f conferred with the
iocademlc deans anii.Qisc&lt;!-..d that In
:r!n.TY perception was shared !&gt;Y

1

,.. 8. The Cltalrmart

for

degree

-:~f~~~~t~i
t~~ r:: ~'=· ~~ w~ =
Dean Poredotro ond/0&lt; 1 nopn1Mf1tatlve of

raising tulUon and room rent, and making
changes In the f~ structure of SUNY.

government atfaira, Syracuse UniYerstty

Grad Dean struck by
'how little-we know'

(2 21179) provloualy clrculotedl After some

A. TN PrHklanf

ac[~~· ~~~en~u~~o~~rdonoftb~ru~~~~

Wr-. leon. Goldstein, presideD!, Klngsborough Community
li::l:·ty~N~:""'h · BiOoldyn, reproaontlng tho City

Committee.

C. Oilier·

A copy of a let1er from Dean Welch to
Doan Poredolto elated March 5, 19711 waa
rocot.ed and dlecuaeod.

Hom I 2 Offtc.s' R~1

tile

oloOirt credit_, tor

Conakteration or Dean Peradotto's M~

Hom 11 App&lt;ooat'of Minutes
Upon acceptance of the followlog
corrections:
In Item t 3.A (p. 2) , Insert a panonthosls
after .. (Wolck"'; change ..,.standard• to
••standing"
~
In Item I 3.B (p. ~~ . delete "which" In line

tion, N- Yorl&lt; State Stete Educetlon Deportment.

Dfacuaaton Groups:

8.- -

1

order at

p.m. to conslder the following agenda:

Norton 112, l'lr.

11:.0.12:15

to

Tho meeting was celled

Keynote Addreoa, . . _ Pollllc:a- l'rbtltoo In Now Yorl&lt;
........ - · Woklm1111 Thoelro,

Mlrch 15,1919

~be~

from- .-ty

. :•.:::r.:...-r..-:..r::u- -·

L. ~ !*nted out thet lila FSEC
.UU-1101-..-wllllllla
"""'P'Ma
f&gt;(lnwy
- · the.-.
(lAw Sc:l&gt;ool
" ' - ' ol27
Aprtl1117111n
ond
thel 111a F8EC cannot~
the
pn&gt;poaal wlt'-1 helrlllg the dolo wtUi:h
aubatentlelatlle lAw Sclljlol'a ctelmo. lt -

-um•

a-·

=-=tile 1'

- t o _ . _ - Olntll _ . _ ,
b e - ' * ' ffom an Ad

-

•-' :"/:l

.:::..""=~~·
of

..:om~

lila

FTP Commll1eo to

wf1111n wllloh
F8EC
con _,tile._.,._~
to""'

-MON .......

• ••
2 1'1
. . .,
Put-to-~ .

=•'=",T.."=='o~~~.:.!
or tha

Greater Niagara Front!W Oounoll
Boy Scouts of America.
.
Noting ~ - . t -

for

"Ou111Mdlna . .
10 l'lliltft " Hurst
feels tee09nttlolt Ia tt1eo due io ot11a&lt;

member8 Of U/.8 -unltr who
gave thaltllme to hie l5-acou1 ~.
Richard Kunz, ~uat• 81udllilt in
astronomy, ti1Angad for tha ' - to
win an u_tronomy 111811t badge, utilizing
the U/8 Ob&amp;MWtOfY.
Robert Hunt, dlnlctor ol environment·
al health and aafely, taught 1 crucial
pwt-ol requQd ~ for 1 aaf.ty
merit ~; .,.,_...., In lite Olfioe Of
PubliC SifeiY _. lnllrumantal In
helping lha ecouta otn~n a fingerprinting merit :- '-lae, and Walter
MIICintyre, dlnlctorollJ/8'1 Computing
Center, arranged a tour fOt merit polnta
toward a computing 111811t badge.
"Eveoyone on c.mpua- ~. ';,wy
nlcet&amp;-\18," H~aaye. "Tha omc.n in
Public: &amp;alety · ·" - a t'*'tandoua
under8Widlng of klda. !1'1 ImPOrtant
- thai - Nlllze how much lha Unlwwaifl
,._ done and can offer the community.

MlliCiL DliiiUHE
.......iiiiJOi
.,.,................
...

i::.1lfiif'·~-=-ts
.---_ ...... ,. -=-.. . .

" " .................'Cielllt .....

I

�15,1171

n

Are facul~y the ltey to retention?
At some colleges, yes; ,a t othe~, no
Bidtf()( ...P,Illld casino gambling In
tern New Yor1&lt; have been submitted
Governor Carey's special panel to .
s1:.~hfl Impact of such gambling In
In a public hearin~ . hetd Tuesday In
1 Courtroom, 0 Brian Hall,' memol the C&amp;alno Gambling Study
listened to testimony In support
legalized casino gambling by Niagara
Is Mayor Michael O'Laughlln and
lracl from the office of Bullalo
or Jimmy Gnllln .
Addressing the panel first , O'Laugt&gt;eaw Niagara Falls a'S a prime
alcleratlon lor casino gambling
use of Ita •worldwide" reputation
.,. a resort area. He feels· legalized
gambling would have a long-range
Impact on job opportunities and would
lllfp resist -•ion In h_la clty. Asked
1 he means to single out the Falls as
the only .,.. In Western New YOlk lor
casino gambling, O'Laughlln replied,
"The only plac:e ln ,Wes:ern New' YOlk to
bring It Ia the one with magnetism,
lli~F81Ja."

0 Laughlin c:Onaldera resorts pr1me
lr88lfor gambling. He feel a other good
apots are Albany and the Catskills. He
New YOlk City
, would .r&gt;OI llka to Included becauee It aireedy has enough
attractions.
O'Laughlln - r e d the panel that
Nlagera Falla haa ample "virgin
territory, ..ad)' tor d-iopment ," not to
mention the Nleg8no Falla Conwntlon

Center.

Sam lracl, epeeklng on bellall
Mayor Gr1Hin, atreeMd the revltallz&amp;tlon of Buffalo ae a pr1me factor In
oonsldenng Buffalo .. a . , _ tor
teaallzad caelno glmbllng. nanibllng
will be • catalyst tor rebuilding the
-town - . eomethlng whlcl1 haa
already begun with conetructlon Ql the
eon..ntlon Center, the new • theater
district, lhe'!IOCkoom waterfront hotel,
now under con*lnlctlon, and Increased
bualnesa at Main PI- Mall.
• •

lor~~~J!~t=C.~~~· maonel
The f** will h - orattl!jlltmony 'ln
three other ~lies In New Yot'li. They will
also accept written aubmlaslona. Theea
should be forwarded lo: C&amp;alno
Gambll, Study"-!, P.O. ·Box 7025,
~~~~lion Annex, Albany, New

The panel will aubmlt an Interim ·
report by Apr1118.

Workshop for

women planned

Rep&lt;esentatlvea

of

live

colleges

~='~tat~,~~e'r:rr~ w~~

Fo:

locuoed on "'mpl1catlona
Future
Institutional Change."
The worl&lt;ahop was part of a day-long
program sponsored by the New Yorft
State College Personnel Aaaoclallon In
cooperation with the W8f!tern New York •
Consortium of Chief Student Affairs
Olllcers, the U/B St~dant Allalra
Oivtslon, and the Wes)ern New York
Personnel and Guidance Association.
The massage preached by most of the
panelists underscored what U/B of.
flcials have been repealing lor the pasi
several months and whet the Senate's \
Admissions Committee recently noted
In a dralt repon: namely, that faculty
must r&lt;tCOgn~e the neecj to become
more actively Involved In getting and
keeping stydents In their ·respective
colleges.
.
•
One of the panelists, Or. Thomas
Hegany, .vice president for academic
affairs at ' Potsdam, suggested 'that the
Academic Affairs Office has the main
tesponslblll'ly In helping · faculty become more • student-oriented." This Is
an essential component In the battle

:r!l~~\. a~~~~~~~~1csH~~·s~

•gulls apart In terms of mutual
onderstandlng . • . He called lor faculty to t&gt;eeome .more .
closely Involved In d&amp;finiJIQ the mission.
of their colleges since:: they ,...-;;. the
tone." Without a clear Image of the
institution, admission counselors cartnot effectlwly recrult; he said.

ltlaMat form of IMctllng
Relernng to advisement as the '

"highest fOrm of teaching," Hegarty
urged that ~ token appr~~Ciatl&lt;in be
gl-. to faculty and atafl who do this
wort&lt;. He mentioned special awaros or

8!fnrec:J~ \~nch~r::.~ft~on

at
Potadam, Hegarty reported, the college
hal: lnalllutad an " amazlngly auccea&amp;fut" Faculty Friend Program wh1\:ll
matchea Incoming students wllh
faculty. The purpo&amp;e Is to promote
poaltlve Initial Interactions tiet)Neen the

~ gro~c:f~rr'of:C~}"~~~.!\~

~hes special counseling services
lor undecided majors; offers min i
grants to faculty and students who
tog.ther wort&lt; on "cteatlve endeevors";
and haa etarted a new tabloid called

;.:m~.;,:lg;':~:-:.: ~~~~':

the college and 'community. .

·

deelslon-maklng lntcinnatlon.
AI Penn State
.
The third panelist, Or. ' l.&amp;lla Moore,
assistant professor of counseling
education and coordinator of the
student personnel option at Penn State,
viewed the retention /attrition problem
from a dlflerant perapectlve.
Moore1:0mplaJnad that emphasis on
aMtlon rates does not take Into
·11CC0Unt that life Is a developmeritaJ
~cle .. Some students slmfiY change
their minds about the type o Institution
theY want to anend o~~t the 1-' of

~=~~~~~:r.e =t~

.,::r.rsue their
Instead of ·trylne to maintain the
'Status· quo by impeding such change,-.
Moore maintained, Unl-alty personnel

=~~- ~r :=~=ldasbe"~n~~­
~~~e ~:" t~o~ ~~~~ft~.~~f.l
close.• ·

'Moore racommencled 'u..t collegee

=~ttt:.':x=n.e:==~ !~n~

strengthening racrultn14111t of transfers'
- II there Is a need for more students.
She noted that one college In
Pennsyl vania has a mobile unit which
travels Into neighboring vlclnltlea and
oilers caneer counseling to realdenta.
Moore speculated that In future yaars

f1\0r&amp; "r8Q~= ~~~~:.::

:':'Ji1no
dlaiQY8t-llbout advlalng
students to go el-he,ra If she believes

Penn Stale cannot beet utlaty their-

oltta oamiiitl!nllllf
lltiCLU8~
- .&amp;kf ciub •• -

The -ttno
_

..... -;.-.- ol

Onc:tor. . .,.....,._......, a, 1t7V.

-- ·

. 11t1 ca.ue P/lllfY

.::.==:-:'=:":.-'C
.

�Mar~ 15, 1171 ~

~ Lessons ·o t

Love Canal .
to be explored
The tragedy and lessons for soelety
of the Love CenaJ will be examined In a
a«1es of campus fo/lJms , March 21·22
and28-29.
•
·
Sponsored by the Environmental
Studies center, the forums Will be
presented at 7:30 p.m. In the Woldman
Theatre, Norton Holt, at Amherst. All
are !Tee end open to the public.
"We want to analyze how the Love
CenaJ happened,"What the dimensions
of the problema are, and how we can
ensure ·11
happen again ," Dr.
Les1er Milbrath, Cllrector of the Environmental Studies Center (ESC), explains.

won,

First lonlm
.
The llra1 forum , Wednesday, March
21, will be "Love CenaJ : The Developing
11

T~r~Y~!""~.V~ =·

of 1he ·

~~=~:~~~~yc)f :1,':,".,.!;,",'l

and current remedial wort&lt;, wilt discuss
the physical setting-of {he canal. Gerald
DICerbO of the ESC will review
historical mistakes people have made in
land use and In forecasting tong-range
consequences.
.
The process of dloco-lng the Love
Canal danger and alerting officials and
the public will also be reviewed In the
fk'.t forum. John McMahon of the
Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC); Lola Gibbs, preeldent of the
Love Cenat Homeowners Anoclatlon;
~ Shrlbman and Paul Mac:Cienll'an of
the Bu"alo E..,lng Nfliws wilt
pertlclpate.
·

DltMn8lone

• The dimensions of the problem will

-

be the aubl:t of the second forum,

~~y,

arch 22, chal!_ed by Dr.

~lcheel Cuddy, coordlnatoo: of the

State Task Force on Love Cenal ; Dr.
Beverly Palgen of Roawell Park
Memorial Institute; Joe Fogerty of the
Department of Transportation, Dr.
Adeline Levina of U/B's Sociology

~="'o:U': T~l'':fa.~{v,m

dlocusa, health problems, family disruption, property loooea 8Jld evacuation
and resettlement plona.
•

The Bealnnlng? -

" Is Tfils Just the Baglnnlng?" will be
the question examined In , the third
forum , Wednesday, March 28. Levine .
wUI chair the •aalon .
1.ocatlon of other toxic time' bombs
wlh be dl,cu88ed by Peter Mlllock,
coordln.tor of a state Interagency' teak
' f011&gt;8 on hazardous wastes; Leo Helling
of the &amp;tete Depar11J)ent of Heelth and
MlchMI Desmond, reporter for the
Courier E~preaa.
'MIIbra1h and Richerd Lippes, at·
torney for the Love,Cenal H~w-.
Asaoci81IQII, will di8CUU wtlere the
reaponalbftlty lor the problem 1188.

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Agency, end Mlnll Hlllllltan of AMhel
College wta e110 ~. The
-'911 will • with • IOIIIIdllible
dlacuulon aummartzlng 1 - a to be

sar.on

learned.

The public .lorwna . coeponeorwd bv the U.

beinG

CINil

Hoiii80WIW8 Aatoclatlon, "" ~
of W - Votera, the N.Y. Pulillc

l n t - ReMM:h Of1IUCI and U/8'&amp;
Rachel c._, College, eo-. of
UrbM Stucllee, Corrimuntty ActiOn
~C:,mul8r Council, ai'icllllucMIII

iiiiiiUNiiifiiMi

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�</text>
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                    <text>ready for Senate·Tuesday

Gene~al Education report
.

.

.--111-*Y'•-r

STATE.UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

MARCH 8, 1979
VOL 10 • NO. 22

Time to-Act
General Ed, says Peradotto, is·a •
'subject of infinite discussion, but
ought not face Indefinite deferral'
By Joyce Buch.-.111
- S i o l f'

" General edUcation Ia like happiness," asserted DUE Dean John
Peredott::i, "lt'e a subject of Infinite
?~:~~le de'r.:n.~ght not be one -of ·

w

Slmllle It may be, but It nevertheless
underscores one of · Peredotto's main
concerns abOut the General Education
Report which wtll be discussed at a
apeclal meeting Of the Faculty Senate
Tuesday. Simply, the Dean (...,. the
Executive Committee's recent decision
to delay tile Initially proposed Fall 79
IJ1U!Iementation date will ring the death
knell for Phase I of the report.
If this should . happen, Peradotto
lamented, "class after class . of U/B
students would be condemned to the
aame mindless distribution requlr&amp;ments" we now have.

-

Phase I acta as a type of saf~uard ,
explained the Dean. Once It's Jmr~lf"~~"g,;_.\1 provides •something to
. Peredotto emraaslzed that faculty

:::,u:t~~~~fa'll'~~. ~'.::':·~~· :c:l_i1~

a means to an end rather than the &amp;Ad
product llself, he -Insisted. He also
warned that If Phase II Ia deferred until
:;.aae lis ''fully oil able; then U/B m;:
-

---

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:y: •

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I*!Odoa:!.l:

Natura18c*- and . . . - a.

A.-.on he8 been tmolftd In tha
U.S. 81*» llfOIIfMI ..,_ 11117, hie
main locus · or l i l t - ' baing tha
~of water, toe or anow on other

~llio.me a - b a r of the VlldnO

-=-~~-=r-'n-.:
Ina NAit. prolect to -...op

==-..
= ...

tor tile

rwtam of
tvhft plaMiory

wl h thla rww, 11nd abmetlmee
aurpri-'ng data, .._ foroad to
rethink ...... f - !"--ee Mlout
the aoler ayatem'alergeet p l -.

·f~~~~~la=-:,f'=l:

eent

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iftcluded two bacll from

January and ewly F*-Y.
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.................... ie~

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~'=.::
...... Tlla.,_

31miHIOIItol2

.

co~= ~~rbe t=..,=ed ~ of pragmatic con~lona, the Oean
noted that the GE RepOrt etlll ......_ a
pro,._lon for •
lng" grouptLto
-top auc11
a In lieu of

cjj~---lli'M..-1
,_II

of,....... will

..-

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.....

planet In the next daya than has
been '-'lad In all offluman hlatory."
Voyager has aendlnQ '*'&lt; to"
Earth astounding llhotOinlllla-- of
Jur,lter and Ita moons. Scianllafa, faced

. Information,
footage

.be

-.o _.,.

That's where Voyager lis going;
FNSM's Anderson Is getting dat~
from friends at the Jet Propulsion Lab

AilOUI tour lloul'1l bal- the Voyager I
medii Ita c l - encounter with
Jupttar, dur1nQ tha moat tntanee data
galher1ng
mlaalon, a group
of 8Ciantlata
in FI'OI'ICZIIII Hall
MOIIday to _ . Voyager foo._
I:I'Otlght back from NASA'• Jet
Proputalon Lllboralory In Paaadana llr
~ A'*-, dean · of

What the committee sought hard to
avoid, aald Per.sotto, Ia the 'kind of
extended dlacuaalon/lmplementatlon
debacle that H..-.:1 has expertenced.
Harvard beiMn talking ebout GE In
. 1971; Ita navloed pW"o, though, wtll not
fully Implemented until next YM'· Uollke GE plana found In amaller
lnatl1utiona, U/B'a, at In Ita l1111t
phase, does n(\1 contain the "planned
Integrity 11nd coherence" of OOUI'liJI work
found In ao called "core programs." The
reason, explained Peradotto, Ia a matter
of "arithmetic.• Becauee of Ita size, the
UniversitY simply could not ·supply
cbu...,s and te.:hel'll ..n-.aary to
servlca Its large numbeta, eapacl~ If
~f~~!::,~=~ to the GE gut lne

__ _

By )uplteri., Ulllla a.-«llllai

=gh~ri~d~r~ lm~-=- ­

Awoldlng the H8nWCI dlbecle

Anothai' of concern for the Oean
it "ehould be replaced aa soon as
Ia the "ability and wllllngnau" of the
possible." To brinsftllla m~ home
profaeatonal IIChoOia to eocomrnocMie
to the Senate, he_ says he plana to.
to the GE prog...,. Other lnetltu1tona,
recommend that the Senate "at leeat" ·
such aa Cornall for eXIIIIIple, do not
modify the Pnl"'"'l distribution requl,.
hava to worry aut thla apect of
menta for the Fall of 79to contain four
Implementation alnoe thair GE ,.qui,._
courses In one knowledge...,. and four
menta ~ly only 10 their facultlee of
In 1111othar outside the major. Pnseently,
Art a and ·Sciences.
students must take at least eight
- oou1'1188 or 24 houl'll outside their major.
The 0ean au~=.:&amp;..~
wtll only be llllla 10
M eiglil
The Dean understands that · - of 11 GE eoutM8. ~
demlcs, u · a rule, do not like to put
progrwna,
axptjllnad Pelwlotto, oouid
their Imprimatur on ~~nythi&lt;1Q that Ia not
" perfect in theory." He alao rMJIDe \!let · be m8de ellill!lpl In .,.rt or .nogalher
.from the r.quiiWnllrta.
some faculty wtll Hfcel)' be "ecandaiThe committee could
If
lzed" when \hay coml)are the "gorntha ~tallon of tha 8orlnllw
mlttee'a;'hlgh educational ldeela to the
Report wtll .._ .,., eiNct On the
compraml- contained tfl the report."
He MYerthei. . maln181na that thiouoh

J..-,IIa ·~ ..................................... _Yialblaln
- tlll'a plloto.....,. Fall. 5, 117'1, br v.,... t. nw-...-.n- 21.4 miNion
::J:7.IIIIIIIon lllllee) fro. tfw ........ at•the llille. The
larva
le, lo,- l i e - ....... ......,.. dlatr.. To ... rtallt of .lup4tar Ia Ilia
. . . . . . ~ alao .-y briiM tJIII ... ......., - ' - ....tlnga. The
c.lleto (alii n.tr twloa ee
Eertll'a Moon), Ia
..,..Y wta1111a at lla ...._ left. All tine IIIMtw
'-to Jullltar
...... - ..... e.dl'a --~.........
..... Tha dreat
Relllpot, • ..... clroolldlla 1
dlatulbal•, Ia In tha bottom
~ooeottlie
.
.
....

===~llll:rlo.~n

yeen~locoone.

Pr-tayatem Ia 'foollllh!
While the Dean conaldera himself a ·

numerous manlfoura of ~ dl~
cuulon and thofqugh
, the
committee hal d&lt;wloed an .Srnlttedly
lm~t. but viable, "flexible pl., \!let
wlfl allow for ewty lmplementiiiiOn of

-or..-.br-lnlln . . . . . . . .

.......

�' Mon:lol,l17t

::J
•Juelter .

Qaude Welch obJects stre-.uously to
Peraclotto's stand on distribution creitlt

- """"-'·-~~
over the years, Ia a.n·near the center of

Jupller In thla eaqu~. which depicts
gsUeo swirling In banda around tho

the Senate, th8y will reopond.,wllh the
guidance originally nsqueoted.
Hla ruling, he ..ld, was a·
raafflrmatlon of- pr81!1nt policy which
aHows distribution credit for cqllege
couraeo only II they ara cross-ilateH ln a
department. Thla Is so, he oald,
be&lt;:ausa regular departmental· couraeo
undergo a .acrullnV. by faculty at the
departmental and faCulty oJ'achooiiiMII
belore being eant to DUE.
This Infers, said Peradollo. lhat the
coursa Ia "located within a system of
faculty accountablllly and peer regulation, 1tself controlled by larger
exlramural scholarly and pedagogic .
statidards of the discipline. •
• "There Is not that :O:ind of control bY,
lhe discipline at1arge In the Colleges,'
he noted.
The DUE 08iri eniphasltecfhe do\isn't

failed to mention the College~, but only
tJeeeu• ''IIIey were not In exiStence at

::It::-.: ~~=0~~

Studleo, tile o.p.rtment of Aecreatlon,
ll.thiMica and Related lnatructlon,
Mll-.:1 Fillmore Cqllege, and the Office
of Ultlen ll.ffalra were not mentioned
either. Yet, many of their co urNS ara
available for ouch· credit, Welch
contended .
Welch ..ld he hopes the Faculty
Senate will hear the Collegeo' vi-point
on the dlopute. The Executive Committee was scheduled to take up the
queallon yesterday.
Started In OctThe problem emergecf In October
when Carol Petro, associ ale !lean of the
Colleges, proposed that dJstr1butlon
raqulremelil credit be granted lo certain •
College courses not cross-llsled with -

plane! and In a vortex around tho center
oltheapot.
.._
Anderson pointed out that the Great..

rh~~rm~·t=~~~~~rt~~ allout

Lyle Borst theorized that the spot
mey be a volcano, since there must be a
source of energy to create the vortex
When another lacufty member voiced
skepticism o - the poaalblllty of a
~lcsno 40,000 km. wide, Borst calmly
~=· .~im, "We're f1C!I talking about
After some dlacuaolon which resulted
In the leas than startling -conclusion
that there still Ia a lot to. learn In the
universe, AndersO(I noted that Voyager
will travel on· to Saturn .and begin
transmitting dala from one of Its moons
and Its rings Jn November, 1980. He
added that there are many opportunities
for. theoreticians lo join the space
program arid encouraged members' of
the -:.u~lence to- d~O.P soun-cl grant

. ~~~n~~ ~~F.'fs. ·~~; ':a.~~~ .~:f'!.,.\'~ .
i11ffiirennn ktn •
. pr~r,g"jl~~ to see Bufloito · get on tho
map," the neW FNSM dean said .
Unlll the Colleges move more closely
to lncorporat~ thema,lves Into the
-sys1em· of disciplinary accountabfllty
and sell-regulatron, Peradouo .sald, " to
allow distribution credo! for College
4)
couraes offers no guarantee that
matter . •
students taklng such courses are being ,
For example, Peradotto noted that
exposed to !he disciplines as they are
the Springer Report recommends that
all courses that depart from "the three
~m;,~'X developed •~ th_e unl-slty
hour/three credit module be " justified
The._DUE dean noted that as part of
and examined." If, alter Investigation,
the Spl'lnger Report Implementation an • I he pre-professional echools drop some
evaluation of distribution raqutremenls
courses to threec(lldlts, then this could
Is currenlly underwil;i" by a select
possibly have some· effect on GE
cornmlllee of lhe Senate.· He said pert
· ac:Cornmoctatlon. . .I
of this panel's task will likely be to
address the dlst':'butiOfJ problem.
I
for their students, In which one area
.PUislde the maJor ia studied In depth. ,
. "I think that pedagogiCally It's a
beautiful ldila •• but It's not general
education ." Such an option has little
breadth, lnelsted the Dean, and breadth
of atudy Ia what under! lea GE.
The enrollment and adml88lona
4. examine· the exten~ to which
ey-'em• will be the next units to be
enrollment and admlaalon policies ara
·HoPea·tlle Senata Wllle...-.ltaall· ·
by the Unlveralty Committee
eotabllab.ed by ~cl~ external to the
Peradollo uld he hoPM to get a
to Study OPWatlonal Proce98811.
• UnJ-slty at Buffalo 'a(ld lhe-.-m.to
strong sensa from the ~· citi 'how
Prealdent Robert L . • Keller, In , which our campus can e.alabllsh Ita own
they want the GE Commlllee to ·treat
dWDina the - ' with tru. OfCQIId
pol)cles;
_
exception&amp;. He alto hoPM that the
.-lgllrMnt, aald thla .,... has become
5. recommend a system lor forecast·
Administration will Indicate "strong
~Iaiiy critical, now thai: the pool of
lng enrollment projection• at all IIMiis
traditional college-age youth a Ia shrinkof J~em~~~; =mmendatlons as
Peradotto, Ia that departmenla which
unclertal&lt;in6"'ihla .
_ , neceaMry or
for
•experience a greater' demand will have
Keller ..ld, the &lt;:Ommlttee (chaired DY
Improving the enrollment and admlato be strengthened" accordingly.• This Is
pr. Frwlk Jen of M~t) ahguld:
alon aysterns, Including dala collecfar preferable to having the commltlee
1. .,..,.,,. and eva,l\lale .the existing
lion, Information flow, and atudent
."go back to the drawing boards" at a
admlMion a~l. lfl the Unlver11lty, . recruitment.
later date and "tailor . programs to
Tt&gt;e President oald these speclflca:~~ng:~~~~~·departments . That
gn, and 1118 equal opportunity pr&lt;&gt; - lions "are not Intended to restrict the
As to how the Senate will neect to the
grwn;
. approach the Commlllee might take .Jo
GE Report, Peradotto admllled he Is
2. -..mine the etfactl-. of the
Its aaslgnment." Given the scope of the
"frightened." He .-alne convinced,
lntarNiatlonlhlpe ~ tile offloeo
undertaklnft• he lndlceted, the panel
wtlloh pertk:lpata fn or~port the • may find I n_ecessary to eolabllsh a
l~g~,;l':~~u~~~~~!';:'~';:
.wotlment and admlsalon
In
priority syslem to carry out thla charge.
the committee's pro and con arguments
the Un...,..l~ I ude AdmlsIf thla proves to be the case, Keller
about GE and thua would end up having
1110na and
a, the Computlng
said, he wants to review such priOrities
c.nt.r, F10811C1al Aid, Houalng, Schad- with the panel .
.
more reapect lor the document lhan
they may Initially demonstrate.
U!lng, Academic Depart,_ta, Pfoles- _ To enable the panel to - review a
Whate- tranaplraa In the Senate,
aloMI ~~. lnatltutional Studleo,
complete enrollment and admission
the Dean hopea the report will not be
Mil Publlq Relmlona;
· cycle, the final report will not be due
sent beck to the GE Committee without
3. determine the sultablll... and
until January 1, 19110, with an Interim
the Senate's "zeroing In on very apeclflc
.rt.cl'*- of 1 exlatlng Unlveralty- rePOfl "due 011 October 1, 1979
wide ooma'lltte. ..r.tlfllllo admisalon
The penel'a first wlgnment was to
laaues and olferllig aorlle concrete
recommendatlone forch8ngeo."
~· fncfudlng, but not
~and m-'&lt;e reooo:nmendatlona ·
;;;;" .'~ .,~-wJded ~
~11'·:1ngpurchasln~p~lf0fll . That
Adl\\laelona-Communlcatloi)S., Panet; ·~~~. carrie!! n lhe ~rter,

,,...~~~?A:"~ that propo58l o
the Senate, besed on hts' understandlng
that lhat body "bore chief responslblllty,
for guiding me In deallncll, with it. '
:V'f:.t:. ln~:;:.:,~lon~llul ne&lt;; and
Senate Chalnnan Newton Garver
conveyed to the DUE dean the feeling of
the executive committee thai themalter
was the dean's problem : Peradolto ,aid
· he disagrees with that Judgment and
,marvels " at the silent deference with
which they (the Senate)~! a
prerogallve heretofore con
• so
· vociferously and guarded so fiereely.•
When he decided against distribution
credit, Peradotto said he was certain
that If his stand "Ill serves the Intent of

.•General Ed a:;m_,, ....

wh'Zte~;.::r.;~~~~~"-~'.:0~~~~~~

Jen committee looking next a)
enrollment and admissions are-as

my,;

aaslpn~t.

=.-:~~~~~~~~~=;

:~p~~~!.~w~~ "r~P.ra::::.~$&amp;~

dealrabl~t

'

There's slight chance
to see lunar eclipse

Employees repres~~ted by ~V~
got 1.5 per cent raase ,_,arch 1
and as alich will .--lve lncr-a. If
tl\ey .,. peld only partially through
theM junda, the 1 , . , _, muat be

=-'
~·~betos::,,"'l~-

thele

a-appropriated,
5. Eriiployllea lleMng •
departmen.- Cllalra will 11M their owemc1ee
for Gnlnlatr.alve ctuttee Included ·In
their lillie-- ...... for~

ol Olloullltne their . . _ _

•

30~-~~ ...ua June
IIIIIICIIIIIIMI•ta iW'k.ii:*:~
Plllodl. -.-.

entitled \ "' . . . . . ...

of ...... fanM - nOt
.......... edlillftll..

----~lundldln
•
Ill
---

-~

='=

··~if=

Allentlon. sky watchera.
In caee you miSled that solar eclipse
on Monday. Feb. 28, take hear1.
According to Dr. Lyle B. Borst.
profeasor of phyaloa and estronomy.
thera'a a aUght chance o1 obeervfng the
final· t.-,cea of a partlaf ecliDU of lhe
moorr1n the Buffalo tueoday.
March 13.
•
89rat. wl)o ta In charge of UtB·e
ObeiiMI!oty on the atxth floor of Wende
Hall at Main Street, eald the partial
1..- ecllpee wtfl be tn "full bloom" owr
England and Waatern Euttlpe at aboUt g
p.m.
'
In tile BuHalo - . he pointed out,
tt..l would be .t1out c p.m., long before
the moon r~. ~. he added.
tharw'e a poaalbflfty t11a1 Weetern NeW
YOII&lt;a-a mtalit g.c ailllmpaa of the tina1
_ , ort11e f)lltlollacllp• w11en the

on

n.....-..-....

lnOOIU:I- atiD!ut 811.m.
. . , . . , ... _and
OIIPQiite ...... of the

. .=.

- Olllltlnt ,.. ol ...
..... I!IOIIft.
~
I!WIIIId to try
to . . . . . . . . . ~otllw~

.,.. . . U/.~.11.....,.. ..

-~·. I. &amp;~•

• • •,

rlflw .,d!Nll 91001

�-

.. 1~71

Tuition hike·.
' geJs approval
~ / from Trustees '
Someone aald the llluatrllllon ao-

~ 1 11 1 ,

- ~~~~~~Pon~a'!.~~~ ~n

'

,

student aubmlttlng to aettlng 11C111Wed.
Other&amp; thought IT waa CamiLle
Student gaaplng her last.
Whlchiwer, one thing Ia ·ctaw:
F..ahmen and aophomonoa will par an
eddltlonal S150 for the "Dr!YIIage"' of
attending U/B and other' SUNY unlta,
atar11ng next fall. Junror. and ...rcn
will be unaffected u wtll end at.-....
For medica~ -denTal atll4Mnti,
there's a ten
oant hlka - from
; law atuclerltl'·bllla wiH
•$3,000 to S3,
go lrom S2,000 to $2,200 annuelly.
In making the announoament the! the
executive i::Ommlttee ol the SUNY
'Trust... had approved the ,.,_ at a

Mra. Heedridc's......_.of~'•home.~P'IIIeOin.ecid .... tocookbook.

•

Wlde-rangbig-Women's Club cOokbook
Is reportedly 'selling like_hot cakes'
·

ro.,~~~ ~\:,dalo.mcr::,.oar.!t"

I

other peraon I know."
• The e&lt;lltoro [Mra. Pat Oremuk Is
aaalatant editor] make no claims lor the
According to reports, the club had 1 ~nallty of their recipes. Th~ almr,ly
orders for eome 40 copies of the
:.om."':~':..~~ S:.~~w:ro fr~~~:.9
apl,.,-bouftd collection of mote than
The book Ia available by calling
500 reclllel, after It wu leatUNd In
Jlllllce Okun'a column In the Buffalo
~~~"n::~.icft~~.s-G~~
E-lng Newa lut Wednesday. The
Student Loan Fund.
·
volume eella for $5 and requlnee an
eddltlonal $1 .50 for poagge, but that
hean't stopped prospective buyens.
CLUB
SCHOLARSHIPS
WOMEN'S
According to Ita editor, M,.. Mllrllyn
The following atuclanta have been
Pautler, who• huabend Ia a profeeaor _
- - acholli-ahlp fundhla through
In Educational Studies, the boo!l Ia
the Women'a Club at SUNY.O for the
11711-71
1!11an L.
a.towltz, Tdby R. Axelrod, SIM M.
WWII II, and a!lll others .,. buying It
AllmaD, Pattlc:k McCourt, Mlcllaal
becauaa the recipes printed In the
M...-o, o...rynn Ferlcetta; Holly c.
N•w• loOked good to them or becauaa
OoiJw, Launon A. FIITIJ, Andraw
~~-lnt.-ted In BUffalo's hlatory.
"-gard, SuaM Gray, land Linda
Unl--~1~\l'on' t~a::y~ \~ Ulbar.
~hlng from appetlmrs to .complete
The Women's Club of the Unl...,lty

I CI damlc ,..-:

rer.-:;."R: '"::~ ~= =..w~

-· ~:-' ~/:m-:..: ,fo::' ~o~N~~ '

lood~outllne all equipment needed-

from waterproof canvu. to aabeatoa
glovee.

llralclleeol.........

-

1

booa:';:'.n,~ of~~~~

landmarks lfone by M,.. M~~ggle ·
Heedr1ok, wile of the dean of the School
ol Law. · Among tan pen. and lrik
draWinga· .,. rendltlona of the. Pnoaldent'a home, O'Br1an Hall, Abbott
UbrarY, Fumu Hall, Beck Hall, Ellicott

andH-.

.

~ capsule hlatory ol the building
..:companlee MCh sketch.
WhUe looking for a recipe for

~~: ,:u~=~m:c:: rt~::

=

LaBrun Ia conaldaNd •..ny American"
and wu built In 11128 ,.
of a

·=~
8

1:!.

:totn: .1~ I~

'&amp;~to~::"~ Funghl Rtplanl,

)'011 will atumble on allltlatloa about the

._,..H.Uchtm.=lmMoonelet
ol four bella; the
Ia 1100 lba.
with F pllllll; the - ' d Ia 750 lba. wtth
8bpllch; !he next lathe IiilO lb. ball with
C Ditch. _, the IIMIIael Ia 4110 lba.
wtih D pltcll. The bell to.- Ia m-Illed
'All truth 1a one.' ,. , HI..._ _..
pnMcled by ,.,._ .... leblln.

'1:
...._

=

of

"'*. . . . .llllllon
. . . . . . . the
'"""
the
lclla-ofl.eltrKMW. ftfttn. KMW

.........
=:==
-ldilklllea.
. . . . the . . . . 10 - 1111111 . ....,

~

="-lr.=:.....· ·-·

outll--------

UnHr .............. the book

-unno
NCipel

-fill
......... ---With......... .
for a 12_011_,....

LJon'a Halld 1_. . _ ._... JIGitr;
--~ . . . Clllll.aOitlllaga)
... Milia hOI _, aDUP, to
_.uon bul-. 'lila ....
the
..... the e»e* book polnta 0111. _ ,

---~--

'*"'*"
s==--..::-..:-oo:::
........

--~
. . . . . . . . . . drn.._ ....

. . . . . taltiNe

J~~~~':b

Cool&lt; BoOk" Is

long on Ideal to j'azz up vegetables.
iiere'a a umpl ng:
,,

l:aoll-·-11

~'fr~'!.tc::f:"::'.u}."dd cauliflower.

Simmer until done • 15 mlnut•. Preheat
OYen to 400• . Mix .our aeem, cheue, flour,
CNIMd bouillon cubee, and muatatd . Plece
coullflow« In caoMn&gt;le. Spoon c mhcture ower cauliflower. Mht rwta, bread
crwnbl, butter, morjo&lt;am,
oalt.
Bfl&lt;lnlde-- mlxt.,.. BaM 15 to 20

--anil onion

mlnutM.

amendments, reports are.

The full Board Ia expected to okay the
lncreaaea at their ll!lxt meeting.

$'=J?"I.on and C.lo&lt;y Side Dlato

..~~~d:.med~~':~~~~:. \~
March 21 at the capitol.

1 T. curry powder
~o~r Mit

o.

. 1 medium caullfl.....,.(~nto
ttow. .tteo-21be.)
'·
1 c. edtJr creem
1 c. alorwddld c - (Cheddar]
1 T. flour
·
2 chlcMn bouillon cubeo (cruohld)
1 top. dry muotord
1/4 c. fine dry brMd crumbs
1 T. butter (melled)_
1 tap. dried marjoram lea- (crumbled),
1/2 tap. onlon-oalt
,

~=~:.9°~11:,n~!. ~"r::l' ~,:alo~~~th&lt;l
water. Stir constantly until smooth and

!1\r=

out of the legislature - and do not
want to accept cute.
_
"We 'made every etf0r1-to iiiiOid It,"
the Chancellor aald.
John Hardy, 'Mcretar)r to tha

..

~~h~y::Tt:J:ooE:n,; c:.:llt~

.:1:

group felt State Unl...,lty could rMka

th~r~":lr.tned onions and cetory In baking

;:Jle m~:"b':O::'d,.~tay w~h~.::;
dish. Slice cn-.a over tile w;etableo. Pour
than l'lllae tuition . The
milliOn,
:_,:: sauce. Shake on glr11c aatt, 11 ,- provldjld In Gov. CereY,'a original
11 ...Oetable dla~ Ia oman but deop, ttoe
budget 111Quaal, Ia S32 mftllon llbovll
-..layering of wgot-. ctoee•. and
fundlngforthe-t~.
aauooc.n be repeated. Bake alowly at 250'
Wh.non aald he fall cuta PIOIIOIId
•
to 300' until c - melta thoroughly.
bY the leglelatlve atalfera wOuld " . Se.-8.
·--Coiaftwl =.c.."?n..:'.O:the":l:otO:

';/;t'

security by,aliy other name·is
· =~n~=:r. In the"-'~
ali:rr:.llacurttr
Departmen_t of Public Sa~ty ·
Gambling panel .
o111oaa ~ "'ur chqil .,._ """',.....
slates hearing
: AI~of=u=~Miad
:;:-..:,.movtne tJeronc1 almpla policing . 'lila nN1y 011II ~ ........!!1!1.1!.....
liilw Dapart~Mnt of
Platt Hlnta, SUNY dnotilr o1 PUblic
oominlaalon
....., :-.rTt wll
Publlo
IQWtoualy called
aalwly, polnlael out that - " 8UNY
=.~~~II!Mn~'eo= &amp;:i

u;::,

wiUnr..r.~~y Polroa.
~ ._ ,cmt..~~ nuda _, •
--·~ =-~~:: ~=:.:r::n-lc ..,.y
Grtflln;T'~otUI la~ol can ba adlpled 10 ne.cta of ..:11
~

Row~~.

·

.

~
~:'-=:-"~~
The , . . _ . , 111-lllllllll.'lllt=llll·
.

.

~
~-=';'·...,... '" Ita -·~ :=-..J!=...--...:
~a:a=
.. u,:.e' tara==xr·=·~=
~- .....,.......,
........
"':lo:.

10

...

10110 10 . .

~·a:::=~~
=76"==~
ldldliiiiillilllftillalilloliliilltllftn,• IIIII - . . 001i1n1un1tJ ar1111a
loll, " - r.III!Ona,

ac1u.,;u:.~

Un1wn11y-

munftyln
- · Wllopa to
tlllllt ... 10 .....,,
~ IIOIICIIIallla
Gllflln noeu.

-&amp;taz:"=~IUNYIIMtlla

lllf
NawofYOIII

hlllbllt .-....o.llo ...,.._..

- . . . , . _ . 181110r 1ft
.....

W.A. CalllaMIL reuarch aide, fa dead
WIIIIMr A,-~-- --"
In 1111 t1111a a1 U/8, 118,..,... 11a1
...... .....
...,. wltll Or, ........... _...
llliua~Lab

lll . . ,_...,..oiMiallblala•,dlad
••

,
=~~~=a~'==

:='J~,:

a
~~m dhtonal
.
i{~fc ~1( ~J '
Low o;~tlorle cheoil&amp;or any "melting" choose
Firat parbOil ~ onions and celery;·
save 112 cup water. In a ...,..pen mix curry
8

:,'g

=-=

""-'-oa•.:.-.:=L..P:.B
....~~Iw...M!:"
extiii:tuth8
'

ru••

'1 /2
mfllt
' Pf
112 c. wter
~,,
- 112 c. water trom boiled onions

:;t,! ;t"':' 8:.1.srm: =: =.:.:=.~r~iiC: ....... ar.l!rftllt...-. •,=:
p.wlth....-M • .=r~:e
• . . . for.. .....-:

J:o"':

,.load S50 a y - (the oalllng on atuc1ant
ectlvlty r... haa bean adjusted UI)W8nl,•
1oo - a maximum hlka ol $10 Ia OK bJ
SUNY If students at a gl_, CMIPUI
approve) . ,
·.
Finally, a $70 hike In board c.Hmact
charges Ia "probable alao, • nopor1a from
Albany Indicated. Individual cam~
have to mala! that adjustment".
To compensate aornewhat, Whar1on
announced removal of the $15 atudant
health lee.
. •
The Truateea' executive committee
halllo approve the hlkaa leat Friday ao
the executive budget could be ~ed
to guarantee how the ext,. lunda wtll be
.used ($5.1 million lor equipment
replacement, library _.:qulaltlona and
other on-going lundlng omitted from
the Initial budget request, and S4
million, lor debt serVIce on naw
construction).
C...y filed the neceaaary budget

:::~alee~ book that Ia aelllng

-

'

~~llalllftlntlla

llalid of flllaiGlllalce;bUI*...,

'lila ............ lllltl •

. . . . . . . . ._

.......

r...:._· fllfj~ :=r:..:-=.-:11.-a.=~~ wa - :r':':fr.NawYOIII.---.,
claoMIYOI.....

.......

. . , . . . .....

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

e~=
da.

�.......

.'

Congress eyes
new draft or
:youth service'·

{'The Deer llunt~r'
·It's a kind of a 'Huck, honey' boy's book,
or Is It about the horror of war?
Cimino seems to be handling too many subjects

.
-·-.,. ........

Saying that the all-volunteer mllltwy

,

llervlcel concept has failed Its teat
San. John C. Stennis, chairman of thi

Sanate Armed Setvlcea Ccmmlttee. ~
called for a .-w-etyle draft which "will
be fair and.eqUiteble to all."
members of the town preparing for the
scenes In VIet Nam The Mlululppl Democrat made the
wedding ceNmonlea, which are held In
coffins, hospital confusion , shellproposal In a apeach to the Senare
the gorgeously gaudy church, end
shocked
Nick - make us wonder abOut
In 1M, lAelle Fiedler wrote'hla most
Stennis said the six-year-old al~
watch the okf..World wedding, the highthe film's point. of view. The war- Is ,a
. . . . . . , ....,, "Come Back to the
volunt- sys1011111a ~clearly the weakaat
spirited drinking, eating end folk
canvas on which to display Mlcheels
~II, HUe* Honey;• In 1878;
link. In the vital chain of our military
dancing. The wedding festivities are the
all-American courage, but . It's also
security
. . We .,. almply not g~lng
farewen
party
for
the
bOys
on
the
eve
of
- The
· fomw
"The Deer
horrifying, ugly, sleazy. And Michael
· HunW' "'CCmllllh
........
haa
their departure for VIet Nam. •
men~ower In the numbers and with the
as
the
does
not
return
to
Clairton
men wit end Cll1gln8Hiy, but It Is
After all the m"f'YYI'&amp;klng, Michael,
~!'~r~l~~tJ=~48Qulrementa of
conquartng hero. He deliberately avoids
Nick and three buddies climb Jnlo
--Ina
fo tha ....... trat
the coming home party that the town
a-la
ofl'fedlar'~ _ , oon.-yed In
Michael's white Cadillac with Ito flashy
He aa1d thi difficulty In meetlilg
has planned for him . Silent and
tall fins, to drive to the mountains for
manpower requirements Is particularly
clnemltlc
One of tha
I* points that
the last deer hunt before VIet Nam . - depressed, he climbs the mountain for
pronounced In the National Guard and
deer
hunt
agaln
accompanied
by
the
Fled. . made In .. - J a l piece
They'ra all still horsing .around, In a
other reserve components which .,.
a heavenly choi r,. mist, the whole
that In Americell ~~- .... "at the
down-home way, as they guzzle beer
faced with oavere men power shortagee.
gestalt - but this time 1\e sees the deer
end eat sllj:ed White bread, baloney end
are
fooua of ~. The military oervlcaa.have worl&lt;ed h~
and doesn't kill it. One assumes that .
Twinkles.
•
to make a succeao of the all-volunteer
Vlet' Nam has &amp;nded hie taste for blood ~ system, but It has proved "not to be the
find lnat_, "a chaata mele·love a the
sport but It's not shown either subtly or
answer to either our peacetime or our
Ultimate -IOnal 8lqllfl-." The
Oregc&gt;rlaf1ec81&amp;1y
- •
.
. movingly; the mood Is a 3our dullness.
wartime military manpower requlr&amp;1
gnoateet ' - In much of American •
The last big edventure IB Mlcheel's
ments." he continued.
haa
..
rlctJon Ia rooted, ~ng to Fiedler,
return to VIet Nam to find Nick, who Is
for the hunt. He Is .the natural leader of
AWOL He tracks him down In
"In tha : : = - - o f Alner1c8n life,
Equity and Fat,...
noatalgla for the
Ita Imp
Stennis called · for a new and ·
:"
Infantile. The mythic America Ia
Innovative type of oalectlve service
pb188slva
to the blood
,
In a Cecil s: DeMille flick. Early In the
~-·
"built from the ground up on the baola
Which for him haa a mystical bea!!IY~~~e,nheVI~~J~~~~ %'!u~
Hia - • of the mountain, as he stalks
76r'::r:;~~~~~lty and fair treatment
the ~ he's spotted, ta somewhat
heppena,'' and he Is determined to keep
Ia a kind of "boy's
He added: "There Is a need for publl9
book, • with tha epecla1 ritual a found In
his word.
Information In thlo area. We should
thla ~= tha ebullj,erlt ~e of
There Is a long and riveting scene
the ~It gang, .with their putlmeo
client. Michael Rilla the animal In one
proceed , therefore, only after ex·
1
of drinking, beer, . ~lng pool,
haustlve hearings which develop all of
shot, and the camera shows , us the
clangeroua eporta; tha oalebratlon of
the facta end th&lt;'&lt;Oughly explore all of
stuff, end In marked cont~st to the
,.... prowas; the atrugglea with the
the posoiQie alternatl¥18. "
ending of the film, which Is a moving
......,.. 8IICI with wtllalna; the
In another development, the Defen11
funeral breakfast, cornlly marred when
peripheral role ot WOII*I . Thera' a even
Der,:.ment released f~ures In mldeveryone begins to sing " God Siess
a raft, speaking pi Huck (Finn),
0
America. "
It nlledo tightening
- w'!:lch lo also a personal climax 1or
recruiting goals In the final months of
The movie Is very uneven. There Is
down.a Vletnameiie''l;'er until they are
Michael -glorifies.
·
1978 for the first time since the draft
pfactlcally no dialogue and connaacuect.
The kill accomplished , It's time to go
ended In 1973. The armed forcoa
Lealie Fiedler waa alao making the • to the bar. As they down their beer, .one
recruited a total of &amp;4,800 men and
pOjnt In lila _ , t11at all of !lola ,....
women from October through Deoem~~ r:::,~~~ ~.e:~:.~~et~~ men's comradeship has less to do wl!h ber,
1'811owllllp waa a kind of Innocent
or llO per cent of their overall goal.
chilracterlzatlpn than with the bOy's
- u a l t t y , or a denial of lto .cowrt
attention. Look how sensitive we really
The Air Force recruited 95 per cent ol Ita
are, under our coarse exteriors, • It
~c~~,e~Y~~~u\.,;~nsuaf~~f ~~
-.no to say, but lfs self-conscious
;~:~~~93 r:~~· ,:gep~ar~
Lin:l'a neYer develops, and their one love
. . certainly physical, but In the way
"lnd unconvincing .
•
~~~~n~ea::rst q':'t~ ~~~s' ~~
that goodnatu~-lln Md buddybuddiiiMS . . ph
. The only
97 per cent, bu~oth the Air Force and
remarl&lt;able presence, her Linda might
- i o n of ho
Jclam Ia wl'llin one
ebru tty to VIet
the Army fully met their goals then. The
be just as unnoticeable as the rest of
Nam and to an onslaught o?vtolent but
the women In the cast. · De Nlro Is
gripping aceMS, panlcutarty In the
magnetic, but hard to believe. He Ia too
prl'lon camp, wl\ere Ru..lan roulette Is
YGII'IWa - - fiOgotl"
dropped' from 74 per cent In 19n to 71
dashing, too sophisticated looking, and
Of ~ no one ~ the
used u the grueaome torture device. It
percent In 1878.
at the 981!'e time too undfiVIIIOped as
...-ton..touaty.ltlaMia.l,aflar .
Ia Mlcheal, VIe aurvtvor, who aucceasthe central character. He Is a
fully ex11orta hla fellow-prisoners, Nick
Alternate 8erYice
hendoome,
muscular;
heroic
shell.
The
MCISte:,we,
to
aurvlva
with
him.
We
get
a
1IMWIIdgl of tha
In still another related development!
-1\ere ~ only of hla quick-wilted...,....... end . ~""" ._..,.,
Rep
Paul N. McCloskey, Jr. (R-Callf.
:~::,...::~:~ ·.~ 0~~~~~~~ ,;:;:; and .ten
..... him tha ~ ....,._, If
. . _ confnlinled by pllplcal
co-aponaora Introduced a bill
and
acto
the
pert
of
a
man
who
has
been
but of hla ..,.. of hla own
1101. llldlad, aldnd of..:::r:=-:· v• the
Feb.
15 to create • national youth
morally lobOtomized by the war.
service as en - allernetlve to the
The p nclpal theme of the movie
"o'1
'811-volunt- mllltwy force. Their plan
.......,. TliiiW II
of .nr.ctJon
I E a t a l y. He thrlvel- on the
-m• to be thet war Ia bad , especially
would requn -.:11 of the nation'•
cNI
of clallger. IM:onlc, onlerly
a war thet takes our boYs away frolr) the
approximately 4.3 million ygung men
10 - ~.
Clf . . lllut
JOUIIII · .._.
Linda
....,.
faallnal
M
a wild, viOlent ballet,
American heartland, with Ita homespun
and
won.~ whO tum 18 aech year to
fW iiN llltlilln or ......,., lila IWII
firing on all tha captore 8IICI ovaroomlng
frontier virtues, end di'OPJI them In the
chooae one of tour options: (1)
u.m: thaaupemw~ 1110111 aaaln. (I.Mge midst
of a bunch of foreigners (there Ia
voluntfor two , - , of_ mllltlrY
-lone of U.
I
no auggeatloll that there are any good
aervtoe 8IICI ,.....,. 311 months of
VIet,_), lfa en attempt to update
8114 no one
at
ecluoatlon and IIUIIIID '*-fila almllw
the encle!1t tale of the lo" of
to tho• """- tha Oiblll; (2) "l)luntew
Now thlt eeoape1_ the
of hie
l n -. But the .director~ to
for alx montha of aatlft duty followed
fluddlea, IIIII raft, me - . . . MlchMI
be dealing with more subject matter
by fiva-end+half , _ . In the ready
.....,.~.., lllen, , . . . . - with tha
than . he can handle. The 3 hour film
reaerva; (3)- volu- one year of
oantnll
....--. of tha ot.aeed.
(Whlall wu reportedly cut down from Ita
ciVIlian aervloe In _.,munlty or
II'a lila
ol lila clearliunt trMapol8cf
original 5) need&amp; tightening , both In
environmental aervtoe projeeta; or (4) be
length and In statement.
placed In a mllll8y lottiiY pool for alx,
y-. of chit iiiiiiiHty. Ponons
chooalng the 1ut option mlahl bl
required to two , _ . of acth•
·, duly and Incur • four-,_ ....,..
. Obligation If mllltery manpo- requlremenla were not othenrlae met. They
would u.n ba entitled
two years of
athletic events? Under wtlar conditions
educetlon rd !Ninlng '*-fila.
wouk1 you attend?
The 1111 ~ wtabllshlng a
No taiiDhone calla,
my
quaal-pulltlc CMIIMiQitlon called the
10111111
me1Ney.
NatiOnal Youth llerYide Foundation to
Wa- you II '-athltitlc events.
- ' • the Civilian aervtoe program.
How can we gat you thanl?
The feunda!Jon would. Invite state,
regional end looal governments and
-LinJO.IIIIII
D l - U/8 11Dorta '"'-ion
lhillr ......,.._ to alibmlt plana for
1311 Crolla Bulldleg
employfng youtha In IMIVIce projec{s.

s.;,==•

'*' -

-i!S -- .

==~o:x'::=~~

~'la.~:'l': th~ ap~~~':le uta;,.::~~

~:~:'.::f.• J~lz~~ro~t~ q~~:

approach

"~~=

~~:..=~ ~~~~g",nor";"~~~:~th~

'_:a.,: -

~~;~~~"'fr."~pei&lt;'/~~ ~r ~~:~

=~~ ~~~n ..::- ~~:~~~ ~J

::,:w~~st'.:': r~":.~etfe"~P,~'~·su !\';~~g

~~~~~ ~~ :r:::e~~:~~~a~~ =~~~

::.~J::~u:::':..!!!rC:.:.re:..=:',i~~

~~~~~O:~h.t ~t:"~~::,~ of

l::! ~~~

::..~~:z !!'::'~n!~ ·~~ ~~~~~~~~';r,

~:r'~~~~~P~~~::!~ c~"a':~t.:1. f~:

~::...:.":net~~~~~:.~

~ YC\.:r~"':':,;.. ~~~

...

1

~~~ ~~~rs~p ':~:~~~~;:

C~= ~':-:~wltc....i

~pu~rg~~~~~r~~:::r:n~~~

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a.._

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_ .....

elMS:,
=~~-~ ~u..::=. ~o't

=.,. ,
to-.

...,..._at.::::;

-•no

-

D8ar Facu1ty_and Staff:
Why don't yo.- back athletics?

pl-.

clut._ "-

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

to

Dates to remember

~

Fits·

IIUII!nlaelon ol Ph.D • ....,._ of_~ to

Olwh.-lchool

for"*'*' ,.,COIIfarral, to

Sullmllalon ol.._-a.-.....&amp;01

_

...... llchooli£:01'
......llcl-. a -.
=n~
a.
F111~1171===-~~-:=~

Mid . . . . . . ~

�..

Mo&lt;ehl, 1171'

•a•.~

LETTERS

;A;

.-..;- ..

- An affirmative action component
within proposed General Ed program
is supported by a group of·faculty
_ Mill N. Clllll&lt;, Aaaoctale Profeaoor of
.
English

=."
~· :.=.:r ~·~:
PfOIIOMCI General Education Prbgram.

Tllor:.:. ~=:
.
~::.s:~~~ =~

WllllomC. Ft.-, Associate ProlesS4&lt;&lt;&gt;f

·

English

Oe¥td Gerber, ANoclate Professor of

·

History

In 18711, the Untv.ralty ._., of
T....- appointed a subcommittee to

Gene J . Orablner, Aaalstant Professor of

the ao.d. Ita ·~rt of Afflnnatlw

.Anthropology
Gall P. Kelly, Associate Professor of
Education
Blabeth L. l&lt;enftldy, Associate Professor
·
of American Studies
Ctnlyn Koram~, Aaaoclate Profeaaor of

::':.:ff~~ =~~~g

Action ProgNea," June 25, 11175, urged

·-I'IIQ&amp;I'IMII11 of curricular de¥elop, _ . IUCII • women'a atudlea and •

ethnic atuellea. •
Significant curriculum d~pment •
hea occurr.d, Including the eatabllah- ·
,
_
of ..........
panJcular
.,._
_
of
new oou,_ In aome lddlllonal
dlaclpllnea. The atudant conatltuancy
01 IIIIa new cunleulum, - ·· he&amp;
been - and oontlnUMJo be - ' moatly
mlnorltlea llild - · powclaely thoee
whoae alltnnalllle action perapactlw Ia
alnaady aanaltlzad. We ahould note that
their partiCipation he&amp; prOYed ln¥aluable
In claflnlng the new currlcutum.
The next lmpottant and - . a r y
step li' to bring affii'IMIM action
Cll'l'icula to a// a)udanta, and to make It
etfectl.,. within the OY&amp;ran Unl...,.lty
mlaalon of not only educating people lo
be aoclally 1111&amp;1'11 and produott ... but
&amp;lao -"CCing 111em In a ,_,lnglul
~ lor tna bella of principled
behavior. The •11-«tuCated atuclept
not only undaratancla othara who are
dlff&amp;~W"~. but &amp;lao IenOn how thoee
othara - the many vwtatlea of people
who conatlluta the AID«&lt;can rwtional
idantlty - view the maJOrity.
In - · ,..., the acedamlc
community hM had a¥allable to It an
mor-tna amount ot powclaa and
organizecJ knoWteCiaa about the ....
~of mlnortt!Mand • - · and
· &amp;bout eoclaly'a ...,on- to llltlr
...,..,._ - knOwleclga which Ia
Plftl-' _, lll!lllollllato awlda IWIQ&amp;
of ~ dllalplrn.. Mora than
- . ~........... ne.dlllla
~~~~~10 ....... ~/
...,...,.. .., .._ 11111111* of \flelr

~

:=::.. rcd

-•t-

&amp;lqi&amp;IIINie .. .... ...

IMwllallly

-llllm "' .......and
IMeeymbollc
- not
.....,
1M
111111......
n _ _ao much
a 1*1
reeponM~

of-tllllllllfiiiiiiiWIIOr.
The .,..... Df.and -

. . ..

r::.' =,:=::.-::;:

!!!IIDIIW'*'al ...... -

........

=Inti

llli . .
woulcl .. iD ... 1M
..,_..tile 11111111111 IIIII 1M
--~~~~~-Df-1"~
....... a.-liD mill .I"...
1111'1
not 1111 tllllr iiCiflllllll IIIII

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

1111' .....-

•• of • -

of

far . . . . . . Ill ... ~ Wllllld ..

......,ptllft.

.. CllllilfiOIII of Ill 8lflnniiiW 8Giton
-.wta dtF

~~

•
Norman N.

·

Education

Holland, ProfnSOJ of English
Erwin H. Johneo_n, Profes.aor of

.._0.P-.Prolouor
Chairman an:1~~~t
of Blaclc Studies
--~r=-:t::

- · Studies
VlaltlngAaalslant
Proleaoor
of American
and Bllick
·
Studlee
- H. - . . . . . CleM, Faculty of
Educational StudiH &amp;nd'Profeaeor

of Education
Nett lctulllttz, Auoctate Profeeaor of

·

English

-=:i~'-=l=r~~!"~~~
Education

M - L Sl~n;:".O,.~{ :=~

ntng .1. Spttzberg, Jf ., Aaoelate Profeeaor
of Education
Lois WeiM, Aaelatant Professor of
-Educallon

J - D. H,_, Prof....,. OJ Law &amp;

Jurleprudence
ClleriM II. KIIA, Acting Chairman and

•

Aaaoclale Profeeaor of Amertcan Sludlea
. . - . Vloltlng Aoalotanl Profeaaor
'Adaltnei.MW, ...

:::~.==':
Sociology

-..~~,:.~!rE~~~:

K- I .- ,, Anlal8nt Profeaoorof
. -Studlel
lli-H.F-,AaaoclateProf-of
Hlatory

-o.- .....--ot
-I. s:-•.P.::=:,ca; ~:;1::

Jur1apruclenoe
--.P-anel
Law and

. . . . : .;_
-~·-.

. .

.

-~AI,
·Viet' War '·dangerous.' .
· t.o .U.S., student suggests .· ·

·wanted:·-Editor:
AI tcultr· rnembera ot the state
Unl..mty o New York at Buffalo, we
auppon ihe principle of an afflrmatlw

.

·-....

Ed~:~lte all press and admintatnitio~
efforts to downplay. the global
significance of China's Invasion of
Vietnam hare Is one 1)81'son who
· realizes the Importance of officially and
economically denouncing the action of
the Peki'-'9. Regime
Tbe Ch1neae' . .·fighting .one of the
wOrld's moat advanced and experienced
armies. In oriler to malte up for their
· disadvantage the Chinese are sending
ln wave afier wave of regionally '
recruited militia In an effort to Weaken
Viet poeltlona 80 lllat victory Ia poaalble
by China's regular tnfant(Y. This
"Human Wave" ·tactlc Is precisely, the
:.:'e~af"ag"a~. t;l'~':t~.!':f~~

:::, ~~~~~n\ .~=~~ ~~~~

"tactics was at the staging area of the

~~~~~l~~[~iJ~ t'::m=~=~n.

The Soviet Union has made It clear
that It will not sit Idly by and watch the
Chlnesecontinuethelnvaalon. PresentJy the Viets can handle the situation,
but It the Ql'- Pli&amp;n 4 1 P . i - front, than the"SOV!ata will r n t - bY

~~~'n'l,~· ~~:&amp;an:a.TI:

c:=-·
Tl:

besldes-locet militia In the - .
pure size of thla area dlctetea that a
conventional atrlke would be lnaufflclent; this retallalory Ioree would to be nuciiiiiL So aa to not oommlt
national suicide, the Soviets would
have to send a nuclear atrlke at Peking's
30-&lt;10 IRBM'a In the heart of China.
This Is what happens to China If they

=s!!\Jn,~.g~~~~iy~~ ~r~

Tang's Hillar-atyle Invasion, and 11
· calling for global .J)f&amp;ISure lo atop
aggraaslon and _ , nuclear ww.
Now where·dO t~e U.S. end NATO Ill
In? Tang launcllad the Invasion two
days alter his visit to the U.S. While
here he took every opportunity Jo blut
the Soviet Union and belittle the Carter
- edmlnlatrallon lor not taking, a hanlll~~~t.
againot the Sovlato. Durt~ all theM

· . .

~= ··~:\ \"~ !.d,r:;~
hl~~rln.
811

.

'

In A~ t:--=ln~lor
towanla paeca. All they ' - II Sanalor
Jaoob J8VIIa 1"-NYI uYtna: "The
United Stalaa w n not atanil lilly !))' 11
the Soviet Unldh , _ aaalnat China."
Allttt.y - I a U.S. St8ta D&amp;!*tmant
olllclala gol~o China to normalize

.:'":C:

=~

cnuar;.
·:::...~· -~
c.tw

8oolall -

t1t1r -

lata.t Wid hom
Ia a ·a.rt tor
-.-..nt" bY the Cllrn.&amp; and ""

o..at llrlleln

oonaluellng mUitary nda dMia with ~~~e·

~~ Sowtata •

I1IPIIOrt- of

ldnll .llr lila

;..,_
11111

u.a.

~~~~~
lro.......

DOMIIIIIIYOiaU.8.

If .............. u.
Ndlin
....

-=.:==
;~

11r1111.

.. ......
lllllll

military strategy from "mut~al daatruc- lion" to Klulnwa "g"'!PPIItlca. • Thla
Ia a policy or llinlte&lt;r nucr- ..,.. mat
Intends to engage the Sovlata In thlatN
conflicts around the ~ alfort
to ~ up Soviet strategic
to the point whera we have II rat atriU
capabllitlea. Thlala an act of and
the. Soviets vi-It aa auch.
What we muat do •
COIIC*ned
Americana Ia pnaaaura the admlniattalion to abandon this lnaanlty and ratual
our commitment to detente &amp;nO a world
on:ler ol republica wortdng tow.,ro
economic pnoapartty lor all.
.
-Erlk 81ten Blltnva

am..._

-Ciarlflcatlon-o(
'Zionism' offered

Editor:
1
be
Zlonlam, with
to the two
lattore, "BBU
a AIM!&amp; IW:Zionlam" and · - t • ~~on Zlonlam
Ramarlca," prtntad In the Thuraday,
.......... ..._....._~

~~~.::~ltf;:u~~

1)

Dr.

.;.,--s.-

-Ia

perfect ldaal ~IDtlon 111111 Dr.
and the lt8U would liD
believe It ia. The U.N. Ia In fact run
ul!der the ~ .,pi the mora
~uf oountrtM. Exainplae of lhla
are , the oommunlat aafellltM IIIII
.-...pnaaauraahom A..... votaln
l*tlcular waya, and the Oountl1aa thai

to

to

:.:a~•~·~ ~011::!
oountrlaa.

2) Zlol)lam Ia not dlacrtmlnalory; It

Juel doee nol__.,.lliiY Otllar IIIQPiee

axcapt the Jawa. Zlclnlalli, limply
~1 1&amp; the ballallllltl tile .r.wtlltlltouoo be IIIIa 1o Ntum 1o lllllr
.,_,.. ' - of
mora oom..-lr tcnown • tar.l.
3) Contrary to wlllll 1l&amp;ld In lila
two~. Zlonllm II not _,.....,. ID

Zion,

=.':;.-Zion-:...~ _..... ...,
..:~.ro~=~~:r:m~:.-:

Ia ....,. IIIII . . _ ,
~~ld In
lr ~-"aatcieMH Ifi!!!!.W' Milan.
....uld ba ..... H 0.. _,.. "ccliooiirr

Clftaln -

CCc:. ~....~~~U
_.

•,.

:::..r:r~~

.::.....:

lila ~ ~ ,.,.,. to "'lii
paopla
be
...............
a.tad In n..
, . , ..,..,

to

=:...-:v.~=~~...:
tltr...,

"And IINII llllllla _ . . . . . _
me and lllealllll
.,_,._Ill
111a1r
tar .. . ....._.

m*f.:j
=
oeo•..._
-'·to
•• C:.,1111110 . . . . •

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IIIII

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=:u:'~_,Ziollllmto~a
form of r.cr...·.
U.N. Ia not tile

1lil

W..'lllll . . . . . . .

tl 118
-

. .. .

~~~
~~
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�. . . a~

Marclol, ll78

New York
' ...
.._._,,._Rgurea-Minor.'
oUon
_
..... lo--••·-of
.......... e ..........
U/8 Art
........,...,__,..on-at
the FAll
122 E. Dlt St.l ln Nby

~

YOIIt City, through MMdl24.

_. . . . ---Knw

CIEOI.OCIICAUCIENco~·

-

.........y-8

frlclay-9

---~Dr. ._,,._.,
oodr*liw. U / 8. T - Dlmg

in~-· Mdooy. -

------DAJ·
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....

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....... .. 111111111' .., clortly opllono

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............ ~.- -­

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T-

.:30p.a.----.. . . . .
---·
..,._... IIJ

ConW tar -

ol Cullo.nl

.

, Dr. Jclon

-

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Moorw,~ presl-

'""'

Old
Lola Moore,

al

, . _ .... UoWerollyol~.
•
Ttolhor lnfomoolion moy be ablolned by coling
... u/B-..--~•e31l-2527 .

c.. ....,

::.=;;..,~~~

1loomoa ~. vice

..

ol . . Sludanl -

---~uv-.
..,
Elric ~ al a.-.~Uoo
~ in
-lnoUII•illirAio•tcwoCcomooullly."_

A....,.. dllcuuion on . _ f o r Fuluro

donl fer -

2 P . I I I . - - Y _ .. . . _ . _
.
- - . ~ "n.Uooalu.vAnalg . . Y _ a l _;· - -·
- · ~. "A
In lMiguoge

-·
---

Sponsored by . . - · Club.

Cclogo .. _

.,.._,. ~· T - - . LlngiMca,

IlLS LECTURE•

-

-lo

-··~lo-Piootognoploy

A-....., - h

lllnc1ft7:
~a
Project.
lwolhony Bomon, collie lor tile
E-lng
ond fino .., Yldoo lltiat.
' 33Q Bol. 10 a .m. Sludonta. fecully ..S ~

... -....

~bythoSc:loooloflnfcrmationot&gt;d

Ulorwy-.

.

. . _ ' - II t O'lloton - . 3:30 p.m.

_._IIJ .. .._Uinry_OIIIce.

Ul•wa;.-/uoerrcOHFEREHCE'
011

.rAl'llnCI 001.1 OCM•IIIII

c.:.. u • • o .... ee GeMr8llzecf

~

- -- ..... K.-

Aoono. Eliooll. Sponoorad by Cenler for -

olc.AniT-.
10:30 Lm. Emil_..,....,;,
. . . . ..._ ol C
c-munlca,.,_...,... Anthropology, "Sel1ing in
a--~; · Mines. l.ealvoe&lt;,
Nolloropclogy, - - ~ oi Obeally: .. EJmo.
IJI'II'hl' olo Walghl--.clng Orgonlzation.•
1:30 p.m. - . , . _ cl c-nlcallcoo&lt;

_, ------~
•230 Aldgo ...._ • p.m. .
a:ao.
O.V,~ol-. --

DopotlnoontoiModk:lne.-

~..!.;~=:. ol U/B'a

Dr.
_,1 '"'- -· Stoom~
llon*olon
Dr.plooi\lng,
""""*'"""
ClPtion
-~"'~-'""'
Penn-· '""'Dr. - - ·- ·

~ a l -v-0111;·
. . , - - - sv-na
- - . g .,

_.,..,_....-Flow,

'Dr. Gerold
"- Klus8n, Deporlment ol Ployslology and Bioployolca. DaltootJalo Unlverllly. 5108 Slootman •
4 : 15p.m, Coffee at 4 p.m.
Jolnl will&gt; lho Divlolon of Clwdology,

AUI"

110011. -

-~. ~lnSc;lt·'

-

.a .,... """'

lretllullonol~" loocloe&lt;Uodfortho--

u.. ~-..s-.

lno 1'MI onolw-

1too1

........ i n -. -'&lt;oloop wtl deal
m111n1y wtth atudent ~..,.. relate to
~ " ' . . . _ ocolegeeduadjcons.
The monolng- wtl t-.... preoentalion

=

·--

w.!:1~a.m.chc.c~~

· - . Peck.
_ , . ,•p.m.
MSfl En~PC.IIuff*&gt;,
N.Y.- ~I8Yiendo.
. PHYSIOlOGY_,. •
·~- &amp;oluo- a1 FCICOO Alwtng Ilia

o1 emoled
&lt;top out belore ..oog •
dogrM, - l o oltoor lnoiiOJIIono"'• ._,..., • - . ; 11one out from llooir aludlol 1o

10 ..... - . . . . , _ . , - . -

T -.

.

-ond~- ·

Ut . . . . . -....rCOM Bi81CE

·-.-

College

• n 1o . -

·.

D• Z.uberM' Gottn. 232 Squire. 4:30 p.m.
UUABFJLM•

/
Wnorog- (-.-a. Wall Gemwov. 1975).
Confanonca Thealre, Sq.n. 0111 636-2919 for

ahOw-. Mnloalonc:lwge.
IRCFILMS•
Tu.. Chalnuw Mlaucre; RMfw u.ctneu.t

10 p.m. Sl lor non-

146 Diof-. 7 m

leep8yeno.

-

A clolling, blool!y ""' fino (Chalnaowl on lho
...... bll • hyatOIIcol 1930&amp; - 1 .
agoin8t ~ lto.-.a .... wllto
anylloOlgfromdeolhiO-onlloeirl)lllons.

-·

Good-.

170 MF.ACC, 1311co11. 7100d 10 p.m. $1 101 non·

Cllftoe~

-----TM~
_ . . _, _ . . . 7p.m.

_ _ _ _ _ ... _...-.g

- . -...,, - · llid- corgorizo·

cl . . -

ol -

· o l - - I, Inc.

,.,
.,.
. policy
. aiiiM
/ -_. lNI-.o
_
_
...
_
. . be...,cl . . . . . . . - o l ...

Oovlcl-.Ccornoooo.-, . ,..,

~

ol ~- Dallorlll Conc:eptiono
~-- ..,
&amp;...
Hagg, ~. · v..... Un·

,.,..,... "' -

_,._...-.r..-v;: PooAJ.- .

--.....·
~.

"TCIUCI*Ig- In Aayon-

3:•5p.no. - " - ' " c l . . _ _

· ~. -. ondc.olyn
-.out
-DMI · -.· ~ '1NII a l -;· OM:I
~.~-a-. I n - Plra-

--...co

.......... I I J - ..... • .
,._
. _ , -...
.... . . _
_1
3;
IIJ
.-.

..._.

-IIIIDICALBIUCAnDIII
ED

_....-

. . _ . . . . cl . . .....,. -

...

..

:..~=

......iii.,..i.==.::::..:..":
........

.........

- .-..s

-Aao-

. . . . . . - Q d o . - - I I J U / BO!IIce

ci~-_.,_.,,llld
...

..._in~

0111131--tar-.

- . i d o w o d - -.

INAPEUI•

MAO SHOW•
STAGE, In~ will&gt; SA,.._.,., Tloa
Mad Sloow, a ........,.. baaod on Mad
~· Bool&lt; by Lorry Siogelm Sian Hart;

Cell 836-2819 fer show limos. _ , c:twge.

~~m~~·
·~=~2·
11cMtoo . . ....

Wild

door

goneoolodmloaion.
Cl allha Sq.n 'TiclQt Office.

A guonnt- ......,;ng ol fun ..S laJgha. H you
"'*&gt;Y JlaOuiM, you'l "'*'&gt;' . lho show.
· aa Alfred E. Nowmwo -yo aaya, "'
"Whoo'' Me WonY1"

- UIIIGAY L8EIIA110NAIONT•
~. 107 Townaend. 8 p.m. E~

Wek:omo

-no.

CACFILM'
Klftg ol
I 70 MFACC, Ellcoll. 8 and
10 p.m. Gonenol Ia S2; Sl.50 for
A-..rfulanti-flmwilh~ -

W. I e Scottillo prfvale

1oJ tho ond ol (Alan -~

•-

"""* to • -

_ , "' iMostigale '

ttAat ond ..... only , _ , . ..-.
-oltholocel._..oowfum,
JI&lt;ZZ IBE'lT COIICBI'f•

c.a.- ....._ """• ,.._.perfcrmance

-·--~LM

.

,...-...-~-eo.p,a
1-7 .... _
• ·

AW-.g(l978j . ~-. Squi'e .

DRAMA•

s - Poople by Mo&gt;dm Gcorl&lt;y, di"ecled by
-..on. Center for l!IMITe Roaoareh.

.

~onds;..!t.:....~.~

ooc:eptod. Sponoored by tho Center fer l!IMITe
Ao--.::to o n d - o.,.lmonl
MADSHOW"
,
STAGE, in conjl.olclion willl SA prosonta, Ibe
Mad -Show, a musicel nMew based on Mecf'"'
.._...... IIJ Lorry Siegel and Stan Hart:
music IIJ Mory Aodgon. l&lt;alloorlno Comollloeelre.
Bp.m. llcketa•e S1 .50for •tudenta; $2 general

-·Td\01
l1clle!s
.. ... Squire
Offlca.

allho door

Of ,al

JAZZ IENEFIT CONCERT•

C.Q. Prfc:ele....,wilhaprwnloo'epertomoance
olhlo""'¥~. T-aCofe, 2610

Main Slreel. 10 p.m. S3 o1 door. Proc:eods benefrt

WBFO.

----(Wool

INAP-fUI•
I lltl8). Ccorofwanoo -

- c t o . g a.

Germany.
· Sq.n. 12 midnight

alliii~T-Cafo. 2610Main

- . HI p.m. ' 13 ol door. Proc:eods benefil
WBFO.
• ,. •
.

111tl8l. eonr.w.c. Tlooalie, SQI.O'o. 12Germany,
midnight

- d w g e.

~-- 213 - - ,. 12 . - .. w
........ ... -211011id ..... -you...
- . . w _ , - - _ . , . y o u lorgol
IOOII. Illlngo-lyouU.; we'lfumlah

CACRUI•
Klngol- 1460lof-. 6ond IOp.m.
Genenol-laS2; SI.50fere,.-,ll.

-$1C..,lor
.50. /oDS
oceeplod.
Sponocnd
by lho
fiJIvouchora
n-tre

fUI•

..._ - """"' - - ..s ... - -

'-Y&lt;n·

s......... .._..by Gorl&lt;y, directed l!Y
w.d - - .. Cenlor I« n.on -.:11,
881 Main St. 8 p.m. Genenol odnolaaiOn $3;

----- ..... --·
-·
-----"-·
- - -oaon-·--·..-. ------...... .....--------....-.
-.-u.w..lly. UUAi----.--.,-,::
, ... ·-·-" .....
- - --(Wool
-------·
~. - A-15,

_

Vorl&lt; eon-IUoo ol ChloiSiw*ol Mlirl Olllcora,
11w U / B - Mlirl ~• ..S tho WNY

,-..-

.._._~.
.. b e _
, - . - ..... 1'11&gt;-

_.,_.,__tor_ond

CfVLBtQIIIEBIItll..,._l .

Conlononce

~ by tho New Vorl&lt; -

wtl

...,.

.........I I J - - --

H. lloomoa, Doplrtmontol~ ~ . ..-.otyol Moine.
Room 18~ 42.0 Rldga ...._ 3 :30p.m.

ATTJITION I RETENTION COI.a\BIC£ I

...... -t;31).11 :300UII.~II8.

-

a•o ..._,, -

._a-

I l l , . . _ gr8llulllng-. EOC, 4115 Woah-

s.twclay _;.. 10
1 •

-

· .1ona -

-"*--"'·-... __ _
-.-r-·.,.,"'-.......
ttli'wy, ~. "In You T-.g lo
Mo. U o - * - - o n d - l n o
_ , .......... Olllca;"

e-rn. -

-. -~. ,... ... a
-~,·

.....

,. _..,...

~ . ~.

-;· c...MDDoN~~U.

....,._.,...., "88lo

11'.30 .. Clolkle -..a-..~-

'

DIIAMAMAw.f•
fOoople b y - Gcorl&lt;y, directed-by

· - - - - I..I J ConW lor Slodoo
olc.An!T......O.
IOa.nt. k
lei .. _ _
-

CII\ADUA110N AIIUIUIIfbW •
fhlo _.. COAling lor grDJalea
"'"'" Ooootof Ao-.o ~ ol ... Educe·
ol
()pporUolty ConW ...
lngton Sl. 2 p.m.

U.-CONI-fCE•

oa c

Sund&amp;y-11

-

- -·
l o r- 881 Main
St. 3 Cenlor
p.m. Gonenol

-ell.

13;
- o n d - - . 5 1 .50. -vouchora
ooc:eptod. ~ br . . Cenlor lor - ......

. -ond-~ .

.A

!liCITAI.•

......

3p.IOI.

~:

plano. -

-

Hol-

WoofcoiiJ~ . -. -..SNioo
Cqolorod.
~·a-ol.,.__

IIACK.-dN~·

187
.b
3 :30p.m.
fM:_·
S1
., .
. IFH::C,
_. _ -...
e _Et*y
lo
_ . . _ , . . , . . . _ . .. , _ Spon-

_ . . , . . O I I l c a o l - -.
--~-8-~ln 167

�1

r - ;...,.,g. cUin8 Lant, ., e p.m~. •
-o1·~---.on

_ 0n

:

Thursday- 15
SOAP OPBIA CONFEIENCE" .
9 a.m .• ~ Opora 10, Or; Mlwy ~
UIB; 10 a..m., A,..~IM'a Oulcle to the
Soop Opora, Or. ~ ...... Col·

Seoe;

Mo-.o.----

a.m., A

11

tolwerChy Df

PfaleCtld

~

, PJOgrim lrrc&gt;OCI

Or.Oporu:
A

Pn&gt;grwno, 831 ·4301 . Open to ""' u.w.otly

~-

Sflln:o~TIOHen:~-

A pr1oe of $281 lncludoo roond·b1p olr to
Oo1endo. via United, and occ:ornn-.. ., lhe

panels oiiiOOP _ , .
·

conference director, SUNVIBuffak&gt;, 651 Chrtstopher Baldy Hal, Buffalo, NY 1 ~260 .

.

EMERITUS CENTER LECTURE"
J.FUL Tollden'a NMcl f« MldcUe Urth and
Ours wil be lhe 101&gt;1&lt;: ol Prolesoor- Ooly,
profe;ssor of E(\ghh, after a luncheon at 1 p.m.

~~~~t~·.~C:a~·
ORAliA"
Gor1&lt;y, chctod by
Summo&lt; P_.. by Ward Wiliai'Mon. Center tor Theatre Reseerch,
list Main St.· 6 p .m. General $3;
$1 .00. ADS \IOUChenl
accepted. Sponeorod ,by lhe Center lor Theelre

-end---

...

-.·---""-P~MMta. Tbe

-..ct&gt; and Theatre Ooporonenl

......... by lorTy Siogol end _ , """"
..t:w~o~ory Rodgon. -

comoll--

UUABALM"

CHEMICAL ENQIIIEERINQ SEMiNAR I

Scate-up of Maaa Tranaf• wttl\ Chem~l
Reoet1on, Donald N. Mk, eno;n-inQ Ooport·
E.l. du Pont do .,.,
262
30
Clpen. 3 :
p.m.
--

"*''

c&lt;o-

,,..._ Tlci&lt;elanS!.501or-; S2gonenol
- . . _ T-n-otlhedoororot / •QEOlOQICAL SCIENCES ,SEMINAR"

...... ,._1

_,....

-rdl

Qlfico.

, . _ , . (1878). (lcJnlnnce ~- -

-

CIIU&amp;-29181or ...... timn. - c l l o r g o.

HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY.
Sonw Molpt ala glee' AlpeCt&amp; of lnt~

4194 .

~aln

GRAHTSMANSHIP WORKSHOPS
The Olfoce Qf .Crodit·Freo Pn&gt;grwno Is prosen1·

Culture. Of Roaenwy Reea.

NatitnallnatituteS of H&amp;llth. 1348 F.-bet. 4 p.m

~LECtu!F

FILM"

-

............... -

I I -· Vol&lt;ar -

, _ Houojng

· .-ect.

HovM,

Camogte-

5 :30 p.m. Free.
~by lhe School oiAroNted&gt;Jro ond

-

IJnNotolly. 335

-...,-Dolo-,_,_
-Ooolgn.

.,. 7 p m. Sponoar.cl by lhe Contw lor Modil

Ao_...,al&gt;oulopoay_who_·

- · .-v-. ondlnclolng oooecomoo

•••
__y_,,....

lf'AOC.- .- -.
•a..--"'
IIIII-e1-

-

-

(China) .

7 p.m"

f(:Nnoj , UiO p.m. 170

-

~~;::~.:=-~the

loodlng- ooa gross cop ln-ligaling a murder.
klcNpping .,., fotoniea down MexicO
wwy. A11o otoro QNr1ton Hooton ond Jonel Leigh.
wi1h Oielr1ch and Joseph Cotton In bit

.

WOAKIIHOI'
Nurl)lrlftl the_.....,. Ar1lot Wllhln, Roger
F -.,...- aod M."'- condicfaleln C&lt;eellve
SludiM o1 SUCIBuflalo. 167 MFACC.
7 ~ p m. Ftoo. Sponeorod by tho Browtolng
linry.

WAa-YIIIGHf,._•

r - (zn-.

..--.--.....-.
__..-_..
..- ........
---lar-onan..,..........,.
.,.... ...
-

jaN . . -

. . . to .... -

#rift ..., -

hor

- - . . . . . . . , llwaugll

~

. . C::W... _ , -

.-

to _ , ""' mora.

liloyllon,go--eoa.Co!L

La•

1951). 7 p.m.;
~ 111&amp;41. 8;55 p.m. ConllrWloO - ·
lhea.)'oll _ _
_
and_
Angoll,
Is

-- _-- -.ha-.-~~~~~--··lf27-a7aod-on•
... cUing

-

•

Touch of &amp;II (Welea) . 146 Oielondorf. 7 p.m.

-..

148 Olefen-

Notices
FIRESIOES PROGRAMS
Informal ot.euMiona on tM .Bef\al Fetth.
T-yo ot 6 p.m. In 282 SQ&lt;ko; W"'*&gt;esdoys
81 7:30 p.m. in 1t'Mt Jane KMW Room, Blicotl
Complelo For mora lnlonnltion please col 83&amp;-

Monct.y-11
. . . T..........,IJ!ra'--~

Olrttrt.nd.5. Conference Theatre, Squire . Cal
636-2919 for show times.

Po'-Hmlle .
In 1M High Arctic,
Roymond s. Brodey. Oopootment ol Geology end
GoogrC&gt;ny, UniYenfty ol liolossachi!Mitli- Room
tB, 4240 Ridge Lee.3:30 p.m.

. ~..;!;...:"':'e-on

tllllly _ _ _ _ home _ _

ha

-=-=~~-~
-.llwough
"""'**'"· ~ond

· .. ..., morfiiiV).
.......
~
and ..- No Ingrid
,_

-

-

Ia

~.,10~:.,1ou~~

.

For more lnfonnalion wrile. Or. Mary B. Cusale.

-IHOW"
,
&amp;ToiGE. In oorjun&lt;:tioo with SA

end c..a.- . , _ -

:;,:,.~;!30t!.~==

nei"Theatre &amp;ncf-,.,. K8etr Room Mlerd fa:nore

Wednesday - · 14

c.ntar,

br Dr.
-·--.~--. ~--.on-

:-:~=~~:~
Fmsc:l\aiJOr, OTR. ~Ute . Ka1harine .Co&lt;·
creators and view.a.

bo hold o1
Ill

mlniA'(' •

~VWGWOAK-

Dynomlc Appr-" In the T - ol Por-

Academic""'
"·Ellcott.
Continoes Mar&lt;:ll 16 -

on

c:omcx- -

u.w..ityA..,.,..

Yaluel: • • Sc:M&gt;g: loll App:oodl to~ ·

In ~ Oporao, Or. Stuon &amp;lrin, UniYenit; ol
W&gt;-1door. 1:30p.m.. Wily

Dlo1ilbuled
Goldsen. Comel; 2:30 p.m ..

on

ooll,
ccmrnunlly,
lhe Moo&gt; -

Siler-. Twin'""""' !hero (tc..--1--

F« lnfonmolion, coli lEU ot 836·2077. or 2078
and ask for Cathy or lMTy. •
STUOY SKIU.S LA8
The Study Skila Lob ot lhe UniYenfty L.-nlng
Center, 386 Hoi, .. ""'"' lor tutoring In
reodlng and · study -. Holn n : Monday,
T-andlhlndoy, tto.m.-1-p.m.; day and FljdoY. 11 o.m.-3 p.m. The lab It
krill U/8 student&amp;.
•

"'*'

UNOERQRADUATE PAOGIIAII OF SCHOOL OF
IIANAQEIIENT
-llonslor~1979-ero

.v- In 151 Cmoby, 205 So&lt;*• . ..., 370

WFNX . - . ~-hoi boon • to Mlwc:h 16.
WRmNO PlACE
The Writing Ploce 1o not lor "po«" _ , lt'f
a tree aervice to&lt; e1 writero. Why not giYe yo&lt;.noll
lhe
of ""*""'~~' - aiJoul ywr
wrillng? We're ot 336 Boldy Hoi, - hoih
. .e-v.
,12-4; _ _ .....,
_
, __

odvan-

c:omcx-.

_

ALAMO QALLERY
- - . . . : Pofnllngo and 11M Y-lo

:, ~""":,~ ~~~~"':
structo&lt; wi1 be -

Berger, M.A .. -

=.:.~~==~ ' .

QUirect. For Mthar_lnfonnltion c:ol831-4301 .
I

'

LECTURES IN BASIC NEPHROLOOY W
VaMdate, an ATP... Inhibitor and Polent

:::-~~c:,·::/s~=.r..~

22 at 4 p .m. Co- ol 3 :45. S!&gt;oneorod by lhe
• Oepnnonta ol ~- _,..end~

.on-

cology&amp;~ -

-Bock
Flguro- - . , AjJrl4
. . . .. .Qpon...
-..., Gel!erY.
Hal. Throolgh
lng ,..;epHon: 'IJ&gt;&lt;ndoy, Morell e. 7·&amp; p.m.
Sponoorl: VP lor SclancM
M 0.

..

end

==============

On The Air

-·

-AI.O: ._..,

1UL
doon, School of -

A. Kala, - 10 Lm. - , ] \ '

(Ch&lt;nlel 7).

-~-·,.--­
- - L,_- eo..-~

-""'·_,___

~~10) . 8: 30p.ftl .

LENTBIMASSES
cUing Lant. -

braledMfrcllowa;
12 .--. end 5 p.m. -

... b e -

... ,....,-.

IIARCHII

cantor,

-~
~-nora,IEIIcoll
rounds).
•
12 noon - Conler, ~ 5 UniYenit;
Avo .• --~
In · oacfl -..odly lhe&lt;l ... be •

bofore...,-

mooot110Copenoi12:10p.m.
~ ... b e -

- - . ,. -

...,.._,

.. (Ito

Oollflr."

8:05p.m. WaEN(II80).
~MAl: _ _ _ _

· ....
-.w.11:05p
-(11801.

()pillion .. - -

~~··-- ......
L.IFE--.... ___ ......__ __, ---1111*.---0IMI
____.........,-loc&lt;Aiy.
.. ...
AI.O:....,-.
.._ .... __
_
.,....
..,.'",_
~--.,.------u.ma·-.
__
...._. . . . -.._ .... ......
____ ........... .
-~----

- 1 ! " 1 · - - b y - . .,

to

•

__
__
_
-_

T_,.-11'-~- -

~-lroo alcllorgo. Thay . . _

IIARCH11

~

_ __c..r-110-. - --

(CiwNI 10). 8p.ffl.

MAICHII

_

,

A.&amp; .....
P!LD. ....
................. IOL._...,.

lQWMTJ.

'Tuesday- l :J

-

-

ol . . ~
_

1-.o CONrdlly .

10 a.&lt;IL4 p..,, Ill -

:M3 - , •

~•ot . e:ao-.

IIIIIICII 14

•

~-·,.

-.-~

__
_..
.......... ......
......
___
....._.,_A._

_ c . . __

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

lll-ol7:30p&amp;ol. . -~

- u - e a : ·A-111 .....

.........a..·

lQWM1CII. 7-.

IIIIIICII ft

......
aa..-.-.............,.
o.-fl.
A.&amp; . . . . . -

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

�~""'·· 1871

-Q.uestt·ons

Her_b Foster of ·FE~ is ~anning

-=

·an 'urban adventur-e' for students

Ttii · -.ge, white, · suburban · high
the ral world."
schooler woutd likely ba .hesitant about
Foster shOuld kno,.,,whet worlls and
lea¥1
111 comfottable turf to .-.tura · whet doesn't In city achooB. Before
Into 'fuffa'lo after- dark. So would 'his • coming to UIB, he apent --17 years
parents.' Likewise, their Inner city
leeChing In public schoOls In New York
counterparts don't exactly spend !heir
City. Flw years ago, he wrote Rlbbln',
.8Yenlngs touring Amherat.
JMn', VIti Pleyln' tile Dozens:· The
., Cllrllllne II.Mcc.n., .
"What often Ia needed to allay fears of
UnrecGflnlzed Dilemma of Jnner, City
whether atudenla _ , reoul.-ly adthe unknown - ,whether they are
Schools.
mitted ex' accepted through EOP.
perpetuated by " racial fantales" or
FostarsaldhlaeK'perlenceelghtyeera
Flndlnga&gt;/1... allown1hat EQP atudenta
The Olftoe of StUdent Teating end
meraly
by
shIgnorance
or
naivete
ego
w~h the Outward Bound program,
have
charect.-lstlca
that
aaparale
1hem
. . _ _ , tucked
on the thlld
geYe him the J'lmpetua to add the
Is a head-on confrontation .·
from olhera. Oflhe t973 umple of EOP
·ffoar of Hanlmln Utnry, hea been
This weekend, Educational Studies
experiential component" to his wor1&lt; at
students, -22 per cent peralatect; 75 per
compiling
01&gt;-Uni-Professor Herbert Foster and an
the l:lnllleralty.
.
cent dropped out or lranafemld, and 3 .
etty etudlnta lor over10 yews.
Students participating In the Joronto.
'entourage of graduate students studyper cent stopped out.
M8ny unl..,.qlee a-top -student
Student Testing found the! slightly
urban experience mual try to learn 11
lng urban education , will conwrge on
mora than ~ of the EOP atudenta who
the Pearl of Lake Ontario lor an "urban
m uc~~bao~ the~, cenpol. lt"?"oa~.' aaocpartlallclllarand
peralated planned on JTIBjorlng ln health
adventure." The purpose 61 haulln9.
,..
ood'
1 1 - . entollmenl and attrition.
sciences, while none planned on ,..
grad students to Toronto to "confront· . economic pal end present from Ita ·
UfB'a S t - Teatlng and R-.:h
management or double ·major. "Ninetythe city In It~ ethnic and racial
residents. While doing this they must
ollloa,adMalonOIStudanl Aftalra, hea
two per cent of tho~ EOP students who
neighborhoods Is to glw the sfudenls
either wailraround th&amp;nelghborhood or
adwllnoad I• beYond this range 01
wera undecided ebout ·a · majof sa
Ideas about d8YeiO"Ping aimUer protake publlc lf!"Sportatlon.
·
study.
'
freshmen either dropped out or.
grams In lhe school systems whera they
A_...
.
•
·
...., S. wr.t. ectlria director, and
transf-ect.
1
are wor1&lt;1ng or may one day be
a,81aff ol eight undergr..tilafa studeotl,
· Th• csps study alsq focuses on
employed
.
·
• Exper!~tlal learning Ia underg~lng a
lour Pfl)leDIONIIa, Md lour graduate
Initial and final chcilcea of majora of
-lalanla, " - oondllctad ...-chon
Foster's "adventure" prog1ao!"1[h~:-':.'!~~~~:!.:~~~~~~~~-i
regularly edmltled atudenla who pernow com.e full circle. In the past, he has
go~ mental reports Indicate. the! .the
the lmpect ol the Unl . . .lty on tl\e
alai. Forttalx~ cent of the 11173
ushered students into lush forests for a
transition from claaaroom. to the real
perapnal, l nllflaclual, soc... and
world I slough for tilgh aclloolera. Even
oamp-oul, Into more prollalc suburban
pn&gt;leaalonll dewiopment of those who
enroll.·
settings, and now finally Into the city • business and Industry are using similar
Their atudlee h... been bounded by
Working as a group, they set
pro_grams to ,broaden employee per.=:e1~~p~ ~~~~~~ c'::~\o~J,J~ - Itself.
"ttne main queatlona: Who Ia the
goals. accomplish tasks and enjoy
spectl¥88 and deYelop"human ·relatlons
to
complstely
dlflereiit
faculties.
Unl..,.qy student? What experiences
_recreational activity.
. : : : · :.=~~~:"...::.'aBr~'Pa"c~l~
Student Testing sDOkespersons sug. doal the Unl...-alty aludant lace? And,
gest that mUj:h ol the Information
what Ia the nltln of tile lmpect of the
Contemporary apprentloaahlp
·
and students In · an attempt to
concerning choices of majors can be
collage' axperlanoa? In no other
"humaAite" the -Unl-.lty milieu.
·.
Experiential education can be viewed
uaaful In planning d~artmenta l enroltunlvwalty In the country Ia there a
as a contemporery version of . the
Currently, Foster and a handful of
almll• program, m8klng UfB the • ::,n~~d sclledul ng upper "JII!'l
apprentice - journeyman methPd of
other educators around the country are
In many p h - of
.national learning, In which people learn by
forming a national Collabonitlw tor·
- o n atudlnta, Wyant Indicates.
doing. The · hoped for result Is the '
Experlentlai·Leernlng·whlch will ect·aa a
Flndlnga complied by Student
Senlora ._clearlnghciuae for Information on
enrichment and broadening· _of a
Testing and " - - I were . recently
various attlvltlea 1hat can ba used to
student's life experiences through
. The third longitudinal study being
..-.teet to "the Yloa pnaaldenta, deena
Injections of -:edwnture;
physical
f_urther this approae~ to ed1JC4tlon.
l:onducted
by
Student
Testing
Is
the
and the Unlvaralty'a aHrltlon/retentlon
, .
Senior Survey, a cross-sectional survey - chellen9e and socially accepteble
commlftes In a program entitle!~ "~
rlsk-tak1ng.
.
.
•
•
j
Initiated
In
1969.
Its
purpose
Is
to
Moaalcof College Student Percaptlona:
eyaluate tbe· tm pect of 1he Unl-slty
im~.;,~~~~e~~su~~~~~.u=~~
Implications for Retention:;" H. ., the
experience on atudents In terms of how
staff praaentect hlghllahta of ilil three
students, partlciJierly those of lower ·
' Mark.A. Siegel, chairman of the"State
they percelw ttrelr future plana and the"
main longitudinal and croaa-oectlonal .
Asaambly's Hlgher Education Commit·contributions of the Unl-.lty to · socle&gt;-eeonomlc status in the Inner city,
atudiee In a panel format . Dr. Allen H.·
tee, Is vlaltl.ng U/B toCiay for an
seldom trawl outside the confines of
aalf-kno.wled~e, aalf-aw..-eness, lntelKuntz, former director, now ectlng
lnlormal"!get acquainted tour."
their own nelghborhoods._Thelr breadth
director of the Offloa for Institutional
of experience Is often limited to what
"Siegel is meeting with Admissions
Studies, _...,a moderator.
theY see on TV.
•
and Records offlclals, taking .a tour of
of ..:h year, asking the.m to report their
,
'Teachers
can
.
talk
or
lecture
until
,
Amherst,
meetlnJ8 with students and
perceptions after n-'Y lour years, and
0
1
to lridlcate -~· • which _they ·haw
01 a 01-·
changed.
.
.
11112. 11 the lim of t,..
clarms Foster. •11 can provide the link to
the Bubble, 107 Norton ·In cue of ,..In).
longHudlnal atudlae. Ita purpoaa Ia to r
The reaponaaa given .by t9n seniors
cMacrtba cherect-llca and experlconcerning the contributions of the
of UfB atuclenta during and after
10
~~~~i:r..1, ed
·,,'n~fv~~
collage, end the P~rCeP~Iona of"l'atudanta oonc:emlng Jhe Unlvwalty'a
Ilona! and Hst
development are
contrlllullona to tllalr davwlopmenl 11
lnllf8ltlng,,Oo.
mspondents felt
yooing adulta.
the - Unlwralty ., . . . a substantial
s.ilpla mambara of the tiled and
contribution to lflalr personal and .
•1117 frMIImen c l - w. . lntervlewed
lntellaclual d-pment
However,
This Is I he tentatlwllst of commencements planned for this semester:
fof.Wc~~Ground and clamog...,tlic lnlorafmost 50 per cent said UfB·contrlbuted
!Mtlon. Reaporla. reported
*School of Information and Library Siudlea
Mayt3
~~"m~.?~~V~~~~O:. appreciation of
John Lord O'Brian Hall , Alden Moot Court
Sunday
· £ighty-flw ·per cent of the 11177
Amherst campus
3:00p.m.
aenlora "said !he University · m.a
toNOONCS-up lor 10
to conaldenable contributions to their
*SChool of Nursing
•
•
the
of tllj
May13
• end !hair aat
lon wtth
· vocational de\Oekipment. This tliSpOriH
Kleinhans Music Hall. Main Auditorium
Sunday
thllr llwW. F111Jow-U11 Clone tllrougb
Indicates greater aatlafactlon t1w1 7:-30p.m .
SyJilphony Circle, Buffalo
. . . . . . . and~lon--.
of 11174 tien!Ora wtt11 IIIIa ~of their
1M ... lor .. "decade ..... been
Unl,..lty ezperlence. The · . . , _ .
~of ArchHacture
May t8
OOIIIatad, llul--'"11 end IIIPCXIa wtll ~eating Office s-181 M!JIIIMbad . .
and Emln&gt;nmental Daalgn
.
Friday
CGIIIIIIue tor a numblo' of
to coma.
dilfenlnoa during tlllir p
If .. lo
~aUfayes Hall (lnclemenl WMther-Hayes) 5:30p.m.
the attrltlonf_., - - - - . . .
..._, Straet campus
ulcl u., did not llnow ........
attrlbuta It to the ...,.,..., « to . .
-sa-t of H•HII Rallied Profeaalons
May18
time ell"-- and.,......,..~
Fl'ldly
Kleinhans Mualc-Halll Main Auditorium
lnlhe..,.......,• •
s,-mp~~ony Circle, Bu falo ·
7:30p.m.
Dr. Kuntz -.:ludect . . . . . . . . . .
'F~Ity of Engineering and Applied Sclam:es
-May t9
lion
Plll!lo T.-Jng
----.ell~
u.n at Paiker Engineering
Saturday
by Slildei\t
ba .........,.
(IIICiament Weather-Clark)
2:00p.m.
Ulld
Mlln Street Campus

Who Is the WB studeot?- How does
being here affect him or tler?
Student testi~g has a decade of data

---

-•Y

ext..,....-

=OI=~~Yinc=

118 1

=:'~u~ngBI)~elr ~r~g:~l::rs~',l~

Ch

i itl
a rman v s ng .

::''::!.~~ue:Jg,:~~~lncem~d~~~~

~-e..Y.

~BOAC):

-~~:~~~=~~~~ h~;:'J~ ;~~ ~or~~~

=:·co"n'i~re~~ &lt;~~::; ~:,t.~ut~:~~

Commencement '79

-=t

=:r?~.::.=
~=:m~
r-a

:=;-

r-a

In--..,._ -

·~of

Managament
Klelnhens Music Hall/ Main Auditorium
Symphony Circle, Bu falo ·

*lcllool of~

Kleloh- Music Haii1_Mity Seaton Room
Symphony Circle, Bunalo

·~

ollocl8l Work

Ka!.'larlne Cornell Theatre, Ellicott
Amllerat ~pus

*lcllool of lledlclne
Klillnllena MuaiQHall, Main Audllorlum
Symphony Cire!e, Buffalo ;
.
·~a~~oo~ of DenllalrJ

Buffalo Convention Centar
Con..,.!~ Center Ptaza, BuffalO

*F-"Jai-Law.ind~
A~......,n Auclltortum

laton, New York

•

·~eom..-wt
Memorial AudHOrlum
.
lluffalo
*Caps -

Gowna Will lie Worn

May19

Saturo.y

7:00p.m.

May20

Sunday

,,

• 10:30a.m .
May20

~m.
May20
Sundly
7:00p.m.·

~i

=y8:00p.m.

1:30p.m.
May20

=.rm.

�?

Libraries find hea_d
. for technical services
John A. Edena hM.blen appolntad to
, _ the Unlveralty Ubrarlaa' Cant~
Teclin~l SeMcaa. Hla acceptance ol
the poeltlon culminated an extanelve
national -.:to. ~~~~~ to Saktldla
Roy, dlnoctor of Ulnrlaa.
Edana, wtoo hu bean Maiatant
dii8Cior of libraries for procaaalng at
the Unl-.lty of Georala IInCe 1174,
wlllaaauma hla n - pcieltlon Aprll1 . As
head of Central Tactonlcai-SerVIcaa, toe
will be a aenlor admlnl.atrator lri tile
Libraries, supeovlalng 'ttM ordering,
cataloging, and prooaaalna of all
materials for all units arid branches.
Edens ..-tvad bla BA In .history from
· Hendrix Collage In 18&amp;4 and his MLS

=

Unl..,.lty of Georgia.
•
He Ia chelmoan of the RMourcee and
Teclinlcal 8erYk:ae Sactlon of the
Georgia Llbrwy Aa8oclatlon and In the

IIIII hu
cloaiNCI on- Automa-...oclatlon'a
Commlnaa
tion and tile Ainerican Llbnry AAOCIItlon'e statlatlca for Teclinlcal 8erYk:ae

Committee.

~.::r~!'~o~ =~~r:.~~~~d=:

~fv':J~"e!.'::O!~t~;:.,en~·

services branch of llbrarlanshlp at the

.

Edens will be taking over a POIItlon
held In an acting capacity bY .... Roy
' since lila appointment • dlniCior of
Libraries last y -. ''Tiieelcpertlaa wlilch

tow..-da lncr.alng -the efficiency Of
acquisition and procaaalng proced..-,

~=
l':'P!:"81l~ ::~;::.=
~
Libraries."
·

Poetr·y unifacquires-.
llive·
ac~~fredu{h~ e~':~e ~~'\"v!: ~f J~=
0

Shoemaker, il poet and bookseller.

rh:~~ ~lJ:"~~~: 1':"/t'~':,

of
California,

-His

collection

contains

:l'e"n"c':.~:~~me~~'!'n~:~n~n;:'~;

A._on~·

.

From 1880 to 11124, J-• were fleeing

A 'maY8flct•
Drucker sees Yezlerska
"a
maverick .. . an emotional an fiery
person·. " In Yezlerska's book and In
otbar women's writing, the Jewish
woman Is seen as a strong figure; She
Is loud aod aggressive. The Jobs she
performs range from peddler In the
market place, to a renter of .rooms. She
Is the center of the economic role for
the family , while the man gets an
education. Drucker said, " Anzla Yezlerska ne- felt as though she grew up the
way American women should." She
liVed Jn New York City after coming,
lo America. ·:she thought she hed to
be;oma cold and hard t become-"'
American woman," Drucker eafcf. •
Thames similar to Yezlerska's appear
In many otl)er writer's works. Among
those that Drucker will eJ&lt;arnlne are
Rose Schneiderman, " All For. One;"
Rose Cohen , "Out of the Shadow;" and
Beatrice Blono. "Tomorrow's Breed".
Emma Goldman, another whom Drucker

~r&lt;5m the

Unicorn and Sand Dollar
Bookshops and the Mlya Press.
Included are manuscripts and letters
of such ~Js as Edward Oom, Ro~

Duncan , Theodore Enslln--;---Mlct\Mt
McClure, Gary Snyder, and Shoemaker
1

~~ref,~~- ~~~gll." s~~~ 0 ~h~~~~~~

holdings of modem literary manuscripts and makes available to sch018nl
new material of great lltenil'y value,"
. ~!~~~~on~~S. curetor of ttoe
Acquisition of the archive was made
possible by ll giant from tile U/B
Foundation, Inc .
• -.
.

Europe, 8COfii)ITIIc depreaalon,
,._ullon, Wid a 20-year aervlce
~~:~~dlrie t:'~e·!:~ ~J:."'b:~~r::
tllflod In the ez.t'a anny In a maaal¥8
an anarchist, her concept of "free love,"
1111gmlon to America (ona out of three
1
. - . left the Europaan vlllagee).
Alnarlca wu the " prom!Md land."
·was haraaaedjln her autobiography,
llllen they
though, they saw
"Living My Ll e." Goldman's work •Is
. . auccaaa - · t !hera to taka them
Important In thet she deals with
tlr the twld and that mono money
· thefrtea, not considered female, but
ly . . - t W011&lt;1ng mono houra.
- n through the eyes of a female.''
J-a to conalder America
Drucker aald.
• •a pox on Columblll," Drucllllr aald.
For many , _ , bOth men Wid
Pot a mrtft
•
· tha trip tO America m.nt ·' Maltlna
Tha American melting pot notion Ia. a
lng out of the oountry and ·
myth, Drucllllr contends. 'We're finding
IPindlng two or more weaka on an
1
-.ctowdacl liNt with little or no food .
Women ltMWJIIO . . _ - conaldanld
the f - of loalng their unlquaneea," ahe
"faar game• for llt80k and ....,tt.
aald.
In 11124, Anwlaena began to
Aa an Amerlcln citizen, .Prucllllr want

~~ ~~~~u1:e:'n~l~:. .(~c:~~~~te

am•.

=

==

:,~:-: ~8:-=t~~~~~~~.:..-~

::::v::r~J..
tt:"J.."t.;
•g~tt~ng -..r' and

llllmlaranta -trng . _

Joll ~ttlon for
ealabllllled . . . .. Tile lnltnlg..uon
Act of 1114 ulllllllalled .-ua1 quotaa
OrlatlcaJiy NlluDkla the tlda of
llnlgnera 1*111110 to ~IMI1clr\ ~hoNe.

llllae--·.n.~e

• Many ot 1 t 1 e - iJiom ~
conalcleno 1ft ._ Cllleertlllon cama to

America ......... and had !rOUble
llllklng 1 11W11i111an to AIMrican

.......

CUlt .... Drualaar llkl " - llld
to··~
aducallon ttwy did
llecauaalll.,...... outtura. at that flma,
men ".......
- 8dloWa
-and IWTIIlnlii
~ ~
dutlea. ~·for tto.a cama ~ CIOIOilGI with Cit'*- In
lnduatdlll......._ nlaht achoal, and
lllt'-lnt ..... {_,.,...,nl1y - In).
AII_ICllll 1U1110ra l)ruClUr wiH
COIOIIdal', Mill ........ Ia ...

=

h~~~w~l..at=~~~

Ylddlah and Engllato at horne, lhe
leWnad to l'lad lftd write Hllll-. anti
Engtlah when lhe NIICIIad t!=hOOI age.

=-~-::·~,-~~~~-=.:~

:-acto~ocl~~;'f!

her ~ did, Drucllllr Ia
.aenaltlwio to tile path thai ~er.- Jawlah
autliore had to ...,. In on!..- to fill

~;.jOy. ttiio

lila of ICIIdlmla

and toapea to continua t-=rolng. Sloa
toapea to be able to do men~
and wrttlng once aloe hM recetvad

~=:~~
FelfOwllolp FoundatiOn Ia a

'*

National
PIOIIFMI
wlilcli hopei to prai1!0ie exoeAencJa In
.-.o11 on tile 1a1ea play In
- - .. Fouroclld 1111174, ...

r=

'= =:nIIOtlo---.._
~-==-~.
........ __
...... .....
.~
.......
~.:::::::',:,::.

LaAoclle. InC . . . . . . . . ......, to

......,... lD

......

_.....~
_ to ........

• - -.............
Clllflllcleladol'*
....

pl8pOUia

UlideNtlnlllna -

··

....... In "--oanwlelllnll
..,.
,... ...... ..
• "TTie
~

~

!!!!l!~r--·

"--''*

.

~'=·=.:..~-~

_Spring planting

........

.·

,._._.,NAawMII

n.. ....... Chy~• ........, ..............

.........
.. -_.....................
................ ...........

......_at...

=:.~~~

Main ..... CaMpw.
~

~

. . .•

I

.. .

••and••................. ......_
_..

. . .~""·
Tlio~ .............................. Colaga •• _
........,M1:11p.110... 11JT...._...
.
.....

�~rchl, 1t7t

/

CaSSata·

SENATE

Head of Program in l:?_aytir~'le lV
has a new community involvement
In 'media -awareness building'
Mary ~.

==

dlractor of U/B's

progqm In djytlme TV, racelwd a

~

=.

re:;rul.!:"or•
Prollllllra.
111e Sanator had _ , Whal he
t11ot1g11t waa approval of a fedefil grant

~~J:=~~~gA~=~
11111 "grant ." one o1 the Senator'iloldee

tOld C8leeta, lhe waa In line tor "1he
Golden Fleece Awwd" which Proxmire

pedodlc8lly glva out to University
~ and others he feels have
.,_.~I funding l.or a ride.
Informed that - CUaata had not
-..c1 a grant from HEW, the
J'nlxmlnt 111!'-etlve lost Interest. It
=.•.:~"::..~ffa':.u~ follows-up on

=•
o.,.,..-

Proxm'that.:=::
l:.

~lr~

wlr.or
She'll hawt plenty to tell him
II and when a gqnt Ia -.,proved.
'
Soap
a awloua bualneee to
tile - - . prof8180r, who Is
currantty undaruldng a l«iee of new
oornmunlcallon1 projaC!s, In addition
to a eympoeium on aoape ahe Ia
twinginG hera next Thureday and.Frlday
1- "Caaendar'' for details).
•
~~In-' In day11me dramas
(and In TV aa a whole) atet'ne lrom a
'oonvlctlon that the medium Its
day11me ldledute In pwtlcular- packs
., enormou• wallop, the Impact ot
on both Individuals and society Is
not cte.ty undemood.

..,lch

-.::-.::-one

In lier l nt.-t. Take
a - t Inquiry .-~vee~ Jrom
Ruder and FIM, a Chlcago.baled
public lllaltona fl=lcll has been
lllllnad 11Y tile A
CQtlege of
Clbetetrlc'- and- ynecotoglats. The
phye~·
anlzatlon Ia lntereated In

;••wh·~

1;:;~~~-..lucllld

on "Uf8 and
Dliilll .. tile t::laytlnw T...181oa.Biriat."
Tile 8fudr ,_..., on tile lnf"*"&gt;e of
the mecll on j~M)eptiona of ilfneae and

=-.on~or.co,:::ln

lmf=
atr.ctlng the health and -:t.lng oJ

IIIII

FSEC approves charge for
administrative-review panel

A~a Building" which has recently moved onto Ceaaata'e crowded
agenda. It has to do with the pol!!"lial
ol TV as a force gowmlng aoclal

~~f~~":,_econ~~- tne
1
pUblic tends' to be..,. u~
con au,_ el mue media. The project
alma to remedy th81, by pulling together
the moat significant lnfonnatlon available on trends and dewk:es the ·media
.use to manipulate · the_ flow of
Information.
Ceaaata and project C&lt;Hleveloper
Paul Kowalewski, together with student
research aselstants enrolled In Independent study work, are now d8Yeloplng nine subject module- 8nd a
,general Introduction .1
warenes'!. ·
building . The modylee des w

t~~.ceste~~~.n11rv. ~,;"JI8~.tr,·d:,

news, messages of popular songs, and

change.

_

lnd~::T'ua~ho0!fs'::!s l~ ~~=-rpe~Yhl;';

her ·own media awareness; by parents
who want to educate their children to be
more aware of media manipulations;
and by Instructors who wish to train

,gro~ ln,::~he~~~~~~~,~:ge~/'Ya

narrative,. an --~&gt;utll ne designed tor
development of an original presentation, an outline lor a group activity
workshop, and a bibliography. Each will
otter examples from the medl,a on the
topic being explored.
Some schools report that they
already use Kojak and other c&lt;;&gt;ps and
robber&amp; ahowe to .-tructure social
selence leeeons. Since kids watch the
ahowe anyway, the theory goes, t!)ey
should be eager to watch them critically
for what they aey about such things as
Firat Amendment Rights, the right tc;&gt;
privacy, and. related Issues.

CciiMtuniiJ' ..~j''
Cuaa!a aaye aealstance In building
media awaritnesa~amethlng which Is
critically needed.
project demonetratas the Unl
' ty'a Interest In
working with the mmunlty, she feels.

-~:. ~~~ ~c:'~lirC&gt;fJ,~u~,:;,.,t~
elforte In 11177. TlJ'flB~ource materials

SUNY funds
'innovations'
. State Unlwralty hu provided undergreduate
Instruction -Improvement
to 18 profee10ra on 14

awards

~f.~~. Dr, Robert P. Cerveny,
aaalstant professor, management sci-

ence and ayaterns, received a grant for a

~i':'rn~~~":'J:. '7nheB~~~f ~~

lion." Collaborating with Cerwny are
Dr. sinford G. Gunn, assistant
professor . of accounting, and Dr.
Eduardo L. Rhodes, assistant profeeaor

Kowalew~ 'and the students

ot,:n~~f~m~~ta~.~··;~ ~~ad

hance" the COuncil's work, Executive
Dnctor Robert E. Grtmm aaye.

SUNY-wide to help ~ special
Involved In echolerly and
creative .:tlvtllea leading directly to

Cuaeta,

are developing shbuld "greatly en-

ea.- Ia concemed, too, with the
lOla lltnrl81 ~ay In mass pilbtk:
· L meea medium,
IIIIIY, Indeed.
be
the -INior
lhe feats.
Only h - the audience has to be thll
-..nlcator. TlHII 11 to _ My, no
. . - hOw rMny bDoke or more
IIIOIIIm 8UIYIIII8I of -..IIIUnicatlone
t.JIInology atltnry fn11Y :;;::· lhev
do no
• unleea
ra u.ed.
Llllrarlee =to dRip their ......ltlat,
IWiiah out to lhoee not
IIUIIIbllad ..-.; their Cllenta,
She IIWlllte
t8klngHouee
t'ldeea to .... Ullbomlng
. _.._on llbrarlel ilnd ln'-lon
. , . _ tile llrat one- to be hlld on
I) to whfcll 1118 fa the ofllclal
for New VOlt State of
. She elealad to tile POet
...... .rtencllng • Gowamor'a
t i l e - topic teet fell.
lfiiU81 that the media eel
"ttil tiii8IICia of eoolal and ~
...._ iad that theY -lftetrunientalln
~ 'plct- Iii our
of the ·

.,...,,...to

c..ta---·

c-.

,_on
c.....

=

--=

t:*'

==......-:::: --::::1="

lleu~ned to
and . . . Willi
e.
and
lllflllllllna
........_
. aymbollc
wfllctl tile medii ~.....
L..l llniCDt Proxmtra mull that ........ declclel who'I Heeclng Wllom.

JOBS ..

expenMe

~~~\::~~nCategortea.:O

lm&amp;:::.

fine arts, aoclat eclencel, natural
eclencel, humanlll81, and proteealonal
~- One hundnld aiX1y...ght
propoute aubmltted from 46 campu-

range of lnteraata and
Individual apeclalliationa, a SUNY
Central apokeaperaon laid. coverad a wide

For -~~~~rant
to Dr.
RIChard
L.
,
a 11'0'. , . _ II the

of eoolal and

~ ::.T=-=ble~
Into me decluctlwe and ~tonal

~ ofHofnM
8fr Alttlur
·~··
111ertoa1
In .payclloiQDY
and
human lllalfonatnatructlonal mater1a1a •wru be dewhlcll Ill...... thnlugll . .

=

":r:.-r.ot":,:

leal . . : :...
'
daductiW~

=~:r(.::...

..... ~ ..

prumote- ...._and ellatone. ·n. ~ · will .....

wllo-

-te.:lol~
II8YCho
II 1,000
Alftadlll*ntl
Altloultu... and

r-.

TeCionk
lege.-o
The bull ng of • fun-etad fnMiuola
ionghouea and tile pllontflicj of ..
IR&gt;QUOII garden will be lllljol' , . . _
ol an lm~ of uolllllgo.....,
aducatlon aw.-d to Dr.
C.
811raydw,
ol ..thfo.
po!OoJ and eoclology. ~-

Mal-.,.,....,a--..

BejjtMtna. wf1ll - . 1 JIICiilall, tile
proJect wllf"lnvot.. oonllrUctlon of a
ronghouea IIIII ~tl In lro!luofl
·- farming on the land . - - . '-1101,._
lion bY III8IIIIIR of tile OnonOiea
Nation will be ..oouraaad.
•
Expected t o _ , . , lo 200 atuc1en11
"' ..a-togy and Nattw Amerlltudtel per
tbe IOIIIIIIouee IIIII
Qlldllywlll 8llo be . . . . . . far fllfcl
. , . tiy ectooof alolldNn ill tile Oawego
- - ·lilot Oftly
auttwollo plant

r-.

=
cropa.

w..

r..:-~,r:-=·r::
-

�Sex too-often ignored
in business, Chatov says

.,..,.Roger

.l'llllc--'
I

He's finish,ed a film about the West Side,
_is now planning one dealing with
'Death Row' in a prison in T&amp;xas
~~~~~- The film will be edited by Andy

By the end of Sjlrtng , Bruce Jackson,
t11o outspoken and sometimes abrasive
dractor of U/B'a Center for Studies I n
American Culture, will have completed
two new fllm1 for viewing on Public
T~slon ; one dealing with life on the
Wes1 Side of Buffalo and another about
lite on a Texas death row.

Jackson appears more excited about
starling work on hls death row film than
liAishlng up his West Side production . ·
The reason is likely the broader
audle!Jce appeal and social significance
of the subject matter, alon~ with the

.:U1
~"Ct:(.'rw~ ~1de~.'!'1!':,';,\a~
aut 50 locations ·throughout the

take.
Out of

neiallborllood ~ .It tlepiCC., Aiti'OUIIII a
llllil of interlocking, complete vig- . the cultural and occupational ·
~ty of a pGipourri of residents , and
llow they menege deaplte a sinking
Mlioftal and looal aconomy.
Mlny of llloae C8jllured on film ,
lllcludlng a pollee officer, a topleaa
dlnblr, a ga -ion attendant and a
T..,lrt prlntar, talk Into the camera
lllout !ham-'-, their joba and their
llligllbortlood. Jackaon found tbe
1110111e he tUrned IWd a "atrong identity
-aciou..,...," so much so that they
= : ; t of themaet- llrat as "Weal
"Buff~l~n=., only aecondll'lly as,

No IJ!8Cial editing techniques will ba
Ulld fiSr elnphula or effect. Rather,

Jacltaori wanta a product .!hat gives a
lllralaht-lrorn-~uldar

comment-

IIA&gt;IIanca, Clalma ~ -

r

ary. Frills..,..,~ when there's

Mcklon OrlgiMIIy Intended to all the
=~ with nolad fllmmal&lt;er

ft G = = = = , lor ..,.,.,.
··
dropped
out.
~~~a-lncl
lila Will, 01~-· D•~ll
IIIIo .. 1M the-.cl
_.,,lah

lacu"J.:::

:!c\~~a~~~:c~::,m:~

.

Deeplta the _,..,, oogue for
bualnilu organlutiOna to cry out
agal1111t govemmentlnterferwnce, a U/B
proleasor, bell- buaineea and QOYemment aren't ~ engaged In
battle, but rather atltea getting along
through mutual cooparatlon .
.
He lurthar auggata that whan
regulators within or without an
orvanJzatlon ·.,. unduly represaive, •
something slightlY tlbldlnouala afoot.
Dr. Robert Chatov, auociate proleasor in the School of Man.gement,. has
~pounded th- views in an article,
'Cooperation Between Go&gt;wnment and
Business," for a aooil-!o-ti&amp;-published
Handbook o(' Organlullona/ Design.·
The · volume is a collection of
contributions attempting to ·summarize
the state of knOWledge In organizations.
·~t is ~oollah" to view governmentbusiness relations as oppre!lalve,
Chlitov contends. "Government Ia the
supporter, the protector of business;
Interaction between the two has been
developmental and there are few laws
inhibiting business activity."

Ja.c kson

1

•

r:: 1h~rm~ ~ft

approximate!~

t ,300 applica-

~~81FIIJ:~stll~t: 'ae/:1~ ~
10

grants lor films; Jackson's was one of
them . Additional moner to cover

~~~~~=~o~.:!J~~- ba supplied
Jackaon la proud of the fact that
Texas authorities have n.- granted
any other filmmaker such open access
to death row and Ita Inmates as he has
been promised. He expects to start

~~~~~~er~w~~~~~:l~etoS:y~onth and

In fhlo prison film, which will also be
a on&amp;-hour, CDior documentary, Jackson hopes to capture the day-to-day life
of condemned prisoners and how they
cope during the. long wait between
oentanclng and execution .
. Jackson and Christian are also
wrltirig a book for Beacon Press about
the I I - of Jnen on death row.
in addition to his filmmaking,
Jackson Ia workln2 on an LP for

=::::..::::":'..:tU.: .~=~'';,~

prison songs w• nominated lor a
Grammy io f977.

Unconscious moll.- often Ignored
In analyzing government-business
relations, the trend has been to focus
on conscious motivation and to
discount' 0(' Ignore any unconscious
motives which might be p!Ment.
Chatov believes that "awareneaa of
unconscious mental processes can
provide unique Insights into lnterorvanizational relations such aa cooperation between government and busi-

ness:•.

A member of U/B's Group lor Applied
Psychoanalysis, Chatov calla on psy-choanalytic research to allow the
con:elatfon between unconscious me&gt;tives and the actions stemming frbm
them .
. ·
For example a person may have a
desire to worl&lt; lor a large organization . •
Consciously,' his or her only motives
may have to do with the security and
prestige which ac;company such a
poallloll. AI the . . . . tUna, .........;
there may be a aubconaclou1 motn.
lion toward such a career chOica
through a desire~powwful parental
figure. The
utili -achieved, yet
two dilleren"r1 . motives spur Ita
attainment.
m
Uttle attentioh llfia paid to
unconactous mouMron or to -uallty
when analyZing 'Jiualneaa bahavtpr,

~~~~o~~al:'·s~~~a~n~~::_~,:
influence of Mxuallty in human
behavior Ia wen-documented and In fact
Ilea at the core of the psychoanalytic
movement.

.

warda regulatiOn, the nw--"
professor aaya. AI tm., It liewelle
such "lntartarenca;" at other I'"- It
cries out for " protactiOn." Cllatov a.lla
this ·an outgrowth of "OIIIWIIZIIIIOnal
paranoia.
• "The potential lor paruola Ia wtY
high in organlzatiollll and hOicle
Jkl!'illcant Importance," he' ..,...,..,
"slnca tha 88IOCI8t«&lt; dlatortleiM ar
reality may ~I ratiOnal

rearao-

to~{~~'::,=C::l='."

of~

paranoia atema from a core
fears exist , yat ..,., rational; they
remove the orvanllellon from ,_.tty
and must be d..lt with.
·

~~~ t.":u:..~, ::::-'~::

a central objact, policy 01 ~. focua
' upon It and get rid Of It, in dl'der to
. rei- the pressure. Chatov MMrta

~~u~':~~~~~r .:~~~~

the unification of the group without
of ttte

g~~~~~~Won~he personality

~~~~'!;:.~~~=\'!ucin is-ntrol,

the essence of control Ia sadism," he
states. "Yet the extensive literature on
1

~=-~=! ~~~~~~f~e ~,:.. ~

contcotling others."
Chatov believes It Ia time to
acknowledge th- foroea alnce theY
are -behind all types of control,
includi"9 ·govllfl)ment, achoola, the
homa anll all major inatltutiollll,
,
"There Ia ample. opportunity · for
aedlatlc haras'l"'"t by regulatory
C9fTlmlsalon pertonnel as they may ·
seek to inflict phyalcal or psychological
pain for purposes of receiving Mxual
pleaallta, ' Chatov aaya. "This may ba
done by lmpotl"ll burdensome regulationa on thoM under one's authority.
The regulator l~ed through the
ltha ntgulat. .."
fruatratton and
To eliminate
men! caulad by
t&gt;qth · C9,n•clous and unconai:lous
motives, Chatov.auggaata that "Ofglln-

po~ant.i'r

==u:==,:,

lying
exprealng aadlatlc .tancNnciM .nd
attempt to minlmtza t11am wllen
appropriate to Improve OlgWIIzattonal
effact'-1, 01 to cllannel t11am Into
conotructfve avenuea wherw poeatble."

College B opens
search for a' Master

�u

.March .. 1171

Roots?
.,_, .........

-----

U/8 ..cll8tlon blologl.t Dr.
JoMph 1(, Gong C811't lrllce his
roota directly t.c1&lt; to Adam Mel
Ewl. But he probMIIy cornea cloMr

to ~"ro::!.:Or~~lly

member

C8ft 1r11ce hl1 l)lllemai enceetry In
CNne beck 11n fnaadlble &lt;1000 yews
'Wid 13t genermlone to 2255 B.C.! .
The .mazing written ~6gy of
the Gongs of F8h Yu11n (Flower)
Ol8trlct, Kwangtung i'rovlnce, lndlcat81 that the ~lne be!lan with
Yu~-CIIung (Gon~ who was

C~nce~n ~h~·g''~;:

_ , , which mar1&lt;ad the beginning of tile St.te of Gong, occurred
during the Yu Dynasty ln -the reign
of Emperor Shun.
·
To ..nty Yung-CIIung'a exla1ence
from other IOUrceB II Impossible.
But H Ia known historically that
.._. . . - from 30 to 70 such

~-:,~no:C:r ~~~·

r.-........,. .....
wh';:

and that .

,1111

.l::"'~em.!~:.er.:r~re

~.:'1 :-'..:'.J'l ~~~~e

..-w&lt;~ .

updated and copied lor
u-...c~s
of yews by male
members of the !emily entrusted
with thll .-ty aacfed duty.
Hlllldreda of paogea or ~~nceatrel
Chllrta ~ng the n...,.. of male .
deecendants of Yung-Chung &lt;:ompriM en enormous red · leatherbound book.
From 137 A.D. onward, eac~
male's blrthdete Ia recorded blslde
hll neme. Those In the venclenl"
gen-lone from 837 A.D. back to
2255 B.C. h_. annota11one blslde
tile nemea which can bl llsad to
celcul8ta birth~ . TheM spaclllc
nol81 Indicate, tor lnetance, that
one offspring 'was born "In · ~he
thlrtr.tft _ . of a certain Emperor
llllun" of the Yu Dyneaty. Knowledge of ·dates ellrlbutad hlatorlcafly to each dynasty makes It
poaalble to date th- early

~ora,:.;'ro.,~:=:!r;,

-t•
which
nwnblra «

certain .

occumed to lndlvl&lt;fual

to the. _,,.. clan. '
a . - of lfle c:IM'I location Mel
tll!t
undw which Jl
.-- ..., " - ' and
edlla - I t a of the'~ . .

c:r-

.= _....,..
...........

lncllldld.
MMIIIIIOIIa foml a too.,
• _ . . . . - l o n 01 lfle

=· --.

.......... h...,, the.._

1111 fte 1111N111111 lllllllllln end, In

tile

hiMIIrr ."'

a..

I

All Chinese femlly
tlonally maintained recorda of
geneelOfjJY traced through males
only, 10 a lack ol.male helra wopld
halt the history of _a given clan:

~.fJ..~~~. ~~.:...mh~

st::!n:

records tack• elra or lost their
records In wars'« other disasters.

A male each generation
Luckily, the Gongs of Flh Yuen
had a male heir each generation.
Their recorda apparently were never
lost or mislaid .

exg~gn~~:~·~~ '!1~~~!1~~~;:,'/P-

Ic ancestors' names Indicate, one
. member o~ the clan helped found

~~~~~ t~y~ty B~.lc~n~~~~

• aided In founding the lengt':r Chou
Plo~W3:~~~Jr':.~d he! power
The record alao notes that about
655 'B.C., the Sfete of Gong was
overrun by warriors libm the State
of Chu, forcing Yung..Chung's
descendants ' to flee Into the
neiQhborlng SJata or Lu. One or the
. Gonga In Lu built up his political
reputation to tile pol~tthat he was
named the s.ton of Tung Hen .
Anotherdlrectanosetor of Dr. Gong
Is mentioned as h8VI ng served as
- a r y to W~~ng MMg, who Is
laid to have founded Jhe Hal~
Dyneaty bllween I and 2.3 A.D.
By 80 A.D., mill lilly lind civil

=
'fi.Ltm-lng

~n:~
": ~.:
lome of the llfWICNe -led In

F""*', IIIII Dr. Gollg'a IMIMy _ ,
10 Klengel.
"flral
!110ft'') fted
I lllltll hla
IInneii In 137 .D. (aheed of
~I through ,.._
_ .
L.uno
Into KwMglung Provtnoe. From thlil point on, IN Gong

_.lona . . _.... wftll lf*lf·

li: ........... In the aenaeloaY

ellhaugll M~ of. lfle Nlliii ~- . . attn

::C:: end

3

t,..

oul
of
8nCient reoordl
In K..-gtung .Province
..,,u 1138 elM eklera, 1-.ful
the , _ mlahl deatroy ' " - ·
oapled'lhern qukidy once men Mel
-ate~~ them out
Sen
F...Cf100. Thera I
'-!
In lha Fah YUIIn "&amp;ratrlcl emily
Aaaoc:latlon lor ufelceeplng. The

:n

w.-.

:::C:::'lrt r.:!lhed

tHem '"The -'or......nng J.,.,_
did not ~J the Chi- r.mlty
In "'-'·
tnat.ed, II tile ~
Communteta a ... ,...,. . . . wllo
Gbll-... 111em In en damp~ to
wiDe out .. -lael •of W!Cienl
cultw. ndldilol, Or. Oong
templee

0( _ , . -

..,..

Dr.-.........
Or. . CJong"e ........~

::~9!'..! ;,:.870a.

-...
.. o,..
u.s.........
PAID

llllfhiD.
_
..... DI

Although he lied 'SOma education, Tung Sing worked as a laborer ·

~~~::g~·~••S:.h!~.:;:r ~ .-

Sang In Kwangtung Prcvlnce
........,ral years '-ter. He married Mel
blcame a vHiage leader· noted
especially lor IJls.ablllty as a scribl.

,tt!:~·~~~~":"A_it~en;.: ~

Nan Unl-slty In South China, he ·

!!t.~ee~l~t~fa~~=';.,': .
businessmen In 'Chlnatowr&gt;.
He returned to his ancestral
village to marry.Fung Tal, and soon
alter brought hl6 bride. to Ca)flomla
where Dr. Gong , his brothers Jack
' and Herbert, and sister Lola were
I!Om .

FreqtJent serious marital disagreements lad We. Gong to return
to China, taklng the youngsters
w) th her. Althoug i&gt;L- her husband
fol lowed, he dled shottly alter
altlvlng there. Poor business
investments and his love of thegood life In San Francisco had
contributed to his premature deeth
and left his widow penniless, D•.
Gong recalls.
rtw.totwlir
"The growing threat o( war In

~~u:s':"'rlandmyon:'ot=," ~=

decided she must aet us out of the
country to the O.S., where we·
would bl ule.• Lacking funds tor
the trip, the determined woman
sought work In the vlliaQe- u a
·-·e-ng-lady
•1J'818 In onler to . . , moi)8Y, but
mona lm~ly,to build up credit
Wllh which aile could borrow money
for the trip.
Working lram dawn liniN dusk 8t
often, phyalcelly ••~lng jOba,
she buill her credit
¥11'--·
who loaned ller money for 6oat

ana--

ilmont

farea IOI'herMII, Joaepllend Jadk.

When the trio arrMd In Mey,
the
Coolklol. the)l
had only 55.
· "Mother paid a rnontfl!e """"on a·
one-room apartment with 11 .75 ~ It
and bought an enormous aacl( of
rice with the rest," uya Dr. Gong.

~e:JS • . _ ,

ss

bulrdlng. A aoclat worker
-:
from lime to .tlma a110 .
· Alter Mrs. Gong's I'IICOvei'y, she
got a job ua-.amatreea OQ..a WPA

l:l:t =chm~• ::::~ ~!

allowed her to becotne ecq.,.lnted
with women trpm dlflenent ethnic
backgrounds, which '"- eo)oyed.
.~ "As a result of tha WPA job,"
says Dr. Gong, "my I mother's
CbOklng branched out from atrlctly
Chinese food to Include potato
panoal&lt;es and steemad turnip
greens."
·
Hallf worker
.
•

a..::' .~..::/~o~:.'~~ 8o~,c~~

could not l'ltad or wrtte either
C!J.inese or English, gained a ••
reputation In her ne~hborhood as-a ·

m~.':~~fJ1,'•h~lyc..ciTt'::.;,g

gQ!&gt;d

reputatio~

and
enabled her to

~.7owpa~~yftod:r: '':~=

Incurred.
· War broke out, however, bllore
she could borrow enough to send
lor Lola. Later, she .-fvlld word
from relatl¥• In China, with wllom
her daughter lived, tllat the girl had
been taken by the advancing

-J~World War h, Jadk returned to China to II he could find
Lola," Dr. Gong recalls aadty, "but
1here was no trace of her-not~

a Qf8V8, "

08lplla Mra. Gong'a

~~nguiSh

::t,'J:,g:u~~':'h8~~~~

_.,.. In Workl War II raturned
l.tely. Both Joeeph lind Her'*l
l8f'Wid 1rt the U.S. Air F010e lind
Jack wuln the U.S. Army.
She H....:J long ..-glt to Jack eatablllhed .. a bullfii!UII)III
Mel communHy leader In Fl'ltello,
tierbert beoome • offl- In

=.nAir~~--.--

Or. Gang -tueiiV a.nad tlll'lte

~'-~ tfia 1'11.0., end
Joined ma U/lllailultl' Ill 1114. An

actlw ~. muCII of lila work
' - lnliOlved lfle afleote "' low dole
,...ldlon, wlllch hU a.nad him a
national Nputatlon.

Wofllln
a · -lady
-The plucky
found work tha .
next day as a -..atraa In ·a ·
r.:tory, wl)lch wu lillie more then:

=

a sweatshOp. Not only did aha have
to support 'herlatl end her two

Mel

~:::..,-:.=t,!gg re~~~

-.,lid -

credit to borrow

~0~~~ng Herbert and
"IIIIa ofllln brought piecework
' - willa
from the r.:tory,"
Or. Golla -.bare,
on

'*

"=::P.

-=z=--~~
..--11.

thelllldilne 8helefl with
• for
~!!*'~~ retilmecrto
=---.-..-~'-1 work-

..,.._oftheokllei·Aaa child In Clllllomla, Dr. Gong
always hta fatllar"l
!emily gaMIIogy •lilted. But OIIIJ
.-ntly did ... get·~"'
published book. Not
•
he
found It feeolnatlna,
ello

...

~ hla lnteraei· In ~
- - l i n d hlatory.
"AIIIi'ough I'm 11ft Oilier Chlf.mlllel 118ft elmllar ~a.-aura
""'
ba -•• heofaubmlta.
the oldaat 111111 1ft
....ltlencil
e..... 111oug11 1t1e ~ . .
tllilndl-

_,_lclll.,d...,....,

lloni ~. BrOCIIer .lecllll-

=·

~:!

=-~~~~

t:=::.·y:a.

· larelllldle.tlh

...,....... U.., .lecll Mel I

................. dalng the

~ c::J...... Q81tf~

lilldllllntlwbop-r:.en
..... lllhlloiJDb~ ..... far
. . . . . .. flllur to .....
~·Ill .... motiW'.........

"-1 of Or.

Oong'a

~

llliiUDendwtlenlllllaanfiOnl,
Mlacta their Cllll*a
. . _ _ ...... lnt-.t.lll•hla
. . . . . . . llllltnend " - ' - · Dr.
..... ........ he'd t!Mtovflltthe

bdlilonlllr

:z ~~·."'J..•:.

~1M ...... "'
Ia Klntl.
Willi tile IIOIIInin8
l'ltletiCIIII
llli Clllna, II lliiY

•

�~

\

.

�Preamble.
Though nothing can be
lmmortall, which mortaDs
·make; yet, If men had

.(

the use of reason they pretend

to. their Common-wealths

might be secured, at least frop1
perishing by lntemaO diseases
... Therefore, when the~

come to be dissolved, not by

extemaO violence but by
Intestine ~der, the fault is
not In inen, as they are theMatter; but as they are the
MGkers and orderers of them.

·'

,•,-

- n.--l:lobba. ~

... . . . ._. _to

.......
eo...NOI'E:
- no. ..
...._.. .. ._.of
._~

votod
the Geaenl

~-

.. .,_- !11om -

-

.....

. . . . . . . . . . . FSEC .........· to--anv

.......... . . . . , . . _ . . . . . - . ... 1910. The r.port
. . . . - - - • a ..,ac:llll - , .
the Faculty
. _ , . _ . . , , - 1 1 , •l:lllp.m. In the Woldmen

of

~--&lt;--Hai.Ao.hontl.

education·, charged with developing a ~ for a
program In - a l education and with monhoring, and
-evaluating Its implementation, be appolnteQ by joint acllon
o1 the Facully Senate and the Ofllc:es of the Vice President
lor Academic Alfaln and the Vice Presl4ent for Health
Sdenoes.
~ Senate passed tills resolution in
Man:h, 1978. tr.k position was comls!ent with a statement
to the Faculty Senate made. by Vice President for Academ~
AffaJrs,: Dr· Bunn.
·

- In April 1978, the General Education Committee was
..JorrnaDy constituted and charged by a joint' lettei from the
Vice l'laldent for Academic .Affalrs, the VIce President of
HeaJth Sdenoes and '!he Chairman ol the Faculty Senate.
The charge to the Committee Identified nine specific
responslbilltles:

'

1.

ailroifOFntE -

GENEJIAL.JijQUCA110N cOMMITTEE ,

.....,,.,.....,_.Nolod
............ Page2
............ ..... ·"-'
.....

~~·

1

L
8. . o,a-. . a.-

II. ~Ar.. ...... .. .... • · ... .. . . P-3
IV. ..._.... ........ . .................. hge5

V. ~-~ ..... . ........ P-6
VI. "~ llaoloW a-.1 Educatbl

of

...... .. . ........................ hge7

-rJl!l.vifp.,;j"gg..t ,.a~ lm~mentaJion ' o .the
.-program(s) ;
.
4. To su!igesl the type and extent ot Institutional
" research and evaluation which should be effected tG
;"' aSses. the Impact ol the. programs;
0
~ ' 'ro reoornm•nd wheTher or not the prograU&gt; (s)
should be voluntary or mandatory;
~u To recomiTitfld modtfk:aHons to cWTant distribution

,-l,

I. HISTORY,' DEFINITION,
ANDNEED

To recommend a coherent program, or programs in
general e.ducatlon;
program. Is

2. To define the goals-and, ob)ectives the
desl!illed fD accomplish ;
•

~

e~e

major

requirements,

and

graduation

requlrernenls which would be required ~ the
1 progrom(s) wore. to be implemented;
7. To conoidot methods ol interfacing the. program(•)
with Cldslblg curricula and/or new cun1cula;
8. To rocommend me.ans for use of the. operational and
cultuiel environment to support this program, and;
9. To oonsiclir changes which may · be required In

.

41udent advisement.

The oommltlee was also desaibed as, "a standing
of the Untvenlty," and charged to "monftor the
goneral ed...,_, program that Is approved, to make'
NlCOII\IMndaaon fOI'" subsequent amendments, and ~tdvise
.. In b implementation."
-

~ tho dioculoions desaibed above was a
.,.._,. wllh the iMdequocy ..-..oy.wlde. graduation
~In poornoanggoneral adllalllon. At no ~~age of
the ~ the. valtdtty of this general ooncem
c:holonild- lnclaad, dghl ti-Oough to tho p(Oiel1tation of this
IMport to the f8culty Senate In
Oclallor, ....,_, 110 the Ned for _.wducatlon was

of

c -·.........
~by

.. ...,..__

ea.-n wllhlbe- of _.,I aduc.tion ts, a~· ooune,

no1 unique 110 SUNY/B. Tho Carnoglo Founct.!ton for the

Ad..-•- of T-'*'8 Nllodad ouc:h ccncoms on o

Importance, and lnterat ·to themselves. For many other
students, hoWever, this · latswz·falre cuntc:ular policy
provided too Jittlo guidanoe and direction . As a resuh,
student.' programs oo,dJide the. "l"Jor have often amounted
io vtrtuaDy hap......,.d occumulotlons of oourses, with little or
no curriculer raUona}e . In many other cases, students have
nanowed their choices ol counes to fields closely oonnected
to their &amp;rea of speda]Izatk:m. •
'
The att~mpt in-many unlverstties.and ootleges to respond
to this situation -by reviving and advandng general education

has brought forth numerous definitions and statements of
goals . In the "early ·of Its de.llberatlons, the Generol
Education Committee dttvoted considerable time and effort

to theoretical deliberations Reking a definition of general
~ucatlon and identlficatlon of the. primary goals of • !ienerol
educatiOn program. In our Progress Report to the Faculty
Senate in Odober 1978, we stated that "General Education
' Is devoted to the development of abliilies In aitical anolysis
and genefalization and the.ir application to a range of subject
matter -41rectiy assoclilled with a studenf s !lllajor field . h
also- ,..P to lie~ _.o)dlls. In ~ the. orol, , wrlnen , and
computational demonstration of such intellectual ability. "

Any altempt to com~ the range of purposes for a
prognooi, Into a tight definitional form b
bound to be tnade.quate. The Commltle.e devoted
considerable time to discuJsion on the objectives which •
general education program should achieve, and agreed on
the foDowtng goals: '
·
general education

I.

2.
3.

The ability to communlcateolnteUigendy;
A broad kQowledge ol mojor ide.as, principles and
expressfons of our culrurol heritage ;
A senoe ol penpectlve that frees one from the
provincialism ol pononal experience, culture, and
time.;

4.

A aillcal acquaintance with the major dlsdplimuy
meihods- ol orgonlzlng and verifying knowledge of
oneseH, one's IOdal environment and physical

Worid;

.

..

.

5. The ability to lntograte and apply knowledge ;
6 . An "ndentanding of values and experience In
evaluating moral llluallons;
·
At many intiii!JIIonl, dMIIcultla ' - been.c)cperten&lt;d •"'I
much time consumed in trano1oang ouc:h broad goals Into an
actual cuntc:ulum . SUNY/ B 11 no1 oumpt from these
dlfficulttes.

of

The purj;oMs of a - a l e d - program may also he
tnadequados pemoiYod In the exlstin9
cuntculum. Such lnadoquaclol lcionllflad hen are not
memy refloc:llons o1 the. ~·· opinions but are
_
.... with - - - larmaly and Informally
expreued in'torms

of

during the. oonoultodw - - ol .. """'· Tho Committee .
hu remali&gt;ed mindful
~hot. chtougl&gt;out the. procao of
curriculum dalgn. •P-..cl 1nac1oquac1o1 In the. prnent
~uate cuntc:ulum tnc:luilo the. following:

Iprod-.
...... _........., ............ _...
.....
. . . .... .. 11111-.----"'
....... ..... ................
--Mio 1M* ..... I colod _.,! education a

•. . , _ - - " ' A -lludy of~ cuntc:ulo
- t h e oounlry
the
- 1 1 0 ... !1160's ODd
portion ol

ODd -of .......
.._
...... 19'111'• ..... ...
1
.._.,_
... __
..alowad
_of_.,
In ........
lberm~

•t~olaocoeodiOIIudooa'freo '

- - t*

-

...... portion~ .....

..._., IUCVIII-"" ........ to
........
of..............
Qiili

· S....

thlo -

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

loll'l!lboon

--=~·
----of~
~i=,
.---....v
I

1

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

~

......,..._.,...._._of~

1. Few. students can".- 11M 2,000 or more oounes
offei8d .. this IJn-..y and ooloct thote which
would
educollon. The lock
· ol c:unlculorolnidulw and tJU1&lt;1or.a coflon resultstn an
ed-..1 -..._ .,.....
wtilt ...or ol Inter·
..._...._,
purposeful

oouncl--'

of

C111i111 ~ A CCa II£ DIDR1'J
llitoloor-........ (1977J,p. ll
ot, Clll"'lltt ......... ln .U -

1.

. . . _ II . .

2.

f l . -· ot

3.

--....·

. - - - . 1 1 7 1.

Ooolll ..... - . 111ellolonillalfl--' (IIMJ.

-

.

�.

'

l
pograskx\ end sequa1ee-. Moreover_. courses have
prollla1IIOd to accommodate ~orrower and narrower

2.

opeciollal!on. larger views of dlodpllna are thus
obocurecl10nd the ~ f'2_&lt; shared Intellectual
~II cllmlnlsl,.d.
•
•
The ~·· pnMn1 dillr1butlon requirements
_ , _ lillie lnedlh. SIUdenb may oatllfy H
monlvby ~ 8 couna In a few clepartments
or In one ~ outside the dlvlslonal
In which tholr ...... lolo.

3. The~ cuntr:Wum clooo D O l - the
~-· cl baolc ..... one! the Harvard
Redl&gt;ook' owNaed to M one! characcl mind," namoly,the obllttioo to "think and
oommunlcMe effcllvoly, to niaM relevant Judge- . one! lo clocrtnllna- valua."
4. In the ...... cl • cualculor which
r
,..,...... guidwlc:e to al oludentl, the Unlvetwlly

· ~ l!l*m .,.. allodtYe - t o communi. cote t o - tt.loculty'a coloclloe Judeotn*nlas

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

The --clthegoek oodned one! t h e - cl
the Ndeq- noled
be lulflled aolol!t by a
farmal cunlculum, - w e l l ...-vee~ • be. The
....,_ cl ...-..y..wlde ....,_ oil havtly
dopondant the oupporllve - - and ellorls_ ol
..... •• faulty. one! ........ ~. NCOgnltlon
cOhe impc&gt;fW&gt;c:c ciiUd&amp; " - ' clooo not the need
' for allrUCtlnd _...,which w i l l - one! dlr.a the
. . . . . and ..... clal ~ - . 1 the lrnpoovemoJ&amp;t ol

..,._cannot

~- ~ ot SUl'(V/8. .

..

pn:;g,....,

In the oeard&amp; for •
by which to odvenc:e gonital
ecluci6ln a1 !hit Onlvenlly. the Comm- took advantage
c1 the opportunity 1o . study' propo..t. or programo
dowloped ot other_-..s. To revle"' here the fuD r~
cl.-npleo tiUdlea """'*! be a forbidding taok.• Sedion n
· "'pplons and Ololca," ollen a bo1of summary d the major
_....._ ~ aooclols. and t~ lormulotlons
Conolclored by the c:on.n-.
'

D. OP110NSAND

CHOICES'·

--"*"'-

t hatloeen ..._ 1o ' - thatai.Jnl!IOnity commlllee
_ . . CIDIIIIdoroblo one! ollort to Oludy • parll&lt;ulor

........ --_..Upon ..

of
... _....,. body . . . one! ........ .
• - • 1 d-.. aiel
one! many of
th.nlhoao.tn t h e - ' · The_,
" - c:reoll*y .nal _ . . , . oinks lnlo oblvton: The
~ II'* on aa 11 ~'-&gt;ad. The pooblom

which--.,_ which- ..........

.........

ore not fuDy congruent with dlodpl!nes and sets up student
requirements within each ilrea. Students still hove choice but
the range of cowses that ftt Into each knowledge area IS
narrower than the range offered within the dtsdpline or
dtsdpllnes covered by that area. The Comrnttiee at flni
r._nded ornblvolently to the Harvard proposals. The •
program oee
be a thoughtful rearrangement Of
d:istrlbution requb'irnents, but not much more.-Yetl as other
_alternotlva were coauldered and foupd WllnHng, the
Hotvard opprooi:h; ~ not Us specillc progJOm_, gained In the
Commltlee's esHma!lon.
·

any attention .to basic skills deVelopment. -Also, the
Committee _reeognlzad the problem . that not aD ~
have a cumulotlve otruc:ture that builds oaolly from one low!.
of Intellectual oop'-allon to the nat. Furthormon, the
Commlllee doubled whether a capacity uillodln .. - t o
provide the number of counos coiled for In lhll plan.' 51111,.
the program had oonoiderable - - ' ·
d\ot wOuld
have directed students Into """-'-1' and oome
lnterdisdpltnory """"In-only 3 of the
.._.ted
as • woy ol ~ balonc:e betWeen opreed (breadth) and
sophistlcotlon (depth) . •

The CommHtee e&gt;&lt;plorOd ...m.1 approaches that
attempted to identify objectives for general . education,
objectives c:ul'ln terms Of impact upon student knowledge,
competence and oppredollon. Theoe opproacheo drew
upon the workt ol Daniel BeD and Philip Phenix. • One
approach In particular oa:upled the Commlltee'o.auentlon .
h coiled for requirements that would provide for (1) an
olucldatlon &lt;&gt;I tradition : (2) the ldenllflcation and objective
.......,_ cl VAlues~ 13) KQUa1ntanCi with major

In eli~.~ plan .provlc!ad. ~ cl 'clepartun for the
Coo&gt;mlllee's wod&lt; which then poceodad to move loWald
the reflnement of the knowledge .and the~
of the Ideo ol opedfytng therMo, - . and ..... that would

diodphrymethodscl~......._ """~

-men!

knowledge . But Mshould be obvtout how much . - , I t a to
goln
about ouch objectlveo than I Ia to lranflote
the objectives 'Into spedflc progr:orns, giYen traditional
dloclpl!nary Categories_and boundMtes among ·~

........

--longih caul-.

"""'!"""

wtll--""""'*'

e-n-·.

. ... ~_-.tclb~-

............ ..-II ... """ ..........
miiCh_~

....................... flw ............

· Ill.

--~ .....

KNOwi.EJ&gt;GEAREAS

1. fllllork:ai8Dil " ' ' IDJ'In' ......

""~-- -

T h l l - WDIIM'- .................. to . . . apll&gt;

..aAI
...,..__
. -..s

""'*"'

_.. bolh

-unMonfty'o
· - · ,.,.,...
..-.d toelill
--objodlve
- ' beyond
the
~
atpeclly.
Thll
aloo IlNck
the CorrwdN membort aatoo limlad a goal for o ~

. ......... o.n-1~ .._.___. .. ..,od

_.........to-

channel itudent ct-. Within ~ ·
Fioculty-planned~~ -~.could be
offered to oome llludonls lhriJiilih ..,-ly ~.
coherent COni _..,.; but ~"'lucconno would ...... .
adllcllll&gt;n.-cl cbal)no!ad ~- that -..lei ....,

earn-·. -

modooL ....... ouch .. -

daslgnad lo provide 0' foundotlnn for lludento to
own 1aarninQ 111 the baolc knowledge -aa-humen-

c---.

oflcxd the - - ' ad...-n _..., to that course,
and becauN • ..... In IKt. conticloNcl • number of
. . . . , _ ............... !hit _ .. ..... judged_
bdolv- cl the~ eclucation
- - rejaclad llhor thoughlful oantldonllon chalng the
_ ........ cl the ~·· dellberellons. u
......... I b i s of the
prindplos IMI*ih
the
rncmbe-1 of the~ -..n~tylo read t h e - - cl the

v-.

The Committee also corloklered some structured, Wlltorm
programo. One such program would have oet out three 0&lt;
four year-length oourse oequences attempting broad
tntoilroHon of knowledge acroso dt.clpllna. Students would have been required · to toke aD ouch COUIMS. Such
"foundalion" couraes or coune aequenees could provtde a
coo&gt;prehen!lve map of knowledge and -stimulate student
thinking about the otructure of the whole domotn cllepm!ng.
Such a Iorge ·scale map would provide a cognitive structure
enabling the student to ldenHfy and org"""'" leadtng Ideas
and- their Inter-connections . ldeaDy, )he. student would
• be guided over the lnteDectual tcraln , charting a way
throllgb the oubjects ol lnltrudlon 10. that a oenoe Of how
each topic fits Into a laager c:ohemlt ocheme could be
acquired. llronow*rs Aacenl of M'l"" program 1""' offered .
as an aamplo '.,j the poaolbllltloo ol IUd&amp; "'" approach.
~. the pooblomo of cxganlllng couna cllbll kind for
_ . . ol 3.000 IIUdontt each year and In ascurln9
• """""" faculty to teach them ..... oventuolly ovawhelmed
the
of wllill Ia ........ Even more

The Comm- oolloctad, noad and dlaa..d ,.,._. ol
Cornel, llllnolai';
San 01ogo Scola, 11ow1ne o-n. and
SyracuM.• Thll-lad the eo...- mombcn back '
nOt/without oome l'llilgl!itngo, lo clollnlng con. _.. of
• lmowiodge and"~ within them .
One -.ly _,.,. ...... the ~ tnlo ...
lxoad .... and " - dtvldOid each " - .... ol
lnlolloc:tyel dOimand (lnlmdudooy, ............ and
ad...-cll . Scudanb -..lei be ..,..s..d ~ CQIIIIIIolo •
- o f . , . . , . . . . . , man ""--d wan by . . . . .
CI&gt;UI'II_.....to .... .,..each ...... lt_hapad
that-.....!""'"' ......... two- might bo .......... by

Bacau. the ~ ~ the IJn-..y can ID

s---

goMialaducatiOn~ &amp;om~.

c- w-...

-.out

.,..a.......,s•

•

,·.v-.

ani!_......_....,._(5_...,..
:KJ .... . _ .........

1S_..In ........
clthe....,

cl4610

·--111·
...........
-...................
............
,.....
..........
....
..._. .........
.. .........,.
..
~- ~
..... OIIIi- ..
~~oo~o~r.-

.-(1_,.... - . -...
_ -... - .....

__
--.. . . ·----0..

e. ... .-..-..

.

7. llaeloalanlllllw&lt;IO..._.,_.._
.

~-

~

__...,..,.......

(,

" - - ~---- ~

tO. . . . ........ ¥. 81·7 .

.

�-rh&amp;Jt.n.rcl General
Education Report seemed ·a

good starting point, inasnuch
as It had glfterated' so much
national attenlloa1 . . . . The
Committee at first responded
amblyalently .... ·. . yet,
as other alternatives were
considered and found
wanting, the Harvard
approach, If not its specific
program, galnep In the
Committee's.estbnali&lt;&gt;n. '' ·

........,.. IIIII n
s.Ma ... cruciol to a
_....,._.,.._.., lhlllhoy- a diolinciM
............ lldloily • ......,._. b
to
. . . -·
. . . ,n..
..._ ......
_ pollml
ol -.lngo,
conllrudlng
lqmoooiolo
....... concopts
Into.
..... Plollp .,._ . . .. . ·~view ol t l w - range
ol _...... ' - _......,. .. the one by
........... roly ~ the pool, the other by onalysis,
..,..._ IIIII ~ ol ......... expnaed In other
dloclplnea_lllll In~~- -. I

,._

~' whllo ~ to
a.dbno . . by no -

gain exposure to other
unique lo the ~d

~ Sludla knooAodge area u envisaged by the
~ . lt would ollcr a proportionately substantial

-

ol ouch-"""-·

'

s.

.

Ulo_.....,s--

5. Seclol ... ....._.. . ~

olwlud '-been Mid .. the prNous- apj&gt;lies
hae as well, exoepl that now the focus Is ..,on the .biological
world, and upon the Important theories, like ·evolution,
which have not 0!1 ~ prominently)&gt;'the developmftl!
ol these diodp!inM,
have~spread their rMthodological
boneflls Into . - .. of knowledge .
Stated most simply, the d-.blllty·of a knowledge oraa
devoted to the Life and Health Sclencp rests upon the naed
to understand living organisms generally and, . more
particularly, the human body, and to be aware both of the
• capadty to susl41n human life, and of the existence-of threats
to hUJ11liO hfe. This need has been tntensiljod In the ·recent
past as health and healtll care delivery have emOIJIO(i as
mojo&lt; public ~sst,~... There Is little reason to anticipate that
public aftentlon to such Issues will diminish In the future; HIs
more likely to Increase. H a general educetlon 1s to produce
an InfOrmed and diocrimlnallng . c1t1z.eruy thea basic
kJ!owled!le In thoM areas likely to be the locus ol political,
~.and economic Issues and ethical ooncmu should be ·
-addreosed withbl the general edUClltion progra1n.

Furthermore, .,;any ol the 1ssues sunoundJng health and
bealth care delivery can only be deYeloped ro the full

throu!h an Inter~ approach . T.opi&lt;s ouch as
cook:oatalnment, the policies ol health care distribution ,
death , dying and chronic dlooue, the usa &lt;;! lamUy and
comliWnlty syotems ,In ~ pnventlon and many olhas
c.n only be oubjact to luD lnvallgoljon ond undaltm&gt;dlng
.._.., ~ ......S.of lludy. A lJie and Hulth
Sdonca .............. to • eon-~

wowldlhUS c:ontri&gt;uw subobmtlally

- - _..., which _... to davelop

-~ lludy IIIII to IW)Iy ~ ki&gt;owladg.o to

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

~~-··

.

._

Tho Soda! Sdonca ... ~capable of conveying
an ordered un4outanding ol the lnllllutlons and structures.
oiiOdety which Is an to .n)l lndMclllal, as lndlviduat='
and asiOdal being. k would be cllllcult lnjleed to Of9Uelh'\
otudanti should be left to davelop their ~Ips to otl&gt;et
ihdlviduals \and- ooclety around them In limns of myth,
p~udlce, and suporslltlon and not be exposed to mor&amp;C
- lldentlllc understanding. The copactty ol the sodol Md
behavioral ~ to povicla- on empirical basis lor
comparioon. of the tnitltutiono and ~vlor , of diljerent
IOdelles Is of lwther irnportaelc4 withlrr the context of a

seells

_general education program which
aoss-cukural penpect~va .

to provide

Yet, it.. ruoons lor the indwion ol • lcnowledge ma
concerned wHh the fOdal and behavioral idences extend
bej.oond 'relevance' lor the lndMcluiol lltident. The
lntdectual cMiangr ol ollempllna lo..davolap and apply
co~~ to the --.-..ly vmOd, complex
and frequently changing palteml ol human behavior and
organization Is lormldable and - . g b fuKiUing.
Furthermore, the rnethodologic:o which concern
IOdal confront the IIUCiall some basic
q - about thO natura of knowlodge end modes ol
validM!on. How, foe~ ,'
to "avoid •
value judgemanta, u objadhoa ~ • oupposed to do, •
and yd not nodllly the raWvance Of their knowledge to rul

-IDOIII-

hwRan ooncems?""

.

4

-oocllil-.
~

Wldlo such the

o&lt; .-ollie

-

poood to ....... degrees among

•..wr-thoftltn some conlul

Mel tf)ua proYida h

daocrt.d - ·

6.F...... 1.-...

~ ~nca

'
;
• I

�,·

«&gt;e&gt;mennwals lllcfloa to act out tlw ch-. of parodllallsm •

J.

which Is the cause olthe pr(ible.n, OJid to dose the door to
..-....! federal ft!Mtng.

ln.l1llllhomMia and/01" comp-..) . '111R&lt;om·.
mittee sMI contiliue to d~ . tn ~
with the l..eaming Center, the EOP ,..the £.)gllih

· If the ;ustillcatlon for foreign I~· study In GeMrol .
Education developed here ~es less-Pt10rity to mastery of a ·
foreign language 101' prGdkal ou;ommerdal.,.., ~ obviously

and l\4athematics departments, the ~
UOrories, and oJI&gt;errelovant units, prooect.oes (or:
(0 the ldentlftitlon ol different needs Icc besic
skills cowses, (H) · the ~design arid provillon dl
oowses to meet such needs, and (Ill) crbria 101'

-does not di5cWilt It, !'I'd unquallfiedly · e~ H.
Because If plaoes:a.lgher pri~ on its value as a vehicle for
0"05$-cultural

experience (as well as for "Practical
consideratiohs governing the volume of the entire General
E'aucotion. ~~ , the foreign language requirement Is
rrUnimaJ. The expectation of the commtttee lS that
eternenta.y language programs wiD consider ~ 4he!r serious
r~nslbllity lo adjust their form!!/5. especially Jor studOJtts
intent on minimal compllance with the requirement , to stress
reflection on language structure , lingulstlc and cuhural
identities .and differences, and the reletion between
langvage, perceptual
view , and cat~ of thought .

exemption from

4.

f'"d
•

1

..fi.

"""·'

IV. P.ROPOSALS

Jhe--.1111ht,..._.cf_.
able

(U

the foiJowjng

"'"¥'

COUrse

distribution

6.

Historical and ~ Studies (2
' courses) .

_
Sciences

clll

~
courses) .

(li)

Ule and H..oJth Sdences (2 counesl .

-=-ily llmtoocl to
(it) --

(a) Llwnture (2-counes)
. (b) Ar1s (1 courle) .
(v) Sodod and Behavioral Scllinces (2 counes) .
jvil Foreign t.nguage (2 couriesl .

units-

..
opec;illc knowledge ........
In the cue of unit&gt; which the Coro-lnds do
not,fol nudy 11rt0 htnglo knowledge .,.., their
c:owles tball be ~ .... knowledge on a .,_ by ~ loasio, In consultation, where
poellble,jMII) t h e - &lt;:Of!OmMI&lt;I.

nol

co ....... ........,

Allonore Colego; ond 4tll ....
!lllljor - ~ rnancl-.d · II,

~-..lards .

7. 'rMt the eon.- oonolder tlw

~

cf

the Genenl ~ .,....... IDe - . l l y ...tde ~ . . . _ ll\lllftl .

~the General Edoocallon Co'!'mlllee be chorged
.lQ ldonlllv

That &lt;he Committee· give consideration to adjust·
ments In the GeMral Education " ' " - where fuMlJJment of the requlmnontl may pooo ~

dilflcultleo. n - c.- n\oy.tnaudi, but ..,

and • JRcllnology 12

Ov)

l.

IIY.Mabillty Ol the """""'
of the ~ con

5. That the Commiltec eslablish a mechonism to
review and approve courses 1or inclusion in the
GeMral Education Program and ' to_ encour9
th..development of new counes 101' that _.,.,.

before, !J'aduation to · complete satisfactorily
by knowledge

s-an- of the

program . •

That" all fushm"'', irittially enrolling ~ the
ocademlc year 1980-81, including
ansfer
~udenls with less than 15t&gt;ours credit , be.rO'quired
COW&gt;OS fulfilling

tMst: requirements.

eo.imittee

That the
c;ontin.;;-to develop alteria
· and mechanisms under whlch lndivkiuaJ units , Of
groupsof facutty , could present proposals to H !OJ
otbu.. academk:aUy coherent core programs.
Completion of such· programs wouki exempt·
students &amp;om th&lt;i stan&lt;!Nd J&gt;I'09ram , with the ex·
cept\00 of the ~ skills component. ihe crilerla
applied shall ·at leasl lbdude: (I) Insistence on
~ - - - " ' ...Gjeol- ~ wllh lbeti'IJtl.of
-necessary fOJ.the completion

, .,,......_
~ 1.

That&lt;heeom...-dewlop.-- ._, . . .
c . , . _ . cf 3oouna (2;nCnt!Jtih ...........
to tndude iiiiiNction ill the WM of...._,_. l

c. ·

That .;., ......_ ......... SUI'IVta ........
~. 1910 ........... ilcf d. .

.__
.,.._. _.. ....

..

_.....sa....~

onlor~.-....

D. 1. l'MiaooiApll, i979,Md__.,....,_,
·.J

-

cine~cfthe_.... ...... G.noool~

That Adririuions and RoCO!ds ~ n.~ed to
nollfy, • soon • posolble, all newly accepted
...,.._.larfal, 1980; ol ony opiJIOYed changes

Com_ ....................... . . . . .
orllong the ....... . . . - . . . . . . . . . . . -

the

ln~Jeq- .

eo.nr.- ohol be - . . .

~, thencJI1ilall&lt;rnlal

, . . lnllll
..............

. ~~ne_. .

B.

I . Tho! the Gonenl Ed11C411lon Comniluee be
wldt the conllnuing development of the
Incoming deM ol Fall, 1980
ond lhooe ~ . ond wllh the oubmlssipn of
. ~ . . , _ Icc ouch devolopment to the
F~ Senate lor lis October, 11179 -.g.
Such proposalo ohol awe, bui no1 . - 1 l y be
llmiled to, lhe taoki oullnod In B 2·7.
chorgod

i. That pooWiono ol D.J.

a.m •..,.-·-·· -

prospm lor the

not bo .......... to..,_
ohol ........... .

' itscunew--2~.---.lllp

-

-·

the Sti&gt;dont - .•• and""" . . . . . . . . .
clont; t - - . 1 by the ~ 6luclolll

S. n..·lbe choir bo _ . on April 1 al -* IIIII'·
· The- a...q,...,lhaflbc ~ . .

~"""'.....,.tho--...

.. -

. . . . . . . . . -----a.....--.

. . . . ~ ohol nol . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

oandnoltnfl to -

on lhe

c-,

cw .,_

5

�·I

Ia) the desirability of lntrodudQg Phase U as rapidly ""

V. RA'DONALEAND.

poSsible.

EXPIANAnON

•

.

lb) the maxlmlzallon of the time avolloble to the
Committee to work out details of the various elements of
Phase ·U.
.
.

to

1c1 the inaldmizatk&gt;n of ihe !!me ·~ academic
and administrative units and otudents to deVelop ,._....,.
to Phase Uprior to tmpleme~lllllon .
•

ot- ,lmtructon should meet one of thae '
rapoilslbllltle while taochlng was considered unruoo~oble .

majority·

'It was therefore decided that primory reoponsi&gt;lllty for thedevelopment l&gt;f these compolmdel should be IIOiigned to a ,.
ooporate "buuc lldlls" component of the general education
program .

~ hiMr alre.ody !Wn
units

m..Ted to

In.,._.
ideiJtilled:

~ts would ...

PJ_. . . . .

place ..tth· so~ of .the
83. BasicoDy, three groups of

1. lludcnto, lllcely ,.. tt.,

82.

October:

As Its Progress R2p0fl ·to the Faculty Senate of
1978indlcalos, the Commlllee has tlways been aware ol the :
dllllculty In translollr&gt;g the goals of ~ educClon Into an
octwo1 cunlculllm. Long d!ocualorls c.entered on the relative
of two c:unlculac organizing prii&gt;dpla: con···
vontlonally-delined knowledge - . on the. one. hand, and
a oet of required ed~ •1u..n-, lslues, and

......-----..liil&lt;Milliilge--,
lho · The Com- """!''udod
on

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

-:=-=~z:-~.._c--..s
~
-~-c--.ew
_..,~,

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

1D ~ . . ' p * d lloclp al SUft'/B, I
~
..........................
_ _ .coulct

..............
w..... .......... ,...
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ ... _300,

...........
af.... .......
..., ..........
'* .,_.....__

~- ..............._e-illoe,IO
3,0110. llullho

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

0

...,._
_

.........

__ ..

..................... _lho

• ,..,.... al -

mUll bo

'l1lt c - - .. _.

......

• lho . . . c l -

an
u n - g · ol the' fu~ atructum of the
dlodpllna muot boimpi!Nd to ;w.!ents before.they con deal
effectMdy with themeS, lllua, and ~ which crooo'
dioclplnory lines. Whlle Maumln!i. wtt1t Philip Phentx, the
~ of the diodplina .In plan~ the cunlcu)um,
~. theCommltteealsoodcpted, ln principle, !held.. \
ol a "iii of required educational themes, llaues , and
oxpalonceo o-'applng the knQwlodga area-Oaaad otheme
ol c11o1rt&gt;u11ort requirements . A prlmory aim of 'thls .., ol
INmlna - - would ... 10 dewlop the lntellactual
okllls !hot onoble one to tntewooe and apply knowieclg« and
pr1ndpla ollho _ . . d!ocipllna to probioms and 1ssuet of
~ . and to """"""'80 IIU4ents 10 dltcover how the
.........._. IICq\lhd from dlodplined ~ can ~
~ In lho oolullon of pol&gt;loms of life today.
~ ol _.. lnldoclual okllls .. the capadly lor
alllcal8ticlng, ~; an\1 ~tion ._ and the
. _ ol ~ a ._, body oflcnowlodgo to related Bfe
thai

- · enallla to IDd. an Informed ond
_..... ...... ~ domoc:rallc ~ ·

For ol - - - . ....... ouch ed~
........ . a n d - - might Include: otuclll cl ~
............. lho idonllbllan and .-..... ol
........... - ............. ....,...,..,.and~
· SludMisccMcl alonco lllllfythls
raqunin.onr and fullll ... --.ution ......,._ In a
knowleclgr by ~ t:omplotlng • . . ..

""*"'

"!her..--·

-.--. .

I'IOpaial A·1 Nlloclo the . . ol 11-.

two

rnodeo ol

............ -...-. n..c--lnilnda to develop

' the

--r.

lho ....._

.._.,.-~.

~

~nplon .. -allhor~A-1-.Iho Ftlol1980, or
tn • 10111ooquon1 " ' - a tn 1981. n.. eom11111 hao 111 lcs.nllfjl ...-ol!ltloa. ihemollt to be

1p......,. •
... -...- .........

lnckldod 1n e. ....... and
~

83.

mechanism far the

.

.

•

whoM prlcit
~
Ior the puriUit of the undOrgrodUate
cunl&lt;ulum, but whoM- oldllo would be enhanced by this
three course compollel)t.
·
~.

2, students ..mo. prior pnporalion Is Inadequate for the
..... sto4ed purpoae and who would nMd furtbor ""'"' In
order to benefit from sucli a thie&amp;coune """"""'*'t,

""

3. students who. "1&gt;'1" . - -... .... oould
be~ from iol or poot ollho- ..... COIY1J)C)Mnl. '

· The .Commtttee Is awlft of the polllbtllly thai oome .
· studenls may need furth«r pnporalion before they ore oble
to 6enellt &amp;om tdence couna wl&gt;ich would ~ req~ .
The Committee wiD give furtbor CONidorotion to this
probkm wttliln ~ context of the GenenJ Education
program .

.

f

r

�"Given the size and physical
complexity of SUNY/ B, the
diversity of its academic and
professional programs, and
the .beterogene~ of its student
,body, the Committe~ on
General Education beUeves
· that the eStablishment of a
thoroughgoing General
Education Program, in toto,
at whatever date, would be
.difficUlt for the constituent
~arts of the University."

'"&gt;.

·"'

.:

'

\

l

,.

.

(

.

...,·
. ,.,. .

-·-

-. :

~

..
students,llls hoped that over the years mOI"e and more such
programs would emerge to S&lt;m~e the purposes of General
Educotion more richly.

85.
The eo.n-tuware that, In the long term, the quallty
ol the c;,-o1 Educallon Program would be enhanced by
the dewJopment of new counes and by ,mod!licatlons In
!hose alrudy taught.
fiQIII Committee discussions emerged the view that
certain courses we moll appropriate for a general education.
Such courses are spedolly d..;gned to meet the needs of
non·mojon rather than norrow In scope, and lorgely

oriented to prospective majors. These counes distill the
major conoems and conceptions of the 5Cholorly dlldplines
and deueJop obilltles useful In the -informed l~e of on
educated dtizen . Altenllon Is focused on th' develppment of
a Q1t1ca1 und~ and or the abilltitt 1&gt;~ 'R
acquire and utllioe knOIOiedgt. The best' Genorol Siucollon
courses develop the student's a61liiy"To analyze sltuotlons,
apply principia, and reach conclutlons In a wide range of
knowledge oreos and reoi-Ufe expetlence5.
A mechanism f&lt;&gt;&lt; the encouragement and development of
appropriote COurMS Is considered on Important port of the
General Education program. The creotlon of new counes
appears to be ._;.lly necessary In order to Increase the
oc:caslbOity of ccta1n knowledge-areas to non-majors and to
fulfill the lnterdioclpllnory alms of the General EducatiOn
program. New courtalhould noc ,l)owever, be confined to

these lunctiom.

\

VI. A SUMMARY REVIEW
OF GENERAL EDUCA-TION MODELS
Structunol Modelo

•Core gf!nerol education program• are common , tightly
knH, yet broad and often interdisciplinary series of courses
usually requited of oD students. An example Is the general
educotlon program prescribed In the ttorv&amp;-d "Redbook"
(General Education in o Free Society1 . Three common
year-long' general edu~tlon courses were to be requlred of
all Harvard students - one each ln the humanities and
soclal sciences ond one of two alternatives ir) the sciences. It
shou14 be noted , however;-that some cores are not divided
into courses. This _)s the cpse With t~e well_ known Great
BQOb -

'"'

,Jobn't Colleg« In

~.l)nd

Sante Fe. COre cuntculo arot found In i!PProiclniaieTy 10
pO.unt of Ametlcan colleges - 7 percent ol colleges of oris
and sclenus and 14 pen:&lt;!llt of professional/~
colleges .
\:l9Jr·Lnu'i'

• Dittrlbutlon ~Ire-menta ~ Intended to er\f.l!.a. that

each student takes a minimum number 91 courses '¥vaedits

· In specific academic oreos. For lnslllnee, at the Unlyerslly of
&lt;Altfomla, Senta Cruz aD students are required to take a
total of six counes - two each In the humanities, social
sciences, and natural sciences. Distribution require.menu are
the most common form of general e.!ucatlon , found In 85
percent of Alnerlcon colleges. ~e ore four types of
distributlon requirements - pretaibed distributJon re·

qufremenra, minimally pre.sct!bed or smorgasbord distribu-

86.
Throughout b dell&gt;oi.tions, the Commlttee has been
owore ol the need to bolonc:e the desire for on lnU!!IectuoDy
and educatlonllly oound - • m In General Educollon with
a reol!zation of prociQI oonttralnts. Proposal 86 Is Intended
to permit the ~ oome lotltude In responding to
chongtng olhi.don. Mel condlllons, whm! llnmedlote
oonotrotnts can bo clemoo..,lled.

1J1.

Dl-3

Tbo-'&lt;althoeon-'-_.........,_

.,.,......... 'IIIII . _ 11 no -

to loollew doll a wll

..-. . . the
_.........
.. ·_
In tho
.dltNnllh
. . . . ....
. ..... .
_olthe
.
.................. tho-peapoiO_ . . ..
............. At ... _ .......... ol ........... ~

........... _,_....-.c:y ..

to-

.................... ol-3-....Wto . . . . ..tdne
~

......._

'*•·

~

' don reqUirements. recommended distribution -guidelines,
and o small group of programs which con best be described
only as ..Qiher."

•Pr8crfbed dlftributfon ~remenQ Involve combine·
tions of .specified courses, student course options from short
preselected U&amp;ts, and a Umtted numbq of eledlves 'In
designated areos. For lnst09&lt;", the Residentlol College at
the Unlvenlty ol Michigan requires students to toke a
freohmon seminar. on arts procllcum, foreign language to
, the lew! o1 reading comprehension, three courses In the
IOCiol odencel, " ' - counes In the humanlll&lt;s, and three
c:ourMSin the natural scionoes. Approximately 60 percent of
oolloga and un1ver11t1es haw d!mtJutlon requirements with
spodlied COUrMI - 48 per&lt;&gt;enl ol collogu ol arts and
oc1ence1 and 74 percent ol.,..,_,..,technlcol colleges.

few ~ any_profes&amp;lonal/b!Chnlcal schools and. 5 pereent ol
oris and sciences colleges employ them.

•Other d i.trlbutlon requlremmta diller from thote
olreody dltcuised In the procedures they ernplpy rather than

their su~ . One example ls the competency or outcome
based distribution requirement. At !l'erllpg College which
has sudl 1!1: program students are required to demonstrate
ottolnment In eight general ,education orea,s - Chrtstlon
heritage, values, acquisition and use of knowie&lt;lge, art and ~
oesthetlcs, physlcol and social environment, verbal
comrrlJllllcotion, physlcol and .-e~al activity,' and
grqups . ..Attainment must be demonstrated to 1!1: faculty
cofnmtttee tn each arel!l: via courses, Independent 'stu.dy, .,
standardized tests, -and/ or experience .
Hampshire · College has ri, self-paced di•tributlon
requirement. All students me req;l,~ed to pass 1ndMdualized
oofnpre.hensive. examinations ~'Xt neturaJ sdences and
matheml!l:tics, social sdence.s , lan~age and c:Jmmun\c.etion ,
and humanities and arts . There are. no coune requtremJh\s
and students can the - ....-.,
papers ~ whenever~ wish.
Metropolitan Slate Unlvenlty has a oontroctual !l"ncral
education d'"tstribu:ion requh'ment which Jnvolves the
-aeation of an indivtdualizia program which must cover
basic learning skills, personal growth and development , dvlc
skills, and culturol and recreollonal skills. A two·yu&lt;
program Is specified In on agreed-upon poe! or conlnld
between each student
his/her advisor. h may lnc:lude
formal counes, independent study, and experientlol
education.

ana

•Fre&lt;: el«tlueo mean nq general education program Is
speclfled by a college. Tho student oar create • _ . )
education program bosed on whatever c:ourMS he or ohe
selects. Amhent College has such a program. So do 2 -

pereent of the rest of Americon Institutions ol higher
education - 3 pereent of arts and odencel c:ollega and 2
percent of professional/technical ochl&gt;oll.

..

~
'-'
.,.,
:,'1
••

~

:J

·~-~and. .
""*.............
botlla ollcnowladga

employed" .··---

11Ccjualnt studenD with tho

methodologla
cl
the
various-~. Thllllthe--

lorro ol general eel.- and tho ....... - . . . . . _
requftmonla, porliculodytn_and_..,..._

!I

li

:,
•.1

ll_
~

'•

�"~QP

offerS .. _. a -slice~

of life tpe often sheltere&lt;fstudent ha5 not before seen . . . .- Stich &lt;eXp~riences
prove eye-opening {or
students. One · . . . returned
to Antioch shock,e&lt;f to learn
that all ~Americans did not ~
actively want Gene McCarthy
for ptesi&lt;!_ent."

·Technology of 1M Academics. New York St. Mark's
" ' -· 1966) .

nus

ammgement of creating general education out of the majorll most often found In professional schools and is, as a
~ · frequently called~ "prof~ohnodel ."

ea.- ldea-baood ginerul edUootlon growl out
,

of an

perennlalist pQ!Iosophy of education .
holds that ·education should be based on a
fundamental or preocribed body of knowledge dealing with
the heritage of humankind. The most common example of
this ' Is 1he classlc western ctvillzatlon courie and
- -

"-'tlalism

requlr~

to prepare accounts of _

•WQ}'I!: oflmowing·ba.ed geneial education emphasizes
method
of learning rather ihon bodies of !inowledge.
Brown Un!Mtsi'iy has ettempted to offer such courses in its '
modes ofthOught freshman seminar program .

00'

"Contemporary CM1izat1on." started In 1919 at'Columbla
Unlvenity, Is the surviVIng granddaddy of all such coun;es.
On the othet hand, perennlalism Is concerned with
immutable and universal truths, wlhich are thought to be best
acquired through. the slljdy of the "G-' Books:" The St..
.John's program Is the best known of the perenntallsl
cunlcula In bigbeT education today.

•
or problem·bo.rd ~I ttJucation. also
. - ! -.lloclpllnafy s-r-01 e d -. seek&gt; to
- t h e unlly ol knowledge, the recurrence ol basic
ouch .. freedom vo. outhorfty or the individual vs .
sodely, and the contributions of the different disciplines or
ways ol knOwtng in shedding light on an important topic or
4

..Tap session .. to discuss ideas, experiences , and projects. For

thts meeting students are

their observations and problems at Work .

Thane

problem. John Jay~ In New York C~ has offered
this type ol program around themes ouch' as "Deviance,
Conlonrilty, and &amp;.:.ptionality;" "The i.Jrl&gt;an Experience:"
"""-'ea: ldMis and Ralltln:" ond "Conflid and Conflict ~ -· Stu4onls talot • !1-&gt;e. lectur., .an inter~
a dlodpltnary - . and on
lndopondenl proloc:t.

-**·

•Lfje need&amp;-baaed general educotlon is concerned with
providing stu9ents with the basic skills and knowledge
necessary to function In the world . Stephen BOHey argues for
such a cwriculum in his book , The Purposes of Education
(Bloomington , Ind .: Phi Delta Kappa Education
Foundotlon , 1976) . He divides l~e activili&lt;~Sinto four phases
- coping, 'work, free seH, and the enveloping polity , and
s\Jggests the skills that must!&gt;" taught for each.

•Developmentally-baaed general ed&amp;(_catiolr"':ies educatlon to the~ of human growth ._...,..hur 'Chick"'ng .Is the
pa:sorl who has gol'_le ""' t ht .furthest , in designing.- sue~ a ~­

program. He 'holds the widely shared belief tllit'lnteDectual,
moral , 'rln.d ethical growth ~r ,In tandem . Separately they
are" abstractions, together ·they are integrated parts of·totaJ
human development. Chtckering's curriculum is _based on
1heqse1Ationships that emerge when related st&amp;ge:s of ego,
.J

-.

~ inteiJCGtual, and moral .development are llnked. He asserts
· that each stage dJffers'-from the ~ 1n terms o f student
motives for edu~tion, student Oeliefs about the meanihg of

knowledge , student uses of knowledge. ~dent feelings
about where knowledge ume from , -student lomlng
processes, eppropiiate functions of ed.ucatiobal institutions ,
appropriate teaching practices , approJ)tiate student-teacher
relationShips, and appropriate fonnsof evaluati6n . •

•Kind• of knowledge-booed ~era/ education grows
out !'f the work of Philip l'llenix who d ivides all knowle_flge
(New V ork:
McGraw-Hill , 1964) - (1) symbolics (ordinary language , .
mathematlcs ,- and other nondiscoune forms) ;- (2) empirlcs
(Physical sciences, biology; psychology; and $odal science) ;'"
(3) esthetics (rilusic, visultl arts, the arts of""ovement, arid
literature] ; 1 4) synnoetlcs jpersonal Rhowledge) ; (5) ethics
(moral knowledge) ; 09d.(6) synoptlcs (history, religions, and
philosophy) . A general education cuni&lt;ulu_m would induqe
a sequential study of aU six realms of meaning . However.
students w6U.Jd study the six areel ~ndy as much as

into six types of Realms · of Meanfng

possJble to 1-fle the ;nrer-relatiQnsbips among Uwtm.

~·

'" ..~

IIIOTE: The. _.,clb&lt;a mened to an!~ footnoted in this
report are available In the Faculty 'Senate ofllce a~,in
the Unlveralty Ubrarles.
~

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
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                    <text>c.m.vaa

RepUperson

Women

Rayna Gangi repairs
Mardi Gras was
computers, Ignores
called off in New
'comments' about •
Orleans, but not at
. Squire.
·
her doing so, and
plans to make
Seep~ge 10.
movies and write.
SeepageS .

letters

lk,lzz

A series of events
On everything from
The misadventures
on campus and off
Women's Studies to ·continue under a
are planned for the '
abortion insurance.
new name,
from.gener.al
· _
coming week as a
Seepage 7.
salute to
- education to racism,
International
from deans and
Women ' s Day.
from 'The Spectrum.'
Seepage9.
See pages 6, 7, 8.

N,IARCH 1 , 1979

STATE UMVERSITY
AT BUFFALO .

VOL.10 • NO. 21

'

.

_S tudents
U/B frosh still rank above
State and national norms, but a
continuing decline concerns faculty panel
.BY Joyce Buc:hnowald
Reporla"Silolf

A draft report from the Faculty Senate
Adm lss l~s CommltJee -charges that
uta's recruitment
most be

profarn
1

rs":'~~~}~·t!rn~~~~ ol~~~~~~

Its student population In years to come.
• According to the report, !hare w• a
"mart&lt;ed decline" In the student "Profile
for freshmen edmltted last fall , with the
ratio of those admitted to ' applicants
Increasing about 25 per cent. That 11178
class, ho"!a-, still measures favorably

:P~:~~~t ~~\~ ~f~:~~~ ~~~

trosh used to.
·
The reason for the decrease In
• selectivity Is simple to explain; Jt's the
law of supp~ and demand, the Senate

Schwartz

fo""t~euJ~rW..':tt~u=.:.'JP~~'ij'~l~::

He wanted to give the Council
'good news,' but most of it wasn't; .
stu~ents are frustrated, he said

-

-

Student Auoct8tlon Prwklent Karl
Sctl-u Mid be
the
Uni-*Y Counc:n wanted to hear
"good .-a• ebout U/8 . '
.
Altw ell, Council Member M. Robert
Kcnn IIIII orltiCIDil Faculty S.We
ClleinNIII Newton
last
mantll'a Council -ron for airing only
•oonoama."
lbeow 8IIYI!tlng right
aut lbe University?", l&lt;Oten 1\ad

w• ...,..

=·

.,.,'1

....,.ltll!lllllle.

a.- .. -

At lbe "Febnl8ry Council ..-tng

InVIted ~·.-:,·
on8ch..U,
bahlolf or .tuelenta,
fh
... _.tM.
"Men INn~~ other SUNY ea-t,"
be lllld wtlh pnoe, '\1/B ta a melting
~ ._ e wirllly of eluelenta , lfoln

urged the Council to become "advoceles for public higher educellon,' ~
wt\ich, he ..ld, ,_,. dlftlcutty, II not a
crisis. The eacalatlng coels of attending
SUNY work a herdahlp on fhoee middle
and lower Income studen111 for whom
the lnatitutlon w• eslabbhed. More

fo"'att'=. ~~C::..':ntr' afford
~SUNY

syatem Ia alao.decllnlng In

==-~~~ :;~~e~:

longer • a top untveratty, If we
- - . Scllwartz Aid he ....IDa

size of lhe freahman class Increased by
some 600 students.
.
Theoretically, If U/8 continues to.
have a freshman class of.approxlmately
3,000 and does not subatantially 1
lncnoaae Its pool of applicants, by t985,
given a projected 12 per cent decrease
In college-age students, the University
could approacll what Is comparable to
"open edmlsslons." That's the prediction of Comml\tee Chairman Brian
Ralchford of U/B's s_chool of Manage-

ment.
. . _ -. . declining
Although cumllll fniehmen continue
to rank well nationally and Stat..tde,
the fact remalna that each fnaahman
claN at.- 1973 halo htod conalatentty
~ hlgto ectlool .-.gee and
rMidnga. The high school
~In '73- 91; tllle ye. H 17.8. "'"' ,..,. . . . fha cla8a
rank lila lltll ~; tllll ,...,

c-

averages..._t!oe committee fouixJ that thii
bottom auu atudenta (or 20 per 01111)
htod ..,_, high .a-1 grade point
avenoogea· of 81.45. Cla8a !Wifd~

=:':,'&amp;!-:!. 'W:' .,:,~~~

cent also htod ..,_, w'itlbal SAT IICOI'1I8
of -468 and mean math IICOI'1I8 of 535,
These, though, are still much higher
than the national-ecore awenogea of 4211
- 1 and 468 mathematical.
By comparison, the top 80 per cent
had .high school .,.ages ranging from
83.7 to 99.9 with a mean of 89.15. Their
class ranking ~ntllea ~ from

~:~.'~.:-~:.:.h !:t,:.'~r-~':.~

these students 21 pointe higher
than those In the bottom 20 per cent;
the mean math acore, 22 pointe higher.
The report concludes thlllellmtnatlng
· the bottom 20 per cent by grlide would
have a "conalderlble lmPIICI on the
average grade and clasa rank and would
render the cl ... much more comparable
with thou admitted In pi'8'iloua yews."

._.

.Ulll-.lty attrttiQn and high

-='-'

The report alao ~nta out fhlll,

:.:rn~ .\~~~~~l:i--:'.J.~

student's acedemlc sucoeea In high
school. When aoclo-economlc atatua
and ability are held conatant · fhoae
students- who failed to
a B
awenoge In high achool - . twloa •
likely to drop out of college lben 1how
whodld.
"The lmpllcatlona of SUNYAB'I
recent move to admH aome C ·atudanta
Ia otwloua," the report laada.
• The report alao notaa that while
U/B'a attrition nile "Is not OUIIwidlehly
high"
.. ~forlien!
what
might " be
a -un'--lty
ceriler with Ita "level of aatecttwty and

Obiiiln

. .... :::-...:r:.....=. ---- =. . . .5!.
..
........
_
.......
........ -.........
.....
.....
=
.
--=-........
,. . .... ..........
--=- -bin·........
.
.
..,, lila--..
.... ...........

==·

a::.-

d=

SUNY'a a:ncllcamenl Ia not juat a
of money; ~. he
argued · - . . 1!0( ,_.,.ng lbe
~ 01 rn&lt;NWr: . Clua." II Ia tbe
Counoll'a ~Uty to •
~IOn

"

~ Of tbeand
. . lltlbldN~. PI~,_ be nol8d.

.._..,
.,_
alalld lit ...., . . be •

:.T.~t':r'~~==~-=

8tudanta IIIOUidll't , _ to be
-~=¥111'1111
Oldlrto..-1
BUNY,
........_HeutQIIIIbe

.................... _y~

.....
\'eft,"

oonttnua to '

~ltanNew
~ IIIOugll.

tile IIUik

IMttlullotl,"be .........

quality

... _,.._.,..IWiklng_lll.e.

A dtictlne~ao "-'~In

"SAT-.

fhle , . .nil

~~

':1:'.-::..a. ....

-~-PDI!IIa--tlwllllllll

-~25poiiiiLMT

~
=~=:
tolle•-

,__

of - .

~..,

"-'

._

to al polntdlp IIIIi ,_._

-a:r~-.:=

..._.-.

lbe

,

~·===-~':.=
hiGh

par 01111 _ . . . . . to

PM1 blatorY. •
If U/8 llad -.n able •to aut . Ita
lillrtiiDn nile 11r • par oarit, H oould liM
........ ........,...~!hie~ ol
~"'*'Y 2,800 lnat-.1 of 8,1011.

:-'..:B-..1ft!ll-=

: : :. .=-::rbe::.lll
10 UIB GM be Rllcbbd ... .

~a!

~The" cun,nt

euppty .nil demand
altiiMIOn Ilia put lbe Unl..-ity m a

rwtettwety rww PQeltklft. It no 1on11r 011!\

._.

�~1 , 1S71

l

•Schwartz
..........
,.:.,

-

·~lty oratudenl

life at U/B Is
""'-!ng." He cited _ . . , reasons
wilY- Sfudenta feel that there Is "too
Ngll a level of lneenalttvlly to atudent
prolllema;" atudenla are not taken into
OOftllderatJon when decisions are made
llflectlng them; the admlnlslrlltlon - . a to dlamlaa student
__., llboul "quality of life" with the
attitude that "II doean, hold water;"
...ci~NN~gwlal and logistical conslderatiOna ep.,_- to take precadenoe over
atuclent needs.
_
sJ:~
~tad~f specific examples,
•lnatltutlon of the Spr1nger Report
thla 1..1. which, he Mid, will cause
"atudants to suffer;"
•
•the c:aMng up of undergraduate,
adoclltlon ......., the vice presldenta
l« health aclences and IICademlc
affalf8, eomethlng he feels will affect
'undergrade advaM!y;
-thoi declalon nor to build a central
atudent union fiiCIIIty at Amherst;
•the f.:t thai students had to stand
outalde wltltout bua shelters during the
courae ol - . 1 hareh winters before
t h a t = : waa remedied; and

on._

..::.0. '::':::~-:-i~h~:~~~~

thbugll the Student Association Is
willing to pay for It entirely, Including
coming up with the money for an
0

~':~,:: ~l! nc~f ~~

have taken

ClOre

of Insurance and every

other queallon you can think of, but II Is ·
atlll being held up by rad tape and

bur.uc:rlley . .

'WIIIlt - I doing hwa?'
"Maybe we can't do anything about
apllt campu- and a lack of
conatructlon,'' Schwartz granted, but
.lhwa are factors which U/B ltaell can
control that m- a difference In

:\t.'"~·~fenon:on~!r ~~~~!n~' ~

themaelves, "What- am I doing here?
Why don, I IMve?"

FIICUity . . unt8ppad
The SA president aald, too, that the .
U/B admlnlstrlltlon seriously under-

~~"~/;'n:'.!:t:::.::l :~~ f:r~

on the pwt of admlnlatratore that oura
Is •a IKy faculty that do&amp;an't do
anything.• Since being SA president
and ewvtng on a number of commithe haa found this Is not
10. "Our fiiCUity ar:e the lifeblood of this
lnatltutlon, ., untappad potential we
haven't taken advwl!age ol." Too often,
Schwartz auggeelad, decisions are
made without ·the Input 811d knowledge
or fiiCUity.
"This p i - could really fly and earn
the reputation thai II should have, II it
took lllhwltage of ~ reaoun:es

f-. - ·

: S " : u : t = . : ' : . ' * to bloom,"

D~spite Michael Pierce,
Council wouldn't act

-,
pwt of a budget document eent to them
ew!ler. He ecknowtadCied port of

Schwartz's concem. "In ihelrllnchee"
of the admlnlatrlltlon, Kettw aald, there
Is a tendency lor lndtvrduala to avoid
responsibility by "looking at their job

Despite anything Its ~UIIent member
Mlchaet Pierce could-dO ot say (and he
sald plenty with some eloquence), the/
U/.8 Council ...:: alter lengthy debate found Itself unable last Friday to take a
stand opposing a SUNY tuition hike. ,
Instead, Council members voted 5 to
1 to pass as a separate motloo a
statement Pierce origlnaHy wanted
Included In a blast against the raise In
tuition.
lis. amended by Council Member 0..
James Phillips that statement read:
" Be It resolved that this Council,
cognizant of the fact that a proposed

descriptions," and saying that this or
that 'decision Ia beyond their purview.
Too many thlnga are pushed along to
the presldentlal level lor resolution, he
complained.
What kind of ah.,.nl will we have?
Attorney RoQ!Irt Koren, a U/B alumni

~-::s~

=0:,

~~~~:~d':~t

Schwartz and others like him" will have
alter their graduation. Gnsat alumni are
what make a great university, Koran
suggested . . He aald he wonders what
the relationship will be between U/B
and "the Schwartzes" In the future.
"Greduates are spokespersons for the
University," he noted, but what will
students on cainpus today have to say
about us once they have received their
degrees? "It seems," Koren aald, thet
they may be too turned off to participate
In alumni activities; "pertlaps aom&amp;l~"Ptos=~e~a~'ne at the student
Keiter cited studies which show that,
ten years after graduation , students
lend to..Jorget about quality of life at
their alma mater, and ramember only
he quality of Instruction . Schwartz,
though. ''will be surprised II within ten
yearallorget. • Another.student agreed,
"I will always remember what It was like
here. 11
•
•
The President noted, 100, that _
U/B attrition nile Is not as high !IS it Is
at some major mid-western universities
which are being held up as models lor
the kind of student life we should

tr~~~n~~:::~ewnFa:~~~~~nfu,~';'e"'~C:.; well-being of students, and of the fact

l::ft\o~u~,:~.u~~~:s:;';~P~~ B~ar~

of Trustees to undertake without delay
the holding of public hearings at the
State University of ~ York at Buffalo
lor the purposes of receiving repr&amp;aentatlons and evidence concerning
such a proposal."
No one waa confident
_
No one was confident that the motion
- passed almost anticlimactically would have any effect whatsoever on
the Truslees. The Trustees were to meet
in Albany yesterday [February 28],
reportedly lor the purpoae of taking a
stand on tuition.
Their timetable seemed to rule out

anx~;:.·~g~h":[founcil might say or do

would have little Impact, said Chairman
Rober11. Mlllonzl, who was hesitant lor
~t;"aJy~ou~ to go on record about tultlo~

=o~~,:~~~Tisho~~· ~B~~.th~

anr

In
event , the Chairman felt that a
Counci subcommittee shpuld first look
Into the effect lncreaaes In BEOG and
TAP support would have on what

acknowledged.
Split campuses are not unique to
Buffalo, either, the President offered.
Rutgers, lor exainple, has five campuses, some of which are as far as
twelve miles apar1.
Council member George Measer, also
a member of the Daemen College board,
submitted that - U/B students don't
appreciate what they have. Daemen has
practically no facilities, he said - only
one cafeteria, and nothing lor physical
education. "not even a bubble." · ·
The good old days

~~~~~ ~~~~~~~u~~~, ~~e ~trl ~~

Chancellor John Perdue In last
Thursday's Reporter that students from
families eamln·g less than $25,000
':;'~:/r'!c~.::J'~~ ti:Yhl~:ss tuition or be
Unconvinced, Dr. Phillips said there
seemed to be some urgency lor a ''yes
or no, now" on the matter.
"We should consider what position

""'

Chairman Mlllonzl reminisced about
the days When he iOok streetcars to lhe
Main Street Campus lor classes. There
was nothing else there, he said. " But I
remember four of the happiest years of
life, even though we were in motion
al the time. I hope you heve some fun ,

:~Won"&amp;':l.l"llw~':,';~el"!! In~ ~~~~~~

ourselves look foolish?" He acknowledged that It's a " thorny problem"
lor the Trustees, but thai ~~ Is the
Trustees' duty to grapple with It, not the
Council's.
Dr. George L. Collins, Jr., agreed
with Phillips: "II we're going to have any
plausibility at all, we have to make a

mr

'oy;;: h~~eadl~h~~~~~:~'.fr~=.Jlecs

When the Medical School had on!¥ eight
rooms and he had to travel back and
forth by trolley - alao without benefit
of shelters. He aald that, despite
hetdshlpa, •we tumad out .Orne of the
beat doctors In the nation."
Collins Mid Schwwtt had told the
Council what It ought to be doh'lg when
he (Coli Ina) Is not aura the SA prealdent
_._ knows the Council I• doing,
MMy
lnatllutiOna
aganc~
throughout the State ere aiiO demand11\'g a 1an1ar alice of the flacat pie, he
aalcl. "VQ ere doing all we can.• He
quoted a eolleeaue of his who said to
him onere when illaculllng the IIICIIitlea
at Roawell, "Louis P8ateur dldn, work
In a laboratory where Muzak was piped
Into the men'• room. •

'Do-

statement.''

Aklcklntheatomach "'
Pierce noted that U/B Is just
beginning to make headway In Its drive
te lessen the attrition rate. Having a
tuition hike now, he said, would be " Tike
klckl/lg a patient In the stomach alter
open heart surgery."
Shouldn't the Council take some
stand?, he asked . _
Well, said Mlllonzl, perhaps the
Council could' just say that U/B
students are outraged and ':Would like
to be heard" before the Trustees decide
"But we can'ltelllhem to come here, 0 ;
go to Stony Brook.• Pierce wanted the
Council to call fO( hearings at all the
SUNY graduate centers.
M. Robart .Koren suggested the
Council "talk sense, not emotion." It's
probably too late to do anything, he

su~:~:::'nt

Ketter Interjected that' he
suspected the Trustees had hurriedly
.called a meeting lor Wednesday
because of the Legislative Calendar.
They're on record as' favoring a t+Jition
hike, Ketter reminded the Council, if
they get guarantees that the money will
go for · llbrary resources, equipment
replacement, and other s;leclflc purposes. If the Governor Is to amend the
budget request · to Incorporate such
guarantees, he must do so within 30
days of the Initial budget mesaage
(Which was P,eaented on F.eb. 1). That

r~~:rblys~~~t'!:f. f't:et:~re ~;pdenc~.;

remains opposed to ralslnH

SUNY

lul~~lrii~SSa~~:r ~~fUJt~~.rs'sig~·

With
his motion to amend the Pierce
statement calling lor hearings.
• There was only one dissenting vole
- probably because the Council just
wanted to get out, one observer noted
(In response to the way some members'
votes varied widely from their stat&amp;ments during the discussion).
.
'Rocky' reaolutlon 'Iliad;' cenaure 'out
_
ofo~

t~&amp;.".J~I ~~!:f~~ ·~~~t .:::'J%:-'~

tribute to the late Nelson Rockefeller,
and Chairman Mlllonzl ruled "out of

~n';;~ ~h~~n 1~e~~~ur~~u~~

barring a Spectrum reporter from a
meeting of the Senate Exacutlve
Committee.
The censure proposal contended that
the Faculty Senate Is a public body
subject to provisions of the " Sunshine
law."
"This Is not the forum" for such a
determination, Mlllonzl told Pierce,
who Introduced the resolution.
"Go to the Attorney General and
complain," he advised.

Child abuse: a major problem
By lien. . BartMW

Norman aalc:t.
Ms. -Male's organ ization provides a
24-hour hotllne lor parents who C811n01
In 19n, there were 22,000 reported , cope with child ..-lng. Weekly
caaea of child abuse. Nobody knows
meetings are provided lor those who
how many went unreported .
feel they need t~Ml' aaalstance of group
Child abuse, Is, In fiiCt , one of the
seaalona. Parents Anonymous lief a
. success record as a private organlza\'6:~.1m~~:J::m! we;;,~ ~~~B tlon, she aald. They have n-llad to
Educational Opportunity Center (EOC)
report a parent lor child abuaa.
heard last Friday.
Ms. Male - • child abuaa aall""y to
·Speakers were Mr. Lamarr Norman of
occur In lamll~ where "the parents
the Child Protection Services, Erie
~":n~p with their pwents putting them
PIA&gt;IIcA"IIra~tom

1

do.....,....,. .

~n~~~PBJ'=nt ~~~~c~ s~:~.;

"Where do we go from hans?",
Council Member Scori~ asked. "What

Anonymous.
The film, " Fragile: Handle with Cere"
waa shown.lt deals with the mysterious
aide of child abuaa: the parwnts'
attitude toward and reasons lor abu• ~
A mother, not able to live up to the
• social myth of Instantaneous mother/
child love, beet her one-month old
baby. The baby suffered brain damage
and diad at the age of 9 months.
Norman's dlscuaalon of the leoal
aapecta ol cihlld abuaa followed . 'fhe
courts, defining child ebuae In Title VI ,
stele tbat children under the age of 1a
who h... a«loua Injury lnlllctad on
them by m.,.a othw than acctdent ere
• child
alluee - ·
Norman told EOC students thet while
..~ Cltlanl have a reaponatbillty to
• repon abuM or MG~t~Ct. certain

~j~.=ort~':i ~~ :~":c:

= l n g ? Ia there a followup? Or
Mlllonzl aald he conaldera the naports
of Schwartz and othere Who have
add.-.d the CouncN aa almply •
lnfonnllllonaf, They provide baclcgfound
10 .... will hew • belt• Ida. of the
problema." It Ia a w.y to get a hendle on
thlnga, he aa,ld.

!"!. mandatad to
,...,.., PflncWtll, and

. . . . . . . , peop1e

,...,.. lt.
eaiiOOI ntnM, for 8ICIIIIIJI*, can be
fiMd for 1101 reponing _.y - o f chNd

•

......

.....

-

~"~:":: ..... ltaalo

:':::..

~~,.

As~ed about foster horne ClOre aa a
solution, Norman Mid, "the locua Ia
~~ '1fs:~=rt~- Foatw ClOre Is used
Norman the parent who has had
higher ad~catlon aaleaa likely to abuse
or neglect a child becauee that pwent
baa more lntereats and can "escape" to
them when problema arlee with
children. H o - . this Ia not etways
the caae, he added.
The economy plays a par1 In child
abuaa, too. Whlfe abUaa ,and neglact do
oecur In high Income lamlllea, Norman
said more naportad caaea occur In
middle and lower lncomelamil~ .
Mr. Norman has atao ._,alcoholism
and drugs u factors leading to child

abuaa •

• This program. the aeoond In a awlea
of live, waa Pf8P8r*l by Mr. Donald
Po,Chadley, 811 English lecturwat EOC.
Po-Chadley dealgnad the

- ' " ol
the neecla ol atudants
and ....,.. taauea."
lJpcot~~lng pnogrwna will fMture
lecii""*OII battwild women and rape,
Md a dlacueelll!l of aaxual ettltudee by

lectureJ.
meee
._.,."'I_.
"to

• ~·tl... ofplanMCI~thood .

�1,1178

•Students
(lrom-1. col.41

simply concern Itself with how to seleCI
the most qualified studeots. out of a
mass ·of applicants, lnstqcl II must
concentrate Its efforts on how to attract
them.
If the vast majority "of all thoae who ·

:~Ytm~n~~arS::s."?~~

~~

:,
_
point In discussing policies for
eliminating applicants lrom conslderetion.· Rather, It would -.n more
fruitful to ,dlreCI our energies toward
delennlnlng how to flnd better
applicants and towards keeping them
once they enroll," the report concludes.

Steppac~..,p r8Cnlltmant ·

Ratchford emphasizes ·\hat the
committee believes recruitment efforts

~::.,~~'1'~~~o~~~e~W~tt~~ oo~~:U~

how-.

a
found particularly distressing,
Is that no hard data exists -'nst
Which the effeeflveness of recruitment
can be judged. For example, Ratchford
contends, there are no figures to Indicate any relationship bet-n the ·
number of visitations mede by
atrmlsslons counselors and the amount
of enrollees they generate.
The draft report called the current
Adm issions and Records' visitation
budget of $10,000 (In endowment
money) " woefully underfunded:" (That
budget Is being Increased for next year,
the Repot1er has learned.) The report
suggested that perhaps the time Is ripe
for t~e University to either hire a
full-time recruitment coordinator or set
"differential standards for admissions
betwsen programs," ali Idea Ratchford
·
.does not support .

Toxic waste dispos~l
. U.S. can learn from Europe's e~rience
with -regional waste-burning facilities,
U/B engineering conference is told
The once proudly self-reliant U.S. ' Canal clean-up, said lack of long-range
may find Itself dependent on Imports to
monitoring waa the major failure there.
In the future, he said , companies
solve yet another problem: toxic waste
,disposal.
using landfill will have to ask themAn expert In the field told a campus
selves whether or not an area Is remoteenough , whether the 9round Is
conference last Friday that West81:J1
, Europe Is pioneering n - methods of ·
lmpenneabte, and whether Its willing to
- spend money for monitoring and
treatln~ Industrial waste. The U.S. (and
security.

=c",~ ~=""'~-~~. ca~

said.
Thomas Rl'*«, ..-agar of Environmental~ Elementa Corp. In Baltimore, pr8Mnled a alfdl allow of- giant
facllltlea In Auatrta, Germany, Denmark
and Sweden Which . . burning
chemi cal waeta products, rather than
using the lend-1111 method Which has
wreaked perticular havoc here.

cao.wn........... leciiiiiM

In Scandinavia, fllnkef said the law
requires Industries to have toxic waetes
treeted at government-run lacllitlee. He
IJfll(llcted atatea In the U.S. will llkely
get Into the eame business In the next
rew yews. His ftnn salls pollutioncontrol equipment Internationally.
Costs tor the Scandinavian facilities
-&amp;lie around S50 million each, he
noted, eddlng they can be aftorded In
thla country.
Denmarlt, In pertlwlw, has rnede a
profitable bualneoa out of toxic W&amp;lle
dliiiO&amp;ai. Waatea from all o - the email
Milan .,. trwwported to one site for
bumlng et t&amp;mJ*llt.... up to 2,000
dellnaea F. The uceu heel Ia ueed
either by the publicly-owned dltpOsai
oompany for lte own needa or la1ed Into
the municipal dlatrlct heeling aupply,
thua reducing ot/ler energy requln&gt;. . - ..
~ bypnlducta of lncl-atlon

=..=~~==:.~~~~
the IIO'I8fM*II .

WllyllftJienclftlla?
A Love canal ar• homeowner raised
the queatlon of Why landflllo should
._, lie cona~ In the future? Why
not use technology which &amp;I reedy exists •
to dlapoae of *eatll differently, safely?
-n., problem Isn't technological, a
retired chemical engineer ln the
audience resf)QJlded. The problem Is In
persuading the corporate -community ·
that It Is the proper, humane thing to

do.

"I can aay this," he said, because "I'm
retired ," and " no one can fire me. "
Peter Mlllock, coordinator of the
State's task IQrce on hazardous waste,
said a report on dump altee In Erie and
Nlagare counties will be forthcoming
soon, pinpointing the number, locatjon,
/
and-potential risks of such sites.

Faculty lnvolftmant

"fo'::~;.~r~n:, f~~~~~~~~· ~ w~~

The--report, to be discussed at a

e.':.~i~er ~~~nt.e ;;~\e :~~~. 11'.~~~~

against Hooker and/orother companies
charged with toxic dumping .

Joint effort
The Hazardous Waste Management
and Disposal- Seminar was jointly

~,;~~~r..J~r.~~~~~~ 6?H::r~

Credit-Free Programs, and the American Society of Civil Engineers.
Some,
englnMra, sclentlsto and
Industrial officials attended the event,
Which was billed as the first major effort
In the U.S. to consider the possibilities

eo

lorI1~ ~':{h~=::;e~::e~~iAndrew
Middleton, water pollution control
engineer, Koppers Company, Inc.,
Pittsburgh , Who led an open discussion
on research needs; and Kenneth Rubin

1

~~~\': ::~~'l~~~. !:~o fJ~~cu~.:frh'.;

·

" Reavurce, Conservation and Recovery
Act" and related legislation on environmental quality conJrol.
The program was part of the campus
obse&lt;Vance of Engineering Week.

Dental researchers to test
new artificial tooth materialR-ehel• at U/B wlll aoon begin
t•ting surface ratee of a new
artificial tooth material said by Its
manufecturer to be superior to those
now on the market.
.
U/B was selected o - ..-af other
den tel achoola for the th,...y-teet by

k~an&amp;;:,•u~ls~~?~
D~i
reatorati .. dentlatry. The klentlty of the

11ie o.nt8h facUlty Ilea ~ for bell
manufacturer, he edds, muet remain
throu9h ctwgea to u. . ., Rinker aeld.
confidential until after teste are
L8w requ- .U lnduatrlaf weate to lie
- oompleled.
t,_..cl et the ptent, a bulc factor In Ita
Ogle saya aorne 80 petlenta, reqlllrlng
- · he lndlcet.cl.
oomplele denhne, w11o gl.. Informed
11111ar .,.._ a llmflw. regional, -- oon-t. will pll1lolpale In the etudy, ~- WOitlln the U.S.
IWt of aac11 clenllft lilly ,_,.. wiH lie
oompoeed o1 tile rnawnar. The
oiMr portion will be made of llttw
reeln or Pl.lfOIIIIIn ....ntlr .,..._

· •Aitllougll ......... UMd In
dent- IOCIIII. lloth NaiR 8Rd
porgelaln " - 1o1M
Ogle

chwbal*a:

pointe out. ,.... ..,._tend to a ..... ..... poroelaln. But
poroelllft, wlllcll- cnok. -down
gold - - om.,. . . . . ..
....,..
~..~llome
.. their ........
danMw with
....,
oompfaln of
......, 80UIIde made by

•

lhllt.U

.

mouth. Onir the U/1 cMntJMa s-:t~c~­
pattng In the ...., will . . _ wiiiCifl

Either the oy81ern didn't generate It,

rrovldea •

c:Mngae on 100111 aut'- to
~ of a

111111-.Thepho~ ....

nlqua

to .. .... ..

to......_

thel

UMdllr--=-ol
.....
of _
...,.,.
. 111C1
other m•••ura111111a of l i n d - .
Dr. Hlnlld Clnlala, dlllrmln 8Rd

=-~==-~.=.
........
-'Ill ft...,.....,.,.,
.... _ ......
mo.t ......

..:=.=.c. to.:::·:~ the..._.
,.,...,... and .. .... lor Ill&amp; .In tile

='.!i'.:~"/i n~~.:=b.:lf!tlcut~rn:

resin or porcelain.
· · . • Dr. Lane» Ortman, assistant professor of remoVable prosthodontics, says
the surface wear rateo of the dentures .
will be examined e.ery six months
during the three-year teat. In orde&lt; to
precisely evaluate changee In the
surfaces of · the new tooth m81erlal as
as the con-tiona! onea, the
r-.:hers will uae pllotogrwnmatry
Which
three-dlmanalonal
view o the ~- Thla technique utfliZee two camerae 8Rd two projactora
to film dlffenant anOiee of the aame
aurt... By~ one photo
CMI the «**. the dintlete can

wltllln

l::'Jl~e ~~~l:~Ppu:-s~::, oo~

demi'C pertom'linos and retention.

Information need.cl
Even Information needed for the

rr:n~:t.S..o~,:t~"a'.~r~n~rrw~l'c~~

-11

the Admln.lstratlon has been aaylng In
recent months- particularly regarding
the necessity for faculty to _get Involved
In the recruitment process.
•
Perhaps the feCI that U/B's engineerIng faculty members play an 8Cflve role
In recruitment has some bearing on the '
result that FEAS attrectselarJie number
of engineering ma]ors .compared to the
national average.
&amp;leo,
On the other hand, U/B's Arts and
Letters faculty attracte fewer 81ud.nts
than the n81fonal - -- Ratchford
wonders whether thlo could -'b!Y'IIe
the result 'of a Sl{btie or uilcon.cfoua
bfas artlwlat&amp;G by llllmfaaion co..,..,_
ora or contained In the recruitment
·policy, or -her some bias exists
against certain academic programs
pere. Again, tha decrease In AlL
students " peraflels national !ninde,"
bu t at U/B Ills " more pronounced," the
report notes.
Finally, Ratchford says (and the
report emphasizes) that little lnfO{Ill•
tion Is available regarding U/B stuaents
onoe they enter the Unl..ralty. For
example, no hard data exists on the
char8Cferlstlcs of otudent drop-outs;

.:.~,....

to . . . . . . . . . . . .
-.
"Riillllaa!!l ....._ II fiiOI&amp;IIiry on
of_.,- - ~-

Ortman . . . . . ~"" .........
aupportlng .... bone lllrllla..

::~chf1~ ~~ &lt;fnl~~ In.:::.:
lmpoulble to retlleve. For ..__,
1978 freallmen could not be oomi*JICI
to regulw admfaalana crtterte " ' - the
data was not available. lnateed, they
were ranked' only by high ectloof

.-agea .

.

RatchfO&lt;d auggeata that the Un'-·
sliy's n- Olfloe of . fnetftutlelnaf '--.

R - allou~ ' Involved In
~'l:n~ ret
ng IUch •Uibla
The committee will lniM _ .
"*"'-'lona and IUbmlt Ita

"'::'o:::r."

to~s.:===::::.. l'nlfM.

~ r.o:::-s.: '::-~.::
=:r.::-to

In addition
Donald ~. aeaoclelia viae ..,....
dent for ........ -='-·· 8Rd Adm. .
llone 8Rd Aeoorda Director Rlcllanl
o.-uk . . . bean ~ .. - -

Council notice

~-

...............................
..................
...
_...,.......,
a,........__ ':\·,:-.:;
n. c....lel . . ~ wllllolcl
c....~

n. ........................ ..

�4

A 40-year University associate
has become a closer neighbor

2 panels
working on
Springer plan

/

A community ewvtce ~~ge~~ey which
hao ~ tied to U/8 throUghout rnoet

By Mercy Canoll
Ropotlerlno.n

:C:.:c""J:n:.'~.

With the promlse of "a minimum of
Inconvenience and a maximum of
efficiency," the Introduction of the
Springer Report racommenCiatlons Into
the academic 1'- of U/B students and
faculty Is sat forth is September.
Two advisory committees have been
worl&lt;lng feverishly In preparation for
Implementation: the DUE Curriculum
Committee, chaired by Undergraduate
Dean John Paredotto, and the Springer
Implementation Steering Committee
{SIS), chaired by Associate DUE Dean
WalterKunz.
Essentially, the Curriculum Committee Ia dealing with the academic
aspects of the Springer Implementation, trying to lnsure·that the 'changes
required py the program are academ·
featly sound and t-Ibia. The Commit·
tee plans to review what each
department Intends to do next Fall. It Is
currently ravletrlng those areas In
departments where course credits still
differ from the Carnegie system of
contact hour-&lt;:redlt hour equivalency.
The Commlttaei made up of sox
•students, six faculty and Peradotto, Is
also wor1&lt;1ng on the various "grandlather clauses" necessary to a smooth
·
transition.

has rwcently
1be Child .,d
Psychiatric
CliniC, Inc., has moo.! to the Un1Yel81ty
"'-byt.-18n Church complex (at Main
IIIII Nlaglra Falla BouleYard),
~~~ usad by the /8

:::fo1-'

occutftr

1be cliniC, C&lt;Hunded by the United'

=

=ob!::::O =~~'{ ~~[:

~f~ ~~~~h~ /

~. who

holdl cliniCal appoint·
both psychology and
111 UfB, Is Ito axecutl"'
diNctor. o..td Hallowttz, with cllnlc&amp;l
-..olntmenta In social wort&lt; and
~laY. laeaaoclatadlrector.

· ftWIIa

In

..,a.IGY

AIJ7I-

Both st._. that the .,.cy has been
IIIII oohtlnueo to be a valuable clinical
IWOUrce In the education of U/B
studenta. It hal ~ the alta of a
on.yew training prOOfM! f()( Interns

11om the .~~::.1Ca11SW.d!J~~ p~d
~from the School of Medicine
spent olx·WMk pavchlatrlc rotationa Ill the t.clllty; resfdanta In both
_ . , paychloltry ioOd child psychiatry
,..._dutytl-.
s...at social wort&lt; greduate studania taka a field wort&lt; pr.ctlcum at the
clinic y -. Six of them ara now
spending 21 houra a week wort&lt;I ng as •
part ollhe staff.
.
That ataff extends to 22 full and
part-time profeaslonalo and eight
trainees. las1 y-. they served some
UOO lamlllao. About 30 per. cant of
cues are merred by physicians;
another 30 per oent by schools; ahd 10
per cent by courts and mental health
agancleo. The remaining 30 p&lt;ir cant of
.-tllants are oetl·refarra.lo.
.
Staff are deployed part-time In 18
locations - alght In the city and 10 In
the county - ali part of the overall
community mental health 'Pparatus.
The Un'-alty location Is a setting for

=~h =."'~an~~ra ~~~In~';:

...... cllenge
Former'ly known as the Psychiatric
Clinic, Inc., the agency chan~ Its

=o: -~~p~~~~~~~ly
~~~
1'f

Loglatlcallmpllcatlona
1'he S.I.S . committee deals with what
Kunz calls "the logistical Implications
In family structure because of separa·
lion, divorce, severe Illness or death;
running away from home; trouble wi th
pollee or courts; emotional upsets on
top of physical problems; lack of self·
confidence; feelings of being alone and
mlsuntlerstood; and lack of direction.

~~e ~~"!b='~• ~afun~~~~f':,~

parental personality problem . Older
· adolescents can be referred without the
entire family being Involved .
The goals of the therapy process are
t~lld ()( adolescent learn to:
cope and adjust lo the world more
elfec11vel y; develop feell_ngs of sei f·
worth ; relate to peers and Important
adults mora approprt~ely; maximize
the usa of Intellectual, physical and
personal potential ; and become free of
debllllatlng anxieties and.l;2nfll.cts.

~:: lt~~~ponant

thoee 111&gt; to age
The clinic sees
.clulta as welt, but 1 - are parents ()(
others clooety Involved In a child's or an
edoleecent'a problems.
tqlfowltz notea that the agency

tool In therapy.
Individual clinic offices are fitted out
with a variety of toys for younger clients
to use when seeing therapists. There Is

uniQue; otaff cllooae from a vWiety of

equipment. A gym facility Is available
lor group competitive sports.

~e:Of.~~:ft~a =1Pt:/e.~~ ~~~

:=':;:~:~:,~~~~= 1~

~- modes to dewlop a~o
"fit" for -=!1 Individual's needs

,~.:.crr~~r=~~~~~~~al:..:r.d

Fees are BSMSsad according to whet
each family oan affoiil; no one is
rafusad S«Vlce loran Inability to pay .
The cffnlc Is iCCredlted by the
American Association of Psychiatric
Services for Children, and Is a member

clinic wUI ....,. a to
montapproprt... agency If II determines that
Ia lha beet eourae of action. 'We don't
build ,.... ~.- tqlfowftz em-

,.__.

Clinic "*-PPata prowlde treatment
..,....... (for tha Individual,

~:

.:::;:;.r ~=~:

~lilachi':·

adoleaoant Qft&gt;UP
~li u..py tor ~;

edlalloft. \..~~~
IliaCI tla llroadelwd to lrwoiYa other
~

hwl008llol• IIIII ., ex·

:-...:::=:..r.::-~~
11U1!_11a11e11 or , . _ . . br ~ at
,.. •••• ':::::::".... -the,....

lllllool...:r.-:: _,

tor1111111

-

=-.
.............
. .... .:..-::

=

-=-::

• -..utt...ta
oiMr organ&amp;

lea.....,ol.-.nt, achool

A -.:11

oommlttee .chaired

by

~:~J,='=:n=~· :~~~~

..

In Identifying c...dldatee from among

the ragut. UnW..Ity faculty for the
poaltlon of maatw al Clifford Furnas

Collage, lila olcieet residential unit In
the~~~~~·

eyatem .

By providing a llvlng-'-nlng an-

vtronn.lt In which atlldents can
Ul*ld their Of the Inter·
actlona among v.toua dlaclpllnes, the

Collage ~~~temPt• to bridge the gap

_..no
........,...,
ell-..

the

Cf'C

11111 lhe
11101 Uplr.o:nl I~

ac~Mttat

1be ll*nblnlllp of lha

eewch

- " ' - I!Mif, Iller .-y, retlecta thla
,..,....... ,..... In aeeklng the
Uftlly ~ d~ dt.ctptlnea:

OCMIMII,...._•

lrfaddllion to ltlil
Md a
tlllnl ltudlnl ~atlft, H-.y

Elbnlclty conference

A--on~~

-c.-·

- . , Elllnlolty In the u.s. Mel
... bllllld .....,, Mald!A,. 3 p.m.
Ill . . IJIIoldl!wi ,_., Norton
(MIIwM).
br lha UlnlniM

..:.::: &amp;-.:---'

~~~r:JJ~t~S:,:'~~~o:.;s~~s ~=~~w~rt&lt;~:r~~

of the Erie County Children's Mental
Health Consortium , an advocacy group
dedicated to securing funding and
services.
" Youngsters don't have votes,"
· Hallowltz not es, so the legi slative "
process requires a nudge II their needs
are to get an y attention at all In the
often political ly-dominated funding
arena. He notes with some satisfaction
that Rosalyn Carter has become a
champion of mental health funding.

A

'8oocl mat!;h·up'

demand , bus scheduling, and the need
lor larger classroom space.
Publications are belnp prepared lor
pre-registration In Aprl by DUE and
Kunz: booklets 6utllnlng new rules and
regulations and mimeographed mater·

~~~an~:~crl,~~~~lndhe an~h~P:S~ro~:::

demand adjustments will be made alter
explained Kunz, "as
well as the number of sections
necessary for certain courses. We're
trying to get as much stuff done by pn&gt;-

~e-rag l stratlon, "

•

as rye~otg~~.;ie'fr,"ri,~~tl~w ~~~~~~
agency. While the clini c occupies a
suite of remodeled offices on the third
floor of the Church's educational wing,
It also "shares" other spaces meeting rooms, the gymnasium - with
the church. This way, he says, "we are
not spending our limited resources lor
Jarge space' that are not constantly In
usa by us." The presence of the
gymnealum on the prllmlsas moreover
puts ar. tllld to the necessity (and
problerns) of having to transport
children !o facilities ell over the city.
Besides, he sala, ·~his building has a
proud history an!l -.: contrnulng record
of human seryictls." Gr.,ups such as AA
meet there In addlt on to church
activities,
·
And, both Goldber&lt;j and Hallowltz
!18y, ,being_closer tc !!1{1 Unl-slty Is a
,
decided plus.
"It's a good match-up," says
·
Goldberg In summary.

Clifford Furnas Coll~e
Is seeking a master

f!!!.... ~·

p;ol II c -~~~~~ lnlllltutlona who have
~ lmrlliGt on a - ·
1be allnlc , . _ . a hloltory of

'

/

Reiss; the· committee Includes Or.
Warren Barbour, associate professor
and director of the ne~: Anthropology
Museum; Dr. Lyle B. Borst, professor of
physics and astronomy; Dr. Diane
Jatobs, associate professor of microbiology; and an ex-&lt;&gt;fflclo member,
Carmelo A. Privitera. prdfassor of
biology, Whose resignation as master Is
ellec11va at the end of the currant
_,
semester.
Acccirdlna to the College charter, themaster of Clifford Furnas College Is
responsible tor all actlvttlaa of the unot,
Including courae and faculty devalop.
merot, naaldentlal life, COQperllllva
v-..lura8 on till. part of -ltudehta Md
Fetlowa of the Coltaga, and InteractiOn
with olber ~ both wllbfr., anc1
Oldalde tha
dutlea ... oft~
u perFof a
full ac.demlc toed, through
..........Ume ~ta with .a
ragular unlveratty

mast.,.•

OOI:==..:x-:-Juch

=.:."We

1be _ . . . .-.Jnatlona
. ·- - -br
- Mardi
both
;or.":iollllfllld

au. ....., or .11m
Hulma, cJon.~~f)ffloa.

1 , diMaMd to

....

=...~ ~

.;;ar

Complex,

•

r~~a~~fJe~5f~~~X~demic Affairs
~::,~~;~~~nat~g0;'ft1,B~~~':f:~~~~

(VIce President" lor Health Sciences),
provide "a
feels the committees
variety of perspectives on the manage.
ment of problems that arise."

will

Not averv-•i pleesad
Not everyone Is pleasad with the

~~~en'cl'atlg'fse~l~ntlat\~A~~~

to Student Association President K~
Schwartz . a suit is being Initiated
against UfB by ihe S.A. on grounds

~~~~~ee~~~~~~~y ~~~m~:-~~';Pn~':r

Report In an abltrary and capricious
manner."

a

=.~J'~~~~~a~·~,;.~r.'ut'!:,~';h f~

terms of requirements are quite
dynamic; requirements change as
educators determine what Is best f()(
students."
Not so, says Schwartz. ''Two
lllemanta are - t l a l hare . .'. students
~· to be given enough time to adjust
t!)elr schadulee to the changes; and
When changes do occur et other

:::'.!k:nr:· 1nt~e .,::.mr.:c,~~r,~, ~

conscientious manner, with a more
sensitive attitude towards the student

body."
Catalog makee n o . . , _
A new undargr6duate CQIIrM catalog
• Is slated to appear next month, with
disclaimers but no ciMr Information on

=~s= ~=~~'::

=-=.:

load Impression, (that catalOG a'-1 might hava aold a faiN set of QC!Oda.
Jr. a phllosophlcel debate." Bunn
shanla the notion that " Many cetatoof
. . aublect to ·change. Student&amp; . .
being gfv-.. .a much advance wamlnq
as poaalble to Insure less oonlualon."
All ~Ilona of the commit·
t-will be forwarded to Drs. Bunn and
Pannlll. An agiMIOble plan of action will
then be brought before tha Academic
c.tolnet tor futther a()(Utlnft and

chanrJ::,

If

-=-='~ ~~YThe ~~~

I:*'
NCOI1ImlllodMiona. whiCh ara In the
form of ~ c t - propoaals.

!Wf~ e.lt toBunn Md P.,nlll.
., -~~~be loepplfy ellocl!ad If all the
01w1Qee _.. flnaHIM and .,nouncecl
br ar.tw!latNIIOn." muMCI Schwartz,
•Millwlnett.e .-y thla Unl..,.lty runa."

�Flexible
That's what we'll be in implementing
Springer' Rep&lt;?rt next fall.' Ketter s~ys;
problems would be involved at any tif!le
The University . will "bend ~ver
backwards to accommodate problems"
students may face as the result of
Implementing credit hour-contact hour
equivalency In classes this tall
President Robert L Ketter told the U/B
Council Friday.
Implementation of the Springer
Report will additionally be accomPMied by " grandfather clauses" to·
~~~.:e:,hose alnsady enrolled , Ketter

seemed to benefit faculty workload and
not students, Ketter rBCflled.

The· President responded to two •
specific concerns raised by critics.
First, he said, reducing many courses
to three credit hours does not marl&lt; the
end of any so-called "four-course" load
Studies show, the President said, thei
the •-age loed Is 20 hours, not 18.
Students already take five courses. In
fact, he noted, aome felt they could
hendle as · many as 44 and ~ hours
before a registration limit of 21 credit
hours was lmpoeed a r- years ago.
That m~l!"um Is currently 27 hours.

The Dearing memorandum
DOB's objactlons continued through
1976, wheo the Trustees ordered a
SUNY-wide study of the situation
(which was not limited to U/B) . The
resulting "Dearing memorandum" Issued by the SUNY Yice chancellor for
academic affairs called on SUNY units
to "cease and desist:" U/B has spent •
since 1977 galling Itself In a position to
do this, Ketter reported.

De=~~~~as ~eopt~a~e de~~~~~~7
· semester hour" which says one
semester hour of credit Is to be granted
for "at least 15 hours of 50 minutes each
of Instruction and at least 30 hours of
supplemental assignments." A semester hour of credit ..may be granted- for

:=,v;:rmwlh's?s~lo1nerh~foapfl~prdstu~cav~tllooonn'. ft.~ ~ra~~

-1·xes compu-t er s '
She 1
u,s e.d .t 0 wo.r k f or IBM .
-

.

sh~~~~~f~~~·~~~~~~':v~~:,;

academic lnteleSts, .
'
Com
Edo
wouldn't touch.
Computer technolovy _,,..
Fecutty loed Ia •aener-•
Ketter noted that he decldiod on
Dressed In denims, she yanks the
Ironically, Gangl developed a COurM
Seoond, the President Indicated
September lmr,lementatlon of contactcrown jewel of technolovy from Its
for . Women's Studies on computer
lowwing credit hours (and ttiu~
secure station near the wall , removes
technology, built was cancelled due to
credit equlvs ene(. (with the added
requiring more courses) doesn't Involve
feature of protection for students
Its protective shell and starts to work o
lack of enrollment. Initially, many
any necessity wliataoever lor lncnoaoed - alnsady enrolled) on advice' of the vice
.FCJr lack of a better descriptive, Rayna
students hed told her they were excited
l numbers of faculty. "The teaching loed
presidents for health sciences and
.-illanglls a computer repair peraon. The
about the course, but one by one they •
at this Institution," he said, "Is one of
academic affairs, the DUE dean , and t~ O'niverslty Directory calls her/ a
decided against taking it. Gan!ll said
the most generous In the country."
Faculty Senate Executive Committee. • programmer analyst with University
she would gat excuses like "I m not •
Most faculty teach only one or two
He suggested there would be problems
Computing Services . She Is . also a
good In math," or ''I'm scared of taking
courses per-semester, or a-maximum of
When.- the changeover Is Instituted,
"llrjgulst" of sorts, considering she can
tne course." Even though one repeatedthree per year, he said.
" speak" the computer's language - six told tile students she, too, was
that walling another year wouldn't
"I can buy the argument that we'll
help.
•
of them, anyway - and knows the Ins
dumb In math'', and that they could
need more buslflg and bett.er distribuand outs of programming ani!! operahandle tne work, th&lt;iy just refused to.
tion of library reaources," Ketter told
lion.
.
believe lh~ hed the necessary ability to
The Budget
·
Mlchael Pierce, student representative
0
On another topic, Ketter told the
as
Stall
to the Council, "but not the argument
Council that the Executive Budgat
that we'll need added faculty."
proposal spreads maintenance reKetler reviewed the history of the
sources - th inner, and again defers
_where she had orrglnally Intended to
offering It as a PSS workshop this
so-called four course loed and the State
ll8C4!.Ssary
equipment
replacement
Division Qf the Budget's opposition to
enter the communications field, preferSprln1t,funds.
it.
The President said "we still don't
ably journalism. But the Marines had a
re~~gcnln~0.:"e;.~~3f\:,:,'::'r~g;~=
The system of lour credits r~~ther than
know" whkt formula DOB used In Its
~~~~~~~~
;:'~,e,f~~J,':!,
h~h,:,r:
lions
by doing graduate work In Media
three lor COUI'MS which meet three
decision to cut the budget by $218,000
Studies. She flea wery Intention of one
plans and .sent her, along wit~ eight
Iimas weekly was Instituted In 1987-e8,
to offset what It called " too rich" a
other women, to electronics school.
day trading In her screwdriYw - for a
he said . A number ,Of units added
distribution of faculty across the ·
..-81 ranks. "We don't know what
On• of low to graduate
to
·
Institutions we were compared with,"
went from three to Jour flOurs with no
One of only four women from her
-JII.
Ketter said,_ but they weren 't the ones
class to graduate trom the 15-month
which U/10 had suggested earlier
course, Gangl became a communica(Reporter, November 18).
tions engln - specializing In radio
Arts and Letters and Social Sciences, In
technology. During her stretch In the
particular, had failed to " enrich" course
service she repelred and · maintained
content.
cut or If there'll be more slashing on the
radio equipment and also taught how to
DOB In 1971 conte~_!ld that the move
same basis In years to come.
use II.
The Baldy Advlaory Committee ' wtu
After leaving the Marines, she
award $2500 .-rch fellowshlpe lor ·
continued her education, first at PSI
the summer of 197Q In Law and Social
(now ATC) - a local buslneas school
Polley.
- and then at U/B. An energetic
Baldy Summer R-.:h Fellowahlpe
woman , Gangl has always worked a
ere
available to lull-time U/8~
40-hour week while carrying a full
and staff In support of
academic load.
and Paul Avila • Mayer, creators,
activities In the g-.1 anaa of Law and .
1
Social Polley for a coniiiCUII..
~~=\~ .Food~~.~,,~~.:
tWo-month period , dUtlng whlcll the
she was the only female who did
(Shloben) gr.''Ryan's Hope;" and Robert
fellow will devote lull time to the
computer repairs "this side of the
l&gt;riscoll , president and chief executive
research project. (No ern~.
1
officer, Sklbbereen Productions, Ltd.,
other stipend, or salary aupport for
creators of an Ill-fated Canadian soap,
other purposes or from other aouroee Ia
regular repelra, and pntYentl .. · malnpenmltted during thlatlme.)
;:.~~·" which mtoY yet be
The r-ei! fellowahlpa . . InFriday afternoon, "W"-f the Critics
tended to support ln-tlgMiana of: lew
fhctures, Bethlehem Steel, the . Ford
and Viewers Say About What They
or legal ln.tltutlona In their eoc1e1
Plant
and
the
WorthingtonStamping
See," will be the focus of a group
context; the Impact ot llllle!ll(e)
Corporation. The systems, by the way,
conalatlng of Emanuela Soares, authbr
.of society upon lew or ' lePI
were much larger than the -mlnlof TMSoep Opera Sooi&lt;.Wid an editor,
Institution.; the Impact ol ..,
computera and termlnala currently
Crown Publjshlng Co.; Jon-"'lchael
(Including a particular law) or lege!
Reed, syndicated columnlat ("The Soap
doctors.
'
lnstllutlo118 upon aome ~e) ol
Report:?; __ Richard Flelaber, difector,
society, put, ~t. or~.
U/8 ct.dlt·F- "'--"'•· and two
Special consideration will be
to
othens yet to-ile nemeof.
~ which Ia likely to
Into
Tha con'-'ca will be held at
wxterniiiiJ luoo.llle' pnljeote~ enWI
~ne Cornell Theatre and In the
ecele lnterdlaclpllfWY
1101
,_Keeler Room, Ellloott. The - . t le
fundeble from oiiiW eouroee. 8IICI to
being funded by· the Convwutlona In
- a t propoule from JUnlorleculty.
the Dlaclpll... PnlgrMI.
Applloetlone ~ lnc:luc-.: 1. •
For more lnfonn.llan,. contact Dr.
cllecriJI(Ian of the r..a11 llfiiiiMid:
l815 Bloldy Hall.
InCluding mellloclology 10 be Ullid Mil,

!l

Hao~,:~.; a~:\y~~~nfs'~~~~
~;~s~~,s,~z. ~~:: ~~~~~ :';;:,~

~~g ':::~v~'!.S::~n!ri~~=-~

:;:'~':"u:~ \:t~~rer:~ute:.~~
~~~y =:s:\~· t~:'i:;~~1~~edth~

un~~~~~~}":'t.~"'l&gt;~~~~~slonal
:=:e;~J!""an~~~~.a~':l:~l :'~~~~~~

Baldy fellowship
applications due

~·;rn~r:. \~~~'!..~~:~~;~ ~~~~~~

Campus conferenc~ will look
at the television soap opera

.

woS.:.::ro~:~npoi~~~~!:."::/ li&amp;~":

~~!sl~ /:r.'i~u~l1:!~ S.,~:C:1.r0::;

~r-G~:~sco;:;g;::~~l~e:'~:u~';::

· c..a,..

.._~.a...._.

of tile

"~to be leeted. plue oOmll*ll
an the rellllciMIIIp 10 ......., ....,.

=-=

~~-=:=..~t!:

n
lloiMI PGIICJ, the
lor
l..a.ll.nllna.1/8 the 1 1 1 - v
11111n

or

wt•

IN _ . , 8IICI
o.rtaa~um
oftllii llllf!Pnt.

a. •

~ lllould be eulllnlttad 10:

==·
..::: ,r:=..t..:-:.=
Aeelillnt Yloe .......... WIIM H.
a.-.
_... ...........ldy
OolnntMe, 114 Cnlftl ~•

llelllelleAprlll.

�llordi1 , 1870

Robinson can't face
returning to UIB

· Arespons~
Peradotto 'welcomes' Springer letter,
responds to those parts which merit
public disc~ssion,- ignores the 'digs'
e.or:
There - certain crtllcal Issues the
r..alutton of whjph ehape the life of
IIIII unherslty. frequently without the
.....,_. pul)llc diacuUion or -te.
lil)i ballel thai !hills hlnnfuf makes me
w.1come tha kind of latter ...t by Bob
~
{,!lilpcw1w 2/'l2/79), and
prample me to NlpDf1d to thoee pert&amp;
ol It Whlc:tl
public d18cuaslon
would haw been graat but
UIMI
fwl to respond to fhe digs,
Wh
- wholly out of ctw.:ter, and
which I taa • ., fndaX of Bob's own
deeD cl..amfort more than of hie desire
to lniHct It on olhera).
A llmpll point flrat. Springer
mentions my 1"'-1 "to rudely tum away
~with problema• ral8led to the
lmpiMMntalion of the Springer Report.
He II m.n111a~ertlcle In the .
~ (1/:111
In which 1 am
quoted aa18)'111g:
In the fall , .Myon&amp;
_........,.
andcomes
.to my office with It they will gel two

(=

"*"

~ Anal~on rnon&lt;H)'IIablea

lor 1ft* lnllllilae.•
When, In tha pat, he hal found not
to hll llldng a quotation of mine In the

c:-.:,":.
~uf. ecl..;;llr!tlo": ':
Thla
he
not. am

~-

dlil
I
..ry for that..._,.. what I actually
ulcf, to a _ . whole pencil waa
_ , elower tiWI my epeech, was: "If,
In . the t.ll, pt0p011«1f1 of early
,,.,.,.,.,~
encounter massive
~ ale." Tba. I admit, Ia Still rude,
but II II a Nllerlaa -..mtended for
atudenla, tha poCentlal victims of.
lndallbarata Implementation .

...,..

lima

.......,........,_.
t,_

that laed1 me to the next point: my
llitter In
Sp«trum (21111/79)
!WpOndfng to tha charge of the two
atudant ...,_,gttves on the General
~kin CommfHee that my argument

::=-.::a~an:.':-"~~

Student ~atlvea 011. IUCII cornmilt- ~ a l'llpOneiblllty to the
conatll111110y that voted them Into
• offloa. By going public In the &amp;p.cuum
they wwe -Aotllying that conatltuency
thai on the laue In q~tton they hed
failed tlwough no WM\ of efforts on
their~ · and thai I was the cause of
There wu nothing· wrong

:::. ::.re.

What prompted my rMpOnll, how,
-·
lmpNN!on
created,
a-tho8atha
wllo mlaht
not b e
- . of

the cornmlttaa'a lllllonal and clamocrllllc IMOD8dlna. !hall -alllng
form of -'tn»l ~ the right
of 1111-..lon equiiiJ aNNe~ by all
.--..olthe_...., and thai my

=

:-'~~w~
,_..C:l!..tc:l
_......my
duty

•• ........,..,.....,_the
ol..,..
.......... I IIIIo

Irony
In .......... . . _ ,
........ ltiidy • "PPnnaallaa," and my

. . . . . . . oOIIaagUe to -

=="'-=-'·~lon

..........................
=-="'= ••
~

tha
of

=::.......::-.......~~
loll

tha

8111 .,.. • ...._, IIIIIM In onJar
. . . . . . . . . . . . ln . . . . . . .

a:::

~.:

a..::; ::.. . ..'='=

~-­

EDITOR'S NOTE: Dr. Lit .... Roblnaon,
aWomen'1
"'""""Studlel
IM:ulty
-the
Progrwn
who In
holdl
a
_ _ . repatatiOn .. "the - t

.....-.. '-'"Ill llterery and IOCial
critic writing •...,•• hal .reelgned . .Dr.
Clwl• Kelt, ~ ~ itnd
of assault In the committee. He would
8CIIng chairman of~ Studies,
then have seen how strong an advocate
C&lt;llll,_ted that "We lhl'*· tha
of the sciences I could become. let me
Unl. . .lty II lo.lng of Its .ary tlilt
.go on record for his sake: I could have
tuehlr-IIC!Ioleq . •.. We - · of course,
lived with a negative vote on foreign
botb uddaMd and engry that . . - ·
languages; a \!Pte to exclude natural
loelngalaadlng 8Cholar, poet and crtllc
sciences from ·general education would
at the v.y IIKIIMIII when our Ph.D.
have led to my immediate resignation
propoul .. finally IIIDIIng bward
from the committee.
IIQIIn." Batter than 1111ythlng ..... Prof.
But the !leepeat difference between
llobln1011'1 rwalgMIIon latter 1e111 the
Bob Springer and myself Ia, as I reed • etory of why lha 11-laewlng and offeq
hlm, o - the nature of general
tw-tontha-of
education . Hellllr:,: 'Whet Ia studied at ,_Women'IS\ud... lwe.
those arguments?
I wlsfi now In retrospect that the

sciences had come under the same kind

V~:"".:7,~letla::.~.\:!r,~ t~

:::
process. • I have no problem with that

ao fer a ft goes. But my letter to Joe

Alutto had . to do wJth dl..:/pl/nas,
dlllia/ons, and major

departtnMttal

=r~~!'fJ..ng:.=,s;::.:r:':m
produce or foster a// the traits of

Intellect that constllu
t I called In
my letter to Alutto ti'Mi
and
perspectives that mark the cultivated

"vi-•

=·

m~t ~'::m~~~~el~f t~w~~

and Integrated life," then our dlsag..ment Ia profound, for, among other

~~':~~~s~~~~.!.ol'cih~"'t,n::l

range.
Whet are the "traltil of Intellect"

t.:IC::e S~!f:
17.ograms and

=~ld;! 'r;;:.za"~~
dlsclr,:lnes rn the

t~verawl:fcit =~~~~ 'j.~t~"~t ~l

those traits? Does he find some of
those dlaclpllnes lnetllllng and cherish- Ing more ol his "ttal)s of fntellect" than
others?
.
There hal to be a hlerarclly of prlorftlaa
If he does, then he shares my view
that those very disciplines deserve

:.!''ldk~~r.:;:e;e~;::,~· ~~:~·~~

minds. the criteria of evaluation:
5.J&gt;rlnaer's ''traits of Intellect" or my
"whofe and Integrated life." For, make
no mistake about It, If we do not
eatabillh a hierarchy of priorities
.ccordlng to theee criteria, pride of
place and rank will . be establflhed by
criteria we both egree are leas worthy:
blind edh....:e to heed counts, to the

~ftl':l'..~~~ of:~:"':~::,.~· ~~

ed=~,:'~=~~~~~s~ly

- dlecounted, but unleea we u educators·
continue to offer a definition of the
Unl. . .lty, Informed by principle ~her
thM expediency. .nd llhapad by
continued Cllelogue of the ~I kind,
tha Un...,..ty will be defined for
ua by 1onlea over which we haw little

"*'

control.
II II II not the IOle of a " Uni_.fiYwtde efflcer'' to argue from principle
llli:e thte, to 11eoom1 8dYocate for
......._ of ediiCIIllc)M _..,. COIM8
liMier
whether It hloppene, now
mel ~n. to colnc:lcla with hla own of cufttv.tton or not,
T haw been
ml8lnfomled 11110011 the Job. Springer, 1
hape, doea not - . t e lollolomlzed
. . , , Mltlough, coma to lhl'* of n,

-11.

"*'

one

IUDh
a~:_.
cllllnct
. Ilia - . a COUld
not poMIIIIy be
•

_.....~.~

A--..VIoel'la/OeM, DUE

Prol. et.1al Kelt, Acdlll Dhctor
Progmn In Amartcan Sbldlaa

o.« et.1al:

.

.sJ~~~~~~n~..'"f:'.e~"3...'*/"~

nsaiOnlng with no~ job In JlfOSpecl Ia a f)III8Suni .of just how grave I believe
the situation to be, and 1 know you will
nsapect my naasons for this conclusion.
' In Ironic Jokas about American
Studies, 1used to quote what the Queen .
said to Allee: It takes all the rvnnlng
you can do to stay In the same place.
All the runnll'lgi could dv lor five yMnl,
Charlie all the physical and
emotional energy, lmeglnation, brains,
and daring I coold muster - and the
Program Is not even In the asme place,
but haa lost ground. You are the fifth
head' of the.fwgram since r·have been
on the faculty, becauae we could never
get a budget line tor a Director from
off-campus and other ·~.culty positions
were cut.
Closer to my own concerns, the
responslbiiHies In the women's studies
segment of American Studies, as well
as ln the College, grew wltll the quality
and strength of our offerings. Yet we
had to struggle to replace the two of us
currently on leave and we have
consistently been refused additional
faculty In women's studies.
And then there Is the Ph.D. 1 was put
on 1he committee planning the
American Studies doctorate In my first

.i::'po~~~~ft~Y f~ ~~~is/d!o:a,u~~~
of our existing program end our
proposed Ph.D. Sitting on the Arts and
_Let-ters Divisional Committee and the

Graduate School Executive Committee
I have since read a great many
evaluations of graduate programs.
Never have I seen. one as un~l ntlng in
l~a praise as ours was; never have 1 seen
a department actually penalized tor
earning such praise. The Ph.D.
proposal went nowhere and In 1976
while 1 was Director of Gradual~
Studies, we had to struggle to· keep the
M.A. program alive. 1 understand that

-~a~et!'~":,~ ~~a~ ~~em~d"on-thf~
Issue, but It comes- If It comes - too
late to make my own ertorts seem at all
proportionate to the nsault.
What 1 am trying to say Is that 1
believe that U/B haa tha best women 's
studies and American studies programs
anywhtlffl, and that I cannot remain part
of them because keeping them alive,
though slowly choking, requires an
effori" that 1can no longer make If 1also
- . t to write my books, work in my
community, and w~ch my child grow
u~
.
In addition to the specific problems

~.:[,!,~,!!'~~':f.:.~~~:'::

one

lines

U/B. Toglveonlyaf-examples: I was
hlrad on
of (our
nsaerved for
women f.culty and administered

~ua~~t='~· 'i::m"'o~~~~ '~;
e-

Women. Not even thla token number ol
'POstS haa
been nsaervad again, and
1hare Ia no longer a special commlflee

or

office

~ tor

women's

concerns.

Moreo-. I came to Ut B from MIT so
that I could te.ch women's studies In a
feminist environment. The very small
• number of c t - kept for women onl y
were eliminated . by the University,

=~~lo~~r =Pn '::l'.':~· s~~~; a~g

one was even tnttlfflatad In our legal,

moral, or educsllonal arguments.
Finally (on my.llst of exampres, that is,
not on my possible flat), when I came to
U/B, the University sheltered a fine
parent-controlled daycere center for
preschoolers from babyhood on.
Although I was chlfdleea then, I was
pleased about this as a symbol of the
campus climate for women . Now I am a
mother, myself, and the daycere center
haa long since been closed by the
Administration. ·
I wlsh you and my other coll~ues

~og":~~"/ci'uu\"!':'~g:; ~~v~ ~~

continued supporfand affection .
Slncefely yours ,
-LHIIan S. Robinson
Aasoc:late Professor

Save those Pannilt buttons,
~Spectrum's' Rosen recommends
but none of thle wtfl change the fact
that "Pannllt wants to be President"
waa a commonty-helcl aaaumptlon In

o.p.nHII!t.
1 , _ no 18111 fMion to believe that
Or. Pannlll 18 plotting hll path to the

jailer

preeldenoy
all, f'VI the salary
fig- too but other people do.
Dr. PIIMHl'l att.mpt to slay the
mea.nger looka nloa In ptlnt; and It
Pftii*IIY brought emllea to that l.ctlon
on campua thai ~ye Melng The
. SpecfnMJ put In 111 p l -. In thai aense,
II Ia marveloual\' IIPPf'OIIFiate that It
~ within tha ~·a first
lllgnfffllant conltlbullon to the DUE
Oliln diMIUta alnce the laue first
aurf.aec:!lhrw monthaaao.
Cany on gentlemen. And those

_.,......,

buHorwl

Jarrett In 4th term

.101111 A. Jilrratt, 1 Uti purdluing
IIQIIII, It aeMng u ~t of the
Slate Un...,..ly of· NeW Yclllc PurchasIng Altoolmlofl for hla fourtll llllCC8S-

aNII.....-tenn.

Other of,_. eleCted - • : vice.
DllaNint WIIIIMI e.nz of llrcPport
ltate~;
W81ter Klyczek
• of III!Monli ..... Coltaae; -ery .
.tolln ~~ of &amp;tiNY at Albany;
....,.-1Nitlllm . , _ of State
at OIMgo; 'Oecll Starmer of

-rar.

E

COl._
.. -e;r.:u....
ol

Environmental

�llotdl1, 1tn

j

.

I

j

'Rights of Conscience' group answers CARASA
Editor:
We . . writing this In response to the
Guest Opinion Written by the Coelltlon
for AbOrtion Rlght11 and Against
Sterilization Abuee (C.A.A.A.S.A.) In
the Feb. 9 1 - of the Spectrum and
state,.,._ , _ by CAAASA apokesl*SOn Ali- F18k In The Spectrum
article on the abortion cov&amp;n~ge
controversy on Feb. 9. The Ollinton and
Ms. Flak's aiM-a contalned many
distortions, l - I e s , and undocumented ..-tiona about the facts
of thlslssue Wlllcll demand corractlon.
We believe that the ~era Important
enough to WWTW~t a responee In the
Reporter as well sa The·Spectrum.
CARASA and Ita supporterw are
unfortunately unable to see the real
Issue lnYOivad • In the compulsoqr

Bi~m:.~~~~f =~s~:~~:

:::

rights of conscience. Their zeal and
dogmatism . about delendln~ their
"absolute right" to abortion makes
them think nothing about suppressing
the rights of coneclentious objectors to
it.
•
.
It also has led to their having an
almost paranoi8C -plclon of the
intentions of our group and other&amp; who
disagree with tt.n aboul the compulsory payment . They find It Impossible
to 8Ccepl the fact thai our group's
concern Is the rights of conscience and
not the abortion Tssue lteell.
They have Ignored rational arguments
and have chosen to make in emotlon111
appeal. They bell-, lor example, that
they can eaoape having to deal with the
Issue on Its menta merely by labelling
the objections to their position as
"chauvlnlot." We thus leal the need to
l'fH!stabllsh rational discussion about
1hls Issue.
'Moro than 1 platitude'
First, we believe that the rights of
conscience are more than a mere "moral
platitude," as CAAASA alleges. The
notion of tha right of conscience hes
held a C811tral place In American
polltlcal ltlgel. .,d constitutional
thought. TIIOma Jefferaon ~ of
"the oup,_ wltl of the nation In behalf
of the rlghta of -.clence." The u.s.
Supreme Court ,..._, the right of
conscience "eupNma" (GIIIetfe •· U. S.)
and an ·~· (S~Nt~Nrf •·
Vern.,. In 1111 d'-'t In 61/,.tftl,
Justice ~- llllld that thera was an
=~~~~~ Amend..- right" of
The courtai!M- lit to protect the
rlghta of con..,_ If\ many apeclllc
areas, InCluding -.clentloua objection to-· IrM-a• of ,..lgion,
and the dgll.. of medtcal I*IO"nel not
to have to pMtclpata In end tooepltats

::~=-=-o:r~~~~-

Thla ._.
algnltlctllt
r~

to,

IIDilll Ia, ~ _,.., _ .
for •· Tile courtl -

tile

!fila of

oonecl-

reuntntt ~
rneNI)'
lnll~ . . .
8180 be
U/8. ~....., that

r"""'*'* •

""""·111111..

the "ooi. . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . .

&amp;round - - .......... baM Je0811y

;~~

;:.:-r..:'.":l::

legal Issue Involved here, It Ia still
repugnant for' a compulsory payment to
be Imposed. This Is because a
university commits Itself to respecting
1118 diversity of vlewo and Individual
rights of the parsons connectea with 11.
It has an obligation to adhere to higher
standards In these areas then the
minimal ones Imposed by law.
,naccurate, misleading'
Second. CARASA's stat""ts about
the support for the abortlell' eo.erage
and the plan of two years ago were
ln~urate and misleading. Sub Board I
CAAASA INFOAMAnON DAY
The Coalition of AbOrtion Rlghta and

Agalnat Sterilization, wlloM position Ia
under .tn In thll place, II hOlding a
Reproduction Rlgh.. Information Day,
today, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. In the

i';!ulra.,.&lt;;:tw ~~'::ASea~:J.::ueln
connection with International Women'•
Da.

did not know II most students wanted '
the cowtrage or agreed with a
compulsory payment. It has never
asked about abortion coverage In Its
past annual surveys of students about
the Insurance, and decided to Include
the coverage over the summer with
virtually no student Input. Even If a
majority had wanted a compulsory
payment, however, It could not be

~f~::,'~ m="':es'::ct~.hts

of the
It could also not be ·contended that
including the coverage In the plan two

r::r:.h:9~ha~·:~er!'~:. ~~i~~7or'ft:
Few knew of Its Inclusion as It was not

~b:~~z~~ ::s~·~e,?~:rd~d;~"'i~

exclusion-. f'urther. the coverage was
not dropped last year because It was
"Inadequate" and the cost "prohibitive."
as CAAASA aii!!Qad. It was dropped
merely, asa U/8 Health official told us.
because Insurance companies ~
changed and It was lost In the shuffle.

About ... 'Option'
Third, C,t.AASA Insisted thai writing
an option Into the plan - so that
conaclentloua objectora would not have
to pay lor abOrtion coverage - was
• unworkable" and would cost so much
as to b&amp; "unrealistic." Firat of all; we
have bean told by parsoRI In the UIB
administration, fruiludlng Dr. Ketter,
- that thete Ia •no doubt" .Jhat an opUon
can be arranged If U/8 makaa It clear
thet It wan\S it. Secondly, CAAASA haa

:C,~'.;!orC:J'':,~ -:'~'~C::.'h~ 1~"l:

aomethlng wtMCh will be datermlnad by
the negotlllllona baiWean U/8 and the
iniUrBIIC8 c:ompenf wiiiCh - JUII now
~mellclng. CARASA ai80 Ilea no
_.. tor *Ina IIIII! thl coat would
~tor thoM wilD get the cownge

":.'*r
....~OS::...":": :'!na
UnMratly u an ......,.. of ,_.the
prtca of abort~- . g e -

,up

==~:ns ..!"=do!:..~

rlghtl 0* '*"'*'- .......... lboltlon
- h ' - t11i1n ,..._ II 1 - of

•
aptiOI'IOOJecltoq
uactly to
bu1,......
'*"'"'a
001oaa.nno.

- a1n
r be
a.....at'-""....,_

.-t1IC .. ~plan, JNt. '*'of

n • only
. . IJnholqlty of

iiiiPD-'
- . . ,• ..........
- . . . ,-_
.
. . . . . illfllllllla
....._
......... ...... . . ' Jtlloltlon Nflmd
policy ......... OOMitlt lea: Tile fa ..

_

...,_.d ttoe Millilnl .-ld lor abortion

·~~ ............., .......... . .
Ill•:-=•
... _._..
...... .
lor
lmiiOIItl

tile

-

not • potentllll

- . . - dowfiOI ocMr abortlona.

.. lllgll · . .-. .. " ' · ,.,

llludanll

because It goes toward paying lor the
entire student health program at
HIIA'.!II'd, Which Ia not paid lor by State
funds as at U/8.
Coats and prlnclplaa
As It Is, however, the cost of an
abortion Is not so great as to make It
likely that the cost of an option would .
be prQhlbllive. An abortion Is not $300
or $&lt;100 as Ms. Flslc stated, but $t60 In
1he .first twelve weeks of pregnancy.
MQrJIOver, even If the cost were higher
for those taking the option, Wily should
the burden not fall on them? Why
should II have to be the conscientious
objectors who must assume the burden
of paying higher costs by goiflll
elsewhere lor alternative Insurance
(Which Is much more costly than UIB's)
In · order to avoid sacrificing their

prl~i.t'~l -:Jurther

,;gued that an
option would be "'unfair and unrealistic""
because It would require a woman to
anticipate in advance the effects that an
unwanted pregnancy would have on her
life. This argument Is very demeaning to
women . lt false[y presumes that they do
not think such matters through, thet
they are unable to act as-Uolnklng adults
with consciences and a free wfll and to
assume responsibility. lor their actions.
~ l~al

requirement

ag~,:~~r:· p~~~~ br~x~xuo ~~ou~~
grounds lor insisting that their desire to
mlnlmfze the cost of abortion coverage
·In the plan overrides the rights of
conscientious objectors not to pay.
There Is no legal requirement that group
health lnsuranc&lt;l"plans cover abortions.
Thera Is no mandate from Congress, the
state legislatures, the courts, or the
maJority of American citizens, as
CARASA stated there was, to Include
abortion coverage ln. health Insurance
r.lans or to have a compulsory payment
1

11

c~0:: ient7.:'~s ~~~~rs 1! vra~~:!J ~:

shifting the burden· of paying lor
abortions onto them just because
groups like CARA$A want Individuals
lo be able to escape . personal
responsibility lor their actions In the
name ol " reproductlve freedom." -

-t'"""-''

oiuggaatlon
Fifth, CAAASA Indicated th':h:: there

:,';~c~far~~~~ ~11:Ysm"c:}t 'a ',.;;,':1
~:~¥hew~t~sl~~~~ ;~:;:

0

=

Is happening. The payment requires

=tio;.'~~ .;:::p~'l:, ..::?1ce
and to ~ve their support to abortion.

tlo~A':.a~\~~~~~u':"O: •gpa:;

abortion coverage - which In their
minds Is the same thing as ettmln•tlng
the compulsory payment - will nsault
.In an Increase In Illegal abOrtll&gt;na.
Abortion Is I • In this society end
Whale- happens at U/8 will not affect
that fact . Actually, It Is a logical
Impossibility lor a woman to heve an
Illegal abortion In the U.S. In the llrat,
and probably the second, trimester of
pregnancy. Nor has- It been demonstrated that a woman's decision to opt
or not to opt lor abortion coverage, or

=~nwWf,~fi~~~~~~d~s~~'!...!:

an abortion.
CARASA cells those who oppose the
compulsory payment an "obvious
minority," but we at least have gethensd
approximately 1800 slgnetures on
1

9

\'i'~~ ::0':.~y ~u~~gt~~~~tp~~ttlg~~~~i

student support could Sub Boaon:l point
to wherr they made their dectaton to
lncfud_e the coverage In the tlrat place?

Signed by no,..atudanta
'They have attempted to circumvent
these .questions by making false
charges, like Arlene Fisk's, ·that our
petitions were signed by a lot of
non-students because we have not required a student number on them. The
fact of the matter Is that we do require a
student number. There were ooly about
70 of the 1350 signers of the petitions
that we submitted to Sub 8oerd In
November that did not have student or

g::!~IJ:'"f,'!t ~~~~~r;.~u=~~~

this hed-she taken the time to ollectr1lur
petitions at the Sub Board office whera
they are on file. She could also fiave
-'fled that the olgnerw are students by
checking UtB recorda or the atudent
directory before making her aaeertiona.
We must sa~ In closl~ that It Ia

~s:mn~~t~a .::=~

Inaccurate atatementa and ot&gt;luacated rational debate about this
Issue. We hope that thla will help -to
l'll!llore that and to maAe -voow
realize that If enough ·aupport II
demonstrated, an option can be
~~-whiCh will respect ~one'a

_- Uti Rlgllll of Con..,_ Qrooop

Minority Law group changes
name, not Its past goals
Editor:

In WI effort to 8lq)lllld the acope of
..vtcea Wlllcll our organizatiOn oilers
to the mln&lt;:lrttf etudllfta In our law
echOol, the Puloito Rican and Aalan U.
Sludlllll AAoclatiOn lou Invited the
Nidi,. Arl*1can 1tuc1ente of IIIIa acl'ooo~
to l*tlctNie In our Ol]lanlzallon as
actfwt meiilbn.
Thla actiOn togalhar

wttto

the

lnclll8ion In our IWIIca of ~
Rican lliaplnlea
PIOflllll8d ua to
change t h e - of our organizallon to

'*

:tt....-c, Allan and

Natlwa
""*~An U. 8ludenta Aaaoclation
{IMNAt.Ml,
the

_..._liffact

Thla Ghilaef
our peat QOiila nor lloee h ~ In)'
olhao' Change ..... for . . '*lOglllllon
of our let16W Nail.. "'"'-"-' atudanta

aa an Important part of our ~
IIIUdant population .
, . - t l y alectad ortlolrl ef
HANALSA oonllld of: Hac:tof 8lfttllao,
p!881dent, Milton Cartier. Ne

PIWI-t'

dent, Dean Emllllmlelll, ' - · 111C1
DaWd 8 . Mora, MCnllary.
,..._feel I - to contact MY of thl

libow ollk*s lhOutd you--~
lnlomo•llon rwgardlng our oo!IIMZIIIuot.
Our office Ia locatad In Room 111M
O'Brian Hall, Amherat ~Ill.
.

--- ................
~~-.:

11oe . . . . , _ - - - , . . ......

••u.....-ca

IS).

�•

· j

llofch 1' 1t7t

1I i

MORE VIEWPOINTS
Student .says·his ideas
Asbestos
would improve elections
L

NYPIRG isn't satisfied with
remedial w9rkpone at Baird;
Faculty member asks Sena_te input
Remedial work undertaken In Baird
Hall (where NYPIRG has charged that
dangerous aabeato&amp;-cootalnlng materlela . . ~t) may have been a " cure
••• IIIOf8 dengeroul than. the Illness,"
two ~tall- of the consumer
advoc8CY group contended In a letter to
the U/B Environmental Health snd
s.tety Office this week.
The! office has argued that the

"'f..e::I•F:.~~!-~::,~~tier1nt

and Robert Frankl of NYPIRG say that:
has r-.tly come to our

•n

attention, that 'remedial' work of a
a.tatn nature has been carried out on
the a.lrd Hall material In question.
Specifically, the ceiling material of one
music room waa removed and spraying
of the ceiling material took place .In the ,
other priiCIIce rooms. The spreylng, we
- · waa done In sn effort to
're-aeel' the material, for whalever
1111U0fl :

"The menner In whJch this work was ·
CMiecl out may quite well have resulted
In 1 eltuatlon where 'the cure was more
dlngerous thin tM Illness.' The
removal or spraying of fibrous material
waya run&amp; the .-y high riak of
reiMalng lllrge ~titles of IIbera Into
the emblent air of an area. When
dealing with 1 hlzlrdous substance
such as aat..IOI', strict safety procedu,... . . 1 _n -.,lty, which unforlunetely _ , not camed out during the
~lalwork .
·
"Aabeatoe llb.e have the ability to
l"llmlln euapended In ambient air for up
to 80 hourw (3¥.1 days). This Is
aaeurnlng they . . not 're-distributed',
e.g. broom-swept, su~ect 10 . the air

=:'::'u:':'J'~~ o~~~~~:.:;:,~

,...,_,. ~*"' ~- The remedial

proaed- ooneliNd of atmply cloalng
the millie rooms lor 30 minutes efter

the epraylng, _ , efter fallout of the
This, Is

aat..toe material wu observed.

::lct::"Ytw.,.,.=::-~.::::·c:~~

CROWN Kl£ER KOT 8004, Ia untested
for Ita -'lng c:epebnttlea end thus Ita

effect._ laW~known .

"11111 not only 1ncludea questions
lbout Ita -'llllltnlngth With regard to
lhl W!llgllt olllle -'ad mlterlal or the
....... ol Ita .r~ec~........
aiiO
lllciilt Ita lmpect NelatMDI. Suctl an
....... ..-.nt ,..,. Y«Y ICOf8
low oneny- al u - clwKI.utlca
• IIIII til.- lied to I of the
oriiiMI .......__ kl f8at, elmply tile
.. . . . willght ol • • - ' ! y -'led
.......... mer, .... In -'dnble
fllll!ld oftM ......_. - - . . AIIO,

but

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

. . _..,.._.. ._ . . . . ~·ng
~ n.lf II "'*-'t, I.e. ...-

.......
~

for students, faculty, and administrators with an Interest In environmental ~
toxic hazards.
"In light of the·fscts, we feel It Is your
unquestionable resoonslbllltv to the
health and well-being o1 all University
and community members who frequent
Baird Hall and other potential sites on
campus, to eredlcate the asbestos
hazard In an Immediate and sufficient
fsshlon . At the sam§ time, such action
csn malle the Unlversity a shining
example of concern, knowledge, an·d
action to the general community, a role
lhet Is the essencs and function of the
Unlverllty within society."
Sin""!ely,
-Frenk Butterlnl
U/B Prolect Coorqinator, NYPIRG
Robert Frenkl
St_udent Project Coordinator
The following letter was forwarded to
the Faculty Senate Executive Committee which took .no ectlon at Its Feb. 7 ·
m•tlng:
· The problem ofasbestos In Belrd Hall
hes thus far drawn very little comment
from faculty members outside of the
Music Deper1ment. It seems clear to me

~~~t l~•;;:u:~~~~~'::;~~f. ~~~esa~:r.,~~:

should strongly urge I hal all reasonable
steps be taken to ascertain the level of
risk presented by a hazard. In the
Immediate case, sn air sample can be
taken and evaluated . By refusing to do

b~t~·~~~~~~~~~~~ra.;~g~t~~~~~sJ~~u~

fears about the hazard· or coold provide
~ strong support for Immediate
femoval of the hazard . I believe the
Faculty Senate should speak out pn this
mailer.
-Sanford Gunn
Operations Analysts
School of Management ·

the endorsements' wording is one definite
area where the editor can be unllaterally
responsible.,

to be printed before the endorsements. t Will
how speak of further benefits of the
schedule. I hope SA and Tho Spocrrum wtll
not long remarn oblivious to the1r power to
Improve student elections.

How etr~houkllt be?

;J r~~l~t~ ~ ~~·pd~r~;!r·t!~=~
and
0

Endo&lt;s_omento - t ond fut111e
As fort he editor of The Spectrum, 1 agaJn
jhave journalistic criticism , c6ncamlng the
tVerY wording of the -endorsements. In my

making lnscrutabte endorsements
"bfunl assasmente ... I, too, see a problem
.with blunt assesamente. But here 11 a
pseud~dftemma ~hat only again serves to

Rosen feebly admitted to (" They may be

morally _blame any editor for preaeritlng
:~~:L~~ consideration a tor e~doralnO a

::,oy~,~~:"t~el~~~er.~ftf~7~hl~~~

gr~;r :~~sV:~h~~:!~c~~~ r;-,r;~~"o~'rro

vague In places."). True, they aren't slweys

~.&lt;;3r;·b~~'!t: ~c::,~r =~r~~~~

1

foJT~:;';.g ~ch j~sufl::ib~~s~~~~

unfair obstacles to the down--thumbed.
A q editor's endorsement .Js best written

The first and more common one Is that the
non·endorsed candidate resigns his cam.palgn spirit In dleguat, and goes through the
motlons for the remainder of tlrf\9, If a
candidate Ia ao docHe 10 as to not defend
hlm.alt with over a 'Week arltl a half of
remaining timtl (In my plan), then this says
something about hla future performance, If
somehow etected. He may afao choose to
wrlt8 a sob lener to The Spectrum, with the '"
only points being he wasn't endorsed and
he's angry about it. This will result tn

-..een

when his preference comes from a
substantial dlsc....,ment
the
candidates. He must then substantiate the
difference, In writing , by referring apeclflcally to the retev.:nC content of each
candidate's kjeas or non-kteas -of that Issue.
If an editor meretv says
candld•te's
ideas are better than the other's, aa Mr.

one

~se:m~~~ ~odrs~~eh:~ :'1r,O:~:·':;; .

power.
The reason why I call .this an abuse Is
because It Incurs the ethical Issue of vatu• .

~~r~~pt~'t~~ ~b~~::f ~rrr::y ~:~ ~
candkfates

~~~~~:~·':ti~S:.th~~~u:~t~lt~r~

responses by non-endonted
depicts much of tf\e grubby political scene
at every electlon. It marks • dead end 1 am
strlvlng to preWMlt from recurring.
The more desirable scenario would be thaf.. ·
non-endorsed candidates use the1r· am,ple

~~~~s:in~~~h~f~~r~~~~ .~h;!nc:.'~dh~~:

this may be true anyway.._ It Is not true

~~d~~~[s sai~oS:~In~es~ase;g.

••

~r~~~';'l'~~~.:: by~;·~~"3,~C c:e,:,~·~~
1
~k~~tagreg{~:'~~) no ~!!n«Jo;;;,'U:~tudt~

somehow follow concrete data. Indeed, In
racea such as Student Activities Director, a
race In
The S~ectrum abueed Ita

whk:h

~:V~id~re. ~: !1m'::i: "~aa:'1?ri~ktao~:
15

0

1

must simply own up to their ·ahares of

cand idate's Ideas, and In effea£ his fUnding
prloriUes, as superior, the editor aut~
matlcaiJ trsmplea over that part of the

.

Editor:
We, the BIIIICI&lt; Student Union , being
the .-.t-garde egalnat reclam on this
Cllllpua, uphold Or. Molefl Aaante's
~~ claiming that Zionism Is, In
, racism and tt)&lt;e laaue with
thole crttlca of Dr. A sante, who have

=,.:::':o ~!:er~~ :i~to.:'~i

Zionism and racism u given by the
United Nltlons resolution where more
thin one twndred nations have
condemned the exclusive and discriminatory nature of Zionism • racist.
In .order to und-and Dr. ANnie's
poeltlon we must rev!- Zionism 1111d
reclarn: raclarn Ia exclusive; Zionism
exctuelea all non-J-s. Racism dlaa1mlnatea egalnat thoee who . . of a
dt"-1 r - . Zlonlarn dlacrlmlnatea lgllnat thole whO . . not Jews • •
RM:Iam ..,..._ In the notion of racial
~rlty; Zlo!ltam bell- In the
"dlieen ........ notiOn. Rllctarn
MltoMI policy of exctueton u In NIZI
8outh Africa. and 1.,.... •

electorate, and rebuttals from the editor.

opened. when campaJgn time Is etruatured
shr,ewdl y.
Whether that potentlal Is used,
has
been given a chance to work before, Is
irrelevant matter.
that my
plan.. Is "only" to allow 4or the fairest
possible election. which Ia tantamount to

another

bT

:f;!"~t.f~~ t~~~t p~.~~~b~y d::;~:'~g

r••

o.m-r.

l'llrtiiMncn, 1M fa 111M .._
crttlca . _ Clllled Or. " - ' • ......

ceh.,mtoua and · pernlcloue,
wttllout ~ lhll he ..... It,
.,_.,. ...otlonlili!TIItloMIIIIIIOn on

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

jllllttM~t.Dr

. . . . ....,.. lnJUitlcl 01'1

:.::-~but~-=z:
"* .. ._ ,_, men

II II llbwiOue

1110111 Zlonllm and . . . . . 111811 Dr.
"-'*'• crltlol - ct, they - through

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

ch:';?':1,,~'~v:,'t~~t~'1:li:.":"ll'~i&gt;e

~~~~~~~e:n:n::~·~ ~~~
lions.

the abaye race last oemeoter; 1 don't feel

wgument work-a, this taoa may prove useful
to editors at futureektcilona .

=':.=-..::tin~,:::.:.~
,

~~the campaign, In line with •

auppf..-wy to The Spw:trum.

::r:c..::.~~.titoi,he=;;

.

-~=-·don,

=~-=
~.':".:~·
alljlcllonl8_fl
__

- · 111)1

, _ _..
~-:r-...,.............
edfltiNI-••-a

_..... ..--

COillldlrllll

=.:.=..~ilrity---==.:.

enillle.._~-~..,_hlmllht

~·.!1..~~---lo-­
-~

WHit

=,:r:r.

aun~K':i:a":':.::'J:18!Mt spring,
~':.,"::ft.:: :!1 :.:C.-v"'"':'.:.oa:;.::
,:•L;.,::J.Ftr,:e~~~
t~~tfo~~Monday'a Spectn~m wHI oover

c:r::

t---..--.·---lglfnat
..
:="=n:"c:.::l'=:elfll~:

Thlt laaua tt atso 1111 right ...,. tor a
,..,_ of

aumnwy reprint, or -

_ . _ _ !llflliie

•candldateie
. 111111 cam~--~
liom
Wed""*Y,
lhe-fir81
comlilll,

rr.·
.=:,1~--.:".:. 'J:r·=

=
____ ....... __
=..-.,.::~~~i.'=

of . the

lh-. Friday. Heni, If they -n·t done ao
In w r t t t n g , - cendldatoe alight' ed by theedllot'a ..,_ &lt;&gt;&lt; __,, 0111 start

~~:,~.::':::.=..~~~~':~\~
=~re=f~r-:~~!::

M&lt;. - · In c:Me you think so, tf)e foct
of another ~doea not m-.n you can
oontl~ua to prectlce badi!Loumaltem with

wonting

~~== ~te on

"11•-

'Woilde' hofps but lin, !toe
The creation of Worlqs laat month
presents gceater hope tor a fair .-ectton. I

~o~ aul:f~te...l,:~ld ~t ~~

the

editor almost crutes the setting. A
sustained high leWI of dlscuoalon Ia our
beat hope fa&lt; the beat condidates to.- the
beat SA aervlce .

m::..~:n;..::~r::~~~',;,!,':~ :; t;e~-:al~

the perwllgm whiCh I ouggeoted lOOt Worlds' .li~w-ly ol:heclute
_ , , to retegete thtl paper's SA cowroo•

Clearly,

~d==~~0~11!~rea~r.~:::c~t~~~i::.

::d~~::::,1:. ~~r~c:r~~~r=. ~~

Unfortun.te~

Recall

delend The Spectrum¥. endorsement rta~ts,
the editor would now hllve a str6ng defense .
to anyone, Including Jilted candldatn, who

Moybe. the overall quality ol candidates
will Improve over the years Jt a respectable
tradition, baaed on lair etecUone, Ia
~ established. Given the current dim ltate, 1
cannot s'ee how The Spectrum or SA ca.nnot

W-

the ~ntervktw, which the
th8' editors endorsement

~ru(r~~yo~::,~u~,t~!t:~ 'u~~Fu~~t'r~

~nJ~~t~~e:.r::"~!!~~h~t ht~~ ~~~e61

0&lt;

~n

~~lalred0p~8~ dgt;n:;,::•f~o~" 1::

your values when rating ldais, and show
why the endorsed ones are better.
A dloMrv~ to both
In the race al hlded to, failure to clearly
Identify -both candidates' major concrete
Ideas, and the mere labeling of some of the
endorsed candidate's Ideas as "l nreasfble~"
proved a disservice to both candJdatea .
Again, aeoording to my analysis, .the
probJem Is a categorlcaJ one, not debatable
the results. nor even by the performance

.~ thelaaue~~~~~~":~Wt~

. ._

r~r:nnc~~~~trn ~~e w:r~·::a,:n:t ~~~
strong poJ;,'\
w.ordlng of

g~ec:~ ~o~~~!:e~an:fda::fs~~~':

my plan Is to allow fcir the ) a1rest possible
~:.\~~· not Instantly create great can·

BSU upholds
Asante re: Zionism

~

deLe~?~~o~~~mti~i~~ ~It~~~ o~otc:::'tt

rh~7~~:: t!e'm' ,~':!~,ro~~~:~r~:~~-;:

=~~fty J}~S,:lst~fn'~ ~entfa1

.__,~~~~nw._....

intelligence or enthusiasm ,
he can
demonstrate his unappreciated quality while

campilgn begins. After explaining the

at Buffalo, cost-free, and demonstrate
proper safe r~moval procedures. This

-~

•

ti~~ ; :1k 1:o~~~?~ s~=pa:~~

of--

:::....~..:: ,r;:.~

~ l:'.i~~T.I

::r:::

-t-

judged beat on 1111 - ·
-tholr floinieaa
lo · lfll ,_......_
Ia -lor anyone
fill
8iMcfNM nol, Of - l d nol.__~ an

--11
to"'"*=...e=.~~sr.
~
reforma I
be wiN liMp
~~~~--· rolllo 01111' .......

'* -·

f Iloilo- !'IIIYIII ,_ - · 81 -

rn-.••:-::..:
.. ~---:.=
.......
...... :1;:: :r.--

fn

1*1- M&lt;. AoMn.
. "--oa,
luttn - .... lhlllludlnt
1111-..r-

·-.......-.

- U y 11111

.-ng

net·~:~::==.-= --=~.=~~~~=

......

~

�?

-

. . .u ..

Women's Day
PSS, Third World Students, WSC
plan on-c;:ampus events for observance;
BuffaloCoalition slates· even more
The Professional Staff Senate,
Women's Studies and the Third World
Student Association are planning '
special activities In celebration of
International Women's Day.
March 8, the day of official
.recognition, the PSS will present the
• program, "Children, Careers and
. ChoJces,'.' which also r:f1,nlzes this
• ~da~ the International ear of the
The prcigram, which begins at 9:30
a.m. In the Talbert Dln1ng Room,
features U/B Sociology Professor
A~llne Levine • who will Jllve an
OYervlew of the choices and problems
women face when they a«empt to
combine child-rearing with a career,
After Levine's presentation, Kathy
Kreis, a valUjls clartflcation expert, will
conduct a workshop designed to
Identify and expl~lo how such options
lmgact on the personal lives of women.

Pale~~~e·a~~h ~a~~:!,~~ P~ac'!.:~g

1emlnlsm and the role of woman In their

r~~r:::f~~v: ~~~r~~"m~~=~~~sx

reception will follOw.
.
· The Third World groups will also hold
evenings of song, dance anil poetry
March 10 at 7 p.m. in the Fill mora Room
at Squire and March 18 at 7:30 p.m. at
the Langston Hughes Center, :!5 High St.
.
All activities are open to the public.

Ol~m~1~ 1 '1:' lnternatiOMI Wo~~~~ ~~~h S::asoff~~. ~~

Bnlverslty community, Is sponsortng a
"Take Back the Night March,'' March 1
from 7 p.m. to 8:30p.m.
The march Is designed as an
expression of solidarity against the
Increase of violent street crtmes,
especially those whose victims are

Ex..:.':.'ir.;o.h~..:'.ntt,':.m~rlrf ~ p~~

moderator.
Coffee will be served a half-hour
before the program. All members of the
University community are lnVlted.
CARASA projecto
Women's Studies, In conjuhction
with the Coalition of Abortion Rights
and
Against
Sterilization
Abuse
(CARASA), Is sponsoring a Reproduction Rights Information Day today from
1.1 a.m. to f p.m. In the Center Lounge
at Squire. Students from the two groups
will be on hand to discuss con- .
sequences of eliminating abortion
~~~ f~O,:::. U/B's stu~nt health
The stucfents wi ll also try to generate
opposition against a resolution Introduced In the State Senate which calls
for a Constitutional convention to

~~~;:.·~~:~~~~~rsl!, W:O~::'n~n;~

out of the necessary 34 states have
already tl!ken _A&gt;OSiti\1.11 action on a
similar resolution.
•
The groups will also hold an open

~~J:'ft.l~~eh~t~loc;~n,rs~:,_t~B~io':'d
hearing devoted to. discussing the pros

and cons of the current student health

Insurance plan . During the meeting,
two speakl"!! will attempt to present a
national perspective on Issues sur- .
rounding women's reproductive rlg~ts .
, Franzen sald both Women's Studies
and CARASA are expecting to bear
"vocal opposition" at the hearing from
members of the Rights to Conscience
group who do not favor the current
policy which Includes abortion coverage. (See today's "Viewpoints" for that

~!~~i~~M":U~~nporm::~1~~s~~~

recognition ol International Women's
Day. First on the agenda Is a two-hour
discussion, March 9 at 4 p.m. In

~el

·

policy as Is.

Third World otudento
The Third World Student Association
wlll.sponsor three ~ys of activities In

wo..l"";~os~~ a'!,..r:eiollow the march
which Yncludes presentations by
Nkenge Tour-e, an administrator In the
Washington, D.C., Rape Crisis Center,
and Pat Plno, a member -of the Love
Cenal Homeowners Association .
A qul'stlon-and-answer period will
follow the presentations. Resource
material and additional information will
·be av.llable to partlc)Dants, along with
chlldcare for the entlt\i evening.
Other events being co-sponsored by
the Coalition are: - •
•A Children are P8QPie. Too. Party ,
March 3 from 1 p.m . to 4 p.m. at Shaw
Memorial Church,· 453 Porter (at
Jersey) . Puppet show, games and
refreshments for children between two
to ten years of age. No charge.
•Film showing entitled "With Cuban
Women," March 9 from 7:30 to 9:30
p.m. at Painter's Hall, 12 Elmwood (at
Virginia). Refnoehmants available. $1 .!i0
donation.
·
•Wort&lt;spop on Women AgelnS1
Violence, March 10 from 1I a.m. to 2
p.m. at the UnHarlan Church, Elmwood
Ave. &amp; West Ferry. Topics of discussion
Include ~ · battered women, repro-

du;~~e~~~~ ~~~~M~,c~:from

S p.m. to 1 a.m. at the Unitarian
Church. Disco and refreshments. $1 .50
donation.
•Women's Martial ·Arts &amp; Self·
DefenH Demonstration and the All
Women's Cast, March 11 (Ume
unannounced) at the YWCA Bldg., 190
Franklin . Retruhmenta. ~cerpta from
"Some Enchanted E¥811lng."
•Self-Defense and Raile Worl&lt;ahop
for Woruen, April 7 (time unannounced).
For additional Information on Coalition events, call 836-8970 or 831-3«15.

Chft
a $ sche d ule
"MONDAYMARCHS

TUESDAY·
"MARCH&amp;

MARCH7

WED.

THURSDAY·
MARCHI

Celnera
Use&amp;
Operation'
7-10PM
4 weeks

Stained
, Glass
7-10pm
6weeks

lntro.
l&gt;hotography
(black-white)
7-10pm
6weeks

&lt;:.rn~a;e

Jewelry
casting

~-!'!:~

.

Ukrainian
Egg
Decorating
7-10pm

.....
J~

Making
1-4pm

Career Day

.......
....,NE
Quilling
7-t.llpm

--

.....,

lntro . Potteo:y
(using the
wheel)
7-10pm
8weeka
SllkScrMn
7-10pm
6weeks

Sign

Jewelry:
inga-bracelets
etc.
7-10pm
4weeks
Slide
Processing 7-10pm
8-'ts

'"'-'C.

lntro:

Spacial"

Pottery
Claaa
ConeS
oxidation

wheel)
7-10pm
8weeks

~~~~U88
1-4pm

lntro.
Knitting
7-10pm
8weeks

~WI
Center

tntro.
Pottery
1-4pm
8 weeks

120MFACC
Ellicott
Amharat

Jewelry
casting
1-4pm
4wwks

A....-ge
Workahop
FM:
S10rnember

Amhenlt, N.Y.

FI_.Loom
Wa¥iAg

S20non-

Nu:.

eamr1.t2111

S15non·
7·101&gt;111
llwelka

member

lbldanl

Rr:Z:l;..r
.lOIN

1-epm?-~
M~u-W· ;

F&amp;

SAT.
MARCH 10

'"·

'

~·

~

_I '

�IELI gets
3rd group
from USSR
The Intensive English Language
Institute (JELl) baS been aetected forlhe

~~~~hc~~,~~~~e:,!~t.J~/o~. group
The Soviet sc:llolars will spend 'eight
weeks at U!B this summer to study'
Amer)can methods of teaching English
as a foreign tan11uage. About 80
scholars, aU teachers of English at
Soviet l!l'liversltlee, have v1slted UIB
during the past two summers.
Dr. Stephan C. D_unnett, director of
the tELl, notecl thilt no other university
In lhe country has been selected by the
International Reeearch and Exchanges
Board, which edmli\isters the program
to host it for more than two years. The
U.S. Department of State funds the
;&gt;r&lt;;?¥~mou'!t of community partlclpa·
lion In the program was a major factor
tn UIB being setec'ted !'!lain,' Dunnett
said, citing the Soviets home stays
with area families, visits to local
·attractions and the l nteresl shown by
people In the community.
Last year's vls!tors were especially
pleased when the Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra hosted them at a special

~~~7:Jn!,~d• .r.n~~e -~~~~ce::xpe~re~~

~~;~r:,P.~- anywhere bu~ In a ~lty like

Dr. Dunnett ernphulzed that the
Soviet scholars partlclpa,te In a strong
academic program while they are at the
lEU .
The scholars ars expected to arrive in
laleJune.

In the meet• of Rio teat weekend, a
drum roll heralded the opening parade
of the)lr..t.enten "Carnaval"
a
f8ct duly noted In Reuters dlapatc:hes
fleahed .throughout tha world. At U/8,
the Latin cuatom of ona big f!lng bafore ·
the J*llltentlal -•on Ia carried on by
the Brazilian Club whlc:ll amually
..,...._. clewlf..ma_y-care ......., In the
~Room IIHiqutre. ~~ S.turday
nlgltt'a U/8 Camaftl . waa IJplcal: "II
-loud, p.cl&lt;ed IIJICI wild!,"~

-aon.

......,....

~

Sick leave limit
for·9-mo. faculty
No faculty member on academic-year
appointment may accrue mora than
15.75 days of sick leave fOr this and
subsequent academic years, Robert
Pearson, assistant vice president .and
personnel director, said this week.
According to Pearson , SUNY Central
has recently clarified the "meaning and
Intent" of con,ract and policy statements relating to sick leave accrual.
(Section 23.4 of the Agree"*1! between the State' and UUP and Article XHI, Tnle
C, Section 1 of the Board of Trustees
Policies). lanlll'8ge In these MC!Ions
was changed In April , 111n, upon
execution ol the curr11nt agreement with

u~~P-:::;:n ~lnlr,:! o~..;..ic year
aetermlne the total length of the faculty

=.':\xpfa'f.::.1~~~e d~':!~'i:~lo~j

this obligation determines both the
numbjlr of days of sick leave credIt
which canbe'accrued, and the period In
which any llbsenca d .. to Illness must
be c:llarged against those cnadits."
.the UIB .academic year Is

-sec=:::':~~ .~n.:.v:~.m~':.m~~r~

15.75 daya. He req ...ted auperviiora to
insure that thla maximum Ia accurately
reflected on aemi-annual teave record
aummartae .

..,..qat•.ace
Plans for the Fourth &lt;!west
Marxist Sc:llotars Conference at the ·
Unlvers~ Cll Onclnnatl. March 9-1 I ,
' I 979, lridlcate that two UfB
professors, Gene Gral&gt;lner (Social. .
!'hllosopftlcal and Historical
t"oundatiOhS of Eduutlon) and James
Lawter (Philosophy) will partklpate.
·Theroe of !tie-event will be "The
U.S. EduU!fonal S~: Marxist
Approacllios."
Oneollhe contetenc.e ooganlzen.
noted Chat ~tfooo In the U.S. Is
today ;ac:IIIS a crlllaoiiMfly ,
clftecltons, with mr..h to fundlns
and att.llcks on afflrmatlw ~elton and

ott.'II'OJI'MIS ~for qullty
education for all.
Conference organl~en hope to
have pepen and discussions on
t_c_...tns educattonAS an
Institution u well Is on Manolst
appr~ to the study and teaching

of v.rtous dltclpflnes.
Pl-ot...Lawter wtll.,.eak on

''Jenletdsm ...

fnfonnacton on a~Rridlns the ewnt
can be obtained from etltler Lawler
or Grablller.

�.......
...

-

_,/

.

Faculty panel holding
confidential hearings
stressed that -the committee on
Academic Freedom and Responsibility
cannot act on rumor or speculation but
Is searching for facts that can be
substantiated beyond question before It
makes any recommendations to the
Executive Committee of the Faculty
Senate.

Two closed, confidential hearings
will be held in March by the Facu~y
Senate Standing Committee on Aca-

~lc [~=:. Brj~s Re~~~~~~ty, ~~

Pn!ISidlen·tlal statements,
dlscusslbns,
of the Faculty
to the
forwarded to
this week.
an arrange.

~···· - -··•,.•··,;··.u'u"t"he'"·u.ni:I'a~e~

11harpens the
separate lines of
propose• to strenoparts separately, at the
IIIIPSnSe of the whole."
Garver said the executive committee
finds that the prOposeD Council "Is

~ves\'a~w.go:~· ~~t~u~~t~grJ~~·c~~

as advfsory to the two vice presidents
rather than as an Independent body with
Its own Identity."
The FSEC, he said , Is further

:rc::~~~ ·t~~;":~~·ar~~~~

Council, since they are not administrative at 'Btl." Instead of being charged
with the /mplemenrallon of policy,
GarVer pointed out, " the proposed
Council would 'have the general
responsibility of revlewln9 and recommending UniYBrslty pollctes gollernlng
undergraduate aducation .' Since the
Faculty Senate already fulfills such .
responsibility," he argued, ·~ he proposal contemplates an unnecessary and
deleterious duplication of responsibilIties. Becauoe of Ita encroachment on
prerogatives of the Faculty Senate,"
Garver concluded, " the proposed form
of the Council would be worse than no
Council at all."
The Senate Chairman contended that
"the propo$111 of Dns. Bunn and PanniiL
arises out of unswerving and .single-

minded devotion to the principle of line
accountability. The Faculty Senate
Executive Committee have no doubt
that this pr1nciple is important and that
Its application could usefully be
strengthened at this institution. They
are convinced; however, that line
a"!'ounlab•ll_ty cannot be the sole
pnnclple of adminlstmtive organization
'" · so complex an lnstitutlon. The
m1~sio~s. services, and functions of the
Umvers1ty often cut across major lines
of accountability; and where this Is the
case, the University needs to have
officers whose responsibility cuts
ac~oss maJor administrative divisions.
Graduate education and undergraduate continuing education are
major ml.sslons of the University where
such reltculated administmtive organIzation· continues to exist " Garver
noted, "and in the case of the Division
of Continuing Education we have an
example where the budget Is contained
within AC!Idemlc Affairs even though
the resllonslblllties ate University-wide.
Undergraduate education Is surely an
equally Important mission , and deserves an officer with University-wide

res~s~~~~~es".;;;

Council on Under~raduate Education, Garver contended,
does not overcome the shortcomings
of the initial parts of the plan of Drs.
Bunn and Pannlll. Perhaps some parts
of their plan are compatible with

~;,~~lbYIIt\~s asf~gn t~:'"'f&gt;"~wl~

Undergraduate Education; If so, their
plan need not be rejected In its entirety.
The Propo'sed Counclf , however, would
do more harm than good, and must be
either rejected or completely redefined.
An indispensable element In any
reasoryable resolution of the problem
must be that the Dean of Undergraduate
Education retains. University-wide responsibilities, together with commerosurati authority...
.-- -

Senate mulls Gener•l Ed report,
approves access to salaries
~·hc!7e'i':,"'to (::~S1 th:"~ot?o~~vNPo~~

substitution , aa follows:

·

To return their report to the General
Education Committee fot further refinement, with parUcular concern addressed to
Points A 1 (vi), B 1-3, and the minorities
concern of the Thorner et al. letter of

January 31 , 1919;

_

fu:rn:'1:'d~~a~i~~ ~~p~~~~~ldnct~~:~
1
Sef~~~o :S:resa strong approval to the

general thrust of the Report , our concern.a
00
1
(Schoentetd) and
1
SECONDED to.
the question until

rZ: nt~ •fr~~·
postpone

the next meeting; which motion CARRIED.
The meeting adjourned at 5 :15p.m .

announced.

The

·

purpose .of

these

hearings,

;?~d~rirs s:~~· ~~~~~~::~~;~~t~,'::!,

Loubere urgad that, If any member of
the academic community feels that
his/her rights to acailemlc freadom
have been Infringed or threatened,
he/she come forward to Inform the
Committee. He also urged that, if any
member of the academic community
feels that any rflernber of the faculty ,
sfaff, or administration has failed to act
In a professionally respons·Jble !NI"ner,
he/she also come forward to seek the
~
help of the Committee.
Members of the Committee on
Academic Freedom and Responsibility
are: Loubere; Tom Connolly, English;
Murmy Brown, Economics; Arlene,
Collins, Microbiology; Mervyn Alleyne,
Linguistics; an~ Mike Milstein, Educational Administration.

cpmplaints or charges of either
infringement of academic freedom or
professional irresponsibility on the part
of any member of the university,
community.
The sessions will be held from 8 p.m.
until 10 p.m. on Main Street In SQuire
Hal l, Room 232, on March 14, and at
Amherst in Norton Hall, Room 203, on
March 21 . Appointments may be made
by calling Loubere at 636-2181.
Submissions in writing to the chairman
will also be ,welcomed and will be
treated confidentially, he said .
Prof. Loubere, In announcing the
hearings, explained that the Committee
is responding In this fashion to Its
charge, as formulated by the Executive
· Committee of the Faculty Senate. lie

Aid for Law Library
Steps to cut down on the number of
undergraduates, and other non-Law

said, 'We may open the Undergraduate
Library one hour or half an hour eariler

week by Saktldas Roy, director of
-university Libraries.
a) . The Undergraduate Library has
i~sed Its hours on weekends so
thOf ire now the same as those of the
Law Library. The UGL hours are:
Monday-Thursdey, 8 a.m.-1 1:45 p.m. ;

unless they want to use legal materials
not available there."
c) Efforts are being made to alleviate
the noise problem In the Undergraduate
Library through slgr\s, personal contacts, librarY orientation, and, If.
necessary, the assignment of certain
::'~.of the 'llbmry aa quiet madlng
d) The OJflce of stUdent Affairs Is
being · contacted to publicize the new
facilities of the LocfiWcod, Science &amp;
·Engineering, and UGI: at Amherst.

t\~:~t~t'1~::!~t ~~eu~~~P~~~ ~~

~'::J'e:~}~;itf'~[~c\i.~fs e~g.o~~eu\tt

:r~~~· :m~;ms~nJ'.;;,'· ; 11 Sa~.'::;~~~(~

p.m.
b) Effective April 1, the Lockwood
and Undergraduate Libraries will be
open when the Law Library Is open. Roy

•Calendar
• (ll'am paga12, col. •l

-

·

Or. Shat Scott, asaocia1e proiossor;'IWlttnipology.

'f., 8l)lllicotion in 151 Crosby by

9 :05p.m. \WEN(930).

MardiS.

.-o

MARCH2
A.M. IIJlFFAl.O: Dr. ~rd A. Katz,
dean, School of Me&lt;tic:he. 10 a.m. WKBW-TV
(Channol71-

·STUDY SKIU.S LA8
The Study Lab at the lJniVerolty l.-nlno
Center, 366 Baldy Hal, Ia ._., f« Momg in

MAReH2
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS -

reading and study · Ho&lt;n - - Monday,
Tue&amp;dayandl'hursdeY. 11 a .m.· 1 p.m.; Wednes·

cloy and Friday, I I a.m.-3 p.m. The Iaiii&amp; ._.,
to al UIB a lOOMis.

UNO£RORADUA ~ PROGRAM or· SCHOO,I. OF

MARCH3
.
A.M. BUFFALO: - · _..,.., . - .. Fe·
cUty of Law Md JL&lt;illjii'L&lt;!Iince. 10 a.m. WKBW·
TV (Channe17).

MANAClEMENT
~tO&lt;Se~1979admls&amp;IOnsre

- i n 151 Crosby.. 205 -Squlre, lll)d 370
WFNX. Elcolt. ._.,.date haS'-&gt; .-.dod

to-.:11 18.

MARCH•
CROSSTA1.K t Dr. Ar1hur Ellon, ~.
Engtioh, diecu8sea Reich. 9:0!5 p.m.
WBEN(930) .

WRmNO PLACE
..,..
The Writing Ptoco Ia not for "poo&lt;" writers; It's
a
for a1 writers. 'M1y not gtve ~
the odvontage of receiYing toecllock about your
-.g~ We'nl " 338 Blfdy Hoi. Clmllu&amp;.
lhe ho&lt;n are:~ . 12_.: nights;

tree-

except~.

-

Horrlotl inteiViewll Uonol Abal, writer. Co&lt;.rlar
Cable (Channell 0). 7:30p.m..

MARCH·•
CROSSTAI.KII:W- -y-~
Jim_,.,._,-~.

t 1:05 p.m. \WEN (930).

6·9.

-"llhY·

IIARCH6

.

Exhibits
u - tn Kloocl "' a . - , e groop show
~by the Otllce of V.P. for Sclenoeo and ~ d M. Through 7. Alamo Oolary, 8-* Hal. Mondoy-y
10a...m.-6p.m.

_ _ _ . . AIICHAEOI.OCIIC
- ~MSTOIIATICIII

8.

\JI8-

-"'~·-­

--------...

Cenlar, ~ thlvugll Fridoy, , 1
a.m ... p ....; _ _
_ . , _ , tO a.m..:! p.m .
IMK:..-M\'~

..................................
--.....v-"'

_lor _ _ ., _ _ __,_

- .

•••

1

I

.....,,_.. ...... 11.

A.M. IUFFAl.O: Kat11J ~ 1'11.0 . conin . _ Sclenoeo. 10 e.m. - · T V
(c::t..w&gt;ol7).
IIARCHI

COIIVEIISATIOHS l l n t E - .,._,_,
o...iar ~

PMT AND l1oCt - - lynn Oorcolln.
ia....t0). 6:30p.m.

~---,.~­
-~. - . , . , .

...,_lor ..

O n - .... -

....

IIARCHI

AI.AIIO GAUEIIY EX.-T

D.C .

COIIVEIISATIOHS II n t E - &amp;IW Har·

l1oCt-- Konrad-·~
- C o l i t e ( a . . . . tO). &amp;p.m.

IIAIICH7 · •
A.M. IUFFAl.O:
.... Pllld1&lt;*&gt;all. Ito alljad . .

.

Dr.-._ba-.
1!-,
~

tOe.m. -·TV(a.... 7).

IIAIICH7.

~-·ntE- - -

tlot - - Lynn Oorcolln. CoiiW ICjwlnll IOj. 7 p.m. -

�7

.

CALENDAR
_
.... _....,...__ ......

--,---·----...,.·__d---.. _ ... ---Kohl.

UUAIFWM"

Donnfo Hodge, U/8. 139 Parl&lt;er. 3 p.m. Followed
by a -..,~on- cOif8e heM.&lt;.

- Col636·2919 for show

·-

· - - c h a r g e.
Tho BMd'a conc:«1 ot WintoiW1d
featured a of guest ortiita ~ the
ponlhoon o1 EnQb1:1 Md Amotican r:oc:k·o-&lt;01.

CIYL---11
Tile d ~ Spooo for 'lloJor
~ Prajocto, lloYid Wllotl, \Ace preol-

1

.

TholoatW_(_,~ , 1976).Con-

fenJnOO -

dont "' Acrea Amorlcan, tnc.. Buffalo. 322
- - .. 3 :30p.m.

Aroong ""'

gueots '"'! Bob

DrJM,

Jonl -

·

L'-- no-

~ "*

couple lhoy begin •
oriy 1o lind lhoy hove
ove&lt; tunonJove.

eoe...-

wrflten- c:o4-oc:tod
by,_,
a oontncl thO Trlotan-

fooldologond ..

-~ONAFIIICAN.-TOIIY"

PHILOSOPHY_,.,_

von Mo!rioon, Dr. Jom.
.-....

~

Tho Duty of - - . . : CloMic
FtedonloSiata. 660
Blidy. 3 :30p.m.

UUA8-ALMSENES'
F.-. (1932): Tom&gt;r of Tlnr Town (1933).

INTEIIMATIONAI. WOIIIIEII'IDAY"

Conference - . .. - S1loting tine il
11 :30 p.m. Admission chlwge.

LoYino.

_,,

......... 1&lt;m , _ . . _, Ph.D.
3T7 MFACC, - 2 p.m.

n.-

,__"1or.

by

_..~ln---

PHYSIOt.OOY AND IIIOCHEIItfmiY

- O G Y LECTURE"

Structut"H='unctlon Relatlonlhlpa and A•
...,bly - I n Homoqanlno, Dr. Joseph
Bonovonlln. OUI&lt;e tJnMwalty t.optntory.
S108Shetmen. 4p.m.

JOINT-I/

- - -. - - a l t h O
- -· Bonn, Gonnony. 106 BaOd.

•p.m. F r w - -

--NYI'IIICI-n.

...

onlhoi"-. OpenlothOpo.tiic.

Tho Spy Who l.oMd Mo,
Moore Md
Bwtn Bach. 146 Oielendorl.
10 p.m. $1
for non-feepeyers.
Jomoo Bond teams with a pulctw1tudinous'(what·
...,.;) KGB ogent to ge1 a "marine sc:ientiat"
who'l been " st"*&gt;g" ~-equipped sub-

. .. m.
por1les
306
~-7:30p
K Wfl bo
oonducted
byatone
of

NYPIAG'o._w,oediDI&gt;byioll.
OoleQe H

~

Allolrolo b y - -- 219 1Do1ge,
-Quod.
Ellcctt. 8 p.m. Open tool,_,._
LEC11111E"
. Tile-

-

Junele:

Wolter ............. Prof.
~·­

-.yHorlmln, v•~ep.rn.

m

~by""' Dopwlrnent"' Englfoh.

_..UMETIIAU..

---~Ciori&lt;-. 6p.m.

UUU.I'IUI"

.

Tile -

(England). Conference - ·

:ti;:.;~~;;~·"'-

...., ___ ctriolno_.

Duel&lt; SCKip; TlvM

EJMcott. 8 lnd 1o

St-

. S..oo (Vloc:onb}146 Oielendoi1. 7 p.m. Sponaored by the C..Otar for Me!fla Study.

and_,,

ARCHEOLOGY LECTURE"
Eltc:rmlono at Loehloh
ConquMia In ....-. Dr. Do-.id Usslohkln. c1 Arc:hiOtoglcal E&gt;&lt;cavat~ons'Pn&gt;jOCI of ret Lacl1ish.
Anttvopotogy ReseM:h Mu.....,, Ellicott. 6 :30

17.0 MF"CC.

~ .m . 'Tlckets

•e $1 .50 tor

Dr. u . - ... visiting C\niOr The Royal
Ontwfb ~ .., • --.g ptolnoot. lJnMoiol!y

Be _ . s lo laugh.

of Toronto.

WAIFIUI
Doo Duolloto (Fidle)l Soott. 1977]. Conletence
· Squre, Col636-2919
lime$.
- c h a r g e.

IIRANOO, DEAN, CLIFT FESTlVAL • .
Young Uono (~ 1956), 7 p.m.; suodonJr Loat s..rnm. ( -. 1959). 10 p.m.

'"'show

. Froeadmjasion.

-Worl.

Sudclonly, atwmg Eiloboth Taylor. Katherine
Hepburn Montgomery Cllt, II a faacinating
o1 T....obout a
ned daughter·

-.o· rom
_ , -·'her.._,.....,

~-- Tho-- ......... drcuo-

.

.,...._·

__
-..-.cu....,..._...__.....,.
OIIAL...-v-..fl

- - ·UK.-

1D7, • 5 1 0 -

-..,...,,
- - . oco
G Y .............
..-.

...... -.--134

- ~~~
, . . .. 1p.a

-···

.. Dr. ,_,-.;.

·-

---~MmiiT&amp;
.....
11-ICif~COILOOI••I

-.,-.......-..CIM'I-~ ..
C . ..101 . . . . . . a..d, ...... 1:30 p.....
~

,

odoptotion

"' fN«Y OotL

frldAy-1

-

Young Uono, with M.ron Brondo, Montgomel)'
Cift Dean Mrin, il on _ . . , . , ol the
Irwin Show novel obout the INM of throe rnon in

WAIIIIDNIOHT FILM SERIES"
F,.b (1932); Tonw of Tlnr Town (1933).
Coni-- · ~· - Flma allr1 ot 11 :30
p.m.-charge.
F.- "'"' bo c:olod many tiWl9l - a honor
~ flm. a mcn1 ....,..,, e revenge tiM, ., ex-

_,_____ -

- by
"
- Sooll, with ~ CernodOle,
clJefo.
~
~

In

p.m.

-~~ ~~ the Stoogoo on ono bil?
2

~~~oct~~ -

11m·-

ln-.-.~Tho
- mon.-.g plonta and dorl&lt;. brooding &lt;NO&lt;·

- c i - J C U ! I I t y a n d - . T..-.was il top torm fortN&amp; one.

Sa~y-3

-

-

•

about Buffalo -

·-

"""""""107

~byCOiogeF.

INotldng by Phi
r,_,_.,_
6 p .m.

IA-Y-1.

ea.rn.-~ .

i•30o.m -~: ,___on_
_. D ..
~ GutWidgo,

Tuesday-- 6

ID:30 - - - _
_ .... p, _ _ _ _ _ t (Choloo ol

~OOY &amp;aillwl'
-ofloA.......
a - Dovid, Ph..O .• """"'"""' of Immunology,

PIIO., UIB.•

.._....nd_

_
__Ph.D.. .Ul8.
12:15-0ol_

In_,._.._,

•

MllyoC1Inlc.-. -223Sl'lom8l.
4p.m.

-

. . , . . _ by -

Olloo

-

,.,_

-.

-

Cologe

WedneSday- 7

~

P!ogrlnl

CHIIM:AI.-11-IIi-f

-~In~---"'

-

ptoooo
~---~
- - e311---.
p.m.,
Ho,
--CGol~---·
2 • MFC, ea&amp;-2882 - . 3 p.m. on
..t&gt;g,
U/8. 2112 c:op.,. 3 ·30p.m.
. . illld
_,
IIIC-·
-

-

col

To ....,.

5

N.
~of~ Engin- - . o Q Y_ __

n.-.-..---......-- _.__
'*"""'" .. - ..,...._-_...,ar.-a.
.... -......,., ...
·CM:..-

_

- ---llOMFAel::l. - 7-10p.m.

11 .............__

_ _ _ _ ...... 1 4 1 - .

.,...
• -

.

10 .... - - 11 .110 l o r - ·

~. -........
. . . . . ......-. Enclfond. 134

-·-·--- -···I .....

"""'""'"
IJII.
u ......
PAID
llodfalo,N.Y

l'tnloit o.JII

w._ - - Conference

Call 836·2i19 for show tirneo.-

Theatre , Scju;re,
charge.

BAC.K0...0.. TOUIINAIIEIIT
167 MF"CC· Elicott Comptox. 5 p.m. &amp;.wlday,
March 11 . Entry foo II S1 per poraon, Md mus1

b o - b y March9toboeflgillle.Prizea witl
bo · - to...,..__- . bring your own sat
to the to\A'nlment.
~bythe~of-t"""""·

CONTINUING EDUCA110N WOIIItiHOI'

- A a . . t l - TroWnf lor -

A10lalanto and . . . , _ ~- tlol- Mwc11
2 end 3 , 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Prereglstrafton requtrod. Sponaored by thO UIB Crodlt·Freo Pro-

grwno.
CREDIT-FREE WORKSHOP
Prognom 1mpoct -

C&lt;odlt·FnHI Progrlmo ..-e

Communlc:otion"­
by Dr.
~·-- to---~
Ruth,_., Creative~- on March
Solving: An Apptoach

30. 8 :30 a.m.-4:30p.m. Tho fee II $5 per poroon.
Regl&amp;tratlon con bo' ...- through Credit-Free
Progrllma, 831 -•301. Open to thO
comnu&gt;lly.
'
LAW..-ARYPLACEMEHT
CAliEEII DAYS

__

-~--~ . 1090'Brliln .

1:30p.m.
""
-I-Liborlow. 1120'Brliln. 3;30p.m.

On~&lt;Ufng
tnted- tolowa:

Lon!, ---

5,_ p.m.

12 noon -

boc.le-

- -

Cenlor.

-~~------­
- 12 noon - Cenlor, 15 u.w..Jir
Aw .• --~

In-· ooch-...., ---

C o r - . . . bo _ _ _ bo.
_
moooln 10c:op.,ot !2 :10p.m.
_ _ .. _ _ b y _ . _ . ..

--UFE--

T - , , - 1 -~HowDnGO

-

..... Woll&lt;ihopo- ..--IIIII ~-

. . . . . .2177.

2 ..... 8Qift
- · $2.50
for··
MFC - ; $3,6(1 ol

Sponoored by the Profesoionol Staff Sonata.

LENTEII-S

P0£11IY READING"

-c.-.g -· "\JoOig
thO
Unry," Dodoion
''T... . . _ . - &amp;oy." ''Oo"

clarify aplibna .. they

UUAIFJLM"

FILM"

U18 GAY LIBERAliON FliONT"
COifoehouse. 107 T()'ll'lSend. 8 p.m. Everyone
welcome.
CACFILMS"

..=y::;,:c.~ ::::;.:

No..ces

_.. tntraductlon to Tref'l•

-

ol .ooclology, UIB. T - l l i q
Room. - . t . 9:'30-11 :30 Lm. Colfeo ot 9 .

UUABFILM"

Monday-S

marinel from both the US- lho USSR.~
major norneo1s ilo giant with o rnoo1fl of steel.

COUECIE H...-rA110f1••

~

Tho Loll WoiU.(_,., Sconoeso. 1978). Conference Theatre, Sqdi"e. Cal636-29191or show
tmea. Admisaion dlarge.
...

!\1!

N\'I'IRGII~·~~obout thO- Yoo1&lt;- Leglololure for Slldent

-

~C...S-CIIololo!I.Dr. ­

-to to their poroonal-. The prog!WT1 modor·
wilt bo S1ocY Johnoon, .,..,_ "' the Pro·-Staff senate Exocottve C0mmltt80.

G.OODYEAR FUND LECTURE"
• G'-lo In W..H. Y, Ctarance Dye. Gondyeor
-&amp;uth Loungo . 8 p.m.

IIICFilM"

Thulsclay.- 8

,deaigno&lt;f to Identify -

Sunday ·- 4"

CIVILENGINEERING SPRING
SEMINAR SBUESII '
UM of Underground Spoeo lot MoJor Engl~&gt;­
-ng Prq.eto, lloYid Willett, vlee president,
" " ' " Amotican. Inc. 335 Hoyes. 5:30p.m.

GIIAIIUATE ITUOENT IEIEAIICH AWARDS •'
Honcnry Sclontltlc: Socloty of Sigmo Xi wt1

hold Ito~-- - d s com·
~In 1. . F.-at 7 p.m. Gnoduolo , _ , .

--~

Eric Claptoo and ..-..cJ

~.

1 4 ! ! - -. 1 p.m •

"' "'*110- Thoy . . lo ·
aarylo&lt;oi--.Col--.

-----~~~­

-cua-Enllot----" . .
--.a o

n.

of IIMCI'
NAACPU/8 ~
··
- •
n-.Np lllhlo - - ll1op by
- Conlor Laungo, 11 Lftl. lo 3 p.m.

8Qift

&amp;c~~--*VofLont•_.._ ..

bo - · 7:30-- . . . . -

Qlaluo

..

-~~---, ~-"'~
.--....moon. . - I I I I I ....vlrluo ol truol A liP
-

Oorilor.

~..=~:..- LMit, • • p.lll. , .
-d~---

ool, on_....,,..,~wl-holdal

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

.. -

.............. te-o.
,....,

.CJUIIIIA•

IH2). 7pm.;
L. . . . . . . . . . ~.'11M3!. 1;10 p_..

~­

-

C1M1M -

~--

llCtiDO&amp;.GPM'N

/

Comar. 15

....... .,. ·

.:r.:=..""'=:==:.

--.·,..."···

�To keep track of
U/B's cultural
events through
Aprill, save
this magnet

.

Williamson
out, the titerol meaning
ofCottages,·
tho title io
People Who Go to
~~!rwf
..
~!~.uoucwin
j.e.. the leisure clus - are
U/B'a Theatre Departmeut and IIIIIOCiate
born into their IOCial clus u most ! of
points
"The

DOt

deiJI ol. Arto and !..etten, oaw Peter Stein's
Chekhovs eharaetero are. They are
-ntati&lt;G ol Maxim Gorky's "Suuuner professionals (engineo!r, lawyer, ductor,
People" in Berlin and thoqlrt n "the belle. writer) who have eome up from the working
production ol a daaaical play rvo ever clus. and tend to accuse one another for
having broken that ci&gt;nneetion.
-··" Ahhoogb Gorky """"" the play in
1904 (at. a time when dlaturbanees in Ruuia
Gorky's sweeping ~ook at. these people in
were becoming prooouneed), it hod rarely
Russia at the turn of the century, which he
~. produced. A year aft.er the Berlin
eolled scenes rather than a play, =ults in
porlormance, England'a Royal Shakeopoaro
- like 19t.h century 1luuian &amp;ov.U - a rieh
Company produced it u well, re-establiohtapestry ol diverse ehancters, who collide,
ing the rec!ognition ol Gorky u a major ftirt, comjAain and ultimstely
e
modern playwright, and created a new
dilemma ol what to do~ their lives. With
intereot in the play. Unclor .the title,
the ""!"'ptiOD oft•o •omon'a deciaiona, ihe .
"Summorfollt," It opened in January at. the
question remains Ulll'aOived.
Long Wharf Theot.ro in N.,. Haven. and
The opportunity to thla rarely
produced play by 0110 of the maotero is
wu revived earlier Jut year in New York.
Dr. Williamaon is 'tile dinlct.or ol. thla _provided during th&gt;pe weeks olThuroday
dr:ama set in Ru.uia at. the tum ol the
through Sunday peliormances (the Sun"century, whleh will he the ...,.od
days are mat.inees), beginning Mudl8 at 8
~roductlon of the Center for Theatre
p.m. st the Center for Theatre ~ .
Be_,-.b in their new quarters. It is
(See "Dil'ed.ory" for oil pertinent inlorma·
Chelthovian in tone - the intencting of lion.) The !&amp;·member eaat, a miature of
middle c1ua intelloetuaJa. their oltemal.elr theat.re . majors, Center fellows and
poignant and amulillg lamentotiona, the townspeople, include• Mary Elizabeth
ambivaleneeo and ennui ol the well-to-do.
Brown, Joan Calkin, Anna Kay France,
VICki Barril, Jadt Huuter, Keith Watta aDd
llul Gorky la ""'"' l.o-.d iD ~
Riehard Weop. Coot- dooigDor is Flatber
ehanp than •u hill
Qlethov,
and lea 1J111po&amp;hotie to tile Wbloo of his · Kline. oot ...,_. ii ~ Folden, and
llc'dlll . . . lo by tile tedmlool dlieet.or,
eharaeterL A.ther ~ II! Uult the
Garyc-ftua. •
"Summer People" - Ia
Dr.

eolle-.

R........

Visiting Musicians

o.. Sa~ • ....,.... a. the Baird Hall
audieDee Win be trealed to a ooeoacleooeort
by the FiYe Cemuriel Eaemble (their lint
hero -

live ,..... ap) • • foar.penoD
and ~. -

'"""'of...,.,.

.i
........ haft bad close
- - - rib
thla_rd,..
_..
Corol

~

eopnDO.

.,...

a

.......... of the Crutloe ~ ill the
helen .....U., to E""''"' lor llD
aetlva- - · and ntlll'lled here in
the -m. to pt J.r MFA ill U/B'e

~~~-~.'11oioyearobebeoamoa

�c-eno
:r,w
......., ..-r

.......... - - . ; tile
'!ill be
wllll~llle U/B ~
lillie DOted
pa
'rid Ju William&amp;.
1'llo nried aloo iocludes three
C!Oiltnlllllg
which will be
.....tatted by Pror-r CipoDa: "2nd Suite
... EDclloh llllltay Bud"..,.·~· Holst,
"Hllloollg &amp;. 2" fGr 24 .,.;nd inslrumento by
Pwq Gral&gt;(er. aad Bidwd Strauss'
"Sonnwwe for .18 W'mda"- - · wllich,
l't!ofe-.r Cipolla informs, waa c:ompooed by
Btroaa wbon be waa17.
'nlia major coa&lt;ert will be held March 25
in tbo auditorium of "WilliamJville Sooth
lfich SchnoJ On Main Si.reet at 8 p.m. And
it~ free.

r=-;wt
..,.

""'"'*

Robert Dunean in
Re&amp;ideaee
Tile ....,...._ Weot Ccut poet. Robert
" ' - . ril be iD nooidoaee In U!B't
Jl.lollloll ~ clariDc 111e lut two
......, of lludl, ot .the invitotion of poet
Jlabort Oreeloy, who .... appolmed Gny
~of l'ootu ODd lAtter&amp; lut CalL At
port of tbo Gny Choir aetiviti-. Profeaaor

...u.

"Scbolan Sean the SeUen" io tl&gt;e tiUe of
alftdit..rre..- running from March 21
throlllb May 2 in whlch six prof....., from
UJB'a Engliah Departm011t will diocuss
- "Mlling boob. If you can't attend the
whole oerieo ($15), you can regioter for
individualleetureo ($3 each).
Robert Dalia lecture io on ..Jlle

Silnoerilioto bribe__,_. ol"'ttlr"HatJIIIt
boob (ODd collop campos eultl. . J .R.
Tolkion. Marilyn F.rench's !ictioniled views
of tl&gt;e oppreaioo of women by men iD our
oociety, ne
Room. will be
dil&lt;oaoed by Myles S!J.tin. Murray
Sc:hwartl has chooen a book about Viet
Nam, J)WpGI.cU1 by Miebael Herr: Slo1~
by this year's Nobel PrUe wmner ID
literature, lsaae Bulievis Singer, is Mark

w-··

Shechner'a tople. Losue Fiedler will air.bis
views of the longtime favorite; Zex ad IAe
Art of Mo~ M~. The aeries

&lt;GDcludea with a look by William Fiacher at
Alex Haley's Rooll. Profeaaor Fiacher
subtiUea his tolk ·A Public Event." since
U.e ramifications of Root• (tlle TV series.
Alex Haley u a eontroversial public figure,
the B!J.ek experieuee in Ameriea, Boots IT,
ete.) hAve gone far beyond the hook qua

hook.

For further infonnation, eall 88}-&lt;1.801
. and aaldor Mary Ellen ShaughneSIY who
very appropriately - abe has a Ph.b. iD
Engliob from tbia univeraity - io
person reaponsible for setting up Ibis
iDterestingeourse.

Cneloy.plaaa to ...-t u tiiDualoeriea of
Cblrloo Ol.m llomorlal Leeturea, iD booor
of tW iDIIDeatial poet talllbt ot
.WB ill tbo oidJoo. o-a will in&amp;Dgurate
111e oeriea wllll four 1eeturet ill O'Brian
Hall, 1Dioralllioa obout wbioll II in Ibis
..,..., dire&lt;tory.
IB&lt;ely tW he will
-lift two - - - o f his poetry - ooe
ot U!B ODd- in tbo city (problbly at the

It.

•Two visiting groups spoDJOI'Od by the
Music Departme~t: the New York Consort
for Poetry ud Music on' April 4, and
violioiot Begis Pasquier ori Apri16.
•t. eredit-free eouroe iD mime, beginning
Apri12, teaching mime tedtniques, general
movement, an intl'Oduetioo to mask, as weU

Alloatown Community Cuter); thot io iii
lbo _.live otap u tbil goes to prest, '

... wll be_......!J.ter.

.
llobort Daacu .... bani iD Califomia ill
. . . _ • eollep dropout In· the
lAte thirtlN. DqriDg World Warn he lived
iD New y arlt where he edited olill
._.... ODd .Booodiog IAe Bow. New
111~ ODd

~

expeelt to

as aesaion,s on im~ioa incorporating
all or the above. Teacher ia Howard Lende,
who has performed with the Canadian
Mime Theatre, Metro Toronto's Cartvao,
as weD as on
T-elevisioo (ETV aod
CBC). For infonnatioa about registration
and fee, call 881-4301.&lt;The lui appearau&lt;e iD Clark Gym o!
Miebael Tilaon Tbomu eondueting the
Buffalo Philharmoak. April 19. From the
who brolllbt you the popular
Philh11cmonie &lt;GDeerts-in-the-gym in lliTI
&amp;Dd 1978: tbe Office of Cultural Affairs.
More about thil iD the next '(Mareb 29)

publillt a new

. . , . _ of blo poema, and his -en•
' val- work OR the im.pt poet H.D.
(HBda l)oalilde) Will be releued by'
llloa 8walow Pn-.
"llll&amp;b poetry. • ...,.. Daacu. "u J&gt;l.ber
- _.. .... ...U Jove.ar make otaieo
ar .......-,
1111 t.eultioo ot.

.......

to-

Canam.n

Winds, ~ereussion
and Karel Busa
x.ret
..--ODd.,..........
ean.en.

Baa, lk c-h-AmerieaD

mapel.

COlli·

wbowoa tbo

They've moved

l'uiiDw PrWe IDr ............... in 11188, will
.......... tarU.IIudlZii-b7tbo
U/B WIM ......._ dlrooted by Fraak
~ofU.IIlllio~ lllr.Huu

The Pa,try Colleetion hu eoinpteted its
move to the Ambent Campus. It is located
iD the Special CoDeetioas area. 420 Capen
Hall. To reach it, take the elevator inlidl!
the Undergraduate Library OD Capea'o fifst
(DIIl "ground! noor. The boura are 9 - 5,
Mooday throagb Friday. It io • closed
weekend&amp; ud bolldaya.
-

wi!~U. ~blo ill. perfarmaaee

tl tW. of .................... ~;"
..,.._ . . . tW 11188' upritiDp in
0 ' + I ullda, ad "c-no ... """"--WIMEDoomlllo."TIIe..._wort
ilfirllrp{liO-)wDiud

l11U81C

.___,..........._llalrdo.tar
.....

n.t4 0."6-

c-poeer.ID-IIMioloDee:
Ball.
of u.
C..Uve . t l"erfonabbc Ana ud
DopuiiiOII&amp;of.....

g Pll. ..... ....,_.,

.....,
I

......,
•

UYE~~
n..
~ .._.,.
~

{IIUNYAB

Altllla . . . . . W8I'O 1••7 FM).

T:IIPiit

-

..-: .
... c...i~o......,.• (Villlillr Altiot

�Serin). Boird Recital· lhll. 8 PM. Geoe;al
~ $4, Faeulty/Stalf/Aiumni/Sr.
Citilleu $3, Studeata $1. Sporuor:

9
Friday

o.,utmeut oi.Muoi.£.

JAZZ BENEFIT OONCERT.

nLIIIlCitEENING/DISCUSSIO
U..
Dotlcc (19119), Froaeb film by
Robert Breaoa, with 'clioeuJsioo by film·
, _ , Blu, -~ pro{- Ill
U/B. 34 Duns Scot111 Hall. o - College,
4380 MaiD St. 2 PM. Geova1 Admiaioo $2,

4
S...S.y

Memben of La Cerde Cui~! de Ia
Lugue FraD&lt;aille 11.75, titudeuta $1.25.
SpoDMn: Media Study!BufWo and La
c..de Culturel de Ia Langue FraDeaioe.

10
Sotanlay

11
s-day

POLl( MUSIC

, Cooooertr 8: "The

IZ

I..IJC1'Uili SEIUES:

5

lltJJLDING WOIILDWIDE
Ad&lt;K Sa1otM. archil«! , Ri&lt;e University:
·~-cmt Housing in South Africa: Rural

MGIIday

Enyironmental Desigu.
~,

'

w.......,

UVE llADIO BBOADCABT
M..W: .fn&gt;wo Marll&gt;oro (Buffalo Chamber
Music Society oeries) tive from Kleinhans.
Schubert: Q - in B, Op. 168:
Booeherini: Guitar Quintet in D: Bnhms:
PiaDo Quintet in F. Op. 34. WBFO (68.7
FM). 8:20PM.
MUSIC
•
.
•
RoiNrt Did&lt;: Con~mporary flute Tech·
Diq- Wcrl.obopo and Coneert. Boird
Recital Hall. Wcrl.obopo: 11 AM·1 PM:

14
W...m-lay

15
11mnday
16
Friday

2:~:ll0

PM. Cllncort: 8 PM. General
~SUO. StudeDts, U/B CommUD·
ily ADd Sr. cw-11. Sporuon: Comer of
the Crell.in and Per1ormiD« Aria and
l:loport.met ol.lolaole.

Zl

c.rnegie·

WORKSHOP
and M.A.
eandidate .i n Creative Studies at SUC/Buf·
lalo: "Nurturing the Performing Art1st
Witbin." 167 MFACC, Ellieott Complex. 7-9
PM. Free, Sponsor: Browaing Library. •

Roger Ftrerteilt, .!lluaician

MUSIC •

•

W...m-lay 7no iii Mii4M* (Visiting Artlot Series).
Boird Reeital HalL• 8 PM.· General
AdmissiOn· 54. Faeulty/ Staff/AIUDmi/ Sr.
Citizens $3, Students $1. Sponior:
Dopartment of Mosie.

. ZZ

DRAMA

Tlnondar Svmmer People•by Mi.xim Gorky, direclod .
by Ward Williamoon. ~March 8lilting.
MUSIC

.

Jou ~ directed by PbD Sima.
Boird Recital lhll. 8 PM. Free."Spouor:

DRAMA'

o.,utmeot oi.MiiOie.

Svmmer People • by Maxim Gorky, direeted
by Ward Williamlon. See Mareb 81isting.

CIIAIILES OLIION IIEIIOIIIAL

DRAMA c

~n-*:"The ~of

,s,m.,,,.

People• by Maxim Gorky, direeted
J&gt;y Ward Willii,Juoo. See March 81isting.

. DRAMA
•
17
People• by Maxim Gorky. direeted
s.t.nlay
by Ward Williamooo. See March 8lilting.

s......,.

On·gnlac ldomltieltioolo: doe Paom .. the
Roeall and Adv- of Self iD Projoetion ••

See March 20 listing.
U
Friday

DIIAIIA

s--r p.,p.• by loluim Gorky. direclod
by Ward W~ See March BllotiDc.

MUSIC

StlldeloU of 1'rit4 AncAaoka Boldt, duopiano ~tal. Boird Recital Hall. 8 PM.
Free. Spo,._.: Depu1aeDtoflolaoi&lt;.

SaboiU, author of Do.blo E%-

,......., w. w- for

UVE llADIO IIIIOADCABT
~ (Ruffalo Chamber llaoi&lt;
Society aeries) tive from Klelnhana. Bartoli::
QuariA!t No. 6: Moart: Quartet in D, K.
499: and with pianist Stephen Manes •
Schumann: Plano Quintet in E flat ~r,
Op. U . WBFO (68.7 FM). 8:20PM.

......

POETIIY !lEADING

o..u

Imaginary Penoos: tbe Poem aa an Interior
Play." 112 O'Brian lhll. 8 PM. Free.
Sponoor: English Department's Gray Chair
o!J&gt;oetry and Letlers.
,'(1&gt; ...:

LECTtlRE SERIES:
BUILDING WORLDWIDE
Volker Hortlwpf, architeet,

LEC'I'UilF.SEIUES:

BUILDING WORLDWIDE
Peter Maooroirtg, arehited., Nova · Seotia-&gt;'
Teehnieal College: "EdueEion !or Building
Design: Oboervat.ioni and. Experieneoa in
Canada and AustraliL" See March 51isting.
CBAB.LES OLSON MEMbluAL
1ECruB.ES .
Poet Rol&gt;ert Domccuo•: "Tbe Power of

DLUIA
Svmmer People• by Maxim Gorky direeted
by Ward Williamoon. See March'~ lilting.
Note: time on SUDdaya is 8 PM.

Mellon University: "Proper Technology:
tntra Low.-t Emergency .Shelters in
llanglad~b and Traditional Housing in
Peru." see March 51isting.

;;-- Tnditional, Urban Spontaneous, Urban
Deoipecl." S85 H-reslhll. 5:30 PM. Free.
Spo..-: School of An:hitecture and
6

DRAMA
Svmmer P•ople by Maxim Gorky. See

· LIVE IIADlO BROADCAST
Atodru &amp;gov;tz.. guit.uist, perfonns live
from the White House. WBFO (88.7 FM). 4
PM.

Ove~

a.o.dobow
- ('1'hird Edition)," featllri.of Kim Ood7 and
Joen Krill.. Coruen Theatre. 8:30 PM. 11.
Spo-. CQ!lege B.
llhMay

19
MGIIday

JAU. BENEFIT OONCEBT:
C. Q. Price Sextet, with a premiere
per!onnanee of his new comp&lt;&gt;Sitions. See
March 91isting. •

H...... violin, y...,. M'sld.rulu&gt;f!,

epo-: Deport.,..~ofMurio.

lery. 8 PM. General Ad miNion $3, Students
with lD eards, U/B Community, Senior
Citizens, Gallery Members 11. ADS
vouchers aecepted. SpoDMn: Center ol. the
· Creative and Performing Arts and
.- DepartmentofMusie .

Mardi 81isting.

MUSIC

piano. Fo&lt;ulty recital. llaird Recital Hall 8
PM. Ge-.1 4dmiuioo $3, FIICU!ty/Staff/
Alumni/Sr. Citireu $2, Students 11.

-

• G.Q. Priee Sa:tet, . with a premiere
..,..rormance or his new eompositions.
S}alfamcdore Cafe, 2610 Main Street. 10
PM. $Sat door. Proceeds benefit WBFO.

F.,.._

no-r

DRAMA
S.mmer People by Maxim Gorky. See
March81isting.

-

~ ...

~~- l'id;orlr of w.Mioa, Goo4IDill.
IK. . and the ~ ~- 8Z2

TALI:HI' 8110W

r- ReVIIO D: ..-.! auai!Aw Ilene,
feet.ur!aalawotudeala, ........... . . .
iD ....... and--· ..... and . . . .
- · 8pclofa &amp;llo !a&lt;uky. wn-1'1111. . .
PM. Free. BMroe ule. " - ' lltlodoll&amp;
Bor Aaaodatioa, BtudeDt Lite
IAwlldoool.

JAZZ COIIKEaT
c-rto 8: Jim eaw.-. pianilt and
-...ble. ConooU -n..tre. 8:30 Pll. ll.liO.
s.--.c.~ep B.

8 PM. Free. s,.a..-: Deport·
- o f F,;qljolo and Paela 6 Writers, !De.

a..-.,

II
. . . .y

oWlA

c-au..

.

IIUIIC

u...,. • •• c-,.-n Ceoocnt. •·
r-.1 by Willuia ltellloo. llllrd .....
lbll. 8 I'll. "'-· ..,_,

s.....r~·byllaldli~.cllndlld

byWardW..__8oe ...... lllolillr.
.,..., dille- a..ayata. I'll.

lftiiiC
.....,,.,,_, ""'*; . . . . ., a.ut.

1-.

~

.......

.....,. v -

~-

,._,, ...

~~Aft

cw.

--..

.......

n.w- "

u.AIIA

,s

�MUSIC/DANCE

Cotot..,.,.,....,

Boird
.&amp;umbl&lt;l, eo-directed
by Yvar Miktlubplf uil Ju WilJWns,
joiDed by the ColkgiiLm Mt&lt;ri:vm,
direc:led by Barbra Wioe ud the Zodioqu r 1&gt;- Co., clirectA!d by Linda Swiniuch. A
1'"'111"1"' of eootemporary music based on
medieval muaic, felturing the performance
ol •Medieval Variations" by Danisb
compooer, Paul Ruders, wbo will be
...-nt. That work will be daDoed lfy the
Zodiaque Co., witb choreography by
J-ne Goddard. Conductor: Jan Williams. Baird lleeital HalL 8 PM. 'Free. Sponsor:

29
ThiU'IIday

•

n::snv.u.

~ty.

. MUSIC

Lecture/Demonstration · presentation of
his own worka. Baird Recital Hall. 8 PM.
Free. Sponsors: Center o! the Creative and
Performing Arts and Department of Music. ,

DRAMA

r-·•

DANCE MARAmoN
Third A -...z Llllllc:e M&lt;lnl~A&lt;no to benefil. •
the Muscular Dystrophy Asaociatioo.
Squire Hall'a Fillmore Room. 8 PM through
Sunday April!, 2 AM· 90 bours. Voluntary
donation at tbe door. For iDformatioo re
applications, .call CAC, 345 Squire Hall, •
881·5552. Sponsor: Community ' Action
Corps.

THEATR.E
College B PlaJien. "Godopell." Cornell
Tbeat.re. 8 PM. General Admiazion $2.50,
Students/Sr. Citizens $2, CB!IRC lee
po.yen $1_.50. SpoD001'8: College B . and
Inter-Residence Copneil.

D&amp;UIA

s--o.. People• by Maxim Gorky, direded

S1
Satarday

lioliDg.

Nate: t.iaM 00 llaadq~ lo.ll PM;

......,

MUSIC
Micllael No.tamb.,., saxophone · (Faculty

Cipolla., witll , - conduet.or, lt.rel Huaa,
ud wiLil \liB ~ E-blo.
~llooo&amp;loH.S. &amp;IIIIIMium. 8 PM.
Ft.. a,-: o.,.n-oiMaoio.

Reclt.al). Baird Recital Ha)l . 8 PM. Genera.
Admiaaion SS. Faculty/St.a!f/Aiumni/Sr .
Citixeno $2, Students Sl. Sponsor:
Department'of Music.

LllCI'ila . . . .

LEC'ruRES

•

Frtilay .·

"*
..-c
Torth ... the Godly
8eo': tile o.-1&lt;111 the Ralm Poetry." .
of

-~,.

lft8C

c..,oo.r. ,._, ...u ol pduat.e
.............. 11111'11 lledUI lbll. 8
I'll. r-. ...... u.,.n-..totM.-.

Yvar Miklo4lltoff, piano (Fac:ulty lleeital).
American pwio music. Baird Recit.allbll. 8
PM. General AdmiAioo $8, Fac:ulty/Sta!fl
AlumnVSr. Cftixens $2, Student. Sl.
Sponsor: Depar(itientofMuaic.

DRAMA

playa by
liJting.

Fran. Kmet.o.

See Mareh 29

-

THEATRE
CAlk go B /'~Qycn: "Godopell". ·See Mardi
291isti.ng.

•

MUSIC

p..,.J!Oni and Mic/Ui Blood, two one·act

~.

8eo Ilardi Slilllllc.

DANCEMARAmON
Tltird_ A,......z Llllllc:e MarutA&lt;&gt;lo to benefit
the Muscular Dystrophy AMociation. See
March 30 listing.

Poet Rokrt v..o-: "Tbe Presence of the
World: as Actual; u Real - 'FiDdiDg the
Way.' " See March 20 lining.
·

,. Cut.,

ClldLII:IJOUION liDiomAL
LIICftlUI!I

THEATRE·
~go B Plilvero: "Godspell". See Marcil
29list.ing.

CIIABLES OLSONMEMORIAL

-..JINGwoaAJWDJE
.11rie ......._ ll'llllliod, li.LT.: "'heel·

......,,....,.,....~ ... Tlllrd w..w
~
J!i,pt.• Bee Ilardi
5111111ic. . . . . . , c.-1 .. 111-...J •
St.....

If
.,....,

DRAMA

FannJ!Cini and Miclli'• Blood, two oae·act
playa by Franz Kroetz. See Mardi 29
- listing.

11\181C

. U/B .,...., ~·. direc:led by Frank

•

,

David Belnncm, Compciser-in-Residence:

Fannvard and M'di'• Blood, two ooe·act
playa by Frai&gt;z.K.-z. )Jireet.ed by Jaek
Hunter. Harriman Theatre Studio. 8 PM.
General Adm.iasioa'18, Students and Senior
Cftixens $1.50. Sp01110r: Department of
Theatre.
·

A Jhc~WwJN_,
FutitJ&lt;Jl: a muque,
a budlc drcle (otorieo and _ . , ., a.ajl a
medieval dan&lt;e ~ion by members
ol the U/B llodievaliot Club. Refresh·
moulo, iDcludiQg, uturally, mead. -l67
IIFAOC, Ellicott c-plex. 1-4 PM. Flee.
Spoa.r. llrowoiDr Library.
.

bJ Ward ww.-. Bee Ilardi 8

author of book on D.H. Lawrence's poetry
and co-editor of collection of feminist
literary criticism: "Costumes of the 'Mind:
Transvesli~m as Metaphor." 410 Clemens. 1
PM. Free. Sponsor: English Department's
Graduate Program ill .Jiterature and

·x·

~oll(uoie.

. . . .y

FILM/DISCUSSION
Eveffing1 for New Film: Vinoent Grenier,
&amp;mmaker from Quebec. now living in New
York. Will ScreeD and discuss "Interieur
Interiors" (1.978, 16 mins.), "World ill
Focus" (1976, 20 mins.), "Wbile Revolved"
(1976, 12 mins.J.
(1976, 9 mills.) an·d
nther works. Albright-Knox Art Gallery. 8
PM. General Admissio'n $2, Gallery
members and atudenls $1.50. Sponsors:
Center for Media Study, Media Study/ Buf·
Ill~. Albright-Knox Art Gallery.

•

APRIL
1
Suday

DRAMA
FannJ!Cini and MiciM'1 Blood, two one-act
playa by Franz Kroeti. See Mardi 29
listing: _

I

COILOQVJUM

•

.5cHodr&lt;J M. Gtlbcrt, poet and professor of English, Ullivenlty ol California at Davia,

\
on---ProfitOrJ.

. s . Pom,r.
. . PAID
Buffalo, .Y.
~rnnit Nn. ll t

THEATRE
Colle go B Plavero: "Godspell". See Marc:h
29 listing.
DANCE IIAJIATBON
Tltird A""'"" Llalocc M&lt;lnl~A&lt;no to benefit
tbe Muocular ~y Auociatioo. See
Ilardi 80 lilting.

•

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

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                    <text>llgn !*8ldl fUture dewllopn••

Update
on

\

nearty twice as much space

4: The Oakgrove ~structlon Com-

·~~'peee11.ML4

· under construction north of Clifford
Furnas Hall. These two buildings were
designed for the de~artments of Civil

A. ProJects under Construction or Soon
to be initiated
1. The John A. Beane Center

the most advanced earthquake- simulators at any American university and Is
expected to attract millions of dollars in
research to SUNY/Buffalo annually.
The maJor contractOr for this project Is
John W. Cowper.
3. -The Phlllp Dorsheimer Laboratory
Greenhouse (attached 1o Cooke Hal~ Ia

~~~~~:.f:es~~~:r·!~N~ca~:l

.campus
cOnstruction·

pany will reaume work In the sprl"ll on
the constructiOn of a new parking lot
. located north of White Roed and west of
Hamilton Entrance. The
lot will
provide an eddltlonal 526 ,parking
spaces. This, In eddltlon to the new
P-7g lot, south of' Clemens Hall , will
bring total ·parking capacity tb 5200
autoniol)lles at the Amheret Cenipus.
5. The construction contrllcl for the
new Music and Chamber Halla was
awarded to tht! Mlllllore Construction
Company this paal December. Construetl&lt;&gt;n Is just beginning on thea&amp;
buildings east of Sainuel l . Clemens
Hall. They are scheduled to be
completed by July of 1981.
6' Construction--on the Eaat Lecture

This update on campus construction
was i ssu~ this week by Albert W.
Dehlbetg , assistant to the vice
president, Facllltlds Planning: .

Helm Facility (Central Stores W~~;t;
house and Maintenance Garage) f t
nMtty complete end are expected to b1&gt;
occupied by the Unl..alty sometime In
the next few weeks. BOth buildings
_.. constructed by leCesse Brothere,
Rochester, N.Y. and ere located.at the
southwest comer of the Amherst
'Campus near Ci'ofto.Hall and the Statler
Commissary.
2. Two new Eng ~n-lng buildings are

~~dln~foht'::'~':~st w7H'g.,~[~~· on:~

$~.~ ~fr'::'~~3re :1'/'~!~~is o~

:::l~~Y. I~Y:,!~;:'of r.::.hm~~v~:..:,aJ
wlll~ovide

~ Mar/:~~,0::, ~nh~~se located at

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

·new

~~~s ~~~r:l'J~ ~~~ ~~()(~ .

FE822, 1979
VOL.10 • ~.20

tt-a~ll: either a Co~ncn·, or _the qld way
By Jorce Buchnowst&lt;l
Reporter Slat!

If for aome nsaaon the Acedemlc

~.":rt ~~~::aPr~~~~ ~oJ..~ .
greduate Ed,ucatlon to formulate and

no&gt;ll~ Unlverally-wlde undergraduate
DOll~, F. Certer Peonlll, vice prealdent

for ,_,h aclencee, w111 recommend
that the University nswert to a previous

=~~'Unt:=r"...=..
"'ri't,~tf:n ·reportinG directly to the President.
PeonlTI told t.he Reporter 111111, with
the ut-up of the t:unent admlnlstratlve
hlerwehy. there'a no way tlll1t a DUE
0... who Ia fMPOIIIIbla to the VPAA

::" :::u-...:r~~~...::.:..lhe.:-:

cempua el4111eAU.
Saki PanniH; "'t cannot -.or!&lt;. ll'a an
admlnletllllhe nlghtmn. Who Ia going
to deaiCie our prlorlttea? How fa he
· going to .-ct to oonfllctlng order'a and
two maetara? 11'1 just an
lmpoaal'" olluatlon."

....................,"_

.

"-'""ll Mid he hell no problem with
the admlntatratl.. llructure which was
In effect . , _ h e - to U/B from the
·~SUr Btala" In 1813. AI thl1t - ·
the Unl,...lty·wlde DUE 0... !Mile no
dlloln thlouflll ... OIIIDe of the
Ac8dlllllc Altalia VIae ,_.._.,, Slnca
...... ,...,....,.., only to the
.......... P8tmllf ..... the 4Mn 111141 to .,....y ... ay OOIIC*III of

~-eel lhe nollon that he Ia

==r.~~~=
on_,...

't!:,..

.._
...,

•

.......,.. to the dl8clpllna
... -r~to

Ill dllflcuh
81-beel
-~001108de,
. . -for
.
ty to COIIIIIIUIIIclle

I•

Council on Undergreduate Education,
while II may not be a panacea, Is the

the lntrtcacles of curriculum design·,
=nclng , constraints of outside

~~tro:si.':au:sft:' s\~:,.,~~

suppcit't'~ :~m:~a.n~~ ~::.,nt~~~

lively foreclosas the possibility of
dO'mln!lllon by one Individual.
.
.the Council would be compoeed of:
six fecully- four fro.m the CO&lt;e ca.mpua
and two from health eclencea;- six
students; and thrae deans or aeaoclala
deans - two from the COAl ca.mpua and
one fro.m hfalth aclencea. Peradotte, an
edmlnlstratlve officer fro.m hNith
sclencea, and the dlrac:IO&lt; of Admlesl!lns anCI Reoords would u
ex-oHiclo members. Co-chalra of the
CQuncll' would . be eelectad by Pannlll
and VPAA Bunn and would be llli-Ofllclo
.....,bers of the· Preeldent'a Acl1dernlc-

exr~~~~n ~~/!~:;;e8~:~:aat~::rt
~~-= ~~~ves.~;;ld~~~E hd~0

technical details Involved w~th the
health sciences curricula waa "llel&amp;gated'' to Pannlll'a office. •
Cumsntly, Heslth Sciences Aaaoi:late
VIce President Donald t.anoon handles
mug,h of the lachnlcal details and
llaleon work for the faculty. A botanist,

=~s c\:.3~r.::'ln .:\'m

a c - edmlnlltratlon and counseling
at the Unlverally of Texaa at AUitln.
Only 0118 . . prwlderll?
The only other 1nY Pannlll bel'-8
one DUE dean would utlafactortly
both fhe health aclencee and the
academic ..a would be If U/8 heel
only one vice ~ldent to which both
these- reported.
Although lha cumsnt ad.mlnl~
model, which provides fO&lt; vice
-~tor llolll t.lth actencee and
.................

Pwmlii!IOMd thiift
~ and

CO&lt;n-

eahOOis,
York

, do not .... a VPHS atot. In
theM. W:hoola. a curriculum like
nurllna. for
Ia ,.,.• • t.culty
under h aoc:t.l aclanoM ........_AI
NYU, only lha rnadlcll -'II dantal
achoOia . . under the halllll ~

-pie.

~. .

-

lnatlhi!IGM. "-CCh,

Cablnet.
Pani\111 lnalata that CNaiiQII of 1M
Council corn.u a~dlrllcl ~to
t~ rrotorloua F~ 78 .PIIialclentlal
me.mo which aakacl that • rnt1lllanlam
be daweklpad
lhallJnl..altywlde pollclu on undergraduala educe. lion . . obeerwd.
.
Aoopyofthe nwno._ ~
aerrt to Jonatllan Reichert. Who _.
·theh the chair ol the FICUity
and to the Senata'a Executlva Commit·
taa, but the nwno was apptii'MIIIydlecuaaacl by them.

'0 _,

'How can
one DUE dean
serve two masters?'
attantlon fTom the VPHS •.

~~-~~~--...
Otven , _ !*lieu-., 0118

tlnW-

~wlda

vice j~Naldent would lind II a
formidable, If not tmpoul'" ll1lk. to
coordll*a elfort8 for 11a111 the hMith

U/B haa five Maltll - - - eae-1a.
.... wttll ,.. . . . . ~ unlllla • ..,_and the_. cempua, I'WmiU
bel.._. The office -'II Ill rwiloMib/1GIIMr Uijh4lialn. wllloll . _ t11e1r own
rnacllcll acllooiL U/8.111Mn111he lllflfle- . tiWa WOUld juat lle.too big.
tlolla .... tour llolpl. . . In ....... _,
The Health Sclana. vice . prwlderll
aaeoal8llolla .... ,... - - . ~
,.qWtng an ~ .._,. ol
otrongty bel-- tJ\at the IJIOIIOIId

a..ee,

........,__

Ae w u hla paraonal aaplllillolla . .
.IXIIIC*Md, Pannlll eooffed at t ' "gulllbla -.lgll" to bel- 118 WOIIIcl

..athe'-llh
..
11'111'11 which to ----·~
- . c l to the UnMraltY
I)Neldencl'. PanniH aald "t!MN'I no If,
and&amp;, or buta about II," he "llllolutaly
~ not want" the Job "under any
~-·
Nol If It offaNd to him?
"No." ... lniQied. "TTie wllola tilingkilL"

n.._,_...................
..

_.

"

�:1

...

..

lnclepeDdent Llvlns Project endl-.s; .
some 111ay be forced Into nursing homes

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

The kldeploi!Mnl t.Jmg Projecl. a

. . _ w.t "Sida ~ llhlcll 11M
IIIIDecl llle ~ WIIO .... phy8ICal
....,...,.,.
- wW..,..,
- on
II Sl~ I _...,lo al horne,
,._ :10 " ' - _ _ . hlndlng runs out.
During llle .... two ,...., 1116
~ ~ In .,. -bounded by
FoNM
Main Street the
w...tronl, .... ""'""-' OCCU~onal

A-.

......., ~ """' the Project,
whldl Ia hcKiaoid In the Allentown
Community &lt;Center, 111 E l , _ AWl.
._, H not t.en fO&lt; the Prolect, Its
~ ...... Glngher belleW!is, •
majority ~ t ' - Individuals would
.... t.en fOI'CIId to aum!nder their

=~::" o-::::,.:0 laln~o
-

.=

professor of occupa:tlonal

~atU/8 .

"Many of the elderly have medical

~~CfO&lt;"":'em~o"?~~=~

home." -exolaina.
The - · . - i to cool&lt;ing fD&lt;
may find- can no longer see
llw atOWit -controls cla.ty, 0&lt; a •
.._..,-bound man may be u lo , _ ~· orcloeet IIICI&lt;a. The
.,.,_ with m..matold -.thrills may be
......,. to tum m lights and electrical
IIPPitancM '**- gn-.ted fingers
cannot g~ the awltchea.
Ma. Glngher uya .., all
• ~ Of elderly peraona, who,
deaolla medical problema, can contin..
to function Well at home 11 ~
taa1ca can be adapted to ihelr
ccndltlona.

,.,..f

1tema whldlcan MID
Some ltema provided by 11w Projed.
after staff members have clients' llmltatlona, " - Included
ralaed •r.mbQia fD&lt; atowt c:ontrola lor
thoae With falling
hooncl-hekr
shower attaclm*tla
aatety atoola
to allow thoae unat
y In the tub to
t.the aafely. OIII&gt;Nnded kltct*l
fO&lt; thoee who " - suffered
~ • . . . . . , _ 0&lt; Immobility in
one h-..!, -apec:jal Velcro fastenens
to Nplac:e buttona zippers fO&lt; those
who find to be a stubborn
-.acleto-..g thernaeiYes.
In c:ae., Project staff haW!
'*Pad clllnta r-.ange their living
quarters ao "'-Ill, clothing and
fUmllunt .., mont -lly lfi'CBS*Ible.

:.=h1,-

*"'""'*'t

..................
.,......._
"Many;
Items

provided by the
Glngher, ·aren~ ,.
llw cllenta' health
............ Medicaid()( Medicare." So
wt.. ._. lor llw Project c.M, It's
...llllal)'- - o f -elderly, the
of whom .... IIICOIYIM at 0&lt;

l'lojacl,

-

lmburaable by

:"J

=-IIMCIII~~·
~lc

can pay

p~~aa~zee.

Exlra ...p
"If we go to a cllarrt'a home and find
he O&lt;llhala distraught o - a late Social
5acuf1ty check, - know Whom to call
about the problem. If there's no food In
the house, - know whom to contact to
get food for that day and until the
groce&lt;y money aniW!s, • Ms. Glngher
polntsOU1.
If a client "'&gt;PN"S to need medical or
dental at1ention, the staff paues this
infO&lt;matlon along to the appropriate
peraon or agency but cannot force

close of the Project

student Patricia McCreery.
"There are an estimated

...,...Ices," Glngher says, "and many of
theSe may be prematurely placed In
nursing homes If the Project Is
abandoned. "
And, she laments, the elderly who

r:,av:h:i~e~~~~.~~~ ':::, t7~~;:' ~!~
outside encouragement to do-so.
'

SUNY has "no ln1ention" of develop-

additional financial su~port from the

::;:::,~::_away lrom one area of study

l:f:e '='d:n~d~"r~~~? ~u!l'~~~~
· but there will be no tuition boost for
graduate students In non-professional
areas. he said. Perdue claimed the
reasons are that SUNY doesn't have
enough graduate students to begin
with, that an Increase would make
SUNY less competitive with other
lnstltutipns in neighboring states and

1

1

:::t~,;:~~~~~~J~ :f'ng "a g::,~

JOlin Perdue, vice ehancellor fO&lt;
"'**"lc program P&lt;l~Qr_and planning,
reponed this to the Prtif\lsslOnal Staff
Senata !;..~.=,no a~lon-~
1 fol......,..
~""'

- - . . to

8

QlftiiiP.

........ -

••Pi~8iii .. !'
: . .- .
lng las

lad -

- -

=

- - ~~
~ to mob

• Ia did : : : . . :
a...:.Jior Whorton
to begln aneffort

to
.~
tiduc8tion al
SUHY
last - . " - - said, "'''"'""'"•
~about t5 coll"'les met at Stony
Btooktoexd\llnge~onthematter.
Perdue also told the PSS that SUNY
Is "concemeil" abi&gt;U1 the "Increased
coat of health related services" and

~~~h'!r"~~:r-W:~e"~ ~~~r;.,::~g

the budget.
Although SUNY has generally given
autonomy to Ita unfts, the Vice
ChancaiiD&lt; said, he feels Wharton
envisions a stronger leadership role for
SUNY Central . Perdue said he pe&lt;~aaryybel lev!'SUNaYuchls leadersto
be h!P.hellds
11 5
·together as a system." He also strongly

~~~ t~~~Jnt an~ 0':;,_e ~~=

clooely to ensure a more cohesive
aducatlonaf experience fO&lt; SUNY's
atudlenta.
Belen apeeklng to the Senators,
Pard.. told the Reporter that If a tuition
hike _,.to be put Into affect fO&lt; first

~. t~~seA=~ ~
under 115,000 would be •a couple

111

St~:,e- date,

Perdue repcirted, nothing

=~~~~in~ '.:' ~~~u!f: s~~
1

ti"=

said SUNY realizes that
higher tuition poses a situation which
seems antithetical to .&lt;s mission; he
lamented that the reason fD&lt; the
inconsistency Is that the ''State has
never made up Its mind what ll wants
the Stale Unl-slty to be. •
'
Perd'ue said lhllt ultlmatety, _State
legislators have the responsibility 11&gt;
~igure out where to get more money for
education If SUNY's tuition remains at

~~:~~~!':"'t~r~'lfJ1~~~ :ur~3!

saY&lt;Id by decreasing Bundy aid to
private schools. The amount of the
Bundy subsidy depends on the number
and type of degrees granted, whether
the students receiving them are from
New· York State 0&lt; not. Payments for
degrees awarded to out~f-staters could
be curtailed, Perdue suggested.
During the business portion of the
Senate meeting, PSS chairperson Cliff

~mt ~ ~~et t~f '.!~rgh '{;!',~":
1 1

member) will be discussing whether or
not the Unl-slty should fD&lt;mulate a
policy regarding admissions and
housing for ex-convlcto. The Cabinet
will also be examining whether or not

~u~n :la.=8 of8v~(~~=m~~oy=

~?:i,!\'jion L~te~ ~~~~.::T· fr~

Albany.
Wilson asked thai any member of the
professional stafj who wants his or her
opinions io be. koown on the Issues ·
should contact a member of the PSS
Executive Comrttlttee. ·

IIIPPOft for the Pro!Kt,
.... Ita ........ - , . . . . . . . . . .

•
more w ... ad_,.ly
affectad alnce they ..., not eligible fD&lt;

c..
- . - Uftllld
==O..~r;U:~s·a
af~
,
.
udJ

Student Senate approves
mot~on to audit 'Spectrum '

==-tile"rn.=::-c:o.n:..erldt
-~ ~
~ 118 .....,.....,, llle Pnlject'a
....... _OIIInlalclenllfted to a.n
... . , ••••• Clllllr . . . . . . . .

~··--·
~~~"'

20,000

~'!:'Ys:~~v~~; ~l"!t~~~ '~ee:t~~~

SUNY not developing
single academic plan

,..,~
....

=..r~·~·ndMI ~

Sad~ding

c~~;. o~~J!c~:"Kar~Ne!lf~
and U/B graduate occupational therapy

huncllwd dollara bat1er off" than If there
had ...... no I~~CtMM at all. However,
= t a D&lt;whoM fam 11y~lncome Ia

• _, .-r

=r:.

Side.

:lnt:fn"~""fn ~=~t:;ul~

can,_,

Won, talk

acceptance of such care. "SO&lt;ne of the
elderly we'WI _ , are mistrustful of
medicine In g..-..1 and may refuse
help """" wllen they .-:1 It," the
Project dlrectD&lt; reports.

Plofect ataffwHh
. .agonclaa
. . - . - such- . . llw
coopanotlwely
Naighboltlaod Anal Aging SeMces (the
Allentown-Shotwllne SeriiO&lt; Semces),
.._..on ~s. and other proupa
whlcfl oontact 0&lt; provide help to the
elderly Who live on 11w Lower West

...
•• Qlnaher ....
"If
" - ~ lndl¥tilullla . . fonled Into

Nnlna ,..._ --..IMJ
far -....... .. honie, health
. . . , _ wlllllolp pick up 111e tall. But
tor 111e 1111noe w111c11 -.~c~

~-l.cctl.4)

The final mlnutae of T~a three
hour
,_, ~ Student Aaaoct.
--.g at HaM Lounge
1.....
dealt briefly with the Sper:rrum Ia-.
Benalor Turner Roblnam callad 101" 8
lll'affmlnary aud!t ~ 11w $pecf1vm by
8ub ao.a, 1, Inc.
Tile motion waa mat with ...,..
C111PQe1t1oA.
&amp;.A. "'--dant Kart
~ AIIIIIIMiad tabling n until rlaxt
-110w 111uc11
Pflllll"nil
M t--.aton aa to
IIUcll
., auctTt wltl coat
T - J~IU
-tlonad thai...M outalde
CP
.,. laat 1
A audit of
. 1W7-Augu81 31,
=-:.~
·-,

t:;,
(.....)'.-"'-•
honored
~ p , . c:-"" F. Glasa, aaaoclate

....

.;'~':~"-been

.

Coundlol~""s!'t.l::

~,..,·-=.:=-~

nelrt-

.

A friendly amendment

was

.CC.pted

and llltached to Robinson's proposal
~by~-~ Levlnaon. It fl!Ciueated

..., the.....,. be oonductad frcim E.W.
Doly'a olfloa, all wagea ot Spctrum
Perrodlcal, Inc. to be accoonted for
Levin- cited this Ia accord with
Section Four of the Spectrum by-laws.
Robl naon•a audit proposal paaaed In
the Senate, 1&amp;-2-o. The Idea now goes
to Operation and Rules fO&lt; their
consideration.
Tile Spectrum -utlon ahoulcl be
dlacusaad atllw neat Senate ,_lng.

·

~~II'S OPEN OFFICE HOURS

._... flallart L lt.... wll holclllle

.. !!'!'t~~T~-.aton,..__!!
zr~...'"'!"'·_toa 11•••

...

- • ·--•

--~~--·~·

t

Pannlll said he will no longer SPBak
with an)'- member of Tile Spectrum stall
regarding the DUE dean matter since he
conclud«t that their reporters "do not
extend themaaf¥es to obtain all
1nfD&lt;matlon on controversial topics "
He complained that be has never met
face-to-face with any of the people who
quoted him In the paper and that he Is
Urad of anawer1ng " loaded questioos"
over1ha phone. "I think they (Spectrum
raportera) should uaa a little shoe
leather and knock on some doors ' 90
they can get an accurate Idea of what
we'ra a! I about here," he asserted.

·~=.~.. ~

_Ha

~he

atudanto or

notion that without a DUE
dean In charge of all undergraduate
education, the VPHS might , in a budget
crunch, sacrifice health sciences
undergraduate programs In favor of
research and graduate programs
Pannlll said such an action would txi
tantamount to "cutting my own throat "
since moat State revenue to the facutiy
Is derived from enrollment. It would be
Insane for him to dO any1hlng that
would spur attrition, he emphasized .
Another sacrifice Pannlll said he Is
not prepared to make concerns general
education . The VPHS refuted charges
that he would Ignore general education
requirements , making already highly
technical and Insular areas in his
domain even mor.a so .
To the contrary, Pannlll maintained
that, on the average, health sciences
- stydents are sorely In need of remedial
wortc: In composition and commun ica·
lion skills and could use a firmer grip on
the "forces that govern society" as well
as on those which enrich It, such as the
arts,
It's "absoiU1ely essential," said
Pannlll, that health sciences students
take GE courses bef.ore entering a
specific program . He promised that his
stude~ts " will comply with all distribution requirements' set down by the
University before they graduate.
Fdllowlng a suggestion of Pann1il's,
Larson 1s currently wor1dng In conjunc·
lion with the EnJIIsh Department to
:r:~~s !tu~~. ~urse for health

He'a already aubmlttad a ~n
Despite what was reported at the
Faculty Senate' last week. Pannlll said
the health sciences are not currently
work ing on an academic plan. They
submitted a plan, complete with an
overview showing interfaces with the
core campus, some two years ago. To
date, Pannlll aald, the President has not
responded to the document.
Last year, Pannlll reported, the
Graduate Student Association, alter
receiving a copy of the plan from the
President's office, criticized It for "not

~~~~~~c''W!n~O::rha~~ to t~':du~
emphasis was. Intentional. Graduate
~~~".: .~Gn~~~t:~~lew;

they
If, lifter receiving the aceclemlc plan
fD&lt; the COR&gt; campus, Ketter calls for a
revision of the health sciences
documem· or lot more- emphasis on
graduate progfllllls, Pannill said he will
comply. He speculated, though , that no
"substantive Changes" would be forthcoming.
He'a not loalng any ateap
The·VPHS expreaaed confidence that
a "cohaalve, comprehensive approach"
to undergraduate education can be
attained reaardlesa of What hla critics
say about tfie duplication of services or
the fragmentatlm that could result from
two people,' Instead of one, planning
tha educational · experiences of U/B
undergraduates.
Meanwhile, the tall, conservativelooking former Texan who calls his
office "The Alamo, • says he will
continue to do What he thinks Is
'1oglcal" and "right" and "not Jose any
sleep over 11."

Juenker named
Donna ~uenkar, an associate .profes-

~':ml~tht~t':~,!,of ~u~~:· ~h~~

~~ 7i:.t of Undergraduate . Nurse

1

She joined U/8 In 1965, and SMI8d as
acting chalnnan of her department in
1g76, Prior to her faculty appointment ,
She was program coordinator In
· = r i c nur~ln~the Staters ol

=:/.':C:~~ nurae t~'.~urt~:'!:t'~

Care Unit at Child-'a Hospital.

�F...._,.22.117t

~ew pr~ram -~o focus

-.. on o·n -the-job hazards_
=~~ra~dee~~o~

tC:..tr;;r;'
mental hazards- clarify their role In
•
health problema has begun here.
A new R..,_.,h Prcigram in• Occopatlon~l and Environmental Health Is
berng conducted by U/B's Deoartment
of Social and Preventive Medicine,
- which has produced numerous epldem-

~~~~pft,c:~fdtl::!.tnc~~;~ ~\u~l::.,:~

popolatlon groups to pinpoint health
hazards and those parsons likely to be
affected.
. ·
Dr. Harry A. Sultz, professor' and
acting 9halrman of the department,
says lhe new program Is a response to
the growing public concern about
environmental and occupational health
hazards. While occasional studies have
been done; U/B's Is the first progrgm In
Western New York to utilize epidemiolOgy as a means of Identifying potential
hazards In the workplace.
"Locally and nationally, the West
Valley and Love Canal situations have

Ms. Winfi~ld
named to post
in Personnel

=~,g,!tY~~!t ~~no~r.'~/' ~~a~~~~~~~r:

damaging hazards, wt)jch haven't been
ldentlflep lend urgency and importance
to the type of studies to be conducted
here."
'
Program project directors George
Carlo and John Vena have received a

Sinette Johnson Winfield bas been
appointed manager of employment in
the Personnel Department, Robert
Pearson, assistant vJce president and
personnel director, has announced.
A native of Buffalo, Ms. Winfield
tqr for tha State Department of Motor
Vehicles In Albany before returning to
this area. She has also hald posts with
tha N. Y.S. Division 9f tbe Budget,
Albany, and the N. Y.S. -{)apartment of
Civil Service in both Albany and
Buffalo.
Ms. Winfield was a supervising social
worker fQr Child and Family Services In
Buffalo .and l!erved as a caseworker for

/

This lear's contest for the annual

~~~~ P:e"f~"p~lieo:s~~r~':/oets
1
. byr:l,~ cg.n;::~~~t ~fs~~~~~;~~~~~

Friends of .Lockwood Library. It Is part
of a nation-wide competi tion held
~rv~~~~ le;,t over 70 colleges pnd
· The local wi nner will receive a cash
pri ze of $100 and wi ll be eligible for
Inclusion ln an occasional anthology
published by the Academy.

b~'"a";~ca.;i~"'th~rotfrT~n~~:.'~nB\~Wci

1

1977.
She Is a former member of the board
of directors of tha Urban League of
Buffalo.

~ ~h~uq,7h~he c~~!ts of" ,J,':?~".:l
preatro.,, " Prof.
Wickert of English
. Indicates. Over the years, such poets as

Rubella clinic
in Michael

College Prizes befOre going on to attain
national reputation .
- Previous Buffalo winners have been
Joel Lipman and James Guthrie
(1974/5), Tom Centollella (1975/6) ,
R.tl. Pohl (1976/7) and Margaret
Hendefilon (1977/8) . Several honorable

A walk-In rubella Immunization clinic
will be conducted at tha University

~=th9 ~~j..~il M1t~t a~'~ ~~'iX

1

mentions are also awarded each year.

This Ia not an epidemic, apokespensol}s
caulloned, but alnclt tha rubella vfrua
can oprMd, the Immunization altort hu
been set up by the Erie County
Del*lment of Health.
Women ot child--ng age who are

........

-

- ·Uno-No.
lc
-12 --Amhefst - ·
tonance.
34388.
_

-

AHalf'S

Wor1&lt;or 110-6- PI&gt;~ Pllnt, Am·

........:;::~ 110-6Amhorol, l.ino No. 31,"388.

~

-.1,

......__ •..._-..,._SCH-

~-.t . Moin. UnoNo. 31301 .

Centnrl ,

Ouplicating, l.ino No. 3101 0 •

-

Vohlcfe Oporotar - 7 Ptont. Amhorol. Uno No. 32268.

-v-

- - Hotpof 110-6-

ArpherSl,UnoNo. 31379.
~.M«o&lt; sew - ""~
I.JneNo. 32297 .
-

JAMES I DeSANTIS

ldJtor-ln.-Chfef
M~ULEn

~

PI&gt;~

""""· ..,.,........,_

~IG-f~Can­

31676.

SEIIVICE

T,.....IG4- Modicine/~; Olv, ol
._._,_EducCiOn(~e~ .
Faa~ 184 -lliognol4ic-P.E.M.

-110-61:%:::=-110-6.

___
...
- -.1180 8.

Univ«aaty u..a; Molle : ~:

Aubfttnl fdtfot
JOYQ~I

.,'- -lyc.,.,..Ed&lt;r.._,._..._

PI&gt;.- Pllnt, -

Ctorlc--~~

Coon! Tectlnlctl--

-a

'*•li.IT"""

1

Fulbright confertt~
The Council for International Exchange of Scholars hea uked U/8 to ·
host the 1979 Fulbrlght-H~ Eastern

~\'ffi~~~~~~=t.T~1 2;:~

According to Dr. Khalry ~wl, special
assistant to the president for Inter- '
national programs, a campus-wide ·
planning panel has been formed to
decide on a Conference theme,

:'P:;:rt:="l':ih:m!.=.
n:t::
event.

· The Faculty Club Is sponaor1ng a Sunday Brunch on March 18, ·from 11
a.m. to 2 p.m. In the Faculty Club, Harriman Hall, Main Street. Cempua.
Aduita - $3.75' per person; children under 16 - $3.00' . Infanta wlfl be
admitted free. The menu Includes: Bloody Marya, screwdrivers, orange juice, -bled
eggs, glazed t\4m, link sausage, chicken a Ia king over ho....atyle blaculfa,
potato pancakes with applesauce, molded jeHo seted, asaorted ret~.
~tries, eake, fruiU8(1s, fruit.
,
·
ReSllrvatlons are required. Checks should be mede payable to: The Facuity
Club and sent with the r_,vatlon form to 21115 Harriman Hall, 3435 Main
Street, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214 not later than MOnday Marcil f2, 1118. No tlck8ta
will be Issued - present your riame at the door. For further Information
Phone 831-3232 bet_ween the hours of 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. NO
SALES AT· THE DOOR.
'Members and their guests: ,O,dults $3.50

Children 12.,75

~ -.t,

80-4--f'tlyllcl f&gt;lonl, - . l.ino No.

~CIVL

off~:, 1~ ~1:.."'8~ionu~lvt"~~\fc ~ft:f~

and a Ph.D. candidate In Educational
Admin istration, ~as be&lt;in appointed the
first administrative Intern In the
Preslde"nt's Office, President Robert L.
Keiter announced this - "·
Richardson will be on release time
from Pu,bllc Affairs and will· serve
half-time ·In the President's Office. He
will work on budget and related areasunder the mentorshlp of Acting
Executive Vice President Charles Fogel
and Robert Wagner, aaslatant executive
vi ce president.
.
Richardson was recommended for
the Internship by the Professional Staff
Senate.
•
_
• Similar fnternahlp opportunltlea will
be provided to otber recommended
- members of th11 faclllty an~ staff.
Potential areas for such appointments
are currently being explored.

Convn&lt;ri;a1lve Ills·

pu~erson.tr:.s(~ . UnoNo . 31209 .

'tJk.ciOt" of Pvblk

toeflf r

-

IIOII-C04IIP£mt CMI. SEIMC£

F-nt flloclllno. Opofotar 110-6 -

.,

A L'OI'I'IfNII comnwnfry newspoptH pubUs~ ltOCh Thursday by th. Ofvislon ol
PlibUc Affofrs, SfO,. Urilvwsity ol H.,.,
Yorll: of lvffolo Editorial of1kfl or. locat.d 1;, JJ6 Croffr i:I.DII • .Amherst. •Tel•

phono .,..,.,.

lienI - - Sciences Llnry, FII015.

-~~~
orderS'
Sciences, F"-901e.

than five typawritten , doubl&amp;-speced
pages of unpublished, original poetry In
English. Translations and previously
published work will be disqualified.
(2) Entries may consist of single
poems or of groups of poems. .
(3) Entries must be sent In triplicate.
tXerox or clean carbons are acceptable).
(4) The author's name must not
appear on the poems submitted.
Instead, each entry should be aocornpanled by two 3"x5" file cards I!&amp;Ch
containing the author's name, Bddress,
phone number, and academic status,
fog ether with a list (by title or first line)
of poems submitted . ·
(5) Poems will not be returned unless
accompanied by stamped, self-addressed return packaging .
Deadline for submissions is March 1,
1979. Entries should be brought or
mailed to: Professor Wickert, Dept. of

Richardson ~·
is intern .in
Ketter's ·office

'End of Wint$r' brunch_

~""~~~~:

cues at Buffalo State and In the City.

previous contest winners.
~
Rules for. submission are:
(1) Entries should consist of no more

judges will be announced by March 15.

FACULTY

are

All students registered currently at
U/ B are eligible to submit, except

~~~~~~~~N~~e~f w't~~ersB~'fgi

JOBS

.~!":r"::Tt&gt;!r.~~~s
~:"~~
Amherst. There
also reports of

::n~=n~::'.,"=~o~~~

Jax

~v'::.~t8a~!~~ryh~ ;~~rv~'~kp

further notice.
Dr. M. Luther Musselman, director of
the health service; said- that the - live
vlruo vaccine Is available to students,
faculty and staff, both mole and female .

will not be vaccinated. Rubella can
aenoua problema for an unborn
child If the IIICIII!W hed the
e l i - u a chilli and davelops It
during pregnancy.

'. v~~~~~.,:~fl:~~,;'f~~~·fosN~u7:r~foo"i~~
because of the many types of
manufacturing done -here, the Interest
of -unlons in such studies, and the
excellent resources available at, U/B
and Roswell Park Mem.oriallnstltut&lt;!:"

Annual U/B oetry contest
is now receiving
entries
.

served as senior personnel adminlstra-

Welfare Department.
_
A graduate of West \lirglnla State
College, Ms. Winfield received a
mastilr's in urtian planning rrom
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute In

grant from the New York State Health
Planning Commission's Health R&amp;-.:1&gt; Council to Identify hMith
problems aaaoclated with Clvfl Service
ayatem occupations.
"Municipal workers," they explain,
"represent a good cross-section of
occupational categories and are thef&amp;.
fore an Idee! population for establishing
baselines with which to compare .
Wbrkerllln other Industries."
By Identifying causes of death and
especially the Incidence of cancer
among municipal workers who have
already completed their careers, a
statistical base can be designed against
~hlch ~ealth effect"S and hazards In
other types of occupations and
environments can be compared.
Carlo and Vena note thai the study Is
being conducted with cooperation from
both Buffalo Mayor James Griffin arfd
Buffalo's Civil Service Commission,
This allows researchers access to Civil
Service recbrds extending back to 1910
for review of pertinent information .

.,___,

To:

Faculty Club, SUNYAB

NO SALES ATTHE DOOR

265 Harriman Hall

3435 Main Street
Buffalo, .)I.Y. 14214

PLEASE RES!ORVE:
---------- Adulle for brunch at $3.75 (S3.1i0 members)
---------Children (under 18 yrs.) at $3.00
~for

total amount

Mch (S2.75 members)

s.______ hi enclosed.

DEADLINE

NAMI~------------------------------

MARCH12

ADDRESS __~~----~----~------~---

.

PHONE

•

I
I
I
I
I
I

I

{

I

II
I

l-----------------~----------------J

�Ice from the Po~.U region~

Is Invaluable aid In studying-past

' The miM a thai coven millions of square kllometen of
lbo polar regions II Jlarllng to speak.
M hM mony to teB. Oxygen Isotopes In lts
mo1ec:u1a speak ol temperature variatlonl, both seuonal
onc1 ~ong~enn . Dust trapped 1n the a speaks""' on1y of past
...._..... but oloo of prVUstoric volcanic adllllty. Tiny

bui&gt;lllos of tropped olr give dnct evidence of the
fXliiiPOIIIIOn of the earth's ~e tens of thousands of
yeon - · TheiNIJly elements found In minute quantities In
polar a - olumlnum. cadmium, sulfur, lead , powslum,
chlortno - give boN lines of natural ad!vlly. against which

humonldnd'o po1utan1s can be measured . And a study of the
a,_ llsolf- ....... of past accumulation , Its Row nste,
lbo cloilrls 1 has loft behind In the past - teD df advances and
contractions over many miUennia.

A loollor oaocll/lns the pMt
Nlln al, polar Ice lo an ·unusual resoun:e foe those who
wish to lludy many IIJI)I!CIS of the earth's past, most nolably
11
In lbo words of OMoter C. l..angway, Jt. •
........... of the 0opertmon1 of Geological Sciences at U/ 8,
po11r a , . _ . . "unique, large earth muses that 11ttJ, Is

'*"*·

--··

.

rhere are two great polar k:e masses , one in each

hemlopheie. In the nocth, therelo the Greenland Ice sheet.
which oovers thai island to a depth of perhaps 3 ,200 meters
et Its thlckeS . In the south, there lo the Ice that covers

Anblrdlca . The Antan:llc Ice sheet consists of two unequal
p6rtl, IIIIth dilment hlsloria and chanlcterlstlcs. The EaSI
Antordlc a sheet IS old, liable and based on land, like the
GrMnlond 1ce ; •a port,_ 4,000 meten at 11s thickest
point. The Wat Antan:llc Ice sheet Is probably
omallor and r - mainly on land below ... level.
llloltngulohlng features of the Wat Anhudlc Ice sheet are
-._lllljar-.gasholws, the !lou ohelf and the Ronne
ohelf, at oppoo11c sides of the sheet, though both are fed .
&amp;om thO ...... well.
•
•
Vast though they .-... the polar Ice masses are only
smol mnnams of Ice sheets that covered perhaps 30
pa&lt;&gt;mt of the earth's ourface "' recently u 18,000 years
- · One of the moot Important dlsoover1es made In the past
few clocades 1o thai- live In a relatively Ice-free period that
1o quite un.....- In the earth·, recent history; glacial periods
-been the domiNnt feature of the earth's climate for the
pool- ...... _ .. Aa:onllng to 11otopo records drown

yo-.

......
- ... -boon"""- oighl ~
....... -...e 10,000 _.In ciugljon; - - I n

- - . ... . . - . . - - t o ... one! about 70,000

to ~transformed first Into the more solid substance called
11m and then Into Ice . higher temperaturl.s begin to reach
the bottom of the Ice sheet.
The Interior of the k:e sheet tends to be warm . since it is
exposed to geothermal heat and since lee is an excellent
Insulator. When the warming trend reaches the bottom,
Whlllans says. a lubricatlng layer of water forms. and the Ice
sheet surges outward. As the central portion or core of the
ice sheet thins and me~ . the outer portion advances - an
advance that Is the warning sign of melting . Sitting In his
office at Ohio State, an area that was covered wtth ice during
the Wisconstn glaciation , WhOlans points out tMt ..when the
last ke. came down , h came down through forests . which
suggeoto that ~ wasn't too cold here ,•
_
But such a mechanism cannot explain a sudden collapse
of on Ice sheet, such asls believed to have happened In West
Antan:tlca sgme 124,000 years ago. ~Denton of the
· University of Maine oays that the West Antan:tll: Ice sheet,
after retreating s&amp;owty for many thousands of years , appears
to have coDapsed at its core, aS did the WisconSin , In a time
period of anyWhere from two centuries to 2,000 years , a
geologlcaf eyebllnk: The evlcleOC.. , develoPed by Omton
and John Mercer of Ohlo Stale Unlvenlly, ls dntwn not ITocn
the Ice Itself, but from Indirect studies of sea level records,

' " : : " . _ . punlv . . . . - · . . . of poilt Ice
been opuned by the . . - lhot - could be
,_... lbo one! of .,.. ~ period, our period of
~ _,. ........ ,__S, laming mon about
pool -........ + glolo one! goologiolo exped to
- - . . ! the _ . . one! be to speak of the

-.o-.-

cortolnly.

T_ ..... _,.,._.._
ldndo of lea-· One lo the lludy
of ...................., llloatoplc ~ . the podlcla In
•• lho
The -=one! II the lludy of lee
~ ...... tho ....... ond ... .-flow_
-.N..................... ONeS... Univonlry, 1o
...... al ......... 0U1 .... "a lllho podea - . , !." To
..... T-"""*allho~al-addo: "Even

ct-...-·

,_--""*

........... 11 ........ 1111-amounlstovery~
Thealldalb on lbo plonot, ln t h o - of

..

C •-

- - - . holds• about

.........

so.-.,_-...·

.......... whk:h llllboul 80 _ . . of .. .-.g
palllll. Slool .... ... .. .-.g p&gt;lnl -.lei bo
-

Denton says. ~
The evkience, says the Maine scientist, is ..etther Indirect
or lo under the Ice sheet today." What is certain, he oays, Is
that there was a rile of about six meters in the g)obal ocean
level about 124,000 yean ago . h Is also evident that the
mortt1me West Anhudlc Ice sheet can undetg&lt;&gt; s!gnillcant
changes much more r apidly than the land-based East
Antarctic sheet. But the enormous amount of heat needed
to nielt even the WeSI Antan:tlc a sheet gives glaciologists
pau..
.

IceAn lee sheet may not have to mel be/ore B can begin to

flow, ~ points out. The alternative Is based on the fairly
rec.mt dlocovery by Terry Hugh.. of the Unluersity of Maine
thai a sheets ..... drained pr1marl)y by ICe streams. which
. . gloc:lao wh&lt;ile walls consist nol of rock but of Ice . Belore
the dlocovery oflcc ceam.. B was thought thai Ice sheets
flowed
fairly uniformly oB along their edges. Now H
Is evident lhot iheoe
of Ice, flowing within l!§nks of
Ice. pr&lt;&gt;vlck most of the drainage . There are flve Ice streams
(~ nomod by the ftnt 6ve letters of the
~ flowing &amp;om the w... Aritaralc Ice sheet onto the
!lou lee Sholl,"" eump~e_
says the theory, that the Rooo lc:e ·She~ were to
ohlnk ..-nlv, by any one of • number of mechanlsmo.
~ lhol tho...,. OIIOUid be .... P)llllng the plug In
o - . . ,_ You -.Jd just lot things go very rapidly." WHh
lbo a shelf no..,._~ to plug them up, the Ice streams
OIIOUid """ 10 flow much t.c. Icebergs would calve ropldly
&amp;om ends. aadng "calmg boys .• The cloMng boys
• ntpldly Into the a sheet, which thus would break

""'-4

.,..ms

s.-.

... oudo o \....--"\

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

...

~.

.

The . . . . pointolthetheory, oayo Hughes, is~ "you
.,.,_tobrtngtho heel to the lee , You can bring the a
to ... I.-."Thlrll.thobe911ho1Ciivoclolltheica~ . . t o - poolS oflbo earth , whore they """'!d

0... tud ............ lhol

thll--

•

explain the rapid breakup of a pan of the laurentide leo
sheet that covered Canada up to about 10,000 years ago .
They soy tj&gt;e calvtng boy focmed In what Is now the Hudson
Bay area , and that thlo part of the Ice sheet collapsed In no
IJ&gt;O!"e than 200 years. This breakup of an Ice mass, perhaps
~large as th~&lt; Anlaralc Ice sheet Is today, was '"porttcularly
spedaaJ!ar," Denton ..ys .
Squeezing data from Ice

,

Gladologisls who study Ice dynamics UN .-al tools. To
measure the rate of Ice oa:umulotlon . they can use a
phenomenon provtdn by one of the grimtMr octlvltleo of
today , the OiideM arms race . AD the snow that has fallen
since 1955 Is radioactive , because a'-herlc tests of
nuclear weapons have left debris floating around the globe.
By measuring radloactl.-y. end other features , glaciologists
can determine the current rate of Ice accumulation .
Current Ice motion can be detennined by using artificial
sateUHeo, which plclt up signals &amp;om transmitters planled In
the See. The method has a potential acctuacy of one meter or
less a year. ~for the interior of the ice sheets. radar can
offer o detailed picture . The possibility of using radar for
glaciology was diocovered IHerolly by accident In the early
nlneteen-fllties when several aln:ralt betng fmied to Europe
aashed on the Greenland tee sheet because the. ice was
" - "t to- the frequencies betng used by theh rad..altimeteii. Airoralt now travene the lea-sheets equipped to. .--ch purpooa - IIIIth radar thai give o detailed
l*:bn ol a """- altltudu, a thlcknea , lntomollayoring
one! ollho earth·, contoun bonealh the
eo wolf.
For those who wish to study what tho Ice contains, the
_,tlol method II Ice cor1ng - driiKng Into the a sheet to
oiUin o oontinuouo an that can then be onalyzed In ony
one of a clooen different ways. Much ol the hlstocy of
glaciological studies In recent years lo the story of how
- - have d• veioped lncnUngly Ingenious methods of
-.cttng more and moro lnforrrlllllun from Ice cores.

u-

Ulonoyallla•
1\J the StiiiiO Un-.ary of New von. • .Bullalo. Chester
~ ll&lt;urololr alallwooy of mon than 7,0 0 0 - of

�F*-Y 22, 1t7t

beneath the ice wM, os well as water samples, oedlment
oores and other evidence from beneath the Ice, had higher
pdority.

So, on December 2. 1977, a rocket flame ·drill started
burning Its way througlli1lt sheK. The hole froze closed. A
second effort wos made e., December 13. This time the
drillers went through the Ice shelf in just nine hours.
RtSP drillers will be back on the Ice sheK next oeoson.
trying t.o obtain ecomplete core. At the same time , drillers of
the Gr«niond Ice Sheet Program will be preparing to gel a
' complete core in southern Greenland . And efforts will
continue to obtain a complete core through the thk:kest part
of the East Antarctic k:e sheet. Soviet scientists have been
trying for several years at the remote location they caJ1
Vostok. And French glaciologists were drllting at a location
c.aUed, less romantically , Dome C . in an effort for whlch the
UnH:ed States provides logistic support . Neither team has
gotten d~ 'han a?out 1 ,000 meters, but improved drills
are expected to surpass that . ·
'
Solar mlnlma
Examples of the i nformation to be obtained from such
.,.,... cen be multtpUe&lt;l almost e ndlessly. One lascinoHng
reoent effort was made by a grou!l of scien tists headed by
Bruce C . Parker of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and Stole
University and Edward J . Zeller of the Un~ty of Kansos,
who sought ve:rifk:ation of a discovery about the sun made
:i'..:!ci,~• Eddy of the National Center lor Atmospheric

Ice ""FS· vlrtualy the complete library of cor.. that have
been collecood by him and olhors In r...earch programs
~ by the National Science Foundellon. This
c:olloction includes the only two complete coroo drilled
through, rapectlvely, the Wa&gt; Antarctic Ice sheet and the
Greenlond Ice oheet
The &lt;lNonland core. 1,387 meters long , -drilled In
1966 at a plocacalled Camp Century, so named because H
was IUJlPOSOd to be 100 miles from the AJr Force base at
Thule. on the northwestern tip ol the island . The Antarctic
oore. 2 .164 meters long, was c:ibtained two yeJif'S later at
Byrd Station,ln

Studying historical records , Eddy fo und that the ll·yeor
sunspot cycle doa not seem to be a permanent feature of
oolar activity. Spectfically, Eddy found that there have been
two periods In relatively recent (by geological standards).
history when sunspot activity apparently disappeared: from
1460 to 1550 and o9ain from 1654 to 1715. Eddy calls the
earUer period the Sporer minim um and tl}e more recent'
period the Me under minimum , In honor of two 19th-century
astrono mers whose earlier reports of the phenomenon were
Ignored.
Eddy'• proposAl hos been suppon ed by climatological
evidenoe. Parl&lt;er and ZeOer sought funher confirmation
&amp;om a study of nitrates and carbon- 14, a radioactive
element , In the lee sheets. Both nitrates and catbon-14 are
produ&lt;ed by solar radiation . When 5unspot actlvHy ts high ,
fewer high~ C05mic ray. reach thC earth'o atmosphere .
, The lower energy radlellon from the sun breaks apart
nitrogen molecules, which then form n1trat01. ~ runspot
enetgy Is low, the higher energy cosmic ray. reach the
alffi0$phere and co use the formation of carl&gt;on-14 .
• Parker end Zeller have found that the record of the ice
cores supports the existence of both the Maunder mtnlmum
and the 5po&lt;er minimum . For both bllhooe periods, they
have louna low nitrate levek In the Antardic Ice nooord.
They ore nbw lrJIIng to c:ibtatn the same record frol!l
Greenland 1te and to go bock~ In history In en effort 10
detect other periods of minimal sunspot activity.

w..,_

Anum:tlca . ·
Each of the t'&lt;NO complete cores contains a record that
could go eslac bock as 100.000 yean . Glaciologists would
dearly loVe 10 have complete cores from the center of the
Greenland and East Antan:lic Ice sheets. Complete cores
from the heart of the Ice wets"could hold. record of the lost
500,000 or moe• yean. a period that would include the last
two (,.,.s P*lbly thrM) ~ and thus would give
involuM&gt;Io tnfontt-'on put the cunent interglacial. But
obWnlng c:omplot. ...... hes pr,..d difficult.

Tough-....
Part ol the problem is logisllcal . Working on the cold ,
banen Ice sheets, where all supplies must be brought In w!lh
grOat efbt, isnooeesy. But the nub of the problem Is drinlng
ledmology. Building • drill that can do the job Is a
ourpri11ng1y touil pooi&gt;lom. ~lock of adequate drllllng
t«::v!ooogy Is harnporing the oclonll!ic exploration ol the Ice
sheets .• . . . . _ ac:knowloclgos.
Glaclologisls cannol bom&gt;w very much from c:ommen:ial
drillen, who •• not ln - • d In obtaining complo\e c.ores.
An oil compan~ Is IOIIoflod with a sampk every 30 m_eton or
10 , while continuity is .-ntlal to tho glaciologist. The
technlqU4! is to drill down alewmeten, eXIrad tho core , and
dril down al- more metlfS.
But fairly quickly - at about 400 metoro or so - ice ftow,
or awp. becomes a problem. "Drllllnti through Ice Is an
-.,ely dillicuH problem," soys John W. Clough of the
~ of N«nsko Ill Lincoln. Clough Is head of the
Polor leo Coring Olllce IJ'ICO) aJ -a as of the Rou Ice
Sholl Project (RISP) . "On the one hand , ft aeepo rocher
ropidly , O&lt;&gt;&lt;Mihlng we con countoract wtth the proper drtllng
fluid On the other hand , U will ohahll' I ke glus - and we
don•t w.ltlcechtpo; we want • solid core."
·
. To ooun1orbo1onoe awp, drillen fill the bolo wtth a fluid
to hold off the Ice. l&gt;urtng the RISP effort lui ooasorl to drill

.......... 400-- lhldtr.- of the :~tr
Otlolll - · no · .-,.~
liNd, lor
the
M . A..,_,
J"
1lw
. . . . . . , . ~ . . . . " ' " • ..,_"'the.._

_,.330-.0ough-.lholoo

.-.tal_..,

ice-·

Corel can be dolled
&gt;
Cores can be dated with mosonable accuracy becauoe ol
seesonal variations In ouch phenomena .. the deposition ol
micropor1lcles on the Ice and ol the oxygen Isotope In water
moiopJies . Water contains oomo Ql&lt;ygen·18 atoms and
10me ox.ygen-16 atoms. lbere is, however, e temperature
offact on the ratio ol oxygen lootopes In water. At lower
temperatwa there is a higher ooncen- ol 1lw lighter
IIOtope; 1p polar -=umulatlons, then , snow loyen put down
In winter..., richer In oxygon-16 than are summer snows. ~
Danish odenllst , Willi ~. has ployed alnajor role In
the devolopmont of oxygen loolope studios, which reconl
no1 only aeuonal vonatlons but olio long·term changes In

/

'-""

theoarth'sclimota.

~ can be ~ wlih the
...&amp;dololliu...,.-., ~ olooghoe _ , - . 1 tnd
long-tam '-too. More
btl in the ..........
oxp1otno l.cmtle G. 1loompoon ol Olllo S.., '-auoo ..,.
'* lila • ~ Clll}llng COI*IIY· "flhor 1lw . , . . .

Tho -

IIOtOpe

"""'-lidos

Isotope nor the microparticle record Is conclusive In lt5ell,
because a mild season may leave behind an inconclusive blip
rather than a clear-cut peak or trough . But If both records ere
compared , a complete picture begins to emerge . 'There ore
other seasonal markers oi well- lor example , the salts left
on k:e shelves by storms, which are more JeYere in the
winter.
Thompson believes that he has found a clear relationship
berween high particle concentnotions In he earth'•
atmo5phere and cold climate periods. One possibility, he
says , Is that volcanic activity ploys an Important role In
cousin$ colder periods . Thomp$00 says he hos detected a
difference in the mk:ropartides found in the Northern
Herni!J&gt;here and the Southern Hemisphere during ihe 1a11
gladotion . In AntArctica, he says, the particles are polmarlly
ol volcenic origin , indicating that the duit spewed Into 1lw
lilmOsphere by volcanooo may have lnterulfled atmoophcrlc
cooling by reflecting the sun's energy back Into spaao. But In
the Northern Hemisphere, Thompson says, windblown
particles predominate. His Interpretation Is that """" land
was exposed os lower ternperalwa reduoed MA levels by
loddng""'"' water brto polar Ice sheets:
There is room for wide differ:ences of opinion about such
proposals, in large part because moSt of these fields ore so
new . ~ Chester Langway points out , both oxygen isotope
and mk:roparticle studies of ice sheets began ln earnest about
1964.
•

Pollutant traces
The technique of ana}yzfng chemicals In pole~ a 'ts even
newe;r. li came to maturity only In 1969, Umgway says, but
already H'Is having 1mportanl practical effects. ~ warning
about the dangers of lead In the environment originated with
the discovery by Clair Patterson Qf Cohech of a significant
Increase In the \ebd content of newer layers of ice ,n
Greenland and An~; wtuch are as far from
humanklna·s pollutlng acttvtties as tS posstQle on this planet.
The lesson was obvtous: U lead Is reaching the po&amp;es, lt is
far more than a local prob&amp;em .
·
Michael M. Herron , a graduate student working wtth
l.angway, has helped 10 study the deposition ol ~
long-lived radloaciiOe Isotopes from atmospheric nuclear
test!. On the charts, the U.S. '""" of the nlneteen·flftlos
-.how up as a de¥ peak, to be followed by the oven higher
peak produoed 6y the Soviet t..,. ol the tllnoleon·- and
the lower Increases. coused by French, Cltlne. and Indian
nuclear explosions. Next, l.angway and Herron , along with
chemical oc:eanogropher Edward Goldberg and his
colleagues at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, are
looldng In Greenland for signs of the 50 ldlogroms of
uranluri'l -235 that burned up In the atmosphere when a
Soviet Cosmos satellite, with a nuc:Jeer generator on board ,
plunged back to earth over Canada.
Glaciologists CAll also study many other chernicels In the
ke to get a better measure of poDutlOn , Herron says. By
compOrtng current levels • of such
fluorocarbons, carbon tetrachloride and pesttcides,
glaciologists con help determine whether a purpo&lt;ted
pollution threat Is reO!.

substances ..

Climate past and J&gt;&lt;NOnt
• But dimate. pest and future , Is clearly the ma)or concern
of polar gladology . Much lnlonnatlon about pest dimatic
trend s comes from ocean sediment c:::ora collected In the
U.S . deep sea drilling program . Valuable as they .,.., the
ocean COJes are highly compact - a thousand yean of
history con be contained In one of ea... By
compori5on , the Greenland Ice sheet may a
3Q&lt;ennmeter deposit lor a · itinglo . The " - Ice
sheet Is not as generoUI, becaUM predpltallon Is much loos
{lor a~ Its Ice, the Antarctic gets as ltttle pnctp11a11on as 11w
Sahara) . Even so, the yearly depotll at the Byrd Stillion Is
about 16 centimeters, whllo H is 3 centl- owr much o1·
the East Antarctic.
/
And the falling snow traps alr that remolnlln the Ice..._,
no1 only In tiny bubbles but aloo In the lonn ola dolhral8 -

a molecular

cage

of

w-

moloculeo 001-*'11 a

microbubble bl alr. "You Clln get the atrotoephmc
composition .. a function of Hme,"l..angway says. "Whew
else can you get this kind ol Information? Nowhitre."
. From l.angwoy's point ol view, one of the . . - vttluoltle
pioca ol Information gained from polar Ice otucliot Is the t.CI
that temperlilllra at botll poles rtoo and fall togodw.
• Anyone· who builds • global model had better buld • that
way, with both Pola In aynchrony," he soys . •
But gladologisla- tho! the , _ ~ ..
ahead and that ol to.t.y's theOOeo ohould be ._.sed
that anyone would be bold
..,.,.q, 10 loiay that he'S got . . 1lw _,. a..ta R. 8ondoy cl the 1-...ry ol Wlooonoln. ~

• - · ., -*In'-

iM:Inallon Is"' tho! dwwto 10 much thalli - · -..! In
- 11w proepocl that In a rw1o11vo1v '""' w. • be
.......-.a.lymon~tn"'-'sswhlltoll*tllon .
111·---· ·~
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Flllruoty 22, 1171

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CAL-ENDAR.

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A non-GagrM rec:11a1 t-.mg Oavld Brioy,
Ria&lt; McGirr, K.C. MMy, and B&lt;.n11ck.

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PHYIIOI.OOY - R I

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by . . . . . , . _ " ' - - - Hal.
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_ _ .,. ... _ _ _ Clolollt.a

-

&amp;..-, Dalk. - - t.owe.
The ... _ _ _ lna001111)0tilion

YCIII&lt;C&lt;udan~-ancl-,.

_
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........

........ ... ___ _

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Squft. Col~211181or--. ­

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7

olrnoophoric oto&lt;y ol a """ - " '
---lhornomo&lt;yaiNotnt

wlle .

LECTURE'
- - .lunglo:
Codylo, E. lThol&lt;lllo(l01
a l , - """·
Go&lt;&gt;Hrey,._.
YIIO~
Baldy) . 8p.m.
~.bytho~oiEnglloh.

-

IIUSIC' . '
UIIWind~BintRec::biiHIII . 8p.tn;

FilM' .
Tho w - (Wyler). 1461liofendort. 1 p.m.

~msctay- t
OUEST LECTURES ON AFliiCAH taTOIIY'

~lortheCenterforMe&lt;iaSiudy.

whlcll-

A cowboy epic
the ato&lt;y of a dispute
CN&amp;r lind ri!Jhta end tho action lak8n lor lhoae """
- - - I n the r1ghl. The .........
Gory Coo!!ef.
end Dona Anchwa.

Kl== :.:.

"IF A RECITAL •

LEC11JRE•

-llrerlnln

ChrtotopMr CriMIII, teno&lt;. Baird RecitBI Hal .
8p.m.
·

LECTURE'
Warda and Woundo, Or. Geoffrey Hartman .
profouor al English end ...,_.tille lit.....,.o,
Yale llrWeroity. The Kiva (101 Boldy). 8 p.m.
Sponoored lor tho ~a.;. ol tho Dec&gt;enment
ol English .

~
,_,:::, "'1'11~

377 MFACC. E l l c o l.m.
t.=p
"
Tho third ol four_
by . , . , _ lor a
~~In-

.

-·profat-

w--h ·a-FIIoa.Jeromo~ .

ol Englilll. -lkMrofly QJioge
Paltz. 322 Ctornena. 3 :® p.m.
Sponsored by tho Graduate Proglwn in English
l..itenolure end Society end tho Boldy Cenlor '"'
Lllw end Sociol Policy.
•

--to-.--

IIUSfCOLOOY LECTURE'

--·ArchlY.

altho
Bom. Gennany. 108 Baird .

4 p.m. Free admisak:wl.

TueSday- 21
MUSIC'
Pillno atudent r.cttel. 8eird Rec:itll Hal. 12: 16

p.m.
OUEST LECTURES ON AFRICAN HIS'1pRY'
Tho TOM!- al Dar oa Salaaa1, Dllllid H.
Arrthony81. '377 WFACC. E1icott. 2 p.m.
Thil Is tho firOt al leur locturoa to be given.
throogh Frldoy, by andldolea'for a '-"*'0
1n Alricon History (to be housed In tho
-.ol-=t&lt;SIIdos).
.

liEN'S BASKETBAU •
Ul8 ft. Buffalo State. Oatk Hal. 8 p.m.

LECTURE'
The Sacr.d Jungle: Walw llonjomln. Prof.
Gool1rey- YIIO' llniYtKolly. 322Ciorneno.
8p.m.
;
Sc&gt;onoored by tho Dopor1mont ol English .

liEN' S BASKET11AU.•
Ullwa. lnlckport. Oark Hill. 8 p.m.....
UUABFILII'
-~e:J6.211191or--.
(England). Conforence
·
§quA.
-

chorgo.
A-....:,-.-fiOnlnwhich-

Husa« o - . In Napolo&lt;WI'a army -.tty
confront each other " a aeries of uvaoe durlll.
Directed by Ridley Scott. wflh Kolth Cotradlne .
HeMiy Keitel, end Clwiollne -

Wectnesday.- 28

Nodces

OUEST LECTURES ON AFRICAN HISTORY'
Dlroc:llonoln National Hlltcwlogtoplly In
Alrica, E - Sleinhlrt, 1'11.0 . 377 MF,t,CC,
Elicott. 2 p.m.
The seconc1 o1 feu 1octuroa by condidatoa for a
' - " * ' 0 - l n Afrlcon Histo&lt;y.

LECTURE'
c _ , _ and

Oemens. 3 p.m.
~lor

the

Body; Carry Nitoon. 410

•

tho Dopor1mont al English.

CHEIIICAI.EHOINEERINO-...RI
- " " ' o.tolon, Tho Clrt&gt;onnl.m ~. 262
3 :3&lt;Hi p.m.

~·

OEOI.DOICAI.ICENCES_,..
F. /qww. a Thoyor ~ 0.
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ITUDY .au.ILM
Tholllucly-Libot ... ~..-.
Cenlor, 3118 ~ Hoi. II lor "*"'V IIi

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LFEWORKIIHOI'S
Activelytl!O&gt;dealed: WomonendAicohoiom.
T - y . F*-J 27~ end folng
on a Shopalring lludgat; ~ How
DrugoWork.
•
, . _ , , , . . . . . . . , a - T h o - SpaoM;
Finlt.._ln ... Forefronl.
Ufa ~ . . credit·- end~
al chorgo. Thoy ...

a.y. 11D-Hol.ea&amp;-2-. -

-IIC~-IIarlhe

F-.Ric:lwdc. - . - o n d o e v . t·

llngulohod.
~

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,

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H o i . - ClnilluL

3311....,

- - -: ........ 12~: - . . . .
--Ffldoy.W

---·-1\,011.1

�Fobruuy 22, 1171

Her~~ s-how SA
Staple has thoughts on Bunn plan; :
Spr!nger wonders if Peradotto confuses
personal &amp;.. academic priorities
Edllor:

a plan for health sciences. It Is our .
understanding that from these two

=.:~x=~;,· s~~n:!~~

r.:..ar:,se'.!";'he
mould one for the total University. But
maybe we don't understand It pooperly.
•••
-RTM.
Editor:
I cannot help but respond to two
recently published letters from our
Undergraduate Dean, Jack Peredotto.
The heart of his rasponse to-Dean
Alutto (Reporter, Feb. 15), to me at
least, Ia the fourth paragraph. I admit
that paragraph Is quite obtuse (or
perhaps It Is my Ignorance of Latin and
Greek), and I may be misreading II. II,
however: we In fact do have a

10 . , _ t o my Inquiry atlut week's
F..:ulty s-te meetin~ Vice President
Bunn '-led that the academic plan
he wll 1 offw to Prasldent Ketter
excluctee HeeHI1 Sciences:
It Ia beyond my understanding that a
pl.n whlc:l1 Includes the professional
IChOOia of engl~ng. lnfOfl)latlon

Ita poo._lonel schOOl a. II aced em lc
plennlng must t-"e account ol student
..oilmen!, tnen the continuing high
enrollment In health sciences profeselonel echoola must lmpo!Ct on support
lor unlta In which enrollment Is
.-:tilling. Pnleldent Ketter hes stated
.nd VIce PI'Nident Bonn hes Implied
the Admlnletratlon does not Intend
SUNVAB to be monopolized by the
poofeN!onat IChOOia. II. that Is so,
IICiden)lc pl....,lng · alraedy Includes
naattalnl on the expansion of
! ' - lldloola, Including those In
..... th~.
A 111*81' on dlaplay In the main
corridor of Fllltler Hall actwrtlsea a

=~~~:;eo~~g

_ . Mf'llcee. One might IJulra
whether this onglnated through oint
diiiCUNions between VIce Prea ants

=~n~t ~.tA: r!!,f.:~~r~,,:'~

up to future demands of the job mar1&lt;et.
• On the otl)er hand , COflllder the
eltemathe scheme of healtlt .,aurance
offered to State employees, whlc'h
proyldes a vwtety of 88f'llces In a
central clinic for an lncluaJve fee rather

::::r~~~g ~~·:on-;:=.:::

!lat. The Introduction of this sch8m&amp;
would seem to offer an unique

: : .·

~~'T~'f~=~~ud:.,tz

=~:~ ~. ~~a~81~~:::

succeaa or failure of an alternative

system ot health care delivery In a
panlculer pea of WeatjWll New York.
Sucll a itudy would likelY, attract
outalde funding for - . 1 d sclpllnea
outalde Health Sciences.
On a allort term beala, doutitleea the
omlaalon of Hwlth Sciences from the
DRIDOMd Academic Plan eterns from
IN· lllln.._.Y owor reeponalblllty foe
~-· programs within Health
Bc:lenciel; on a long term beals, 1bellel!e
lhll omllalon 11 clue to the chronic
fllll\n of the Admln'-lon, herl or In'

=~L~::,=~~
.-.ton to e1m1ter ectloola within

IUNV, pertlculllly MIXIIftf)llfled In the
CXIIIIIM!IIIon between Buffalo and Stony
8loolt lor c.pltal fund&amp;, .-ourcee, and
~ty.
.
Thll .nu.tlon Ia made ,_. difficult
...._of pontlalll .,..._, diiWctly
.nd lhniUgll the union, ....,._ung
, ~ .. both tlnlta equelly.
the Adlnlnlltratlon .to~en . - - t for
"""""' ~ _IIUNVAB untta at
.

CllllcRit'• ~~~~~. : :

==

~
al~ for pedlelrtc
. II te llliD .,.._.....,_the

E

of .... fundi for SUNY
•
...,.. Holpltel hel t.n
..:SIIItal1llf, hiMng NQerd to
IIIIICIOanll pniOIWtla Of the

..
. . . . . ldlool.

n. DOIIItntlld - - - of •

-

lor

111111111 -~
-,_wllhln
_
..,
.-.........
IUNVAB
WOUld
-

.. . . , ............ .oluiiOn for

end . . . . . .

........

........,. .. _ o f
to lltfllllt luhn
IS, . . . . . . 'IIfper-

..._..,......-,,n•

.... Jl* JJI1tlllltlle ... -

.

,..,e~-&amp;.
...

~r=~~~ a~:fd:~ ~:rn

~~vel:!\~-%'~te a~~e~:'l~~~.... o:J:~

Classics, have Intellectual "pride of.
place" and ''rank" al)ead of others, then
my vote for F'eredotto now ranks with
my vQte for Jimmy Carter. · .
What Is studied at the \,)plverslty Is
far less Important than ttlf-o traits of
Intellect acquired In the pl'l&gt;cess. A

:=rn..':tf i~o~ta ~~r~e~f !~~~ b~
the spectrum
majors In which such
traits can be developed Is very broad
Indeed . I must reject the notion that any
serious student graduates with either
more or less potential to develop a
" whole and 1ntegrated life" because of
the particular program she or he
followed . It Is no doubt bene!Jclal to be
especially Interested '- even enthrelled
~ with your own area ot study. II,
however, officers with University-Wide

or

~~~ti~ c;~t'i~~ e;e~·~nr~!\~f;

be led aatray.
The Issue of a General Education
program Is obviously related, and that
brings me to the Dean's response to a
letter from the student representatives
on that committee (Spectrum , Feb.16) .
My oppoelllon to the General
Education program now on Its way to
the Faculty Seriate Is broader !han an
opposition to a language requirement. I

~~nm,::f~~~~~=s~~e\gr~p:a::J

seven

areas. Such a basis prevents far
too many students from accomplishing
anything of substance outside their
major. II Is, so to apeak, too thick to stir
and too thin to plow, and I do not
bell- this fa~it can be overcome by

refi~~~· '':,';)~,~~~·e proposed
~~~~= ~~o~~~~.;.,u~~\:S~·~,e
trover~lal .

A nvmber of basic cone&amp;plufl and practical eapecta of It have
not been explored In any detail. Several
key laauea In the diaCuaalons ,.nlch led
to It, Including the foreign ranguage

r==n~,:,c'.~ f~~~':~ ~'!.:\'.::
by a alngle wote.
_
e- In - thla broeder conteli\,

~. I can understand the atudents'
feeling that Peredotto hes been
edM\ant . Aa the ,_ponse to Dean
Alutto allows, lfa not hla opposition to
ott. things ao much u hla unrelenting
advocecy of the humanltlae. I can only
aay ~n. I underatlnd
but
not fn poaltlona of lfn'-alty-wlde
-.ralllp. Alao, although Jack Ia only •
• pan of• allm majority determined to
pr.a for eerty lmpl-'atlon of the
plan, hll P«!Sitlon ta the least
..-..endable. DUE Ilea now vJrtually
g-leed that this fall will be a period
Of rnulmum atudent ,_trnant of new
. _ . . _ , .. ttow one can IXedlcl
~ from one c!lenll•. llld even

.avocat...

...

=-':;,.:...~ ~"io ~r,a:,~

..,_tlmeurgetha auperpoaltlon of yet
_,... ohlnge Ia a p.nadox that I
cannot NIO!wl.
It Is ..._.... that · we cont1c1er a
minority Nport •IWianatlon. I thl'* a
~
all wotk a little

1:1 ..
::=.,:;-'._
.::-::,relftdcenlll-c
, _ end .,... ...uy wanted. That

........... -

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

biMIIg belli'..,.._, I ~ ftle
. . . two . . tile only
-.

- t o be only-.
•.

elections
ought to.be structured
Published excerpts In The Spe«trum .

EDITOR'S NOTE: ~- atudent lob l.omllardl Wrote a lOng,
'detailed letter to The. SpectnHD airing
Na . . _ on-that pajler'a I n n - In

Th~"t~t~~~V;ad~~':..~~s~

menta In Worlds. Filday - Debate In
Squire's Haas Lounge.
Week 4: Monday - Article In The
Spectrum c6-lng major differences
between candidates In the debate.
Republication or revision of endorse-ments. Tue!idey - WorliJa' endorse-ments (If the p - Itself Is not printed
In Week 3) . Wednesday Final
campaign statements of the candidates
prlntad1n The Spectrum. Election days:
_
Wednesday to F'rlday.

:~-::'~:":.~=I~~'C.:'=

be a better system. The A.,.otter agreed
to pr1nllt -In two perta. After thaf, Mr.
Lombardi •&amp;~»nded on hla original
II now requires th,.. perti. The
-.c1 - on election - . g e
mlgllt better be structured appeer&amp;
tocl8y.
concluaion, next WMI&lt;,
addrea- how Tile Specftll"' worda Ita
endoraemanta, and wr1pa-up - the
poopo&amp;~~l for raatructurlng.

- pl-.

n.

Voter~ ahoulcl reed aomettilng lbout
candida!" btfore ~enta
My IntentiOn for Week 01111 Is to

Editor: · ·
(The following is the revised 'second
part of a two-part, unprinted letter sent
to The Spectrum·- on :February 1.)
The other Important side of The

~:~sh f~~~~n.,:,~~. ~n~~··so:,~

ldeu, before the electorate. fl:ra time
Is expendable, so the election may only
use three -'ts of campaigning. The
editor's role begins In earnest In Week
Two wlttf tile lntetvlewa. In lieu of their
full publication, I wonder why they are
not conducted publicly. Through
publication of two to maybe lour pages
of strategic excerpts on Friday of that
-'&lt;. the electorate. can establish
Intelligent opinions, distinctions, and
pemaps liven conclusions about the
candidates - all of which they have a
-end to do It with. The Important
thing for the editor to rasllze Ia, not that
the l11tervlews ara overwhelmingly
Insipid; or that some candidates ere
ms1p10, out tnat tne voters reao

~g.~'[::,%~:':~~~~~~~=':;'.;

the results, Is the coverege iiScelf.
Criticism of this type is of a categorlcel
0

~~~:ica! ~~u~~'g,n1~to uPJ;~-

Youog, !.believe It Is on these grounds
that a moral charge of undue Influence
can be Immediately ascertained. For
Mr. Young's statistical route to be
correct, lhe more sophisticated survey
which I outlined Is needed . Mr. You;,g
needs this study to prove brelnwashlng
(If he Intends to go this far) , as much l'"
I ne&amp;d the ~tUdy to prove my soft-core
category.
I no longer feel the election cover~e
is gros~;ly Irresponsible; but desp.ie
The Spectrum's best efforts, It could
give non-endorsed candidates a ,fairer
chance. As I will now demonstrate, the
solution to the problem of a single
major newspapar covering SA elections
- r.ll_qulres tbeoooperatlon of SA Itself .

~:.:;:r~~~7~a~~r'!!:m'!~~~dW,": =~

of coverage Is not u important u the
principle, or the fact of this coverage.
In my October 251eiter, I spoke of the

~~.:.n~c~~~~~C:' ~~~e~~r:..=~

~h~?tfc:rl)~~~llf~t~?,~r..~are.'tl:::

In ~~pr~l:t~.!.he ~":'e':a";eco;"!.~~. of
coursr. all published articles pertinent

~~t~~~:~ec;:~~fl. ':~ert~~oet:;':o~~t~en\~

Then there Is the

edlto~s

further role In

~rd~~~~':,~ ~~ :::.,~:~~....,~~~d t~

undlscussed feature - his values. All
of these elements will be discussed In
their place.
•
Sufficient time nieded

auiR~::r ~r ~r~~~?~~:~.s.r:.n~~~stl~:
1
~~Jl~;:u,':;.~,! ~~ntth!t~c~~iin1~ · ~~
endorsemen{s In last semester's emar·

fsen,tci ~::~~n~nw~~~~r~~y . :u:~~~
election should be so. As Mr. Rosen
said (Oct. 25, 1978), II wu SA's fault lor
that lime squeeze. SA also Inflicted the •

=

!~~t~~~~~~r~::a~"F~~-s~rc;t~:::t

Its landango, by instituting a fqur
period for campaign time, beginning
, altar the petition deadline.
In order to work, the plan calls "for SA
to· structure all campalgn -fits wit~

+~: ggr;,'~~:o'rr:,O.:~~ ,~':'!~,~:~~

the most Intelligent discussion of the
Issues, with all Interested panlea
having ample occasion In whlch to
apeak, and having the occaalona
arranged so as to I:M!•t provoke the
enal.llng ones. I holle neither Mr.
Rosen, nor any future editor, nor a!
least part · of SA bel'- that en
Intelligent dlacu•lon Ia a red leal goal. I
hope th- same people can .understand that while my plan does not

f!~':.:t %1/:::=~ri ::x::1~t=
comlclly, I believe the plan will at leest
and at last guarantee a lair election.

~ Timetable

•

lmmedlltely following Ia a parldl.llm
beaed on the general principle. Tho
more rooted theoretical juatlllcetlons
will follow th-'. For lfmpllfylng
~.the ....... will be anderatood
to run from Monday to Fr!Oiy. I believe
they 1119Uid be ai'r8nged lfke ao for
priCtloll ~- ...1: •
W. 1: " - candldll..- to their
own I'MOUfC8II (party P'-'forms, cam·
Pllien IJQIWI, etcJ,
1: -'Y In tile week tnwNwa with The ~~~~ and
Wolllfl, publiC If ~. f'rlday - -

bi!IC&gt;t9 !he raw data.llll person'OI:oPlniom
of another can be contaminated by a
previously stated oplnlon from a third
party. What Is true for personal ·
relationships Is true 1or politics, Where
personality and Ideology are Inter·
twined . Clearly then, If an election Ia to
be fair, then endorsements should be
prec&amp;ded by some rew data. Mr. Rosen ·
found these theoretical points to be
valid; but he added that SA hu not
allowed The Spectrum sufficient eampalgn time. I therefore again urge SA to
enact the needed bill that will allow an
editor to' parform responsibly.
Then lhay can weigh thlnaa
When the raedera tlien read the
editor's endorsements on Week Three,
Monday, they will bounce hls..raaaons,
values, or Impressions against their
own. This Is a democratic luxury The
Spectrum has not allowed, or rether has
not been allowed to give, lor a
senselessly long flme. In the abeence of
the bill, when somehow given the
chance, the editor can ' atlll be
"unllaterelty reeponalble" by sticurlng
the lntetView coverage before the
endorsements.
,
. I doubt, Mr. ROMn, If It Ia morally
lagltl"18t8 for you to weigh the cost of

~'4~~:.~ ~=c:r.~~~~~d

later legitimize your endora«nenta,
the elecllon 111811 fairer against a ' " - coicl.-bioodlld apecufa..
lion of how many at~tl will naad the
thing.
· The very act of weighing the ccet
exPQ- your unwllllngnaaa to Improve
voting conditione; thla Implies your
ecoaptence of the ar.tua quo. I find that
very Ironic, since In your No...,.ber 10
editorial you blame the atud11r1ta with
"altereble Ignorance!!" Now I realize,
Jay you n - In prfnt ecoapted the
stalus quo; I am merely pointing out the
abo.. Irony In caae you dsre think of a
utllltarten defense that wiiiiUpport your
posllloro. Even II the poobllm Ia that
~lng '

=~~~~~~t~ t~~. ~;~k~ud:O ~~~
1

your bulging ,......... of contributing
writers. You ~• tbe authority, the
Idealism, and certainly the perauaalve
ability to do ao.
For t h e - of ernphuls, a Spectrum
editor needa a planned schedule to
provide fair conditiOns for hla endorWmtiAta. By now, I hope SA underltanda
Ita pUt culpab111ty and obe~SII
In caualng lmpo-lshed voting condr..
Ilona.
•

-lob lombenll

�.i

l' i

There!s lots ofWB participation
In unique prime time-local TV movie
11Y Howard KUng

numbers In a book against human lives

A new televtsion film produced
entirely In Buffalo will feature actoes
and artists from UfB. '
Skeleton Key, premiering on WIVBTV, Channel•, March 2, at 8:30p.m., Is
the first locally produced movie In the

and suffering, you cannot. "

A rtgbt to make money?
•
When Gordon resists ~M accusations
with the assertion that banks have a
right to m'I-Ke money, she asks how
much Is enough . Then, 'Wake up boy
... you better look around you, 'cause
everything you know Is wrong ." HMs is
a working class, oppressed point of
view,- one which doesn't just equate
rundown h_puses with danger to
travelers, but as real emblems of thti
suffer! no the! aoes on Inside.
· Red-lining for her Isn't Just en
Isolated problem; It Is a symptom of a
systemic disease. The power of her

1

~"'/i ~ prr.;::~:~g'ij,tw~~~~~p;a~f,;,

dealing with a reporter's Investigation
of a murder. The structure Ia a complex
mystery, weaving suspense In bits and
places as the SIOfY winds Its way to
surprising revelations.
. At Its centec, ·a cautiously developing
political message evolvea Into a socla.lpolltlcal statement against a system
which promotes the Interests of banks
over t~ose of people.
The focus for the message and , In
fact , the reason for making the movie
was the difficult problem of red-lining.

1

fh'~ ~e~~ c:'ti"~t~~ fn:/:'h~~o~h~~~~~

the groping assertion that he "just
might" like to see the system
destroyed . He tells a bank offici al In a
climactic sense, .. You can't see past a
system that's treatlngJou good. Well
~~~.,'.'=~~e .~e bad. e and a lot of

To moke oudl1111ces think 11 hlrd
Director Fred KeiiM, a native of
Buffalo, commented, "The hardest
thing, I feel, In film-making Is not to be
entenalnlng, but to try to make an
audience jaded !:ly too much mindless
fare, think. If you can entertain and be
provocative, l think that what you're

::'f!nw~~~~:~~r~:!1"7~d:~fi~~

w.~~~ ~f ~:~~ ~l:o ~:~yo:,t u~':J(r~

TV's actlon-paclced..tandard . Hence the
form and structure of the film."
The film follows Gordon Raltt , played
by Joe Marshall from Buffalo State, as
he begins to uncover the apparently
frlvoious story behind the dlscovfi(V of a
myatenoua akeleton under the fictional
"Tyler Monument" (Niagara Square) .
His aucceu at Sllllaationallzlng the
history of the bonea Into those of a rich
and powerful fudge, Richerd Tyler, who
disappeared ebruptly In 1906, brings
him Into conflict with anothM reportM,
Phil Roeaeetl, who feel• Joomailsm

!'/:'hul~ 'r{:.J,:C':: ~~~gn'/ll~'!::S~~l

Lome Hlft': 'Mrs. ROMeele'

poL':t~\l':%7~n':St~~~~e;!g=~ b~

Stratton Rawson, a graduate student In
the English Oepartmllnt, and wrttM. The
view he presents Is basically middleclass, seeing red-lining as something
e
" lxoputo"Yt's" 'tshesomthoethuisangndwshicohf unsfmaalrillyII
'
savings Investors In a bank. Ultimately ,
for his character, the real threat of redlining is the! It creates over and over
"another part of the city you can't go
Into after 8:00." Though Stratton
Rawson hes been politically active In
recent years, notably In the GSEU, his
character ·In the .film st-s shy· of

~':,'6'~~~~:".'/x:~t ~{;!Ypf'd,"l:i~ously

Otheno Involved
Other fi ne performances are given by
Mack Donahue and Ed Smith of the
Theatre Department , and Joe Giambra
of Urban Studies College. Mark plays a
heavy foe Edward TyiM, chief red-1108(,
who beats up reportM Roessell foe
being too curious, and does so with a
very convincing smile. Ed Smith playp a
man whose slstec is killed In ' a
"red-lining" fire on the East Side.
Giambra, for sever:al - years an
instructor In "Organized Crime" at
Urban Studies, Is a Buffalo polleeman , who plays a policemen In the
movie.
Of course, a film Isn't much without

::~n:~sf~?o~~lf~rf~:ti~ Fn"'l~i:

case almost two years. Editing was

~~~~~~ I~,,gl\':'e~,ea,:]~~~~~~~

Important bits of the script, Including
the dialogue for the Lorna Hill scene.
This doesn't seem true of Roessell 's
The
associate producec and, · later,
wscelfenew. hoThm eGirordoconn fmroeenttafl..t on'" 'thewhnelcxht
ttl
:!~r:'~ 8m:'in ~:~~.~~r~~~~ntduated
bealns when Gordon brings a Qrunken
The music I• en original score
PhTI home, leads to a dlffMent analysis
and to some of the flnest dialogue In
:Je~
}:!~ '&amp;~~:!n't"
the movie. Lorna Hill's role Includes
U/B actora
one o! the tlea1 'scenes as she deiiV&amp;!S a
Ray has written music for some thirty
shows, Including the annual Shakeslntereati'IIIIY, the film's most vigormore essentl~ political statement,-,
peare-In-the-Park P.roductions.
ous social comment.nea come through
Red-llntn9. Is banks making money.
1
cheracteno played by people frcim U/B .
Simply. ·you ~·t make a million
1t~~ ~~e~~ ~ug!:;J~e;::sc':,~
Roeasell, the second reporter, Ia 1v dollars Without squashing a lot of
crete, sMene" Elll
mplex Is .
played by Richard Wasp, a gntduate
people." Her whole focus comes from a
transformed Into the surr
tic, disstudent In the Theatns Oepart"""ll who
compounded and deep-rooted sense of
Jointed, frenzied setting for
chase
has been In numecous productions
exploitation. The victim Is not just runscene In the movie. If t t Isn't
Including the .recent Thnsepenny Opera:
down houses and neighborhoods, It's
appropriate, what Is?
His c:hlrcter In the film r..-la the
people's lives: "You can't balance
&lt;!thee, nssponalblaand Informed aide of
journalism, one which Ia for a while In
~{~:J.!.,f~:r._I088SIIIItial conflict
R - r often functions u the
coneclence Gonion should have,
pointing out IMquttlea, gambling foe
the truth, anc:t crttictzlng the "yellow
The Institutional Funda Committee for the Allocation of BRSG lunda and the
Joumelln" 01 the typical newspaper.
recomm«tdatk»n of U/8 Foundation Seed Money Grant fundi announces the Spring
He cmiee hie _,.lcllons - t l y to
:~:::=:~~:~~== ~~~o:~!~w~~:,:a;~,~tybe~:=
the point.....,. he liM• fired for trying
each faculty member ln. the beginning of March.
to melle too many connections fiiW on lila e.t Slcla and tho business The faculty chalrper1ona are:
IQC!tceaof t.nka.
astounding epecut.tiono.
Eveota bring Gordon to the same
conclusion - and to the same end as
Roessell - but only after his Ideas end
charactec undergo a elgnlflcant, though
subtle, tranaforma1ion.

:r ,7:,Y

m::

,--------------------------T--,

Spring grants

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

_

"

•:

The llfinO plus _ . . other ev911ta
IQClplt... Gordon's awolutlon from

rldtculoua naiwlla to a

=

beginning

- - 01 Pllll'a ldftd of tNIII. His

=--==t~
Ra~'l
br U/8 act,...
Loma Hill, -~
and

pl...,

tile moowe. nr. lllltll• ~·
of end
~
~.
.., ,.. - - - rapofler .....

........

Arta &amp;.lett..
Atctutecture
Education

David Wlllbern
AI Price
Thoma Fr.ntz

Englnesrlng

F111nl&lt; Couarelll

t=...........ec_

~y

Health Sclonce

Ma-t

tiiLS

SOc:lal WOII&lt;

Dick Jo-

c.
c.rt ~·
CMrleo l'ciurtCftloKim

, Dlci&lt;Cimpbeti
Arthur CryM

au.arks are
lecture topic
Evidence that he has detected a quark
will be presented by a distinguished
physicist here, Wednesday, FebNfl(y

28.

William -M. Fairbank, professor of
physics at Stanford, will dlacu11 his
research end publications on "The
Detection of Quacks" at • p.m . In the
Moot Courtroom, O'Brien Hall.
Whether or not quar:ks can actually he
detected has been a controvenolal
subject for scientists since their
existence was prop_oaed by the

-~"}~1l~~l!:t'. ~~Z:..CO:~i~an~,;

_now defined as hypothetical particles
that carry a fractional electric charge In
the atom end ana constituents of known
elementary particles, would be the
fundamental building blocks of particles so far_, In the atom.

~~=\r~~~":"nc: f~~

of
published three 1181*' on tho detection
of quarlta CNer the laa1 10 ye.a, lila
moa1 nscent a month 1100 In Physical
Review Leftent.
Many scientists contend that quar:ka
exist only hypothetically and cannot be
detected physically. FalrttMk's ,..
-ch his not yet been ~fled by
other phyalcla1s.
· Fairbank was the lira! scientist to
detect magnetic liuk quantiZation. Hia
research Includes work In mlaowradar systems and mioro-~119'

:~· ~"Cl~.·n:w:W.;m-·~u:

chlmbero, and the propeniea of liquid
helium 2 and He3.
A natilllt-Of MlnnMpOiil, Fatrt~Mk
nscetved his ~u.ae _ . . from

~~;,g~r~~ ~,.:=r:n.:.:~
fellow of the American Phyalca Society.

FJnnegan named

to AAUP Council
U/8 Anchlvlst Shonnle f1. FI~~M~~M
hU been elected to lila Council 01 1111
Americain Aaaoclallon 01 Unlwnlty

Prof-..

Ma. Fin ...... will begin a ~
term on lila Counoll In J -. .._ w111
join • othlr Counaff l!llllliiiN 8IICI

=......

offla.a, &lt; : ' - , _

AAIJfl'a

'-lltel ...

tllroutlhout ... ........ ..
nlng~-~­

llfiiii'CIKIIMI • • -

�........

February 22, 187t

ATE
FSEC g'ts r~pQ.rt on A-c ademic Cabinet .sessions
Md of the dlt8Cti0n In wl)lch it wouJd be ..
uMful to move.

-tt~oi·Themlnutnof the..-lng of Fobtualy 7,
1119-._.,..., udlllrlbuted. ·
-

-.mot tile,.,_.,_,

the p,..ldont nor

t~e

Execullve

VIce - t wa'111&gt;1e to 110 pneeenl. There

wu no P-,_lclent'a Report . .

fi.o~on~tributed -a report
=\:l'(=::,.;::;•;_~~ he Md partlciWilll-rd to Item 11 of Appendix t, the
Eaecutfwe Commlnee raised questions

llbout the DUE policy for administering

atudent advisement via--•vfe the department•.
Willl-rd tq 11om t3A. of Appendix 1,
diaowalon centered on whether access toaalory tnformllllon ohould be provided by

~~f=:.o:r~':·~~t~ ~~:~~

~~ .,"?;'!':0..\.~. 1 ~neas) for the

thew'll:,.: '~\:' ?~ ~~:P=~.~i
would like 1-bock on lflls by Wednesday,
2t February. It wu ~reed thot the
Chalrmart would draft i response to the

Pfealdent on this metter, to be considered

'~~~9~mlitee at ~he meeting

na.

Chairman aJao reported on a
t o l l - con-ton ~· ~ad With
Graduete Dean Moore on the implications of
the Public -otflcere law for faculty
membera.
·
The Chairman announced that he

~=~~.~tD~r~ r;~

o..duato AsslaW.to be asolgoed to tho
Senate Ollloa to pro¥kle staff aulstanco to
the VIce Chairman and tho VIce Chairman
E1ect. Their duliea ahould be re1evant to.
and part of, their graduate dogroa programs.

c.-,... .._il

=

~n,.:~~~~,:cr~~,;:,pr~~~1~
o~=:aecum"lnu~~o,. .r::au~~y;~~

i,:,CU~'Jj,,~~~·-:.~m,~,V~":.eprnro~

Repon.r, while continuing an .ctuaf fJ'IIlllng

of

the minutes

to

each

~:~u=w.~u;:,.::!~~n~he

Senator,

as

rr.:, r~:nn,e.a

mlnut• are eo publlahed either by ha~ing
copy of that laaue of the Reporter sent to
them or vii a notice announcln.g the

publication.
D.O!Nr

Proteuor WiUIJm Warner was designated
• FSEC rapreaentatlw to the Profesaional

r,oi' Senate n:oettnga of 2/t6, 2/23, and

-nc-_.._..

····-,_

!1Ta~';g .~~~c:ntr:~~b:;;

which were communicated prfYatefy to the
Editor. ~ ...

-12
A.

tletni2TbeSpectrunt

g_Ae of February j31/ll;.ve no responee from
the Spectrum with respect to the matters

" - i o n from the At~'""'- Com(-lloporfw, Feb. 15, 3) woo
,....,...S. No .:lion- taken. ,_ dlllr11K!"J a llat of the
..._...to be -In the final-' of
1M
Ecl.-tion
eomm-.
- i o n at tile FSEC
meeting '"'
of
"*'-Y 21, 111'8.

Hom 13 Acadamlc Coblnet MHtlllg of
2112/7t
A. The Cabinet took'up a number of minor
items Including the proposed · tuition
Increase, the arrangement whereby our
students take ROTC at C8nlslus COllege, the
com ing vis it of Dorothy Hatrison (of SED) to

explore. exchanges between private anti
public Institutions In Western New YQ.r1&lt; ,
and freedom . of access for salary
Information (wh ich Is currently not given out

fttr~'!t~."':r[~~~ 'h"dJ~po~;:ai~ab:=, I~~~~

detail ed salary_,ln~ormalion for all me~s
o1 the bargaJn lng unlf).
B. One main Item of discussion was. the
Implementation of the Contact/Credit Hour

. ~~;:,td~\~~~Y p~~set~t"e.tat! . ~~~:3ie P_"tc,~
completion of the various statements having
to do with graduation requirements and the

~!~~~~:'~1e~ h~Tr:n~~:io~:/o~st6s~~~

transitional clauses tor departmental majors

will riavo to vary dopenq)ng upon wliether
the requirements for 'maJor are stated In

~e:'~~c~0~f:c~~n~~fst't:eegr.ri~i !~:

science departments to ratee the credit for
basic science courses from 4 hra. to 5 hrs.,
~J t ~wedsome arguing that it ought not be
OJ

10

wa~· dr:~::~~s~ =.srr~~ ~~~eP'=~~~~

Bunn and Vice PrNident Pannlll about a
bridge committee which would co--ordinate

~t1at::'~~gra~~~\h ~~~~s~f T~;a-~:;;!;

sentat1on on the commiUee woukt'generally
be two persons from Academic Affairs to

~~J'J':~:nw~~~mbeH~~ha~~~~h ~~=

co-chairman appointed by. each of tl}s Vice
Presldents; the committee would have the

~~o~:!~~l ~~ ~e;~~as~t·egf~':~~
1

~~~~~i\~ t: ~!:t'de~~Y~r,.~~ .:e•:,,~~~:

· are not ment~ned in the plan, and ll seems
to be the conceneus that they would go

~~~rg~ 1 ~hj~ ~:~r!h:i~~t.~h:~~i~~~;~

even with respect to nomlnatlon,-since Its
slate of n:pminees would be thrown into a

r,tt~:"8c~~1 :ra~~ o~~~"N~e:s i~~~ e!;~

consJderable uncertainty bDth lo the
document and In the discussion as to ·

protect students currently enroUed from
being overburdened by courses in thelr final

whether ~ tlle primary respons1b11lty of the

d le~ssed , and It was reeogn r£~ 1hat the

committee would be for legislation or for
~~~~~=~~a~l~ru~! t'-:o -~~me undetermined

rr:s,~ro~~- ~~:::t ~~a p~=~-~~~

The main rat\t&gt;nale for the proposal of the

two Vice Pn101donla Is that It is a logicel

extension of the principle of line account·

ab~~Matlona

that were -expressed about
the plan Include the following:
.
1. The commlt-tee gives undue weight to

~te~~:,r~~c'ta~n~f1~~~ g:. 1!Yt~~ ~ea~\~
_

~ :rJ:!i:~~ total undergraduate effort at

2. The plan Je faulted by Ita vagueness,
since Cal It does .not discuss
happens

what

.!~eth~~rc8!;n~ut:s ~':::On:~~ 111i~iest~~
President's letter of 2/1/78; (b) It does not
lnQicate what authoriR; tor making any

~~r~~~t ~~m:o c~m:n~~ngw~~~~~n na~

advisory committee to the two Vice
Presidents; (c) It Ia uncertain wt~ether . the

f:g'rs~:/o~ ~~ !~t~~':f'~~ent:t'l~~~~v~ with

su~P~~~CC::;':u~:c,\~.!r·w~~~e7!,1~~~~~~~~

would be an attempt to supersede . the
Faculty Senate, arfd ther•fore undesireable.

th!e1~;:. co:o'!'!tte;:tU:s ~~ ~~~~:!!r· ~~~
confidence In a united undergraduate
program at this uolversity; In fact .lt seems

~go0J~:r~W::e;~t!; ~~~~W~.;o~:~~~~~

the two divisions and-give--prominence to the
two Vice Presidents and to no one else.
The President wishes to have comm'ents
on the plan by Wednesday, February 21st.
-Newton Garver

'Minutes show how fac:u lty ~oted
EDITOR'S -NOTE: The bylaws of the
Faculty S8Nite mandate that all faculty
receive mlnutH of Senate. meeUngs.
The Reporter is happy to assist by
beginnlll(l to print these, in ecklltion to

~~~V:.~~~:~'r'~t;. em!~~tef3

ext-lwely duplicate our previous
reports, they ha¥8 been abridged. These
aomewlult f811(1thy documents are run
f.. the 'purpoae of at least miking
arallable to aU flitlllty_ and other
c:oncemed members of tlul campus
community full dlacuaalons of Issues

- ;:!.~·~~ !~o are;::,c~r::
reooiutlon.

documents - many of them lengthy and
complex - ·which are to be acted on at

~:'e~e ft.Ttln~~:r:str~~~nl:!dad tri~

desirability of th is, and pointed out that

~~~~~~~ ~~ltm~g~t~~~= £~o~~dt~~

for a continuation of the present meeting
next week.

~C:~~:=::":nklentlat ~val\!ltlon
Professor H~an reed parte-of -t, is report ,

:Ov'E~n~ha: -r~':r~r,~~no(a~~h6~~~~o th~~

Se.f~2t: the Senate accept the report

of the
0

~~sl~~~~~acf~!Yua~~~at~r~~u~~~e:s ~
10
fnu~ri'e ~~enf~hi!U~:f :,':s~;u!!J'aJ~~~~

procedures of the Board of Trustees of
S.U.N.Y. are invoked next year.
· After discussion, which focussed chiefly
on the merits and deficiencies of a
questionnaire proposed In the Report as one
Instrument for the Chairman to use In

~'~e;,',~fee;6~11 Y P~~tJ.~~~~ theev:~a~~

constituted by the Trustees, an amendment
to the Resolution was oHered (Hyman;

SECONDED by Schoenfeld), to wit:

_ provided thatf In the event the evaluation ·
procedure Is Implemented, the FSEC shall
review the questionnaire prior to ahy uM of II by the Chairman. It was MOVED (Preenblotl) an&lt;:- SEC-

ONDED (Hariord) to postpone tfie question

until next wet*'s resumption of the session.

The motion CARRIED.

H11111 tl Report 'of Faculty T.O~n and
Prlril-• C:O.mlttaa .
.
Professor Greenblatt (standtng In for Prof.

Solkoff, Chairman) ofl~red an amplification
of the Report of the Committee as It was
ex-cerpted In the Reporter on Janu.y 25,

191'9-. The report aimed at deecriblng rather

~id~\~'~ O:.h~ac~F~C::Oin~'met~t~

Promotion, lnd Tenure
1

(~B).

The -six

~r!;eciofAdv= ~~ran~=~~~~~~ ,:~~
~~.:a:f:'·~~ d~;~:n~:!~~~) ~~~

necessity of writing a balanced teltef of
recommendation, interP/etlng a candidate's
publication record on quaJit)' as w'Jl as

quantity, ond. projecting the cend ldate's

ourreo\ and future role in the Department, as
well as providing hard data as to his/her

~--=:~.:.~=t~:":~~~f-:s:~~tee~

had in evatuatlnq '"non·ltlndard.. candi·
datea: e g .• llbranans, Clinical Professors,
f.:ulty In the Performing Arts. and the Law

School.

fro~he :~!n~a;seJ•;r::~~;i"?r~ pr:::.~:

lnfluoncoo: budget, politics, the Pr""id0&lt;1l'a ·
Oltico, lheUnion(UUP) .
Tho chief daldorata for tM PRB in future

were· devising equlta~difletenllae for
females and mlnorltlea; orltorfa fa&lt; the
, evaluation of teaching eftlctlveneas· and
. I(&gt;at ,Unit heads be orfontad to the t"-t&lt; of
t1lal&lt;lftg adequate -.~ora.

=

The ri!Com-tlona 01 the Commlttao

=~~"'14~~~~~

bo:

- - · they will be pro-tad to the
__,OI'aollpn.
~ onaued. oantorlng Cllfefly on (1)

the amount of time the PRB devotes to
cases: Professors Baum-and Wickert found

:;e,~~e;:8:,~~~,~~~n~!:,~~raa~~:

blatt pointed out that the f'RB members had

spent many hours before the meeflpg going
over the material, and that the details of the
caAdldacy had been exhaustively canvassed
,..PY departmental ahd facultarian personnel
committees, and thett evaluations were a

~R'h~ ~~doft~~~~te~~s ~~~~=-: t~~
8

~~~S:.Ji:,dt~':n~~! ~!:ra~~ of~~~ui~~~

reconSideration at subsequent sessions;
(2)

The propriety of 'buddies" · of the

candidate providing letters of recommendation. Asked by Professor Soons what
constituted "'buddiness'', Professor Green·
blatt mentioned erstwhile fellow graduate
, !Students ; directors on one's graduate work ;

~~~:Hu~s ;;~r:S?ci;:!,o~~a'n:~~~~r~?e~~~g~

Wickert reiterated the position that it Is the

r::!::e·~~~·hs~~6~f:P:'~.~m:~:.'~g: :~:
der;,e~~~:~.~~r.4s~ir~~t~~re:~~:!!;nie

declared that It Is wrong to have different
criteria for women, Inasmuch IS men have
family reaponsibllltles too; PrOfessor
Harfqrd disputed thla contention, as being
:~~~~~fs~~To:a'" thrust of Affirmative
In reply to Professor Baum's Inquiry about
tho accessibility of the full raport (as
different from the account published In the
Repor(or) , the Chairman stated . that the
Report has now bean received by t~e
·Senate; there are no plana to publiah It; It
can be soon by any~ In the Senate Office.
The Committee's r.:onunendatlona will
...,ntually be submitted to the llenato for
consideration and adoption.·

,_lc

~:""-1 of
-ng.
Postponed to rell!lmptlon of !M.tlng,
February 13, 1119.
Hom t1

"-1 on A!fmlniltretlft
,

Comm-

-lew

SE~=) ~:o:o;J:.::m~~f~ ~~

FSEC that II not conotilutt ,. Standiog
Advisory Committee on University Admin-

istration (as recommended by the 197e
Cohen Committee, end C3Ued Into conskllr-

atlon by I he Senate on 12/5/78), since {1)
the Senote already hea an Academic

:\ft;"~~ :m~~!::, ::fhc2f:'r:! f

1

President has appointed, since the NP;.Ort of
the Cohen Committee, a Taak Forie on
OperaUons to undertake selecttv&amp; review of
Jfarlous •spects of · Untversfty Operation.
lrfsteed, the follo"Wing recommendations
wer-emade:
•
1. That no Mdlti6naJ commjttee be set up
1

~~'f~~he ~~~Y

Taa~

at
COmponent of the
Force on -owaUona be named as the

Standing AdvlsoryCmnmliiH on University ·
~

AdmlnlatraUOR.

Wl~i&gt; T":.thee'!:.':l:t ~,:U~ c~~l

cherQ• to the T - FO&lt;ca on Oporatlona ·

~~':;e=lp ::.,:C,
pointed

out

the!

hla

to ,..pond,
commttta wu

=~~·..::,~..:=~or.:~

iongof - t . and made from -a different

-.-.·-•t,ool.a

�•Senate
Waters, Wickert, Wllllama.

~-10,coL4)

Abstain : Joss
hem 13 Stotua-of aHrttton - montlon IIIVdy

tntonnatJonal base; and there were severaJ
•pecta of evaluation of Admlnlstra.Uon that
tt did not MkJrns. A new comm1ttee could

~~=='lor Student Af.falrs Siggot-

mU8 a review of the wtdeopread "literature"

kow called attention to the Summary Report
from the Onlverslty·Wide Study Group on
AttritlontRetent/on, and gave a progrna

on Evaluation of Administration since 1977,

and might wott eddresaltaelf primarily to the
question whether the current Administration
provldee, basically, "academlc" or ..man·
. agerlal" leadership~ Moat of the discussion
reiterated these several concerns, empha·
sizing that the existing committees are
either constituted by Administration itself or
do oot address the academic side of things.
Recommendation 11 was defeated , 12
yea, 25-no, 4 abstain

~~~~ t~n i~:mw0:tt~1 h~~~urn Hb~ ~
drop~ out

sponSents: students who hatd

because ot difficulties in the reglsliatlon

::t ~~~ed~~~f ~~~s~~~emm'ffl:t'=
against retention are program accesa]blltty

~: !~o't':'~t,o~r~:n~'rt~ ·~~~.',"='o:.;

0

Ku~~; ~~:tie~~rtk~d~ar:&amp;n~:,;~ed~Mai;

~une

Severo, Staple, Tatvitle
t-Jo: Acara, Baker, 8aum , Bloom, Bruenn,
Curran, Fedor, Giese, Greenblatt, Harford ,

Professor Segal MOVED the Resolution:
That the Senate approve the sending of
the Chairman's latter t6 ~ohn Rooeevelt.

Rising, Soons, Trice, Uthman, Waters ,
Wickert
Ta~~~tain : Hyman, Schoenfeld , ·s lggeikow ,

(Item 111, Agenda of february 8 aeoslon) -

The letter was In response to a request by
Mr. Roosevelt (Chairman of the SUNY Board
of Trustees Committee on Budget, investments, and Capital Facilities) fo~ comment
on the propriety of ualng. social policy
6bjectlves as one criterion for determtn1ng

Recommendation tf2 was defeated, 5 yes,
27 no, 5 abstain
Recommendation 13 was defeated, 8 yes ,
19 no, 2 itbstaln

~~~ g':,n~:~l ~~~~!liT!'~,';~!~~~~~

Squire. This year Is no different. This
tsst fling before Lent ts the " blggeet;
wildest, and most notorious Brazilian
celebration," lt.s organizers say.
In Brazil It means three days and
three nights of dancing, singing,
parading around in costume, and
•general hell-raising."
In Buffalo, there will be a shorter
'le&lt;'Sion • one night of dancing,

:~~~!~~a~t~r~~~atpJbha;Jn&amp;~t~~;~

are

optional, organizers Indicate, "but

=~~~~~ ~~'"A~~~ ~~f~e ~~e~e~~
one."

,

·

Each vear's U/B CarnJival has_ had a
bsnd - some brought up from Brazil,

some from places around the United

Sillies. Tills year, music :w~l be
provld!&gt;d by a nine-piece band led by
Buffalo's Dick Griffo, who has played at
the Ontario House in Niagara Falls for'
quite awhile. Griffo plays tenor and
soprano sax and the flute. Also from the

~~~~~~ M~~~~o~~J' P:'~o B~";~~~~

Roberto plays trumpet and Machado
has been described as Brazll's premiere
drummer. Other band members will be
coming from New York City and
Boston.
Brazilian Carnaval music Is difficult
to describe, says Bonnie Webb, one of
the organizers. "The beat is so obvious
that It can't be missed, kind of like
disco. But It's better than disco
because yOu don't have to know any

m~g~J~s"1~~"8~n~~~u~~(b;

"available
at Squire Box Office the Jllllht of the
evenL Carnaval will take pljte in the
Fillmore Room from 8 p.m . unti13 a.m .
There will be a late bus back to Ellicott
at 3 and Security has allowed late
parking In the Main-Bailey lot so cars
wi ll not be ticketed there.

-

.......,.by...

,_,__A~­

the __

TITLE. THANKS 71J AJJOti.R REAPERS 1.1)}10 s~N'f
IN '[HEIR. If)£AS .

civil engineerlng . two subject ..tl be "lake. Poi!Y·
lion." WBCN (930). tt :05 p.m.

,
CONY£RSATIONS tH THE

FEIIRU~YH

~TS ·

.
&amp;thor Hor-

IIUIIC~_,.

rtoOt tntervtewa Lionel Abel, -- Courier c.H
(Ciwnnolt OJ . 8 :30p.m,

llafta.'

...............
Halogropllo. tnocrtp,.,.~groupof
7

CONVERSATIOIIS JN THE ARTS: Esther - -

fEBIIU~YZI

CONVEJIIIATIOHS tH THE lUITS: Esther Hoi'

--

(Ciwnnol

tO) 7 p.m.

-·0
........................... _
NORMAN, NOT HOWARD

No, the R_,...lcen .,.....,....,.. •apJrent 11om
did not poou
ol ArdliWC·
thriMih !he ....... etop 8\

- . _ .- _ .................
Cllolrct.
DMignod
br
..
~Hayel

Hit! !..-, ..,.,_.., by tho --EUWOIWI•IIII Dooign

'r.,_

llle'~ty Seilele tneetltlg. h ...... NonrtM . . . . who ....... ..
abjedlolt to .................. ..

..;.............

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

'
'

r~:';~~~~t::'~l~'1:i~br:g~~).

Yes: Acara, Berdahl Brown , carpenter,
Connolly, CurllU) ,, Dziak, Eberlei n, Ehrt lch,
Fedor, Garverick, Hare, Hessleln, Hovorka,
Hyman, Kennedy, M. , Ktlrigman, Kroll, A.,

~W,~a~·.·~tlr~~·A~~~:~gSc~~~~:ld.~:::
Si~C::Iko8"a'k~.on~,1 ::~1eH!~~~~s. :;,t;.:·.
Reism anil, Stinger, Talvltle, Wickert.

~~~3~~~nus~~u~3~ 1~h~~d~~: T~erc,T~~s~

SECONDED) the Resolution:
as Trh~

~~"m'ft~geh'a!vi~~ AZ:u~7~e'!-rr~· ~~:

......,.... hi

1

~~~!~'~tt'~: ~~~~:ry~ e~t~~fl~~

~~=:~~n~~~~7t~~f"~~t~~r~~~~~:r::;,~~~

Increase be communicated to the Trustees ,.
of SUNY by transmission of this resolution:

~~:t~~::~Y:.en:~it~~~he,!':~~~~~~

of ..
members of the State University Board of

~~~st?nest~rt1~~~eln d~:f~:~~~hea~{,~S:~

5

-~~?~~ 0n~~i~m~~t"~f b::dS:~~~~~s_h:~:
~:f~~~~ r:'~~e?6f~~~v!~~ t!:t:~~=~egn:

#

·

ttem IS Raaolut.On on tuition ln.creaae
Professor Rising MOVED (Schoenfeld

tndependently associate ourselves wilh and
support the arguments of our President ,

~~~r~d:,~~«St~~~n~h~::::~~~~.of ~~

to these cuts could be explained .
" The committee conc..;rred witt\ the Vice
President on the need for today'a meeting In
which he will discuss with the Senate both
the responses he has received to the draft of
the Academic Plan , and, within that context, ,
the Impact of the budget cuts.
"The committee now p:lans to request
further 'meetlngs with tl)e VPAA as well as ·
with Vice President Carter Pann lll, Pres ident
Ketter and the" Dean of Undergraduate
Education , John Peradotto."
~ice-President Bunh reported on the
status of the Plan of Acedem lo Development
he has been drafting In response to

Schwartz, against this measure.
" The additional Income rea~nds only to
short· term fiscal problem!J , but of partlcutar
concern to bs are the long·term effects of
these tuition Increases on the very nature of
a public university. At the same time that
the addltlonaJ income responds- to shortterm fiscal problems, the addiUonal coat
excludes more and more of exactly thoee
students the untverafty wu dealgned to

serve.

.

/..

" A cleat ex amp• of. this was obtained In a
19n survey of atudeota .who 6eft our
Institution before completing their degreo:

~~h~'~;).1 ~~~~~~~~~un~~:wR:~~rs

30 per cent reported that they w. . fOKod to
leave for financial rw.aone."

88

rel&amp;Yance of the etatlatlca ln the final

After dlocuUion ot the validity and

~~~~WhY

Health Sciences do not have
an Academic Plan , or are not Included In
this ooe, Vlc•Presldent Bunn reptled that

~~D,t(~~?~~D..lf/0;::'!!!,,~

'r: ~.::~~

=--.:m~:: ~~=·: and mlklng the

~~~ ~1nn~~rr;.~~n~~n':k:O-:;e~,:~~~

concern to us . . the long-term etfette of
these tuition lnct'NHI on the vert naturw))l
a public untver,lty.

~1f:;:. a:~r~~-~Yr!U~~~~~~

The additional Income rapondo only to
short-term fiscal problems. but of PMtlcutar

and desirable thaf the two divisi ons should

between them .
•
Acting Executive Vice Presld.ent Fogel
pointed out that Health. Sciences are
engagfngJn &amp;Of!le plannJng now.

Tho amendment baing APPROVED by
votcevote, the MOTION CARRIED(31+1).

-

Hom 12 p,..ldoft'tlot fvoluollon Proceclu&lt;w

~~. ~'ml:m:"-·

~~~e~~~d~::.!sormV:re·~,:p~":,~

=~~=~.~
=~~:,;.t::-...,~~~
ltoetf thon C.ARfiiED (.a.o.t).
YH: Acala, -

·

Benialtl. -Bio, Blou,

~=ln~=--~~~H2f.:-:

, Glooe, Hero, - · HOVOttla, Hyman,
touca, Kennedy, M., Ktt~man, Kroll, R.,

=a:.: ~:.':l.=: M-:':.1-U::::

=:::::s::.""SI~nOer~UJfJ::

~~~,...

alera,

No: Gleoo, Malone, llelomann, Talvltle
Ablloln: Ehrllcb

their revis4ons of the quesUonnaJre to h1m.

Mmi·colo·n aftet ''year'' to a comma and
defete the won:la "tn the event that the
eYaluation procedure Ia lmpJetl*'\ted",

H-.

~~~:~~· ~=ield.~~"'\ruilt!::

questionnaire and the meetings with faculty
groups propoeed by his committee were
suggea(ed pfOCIHiufft for the Chairman's

01 Pr.~~~no;,::=t.edl:~~~~~

C:::~t:.cac:nno~a:.•c..,=.-~~:

leln, Fodor, a-lei&lt;.
Horton!,
Houtotn, Hovort&lt;a, Hyman, Jain, Kennedy,
· M., Klingman, Kro~ R., Kroll, 8 ., Kuntz,

(H~~:!sor Hy~n spoke of tt\~ Resblut1on

postponed from the meeting on February 6
~-minutes, Item 5.), emphasizing that the

-· ---tenttortno
-by--ofthoMuoic~· ""' ........... Uanol Abo!, wnter. Courier c.H

"*"·11w&lt;lugll- 5

00

to present the fJnaJ versiOn In late April or

FBRUAIIY%7

trough

Tues~~Y 1~

~··~:,~:SC:~r:'~fn::·n~~"~~~~o~~re"J)

11/ERE WERE II GR!:f.T PEAL
OF SIJGGESTIDNS SVdmfrrEI&gt;
.Af/0 WE IIAD riJifJE PIFFIC:Utrf
CHOOSING 11/E WINNING

.

Professor Connolly was moved by
Professor Baker's arguments , but spoke In
favor of sending the letter because
otherwise there would be the lmpflcatron
that the U/B Senate and Faculty are not

read the following report from the Academic.
Planning Commtttee:
.
" The Faculty Senate Committee on
Academic Planning has met five times since

CC¥ri1C SfRIP" C0NrEST:

~ ~""2:~~
~-~=t t
__,

a.m ... p.m.: 8IUdly .nS&amp;ntw. 10 a.m -3 p.m.

policy as soc10t policy.

~~~~r:~_ f~r ~~!~~n 5At~~- Win,~!~
10 DIIVIO SANDS, ·A GRilOtiA1! . data concerning targets and problems have
been shared with the committee and the
OF i.ll8 JAW S:f.KJOL I FOR.
~~''grsc~~s~C:d;~k~ ~~~~0:~~; o~~
WINNING 00(? •t.f4mE 11/E
both long term goats and Immed iate

Ernbeoey, Wllhington. riott intervieWs Kornd Waehlmenn, archltect.
-~(Chennol tO). 6p.m.

C.,tor, -

Item 112 Resolution on proposed tuition
lncrean
Postponed until the resumption of the

continued meeting was called to
order at 2:00 p.m . 13 February to consider
the following Agenda items remaining for
action :

~

A.M.IUFFALO: Or. LAonard A.. Katz. associate

c~ IIUTOIIATIOII

In t~elr
Professor Staple pointed out that the
letter Is centered not on South Afrlca, but on
the general principle of using Investment

meetings have been with Or . Bunn , one with

dean, SchoOl ot Me&lt;ficlne. tO a.m. WKBW·TV
Unlike Wt KIM • CM~actw, e group shOw (Chamel7).
- b y l1e Ollloo ol V.P. lor Heol1h
Sctanceo m OeQnnent or M Through -.:11 FEIIRUARY 25
7. ......, Golery, Bed&lt; H11. Mondly·~Y
CROSSTALJ( It&lt; Dr. Rolph Rumer, I&gt;"Ofessor,

10-.m -S p.m.

~~~::~n~~ea~~~t~~~c~.rinciples

~ The

The event is jointly sponsored by the
. Brazil ian Club, SA , and POOER.

FEBRUARY24

.IERUSALBI.. AIICHAEOlOGICAL PA&amp;r AND

~~~~:~~~Pty thh'~td~mft~" i~~le:,~ - ~~=

Item 111 Lett• on Endowment Investment
Policies
Postponed until the resumption of the
meeting .

m~tt~":%o

C;~av~~~ M~~~eb~~~~\t.i','P.~6~~c~~

On the Air '

AlAMO CIALI.SY EX~

Baker spoke i.galnst point 5 In the letter,
questioning the validity and effectiveness of

p. m . the meetln was RECESSED
untll2:00 p.m .
••
February 1919.

over to the Fillmore Room Saturday
~~-~~ht. I'm sure there' s noth ing else like

•Calendar ·
Exhibits

~rwc:,~~~~~~!~1 g~d~~~en~,:~~:t ~\:~~~

Item 110 Stetus Ot ettrltlon - retention
study group
Postponed until the resumption of the
mee.tlng.

special dances or steps . In fact , if you
can jump up and down , you have
mastered the dance 'pulando,: which

p

potlciH

~~:~r.rkt'u~fn~l~· L~Twrg~~e~zeg~~~~~~Ts:

'Carnaval' scheduled for
Fillmore Room this Saturday

t5, 1979.

Item 14 LeH« on endowm. .t lnveetment

.

-Na-Prot...or "Soono·

aaked that tho devotop oomo guldotl- ~ boolt aalo prottts ahould be di
Of br
faculty who require otudento o bu)' -

;:te'::,%·~~~:'::~tor.,:'!,.~
teo .
Prof-or Connolly lnqund about hto

:::~:. :l~...:n :'U:.~!":;,::'.\1.

Tho Chelmtan and Prof- Kuntz Of the
Admloalolla CommlttM pointed out lllet
~.~adiiiCfliiJIIPCYbe- . , . _
m.;;r:todc::::::..
_..,reto-..llle._t-.
The - l n g edjoUmedM 4:11

"1-.,:v; '1::
P.•·

'•

�n.

F - r y 22, 1171

~lEOta

~

Libraries assess
budget mpact- ·'
'Official announcement of the1979/80
operating budget for the University
Libraries evoked little In the wey of
~'{ff}'::iy~~n.g to the current iss.~!&amp;
T,lle p&amp;fl three years of essentially
static library eupport served ea
• Jlr&amp;peratlon for news that ihe Depart:
ment of Budget has rejected the
Libraries' request tor appro~lmately
$900,000 In additional funds fOr the
coming year~Jtor "Steve Roberts
reported .
·. " In spite. of growing faculty and
stll(lent needs. in spite ol rapidly rising
costs, the Llbrarlea will have to contend
.with a budget offering- 01\1¥ minimal
Inflation relief and· little hope of
•~pendln~ .or lmprovl~ exlatlng · pr&lt;:&gt;- •

'

A Dew flute·
That's wt)at Creative Associate Robert Dick
has developed; the music it makes
is lil&lt;e a 'ra!nbow that fUis the sky'
For ·eome, 1 strange metaphysical

--lon - • to still tha body when
listening to the oldeet of musical

corn

the new Instrument.
Ua~n a metaphor to make l'
son between new and old II ute
mua c, Dick likened the traditional
sounds to a " rainbow" and the new .
music to a "rainbow that IIIIa the· sky.
It's the same expreaalon but with more
dimension ."

was • w;;il received" by rathereonserv..:
live m~slc l ans at a National Flutists
Association convention last summer.
So tar, Dick says ha has racelved llttli
flak troin traditional artists. He believes
that this reaulta, In part, from the fact
that he Is an accomplished performer of

e-.

Man:117 -'tehop

not played well, usually because, the
musician lalla to reapond to Its
emotional content. Because ha believes
so strongly In a performer bringing an
emotional Interpretation to music, Dick
refuses to enter competitions. In such

lnstrumenta, the maacullne-contourad,
femlnln..-oundlng flu_te .
" - " - it'a b&amp;cauee the lnatru~)
conju- up thought•Of romance or haS
been ueed In tlmM ~ and preaent to
rouee the IIOda _or IOOihe the beaSt.
Moz.of paid homeae to Its .,...glcal
quallt... ln one of hla etlrrlng operas.
Altllough Robert Dick, . e · oreetlve
- ' a l a at U/B'a Center of the
CIMtM end Performing Arts, once
enter181ned fleeting thoughts of wrWng
ec1ence fiction or entering the. world ol
Medlaon Avenue, hla only s«tous
ernbltlon hu been to be a good
mualclan.
With luck, which he clelms he's
"made" through "hard wor1&lt;," at 29,
Dk:k hu come a long way In realizing
hla life's goal, After doing under·
11'8dUate won. at Yale and rej:elvfng an
111 .M. from Ita School of Music, the New
York ·city native wrote two books on
flute tecllnlquea and .-ntly com'Piated a deelgn for a n - flute, Ia
M80Ciatlon wfth IRCAM In Paris, that
will edd a rww dimension to the
lnalrument'a musical aapabllltlea~

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

Dick ' - hta new deelgn will "do
tor the llula wt1at electricity did for the
.,!tar. • Ill Cllhllr wonla, by virtue of Ita
- . . Oldt w.~ta hla llletrument to be
u. OMalyat lor the CNIIIIon of a new
lalllooll ill mdalclll ~- Ulca rock
- Jlml Hendrix wllo Clawaloped a new
lOIIICIIIIIut.l) for the electric .Puitar, Dk:k
ta ~ding the alpllabal for a new
type of"'* illuelo.
.. !IOU_.. hniOIM· -hlng, you
a.~ !OJ It, • ....,_, tile vfrtuoao

---ly

~01111 aaya

hie

,_

flute

Ia

the tiUI
-the
· "plea
.. and
the
ndltlonll lloellnl,
.__. of ,ta u,a end u. control . .
....... Uftllllellla eo.tun deelgn, the
...

-

ltUpllldaUt

~

111111Nn1tJ eo a. *-lclln'a touch.

~

--*· Dick
...,.....,hla"elln~ln­

_.

Wllllltl "" or 11x

l l r . - c - ....... ~ tMI ...
. . _.., ol ~. tina . . , _

.....,..... ..... _ - ,_.,..,. nuta
......,........,.,_IIOioa~

~ ......... endfNIIJ-

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . uaually
....... - - ol ~ bawllclar·
. . . eoDiaklftwlllilr.lht~

On March 7, the performer/ composer
will conduct a day-long frail w~shop
on contemporary flute lethnlques. The
wor1&lt;shop Is open to the public. The
day's activities will be ca~ b~ an -

~~J~g ~~~rmA~~s:rc,~ c1~ a~ 1 a:~

students and $1.50 for jhe general
public.
•
Can only the' vanguard of musicians
appnsclate this redlcal transformation In
the flute's mualcellanguege? Dick says
no, and proudly reports that his music

trag~~~r,.a'.::,~'tuit some new mualc Is

~~anl~l

:z•;..,:!f.!sln m,;::, ~
win.
,
As for his future plans, DicK would
like to remain with the University tor
another year. Ultimately, he hopes to
tour, perform and record as a soloist.
-JB.
,
•

LEITERS.
Garver la_u ds Bunn for'.

going public with data
Editor:
The Faculty Senate took no official

~:r;,::.,~h:Jetfo~.rJ"~~n~"Jn~o~1 ~~

mMIIng on February 6 . This seems to
me an omiaaion, and because of ll I
wish personally and publicly to
commend hilll and hla staff. He made
eta. that the ataliatlcal contteuratlon
of relative WOII&lt;Ioeda Is a partial,
fruatratlng, and uninspiring aspect of
academic planning and I &amp;hate with
many colleagues a dlataate for planning
that Ia driven entirely by enrollment .
Nonathlll... planning must take account of enrollmenta. and must operate
within the conatralnta lmpoaed by
t'-1 . We are Indebted to-Ron Bunn tor
giving ua a healthy alap of reality In that

, ; : :·Yloa "'-ldant and Tom Craine
are lllrtlcularly to be commended tor
publlahlng the llp&amp;Ciflc working data on
atudantlfaculty
Whk:ll - ..-ted on the first page ot- the
,..,.,.., for 2/15/79. The J)ro1)081tlon
thai enrotfment constrains planning can

,.,loa,

Non-l'rofit OrJ.
tr.S.POSU(IO

PAID
Buffalo.N.Y
Pamit No. 3 I I

be threatening and· paralyzing In Its
abstract form ; there Is no way either to
argue wllh or lo adjust to an abstract
truism. In Its abstract form , therefore,
the proposition prevents rather than
encourages rational debate. Even in
cases where the target ratios for 1981
show current enrollment and staffing to
be badly out of· balance, the specific
figures are much better tha!'l the
threatening abstraction. Knowing 1118

~~:!:;:~~=n.:::,~~~~:r~::

realistic response Ia possible.
Some may choose to attack the
trarnewor1&lt; u "narrowly managerial: "
Whether In Ita preeent detalla or ln a '
conceivable modification. Such an
attack wpuld be silly: It undermrnes
faculty lnteresta by eliminating the
posalblllty tor rational dlacuaalon . A
frarnewori&lt; that Is lmperfact, slnoe It
opens the way tor dlacuaalon, Ia much
to be preferred coer no framawor1&lt; at all.
The Bunn-Cnolne cbart, therefore, end ·
Ita pubHcatlon, ~ plaudits even
from lhoH faculty w110 ct..- under Ita
lmpllcatlona end wllo would wlah to
modify h. MJ - - . oornpllments tor
an Important atap toward rallonal
hlculty cllacwaion of rMOUIC8 allocation.
Yourw Sincerely,

-Newlon oar-

Chairman, Faculty Senate

~:,;.,~~~?~~-~~~ ~~~= f:~a~

.

the severe stalling cutbacks of recent years, the new budget OffWll little-else
to reverse the dlst-.lng fiend within
the state to marginally maintain rather
than develop library resources," the
Libraries statement continued.
The base acquisitions budg~ of the
University Libraries will remain the
seme as In 78/79 at $1,248,100. A
requesled Increase of $413,000, needed
to bolster a demonstrably deficient
acquisition policy, was.denled although
.· an 11 .1 per cent Inflation Increase was
allocated, amounting to $138,800. •
The Libraries requeatad an additional
7 FTE, 2 profeaalonal and 5 civil service, . ·
to partially restore 19 nnes lost during
tha two previous years, to ~tely
stall the. 11ew. and enlarged Amherst
tacllltlos, llf.1d to stall the Main Street
and New Ridge Lea Libraries, facilities
neceaaltaled by the spill campus and
building delays. None of lheee lines
were funded. Neither were any taken
al((ay, malntalnlnge total of 237.711nes.
~ request for a 15 per cent temporary
services Increase for 19180 wu also
denied, holding that budget at
$212,169. Compensation lot a rising
Fed-1 minimum · wage wu not
forthcoming, the Ubrary Nha ...ld, tha
Department of B4dget rationale being
tflat SUNY Ia ~xempt from paying
' rillnlmum wage.

. •Update
-~-1,col. 4)

1981. When· flnlshed , the building will
contain one larg.e Lectur~~ Hall 'fl'ilh a
seating capacity of 450, three at 220
seals and two at 90 seats.
-

/R~·r!t1~\~rJ,~'~'- Epl,~'cr :~~-

advertised last November and bids were
opened In Albany on February 6. Thls
facility will Include a Field House (101'
basketball, volleyball and track), six
handball courts, locker rooms for men
and women, a therapy complex ,
equipment check-out area.two seminar
rooms, several faculty olficea, and
fixed , moveable and ~able seating

:~arp~~~x=e~~· ar..ror'·93-:32~

square feel. rRe archltact for HPER·Phase I Is Robert T. Coles of Buffalo. .
· B. ProJacta In the Planning Stagaa
t . Planning for the renovation of
Fosler Hall wea lnltleted laat September
1alter the Division olthe Budget releued
the neoesS@cry lunda. It Ia estimated that
the planning stage will take at least a
year to complete before the bid
documents can be Pf80818d . Foster Hall
Is one of the moat lmjJortant renovation
pro)acta at the Main Street Campus u II
wilf serve as a basic aclenoe laboratory
facility for the Health Sci-.
Facilities li'lenning Ia hopalul that the
renovation
begin early In 1980 and
the building will be reedy lor occupancy
by J)Jne of 1982.
2. Maeter planning of the Maln Street

will

:;,ao;~· :r.,~:::.,~,~~nc:-:.'er~

present study, which should be
complete by the and of the aummer,
will produce outline facility programs to.
guide architects tn·dealgnlng Individual
building renovation pro)ecta. II will also
mal&lt;e nscommtln(latlona on circulation
and utility systems.
3. Recently the Uniweralty recelved
verbal approval for the design of lour
rww .Amllerat buildingS' - (1) SOciaL
Solencee - " " - I - (2) Computing
Center (3) Student Actlvjty - P'-41 II (4) Healtll. Phyalcal Education and
~ion - " ' The Oftloe of .
FacmtJM Planntng Ia currently working
with the varloua ~. dlractora and
their rwpactl.. faculty and staff lh
oompfallng the - . . y programming
won. lor lhllaa bulldlnga.

u.

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Conyers

PurciYslng A University- ·
wide panel has a
series of recom:
mendatlons ·for
Improving Its
operations.
Seepage 10.
I

Martln Luther King
isoneoffew
American leaders
whose stature has '
_ grown with the
- passage of time,
, Michigan
Congressman John
Conyers say~.
Seepage 3.

ChinA

Engineering

The campus
Chinese community c;elebrated
their annual 'China · ·
Night,' Saturday. Seepage 12. ·

Opening

A Career pay, a
toxic waste
conference, ~nd
computersearch
demonstrations
will highlight
'Engineers Week
oncampus.
·
.See page'S.

TheAnthro ·
Museurn opened _
this week with a
display on
Jerusalem an&lt;f
scores of visitors.
seepage 11

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

FEB 15, 1979.
VOL.10 • N0..19

Acadeilllc plan
Bunn tells-Senate discussion phase : · is 0\1~: he expect~ to soon
-5\Jbmltastat-ement.to thel?~:esldent
Ronald Bunn, vlce-presldM'i for
academic alfelrs, told the Faculty
Senate Tuesday that the discussion
ph- of the academic planning
proeeaa ha concluded arid that lie will
SOOI&gt; offer the President I sllt_,t
Whlcb provides a "eon till&lt;!" In which the acadaallc affairs .,.. of the Unl-.slty
can "ruulze lllelr hlgr-t pot.,tlal" In the - . I n - s " " -·
Bunn retailed that he took Into ·
account a mlulon. and • procedural
ana _,ros framewofk _ , considerlng .111 Academic Plan. The document,
~ to- the Vf'M, pnMdee more
·~· ._-clinG !be mlaalon of the
Unl-.tty "and how It noflaets on .
spec;lflc academic concema, such u

College H.

IWIQ8 of Pf!IQJWIII .

Health-related unit's residential
program Is geared toward improving
· the quality of student life
Colfege H hu gong ahOOR .,d
nutrltl- ~.a weight room .,d
a -oallly ~«;enter, murala of
the Aoed Runner ,., lntemal
,_alelta' that dlacu.... ~lng
from drug - . . to how eye COIIIaC1 Ja
uaad In aoc1a1 lnt...:tlon .
True to Ita !lane of .,_lth care·end
human MtViola, "the College hu eat up
lalta end ..... ...... ooed
vou.yt~all ~ and • tutoring

,_,h

=- =~voi:':T"'-~

care....,clee. hM a bolling clinic and •
a!IMNi8tlca PIOIIfMI for womM~ toom~ with Cllllpen to ~.. euctly
l f w - ' o f - fat to be fought) .
~·• Into akin care, chlldblr1h, Job

11unt1n0 end c.dio-pulmonlfY ..uael-

'1"'-.)udOee end ......,, -~
. . . . . .-.cl - - i o n tfwougll •

..... ....,-n"Oi"MdinO IIIDitU

for

conlrfbutlonl to - quality
1-. ,1111. Studlnta wiSh t1tit
DDint_gel....,...
fft._,..._ionlnlhillftir,

Hta•••
t=.,oe1110ol
fllolill

•

E

' .-.cl 7 of Porlllr ..
. . . . . of ... ~

. . IHIIJ!h....,illld

~...

But you don't

- t o be a.p.....ed, biology, nurelng _
or 8CICIIII wort&lt; student. 'Non4lMith
majora who want to be more lnfonned
about health • consumers are also aneourwgacl to join.

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

..:'':'.:

un~t==~~~=·~
~~=~
J;ls .~lo;,

social and wthlcai ¥1iues"Pn medicine,

::'' .-."3;· h:...:·~:r-~=~
suicidology, children's rtgllts,

praetlcurna, lncMpe&lt;ldent et\ldiel, and
., Introduction to helltll "--ds In
gaMnll. 1..a1t fall, 100 atudenla wwe
...otlld In eiMiwolt&lt;, ganegtlng aorne
. .If, ·
-CIWdll
houia. of IN U/8
H'a·not
1M blaiiMt
eolleDM. ll'a l*flilniY the moat
c11...-nt~c~ and aNI, eon... Mater

.....~w!MIIioldallll
........ ""-P· ,_ 1111
Ph loeclllllr ~1, flnlt
~ anllld 111111 ~ H llwough
hlat--lnmallia
.
liiiiWiy "' • PM-tillll faculty
IMIIIber (tiM Cottage'• 20 laeutty -

U/8

-~11,'-l,ool.l

•

The pl., al80 offers a p(I)Cedure by
which the lfn,..,.lty can. monitor and
CDmiCt Ill problems. The procedural
context Is eignlflcent, noted Bunn,
baeauaa It "lnilicatea the rules of the
a.ne" appropriate to U/8; ruiN that
llliqw •reuon to reign Willie WOiklng
through common l)fOb!ema. " The plan Is
one that "underat8ndaltleeontr1butlons
that many pan malca and not • feW. •
The raaource eontlll&lt;t gqpplaa with
futura State funding and the eonnectiona bltw_, resource allocation and
ervollment dlatrlbutlon.
Although Ill wlahls the ~site
true, Bunn laid U/8 e.nnot
escape the relatloMhlp between enrollf118n1 and deployment of reeouroes."
Hls~ plan, h__., deals with t~

realities In a way which Buon hopaa e.n

minimize rlgldlty.
a - - of the modi of funding ~
the Pl8l
BuM laid he would
lii""foolllh,"-r,;--.......,t a pt., In which
the oore C8mj)U8 atudan!lflicui!Y ratio
Is much rlchtr than 17·1 dMj)lll hla
feelings regarding the ~-­
of a riCher ratio for the "Unlliarslty. HI
81111'118eted, " " - that certain
faetora may -.naie a modification
o1 the ratio, u H applies to the oore
~ aueh u model o1 lnatruetlon
which rety on oerta1n faeutty/ltudant .
eonflguretlona In on1er to fulfiU t11e1r
mlsalona. The VPM gave the perform1ng or clinical WOik u -piN.
Other conalderatlons, he lllid ooutd be
the dlalflbution of unc~arviii~Uiiijii to
graduate atudanla and the degnla of
supervillon for paltlcutar ~

lnc-.

of d~-ion ~ -

1111 ...UO, a-IM of
tema1 and . , . . . . ~
etay wlthltl a o.taln
IWIQ8, 8Uiiii predicted tll.a will be
enough fieldblttty eo 1111 Um...tty
doea npt ·~ ltMir.
8.,.11 lllid It wtll larQely be 1111
raeponaibltltY of Mdl daM to dM:Ide
the atUIMntlfaeulty ratloa for lndlwlclulll
deoartmantl ..,_ the 1*11 prowldel

A
'lllllous

su.lnta muat

only ., • .......,.. baM of aupport. •
Bac:auaa 1111• PfO)ecta ratloeonly for
laeuitlea and _ . , a- Mid 11
•encouregea vartetlon" end will etllbll
highly aeetaimed ~ to
----.·-a.eo~. 4

Thla chart Showing etudant-taculty ratios loi facultlea and ~ within
Acadan!ic Affairs _.ted to the Senate Tueedly by VPAA RoniiCI

~

·

•

Unit

.....
ML
FD

......
....
....
LAW
1011

AIICH

s.w.

DUE (Cotlagea)

~1,

Faltm
aturlaott......,.
,...

12.31
12.•
15. •
Zl37
23.•
18.72

~tl

· 13.33
14.11

33.78

. . .........

sw.nt

1N1
Wcnlng

..,....

1511
1511
1511
2011
2311
11/1
1111
15/1 .
14/1
14/1
37/1

...

....

+582
+232
-,11)

-1a
+1•
+11
+13
-6
+1115

~
......,

.

. ....._.OR
........

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

-

.....

-311

-15
+II
+5
+1
+7
-8
-1
-1
-2

�l

-

_.
Tuition

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

Institutional
- Studies office
now functioning

under the te.leflblp of
Or. Allen Kuntz. Ita acting director, has
tine lllllln- of reaponalblltty.
• Acoon:tlng to · ~t Executive

:: =':""..=.~,=-~~~~

__...

........

•Senate

a

Contrary to a headline In
local
newspooper this WMI&lt;end, President
Robert L. Ketter doesn't exactly " back"
the latest SUNY tuition Increase

SC:dtng to sources In the Presllta op«atton, 015 will uaume the teak
dent's Off tee, Ketter (who call8&lt;f on the
of coordinating ·tile Courses and
Trusteea to reject a general tuition hike
Section Anelysla- Report (better known
week before ut) reilatds the cunent
• CASAl whlcll Ia llftiiU8IIy to
plan tor an tncrMM lor freshmen and
Afbenr far acnotlny ~ SUNY and ttoe
eoptlorno&lt;es only " as strictly th~ lessef
Dlwlalon of the Budget.
of two evfta.•
Aa I t a - impUM, CASA giYBa
AtamMI~InNewYorkCity'frtday,
• =ormelton~tnetructlonal workttoe Trust
that SIJNY needs
(auch I*
utlllzet"*'; \:tia''' !O!Jl8 $II
o more lbl*., y..,. than
, etc.) from which a
GOv. c.t11ey ~ed tot nla !budget
~can be dr-. betWMn U/B • proposal. As Mrty as a month ago,
other SUNY units.
Al~v sources tndtceted that the
· Governor- was purpoa8ly going to ask
Ca•plnllt pdnt-oul
teas for SUNY just so thelrustees
Tile - '· which esaentlally '' a
would sanction an Increase In what
'*"Pflclil.s oomputar print-out, was
students have to pay.
not
used for Internal
Friday, the JIOWmlng body said,
•
It was too
given no eddltionat State. fund ing , It
for
was preoared to raise tuition for
of
students In the first two yeara by $150 a
year, to the $1100 figure now paid by
juniors and aenlors.
•
·
This ~ make ..available, the
Trustees sal~ S4 million more than
Carey!"" asked, tor.uae In paying off

the"peil, responslbiiiW for CASA
with - . 1 Offices and
tndiYkluete; omoat-,_mfV"Mth Unt-lltyComptiolterWttttarn Baumer. Kuntz
Will n~ Baumlll'a old rote as
CASA ~pus coordinator.

Ennll....,. npoot

In addHion to CASA. the OIS will be
:"alw'l\1 ~J:.~ro=la~
projections. To ,..tat tn this, effort, five
employees IJOtn the statistical section
of AdmlaeloJ11 and Recorda will move
in Sprlthezg f r omoorttoe CapenMain5,!~0ICarnS
. pheua
t0
~lh 11 01
·T
emoflllor-R.!'~' llwilllll beworkconaluderednder partthe
A&amp;R .....
dllwctlon of A&amp;R chlel Richard Oremuk.
The tblld- of nsaponstblllty, and
one thalia mora than famlller to Kuntz,
wiD t. 1he continuation of lluclles of
"8tudent migNIIon," mont commonty
-...cl40 •
and attrltloll.
Aoooldtao to W:::::'!ntKuntz, who Ia
atiU dkwiiOt of
Testing and
Reeewch,wiiiWOfltcloMiywltttataffln
with the Untwet.lty..wide
8tudy Onlupon Attrttlon and Retention,

,..,,ton

lhltomo.end

::;:':::::'."l:::IG_.~=a
=~~o.,MIICiatlona for cor-

Kuntz7ti''t. Melat8d bY- 111tam
" - the poohulon• at.lf, gqduate·
IIUIIInta, lind e
The omo. wilt t. ~MIPPD'tld bw
NIOaiiiDn of el8tfllll...,. and throuah
llllna - ' 1"- Iii the Olftoe of tM

--.v.- - . .

l'rtllillnl.

'nola~p~tntt,Wao-axpaoMaes.ch

wlllilglntore~ciNCtor.

Study In Spain
to be off. . . . ,
-~

-.. .....__

,,. _

&amp;J

. . . - . . , _....__
6
_
_ ~ ...... - . .

of

of=:'~~-

, ••

.... ......,_. 8ludlllte 10

.._._ ~cor.::.:;.::
...,.., illllll liludJI!illll

llf!!!IIL

'111ellftiiiiMIWIIk*,_._,._Z7
IDAIIII!Il"l7,....,...eelii-...., ll8r
.... a..._..... taoooiJ .... -"
In . .
llld ,...,.... of a.

-==::.-::---.

The U/B School of Architecture and
• Environmental Design (SAED) operates
8

~:fders"":. !ma=e" n,a;;~lcl~~~

community work.
IM tnal "mMdll!e'' ta being
challenged by a task !,orce of local
atchttects-, repor1edly alarmed ~ver,
=~Ilion from unlicensed practotlo-:
According to reports, SAED has·
obtained at least $1tO,OOO In contract
worlt from the City of Buffalo in the past
1 ~- years-notably for plans tor
modernizing housing pr&lt;&gt;Jecls aM lor
the Theatre District.
-·
l'artlcutarty ectlve tn criticizing this
Involvement has been Buffalo architect
Robert T. Cotes who complained In
November specifically that SAED and
the U/B School of Management had
undercut hlll'flrm In a bid fora 'stUdy of
the development of the Ellicott district.
The Joint U/B propasat was flied In
conjunCtion with the BuffalO 'Urban

t..Mgue.

-- •

•

- TlW Buffalo-Western New Yor1&lt;
et.ptw of the Amerloan Institute ot
Architects "has had a apectat ~aak toroe

ri.,ud~.~h:;=.:~ ~~~?.

Coles aakl- the School's ect!Yitles

!=....':'_t~~ ~~~~t 11~

"breed el&lt;J1811ence necessary· tor such
•
• •
•.
An .ucle In the Su~ NeW8. t111s
weak quotes f!llllllp~ acatlldl, cochairmen of ttoe ..chltecture group
tooklng llolo OQmpfelllta, u notlng that
hta pane~ haa purpoMiy- quiet tn
Ita wortt. "We . . eaeldng interweta=_,. Scaffidi told~ the
tiona from both _
News. "We't11 !Tying to get a lalr
-uetlon."
.
Scltffldl aald If ttoe WJt
~t Ia dalermlned to be
"unalllicel.
• he Clcieen, how the
1

. . WOflt.

~d~ ~~pugg~,:m' ~ ~~ 't~t:~

Boar!! of Trust-.
The Senate at so voted to accept the
toans -oneonetructlon projects. It would
also yield $5.1 million for other Item~.
report of !he Ad Hoc Committee on
Presidential Evaluation '"Procedures,
considered urgent, whlcb Carey failed
to Include In hJ• funding request:
discussed at the Senate lniiitlng last
Tuesday, as a guide to the
Chair
money for equipment repl..,..,ent ,
Increased library acqutsltiOflS, hlpher
In the event President Ketter decides to
'fTllnlmum wage costs, etc.
- ~eek another appointment.
'
· But, the Trustees said: 1l the
Senators discussed a 1lil18t wh ich
nther have Carey add the $9.1 milt oll ~
senate Chairman NewtonG&amp;rWrsent to
JI'OIIl State revenuea· ~ 2) they want _ John.!l-1111. cbatrmanc.Qt-.ltle:lioar.d
some assurances fhet both the
of Tl'\letees .COmmlttee_ ®~Budget ,
Governor and the LegralatutB 'Will allow " tn'ieetments .,d Capnal ~aclltt les ,
the new funds to be used lor t"""' ;- whlcfi offered alx gutdeUilli to be
JUM!.Cj~l!
1'2! f!llJW!ed ~-=- corisideAKkwhen decldlr!ll--ttll! rote of
eliiiW!iiire.
' social policy objectlv's In SUNY
That puts the ball squarely .ba&lt;:k In
Investment decisions.
J
Carey's court, observers say.
•.
Senator Howard Baker spoke1lgalnst
Many students will aupposedf.y be;: • a section of the fetter,- ..saytn:g he
protectedlromthebruntolthet,..,..,...,ueations writing to companies In
Proposed State and federal grants are
which the Unl-.lty holds stock to
seen as offsetting the hike ~or those - Insist on Implementation of the Sullivan
who come from lam liTes earning tess ::-desegregation princi ples In thalr1lperathan $25,000-annually.
lion In South Africa. Such an effort , he
Ketter said he liked the new plll&lt;l
said, would have no effect on
better. than a $100 . acrosa-th&amp;-board
government policy and could be
iJlcrease, "If the trust"'s- feel they have
counter-productive.
to go In this direction, " at all.
A voice vote was taken on approval of
He said he hoped the board would get ·
the general principles Q.f the corresponthe assurances they need '1o make sure
dance. Fjesults of the vote will be noted
the money Is used lor the educational
In the Senate minutes.
ben~t of the SUNY system." .
Student Affairs Vice President
Richard Slggetkow gave Senators a
~resll.report on the Unt-stty-Wide

_.ate

Ex~~~~J',g~~=~:nr:p~~~~~~.:'d

~

~

••..,...

~~:::~:·~--=

. . .• ,

1CIIIIL,

-....n

....

codeof ethlcs oHheAmerlcanJnstltute
of Architects can be enforced. The
1

~~~~~ths ~~tr~m~~~t.~~nt~~~

faculty who aren't llcen~ 1!): AlA.
- D•n 'Collen!' tn' a'iidiito'h o ctitn'll'"a
mafldate for su.c11 community wort&lt;:
ret~ that • we ate net dOing what Is
prohltil(ed us bY, taw ana l!Y
prolesslonal ethlc.s.
- . .
Stuoents are recelvtp_g lnvafUabl!
tralnfng, he told the News, an.d theClly
nas receiVed a hall million dollars In
funds for proJects as 'I '&amp;filii ,qf ~
worlt.
• ..
.-.:;,ft
Cohen emphasized, , \00 rt1Jhjll. ··11&gt;11 .
School Is not practlclng arohlteotur~
but Is simply (lolng the prjt-pl~nlllll
necessary- before archlt~~eture cen
begin .
•• •
• _
A spokesperson tor · the City's
Department of CommunitY Developmen!' &amp;gleed. " All ttoet U/B has e\'er
·done for us Is . slooles," Rotan·d
Coleman, neiiPJborflood ptannlng managar in the Department of Community
Development , saki.
•
At the time o( CoJes:.lntltlal proleat

rnnovatiorf, .
proposals asked
Do you have a bright Idea lor •a new
ap
' p,royacouhdtoot,eacyohulnmgayyouberclabaslae? to get
11
some money to put It to the tesl
An Awards Committee, consisting of
· the deans of the Graduate School and
the Division of Underoraduate Studies,
expects to have avaltable April 1 a
moderate amount of funds to be used ·to
stlmuiJte Innovative Instructional technutq~teslmeanfacd uplrocedty
. urea on the part of
11
II
Thelundsmaybeusedforavarletyol
purposes as long as the faculty member
can demonstrate the use of new

,,w,

.Cl&gt;les'
~t!E~~:\•~'l:J~~e~~l'[t,c~,;=~t~ :a"lnno1 srval~';llon:ma,...ynl.'!norlro~mw~tt~nnsgg
accusanona b"l wu "flatt~
tl
·-..,.._.

1

bY hi4~~n~: ·, .
.: • , •.
:'=~~:=~n..=,~~Y!
The News Sunday story quoted
more orthodox fulllon or pi'888ntlng
-~ her "angry architect." .Pavid Stje;
new materials with 1118 ~P pi, n'w
gllft: .
• techniQues. A - s may ta11ge 'Up to a
AbQJit SA!D, Slleglltz 1e ~ I!&gt; _ ':lnaXtmum .of $2000.
have said: " They claim they can do It
The nature lind goals of the proposal
cheaper&gt; and they can't. They do lousy
should be outlined In preclea terms.
worlt and charr top buc~. ·so .that tliil
BCConlf)anled bY alfltlllnlzed tiudget of
community o archltecta, who are
materials,
end/or eqlllpmeot
breaking their backs to make a bucllio
llama u needed.
·
this !l"f')munlty, are starving." •
The following queetlona a/IQuld be
Stieglitz Called Bullalo "e ~
answered :
ares" lor archltectll, with .lnaufftcir.&gt;t
Ia thla for a new courae or an ixlattng
. - oor.otructloft to -aupport Jta small
courae? Whet . . ttoe lniiOirattve
COiftllluntty of ..chltacta.
• features you wtah to Introduce llld bow
do they diller from extatlng olfertnga?

...nee..

=.rr: ~~':*'.!:.::c!he·br~ ,

\1111,.._
-.

t'aDiC when the
Cfuio al 10:•

Feb. 210, In the Emlritlll C..,
twnnwoHell.
.
"-' Celldn and lucia lleok wilt reed
lninl the - a of euthota aiiCI'I

..

~ at tba 8lld of Ap&lt;lt. She has

-

:=:.:..n::--!*
·
.ot-.,
..,..,_

'1111.,.
be ~Y Mra.
flot.rt..:~· Mra. ·
Witt•

~-

.. ~--~

.... . . . Ia , J.11Ht111
- .. •

-.

,......,

•

·.

~~~
••

¥PI

''

~r y::~wh~~=el_.~~

follow the
will be

1111; ylill'

Me. Cllkln Ia ~ ~
iNt1Dt at U/8. LMI
aloe -

the_........._._.-..~

._,,ng-

muak: tor the put
alx ~. end, " - perfonnecl at the
Clutyaod '"-re, Atncen Cultural
c..otw, the()peoa lludlo end Centat for
.'"-re ~- 8he Ia a Nllow In the

=-~.MiiJ.:':.."C:"·
-'of

Innovation tranaf.,.,te directly or In
principle 1o othW cowwe 1n yqur ......
or-to courMe tn other ecedamlc areu?
llao, lndlcete briefly bow.
How witt your tnnomton be bmught
to the attention of ottoaq whO might
lind 1t uealul? What mat.n.ll 81KJ7or
equlpn\ent will be needild to tcllteve

1011e ~at !hi Katherine Con1eu

!'1111:••

1i1JCZu
8180
~-----:
.:
r"\':.~:=
~
....... . . . . . . . . . . of ·
. . _ Ill
, 8tdvle Plllll, Anne
. . . . . . ........-. ... __.... ID
_ . a __.. I tllnlrl~iil
il!!iil!!!~~.~~2t. tp.a Ill

In the January 18 Reporter.
Garver referred to committee a
request from a Senator Which aOI!sed
thet the Sen'l)e develop some gufdellnes regarding how book sate profits
should be disposed of by lacl.olty who
requ ire that materials they author be
read by their students. The Senator
noted that many private and State
lnstt,t uttons heve devetoti§d guidelines
ihat earmark suc/1 profits tor activities
~tl:b benefit studentll : ~ •. ~-

'Women speaking'
II program t • .c
.
;
~ filpelldlog"

·

ll)alntaln quality and leadership.· He
cautioned, however, ttoat It may be
Impossible to maintain an excellent
-program If an area has a very serious
- ehortage of students.
In other business, the Senate
approved a resolution which put It on

Arqhitects looking at . . ::-~.:;":.~ .::~··
SAED's work for City ·.....: ..,.... c
reated

·-------·-·1

~-,.-4)

Ketter sees $1~50 hike for frosh
and sophomor:_es as lesser of two evils;
Trustees want:assurances from Albany

- . 1 monilia of quiet
~
wort&lt;, the Offtoe of
lnalitvtlo!WI Studlaa (OISI hM finally
to.come .. oftlelel llxilft of the
Att.

~ice.

.......

-.~---·-···~--·,

"-!J15,1171

~. end. Mrt.

.'

:

Tllllnl , _ ........ Mrt. Ahndoeoftr _. lb. ......._ M. .....
...... ..,.,
lelndllfleofpoeltolty.

no..

·

your daper{rnant, or Oilier facilities of
tbe~~~conaldanibat .,Y lillie;

~~o-. all PI'OII088Ia mull ...:11 the
Awrda Coqtintt* not .181ar lhen lour
~betocwt~'-""dul4ntl,.tolc;llthe

coureatatot.orlated.

~tiona ahoutcl t. directed to
ak, Chduate Sdloot OffiCe,
Hell , ext.W-2830.

�f'*-Y1S,1171

King.blended the
moral and pragm~tic
By Clwl8llne ...-McCann
PIA* Alflllrslntom

.

...~.f'~et~uP'· yes, I'm a dreamer.
This Is tlie message Congressman
John Conrera. Jr. conveyed u the

¥='t..~M:U~t':;~~\!."g.~~

spoke to an audience of approximately

200 In Moot Court, O' Brian Hall, Friday
afternoon about ''the man who made
dreaming fashlonable."
Conyera attributes his peraonal

~~inKR::wro'~,.=~.~hia

custom of not endorsing Congreaai~
carldklatea, King ga.e Conyera tt1e
"bleaalng" Whloh wu cructal to his
election.
"We came here today to ~Y ho~

~h1t ~~noel~ n:;s~

r

a

succeeeor to 1\lng, ~ he •
genius, and glinlUMS ·are not rapl-.

:'~~~~~: ·:==~~

now connected to Ita slruggie. It Is
laced with a Democratic president
"whom we elected," he said, a man who
In eight mon~ha has hed a 180 degree
· """"""" In economic policy. A
411"8ldant,&lt;he added "who no longer.
supports me Hu~Hawklna Act,
which he slgnecf"" U'lfo law, who Is
increasing the prime Interest rate, who
!_B dim inishing urban progress. •
·
What King -wei tell c.rter
"What would Martin Luther King tell
Jimmy Carter?, • he asked . ''What would
be the Issue II King was here?" Martin
Luther King, said Conyers, would be
speaking of Issues that ''would
determine the destiny of Blacl&lt;a, of the
United States, of the world."
He praised King for speaking In terms
of the here and now lor attempting to

1

=~ng~~~~~~:;gH~
better the next generation .

-

un~::'..:tln~~ou :.,.~~~rn;h~

self-sacrificing, gentle, political prophet." "This bundle of contradlctlona," he
added, "defines the venlua of King."

power, • the Congressman said. "He
cannot be Imitated, but he can be
studied, and he can be loUowed ."

Heapokelof....,.... •
He credited Klng'a l¥'00mpllshmanta
to hlallblllty to ._1M moral power of
religion end .....,... It to the pragmatic
power of J)olltlca, eeperatlng him from

A pMrf In the legecJ
Accordlnq _!O Conyers, "There Is a
pearl in the_~ecy of King. Her nama Is
Moaa Plllka. Aoea. Par1&lt;a was a
Southam Black woman who satin the
front of a bus at a lime when II was
strictly forbidden lor any Black to do
ao. Conyers said thalthla woman, with
. no education, no degree end no
ldaologlea, -'arted the unlflcaUon of
Blacks end Whitea. "She began," he
.
.,...., "end then they got King.
- "Vou can't be a Martin Luther King,"
he couneeled, "but you can all. be a
RoaaP.t&lt;a."
.
' e--tc ......, lleen't chenaed
Conyers aald the aoclal and econorn-

::v=

~ ~ pu~~ f~=:::
about c~hta, not only for 818Cka.

eo..,.. aid hla hlgMet DdorltY for
the future Ia lmplemantetiOn .·o( the
Humplny-HMI(Idna Full Em~tl.
ilalenolld Growth Act, which eeeka to
m8ke full employment a prime objective
of lila govwninent. He aatd the act,
which .... been t.rgely Ignored by the
govwnment, Ia a reflioctlon of the legacy
of ~"'8Ck - t i s faoed, for the
first 11,.,., Mid Conyer8, with a curious
phenomenon: economic probl.,... are

=:lt:,!.~~ngt.7{,:!:=~ ~
lncomeoi end economic opportunltlea of

the worfdng and middle clu- are no
better, and In many cases are worse,

then they were In the~te 19608."
Among_ black Americana, as one.
example, e comparison between 1968
and 1978 shows that:
·~he
l!&gt;bleaa rate for bias
has nearly doubled from 6,7% ·to 12.3%
•the jobless rate lor black teenagers
Is at least~2% ~her then 10 v-a ego

•-ao•

lobe next yew trorn~hla
n
-a-INt;
•a 12.5~ In
ual.for fow-l
WhiCh It Ia
eallmated tranalat• Into a cut In about
.
80,000 atlbeldlzed houalng unlta;
•cuts of ~ mllll'*~"chlld

~~~~·h~~h~olth:S~~ ~ago

nu!~~'=' rn~r=llty lnaurence end
other benaflta UIICier Social 88aurtty,
amounting to about 11100 million; end
•a rt• In Social ~ty pawnall
-·which In the---~-

~r.:.:~~=· r;:u~~:::

Income.

•the .average bi8Ck Income today Ia

than the average bi8Ck,noome during
the 1975 recession
•the proportion of black families

:~.~~~.~ ~~ \~7

29.4% .

,ru:=

F..... apendlng cuts ,
In the past two yewa -'one, Conyer8
said, there hu bean a . reduction of
roughly S25 billion In federal ~lno
u a proportion of the Groea National
Product. Hlstorl«*IY thla hu _ , a

~:
·~==~~f:~'I&amp;J=
calla for.

. •• cut of more than 300,0Q0 joba In
public aMYice emplov-M from the
19781-';
•a cut of over 300,000 summer youth

=..ret=:itl:"':t:-~

~Ill~

2, the committee
....,lmoualy paaaed a IWOiutlon
putting It on NCOI'Cf u 11-'no .,n general
~t with the Intent end Implications of Title IX of lila 1172 Education
AIMIId!Mnl paaaed by the~"We believe," the - - t continto
ued, "the ~- will enhanCe the cotlegt.lle experlenoe for
entiN ltudent populations end~
- • en - . , 1 to eliminate
IIUIIon of ... diecttmlnatlon. The lila _

IX~twlll-tol-tlif '

- - o f WWIIty ltadenl -...... end
. _ on tt111 .,..ua. We hope ltle
- ' f Y wiN reepand by
~ piGIIOitiOIIIIIeiJ ll'la.-cl
IJIII.-Ity

•

~·.~~~4~~.. ~

......... _
................................
'

.

It IMIJbe, llee.IG, "'MMIUGIIa,.....
. . - .. . . , tlfiiiiiMoad - -

-

~ai

~ago

;n;;;ln=lhan ten
that--on
towan1 epldtUal
doom" end · - lallon" . . tong . . . .
continue to apend r. more foil" anna
then • do lOr human needa rtnge ..
true today . . In hll deY,
contended. Ametloa'a mlllt8ry build-up
end PNOCGU~.;IIh -.ttY .Ia
·n
the '-hoPeful .
lla• eoolal
economic
the VIetnam Wrl .......
mockery of the 'Gr.-! 8oolety' In Dr.
Klng'e daJ."

cac-..

"*"· :r'
..

Athletics panel asks equality in funds .&amp; eligibilitY
The F_..ty ~ Commltt• on
Allllellca ,_ P...-clrMOiutlone &lt;*ling
for: 1) lncr.Md fllf1:CIIng for eporta In
line with Title IX end, 2) en _.ng of ttle
definition of ec8demlc "aood atendlng"
In connection with ellglblllty for athletic
pMICI!*ion.
.
Bolh -lutiona - t o be IIPPfOWI(I
by tha Senate to ~Senate policy,
end aubeeql*llly by thelldmlnlatratlon
to beCome Uni..alty policy.

d..::

eona-

. TM Mlchtaan
reca~~ec~
that Klnv In 18118 aaid, -we de'lelopecl en undo!rcl- In lhla nation,
end unleea tllfe unclerofaee Ia .,... a
working claU, we- aotna to oontlnue
to 118¥8 problema. The Dltt8ineali Ia vwy

1111~

�February 15, 1979

SA elections: does 'The Spe·c trum'call the_~hots?
Mlor/.......-.,
The follOwing lett« waa ..,, to The
SpectnmJ on~ 1. It ha not been
printed, tllougll for ell I knoW', It mloht
be. The 8UbJ8ct Ia the power of The
li~Nctn~m'a

- t s In student
electiOna. My lcnmost lnt..,tlon Ia to

=le: ~lng
a!"~ o~ I~
anal~
endcne, by flf'lll

Ita lnf.'uence
In -lstl&lt;* t.-ma.
-'&lt;, I will
my eblutlon to how endorse.,., be made fairly In an
Intelligently org.nlzed election.

•w;,;r

~

I ~.~.,..~~.:~l:;~
:"lliCI.
The ensuing discussion
rnjght noeult In fairer elections In the

future; I doubt the lull effect can be
effected In the -~lon . Wl)lle
_,.1118)' ..-gue that SA candidates are.
10 Incompetent 10 aa to not deserve a
pl....., election ayst«n, I lind thla a
fiOII uqultor ..-gument. SA needs
electloo reform to regain respectability.
.
-lob Lom...-dl

Editor/.....,_:
· With die next SA elections not too far

-r

(lately . - I« enough away),
thla Ia a good tlma to compl'llhenalvely
......,., and hopefully reform, the
election proceaa. You admitted In our
dl~on- -'«(Oct. 25, 1978)
that -hiOUIJIIa ate welcome toward
perfecting Tire Spectrum's endoreement
proceu. Lately, many people are
wondering II the election process and
the endoraement proceaa mean the
a.-ne. My hope In thla ' letter Is to at

=~-~ ~~~. ,'~oeo~~C::-

eome

-hrough blh analyzing the

In esl-:"~~~~':;and ~~~ ~~~MSures to keep that to
only a role.

r,!!t=•'':.'.n":j

The historical problem of Sp«trum
their next to uncheck-

~ala

:':..:..~A~n y~, p~;cttr:s, 1~
~ut not '

exlata despite rour claimed,

=~/lg~ ~~~~~~- N~~r1;~
lncl~ those ahowlng that all

Preeklentlal and VIce Pnoaklential
efeCtlonal outoomea In the laat live
, _ . COincide with Sp«&lt;rum endonoementa. rm plaaaed you lind the ligures
fwd to lgnorw.

,nllla Lt t'
The Young

.

Indeed are
~--t . llllllglne theY could .be
U8ld to 8UPPOit ftWIY conclualona and
~ptlana, Including canaor.lllp and
-_..,,You aid on Octobar 23 It
.. ,~ 10 .......... Wiling habits,
• 1!11¥ ...... 10 .,...,.._ anctor..
_ . _ Ylll.ln~to Mr. Y-.o'a
PIII1ICIIIId ....... of ..... ~
_.. . . ....,..ofUBto
•
the IIIIJIUII*IIa In
eatnty .•
dD yau ~ ..... to, .... (he
aubllal Ia ~ (Oct. 23
edltaNQ, - yau dacln'l - IUCII ~
IN IPirft of
llgurea

~

"'*

w

=:.:..I,:,-='.:.::-.:
.__..liMo=
tNnii-IIIUit".,_,_11...,
_... ..,.....
yau

.

to llllp I'Mintaln

"--:

today; but I
.-lfonty

~

In our '

aNiyela _ , lla plowen
but H Ia my tentatlwl

_ ____
____
A---- .... a.,.---··,. .
..--

_..,._...,.,._
,............_
_..,..
...__,...

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

eleCtorate, of that "loyal - . 1
hundred" to ' a sheer statistical
tendency. I lind Its psychological
underpinning. In that the editor's .words
could carry a lot of weight to about thai
many - because they are the editor's
words. This Is not - to say 1hey
- f l y only read the endorsements~ But for various._ reasons, some
who don'l only read endorsements are
disposed to voting the Spectrum way,
and do so, even when short of a hard
reason of their own . The endorsement
can simply tip the balance for the
undecided but appreclatl"" reader.
This may even occur In only one race
In which he voles on. In other words,
that same person may exercise more of
Ills judgment in other races. Consider
this Idea a refinement of Y.OUr
dlsllnctlon between voters who eother
slngle-mlndedly smuggle edllorlals into
the booth , and voters who each have a
mind. The· survey·f spoke of can ferret
out even the sofH:ore, part-time
loyalists.

'There Ia an easy way to paraphrase
your defense of making endorMmenta

as they Involve the public need lor
them. Aside from a newspaper's

constitutional r1ghts, endorMments
S8MI as a ao[ltary acreen to separate
competent frOm Incompetent candldataa. This Ia a distinction that Is often
objectl...,ly Impossible. Lack of voter
interest Is Itself a good reason tor· the
editor's Interest.
· With the dribbly voting turnouts as
they are, a mere thousand votes for a
candidate guarantee a • certifiable
landslide. II well-Informed editor Is
thus entrusted by default, against all
his sane wishes, to speak In what he
feels is In the best Interests of 17,000
people. Of these, the voters amount to
typically around 2,000. The " u(lknow- ·
able question" Is thus reduced to: Does

~~~g:,,:~r:~":'~.J:%".::!:.~

voles? That Is. does It swing the
election by capturing a deoree of
seWnll hundred votes - the dllference
In the elections Mr. You~g reporteil?

lm~~blr: . a

cotrectable lack of
Information In answering .this question

:i~sf~e;;:::·~o~;~O.:o~fl~;~'i:~

statlstl¢81 breakdo
~· groupe and
su~roups. Among lfiany pootslble

A pitiful number
·_
~ Why Is the strO~JlOSSibillly of such

:.;gr$~~.:0mll:= Is ~o~ ;~!~~~:,t~·b~~
. the pitiful number of voters they
.represent. As I've said, a bloc ol even a
few hundred hard and aoft-core
~rga~~stsu':' dt~~he?~~n~"':To~:.e"~

~se~~,:::i',;nl~ r~~~Yf ~.Ju~~

conclude that students are brainwashed , my soll-&lt;:&lt;&gt;re category Is as far
as I now wish to go with the'ilg_ures.
II this bloc always appears, and If the
miserable voting turnout remains
constant , then the reason why elections

properly, with ' the random and
Independent sample technique, only a·
portion of the voters heed to·flll out the
loons. Such an analysis is on ly a
practical difficulty. That Is, what
statistic team can be found to sample
voters as they exit from the booths on
SA elections days? Does SA consider
this question Important enough to
employ such a team from the uniY8flllty,
or even hire an outside agency?
NBC conducted
such
surveys_
throughout the 76 Pnoaklentlal primaries and electiOfl; reports of stlllllfled
samples of elections have been
published for many · years. : What i s
~nown In the discipline as a stretllled
sample, or a contrasting sample, Is not

't:.Pr.s~,b~~:~~ Ther!"ts e~~t=lop~overcomlng the unsuspecting voter In
the booth, which he or she cannot
speak · of upon leaving. II voters
cooperate, and there are atatlstlcal
margins of error lor those ·that don1,
then a better Idea of endorsements' role
can be attained'. ·
M-....nlputatlon?
But eYen without the aophlstlcaled

~"l:wsr~m:r..;:u~p ~~r:~-

:=

- s woukllla like. 1'111 quite willing to

1 =.,:nec~on~r: u'::,urg:.
_theol'tz.fng to think that out of 17,000
undergr.cluat... lh«a axial - - ·
llundr.cl eiJoractatlve .-Iars, In effect a
decl- bloc, who trust their only
atudenl paper 8IIOIIgll to trust Its
~ mont than thefr OWI1
tuclatl*rta. to~r. Young's IIYklence, the
beal
~Y tllta Interpretation In this direction. You may holler
that I have no right to make an
aaaumptlon of aucll a bloc - that I am

•allable.

~~ ~~ ,~'t~:::::t:~euy:::-;;

tell Mr. Young that he needa "landslide"
-latlca to prl)ve hla charges of
"undue Influence" (Oct. 27), - only to
him deftly produce them on
November 1?
That looks lljce a pressure cooker,
doean1 II, Mr. Roeen? You n - - . c l to lt. Yet, balore another
vutg.- mGb ruahea rour · office with
lon:hea and ramrod - your poaltiofl Ia
still quite del..,alble. You " - to ll,.t
youraelf from the tqp_~ Mt:

=·=

r.:d

c:::-:

~.,.=

alecllon to lla PfOJ8n u~IUWK:ed•

that

-.. .. a.~

The . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

W... the madla tor a population
OOMiata of only a madlum, • It d9aa
1
SA .-:tiona, It Ia only nat- that
- - madlum ... . - lnfiUinoa. Thalia
to ..,'
editor helpe produce a

p

If...
~'lr'~:.'::w-c:
gNIII 111m fila aiMiatloally . . . lnflu-

-- 1 not attrfbuttno a.
. . . . . - . hom the dlplhe of tha -

=::us~?caF~~~~~~Y ',~ .:::a.;:,:t.:O'f.

loyalists' dominance of electl~ns 1 am
emphasizing the lack of voters' more
Independent of endorsements. I'm also
emphasizing the lack &lt;&gt;I voters per se
which makes the loyalists Jlery prom!:
nenl. Therein could reside your
re_sponse to Mr. Young. Yet, what this
analysis does Ia mitigate Mr. Young's
charge by e&amp;alfll! the moral tone of
"undue Influence ..' The heavy practical
influence Is still there, but as far as a
statistical analysis goes, with due
cause. · I will sc)!:m show a different
approach.
ln-tlgatioll? •
SA may wlah to ln...,stl~ate, wllh lhe

f~Z~i'i~y ·~~~ednu.:!r~f ~~s t~

which a voter relies on endorsements ·
and 2) lhe relationships, over a number
of elecllons, between Spectrum loyalists (to be operatlonally&lt;Jellned), the
turnouts, end the results. Conclusions
may not be valid for the first test until 11
is made over several elections. What is
especially Important Is that the surveys
be done by people wllh lormal training
In the field. A badly done survey can

on~~nu~e=~~~~sc~~~~~e ol
The Spectrum's endorsement power,
these surveys would not be sterile
exercises. Knowing more exactly the
- endorsements'. place In the election

=~~;,·:"~~:e're!.\:t~a~\\iu~~l ~~~

in tum could make officials give more
attenllon to the jobs they are elecled to
do. And the electorate might better
realize Its unused power and
therefore drop the cynical aspect of
their apathy. ·
,

es~fJI~ al~~~~~~ne'::!::~~llhe

In your November 10 editorial, you .
officially accepted this static situation. · statistics aren1 there yet. Until then, I
I am taki ng this view a step further. Over
lind my explanations above more
the years, editors succeed In pushing
plausible than the alternative " pod
through their choices because they
theory": each year, a decisive bloc
inherit roughly the aame political
unswervingly follows their newsraper's
situation: a ceiling of two thousand
editor. My next dlacuaalon wll show
voters and a- bargain basement of
why this statlsllcal analysis is ol
- a l hUndred votes.
secondary lmpG(tance.
In·- emphasizing the hypothetical
-lob Lombardi

Asante~

statement on Zionism
draws fire fr~ -several p_rofs
Editor:
.,
.
It has bee~ ll!ported that Dr.SMoklfl
Asante, of the Department OfCOmmtm.

oo=::. w~~';..T~

~t~~"'{y:/.d 11~

must smash lm1&gt;811allam,-Zionlsm and
racism from thelaceoltheMrth."
Asked If he hed been C&lt;&gt;mlctly quoted
by Tile Spectrum; Dr. Asante has not
yet repll8!1.
All those vtho uae the Zionism-racism
phrase, a~d most of those who hear II,
understand that It Is a codeword lor the
annlt&gt;llatlon ol the stale of Israel. Those
who both uaa the phrase and espouse
the Idee In It include the terrorists of the
Munich masaacr11, of the L0&lt;1 all'port
and of a hundred other systematic
slaughters of the helpletlll chHd or

The claim that Zionism Is racism is
calumny, a calumny contrived for
diplomatic purpo__ Dr. Asante has
8YIIfY right to 6peak freely In a lree
nation, buhlllflcanaiiOspeaktocall his
statement, made to a wider audience
than this letter reachn and made with
some authority, both a lie In fact and
pemleloualn Its Inflammatory effect.
-Chartae E. Smith
...... K.Brown
JoaeDIIMaallng

En.-ttl Well lilumoy, Jr.
Allene 8UITOWI
IreS. Cohen
N. Wallace
Katkln
A.M. Olazlano
-Enls

St._
Edwanl P.

....-tJy.

United Way math faulted
Editor:
I would like to call attenllon to
~=~~~ca~.;:,'" the February 1st
On page 11, the table of United Way
~Ia and Amounts Received has
respective totals ol $125;000 and
$132.,934.65. However, on adding up the
columna, the totals are actually
$144,167 lor the Goal and $132,410.55
ae amount received.
An explanation, In the nexl possible
Issue of the Reporter would be
bel-, In the ln18f81ta of those whose'1
curl Illes

dl~~~~a~~~~ .!Z. t~

Interest in the matter except to uncover
the mathematl&lt;* principles 68hlnd th is
"New Math."
Th~kyou .
Sincerely,
-Daniel Barry
The Olvlolonal Public Affairs Office
which suprlled-Uie ligures replies that:

1) !he Iota of unit quotaala more than

the. Unl-slty's total goal to allOW lor
"shrinkage". - money pled gad but not
paid. The amounts- ~ total Is
more than the aum of unit amounts
becau-. two gifts - . .-vee~ which
Into any of the Individual

=._•w.::::.

~epoi1 'distorted,' Solkoff claims.
.._IOtheEdllerofthelleport.-- Mr.
~M~ that a llaWapaper

a

which clehna to ' - .-..chad
high
...., of oblect"'- Journalistic r..,ortlng
.._ld '-eo lignlnc.ntiJ altaNCI ttMi
"-"t'on the PNilclent'allewlaw Boaid
aobnlttad - by IN Faoutty Senate
Comnlln. on T - lilld Prtvtt91
ol lhe myriad and atanllloani
deletlona made by tha editorial' staff of

a-

the -Repotler ~or dlatortlona In the
meaning and I~Alcallona oltha Report

~~,.::·be =.,o~,1.='fo,..::l

Faculty membera,
·
P.S. P I - let me know In Which
Jaaue of tha Raport.- thla letter will
~

·
,..,...

-~.. llollloff, PII:O.

�Fol&gt;ruoty 15, 1878

•CollegeH
(t--1.col.2)

mostly that - community professionals who provide services In the Buffalo
area) . The first Individual to become a
full-lima collage master through that
route (mosl of the heads of the
collegiate units were U/8 faculty to •
begin with), Dryden has been In the job - both ~ling and officially, for two years: _
He s as4lstad by the College's
residential coordinator, Wayne Mille, a
Ph .D. candidate In health education.
Shirley Rumer, an R.N, and also a ·
docforsl student in health education, Is
a graduate assistant In the residential
progta").. !ihlrley's "a very special
person. says Wayne. "Her warm
personality and sincerity" have contri·
butad much, he adds. Oryden agrees:
·~he thinks of everything .•
Gl¥1ng a 'little more'
The non:Cradlt residential program
has bean emphasized In recent months
at the College, In keeping with Dryden's
•
announced theme for the year.
"I am told," the master sa{c"• "that

~~~r~ua~~~.lr~~e~Jed ~t~~~

curriculum they wsre In wasn 't giving
- them exactly the sort of classroom
f!Xperiences they wanted . ... (It) began
wl,th students who wanted SUNY at
Buffalo to give them a lillie mor~ than it
was willing or able to give at that lime.•
College H should still perform that
funcl)on ,
Dryden
believes.
"Our ·
slrength lies. In our ability to respond to
student needs." The theme for the year
Is "Get Involved ," a theme reflected i n
attempts to provide effective guidance
for careers In human service, extensive
opportunities for volunteer service, a
vigorous social end athletic life and,
moat of all, Dryden says, " an
environment where student ideas and
anergy can have some positive Impact
on the quality of life at tha.Unlvarslty ."

•

...

11&amp;1 coordinator Mltic confirms. Most
of them are llnancad through a
voluntary College H fee of $12 a year 6r
$7 a semester. Soma of the activities
(the Bth floor weight room , for example)
~~~";:~~ed to faapay'!'a; others are

dizzying schedule of activities through

•::.":a

• . - ....

.:l~~s.'1:~hl~ej~rl~~

:"~~~:~.P'=ut~ne

Ulld'l!' the direction' of Tony Fllllpplnl •.
they ware a project which many on the '
ad 1 "Whe
h
floor parilclpat
n.
n you ave
soma pride of ownership,' Dryden
1111!1&amp;, "you won't be so apt to Jqel&lt; a wall
(n" • anct you'll be more alart when
outoldara attempt paJty vandalism on
• your ground." Stupid vandalism has
piiiQUed Ellicott In reoant months.
·
. Collage H hopes to extend the murals
to the• weight room where "Oiymplctype" artworills planned _again. If and
When bureavcralic consent can be
aacunad. Ylhat Ia planned wUI
·:an art

::'1 ~~u~~lnRI~~~~ ~:~t ·~~

program (invol'flng 24 houre) . will be
eno!Mr IIW1 ot the month, provld.lnQ..
cel1111catlon In first aid for those who

~J!I: lt,;.~ore: .~~,:We 1~
cardiopulmonary reeuscltatlon at rudy

be

~=~tl:mdf.=l~~ Wea~:;y~

~~efng~~~e:ftrbe ";,.:::

~~lnator -Mille says with exuber. The weight room , tha only ons of lis

1

ln the Bubble. with lwlerees being

::::=~~~mAnCI:'t~~ ·~t~
are

Rablrth...-11

Apri l~ Ma. Rumer billa

Mooth;

aa "Rebirth
•new baglnnlnga• will be

~ad . She will put together a

.tlln ~workshop for women (delving
Into acne problema, how to put on
..-.up, and the lm~ of a
ba1811Ced diet lor healthy-looking .tlln).
A dental education wotlt8hop will be
Included. So wilt one In career choloa
and aummer jOb hunting, lad by Evan
l.aapaon , a consultant In mental health
who rune College H'a career counaellng
~ trom an office on the first floor
of The rebirth theme will carry-over Into

ectlYI,::
l;'r...=...=~ ;...~
:::1' con~ -Ions In T,__
ect=t•

.,..P

tlbraaat

-

of

thla

featuring

arJ:a..o~::Jaal:{ P~~~:i:ra~~~~

first aid and safety. A alx-hour movie
marathon on drug UMend abuaa will be
one filature. An alcohol workshop will
be preaantad o - three evenings. Studania will actually drink alcohol and
then expoae thernaelves to a number of
1881•• Including the bnaathallzar end
reaction time experiments. Their

=:'Jri~~~ r:lat! t~l:'~prl~:

-v

n

;1;~~::&gt;~
~~i~.. ~~.,

.

*

this year.

'

You can say I live in College H.' &lt;

Decisions oil programming
msda
~:r~:;;d.f g~~~~ ~~~~~~;"'~~~
by the Residential Living Council . MitCh
Glttelson was the llrtlst. It took monll\s
stillnow'ltZ, -. ~lor management
~
.o,lll 1a1 p1u1 1 1ha
raJ..
maT6r, hilads th~ :liatup Whlcll oonl1ots
t~pp:l.~tuda~ts -say,'~' or~h e e:d~ess
~~2h II~~~~
at!'flg:sn fr~
bureaucratic tad tape the collao-...and
olh!lfll l)ave to..endura In trying to,use
Collage's Hvlng space. The RLC
receives p.nd doles out College lea
Ellicott In u~loue, spontaneous ways c
money.
:~._"' ;.ora;..·:;..!~
-College H ectlvltles are supervised by
l:!~~~t"U!tiiS are a festuca of
22 student coordinators, twb IIIICh f
tatl
~):{lOoi'S; too. The thtnl,.ilopr ot
11 areas: CPR, artworl&lt;,. brunches,•
Col e • ' Porter unit:. boasts IarOe&lt;
socials, publicity, athletics, housing, - than fe color likenesses of " Tweatla,"
volunt- work , tutoring, yesrllook, end
8llga.9unny;:and tha-Roed Runner from
HeartbMt, the College's .,....letter. •
th!t " LooJOie Tunea" series, a mountain
e-rta . . epldemlc
- I~ • with
rainbow, and 11
Ru';::'

.·

'It gives-you an identity-in the University.~~3 --:~?

lnli/!~..':s~~n~l~~-&lt;1'\'~~ ~~?J;,t

•

r~n~ l~o~mg_~,:cs~~P~';

=~.:.u~x~::! ,!~~~ v...'l::~

-lahts. Student laas bought the
equlpment; a treadmill le next on the
list. " Anyone who'd like to donate one"
would be -~come. grunted 0118 student
llnonntlhedablem~~ - of banchpresalng a
..,.. r

special for him - that and the chanca
to be around others with common
Interests.
•

se'~':fye~=J::::e~1 ~o~~~~~
::,~orvY~o~'::,ts~~:arclsan~~~l~ru.:

College. !The Student Health Center at
Amherst ls also located on College H
turf, enjoying a ·logical- though not
fonnal relationship.) Deeplta the f8ct
that Collage H end the Sexuality Center
are ...,parata, two mernbefa of the

~~tl~•=:=~t~~-EI~=

Sexuality Center makes IIYallable
contraceptive supplies, .pregnancy end
VD tasting, abortion and birth control
counseling, end referrals all In
strlctasl confidence.
~
Voluntewl8m lain ¥Ogua
College H dotes on volunteerlsm. As
Wayne MUle _puts· It to undergrade, "If
you are planning on getting Into any
professional school In a health related
ares, you must ~a a strong voluntbackground . You cannot hiiYa too much
volun-,work on your reeuma.•

ha~.:"onJ.n::'~ "'ll:'lzat~~· w"lf~

volunt-s Is the Erie County~lcal
Center wllk:h u - atudenta In auch
capiiCitlee aa admlaalona Olea, chUdren's playroom attendants, and helpiri
In OT, PT radiology, the medical
library, ate. Col'- -fl aleo provldea
peraonnal who -Tat the Red C.O. In
campus blood drives. One g-p of
atudlents wOII&lt;a with tile elderly
a
saftlor cltlz- ~~ oomplex. At
Chrlatmaa tlma, membef8 of the
Col'- collected S88 lot a I*1Y there
and 30 students attended.
'H..tbest'
Col'- H atudent• get the loWdown
on ectMtleeln the College, read reporta
on health themes, and pick up tltlllllllng

at

=~=:-~~~
~ua.r 'by ......... and lllppad

ililileNioflil~ ~ -.:1 . . ..
II\' ,..,.., you OM lesi'n thlt "thli

third floor Ia -..ally lruanlilll," that
" Ante hu al'llbber dlic:lt,• t h l t haa ~ nollcad Al*ldlno _ , . .
amounta of t l - In . . . , _ elaa'a
room Uuat llt8l - · mind you), or
Who dallied
tMaa popular

WhOM-..,....... 1llnNglloUI,

.,._... -

' * - arttalali on
10 anlkle atuclanta to
pl-llwougll the whole thiDa.
eandwlched

weightier~

Thill ..... ....... iiiO 111lntormatton 011 , . . - . . . . lllrtll .alrol.
Yltaml•, and . _ tD .... up amaldnti
· • wtll • thll ad¥loa on llow to hlndli

an attampt:a-"rape: "Try t~j;ic:k rather
than hit- you'll reach lart"m:~ your
nalls, poke his ayes, ap nl
, Ram
your knee Into his groin
and pull down sharply .... "
Heartbeat may be joined thla spring
by a "yearbOOk, • anoth.,..-llrat lor a U/B
college. Photoglllphera will
tw~nlng
through the' donne thla -

or~

a~lls

be

=~~.~=~,.:"'-=
be called "The Aewll-."

The book will
lt'ad~t

If all thle aounda out of atap with
whal you read concerning the dl•
llluslonadf!'.acont=rlp~ among
11
~~~~~o c!O with t~
concern lor "student life," chao'8clerl•
tic of this and other collegial•
reeldentlal units.
Colleae H:a llt-unl tallul about

gan-::;

"providing a llvlnu-te.nlng /I()IM lor
our etudec)ta," "r# cnaatlng an ldentl-

t'::;=.!Y
::r: :::.t~
"chanoa to avoid the lade of .,.,_...
Identity which often

un,_.lty."

C)()CUq

In •

IafOe

Evidently lt'a no1 /uat talk. Walking
t1woug11 the halla of the ...alcllnce ·
vllltot ll!)lloaa~

:mn.

--=

~lon
,.._.....,

-College

u:

8ludlnta
~
..... and •

call
OUIIO..ctl
ott..~=
around
In bMIItobae
and
for the ...,_ or the
-·
Woll*l wlllatla and ................
laga In leea than ,...,_. tlmll. "Be

=-~-c-,::~1!-~

MotriaMY ahoula out.
lt'a ttut, 1tuc1en1 ..,., lila
College 8lllblla you to~~..,. a
number. '1t
you an
llfltllln
. the
OM ..,, ' 1... In
CollegeH."
.

Unl~ou

�February 15J111ft

Slave of Love
-lolowellc&gt;c&gt;b ,_..ty t.tclllna eo
• "'--en mo¥W .,., di'CII 1f11 In the

~ tonight...cl t~·

UUAII

CALENDAR

--ci---·-AKoy
__ _,....,...!lord_

~~y-·

---.-~
Lft).-4p.m.
"

----·
---D.-·-""-al
.-a---·

.._..,~T-Hill,--.

10

II ,_...

•.,..,

Or.

pro-

Chl&lt;nn'a-·

pllol.12-.

_,_oi ..

-NieAI.III·-·m-1
CIIIpTool..,_

. . . . , _ Dr. ,.., K. W~%~~'4, Un!Yo&lt;-~~--11)' d Coml&gt;r1dgo. Englond. 2011 F -. 3 p.m.

-

•

~-2 : 45 .

LmiiiA..,_ AMI .oc:eTY COIWQCIIIIII'
- - - n . - one~ ... Ewe:
u...y .. 'lllo Mordww d

v-

- ·.· 103 ClomonL

3p.lll.. ~bflho-- Plogown
.. ~-~allho~al

........

·--_,.....
·---,.. -

_ . .. Sproloh- lrwlled

1111 jlllrrilg - . g lor lho next
"T~ a..-. ~ : 30 p.m. Fer fl.othor

lnfanNIIQIII!""-- ~211 .

_____ of ____ _
~ICBKE.&amp;.wit

A .......... ~~- ..

----·-

0,.,._ popnnont al CQmpulor Sclonce, Purduo. ~eo. 42211 A~cp'LM. ._5 p.m.
.

__ .._,_J__ _u-.ny
ITA~ COUOOIIIIIII

al · Room C.2fl, 4230 Ridge La. 4 p.m,
CoiiOe hour • ~In Room A·11i.
CIUAMIIIOUCULAIIIIOLOOY

I.EIC11NI

~ "' CleMo during E.or!y
........... Dr. Oeoflrey Chlda. o.p.tment

.. --~. 114-.
4 :15p.m. Coftee lit 4 p.m.

1

. . --&amp;:n.1·

- -t,IIIICI!IIION•

~-- '1n · (1G78).
......,._ .... _ ,. 8pJII.- loll o n d - &lt;t/

-·

c:OwumiSCIEHCECOLLCICM*f

An ..,._,..., Oenerator. Proteseor Mike
O'Donnell, Dopnnont al Compulor Sclonce.
Pl.&lt;due. Room 41 , 4226 Ridge La. 3:30 P""·
Colleo .., dougtW)U!o w11 be . . - et 3 p .m.
lnRoom 61 .

CEUaiiOlECiJLAR IIOLDOY AND
CltEIIIS11IY OF IIOLOQICAL SYSTEMS

-_. ...,.... _0 __

PooMiw . .llooiOI F - I n t h e - , - .
d o v - Poplldo. Dr. ~ l&lt;riel,
· - aiMclocUor
Soizberg,
-127Cooke.
3 :45p.m.;Biology.
colleeet3:30.

-·

CMLENCIINEEIItNO-SEIIIHAR

322
--Dro·-~-

PHYSIOlOGY-·
DD--11 Colclunl Uptoko by

__ _

_ _ _ _ _ _ ln . . _

lAC FILII'
T-(1975). 148~ . 7..,10p.m.
$1 lor non.feopoyorl. •
Olver
m ~Roger 0o11rey
....,

-feobnd
· Jod&lt;
Nicholoon,
1n this
wldl)'
· often Ylouoly ......log musical ol The
Who'a rock cpono Wl1tlion bf """-'ijUitaria'
-Townohand.

-.................---/T_
..=iet...._ __... _

•

. . . . . . ~dCim-

......._

. . _ _ YGIII~~

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

UUA8MIDNIGHTFIUI'
. , _ . , . Uwlng (John Waten;, 1917). Con·
Iorence Thealnt. Sqoke. 12 midnight. Admission
c::lwge.

Sun~ay..:...._ 18
IFA RECITAL'
Jo Ellon Horrio, clsinel. Baird Hal .
• 3 p.m. F r e e -· Sponll&lt;lnld bf 111e Depart·
mental Music:.

w_,

UUA8FUI'

(John M8us, 1978). eon.
· Sqoke. Col636·29191or ahow

1111
........,. -

~

to

- . Room 18, 4240 Ridge Lea. 3:30_.

p.m.
IIICIIOBIOlOGY
_ . , , .~·
,_,_bf_

Monday ~- 19 -

'·r r

')WCOICiwlda. er. Diane M. Jlooba, Oepwtment of Microbiology, U I B. 223 Sherman. 4 p:m.

HOLIDAY 8US SBIV1CE
Todoy--Waol*lglon'a llr1hday-&lt;l a U.flodged

U I Bholday: noduses,offices .
Amherst Cornpus I Main Slrool l Ridge Loa Corn·
pus bus """""" wll be provided ..... 12 mid·
night from·Slroet. Uoe lho rO!l'Jiar seosloo
Route 2 ( - y ) schedule.

T,.,.,., on

CHEMICAL ENQIIIEEII- - R 4
l n f t - o1 ,.._Add_,
o...uquld
Mixing and .....
Jn Stlning Tanka,

· Dopwtment a1 Cllemlcal ~­

V•en -

log, UIB. 262 c.-. 4 p.m . Relreahments will be
- 0 1 3:30.

SPEED~T~ '

Dall Plooo · Street o( $pnng....
7:30p.m. · $2.50
entry ,1l&gt;e. _
1110 ~ OOIIY!IIOiy.
.,

()pon

ICE HOCKEY.!
UII wo.
Center. 7:30p.m.

,_m -

)~

Tona- Sports
11

PHARM.D. SEMINAllf
Yoluo

- - -·
CACFUI'
-

B

othera.

_
-

•

s,.-.. on. R. Coo(&gt;er one~ c. Sc:p.c&gt;o~L

Tuesday-20

248 Cool&lt;&amp;. 5 p.m.

BIOCHEIIISTRY NUTRmON COHFEIIENCEf
Diet ond Colon Cancer, sa- GrWoom. Ph .D ..
prof.._, U I B. 26 F . -. 12 ._o.

-·on

ALMS'

UUA8FUI'

Woy to Shadow -

(Brakhage); RlfiiC-

llock(BrWcl!oge); N o t - (Menken) .
146 Dlef..-t. 7 p.nl. ~ bf the Center

fo&lt;MocloSiucty.

A-d~ (U . S.S. R . )(-~) .
Con-~ . Sqqi-e . Col 636-2G191or

~c::lwge.

_.( SPECIAL SEJII£S'

.Foloan; ~ 170 1/f'MC,
10 p.m. S1, ~: $ 1.50,
.
¢
OW. Humpln\l Bogorj, Mwy

m

F_. -~are m

~

B~&lt;NY

c:n.oon.t. Wid ·

-llogort ........ oloo--

Ingrid""'-· A - alintrfguo, - .,
- - o t - ..111111mloboot
lor o h
llogort , _ oold: "!''oy H
Agoln. 8om.. ond lo&lt; lho IDfChy . ,.,. Time
Oooolly."

----·
·
~-

STUDENT-PIANO RECITAl"
BalrdRecllaiHel. 12: 15p_.m.

UUA8 WEDIIE8DAY NIGHT FUIS'

Y_,

EFf'ECTIVE ~FOR UNDUIOIWlUATES

111e....Y. ., _
_Il
UI.IIAY_,__.
.__
_,
.............. -..-of............. (Jolwl-.
-...
""a
- -.g
-Dr.-W...--2....

tit ill

MEN' S IASKETBAU •
U I Bwo. PlottobUrgh. ca.I&lt;Hal. 8 :30p.m.

Oolgl ............

_ ....
_lloglo
io
al .io.Som
- Spoolo.
~ eye plc:Uoa . . .

:-..:.-:.,~-::--..: :"oe:

Vincent and Gaty Busey

Dr. 1.t11on M.
oiM&lt;Idlc*lo.
.S108Shonnln. 4:15p.rn.; collee014.

. Col 838-2G1G lor
eo...-"'-· ecp..
lllllllond . . _ _ _

'*' -

w-y-,.-_ . . -.. ----·

Royrnond ~ - ~ ~-

9lcott.

-...-.-dlqo.
____.... _ .. -.0 ...

Ito devotees,

tho heyday al ""' aport, ond • - · fa&lt; Its •

pooalng.

SEIIIIWif

II; ond glllory-- 11 .50. S!&gt;on·
bf' lllucll&lt; ond 11b1;111-Knox M
~-

A - tl '-(U . S.S.R.)~. 1G78).

.

~~.."':"io aurflng,

Acheeon. 4 p.m.

10 -

.

1111 W - J (John Milius. 1976). Con·
· Squn. Ct1636·29191or-

IIJCITAL'

Hal. 3:16p.m.

-of
'a;.,...,
.....

-....-.TootiOor ...

UUABFIUII'

-

- - "' ,..,.....,. . . , . , _ , .-,1&gt;
~pn.lorrt. 121 Cooke-3:45p.m.

107 T - . 1. 6 p.m. E.-ycne

.

._toTou_....,.__ara: Ma.
Koren B. Spittle ond Mo. Vame!M A. Coli'&gt;a,
Uolveralty ~Center .

262

c.-. 1 p.m.

Tlllo ......, wll dernoilatr-ote eftectiYe note-

-.g tecflniQUoo ... ,_,. -

greeter
'-n1nQ oflicloncy ond Improved powera al oon·
con1rollon.
~COlLOQUIUM'

-~In lllog&lt;ttlo'l Yloual ..
Dr: Etogen e-. profeaacr of phloaophy ' and
lntemotionllly-l&lt;nown-ln tho tlleotyapplcollon a l - ..
poyctdogy,
~ - art. aoc:lology . a(ld llnguiatica.
l..lnguletlca l..cx.nge, ffrot floor ••Spaulding. Ellc':ott.

"'**"""'·

3p.m.

.

6!&gt;onoo&lt;ed bf lho Clrde l o r - -·
DEPAR'IWNTOF ANATOMY-.-f

~
1G71). Con--. &amp;on. 12~-

· tl fotood bf orlmo 10 IMI
01 _, IIIII tynmy. A -

A glllory d -

iolrylolo~Ud~-­

_......,dlho-•onyUUAS
lmgo)'OU.

.. Actin ln , t h e - lln:ltlo

-

~-ln

I

_ _ Dom,_,,

SomuiiW. - o r Q . - a i M a -.
Pl.&lt;due. Room A·15, 4230 Ridge La. 4 p.m.

-·

.....
----

.........,.

' , _ , CI.,IJ. lfo-toiFACC, -

f ond

•o-.e11or----..

----148-

~~oe-.yte_,....,_

l\10-

·---.........--

-.Dr,,.,.,-·

...,_,_,a..

..a.o~ogy,
Un~Yo&lt;o~y, - · and cur·
rwn1ly 0 - . g - .tho - - I n -·

ThursdaY-- 22
PBIIATIIIC--f
~~ofCol--­
Dr. Flke, ~of Mergy
Room, Cloldren'O

BA81C~LECTUIIEt

Tllo -

~ .. -

. . . _ Dr. Cor!

w.

(3ottBc1111k.

CoroltN- of Medicine.

S1DS"'*-' . 4p.IO. ~ol3 : 45 .

""'-"·

----·

U / 8 . 123

......

-..on

-ALO LOGIC COLI.OQIMIIIf
._...aParct · a' JohnRictWdi, Unlvef·
lltyoiQoorgto 1111111dy, 4 P·'!'

CIUAMI--.utBIDlOGYSEIIINAR I

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

,_C
"!"M ...... loll.·
T---~~~-­

- of OooloJw -

""' - - por1nlyal ol lhe dumb

AHTHIIOI'tii.OCY-.ui&lt;ER'
Tor, prole...- of

~ bf . .. . - - al Ptoyllology.

Wedftesday-21
~.EIIcall. 12r-.

blonde,

-s._..,· bflho
m "'---IY'
~­
~In lho
~-

COUOCIUIA'

~

• _,0 .... 11. -

Comtl-.

1111~8-ITM.~CBITBI

Ull-. ........ T-llponConlor.
,,.,__
l

tnrnortol -

ond CltiXa lmmun&lt;*&gt;gy, HoiQitol. 12 . . -.

UIB .loa~
8 p.m.
-- ~bftho~al- .

• , . . . - - - ...... Hill.

---to-

- - ~Qrawtord.
.
_.. m aAJre. -hlo,mol""
became..,• _
rotm

En

)

-.--.a.•

1om Y - y. -Judy Holiday and Wiliam
. _, io • ~ oomady ot&gt;out what results

tioo . - - al Anllwopology. Elk:Ott

Colleo 013:30.

s.t.day-17

..,_,tol,

·-lifo---.-.
Canplox. 8 p.m.

, •

eenu, Dr. DIMd iloGcl. UniYeralty ol Vlrg01la.
178 Forbor. 4 p.m.
STATISTICS COUDO\HUM LECTURE

~ (WIIsh. 1941), 7 p.m.;
1om
(~. 1950), 8 :50p.m. Con·
farence-.Sqoke . F r e o -.
sv.-., -.. James Cagney and
Rltil Hoywa1h . A
nostolglc musK:al
c:oooomed ., lmpor1ont ..._ in love as

0opor1.

Gor911trJ. ~

.

al

'

.. _

Dr

. -~.. ·o.c--rt al Viro
ADIIWel. 114 Hoc:hMefter. 4:15p.m

�7

Peradotto
takes issue
Alutto
with
Editor;
In a spirit of friendly and product ...
exchange, which I know he will not tlllca
amlu, I cannot let pea without

~:'~':.'l:o 1:t~m~~!,. ~ 2~~~
1

Exhibits
ART DEPARTIIENT EXtBT
Bolhune Hll.
2917 Meln Street. 'l'hrou!;l F-..ry 22. . _ . .
..., Mondoy. 12-4 p.m.; r . - y,
and
~.12·3p . m .
·

u-..-. -

w..--.

the midst of a prea«~tatlon othel'wlae
char:acterlzed by the pungency and
precision - have all coma to edmlre
(and some of us to fear) In the Dean of
, Management, he slips ua a rhetorical
Mickey. After obaervlng that " management-stud'ents, In general, take only 40

ra'me~~']_t w~lle1 ~~s~~~La;:.~ .:::J

ALAMO OALLEAY EXtBT
Unlike in Kind or Character. a group show
· by lhe Office ot V.P. 10&lt; Heoltl1

Scionces
- Beck
· alHoi.
Art. Tliiough
7. Alomoond
Galery,
Mondoy-Frtdoy
10a.m...5p.m.

~~~~c~~~~re:l~~·an

1

JERUSALEM'S ARCHAEOLOGICAL PAST AND

Keapln9 1M Peot Allwe. A l)hologrlil)hloo&gt;&lt;hibil
proylded by lhe Embosaf, WoshlnQton,
D.C. On olChibil unll I.Wcll 9 . U/B Rooeon:h
........, al Anltwopology, Acedomic
C'entOr, e.c:ott. - - ~ Frtdoy, 11
a.m . ~ p.m.; 'SI!Itu'dly tnd &amp;n:My, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
IIUSIC IJIIIWIY EXtBT
.
llualcal Autogrepha, Holographs, ...
- . Emendatlone, "' oxtr'aordOwy group of
doci.rnenta. Some have been lont lor lhe
- b y - " " " " " " " ' oflho- Deport·
1
menl. llYough ~ 5.
COUNCiliiEETlNG
The F-..y meeting of .,. Courd of the
~ wt1 bo hold Frtdoy, F-.ay 23, 01
3 p.m. In ... C&lt;luncl Coni- Aocm, ~ .

..t-...ngMo.
UUAIFR.JI•
lltood end C - lblv. 19701. Confer·

-.-dwge.

A-J)OI1nlitoton_-golng _ _

CRfDIT~REE REGISTRATION

.. oc&gt;it-hle~--·-

:

ineatnngellnd.
W)'OU

don, have don&lt; heir, you may miM _,.

lie -

· but . . . . . )'OU. . . .. )'OU'I got

ot

the P'*&gt;l

--Sc:t-.z.
c.---

Onh_..wtlboe.--ofllo~

Progtwna wtl lw&gt;ld off-campus
on ~. F-..ry 15, 01 lhe
Thruway Mil from 5-9 p .m.; .-lCl on Friday,
F-..y 11ollhe--lrom5-9p.m.
U!B

r~

LIFE WORKSHOI'I
Thuroday, F*-Y15-a- 7-8:30p.m.;

C&lt;medy-.
7:30-9p.m.;'Emergoncy0n
oflhe
lnlo&gt;dcated. 7 :30-9:30 p.m.;
JldNfly

Notices

.

.
--I.

to ... hoepilollor ..-gory "'

doolgo1od"'-"'

Tho- ..
prownl "'Y
..... ct&gt;ld INght - - the hoec&gt;il" bOk&gt;fe
he"' .... t o - ·- - lor "'Y length ot

Oruga.Wort&lt;. 7·8p.m.

W - y. February 2'1 -Fnl ~In lhe
Forelmnl, 7:30-9p.m.
Lie Wa1&lt;lhol&gt;o . . aodit- and~ond
~Aegistmion
ia
of-chlrgo.
()pen
10 · -~
· - ·In- 110
•· 638·2808 .

OAII dFAcE HOURS
Hot.ntorFetwt.y 16dbe 9a.m.-4:30p.m.;
F-..y 20-23 , 1hehotnw'lbo9 a.m.·7 p.m.

-. &amp;.yone.~-··-·

the ct&gt;ld..- .... . _ . , - l l j &gt; p o h -ond
1

locomo. The~iefran2103p .m. endlehold

~~'.':,~;/,"&amp;, fr':tin!.'iwlt~~h:...~
those- stiii"'Wu~ry. on the life and

.
--1\mhg
-ot-.---.-.......
otot ..
ot ...

I.-wood lbory wll boQio ctwglng OG&lt;lOOOia

COHFBIIIICEa 111'HE DIICIPLIIIO

ot ·
no1.........,
"'r.-wed,

•• tho Office

bocks

Tho~-

..__IN\'bo_IO_ .

1979.

10- ~lnlhe--•ol

Accounts "" C&gt;YOt&lt;luo
by Fobruory 23,

Kyou 1wYe eny~ bocks, bo an to gel
them lo the ClrWOtion Dopertnenl •• I.-wood

10 - - .
u.w..lly ........-.lly,
, _ _ _ _ _ bo
--Yarj&lt;~-.endol
b - - Y o r t &lt; - O i i l r g e.

FEBRUARY IS
A.ll. BUFFALO: Or. 1bamu E. -

~oe&lt;Aiy of Lew

_

FEBRUARY II
ONVERSATIOHS IN ntE ARTS: Eoth« He!'
r f o l l l n - O.Yid
7:30p.m. Courie&lt;
~lChamel101 .

'FEBRUARY 17

A.II.BUFFALO
Or. .._rd ....

_.....___
____ -·...

aoklor

FO&lt; -

·cal EU II 638-2077 0&lt; 2079
CllhyO&lt; I.MTy. •

STUDY IKII.LS LM

---~.at~..-.

~

- - - - - - -. end·

,__,_

ln .. llllalpiNo--._

.__-.

.......,.

ot 1M
Senior Clllzen In 1M F - , , -.e
...__, '-'*&gt;g- ~
~l

~

..

,...._101..,_23~

,__,_
er---..-

... _ . . . . , _ . . . . . ~at

IWiod-

0..-

-

.

. . . . _ . . . . . . . , . _ 1 1 _ . . _..

- " 1111..,....._
' ..... - a
Clpeft.
• n
. -d
- .-.002
..

-1878 . .

__ _

~-··-~­
.--...-.....--....-.
CIII5ell'l'- '

.... ,

&amp; - - - Zll&lt;, -

· Fot -

--f'I.Aea
-wo-.o-.~onot..,. ._.. _

· cal

fM'I'nolgloe~

. . . . . . , _ .. _llllldy _ _

~

·

- - - - . . . . . 12-4,- ......

-ftldor.ll·8

.

•.··

.
...
/ ;

.

/

comperleon, a concentnlion In Ac. counting Ia 11111T0W, and It II llnly no
lnllllt to an -untant to uy eo, nor Ia
lt~tobe.

.

What needl rw-«t~phUII after reed-

"\"':.:: ~:r: .

~~~~o:.c:~~

would not qu&amp;mll; the ~ion thai
dlaclplln•. though cx:pnlad In~­
manti which may occupy I'CJUIII:IIy equal
epece In a cataiOgull! ol the un~
lnletleclu.l 81M11, do 1101 t1r , _ of
lhat or;.nlzatlon occupy BCIUilprlde of
whan lfi01tler iOucliiiOIW tllln

pl-.

..:::---m. .

PlnPtlll'- 1NI , . ...

,.

Surf City
--·

~~·
~~~~ ~"~ =·~p~
worda wholly unf-lllar to me. By

load Ia applledj_!'* • n...c not lllow
~~---­
~.=::'-=-=
that diiN!IMII eRn.- of
botflln fonilulatlng 1M.._.._.

t

.......... .;.. , •.• - ~~:

....-...oaot _ _ _ ,...
.,..-lor._

KOihy - · 1'11.0 .

,I

T.U~,_I'OII

' 838-2271
and
. W·2 -

548c.ponltll,- - -·

origins In magic, and Ita c!...top,..,t
Into a science, so that they ~n, If It
tlllcaa on them, rejatlvelmmun
to the
kind of blandl.,._,ta o- AI o now
and again lndUI~.

FEBRUARY20
A.ll. BUFFALC): llaniOgo ~Henry

In

-~----

aoc'r.:?;,

--.CM~ . 11 :05p.m .

Q&lt;W1'0: Pliyolail F - ,

E:r/~~·

~~.:?hr::~~ ·~~.at~

7p.m. WBU&lt;-~~~3 . 71 .

WBENl9301 .

Canter, Baldy Hoi, .. lor . - . end lludy . _ . . ., .........
T.,....ond Thuroclly, 11 a.m.· I p.m.; doY and Frtdoy, II a.m.·3 p.m. The lib Ia ' - '
I D I I U / 8 -.
•
__

~---10 ...........

dean, -

-R8AuARYII
,&lt;; SEHIOR CITIZEN IIEPORT: Tha -

The91udy-Ubllthe~~

__
_
TOIC--Iono!Qn----·---..-.
. ..._--- --bring-..
.

- ~--. ........... _ o t _ _
down'OI-by~l•- 9 .. - .

Katz,-··

:3

Lucretius and Vergll, Ovid and a hoe! ol
others, the origins and extensive
development of tragedy and comedy, .
scientific historiography, philosophy,
formal logic, political theory and law,
aesthetic standards still opera!... In
art, formats of though) and beh~or
(for good or Ill) that underlie our
io!tltude toward women, the Nlatlonllhlp
.between man and his world, between·
the l!)dlvldual and
work,

o f -. 10a.m. WKBW:lVlChamel71 .

lChamel71.

VACAnciN T1IF TO FLOIIIIIA

ond

~:,ftua,So~~es

1g.a-.

-

--.rw~n Towars lhonll""'-'·

_..u.w..~~y,a_ot.,._

-11

.-.,
10--.....

· er--l'&lt;M f'l'o.
c.ndldlte In hellth ~ . 10 a.m. wtCBW·TV

10 . _ ..... Uow.olly ·
... prioa al 1281 _ _ , rooncl-lrip olr 10
O!londo, ... ~. ond ......... .... ""

olh - - . , . I D ........ «fiRIIoclied
~-----.end
llonoth _ _ _ ..... _
_

~-

byf-..y231
Tbo EnQiilll ~' lne- ..
_ _ , . . , ·~ to dullng op&lt;lng

·._
ot.Cindy
.......
propoool_
..,...
.,
_.....
,- _
_
•topic_
end
-Include
ot end
the

ana

WKBW·TV lChamel71 .

--In-·"'
... o t - br-. ._,
---.64c;c-Helln
Olllce

thought of Byzantium through the fall
of Constantinople In 1453); exposure to
Greek and Roman phllosopb¥;' relialon ,
myth, literature, art, social and poiTtical
forms, as
as their abldlnglnfiuence
upon the habitual texture of Western
society and mind. We are, In other
words-, talking about Homer and

On The Air

CROSSTALK II: Urblin Traftolt. Dr. _ , E.

0~1001(5

In lhe dining- ot the Hoepilll.

Aort1 , 1978

Wo-

men lr1d All!ohollem. 7:30-9 p.m.
T-y. F*-J 20 - ~How

CHILOREN'S HOIPITAL I'IIEAOMUIIIOII
PARTY
~-~·given Bullalo'•
Cllllchn'e Hoepllol . - y ond ll*d Soturdoy
ot--lor-wllowtleoonbo

-

- -aa

SAED EXIti8IT
Ul&lt;ralnlon Chutchea o.lgned by
Zulc A Phologroph E.Kh-. Hoyes
Hell t.-v. Spcineorod by lhe Sc:hool of Alt:hliee·
... and Etwtronmonlal Design .

Bodgot- • report from - · -

once ~. ~- Col 836-2919 '"' . _

English or

11

to 'e;~~~l: mlhc;:' ~o~ ~n E,~:,
escutcheon; my cencern Is to correct a
few misapprehensions about Classics
that seem too quietly to u.-tfe Dean
Alutto's remarkable comparison. If It Is
true that Classics majora tlllce 110 per
cent of more of their couraework In their
major field, -let It be remembered what
that couraework _ls: the maatery-Of the
structure and usage of two llot
altogether easy languages (for Greek
alone, It mBfllS reading texts from
Homer through the New Testament,
with a range of lexical , :g_!8111matlcal,
and stylistic evolution at
great
as that exhibited by Englltih between
Chaucer and ~er) ; tha.hlstory and
archaeology of Greece, R,ome, llrid the
ancient Near East owt:. a period

CURRENT RESTOIIATION

caJ.O REalAI. •
Kon lohll, - i o d by Cloudla-.. Bl*d
Hoi. 8 p.m. drllolion $1 .50;
...,.,,. o n d - cftlzena S1 . ADS YOUChoro
ICCOI)Ood. 5pof..-ed by .... Center ot ... ~

',

Social Science majors ... ten&lt;l to take
about 60 per cent of thelrcoureework In
their ma)or field," he asks: " How ... Ia
our (Management's) altuetlon . more

.....
wu·
•·
.....,_

=

~

~,..._
In cNitlllll!l
..
of
mott liutiCIIO

peNafl
~

a wilDie IIIII itltllgrlil8d l k
·
My friendly~ ..... ~ AlllltO
OOMr the lnlell
of at ee.t - o f IIIII

not, Inof 1111
~~~-.
del..:!
homehou
the legiii"*'Y
hlglr
polnl - the juat Plea lor~

=-::-=:
::~n:"ln,.;.ol =...::::

~~ ''u:'

-

Indulgent. But -

on IIIII - · 11M

.........

,- CIMelcl dOee alrlg!!!. thank 11'011· Tile

de!*l,_l'l 81udeo\H"80UIIy Ratio II

�T.......,, Fib. 211

lJI &amp;Agin~r-s stress.. _
the social is$ues ·

Tour of the NuclFacility. call 831·2826 for
.-vatlon..
Comput...n:b demonstration, Science and Engln-

1:00p.m.
2:00p.m .

--5!111

~~~=.,~'lr.,~:,:;,ratlon, SEL: Ph ysics

3:00p.m.

.........,,Feb.21
1:00p.m.
2:00p.m .
n..lay, Feb. 22
1:00p.m.
2:00p.m.
AHday:

FttdiiY, Feb. 22

~~~~fu.'tk'!'s:'~nf.,~ go,.::~~i~.,"~~c!i

Tour of the Nucl- Facility. caJ I 831-2826.
Compul . - c h demonstration . SEL: Biology and
Pharmacy
Cryogenics demonstration : Woldman Theater, Norton
Comput...._,.ch demonstration, SEL: Englnearlng
Engln-lng Car- Day for public high school students
Hazaidou s Waste Management and Disposal Seminar
Tour of the Nuclear Facility. Call 831-2826.
Computeraearch demon~tratlon, SEL: Energy and
EnVIronment

AHdjy
1:00p.m.
2:00p.m.

·

AIIWMk
. •
Dlepleys in the SEL. Tours of Main Street and Amherst campu s engineering
l.t&gt;e will be announced.

Toxic waste seminar
set for next Friday _.
A comprallensl..., seminar orrllazardoue wute man_,ent and disposal
will beheld here, Friday, February22.

~~~0:.:~'1-w~~~:

- t e problems with epeclal attention
to _ . lealelatlon, current eHorts to
"*JJIGGI toxlc - · materials, and a
c:...la
oltheLo...,Canaf.
Dr. 0
' Lee, dean of the Faculty

:!...
I

=

':problema
~~~~~a:,~~r::;'y
throughout the

·
R-opment ofleglonal
edlaposaf facilities .
The F .
confenenoa Ia the first to
coneid1lo:
compnehenelve planning
olrlllegy, Lee adds.
",1
All eiMlens will bil ~- I n th6 Kiva
(Room 101), Baldy HaH.
· The ~roa Conaervatlon and
~ ~ -. which requlnse that all
._.,... wasta be accounted for from

oou

*'

=-~~- e:lf'l:""i:l~

~ Rubin, an expert In environmental law who Is a member of the firm
of Morgan, L-Is and Bocklus,
w.hlngtDn, D.C.
F,.,k ~. a partner In Conaatoga-Ro-.s Ltd., will provide " A
CaN Hlalory of the Love Canal

01-.·

.

· Peter Mlllock, coordinator of a State
task force on the environment, will give
a "Summary Report of the Interagency
Task Foroa on Hazardous W;aste."
The European experience In regional
waste disposal faciliti es ~1!\..._be
described by Thomas Rinker, ·~-~er
of process systems for the Envwnmental Elements Corporation of Baltimore, Md .
Diane Carl sOn, coordinator of haz:
ardous waste · treatment for the
Michigan Depanment of Natural Resources, will di scuss that state's
Innovative progr811Y.
The conference will closs with an
open dleeusslon on the research needs
for hei&lt;ardous · waste material and
disposal. The discussion will be
moderated by Dr. Andrew Middleton,
former U/ B professor who Is now a
water pollution centro! en~l n eer for the

K~~~Y~~ngy ~h~s~~~~ 'of

EnllltJeerlllg anc1' Applied Science-s,
OMfe of Cnsdlt-Free Programs and ttMI
Buffalo Section of the American SOCiety&lt;~
of Civil Engineers, the ssminar is belrl9'1
cocrdlnated by Dr. ·Lee and also by Dril l
Date M. Meredith and Dr. Thomaa Wlll
~. both associate professors orO
the Englneettng faculty .
Information on registration for the'l
conterenoacan be obtained at831-4301 .0

-

01111 anaiNtlona of I t a - CclnlpiMr-

-'* ...a Will

be offeNd In the

..,_..,~utnrydurlng

NeilloiW lllg!Mira Walk

&lt;-

boxed

llllllllllllt- _, e.vtoaa , _ beeli

::::C: ~ aoma
end the HMitll
...._._...tor
time, the
a

8EL ' -11111118 . , . _ operatlonlll only
-.-llltAaaull.
'

.._... Kilblltld,

~

cooo diMiar ..,. the IIElcen on. data
11-. 1ft UW -=--. prtnw11y In

clwftl8trJ, llloloaY.

JJhyalea, electr1cal

81111"-1110. elitictril!riCI

· ICIIIIoe, llolfutiOII Mel

pomputer

.-nn-t

....,rtalnd-'--

'.."
~

SEL will demonstrate
Computersearch
week "

an

.

~

appointment with her or one of the twdl
other staff persons doing them,
although an ..,polntment Is · -no
.t&gt;eotutety n~ . Persons ohould

~~~h'::~~.~~~~~2
II__,. The~ llealf takes from 5
to30mlnutes.
•
Kobel8kl Is enthuoleatlc about the
beneflte of the comput..-.-ch, while
adrnltllnfllhat INII~IIIonallela look
111 t11e klli&amp;wltll dl
•
·
"Tllere'a no moral. benefit to 11olng
through numerous Jlllf)er Indexes, she
says. "Tille 8y8Nm
a lot of
time whloh; for moa1 of ua, Is money."

'*' .....

NAACP ·s tudent
chapter formed
A student Cllllplar of the National
AaeociMidn for the ~ of
~ Ia Nina lonnad on
...mpue wltli 8erber&amp; J'. HIIIIMI aa

CoiOI&amp;d

at:linO----.... ltiii!MI llaa recruited ,_. t11a11

=
oc;:.
!10

-t::.~"::m~A~

boan1 will be loltfloCiiiii!ID
told the Cowl«-~ that the
group "wwuud 00&lt;1tlllua the atruoale tor

equal rtghte and human dlgnllylor all
studanta."
Elactad alao to two-_- terrno on the
8lllbrwniC Chapt81'o uac:utiva group
AltKia
lint vice Pf881-

-=
dallt;

Con-.

.......

'*

'.

else.
"The SEL can .de...,lop In the future
Into a regional Information center, not
Tschnologlsts are on the defensl~ . 'only on toxic waate m1111ers, but on the
these days, under attack for everything
environment and energy," Lee explains.
from g_es-guzzllng cars and en~"Our goal is to ha..., a compn!hensl...,
collection that, hopefully, will be part of
a national network of regional Informaa:'r~r lre and the West Valley redlatl~n .
tion centers."
The SEL will have avallllble by the
e....n the official National Engineers
23rd bibliographies of references
Week statement put out by the National
related to Lo..., Canal and West Valley,
SOCiety of Professional Engineers is an
Webster says.
attempt to j ustify, of all things,
St-Ing Committee on Regional
"p~m~~~;;;,,. are) people wh~ do'n1
Environmental Quality
see progress as a,. mindless behemoth;
Lee Is- chairman of U/B's St-Ing
devouring all in 11g pallr, but rather as a
Committee on Reg'lonal Environmental
1
Quality, an outgrowth of what began
~~~v~~~~~~.:_ec~h~'ri' cdl~;rS:u:l~g
simply as the Lo..., Canal Taak Force.
purpose - , works for the betterment of
w;~3 '/:'?~ r:!':~ · t:e u~!!.rs~~~~~
all,"lt reads.
steer(ng comml,l.tee 1/yll would enSocial Jlluea ar9 the focus
compass Lo..., Canal and other pollUOne expects that most engineers
tion- problems," he - expla:ins. "The
long for t he halcyon days of the 1950s
steeri ng committee has been meeting
and 60s , a time when President John F.
monthly and has served as a clearingKennedy extolled, "We would not be
house for specific requests for
able to meet the challenges of the
University aid or advice."
•
lnodern world were it not for the t rained
Lee continues, " The committ ee will
engineers who develop and bu ild the
serve as a motivating force. to
products and systems that contribute to
11
the welfare, safety and advancement of
all Americans. Our engineering capabiltoxi c waste."
ities- are crucial, not only to the
1
Public forum a on Love Cano,l

By Uncia 0-'Cobas

ltillh Walker, I8COIId vtce
piMidellt; Oanl8a A. Blanch, oacretary;
Alll8011 HedQoplllh, -lstanl - a r y;
end
DeboNIIHerdr.
-profc.tiM
"-'lla, .. auoclate
Ill £ltllleb,
liMn c11oaen faculty

.

~~::~~: t~ ~':f~~~"S,~e~~bl~:, t~~

l::.f~t'~~~~~ er~~c~~!:':h~~~j,Bgpe~~~,t~

bllller and fuller life In freedom ."
It is not surprising , therefore, that the
main . 9'lli'IS scheduled for U/ B's
recognition of National Engineers Week
focus on, well, soclall$sues, "
Career Day for women and 1f1111!il'IU"
An Engineering Career; 1;)&amp;~
!;&gt;!!
held Thursday, Feb. 22_. to a~,~~llaChl 9th
and 10th graders from.JluJ alo.:~u t&gt;Jic
schools wit~ ~r t&gt;ppl:i ~ nftles· 'In
engineeri ng. Th'e aO-day affair Will
Include tours of lab faciUties, ·a
demonstration of cryogenics and, most
important, one-t~ne Interaction be-

-.1m

:.':~~ ~~~ul~~u~~~u~~~~~/ B's-e~glf'·

The • .event Is · gea~ lo "non-traclit fonal._ engineering sludent~ . the
mfrlorllles andwomsn .
• ·• · •
' "'Yh.ere may be talented J!Cl.l ep tlal
enbil\eers from mlnor1ty gr(\ups who.
hll}'e never had a chance t o even t ~IJ1~
ab9ut engineering as a career.'; George
~. dsan of the Fa&lt;;llliY of Eng}[ IIMirlng
and Applied Sciences, biJI_Ie~esih"'V-flltr .
thi s career day, we're gcymg., l

chanctf.
'•
. ,- a~'••
Lee points out lhiC ttl'e I -

AAr

~ '.

f tile

career day "!,a&amp; lnltill!lid )f{' s u\l'ent
engineering gr~ps , who· are p) llllrilng
to act as guides and h~ sal up a
nOm bel bf to\Jril, discussion groups and
dlsl&gt;lays for the high schoolers.
Aich'ard Ferraro, president of the
FEAS Student Go....rnmerit, says- hi s
grqups ha..., belln ~ enthuslaa11q
about becoming Involved In car- day
and other Engineering Week activities.
Esch student group Wltl&gt;ln FEAS Is

~~~~ ~~~::r~~: :~~ ~gr~:~~

Library (SEL).
•. The- other main ev~nt scheduled for
11-. Week Is a seminar on " Hazardous
Waste Management anJI Disposal " oo Frlday, Feb. 23. It will bring together
sxper181n current legislati on, historians
of the Lo..., Canal , and those familiar
with stal e efforts to desl with h~ous
wastes and disposal facilit ies In Europe
and Michigan In an attempt to come up
with future solutions. (See seperate
story for a rundown on thl s Conference.)

=Related

to

end Energy A this Issue, Lee has

~.~:~l~~'::. ~~~~n"ri,"enr.:::s

~~oJ'~.:l~":'he~~t~' of Western
Thlo l'liSOUroa C8nler will hold
materials nslated to environmental
problems and energy-related subjects,
such u nseearch proposals, dncrlptions of education activities, blblloref.~.=..:~ proceedings Of the
The main part of the Initial collactlon
wtll be the filet from tr. Environmental
C'-ri ng Houee Organlzatlon, directed
by Ma-la Hart . Theto8 tllaa, according to
James Webster, dlractor of the SEL, ant
ntede up In lll'ge part of newspaper
clippings about local environmental
•- Since rllll'll of the cuFIWII

=. ':t:n.:''Mi":.ct.:".l'::
.. ,.tronn.~tat concaroa. lllte Love

~snSt~~ o~~h:~~~f~r~o~":'ih!at'!m't'=

l.':sie';"~jfb~~~~n ~~~~~~~·gd~r:~~ ~

public fOrums for March which· will
provi de an Intensive· look at the Love
Canal disaster.
Chairing forums for these free-to-thepublic sessions on March 21 , 22, 28 and
29 are Milbrath , Charles Ebert from
Geography, Adeline Levine of SOCial
Sclerrces and Peter Gold of Rachel

Car~~~~"fl.':it FEAS has joined th is
0
f~ ~a~~~~~,n~A~Yn~ri~~'\Z~~~-":::'~n~~

hopes the steering committee will
con!lnue Its main functk&gt;J) In 19!1 ntlfy~
lng, U/ B people to. wgrk Ol\ specific
problema bro uwnt toJnu\d i n promotin·g
general educatJ.OIJ prp,grams, _
Servir\g. wHii Lee on that commltt!'9
are Donald Brutvan, .who .. act~ as
1

~~~~".:r! ~~~~ ~!~'t'~n° o~e00(:!
School; Milbrath; Daniel Muriii:J, of

~:,~c~~~~,~~~~i:,~~ ~eR~~.,:C~

Stanley Bruckensteln of Chemistry;
Blake Reeves of Physiology; Joseph
Alutto of Management and Ralph
Rumei of Ci vil Engln~ng .

Health fair

now at mall
Visitors to ESstern Hills Mall are_

~~lnJiu:::::.01t~/ns~~hn:.';'~~ ·

Fair, running now through Saturday
under CO'-IIponsorshlp of t1le Mall and
•
CollegeH .
Steve Sh..,lro, Collage H junior and
student dlnactor of the fair, says 35
agencies and buslneesta ere sponsorIng .a boclhe In the mall's 110,000
square feet of promenade sl*'&amp;.
S......al exhibits provide acreenlng for
cer1aln medical problems, others· ere·

~~a:,:~=~~~~c::=

and will lncfude clemonatratlone In
tennis and welghtllfllng .
Fair boclha ant open from 10 e.m. to
9p.m.
•
Shapiro says the fair helpe Collllge H
' fulfill Its commitment to ccmmunlty service.
•
"Acquainting peo~ with waya they

:;:,·~~·at!.,~' var~~

=

•.=r;g

servloae Is an excellent and worthwhile
way to achieve lhls~l ," he believes.

~
notes that
proxlmetaly .a
members of Cot lege hi..., cocperated
with Eastern Hills . staff, to whcim he
credits a great deal of the Fair's
development. College H has a bocth
from which students will Interview Fair
visitors to help them plan slmllar
prolecte In I he future.
Flobert · Merkle, lhll mall' a dllstant
manager, ..,., that • quarter of a
million llhoppen ere expected during

t~to~,t;':''~!'fn~~-

'•
ar-tar, In - • of vlaltors, lh...__,MV
Oilier mall In ~ York Sit!" or
Northern ranneyiYinla, he said .

�PSS trying·~
to interest
new
members
Professional Staff Senators are In the

wo new Ctedit.:free c;o dlnators
tress worki~g with the departments
8

i~1:J.'~ ~~~~o= t~'::.

wlnt• :f.tch accentuated ~
's jltla'l, the U/B Office of Credlt1~.;:::; =:;~ed the start of
This
most Credit-Free offerings
In the WMk of February 25, safely
ond the wuther danger period
lch " - people home-or so the
11ope Is. The mejQdty of classes are six
to ten WMka ~· meaning they still
:'~i~~~C:;,'!;~:rd:.""n students
The curNnt schedule offers -a

process of conducting a telephone
campaign aimed at genenotlng Interest
In Senate activities among the group's
280 new members.

~ of '-f~ ~"o~Y:~'grr~'=h:~

v-.

Include the employ- o

membership. The vote au.cceoofully.

;W~nt~ed~~=-~ u~eno-d'J::!,~

chlsed groups, who prevlou,ly had no

f~,~~a~~?~,~~~ t:;;,ou8~,=~ryto;l~

~~~u::r at~=sg':d 1::1¢~\~nho~!

decisions.
·
The PSS also plans to schedule gueat
speakers at Its next severo! meetings to
bOlster attendance by new members as
well as to. better Inform the general
membership on the relationship of U/B
to SUNY, other SUNY units and to the
State structure In general.
• Dr. James Perdue, SUNY's vice

to-&lt;!o-11 set!Sions. But It also mar!&lt;s the
llart of a cll8naed way of looking at
I!Ot-for-&lt;:nldlt offerings.
There's a new Uni~lty deen for
continuing education who has sald he'd
IM&lt;e to see his entire division more
aligned with traditional academic
departments.

Two new coordinators
Within the credit-free area, director
Rich Fleisher has 'acquired the
assistance of two new program
coordinators, (the lndtvrauats responsible for course development).
Sharon Proper and Mary Ellen
Shaughnessy are the "newcomers"
(actually, they've *'&gt; here since last
t.cay and October respectivelY', but the
new schedule reflects theft first joint
effon) .
Proper came to U/B from Buffalo _ that many educationists are convinced
aid those who have developed that
that "Credit Free Is the wave of the
State where ahe was also en
familiar "block" In grappling with a
future" In terms of student clientele.
admlnlstrstor In credit-free continuing
thesis, dissertation or other lengthy
Unless everyone begins to take new
reg~~~ s:.:,~ t~::l'-!"';:.Jr~~ directions, the "consequences can be
~~~~~~\pti.u[~~ti::0°~~ns~er~P,~:
serlou~t;" she, too, believes.
·
of methods "lor getting the work done."
State master's In Institutional research.
Ms. Shaughnessy has made It a top
· Shaughnessy Is, In her wonls, "a
priority to meet with academic
riiCycled teacher." She taught In private
departments to explo.re ·such ways and
out of the project.
high schoOls from 1962-70, and also did
meens of mutual assistance. A course
some administrative Won&lt;. From 1970on "Scholars Scan . the Sellers" being
72 , she was on , the Engllah faculty aJ .
offered this semester with English Is a
the Credit-Free
Trocalre. Willi a bechelor's from
goOd example. The Theatre DepartProgram has to ' be Increasingly
Medallle, a muter's from Niagara, and
mel\!, too, has embraced credit-free
a Ph .D. from UIB, _ she became
~:':a':'~f~\h,~r~::s~~n~a~i~"t
Instruction wlth an " Introduction to
Interested In adult education when
·Acting for AduHs" offered days at the
tbe State (real estate Is a good
teaching an ..-.tng compoeltlon class
"'ample-sales people and brOkers
for adult women. While working on her
~..:o~d T=~R:~:.h :.~~o':;
~e to take a certain number ol hoursPh.D. here, she tauglrt In MFC. Later,
In-specific areas related to real estate to
she was aasocl81ed with Shea's Buffalo
pt~,rrto;::ng:.,n dealing with the . k!I&lt;IP
up licensure). More Is coming end
In a public rel811ona-eommunlty devel:dep:nta, too. Two courses with
Credit-Free Programs has a role to play.
opment project funded !lY CETA .
Prof. John Lick of Psychotogy-"CopWe have to realize, though, Ms.
lng with Stress" and " Sexual Roles In a
Ptoper emphasizes, that In most casas
Who-. what
Changing Soclety" -are being offered
Credit-Free clientele are not those who
Proper Is harldllng courses falling
this spring. The latter · looks at the
have to have education. They wsnt It
and their desires have to be addressed.
sensuality movement of the 70s, the
"We have to leam to reach out to this
effects Qf the women's movement on
PSYchology. antiQUM, fumlture and
mal&amp;-fernale sexual Interaction, swing-. ' totally different audience, and we c1on't
design, and nature/science/technollng,_ homosexuality, bisexuality, end
. know yet precisely how to .do 11''-we
ogy.
meenlng the University and not j ust the
more.
~
Shaughneoey'o rMim extends to
tl"O of them .
anthropology, hlatory, sociology and
,related flefda, dance and movement,
Shaughnessy Is also puttlng together
A -th knell?
.
,
a day-lo11g April program on "Cereer
rMI
~~~~',~~~~~ ~~:r,e,;:~~~h~~n:
In that field), and mualc and theatre. • Alternatives for Educators," for bOth the
·unemployed end the "underemployed."
Part-time ooordlnatora handle other
Its purpose Is to share strategies for
offerings which have .been the occaN- people - l l y mean new
sions for sneers from some on cam~us?
ideas for an)' program, tha two women
non-ec.»mtc fields .
A cursory look at the apr1ng schedule
point out. Befcft tho aterl of this
Values clartfiC8llon, skills assesswould suggest not. You can still find
..,_ter, they _.•examtnlng- Is
menta, and resume end InterviewJechcourses on " How to MeeL People," "The
being done .now, end wh81 wa want to
ntques will be stressed. Co-sponsoring
Occult," and how to make "applllhead"
do 1n tha futuno, aurveyln11_ new
this ¥1111ture with Credit-Free will be
clolla, for lnat.nce.
directions that might be 18ken. • Tlley're
Adult · Advisement. University Place•probably men objeetl.. juat becauae
ment and c.- Guidance, end
we're now,"~opera.
Educational Studies.
people In transltioh. I know a woman
Proper Ia
In conferences
This Ia a project close to Shaughwhg, when she was In proceu of being
(a specfelty of
81 Buffalo St81e) and
nessy's ~ becauae oha ''had to learn
divorced, found that a folk-&lt;lancing
hopes to 8J11*1C1 auc11 activities 811J/B.
the hiiRI way.• A olmllar venture for
In wh81 wan? 1t11a June, for
~:: ;:"..'.\'O:~~ru:::~~g that helped har
currently-enrolled grad students was
the Arm.t'i c.mDua end tha
of
' held last fall on campus and Is now '
One person's fluff can be anothefs
Archltecblra 111411 l:nwlfonmantal Design
bel(lq evaluated.
• •
survival tool.
Will be '-1 to an a'chltecture
"It a Important to haveJhe skills IQ
For Information or a brochure on
find meanlngful employment ," ShaughCredit-Free offerings, cell 831--4301.
0
we'll mont of that aort of thing.
Cred1t-F- haa traditionally *'&gt;
Karen Blidy column last lall-a ·cotumn
Involved 111 an annual Tex lnatltuta end
brimming with the fruotrotlon end
has played a role In con,_,_
spon-.cl bJ campua departments,
t::
such as 1881 _ . . Summ.. fnatHute of
t8llchifll field. "You can, juat ott beck
Ftuld~lca .
and
cry
dlacrimlnatlon,
though,"
Ma. P1opat a po1811tlal, "too, for
Shaugh_,- polnta out. " You have to
dO aOinellllng abOut II."
Another aertea -lgnecl to provide
"U/1 ...._
program by
· lkllla -wllk:ll ~ Changing wor1d may
Credit_,_ DINalor f'l*l8r.
demand 18-'\.lilng the Peat: A &amp;umwel
WOIUIIOp, • 11e1na o1t..c1 on four
~at Tl111 F.,, Inc. Obwlouely,
..,. a..g~. this Ia _ . s to
·~ JIIIO!IIe," but fha •Y
tnrt.llon and thed1
building,

..

~!~~J:!,th'fh7~~~~~e~e!llr.J,~~~
Pro~:~!!o~e~~~~~at

=.

\~n.:~m~u~~~n

=

Ti~tu:;d '"=:!~~e h:~"RC:~

..,.,_

·

c.-·"-'-

.

r:lr~~~~,. ·~ea"~m:..~f.i,,~,!'ero

~~as:~~~~g or~~Yes~o::::/.~~~~9.

-e:~~:~~~~f,=:t7.::~~s:r.;

=:fie,

-=..ww..~~-=

=~":'r.:n

the U/B

i~~~:'Jo~~~~;:~g:n:,.Ar::c,t.t

:~~~~-::· =:-~~rb~J~~~ !
~"f:::f=,,:':'tm/!~~~of

~x:=o ~!d:,· :::

'H-"""'&amp;6e•

crt--

~- '*-" Ia offering

atlll

8ft0t111r lppnllioll to lllllllng It: thla time
tn

-

~

ol

..-lanllc

Ute.

OounMitna" MUion

A
will

•Peradotto

~n~~~~J~.~m.:Jcfr~~ram.f".:!.~

meeting February 20.
All professional staff represented by
the Senate are considered part of 118
general membership and are encouraged to attend Senate meetings. Only
elected Senators, howeVer, can vote.
Because of Inclusion of the three new
groups ot employees, the Senate has
changed Its constitution to provide for
five, Instead of four, representational
areas-two academic end three service.
A member's off Illation wltlt one of the
five areas Is baaed on l?.l:l,.tunctlon.
Other PSS changes Inc~~ a, two

~~.,:,n;r:: h/~. ~~i!fe ~.:w~~

Senators to constituents frpin 1 to 15,
e
to 1to20.
Elections for new Senaton. will take

pl~~\~~~~ilff Wilson Is confident

that the integratiQn of new employee
groups In the Senate will Improve bOth
the quality and amou~t of lnP"t thliPSS
fi~~~~"er~~mlnlstrallon ~ consultaOver the past few years the Senate
has •grown In strength" end has had
input into en Increasing number of
policy' decisions, aaaerted Wfloon. It
has become a voice at the Uni..alty
which Is "clear and distinct ·rrom that of
the faculty, " he added.
Presently, PSS members are represented on the General EduC8llon
Committee, the Academic cabinet, end
the Affirmative Action, Calendar end
Reglstllltlon committees.
Jn addition to Ito committee work, the.
PSS, In cooperotlon with tha President's office, Is In the midst of
organizing ·tntemehlpoln selected areas
around the Unlvlnlty for tha professional staff. The Internships . . meant
to be a lewnlng expertenoa for
partlclpaJitS that will broaden their
admlnlotrotlve and promotional poten·uaJ·
•
To date, Wilson said 23 profeialonal
staff members· have expressed Interest
In the Internship program. lnta"nahlpo
hlive arranged so tar In the Institutional Studies Office and In the
office of the Executive VIce Pnleldant.

Run for Sobriety
set for Sunday
The Buffalo Pllflharmonlc Aihletlc
Club Ia co-sponsoring a 4-mlle run at
the Amherst CemP'!I Sunday In
conJunction with the Weatern New York
Task Force on Women and Alcohol.

oa~~~·=~A~~=-·.;;

declaration of Governor carey. Tho-

l:"s:~~=tt:::.c:r.c,~~ e~

and Alcohol WeeiK." Which atartad last
Sunday.
Activities have Included: a ptWI
conlotene:e, radio end leleololon br0116C881a, a earteo of newspaper 8111clee, a. ·,
theetre production and receiiCion, and
the run.
The "Rom for Sobrlet(.' will atart 81
,_., at tha Bubble; nog atratlon begins
tha'a at 10:30 e.m. T118re Ia a 14 entry
toe. The 4-mlle oouree Ia ant !rely on tlla

::".f:t='•':C:;cl::
Jl'l::
........ alter the,_, Trvphlea will be

~ to the lht 3 tlnl"*- In -="
ol 8 ClllegQrtN.
. Tho- Ia ooen to all run-..
For Information oall ~ or
131-21113.

�1 i

· I

~,.;...

DOCUME

___

_.... __

Panel offers 15 reco~mendations re: ~ Purchasing
, ;

laaued to the time gOOds are.dellvered;
and (3) delay of ~Ill to~.

8•• ~:l'ct.":"":puterlze for
through
Stale
contracts.
many
u-s
are eware
that theHoweYe&lt;,
problem
1
Ia lmpueed by Albany. They urged; Stale· ordera as -soon aa poasi/Jie In
Committee to removal of the
orrJer to reduoe error and to lr.ck
mandai
restrictions
p(Jrchalll' mqu/alrlona and putehaae
c. ~ ,_,_;. a.c- '
ordera mOM effectively. 7he Committee
claulng·Its Ueeq • The CQmmll ae
alao recom
. thai the Reseerch
ft'"''-'lc t complilnta by
Fo
. computer be teprOJ*"&lt; of
••
med. Tbls
allow l'un:haelng
orientation In the Punchaslng ..
-~
. ,__,..and.,...~" Related UnJhl to eliminate a
Therefore, Purchasing should look Into
alg~lfk:ant part of manuai ·WOI1&lt; and to
the poaslbiHfY of reorganization to
develop new Information, auch as
(ln&gt;Yide better a«YY~. · The b88Y)I
ptedlctlng funds -'!able In lndlvldulif
. gtanta r i contnocta .
worklolld for Purchasing under the

11

IJ. Poor ORJitr of ~ • The
quality of many IIII'Ch- under Slate
conllac1a Is often poor. Exampiea
Include pens, typewrfteq (because of
the dlfhnnces lit repair IM&lt;Vk:e), tape
recorders, elaQronlc ~t., lmal " - • end auch offlca supplies as
typewriter ribbons, co'py mechlne

~ ~~.,b;ut 3,.

...__,._

~~· ~

....., liMI lb U... . One of the
peratatent complaints of u.-s Ia that
Purchasing Is not ~-oriented. u-s
feel that Purchasing frequently does not
&amp;~pp&lt;eCiate !belt problems. Purc118aJo.g,
on the other hand, compllllna abotlf trw
users' lack of 8ppt8Ciatlon ol problems .
resulting from Al'*'y constralnts Cl."
product$ and procedures (e.g., If US81ll
make a commftmant to purchase a non'
contrw:ted Item which' Is under s contract, Purchasing has to spend 811
l~lnate amount ot time to obtain
Alblfny 8pproval). Purchasing also felt
there was Hltle _...,lalion for the
additional WOt1&lt; Involved lrr handling
811141f118DCY orders as well as the large
number of contact peraons Purchasing
has to .......,, etc. All of these problems
reduce the ability of Purchasing to gl¥8
more personal attBntlon to lndMdual

~-;~Ja.-u.

PtoiJ/ema • Other
problems Identified Include an Inordinate delay Involved In purchasing
computeq, exoessl¥8 use oJ emergency
~and the lack of use of standing
orders, breakdowns In placing and
flnlnp orders during the lapse between

~ =~ion.:~n:r~!.tr::'

r:: sr:

final- dell..y spectflcalions to be
placed on oroers, Improper substitutions tor goods ordered, and delay
C8UII8d by the Related Units (e:-g.,
Mlmal Unit, Co~tract AdmlnlatraJion,
etc.)

12fli"

Ill. Anel,..la of the Problema
_,~;l
A. 1 - - . . Dela,. • Many .,_,.
blame Purchasing for delays. ~Pur.­
chaslhg Is ~- at limes responslbl

~~=· t~ '~inft.:'~h:,:to

m
orders are specified by u.-s
• emergency oroers" Interferes wlffi
Purcllaalng'e ability to handle normal
expeditiously. Furt"!:~
more, mall delays and delays ur
Flelllled Unlta et oompllcale the
problem. In ...,. - · · Punchaslng ~.
cut
the numt.r of clays ueed for laaulnlt
""'- 11om 12. 7.. dliya In 1171
!

'*""'-orders

to.,..

clays in 1178forone..._or~. Furt~

...

Nducttona

IN!y

be mote difficult;
ueeq would lllca tq

11t11oug11 .--u...-vto-day.
Aa lor dMy

In the delivery of

goodf

~=~~-ro
~~lng'l llllblllty to !Tack ordenl

;n.;u.,

have laft Purchulng. (At
~. iha traaldng - h a s to be
Ollf*l- -uelly. Tllia oonau,_
too mua11 t1ma lor Pun:llulng to be ab!11
to !Tack on1e1a on a raeu• bMia.)
At ' - ! three prob!MM oontrlbuta. to
the delay In_... ,_.,lng payment.
0~

,-.,.haveto
~
a1na New Vorl&lt; State
-..rei vouct.a. Vendons, particularly fofafgn
ama11 fltma, sometimes
fall to 11gn the vouct.a, thus causing

and

:=: ~".o=: ~s·~~

WOt1&lt; for PurchMing and cauaM the
to loae oaah cllecounta w'*&gt;
1 ' - ara available. Second, AlbMy at
sw-t pays~~ the billa for both State
lllld RaMWch ord8Q dlrectlf
llltw U/8 Mllda In an the au
IT!g
docUIIIellla. The mln/mlilrl tln1e.
1a1cea to pay a biU Ia llbollt1dlC 'lllllllbi.
Thlnl,
CJCCUt' "for
..-toua ,_.,. 81 the u-s· 1-r and
• """"-ing .

to=

clela,.. _...,..

=
.................
•. "'"' Otlalftr

CurNnti~L . Al!&gt;env

ucta 11om

to

of , . . , _ •
UIB (and
buy

raqu._

_..IIIIi

·Btaie

llgeiiCiae)

Slate oonlracta.

_ . . _.,..,.... dial lltat•

poorca::r.
dllllollal.....--.
.........
-ara
.._ .....

---~-of
1'llav
allo ~- thai the
a
.f
- tD I .,_ eualt ooeta •
In~ •••,

tllraft IIIIo icoouni.

_ . , faallalt,• II wad often br _..
.. ....... tM IIDiiDr of ~

wll~

81

~~t =-'~g're~t!'"OC:m martt,::

u~~::,:~~~~~-:_'"'1:

PWC~Jases under $25. The w.l9e yee of
Petty Cash Procedures will sa¥8
procasalng costs for both Purchasing
and u.-s. It also will free Purchasing to
provide batter a«YYca to u.-s el. .
where. (Pelty 1cash procedure • Is

beJ laves

that It Ia lnefflclent for many
reaewchers to become dlreclly Involved
In Pun:haalng alnca It Is unllkjlty that
any u - who spends perhaps 5% of
his/her time (abouttwo -'&lt;a full-time
a year) on purchasing activities wlll be

'pro,J.Ic~U.
ProbMmr · Such
problems as Improper substitution of

products, the need for final deOvery
speclflclstlons, etc., clearly require
Improvement In Purchasing. Howeoer,
many problems identified by users (I.e.,
PrOblema with computer purchases,
!lirimal purchases, i::ontract admlnlstra'tiQn, etc.) are In a narrow senae not
.,..thln the jurisdiction of the Purcheslng Department. Ne¥8rthelees, lhese
problems have a negati¥8 Impact on the
efficiency and effectiVeness of UIB's
Purchasing Program. These prOblems
must therefore be resolved.

.
IV. O U j Glwn the precailing analysis, the
Committee decided to Improve the
Purchasing Program by looking for new
procedures and new organizational •
configurations. The new llPilfoacbeS
were designed primarily with these ·
Objectl¥8s ln mind:
•
A. To reduce the worl&lt;loed Qf

~=~"Jin~~":'t.:l~~~=·lts

B. To provide better communlcatlon
= n Albany, Related Units. users,
'C. T6c~~ the frustration of all
participants in the purchasing program:
faculty and staff at U/ 8 and staff at
Albany.
·
D. To enable Purchasing to negotiate
with users, Related Units In U/B, and
Albany-t&gt;n current Qperatlng Pf!&gt;Cedur&lt;~s
and syatema that Impede the etfectiY8nasa ..and effjci0111cy of the local
rch I g program
puE. fan have Purd...tng take . the
leadership rOle In coQIInuoualy d&amp;¥81·
oplag new proceclurea
ayatema to
pe used by either US81ll, Related Units,
or Purchasing Heel lin order to malntaln
an efficient and effective purchasing

and

~~ ~~~;, :,~4:"~~o:ch:~ .

achl- thlagoaJ.
V. ~
The. Committee · recornmanda the
foiAio.~ng_: .• ~~-~ C.f"'IHWIIo•:

... Oovenl-........ ,.

1. !7Jet a PUfChulnfl Polley Board be
8J»&gt;Onr.d lly the VIC. l'tealdent for;
Finane. and Management from • list of

=~r:• =

b~~:thre~:
~I be responsible

.edT
chasing, the Board

~~8~1 :."-.::;'=~· P~~

deacrlptlon of the Soard Is enclosed as
Appandlx a.
lalncloodecl

(That..,......"'

' - - ED.) •

2. Thai a satellite Purchasing office
be utabllaiNid at Main St,.. to • , . . . . - . and ecademlo ~ment8
at that location. Additionally. PuraJ.as-·
lng should ass/fill e coordinator lbf
~a/or group of uaeq.. Tllll will
IngPurchasing
a from
thoroogn
..--ln
of problems
the
.-'s point of view. The coordinator
will be responsible for solving major
1
pu3rch
. ~. ,"~.."~:-m-/cJ~,!==~j,

~::.~on,..:;J:,. ":J'ft:/.:n
'"

__,.

u-.-'

g,.,,.,

•

and medium
Thla will raduCe the
- . l t y of ~ who cannot

r:'C:~=::=::~=:

ecademic&gt; ~Ia . . ~
within their sw-tt I:JoodOelll to provide
lhll
the c~epWtment "--d
_ , . . , illllltutlng • dnet~tor-aw
NOOUp
1111 !IIIII)"
COliC
,
. . , _~
Ia _ ,to_
_ , lly
(If

...wee,

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

,

~tl'~~~~~~:~Foundallon

and the Stale of New York allow
PurchHing to use Cfleck·Attached
Procedure. (lhls Item needs the
approval .ol Albany. Described In
Appendix D.) Use of thla Pt0Ced!U8 will
reduce the time needed to pay wndors
and lime needed to type purchase
orders, thus freeing Purchasing to
provide better service el&amp;ewheno. •
4. That Purchasing work immedlalely
on combining the purchase requ/Bitlon
with the purchase order so · that the
Purcha$/ng staff can provide better
service elsewhere.

uss.:1":,' :;,~rc;'a;;~w~'! :,'~,':;~;;

order$ and service contracts and
decrN&amp;e the use of etnfllriiiiCY ordeni
Thla will reduce the workload. for both
Purchasing and users.
·
6. That Purchasing develop work·
shops, lntemsh/ps, llckler systems,
and a purchasing flU/de or loose lfle_l
pu('Chaslng manual for usenr and their
coordinators. .

us~·l;:,r.::r~J :;1!~c~U::;:;~Yt,k~

O~tlon" Is
the best pattern. This a lows U1 does
(The SCH:alled · Munlclral

~~;'~':::: ~n~'f.Y) towl't~rc~:

option, Purchasing can more effectl¥8ly
meet the requirements of u-s.
6 . Thai Albany allow U/B to make
payments locally up_ to a certain amount
(perMpa S2,01JQ). { Currently, except for
.petty cash, Albany paya all billa.) This
will raduCe the time needed to pay
,_,do,., eliminate the New Vorl&lt;
Standard Voucher requlniiii8Rt, aava
expen- In tranam_lttlng c:loCuiQents
betwe8n Albllny and Bufflilo, and allow
u-a to _ , oaa11 discounts when
aval!able. Of course, eddltlonal clerical
supPOrt lor this UniY81'111ty Ia - . . y

1 ~~r~~~~lsJ~,~r,"'J~o_:~,;,
r;=S,:;ry,.,~::.,

==to'::.

and PfCJC«/utes on Purcltaalng and lt8
users. The ao.nt will . . _ . to the
principle that any rules
promulgated on
by
the Retmad Unite et uta not be

and.:Jt."/:.lons
....a-

onerous and~- 111trr ~-

between a Related Unit and

the 8oenl

:r,.ua~~~rc::n:':;:.
1-J ~

· Related Unit that Ia di-'lna the
Board's lecommendetlon. II a ··u•
factory solution cannot ~~
~,.:.':.,.~:'.::.-~..
referred to the President of the
Unl-alty lora final decision.
10. That the purchasing PfCJC«&lt;ure lor .
computers be aramlned thoroughly by
either the PurchaslnQ Polley BOard or

l'nb:

f:"!, ob,"';.:,:{::l~:.dJ.'fto~6:~;

should be asked to allow Cai&gt;llal
ConatructkJn Funds lo be used for
computer Purch...s alnoa comput.,._,
',l'=t':c,and~~ne:1 ~
1
edueatlonallnatltutlon .
11 . That Purcflaalng allould ffl'llew
and t/Qhlen Ita Internal Plt&gt;qlaall!g
PfCJC«/uru (e.g., logging, lderitlfylng
wndora, product lubaUtutlon Prc&gt;-

::!:"

~Th:,c-~,;-.,

the

new _.llnQ

PfOC«/UfM . . In effect, PutehaalnQ

-'lould tel/feW /Ia ·man- dep/oy-

lrtcludf"l, ,.

,.,f ·~.
poaalble
: , : ; ; . ,.,:'~::"':-!
hl..,_-lavel
...._ Tha , _ , tor thla
.. -

'r:!

-~·-11,011.1

�n

Schwartz aclts raising
fees, but not here
Student Association President Karl
Schwartz ·support$ a recommendation
of the Student Association of State
Unlyecf!ll (SASU) that would Increase

~'::'tts

~~~ ~;"~"~!~~~:~~

he'!"&lt;!~~ ,1\111 ~I lor a referendum to
h\ke tile lees afO/B.

Ch~~~~k ~~~~y :..~~!"":~~Pci

likely authQrlze a~wo-~ change In the
ceiling to $100, provJded the Increase
was approved In campus student
referendums.
Accord ing to Schwartz, the laat
ceiOng Increase occumsd Jn 1968, and
since !lien lnOatlon has eroded student
activity m90ies, making an Increase In
(ees nece""'!!Y on some campuses.
~wartz, who refers to the ~ees as a
' " ta•;'; ..JI!Irled on . etuderlts - lor _"noq;.
acaOBiri!l&lt;-serivcea, contended a hi kelp
fees h'ere is .unnecosary since U/B.
-" underutllizes" Its resources. He
expllilned that ari Increase would be In
ord~r If the llnlvet8Jty had a good
number of student organizations with
healthy membershiP'!-' which ·provide
services to studel).ls "at the grass roots

level." But, he said, It doesn't. Also, a

l~~~~u,';:~e ~ude~m~~~ad~

Schwartz, and It would be Inequitable to
levy an Increase O"-,those students who
traditionally do not use the servtcea.
Although SASU supports a ceiling

~~~~~tt:St=se~~~~t:.f.":~':'~

says he sees no Irony In the situation
since the -tuition hike Is a "politically
motivated" maneuver end attects all
SUNY units, while the fee ·boost Is

~~~~~:~ s~~~~ re'r~:::?.
lndlvl~uel

f':

SUNY campuses.
Currently, Schwartzapeculatacl, about
50 per cent of SUNY aclmlntatratcn
favor an Increase In the fee- ceiii!IQ.
Those who oppose any' c~ .do O!'\
like the Idea of atudente . blilng l!J
control of that much money, · he
suggested.
Although Schwartz said he will not
call a student referendum on the matter
while he remains · In· office; his
successor, who will be electe&lt;j this
spring, could opt for a referendum .

•Purchasing

(from_, o.

eel. 4)

recommendation Is that ·the new system
will probably demand more staff with
higher profess~onal skills and less staff
vilth clerical skills.
Vl. Ptlorlty Rsnk1rtg in Implementation
The 'Committee assigns top P.rlorlty
0

lf~~ cb::!~~e ~lhrn:u~c~~\~~~{~
role

ln. the. Improvement

~gram

~:~~~~g bi~':n~~~\\~5. ~~st~

-

7, and 8 under Operational Proceduresneed Albany's approval. Allowing U/B
to use these new procedure_s will likely
lead 10 a significant Improvement In the
local ~Pu&lt;ehaslng Program. The Com·
mnl&lt;!ll'lirges, thereto,.;, that AlbanY' be'
asked for its approval as soon as the
Purchasing Polley Board and the
~ l dent deem appropriate.
•1Jhe remainder of the racommenqa·
ns can be Implemented locally. The

i

~~.';1~ ~~~:; ~=~f~ed ~~~~,!.~~
Implement these recommendations

9fJ some variations thereof as soon as
IPI?SSJble.

•

.

.

~·A f,insl Observation

enThe . Committee believes that the

~mljlended - operalional procedures

flld

11. Role offhe Soard:
The principal role of the ~ -Is to
establish qultlellnes to helll~
-•l"luiil!~lng
assume tts~,.prlnclpal . I
loo of
1!ff1Cient
maintaining 'w effective
purchasing program at U/B: Spel:iflcally, the Board Is at the ·minimum
rQsponslble forJhe followin't\\"~
a .r To. Rrovroe commvnlcation . 00..
tween Purchasing, the Related Us&gt;lts at

no""'

U/:.

Bf'~ ~:o~l~~~s~~.~e~int of view
on new procedures and processes
~'rBJ~~n~~~e~~':',~~rchaslng or units
c. To collect, from time to lime, from
users, the Related Units, and the
Purchasing Department, their comments _on the state of the purchasing
program, to examine these comments
thoroughly, and to devise possible
changes ' for Improvements, and to
monitor the Implementation of · su g·
gested changes.
'

new organizational co~flguratlons
0
"'" Improve the effectiveness and
momote the conllnous monltorlng and
that ,..J mpede the effectiveness of
i_ljlprovement ,of o.ur purchasing proPurchasing .
Q_ram. However, the Committee cannot
emphasize too strong\)' that In the final
os:tsT~~e:fej.~:'ts~~~ ~~}'t-~~
analysis, the effectiveness and effiprocedures that Impede the effective-Ciepcy of a purchasing program
ness of Purchealng.
clapenlls on the mutuv sup!)Orllveness
of the st11ff of Ahe Purchasing -_ Ul. ApPOI-t , _ _ ,
Department, the staff of Related Units
Appoint-. to. the BpMI we to be
In Buffalo and Albany, and the users of
macla by the V~ Preekleilt for Finance
\118 serviCes. Only If all ~les are
and ~t from !Mia submlttacl
di!leanllllld to' worll IQllethW , Y'\11 the
by the epproprllle ~· ...
Unlve~lty echla.e Yhe alin of' tiaVIng an
bbdtee. ~~IJ:atl--ltute
afflclenr and 'ff~lve. purchasing
the ~lltl.. bodjel for ..:It of lhe
five appointed fllllllll*1l of the ._., ts
pr~~- the CommiU.S.
to
to be determined by the OffiCe iii the
thank the users who took tlme from
President.
•
their busy achedules to respond to the
IV. r .... otOtlloe:
COinmlttee's questionnaires. The ComThe
~ Ia 1o be eelectacl by
mittee also wfahee lo thank the staff of
the Vloe flnlaldenl for Fln811C8 ana
the Purchealng Depaltment who contriMaJ1110811*t\ from the th1'1111 fiiCUIIy
buted significantly to the ~opment
lllMibera ..cl fltnrt.l, with the Initial
of tbe new liP~ racom"**((ed
chair..- eervtng fora two-~ term .
by the Committee .•••
EliCh~ t. t o - for two years
wfth atagg41rec1 tanM. Reappointment
EDITOirl NOTE: . _ . . of their
to the BoWd Ia permitted.
~. . . . of ........ ~~- to IIIIa
The AaM1ant VICe PrMident wfll
on tile a-11 during lila/her
tenure.
·

Alg~n~ ~~~r=~nt:degc~:.~\';.f~~

w-

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

~==:;:;!-:: .. v: A.U,., ....,,
.I
The ...,....,"" Polley ao.d lhall
~·.~·!'~ ....,_.
• report annllllly eum-tzlng

the ' . . . . . _ railed ..cl ~
problema eolved d..-tng · the ,._"
Important ~ - lo be eolvad In
future ~ aleo ahould be ldlntlfled.
One copJ of the report liMit be - t to
the Offloe of Yloe f'Naldlnt lor 1'"-'cce

-=··'·

end
Anollltr
copJ llllllt
be to
unpwa~~y
Coanlltle
011
eper.lloMI PniCIMa 11(1111 . . . .

..

~~Tile~~

=~===
:=.ra~
.... ..,

�1l

.·

Fobruory15, 1t71

-- .......

Alwayo colorful, -~ys -lnlnil,
Chine Night hM become .., -my.
..,.-.lted annu81 ...ent. IAet Seturdr(o
In the ·Come!! f-ured

.........

-__,

danalng and aa ·camChi- Community gathered to bnte thalf heritage.

•

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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STATE UNIVERSiTY

FEB8, 1979
VQL.10 e N0._18

AT BUFFALO

Newdea.n ·
Anderson of Natural Sciences~ Math
likes cold regions, studies the pianets,
and sees opportunity in_.adyersity
By Joyce Buehnowskl
Aepor18rSialf

D~':yn~nXn~~s~nt~~ of~~J.foefs R:'~

weather. Snow and cold are old
comrades of the new dean of Natural
Sciences and Mathematics, who has
spent many a cold day and night In the
antarctic-voluntarily.
Dr. Andenwn Is no masochist; the
travel carne with the job. Prtor to his
arrival In Buffalo, the distinguished
· scholar was chief llclentist In the
Division of Polar Programs for the
National Science Foundation, where he
developed and coordinated multl-

~~r~:gl~~.'~.sl~t~~c~~of,:,~~s~or

..

the

Pu~~:·~~~ yt~~~~~~~pea::? ~~

years as chief of the Earth Sciences
Branch and superior reseaicb physical

Formula by whicfi D6B mad~ cuts
remains a mystery, I&lt;etter reports
He's not 'dumb'
President Ketter told ' the Faculty
Ketter took exception to a statement
Senate Tuesday the! part of the
of a DOB representative (quoted In a
reductJons levied on the core campus
local newspaper) who called him
by the D1Ylal011 of lhe Budget result
"dumb" for ~arguing against a tuition
from wiJat OOB said Is a "alsproPortlon- ate -num!Mr .of facully In !.he higbe[ •
ranks and at h.lgher salatles within the
mos.t from a tuition Increase since
ranks" compared to "peer Institutions."
- funds would be used for bonding to
To date, the Unl-..lty does not know
complete construction. The OOB Is nt~t
the Institutions against which It was
being honest with the public when it
judged, but Ketter said that Information
Indicates that a short~ of funds exists

~;::~~~i~~~-

~7~J;.b~~~!~~~r:.msu~~uYcT:.'~~~~:~

11

~~~"':~~~~&amp;!:. ~ec :Pd':"·D~:' .:S":

by DOB In the coming month.
sequestered about $130 million ln
Ketter told Senators that DOB was ·
tuition money earmarked for bonding
specific on how It wanted the budget
and used It for "operating purposes."
reduced: 24 full-time ·day program
Instead of using tuition for bonding
and putting the excess In the State
faculty poeltions must go, along with
12 support positions fof\ a total
~~~'b'Msn~~s ~~~~stf:Se ~~~':.
$338,800. He Indicated those line~
likely to be alfected by the cuts woulo
"without regard for capital construc"not be those at the Instructor or
tion," then adds more onto the cost of
assistant professor rank," but rather
tuition to oo- new construction .
tliosa .budgeted at around $20,000.
Ketter announced tnat the University
Committee to Study _Operational ProThe President said he didn't know If
cesses
has completed Its report on
the cut Ia a "one shot daal" or If It will
Purchasing operations and will now
happen yearly until DOB feels U/B Is
undertake a review of Admissions.
"getting Ita housa In order In respect to
. According to Ketler, the purpose of
What IIIey feel Ia order."
the committee, chained by Professor
~Ia of the budget -.given In
Frank Jen of the School of Manag&amp;last WMI&lt;'a Reporlflr.

Management
Ahitto has 'different view' of
tight resources, says others have
funds his sch~ol could use bett~r
with that; Ito goal hu to continue to be
F""" C:WO.by H8ll ths Unl-.lty
to Improve quality.
loolcadttf....t.
The problem Is wort&lt;load, not the tack
lllraUnpromleM
of one. Here, In the School of
Management got Into a bind
M~t. the.- Is not that they
bagll\fllng abollt alx y. . . ago when It
are gr..dlly out to oommande« the
decldlld to expend on tha baale of
- o f the rest of the Unl-.lly,
"prom!-" of additional reeouroea
but rather thai other area haVe
from the um-.lty. TheN promleM
,_,,.,.. which Management could
_.not "fQrthcollllng," Alutto NOlita.
uN to better eHect.
Managemenl ~ to run lnlll trouble
" Management f - . a V«Y diH...,t
With 8ccnedllatlon.
prc&gt;alluatlon," says Dean Josaph Alu .
grwn wu especially allort
the
-we .. plagued by hlgb atudent _ View of IICCIW!IIIora. "We had to Inbring
.-.-cl, a demand which the Unl-.lty
the School Into -bal-." the DMil
cannot meet In terms of additional
sa~ faculty adopted a tour to
atratagy tO&lt; running tha Schoctl with
In tact, naporta the - · Manag&amp;meni
haB tlad to ned~ cwarall
only minimal , , _ In - ·
ThoN In~ . . .-martred lor
eNOilment In ,_,t ~ lh o,;.,.~to
remedYing dllflcllnclee.
.
·-ure a high quality aduc&amp;llOOal
tn fm the Scbool'a student to
exper~enca . "
faculty .-lo nad muiiYOOmad to »-1,
ltllii!OIIal and local projectiona are
tar hlaher than eocnclltaiiOn etanclatda
thalanrotlnwrt ~-will get wone
permlf. By reducing MVO!Ir-a In b
In the neat M*al ,-.. Yet, IIOIN
Alutto. hla achoal can'l be concarned

The-=

,_,,.,.._ .

''-reer

...,

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

mer.t , Is to help make bureaucratic
processes hate " more responsive to the
needs of the University."

On~~~~-n::~~r being asked
1
~.J~~f ,.,:._"e~ B~~n~~t~d

Senators that. because of the "ambiguity'' of the State's Open Meeting
Law, Senate Chairman Newton G.,._was " not guilty of abuse of pubjlc trust"
when he refused, last - · to let a
member of The SpeciTum ataff oil In on
an Executive Committee meeting.
;
Newhouse edded-ttuit becauie of the
nebulous character of the statute, It Is
"plausible to argue both ways.• But he
said If he were In Garver's shoes, he
would have "opened the doors" because
there's "nothing to lose."
Newhousa Informed the Senate that
an advisory opinion on the metier could
be secured by wrttlng the Committee on
Public Access of Records.
During a discussion on a report from
the Ad Hoc Committee on Presidential
Evaluation Procedures, -saveral Senators voiced concem·o - the wonllag,
form and methdd of analysis of an
attitude survey (presented In )he report)
deslgnect to give Garver • ' guide" to

·.s..·s.ne...· ~z.coL1

sclentisi for the U.S. Army Cold
~,~~~~hand EnQl-'ng Lab
· His personal . - c h lntenaata
Include the physlca and chemlalry of
water on Mara and the satellites of

Ju~:~~~n=· has
out of
acedemla, full-lime, tor
years,
pursuing (and . accomptlahlng) his
professfonal goals, the q.-tlon artt"Af? why.he wanted beck, and beck at ·

!:~'is

The dean

aug~ests

118\181"al reasons.

:~d~~c~~~P&amp;u, 1t!'~~!r~e~r~d~

f~'v.'~r.:ens~s~~~t~~~~~0n~~f ~~
scholars.

Academia haa changed

.

.•

'

ln~:~t'lon~'gt"?Sg~':'u:~y~~ a:''!::

edjunct professor, visiting lecturer or

.

r.,u;:.=r&amp;"l:·g~~~.::OI~~~~

a way which "appeals" to hlm."From the outside looking In, I think I
can opportunities that
ro;'~'1'c:~~~~!":re~..,:.~~~lty I fe
But whyU/B?
. Anderson explains that of all the
universities he has had profesalonal
contact with, U/B Is the one he tall Ia

perhWl:

==~·!'f~~=h:=
other conalderallona. He ul..ii tha Great

Lakes region, the cultural reeouroes of
the area, and what lie _ . .... u a
"hlah'Quellty'Of lila" In Buffalo. ~
A:t the rial&lt; of .,undlng too upbMI,
Andanlon also reports thai from whal
ne reeds In CMIPU8 papare and " ' on the at,_..," U/B Ia 1101 -.HIIct-"'
with the - ''dill- ol C)lftiOfMI MCI
dlslllualonmenf" he 11M Wll.-.d •
other lnatltutiOna ~tile -.atry8lfhough he has nolloed the facUitJ'
here _ , "uniformly discouraged Of
possibly juot tined.".

Haelthy .-Ilona
.Andaraon says moat of the crttlclsms
he nseda about or '-8, ~ like the
"h•llhy reectlona" of atudenta and
faculty, and contain a "oonalructlw
element" which he llkea- This Ia not the
casa at other unl..,.lty cent. ., he
tnalatil.
Even the 11nanclal tunnotl U/B IInde
ltNif In doaa not _ . . ~1'81'Npe It's bacau• ol hla optlmfatlc
nat~n, but the clean oontenda thM
budget cuts don't 1 - him. He "lived

.

...

. -.._. _,

�. . .u ..

-.

·Artwork.for Amher~t

•Senate

.........

'-~tty opinion an ~ perfamwnce.
If ~ decldee to fHIPI)olmment.
'**- ol hla poaltlon
an the a.-. wiU be pert ci a fhM

WHiard Harris to be ' unofficial' curator
of new gallery on fifth floor of Capen;
Art History team is searching for U/8 holdings

a.-.

_..__....~-(Sea.

...._, atory on the propaeed ~
..... In "'*Y'• IIIII*).
.

s.n.tora deeldad to poRpone eny
-on the repart until nex! T.-y at.
aapeclal-lng ol the Senate.

r..... ...,

PM,...rt
.
The repart from 1M Commm. on
~
c:h8lr8d • by
1'1""- Nonnan Solkoff, alao
c~Kuaeed.
The , _ . ~ with
wot11nQS o1 the "'-!clenra ac.v on
F-=ulty Appolnm-t. Promotion and

T-(PRB).
a....! s.n.tora

~ concam
tNt: on lll!o --cje, the PRB _,cis
only 15 (as a .,-oup)
clellberllllng on the dossior of a
~ for promotion or tenure;
- . o1 the Pfl8 look with a

:'":::.:.="=:'~
PRB _ , . to .,..-.

c:end~

empllaalze the Importance o1 pojlllshas oppoa.l to t-=hlng; aome PRB
,.,..,... laal that, when assessing

lng

~tlala

o1 WOI'IWI, family~
should be conalder8d, although such
nol glvwl to male
c:end-; ...S Improperly ~
doulln . . no1 ...t to the
c:IWrmen of clel*t"*'ta ao errors can
be NCtlfled. Del*t"*'t ano
.-ponlllble lor coonllnatlng dossier

.....-Ions . .

..........
The

~·a

recom.....satlons

to the PRB will be ~ by the
Executhe Commm. and brought to
1M floor of the
a wote.

s.:r-1or

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

.

Finally. 1M ~ voted to rajecl an
EDcuthe Comml- recommendation
It not _.... .. Admlnlalnltiwt

-

Ewoluatlon

COmmittee

to

"Initiate

eeteelhe - - ol the Admlnistn&gt;tlon . •. ..., t o - r e c d m to lmpnM the ..., function- .
Ina of the Adlnlnlatnotlon ...S Ita
'*loNHp to faculty and atpclenta..
The ...,...,._ ol such a
be.- ~ In
18711 by an 8d hocoommm. c:halrad by
~ Ira Colwt. The Senate

_,._had

=-~- the ~ I~ the

The - --.g
brought &lt;c&gt; at the
'*'-ol the s.n.te ..,

$pM:fruot 8dltor .w, Roe.- who .....,
why the liPPf0'8d lion 1~. The

o.-

a.- -

diNciBd the Executhe
-

Caalm-to loc*lntothe -

·ec!!HI~~ ~ t=.,~
11111.-clthe....--dldnot .... -

_ , ..... the a..-'!1 "--emmc
..--...-----~-

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

~-

............... ~to&amp;tudy

==..::=:
·~
..,_..._,,...to N
IKI-

·---odalloo·

~
.
. • .~
. . . , .............. ol lba
O.tii!J·"-~be

_.. • .. -....no

Acllll8oty
o-n.-~~

.....

---

•.

Its more gra::lous critlca call It
" untnsplrad;" the more vitriolic call It
"MSthetlcally sterile .•
Thoae who. sh.a ell'- cif - . o r ' * ' - hold atlll-anotlw" will
be . , - ! to - . , thai UIB's Art

!.c:'"lng

~
aome projects
t o - the
men! at the Amherst
Cllmpus more visually atlmulating.
Although the de!*lmenl, located in
Bethune Hall ...- Bennett High

Sc:tiool, Ia not physically on c.mpus, II

....,.helass con..-s ltaell an "ln-

. tegql pert of the Unl~s peraonai-

~:T..~~=;:'~

. dlsplliy, 8SIIIICially at Amherst,·-

.badly" on the de!*lmant.
As a first step towwd " uplifting the
visual c:11arac1ar of the UniYetslty."
Hams ._ asked Alan Blmhotz, the
vlce-dialr of art history, to coonllnate
and supervise a student projeCt aimed
at "locating and authenticating art .
belonging to UIB •

Who-wt.t

st~~!!t~ ~~~~~l~""thew=

tecmlcalltles o1 just who owns what.
Oetenninlng precise owne&lt;Shlp is
complicated becaUse some art wort&lt;s
_ , glvwl to. or p11rchased by UIB

~tut~:""whi:~ .o:"e,..: best~

PfOI*IY of various departments or of

A-pllery .
Some ol -

pieces along with
other, """" rac:ent wor1&lt;s by the Art
faculty ano scheduled for display In a
small,
galleiy ~ on the filth
floor of Clipen, wll~ Hatris will
oooltlclally di rect.
Finding the UniYMslty's art treasures
Is not an easy assigMMifll, explains

n-

=~.:1":.

ottlces, In depertmenls, In the Frank
Uoyd Wright House, which Is ~tly
occupied. by the Alumni Aoaoclatlon,
and at the PreslclenYs house.
It will be the atudenta' responsibility
to contact depat1mellt heads and other
administrators, . and to wade through
the An::hl- to track down _,u.ing
and compile an exhaustive list.
Although UIB's collection will
PR&gt;blibly ncit be ol the caliber of those
lound In some private schools, Hems
pradlcts It will contain "Important and
signlllcant" pieces which can be
stnrtegically placed to enhance the
, Unl..-sity'a visual character.

r:.=-~'Mr:··..::=

It Is located. He Ia . . . .. - · that
pieces . . located 1n vanous

liOiTie

IndividUals.

.

Next ..-nester, Hems Is planning to
. Initiate a Joint faculty-student -.ture
thai will culminate in creation of
" professionally
aadlble"
super!llllllhlcs lor the fourth floor of ~ ­
fhB project will be an • ongoing one."
explains Hanls, and will be continued
by .,-oups o1 students and IBCl.iity
~sora untH the Job Is compllrted .
Some may feel this type ol actJvtty
oonlllcls with the purpose ol th~ art

program here, but Hanla maintains it
•enhances lbat program" because such
lnwol..,.ent makes the department a
mora "vital part of the ·unJ-.Ity" and
"dlstlngulahea ltsi'ole."
·

Buying 1-.lly-a
fhe chairman alao reported that the
UIB Foundation Is buy!ng some
paintings by note art leculty lor

~:rr:: ~ galc;::.n·~arrl~~~~~

purchases a "morale boost," because
they express confidence In the
professionalism of the faculty , who
have donated wor1Cs to lh'.l Institution
lor many years.
.
Although there are no current plans
or money lor acquiriJ!g sculpture lor
Amherst, Hanls suggest..:! that one
way the Unl-.ity might obtain "high
quality" wor!&lt; I« a relatively small
amount of funds Is by spons()flng a
competition lor advanced sculpture
students. Fortunately, UIB has an
ample pool of talent al""'! II Is one ol
only two SUNY schools which offer a
masters In line art~.
.
Hanls acknowledged that President
Ketter has encouraged him to take an
active role In dewloplng the visual
character oft he University. Although he
certainly doesn't hlmsell as the
"grandaddy of the arts, " he - I comes

l~n~~':ir-ev!!'M:'!W,' :~~,:~

coordinate Its . human and financial
resources to create a more dyriamlc
~sual environment.

If Kett~r decides 'to run again,'
faculty may be asked their opinions

=:cw....

If this September Ptaaldelll" Kelt.deddes he wants to be conaldered lor

whJch

aouctt

The

~em .

~ts

on

~~
opinions -"'

their

. , _ _ . . can • strongly, moderately
or aornewhet" 1Q!18 or dlsagree with

designed t&gt;y a ~Pol the Ad Hoc
Faculty Senate Commm. on Pnoaiclent'-1 -Ewoluatlon Proc:ed..,.. wllk:ll Ia
c:halred- by Jacob Hyman of the Law
~
The SliMlY. 8long with
dlacuastons which from a
'Of faculty ri\iiilliiga, would
oonatltvte ""' major ......-c. of InpUt

lor Setwle a.alnilan N - ~
wiWI he and lour _ . . on the Ad Hoc
Committee on l'nlaldilntlal EY8Iuatlon
to - •
-notbe.-_
lKetWs
_ly--or

=

the SUNY central administration." etc.
In Part II of the survey, lacully are
asked to evaluate 15 Items In Part I as to
"specific
how much they feel each "should count
Sample - t s In this secllon
In the o.....,..l evaluation of presidential
with which faculty can agree or disagree
performance:" On a numbered ocala, 1
lncluda: "The pnisldont hae sllown
competent '-llntllp In: establishing · Is equal to "extremely Important" and 5
...s maintaining a quality educational Is equal to " not important at all."
Although questionnaires do nol have
program •.. ; the recrultD*&gt;t ...S
to be signed, IIISpOIIdenta are asked to
8IICOU111C1"11*11 ol outalandlng 8cholprovide blogr.plllcal Information on
..... . •• ; Improving the quality ol
. - . ye.-s at U/8, sex. and name of
schollrslllp on campus. • Or "Generally,
the president has: selected and retained
faculty or school •

Identifiable._-..,....,_•

'*"""•""'· .. •Anderson

~tha~wlftbeueed .

AccontiiiaiOauldell... -..clbythe

SUNY ao..1d T -. 1M EY8Iuatlon

d..,,__..- ol

~- be com~ of tha

tha Faculty Senote.
11cow Slalf Senile, ...S Collage
Council, tha ptWeident ol the Student
8ady, Mil a , . , . _ , _ of the
...... _ _ _ by tha
Pool

"':'·---Committee
--a:t-~ of

1t111r - - - - . - ...S must '-'e
....... .......,. which . . . . . . lba

_..._.,_._u.egroup&amp;.
The ~a l8ila ...S the

faculty

_ . . . . . . - b e the t w o - ol
inlllm*IOn on whJch Gonw -

blft.~.... ,_,.

-be

==~~...:.
..............
...,
be-to ..

...,.....,_,
............... to
--- Flnlilly,...,

..

a..-tlar .......... U/8 c-:tl,

~-

....

..T - .

,,............,..~

-a...IIDrlla .... - 1

-·-...-....c =-• mr' .......... ......
...:::r.............
• .:::::::.:
...........
-=ii;!;f
.
. ._
. _
II ......... ofjiWial
--illlto

0

!~=;;~-=.,~

•,:::

!!i!ti~!!li!~P.!....
!!....

t;~

~

to

.:

~~.:'~~u~~~~.=x:~i~li~

;c"tton"';.~~~~ ~s~~e;;:'~'tW:i':~~~

noopinlononaglvwl.........,..

~s ~so~ llla~i~ 0 "':tacu~
anonymous SliMlY was

stall of high.quallty .•. ;assigned to his

........................................................................................................
1
01
--- ·•
IIYough ._, ye.s of 1'-n" with the
allow ~ tq be hnd -into the
..-Jrab1e aaplicta ol QIWIIIIITI&amp;nAnny , _ . , . IIIII ...s ~ - . In
Institutions which exper1enca1 tw
shlp."
wone atn11na than facing us. He -.o 11aa J..t come from a
two-,.. stay with NSF" In W-ington,
t h e - airinG capital, ..., - - to

--.cflba~olbudgat

~~~

sayshetookslotwan:l to the
time when the funding "p.-&gt;dulwn
awlnga l b a - way.•
Nonelheleas, he says.,
ol
the wonl -.g. - can do • thla
Unh..fty Ia to - - ...........
cliacouiiQIIII or 1a1 ~-

�Fobfuolyl,1171

. . 1221m

l

•Management
(!Tom- 1, col. ~)

evening and putting new Instructional
FTEs Into that program , the ratio has
!*In trimmed to 24-1 today. Aluttotdentlfles a target of 20-1 for the future
:.:Cu~~~ -"that th is i s "open f~

=

In terms of sh- numbers, Manag&amp;-

:::r~~ ~lf:~~at~~~w~

part-lime, day and evening. There are 65
students enrolled Jn Its Ph.D. programs. Faculty now number i n the
neighborhood o1 60.

Succeao end diaperlty
M~ement had a very successful
recruiting campaign last year, hl rl11g 1.4

new faculty- many from " top school s"
across the coun!:£:. This came, Alutto

::~=~~~.tl~eall f~~t "~~ek ~~~~~a:,

business, competition for the best
faculty continued to be very severe."
Part of that success was !he fact that
tile " school has been able, using both
State and non-State funds, to "con'
atruct credible and competitive packages of total faculty compensation."
Earlier recruitment .efforts "had been
hampered by budget uncertainties,
excessive student-fsculty ratios wttlch
raised questions about commitment to
programmatic excellence, and limited
· dlscretlonery funds.•
Too, the School's reputation bas
been enhanced by two . reporta on

1!.'!~ ~~ ~o~:.:~"/:lh:sN~~~~~
1

MBA magazine; and as one of the top~
business schools nationwide In a 1977
survey by cartter. This despite a glarfng
disparity In size b e t - Management
here and similar faculties at Illinois and
Indiana, for two, where the Instructional
staffs ho- between 170 and 180.

Wllo'e -.Metorted'..mAiutto feels decisions on resource
allocations which the Unlvenoltv has
made In the past twve elready bmught
about the "distortion" which many
~e would result If he gets more

:.::e~~- d~~d

~~~..;: .!'~¥~

':,
other deperlments which are not able o
respond to that demand enjoy algnlfl
cantly richer atudent-faculty-tetloa. ln a
then , Atutto smiles, "we're not
ewey their reeources. They'_ve got

:!:',1."9.

Manail""""'t could poealbly double
Ita size and atllt .,_ e high student
demend . But the undenleNe reellty Ia
that thet Ia not _ , e poeetblllty here.

;r-~f."';"~t :..·':,.;-::, ~/:~:,..~~!!
Alulto aigha.
The Manegement dean "feels bed thet

we have a number of students who can't

puraue the intellectual lnt11f11Sta they'd
llka to at thla Univenolty," a ~lam

~~!Tth~~=t:_e~~ :::'~

thoM who want M~t .
Studenta who cannot get wfiiat they
want hera will almply move on to other
untv.altles which ttave allowed their
professional schools to grow, Alutto
suggests. Thla hurts_everjone.
by

.n...rone"We tend aometlmes to argue the

wrong Issues, • Alutto auggesta. "We're
not dlacuaalng" the dlsaolutlon of Arts
and Letters or other units with
dlmlnlahlng student demand," he
atres-. To the contrary, Ma~~agement
Is quite supportive of theee areas,
requiring Ita atudenta to g.t a more
tlbenll education then, say, thoaa In the
humatnltlee and aoclal aclencae. Mat&gt;-

~.J,~C::i~f~~ • et home." Aria and ~era end Social
Bclencea majon, · on the other hend,
per cent of their
tend to ..... ebout

eo

oourNWOII&lt; In thllr major field.
How, then, Ia our altuatlon more

rigidly WIC8tlonat that~ an Engllah or
Claaalcs concentratiOn?, tha aaks.
"M~t Ia a nat exporter of
atudenta, Atutto potnta out. The
School'a accrediting agency requi..a a
broad educetional ~- 'We may
quibble on the final configuration of a
Unt..alty-wlde general educetton ~
QIW'I." Alulto granta, but "our faculty
and our accrwdltlng body are committed" to the co.-pi .
·
The daen polnla with _ , . pride to
lha joint dagr.a prograrna w11tc11 lha
Schoof ot1era with other cwnpua unlta.
It ta poaalbte to get a JO/MBA
comblna(lon; there era"MA/MBA degrwe
PIOIJIWM 1n
(tntemellonal
J11t111a1 and an:lilteCIIIIW; lha 88 In cMI
~ · lnduatltal 8110~
pMnMC:y. and/or ~
OM 11e lolnltr piQUed
with lha
ltiiA. TfiiNia an MBA,
ton In
'-""
man11118ft*1t aa welt • In

_.,Y

six other more traditional business
fields.

'Farm !tout'

"Our strategy," Alutto aays, "Is to
farm out as many ·student credit p ours
aa possible, !f that makes sense from

~C::~~~~l~!tc~ntM~~t'aTh!

=•

sources, but It also provides opportun-

·~..::l~"r.o~~~~ ~ff f~:::

units don~ want to provide the courses
outside Management that we need ,"
Atutto reminds , ''we' ll have to have the
resOurces to provide them ourselves."
"Of course," the dean rMSOnS, .. _
hive no right to • dictate to other
faculties what the content should be of
the courses they offer. Our accrediting
say, tor example, that
our students must have a course In
Engl1111t composition ; they simply say
Management greduates must meet a
competency requirement In use of the
language. • But a wel l-designed, walltaught composition course does an
extremely good job In meeting this
need, Alutto feels.

_.,. - ·t

• Non-SIItta lunda
A major effort of the Management
faculty, In light of the current fiscal
situation, Is toward developing greeter
non-State support. 'We have a very
task-oriented faculty. ~ Alutto remarks,
• one which responds to a problem
with a strategy for solving lt. If the
Unl-slty car. not give us all the

~':'~..; ne:lir:;:.'. "Mman':'~~!,';
~,r.a'~ ~i'jJi7~~ ~~o::,on~~
11

1

Crosby.Hall Is now used at 180 p8r cent
of capacity, Alutto Indicates. An
Amherst location Is still eight fo ten

t.,~ ':~~ld~!d n~~tfc:mth~tu~~~

This not only servas as another limit on
size, but also Introduces the problems
of bu sing back and forth to Amherst .
and elsewhere which plague students In
many fields. Only here, no relief Ia In
sight for a decade.

ut...ry problema most alr,ltlcant

po~e1t.;l~.::-~r~g

! t tM~~~~~:!l'~:
the library situation . Although a small
col lection' for Management is provided
In the Main Stnlet Ubrary, the bulk of
meteriata ne&amp;!led by both atudenta·and
faculty are now at Amherst. Thla Ia
"ln1olerable," In Alutto'a . - . Students
are dlstreaaed, and that discomfort
0

::l=ngu~~P ~den:."'~\: ~

"not pleased," to put II mildly. The
distance ~ prohlaaors -and the
library has changed work patterns, and
even affects aOc:ial Interaction within

~';"ud~~tl.~~ac~l;":l:o ':~tro

=

=

the library, for example, no longer come

~~~ C..~-1 ~:Y~""l:at~

anotRer, and of students. Alutto
emphasizes he doesn't condemn the
Ubrarles for the situation . Rather; his
comments are Intended to under8C'X8

~~sr:e'~'~.~s ;:,n~~~~JI::r~,~
In carrying on everyday activities:

the dean reaiiZIIS; If arid when thar
happens, Management will be ready.
The School takes the same approach "to
Its evening MBA program . Thera are
Indications that MBA day1ime enrollmenta may slacken In the mld-1980s,

~~u~3'eco"rl\f~':..,t~~

=

~

because of the " built-In demand for It"
among those already employed who are

~~~~p;&lt;~:~=r:rig tlie unity In the

-lou•

School's approach to
kinds of
students, the·dean points out th8l the
Center - for Management DevelopmenL
successfully offers a wide range IS! ~
credit-free, updating programs for
managera.

r

More data needed
Alutto oontande thai much of the

rt!'~c~rc:.~~ ~'!!::::..:':;

tact." He'd flka to , _ mont
compariaona of lha emount of totel
resource8 devoted to non-~lonal
areas hera and at our 80-CaJied paw
Institutions. He would be lntenaated In
similar dele on atudeot credit hoUIII.
" lat's hear .arne dlacuaalon, too, of
endowment support for the lifts as
companad to professional .,..., " he
asks.
Too often, Alutto says, all we hear
and read about are "the value
udgments of people with vested
ntereata."
Thera's a certain " Iron~," Alutto feels ,

j

~t~~~~~~~~t~=~

as a solution to

atu~a'

the

should

Inability to

reason property, are tha ones who don~
wish to "focus on data" In debating how

$250,000 the preceding yew). PI- call

University

resource8.

for securing well In excess of half a
milliOn annually on a conalatent baals

eiiQcate

Ita

Nonethelesa, he ramalnl • "more
optimistic than moet tn the .tJ!IIty of the
ayatem to hendle Ita problems." He
feels a. ~nltlon ol t,.
connectednesa • of the - . r componems of the Unlveralty will result ln a
compreltenal.., worbbte pl1111 lor
meetlng_challengea In the next lour to
five yews.

r:mc::::v.~-,u~J::.o~..::: ~~

·t--

a $30,000 conlentnee canler In Crosby
Hall, and the Investment of an
addltionel.. $90,000 for computing

~~. to dlacuaalon of

another
problem for Management: facilities .

'Safe_'cigarette unlikely,
res~archer says
rePort
A Roawell Per1&lt; .-char whoee
dally quobt calla lor the smoking of
2,3110 clgenoltea little ciW)ce of
--..oping a truly aefe c~e.
Dr. Fred G. "BoCk, U/B rieawch
proleeaor In cllemlatry and !ljrector of
the can- l*lt.-a taboridory In
Onlhanl Perl&lt;, .,_.t 8IIIOke the
hlmlelf. Thaf'a doo)e by a
amoklng machine wlllch eutorriat
ly puffa on 1110 cigerwlta8 81 a
lime aa ~ oK atudlee elmed at

"
=

reddclng ainllldng ' - " • ·
llocl&lt; llaa beell . . _ . , In emoldng
lor .tJout . a
and '-'*
theUha-' &amp;urg.On Genar81'a report
wlllllb-predll:t• an _ _. de8lh toll clue
to 11111*11111 of :148,0110 ~ Ia

-at
"grr!!lly

...,18tlc."

"'mmkknD Ia

-

r-a

lha ~ known
of de8lh In lha "United Btataa,"

Bock said . "The
lhowa thers Ia
aubatatltlel evtdenceilnklng emoldng to
tung cancer, "-11 d l - . birth
defects and other all menta."
SomlilmPf0¥811*1ta .,_ ~ made
In ~ through tha uee of fllttra,
which reduce tar and nicotine leveta, aa
a ,..,.t of elforta at lha N8tloMI Cltllcer tnatltule and otlw groupe. But Bock
feels tt will be _ . ~ e.too. the
rweulta . , _ up In low. de8lh - ; It
...._ ebout Ill ~ for emolnllgrelewd~to-.
Ewn then, he - · the ooer811
deeth rate may n6l go down alnce
CUINIIt 818tlatcl . , _ thai lha number
of women IIIICIMra It on lha 1 - - ..

eun.nt - ' ! 111 tile Orohlill "-'&lt;

l.eboratory Ia _,..,.,on expar~-.
to determine If dlfteranl mlllbQdl of
tobacco cuttlwlton and prowaatng,

low.- ter end nlootlne 1eveta.., wrtoue
tobacco mlxtii!M wilt reduce lha t1ek of
tung cancer hOm amoklna .
"I doubt very much thet theN will be a aata cllllnlte ~.. arry time
you Inhale a fOreign material It cau- a
reactiOn In lha bOdy tb81 may teed to
cancer," Bock said.
"We can go furi"er In reducing the
riak but _ , If we . . ~ut,
c~ amoklng will atlll be .-toe."

.,..............................
FEBRUARY~YI

~.

,....,_, 12, u.-lft'a . . . .

=

... eclledulld, Ill ..... allould ...
open.

=:::=

011---. ~ 11,

~-:-:...::.

c~oae~~."

�.......

4

LETTERS

Carter. bUdget
irks; saddens
this writer_

NYPIRG representatives essert University
has 'obligation' to alleviate hazards
......., 11 •-~~
1 - wrttlng to •...,.....u Y c-• aome
pointe concerning .abeatoa an ubesloa apoewe. In . - . ! yews, break·
111r011g11a In medicine and technology
Nduc:ed or altogether eradicated
IMIIY of the
leedlng· ~ of

How-. the """'Pie analysis raport
alarmingly ral- mora queetlona and
.-d for concern, rather than allaying
any 1-.. Tha report confirms the point
thet the material co-lng the ceilings
of Baird Hairs mualc rooms and
Mllwaya Ia composed of asbestos. It

one of whk:l'l Ia cancer, whiCh cauMS
20 w of -··-• deaths ...... whoaa rate Is

=nlng matorlalo pnsoents an
Immediate danger and undercuts any
1 1
1 let (th
1
cone us ons 0 88 Y e preMnce 0
physical dam110e and abuse In the
18
disputed ansa apparent).
The report also goes on to state that
" the detection of a single fiber In the
WOII&lt;pl- atmosph818 would trigger
the need for pl)yalcal examinations,

Edlklr.

'""'*

=·~ncn:: ~=:

"' -··"'N
1--'"11 at a rate of 3% a y...

Allleetoa expoaura has been pinpotntad • ·a primary factor In thla
It has been found that 50% of
Blbaatoa Insulation WOII&lt;era die of
..._. and I\OW many medical
..thorltlea 110rae that the majority of

mer-.

=

are environmental In

canoera

Now to the particular problem at
IWid. It wu atated In the Rep&lt;Xter
(211/78) that Mr. Robert Hunt,
Onlwralty Dlractor of Environmental .
...,... and Balaty, proclaimed that
1 und 11 1 1 Baird
~...:.S ~ •no~h "hazard
....,_ of their low ooncentratlon."
Mr. Hunt apparentlY, was basing Jtla
belief on en analya a of a BaJrd Hall
aarnple done by the National
ayp.um Co.

result In Internal tissue dam~e of the
lungs and other organs and u tlmately
cancer
1u';jr~ndH~~ttrolnteatlnal
also stated that the
asbestos In Baird Hall conatltu\es leas
thah 10.., of the matorlalsln the ceiling,
an am~unt Which would be lower than
the amount allowed by the U.S. Dept. of
. Labor. Yet In 1973, the Envlro~mental
Protection Agency banned . the spray
application of matorlal containing more
than 1% asbestos by.welght.
In light of this, It Is genuinely
alarming that Mr. Hunt or the
administration would riot see a need to
take on an &amp;Jr sample study, a task we
assume . Is clearhy thelr role and
obligation In light o the findings.
The facta clearly point to a clear-&lt;:ut

alsoco:a::"~':~oest~t:J:Z::~

=~~~ri ~~~t~~~~ont~'

ll:

~llr.tl~~~~s~n:~l1t~1 ~~n~~

rt":'~eto~~~~::.:S~rto~~~~rtfaH~

=::,al~'h.,~":f~~t:,d t~her a;,~~l:l:

•cannot be aaaeased bas8d on an
examlnatlonof(the) bulk sample."
The fact that many music students
use the rooms as much as 20 hours per
we.!&lt;, we bellew constitutes a
"workpl- atmosphere." Yet this Is a
minor point. Recent medical findings
have concluded that simple brief
exposure to asbestos on a porlodlc
basis (envlro
tal exposure) can

sites on campus. It Is a supreme
obligation to the great number of
If and
It
1
stude~ts , sta
commun Y peop e
who use these facilities . Anything less
would be Inhumane and a shirking of
duty and responsibility.

-Fr.in:~u":'.:J~i

Robert Frankl
NYPIRG

Elaine Meiser was a ·student who cared
about learning and this University

=

~

and a broken leg only, temporarily kept

-:
opinion, and problema that attend the
--'lon of a bureeucnocy auch aa this
Unl. . .lty. We tend to forget the
day-by~ay _,ta and the people
lnwlwd . We make theae statements
baceuae on Janu.y. 28, 1979, Etalne A.

aha not only worked toward her d8Q1'ee
but did wlunt- work at the erte
County Hospital. As an Instructor she
hed for many oourses and u her DUE
advisors, we were tramendoualy lmpressed with this desire, agelnst great

attributes
most students enjoy youth and
health. In spite of this lack, she hed the
qualities we need more of: courags,
kindness, determination and Intellect·
ual curiosity. Those of us Who knew her
well will miss her and always remember

!::"1.:.:::0~'"?~ ~u:.;:.~[y~

died.
Elaine - - an atypical student who
-.ted to complete a degree and
. "finally pay taxea." Her deeth should
not go unnoted by.lflla Unl-.lty which

their family situations. Many Illnesses

::'stp6~~er,'~-:;rcl~t~~~ in it1e~~~:

~ra~~ ~~~;;' ~: ~~:~t~~e

r,::~s, ~gt ~~~~ h~!~.:;''~g ·.:.,1 '~t!

Sincerely yours,
-Milton Plae ..
Professor of History
-Dorothy Wynne
Associate Olractor of
Advisement, DUE

her.

hoped to do. s~a majored In history for
the sheer joy, as she put It, of studying
he
t t0
wh t h
ned Elai ne
.,P!fso a'"~'!rin:
She was
concerned about hl!f Instructors and

pe=.

!.•

Academics, professionals urged to come together
In a str~nger and beHer State and local UUP
Edllor.
Thla Ia an open letter to all academics
and prol.atonals on o,. campus. Tbe
..-tatlon cMIIenge of the fall Is
now ~ and behind ua. For at least

::-~~~~~~'~
all. The Buffalo Center Chapter of UUP

nowllaato a-t on with ....,_ung the
lntaNata ol _ , l e a and profeaaloMialn lflla unit.
We know u.t many of you want'
clwngea l!llde. We also kQ.ow that there
. . many dlfNrwlt J - about what
lhould be dona and how It allould be
clone. Wa bal.... the baat way to make
otw1gea Ia through the damocratlc

c:::·.

=-

r::-VOla~

____,of_
___
,_._
-of--·-....a.w
__-

:;;::.:

oplnlona. ()pan and " ' - ~tatlon
of dlllwlna vlawa within the Chllptar
'*'make lfllwllar and atrongar.
Ona muat baooftW a mambar to make

" . . .&amp; . . ,......

- """"......
- _ ....
o#
y............
,.,...,
_

-···~-- -·· '·
_,,._,
,

-----A.~

.....

~-

our Chapter and the State ' UUP
organization .reflective of one's needs.
We particularly nsed members from lhe .
unlweraltlea to make certain that
university needs are repnssented within
SUNY as a whole ~
The Issue as to who will represent us
In the near future Is now resolved. We
want """" those critical of UUP's
policies to Join and make their

~

criticisms known to all. Furthermore,
we all need to work together for our
common Interests. Please take this·
letter as a personal Invitation todoln us
and help us build a stronger an better
U/B and State UUP.
·
Sincerely,
-R. 011- Glbaon, President
WUIIam S. Allan, President-Elect
- Buffalo Center Chapter, UUP

Segregated lots said not the
answer to Amherst parking woes
Editor:
,tn raepondlng to the letter, "Parl&lt;lng
altuatlon 'deplorable,' group of FES
faculty contends," In the February 1,
1117'11, laaua of thf! Reporter, I, In
eddl~lon to ~ ~I of the
..-;r.tuatM at thla Unlvenrlty, must
IIQIM. Convenient and non-hazardops
pil1&lt;1ng Ia virtually ROIHIXIatent on the
AmlleNI Campus. Tha par1&lt;1ng problem,
particularly In the spine-· la one that
af!acta faculty, staff, students, and
Yl&amp;ltoq alllce.
•
Bludanta
at alllioura of tha day
on the Amllarat Campua and are
oonat8ntly • - with long, cofd, and In
"*-· dangari)ua walka to
lhelt ~- l'nlblarria aucll • " -

arm.

Dr. 8uMn C. KuliCk

haa

_,

c.n•."

'

~-=.,.to.::::;::

...llclllolpll..., c.... tor

... ....., ol AIIIID- ·

A _ . . , CllillliqiNe, to be hald In

Children's has
its own panel
Editor:
This Is to Inform you that we, at
Children's Hospital, also have a
committee which monitors "all research
and educational activities Involving
human subJects" . . . as stated In your
arllcle ("Human Subjects Research

..

=~~;~ Rff~1f8d ~~- '"~muuo~~~

Review Board and Is under the direction
of Dr. Patrick Carmody .
Sincerely,
-Alison C. Haotle, Admin . Assist. , for
n.octora Schulmal), M.D.
President, Medical Staff

SUNY Trustees
change policy
on r.etirement
The SUNY 1!oard of Trustees have
amended Arllcle XV, Title 8, S1 of their
Policies, changing the mandatory
retirement 110e lor administrative and
executive offfcera of the Unl-alt~ . The

c~?.~ ~~n.::_~~~,:S.:J~~f~

s(aff shalrbe rat ired and their services

terminated On the thirty-first day of
August next auooeedl~ their reaching
can and must be remedied. · As
age seventy, and administrative and
previously mentioned by the FES
executive olfloera of the University and
faculty, covered and lighted walkways
would be a tremendous, and much . of the- Institutions t"--n, If their
aervlcaa have not othan!rlae terminated
appreciated, lmpro~ent .
prior thereto, atlaiJ be ratlrad and their
5eparate faculty·atalf parking, howservices terminated on the thlrly-flrst
- , Ia by no means an acceptable way·
day of August naxt suooeedlng their
of o~mlng any of these problema.
This Unl-afty must not only value
reaching 1108 -~· ax~that the
·. faculty_and atalf morale but also, If not
more Importantly, student morale. All
commuters, be they faculty, staff, or
continued for additional periods not to
students, must work with each other
exceed one year each altar age seventy
and not 110alnst each other to alleviate
upon . the racommandatlon of the
the problema that ,_them every dliy . . Chaneellor of tha Unl-.lty and with
- Chrlatlne Wackarle
the approval of tliio Board of Trustees.
Nothing In this Article shall pNY811t the
Coordinator, SA Commuter
appointment of any parson as a member
Affairs
of the academic staff or aa an officer
Who has raachad the mandatory 110e of
retirement otherwise appropriate for
April, will feature two keynote
periods of 88IYioe not to axoead one
apaalcara, •
_... of afternoon
year each upon the recommandatlon old
workallopa and caaa dlacuaslona.
the Chancellor of lila Unlvaralty an
All family _....,. working In
with the approval of tha Board of
oonlunctkin with the Buffalo PayehlatTrust-."
ric Centar and the Gowanda Payehlatrlc
Thla ohanga ITIIIkaa Unlvaralty policy
Centar will be Invited to partlclpale~
uniform with Ngard to , . . , _ t of all
ct~ lnvoMd I'! family exacutl.. and admllllatratl.. ofltcara.
and oompll- with the
Oalehman, - . l h
Fadaql AQe Dlaarlmlnatlon In Employ·
.......,t • ~. will act •
mant Act Amand-t• of 1871, which
ooneutt.rt for
pftlfact.
tOOk alfact on January 1, 1117'11.

:,~'

AglnQ unit, Psychiatric &lt;(enter get grant
-.leclaoonnctdeelgnedto"dllwelop
IUI1IIar . _ _ ' * - family '
_...... and -.llnaloq at thlr
Bufr.lo ~
TIIa IUOO _.,.. fl'om the U.B.
f'lrllllc ~ ......_, • diYielon of

1

lion. We must not allow the President's
claim that this Ia a "compassionate"
budgat to. o-.hedow the truth: too
many people are out of work; too many
school systems have had to lay-of!
teachers and deny recreational pre&gt;grams to children; 'too many hand!-.
capped people, ·senior citizens andpeople with' low Incomes cannot afford
housing or health cans; too many Lovs
Canals and West Valleys cry out for
funds.
Let's not forgat another truth: the
weapons systems to which carter gives ·
his loyalty are designed for mass
killing. Their purpose Is to murder
grandmothers, maim children, destroy
cities.
.
· Detroit Mayor Coleman YounH has
said, " America's greatest enemy es In
the poverty and degradation of Its
people. We must get our priorities
straight. If the mal n enemy and dangers
are within, then the main money should
be spent within, rather than on
- Ann Meloanuhl

meant ao much to her.
Elaine was a strlver and a y::.er. She

T~~Sl&gt;f.,:t~n~dr~=·

:~~~~tart!' of ~he t~:S~~~nts~

armaments. ••

A8 we reed the PI088 of the RepOfter

Edllor.

Editor:
I am angered and saddened by
President Carler's budget proposal. It Is
a clear Indication of Amorlca's
priorities-weapons of mass destruc~lon
take precedence over jobs
programs, education, housing, energy,
health care.
We must not allow ourselves to gst

:-=_:lila

Ell~n

lila

I

' r

-

::'..lf •g.

o: ~: t::

�. . . . .£). .

New m·useuJD

a,

A~thro unit ~t Ellicott bows tonight
wrth receptron, opening of exhibit
on jerusalem on loan from Israelis

--S1alf

Nina Sedita

The f.cmnal opening of the new
R_,.ch Museum of Anthropology will
be hel&lt;!_ ton,l,ght from 5-7:30 p.m.
Featuring an exhibit of photographs
of Jerusatem on loan fr9m the Israeli
Embaasy; the museum Is located on the
second lloor of the Fillmore Academic
Cor!! In the Ellicott complex - In a
portion of the space formerly occupied
by the No!lh Library.·

Collection lnlm WMtern N- YO&lt;t
Over 95 per cent of the extensive
collection Is from Western New YOO&lt;
lncludii!Q -ceramics, lithic (stonei

~l='asan,!,~~~~~o~~'!'rtJr::~·~~~

around 1825, the time of the Erie Canal.
The muaeum will lltustrato a history
of archeology In Western New York, Dr.
W~n T. Barbour, associate professor
of anthropology and director of the
facility , aald. The collection!!_ he
added,- represent a commitment"' the
Anthropology Department and the
University to research the culture'
history and prehistoric cultures of
Western ~- Vorl&lt;.
•
"We have the best collection In the
Eait of pre-Columbian material from
the Northeast that has 'provenience, • "
Dr. Barbour noted; "that Is, we know by
excavation where the material comes

~':e:;.,~~~r:~·r~';;;:S:b~~tr~
lng to the director;

•

M-.. Wlllte'a kiM
.
The Idea for the muaeum dates back
to the 1960s when the late Dr. Marian
White, a well-known archeologist In
New York State, was a profesaor here.
The collections repreaent her worlt as
most of the materials -re excavated
under her guidance.
Whltll, . WI&amp;S one of only lour full·
~:::~orrn of ~~~.eo~~ 1n~ ~11-::
Rockefeller Foundation grant for a pilot
program to relate - c h on the
Allegheny Indian reservation to the
preaent day Seneca Indians through
thetr participation and work there.

1

CommuniiJtiM
In providing space for the museum,
the University opens to the co[llmunlty
an op~rtunlty to learn about anthro-

~~::g ~ne'~~~i~~~~~~. t~~
Barbour..emphasized.

de~l~e ~~~=e~,~~ ~~~u~v3j~'~Y:!

high school students to archeology.
"We want to more directly Involve

:::'We~~:,w~~h~t~~:'~ct~?~ru'::.'::'~

making our facilities more a•allable to
the teachers and students," Or.
Frederick Q. Gearing, chairman of tho
·
Anthropology Oepariment, said.

~~~ t~!:'~h:'~~~s '1,'~~ ~ftl

onf?':
also be able-- to
archeolog lsts wOO&lt;.

observe

how

Va~~~ :,:'::f~~e research museum to

the University Community will also be
felt when Introductory courses are
taught. Anthropology as a whole, but
archeology In particular, Is an apprentice typo of discipline, where a student
works closely with a professor on
material culture.
Students wiU be able to, .actually
handle and study parilcolar flg\Jrlags or
kinds of stone.
A 4!Hoot totem pole Is one of the
most visible displays at the museum. It
was carved commercially around 1904
byihe Haida, native Americans from tho
Northwest coast of North America, as a
present to Matt larkin, an Industrialist
In-the Albany area who was the Inventor
of the juke box.
The Osmose · Corporation, a local
company Involved In wood preservation, Is J:)elplng U/B researchers by
advising them and tryln~ to develop
chemicals which will pres.ove the totem
polo.
The opening exhibition at tho now
museum , "Jerusalem - Keeping tho
Past Alive," Is a special photographic
exhibit brought to Buffalo by the
Education Oeparimont o~ tho Embassy
of Israel. It deals with the history oL
Jerusalem, a 4,000-yoar-&lt;&gt;ld city, and
how It Is being preserved. ·

,,

1.:--m u ta--..,

Local axhlblta
The University Is also hoping · to

~~::::rn~~:~ ~~~~: =t~~i

the museum ahd aasoclate professor of
enthr.opology, Ia working on a future
eXhibit of the history of art:heology In
Western New York, which he says will
show students whet value the discipline
of archeology has here:
" Because 8[cheologr, Is tho.JJnlntentlonal Jllstory of poop o, archeologists
can not only recover and bring to lifo
material that we learn from today, but
can preserve It and tts context-for future
generations," Scott said. Scott Is
credited with being tho force behind
establishing the new facility .
Tho Research Museum of AnthroWeogy Is open to the public

P-~~·:r,~Y~[~~ F~~dJ'Ys~~~~-f~~

10 a.m . to 3 p.m.
,
•
Further lnformetlon can be obtained
from tho Department .Of Anthropology at
636-2414.

Tobach differs_with - Wifs~ n on
asked one member of the audience,
The prtnclples of sociobiology are
reductlonlstlc from a scientific point of
view and anil-human fr'om the Point of
1181 88 many or his genes as posslbl•
view of practical social consequences,
rnto the next generation, such behavior
accordlag to Dr. Ethel Tobach, a
as giving flowers to his wjfe attempts to
companlll•e paychologlst studying
ensure that she will rsproduce tho
animal behavior a1 the American
husband's and not someone else's
Museum of Natural History.
genes.
Invited-to speak here Friday, February
The theory that higher evolutionary
2, by tbe Cot lege Workshop ~n Marxist
Studlet &amp;l)d Rechei'Caraon College, Dr.
~~~rro~~~~ft:~o,v:
Tobech quoted extensively from E.O.
laws that requlrs their own level of
Wileon'a latest book, On Human
expl-tlon w88 a lhesla of "dialectical
Nature. Wilson's previous book, Soc1omaterialism.• In the Dlalecllcs of
blofogy,
sparked conoldonble
Nature, F-lck Engels contrasted
deba1e centering on his thealo that
hurNn behavior Ia genetically pro~~~~ ~~~t~,:\':Y,?=t::
grwnmed to produ.,. Of.!llmel tranamaterialism: pre¥alling at the end of
mlsalon of an lndhttduala genes Into
the nl'*-'th century, which trled to
the neXl gen«Mion. (See The Socioexplain human ~lor and other
biology
edited by A.L. Caplan,
Herper &amp; Row, 18711, with • foreword by
::',\:\~~~
analogOus to ttWlleon and Including artlciM by
T obact1 ched IIUIMI'OUI attacks In
WI leon, Tobach .,d others.)
In Ierma of methodological prln- • Wllaon'e lateat book aoalnst the
dialectical materialism of Marx and
c:~p~et, Tot.ch wgued that Wlleon falls
Engeta. Rei!Oion and Mandam ... the
to racognlze different "level• of
organlullon and Integration," and
to·uplaln dll1erent ~al
aooordlng 1o WHaon. Such "actantlflc
and ~lora! leYela by a lo-t
- ~~lam" wneon alao a.lla a
biological
clenomlna1or.
1- ...,.,.,- but one neacled by our time. It
-.aleta In orienting actentllle efforts
lallloYIIII"- ill the..,..,
towa'd genetic engliiMrtng """" than
"Woufcf Wlleon tty tO gfH • QanetiC
towanl ~~or
~ of the fact 111111 I .., IIOinll
In aoclll tom11 ol " -~ " - a tor my wife IOfiiGIIIT'

l~e~~~:r,~~~~;;n~~~ =~~.;

:=:

oe.,.,

.=r.::.

~'f:S~~Y!."~~~~r. .

_,.men

-oee

' So~i obiology'

issues
1-.

Inherited characterlatlcs programming
behavior.
what shall be conaldarad a 'good'
while those who defend a~ . have
Wlh augentca aolve
another?" (Cited from The Sociobiology
ctlala?
For example, attempts to eolve . Debate, p. 4~.)
_

~~~ce~~~~~~~~~~~ are~~:~
:::Cfar·~~~,~ ~~ ~'n'll'e.t~~~ ~~
~~r~~~o:~~:~~., :.'~enl:'~m

finally solve such problema. Tobach

:f.ll~"1nl~.::O~UC'jn'~tl\':i: ~~~~g

_,_Lawler .

3 from U/B
a·re Interns

0::-.,:-

l~:,u~~~': ~.:::l~etlces 88 11ternmlng t~"':t.¥~8
..=t~
Even our highest phllooophlcal
Participating In tfle State ~bly'e
reflections are ultfmatety only prod ucla
Intern program wlllcll bagen ....._, 2
of ~lcally controlled "gut ..-:tiona"
In Albany.
They ...: Diane Cllurder of North
aternmlng from thenypothalamua and _
Umble sya!ema of the brain. "T'- , T~da; Barbara Braun of Bulfalo;
cent. ..' wrttea Wlleon, "flood o..
and Bruce Proctor of BuffMI.
conaclou- with all the emotions The lnterna 30 houra a weak ef
hall. loft, guilt, ,_and oiMra - that
the Olpltol, until May 11. Moat get
are -.aulted lly lllhlcal plllloeophera
college c:ndll.
who w1811 to Intuit the alaniMnla of
"-illclpenta I-'ve whet Ia ~
IJ90d and evil. .., They evoMd by , . an "In-depth -'on-long IIIWlllc*
netural eelactlon. That almple bloeducational ~." InCluding M
. logical ata1ernent- be puraued to - lntenalw ortwM!Ion to g-.
explain llthlcs llid et111ca1 plllloeopllera,
ment. The eduoallonal part of the
H not eplllemo~ Mel epiatemoloby • ¥lilting
gla1a, 11 an dlloltta.
, Dr. Dennis R. ~ of the
In repiJ, Tobeclt lllloed, "Sfloljjd one
UniwWIHY Oollega II Pl~h,
IU!ipoaa thai~ foaghl lflllllllt
&amp;ell lntwn Ia MIICI"''I to a
IIIQ
11'-Y, or whci n ftalltliia 11Q111nef .rnemlllr or llllff office
~
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L8glllltln.

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- """"""' .K. ltgh School.
Z&lt;ldloque
Co.
7 p.m. - R-eo.

U.tr..tnl --*'11 al '* ohoc:loor. Wlt&lt;&gt;UW
.....
_ _ _ _ ... '*"'

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~FOR-IIU&amp;IC'

• - .,_.,.-. Julua-.. and

-

. . _ . . 1'1¥11 8ryfNuloon,

Contor"'

tho~----WABFUr

--...-nuu.·

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1.PA

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-Ablghi~M~.
,.,~ a.1os'-Slo!&gt;hon
8 'p.m. -~ .,.,.,-.,
S3; UIB -~..oh ll $1 . ADS·
--

Dilnoy, 19781- &lt;:o:norenc:e

- Scoft. Cell636-2919
- d w g e.

""show--

~.=.::.:.."'3!... Abel,In-Collie. ( a - - t 10). 6 p.m

To .. Or-To . . ~ 146();efendof1 .

7

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1701/FNX;, R-eo-.

Monday-11 ·

- 10p.a l 11or~ .

IIIOCHEIIISTRY SEIIINAII.

......,_~22.1W2.

c:AC. . . .
- . ...... -

Patricia

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- 146llll!llnbf. 8""'
$1 .50 fer

....

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Ina-

Joel. Ph.D ..

al MoloeuW
Biology, ~ "' Oregon. 108 Shormon .
4p.m.

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Hellloysan--.gdr&gt;wn l h o -

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_ . . . . . , . _ _ _ _ _ _ Coot·
COIMIIIIAT1011UITMI
AIITI ·

lot

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"'='=~~-

11oft ,_.., end ''O!Mo

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&amp;r1y One -

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c:Wm

M-'•

The Rl- (Lorentz}; Happy
Qoy;
You're No ORe nH Somebociy Loves You
1Pennebaker}. 146 Q;efendor1 . 7 p .m. Sponsored

FES-

OeYalopment--

;s co-~ by tho
FIUIS"

ol ConlMediii/T..:h-

er E~tion and the Weatam New Y&lt;J!It.-.

- f O &lt; - and CunbJium De&gt;ollopmenL
Pre..-reglstration recp.Ji"ed. For further information
contact Or". Arthur Kaiser, 636·2484 .

by the Center for Media Study.
UUABFILM"

A Slavo ol Lovo (U .S.S.R.} (Mil&lt;halov, 1978}.·

UUA8 WEDNESDAY NIGHT ALMS"

llttl• Man What Now?, 7 p.m.: Christmas in
July, 8:55p.m. Conference Theatre, Squire. Free
admission.

.. 0:: ~;.~ ~~-a-ec:!~tt!:; a~
crue«:ies of tt\E! postwar depressJon In Twent;es
Germany.
Chrlatmaa. with Dick Powel and EJen Drew,
is a t.-n about a hopeful cootest-winner going
on a shopping spree on anticipated winnings
. POETRY READING"

•

St Valentine's Night Open Radlng. Come fo
read 0&lt; 1o Asian. arow,ino Lbary Music Room,
' 255 Squire. 8 p.m. Free. Refreshments. S!&gt;On·
sored by the Browsing Lbary.

Conference Theatre, Squire . Call 636·291 9 lor
show times. Admission charge.
It Is ·1 91 8 and the Bolshevik Revdution has
just taken place. In the south of Russia, a film
crew Is attempting to finish a romantic mekxhma,
olllivloos IO the cliMgea about lo engulf them.

The leading lady, foling in • Red
cameraman, finds herseff caught up in the forces

"'transtormetion. Tho- Yort n - loYedll

ALII SCREEHfHGIDI8CUSSION"
Ewenlng• for New Film: Jonu MIUL Screen·
ing a n d - ol "In Between" (1978}.
Alxfght-Knox Art Golery. 8 p.m.

Genen!i-

$3; students and golefy membera $1 .50. S!&gt;On·
SO&lt;ed by Media S1udy and Albright-Knox Art
Gallery.

BUFFALO COMMUNITY STUDIES GRoUP

MEET1NO"
•
Soeitll lmpiiCt of the low. C.nal. Panel:
Oovld BM&lt;er, Martha C&lt;Jmwel, Sosan Hutsml1h,
Penny Ploughrnan, and Sharon Rowe. 123 Jewel1
Parkway (Frri l.loyd Wrtght House}." 8 p .m.
COffee &amp;17:30 .

V1SIT1HCI ARTlST RECITAl"
Anton Kl*ll, p;ania1. Baird Rocl1al Hal . 8 p:m.

- - . s •: factJIIy. S181f, aMnnl,

-citizens, $3; sn-.ts, 51 . 5pon&amp;O&lt;ed by
· the0epot1monto1Mdllc.
The JMw York Timet hal calad Kuertl a
"piafjstfc O&lt;IPOf'lO"'I" who •con ploy~
like a miracle." In his UIB recital he wll ploy

two ol the 32 - - Sonatas wNcll ""reconled this pest Y""!'Kuerti , who W88 bOrn in Viema and muaicalty
. _ 1n the u~ Ststes. has perlonned wttn
the~-ofthls~.
New YOI1&lt;. l'tlladelphla, Pittsbu'gh among them.

Nodces
c:tiiLDREN'SHOSP1TALPREADIIISSION
PARTY
punch pony lo given at Buffalo'a
Chlldrwl'a - . tnt and II*" saturday

=

A..-,-

:.=,

~~~v: .:..0~

The
progrwnlo.deolgnod
" 'the
-hoepi1lll
0&lt;_
..,
,....
child might- ll&gt;oot
boCO&lt;e
he 0&lt; she ... "' lito)' - - lo&lt; .., length ol

time. ev.yone, ~ ~- .. lnYflod, ond
-~.
1o como. The por1y ia from 2 lo 3 p .m. and lo held

the chid

.-not-..

In the dlnlngweaoltho -

·

FREE D&amp;NTAlP"""""' who think they need -

wort\ ond

would ... lo toke pori In • a1udy ol patlont
re~DCWWJ~ to routine dentlll --~ ahoiJd oon-

Thursday- 1 5
PEDIATIIICSRESEARCH SDIINARJ
... Toot For 11w Dooocdon
o1 F-lal Hypo&lt;MU~Io, Dr.

~o. -. --pro­
o1 pedlotrica. 11oon:1 Room,
Hoo·
OEOI.CICIIC:AL-..c:U.-..•

(Oyton-} c.nlo&lt;lorn.ft- 681

~---

Moin-.

8 p.m. Gonorol S5.50;
$2.50; S3.50.
br ... Ol1ioo ol CUI1urW "'""
...
ol
OMoion ".,
'- II.S.A
· ,.
~.
SpooMrw
CAC,
..

. . . ..-..-y.

~ W. Ulodgren, ~ ol Qoology, ·
~ o l -- Room 18, 4200 llldlje

U/8 -

Leo. 3 :30p.m.

-~-~ondl'lli~Sigmo.

--

-"'-

.........
- . o fll
a.Y
_,....,
. . .f. . . ,....,.

~-

- O r. '

•

...
M.

~. Oopnnonl ol

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

'-drJ-·028 ~
. 41 p.m.- Collogo ol - · _

riWeet ....• . . . . . . , . . tMrv P8eko. 2•&amp;

c:-.. 6p.m.•

c-...-.

pi1ol. 12 noon.

LITEIIA'IUIE AND

ol tho a1udy by. ~t.

c;-

IIITIIOIIUCUOH TO , _ -

OM TIE

..
..... ,.-.

-·--·--.--

IB:TUIIE~,_-.

SOCIETY c:ouoouMI•

- . : - •.,.... _
_,tho Ewe: Vort&gt;ol
u . . . y t n ' T h e - o l -'.• 1ooa.m...
3 p .m. F,.., ~ br tho~ I'Rigrllm •
In •l.iloriiUII ond SOcloly· ol tho ~ ol

EnQIIIIII.

-~--

~

, _ - T-lo,lolondoy, Feb. 12.
213 Bllldy. 12 noqn.

- . . F o b. 14, 21311ofdy. 12_..
~. F~ . Feb.

ST.uWni:IC:OU.-1

a- ,.......

an Cl&amp;atlllou.._ wtth lllore

, _ , . . ~- J. ol -

nocelve--

tactOr. Nomw&gt;LConohllt831-4412. •
must not currenlty be under IN cera of a dlnlat.
P _ . t s wll
ond
x-rays to ~ how much rouh treanent
they require: Two filings wll bo prt&gt;lirjOd • por1&gt;

· Aoam C:-28, 4230 llldlje

~llourllt3 :301nAoam"'15 -

· lJIWwwi1y
1..eo:
4 p.m .

18, 213 Boldy. •2
noon.
Thlo Q u a n - Anojyoia Lob ~ ... boglven by Or. s.o. - · U/8.

,_,.-Comedy-·

~--,_

·--.·-tt.-•

TloonMy,
7:30-8 p.fll. ; ~ Cora ol . . _ ,
· 7:30-11:30 p .m.;

-laofolv.

�- Fotwuary a, 1111

Garver suggests
policies for
-investments
Newton -Garver, chairman . of the

~~.l::lrness..g~t~he h~olesu~:ledpolr~~

objectives should play In University
lnveatment decisions."
The statement will be voted 011 at next
Tuesday's Senate meeting .
·
Garver cfralted the rac&lt;immendationa
In .aaponse to a memo ltom John
Roosevelt chairman of the SUNY
Trusiees Committee on Budget Investment and Capital Programs. The board,
In evaluating Its policy on lns!ltutlonal
investments, Ia seeking lnp4t from
throughout the SUNY system.
. At stake Is approximately $56 million
_ of endowment money and tnvestments,
the vast majority of whlc)l Is the
endowment bought Into the system by
U/B when It became a State Institution.
Garvets statement follows:
r

1. We urge you, In Implementing the

~~~~w:~:~\aih~~~~~.:!~~~~re:~~;:;

Health Scient:es stepping":up -_
minority, dlsadvanta ed rec.,ui~ment
By Clwt8tlne M. McCann
N*A-.Intem

Recruitment of minority and disadvantaged students tor the Schools of
Medicine and Dentistry has become
Increasingly Important beqlluse of the
decreasing enrollment of students tn·
these categories, says Rudolph M.
Williams, assistant dean and financial
aida officer oHhe School of Medicine.
An expaM&amp;d recruitment program
has bMn possible by a Health
ear- Opportunity Program Grant: The
$265,000, three-year grant is funded by
the U.S. PUblic Health Service. tts
purpose, says Williams, Is ·~o -recrult,

~~~tyan,:,d ~"f~~~~~s,:::;:~ts0•!

Recruiting activities curTJtntiy Include
visits to colleges and participation In
~ ·days
by Medical School
personne1 and students.
VIdeotape lor '*'"'ltment

Williams, In cooperation with Leo .
Richardson and Mary Beth Spina of the
Public Affairs Division, Is now-developIng a videotape which will, hopef~iy ,

10

~~~~~~Y~s fa~7mf:~lc:;~ ~~n °t o ~~~
1

students, not only minorities.

No numerical goals
Williams hopes to see the effectiveness of the program reflected In
lncreaa~g enrollment, Increasing ~rad-

~e:· rls:'i~e~~~gr!:~~"i'!~er;~m~~g

~::~ T/,';, ~~~~:,t~': wfJr"~
~~=-~:t::'~~~~~~t~gs;;~~;

minority and disadvantaged students.
He has, set no ' numerical goal, bt~t
hopes "fo attract qualified students and
prov1de a · meaningful college experience."
In addition to the Health Career

distributed to ochoolo through the mall,
. ellmlnatlfltl the need for a direct

Associate Chancellor for Health Sciences, Dr. Ald_en Haffner, In develop-

t~·~~:ld~'f'D~h~~.10 ,;"'~88 ~

-

representative.
.
Although It is the mo•i recent
development, the videotape Is a
re1hatelrveelyfortsmsalarelport}_?~_?f thsehpo'rot_ng~amup·
01
fl
g.,....,..
•
retention of minority students.
The Grant provides for educational
skills development, Including a summer
program for students who may want or
need a head start with their medical
educations. Enrichment courses In
medical vocational and study skills are
also offered, as well as some first-year
courses for credit, Courses are offered
throughout the year, in the Learning
Resource Center, located In the
basement of Farber Hall. Because the

~n°rt'!:'~\t1n:~~'/;' · .:i~~~ssJ'r:~

PUT A BUFFALO IN YOUR LIBRARY:
The .-..ge jumpe r.orn the lapels of
~M~~Hfrom the
Schciot of lnfonnatlon end Library

Sludlee (IILSl.

The atudenta .,. - n g buttons
deelgnad by Gerald Shield!\, an
proleaaor, In an effort to
~
themMivH 81 potential

_....,t

..

~

Pert of a campaiGn to lncreaaa job
buftons .,. worn at
~tiona to help attriiCt attention to
U/B etuelenta and alngte t'*'&gt; out from
tile crowd.
.
In conjunction wlt!Lllle buttons SILS
It compiling a llat of 1978 gi-iduatH
wllllfltl to notocate and rriaking It
ll¥llllable nationwide to PfOSpeciM
~. the

ment of a proposal for a system-wide
grant for minority affairs. T/le $21

w~~n AW~'t."~n~":s ~¥bm~'~J~

ork
th
1 llys
111
1 -.erl'n epsropecgrama
tshyestefomurwmedwlcal
-·ongee
~ 11 ••

aimed at undergraduate and medical
and dental school levels. The grant
proposal was written by Williams, Or.
Michael Heiberger, vice president of the
SUNY OptomettY School , and Dr. Gino
Andriottl, dean of students at Upstate
Medical Center.

management of the University endowment funds , to keep In m1nd.that the
prudent lnves,tment requ ires keeping
one eye on social sltuallona. History
remin'ds us over and over, most receriiY
through the ooclal eruptions In Iran,
that corruption, inluatice, and brutality
are forerunners of fnstabiOty. Therefore,
Investment In firms whtch operate
under oppressive social positions is
generally Imprudent . The :rrustees

~~~ul~e~e s~~u~~"i.~ta?~~s~ith~mf~~

and social policies, sines this _political
claim often hides a support. for- the
status quo and Is neither genuinely
prudent nor genuinely apolitical.
2. We do believe that It Is appropriate,
wJthln the limits of fldUl'l ary. respon,
sibillly, .tor the Trustees to_ consider
matters of social policy · In the
management of enclowment funds. We
also believe that It Is possible, within

~~~~d~:::::~sris fnt6ak:cc~~~~al w~~~
1

A high school for health sclencH
violating basic fldiJclary responsibilA grant proposal for a partnership
Ities, esP!'j:lally II the
ves\ment
between the Health Sciences Faculty
uncertainties correlated with political
and the Buffalo School System is also
uncertainties, as menlloned In the...,.
in progress . The aim is formation of a
previous paragraph, are kept In mind .•
hiQh school for health sciences. The
3. Wl111e divestiture of some security
untverslty wo)Jid be Involved In trl\inlng
may occasionally be warranted.. solely
the students, with the emphasis on a
career education rather than a voea- tlonal one.
lture Is generally- a weak and poor
Williams Is enthusiastic a,bout the
social policy objective~.
expression
grants alreadr.. mcelved , and the
In general we would suppose that tlie
programs deve oped because of them .
Trustees should decide to sell or retain
He hopes to see more grant&amp; In the
stock on prudential grounds J8thllr than
future, but said he is "concerned that
as a matter of protest. The exception to
efforts at Increasing minority representhis might be stocks In IndustrieS that
tation In Health Sciences here are
are agreed to be socially har(!lful, such
losing their thrust. "
__.as the tobacco industry.
He added that, " most of the activities
4. The mechanism we commend to
have been federally supported, and
the Trustees for expreaslnB moral I\Od
President Carte(s recent budget has
social prospectlves of the nlverslty is _
eliminated support from most programs
sensitive voting of proxies and speaking
similar to those wan ave here ...
out at annual meetings. It would be
uileful for the Trustees to have an
Advisory Committee, with student and
faculty representation, ·charged with
considering the varlouot proxy matters
0
that are to come befOfe annual
t&gt;e!~eno~~Sna~.:'~:J1~~1:~ ~':.~n ~ meetings
and various other mattl!l"s on
many traditional ·aspects of ilbrar~an­
-which a representative of the Trustees
shlp with information science and a · might speak up or raise queatlons at
strong emphasis. on noll-book aAd
non-print media, Bobinski said. The
:~:.~ro~~~~v·· =~a'rn~ tha~~::
School has not. only Its own computer
prospectives on the buslnesa of
terminals for on-line training and
companies In which aecurltlea ars held
Is an iltseparable part of the
~[~~~3 baut ~~a • :u~v~~"n~ nondelegable
fiduciary reaponalbllltles
laboratory as well as a special ftbrary
of Trustees, and that the Advisory
which acts as a working lab for the
CommUtes should be consultative
school's program.
rather than an ultimate datermlner of
the University policy in this matter.
5. With N&amp;pact to aacurltiH of
science, medical llbrarlanshlp, and
companies doi!'?t, bualneee In South
preparation for a specific type of library
such as academic, public, research,
~~s":.;r:'~ou'9 '!e., e ~~~.:.!o
governmental, etc.
sale of those -securities. We U'Q9
A growing number of SILS students
Instead that the Trustees write to each
have been specializing In m!!dla
services with emphasis on ·audle&gt;~~t~g~o~Ftl.,
el=c~~:,m::.;no,.,~
vlsual services to academic, public and
require, termination of South African
spaclal collections.
operations or . the acceptance and
conscientious Implementation of the
Sullivan principles. This com!spondence should then be followed up by a
A bill io have tne _uni~lty's
request at each annual meeting for a

~~n~~~~~fo~~:"~~·g:,~,~~esf~~';J:~{.
or

sc~~~~ :.:'JI:::J'br!'i~~=hl~~~l~';~;.l~~

1 1

•t.a-.

employer~ .

"Our students did quite well at tile
Amedcan Library Association Midwinter P'-'!&gt;ent Center," Bobinski
aakl, "but the ALA Confwence In June
0
0

~,:r~~i~sl~:~ w~rt! u::f~

10 alford the trip to the plecement
..:tlvtty there. Thl• -Y mo.a library and
Information apeclallat employers wtll
' - a chance to recruit from our
and whh lese expense and

=:!"

The apeclal llat will be l'eady for
lllalllng by MiliCh 1, 1971, and '!MY be
~ II¥ wrltl,. IQ. Put A INtleJaJtl

r=.r~~~:r="'
Hall, 8uflalo. NY 14a0.

w':J:!

Bill introduced

r~~~~ ~~=~eo~t~~~~o;l":'~~ a:;~
~~~~=~~:':~ clplea.

the Slate A&amp;Mmbty by Erie 4County
LeglslatOf William A. · Pauly (AAmherst). The bltl urgn the change 81
a fitting memorial to Roolieleller who
·Instrumental In ~pmg new
. f.,llltleS tor the ~Y- 4'coordlng
to ~tlram..At'*'f, the bUI will be
o6neldeowCI Ill' the "-"b')' on

"*'*"

111.

1

Tr~sr:: ~~= 1~at th-= ~tt:'~'og:
1

reported to the various constituencies

f~f~.rt!~.::I Partly pt~j~,:,: :::::~

further com..-ta and auooeatlona
about the Truet-· action In 1 ' -

maffera.

·

�........

fo1&gt;1U01YI,1f71

.....

Groot
U/B chemical engineering major
who spurned the 'rat race' was never
'disappointed' with tl'\e jones cult
There wao a ~ U/B alumnus
emong tho 900 vlctlma In the "-oppe'o
Temple maao aulclde In J - n.
Guyena. She waa Pauline Groot, a
chemical
rneJor w11o
groduatod In the ..ty 1970s. While In

eno-.ov

~ 1n:"it!7~,.!t~ldo':li: ~ ~!
1

1

8

::t',...oon,juot to lament the tact that
oclence reporting In f18n.,.lln her·YI- • .abyamal. Sclentlata talk Jargon,
ohe lnalotod, and most ao-callod
oclence wrltera, lhe oald repeatedly,
don't know whllt they are writing about.
Having ~ lr8et.d to her complalnto
so fnquently one ...,...,.,, - aokod
II« to .write an alllcte on a campus
In
oclence project. It - • fair.
ratroopect, her complalnta and bluater

~!-;: ~~~~p~.~err::·.: ~::,~

If not al-yo wflllngfy. ~ following
article from the Albany Times Union
tells of how Paull~.got to Jonestown:

Fourth tribute to King .
will feature Rep. Conyers
U/B's fourth annual tribute to Dr.
Martin Luther King will ·be presented
Friday, ·February a. by the Minority
f'aculty and Stall Asaoclatlon.
The 2 p.m . tribute will feeture Conresaman John Conyers Jr. of Michigan
ilnd will be held In the Alden Courtroom
on the flrat floor of O'Brian H.ll. The
ram Ia !rae and open to the public.
ecently r. .lec1ed to his eighth term
n the Hou• of Re!&gt;reaentatlves,
yera to a aenlor member of the
uee Judiclary Committee, chairs Its
mmlttee on Crime and seMIS on
he Government Operations Committee.
will discuss " Equity Issues for Slack

America."

m:.O "':1,7 ·~~:;' ~~~\~'rbe~n8r~r:g

Room .

11

tnv~B.\'rimi&gt;FtR:,a"'R:!'.' Bet&gt;~ t h~~

Smith of St. John Baptist Church,
followed by two sslactlons by the U/B
Gospel Chorus. Dr. Edward Jenkins,
chairman of the Minority Faculty and
Staff Association , will welcome Coners. President Robert L. Ketter will
ntroduce him.

r.

f~'U:!:~'e:~!~:,C:,w~~H·~h~~~~~:~

foyer of BaPdy Hall . All are Invited. ""

By Ronald Kennani For years Cornelius and Elizabeth .

~,'3"Ja~~t~~~O:.~~u9:.:0~~~~0 ~~~

bad points" of the People's ~mple,
return to her family in Niskayuna and
get a steady job.
And altnough Pau line didn't harbor
the same Ideals and social values her

~~Nh~\~·d':~o~r~~l~ ~:;en~~n~~~~~~

residence.
But the bad points became ugly . . .
and Pauline and about 900 others
committed suicide or were murdered
apparently on cue from Rev. Jim Jones
one November afternoon In Jonestown,

Gu,Y.:'~O:· weeks after Pauline's ashes
were sent horne, Groot, a chemical
engineer at the Knolls Atomic Power
Laboratory, haltingly reconstructed his

FSEC is opposed to tuition hike
lllnut• ol liMo F...,l1y Senato Executive

J.,uery

~-· IIJ!eclal IIMtlng ,
The lpe&lt;;,./ m"tlng Included

Sl,
the

following egenda:

~~=t ~'!: .~'l':l',:.ry
of
the lmPec:t olthe GovemOf'a btJdget on this
0

report

lnatltutlon. The reduction of 34 lines lnd
t381 ,100 from ttte baae budget Ia no more
0

::1r.'
o:h:'. ~=d~i'~~'':rob~l ~~
1may pro.. diHic:ult to"l&lt;lfuotto.

........

f2 - - ,. " " - - ' tuition

·-

Two 1ltematl¥e re.olutlona oppoalng the

propoMtUIIlon Inc,... were prooented by
the ad hoc committM compoNd of Kuntz,

=:~rt~!\c'ki.:?~.~~z:r:J

reaolution be recommended to the Senate:
"Bo 11 IMOI-.d that tho ~ following

~~~-wr~~·~ a:ta'!: ~=.c:: ·~,

Now Yoo1&lt;ot8uffalo. and thotlta oppoaY.lon
to the prorpoaed tuition Increase be
communlc:atl&lt;l to the Trua._. ol SUNY by
tranaml•lon of thl1 ruolutlon:

"The Fecully Sonato of the State
Unlftrolty or Now Yoo1&lt; at Buffalo
recommoncll to momborl ol tho Stole
Unlverolty e-.:t ol Truatooa that lhoy
d l - the prorpoaed rloo in tuition. In
lilting thto octlon we lndop-.dontly

::::.:.~.~'r-= =·~· '1~ ·~

Ketter, and the Fi"ru4dent of our under·

~c:. ,:,o::::~lo =~Jon,
"'Of

~*'!leu'•

Kotl

ooncem to ue are the

:t!·~·::.-:::.0:,·:-.:b~~·~o.::J.~~

the -

limo tMI tho -itlonal Income
1 to ohon·torm 1'-&lt;:al problema, the
' C08t eJCdudel tnOft and men of
ly tho unlverolty woo

___
ot-.

1.;t--J":..::·..::~ ~~

doolgned 10 -

lnatllut~.........

·

.

oomplotJng thelf dog-:
3 0 - - _...lhallhoy wore fORlOd to

Solkoff, Greenblatt, Woff ,and S'mlth.
Oean·Moore reviewed certain Issues about
the manner In which outside funds are
admlnlatered. GAO's seUlement with
Stanford Untveralty about lrregu'-rltles

:!'~'~'Y tror~t:;[!j,ra,:;.t; :r~,,c;n~:~:

areln progress elaewhere. These audits may

n.. fll': - , _ by Doon
~ii!Oiiiiiioi~AAICij~~~
~ .... -

ol tho FTI!C

~'"'!'ft- 11r1¥110goeC..IIIiiM),

~~~ ~~tt':";'~~npn~=~~~~~~

station, and settled In RedwoOd Valley,
Calif., her father said.
" Pauline waa turned olf from the
~:~ ·r~~~~~qp:;teawa~dd~~~~~=br~
conventional rat race and was looking
dlaconlon, and awarenua of the great
for different ways to do good ," Groot .
difficulty of almulteneouaty asaurlnP. pr(&gt;.
continued.
!:!~t:.•aearc:h productivity, aod acuity
The family corresponded occaalo,.
·
ally,
and
the
Groots
traveled tp Callfr;&gt;rThe meeting adjourned at 5 p.m. '
.,nla several times to visit Pauline at ,
different People's Temple locations.
During one visit, Groot said he and
his wife attended • a very reesonable
service in a beautiful church." The
sometimes be augmented by a aenae of
some publ~ figures that It Ia lime to crack

Deadline for
Tuition·waivers

The d8jldllne for Tuition Support
Applications jform PS :)04) for
Claaail/ed S.rv ce Employees Is next
Monday, February 12. Completed
applications are to be sent to the
attention of: Rosalyn Wilkinson,
manager, Human Resources Develop- ment and Training , Personnel Depart• ment, Crotts Hall , Amherst.
The Tuition Support Program Is
designed to encourage the career
development and adVancement within
State service of eligible employ- and
to uslot them In achieving reesonable
1

car::hy~~e~ ,:::\~.s~1':!~::r'r'::'~;,s,

an AI'Proved applicant may receive 50
per cent of the tot81 coat for tuition,
raglotratlon, and teboratory , _ for
training actlvttl.. in which the otudent
was -.vollod during all or part of the
11

• ~urMS

can be for credit or
non-credit and may co- regular
college COurMS, lnatltut.., worl&lt;ahopo ,
881Ttlnara, ratr.her cou,_ or coneapondence oouraee given by acctedltod
aci)OOta . Employwe may ,.q-.t
Tuition
for only thoee c:ouraM

=::~~---·
-=~18u=
Tile IIOTlON PASSED UNANIMOUSLY.

:l~e~m'~'j'f~":~~ d~~~~"fn f~~~

world."
'·
Aftef receiving a 'di!Qree in chemical
engineering from U/B In 1971 , Pauline
attended a racrultinent rally hosted by
Jim Jones In Philadelphia and ' became
"Impressed with that man and what he
accomplished ," Gr~t said.
She joined the cult, notified her

AppUcallon forma
- · may be obtained
from Ma. Wllklf\8!111. Queetlona abould
be direcled to M.ry llcllwelclller,

113&amp;-28110.

:1'~\~· ~~~...erce: ~r'~th":':l~o.n~

lions except '1here .was more audience
participation than I waa accustomed to
and there were very powarlul appeals
for donations." Groot attended the
Dutch Reformed Church as a child.
Pauline, a 1967 graduate of Nlska-

~= :.?~a~~~lianmr,:,:c,~~:~

again her parents traveled west to visit
her because she had no Intentions of
visiting home, Groot said .
For a week the Groote saw their
daughter and the cult's home for
rlltarded children which waa •very well
run with competent people," and an .
animal ahelter and farm anl~a which
were also "In good _ehape," Groot
added.
•
.
While worl&lt;lnq In a variety of jobe,
Pauline tutored other cult members In
math and aclence and "helped people
all around," her father aald.
"Pauline waa not really odJuatod to
the poclal ecene. She waa -.y
Intelligent and aha felt thla waa baing
held ajjalnat her by her' ~." Groot
continued, lila claapod handa ahliklng
ollahtly.
"'fiW Temple WM ... lnlenaely aoclal
org-..IDtlon, and aha '-I to_ be aoclal.
And theM people - . c l and wei-

COIIIIISI tw tor wtwt ..,. - · She
=-~-~- with'* new

Before Pauline left California for
Jonestown In December 19n to fill a
math and science t811Chlng poeltlon,
· she began writing lattera to family
members she hadn't corresponded wtth
In A~he Groote were buoyed by this
gesture, "because she was looking
outside to her family more. She hod not
-.
written very ~ often and -

dl~~::'~~j·;:~t.:,t~ullne would
occasionally write home and deacrlbe
the climate, flowers and butterlll.. and
her living arrangements, Groot oald. •
Pauline wrote &lt;she was "worl&lt;lng
hand " In Jonestown and ''things _,e being accomplished," Groot said.
The engineer said he" and hlo wife
ssnt clothes and other Items to their

~e~~r ':."o c~~=~':;!~.J~:~~~·

=

packaQe arrived.
And· alter the holidays, Groot said he
planned to write Pauline and discuss
plans to · spend two weeks In
Jonestown.
.In late November the Groots reed
about the shooting death of Congressman Leo Ryan by cult members and "I

~~~~ s~rd~~r~n~.;r;s~~u~r ~~ronoi:

State Depart!)'lent confirmed Pauline •
was one of the 900 persons who
committed suicide or were murdered at

th~~n~~\':· had

attempted to coax
Pauline f.rom Jonestown, but their
daughter rebuffed their efforts. " We
only suggested we would welcome her
back but she was very Insistent she was
happy where she waa accepted and
staying," Groot continued.
"Our first objective," he added, "was
maintaining communication and you
can't achieve that by shouting and
yelling . ... "

Porter food unit
will be closed
As of February 9, the Porter Cafeteria

~~~~ef~~~~~! f.:'~~':;,::,'!~ longer be

Faculty Student Association (FSA)
Board Chairman Joseph Darcy ottributed the closing to "a consistent toss

Jnfh~n'C::fsl~~ "~::'' ~1:.an:tt! ":i;~g·
~~~~=.:~~tt~u~~ ~
=rw,:r;~:~~~~':'~

•;:..::t!'u::

of various Unl-alty consl~uenclee.
Steps have also been token to the flow of traffic it the Student Club
and to alleviate the overcrowded
atmosphere. Ao of FebruarY 3, a IJWiee
of alterations have begun. A 1'88hulftlng
In stall dutlee can also be expected. '
80

~fc: ":/,1.:~.;~,;c:o~t! t!~

alternative methode 01 action" from
thoss who miss the afternoon SubShop.
Until then, lunches can be purchaaed
at either Richmond or Red JIICket
cafeterias, aa wellaa the Student Club.

New bus stop
at Main Street

Because of the pllllttna problem on
the Main Street c.mpua, eapeclelly In
the faculty and student Shei1Jian lola,
there Ia a new bus atop atartlng Feb. II,
Roger McGlll of the Busing Oflloe 11M
announced.
To encourage people to pllllt In the

::~s':l!~otA!:,=~

=

-~~:.=~,)~~='=

then go to the Diefendorf AMU atop

belen IMYing Main SIJwt for their
ultimate deatlnatlona.
Thta will benelll not only etuelenll
but aleo petlenta .. the dental Ollnlca,

McGill oald.

'

u: ::n~--=
:::t.lng

ln=:..oo.=.r. by
8nY CMIJ)Ua bua,
Ridge La
bu- OM be n_..s dowll It tfie -

etap . . . . . will

.-.o dl8cNrge ~

:,,::;ley"T:.::IcJ.'Il 111111 ....

�. . .una

Fobruary 1, 1178

SUN·Y Senate: Wharton says 'we can live'·w ith budget
would-4urther raduce the gap between

"The total pie Isn't adequate for

~~~~n':'£u~~v:~~c,,l~":~~ro,!'f1':!1~

~d'ti!':!.ii!&lt;gW~o"'.l ~~~~~\~

We have already found cases whereJtls
less expensive to attend certain private
Institutions than a SUNY campus. "

:r~~rs'ti~~-f:~~x~::r~~~~

·Tuition reduction could be risky
Consideration has also to be given to
tuition raduction, an acflon that •could
be viewed as a dramatic attempt to
return to the basic philosophy of public
higher education- a philosophy which
was the foundation upon which higher
·
aducation was establ.(ahed.
"Risks of such llfQ!Iurse of action are
considerable; " If th anticipated enrollment Increases were not realized, " the
University would face the prospect of
major revenue shortfalls and the
consequent need to raduca programs
- and personnel."

OYerall aaaeisment of the recently
aubmlttad Governor's budget, which he
,..lewad S.turdar with the Unl-.lty
Faculty Senate at the 61st Regular
Meeting, held at the Alba:ny University
·
Center, February 2·3.
While IICI&lt;nowledglng the document
as a. "survival" bu~t with "significant

well" end "retrenchment Is not
lnvol&gt;ed."
One of the moat ~ous unresolvad
financial problema Ia the failure to

~~~.' c~~r../~,th"!~he~~~

amental question" of how to raise the
_ , of Income to lnc:rMM future and
peat bonding commitments.

ell~~,:, '::l'~~lalth:s.r:::m:::~

budget naquest for equi pment replacement. "On far too many campuses
equipment Ia In ~. - very critical
stralta."
Another lmmadlete and continuing
concern reoulto from the total 'temoval
of another Item, the Library Improvement noq~M~t (S1 :9 million). " Budgetary

~r:.:

needed

wwnad.

=-:!"::~~.:,:: ~ver:l:~
library

acquisitions,"

he

T~ .,_!loa unclilcl-

)Aimoot a thlnl of hla prepared formal
comment• centered wound a balancad
conakleratlon of any potential r&amp;Ylalon
of cu..- tuition ~ •• a question that

~~et,rnnoJ:'m~~~

....__ na.-tad ... not met by
~ State funding, the Unl&gt;eralty haa only two optlona - to reduce
projec:tad expendlturw (Including the
~lilY of -11*11), or ln.,_tufilon."
The Clwloettor futty '*'&lt;&gt;gn~aa " the
ob'lloua problem" - that a reduction In
enroll11*!t due to a tuition lncruM
"llllgilt the effect of lowerlne
expctad ,_ue,• M.,.,_, "11nrol
"*'' ~. If Jer;e enough , could
wipe
!"Y net gain, or ..,., become

f:

'-,: r00at a.1oua aapecto of eny
• - In the ooata of atfendanoa, he
8dclad, ... not thoM l)4nOna who may
811111 from one lnatllutlon to another,
_but tlloee wt1o may e1ec1c1e not to atfend
81 ell. "'Aa the coata of atfendance
continue to mount, mono ..s mora
~ ..,_,. wHI dlcldl thai IIIey CMnof
8ftonl to .nand a COllage or un....uy."
Or. Wlwton ftll)elllad, durlnJI a
~~ "'*"on period, that ~
'-Y and rapid raductlona and
Nbllldlmenta" - l d oocur If anroll,.,.. do not kaap up wltll ~~
....... but thaN 11M not ~ an
Nllllll)' on the part ol lndlwNual SUNY
unlta to alltacC new at-ta.
,_....._..,.._
The Clianoallor I~ tflal a
ortttaal elanllnl In .-.nQ a clalermlnatton on . . llllaly ~ of any tuitiOn
. . _ t111011 ...roun..t Clapande
UllOA ~••• aoeb o1 .nendlng
IIIUIIIIo •· ...._lnatlluttona.
.,........ ....., ........, a grwl

... 'Of _ . . . lor 1118 IMifllllll

Actlvltyf..
The Chancellor also announcad thai,
"due to serious divergence of views
between campuses and certain campus
administrations and student leaders on
this matter," he has not made a final
decision either to approve or disapprove
a SUNY Student Aasembly resolution to
raise the maximum student acllvtty fee
$30 . .This action, If allowad , would

rn:''--;r =~~~~:sse,~~~~ t~

·a1udent referendum at each campus

un!l:e:t.'7/U?J~=.~~ ~:'~!:!. f~. will
authorize a lw&lt;&gt;-year temporaJY chahge
In the permissible maximum, provided .
It Ia approvad by campus student
referendum:' SIICh a prOcedure would
allow time to resolve differences.
'""ertheless, we have aertous questiona whether In the present climate'
~~f./~ ~~u::l~ tr.":!'.~~ -~ould

be

Conatrvctlciif boi.dtnv ·
The .Chancellor had earlier Indicated
that the capital construction fiscal
situation "Is complicated by the
so-called 'build-out.' During the period

~~ ~= at~~ey'cy~~~~~
lfn°~~g "',:'~~~~u=ds~~"1it~

time, a commitment was made to
complete the converalon of those
ahort,term notes to long-term financing
by-October 1, 1980.
"The Unlverally has some $248
million· outstanding In short-term
notes. In addition, there are aome $55
million of new construction alerts
(mainly UfB Amherst and Main Street,
lll)cl Old Westbury) which also noqulre

;::!.'!, ~~ t~fn~· o7~~ed:fn"dl~;'pon

the

Investment In human copltal
The Chancellor concludad his formal
presentation with the following comments:
"Two fundamental considerations
the fiscal
underline all others responsibilities of the ·suNY Board of
Trustees and officers and the-erosion of
state support for public higher
education . .
" Public higher education Is an
oo

~~r~::r~ ~/au:~~~~~g~rro~~:1 ~

public need - Investment In human
capital. The public belief In making
certain that tliose with the ability
should realize their fullest potential Is a
1~~~:,~:1.'! !~~t:t o~u. s. public policy •
"The reason Is clear · - the dollars
lnvestad yield a return to society far in
excess of those recelvad by the
' Individual. A failure to recognize this
fact and to make the needad Investment
in human capital can only lead to a
bleak future Instead of one character:~w~t/': ..soclal health, dynamism, and
AAUP and ratranch"*'l
There were several efforts from ttie
floor during the question period to draw

~g~t.=''?~tln~ ~=d',~~tla:~

. dlalogue between SUNY and AAUP that
mlgN lead to clarification of retrenchment clause provisions, ·and the
subsequent removal of AAUP's current
action of censure against SUNY. Dr.
Wharton effectively closed off discussion on tbls 'Item, explaining that he
•was not at llborty to make any
comments relative to a topic related to
•collective bargaining." •
Budgatanalyllo
At the Friday morning session , he
Senate also heard a detailed report !rom
Mr. William H. Anslow, Assistant VIce
Chancellor for Finance and Business
for SUNY, Who Jlave an "Instant
analysis" of the Governor's budget
which he characterized as " ateble and

Foreign students
meet with Ketter
In an effort to "11nhanoa warm
frlendehlpa betWMn loretgn atudento
and the admlnlatratlve oHioera," an
lnfomlal gathering of UfB lntern81Jonal
at-Is and admlnlatratona- held at
Red J - Quadrangle, Saturday. The
Mnl was apon-.d by the Student
Auoclatlon, the Graduate Student
AaiOclatloR, and the International
Coon:linatora.
G u - Sullawan, SA's coordinator
lor tn-lonal aftalra, noted that
"7.2% ol the atudent -ulallon here Ia

. _ . . 011 lh1e laua," and the;
~IIIIII ..,..UOO.:_.--,. madeupolforetgnatudenla." Prealdent
_
~ - .· Ketter ~ the function, staling
~~_ _ ,"wwll
111M "'lle Un._.,ty II ext-y
IIIIIM of llllcu8alona
fortunate to " - a tarve number of
- . . . _ . . .......
lcnlgn atudenta." Such a gathering did
of 1M Clllllolllt CII*(IOna
mucll to "brrdge the gap• - . . . ,
. . . . . . or Nit a lllltiOn • admlnlatratton and lorjlgn atuclento

a....
_...,

a

bonding . We thus face bonding nOOd
of about $303 million overthe next 20
months." (It was noted that 62. per cent
of this total Is for buildings already
constructad.)
The three possible sources for funds
to finance this addad deb\' service
Include, " additional rental reserve ,
pledged budget allocation, and Increased tuition income. Whether or not
Increased tuition would be requioad,

alike, he seld.
Sullawan said that UIB's 1 760
foreign students feel they are "Informal
repre8ehiatlvea ol our countries.
This is really a privilege for this
Unl-slty as well as our prlvlklae to
study here. In this community we face a
trial of whether foretu.n atudents who
come from more than 90 countries can
live and work logeUftW In hannony
among themaelvea and with Americana
This Ia an Important trial bac:auae ao our
world bocomea more complex end mora
Interdependent, our ability to cooperate
with each ofher Is a crucial fac:lllr for
our aurvlval on till a planet. Unli&gt;ct;.natety, thll ccioperatlon 11 usually not·
comlhg bfltaeff, but Ita axlatance only
caa be maintained ao long a we ...
willing and ......., aome effoi1
00.

0000"

austere In all of Its a.spects. "-1{1 terms of
state operations , the budget Is •
"extremely tight with onlr a 3 per cent
' Increase for ali purposes. He explained
that particular attention was accorded
to effect tax raducllons.
The - Canton-SUNY ! Buffalo representatives Cl)-sponsored a resolution
which was adoptad, " to allow each
SUNY campus to estebllsh Its own
academic calendar In accordance with
general guldelln&amp;JI ·provided" by the
Board of Trustees with regard to
religious neads of the faculty, staff and
students," and "calling further upon the
Board to rescind Its current policy on all
SUNY campuses and refrain from

=~~~~8N~~~Icuc".:l:n~rs.~ 01 1 0ther raaolutl....

pe~:,/~~~~~~~:r~~o':,~f~: also
•That the tnlverslt~ ~~ulty Senate

recommend to the Chancellor for his
attention a model for campus Affirmative Action Committees that should

B'~:rs~~~~~~elo~'J"ng ~~~ c~~~~

tees and their charges. (Fafr Employ,
ment Practices Committee)
•That the SUNY senate end&lt;irae the
Inclusion' of monies In the 1979-1980
budget request at a level not leas than
that provldad by the previous grant; that
continuance of the faculty renewal ,

~~:~~~'lnt~"';"~';';~. (~~~Itt::

on Personnel Policies)
•That ttie University Faculty Senate
urge the Chancellor to charge the Office
of Access Services with r&amp;Ylalon of
current information brochureo to better
meet the needs of students preparing to
practice health care professions. The
revision should:
1. Cross referance programs by
discipline and location;
:F. Li st preadmission requirements;
3. Include eligibility for licensure or
certification;
~ - List size of program;
5. List artlculetlon arrangements
with other programs whera appropriate;
6. Include undergraduate and graduate programs . .
The r&amp;Ylalon should be completad In
lime for September 1980 registration .
(Health Sclenoaa and Health Affairs
Committee)

Human aubjecta
• Thill the Un'-alty Faculty Senate
urge the Chancellor to taka lmmadlate-

r~~ut~~,.:= ~'1:;·~:~

tlon of Human Sublecta that would:
1. 8yatern811Catfy ...... the procaduree, pollclee and oompoattlon of
local campus lnatltutlonal r&amp;Ylew
boards·
2. ACcept appM'Io from Individual
reaearchera who believe that t~ local
IRB has mlaapplled pollclaa and
guidelines for the protection of human
aub)ecta;
3. Act to dlaaamlnata Information on
the guidelines for _protection of human
aub)ecta to campus IRB'a and faculty .
(Health Sclencea and Haalth Affairs
Committee)
• That the University Faculty Sanata
atrong)y aupporta eHorta to obtain
budgetary reaourcaa to rapt- obeolete
teachin g ( - equiptl'ltlll and adequately matntalil exlattnv aqutpmem
lor bolh leaching and . - a .
(Committee on Reeeln:h)
·

Off'ICIAL ADOIIEU
The official adclr.a ctf the Unflaralty Ia:
ltata Unhanlty ol N- Yarll at Buft81o
~Hall

.............. YarlltGID

�........

n

.

rn-liouse
grant funds
are awarded
s~~g.,s:';:'\':; ftuh~d'~RsG

Committee
for Its consideration ware 34 proposals
for health-related research totalling
$152,908. The U/B Foundation Seed
Money Grant Committee racelved 39
proposals for research In other fields
totalling $72,161 .
The BRSG C3ommlttee allocated
$36,020 In support of 17 proposals,
Graduate Dean Gilbert Moore, chalrperson,1nstltullonal Funds, Indicated.
The U/B Foundation Seed Money
Grant Committee makes only recom:
mendatlons to the UfB Foundation.
They recommended · 14 proposals
totalling $19,333. The U/B Foundation
In turnapproved ' nlne.
ReceiVIng BRSG grants for these
projects are:

EnBl::'
1froeve, ChemiCal Engln~ng ,
Effect of Putaatlle Flow on Oxygen
Transport In Membrane Oxygenators , •
$2,775.

HoalthSCII-.
_ o .R. Fish , Physical Therapy, Maatlcallon
In the Ttee Sh,_, $1 ,542; J . Laughlin,
~t':'~?·H~~~~ and Its Employees'
Man-oement
_Raymond G. Hunt. Human Resources ,

..

r:z~~~'ra~ct':.!~~=:~~::: '~~·
Noturll.. Jeremy Bruenn,

·
BlologlcaJ Sciences,
Cloning of Yeast Genes Involved In Meiosis,
$2500; Clyde Herreid, Blol,;cal Sciences,

A~ Summary of 1979-80 Appropriation_:; (OOO's omitted)
lnatnlc·
-·nd
Dlportmental
R....rch

Tobl

Recom·

mendad

187$-«l

i~~E;,~~~~--~-~· :' :' :' :' :':'·::

Stony Brook . ..•.••....

H!•lth. Sc~nce C..tera
Buffalo ...... . ....
Downstate ....•.•.
Stony Brook •....
Upstate .. ...

49 ,144.7.
32,283.0
75 ,63-4.7
60 ,662.7

25 ,342.0
16,343.1
35,669.8
23,698.7

642.6
346.2
117.0
1,458.8

22,289.6
61.694.8
40,735.2
50,547.1

19 ,875.6
16,968.2
16,527.7
10,915.2

67.1

Brockport ...... . ......

24,066.4
25 ,709.7
13,991.5
15 .503.2

12,065.0
13,722.2
6,750.2
7 ,545.1

Buffalo .......... . ... .
Fredonia . . •. ... _
Geneseo .•.. -•..

1

Raman

Study

-

1

~Pf:!

lnatltu
II!Ifill

A~xHIIIry

~Pf:!

Enllf-

pn..

.,

Srringo

1,461.8
1,226.4
I ,«8.3
3 :514.0

213.8
77.1
237.6
86.7

4 .553.7
3 ,131 .2
5,811.5
3,601.4

58.7
5.3 _

2,204.2
37 ,243.4
. 28 ,918.0
76.1
31 ,821 .0

12,780.7
2,615.1
1,563.1
8 ,899.3
3,847.8 - 27 ,248.2
25 ,510.0
2,419 .0

4,059.3
2,464 .6
3 ,937.4
4,760.1

-1 ,062.5
-541.6
-1.234.6

· · ·3,5:3

405.5
8,197.9

.. j12:9

·a:i•7::i

.. '427:9
.. '322:6

1,512.6
1.578.6
755.7
1,054 .1

6.270.1
7,004 .3
3,746.2
3,937.6

- 2,372.6
1,05) .1
1,667.2
1,623-. 4

-369.4
-385.9
-216.2
-244 .5

138.1
68.0
183.9
198.8

-230.6
36.6
38.7
-12.4

~72 . 6

- -321 .5
-1.463.2
--4 ,710.5 .
-1;218.0

1,894.5
2,60-4.6
1,003.1
1,538.7-

64.6
196.0

321 .0,
70.2
89.3
48.8

850.6
714.3
490 .4
769.2

22.9
5.6
4.7
34.5

2.5
.9
6.1
2.4

t!!Z.7
140.6
224.4
172.4

37.4
31.4
56.9
31.4

«8.2
229.0
«3.2
2 ,317.7

1,182.8
5,278.8
8 ,042 .8
3 ,150.7

1,121.5
304 .9
1,613.5
. 197.7

2.5

2.8
.2

46.3
4 ,692.9
10,464.8
2,541.2

.. 3:8

9 .7
263.5

1.6

4.5

391 .7

577.5
462.2
338.0
429.0

241 .3
162.9
107.9
279.3

-10.4
1.8
1.8
.6

·65.7
93.1
42 .3
• • 49.4

17.3
43.4
21 .9
11 .9

218.8
156.2
114.7
131 .0

1':

Changes
University Center&amp;

Albany..........

. Stony
:~f~~~~·-~~ : :: ::
Brook ..
He•lth Sclence Centers
Buffalo . ..
Downstate ..
Stony Brook .
Upstate .....

13.5

~-i:ros:s

----.-.:a

Unlveralty CollegH
Brockport .......
Buflalo •......
Fredonia . .. .....•..
Geneseo . . .. ..

1.7
7.7

120.2
21.0
60.9
69.3

-75.4
-17.9
-19.2
-112.5

B. Assignment of Personnel- FTE Positi~ns, 1979-1980

~~~~~~~~na~~io~ara~f N. p~~~~a:T.
Laser

St-t .
Affolra ·
.and
st.-t
Aid

Academic

Untweralty Colleon

~:~~smo~!tr~~:;.'''S~165~5c~~~~~~
1

Ext-ion
end
Public
Orvanlzacl
Re...-ch
S-CI

Untveratty Centwa

Instruction and
Departmental ResNrch
lnatruclion
Other

Kelleher, BlologlcaJ Sciences, Mutants In

Chemistry,

-·

Budget- C!-lmparlsons

,_

The University-wide Committees for
the Allocation of BRSG (Biomedical
Research Support Grant) Funds and
U/B Foundation Seed Money Grant
Funds have acted on proposals for

...

'&lt;""

Total

St.-1 Extenakm

Affairs

and
Organized
Research

Academic

~rc.rt. ~

Public

Sen lee

lnatltutlonal

and
Student
Aid

Auxiliary
Enterprlan

~Pf:!

of

~I~'1r~ ~ ns:~~=ca~ ~J:

ences , PhysYcal Fa:::tora Directing DlsulfJde

Pairi ng In Proteins, 12400; 5agur N. Srlharl,
Computer Sclence, Techn~uea . for Deteo-.
~~~nd:'!.. 'k~~C1tation o1 Changing

Un,.,.,...fyCent. . ....

Albany ......... _.....

:.:

:~?~:~~~~: ~:::::

::

Stony Brook •.• ...•....

2,250
1.538
3,304
2,607

764
524
991
774

884
2,903
2,048
2,180

374
314
254

8
4
9
4

209
127
271
182

..;...
..•....:i

91
1,817
1,536
1,491

24
21
5
66

338

233
475
328

129
88-

1,~~

577
417

200
125
207
203

10
375

.... '20

" 266

13

89
95
47
43
55

284
294
216
186
200

110
73

.. .... :i

-,

222

123

HNith Sclenoo Clntlfo ...
SocloiSd1. Bledermon, Psychology, A Cortical

Buffalo ............. . .
Down$ tate ••..••.•••• •

Laterality lnvnt=IOn ol the Processing of

Stony Brook ...........

Chinese and
M Charactera and
English Won:to , 13120; R.A. Depue ,
Psychology, Studll8 of Subclinical Oepr8S-

slve Oiaordera: Part 1. Development of a
Case tdentHlceUon Questionnaire, S1000;

J .F. Ouchan, Communk:atlon Dlaordera ,

~em=~~u~~'tn~once:.,;r'k~~

Aocuotlc Analysll, $21115: c .r."ouggleby ,
Anthropology, Blood GrouP. Mal1&lt;ers and
Atheroecl.-oell in Non-Human Primates,

rnf::;Ar~~ ~:.:dlburt":r~~:
S21185;
Infant

lnt...:tlon,

M.

Krlatal ,

~~~'fV~':" sf~o~' :.r'·'tu~l:.~

Upstate ........... ... .

Unlvlfolty Colilgft . . . _...
Brockport .............
Buffalo ..•..

Cortillnd .......... .. ..
Fredonia ...... . . . ••• . •
Geneseo ......•.

Un~ty

Conlin . . ......

Albany ............ . ..

=~~?~~~~~~ : :~::::::::

~~C'~o,:'!·co.;io.a·: ::.

U/BFIndlvkSuala whoee proiecta were funded
:&gt;y thtf U/B Foundation - .:
Colin Mellon AdMI, Mechonlc:IIJ Engl-

Downstate . ••.••••.•..
Stony Brook .........•..
Upstate ................

=

Relotlono • - In Newly Eotablllhed
Rljlld T - t Linea, $1040; Fr1111cee
Downl~ Af'Dhltcture, Buffalo DomestJc

~=ing,' :,.l,'::t'.:.:'r.io~~F..i

t~~~lon~o:: c....~.~ci&lt;~.~~~=;

~':!':=.Av':'it!~ J~'

1,133
1,223
784
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782

472
512
279
255
285

8
20
-29
1-7

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11
-24
8

18
219'

12
--4

Buffolo ...............

u.;~ty COI~eg~o . . ..••.

=~'~:!\~." :::::::::· :::

Cortlllnd . _ . : ..........
Fredonia ............· ..

·558'

83
131
78
51
74

81

84
85

1
4
-12
4 '

-

-· .. " i
2

!1-

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-10
--4
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.. " 220

-10

..... ,:i

-3
2

-1

~

3
8
1

558
17

':i

-2

-1

.-

1. Includes Incorporation of actlYitlu previously funded by self-genefated revenues.

C. Other Costs

-. ...-. --

liducatlon

...

and

lnotructlOnal
Coat

0-Colt

U-tyCanl. .

and

:::w~~~~~ -:::

J s

18
4
1
4
3

2. · Positions for opening new hospital, authorized bufnot funded.

Public-.__
and A. Nell
v__,, 111.8. All tnW.tlgatlon Into thl

=:....~~""'· Student'

4

"8

Geneaao .............. no changes

:t:,nagr::·"P~~nlUitlo~.~~'-:'.j

Firm~;

77
112
62
60
61

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198
136

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~rC;Oiit.acr:. ~.:"nao~~nt'rl~;

509

Albany ................ ..

:::::.:::;:

-·-c:.ww

Stony Brook ........ - ....
Buffalo

Downa- .. ........... .

Stonylltool&lt; ........... . .

-F-.. . . . . . ,.
Upolale ............... ..

c•::oport ............... ,
llufWo ................. .

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

-

$3,850
3,451
4,103
4,-419

8,412

17,4111

$2,009
1,872
1,812

1,8!12
7,31111

14,240
21,133

11,2113
13,32!1
11.to0

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1.-

2,125

2,101

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158
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-

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Allocatl-

·-·$258
314
249
228

-

-

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- 287

171
183

154
133
149
1811

1110.

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1.42
1.35

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.. , 2'.85
1.18

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1.211
1.06

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.

�FobnootJ I, 11711

0

Winter_
Ciarni I
Winter C.mlval 79 found oGl onthuoiHtlc otudonto teotlng tho , Ellicott
CI'OM--country akl tralle Saturday. end an
overflow crowd et WJik ..on Pub for the
WPHD Road Show. Thoro woro 1,000
oldoro ot o lltlnga ot Holldov Volley w:e're
told. and even a anowy football game on
Soturdoy. Winnie Tho Pooh, the entry of
Wllkeoon'a fourth floor (pictured here),
won the officlaJ •now aculpture contest.
" Unofflclel" toilet bowlo ond woroo ot
Govemon probably got more attention.
though. The okotlng ot Leko LeSolle7
They cancelled h .

•Calendar
(from page 7. coL 4)

7·9 p.m.; Women and Ak:ohoUsm, 7:30·9 p .m.
T~, Februory 1S- Garmon ~and
Culture, 7-8:30 p.m.: Old .Testoment Propllels,
3:30·5 p.m : Shopo;ng and Eating on a Shoeairing Bulge!, 7-9 p.m.; ~landing How Drugs
Wcw1&lt;, 7-8 p.m.

Wodnooday, Fobnoary U - Anlll..odieo olthe
'M'ilo Houoo. 8-9 p.m.; Shy Peraono' Atlarl\'mOUS,
3:3&lt;&gt;-5 p.m. (no regisb'alion reqo.Orod).
Ufe Wocbhope • • open to students, tacutty.
etaft,......,.. and spo~..~SM , Md are credlt-ftee and
~ free o1 cn.-ge. Regilb'olion tor WOII&lt;ohopoconbemode ln 1 10Ncw1on, 838-2808.

PHI ETA SIQIIA FEU.OWSH•s
who pion to -

lor grock.ete

Of

p r o t - doQ&lt;eeo and who oro men-. ol
Phi Elo Sigmo Froolwnon ScdoiY ahculd
got
the locutty advloor, w.
. 231 5QIM-o. 8 :30a.m.-5p.m. dolly.
Notfonol Phi Elo Sigmo SOcioiY offers 1•
$500 ~ this year on the buia o1 a
atudent"a ICholarsNp recc:wd, evidence of creative
~. evidence ol need, promise ol
IOOCOOI
and chonocter. Only
rnef!1benl ol Phi Elo Sigmo oro eligl&gt;lo for tlleaa
gift - . r i p s. Natfonol doadllne lor IUbmitling
..,.,t1c:otions lo Marcil. 1. Locol doadllne lor-- · ~19 , 19711 .
.

In -with
In "'-' ,_,

-VACATION TRIP TO FLORIDA
Tho lntenalve &amp;1glilh Languog&lt;i IMM\Jil! Is
~on excuroion to F1oOdo during spnng
brook. open to tho enllro u-.ny CXliiV1U&gt;ity.
A prtce ol $281 - - r&lt;&gt;und·Ofp 1ir to
'C&gt;rtlndo, • United, n .commodltioi-. at .the
-..on Twin Towere lhole ( l e u r - ).
Tho peckago lncbloa to Olonoy
lor ono-doy, .,.,..... to Ooylono 9ooch
(one cloy) ond Soo ·- o n cor.-.

Pl1ce on otpo (to plocoa
ouc11 • Gordon~ In T - ). and a :.oe
from tho holol to .,.,.,.,. In Central
b11nQ """"*"from now
unlllolorch 2 Tho o t p - -.Qoy, Ap1 7,

Aorida.-..

ond""""'- 1 • .

F o r -· COl EU at 836·20n or 20711
ond ooklor COihy Of UrTy

on-f'rof"ot orx.

u.s. !'&lt;&gt;""K"
PAID
Buffalo, .V
Pnmit No. 311

-lob.

•us

In

ITUOY
LAJ
Tho~
tho u.w..oty lMnW&gt;g
COnlor, :lee lloldy'HIII,Jo open lor """""'
reodlng and study . ., Mondoy,
Tuetdi)IR~. 11 •m -· 1 p .m ., Wecfnel..
cloy and~. 11 am ·3 pm Tho lob lo open

tooiU/11-

.

Exhibits
' OROUP SHOW '
Alamo Gollo&lt;y , Becl&lt; Holt . llwough F~.
Spor--.d by the Office ol V.P. lor 5clonoeo""" 0 0 - o l Art.

OAR OFFICE HOURS
Februlry 8-9- 9 a.m.· 7 p.m.
Februlry 12·15-9a.m.· 7 R.m.

-

TAX INFORMATION FOR FOREIGN STUDENTS
Tax lnfonnalion lor foreign . ,_,,. and schcl.,. lo avallable through Aptl 1 3 from the con·
aultant to Foreign Students and Scholano. 402
~ - By appolnb'nent only. Thoee aoel&lt;lng asalstance should bring copiea ql the~ 1978 tax
retumo and W-2 forms. For appointment, cat
636·2 2 71 .

JEJIUIIAlDI' I AIICHAEOLOCIICAL ~AST AND
CURIIEIIT IIUTORA110N

K-""!lho_A..._A~­

provldodbytho-~ . ~ .

D.C. On o&gt;CIIIbll unll 9. U/8 - . o i l
Museum ol Anll'n&gt;pok&gt;gy, Cenlor,-Eifoolt. ~lln&gt;ugll ~. ,
Lm.-4 p.m.: SMJrdly S'1d a.nc:.y,. 10 a.m.-3 p.m.

_..,...... c_,_.,..._...,

SAED~

.......... Z*A............--Hoyeo

In -

.Is.-

HII'--Y. ~by1ho-oiAn::Ntoc­
tureond~IOIDoolgn .

Zuk.-ol-ol-~­

slly

proclalngon:Hioct

- · oonlinod t o
- -· In Ontorlo, lflle In (,.._ ao mony ·

- ~-·-.v--..-) . ond
one In Now Yorlt. LocUtng In ~ rooontty,

"'*" ""'

Zuk
Ulctolnionl In 1,00()-yeor
ctwtolfon . . c l d n o t _ l o _ - . r y
bl-.g - tho! Adllon
- Hlo 20th
CenUy
continuo
deol&gt;i10
Wlolw&gt;f
_..
-ln1ho~~~-

------In .. . ,"'"'*'
. . .,
Acc:entlng ... aonct*y -

. . . - -. ho -.by ·-

on tho

..tn -

ond

O)'l!'ballc ....

toghl thol ....

-a~

lftuiQicol-- -~---­

from the b&lt;lghlly • • roof -from tho
low -_
lo_
- ·l.
churdlooluk
_
o_
ho90 whore ... - - Fer- ol hlo

.... hlrmonloully-01nJc:lnl-.
TfWiy-oUI.~

·---tnduclod.

--WOOIICARYI!IUI
Croollve o.ft Center, 1 ?0 MFACC, Elfcolt.
Follnary 111.28. 8 0/11. ·10 p .m dolly. Spon-by!IIIC&lt;.nCenlorono-ARiiro

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Budget not so good,,but hot~ s~ bad, .elther··.·
The U/ B budget situation for the
fiscal. year beginning April 1 Is not
as bad as It may look at first glance
Acting-Executive Vice Presldeni
Charles Fogel told the Reporter
Wednesday morning .
True, the Carey funding proposal
tor U/B includes only about
on"e-third -of the increase which
SUNY was asking, and contains
some line cuts, but there Is still an
overall budget boost of $2.6
mOtion.
Two categories ,
In explaining the budget from the
sketchy Information he had available, Fogel cautioned that funding
figures for tJ/B have to be
discussed In two separate categories the so-&lt;:alled core
campus and the health. sciences

center.

The core campus, Fogel said, I~
necelvlng an Increase of some
SI .«Smllllon- to $75.634 million ;

::: ~:~~ s;;esr;~~wr,b~ i':!'7~
$22. 289 mi llion .
Wi thin the core campus figure ,
the State has authorized seven new
positions (one radiati on protection
person and six maintenance people
for new buildings) . Thirty-six
positions are to be deleted - 24
faculty , lines and • 12 support
~sltlons. This. amountS to a net
·

o;.sh~~~~~s~~i~~~s are in line for
18 new positions (12 faculty and 6
support lines) , and will lose no
positions . This Is true, Fogel said ,
because the health sciences have
experienced " workload" Increases
(meaning enrollment increases),
while the core campus has failed to
meet enrollment targets.
No doom
Fovet said cries of gloom and
doom would reflect a "misreading
of ·the actual situation ." We asked

for some $4,800,000 more than we
got , he granted. It means some bell
lightening and a failure to get
money for Improvement in library
acquisitions and computing facilities, but.the Impact Is far less than
It was, say, two to thnee years ago.
At that time, we h~ lncrease;d
enrollments to handle and received
cuts. " We did everything but' skete
on thin Ice" to keep from having to
retrench employees with contracts,

~~Re'n6':":~~ot~~~s u~~in n~D~~

" has been so manhandled" by DOB
as to have \ to think about.
retrenchment.
.
Albany didn't specify exactly
where personnel cuts will have to
come as It has done In the past: All
It Is saying Is that a certain -amount
of faculty and a certain number of
support positions In Instructional
areas must be eliminated. This
means , Fogel lnd_lcated , that cuts
could be handled within the normal

~!""~t,~':!tt~~:erpr~~:m;.;::;.

people leave may not necessarily be
the places where cutbacks can or
should be m -. That hasn~ been
decided yet.
·

Whit's In, whlfs out

Turn ing to a closer look at what Is .
and is not Included In the
Governor's proposal, Fogel pointed
out that the 36 line cuts within the
core campus are valued at about
$450,000, Including both salaries
and supply moneys for the
positions. Also cut for the core
Ch.ITlpus were: funds to pay
employees who wish to cash In
vacation· tfrne ($64,800Jb one,time

U'gri'~n~n "m~~ey (~~7 ihe )ien:/"~j

facil ities (a cut of $165,000); and a
slash of $217,000 to neduce Albany has decided Is "too rich" '8
distribution of faculty among the
· - ·.........·-1t,ool.1

r

FEB 1,1979
VOL.10 • N0:17

General Ed
Current thinking is that six
' knowledge areas' will be identified
in which all students will take work
ChllllceS · ~a the FI¥'UIIY Senate
Elcecutlve CommiUee will soon be
debatlilo recommendations for a
General Educatl"" Program broken
down Into six "knowledge areas" In
which students must do courae work.
The second phase of the development

l'JenJ/Jrcatfo~grof'co:r:JJ.s ~~~~~~~

f.f~~~~h~~';.,~.:l'ua.i,ew~ll':",:~~ve~erat
a&lt;J~I~r mt':!l~~swlt~s~ g~~Jkof =~
Peradotto, dean of Undergneduate
Education, reported that the General
E&lt;tlx:ation format will likely Include two
courses each In the areas of historical
and philosophical studies, physical

~~f":.:d ~e:;=',~fY5~\~~nc;.e~.;

languages. Students would also ·be
required to take at least three courses In
the area of literature and arts.
According to Peradotfo, more courses are needed In ·the last category
because of the " disparity" · between
literature and the performing arts.

Carter's veto
threatens Nursing
~t

Certer'i! refuaal to algn a

,_.a

bill extending the N&amp;ne Training Act Of
197!5 wlll
diiVUtatlng effect on
U/B nursing progrwna, predlcta Acting
Dean of Nu111lng Dr. Ruth Gale Elder.
She aays the School, which turned
- y aome 300 QUIIIIfled undergraduate
appllcenh In t817-78 for leek ol18culty
lind aupport aervk:ea, will heYe to rwjeet
_ . greater numbenl In the future .
TI'Wntng of nu111M to pi'O'tlde higher
ieloala Of care • n&amp;ne p111Ctltlo-.,
Cllnlci- « apeclallata In 8UCh
u pedlelrica. aertatrlca end I*'CiiotoCIY
-lei eteo taft by the wey8lde u a
,.....t ol failure to extend the Act.
During the past tm. yura, Elder
Mid "the U/B School of Nu111ing hes
- - .--ty S3 million In Iunde f«
~Ips and ~tatlon gr811tl u a
,.....t o1 the 1\ct.' An additional $1
million reqUHt, submitted for 111711, Ia
Ill Cllltlnct Jeooan!Y should both the
and
Senate fall to ooerty pan rwubmitled . . .Ions
11 to be •ntrocllleed tater In
ol the

~

the current session of Congress.

'Short-elgllted'
f'nlalelent c.rter's pocket veto of
teglalatlon to,extend the Act which was

~~=:!ct·~~,:«&lt;,:Y~

Ita "Inflationary" nature. This t. an
extremely short-&lt;lighted vi- of the
sltuatioll. Elder bet'-.

~=~tr.==.V:.~i8".!:~ ~

at
thoae wllich prepare~ Md
. llf8duale llllnllng students • ~
fiMitll ~onala. "Btnoe 11178, our
School hu pooduced ....ty 125 rune
p111Ctltlorws to work In ambul8tory
cllnlcf, school
end '-Pitalang ho.,..,.. Eldlr palnta out.
p111Ctltlorws. lnilned to JIIOikle
......... which ..... to betMeole
province of the phyalclen, _ , perform
t ' - aapecta ol . . . . . a ao- coet
then would ottwwl• be poulble.
T - kinds ol llfOIIIMII, the~
IIIQUed , ahould be
ltl811

=

ayat-.

......_.1'8111er

·---·-11,ool.1

s-ndphue
The aecond phaae of Implementation,
scheduled for 1980 or thereabouts,
Includes development of special courses In each of the six .,.. for
non-majors, courMS which will ~vide
at least a basic understanding of the

ansa.

In eddltion, students will have to take
at least one courae within these anoaa
which explores certain themes like
"ethical end moral evaluation of
conduct" or "POlitical syatems end their
Impact on human life," suggeeted
Peredotto.
The themes will be "g.-a! enough"
so they can be covered In a number of
cou,..... UniVonlty catalogs will be
ctwlged to help atudenta Identify
courMa aoconllng to the themee they

wl~ Indicated tllat atudenla wlll

aleo , _ to delnonatrate

c:otnPM•ooe· ·

In writing aiiCI In math to the
pr&amp;-ealculua '-'· ~. no ooww
work need be ..... liP!'- - - " .

_,--out

atudents
olu.n.
......-.mty, ... Gener8i Education
formUla ,_ not • VIII .,_, flniiNzed.

"'-''otto noNd thai ... General
EducatiOn Committee le atUI "conalderlng" ., . , _ . 10111111 ill wlllch
atudanta piCI&lt; :::/, tlnll « folK ·

~n"=S'=

.

tslalmoNOOUt8ee

Aleo on the burner Ia ~t of
eo-called " core programs" mede up of a

sll(les of couraea which have "orvanic
Integrity end unity.• A student might
opt to take such a program lnateed of
General Education courwes, lndk:aled
Pe&lt;adotto. The Collegee would be f!Ufy
candldetea to offer such progrM~a, he
said.
- After the General Education Comm lttee makes Ita recommendation I to
~the
Faculty Senete thla tiDIIng,
Peredotto saki, the Committee will not
dlsbend, but will continue to monitor
the "Intellectual content" of the GE
courses.
Student oplnlo!' carrlulese wlllght
Peradotto hopes students will approve of the program, but noted that
their arguments pro and con will not
carry as much weight as facolty opinion
since Jaculty have a "longer commitment to the University," end students
would essentially be commenting on a
program that will not directly affect

them.

A grendfather cl..se excludes
students who were enrolled before the

pr~=~~~ Commltt• piobebty
doeS not have the authority to
recommend lnatructora for the pn&gt;
~ram, "-**otto l"fllcta that the "beet

~~tt:,.;ll:~~~al~

abOut General Education ell along."
The dean aleo l"fllcted a Cloee, heRS

::.o~~~~

within the Committee, end expecta IN
faeulty u a whole wlll reflect the · concerns expreeeed by Committee
membenl.
If lmp-tatlon of the progrwn •
lnltlall9 propoeecl ta. found to be
•unfeulble," ~ uya It will be
"modified" by the Committee.
Nolnduae-t
Attempting to explain the r.lloMie
for utabtlahlng a G.,... EdUC8llon
program, Plndolto uJcl .,......

~~U::.,~~0th~~'-=

"'-*1111 unfamiliar to them. .._.,
\end to Qrnlt tllalr atuellee to a - ...,. ol cou.... around their nwjor
.....,. they .,. confident they can do
well, he lnalated.
....

..

UIICiergreduale,

~

.-lied, he had to take he
.,._,. but Ia now glad)le did. '\Aft the
"-dom to ~. I -leln'l hew
..... them," he admitted.
~ -.ct the lldvl-

...

-~o~,·-··-·

�........

Febru•ry 1, 1879

They'~e. had It

Law student.s and faculty contend .
undergrads are po aching in th~ir library;
situation _is 'intolera'ble. ·they c o mplain
Law students say they've just '&amp;bout
had It with the large numbers of
undergraduates who use the Law
Ubrary f&lt;&gt;r study space while Law
students, and. otners who need ~s
resource materials, are kept from doing

lm~~~~~fn~;~ere voiced last ·week
at a meeting of student representatives
convened bv U/B Libraries Director
Saktldas Roy. Th.e two Law students
present at the meeting serve on the Law
School's Library Committee.
According to the Law students, their
peers are so angered at the (l(llsy,
overcrowded situation at the Law
Library that their committee considered
banning undergraduates from · the
facility. The committee as a whole,
however, thought that' position "too
extreme" to be workable.
'Intolerable sltueUon'

Their grievances were underscored by
Law Professor and Librarian Wade
Newhouse who aald conditions in the
Law Library have become "Intolerable."
Newhou~e said that because the
facility was the first library constructed
at Amherst, out of necessity, It became

~:· .~~~":nt~0 ~~dr~~ryw~~~eci&lt;ei~
~~:w o1~~t ,tb~~ fc;~~t~~ ;~~ed~~n~

But now that other major libraries are In
full operation at Amherst , .the problem
~~~~-resolved_ Itself , l~mented New5

an~e f:c~Ft~as~~edndra~a~~wto t~g;:~

NYPIRG -cites ' hazards;'
.U/8 says they 're not

"hostile" to undergraduates; but do
resent1he library being used just for

according to standards set by the
National Institute of Occupational
Safety and Health and the u.s.

g:~'!.~~~~t ~ve~~:roa~~~~~ont!,,:~

1

~~";~~~~trh~~ohu~·b~~h ~~~e to
Newhouse and the Law students
asked .that more be done to Inform the
general student population about the
availability of space In other library
facilities at Amherst C&amp;mpus, like the
Undergraduate Library, the Science and
Engineering Library, and the new
Lockwood . They also asked that other
libraries be opened earlier on weekends
to accommodate undergraduates who
usually flock to the Law Library be&lt;;auseof Its longer operating schedule.
Extended reference hours on -kends
GSA representative Jorce F'tn. and
SA , epresentative Joe Mayersohn
asked that hours for the Libraries' reference service be extended during the
weekend. Roy and his staff agreed to
change the ·schedule to accommodate
needs , but W!lfned that, because of

~ds~~~~~~u~~"Jn;~~~~wt~~~sh~iet~~

week.
Plnn also asked that the Libraries

~~~:fraw~::san'?~&lt;lJ:'n~. ~~ ~~ ~
0

problem

exists

because

graduate

;~d~~~s ~~~g~t f~':"~e~r ,r'f~:~s~;~
• returned late.

Roy reported that the Libraries will
likely be leasing 16 copy machines from
the Research Foundation . When the
arrangement Is finalized , the cost of
copies will drop from 10 cents to 5
cents each , he said .•

U/B again. on cover of

'Scientific -American '

The .mlnar, conducted by counselIng psrcholoa1111 G«aad Thorner, will be
the lira! of Tts kind offered here for

stu_dled respltatory processes In the
For the secon.&lt;t time In less than a
eggs of many bird species, both In the
year, a report on researc11 by U/ B
scientists has i!aptured the cover of the · laboratory and on field expeditions to
VBJious parts of the worfCf. "
prestigious S~ientlflc American .
A technique for measuring the
The cover story In the February Issue
Qf the magazine is " How Eggs
pressures of oxygen and carbon dioxide
Breathe," a report of a research project
1n chicken &lt;&gt;ggs Is depleted on the
by Drs. Hermann Rahn and Charles V.
magazine's cover:
Paganelli , U/B professors of physiolIn the experiment. the magazine
ogy, and Dr. Amos Ar, senior lecturer In
says, " HI-day-old ~hicken eggs, each
the Department of Physiology at Tel
specially fitted with a metal connector
Aviv University In Israel.
and a fine plastic catheter, are removed
All three are respiratory physiolotemporarlly"'rom an lncupator. A plastic
gists.
syringe Is attached-to the connector In
Scientific American says the article
order to sample the gas In the air cell at
" shows the egg to be a not quite selfthe blunt end of the egg . (After the
contained life support system for· the
sam~as been taken. the syringe Is
developing embryo. If holds all the
tilted so hat the drop ol mercury Inside
Ingredients required for the growth of
seals o the openfng, preventong the
the chick from single fertilized egg-cell'
gas sample from being contaminated •
atmospheric air.) At the same time
;;,se~~f~Pitng~;JPe~7· th!0eg~u'!f:~th~::1 awith
smaller glass syringe Is connected to
by simple diffusion , th&lt;ough mlcrothe plastic catheter and a sample of
oxygenated blOod Is removed from a
~o~~~~e~~~ t~:,~' ·d~;~pdeen ~~~ sarnr,le
in a pl-.,ta-llke membrane
out."
·
with n the egg. After samples of b'ood
The aathors said " our Interest in bird
and gas have been taken from each egg
eggs started 10 years ago when O.D.
the concentrations of oxygen and
Wangensteen, now associate professor
=ri:tt!f~de . in the samples are
at the University of Minnesota, joined
our respiration group as a postdoctoral
The U/8 project feetured by
fellow . One day he asked, 'How do eggs
Scientific American Mrtler In the year
breathe?' Since none or us knew, he
was "Computer Poker" by Prof.
proceeded to demonstrate for the first
Nicholas Flndler, a report on a project
time how Flck's law of diffusion would
to " teach" computers to play that card
explain the gas exchange across the
game whjch appeared In the July, 1978
eggshell of the chicken . We ~ave since · Issue.

SeveraT v-a ago, Thorner conducted
a almU• *'tift lor faculty which met

La~e additions to Senate agenda

wlll
"'1M CXICe a w - for 10 weeks
Wjjlnnlng Febnl8ry 6. The two-hour
....,.,. Will beheld from 1-3 p.m,.
~lnG to Thorner, the purpose of
1M II to help ~lcipanta
"'lnnllnUUIccllld All~ to students In a
..... ..,.. by "!_lrlclglnQ the gap"
. . . _ . ....... through , _
~- Thorner aays ha wlu llllllr .......,inG end group 1"-PY
.............. iflllll -'011a In addition
he knows about
......W IIICI Ilia feelings about

Two last minute llems of business
ve been edded to the agenda for the·
February 6 Faculty Senate meeting,
Chairman Newton
said thfa

hazard level.
Hunt says that most of the substance

~fn'e';~l fr~~~~~~n~a'\t~~ ~~~ ;::~;i~·

contains less than 10 per cent asbestos.
John Neal, vice president for
faclllties planning, told the Reporter
that he "Is not aware orany Immediate
plans for future Investigation" of the
matter, but did concede that the ceiling
In Baird Is "ugly," and that he has been
~lng unsuccessfully for two years to
get It rw&gt;&amp;lred.
Neal said he hopes to secure the

=I'J
tJ!~~e ff"cir ·'!'!';~:ilc9'%a~a,:s.
NYPIRG representatives said they
11

will begin a complete asbestos
trackdown at U/B and hope to Issue a
nsport at a later date that will Identify
pl-. where asbestos material Is
beginning to flake.

Seminar for TAs
begins Feb. 6
·The Student Development Program.

=.: :oo:rr~~.: =~':o t?:!
l':r.uale 111udent~ and teaching as~ls-

theM~art~etgroupe.

011

::.::::-~'l'o::'~ture,

eo _...._.. ,...

"'nnliiiit IIIUilllllon-.

~ .......... toabout211

n:::. =-=:'
;

study space~ They -also do not
appreciate the 110ise made by some

ahoulcl

conh.ct

-Senators
"·

a.,_

will be aaked to act on a
reeoiutlon concerning the proposed
SUNY tuition lncrMM (a resolution
Which was to have been edopted at a
special meeting of the Executive
Committee, yea1erday), They will also
be aaked to approve a r8llpOIIM from
q.Jrman
to Jobn Roosevelt of
the SUNY Trust-. Ro-.11 -has ·
solicited Input !tom 18culty "regarding
the extent to whlcll aoclei pOIIcj
objectl- aiiOuld· be oona~ In
~ U..l,...;ty In_,._, poll-

a-

The originally announced agenda
Included: 1. Quorum and call to order:
2. Approval of the. Minutes of 12/5/78
(previously circulated); 3. Report of the
President; • · Report of the Chairman; 5.
Pretlldenllal Evatuation
Procedures
(Hyman) - resolution to be distributed
at meeting; 8. Faculty Tenure and
Privileges (Solkotf) - report published
In 1fejiortw, recommendations to be
presented 111 ~Meting; 7. Academic
Planning (Dudley - Bunn) - to be
cllatrlbuted at tlla meeting; 8. Old
Bualflfts: Report on Administrative
Revloiw (Oommjttee· 11. Other Old
BuaiMiu; 10. /MIN Sualnftas: Status of
.nrltlon retention study group
(Siggelkow); 11. 01~ New Business.

�-uaryt , UITQ

. . .u...

Geri·a trics
WB, Rochester, VA cooperating
on one of 6 programs in the U.S.
to train physic;_ians for the elderly
By

Mary Beth Spina

Editaial Associate, Heolth Sdonc..

The Buffalo VA Medlc:al center will be
the site' of a cooperative fellowship
18

f'f~~~"'t:"'':;;g W~c:st~ io""dt.!.'l::

physicians who wish to specialize In

tre~~~n8~~~~~'W~r.;,

assoel ate chief of .
stall for education at the local VAMC,
said the fellowship program rs one oi
only six of its type funded nationally
this year by the Veterans Administration. Forty medical schools submitted
proposals.
Two physicians wil l be appointed as •
fellows In July, with another two to be
named a year later. The program will be
. conducted at the Buffalo VAMC and
Monroe Community Hospital , Rochester. Other facilities to be used as
traln l n~ sites will be U/B's Multi·
disciplinary Center lor -the Study of
Aging and the VA Medical Centers at

Ba6~~~~~:,a~f~~~~~fd~p~h"e btvlslon
ol Geriatrics/Gerontology In the U/ B
Department of Medicine, will direct the

fr~"r!kft~~~ma~r:.':,tg,:r d'fr:C?~; ~i

Monroe Community Hospital; and Dr.
Harold Brody, acting director of the
U/B Multidisciplinary Center. Brody Is
also chairman of the Department of
Anatomical Sciences here.
Joseph Paris, director of the Buffalo
VAMC and of District II VA Medical

';'.,r;,t,~, :'~~~e.,:~ ~~·st,

She's a· reporter '·
not an a.d vocate
By Joyce Buehnowskl
-erS1aff
She Is a woman who speaks of " great·
concern " for her native J'llgerla; a
woman , who by her own admission,

ra~.::st~~~~~vt:'~~~~r:~,~e~h~:t~

leal concepts. Finally, she Is a woman
who Is determined 10 usa her graduate
education at U/B and the best of what
she can garner from the American
culture to advance the status of her
8

~~~ woman- in question

Is Doylnsola
Aboat&gt;a, a doctoral candidate In the
Department of Communications, and
the first woman features editor of the
Lagos Daily Times , the most widely
read paper in Nigeria.
Perhaps because of her pragmatic
nature, Doyln (her nickname) felt
compelled to relay that she looks with
somewhat of a jaundiced eye on
Nigeria• journalists, educated here,
who return to their homeland and refuse
to practice anything but an American
br"nd of advocacy journalism .
Tha go-nmant owns tha press
Unlike the situation In this country,
the Nigerian press Is owned by the
government . If a journalist makes
unverifiable charges against the r&lt;!Qime
In power, the material or publication Is
Invariably censored.

onD.?{:~ ~~:s~s fn"~n~~~~ls~,~~~
realizes that many people would
disagree with her stance, but she
neve.-theless believes there are "many
myths surrounding advocacy journalIsm." Otten t1mes, she finds Its
proponents are not as cOncerned about

what they can achieve through their
;:,r~gn ..t~ ltt.bey are with people's

;~~~k~'~ s~=Y journ~~llsm for
Doyln argues that given the cultural,
educational and go-.&gt;mental history
of her country. Amertcan style advocacy
journalism Is unsuitable for Nigeria's
current stage of d...lopment. Pursuit
of It, she feels , could lead to a sltuat)Pn
where there Is no preas at all.

11

o.ung wHit rMIIty

" NigeriAn journalists should deal
with reality," she lldvlaed . And naallty
tor a NIGerian means living In a country
where tfle poaalblhty ol eonatltutlottal
IUijllllaiOn and delentlon 'NIIIIOUI 't\Ut

-~~ 0nler
18

publish,

to

effective, Indeed to
Nigerian )ownat-

Doyl~ya

lsts muai "adjust" and " not be slaves to
the theoretical orientation" they are
exposed to as students here.

po~~it~f~s/l:r~~h !.':t~torY~~~~::\e~~ n~~
;::~~We ~m~~~~~ ot'~e ~~~r~a~

press In Nigeria, Doyln, In fact, was
res!"'nslble lor a series of ar11eles
critiCIZing the government's disaster
relief program .
She relayed that government representatives called her on the carpet when
the first ar1lcle In the series appeared ,
but that after she proved to them that
she hed the facts, they printed her
pieces.
Ironically, in a situation where the
government owns the press, Doyln says
the "onus is more on the journanst" to
prove the validity of his or her
statements.
.. One cannot rely on sensation In
Nigeria, you must be responsible," she
noted .
Since at least the tacit rules
concerning governmental eritit:lsm
change with the different regimes,
Doyln acknowledged that journalists
"walk a fine line" and never really know
just how much they can say without
being censored . ,
Perhaps the most beneficial outcome
· of her studying In America, Doyln said,

~~~·b~~~~t~ h~~~~~g;;~~~e~~~

view It more as an objective observer.
Her studies here have also glv&amp;(l her a
chance to observe our culture and have
given her Ideas on using some of our
tools to help her people.
01

~r~~~~Z'o~n

said she Is "thor·

~~~~~~,,~:t~e~~tl~r~e:~~ o~a

format to convey Information on public
health and lldult education to large
nu~ of illiterates In Nlgerta.
"The Nlgertan - l e love story·

tel~~,;;; U:~~lal::'.lmpresalons

of
Americana, Doyln replied that she llncjs

r.:'t"t~.:.:ew~~~':"~ t~eo~~:
~~rc:::h~~~.,w,~~:;~h $It

"In Nigeria, ~le . . not units unto
themoei-." Doyln explained that
family aiiil an extended family ..,
~fly nMrWto provide aaalatanee as
wetlaa -IOnal,upport.
B-UM · 01 her elo.. lam II)/ tieS,

=~ry~:ur:':
strength ."

r'!'c'l11l;:

will be working together. Reportedly,
this cooperation was looked upon very
lavorably by Washington , he added .

::= :J =.:.";

VA has taken loadarahlp role
, Paris points out the VA has been
taking an active role In geriatrics for

some time, first with the designation of

~~~~~'::d~~~~·~~~~~l:"~ ~~~

Geriatric F,ellowshlp Program .
Wh ile concentrating on medical care,
the new program will also include

~non·;-::~~ca~r,.:le~!t~n~~lngm~li:l

management.

"Obviously, medical problems ot the

ft,~.9 &amp;\'~~~~t e:~;~~J~~g~f'th':"':a~.

In which the physician tre-ats the.m may
be different ." Physicians treating

~a~ng':u~~~~tus ~:ue~~e fo~~n~~~~r:.;
rehabilitation programs than Por old·
sters with the same problem. Too often,
Calkins said , physicians dismiss the
elderly's aches and. pains as eonsequences of "growing old" rather than
~~r;~':,;'~ ~!t~r~~Pe. to seek causes
Celklns noted that the attitude .Of
medical education In this country ." has
1

1

e;,eo".~e"cio~ 1~~· d"c,"n~t ~!~'J'"'l/:~

selves to definitive cure are regarded as
uninteresting or 'poo~ teaching eases ."
This Includes most of the elderly.
With proper medical mahllgement,
thou~h , he argues, ~tlderly patients
' r::w::n?ti':.able to pve full lives despite

Mek-.up of the pn~gram
He noted the two-year fellowship
program will provide ~lelpatlng

rnh;~!,~,sg~~~~~·:..':!~,,:xr.m~a.=

by two-month rotations In the geriatric
aspects of neurology and paychlatry.

~~=~erte~,~~~· ~~~~~s ~ ~~~~
patient , such as altered patterns of
disease and altered Immune response
to Infection and malignancy.
Also to be in·ctuded are weekly
seminars at the VAMC featuring
spsakers from U/B's Multldlscl~ll"![?;

fc::~:rof~r~~~~a~~"J g:t!~~~~~m~~~
as~!!~~ ~~~n~lrst ten months of the

program wUI be spent In Rochesterprimarily at Monro~ Community Hospl·
tal.
Following this "core" portion of the
training, each fellow will · complete
a 14-month elective segment, In areas
of his or her choice which relate to
geriatric medicine. Calkins said the
elective work will l_nelude oppOrtunities
to conduct or participate In clinical or
basic research.
In a third component of the program,
which will continue throughout the
two-year term, fellows will par11clpate
In weekly Geriatrics Clinics and will
serve as preceptors. for medical
students at U/ B and U/R and for
medical residents at participating
hospitals.
Houaa calle
"Thtl medical students who work with
· the physician-fellows will learn how to
conduct house calls, " said Calkins.
"That's a vanishing type of care, I hope
we'll see more of as we begin to develop
extended home health services lor the

elde'!\~i~s

noted . that the medical
curriculum today tails to prepare
physicians to examine and treat
patients In the home, away from the
technological wond!lrl and the "security blanket" of a fully-equipped
teaching hospital . ·

In -~~Y~f~an•u:~ln?n h~~:" =~n~
homes, " Cal~lns noted. "It's - . a r y
lor the physician or medical student to
learn how to be courteous, considerate,
and yet medically observant In an
unfamiliar setting.
.
"While the science of medicine may
be best .{lractleed In the elaborate
surroundings of modern health laell·
itles, " he continued, "the art of
medicine may be practiced virtually

anf~~'i,'~;e care · pro ram run by the
Buffalo VAMC Is ¥deal lor such
experience, Calkins said. Currently,
some 80 of the Institution's patients are
seen In their homes.

An 'unappealing' llakl
Calkins noted that gertatrie medicine,
only now emerging as a specialty field ,
Is frankly " unappealing" to pnyalelans
lor two Important reuona:
"Dealing with the gel'lelrle patient on
a regular bas1s loren the physician to
lace his own mortality. He looks at the
~~~~~ F-t~t/:'l,:::h\~!~~s. 'one of theM
fhe second reason, Calkins ouiunaa,
Is medical aducatlon'a tendency to
equate any condition for which a cure Ia
Impossible with a sense of failure.
"We wa~t to help medical student&amp;
who take geriatrics and the feiiOwa

E-vona hao a lotal lllnan
" After all ," Calkins observed , "every·
one hes a fatal Illness; it Is called living.
Our goal centers not so much on
prolongation of the ultimate life
expectancy oJ mankind, but on
Improving the quality of life lor the
aging , often chronically Ill person.
"Contrary to ~hat many may believe,"
In terms of tile ehrottlcally Ill, alderty
he pointed out, only about five per cent
• _
patient," he oeld.
ol the elderty In the U.S. are In nursing
homes or other Institutions. The vast
majority are living In the community.•
With proper medical care tliMe - l e ·
can continue to enjoy life, rather than /
• just exist.
,
An oral health Instruction clinic WIIJ
be hekl at the Educational Opj)Ottunlty
app~pt1~~·.s
~'~.! ~ Canter,
4815 WaahlnQton 81., on
one-third ollts patients.,. il5 or older.
Tueaday, February II, from 12:30to3:"
Slnoe the - . g . U.S. veteran Ia now
p.m .
•
58, the VA system will inevitably h - to
The clinic, eonduetlld In contunctiOn
with National Chllclran'a Dental Health
Week aponaorad Wtnually by the
"By the ~ 21118, the .,._,utoe of
American Dental "--atlon and the
~ the gen«at pojlulatlon 8!5 Wtd Dklli' 'fill
Erie County DanMI llociiiY, Ia open 10
,u E!)C etlldtnla ilnd ~ IM!u•.

:~~~~s'r~!':J'~rrn...:::s~m:: .

EOC plans clinic

d::i;t

r::,=.::rm':':.~'r.:d.~.:.
~~u~~~~-:r=-:.~

today," aald ~na, •eo the 11- to
leech phyalelano hdw to CCIIIIpiWheo,.
alvely care lor th- patient• Ia nw.•

Rolli-.

t:Oonlt"-'d by 'EOC faCully l'llllltlbtr
the clinic will

Nancy

m-llgeta the ceuMa

Df-.ldl-.

and ~lion

�Fobruory 1,1878

Private schools
d·rain State, ( ·
CUNY g~p 58Y.¥

Tuition hike called ' hidden tax;
Ketter urges Trustees not to ·approve it
EDITOR'S NOTE: U/8 President ~

L.

dell-.d · tile

K-

following

- o n the poalblllty of a tuition
et the ..1-.ry 2:1 meeting of
the SUNY ao.dotTnm.e.

As many of r,ou • . . are awant, I

~=u~~fy~gt~ d~1e, P~·1Ftr:'~

t.en plel,..opoken about the possibility
of a tuition IIIC(- for public
Institutions of higher educetlon In New
York State. The ,possibility IIllo been

~.::~~;

::".:n=l ~~~tho:: r..'a'l
1

Issues !hal should be on the table. My
purpoee, therefore, Is to direct your
consideration for a moment to What I
vtew as the fundamental questions of
social policy which are Inherent In the
Increased tuition proposal that has
:~~eated for State University of

=

State Universities and Land-Grant
Colleges were created during the
nineteenth century as a result of the
edmltted limltatloqs of private Institutions. They alao were the result of an
Increased public awareness of the

:J:r~~~~u~\\':' ,':=~f; a"s~ ':~,~~

Th888 CIM!ed, state-funded lnstltu-

~~~~ t~b /i{f~~~wc~~~ Pn~
1

dl.-slty of academic; professional, and
vocational fields. New York State did
not slgnifl~lly participate In thesa
early developments. The circumstances
were slmUar In New Vorl&lt; State,
howewr, neaf1y a century later when
public higher education, beginning on
191l0, was to be developed on a large
scale.

attitude In Niw York dltflcult
A ~Ia! difference In thoee later
circumstances was New. York's reliance
during the eddltlonal deCades upon
prfvate higher education. The private
Institutions In this State, together with
-

:=~e..= ct'~~~~~~~o,~s ..:l~t~

the fortunate few who were able to
attend-and I emphasize that theee
were only a few In terms of the
proportion they ~ted of each
high IChool graduating class. For
Instance, In 19511, just before the Heald
Commission was appointed, only 36 per
cent of New York State high school
graduataa were In the first and sacond
years of higher education combined. By
1871 the percentage of high school
graduetes entering po'Stsacondary deII'M1!..,11ng institutions In a single
year was 65.8 per cent. The percentage
et1endlng Institutions in New York Stele
was 52.( per cent, the - t majority o!
thoaa atudenta being enrolled In publi~
colleges and unl.-sltles.
The aeetlon of a public sector in
higher educetlon quite obviously
lnaeaaad acceu to higher education
for liNt clttz.ns. N-'heless, the
NIIMce by the State for ao many years
upon private Institutions for the
~ -'lele to a limited and
email number of citizens has , _ It
difficult lor a!Kted ~tatlves In
thla Stete to $ t h e new attitude
toward public hi
educetlon which
was called lor In t Heald Commission
NfiOII. n made It difficult In 1880, end It
,...... It no leu difficult today.

....u ..
....
.......

.,..---

, . _ .............. _ p u b -

_ _ , _ _l l y o l ""'"""' .., .... Division ol

" ' ra Cnol1.
pi-.W.-

-

· .....,_, Tole-

-oll'uloii&lt;A-.

- · OoSAHIJS

-.....o..l
_,_,

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

---

JCI!IN A aouna

IO'ta_,~-

TuHian: all obvlo.,. manllaatatlon of the
problem of acceptance·

One ol the most obvious manifestations of this problem of acceptance ls
the higher tuition which prevails In the
publiC sector In this State ..... State
University of New Vorl&lt; ranked seventh
In the nation among state universities In
1977·78 for tuition charges . I maintain

~tcalr~~"ar:'~~ng~s~~:l've ~p,::

upon the college-going rate In this State.
For Instance, In 1971, as f mentioned
earlier, 65.6 per cent of this State's high
school graduates continued Into post·
secondary education at degree-granting
Institutions. This percentage fell in
1977, the most recent year for which
statistics are readily available, to 61.6

Wesf:.t ·N~"w~~~~~~v~~~~~d"i~i

Ieos than 50 per cent of the students
graduating from high school continue.
Higher costs are Indeed limltlnp the
educational opportunities we provide to
the citizens of this State.
Furthermore, these increased costs
affect the attrition which occurs after
students have enrolled. Last year the
University at Buffalo eonducted a
telephone survey of ,
full-time
undergraduate students Who chose not
to return to the University. Of this
number, 284-that Is, almost 30 per
r.ent of our non-returning studentsstated-that their primary reason for not
continuJng was economic. They could

~~~onJ:';.,~,f'l:," tg~~:~n~~~~~f ~"m~:

reversing the trend of greater access of
higher education for the citizens of New
Vorl&lt; State.
It's a safeguard lor private Institutions
Why Is high tuition charged for public
higher education In this State? Is there
a direct correspondence between
operating costs and tuition levels? The

i:.:

:::';.~~dl as ~~ "f~~~~~~y c~~ar:.
high at fc':JI,Iic Institutions In thYs State

::.,~~:~,n~~~ha~~~~~~f~~mgro~~ea?.:

higher education . Such decisions are
~lltlcal, not educational, nor economThe taxpayers of this State ars
Infinitely patient. They have been taxed

~u:i:lg:,S~~~u~Y,~.~ ~:,., h~~:::,
~:~ ~; l~de:!e~~~~WF~;~1.r.~~

the State appropriated $81,566,000 In
direct aid to private lnslltullons. In
eddlllon, the private sector received
$119,249,000 during 1977·78 In Tuition
Assistance Program Funds. tn other
words, State taxpayers In Now Yor!&lt;

siale

are

funding

private

higher.

:::'~;'l~0a"ns~.'bS:l.oolJh~nul.fl~~·n;f~

Is by far the lergest amount of public
dollars given to the private sector by
any State in the nation .
TAP funds !nor private schools

1

atdAsc~~~iythrs gf~t.rlP0 f:.'~~s~ ~::
ra~;~d~.~~~o~",~-:: i~~wr::!g~~~p~~

It also Is weighted to favor private
Institutions. It Is not sufficient as it
currently exists to provide access to

~~rhr;e~•u;~~o;t~':r ~~g~esm~~

are assuming an Increasingly hiQhet
burden of debt to obtain an ooucat10n,
and this Is especially true of the middle
income class.
Would low-tuition public education
help provide greater access for more
citizens of this State? I submit that It
would I Moreover, I believe that from a
social pbllcy standpoint the more
·desirable Issue to have on the table at
this time would be the development of a

~~~~~~~s'p.;;~"~~~~~:' &amp;~~~!icori~~';

York-not raise it. The consideration of
' this possibility should be discussed
openly, with all of the facts publicly
presented and freely debated. There
should be determlned In as objective a
manner as possible the nature of the
best system of funding of higher
education tor all the citizens of· this
~~S.::id P~~~rs!ld~ .•!lme for a second

Don't consider It at this time
Most emphatically, based on the
facts available, I do not believe that you
should be giving serious consideration
at this time to an ln~rease In tuition for
Stele University of New Yorl&lt;. The
"bottom-line reason " that I believe this
so strongly Is that under the·
circumstances which prevail this could
only be read as a decision for salectlve
taxation and Income redistribution.

h,JJ'."n ~~~ ~~~gth"es~stt~!v~1;'r!:~
Income groups In the State-the ones
upon whom this State must rely for Its
economic and cultural survival . Moreover, the tax In question would not be
lor the purpose of providing low-cost
public higher education. It would be
Intended only to maintain the unique
subsidy wbfch this State ' provides
through taxation to private higher
education . I do not feel that you should
allow yourselves to be used In this
mariner, until there has been open
debate of the saverel options that are
available, and unlll the desires of the
citizens of the State are kAown .

Albany editorial questions
tax money for private schools

u.r:: o~
•-=
K-o

'": .!:..AJ::-'~=
on the tuition hllce:

A serious question of private vs.
public education eoats and financing
arises for the taxpayers.of this state as
Increasing amounts of public funds are
poured into the private school treasur·

1es.

Trustees cf the State University of
New Yorl&lt; last w - at a budget
discussion meeting h-.1 unanimous
and emphatic rajectlon by college
presidents In the svatem of any
proposals for tuition i n c -.

Thl~~-ot':"~~ ~~=~ed.1Th~~

l:i-.lty of Buffalo Who dropped out
last year did ao becauae of economic
-.ens. "They could no longer afford

=':.,

r.,~~o :Sr:-~. ·~=1etl~. ~
":~ve:':'.;.:,::::,~~ ~~g::

-··,_,.,Y

But what may ba unexpected at least
)o a public thet doaa nol c10Mfy follow

[ ~ton funding ta that our taxpayers

are

funding prf..._ aa wen as
public hlghar aducallon lnatltutlona In
thla-e •.••

..

Obolouaty, thla ~ - - ·.. """'

~'"!:'U:S =~ wo!,~

greatly Increase tt&gt;e opportunities In the
public schools: But It would also eet up
a less competitive system wJth the
priva\l!. colleges, probably lowering
their enrollments , bearing out the
--Ketter view that the hl gh tuitions at
public schools eXlst "largely for the •
purpose of maintaining the position of
private higher education ."
The determination that Dr. Ketter and
other public · educators in the state
undoubtedly want to see made Is one of
vital Importance, as well, · to the
students and their families Who In the
next decade or so will be s-Ing a
pOblic education here. It has to do with
the basic philosophy tHat has emer_ged

:::~=-~~ ~%~"';~~1:t~edt'!:tl~

schools can compete with the mostly
excellent public Institutions.
The basic Question, of course, rs
whether prfllllte colleges In New York
State 1\aoe prlcad themselves out of the. .
martcet unless they r-ive- subatantlal
taxpayer subsidies and whether those
Who want to go to public schools

r:n" 11h:~vew~uf'dy,,su:·.~;;:at~~c;~

existed.

·

LUTCAl.L
.
Frlcl8r. Fib. 2 II the 1aat ._tar antriM
1 0 - .... - - - .. S'and to 131
crofts.

"The private colleges and universities
In New Yorl&lt; State receive large
amounts of pub flo funds from the State
far more than the private Jnstitutlons In
·all the other states of the nation ."
This conclusion Is the crux of a
crUical report on •'The State Investment
In Private Higher Education In New
Yorl&lt;," prepared by the Office of
Institutional Research of the Professional Staff Congress/CUNY.
The private Institutions apply admission restrictions and tuition charges
that effectively deny open access to the
State's taxpayers, the CUNY Union
report charges. "Yet they are unac·
countable to the taxpayers or their
elected representatives for the tax
dollars their Institutions receive."
Many of thosa tax dollars, the report
says, "are misapplied by the private
Institutions for purposes not Intended

~~t~~~.;;~t;~~ayo;::"rh~e~l~J~~t~u~o~~~

private institutions, and tor i=~'rposes
detrimental to the State's ·public
Institutions - · the State University of
~== y~o:" and the City University of
The report's findings can
summarized under three head in as:

be

1. The-Coat of Prtvaia Higher Education
to the Public

un;J~:~~~~at~!,J.:J'te$66col~~~" a~~
State tax dollars last year in direct
Institutional (Bundy) ald. This amount
Is o - 25 per cent mora than the direct
Institutional aid given to private
Institutions by all t~e 49 other atatos
combined.
•This amount does not inckrde State
tax dollar~ awarded to students, nor
does It Include city and county taxdollars. The current real estate tax loss
1

~~~~: :n~r~~~s~~~n ~e,er~
City aloO!IJIXceeds $43 million a year.

2. Tha Uaa and Abuae of Public-.

by tha Privata Sactor
· •The drain by the private sector on
the public treasury has not been used to

maintain or reduce the tuition charged
to students: private tuition and fees In
New York State have risen at the same
level as the national average.
•Bur.dy aid and the Tuition Assist·

..

::[g~~ ~= t~1~obre~~~.!~'~a~~
:~1:'1~u;:~~"s~u~~ni~~ ~~~~~;

them for more affluent students. •
• By applying Bundy aid to Increasing
expenditures and by applying TAP aid
to Increasing tuition charges, the

~;~!!~~~~~~u~~~~d~~; t~~?r ~!'::~

and universities.
•
•The public Investment in the private
sector Is 11118C0nomlcal, insofar as the

~;r.::;,:-;:~s~~~~:,:~ ~~!t~s"t ~e:~
~:~c ~~n:u~,~··,n~r~~~n~~p'!,S,:~

S6,847 per stOdent, while the City and
State institutions spend $4,352 and
$4,779 respectively. - At the under·
graduate level, the private Institutions

fr:~d sf.~'a~nds~~ur~~':f:!1~:

the CUNY Con~ress reports.

t~~~~~~ ~t!'C~ntrW:'u~~~ro~~
81

private sector's P"'aent and projected
swrplusas. These surplusas are papered
over to appear aa deficits.
·· Deficits" occur, the CUNY Congress
charges, because non-mandatory trans·
fers are, mede out of educational
expenditures to olher accounts, such as
endowment and plant funds.
Ninety-two private institutions reported total surpluses of revenues over
·expenditures before transfers of S64·
million In 1973, S62·mllllon In 1974, and

~~jecf.~se 0~n~:;,",j~g~ntra~~~

fers (the excess of gifts, bequests,
receipts, Interest and dividends over
restricted current expenditures) are

=,:.

\'9%~~'1o ~1l'1~1m'C::: l~i=\~~

daiiC::, 0:., ~~~~ .!~

aurplld ol•;r.;::,.lflon In 1tlll().lt. ·

• In 1977, the State Education
Department estimated a surplus of
S24·mllllon for the private sector by

'!•'' .

•IN 'CUNY repcwt,' pege 11 , cot. 4

-·.·..

.•.•

�FebnYry 1, 1178

LETTERS
PRB .'not even-handed'
iii its evaluations
Editor: .
Thoughts on the Report of the Senate
Committee on Faculty Tenure lihd
Privileges.
If Shaw's aphorlsm "Those who can.
do; those who can ~. teach" • were

~~~~·t bfea~":: ~~b'lfs':::;·~~ ~~~~

have an oversimplified version of the
.. common man•su view of the academ ic . .

Does anyone think that It is In reactloo
to that canard that academic evaluati on
seems to have become oeslfi&amp;J into
"Those who can, publish ; those who
can't publish, teach; and those who

(:~' ..':~ ~~~~;, ft."~~~~ t~'!'o":]~g:

understandable to thlnk .that this Is the
explanation , but not necessarily excusable.
The Policies, Procedures and Criteria
for Faculty Personnel Actions (Re,orter, December 7, 1978) Clearly states (as
did the 1973 version) "Excellence In
research .. . Is to be valued and
recognized, but this will n-ot counter1

[:"':~; ft~~ur~~~~~~ '1Phis·",J.:!~\,:~

~~~;~~:n~i~a~~;le~h~o~~na3~~ t~~

th.ey carefully evaluate research but
not1ce teaching only when they mustand even then do not give It much
emphasis.

I'IA&gt;Oc:Aifairslntem

Strict enforcement of tfie nscently
revised Health, Education and Welfare
guidelines lor Implementing Title IX of
th.e Education Amendments of 1912
could have detrimental effects on th.e
11ports program at this University,
Athlittlc Depart!!lent officials Indicated
this week .
Athletic directors have been working

f~'~;::~\~ef~:.ve:;~'~"rfu~lry"t'/,~~~~'J:P!

comparable men's and women 1s pro-gram, they said. But the progress med.e
mar. be threatened by a new definition
of • equal opportunity."
The goal oJ Title IX Is to eliminate
sexual discrimination in all educational

t:'so~~ts ~~r!~:"r~~O:,':"~~~ ::,~in~.;

numbers reflect the Interests shown by
students. and thus satisfy the requirements of " equal opportunity."

eq:J~~ w:,.":: 'rJ~~IteJ~t~.po~!nc:&gt;!
athletic director, Is ln "quality coachIng, facilities , and budget" for the
women . H.e added that "nobody In th.e
department Is trying to take edvantagl'
of another. We have a good staff of

:1'!\~ew~p;,r'rn':,~\~te~"% ~~:;~~=

funds as fairly as possible.

A atatlc budget
All additional funding for the
women 's program must come from a
-redlstrlbutlon of funds allocated to tbe
Athletics and Recreation Department as
a whole. The department Is In Its

g~~~~- ~~~ ~,:c~~~f.1"3i'r~l~ ~~
11

r~~~~csr,~Hi~::1ri:::a~ne_quanzauon is
meet with the Athletic Governance
Board, which comprises students and
When first enacted In 1972, th.e
faculty members. The needs of
guidelines of Title IX _,. very vague,
various male and female ,programs will
requiring high school and college
be assessed In deciding upon distribuathletic programs to provide equal
tion of funds within next year's-budget.
opportunity for males and females to
In addition to a restricted budget , th.e
satisfy needs and Interests. Guidelines
department has faced many problema in
of the revised Title IX are ~ulte
1
clear-cut . Colleges would have to
provide " substantially equal per-capita
Street
Campus.
The
teams·
must share
expenditures" for male and female
both practice and playing areas, leaving
students. To atone for past discriminano team with enoup,h time In either.
tion, colleges would be required to
show they have developed plans to
~of~.aal~1/l: 1 s t~b ~:Jl,J(~~ ~:~:~
insure- that •:the [nterests and abilitieS
of women are effectively accqm~~~~i~..~\,!,t~?gn!T~~t T~~ur,;
modated."
mind."
We'M IIIedellfOIINU
U/B Women's Athletic Director Betty
Dimmick feels th.e Unl-slty has
She11 push lflhehn to
progresseCI greatly towards meeting
Dimmick feels Title IX Is necessary In
th.ese lnteresta. She said nscelws
mandating equal opportunity and that if
•at&gt;eolute cooperation'' from th.e men's
she .,as to push th.e Issue, she will."
department In developing the women's
Until last year, the women's basketball
program.
.
team had only a part-time coach. Th.e
Student surveys used to determine
team was In need of a lull-time
areas of Interests have shown a
coach/Instructor, sh.e felt. When the
aignlftcant rise In se'lllrJII areas of the
full-time position opened up for the
women'a program, end participation
meft' S team, Dimmick WOrked through
hnlncreeeed aubltlntially. Reapoi)ISS
the department and Affirmative Action
to the moat nscent aurvey led to tl)e
to open a similar f?O_Sitfon for the female
formation of a women'a track and fle•d
tMm . She doean t ~. ho-er. that
club for the Spring. Money originally
there Is a need for equal per-c~~plta
allocated to a men' a 9'0Qram wu given
expenditures. '1 can't eay that I need
10 deWlop the club. Women'a aoftball
equalapending ~heed. I can't ruin the
" - _.tty bMn promoted to vwalty
men's program, - aald .
atatua, and Ia being partially aupported ~ Muto agreea that Title IX. with Ita
by footllatl gate receipt&amp;.
original requlrementa, wu~ The number of men'a and women's
~of tegjalelien. He lee!&amp;. though.
- • haa been moving to.-da a
that the new ruling lncllcatea too much
'*-- With the eddltlon of aoftball to ~ment lnterterenoe. "The govemy _ . there.,. now eight female
ment Ia telling exactly what you have to
The...spend," sal~ Muto.
8 to ihe men's

=:f:~~8edw~':.c,T,W:s ~n ~u~af~

at.-.

~nd publl~tion

o~

~~~~red~~~~:! ~d~c~~~~:::

other than theoretical research publica- • -

g~~het~:~ul~;s:!::~~ tr.'~~~~o;:!

in the Policies, Procedures, and Crlleris
lor Faculty Personnel Actions are not
bel ng applied - and It llecomes a
waste of paper to print them. And, until
than, candidates from "difficu lt departments," that is com~sers , painters,
dentists, surgeons arid librarians, will
not be accorded the even-handed
evaluation of their contribution to our ·
University's greatness that mey marl I.
-Shirley B. H...teln, Ubrarlan
Health Scler&gt;ces Library

Parking situ~tion 'deplorabl~,'
group of FES faculty contends

Title IX could pose
problem~ for U/B _
s ports
ey Chrlatlne McCann

As for creative actlvlly which is'
"linked very closely" to research In the
Policies ... , It seems to present
ir .superable cbstacle~ - Insuperable to
th£ PRB at least. One committee
member is quoted as saying "how do
you make clear the non-research,
:&gt;On-publication, non-teaching contribution?"
.
It seems to me that one /udgea
creative activity, and clinical abll ty and
teachi ng (and other ~ullar contributions), ust aa one ud ea ~UMrCh
outsl a
one'11. own
discipline. One aakputhorltles 'ori the
sublect'and one be/lives them. Until the
PRB gives credence to unusual aapects

Editor:
This petition comes as a result of
growing frustration,
concern and
Inconvenience. It also reflects the
Inability of a number of members of :he
Faculty of Educational Studies to
obtain any assistance from University
authorities through other channels,
such as letters, personal representations, etc. Thus, we are resorting to this
form in an effort to "raise consciousness" amoog those In authority
concerning a problem which is clear to
us.
We find the parking situation at the

~~S:h~.J:."J.~f~~~!Y. ~~~~~:

th.e Baldy-Lockwood-O'Brlan area) deplorable. Further, · we feel that It
currently constitutes a clear safety
hazard.
we urge the Administration Immediately to effect changes which will
improve the situation . In ,&gt;articular, we
urge that Jeparate faculty-staff parking
be provided ln a manner similar to that
which prevailed at the Main ' Street
Campus.
.
1

0

8

dlr,~~~J'{tm'!"~nd%~ co ~!:~1e~t ~~
ing during the'day. In the Faculty of
Educational Studies particularly, facul-

l~";:e~.~~ mt~st ~~fr;-;1' ~~:.,~~~k~ a~~

supervislon In schools, 'conferences
with administrators and the like. Th.e
~rf~~~lt.parktn9 situation makes this _
Further, and probably most Important, the walkways between the parking
lots and th.e academic buildings are
inad.equate and in the winter, positively

dangerous. Several people were Injured
last wl nter.
We urge that covered and lighted
walkways be Installed for use this
winter. We urge that at ~ he minimum,
the wajkways be significantly better
maintained, aM we urge that two more
walkways be constructed to serve the
;::,~~ fr~~~r:;get&gt;'!..,~ Baldy-Lookwood,
Parking would _ , to be a relatively
minor problem on a carnpua with more

=m~:~~·~ret1g~~- air~· u~tan::S:

hazard to many In the winter.
In a University which valuea faculty
and staff morale, It seema to us that
steps can be taken to ease a cunent
problem whose solution need not cause
major expenditure cir difficulty.
Signed,

-Dr. Philip G. Altbach,
Chairman, Social Foundations
Dr.

R~SNwlc,

Ch~~~=P.
Chairman, Higher Education

Dr. Auatln S_,aon,

Chairman, Educational Admlniatratlon

Dr. Artll.. ~.

~airman, c~~~~~~=~!

Dr. Paul u.-.

Chairman , EdUC3tionat .Psychology

-

Dr. Rlclllnl..._,

Chairman, Elementary Md'
Remedial Education

Dr.

An._,,.....,

Chairman, lnatructlon
Dr. Clwlee Cooper.
Director, L...,lng eentl!'

Two stude11ts urge naming
Amherst
for Rockefeller
could be enlightened. And
Editor: .
Recently, Nev; York State and the
nation have mourned the paaalng of a
great atateaman and phllanlhroplat. Hla
dedlcetlon hn bean unaurpused in the
area of hiGher educat100 for all In NYork State. Thla man wu Netaon

;::e

s:=

t~"~~af=.
oro~
Unl-alty of N- ~ork at Buffalo

be
renamed the Nelaon A. Rockafetter
C&amp;mpua in ..-.cry of the lata VIce
prealdent and former governor of the
Stata of New York.
The form. VIce Prealclent Rocl&lt;eletter
wu a prominent, Mlllonatty lernoua
fig IKe from N- Yort&lt; State. He- the
flrat man from N- York to hold that
high office in a.. 5Cl ~- · AI
Govemor, Nelson A. AocMialter expanded the SUNY ayatern ao more

of particular
Interest to our community, Rodlllletter
commenced construction of "t~
campua of the 21at Century" In
Amherst. TheM are but a f - of hla
accompllahmenta in bia more than forty
years of public aervlce.
othe&lt; • atructurea on campua have
beef1 named In honor of varloua or-t
people of our community and-· We,
the undersigned, feet that it would be
befttt,lno that nOthing leal than the
entire llmh. .t eempua be named lor
the once Vice P,.ldent end former NYork Go_,or, Netaon A. Rocfulletter.
wt&gt;oae vlalona, MPiratlona and ~·
laid 'the foundtdlon oL the future of
education In Western N- York.

-DDMIII G. Dbdlrl

....._.A. ..........

Undergrec:tuate atudenta
U/B

�February 1, 1879

The Lacemt\ker
Isabelle Huppert In e acene from th0

UUAB movie for Thunday ond. Frtdoy.

CALENDAR
\

Land 11M ond Tron_,._ - · Pott I~
Or. .looel&gt;fol!ereclomon. TeiAvtVu.w..lty, .

Threo too..n of musfc, two disc ~&lt;&gt;&lt;:keYS {Robert
W. To;olorlr!dHirvMoorel . prfzos .
The party of tho Camivol.

wllbo-.

UUAB MKlNIOHT FILM SERIES'

CIVIL-SEMNAIII
225-~ . 10:30a.m. -­

Ero- (David Lynch.

Theatre, ScJft. Midnight . -~·
Stars John NMce, Ctw1otle S1ewwt Md Allen
Jooeph. Outwar&lt;ty, this """"•' of cUI films Is the
simple story of an innocent )'Ot6IO man who has a
fetish fOI' Wlsects Md filth. This fkl OOIJd answer
the question: "What could replaCe lhe Rocky
Horror Pk:tu,.. Show? "

PfiE.STUDENT CONFER~CE LUNCH
Oiscuaoion on Studenl Conference
on COmrn!..ricetiv Behavior. 209 Baldy. 1 p.m.
~ed by lhe center for Sludieo In Cultural

T-ondGSA.
MEDIClNAL CHEMISTRY SEMINAR N
Stoblllty. studloo on Short lmporloet RNA
Ooublo - .. Dr. Thomas Melson. Department
of - 1 1 y." McMaster \)nwetS!Iy. 121
Cooke. 2 : ~5 p.m.

'Saturday- 3

~y_ -•
AI Cloy.~-- -

, _,

~All- the

Genius of Welt

llloney.
AlgiiWWMkdlys, 10a.m.·4p.m.

-

AIID CIIEEIE PAIITY'

- -·Squire. 1 l a.m. · 2 p.m. Choete

lrM: """*"'dwgofor-.

---TION·
F...--. ,_,_Free.
•

SqtH.

~by -c.-College.

_..,.._,,_,

.,....nancs cou.oow. L£CTUR£N

---~JemooH.

·Leo.
- 4 p.m.~- In-Room
C-26..t.-14230
Adge
Colfeeat 3:30
5.
WWTER CAIINIVAL

auEPIN-..cJII'ECW.•

S::.,..IMieo.Noon· 4 p.m.

--·
30

llolo- whon 11e

Open bowiW!g,

'-Is blue ond- o

-·--·

•-l!oo--CIIfi&lt;Ho1. 6:30p.m.
-··-.:~UU·
- - - - C I I f i &lt; H o l. 7p.m ,

-CAIINIVALION

--.. --.-.d-.

-Sid

IRCFIUI'
King ol - . , L (French-Italian, 1966). 146
Diefendorf. 1 anc110 p.m. $1 ~for nonf~ .
•
T - the ond of World W• I a Scottish
!"*' Botoo) COilWS to 1 French town to
lnveotigole I bomb tloroot The oRy ra-.s he
fWlda . . ttoooe of tho loati .....,. osyfum. Funny,

""'·---·~·

WWTER CARNIVAl.

_ __7p.m.

_VOUEYa.t.U,
_ _7p.m. • COED

------- - ·
--.
--...----- --·
clwgo. CIII&amp;36-291a

- ·.. . .b
10 ...
y
... -_ . .pointing
_ . .by
,
--·~-lnl1illlloryofat..w.a

-

.. . . _ ..... glit. ~ond-

__y..__ _....

"!.-JY"

.

WMF1Ufl•

n. ~ (Froncel . Conference Theatre

Squire..c.l636·2919 for show-· ~
ctwgo. See F-..oy 1 tordoiob.
~CONCERT•

~v-- -t.Wick

=·~~::-~

-~·

U l a - . - - C I I f i &lt; H o l. 830pm

.. _,_

-

WlljE I&lt; CHEESE PARTY'
2nd , _ t..ounge, Red Jacl&lt;at Quod, Elicott.
7:30 p.m. Uve music. President Ketter and a
- o f -trative qtficero wil 'bo l)reSIWOI.
AI fooelgn we U'ged to ame to lhe party

MEN'S BASKETBALL •
UIBn.
Col._. Cllf1&lt; Hal. 6 p.m.

-.oy~

~107T-8p.IOE-

ICE HOCKEY'
U/8 ws. OMMtiO State. Tona.WM&lt;ia Sports
Center. 7:30p.m.
Freo al&lt;atwog ono houl" -the gwne . No al&lt;ate
rentlfa. Free to students with 10.

$1 edmisslon for..-.11; S1 .50 to&lt; others.

F"m round com1•ttitlon.
You must have pre-fegistered by the 31st to

1111 ~· 1a111 Confenonoe

TION'

CACFILM'
Wtww' a Pappa. 146 Oiefendprf. 8 and 10 p.m.

•

Setond n:::uMS tor~ men's end women's..

=~-~·

WINTER CARNIVAL
SNOWSHOE OEMOHSTRA
Near Anl..hwat jennis OCM.J"ta: 2·4 p.m.
fRCALM'
King ol -010 (French-Italian. 19661. 170
MFACC, Ellicott. 7 and 10 p.m. $1 adrnfs.sion for
non-feepoyors . See February 2 t o r -·

WINTER CARNIVAL
HOUDAY VALLEY SKI PARTY
BueosleaYitMatn ·~lot , 6p.m., sherp.
You muot have pro-&lt;oglstered by lhe 3101.
5ponoo&lt;ed by
Clulo.

I ON
IIIAIKETUU
_
_ _7p.m. •

- -. 7p.m.

WINTER CARNIVAl.
JON I BASKETBALL •
The Bobt:N. 2 p .m.
Fnaf round, both men's and women's divisbls.

95

UUABFILM•
lluo Collor (PalA

Sc- 1978). Confen&gt;nce

~~Coll636-2919 lor Show times.

Auto-..--

Sbn Richord Pryer, Haovey Keilfl Md Yoptoet
l&lt;ct1o.
nthe central
loc:uo In thio film -.g the rage, fi\ISiratlon ,

~-of--f.. byttne._.led~C&gt;
wi1h their - • existence iond o"""""' union .
UUA8-FILM&amp;ERtES•
~(David Lynch, 1977). Conlerence

-

· ........ Midnight. -

clwgo.

... bo S 3 . - $10 tor_.,.•.

" for --wilootoa-.~
· ... unemployecj ....,;
--

SuDday-4

CA(:FJUI•

WWTERC-AL
PANCAKEMEAKFAST Af«)
AWAIIDa CEJIEIIONy•
Studao'tt C!Lc&gt;, E5cott 10:30 a_m. $1

..--hot
-..Souol--.
_____ ..,__Qu.

- · · , . _ , 170
Elocolt.
:!:.'"
1 1 - t o r - 5150
MFACC,

.._. -

ond -

8 Md

for

A - . imoglnoti¥e

--·-oc~-.glo_,..

...-e-._ a••••-Autto
-··~

~ ca.aM-•TMEurw

---

WQMIIofCII-.ooi1QI.IIp 111

'

--~AI.:

- - 10poo 75-_,, . ._ _

.

-..u.s

VOCLINIC'
Unlllrian Universalist Church. Elmwood and
.West Ferry. 7:30 p.m. VO te::&gt;ts and blood pres·
SU'e. Confidential" Everyone welcome. by lhe U I B Gay ~lion Front .

Monday-S
CONVERSATIONS IN nE ARTS
Eother Horrlolt Interviews documentary videomaker Lynn Corcoron. lnlemolionel ~(Chan·
nellO) . 6 p.m.

WINTER CARNIVAL
MIXED DOUBLES TENNIS TOURNAMENT'
The Bubbte. 10 a.m.
Flnol round.

PHYSKX.OOY SEMINAR I
Pathophyakl4ogy of . Atveo&amp;lr Flooding In
llomocl)•- ond Chomlcot Putmonory ~
Or. EdmoJnd A. Egan , ~I Of Pedlotrics.
5106 Sherman.
p.m. Colfeeal4 .

1ouclolng-.
- -·
WWTERCAIIIIIVA1.

a .
.....,_.,,_.

: _ . . -.

a.m:

WINTER CARNIVAl.
COED VOLLEYBALL TOURNAMENT'
ThfJ Bubble. 10 a.m.
F"onalround.

- o n ,.,OO.bO&gt;iogy.
5ponoo&lt;ed by The Collegiate Wco1&lt;aho!t In
- - o n d RoctoeiCoroonColloge.

~~ ConwnLrity Action Cotpo

- - CAIINIVAL

SUNYAS MEN'S BOWLING INVITATIONAL •
ScP"e Haii.Mles. 10
Spectatcn welcome.

MARXIST LECTURE SERIES'
• Biology, Humon Poycholovf ond EnYiron"*'tal Conlrol, Ethel Toboch, psychologist, De·
ponmem of Comporotive Aninol Beloav;or, Ameri·
can Mus8lm of Naturll1 History. 107 MFACC ,
Elicott, 3 :30p.m. Dr. Peter Gold, Rachel Car&amp;on
College, w11 comment.
· MI. Tobach ts co-author ol Raclam, S.xlam,
MUhariam and Social Derwtnlam, IWld author ot

WINTER CARNIVAl.
FIOURESKATINGEXH. . TION'
Tho Buff1llo Skatwog Club performs dance
ctooruo ond lnoestyte skotwog. Loke l.oSafle ~
Area (new Wilkeson) . 1 p.m . 7" weather P8fmit·
ling.
F""'sl&lt;atingfolowa.

-~-

WINTER CARNIVAL
CROSS.COUHTRY SKIING'
Ellicott ITalls. Two sections: 9 a.m. • noon. and
1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
AdvMCe registration requ;red. Sign'up from
10 a .m.· 4 p .m . ttvough Friday, Feb. 2 at 106
Norton or 7 Squi"e.

ENGINEERING SCIENCE, AEROSPACE
EHGJHEERINO AHO NUCLEAR ENOIHEERINO
SEMIHAR I .
. ~nolle ~. Ed McHale, l}n;on
Cwbido. 139 Pat1&lt;er ~ - 3 p.m. o;s.
CUSOion ond ooffee hour follows.

WINTER CARNIVAL
CRAFT DISPL.A Y AND SAL£•
Cnlft Centei!Student Oub, Elicott. 11 a.m.
12:30p.m.

UUABFILM'
Bluo Collor ( P a l A - 19761. Conference
Theatre. SQuire. Call 636-2919 for show times.

WINTER CARNIVAL
SHOW SCULPTURE JUDGING
Designated areas. 9 a.m.

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SEMINARN
Hft Conwergenee Bound• for Adapt.,.. ~
tlmation, Dr. Dimltrl Kazados, Department ot
BecOical Englneeoing , U/8 337 Bel . 3 p.m.

WWYBl~AL- 8CULPTUR£

19771. Conference

-food

inclucleS
items

ALMS'

At lond (Mayo Deren!; M"hoo ol tho All""
, _ (Ooren); !"'-!. 146 (l;efendorf
7 p.m. $ponaored by the Center for Media Study.

BRANOO, CLIFT AHO DEAN
FILMSERfES•
~
From...,. to Elilmlt)', 7 p.m.; Giant, 9:10p.m.
170 MFACC, Elk&gt;ott. Freo. Sponoored by UUAB.
From ~ to Etornlty, wi1h Montgomeoy Ctif1
and BlM1 Uncaster, il a tragedy of amy men
caught bo'-1 oonfllc1ing doairoo to belong to
the 30fidaffty of a group .-ld the need to maintai'l

--·

their lnlegr11y .. Individuals. Clift Ia lhe ~!agile .
.....,_ Prewm; he was olwoyo 1rag1e and

po-

OtanL with George Stevena, B~lh Taylor.
'
Rod&lt; HoJd!tOn -James ee.. ..... Oocar....r.ni1g
odoplotion of Edna Ferber's
abou1 two
- o f T - - .. n wos De-.'a loll lim and
the rnt in which he wasn't a rebeltous teenager
throughout.

Tuesday-6
SPECW. SERIES ON EFFECTIVE LEARNING
FOR UNDE11C1RADUA TQ•
e..,.... Con- Fo_,, Or. w.;am Elei •
Department ol l9emon1ary ond tion . 262 ~ - 1 p.m.

Educa-

IHTEIIESTED .. THE Ac.NO .-ROCESS?
Tho lotuliidioclpli Contw tor tho Study of
Agi1g extendl .-.. ~ to graduate students
01) _ , • ., aging to
loculty wtoo - a - . g 1 0 - oloo1locon*og goa&lt;Mte
In 0o;onto10gy ond QOrialrlCO. 3 p.m..
Squn Hal. Room 234 .
OOtiVEIISATION8 .. nE ARTS
- - "'- Foldmon,
"""-·
eo... Coblo (Owonel10). 6:30p.m.

�fobnl0ry1 , 1t78

i

. .,IBid

Phi

Eta

Sigma

F- . . . , Honor Socioly should

get in touch """ !he locUiy - · w.
· 231 SQtke, 8 :30 o.m.-5 p.m.&lt;Wy.
Nolionlll Phi Ets Sigma Honor Socioly off.,. 1 ~
$ 500 scholarahlpo lhil yeer on the of •
student's achofarahip record. evkienoe of creative
-.y, · of fonanclat llMd. prornlae of
success In .chosen field . and choroc18r. Only

~-E~::-~:-.::.=

apptlcalions Is March 1 . Loeal _...,., fD&lt; oppllc:ations!sFebruary 19, 1979.
SPRING VACATION TRIP TO FLORiDA
The ln!enslve English IAngooge !nsl!tule Is
an e~tctJI'Sion to Aoride s;Uing spring •
break. open to tho entire u~ ""'""""'ily.
A price of $281 includes rCJU'ld.trip air fare to
on8noo. via United , a"ld accommodations at the
Sheraton Twin Towers there (four-occupancy) . •
The package also lndudes tickets to Disney
World for one-day. e~tcursk::M'Is to Daytona Beach
(one day) Md Sea WOI1d. discounts on car rentals,
pr;ce breaks on other optJonol lrlps (10 places
such as Bush Giw"dens In Tampa), and a free
shuttle from the hot~ to attractions in Central
Florida. ReSOMIIions are being accepted from now
until Mereh 2. The trip !eaves Saturday, April 7.
andretumsApril14.
•
For ilformation. caiiBJ at ·636-2077 or 2079
and 8511; for Cathy or L.any.

sponsomg

M~~s~~ siote Col'-

Clw1t Hal.

7•3Qp,m.
WRESntNO'
U/B n. John CaiTOU Unl9wolty. Clw1t Hal.

7·30p.m

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Eather Harriott ~terWtws Morton Feldman,
composer. Courier~ (Channell 0 ). 7 p .m

SCHUSSMBSTEAS SKI CLUB
The Schussmeisters Oub wl hotd a ski mechenicS W"'tbhop from 7 · t 0 p .m In Room l 7
SQu;relor mombeno only.

DOCUMENTS CLINIC
The Government Doc&lt;.meols Oeperlmeo! of
Lockwood Ubrary will sponsor five lwo-hou'· "Doc
ainlca" during the weel&lt;s of February 13om I 9 .
Those who enroll will te.r1 how to kx:ate and use
government publications
The Deportmenr has approximalel)'

Only Yftterday, 7 p.m.: There's AJweys
Tomorrow, 8 :55 p.m. Conterenoe Theatre, Squire.
Free -*niAion.
0n1y v~.- Marvnt
om Jolvl
Boles, Ia a tearfi.A portrait of a woman ....00. atter
botng ll8duc8d by a """'· tMNn hit chid - only
to met at a chance meeti'lg 12 years later he has
torvo«on her!·
There's Atwap
Tomorrow r stars Fred
~y. Barbin 5lonwycl&lt;- Joan Benneh.
· A - o g e d toy monuf-lries escaping hit
t&gt;o..-geo;s priaon , but lacks the strength to be

s.-.

OISCUSSIOH"

CETAIV---~ -

R. Lovol. Jr.• '""""' _ . . , , 'MCrotwy "' lobo&lt;
'"' - Room 10Q., Bulfl0o Convention
center. 9:30a.m.
5&lt;&gt;onaored by the School "' Management """
the Hl.r!WI Resotrceo Ins-.

loYol. o ~ of lobo&lt; om human
1'81CU'Ce1• • ctnentty president of lhe fU)ber

ac----...--..
MorU8ctlnrll Associalion, the Nolionlll T.ade
-.ofthornom..-lndu&amp;try. Ho wu
by _ ,, Forti 10 tho Nolionlll
A&lt;Moory Cooocl on Voc:allonol EducOiion om II

l t h o - COnwnlooion"" Ernc&gt;loy"*" ond Taroinklg
Polley.
EN~AL SlVOIES C£HTEJI

COU.OOIJIUM•

Corrytflll

ea_,;, o1 Anclonl c"""'"- Pro-

-

Anttvopology - ··
Ouod.
Elk:olt. 12 noon.

resaor
Em Zut&gt;row,
U/8. 123

CHEMICAL--..1

.,)'ll*lgbutoelf-eoting

ALM"

o.m.

Moot John 0oo ICao&lt;al - 146 Q;efendorf. 1
- b y the Center for Media Study.
Ff'Wlk cap. is coming here &amp;ater this semester
This il one of his "*'Y hyrms ol ~ for the
·common mon": Gory Cooper om Blrt&gt;o&lt;o
Sta"lwyck ere the central figultl in a story tNt
focuses on a cynical publlicity stunt to lind ' 'the
to&lt;gotten ....-.ge mon " In the end. Mr. Average
outfoxes everyone.
'

=~~n!;:'r'deel~~=:
political,__

econon0&lt;: om
Mr. Ed Herman , the assist.lt doctlnents lbw·
ian, will coriducr the clinlca. United States Ooco·
ments will be emphaaized, but those lsaued by
New YOif&lt; Slate wtl also be dl5cussed. His!ory
students IntereSted in oktar &amp;CUCeS, or others
interested In the Europelw\ "Corrrnulfties or
edlan colectiohs. can -.-spec~a~ apj)Oin!ments

---

Ooolovlc -

.. -

Thu!"5'1ay - 8
w....

H. Forc..ndny.

UUABALM"
1 Wanna Hold Your Hind {Robert ZemeckiS.

PHARM.D. - . t l
Drug . _ ~IINI&gt;I-. Howard
lAMne 248 Cool&lt;e 5 p m

1978). Conf«ence Theab'e, SQtke. CIOI
636-29 191o&lt;show-- - c h e r g o.
The Beelloo •&gt;Vade America om B e e - II
oom. or apeciel interest is lhe actual newwM
loolagoofll'e -""""c'at thealrporleou the 1.-n of ttltW tnt ~ on Americln

~: :-v...,, -

NY.S

Scwwy Aoom 18 , 4240 Ridge

l.u 3:30 p.m.

telev!olon .

INTRODUCTION TO TIME SHARING ON Tl£
CYBEA:
LECTURE DEMONSTRATIOH SERIES" .

,

Nodces

. . . . dBlnYu;,... hol
hold"'--

--

Have you been -

origlnat reoe.a. in artY

Do in&gt;m
you want
pn&gt;duciiYe ~- on yow wort&lt;
yow
~Do-_. &lt;ooognllion iO&lt; yow- but
feel you .en'! ready tor a~ oc:wm.renoe?

/,. ~send

an ab&amp;tract ot 200 won11 01 teuoto

certoc1&lt; "' - . ., c-10e
5(JOUiding Quod Bfjeott by Fetwuory 9 (pioeee
lndude a runtJer and tdchM at which you can
be-

&lt;..!!'\"

The program wil focua on klatitutionll gover·
nonce and p!Mning, on 1inonce and budgeting,
personnel management, goverrment r~ end
-b'elive """"""'"' apptlcalions. Ahention
wit be given
planning """ .....,_
on the devek)pment of profeaaiooal ' netwcrtts,
menlll&lt;IWiiona, omolher - -.
Participation is Nmlted. The c:oal "" the In·
slirure. including lultion, room om wtl
be $1500, and ! n - a S7 5 n o n application ree.
For IUI1her Information write 10: Bryn Mawr
Colege, HERS
Sunmor ....,_, Bryn

TUTORS NEEDED

The lnlenaive EnglialllM&gt;guage ..- . . needs
English . , _ and ~ '"' lh!s
.. semester. Learn how you cen e.-n aedit by

calling 836-2079 ( - - 838-3382).

•

Session I - lnlnlductlon t~ rm.8hlrlng
Public ln1oroe1M Tormlnelo, Mondly, ~eb. 12.
213Batdy. 12noon.
Session II - lntroductkln to the Text Edttar,
Wednoodly, Feb. 14, 213Batdy. 12noon.
Sefaton .. - ' S..bml!tlng Slatlotlcal Feb. 16, 2f3 · Batdy. 12

In_,.·-·

-noon.
CAU. FOR STU0£NT PAPE~S
A t.ktMnftv·wide &amp;tudent conference on Com·
ond ........... wtl
8 . 9 , and 10, - t h e --ship d the center for Studtel in Clittxel Trans·

-- to .,. ._

Mawr. Pemaytvanil1 9010 .

FREE DENTAL WORK
Persons who think they need dental wen and
Woutd lt;e to taKe part ., a study of patient
response 10 routne dental treatment shoi.Ad con·
tact Or. Norm1Wt L Ccnh 81831-4412. Vok.nteers
must not CUTentty be ooder the ~ of a dentist.
P.-tioipatits w1 receive denta1 exanWlations and
x-ray&amp; to determine how moen routine treatment
they reQUire. Two filings will be provided as Pl¥1.
of the sNdy by a der11ist.

MEN 'S BA8KETIIAll•
UIBYL O.nnon COIIege.. ()aric.Hal . 8p m

~ Mawr ~ om HighOr Education
Resource Services have announced the tOU1h
annual Summer nstitute for Women 'tn Htgher
Education Administration, ld be held July 1
through July 26. 1979 on the ~- campoa.
The klstitute is a residential ~ otterl'lg
women 1acLIIy o m - illen5Mt lnlirWlg
In educalionlll acininistndlon . . . . , _,

M;d--

c..-

Call 636·2821 to reserve )'OlK space, lli"lce all
groups wW be tirnited to 12. Fac:utty membera are
abo Invited. The cllnk:s wil ~ hefd In Room 110
in tho &lt;loYermaO Oocunonls ~-Feb­
ruary 13 &amp; 14, 2·4 p.m.: Februwy 15 &amp; 16, 9 :3011 :30 a.m.: Febn.ay 20, 2-.4 p .m.

lion, Michool E Ryan, - · of Cllemical
~. U/8. 2e2 ~- 4 pm . Refresh·
menta w11 t. MrYed et 3:30

GEOLOGICAL ICIENcEs - A R "

150.000

doct.menls isSued by the United Slates. New Vorl&lt;
State and Canadian governments , and the European Communities. As in most libra'ies, onty a few
are listed in the ctW"d cat~ .
klfonnetion contatned In government docltnents
ts often the most CUTent avalabie. Whne eome
titles in the Oepertment are more suitable for

UUAB WEDNESDAY FILM SERIES •

Wednesday- 7

SUMMER INSTlTUTE FOR WOMEN

This Ouan!ilalive AN!Yals Lab Lecture Serin
wi1 be given by Or. 5 .0 . ForT, U/8.

Exhibits
~

-··
·
by
- Zulc
A·
PI'*IJIOIIIIIc
EDoolgnod
o - . HlyM
Hal Lollby. by tho School"' Att:Ntec·
ture·om Env!ronmonlat Doolgn.
.
.

io.- """""'*"'
nof- to--

ZlJI&lt;. profeoaQr " ' - .. McGII Unl¥0&lt;tlily !n .lo!onb'eOI.
..-.ct
ohOw II oonl!ned l o - cllurt:hM, two
;, Ontsrio. five in (00 "*'I'
L11&lt;rwi11fe "*&gt;wing two world..,.), ond ono
in New Vorl&lt;. ~ In CNc:ago rwcenty, bAt
no!ed lhal Ukroinions In their 1,000-- ~

-

... did
buldlnO
melhodo. His 201hCan"-'Yccn--..lha! tradition dosl&gt;l!e , _ , - I n tho
--·ed~~ Accooling the ~ with aymbollc ..,_
perlite -

thai

ere -

in lhe ~

iandacapo.
thereby
liglll - plocod
on tho main'heaher
and •two
~
1ilurglcal - · libby _.tine

tho ~

brightly lit , _ . . . - • rool _ _ _ _ IIYe _ l o _
height
the -_begin.
Far_ _,. "' _hlo
otealwmonlouaty
_

from the -

- frorntholow-• lo-ila~

MOA DANCE MARATHON
~ wWling to dlnce;, the l979 MDA
Marathon moy picl&lt; up appllcatlona In the
GAC office. ~5 SQtko. Appicotions must be
ftllod out by Febi\ooty 6 om brougl!t to tho
-cry
~ in the Conference
Theatre.. Sqlke .lit 7:30 P:ft', on th.lt dlle
Donee

eo..-

OAR OFFJCEHOIMS
F~2-9em-8pm

Febfua&lt;y

9 - 9a.m.• 7 p.m.

F"""*Y~l1·15-9Lm .·7pl)l

Februlry 1-e - 9 a.m ~ ;30 p m
Fetwuory2Q-23-9e.m -7 p m

PHI ETA-FEU~

dogr.o-- .. - "'

Sericn"""ptonloworl&lt;for~O&lt;

prot-

T
hlt-.g_,_ _
_- _
Thirty·olxl&gt;hol""""""'-.
.~
HatvorG. Pem omRIT

To flat - I a In the "C81enc18r." cell
JMnShr.-ataa.aa.

Key: IOpen only to . . _ wlllu_pro1-uon.t ln..... In 1M aubject· •01*!
to lbe public· ••oiMn to_...;. ol tilt
Unl-.ltJ.

U...... otherwiM -"led,

..

llclcela lOr clwlllna ..........
~c:::.-1M-. . . . ....

�--

Tarbet named
associate
in DUE
Dr. David Tarbet, associate professor

~~s~r~:!h·dt;;.~ ~n t~'!"''6',s~i"b~

Undergraduate Education (DUE), for a
period ending December 31, 198t. •
Tarbet , who.has published essays on

~~~:'v"' E~_:,uo:,~r.hy h~~ 1~~~
following resp'1nslbllltles, according to .
DUE Dean John Peradotto:

ECC unit all·planned; funds not released
The first glimpse of plans for a major
educational communications center to

~,:.!"~.'.!"6=:~er~r~~~e~~

educational communications capabllltleelnued thla month.
The directory (a 16-page two-color
tabloid} outllnee the who, what, when,
where .00 how of aervlces offered by
ECC at bolh Main Street and Amherst.
Coplee are .allable from the office of
Dr. Gerald O'Grad~. director of ECC, at
831-2304. .
The future home of ECC, the
publication reveals, will be a four-story,
38,000-square-foot building between
Capen and Bell halls at Amhers1.
The Flrwt Floor will house Educa-

BRIEfLYPay 1oost few ....rey's Staffl
While CSEA and UUP are stilt at the
bargaining table, t 60 of Governor
Carey's top employees are due for a 7
per c:ent raise now and possibly
another In a few months, UPI reported
last weekend.
The news agency said legislators
and judges may also get raises under
an agreement between carey and
leaders of the Legislature.
TheGovernor'sOfflce has asked •
for a special appropriation 't o give
the State's highest officers an average
p;1y boost of $3400 retroactive to
January I. UPI said Carey will ask a
salary study p;~nel, which he and the
Legislature will appoint, to
recCIITUT&gt;enda.odler 7 per cent hike
for top staff In the new fiscal year.
This will b&lt;lng their total increase In
.1.979 to 14 percent. or approximately
$7000.
Ac:c:ordlng to UP1, the time Is right
fa&lt; atea151atlw p;IY hike also because
It is a non-elect ibn year. The hike for
.._kers, however, could not go
Into effeCt until I 98 I.
IAI&amp;I•Iators now rec:elve • base P"Y
of
supplemented by
•tlpends ranging from a maximum of
Sli ,OOO to f minimum of $1,500
yearly. luct&amp;es earn from $48;000_ S6J.OOO. and CArey's top staff
members now set between S4 7 ,BOO

sn.soo.

and ss 1.150.

tional Television Prod-;,ctfon and Engineering and Technlcel Services, and will
Include studios, set and prop storage,
control rooms , video record ing and
editing spaces, and maintenance and
repair facilities.
.
The Second Floor wUI ~ rov_ide space
for Audio Visual Equi ~t Services
and the Media Library and will Include
equipment storage, testing and demonstration areas , film and videotape
storage rooms, and preview and

pl'fh';'~~~~g~:·r will house the Visual
Design and Production unit. It will
Include film editing, animation , special

~!~:.· ~~y~~e::;'~~S ,:~gutd~~~~

Carey 'didn't do It' S
Governor Carey told The New York
Times Thursday that it wasn ' thls idea
to hike SUNY tu ition by S I 00. Carey
has taken the rap for the suggestion
during tht! p;ISt f..w weeks.
According to the Times , SUNY
Chancellor Clifton R. Wharton, on
heal'ing Carey' s denial, acknowledged
tbat the tuition raise had Indeed been
a SUNY proposal. Wharton said there
was " no point In trying to fix blame. "
He added, howevt!r. that the SUNY
budget submission did notlncludfo the
tulflon Increase.
The n..a' quoted aides to the ·
Governor as saying that SUNY had ·
made the tuition proposal at recent
budget sessions. The University' s
Initial request for fiscal 1979-80 was
for a $79 million Increase over this
year's S634 million. The liMa said
Carey Is expected to go for only
half that amount.
At a' meeting of SUNY trustees
held in Albany Wednesday, several
SUNY unit heads joined students In
prorestlng'the proposed hike.
Chanc:ellor Wharton said a " reduc:tlon
in tuition should be considered."
Aides to Carey contended to the
however, that SUNY had asked
for the tuition hike even before the
Trustees met. Wharton said " we did .
not make a formal request, and a
decision has not been made. 1t Is up •
to the trustees." the Chancellor said.
Who ' stelllng it straight?

n-.

tor graphic artists, ·a photocopy studio,
black-and-white and color processing
laboratol'ies, and places tor slide and
.
print creoaratlon.
The Fourth Floor will be the site of
the Administrative Core, the Instructional Development Section, and WBFO
Publ ic Radio. It will Include oHices, a
media design laboratory, audio production studios, and announcing and
control booths.
Accord ing to O'G(lldy, the Center Iso
tully des lnged and awaits release of
funds tor Construction . Its completlon
will mark the first time in Its history that
the Un iversity wilt have a fullyIntegrated instructional support servi ce.

1. chairmanship of the Division of
Undergraduate Education Curriculum
Committee with associated duties;
2. asslsti"ll the dean In monitoring .
grading policies and In on-going
grading reform;
3. assisting the dean in· development
and Implementation of progriii!J.s for
improving undergraduate teaching effectiveness; ..
1
4. assisting the dean In the
Implementation of general aducatlon
program(s); and
5. , other temporary or ad-hoc
assignments.

Wbat would be think now? ·
In Tad Mosel's-current controversial
biography of Katharine Cornell,

l.eacllns Lady . the author quotes a
letter from Miss Cornell's father, a
l ocal-wlndshl~ld wiper ~gnet.
about t he Idea of a theatre In Miss
Cornell's honor on the UJB campus,
" A memorial to Katharine would be
a wonderful Idea and I must confess
that I have frequently thought of It,"
the elder Cornel.! wrote to an
associate In the early 1930s. " but I
have never considered anything of
thei&lt;lnd as being a business prpposl tl on. I did. at one time. think rath(Or
strongly of building a theatre 6n the
University of Buffalo property and
pre'!'nting it to the Uni versity and
calling it the 'Katl\arlne Cornell
Tbeatre ' ln memory of her mother and
a tribute to Katharine. Bur upon
investigating the matter thoroughly,
I came to the conclusion that the
Socialistic tende~cles are so
rapidly creeping Into all of our
Universities, and p;~rticularly the
University of Buffalo which i s
dec:ldedly Red. that I would not do it."
The University may have enterrained similar thoughts of a gift of a
theatre at roughly the same t ime.
because In 1935 It honored M i ss
Com ell with its " highest awarr;l."
the Chancellor's Medal. She chose
not to attend the commencement at
which It w;u awarded .

Urba'n Affairs sets
panel on drugs
Coralyn P.A. Hunter will present a
" Practitioner's Model tor Increasing the
Effectiveness of Drug Abuse Treatment
Services," Friday, February 2 al 2 p.m.
in , the Buffalo Room of the Statler ·
Hll:on . The public Is lnvitert.
The prese~tatlon will be the main
feature of the Winter Symposium which
the Office of Urban Affairs at U/B Is

·~=~~~:~~ ~~~~c

=·.

director
of the Office, he symposium Is one of
several efforts ~he Unl-slty is making ·
to contribute to improving lhe deliVItry
01

K~~~~ ~~:~~~?ti'7J~rJ\~~~-nter

is senior COJ~nselor at the Ellicott- '
Masten Drug Abuse Cenler on William
Street.
·
•
Other participants in llle symposium.
as reactors to Miss Hunter's modef, will
be: Roger I. Blac~well , Erie County
legislator from the Sixth District; Dr.
Frank Baker, director of the Division of
Community Psych iatry, U/B; Robert
Hill, manager of human resource
development of the National League pi
Cities/U .S. Conference of Mayors,
Washington , D.C.; and Dr. Elsie M.
Smith, a membe&lt;. of ·1he U/B
Department of Counseling and Human
Services, who Is currently on a research
assignment in Washington, D.C.

�Mark lane
He's got the 'real story' on
the disaste~ in Guyana;
-says govern_ment doesn't want to know
By Marcy Cerroll
Ae-lntem
"Media mesmerization" distorted the ·
events at Jonestown , Guyana, Attorney
Mark Lane (who was there) said this

week-

The Fillmore Room was bathed In a
courtroom-like silence last Wednesday
as Lane presented an "inside view" of
the Jim Jones cult in a lecture

s~~or:Ssb(a':e~:tr~P~~~~ ~':,'~!~o _
since 1964.
He1s the belt source
According to the attorney, "there Is
no accurate SC?Urce of Information as to

~!~~1r:.,a!y ra~~"'1~'1 dBu~0~e ~d~

absolute truth. "
Lane is writing a book based on his
experiences at Jonestown and is a hot
item on the lecture circuit with his

"e~~~ltn;~I:Sco¥~~ple

lawyer , expressed concern that the horror of
Jonestown woul~ be treated Inaccurately by the media as were Investigations Into the deaths of John F.
Kennedy and Martin Luther King. Lane
Is representing James Earl Ray In the
King assassination triaL
Good Intentions, but ...
Lane talked 'about the good lnten-

lions of Jim Jones' commune. There
were 70 medical doctors per 1,000
people; a woman who lived there told
him her blood pressure was checked
three times dally. Many People's
Temple members left the U.S. because
conditions were so poor .In the cities
-that they came frq_m . "They were In
search of a dream they couldn 't reach
here," mused Lane. "It iurned Into ·a
nightmare there," though.
Life in Jonestown consisted of long
work days (101'.! hours daily) and, many
times , ·rice for breakfast, lunch and

~~~~:~ ~~n~r~~~; ~:~ra~9r~~~~"n~:

fertile enough to grow anything.
And then there was Jones himself .
Lane described the leader as "a con
man who wanted well. He was a
troubled man on the verge of Insanity,
who went beyor.d 1nsan1ty."

Many didn't want to dlo
In escaping from Jonestown and Into
the thick jungle brush , Lane and a

,,~!'.e~y~~n~~~cr~mi~~u~~:r ~~e rrcr~~
0
~~~~:rwh~h~ r~~'f~~ ;;,as~acr~a.tl'!'d

in the bush ," he said.
Lane was careful to inform the campus crowd that thro~ of people did
struggle against pei'IX)rming Jones'
ritual , " many calling It crazy and not

wanting to die ...
He found the U.S. government's lack
of concern with the Jonestown horror to
be In line wilh the general reluctance of
Attorney General Griffin Bell, who

anybody like him wh_o set foot In this
country" praised Lane) and James Earl
nat

~n~~!~!f• ;:,~n;~ 1f:k17~~oa~teh~'/Jk

such Involvement, telling one Party
member, " You're becoming Irrationalfor someone who talks about free
speech , you're doing a filibuster."
Lane was presented with Michael
Levinson's Book Of Lev. He asked the
perennial underg!Jlduate to recite a
versa to an amuse!! audience. It ended
Mark Lane's visit on a lighter note.

assassination, he won't look Into the
Guyana deaths ... what crimes does he
want to look Into?"

A filibuster and a gilt from

tl;;;~~~~s ~~are~~..?.!sth:

~~~~r ~n: ~~h:~~n'ir~ ~n~~~~e~~~

~ev

A question/answer session followed
Lane's talk. Questions ranged from
Martin ·Luther King ("There was never

Portrait of a victim: U/B grad was a. 'follower'
~p~;~R~.;,~1~ :J::.-:. Lt'::'w't~~~

worttod on the Repot1er willie an
undorbroduete hen) wrote the following
portreTt of 1 U/8 efumnus who wu one
of tho Ja..,stown victims. tie tatklii! to
many relatiYes, Mends, and former
associates of tho late Donald Fields for
liiils report which .,..,ad orlglnelly In
theRerfew.
·
Donald Fields, a U/B School of
Pharmacy 9reduate; was one of tl\e 911
persons k11ied In the November t8
murder-suicide at Jonestown , the
Guyana settlement established by
self-styled messiah Jim Jones.
Fields was 46~He had moved to Los

Anar~eswlfe

Shirley , 41 , and their
13-year-old daughter were also confirmed deed by tho U.S . State Department.
The Fields' teenaged son Is presumed
to have died at Jonestown , -too.
His childhood and collage friends
here and in Los Angeles were shocked
and puzzled by hls death , and his
mother, who lives In Los Angeles , was
left bitter and elone.
Fields' mernberahlp In Jonea' cult,
and his resulting death , baffles his
former friends for - a l reasons.

~m.~:,r;,~~~~~lln~' an't~;~!~a:lgh~~lvation ,

~lelds,

say his friends , was Intelligent, but not brilliant. Popular. but not
charismatic. Ambitious. but not driven .
Fields was " nondescript ," [one
acquaintance) $8ys. ''He was the type of
guy who could easily get lost in a
crowd .
" He didn't appear to be serious. I
don't think he was the type of Individual
who set great goals."
Says !another) : " He was practical. I
don't th nk he was a dreamer. I don't
think ~~ was looking for a great
saviour ....
"He tried his best , because It meant
acceptance. "-What he lacked In
exper1ise, he made up in trying. He
wanted to be a p,art of what everybody
else was doing . '
1

1

'Fi~ Jofr.i': 4'ormer

associate) says
Fields was "fairly spoiled. He always
wore nloe clothes, always drove a nice

car."

Fields' parents "doted on him ," his
cousin , Mrs. Shafer says. "They gave
him everything, everything ." She says
Fields' parents put hlm through U/B
Jo""* - e d the PLO
Pharmacy Sct&gt;ool.
An lilentlfled _though not observant
Fields finished U/B In t955. Then he
spent two years In the U.S. Army ... .
- Jew, Flelda joined a Christian cult
h
ed h p 1 ti e
Alter being discharged, Fields came
tJ~:ti~ su/:~n. t e a es n
back to Buffalo, lived with his parents,
A "materlalf.tlc" person , he sold his _ and worked for two pharmacies In
Bu~~Oe Lisch, owner of the Hertel
home and ell hie belonv,lnllf', and
donated tho money to Peop ea em pie.
Pharmacy, remembers Relds as "alA pharmaciat bv profession, he
1 kl
1
apparently died bX' his own hand . by
ways full of fun, a1ways o ng, a ways
cheerful. He never seemed lo have any
I Aid
awaIlowing a' letha m Ixture oI Kooproblems at all. Everybody liked him .
laced with C::tasslum cyanide and
Henry Crlden, owner of Parkel's
poFtfelodlusmwasch anorideonl·y·ch
· ·11 d . His father
Leader Drug , Inc., says Fields "was a
Robert, who died throe years ago in Los
kibbltzer. He was a k1dder. Customers
- Angeles- throe years to th,e day before
th~~ht~~~~s~1~~le~l"li~ffalo In 1962
the Joneato•n massacre - was an NFT
1.,.. Los Angeles. " It was mostly the .
::;:~·,.:;:-;,~a ~o~h~owM;~a~h: weather " an acquai ntance says. "They
operatedaiiOdaahop- named "Bernie
hatedtne&gt;¥1nters':,dr'ii"ff I0
I
They never visit
u a aga n.
Mae's" - on tho uat oklo of Bulfelo.
The Fields famllt!ved on Ooat Street
A S200 000 homl
_
J:..5hheafner0onal,
e fl.! ~-alnno.faaDoynsa~drsFi~t:l'."
In i..os Angeles, Donald Fields
'•• ~
ed
1 t h
for about
She I I - In the Town of Tonawanda..
work at a pr va 8 p armacy
According to the Bullate Ct~
~~al~s; then he joined a pharmacy
Directory, tfle Fields family lived at 1
During hlo first low years In Los
Brunswick Btrd from et least 1!Mil unti1
Angeles. Fields met Shirley ~ller, a
1a55 They ;Mid at .w; Linden from
1956-to ~11511. st 33 Manhert from 1959 10
Jewish ocllool-teecher from
oen x.
1980, and
15' Leonard In 1961 and
~~:.:;:,==:.!.Y:':
t982 · · · ·
Waldman, a U/B classmate o7 Fields
~ moved to Los A~ In 1980.
~ Donald Fields
Fields was a "very materialistic~ th«e wu •notflu•v
minded ~." Woldman uya, "Don
llbout him . Nothing thai
• - t.'i' - . nice. He was a clotn.
~lm to follow e man like
horae.
,:.
whoM goapel at rlrst wes •
Woldman says Fields and Ills wife led

1

Ill

'":'*"

::.Sm.v"

1

t'::f,;

SOon alter she joined the Peoples

an " average, normal existence."

1

~~[;'Jr~,; foi~d?~;~/: c~~v~n: ~~ ~~

They had two children , and they
moved to Northridge , a wealthy suburb
of Los Angeles . Edwin Bemste1n , a Los
Angeles pharmacist who left Buffalo In
1965, says the Fields' former one-story
home, on a half-acre of land , is today
worth about $200,i l00.

Francisco . She apparently gave her
husband an ultimatum: join us , or never
see us again.

She was also Interested in astrology,
numerology and wil.c hcratt.
" Fields' mother told Herb Brln of the
Los Angeles Heritage that Shirley
Fields was taken by a friend to a service
of· the Peoples Temple In Los Angeles
about 11'.! - 2 years ago. Shirley Flelds

~~=~~~~c~&amp;~~h~~~~~~~~~~n~~~~ and
everything he owned. He told his
friends in Los Angeles that he was
moving to San Francisco to take a
better-paying job In a hospital
pharmacy.
In April of 1977, he went to San
Francisco. He moved Into thJ&gt; Temple commune
" marking time" until Guyano,. He gave
all his money to Jones.
His mother was scared. She called
her Congressman, her Senator, local
Jewish agencies , seeking- help to. get
her son out. " Everybody~' she told Brln,
"passed the buck. they wouldn't
listen."
She was Interviewed on local
television and radio news programs,
again pleading for help. Again, nothing
happened .

Peoples Temple falthtieallnglhypnotism was curing her cancer.

Of~~o g,~ye~mmer

Disillusioned
During his last few years In Los
Angeles, Fields studied business
management. He was "a bit disillusioned" at his progress In pharmacy - he
had not received a hoped-for promotion

:~~; ~~~:!n m~r:"~;:esy~~~r:fm~ ~
0

sa~felds' wife, .;.,.,.,rdlng

to Bernstein,

rr~~-~r;;~~":cJ .. s:~tan~ncerned, educe-

~a~~~ s1~e ~~3'P;':f~~p~~~~er":~!';~~

th!~~~~ ~m11~a~~~o~n s~e~~~ la~~i~ .

which Jones claimed lo cure maladies
by touch was actually chopped chicken
livers.)

M'l!~;"!;\~~~~ 1 ~1s

mother to a
Peoples Temple service. "I saw through
it right away," Mrs. Fields says.
Shlrle(, Fields also tried to persuade
bee
Fields' ather, who had recent 1Y
n
· released from a hospital with a heart
condition , to attend a Peoples Temple
service. He refused: ·
f'jonetheless , Fields' mother told
~~~~~:~~~\:~ ~~~rsuaded by his wife
" He was rai~roaded into It," Mae
Fi~~~s;::•;. snow job by his wile,"
Waldman says.
This Is the part that mo~t mystifies
Fields' friends .
Even though Fields' mother does not
know If Donald underwent a formal
conversion to Christianity before
jOining Jones' cult, she told Brln , "you
couldn't become a member of this
ch h 1
rted "
~c ~~e~:J'~~e oonve
· ···
Nobody knows for sure. But Fields'
friends feel he almply was teken In by
his wife.

A toltow.
"I think Don could be persuadell,"
Bernstein says:
.

0;;~::.r. ::.~r.,l=: he was a
·~"-'"·'"

_ ..... ~ J

--·~

of 1977, Donald
Fields joined his wife and children, who
1

h~~~~,:t ~~ds '!..~gr.,e~":;,, she
received letters with the standard
Joneslan reply: "We're very happy
here."
Donald Fields remelned In Guyona ....
On his way to San Franc loco In 1977,
Donald Fields stopped by his mother's
apartment . She warned him: 'Welch out
for Jim Jones. He's anotherMenson.
"He hed tears In his eyes," she
recalled . " He must have understood."

•General ed
t"--1,cot4)

trainees to keep In ,.,lnd that the
purpoee of a University education Ia not
merely .,o get a degree In e mejOr, but
to become an educated P8rf011.
"U/B has decided whel type of
school It wants to be," he -'tlnuad,
"and It doosn't want to be e
professional school. It d _ , - . t to
certify competency In only one-."
Peredotto Indicated ft woiild be up to
the departments to respond to the
recommendations of tfle Collwnlttee.
He complained thltt some cle!*tmenta
have· succeeded In "lmperillllzlng" a
student's time through t..., oouroe
requirements.
" In some cases these ~s
were made not on ped=IC* 1100nda,
~~~e~~= _.llroun o 1ft onler to
JB .

• ' • " [·- - - - - - - - , - - - - - ' - -

�Fetm..ry 1.1878

High school
grade infhition
is worsening

Delay in Springer implementation
Isn't warranted, Garver submits
harmful effects Man Increase on enrollment
and the narrowing of coats between publtc
and private Institutions with Increased tax

~=~~~ ~t~·~~:,-,9;nfs~~J

student reprasentaltvea were un-.nlmous In
their opposition to a tultiOh Increase.
Student Assoclation President Schwartz
requested tttat FSEC address the Issue
Immediately so that the more "credi ble...
voice of the faculty might be counted among
the ranks of those staunchly opposed to
tuition lncraue before the Governor slgns
the Executive Budget. Chairman Garver
1

!:cr;~~,m~t ~r~h~u~~~~~~ess r~n?~~

deliberative process and that a hastystatement by FSEC without that procesJJ
coufd only result In an ineffective statement
of faculty opinion. He further stated that no
statement by any gr.oup will affect the

~:;'::x':e:~~~:'b, ~:~~o"n ~7,'lh~l~ettr~~

stage In which · the Legislature will finally
regard that budget.

JOBS
CCW*iiiiiftCML IBMCE
~

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

~ ~:

Cour!o*lg SoMce;

E.O.C.:

~.Am·

-~~-:~.-· .

&lt;*le • .ue-.-~:-

· - - --c-.,yJ:
~~.C'f'S.~;~
Com!&gt;ullng~.

"

..... - - . . , Aft-; NurWlo:
~-· Noo.wct*llogy 11*1·-1: ~­
l'l&lt;9om 11*1·-): Cenlrtl lll.oplc:d1g
--~,·~eomr.~~

--·~~-·
----~-~c.neor.
_A.....,CIIIIl..W -Cime&gt;uiMIIC31.

- - I I M - O f t l c o o i - N ;·

_ , Aoccx-.g Ollloo: Poyrol 13); Accounts
~: c.Mt·F-: Modicol School Buolnoso
Ollloo: UrWwolty l.lnf1oo: Ollloo .. Student

-- ·T,. . . -7 --·Records
•· -

c- SCH -

Olfice.

121.-

UrWwo~ty Budget

CllllliCH

.

~~~t~~:~~J:~~~:S~!~~

would be
K . Schwartz., representing student opposfUon to 1979 Implementation, offered to
1

g'ufm ~~~~~n:~g::~,r:,~wU~h t~SU.~

. the time. It was agreed to postpone further
discusat.on of the Issue . until that
Information is received and distributed with
8

th~e :r~~~~ 14oveo.

R. Slggelkow seC.
ONDED , that the FSEC accept and approve
the Chairman's comments presented at the
Dean'aCouncll . The motion PASSED.

&amp;.rgery: l.odcwood

l..lnryca--J.

-Ciort i - S C H I - FVohooing .
--IQ.I-a-oy; ~

lludget Olllco; UrWwolty f'ld::abono SeMceo.
-~-as-Unive&lt;·
oily~-·

..... -

--~- Oponlor SCH~Com!&gt;ullng-.
_ . , EIIP-ICH ~~

-

B. The Chairman
The Chairman reported on a meeting of
Deans on 1/22/79 to which he was Invited
for dlscusalon on lmplementaUon of the
contact/C'.cedit hour provisions of the
Springer report . In a written summary of
those dlscusskms presented to FSEC, the
Chairman stressed the following points:
1. Though the problems are real, they do
not warrant postponing imp1ementallon
until 1980, because nothing has bean sakf to
show that the problems would be
aubstantfaJiy less In 1960.
2. Faculty members and departmentS
have made plans on the assumptlon of
lmptementatlon In 1979, and delay would
further erode morale and confidence In the
administration; furthermore, ·Such a delay
would indirectly attack the Senate, since the
Sen.te Is- a major component In the

~~c.:..~ SG-t•-

- c . . - as-- SG-tO- Unl-

-.-

-

- -. - - 1 2 1

Clllll ICH -

Pt1ysicol

Clort ICH -

~h:·8h~fr!,~~ur~t:fr1b~f::J~~~~ea of
memo from 'faculty Tenure and Privileges

a

fe~;~~dNp!~~~t~~ep:~~~i~~~a61t~:

and Jurisprudence. The Issue will be
di~cusaad at the February 7 FSEC meeting.

--):cennl-.

-&amp;aT-. 111M-~

-Ciort--~-

~CMLRRIIICE

P
1 ..,._ 10-12 -Ott""' ol
--~~s.n..c...
fACUUT

~--).
Schoolol - l..lnry-F·800C

------·
------......
.. __
__
-----.....------·
.
- .F,I0
0 6 - - -Go&lt;*&gt;giiotl

v-. --.F.eooeC21

-

Pllyooco &amp;

F4007C21

....... HOOt

,_&amp;

,....,

............
...._
t

A, Nom#natlona
Nominatipns to the CoUeges Chartering
COmmittee and the Academic Freedom and
~Te~i.bllity
Committee W8f'8 AP-

8. Admlnlatratlre E"alu.tlon CommittH
At the December meeting of the Faculty
Senate, the FSEC was directed ttl consider

::: ~~~!~~~'tc::ri~W!o:S~ec~':n~:~~d
?tdiscusllon
~ec= =~tS::'8n':. rerol~o=
of the taaue, it waa the aense of

the committee that In view of curren1 efforts
of the Jen Commlt1ee (Tuk Force on
Ooemlons) and the -'cadamlc Plarmlng

Comm•ttee, which Involve admln1strat1ve ...
reottew, It does not saem reasonable to
appoint another committee . It may be
rMsona.bkl to gtYe thft Jen.Commlttee some
senate standing. Even without that .:Uon, it
WCMJid aeem thet the 8enate il Involved In
subatantlal admlnlatretlve review, and thus
~
11 in harmony wtth the recommendation of
the Cohen report , even thouRb there Is not a
..
~~r!tt~ Admin atrattve Evalu•

.

N. 0.... ond -'· Schoenfeld will droll a
.-lhle otalemonl ..Ciocllng FSEC's
recOIIIfMMiaUon on the iaaue and prnent it

MIM tile F - r y &amp; - ...-lng.

~-.'!':V,.~~~":~~ rmon wnto

to the Director of the Ubrwies and a tress the
following polnlo:

1 We nole a reduction fn the number of

academfc f.culty on eome litKary Mllf'Ch ·

comti'Mtt_. lraa'l ~to one.

2. The ~ w~ IO help bx
:::::r::,t:.l"=.tul.
ol
mlc tacuiiY 1

·----··"'--··-10..........,_, . .
a

The Olroctw "' tile Lib&lt;•• lllould

a - - "" ..._
-

,.,...,.. _

--~~-

P~a:'nt~~~e ~''::,~l~~minent

adoption of
General Education requirements. the senate
would be ill-advised to attempt to revise the
existing distributiol) requirements at this,

ti~~- As

:i:ri~~~~~~~~ c~e"~~~;.n~g;fv'~:

In the past.- the determination of

in four (23.3 per cent/ earned an A'
average in high schoo , compared to
19.7 per cent of last year's freshmen and only 12.5 per cent of the class
entering in 1969. Students with C
averages in high school account for
only 17.6 per cent of loday's freshmen
compared lo 32: 5 per cent In 1969.
.

the senate should not intervene (other than
through general periodic reviews) .
3. It Is our expectation that Colleges
courses will be given consideration along
with others in the implementation of the
General Education program.
4. The Executive Committee would like to
have a report from the DUE Dean on the
implementation of the DUE distribution
requ irement , both with ' respect to Colleg~s
courses and also with respect to courses tn
SII..S, SAED, RARI , and other units not
mentioned in the 1968 resolution .
FSEC approved this report and authorrzed
the Chairman to convey It to the DUE Dean
and the lntelim Dean of the Colleges.

Slan~ards

declining
" When these grade increases are

g~n~~1~~~ !~~p:St,~~sd~~:~:nH· ~:~~

clear thai the secondary schools'
grading standards have been steadily
declining since the late 1960s," said
Alexander W. Astin , UCLA professor
and dlreclor ol the survey. He said his
conclusion Is supported by the majority
of freshmen· themselves, 63.7 per cent
of whom (compared to 61 per cent last

llem IS New Bu llnesa
A. lnstltutlon•l ln,.estmept Policies
The Chairman presented a draft response

to the Roosevelt mem'brandum distributed

al the 1/17/79 FSEC meeling. Following
discussion of (he response,

E.

~~~n~,f~·M~~~:r::.e~tet~:r~.g~~~J

segal

MOVED, A. Schoenfeld SECONDED thai

in the high school has become too

FSEC endorse the letter and recommend to
th~~:",:~~~~~a~~~~(f.ve sending II .

eas~."

al:o ra d:.,:.';~la~gn ~~J~e ~;p~ ~h"f~
students' academ ic expeclallons in
college," Astin said. When asked about
their chances of getting at least a B
average In college, 41 .4 per cent of I he
students (compared to only 23.6 per
cent In 1971) said they were "very
good." A Iota! of 11.4 per cent of the
1978 freshmen (compared to only 3.7
per cent In 1968) expect to graduate
with honors.
The 1978 survey was based on

-'· Kuntz MOVED, J . Hyman SECONDED

that the Chairman be empowered to appoint

a commlt1ee of three to draft a resolution

regarding tuition Increase and report back to
the next FSEC meeting. The motion

P-'SSED.
N. Balcer MOVED, -'· Kuntz SECONDED

that FSEC commend the President for the -

~~~~~~ h:~ltl~~ate~~eg~~~~
8

•::

2

~':~~r~f +r~s~~~~uWe ~~~~~n~A~sW~
UN-'NIMOUSLY.

SERCoNt~&amp; :ha~ Fs~'tv~e·ndLits ~~~!
and best wishes to the departi ng Secretary.
The motion PASSED.
The meeting adjour~~ at 5:18p.m.

81 0

&amp;

~~r:rf: ~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ o:~:rgrc::o~~

1

mended by the Faculty of Law and
Jurisprudence. •
Although we will not address ourselves to
the mechanics of Jmp~menting the

-

L*-'

. .ion "" ltb&lt;lry

t~e~~:,V::~;y··~mi~~~~o'6r:1.~sc;.:~.9.

reasons . First, the proposals take Into
consideration the partlcufar academic
climate most conducive for tht optimal -

~.,C~~~:~?t;~~= ~~~r~~~cecor~':

~::nr~~t~~: v~ ~:r ~~~~~~~b::'s~

Second, the adoption of the law school's
proposed recommendations wljl encourage
other divisions and units of the University to
develop criteria for tlffiure a{ld promoUons
wtllch may be more fleJCibly applied and
si multaneously, more realistically related to

~~e ~~~~~~na~Pn';l':. of1 ~~at t::ic~·~~7·~

recommendations recognize \hat our faculty

~,:=~h ':!,~s':~:gpee~;:~~o~rrnu~o~
~h~~~~~~~s :t~~3~:n!;~~n~ectl~~

teaching . To Ignore such dlvershy may be
tantamount to atlfllng the creative uplrallons of a slgniUcant proportion of our
ac.demlccommunlty.
There has been some concern that as
different Schoo~ or Olvislons of the
University developed their own promotion
and tenure etandards, there would be a'

1

~~!"'~,~~~e;n "~';fe~~~": ~1- ~o':fat

AE: Standards for Tenure and Promotion,
School of Law and Jurisprudence
·
The Faculty Senate Corrimlttee on Tenure
and Pr1vileges endorses the pri nciples which

from • representative sample of taw
schools , it becomes clear that our law
school , w1th its present tenure and
promotions standards Is at a competitive

8

sample of 566 two-year and .four-year
colleges and universities. Of these,
187,603 questionnaires from 383 insll·
tutlons were used' to compute national
norms which were slatlsllcally adjusted
10 represent the nation's total of
approximately 1.68 million full-time
freshmen . In the 13 years since the
survey began , more than four million
students and 1,000 lnslltullons have
participated .
The study found that students
continue to move toward the center,
r,:'lltlcaOy, with 57.8 per cent-hiqhesl

~~::~::r~~~~n~~~er

Chairperson . Faculty Senate
FROM : Professor Norman Solkoff
Chairperson , Comm ittee on Tenure

Even though liberals and far-left
studeots (25.4 per cenl) still oulnumber
conservatives and far-right students
(16.9 per cent), the left·rlghl balance

~rg•h,s~!~~:. f~~~~~~~~~~e~nFa~!

of conservalive and far-right students
has remained fairly stable since 1970
(belween 15 and 17 per cent), , the
Increase In middle-of-the-road students
has come aJ.Ihe expense ol liberal and

:~~~~~,~~Ia ~ cia: ~f?n':J ~~~mw~c~
15

per cent to
frec:;hmen .

28:. per cenl ol I he enlerlng

labels misleading
" These trends show that polillcal
labels can be misleading," Aslin said,
" since the-decline In students Who call
themsel~es liberals has been accom·
panled by bolh liberal and conser:atlve
I rends in stud en! views about ·specific
Issues. AI lhe same time, sludent
support for such 'liberal' causes as
equal rights lor women and student
power and autonomy remain al an

and wouJd encourage typee of creatft
activrties fOf' which there may be no
Immediate reinforcements .
Of Interest and to be lauded Ia the Law

alli)Jt::,~ ~f~· about their future 'plans,
lhe lres~men continuad a trend of
Indicating an Increasing lnterest in
business ·(19.3 per cent compared to
18.1 per cent In 1977) and a declining
Interest In schoolleachlf1fl {6.4 per cent
compared to 7.2 percent a year earlier) .
The relative popularity of these fields
has been completely reversed since the
first survey In 1966 when teaohlng (21.7
percent) war nearly lwlce as popular as
business (11.6 per cenl). The survey
- also showed that women are Indicating

ond--cleclsiOM. . H1000Uid
11o - • t o - o -o.o(piCII · - •

!cine, buaoneaa arJd law. Nearly
one-loUI'!II of all freshmen women said

1 1

0

P~~a~f ~~ B ~~!r:,~:)'To !h!hC:,n~:r~~~

beltl¥1 that the flexible evoluUon and
applicadon of criteria· for personnel

~ec;t~to:Ju'::n~~:.:~-=:~:=~=

tho efficiency by which lhe PRB fui!CIIono.

:h:O~~:;'=~on~~-~~r::rnaJ:~:

:!.
~=.:t.·• :v::a:.: ·:r• -:
oxcollont, medlocn, or IMdeq. .lo teocher.

.

Education .
The students' high-school grades

~~:~~yaf,P~d~~~~!~:u:~~.:~~ r~~fi~~~

~~~~r.'s:!:~:r~:g~Oa"': ~~~~~~a~

Hemt•OidBuslnHo

Pl1ysicel

•. _ , EIIP- SG-t• - Pl1ysicel

-.Mtll"orol

~~~~~~i ~~,~~ns~~e~h~o~~~cf:u~
t~gel~~~~~~i~~e ~~er?:~~o~~nciiLg~

· D. Dls rrlbutlon Credit tor College Co UI'H'S
N. Garver, B. Howell, and L. Michel

Prlvll~es

Item 13 Com milt• Aeporta

._,-~-121

..oityCGmcMing-12).

High school grades of entering
freshmen at colleges and universities
last fall Indicate thai grade inflation In
secondary schools has continued to

:::!=~~·~r:r~~:J::Io=

ttoey pl., - • In these lleldl
compared lo only 5.9 per cent In 1111111.

�.......

n

Who gave. what to United, Way
'

Goo!

~: =~·=~rn!"'~~-~ -~~~~~~~ : : ::::~:::::·:

.. s ~~·::

s 18,996.80

=r:,'

::~==:-~~'n.i.dtOi' ::: :~: ::::::::::::::: ::::::::: ~~:~

4,5~.80

~":['.:;,v:rtt!';'~~;:,on~.. ::. :::::::::::::::: ~~~1.8

30. Olwttlon of Grw:luateand Profeutonal Edue~Uon .......•......... . 600

6,319.10
324.00
665 .00
5,679.80
1,373.80
,. 1,658.80
1, 321 .20
2,459.65
4,467 .20
10,645.60
9,431 .60
1,937.50
1,644.40
1,119.80
4,292.20
5,302.60
4,175.20
666.00
434 .00
3,665.20
1,334 .80
104.00
' 1,102.60
3,262.20
600.00

$125,000

$132 ,934 .65

.

~·~~4 · · · · ·w

:::

rm

u•:

a==S~~:•.&amp; .Mo~ho~atlca : : :::::: ::: :·::::::: : g;~

of.loclotWorl&lt; .. . ............ .. ..... . . ...•..... . ..... 1,310

11.

:::==:::=..r.=:s:~~"~r:.•1on. :: ::: :::::::::::::::::::::::~gg

210. Unl_,~ ........................ . .. .............. 8,393
21 . ,,...._...MdEucutlweVlcePrnldent ................. , •.. _.. 6,800
22. Vlce_lof._lcAitalra ....... . ................... 5,837

: :

~===~=l.!:P.tannlng .. :::: :::::::::;:::::::: :.:: : ~~

:27.: ~::,-~::=·.AI~'~
.·::::::::::::::::::::::.· ..·::~:~~
UIB AlUmni Aa-llon .. ................... . .. .. . .. .. .
.. . 150
28 . Un'-WIIJ ot-alo Foundation, Inc. . . .
21. HooHII Reloted Proloulona . . . .. .. . . . . .. .. .. .

. .... 000
. .. 2,990

't!:nEJ';t·

lol Emp.
whocontri·

bu,todl12131176

~':j~ga~~e~;~s D~!~~~~~ ~~"r~

community drive. Several other coll"ll9S
and universities lagged behind.

According to Public Affairs Director
James R. DeSantis, campus campaign
leader:
•The University exceeded lls$125,000

represents a 20 per
glvi\!Jl over 1977.

R

Increase In

tio~ d~~en:!:ec~~";;;!' /r~0 ~f:~Pf~

1977 vs. 2,527 of 4,529 in 1978), per
capita contributions increased dramatically. Of those Who contributed . the
per capita gift was $52.60 this year,
compared to $44 last year. _The
contribution per lull-time employee
increased from $24 to $29.35.
•Some 14 major units of the

¥~:' f~~~ret~r:l ·~rre ~~~l';'~~\rr'o&amp; · ~.~!.r~s~'ri~.~~~c=~ch~~fii,f ::;~~~~~::

26
218
274
186
23
9
115
24
3
19
87
7

$22.42
24.00
75.72
71.09
69.45
79.98
40.50
95.00
65.28
52.83
51.83
20.97
79.34
87.59
114.46
69.35
101 .97
53.04
48.68
41.27
32.13
44.41
48.11
48.22
48.92
70.25
36.86
58.03
64.35
85.71

~

~

""$29.35

$52.60

89

115
52

n

.

262
312
22 .

success~.

the Division of Finance and Management; the Faculty of Engineering and
Applied Sciences; the School of
Management ; the Division of -.PublicAffairs, and the U/B Foundation .
The success of the campaign,
DeSantis said, was largely the result of
work of more than 100 departmental
volunteers. We can point with pride to

•CUNY report '

and Civil Serv\ce personnel who gave a

. 1~1 . on the basis of 1975-level

~=m~:~~ :C"nd-te~~~~~c~r~~s!ici~~~~

decreased .
"If, In fact , one of President Carter's
goals is to curtail or contain 1he high
cost of heallh care," Elder said, "then
he Is, in effect, cutting one relatively
inexpensive bill which would ultimately
help him In achieving his goal ."
The dean note&lt;! that the UIB School

~~~~1s;Jf J~s~~~~~r;;~ ,:~,~":~~~

of Nursing has been deluged with
requests from various agencies , c linics,
and physicians' office&lt;s lor nurse
practllloners. "The demand lor these
practitioners has far exceeded our
supply," she emphasized .
An equally devastating resull of
failure to extend the Act would be a
reduction of adequate numbers of

1979-80 ·ca/e.n dar
1979 Summer Seulon
1 Session June 4 · July 13
II Session June 25 ·August 3
Ill Session July 16- August 24
12 Week Session June 4 • Augus124

FIRST SEMESTER, 1178-80
Instruction Begins
Rosh Hashana Obeenlance
(beglna at 8 pm- no evening classest
Clas- Resumed
·
Yom Kippur O~ance
(ends 81 p.m . • on()' evening classes held)
Thanksgiving Recess Begins at Close of Classes
CI.._RasUrned
Instruction Ends 81 Clo" of CI-s
Semealer ElcamlnatiOnl

e

T. September 4, 1979
F. September 21
M. September-24
M. October 1
W. November 21
M. Novernber26

~:

== _

Waahlngton~rt111lay-

COIIMRK:£IIEIIT

-cementa, If authorized,

Sunday, May 18, • 11180
will be arranged .

.... ~Peller ........... St....,.'*-- of "--laloua Holy
o.,r. "'n l1loee rellgioue holy dayl · - rnernbeB of a faltli typically

tf1e expec:tatiOn of c/lurch or aynagogue that theY. be abMnt lroiT!
1Cf1oo1 or WOlf&lt;. cemp- wtli avoid the achedullng of such events as
c - . rx atudent c:onvocatlons, arid illdi111dual
I1UtiiM8 . . tie e.n:uwc~ tram without penalty 11 expt8Uiy NqUMted.•
(Ftonl tiUitY flollc'lll.,...l, 1875, Section No. 011.3)
.

I•

Bu~r::at:r'.~:.:,~~~=n~~r~~.W:'an"J

qualified nursing educators, admlnl,..
trators and researchers lor universities

to students transferred from~lc
instlt ullons constllute.s a prl te
windfall of over$17,million a year.
. In 1976-n there were 78,
non-

~~~:~~~ac~~;r;ge:r~~ren~~::~r';:1~~

advanced education, • Elder noted, ··and
if the Act Is abolished, we can foresee
that these shortages will dramatically
Increase with Inevitable negative effects
whom 12,722 were foreign and 66,120
on the quality of health care.
were out-of-state students. This trans" President Carter has argued that the
lates into 49,950 FTE undergraduates
supply of nurses nationally is adequate
to justify halting financial assistance
~~sif,·~t~ ~~1~r:~~~:."nr~d3%~s ~,which has been available since 1975,"
respectively, of the total enrollElder said . But , she added, he didn't • cent.
ments lor that year. On the basis of
differentiate among the various levels
1hese figures, in 1977-78, of the total
of education represented In nursing
Bundy grants of $66.6 million, $15.1
today. "It Is well known and thoroughly
million was awarded- to the private
documented that there are massive ·
sector lrx non-realdent atudenll.
shortages of nurses with baccalaureate
In addition, private Institutions
f~~J.reduate degrees,• : Elder mainreceive · Bundy aid for graduates who
transferred to their Institutions after
hevlng attended public Institutions for
More education needed, not less
one to three years. Bundy aid, which
"Without the higher education
assumes private Institutional expendioffared bY. baccalaureate, graduate and/
tures for foJir yeara of their gt*luates'
or prachtionerfclinlclan prog111ms, a
baccalaureate programs, thus Is overpaying the prtv81es In excesa of $2
:!~g~cftrotu"a~~?!d ~~ r;re's~~~ ~n: million
per year, the report alleges.
positions available today and ' the
problem will become more acute."
3. The Coat of the Prloate Sector to
EJ::r
Public Hlp Educ811Gn
and the nation will mount In the next
Yo~~ N~~ to4.:nl~~
few years, for adequate numbers of
nurses to fill specialized jobs simply
Institution aflarp I~ ln
won1 have been lralnfl(l.
public aid to the pr1Y8Ie aectot haw
Dr. F. Carter Pannlli , Jr., vice
come at the expen• of the State's
president of the Faculty of Health
public higher education ayatem.
Scllences, said that extllndlng the
•Duri]lg the past five ~. the
~lllties of physicians through the
proportion of State aid to prhele
use of nurM pniclftioners Is one rMans
Institutions has IIIONUed ate the
of solving major problema of acceaa to
proportion
State aid to public
quality hf181th care:
lnslltutlona has decreUed.
'
"The UIB School of Nursing hu
•Correapondtnoiy, prt- enrollan active pwt In educating t'-&lt;1
menta haw fiiC:r8ued Mel publiC
phyalclanfextendera and we feet
enrollments have deci'eUed.
additional lunda ellould be made
enrollment . I~ In the lltMe'a
available to
continuation of
· private aector bet_, '-" 11711 Mel fell
tneae and related pr6grama." ·
18n came within New Vorl&lt; City,...,.
CUNY lost 51,1111 IIIUdenll In the -MIS.
period:
•The profit of the private aectot et the
TAX FORMS AVAILABLE
expenM of the public aector Ia no
Foo 1M_....._ 01 ..........
accident: Throuah the Commlalon on
lndal)endant CoTtegea Mel Unlveraltlee
L:"'in.~
(CICU), the private aector cam.,.._
opeo~IJ agelnat the publiC aector and
.._...~··
hal gone ao •• • to uove tile BOard
.~ts to curtallconatructlooAI SUNY
. . Ciofta . . . . . . ---...
end CUNY.

~:;~~~~fs~~~!;:'t{;~'~~ ~~~tf~~·:,1

s':.~':/l'~,f~~~\h~co~~~~~y

1~

s. December 22, 1979

:?oniUIE~R, 1171-10
M. January u , 1980
Observed Holiday
M. February 18
Mld-s.ri~Mlar Receaa Begins at Close of Clas..s S. Maich 8
Ci-Reeumed
M. March17
lnatructlon Encle81Cio.. of C SF. ~=yy~O-S May 17
Final EumtiWilona
·
·

~

(from page 4, cot 4)

have also Increased).

(from pege 1. cot 2}

,..._lon.

great deal of time· a~d el&gt;&amp;rljy to this
year's effort ," he noted . ""'
DeSantis said that 'Wl!libut "the
invaluable efforts of Saii 1.'Mal1lleld and
Leo Richardson:• of hiS'' s\afl, the
campaign strategy "couRt ha'ie never
been fully Implemented. "n)\&gt;y really
made the difference this year;"

~\h~h~e~';,'~~~~~l !~e~:~u~~ ~~~ ~~~

•Carter veto threatens Nutsing

'Divlelclnel

PwCapltaS
pO&lt;~Of

$16.00
45.09
39.66
29.89
40.67
46.80
32.40
66.50
30.53
20.50
18.63
11 .48.
47 .30
62.04
37.75
30.22
66.06
37.37
43.06
19.68
19.35
22.44
37.65
48.22
33.61
. 55.61
36.66
58.03
37.72
85.71

1978 United W..ay campaign called 'rousing
The 1978 United Way Campaign on
campus was a rousing success with
U/ B being credited publicly lor

PO&lt;COt&gt;lla S

'porFT Emp .

.647
. 250
11
103
65
79
8
7
87
26
32
63
31
51
93
136
19
31
23
104
165
94
16
9 '
79
19
3
19
51
7

1187
564
21
245
111
135
10
10
186
67

26,336.50
633.00
7,323.20

3. School of Archltee,ure &amp; EnvlronmW~tal Design . .· . .... .".::::::: .. :1so

~:

Excoodod'
Goal

Ami . Rocalftd
•• of 12/31/71

.,.·,.,.,..,of

IUIIYU ......... Alllla: "II auclr-f',.._.ed -

-111 In a
~to fulfill 111 8CIIIIImlc ~of t h e - onlllat
1111n tnetructora aiiOulll prO¥Itle 111 opponvnity for the
up
- - - 1 wltllou1 penalty."

111.....,.

':e.

t-

of

The..,.

'*"""

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

Tu ,.._a
..,....
....................
_
...........

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

of

l

' . ""-

..!..._

...::.

�""""'"''""'•••-lntvtoltonoot~ofNucleooR-o, 1111 .

cky' ~

Nelson Rockefeller, whale- you
1

;:::H~Ie~~~~~ t~~e"~~!1~c:,~~h~ ratl:
~~~h~n~::ehl~n~';l'~i~fs~~t~o":' ~~~tih~

previously neglected collection of
teachers colleges blossomed and
expanded into a major university
system with high hopes aryd bright
ideas.

You ;.,ight call Rocky the "godfathef'
of U/B , for again It was his design for
SUNY that was big enough )o absorb
the formet-private university and nurture
it into SUNY's major university center.
Whatever has happened since ·to slow
the progress of U/B and SUNY, to
weaken the position of public education
in New York State, it wasn't because
Nelson Rockefeller didn't have a great

.

·

vision for what ought to oq.
Kelter atatemenl
President Robert L. Ketter Issued the •
~~!~h'~~Ps !:!~,m~nt on Rockefeller's
"State University and the University
at Buffalo, In particular, are deeply
Indebted to Nelson A. Rockefeller. Both
existed prior to his becoming Governor,
but as they exist today is fn no small .
measure the result of his effort and

sup,~~ms appropriate that he should
be remembered for these achievements
in building a strong State Unl-slty
systl!m . It is, _after all,..a system whose
publicly-determined mission is to serve
the State and its citizens. Nelson
Rockefeller did this same thing
throughout his me ... '

•C8rey's
proposal .
..__,__budget
_
have r-Ived, according to Fogel);

C'Jri~i~ =·~
==&gt;&lt;~?c.C::f'g~~~~r~hna~

111111* - · Tile ectlng executl\18
vice - - explained thll last
~Nt~la =~~t~m~ :)_
called
lnatllullons" In other
IIMM, to determine how our
fecutty . . dlatrtbuted acrosa
wwlous ranks In coml&gt;wiaon with
tllelra. -Tile "*'tt was tllet DOB
· delermtnecl t11et .,... distribution is
1~- They eummerity nsduced
the budget by 1217,000 to offset
IIIIa. Stony BI1IOk- lilt wltll a cut
twloe that - . Fogel eeld,
while acme tnatttutlona reC:el-.ed an
, _ . . . ,.. oltt.
On the pin llda ol the ledger for
the-- «*ftPUS, the c..y fUnding
pl.. lncfudee IIIOMl' for: the
-..uz.uon of....,.. not funded
ror • tun ~ • budget yew
(-11.252 million): _,.utility
~ ' - (S871,ol00. about 80
to 15 per o.nt of - allould

-=

asked for); and a second
bubble at Amherst ($45,000) . The
seven new positions· total around
$80,000.

o.m.tkila
The health acienoea budget also
lncludaa moneys for annualization,
rew poeltions ana general price
tikea.
In the health aclences, the capital

=:v::. ~~.r=~~

which now run dental students
some $4,000. This is an item that
lied been in tile budget year after
yew. At Stony Brook these
expenatve kits are rented to
studentl by the Uni~~eraity . This will

·.

Nun..Profit Org.

U.S. !'&lt;'stage
PAID
Kuffalu, N. V

Pcrmi•

o.lll

now be the case here.
There's bad news, too. Fogel
noted that the budget proposal falls

~~~;;,~,:;t"Ya~uY~~~~r ~u'C.T~~~

This

a

Is

problflm

here

and

~~":.,~~:~!~~eu:~:ti:~ro~~~;:]~~~

and becoming obsolete: yet the
State simply refuses to budget an~
0

=~~a\ ~':f'~~f :a~ld w~s .!Wft:::

inlo this yeafs budget, but those

::.O.fl:t~~= l=n ofda:!;.~ptl~~~!
Fogel suggested . He feels some
funds for equipment replacement
khouid be provided each and every
year.

Ho extra -ulaltlona IIIOI1IY
Another major flaw in the bUdget,
Fogel said , Is Its !allure to include
any money whatsoever for Increased library acquisition• (another item that U/8 has been

~~=~nl~ ~s~ll'fn~:"iJ~;
1

price hikes, tM , again. not as much
as tJ/B had asked . We wanted
$187,000, but will receive only
/ $138,000 extra. No new library
positions WOI!'e funded either.

emo;,s~:ed l~:fon :::-~~:~e~

strict enrollment funding formula,
the State could ha\18 jusUiied taking
away three or four lim~~&amp; the number
of lines that ha\18 actually been
axed.
He said the University would have

r;~:~~4~~~= h~~ ~~~~~~

because this would ha\18 given us
more " flexibility ." Instead, the .
State cut less, but cut 'it outright.
There still remains , •t oo, the
possibility that a hiring freeze could
be implemented within the number
of lines authorized and funded. We
won 't kriow this until Aprtl1.
In Ali:limy, reaction to the Carey
budget was mixed. Chancellor
Wharton was quoted on Albany
radio as saying that the failure of
the Governor to support the entire
$78 million hike SUNY· lied
requested (the SUNY Increase is
only $35 million) makes a $100
tuition hike Inevitable in order to
maintain operations.
·
At Reporter deadline the only
new capital construction ptort tor

~t:e~ul::'t~ ~'has~he2 ordP~!
gymnasium proTect at Amherst.

�a 'publication of
· The Office of
Cultural Affairs
Eotber Harriott, writer/ editor

The Theatre To Be
Seen and Not Beard
U you lrnow oothing about the National
Theatre &lt;~f !.he Deol, don't let the name
mialead you . It is t'lrtt and fore- a
superl&gt; theatrical enaomble. The lid that
11 of the 14 performers eannot hear is
merely a lad, not a disabDity. And the
.notion that this is theatre for deaf people
ooly is inoorred., althoup it ean be seen 11
a unique bridge between two uauaDy
separate worlds. The NTD oommunicatea
to geoeral audie..- throup a combiiUition
ol sign lanpage, body l111JUI£" and J.be
spoken ward.

JonasMekas
Joou Meku is ooe of tbe pioneers of
indePendent filmmaking, and bu inOueJ&gt;&lt;ed and en&lt;&lt;n•n,B"d oolleagueo u
diverae u Stan Brskbage, John Cuuvetes
and Andy Warbol. A}Doag .his many
c:oolributlona iD ~ ~t
mmmaking;. the m.,..U.. "Film Culture."
a journal of independent cinema aad ali!O of
independent criticiam of "eotabliahmem"
cinema. "Film Culture" •u eatabliabed in
the fi!Ueo; in the Nriy ..WO.. lloba wu
iDII.nuMntal ill foundiar l.he "'-abn
Cooporati•e. wbieh. Uuoucll dioooowia«
..u.oda ol cliiUibutlon. helped brio«.• New American CiMma. In addl&amp;ioa.
l(oba' film criticiam ,... earried ill the

w...wr

Villllft vooe. aac1 the s..w
rar
ai.-lliOyean.
Aa "' his _ , !ilaDakiog. hia
...U io "Diariea, Noteo and Sket.dles. •
.......{,~ IDCI.-pleted iD

~.
baore.....udtllia.....Wand
bod! to urtior fool.aae far "Diarioa":
lila .-11. ia "In Jlet-. • I b wllidt
..... wiU aad .......... the
. . . . . . Knox Arl Gallery oa F..._, IS,
II lila B...U.,. lot New
0. tbe

......

f'ilm--

. Olm'o,........,alriWI.o

The medlanics of performance are easier
the &amp;yal Shakespeare Company, to work
with· him in Paris u , in Brook's words,
to out.line than the range and theatrical
impliet. The three speaking and hearing ..America's most innovative and expressive
per!o..-n, iD e!!e&lt;t, tranalate into words company."
the sign language of their ooUeagueo. But
The program scheduled for Tuesday,
this sign language.hu been ~veloped into
February 13 in Buffalo, IJ'I'¥ged by the
an art form of expressive power and ~ U!B Office .of Cultural AlWn ADd the
eloquence, embncing mime and choreoDivision of Student Affairs. with generous
gnphy. Tbe · three speakjnr adA&gt;rs, who . oontrihutlona by student ' clubs and
organizatJodo (oee direel.ory for their
have mutered the language of aigDI10 that
their hands oeem to lJy 1lke birda, do not
names), is in two parts: the Stephan Zweig
adaptatJoo of Ben J0010n's "Volpooe," and
atand by u interpreters: they are in and of
the oompany, parto!theaction.
· "Quite Early One Mornioi." bued on
The Natiooal Theatre of the Deaf won a
poems by Dylaa TbomaL
Broadway "Tony" award in 1977 and wu
J amaiean poet and playwright, Dennis
&amp;ott,
hu directed the Dylan Tbomu proo0
c~ by Britilb cllred«,&lt;'eter lkook of

To keep track of
U/B's cultural
events through
February 28, save
this magnet

poem about his Wales village and villagers,
in a simple, direct way which ;. flmny and
t.ouchiog. The bawdy and bitJng "Volpooe"
-has been directed by well-lmown dancer cbcreognpher, Don Redlich, with techniques of J apaneae Kabuki (and a healthy
chargeo!"oommedia"); David Haya, NTD'a
founder/producer bu ...,.ted ~ theOtrical, !»lorfuland outrac-a ooatumeo and

sets.
The per!ormanee wiD take piMe at the
Center for Theatre RMoudl, 881 IbiD
Street, and promioea to be "a 11ft ol bNuty
and ,. delightful oceuion" {to quote , _
Brendan GiD'o NWI Yorar revlew) for
bearing and 1100-bearing ....u- alike.
written by Noel Can-oil comme..ted that tht
l!Xtraordinary penouiity of JOIIU Meku
bu become "incarnated not in a body but on
....On. • "Each abol.," Can-oil wrote, "leU.
ua Meku' valuea ... wbal be !eelo ia worthy
olattetlon, both for ua aad far hilL"

�Blill'• _..._ . - ) ordered
~ JiPtiDr - """ doe Alomo
Gollory- ban.

Mr. Rioman. wllo ..-...d bill B.F.A.
,_doe Jlllocle biaDd Sdoaol &lt;II o.dp """
1D ..-.at It the Lnbioo Gallery iD
New York before - . . , to U/B," clearly
eajoJo bla .....-Ia! clulla The jab Ia
eallreiJ voluntary 011 ·bia part. - ' be bu
"-~"""-raJ iD oolectioDI
ODd -.uatiou. Net onlJ U!B 1111iota, but
...uota, too, have been ...,._.ned;
ODd Riomln'o proffJuioDal with
--.ben &lt;II tile c:uratorial otaft at tile
AIJript-KaoJ: &amp;Dd HollJnllo broapt IODIO
&lt;II them to tbe openiag 21-artiJt ohow, in
-..Jo of new talmt, fer "In WeotorD New
York, • ulnviUtioaal exhibition opening It
the AJbript-Knox, February 5.
Group obo,.s are tbe 11101t popnlar It the
Alamo, ~ to Mr. Risman. ud the

lart'-ninr- one

(February 7) will include
1rorko by University, Hallw&amp;lls and areo
lll'tiiM in photography, drawil!gl, pointing
&amp;Dd eollqe. Abo pc&gt;p!1iar are the opening
.-ptiooo, booted by' Health Scieuees. II
you would like to meet tile artists, browljl
tluougb tile~ worko, ond enjoy some wine
and cheese iD attractive surroundings,
c:ome to the next opening, Wedneoday,
FebruAry 7, from 7·9.

Mime Workshops
Wayne Pril.cbett, former director of the
Canadiall Mime Theatre, bas been in
reoicleoce ill the Tbeotre Department this
week, eo-apon!l&lt;:lr'ed by that department and
tbe Office of Cultural Affairs. Ahbougb bla
performaDce ud JeVeral of bla master
~ have already taken plate, todsy'o
and tomorrow'a woritabops are still open,
and iree to obeervers (not to participants)
from 3-5 P.M. in.Harriman Tbeotre Studio.
Pritebett was born and educated (as an
eroDOIIliat) In England; be studied mime
with the lopndary Etienne Decroux, and
drama at the Rnyal Academy of Dramatic
Art. He has performed ill opera, concerta,
theatre and cabarets throughout Europeas well as at 10 Downing Street lor former
Prime Minister' Harold Wilson. Hi! many
TV appearances include the Monty Python
Show. llertlort Whittaker, Canada's dean or
theatre on"liea. deoc:ribeo. Pritchett as "an
IIC&lt;Ompliahed mime, with imagination and
vitallty."

Visiting Artists
Reeitals ·
Of California-bern aoprano, Benita
Valente, wbo won tbe Metropolitan Opera
audilioaa In the early 60'a, Micllael
&amp;einberg, muaicerititoflbelloltOft Globe ,
WI'OCe a decade later, "I would have a bard
time IWilinc a lyrit aoprano wbo ia a finer
~ oinpr." Alan Rich of New York
..,_..... I'!'IJOrted, "Not · alnee the early

Mime Wayne PritdoeU,
days of Elizabeth Schwarzkopf have I beard
a soprano sing Schubert with such purity
and intelligence,"
A veraatile performer, Ma. Valente has
sung operatic roles, from Mozart.. to
Benjamin Britten, for the Santa Fe, Boston,
Zurich, and Washington opera compsnies;
hu opened Lincoln Center's "Mostly
Mozart" aeries for two sueeessive seasons;
haS appeared regularly with the Boston,
Cleveland and Philadelphia Ord&gt;elllrU; has

been soloist at Tanglewood (under the
conductorship or Leonard Bernstein),
Aapen, Marlboro, Saratoga. and other
prestigious summer festivals; and has
.
recorded widely.
An accomplished interpreter oWeder, Ma.
Valente will preaent a lieder recital in llalrd
· Hall on February 8. which will include
Schumann's Liederlcrei•, Richard Strausi's
Opltelill Lieder, Si% KeUer Lieder by Hugn
Wolf and "Five Songs" by Schufll&amp;l!n· Her

~

u

an oconomlot.

accompanist for this Musie Department
Visiting Artist Series is Luis BatUe.
Another Visiting Artist Recital will be
offered the following week~February 14) by
Vienna· bom, Ameriean-tri.ined pianist,
Anton Kuerti. K.uerti was a prodigy.
performing the Grieg concerto with Arthur
Fiedler and the Boston Pops when he was
12 years old. W~ile still a student or Rudolf
Serkin at the Curtis Inatitute, Ruerti won
the Leventritt Award, which helped launch
his busy and successful career. He has
performed with major symphony or·
cbestras here and abroad, and has toured as
a soloist in ltfoseow, Warsaw, Rome.
Mr .. Ku'erti recently recorded the
compkite Beethoven sonatas for Columbia
records, and it is Beethoven and Seriabin
with whom 11e has become ·especiaUy
identified. Two Beethoven sonatas (No.'s 4
and 31) and ''Twelve Etudes" by Scriabin
are scheduled for tbe concert, as is
· Mendelssohn's Scherzo and Capriccio in F
Sharp Minpr,
It ls possible that Mr. Kuerti will perform
on one or his own three concert grands;
whenever practical. he carries one in a
~ small custom.,built truck . He now lives in
:Jioronto, where he teaches at the
University of Toronto. An engagement at
U!B ia clooe enough
him to say, "have
piano, will travel."

tor

Winter Carnival
Tbe Winter 'Carnival - January 31
througb_February 4 - provides a variety or
indoor events, as well as, or course.
recreational ac:l·ivities particularly geared
to taking advantage of our famous climate:
e.g .• snow seulpture aU day Friday with the
judging on Saturday. February 3, a~ 9
A.M.; cro country skilng on t_he Ellicott
Complex Cross Country ski trail · (also
February 3. from 9 · noon or !rom I P.M. ·
4); a figure skating exhibition on Lake
LaSalle near the Wilkeaon Quad of Ellicott..
by members of the Buf!alo Skating
Club, to be followed by free sbting.
weather permitting, Sunday, February 4.

B.e,..ur/...-/Febroary 1,1979

�FO&lt; ClODiplete details'OD tiCket priCes, times,
etc. of events, _.magnet direetory. _
.

(The brochure adds that Sunshine House

will provide first aid .. .) Tbere11 be a disco
and jazz d..,.. exhibition by profeasionala
- like jazz ~r Tom Ralabate - from
1-4 P.M. on Friday the 2nd, with open disco
danciDg after the eabihit.ion. Indoors, that
is. Plus films, snowshoe demonstration
wrestling - you name it. For add.itionai
information, check the ..ilep&lt;wter- "Galen·
dar... or call the University Activities
Office, 636-2808.

The'Ultimate Space
..A creature of science as it inadvertently
approaches poetry .. . who unexpect.edly
transcends the limits o( his own existence to
suddenly and )"onderfully address himself
to the central projects of the living
conscience." This could be a description of
Buekminst.erFuller. but is, in fact an
exoerpt from an introduction to an. other invent.or~ator-researcher. Konrad
Wachsma.Dn. Wachsmann has struggled for
a lifetime (be is now 78-years-old) to narrow
Lhe gap betweep arehitocture and industry.
His seareh has been for better building
materiB.ls, bet ter tools, better methods to
achieve "the ultimaie space, .. as be calls it.
He has always challenged the status quo in
favor of new possibilities, new patterns of
thought and action. His focus has been on
ineorporat.&amp;&gt;g technological advances into
building · e.g. to use ' mass produced
modules or element.&amp;, from which any kind
of building can be !'15"mbled in any
variation or eombinatioq and for any
purpooe.
Like all great thinkers, Wachsmann
anticipates the (uture with utopian
projects. and stimulates discussion In many
f~elds on the problem of the spirit in a
• technical civuization. On February 12 at
5:30 P.M., be will speak on • Advanced
Building Technology: The Challenge to the
Design Professions" at the School of
ArchiLec:ture and EnvirOnmental Design.
The lecture is free and open l.o tbe public.

Fllm.s
Films are abundan~ on this c&amp;R)IlUS - too
abundant to list individually in the magn.et
directory. Consult the Reporter Calendar
and the Spectrum lor weekly listinp.
Further information at 881-3541 (Squire
Hall Information), 636-2919 (UUAB films),
and 881-2426 (Centcer for Media Study).

Evenings for New
Music
The February 11 .. Evenings for Ne·w
Music." perfO&lt;med by the Creative
As.ooiates at the AlbrighL-Knox Art
Gallery, will feature guest soprano, Phyllis
Bryn-JuDson, as soloist in Pierre Boulez's
"Improvisations sw:. MaUarme', No.'s 1 and
2." Bryn-Julbon ls equally at ease in
traditional aod contempocary repertoire,
and has toured throughout the Qoited
States and Europe. Andrew Porter, the
emiDent music critic of tbe New Yorker
magazine, baa ealled her "one d U.o glories
of the &lt;oneert program." And a deoaiptiolf
intbeN&lt;1D Yori(Timu of the work she will
perform here said "The liCOre o!
'llllpi'OVilationa on Mallarme' wu beauti·
fully sung .... She msde the wide-flung
inJ.ervals aound easy~ her piteb was
fiaw&amp;eu; her sound wu consistently pure
and instrumental-like." ,
·
llounding out the program will be works
by the 211th century classicist, Arnold
Schoenberg. and by Julius Eastmsn, a
form..- Creative Asaociate. whose brillianJ
pt'riortllilntfi here; in composition, voice,
~ and mu. · Lheat.re , made him one &lt;»f
the best-known and most popul&amp;r of t.he
Croative Asaociates. Mr. Eastman, who
will be preoent at the perfonnance, calls his
piece, "If You're So Smart, Why Aren't You
Ritb?"

~

.__/_.uF-,J,It79

Zodiaque and the
Strauss Family
A collaboration between the Zodiaque
Co. and the Amherst Symphony Orchestra
sbould result in a spirited program of music
and dance on Sunday, Feb~ ).1, at the
Amherst Jr. High School. "Slnussuite," a
new dance work, choreographed to music
by Johann Strauss Sr. and his sons, Johann
Jr., Edua.rd and Josef, by Linda Swiniuch,
Zodiaque's direet.or. wiD feature dance
soloists Jeanne Goddard , Hannah Raiken,
Tom Ralabate, Holly Stoehr and Ms.
Swiniuch . ..SLraussuite" includes the
lighthearted, fast-moving "Life Waltk,"
"Thunder and Lightning Polka," and the
"Radet.zky March."
· The concert opens with the overture to
"Die Flede nnaus ," and closes wit h a rock
band joining tho Amherst Symphony-;n
musical settings by Aaron Copland, George
Gershwin and Hershey Kay.

· ~ colloquium presented liy Profeasor
Marvin Kohl, Department of Philosophy at
Fredonia: "The Duty of Beneficence: Some
Classic Views." March 2 at 3:30 in 684 Baldy
Hall. S]l!&gt;nsor: Department o! Philosophy.
• David Gibson , former Creative Asso·
ciate, and composer·in·residence here from
• February 26 to March 2, in a free
lecture-demo of his compositions, perfanned by the Creative Associates in Baird
Recital Hall on March 2. Spon.Or: Center of
the Creative and Performing Arts.
· ,
• "Five Centuries Ensemble" of inter·
national musicians. with old and new music.
Visiting Artist Series, March 3 at 8 P,M.
Sponsored by Music Department.
•The Center for Theatre ReHU'Cb's
second production, "Summer People" by
Maxim Gorki, directed by Word WilliAmson. Opening at the Center's new quarters
at 681 Main Street on March 8.
• Percussion concert. by U/B·based,
internationally known percussionist. Jan
Williams. Baird Hall on March 9,
•The March 19 and 211 campus residency
of Frank · Capra, legendary Hollywood
director of the thirties. Sponsored by the
Department of History aod Center for
Media St11dy.
•l. Paul Hunter, Cbainnan of English at
Emory University, who will lecture during
the firSt week of February oo . U.e !&amp;b
century publisber/f&gt;OrDog"'lpber/autobi·
ographer, John Dunton. Call Prof-r
James Bunn at 636-2557 for more definite
informatiOJJ.
• A colloquium on "Literature aod
Society," f..turing Jerome GreeDfield,
profesaor of English at State Uoivenity
College at New Paltz, spealring on "Wilhelm
Reieh's Prilon Filea," 322 Clemena, 3:30
. P.M., March 1, sponsored by the Baldy
Center for Law and Social Policy.

·,

�G.S.A.. Alpha Lambda Delta and Pbi,Eta
Sigma.. Note: Besides. Squire B.O.. the "
Center for Theatre Research B.O. will sell
tickets Mon. - ~ri., I P.M. ;SP.M.

l4 .
Wed.-iay

POETRY READING
S~ Valentine~nightopenreading. Cnmet.o
read or t.o listen. Refreshments. Browsing
Library's music room. 255 Squire Hall, 8
P .M. Free. Sponsor: Browsing Library. _
MUS.IC

Viriting ArtiBt Recital: Anton Kurti,
piani&amp;t. • Baird Recital Hall. 8 P.M. General
irdmission $4, Faculty/Ste:C/ Alumni/Sr.
Citizens $3, Students St. Sponsor:
Department of Music. - ·

15
Thursday

FILM SCREENING/DISCUsSION
Evenmg1 for New' Film: JOM.I Mek&lt;u. •
Stteen!ng and discussion of "In Between"
(1978). Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 8 P.M.
General Admission $3, Students and
Gallery members $1.50. Sponsors: Media
Study and Ar6right·Knox An.Gall-.y.

Lrt'ERATIJRE AND SOCIETY.
COLLOQUIUM
Marc SheU: "The Whether and the Ewe:
Verbal Usury in 'The Merchant of Venke',"
103 Clemens, 3 P:M. Fnoe. ·Sponsor: The
Graduate Program in Literature- and
Society of tlie Department of English.

20
Tueaday
22
Tburaday

24
, Ssturday

.,.....,

~

.

Tleket.o. wbeno required,· are available at the Squire
Hall Ticket Offiee tin advanee); remaining tidteta at the
door one hour before l"'ent. I. D. cards must be presentedin order to purchase tickets at Studeni/Faculty/St.olf
I Alumni rate.

II

.............,
z
Friday

MUsiC'

t.o observers. Harriman Theatre Studio, 3-5
P.M. Sponsors: Off~te of Cultural Affilrs
and Department of Theatre.

E...,.mg• for New M'!'ic•: Works of Pierre
Boulez, Julius Eastman and Arnold
Schoenberg. Albright-Knox Art Gallery. 8
P.M. General Admission $3, U/ B Com·
munity/ Scnior Citixens/ Gallery Members/
Students with ID Car'ds $1. ADS vouchers
aecepte&lt;l. Sponsor: Center of tbe Cnoative
and Performing Arts.
·

DRAMA
W - Pritchett:• mime workshop. See
February !listing.

DANCE EXIDBI110N
!Nco aJid Jazz .o..- E&gt;:Aibitm•: Fillmore
Jloom, Squire HaD. 1 P.M. Free. Sponsor:
19'19 Winter Can!ival Eveot. lp&lt;llliOl'Oft byl
SA, Sub Board l, Reeonl Coop in
_.w., with Theatre DepartmeoV
o- Prasram ODd Zodlaque Danee

ARCHITECTURE LECTURE SERIES:
BUILDING WORLDWIDE
Konrad Woch"""""- • architect and author,
U.S.C., ·:Advanood Building Jecbnology:
Tbe Challenge t.o the Design Professions."
See February 5listing.

c-po.y.

4
-..,.,

Skatilog E&gt;:Aibitm•: Sk&amp;tiDg areo

011 Lal&lt;elASalle near Wilkeson

Quodraaile.

1 P.M. Sponsor: 19'79 WinJ,er Carnival
Event.

......,.
5

• ,.
.........

LINGUISTICS WORKSHOP
_
Awlied Linguiltiu · Defi•ititm and Uses,
an interdisciplinary workshop of interest to •
linguists, educators and language teachers.
Panel discussions and informal papers .

MUSIC
Composer• Forum (graduate studentS).
Baird Recital Hall, 8 P.M. Fnoe. Sponsor:
DePartment of Music.
.
25
Sunday

MUSIC
Univerlit~

PhiJJiaT7110nia - Baird

Sow

Competititm W'...,..,.. Cotocer!. Baird
Recital Hall, 8 P.M. Fnoe. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

26
Mooday

ARCHITEcnJRE. LEC'llJRE SERIES:
BUILDING WORLDWIDE
WO]Ci~ Lemikowoki, architect, University of Pennsylvania, "Industrialized and
Conventional Housing Design: Poland,
France and other European Countries." See
February 5listing.

VISI'I'ING MUSICOLOGY LEC'J'tiRER
Robert Bailey, Eastman School of Music:
"Form and Musial Language in the Later
Symphonies of Johannes Brahms." I 06
, Baird, 4 P.M. Fnoe. Sponsor: Department

FIGUU SKATING
~

DANCE/MUSIC

Amlterrt Symphony, with ~diaque Dance
Co. • Amherst Jr. High School. 7 P.M.
Free. Sponsor: Amherst Symphony Orchestra, Zodiaque Oat.~ce Co .• =CeDter for
J'heatre Resean:b.

FEBRUARY DRAMA
W - PriU:Aett:• mime workshop. Open
I

MUSIC
"'Greative A61ociate Recital: Ken Ishii,
cellist, acoompanied by Claudia Hoca,
pianist. Baird Recital-Hall. 8 P.M. General
Admission H.SO. Student.s/ U/B Cnmmun·
ity/ Scnior CitixeDB $1. ADS vouchers
aceepted. Sponsors: The Center of the
Creative and Performing Arts and ~he
Department of Music.

. Linguistics Loun~te, Ctol Spaulding Quaclrangle, Ellicott Complex, Amherst Cam- ·
pus. 10 A.M. · 4:30 P.M. Fnoe. Call
Professors Garvin or Zubin at 636-.2177 for
further in!onnation.

,. Faeulty/ &amp;taffi.Aiumni/Br. Citiuns $3, Stu·
dents $1 . Sponsor: Department of Music.

Suoday

MUSIC
U/B J=· .Ememble. Cornell Theatre, 8
P.M. Fnoe. Sponsor: Department of Music.

of Music.

AIICIIITtlC'I\1 LEcnJIG: !iEJUES,
IIUILDING WORLDWIDE

Willie. M•g;,., ant~lopt. Syncooe
· .Ualvorsity, "Squau.er SettJement.o in South
Ameriea: A 'l'lloroulh Loolt. • 335 Hayes,
5-.30 P.M. Free. Spon~ Sc:hool of
Arohlteotare IUid EDYiroomental Desip.

IIRI8IC
l'iaiO.. Artirt Scriu: Bttral4 Va~eatc•
JWrd Hall 8 P.M. G.enl Admission $4,

13
l'loeaday

'J'IIEATRE
Tic. Natioloal 'TheatNJ of th• Deaf':
"Volpone" (Ben Jonson) and "Quite Early
One Morning" (Dylan ThO-'). Center for
Theatre a-an:h, 681 Main Street, 8 P.M.
General Admission $5.50. U/B stuaents
$2.50. other ·atudents $3.50. Sponsors:
Office of Cultural Affairs, With the
. assistattee ol Division of St.udenl Affairs,
The Independents, Speakers Bunoau, CAC,

un-Pr-ofit OrJ.
l', S. PO.Slllt(C

PAll)
Buffa In~ N. V.
Pt·rmil o. 311

Exhibits·
&amp;n.lltovnu Wood Caro..-.. Creative Craft Center. 120
MFACC, Ellioot.t. Friday, february 9 · opeail&gt;g
reeepUQI\. Exhibit continues t.o Fobrusry 28. 8 A.M. · - 10
P.M .• daily. Sponsors: Craft Center and StudentAifairL
aro..p lww• Alamo Gallory, Bedt ijall. Opening '!iDe
and cheetio .__.,uoa, Februa&lt;r 7. Sbow runs lllrougb

February. Sponiors: 011ice of V.P. lor Health

~

Uld Depanment of Art.

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

1979

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

JAN 25,1979

VOL.10 • NQ.16

A&amp;.Lseen

Springer ~epon

facing an

Ketter expects recommendation today from VPs
on whether to implement it in 1979 or 1980; Bunn and Peradotto emphasize nobody's 'backing away'

~opportunity'
PuttingMFC
on-load is a plus,
Levine suggests

The vice presidents for academic and
health affairs have been charged by
President Rober! L. Ketter wlt.h making
a· recommendation · to him today
(Thursday, January 25) on whet he( or

Dean George Levine of Arts and
Letters thinks teaching night courses
· o,...loed" presents his faculty with
definite "opportunities."
The changeo..., will come next fall .
And It Ia the entire K&amp;L faculty which
will be affected, not just EngliSh as
repdrted elsewhere.
Up to now,_ A&amp;L faculty who heve
taught evening courses have· done this
as an extra assignment, racelvlng additional compensation.
This Ia true tor faculty In most areas
1

J~V~:"fn" ~ptember,

of
though, en
evening class will be counted as part
of an Arfa and Letters' profassor'a

normal load.

The reason for the change Is strictly
economic, Dean Levine edmlts.
The Vice President for Academic
Affairs (Dr. Ronald Bunn) wants to
dilute Arts :md Letters' rather "rich"

=~:;.u\'lto ~~~ ~~e ~x;·:::::

yeara.JA!Ihe same time. Bunn wants to

~.Jc'W .:~~~=~.~~~n~~~:r',~:'~~
Architecture).
To reach the

15-1
0

level

(still

~~~~:!~Le~~~: !rd ~ ~.~n'L![~~

must either give up 39 filculty poaliions
1981 or incr- Ita student
enrollment FTE (full-time equivalent) by
582.
by

~~~~~:,&gt;~:::,~'!_~~ft'~~~~~r~rf~. the

That report calls for establ ishing

~~~lv~~(s~~~~ e~u~~~\~r,~~

and could bring about major changes In
course loads, graduation requirements, ·
-etc.

S:.,ar;r
y~~~:!YP~~J: f~urt~~~ft!
for !hree classroom contact hours per

· making the four-course load (four
courses for 16 credit hours par
semester) the undergrad norm tn most
areas. Under contact-credit hour equivalency, a five-course load would
becOme the norm .
The qliestlon .before the Ul!!
edmlnlstratlon, o1flclals contected by
the Reporter ltl'lphaslzed, Is not
whether the Springer Report should be
. adopted, but when .
Not a 'backing away'
Vice Prasldent for Academ ic Affairs
Ronald Bunn sald Tuesday that no one
should Interpret any hesitancy to
Implement the plan next fa11 as a
" backing away from the basic Issue."
Bunn said he bas heard and read
spacutatlon that major ~roblems would

tJr~'~ ~ur~!rlj,~ t~·~~~

e, decision
t:iUe8 on ipaculalli&gt;n alone... -

Ia that " we do not_ make

do this, • Bunn said. As of Monday of
this week, his office . had · not r.et

~~v~~m!:'n~s~ea~~~~~~~~t

xn

the Input was expected to be In by

!~~~~iu?t~~o ~.,!'f,~~~'b~~~!s ~~;~~

"It Is reasohable" to go ahead for next
fall. 'We want to be sure thet students
are protected,'' Bunn point~ out.
Commitment to 'grandfather clause'
Peradotto confirmed that he end
Associate DUE Dean Walter Kunz were
spending moat of the early part of the
week looking at these reports.
Peradotto, hesitant about ImplementIng the plan this year, said ~e had bean

=Zt~':!}.~~ ~~~u~:F~.ell',;t

........; .....

To get the facts, he sald he has asked
Undergnsduate Dean John Peredotto to
~lew all data on plans for ImplementIng contact-credit hour equivalency

on the matter Monday. At that rnMttng,
Peredotto said,. thefe was llbaolute
commitment for a Un'-flty...,.de
"grandfather clause." to protect · students- presently ,!.'rolled from any

basis of last laM's enrollment) will
pick-up at ~east 234.1 student FTEs.
This puts us half-way to the 582
figure,' Levine sAid.
.
Putting the beat face on the situation,
Levine !Misted that the move Is really
more than a responie to a crisis. " In a
large sense, It has educanonal merit.

precisely what problems exlaf. !!1fnul
we look at the data, II Is Impossible to

the wake of tha changeo_ver.

~~~f'~~~~n~~~hce~:r;;'~~~

~~~o. b~uno;,en'~~ ~llfart~~~i

~~~~~~.::'~:~~~~

MFC enrollment totals. Faculty,

teac~ ~F~ri~oJ t!t":aon~ I~

=•

the number of ....,lng offerings overall.

Z:.:'c'l:dw-:t::y ~f:::O 'fnt~
evening, hi
out. _ Already,
English Ia In proceea of dawloptng a
master's PfOIIIWII which can be
completed entirely at night. Aria and ·

::=!lat:".:.'dV wl~~~~penwl:~ ~
student&amp; aa well as to MFC enrolleea.
Levina thinks the move Ia consistent
with ~ge plena for more

.. =.~=~or..:'u~:O

~~~

Jolt&gt;ed With SUNY~y In dMeiOI&gt;Ing
a l&gt;fOIIcOaal -'&lt;ing -IOMI Endo-.
rnent
the Hull*lttlaalulld!IIO for 'an
edufl education PfOGtM1 In the capital
. .. UIB will bean tnlegMI pert of the
program If thl fundi are aldrdad.

on

........- ..... -

UIB classes win go on "standard
lime" starting Nith the fall aemaster of
1979.
That means, University officials said
t h i s -:
1) That all claaeas on all campuses

~~~~ta;:~t~:~h=:~~~

etarttng limes on the three major.
campuses-Main Street , Amherst end
Rld~Laa] .

2) That clasaea with the same number
of contact hours will be held normally
within standard lime frames established for that number of contact
hours. (See accompanying chart.) Thlt
coincides with tha propoeed establlahmant next faJf • of contact hourlcredJt

~~;uc-:1~~~~ ~tg':'oo:lh u~~~

so-called Springer Report. Recently,
threa contact hollrs have been the

.. norm" for eouraes, with vlrtations

being handled as "exceptions." Now
there will be · norma" for 2, 3, •. 81\d

...m ...,_

:-cr===; =~~~~~
.... ~

.-.ywiH-ba

. . . tlrfoiFCioii"CJ'ffde . . . . . . .

----·-~-1

0

~~:~~s! ~~~=iJ:'ent: t~d~Y ::;~

problems" which may be brought about
by a tranattlon 1&lt;&gt;--&lt;:ontect-cnodlt
equivalency by this fall , He aald he also
doubts his DUE advlaement staff, each
· of whom alreedy haa an 800-student
load, would be able to find lime to seek.
. out .ana.,..,.. to the -lou- qlo81tlona
studimta woufd 6e f8cea with.
He nofed, for . . . . . . .-the! In the
rnatwials on the c:Mr~geoww Iliad with
ACaderalc Affelra .bY aoma departments, thefe _. ilo Information
what..,_ on changaa the , _ polity
would bring about In ,.qul,_le lor a
_ major. This was auppoeed t o - been

__ .........,,._1,_4

.

5-contact hour courses.
R-owlly
According to Charlas M. Fogel,
acting executlve vice praaldent, the
objectives of the change ant:
·
•To distribute times for course

~~'li'a~~!Y ~~ at"u"de~~a; optimize

their
•To minimize the hassle In buaalng

~~~;::'~,:T ~ts::!~ ~::,e~::.o:,:.u~~
proved to be helpful," Fogel aald); and
•To regularize the use of cl-roorna

~c!:l~~~~~ departmenl_!l - •
Rl~hard
Noll , director of the
Unl-alty Scheduling office, ..ld that a
committee compoeed of Fogel, DUE
Daan John Peradotto, Gnaduate Daan
· Gilbert Moore, Continuing Education
Dean James Blackhurst, Computing
Center Director Walter ~JOC1ntyra 1

~~=:J !;&amp;=hon"'tt~=:~·of -:'t!

...,_t Arts and Lett. . dapartmentl

are aofldly behind thl m001a to put night

_ , , _ orHolld, Levine uld .
lltiM aald the account of hta
- l n g wllll the Enalllh OapartiJI8f'l
'-' Friday (~ l11 Til• Spectrum
Monc~ey) was ·nonaanaa. •
"8y end ...... the dMn aald, "the
!acuity, too, View the cNng&amp; • an
IJIIPCiftUIIItJ to t - contact• will] a
......... 01 ......... "
n.
rnoner out 01 aoiiW'

Per-o ,_,.lelttl'ln a 11711atart
Peradotto fllld TueadaJ. he " still has

All classes on all campuses will start
at uniform times beginning in fall of 1979;
'norms' set for a variety .of cq_ntact hours

pointing out the need to do this for ·

~
1

1

:d"'m'lnra:'r:.t~lorjio :~th:i'o~e w'Wtf"!
"grandfather clauae," he Is relle_ved .

Standard tl~nes·

yews.

Artr:ean':rr~:!" ~~~~~.:P:':
~~:,~.;~:...=s:~ .

~:;:~e:~en t~ w::l~horma~~~ ~t~

Prior to MondliY, !he-DUE- aald
he had quttelrMkly been worried that It
would fall to 1t1m to have to· neaotiete
Individually •llh departments to lnsure

' St~ct.rd
aCONTACT HOUIII
· II·W.f'
f·TH
8:00. 8:50
-8:00. 1:\5
1:00. 8:30
8:311-10:45
10:00.10:50
11:00.12:16
11:00.n:!IO
12:»13:.45
12:0(1.12:50
14:00.15:15
13:00.13:!10
15:3C).18:4S
14:00.14:10
17:00.11:15
15:00.15:!0
:~::::7::

-

::r"'t!i.:""=ge:_u~=
1raMitlon to contect-cnodlt equivalency
proJected for fall (a proceea still being
~ookad at by DUE end othlra, ~·story). "Biandanl lima" will go
Into effect naxt fall _ , If conlpll.nce
with the Springer f8COmmandatlona Ia
!!&lt;&gt;ltl&gt;'!"ed.

liprMCict-

Exacuttv. VP Fogel haa aelced all
-acedemlc departiT*tta nof only to
Incorporate tha , _ time ~
Into their acheclulae, .but_alao to . , . .... · - - . · - 1 . 0 1 1 . 4

nme' frames

4 CONTACT HOUIII
T·TH
II·W.f'
1:10
8:00. 1:40
8:3C).10:40
10:00.11:40
111:00-13:40
11:00.12:10
12:»13:40
14:00.111:40
14:oo.ti:IO
11:00.17:40
lli:3C).18:40
17:00.11:10

e:oo.

new plan.
·
Departments ware notified on J uary 3 and gt- an extra week to
propoee thllr achedutea for fell 18711
(proooe&amp;N which ware due In SchldullnQ.Iast Friday). ·
~tattvaa of
_.,... large
depart11*1to ware contacted lor thalr
feelings and Input on the etanclardtza..
tlon before Ito adoption. In soma

2 CONTACT HOUIII
TOIITH
1:00. 1:40
10:00.11:40
12:0(1.11:40
14:00.15:40
18:00.17:40

I CONTACT HOUIII
. .T.W·TM-F
8:00. 8:!10
11".00. 1:!0
10:00.10:50
11:00.11:110
12:00-12:110
'3:00.13:110
14:00.14.110
15:00.11.110
1-18.110
17:00.17:110

T--...• Oil .

T-TH

~ '~

�January 26, 1878

. . .acta

l

•Standal:'d times

SlC.Is closing

(lraft-1,col4)

their classes '1hro1Jgh each day and
through the week." This would help

~~Td~~~~n~~ngb~~h of ~~·r~.;

Social Sciences research unit Will call
it a day at the end of thi~ semester;
lack of support is major reaso~ why

Scheduling Office. and for students

~'l~u,!~ t:,~ ~~~~~ra lr~~v~~~:

courses they need are offered at the

same times.

ByJatee~ld
AopofWSWI

At the end of the semester, the
Survey Research Center wJll close up

s~~~ca~~~~~h~ayFaculty of Social
Sciences and burled on the Ridge Lea
Campus, SAC was established lust o -

~~e ~fdt~cc::;, ·~uu:~ 'V~~:

•Arts and Letters
.............. 1)

l8vlne hopei departments will take
Into 8CCOunt ,...ultlng financial har~
llllpa to lndlvlduall when scheduling
oummer programs.
,....,_ Ia · another drawbaCk, he
8Cknowledged; eome faculty will be
Mlced to t~ nights who would
-

pntfert~l~s.
It Ia a1eo ~lble" that Arts and

,,n,~'But ··~~~~~:on!~

:::,..
He aald he Ia working on having 8 TA
ooeltlone cumtniiY funded by MFC
lund&lt;id through the regular Arts ana
Lettera budget.

..........

The altematt.M to lncrMSing student
FTEs, Levine said, would be six:
"I , will be able to make no

r...::~:: Wlw:a~S:ruct~'=

F~~~~~~1~~ 1 ':.~'':".:·to allow pure
chance (reslgnatiOllo, deaths, ratlre"*111) to determine where we will take
many of our - lmsspective of
~tty, programmatic need, workload,
or plano for developm~~~~t . In the past,
thla lo - In part - how losses were
abeoft&gt;ed . .
"I may have to notify faculty without
tenur. that appolntmenta will not be
- . d for budgetary reasons. This
InCludeS faculty cu"""fiY under conelderatlon for tenure as well as those
who will be considered In the future.
"I may have to reduce TA lines at the
rate of 4 TA's for My faculty llneo For
Englllh, thla could -uaty affect the
graduate program and could result in
In teaching aaslgnments for

1

:?;.'

"' mi.y -

to recommend rat,....cl&gt;-

"*'1 of programe.
·
"T.-clll'lQ to.dl may have to be
lncreued.

n-.ant not viable optlono, he said .

"It would be dl-roua for Arlo and
Lettera to 1oee 311 poaltiOM," he
contended. Not ~ "underatanda
1t1e cnwttY of '!'~l· h8 feela, cartalnly

notlhe . . - wnocn aland to gain lines
- Alta and ........ ~. They ....,,
_ , &amp;Ynll*hellc to our p!Oblem, the

...........

.............,
t..wtne Mid

he .._,, eltow the

,._..,to dl.........

~..:::::::C,"l:::":=:

10 oula bllng pnlpCtead ~VPAA 8unn
~lludgel Conllngancy
... fall ot

t..wtne _ ,
. . the -

offer ..y

... eo-a aohlnG

..........

g---..

.. _...,., .. poaltlve

~ pro-

-. II ·
- "' -lndlalll8d.
17 poalllona, ljglll In

sltX="I~;\~·Professor R.ay Hunt , It~
director, who is also the chairman of
the Organization and Human Resources
Department in the School of Management , one of SAC's main functions Is to
provide a "full spectrum survey research.
capability" through offering such
services as research design, sample
design and selection , data collection,
data processing and analysis, and
report preparation.
•
Through Ita Social Science Data
Laboratory, SAC provides systems
support and maintenance for the
Statlstlcel Pecksge for the Social
Sciences. SPSS Is a standard system of
computer programs used in data
analysis. Tile lib also provides llala,
developed e
~ere, that can be used
for tnstructlon11111d research.
Recently, SAC designed the Instrument used In the General Education
attitude su(Vev and also processed and
analyzed the dsta.
.
Although not among Its primary
ectlvlfles, SAC has afso sponsored

~~~= ::r~':u~t~u~ro~:s:r~

shops on SPSS.
The bottom lloe felnsolvency
One reason for the demise of the
Center Is l nsotvency. Accora tng to
Hunt, the "bottom line" Is that SAC
• failed to "devel op a sufficient volume of
externally funded research" and therefore was not able to be self-sustaining.
But, ex~lalns Hunt, It was conceived

~t!, f~~~t~e=~ ~=c~~~~~~1l

was "always dependent on someone
knocking at the door."
Unfortunately. not enough knocked.
Hunt says the University simply lacks
the volume of supported research
necessary to suotaln a contract
operation like SAC. Established schof·
ars who could give business to the
Center usually have their own shop, he
relayed .
·
'Securing contracts from outside
academia ·was also qlfficult . For one
thing , Hunt feels Buffalo " lo not a
research-oriented community," and that
units of local government just do not
have the funds to afford the quality.

~~~!RCf=~· ~~~~u'il:iety lost
customers for the Center Ia that It took
only jobs where research findings could
be made public within two yeara, and
where the eource of support could be
Identified to respondllllts and In the
Center's files.
·

prl::!'.=:'=,.!~~~o~~~!. of

. . _ ....._ -lei ._. -

.,.at,

....

Hunt realizes that SAC could have
been 1110r9 competitive II Its contract
prices fower. He believes,
that to cut prices, the Center
would have been forced to compromise
=~or Ito "Intent• to produce a
hi
t product. Because of SAC's
Ul ton wlth the Untver.lty, Hunt did
not vieW IUch a compromise u a viable.
ellttmltllve.
Deeplte the Centw'l .....,...y high
prtwe, Hunt ~· he ,_ --..c~
Ollie fnlm "--a of prhate aurwy
. - a l l 9ftCI• w11o felt 8RC lnh1nalng on their Client• pool and

ho-.

proflti.

He - ' * 1 he hu "little NIIIFCI" for
t h e - 111 wlllcll-.:11 .rtonaare
IUPPOfl8d ..... Unl-.tty and bel liMa
1M "ppobb- of malnWinlng ...,

~lltyhnare

. ...........=CII~"-'-IIald

an

bJ 1M

F~

In

~with- ollt - l n g IO the

.... . . . . olher , _ Wllk:h
1M CenW'a "-'Ciel
...... Hlllllt Ulcl he lllll.cl FIMnceand
.... . . , _ tine !liMa to ""
-IOCioa_ ...,...forltle
~

Center, but was Ignored. He said he
finally received a business manager In
197•. al1er he already hed a hendle on
what the costs were, and SAC was
experiencing financial difficulty.

Ot~~!J': 3~!"g:;~u~'W~~'I:'hut:g~

departmentalrwolved, to 1111sure a wider
distribution of .courses throughout the
day. and the - · and to ensure the
succeS&lt;~ful seating of all classes.
Further, Fogel said, "any depart.

:\'~~;"-' ~ue: f;h'::..t~~to~~\~~

Untver.lty juet 'talke' ~
·
Hunt said his "attitude about support
· availability, after all others are seated ."
for research at this University Is that tne
Fogal said he ass4med any such
Institution talks a game but doesn't play
request j wlll be able td' be academically
11. It does not, In fact, allocate
justified."
•
resources In any rational way with
respect to supporting research developSpirit and letter
ment nor does ·the University make It
Noll said the Scheduling Office
easy lo do research."
JHe recalled the · promises that
r~~~~o~~bo~'!.:th~r~~· a~~
Induced him to leave Cornell to return to
U/ B and take the helm of SAC ~n~~:·.~m":td~:;'~·~~~
promises that Included a redefinition of
of times than those pi'O'IIded by the
th8 Center's mission and Increased.
standard schedule. An example would
support staff. Hunt says that with the
be a three-hour graduate course where
exception of his salary, none ot the
the professor prefers to meet all three
promises were kept.
hours at one sitting.
"The University did not make them In .
That's fine, Noll said, as long as the
bed faith ." he explained, " but found
departments concemed ~elther atone or
that It wq unable to keep them.•
In conjunction with another depart·
Hunt believes t/lat solvency for a
ment, group other graduate courses In
"free-standing unit" like SAC, devoted
similar blocks. The graduate course
to research Implementation' rather than
the!
meets, say, from 12'3 Monday
development, Is " at best problematic."
should, he says, be joined on the
The Center was "misconceived" from
schedule
by two other courses meeting
the onset, Hunt feels . "both confor the same three-hour period, one on
Wednesday ansi one on Friday.
cex:;:,~~~~d t~g~~z:''::a&amp;;~ter was

~y~al,% f::::::~.::t: ~j':.crv:"fJ~~

Pollllcal ~clence Department. At the
lime, State dollars were plentiful so the
decision was made to create a center
which could continue to service the
Unl9ers lty.
Hletorlc accident
"The creation of the Center was an
historic accident ," asserts Hunt. It
appeared a " reasonable" thing to do at

~':lo~~ro.e~o:t~:. J.~ut 'ft~hm;~~n~

"tlllngs may have been done differently."
Hunt suggested that If SAC hed
Initially agreed only to undertake
pfojecJs " with money l.n It," Its finances
likely would be In better shape. But that
was not part of Its original mission .
Those moat likely to be aclversely
affected by the closing of SAC,
according to Hunt, are young faculty
and graduate students wha go lo the
Center for advice and asslstancl! In .

8S"~!:::gs~c ~~.:;~ .re~~";lu u~~~~~

be a credentialed organization on
campus to make it easter for young
scholars to obta1n research projects.
An organization like SAC Is of only
"Incidental benefit" to established

:~":~\1.:'9nt':'~p~~:2on~:~~f t':=r.

projects.
·
Hunt " assumes" that support for
SPSS will cease with I he demise of the
Center unless Computing Services
takes o - the
Hunt says that the
maintenance o the Statistical Peckaga
Ia a natural for Computing Service and
should have been put there in the first
place.
·
What will happen to data sets In the
Data Laboratory " Ia not com'pletely
Qee.r," says Hunt.' They may go back to
Political Science, an eventuality Hunt
would consider " unfortunate, • or, the
Lab could be maintained as a "freestanding entity'' whlclt could continue
to provide coneultatlon ..vtcea to the
Unl...,lty communitY.· This would be
the "most dNirable • outcome, says
Hunt.
.

Job.

·NoonewflloeeiHlab
•
·
Fortunately, no SllC core employees
will 1oM their jobl w~.en ·the Center
folda. T- of the four cora ata11 will be
lllrad bJ Hunt for pereona1 ~h
projects. Two othar8 will hopefully be
placed In o t " - - of the Untver.lty.
• Hunt :f'oJhe t~nl'l1:1ty Ia makln~

::Ton,
for the two, ~Ia
llrK*taln -her they wfH find
the~

IUitable.

Moat ol tile -

ltMOCiatell Willi ltle

QNC1 lltuelenla
Cent8r worlt lA tile

· o.ta lAb. Hunt a.p 11!eY wfA contln"'
10 lie funded t11n1ug11 SOclel

ec.-,

atlaMifllrthe ........ ollllla

~·

•Springer

''"""-'·col.

4J
Included as an Integral part of data

su~~'b"JEb~::;~rt~rse~pared

to
abide by a decision for Implementing
, the Springer Report In 1979, but that he
feels It would simply be one more
assault on the quality of. atuotent life at
thla Institution.
"Someone will have to be prepared to
take responsibility for It, • he said.
He fevore the 6-courleload
Let's make It clear though, Peredotto
added , "that unlike the studllllts, I am
not against the five-course load, nor do
I have any doubla of its educational
value." Peradotto said he has long been

~I:J~ao:':t of0~x=~~"!:': ~f.
possible. ~he four-course load," he
said, "represents a cheap degree by

comparison ."

He emphasized he Is not angling for
an Indefinite delay as he believes some
students might be. His concern Is with
Implementing the change with the leasl
amount of peln for students.
As far as Health Sciences courses go,
Peradotto said he has been Informed
that "there are no changes to make o there." Most Health Sciences classes
already have contect-credlt hour equlv·
atency, he aald.
There are some chen gee bel ng mede
"~
hera" In . terms of basic
requirements that will "Impact their
thle Ia not a major
students;
problem," he Indicated.

ho-.

.;

Double deduction&amp;
set for United Way
The State's failure to deduct United
Way pledges from U/8 ~ for

~::~:r·:~-J~T::c,~~he.T:':~

l~orl:.~:l~~~--lty eoun:ee - e
• "We had eome trouble In the J18Yroll
department with comput... " a apol(eSman for Stele Comptroller Edw8111 V.
Regan told the Buffalo E....,lng ~ws
s.turdar .
"We'l juat ·'-e to deduct more
later," that lndlvldualaald.
The Comptroller'• Office deducts
money pledged by
emploYMS and
forward a It to the United Way.
All United way ~ In the State
were affected by IIW fOUl-up •

s-

~":!:."'h~w~Ttt:'::=, ~

eflualton II rectllled, a UnivwafiY
~ &amp;l*l\llaled.
Complaints
from U/8 brought the ·auuatton 10 the
- ' o n o1 Regan'a atalf .
Tile Newa ' - ' auggea~ It Is
lflllllc that Comptroller RegelfS llret
~
from hla own

•came

#

�......

.....-..., 25, 1t7t

Bunnbraces
for cutbac~s~
.eyes options

·Affirmative
Action panel .
now functioning

We don't know
yet what Albany
has in mind

the University Afflrmati'l!l Action
Committee has approached full membership, according to Dr. M. Car1ota
Baca, lta Interim chair.
The panel now consists of n&amp;pn~:­
sentatlves from each vice presidential
area, the Student Asaoclatlons, the
handicapped, CSEA, the Faculty Senate
and the Minority Faculty and Stllll
Association.
Various sul&gt;&lt;:ommlttees will be
formed to addresa specific affirmative
action concerns, Baca Indicates. As
they are, she says, expanded Univer-

Asked to confirm rumors about his
plans for meeting budget cuts that may
be lmpoeed by the Stale lor next year,
VPAA Ronald Bunn contended Tuesday
thet anything he could-say would be
sheer specu[ation since " we are very
late In letmlng from DOB just what the
budget ptan will entail." [It Is supposed
to be revealed february 1.)

~!Ytt~ec~:r!lYt~t~:':r~=!1~

cs~ a~J'~o~~':."Dt~v~ar:e;o,P'~~~9
1

anything from DOB, so Bunn Is
nsluctant to tip his hand on how he

ml¥~!,~~ ~~h g:~~~~~~- admitted,
that the University seems vulnerable to
some fiscal paring In the comln~ear.
That's due to a failure to reach budgeted
· enrollment targets this Y!'Br·
" We hope," he said, tlfat DOB and the
Governor will not reduce the actual
budget base, because "we are confld1111t
I hat we will meet the enrollment targets
very soon ." What the University would
like Instead Is Imposition of lnCI9888d
savings on the same or larger blise
budiJO!I. This would not be as
dtsruptlve, In the VPAA's view.
The difference between our enrollment target and actual registration
ligures could be translated Into 50 or 60
Instructional line cuts. But hopes are
that any cuts will not be In that form .
Bunn sald his basic strategy In light
of continuing uncertainty Is to try to
maintain as much flexibility as
possible.
He said he is trying to-create a pool of
lines with Which to be able lo respond
to DOB cuts .. This year, Universitywide, there has been a ceiling on
employment; abOut 200 lines heve been
left vacant, 62 wlthlri Academic
Affairs. These 62 linea are distributed
among1he several units of the Division,
Bunn aald, and Include. both non-

~~~"8P~ \:"~~~~~~~~menta

that they cannot "count on" getting
· these linea back on April! as Is usually
the case. It Ia poaalble they will have to
be used to meet cuts and savings that
may be mandated.
In the event the 62 ue not enough,
Bunn has Identified another 18 llnas
(the 10 In Arts and Latters relernsd to by
Dean George levine r- sapan~te
story), 5 In Educational Studies, and 3
In the Social Sciences). Some or all of
these, he said , c:Ould be added In to
meet budget trimming requlnsments. II
none or only some ans requlnsd lor thet
purpose, they may be used. lor
radlatrlbutlon within Academic;_ ,(ffalrs,
from areas of low student-faculty ratios
to those In Which the ratios are.
unecceptably high .
The VPAA Is on nscord, however, as
not "(antlng to make rapid or marked

~:-:~ '~ti~~~-·ll~hel:-"t!i~g

considered by wey of raellocatlons, lor
example, would simply bring Manegemen! down to a student-faculty ratio of
23 to t, while lncnsaalng Arts and.
Letter• to 15 to 1, another Capen Hall
source emphasized to the ~er.
Finally, the spurce said, "it's all a
guessing game" until Carey brings out
his budget messaoe next Thursday."

the committee." ·
•
The specific charge to the committee
Includes responsibility· lor the Implementation of the "SUNY "Grievance
Proceduns lor the Review of Allegations
of Jllegi\J Discrimination." Any SUNY
student or employee~ use tbla
uns, Beca
Internal grievance
explains, but It Is In no way Intended to
sur,plant or duplicate any already
ex sling grievance procedunsa. Neither
does It deprive a complainant of the
right to file with outside enforcement
'-Or. MaguiN wtth Sam, the monkey.
agencies.
The procaduns provides lor an ad hoc tripartite committee to P""-" each .
grievance In the event prior Informal
resolution Is not nsachad. Each
trlparllte committee will be drawn from
· a pre-selected panel or pool of campus
administrators, faculty, employees, and
students recommended 10 the President
by the Affirmative Action Committee .
• differently and theilluslon occurs.
.The Committee would like to Include In
"Since rrwch of our knowledge of
nscommendallons to the President
Its
'human brain function Is lndlnscl and
the names of those persona In the
baaed upon animal experiments,"
University community Who ans com·
Maguire explains, "It's Important to
patent and Interested In the nsaolutlon
determine where our experiences are
of Incidents of alleged dlscrlmlnatlorr..
similar to animals, and where they're
Baca anticipates an_eatabllshed pool
dlflensnt."
ilulllclently.Jarge to requlns the S«VVce
Uslng.monkeys, "Maguire Is attemptany one member . only one or two
tlmesay-.
.
.
Individuals who would like to
people have. The photograph acvolunt- as a member of \he pool from
companying this arllcle Illustrates how
which the tripartite committees will" be
tbls worl&lt;s. The monkey, -tad In a
drawn ans akad to contact her a1
chelr, looks alternately at colored and
636-2901, 503 ~ Hllll.
black and white stripes with a pause
Members of the Affirmative Action
panel~. ·1n addition to
ManteE.
Abbott, editorial aaalatMt, ~
monkey's brain cells change.
.

Monkeys aid in
brai ·research project

--·-Scioneel
By Mary Bath Spina

Sight Is a luncilon of 1he brain as well
as the eyes, si nce lt Is the brain which
accurately organizes and processes
Images taken In th~U.llh the eyes.

lnl~a:fonrrec:n Pj':,;es~;:.~n °ls vl!rs~
necessary lor higher visual functions
~=

as a~su!,~"f.,ni~Y&amp;uaf'e;;:~
contr~, which , Involves skills like

ca~rli'YB~ :'~~ :::~=~~~~keys

..,...
helping sclentlstsleammore about how .
the brain processes and organizes
visual Images Into accurate, meaningful
Information : By Identifying normal
mechanisms In monkeys, Whose visual
perception Is very much like thet ol
humans, the scientists ho~ to gain

~~~h',~nt~:~at dy;:~:Sro~ l~ls~':l

perception and learning .

Which parts of the brain do what?
Or. Joan S. Balzer, nsclplent of a
three-year $125,000 National Eye
Institute grant, and her coll8agues are
especi ally Interested In functions of a

:,y~~ o~~~~ri":~n~~~P~~"n'f.'::

believe different parts of th is ansa may
analyze specific visual Information,
with one pari concerned only with
colors and another with moving
obJects.
- .
When single cells In the brain
proceas Information, says Dr. Baller,
electrical signals""' emitted which can
be picked up with tiny wires called
mlcroelectrodea. The actlvJty of single
cells In different parts of the pnsstrlate
cortex can be studied white monkeys

~ s~~~~r:::,~..,l~~~:,.s:;,~.;

r:,=:-, ~~~~parlo~, :~~o:~~~~

of
" It may be found that dam- to one
pari of the preatrlate cortex affects only
the ability to recognize colors, but
perception of shepes would be normal,"
says Dr. Balzer, who Is· an assistant
protessor of physiology. Poaalbly even
mora complex functions go on In other

~~~~":.f~~da~•

of the

::1::':..~' r~~=n:.:er::r' ~~
,_ •.,_
=~pulrtn.

A third area under Investigation Is

~u~~u~l~l~n~w::~~~r.~~~u~u~-:~

vlsoal function . Dr. Steven Hollmann,
Dr. D~tvld Bender and Dr. Bal- say It's
been suggested the p_ulvlnar may have a
role In eye movement control and may
~c\:m~fP!~Ize and process visual
. "II the pulvinar has a visual function,
Its absence or Inefficiency could lead to
Inaccurate messaoes being transmitted
to the pnsatrlate cortlll(, ".- says Dr.
Hollmann. To "determine Its function,
tests will be conducted on a monkey
Whose 'pulvinar has been nsmovad.

TRYOUT11 SET

Audition• lor the U/1 IWOductlon of
El1c lent.,'anewllleY, "the Fall of tile
Arnamne, wiH be ll.ld today ancl
tomorrow from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. In tile
Hamman ~tudlo 11IMtnt at Matn 8 - .

Jr., ualatant to dlntetor,
University Pl_,..,t and
· Guidance; William C. Flecher, ·
elate professor, English; Mary C.
Hamon, assistant dean, School of
Nursing; MlchMI Hudeckl, ..-ell
proleaaor, Biological Sclencea; Johan:
naJu-. student ~tallve; Jeaee

c.reer

~illr::,a:l'v., ~~~~~u~:

C'=s

Development (ex-officio); Jamee G.
Pappas, chairman, Black Studlee; Carol
Smith Petro, aaaoclate dMn, The
Colleges; Hairy
Pol'pey. aaaletant
vice pnsaldent, Finance and MeMgement; RooNVIIIt Rhodee, coordinator,
Minority Student Alllllra (ex-ofllcl o);
Turner Robinson, Black Student Union;
George D. Unger, alllrmetlve ..:tlon
· coordinator
(ex-ofllclo);
Maryann
Wechowtak, clerk, Law Library!=·John R.
Wwren, . atafl aaaoclate,
acllltlee
Planning; Claude E. Welch, aaalatant
vice praeldent, Acedemlc Aflalra; and
Rudolph M. Williams, aaalstant dean,
School of Madlclne.

w.

M.Fab.11
M.Feb• •

LMI daito flled&amp;graecard (~an=.)

F.Feb.2
F.Feb.t

'F. Feb. I
'F. Feb.1tF. Feb. II

+ + w. Feb:-21

::

W. Fa11.11

"-"*''

~:.:!'at~ ~=~·.=..,~n ~for

In OAR lor June 1871 coni.,.,.
o.lllne for flUng lor SUNYAB application for financial
IIUietanot (Form UB) for 1171-«) (applications
,....... .rtar thla data- .ulllel:l to lunda

minutes, and alter a lew moment's

r,::u,:~ackW:,C: ,:au~.:=

~~Jr.~~lce._.:~~w=~

• Carter,

Last day to add cou..-- 8of1ng - ·
Last day to drop oo.,_ wfihcMit IIIWIOial llablllt'y
for Spring 1879.
~
Last day to drop cou..- without ~an "R" grm,
aalgnad - official raelanatlon for 8pMg 1871. • ·
Deadline date lor aubmiiiiiiOn of tuition..,..,. to
Graduate School for 6prtng 1871 ........
l.aat day to ntelgn with 10% tuition liability for
Spring 1871.
for Spring 18711nvoloea clue or 7 ClayS after
lrwolot poatmerk dale.
Waahlngton'a Birthday. Obaerwoj holiday.

'F. Feb. :Z..

"W1,aual Illusion raeults w.hen
colored atrlpea . . •tansd at lor - . 1

black and while atrlclea ~ tlntad to
the w-. Sclenilata bal.... that
expoaura to the colored atrtoea 1ft-.
the ...altlviiY of oertatn· cella In the
brain. When tfle black and white atripea
are Introduced, the cella • ~~d

a-:

Grad School deadlines
F.Feb.2

~rlate

Vlaual lllualona
In a project funded under the
grant, Dr. William Maaulnt Ia taking a
clo- look et slmllarlflee ~ the
visual perceptlona of montcaya and
humans by ltudYing a special kind of
~ Illusion. Thla otucly may provld6
clues about the phyalcal baals of ~

..,r

~nu~)~t ~~~":~e '!'1:~':.J ~~~~~ ~~~

-.liable)(- Jan. 31, 1871 fCftri FAF).

o.lltne for automatic • .._ of continuous regia!,.
tlon lor!'- atudenla Who have ~eel 811
...,._ NIIU.._Ia for June 1871 and 8aplembar

11111.oont.mla.

,.... ..
~

·.

•'•'··~

• • • ••• L.

.......

"''

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

I

I"

�Jon~~~ry 25, 1171

...

Genetic studies
.Chromosomes may be t-he-key to why
some persons are more likely to have cancer
· and other diseases, Dr. Bannerman thinks
8y MIH Carlin

--Sifll

~~~cxl~n~y,~~:~~~~~~m~~~~

in
why some persons are more susceptible
than others to cancer and other
diseases, a UIB research e•pert
believes.
.
Dr. Robin M. Bannerman, who heads
a federally funded medical ..genetics
research team, and his associates
. know , for instance, that a single
malfunctlonlng~ene amo~g the many
thousands In each human body cell can
cause a birth defect. As researchers,

-Bauda fami1y funds

~~~ P':~! th~~~~~ O!'Y!~otten,

-'"!!1.~- --DoonDollloi-. J--. ~A.-.

chromosomes lrr each body cell

atudent.

tr&lt;~its and characteristics.
'
Bannerman, whose own research
relates to tracking down the effects of
faulty genes on bloOd cells, pointed out
.In an Interview that there may well be a
correlation between genetic leeton~ and

DeMuth, has been a practicing
pharmacist since her graduation In 1926

and has been director of the pharmacy

at St. Francis Hospital in Buffalo for the
past 12 years.
Joseph aav.da. a brother, was 1939
graduate of
·School of Pharmacr,
Now retired, h~ once was a partner 0
the Holzman Drug Company and was
associated with local pharmacies. He
received the School of . Pharmacy
Alumni Association's highest honor
the Willis G. Gregory Memorial Awerd '
In 1974. His wife, Rose, Is also a Schooi
of Pharmacy alumnus.&lt; a 1943 graduate.
Another brother, &lt;;haries A., grad·
uated from the School of Medicine In
1942. His wife, Philomena, a ' 1939
graduate of the School of Nursing
worl&lt;ed at both Emergency (now
Sheehan Memorial) and Children's .
Hospitals. Dr~ Bauda, a Buffalo
physician, two ears ago establlshad an·
annual award n his own name 10 be
given a medical student who best
e•empllfles the attributes of the family

~~'aW:.'h'.:' ,\':e~a~~~:al~~~~rJ~:: ·

but not others.

a

Dr. Dwllel H. Murray, acting dean of
the School or Pharmacy, aald the
Samuel J. Bauda Memorial Award will
be ~ed each year to the student
wt&gt;o beat e•empllfles qualities of
teederehlp and dedication to oommunlty health care. The award, edmlnletered
tlvough the University or Buffalo
Foundation, Inc., will Include a $200
check to the recipient.
Bauda, who died two years ago at75,
a practicing Dhaimaclat for 50
v-a. A 1823 UIB Pharmacy g...Suate
he hed been a longtime contributor to
the achool . He wu a partnet In Leed's
Druga Inc., "-own, for 42 years
and manager a1 Hwwy and
Drugs
al the Hotil Samuela \fl....
In eatabllahlng the annual award
Bauda'a noiaiW. noted that the. UTB
achoola of Pharmacy, Medicine, Nufs..
lng and Enalneerlng have touched their
another brother
llvelin poeltive ways.
graduated from the School ot Engineer:
The Bauda'a slater, Mrs. Jennie - lng and Is-employed here by Adsco.

carey

~~~'t."~r~!'~;:,·.ull

cancer, for lnstonce

Take cancer, for Instance.
Bannerman asks: "Out of 100 persons
;~l~u~~~~c~arettes, why weuld 10
"Something causes the Ingredients In
cigarette smoke to bring about cancer ,
In certain Individuals," he commented.

St-.1 artlata

In

Buffalo

~~et/~d:;,~'~':.Vs m:rr,oso'.l'seh:u~rn~tlng~
allowed

. =~~ar:.if~7~
w~~f~r ~~
individuals but not others . ·
"Some

For some, he further explained,
animal fat poses no 'problem, but In
other Individuals the fat finds Its way
Into the blood stream , causing such
health problems as arteriosclerosis, or
hardening of the arteries.
Here again, Bannerman believes
current research Is In the process of
isolating tha genetic malfunctions that
cause, or allow, fat to enter the bloOd
•
stream.
As In the case of . smoking, the
ultimate result would be to counsel
those Individuals found to be potenlial
arteriosclerosis victims to eliminate
animal tats from their diets.

are

~QI8dwatatif-.tatUIB.

Bailwai rnontha 1o the education
depwtment of the lbrlght·Kno• Art
Galteov oommlnlonad Nihart to create
a 8CUipaec~ ~ to be uMCI u an
lnatructton.t model for the gallery's
"Art to Sclil)ota• prognam. The program .

More different than we think
While 1~5' often been said that
"people are different ," Bannerman

::..""=-::.,-:~--He!"~~
vwiOUI tech-

~-

~

___
--""'"'""" . . . _ol
----.....olN.,ll!l,

wort&lt;lng

a

~ perfcid, ~ a wllf.

IIIOUnlad llnlnZIICMt al a head - • kind
al "lltlllqct ........ " • he dMcflbM the

. . . .a .. ,....

~--WOitt.

y. . . . . . . . ._ _ _ _ ,.,.

-•••o-.-.-.. r.,.

---Arl-__
----

plooooe ..._

-~-~

-r-.nr
JOHIIAClOUia

lit

..,..

~

[,_

people," he noted, "are
mishandling animal

ra~lsposed .to

area

" ' - l o r art~.
•
The OallarY llllllllad to the locallybeNd....,_ H . Cilmmlnga Foundation
far luncle, enabling therii to oommlaaiOn eatactad artllla for part)cular

to~ smoke."

SomofoOda
•
Following the same line of thought,

IIMtlng a behlnO-U.- glimpse
Into lhe eculptor'a·CIIIft, lhankato John
Nllw't, teaching -181ant and eecond-

.,._.. to dernonat7ate

t::

0

;~~~~c~~ ~~W;'~~n~ c~~·
cu:~~-ch Is the caSe, Bannerman said,

Studeot .sculpt~n creates
instructional model for Gallery
~ lind eeoondWy achoola

are

~t=~~ ~r,~~~u~\·sge,;~l~itu~~~~~

Pharmacy student award
Rela!W. or the late Samuel J.
Bauda, a Jamestown pharmacist and
U/8 plwmacy g...S, have established
an -anf In hfa name to be given
annlllllly to a g...Suatlng U/8 pharmacy

the

•

The flexible rubbe( mold and original
plater 1\ave also been acquired by the
Afbrlght-Kno•'s education staff for
lnatructlonal purpo-.
l'llhart, a teaching uslatant to UIB
asaoclate professor ot ·art. and sculptor
Anthony R. Paleraon, believes community aervloe Ia an
Important
reaponallilllty of Wliats.
&lt;
"It Introduces young W1 studenta to
original art and ahowa them the
JlfOOI8M8 kwolwed," he said of the "Art
to Sclloola" prognun.
Nihart llullled for two yews at
Montoa Coltaae In RocMeter before
oampletlng hfa bechelor'a here. He
- ' • to NCeMI hla "'-"er of .Fine
Alta cteg,. from U/ B In May .
ThallfiiM month hla !heals show will
be fall- al the Artlata CommiUee
Oallely: the show will Include various
wtded- P*-, 101M In comblnatlon wllll-.henotaa.
Nllwt 11M axhibltad a1 the Alamo
g.lllrr In 11ec:1t Hall on the Main Street
Ol!n!M. and at the AAO Ge1Wy.
Tllil KUiptOt, who taualll • f-.clry
..... during
tile leachlna
fall - at
..............
to ,.,_
Galllge or un'--lty t.var att.

u.e

IINihiatlon In May.

~r~~~.~~'tsth:new;'8.~~k .•'!ven

" be more
Medical genetic resea{ch at UIB has
been mainly financed since 1964 by
~rants from the National Institutes of

am~~~~~\~~~~a~g~\,!u1ct.J~~~~

period ending June 30, 1979.
The U/B program , besides carrying
out healtJ&gt;..reiated research projects
trains doctors in the field or genetics '
" The gr.nts contribute ' greatly · to
genetic teaching In our School of
Medicine, " Bannerman pointed out .
The U/B program also offers patient
• service through special clinics at
Buflalo General Hospital and Clllldren's
Hosplt8.i In Buffalo. The clinic at
Chlldrelfll Hospital Is linked to the
Department of Obstetrics and Is
described by Bannerman as probably
the only one of Its kind Where
geneticists and obstetricians work side
by side.
Bannerman, who has been a member
of the U/B medical faculty lor the past
16years and a genetic researcher for 20,
pointed out thet IOOUI 2,000 purely
genetic d l - - without any known
-lronmental factors heve been
diiCO'IeNCI thu~ fw, and that new ones
.,.alill being found.
The clinic at Children· 1
18
· uear-1 mainly to lhe retatiwly new
~-~-of
l!**ic COUIIMI""V ....._
to birth delecta. Here
• pro"*:'f.. - I a .,. edviMCI, baoeci

Hoaoilal

on medical tests, on the possibilities of
transmitting genetic flaws to unliorn
children, flaws that could cause severe
-sometimes fatal - birth defects.
A staunch ac:IVDC&lt;~te of prenatal
genetic counseling, Bannerman of&gt;.
served that such counseling places
"great responsibility on the Individual."
(The Western New York Chapter of
the March of Dimes works closely with
the UIB research team In keeping the
public Informed about birth defects and
their prevention.)
·
One of three ways to tranarnlt
Genetic diseases are transmitted In
any one of three basic ways: through
chromosome abnormalities, through
slngle ·"gene defects and via the
combined actions of faulty genes and
environmental factors .
Bannerman concedes that Information developed through genetic testing
Is somewhat akin to the odds at a
racetrack.
In what' Is called "dominant Inheritance," for Instance, one affected
parent has a single faulty gene which
dominates Its normal counterp&lt;~r~ In a
"pairs system." The other parent is
.normal. In such a case, the genetic
evaluation Is that each child's chance ol
Inheriting either the faulty gene or the
normal counterpart· is 50-50, ragardless
of the number of children.

Controversy
Bannerman pointed out that con·
troversy often arises among researchers
ragardlng the -e•tent of genet!~ and
_ environmental factors In some di·
seases.
Ills esflmated by NIH , a blanch of the

~.;~·w~r~:n:;,~t,~ ~'m~'ii f~o;,~~~
suffer

the

consequenoea

of

birth

~rect~~!.v"7Jng ~=· ~~rt~r.;

considered genetically Involved, due

~~o':o~s'.a!/Yt.!0o~ec:I::~~~:O

cases are , attributed to outside
Influences such as infection, drugs or
physical injury to the fetus .
·. Bannerman said about 30 per cent of
all serious diseases In children are
Inherited, and that about 10 per cent in
adults can be ·attributed to genetic
malfunctions as an OV'!'Tidlng factor.
01

~.:~rc:=

is much concerned
with disease prevention .

wh~~~ea~1ecfs"~~:'~~~~~u~~~is

PKTI'.e
:,
afflicted children, can be prevented If
discovered at birth, Ban-man said.
He added that the treatment - a
medically prescribed diet- will-prevent
the disease from developing. •
The test tor PKU, now · rbutlnely
edmlnlstered shortly after birth by most
U.S. hospitals, was devel~ by Dr.
Robert Guthrie, a UIB professor ol ·
pediatrics and a member of the
University's genetics reaMr!&gt;h team.
Other medical members of the " team"
are Dr. Ramakrishnan Redheendran of
India, whose specially Is pediatric
genetics, and Dr. Mario Rattazzl of
Ita~ , an e•pert In biochemical genetics.

halfhe~':z":c~aow~~~'1:t,~D~
degrees, three with masf'llr'a degrees
and about 15 technicians and secretaries.
"'

Anlm~l modeta
Some of tho research at UIB Involves
e•perlmenfs witli rata and mice,
whereby sifuatlons are created to '
simulate genetic diseases that affect
mankind , so-called " animal models."
·In studying diseases that affect the
bloOd In animal modele, Bannerman
said he Is concerned with the "abnormal
succession ol events" that takes place
In a malfunctioning gene. Put another
way: ' What does the gene do to make a
person sick?"
II Is this question · that lures Dr.
Bannerman and hie uaoclatea into
studlas that pinpoint abnormal genechtomoiCIITie activitY: .
This abnormal activity within the tiny
body cell, Ban-man bell-. will teU
us aome day - u lndlvlduals whether we .,. able to wifhatand
apeclflc envii'DIVI*IWI factors such as
smoking or eating certain foOds.

�Baird
solo .winners

=

, . ........1 ...... Bolo COfiiPRitlon
(conducted In

memory of Muelc

~ founder C.meron &amp;Mdl
..._ 21 partlclpanta this .,.., from

~c;::. ~

~~/·Ff!:

·win,... (pictured t.er.l will be..._, the
opportunity to perform with the

UnlnNity Phllhamionla, Jamee KMprowlcz, dl...:tor, eta con..n Feb. 2151n

Baird.

SILS, Higher Ed.coll~borate on Ph. I). for librarians
possibility of a cooperative arrangement with another department.
Since the Department of H lgher
EducatiQII off'IQ neither a bachelor's nor
a master's, but concentrateS solely on
the Ph.D. and Ed .D. It -med a good
mate~.

~

·

.one of a ltlnd

The two units met on common
ground In the fall of 1978. By the aprlng

of the followlnQ year, the joint venture
was finalized. It .-.ned a very good
m8f.Titige," as Bobinski put 11.

s'lnce ttte one-of+klnd program

A ..........uon

began, Bobinski and Berdahl have hed
more than 100 Inquiries about It from
colleges and prospective students from
all o - the U.S.
Briefly, 1116- plan of study Involves
three stages.
Ph .D. candidates must complete
course worl&lt; In such core areu as the
history. organization and governance,
and economlca of higher education.

•

Saya Dr. o--ge S. Bobinski , dean of

the IJ/B Scllool of lnfonnatlon and
Lll:ntv .Studies ISR.St. " No longer
snouid Ubrarlea be associated with

:1:~' ~:'~i~ co~pu=--r.el~

!:'.:f~~ =~rcs:l~:'h~ o~~

specialization. SILS offars a ~fnar In
acedemlc librwl-hlp lllld an lnterahlp
In an acedemlc llbrwy as a special
course for doctoral studenta. The
cooperative ventun1 also
a
dissartatlon on a topic In academic
llbrarlanahlp.
.
What kind of work can the s.-aful

revolutlon."
Dean Bobinski and Dr. Robert 0 .
Berdahl, chairman of U/B's Department
of Higher Education, have started a kind
of ,...,elution of their own .
They have eatabllahed a cooperative
Ph .D. program leading to a doctorate in
higher education wltn a 'f:lallzailon

~ =~n~:~o:~::~u~=

the work!," Boblnaki believes.
The joint program, he axplalnad,
out of an Inability to develop a
fult·fledgad doctoral program In SILS

.._n.

.

a1ona
r
Wlih only 10 SILS faculty, the ~D\..--'\
ooutd not raalialically be deveiOi&gt;ad
Wttttou1 t""*ring tha maatar'a pro..,., BOblnakl axpialnell.
""- To · combat the lacl&lt; of faculty
~nangth , ha decided to expiON the

:U'
?.; '::.:fn\~a~/;:~1'~::.':~~~
live or . - c h poata In unl,....lty

11brwtea or media centers or, according
to Boblnakl , would be prime candidates
f o r - - as faculty In graduata library

achools.

Bobtnald noted that with the field's
incrMalng apeclalization, lilnrlea today muat focua. beyond their .,.,....._
tional etoc:k-ln-tracle: booka, partodlcals
and _....,...

Flow-dwtlng technlquea, COBOL

=rn".:tforf.'ogf:':X::i,O• s:~~~~~e~~

-the right aource, It Ia all part of the

t~~'lji,G':iurther ~

they're all In the lexicon of the'lrbfarlan
ot 1978.
And the emphasis on non-print
materials such as vjdao, microliim,

that many
librarians conalder libraries "the heart
of the unlveralty, • end think of
themaal- .. "part.... l!tllh prof-.

de-

He obeerved that tha IIIOII8II*rt
toward faculty alatua national~ Ia
=-~~~~··:'~'.lui. But !)eN

:::~~~": ..:'~:J'on~..,

Meat_.• and eXparl- r.qulrad
In the , _ of these technical
Imperatives feeing the librarian of the
future, applicants for the Joint Ph.D.
program must not only hold a master's
degree In . llbnary lldenoe with a

:J:r:i~~~~tl~~.:n :=~.

::':0·

..
years' prof-tonal wort&lt; experience In
an academic ilbrwy.

seq=·~- ·~hr::.r:. =.r~

Of theae, three have received grant

sora."

.

A crlllclll look
8jlca.- of their Clriva lor IUCh
atatua, libnarllina . . being obaeiWCI

'!::t;."'.:l

wl~~:,
~· Boblnatd "the
mast_.a Ia the twmlnai dag-. il they
achl- the faculty atatus lhll want,
they will aleo ba .
prftSUrad to get their Ph.D."
·

ho-.

~~~ ·~~·h~,:Jo~r~~~

~t ~~'"::"~~ ~ ~~

~=· =''':,':!:,'·ha

~~:,~

awwcled In part becauae of tha "unique
and innovative natun1" Ql the new

aald, to

encou..-ge .-uttmant and p i - t
of mlnorttlee and women into the

management end of tha job martcat.
Ironically, while libraries h... tradition.
ally been staffed predominantly by
women, there Ia a disproportionately
low number of females In top,tevel
edmlnialratlon.
Becauee of their incrMaingly Important role In achojarahip and the
t.-ntng daiiW&gt;da of tha

hetr.:lenad

e~~!l',g ~ ~:

.=

;;;r.;;.:.i(lee, Boblnaki lndiaaled. U/8 Ia
one lnetltutlon where that naoognltlon
heabeen_..,

~-:~~~mn::

noted. When they .xplaln the ln. •
trlcaclea of canS c:atetoga or 1e.:1 you to

-·

~:.=.":ru.~ C:.,~T. to arm 118
Boblnlkl Mid hla

'::t::.?: goal le

:r.;..

r.:r.:':'~

fer
speclailzailon In libqry ~.
media and other aapecta of !he
--dlveraifylng field .
"llut -·d need at Jeaal thlw faculty linea," he pradic:ted.
With budgets ~what they . .

lheee days,- a
of_.....
hean't been able to II
a .olutlon to
that one.
But ·maybe there's a ''Hqw-To" book
tomewhere.
-I'C

tar,....... ....... --. ............. .
.......................
CITA.IOU

........
......................... _
The

c...

IIOIItlad ..................... ,.
CITA ......... ThaC.... . ...

�........

-!O•uorr 2s, un

'aos.e Encoamter
a.... ·
-growtH~Pe
· - _.,..
lighU
~
both
end klda
In
'Ciooe Encou,.... of the T1llnl Kind,"
the UUAB movie through Sundey.

£ALENDAR
UUABI'JUII•
~e-..-

'lbursUy- 25

636-2919for-.

. - .-Pil &lt;.

PBJIATM:SMRAIICH-1

-~-P-ICinlcal
-~Dr. Cln

- · pro.

-·~
-Roam, Cllldren'l Hoopltol. 12 ,_,,

--~·
Tho - . g ol 1111 R. t.ooO
un-.tly Crodt IHon wll be,_ 11 2 p.m.

..

~ Hoi 418, on the Slate
u.w.ottyCologo _ ., Awnuo,
Thilll ..... ~lo-Crodt IHon II oporating ond to ~lion the
- . . on ony lhot .,.,_,. the Crodt
IHon. . . . . - . olthe Boold o1 Direc1oro
w l l b e -.
•
H II nlclpoted IIIII 1111 meeting w11 tool one
hour. Mloond-wllbe-.
In -

1ECHAMCAL BGftEEMJO 8EMNARI
A - ol ~ -..g from 1 Flot
1'1111, Dr. O,S. Rloy, Yloiting M80Ciote professor,
u n - . t l y o i -. 206FLm00.3p.m. Coffoe
ot2:45p.m. ln206Foow.
-O
O,Y
I.ECTIJIIE•
__
_
_ lloWotld,en-ls--..
~ ~.

cl tllo .,_Kind. Confer·
ctwge. Col

enco n-tre, Squire. -

106 Baird. 4 p.m. Spon.

ocndbylho~ol- .

ITATliTlCS COU.OQUIUII•
A...,... ol ~ In -11
F-loln. -tent professor.
DIYiolon o l - t i e l. ~ oiRochosler.
- . , C.28, 42.30 Ridge U.. 4 p .m. Coffee
II 3 :30p.m., RooraA·15.

c.-. -

NYNIG OIIOANIZATION ME£TINQ•
334 Squn. 4 p.m.; 167 MFACC, Ellicott.
7:30 p.m. Anyone with · ouggesttona or

hill-

A Anllng atory ol UFO elghtingl ond their
~hold on the peope wl1o 100 """'
A
ol,. bell a••-apheoa wor1&lt;lng
In the-~ did the lln*lg. Si&gt;eclllel1ects
by Oougllo Trumbal (2001: As.-. OdyoMy .)

CAC fli.M•
Tbo t.Hi Waltz. 170 MFA/X, Ellcott 7:30,
9 :45 ond ~ $1 lor a~ts:
St .50tor-..
A dozzling erqy o1 ~t ~ J&lt;*is "Tho

.s.r.

. - d "enexptoa;onoi)&lt;Jy."
UIB ~ Y IJIIEIIATIOH FIIONT"

Colleehouse. 107 Townsend. 8 p.m E..yono
walcorne.

MEN'S BASKETliAU.•
UIB ... SUNY/Bing

UUAIII'JUII•

a..-"' ... .,_

tern.

n.n. -

Kind (Spiolberg.

·-

c;or,...,.
CIWgl. Col638·28191or-.
f¥n11 1hot llhoot-o!f ike roQ&lt;ell,
look .... the -..y dough-

-..-..hi
boy,ondl-lhll-achondelier
lhil 1&lt;:1-ft ct-. flrn with ESP &lt;Net·
· No ldonoa lic1ion llooy t.o -bean ehot
on lhioiCIIo.
·

friday26
_
_ ,0111(_

--.-liiiC---·

IDUCATOM-f
. . _ _ ....... -

.... Dr. John 0 .

.......

Cllri&lt;Heii. Bp.m.

Monday-2~
lilliE"
Wayne Prttchett. Wei~ in Canada_and
Briteln. Hamman ~. 3 p.m. Also Olfertng a
c1asa from Janu8fy 30 through F.oo..y 2 from '
3 ·5 :30 p .m. Even lhouQh the cluooa are filed,
they wil be_. for oboervetion.
•
Sponoored by the n-tre Department ond the OffiCe ol Collural AHan.
BIOCHeMISTRY SEMINAR I
Rcenl Studleo on Cyclic Arnpodopen&lt;llont

, _ n Klnaao F""" Rabbit 51&lt;-1 Muoclo, Or.
Chlno·Hslen Huang , Oepwtment of Blochemlo!Jy,
School. 24~ Cecy.
Unlveralty ol Vi'glnla -

You1kwe tt.

PHARMACOLOOYAND~CS

.

~p. m .

SEMINARM
Recent AdvencN In Proatag'-ndln A....rch
wttfl Sp«:lal R-..c. to RIPfoduction, Or.
Gau""" Chaudllull, assiatent protosacr. Deport· •
mont ol Gynecotogy.Qbotelrica. U/9. 102 She&lt;·
man. 4 p.m. Refreshmentaat 3 :45 .

Saturday- 2 7
AUOI110NS•
llotropolltan Opora Audltiona. Ba;rd Recital
Hall. 9a.m.

WOMEN 'S BASKET8ALL •
Ull n.lthlca CoUege._ ?ark Hal. 1 p.m.

-rt

MEN'SSWWIIINQ•
UIB n.
College. Clet1t Pool. 2 p.m.

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Eather Harriott lnteMewo docume&lt;ltsry videomaker Lynn Corcoren. lntemationlll Cable (Chan·
nel 10). 6 p.m.
MICROBIOLOGY AND DERMATOLOGY SPECIAL
I£C1UREI
Autoimmunity in Pofychondrltll, Or. Steven I.
Katz , aenlor Investigator, Dermatology Bnonch o1
National

ICE HOCKEY•

c.noer

man. 7p.m.

Institute,

eo.._. 223

She&lt;·

IB ... Ccrtland Stahl. Tonawanda Sports

Center. 7:30p.m.

UUAifli.M•

ct.. Encou..- ol tho Third Kind. Confer·
onCe '"-""· Sqolre. chel"ge. Colt

638·2918for-.
A ~ atory ol UFO aightingo end their
~hold on t h e - - see !hem.
A
olthe belt -oalogoopl•a "5lf1&lt;&lt;nCC
In 1111 lodoy di.O the filming . Speciol
lffecto by Oougllo Tplft1lloll (2001: A Spo041 '

hill-

~. )

FILMS•
Adftntu,.. ol Jimmy (Broughton) : The Lead
(S, Pelereon) . 148 Dief..-t. 7 ..p.m.
Sponoored by the Conlet" tor Medie Study.
·

IIRANDO, CLIFT AND DEAN
FILM SERIQ•
Eaot cl Eden, 7 ~.m . : Wild River, 9 :05 p.m.
170 MFACC . Ellicott. Free. Sponoored by UUAB.
Tonight, the dof;n;tive JarMs Dean film ond a

MontgonlOiy

0&lt;&gt;00 totter-day by
Clift shire the~ . both directed by Elia Kazan .

Eden Is ""' rnoYie lhlt Dean the
blggMt ... ol the 50a, an llllOtionaly &lt;Net·
- . q adoptlilion olthe Steinbeck novel about
two br&lt;&gt;"-' riYolry for the love o1 their father.
Jova1Aeetilexoeptional, too.
Wild River (With Lea Remicl&lt; end Clift) II the
acootJnt olthe buldlng olthe T..._
V#J/Aey ~. e glin1pee olthe big bureaucracy

...... ~ ond ~ . 8poulding
Dr*'~~-. Bcolt. 81.m.

~Dr. -.,.

.....

by Oougllo Trumbal (2001: A SpoC41 ~. )

UUAI MIDNIOHT SPECIAL •
PI'* Flomlnltao. Confenlnce n-tre, Squn.
12p.m. Admiasionctwge.
The archetypal "bod teale" film , fiJI o1 the dis·
gusting, the - l i n g ond the perwqe. Critiea
agree it '1Nves a bed taste 1n 8YefYOI'M!'a mouth.··

BOWUNO
UIB l'"""tlonai..Squn Lanea. 12:30 p .m.

U. .._ D ' Y - Collage. Cllri&lt; Hal. 7 p .m.

~ e-ntoro &lt;11 tho Tlllrd Kind. Confer·
SQun, ctwge. Col
638·2819for-.
•
A stunning story ol UFO slghtingl ond their
• overpowering hold on !he peope wl1o -them. A
holt-dozen olthe best .,....,,.10\)iapheoa W0&lt;1dng
In the-~ cid the lln*lg. Si&gt;eclll elfec:la

once n-tre,

1-

Bond" In Ita
concert, ThenklgMng Dey,
1978. Eric Clomploo, Nel o;.nond, Bob Oylon,
.toni Milchel, Nel Young, Van Monioon, Ringo
Dr. Jolwl, Muddy wa- emong them.
Oiroc18d by Martin Sconoeae, lhil. flm has been

-vyto-....

-··MikETIIAU.·

Sunday- 28
• UUAII f1L11•

"
.. Cllldren'1 Hoopllal. 11
QIN.
- .

ancllhebocl&lt;woodsmen lod&lt;edlne -lt!a&gt;uggte.

OIIAI.IIOUIII\'-ll

n...- .. T. . . . ~terPwo..,....

-.Dr. -..F. -. ~-ci~.Scl!oalcl-ond
~.~cl- . -107 ,

4 6 1 0 - - 1 2 , _ ,.

Tuesday- 30.

-

-__..-·_

~BIIllll-

IIIOCHEIIISTRY IUESOAY NIITRITIOH

. -et--.
.... ~.- 0 . ...... -......-Coll&gt;&lt;n·
-.., , ......
1'lle tl" ... -

JG-.Mt

..._...,.
............
......
.....
,......
-··
__,_._,
..................
............

COM'BI£NCU
.
Eaorclao a1 It Relateo to -llh and Waigh!
Control, Dr. Jolw1 NoughtOtl. deen, School o1
Madiclne, U/9. 26 Farber. 12 noon.

Ezlo

~­

-~Dr. .._~. --.~
.............. 8101-.4:1111&amp;0..

____

.__..

CAC-·

-.
.
-.-llf-.
--·
---·
---·

, .. · 7:30, 8 .45
-.,.. -at
l o r -; S1 .50

'""' ..... IIIII

----~-. Squn.

ITUDENT PIANO ReCITAL •
a . d - H o l. 12.15p.m.

Wednesday- 3 t
EOUCATIONAL OPPORIUNITY CENTER
IIEETINQ•

A - c l - t n -.vome

Tornow, Instructor, Parent Effectiveness Training
Program. EOC Center, 485 Waahington. t 2 noon
A. pr.el of EOC students w11 participete tn the
.-ling.

CHEMICAL ENOINEEIUNO SEMINARM
ActMted C.rtton-From en Idee to a Bus~
noea, Donald R. Moore ond -Murty, Acbvatod
CootxJn OiYiaion, The Carllon.nbn eon.,.ny 262
Copen. 3:30p.m.
GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR•
Fluvial Sedimentation of Coerae Gruels.
Emlyn H. Koote&lt;, Unlvcnity ol Seskatchewon
- . 1 8, 4240Ridgel.ea. 3:30p.m.
PHARM; D:tEMINAR.
S.rco6dc:.la, Barbara

Motrtson.

WlitSTuNo·
UIB ... R o c - Tech, Vwsity and J.V. Clarl&lt;

Hel. 6p.m.

fiLM•
Rulli cl t l l o - (.,_,Renoir) . 148 Oiefendorl. T p.m. ~ by 1111 Centar lor Media
Study,

-----lgno-.

COIIVERIATIONa II THE ARTI

A IIlAH AIID A WOMAN
FILIIIERIES•
The -.to aw-n, 7 p .m.; s - aauu,
8 :35 p.m.. Conlerenoo n.otre, Squire. Free.
SponooredbyUUAB
o..tl Is the loot . ol the e~olic

metocnmas

-lion

In which Oiotrloh was dlroctad by Josef
von &amp;Wnberg . Ira on 1xtr.rnety campy
ol the tough ito ond - · coolumeS ol a hord·
luck lomrne lalolo.

S-

-od

Dallull-1111 qutn-liol--je11&lt;erol
the t930a. llatbata Stonwyck givea up everylt!lng
lor the ul&lt;a o1 her daughla&lt;. H
a radio
-.&gt; oqera that cl1umed on for line decodes.

-----..,._,Co l· -··-·
THEAIITI

Cou'·

lorCoblo(et.mel10). 7p.m

ICE HOCKEY•

~TIONa II

248 Cooke

5p.m.

u. ... u-

Collage.

Centor.- 7:30p m.

T....-

Sports

'

lor Cobia (et.meltO). 8 :30p.m.

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

.... CIIri&lt;Hal

7:30p.m
_ . . . , _ , _ _ _ Hal
FACULTY IIECITAL •

8 p m -~~ 131or goo.- publoc: $2 for

U/8'-&lt;:\llty, atofl, .......,, ond_cltlzeno: St

lor-

Mo Reynard wll bl -

by """ S&lt;:Noos·

man, oboo, ond SUmlko KoMo, pianO

�7

Lake LaSalle
ice rink
opens Feb. 4

INTERESTED IN 1'tE AQINQ PAOC£S6?
Tho MlAtidieclpfino Cantor .... tho 8\Jdy ol
Aging extends an i1vita1lon ., ~ .,._,,.
and faculty who have an t n -t In aging 10
attend e meolilg 1 0 - e 1 - . q gnO.ata
......., .In goronk&gt;logy and gerfaWk:a, Tuu&lt;~oy,
February6 , at3 p.m., Squire Hal. Room 234 .

PHIETASIOMAFELLO~S
-

wbo plan 10 work ....

11/t

~.....

p r o f - degroea end who .... """"""" ol

Pili Eta Sigma Freehman HOllO&lt; Soclely el&gt;outd

lho factJIIy - · Robert w.
Hendenlon, 231 Squire, 8 :30a.m.·5 p.m. &lt;lolly.
National Pili Eta Sigma HOllO&lt; Society off""' t•
$500 ~ thle ~ on lho bosfa o1 a
get In toucl&gt; -

etudenra ~record , fMdence of Cf'Mtive
. - . ; . evidence ol financial need, . promlea "'
success 1'1 chosen fteld , and character. Onty
~ ol P1li Eta Sigma are eligible f« 1hese
gift~ . National deadline'"' submitting
appllcationa is March 1 . Local deadline f« appli·

cations is February 19, 1979.

WOMEN 'S IIASKETBAU •
UIB YL OeneMo 5111\e. caatk Hal. 6 :30p.m .
WOMEN'S-NO"
U/8n.-.oStalo. Clar1&lt;Hal. 7p.m
UUABFILM"
~kor(Frrce , 19771. c:om..no.n-.
we. Squ;-o. Admisaion ctiwge. Cal 636-2919 1«
limes.
•
The ti11o'e ..._, 10 1he 1wnouo pointing by
Vermew ill reHon::ed by lhe dnctor'a weellh of ex·
qu;si1e, poin!Otty de-in 1Ns •""Y ol"" 11-la'.ed
love affai' between on . - . , bourveols e1udol&gt;t
end .,
shop gilt Ctass end lnh!l·
lectual diabnctiona- tho rolotloNI1ip.

lno-

SUMMER fNsnTIITE FOR WOMEN
ar,n Mawr ~ IWld Higher Education
Reaoorce SeMc:ea he.e annourn;ed 1he toortll
anniJIII Summer Institute for Women in Higher
Educolion Mnlnialnltlon, 10 be held July 1
ttwough Jliy 26 , 1979 on 1he ar,n Mawr
campus.
The lnstttute is a reaidential program offering
women f8QJiy IWld ~ Intensive lnllnlng
in e&lt;b::&amp;Honal admi'tiatration and management
Bl&lt;lta.
The program w11 focus on institutional governance and planning, on finanol and budgeting ,
personnel manogement, gcwenwnent relations IWld
acininis1rative computer applications. Anention
witl be gtven to career p&amp;afinlng with en'IC)haals
on the development ot profeaaional networM.
mentor relations, and other support systems.
'Pa1k:ipllion is limited. The cost tor the In·
stitute, incfuding tuition. rocm and boerd
be S 1500, and in addition a $75 non«fl..ndabf8
application leo.
For (Urther rnkwmation write to: Bryn ~

are 'fisted in the card catmog .
Information contalne(J1n government documents
is often the most curent avalabJe. White some
titles in the Department are more suitai:H: for
, hi5tory students , especlaly those atuctying Amen·
can history, many others deal with current social .
economic IWld poli1icol iesues.
Mr. Ed Hetman, the assistant doct.ments flbrarian, wi1 conck.tct the ctinics United States docu·
ments wtl bC" emphasiz.ed, but those issued by
New YO&lt;k State wil eloo bo discussed . HistO&lt;y
aludeoll .,_......._ in dOer aource5, or Olhens
interested ., the European COI1'II'IliJtlit or een:
ldiln oolectiona, can make ispecial appointments
with Hetman.
Cal636-2821 to reserve your spec:e, &amp;iloe aa
groupe wil bo limited to t2. Faculty ~ ""'
IIIIo invtted. The c:lirlk:8 w11 be hMd 1n Room 11 o
In lho GoYermlont Doc:unents Oepnnent- Fet&gt;
ruwy t3 &amp; 14. 2-4 p.m.: February t5 &amp; t8 . 9:30·
11 .30 a.m.; Febt\ay 20, 2__. p .m.

wa

Colloge. HERS - . - &amp;rrwner
Mawr, P~ytvanle 1901 g,

In-

lt5\lfU18. ayn
'

TUTORS NEEDED ·
The
Engftsfl ~ ln81itu1eEnglish tu10&lt;0 and C&lt;&gt;nYen18tion 10&lt; this
semester. team how . you can earn credit by
callng 838·2079 (ovenlngo 838·33821.

MEN 'S BASKETBAI.L"
U/8 ... , _ Slolo ( - &lt; l o r ). C"""

Hal. 8 :30p.m..

DROPIAOO LOCATIONS
OropiAdd 1aclities wil be avaUable on both
the Main St"eet and Amherst CMlPU&amp;eS accordWlg

Exhibits

"'tho1ol0wlng ~ .

Moln StrML 2&lt;0 Squire: January 25 · February
2, 9 a.m.·S p.m.
ArnhlnL 210Froncuk: January_25 · February
2 , 9Lm .... :30p.m.
Ho..n 8f1er 5 p.m. are reserved tor MFC

SAED EXIftfTS

Tho T_... al Khejuroho: A CdC&lt; Print
Exhibition by Willard Eliott. - - Elfoft,
Department ol
~

-try.

~"::"~

~

::.=..:==;,:

· by -tmont &lt;ril·

FINANCIAL AID SATE\.UTE FOR MFC
Tho director o1 lho Olftce o1
Aid an·
nouncea the opening Of a satelite office fa MFC
,,._,,., A Flnanciol Aid~ wil be on duly
at Hayoa Annex A, Roori. - 2. on Monday and
Tuu&lt;loy ol eoch wee1&lt; ol classes from 5 p.m. to

F....-

7p,m.

Hot.n are behQ eldended to eet:omrnodate the
evening d~cin .
Fll£fDOM OF INFORMAnON LAW
•
The Freedom ot lnfOI'nWtion Law covering the
UniYer&amp;I1Y ot Buffalo IWld other _,.,... ol tho
State o1 Now YO&lt;k (effoctlw Januaty t , t9781

Notices

pro.ldee ....

~-·

---.- ..,. ~
2 Wlclr Ooola&lt;, ~ Collogo. 8 p.m. Span·
_IW_,.,_InCHioond~

-~~

. . bol3. ~; $10forpPone:
" " " -. . . ~ond­

-

.-

. . go .. C?-.rwtuOMa.

~c:uc

.

--~-"' ·

~l.lnry . . _W..~"OOc

Cllna" -,.. . . -

o1 Fobnwy 13 ond 18

=~-~
. . . , _ ... ~ 150,000
_ _ IW . . UO*d-. -YO&lt;k

Aoln--.&lt;rit·-

--~
-~ - - · ond . . Ello-

---·

ar . .

. . . _""--·-u.-.ay
tioclng- ' - -· ~ ..-.oy -

wants to
organize . outings for the .University
community, such BS day hikes or

~i~~~~t wtf':'~~~.t~gsrenr~~~:~g

equipment from the University for a
nominal user fee. Miller says Buffalo
State has a similar program which Is
very successful.
Trip boml, Jogging courM, marine?
He also plans to set up a "trip board"
where students can seek out others who
want to vacation In a particular place.
Mnter's office would help students plot
out trips In exchange for reports on
points of particular Interest. . The trip
board concept Is used by the University
.
-of Oregon, among others.
Miller aaJd there are --.1 agencies

=~pl~ng ~~y=~rb(il~h::;h...=,.~::.~

ot propoeala lor future restoration, renovation ,
ond-l
Both 1heao exhibits ore In Hayoa HalL~.
ttwough February 1
Sponaored by lho SChool "' An:hltectur'o
m Environmental Design.

Blood drive
set for campus
The U/B lldmlnlatratlon and the Civil
Service Employ-. Aaaoclatton (e&amp;eA)
have coflllboratlld thla eem.ter to Nl

:t~ R~e~:I:Obl:r=::

cempu-.

from

menegement .,.
~atHuent #

January 30 frof'fl 2 p.m. • 7 p.m. In the
Fwgo Cal«arra= FebrurJ 15 1n1m e .
a.m .· 3 p.m. In T~bert H~l

.,_,from -from

..,.

bo~-30deyaby-oroon­

Plara,-. NY 12248

~~~.::,.s of s~,f,~~~~:~~Tch ~dv:'~::!

Jen.p~~ of !~':n~~;.se. Miller

are:

~­
In wrftlng by

~"'-"'

ha~!ot~~~oJ:~'Tns~~~~~~~h~~g:~:;'~

from 9 a.m. to noon or from 1 p.m. to 4
p.m. Those, Interested In · renting
equipment. for the three-hour periods
can do so at 106 Norton or 7 Squire. If
reservations are made by fomorrow
afternoon, the rental fee will be $3.50
per session . Afterwards, the price goes
up a dollar and availability of equipment
Is not guaranteed.
_The Cross-Country Ski Club will help
patrol the trails during the sessions and
will also give a short demonstration on
use of equipment and basic motions
before each outing : The club has also
agreed to maintain the t rails throughout
the winter months.
.
The perimeter of the ski area Is about
a mile and one-half, says Miller, but It

The bloodmobile will be at M~ n
Street today and tomonow hom lla.m.
to 3 p.m. Donallonallrill be taken In the
Fillmore Room tn Squire.
Other bloodmobile clataa for An1lllrwt

-~.,--..,.­

wil
"' - " ' oucll lleAooonla-~.

Cross-Country

aucceaa.

"""'

~--. 13eerdSHal ,

..---·-t.v
.__

~ftm~~~~.·~~eb~:.Om!\,f'l::.rt:t;;~11~1~~

someone co coordinate the activities.

groups to make the blood c111.. a

b o - ..... ~.. AooonlaOfficer, w. Engollwd. at ... - tion. Aooonla ..,. bo .._...., .. 1 ~

CroltoO&lt; . . . . locaflon

0

public.
•
In the same general area es 1he Ice
rink , which Is just north of the WllkBBOn
Pub, Miller says that two bruohbell (a
hockey-like team sport played wlt1t a

Both labor and
.....lng S1J11PCH1

~

Coploa . . . . . low ..,. bo -

~=~;fv'/;y"w'W~ f~ ~~~~o~~

o1 · amorous ond~. ~
statoes represent moet excelent rendlf1nga of
lho body ond
probal&gt;ly equal 10
lho flnost ocufptlno being prociJced In tho world
atthettme.
A Pion 1cw01d P o . . -. Aeeriosal ~

v--. A....,..

....
public
, - f a lIn
_O
&lt;lnapection
_ol_
_a. .. .·
-

1

l~'Wg ~tt~ f~erll~~?~:ttrng~ ~~:::~~

project Is completed, the rink will be

a combination exercise/jogging courae
at Amheral thai w...QIIId be contoured to
the environment . , Other tong-term
proposals being considered lnciUCie the
construction of a marina on l.llke
LaSalle wh8f8 aall boats, !*Idle boat a,
and canoes could be rented.

.IAPAN£SE PRINTS
Tho World ol ~ ond c......_.,
PriniL Lla Copolna ~. 35
~ houri: ~-8olufday. 2-8 p.m.
Through February 6 .

" * ' Y - be-..,.,......

ol _ . . . ol eornplione -

sculpture on. and conatruction bl' several other&amp;
.-ound 1he &amp;mal tow!) ol Khlju!aho. A city ol 20
equaAJ kllomo,_, Khljuraho wea tho captal.of
lho Chande!la Kings from 900 to t200 A.O. Tho
sc:ulpturea oro ~ exeaJiod ond pO&lt;Qy
lho ~ al tho Hindu ,..;glon olong volu~- "Y"'fh ( - 1 !I• -'"ly

-e

lrom noon·8 p.m.. Jaooary 25-February 2. After·

-

•

......-ol-ae-aade-oltho

..
and graduate students.
VaMdetion of atudent tftnttflcaUon cardsatudenta poseeuing a permanent 10 cwd may
teve n ,.-ted· dl.mg l h o - process
at tho location m - Ia*I above.

.

Weather permitting, next week during
Winter Carnival, students will officially
chrlslen an Ice skating rink on Lake
LaSalle and cross-country ski trails In
back of the EUicon Complex.
Development of the facilities · was
proposed by the Re!:raatlon Committee,
a group composed of students, staff
and faculty under the aegis _of the
Division of Student Affairs.
According to Recreational Program
Director Dusly Miller, If there are at
least six Inches of Ice on Lake LaSalle,
It will open Sunday, February 4; at 1:00
p.m. with a ·skating exhibition (dance,
fr~style and chorus) by the Buffalo
Skating Club.
Miller said Maintenance - Is now

·

the Bullpen;
lOa-m. In the
Fargo Caf«erra; April u from I a.m. • 3
p.m. In Talbert Halt; ·Afa~ffom 10

a.~~~ ~~~':~~n
be announclld.

St,.:·

totn

�"'

Jan~WJ

Cal.culatOrs

LETTERS
1 ....S the • .tlcle l'lii)Ofllng

my

=-=~~s
~~.::~:~
.....,.... to It, In today' I Rflpottar (Jan.

tl). AlthOugh II wun•t too lar off In
8CCUIIIIely -lng the laouea Involved

=.::.tr::fu'll"::O~I~r.~

the .tlcle would have been better If the
FMpottw heel contacted me or my
attorMy or had read our joint reply
otatement In responoe to the Law
SchOOl' I o-mber 22 report.
·
1 am enclosing here a copy of the
h8ndwritten statement of proteat that I
wrote before beginning 8IICI1 of my
elC8ITII and submltted to the registrar of
the Law School. This will give you an
Idea of how aomeane with my handicap
.of ·~fie Leeming DINI&gt;IIItlea" has a
dl"lcull time luat mllklng letters on
PIIP«· (I ""' left-Nndad .,.,d write very
olowly and with g,..t ,dlfficully and get
writar'l cnmp and the results of my
too piN81ng to the eye as
you can observe.) The draft of this
_.._.., written prior to the first
...n, January 8th, took a helf hour to

effort...,..,

~~~=~•t=.n="~

~lad from the original statement
and took only 20 minutes to get down
on peper•

•~t.::...~':,&gt;~0~~ ~~h~~~.:!

· to the Law Schoora o-mber 22
report. The fact that you did not contact'
me or my .ttorney for our statements,
juat further ahowa how throughout all
lhla, 1 toe¥a not had adequate
opportunity to prMenl my aide.

Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the
University as a recipient of ~eral
funds from HEW, would be compelled
to comply with the law. and the Law
School, being par1 of this University,
would be obligated to do likewise.
The act to recogn lze my hand lcap and
provide to me the necessary and
adequate accommodations for the
handicap would establish a precedent
that all other handicapped students at
this Unl-slty · would then be able to
rely on for accommodations they would
require according to the mandates
that Sec. 504 sets o'ut. Presently, the
University and the depar1menls within,
are taking each case as It presents Itself
and are utllizlnJI much discretion on the
" case by case approach which results
In inconsistent treatment of the
handicapped , depending on the per·
sonal prelerance of each department.
Can barely make grades ·
The way It _Is now, by not being
accommodated lor my handicap, t can
barely, make qrades sufficient for
meet ng the mint mum requirements for
being eligible Jor staying In the law
schoo'l program. As It was, the loucth D
plus grade caused me to be -di'MIPoed
from the Law School program afi\ft +tad
to apply/petition tor readmlsslori. This

: s s :~ed ~~r~ncl~~

I

More and more people are using them·,
but most dQn't knew howth~y wor:k;
RPN users strongly pre~er thaf type

GoH gives her side .
Of dispute with Law
EdiiDr.

25, 1178

m1~~ s~c'l,~

~~~~~r,·d~~~~s ~"a; ~~~ud~~~:

getting a BA In Human Services-Mental
Health Advocacy. (This Is the 3rd

~::/:J~:::, ~e~~~~~~; ~~~ :~~
tat MS was at Buffalo State) .

~esJ.lE::.. ':H~~Ii:sa~r~~~~~~ ~~

" Specific Learning Disabilities" but
they are allen! 1n defining each of the
specific handicaps covered under Its
definition of Whal It does define as

~,~,C:~Fc~ ,:'l:'"~~~:;roR&gt;fJr

::\
Handicapped Children Act of 1975 does
contain a definition of "Specltle
Leamlng Disabilities.• This Act covers
children In the elementary and
secondary schools from age 3 to 20
years 11 months. Part D of Section 504

:':.:'!\e~~;L:;'t2 :ds:,r~s~

~~::/tl~c}ls't!,=~~du:~~~

Becauee Sec. 504 Ia silent on a
definition, but Congnasa haa adopted a
definition In Pl-94'142 (which Is quite
similar to the "National Definition" I
cited above), I feel this definition
llhould auffloa for my particular caaa.
I ""'not the only 81.--.t with SLD et
SUNYAB. It came out durt~ the

f:~':~lz~~· Nto \~

Hancllcltpped knows of four other SLD

I

New&amp; Bureau Staff

The day of the disposable calculator
may be just around the comer.
As sales of the hand-held Instruments continue lo soar and as people
become more and more dependent. on
them tor quick tabulations and
calculations, calculators will become
ever more Indispensable Items to
students, researchers , teachers, shoppers and anyone else who uses
numbers.
Many experts, like Dr. Wayne Bialas
of the U/B Industrial Engineering
Depar1ment, believe that calculators
will become ·so common and so
Inexpensive to manufacture In the near
~':,'u;~~~~:~.:i!~s~ available even on
F;e will be entering the phase very
soon, I think, or disposable cal·
culators," Bialas explained. "The_
Insides will be so lnexJ!8nslve thar It
may be Inefficient to even replace their
batteries. We may soon Degln to use
and dispose of 4hem the way we do
disposable butane lighters."

~her-;

the tact ahe was not allowed

to lna.t Q)' and ph,._ when
:JP""l
her ~en...., results;
octwge IMt Law SchOOl POlley tor
daltllng wtth hencllcapped Individuals Ia
.......... and~."

__ "'*'.....,

... to .-~~!lilt unlfonll guldelliiM~·

Ma. Oott, the . - - cantenda,
·~-Willi! to be placed..,_ other
few ...,_ta In arrt way, 1111her, ahe
to be tll1owed to oompete with
w-on~t~~equal ...... " ...

were
found In the area o'rlnefflclencles. RPN
users appeared to have a deeper
understanding of the best way to use
calculators and exploited the " stack" of
pending operations better than AN
users exploited the nestad parentheses
available to them . However, AN users
were able to be more efficient on RPN
machines than RPN users were on AN
calculators.
After users learnad the concept of a
stack of pending operations, the [ogle
system appeared to become more
understandable to them.
"The Impression with t!&gt;e AN data Is

~~~~rus:~ft.'e~~o~n mu:~ ~~~~~g

operations are storad, !I Kasprzyk.sald .
The researchers found that though
each group preten:ed oslng the system
they had become accustomad to, RPN
users were much more extreme In their
preferences. Some AN users expressed
the desire to switch to RPN calculators
after the tests, but RPN users heel no
desire to change.

Th!X'~• d~~~an~PN

users are very
different ," Dr. Drury pointed Out!
"They're like people who differ on tile
merits of slick sh ifts and automatic

1 1

the calculator and don't understand
exactly what's happening Inside II ."
With Dr. Colin G. Drury, associate
professor of industrial engineering at
U/B , and student D.M . Kasprzyk,
Bialas conducted a recent sludy to
determine why and how people use
different types of calculators.
"We found no other study that looks
'8Uhe sort of m lcroaco~lc level of how
people use calculators,' Drury said.
ANn.RPN
The two logic systems In general use
In calculators are Algebraic Notation
(ANI and Reverw Polish Notation
(RPN). The AN system utilizes simple
rlght·to-lelt entry, where one would
enter "a + b
ANSWER ." The RPN
system, Which Ita advocates lnslot Ia
the moat efficient logic system
requiring !he minimum . number of

=

A study -.dueled last year by Drury
others attempted to compare
In the uee of the two
systems. They found that the RPN
calculator was superior to the AN In
speed, with calculations completed
aboul 30 per cent faster, and In
accuracy, with Mit the errors of the AN
system.
The resufta were considered large
enollgh lo warrant more Investigation.
The U/B reseanchere tested engineer·
~I fferencea

traAsmlsslons In cars. "

The resear~ners agreeo tnat the RPN
logic system may be more difficult for
many people to learn than the AN
system, which more or less follows the
sequence learned In high school

al~~f~:::'r.

however, that persona
can display such strong preferences for
certain systems, and that many more
people are unaware of how these
systems work, was lnHially aurprlalng
tother.-c.'ler8.
"We should look at this area much
.

~~.,;lo-:'r.( ~..::r:.aal~d~J::::l

capabliltlea

lor grasping

calculator

:•lgn ar.d ~~~ ~~n~=·
matl::':fexpertise, arid the
ilmltallona of calculetor dealgn.

~=

conceptual

More attention to u. . . - . . y

~Ju'l:t:'rp.:':J~n:u

!: '::

providing a logic that Ia u~
to the u_,.. Dr. Di'ury noted. "They will
have to' take the 'il- Into .:count when

thtrr~~~~ ::".':!~=~=;._

calculators and computers Ia blurrlng1
and pointed out that the lalgaat or
employment for hum.... factors engln-slaIn human/oompoter Interaction.

Job prospects up-except in government
The job market for moat college
greduatea this ~ Ia continuing to
r : e except at local, state and •

~~~":1/levelaeJ~:Sf"=..

~7

A national aorvey
employers
ahowa that an overall' 17 per cent
lnCrMM In hiring Ia anticipated b7 the
employers at thla early ' ' - o the
college recruiting seaaon. Thla oorn·
parea to a t8 per cent gain projacted at
thla point a~ ago.
·
dlff....,.t outlooks are

Ho-.

. =t :::. '':...~r.at~:r. =u~

n.lliliinl ollectlon 804, theY-...

we~~o~g,:;'Ys'l~~yn rSS/f,~S::nc..s

"As a result , some calculators appear

and

---.t

:~~~labl~rfn :~~~~~eJs to a~~~m~l~"p'l~~
. register and a large number of
addressable storage registers; subjects

~~m~a ~~t ~ ~.:'s~ t~':'n'f~~~al=~~~

..-ted ~.:Ide; the law achool
hea lillY to nafute my
. . - -.
...... not had me tested
by lillY expena.
-Mary AngeM Oott

The..-. .....
Ma. 0ot1 In her handwrittllll formal
protest of uarn -.clltlona nol8a that
ahe "can't phyalcally flnlab the ._...
and therttfcn lla being! ... denied the
opportunity to mM8 hfgher grllllee ltlld
.. • 1181 being made to suffer l o gnldea- a -11."
In the Joint
In ..-ponoe to
the ~ Sohool'a report of o-mber
22. ahe and her attorney:
ooontend t111t1 due proceu 11M been
lacl&lt;lng throughOut the of

Hewleti·Packard · 9815A, a programmable calculator used In the study as a
keyboard lnstrumenl. It had a "stack"

loll,~~ft~'e'::.~nufacturers have been
primarily Interested In the hardware,
mechanics and reliability of their
calculators , they have largely Ignored
the thought process that occurs as the
human uses the calculator," Bialas
said .

~~~~E~u~ f~'=E~' sequence

evidence as

r,
~~~:::. ~ ..~~se~~~:!~'i,l~ :,~~~
registers. The RPN calculator was a

No Idea what's happening
Surprisingly, Bialas noted, even as
more and more people are using
calculators, research Is showing that
most people have no Idea what Is going
on Inside their calculators or how to
make the best use of the instruments'

atudenta her9, attending 1111d In need of
-moUIIona fortlllia hand~Qp .
The~~only

lng student calculator users on both the
system they favorad, and on the system
they did not usually use. Twenty
subJects were tested .
The AN calculator was a Monroe
1930, a full-function scientific calcula·

By Linde Grac.Kobaa

employers In the private aactor
anticipate an 18 per cent lncr.ee ln
hiring, local and atate goo.nmenta
e = a 12 per cent decline, and the

:,.,.

~~e=-~~=

""'¥ brtng the fedaral ~··
ool~ry

hJrtng to the .ioweat 1._

since the 1950s," the council aald.
The majority of employers -pendIng to the study anticipate lhe

~~':'~eo1~t:&lt;t,•~11t::.

\.':/~~~1t~

47 per cent expecting alight Improvement and 12 per .cent anllclpatlng
substantial Improvement. Only 18\'en

~ ~~r,:'34co,:t,lt::,1l~r:_orae,:'ci

1,.;

chanOe from
leal half of t 1178. •
Fonowlng the pettem of recent yeara,
the study found, the blgg..t lncrMee In
~b openings will be In engln-lng. A,

~ C::,P.al~is34ant:,!p= o-;' 1~

bachelor's level, 31 per cent at the
master'a, and 35 per cent at the Ph.D.
level. A t9 per centlncr.ee overall Ia
projected lor the "acl-. math, and
other technical" category, Whlla a more
modelll ~ per cent gain Ia e~pected
lor Cllactpllnes In the bualnesa category.

�Drop-in centers are release valves for ca·mpus pressure

---

By Paul Chimera
Collegelile Is a ro.d with many turns.
It's an opportunity for..ellj)loratlon and
discovery, to pioOMr now academic,
social and phlloaephlcal frontiers. And,
ultimately, to grow fr'lm the host of
rslatlonshlpa one dewtlops.
But the college journey can also

~:n ~r~~.~~:,t&gt;x·~. :~o!~~~

be a time of trauma.
At U/8, th. . ts a release valve for the
prsssurs cooker.
Known as the "Droll-In Center," ..!til
doors are quite literally left .open for
anyone - student, faculty or stall
member - who may need to talk out a
problem and allay the streaaes of living .
The Drop-In Center, an arm of U/B's
University Counseling Service, Is a
group of some 30 paraprofessionals and
specialists attuned to "any 1\lnd of
problem that ~ats In the way of
academic living, says Its director, Dr.
Dorothy B. Adema.

M;r~ths~::!~..:,Od ~~lr~o~'bw.?; C:,~

Amherst, the Center opened a third site
last February In the Joseph Ellicott

eort:.~ bellewtslhe large size of the

Amtwst Campus dictates the need for
th8Centersexpanslon.
"Thera are f - centralized places
where one can spontaneously start ·

~~78~g::'p~eJm-:! ~fB=~~:.:
1

office Is In room 167 MFACC) is
lnte!)llonally left open during service
hours. This literal " open door policy" Is
symbolic of the receptive, de-mystifying atmosphere the Drop-In Center
wishes to malrUaln.
" But," adds Gena Nelson, ''we don't
want It to be a hang-out. Bats can hang
out, people can Interact."
The range ol conflicts that seek a .
compassionate ear Is diverse. Often It Is
the difficulty of adjusting to new and
sometimes formidable surroundings.
Or coping with uncertainty about a
student's choice ol major.
Sometimes It revolves around prot&gt;lems people exr.;,tence with room-

m~:sor~~he~~~;ey,'~~;~~~~loa"sr'!':nl

U/B graduate and former volunteer ti
the Center, "The center Is here !Dr eYefY
day kinds of problems - maybe, for
example, someone breaking up with a
boyfriend."
.
How does It mMI needo?
How does the Center, which handles

~~~~ts ~~~eq~=~ "'6?u~:~· ~~~~~~

Adema points out that virtually all

~~~~~t; f[gm1 ~~tim~~~~M~~sl:

- scholastlo success - dee! with (he
central Issue of relating to people.
"The &lt;elationshlpa atudenta develop

l:~r:t!t~~n~~;:::'~te&amp; ~~~ad~

the
One of the methods they use Is peer

~~;::~n~f ~~=...:l'~:~:!~~~~~

underclassmen.

Graduate students, In tum , are paired
with personnel of similar academic
standing. Nelson himself Is a Ph.D.
candidate In biophysics, attesting to
~~:f1.1vergent backgr~nds ol t~ Center
A blind counselor and ·one with
cerebral palsy also · are on board .
Additionally, resource personnel from
the English Department, Education and
Psychiatric Social Work assist the
operation.
A national t.....s
The momentum the Dro~ln Center
has gained seems to be In step with a
national trend In heightened counseling
services at cdlleges and universities.
0

~~"::~u'::lrs~ :?::;n,:~:g:'~.Wpo~ ~~

the proliferation of both mental health
centers and walk-In services like U/B's.
Or. Paul Walters, director of health
services at Harvard, seld his program
tries "to guide students Into seeking
self-esteem In their relations with
others rather than through their
achievements,· a philosophy similar to
the approach of the U/ B center.
The Center Is proud of Its tum-about
from traditional counseling models.
Psychological lingo - often confusing
Is avoided. The setting Is
unpretenUous and co.ndutlve to relaxation.

Ac:c.ptanca
·
The key to the Center's eflectlvenaas
Is the acceptance of people for who and
what they are: getting people to accept
the belief that "I'm more like other
people than separate from them,"
Nelson explained.
• r~~a most difficult step Is the flrat
one, whera a person-can say 'Yes, I h a problem.' Once . they make thla
decision, It's down hill from there.''
Acoordlngly, a meeaure of the
Center's sucoess Is the resolution of a
problem after only a single visit reinforcing the underlying notion, staff
members agree, that the ultilnate
source of help frequently lies within the
person himself or herself.
Room 167 S of the Harrtman Library
Is the home·base of the Dro~ln Center.

~- ~ ~~n~ Mpo;:,~a~~~ro~~~0~rl1:lt'llt~~

Room 104 , has Identical hours. No fee
Is charged at any ol the three locations.
The Drop-In Center Is an extension of
the University Counseling Center,
whose director Is Or. Nathan Altuchor.
Both groups report administratively to
Student PersoMel Services.
A sign outside the door of the Norton
Hall site asks, "Are you feeling pulled In
too many dlrei:tlons?"
The Dro~ln Center Is determined to
point Its friends on a clear a(ld steady

wl~~~fna~~ 'l!v.sa~'!":.-!·e~~~n~~

or social problem . When this Is the
case, the Center acts as a referral
service, Insuring that the Individual Is

who attend claMs and then Immediately leave, • remarl&lt;ed Gene Nelson,
one of Adema'a .work/study para.
professlonalo.

stance, who deal

An ..... tolaolellon

US offering grants f-or study in China

But the,_ Dro~ln Center, whic~ Is

~~m(ti'~y:,nt;.r'~YJ ..e~n~~~

anawer to this laolation,e according to
Aderna, an expert In counselor
education.
11
1

m!.==. r.

~!. ~f="t'iy "!~~

orlentatiqo to "Immediacy." ·
"We lind tbat moal people who come
to be seen
to the c.iter Immediately, " , Adema said . "We can
help best when ~le are anxious the
most" about the concerns- they bring
with them.
Olton tlrnee, says the director - who
asks to be C811ed olmply "Dotty" ~pie juat nead to talk, to sit and read ,
and to lUll be with other people.
"We'ra pi'OY!dl~ a placa that's
available to anyone, • 111e adds. 'We do
not keep reoonla on students and, If
they wish, wa comp-ly respect their
anonymity.''

p~marlly

with fellow

An application deadline of FebruarY 9
has been lnstltutad lor three training
and research programs 'In China.

-

Advanced Training
.
Fellowships for advanced traln l n~ In
the People's Republic of China (P C)
are available for grad students or recent
recl~lents of advanced degrees.
T e program will Include language
Instruction at the Peking Language

~~~~!~~~l:~llo~r~%~~y ~~~~~~~':.

Beste eligibility requirements Include
U.S. citizenship, receipt of bachelors
degree three years of modem Chinese
(exce~ for natural scientists where
some at less coltlpetence will be
considered) , and agreement to spend
one full year In the PAC. The program
beglns In September, 1979.

R-a. Program

Opandoar

The door to the facility (the Ellicott

R-.:h grants are available lor
"

~ibrary

_,

schedule for

HEA(TH

.

..vtr

'

.

spr~ng

Senior Scholar R-ch Program
In addition, the Committee on
Scholarly Communlcetion will ~vide
grants for up to 15 sen/or scho ars for
research projects In China ae part of Its

~Y~!~Scr:lm~d t:c~=' A~
elation. Sen lor scholars should

be
Individuals at the lewtl ol associate
professor or above, with
dla-

~

.

•

~~nl!,"~snha~r~;~~.r=r.rac"f=

:,P~:~~~~~s,;.,J~~~o[o ·~=-~

ProQram above. it thev so desire.)
Grant tenure may ext110d from three
=l'::,~~ ~ ~ between Juno, 187'11

1 1

~-

more

For
Information, write The
Committee on Scholarty Communfca.
lion with the People's Republic of
China, 2101 Constitution Ave., N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20418.

~

-

semester

JANUAIIY t .. IIAY20:-

IIEGUUUIIIOUIIS

,......,.
=-=-·
;::..,
.._,_

scholars at all levels. U.S. citizenship Is
required . Applicants must submit
carefully formulated research proposals
which can be expected to bring
successful results within the present
Chinese academic context.
Grant tenure may extend from three
months to one yeer In the natural
sciences and six months to one year In
the social sciences and humanities. The ·
~rant period must fall between Juno
79 and August 1980. Members of joint
research proposals should apply
Individually•
These research programs are man~
aged by a subcommittee of· the
Committee on Scholarly Communlcauon with the PAC, the Committee for
Advanced Study In China, as a fljderally
funded program on behalf. of the u .s ..
Government. It Is expected that, subject
to availability of funds , up to 50 grants
will be made, ewtnly divided between
the two programs.

course.

CH£111BTIIY

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�.January 25, 1178

-SENATE
FSEC hears speculation
on SUNY fee increases
p. 12. The mo11on 10 amend PASSED.
Tbe amended motion PASSeD. It was
APPROVED that the deecriptlve porilon of
the report be placed on the agenda of the

Feb&lt;uaty 6 Senate meeUng.
8.

PmidetttS.I

Eralu•flon

Proc:.durn

(Hrmon)
J . Hyman reported that thecommtttee has
developed a questionnaire and plans a
aerkll of f1tculty meetings designed to
solicit evaluative reactions . The committee

will present Its repori at the February 8
Senate meeting.
e . Election• COmmlttH (Cil•mberlln)
s . Chamberlin dlstrtbuted a report of the

=:'c::;s~~~~:: :;r,::',~ ~='~;~
1
S:.~e.1.P~~ aC::!:.rJ.r ~1 ~~~~~er:C~~~~

·A nd th_
e winn-e rs are

Comm ittee, dlacussed the rallonaJe behind
the proposed apporUonment .
E. Segal MOVED, L. Michel SECONDED
to approve the rapdrt of the Elections

~~~~·be~~en:rv~'m~~~"~~
1979 elect-tons . The motion PASSED.

• •. •

to,....

Dr. Khalry Kawl draws- win...,. In • cash prize lottery aponaonod by Sigma ·
funda to go "Mtlonal." Win...,. ora B. NortNin,
Phi Eoellon fraternitY
flrstpriH (111311: Jerry Manganiello, MCOnd prin. (11Clfi71: Devld Panzlll, third
prize (11084). Slg Ep VIce p..,.Jdent MlchHI Novak Ia ~ K8wl and
fraternity President Tlm Frey (holding tho ~wll . ·

&amp;!::::;tc;:, n::'7:vrr: =~rrrc::' :

~~1Jk"6J'EC.od preceding an ektctlon was

D. Aca.,_lc Pfunlng R..l - (Dudlef)
The committee chairman wa
le to
attend. N4 G.ver summarized the ~tatus of
the committee's wor1t and recommended the
repori be pn10ented a!Jho Fcebruary 6 Senate
=~11b. ~he recommendation was AP- .

Who says Johnny can't read?
not those who've' done research

Kom 14: Old Bualneu

A. Noml,;.tlon•

Oueto Increased admlntatratlvedutlas , G.
Harrl a will be resigning from the PRB. The

.

Chairman recommended that a past member
of the boar&lt;l be appointed by tho Preoldent
to ..,.... out the remalnder of H.-ria' term
which oxplniO Augull-31 , 1UN. The
recommendation was APPROVED .

Everyone "knows" Johnny can't read
anymore. ·

Sy"dlcated columnist James Kilpatrick has pronounced thil present
one of "Illiterates" and
numbskulls."
Dr. George Gallup appears on a TV
public service announcement from time
to time, lamenting that " reading skills

""Item• 8 a C: Postponed until the Januart
24 FSEC mooting.

~oration

D. Attrlllon/R.t011Uon
A. Slggelkow distributed a ·condensed

~~~~~~,:~~g·~:~ao!n~ssue

aree~~~~~g ! ~?~~u~nl!.;:!f.;~ .. in
1

E. Poatponed until the January 24 FSEC
meeting. -

:

Memll: -

education have "been raised by State
legislators around the nation, Indignant
over the decline.
Yet, Dr. William Eller, professor of
elementary and remedial education at
U/B, polnta out In an article In the
current Newsletter of the Faculty of
Educational Studies, these "experts"
llave " no appropriate evilluatlve data" to
back up their charges.
To the contrary, Eller notes, several
studies (In Iowa, Indiana and· other
parts of the U.S. and canada) have
shown_ that reading ability Is' not
declining disastrously (although some
studies are more r.-ssuring than
others).

lull-.

A. - A..... IorF.,.,.,8,ftN

A~~ f¥{,!ha~otr'"'t.~u"':'~~d"~

WOLDMAN THEATEA ('lfrot floor, Norton
Hall) at 2:00p.m.
Tho moellng od)Oumod 815 :30 p.m.

10 fellowships
funded In dentistry
Monlee to llnence ten $1000 national
lelloWehlpe _.med at doweloplng metttO!IJ to ,_.,re quellty o1 · dental care
been given to
U/B faculty
-

rriember.

a

R-.:tl by U/8 alumnus
Eller cltea re..roh by

~~~~ftt~="'l.:l&gt;~

Robert O'Shea, .-.funded by the W.K.
Kelloa Foundation thfoUIIh the Amertcen FUnd tor Dental Heelth. Dr. O'S'-,
U80Cieta prof-r of social . and
prewentlve medlclna, notes that:
"Aalnc:rualng amounta of the annual
18 bllllon-plue Y.S. dental """' bill are
pmd lor by third party payers auc:h ea
oo-n~~'*~t end pt1vete Insurance,
U..'aagrowtng need to eeek methods
to determine- c:onatltutes quality."
The Kellogg Fellowahlpa, Dr. 0'8'nolel,
~ candldalea of

wm
::,-~.:a. ~~~
1
~V:.':'~=for ~
~ oonduc:ted "under the

fello ...... pa muat be aimed at aapec:ta
o1 qu1111y In cMntaJ cere," 11e
.....,...__ Semple toplca might
lnc:lude ayatemalor ,_..nng levela of
cau-llty, meltl041 "ol dellnlng approprlo1 dent• tnllllment and
~ Information end roln In
qulllll)' c:.-..
Ttt;_WIOwahllla will be -.led by
tile ciOininltt• ln Fellrwry aod July,
11711.
• next deedllne Ia May t5.
Studenta ln*-'*1 In further Information may contact Dr. O'SIIM at tile
~ of Socl• ...c1
loledlclne, 2211 MMI &amp;c., Bultelo, N.Y.

....._,u,.

~~~--

0

a

U/B
1

~\u"l~"· J'.riit~~~h!' ~~~:' ~

Indiana University In Bloomington.
Farr began IOO!&lt;Ing at long-range
comparisons of reading ability ea part
of a rcrojec:t lor the Educational Teall::s

~.,;,eat~ "'6~ ~~~~fev'=nt

trends In the U.S. by looking at:
atate-wlde testing programs; large city

'

:O~lt~~~f~.%~:i..~~;.._of
w:~~~~Yt ~k.".':~~~~·~=~~
g"!~f,:,'n~~~~

Ia no reaaon for

::::~=..."rfn"~l~at~

patency In the lour dec:ades prior · to
111815 may h - lftaaned or halted, and,

=·~~~

e:: ~~r=~~~

--g~:!'~..:.;.ltant

Interpret•
Ilona," the
adc:..d, "we feel
leaat certal11 about the last one."

•-hera

..... c:omperieona

In the State ol Iowa where readl.l)g
81&lt;111a have been .-aed o.- the peat
40 r-s. Eller notes, """dlan thi rd
~reeding part~ 1977about alx monlha hlglllf than the 11165
median. But •
atudenta prograu

~~~~~no,~reed~~
ve-a.
..
...
. Grede 8,

pUpils of ~
'

·though, Is the only level at which there
Is actual Inferiority of t9n level
performance compared with - 11155
medians. But , as Eller says, "Gr- 8 Is
the most Important In terms of
long-range significance."
Indiana Studl•
A few months ago, a more heartening
long-range study of reading ac:hlewtmentln representative Indiana sixth and
~t~p;~~~~:;'.,;"mpleted. by Dr. Farr
The group dlacovered thet the
average sixth gr- pupil In Indiana In
1976 was ten months younger than the
average sixth grader had been In 19«.
Thua, while overall reading ability lor
sixth gradere haa not changed alnc:e
19«, age comparlaona give the 1976
pupils a to-month advantage.

f.:n"d~~Oth g~"':;~ ~~u'lr. '"::;

po~

percentile
better than the 1978
median. But the 10th gradera of 1976

~9tfg~u~~;:;~ ~~ng~~~han,.!~!

were thus dlstlnc:tly superior when age
was consldtlred.

rafe~~·O:,~; ~:f? .!::'.': Yt~~

19«. Thla would m...,, Eller pelnta
out, " that some of tile poorer reedenl
were remaining In· ach()()(, presumably
pulling averages down aomewllal."
What ere your eou,_?
Eller notes that Indiana's FliT Ia
sup~lementln~ hla research efforts by
~n~t~..J~,:y ~I .:!,':!!ortc:ally
Farr writes to each claimant ,
Inquiring about hla or her aouroea.
If there's no reply (ea th«e uauany
Isn't), he attempts to c:allthern .
The response Farr get a moat often Ia
thet "ewry~&gt;ody knows " lt'a true.·
He and his 11880Ciates llaYe conclu6ed '1hat anyone who aaya that he knows
that literacy Ia dec:reealng Ia a very
unsure person."Such a peBOn Ia at beat
unacholarty ancf 8\ worst dishonest.•

Asante elected
M"Oiefl K. Aaanle, proleaaor and
DePartment of CommunJc:atlon, hat(·been elec:ted a vtce
prealdent of the lnt.ernatlonal Communication Aaaoclallon . ln thla c:a~
city, Dr. Aaante will ch•r the
tntercultural Communication dlvtaton ot ·
the -latlon end will plen Intercultural end lntarnllllonal plograma lor
tne 111110 Acapulco Cont._.

chairperson,

tx!d ~r"~ =lllf~-~ on the

�. . aalta

n

DOCU~ENTS
Senate rep!lrt offers glimpse of. how the PRB works
The Presldent'a Board on Faculty
Appointments, Promotions and Tenure
consists of nine tenured full Profes:

Unl-.tty HrYice
University service was weighted more
heavily when scholarly output was

ca;:,n,;x,~r:r.:n~u~ly '~n~:"~~

was expected. Membership on run-of- '
th&amp;-mlll committees, presentations to
local community groups, and at-

..

=~=r~,;~.~ ~~r~:,

student obsenlers (one graduate and
one undergraduate) are appointed by
the President from slates of three per
vacancy recommended by the r&amp;- .
apectlve slud8fll association .
The Board reviews all recommends·
lions for appointment at or promotion
to the rank of Associate Professor/
Associate Llbrar..,, the various titles of
full Profesaor/Ubl'arlan, and the grant-

~~~k~1tt"':.:n~"Ytsap~~~::,~ ~

demonstrated academic quality and
g:-~,~~~1, of the r~mmended In-

Ten~~ ~ul~v1\"~~ h~m;'~~o~

report deacrlblng how and the wterla
by which the PRB members evaluate
recommendations for tenure and
promotion.
Nine Board members, with the
exception of the graduate student who
wsa Interviewed by the Committee
Chairman Prof. Norm81) Solkoff (the
undergraduate student was unavall·
able), wereJntervtewad by two members
oflhe panel. .
Excerpts from the panel's report
follow: •

Roedlng and conalderlng the cloaaler

2 ~0::~ ~:,~•

oond~1~dJ'~?~

to esch case Is abo~ minutes, with
unanimous positive recommendations
taking the shortest time. Efficiency of
functioning Is seen to be related to •..
mernbara~paratlon for a review

:J'o~~/!"has t!':,

=

-~~th which a
Although PRB members enumentled

~~g:,r:: ~:~~:r.s.:. ~·:a:~rnr~

dossier, It was ct..... that research
productivity was the moat hsavlly
weighted category !quantity, :~,uattty,

~~: ~.~~· rn!:.~~~~c::;s~·d;;

not read candidates' publications. They
rely en such data as: lnapacllon of
titles, Where the work was published or
presented, outstdelettera aaaesslng the
quality of contributions, citations by
others In the sarne or similar fields and
the evaluations by chalrperaons or other
knowledgeable Individuals, If these are
available . ... Some PRB members

=~~::Jyco:eor:,~a~~n~~

the quality of a candidate's scholarly
work. They wen1 critical of those
department chalrperaona and others
Who ssslsted In the PlliOBrlltlon of
dossiers who did not Include the data
necessary for the a-d to make a
watt-Informed judgment.

=~:"'ex;=~~~btf=

:=.;

tendance at conferences were viewed as

relatlve)y unimportant ....

Lettera
When unsolicited letters In behalf of
a faculty member are received , which Is
rare, they are treated as additional
Information but are not accorded much
credence. On the other hand, If a
candidate's solicited letters from
academicians at similar or higher ranks
than for which the candidate Is being
considered attest to his/her status as a
national ."experl", the decision-making
process Is facilitated .
ThaDouler
All PRB members agreed that the
process of preparing a dossier needed
10 be significantly Improved. Many
curricula vitae were described as
unclear, replete with trivia and with
letters which obscured rather than
clarified the talents of a particular
faculty member .... Several members
went so far as to suggest that e course
should be given b faculty and
'Ill to prepare
Chairpersons on
dossiers. The followlilg suggestions ..•
were made most frequently : (1) The
dossier should be organized and
captioned appropriately to facilitate the
reviewers' task; (2) All required •
Information should be Included and
clearly labelled; (3) The dossier should

~~~s1~1"~l'e.e':n~~~~e!!f~"Ja"ev:~

&lt;•l

eluded ;
Outside letters should be
from well-known people In the
candidate's field with as few as
possible from friends . Letters from
sources suggested by or "toe closely
COMected" to the candidate would be

~= ~) t~"'h''ng~0~~~ ~

not just descriptive or andacdctal
evidence; (6) Coveting letters from
Cflalrpersons should provide a bslsnced
buts for decision-making, without
padding; (7) Information about the
quell~ of publications should ·be

1:~ber'~ p~se~:n::~i~le ~lelfn'~~

academic plan of the department
should be specified ....
Several miscellaneous dossier problems ... were mentioned. One r&amp;spondent repOrted . . . that now, more .
than In the past , some deperlments
recommend mediocre candidates for
promotion or tenure In an effort I&lt;?
retain faculty lines ....

o-tmantal ,..._
Moot members of the Board approach
the dossier in the belief (If not the hope)
that some sort of prior peer review has
taken place at the departmental level, ...
There SMmed to be no deslre ·to lmpoae
a particular committee structure on
departments; In fact , some respondents
suggested that a variety of approaches
11 · not only acceptable, but appro-

was·not perceived to be a problem.

division or program.

Communication with the praldent
Considerable concern was voiced
about tha tack of communication
between the PRB and the President's
Office. Although It was unanimously
stated that the President does not
Influence or try to Influence the Board's
deliberations, It appeared to several
members that the Board's deliberations
were not evidenced In many of the

R-&amp;"o':t~embers-fett that a
ment's reputation significantly
the destiny ot a l&gt;Artlcul• reoommendatlon, and this reputation Ia

0

1

r~e~,·~~~r:~ ~fsB"=~~Ys t~~~ara

suggested by two members, this
situation could be rectified If the
President provided formal feedback
regarding his reasons for overlumtng
·particular Board recommendations.
1

ar:~~~~~Pt:'.J~~::'r:~~~~~:e ~~

.:::
objective than othera, they are not

=~~ng ·~he e~~~uybera'~~~ ~7

others ....

T~:',:re"~? =tntment
1

or prcmo-

~:~~~~lc~f::ff~~sm~me:,:."t,\':'~~

substantive slgnlflcanCII. Several r&amp;spoQdents Indicated It was easter to
decide on promotion to full professor

=Ito~~- "fll'eotn1~~1':,';tsar~o s!:~ur~
~=:~Hy :1/~~ult s;.';:!~ny"upan~ o~'!.

decisions are Involved .
.
Also, the treatment of exceptional
dossiers (I.e., non-standard, or those
Which rely on criteria outside the PRB's
" usual " evaluative guidelines) emerges
as one of the thorniest problems ....
Difficult depertmenta
When asked Which departments or
disciplines made the evaluation process
difficult, .. . most respondents ...

~~~~~":v~~~;;:.~n9,,1:~~~r~.w~w~

members were· virtually unanimous In
recognizing that he evaluation of
candidates. from ~-libraries, performIng arts and practicing or clinical
professions Is moat problematic. To
define ..creative" or " professional"
contribution has been elusive; thus one
respondent Inquired, "how do you make

fi~ n~~~~~~j~~s=~·buW:,';,"f.ubllcaA majority of PRB members
Identified librarian-candidates as the
most difficult to .evaluate. Two
members named the libraries as
presenting. the " worst" problem. In the
words of ano!her: " Every librarian who

~~e::f~'~:~~~ ~=,;t~n~~!, ~

crlterta•• applicable to llbrartans. The
revised crltarta adopted by the librarians
were reported to "further muddy
thin~•·" Three members offered sug-

9!,~'~~~an·s ~gp{~m~~~~~':~

we (faculty) aU have -

they should d.o
research." Another preferred a different
Mitigating cln:umatancea
·
courae: " Ketter should be Informed that
In the abaence of publications or If
the PRB ahould not handle librarians'
the publication record Ia sparse,
_ cases.• A third respondent offered the
mitigating ctrcumatancea are sought,
view that qualified tlllss be used for
e.g. an ongoing cornm.ltmant to acme
librarians without publlcatlons or that
compte• progrwn or ..-ell activity,
other avenues lor promotion and tenure
·
pr~:··aoard relies chiefly on outside ' decisions be explored . .. .
opinion and letters when dealing with
Uni-.Hy a.vtce. Faculty with tong
dossiers beyond their coUectlve field of - lnalcla va. outakle
dlatlngulahed MIVIce whO might nof be
Basically, the same evaluation
competence. N-'heteaa, many Board
publlahlng u "**&lt;*rtly In naoent years
procedures are used for In-house
members place oonslderable reliance
u !hay had In the put . . .-ponoea to
promotions as for tenured appointon their wl...,.,glng lntereats and
more f.-.bly than . . younu-laculty
menta to be made from the outside.
academic experiences which they feel
rnembenl " " - ..-ell oroducttvtty
However, thent are special conalclerareinforce the credibility of their
to tow. Superb t-lng Nrioly eulftcaa
tlona that apply to each .. . . In the case
judgments.
byttaetf . .
of In-house appolntmanta, thera Ia
lnatatence upon lnd_,..,...t evaluaA miaMI approadl
tions and a wlah not to be too parochial .
T~ . . . . . . , _ _ . ,
Beard membenl detcrlbe thamselvaa
Theae decisions . . uaually mada wlth
. T.:fllng perfonftance, although Inaa "rational" In their declalon-maktng
a-ter confidence becauae of the
cluclad u a !actor In all tanllltl and
procesaea and lnalst that g.ratuttouaty
evallablllty of more and -•organiZad
promottona cleclllona, ~Y
offered oplnlonl do not replace h8l'd
Information.
·
·
Standards . . more rigorously
applied for tenuiWd appol""'*'ta from
tiona Of ta.c~t~ng~ to be buad
candidate wlllch Ia fr*luant,. reaolutlon
may be . , . . _
the outside.
nta' i'atlnga. eoma
Ia 'llltempled through lurfhir atudy of
prt _ _..
!rom the Unt..atty to ma1ce an oulalde
~
...-..MOna ~
tha candldala'a doaalar, through anaty.
the w1ac1om and validitY of thla
•
ot lllmllar ~ !rom other
llllll'l*h but ol'- r.tt 1M! 11 daparlmanta: and/or through oonautta. l*lod. tanuN Ia u..,..ly grM!ed.
P!Oblllly 'lha way to ecquiN tha
tton with tha guidelines by which the
l:saant'-!ly, lha MB reltea on the
_ , tnrorm.ton.
cornMB oparatea.
s-ch Committee's nacommendatlonl
........, II!IIIID'IniiiJ on ~
A oonaanaua - o PRB .-nt~era,
and on how ~to. open and
Whlcll provldad u .......,. al
wOOl clolely with other, Ia
axt_.ve tha ~ wu. Two
lllllltf I unlor '-lt)' __.Ill ..-"\ uaually ...ahad. Ho-, a
00.011110111 and
of tha
~ occurs, tha ~. In Ita
problema In . . .lllllna outalda can~llllamofajunlor_._.
advii9IY capacity, raporta 1'ha 0101e to
dlctet. -mentloMif: tha llleMce Of
-.on ~ JllifOIIIOMOe 1114 lha
A ~ - t Of tha I'Naidllnt I ' - Nlldera .a
......_ . _ ~ the 1ae1&lt; Of
dactliOn. 1n"- Deddllng or elflOla .Of tha . . . , . . . In hllllw •
. . , _ , . , ~; I.a• . _ IUCII
M!!~e~!lllllar!Miia•tolhaciWacla&lt;·
by ona or a I • "biMed" .....-.to
an lndlvlclull will .n:l) a perttoullr
of • ..... . . . . . ..•.
control tha cleciiiOn-fMklng cw-

~-=r.;·~~i::t..~ .:.~!!

::'.:..S~.·=-=..:

=.:o:a,;;u,~,!l'eW:.-: :!rtU:.::

n.er.

=:..-,

::~~':.~.J:~=

a-=""'lit

.....,..tona

-

=•

~~~~~~.rei~ '?~'::rest~~

within a4epartment ....

Confklentlallty
There are no specific formal steps or
procedures to Insure confidentiality of

~~~·~ow~~~'Jtien&lt;t,~'~

not considered a problem. Dossiers are
distributed at the PRB meeting or handdelivered. All dellbioratlons are ..tiel
and all documentation Is destroyed . It
is understood that the dellbenltlons of
the Board on a particular candidate are
never to be discussed, nor ehould the
way an Individual votes be ~ad .
Student · members may not taka
dossiers home. Leaks are rare . .. . The
minutes consist of a .. ummery of
actions taken and become public
knowledge If the President followa the
recommendations of the Board. R-sons lor a negative Board recommendation are communicated by the chair of
the candidate's department. Individual
caaea acted upon negatively may be
resolved by the Dean or the chair but are

!:'e PRB t:::l

=~ "j~tn ~l:'J!~n by0
actions Is dls!lemlnsted
President's Office.

1

C""the

Externollnll..ln assessing the role of external
Influences on the tenur&amp;-promotlon
process (e.g., budget, political pressures, enrollment), Board members
generally believe that their evaluations
are Immune to these factors. The Board
feels ·senaltlve to, although . not
pressured by, minority tsauea. Board
members also believe that union
activities h'ave no Influence on their
deliberations. The PRB stated untmoualy that the President does not
Influence, or try to lnfl.-ce Its

de~=~~~~~~tW'eient views in
assessing the Unlverally's reaponalbll·

~~~~~J~h~o:ac;~\r.ot'l':.'~~

-::;Yt,u:::'~~ ~~~~~t.'ror =~:

evaluations should nevwtheless be
based upon demonstrated eviJience. A
person should not be refused tenure
because the Unl-slty Ia unable to·
meet his/her needa, If perlo_rmance

f:!:.':..t: ,:-~'':,'[•Un~~~:'=

should not be an excuse for poor
performance. A department ahoutd
decide on whether or not a candidate
fulfills or wilt fulfill Its mlsalona. In

f,"~lf'n~ to~e ~':u':'tJ~

members felt that their standards - .
already high enough.

~::.=~

to euggeat
cbangea In operational procedu- of
the Board. Although not 11W1Y
recommendations wen1 made, the two

most frequent_,

(1) lmprooe methods lor .--lng
women's credentt.ls, !Ming Into
a&lt;:count fBnllly de!Mnds not oonllldaNcl
when men are .,_ted for promotion.
cumantly on the
(Thent are no PRB) .
·
(2) Develop baiMr methocle for

aa=.,"JIJ:c"~- "-"-

as a l'8dre of atrong and ~
lndlvlduala, all but one of . , _ tae1
that thelr'promottona would la.QIWitecl
If nacomll*lded today. 111e1r lftlt1lllll

toward their WOfk end their~

to the Interview aclledute ~
similar. There _ . to a. no 01w1ou1
Internal ..,_.. of ""*- IIIII t111a

=

=":--:~,;:
::;.::,":::
commtttea cen ex.t any 81gnlflcllnt

...

11111'*!011 on IICedemlc change.

CwNnt · ~ or tha "'--lcclnt'a
Board . ., . . _ eoo..

= J=· :"''.trr~
Review

Michel, Jr., Enall8h; Minim ,..._,
ar.l ~;Wade ........ ' - '

~~~-=
~...; ~' . . . llldlll
....-~we.Tha-e......,
IIOr."--~;
.

.

�........
1000-year-old

$Culptur~ ·

The TemPi- of KheJuraho, India, dating
• r.r •liD A.D., ara richly c:erved
oc:ulpture, much of It
- I n ..,bject metter. Twenty of II&amp;
_.,... dedlcatMI th.,. over two
centuri•• by the Chandelle kino•
8Uf'Vtwl. Photoani:Jha of aome of them
IUiken during hlo vt.lt to India •• an
....,.,.... ac:lentl8t In 1977) are among
211,000 llldeo which U/ 8 Blochamlotry
Prof- Willard EUiott hao onapped
Iince 1143. Eliott, who glveo ollda ohowo
ft arM retirement hom.. for the pure

fun of It, Ma extanalve collection• on

-

auch other aubjects •• the pataca of
the anlf'!1eh: of Kenya. the

,Europe~

Cornwall countryjlda, Stockholm, the

U. S . S. R . • Iowa.. auneeta and otber
paltoral acen ... He Ia never without his
camera when on sabbatical or when

attending aclentfflc conference• abroad.

Color prints of hlo studleo of the
Tempt .. ere now on display in HeyM
Lobby (oee Calendar}; a ohow of
different prints will be on view in the
aacond floor gllllery of · Roswell Park
Memoriellnltttute in June .

H_e re's a list of servic~ stations ·~o ca~l for help
Cempila Security recently c:anvasaed

-ou stations to lind thoee-wllllng to

IMI&lt;a a.vlee calla to mdlorlata in
trouble on the Main Stnaet .,.d Amhefst

c.mpu-.

-

With _ . conditione

worMnln~

:r.wt:;:.t=-:.:n.:
":m~t&lt;efy
them..,_

find
uNibla to start thalr
- .. Since Stela equipment cannot be
UMd to ..... privately-owned vehicles,
lleourlly wWited cempua motorlata to
' - 111 Idea of what n..t.y e.vlce
-Ions .,. cNr;lng lor a tow or roed
C811. Knowing the prlcaa llhaed of time
-.old be a ..raguard against possible
81CP!o118tlon In .,. emergency.
II you should · experience car
diffiCulty, Security edvi- that you

-lfy lhern as soon as poaalblt.
Otherwlae, warned Security Director
t.. Griffin, Unlvwalty polloa may be
forced to !Jekel the ow, or C811 lor a
tow, H the uo Ia obelluCtlna :raffle.
Griffin eap
people with car
......... lllnd to put ciA ....., flaelwa.

"*"

... 111111 '-lllelr- lor poolonged
lllfiOde wi!Mul~ llec!lrlty.
1b M O I C I J tldoMing,

E ......

(lrtffln
leaurlty.

-~•
,..... of ...flrat
dn-,
8ecurtty Mafl will pt-a
-lol!the

:r,.,::-

IIWIIIIIrof
c.11 to
1110t0r1et

no

•t

_,.,.._~

one of the nearby statl"lns wh lch makes
roed calla to the campus will be called.
Inoperative autos cannot be left
O¥ernlght In moat campus Darklng lots
because of snow rem0¥&amp;1 efforts. Those
found In Iota not designated lor
all-night parking will be ticketed .
The Unlvenolty is now in process of
getting blda for a towing contract.. Once
tha contract Is effective, cars abandoned or stuck on campus can be
towed, at a. particular prlc;e, to a
fenced-in area near Maintenance at
Amherst . The tow, predicts Griffin, will
be considerably cheaper than what Is
now charged, and no charge will be
lavtad for short-term storage. Owners
are liable lor the tow charge In such an

-.t.

The following statioqs will make
S«vice calls to tha Amherst and Main

~n:.~~w~~-.~e

*'

amount of time spent on
diat...ee of the tow.

~~~~ ~

a call and the

-·-

•lob••··~c.nt225_C_ftdHwy.

----·17 $1

UT-2744
I

•...m. ·I p.m. (except Sun..)

S57UialaSl

.

ra.ct cell· SS
tow .. S12
1 o.m. ·Midnight

-

•Frank Mobil Serwtce
3115Moh1Straat

_ _,A...
_,.

o,._

u.s. rosugc

10
Buffalo, . V
Permit No. Jtl

UH14l

.-call -- . 1 5
No-..g
7a.tft.·Noon

t~·S15

---·5
H35MolnSl

81HS50

~

:::,,u;.-:::.o.

--·11....... _
._----Dr.
____
Amharat campus

----·
.:a::=.-=:._... __ _
........
,,_ _,,_..

-·1141er_I __ A _ _ IIII.

-

_.,
,__ "_
--·11

•Ed Oubrm'1 a.ntce

:=r--

roecl c:efl. 17.50
law-fUior-SmL; Uior_h_llll.
la.m.. · 11Jl.M.

'

...... :.p.m.

No n·Profit

·=~•~Eiaon

•Jay'• Teaeco Service

.-

-ooi·IUO
--111.11
7a.a-11:JO...-.

......... ,,lUlL

. -con-ss

•11Gb a Oon'a Mabll
~~Hwy.·

llaln •.....- Cempua

---

21M -_.Hwy.otN. F_,

- - · 1 1.50

•lledtweN'e Plaza Serwk:e, lnc.
837~232 -

........

•L.any' o - c.mer

•T&amp;SAuto
C24t llopio llcl.

UH7C2

-clll-110

-"''I
...............
No

•Cecler'a..,..c.ne..

=-~~-ool-11.10

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

--1111er-looi ; IZ.60-~- ....

,

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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  <item itemId="85707" public="1" featured="0">
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                    <text>~TATE UNIVERSITY-

JAN 18,1979
VOL.10 • N0.15

AT BUFFALO

Transfers:

we'll be seeing more.of them

ByJ..,c.~l
Ropor1or6lolf

counselors visit each Junior college
cempue once each yMr;
·
Besides appealing to ·Junior college
grads who comJ10Se a m!)orlty Ql U/B's
transfers, A&amp;R Is exprorlng other
potential sources of transfers. For
- example, A&amp;R ltu folllld 111e1 ""'"f
students who orlglnalft l8jeCied
by U/8, but who heel good lnllfel
contacts with staff, ,.,.
hent

To m.~ both future enrollment
projections and Ita commitment to
educate ln-'ng num"'- of Junior
oollege gredUMea, U/8 wJII alowly

·~~-=r'A.
conl"';""~.ufUclwd Orwmuk, SUNY

::-Jl"'""

hu ~ that U/8 hold Ita
f r . . - erlroll"**l to 3,000 until at
·-111181.
lncrN&amp;Ing the number of full-time
transferatudenta, which usually ho~ ,
around 1,«JJ. to Mlout 1,700 by 11182,
wlll help offeetlhe ~tim !*I of the
SUNY edCII:'i'~ ~~~~ ~!

:::h:r.::n~o:t's~"" ~ ~
Also, edmlsalonl coun..,_· flood a

~~:~~a~-:1,~ :'w":rts~:, :g

the Unl~lty aa freshmen, but Intend
to transfer at a later date to rec:el..,thelr
degrees here.

~

the lergeat · but lor the
pnwloua Jour y-s. freshmen enrollment was generally held at between
2,500 to 2,800, aald Dremuk.
Since a INIJ&lt;&gt;t11y or transfers from
Junior oollegea .,. Interested In
majoring In the health sciences,

Soltoell
To date, Dremuk says U/8 haa used a
"soft-sell" In terms of recrultlnj

~d~~~~~o~U=I~~'T.l~.u~ut

Dremuk noted that, at least since he hu
been here, there haa .,_, a tacit
agreement with SUNY that U/8 •not

~~ ~~declo:-:

wur

concerted effort
be m8de to atlrect
t.-tera lnt_.ed In "non-lm!*led" !MjOnl, Dremul&lt; lridlcaled .

u........ _....

. UR hOpea IIIII can be edoomllliahed
WOI1dna In -.Junction with the
Dlvillon ofl'ullllc Atfal18 to uPcnde the
quality of .-ult"*'t .,...;tile, IUch
by

•tJroc:~~u.- and eudlo-'llaual

tiona,

which

.,.

ueed

.,._,....
to attract

transfers.
Drernuk aald he haa also requested
non-Impacted weaa to deoeiOp their
~~ t'::i."f::!~ for dlatrlbuThls f - of the "articulation
prooeaa," a euphamlotlc way In which
AI.R ,.,.,. to retrult"**t, Is Important,

:='

.. :!r:,ect=.':·~~~":n~nl;:a~

m~:~"or D~f.sn::. P-1~-;~,

Headway reported In retention battle,
b faculty morale Is said to be low
Individuals, ltlay dlernplon .-on and
rationality and tefld to be offanded If
treeted aa thouGh they .,. Irrational
("" It'I . _ ., Garver added with a
amite). Anylhl
peroeiYed aa "-udulent or aa au
ng the -.:11 for truth
~-to faculty In !!-',"the

~~.

Thla, ha
real
problema for edmlnlatJwtora."
_
Hehed .. - p...
Tll«e II a lueplcton among faculty
on this C8IIIJIU8, Gerver .ul, that
prlnctplaa uaed to .,.,. 81 dee181onaJ*t~Cu~artye;

decllllona-n "'Il~
0111." 1'1118 ,_-.ad

.... "eroding
" ' ' - ' .....
With -'1 ... Ulk 01 1lloCIIel -

....,._.
v-. ..,. .-s.......
-.." .._

for

,....,....,~....S.~teel

-..
. . - - ~ llrel......
for~_toeula_
....

.....

not '-JI

~ ..::.-:.-~lngnottJ:'d

them. They want to know .
- " clellll
The edmlnlatretlon , he acknowladQed. hay point when It plaeds It Ia more
uaafiiJ'"POIItlcelly to " - qulel ellout
hoW outa wtn be ---'eel to untU cuto
nactuelly · Admlnl-ora don,
- t to tip thalr IWICII to Albeny,
But, the
ctlalmWI - ' on,
feculty think If you don, IIIII tllem, If
you don't tl\l8l
to the DOOd

a.-

-

muat

"*"
-1.-

behind ~. tllln

be "bed

e..

"The ldlll of ...tonallly ..., tor trutfl c:t.11 w1tt1 the ~II taotlca
~ ~

"'*"' •

I8QIIh,"ha--.

...

NoMtlltllla.-~~­

aopiCI

to be "1fttUUIIad" by . . . . . .

oanllftuad
-lllcl
-to " - · . .
.
. _ .....
.
Lalit ..,_. dfiiW .. conctullon, ~ axplalned, . . , . Ia

_._..... .... __.

hM .

taken the form of Informational ~­
Dremuk pointed out, h o - , that
SUNY unlta " - ......'*'-' ualng mont
edvertlalng, - - 1lunday IUPP..
menta, to attrMI.._.... appll-1.
In IIIII, 'Naw ~...811111 .. eel
In • .Sunday- fiJI t~~e· "Naw rcwt
Tlma.
Dremuk oald .._,.,.,. 01 the
Admlaalona Communlcallono Committee, which he .co-chall8 wllh Public
Affairs Director Jim DaSant'-· will
c:tlscuas II, when and how UIB should ·
use recruitment advertising.

requests a year for Information- from
potential transfara and !bout 50,000
Inquiries altogether.
In eddltlon, Drernuk wants his ttalf&lt;Of
admlaalons counselors to ! n c r - - vlalts to Junior colleges around the-e
as. well aa their attll!ldance at regiOI'IIII
conferences of Junior college aeunaelors In order to further promote Unl~lty . Currently, U/8 edmlaalons

.......,

..

�• ...._,11,1111

l
•Retention end faculty mcnle

---··-·

-...eiDn"......., JllrMelf

tnd ~.
ID 11e ..... '1U notlrlcllon."

..._.-'-'

~:"~~~~o~rs~~~
a.-,.,..,.

=-difficult.
An
....,.... , _ 1a In t i l e - of - a &gt;
..,.. Ia gre~~t-ment on the
1*1 of . . _ of the beet faculty" a.w
IN . _ . . .,...,_ kepi In
~y···~Att mo
~.'"!i'~~!~utal,2!

,_

..,R -

.....,, ,..,_ -v

. , . . . . 1oc1111y to faculty

~

__..

anini-ion to
pnMda 11 IIROCilhJY functioning climate
wftlllft....,.thewortl of ediiCIIllon rney
011011 .........,...,
lllid. This ts
,....,

-.t

a.- ...,. the c:.e.

c-.-

"GGl 1110ore 1w11o

..-,u,

~ ~lily" -

::-~~- C:::

haw!

:'..!!!i ':ff"l\:;

unn.atty to Implement

~~~;::'g poll-

clee 8lld options adopted ••,., years
~acuity li-e frustrated and want
amootlleJ .....noements for such
~ actiVIties. "

IIi-,

The prol-ate Is also conoemed
~
ted
terri to
about money,
no • re
n~
~ 1':(' t~nl:;~~ ~ ~~:ue ~
T/That a4ery lndl.,._ that
Unholin.lty prof-. have blllolf 1.~
hit of all mejot occupational groups
ellecta of .liMo spiraling cost of
1
~tty t.ye /oat 17.5 par cent In
,..,. of fNf ~ po_. over the last
dlcade alter tax• and llftects of
Inflation-- figured, according
to data -putad
the Tax
~lon.lnc..
IIMelwol~the ott.. hand, have
.,joyed 1
• gain of 32 par cent;
autoWoiiCera,
cent; truck drivers,

by

the

by

t~la

14

.C.,

ce:'.!iwlduiia at
Institution
. . _ . of and III&gt;I&gt;'ICillte the
. . . . , _ amounta of -State monies
wlllcft come Into this as e
,_,., of U/B funding, O.V.. granted;
H Ia lmportent that
llllldlng..,. balanced."
Muc:li of
concern o t.glllnlng -uent ~tatlon Is
cllrectly llltlfbubble ' to the facultY's
lhrt'*iQg dol lira, he Mid.

but,,.__,.,.,.,,
"*"'
the ,_,,

HDw ....... tnd UUP cllffw
0... cfeflned lor the Council how
1111 F_.ty Senate diH.. from the
~egent.

Thelleraalnlngagent,

Ill illd, Ia CIIIIIC*IIed wtlh "'erma and

_, '•

_ _ . , . of emp~oy-.r·
- ..,....._the
Un-.tty admlnllliiiiOII
la an ...,.._...
NlationNI8donltltp Wlllch ... -

upondL":.'"*~~

---~bythe

::=::C,T.::in~
_._. 01 1M - . · eeim lo
...... 110 IIIQIII . , ........

J

for •

.....

lift

,l,....no

c~-=

-~====~

:!"""-• ..,... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ._

......

......

crl...,.

..IIIIIMtlon

• ?':ez..~==
=':,.,.,.,:
.........

J

"'=-~~=-«,:.~:~
-It lhouklbe~ lor the use

~~~';~~~~

eupply ....ugh lor the faculty~
this fine of - . l n g - . a to be
saying: II all but kills lncent!Yes lor and
tangible beneflta of . - c h , Ketter
acl&lt;nowledged.
t

-Yort&lt;Statalurther~allzesthose

faculty and catnpUMS which ate most·
heavily Into - " "
-..lng a
portion of the a.whead generated bY
their wor1&lt; far awlWds to projects which
cannot gen-e outside funding. This
la&gt;ors the lour-~ collegee at the

by

~~~ ~~:J11C:,~rii-?':i
large would probably raflect faculty
support for the current system.

ret;,ed

:::= ;-==.g~=
-

gmot..,_ID.,..farenhllnc:lngthelr

~He

~==:::­
r-~.:.-:e

~~'::'~g.

Ketter aald the
local administration haa SR8111 years

l!B~~ngee"n~raf"Y~:oufc:•~rt:u:~

=:

major administrative computing facll-

~"! ~=~= ~~~e"ssthe;.,

=.,

he oald, we are still awaiting approval

from Albllf1ll for a viable propoaaf for
securing the kind of computing
capacity we need and tar paying for it
with other than State funds .
.
We can get the admlnlstralove
computing sat-up where It should be
withon two years, the President ~ld, If
Al~ny leta us. 'We cant get
dac~:;..s· ~rged the Council to halp
spr1ng loose this and other declslons at
the Albany level as a means of helping
both University operations and faculty
morale.
lan~

anything right?
"For 45 minutes." Council Member
Robert Koren responded, " we've heard
nothing from you other than what's
wrong, nothing but talk about Irritants
and tensions. Is there anything that has
been done that the. faculty favors? lfs
easy to tear apart. Isn't there anything

~~~~· ~~~ ~~;
am-

to convey such an
Impression,
said.
He gave credit to the positive way
President Ketter has worked with the
Senate and 1o the wor1&lt; being done by
Academic VIce President Ronald Bunn
in developing a lramewor1&lt; for dealing
with student-faculty imbelances-even
though "that work has not y~t been
shown to the Senate." When it Is,
Garver said, he Ia sure It Will prove to be

'J:!~·~',y,~~lt~::::w~~ar.!~g

Headway In

,_,on

In raaponae to a request by Council
Member Gearge Measer at an earlier
meeting, President Ketter presented
SQII18 'obrand new ligures" Indicating
some headway In efforts to retain a
higher percentage of daytlrroe under·
graduate and graduate students.
The number of DUE students enrolled '
in the spring who dld not return on the ·
tall dipped from 1,5861n the fall of 1971t,
to 1,573 in the fall of 19n, to 1,414 this
past fall. The 1978 figure represents a
retention rate of about 85 per cent, a
chart supplied by the President
Indicated. The number of gtaduate
students not returning from spring to
fall dropped from 925 to 835 between
t9n and 1978.
Those who graduate are, of course,
excluded from thecom~lsons.
Among Millard Fl lmore College
students, though, . figures _remeln
discouraging, reflectong a retentoon rete
of less.than 60 1!81' cent. MFC, how-. has a new dean who will be t.ytng some
new approaches, the President report·
ed.
Other studi!'S on the attrition 1-

~\~~':,",::.'::1'ca~S:~~~Fs\~;t's ~~~~

"-tnd~ofN-Yorl&lt;.

A II._. lllllloe.f pedeetrian bridge at

the~-~~~0:,-::'n:.::'.:t~..:!
.......,

~·

_ ~
"thl;
~~~

1
,.. -.=. __,,_,_..,
..,.ofa.n..':r..:!.•
Mel~
.J The cNmller
• ~"to,_
L &amp;llllt, ....._, ,.,..... PfOIIIW1I
wit
II ~

caaldll-.

--..n

......_~~~~~,two~,.._._

Ill - · • -.ttng 111Udto, an
~far mualc
- · Mel
......
. . . .......,
lightOther
8lld
ai:llllld-*OI.MCI-.,

...

...

. ............. loft Mel__..

-~
.-~
. . . . . . . . . lllthei*lww•a'-11.

He called tor completion of the
Amherst Campus In his State of the
State addreoa. _
Two weeks tater he was reponed
"pushing State University officials to
use the re-.:11 and development
facilities at the/ State University .of
:Buffalo as a source tor creating
'olustef pi high technology' jobs In th:
Bulfalc¥ area," the Evening News
reponed •
Could· thisbe the oarne Hugh Carey
who was branded • "public enemy
number one" In terms of U/B al)d its
future just last fall?
Old all that hollering at him · on the
Main Street Campus early In November
hit home?
Is the second Carey administration to
be an ere of good feeling between
Alban and Buffalo?
Wei~ no one is willing to go quite '
ths( 1..; yet.
J
Alter all, the Carer, budget plan for
the n!'W fiscal y - ( eared by some to
embody a meat-axe approach to U/B
funding) lsn~ being brought down un!ll
February 1, and has ~~ held
unusually close1o tha chest. ( Br, this
time, we usually have ·~.Inkling , one
Cilpen H~ll official said, but ,this year,
there lsn t even a good ru_mor. )
What has been sail! In public to date,
though, has to be viewed as promising.
despite that uncertainty.
Contlnuong to allocate money lor the
full development of the Amherst
Campus Is on the best Interests of the
peor,le of New York, the Gov'!"nor saod
In h s annual report to the Legoslature In

on campus tend to have significantly
higher retention retes1 han those livin-g
off-campus or commuting from home.
"We're trying to lind out more about
the particular problems oJ those living
off-campus," tha Preslcfent said. "It
may be that we11 have to move toward
·providing more housing on-campus."
In any event, " I believe we're heeded
In the right direction,". Ketter said
optimistically. He also complained that
SUNY figures on our attrjtlon rete
erroneously Include .students whom we
do not expect to retum from one year to
J~ry.
the next-one year hospital students,
en, a . a meetln&amp;. of the State
lor ex~ple.
~=.::1\c tu~.:Jrfo su~~~~~
Ott.. matt. .: tuition and Rotary Field - cnlton
Wharton , Jr.. and said
On other matters, tha Council heard: • [concernlop the U/B Job development
•Its student mernbeo;1 Michael Pterce,
plan], "We ve talked about this before,
put U/B students on record as
and now that my lldmlnlstretion Is
opposing a tuition hi e In any manner
staning another lour years, I think we
or form;
should move along on lt. •
As a way to get started, the· News
•That three private universities have
protested to the State Board of Regents
reponed State Commea:e Commlsconcernlng U/B's plan to add a master's
~loner John •
0y11011 suggested
program In plannln'! In the SchOO! of
increased funding tor the Selllnce and
ArchltM:iure and Envoronmental Desogn;
Technology Foundation In the next
the Regents hav'e not ,rendered a final
State budget.
decision, however.
The foundation, Dyson Indicated,
could provida start-up mo"'y lor private
•That Lockwood Memorial Library at
industry to locate 1n the Buffalo area,
Amherst will be dedicated Aprll19; and
•That some $200,000 would be
making use of the scientific expenlse
available here.
·
necessary to restore the decaying west
stands at Rotary Field; the Rotary
The News was quiCk to respond

eaw,

A.

s.

~~-=t~~ ~~~.,:o~~teth:a:~:;:
demolition of the stands In question,
Preslthint Ketter said.

Contract awarded for·
Amherst
music complex
anoU.

A CCIIIImct lor
ton~lted
• A - fiRIIIICI -uded during
the w l - brelk.
·
The Stall Unlvwslty Construction
FtiiW gewoan 18,711,000-erd to the J.
f1o11Q11o1a eon.tructlon Company of
T - to build 11 four-etory music
bulking Mel alW&lt;Htory chamber hall
,...CIIIIIbiMd54,210 net equarefeet.
..,._......-~ned by Ulrich,

Is Carey.
'·mellowing'
toward U/8?.

designed by the Ulrich, Franzen firm.
Insulated tinted glass will be used lor
the windows.
Or. William E. Thomson, chairman of
the Department of Mualc, noted that the
"long-awaited mualc bulldlng and
c:hamber hall will provlda a setting lor
muato education and musical perlont~~~~~~:~~that Is appropriate lor the rtch
cu.ltonl life of the University and
Buffalo."
He added that, when ready tar
· occupancy, the two buildings will
house the most complete music facility
to be found at any of the State '
Unl-.ltyoenters.

ed/:':.'~~~ ~~~~~h~hs,!,~'nor

Wharton has
been drum-beating lor a year for a
realization of how pivotal SUNY can be
in the State's economic revltaHzatlon.
Further, the News oald, with the only

~t~~'!!t?,:~n~r,pbu~".,&lt;&gt;,:\~,!:~h:~

creative problem-solving In high technology Industry and reilaatch-or1ented
enterRrlses. As ... President Robert L.
Ketter has not'ed, only a lew places in

S:

:..'::, c~~~ (~\:
~l~eon~J
business and Industry In the expertise
of a taleoted faculty and atudent body."
Last ~. the N..,. editorial went
on, "Ketter g - this thame a welcome

~no~k ~='~~·C:. ~~~,S'

on aoalstance In buill- 1101111 o~
research and _..etlng, accounting,
finance, personnel 8lld tachnology
develdpment ...
It only 111111&lt;• - · the editorial
concluded, .,o put Untv.ralty hvman
resources to UMful COihfllunlly purposes In rej....,.tlng the State's
economy ana "-"'lng prt¥ate jobe."

~far .

Expressway

t.eytne

to be built

...... lnatftutton
~ R.
commented he Is
'most
pleued" that construction Is about to
begin. ''The new facUlty will be more
- ' a t a l o r one of thla atate'a malar
ci.tlturat inetllutlons," he lllid.
Work on
bulldlnge Is expected to
begin IIIIa month. The targated

'.o\rti and Lett. . 0.0

the

c:omn:"".,:~e!:a'!u\r.et:!:ond to be
--.led Ill
Amherst Campus In
,_., monthe. In October, the John W.
Cowper Company, tnc. began foundation ..,n. on
engt~ng buildings
which will contain lnetructlona.l 8lld
~ ~ lor the lllpertmente of
Civil Mel Mec:IWitcal Englllewlng.

the

two

0.. JIVIIICIII

curr.nt~y Ullclaowey

iiiCIII.a. . . Plllllp ~ Lab
~ llle oiOIIII A. Blane
........ tNnt bllllllng, 8lld till Samuel
Helm ......__facility, u ftll u
. . . . toad Mel parlllng 101 conatruo-

UOM.

You think theno'a 11 lot cf ..-oed

:;::"~:;'~'!!'Ling on around here
Conatructlon of the Lockport Expnosaway, planned lor mare than 10
yMra, may get underway thll aprlng,
State T,.....aportatton Commloaloner
William C. Henneoay aaklln Albany last

-·

The Federal Highway Administration
haa IIPProved a 4.1 mile a.cflon of the
road, to be daalgnatad lnl. .tate 990,
between the Youngmann Highway and
French ROlf! In An'lherat.
Thia part of the road will akin the
-tam edge of the campus and Is
dealgned to trafllc flow in aod

-..cl the campua.

Federal..,.._. - • the U.S. will
!laY. 80
01111 of an Mtlmllted 188
tlllllioD cOat of the lo181 PfOIIII;I.

'*

.

�hen heads panel comm.itted to
revitalizing public art in BuffaiQ ..
He didn't aet out to do It, but Harold
Cohen, dean of U/B's School of
Architecture and Environmental Design
(SAEO), 'has probably done mOte to
cement cument tow1&gt;11own relations
than any other member of the Unl-.lty
community.
.
Press he gets; lots of It, and it's
good-even the editorials.
First, Cohen, Whom the media -ms
to treat as a type of visionary, got SAED
Involved wlth the city and virtually
created the downtown theatre district
concept. lfs a concept that has given
credence to the notion that Buffalo has
What U takes to experience ·a
i::::~sance of civic pride and develop-

M!;.&lt;;:n~~': 1 ~.:"~~n~rfs" .!,~

Culture, which he chairs. He was
recruited for the job last summer by

M~~nG~~~~~~ilon

of the c,ommlttee, GriHin recently announced thet
1979 would be a year Which emphasizes
"new and revitalized public art for the
City of Buffalo."
21

~~~g wc~\11!':yo~ t%'lf.:'felpo~1 ~~~,!::

Francisco and Chicago.
The 21-year plan will Include utilizing
federal, state and city funds.
" Art Is too Important to leave to the
galleries or universities to teach,"
Insisted Cohen .
Art, like the theatre, focuses on
Important social Issues, and gives a
sense of lifestyle to a community,
Cohen said. He wants more art places

::;,~t~~:::J.ubl~ b~!~~lon~d ~?

resPdents can benefit. Like the grwt
cltiea of Europe famed for their outdoor
art, Buffalo, Cohen Insists, should
brjng Its art closer to the people
through constant exposure.
Paraphrasing words of the famed
architect Louis Sullivan, Cohen said, "If
you've never a rose, rou don't
·know how lovely one can be. Bringing
quality art work to the neighborhoods
wl11, he believes, contribute to their life
rhythms and enhance community pride.
The committee Is also working up an
Inventory of all parks, pl~grounds, and

~:J:"\~edd,:I::,U~ ~nt:~~re~~

Llka the coat of evarythll'ljl alae, the
coat of attending U/B and pther SUNY
unlta may be going up.

~~~:::::nc1on~~~,;,~~

Neither do admlnlatretora.
A tuition booel of $tOO hu - .
"auggeatad" by Governor CaNy; and
the 81ate Unlteralty Trust- are
expected to COIIIIder that "au~l':llon"

f.~'=-'~~~~
,..........

ty next

CaNy II _,eclly trying elso to
• .,.,..,.... the tru- ol City
Unlweralty to lmpoaa a almllw l " " ' on their 1!10,000 atuelenta, raporta ano.
Willie the .SUNY Trvat- are the
wt1o muat act..,ly ralaa lha tall far
attendance. the OcMmor'e "auggeetlon" could be built Into hla budget far
the coming ,_., thua putting the onua
on the T - toeleofda...,.. to "cut"
the _..... the! will be mlaalng If they
don~ go along.
Tuition lor 11W1Y ~ Ueed
8iiiCiualwl)' to ~ SUNY oon8lnlctlon - . . but In ,.... a
poftlon 1W1 .,_, dhlarted ft) SUNY
opnllonL
N llllllftMII, the hllre would go Into
. . . . ..... the 1I'I'NO,... 01*11 nax1

ahowa that · for awry $100 ralae In
college and unlveralty tultiona, ~.5 per
cent teWilr at.m.rta attend. In liGht of
U/B'a ~attrition problema, Pterc'e
aafd, It ls.cl- any auch hike would be
. detrimental to the lnatllutlon as well ee
to students.

211 par OMI drop
He aafd that after the 1878 SUNY
tuition 1~. there was a 211 per cent
drop In atudenla from l o - Income
lamlllaa.
•
The atudenta of this Un._.lg.;:
opp6eed to any lllka,

==

up-grading program.

New apol for Dmd
In addition, It will soon begin to
search aut a more appropriate location
for the bronze replica of Michelangelo's David, • now located In an
unappealing alta near Delaware Lake, a
site made baSicall~~lble by lha
Intrusion of the
a Expreeawa.fiie committee also. lntenda to war1&lt;
wltlllhe Chamber of Commerce to find
a flltlnP. location for the .atatua of Gen'.
Pulaak , a gift to the people of the
United Statee from Poland. A poealblllty exlata that the statue may be
placed In one of the city's predominantly Pollah nelghbomooda.

r=

~.:.
=~
ago~th~
=~.=-lha
State-· ec.n.
.......
~

lnelllullona WOIIId
IIMIY ..... ......, 1 - In tNir

111111 the

v-.
memo.., :.r::-•111

~c:::r-~
...................
_........
A~Mny,

K8ltlr IIIII, 8lld "'lllllle

OINr-lft-~"'SwiH
...... In ...... ~~-"'

~ayeer
..,~tulllon
....,_and..,...._
a . - .... OoiiOe .........,.. tor....-............. .....
........... .....
AabartW.,._.....'=Ift....._..
Millen.
....

and 11100

. . . . . . . ~lllnl and

-

............. lhldllll~
to . . ·uta Counoif, IIIII 81 lalt

~

Counoll ...... thai

~

Tulllon ~ ~ llld.

~~~~-~JI»rL'\,...

8llcl

lle'd

.....,

. . . . . 0# .......

to

-

at8111tllild.

tuitiOn

m;=.anJ ~rc:'.~=:w:d•.o give
It was both a constructMI and a
politically pragmatic move, noted
Cohen.

f~~ ?~s h~ :J'~fJ.~~~~-e;:::,l!•=

~'!.~f~~=t=u~fd,b~~~lng:r

cent of construction costs will be aet
aside for this purpose.
Asked what will happen to the
committee's wort&lt; when and If the
Griffin administration should loae
control of City Hall, Colien responded
thet the panel has 1KI!Idered that
eventuality and plans to•epproach the
Common Councllln-abo\tt''8 year with a

proposal to create,' by statute, a

permanent City Arts Commission.

co~~~~e~'l"!~\ 1g~~f W.~~'!ts ~

the area along with proml~l citizens
and ex-officio members. from the

=~~~~'!:'·~roup

W:

advisory boards lnvo'-1 w'lt'll ¥artoUI
aspectS' of the arta .,.,d cuii!Jre 1jpoll •
sculpture, mualc and parlla. .;;

No-.laM

•

As chair of the mayor's conltnlltee,
Cohen admitted thara ano times wllen
Individuals try to put political pNaure

~':.t.hl: ~~=~~h~~;

:.=::,-,;

he ever makes Ia to deley Implement•
tion of an Idee. He compromlhls beliefs.
To Insure against decisions "bv whim
or personal flat," Cohen wants fo keep
the business of the committee u open
and democratic u
poaalble; he
demands that II go through proper
procedural cll.,.,nela l*&lt;&gt;te .,.,Y decisions ano reachad.
In hard fica! tlmee auch u tMee,
Cohen raaJIHa tllaiiOIM_I*IPie_
bound to oppoee uee.ol publiC lvndll tar
the arts and cuflura. He '-Ia, " - ·
tllaltheoomm~le~;

tllaiiiWI muet ,_..I

:'1:.1111• well •

=~~~~

to.,.

Cohen II OOIWIIIOid thll any - . y
the commlltee epencla lllould be ..-..cl
u.,., "lrwwtll*ll In the culllnl 1vt1n
of Buffelo,"- tllall1 bound to llflng
lmmeuufllble di'IICiencla.
-.18

·High energy bills could result
In cuts elsewhere, Ketter warns

Pnaaldent Robart l . Ketter quoted In tha Courler-Exp-• • •
viewing lha hlka • "anothar lndiCIIIIon
• c.noteaa uee of ulllltlee on campua
that New YOI1c 8tllla w....ta to be noncompetitive with the , . . of the _
..
can rwult In funding cutbaclca far
In twma of public education. New YOI1c
academic and other - · Preelclant
alfeady hu the hlgheat public tultlona
Robart L Katt• w.nec1 lha cempua
oornmuntty thla .....,,
In the Milan.
UtiHty 00e1t at U/B will appiQMh II
Plrtty public and prhate
mUIIon thll
ICe!* 1IIIIOft.l In a
tultlona to be a dtlvlng lcNoe In
New YOI1c ~ Ketter told lha U/B
adnilnl8lrlolala.
Nlartyl&amp;m
. oftheiOIII.IINIIIIINd
tar eteclrlcll . . . , oa8le .. Amlint.
with

=::;

v-.

One I* for art
.
Before creation of the committee, the

d::ft'1.r~dm

;he committee will
develop a 21-year public arts plan to
complement the cultural heritage and
existing art worl&lt;a In the city. The plan
will be comprehensive, Cohen relayed,

WilfCarey's 'wish'
be Trustees' command?··

Also on I'IICOII1mendatlon of the
committee, Griffin has decided to gMI
the Q&lt;Hh811d for crwtion of a $100,000
sculpture for the City Court building,
providing a model for the eculpture Ia
favorably recehood by the Common
Council, the committee and himMif.
Although half the money far the
sculpture and modalis being fynded by
the National Endowment far the Arta,
Griffin vetoed the project teat
claiming that ihe city couldn~ alford It
and that the money ahould be ue8d to
repelr structural problems In the new
City Court building.
The mayor's reveraa1 •on the Importance of art work In the city hu come
about, at 1eaat In pert, ~ of the
committee's Influence at City Hell.
Griffin, no neophyte politician, simply
realized, said Coheti , that the likelihood
of makl ~ a political laux paa would

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

·bi&lt;G~~.-.......-.

tar lilrtal - - - of • - - tn~~~e811da....,..tao.._IICII1ft

I

�Jonuory 11. 1871

4

PharmacokineticS
Pharmacy gets $2 million grant
to establish a cent-er for studies
In field pioneered by Gerhard levy
The Scllool of PlwmiiC}I hall been
rwned u the ette of a $2 million
..-ell center for lntenaiYitlltldlee on
drug lm.nctlon with the body.
The , _ Cllnic81 -.ookinetic&amp;

r:-..:br..:.l~r=

lotldal SclenoM (NIGMS), will be
•ciiNc*d ~Dr. Gerhard Le¥y, a plo,....
In the field of plwmeCOklnellca.
Aldlna In the .norta will be members
of tile IJIB ph8rmaeeutlca faculty, Dr.
Ho-Leung Fung 1 Dr. William J. Jusko,
Dr. o.vld Lalu and Dr. Jetome

~ cent• Ia one oflua than a
dozlen In the nation to deal specifically
With the pharmacology and toxicology
of drugs.
The cent• Ia an outgrowth of the
_...._ that plllenta absorb, metabolize and excrete moat medications at
markedly dlffwent rates due lo many
factors auch u the plltenrs age, sex,
genetic mekeup, diet, smoking habits,
i l l - and prior or concomitant use of
othW druga, Or. Levy JJxpialned.

='~'l.lchoth.,:, ~~~ t~=~

pn&gt;per doallges of vartoua classes of
drugs will be a.JNjor goal of center

..-ell.
Although medications are dispensed

.

:=.n,~~ho!.~ il~n=t~~=~

be lndlvlduallzad to achleYe optimum
therapeutic benefits to the patient with
minimum aide effacta.
Studies wilt be conducted not only at
the School oF-Pharmacy's facilities at
Amhwlt bulya'l.o at clinical pharmacoklnatlca •laboratories at Millard
Fillmore, Chlt-·a and Buffalo Genwal hoapltals, jointly opwated by the
UIB Depertment "Of Pharmaceutics and
the ~lYe lnatltutlons. A large
numb.- of phyaiCI- at theee hoapltals
will pwtlclpele In .--ell IICIIvttlea at
the cent.-.
Dr. DMiel Murray, dean of the Scllool
of P~, noted that Buffalo Ia a

==

=:!,~ c:r.r:=..~
'*-

=

:C~c~-·;;:nt,:e~. ~nt~~~

•

., ...... u.,

• •

-.-IFFt"•"''"•--'*"--Conlor
The Cllnic81 _~

c.ne. II the BUNY-Bulfalo 8chool of

~~on~
n:r:o-:.r::.~-:..=

...

Important biomedical probletna
The Clinical Pharmacokinetics Center
Will be a locus of Intensive health
care-ori ented r.-ch and teaching.
We will be addressing Important
biomedical problems, ranging from
fundamental investigations of mechanIsms of drug action and disposition In
experimental animals to clinical studies
that are designed lo Improve the
therapeutic efficacy and minimize the
toxic effects of Important and widely

u~~~f:tCat research Is not "expertmentation" In the usual sense. Rather,

~on~{1~~~nJ':'i:ri~ 'I~Y~~t';,'ls:.:

:whl~ey
ft lff~:!~J~~t~!t~~n~i
::,;r,;
receive in the context of an

appropriate therapeutic regimen prascrlbed by physicians on the staff of
University-affiliated hospitals.
·
Using high!¥ sophisticated analytical
methodology, we will be able to
measure the concentrations or these
drugs In body fluids and we will
determine the relationsh ip of changes
In these concentrations to the therapeutic response and to the occurrence
of adverse eflec.ts.
Mathematical analysts of these data
. .will permit us to suggest to physicians
certain changes of drug dosage and
frequency of drug edmtnlstratlon which
may Improve drug efficacy and prevent
or minimize adverse effects.
These capabilities are available In
only a very few major health centers In
this country and we will provide them at
no coat to the petlent.
·

from their own governments.

Between 20 and 30 students In the
Department are pre-doctoral students
and about one-half of these will be
engaged In research under Center
auspices. About 10 undergraduate
pharmacy students serve as part-time
research assistants during the school
year and lull-time during the summer.
All faculty members associated with the
Center are engaged In undergnilluate
teaching and represent a valuable and
Important educational resource.
Contributions to the economy
The Clinical Pharmacokinetics Center
will make a modest but slgnlllcant
contrlb~tlon to the eeonomy of our
region, both directly and Indirectly .. Its
direct payroll will be about $200,000 per
year. In eddltlon, It will contribute
about $100,000 annually to the
University for services and edmlnlstratlve expenses. A substantial number of
postdoctoral traJriees with fellowships
from the U.S. and foreign governments
will bring additional financial resources
to the area. Several large pharmaceutical houses have been attracted by the
quality of our staff and facilities and ant
funding · special studies that we
consider to be-of scientific and societal

pharmacokinetics

tile! ht.-lorically It Ia a logical location
- . e Dr. Lavy eetabllahed the
natlon'a flrat pharmacokiMIIca labor·
etory '*-In 11182.
"Or. Lavy and hia late cotlelgue, Dr.
EM NeiiOII, _ . e.ly ...,... In the
growt11 of the appltcatlon of pharmaColdnetlc principia In therllpy," Dr.

MwrayMkl.

and from other unlveratitea judged our
contributions and progress as "outstanding." They stated that the research
proJects that we propose to undertake
durlng the next 5 years "will
undoubtedly gl¥11 rise to Improved drug
therapy" and gave their " enthusiastic
approval" to U.S. Government financial
support lor a major extension of our
.
program to a Center.

A '/::tll'nrc:fm:.macoklnetlca Center
Ia also a training ground for young
clinical scientists. Our Department ol
f'harmJceutica and the Center have
attracted trat,._ from all over the
world. We h - -teamed pharmaceL&gt;tical eclentlats, ptwmacologlats and
= i c l - u post-doctoral trainees

sl~~~'f.l::l~a; Institutes of Healtt. have
recently announced ·a nymber of
additional grants to members of the
Depertment lor studies of teed
Intoxication (a problem · affecting

Sweden~=·· ~~· ,.::,'f'~"J.:
way, Finland, Japan, Taiwan, India,

Thailand, Australia, New lealand ...,d
other countrlee. These Individuals and
their 1-lllea h - enrlclled the life of
our community. Many of them have
been aupported by apeclal fellOwships

.

~·~~~~~.)~lldJ:...~p~~~dv~7t,~

proved methods lor the treatment of
accidental poisoning by . drugs, and

investigations of factors affecting the
Pharmacokinetics of certain antilnllammatory agents, among other
projects. We have beCOme one of tho
most ectlve drug research groups In the
country and I believe thai this will have
an lncrealitngly positive economic
effect on the Gnaater Buffalo area.
An Important leeiOII
There Ia an Important lesson to be
teamed from these developments. It Is
perhaps best summarized In a recent
statement by Or. Alden N .. Haffner, the
new acting assoetate chancellor lor
health sciences of SUNY( "I heve to
point out to all concerned - tire
Legislature, the Stale Division ol the
Budget and to lh• people who sha~
pubf/c pollcr,- that quality baglns wtth
quality. Un ess - give a program of
anrlchmMt, ww w/1/ not hiJve enriched
results. Even as a . public Institution,
SUNY must haY!t a commitment to
quality as well as to dlwralty. •
Without that Initial enrichment

~~ul~

:\a::=:r.o~l~~~

government end oth• support. Conversely, without adequate State support
for our academic miNion, we will not
now continue to thrive.
The new Clinical Pharmacokinetics
Center at the SUNY -Buffalo School of
Pharmacy will mal\• significant contributions to the health sciences, to
health care, to eduellllon and to tho
economy of our regtoo If t he School of
Pharmacy remalna a atrong and vibrant
Institution. We hope that thle will be
racognlzad by the l..teratllp of our
Unlveralty and by the policy makers of
the State of New York.

=.....
....-_:::gs.:r
....... -"' Roswell researcher suggests Vitamin A
..,_....
_......_IICIICI., .._..._....... may prove important in eancer prevention
=.ill.....
.,_Carin
-

--.amp.

-=. ==
~Ion

ol

- - - lllliledlolne 8nd by the

ola..........., .... bytheFeder81
cao.-t for .............. of
-CIInlaM~Cinter.

---

comparable to the " first signs"

cancer.

VItamin "A" may pnMI lmportal)t In
.a1v1na mankind's cancer problems.
Dr. JohnS. a.m.m, whoee expertiH
. . In tile flelcl ol p-ttve
piWnlaiOOIOCW, haa been experimenting

:.~"~n-:. ~:"~tt'::

=· .,_

haa aclllewecl so fw In controlled
lllborllory - · he reported In an
~ too pw cent

of

The Vitamin " A" used In these teals,

=.r.,~~r:f~~tcr~·.~, ~~e::;

noted that natural VItamin "A" was

=top~l~~xl~ ~:~o~~

natural form exlataln body cella.
Bertram· also cautioned the public
agalnat uatng natural VItamin "A"
becauH ol Ita toxic effiiCie.

~of~Thera­

NotaCUN
The VItamin "A • appt1Mch Ia not
lntanded u
a CUte, Bertram · emphasized, but rather a ail attempt. to
.,....,.m __.cella from 'develOping In
epithelial tlaue, whlc:;h lnctudee the
akin and the cellul• Hnlng of Internal

- " " . . . . . ln"\hjuiJon,

-•onn

An

_._

prof-

In

the
~t
of PllamlaCOIOgy and
~ BwiiWI'I oondiiCia hie
IIIII ·. II " - - I PM! lolemonat
lnllltute, . . . . lie Ia .., - " " •
- " " acilntlat In the

aliidol. Tile --funded lnatltute Ia
bneol . . mo.t hlallly ~-­

have reported euccesa In preventing
cancer from d-'oplng In CJI'Cinogenexpoaed 1-&lt;ify animal• by 4raatlng
them with aynthetlc VItamin "A".
Bertram said t h - teats Indicate an
offectl-.ess of eo to 70 pw cent.
Through .--ell, Bertram ex·
pl!llned, a altntllll'lly of symptoms
between pre-maliGnant conditions and
VItamin "A" deficiency wu discovered .
It wu this diSC0¥8&lt;)', he ~urther

~'tnt::,al tt:!~~edo:h~ ~tr::s~
Vitamin " A" during can~ premallgtlant pheee.

Ueed Hu llwuHn

Sh0111d the syntlletlc VItamin " A"

~ become an-ecc:epted method

ol P-oling cancer, Bertram ~ed •.

counby " - .._.. clinical trillle In
"'llgh rill&lt;'" 10 detlorml.. the
.n.ct...,_ oi~Jft!Mtlc VI~ "A"

the ~t probebly would biiCOme a
lifetime pettwn, much like the uae of
lnaulln by dl-lc plllenta. The goal
would be to maiAtaln a suffiCient supply
of VItamin "A" In body cella which
othllrwlee mtaht beOCime malignant.
A natl¥11 of England, a..tiWI'I MnMid
hla Ph.D. from the Un-.lty of

•-GINo•. 11eol ..........
..,.,

..-IIMII Willi U/B and Aclewell Park
for llllout .........

orc:....eeldaynthetlcVItamln "A" in
haa been fOund effecthte In

~~==-=-~~~

-·

" lwltlng . .
Other u.a.

--Dfl-·

..........

U....Hehaabeen

�. . .u... .

Faculty
They're important in improving retention
rates among U/.B stud~nts, report says;
~ntire campus needs behavior transplant'
The Unl-sity-Wlde Study Group on
Attrition and Retention sent President
Ketter a mid-December progress report
which recommended, among other
-thlnga, exit Interviews and follow-up
questionnaires for withdrawing students; relnstltutlon of mid-term grade
reports to detect lhose students who
may be In academic jeopardy; development of )"ear-round sporting activities,
Such· as jogging tralls and bicycle
paths; and a centralized Student Union
for the Amtferat C8mpus.
The 32-member Study Group, composed of faculty, staff and a good
mixture of students, was formed last
Februar)v In an attempt to help the
Unl-slty come to grips with growing
attritlonfretention problems. It was the
first such body established within
SUNY to begin exploring the drop-out
phenomenon.
The group Is chaired. by Student
Affaire Vice President Rl~d Slggel:

advisement, good teaching, or informal
contacts," and that the University
"develop ways ln which faculty can
become more Involved with students. tt

Recrutlon, umce MCI algne.
Other recommendations forwarded to
Ketter from the Study Group are that:
•the University "encourage application lor action-oriented research grants
to. Identify policies and practices
designed to aid In student retention;" •
•a committee be formed to deVelop

_ E:'~le:~o r:r:~lo~~~e~~~~tl~.::posslbilltles;"
•
•the President "make special representations t.t budget .hearfngs" to
maintain support for service-oriented .

~as ~~~~a~~e?"u!',sgll'1;a~l:'=~

among others;

Behllwlor modification needed
In an earlier preliminary report sent to
the President, the Study Group noted
tbat "real progress" In -combatting the
problem ls likely to be " slow and
difficult," since it Involves modification
of "strongly-entrenched behavior and
attitudes" of the Unl-slty community
which may contrlbuq, to student
withdrawal. Abrupt or bondescendlng
treatment was listed as one example.
"A cohesive UfB community will only
be achieved if students, staff and
faculty realize the Importance of
recognizing each other as Individuals,
the development of a cooperative
atmosphere among all community
members, and the_ need to .be more
=·~=~tf.:':Odca:~pa with various

•the clarity of . signs be .Improved,
especially on the Amherst Campus, and
that the number and quality of signs
directln~ people to administrative and
academoc offices be Increased ;
•such annual events as a "Spring
Day" or " Spring Fest" be Instituted ind
held at the Amherst Campus, so
faculty, students' and staff can l)el more
of an opportl.lll\- to Interact with each
other as a com,.tonlty.
A "Spring Clean-Up" of the campus
Involving the entire University community was also suggested, as was a
policy under which student representatives and staff from the residence halls
• and maintenance would meet to
"consider ways In which routine
custodial respons ibilities can be
assumed more easily by reslllents
themselves."
The Study Group endorsed the
concept " of eJq&gt;anded business hours
to meet the unique needs of all

d!'::e~~~:= .~r~=u'~a~

"staggered office hours" tor student

kow.

·

Important - o n which we must begin
to build."

=

·-

'Distinguished.' professor
is scholar and activist"
U/B's newest "distinguished professor'' Is a scholar of Eunopean
.Intellectual. history an't1&lt;1 human rights
activist with a record of accompOshment spanning three decades.

s~~r,~~~bt.; :::: ~'l!~~~~~·sr.::er~

December, Dr. Georg G. lggera is
currently on leave from the Department

~".:.?? ~=· ~e :~e s~'::!~'/.~..A~
Institute for

~=:~:~~~~P...'~::,s;~o:.,~~W;;:,'~~

History

In .Gottlngen,

~Efu'fiato brlefl; during the sernestilr

~~a:Pt~!s~~~~t i'~f..::~:: r~
,'[,.,he
1
schedule a two-hour block of time
. ~'/:c,:,r.::~~e:!td ~~ 1~ ~':rllngas,.o!
F8CUity cooperatloil lnlporWII
during the week which could be
"on the 18th century historian and the
The l&gt;eceinber report to Ketter, along
exclusively deVoted to student-faculty
beginning of history as a pnofesslonal
contacts.
with a summary report laaued by the
life discipline In that century."
Aocwatadaffnlliono
group lut week, emphulzed the
He Is, he Indicated, " particularly
Importance of faculty In assisting
In eddltlon, the gnoup felt positively
Interested In dealing with historical
writing u a science In the context of a
::~::.t p=r~·IOTS~O;~r~~~
about the role the University's new
Institutional Studies Office can play In
attrition ;1 evl~ent when faculty ere
on the
focusing efforts to combat attrition and
available to otudenta for consultation
question of the political Implications of
and contact outside the classroom
retention pnoblems. In order to Improve
historical writing, moat notably In his
situation . One study noted that "some
UfB'a situation, tbe group urged tbat
book, The German Conception of
the attrition rate hare be "accurately
contact with a ltoCulty member who
In which he discusses the
cares" aucceedtt In nsduclng the
:,::::r~~~d;:,~~~~s the reasons for _ History,
oolltlcal function of historical studies in
dro.,:.O..t rata, while a study at Syracuse
"We need 10 know the a&lt;eas In which
Germany In the 19th and .20th centorles.
concluded that "thnsa personal conttoCts
the Institution Is successful and where
~ ~= f=~¥. ~~:.:~lcantiy
11 needs Improvement; collecting of
Nazlldeology .
such lnformatlor., In Itself, represents a
wl'i::at ,:tu~:iO:P!~rs a~?:~es "d:J
~if:!:J ~~~Yinct~~. 1 ~cr::J
commlt.ment both to . ~hange an.d
scholarship which helped prepare the
retention -..s to be a "likely indicator
lnstitutoonallmprovement.
Nazi Ideology." First published In 1968,
The gnoup nacommended that each
of better classroom teaching, counselthe book has been through ttvM
lng and IJIMI'Ingful out-of-clue axacademic department be responsible
revisions, the latest one released In
pert-.·
lor d-loplag Individual atudent
1976.
The U/B summary report ~eel retention P!OQ,.,.o.
·His o\her writings have Included The
our "faculty be reoognlzed tor k
The group's final report Is due In
g
mld..June.
·
students In achool, whathllf

":!:•·

(j~~~so m~~gj

so:'~~::~~~~~~~~~a~~!~&lt;lJrV:ty

1

1

~~lfos:;hy ~~~~t:':''l.,nVg;:,on~:!~

Complaints about lounge use·
lead to new policy at·Ellicott
Bacauae ol complaints recelved from
-loua groupe eoul the condition of
Elllcott'a plaza '-1 lounges after
partlaa, the un-.lty Housfng Office
hu propoeed that pre- and post-party
lnapectlona take pleca to =
-etatua and ~ r_or possible
Ol-lsftoCtlon will\ lounge condl·
tiona _,.. to a heed a few Weeks ago
-Rachel
College wu forced
toCMC:ela - . d dinner becauee the
lOUnge tiler , _ , . , wu left In a
lhabby stale after a party the night

c.aon

....__

AccordinG to llfOPOMd new gut•

. . ., Wllldi must .till be -lawed by
. . -..-.~ Council the
~. a pnHIIapectlon wtfJ.__.

..... 11e1o&lt;e • function

....... •

by •

~

IWiaident advisor, " tha
IIIII tbl room Ia In an

::S.l:"--'Ilion .

lnfoimMion
will be

~.,.
. .a~P~C~~~tonn
- · · condition
...,...
.

A post-lnspac11on, arranged In
advance, will be completed altar user

p~P.",:~;,:': .~~"~~;c::,~~~~~

or R.A. and returned to Custodial

~cesc~~~~P~~r~;.., oo

completed by noon of the day following
an event.
Custodial Servlcell will do weekday

ln~f':~~.. are found, Custodial
Services will determine coats of r.pelra.
The bill will go dlnactly to the 1'8M1VIng
group. When a lounge Is not formally
'-vee!, billa for damaoge will be 118111

~n~=~~ ":".&amp; ~~::

billa will IMir lounge prhfllagec
....aMd.
Pre- and P081-plfty ln81)8Ctl0i1 will
Include checking lha ConditiOn of light
ffrturM, fumlt.n, wlndowa, l'llllnga,
carpets, bellltoom lactlltl", and
general ct...tlnwa .

.

Chaplttr In the Intellectual History of
Tofal/lar/an/sm), Leopold von Ranlle:
The Theory and Practice of History,
which he edited with Konrad von
Moltke, formerly of UfB, and New
Directions in European Historiography.
lggera wu back In the U.s. o - the
break to participate on a ~anel In San
Francisco at the annual maetlng of the
American H lltorlcat AISOClatlon. The
panel wu titled " Redlcal Hlatorlo-

. Pn:,::;,ar~~:.• Society: An

Clllllrlglll8
.
lggera and his wile, Wilma · Abeles
lggers, taught at predominantly blaCk
unlversllles In the South during the
1850&amp; and -'tlt, 18110a (tnom 1~7 at

:\,.,::ms'rll57 cr~'TS: ~u~~~=

Unl..,.lty In New Oflewls). •t wa very
milch lnvohed In r.- ..Wione In the
South durtng tile Civil Rlllhta ~
ment," he IKIIIad, "and r atilt ,._
llnka to tbl South. • While at Phlt.ncler
Smith, ... helped ~ the e.nciiMrto.
~rwgation the Uttla
Rock ~I bo.nl wlilla chlllmwl of
that cttya NAACP.
Antvtng at U/8 In 11186, 1aaara
Introduced the concept of twvlnQlllle

-'1181

University assist on .. or more predominantly black Institutions. For live
years, he was chairman of.a committee
which set policy for .and supervised ·
cooperative arrangements'between U/B
and Philander Smith and..other, similar
colleges; t~e aim was loo,belp lmpnove
the quality and effect"""eas of these
Institutions.
•
lggers has also been· active on the
executive board and on the education
committee of the Buffalo Branch of the
NAACP.
~

Draft cou....,lng

pr:a~;;,e;'~-:'"OC:.~': ~~~~-

uals who founded the Draft CouiiMIIng

f:'~~~::~~:o~~- to

"We left that the kind of co.-flog
we could do would be pollticatlll more
effective than wbat the draft realatanca

::'.':.

1\:f'"o!';'/::

tg~~p,;,:p:
told Mike
·W'e fell It wu poas1C1e lor people to
object to the war and the dralt by
staying here [rather than fleeing to
Canada], and without neoesurtly going
to fall," lggera explained to Healy.
"We were qu"e wlllln~ to counsel

l:i~~~~~.':';J~I'I::r~":,~~~

we generally did wu to advlae peopla to
comply with the draft law up to lha
F,~'n~l~c!,~ could no longer do ao
"So some ·men JPutd topply for
conaclentloua objecllor atatua, go
through a physlce!J - ' tor Induction,
and then rafUM lntluotlon," he uld to
HeaiiJ.

"

• I bo

,

Even before the elld of the drlllt and
the Vietnam War, the counaell!!ll effort
.was broadened Into a Military COunaellng Ceqler. The work oontlnUM, now
addressing a variety of DfObleml
encountensd by Individuals alraedy In
the mllltary: problema ol being AWOL,
attempts to gat dlac:hargee u~.
etc.

~ f.::S ~=·u~u:o''l~
~~· he ~ad during hls ¥lalt

A graduate of the Unlverafty of

~~dw..::'bi~~~~D. ~

11151, tggera hU atao taught all
Aooaewlt and Tulane unt...ltlea.
He lo aMtlve of Hamburg , Germany.

Ohio State has
saved millions
Ohio State Unt..,.lty'o energy
con-ton program has aaved an
eetlmalad Sto.4 million In utiHty billa
during the pat fhoe:y.ara, -.ling to

Thomu 8.

Snlllli; uaoclale vlca

pqeldent for physical factllllea. Tbl
con-ion effOrts · wtolch coat
aome $2.3 million through 1176-77 " - returned about $4.46 for ...,-y
doHarapent on the program,bl Uld .

�.......

Jlnuary11,1178

From Revolution t

VIEWPOINTS

moved to the right , but rather that they have ceased, at leas{

1o&lt; the presen~ acting on their political views .
Campus alllludei do not seem to have dramatically
changed since the 1960s. As S.M. l..ipset has pointed out,

a, Plollp G. AIIIKh
nw ~wllh ....-..... judcallon, haw 1&gt;oen

c:olod a pelod ol ~on the Amollcon r.ampus. \Muolly
al olh polllcalcagw-• wblch llounohe4 during the
Slda bow cliooppoarad, and low , _ groups have taken
. . . ploco. Thoro - . boen nlatlvoly ' - ._..,""",.or~ . and sludent energies
to
.... In fiOI\1&gt;0IIIIcel ~. At IMtl oome ol the·~·
ol opothy ... rollecllon ol the lock ol tnteral ol the . . ...... In tludent alliin - elpldaly In c:ontnllt to their
~cUing tho IIIIo 1960s. I do J101 cla1m thai
- . . 1 1 at a~ lewl, but the campuMS are not entiroly
ciOII&lt;*I ol pollical~ or~ ellber. For
eumple. In 1976, 18.6 per cent ol und"'!Jl'duat..
..-..t thai they had engaged In"""" form of actlvllm.
With tho ~ and dlooppeorance of t~ SDS as a
~ movement, there was a general ~eement
omong mony radicals that organlzational efforts should bo
IJoood - · such .. In the worldng claJo Of the trade
...- ~ nw _ .. tt-. argued , had not
JIIO'I'Od to bo on oliedtve tpringboard to revolution . N. least
In ol continuing , ~ commlted radical
IIUdent lJOUPS, the campus roverted to a political level no1
..,... the 1950s, prior to the em'Orgence of a Iorge ocale
IIUdent mowmont. Eve1 the tradlt!onally moot aatve
campuMS, ouch • the UntvmHy of California at Berl&lt;eley,
Havard, the Unlwnlty oi'OUcago, and others, had only a
low small, nlatlvoly lnadtve and usually weak otudent
polttk:al orgontzationl functioning. Most Amerlcan unlver·

stuaents were radlcallzed during the Sixties, and their politics
have remained .someWhat to the left o1 the American rx&gt;litlc.al
spectrum. In 1977-8, lor ex8mple, 27 per cent of coUege
and univenlty freshmen reported that they considered
themselvestiberalorra~whileonly 16.4percent labelled

ooem

-

had no functioning political orgontzations at

•

- · had doclnad and tho mMS media were no
""-asuch-...dln.,._lllaln. Thus ; the~ ·
olh
clapr!ved ol much ollll

lladonr....r.m

s.v..--

A,..,..,....,
tho .......

porlod

-...,dttv.

---a

In
tradllonol ol lofllt llluclont .adlvllm and
_ _ . . . ..,.._, the . , . _ pelod II o portlcuJarty
loomn ana. Some Vlllgol cl the "old loft" lludent 1J0UPS

... - a n d ....._.,.

strong poltlical
---amaland'-otlny

......._
- - - . .....- by • polttlcal
. . . . . . . . . - • ~-doa101111iatiol11 oond to
lie .... aDd no ongplng . , . . . _ or mowm..-nt . .
~.

more dominant in four~year institutions and In universities ,
the prestige segments of the poll·secondary educational
system . When queried on spedftc social questions, such as
the use of marijuana, abortion , and similar l.ssues 1 students
were even more dramoticAily to t~ left of the general
population. Students have unquestionably, remained llberol
to radical on questions of Ufesty~ and culture. They have ,
however, moved .somewhaL to .the right on poUtlcal
question$. although they are still vary much In the liberal
daection. Politics, In general, hav.e become a less Important
concern of American students during the Seventies .

an.

Spondk:.a1118m
Daple t~ decline of the -bllshed political """"'ments
o1 t~ Sixks, has boon .some sporadic ~ In
oomeoollegesand ti'niwnltles. While nellberthe numbers of
demonmwlons nor their mllftancy can compare to the
Slxks. th- effOrts in9Jcate that political consclousnes on
campus is not entirtly absent , and that dramatic Issues can
mobllloo students. Demonstrations In 1977 at Kent State
Unlvmlfy protesting the proposed construction of a
gymnasium at the site ol the 1972 shootings resuhed In the
meot of almost 200 students. Students In Callfomla and In
aewrol other parts of the United States he"" protested
ogo1ns1 American policy In Southern Africa In gen«al and
against the lnvestmont polic:les of unlwnltles In pa~ar .
Thea demonatrlitions also resuhed In several hundred
· but led 1o n()uung m~ment and were con8ned to
a omoll numbor olcompuou.
1M--;:;;.;:;;-media haw not pOJd much aHentlon tb local
and this has helped to limit Its national
have been dlverae, the events 'PQ&lt;8dic
unpredtcublo, and the ocope ol dernonstra. . . . ~ llgnlflcandy omaU.r than was the
Sbdies. 1M Kent State demonotnltionl were
llllllonll media but the South Afrtco protests
detptte arrests. And ·other
, such • the subotandal but ulan&gt;elely
olloots by lhldonts at the City Univentty of New
Von 1D frae In the face ol fiscal aio1s. wore
honlly ropodOd II aD. 1M tmemal communications
...,_. ti tho tludent mowmen~ except lor. campus

I

themselves conservatiVe. Uberelt- and radkels were even

.

'Established student
governments have
assumed a greater role'
Seventies, there Is no q~estlon but that the political
consdo\lsnes.s and the power of student governments has
been enhanced. Allhougii'Student _.,meet bOdla are
elected by stud!"'ts lr1 open elections, they have not
traditionally had much rank·and·lile Input. This trend
continues - and both the elections and the other activities ol
student govemmenl5 are. not taken very oeriously on

campus.

...,

Na_. etudent.OI'pblratlooa
.
Al the otate and n-.al levels, student government
organizations have been active . The U.S . Nanonal Student
Aslodadon (NSA), which almost collopsed alter its links to
the OA were expooed In 1967, managed to stay In existence
and moved lllgnlficandy to the left . b took a strong anti·war
peo1t1on In the late Sbcties, and continues to be well to the left
ol t~ general Amerlcan 'OIUdent population. 115 annual
national ~ have conslstendy taken liberal or radical
positions on dvll right5 , drug legalizadon, and on other
topics. The NSA never had much Impact on the local
campus, and tt remains vtrtually unknown to most students.
Student governments have 'aloo engoged In lobbying

efforts to proted

•ud~t

Interests. These student lobbies

have been active in state capttals and recendy at the federal
goYemment level. States such as New York and California
haw boon ospeclaJiy active In this area . Student lobbying
orgoniiBtions In lheae states luwe hlled lawyen and
prolaolonal staff, and In general ha"" brought student Issues
to the atlention olle9slators and government officials. The
lobbioo haw boon ..,.clally concerned with ·financial
questions and - o f student rights. TI&gt;-Iobbying efforts
have kopt -al/'from ideological issues. As In the case of the
NSA, t~ student lobbies are generally little known on the
CMnpuMS.

Very recendy, the National Student Assocladon and the
National Student Lobby, the main national group
coordinooing lobbying efforts, have formally merged Into one
notional orgonlaatlon. Thlo new WouP has af!lllalions &amp;om
about 360 colloges onJ unlwnltla ~ n&lt;lt a very lmpraolve
numbor *'&lt;e- are more than 1,000 sucla lnstllunons In
the Unlad Stata. Bull II the lirot dme In a number of years
-~~ • Nllionolly coordinated student orgoniz.lfion.

eo.-v- lludonl ...._._ have boon lorgely
clgnor..t· - -but they 'have
by the .....,...
ollltudont lldlvilm,
boon ,..,. hom to dme. Slgnlftcontly, American
. . . . . _ llUdonl _ , , . have never achieved. the
OCIIII'INrparts, ....... lboy
have boon_.... ......... the poll. During the 1~
.......... _ _ otud.nl_ - - I n
Unltad S.... ond *-ned to ..U the Nallonol

p - . u cl lholr Euoopun

-_.......................... __ _.___
---... -

Stuclont " - · -.lly ...... ~ . Groupo . .
F...tom - . t - moc1to

.,. v- ~ b

...,

..,

n.. ,....-. .............
11511 ......... ...........
............ .--.
.............
...........
......... _..."'.._

oddly.

II

no-- -""

Sadllp ., -~

• . _ . . . _ ............ )tullll. lt
~

Non·poHtlcal currento
Several campus currents which are not directly relaled to
actiVism deserve attention and cen only be mentioned here .
Religiou~ groups have had a significant revival In recent
year.;, and have had some Impact on students. While the
established Protestant , Catholic. and Jewish groups hove
seen only modest growth, "new.. religious movements have
been most successful. Foi a short time, varieties of HindUism
flourished on some campuses, especially those which had
previously seen a great deal ol political activism .. Yoga,
vegetzorianlsm, and various schools of Eastern spiritual
comdousness aD had some lmpad..
Wh~ these groups have declined in influence , they still
retain some lmpad on students and maintain a presence on
many large campU5eS. Of wtder slgnlflcance is a modes
revival of fundamentalist Christianity on campus. While less
evident on the more sophisticated" campuses which have
seen much activism, Protestant fundamentalist groups have
been active on smaller campuses. It is impossible to estimate
the numbe.n of students involved in these relig)ous .
movements, or t o Lndicme whether they will become a
permanent pan of the campus scene. But for the present,
they ate an Integral part of campus tile. And K the weB
publk:iz.ed ..conversions'' of fonner radicals like Rennie Davis
and Eldredge Cleaver are any Indicadon. the religious
SJOups are attracting some support from. students who mtght
olherwlse be attracted to radical politics.
The lratemlly and sorority mo~nts ha110 aloo regained
some strength on campus In lhe SeventieS, alter being
se""'ely threatened during the Sbities. Allhougll t~ have
not reassumed their dominant role over the soda] affli
extracurrioular lifo of many campuses that they held prior to
the Sixties, they have Increased their membership as
students have loolted lor a aense of cornmun~y.
Poychologlc&amp;l Hlf.l_.,.....ent
. The re~ revival, and especlaDy Interest In
personalistic ~ religions, Is part of a widespread
concern evident on campus as weD as In the middle class lor
psychological • ..~·Improvement .• nw popularity of books
like fm OK, You'"' OK, the EST movemlmt , transcendental
meditation , and limilar currents are ell Indicative ol this
significant otraln In campus life. In a aense, the Idealism
which was focused on political and oodal concerns In the
Sixties has boon directed toward the "Inner lifo" In the
Seve~tles . Even the most popular o( campus social causes of
the Seventies, t~ environment illue, Is very much related
to this CUJTent.
Whde the environmental emphasis (and ouch related
Issues as t~ otruggle over nuclur power, Earth Dpy, and
oolar power] has not suocaeded In becoming a continuing
movement, H has boon one of the loci which have attracted
student attention . Calnpus _ . a&lt;e filled with
envlronmant·relatad lloria, and the sporadic movements
au!Jutldal student
related to t~ environment support. There 11 a ~i!#ltenod ew...,.. of the Issues
Involved, and conslderoble tnteral In the tochnlcal aspects
of environmental ~. Maol ncontly, the
against nuclear paw. laditin has - . ! otudent
Involvement . nw ...... ndnoltty adlwly involved In · the
illue has related environmental ~ to bloedor oocial
and political 1m.,.,_, but moot .......... do not see the
movement u - . ! to I1Uijor political quatlonl. It Is
significant that the environment 11 tho whlclr aeems to
have attracted the wtdoollludent tntara« during thadecade .
Some elements of the Slxkl thotr viability on
campuoos In the llnltad Stain. P-"'1&gt;1 In historical
rOlrospect, the I1Uijor - . - . o1 tho 1960s wiD bo the
women's movement and the black 1tudent movement.
During the 1960s .,.._ from theaa rroooa~ents aeated
academic prowamo In many c:ollogas and untvonttles. as
as po11ttca1 and 1oc1a1 ~· nw academic
- . . although under atlad&lt; from comarvotlve forces
aDd lhraatanad by efforts to cut ....-y budgets, by and
Iorge continue and .,. a locus lor community. The
Oll(llllllallon aopodl ol tho ·· and block movements
bow auvtwd boltor thon have the .,..... poltllcal audent
allhough thoy . . .....,..ay-- thon t~

stru.

...a

196011,
.......,_...._,tho....._,
•..,_.,
""""* cl tho

-during the
Allhough t h e - culture" has
tmportant
....,_ on campuo. I Aflllll*lg. .........
counter
....... have boen accopllld by the
aoc:toty. Recent
...,.lnanllltlborol_to.....,martjiiMa,the
. . . . . , _ _ ol toc:ll
aDd IOdal
about
• 0
I . . . , aDd -"'*'ttlaoo wd-botng al foflect

""'*·

"""'*"

�7

"'"""" 1&amp;, 117t

Apathy: Student Activism· in the 1970's
Cc;onc::ems
v.ohich were Only a few years ago limtted to a smaD
iafgelycampus-based mlnorlly.
.
'

"extra·porliamentory opposl!lon" to ROIItlcal systems which
had no other vlable.opposltlon.
Student effoils at partlt:lpallon In the eloctoral procaoshowed the oombinaHon of llldory and defeat which
disillusioned many participants. While students were
aedlted with helping to force Lyndon Johnoon to stop down
In 1968, they were unsuooessful In presotng for the
presidential candidacy of Eugene McCarthy In that 11M', and
!ilrong .upport for George McGovern In 1972 did llldo to
tn....U,te him &amp;om mas!ilve defeat at the polls. Perhaps u a
resuh of these unsuooesslul effo~ at part1c:1pot1on In the ,
electoral process, stydents did not take part In the 1976
presidential election. With the e&gt;&lt;ceptlon of elec:tonl politics
In a few local oreasln which s!udents are a ol9nlfltant pari of
the population , they have taken little Interest In local politics.
And even In plates like Berkeley. California, and Ann
Arbor, Michigan , student political partlclpaHon has In rea!fll
years been limited and mootly Ineffectual.
The key mobilizer for otudent actlvlsm In the Unhed Stales
has been fonilgn,.,llt:y, and there have been no foreign
policy luues In the Seventies whlth aroused much student
.-n • aoimplo ..-,.and
Interest. The Vietnam
as a moral luue . In addition, h olleeted the otudent
eommunlty'"quhe directly through !h. dnolt. No eunent lslue
has this clear moral tone nor does any affect Amerlt8ns
diredly. Sman numbers of students have oppooed America's
policies In Africa, but even here Cuban involvement,
lnterri-nal power poiHits, and very oompllcated
sotkrpolitlcal quesHons blunt the moral fon:e . And , of
course, American military forces ;,wre not involved. Other
foreign policy Issues seem too complicated; human rights Is a
laudable goal , but many ..e H as possibly damaging to
detehte, also a positive element. The oil c:rlsls, balance ol
payments , and Inflation are difficult to understand . No

Foreign pollq,
The most dra""'tlc change In the Ameticon politico! scene

which has affected the campus Is the dedl.n• of foreign policy

as lin t55Ue of acrimony and of direct concern tO large
numbers. Speclflcally, the end of the Vietnam war and of the
droll has taken much of the moral outroge &amp;om the otudent
movemen:. The wtdespread Involvement of large numbers
of students - and the support of a significant section of the
middle doss - ended when h becaine clear that the war was
ending , although tt •hould be recalled that H toolc several
~~"""' for the conflkt to actually end.
This Is not swprislng, since American students have been
historically motivated largely by f'l"!ign policy Issues - and
the Vietnam war, which directly affected the otudent
populatlon through the dralt, was an especiaDy dramatic
instance. 'The.- war e:ffectlvdy combined a mora] question
wHh one of political expediency. Uberals, pacifists, Rldicals
on{~ many itudents who were just outraged by government
lying oould par1lclpateln the anH· war moVement . While the
movement's leadenhlp tried hard to give a - dominant
political tone to the struggle , most students ..ern to have
been "radlcall&gt;ed" only to the extent of oppo!ilng the war
itseH, and sometimes some of the institutions, like the
unlversltia, which seemed to be supporting the war effort.
Although the leadenhlp of the student movement
attempted to broaden the anti-war struggle to a multHssue
political movement , It• had little succetis. Indeed , the
frustraHon of the leadenhlp either to directly Influence
American foreign policy or to "convert" Rink and fUe activists
to radical i&gt;olltlcs led to lnaeasingly strident-rhetoric and
extreme tadk:s. "These emphases aUeneted most students,
and limited the effectivenus of the movement. The history
ol the 505. menHoned earlier, Is a good example of the
effea of Oldical mllttancy and ideological sqiJI!Il!es. Tactics
moved from teach·lni and freedom rides to disruptive
campus demonstrations which resulted in some violence
(often precipitated by the pollee) to massive dlred
mnhontanon with the at4thorities such u at the Democratic
Party convention in • 1968 and the demonstratkms In
Washington , D.C .• agolrut the war In the following several
years.
The ftnal tactical stage was underground urban guerilla
warlare which Included the bombing of buildings. These
~uduatlng tactics. and an Increasingly strident student
rhetoric lndlcatod to most students that the movement had
lost Its 9R1'P ·of American political reality. While large
numbers of ttudents raHied for opedfic antl·war
domorutrattoru after 1968, they no longer toolc the
· ideological leadcnhlp of organlratlono like SDS very
serlou!ily. Therw Is no quesHon but that the tactics of the
movoment oonbibuted to lis Isolation ""ll speeded lts
dedtne.

war-

foreign policy Issue touches a large number of students. and
those questions whk:h are lmpcxlant are seen as
compllt:at£d. Stgn~tcantly, the only liue to arouse even
modest concern on campus ls Sout
· , whk:b is the
most clearly lnoral quesHon .
·

'Economic realities
have severely hampered
a student movement'
reflection of the changing job market . Student Interest In
Innovative courses In the social sciences hes dlsstpated , and
has been replaced by demands for more courses ln
ocoountlng, pre·medldne and !ilmllar lleld$. M!riy ol ilie
liberties taken with the traditional gRidlng system durlng-the
Sixties have been eliminated as there is more stress on
oornpetlllon for scaroe jobs and even oean:er openings In
medical and professional schoOls. There Is no quesHon that
the economic realities ol the SevenHes have .. uere~y
hampered the emergence ala studentlnovernent.
·

O.angtng cle..._.....lca
A baolc fact of the 1970. Is a massive demographic shift
which ailed$ the unlver!ilty In many ways. The g..--n of
the SixHu WM, In many ways, an abnormal OM. It was qtllle
large, rollecting the post-w~ "baby-boom." The American

A ehanglnll role for unhlersltles
The rnle of the unlver!iiHes has also changed. No longer
ore the "best and the brightest" emerging from the Ivory
Towers to save society. Public confidence In e~ucaHon In
gen&lt;RII and In higher educaHon has declined to oome
extent, and the taxpayers' ' revok has directly affected
alloea.Hon$ for higher educaHon. Universities have lost much
of their seH-oonfldenee as weD , and without quesHon they
have moved from the center stage of society. Research
funds hove declined , and neither students nor faculty expect
that higher ediJC&amp;IIon Is the wave of the future .
Events In Amertcan politics generally have not been favorable to student activism. The movement of the Sixties
achieved some Impressive victories and, in a sense, set the
stage for other 50detal developments. Students were
Instrumental In bringing the war In Vietnam to public
atte-ntion, in buJJding an enti-war moveme.nt and In aeating
an alrnospheroln which the public Is much more skeptical of
foreign policy Initiatives by the Executive l:nnch of
government. Students were especiaDy audal In the
changing oodal mores of the period - a gradual public
acceptance of the use of marijuana, the end ol In looo
poronds on campus, and the !J"')Wih ol rodt muolt: as a soda!
foroe . But as was pointed out prevk)wJy , the moVement
Itself perceived faUure In Hi actions, and "most students did
not see the struggles ol the Si&gt;&lt;t!q as llldorioUs. Thuo, In a
te:nse , the &amp;egacy of the movement is one of success and
faDure , and UIs therefore Rlther ambiguous .

populatlon was, at that dme, statistically •younger" than H
had been for oome Hme, or will be In the forseeable future.
Thus, numericaly, youth was • foroe to be reckoned with .
A1 praen~ the aboolu• olol of the oollege·age genORIHon Is
somewhat smaller, 'and the Amertcan pGplllatlon Is "a~ .·
·The bulge o1 the Sixties has ended , and trends In the
birthratelndlcate that h will not ooon reoccur.
The Sbdles were the culmination of a period of
tremendous growth In hlglwn- educaHon. EnroHments had
"eadDy expanded , facultles baa grown, and there was a
senoe of optimism about the future of higher educaHon. This
!J"OWih had ploced oev.,.. llralns on the unlvenltles .
Tr~l norms, such as fn boo porentfo, elements of the
undorgraduote c:unlculvm , and othen went under attock . A
younger geMI'lllion of acadomics did not., in oome respects,
share the olclo&lt; volua of the profenorioto. lnaeued
ern.,._ on .--rch - and graduate education and
newlound a!1uonce In higl&gt;or educaHon all placed strains on
the Ol'llem which u~Uile students fek. The oeadernlt:
ocene o1 the Sewndes Is wry dtHor.nt. Gone Is the optimism
In the face ol the "steady state." declining enroDments, and
the to. ol oonlldcnc:a by public authorltla In hlglwnedut:Mion.
people •• enlorlngthe unlv.mltles,
and thole Is a - ~In aC..:Iemtc fleldJ at the
level of wadulle educa6on. Young academics have
dlfllcully In obtaining potltlons and In oecurlng tenure once
In on academic job.

"-young

Condualoo: Polltlc:.J rull1ln !rio -.tile

~The ~ allil wos o&lt;x:&lt;&gt;q&gt;anlecl by ecOnomic
· The Sixlta began unpncedented oconomlt:
_.tty, with ample employment opportunllles for college
waduala at all levols. The oconomlc reallly lor college
w-.o 1o by no mana opllmlollc, portlt:Uiorty 1n the
traditional ll&gt;oral fields - the hotbecb of otu&lt;lont
· OdMim In pre-.. yun Thon 1o a mljof tmease among
............ about future . . - ~· Studento hl!w
abandoned the ...... -lor~
they
- ! h a t . . , _ _ . . . . - . . belllr. Studenb. . , . - . 10 111M rlolcs, lndudlng the risk ol involvement In
...... lor '-"" !hat . . . . _ . . . . - lnO!I bO
~ · To~- · lludenll -and the public' - q.-.ed !hie ...... of • colloge ..,..., and the
.,._.,., al ...... oniOrlng hlghoo ..rucatlon ....
..... tlodlnetl.

fields."""""

......-

· - " ' * " - r - n t l n the s.--Joa

,

There Is no question but that the polttlcal realities ol the
SevenHes have been less favorable to student ac:t!vtsm. The
Nixon AdmtnlslniHon proved espetiall9 unreceptive lo both
the subotanoe and style of otuclent demands, and the
movement had no syrnpothetic; e.r In Wuhlngton . 1.-.:1,
Admlnlltratlon leaders rwpeatoodly llllatked oludonl adlvlom
and the acaden* oornmuntty _.tty, and played a rolo In
creating public ~ 1e t1&gt;o otudonlo. Wllhout oome
ov,..,athettc In the c:cntdon ol and In the
media, M It dllllrult lor the student _ . to
beoome. national ~cn&gt;e. &amp;en thew-......., provided
for lludenlin...,.__, The.,.....,....,.,
10 Nixon ~ In tho
and ..ned 10 ...
lunc:tloning .tet:lltiOIIy. Thus, thiN ....s lor

few._-

eon.-

- b y 1hi publt, whieh . - . 1 on tho...,_

•poilllcal
-

- - -· 1ft _... -

tho .__...

_......., - fwlcllonlng ~ . .........
~ ......... forsludenl adlvlom. In ~. lor

.......... ... ....... dewlaped mainly when nwny -

a

ol the Sbolloo
....S lor an

Student movements and conse
These are some of the reasons for
stUdent activism on the AmericM Clllmpus . Most liberals -

and the campus community genera.Uy -t.,...(f'lot ent:huslastk:
supporters of President Carter, but they do not actively
oppose the Administration. There Is substantial fear of a
conservative current,fn the UnHed States and concern about
~(flmpad of tax-revolts, recent Supr~e Court decisions ,
and similar conservative trends. Student movements have ,
In general, been most active and sua:esllul during pertods of
liberal power In Washington . The movement of-the Thlrtles
coincided with Roosevelt and the more recent period of
activism began during the Kennedy Admllftitrouon.,
Conoervatlve administrations, and eonoervatlvel'llind. In I
public opinion , have not In general been ..~ the I
!J"OWih of student activism . And the key moral ~ which
have orou..d students In the reomt past: . . - 'liilaHons, l
Vietnam , and the like do not now exist- The direct Ploblems
pf the student oommunHy: competition for Q1111des in order to
enter remunerative professional fields, unemployment of
gRiduates In some of the liberal arts and wldesprud
employment problems at the doc:tonl level, tutboc:b In
ocholarsbip assistance, research funds , and In public
Os!ils1once to higher educaHon are aD oer1ous ooncems lor
students, ~.ut have not led to student political Ul1lelt.
The Sixties had an Impact
.
DespHe the unlikelihood ol the emergence ol major
student actlvlsm In the very near future, the Sbdles had an
Impact which Is as yet lneak:ulable on Amelcan otudenls and
on American · euhure and politics geneRIDy. The
unprecedented amount of dlred-acllon prolell In a made such protest familiar to large numbon of AmOrtcans.
Issues ouch as radom , tmpe1alln, and _,. baolc
quesHonlng ol the direction of A m - ~ and policy
were Rllsed by the oludent mov_,... Ond reported In the
mass media . The O!lvtronrnental ~.lor....,.,._
got Its- stllrt on campus. The otudent movement and ~
largely campus-hued uncla!Jound ..- 8nl nlood
questions about the Wootylo ol Arnorlt:ono: rodt m-*, tho
use of drugs, homoaxuallly, malH_. rolos, and all.
Issues . These malton oontlnued to be wldoly ~.
There Is, rrt praent, no o1!J111can1 ol lludont
activism In the United Slrrta, olthousjl campus polllk:al . . lo
not totaUy dead. And M unlllal!l !hat a major
movement will . . . _ unlaa _.... fcn&gt;e, , _
Ukely a foreign policy-· lllmulaln 11. Vrrt, tho lnlpKI al
the moot recent Amorlt:an lltudonl , _ , . , !hat al tho
1960s, continua to lnft..._ Amorlt:anlfc In lndnct - ·
H the campus has Indeed moved from the .............. oltho
1960s to the -thy ol the 19'701. oome altho.........,..
residue of that rwoluHon d hao .........

Edllor'o Note:

T h l o - - - ............. - . ..•
-.h
.. _fn__... ............
~I~ 19791. Far loriMr ..........
-Philp G. Allllach, ~ ........... . - - C"-

1... .. .

y...., McGniw-11&amp;

19741. &amp;.Jtl. U,.. _. P.O.
Allllach, ............... Ill "--I ~ - - .

19691 ad P.G .. Alllledl ad D.H. 1W1r; .......,_

Sholooolo ~ ....., , ..... ,
..... G. AIIMdllo ................... ll1.--.. . .
F'?l"'~....._.,

'!~F....,.,__....-"' ...

...

co.:-=...

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

- c - . H e l o ......................

--..~Aot~..

~.~.~~ ... .

~

�.........

•UUPwins

Grades

by margin ·
of 3 to2

Peradotto thinks present system
was 'designed by idiots
for manipulation by ariy~ody'

United Unlvwslty Professions retaineel bargaining rights for more than
. 18,000 academic and professional
employees Jn the SUNY ayafem by a
margin of 3-2 In the elec11on conducted
by the Stela's Public Employees
Relations Boerd last month.
Out of t 1,315 votes counted, UUP
8,087, or 53.8 per cent,
companod to 4,0112, or 38.2 per cent, for
the challenger, the ..ew York Educators
Association. The thlrcf option on the
bellot, no union, received 1,156 votes,
or 10.2 per cent.
· UUP President Samuel J. Wakshull
Bald after the results were announced
by PEI!IB:
'We era delighted at the outcome.
This lengt':{ campaign has taken Its toll

~~:,r::e

-:n~

"I have heard the u.s. Navy described
as a system designed bY, genl~ for
execution by Idiots,' Df. John
Peredotto, dean of DUE, blustered In a

~e~~W~ut,::;eo;'g u~.:~ f~~~~

=

a.r~t'::~~

1

rep-h~~~flcll.:".ft f~~ ~r'!fuP,

I

wish to express our sincere thanka to
-vona who worked so hard for this
victory, and especially to those SUNY
..,_lea and professionals who
demonafratecl their faith In us with this
vote. of confidence." ·

Mingus dead;
wasSitieprof

·,

Hia autobiography, B~tnaatb the
Undenlog, ,... publlahed while he was
In Buffalo.
.
.,
The ~ular
bassist, whose

t:z

~:~.:...flnto ~~~?.~~~ritfo;~

y-. aiJII. He was here during the
spring &lt;11'1971.
.

KelltOn State board
Phyllla M. Kelly, a member of the
U/B Council, has been elected to the
board of dlnac1ors of the Association of
Council Men)llar8 and College Truatees
(ACMC,T) of the Stele unr-alty of New

Gott -~tsso
·A Law Bchool atuclaDt ,.,ho con~
.,.. le auffel1"11 ·lrom a "aJ)Klflc
-.,tng dlubll~ty-' hu beMI allOW*! to
.-. liM! - . . . under 8fleelal
:::'l':.:"~u::'. ::,;~ glwn more
waa the atudent, Mary Angela
Got!, IKOgllizecl by the Unt...tty as a
~Individual as she aought
101111.
President Robert L. Ken.&lt; submitted
1 ' - rutlngatn the caM of lob. Gott on
~ 5. Hla action followed mora
- a ...-of !*ltlana Ill' tile atUIIent
and '-'ft08 11J a lAw ~I panel and
oct. bocllel-lng
contention
....... Ia. ~ atudent ..
d-'11-.d ...... SectiOil li04 of the
IWIIbllltallon Alit of 11173. Aa aucll,
Ma. Oiltt ..,..., she Ia entitled to

,._.ther

'*

1nattua11ona1 oonakMr.ltona,

lO 1 ' - lldenCiecl to atudenta
and

other

61 0

.:Cj;,;

n..-

Shewtll-a three-r- term.
The AOMCT Ia a atatewlde organization of the ~a appoint- to
Council• on SUNY campu-. Jerald C.
Newman of the Untvwslty Council at
Stony Brook - t l y na-etec1ect
pqeldllnt of the aaoctallon at the
group'a ...,uat..-lng.

~

5

~~'::d"'orc'::!':;::',s~C,:::':!!•.,;-

elected

Yorll.

"""

this week In a reminder to faculty that
a/
.n'..,_raVIs_eangrchliu- maannd edub~caecttlonnal atlrcet(1rvtlhllaens
1 •v 1
,

,:'rJ!

=~·~ol~ 1 the ~~::::;~~.,:.r."'es-

............
=

R~n~-v~~r:=~~~~

bean offered the same option .• The
grede of Incomplete Is the _only one ·
subject to change, Peradotto said. "All
other grades are considered final ."

e,

Charles Ming14t, 11 :x&gt;, 'the first Jazz
musician to ...,.. as visiting Siee
Profesaor of ~lc,here, died earUer
this month In Nitxlco.
Mingus, who,~
- worked with Louis
Armstrong,
Lionel Hampton
11r&gt;a degeneraand others, a~
tive muscle .D.Iton known as Lou

1&lt;/A

Implementing
ederal and state.
regulations written to protec1 the rights
end welfare of human subjec1s In
research is the University's responsibilIty.

So ara 'N' and 'X'
to institullonal ravlew and approval.
end advisers.
The grade of ~N" Indicates no credit,
Uni-slty policies established to
"Our · present grading system,"
an official audit. But,. Peradotto noted,
ensure compliance with government
Peradotto continued, "seems like a .dark
"there are Increasing reports that
rulings require the determination and
perversion of that:- designed -It would- - Instructors - are honoring, and~en- --justlflcation-of ·posalble risks that might - appear, by Idiots ' for. manipulation by
Inviting student requests for. an . 'N,'
accrue to the subjects of research. As
practically anybody."
tong alter the deadline Jor ras_1gnat1on
defined In Deplii1ment of Health,
The dean Is seeking suggestions on
from a course without academ1c penalEducation and Welfare guidelines, an
"qradlng reform. " With "so much
ty"-even . where work tlas been
lndlvlduallsconslderedtobe"atfiak"lf
combined experience 8iill wisdom." he
assigned , submitted, graded and
he or she may be exposed to the
returned. The DUE dean contended It
possibility of harm physiCIII,
said " we should be able to fashloh a
makes " little educational sense, and
psychological, soclologicel, or other_systel1l more sensitive to the Qeed for
even l~ss logical sense, to assign a
as a consequence of any actlvtty whiCh
true evaluation·, reflecting the proper
· deadline date for reSIQnatlon from a
goes beyond the .application of those
character of grades·as mean~. not ends,
more subordinate to the real goals of
cour"!' without academtc penalty, and
established and accepted methods
then , 1n effect, to permit and encourage
necessary to meet his needs.
education, · and tess ..-ulnerable to
Its circumvention by offering a grade of
Inflation and- manipulation" as Is the
Full disclosure of the reseilrch plan
present set-up.
'N' to avoid earned but undeslraple
must be made, with Its anticipated
grades." Such a prac\lce, Peradotto
Although he can not "disguise" his
effects and benefits explained, and
lamented, '1ormally educates students ·
"dissatisfaction with this system,"
"informed" consent obtained before
~:~a~r.~~t~mphaslzed that we have to
~~lit~~!)lclsll) . Illogic, and lrresponsiappllcatlo.ns for support can be
submitted. Twelve Institutional Review
He atte ted to clarify DUE J}ollcy on
An ''X ," Peradptto continued , lndlCommittees have been ser up to
grades:
,. .
,
cates un_offlclal resignation and Is to be
monitor projects In the various
A, B,
D, F: These grades,
glvenonlywhenstudenteleaveacourse
academic areas and affiliated hospitals.
Peradotto said, are lnt&amp;rPJeted respecwithout officially resigning, generally
Investigators uslnP, human subjacts are
tlvely as "high distinction, · superior,
without the instructor's knowledge, and
requlrad to submit their proposals for
average, minimum passing grade and
have performed no work on the basis of
· approval to the committee relevant to
failure ." But " DUE could not suggest a
which they cen be e'(aluated . It should
their discipline before the research can
uniform Interpretation of these terms,
not be used either to extend the date for
be Initiated.
resignation without academic penalty.
nor should tt ."
. The committees and their respective
"I" Is a problem
chairpersons are as follows:
The Increasingly ubiquitous grede of
Not to mention 'S/U'
Architecture/Management/Social
"1", though, seems desperately In need
The " S/U" gradlr.g option must be
of such clarification: It should be given
n'g~~ st:Jl~t~=e~;lcL~or~fggg::;,
r~~4u~r ~":e:!u~'l"~ w~~~~s~~e
only to students who, for a legitimate
Sciences - Anthony Graziano; Buffalo
reason, were absent from an exam and
possible for a sludent to request ·a
General Hospllal - David Greene; Erie
could not complete the course work on
written evaluation to accompany the
County Medical Center - John Border;
S/U at any l i'IJe· before the end of I',
time. The student must have a l&gt;a11slng
'Millard Fillmore Hospital John,
average In the couraa and must request
course, but that student must hJ~,ve
Vance; Veterans Hospital Jack
the "1."
suljmltted the Initial S/U request within
Goldman; Schoo/ of M#dle,lne the first three weeks.
The request for an "I" depends,
Thomas Flanagan; School of Pharmacy
Peradotto. · said, on an Instructor's
The ·philosophy behind " S/U ,"
- Gerhard-levy; School of Dentistry Peradotto explained, was to encourage
judgement as to what constitutes a
Elias Kaufman; Scqool. of Health
students " to explcinf' the forbidding
leglllmate raason lor mlssiQg assigned
Related Professions - Gerald Kraft;
work; instructors are not obljged to
academic .terriJory, where unfamiliarity . School of Nursing- Hei"!' Lower.
~comply. The outslde limit for makingand severe competition from majors
up an Incomplete Is two years, but the
might otherwise quench Intellectual
curiosity. " For the most part, "II was
instructor may set a shorter .limit.
Dobs~n
Peredotto warned that Instructors
expected that students would enter
Richard L. Dotison, professor and
should not give any grade other than "I"
such courses with their intention
chairman, Department of Dermatology,
If they Intend to accept late or ~lsed
already clearly formed to declare 'SfU'
work alter a couraa Is o -. "To
grading . It was
Intended to be
has been named vice president of the
negotiate Individually_with students for
- American Academy of Dermatology.
what it has largely become-.an escape
a change of one final grade to another
hatch for poor performance, .or debased
The election came during the 37th
currency encouraging Indecision and
Annual Meeting of the Academy, In San
... and formally to request such a
procrastination ...
Francisco.
chenge, may be pedagogically defenChenges are clearly 'ln order, the DUE
sible, but !I Is blatantly unjust to othef
Dr. Dobson served as chairman of the
dean feels . . He hopes to submit
stude!lts In the couraa {end, by
AAD's Council on the Annual. National
legitimate extension, to thoaa In the
suggestions to the Faculty Senate this
Meeting In 1978 and on the AAD's Board
rest of the University) who have not
of Directors, 1970-73. .
seme~ter. -

c:.:ld
serving thoaa In SUNY we represent. It
Is good to have this behind us so that
we can now concentrate on the task at
hand: ~tlatlon of a new contract to

""

Human subjects
research p·o licy
is restated

major

e ·c oncessions from Law, not all

Ms. Gott, who Ia reported to have an
hlilh 1.0. , suffers from c11Hrculty in fully
oornpnahendlng comple'&gt;c oral statemanta. She need a more time to process
· complex Information, she said. In
-addition, she claimed In papers filed In
Federal Court, her concentration Is
•
distracted by noise.
Psychological reports attached to the
suit papers contended she could get
good greclaa 11 school oHiclala meet her

_ :i.~~~~i~:,:~~Dy8~r

In law

Reports flied ,.;ith the suit claimed
that Ms. Gott's hendlca(l Is "clinically
niCOQnizable."
Her attorney •g_u&lt;Mr In court for 50
per cent mora time to complete exams.
The flrat court
was held
Deoember 13 befora Federal Judge John
T. C41ftln. Curtin wlll , _ the matter
again. Jan. 25.
Curlin, saying he heel no other
chOice, denied a restr-'nlng order which
would " - required the taw school to

,_,;,g

pro1llde 111m tlma.
I

·

118tter aald thai, alter studying HEW
0

-==~~ ~~~·L~ ~~~;~~~ ~;:

HEW regulations do not contain a c'-r
...Wtlon of what conatltutes a
~fie IMming dlaablllty • £Yidance
Gfltllsi_heaald 1na ladwlo Ma. Got!,
•may ... gleaned '""" tha diffiCulty
1ncu1t.c1 bY the nui"**ua paltlclpanta

r-'

in . your case coining up with a clear
.Ketter told Ms. Gott
was
decision regarding your claim."
..
"comfortable In arriving at the following
. The Law School's position, Ketter
·conclusions":
told Ms. G'i'tt, is that "you are a student
" First, I can find no Information that
In 'academic difficulty' and they have
there haS bean any discrimination
mede accommodations to you as
_against you."
such." The School examined evldenceSecond, he said, he concurred with
o,l six experts who examined Ms. Gott
the lecommendatlona of a December
and supported her claim. But, the
report on the matter by the ACademic
President pointed out, the School feels
Standards and Standing Committee of
the evidence "has not been sufficiently
conclusive to convince it of lhe
of
reed
lncorrec1oess of refusing to recognize
that Ms.
might taka her "Mnals
you as a handlcapl&gt;fd person ."
• alone, in · a quiet room o• carrel whera
Ketter contended that Law, In viewing
she could If she wished, wear ear muffs
Ms. Gott as having acedemlc difficulty,
or other devices to filter out nolaa. Sher
"has extended itaalf In an . effort to
could use an English dictionary during
provide" special accommodations bethe exam, but would have to complete
yond Its normal policy of making
the exam In rough handwritten form
allowances for students whose " oarliwithin
normal lime limits. Provision
cular anxieties make It dlff1cult for them
was made, however, for her to type the
to take examinations In the normal
exa"! and hand illn In final torm within •
WilY -"
· 24 hours. First, though , she would have
Jesse · E. Nash , assistant U/B vice
to submit a xerox of her handwritten
president for affirmative action, oranswers.
The Law School committee report on
the case suggested that the School
expert&amp; who supported Ms. Gott's claim
"has been -mora than lair and jl&amp;nerous
and 11om the Law School. Ketter said
In response to Ms. Gott's petitiOns, and
there not total agreement on the
~~e no further action with regard to
pert Of " - - · that the
evklenca auPPQrtecl the claim- of a
Me. Gott aays ahe has received three
handicap. £¥en among those who
bachelor's and two maate&lt;'a ~
aupporllld Ma. Gott, Ketter Indicated,
ranging from English to mental health,
u.re - no1 ~~ on "appro- , at U/B and Western Kentucky Unl-prlal8 !flOCO"'mocl8llona."
I
alty

'"r:t~a':~~~ ~~he La~hool

~

~~=~7d:::h~~e,:~~~

�"""'*' 11, 117t

. . ILIA

ETTERS
Media missed the point
in 'Spectrum' ~lap, Berey says
Editor:
At the conclusion ol the previous
semester, much had been written and
said regard ing certal11 actions of the
Undergraduate Student Association

~~~e~~~~~sZ:s~~~r~ntr~v~~

sial legislation, but none have looked at
the motlvatlol\81 factors behind t he
teglslatlon. In order for all to give
justice to those Issues relsed by certain
Senators, it Is Important to realize why
thosa students acted In the manner in
which they dl d .
The legislation proposed was to
affect the structure of The Spectrum
and certain members of the editorial
board. The legi slation was addressed to
those specific areas because It Is
believed thal ia where the problem lies.
At this University, The Spectrum has
an enormous amount of responsibility;
as well as the equally enonmous power
of the press. For all intents . and
purposes, this lone publication Is
responsible for dissenllnatlng the
majority of information to the University
community. This responsibility and

rnd~~~ar.~~=~~~ ·~~· ~~at,~er~~r.
responsibilities

as

members

ol

a

~~~~r.,:;- ~~~::,xa;;;~ie·.:::w~~~~~~

should be free from opinion or bias of

~~ kl'l!,;'nM~r.,::r::;:ve ~':;'' ~~~m~~~
occasions. In llfddltlon, the charter of
The Spectrum provides no effective
means to correct the causes of these
violati on s.
Freedom of the press Ia sacred, and
must be protected; the editorial policy

This Ia, of cou.-.., looking at the
1

;:u:~~7t~~tW~~~ g,':t"~'lli- ~&amp;

Its problema. Thla Ia further undoncored by the fact that the election was
fought, not on NYEA str'llnllths, but on
UUP weak-. Over 5000 voters,
almost hall olllloM voting and a third
of thooe ~led II¥ the bargaining
unit , voted agalnl1 the UUP lecord;
another 5000 - . unlmpreued.
What are the ,.-oblemll'l I Identify
several : (1) Locally we wllll an opan
campus no matt• what powers the
contract gl- the Incumbent agent to
cloee out oppoaltlon. (2) The contract
retrenctun.,t e l - l • of deep concern.
(3) F• Imposition Ia rwented,

ol the Editorial Board must be their
the Editorial pages. Il ls lett that, In the .

Fn!~ ~~~~~h~":rfn~ ~'h ~~·~:~~

responsibilities the publication carries.
As was stated by Supreme Court
Justi ce Hugo Black m 1945, the ri ght ol
free speech "rests on the assumption
that the widest possible dissemination
of ln(ormatl on from diverse and
antagonistic sources (exists and) Is

:::;;~:~~~~~~~3!:i'-~a~f~~r: J'o~~~~~;

~~~,~~t~~ :1en~~~~:fl;.:~?o/!~. T~~

" its conti nuous repetiti on of an attitude
reflected In facts which Us readers have
no chance to check, or bv Its ability to ·
surround those facts by an environment
of suggestion which, often hallconsciously, seeps Its way Into the
mind of the reader and forms his
premises for him without his even being
aware that they are really prejudices to
which he scarcely gives a moment of
thought"' (Harold Lasky) , the true
power, of The Spectrum lies.

II all riews has not been written m an
objective way, and presented In an
unbiased manner, The Spectrum has

violeled the trust placed In It by the
s!tia.ents at this University.
This letter is not intended to be an
endorsement of any particular piece of
legislation. Its purpose is to rai se
cer1aln questions which , up to this
point, have seemed to be Ignored by the
media.
-Don Berey
Senator

especially when It Is difficult even to
Identify where the money goes. (4) The
del uge of self-serving state [UUP)
publications Is unacceptable. In p'artlcular, It Inadvertently caricatures the
un ion leaders so that their ability to
lead Ia se-ely curtailed . (5) Only partly
as a rl!su lt of this·, there Is a need for
change of state leadirshlp. Specifically
the UUP president, Professor Wakshull,
and the sen ior staff coordinator, Evelyn
Hartman , should go.
Of these concerns I believe that the
fi rst Is solved ; the second will be solved
In the next contriiCI , If only by
omission; and, as to four, Bill Allen has

er~;;:~~:e:tgr,,~ea!l~f J~s~d~~:~

Three and five are tougher, but I for one
• pledge to try to do something . about
them . - It Is usual at a time like this to urge
that we eome together In order to move
forward. I will let others spea)&lt; to that .
laudable objective. Instead · I Invite
those of you who have specific
concerns about the union - whether or
not you are members - . to b&lt;lng those
concerns to my attention. We need to
address those concerns as a regu lar
responsibility and not just In the heat" of
a campaign. I promise to try to respond
to any such problem Identified to me.
• -Gerald R. Rlalng
UUP Academic Vice President

Marxist Feminist Robinson
publishes 8888Y collection

TMI'alhe ~Of Loula Kampf of
MIT to 1M -IIV-tl&lt;lbllahed Selr,
Clu1 Cu/fww, the work of Prof.
UIIIM a. Ao111nam1 of UfB (lndlanll

Unl..attF ...... tWill.
Prof. ~ o1 Arnar1owt Studiea
Ia

--"

Ylltllflll

~

of

.

predecaasora, which either took on
'woman' -.a the newly respectable
subject of traditional academic criticism or were lnfonmell by an ahlstorlcal
eenee of what 'woman' shOuld be and
on that basis made faulty Judelementa."
Part 11 teatures appli8cf c:rlilclam: on
"the conntct . _ _ , Renal_,.,.
Woman u -aoclal being and • 111~­
concaptuat entity; on J - Austen s
tneetment of aex, ct- and 11Wriage;
on and POPUlar l i t - - ; on
televlalon and Ita po"reyal of and
tnn- on W!ln*l'l . work; 011 the
wrltlnp of worldna ; and 011'ttw
-....,.of tamllllel IJC)Mry."
Roblnaon ......_It futile t o IIIII lfllllltiOMI inathoclology It _..

--- .. ...... .

At . . . . . . . . ~. "P.nt••
~

, _ O f - and 0111111 ••

i.=t..wy

~ ,_
the ...........

...... 01111 .......

~

C8111d "prrbMIIy
lhd
- lhd

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

...
.!'!
....... flnllillll
.....,,...._..vr•out

On Monday, December 11 , 1978, the
fall meeting of the members of the
OrganlzatTon of Principal Investigators
wa:s held In · the Red Room of the
Faculty Club. Roy Slaunwhlte (Biochemistry) , President, Introduced the
officers. and Council members. In
outlining some of the maJor accomplishments of the past year, he stressed
the Importance of having representation
on the Board of the Directors· of the
Research Foundation .
When Ernest 5ellg , past president -of
OPI , lett SUNY this past summer, his
vacancy on t he Board of Directors was
filled by a pri ncipal investigator from
Downstate Med ical Center. Since a
representative on the Board of Directors

~ to prablaml . . . . llr 11M
f-inial orttlciMI Ifill! COli- -with.
IIIII - ' and~~

,.,.,_._

~i:ar-:' ;;;-~

~t'n";)~n~~e~~~~gn~e~:,~~=;

"'R'J

from
floor, these candidates will be
submitted to the membership by mall
bello!.
In a dlscusslonJ&gt;f objectives to be
pursued during the next year, It was

f/:' ~~~!~e ov;::i~~'lP.io'=' is1 :~"i

admlnlstratrve practices peculiar to th~a
campus, which so harass P.l .'s that
their exodus continues, often with no
monetary gain or advance In prestige.

Test useful in
reducing fears

l';;~~~atP~~e an~s po~l~~~ec=ss~ -o~~

A simple three-minute, four-question
test can help Identify and reduce patient
an xi ety In the dentist's office, accord-

top priority must be the reacqu isition of
membership . It was lhrough this
avenue, th at OPI came to appreciate
fully that most of the researchers'
admi nistrative problems are created

ln'!J~~ a~~!~ha~;=~~cl~~~~:~sor of
behavioral sciences at the School ot
1

~~~sl15..\~le~~~';'~0:~~~ ~~x~~i,X

~:.:Zrc~n~o~~~a~'::ra~~f "t:'o~~;~~
~~\::r~~ ~~u~~e~~o':.~ o~f..::!J'Y.
1

money

with

which

to

start

reports that analyzed data prove the test
to be highly valid and useful .
" An estimated 20 per cent of dental
patients suffer a moderate to high
degree of anxiety before and during
trips to the dentist, ':li4C&gt;rah said. 'While
some patient anxlet1'i! obvious even to
the casual observer, some patients are
skillful at hiding thelr-&amp;nxlety."
This nervousness ~n~ cause a person
to put off neces..,Y•dental treatment
and can also caus&lt;i"dlfflculty for the
deniTst who has to confend with "chairsquirming" or · muscle' Roh slon. Corah
contends It Is lmpo~)91 Identify the
anxi ous patient ~Ye treatment

new

research.

Other Important accomplishments
include the Issuance of new, written
·policies for Research personnel which

P~~~~~/~~r;;;Fn'i tn~n~!~~~ a::'d [~
1

0

giving sall1fY Increments . P.l.'s not
having a copy (a memo from Robert
Pl!arson to Administrators and P.l .'s

:.x.,:&amp;~:..;·,n1 ~~:lP:Sg~~de,7fm:~

The University Board on Sponsored
Faculty Activiti es (UBSFA) and President Ketter have -supported OPt's

~~h

and Dr. En;cit ' Gale, also a
professor of behavioral sc_lences, found
that persons scoring 13 points or higher
on the DAS should receive special
attention from the dentist.
Reporting ill the November,lsaue of,
the Journal of fhs AmeriCB!Jo Den taft
Associ ation, the two doctors, ;oolllo at1101
pioneered development of relaxation
and desensitization technlques'I/Turther
noted 1hat DAS scores deCreu«&lt; after
desensitization techniques wer6'used .
They also found that previous dental
experiences appear to have little
bearl
on anxiety and that an

~rc':."t ~fr ~~~~one,c':-d~;:~ige~~ \~~

Research. Still unresolved Is, however,
the queatlon of location of the Office of
the University Dean for Graduate and
Professional Education: sbould It be
Independent as It Is now or part of the
Offi ce of the Vice President for
Research?
A Committee to Review Admin istrative Procedures chaired by Frenk Jen
(Management) · has been reviewing
Purchas fng Department procedures.
The willingness of the administration to
Implement the Committee's report, due
January 1, may be taken as a measure
of this admlnlstretlon's willingness " to
make research fly.•
The Nominating Committee, consistIng of Jeremy Bruenn (Cell &amp; Molecular
Biology), Christine Dugglaby (Anthropology), William George (Mechanical
Engineering) ; and Diane Jacoba (Micro-

';P.

:::,~~~~:Jl';""C:,:~":J !ft~·h~:';

her level of dental anxiety.

•

ow~sp~v~\~':f&amp;nft:: :l':.:•l~~
~~~~W~~clrn'l:t:::~~o:r~=.

the two researchers reported.

Health Insurance costs
Many employees wish to know their -health Insurance collfrlbutlona (total
bi-weekly payroll deductions) for Calendar Year 1878 u they Pf1ll*ll tllelr
1978 Income-tax returns. The followlrrg data Is provided for tlloee employwa
who were in payroll status foi the entire year (28 bi-weekly ~~
deductions) and were enrolled"ln the same health /naurenr» plan tllroUg!loul
the en tire perlod:
EMPLOYEE COST OF
INDIVIDUAL

TYPE OF HEALTH
INSURANCE
COVERAGE

~-~~~~~~~
."
'l1le ..- 1111111 11 a OOIIIciiOn
._!!

Amlrlcln ltUCS. et lila Unl.-ally of

biology), chairwoman , reported a alate
of four candidates to fill two positions.
The nominees are: Richard T. Evans
(Oral Biology) , Diane Jacobs (Microbiology) , Rober1 Mates . (Mechanical

own . However, this must be confined to

UUP officer contends vote result
not endorsement of status quo
Edllor:
A "footnote to the recent bargaining
agent election: Samuel Wakahull, UUP
President, speaks of the results as a
•vote of conflclence.'' I have gnsat
difficulty with that reeding . Quite the
contrary In fact , 1 lind the results
indicative of .-loua problema· wi thin
the union.
Consider thoee results: UUP gained
less than 54 per cent of the \'Oies cast,
with less than three-fourths of the
16,200 conatlt..ancy voting. In alii three
of every eight members o
the
bargaining unit voted for UUP, ~ly
a rousing lndlcat~ of support.
.

OPI claims restrictions
driving off researchers

EIIIPLOYEE C08T OF
FAIIIIL Y COVEMeE

COVERAGE

StatewldePian
(BiueCrosafShleld &amp;
Major Medl&lt;:a:l)

s.oo

G.H.L

s.oo

Stt1.88(1at12...,.11
deductions et SUit;
lut14 et $4.58)
$18.311 (18112.,.,...,.
deductions at $1a; lut
14atS.OO)
,

Above employees who converted to the new Community Healll Clln Plan
of Erie County (HMOI stlfted their HMO payroll cleductfona .. "' ......
payroll pilrtod (i2e) o Calendar r - 1878: Their payroll diiiUDIIon -

"TheM,.._..

S.llfl for individual~ or •-351or family - . g e.
mutt
be aubetltuled for theallli ~~deduction cited llbcMin rwull Ito a~
coat lor alngle co_. of 1.81 lor emplor- oon.wtlng from tile llatewlde
or G.H.t.
amp~ c:oeta tor t . n H y - . w• 1113.75 for
Stat-Ide conoerslona andlft.71~ G.H.I. conWI!Wiona.
ThellbcMIY-fy COe1 flgu,.. will not IIPIII¥ to amplo,we whO_:
a, changed tflalr
(lnclhlldualto tarntly
--.a~ during 1878
b. newly employed and aurted their --aa • dl,..,l ttm.
tlvoughout the...
.
c. -on ._..of
durinG tile-Each ot1heae '!IH ,_,. to ba
on .,lndlvldual baiiL 'l1le l'llvnlll
Olfloa ("""*-1, ta1ept1one
can prowlde .......... Ill t1iaM
l!p8Cifle-.

Pr.,,_v.-,

cower-ae

e111anee-.

a

"'-

.

�•

January 1 a, 1878

SENATE

FSEC chairman asks for clar-ification on DUE dean
~~'1'F~8etf~-=~~~ th:r,~_:~~~

of your letter on whiCh thelr negotlatlon has
been premised.

construct1ve concan• : that we are &amp;nd
should remain a single untversity with ·a

HS. There were many auggeeUons about
who has or should have responsibility for

Interpretations. The first of then Ia

FPara.

- powers whose sole responsibility Ia for

eliminated/' According to one view,
expressed forcefully by Or. Laraon, this
~graph is the crux of the 'flier, and
set11es the question that the Dean shall no
longer have any universlty·wkie powers and
responslbUIIIes; the further Inference Ia that
since the new po,ltion of Dean of
Undergraduate Education is established

also to have Increased responslbnlty for

J~;e .,;retn~'lo.~:~~~ ~~~r d~!rer e~:

student QOYemment officers were present.
as weU aa Administrators from both AA and

ru.:,~=;g~~r:·~~~~~ro~":;;s~

~~:~~~::'tr~~~: c~:~~':rs. -=~~~~~~

there seem8d an unwillingness on the part
of efth«VP to commit resources, and It was

reported that It Is alreody too dlfflcolt to

appoint chairmen to allow Insisting that
they alao undertllke this chore. One
questJon artaing from the meetiOil I!J
whether the Senate wJahes to c~aponaor a
Unfveralty-wlde commlltae on-thla-topfc.
Followtng conak:Serable discussion, It was
agfflftd to minute that no motion wu made
to go ahead at this time with co--sponsoring

i:::~~m:.t

regrt t~~~n~

Department of Instruction.
B. Other representatives
postponed .

1

Hem I 4 Old Bull-.
A . The matter of using Colleges courses to

that the VJce--ltresldents have Interpreted
, " dlre;ct responsibility" to mean "exclusive
responsibil ity, •• and therefore to mandate
curtailing the powers and responsibilities of
the Dean. We see. no reason why " direct"
should mean " exclusive". and we reject the
Vice--Presidents' reading of Para. (3)eapec:ially .In the context of your letter,
wh ich elsewhere makes explicit your belief
that the general design of the plan Is
consistent with the recommendations of the
Faculty Senate Committee.
In-this connectJon the Executive Committee wished me l o remind you of Aecom ·
mendatlons 1, 2, and 5 of the Report, which
T~~ :.oJ:S,~ t~:: senate on 5/ 111 : ' ·

R'!f~:'~~~!~ !t.o~td

continue to have
one Qlficer with broad responsibility for the
quality, scope and content of the

~~~~~~~:!etr~~~ ~~~~r~hJrg else.

not be an occasion for further splitting the
campus between Health Sciences and
Academic Affalrs. Even though he holds

-

Recommendation 2.
The basic fuoctlon of this Dean should be
to provide academic leadership at the
undergraduate level that Is sensitive and

e'1:' ~~~nt -r:c'~~::,:sAf:.~:,c~~=

1

he ahould be expectid to
whole e&amp;nlPUO, ha

-responsive to the faCtJity. 67. no 2, abstain 0)

~-lp lor the

PASSED (Yao

~~,Z:'Y re~ 1ont~::ug~~J{ty ~~
l:.~ki 1\fte powers and

R-mm-.otlon 5.
The present functions of the Division of
Undergraduate Educat1on should remaJn the

expec:tallona.

~m:~ls!_'~tl:~:!!:~c:- :.~~1ul~~dn~~,~~

Untveralty and

rMponlfbll~leo oommenourote wllh theoe

reoponolblllty of the Ooan. The largely

Laot monlh the FSEC began lool&lt;lng Into
l~lementaUon of your tetter of

the

~:rJ~~~~snrn ,.: ad=~nt~:u :g~=

~~~~":. v:'r!'\Wc the

vPH!i ~
PfOPOMI to the Fse8':::'rng of
111 15, oubeequently publlahed In the

studied by the Dean aa soon u possible. Recommendation PASSED (yeo 67, no 1,
abstain 1)
.

' - ' ond

R.,.,., of 11 I 30. No action wae taken at

that meeting, other than to lnatruct the
C!Ofllmlttoe to ._further conaultotlono ond
t o . _ - - In the mMntlmol ._hod o
brief oonter.nce With Dr. Welch; tho
oommlttoe hod on extanolvo dlocuaolon with
Dr. BuM, Dr. L.oroon, Or, Welch, ond Oeon
- t t o ; Or. Bunn gove tho FSEC o
lengthy .ccount ol tho dlvlolon of
rMponolbiiHI• wO&lt;Icod out jointly by tho

These Recommendations are central to

.•

~:.~ ::e.g~~: \~rt~:c:;~··~i::
=~~ty,;,.g:~; 0 1ti:h":'J. fro~ =~~=

plan can remaJn consistent ~ the senate
1'88oluUons only If It Ia Interpreted and
Implemented In 'a way that respects
Recommtndationa 1, 2, and 5. We see the
bllurcotlon of DUE Into two parallel
divisions of undergraduate education, wfth
the coneequent exclusion of the 'Oan from

~':n"'=.,cir.:.1 ~.:::-~:

the moat - t ,_lng of tho FSEC. Aa o

:::arc=~:.:::....~~~

.!f

to thecurtollmwlt of t h e - - tho Oeon
11101 lo en1811ed by the ~ dlvtalon of
--'biiNieo nogotJated by tho Vlce- 1 1 . ond It rojecto tho lntorprwtotlon

Yours sincerely.

-Newtono.,..r
Chairman

Larkin on
VPAA-staff
Dr. . John A. Larkin, associate
r,ofessor of history, will be serving as a

v~eulta~:~W~ l~~:m?~f~f~ar:s \~~

j the spring semester, VPAA Ronald F.
Bun 0 has .announced.
The program for Faculty Associates
Is Intended to give Interested., qualified
membeR! of the faculty In Academic
Affairs the opportunity to become more
deeply Involved, on a short-term besls,
In academic administration. Released
time, wholly or partially, from other

z:~~::~~~:~~:;~=t~~- &amp;~~~I:Jdfor

0

sion the Executive Committee was
unanimous that shifts of administrative

unl-.~y,

:~~~~~ b';~sn=l~r:gl~e~r~~~~~~t ~g

ap¥~~~~bt~~ ~~~ ~r:c~~s~~~:::~~e ihe
~::g~.~o~fy Eft:r~~~~;e:.1o~.1 ,tt"'!,:S~

~~rc~::~:~i;e~~nv~;aa~1~n la~u~~~TJ

thla

Intent of your
letter ol 2/ 1/ 78, to reaflllm the
university-wide ecope of the Dean of
Undergraduate Education, and to specify .his

8::'t:pwit:lns~';:ct~~=lthw~1n"~~ .. n~f«'~

~:ar!'~~rr:~~.;~~n~:.ur~v~~':Tt~~::!~

Dean should be a symbol for a single unified
commitment to undergraduate education at

unanimous concern Ia for the survival of

un~rs~r;~et~=;'~e

~le~~slnf~~~a1ros~'"o1 ~~~~r~::Fua~:lb~;:J.

5

The meeting adjourned al6: 00 p.m.

rt.::~d ~~ctff~:~ T~:~,=~ f = ;,'~~ .

8

wh~~~ ~cra.'~'T~~'tt~C:~~~~-:Js,~~&amp;t!~t

tt;~ linc!'!J'B~~~'m

~Ia One
Deer Pt81fdent Ketter:
The Executive Committee of the Faculty
Senate has Instructed me to 'l(rUe you of Its
concern that the .Dean of Undergraduate

i:~:!J't~~~r!n~~~:~~:·:op~~=~ :~

.the VPAA.

7

7

from the VPAA to the VPHS. We do nof

Dean•s powers and responsibilities be
similarly limited: It Is a strength rather than
a weakness that there are overtapplng
structures of organization at this Institution.
The FSEC therefore rejects Dr. Larson's
reading of Para. (11.

satisfy dlstr1butlon raqulrement4 came up
again. B. Howell and l . Michel were
appointed to work with the Chair to present
~ f.'opoaal to the meeting after next {Jan . •

thorough dlacunk&gt;n wou~d seem useful .
and the Calendar COmmittee Is asked to
~~~:sf~~~al about how to a~nge such

question the need for more effective liaison
between the Dean and those directly

¢~~As8n~ ~hot tor~.n~gr~~~r!:"t~~r t~~

'

:f~:.s:' F~~fr ~~ sc;:r,~ daie~!~[!r:nA

within Academic AHalro, tho Oeon'a poitera

r;:: ;,sw~:~J::d:.':,'.tc,:~~~ ~; =':~~~

were

been discusaln; the
criterta pertaining to potential conflicts of
interest of faculty members who have
supplemental outside IQcome. It was agreed
to Invite UBSFA to discuss the problem at a
subsequent meeting at Which the FTP and
RCA committees are Invited to be present.
B. In the discusslon of the Chair's report
of the Cabinet -meeting, concern was

question lha neod for the VPHS to develop

an administrative atructure appropriate to

. the Dean's being located In Academic

P::fB,r::,m ~~~

reports

und.ergraduate education. We do not
question the competence of Instruction and
advlsement .ln Health Sciences. We do not

~~~~~ ~so~!~~~'r'~;!~~~: :,~:hs;~

·regard as a technicality tor retiring a Utle

G. Rising agreed to arculate at a later

~=~~d~~ene::u,:t~n"t; V~Pr~d~f~·

his direct reaponslbiUUea fo~ undergraduate
programs In Health Sciences. We take no
-posltlon _on the proposed tranafer of lines

and responsTfillltles do not, and cannot,

such .a committee.

.

~~~~~.~v::~~ o!,~~:n=~~r.h ag,'!:d

:"Sc:.a'noe~c:J'n~~:utf~~~:~e:

Recommendatlona.
n Ia remarbble that there wu a ciMr

cone-

,

....,lmltr 1n tho FSEC, ollhough there wu
~locuaa)on. Thla unonlmHy
atetnJ f~ our naiTow focus on a alngle

.

Larkin will give attention to a variety
of subjects, · Including enrollment
Fn'Jl:.~ . and planning, the VPAA

Holding the Ph .D. from NYU, Larkin
came to U/B In 1966. He has also
served on th~ staffs of Yale, the
University of the Philippines and the
F..ord Foundation (where 'he was a
translator of Indonesian).
His major field of Interest Is
Southeast Asia.

�......
REVIEW

,11nuary 18,1171

197·9 brings
retirement
plan changes

Bergman film lacks
.transcendance of art

The followinO changes In employee
flelirement Plans are effective in 197~ :
TIAA~REF: New York State contriIIUtiona to Individual employee contraCtS are currently related to the Social
Security base ($22,900 for 1979).
Effective July 1, 1979, the slate will
begin contributing an additional three
per cent (3%) toward retirement
benefits of employ,ees enrolled In

By Esther Harriott
Director, C&lt;Atural AlfaJB

lngmar Bargman can be unparalleled
In his genius for exploring familial
relationships: consider "Cries and
Whispers" and "Scenes from a

~~~~ha:rhan~~ a1f!"~~~gs ~~:

"ti1':.'c~~.~':,J ~~!~·~an

~\'f~~1u~l::~nS::c~~rk"~~:

EllectiveJuly 1st: 9% of afi salary up
to $16,500; 12% of all salary between
$16,500 and S49,500; 11% of all salary
on excess of S49,500.
1
::S
~~~::c'J'ri~~ to ~'::le ' !~i~n~
contributions to their Retirement

ad~~~~~nt,'"':~ ~:~ty ~ndre~~~~

:f'~:'au:J~~·~n~~~ ~e ,::O~::;"t!{
lb 10

withdrawn funds), they are not subject
to Federal or State lnoorne tax. Interest
earnings on the amounts contributed
are, when received, excluded from New
'tort&lt; State income taxation , but are
subject to Federal Income taxation

un~_erJ~:e~:,::wState

e

In ._Ia
Fled.__
...IIIIU

•

dufi:f.~k

A. Fledlwi Samuel L.

Dr.

~~~~,::==In ::,dfa ~~:0::-lnlll.
The

-.... tour,

under

official

aowemmtnt ~ 11110~
autP~C~~ of lM Unit-' . . _ In
t_ionAQency, &amp;aall,ledfWto New Deihl,
ca1ou11a, lloln&amp;lllr, "'-- lllld Hydarabed to lllllk pitawtly to unhWIIIY
studMta Mil ~ wtao teech
Enallall4ifld Alriertc.l t.-on
Ala IDIIIC- ~ IIWalure anc1

"'l11ll
Ftedl.r ..,.. the - ' O n tor thll
........_ ttoe
of new

.,.,._tot
1111
"TTIIrre
11t
•

..

.
111mrr of ~

RIM. lM ~In...-----

and her pastor

~~s~=n~O:.setS'::'~~t~r O::l:!

r~·:~.r~~~7~~ ~r~~e ;,o:;~\tyu~r ~:

!ration; Mra. Fnin ~gh. principal
clert&lt; !"--nell; Mra. FtW1 Stanton,
senlpr typ.-.

t:va

lion. Charlotte . Is In her 60s, and
s:,amorously gorgeous. Eva, the 30-lsh

highlights and restrlc1. This Is not a deferred compensalion plan under current Federal law.
Consequently voluntary contributions
will not qualify undec tl}e tax shelter or

~~ll: ~ ~~0:::
636-21150· Mr " - "
Lippert
manager' em.,io,ee .....,.. AdmlniOO:

to the
" Scratch a martyr and you 'll lind a ·
sadist," someone has said; this Is an
apt description of the long-sutterlng 1
meek daughter, Eva. In the first 9cene,
we see her writing a letter of Invitation
lo her concert Pi anist mother, Charlotte
0
husband.
Eva 11 a morbid creep
Mothet' d d
h
h
an au~ ter ave not met In

\~:!a:some

Oueatlona 001am1':8 t - new
prOCedures
ahould be reeled to any
0

a diHicult and disappointing mother,
but wr.'at Eva expresses is a more
fundamental resentment of the submissivetowardstheforcefui. Onandon
sl!e accuses: even Helena's Illness Is
attributed to the mothe~s desertion.
(This scene Is definitely not helped by

parsonage with

will be able through regular payroll
deductions, io contribute up to 10 per
cant (10%) of their gross annual salary.
lnt.,.estesmingaonthesecontributlons
will not be taxable until they are
withdrawn or r-Ived as annuity

will not match
em/'%':' =":'~~n~i salary . contrlbuted cannot be changed more than
once in any 12-month perlpd .
4. Withdrawal of voluntary contrlbulions, In whole or part, may be made
oncaln sny twelve-month period.
5. Loans on lhne contributions are
restricted to the usual ReUrernent
System lOan arrangements.
6. Any member who Ia currently
making voluntary contributions snd
Who elects to conlribu!e under this new
:-:\\\:'.mull cancel hla or her pnwlous

MliPie-Forest Theatre, there wasn't a
wet eye In the house. Their subsequent
subtitled vers ion brought out a lew
handkerchiefs, probably because the
audience could concentrate on the
extraordinary performances by the
stars, tng::d Bergman and Uv Ullman,

~~~ds~~~~~)s=s:o~~~l~ea\ ;t:·

~l~alorang.%';"~co~e.puE~~~~

1

her as a child. When her mother left lor
concert to!Jrs, she felt rejected. When
her mother stayed home, Eva resented
her Indomitable energy anjl will.
Charlotte is blamed lor everything
from the braces on Eva's teeth to urging

~i~~~~~ssri~a~~~~~~:_vend

•

NEW YORK STATE EMPLOYEES '
RETIREMENT SYSTEM (ERS): Mem-

·

the love-hate relationship between
mother and daughter, Is directed with
such a heavy hand, that It becomes a
Freudian-Gothic melodrama.
.
we 9asp, not from pain and
recognltoon,
but from the sheer
1

~~~W~~~r~t onwg:,~~n..H~ s~h:w~~~~ ~r;.:~rll.\'~~~l~:n:~:ru~~u~t'!ll~

salary
up to $16,!500; 15% of all salary In
excess of $16,!500.
The sta.te's 1979 contribution rate lor
employees hired July I , 1976 or later
will be computed as follows:
January 1st thru June 30th : 9% of the
Social Security base of $22,900; 12% of

1

t!~~~:·~ab'!.'\~,~~~g ~~t :, ~~g~~~bsrre
bedcalllnagnd_curnah~!.'!g _to~Maradmsa.'hcoemseta lr)s,
1
-d

We watch Eva tear her mother to
shreds. Charlotte's face Is a wreckage
of guilt, regreCand sense of failure, as
~he begs forgiveness . " I wanted to love

;~· :;ytsl ~o"r:'.!~;~'~~J ~~~4~~nd~~;
Eva's

long-festering

resentment

is

=~~~s;,v~d~~~e~rr;~~oa~~

- you're a menace .. .. Is the daughte~s
misfortune the mothe~s triumph? Is my
grief your secret pleasure?"
Charlotte, devastated by· the enCO!lnter, leaves the next day, while Eva,
purged from venting the years of stored

='::~~~~~r'n~ 0~~ik:':Yu.t~r~:ln~tt~~

llness camouflaged by dowdy clothes,
wire-framed glasses and ludicrously
severe braids. Her appearance shouts ,
" I am an u~ly duckling and a !frlected
lillie girl." ow much more mo ng this
~~~~\:;'.:'3,e ~~d tg:n 11 hli1l ;ngsubJr,
grliPhlcally, between the eyes from the
start. Berqmsn · hss unwisely and
unn-ssaroly directed Eva to look and
act like a creep. Rather than eliciting
our sympathy, the repulsiveness puts
us oH , and we gratefully look to her
mother lor warmth, earthiness and a

old and frightened and crying ." We
watch her write a second letter to
Charlotte, In symmetry to the opening
frame , th is lime apologizing lor driving
:'ear~;r;, ar~e ~~n~~~ ~~,:,.,'.::;" .. :~
rt II " f0 them to help
a t:learing
of the air. Rather, we see an
emotionally cri ppled woman (flanked by
the physically crippled sister, lest we
miss the point), who, having decimated
. her mother, wants her bact&lt; .

her

IJiood Impart a note of tedium to the
harrowing events. The one point that
Bergman succeeds In making Is that our
expectations of our "loved ones" are
both mysterious and Impossible of
fulfillment. When Charlotte looks
through the train window, as she flees
the purgatory of her daughter's home,
stohabeacknpoartwledofgeas ~~larthalas~~lyy"':rl'e~
·-·" Lights on In houses, people engaged

1

'=r:"o~~!~&amp;~~ :: ~n't ~ee

rete:h~~Y ~~r;~~~~~~·:.n;,?~~~a ::Y~~:c£t~~~~~\~~~erl~~!1et~n;v:;,sd

reun ion ,

·

but

the

dagget:J

In

~:;!,t~r.n:;,,:~~~ .lf:~'g~;~ot::eer ~~~

mother. so does the unexpected (to
Charlotte) presence of the younger
daughter, Helena, whom Eva has
removed from the nursing home where
her mother had placed her. Helena has
an unspecified, gruesome Hlness that
ki"'Ps har bedridden, spastic and
unintelligible. Charlotte, horrified to
see this unfortunate creature, pulls
herself together for I heir encounter. Eva

=~lt~oa~~e ·~=uc'!lf:~:.:r,:;

~u~v;.:"'l, ~~~f'c,J:r1r:~nt~a~''IS~"~;

normal dalllneas. She had hoped to lind

Charlotte's "pertormance" with Helena,
~=~~~ ~.::l ~~~up~t~~m::
=~~~=~J:~ ;'::'~\~t~ lion. But as they reach out to one
c:Ommenting _ sometimes directly to
another, only pain Cll!1 result. This Is
the audience-&gt; on his wile's behavior,
the tragedy of a failed relatiOnship, btl!
lllld on their marriage).
II Ia marred and by Eva's
Nothing 11 not paaaiii&gt;IHggrMalve,
compulsion fo punish and blame.
Eve pertorrna, badly, a_ Chopin plano
Little attempt le made to demonstrate
p&lt;8iude for her mother. Cftartotte's face
that any personal struggle haa two (or
during lhla pathetic recital Ia an
multiple/ aides; that, lor example,
etoquent atudy of mixed emotione:
::::"',_o11 ~b~: J=-~.::._matemal affection, profaaatonal imher litany of grlevanoea, her Inability.to
patience, nostalgia, and regrat lor the
put her girlhood -menta Into aclult
put. She Ia moved by her daughter, not
perapectlve ma11a ua pit~ her lor her
e=.a ':::
emotionally .,..ted atate. But the film
lnallllng that she partonn the arne
~1P':'!tty'~ c~helcal....~~g; It~·=
prelude. Aa Charlofte, -.cl beside
, __............._of · · Ewe at the.,._, playa with eutllorlty
art.
lllld uaderatandlng, the camera n-on
a --'1111ng ciOMUp Of the twO'
....... Charlotte'a Ia loll 111 the mualc, .
willie Eve a t - at her mouw with
~m
ugly, ..,..,!lata.

1

~':: m::,~· ~",;,:~'fn"si

u--·-KeJI

ogg f und s
for deaf

'* "--·-

.

.._._
Clwt- Ia tw from a llerolc ~-llhe Ia Yaln, eetl-c~nlefed and pam-

a

per8CI; but
fa Dr..fflrmlllg lllld
10. t!IPM Into 11111-PHr, -.n
wtllll .,...... the cr.atto of liar
~
We f t d"-" to.

..r-

:=::·
liar~ •=~

The saga of The Spectrum resolution
...
In the late!! episode, S.A. President
Karl Schwartz rejected the Student
Senate's resolution of December 8 to
conllnu~s

Nlghto;nare and confrontation
An effective surreal' Image Charlotte's nightmare of suffocation by
a daughterly figure - Is the signal for
the ultimate confrontation. Charlotte's
cry awakens Eva, who spends the

~l':f.'i~~t:.:::an~s ~;:~~~\';,~ t~~r;:!a;;; ~~~'!',d~r ~II \~e ~~o",!g:':~'lll~~~ h:n

$22,900.
For 1979, the state's contribution rate
lorernpiOyees.hiredpriortoJuly 1, 1976
will be compuied as follows :
Jarwery 1st thru June 301h : 12% of
the Social Security base of $22,900;
15

,-S pectrum'
issue still
unresolved

Gal
Collage, !be w~d'a only
I I - arta college lor dul atudllnta,
Ml receiMd • Otaftl Of $1.311111tlon '-!
the W.K. Kellogg FOW&gt;datlOn to daft
a n- role
lhe ~at lchool In
aaslallng loCal commullltlea to -

ror

deal people. The CO"- 118e eetected
three othlr ectiOCIIa fQr the dul to work
cotl-lwlr
Call-

~~~~g tht~ae'~~~ched.l~orl~80~~ri

impinges severely on the First
Amendment of the U.S. C6nstltutlon
which prevents Congress (or In this
case, the S.A. Senate) from In any way
abridging the freedom of the press."
Schwartz took action in accordance
will\ the S.A. Constitution, which gives
the. Student Association President the
power to reject any piece of legislation.
Also In line with the SA Constitution,
the Issue "will go before the Senate at
~~~~.fera'!l~~Lng automatically lor
CLARIFICATION
.
SA Sena'or Bob Slnkewlcz, mentlonc
prominently In the o-tlbar 14
Reporter story on The SjiKirum
controversy, notes two errora In that
report: He dl!l n o t - SA office In thll.
.fall elections (he ran unaucceaalul~ In

..x::a:o -~

~.:&amp;:::~J: ~:;~::=.

What the SA Senate rseolution Mid
(vote to oust The Spectrum editorial
board). Rather, Slnkewlcz clarlllacl, all
1hS SA Sub-Board r.- hacl to do waa
consider the matt~ . Also Dla"'!
O'Connor who •waa pari of an interview
with four senat~~&lt;S -ntacl In that
story wants It mea oiNr that her only
concern was with
-mlitlttee to
oversee · S" olllclaltl':" Ms. O'Connor
contends she had n
to do wtth
The Spectrum pr
n, although
that waa not mce
during the

w

Interview.

3:)0£
10 1!80:

• At their last meeulfijl- ~b Board I
members decided thwe would simply
be an Investigation of •any violations
found within their contract lor
subscription payments to The Spectrum. SA Vice President lor Sub Boar&lt;H
Jane Baum emphasized that, "We do

not cohtrol The Spectrum."

er

Examples of violations tM the
Sub-Board contract would lndll!de a
failure to uphold the Journalistf:~'?'de

~~~~m1fsgh~':.~o;.c~~~;r~r~e

to
Baum was not certain how Sub-Board
will proceed .
The date lor the next S.A. Senate
meeting has not been set at this lime.
Members of Sub-Board will hold their
next meeting on January 25 In room
330, Squire.
,
It is evident that The Spectrum
resolution has become a sensitive Issue
for all Involved, one source told the
Reporter.
Meanwhile at The Spectrum, It's

S cott JOinS
EOC staff

business as usual.
o
o

as;;:.:I:0~1 =i:\r:"e::l"O:::

OpportunltyCanW!EOC).
In thla poelt~.Llllr. SCott wtll be In
charge of the Euva 11-.1 ecedemlc
and vocatlonal/techniCel progowna, u
-11 as Ita-~
C11¥181on.
Tl)e EOC, 1
at 4115 WUIIIngton
St., conduct• progrwna to .,..._
economk:afly lllld educat~ dla-anlaged atudenta over 1• , _ . of
native of 8ufflllo, Soott fa founder
of lllld a part- In the Buffalo lnatlba
lor H
0y
lea He Ia
bar

au:·

~'b:'rct
... ~-~r
~
1111 _.o~Nctol0,.
1
__

~·--18

Oo·-ft:::."'ctub.'"' .,..._ ,....,.

·-·

He lomMirfy ..wei .. prfnolpld of
~t Elementary BciiOOI In 1.8ck·
-na.._.lllld_WII!I aaelatani:inCiiW of
Grow. \MY8I8IICI .net Eaat H
8Choola
tn aun.Jo, also aervl~ at Do
ecfloDit
u ooonllnator for Project Aeplnt,
a
federally-funded college Oftentatlon

prog,..,._
A
of Buffalo Stata, 8oott
~llu.,__a degr-. at N&amp;.gara and
......,

"'*'uate

ro- =
.......__..

""~h MOURa
----..

1111111

-~~• lid••.,.. I
lor Its conllaal
.... ~=--:af
-~~~~=~-- •the to.....
waJIDwt...-·~~w
on~:
• .......,,
~
;_.'i,r:..~ =.:r...;:.~.:a.T: :.~.:'ti:t:.i\sT.'=·
M
II' 1 tnl
!liilliiiiNiililli•
•
...,,.._.
~_
tortha
~,__..'"-,...._.:......
...
......_,_
• ,,....;_.
_ o.t,
_....;.
_ _ _ _ _!....;..,::;;:·~·;;;;~;=;;;;:;;:;:;:;::::::._-.
~-~---:-~.

--=:...

1

�...a ..
Slnsfns SaturcYy

-·....,..,·_T.,.,.---.
---n.nday-18

........

.. ~II,
-,-.or

.. -

~··

Hooplol. t 2 -.

MQIRKllllll.a:w.EVENT•
: = l o - o l f - l l l l o l d , d i a·

:=;:JC\:"~;t:

A-..b,---onhlo,_,lwoo1&lt;
. . ,_.epm. ln335._

- - Cllra (Dylorl, 1977! Conf"""""'
-2919tor-.
· SQIR. cfwvo. Cal 636-

they - · In college, 1-.mg

--··~'fl!otoo1ronthaS
C8led --erlng:" Oowt is the

· Children'• Hoopllol.

Pin&lt;--·

u.o-- ..

Pll'tiiOI.OCIY
ol - · Dnog
Eric G. ~. llot&gt;nMnt of

c.mon.

---·

Dr.

- - ·...-.- -

with • world ""

WOMEN'S IASI(ETIIAU •
U I lws.lluffeloSUte. CienHell. 7 p.m.

~

5108

WUFUI'

--Ciono(Oylon, 1977!.£onf""""* .

-2819tor· SQin -

ctw:ge. Cal 636-

=---·

--MOVIE'
_ , . . . . . , _ _ (Siogol,
Tho originol

UUABIIONDAY NIGHT MOVIES'
On the Wo-1 (Kaun. 1954), 7 ·p.m.
Whllout A Couoe (Roy, 1955), 9 p.m.
,170 MFACC, Eliooll. Froe.
'Mlol peoplo In ll&gt;eir 400 .-y lhoughl WOO

boon

----~Dr. Ooniel

Polhology.-

··

two of the blggesl cUI figur1ls of the 19500.

-TIIIC-.,._1

Shemw'l. 4 p.m.

-

greol fl1uff -

t9

-

PHAIIMACOI.OOY) THERAPEUTlCS
SOIINAR.
Drug lnleroelklno wllh Acetaminophen, Or.
Tweu Gel&amp;ner, &amp;SSOCiiJte cancer research sci·
enlis1 ..s -en prot....,. In phonnacology,
f'llr1&lt;. 102 · 4 p.m. Refresh·
menta, 3 : ~5 p.m.

- " ' . . ,.,.,_,
(!loren)
ond Oor(ll(ooghtan).
14801efendort.
7p.m.
~by Centerli&gt;&lt;- Study.

•

11 a:m.
· -

Monday-22

flUIS•

Ulln. . . -Cior1&lt;HIII 7p.m.
-·~·

Friday -

~919tor- .

II,--··

~ol~.-flocm. Cblclren'a

WA81'1L11'

WABFJLM•
--Cioro(Oylon, 1977). Conference
cllorgo. Cal 636-

" ' -· Squire. -

1iou's .rter S p.m . . . ~ fOf MFG

m~·-·

Tuesday-23
~PING AND STUOY SI(IUS COMI'ONEHT
SPECIAL SBUES•

~·""-"'ewller:Dr. 1956).

-262

· Dopom1enl
Educotional
~1·2:20of p,m
Sponoored
b,- the

~-

lJnl--'ly~Cenl«.

Squn. _ . , ; g h l ·poe~· 011 ...nich the current

. . "' . . - - · -

: : . - - " · Dono Wynter -

u.oty. ~
-

-----.....

~--·~
-·Bron·
.:..-al-l-otic&amp;,-

.., ...... -.---.
e ..... u _..
-

Hill

-RU/Biooultll.-. - -

..... llot&gt;lr1r'*"

~ a.nicol ~ . lJni.

-.llyol-. 262~ . 3 · 30p .m .

......
•,. .. .__-..,an_.
~·

IDI"T1 UlT7! CillloNnco

eta--

.................... (lllogol. l-1

:--~---...-

-·

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

_ .. . ... ...
..
_Uooly
-liloCirllly
·,• ......-.

.

- -ot

llnlt-~.lelllne.
2. . CooM. 5 p.m.
-

......11oo-

Antol fV""-.-g). 146 Diefen·

-.Tp.m.

. . . Ia -.y

&lt;1&lt;m11

dlo . , . _ ..... -tore

3311._ Tp.m.
_... _
, 1 . - o f - from
- . c ! a f - 1 3: 2 ~ofTAI

QA--: 3. ~of

~-..,..-.-

- - - polcy
. Ctw&gt;geo

Anetysta of Recurrence Times In .._..
Cane., Mk:hael Fe6dstein'; asaiitant profeseor,
OMalon of Biostaliatica, Unlverolly of - l o r
Room C·26, 4230 AMlge too. 4 p m. Co(jeo

ot3:30p.m.. RoomA· 16.

•

WOllEN'S BA'SKETBAU •
U/Bvo.O'YowflleCoHego. Cied&lt;HIII. 7p.m.

19~~.=:=~~=

ctw:ge. Cal 636·2919'for-- •

Flying thai - . o f f like ..-.....
sooce croatureolhatloolllike tne -.ry dough·
boy. and a specea'8ft that reeembfel; a chlndelier
lhlo ·oci·fi choae 11m with ESP over·

tooee. F\M'IIo ~

uuuL'ILiil·

(L Bocon ..S B. Bortceloy,
Ull3). 7 p.m.: T_, H o i ( -. 1e35) Con·
- n - . S Q I R. F Tho "' . . 19300 - - .....

. . -..y--.. ,.,
-----·

- - - . .. ..... · - . - Dlcl&lt;
- · IUiv - - ond Cllhgo&lt;
._
,
Mol

~

· - · . . - o f ... F r . c i Cllhgo&lt;fllln . . . . --.~·lol

........... _,......._,,QOII&lt;

-v----

Notices

IIENEFlT CONCERT'
2. Wicl&lt;

~- ~a.._ 8

""""' .,. Action tor -

p.m.
Soon·
FebnBy

In CNie -

Latin

-~~wll bo 13. _..,.,1 0 tor potronl;

$ftor-. 1110~ond­
-- ---goloCMoen~.

CREDIT-

Tho.-~ of 1110- R. 1..ano

Slolo ~eo- lkllon . . bo held, "-'· .looo*Y 25, • 2 'pm. l n - Clooolond

-A-...
_Cin
____ ...

-

418, 011 . . . Slolo u.w..ty Cologo -

·

c...
...

Tbloioyoo.&lt;~lo--­

c.-~.--..ondlo~

- -----.... ::.::::::::::::-----·-LOCA'ftlllll
·----~.--of--af­

. . bo ....... .

••~-

.. .-.a .... ono

-- -ond~ ..... -

Dlaii/Acld- . . b o - ... -

• ........ ....., ..llr.-y1f, lom·
I P-"'-: .looo,.y II, t o.m -4.30 p.m.: .,.,_ .
22"'-l/ :t:'t .... ·8 ......

........ lt._.or...y 1"-Y

I . e a.• ·4 30p.m

the drop I 01111 procesa

WM!&amp;. by awolntment only.

ondlta World, eneStSondera,
CoUnbia Unlverlity. 106 Baird. 4 p.m. SponsOred by the Dei)OI1menl of Music.

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

Hill 7:30p.a

have ~ •-led

ot1helocllion..S---...
10 cordo to&lt; new llludOnto ond ~I
cards «0 available In Room 2, Dielondorl Annex
from noon-8 p.m., Jonuory 16-februaoy 2. After·
INTERESTED IN THE AOfHG PROCESS?
The Mullicfosciplinofy Cenlor lor the Study of
Agklg extends en iwitation to graduate &amp;tudents
.wt feculty who have ., Interest in aging to
onerd a...-mg to diocuss a -....g gracl&lt;.ele

....,.... 1n gerontology .., geriatrico. rueaaoy.
February 6 , ot 3 p.m.. Squ;re Hal , Room 234 .
OAR DfF1CE HOURS
January 11-9 a.m.·8 p.m.
Jenuery 11-9 a.m.4 :30 p.m.
Jenuery 22~ebruary 2-9 a.m ...a p.m.

UUABFILM'

PHAMUI.-1

------oingo.....
f...
-. --.
-- - .._. ----==
uuil'
l
--.,...__,.
-.._ ...--~~-

-l!fca.

of
Roowel Park.
Board Room, Chldron'a Hoapillll. 12 noon.

STAnSTlCS COUOOURIII'

W~y -24

.-. -

Dr.

MUSICOLOGY I.ECTVRE'

WOIIEN'S-G•
U/Bn.S..--o.Cior1&lt;HIII. 7p.m.

McCor111y

FAGULlY-=rt'AL •

· ot'"*&gt;ts _..;ng • -

lmmoblllzocl E""""oo WHh P-Ilot CHnlool
Ro~rch Appl~tlon ,
Oaro Ambluo, oro-

fesso&lt;. -

'*"

vo-tlon " ' - ..,._
10
may

PEDIATRICS RESEARCtt SEMINAR I

Exhibits

�.-

.

~~~e CJe~~eQooe
.PRING 19.79

A program sponSOfed by the Division of Student Affairs
Student Development Program Office and Student' Association
REGISTRATION BEGINS MONDAY,
JANUARY 22nd ~

I

-

-

�,.,...;..,J_, .._..,IN__

DOUWANNA ·BE A aAJWNl

l:tlp.a.IZOlN-."-Mnl~

Leader: JukleQJt, member of Clowns of
America and Buffalo Clown Alley

W...... n-tpdoa:
LearD to boa down. Thill...- will cover
ol downing: !JI&amp;ke up, eostumes,
bolloou animala; propo and akltl.
Portic:i.panu will develop their own costume
design.

oil._..

REGISTRATION
Registration
begins _Monday ·
January 22

IIAIIMONICA
MoDdayotJ_,. zt-...... IZ/8:00-9:06"
p.a./318 Sqlllre 11a11. Mallo St. C&amp;mpu
Leader: Billy Strauaa, former cloaet
lwmOo.icaplaJ&lt;er

w..w.., Deecripdoa:

RepLnlioD il-u.L Jt .......... that
""' will be i.olarmed o( oehedule . _
ad thot the Ieider will prepare for tbe
~ D111Dberofportldponu. Moa
WGibhopo ..............S oalya Umited
number al people. You may recilter io
or bJ pboDe (if there ill DO fee). At
tbat time we will provide 1011 with updated
iDformaiiGa oueb u out.liD. or oupplies
required . PleUe Warm ... at tllia timi if
you require aay.,.a.J uoiot.aDce due to a
haadiap. AJoo, D04ify ua If you wish to
......,I your~. Mapa are available

Leata the basics ol harmonica technique
and l&gt;lues theory. Start on tbe road tO
barpdotD"through praeti~ group
dioeuaion, listening to the music of
harmonica greats aad guest performers.
Participonta muat provide thejr own
bai-m~cas. FamiiWity with blues mu~ic
Will be helpfOI. Albumstnd
books will be
1
~mmeoded.
JEWELRY I'IIAIIJNG

-req-.
How:

Vlsitorpboae
llO Norton llall. Amb«a, 686-2808
When:

January22·2&amp;
8:30 a.m.-9:00 p.111.
lletliJu&gt;lnc J ..... 26
8:30 a.m.-6:00,... Monday-~day

w..-....yo~F,.._,.za.Man:lo

ZI/1:118-IO:OOp.a./CnedveCraftCenter,

120MFAC, ~c-,lu,AIUent

o..BEJGINNING GUITAB
n-.dayo/1'.........., 1-April5/lodMdaal
'h - - ....,_6:00aad 10:00

p. -.1318Sqahllaii.~St..ea_.

Leader: Sue Lyono, hu played and studied
guitar for 9ye..-..

w..w.., DOocriptM.:

lat.ended for thQOe with no previous guitar
experience wbo want to leara basic akilla
needed to play a tune. Reodiag music,
tuaiag the guitar aad liOrDe theory will be
p.-nted. Participant&amp; must provi~their
OWD lix string guitar·.

BLACK AND WHITE PBOO'O
PIIOCE88ING
........yo/J_, ...........,. %7/6:30-

=

........, . . . . . . llal, ~St.

J . _ DiViDeei.r.o, photo buff with
lelddDg experioace
•
.

"~ Dooert,tloa:
LearD buie development and
.....,_.e.b-blod&lt;.-1 white film, u well
• .,..W etreeta iD tbe eamora aad
-~ . Pal'ticiponta muat h a v e - to

printing

a eamora (other t.baD allO peeket t1p1) and
provide tlleir OWD film and piper. ,
Reptration ill Umited aad will be
...,firmed upoa paymeDt of 15.00 (cull
Ollly} to eover the coot al cbemleab, The fee
iDdudes membonbip iD the U/8 Pbato Club
wiDdl entitles yoo to tbe uae ollhe
~ iD additioa to ....-bbop

u-.

Leader: Ken Landau, photo buff with
• •
teoching ezperieuce

Worlttlbop DeecripCMa:
Learn buie development and priot,ing
ProcelfO&amp; for black and white film. .
~ ParticitJant.l must bave access fo a camera
(other than allO pocket type) and provide
their own film and paper. Regiatration is
limited and wiD be confirmed upon payment
ol$5.00 (euh Ollly) toeovertbe cootol
chemicals. Tbe fee iocludea mOIJ!i&gt;erablp io
the U/8 Pbol.o Club wbid. entitles you to
the uae of tbe d.srJaooom iD addition to
workshop time.

~

Leader: Jamee Puglisi. Asaiatant Director
of Creative Craft Center

w..w.., Deecrip~M.:

You will p.in a baaie undentandios of tbe
possibilities and properties ol a precious
metal. Eoeh peroon will design and crelte
their own project (ring&amp;, pins, pendanta ... }.
Purehue of neeesaary materials wiD be
required .
-

COMEDY SHOWCASE
Thvodaya/F""-71-...... 817:30-9:00
p.m./S&amp;ISqan, MUSt. C..,...
Lesd&lt;or: Steve Green, ot.arving comedian.
who bu begged for food on Chippewa
Street aad who hu been booed off the stage
at "Catch a Rioiog ~· io Nnr York City,
and other nigbtdubo.
Wwtuhop n-tpdoa:
Ever want to try beiDg a stand· up OOIIlie?
Seaaioba will emp~ clerelopiu« a
eomody ltyle aad re1aziDs tn lroDt olan
andienee. Every - k eorclt member is
given a ehaDce to try out ~rial ~be,: ha~
wrttwn &lt;r perichned ln an uupro,_.
WIMc DOt petformiag, members act u tbe
........... Due toiaflatioa,
-.abep may be ubd to act u eblin.
tabloo, aad aabtraya. SolDO past members
bave fouad t.be u-ansformatp from student
to funUtaro eo enjoyabldbit they have .
dropped out and had t.bemaelves ·
reupholotered. One member, Artie
Felnol.eiD, Is aow a eola ot Maey's.

.,.....,...l'

CIIEA11VE DRAWING. CARTOONING
AND DOODLING
,.._..yo/J_, 38-F..._.,.
al/8:tf-IO:Oip.a/CnedveCraltCe-.
UIIIIFAC, ElllooU C..plu.Aioloent
= J o e M. Fiacber. Direetorof
c-live Craft. Center

Volunteer to be a
Leader!
Put ......,.. bave indicated that they were
able to relaa in tbe fun ud frioDdly
aunoophere ol tbe woi-kabopo, and have
found that tbe teiObinglleacklnhip
·
~....._dlelr ........... aad .
viLla. If 1011 -talent or expertioe ia a
paaileaUr .... wby DOt take pride tn
......., o&amp;llel'l to enrieb their livea?
I'NpooolaGG 111)' top!&lt; '!rN are .......e
ad . . . . ~ lOr the s.mmer!Fall

ll'lll.,...._.u,.,.. ... ~at.el'llited •

......

..taot(lorolea-,, ~.-the
lD'E WOBK8IIOPSOIIIoe (llO ,.__

II-

�,OOMIIUHICAIION ANDTBEbEAF

~~1-15/MN. .
p.-.IZICs.,.lre . . . IWI!k. ~
Leader: Siotor Viqpal&amp;. PriDdpaiBL
Mary'a Sdlool for tile Deaf
w......,o.a-tp~~o.,

The t h r e e - will cover Ia..... and
s.-&lt;:h probl- of the deaf, basic - of
the manual olpllabel. demonstrationa with
daf children, and dioeussion of the
· edueat.iooal, oodal and vocational
lmptieationa o( deafn-.

CIIEA11VE JOB SEABOIIJNG
'l'ooooolaptJ.__,. Jt.F-,.
13/1:311-5:00 p.a./318 Sq.ln Hal, Moia St.
C..pua
W - Grodl,

-a-a."

RecreationANYONE CAN lUGGIE
.._..,.,J_,zt.F*-ry

.

•n....... , .•.lilt Sq.ln Hal,-.. St.

c..,..
Lader: Jadt Perieak, •

juggler who hu
taugbttbe sldlJ wway.

Leader: Stephanie Zuckennan, University
PlacemODt and Career Guidance
W..-k~Mp o-riptlo.:
What elae ean you do beaidealook in the
want ads? Job """kers.w!D leam the sYstem
and strategies for locating the hidden job
market. Help will be provided lo locate the
job you want and bow lb present youraelf
favorably wan employer.

w..w.., o-ripdoa:
Through 4eiii0Ditraaoa. by Jack and guest
jugglen, ouporvioioD IUICI practice, you t.oo
COD IearD lb iuale wiLh relative · Bring
jUQiin3bollalothe-finloesoion. Three
tena.il bolla wiiiiU!IIce. •

CIIE88

ezpert and Vic:e Pretliloal of U/B-q.e.
Club
•
·•
w......,~

CR08S.()(JUNTRY BICYCLING . . . .y/J_,H/7:G8-t:Jip.-./ZIZ
Sqooln, lllaWk. ~
Leaq,r. DioDe LovejaJ-Wilooa;..-eountry cyclist
-

Rod Sou-• dlacuaaaa "Death and Dying."

DEATH AND DYING
. . _ - " ' " - Qooellioa·Auwer~= "Wioat Maa Shall LiveiUICI Not
SeoDeatla"

W.......y/Juaary U/1i00-9:00j&gt;.m./108

.......
.-..-c..,..~·
... _,.__.,..al"riaodl)
W......,Sodaa:

.

w........,..,F-,.7-Apri141'1:G0-9:00
p.a./IOIIN-.Aa~ooent~

(Reptratioollo - : r )
lfader: Rod"Saunden, wcrkabop leAder

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

FOI8AIL
...... ~~.- ............. _ _ at

lMdor: Evan W -,loui'Damenl~Jia1e~

w......,o.qca- ,
haaball rulaa, ....,......., and tedaaiques
will be aplalaed and~ Elo,joy

=a~~
.... aoi!lll_
fllaDI

.....
I..,, .....

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

-

LoeMr. DMWIJi:

,the

U/BN-..,._and....,flluACU-1

· .Werren

W.n.bop Deaaiptioa:
This workshop will provide you with basie .
survival skills if you were to travel to a
German SJ&gt;O&amp;l!ing area. The German
culture, customa and language will be
explot"ed through a variety of ways,
including slides, film, and eonversation.
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF OLD
TESTAMENTPROPIIETS
.
Taeodayall'ebnla&lt;y 6-Marcb 27/3:311-5:00
p.•./105 NOrtoa Hall, """"=nt Campu
Leader: Warren Blumenthal, experienced
teacher, autl&gt;or, studied at Jewish
theolosieal seminary in New York City.

,......,.,F--,.s.zzn:00-3:311
p.-.IUis.,.lre ......... St.~
lMdor: WayneGrodl, U.S.C.F. rated

larD tile bulea or improve your oldUl Oue
hour iaatnactioD perloda wiD be followed by
lllioplbal- period.

.

GERMAN LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
'IWoadaya/Fellr.ry .......... 6/1:G0-8:30
p.•.IZIZ Sq.lro Hall, Mala St. Campua
Leader: Heidi Zacher, German Club
member. Gennaia Education major, and bas
visited Germany several times.

smoe1978

w..w., o-ipllaa:
Tbe liHSioa.s inYOlve open discussion and

writing exercl...r eonoeming peraonal
reactions lbdeat.h, oneoflife'a inevitable
p~ . The aim of the worbbop is w
help participiDta undentmd death, and
lhroup lhio, tive a fuDor life.

rmSr l.ADIDi 01' THE lVIIITE HOUSE

w........,.,J...,.Il·Apr1418:GO-t:OO
p.a./18'1~11oB,~C..,..

Leader: Carl Sfen-aaa, I"HMl"Cher,
le&lt;turer and eolloctor who is gathering
material for a book on lhe subject.

w.n.ioo,~:
Intended lb i1Justrale the publk IUICI private
Hvea of Whil.e Houoe Fint Ladloa, tile
worltabop will empbuioe the lln&gt;ng
womea have bod in lhe
Preoidency and ill lhapiQg Amwican
blolory. Lecture . . - . - . slidea, muaic,
reeordiap &amp;Dd dt.ing relaJed a'Werial will
u
portrayll.

IDII,_-

_.,.of

W.n.bop o-riptiaa:
Clarificatio_n of the teacbinga and obje¢.ives
of !)ld Testament propheta (Antos, Isaiah,
Jeremiah, in partieular) will be provided.
Making tl&gt;eir books more readable and
promoting the eompetenc:e w judge ana
evaluate their eontepla will be the
workshop aim.

MINOR HOME REPAIRS
"I'Hndoya/F""'-ty 1-Fe.-y
Zll-·l:OO p.m./201 N""oitoa, Aaberot
Campua
Leader: Karen Whitney, home repair
hobbyist

w.....,

Deoaiptlea:
This eoune io,deoigned lo leach n'iinor home

repairs and the use of t.ools around lhe

house. Learn when lb do it younelf and
wben t" aeek outaide help. People "With ton
thumbe Md no ezperienc:e wekome.

SHY PERSONS' A.JIIONYMOUS ·
w-....,y.,~-Sl-Apr14/S:30-5:00

p.a./116 Sq.ft,-.. St. c..,..
Leader: Gerald M. Thorner, Counaeling

PsycbologiA, Univenity Collll80iiq
Setvic:e and Student Development Program
,OI!ic:e
.

W..W.,~:
Is your ahyDeu inhibiting your growth?
Are you tired o! the dilcomfort and
djsqt idMtioo your abyneu caues? This
....-bbop will provide ae opportanilJ far
yealo learn ...,.lb eope with your
dioeomfort in sodo1 aituatioas. Within a
supportive environment &amp;hare your
ezperie....,., gain an undent.ancliDg of bow
this behavior patt.orn developed and
ezperiment with ..,e strateciealb help ·
you deal with and oven:omo your ahyueR.

Blumenthal,

Registration is 0101 - . y .

SIMULATED SOCIETY
Tbundaya/Fellr.ry I ·Mardo Zl/7:00-9:00
-p.m./330 Sq.lro Hall, Mala St.
Leaders: Michael Scbwut&amp;, hu
participated in a SIMSOC experienc:e, and
'
Winston Johnson, Ph.D. student in
Sociology of groups. .

c.-a

Warbhop o-riptiaa:
Through small group inleraet.ion, we shall
discover how power is exerci8ed and
maintained by various groups in society.
We will use the SIMSOC manual by William
A. Gamson w create political parties,
industry, police force, media, labor groups ·
and judicial eouncil. Our main aim is w
learn bow social order is established in
society and experience !un in the.,...,.,.,... It
will be necessary for j)irt.icipanta lb
purchase the SIMSOC manual available at
the U/B Bookstore on Main St. Campus
($4 .!lfi).

�In Recognition· of
World Hunger
SHOPPING AND EA'J'ING QN A
8IIOI2miiNG BUDGET
TwoeolloytfJ_, . ....,....n,.,t:GO
p.-.ts--Doopor-.·IIND~

Dr.toboaNiopnhiiJIIIonl-)
Leader: Mary Cooperma~~, N .Y .S.
certification in Homemaking and former
rest.aurant operator

Werbloep._...:
Don't throw tboeecelory leaves away!
Think you're t.oo poor to have thrimp or
steak?
Mary will take you fr!Jm.- to nuts ad_
demonstrate bow a nutritional diet ean be
maintained on a limited budget. Titqe Is of
the -nee and eating oo the run il one of
Mary's opeciall.ies. Food will be prepared .
and sampled at eaeb session. The grand
finale will be s complete meal Registration
will be confirmed only by the payment of ·
ooe dollar ($1.00, cub onln&gt;leaaelat which
time an ouUine will be available.

WOKCOOIUNG

Ttoe.~ay/Felwu.y6n :00·9:00 p.m.IIZ3
Jewett Parinray, Alumni AIIOIOdatioa Office
Leader: Mllp.i Laraon, has bad le1001111 in
Chbiese coolting and uses a wok regularly

for food preparatioo.

-

ur- - t l n g "Wolt ~"'I ·".

Worlubop o-ripdoa:
Nutrition and econClllly will be streased in
Ibis WOii&lt;ohO!"Which will teaeb YOU the
advantages of ineorporating Cbiio
,foocla
in everyday meals. Included will
demonstrations of wok cooking techniques
and aampling of disheo prepared.
Regiotration will be coofirmed upon t he
payment of one dollar (cash only, please) to
eover !ood&lt;OOU. Fonner participants of
this workabop are asked not to register
again .

""&lt;!.

HealtH Related ··
UNDERSTANDING ROW DRUGS wou:
hooolaytlJ _ , . 30-May 817:00.8:00
p.ao./ZUSqodro 111111, MaaSt. CampaJ
Coordinators (all U/ B Pbarmacoloa
• Graduate Student&amp;): Kevin Renakers ·
Pbarmacoloa and Therapeutics (School of
Medicine), Joe Dunn· Biochemieal
PbarmacoJoa(Scbool of Pharmacy), and
Jay Steinberg · Roswell Park
Pbarmaeology
·

Werbloep'o..cril'll-:
Did you ever wonder how an I;SPiriD that is
taken orally can- tbe pain of a headache
or a atubbed big toe? Here il an opportunity
to learn about the most eommoo
prescriptioo and D&lt;ll&gt;·preteription drugs •
and bow they work. IDcluded will be
antibiotic:a, anticancer, bigb blood preuure,
beart, tranqlliu-., over-tbe-c:ounter and
bormooe·likedrugs. No need fer a leienee
l&gt;Kqrow&gt;dl All you need la a sineore
interelt. An outline will be made available.

..,....,.,.....,.a.
....... an:•·""
, ...tzus.n
WOllEN AND ALCOHOLISM

Hoi, Mala St.~
Leader: Rc.mary Creenan, R.N. working
rib Aleoballlm Semcea of Erie County

w......,-..-,

Deoigned to niae &lt;OIDJI1Unity and peraonal
aw.,_..., the worltabop will !oeus on
identilleatioo. interv111tion and
rebabilltatloo of the female aleohoHe. The
!OI'IDAt iDeludeo lecture. dilcuaak&gt;n, guest
speo.kon and a !ibn. Not !or women oolyl

Gumam Kaur denlonatrlttng "'KundeHnl Yoga."

BELLY DANCING
Thanday1/F......, 1·March8/DOOD·1:00
p.m./339 Squire (ueept March 8- Z33
Squire), Mala SL CampaJ
Leader: Carol Stephenson, professional
Middle Eastern dancer.

Worlubop o.«ripdoa:
Hereis your opportunity to learn the
ancient art of Middle East&lt;&gt;rn daocing. Gain
ao appreciation ol this line daoce form and
stay in shape at t beaame time.

Leader: Carol Kaminsld, experienced danee

insttuetor
Worlubop o-ripdoa:
Participaots will be introduced to all dance
techniques wil.h t he emphasis on individual
improvisation . Each session will feature at
least 20 minutes of improvisatioo aod
exeroi&amp;es designed to help expand
participaot's creativeness in.dealing with
.time. space and motion . Jlesinners
welcome.

JAZZ DANCE
TaeedaytlJuaary 30-March 20n:OO.S:30
p.m./10 Capea, AmberotCampaJ
Leader: Nancy Wolff, oxpe!ienced dance
instructor and cbo~grapher
Worlubop o-ripdoa:
The fundamentals of juz dancing will be
taught starting with buie steps and leading
to dance routines:Wesr eom!ortable
cloth in$, leotards.i! you have them.
KARATE

hooolaytlJuaary 30-Apri13n:30,8:30
p.aa./339 Squire 111111, Maa St. CampaJ
LeAder: Erie Raldiris, b.Own'belt in Shorin
RyuKarat.e 1

Werbloep o-ri,d.a:

,

.

. .

Learn basic form movementa and aome·self
defense technique&amp;. Stay in'healthy
phytical eondition while increasing physical
endurance.

KUNDAUNIYOGA

1'!!-lar•'J - r 30-Apri13/6:00-7:00

p.-./332 Sqodro, Mala St. ~
Leaders: Sat Singh Khalsa and Bhai Dyal
Singh, eaperienced· Y~ teaebers .
W-po-ripdae:
Develop expanded awareneas, greater
flexibility of body; relief frt.m teMion,
deeper and more relued state of
eoosciousneaa through yoga pooture,
breathing and meditatioo. Bring rug or
blanket and wear loose fitting clothing.

KUNDAUNI YOGA ,

s.-n

::=Gw:nomKur,e~enredYoga
Worluloop~

Develop !"'paneled aware-. greoter
lleJdbilitJ of bociY, relief from tenaioD,

u.s. PGOtap

PAID
Bulfalo. N.Y.
Permit~.

Ill

Worlubop o-ri,ti..:
A basic introduction to individual and
collective meditation with explanations of
the theory aa well as the spiritual praetiee.

CBEA11VE DANCE
Taeedaya/Juaary 30-Mareb 20/4:00·5:30
p.m./339 Squire, Main Sc. Campus

..,....,.,......_,.I·Apri15te:08-7:80
, ... /Ill
Hoi, Maa St.~ '

NOll· Profit Org.

MEDITATION .
Tlnlndaya/Febnary 1·Mardo 8/8:00-10:00
p.m./Z32 Squire, MaiD St. Campus
Lead.,.: Steven Turner, has been prutidng
meditation for 4 years and has previous
teaching experience.

doeperaad IIIDrerelaudaU&amp;eo!
~tllroo!PJOP

polture,
bnalllillg aad .-liloliaL 11r11w rue or

...........

_._~dallli8s-

C.OI KamlnUJ;a ..CrHtlve Dance" del•.

MODERN DANCE
,
Ttoe.laya/JuMry 30-March 211/5:15-6:15
p.a./%33 Sqalre 111111, M... SL ~
Leader: Ilene Ebner, has studied modern
danc:e · Martha Graham technique for 4

years

.

Worlubop o-ripdea:
The buie techniques of Graham dancing
will be t.augbt with an awareness ol bow one
ean learn to move and utilize different part.s
of the body. Designed for those with little
or no donee lnining, expect to learn a

number of different movement

J

eombinatioos through utive participatioo
in this workshop. Appropriate dance attire
is reoommended.

,_..,.,J_,.

SHIPSHAPE
hooolayoud
30-Ma.d ZZ/5:30-6:211 p.-./311Sqodro
BaU (except Mald15 · Zil llo!*eJ, Maa
St.C...
Leader: Meliaaa Kanovaky, formerly
employed at a Health Spa

Worbllop o-ripdea:
'Tis the season to get in shape! Beginning
with buic body movement.~, eaeb seaion
will be an aeeelerated veraion of the

previous one. lnSU:Uct.ion for speeiatized
areas of eoncentration (atomaeb, !ega, hips)
will be provided. The leader's expertise is
in exercise that fiat.ten the female figure.
Wear leotards or loose fitting clotlling.

SOCIAL DANCING

I

WedMadayt/Jaa_,. 31-Ma.d
. %1 /Z:00-3:00p.a./C.,. 10, AaalMnt

c-,_

Leader: llebecu Lynn Cress, hu ail_yeara
oC da...,otudio trainin&amp;

Werbloep._...:
The buic:a of ballroool and dileo dancing
will be taught. Danc:e ponibil!ties indude
the Foxtrot, Rumba, Merengue, Cba Cba,
· Saloa, Samba, Tuao and even a hultle or ·
two. lhw to appiJ pat&amp;ems to dilferent
rilythma will alao be eovered. Open to the
lirlt 10 maleo md 10 females wbo resister·

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Happy

Winter
Break
LAST ISSUE Of THE SEMESTU

ovouc

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

DEC :14, 1978
. "VOL. 1.0 • NO. 14

By Joyce Buehnowakl

-

.. s...,_

It hasn't exactly been an easy three
and one-half yeai's, but the U/B Medical

SchQel has come a long way since the
Sptlng of 1975 when Dr. John Naughton
took ~ as dean; a position which, _
before his arrival, lay vacant neany
ea years.
•
s-ee of a reputed 1- ol
- i o In the - y 708, It Is no
secret that the Medical Schoors
national and local reputation suffered,
as did the morale of faculty and
stl!(lents. Now there ara signs that the
dark cloud which once hovered over

. ~~ ~~~~~~~J.;

-

ol the Buffalo
Ph(.slclsn magazine will, In fact, gtye a
de ailed report on Jhe status of the
school, Its student body and Its programs.
•
Information for , the Issue was
gathered from departmen't chairmen,
edmlnlstretlve staff and hosp1tal directors In the form of a 7()()-word synopsis
on each ol their res~lve areas. The
data were collated and put Into report
form by Naughton, Assistant Dean •
John Richert and Robert McGranahan,
editor of the magazine.
.
The report Is not meant to be an

:.':.-:"~o:Ton ~~~~:.. ~~~~~~t~l~mn~

and students a per&amp;P'!Ctlve on where
they -... where they ara, and where
they're headed.
Sell-atody =mlng
Information gathenad lor the iii!.IP
will aleo be used as part of an
Institutional eelf-study whlc:t1 the
Medical School must complete before
l ts 1980 accredltatlcin vlaH.
One of ttie !Nljor turnarounds In the
Medloal School a.. the PMt f - yMrS,
"a
eccordlng to N.ughton, has con.....,tly Improving student bo&lt;IY·"
Each c1u1 since 1974 has jl8en
ecacjemlcally stronger than the pnic:ed· •
lng one. Cumsnlly, medical edmlaslons
teet acoraa for astlrtng lJhyalclans

::.ron"!!
~~~~ rh:re..=~fr~
Part t of the National Boards.

Student morale Ia up aleo, says
N.ughton . This can be evidenced not
only by the type and decnlaslng
f'*I'*'CY~=Ialnte raglallnd, but
&amp;180 by 1
student participation
1n commmea 81111 lnat"UUlonal work.
Anotto• good lndlcelor of helghtelled

T-.

Whle _,....... In
...,y ol Ull'a 1211 l,.,.n - - _ _ . ~ hm ....,. ltr.- to
MllltCal School Folllee, a night of song,
......,_, m . _ MonMy. ~
IIIIlS ~~-==ling the faculty), and
....,.._ eelcl t1oe ...... ......, for
wheN atudenta 81111----" . . . , _ _ ,-..., - - ' • ....._ ol
g1111er for good natUNd fun .
_ _ ...,. ......................, ..._ rpr ·
..... ~ Ch8ifiM!! of
_ _....... - . . . . . . . . -...........

mcwa1a lilaughton pqlnla out, Ia tile
~Utlon,

=.....

two ,_a

IIQO, of the

..riOIIal statlft ' - ' - ' NCiutted

. _ NeugMon'a .mv.l, and four
~- .,_tly,.,....,,

Today'sR......-Istheflnallssue
for the fall semester. We will begin
second semester publication on
Thu~ay, January~ 18, 19.79.MNn-o
willie, our best wishes for a pleasant
semester break and holiday season.
Our th;tnks for your support during
the year.

.....

�-14,11711

•-Medicine: good news
:"'::-:,Y~~ .Medical

School, w1i1
" help perpetuate" an- even more
Improved situation, Naughton predicted.
" Even though the job Is not yet
completed, renoVIIIIon that has been
done so far has had a rawardlng Impact,
end has made It possible to Improve
recr}lllment of chairmen and the
wolklng environment of students and

BRIEFLY

lac~~~e ~=s. of faculty' and
students has steadily been ll}lprovlng
as .e•lsting programs have been
strengthened, Naughton believes the
external Image of the I!Chool has 1!!"-0
a:-n enhanced. The Indicators are there

Calllus~

A series of 'ommerclals for •
Canlslus College which aired on
WKBW last w;,6 aused coooem on
sever~ local umpuses.
Tired: of "the" big university" with
Its long lines and Indifference? the
&lt;;C&gt;mmerclals asked.
Ready to tty a ruJ college after
a two-year Mld&lt;ey Mouse S&lt;;hool?
Well, 1ry the new lmprovedCanlsf~.
That kind of blatant "Brand X"
adY8tlslng Is prohibited by the
"Statement of Prln&lt;:lples of Good
Practice for Members of the Nadonal
Ass«l.tlon of College A!lmlss)ons
Counselors," one sour'" pointed out
to the ........
Those prln&lt;:lples all for the
avoidance of ''Invidious

10

1

~J'~la;~!~~~ac't'lvT~.~!! :"~~Tt~'f~

Kline sotns to Boston

u.-

Professor T. Jefferson Kline,
associate dean of the Faculty of
Arts and Letters, will leave the
Unlverslty,at the end of the current
semester to accept a poslt1on as
chairman of the Department of MQ!IemForelgn Languages and Llteratur~
at Boston University.
Kline, an assoclate'professo{ of

'omparlsons."

French and_ ~o'l:nparatlve literatUre.

They also outlaw "en&lt;:ouraglng
students to trAnSfer If they have
shown no Interest In doing so."
Several local colleges reportedly
'ornplalned to the State Eduatlon
Depou:tm.... t.
Funny that Canlslus should be
taking up a hard-sell student
recrultrn..,t ampalgn, 6ne observer
n6ted:
"The most recent Issue of the
Canlslus Clorolllde had a front page
story crowing 'that e,prollment was up
and the dorms, overfl~wl~."

Joined the taliul ty In 1970, after
receiving his doctorate from Ct&gt;lumbla.
He has served In various administrative
capacities: as director of undergraduate French studies (1970-7 2),
as director of the SUNY/Grenoble,
FranceProgram(l972-73), as director
of the Master's Program In French
( 1974-75), as acting chairman of the
Theatre Department (Spring, 1976),
an&lt;Hn his present position as
assoclatt:deanslnce 1976.
fie Is author of Andre Malraux
ADd the Mdalllorpbosls of De.ath
(Columbia University Press) and
varlou$ articles on the novel (In
.
Twendetil c;_, Liter...., and.. _·
c.tdendl!l'lleme), on theater (l n
R....-1&lt; ltevteW and The Stuctur..nst
ltevlew). and on film (In Tbe Inter·
...-.Review of Psyco-....alysls and
Psyeho-cuttwal Review).

Me_. l!l'llllp week &amp; success
WBfO's '' Earfest" Fall Ustener
Su.pport Week raised a total of
$7,241. ln&lt;:ludlng telephone pledges
and benefit proceeds.
"Although our goal was $10,000, "
WBfO Geneul Manager Marvin
Gr•nger said, "we consider the week
a success. It signals an upturn from
the put two llstener_support weeks."
PtecJses of ~0 listeners will be
placed In e Ustener Support Fund,
which wiH be used In the coming year
to purchue equipment related to the
station's pending power In&lt;: &lt;ease.
Such purchases will count as local
matching funds, part of the $26,000
which WlfO must r•lse by~.
1980, to matdl e S 77.000 grant

from the~ oftte.Jtb,
f.duc&amp;llcM, and Welfare lor the power

FOftlsn students on die rise
Figures gleaned from the newsletter
of UJ11' s Intensive English Language
Institute:
•In 1977/ 78 foreign student
enrollment In U.S. colleges and
universities was reported to be
235,509 - an Increase of 16% over
the.prevlou. yea-; and more than.
twice the enrollment of I 0 years -

ag~.31.1'1&amp; of all foreign students a re

from OPEC nations; Iran has sent
36,220 studeo!ts, almost half of the
n;s~o:studetlis lfom theOftC' - &gt;~·
WlfO"""' Cllllr pledses of support, countries.
•Engl....,.,..lng continues to be the
~too-new
most popular field of study with an
~r....,.thestatlon's
enrollment of 28.8'1&amp; of.U stuc1entt.
--.....,list to 1200 local
wfille humanities continue to decline,
supporters.
posting nearly an 18'1&amp; decrease over
the previous year.
_ •California tal&lt;.es the lead again
as being the state with the most
•
Is
. . . . . . . ALL
foreign students enrolled. Just as In
~WIIItaiS. Hamilton of
1976/77, It was reported that one
Modem L.anauases and Llter•tures
out 'of everj'sl• or'seven foreign
haabeen l*ne6 a.oclate dean of
. students was stutlylng IQ California.
the r.cutty of Arts and Letters lor
New York maintained Its position of
a..._,.., term. beSfnnlng January numl&gt;er two with 21,569 (9.2'1&amp;)
15.1-919.
students.
ftlniiiiDn ... helcl-al positions
lnfonnatto,n-s taken from " Open
wtdlln Aouand"-ers,tncludlng
Doors." published by Jhe lnitltute of ·
fcGitr~ Pll Ktif18 associate International Education ...,_
dNn. *lsateelplent of the
The IW Itself has 152 fall semester
a-.llor's Award for Excellence In
studenls. lJJ1l overall has
approximately 1.200.

Mfte~wiiO""Ied

"'

1

S:l3~ ~~~:'f~~rable

comments
about the Medical School during his
travels as dean , Naughton notes that
the school now has a good number of
local medical Interest groups. Also, the

t;,~·· ~~=~~s. ~f;~s s:,1i-sur,;
terms of extramural funding from tHe
· National Institutes of Health . U/B leads
the other SUNY medical schools - and,

~~d~HB ~••w~ ~~:f• ~~~~~~~
t'!f"'S of NIH funding.

Good ,....,..,...
Another factor which bears directly
on a I!Chool's reputation Ia the way 1n
which Its students perform ln house
staff training at other Institutions.

tn~i~e;~~~h~ .fsrre~ Y~~O.:!~

managed to get students Into some
top-ranking programs."
Moreover, Naughton says students

~~:.~ ~ro~u=~~u~or6:~s~lt:l~~
Intern anti resident

pr~rams .

0

th~au.Pe~~n K~~~~~~- ~ nL'1~ ~!il~

studeht, was elected president of the

~~:nl~tl~~u::te s~~d~.:'~ f.:ri~i'~~?;

year. Another definite plus for the
school's Image and part of an

:~~r::'~~~~~ ~~:~deen~=~~~".7d~
feels .

'

Problema ri;:maln ·
To be sure, there are problems which
still must be 4olved by the MediC!II
School, Naughton Indicates. The
0

lor ~ftnt~nt;~ttr ~~st an~
1

1

ll:::':iilYes
Improved, Insists Naughton, not !c
mentlo~ the cramjled conditions of the
library which is shared by all health
sciences students.

th~heY~te;:h~'lfPl~~~!:f b~~~~~~~[
!unCia for the Medical !\Chool, was a
"step In the right direction ," asserts
Naughton , because It recognized the
disparity of funds for Instructional
support here as compared with other
SUNY medical units.
"The fact that the , supplemental
budget allocation will bring us on a par
with Upstate and Downstate In terms of
Instructional support, Is en Important,
constructive move for us, 11 he explains .
Rob medicine to pay clentlatry?
As far as Assemblyman Miller's
comment to the Faculty · Senate
Executive Committee last week that

~=r ~'3.~1~ '=.!~m-;::~~~l~

eduestes more physicians than It needs
and not enough dentists, Naughton
remarks that caution should prevail
since New York has traditionally been
an ~~ export state." The dean points out ·
ttiat although figures Indicate New York
eoucates an adequate JSupply of
physicians per capita, many graduates .migrate to &lt;&gt;ther states to seek
em,t3k";':J·.shllt In funding-ma alsO
cause medical I!Chool tuitions rn the
State - to soar, forcing qualified
residents to attend out-&lt;&gt;1-stste Institutions.
•
"The answer Is not to take funding
away from medicine,".. concludes
Naughton, " but to develop additional
resources for dental education ."

Marxist Workshop u'n it
P.lans active spring schedule
The College Workshop In Marxist'
Studies . Is planning a wide-ranging
slorles- of events the second sem_ester,
Dr. James Lawler of Philosophy, Its
coordinator, has announced.
One will be a reading of a play by
Buffalo State English professor Manny
Fried, In cooperation with the Theatre
Department.
~
Abother will be a panel dlscuaslon on
some aspect of the role of biology In
human behavior, crltlciZI!&gt;Q some
biological theories.
'
A third lfl be a consideration of
human rights - 119nt a theoretical
viewpoint.
The wOittshop, formed last year, has
only a modest budget, but a wealth of
Interest on the part of 12 faculty
m!tmbera who serve on Its coordlnatlng
committee.
As Lawler explains It, the Marxist
workshop's chief function Is " to
enhance existing courses, to promote
lectures, forums, films, etc. sponsored
by departments and campus organlzalions which relate directly or Indirectly
to Mar.ost Studies, and to supplement
these efforts or cooperale with them
when necessary and possible. " Marxist
~tudles recommends courses which,
while not necessarily only about
~arxlsm or taught from a Marxist
voewpolnt, Involve the treatment of
Mar.lst .. perspective u a slgnoflcant
feature .
..

ci::S: fn:'~~:~i ~j~

l'lel~

through diSCUMion and debate of the
conceptsanctleppllcetlonsof Mancism."
....,.lei Studlal .tao promotei communlcetlon and dlecuMion MIOng
faculty In~ In the lm~ ol
Mlnd8m In their llelda who wtah to
..........nfonMIIOn and idMI.

Mar.ism Is an Interdisciplinary
perspective, Lawler l&gt;olnts out, but
there Is no systematic effort on this
campus to craatl' a useful means of
communication and discussion bet-.&gt; faculty and students from a wide
Qriety of dleclpllnes and viewpoints.
The Collage WOittellop Ia meant as an
Initial effort In that direction.
~ defended or criticized,
WtJether tn' lr8diilonal lorm or tn riewly
developed variants Mendam has gained
a definite p i - In moat 11 not.Jil the
soclel sclencaa- and even, to • lesser
extent In the natural actenoaa Lawler
points' out . tt lnvol¥w nOt only
economic, social and political theory,
but general philosophical views on the
nature of mankind and general methods
91 approi!Chlng the study of particular
areas of life. The development and
application of Ideas Inspired by
Marxism ,play an ImpOrtant role In
sociology and psychology, history and
education , anthropology and ecology,#
law and art- as -n as In philosophy,
economics and political theory, . he
enumerates.
StudentS' who only know about
Manclsm through hearsay will lind it
· difficult to understand events In today's
world Lawifr contends. our concern
for general e&lt;!ucation should lead us to
roake sure students have ex~
to a balanced Ma'"lst per...,cllwa. '1'011.
can' t have an academlllllllr Jnedem
university without t~ls, he . . . ..
Lawler recalls the ""'-yptoat
reaction of an uninformed lo* ~
when the old Social S c i - 1::olleO&amp;
was being reviewed.
"Why do you went to ......, my ,
prOperty?" lllle aelced when aile . _ .
that unit had a Ma'"lst perapectfva.

�S ectrum &amp; ·SA:· ~ho has what p·o wer?
Who can do or did what to whom In a
tiff between the Student Senate and The
Spe&lt;;trum?Confllctingoplnionsabounded as the Reporter went to press
Wednesday.
, ·

editorial board and replace it with a
steering committee.
No funds, no SPKS

If Sub-Board · does this and The
Spectrum board defies It , then Sub-

wli~sr.:e~t'r~~~~:,e~n~~~s~~

Board could cut off funds ·from the

pa~r!"rss~na~~~~=t~1!"..en

wields what power In that arena, too.
One Issue at i1 time.
.

subBoard and The Spectrum Periodical
Inc., under -which Sub-Board "buys
student subscriptions" at a rate of
$27 ,500 per year [for 14,000 copies ol75
Issues with a minimum _average size of

The newspaper contro-ay
First, the newspaper contro-sy:
Four sfudent senators, members of a
Student Senate "oversight" committee,
· complained to tbe Reporter that the
Senate's actions in• regard to The
Spectrum have been "distorted" by that

17

said: the
Senate could seek to have a defiant
Spectrum ousted from Its Squire Hall
office space.

pa~nday's Spectrum re rted that the
Senale had voted to •I:Jissolve" The
and replace it with a
publication run " by former SA officials
jilted In last month's mid-term
elections."
The move was spearheaded by
"38-year-old campus prophet Michael
Levinson," The spectrum said.
. Senate followers of Lev vowed to

1

as ~~~ey~~~~~~~em'n1~~~~~~~~~~~

Spectrum

shoul;{'n•t be occupying student activity

~al~":,~f~or~v:'/~

Spectrum ..W. atudlant IAterasta, and
to ..,._ IIIII ~· edltorllil oo.rd
with a IJW\altlonal commlttee.whU8 that
re-evaluation Ia being canied out.
This Is neither a dissolution nor a
tak~ ; lhey &amp;llluad.

~~~~~~~ :!~!"'tJ=t~~~ll'oa~

Spe&lt;;triJm _

.

"You haven't heard the end of this,"
Senator Slnkewlcz told the Reporter,
despite the fact that the semester Is
running out.
He and the other senators Interviewed
agread that they wouldn't ''rest" until

fn::'es~~ ~f n:{;.'cfe~. "~~a t~~;,~f!

"responsive" to students.
And one no doubt which doesn,
accompany reports on the Student
Senate with cartoons of monkeys
swinging In trees as did last Monday's

Spectrum.

The aame kind of go-nment
The StudeQt Senate quartet Is also

·~~~~~~

-=~gq~~\'f:s.. ~ 'h~e!';,m~r~~ ~~trh i~:

~~~f3~·t r~~~~~~ ~.;;...Weco~~

responsible and responsive to students.

Robinson , 1111 wasn 't
"allowed" to call Itself the Spectrum

get advertising ."
Robinson said The Spectrum is not
"lndePI'ndent," and can't be. Mandatory
student fees were used to purchase Its
equipment, he charged , and "It was

;i,~S:::~ ~~:..:.r::n;r~:r~

senators and supporters· showed up In
their offices to lay ''s'elge• to the
pub)lcation, The Spectrum reported.
Not sol chorused Senators Don Berey,
Bob Slnkewlcz, Tumer Roblnson' lalso
hf8d _of the Black Student Association),
and Diane O'Connor.
"A gross misinterpretation," fumed
Robinson.
''The Senate resolution said In effect
The Sp«:trum must be more responsive
to students. The Senate did not vow the
paper wou1dn, appear Monday. The
Senate does not engage In arbitrary and
capricious acts for the fun of It,"
Robinson aald.
The Involvement of Mlch8ei Levinson
was .,otally mt.rep......,ted," the four
senators claimed.
,
Levinson, they pointed out, Ia neither
a aenator nor a student. "He Is not a
spokesman for the Senate or lor any
students."
. _ ~n ...0. Slnkewlcz disagreed
u100. just what the Senate's Spectrum
resolution had aald, but finally agreed
on ltti "Intent."
The Intent, they aald, Ia to have SA's

~~ 1 ot that , Slnkewlcz

attempt by ihe Student Senate to
control the press. There are reports
from some edmln!strattve oHices of
calls from faculty In support of The

~~~s~~

t:l P~tud:,t 0~o~mfg~

ofllclal media for alrstudents on this'
campus. It Is not autonomous.."
The Student Association, both
Robinson arvj Slnkewlcz fi!Wled , has a
responsibility to formul@
ft a more
.. ractlcal l'{lethod of operatlon for The
ectrum. • Aslt stands now, they said,
he editor selects- his own editorial
board . The structure Is conducive to
Ylolatlons; there's no oversight by any
group."

~

R - aaya tfa a croclt
Jey Rosen, edltbl' of The Sp«:truin,
rejacts all this .

ce~~f~l':"=u~:~~.;:l~~~~.':

.

pointed out.
The paper Is an Independent
Institution authorized to operate-under
a State charter, and "does not fall under
IIIII domain of SA or the Senate." The
paper's edltorial 'boerd ;' mo~. has
wted unanlmoualy to object to the
lnterfenlnce of allldent oo-nment In
Ita affairs. The corporation conslats of and I11.-CCifii8&gt;Hecl by Ita edlforial oo.rd,
Rosen aald:
. ·
Any move to remove that baird ls\ln
effect a move· to ''dlssolva" The
Spectrum , he contended, no matter
wnat the wording ol the resolution
mlllhtbe.
AOMn aald, too, that LeYinson /a
lnvol¥8d In the effort. Lev Introduced
the resolution ill the Student Senate.
tiel they didn't tell you that ," ha

Spectrum .

·

. A government , they say, -that Is
That,

sut&gt;mlts

SA

President

~~r.:..'w,~(a;.~ ~ ~~::!',::n.:cs7~.:r~

Robln\l()n).
"I'm embarrassed by all this," said
Schwartz. He has. spent the last month
("successfully") d8veloplng a Student
Association executtve committee -that
has ctedlblllty_ and (espec\, he aald:
·To fully explain ths wrangle over the

~r~~~l'l~:::,:.o~~":lt~~~

and an Interest In- parliamentary
maneuvering beyond the ordinary.
In essance, though, the four
·o-slght committee" Senatore (and
the faction of the Senate they represent)
contend that the student election held
at mid-term Is unconstitutional. ·
Schwartz claims he has lagltimate
power "to call general elections· and
referendums." The Student-wide Judiciary agrees .
The oversight group has a different
view.

They grant the President can call
elections, but only "In C8Sit of
vacancies." This was &lt;lOt· tha case, they

Ultimate authority
• Slnkewlcz, Berey, Robinson and
O'Connor base the Senate's authority to
rule on the validity of the elections on a
clause granting the Senate .,he
ultimate authority o - all the affairs of
the Student Association with the

~~~~~f~~~~ral:~~~~~~~g~:_ !he annual

Sc1~".!rtz l~t~~s-"Wol/~lslaW:.!t:::,Sd~

In any tripartite system anywhere has
authority-a- the judicial branch.
In any event, says Schwartz, the fuss
over government and The Spectrum Is
being ralsect by a•group of disgruntled
office seekers who, since they couldn't

::w:'r~t1fobl~onn~~d ~~~~w~~ ~~~

were defeated In the disputed election.
It's very easy for any special Interest
group that works 'hard enough to get
control of the Student Senate, Schwartz
88

~hwartz, moreover, Is not sure theii
is an.Y official oversight comm{ttee. He
'says he vetoed the Senate laglslatlon
establishing it because It was coupled
with a motron Invalidating the election
(something he contends the Senate
can, do).
The four oversight committee representatives aay they era functlbnlng Wl1ll
a total membership of 10 lo order .t o
keep an eye on those · SA officers

=~~-e~~~tie r.".:'J ot tbe~sw~~
88

thoae officers.

~

Berey said the committee ln.tenda to
give Its preliminary report at a Senate
-lng,_ Friday, December 15, at 3
p.m. In .,.., Lounge.
He said Schwartz has refused to call
that meatlng, but thalthe ·Senate, with
Its "ultimate authority . OY8I all, . . .
affairs," ate., has called~~ anyway.
Trying to ~ the-cln:oia
Berey and his associates contend
Schwartz doesn't want to- face a report
from any oversight group.
Schwartz aays he's not afnlld of an

"'W!y ackriOwled~· ~ ~ .Stud~l- =~'l:..:"'.=:!t':. ~wouOO: :;1t

It hadn't ~ oouplecf' wllti CIICI8ring
wlde JudiCiary has okay&amp;d . the
IIIII elliction llldlldJ,
bellotlng, but contend that the "Student
"What I don't Want to do" eaya
SUpreme Court" should have. been the
court of original jurisdiction In the . Scbw.-tz Ia
to lila!.
clnlo.malt8f.
- .
/
[Senlile-·) any·than~
They claim there w...-e Irregularities In
approving the election procedures. So

001D1111,_

':to..,..._::=:..........

·-----·.u.·.-.... -·

'forslve the fadler'

_,.,a

" The Slxtles" -they
thrilling
decade to many young people, a time
of experlm~ntatlon and Incandescent
change. But for others, like UIB English
Tut of IIIII ...... utlon
Professor Howard Wolf, they were
aalflie
ret=fu:~~he
~~r
"':h'!tor:i&gt;o1e
The actual resolution about Th~
years of anguish and self-doubt, years
Sp«:trum finally made available by
campaign, Rosen !'Qmmented, "bears a
that Wolf vividly recalls In a_new
Robinson and Slnkewlcz Is somewhat
:ri~~s :"r.:'.:.an~~h~~~.fll}~~ fTiemolr, ForsJve doe f - ($8.95,
at odds with this Interpretation [and
Spectrum. That' s not just coincidence,"
-lacking In clarity):
New Republic Books).
Written In long-nand, the hard-tohe said.
The publisher des&lt;::rlbes the work
follow statement reads:
thlsway: •
• ..
_
" ResoiV9!1,
" Growlrog:Up.durlng t))e '4Qs.and ·
president - of' ·sA-:"That we, the undergredu'l,\e Student
agrees. To aay Levinson Is pot lnV9.1~ 1 ·sp,; 1-tPW~&gt;rd ...,se~~fAtber)~ " '
Assoc. Senate of tbe State Unl-alty of
tis .-1:.0• ~llll...-jle,!~ '- " ' " '' to 1 tlcker:li!IO yiSJ~of tM&lt;.l4'!or!.&lt;t~ { ,.
jSchwartz.: .. ::•~.• I •1.
I~.
•ti• "".
lather In tum chides him for hi~ . :c,
·
Student Assoc. and recognizing any
•. ,Levinson .hf!llsell Introduced the · romantic dreams of literature ilnd art.
resolution before the. Senate; Schwartz ·
student govt. must have some financial
The(&gt;, .as il GQUege professo&lt; In ilpstate
control o - all organizations which It
llllYs.-t"-'s no doubtpUhat,
..
'
-"l'hat'a L•'a,WFftlng," _he...ld.ol the ' New-York. ~Is students constantly
.lunda,.
••
r~roa.cb hlm.fpr hlsllberal.polltjcs
handwritten text.
..
"And realizing. serious Spectrum
end .ldeais. (;Ma~ liQ'! c;aAnang .
lntere,tin-\'ly .- Schwartz . told the
charter violations to exist and continue,
hearby (ale) Immediately remove from
back,' one student tells him, ' but
office the officers of the Students'
my generation doesn't have that
The Spectrum. should be: Bob SlnkeCorporation, Spectrum Student Periodmuch
time.')
wlcz, Turner Robinson, Michael Steven
Ical Inc., that hnlctions on our
"Above all , he strives to be a
Levinson, Don Berey and ChiJCk
SUNYAB campus In R. 355 SQuire l:lall
responsible
husband and father while
F.roellch."
as ourJ'ubllaher of what sho-uld always
All are Individuals who have sought
popular culture preaches the demise
be an of what' Is and of what has
high
student
office
and
been
reJected,
always been, as long as anyone can
of the family. ·
remember. our students' newspaper at . he noted.
"As he walks these familiar tightUIB The Spectrum.
ropes. Wolf encounters a memor..t&gt;le
Rca.~ not alaolnad
" And to furthermore, remove the
cast
of characters, lncludl_ng: Uncle
Rosen Is not alarmed by prospects of
authority of office from all the other
Ben. a millionaire cynic. who tr"'ats
SUb-Board's removing Its _support.
member&amp; of the Spectrum Student
Howard to his first tr-I p abroad: 'Stella,
'Whet SUb-Board does Ia IJII to
Periodical, Inc. Corporation Board of
.SUb-Boerd." Roaen said . They are
a VIllage bohemian and aspiring
Directors whosa pnrvloua function was,
and has always been as Tire Spectrum 'a
actress who gives him .his first taste
editorial oo.rd only, with the exception
of love: Kay, his artist-wife who Is
break It, they break it."o1 'writes' (ale) protected under The
contemptuous of traditional notions
Schwartz agreed thet Th• Spectrum
~rum Periodical Inc. resolution at
of marriage and c.ommltment; Rlc.hard,
can operate without any atudent
UIB and appendeks [ale) a declaration
a student radical who makes an altar
of trust attached to this dOCument for
aald Rosen,
of a gun and wonders at 'the ._,.,.,.,
11111 boOk of rulee and for publication In
"the Unl..alty grants apace• In Squire
Monday's $p«tnnm."
effort of everything to live'; and
liail, not the Senate or the Squire
~-of the wording, Slnkewlcz
Kristine, the daughter whose
House Council.
aald. the effect o• the resolutioh Ia that
dependence he cherishes, even as
Prealdentlal Assistant Ron Stein has
the ~representatives to Sub-Board
he sees himself powerless to pr,o tect
(whO·
natltute a majority on thai _ aald on that point, that thla Ia a efudent
her.
bolnl must 11018 at tonight's Sub-Bolll'd
dl=:,an:.!!.
an
meeting (7 p.m., 314 Squire) to oust the

agalnat Th• Spec"um, ttat they have to
wor1&lt; through Sub-Boar&lt;l.

the Senate has "ruled" the election
Invalid.

,.II

1

~.:.roiu~.::z.

~a~C:tt.:n·ro!~~ ~:w~~~t:~~

~~:.... ~~~~ :t:~'~o"J~r:.~

~.=.:'Y~~r~:t ~~..t'l:rt~~~~

'"= ~=';'~,

~ld~"'=·

"For all diose whole lives_,
to~ by the revolution a11ed
'The Sixties,'
will
strike a nerve of recognition,'' the
advance publtdty promises.
Wolf has won a Major Hopwood
Awand for Fiction and &amp; MacDowall
Cqlony Fellowship. He Is also the
author of111eVokeWIIIMo . . . . .
........... Aliel.'a$ ..., (with
Roger Porter).

....,.,.._f.._

�- - 1 4,1 871

VIEWPOINTS

AAUP erred
in lining . up
signatures

Artnsrace
Writer claims we can't trust
Carter or the SALT talks, contends
our survival is in our hands
By Walter Slmi)SO!t
lnslruclor. Rocllol Carlon Colego,
~. WHY P-=ecenter

Up until about three weekS ago I had
to agree with the New York Times:
"Observing the politics of SALT these
days Is like spending a night at the
opera. Emotions are rising all around
but It Is virtually Impossible to follow
the story."
But a few events have crystallzed the
current Strategic Arms Limitation Talks
for me, rePlacing my confusion with
understandlo11,. and moral outrage. Lat

~~x~~V::mber 27th, 1attended a Sta;e

Oepartment briefing on SALT which
given at _Monroe Community
Collage In Rochester. There I heard an
official from the Carter Administration
explain proudly that the SALT II treaty
would lll&gt;l •top the neutron bomb, the
Cruise missile, the MX missile, the
Trident submarine, or, should the
Presidl!nt decide that he wants It, the
B-1 bomber. After hearing th is, I had to

was

1

;::',:;- ~or!th~ou t~n~;::~";lt,l,;:;n;.~
all to do witb arms _control. While

~~~~r~a.g~r::g.hy~n1~~vfh!'';,~8

serious problem of qualitative "improvements" In nuclear weapons
~=~~~: In this area It Is clearly

The FY11110 budget wouNd ouopiclono
But my .....,lng was well on Its
WilY by thle time. In fact, my suspicions
etr.dy .-oused when earlier In
.._.,.,_ the Carter Administration
that Its FY 1980 budget would
prablibty cell for .,. incrMM In military
~~~~~~ ( - a.~ allowMCe for
'lliiiiCionl. white alrnultaneousty rec;qmrMIIdlnacuta tn other arua In ~to

r...a.cs

=..::..1=tr"~owec~
1;=~
~

1JIIe- quldiiJ
Wlllla HouM cry: the rMident
811110111111111 tile! he beltevea that more

monllf IIIOuld ba apent on civil
CllfMeL (IIlii lheno'a no •cure" for
~-.only ,.-lon).

.._,.,.,.,1he reel

The ........
Then, on

bomb

--...____
__

,. _ _ _ pub-

- _..., r..:::.:-'
.............
.,_....
~

,.._
-

_., Hoi.-...

.. Ia o.flo

-··-"'
_,.__

--~
r.-.rr

--

lllfeM-

.lOKI..,._..
-=-~

of -

Telo-

Editor:
In the rush and confusion of last
minute efforts In the campaign tor

~=~n,t~ga ~~ft':!' t~ ~~o~~tt':i{o~f ~~

fell. The Pentagon's insatiable appetite
got the better of it ~aln and it
announced Its lntentio~ f~ seek a $2.2
billion supplemental budget for the
current fiscal year, Including $500
million for new strategic systems like
the MX and Trident II missiles.
This apparently did not catch Jimmy
Carter by surprise. White House
sources Indicated that the President
was likely to appro,ve the request (and
submit It to C&lt;!ngress In January)
because It would, and I quote , "lay the
g)'~~~ . ~roundwork tor the ratification

·::'in;:;;r, ·~~b~Y~t~~~r":~ed~'}ll:~o~~

The technical jargon in that last

Where does this leave us?
Where does this leave those of us
who know that the arms race must be
stopped If humankind is to survive?
At best we are in a difficult and
painful position. It Is tempting to fo rget
about SALT, but if SALT Is not signed
and ratified, things may be worse than
they already are, especially if a failure
to reach an agreement results in a
deterioration of U.S. and Soviet
relations. SALT II, despi te its telling
limitations, may lessen some of the
international tensions that fuel arms
competition . Also, If SALT fails , efforts
to build public support for the concepts
of arms control and disarmament may
beset beck.
The trouble with SALT is that at best
we can give it grudging support . If we
.do support it, we must do so within the
context of criticizing both ild Inadequacies (which are many) and the
way President Carter is seeking support
·
for iJ.

ratifying SALT requires exempting the
Pentagon budget from next yeafs
budget-cutting, wasting fu nds on zany
clvi) defense schemes and rushing the
development of the MX and Trident II
missiles, It may be too hiQ.h for
constituencies
normally
disposed
toward arms control. Spending for
military projects must be defensible on
security grounds alone; arms control

~~~~~ilu~~~ -" Mov."~g'e~l~i.n1~78lrms

phrase obscures the insanity but what it

bolls down to Is this: faced with
opposition from the military lobby,
Jimmy Carter Is trying to set) arms
control by.. escalating the arms race!
Campaign Pledge forgotten
And what an escaJatlonl The
President's campaign pledge to reduce

~~l ~nsf~r~~~~;,bTr, ~~ ~~~?." ~~s~
1

1

This is the third Carter budget that hes
reflected a pay hike for the Pentagon.
More .. guns," less " butter."
Moreover, the MX and Trident II
missiles represent the worst kind of
.strategic arms escalation. They are
expensive ($40 billion for the MX
system, for example) and will commit
us to growi ng military costs In the
fulure . These weapons are also
"destabilizing" becauae they have
highly accurate wartleads whiCh while unnacessary for deterre&lt;~t pur- - are capable of destroying
hardened military targets, such - as
mlealle silos. Thus, they give the
~ that we are striving for a
nuc'- war-wlonlng, flret-strlke caplb\llty, Thl~ I~ the ~s of

ft'supto us

u.!r~~;':~litt~;:'\':,Ys~~:'t~:st~~h~~~

educate about the dangers of the arms
race. Thus, thpse of us who see the
,da!)per will have to take full responsibil.itror that lob ourselves. We w•u also
·have to take1-esponslbllity for bu fl&lt;l tng a

=t::'i'r!n~~:"'vf~s
~
nology by the Russians.
Carter's approach to

~ev.ftlfo~~ t~u::lt".:d' ~~~~: .~o~~~'X

SALT II Is

=~~r~rMnd..'s .::,n'=~nl~n:~
1
1
, _ . , ., t .,:;~ t~YS,:!~ ~o;o"'rl':!:

restraint and exert leadership In endmg
this "race to oblivion."
_The lesson is clear: We can' t count. on

!:::::Yo~~T~nb:,'~~':v~~~nisw/:. ~~

:s:="
when · It stated that "Mr.
Carter'.a piecemeal bribery of the

own hands.

Management appoints 2 soci&lt;HH:onomists
The School of Management has
appointed two visiting socio-economic
experts forthe remainder of the1978-79
"'**"lc year.
Dr. Benjamin Chinltz, professor of
economics and a senior fellow of the
Center for Social Analysts at the State
Unl-.tty at Binghamton , has been
appointed Rand VIsiting Professor of
Urban Studies.
Malcolm R. Lovell Jr., president of
the R11- Manufacturers Association
in Waahlngton, D.C.. was named
visiting schol• of human resources and
\.labor.
Both formerly served In federal
government poals: Chlnitz as deputy
aAialent - . - y for economic
_ _ . t In the U.S. o.p.rtment of
Commerce Md Lovell as asslstant
~ for manpower in the U.S.
o.o.tment of lAbor.

During the next several months, both
visiting educators wilt address community organizations and university
audiences on various socio-economic
issues.

Reporter of Oecember 7 In which
support was urged tor NEA/AAUP, the
name of Dr. Morton Rothstein was used
without his permission . Somehow his
name was combined Inadvertently with
a lfst of people who had already given
permission for use of their names. I
apologize to the readers of ths
Reporter, the Editor, and to Dr.
Rothstein for any harm done or any ·
misrepresentation .
Sincerely yours,
-Joseph Mssllng, President
U/B Chapter, AAUP

Sterilization
study starting
Physicians at five local hospitals will
collect data during lhe-&lt;1ext three years
as part of a national study aimed at
determining short-term and long-range
effects of voluntary steril ization on
women who undergo the procedures.
Or. Norman G. Courey, clinical
professor of gynecolilgy/obstetrics, is
the local project director and will
coordinate data provided by ph ysicians

~~~~a~~~~~rd:;:~;~a~~~~erFi~~~~~~­
~g~ o~t5~~~~~rsh~!~f~· a~u;t'.~~ ~~~

th~ na:~~~~f "i~~;ooo from th'e Center
for 8 isease Control will finance ths
Buffalo phase of the investigation,
Courey says. He Is director of the
Ob/ Gyn Department at Erie County
Medical Center.
Data will be gathered from an
estimated 3,000 women in Buffalo who
undergo voluntary sterilization. Women
between 15 and 44 will be included and
then only If they give Informed consent
for partoclpatlon . Participants will be
interviewed prior to sterilization surgery
· aod by telephone at intervals' of one
month , one, two and three years after.
Statistics on approximately 63,000
women nationally who undergo procedures such as hysterectomies ,
laporatomles and tubal ligations wilt
be the basts for the total study.
"Although much Is known of the
immediate side effects of voluntary
sterilization ," he explains, " the t~ng ­
r,ange effects are unknown ."
Physicians coordinating the study at
area hospitals are Courey, Erlej:ounty
Medical Center; Dr. David Nichols ,
Buffalo General ; Dr. Robert Patterson,
Chi ldren's; Dr. Wayne Johnson and Dr.
Marcos Gallego, Millard Fillmore, and
Dr. Jack Lippes, Deaconess. -

Canal pickets wanted
'

Attention, all persons In the University Community.
There has been a plea by the residents of the Love Canal area to come
picket at Love Canal Saturday, Oecember 16 5:30 a.m . Your support Is
needed, say campus organizers for the profeCt. For more Information,
·
contact Heldt Oavts, 834-7218.
On December 28, persons arresied for picketing at the canal wlll be
arralgDed, at a time to ba announced . Anyone wishing to lend support Is
Uked to ettend , at the Public Sifety Building , Hyde 'Park Boulevard and
w.Jnul Avenue, In l'llegara Falls.

�General education: -it needs seri.ous consid~ratio·n

By Ge«ge R. L8Yina

Medieval and Renaissance England. My
0

!leon. Faculty oiMo and Lot1ets

The singular ImPortance to SUNY
Buffalo of General Education makes It
Imperative that the enUre University
community ~in to consider seriously
both the justification lor .a new set of
~urrlcular
req ulnernents lor under-

p:~~~=~t!~i;,e", a!~u~~~~~ ':It~~~~

lot rowing remarks might stimulate such'
a consideration . Whether or not my

~~~r~~ a7 '~.!r'lf' :~~~e~~ '?~rtn~

process of articulating such Individual
programs.

Why, you may ask, do I define
• general education In terms of these
particular qualities? The aim of a sound
general education program (whi ch

~r~~ g:e~~::::~: ~~~~~~:~;)w~~o~l~

Education Committee to decide; I can
Imagine no group of people on this
campus who are more-sensitive at th is
moment to the realities of bringing

be prepared to enter, to comprehend,
Srtd 1o function effectively In, an
increasingly complex society. My
assumption Is that these qualities ace
the best credentials a university can
provide a student In help(ng h i m / h~r to
assume the re590nslbillt 1es of cit izen-

tlon, 1 think we can all agree that the
ultimate purpose of any worthwhile
program of education Is he development of the whole Individual who has
teamed to discriminate, and who has
learned to make wise choices. We
now laced with the responsibility of
offering to our students the kinds of
choices In General Education that will ,
hopefully, not lock them in but open
them up.

Poetry lor citizenship?
E.g . Let me select something that
probably seems , 'On the lace of it, to be
as remote from the development of
citizenship as one can imagine - the
study of poetry. I have I0'1Jl maintained
that the difference between people who
're comfortable with poetry and those
who are not , lies in the capacity of
some to to lerate ambigu it y and
uncertainty. As we all know , there are

Whot a good student should be
For me, this process of opening
studen1 s up is related to certain
expect_atlons that I have about what a
good student should be taking with him

questions, who cannot tolerate an
environment in which-everything is not
black or white, an environment In wh ich

~~a~~eat':'~r~~:,

those who sre comfortable with all of

~I'J,~:.st:o~u;t,e!':'.J"~iJ'~~':tl~;',.'i

~~~'!;~::'~ng~~e~r~~;~~n~~~n~~;,.,..

are

~~~'NY~':ruff~~:

!t
Above all, I would expect that such a
· student be literate, that he/she be able
to write clear, coherent English prose.
Next , I would expect that a student be
able to demonslrate an awareness of
the processes intrinsic to'hlstory, the
natural sciences, and the arts. And
finally, I would expect that a student be
able to demonstrate an awareness ol
the relationship of academic disciplines.
How a student acquires these
, qualities seems to · me of less
.Jmpottance than that he/she does
acquire them. For this reason , I would
be in favor of fairly flexible curricular
requirements. In order lor such a
program to succeed , however, we
would need to develop a responsible
and carefully coordinated system of
faculty advisement, It would be the
responsibility of the faculty advisor to
create with the stydent a program of
study thai would provide a_ basta lor the
acqulsltldn of these qu.lltlea, Irrespective of the student's eventual
major. I am assuming that the
undergraduate curriculum as It
currenllr, exists - by and large provides
a sutflc enti~.broad array of courses to
enable students to develop these

~-~~~~~ ~ !'~go:.~m~grrt~::f!

available to all students.

O..ianeclfor the lndiYicl...t
Wfiat 1 am profv'slng , In effect, Is a

t::~J~al ~..::~. r..:~~,n~.;~t::;,"l'~

a uniform set of requirements lntlll)ded
to produce at the end of lour years a
group of students who look and sound
•
alike.
How, lor examrle, one develops a
sense of hlstortca process might well
depend on one's Interests, predilections, talents. For one student, It
may mean studying Thucydldes and
Herodotus; lor another, II may mean
studying the evolution of cities, tlleir
rise 11ecllne, and e..,tual regeneration'; lor another, it may mean sh!dylng
the langUIIge and culture of 17t~d
18th-Centurr France; lor another, U
may mean studying the fortunes of l\
particular piece olleglsla1ion or a social
movement; and lor another, II may
meen combining a atudv of Shakaapellr8'a History plays with a course In

~~

J

those who- cannot tolerate unanswered

!'n~~!~?

:sn: s!f.~'k,;'.;;~ut~~";! ~.;

~~~~~~~3.s~~~e:e ~~~~"''."~it~

poetry. As with all great art, there Is
SOI!lething eternally elusive about a
poem .
My point Is this; If a student can be
rec~eptlve to
the ambiguities and
uncertainties of poetry, he or she is
developing a' quality that will be of
Inestimable value in functioning effectively i n modem society. For all that we

·ft"~~~'t,"u~n~~ ~~~er1gr t~~ay~

realizing th is. E.g. the editor of Fortune
MagllZine said not too long ago that
" business must search out persons of
curiosity and adventure and with human
understand ing , and who have learned to
live · with ambiguities, uncertainties,
and stubbornly held opinions, and can

~~~:'~~:~~ ~~'!~7.~~:t~f t~~~~o':.'re~

of contemporary higher education that
_big business may well , have a higher '
tolerance. lor ambiguity than the
university.
.
=atlng ' the ni'.chanlc from

the

To~~"! extent that General Education

can provide perspective on the kinds of

specialized knowledge that the modem
world seems to demand of us; General
Education separates the mechanic from
the scientist. It we are to deserve our
reputation ...- a university, we, as
members of a unlvwslty community, ·
1111

~~ent~ (!'~l:"nf~ ~pp~':tunl':':vl~

broaden their perspectives; we have a
responsibility to chaUenge the narrowness of vocational training; and we have
a responsibility to ensure that a
significant part of a student's educational experiences at the undergraduate
. level not c;&gt;nly transcend the acquisition
of vocational skills, but serve as a
counter-balance to narrow professionalIsm and excessive undergraduate
specialization as well.
Lest my nernarks be conatrue4 as .

~~:::,~ ~~ ~~Tj:=,san.:,~t\:

=l

concern of 98J1Snta who sacrifice lor
lour years and want to see some results
of that education, let me say thai I do
not accept tha notion that future
employment and the .Jdeels of General
Education , •
I haft attempted to
articulate them, are !ncompatible. That

many universities - Includi ng SUNYBuffal o - have - either actively or
passively
ifcqulesced to the

~;,~~~s~ or!...~~~. t~fhne~;'dl;sc~~~~~e

Central to vocations
If on~ of the functions of a university
Is to advance the cause of knowledge,
another Is certainly to prepare Its
stud~nts lor their future employability
as well as lor their fut ure growth as
individuals. In this effort, General
Education Is cent roil, . lor General
Education cultivates those abilities
which are essential to 811 vocations
beyond those which simply requ ire
narrow, technical skills. I am referring,
of course, to the abilities to read, to
wrltP., and to think. And I am referring to
the discipline that enables a student to
~nc?~fe~nd memory to underlying
We should not be reticent about
using our various disciplines to assist
students In developing these abilities.

~~~tri~~~a~~~~~iC.:.~ty ~:r!:~~'.rshoc;::~
be given every encouragement to do' so.

The h_umanit1es have as great a stake in
1

~~¥! ~'ftn°:h!~eua~~~~z~~~~hr~e~~~~
th'Vt,~~~~~fn~~~~st in the creation of

programs connecting the humanities

Quality lain the arts
·
·
·
My concern lor Incorporating Into a
General Education Proposal an awareness of the aesthetic process, stems
from a convlctlon- th'a t we can no longer ,

tolerate , an &amp;llucational system tnat
knows so much about preserving and
changing and destroying life, but so
little abou( enhancl n~ it. It also stems

~cl~~.;fl~~~~o,::dsta~~=r~~~(~Yo~~ ··

arts.

'

In our obsession ln1hls country with
the narrow vocationalism I have-referred
to earlier, we have tended to .separate
the arts from education. The recent

~~~~~~S: bt~ th~u~o'1:~~~';'; Pap:~
~~;/:'(t::,ce_of ~: ~,Sn 1furt1~e1~~
this by lnslst~ng that "The Arts In

America are viewed neither as part of
~~~~~~~:;::~p nor as a leglljmate part

theTh~;~"3.'l: ~:~hCI~resrc!!~
~~po~':, Foires~~:nd~~m :0t " :·
humanities by many undergraduate~ · l n
~~scj'1ne~m~:lcaDe~oc~:v~:;:,.~rg;,
their search lor courses with olivlous
vocational relevance. But this Interest
Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of
Ospltsllsm: In · a country founded by
has also been prompted by the sincere
people who really believed that
belief o.r many educators that there are
· lew problems confronting modem
economic success was an Indication of
God's favor, Ia It any wonder that the
society that 'do not somehow reflect
issues of ethics, values, choice, and
arts still, have to struggle lor a
1
morality - Issues which are intrinsic to -~'W! :;::t~,r~~~7~~~:e~ry::;ooJ;~"'
the humanities.
1

u!·

Public JIOllcy dloastero

J:~.:Y'1~g~... s~~n~~~~.:~~~e~i

American Scientists said: "II nsadlng
skills are low, If the public has little
sense of history and less sense of
human purpose, if It Is Ignorant of the
Implications of -societal organization,
and has no consensus dn what should •
11

~~~~~ f.:'a~~~~~~h~~b\fc :.:f,g;

disasters which new scientific developments could well create. "

1

My suggestion - that as part of a
General• EtlucatiQ_n Prograiri, students
be required to develop an awareness of
t,... relationship of academic dlsctr,llnes

~~~~~yt~ ~::r~ms.: ~~~ tt.e::~

public policy disasters to whlch·Jeremy
Stone refers. The particular relationships I have In mind lor -General
Education are those between' the
Humanities and either !he Natural
Sciences, the Applied Sciences, or the
Social Sciences. tl I SM!Il particularly

~~~::0 :tt:~b~~ H~m~d:iefo I ~~~
~'fv"'Y h:::~ m~~~~:rc::.ne, t~"i t~t!
humanities constitute
Western Culture. ·

the

Nolllualono
I have no Illusions about the effects
of Incorporating an understanding of
the · arts In a General Education

fr':.~~~~~mihew_:m::,~~~b=~~l~lj~

economic success. We will riever
become like the Balinese lor whom art
Is so Integral to their culture that they

-=e :'

~~~~

;;=~r ~:.y T~

saying this: "We do not haWI any art.
We llo everything • well aa poaalble."
No, we carmof _,.pact mlrw:l.., but'
we mtr; enh8rlce the q...tlty of llfl of
thc!ae studenta who . . wttlfng to open
themilel- up to the eeduct'- of
the arts. I have no Intention of
suggesting thai undergraduatea be
expected to dellelop proleaalonal
.,.oentlala In 1he arta, but I IIIII
aubgaattng thai we attempt to ..,_.
at\l(lenta as appractatl've revn- In the
hOpe that not only will the Cll*lty of
their own I'- be enhanoed, but that
the attltudea towenl the arta 1111&amp; Iller
take with them • they ....,.college end

become, aay, achOOI bolnl memlllra,

-... leg lslatora, pollttclana of v.toua klnda,
fl\BY0&lt;8, teeciMn, panlllta, 1~ of
will h Impact on the P'- of
the arta~n our -'tlly.

core

lntellecluelf-.nt
I have yet a furthttr motive In
proposing that studenTs develop ¥!
awareness of lnten!laclpllnary llnka.· I
see this as a means of creetlng at SUNY
.Buffalo a sense of Intellectual ferment

:il~?,~t~Jr~~~~:~~~ ~~~

dwindling resources,. with bualog, with
delayed construction, and the spilt
campus.

r.:

•

At a time when we are constantly
confronted with the notion that the
humanltlea and the artallrld nlany of the
-l®lal aclen~-- dl8pen88ble 'luxuries, the conacloua "--DPfl*1'! of a
cloaely 'ntegrated Intellectual oom-

1

some

LM'o..,..to...

·

·

For well owr three yMra now, therw
have been dlacuoslons hens llboul the
tmportanco ot Instituting a o.n..J
Education program at SUNY-Buffalo.
l':s with President Sadat and Premier
Begin at Camp David earlier this Fall,
there are Innumerable laauea on which
we can egree"1o disagree. t think the
time haa COIIMI for ua to accept the fact

~~ :=:=t~='f~~pn:~t!!
~eluding mine) will aatlaly ~-

t"fng

~~~e;ac:,·.=~'':i =u~

Hlea for growth that a unlveralty aueh as
ou-.la uniquely able to offer.

·

�- - - 1 4, 1171

/

DA

up I!&gt; $150 and $250 respectively. Completed
opplicallona Q;~o by Friday, January 26 , 1979,
at 4:30 p.m. Ally QU8Stk:Mls, Dlease contact
tlloGSAoffice, 6.36·2960.

COIIIPUTERScfEHCE COLLOQUIUM I

-(and Ollloll R - fn - - - TAppllca- Or. John Coaa, u / Q Oopoo1ment
of COmputer SCience. Room 41 , 4226 Ridge
Lee. 3:30 p.m. Coffee ond dougMuts ..tl be

~y-14

-on -nlcal

OIIALIIOUIOY ~~

- -

.

and Elac1rtcal Perfur·
111a - . . - cl Bone and 1larllagi0Cella, Or. ~
~tof

A.-·

~.Rocm107 , 4510--. 12noon .

- . o G Y SPECIAL SEIIINARI

l.Wiooralty--~.
--.
223 Shomwl. 1 :30 p.m.
.WJIY EDUCATIOHAl SEIIVICE CO\IN(ffL

Col63e·2480 fer i&gt;formation.

· tanowunderway.

--'!'ITo deadline: January 15, 1979.
The program is funded by tllo National Endow·
ment fOr the Hui'TIWlities, The Rockefeller FOll'ldation, !\mericsl Tolophono &amp; Tolograph ~.
The Exxon EducafX?n Foundation, General Mot015

MUSIC'
Muale and Films of Phlll Niblock. 100 Baird
Hal. 9
• Free. Spon&amp;QO"ed by tllo Center

Cotporation. Melrcpofitlol

-of the
and Performing Arts. Mr. Niblock
. wtl be preNfl t.

CEU 611101.£CUUU18101.00Y se.NAR II

c:loorgo.

· 114

ASIA AND AFRICA LECTURE SERIES'

The Uao cl - · In 11M Study cl Hfotory,
Or. Roger DooForga, History ~t. U I B.
232 Squho. 8 p.m. Sponaored by tllo atoruato

Saturday- 16

Group on Contj1uity ond Chowlgo r&gt; Asia and
Mica and tllo Aala and Afrlcon StudMio Com·
rrWtt888oltlloCooncfonlntomationlliSfu&lt;j;oa.

IRCALM'
Semi-Tough. 170 MFACC, Elicolt. 7 and 10 _
p .m. S 1 'admission for non·feepayers.
·

POETRY I MUSIC'
Three by She Poetry tnd Mualc. Byron
Dib1&gt;1e and F -. Ka1harino COrnel Thealre.
8-10 p.m. Sfudent . pootry reading by grodualo 8.-,,. of John Logan Wor1&lt;Shop: 1t1r0o poetS,
Byron Dibbie, J .P. llar6y, and Robert Pohl.

CAC FILM'
AIMf1clnHotWIX. 150Farbef. 8and1 0 p .m.

llcl&lt;etl"

for~$1 ."50fOO"otheta .

MUSIC'
.
ENnlnga for New Mulic; ~t·Knox Ar1

COO::::o"~ =~~

~mullcbyabcmusiaans.

~- !:s~ u~

111U81C'

Gellofy ~ $1 . ADS """""""' occopted:
Sponsored by 1118 Conl8f oftllo Crllalive and Per·
ltnning Arts oncl Mosie ~1.
wor~&lt;a of w-... l.JJCiano Berio, Maurice
w~ . VbaiWo Hocl*"&lt;n Md Nigel Osbcmo ,
porfOO"med by Uniulo ()ppona, p;ano; Jan w•oam•.
perc:usolon; Ebortwtf Bbn, flule: Weronl&lt;a KM!el,
~: Ken lshi. celo: Pamela B. Adebtein,

M - Nooclrnbln, sax.,.,nor.o. Baird Recital
Hoi. 8 p.m.
UUMFILM'
~ (Sonegoj, 1977). Conference Theotre,
Squho. Col636·2919 " " " - -· clwgo.
ThiolatlloBulfolo""""""oftlliaoowost

11m
by~
a....- -laatirlat.
- · -The flm
·· cutstancfing
aoclal
detals tho

-

.-» i&gt;IO -African ClAJre i&gt; tllo
111111 cantury by alave-- a n d - - religion.

FridAy- 15
.. ... .._.Betsy ,
-...-atlho-TeciWlical

_ ...... a..-

.-gad-.

U / B. u-v- ~ C.1011 SC&gt;a*lirlg, acott.

----T-flola.
__ _

10a.m.

--~Y-1

....

'"'show

love""'

.....,...._
-·-OQY·
-.__
ar.--.-___
....._. ____ _ -·---·
.--.-.

........ PILIW.~~-t.
1 2 T -. 2p.m.

...

"' T-......,, .,..,._.. oll'lydiOIOgy. 108
. t'..IOp.m.

..,
_,_...,_AI..

:

Sun~y-

17

~

IFA IIECITAL'

.....,. - . · Baird Hal.
8p.m.
•
Mlaa Smltll, o atudent of Sylvia DWnlzlanj ,
... porfQO"m wol1la by Scorlolti, Haydn, Mozart,

a.--OIIol-.flllryl.au-.
--~.

1/UMI'lUII'

Hol,a:fiiiiA

-~Jeflatngf"'-

...........

Ptay """"

Wit

ProkofteY.

by Bach. Chopin, -

Tuesday- 19

-s-

~CQUCIQUUII•

BFA RECITAL'
Kathy Kayne. piano Baird Aecital Hal. 8 p.m.
Miss Kayne. a student of ..stephen Manes.

RECITAL'

UUABFILM' Tho Fury (1978). Con1e(ance Theoll:a. Squ&lt;e.
Coll636·2919
times. Adm....,. charge.
Klrl&lt; Oougl8s. John Coasalletes, Carrie
Snodgrus, and othe&lt;a. Jo!)n Farria'o best seiiA1g
novll bocomea o film filet 1s port f)8yCh;c horror
story, f)lrt secret _ . chase tlriior. K J10U
De Polrua's Carrie, ~ tllo revenge
scenea, You~
il&lt;ply bloody awfulshocl&lt;·

-

Tllaf"'f(I978)~Theolre . SQWo.'

Coi0311·291Dfcr"-times --chorgo.

ocCordino

CELL &amp; MOLECULAR BIOLOGY SEMINARN
The Rlbl»omal DNA af Neuroe,poq craau,
0... S1ephen Free, ~~ of pt,yalologk:al
Chemistry, Univer&amp;Hy of Wisconsin. 114 Hoch·
Stetter. 2:30-3 :30 p.p . Coffee at 2 :15.

MOVIES FOR THE NEW JAZZ AGE'
tn..alan ol th4l Body Snotchoro (1956), dlrec·
ted by Don Siegel, otamng KtMn McCatthy and
Dona Wyntor-e dasalc: sclenoe fiction ro1m of .,.
flftloo, now baing remade. Buff'*&gt; &amp; Stio Coonty
$1 .50.

· and

FINANCIAL AID HOURS
The Finane~~~~ Aid orroce, located at Am 6,
Annex B. Mail Stroot Campus, wit be closed
oech Wednesday from 1·5 beginni&gt;Q N o 29. until fUrther notice.
'
The office ;s being ckleed to give better service
to student applicalions and to develop new proeodurea. Sorvico on Wodnesdoys will be llmi1ed 10
telephone ceaa and ernorgoncy cases only.

Student Percu~ioO Recital. Baird RecitM Hall.

12 ~ 15-p. m ..

FACULTY RECITAL •
· ' Svu LMI Rehfuu, mezzo-soprano; Weronlka
Knl«et, vioti'list; and Yver Mlkhnhoff, piano.
Belrd Recital Hall. 8 p.m. 53 Gonenol Admission:
$2 U I B FocUty, Staff , ~ ond &amp;nor Cliizena:

FOREIGN ST\IDENT WAIVERS
Foreign Student TUition WaJvef Appticalions for

the epring semeater are now available at the Office
of ~ AJd, Room 6 , Butler Annex B.
Main Slreot Compus. The applleotlon dNdllna
11 Dec. 2.0.. Students must be on an F or J visa
in order to .,py for the watver.

s1 s.-,ta.

Tho program wfl """" with two -

,.,..

!~~~.....:-~="':'~!!
and Thomoa Augush Arne's ' 'The trd
. ofwaniolarma." - w l l f o l o w - .$eolai's Sonota No.~ ( 195a): the IJio w11 ogai&gt;
)oln forcos fOO" t11roa TchoikoYal&lt;y ,aongs: "None
but ... lonely _,_ .. Opus 6 No. 6 : " Don't
believe. my love," Opus 8 , No. 1 and " At tllo
Bal. "()pus 38, No. 3 . The first half of til&amp; concert
d
be conduded with "Pauline'e Aria" from
"Pique Dome."
The second half wtl feetu'e Three Brezlian
Fol&lt;songa by Hoitor VIla L.oboo oncl wit fOd with
, ~IOV'I$onoii(IOO"Yiolfn)No.2(1944) .

'

.GRADUATE STIIOENT RESEARCH AWARDS
Tho Buffalo Choptor of ' Sigma Xi wll again
hold
Awards moetilg
i&gt; February to recognize and rowan! conl(ibutionS
of gr11duole ot\ldenta. AI '11&lt;8dUala sludents at
SUNYAB wf1o have ~ed at IeOS! one yea'
of graduate o~ and ttovo mode subsfan!J&lt;j
prQQf'8SS in a retMWCh protect are efigib6e lor
thlo c:ompotition The lllPiicotion must be sponsored by a .....- of tho SIJ!'IYAB Chapter of
Sigma XI. Applicelk&gt;r) forma ond lnfonnalion are
evalab6e from members or- from the ' secretary.
Dr. Roberta Tentney, in the ~t of Ana·
tornieai Sdeoces. Abencts are due on l)ecember

a&lt;lnldt.e1e SWonf-

1~

Nodces
ACE PI!IIIOME. EXCHANCIE
_
The
Coundl on Eduoillon (ACE)
- --~~~ 1979-80 Cooc&gt;o&lt;8tive Poraool·
nol ~. Thio program.fJrokA!ra """""·two
- " " " " " ' - o f tacufly-- a n d ,.._.---and
ommant. ~. and higher Oducofion ...
..,.,_.. ~ wW*Ig ln4ormotion about ...

""'""'*'

tho,_-·

-..

DROP I ADD LOCAnONS
Drop I Add faclitiea wi be avallabkt to students
on both the Main Street end Amherst Campuses
to tllo following schedule:
. Main StrMt. 2.0 Squjre: Decembftr 11 · 14,
9 a.m.-7 p.rtf.; December 15, 9 a.m ·4 ·30 p_m.;
December 18-21 . 9 a.m.·7 p.m.; ~ ber 22.
9 a.m.·4:30 p m.; January 8·12, 9 a.m -4 30 p m.;
Januwy 15-18, 9 a.m.·8 p.m.
Amh«at, 210 Froncz.ak: starting January 15.
9 a.m.-4:30pm
Hcxn after 5 p.m are reserved IOf MFC
and graduate students.
Students possessing a permanent iO card may
have it vaidated during the ci'op / add proce56
at the location and timealisled above.

Monday- 18

-.

Hlstorica1Socioty. 8p.m. -

ut, lriSinnce ~.

Pflle&lt;, Inc .. The Prudentlll Insurance c"'""'""
of Ameo1ca, and StJn Chemical CQO"pQO"ation
Ph.O.'e ltld A.B.D.'e in the humanities and~
fated aoclal oclenceo erolnvi1ed to OlllliY.
F"' '"' opplicallon, write "' can: 0&lt;. Dorolhy
G. Harrison, Asslatant Commissioner 1&lt;&gt;&lt; Post·
secondaly Policy Analysla, Now YOI1&lt; Slate Edu·
cation Depertmenl, Cuttural Education Center,
~::a44 , Afbeny, New\ YOI1&lt; 12230. 518-

UUABFILM'
~ JSonegoj, 1977). Conference Theab'o,
Squho. Col636·2919 fOO" show-· Admission

- - - - 1 RNA Opan&gt;na
cl' E. .... 0... - .. UniYerllty of
Enzyme -

CAREERS IN BUSINESS
.
The National Competition for 50 places in the
Careers in Buslnesa Proiect. a summer onentation
'?'ogram at New YOOt Unfvenslty Business School,

CACFILM'
A.mericen Hot Wax. 170 MFACC, Elk:ott.
8 and 10 p .m. Tickets $1 for students: $1 .50
for otherS.

-.v.M

-*""· .

by the Oepartmoot of - · · · Alferlly OMs;on,
H is necessary to apend..one day per week foe ....
fHght·week period at the Center. Participants
willbopoid.
•
•
For further Information please call 84 5-4185
betw~ 8 a.m. Md 3 :30 p.m. Monday through
J'riday.
.'

IRCFJUI'
!iemHough. 150 Flllt&gt;er. 7 onc1 10 Q.rn. $1 '
for norrfeepayen~ .
Burt Reynolds. Kt1s KristoffetSOil and J• Clay·
burgh make fun of EST. ""' too-. pyram;d
power, and triangtAar sex. They ta)k dirty, too.

The - (NZa •- HZW)"'
A.-....na
!lanai
o.-ln
F,auc:.,
John G. Knigh~
Ph.Q.. ~-Unit , Otago

The C!Wu..g. cl Prootdlng Fufl Vocational
Educe- Opportunf- for Special P - t .
Or. L Allen Pllolpa, co-outhor of a """"''
book on the .ubJect ~ a coneutbW1t with n'IWI'Y
programo i&gt; tllo U.S. _ , . , . , . Manor. 4 p.m.
Thllia t elMer meeting wtth a registration fee
of $20. Aogiltratlon

POrticioamo

PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR#
lllxlne of Jnaplred Gaa with RetJdual Gas
In 11M t.ung, Or. Hugh 0 . Von UOw. S108
Shennan. 4 :15p.m. Coffee at 4.

Onl lli&lt;*lgy, U-..ty "' Connec1icut -

· Inaof
HodwllltW.
4:15p.m.

- 8RO..CHIAL M.O.A RESEARCH
Wonted: with bronchlalosll"rna. be1woen
the .ges of 18 and 85, i&gt;teraated In
r&gt; o drug trao!ment reseerch project, conducled

&amp;«Vedet3i&gt;Rocm61.

J11

- ~~==· -"""'""'

.. now-

ATTBITioifGRADUATE ITIIDENTS

-

SUionl- Gront ..,picationa

i&gt; tllo GSAolfice, 103 T _ ,
Hoi.&lt;Anang_for_andPh.O . . - .

I

#

INOlA STU~
' Tho India Student Aaooelsllon Ia lool&lt;il9 for
interested students to work on ita executive com·
....... For more information,- cal838-3195
or838-4319.
MAnt.COURSES:

UNfVaiSITY LEA-O.CENTER
The uruv..tty l.e.nlng Center olfera coun;es
i&gt; BaC
Algeln and TrigonomatrY
Studlnts who 1lllftlh to regilt« for IllY. of theSe
ocxnet must ..U a pllcement test. Tests wl
be _ , at tho Uniwiraity ~.e.n~ng cen,tor. 364

-tiel.

-ely-

Batdyontllo~cllfes· -. ~
18-1-3p .m;Tueedey.~19-1 · 3pm

t h o - test each stu·
r.aetve hil t her ecore Advisement

fct----wllltllonbo
dent wt1

�7

pro.lded.
StL.Oents whO lwYe taken p-ENiou&amp;-Meth OOlJ"88S
.. the L.eamk&gt;ll Center . - not lai&lt;At the placement test. HoweYer. a1 other students mutt
take the plac:ement eum pricw to January 15.
For mare~tonnation . please Cllll636-2394 .

MtJSIC LIBRARY AMNESTY
On Sonday. Deoember 17 . and Monday, De·
cember 18, the Music Llllfwy, Baird Hal, wil
grant a two-day armesty on overdue fines tor
a1 ~ bOOks and scores which are returned

~

:::;~~c=-:;..~o;t!':

c:ewed by the Music Ubnwy _ , U, hours
ot 2 p m. twld 9 p.m. on Sooday and 9 a.m.
and 9 p m. on Monday.

OAR OFFICE HOURS
December 14 , 9 a.m.-7 p.m.: Decemller 15.
9 a.m.-4:30 p.m.; December 18·21, 9 a.m.·
7 p .m.; December 22, 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m.; De·
cembo&lt; 28-29 , 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m.; January 2-5,

9 a.m.-4:30p.m.; Janoary 8-11 , 9 a.m ·7 p.m.;
JlntWY 12. 9 Lm.-4:30 p .m.; January 15·18,
Qa m.-8p.m.

PRESIDENT'S OPEN HOURS
Preoldenl Robert L Kelter w11 hold"""" oltee
hour&amp; on Tht.lnlday, Deoernber 14, from 1·3 p.m.
SWdenta may cal to 8l'rtlnQ8 an appointment at
636-2901 .

on-·--

SPRING REOISTRA TION

Reg;stralion lor atudenl8 ~ aJ dMslons ol the
Universily
27 ,
and wil bebegan
coolinuous- throogh Friday, January

26, 1979.

U.--groduate DUE and MFC s-10. as wei
. . graduole atuden18, may plcl&lt;-up rag;s..lion
material In Hayes e. Profes&amp;ionlf atudents shoukj
register with the - main admirjStretive office in
their re&amp;p&amp;CiiYe prolessblal schooll.
Returning students are LKged to register a1 thei"
eartte6t convenienCe prior to the beglnnilg of

-·

lnsOuction lor lhe Spmg 1 9 7 9 - -

on Monday, Januay 15, 1979

11 a.m.· 2 p.m The tab is open to al U I B

WRITING PLACE

-7

Do you Corne to the Writing
Place , a free drop-ln center tor students who WW'lt
help &amp;Wting, --.g, or reviSing lholr writing.
We ent at 336 Baldy Hal on the Armerst
Campus. The Writing Place io """" weejs&lt;loys
12-• p .m. IWKI nlgh18, except Friday, 6 -9
p m. For further lnfOI'ITilltion. contact Barbera
Go&lt;donat638·2394.

Exhibits
ART BOOKS DISPLAY
Contempcnry Art Booka. a dispt8v of .am8 of
lhe INti ., books ~ pm&lt;. AtTongod by the
Albright-Knox Art Gale&lt;y, lhio e&gt;&lt;hlbit may be seeo
i" t.ocl&lt;wood Memorial Ublwy, Floor B. 'It-rough .
23. Hoo.Ks-. Monday·Tiuoday, 9

.Dec..•-m p.m ;

·9
Ftiday.S.h.l'day, 9
Sunday, 2 p m -i o~ m .

KAYESKAUEIU-T

a m.-5 p.m.:
•

A traveing ellhbtion o1 r-.t ~
projec1a and engrovings ollloloorl - - Fronco
l'l.ml. The llnsl OJChllllion o1 Purinl's wor1cS
that hu been avelable ~ 1M United States,
thil elChibit it a repreaentatiYe setection of the

.mltecl'l
-- - . . _ Hill,procb:tiono
ol lhe 1&amp;11
10v-&amp;9 am.1 1 p.m., weekdlys: 9 a.m..-3 p.m. on Saturdllys.
5ponscnd by lhe School ol M:l'ilect\lre and
Enw"""*1101 lleolgn. Through JanuoiY 3

to-

IIUSIC ~y E X F , _ - , .lo"""'J J1, 1717
ber "· 111M.- Ublwy, Hill. through

llocertU&lt; 31

PIIINTSOIIFUIUC

are,,

- - - Oftflllric.
tic&lt;?AllmoGolotY.

Bee~&lt; Hill Tlwough Jonuory 2.

~::~=~:
-

Sc:oonc:.o

~

For those who prefer the homemade,

Marilynn Turnkav gave e workshop Of\...

STUDY SKillS LAB
The S1udy Skas Lab at the UniVersity Learning
Center. 364 Bakty Hal. tt open for MOI'ilg
K1 ....OOg and study skils. Hours ere. Monday ,
Wednesday and Friday, 10 a.m.·3 p m. ; Tuesday,

•.-.Is

1

·ooughy
decor
making " Christmas

ornaments ;from

dough at the Creative Craft Center this

week. Someone who made tltese
colorfut (non-edible} decorations last
year report• " They' re beautiful and fun

to make. But don't try to 1tore them
unleu they're sprayed with ahellac .
You'll get a mushy mess."

Senate cdlilmittees outlin-e .aims
Chairmen of newly-&lt;:onstltuted Fac-

~~a~~~~t"!:"~~y;.,~~~h'!:1~~,: th ~~
0

respective committees will undertake In
the near future.
Admissions Committee Chairman
Brian Ratchford said that , In -response
to a request made at the Octo~ Senate
meeting , hi s committee will prepare an
academic profile on the last 500
freshmen admitted this year. The
committee may do a follow-up sludy tQ
see how the students fared academically.
•
Ratchford said his panel will likely
conduct a study to dlscover If any
relationship exists between edmlsaloo

::,~~~re~hS:d ~~~fv'ts'0fS~~!il:S:~

students at the University and the'
amount of financial assistance U/B
offers.
·
Another possibility Is an examination
of wltether mlnorlly admissions poll- _
cles are being adhered to at U/8.
James Blackhurst, dean ot- ContinuIng Education, suggested the committee explore from which lnstlrutlons U/6
drfWS Its large pool of tranpfer
stUdents, by what process they are
admitted , and how they perform
academically.
11

~m':!e-:'~~i~:to::e th~ ':R:
are

a~~\e'r::~~~~~a~~:::r'i:~t~ cg;gc::~;~

a representative of the Facilities
Planning Committee told Senators that
he did not feel ft was In the purview of
the committee to act as a ''clearing
house" for such matters, especially
since VIce President j)oty recently
reported th~t the malntfnance crew Is
heavily overloaded with work projects .
Senator Max Wickert disagreed and
· suggested the committee consider this
r~sponsiblllty as part of their charge. Reviewing the Pr..lilent'a 808td
Faculty Tenure and Privileges Chairman Norman Solkoff reported that his
committee will lntilrvl- members of
the Presidential Revt- Board In order

~en:: ~=~,:&gt;w 1 :t f~':.lonr,;
811

=~:~\n~~~tlgri. aTr! ~~

mittee will also examine some of the

The Colleges

Colleges

life at the University. The committee
representative said ne hoped the
Council's recommendations would have
a "favorable affect" on the retention
problem·facJng U/8.
•
A suggestion was 'made that the
committee study how the Colleges can
better organize themselves to respond
to the n~s of commuter swdents.

nQW

In

process

of

~~~=~~~e~dl~~~fo:':

general education llath1Q .
He also Informed Senatore that the
• Colleges have formed an Ellicott
ComPleJ&lt; Council that will make
riiCOmmendations which will have an
Impact on the quality of undergraduate

:!'l~atr,:;o~~~~e·.":.~t!r~s-

In
In addHion , Sollloff said his group
will 8'181uate propelled rll'tlslona of
criteria In the Law School for promotion
and tenul'll.
.
Senalor Stephen Brown. chairman of
the R-ch and Cnlallve Activity
Committee, told Senators thll his
committee's first order of business will
be lo decide whether or not to continue

lhe investigation undertaken by the

f:~~~~~: Ff~s'::~~":o~~~;r~;~~~a~~

handles Its overhead .expenses.
A suggestion was made that the
committee consider whether an emphasls on research has any bearing on
the retention problem, since It can
divert Interest away from students'.who
are not Interested on research activity.
Other Sentors asked the committee
1o see If anything can be done to eecure
more funding lor unclerglllduate research, aJid to took Into the processes
used for distribution of Institutional
funding.
Upon the requeat of one concerned
Senator, Faculty Senate Chairman
Newton Garver said he would ask the
Executive -Committee to consider why
no women were appointed u standing
committee chai~ and why eo
few serve on the comml-.

Back from reservation
Or. · F. carter Pannlll Jr., vice
president of health eclenoee, haa
recently, returned (1om medlcel practice
at a Sioux ~lion In &amp;gle llutte,

s.o.

Pannlll, an Internist, hu participated
In a variety of progr8ma ~ by
the tndlaft Health SeMoe which wu
Invited to provide medical care at the
,_,alton during November,
More than 5000 Sioux on the &amp;gle
Butta Reservation ""' .......S by two
fult-tlme phyalctana, a ~ hospital
and five outpatient cltnlca, Panntlt uld .
Difficult medlcalla)lrglcal ~. however, are transported by pl-Io larger,
fully-equipped hospitals outside the
l'llservatlon.

�•

UlB Greeks~challenge
~Animal

House' i_ma_ge

Fraternities and sororities are In the
0::,:
publiCeye. -, A lengthy report on AB&lt;;:-TV news, a
few weeks back was deVoted to"Homecoming .. at Northwestern Univer.-- ,
slty, comparing this year's festivities
(complete · with danoo, homecoming
queen and king, and rah-r.lh football
spirit) to 1968 when protest and tear gas
were the order of the day. Greek
organizations are a major contributor to
the new ._Northwestern spirit, indications were.
The " Animal House" celebration of
fraternity pranks (a l'fiOVIe box 'office·
smash) has spawned three TV situation

0

. =ed~ot!a~~ G~~~~~ ~wh~~
networf&lt;s' "second season" schedules) .
At U/B, Greek organizations have

=.t.=
!t~~h~ t't'u~snf j~o:J:ia't?~~
:~adiW;~v"t.er~~e st:;~"'i."To'~B.,,~u,:ll~
0

complete with bonfire, and gei)Jit'ally
have been busy enlivening the campus
social scene.
"Our beer blasts" at Ellicott (now
discontinued) were lamous, says Greg

Grad Dean

-~~~~~~·(Ttf~)~~;:~f ~veJ~~"Fz~
fraternities :
Not just parties

Former U/B provost Gilbert Moore
is spending his first few&gt;Weel&lt;s
getting reacquainted with the campus
Dr. Gllberl D. Moore, new dean of the
3raduate School, hps been at his desk

-on the fifth floor of Capen just lour
-snow.
•
"I'm In . the process of getting
reacquainted ," says Moore, who spent
14 years at U/B before becomlhg dean
of the School of Education at
SUNY/Albany In 1974.
.
"lt would be a mistake to rely on past
experience In order to respond to what's
happening now," the former -presidentIal assistant who was also acting
provosfof two faculties here, cautions.
Moore Is not yet ready to map out any
broad agenda for action In the Graduate
School, not eel to define what the major
Issues are.
Some challenges are re,adlly visible, .,
tt)ough.
Enrollments
EVeryone ts concerned about enrollment. that's a question thet. has to be
talked about and considered as It

~!:ts to :.Jder,.t~;:parc:,~o:~~~~~
data." Moore plans to develop this
concem In upcoming sessions with the
G&lt;wluate School executive committee
and witt) the academic deans.
The U/B Graduate School as a whole
ra not yet facing severe enrollment
problema, although aome Individual
. , _ may be. o-&amp;11 , Moore reports,
~ate eni'QIIIT*tt for the fall was
quite close to mrgets." SHghtly fewer
beginning graduate students showed
up than expected, but cor.tlnuing
atudanta wwe llbout " on target," he
eaya.

'

CRd .......

a..s-.

atudenta have bilcome
'"-lnaly vocalllbout stipend levels,
lhelr IMPOfiSibilltlee, and other Issues
_,acting lllelr role on '*'IJIUS .

..=

=·

~h ~he~.mr~

~~: atvdents are concemed -

with jultlflcatlon - about their role and
....aonstbllltlee In -lng, about
getilng the support they n - . and with
cleveloplng methods lor Improving thelr
t..:lllng sltllfa. •

Tbelr PfiiOCCUpatlon with salaries Is
a1e0 well taken, Moore bel'-.
elthough he Qlllokty polnt11 out that It Ia
the Qlflce of the Academic VIce
l'lwldent end 1ha various
Which contnll ~. .te
llfpMd lunda. The ~ School
lleillf 11aa only "a lew" graduate
........tllllpH,...
~.- Moore notes, "our bale

-...n-

..,.,lc

~~r:.~Th~~~

:::.::..::=..
a- ..,.,_..
top....,............

dlff...,tlallyJ..._he
hera _ ,
elli'Mt
thOugh theY're
10 offw .... Btl! • a rule, "the
~ tfW~. the harder It Ia
for Ul8 to 11M 1111'-'ltlldanta."
SUN\' ftill ....., 1fW 01*' atiDelld
41i!11111J1 ID _ , , to be 81ft, bul lhal'a
..., a _ , _ , notlllng like an

eaya.

-14,1171

'

8

all p"~rti~;.c~~~~nc"ert~~,;~"a"!" ,fr't?en~~
do with the " AnimaJ House" image, and
no connection at all with the .. Animal
House·· syndrome of senseless vandalism that has been visible this fall.
Terri Hall , president .of Alpha Sigma
Alpha (one of three active sororities)
and the 1978 U/B Homecoming Queen,
agrees.
Both emphasize that Greek organizations have a serious side and make
positive contributions to campus life. ·
Ms. Hall. a member of the committee
studyinQ retention problems, calls
atlention to a finding In the preliminary
report of that panel:
"Students are ... more likely to
remain if active in a campus
organization, inctudlr:'9 affiliation wlth a

What we do well
In the face of the funding shorta~es
whleh affect all of SUNY and the
particulal U/B headache of split
. campuses, Moore feels students and
faculty tend to overlook the vast amount

~~se~alb~~~ h~~e. ~\,"~uS~~ver~~cac:;~~

munity, he finds , is also not always
c09nizant of "how well we've been
domg as a graduate institution'' as
measured by highly supQortive external

~=~~ w~;~ m~~r5profr~a~s ~~~~

tnstltutions. The occasional negative
external report all too of1en snares the
spotlight.
Yet, Moore says, .. we can' t rest on
our laurels. We have to capitalize on
what we do well " in order to meet. an
uncertain future.
Three trend a or general concerns
u'lte all American higher educa~on ,

~ree~~=~~~r f~p~n~z;,~~n. ?sein~e~~~~
lrequenllf Pn the research as a rpajor
factor. Students who lived in a fraternity
or sorority unit had the best retention
niles, and it has even been dlscQVered
that the mere presence of 'Greek'
organizations at an institution apparontly decreases overall attrition rates."
In another vein , the American Cancer
Society:s Erie County Unit has written
to the University thanking it for Greek

~~~eBs~~~~~~s,t!,hef~~rna~e J'~op~~
areas:

· 1. Each department needs to examine its recruitment patterns to make
sure It Is doing all it can. 'We need to

~~~~ ~ s~~~s ~r~~~· Lick Cancer''
"~he support we have received from
the Greeks has been overwhelming,"
wrote Karen- F. Needham, special
events coordlna1or for the cancer un it.
"To date they have raised $582.37, with
more to. come , ... It's been a pleaSure
worf&lt;lng with the students. Their
interest, dedication and energy is
unmatched."
Colleen_ An,gielczyk, the Greek coordlnBt2r for lhll effort, was hailed as a ·
" super organizer and tremendous
wor1&lt;er."
DlriMnr for the .poor, blood · drives,
Christmas carols
•
Ms. Hall notes that the "Lick cancer"
eflort Is typical of what her own Alpha

0

~~~~;!t~~~~~;.:'se~ew~.:,~~~t1 ~~9.

when the college age population will
decline sharply.
2. We're going to have to develop
more collaborative, cross-disciplinary,
multidisciplinary, lnterdlscipllnaly efforts - call them whet you will. One
department's expertise - and strengths
often pale In the face of modern,
complex Issues. "Take the Love canal,
tor example." The Graduate School,
Moore believes, "should encourage
f,~~.!~rge problems on a coow.a=,

3. Traditional graduate education
must finally begin to do something for
the "non-traditional" student.
·
There ere undoubtedly slp,nlflcant

!''li".ift:.1.~~ b;irt~ ~~i:gC:n~:~~~r~~

~=".::en~ 1 a~~d~l:.:'!i,~.,lowh~d~~~'r.i

profit from graduate education but who
can't rnesfl their schedUles with
corwentlonal time patterns and modes
of Instruction. 'We haVe to address why

rre~:~:,~~Vct~~~~~~y~w we can do
If- don't, others will

to ~ve:'~~:!e:;'·~~~fniMar':,.,Hf~
pressures to provide this kind of•
educetlon, Mooreaubmlta: "If- don't,
otherS will."
•
Alnlady, "brokerlng" organizations

Center, plans ta

carolling at a local

~~~e~~"t;ri~t~ahse~n~, S:il~att~~
some

mentally-retarded Individuals
Christmas shopping, is providing a
Christmas dinner and presents for a
needy family through the Newman
Center, 1and came In second In last
-year's Muscular Dystrophy marathon
dance fund-raiser on campus.

.~;d· K~nn:; r~~~in~at P".:J~ ~~~

Children's 'll'jospltal this month, has
sponsored Red Cross blood drives on
campus [Including one which set a
record for the most units collectad In
one day), has enlisted volunteers for the
anti-rape escort service at both Main

::r~:~~o ~~:;~c;,:u~:~~u~.'!~

for Industrial employees. USC has
Initialed a degree-grant! ng program In
Washington, D.C. NO~A is a natiOI!'"
wide program which grants graduate

clap~ ;~~~~alMs.=."!:.;.. are
going to have to be responsive to new
=.:,!~~..,tr/::.'l.·up our basic
1 " - - ~ diRICtlons, genttra/
CGnCa'IB he -pllaatzee.
"If JOild Ilks to k - more speclflca,
bKI!in1our or flva months.·
•

~o

~~~:~~~·~;r'~'~~

~~~~~ n:,":::~oocf~~:nen~~if~

t\

0

leukemia palieots.
.

.

_

Ki~~":.~.n:::;~r~i;~ '~P~~~~~s

12 end stoli has "colony" status (the
first step on campus rec~nitlon), as

:i
::~n'.1t=~~·st:t'~fega
~or lratem tlea lncludlr. Sigma PI,

Sigma Phi Epsilon , Theta Clll , Delta
Clll. Omega Psi Phi, and Phi Beta
Sigma.
The newly-re-eslabllshed Greeks
work together in an atmosphere of
" friendly compeUt~on. '' The men are
especially competitive in intramural
sports _where TKE won a recent Greek
gridiron tournament '(making use of the
talentsbf Brother Larry Rothman, also a
member of the Bulls' varsity).
A Greek-wide planning. retreat Is
r,ojected for sometime In Janua~ or

t:r¥~:":~~.J~i~ p~ ~~,Jr~

retreal the-first weekend In D!IC&amp;mber) .

A lifetime thing
·
Hall sees affiliation wlth.a sorority as
a beneficial, .. lifetime:· thihg.,Jt otters
leadership training and an ldentlt~ with
a national group which CO'Itinues after
college years. A Greek organization Is
mgre_dlverslfled th~n a "club," which is.
THETA CHI DRIV.E
Keeping In' tune with the Holiday
Season, Theta Chi Fraternity Is
aponaorlng a drive for the .n-y. Since
Monday, there haa bean a Holiday ,,.

.=·

~ Haaa ;p~h'rtr:! i':~~e
.!h:
co1Cn point for food and toys lor
the ·poor of the Buffalo community.

~ag~.:'.". r:,~r-:!1:~::~ i~~~ ~ '::

distributed throughout the area. Theta
Chi asks your aupp&lt;~rt In hopes of

~:~r~n lh~.;:.,::::·;~u~:~r~~~A~;

·

and aft e,forts wilt be appreciated, aay

~':ala~~~~~ 111fa3J~~Ish

to olfar .

usually centered around a single
interest; different people with different
interests come together in a close
bond.
.
,

int~;~~~~~d~~~ '1Tn~{;;t~~Y~ol~ ~~~

organization leaders suggest. TKE Is
" staunch" in its support of U/B
football, for example. ' We want to put
some spirit into college life," Kinnear
says . His group also has three members

~n ~~~~~~-~~~~i~~~~:~~~~:.\nf,"!~r,~

have become epidemic. A number of
TKE's live together in Spaulding (as the

Sl~~~o~\·,~~ ~~~v~:~;~;,
0

a greater

t~~~g9~e1 ~:~~~~r~lt~~~hold here again

Ms. Hall Isn't quite sure why that's

~~m~~cep,!.~ha~e~~~fs t~o_m~a'~un~

commitment .e'lther of time or money
(an initiatron fee and dues are standard
with eaoh of the organizations although the dues pay for a lot of
activities, she adds).
Those activities Include such things
as. wine and cheese parties, dinners,
and a variety of informal get-togethers
on and off campus.
Kinnear suggests that a reason for
the relatively alow rebirth• Ia that "we
were without Gnaeka for ao long and the
ones we had b&amp;fore that were just

mediocre.
"It takes a "'hile to show that we
serve a purpose," he says.
Both he and Hall agree, though , thet
" Greeks are here to stay."

lggers,.promoted
Dr. Georg G. lggers has been
appointed to the rank of Distinguished
P.roless"or by the SUNY Trustees.
,
lggers Is a graduate of the University
of Richmond (B.S., 11144) and the
_Unl~ersity of Chicago (A.M., )945;
Ph .D., 1!151) and has been a leculty
member In the Qepartment of HlstQr¥ ,
here since 1965. He has taught at r
number of other Institutions, lncludlnA
Dillard, Tulane, and Roosevelt.
He !s the author of numerous articles
and several books (The Cult of
,6,uthorlty, 1958, rev. 1970; The Gttrman
Conception of History, 1988, 3rd. ad.
1976; and New Directions In European
Historiography, 1975) " which have
placed 'him in the forefront of scholars
dealing with the history and historiography of Europe," the Trustees
resolution appointing him to the new
rank Indicated. His awards Include
several fellowships, most recently from
the American Philosophical Society and
the National EndOwment for the
liumanllles. He Is s!)Mding the current
academic year by Invitation at the
.~~~j~~".:'n~k Institute for History In

�--14,1171

..

Social Work
is introducing
part-time study

The Critic

Brew Reid Kerr writes for 'Gusto,'
reviewing musicians and their acts;
he'd like to wind up at 'Playboy'
Drew Reid Kerr, a U/B senior, would
like to have a job like Dave Shrlbman of
the News.
Shribman gets his share of hard news
assignments (the Love Canal story for
instance} . But he also attends the
Psychic Fairs and regularly lnteNiews
the " tceentrlcs," the "leftovers,'' who

'Smart cracks which read well. T.lle

C:~!:t;h7n g~o~0 st~~e_:~sa "c~~;~

can

thrown In If warranted ." Thus, on
readong his piece on Billy Joel you csn
• learn: that Joel was "dashing In his

91:; ~~~.~ac;,~,o;:,rnr:::~e.~~~f'~r~~~

~::=J~~'::,9n"3~ing

:~~~ ar~~~ u~!rS:':n":.~ma~;,!e~~~

gut~~~~ry~·" Kerr

is . content with
bylined reviews and lnteNiews with
music personalities In Gusto, the News'
weekly entertainment Insert, and with
being editor of the Rachel C-·son
College Environmentalist. In the latter
jOb hls pei\Chant for Playboy has led to
at l~ast one innovation in the formerly
text bookish ecploglcal publication: a
"plantmate" of fhe month.
·
Kerr got his journalistic baptism on

~~~. ~r,c~~~~ ·hew~I ~Rat ~u:,~~{Poa~

0

His first
A " rowdy" concert by t he Outlaws

was Kerr's first real assignment. " Here
were these 10 ft . tall guys in cowboy
hats, crashing beer cans," he recalls .
He tried to be profesSional : if a member
of the band twitched his nose, he
carefully wrote in his notes , "e member
of the band twitched his nose." A
woman silting n8l&lt;l to him noticed all
the writing and asked what he was
doing . '·Reviewing for the News ," he
replied . " How'd you like to AO for a
drink," the woman Invited. "A critic
groupie!" marvels Kerr. "I didn't know
there were any."
After that review appeared , Kerr was
hooked. Before leaving last summer for
his home in Howard Beach, Queens
("the town that fought the Concorde
and lost"). Kerr spoke to some people
at the News about doing features from
New Yor1&lt;. They were interested.
Contacting the Manhattan publicity
offices of major record companies , he
was able to set-up five in-person
interviews with people In the music
business, all of which were published
as features In Gusto. These were the
same people being Interviewed in
Rolling Stones and Newsweek, he says.
One of the interviews was with the
Tom Robinson Band , a British beer hall
rock outfit with a flagrantly gay
band leader. Good copy there.
Kerr talked to the Crusaders, a bil}.
jazz band that goes back about a decade
and has done back-Up _wor1&lt; toJ a
number of artists. This was " the thrill of
my life," he reports .
He also did a story on Carole Bayer

~~";ose~ M~'t~'~am'rt"~. ~~~~ Si~~~

wrote the book for a stage musical
about their relationship for whicll
Hamlisch and Sager provided the
songs. It's tentatively titled , "They're
Playing Our Song," and Is supposed to
open In California some time soon.

'H3('~:~s~1,11/o~~s Kerr, a writer has to

beware of " hype." One record company
this summer arranged for him to do a
story on a great "new lind" of theirs.
Kerr showed up for the appointment ,

~~Y. ~~~~~~= lt~~n~g~~~gl~~~~

he'd crawled out from under a rock . " I
heard this guy's record and ,, was bad.
All we could lind to talk about was
Staten Island . He' d make a better TV·
senes than a record ," Kerr thought.
There was no story there. or at least not

~~~~kd1~ 8a~W'~~~·.~gf!~: Kerr (who is

beginnong to be known by the record
conlptonoes - " they hnd out if your
atuff ill publllhed or not") did a
3,5.mmute te~hone mterview with
Davod Gates of "Br~" ~who did the
totle song for Tha Goodbye Gtrl among

to 1;18 "Informative,"

thin~s

an editor of
Play/Joy, either. " They're the hippest

sometimes was " not written in
Engl ish·:· From there, he was i nvited to
participate In Gusto 's critics poll for
which once a month he had to rate the
best and wor§t music.
Gusto , he noticed , used stringers to
cover concerts. He sent In some of his
Prodigal Sun clips and wangled a
tryout. II' was just a dry-run (someone
else covered that concert for print/;
but Gusto editor Dale Anderson liked I .

1&gt;8. So he tries

as well as fair, with some "critical

others} . In that story . Gates shrugged
off criticism of his repetitive sentimental ballads . saying he's ··convinced ·he's
an anginal. ''
Kerr also does album reviews for
Gusto , and concert reviews (Billy Joel's
Memorial Auditorium concert , for
example) .
Chlcsgo
Last month . he went backstage for an
interview at a Chicago concert (that was
his " favorit~" - " they were incredibly
friendly , anxious to talk, physical"). " I
had my picture taken wi th them. " Kerr
00

g~fi~e"rhat"~X,~t ~~~ c~;'f!f~~ ~o ~
~~~·). cr~~dw:;'_?;'.,"~i~~·~~~leMp~c~n~
call from Houston . "I forgot to find out
if the record compan y was paying for
the call," he cringes , anticipating a
whopping bill .
Kerr does his features " on spec," but

~et~Y t~~i~::t ~d'~ec;~~ shua;;~~~~~

so you' ll get good material , he advises.
"I like to interview people I like."
For those who care about technique,
Kerr uses a tape recorder. A notebook
Inhibits celebrities . he feels . "And
truthfully, It's just easier to take out a
recorder and pick out the best lines. "
On the phone, he makes frantic notes
while talking .
Facts, not Cfacks
tn his reviews , he tries to be fair to
the group and avoids the temptat ion of

.. struck a Mr. Cool pOse" at various
points; that the drummer In the group
was " the most powerful percussionist I
have ever seen ..,
Kerr has been known, too, to
complain about annoying conditions In
the theatre which Interfere with
enJoyment of an event.
Where does he go from here, this
senior Eng lish-communications major
who 'd like to wind up at Playboy?
He's applied to 10 journalism grad
schools and for summer Internships at
Newsday on Long Island (for which he
had to write a 500-word feature about
himself and a 200-word murder story) ,
and at the News . He showed up for his
News interview in a three-piece suit
only to have the edi tor say " let's have
1

t~~~.j~~~~ 3sk~:b:r s~~~ ~~~~o:ka~

G~e0sh:~~s L:~a~s~co~~~~s. f~~s!~O

is Margaret That cher. He was asked to
define roe and epee, and was grilled on
grammar. They'll get back to him .
He writes to please himself

P~~r~ !~~f~~ u~~~~~~ th~~o~~~shea~~~~

to read about them, too . " I've never
been a fan of hard news ," he admits . He
writes , as any journalist ultimately
m'ust , '1o please myself. "
He also dabbles in fiction (but notes
it's his journalism '1hat sells"). He's
into music (plano, guitar, and lyrics
[which he writes while going to sleep)).
He hates TV: " The word Is the weapon, "
he says.
Yet, he's bet his ex-roommate that
he'll be the co-host on the Mike Douglas
Show sometime within the next 10
years. " I'm going to ask him to be on,
along with the Inevitable Andy
Granatelll and Bernadette Peters. "
Why will he be asked to join Douglas?
Maybe as a famous author, magazine
writer or film writer, he isn't sure.
He'll plot that out while in Florida

:';;~~~~r~:~e:~~~ldg;~!~~Q

"that tan

HSL sponsoring an essay contest
The Friends of the Health Sciences
Library (HSL) have announced the 1979
1

~r~~r o~· t~~~lst;~ud~r M~~

Sciences.
An awar&lt;J;of $200 will be presentad to
. the student submitting the best
manuscript (of no more than 25 typed
pages double-spaced) . The essay must
demonstTate either original research or
an unusual presentation ••
All undergraduate and graduate
students currently enrolled In
of the
pre-professional or professlona health

anr

science programs at U/B are eligible.
Manuscripts will be judged by a
select committee of fhe Friends.
The contest Is belnQ sponsored in
on~@, of Dr. ,Rud.QIRlj Siegel ,. a
mt!dic!lil'hlstorlan wKo was an ementus
assistant professor of medicine here
until his death In 1975.
March 30, 1979, is the deadline for

~~~:!j~s~ns~ft t~":fg~~re·H~~~~

M.D., president , Friends of the HSL,
Stockton Kimball Tower.
For additional Information, contact
.M!s. M. Hallowltz, 831·5465/5466.

A part-time program to obtain a
master's degree In social woilc will
begin with the September, 19711,
semester.
Dean Sherman Merle of the School of
Social Wori&lt; says the !'ew program was
Instituted to meet the needs of people
who, because of employment, family or
other obligations, can't take two years
to be full-lime students.
•
'We put together a task force test
Spring to examine the feasibility of
offering a part-time master's program

=~osul~~n::n~:J ;g"ri~~/-'0.:~":'
said .
Admission criteria and academic
requirements for the claSs courses will
remain the same for the pert-tl'l'e
~ram as
sre for the full-time,
8

t'::{

umu:,,StJ'\ ~tude~: l'cir"8i:'nr::'~J:

The major difference between the
programs will be In the field practicum,
which can be fulfilled during tho
summer between the first and second
academic years on a five-day-a-week
basis. The only time students need be
in full-time residency Is when they
bealn this block field practicum .
The part-time program can be
completed In two years or stretched out
to six years, Merle added .
He also said that each required
course will be offered In daytime and
evening )'lours, and that part-time
students will be able to take daytime
courses with full-timers If their
schedules dictate.
" Taking courses In the morning may
better suit a mother with small children
in nursery school ," he explained, 'while
evening courses are more convenient
for those ~ho are employed.''

Council plans
Room dedication

Past chairmen and former members
of the State University at Buffalo
Council will be honored during a

ge;~r:;;:,rz:e dr~~ttnp~ ~near.'!'tr,
Friday, December 15.
Scheduled for 2:45

p.m.,

the

=~eon~,:r;~~nTI~t1~t~~~:"'~P ~:.!

seven former chairmen of the Council
and 13 portraits of former chancellors

angt,~~ld:nt~~~~~nun.:=rng the
ceremony, formerCouncft members will
receive certlflcstes of appreciation
honoring them for service to the
University. The l uncheon which Is by
Invitation Is scheduled for noon In the
Spaulding Dining, Room at Ellicott.
U/B President Robert L. Ketter said
the special occasion " will emphasize
the historical continuity within the
University as It has peseed from prlvat,
to public status and from a comparatively small institution to the largeat In
the State University ayatem."
Ketter wUI present the certificates
during the luncheon and Louis A. Relf,

~~;::;~~0~~ ~~~~ ~~~n::~

Robert f . Mlllonzl, Pf88MI chairman of .
the U/8 Council, will unveil the plaque

du~~tYo!!rn~~~rcatton, the Council
will

hold

Its

regularly

acheduled

~~~nJI,;

for the plaque, portraits Wid
other room decor were provided by
friends of the University through the
U/B Foundation .

•Spectrum &amp; SA ·
(from pogo I , cot •t

effective effort."

have to."
He descrlbed the Senate as " com-

th~~Y~~so;tg~~~~e~~~~~~~Yd~s

Schwartz said. He suggested that the

Sl~~ko;~~~f~~~

pl~.t,:/r,'~~~f.~~~~~r,~n.::,~:,~~ug~!~&gt;

~~~~s'gr':!,,,';,~:.~'Jl~h::'~e!n~ ~~~:!:

this. The recourse Is to recall him . •
"I Invite them to do It-with zest,"
Schwartz said . They csn 't, he feels ,
because that would require support
from students • well beyond 20 clowns
In the Senate.
. "I think the ·Students at large know
what Is going on and would give me 1l
mandate," Schwartz said.
He said the present situation is
unfortunate. because undergraduates
here are "disadvantaged" to begin with,
in terms of power.
,

re~~t~g~t~o ~:p~tafo~n~t~~~~~~~~

In

Student Affairs
Richard A. Slggelkow emphasized to
the Reporter Tuesday that both the
Spectrum and student g~vernment
TO:
FROM :

~a~~~~~r~h

bes~'::!rvec~ ·~~d:~

.,.":'
among the student groups concerned.

·

" I think they're on the right track · to '
those solutions," the vice president
said.
He seemed to be alone In that
assessment.

Members of the Unl¥wslty Community
Robert L. Ketter
,

The Civil Service Employees Association (Region VI} has made a
commitment to financially support the 1979 International Special Olympics
for the Mentally Retarded . This annual event - the world's second largest
Olympics- is a program of physics! fitness and athletic training for mentally
retarded adults and children. To fulfill this commitment, the CSEA' has
undertaken a project to sell and-process film . I would like to congratulate the
CSEA on this rllost worthwhile endeavor, and encourage all members of the
University communoty to lend their support to this effort .

I

...

�Dec:ombor14, 1978

SENATEUndergraduates' report
is aired at FSEC meeting_-,
Mlnutes of the F.cutty Senate Executive

CommlttH, December 6

..:_ Er~iuet'l::"~::~tt:! an

. ~:~em:.,

:r,;;;:' .of

the

that a standing Admlnlst.rative Evaluation
Committee be formed . Subsequent discussion emphasized that such a committee
would exist to detBfmlne eflecttve criteria
and overall effectiveness of the administrative structure rather than to evaluate
Individual administrators.
The issue was POSTPONED until further
lnformatlon cou ld be gathered from the
committee chaired by Prof. F. Jen .

Minutes of

The mJnutes of November 29, 1978 were
approved as distributed.
Hem 12 Olficws' Repoftl

A. The P,..ident .
The President was ill and unable to
.attend; Acting Executive Vk:e President
Fogel reported In his stead. Enrollment
targets and budgetary expectations were
again the topic of discussion. SUNY1
Buffalo is continuing to examine closely the
areas of transfers and grajiuate .admissions.
Whatever the outcome of current'enrollmeri"t
concerns , the long-range reduction In tb,e
number of high school graduates dictates
that we plan ahead . In doing so, we will
need faculty and olher academic lnput~ to
make the appropr1ate adjustments. The
problem can be an opportunltl, but
advanced planning must begin now f we are
to be llrepared for the pertod around 1983
and later. Mr. Fogel assured FSEC that such

Volunteers
.,.....

Erie County Medical Center offers
opportunities to serve patients
In a variety of rewarding roles
~

Aoportor-

o..ptte Ita
OlriMmM -

bring out

~IC

.,....,

the

lll8llllgft- to
wtwt'a leftatilt
ol .,.,, hum.,...

.,.. • r- of depreeeing
=.-~.~~,r:.nd::s

ruMWaY lnflallon.·
In the home atretch before Olrlstmaa,
- ~ allOw ourwl- to dwell
.... on the ..U ..S mono on o!Mra; we
beoocTie tnOAI ,.nnng to give than get,
grow mono naturally gn.g.rioua than
lllool.
For - · the feeling ol good will

may

v_...

menllaat ltMif In N-pl....aloiQ lllvltlerly conFor 011*8, the Yulllllde aplrlt

~

'*"·

~--theiJillrta­
~ flO becl&lt; to the arik:.

U:tr.:==~tt=.w::==

==::m..ID~~l)fl~
Mecllc-' c.nter _, -

Olllllele lor oommurolty action.

•

your

':! , .,fll!ldaalftllllla
Of UIB
'iOiun_.. to
In~

dlloidllclltlon Uftlt, Ita dental cllftle end

Maloney College is -seeking
candidates lor lha position ol assi stant
\~}~~director lor the spring semester,

the - t mowelrom the
old ...,_ ~ Hoepltal to the

Created In response to the findings. of
a special Academic Review Committee
lor the College wl•lch was established
during the Cora P. Maloney recharte~IQll

.................
...__of
lnwrtoua .........

~,~

::*'::
=:r-~-=:=.:
-vency
,.,.,.. . . . . • "'MM!!II

,

~ 1n the family wdlng rOoni or
the
unft, a ..,..meors
In . . uut-1*Jent chlld..,'a play room ,•
n M Mal81anta In the lldmiUiona/
Cllactlelge pniOM8 .00 In the medical
Htoty.
In addition, help Ia needed In vwloua
'**'t ,_...lon activities. Volunt88f8
mlgllt find tbemMI- writing letters lor
pM!enta, 8howlng lllma, organizing
...r a--. or poMibly Juat engaging
In old-I'MIIIonedl -..ring Inter~ oommun cation.
e-y 211 bed zone In the hOipltal hU
a day room wtw. .,....,.. wbo.,.. Mile

t__,..-

:.-=.:=-~a':..~

= ....._

u..py progrwna, eo, onoe g'-1 an
ortenlallon, llle lndllldual volunteer hU
to
activities ~ Stoyell, dlrwctor of
.,..._., CMIItdlr pula It: 'We don,

................... tuat Nlf-mot-.cl,

lllllllllelnlllwldwla wtiO 11.-.IY .-rt

:.~----wlllfROtod9
.......
. . ...... .,_ . . ciOc:Mioll....-'\

PfOQtlllll..ft:~-ta. ltria"-

Jl9!1111iil

wltl '"'all ieS!fOnalbmtt ' for eo rs8
~Heg .,, IIII'!0~8!!P8 ·1QIJd.lle - ~"­
lege • oourae rnonltoriflg Ule£ llal80n
actiYitla lor the , director wlth irr.
structora 1111d with tha Colleges Dean's
Office. assistance In course evaluatlof1,
and resoluti on ol ••tudef1ts• curricular
problems.
.
The appoint•'• 20-25 hour wor1&lt;weak will Include service on Gollegeswide committees and management of
the day-tCHlay operations ol the Cora P.
Maloney College office In Fargo
Quadrangle .
E~perlance with the concerns ol
minority and urban students In higher
education, superior written and oral
communications skills, and a minimum
ol a bechelor's degree are the principal
qualifications lor the position. Applicants currently enrolled for lull-time
gnoduate atudy would be eligible lor a
tuition wal- In addition to salary.
Tltoae wishi ng to apply lor the
poattlon, es well as anyone Interested
In nominating candidates, should
contact Dr. Marte Hoyte ~ 831-5363.
The dMdllne for applications Is January
15, t871.

The motion PASSED unanimously.
Item 18 New BuaJnest
There was no new business.

The meeting adJourned at 5:10.

APPENDIX I

~~:.·:=n~~FocuHy
i:~O:or-._m~-w:,:--

The Undergraduate Student Association

~=~~~~~C:. ~C: =~~'ll·w~:~

wouiO authorize a separate DUE within

~~~ ~le~.J=~~=- "'~~

tlves.

Chairman of the FacultY Senate, In a letter
dated February 1, 1978, from Dr. Ketter.
On Monday, December 4, 1978, the

Item I S Repretentllfn .. Rapc)rt1
_!_here ~ere no represantatfves' reports.

~;:er~~~~~.:·u~er~A~·~fr!:,:tyecr~

odamanny

A. Scope ol tho DIIE DNn
Undergraduate Student Aasoolatlon Pres-- •
ldent.Kan Schwartz dlatribuled..and read .a
statement r9ftecUng the co,ncema of
students regardJng the tfroposed teorganfzatlon of responsibilities for undwgraduate
programs withi n the H'ealth SCiences. A.

t- ·

Un&lt;t.cvta a main
. Allowi ng the Vice President of HaaJth.
ScienQBs to assume direct responsibfllty for
undergraduate programs w1fhln Health

~~':!.,J!..~S::':...!::'lleg";"~

ser5oualy undercuts a main tenet o·f the
Faculty Senate EducatloMI Planning and
Polley Committee Report. Ttte r8port c.lls

recommendaUona and the report k1 Its

In addition lhe

voted on and ·

In both oreu" ( - -&amp;:lences and

Pres1dent reminding him of recommendations 11, 2 and 5 adopted by. the .Foculty

Academics) . It fa Ironic that Or. Bunn'a and

?~iep·:~~~~~ p~r,~· ·i~h~g=~:

Senate on May 17, 19n and communicating
to hlm our .concern that the Auoclate

supposed to ha"" been booed on tho .raport.
A portion of Or. •Ketter's letter to Or.

~~:;[u~ t~ha~~ u~?~:.'l~:~~rJ: ~~=~~~
8

Reichert reads, " I laked the VIce President
for Academic Affairs and the Vtce Pr1181dent
for Health Sciences, In consultet1on wfth the

resf;n~~!~~~esP,o.sseo unanlmoUary;

B. Coll-en' propoael 'tlt~t eoa·,...
tll.,.,it'• ~ oort•ld.,..,S ·NIId oPflon• ... 1n

~ti.l'cffffll~clq&lt;!k;ot;&gt;~';:,~""';;;"'~
~

1--

....

·

• . ..,

~·

;,I ,.. ~

I

._

•

1

~~~~;, ":':!fvt~,;',. ~n ~n':!:
1

•1- (italkle jlddod)
of the Committee's report ."

seemed appropriate In

~

, §1;&gt;}/llnQ.ulh. &lt;aoponalb.ljjly'__toe.. under·

• ~"'--!!ll\:~t~)I"JO, tliil';~)1 SR~
•

. . . ....f11Ec,'.-ee11,coLS

... !.-

'

~

:.~SFtax~1Join'g
....

o&lt;:knowledgas that

since " the Dean of Undergraduate EducaUon
Ia a Unf110f81ty-- Deon, he muet be active

~~~~~~~ ~~~c~~~~1 the

luffllflng dlofrfl&gt;ulfOII ,.q..-, ~ tJieu,
-•lll'flnl t.ellng lllat !!)Is issue allouid' be
~fd .tM&lt;l i'Oqlhry'!'lo ~ oJI!lf

=

tot ..one office(" tD have "broad respons ~
:1:~~fu~~~:n,:~ 1 of ~~~ndergraduate _

Underv&lt;aduate Education. The Individual

~ t!~~~~ly

we

:i.:."ns~b;is ~~4~r~t do":::;: ~~

Kuntz MOVED (W. Woldt SECONDED) to

=:/

proposal.

following reasons: ~

recefve the rwport of the students and
append It to the minutes. The motion
PASSED.
•
,
The Chairman dlalributod coplea of a
portion of tb&amp; Mlnut.oo of the May 17, 19n
Senate maeting racocding recommendations
proposed by the Educational Plann ing and
Potter Committee on the Role of the Dean of

·

oppose thla

recommended similar action to. our senate.
It should be noted that unanimity on any
issue l n our Executive Com~nuttee Ia a rare
feat In and · ot Itself. We urge •the Facorty
Senate Executive Committee to act fn ·a

Item I 5 Old 8\Jth.M II

has

~-'-'Tnot='=:,_~

r1113778;beFreedom
~=ra~ to ~~he tg~m~e!truo~
and Responsibility.

Vh:~~~:':elcomed

'

CPMseeking
jWUI
ICMI ...... 1ft 1M ...... It
Worltild
College H Md-lhe
assistant
=:r'""" ..~-::-: an
Cora P.

Gr~~dlng

~ Academ ic

Lowell SchoeO.:
feld, a newly designated representative of
the PacuJty of Natural Sclencet ahd
Mathematics. He also wek:omed Und8fgraduate Student AssocJalion representa:

The
Medical

IJI'Oiflde
...,._..,whlel1
IIUPPI&amp;ment . .-_ .......
tlledlc*
.00

D.

th:h:::':'te1~~,11~v~p l!,~~110 ~8E~~Dra?~

r::r~nfn~u~~~r :-~~~~~~:~~~~~

Videotapes lor In- ouae presentations.
Rehab Medici,. ;Reeds someone who
can assist ctlenr. 81\il staff In their
Vocational Evaluation Cot-patient Program. Stoyell Is searching for a
YOiuntee&lt; who can 88slat her In writing a
grant lor -staffing the hospital's outP*flent chUt!ren's play room. Posslbllhles for YOiunteer assistance are as
,
endless 88 their talents.
VoluntMr!l spend anywhenllrom two
to eight hours Ill the hospital, from one
tO live days a wll8k. Bul Sloyell Is
flexible; she Ia mon~ concerned wltll the
"quallty of commitment than the
quantity of time.''
In an age where volunteerlsm Is
scoffed st aa free, lal»r or axploltllllon
of women, Sto:&lt;,en rather bell8'19a that
It's "a prfYIIage to be able lcrchooile
volunteer, service. Besides, aha edds,
"you can t attach a dollar and cents
algn" to I~ vollmteer experience.
· Quite lila cont~. lj'a SOfll•_thing
)'OU do wt.1 yoU want to 111W&gt; of
YQU(8111t••The only AlWard Ia a aenae of
fulfillment .

Admlnlstreflre

(R:;~~~~ MOVED (J. Trice) and SECONDED

The meellng was called to order at 2:35
p.m. to consider the following agenda:

up

••. l

The Social Secuflty (FICA) ~uctlons from University employees'
bi-weekly paychecks will be higher In 1979. The Social Security tax rale Ia
6: 13 per ce.~tln 1979, cof(lparad to' 6.05, per cent In 1978. In addition, the
"Wege base . - the maximum amount pi earnings on which Social Security
taxes are pa1d- rises !Tom $17,770 this year to $22,900 In 1979.
Employees earning less than $17,770 a yearwon'l notice as big a change In
their bl·weekty Social Security payroll deductions as those In higher Income
brackels. Examples ol tt1is Impact are:
·

New Tax
Annual Income • Ell. t 11/79 -1978 Tax =
$ 6,000
$ 367 .8Q
s 605
363.00
10,000
6t3.DO
oo
15,000
S19.50
907.50
17,77~
1,085.01
1,07C:85
20,000
1,226.00
1,070.85
.~·=.
1,&lt;403.77
1,070.85

Tax
1979
lncreeoe =
$ 4 80

·

1~-gg
1.:16
155.15
332.92

Ill· weekly Payrorl

Ded=~approx)
+ S .18
+
·30

!+ 5.96
::

+ 12.80

Tlte State ol N- York will also pay more into Social Security In 1979 since
asldtheb elmt ployer
l' It must match , dollar lor dollar, the Social Security taxes
pa
y a emp oyees .
.
For those employ- who reached their "wage base" earlier this ear next
payday (FTiday, 1"2/22/78) will be the last one free ol Soclaly SeCurity
deductk!na (with larger_lalla home pays) . T ' - emplolf8M.,.. alerted to the
I act therr ~clal SeCuflty payroll deduction$ will atarl" again 88 of the
it"riday , 1/5179 (taxes are deducted ~Y
period endmg 113/71 and paid
Income earned In the year paid- not earned) .
n

,

�11

•FSEC

_,.._,o,c:ot.C)

sltu&amp;Uon too unwietdy we propose that the
Dean report solety to Ule Vk:a President of

.away from the DUE Dean belles any
ratlonaJe for the ex;lstence of such a dean.
The SUNY /Buffalo Undergraduate Olvtslon
must grapple with a missiOn statement that

:erta~::r:.lf't~r·,~~t:_,!'at=~~~U:
between Health Sctenc:es and Academk:e.

!~uu:.~~~':!.~~rv,~~~s

outside ~f
The· university's commitment to a high
. &lt;lUallty and broadly baaed liberal arts

Faft &amp;ccomptl

~elchert,

f~:tn:,\~"~~~~o~ ~=u~::-=~~~~ ~ ·r~:

By Linda G~obat
-Bur-Staff

Planet Earth has a temperature range
of approximately + 136" F to -130" F,
with conditions ranging from dense,

~!:,.!~~ft::Swl~d=. =~iy ~~

~"r,~~~~ve~ th~~ghso;;,t~~,lvem~J

work In almost eViify type of natural
environment, (tlere are l)inlts tq the
human body's accllmaiiZfllon capacHies.
•· Ironically, too, sometimes humanmade environments are the most

·we attempt to adjust any mismatches," he continued . " Particularly
In our Industrial society today, mismatches are-of a far more subtle nature

expressed two

~rl~~tll'l'~st~9~~.~~~~ta~~~i~"n~~st

r:::r ::lP~,u~r~~

Summer. In cln«t, lldntera In Alaska
'We have votunttlllrs to test our

:f
g':0~1~ anw.l''~ftrw~anh:::':~,~~
heater goes on th' blink.
- .

fair to ask anybody else to do anything I
wouldn1 do myself."
As a result, he added, he usually

~~~P~~'1,;;~~

work of an Industrial boiler room?
And, of couree, there are those of us
0

Era/ ergo, ergonomics

.,._

~

n

QUIIj . IOPf118-

tlcated," Mid Dr. .-.plr GoldrnM, the
envtroniiiMital llhyalololllat who' de-

w::~ ~:ry.,;~~~~~~~ld!~

"*"·

algned
"TffeeW's noilrlnglllulthem
anywhenr .... In New YOit&lt; State."

Goldmen, who Ia tMCirlnc.-a cou,... In
work PhYaloloay this ....-er. Ia
director ol the IJ.S. Army's Ergonomics

Laboratoriee In Naticl&lt;, Mfaa. He
llealgna Wid twta clothing .00 other
lmJIIimenta auch as sleeping biGs for
extJeme -!her conditions 8lld has
pUbliShed a ~ of booka daacrlt&gt;lng how treat, cold, clothing and other
fectora affect human ~onnance.

Pot.nllaltor . . . - i o n

lng -deeert .eurvtval may provide a
. pleasant mental break.
"In adaPting to heat conditione, we
" - ·- - ' optlona," Goldmin ..ld.
.

~:~~ ~~l=l?tth~\'8·,::/~~ ~~

Mal. Maximize your water Intake, •
the major problem Ia dehydration, and
thirst· Ia not an adequ81e stimulus.
Drink more than you normally would.

C.:,'G~~:;;,e8t~ ~:.co;ec;~~:.

=

If he or ahe Is .....,.,ly fit , he or she

can acclimetlze In about- days. Irs
one of the mora Impressive phyillolog-

lca~:~

:"~~-:9°V:Ith

U/B's IE Department

as

a visiting

~~=tow:' YW::.n:P~~::J~

"T'- cllambera are oriented primarily towards polantlala for aner.:l/

!:'eom:S ':.~a:,~t t!'Jdi7FoV:, c~~m~.;!
department's research program.

our thermal

Ruckenstein honored

..

~-:'::..; ,,.c:o~ -:r~y
sources

by

adjusting

=?~~ar'ree~~"e,:~i::tf~z'l~
spot heating. •
~

wo/l&lt;era will feel cold first
In thelreuremitles, Gold1T1811 eald, with

resulting cold hands ll!l"d feM . By ualng

Last November, the American lnstl·
tule ol Chemical Engineers honored
Professor Eli Ruckenstein ol U/B with
the 1977 Alpha Chi Sigma Award for
contributions to research in chemical
engl,_,ing. This year, ·• AlehE is
holding a symposium to discuss some
o1 thotle contributions, In honor of
Ruckensteln , as part of Its
Aoonual Meeting .(M ..mi Beach, 1978).
Ttte invited spelkers to this symposium ·
wtU dlo.cuaa the work they did in
r:ooperallon with Prof. Ruckanatetn.

~~t=.=~=~= "'ot.aaor

line·· can ba put 81 l o - aettlhga
wi!IQn wldulned dlacomfon.
Goldman dafl,_ ..,....lea • "a
look • the . . , . . , pllya*Oglcal and

1 ~CIIologicll clemMCII of

•

the -

tt-.

a

1111

I .... .00,
phyafcel,

Sciences
reasons for the
8

H:t~:'~cf~n~!:~nto~h ~ '!~k:~lv~!011~~

unacceptable. Firstly, he believes that tf'the

~es~~~!~tu~~onP~:~:fr~est~he~~cu~:~d~~:

advisement. It seems to us that Dr . .Pannlll
could easily exert influence on his faculty to
undertake th is whether Health Sciences

~~ltl~!!sa ~~~:~ erml~ orJ~. ad~:r;;lr,~!
reluctance to do this seems to ·-us an...
unwillingness to work In the best Interest of
students and more Importantly an unwillingness to lose " personal control."
Dr. Pannlll also likened the administration

~~~ ~~~~~~~-~~r:~!~~u,fn~:fh'tscar"n?~
absurd, but If the Faculty Senate

finds~~

Dr. Ketter has obviously expreaatd the
need for feedback. II Is Imperative that the
Faculty Senate reaJlze this need and Issue
•
Its long overdue response.
It has not escaped our attention that
1

~~n ar::~t:nsa r!w ~:cu~~~~~=;
less than enamored· with the prospect of

l':dee%~c ~~~~~~-"~o!!'ev~e th;~'~"uuf~
1
~~~$~~~~ret~!rn ~8m!:C~~be,~~~~

organization lor the Untv8rslly admlnlstra·
tlon . It Is the Faculty's respons ibility to
creatt:t academic policy, and the UnlveraJty
administration's responslblllty to imph!ment
that policy, not the other way around.

underg~·:aPe :~~le~s~~~r;~

-Joel Mayeraohn, Executive Vic;;e Pres ident
Undergraduate Student Asaoclatlan
-DioneM.~.

1

Director of Academic Affaire

Und«graduate Staclen!_~atlon

was presented the prestigious Robert

Drink a lot

Laboratory. CMmber conditions can
range from wctfc JfJ t!OIIk* envtroomanta through e d j - t a In temperalui!, humidity, elr flow Wldllglrtlnq._

specK~c
5

~~:~~::;.~ndat{ons of the Faculty Sen~te
/

!~r:: ~~u~~=. ~t~~g~~f:rt A~~

on the

\:"Jh
c;.'~"gr::!l~Hit~:v"~
U/B's Human Performance

~~ ~~~~t~ r~:C~~d~~ore:::r~.rO::,~~
~~!t~~~·~~~~~ ~~·=~~::~!', ~1~~~1:-ti .

Brody receives gerontology award

has an elaborate laboratory setting in
Natick.
'We find that In a lot of clothing
design, the first principle often comes
from native populations," he said,
giving the Eskimo parka as an examole
of an extremely functional llarment.
"The Ideal Is clothing that Is adjustable
to meet the range of temperatures you
wUI encounter."

pert of

ont~: e,-~ 0~r~·Je•n~n~~-. Health

aa/J.

=~~~~~~:,!.-: ~~~.\y d~t ~~~·lr.:

Human work and flYing environments
are being made a lot more liveable
through the efforts of angin-a and
physiologists Involved In the study of
human lectors, or ergonomics. (An erg
Is a unit of work; ergo, ergonomics Is
ttl&amp; study of work.)
1
Two environmental . chambers that
will be used for .-.-rch alljl class
are just about completed In the

=•

us

that again , discouraged
greatly. He
" Our faculty have had tbla very carefully
explained to them ."
Dr. K~lter's letter to Dr. Reichert was not adacJarallon of policy. (l.e., ExeCYiive Flat),

~~w:~'Wea~ ~~~!:,,'!,~~~rl'em~::g~

advisability of wch a move not to
mention possible less than noble intentions

may allow more workers to perform
certain tasks.
'We can balance heavy drijls that rule
females out of certaln fobs on heavy
shock cords that hold most of the
weight," he el&lt;;plalned.
Goldman has traveled to some of the

~~~~~~) ~~~rt\ onthe"'=lty of of m~?:
~~:r~~~ ~~~ ~~~d~~Ps :~~g~':~e

geographically dlvk!&gt;d Unlversily. At a

1

::1~~~ -

Health Sc5$1ces' undergraduate programs.
Dr. Pannlll now-waits patiently for the three
staff tines profftlaed to hiril by Dr. Bunn .•
In our dlscusalon with Dr. Pannlll each
time we referred to the " proposed change"
he corrected us, maintaining that the
change had aJready taken P'-08. We felt this
to be turktus in view of the feet.. that to th6
best of our knowledge, the F.cully Senate
had not been consulted on thla matter. We
hsd been under the lmp(eaaion (up until

meeting held yesterday wllh Dr. Pannlll , we
woiced th is c:onc:em. His response- " If you

~r::~/':f~~ psychological capac-

~~ersat~ ~~~~~~ M~d~~o~9e~~~e~t~~~
apCe'::l;;l~t. "Industrial equipment

length of daylight and you c.an see that
Mother Nature has a~ flexlble rec'fc;
~~m~l:'l~ftve~~~ an ronmants or
We humans, h o -. ara not as

~~~~~~ o~:h~h:~~Y ~~~~

. Furthec t.clionallzatloft
Authorizing a separate DUE within ijealth
ScM!nces will only serve to fur1h8r
factionallze an already academk:alty and

5

(Dr.~

o?

nor does Jt exist --In any
your
files). According to hltn, Dr. Ketter's l~ter
ol February 1, 1978 to Or. Reichert (then

only assurance for undergraduate students
(especially those Wi\llln the professional
schools) , tHat their academic and educa·
tional needs,
beycmd
their specific
programs or majors, are being safeguarded.
To redesignate this responsibility to the
Deans of the individual schools &lt;Within the
Health SCiences, would serve to further
narrow the all'eady too parochial Baccalaureate programs within that division. lh
addiUon, the precedent that will be set 1f
such a move takes place, will d irectly
threaten the future survival of the DIYlsion of
Undergraduate Edu~tlon. What wfll stop
the other professional schools from
following suit? Nothing that we can see.
And what ¥1111 prevent th l_s University from
becoming a collection of trade schools?, .

::;~i;u:'~ u:~rc!n~~o~~. ~~nJ; ·~t~~~=

1

K:;!!:~~:tt~ ~~~~u7t;• ~~:-: ~:

~~t:n:.~~c':'s~~~~rt.et~, ctc3r'~, w:o~e~~

FEAS unveils new chambers where
hu""!an work and living environments
can be studied and improved

..

:!t.h quW~· ex~~~m~

that thfs changeover ta a fait ac:comptl

~~~ ~~·be~~ ,..~~~:~~~~ ••~g'ea~~

ewJ:a bs

,:=ad

re~~::r.y. ~~

Dr. Harold Brody, chairman of lhe
Department -of Anatomical Sciences,
W. Kleemeler Research Award by the
American Gerontological Society at its
31sl national meeting in Dallas.
Dr. Brody, acting dlreclor .of U/B's
Multidiscipl.inery Center for the Study

~~t~P~~Sin~a~e~~~ ~~fr it~\i~"n's hi~
1

lhe field of aging. Much of his research
has been Involved with aging of the

no~~~i~'/'e'::! ~m':'1~~~~!"'aid, Brody
wi ll present the Robert W. Kleemeler
Lecture at tha Society's meeting next

year In Washington, D.C. The late Dr.
Kleemeler was a former president of the
Society. and a human behavorial and
developmental psychologist- at the
University of Chlcapo. The Society's
membership Is d1vlded into tour
specialty sections: biological sciences,
clinical medicine, behevorlal/soclal
sciences, and social research{ planning
and pr.acl ice. Some 3000. members
attended the Dallas meeting.
Brody Is a former Society president
and Is a member of the National ,
Advisory Council of the Natlonal
Institute on Aging. Hels edltor-lr&gt;-ehlef
of the Journal of Gerontology.

Pharmacy department heild named

·' er~ ·Robert M. " 0o6per, asa6i:lata
professor of pharmacy, haS bean named
chairman of the -oa~ of
Pharm~y by President Robert L.
Ketter.
Cooper, a native of California, jOined
U.(B In 1967. During his tenure he has
served as admissions officer andassistant dean of student and professlonal affalrs of the School of
PhBflllSCY. He Is currently a faculty
representative on the Council- of
Faculties tor thtf American Aesocllltion
of Colleges of Pharmacy and co-

Aid

1

oor4t.i;."or o1 \Ire ~tlnulng ed~ltin
program In p1rennacy 111 U/8. ·
m 1878, Dr. Cooper was-~...:
the Chenoellor'a Award for ExceUence
In Teaching.
••
Cooper recelved1he Pllarm. D. deafee
from the Unl-.tty of Callfomla, llan
Francisco Medlcaf Canter, and completed ·hie 1'11111dei\cy In 11o1p1ta1
phwmacy there. Prior to jOinlna U/8,
he was a pharmacist with the National
Cancer lnatitute'a Dose Formulllllon
Unit, Cancer Chemotherapy National
ServtceCenter.

ap~licatipn. s

.

1979-80 Fl(l&amp;nCialAid Applications are now available to ·s tudents Cl111'p11oe
A. Conner, director of financial aid, has announced
'
Applications are available at two locations: Offio&amp; of Financial Aid, 6 Butler
Annex B, and Student Affairs Offioe, 167 MFA~ Ellicott Complex.
· Students areadviaed that !he Financial Aid F.orm (FAF) Ia not 10 be mailed
to the College Scholarship Service belore Janu.ry 1, 1979.
The 19711'80 Financial Aid Application will egaln consist of two forma:
-f'ORM UB - to be aubmiltad to the Financial Aid Office; deadline date for
this form Is Febru.ry 28, 1979. The Financial Aid~orm (FAF) Ia uead to eppty
for University Funds and also the Basic Edu~ Opportunity Grwlt
(BEOG). Thle form Ia to be IJI&amp;lled to t11a College 8cltrof8ralrip Servtoa (CISI.
l&gt;rfnceto'!, N-. ......,, after•Janu.y 1, 1878, wltlla $4.75 ~~~~~ 1•.
SUNY at Duffafo 8cllool Code Number la 21:111.
~ Flnanolal Aiel Olfloa la operl 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. dally, except
• ._nelday..,_HC'-811 ·"'·

,

I
J

�At Clark Gym: 1938 friezes are being restored
If -

lied told retiAid U/B

notes, "I was a plasterer and mason on
my own." For a brief .spell during the
Depression, he also did collision work
and motor repair In his fath_.s shop.
But of all the types of work he's done,
he prefers plastering. He laments there
aren't viiry many feamlng that trade
these days.
.,.,.ould say you could plaster a large
wall tn a tot tess time ttian tt'staklngi
to
' reconstruct parts of these friezes," say
Szczebtewskl; '~his work requires mo
fine detail ." To be sure, there•s·a lou
of the artist In him. That's evident as hepatnslaktngty shapes the more lntncate
replacements for the damaged plaster.
Although he wes happy to do. the
special work at the request of Paul
Nuwer, supervising painter for the Main
Street Physical Plant, he doesn't plan to
come out of retlr~ment.permanentty.
"I've got work to
round my own
house," he c.huckles. lind then hext
year somet1me, my wile and I are going
to Florida on·v-tlon."
.
Unlll then, he Is going to enjoy the
winter weather In t&gt;ls snowmobile which
he likes to drive over his 26-acre
Lancaster farm .
•
The Reporter attempted to trace the
origin ot the friezes In the University
Archives. All that could be unearthed In
a hurried search was some corresnn·

- a ~ Walter Szczeblew1111 "-"" .ehlln te Clertt Gym to put

miMina !ega on a horae, he probably
wouldn't haW belle¥ed them.
But lor the put weel\, Szczeblewskl
has been back orr..}lhe Main Street
Cempua, carefully noconstructtng not
only tega of horaa but other portions of
finely detailed but damaged friezes
Which hang In the gymnasium .
The frieZea depleting Greco-Roman
athletes engaged In various sports
haw!, over !he~· been damaged,
probably, says Szczebl-akl, by ftylnl!
t.eeballa. Holee, as large as 15" x 15
were notl.caable In one of the three
Which are ancflonad on tl\e walla some
15 feet above the floor. [The U/B
baseball team often practiced In the
gym.)
To noconstruct the missing paris,
Szczebtewakt \Jaed plaster of paris
mixed- with lime and applied It directly
to the sculpture. Holes were first filfed
with wire mesh; the wet plester mixture
was applied Immediately and smooth·
ed . The retired mason estimates the
entire job took some 40 hours.
The youthful. agile 67-vear-otd
Szczeblewskl climbs esslty on high
acatloldlng to work on the friezes. The
becks of the plecea, he says,""' bolted

~-'!~ ~ !;:.~llt the fig ore:'~!~
10
~~~::~ th;:;'rt.ed ·
utB's

Physical Plant on Main Str
or so~
ten yews before his ret rement In
September. "But for 29 years, " he

•

~';,"rt&lt;": ~~C:~~~ lr.,eh~~~~~~~ ~~~
~~e ~~:JI~l:~ c"i":.. ~;~?uut T'~!;

are referred to as the RuiT\6ey and Gary
friezes_ Both those families
benefactors &lt;&gt;f the University.

Comparativ~
International and comparative ediJCatlon programs In ltle Faculty of
Educational Studies (FES) have recent-

~tt;=."ch~~a.;'lfhe bep:';'~~nt ~j

0

Social Foundations_
Altbech ticks-off five fast reasons for
·
the claim:
•Just this year the m":(or journal in
the field, the Comparative Education
Rewew has come to \JIB under his
editorship;
•The U/ B Cente~ foe Comparative
Education , Which he heads, has just
received a grant of $15,000 from the
Exxon Foundation for preparation and
publication of a bibliography on
c~t.e education;

~~~~~.:'~~n~~~~

focus and~;
_
•It sponsors t .. only book ....,s In
the field, luued1119 " ' - ~.
New York, a .....r pubU- In the
social sciences; end
•This spring the Center Will sponsor a
small conference on '1nternatlonallzing
American Higher Education ," relaled to

~id~or:"'' ~~itt':"C:::'r.:rro;;;~ed

The Comparalt.e Education Center Is

an lnl8nii1Cipll~ activity of FE&amp;, and

Ita affiliated faculty Include Individuals
from -lous f!Mds In education and
from 1118 SOCial sciences.
QrMuale pragfMIS
The Center coordinates course
offerings and graduate programs In
COORplrllli"" educetlon, with "" emphasis on Thlnl Wor1d inatitllllons.
int-ed students apply to a llpecific
FE$ . d~"*'t. tllough their
wot'l will be Interdisciplinary In nature.

~-== ~r~~li~leld~

=·.:r=:~=lal ~

-

were

_

Ed: ·a developing center of strength

Tile four-year-old educational program [which pre-da.tes actual establishment of a Center) has attracted doctoral
students from India, Kenya, Zambia-and
Canada. About 15 grad students are
enrolled In total, about half foreign.
Most of the studenls from outside the
U.&amp; return to professional jobs in their
own Rations (one recently joined a state
ministry of eduoalion in Nigeria) ._The

~~i~~~J~~~~~ u~~~~;~:v ~:;~~r.~

Albach admits-but not as bad In
comparative education as in some
fields) , or are hired by agencies of
go-nment and the UN.
One of only two programs of its kind
· in New York State, the Comparative Ed

~~gf:~A~:'c~\~i~f.~~el~~~~ta"f~~

begin to find places In the "field and as it
becomes known that the leading jou,roal
In ttw Netd llaa moved here. It wJII
-.atn small by design, howeY8r:

Joumala and boob

The first Issue of the Comparative

;~'("t!:~t i~e;~t~u~.~r:f~~o~:llf

P. Kelly and Beatrice Szekely of Social
Foundations are serving as associ ate
editors. l'he jour~, which has an

-~Y~~~~~s'1:~d;/~~~ee~~ ~~e~~~hed

The book series in comP.aralive
education , under the~eneral edttorsllip
of Altbach , wilt cOlnprise about four
1

0

~~~~naofY::'.;.y~ ~~fhe c~a:.';in~

Japatresa Uniyerslty In Comparative
Perspective, and a volume on British
and American Education Policy In
Cris;s . In press now are Comparative
Perspes;tiVfJs on , the Academic Proles.Bion, edited by Altbech; and Academic
Power: Patterns of Authority In Seven
Natlon&amp;f Systems of Higher .Education,
involVIng CMe studies ol systems in

on-t'-rofi1 Org.
U.S.

~astage

PAID
Buffalo, N.Y
PC1"111it No.3tl

West Germany. Italy, France , Sweden,
Great Britain and the U.S .
OccaSional papers..published so far
include an essay on '' Language In
Alrlcan Education"' and a preliminary
bibliography on comparative education
by Altb•ch and Kelly [to be expanded
under. the E~xon grant].
In addition to tnes~t"Center publications, Altbach PQints out, the inlernationally-minded" Faculty of Educational Studies is home for two other
International journals: Sovit!t · €"ducat/on, also edited by Beatrice SzeRely,
and Higlier Education; edited by Or.
Robert Berdahl of Higher Education .
The Soviet Journal is a series of
t"ranslations of articles published in the
USSR . The editor has what Altbach
describes as an "excellent collection "
of Russian language material In her
offices on the founh floor of Beidy.
1 nA Higher Ed department which
Berdahl heads, Incidentally, also offers ·
a doctoral specialization in Internation-al higher education.
Faculty actiYitl•
A.notlwir facet _of the Comparative

:O~..:'es ~~}.f~~~~~ ~~~~~~

lUes by FES faculty and students.
;.. recent ruodown of these- activities'
r.::::g:r.:'th~~ the FES Newsletter

• •Professor Taher "Rtttik~ (Curriculum)
..spent last year in the Middle Easledvlslng various governments In the
Arablan Gulf ares on . educational ·
matters.
•Pro fessor Robert Jennings Is
spending the 1978-79 academic year at
Sheffield C~ Polytechnic In England,

~ on International education}.

•
•Professor Day Ann McClenathan
(Elementary and Remedial Education)
presented a pap~r. "Tragic "lhemes in
Children's Books," to the Seventh
World Congress of the International
Reading Association In Hamburg ,
30

Ge!¥"h e ~~~~~t~u::~~;~tr;invo1Yecl ror
~~~j~: whf~soff~reitea~~~-ce':J'::~~l~

programs In Nigeria; this Involved
several professors.
In all, some 37 of FES's 87 faculty
have had some overseas Involvement in
the last five years, accqldlng to a recent
report: In Europe, the Middle East ,
Asia, Africa, Australia, Cenada, and
Mexico.
..
In addition, t~ Faculty has hosted
visiting faculty from Korea afld Poland
for a semester and has had shOiter
visits frem academics from Japan;
India, Kenya, Egypt,- Australia, and.
England .
Other pursuits
Closer lo. home, tha Center ior
Comparative Education works closely
wi th the U/B Council on International
Studies, serves as a home lor scholars
from other countries who seek to leatn
about American education, will help
provide _bibliographic; and other as-

.d:~~~ -l~v~~:Jgnw~~hott~rn:~n~

College, an experimental living-learning
unit .
.
In addlllon to Altbach, the Cente&lt;!s
executive committee includes:
Robert 0 . Berdahl , professor and
chairman, higher education; J . Ronald
Gentile, associate professor, educational psychology and director of the
0
8
Nigerian . Project; Gail P. Kelly,
assistant
professor, social foundations;
Trust .
trvfng J. Spitzberg, Jr., associate
•Prllfessor Robert Berdahl has
professor,
hlgher«&lt;ucatlon; and Austin
recently returned from England where
he spent a _.,ester with the eaaiatance · Swanson, professor and chairman,
of the Ford Foundation , studying the . educational administration.
University Grants Committees.
CLOSING NOTICE
•Professor MarceUne Jaquee (Co\ln·
The- ip.c!at Collectlona Uft1t of the
seling Psychology) hea acted as an -~ L.llarlaa w11 11e oloMd
HEW conauttant In pewloplng a new
T~ o.c.n11er :11
r-llltatlon counaalor «&lt;ucallon pro- . dilr, ............ 17 .,.C.. Collactlolla
gram for E"gypt (ProiMfOr Jaqwe Ia
AnlllhW 8nd tt1e foe1rJ
chairman of the FES policy committee
Calleollon~!!!!!!!!!~·'----------

="~~Pt/ gra~t if';g,ri =l~v~t~:.,:

a • ...,...

lnlilioda.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

DEC 7,1978
VOL.10 • N0.13

Dentistryi
Considering the cont~lous "cut beck

: :· t:'e':u:ac~ln~.,.po~~~ '{'~~
advocates, the U/B Dental Sdlool may
face mor.e than an uphill battle in
securing additional funds from the
~~· of the State bureauCfacy-the
Administrators and
Dental School

the
that
at

-

an uphill battle looms with·DOB

happi"n this spring when the Dental
School undergoes an on-site Inspection
by an accreditation team. They wonder
·e before the
how long it will
faculty-who , they ~~Dint out, make
one-third less salary than dental facu"y
at Stony Brook-succumb to the

office space. or must share a small
room with a colleague.

financial lures of other institutions .
Granted , Long Island has a higher cost
of living 1han Buffalo , "but not 32 per

(,&gt;lven conditions at the Dental School
and their "devastatlnjj effect on.
morale," Feagans feels the school has

cent more," Insists Dental School Dean ·
·
William Feagans.
- Not Just salaries
Of
it's not just the inequitable

that may cause a

~o~~~no;t/l,o~

9"&lt;:9.!!!!!!~&gt;&amp; could elfecliol&lt;i-

ly chip away at morale. Like a lack of
support personnel and space to do

research , archaic equipment , the heavy
work-load of clinical faculty, and the
fact that many faculty cannot even get

been "very fortunate" in maintaining

staff as long as they have.
In the past, says Assistant Dean
Lawrence Drake, turnover of faculty was
never a problem . Only in the last few
years has a trickle of resignations
staAed ooming.
. _What worries feagaps , Drake and lbe
·._ stud:-"ta, is the pro~ of not being

able to replace faculty who have or may

':Cv;al~~t'l~~a!~r,-~~~a:!~~~n~~e~

inadequate space, sal•les, and support

~~!Jifl:jb~ ~dtd~s.can

scare orr

Presldentlal tatlk-ton:. ,
A presidential task force composed
of dental educators from U/B and

~~:r~m~h~e~~ntlhe r~:~i:J ~~~'1.

Their conclusion afllnned suspicions ol
faculty and students, that the school's
"accreditation may be lowenKI" after
the 1979 site review '*"&gt;use of

.:::e".t~~r~:r~ h:.~be~~ 1=\lY;, ";!

"

..._,,.. _t,ooLI

-G·e neral education: 'we must start soon'
By ll8rcy Carroll

-~
The topic of General Education et
U/B lgnllas a cauldron of mi)(ed
reacllon from faculty and students

of the Faculty of Arts and Letters; Dr.
Edward Katkln, representative from the

~~~~ra~~~:=~~~~r~~ ~~~~':td.~nt

Peradotlo: 11M term 11 lmprec:lae
~~ ~~~:;::,~n~~~X F~~m~~
Speaking "In his own right" and not
Wednesday, four faculty mem~ and
as a representative of faculty views,
one undergraduate presented a broad
Peradotto opened the forum , addressspectrum of opinions, proposals, and
ing the issue of "General Education In a
prOblems lacing this University In its
Consumer Society .' He felt the phrase
elfQrt to develop a feasible • GE
General Education Is imprecise, calling
II " an unsatisfactory . term _referring to
CUificulum for future undergraduates.
The Forum was initiated by .tudents
liberal, humane stud1es, more or Tess
o1 Vroo College, the resldent•al college
formalized In the. curriculum by
lor the JntWiscipllnary study of the
requirements , but d•sUnct from both
hUmanities, and m~ed by Vi co /
the specialized major and the remaining
Eaecu1Ne Dinactor, Dr. Harriet B.&lt;--, block of free electives.'' Rather,
w.tmua.
Peredotto felt the crux of General
Education lmoiii9Sihe atudy of what he
f'Wtlc:lpating - • Dr. John Peradot!D, dMn of Underg.-e Educetermed "the hu~ studln," which In
...._ .Dr. "--Il Reitan. dMn of the
a consumer-domlneted eoclety 1 - the
Ill Natural Sclencea .,.,
-listie poaalblllty of being dl~tegardca; Or. GeorQe l..evlne, ed.

Peradotto sees, among the desired
outcomes of general education :

... • .. the ability to transcend one S
private and particular situation and
concerns, and to choose a point of view
common to you and others;
• "a realization of the powers ol
reason, as well as of its limits;
• "a proper and balanced conception
of the various uses Ollife, of Its graces
as well as its utilities."
To establlsl\. such a program In so
large an institution, Peradotto urged
impkimentation of· a first phase GE
program, In which there would be a
"prescribed" distribution system model, as well as cdre prograrn.s submitted
by students for appr0¥81.
"The University Is the one institution
dedicated to humanistic knowledge,"
he reminded his audience. "There Is no
other . institution in Which lruth and •
knowledge are cultivated for Its own
1

sake.•

R811an fawra - lronmental appraecll
Natural Sciences' Reitan felt that a
viable approach to General Education
which would readily "Improve What have" would be a program of
Environmental Studies. "I propoae that
very serious attentlo~ be given to
the development ol .. . (a required!
interdisciplinary course of study of the
environment, Its physical, biological,
social , moral, andaesthetlcasoects .. .. ••
This environmental studies approach
would Include the study of ethics and
morals, a . thorough examination of
society's obligations tQ the future, and
development of 8!1 appreciation for the

~~ a1~ expr~~~~~,!.~!. w~11 ~

subscrtbed entirely to Peradotto's
concern that someflllng should be put
promptly Into action. He felt this
Environmental Studies approach to be a
compnshenslve pert of what should be

·----·-t,ool.1

�l
•Dentistry's funding crunch
(!rem pogo 1, eol. 4)

clin ical stall.
.
Loss of accreditation last Sprong of
the School's small graduate oral .
surgery unit was another blow to faculty
and student morale; it luckily didn't
have adverse effects on the school 's
reputation , though , si nce the unit was
• separately accredited .
According to Drake, the Dental
School had five years to correct
problems found in the unit during a
1972 site visit, but simply couldn 't •
come up with additional faculty, space
and funding.
What seems amazing (and a definite

;~~gor0{t."u· 1 ~~~~1nf.:OuJ.'f2 ~~~:~~t tt~~

•General Education
CI&lt;Gft-1.CGI.4)

Incorporated within the General Education program.

advocated a tightly uniform fi rst two
years of undergraduate study, disagree-

~ul:t'\~r;e;~~~~~~dlu;rud"e,ft~~gram

Lewlne: the lllta .,. atlll struggling

U: seems to me to be a matter of
urgency. If we are a truly comm itted
faculty," Katkin said , " we must achieve

mechanic from the sclentf.t. " He said
1
to
tha undflradll8te as a citizen
"entering, comprehending , and worl&lt;lng

some consensus of what we want

=

"G~=In~~~~~d !:tt;~"t~;evl~,:'.;

!:~1/be

;~=~1;,nf.r~d'l:,~

!~~m"a"n~!'e~x :f/~; Lf~ne cS::~ 1 ~
Western development ," and that " the
quality Of: our clvillzallon Is most
reflected '111 the arts. " "Three hundred
and fifty years after Plrmouth rock, " he
said, " the'ilrts are stll struggling for a
place."
While Cevlne feels no General
Education scheme will be considered

f:rt'fa~~ ev:n a8;:r~~b1e&lt;fl e~:::'.;

designed to meet the needs of the
individual undergraduate, which would
be accomplished with the aid of
extensive faculty advisement. Too strict
0

:u/re'&gt;ljr:'emcr:t~~W;'e::f Lit~~:r.t:' a'::~

create Individuals who look and sound
exactly alike.
Katkln : let's have something uniform
Katkin of the Faculty of Social
Sclertces took what he termed an
authoritarian approach to what a
General Educatlo~ program should do.

~aedd~\~~~~~t'\llf!:'.:. "'it!

physical sciences, music, art, and
literature were Imposed on me, 1
discovered things I wouldn't have
discovered on my own." Katkln

!~~1~~~~e tFd~~~ ....~h~~~n~~Y~~- .~ck
Schwartz: commitment Is needed

w~·~~~:z:gp~~~~'d':.~~rgr~~~a~r:g~c;:;

Association . He felt the most important
goal o f General Educati on should be " to
develop i n students the ability to
in terpret and analyze what they face
every, day in their lives, and to enjoy
doing so." Vital to th is, said Schwartz ,
is the ability of professors " to impart
information in a sophisticated , yet
understandable way. The positive
atlitude that exist s In a teacher leads to
an affinity between student s and
knowledge." He added that few
professors are able to express their
enthusiasm , and a love of teaching . "A
program of great teach ers constit utes a
great GE program ," he said. Schwartz
-called for commitment of faculty to the
General Educati on cause as well as a
revision in general academic priorities.
.. The commitment has to come about;
we have to put our rescrurces into what
the students want. •
While each participant contributed
something different, one theme re-

~~slt~r~~gh~~le1~:nt~nln&amp;,n~~.,'l·
Education program for U/B undergraduates as sr-iltly as possibla. " To
survive," admonished Peradotto, "we
must start fairly soon ."
'

Amherst repair$ backlog
stands at 44,000 man hours
The repairs backlog at the Amherst
Campus now stands at 44,000 manhours, E.W. Ooty, vice president .for
finance and management, said this

-·

a.~,::~~=~~.::;"~Zat X~:.!~\:'
11

he uid .
"Main Street is no different."
For that reuon, Doty said In a memo
to campus administrators, only the
"moat urgent" campus rehab projects
can be attempted "until further notice,"
H theY are ones that must be handled by
the l'ttyeicai Plant Staff.

..:·~ "'::::•S:,';o.~ftyf~~~.. "f:•t~

wort&lt;.

....... _.

Doly defined "lmmedlale urgency"
Items u ''nlal and Pfft8l1l ufety
problema, or thoee tlllnga whlcll make a
~ I~ In -the acc:eealblllty·

"'.
to~
- to
·
or theprogrwn
-.lb!Uty
of a wort&lt; pe..
a
'-d~ employee, or making
neadecl Cfaurooma-talble. •
-

...._.for apeclftC ~proJects
&amp;110 be conaldlrid, Dot, aald, but

IIIey """'be ....... to the proJect.

au'-kle
.....
-be.,.. ..., .....
"II

fundi... .... Oulllicle
Ill¥

A mounting loll
As "we are all painfully aware," Ooty
explained, " many relocations have
taken place over the past several years
and each, even those Involving moving
Into new facilities, has had Its own set
of rehabilitation requirements. Over the
same period of time, our own Physical
Plant organization has Increasingly had
more and more square feet per person
to take care of. These factors combined
with the many imperfections of the new
buildl~s have taken a severe toll on our

rr.,ev,:~:;e~a=":"r:i.Fe~~~~o~o~

the II st of n8eded repairs. "
Something "must of course" be done

=s':t t~1!obac~·a?:~Yti=i;·an~;:

preventive maintenance In order tt&gt;
....,... the buildup In the backlog.
Furthermore, we muot do It with no
f - I e augmentation of our
Physical Plant staff."
Doty said he hopes for understand in•
and cooperation from the ¢ampus
community. "Suggestions for how we
can do a better job within the""
welcome and

That' s what they want to avoid

oe'r::~7 st~d':~eAssJ:;"1'31\~~~~ an°J ~~~

Cronyn , president of the freshman
class , are concerned about the
like! Ihood of just such an occurrence.
They want corrective action now, says
Cronyn , " before it's too late."
That' s why the duo have collaborated on a letter writing campaign to area
leg islators wh ich laments conditions at

1~:1 s;,~~~- Tnh~~~~~d~P,"~~m~ar~~

the Buffalo Evening News.
To date , however, only one of 25
recipients o f the co rrespondence has
bothered even to acknowledge the
letter; that was State Assemblyman
William Hoyt.
.
Altho ugh lack of space is a " critical
probl em, " Feagahs and Drake know it
will be at feast five years before the
situation Is a ll ev i ~ted by their proposed
take--over o f Squ ire . The space shortage
was underscored by the task force
report which reco mmended (according
to HEW standards) that th e school be
allotted 246,000 sq; ft. of space, less
than on e- third of what it presently
OCCUp i e S.

Aside from the space predicament ,
Feagans and Drake contend that , with a
little help from DOB , other problems
they face can be rectified .
Equipment
For i nstance, the Dental School
currently receives no funds
for

~~:a~:n~~e::.acr~~~~ ~~:e~:guro

~~~~~~ ~~=~7~~~~tN~~;~~ris\Jc~~~~~
0

be secured from one piece of machlneiy
to salvage another, or when manufacturers inform faculty that due to the
age of certain equipment , replacement
parts are no longer available, Feagans
must do a quick two-step with the
bud~e~ to
get money for new
1

necessary change," .he said, " those
changes wtll undoubtedly be eflected
more rapidly."
·

==..:\'ad~'

students who, on
the average,
malntained a 3 . ~ ·cumulative average
and scored 6.6 on their Dental Aptitude
Tests. To boot, U/B' s dental faculty
ranks 7th in the nation in terms of
research money secured from the
National Institute of Dental Research.
·This galling paradox , in fact , is part
of the school's dilemma. How can it
convince DOB that more funding is
needed when its reputation remains
unscathed.?
Drake summed it up best when he
commented : " It seem s like there has to
be a complete collapse of the school
before anyone listens ."

-r

:~i g:;;;:,n:b ~~~h~ !r:S~n:k~t"~~~~:~~
1

~~t:at~~~ of rob Peter to pay Paul

A good percentage of the dental
equ1pment at U/ B has an average life
expectancy of only seven years, said
Feagans . Unfortunately, much of H
dates back to the 1950s.
More support funds
Besides securing funds for equip-m~nt replacement , Feagans would like
to see the support budget increased.
Th1s seems a reasonable request
considering the school is receiving

~'r:'t."du~~eth":/!:oen;~:;,r:,it~ri~ l~r;,.,!~:~

doubled t&gt;ver the last 11 years and
Inflationary prices have skyrocketed" the
costs of dental equipment, OOB
continues to Ignore appeals for
additional funding , apparently believing
:t::.;"!~~~:!i:\~/B, a kind o monetary
More support staff
Feagans also argues that If the Stat~
would permit him to hire more support
personnel , the worl&lt; toed of ctmlaal
faculty could be nsducad, freeing them
to pursue research endeavors.
About 16 hours per week of student
contkt time Ia considered IIYerage for
dental faculty, uya F~s. At U/B.
the
la 25-21 haws, and this

•-age

does not Include frequent nonscheduled contacts wh ich bring the
total up another five hours per week
.A.~ain , the excessive work load of
cllmcal faculty was Cited in the task
~orce report .as a situation wh ich , if left
1gnored, w11i likely contribute to a
faculty retent ion ·problem . Based on
their rev iew, the task fore~ recommend~~p~.;'~ ;~; school hire 100 additional

ihe

11

Student problems
Aspiring dentists being educated at
U/8 have their own unique set of
problems. According to Feagans they
have the "dubious hono~· of 'being
number two in the nation in ierms of
money they have to spend for program
· costs. This " distinction" results from
the fact that dental students here must
pay for most of their consumable
fnuft~~~~nts~n top of $4,000 for
Although many schools used to
require students to buy equipment the
trend now Is to furnish instruments' and
inclu(le costs (hidden or otherw ise) in
the cost of tuition, or, as at Stony
Brook, to rent equipment to students
The advantage, explained Feagans i~
that Instruments are, then, dispensed in
pre-packaged sterilized units for various
procedures. ·
This eliminates the need for students
to lug around two cumbersome cases of
instruments, but more Importantly, 11
ensures thorouQh sterlliza11on and
protects the pat1ent from dull instru~ ments or those in :11 repair.

do~~~~up,~m $\t,i~ t~a:3.~ 1ov:~~~
1

past three years and enrollment has
mcreased from 300 students in 1967 to
358- this year, Sweeney and Cro11yn
noted that the number of available
chairs for patient/student use remains
woefully lnadeouate.
Because of this situation , junior and
senior dental students who are under
the gun to complete clinical hour
requirements for graduation frequently
experience excessive tension when no
chairs are available for their use.
Some wish 1h*'Y weren't here
Given What students expec'ted 11om a
school w ith such a distinctive reputation, and what they now know about its
financial and logistical problems, not to
ment ion their out-of-pocket expenses,
Cronyn said many new students " wish
they would have gone somewhere el se."
In an elfort to help mitigate some of
the problems facing the Dental School,
Sweeney and Cronyn want to arrange a
meetinq with the Western New York.
le~ i slahve delegation . That idea was
initiated by Assemblyman William Hoyt
in correspondence to Sweeney.
· If a good number of legislators are
0

;m:~~~~yanJ ~~SS ~~e !!';rd ~~~~ol;~
State figures with political clout,
Sweeney and Cronyn think there's an
outside chance Governor-carey or the
DOB might take corrective action.
It will be Interesting to see how
post-election Albany responds to their
requests .

'Nurs.ing dean
search on

The School of Nursing_has launched

~".'l~~~ ~~o~e~~ualifled !'erson for the
The successful candidate will be
expected to: hold an earned doctorate,
be a registered nurse, and have had
considerable experience in nursing
administration, research, teaching and
clinical practice.
Applications (with a current curriculum vitae) or nominations for this
position should be sent by February 1,
1979 to : Dr. Alan J. Drin nan, chairman,
Search Committee, 243 Far"'r Hall,
~~f .St. Campus, Bulfalo, New Ycm

4

Salary for the position Is negotiable;
It is hoped the successful appointee
will assume her/his positlo~ at the start
of the 1979-aO academic year or earlier,
Drinnan said . Also on the search panel
appointed by Or. Carter Pannill, vice
president, health sciences, are: Or. Mila
A. Aroskar, Graduate Nursing Educa- .
tion; 'Ms. Joan Brownie, Graduate
Nursing Education; Or. Patricia Cas·
tlglia, Graduate Nursing Education;
William D. Hamilton , Niagara Falls; Or.
B!'J"bara J. Howell , Physiology; Dr.
R1chard A. Jones, assistant to the vice
president , health sciences; Ms. Rosemary E. Markus, Bullalo; Ms. Judith
Ronald , Undergraduate Nursln~ Educa~~~~~f~ Ms. Betty Theiss, eter~ns

�- SUNY seeking
$10 million
hike for U/8

Quakers at Attica
·Newton Garver is one of four who oversee
the operation of a Quaker Meeting for inmates;
prisons are the ....growing edge of Quakerism'

SUNY is asking for approxlmately .a
$7.4 mllhon increase in next year's
budget for the U/B core campus and
$2.4 miUion for 1he health sciences
here.
Reporting fQr the President. Charles
Somewhere around 6:20 p.m. every
Fogel , acting executive vice president,
other Friday at Attica Pri son, a Quaker
told Senators that the core campus - Meeting begins.
.
increase- WQlJid be used primarily for
The cleri&lt; of the Meeting is a prisoner,
salary annuallzation , library needs,those joining in are an unusual mix of
filling vacant lines and equipment
black inmates with
Moslem or
replacement
pseudo-Moslem names, a handful of
30 per cent of SUNY' s proposed Sa19
white prisoners, and, typically, three or
million • budget is earmari&lt;ed for
four outsiders.
university centers and 14 per cent for
One of the outsiders who attends
healtl].centers, Fogel noted .
regularly i!t U/B philosopher Newton
In order to provide the Uoiv_ersity ~t_h_
Garver.
'
flexibility in de.olong with budget adjustGarve&lt;is one of four on a committee
ments resulting from
the overOf oversight which nurtures the
estimation of .enrollment tnls year,
;~d~~~~~~~~~:~~~~~ T~~g~~~~~
i.,~~~~;;~~~~~vl~~~b~~.~roposed Farmington-Scipio Regional Meeting ,

all~~· ~~;r~~;:~e~~;:r:::n~.:,~FI~:!·

;,:::
and will eliminate the trauma of
short-term personneJ ag;u-stments until
the institution again meets- enrollment

:;~~s ~\ ~~~~s~tf~n~vW~e!h~n~:~~~

have been taken.
,
In other business, the Senate passed
two resolutlons . One, Which was
discussed at an eartler meeting and
then reworded, asked the SUNY Board ·
of Trustees to "retrain from prescribing
additional University holidays and
reconsider present policy in that

~"8~':;e:..~~rs ~~s~IY~1 ~ in~~:uc"e~

resolution &lt;tl the next SUNY Faculty
Meeting.
An advocate of the resolution told
Senators that It would hopefully

~~\;:: ~fe~~~~! ~a~! ~~~~~:ti~
1

0

:~~!n~~. h~':!t"i.s

and laboratory
Senators also voted to eliminate the
single veto power of the College
Council In 1he· appointment of Its
members.
In corr~~Spondence to Senate Chair-

· ~~mi~t': r':.co~a.:;:d.Jf:l~heeo~~
since 11 was felt the veto "created the
bare possiblllt
of
stalemated
chartering proce~s."
"Before lntropuclng chairmen- of
10

1 11

~~%-~~~~~ • ~~ ~~~a~na~:;~~';,'l

he intends to strengthen the commit~"c::sr:.rr!"![:'~ ~~~·g~al~ ensure they do
Garver said In the past thele had been
too much reliance on the Senate
Chairman for dlrectlon of committees
and in formed Senators tha.t he does not
-expect the 'commltt..es to walt for word
from the chair or Executive Committee
to start working.
_ ,
The chairmen of standing commit·c
Loubere
Academl
I ees are: Leo
•

:;:=o~ ~nd R.~rcon~?~~~~~~ Ed;;f!~

RalchYord , ~missions; John Medige,
A'thletics; Walter Hobbs, Bylaws; John

· ~~~~:On~~ll~e~~~:~:f.r·F~\~~
- Tenure and fjirlvlleges; Kenneth Joyce,
Information and Library Resources;
Stephen Brown, Research and Creatlye
Ac~~~ of the Teaching and
Grading committees have not yet been
appo1nted.
One . Senator moved that - the
Executive ComiJlitlee look Into the
possibility of securing stipends so

:r.fs'f~m~~!:~ha~:~~~~ 1 ~
wori&lt;.

. Aller some questioning by Spectrum editor Jay Rosen, the Senate voted
that the Execu11ve Committee consider
the possibility of constituting -an
Administrative Evaluation ~mmlttee,
as was suggested In a report Issued last
Y~:O 1 ~Sen~:!est of ona Senator,
Garver said he win ask the Sene!'
Executive Committee to revle-, the
grading policies as outlined in
Unl-..itY publications. -

Finnegan elected
'Shonnie Finnegan, Unl..afty archivist, haS.been eleCted to llle ,COuncil of
the Socjetyol AmeriCan Archlvltlls. She
a tour-yaw term on the
will eight-~ ..-nfng body which
dlrecta the affairS of the priqplpal
national ~ion of archlvlata,
- r i p ! CIAIOrJ, peqons
OOIIC*Tied with lllatorical recontL

1

~est':r~ N~a::ri&lt; ~~·~~i~~~~ \."n"~nf~

Organization is in quotes, because,
as Garver smiles, Quakers are quite
unstructured . -

Incongruous?
On the s.urface It seems incongruous
that the peaceful , pacific Quakers
would be drawn to a prison setting . Yet
Attica is not unique. There are some 6
or 8 correctional facilities in the Stale
with Quaker r.,eetlngs, Garver says.
It is more !han merely incon'gruous
[perhaps a esome] that the request for

rr~.;bl~~~~~p i~a ~':,"~~~::..:~~~~~~

of recent times - convicted murderer
Winston Moseley.
" That rather extraordinary request ,"
~s~~~ cg&gt; ~~~~s.!~s~ •.'~(.f~1 p;~~~~~e
· you go if asked.''

1 7

pr~~=[i::p.,o.;~~a:~o r:;~~~;!~

the growing edge o( &amp;lakerlsm for the
last several yea&lt;s."
For all lis middle-elass appearances,
he submits, Quakerism Is in many wafcs
~:~;:~bl~~me~~&amp;x, htfuak':;n w:~
imprisoned In Hth century Enpland for
refusing 1o take the '1est oath" to the
King and 1he royal succession, or for
· falling tq doff a hat to a jud~e or some
01
'{fa~~~~~~~n~~~er notio-n
" that there is something of God in every

shipped off after lunch. " The effort has
continued with other inmate-eleri&lt;s.

author discussed whether It Is
preferable to be loved rather than
feared, or feared rather than loved.
" I avoided taking sides," Garver said,
•and we had a useful and probing
discussion."
It's incidents like that which Garver
finds "surprlsingly rewarding," which
. more than make up for the fact that-he
~~~Y~~cept ' dinner lnvit'ltlons many

what It should tie
During .these ~ months, Garver ·
indicates, experienced Quakers o..tslde

~~~~~ ~~~n~~~k;~~~~~6~g~ t~
0

be, puzzled about how you teach
prisoQ..ers about Quakerism, pressed to
figure out what lleeds these Inmates ·
have and how to respond to them. The
ordinary Quaker Meeting;-for example,
is a community of share:d activities
which extends beyond Sunday services .
In prison, this Is not true.
The Quakers have wondered, too,

Sll+f,,!~d ~~~u~~gcit1.:,

incidents as
well, some. silly and some somewhat
disquieting .
For example, when the outsiders held

~~~~:~;~ ~~~~;.?t,~~o ~::'~l:!ti~~

:~~~.!~~~t;:'~~~~~~!Ya~~:r:~i~"t, ~h~~
1

1

are totally " naive." " In prison-;·" Garver

all the food had to go through metal
detectors; all the cakes hed to be cut
cross-wise before being served. All
food had to be there by 1 p.m. (even
though ilie event didn't begin untll6) to

~?~O:~sl~~.1~~~eg a::~~rq~:s ·~~o t~~
8

control things; taking a leadership role
In the Meeting , for example, may have
something to do wlttr prison status.
Who the leaders are may determine who
does · anq does not attend . You j ust
don't know.
The number of "insiders" who attend
the Attica Meeting range from 12-20.
More men than that are close to the
Meeting, but can't always attend
because its services and dl.scusslons
conflict with college course offerings
(and inCfdentally are offered in the same
· building as those courses) . The
Meeting convenes on Fridays because
heavy visiting patternS at_Jhe prison on
weekends would tend to disrupt
sessions scheduled for those times.
A throo hour bloc of time Is reserved
every other Friday (although only two
and one-half hours can be effectively
utilized.)

~~~~~~ . f~~~e~t~;~t:rss~~r~

inmates attended that event.
The disquieting "incidents come,
Garver says, when you arrive at the
Attica gates some Fridays only to be
told that the · meeting has been
" cancel[ed," that you can't come ln.
There Is no appeal. The warden has
gone home; the Protestant minister is
not in· there's only a lleJ!Ienant In
charge and he won 'I see you. No
reasons are given. On 'the Friday after
Thanksgiving, the .meeting was "cancelled" ~use too many guards "were at
home.
.
.
- There are other, subtle hS@Ssments,
even though the Quakers "get nothing
but smiling cooperation.:;· from the
. superintendent." In reality, though,

sa:te~;~r~=n:.,:;;o;~~::i~pQ~!~e~

~~~;~~s ~~~s Ef~b m~t!~ f~~pet~!,

testimony and views. That Inmate has
become thoroughly familiar with the
New Vorl&lt; Yearly Meeting book on Faith
and Prac.l ice, Garver notes (all those
who attend are provided with a variety
of pamphlets and reading ·materials) .
The clerk se)ecls an "advjce or query"
from the BOOk and then discusses it for
ten minutes or so. Thrs Is followed by
30
minutes of silent worship (although
:;'~la~n~ont~'.r:Sonpe=us~e~;~
in the Quaker tradition,, anyone moved
office or title~ is somehow attractive to '
to speak, may) . A planned discussion
the downtrodden who make up thl!
fills the next hour, and for the last 30
maJority of prison populations .
minutes or so Inmates an'd outsiders
foo , he feels , the Quakers don 't
talk Informally. Seven outsiders rQtate
.come into prisons with a "set"
...Yisits so that each comes about once a
message. There's no order of service, _ month .
no preacher or minister 10 tell
individuals what to think. Inmates are
Machiavelli
expected to take an equal share In
Garver has been eurprlsed by some of
seeing that the group flourlshes. Thev
the Informal conversations. One day a
like that responsibility. " In prison.'··
prisoner asked him what he thought
Garver comments, "you're rarely taken
about Machiavelli. " I wondered if It was
a straight question ," he recalls .
seriously as a numan being ."
Speoiflcaliy, the prisoner asked.about a
int~~:.~~ in ~~:~~~~dit:;,a;:, G = -chapter
In The Prince in which the
says. " Thet's an outgrowth of belng fn

fa~~~ T~~ ig:~~~t ~~~mg~:!,s·;~ t~

past 10 years.
t.arg&amp; numbers of Quakers, he
explains, believe prisons should be
abolished, 1hat more effective and
reasonable ways are' needed to deal
with people who commit crimes and to
bilng them bacl&lt; into society.
Alternatives to viol....,.
A ma}or outgrowth of these beliefs is
a program called Alternatives To
Violence (ATV), a series of training

~~";:\~n~h~n:;"J:r ~f.::u~:s ~.~~

out Into non-violent acts. Th&amp;program
requires three full days or 1Q-12 nightly
sessions. 11 was put on flrat at
Greenhaven Conectlonal Facility and
then written up In a newsletter
· circulated to prisoners throughout the ,
State..
·
1 ~·~~~~u!as~~ ~=a::r~~.
Quaker abo 1 tabll hi
M 11
at
In
of s1:w¥. ~ ee ng
(1\ttica, Incidentally, haa nol yet been
the site of an ATV training program,
although ' the effort haa the full
endo,..,.,t of the Bureau of Prisons
In Albany. Problema with the local
admfnlatra1ion,
explafna.J
Winston MOMMy ...-ct • the lirat
clark of the Attica ..-lng, Ganer
reeatta, fulflllfRQ hfa11utles "jffeett..ry
end faithfully" fO&lt; more
Then one Clay, he .._
pecMcl up and

t&gt;!\

Alii.! J'!n.:.V

&lt;&gt;-

"*' • ,..-.

University."

-

·

Volunt-• needed
•
The AttiCa Quaker Meeting con'ienes
but twice a month, simply because
there aren't enough volunteers to

~~r~d!.~~rd ~:.J~~~~e:. ~~nr!.f~'~

people committed 16 monthly participation In order to meet every week," the
U/B tJicuity Senate chairman submits.
"I've been asked to see if there )lren't
some cryplo-Quakers around the
campus who might be willing to join In

th!,t';~~ lhey can contact me at horne,
at the office, at the Faculty Senate
office-anyplace."
Prospects are welcome to visit once
before they decide whether or not to
make a regular commlfment.
GarVer was one of those who initially
said he wouldn't make such a
comrql)ment.
. " But you don't tum your back on
Attica, " he says softly.

1

Dual transit" study under way
$57,800, Is from .the Urban Masa

A "double header" urban mass
transportation study project Is bein~
1

Transpor1atlon Admlnlatratlon (UMTA).
This 12-monlh grant calla fO&lt; eetual
- preparation of a manual that lndl~ual
plannera cout~ uoe to develop specific
transportation --.loes.
Together, the two atuclles cqme Into
balance by taking fnte account both
" demand" and "auppfy.•
Talvllle, as prlnclpal Investigator for
both' projects, noted thatthe ..-ell at

=~=l':,~dhl~l ~ta'::"O:rs~~~ J: :to~
1

i ng mass trallsltlnformatlon . '
The goal of the study Is to provide
mathematical formulas that would be
useful In any community to guide
pJanners In assessing transportation
needs.' These universally acceptable
formulas would be applied by transit
plann~rs In forecasting what people
want and determining how tp fulfill theit
needs and desires.
_
Dr. Anttl P. Talvitie, associate
gr:,fessor In the Civil Engln-ing

~

g~B :r,~t ~[~:-'~~ ~m:,::,r.=:
computer uoe should be minimized IO&lt;

~s:~:~~~=-rr~

of:::'~~ ~~:r~~ ~~t~f=~~
funded by two grants totaling nearly

~'l:·wit~~~he t'~.~~~o~
Transportation (DOT).

S1~1~;oof f : : 'C"t~~ ~~la~w::

~

Admlnlatratlon (FHWA); 1a
on a
propoeat by Talvltleln compatltlon with
other unf..altlea. It calla tor an
18-montll atudy to dtlloloD. accurate
fOI'IICIItlng matllocls tlltl-Citn lie used
by plln'*ll In pro)eetlna condemands IO&lt; varlou8 modle '01 uoban
travel.
·
The other awllnl, which amou"ta to

·

f::.::='Je::::

here.
Transit studies already completed lor
Buffalo, San Franciaco, Wahlngion,
Balltimore, and Min.-pella will be
used by the ..-ell team aa a llaals IO&lt;
establishing the required lormulaa.
0
t'::
Tafvltle added.
The guideline- formutaa to be
devol oped, Talvltie notacl, woutd
eliminate much ol the baafc "-cct
CUfTentfy requlr.d to map on effective
urban tiMip(lltllllon plan, and at the
_...lime would be appflc8ble In -.y
part of the nation.
.

=

s-.:'~oc~~Yo:!.,n~t;

�VIEWPOINTS

........
1 SAIO lllfRf'S '100
PE0RE IN 1/tY OASSfS All)
I'M SITTIHG UP SO HIGH I
-..Gff NOliE 81£8)5I l'VE
llEEH ~10CHI'IoiGE
MY AOORESS AND Pll~
NUMIIER SO liiE'I NllfCII

\111'111 TlfOSf PIWffl) IN
S'IVDEN'f 01~, NllJ
GIRL WIU Go M l.llltll
l'M AN fN

Griffin -~'hasty'

The Election

in criticism,
students charge

Duryea cites what he f~els are important issues;
Volpe says trade unionism sells us out;
additional names of NENNYEA supporters listed

The l;lonorable Jemea Grlfllo, Mayor ·
Office of the Mayor

~~Tta~:~l N- York 14202

•
Editor ~

As the collective bargaining cam-

~J~ !~~·c:,~~~:~~~~r~~ ~~

' indi~idual concerned sincerely about
this whole process and not In my role as

~ret~~,::~ 0~~e,f;!r,Phu:;e~~~t\'h~:
~

,

prQiesslonal endeavors have includ-

unlons,rm~~ hr~~s~ca3~~~~~e ~l

which Involved the Slate University of
New Yortt
How..-, despite this professional
knowledge, I must adll)ot that the

~~_:na ~:l~~ si~~atf~~~t~wh~

the rhetoric of charges and counter·

~~ed ~vr.n~~ant"l~.u~~'!;'~l~

an Important decision for all of us, one
which will jmpact upon our future.
l&gt;rolesslonalllvea within the University.
lhue, I urge all faculty members and
proleesionals to consider the aiternat,_ presented to them on the ballots
which they should have received by this
lime, to to penetrate through the
rhetoric to understand ttie Issues which
are Important, and to vote.
lhe~l-

ln thla regard, It occurs to me that It
might prove helpful In this process If I
- t o Identify what appear to me to be
the Important lsauee at stake.
(1) My ob-loA Is that the leaders

~lzAicl~l::tl~~~~~h~:

atete !Mderahlp of the present union.

Thua, one Important lsaue ia whether
this'*' be changed IJlOII ellactlvely by
worldriG from Within ~ the existing
'*llalnlng IQIII'II or electing a new one
Witfi , _ leederM!Ip.
(2) The lmpoaltlon of the agan~ ellop

!:on~.:!.""..:==
~~11M

=.y :n,:~

a poaltlon on thio

and a -

on the amount of dues
10418 cllaraed for .....bera.
(31 Polltlc81 lnll'*lca In Albany II a
of to many of us In
, _ of ll...clal ... pport. eapeclally
lor Mlarlel. ~aide hea responded to
thla queatton, Related to II is the
cauaetiel!' of the alate and national
affiliation of er.ll of the competing
aaoclatlona.

ttJ•l 1ba ~~~~· -0~~~!

unit, howev.e
orqanlzationlil

but of arranging an
t.ructure within a bar-

ga(sJ,..;'~e~~stion has been raised
about the future liaison between
NYEA/NEA and AAUP In their allia~ce.
Here, I clearl~ must write from one

~~~:ie11~8 invo::dv~~ t~es~av~~~

tions and relationships and do feel
most positively that , for a number of
important reasons , this question is hot
a sound one. Should this alliance win, a
new , bargaining agent will be formed
open to all faculty llnd professionals
who wish to join with a joint affiliation
with NEA and AAUP al the state and
national levels. Those who join it will
control It, of course, but the affiliation
will continue and may be terminated
only by either side 90 days prior to the
end of ihe first contract period .

~i~~~Y~~~~d

note that both sides
welcome and evidence active involvement of professional staff members.
J~sl as the AFT changed its posture
following the election of the Senate
Professional Association in 1971 , both
NEA and AAUP are open to full, active
memberShip ..at local, state, and
national levels.
Th.er&amp; are other questions and issues,
of course. Many of us have -Special
concerns. In my judQ{nant those noted
here are the most ImpOrtant. I hope that
I have presented th~m fairly and
accurately- as much as limited space
here permits.
Above all, It is important that .all of us
to find out the competing
positions and to vote. If you have

necessary to impose an Agency Fee ....
The consequences have been ill
conceived -and
poorly negotiated
contracts: Article 35 and the jeopardy of
tenure, an unsolicited permanent
appointment " benefit" .that failed lo
provide or involve professionaJ staff in
developing the criteria or prQCedures for
implementation, that agreed to a 7-year
probationary period and failed to
protect tile-long University stall with a
" grandfather" clause,
a standard
- contractual guarantee. This year's
fiasco was " peek-review" committees to
.. monitor" merit money disbursements.
A basic tenet o~ UUP's tradeunionism is that decision making is
' 1 management's
prerogative,'' an adversary problem-solving approach that
abhors taking responsibility for ~
cision-making: " let the SOBs do It and
we'll file a grievance ... .'' This
philosophy Is allen to academic
professionals. We are not assemblyline workers; we are the University; our
jobs constitute its decision-making
apparatus. We decide our future with
departmental colleagues, we promote it
, through traditional governance bodies.
, Trade-unionism is Incompatible with
professionalism,
with
collegiality.
UUP's greatest failuna has been its
attempt to Impose a lrade-unionls1
mentality on academic professionals.
UUP's President-Elect Bill Allen, alter
much soul searching, has decided to
convert UUP from within, luther In

1

~lrr~~~~~hfn~::~r .~er:•::n~ :

view, I am sure. If you have not received

::,~;" h~~:rr:.;~~:'ew~!~· n~et:,.;n:~

choice was available. !jut we now have
that' choice In NYEA and its alliance
with AA,UP. Knights In shining arrno(l
·Probably not. But organizations whose
histories show them to be committed to
democratic problem-solving values

~~m~:a~~ ~~~~\;1\~.~~~Y~u~::~· ~~: -

a ballot, get In touch With the Public
Employment Relations Boanl tn Albany.
•••
- E. D. Duryee

don~ want a new, Improved UUP, we
do.o\'1 wanttrade-u_nionlsm In any form,
in any package however pretty lile
glitter. We learned our lesson when we
bought the new-"'lxon.
But what of UUP's clout? Perhaps

.,.. Colleevo-:
Tlnad of campaign literature? Confused by the haggtln~ Waa our 6'h%
1

~'rns;;,;.rn~ ~r~:'nt ~

beat thai .UUP could have negotiated?
Ooel Article 35 jeopardize or protect
tenure? Tired of the fear and rumor
laaues: "II you don~ vote lor UUP you'll

~A~~,.,:::.,1~~~~~~

Is mad at NYEA," ad .....-m. 1-'n~ the
choice of a bargaining agent too
Important lor soph0f1101'1c politics?
It - • that our view of the woOds Is
obacunad by metaphoric lr&amp;ell. A lew •
llfiO (wh11a a member of • the
ProfeU1C!t1a1 Stall Senate.. Executive
Committee) ,mor to UOP's Imposition
of
Aganoy Fee to ldrtillze growth in mamberihlp, In the midst of the
permanent appointment debacle 'and
UUP'e
litanoa" during "jof&gt;.
reciUalll...eton" traumaa, the issues _._ mudl..._, almoatlanglble.
1M.._ centered on UUP'e trllde-

~eyt~" ~t~··1~4 ~,O,::_'t ~~-: •t~~:

affiliations with AFT, with New York
· City's AI Shanker and NYSUT, with the
" power1ul lobbying fQI"ces" of the
AFL·CIO delivered? We pay $125/)1881'
lor their affiliation (either through dues
or Agency Fees). Did this alliance,

~~~~~!hT85~i~'::1' [,'l~e~c~~~~ 1 ~J

Yrorn

tenured faculty
belng fired; has ll
prevented Ga&lt;ev' s suppor1 of prlvate
schools at SUNY's expense (Syracuse
Is building a $15.3 million domed
stadium, not us) . Did it muster the
votas to continue, the funding of the
Ao!lherst Campus? What did our
$125/yfl&amp;l' efflliatee accompliSh - they

rears

e.

·g-

unionlllll~ to ~lng
UUP
S.... Wai&lt;lhull and
lrlendl-1111
had~
10 lllli&lt;e
- to
.......
palatable
IICIIfelnlc
a. That funda..
~ fallon why UUP atiiiiCtad
few ftWIIbere, Why it

fr:=edssJn m'fu'l~ncl~m easaJNY '~
budl:t to CUNY, an AI Shanker/NYSUT

1

r:~~~,c:s:!f r:..:uff:o~"W'~

·

tacuitr urging aopport of UUP and AFT
-theYioveourrnoney.
Do we need ~ like that?
NVEAIAAJJP au~ he. no real
CII*1WI With our CCII'- In Buffalo
he. tried 10 tNike WP

'**"' ..,o

wren.

.....'t!IAIWVM.' ........

Since you have deemed it necessary

to publish your opinion regarding the
student demonslratioij of 3 November,
1978 upon the occasion of the
Governor's appearan~e at the SUNYAB
Campus, a reply Is both nec~ssary and
In oraer.
Many hasty, careless and often time
misinformed observations were ct~n­
veyed. Such a situation of Inaccuracy it
allowed to persist would surely do no

~~m~onl~;~h1~r ~~:t U.::,lv~~i:fv~ ~~~~

t

the University has a commitment to the
arowth, deveiDpment and well being of
the City. In a sense the University is a
laboratory of wide scope aQ,d range at
the service of the City of Buffalo, and
Western New York.
Resurrecting Irrational fears of the
past In relation to a legal, peaceful
oemonstratlon can only be construed as
an Insult to the University and Its
community.
Feels
fact-SUNYAB is the largest center
of the Stale University System
fact-SUNYAB has undergone severe
fln~ncfal cut backs
fact ;;;-such cut .backs have created a
situation where the N0&lt;1h Campus wnl
remain unfinished for some time to
come

fact-the situation of spill campuses

~A:Ilooln~1~~~:: ~!~~~~~~~.:3 ~~:
hardship
fact-commuting by inter-campus
bus Inadequately funded because of
state cu t backs often can take up to 45
minutes to cover a distance of 3 miles.
fact-the Governor has seen fit to
Invest 17 million of state tax money to
build at Syracuse University, a private
Institution, a domed stadium.
Such money could have gone to
where it belonged, pubtJc funding for
public. education. It Is extremely
contradictory lor private Institutions to
be publicly funded. Such an appropriation to Syracuse University at a lime of
seyere financial trouble l or the State
Universily System waa Indeed cynical
and callous. It was lor these reasons
that a demonstration was organized.
,KingGe«ge
Referring lo the demonstration as a
"Mob Scene" was quite reminiscent of
• King George Ill of Great Britain when he
. described the colonists' revolt for
Independence in 1n&amp;. Yo11r view of how
we ought to proceed remlllds one 61 an
old " Jim Crow" sl)erlfl in the deep
south accusing black people of being
"uppity" when they demanded their

~:~~~l:ron,a.:J.u:a;:::,·~~- ~~~~~~~

wo have pleaaed, our entreaties have
been ignored. When we exercised our
recourse to assembly, we have been denounced as mob trouble makers.
I cannot make many guarantees, out
this I can promise: As long as the first
amendm~nt guarantealnQ freedom of
speech and .-.....m.bty exoot$ I for one
and many other peDf&gt;le ana jjoing to
exercise that right In ols fullest sense.
'
Sincerely,

-Jo~r!st~~n~
Graduate.Student Association
Pierce
Student Representative to lh~
SUNYAB College Councol

-•ic:II...

�December 7, 1878

LETTERS

)

UUP:

its backers point .o ut why 'it's pe~t'

Allen 's 'shellshocl&lt;ed;'
hopes this will be
his 'lastword'
Editor:
.
I am getting somewhat shellshocked
from all the letters asking me questions
in each week,s Reporter, anG 1 would
guess that readers are also getting
bored, so I hop"atls can be my last

~~~~r f~~f~~~·,aan:h~n ~"!:~l ~~s";;~

situation. If NEA '!'ins I will be freed
from my commitments; which now take
so,much of my time as to threaten my
standing as a scholar and a family man.
I can Surrender our fate to the functional
equivalent of the Teamsters (which is
what I think NEA would be) end retire to
the Library.
And If UUP wins I will have lots of
help In reforming it from all those folks
who have now publlclr. committed
themselves to a dealt:~~ or change. 1
certainly Intend to call them up and ask
them to act in supi)OR of their own ·
suggestions.
To Murr•y, Irving •nd Ed
NC&gt;W: To Murray, Irving, and Ed, who
wrote contrasting the existing contract
j)I'Ovision on retrenchment (Art . 35) with ·
the AAUP principles on the same, I
· reply as follows. Principles are Ideas
you fight for. If they were held
universally, one WO\IId not need to
enunciate them. A contract is the result
of compromise with wicked State
negotiators who don't even hold those
principles. Before "Art. 35" there was
nothing to prevent lnst~nt dism i s~al ,
"tenure" or no. You cannot compare a
" wish book" (the AAUP principles) with
a contract provision, unless you live in a
woo1d where wisheS have their own
reality.
To Prof. Coreo&lt;an
To Professor Corcoran. who asks why
I don't express my disapproval of " Art.
35": I hereby do . It Is Inadequate,

:~k~u:~~~:::'/,· ~p~a~~~l,"f~~?'~t\ :~~~

"Red Book" language and wilt work to ·
do so. I have never talked to anyone In
UUP who does not stJare my view. But
how do we get the State to agree?
Will-power alone won't do. A united
membership of t6,000 Is a power factor
and · power, not persuasion, is what
counts at the negotiating table. UUP Is
welt along the way toward that, but If
NEA wins ther will have to start from
scratch and without allies (such as tj)ll
200-,000 member N.Y. State United
Teachers and the AFL-CIO) •.
To Bob Stem
To Bob Stern: Greetings. I did not let
Tom Connolly talk me Into running for
President because I tho~ht I could
"Influence others In the ~lerarchy to
mend their ways." My goal Is to rep/see .
every officer not committed to the
values of ..,_.,emla. II this were the
NEA that goal would be Illusory
because their union Ia run by appointed
officials. But UUP Is run by e/tteled
officers and next May they are all due
lor ballot-box accountability. Suppose

~~~~=~~~~=~~:,~,~~de:, '
elected officers you and I want? Would

autzata

A ~ community ~ pub·

llohod ooclo ,.,.,...., by 11oo Dim'!!" of
,_.,k Alloh, S - ...,_..,IV of NY... of t.Jffalo. fdl-1 ofl- .,. Jo.
&lt;»ffd In 136 Oofls !loll. , _ . ,_ r.lo-

f&gt;I-6J6.-

___

DlrKfar of f'ub4Jc AHofr'l
• JAMl$ .. Oo$AHTIS

-....a..~
IIOISIT
T. MAIIU1T

,.,.

-----

JOHH A. QOIITIH

JOYa IU(HNOWSICI

w..My~-

you be willing to run for office yourself?
As an historian I study change. Some
structures (democracies, for example)
are Jess resistant to change than others
(oli'Darchies or bureaucracies, for
example) . That's the basic reason I am
backing UUP.
In hopes of writing no more letters,
-Bill Allen .

Wise notes
'righteous goals'
are just goals

[;~~~rs~:fs·edA ~~iJl~c~':~l~i~af;~~

Editor:
At the November 28 Faculty and
Professional Stall Senates' sponsored
forum on union representation at
SUNY, Professor Tom Connolly, representing tho NEA, devoted a conslderabte portion ·of his time to a comparison

~~~~:~~~s~~~~w:. p~gr~r~e"sSeg:f:~2

present collective bargaining contract
between UUP and SUNY .
Initially, two points need to be made
in order to clarify this issu_e.
First , the AAUP statement Is a
unilateral descrl p_~ of an Ideal ·
university s ltuatlo if ~ Is, In fact, not
In force In any publlc higher education collective bargaining contract In the
United States regardless of the
bargaining agent.
.
Second , Article 35 Is part of a legal
contract negotiated by a professional
union and a public employer In a
specific hlsi~rlcal , institutional , and
political situation.
Since the NEA has made Article 35
one of the main Issues jn its election
campaign, I would like to take this

~~C::~~~~:r~~ f~:'~J~~~~~!~s~;gaa7~1~~
pr~~i.do NewhoUse pointed out In
his Introductory remarks at the forum,

~e0~\~~~~s a sii~tl~'fn":d;~r: g~c~

1

lillie." As a member of the UUP
Bargaining Team during the salary

~~en~~~~~~~~t~on~~ast~:'.:...:. ha?t!
process at tlrst hand.
Although the union and the State
come to the bergaining table as legal
equals, In fact the State has been able
to , approach the process with the
marl&lt;ed adY811tage of Its sovereign
powers end control of the budgetary
apparatus. Tredltionally In the private
sector, labor unions have been able to
check the power of tho employer by
means of the strike. However, since we,
'as public employees, are prohibited
from striking, the bargaini ng process In
the public sector can become unbalanced .
In the absence of the right to strike, a
public employees union must depend
on a strong, united rnembership that
can bring effective political pressure to
beer upon legislators and .the executive
brench In order to nl!!lotiate meaningful
tfainslor Its constltufents.
Though the NEA._ Is promlsilla' that It
will negotiate a contract that Is
consistent with AAUP principles, It has
not given any lndlcatiC&gt;II as to how II
plens to convince the State to accept Its
demends. No union , no matter how
1 0
co;!:':'
money unless It bargains from a

~8,';!:"'~,~~ ~o ':Wnq~~h

~~~

r;;si~I:;~~:,':J."g1t~e s~~· 1~\\, she':,~~~

::::'~:;:~7~

::1.-h

1

~~ul a ~1 1W~

allies, the question of how campaign
promlaes are to be translated Into a
binding union contract remains unanswered . ·
·
Professor Connolly would have us
believe theI, once elected . the N EA
would present the election resUlts to
the State p en endorMment of AAUP
princlptea, end that the State would
then enact them Into law as part of a
union conti'8CI . Unfortunately, this Ia
not the manner In which the bllgalnlng
proceu functions:' If It were, there
would n_.ba llt'f need !of a strike or
.,1 other form of labor/man.gement

diT.':;
active "*'lbet of UUP _.the
_ . a1x
llcllolr that the atructure
lor

the University c~mmunlty In the
formulation of contract demands. I have
found the state-wi de leadership to be
conllnyally receptive and responsive to
the concerns of the membership. II the
rnajority of the UUP's constituents have
chosen not to participate until quite
recently, this has been their choice. II,
as a result of this non-participation, tho
union has not reflected their views, that
cenainly Is not the fault of the union

~.

clemQc:rallc, giUa root• partlcll*tlon ut.tlfin thei.O&lt;IIM!ullon. Wtl , _
by

_....,ti1IIIVII~ wide participation

would have made UUP a stronger union
in the past. The dramatic membe(s'hlp
growth of the last year has readily
manifested Its impact In the improved
salary negotiated this summer and In
the passage of the TIAA-CREF bill. The
way to get a stronger bargaining agent.
that is responsive to our needs In the
future is for all of us to join UUP and
become · active participants In its
operations. Changing Initials will not
bring about any miraculous changes. II
takes hard work and unity to do that.
'
-Josephine Wise,
Vice-President lor Professlonals
University of Buffalo Chapter, UUP
• Member of.UUP Negot\~~~~-i~fa)

sent' us in one of the most lmP~rtaht
political bettles over the next decade:

~~~r~~~cd~i,e~_va+~~~g~~~~~~:, ' ' :

fought : New York taxes alnaady
contribute more to private than to
public Institutions and forces lire being
mounted In the 1811lslaturo to make
further inroads. AAUP, with a prepond-~
· erance of J'rivate college members,
cannot stan up for our interests here.
(8) · The NYEA " local •Issues ber-

~~~Y~~~ 'f'~e ":~~~[:Jo~"'f.'!'r~ ~~ ~~~

read this locally as " we'll get
preferential treatment." Don't believe it.
Bargaining under the Taylor Lilw Is
one-on-one: a PERB re~resentatlve vs.

~ac~,r~~e ~~s;~a.:,;r~n, .!::~ ,~a;

earlier represented us. As soon as you
realize thet you do not take t20 people
to the bargalnln9 table, the UUP
position already m elfect (with lor
example a university center caucus) Is
almost Identical )'lith that proposed by
•
·
NYEA.
(9) The NEA record In Imposing
agency lees calls Into question their
promise here.
·
0

st!t~ c~~~r'i.~'?;tu~s
1 11

:i:."c~1~: 1 J~\"v~:': J'~~P~nrtih:~~!~~~-~~

Editor:
•
Now it Is lime to vote. A.s an officer I
have come to know the local and"' state
UUP quite well, and as a concerned

~~te~~~~,;:~dp ~?fu~lt~~e 1~os~~~!

Interested In the iSsues the reasons I
will vote UUP.
'•
(1) You are very well served bh hard

~~o~~'J!I. ~~~:e;,gr~ ~~:v~";':,'.~
8

:.'3!

~~~~~ A~ t~ ~.,::, 3~ea':'ld":J~~

little fanfare, grievances and manage-ment negotiations are being carried o~t
faithfully and well.
• (2) Shrill attacks have been leveled

~~·~;~~t'"P ,~:,a~eav~uie~!l?~;~

about his leadership and plan to seek
with others similarly committed" to
improve state leadorsllip In the April

~~eg~\~e a~:~Sks~~~l

f." n"c!\ou~

out~de labor organizer:

he Is a Buffalo
State College professor elected to
office and serving while on leave. He
would, lllelieve, be In exactly the same
office II NEA hed continued to be our
agent. I sense tiere, like Pogo, we have
met the enemy and he Is us. ·
(3) A lot of us d9n't like the UUP
literature. But we have also been
subjected to I'" NYEA blizzard . Frankly
I lind II worse. For example, In a.recont
broadside sent only to NTPs, NYEA
promised them to seek salary parity
with academics.
(4) The recant salary settlement
(which brought me the largest nonpromotion raise since I came to this
University thirteen years ago) has been
attaoked by UUP o.pponehts. We should
recall that when they were our aole
representatives In SPA, NEA lost us our
Increment schedule.
(5) Onder severe pressure from the
rival AFT, NEA has only recently
dumped Its long standing Image as a
company union controlled ,bY school
superintendents. New York teachers ere
not the only group that has been forced
out: my own national professional
organization and a number of others
1

:J:",:u:~· ~~~~A~rfP ~= 1 ~a!

1

hope you'll join me.

-Gerald R. Rising
Instruction

Libraries thank
all concerned
Editor:
•
With the completion of the move of
the Poetry Collection to Its perm-.nent
-Je&gt;cation at Cape!Jr' the University
ubraries have auccesefully completed

caow::e

W:'r r~~s ,l:'e ~~~~~~
moves may have cau~ our faculty and
students and take this opportunity to
expresa our deep appreciation lor their
patience end understanding. We aiiQ
acknowledge with gratelul · thanka the
help and cooperation we received from
the stall of Facilities Plennlns·

~~6'fr,~~~w.~n:r;;;i.:'~ ~"=;

also d..-ves our thenka lor the care
and attention with. which they handled
this project.
Sincerely,

-Seldlclee
""'
Director of University
UbrariP

•NEAINYEA

""""_ ... _.,

despite the greet handicaps. But - do
oppose 1he t,....nlonlam of UUP'a

- ~~~~~~;.:,

~~"o~t~~J~· .!'!\~ ~P::tc,V::
Let' s dO It now.

~~h=.\~'buf~t

Tho following slanatures were omit·
ted from a stalement IIUp.portlng
NYEA/NEA which WP publltlhed In the
Reporter..lui week:
-Stanley Brucbnateln, Chemistry

R~="=':1cs=
ClwiM LI!IM. Oentt.try

81J~

eJ-'-.

m

1

-~D. Volpe

..-.

University Computing 8er¥lcH

Aun active member I au.pport the

Yt:!.':'l\;'1ng
support a poaltlon end .qulte another to
get It wrlti81J. Into a contract. Wade
Newhouae hall made It clew that this Is
not an lnue on 1111\.ich the atate must
~In under the T8ylor Law. B..s on
thefr lack of . _ . In neeotlallng this
poallllln Into It
Ill~ NYEA-AAuP to !fnply that
they would do eo ...tomMicielly here.
The c:urrent UUP oontnplla not IJOOd In
thla regwcr IIIII It dcMe , ... · ua an
opening wedge to bllllllllflloed: without
It -would be no lllltW oft.
AAUP .-not ~ Ntn-

:.sor~
aflll~..:::
and""-~,_,.,.

during bargaining
of SUNY's funding to CUNY, Wtllfon't
need to en~ In guerrilla wwf.,.

real concern. '
(~

~~~,:~

w'TIY
have opposed them on many Issues.
Still I believe th'at we need representation and I am peylng my dues: whoever

Rising will
vote for UUP
' on the issues'

Jolin . . . . . . . Law

.

-~·:=.=:
'*"- 8GIIroft, PawcfiiMiy
au:t.::'~

. Eugene Galer, =liN!~

.......:
-=~
=:==.

c:=.i::l
................
u...,

c.tloft ...... Pllyalcll Educ811on

�........

'

Static, Klnet1c, etc.
The Zodi,que Dance Company prMenta
two evening• of a prognim celled

~st8tlc.

Kinetic, Jnatllnt, Aeeting,
BonM.' at the downtown C.mer for
Thwtre ReM.rch, Frillay lind Saturday.

CALENDAR

n.-..

..., wOOls dooogno:tood by SWW1Iuch and

- ~ CGno&gt;anY
.....-.

Tlusday-7

BIOlOGY-·

Olllu.
....,._ o l - Or-

c.llo. -

In

nB'IWE"
-~2""""""plays .
--·--ArP~-- Haniman ~··
, Ridonlsei\dsenior

llochonlcollr

-

· D.M.D.

A.ll'
-

al .......... (M&lt;rlt Robeon, 19491.
108 lllof..-i. 1..p.m. Spcnaed by 8loc:l&lt;
A

Ia . . -

of

ORAl810LOOYACCIIU to~lllldC8IIIc:lll.....,__
tho Ulnry, ShOtOy ~ 'M.LS-.

~-

M.A..

audl. 3269 -

noon.

his

CEll .IIDlECULAR IIIOI.OQY SEMINAR .
tiiHA - a n d R l - RNA Opa&lt;ono a1
E. call, Dr. EdwW ~ . UrWero/1y a1 Wioc:on·
aln, ,... Ehz)'1J18 - . : h. 114 Hoch·
stetter. • : 15 p .m. Cotfeeat 4.

A-

2 3 0 -. 4 p. m.

~- -

A Woman'• Right 16 an Abortion and the

llelng •Moda On II, Bart&gt;ono ·
Buffalo s.
· Aaaocialion
- who loHuman
• - Rightsof
... Erie
County
Comrrillae
and al ... Nalionel lJ1wyer;s Guld: and Ma&lt;y Jo
Long, an attorney from New 'fork City active in the
Lawyers Guild and In the Coalition for Abortion

OIIA Y PAHTHEIIS' CH££8E. PUNCH PARTY

Rights
and Agolnol Abuse
(CARASAj. 'Bcilo1 Hal (room . . . . - will be
pooled). 1 :00 "'"'
•
The speakers w11 cUsc:uas lhe various meansranging from fi'e?omb attacks on t'MWth clinics to .
calls for a convention 10 rewrite the U.S. Consti·
luJion-.by Which tho opponents of ~- of
chOice for womet1 .-e seeking to I'd! back what
CARASA calls "gaOia , _ by women 01 the

En.._L

WALKING THE 000: AN OPEN FORUM ON THE
ARTS'
Ed Dom, IX&gt;Ol 438 Clamens. 4 :30-6:30 p.m.

" - '· by tho Engbh DeparOnent's
GtoyctWall'oeOyandl.etlets.
Dom "' a IX&gt;Oiin tho M&amp;nlaln ndilion
hoYtng
tho 1&lt;-.:e a1 ctw1eo Olson
• a atudontlho&lt;e. Ho has laJght atlho University
al EMe• In England, and at lhe a1

como..-

·~~~
v.,._

of Buffalo and the
Forum of the Law School .

KM-and~.

Dislingulohed

FILII'

MEDICINAL atEMISTRY SEMINAR II
Cbamlcol Appl&lt;&gt;achM to tile T01l1 Syntlleall
ol Quinine and Qulnldlne, Dovld ~ . grad·

""~"'"*:C.;.e::7::. """"'"""""""
Shop on Moln

Sw.L Conference lbeob'o,

- 7:30 p.m.
_Urian_

.

HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY I
Mlcroctrcultry &lt;II tile Vl... l Syatarn, Dr. Petar
S1orting •. Depar1mont of Analcrny, UnlYersily of
~ylvw* . 108Shennon. 2:30p.m.

Thlo,.,el&gt;ou\--- .. C z -

Cb'hg WOf1cJ W• u is the story

who -

~...,.he

ot

a Slovak

and """"""'
.. ~
receMNs.
deportation
order.Jewloh

A.ll·
Uao llcCiwe, U!B gnodtMie aludont and ,.,.

-

· -.a

-·
lluflelo.

-·

- a n d Y V I I -. IIoirdRecllaiHal.

8 p.m. F-. Spor-.cs by lho ~~ oj

I'OEJJIY-·

~.:~Etlglai_).-·Gtoyetar

,.._,_--.a:

'lllnTJIE•

2 -·playa

"AoccO..· and "/vq8CIIy." - -:

e. ....- - c : J.oa.dootaanri-

•

~Ell SCIENCE COU.OOUIUM

:::'"'' ·50- ~by.,. -Qol&gt;ort·

-

¥

~by-fllalvan.-­
· ...
~0:...~~:".. l..oulo"and
"AoccO.."Io _ _ ._ _
_
____ A __. _

• .. ,~.- _.._

IICA.II•

:..-=-..~.::.::::.~
....,_ -tiiOQIAa-

Tho~ 150 F . -. 7 8Q11 10 p.m. $1

hia11!1agino·~ongo~· CIIr" lo ' a - . . . . - - al
..... _
. . . . al . .lho
_
aid ala_
rnya11e

I'Oal!YREAIMQ•

-·a-..,wOibhap.--··

(11i77).

eon.

--. --- ~-29191or-

Loulo--

.. .... . . al - . . l.ouys'
"LL , . _ .. - . - .·
· - - -. - - l h o O i o r y

~

- l o r n o n - f _ ..
•
A behnd the ...... look el • group bf tos •
" ' - -· The~'!!'herypreny.

Center. 378 St&gt;a&lt;Ad&lt;ng, Blcol1. 7:30p.m. Free.

1'1111- Olljoot .. -

~byhWornen'a-COiege.

CACA.II'

•

•

COllA. 170 MFACC, Ekon. 8 - 10 p.m.
AIMoelon S11or -~ $1 .50 l o r -.
Slrwlge lhinQa ... OCCI.WrincJ ..... oparaiJng

-...

::"O:.:..:OO~'"'f'"'· Cl

.. ft

.,.,g.,

SII.S CONTINUING EDUCAnON PROGRAM' .
Tho Demand tar R-.1 al Motariola from
Secondllry or Y!Ung AduH Collections. Or.
Gerold R. Shields. 338 Bell. 9 a.m.
There is a fee-Of $5: pr&amp;-regis1rationis r~ired .
C~tacl Dr. Judith 8raunaget. 201 Bel Hal. ·

Adapted from the motion pict:lxe The SedueUOI!I
al Mimi by
INa lim IS a aerie&gt;
al politics, - · sea.ction. jealousy ...,
belfayel. flichard Pryer cavorts 01 three •oleo: a
~-ablrll8d J)Oitlcelly ldVe trull od&lt;or. ltle

"""*' ....

Uno'-·

walter'a-nmy .old·-

. - a 'l&gt;readlor who -

found heaven In the women's chOir.
UUAB MIDNIGHT SPECIAL • •

Mol,_ (Fr8ncit, 1976). Conference

n.e.

b'O. Squire. Midnight. Admlaalon cllarge. See
Doc...-81tst/nglordeloh.

...:.::::....~~-=-Th-e~
_~

. . . . lnlt _ _ _ . .

-

:::.........:=":':~

Capitan- and D-Iu,., f\J1h Geller, writer.

women·•

_ Zodlaquo Dance ~ny: Static, Klnatlc,
lntt.nt. F._tlnt~ .,..._ Center fo:"'"·, heah Re_...,, 881 Maln Street. 8 p m. General admls·
_sloo $3, .5)udents and . . - c111zena $1.50:
S!&gt;omO&lt;ed by lho Cenlar fU&lt; lbeob'o RI!Searctl

F•ee . Sponocnd by Wqrnoo'a Sludlos College.

Dopar1mont,

~ldieaeolege, 108 Wi'lspear, 2

P.m.

-MUSIC•
AudlbM lnd Ylllble P5ec:M on Flutes, Eberhard S..m and Ann Holyoke. Hollwalls G!Amy,
30 Euex Street. 4 · 10 p.m. Free admissiori.
Si&gt;onaored by 1lle Center al the C&lt;oative IWld
Performing Aria.
CONCPT•

•

Tho-..,~. James~&lt;&gt;

MO.VIESFORTHENEWJAZZAGE'
~ (E~ ~- 1921}1 a'recent1y

wicz , director, in a commemorative concert in

01lts day

honor pf tl)o . .- " ' blr1hda)' "' Olivier Messlojln. s . i r d - -. 8p.m.Free.

fO&lt;Ito ''lolemnlybeautlful ponrajolof.-...,ite •
Buffljo and Erie County Hlstor1cal ~ty. 8 p.m.
-• $1.50. Sponsored by Media Study/
' '8011'*&gt;.'- '
' ., .,, .,
MUSIC•
Frina Artehanlb and Kenwyn Boldt, piano;
Gary ...,_, tenor. Bolrd Reoilal Hal. 8 p.m.
~ admioalon S3, FIWOtJity181aff/'*'mt1i and ,
"""""ci1izBna S2, •IOOMts $1 . ~y lho
- a l -.
SY~ONREPRODUCtJYEIUGifTs•

..

·~~"';; ~~~;

-to

Vioinlot w.onJc:a l&lt;nltloiOnd pianist Yvar Mil&lt;·
hoahof1 wll be guest
oo 11&gt;0 program

kn_;

8 p.m.
donation $1.-..""""'C&gt;k&gt;ye, retinld.
- $2

'lllnTIIE•
Tho Theon
2 ono·act playa
"Aoccc.-· and · ArPety.· - -·

. ~-$1 .50 ~bylho-Dapart.

II!Miti'IUr

.

;

- - . , .. U,t''ctetn ea.....- Thea•
~-2918lor-!- - ·

.

···-~~""=~:.=: ~
mucholhlawont.
THEATRE•

Clly,. ~.,.;.,..;, improviso-~lhot-~lho-ofNichots
and May, Gilda . 0.. ACIII'oyd. Jo1v1
Bob:H, ole. ClirkOill!. 8 p.m.
$2.5 0 . - 5 2 ~11Cf.by tho UUAB

Genanll -

PerlormingArta~ .

Iron!--·- · p.m.-·o1-.,_,
Oo.m--$3·--9uflelo al1omey, "the Si!IMiion In WHY;" , _ ;
RodriQuez, M.D., New Ym Ci1y pedla"Sierllizatlon :" 811 Balrd, nationally
binh conb'ol and el&gt;or1iorl rights edvocale. -

......
::.=:.
1111111•----.....
.................
..,._. ..
ol

Sunday- 10
LECTUIIE'

DANCE'

and~S:.:~""' Abortion Rights

..,..,, N1 8not 8 p.m GonotoJ ·
-53.-and--$150
-byhClanlar-lor-~

nee,

--film-..:.-

· ~~t ..
...,._Ia, 0[.
SlrWlQ. - · IJn!vorsiiY ~
London, Englarid. S108
T~ ~ . tho

Stwmwt. 4 p.m.

_

UJB :"' U"'-oltyal.t.kron. Ciarl&lt;lial. 8 p

· 3a&amp;llol HoL-a:30p.m.

PHYIIOL.oov~,.~:~
L.eorwd

UUAB MIDNIGHT SPECIAl. •

Mottro..e (F&lt;OIIich, 19761. Conference 11\elo .... Squn. Mklnight. charge
A
y&lt;&gt;ung
meets a oros'titule who
caters to tnakt masochtsts and lhe two fall in lOve.
Novel, graphtc, biza're and at times repulsive,

MEN'S SASkETBALc..

.,..,._,I

--School,

UUAliFILM'

That Obleura Objact al Dasl,. (19771. Con·
lereoce Theatre, ~ Cal636·2919 for ohow
times. -~ charge.

8Ad-

INDUSTRIAI.ENGINEEIItHG-ARII

- ~ng " " " " - " ' and tnduablal
~ · ~ ol ~rdl Apptlc:allori,_Dr. K.H.E. KroOonar, Wayne Stsle U,.,..,...,.,
a l - ~ and.()poq·

-

Ea-

ningham. Courieo'~(ct&gt;annel10) . 9 p.m.

10p.m. $1 ~fornon-feepeyers .

=:t'F!:·.~~=.:..~:;

-

CDNVERsATIOHS IN 1liE ARTS
Harrlotls.artz 01fenltews ...,. Cun-

CACFILM'
COMA. 150 Farber. 8 and 10 p.m. roct&lt;ets $1
foratuderrts; $1 .50 for othent .

c--ad' Emloolon: T - p h y Ual119

-

altho-~ .

Joln1lyNewman
- b y lho - · of MusiC
andlho
c.npu. MOiistry.

JRCFILM'
The CholrboyL 110 MFACC, aicoH. 7 and

R....,ch In W•* RMourcea 1nd Enwl~
man~ Pro!. Ralph Rumor, U!B. 104 PM&lt;er.

p,m, Coffee .nd doughnuts at 3 p.m. in Room 61 .

Ed Dam. Tho Kiva, Beldy Hal. 8 p .m. Free.

Ca~

MEN'S SWIMMING'
U/8 ft. Niaglre UnfvwaJty. Clark Hal. 2 p .m.

CIVIL ENGINEERING SEMINAR I

3 :30p.m.

.... Canlill ¥biWJ ~ chdedby Jan

-·
---dwgo.

MUSIC'
A Hoi&gt;Oagraa Wind Stvdanll RecitaL a...d
Recital Hal. 3 p ... - b y the Doponment

oiMuolc.

and dilcusalng '"""'' short
-~·Media
· "Aitlomale
Dioncliona/Subslilute
StudyiButfalo,
207 Dol8waro
A... 8 p.m. Frae. 5pcnocpo by Media Study/

Romarl

.. 8:15 p.m. Wlliam
wll be ooog as wei

-

Bynl's- tar Fa.

Saturday- 9

ua1estudent 127Cooke. 2p.m.

Sponocnd by lho Jewish

n. _..., Cllc* . . porfonn .. port of lho

............
"'-*'·
· Btitlen
and Deering.molels
T h by
owllcelobrate &lt;he Feast

AeoATlON RJGHTS PANEL•

.

[)e.

laiSIC"

~h

Lbwy. U!B~ Room 107. 4510- $he!. 12

on a . . , _ Pocffic po~al

a monlll cooe by the ln"""'-&gt;e

. St._
--&lt;JIIle-Stliooces
Y- .

byi .... Thoe...

Frlday-8

-..lkMnllyaiTeiA..tv.
. , Don1lf · - Aoom107
4510
al
- - 1 2 . - &gt;.
•

block-·
--·

members will be

'l!lnTIIE•

I

tho Thaotre 01 Sam~ 2 uno-act plays.
''Red Cruea" and "Angel~ - '"Harriman Theatre
8
S3, olu!je&lt;lts and

~~$150. ~j)ylheTheatre

• UUAII Fti.JI•
Wl1lcll Woy Ia Up? (19 77). Conference Thea·
tro, SQun. Caii8J6.2919I«showllmes. Admis·
Ilion charge.- Dec...- 9 lordeiOits.

•
MondAy.:_ 11

I'IUI·
"T
-~ 111871. 1~~0f\&gt;0'. 3and
IJJUI.- i l l t r. ...,..._fl~

�- - 7, U7.a.

7
I

BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAR~
Synthesis and Proc:eulng of Tetrahymeni
Pyrffonnla rRNA, Edward G. Nites. Ph.D., asslst·
ant professorofbioct)emistry. 101ACary. 4p.m.
CONVERSAllONS IN 1JiE ARTS
Esther Herriott Swartz interviews John Cage.
Courier~ (Ctwtnol 101. 6 :30 p.m.

I

FILMS•

for -

U Soufr~Ma; Chronlele of 1 Summer~ 2 14

-Study. · 7 p.m. Spc)nsorOO by tno Center

MUSIC"
Sixty-Twb MesoaUcs Ae Meree Cunningham
for voice L&lt;\OCCOIT1penied us;,g .,;crop~tone by
John~ . perlormed by Ebe&lt;ltard BUn. t OO
IJa;rd Hal. Free admission. Sponsored by the
Center of the Creabve and Performing Arts.

$20 . Begls..tion "" ~ 8 is ' f1!QUired .
C81 636·2460 for infcwmation.

by ttle Deportment ol Medidne's Allergy DMSion.
11 is neoe6SIIY to spend one day per week for an
eight-period at ltwJ Ceo.... Plrticiponls wll

ASIA AND AFRICA LECTURE SERIES"
Tho UN o1 N-a In tho Study ,91 His....... ll&lt;.
Roger DesForges. History Deportment. U/8. 232
SQu• e . 8 p.m. Sponsored by ttle Graduate Group
on Continuity and Change in Asia and Africa and
... Asia and African Sludies C&lt;&gt;rnmi1lees Of ...
Councl on tntemational Stucies.

bepoid. For furthef mtormetion please cal 845-4185'
between 8 a.m. ond 3 :30 p.m. Monday tlwoogh

Fridey.

·-this-.. ,_,
DROP IADD-fD VALIDATION:

SPRING SEMESTER

240 Squire Hal,
Main Street, December 11 -14,9 a.m.. to 7 p.m.
Students with a permanent 10 card may twve It
vaHdtlled during ttle drop/add process at 11to foce·
tion and times above.

charge._
-lhis 1s the

BROWN BAG THEATRE"
Diet Kohte&amp;. -acoustic guitar. contemporary
folksinger. 335 Hayes. 12noon
'GEOlOGICAL SCIEN
SEMINAR •
Of Conmlca'ond Sedlritonts, Cl1ailes J . Cazeau
and Stuart 0 . Scon, U/8 . Room 18. 4240 Ffldge

capi---

.. . . - ~ end disturt&gt;ing

Ono ol _

dialrl&gt;eoegoinsltlebol.&lt;geois,
ol tno Weo~ Including hio no~ France.

CONVERSATIONS fN THE ARTS
&amp; ·t t. Hlrriott Swartz fntervtews John Cage.
Courter ~ (Chonnel t 01. 7 p.m.

Ull.._ Houehton College. Clark Hal. 7 p.m.

Archltoctallklltdlnguc_... Jom Hejduk.

:::::"'s:= ·~

ACE PERSONNEL EXCHANGE
The Amencan £oundl · on EdUcation (ACEI
has announced its 1979·80 Cooperative Person-

Urion, New YOI1&lt;. 335

CONVERSATION&amp; .. THE ARTS
Esther ttamottS..rtr. inWviews Buckmlnster.._
Fullor.lntomalional C.. (Ctwtnol ~01 . 6 p.m

One-

FILM"

With You~ - 146 Olotendorl.
7 p.m. -bylhe0enterforMedltStudy.

Ono (Rollbe-(lrtlell. 70 Acho8on.
7 and 9 p.m. Sponoorad by ttle Deportment Of
-~ ond ute&lt;alures.

UUAB WEDNESDAY NIGHT DOUBt.'£
FEATURES'
Palm 8Mch Story (1942). 7 p.m.: The Mualc
L""'" (EnQBld. 1971 1, 6 :4Q_ p.m. COnf..-eoc:e
The...o. Squire. Fr e e -·
Palm a..c;h Story stars Claudette Colbert,

UUAB IIIONDAY _,-FILM IERIES"
Four Nlghlo &lt;I o Drwt- {F(OOC'I. 19701. 7
p m : Allee In 1110 c - (Weot Germany. t974J.

8 :&lt;0p.m. 170MFACC, Eiocoll F - . . -.
FGur lllglolo- o cal ol nl&gt;n1JrOI-

in a story lbout a lhy yotW~g ,... who tf!88t&amp; a
myslllriouo Y"'"''l grt ~ t1e tactlholtter
solor has not reUned os ~ -, Dreclor
Robert Br:euon'e firat'f"n In cdor
. ·

Alic:oln ... C-•.,eccentrtc~~y

a story ,..,.,...,.,. ol " " - llloon- The
......ted herO, • ~ photo-jour'nalist in the compony o1 o ceo1·ol! child IIOII(c:hng for her

o _.,.of~­

home. -

rocl&lt; 'n ' rot, end~~

.-p-.
. i.!AJ&lt;tt-.
·--:Mt
Co\INctL Of

-l'IONAL

STUDIU

LAT-~~·

No _ _ O...,._Inutin-

co. 2345Qift. Bp.m.

be ll&lt;. -

llodcnwon, Sooool

Poloticol · U I B; ond ll&lt;. llilne GreM.
~d~. ~-= ll&lt;. Sluor1
F -. OrW - . .. U I B, w11 oct u

-·
""--

.

;:!~~:~:==
of the genre. Preston Sturges.

The- L - - , - by Ken Russel. sian!

WOMEN'S BA81{£111AU. •

UIB Y&amp;. SL .IOitn F - Colloge. CtorV'Hal.
7 p m_

-~-- ~· This

QUite poooibly tho nut oulntgeous. ou- .
end flamboyonl filn) yet · - ..... 70s
. 0steilsl&gt;ly. blogrephy d ... 1\Jss!On PetorT&lt;:hd&lt;owky.
JCEHOCKEY"
Uillws. 8rod&lt; Unlvonily IOntorlo) ~onawanda
SporlsCenl8&lt;. 7:30 p.m.
- MUSIC"

,

tJn1llenl;ty

c-

and Chorus . . -

~-Of - · Simons.

-

tno

Recital Hal 8

"" lfiO

p .m.. F1Be · Oepert'Tito program will ot&gt;O" wflh 1lto Byrd Mass, S&lt;Jng
""tnoOtcW. ,.,. O&gt;orus. ~by Thomes
Kaminski ol tno pltwlo, will JoeQUin's Kyrlo

"'""'"'-·

- . . . . from M,_ &lt;to Vlrtllnle. Alan
H&lt;whlness"'" Okrit arid Rosslnl'a Cum S.ncto
Splrflufn&gt;mPelllo--nolle.
' The oonclucl;og portion ol ttle program wll ot&gt;O"
with ~ ·s Cndo from tno Moss In G Major.
tolowed by MozM't's Et lncarnetus est (Mass .,
C - ). llocl1'1 Cruclft110a (Mass In B Minor).
S.nctut from the F...,.e ~ and Agnua Del
from Haydn's Ill.. In TlnWof War. ...

Open 10 ... Ql.tllc.

Tuesday-11
_ _ _ oi ...

PI'-

- .-.--Room.se7c.~P ..

To_.,. _ _•..,._"""'"-

~--

Thursday -:- 14·
-.oci'
lf'£CtAI. SEMINAR•
The-- &lt;I . . _ _ , .

_.

- I n (liD a NZWIF, llllce, JoM G. Kr1lgltt.

PliO . ~-

Unit. 01oQo

~--- ~---

2 2 3 - 1:30r&gt;.m.

-·

WNY EIIUCAnoNAL RRVICE COUNCIL
ft1t~&lt;I

............. FOIIWI'--I

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

-~-...........
__
_
ll&lt; L "ond.
' -· c:o-oulhor
ol o ,_,.
_

...

..... u s - - • p m

Thio··-~-.,.,..._,

•n

nel Exchange . TNs program brokers one-or-two
,...... exchanges ol faculty members and - tratOI$ between.....WefSities and tne tederal oov·
emment, corporations, and higher education a&amp;·
sociabons . Those wiShing information' about the
vanous exchanQe opportunities shouid contact Dr.
M. C811ota Baca al636-2901 ,
BRONCHIAL ASntMA RESEARCH
w.,ted: PecpAe wifl·IJronc:tjel asttma. between
of 16 and 65, lnlefesled In porticil)aling
in a ctug treatmeoLresearch pro;ect. conducted

""'aoes

-tiOnS

of Ftnoncial
Room .I!J- Bulla!: Aonex B.
Main Street Campus . The appUee~on deadline
is Dec. 20. Students must bill. on 40 F « J visa
in order to appty for the waiYer.
,
•I

'

FIUI"

ARCHITECl\JRE LECTURE"

Akf:

Notlc'es

..

FOREIGN STUDENT WAIVERS
Tuition for
Foreign
the spring semester are now·availat:ie-at the Office

so-u

Lp. 3 p .m.

.WotiEN' sBASI&lt;ETIIAU. •

ORGAHIZATION Of I'IUNCIPAL
- INVESDOATORSe.ETINCII
Red Room, FOC&lt;ilyCU&gt; 4'p, m.

9f

Buttio premiere this newest lifm
by Ousinane - . .. AlTice's outstanding soc"'
commentatorJsatirist. The film Oetaib the iiYoads
made into native African culture tn the late 18th
century by s&amp;ave traders end niid-eastem religion

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMI NAR ~
The Klnedes of Meth.Nitlon on Nk:kel Catalyst&amp;, HanloH . Deportment ol Chemical
Eng"-"tg, Cornell. 262 Capen. 3 :30p.m.

'

ANANCIAL AIO HOURS
The Ananciaf' Aid Office , iocated at Rm. 6 ,
AMex B. Main Slreet Campus, wil be dOsed
each Wednesde{ frorn t -5 Deg;Mtng .N._29 , until further notice.
..
.
i'he office • is 'being closed to ~ gtve Qetter
seMce to student" appWcaliohS and to ..deVelop
new ~es . SeMce on WeMesdayl wt1
be tmled ' lo telephone calls and erttergeiiC'f casesonty.

UUABFILM!
Ceddo (Seoeqal. 1917) . Conference Theatre,
5Qu;ro- Calll36-2919 for show Umes. Ad-

Wednesday- 13

-'

ll&lt;opi Add fadllties for spring regls. .tion will be

POETliY &amp; MUSIC"
ThrM by Sir. Poetry •nd Music.. Byron
Di&gt;ble and Friends. Kallto&lt;ine Cornell l'Ma~e .
8 -l 0 p.m . Student 'poetry reading by graduate
students of John t.ogan Wor1c.shop: three poets.
Byron Q;bbte, J.P. Darcy. ond aotJert Polll.
lmprov;satiot\al music-by sue musicians.

GRADUATE STUDENT RESEARCH AWARDS
The Buffalo Chepler ol SiQme• Xi will
t-dd a Graduate Student Aesean:tl AVfW"dS meeting
., February kl reoognile and reward contnbutions
of graduate students. ,., graduatp. students at
SUNY AS who have ~ted at teast one year
o1 graduate studios and have ma00 substantial
progress in a resewch pro;ect are e6gtie tor
this competition . The apptication must be sponsored by a ....,_ Of tno SUNY A8 Cha¢er of
Sigma XI. - - formo ond tntbrmetion are
available from members or from !he sea-et.y,

•See 'Ceiendar, • page 11, coL 1

Basketball: 'we-,re rebuilding'
By Fred Van Leaven
Aec&gt;o&lt;terlnlem

"U/ B basketball has a let going for il
and the potent ial is great," exclaims the
Bulls new coach Bill Hughes. He
realizes that the change will not occur

ov~~qr~\alklng

about a three to four
year rebuild ing Pf'"'lram," Hug)tes
adds . " I jus! don't see 11 any 'other way.
The players must learn offensive and
defensive plays and set-ups, gain
experience,. and devel op in certain
areas."
· •
Born In Dallas, Texas, Hughes Jived
there until gradualion from high school .
He all ended junior college In Kii.nsas for
two years ...and went to Greenville
College in Illinois for another two. He
rece·i ved h is- master's from the
University of Illinois io 1959. ,
Hughes' coachi ng career spans 22
years. He coached four years al two
Illinois high schools, six years al
Roberts Wesleyan of Rochester, and 12
years al Fredonia Slate College where
he received IVW ECAC tournament bids
before joining U/B this r,ast June. His

":"i~~ey~sh~?J":'.::.'~ ~~ :~ih

1

65
players and Is now down to 22. Twelve
play on the varsity and ten on the junior
varsity ..... We are not running two
diff~ent leams," the coach maintained.
" All of !he players learn logether."
The first game of the season was a
tough on;&gt; as the Bulls dropped a 70-51
declsiory to Siena College. U/B had
many teptors going agalnsl them as lite
Coach pointed out: "II was our first
game; we were In a -ened stattf.
they had already played two ga(1&gt;8S
before playing us; and we ahot very
poot1y." Bright spots-for the Bulls were
Tony Smith, Mike Freeman, and George
Mendenhall.
"People want to a team that Is
bushng lhemoetves.· aald Hughes.

;J.~.aJr:tw;"'

a:=, ~J ~,!u:'t,!~

can ldenllfy wr.h and say 'This ia my
team and I'm proud of II .' " AI Fredonia

State, lite Coach met with 100 Booster
Club members before each geme end
discussed the strategy he would use.
He said he would be happy to meet with
interested fans and participate .In
something along those linea~··
" We are interested In billng a
&lt;;omplele team/' he said. By thla
Hughes means !hat the Bulla must be
producUve offensively and light defenarvely, and not be just one or the other.
- His team has a problem with a lack of

:::t::o:~ ~n~~~g':~e~n be offset
With a new coach, a new team, and
one day a new place lo play, the Bulla
will hopefully enter a new, winning era.
Tlte only horne game before the
semester break Ia Saturday night,
December 9 agalnat AkrOn. The Bulla
are at Canialus, December 12; at

~~t=~• St~.!:r=e~~; ~~t~layF:~:::
Southern . Drexel and
29and30.

t..s~ayette),

Dec.

#

�a

Oecember7, 1878

Kodak gives gr~ts for
alums, current studen-t s
Also Daniel l. Short , Aobiirt c.
U/ B has been · awarded $6,150 in
Stewart , Thor A. Trojan, Thomas K.
employee/alumni grants from Eastman
Kodak Co. or Rochester, N .Y., in behalf _ Winkler and Monica Skerker.
In addition to the employee/alumni
of 14 U/ B graduates now employed by
grants, Kodak is for- the first lime ·
Kodak.
• '
.providing financial support
lour
· Tl)e grants, part of Kodak's 1978
Kodak scholars at U/B and the
1
;~;:::~ut~nc ha~t'~s i,'o~~~~~·. u~'l!'~cFA~ departments In which they are enrolled.
Known as the Koda'k Sch6iars
executive .. vice president, who_ repreProgram and designed to " support and
sented President Robert L. Ketter, and
encourage academic excellence," the
Eugene J . Martell, director of placeprogram prov[des 75 per cent of tultlon
ment and career guidance.
The Kotlak grants are awarded to
costs o, $625- whichever is greater _to students In selected disciplines. The
accredited institutions l or each underaid becomes effective beginning In the
graduate or graduate year completed by
student's sophomore year and constudents wtto receive their degf'!e and
tinUes for .two more x.ears, or until
join Kodak within • fiYe years .9!
complelibn of bachelor (Iegree requiregraduation.
,
ments. The funds are awarded dur-ing the
graduates' fifth year of employment.
$~ ~~~~~~;t't cs~g~~~~~~~ i~~s f~~
U/B graduates in whose behalf this
private schools for each scholar are
._ 'fear's grants were made are:
awarded to the department i.n Which he
Stephen J. Czapczynski. Euge~e F.
or she is enrolled .
Durick, John C. Everson, Michael J.
Feldhousen, Timothy M . ...Gordon,
Kodak Scholars at U/B are:
Tom 1zard , Kelly Greene, Kok Chan,
Aotiert B. Hoyt , Brian J . Joseph,
and Lloyd King.
Edward S. Kendrick and Robert P.
Quinn .

·tor

Gold 'go_ing public' w·i th
energy policy simulator
By Linda Grec.Kobea
-&amp;nouStalf
Presentin~he

comptex.ities of this
y problems Is rio easy
country's e
task, whether! eaudlencelsa{lroup of
scientists or high school students.
Peter Gold Is going to give It a try
anfh:';;.,ting master of Rachel Carson
College was recently awarded a grant
from the Department of Energy which

~~r,~~e~'r sf~u\::for ~~·se,!';~6~Y~

=r~~
al':on~a~ s~~:Wnt.:~lf;'·
The simulator allows active audience
participation In attempting to develop
leasible energy strategies for the U.S.
Gold's task ·under the DOE grant is to
presenl programs In the commun ity to
as many school, civic, church and other
groups as possible.
·we wilt go to the public and .attempt
to give a better understanding of "future
energy problems, • Gold explained.
" The idea Is to make real an energy
environment model for the future."

_,.needed.

.

SftM
Gold Is loQ!&lt;Ing for seven people faculty , graduate or undergraduate
students- that he can train to present
the programs. His Is the first simulator
to be used in Western New York except

~n;.::.~::a~=No8':..~:

throullhout the country.
Gold ehenss f881&gt;0nalbltlty for p~
seniii'IJI the p10grama In Western New
YOfl&lt; lind the -.thern tier' wllh project
l8aCiera at Cornell.
"Thta Ia the most excltln~ time to be
-:,ou;apl~y,~~ h
"Wfth~he- of the energy bill and
developmentl fn altemall"" energies
SUCh - . nucl- and solar, futur~
poeaii)Hiflea.,. moat tntenssting."
Golcl pointed out !flat the emphasis
wllll theee ..-wtons w"l be on "the
broedpenpectlve."

=rg

rec;:;::;..o;r

NoutogtJid
"This fa one of the moat successful
DOE pmorama lor reaching the public,"

he ilxp!afnecl. "AI our training _.Ions
at ArgOnne National Laboratories, we
ed¥1eecl that we mull present them
with ·no u to grind.' "
Projact leaders at the Argonne
_.Ions ranged from nucl- engln_ . to htgh SChool and unt....slly
faculty members and education dlrectora of 01uaeums, Gold said. He feels

:,~s
sc~~

::::l f:r~,~.en=I!W;
education, wttt be hlphly

In-eel In beeonllng· program pre-

.

~-

.

The ptOQrlllll begins with an
lntiOdUI:tofy d18cueal0n and slides
Which point out -'ble conaequences
o1 .-gy decislona, Gold said. "Sinoe
the typee of groups the! wlll the
progqm wtll nry widely, the dlecuelloll 1*1 be ed)Uated to Include highly
~ lllforlnlllon on enetgy de-

llllllla or-~ apecta. Then
1111'111 llw ~of the eudllncinf'a

r.u _.
...........,...,.,r.u_,

"'--IJWIIId IO.try the almulelor.
"We

to -

thll the
~ o1 the INChlne
he8111d.

participants to make decisions on the
uses of energy, what types ol energy
(coal, oil, gas, hydrot nuclear and "new
technology") are to be used, where. the
energy will
u~ed
(Industrial,
Transportati , .. .-.ousehold/Commercial, Agriculture), the rate of use of the

~n~~ft;,~~~r~~!'~~~Y~~~w~.;

making
decisions, a 3tgltal clock ticks away at
0

th~~!e f: ~~ri~~o7 :~~~~~:~·that

the

decisions made In one area aflect all
other factors. When the energy reserves
in the simulator's Chem1cal and
Electrical Energy pools are used up,
buzzers go ofl .
• A.'h alarm also sounds when readouts
labeled Air Pollution, Waste Heat and
Rad ioactive Waste get too high.
"W ith the simulator, we can test the
feasibility-of various energy models,"
Gold said. "One method of energy use
that I s widely advocated Is Intense
conservation , but by 'programming ' it
Into the model 'tfe see It doesn't work If
other factors, such as high personal

-Human development functions
switched to Personnel
The · " Human F\esources - Oevelo"'
ment" activities of the University have
been swjfched frqm the Office of
Affirmative Action to the Personnel
Office, E.W. Ooty, vice presi dent for
finance and · management. has announced .

eluding as-lt'does accessibility for the
handicapped , has Increased markedly.
Actions by officials at the federal. and
stale levels indicate that, for the
foreseeable future, these activities will
continue and even expand in scope and·
complexity, he said .
Ooty indicated that the need to
devote· i n9reasi ng attennon to human
resources de~lopment has also be-come steadily apparent. " The Profes-

Patrick Young, human resources
development specialist , transferred
with the function and now reports 'to
Ms. Rosalyn Wilkinson in Personnel.
Ms. Wilkinson 's position has been
retitled manager of human resources
development and training . The Otllce of
Affirmative Action and Human Resources Development has been renamed the Office of'Affirmatlve Action
and Human Relations.
Gradually but steadily over the past
several years, Ooty said , the volume of

f~~ra's;r'f'n11 S:~~~ ~~~~~Far~,;~~
t~e widespread Interest In

highlight

~a~ unl;r~~~~~e ~~- ~~~~~~~n~l 11°~
~~6~r~:~b'ev~rop~~~.'e~~n~h~r~~~h
1
f,~J;;(on~W:~\~~~~oly lndi~~ted~?.[~

1

this way, attention can also be better
focused on matters relating
to
Aflirmative Action ."

~~~~~o~~:i'w:~?~~~~~~~e"s"a~~ap,id

~~~~\~9 cg,mi~Vtir;:,~~le;e ~~~tio~"e[~~

Some solutions not feasible
Gold said part icipants often

~k~~~~~ngpg~u1~ti~. e~~~~~g d:'.,akn",;',;

V/B faculty associated wi_th state-wide
genetic screening-counselin~ project

points out that such solutions are not
leasible In present U.S. society.
" The · only players here who've
extended our present energy resources

Western New York has received
$25,000 through the National Genetic
Diseases · Act to provide SUJll&gt;Ort for
screening, diagnosis, counsel!ng and
treatment for genetic diseases. And two

"See

that

::!~s\'6;~e~!J,Y~oo:,r;e;:, 0~~~ ~~~~ t~
0

~~!at~~c {a~";~~t~:s "6~deth! '!~~

U.S. society will end up," he pointed
out.
Gold remarked that this energy ,

~':t~ N~!\o~~\ch ":,':s":rsg o~~

natural

gas

and

hydroelectric

re-

f.:'~~e!;~~ ~~Y ''; ~~~~~~~1'.:'~~

f&gt;nergy-related projects. He also noted
the nuclear waste at West Valley as one
of the cqnsequences of poorly-planned.
energy programs.
People interested in participating in
this community energy education
project can contact Gold at 636-2319 or
leave'.' message at 636-2316.

J~BS
PIIOFU8IONALSTAFF
ol ......... PR-6 lf'rofesoor-&amp;:hool &lt;&gt;I
lbofr1tll. 8-8041 .

.__,_,_,

FACULTY

--{Mojor--A&lt;Ut-)

~allbofr1ti, F·8145.

-&amp;:hoolal lbofr1tl. F-8146.

-

CMd -

-

, _ IAaot. Prell. ~
Atlgrwnl--&amp;:hoal al tuq. F-81 47 .

--~~
. F-11148.

-

, _ IModiclnel-!'oycNotry

-

~ IEdilor. ~ Uot a1

~. F-11152 .

.

- ~ ---~~l.lnr·

1oo, F-8148.

-

. F-8150
-~--~Ed·
- --~~

~F-8151 . •

based at both tne Children's and the
Buflalo General hospitals. Bannerman
heads a program of service, research
and teaching In genetic dipeases which
Is working to extend services In the

~~~~~f~~l~ie ~~Js~~':,'(~ Ba-;;-ne~~,;

- are m.embers .of a .State-wide panel
lor the project.
r-j~w Xork State's geneticists som- ·
bilied have been awarded over $300,000
/ for the llrst year's activities in the field.
According 16 Or. Bannerman, the
problem in this large State has been to
coord inate and reconcile activities ·in
the densely populated New York City
area - weti supplied with ~VIatively
sophisticated genetic centers ~ with
the. needs ol Upstate areas where the
population Is more thi nly spread and
genetic services are largely confined to
the main cities.
Cooperation. was achieved by means
of a State-wide Advisory Council which
includes consumer representatives. A
leadinq consumer edvocate on the
Council Is Mrs. MarjoJie Guthrie, the
widow of Woody Guthrie, representing
the Committee to Combe! Huntington's
Disease. From the· Western New York
area, Mr. Robert Long , who is a
vigorous advoca1e of services for
hemophilia, Is a representative.
.
A smaller Executive Committee has
the responsibility ol making specific
decisions on the support ol service
activities. One of two members of the
Executive Committee from Buflalo, Or.
Guthrie, Is famous for his work In
devising and putting Into world-wide
use the Guthrie test for the eany
detection of PKU in the nelll(bom - A
test whlch has led to the effective
treatment ol hundreds of children who

~:~.J.:.'.h~f'hrt~ =~;,en~~

receive support for ~tat diagnostic
servlcaa for mental ret8Riatlon ofhlred
On a Stat•wlde beals, utilizing a GM
Maas Spectromet~ recently Installed at
the Main Street Gampila. The other
member, Dr. Bannerman, Is head ol' ttiil
Joint Division of Medical . Genetics.

w~~~f:: ~r!wa~~~il'JI~~~-

~on

this
Is
at present modest, Bannerman feels
that It will be of very great value In
supplementing other sources of fundlng to expand the work. In terms of.
future disease prevention these expendltures are likely to be highly
" cost-eflectlve," he notes.

Joulnsf,_.. stuctY

jogging ha61t~ and th~ health of
Western New York runners are of
spec'tal l'nterest to UIB research~rs.
Or. Robert Dickman, associate
professor In the Oepartm~ht of Social
and Prev~ntlv~ Medlclne. says the
study Is bell~ved to be the first
comprehensive study of joggers ever
attempted. Wlille oth~ Investigations
have Leroed-ln on ellt~ groups of .
runners, th.; _UfB study Is as lnter~sted
In the three-mile-weekly joggers as
In those who put In I 00 miles a week.
Dickman and physical therapist
Christopher Bork.need cooperation of
more than 1,000 runners and joggers.
Runn~rs themselv~s. they will ask .
participants about their runn)f1!! habits,
type of shoe worn ancf surface run
upon, general health, Injuries, and
sleep and diet. The conflll~ntlallntervlew takes IS minutes.
•
It you 'r~ a runn~ or jogger and
wish' to participate, caii831 -5S23
betwe~n 8,30 a.m . and 4,30 P·")·•
Mol)day through Friday, leaving your
name and at What number you c;an
be reached. You will then be recon'""'ed for the tel~phone lntervl~w at
a time con~nlent to you.

,

,

�........
•

J

•

,

N9 guar_a ntees, just good
faith, ·AAUP head says

\

Sabres ticket draw.
U/B Hoekey captain Ed Potte,.on lcontorl joined Coach Ed Wright lleftl and

Public: Affalrs Director James A. DeSerftis in drawing the winning names in the
United Way S.brea• ticket ' raffle thi•week . United Way givers received one
chance for every SO cents per pay period pledged. According to De Santis,
campua Unlted Way chairman , U/8 exceeded its goal l$125,000) for the first
salti. Raffle winners

tiq~e in recant memory. Receipts are still com.ing in. he

were: Colin -Adam.. Mechanical Engineering: Thomas J. Bardos. Medicinal
Chemistry; Patricia J . Collins, Social Sciences; John E. Maloney. Physical
Plant Ro~ Matea, Mechanical Engineering; DaVid R. Rhoads. Physical
Plant; Wilfiam H. Sanford, Recreation , Athletics and Related Instruction; ·
ysical Plarit; and
-Richard A. Siggelkow, Student Affairs; Mamie Warren
Marion E. Wllliomo, Social Work.

Bakk' decision gets
lumps from pan~lists
The Suprem~ Court had " no legal
basis" fo~ Its judgment in the Bakke
Case.
Constitutional law scholar and UI B
,law profes.sor How)Ud Mann offered this

views of intellectuals, he insisted .

Things haven't changed here·
-Rudo lph Williams maintained that
the " posture of the Medical School here
has not changed" because of the Bakke
comment last week in a discussion in
case since the .school was " doj ng it aU
O'Brian Hall
sponsored
by
the
Constitutional Law ,and Law and _ alonlf."
, Wtth an energetic delivery. Williams
Philosophy Forum .
_ •
pointed out 11. was hypocritical of\ the
Mann , along with Political Science
Court to rule that quotas should not be
Prolessor Richard Cox, Rudolph Wilpart"Of an admissions policy when the
liams, assistant dean of the Medical
Federal government Itself stipulates
School, and Jesse Nash, assistant vice
how ~n( COTRANS trans~&amp;rs !stupresident for affirmative action , spoke
dents attending medical
schools
on the legal ramifications and social
.outside the country) must be accepted
consequences of the Bakke decision.
each year in order to qualify for Federal
Professor Jacob Hyman of the Law
funding .
School was moderator.
Williams charged that " preferential
. Mann said the court "could~"!
treatment " has traditionally existed in
formulate a law of the United States" in
medical school admissions. In fact ,
the case because .. that requires a
"i f's right in toe Hippocratic i&gt;ath." he
corporate position" of at least five
said . Each, year at graduation Williams
justices.
said, he"bears young ph~siclans swear
Strong justlflcotlori needed
they will educate · thetr sons and
Moderator Jacob Hymah emphasized
1
that four justices concurred J with
dat:fn~::e~'.'h 8
admission. slots
Justice Powell's pronouncement that
have
also
traQ
ilionally
been reserved for
race can be ~ considered io screening
benefactors
of
medical
schools.
candidates to medical school. Although
The U/B Medical School "leads the
their reasons varied , Hyman noted , in
nation" in terms of the numbe of
the final analysis, all the justices seem
minority students who succ&lt;!ssfully
to agree that if race is iotroduced into
complete their education, Williams
the admissions pr6cess so that those
said . Only 7 of 135 students have
with baSic entitlement are denied
drop_ped out over the last seven years
admission, then "a strong justification
for academic reasons .
,~
has to be shown for It ,"
He explained thi't this year the
number of minority students in the
A polltlc.l principle?
school dropped because of new mediC~!~
Political Scientist Rlchardl:ox called
admissions tests and a new medical
the case an " outstanding example of an
admissions committee at the Univerattempt by the Court to treat the nature
sity.
of equality as a potitlcar principle."
Gox said the Court was also badly '
lnstancea of diSCflmlnation
spill over the Orad Scott ~isi 0 n. and
Jesse Nash , vice president for
because of it, Preslderit lincoln
affirmative action, gave a meandering
claimed the Court had " decided the
address
in which he flashed back on
constt tutionaiHy question in a sort of
past Instances of racial discrlm l natio~ .
way."
By their very nature. Na~h sa1d,
Likewise, Cox feels the Ba!&lt;ke
institutions of!'higher education have
decIsion was made ill such "ll ' manner
historically been .. elitist in orientation.. ''
that " its supporters, let alone its critics,
'There
are only a limited llllmber of
find it difficult to agree exactly on its
0
meaning."
'
~~1n~~ompetitlve society, we don't
CoK said It is "not surprising~· that the
Court was divided. " The Court tread on
=:~~tt ~~t'~'Y.· " he lamented. "we
difllcult and trtlllcherous terrain," he
He noted that blacks have. In the
saod "because it attempted to rpnder
past , been excluded from the benefits
judgement on policies that go_ to the
of lt"good rudimentary education as well
roots of our political life" - policies
as from places (like libraries) which can
which ..seek to give concrete mean ng
whet one's intellectual appetite.
to the political prtnciple of equality."
As a result , minorities wbo enter
As he read through the opinions on
college often are ill prepared and " act as.
the Bakke
Cox told the aud)ence.
an assurance that others will pass. TheY.
he was sutpriaod to see the ease..wJth
become a cushion lor everybody else. •
which the justices " accepted as a given
he protested.
the nght of varlou• groups to be
Nash sa•d tll;lt in a society " wlfe&lt;e the
r"'J'esanted m the professions .
matonly rules..... h&amp; sees nothing
·No SUch right is ani'Wflere e•pressly
pan•cuta&lt;ly objectionable about giving
grantod In t))e ConJtitutton," he sal a.
a hclpmg hand to tho&amp;e in a fixed
Arguments '" the case were not
m.nonty
based On judiCial r8asomng but 00

noted,

case,

AAUP has no reason to believe that
NEA will not honor the agreement to
form a new , joint organization if NEA is
elected bargaining agent lor the SUNY
faculty and staff, Dr. Morton Baratz,
general secretary Of AAUP, said here
Monday night.
Baratz was on an e!e€tion· strategy
. visit , meeting with AAUP officials at
both U/ B and Buffalo State.
Answering critics of AAUP's agree.
ment with NYEAJNEA, Baratz pointed
out that AAUP is involved with NEA In
~imilar associations represent~g tacul·
ty and staff at Kent State University,
Northern Iowa and the University of
Hawaii system.
An effort is underway to form a hybfid
group in the California State Universities ~nd Colleges system where AAUP
is already involved ~n a loose coalition
with both the State NEA affiliate and a
civil service organization . The attempt
there is to transform that coalition into
a single entity with three parent
orgahizations.
"We've thus had significant if not
extensive experience in joint ventures,"
said Baratz, an economist-turned..
administrator who served for 25 years
on the faculties of such institutions as
Yale, Haverford , Bryn Mawr, and
Boston University.

Dealings with Shanker
Baratz became general secretary of
AAUP ("that's the same title as
Brezhnev has in the USSR," he quipped)
on September 1, 1977; he took that post
after six years as vice president for
academic affairs at the University of
Maryland's Baltimore campu~ . On
September 2, 1977, he recalled, he was
Invited by ~!bert Shanker of the AFT to
discuss a joint venture between that
organization and AAUP within SUNY.
"We coul dn 't make it work," Baratz
(t~~_.:·Not at the AFT 1yvel , but with _

No guarantees, just good faith
Asked if there are " guarantees" that
the new association will emerge, Baratz
• said " there are no guarantees;" there
were none. he recalled, in the old
AFT-NEA alliante within SUNY which
came apart at the seaQ'lS. There is,
hOwever 1 e formal agreement arrived ar
in October and an expect~tio n that both
sides will live up to it. "There is good
faith and genuine interest on both
sides," he said.
. AAUP on its own has entered the
collective bargaining arena in a big -way
since 1972, Baratz said. Admittedly it
was a "year or two" behind some other
organizations, but it now represents
faculty and staff in 53 bargaining
jurisdictions (in addition. to the joint
ventures). These institutions include
the University of Connecticut , the
Connecticut state colleges, the University of Rhode Island, Rutgers, Temple.
both Eastern Bnd Western Michigan,
among others.
The organization lacked the resources, " both human and financial ," ~o
attempt to win recognitio~ on Its own •.n
the sprawling SUNY system . AAUP s
traditiOnal strength . within SUNY,
Baratz indicated, has been at the
un iversity centers, but even there the
organizatipn has lost member;s in recent ·
years. Mahy professors won't pay both
an agency fee and an additional set of
dues to belong to AAUP , he pointed
out.

AAUP, he s'ald, laid down certain
conditions for a joint venture:
1) A brand new organization· would
have to be formed and endorsed by
some kind of election. " We would l\0t
merge with UUP ; • he contende&lt;t,
" because it had so poorly served the

fa~~~~~.::~ st~'.:c:ntrallzation in the
batgainlng structure should be provided
so faculty In different types ol
institutions would have some voice In
the management of their own affairs.
3) There had to be assurances that
basic AAUP principles would be
accepted in both "word and deed."
•
The first point Was the stickler,
Baratz said . UUP, understandably
enollgh, " wouldn't commit suicide."
In September of th is year, NEA
approached AAUP about a similar
alliance, Baratz continued. \ NEA did
agree to the AAUP conditions.
Baratz feels that AFT , UUP , and NEA
all played straight in thelf"dealings with
AAUP . "It's fust that we ·couldn't reach
ag~~~e~;!~ t~:J!'s!~;o~re;ling"

or
prediction about how the election will
tUrnout?
•
No . There are no polls...to lnfo'rm us,
he noted - and even iflhEue were.. they
covld be wrong as in the recent off-year
elections .

Whafs ahead?
What's the prognosis for AAUP
within SUNY, if UUP wins the election?
Possibly a further shrinkage of
membership, Baratz acknowledges.
Economics Is economics.
,
Some people have charged that AAUP
policies which the organlzatiQJ1 talks
about having i ncorporated into contracts are simply a " wish bOOk, " and are
not transferable to "the real world."
If there's no P.iace In " the real world "
for academic freedom, collegial governance, and faculty ir}VOlvement in
setti]1g retrenchment policies, Baratz
said , " t)len I want· no more part of

hi'W,':s~~~~~- ~ave

been negotiated
into contracts where AAUP Is the
bar_g ainlng agent, he contended.

A University-sponsored program for foreign students Is looking for
volunteers .
Any member of the University community w illing to lend a helping hand to
a foreign student Is asked to contact Monika Chandler, an administrative
assistant in the Student Affairs Division , at 636-2982.

fr1~~~ /gr~~~~ ~::,~~~~·tgv~ri~e ~~~~h ~p~t~'f:~~:0 :~~~nt~ ~~ld

1

1

8

use
According to Ms. Chandler,"a U/B graduate student, the aim Is to match
members of the University with foreign students on an .. lnformai"'One-tcHme

ba~~lunteers

are not expected (or wanted) to serve as counselors dr
academic advisors, Ms. Chandler emphasizes. Those services are available
elsewhere.
-

Social contact

...
The thrust of the effort is to promote social contact. The volunt- could
take th6 student to lunch, to a hockfiY game, to a movie, whatever might be of
muh.Jal interest.
.._,
If the studpnt has some particular problem (large or small) th•t he or she
wishes to discuss with the volunt-. the volunteer would be expected simply
to help reler the student to the agency or lndivlduai who might be able to
help.
Essentially , Ms. 'Chandler says. it's like the " Be-A•Friend Program.''
Both University volunteers and students stand to gain- something from
sucb a cross-cultural experience, she indicales. ,
With the long aemester break approaching , the program Is especially
timely. Many foreign· students'ere destin lid to spend the holidays here alone
with little outside contact. A friend could help alotln such limes.
Eye-opening
Ms. Chandler thinks the experience would be especiaii)" eye-opening for
tndiv•duals in University offices who have little or no contact with at......,ts of

·

an~,~~n~~s

~dents

a backloQ of foreign
who would like to give the ielea a try.
All she' needs now is vou .
·
• No long-range commitment I~ necessary; only a wiliingneas to try.
Ms Chandler urges tlfat. If you're interested, you leave a meSU(/e H she's
no1 10 Nhen you oalf.
rtzn number, again. is636-2982.

�Ariswers:
President Ketter meets with GSA.
gives answers to a series of
questions on grad student concerns
EDITOR'S NOTE; FolloWing lo the taxi ol • HI
olo-PrnldentR-L K-prowtcMd
1o q him by the Groduote
• -Aoooetotlon.K--theGSA

..,.,.,_to

••""-"" w~!"leh~-29.
Gu~lr,:t'~~~~~e,~~n,t~e.:~• my
iMitation concerns the TAIGA Commit·
ee recommendations and the Issuance
of recommended guidelines lor appolntments to the96 posltlons. It ts my
understanding that the "Guidelines" are
to be included Jn a TAIGA Handbook
which currently is being developed by
the Graduate School. This was
explained at a recent meeting of
Academic Affairs Deans/Directors. I am
told that those who were presenfagreed
that the regulations alone would be
Insufficient, and that additional oral
and written communication WOJJid be
needed In order to fully explain tl)e
nature of assistantships and ~o prevent

~~u=s "!:."Jn?ac~:';"'::~~~~ed~~

able, problems~ill be minimized.
The hapdbook In question Is
scheduled lor publication this Spring. It
will cover three major areas of concern:
Graduate Teaching and Research
Assistantships, Graduate f;ellowships ,
·and other sources of graduate s!udent
financial support. The section on
Assistantships will cover a statement of

~J!o~~'i· ~A~~~~':f~a~r~ypf~

¥A, GA, and RA assignments, a listing

~~!~':.l~r~.it.Y~~u!:~r~:~~~~~~

Federal tax 1-s.
The sectl&lt;&gt;!l on Graduate Fellowships
wilt have !('formation on · our own
Graduate School's Fellowship Program ,
non-University funded graduate fellow=~/,[~~~a:,~j~ r.eterence materials
Finally, the section on other sources
of financial aid will cover M FC

~~~~r;:r~t~ihes"~'n~e s'!!'~~st.:'.l';.

programs, and loans.
TAIGA stipends
0

stl~!nds ~er:~~~9d ~~~~:'/to~~~

I am "pleased to inform you that as a

:::''P~~.s~~r~er;;,~~~~u~d~l, th;.!

Increased during December to $3200,
the minimum recommended - by the
" TAIGA Committee."
The number of TAIGA positions In
both the tore- camp.us and Health
Sciences has remained stable lor the
~lc
year 1978-79. Currently,
Graduate School fellowship support Is
In the amount of $120,000. We have

~::,:,1psanln adci'.:~~~7~·~d~~
request.

T--ancl •-·re-funding

"""'her

q..atlon raised by the
" TAIGA Committee" and one speck
flcalty Itemized 111 my Invitation
concama guaranteed funding for two
ancllouryewa of tnastet's and doctoral
atudento. I haat• to note that no such

~::w::...~::;:mft"''::: ~~~

mended that GAITAo be guaranteed
e/iglb/llly for these IJirmo If their
performance was satisfactory. Without
an lncreaae ill resourceo (Ciollar and
~· a - t - funding at lncnoased

the ·t.~t:::,&lt;•l~ ':~'l.ed ~~
achieve unless we reduce th-.number of
GA/TAs. Thla, In tum, could reduce our
grac~..-. enrollment.
However, my
poaltion alw.ys ha been that a
depWtment must alate at the outset the
conditions aeoclated with Ito appointment, Including duration. Upon acceptance of a student, the dilparlment
llhould be
to honor the
atlpuialed terms.

_,.,,!ted

TAIGA -*loed
In ........, to wotkloed. Or. Bunn
aheCIY hu iPued • · ~um

=

n.

hal
.mo - 1,\ilt.._and
....,onsllliHty tar
requtrtng approxlmu.ly 18 - 20 hours
ot o.pr~&lt;. IIIOUid not be given
Addllionel ~.If
IIIUty tor a C0U1M Ia .... that\ lull, be

one.,.,.,...,

'* .....

'* ...,.,.._, tNt no ............ of luU

the....,.,,..

lllln the
tor •
allollld be ........,•. You
~ty

..... -

may wish to encourage GSA senators

who believe there are . abuses of this

~~~~::, rm~~e~~e t~~~~s;:ue~'::

live Committee to the Dean of Graduate
and Professional Education and to Vice
Presidents Bunn and Pannill.
Vice President Bunn and the
Graduate School also have Instructed
unils in -Academic Affairs to formulate
Departme~l
policies pertaining to
TAIGAs, to distribute them to
assistants, and to send copies to the
Graduate School . . Additionally, the
TAlGA Advisory Committee requested
Dean Moo~ to conduct an extensive
survey of all departments concerning
TAIGA appointments, and this survey
is now un~erway.
~
TAs in Mlll,rd Fillmore

TA~hfnqo:;m!~ =~~n&amp;:~~~n':.f";

:J:'e"~}:'}hthl"J'vt:'~ ~~~::;'~ ~~

~~f~r~~e;~Y~7g; l~sl~c~~~~~~e~~

reported that gratluate students have
been assigned to teach In MFC at
stipend ratea)Rss than those in tlie day
division . Th~tllations are that, when
these / Students occupy " state-funded
lines," they must be paid according to
University-wide GA /TA standards and
their assignments must conform with
other GA/TA guidelines and regulations. _Persons holding MFC appointments ... as Instructor or lecturer,
however, whether they be graduate
students or regular or adjunct faculty, •

~en"o':i~~~~! ~f~~~~r:7. ~~"!~";!.~~~

distinction!

In short, Millard Fillmore College and

~"-'::;~.;~:~'~~~;:. a:ri;f~~ ~r~~:l;

programs on a basis that Is entirely
different from that of the res) ol the
University. Teaching appointments In
MFC and SS are - by &lt;lefinition -

~~p~~:: f.;drellulfi:lora ~~~uc\i~rr;.;-~
temporary need of the University.
Conversely, appointments in the
University in general are "full-time" or
" full-time ' related;" encompass re"Sppnsibilitles which far exceed instruction only, meet ongoing obligations,
and are primarily directed toward career
positions. Attention, therefore, must be
paid to the direct relationship that must
necessarily exist between costs and
Instruction In MFC and SS. Simply
stated, MFC and SS have an operating
structure that directly ties thelr funding

'':'ci·

published for all to read and study and
tho various student government grouP.S
and others were asked to respond to 1te
5
0

programs undoubtedly will have to
contract in terms of resources. J hasten..
to note, however, that contfaction does

VJce President Pannlll. They W..re asked
to consult with their various provosts.
deans , chairmen and/or others, and to
respond. Tiley were not placed under
any restri ctions as to the nature or
process of their reseonse.
Vice President Pannlll submitted a
response which one of your own

University.
The - libraries: Everyone but DOBrecognizes the need
In regard to our Libraries , 1 believe
everyone· recognizes the need for
additional funding- everyone, that Is,
except the Division of the Budge.t. The
need Is shared by a .(lUmber of other

~~b~H:!d t~ ~1~ ~re~ld!~7"8~Xn.:'~~

~~~i~;'fon hs~~te~~:~~on~s fo~ e~~~

gl

~~~~~~~s~:rngmo~Pm~~~:S:: ~~~

i~I&gt;J~~ b~n ~~~~l;su~ny ln~ft~tTon:"g;

the Schools in the Health Sciences. I
believe that Is a vali d characterization
and one that is understandable. For
instance; there was some feeling upon
the release ol the Huii-Yearley material
that the Individual nature of each of the
Health Sciences' Schools had not been

.higher education throughout the coontry. Acquisitions funding simply has
not kept pace with Inflation.
The difficulty of our own situation
Ms been compounded by the .fact that
several years ago the Division of the
Budget - In an attempt to be equitable

~~~~~Ytl~: ~ tfu~r~t::re::~~"a7t:: 1~:

~ff;:~ f;rd/~,!t~r;1PP~~~!i,:;~r. ~n

~~~f~ s~~~~~ to ~~~m;f~~tu~A·uatT~~~
Nevertheless, the Deans expressed
their concerns about the lnterrelationship:~ of the various Health
Sciences Schools, as well as the
inter-relationships of the Health Sciences and the core campus. These
concerns will have to be dealt Wflh
00

core campus has come forward with its

own document .
The Bunn plan
•
As you know, Vice President Bunn
has circulated for discussion purposes.the lirst dr~t of a Plan for Academic

~~Wn'du~~~~ ~~~~rs~t\~~hf~~~,~ ·
However, In applying the formu la .
selected, the Budget Office · did not
include all of our library operations and we have a number We arpu~
strongly on this polnf, '\fld the Divoslon •
ol the Budget finlilly acknowledged
their omission. Unfortunately, no
As many of you know, library funding

~~~u~ft"udg~:i'~~~~~~~~Jo:':~u~mi~e~6~
years. Equally true, we have never
recelved,helevel ol funding requested .
To compensate for these shortfalls to
whatever d~ree possible, .J have

~e ~~h ~7a~=~ed f~~~~:
GA
~~r~i 1~i~~~ru~e~~~~i~~r'~hl~
:~g~~~:~~~~T~~~0~~~ ~'6'ta~n"~.:,Sa'X
compensation were applied in MFC •. an
contained
.student
representation
.
amounts,
but have ' totalled in the
additional $134,000 In temporaryhundreds ol thousands of dollars.
such ·as the TAIGA Committee,
service ftlflding would be needed by the
Continuing Edutatlon Committee, and
Nevertheless, this has not been enough
University . The principal source for
such resour&lt;res, In the face of restricted
~~~;::a~~r~~rat ~~::'~t~":i !~~ .zJX
l~~ccompllsh what_ we would have
UAiverslty appropriations , Is . MFC's
be meeting with pumerous groups of
Again, in our ·1'!179-1980 budget
own budget. However, It Instructional
ftachlsultyra' ftst.aflf,amando·nsfortu:!.,eedntsth·toatdalscflunsasl
request, the Libraries remain our top
funds presently 1)ianned to support
priortt~ . We have requested an Increase
dr
.,.
MFC classes were diverted to Increase.
of on&amp;:hall million dollars, which
version will be forwarded to ma early In
MFC graduate student stipends, the
the second semester. It is this
Includes a substantial Improvement ill
reduced course oflerings could trigger a
dOcument wh lcll, together wlth the
acquisitions funding, as well as 9 new
spiral of further declining eorollments;
Huii-Yearley
Report,
has
caused
some
positions - to replace some of those
then declining but19ets, which would
not only &lt;atiously ompalr the evening
'ft::sd~~\'i'~n1~~~ ~~i~~~'\j,:.~=s
which we were directed to cut In the
operation but reduce appointments for
to be no direction , but rather that the •
graduate students. In short, the present
indicated is not agreed to by
and supports our request. We .,re
level of support of MFC will not permi.L · dlrectiOJl
~
JJopelul. However, I would be less than
those
posing the questions. ·
modifications to the Instructional
_ Vice President Bunn has begun
honest to go beyond that statement .
appointment stipend scale at the level
Incrementally to reallocate resources jo suggested. Nonetheless. Increases to . areas ol high student demand . These
_ Construction: 11 projects ill vorlous
the e•isting scale In Its. entirety are
have had to come from areas
st_. of work
. being reviewed , and will be discussed -· resources
of low student demand . The shifts have
In regard to &lt;;pnstructlon: We now
been drastic, and I fully-support him
have under construction· two new
~~,:.~.,a.rrh~~~~~o'::~ri~ ~~dsg~~.v not
In theS§. actions. The only alternative Is
buildings .at Amherst. Two more ar"
_ to do nothing. If that were the case,
scheduled to be "l~t " within the ne•t
areas of current high student demand
two months . Another will follow shortly
A~lc piMnlng/Unlvei'llty direcwould cap or in all likelihood decrease
therealter. Construction costs for these
tions
their enrollment In .order to bring
structures approximate $50 million . I,
Acammlc planning and the direction
student-faculty ratios Into some reaalso, should note that architectural
of the Uni-slty are two other matters . sonable balance.
planning monies have been made·
that I have been asked to address.
aval(able for motUUcatlon of Foster Hall
Specifically, I have been askecf why
Contraction elMs meen IHs quaUiy
·and Squire Hlill for the Health Sciences
greater steps were not taken to ensure
If that occurred, the University would
on the Main Street Campus. On
student participation in the planoln~t
sulfer&lt;!V&amp;n greater-anrollment declines,
November 3 Governor Carey$nounced
process. Also, I have been asked what
and the Division of the Budg~t would
the release of still addltlonal planning
the Uni-.Jty Is doing to alleviate
see to the further reduction of our
money for the following Amherst
concerns that have been expressed by
resources. EnroltmentJ and studentbuildings:
.
·
some peraons about the apparent
faculty ratios are Important matttl!ll,
t . The second phase of the Health,
dlractlon In which the University is
and no amount o1 argument and
Physical Education, and Recreatiopal
discussion about the nature of the
Facility. This building Ia to include a
Unl-sity will obscwe thai tact. · We
swimming pool, gym, some classc-mlttee did-student repteMntawill continue to be a braed-baeed
rooms , ofhcea, aftd special purpose
lion. The documelll whlcll -aed
rooms. To date, the structure has been
from '"" committee not only was

~~~~~~~ ~~~=~~~ t, :::.~ ~;:::,y!n,~~~

::::a··~~..:~~~i-~~~

~-~e.r'l: ~ue:hla~~-=

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

�........

~7,1171

ATE '"

• Answers for GSA

(from page t 0, col. 4}

Assembly visitor talks ·about
possible shifts in fund patterns
Mlnu1H of the Faculty Serulte
e..ecutM CommlttM. Nov. 29

tee were therefore POSTPONED.

-~~om~~~~9:·~e~:~w:~g~~=~3!: 2:• 2

Cern 11 Approv.l of Pflnutes of November ,

15, 1978.

Item lf3 Comm ittee Reports/Nominations
An additional nomination to the DUE Curriculum Committee was APPROVED .

The M inutes of November 15, 1978 were
approved as distributed.

Item 14 Old Business
D~~ Discussion ol the sco,. of the DUE

"-:. ~~~~C:,~~=~~~•nt ..

Vice President for Academic Affairs Ronald Bunn reported on the current state of
discussions among Dr. Pannlll, Or. Peradot-

The President distri buted a chart display·
ing cQmparatlve headcount enrollmanl
figures for core campus and the Health Sci -

ences for the1976-77, 1977-78, and t978-79
8

!:U:ea~livK=~~,:r:~~~~~ ~~~~~~~:r~ 1~
~~~t! ~~u~:~,d~~!~~~:eh=~u';,~ ~u~
9

ures, and historically, the total of FTE s
~:'"~nt t~~~tes to 8~% of the
Melvin Miller. Chairman of the Assembly
committee on Higher Education , visited
SUNYAB November 28 and spoke with Vice
Presidents , Faculty Senate and Professional

~:·~~S::~~~~~~ro:;:. r::.es~m::'v,: .

vealed that the Committee on "'Higher Educa-

Uon's current trend Is to deemphasize Issues related to faculty salaries and to concentrate on the Importance of support staff .

~~J~~:"~c!"~he~ ~~:;u~m~l~~~s ttl~~

0

~el~n~s hJ~~~~ ~~:~~~~~YIIttl~: ~~~~~1d!~

graduale education at SUNY / Buffalo. While
our traditional and ·•natural" ltlcllnatlon has
been to focus on graduate education and research, Or. Bunn stated that he has observed a need for more attention to our
undergraduate commitment for some time .
We are , he emphasized , a university
ce('ller-not a graduate center and must
direct serious attention and commitment to
the quality of undergraduate education at
this institution . In the past . the Undergraduate Dean was badly disadvantaged In being
able to take a leadership role at the undergraduate level due to the lack of input into
resource and allocation decisions. To cor-

~~~~m!5oFA0s~~~~:~~~~s~~~sld~~~tgra~:!~
?e~:;h~~~:~~~~~ ~sd;:~f~~t~~ V?~~ ~~esst

education. The Committee JISO views the

dent tor Health Sciences in all concerns related to undergraduate education. To ensure
effective communlclltion and Input from all
concerned , an ..r•ory committee will be

Fredonia campus will receive serious atten-

tween the health sciences and core campus
in decision-making situations related to

B~~::~:~o~:~t~~,!~~~~~~i:~~o~,:ra~
~:c~~~~ 0:~~ c;&gt;~~~~~roJ~~~t ~~;
1

~C: =e:.~~"6u!'s~:'o~ ~~ ~~~8Sh~ft
5

!~,~0~~1=:trof~o:, rrhe:'f~~ ~~~ ~'!!;

York State educates more physicians than it
needs , and only 50% ~f the dentists n"?ed·.

fheR~1,;~~h~ Ch~~~hat he had met
with Or. Bunn to ~usa the scope of ttie

OUE Dean and would report later In the
meeting following Or. Bunn'a arriwal.
As yet the Chairman has no success in

~c::;:U~:~~:s::,n~'df~~~11t;{;p';,~~~IT1~=t~

~red::~~t~:k:': ~~~~o~o~!~~ ~~~P~~g ~~~~

committee and In recommending 1ts scope
of responsibilities and mechanisms of
action .
_
Undergraduate advisement will continue
to be the responsibility of DUE . although Dr.
Bunn feels that more direct and continuous
faculty involvement will be crucial.
Discuss ions will continue among Drs.
Peradotto, Bunn, Pannlll and Ketter and
FSEC will be kept informed of the results.

10

~:~~fn:"v3n:C~~~"~s =~ree~ "X~

though a number of faculty memberl have
been contacted . none were willing to serve
without some commlth'lent of funds from
the Administration . There was common
ag-reement that the Ia~ of such commitment would crtppie the ability of the com-

~~~1:1f~~!~~~~8t'::e:furec:;;'!~~~- ~~~

Chairman will be meeting with Dr. Pannlll on
December 8 to dlsc·uss teaching effectiveness and will rer,ort back to FSEC at Its De-

c;:t;;lr:;; t1~e '!f:!hPnoF~,?:~v;f~~~ ~~~~t:

Item IS Hew Business
There was no new~usiness .
The meeting adjourned at 5:38.

COUNCIL MEETING
The next regular meeting of the Council
of the University Is scheduled lor

~~~~~i1 °c~~~':c!. il~ .;,~o,J:j:::·~~o~~
5

3

Capen Hall. Earlier, the Council Is
holding a dedication ceremony for the
room . honoring past Council members .

(troni Pill!• 7. col. 4)
Tantney, In

the Oepar1ment of Ana·
lomical Sciences. Abstracts are due on December

t5.

NEWMAN HOlYDAY MASSES'

l!'riiNculete Conception Ma..es:
Amherst: December 7--folewman Center, Fron·
tJer Roed. 5 and 7 p.m. De&lt;:erOOer 6-Newman
Center. 12 noon. 5 ancl 7 p.m Also in 10
Capen, An-.tatt2·tOp.m
At Main Street. masses for Oecembef 8 are
schedu6ed for 8 a.m. at the Newman Center. 339
SQuire at t2 noon: CantaOcian Chapel at 1 p m

Center. 364 8akty HaR. lS open tor tutonng
in reading and study skits. Hours ar-e: Monday.
WedneSday and Fnday , tO am · 3 p .m. , Tuesday,
11 a m.·2 p m. The tab as open to 811 U/8
students.
WRmNGPLACE
Do you have paQerS due? Come to me Writing
Ptace. a free drop·in centm for students whO want
hal&lt;&gt; starting, draftmo, "' n!Y&lt;Sing lh&lt;Hr wntfno.
we are at 336 Baldy Hal on the Amherst
Campus The Writing Place i&amp; open - y s
ta.4 p.m. and week rights, except Ft1day. 6·9
p.m For further IOfomlation, contact Barbara
Gordon af636·239~

Tho Offooo of -

end tram 9 a.m to 4:3P p.m. FriOays,
for the remainder of the fel semester
~.

Exhibits
ART BOOKS DISPLAY

PRESIDENT'S OPEN HOuRS
P r - t Robert L t&lt;euer wil hold open olfoce
hours on Tl'u'aday. Oecember 14 , from 1-3 p m
_ , . moy calt to arrlnge an -tment at
636·290t .
.

---TIOHon-·-

coneemponry Art Books, a dlspily of some of
the ,._, "" """"' in pml Arranged by the
AlbrighiJ&lt;nc»: Art Gelle(y, this eJChtlil "'-1 be seen
in lockwoOd Memorial llnry, ~ B. ttvough
Oeoember 23. Hours are: Monday-Thuraday, 9
a.m ·9 p m.: Fnttev·Saturday, 9 . a. m .~ 5 P m.;
Sundly, 2 p .m ·9 p.m.

Reglontton tor _ , . in .. - - d the

unNereoty21 .
onct
wil bo oontinuous thr&lt;lugh F-y . .-.ary
2tl, 1878

PAINllNGS AND DRAWINGS
Recent Palnttngs bY Robert AIMfNin and Recent IJnlw1ngo by R.D. Schrook. Alamo GolaJy,

-.--.....-.-e-·-- ~oue..,MFc.-.. .u­

.. moy ..,...., nogostrotion

Bock Hoi. MoJn Stl'aet &lt;:ampuo Through Decem·
ber 12 Houol ore. th'ough ~.

10 a m .· 5 p m Spoosored OV the Art Depwtment

......,_ .... ,_,_n.,.ollioe ln """ ""' Office

-

- - . g - ....... to._wat ......
_ _ . , . "'"" lo ... ~of
- loriNSc&gt;mo 1979s.-t... boglnS

o n - y. '*-Yt5 t979

--.uua
Tho a.oy -

Sak~lefyn ~~hes campuseS

is · another
issue ... raised . Adequate lighting was
mentioned specifically . Vice President
Neal already has been asked to work
with Maintenance to ensure that
adequate lighting lor the Winridge Road
area is con tained In the project to widen
this road and install sidewalks .
Additionally, Maintenance has been
asked to replace burnt Out bulbs and

~~~~f~i~~~The ~nh:i~o~~~nta~~:wh a~~
1

Safety Office will continue to monitor

~~;,~~~~~ ~f ~~:tyu~7~e~~~~~~a~p~~
5

Security also has taken steps to
increase patrols during high crime
periods and in high crime areas. They
are aware that more needs t o be done ,
and I expect them to act on this
awareness.

'life Lines' at Amherst
All of us know that lhe walkways to
the Baldy and O'Brian parking lots are
difficult paths. especially in winter. In
October I asked Vice President Neal and
Vice President Ooty to see that "li fe
lines" were Installed from the buildings
in the academic spine area of the
Amherst campus to the parking lots
Possibly some of you have seen the
pipe-hand-rail that has been built on the
pipe-hand-rail also will be built belwilen
Capen and the Hamilton entrance lot.
Stili, lhe only long-ranpe solution to
this problem is the mstallation of
covered walkways between the parking
lots and the buildings of the spine, and
we have requested funds for these
walkways: Until we receive the funding

;~~~~i;ee~~b~~~~ ~~Y~~i~tJ;~t~~J~~
thewi"ter.
Vandalism
Elevator breakdowns are another
Irritant. While most such Incidents are
the result of machinery m81functions,
we have had reporti;KJ cases of
vandalism.
8

ond Aeoordo wil bo

from 9 a.m. to 7 P.m.• MondfYS ttYouoh

•- _

of~ce.

Construction is not expected to b9Qin
on any of these four new projects pnor
to the summer of t980, with expected
completion dates approximately two
years later - just in time, in other
Words , for another election.

k~:~~ds~~d~~t~ ~:r·t~eb~:Vse ~~~

OAR OFFICE HOURS

open

designed through the schematic stage.
2. A Computer Center. Members of
Computer Services are worlc;fng with the
staff from Facilities Plann ing on the
· programmatic design of this facility .
3. A Social Sciences Building. This
complex will be approximately 95,000
square feet , which is comparable to
O'Brian Hall. Vice President Neal
presently is working with Vice President
Bunn and Dean levy on the program for
this space.
4. A Student Activities Building. This
will be approximately 25,000 to 30,000
square feet , which is about the size of
Squire Hall without it$ bowling alleys or
cafeteria space. I intend i n the near
futu re to establish a joint comm ittee to
advise Vice Presiden t . Neal on the
design of this building . The committee
will be composed of repre.sentatives
lrom the Undergraduate Student Government, the Graduate Student Government, Millard Fillmore College Student
Government , representatives from the
Office of Student Affairs. as wen as
experts from Vice President Neal's

~~~n ~r~~~n :~~"8·s:i~~. Aw::~:r

•Calendar
Or. -

II

lAI&gt; ......

una..,...,. '--"""

of Vioe

P r - 1 '"' -

_ -,5 ON FAIIIUC
-~Prints
GolaJy,
- - Oponong -llecerrplr t3, 7·9
pm Thtough JoroarV 2 Houro .,. · ttwoogh Fnaa)l'. lOam ·5 p m Sponeored by the
Art Department enCI Offtee 0{ VCP Pre:sdent for

.. - - . ,

-Soetlceo

,.

Grad fellowships
are 11vailable
For t979-80 , National Council of
Alpha Lambda Delta will award 12 $2500
fellowships for graduate study.
Any member of Alpha Lambda Delta
who was graduated with a cumulallve
average equivalent to the Alpha lambda
Della Initiation standard Ia· eligible.

~!~:~~.;r~:;r:.=.,":/~'~n~heJ
the first semester ol this v-.

Applicants will be judged on
scholastic record, . recommendations,
the soundness ol their atal«&lt; project
and purpose, 8Ad need.
•
Application br.nks and lllformatlon
may be obtained from: Ann Hicks ,
• 106-110 Norton Hall, Amhanll ,
The application form must · be
c"ompleted by the applicant and
r'!C"tved by January 5 at the National
Headw:"ers of Alpha Lambda Delta,
Box 2 , L-lsburg,f•· 17837.

can be most effective In its prevention.
Vandalism is a disservice to--the entire
University community, and it should be
1

~;~c,:~hrec!~~~ ~~~r~ri:3 0n t~~:

poinl, and I believe i t has had some
1

~~~r~~'\;"~~~~~~~ ti' ~~earr"!!o~

together, perhaps we Gan eliminate It
entirely.
When the elevators were Installed, It

:~~~Jh~~g~~eth1~td 1;::;~~~;nfr..P~~n~~

elevator-s with access to Immediate
service. Of course , you already know
that in just about every case the phones
have been stolen or vandalized.
Nevertheless, Campus Security has
undertaken a project to wire the
elevators' emergency buttons directly to
the Campus Security Office. This will

:~on&lt;;~g~~s ~':&gt;'~In ~~~~=[or.

8

The Blue Bird bus strike
The strike by Blue Bird drivers has
been another concern this year. VIce
President Doty and his staff have been
monitoring bus service and, according
to the reports I have received , the Blue
Bird Company is fulfilling Its contract
to provide buses and drivers. Admittedly , there have been some delays and
minor curtailment due to the strike; but ,
overall, schedules are being met. In
regard to safety, customarily, if a bus Is
not safe due tc&gt; such th ings as a broken
door or window , it Is pulled off the run
and replaced by another bus. I have
been told that during the current strike
thts has not always been done. I would
urge that any instances of unsafe buses
be reported to either Dr. Paul Bacon or
MF. Roger McGill.
•
Role o111rad students In governance
One of the more impOrtant issues ...
is the role of the students in
departmen\al and University governance. When I met with yOu last spring , I
stated that I would prepare and have
published in the · Aepotter a paper
giving my view of th is rote-. I did this In a
question and answer format in an early
issue this September. lois I said at that
time, I am firmly of the opinion that a
department or divi sion which does not
significal'ftly involve students in its
governance deliberations is missing a
very valuable source of information. I
also said that I would continue to seek
the contribut ions of students In the
work of the Office of the President. My
hope is that th is example will have a
positive influence on other areas of the
University. However, I there stated, and
I here repeat, I will not dictate to
departments how they must govern
themselves .
Affirmative Action
A final question posed In my letter of
invitation to this evening 's meeting
concerns affirmative action steps that
are being taken In t~e University In

·~~~~dnt tor~iu1rm:~ras an~5 ~~~~~t~
Earlier this Fall,' I asked the Deans Pn
Academic Affairs and Health Sciences
to prepare a live-year statistical
analysis of minority student enrollment
and faculty and staff employment In
each of the Schools and Faculties. This
analysis was to include total number of
applicants , total minority applicants,

~~~::n~~:~~rr;~~~1~:.e~~~· :~

number of minority graduates. Much of
this data collection Is now done, and we
are work1ng cooperatively wi th• representatives olthe minority community In

~:~~tt~~~~ t'c':"s'l~.;~rse ,~r;;.~t;'!!

groups.
Also , I recently appointed a University Affirmative Action Committee
under the chairmanship pro tern of Dr.
Carlota Baca. The committee con8iats
of members from each vice presidential
division, two student representatives, a
repres~ntative from thfl Office of the
Handicapped, a representative lrom the
Minority Faculty and .Staff caucus, and
representatives from the Faculty Senate, Professional Staff Senate, and
• CSEA . A specific charge for the
committee presently Ia being finalized. I
believe an Integral part of this charge
must be the responsibility ol monltor-

'

~n5g ~ndre~~~~urfg'ngr:C:!:.~~tl;:'u~~~
Therefore, If you
have
speclflo
suggestions In these matters, I think

~ r;;,os!P~::.:,';e ~ray g~o':3 ~r:!:

;:':,'~\~":t '1/,~~.;.:;,~;r.e=:in1u~
::~ ~~3 ~~~'r':'l::! t~.:;~~~=~u::i

strengthening the reaulla of thl~
commttment throughout the Unlver·
aity ....

"

�n

Hockey night

in Tonawanda-

U/ 8 hockey dr.ws enthuslaatlc crowds
to the off-th.:be_,_peth Tonawanda
Sparta Center In North Tonawanda.
Coech Ed Wright•a Bulla kept e crowd of

1123 on the edge of their aaau lalt Friday
night aa they lost 6--6 in overtime to
Oswego State. The Bulla ~go against
Brock (Ontario) University next Wednea·
d8y night, rounding out the fall semester
home season. There'a no Dodo lmlach to

toss out a hat for a hat trick , but neither
is there at the Aud any more.

�DOCUMENTS

Policies,
Procedures,
and Criteri-a for

faculty Personnel ACtions
Dar Colleague:
Since · the original printing of the Policies,
Procedures, and Criteria for Faculty Personnel
Actions In December 1973 various modifications

have taken place.
The revision presented In this Issue of the
ReportiK brings Into the document those
memoranda, understandings and language changes
to reflect present status.
I urge each faculty member to thoroughly read
this document and to file it for future reference.

-~~~k~~;

President

They must also make the hard decisions which lead
to terminating faculty whose teaching and
scholarship are not substantially above t he average.
All actions leading toward promotion or the
granting of continuing appointment begin at the

I. INTRODUCTION
This document contains procedural.. guidelines

f~u~:~~o~~:~ ~~.:':'~"Pac~fro:~~~~~~~~~~

and the granting of continuing appointment. These

r.:;;,~:ncean~ t~f~J'~hecarfns:n~u.fn'~d~io~~

memoranda from the Office of the President and
from the oBoatd on Faculty Appointments.
Promotions and Tenure, and from recommendations

m~~,h~=rr.. ;&gt;:~·NY booklet, Policies of
the IJoNtl of TIWt-. Is not rePeated here except
when -sary. How-. nothing In this document
to mMnt to be In conflict or -lance with those
1

1

:::S.~} ~':J~~~om~am~t;."w ~ ~~~~~~fe~':it

the Board of Trust..s, •peclally those articles
CO¥erlng appointment, promotion, and continuing
appointment.

II. SEQUENCE OF REVIEW·
Personnel actions which lead tb Initial
appointment. -polntment, prpmotlon, or the
granting of continuing 8jlp0lntment follow a logical
eequence throUGh 1M verlous lewis of academic
orgenlzallon. They begin as recommendations at the
depwtmentalie-.1 and proceed with endO&lt;Mment or
rejection of the 18C0mmenclatlon at School, Facut(y,
• and Vice Presidential levels. Final authority In such
actions rests with the President, the Chancellor, and
the Board of Truat-.
The~: ·

The academic excellence of a . University Is
estebllahed and maintained at the departmental
tewt . It Ia estai&gt;Rahed In first Instance with Initial
appolntments·at the lnatruclor/Asslstant Librarian,
Aaslstant Professor/Senior Assistant Librarian
levels, gathers strength with appointments as
Aasoclate ·Profeasor/Aasoclate librarian and
promotion to thoae ranka, and Is maintained by the
'*"lui eetection of thoae who receive continuing
appointment. That excellence Is then signaled and
reaffirmed by the quality of those who we
appointed at or promoted . to the rank of full
Professor/Librarian.
Unless extreme care Is taken at the departmental
· and et the lowest of ranks, no satisfactory
degree of excel/ance cen be established · or

m1::~· ~~or
1

reeponalbllit In eslabflahlng and
maintaining a high degree ~cellence rests on the
depertmenlal Clhalrper8011a who must be the guiding
force tn moving the recruitment anct evaluation
proc:es- forward , In bringing new people Into the
deperlment, and In Improving those already MloWd .

~~ft~:l'~~~~ ~e;:~u'r~~h,;'e~~a~n~Yc\,";1~~~ ­

gr~~~~s~~pro,r.ta': ~mt~r' t~r'i~~~wt;' :~:

Chairperson should study the following :
(1 teaching load, professional assignment;
(2 student achlewment/professlonal service;
3 student advisement;
4 research projects being carried out;
5 student research projects supervised;
6 undergraduate and graduate student advls&amp;ment, thesis or dissertation advisement or
committee wor1&lt;;
(7) department , Faculty, or University committee
assignments;
· (8) evaluation of teachlng/SMVIce by students,
faculty, and colleagues;
(9) wor1&lt;s appearing and works accepted In that
.
academic year;
(10l academic, Ul\lverslty, or community. service;
(11 other academic and professional accompHshments.The appropriate admlnlstra!Mt officer alloutd
assess the status, echlo!vementa, and short· ·
com trig a of ilech faculty member. II at all poaslble, .
this-should b8 done by,_.. of a c o n t . . - the performance of the faculty member can be
discussed. The emphasis here should be upon
supporting end aldlng the efforts of the faculty
member ntther than finding fauiL In thoae caoeo
where · performance -Ia deficient, how-. lhls
deficiency should be made quite clear.
AI the
of review for continuing appointment
or promotion, en analysis of the data collectad In
ttte Chairperson's r&amp;Yiew for each year of service
should be part of the dossier prep.red on the faculty
.
.
member's bellaif.
Naturally, the departmental faculty members
share In responsibility and take an active role In
recruiting, recommending, ~ evaluation, and
dac:lslon-maldng. They do so at the departmental

l

lime

~~:~:::~tt:.":'!! ~..:::..:~~~::oee:;

rank, status, or members of the whole.
Evaluation by students during each year of M!VIce
should be collected In • nagular manner through the
uoo of some type of s~ard measuring Instrument
executed by students In the f..:ulty member's
claooes and collacted in a manner that assures the
students confidentiality. "Oplnlonnalree;" eapeclally thooe collected et the lime ot•dac:tslon concemlng
promotion or continuing appointment, we of
value.

little

lMala of OraMizatlon
l}le orgenfzetton of 1M Unl..-.lly may not offer e
consistent pattern for the review and f8COmmendatlon of personnel actions. Schools or other ty,_ of
~lc unlla made up of departll*lta, eectlona
end 1M like, may or may no! axlet within a Faculty. ·
Reviews and 18C0m"*lddng volea - - w y et
each ,.,..., ea - the 81at..- end rwcommenda-

lion from the administrative head at each of those
levels. The reader is asked lo make the proper
transposition where necessary throughout this
document . -

ad~fn?.:\~~~on°:::~[ ac~t astt:,ertti~~h~:_..~::;~s ·~

5

recom mendors based on the case made by the
Chairperson and the department. Their advice
should clarify the case, and stiould be so~ghl YI!'Y
early, possibly even before the formal proceea Is
begun. When nellhiK a positive nor negative
recommendation can be mede, the reasons for the
neutral recommendation should be fullr. explained.
Faculty members vo.ice their critical udgment by
their advisory vote at these higher levels of review eo
elected .members of th,.unlt personnel com miltwhich are required by these ,~urea ,
VlcaP~

The Vice Presidlints lor Ac-..tc Affalra end lor
Health Sclencee- --.=lae. a portion of their
management responsibility by their review of 1M
personnel actions of their rnpectlft ac.dernic
units.
The President has delegated authority to them In
the following lnstancee: appolnlll*ll 81 or

::=

;~al~~ ~:! .O:.:.~~~~oru.,:a::;:

professor 18¥111 (VIaltlflll Protauor, Clinical
Professor, etc.), and .,., -.- . the,
rl!commendatlon to deny 1M. IIIOIIOead 8CtiiWI
comes at each tewt of ...,lew called for 11r U..
procedures. Aulhorfty nagardlflll appotn- 01
promotion to 1M ..-a ol Aealelant or Santor
Assistant Ubrarlen, or dental at NOh ..... In ouch
· . , _ rests with the Euc:uiM Vice Prwldanl.
In ~ ln¥01Ying continuing
or
appointment et or promollon to the IWIU of
Associate ,profeaaor/Aaeoclate llbrwWI 01 any of
the regut• or qualified .-.nka ol lull ~/
Llbrarlan.the Vice Pnleldent or~ of Ulnrlea
must crltlcetly review the doaalar and the
recommendations, end aend an analyala and
personal racoinmendatlon to the "'-ldenL For all
new appointments, 1M Vlca "'-!dent Ia al10

appol-.

~~=~~~~..::~~

and women caridldatea hea taken 111-.
In eddlllon, the IMpeclive Vice President/
Dlractora we reeponalble for aatabllahlng ~
dures for and supervlalng the review of all of
non-renewal of faculty appointments Involving the
denial of continuing appointment. Whate ouch
review showa that the faculty member's Cllll8 hae
suffered from procedural Irregularity, the Vice
Prealdenl/ptractor should act to comact such error

Save and
file for reference

�The following applies:
.
' c •
1.) The candidate may select an ed¥Ocale when an
academic officer (Chairperson, Director, or Dean)
dou not support the case or when the candodate
believes that his esse will be strengthened or m()re

Policies,
Procedure~~,

and Criteria for
Faculty Personnel
Actions
anc1 to reinstitute the process of eval uation of the
f aculty member at the point at wh ich the procedure
was violated.
.
.

n.:~~=~t.

promotion, and the granting of
continuing appointment can result only from a
positive action of the President . In certain of the
lower faculty ranks, authority lui$ been delegated to
the VIce President for Academic Affairs, the VIce
President for Health Sciences, and the Executive
VIce President; In the grantlnQ of continuing
appointment and In certain classlfocatlons of higher

::,~rth1~:u:r~ ~1 t nT~~:~~· ~~~hea~ra~;e\'~!

recommendation of the President. Action s at the
various levels of the Un iversity are only advisory to
1

"t~~~~:t~:.O~,~~~~~~u~s~~::'ces,

th e President
may act In cases of appointment, reappointment ,
promotion, or the granti ng o f co ntin ui ng
appointment without resort ing to the full process of
review and consultation as herein described.
The Presldent'~oan:f : The final facuHy advisory bod y to the President is
the President's Board on Faculty Appointments,
Promotions and Tenure. The Board con sists of nine
, enured 1~ 11 Professors/Librarians who are
appointed by the President from slates of three per
vacancy recommended by the Executi ve Committee
of the Faculty Senate. Two student observers (one
graduate and one undergraduate) are appointed by
the President from slates of three per vacancy,
recommended by the respective student association. The President does not arbitrarily reject such
slates and no appointment to the Board Is made
except troin such slates. Board members are
representatives of the University-at-large and are
appointed for staggered three-year terms, beolnnlng
September 1 and ending August 31. Student
observers are appointed to a one-year term .
The Board reviews all recommendations for
appolntmeni at or promotion to .the rank o f
Associate Professor/ Associate Librarian , the
various titles of full Professor/ Librarian , and the

~n~nPrs !o~~C:,~ f~~~~~~lr:l;s"~ne~l~
0

quality and promise of the recommended Individual .
It may carry out investigations independent of
department, School , or Faculty, may request new or
additional written Information from those sources, -

~v~e!n;~~e a::r~:.':~a~- f:Ss~v~so~s;~::;~:;ren~~

of this Board are considered privileged commun ica•
lions to the President.
-

fu~~ ~~~a~~oc:':teanm~"':'':Otected· only by the
The adYOCate must be chosen on the
. basis of professional and academic knowledge of the
candidate's performance and must .be from the
· department or dlscfpllne of the candidate. Faculty
members holding · .administrative lilies in an
academic unit or at the VIce Presidential or
Presidential levels are excluded from acting In the
role of ad¥Ocate.
3.) The review proceedings are not judiciary or
bargaining hearings. Therefore, the advocate may
not be regarded as an attorney for the f~cu!tY

~idate.

m~~":fihe candidate chooses to have an advocate,
that decision must be made known and the ad ¥Ocate
must be selected In sufficient time that the
advocate's written statement can accompany the
dossier through Its normal review . Such decision
and notlficatlon may be made prior to thP.
presentation of the dossier at the departmental
level . It cannot be made later than seven work ing
days after the negative decision of the
administrative head of the unit In the sequence of
review, (up to but not Including the Vice P~esldentlal
level) has been commun icated to the candodate. The
unit head must make a negative decision known to
the candidate, In wr(tlng, no later than seven
working days alter the vote of the appropriate
comm ittee.
5.) Advocacy confers no special privilege of
access to confidential materials included In the
dossier.
6 . ) No member of the faculty may be excluded
from normal participati on · in personnet actions
becau se of being · an ad vocate, except that
discussing "Or votl nq as a member of a subsequent
review body Is prohobited.
,
7 .) The advocate may make a verbal statement to
the unit review bodies , bu t the advocate mav not as ~
questions of the members or partici pate in debate.
The advocate may make a verbal statement to the
.
appropriate Vice Presid;n t .
8 .) The advocate's written statement Is to be
regarded as a supplement to the dossier and sh ould
speak only to the quality an d impact of the
candidate' s academic-work (teaching, research, and
service) professional growth, past accomplish ment , a'nd future promise. That statement should
follow the Chairperson's letter in the dossier.
9 .) The advocate's written statement is to be
included with the dossier for review by appropriate
committees and administrative officers at the level
subsequent to the institution of advocacy .
10.) The advocate may not add letters ot
evaluation to the dossier or Include such letters in
the statement. However, the advocate may, in the
statement , suggest expert evaluators who could
review the candidate's work, and/or may urge that
add itional evaluators be used or that specllic pieces
of Information be added to the dossier.

11 . ) The rules of confidentiality must be applied .
It is not the advocate's job to "defend" the
candidate or to attack the dossier, but to explain the
candidate's work, contribution , and promise and. to
suggest to the properly au th orized review bodoes
and/or administrative persons-mate.nal whtch , tf
present in the dossier, would be help fu l to the
candidate.

B. Previous Service Credit

m!~, df~~~~~a~'t'g~~\~s!~~, c~~~~~~~~r .•P~~~;

Ill. PROCEDURAL
REQUIREMENTS
The standards and procedures stated herein
should be considered minimal for the University-atlarge end will be prtnted as a part of tbe Faculty
Handbook.
.
Standards and procedures for appo)ntments and
ptOmotlons apectnc to individual departments,
Schoota, and Facultlu:
(1) shall be specified In writing and available to all ·
members of the uolt and shall be forwarded to all
' higher faculty review bodies;
(2) ehall Include a specification of those who are
. eligible to ¥Ole on each type of personnel action,
I.e., toppointment, raappotntment, promotion, and
he
ling of continuing appointment;
ehall state the method of presentation of
ldat• tor IIPPOintment or promotion, including
the -'tlcetlon of the minimal . amount of
tnlormallon Which muat be Incorporated In such a

:x:

rn=:1:"·..:fetkheto"'f~ ~~tgi1:,~'7g ~r!

!'*-';

.

(4) IINII alate the composition and methods of
-.etlan, ope&lt;Mion, and reporting of review or
..,_.... commttt-. Including the powera of
eua11 _,mu- ....,, In particular, ..toether the
cmnm~u. NOOnllllellda to. the eligible voters In the

or .a tor - untt;
(5) ehall ..... the metbod of wtlng and, If this be

untt

by IMII a.tot, lllhelher eligible voters not pnaaent at
the - l n g 11 which the candidate ia dlscuaoed
may ..,uclpeta.

A.

!111M of Adloc8cw

.

__

In -.ng Clecla1one 1 sq Important to the
Unl-.lly and the lnd~ ' facUity ,_,ber, the
bodlel muat _..,n that a full 8IICI

..neue......, .,_._,
,..,~

2

Assistant lJbrar!an., and Assis tant Ubrarian 1
satisfactory fu ll~ time prior service In academic rank
at any other accred ited academic institution o f
higher education may, at the written request of the
appointee and at the discretion of the Chancellor, or
his designee, be credited as service, up to a
maximum of three years, at the ti me of
appointment. Waiver of all or part of th is service
credit shall be granted upon written request of the
employee to the chief administraUve officer not l ~ter
than six months after the date of tntt tal
appointment . An Assistant Professor, Instructor,
Sen ior Ass istant Librarian or Ass istan t Librarian
shall not be ellg lbla for continuing app'Ointment at
any of these ranks prior to the completion of a total
of seven years in a position or positions of academic
rank .
C. Multiple Review
As an added protection to both the University and
the individual faculty member, University procedure
requires review of all recommendations for
appointment, reappointment, promotion , or the
0

P.:!n,~~~~~o~ ~=;;,~ca~~~!~l~a~~~.h~~~Puhdr~~~~

VIce President. In cases where the recommendation

:!:,~~ t~ ~:!,.~~~P!s l!lothdeenJi.,!h~r.FsPcfe':.~
level. If each level approves, or there Is
disagreement with one level approving and another
not, cases of appointment , ruppolntment at , or
promotion to Instructor/Assistant Librarian, or
Assistant Professor/Senior Assistant Librarian are
decided at the Vice Presidential level. Cases at the
ranks of Associate Professor/ Associate librar(an ,
any of the titles of Full Professor/Librarian or of
continuing appointment at any rank move on lo the
President and his advisory board , as they do if the
recommendation of a unit head differs from the
recom'mendation of the elected personnel review
bodies.

D. NGtlce of Action
Notice of approval or denial of a personnel action
should be made In writing to the faculty member by
the department Chairperson within seven days from
the date of receiving notice of the decision. In cases
of non-renewal , the faculty member must be notified
in writing and in accordance with the Policies of the
Board of Trustees, such letters tieing signed by the
Dean , or the Director of Libraries, and the
appropriate 'I' Ice President. Denials by \he President
(or t;y the appropriate Vice President In the case of
' Instructor/ Assistant Librarian or A-ssistant Professor/Senior Assistant Llbrerlan) will be noted in
writing to the Dean/Director, whose responsibility it
is to see that the faculty member Is informed and
counseled. 1\i!Provals will be noted merely by return
gl the signed appointment form to the Dean.
E. Short-Term Appointment•
A!.pointments of one semester or less shall be

~h~,,::.nd.:;:-d'h:tftu~~~~~i:~~or~~~~~ea~'P~~~~\~2

committees to the Vice Presidential level where final
approval or rejection will take place.
F. Withdrawal
_
In cases where the faculty m6mber should wish to
withdraw trom the~ process, written · request for
withdrawal shall be sent to-the Chairperson, with a
copy to the Dean or Director. The Chairperson
should .acknowledge the faculty member's requ est
in a letter to the Dean/Director, fully explaining the.
si tuation. The Dean should then acknowl edge

~~rJ.~~ t~~Je:huee"6~i~ ~~~v'!,\\:YC:,~~erol0 ~~~;

letter to the appropriate \/fee President, who in tu rn
will notify the -President's Board of this decision.
~

IV. CRITERIA
The selection, ~ evaluatiorrt and .promotio n of
members of the facully of State University of New
York at Buffalo i s of major i mportance to th e
development of the U~ i versi ty as. ~ . center of
excellen ce in scholarshtp . The deftnlt ton of two
di fferent series of faculty ,_the professorial .and the
librarian series , i mplies a recognit ion of their
somewhat different functions . Hence, somewhat
different criteria are necessary for th e individuals
perform ing tho se functions.
•
The ~,o s i c considerations i n regard to profes sorial
faculty are mastery of subject matter, effect iveness
'in teaching , scholarly accomplishment , effectt veness of Un ivers ity service, and potent ial for
conti nuing professtonal ,growth. The basic considerations In regard to library facult y are
competence ill. llbrariansh ip, contrJbutions to the
libraries and their services, scholarly accomplishment , effecti veness of University service, and
potential for conti nu ing professional growth . The
general criteria set forth below indicate the kinds
and levels of atta inment to be sought In cand idates
for appointment or promotion to the various facult y
ranks .
A. Balanced Evaluallon
The specification and implementatl or of an y
criterid for ~rs o nnel evaluation must i nclude a
recog nition that some persons will excel in on e way,
others i n a-nother, and that It is necessary to seek a
balanced- eval uation of each · person under
consid8ratio n. With regard to professorial faculty
appointments at a university, two areas are
particularly noteworthy In Ibis regard : teaching , and
research or creative activity . The parallel area to
traditional teaching for evaluation of the library
faculty is the perlormance of the basic function of
t he libra,ian. Some members of the faculty will excel
at the firs t, others will exce) at the 6ec9nd ; many
will excel at both . Similar considerations obtain
with regard to university service; excellence i n th is
regard may accompany excellence In the other areas
of servi ce, but it may serve to reduce the quantity of
accomplishment that would otherwise be expected .
In reaching a balanced evaluation of a prospective
faculty member, these differences must be taken
into account. At the same time, however, there are
certain minimal standards that must be mal.
Excellence In teachlng/llbrarlanshlp is to be
valued ; it cannot, however, counter·balance a lack
of research , or creative achievement . Similarly,
excellence in research ·or creative activity Is to be
valued and recognized, but this will not
counter-balaACe a failure in teachlng/librarianship.
Service to the University and its community is also
Important , but present with it must also be constant
growth as a teacher/librarian and researcher or
creator. It Is the responsibility of faculty to
.recognize these facts and to use talents and
energies accordingly . Ills also the responslbllity of1
·the UniversHy to ensure that the opportunities
offered are consonant with Its expectations.
Three further general comments with regard to the
evaluat ion' ofteachlng / llbrarianshlp and research or
creative activJty are needed in light of the complexity
and variety of the University .
First, creative activity has been linked very closely
with research here to emphasize that the creation of
works of art (that phrase taken In the broadest
sense) Is an i ntegral component of scholarship In a
university. tn the area of performance, creative
activity Includes both the development of new forms
or techniques. e.g ., music CO!TlPOSilion , and the
performance of work, e.g., In theatre. In these areas,
pertormance Is part of the research and creative
aetivity t be expected. Therefore, the activity and

+

�respecled ~ review of It are to be evaluated
awropriately. Reviewing bodies must look for and
expect to find the same level of peer review as that
expected for published research.
Second, competence and instruction in clinical
areas and librarlanshlp are major concerns of the
University. In such areas, evaluation of teaching

and who does not have other scholarly or
professional attainment. Such a person-Is at the

must bean evaluation of the extent to which clinical

professmnal attainment,

beginning of an academic career, and thus must be

evaluated principally on promise, evidenced by
graduate or professional study. Such evidence
should strongly support the completion of the
appropriate degree, or equivalent scholarly or

skills are imparted. Evaluation of research and

within one year. The

eviQence must also support strongly the prediction
· that the individual will be a good tejlcher and
-rese'archer-creator. For a second one-year appoint·
ment, the person should virtually have completed
the doctorate or other appropriate final degree, or
have eql:Jivalent scholarly or professional attain-

creative activity in clinical areas and Ubrarl,nshlp

must include evaluation of the development of pew
, clinical techniques and practices, just as evaluation
In the perform;mce areas must · include that of
... suPerior or different interpretations of monumental

wo~f,~~ ,;~~N!~~':,i~g,';t\~fl'~=~npn~~ndent

ment. must have a satisfactory performance record,
and must continue to show high promise as a
researcher-creator.

effort or through professional organizatlol11; to the
advancement of theory and practice In a field must
also be evaluated.

2. Assistant Professor/Sen/or Assfstant Librerlan,

no prior experience

AppoLntmen!_ at this rank is normally granted tQ.
one who l&gt;as just completed the appropriate
B. EYallllltlon and Dull•
A balanced evaluation of a prospective faculty
doctoral degree or its equivalent , or who possesses
member must take account of the performance that
scholarly or professional attainments. Evaluation at
Is exll8cled In relation to the responsibilities
this level is prin'cipally on the basis of promise
assigned to the person. To permit reasonable and
shown by the individual's performance in· his
equitable evaluation, the responsibilities of each
: p;~~at~for~~~~~n~~~'"?,Y o~1 ~o;;:ch~~gf;~s~~~i\
member.of the faculty should be specified In writing
and Included as a supplement to the general crJteria
activities. The evidence should strongly support the
set forth below. A specification should be provided
prediction that the individual will be both. a good
with each new appointment, as well as at any lime
teacher/ librarjan and a researcher-creator of the first
during the course of an appointment when
rank .
responsibilities change. Such specification of
3. Assistant Professor/Senior Assistant Librarian,
responsibilities (s particularly Important In
with prior experience .
those Instances In which a faculty member carries a
Qualification for this level of appointment
heavy service obligation , e.g., as Associate
includes possession of the appropriate doctoral
Chairperson of a department, or as Chairperson of a
degree or its equivalent anct further scholarly or
maJor University committee. In such cases, the
professional attainment . A candidate for such an
bearing of performance In the. administrative
appointment should have high promi se as a
position upon such personnel actions as Increases
- teacher/ librarian and researcher-creator , and should
In salaries or promotion In rank should be
al soliave scholarly attainments in hand. For those
understood by all involved when the appointment Is •
whose previous experience Is as a faculty member
Initiated. Specifications of duties should be a part of.
here or elsewhere, this should include positive
leUers'llf l!Ppofr\lment and should be Included In the
evidence o f teachi ng /li brarianship ability , and
dossier presented for review.
completed research or creative activit y beyond that
As a genera/ rule, faculty members who hare not
in volved in graduate or professional study. When a
yeteclrlered conllnuillflappolntment, should not IH
cand idate has prior servic e in the rank of
weighted down • wltlr admlnlstrallre tasks, but
Instructor 1Assistan t Librarian or Ass istant Profes•sor/Senior Assistant Librari an withou t the doctorate
!~:::rs":n~l~.':~.~~~roff~~~~~! to derelop as

or its eQuivalen t, o ne must be certa in that research
or creat ive activi ty beyond th at involved in graduate
or professional study exists and is of excellent
cali bre.
In thGse cases In which th e cand idate's previous
experience is in a non-academic posi tion , cred it
given fo r attainment in the field must be co nsidered
in rel ation to the opportunities for research or
creative activity , particularly where the previous
experience has been a full-time research/creative
activity position . In add ition. the value of such
ex tra-academic experience as a basis for teachi ng or
performance and research or creative act ivity in an
academic career should be carefully wei ghed .
If serious consi deration of promotion to
Associ ate Professor/ Associate Librarian with
con tinUing appoin tment is to be given duri ng the
term of appointment as an Assistant Profess~:" /
Senior Ass istant Librarian , the evidence supporttng
the cand idate's appointment should afso gi ve strong
posit ive ind ication that qualifications both in
teach i ng /l ibrarianship and i n research or creati ve
activit y tor such continu ing appointment will exist
by the ti me such a decision is to be made.

UniVersity service in such a position may be taken
Into account in determining promotions in ranK.

Such service alone, however, should never be the
basis for promotion . The Importance, value, and
quality of the candidate's research O[ creat ive
activity, and the promise of continuin'Q fi rst-ran k
performance in this area are indeed primary
considerations. One of the most important factors
· i n distinguishing_ University faculty from faculty at
other levels of fligher education is the continual

willingness to place one's Ideas and worl&lt;s belore
peers for their critical judgement. Independent

~'r:~~;,V~~~l. b~~bft~ho;:~~ew~~ J~us~fro~P'!:!~

c itations of the research or works of art are
appropriate for evaluation In this area.

The assessment of teaching effectiveness,
whether In classroom. library, laboratory, seminar,
or tutorial , should rest upon solid evidence.
Documented systematic surveys of students In the
classes taught by the faculty member under review
shall be submitted . Assessment of class design ,
knowledga and abi lities Imparted to and developed

4. Length of Term Appointments

The developmen t al nature of the ti r;ne spent In the
Instructor I Assi stan t U brarian and Assistant Professor/ Senior Assi stant librarian ran ks should be

in students as shown by performance i n subsequent

classes , classroom observation , and assessments
of theses and dlssertation,..d lrected are Informati on
sources which should be employed . In addition , the

recogn ized and rell ected in the length of the initial
appointment recei ved . Such term appointm ents are

used by the Un iversit y to allow facult y members to

~~:rssho~~~~::eerr!'e~~ll ~~co~~~~~g~~d~~~ac~~a

demonstrate their abili ties to co ntribute to the
scholarl y c ommun ity. For persons just beginning .
their careers, the period prior to major review should
be sufficientl y long to permit them to initiate their
own scho larly activities wh ile not being so lengthy

graduate student advi sement , and in thesis and
dissertation committee service.

Again, one should expect that University level
faculty will operate at a high level of teach ing

competence.

.

Although some of the measures mentioned In the •
preceding paragraphs may also apply, the
assessment of the quality of llbrarianship should be
subject to a cntlcal analysis by those persons who
can best evaluate lt . The rel~vance of library
collections to academic J'rograms and the
effectiveness of rererence an fnformation del}very

can be judged by library colleagues, professorial

colleagues, and cllente)e. The • quality of
bibliographic control over the collections and the
imagination and skill with which complex problems
are solved or approaches utilized are less publicly
visible and must be judged principally by library
colleagues, but real excellence will create wide
visibility.
•
C. Criteria by Renk
·
The criteria set fbf the faculty ranks in_generaJ us.e

at State University at Buffalo recognize thetr
hierarchical ordering. In addition , theSe criteria
Incorporate recognition that · the bacl&lt;grbund and
experience that people tMng vary somewhat and ,
t~efore , alternative patterns of evaluation are set
at some ranks. These criteria also reoognlze the
University policies governing term and continuing
appo1ntment&amp; and the relationship oi these to the
var1ous faculty ranks. More Importantly, these
criteria emphasize the prospective element In
faculty appointm~nts and promotions.

as to mislead them with regard to prospects of
continuin'g-appolntment through undue delay of .
such rev iew. To achieve th is reasonable penod , a

major review duri ng the th ird year of full-t in)e
service in academic rank i s appropriate. Because of
SUNY rules concerning notice of non-renewal , such.
a third-year review cannot be carried out with i ':l the
. tradit ional pattern of two successive three--year term

appointments. Within that traditional pattern , It Is
necessary either to review the begi nning faculty
member alter but one and one-half years of full-time
service in .academic rank , or else to grant casual,
virtually automatic renewal for the second three--year
term . An early serious review of a young scholar can
be traumatic and unfair, a casual or cursory review

alter a year and a half may lead to fal,se expectation.s
of the prospects of a c~ntinuing appointment.
TherefOr~ . to provide opportunity fdr major review

of new faculty during the third year of full-time
service,

the

basic

pattern

of

two

successive

two-year appointments lollowed by further term
appointment. where appropriate, of no mote than
three years is directert •" r the ranks of Instructor/
Assistant librarian ~.. ..
·stant Professor/SeniOr
Assistant Librarian. In those cases where the offer
of an additional term appointment is contingent .

upon completion of some type of worl&lt;. i.e., a book,
play , work of art, the doctorate dagree or Jts
. equivalent. an Initial one-year term appointment
1

f. "'ottuetor/Assistant Ubrart.n
0

u::r:~~ ~~~~e;ctt;~~~ i~t ;~~eu~~~ry ~~:s~

11 has virtually disappeared. ln&lt;..others, It Is still a

vttat rank .

Thts rank may be recommended for someone who
haa yet to complete the appropriate terminal degree

F-.!ty ..........et Pollctu1Repoo1etto-1Mr 7, 1878

~f(;u~ ':l~~i'i.Q ~h~~~rfc&gt;':t~ ~~;~'~:~~ ;:vl'e"y!

may lead to a second one--year term as an extension ,
or as a terminal appointment.
Thus . for the Instructor/Assistant librarian or
Assistant Professor/Senior Assistant librarian
ranks . an appotntment pattern of one year plus one
year , plus t.wo yean; , plus. t~ree years may be used.

An alternative pattern of two years, plus two years,
plus three -years would also be proper. In both
mstances evaluations- are spaced throughout In
keeping with the liming of notice of non-renewal

specltled by SUNY policy. Promotion from
Instructor! Assistant Libralian to Assistant Professor/Senior Assistant librarian may occur duri ng

that period. Because of the standards and criteria
stated herein, faculty members can normally be

expected to be reviewed to( contillulng appointment
or the Associate Professor/ A"ssoclate librarian rank

~~~r~e~~eels:~~~re ~ra~nu~ uaJs:Z:6~a~C:~~':::J
1

modify the pattern.
5. Associate Professor/Associate Llbrarlen
Candidates for the rank of Associate Professor!
Associate Librarian must hold the appropriate
doctoral degree or have equivalent scholarly or
profe-ssional attainments. In addition, such
candidates should have achievements In teaching or
librarlanship and research or creative activity
extending well beyond those Involved in that
attainment of the doctoral degree or Its equivalent.
When the candidate has no previous teaching!

~e~:XC:tig~i~~l:t. :her:,?~~~ ~~~~~nt~:~:i~na~ ~!

a term appointment or a single one--year visiting

appointment. A -very careful evaluation should be
made. of the effectiveness of the Individual as a
teacher or librarian before continuing appointment
is recommended. In all cases of pro posed
continuing appointment as an Associate~Professor/
Associate librarian , the evidence of individual

attainment must support strongly the f&gt;redlction
that the i nd ividual involved will continue a high level
of

performance

as

a

teacher/librarian

and

researcher-creator. - It must also support a
commitment to h_igh scholarly standards.· Finally,
evidence of effective participation in University
service should also be provided . Where candidates
for promotion to Associate Professor I Associate
librarian are already members of the ..University
faculty, data, evaluations , and recommendations
with regard to teaching or library service and
University service must be provided , as it must with

re~~~r~~~6~~gr:;~v~; ;~e:~~v~o ~~v~t6'out the quality
of the researCh or creative activity of such an
appointee. The candidate must demonstrate solid
pro fessional ach ievement and the potential to· meet
requ irements for full professor.

8

6. Professor/ Librarian
.
The criteria applicable to appointment at the rank
of Professor / librarian are those already indicated
as appli cable to
the
rank
of
Associate
Professor/Associate librarian with the following
additional qualifications. First , anyone who is a
cand idate for appointment at this rank should be a
clearly established , nationally visible, and highly
regarded scholar. Second, evidence of ability to
di rect the programs of advanced students should be

available for any appointment where this will be a
part of th e assigned duties, I.e. , for any regular
faculty appointment. Third, effective contributions
to the Un iversity and the community in lerms of
Univers ity service should also be a part of lhe
record . Once more, as in the case of appointments

at ali other ranks , the evidence supporting the
recommendation for an appointment at the rank of

Professor/ librarian should be forward-looking . That
is, the record should give clear and strong support
that continual first-rank performance . as a
teacher/li brarian and research-creator is to be
expected , has been shown , and will continue .
Promotion to Professor/librarian , or appointment
at that · rank , is never to be simply B reward for

services already performed . Those holding this rank
con stitute the faculty having primary responsibility
for the scholarship of the University, and their
attainments as scholars in their disciplines must be
of the first rank . Nothing less than excellence is
acceptable here.
7. Distinguished Professors

Three distinct titles - Dlstinljuished Professor,
Distinguished Service Professor, and Distinguished
Teaching Professor - are reserved fqr a highly
select group of our faculty. Only those who are
clearly outstanding should be nominated. Two of
the titles hokl special siQnificance: service to the

University and to the discipline and tear::hing at the
undergraduate level. Since these are dis11nctlve

:::;~t,!rre ~~~~~e';::~~~nt!~~~'11n~~~~:'&amp;~:~;~

Distinguished Teaching Professor, is granted
through a special process prescribed by the
Chancellor and' the Board of Trustees. The other
" Distinguished" titles follow the steps outlined In
this document, with the addition that they move on
fro111 the President to the Chancellor and the Board
_of Trustees, where the case Is reviewed by an ed hoc
committee appointed for that case.
_ It is suggested that units desiring to recommend a
faculty member for a Distinguished rank check
procedures and documentation needs with the
Executive &amp;ecretary of-the President's Board, prior
to s"."~::C~'~: ~';:f:;!~rn.
A Faculty Professor is an in-house title given to
an individual faculty member who is so broadly
based in the academic world that to limit that
·individual by designation to a Particular department
or prqgram would setiously restrict the appointment
opportunities available to the University. It Is
desirable to indicate publicly thal a particular
Individual has qualifications sufficient not only lor
laculty nembership In a given limited area, but
suitable for recognition in a number of different
departments and/or programs. The statements of
recommendation and the advisory votes should
reflect such suitable Faculty-wide acceptance.
· The1ndivldualln question must have demonstrated capacity in several of the departmental areas

�wijhln tile Faculty In question. Those occupying
suclf positions would have to be assumed to have a

Item Ill

~u~ ~~~~~arv:.~:c~\a;,~~!:jr.vt~~

The Deen'1 Letter
This letter transmits the dossier to the appropriate
Vice President and should contain the personal
recommendation and supporting reasons. It should

question - so long as- the Faculty continues to
exist as an organlzatloflal unit within the University.
A Faculty Professor cannot be imposed on an
unwilling department . A Faculty Professor can
choose not to participate actively in the on-going
operation and go.emance of a particular depart men~
wlthln the Faculty. Not necessarily having a direct
attachment to any one or more departments places
the responsibility directly on the Dean for providing
budgetary - and/or other support for these
lndiYiduals. Specific duties, privileges, etc. of a
Faculty Professor are to be decided on a
Faculty-by-Faculty basis, rather than conforming to
a common bluepront.
The title of Faculty Professor. once given , cannot
be taken BW"Y except by reorganization or voluntary
relinquishment by the incumbent. However due to
financial and/or other difficulties, the original
(non-salary) "Inducements" may be dropped .
I. Emwllue lllcademk: Renlc
No special action will be required of a carnpu&amp;-'fo(

~':,:r"s'll~np,.g~,~mw~~uhsa:;a:~t~;~'\n"';~~ra~~~~g

will be eiiOlble to add the word "Emeritus" to their
IIC8dernlc or administrative title at the time of

ntlkement.
fO. Oualltled Academic Renlc

.
Quallfled ranks are used to designate research,
cllnk:al, adjunct or visiting faculty and may ba
full-time, part-lime, OCI voluntary. The proper
descrtptlve prefix should precede the rank , I.e.,
Ctlnk:al Assistant Professor, Adjunct Instructor,
etc. Qualified titles such as Art lst-ln-Residsnce,
Vleltlng ~·· etc., may also be used where
- l a t e. The title of Vlsollng Scholar should ba
1.-1 IM _.,tntments of one semester or less.
t..cturw Ia also a qualified title IJoot is restricted
lor of tenne of .no longer than one year.
Suc:ll qiMiilted titles haVe their obvious short-term
butllhOuld also be employed for those faculty
· lllfloee primary eontrlbution. will be In one area of
academic lulflllment, I.e., teaching with no research
contribution, . - e l l wll/1 no teaching responsibilIty, IMIIYice In aieademlc eupport areas.
Lettens of appointment to tllese ranks shall
conlaln an explicit statement that the appointment
Is not one tn· academic rank as defined by the
Policies of the Board of Trustees of SUNY, and that
It does not lead toward consideration for continuing
appointment. Pattern and extent of review of such
--appointments shall ba that appropriate to the
corresponding academic rank. Appropriate advance
notice of non.:tenewal of term appointment shall be
gl.en as Indicated above. •
Such qualified titles should not _be considered
honorary In nature. Appointment to or promotion i n
qualified rank should be carrted out wlth the same
care as lor the regular a~lc ranks .

THE DOSSIER
The following peges show, section-by-section,
tile basic material to ba Included In the dossier as It
Is presented for final decision. In addlllon, items 11
through Vll conslltute a part of tile relevant material
that may be _ , by the faculty member prior to
Presidential decision, and should be held separate
from the r8f!181nlng portions of the dossier.

......

F- .
"::..~====~ Atlttli.lzlollon

I'&lt;

c:..7*'~ 'f:m8(&gt;:!~

of the doealer~ted ·
I'NalcJent, at the time
not aubject to ,..lew

~':r~o~':.~1ai~::,Sm?g:ri~~e ;t~r o~a~~t:a~~!~

advisory bodies as may be authorized by that
Faculty .
The Dean's letter should discuss the work of the
' School or Deparfment making the reoommendation ,
including its future growth '~Jld direction, anll the
place of the faculty membar in the department's
activities.
A_galn, this letter should serve to explain any
irregularities or anomalies that might exist in the
case and should amplify the letter of the
Chairperson where necessary. In pttrticular, the
Dean's letter should specifically endorse or modify
the Chairperson's assessment of teaching effectiveness and explain what standards were used as a
basis for this evaluallon.
Item IV
The Chalrperson's-Letter
This letter transmits the dossier to the Dean and
tile Faculty level review bodies, and should contain
the Chairperson's personal recommendat ion and the
quantitative vote of the Departmental review bodies.
The Chairperson's letter should Include a
thorough explanation of the work of the faculty
member/ Including the impact ol that work on the
discipline, the rallng or quality of the publications
(or galleries, shows., reviews, etc.) in which the work
appears , the past accomplishments and future
promise of the faculty member, and an analysis of
student and peer evaluations, including an analysis
of the Chairperson's yearly review . This letter should
also summarize the faculty member's service
contributions to the University, the community, and
his discipline. It should contain an analysis of
studsnt and peer evaluation of Jeachlng effectivenan
assuring thai
the categories of
lnf~k&gt;n specified In the unit's checklist are
lnclud&lt;.d, and making reference to standards of
comparison (flv~year averages or whatever seemtt
reasonable) that are to be used in all other cases at
the rank In question.
In cases of new appointments, the Chairperson's
letter should certify that an appropriate search for
minority and women candidates has 9&lt;1en
conducted .
(When an Advocate's statement is a part of the
dossier, it should follow the Chairperson's tetter.)

all

ltemY
Conditions of Employment
The letter(s) from the Chairperson to the faculty
member outlini ng the duties to ba performed and
the expectations of the Department should •l&gt;e
included .
Item VI
Unsolicited Material
When materials that have not been solicited by
those responsible for preparing the dossier are

r:~~~~t~~~tbe~ua~hd ~~~~~~~~~llu":e::~e~y

the

item VII

The Ourrk;ulum Vitae
The curriculum vitae, as · the academic and
professional history of the faculty member, Is an
· extremely Important part of the dossier. It should be
clearly presented and 1le up to dale 'in every way,
including the following tninimal Information:
(a) full name and. date of birth; (Gratuitious

~o:,at~".:'m~"';,'l'n~y,d:~. •;:;mg:,te~ffirl'a~~~:
religious persuasion and the like. should be
explicitly prohibited .)
·
(bl employment history, Including name of
employing institutions, titles held, and incl'uslve
dates of employment;
(c) profeeslonal and academic honors;
(dj memberships and offices held;
(e uni¥8ralty service;
(f) other .-vice (CQmmunlty, etc.);
(g) bibliography, separated by books, monographs, articles, reviews, films, audio and video
tapes, talks, preaentatlons, exhibits or performances, using full bibliographic style showlng all
authora (with principal and secondary authors
ciMrfy Indicated) and inclusive page numbers.
Articles should be further subdivided as· follows: (1j
refereed journals, (2) non-refereed journals, (3
conference proceedings, (4) contributions to books.

~~u'Jf"~e·~~~ ,~~ars~~cl:~d i~x~/=
magazines and other '!'ritlngs not Intended as
scholarly contributions .

llemVIH '
Teaching &amp;aluatlon
The results of teachln~ evaluations carried out
8

?nuc1~~""f~ J.'::"do"b\:.u ~re=~~~ a ~~~~

summary or tabular form, with a summary and
analysis as part of the Chairperson 's letter. Raw
dale should not be Included but should be available

~ /~!r".!::,'c.,~v="::'~l~sal:'l~o~ f~!"~~:':

school as a whole, must be presented as a basis for
understanding and evaluating the data in the

doss..

·

In lieldltlon to the results' from some type of
stendardlzed measurement Instrument, and data
· dealing wllh varloua types of student advfoement,
sUCh Items as left8111 from former 'tudents, nsports
I

of student and /or faculty evaluation committees,
and the placement ·and career record of former
·students. shOuld be included. A summary of
teaching responsibilities . (courses, enrollments,
tutorials, thesis, and dissertation guidance) should

~ci~~~~~{'l~~~~~~i~~~,~~~s J~[at~~~~~~ f~~
broken down by years.

Item IX
Letters from Outside E•aluators
A minimum of four letters, solicited by the
Chairperson or a designee -&lt;(never by the faculty
membar) , should be a part, of i'he dossier. The
evaluators should ba distinguished scholars, or
professional practitioners who hold a rank equal to
or above that being proposed and should be well
placed in the field. Letters from former teachers, .
former colleagues, friends, co-authors, coinvestigators and others having personal relations
witt&gt; the candidate should be avoided when
possible. When such letters are Included the
Chairperson should explain why prima facie
disinterested evaluators were no! available or why
the prima facie Interested evaluators can be
assumed to be in fact disinterested. The evaluator
should ba requested to state his relationships with
the candidate. Naturally, the higher the rank beloig
recommended, tM more outstanding should be the
writers of the evaluation letters.
Letters from evaluators suggested by the
candidate may De included if they are not personally
close or have not worked tOgether . _in a
professor-student relationship. Such letters would
nor replace those solicited from evaluators selected
by the Chairperson . II may well har.pen that a

~d;~~trh':.'at~~i~~~~ t::a~~~r.'¥1: ~e~~"o:le::J

selecting evaluators should be stated in this
section.
Evaluation rather than recommendation should be
1

~~~~~:-oflJ't! f~~~'!;t~:m~ ~u=';"~~-~

publications (works or performances) an,d on the
potential for future growth and continued
contribution. A specific comparison of the faculty
member with others in the same field , and at the
same stage in their career should t;e asked for.
Evaluators should be requested
to
avoid
judgements, recommendations, and comparisons
which are not backed liP by reasons understandable
to. persons who are acqulllnted with the field In
question but who may not have spaciallzed
knowledge of the particular area of research In
question . Bare opinions are n·ot useful. Letters
which explain in lay terms just what the candidate
has accomplished, and why it is important In the
field, are particularly useful.
All letters solicited should be ~ ncluded in the
dossier, as should a notation of telephone calls to
the outside evaluators. When a request for a letter Is
refused or Ignored , a notation to that effect should
appear. To aid the reviewers, this section~ of he ;J

~~~:i~~ s~~~:~~r~~.ud:s~:~,?~hib~~~~~~~ap~~~~~ai6~~
s~holarly reputation and staling any special reason
for selection . The letter from the Chairperson
seeking these letters of evaluation should be
included as a spec::ial part of this section. This letter
should not reveaf in any way whether the candidate
has or lacks support by the Chairperson , by the
department, or by any other officer or unit of the
.
University.
The letters should, where appropriate, Indicate
whether promotion at the evaluator's Institution
should be probable.

_ Item X
Letters From IMide E¥llk!atora

At least two lettws should be from colleagues et.
the faculty member, pnsfera~ly In the samedepartment, who can commen1 on the faculty
member's teachlng/1Jbrarianshlp capabilities, .extent and quality .of ~ or performance, ability
to work with grad...ta lludent-. willingness and ,
skill In working with con..-. on commltt-.
etc.
F&lt;&gt;&lt; external candidates {0( initial appointment
the'se letters should riame from ootleflg... In the
department '4i!!'ere the candidate has ,_,tly
been employed.-A SVJIOPSIS of the report o f a local
search committee may be substituted l o r local
·
Inside letters.
The letter from the Chairperson SMklng t h letters of evalualion should be Included as a part of
this section.
'

Scheduled DudUnee
In order to .help assure a more orderly opportunity
for cases to be considered at each of the nec:esa.y
lj1Vels of review, tile following deadline dates
being established. Tllese dates refer to~pt of tile
full ddcumentatlon In tile Office of tile President.
Vice Preslderts, Directors, Deans,' and Chairpersons will have to establish their own schedules
of procedure.

n

January 1 All cases recommending promotion to the
.
rank of Professor/librarian (Including
qualified titles of Professor/Librarian)
and Distinguished Professor.
April1

All those cases reCommending continuing
appointment at any rank, or promotion to
Associate Professor/ Associate Librarian.

Obviously, these are meant to be dftadl/ne dates;
the earlier the cases come forward, the better.
·clogging the schedule toward the ' end of the
semester causea delay In full consideration of
critical casea~nvolvtng continuing appointment and
in processlr.g new appointments .

·

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>. STATE UNIVER~ITY
AT BUFFAlO

NOV30, 1978
.VOL.10 • N0.12

E~;~ergy

center ·

It's still in the future, but FEAS
has named a.panet-to study it fully;
systems engineering center is clo~r to reality

,'n'fir. Demetrlos Lalnlotls, professor of
electrical engineering, has agreed to
serve as director of the systems unit,
Lee reported.
This center, t.:ee said , "Is Intended to
encourage collaboration -of faculty
members In systems engineering, and
to facilitate the Interaction between
systems and non-systems «tented
faculty."
Eventually, Lee speculated, It Is
anticipated that activities in systems

~c~~nJ:'r~n~u~~co~r"?:ut\~ fr~~ ~~

engineering units.
"The conectlve 'Strength of systems.

=~~"'!f~H re~earc;::~ a ;,r~w.;;; ~

attracting external research support."

The ...-gy center

en~r~Pn

l':~~ t~~fl'~

tc;...\':.
the presenY time, FEAS has "excellent

=:,rgn~:.' ~~r':"g~~~~~::-=

approximately 30 undefgreduate courses and 50111*1.-f.,_, oourM&amp; being

~~~~h~n:.ex::;att

Ia h the Unlvw81t,y........., modellno t h e - - p!l&gt;7 the chlllrman
of the Counal ,_.,alng a otudent who'd lllte to -'&lt;1 the Orand Wlzanh&gt;f

SA7--12.

oouatad. These grants amount to a

v-fy expenditure !If over one million

dollars, the d8an Indicated. Some of the
maJor reaearch efforts Include coal
technology, aolar energy, nuclear

=

safety, direct energy con..,.lon.
electrical power tllltlamlaalon, and
delivery ayaterna~ fualon, tl8fl!C

Another st~p toward development of
a formal Center of Energy Engln-lng
within the Faculty of Engl~lng 1111d
Applied Sciences has been taken with
establishment of a faculty edvlaory
committee "to consider all aspects of
the effort," Oean George Lee has
announced .
More Imminently, Lee said, FEAS
plans to establish a Center for Systems
Engineering, to be primarily basad In
the Department of Electrlca Engln--

~n~y_:n=t~l

~.':~. for a mono org~~nlzed effort,"

~~t~~:..,~m~:m"~f·~-~~

he
stronger position to -'tract external
research support, as W.ll u provide a

~~cr:~grns~nS:~':J~~!'V:rwi:C:

·

·

~';,' p~~~ce re~:l:l:,/~t!:J~Y "~ ha

national stu~ as on manpower dema':l
that there Is a critical naad for englneera
to wort&lt; In the energy field." the deu
said. This need will continua ta
lncr.eaae In the foreseeable future.
Labs coming on Una
De'velopment of an Energy EngliiMrln.g Center Ia timely, Lee suggested.
because of the current construction of
two rMW engineering laboratories.
These two new labs, he aald, were
originally conceiYed with the Intention
to mainly provide experimental facilities

~~~tt.:~~~~-;::·~&amp;.o~d

Dean Lee feels an EnefliY ~riglnMrlng
Center can provide "much energy-related
technological uatatance to Industry In

~~~~ Ia ~e:.1C:C:. ~~~~=

~~~~?~~ ~~ f~n~r·~
Engl .....ng

,.=.g lncluatr:y

t~

:.7..,rf',_. ~u:;
loduatry _ . , odnlltbute to
economic Qrowth In the area." lndaad,
Lee apecuwacr, "thla ~Eng!,__

~~~T ~n:.;.rlale: ~-

the Niagara Frontier,"

As election nears:
ensure that all feasible alternatives have
been ·pursued before retrenchment

By Joyce lluc:hnowakJ
Aeportor&amp;off

occurs.

For nearly two hours Tuesday,
Cennolly emphasized that AAUP
Professors Thomas Connolly, William
holds that tenure.d faculty cannot be
Allen and Thomas Berry talked unions,
terminated in favor of retaining faculty
not books.
without tenur6 except In "extraordinary
The open forum, held In O'Brian
circumstances where a serious distorHall's Moot Court, was daslgned to
tion of the academic program would
explcn the pros and cons of bargaining
otherwise result."
agent alternatl- before December 4,
Moreover, AAUP alao stipulates, sald when faculty and profeaalonal staff
Connolly, "'\hat no program or depart- throughout SUNY will begin casting
ment can be dlscontlnuacJ If "It Is not
ballots f'l a bargalnlog agent election . .
mandated by ftnanclal exigency."
Options open to voters Include:
Shifting enrollment patterns, according
.-Jnlnll the United UniYeralty Profesto AAUP principles, should therefore
atonslUIJP), an affiliate of AFl-Cto: as.
have no bearing on continuance since
lhefr bllrllalnfng &amp;g"!)t ; toaalng It out In
law&lt; of the N- Yorl&lt; Educators
a
Aeaoclatlon (NYEA), an NEA affiliate
· an appropriate committee, must reflect
whlclo has teamed up with the American
" long range judgments that the
Aaeoclatlon of University Professors
educational mission of the University as
(MUP), or electing "no agent" at all.
a whole will be enhanced by the
·
discontinuance." ·
MUP/NEA
Con no! ly, who chairs the AAU P
Connolly contended that AAUP's
Committee on Academic Tenure and
position on sanctioning faculty (other
Freedom, waa first to address the
than dismissal) for "sufficiently gnwe
reasons" Is that the edmlnlstratlon can
sparse but Inquisitive audience aUer
Professor Wade Newhouse of U/B Law
lnstjtute proceedings to Impose disciSchool gave a rundown on the lagal
plinary action, but must follow
atructure and history of unlon!Utlon in
procedures outlined by AAUP which
SUNY.
Connolly drew attention to Article 35
of the ,.-eaent UUP contrect which
Connolly eschewed notl0f1S that NEA
provides lor retnenchmant due to
will dump AAUP after the election. He
fln8nc:lal olgency. He note.d that MUP
pointed out that MUPINEA contrects
only allows lor retrenchment when and
.-. now In effect at ltla Unlweralty of
If an "Imminent ffnanclal crisis exists
Hawaii, Kent St-'e and Northern Iowa
which tlll'eatena the....aurviYal of the
and :Joint cam~lgn Is currently being
lft.ututlon as a whole and cannot be
altewlatad by lass draatlc means."
are mutually pledged to eech other."
He aleo noted th_. the UUP contrect
atlpul- that declalona ~ rMult
A al8ff IIMIIIber
hOm financial exJaency ... the
In the ' - minutes left to NEA
..aponalblllty of the Cllaticallor or hla
advocates, Ray Volpe of Unl-alty
c~M~gnee. after "I&gt;Qproprtala" conauJta.
Computing Services, told the audlenat
tlon. MUP, ortthe other hand. calla for
that he personally bel'- the
MUP/NEA alliance beat repruents the
interests of the professional stall. He
exlata or-Is Imminent •. and to
aald his decision stems from that

=is:'o~~:;,ede:gc:~:~n~~~t !~~e C:

~.,:: ~~~~~"s':.f~~·~=~~t~::.era

!'r~ nairon~~feofS:ltP~n~~

:.:::r~~t~
.....-v

==

~? =~

-

.. .......... - ..- . ........

~
agent'a "support of coUaglallty and
waiting for a daclalon to be m8l{a their enclor.rnent of t.-.dltlonal govthen complaining, which Volpa clalma ·
emr.:..="::n-=.:!~ fiii)Uity and Ia ~~:,:::s~:.rc:~~
"":.e
that he "strongly
the onset In the declalonmaking process.
dlaagrees' with UUP PrMident sam
w..._.,ull who relena to collaglallty as a
" myth." In Mdltlon, he aald na cennot
Allan lew UUP
support UUPa "t.-unlonlat philoAllen, praaldent...tact of the Buffalo
soohv" of corl*tant confrontallon.
Center chapter of UUP, told the
"Adversary proceduree'," aald Volpe,
audience thai Ill thla time of- I I - '
should coma only atter·diacuaalon and
crlala, when there 11 a glut of
negotiation fall.
•
unemployed PhD's, "remote declalonVolpe also quad that UUP feels that
making and a tangle of r.gulatlona" that
decisions regarding permanent appointgovern UniYWlllty ectiYitlea. he doaa not
Tents and Job claaalf~tlon .-.
feel that ~no
option ,'• 1-lble.
management prerog~tl¥118." lnatH!lo! ••••••••••• ·••W. """"""J9Q41!1.:-"W.~

ern~lzad

,,

·' i!-=:::

J:n

;"'enn-

-

�"-'bor:SO,tll'l

LoveCclnal
Ebert's on-site studies .result in
call for changes in abatement plan;
Sociology's Levine looks at human impact
By Linde Grecii-Kobaa
NewslllnouStaff .

Chartes H.V. Ebert of the Depart·
ment of Geography, who has been
conducting on-site Investigations of the
Love Canal, has recommended several
revisions and.addltlons to the Pollution
Abatement Plan now underway there.
Ebart's primary concerns are the
1

~r:i :t~:icth!..~~ra,~.U:~t~~~~

for effective monitoring of swales that
may allow water containing toxic
wastes to migrate faster and farther
from the Canal proper to outlying areas.
After Hool&lt;er Phemlcal Company
stopped dumping polspnous chemicals
into the Canal In the early 1950s, the

Former student promotes
international exchange
When most fonslgn vtaltora come .to
the U.S. they buay themae1Y88 wltlt~ng end 8hopplng. Not sa with
Henry Mori~Mreth .
Thta hla fifth time bact&lt; In this
country, end during hla alx-w- stay,
he zoomed .round VNetem New York
epMklng to aomee&amp; different groups of
people, nanglng from junior high
aclloolera to the kiWMia.
The ree.on? Morci8nreth was doing
aome P8 for hla "Butfalo-Oortmund,
Gar!Nny, elatar dty exchange program progrwn which he first envisioned
11ft re-a -ao while doing graduate
wort&lt; In U/8'1 MllniQ8fR8IIt School and
taechlng Gen!llln as a graduate

. ualatant.

'

Since then, with a llt11e

K8ren Bredlcic:ho

o-

heir.

from
peop , like
hla exchan~

!~faa educators and media

~~. ~~ave =-~pat~1n
alstar city trwel venture.

the

Befons returning to his nstlve
Dortmund last - . Morgenrsth
Mayor Griffin with a
B&lt;nPbOOk which recounted the history
of the program.
Among the groups and Individuals
who have t.-led to Dortmund are the
Weetem New York Goapel Slngen~, the
chief of the Tuae.rore Indians and
WGR'a -ldent llhlto.ophar/dlse jockey, 8lwle. M'orv-att~ has also
.-..nged for deef and minOrity students
to J*tlolpete In the program, and
pioUdly ennounced that he Ia now
~ted

laying the groundwork for exchanges
betw8en chllrches In the slater cities.

Mot1181111ih, who was elected presldentoftlie.Gennan-Amerlcan Society In
Dortmund, recently helped establish a
-similar organization In Buffalo. Ita
purpose Ta to plan educational
programs lor those Interested In
teaming .more about German culture
and to provide lnfonnstlon about the
country's economic and political
sltustlon.
"It Is Important lor people lo know
more about Germany than beer steins
and Octobetfests ,' he explained.
Ukewlse, Morganrath feels It's Just as
essential that Germans get a more
balanced view about the American way
of life and our political system . In his
opinion , ttl!~ aell-fi!IQ8Hatlon often
found In o~r papers. gives Europeans a
negative Impression of the country. "A
one-aided orientation creates misunderstanding ," he noted.
The new German Society of Buffalo
will -be meeting at the lntemattonal
Institute on Delaware Ave. Morganrath
hopas that It will be a convenient place
where Americans who have traveled to
Germany can go to exchange Ideas
about their experiences abroad.
Morganrath's knack for organizing
successful exchange programs has
landed him a posltfon In lnttimatlonat
adult education In Germany, which he
will start In February. He couldn't be
happier about It because his unusual
avocation has now turned Into a lifetime

career.

~~~e'~e!'~\e t~asco~r~ ~~~h .:as~~"/

Construction of a school on the dump
site and homes along both sides broke
up the cap.
.
Today, the Love Canalis bordered by
homes and Intersected at two points by
streets, so that It Is cut Into three
sections. Work has begun on the
southernmost section, where a new
clay cover has been laid and drainage
pipes are being place In ditches being
dug along both sides In whst used to be
backyards and gandens.
Preuure from lhe.cley
Ebert Is concerned that the pressure
exerted by the clay cover on the soli
beneath may force liquids containing
toxic materials out of the Canal more
quickly than they would leach otherwise. He . strongly recommends that,
before the clay cover Is placed on the
remaining two sections, the main
drainage plpas be Installed so that the
system's ability to contain leaching
wastes can ~oved . The weight of

~~~Yn~kuoni~h'::.,~~~ on the
Ebert Peels that the model used to
davelop the abatement plan was too
simple and that the behavior of the clay
cap-both the original and the new-is
~.:'gh~~mpllcated than Is generally
More attention should be given to the
extent to which the clay, deposited In
masses of multi-sized clods, can be
compacted to elim inate air spaces
through which both air and water can
pass, Ebert says.
Could extend the run-off
The natural settling of the clay must
be anticipated , as. well_ as possible
erosion along the sides of the clay cap
wh ich may extend tile runoff beyond the
location qf the main drainage plpas
N&gt;other consideration Ebert noies
Is the_ possibility that the Infiltration
holes of the drainage pipes rna
become clogged by the conalderabl~
• amount of clay In the Canal's subsoil
He advocates continual monitoring ai
easlly-opaned control points
Ebert studied a 1938 aerial photograph of the Canal site,' currenl Infrared
photos and data collected In on:slte
In-ligations, and Interviewed area
of
r&amp;llldenta, to pinpoint Jhs locatlo
· two major swales that had 1111
IMien
' reported to cut across the canal site
·
Swatea Important
"The swalea are of particular
significance to the Canal problem
because they could 'potentially represent narrow areaS In which' toxic
material could migrate both faster and
further from the Canal than In adJoining
anses," Ebert wrote In his report
The location and extent of the &amp;wales
and filled-In streams has been a point of
contro-sy bet-n Canal residents
and official lnvesttg11tors. Residents
feet officials have all but lgnortid the
possibility of cliemlcal migration
beyond the first two rings of homes
around the canst, which have been
evacuated-.
Ebert feels that the &amp;wales "could be
· critical in the extent of diffusion of toxic
materlals from the Love Canal." He
urges that test wells be drilled across
suspected swale areas to. pinpoint their
exac1 '"?'Ions, that the natum of the
ftll whoch has COVered them be
e!C81111.nad and thaLtha . aoU . and.contaoned In them be examined for the
-ible presence of toxic mel'!&lt;iala
If toxic ac:c;umutau011 , 818 found,

Ebert recommends that drainage pipes
connected to the main drainage system
should be Installed. He also recommends study to see If the swales
Intersect utility l:lltches, which would
~~:ri:~~n further diffusion of toxic
Potenllel for trouble at the northern end
Ebert's other major concern Is that
fluids !rom the Canal area can find their
way mto storm sewers and other
potential drainage ways at the northern
end of the Canal. He recommends
continued monitoring, since · heavy
preclrltation before all sections of the
Cana are cap_P.ed and drained could
possibly force fluids containing toxic
materials Into the storm sewers and
then, t9 )he Niagara Rlv~
''
Ebert considers the Love Canal
J situation "one of the worst In the
country, a mixture of callousness and
;;m&gt;l:~~=i~.whlch, unfortunately,
The Environmental Projection Agency
last week estimated that there may be
32,254 " potentially dangerous" toxic
waste disposal sites In the country
with 638 possibly posing a " slgnllicani
Imminent hazard to public health." New
York State contains 399 of those sites.
Related soclologlclll - a .
In related research, Adeline Levine In
the Department of Sociology Is
conducting a two-semester field research seminar on the human Impact of
the Love Canal dlseater. Five of her
graduate students are conducting
detailed Interviews with Canal residents
or former residents.
" The human Impact Is Important "
Levine says. "There Is lncredlbie
ologlcal and social lruf)IICt. What
s doing to family ljfe? How do
affected feel about their elected
officials? How hss this changed them?"
, Levine feels the Love Canal disaster
IS unique among environmental disasters since It affects such a great number
of people, comfortably situated In
small-city life, who had absolutely no
:?~=b. they were slt11ng on a

~

Initial results of her survey will be
discussed by Levine at the December 10

~'l:'~i~s~f the. Organization of Women

Faculty booked
for TV shows
Three U/B faculty members: Diane
/ Christian, Leslie Fiedler, and. Bruce
Jackson, all members of the English
Department, will dlecuu the hero In
American literature, fllma and television
on Satunday, December 8, at -4-5:30
p.m. on Channel17.
The PBS program, "You're Not a Hero
111 You're Sung," was p!Oduced from
the ~en confarenee, Thfl Am¥lc.n
Hero. Mytha end lied/a, held at the Sun
Valley Centw lor Aria and Hui!Wllties
and aherponaorecl by Levi-St- and Co.
01
l*tleipanta In 11M conference
and film Include Julian Bond, Mar)oe
Gortnar, Billy Ktdd, - Wllll11111 - M.
Kunatlw, Tom {"Billy Jack") L8ughlln,
Timothy~. Peo)ny .....,.., ("Lilwm
&amp; Shirley"), kate Mlllat1, Rob Reiner,
Lindsay ("Bionic Woman") WIIQner and
ilo l;!ven~n (Buford Pu- In "WWIIklr.;~
Tall ).
-·
Aedler /lot88 that Svenaon "was the
moat fascinating ch8rectar to m11.
because he's an ex-mercenary aoldl•
who ended up playing thaae rol88 and
has got himself all mixed up In his own
1\&amp;ad, be-.. hla fictional roles and
hi,, a,ctual life. •
,
It a seldom, · Fielder adds, ,hat
show buslneu and academic people
really talk to each other."
Dr, H. Roy Kaplan , associate
prolesaor of sociology, will discuss
how winning the lottery changed
J::P 188' life-styles, and relations with
1 friends, and co-workers Wedarnlly,
~y81, December 6, at 10 a.'m . on
~••nn
7'a A.M. Buffalo.
Kaplan- Ia author of f.J&gt;Nery Wlnnen.How They Won and "'How Winning
~by/IQHed Their LJ..,, recently publlsh81per -aod Row.

�A record
October's $10 million in grant_proposals
was the highest monthly totar ever;
grants received are up by 20 per cent
$10 million worth of research
proposals-a U/B record-were sent to

gro·~~~r ~po.fo':~ d'g~noFWi'P~~~~~

acting vice president for research,
reponed this week.
"One hundred twenty-five proposals
totaling $10,706,343 were submitted to
outside agencies," Fitzpatrick said,
"with an additional 71- appllcatlons for
summer fellowships and grants-In-aid
submitted to the Research Foundation's University Awards Committee."
October also saw receipt• of 43
awards/contracts totaling $2,&gt;469,557.
From July 1 to October 30, the first
on&amp;-thlrd of the research report year,
182 awards totaling $11,573,234 have
been received . ThiJS represents a major,
21 per cent Increase over the same lime
last year, Fitzpatrick said .
·
Asked If recent administrative pressures on faculty to get more outside
funding to augment shrinking State
revenues had anyth lng to do with the
surge In grant .proposals, Fitzpatrick
was hesitant to say.
A variety .of factors may have come
Into play, he suggested: deadlines for
various types of research proposals; the
fact that some _federal programs ran out

That didn't hurt'
" It won't hurt" bit," oeys nurM BN McGaw to U/8 offenalva Jackie Craig
Cirbua. Clrbua waa ona of aavaralrqembara of tha Buffalo Bulla football team
who ....nttv donated blood pletal- for leukemia patienta at Roawell Pork
Mamomol lnatltuta. Mrs. McGaw Ia employed ln. RPMI'a Plaaamapheraaia
Center. Leukemia patients, whoaa drug therapy often auppraaaea platelet
producdon In their bone marrow. may require trllnafu.lone of heatthy
plat-.

~er"! hn~~ ~~~r J:~~~~~:pl:'t~~l~
0

and the possibility that several ql the
proposals may have been lor t~e same
- money.
"
Yet, It Is clear, the research
administrator acknowledged, that faculty Interest In research and In drafting
-

g:;or~e~:e'~~ :'~te)::!'.nRoh~as~

total amount of outside funding
recelvad.
Is there any rule of thumb lor
estimating how much of October:• $10
million in funding requests will likely be
translated Into actual dol@ra lor
research?
- ·No, said Fitzpatrick. There Ia no pat
formula which says If you request X
millions, you can exp8ct to receive Y
millions In return.
Nonetheless, he Indicated, since
Jesearch grants for the first third of the
report year are 21 per cent ahead of
19n, It Is not unreasonable to assume

~~~~"[1~,u~e) :~~ b~ y~a ~J~=
1

1

may find ourselves with an Increase of
20 per cent or more over last year's total
of $22-plus million.
The outlook Is optimistic, he said.

Test Tube babies said not
likely to get federal OK
Because of the controversy surround-

Ing In vitro fenlllzatlon and transfer (the
S&lt;H:ailad '1est tube" method of human
reproducti on) , bloethlclst Andre E. ·

~~~~~s ~~~t:llith~:o~~s r;:,~;,~
~~c.,S?~~n.,"~ .)~1

fundl~g

for

~~~~r~fr~~c!":!,~~=~ ~~r,..g~rr~;
f~ft':7Pon c~=cebu~f w1\r n~!~

Brew Bulla: (from laftl Daw Thorn. dafanelw and:· and Frank Prfca. w1da
racalwr, donate blood~ for R - 1 Park Mamoriollnatltutaleukemla
patients as offanahla canter Joa MIU&lt;on walto hla tum.

JQBS

F-liCK.-·-

__

-

Llbr1olea 1•1. EOC. " ' - "·

neae- Olflce. CrU!·Frao, -

School· Urology.

-. ~. -.-.gy. -

· 1'111rmocy, ~Free (pert·llme). Can·
""'· oupiclling (pert·llmel. NurU&gt;Q. Political
Science.
ctoo1l sew. ~ . UniYenoity l.lbnolea.

,_,__

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Fila ctoo111MW, Dlognoatic SaMc:aa--f'EM,

-Aeccnla
c--~~~-...-­
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"""""""' ctoo11 sew. Cem!&gt;ua Mal 121.
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couniO (6). Poyrcll ,.,. Accounting otfioo. Accounti ~. CrU!·Frao. Medicol BualilaM Offlco. ~ Ulrw*, o-.•a 01-

lice--Ma ond t . - .

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ctoo111CK, - - Aooordl

-- Clafll.,..._..
-ICM.
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Qoot(l'8yniiii81H, Poyrol.

ICH, PlJrchooOig.
Chomlory, ~BudgatOfflco.
.
Dall _ , Oparotor 10-7,
_,..,.._ICM,~

"':.!:!l:=....v-~.
... -

c:_.- a.-- IG-14, Unl-

Compullng- (2_. p.111. to 12:30
..... -.ond12 30a.m. - ea.m. aHIII
c_..
IG-10, 1Jni-

a.--

-~-·-p.m. to12 : 30

..,.,-.c~oy-Fitdoy , _.-y;

12a.m. to8:30

sl't11n:~~1llle:~~~~~~VoiY6S

the
t~...Wng ?f zygote~; , , _

SEASONAL (NSJ

. School l!u8kiess
Olfioo
(1 /-1/78 ·-. 10/31/781.
~
(8/1/78
5131/79).Cierll 604, ~ Clr1lc (Dentistry).

..

PROFESSIOHAI. STAFF
A.diNMkane Afllatant PR-1 , Oean'a Office/
Oont!Ay, B-8039.
to DireCtor Pfl-1, Atfnnattve Action/
HRO ..B-8000.

,

the
.

The U/B Student Health Service's
dental services program has reopenad,

·-Ia

Expandecf Auxiliary Management) Pr~
gram at the School of Dentistry.
Dental services were not avsllable at

F-81
- .... .. -

F-8143.

· -

P -, -

SCiences.
SCiences,

-~~~-·~Psychology.

F-81•2.
- .. 1 .
f0-81

- · Neurology Doplwlment,

..... ~n, Urology [)opPnoll1,

-

Far-__

F-8139.

.

---~~­
"
'l..llrwy . - l..lnfy)~
Llnrloa,
F-8137

IJIWMIY.---,.,_,,
......,.,_

...

""""'"'*'o

foaMy

~- .... ond~-

- - - · - · - .... 01&gt;:

~~i:~'lfe"!~~~~~~t~~~~ t~
0

ap~~~~;,...

relayed that the K«tnedy
Institute views Ita JOie as a helpmate to
the scientific community alnce It
Informs them how to 8\IOid unwwranted
criUclam while conducting .--ch.
Hellegera, Who Ia a Cltlhollc, said he
has more affinity for- the "Proteatant
ethic" when It comes to viewing ~hi'!
fehiS'. Catho(lca n prlm«&lt;tY. concemed
wtifi "the "life ofl IIMi foitua" wllle
PTo1estant theologians to look at
the fetus In terms of how It "affects
InterrelatiOnships." •

Student dental service is
back in business-temporarily

......_nt

FACUlTY

=r.t~h= =a~=~~~

research should nliver be conducted
that poses any danger to human
subjects.
.
The role of the bloethlclst, said
Hellegers, Ia to discover what val.wlllbe affected by current or propoeed
ruearch. Bloethlcloto should also worl&lt;
to "protect aclenlloto" from those Who
"attack a method" rather th., "how It Ia

have voiced compiJI!nts nalnsf th[s
method because of the destruction. of

!Jo1.'

An ethical controversy also surrounds the use of sul!-humans as
research s.ubJects. Some believe the!

~f' ~sdr~do~~~~~~~~ h and
Rose ~ennedy Institute of ~uman
Reproduction and Bloethlcs at Georg&amp;town University, spoke last week at fhe
Amherst and Main Street campuses.
m~·s"C"n\'~CeC.:t:. sponsored by
According to Heliegera, an obst&amp;triclanijynecologlst, controversy surrounds the varloua approaches to
fertilization of eggs outside the womb.
Some critics preler an approach where

~h~groo~~t~~~1 ~~~!~~g~h!~~oft~:.

Eng~M«~ng (pert·llmeJ.
Aid
(pert·-). Urilvonity ' Cour-.g ·

1

~~"; !f'Jo~~~.:: =:., ln~'!"r ~~~ei?.

Othera take the opposite stance.
_ Heliegera personally opposea .,y·
controls on, freedom of inquiry which are
' based on the lear that the acquired

will catch."
OtHers feel a more pragmatic and less
traumatic method la · fertlllzlng-~umbet'.

TJI&gt;Iot sew, -

C&lt;edit·Free (pert-). Olfioo of

.and means question," said Hellegers.

impose a moratorium on the clinical
transfer of zygotes (fertilized cells) to
women until It Is proven that the In vitro

~y~ll.!~ ~~ftr~ f~~~htt:g:;'~·~

COIII'ETTTIYE CMI. SEJMCE

The various appcoacl,es to lertlilza-

~~un.;.~S:~~~ ~~ ~;~~~~ca~ c!?~~~;

~~:t!!emgrrar~~· t~~'1l4!?~~~~

~~~~/ ~~~~:/ltfu=~er~~~ lfr~

Luther Muaoelmen, director of the
Health Service.
·
Dr. Nelson Blackmore, p~
director for TEAM, says a IIIIIITl
compoaad of a dentist, senior dental
student lllld hvatenlot we now atafflng
the dental cliniC at Michael on Monday,
Tueeday .,d Thlnday momlnga .nd
Thu..-y aftemoona. 9eMcaa provided
Include oral llealth lnatructlon, oral
exams lllld routine dental claMing. No
dental treat-! .. ~1 but
-gency CUM we altt.r '*Died or

referJ'CNI.

According to Blackmo111, patlenta
ahould cellll31~1 for appolntmenta.
I

He notes the schedule ls' alf'118C1y fHiild
through Dec. 5. He also notae TEAM Ia

~t;Y,., to~vl~t~lhem:;t~
provisions can be made.
The TEAM Program Is funded throuf

~~~n~ ovran..:..ltf~Ed.=t(~ A

Welfare lllld Ia designed to tnoln -.lor
dental students In how to use good
maMgament technlqUM. •

Cooper named
Dr. Chartell R. Cooper, _ . . . .
proleNor of education, I'IM been
appointed to aone-~twm • dlrwctor
of thl U/B ~Awning Cenw.
TN ~lng
In Baldy Hall,
....... atuelanta who need help w1t1t
bMic writing, atudy .nd ~loa
aldlla.
.

eanw,

�.......

" - 3 0, 1871

'Love' poem
paints an
ugly picture

YEA! EA

For: AA

Large faculty group endorses election.challenger;
other letters condemn UU~'s Article 35;
Prof. Stern says historian Allen could learn from history
I
as

be s mall ballot election
December 4; 1978, to
" ' - a ~nlng . . - - for SUNY f.:ulty and professional 81aff
.....,..._
NY~,Z.our colleegues to support

may, In his judgment, be
appropriate." He or his designee may
decide that no consultation at all Is
appropriate.
•
Your union agr- to this article
without the sl/~htest effort to Include
:;)'~.:'J~tlon w h faculty or professlon-

•=:,et~lr~'r..=''~~ '":

:.o"f:.!."',=.
~~~~~;~~
under the retrenchment article? We

EdiiDr:

n.. will

~ICII'Il

8111Natlon wlttl both the AAUP and WEA .
Thla Aaoclatlon will be committed to
the following positions:

~~~

of professional
•AAUP ReciiJoolc standards of ac:ademlc "-lorn, tenure, due process,
l*flciDodlon In gowmance
of'rotectlon against arbitrary retr.1chment
·~lzed or tier bargaining
•No -oency shop until 50 per cent of
el~~::'r-J: have joined
We bel .... that the IISSOCiatlon of
AAUP and NYEA/NEA holds out the
~ of Improved wort&lt;lng condltlona and higher profeaalonal standllrda for all SUNY faculty and staff.
_.......,.. llaellng, Psychology
Ed Duryea, Education
Wlllein Ore!-, Law
"-Y Volpe, Computer
Coheft,Paychology
Tom ConnoiiJ, English
lllllnJ " - · ecOnomics
Bens.ncters Biochemistry
lllarite Relc:Htn, Medicine
Ed Slr8lnch8m" Music
.latin c:orcor.n, PhilOsophy
JaiOingman Biochemistry
~ smiii.iO.'i Classics
~ Hoclllleld, English
llllcluill........, Education
Jallnllbell Mathematics
IWold lnid1e Anatom
~ Cllpplello Health Educatlo~
Chemistry
e.tw.d ~. Psychology
Bab ....,I, Education
Don R-le. Physiology
,_De Loecl1 Psychology
FloW~~ 0..:. Medicine
Robert Springer, Engl..-lng Science
0... IMIIII Geography
.wltlltiiMni, Educallon
Clil......., Medicine

n

.._ ui.burv.

llrWIRIIIIIIonl.

~~

0:.~=ry
.J

Nlc:ll Gocld.- IO.at
Fr8nt ......... Physics
" - !nla, Statlatlca

..., eo-

Mualc

SerM!IUf Aulnld PaYct.•..~
w.-- tte.fth Edua -u 1

~·r•
ucation
....... ' - " • Statlata
~ 210 eJar- wwe lnadvwtenttr GDitlld by 1M _..,.,. Wl*l tills

*"' WM ~-

shall follow the same
answering this questlon :

order

lh

.v.~ti~~.:~!~~:~r f:~~r~~s~~

which threatens the survival of the
Institution es a whole and which cannot
be alleYialed by less drastic means
lemphaals added)." Furthermore, the
financial exigency must be demonstrablybona fide, and , " Asaflrststep, th""'
8hou1a be a faculty body which
::;'~~rc:!~ In thi:.J ==~c:,nseJ~~!
Ia lmml
~ And that air feasible
alternatives to termination of appointmentshavebeen pursued." (4 (c) (1) , p.
17)'
- b) reallocation of resources. "If the
Institution, because of financial exigency, terminates appointments, It will
not at the same time make new
appointments except In extraordinary
circumstances Where a serious dlstorlion In the academic program would
otherwise result." See also remarl&lt;s
below about "temporary variations ." (4
(c) (3), pp. 17-_
18) .
c) reorgamuflon of degree or
curriculum offerings. The AAUP recognlus that an appointment may be
terminated "as a result of bona fi de
formal discontinuance of a .program· or
department of Instruction ," but~lt does
not tolerate such a decision to be made
solely by the administration as does
Article 35. Rather AAUP poll&lt;:¥ s.tates:
"The decision to discontinue ... will be
baaed ...._,tlally upon educational
considerations, as determined primarily
by the faculty as a whole or an
appropriate committee thereof." Furthermore, AAUP policy provides safeguards n o - considered In the
present contract: • ' Educational conalderatlons' do not Include cy.~:llcal or
temponuy variations In enri&gt;llment.

C:

i::~·=i:,c:;r~~b~orr.:

Institution liS a whole will 'be enhanced
by the discontinuance." (4 (d)(1), p 18)
d) &amp; ~above are both covenid by 4
(d) (1), · '-JIIet cited.
TIM
Is clew1y on UUP to
explain how 1\ ever agreed to such an
llbomlnatlon liS Article 35.
When the new NEAfAAUP organlzatlon negotiates a new contract, It will
not contain an Article 35. AAUP/NEA
orgllnizatjons ha&gt;e negotiated sound
contf11Cta baaed upon AAUP policies of
ecademlc freedom and tenure, due

B'~=tt~ f=·~=~e~ ~

Northern Iowa. and are oow contending
to ,.,.,_, universities in Calltomfa.
The agre.nent In SUNY between
AAUP/NEA g - t - to negotiate a
contract based · upon the AAUP
Aerllloaif policlea quoled ttwoughout
thla tetter.
Slncerelyl:'k:e

lf!lno~
Edftnr S. Katklii

;.:.,quo:=,ona.~~~~~UP~~~':

ln.ututlonal Ragulatto.na on Academic
~ Tenure" to be found In
Tire Redboolr, 11177 edition .

Editor:
Prof. Wm. Allen'sletters demonstrate
hla ..,ltMion for the AAUP and his
Commit- to the principles of due
. , . _ , acedemlc freedom, faculty
~. etc .. which have been
_ , _ by the AAUP OYer the years.
He ..._ not yet, to my knowledge
J1lpiiCII-.d the tnt.,.,.,.,. Anlcle -e5 oi
llle UUI'/SUNY c:onttact whic:tt pennitled _ _ _ , ....t. that led
to AliAJf&gt; - But It Ia lair to
~that . . atrongly dlaep- ol

-nw.

~ QlllfiiQI1 ""'-'· If ..

really wants AAUP members to join the
union, Is this: why doesn't he get the
UUP to commit Itself to adopllng the
AAUP Red Book standards and to
abolishing the infamous Article 35?
Wouldn't that be what he really wants?
And wouldn't that be lhe-wlnd out of the
NEA/ AAUP sails?
-John Corcoran
Professor of Philosophy
Member: AAUP, U/B Chapter
Editor:
Having permitted himself to be stuck
with the headship of UUP locally-in
the hope, as he has lengthily made
clear, that from that base he might
Influence others In the hierarchy to
mend their ways (a hcpe that other
good men locally have had and now

lrn: .~/!f.e:'~

fgat,~re'~J;-1\I~nc:;rtha~n

the time being, he has an obligation to
stick with It and make Its case as best
he can. But It Is not helpful for
clarifying either his a~ematlves or ours

~!!'a~pe~lst:1\rp·~l~ ~st'J'nes :::
upcoming election for a bargaining
agent.
.
The AAUP-NEA alliance, In which
NEA has committed Itself to uphold
those AAUP policies and principles
wh ich distinguish a unl- slty from a
' sausage factory, Is not only relevant , It
is cruc ial in affording the prospect that '
we may have done at last with the
mind-set of old unionism, as so
perfectl y embalmed and frequently
~i~~!:Y;! ~n~~'l:t"~k and style of
A brief look to t~e past may be
Instructive:
Denouncing an AFL record of
" twenty-live years of constant and
unbroken failure" to respond effectively
to major challenges, John L. Lewis i n

1

1

!..~erac:;o~.:.,ed~~.:,~rt a~ t!, y~~
blandishments of its leaders~lp that,
welcomi ng his counsel, they would
henceforth mend their ways: "They
seduced me with fair words: Now, of
course, . having learned that 1 was
seduced , I am enraged and I am ready to
rend my seducers fimb from limb.•
Professor Allen as a historian
rereading those words may now find a
new depth of meaning "In them; having
become a union leader, can he be
Immune from experrenclng some shoek
of recQgnltlon as well?
Lewis' added (Interestingly lind l n~ It

::r~:-Jrs~:.::b:!.~~~·~r h~~~:;

he was of course speaking figuratively.
Very soon afterward, though, having
concluded that nothing would avan
from further attempts at reform from
within, he resigned his AFL voce
presidency and assumed a leading role
In launching the CIO. With that (as the
saying goes) an important new' chapter
In the history of American unionism
was begun.
Wh!!e it may be true that, as Hegel
said, peoples and..governments never
have learned anything from history or
acted on principles deduced from 'n "
~roYldence has given special dispens&amp;tton eYidently to an occaalonal union
leader. Surely those who are historians
themselves cannot have been granted
less.

-~:s~.c;;:;
(Political Science)

Papal investiture
coverage lauded

F~"ir:~~'OO'so~l L;:er.

Messages of Love, expanding every
hour.
Hooker love, army love; buried in the
canal called Love.
(Olin's love for Niagara Fall&amp; is
mighty ... three chlorine kisses in
two weeks. Simultaneous chlorine
arousal of 51 lovers-10/25/78. Wet

~~~~~~~~~~~n~~!'~~of~~~£ 0~t

beyond tradition, Olin scarey-klssed
the falls on Halloween-10/31/78. A

g'11:,"'~r.~ bau~;:,~t,~s~o"ft'~Ys~o~r,

30th Ave.-11/5178).
Hooker love and army love are rising .
Subterranean ascendance through
'concrete pores of basement walls

:~'~lj,':,.~~~~~n~~fs'." tomatoes
Hooker'love, army love. A love

su~fnFs::'k:'::f i~'::~t':l ;~:~;

~~~:'~~~·w~~~~:S?~ ~~~se

generations blessed.
• ;-Gene Grabiner
'In . August and September of 1978,
resodents of the love Canal area of
Niagara Falls, New York publicly
complained of noxious odors, Illness.
borth defects and the death of pets due
to seepage of unknown origins In the
basements of some of their homes. The
state had investigated these reports for
some time. but it was not until
residents of the area went public that
the substance of the problem became
known. The Love Canal had been used
as a dump for tpxlc chemicals by both
the Hooker Chemical Corporation and
the United States Army. Additionally,
the Olin Chemical Corporation, which
also has a plant In the Falls, recently
had three chlorine gas leaks. They
occurrad on the three dates mentioned
In the ~em ..._ In the first Instance,
::;:~~~ll·d~rf.eople were gassed, 28 of

/

Student explains

about rally
Editor:
I would like to cl- up matters
regarding the student rally at the NFT
Rapid Transit Groundbreaklng on
Friday, November 3, 1978.
. It Is Important to stress the fact that
tha students assembled w""' In no way
protesting the building of the Rapid
Transit System, as was erroneously
contended In at least one report. The
rally was In no means Intended to
leppardlze the project and we firmly
believe It did not In any way do so.
Further, the Rapid Transit Groundbreaking was chosen for the rally only
after Governor Carey refused to Include
an address at U/B In hla campaign
Itinerary. That the Groundbreloklng was
stricti&gt;_: a political activity to enhance
Carey selection campaign waa obvious,
and certainly was within hi$ rights. It
was also well within our rlghts ,
however, to make a political 81atement 1

~:ft~l7~n.t'VSe or.:rrr;~!et~s':.!ea~fls~~=
~: a~a8~ ~~~; bf~~~:~,~~::!'~~~

Our sole purpose In gathering to meet
·Governor. Carey 'was to Impress upon

Editor:
I would like to commend your paper
on the coverage of tbe papal Investiture.
I am pleased to see-that at leaat one of
the ... [U/8) newspapers feefa that this

~~ :,ar~~.':!s~ugh '"1ponance to

Hot only did you report oil the
ln-tlture but you found • direct
~~ection bet-. the ln-tlture and .

_.....

love PQem'
• for Wayne Hadley
Niagara Falls is festering wlth.Love
Otin love, Hooker love (less forthright
than hooker love).
Veins of groundwater, networks of the
lake plains drainage,
Traverse the soli beneath our feet and

-==

.

~:~~~~~n~:~~~~~~~~:~nd"?f:F~~~~~=

successful.
I hope this letter will serve In making
clear our position In this matter.
-J. Scott Jluato, director
Student Affairs, Stullent Association

LET US HEAR FROM YOU
The Reporter . . . , _ JOUr vlewa on
campua - . -• ..,_, policiM, etc.
loth lel. . . lllellonger poaitlan ~
~
pennlta. et ~

C.,-::::::-·

e..-

�N-30,1171

CO&lt;IrtSE, IF YOII WANT 10 PIILL.
~INGS 8EHINO ST\IDENT
OR WOII.K FOit lllE
/V.Y. TIMES SOMEOAY, '1'011 CAN
ALWA~S BECJ:lME 114E EI&gt;I'IOQ !

For UUP:_changing agents cou.ld alie]Jate labqr
a~

with the AFL-CIO, that deserves
serious consideration .
'
I was a UUP delegate for two years to·
the local Buffalo AFL-CIO Labor
Council . Our union has had numerous
occasions to-Call on the central labor
body for support-often during annual
budget crises. When jobs were

Editor:
·There Is an Important feature of the
current debate on the merits of UUP
versus NEA-AAUP which has not, to my
mind, been sufficiently, If at all,
, dlscubed. This has to do with the
Impact of this vote on lhe relation of our
UnlversJq&gt;. with the Buffalo community.
. In the .UUP literature, a special place
Ia given to the Importance of UUP's ties
· wllh NYSUT and the polltlcal Influence

~~~redg~er~~fi~~~~it thfo~!
promotion of public higher education
and opposed cut backs .on the State
UniYI":.,IY System.
'
•
I tiei19ie that many of our faculty and

~'/1t~ y~v~~~~~!t~t~~~~h~~e~~tl~,~o!~~

the major alate teach8&lt;8' unlan, · but

professional staff would be surprised
and gratified , as I was , to dl~ver the
kind of relationship we have to major
labor bodies In this city. The notion of
fraternal relations between unions
applies fully to our unl9n . Not only do
- receive support for our positions
but It Is Inconceivable that any offlclii.l
labor body In the AFL-CIO would
oppose the deve)opment of lhe SUNY
system. would attack "fat cats In the
University," or adopt attitudes contrary
to the Interests of the teaching,
professional staff or students.

At a time when we are again ·hMrlng
about .strains between town and gown,
It Is lmportlll)t to realize that - have a
solid, fraternal relationship with organIzations that represent a aubatantlal
percentage of our community. I~ Is

~~~ct~~~~ft\l:~ f~ 'l'~~ ~~u~.'o~

movement In Buffalo. It would
uhdoubtedly be a negative one.

:........,_Lawler
Associate Pi'ofas8or, Pllllboophy

Quebec: speaker has no hope f9r French-English blend
~.:'~:eu~~:.':~~~hforh~~dl•~-~P~~in~

By Joyca Buchnowakl
Aeporlo&lt;Staff

Montreal residents to go ~rom womb to
tomb without ever having the need to
learn French. This Is possible because
the French mostly reside in one
quadrant of the city and have
traditionally wielded little economic
_
and political power.

Given the history of the Canadian
province of Quebec and Its French and
English settlers, Malcolm Reid, critic
and supporter of the Quebec separatist
movement, told a U/B audience
recently that a majority of Canad i an~
"do not believe a blending of the two
elemepts Is conceivable ."
Reid , whoi"' book, The Shouting
Sfgppalaters, sheds tight on the
cailadlan turmon of the 1960s throtogh
the perspective of .a young revolutionary, says hostility betw'een French- and

A

forces clashed with French and Indian
settlers for control of the land.
Although the British were victorious,
they wanted to avoid further confrontations with the French. To accomplish
this, Reid explained , a type of

;':m~~~se.:.,~as~~~~ 1 ~h:l'a~~

their language and religious and
cultural tredltlons without Interference,
provided they waged no ,aggressive
campaign against British rule. ·~
They were the Mme
A strong sense of group consciousness has been traditionally manifest
among Canadians of French ancestry,
Reid relayed. This sterns from the fact
that the settlers were a homogeneous

~~~~h~ 1orl~:~~~ '(~~~~~~)m. ~~

shared the same religion , customs and
dialect.
Today, 5 ln11116n descendants
these French settlers live In Quebec,

of

~.!.t'1.1~~~~~e ~~:~~~d~re'~gh ~v~~f:r;
~~~~::!~na ~dgfs c~nu~~eact~~!tY f~

&lt;&gt;ffered

Reid .
1

:~~co~~~~~e~~.rrc,~~rlved ~=~~~e~

........

stances.

th~.~.w;•nroollah-speaklng Canadians
are a minority In the city, they control
Its business and Industry, so one must
be fluent In Engllah to be upwardly

By the 60s a "clear upheaval" In the
middle class was present. The change,
says Reid, was evidenced In the humor
of the decede which wa.s cynical,
anti-rural and anll-&lt;~slabllshment.
R-Leveaque
The need for social reform found
political expression In Rene Levesque
whose political polemics Include
A":re'!V..::'s~!ancopho.nea as "Quebec's

A campus commvnlty MWSpOpw published each Thu,...., bv 1M Olt~fslon of
Public Affairs, Sfefe Unlvenlty ol H.w
York of luffolo. EdUoriol olfion ore Ia.
«Jted ln J.J6 Crofts Holl, Amhers-t.
e~&gt;one 634-2626.•

r.,..

Levesque, who fell out of grace with

~~~ber~ar:.a:n,~ eo~ar::~·~~~
nationalists.

Olr'Kfor of Pvbllc Affolrs

JAMESR. DeSANTIS

,

Edltor·/n.Otlef

I!OeUTT MARLffi

,_
W..«fy Communique E.dilor
JfAN-Allft

paradox,"

has also been an "Important center of
English Canadian life for the past two'
centuries."
Although pressure always existed on
the lrancophones (French-speaking
Individuals) to assimilate Into the
English-speaking minority, Reid suggested that French Canadians found
their situation tolerable because they
were primarily a rural reople removed
t~OO) the perplexities o urban life.
As land became scarcer, however,
and Industrialization expanded, the
French left the farms and headed for the
cliy. Reid noted that the francophones
then found their status " hard to bear"
because they were "constantly reminded of their oppression" when denied
access to better jobs and housing .
Another factor contri buting to the
disenchantment of French Canadians Is
that those who fought In World War Jl
returned home with a broader perspective on world politics and became more
critical of Quebec's social mlllau. this,
along with the adve~t of ~elevlslon and
the rfse of trede unions [which
succeeded In linking economic problems with cultural oppression) ·~rans­
lormed the consciousness" of the

fo"g~~~h-~~~ln~~n.W:,~~~~a~l~;;!l

-

e::r:OO:

~~t=ll':"o;·~~ ~=k· ~~t hf1

setA~~r~~~;=~·n::~~:;

and COIT8CI the lnjuatlcea which plegued French Canadians, Reid said
that after two yNrS In
Leves9ue'a government has become
more ' politically moderate" In Older to
appease foreign ln-01'11, Englishspeaking ean.dlane, and more con-vatfve fr'ar!COPhones.
According to Reid, the · Pert(
Quebecois lo "fairly -II ,.gatded" by
moat In the province becau8e It hu
rernalnad "pro-Independence" without

'PO-.

arousing any "mad dog attacks" by the
Reid suggested (hat the longer It takes
English-speaking minority. Those w/lo
for Levesque to make change~. the
expected Levesque to bring quick social
more the movement deteriorates Into
reform (i.e. nationalization of Indus- _.:merely an "ethnic force" and the
tries) are "disappointed," claimed Reid. , slimmer the chances for Independence.
They feel his term of office has been·an
For the most part, Reid said,
" unpolitical two years."
Quebecers currenUy have !'low expecta-ln a sense, the situation Levesque · lions" about any reforms spurred ,by the
Part/ Quebecois . Moreover, the majority
fi nds himself In Ill a type of Catch-22. If
he pushes harder for reforms, he loses ot the middle class -are not as much
concerned with the separatist mov&amp;the votes of Quebec's financial
backbone end possibly those wh.o fear ment as \hoy are about the more
that social reform wllf bring a lower . "prosaic relilllles" o ..~ng • good
standard of living. On the other hand, job and fighting runaway Inflation.

-•Election forum
(!ram-·'' coL 4)

As far as NEA is concerned, Allen •
noted it is a union " without a past " and
thus feels free to "Imagine the future"
aild " make all sorts of promises" which
it likely cannot keep.
Although NEA claims UUP's r&amp;trenchment clause Is insufficient and
will be reworked If they become the
bargain ing agent , Allen said the Senate
Professional Association ~A) , a UUP

~~e~~?: al\~~ w~:,';,t:!.ct ' ~W,Otl~~

retrenchment clause at all. UUP's
preseni retrenchment clause Is therefore an "improvement," said Allen,
·compared to wHat faculty and stet! had

:~a~h~h~a~!it~~ge~r~:•z::~e~~::~i

clause Is a high priority Item wlth'• UUP.
Regarding !&gt;lEA's position on decentralization "Of ·bargaining 1or·'ll]:l8clat
needs, Allen pointed out , that the
Bargaining Council which It pro·poses
"Is weighted to overrepreseni the small

:~~:~.. ~e rt~~&lt;;, to~o:~ -t~~\-J~~

and at the academic colleges "so our
voice will be heard."
No agent
•
•
Barry, who presented the no agency
position, said he opposes union
representation because it Is "Incompatible" with his " sense of • personal
res~~lbl),','~u':dd Pf~~~ssl~~::::,ssm. "are

;~~~~J~F~h~~:~~~~~:;;;y ~:,,,~

represented by one, he said, that
person is stuck with Ita Ideological
framework. Moreo-. Barry said
whether one likes It or not, involvement
with the union is Inescapable because
of mandatory · agency f - which
support national causes and policies.
,!larry toldthe audliinee that lie, along
wJ'in, other faculty In SUNY, laaued
complaints to the tfl!lbl{c Erriployflelatlons Board regarding UUP's

~~:~i~ntay~n ~~heuu'en~~i

imposslb~e for non-union members to
collect any money on agency f8e
refunds. Only after legal man..-a and

~l'f~~',;'t~"'t:~~ ..~;:~:;::~a~~as~~'= ~e;~~~ t~~ :~:lat~'::ts t~~f u:=,~

team. "
Although NEA claims It will not

~~~f~~ tt~ ~:::;~ ~u~o~.,\.~1f:

noted that SPA negotiated an· agency
fee In Its first contract, and that,
elsawhere, NEA has Imposed automatic
fee Increases.
Moreover, Allen said he doubts

~.?:.'~ ~.~,w,~t ~t!~~ ~~r:~:ox
~~~!1.!l~hryt~ ~.~vo:::'~~·~i

rights" did UUP egree to a refund, eald
Barry. Now, ho_.er, with the PMAQ8
of new State lag1,111atlon which
stipulates that a Union 1\aa only to
refund money used for political . or
Ideological purposes, Barry expects
agehcy fee refunds will never materialIze.

a reform CMdldale and

aue.tlona
Questions from the audience reflect.ed concern over: the leadership of UUP
President 5am Wakshull, the uncolfeglal phlloeophy behind the lockoul last year of AAUP ~._,
ahd the credibility of a - . 1 NEA
prochure which claimed that the unlop
would wor1&lt; for salary parity . _ _
professional staff and faculty,
.
TheM
w,re g t l iw.bhun
:l·
can -'IY ~ ~aceil t
tne
electoral prOceea *"d Oliver lb8on

"more sensitive to the needa of the
university ceoters.ft In addition, he
wants to help organize ., alliance
within UUP In other unlveralty cem.rs

and
nothing about ., NEA promlM to work
for MillY partly and cloee not flow II
oould be .ccomplltlhed.

NYsu"{ NYEA, NEA's state organization, has a relatively small membership
which provides no pow8f base' ln ·the
state.
Allen concluded by' aaylng that IJUP
has the cep8City to "build upon their

~~~ :J':o;:~~. ':::-tlfatbo.:

wes elected u

~n=~W:~~ I~M~~aw::-:

ana-.

::;,g.r
="':::,t~y~r.":::l
Allen;
ConnoiJy said he kMw

�No.ambor30, 1t71

'Spirit of the Beehive'

___
. . -1ft

the

Two young Spanlah olstorw are ~· focuo
of ''Tho Spirit of the Beehl\10, w~!ch
has boon callod a "llttlo rnaote&lt;plece of
clnomatlc Imagination. It's tho ':fUAB
film. today ond Friday.

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

-

_.ot - l n- -y'a

D!wMin~Chlna. Or. ~

cnonoe

Thursday- 30
TOPS NUTIII1'10N ~Cl\JRE !ERIES"
T.- _ , . In Clinical -lclne, Dr.
K. --.bldgo, proteooor ol podio01ca,
UniYorwlty o1 ~- 26 , __ 12 noon.
~ by lho Doporonent of Blochomlo1ry

end lho
School
o~-...
byT
_
_
__
Fhtlna-offou--.--Alii"
cabin In lho Sl&lt;y (1943). 146 lliotendor1 . l
p.m. Sponocnd by Blaclc Stucles.
Al1 ., ~ cast stlr8 ~ e tim tTlUlSical about
• afiglltbo-toeovenlndlho_..

QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS LAB
~CTURE SERIES"

Hypolhaalzlne

ASIA AND AFRICA ~CTURE SERIES"

TlOlQ, Studies, ChlneM Ungu&amp;geS.
232 Squire. 6 p.m. Sponoored by the graduate
"""" on contiroJitY In Asia and
Alrlca and lhe AaJo end Afr1con · com·
- o f lheColnclon 1ntematiOMISt\Jcj;es.

uncorre~otoct

eau... of Cor·

ro~o-.: A Method, Dr. PU A. Lohnes.
Educatlonllf'lychOiogy, U / 8 . 213Boldy. Noon·
1~p.m .

IIECHAIIICAL ENOtNEERfNG SEMINAR "
T h o - llollorior ol c .....
Prot. G.S.S. l..l.dlltd. Deport-

POETRY READING
DeniM t.ewwtow. Klltharine Come:ll Theatre.
8 p.m. Port of the ·w~ the Dog" series
aponoorod by the (by cna;r, Deportment of
l'nglloh.

-

SCREENING I DISCUSSION"
&amp;enlnga far New FUm: Stan Brakhlge. The
flmrneker w1 gtve a talc. and screen Teeenl flms
not previously shown In 8Uff810. Albright-Knox Art
Gellory, 8 p.m. Genenl. .,.,..._ $2: gallery
- _ . . e n d s.-.ts $ .50. Sponsored by lt1e
Center fa&lt; Media Study, Meda Study / BUffalo .
Albright' Knox Art Gallery.

..

UUABALM"

p.m.

~FORUM"

Tho - . Caaa and Ho Proctlcal
E l l e d a , a - - f " " " " ' o W. Howard
Mann. pro~eooor of oonotitutionol llw: Aic:llotd
H . Cox, proleooor ol pCitlcol acionco; Rudolph
IA. . -of"*"""Y-.atlhe
-School. l l 1 d - e. ·.Jr......
font-~ fa&lt;
action, al U / B.
Jacob D. ~ . proleooor ~ conatitutionol law,
w l l b o -.1 090'8rian. 3 ;30p.m.

-live

--t.

EDUCA'IIOIW.~T10N

_,__In

IYW'OIIUIII"

lho PubllcSchoola,

ClaJCio
Clopp, OMoionoiAnlncell1d-.
Buffalo
Pl.t&gt;licScl1oolo,
Tho t&lt;Mo, lloldy Hoi . 4 p.m.
~bylhoEOAI)oportment.

STA~COUOQU-f
.
.. ......._ _ _ Prolesoor
~

..,_ lA . Oicloly. U I 8 W1d UniYorwlty Cclogo
oiW-. AoomA-15, 4230Ridgol.oo. 4 p.m.

CElL Nlll 1110LECUUR
IIOI.OOY I..EClUIIE"
-~ .. Y - - I n Coli, Dr. Bony Q-kogo. 114 -

•p.m.

l.aboratcrioa.
- 4;15 p.m. Coftee at

· -

.

W~ THE D&lt;io: FOIIUIIII QN THE AIID"
_........,._,_.,_438aon-. 4:30
p.m. ~ by llo Grliy a... ol Poft-y ll1d

-·-·_____
___ ___
~.

-ofEnglioh.

-lboglnoatllo--.-.

c-a-Cenlor. A - o l -

_.,_
_,__

-Tino:
conductod by , _
a.-I'I.Win.
7:30W1d8pm.

occ:uPA11011AL nBIAPY I..EC1UIIE I

~

_ . , , $tlloalll4, 7:30p.m : - -

--

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

llindig,

............. --.J.N . -~
Olltlor. ~-

8 :30 p.m. Room 9 , llioten·

... 1 - - o l - . _ _ I I O i n g - by lho ~ ol
~ 1'lllrlllr lo COOlOido lho UN'&amp;

...,_CII..a..·

~~p.,mir.e~agenda inctude. bUt we
ed to: Booi&lt;Store Report; Land Offer .•

not limit-'

COMPUTER SCIENCE COUOQUIUII
Computwa In Tranaportatlon Planning. Or.
Tommy EleYing, Un;verslty of UnkOI)Ing, Sweden .
Room 41 , 4226 Ridge Lea. 3:30 p.m. Coffee
and doUghnuts at 3 in Room 61 .
PHILOSOPHY LECTURE"
The Sleet Perspecttft: Protest, Method and
Vehicle, Professor Roy 0 . Monison II. Weskty
~Seminary . 884 Baldy. 3:30p.m.

wei. U I B. 104 Parker. 3:30p.m

FOSTER CDLLDOUIUM SERIES I
.
ln~ular Force~ In Mono&amp;eyws end Twodlmenslonlll Arreya.. Dr. Brian Pethica. Ctnson
CoBege. 70 AchesOn . 4 p.ct. Coffee at 3:45
;, Room 50. Sponsored by the Deportment of
Chemistry_.
•

PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAA I
Eye -- , . Rhylllma, Soo l.lOil Canlla&lt;:

~rlday-

t

METHODS IN SOCfO-CULTURAL

COHSTITIIT10MA1 LAW f LAW AND

U I B. 337 861 Hall . 3 p.m.

FACuLTY STUDENT ASSOCIAnDN
Bowd of IJire&lt;:t&lt;n Meellng. 201 Norton. Am · ~

CIVIL-ENGINEERING SEMINAR'
Resurch In Tranaportljlon, Or. Robert Paas·

Tho Spirit of the~· (Spain. 1974). Con·
tereoce Theatre. Squire. Cal 636·2919 for show
- Admission charge.
This beautifuly fhed award·winner is a portrait
altho of the lndMOOol within the !emily.
Depicting the torments of Spain al the end of the
CMf - · the WOfi&lt;ISconoldefed .._,.,tin the
-.topmen! o11he New Spanish Cineme.

bu-....-,

mont ol ~ ll1d Applied ·
Cornel. 208 Fd'Ma. 3 p.m. Coffee m 2 :45

~CTRICAL ENGINEERING SBIINARI
imagO~ T~ Dr. Gregoly
Tong , assistant prof..-, electric8l enginoel1rlg.

~K~==~--1 2:10pm

I e.m. - ''lJMI o4 the lnteMew twld other
otrucVed- that erelould In the foeld." A.
(Ant!w'ol&gt;ology); 11;80 a.m. - "Tech·
~In- - o f -." K. Hlovey _
~) ; 10o.m.-"TJ&gt;oCeeeof lheAtudous

Hook. -

_ _ __.. A.

; 10:30

un. - "The uses of atatiatical method&amp;· Wl data
....-.o~p~s;· c. EmhoYtlcl], Psychology;
11 ..... - ''Eihloolnd lhe
1*'181 dlcoasiOn; 11 :SO e.m. - "How to tule
1n 10 you- respondents: .-,g world views, ..
B . ~. I.01gulafic:a: 11:50 a.m. - ''Oral
and wrttten lntervlowlng techniques," B. Dwlel&lt;.
lntemalionol Studios, I.01gulafic:a.
Sponoopod by the Contor fO&lt; Stucles In rutunol
Transmlulonand _- AnalyaiSCiub.

-·researcher:"

IIANAGEMEHT tECTURE DOWNTOWN"
CETA T1tle Vll: Threet or Boon to . Prime
Sponl«tt?, IAalcoln1 R. Lovell, .Jr., preoldent of
lhe -D.C
""
' "-.iol1fng
" " " '- - ·
Wllshlng·
101\,
. "
ll1d
of human
re·
80U"C88 W1d labor, School of IAwlogement. Room
109, Buffalo Convftntion Center. 9 :30 e.m.
~by lhe School of IAwlogemenL

•

STATISl1CS COLLOOUIUIII
l n - B i d f a - of P,_bl._, Pmtes·
oor .limos M. Dlcloly, U / 8 . Room 8-51 . 4230
Ridge~ -

10:20· 11 :10a.m.

8AG LUNCH COUOQUIUII"
e-wy ...,.__ In Erie Counly, Dooi.Nioglro-PowerCc&lt;p.123-...on.
12noon.
Sponocnd by lhe EnWomlentiJj studios Cent..-.
COUOOI** ON THE
REVITALIZATION OF IIUFFALD"
Glenn Cloy!«, executiVe directO&lt;. Restonttion
' 78. 233Squiro. 1·4 p.m.
-bylhe_,Asaoclationofthe
Progrwnln -~AffahStj,ldloa.
HORIZONS IN H£UROBIOLOOY I
--.-~~oflho

oltMWy - · Or. Clorclon Sho!&gt;henl. Yale Uni·
YOfOity School ol ~ - 108 Shennan. 1 p.m.
~ by lhe lnterdllc:opWwy Gnodualo
Group l n -.

----cf . . . . .

Output and Komodo Or-oon Tempentura: A~
pllcatlono ol Radlol ll«&lt;~orlng Transmlttltl,
Or. R. Sluort IAackay. Deportment of Biology,
Boe10n UniYorolty. &amp;108 Shennan. 4 :15 p.m.
COffee at 4 .

IRC ALM"
The FunniMt Mlln In the Wortd. 150 F8lber.
7 and 10p.m. $1 odmlsalonfo&lt;non-t.__.....

a.- ctooplln . - In - of cipo
from his~-- - bolioa lhe title: cuoo

The setting '"' this film ia In New 01toans
In 1917, juSt bofont the Navy closed down 1M
city's rod-light diOtrict. Another LDuiae Mslle IWn
ol youth ll1d""' -....1&lt;1 o f -- Stunning.

UUAB - . r r SPECIAL •

Tho-(1961) . Confor...,.Thee~e . Sq.h .

chowge. See De&lt;;ember 1

IAidnlghl -

iallngfo&lt;-.

_,

tor ~aught« ...._ptO\'Idod by Douglas ~ - .Jr.

HOCKEY•
u 1 r va. Da- Slate. Tonawanda Sports
Center. 7:30p.m.

Me:;:~:.M.:::.nture. a.i Hal . 7 :30p.m.
CACALM•
Annie Holt. 170 IAFACC, Ellcott. 8 . 10 llfld
12 p.m. Tlc:keta $1 for students;. $1 .50 for others
Diane Keaton and Woody Alen sw in one of
the best comedy films otllllllme.
• '
UUABFILM"
Tho Splitt ol

the-·(-.

fa-eooon-tre,

1974). Con·

~· - Cal636-2919 fa&lt; show

times. AdmiSsion charge.:....

CONYERSAnONS IN THE ARTS
£ather Haniott Swerb: intarviewa John C.ge.
Courior~(Channel8) . 9p .m.
'
UUA8111DNIGHT SPECIAL •
- - (1961) . Conf..-..... -.~e.

M;dnoght. Admission chorgo.
This was Martyn ·Mom&gt;es end Clan&lt; Gal&gt;le's
)Asl picture, and veJY neeo1y Montgomery Clift's
swan song a&amp; wei. The story of three jobless
coWboy$ Md a lone woman's passk)nete desire
tor freedom is as sensational as its credfts .
Wntten by Arthur Miler for his wife, Marlyn.

Sunday-3
~~:,~:!:':=s~- dur1ng ,_,..based

on .a nettYe Amer1can ~ who live In the
rail foreat of Cok.rnbla: Waunen: A People of
the Ratnforest; Ralnforwt Technology: W1un1n
Agric:u~ure and Ralnl- Technology. 8ulkllng the Weunan HouH end Canoe. 234 Squire.
1· 5 p.m. Directed and pl1otogrtlphed by Or. Bil.B·
beth Kennedy and Perry Kennedy respectively

LECTURE"
An Eyewttneu Account of Kempuchea (Cambodia). Dan Burstein. editor of "The Cal" and
leader of a recent delegation to China and
Kampuchea. Unnarian·Un1veraallst Church. Elm·
wood and Weal Feny. 7 : ~ p.m. $1 for students;
$2 for otherl.

UUABAUI"
~
lloby (1978) . Contorence Thea~e .
SQuire. Cal 638-2919 for show times. Adm;s·

P-,

...,., charge.

r

Monday-4
BROWN 8AG LUNCH"

,
Slogo: Tho Model ond tho
- .... Or. 8arucfl KinrneninQ , Hebrew
Unlve&lt;alty, Jerusalem, Deplrlment of Socootogy
ond Social Anlhr'!PofOIIY W1d Center tor lnte&lt;·
natioM Studies , MIT 408 Speuldng, EJficOM
12 noon SpJnSO&lt;Od by the Deportment of
Sociology CoiloqUum Committee.

-

u.-

c... of

Saturday-2
WDIIEN 'SS\VtiiiiiNG"
U / B vs Broc~St111e&lt;tC41n. HIII.2 p .m .
· fRCFILM"
The Funniest Man In the World. 170 MFA-CC,
Elic:ott. 7 and 10 p m $1 odmlssion for non·

ALII"

#
Tho llorTiod Womon (Godard. 1964) t50

F -. 3 Wid- 9 p.m. Sponsored by the Depart·

leepoyors .

mentofEnglioh.

MOVIES FOil THE NEW JAZZ AGE"
Tho8fnal-~(1946) , &amp;borlng
Horold Lloy&lt;l. Buffalo W1d Erie County HIS1oricol
Society. 8 p.m. ~ by IAedia Study 1
lluffllo.
ThObollfii&lt;Uldhbyfhla- ~•

AFRICAN STUDIES LECTURE"
Lumumbe end the Congcx A Penon~! R•

-

! . - . : /IIEIMITICDOI&amp;E-HEAOER"
(boaedll
port on a book - ' Y ""'"'JIJted J&lt;*&gt;t1Y
with
- . , - ). Linda R. Wough, OOIOCiote
-olqr.Mco, CornaL ~ t..o..lge,
~- f p.m. Sponoored by lhe Depori·

-.u

- o f Unguiotico.
..... ......... -

............. (bosed .. port

on e ~ P'Qied on arc:Htectt.nl 8Nityail
111(1---bylho-

known por1icUir1y""

A--. 150 F -. 8. 10 ll1d 12 p.m.
Tlcl&lt;olaS11or-ts&gt;S1 50.1ore&gt;"-.

-- --·

llf Yllfl, -W1dMJ). - -·

-.a - -.a
· ._.._
..ex-

ol Anllwapalogy,
Oomllfl. ll1d
~ of .,
. - , , . . , . . , . . . , _ Unguiotico Llulge,
---... 3 ..... _,.,._by . . , _ , ; , .

Far--.0116341-2177.
-~
...

his_,. in- conoma.

CACFIIJfl•

collection, Thomas Kau:e. 31 Clpen. 4 P m
Sponsored by lhe Comrt-Onee on
Studoes
Ono of tho moot Important politicianS and

A,_

~~~~~·h::

home country Zaire (lllo fonneo- llelglon COngO)
He " ' -. at tnt !lind the - . g figureS of
movements south of lhe Sohar8
ond w11 draw from
)Oat·~ boOk on
Patrioe Lurnun'U. 1he tnt Pnne M6nlster ~ Zaire
who wea .......,.., In 1961 , for tNs dis·

his

SquiN Cllfl63e-21118 _ _ _ _ _
....., ...., (1117111. Ccnloronoo - ·

~

a.vo

to-fnlmaU.-otty. Whioa!JIInhio

Konla -

-

lho first Alllcan c:lliZ8I&gt; ol Zaire

�........

7

Notices
ACE PERSONNEL EXCHANGE
The American Councl Of1 Education {ACE)
h8s amouncod;,. 1979·60 CooperatiVe Person·

net Exchange . This program brokers one-or·two
year exchanges of faculty members and acmkliS·
trators between unfversitiea and the federal gov·
emment, corporations, and higher education as·
sociations. ~ w;st,lng lntonnatlon about the
valiouS exchMge opportu'Uties 6houtd contact Or.
M . CaOOtaBacaat636·2901 . ~

•

ANANCIAL AID HOURS
The. Financlal~ Aid Otftee, located at Am . 6.
Annex ·e, Main Street CampUs, will be closed

each Wednesday from 1·5 beginning November

;:tD:::-:i':':n::::~·;g:~CIOSed="'t"o-:QiVii=,.....,.Eielter

29

service to student applications and to develop
new procedures. Service on Wednesdays wUI
be limited to telephone calls and emergency
cases only.

,

-t

tate 208. he Wile Mrn8d find ambassador of ·
Ns country to tho Uhlted Naliona. His close-tieS

-

L.umurme.

and

'* .,_

kl1owlodge of

Afrian diploinley, mocle him one of lho key figures
" the politicol
a( loire. He haa
fof'the post ......... ,....,., and io
c:un-ently on the foculty of the Unlvorolty of

loved-

Massachusett&amp;ot-.

ANATOMtCALSCIEHCU-

Rop&lt;oductM A s , - y and Unltat.-1
Pregnancy In Chiraptera. Of. William A. wmutt,
Cornel. 178 Farber. 4 p .m.
UUABMONDAY-SERIES'

Tho Art of VI-. (Brol&lt;hage, U.S.A. 19601964). 170 MFACC, Elk:ott. 1 p.m. Free admis·
sion .
This rrWld-b&lt;&gt;gging
of holluclQatoly
c:ci*l only hove been conceived and
constructed by Brakhage. Amerjca's foremost
ildependeot fim .-tlsl The film shattEWS and
, ......,......_ lmo(les from his epic wa1&lt;. Dog
Star Man. .-let ktaves both eye and mind d&amp;Wed ,
stunned and sa!isfiod.

-Y"

FILII'

MU&lt;det {Hitchcock). 146 OOeiO(ldorf. 7 p .m.
Sponsored by the Center'"' Media Study.
CHINA T O r . : . = : SERIES'

c&gt;e-

Current
ln China, Dan etnterl.
editor of "The Celt" r i leader of a recent
to CIW!a .and l&lt;ampuche&amp; !Cambodio).
1480iefendorf. 8 p.m
P""""'ted by China Study Group, GSA, and
the U.S -China People's FOoodshiP ~lion .
Burstein wil hold a presa conference on Kern·
. puchea and Chine a! tO a.m., Mondoy, ~
4 , in334~e
·

I

INTERN*-ndNAL COI:I..EGE LECTURE SERIES'

Continuity 1nd Chlnge In lsr•eJ-Egypt Rei...
tions, Or. e.uoh Kmmer\ilg, Oepartment of Soct·
otogy anc1 Sociol ~ttv-y, Hebrew Un!V&amp;I'Sity
of Jerusalem. ono cun-ently vislbng prole.aor at
the Center tor tntemational Stucf.es. MIT. Jane.
Keeler Room. a;con 8 p .m.
This ts tne third '" the "'f"elow 01 lnterretkxlal
Colego" leclureKkrmerting, born i"' Rumania In 1939, emigrat·
ed to IVMt .rt 1952-. He did his ~te­
and !1.cluale WCII&lt; at Hebrew University, writing
his &lt;fisset1alion on "Tho ImpaCt of tho Land and
TemtOnot ~ol th&amp;-Anlb Conflict
on the Building oHhe Soc:loty In Polos!Kle "
~ ill also a free-lance conbibutOf
to lsraeti newapepen and to
naoon'.&amp; broad·

._t

casbng-

EFFECTIVE~SERIU~

- ..... ...,.,"'---

. . . Do

v.... -

282

a year-tong series

for undergraduates

sponsored by the Reading and Study Skills
Com$&gt;ooenl ot I!J• LA&gt;amlng Cenle&lt;.
FACUtTY SENATE MEETING'
T - Banquet Room 2 p .m.

The agenda lndudes:
of~

1~

Approul of Minutes

10; 2 . Offlcws' Reports: a. The

-:: r=-it!.~~~
solution: 4. Ofd Busfnea: a: Celendlr Proposal.
5. ·New Suslneu: a. Probhtms and issues for
Senate comrntttees: presentation of roster of
committees; introduction of committee chairmen ;
b . other busi'less.
CONVERSATIONS 1H '!ME ARTS

Either Harrlott S..rtz inteMews Merce

Cu~

~~ ~. 1ntemational

6

ASt'- AND AFRICA LECTURE SERIES'

Coemology •nd the Propensity for Chllnge
In Africa, Or. Philips Stevens, Anthropology,
chairman ot Africa Area Studies Convnittee.
232 Squire. 8 p.m. Sponsored by the Graduate
Group on Continuity and Change In fuOa and
Africa and the Asia and African Studies com·
mtttees of the CooocH on International Studies.
BUFFALO COMMUNITY STUDIES GROUP
MEETING'

c;_, 1·2.20

~·· '-*"' -

andEactl
l l u-d y - _. 110 - · _ , .

oon·

· - " ' 36 __,.,......,.,
-Coilll30-2384

nlnghom, &lt;lil&lt;l&lt;:erand ~- International
Cable (Channel , 0). 7 p .m .
UUAB WEDNESDAY NIGHT DOUiil.E FEATURE'

The Fount.llnheld (1949) . 7 p .m.; Ruby
Gentry ( 1952), 9 :05 p .m. SQuere Conference
Theatre . Free admlsslon .
The Fount.llnhead stars Gary Cooper, Patricia •

Neal, ~=~=
h~

: : -desb'oyS
bolclings when !hey faJ
to meet hia idealized conceptioos.
Ruby Gontry,- Jennller Jones. Ctwleton

Kart-.

Heston. and
is~and...,..,
in both visual style and subject · matter. Ruby
" a knd of ewth-goddess WOO was dented her
proper mate through the machinations of a com• rnunlty," destroys them al when her opportunity

.

~~ .

COlLEGE 8 FILM•
Scorpio Rising (Anger, 1962). 170 MFACC.
Ellicott. 7 p.m.
ALII'

American M•dness. 146 Diefendorf. 7 p.m.
Sponsored by the Center for Media study.
FILM•

.

The Strtnger (Visconbl' 70 ~ · 7 and
9 p.m. SwnscJred by the Department ol Modem

4tnguageS and literatures.

1 23. Jewett Paritway ~ Frank Uoyd Wright
8 p.nl. Coffee at 7 :30. Dr~ Nuala

DresCner. Department Of H~tory , State University
Cohge at Buffak:l. will speak on "tn the Public
Interest: Tl¥1 Army Ver&amp;uS the Railroads." Open

to all.

Wednesday- 6_
11'-NAGEMENT MEETING M

/ An ;nformationol meeting about the joint as
1n Industrial tr&gt;g-g/Maste&lt;-ol Business Ad·
ministration ProgrMn. 342 Bell HaiL 12:30 p.m.
GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR'

The C8Se for Clessical Ptleontotogy, Richard
s . L.eub. SuHAkl Museum ot Sctenoe. Aoom _18.
'-2:40 Ridge Lea. 3 p .m .
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR

*

On Model Redyctlon of Latg...SC.Ie Systems,
Tsu·Teh SOong, Department of Clvl Engineeri'lg,
U I B. 262Capen . 3 o30p.m.
-

LECTURE'

M!CR08IOUXIY
IIHIIIONTHLY SEMINAR.
A

-

"-"

to

A....,..A.-y

- . o.r)1 - ., Ph.D . - h
- . miorot&gt;O&gt;Iogy. u t a. 223 Sl1ermlol.
4p .m

Thursday -

7 ·

FILM•
_ Shq) on Main Street. Conference Theatre,
SQuire. ~ p .m . Sponsored by the Jewish
Stuoont Ur.ion.
Thts tim about anti·Semlttsm tn Cz.echOSiovakJa
during WoOd WBI U Is the story of a Sovak
befriend&amp; and pl'otects an e&amp;Ciec1y

Jewish

wor'l'*l untM he receives a deportation order.

UUABFILM•
That Obocuro Object of Doolro (1977). Cot&gt;··
terence lheatre.- SQuire. Cal 636-2919 for shoW
bmes Admlssion charge. .
•
In this frfth movte version of Pkwre louys'
''la Femme et te Panti'l." ...l..otj&amp; Bunuei paiilts
· a woOd gone aekew, centered arOIXld the slory
of a rich, W()lldly - - (F.......OO Ray) wtlo
loves a ycung Spanish girl; she altemates betweeo .....,;ses.ansl postponement, l88lllng l*n,
fleecing him, enrag;ng l*n-lm pa;rring to love

-·

ot graduate students. AI graduate students at
SUNY AB who have completed at least one year
of graduate ~ and have made substantial
progress in a research pro;ect are eligible for
this competition . The application must be s.pon·
sored by a member of the SUNY AB Chapter of
Sigma Xi . AppUcation forms and information are
available from ~ 0( frotn the ~.
Or. Roberta Tentney, 10 the Deportment of Ana·
tomical Scienees'. Abstracts are due on Oecernber
15.
NEWMAN HOLYDA Y MASSES'

lmmecu&amp;lte ConcepUon Meues:
Amherst: December 7--Newman Center, Fron·
tier Road, 5 sOd 7 p .m. December 8--Newman
Center, 12 noon. 5 ariCI 1 p .m. Also in 10
Gapen, AmherSt at 12:10p.m .
At Main Street, masses for December 8

are schedlJed tor 8 a.m. at the Newman Center;
339 Squire at 12 noon: CMtatician Chapel at
7p.m. ·
OAR OFFICE HOURS
The Office of Admissions Mel Aec:ords

'It'll

be open from 9 a.m. to 1 'o.m.. Mondavs
through Thursdays. and from 9 a.m . to 4:30p .m .•
Fridays, fortheremainderofthetaflsemester.

1 . Offtee at 7 SQuire Hal witt be open on
November 30 and Deoembel' 1 from 9 a.m. to
9p.m.

FILM•
Home of the 6r.ve (Mark· Robson , 1949).
146 Diefendorf. 1 p.m. Sponsored by Back
Studies
•
... A black sokUer on a dangerous PacifiC patrol
($ made a mental case by the fntoknnce of hls
white cohorts.·

woo

GRADUATE STUDENT RESEARCH AWARDS
The Buffalo Chapter of s;gma Xi wftl again
tOd a Graduate Student Researcil Awards meetng
in February to recognize IWld rew8rCI oontributklns

SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CLUB
The last day to join the Ski Club io Oeoembef

Hou~) .

A Cdttque of Jhe Socfologlcal Approach to
tntll:tion, Protesaor Kart Brunner. RocheSter
Unlvorolty. 210 O'Brian 3 o30 p .m, SooniOfod
bytho~t-ofEconomocs . '

Tuesct.y-5
om

One ot

FOREJGN STUDENT WAIVERS
Foreign Student Tuition. Wafver Applications tor
the spring semester are now availabie at the Office
of Fmandal Aki. Rooin 6 , Butler Annex Bo
Main Street Campus. The eppUcatlon dNdllne
Is Dec. 20. Students must be on an F or J visa
Wl order to appty for the waiver.

SPRING REGIS'f:RATION,
Registration for students in a1 diviSiOns of the
Univorolty began "" Monday, NoYembef 27,
and vOlt be continuous lhrovgh Friday, January

26, 1979.
Undergraduate OUE and MFC students. as well
as graduate students may pick·UP registration
mat81!811n Hayes B.
studentsregister wi!h the main admili&amp;trative office in

Prof.....,..

thetrespec!iveprofesslonal-.

.

Retlmlng students are urged to regl&amp;ter at their
eort;est convenlenoe prior to the beginning of

dasaes.
.
tnstruclion tor tho Spring 1979 Semester begins
onMonday,Janu.y 15,1979.

ST~Y:'!L~Lab at the Unlveralty ~
Center, 364 Baldy Hal. ;a open fOf Moring
In n&gt;adlng and study sklls. Hours . . , Mondoy,
W-and~. 10a.m.&lt;3p.m.:Tuasdor,
11 e.m.-2 p.m . The &amp;ab is open to al U / 8
studena.
WRmNGPLACE

Wrlttno

Do you ~&gt;avo papers u? Come to the
Place-, a free drop-in center for students who WW'I
help st~ . &lt;hftlng, "' revising 11te1r writing.
We are a\ 336 BakJ)' Hal oo the Amt'ler8t

Campus. The Writing Place io ~
12·4 p .m. and -nights, """""' Fridoy, 6-9
p .m. For fl.l'lher i'lformation. contact Bllbln.
Gordon &amp;!836·2394.

�•

. . . .1111

That 'F' you got? It may not be your fault,
says a prof w~o finds grading often unfair

--Slolf
By Milt Carlin

/

Cllller up. That awful MF" you got In

eoclal studies, or whatever, may not
have been your fault .
Dr. J. Ronald Gentile, an associate
1

rJ'.::~~a1 ~sy~~log~1:rt6':~\n~
~~~::~..;;ti!'o:'~:..~

-

unfair and often Is.
For one thing, Gentile noted, few
teachenl receive specific training In
grading.
"T..:hens generally are experts In
their field, " he explained, "but when it
..,_ to flgunng out gractes, they
often confuse their purposes and try to
let one grade summartze both a
student's actual achleYement and hi or
her relative standing In class."
Gentlle teaches an undergraduate
course at U/B In Educational Psychology that Includes Instruction In grading
-.ectmlques. Area schools and teacher
groups often call on him as · a
consultant.

.,....,...__..,,.lr

c••

co=~~~ ::~.::::.~~rth :,'g~, ~~

rejected by Gentile as being Inadequate

=.,.J~s~~at u;~~~· anHo,.'::.':sm:O~
ayatem, In which ·the teacher determines who'a beelln the class.and who's
worst,lsanecessary'evillnoiKsoclety.
This . type of grading, Gentile
explained, sometimes sets up a cartaln
pre-determined percantage of students
~~:lfy~npor ~!'J, ..~~·~;," fC:l't:'~':.n ~~

llne."¥here might even be a specified
percentage lor the dreaded " F."
Grading In this manner, according to
Gentile, neglects the individual student's actual progress In a course of
stud~
•
" Instead ," he eddad, " It rewards the
student who happens to learn last or
who might have had previous knowledge In that particular subject, and
5

~~ s~~!~1,!:!e~~ ':';::, ~~~~nha~

had less knowledge of the subject in the
first place."
Grading based solely on a norm scaled up and down - · survives. Gentile
submitted, because of a "sociological
need" lor high schools to tell colleges
who's at the top of the class and lor
colleges to tell' prospective employers
the same thing .
The "satisfactory" and " unsatisfactory" method of grading as a total
system " carries no weight ln our
society, • he said .

What to do?
What's a teacher to do?

•"What
...:,~ :rci uk'1.1m':;~~· here;::r,
can I do to make all my students
8

better than they are now?''
Aa an example, he cites the
hypothetical track coach who conducts
tryOU4a to select, from all appll.,nts,

the fastest runners. Once team
members have been selected, G9f)tile
pointed out, the coach has a different
problem - to field the fastest team
possible.
This, he continued, Is accomplished

,~fhe~~~~u~n!;~:~~~
to
coach at this P.Oint Is " teaching
the students," Gentole observed, and
the goal Is to "Improve each student's
performance."
- The treck coach then ultimately
assesses each runnefs 1mprovem~nt..
Thls Is what ha advocates lor 1he
classroom.
The leachjpg function, according to
Gentile, "requires that assessment shift
from relative ranklngs of students to the
strides each student makes In skill
~e;.:iii:"~~~O:~·e or attitude ioward
Teaching effactlveness not measured
· Another f1aw in student assessment

1:~ves."f~e:hat ~In (a:;:e:~::,O.";;;ure h:

teacher's effectiveness.
"On the other hand, assessment of
what was learned through teaching

!~:;'q"JJ:o~ th!'?n~~cii~n'i't~'!'l(.~e

No one Is dWed .
Of one tl\ing Gentile is , cartaln:

;::::!.

':entf.':d~~m~t~:S~C:e

very sausffed with grading practices as
they-now exist."
·
A basic problem, according to.
Gentile, Is the need to comblne\Qrades
from d ifferent courses into an overall
cumulative average for student assessment.
" In other words," he said , "II colleges
and businesses would accept separate
repol'ls on what a student knew about

~u~l'ects~nH~~rng ~u!~~ ~~~epg~he~

student's total academic standing
· would not be necessary . The question
i's how to compare - or combine apples and ·oranges."

Parallel '/stems
·
Gentll recommends parallel ~rading
1

~~~!f::!~il o~~~~~!~,'!'.; a~~~:,nat~:~;
averages or class rank , would be based
on comprehensive testing for the
purpose of/ comparing students. The
other, for within-class grading, _would
be used to determine each student 's
progress In achieving class objectives.
Information from the comprehensive
testing, -Gentile emphas1~ed. ''would
not be used as a grade or reported on a
grade card."
However, it could "be made available
to students or parent$ on request , and
- · at appropriate limes with proper
permission- to prospective employers
·
andcollegea."
Gentile insists that -students must be
made aware beforehand ' that the
comprehensive test Is one In which they
are competing.

14cademic calendar
FJrats.m..ter
lnotructlon Ends at Close of Classes
Semester Examinations

._. ...........
Beatns

F. December 15
S. December t6S. December 23

Instruction
M. January 15
Waahlngton'a Birthday- Observ8d Holiday
M. February 19
Mkl-8emeltet Recess Begins at Close of Classes S. Aprll7
CllosMa Raeumed
M. April t6
lnatructlon Ends at Close of Classes
F. May 1t
Final Examinations
s. May 12- S. May 19

ea--t

Sunday, May 20'
•Dtvfalonal commencements, If a~tho!lz~ . will be arranged.

..... u..-.n,

Polley Regarding Student

Obs.vance

of RafJvlous Holy

~~ !hOM Nllglouo holy days when members of a faith typically observe

the eKpeCtatfon of church or oynagogue that they be absent from school or
- " , ~ wflla¥01d Ita aclledullng of such events as registration, the
11rat dey of~. or atudant-wnvocatlons, and Individual students will be
exeu.ed fnlm Clue without penalty II expresaty requested ." (From SUNY
l'olltw ....,,
lledlon No. Ollt .3.)

IUHYAII

tm.

""'"*"" 8dda:

.....,_,of

"If IUCII a ~ . . . , _ rMUita In a otudent's Inability to fulfill an
....,.IC
the COUIM on that pertlcular day, then Instructors
1111111111 pnMde . , opport..,lty lor the student to make up ·the requirement
wltiiOut .......,...
I
• "'

the

.

"The accepted rules of taimess
should apply," he commented. "In
sports, opposing teams know the rules
and when the game will be playad, and
thus have equal time to prepare for it. n
. Within-class grading should be

~s~Ya"s"':. t~~~ec~~ s~~!~7~t"Jr"o~~~

lives, Gentile believes. This, he said. is

~drn~~:fo~~r .~~~~ring

each

Trying again
·
Gentile also favors establishment of a
procedure for those students who may
not !!)aster material sulflclently to meet
minimum standards.
"Tha number of attempts they may
have to pass must be specified," he
advises, "as well as the grade they can
gel on a second or third attempt."
Anoth er option within this system
would be to allow any student who
.wants to improve his or her grade to try

~lg~~rn;~~ ~~i~!o~~t( ~ s~i~~~6~
5
1
=~ p~a~a~l6~fomsT~~~· a~ ¥~~~~~u~~
as~2~t'll:"l: ~~:~I~:Jr~~~ent~
1 8

entitled to know how the average g.:tl, ·
lor each marking period will . be
determined .
F-ergredes

.

Ge~fil~or~;:~~:~~~~u~~ ~¥~~Ps

own preference Is for " only two, or

pe1'sa~~ ~~~:;t:s~~gc~[:~e~~~ors (H)
for those who exceed class objectives;
Satisfactory (S) lor those whO meet
standards , and Unsatisfactory (U) for
those who tall to meet standards. Those
in the ''U" category, he further believes,
should be given an opportunity to
overcome the deficiency and thereby
Qualify for a better grade.

o/g~~~~"; ~¥~·~ ~Y~~~ .~.u~dn~~-~~
this case, the " 6" wdutd be eliminated
and the "f" would serve to Inform the
student th~t he or she ' ls nequlred to
make up a deficiency in order to obtain
a passing mark.
•

Contracts

,

Gentile also champions " contracts"
between teachers and students.

These "should specify clearly the
objectives to be attained and the grade
that will be earned at that point.
Contracts are an excellent way to
encourage achievement above and
beyond the minimum."

Another form of "contract, " Gentile
pointed out, Is an arrangement whereby
a qualified student is selected to tutor a
fellow student.
" It encourages cooperation In the
classroom, '1 he noted, .. and provides
overworked teachers with some extra
help ·I n tutoring those who would
otherwise either not lejirn well or take
up much valuable teacher-tlme."
Judgmantneeded
Gentile, who received his doctorate In
educational psychology from Pennsylvan ia State University Jn 1967,
cautions that success of any grading
system depends on a teacher's ability to
use good j udgment. '
"Doctors , In prescribiog medication
or treatment , must use fudgment," he
observed. "This also applies , to
teachers. _
" Teachers must recognize their good

~i~n~7.1v~h~[ \~\lf~~r:·.J~:~ 'rous~

student's problems and

t~er,

must

r~~."~et~~~~~~.Y ':::~~~~~~~ .!~':now
where my biases are and I let my
students know."

te~'!.eroc;~Ji~, 1 ~~~~t~l~ar~:~~nto~~n~

get alon~ . perhaps due to a clash of
personalities. It such Is the case, he
said, the teacher should be able to
recognize the situation and take

~r.ld~~r~~~e ::~~~nn.~~r ~~0~~~"~": .

friendlier atmosphere In anolher class.
While grading is a many-faceted
procedure, Gentile said, the many
elements should edd up to one beslc
rule&lt; Any giadlng system should .be
based on assessment which Is keyed to

• l~'1d'~=Y

88

member sl/1.,;, 197i,
Gentife has authored or co-authored
tour textbooks and 40 or more articles
for professional publlcetlons. In 197172 he served as chairman of the

Oepan~:~?~~~l!1r:-Jt-~~2~;~~-

Mrs. Weller now
half .of herself
8

waft.~" ~,';~ .f.:ff:tg'L•j~te~~~~~~~~

Airport last May alter a flight from
California, she did not recognize her

m~r.f'inends

and c_;,..worliers or Mrs.

~~~r.J'~g ~lr.her ai~ the li!J)&lt;I "!1!11,~,
That's because Mrs. Weller, who Is
on the · staff In Lockwood Library's
Central Technical Services, Is just "half
of myself."' r
Since she joined Ideal We'Jlrhl, a

·~!~~~i'f'~r:!8~~:
~~tt::'J!ss :l:
In half, and spent more than
on
$300

ne,.. wardrobes.
lo:e~~· Is, In her own words, "a big
A native of Buffalo, she says she was

~=~~~~~~~ ~~~~~h~ :.;:.a:~~~

care to disclose her former or present
walght · - " I'm super-sensitive about
what I did ·weigh" - but she Is frank
about her former condition. "I was fat . 1
·~l:.::.s?n~~epiJ~p~?!!Sn't h~lp to say
After · numerous short-lived, unsuccessful diets, she dacldad last year
that "It was now or never." Her goal,
when she jolned the Ideal Weight
program , was to lose tOO pounds.
After a year of attending the
once-a-waek cl.._, she h~ exceeded
her goal by 25 pounds. " I followed the
proijram religiously, • shasays.
(The program consisted o f " three.
well-balenced&gt;autrltlonal meals a day,"
no snacks, iuld relnloncement from
other people.)
She Is now on maintenance, staying
at her present weight.
" I feel better, a whole new world has
opened up to me ,·~ she says. 11 l'm more
outgoing. I can f\ln up stairs. Walking
~.~lairs used 1o be a great activity for

ha;::re:r~~~-· ,a~~ '\~"g,~:~~, ~~!·~,
hal!fry person."
Wel~~i ~~l:.r Is now teaching an Ideal
Her message, she says, Is simple:
" Anyone who Is overweiSht can lose
·:.1 g~~W,~~0:,~:'., ~flr_\~g lfflcult. You

1

Ideal Weight Group has live locations. For further Information contact
Ms.ldaSchrutt at 877~959or877-8367 .
= Y· -

LATE EYEHT USl1NQ
:10, 4 .p.m., FHirllcQ S22,

Hlolory ~-forum, " On Aai&lt;Jnger O,.O.tlono end Finding Anow.s:
Tho«yoncl~yln-.R....,h."
'-oi ~ ,.,..,...._ T._,
1 - Far lloolol R-rch, F - un-.ty
ol ... " ·~ L - ol .._,?'
Oro! illototy In

tho_,"'-··

The-"'

I

�!10, 1811

o avoid s~ids, -

practice pumping_
on your brakes ·
ByL~!r:....~obas
, For most winter drivers, a car
skidding on an Icy road Is a nightmare
situation.
Experts recj)mmend that drivers

~~2 \~ :,:~do':o~a~Jt~~;::,';

in the direction the rear wheels are
skidding In O&lt;der to break the car's
mO&lt;nentul)1.
Only when It Is absolutely necessary,

~~~~te~~~~g~~ri~:o:~~rd~ d~~~

then, constant pr6ssure should not be
exerted on the brakes; rather, drivers
should ''pump" brakes by alternately

~r~Y'~oa:;~ ~~as:r,~v:e ~"'~~a'l~

control in steering .
Many don't do II
Ironically, researchers at U/B have

:',~1ti~~~ :fv"er:.~'W~ff~~~~:~~~~

pumping Is the best way to stop, a good
number of them don't do it.
.
Why?
.
"Most people don't pump the brakes

~:sr,r~~~Y P~r:,;:~'Y otca,~~·~st~~i

engineering

and

exr.r..;:xrnta~rr~

a human

factors

Hatchett

edUcation classes.
when do people get to practice actuall y
skid?"
he asks. "The
going into a
problem is that people have to learn the
1echnlque of _pu~np their brakes 'on

I

U/B artist's massive sculptures are
part of an Allentown Renaissance;
two are displayed in a new Clinton Park

~eJ:C;~,~";ona l~t": a ~'k'lg~~~c!~

snow. And that may be the last time
thav have to practice."
Orury supervised a group of engineerIng students who surveyed four sample
groups In the Buffalo area: studems,
taxi drivers, ambulance drivers and a
general population group .

By Carole Levin

They know It but don't do It
Among taxi anlf ambulance driver

Oistnct-is in the throes of a
Rennaissance.
Ouayne Hatchett, a professor of art

~~~~P~;,!~,foerb'::~~,'~·~ sck~~flj:JIX

maintain more control than steady
pressure braking. The great majO&lt;Ity of
general and student populations also
answered the question correctly.
However, even among taxi and
ambulance drivers, most said they
OP.Piied constant Instead of pumping
pressure to their brakes.

re:~~~~g~:Sta~~.~~~~~"g~

while In all groups, those people who
had taken driver education classes
reported the least unnecessary braking .
One way In which winter-hardened
residents of Buffalo have adjusted to ·
the weather Ia In getting their vehicles
~~~~~e~"t~~:.nd · anow - most had no
The students who conducted the
study are George LaPorte, Kathleen
Sanguedolce, and Daniel Slutsky. T)ley
recommended that mO&lt;e emphasis on
the use of pumping brakes to stop on
Ice and snow In both ordinary and
sudden-stop situations be given In
driver education classes .

·

They also felt that more graphic
explanations are necess8ry on how

~~noau"d"r;":~~~To~"~~~~d ~
control .

PriiCiice nMCied
Drury goea even further.
" Very law people ~::;actice skidding ,"

:=.,~eseo~~i~

'o:!t w::'.::l ~;!~l~
skidding and regaining control of their
cars in empty parking tots 0&lt; other large

areas."
An automatic brake pumping device
which could be placed In cars does
exist, Drury says, but It would drive up
the price of autos and so Is not In
general use.
"The last place you want to learn how
to stop during a skid Is when you'"
experiencing one on the highway,"
Drury W8(ns. "~ little practice could
prevent a tot of accidents."
CORREcnoN
In the ..., luM of the "-tfer ~~ w•
at8l8d the! ~.of the Buffalo
a...,.. ollfl! ~~
tlon of
W-(NOW) loolnllid

~Gift~."
......,....,
end .......

a._ ...
dllldla. Tille II .._,.._

_. . . . . . ._,..
w.......,.::=.

ol . . c.thollc

Slonple Gltta

..__, NOW hlllle - ' Sllfttlle
Gllta......,..., end In oiMr • •·

News Bureau Intern

Buffalo's Allentown section-like the
highly publicized Main Street Theatre

~~:,~a~~~ co~Ieg~h~~ow~~~-;r~~~

possible primarily by a federal' grant

awarded to Buffalo and earmarked for
Allentown .

here, hasllelped In the rebirth by having

But back to Hatchett .
His sculptures-both untitled-are
constructed of Cor-Ten steel. They're
the first of his works to be displayed In
a public space In Buffalo.

Park.
Located on the cO&lt;ner of Franklin and
· North streets, Clinton Park is designed
by Peter Castle, who also designed the
Baird Point Amphitheatre at Amherst.
The Allentown park Is one of many

He has shown in numerous galleries
throughout the country, Including the
~.,"J.t~~~us Royal Mark Gallery in New

~~~tl~fd~~~~~·t'~eAite~:~~~?; &amp;~ro~

additions and Improvements made in
that community in recent months .

Fr~uaJ;~~~i~s~~lre~~hl:sFa.:.:,~~,N~t~

Prior to joining U/B In 1968, Hatchett
taught painting, drawing and print-

making at Oklahoma City University
from 1951 to 1954. He began teaching
sculpture In 1954 at the University of
Tulsa, where he remained unti11964. He
then went to Ohio State University fO&lt;
one year.

Hatchett sees Clinton Park as a "new
place that ~obody notlced befO&lt;e."
Now, do.t.lnated by his large wO&lt;ks,
the park has become a place where
Allentown residents and area wO&lt;kers
can enjoy an outdoO&lt; lunch. Or pla)'-chess on tables built Into the park
grounds. Or- just sit and contemplate
Hatchett's eye-catching creationseven If some may ask, "But what do
they mean?''
·

PSS hears about discretionary increases
- President Robert L. Ketter gave the
Professional Staff Senate last week a
breakdown of criteria used In the
distribution of discretionary funds .
According to Ketter, $6&lt;4,500 was
available for professional staff increas85Aithough the unton contract dtd not
stipulate that money be distributed
"equitably or proportionately" througllout the University, Ketter said U/B
funds were -given In proportion to tne
cumulative salaries In each division. He

~~~ n~~er :~::, ~o~~~~ifnaidi~:

tionary fund allotmems In terms ot the
proportion of salary they .ganerste.
Crit4irla for awarda
Many of the divisional criteria for
merit increases were explained -t&gt;y
Ketter at the last meeting of the Faculty
Senate, and listed In the Reporter.
Those not discussed theta are the

foi~~::'J:~i

Affairs, according to Ketter,
used their funds -primarily to correct

:f~ ~T~W::.les. 0~er~~~~cr'=rs w~

Involvement with the University and the
community as well as for outstanding
service to the unit .
In Finance and Management, the
criteria used for merit awards followed
the recommendations of the PSS. They
were: job knowledge, judgment , quality
of work, dependability, creativity,
ability to deal with pe6pte and delegate
authority, leadership, University and
community service and rectification of

in~'l}lY.;

Affairs gave merit money to
employees who petlonned In an
outatandlng man- In making the
dl¥ialon wOrt! as a unit .
The Graduate School atso gave lunda
on the beals of outstanding unit service
In making the achoot more of an
efficient and responsive entity.

Merit Increases In Facilities Planning
were given to Individuals who spent
"undue amounts of time" In trying to
make the· unit more responsive to the
IQstttutlon.
The University Computing Service
used as Its most I:Jt.ortant criteria

~~~r~~~~~~~-"e ~h"!rv~~~t;J:

were: efficiency of time, originality,

~~ Yn~!o~::,~· ,~::::~~~·~.\ear~~~
11

related problems, and demonstrated

:::~·o~t~: !f~~':\s re~t~~sh:~!
University.
Only one Individual was eligible for a
merit Increase In the Research office.
The criteria used was outstanding unit
=ce. Ketter aald his office ~rovlded

1herel=~
:~~~~Pt ~?d ~~ g~~=
enough funds to provide IO&lt; it .
dl~~tio~~%nd~~~~~73 ~"Jl~:~

1o the vice presidents of Individual
units, Ketter said.
UBI publlahecltoclay
The President noted that he does not

:~~~:a ~~~~~~tl~ ~~~~o~r d,g~'ft

awards, although every University
employee who necelved discretionary
lunda will be listed In the Repotter. (See
0

pa~~~~ l~fta.r;: = tors that last
winter 118 received a letter of reprimand
from UUP when he Indicated to vice
presidents that money would likely be
evallabte this year IO&lt; merit lncr-s.
t&lt;etter aald he mentioned the possibility
to the vice presidents so they could
atart "thinking about criteria and
1

ell¥1:"..~'1:~~~ said, accused him

of "preJudging 1118 contrtct 11nd
mobilizing aupport for dlecrelfonary

~tuAGa- ~ llialeld-~ -- -M-IIoenl

Increases." Ketter said he felt he "acted

r:srn~s~~;~~t,~,:wg~,~~t!!'~~~

receives numerous complaints when
lnsutflclent time Is available to devise
criteria for equitable distribution of
money.

OU.bual-

lri other buslneaa, the PSS Member.shlp1Constltution Subcommittee recommended that tlje Senate be restructured Into five new elactorat IIIM8 with
departmental repreeentatlon to be
determined by a unlt'a primary function .

!l'"a~t'J::"~:gR~w~=/::

Faculty-Student Aaaoctatlon and U/B
Foundation to be lncorporetad Into the
general memberahlp of · the Senate.
Notices regarding ~~~· elel&gt;-

~~h:'::"::~/!!:,/l'C::',.:':W~~

at the next Senate -lng.
Individuals who feel they
have
been Improperly ctesalffad n en
electoral area should contact John
Warren at 838-29211. Wanen Informed
Senators that the conl!lltutlon hea

mar,

8

' =::,on al: ~entw::' tt.":CO:Y
member of the prolesalonal atalf who
works for . student-run organizations
can petition the PSS IO&lt; admlaalon.
PSS Chalrpenon CUff Wilson 18110(1ad that preliminary talks with Preaklent
Ketter _.. to Indicate Kalter Ia
favorably dlepoaad to creation oflntem-

:\':San:~wlt;:gn ~"'::,.P=..-:=l
be available In coming roontha.

TWO ISSUES REMAINING
TheN wHI tltla
be - _
-.
_ of the
,. . .n..dllva,
.,_.,.,. 7 .... 14.
materiel wllldt muat b e - llllore e.
end of a.-, ahoulcl aubnlll II aa

R.,..,..,

___ ,........_

Ind..,... ....

•

�........

Norember 30, 1978

'

'

Enrollment targets, DUE·dean, Calendar under study

=::.:. =::.:::"Ts:-

Ex.-.,

oonr:r~"Polr:.f:~~ at 2:40 to
-

1171

t1 AppraftJ ol MlnutM of N....,bor 8,

The minutes of the meeting of November

8 were approwd u distributed.

=

- 11.-rf
12 om-.'
Aaporta
oliN Cltal,.,.
The Cholrman reported In writing on (A)

lte:;r

~ven',':, A~~h~blr:

lttended: meeting the enrollment targets of
1881-.82, devetopment of a management

ac.demlc calendar.- A number of revistorrs
..,. dlacuued and with the atterations
reed
he
ACCEPTED and
:f:PR~n, 1for~n:~salon to the

Indicated that a recent account separating

;:'!:rou~~~:.~u~~~= -g1~1ua::

return ratio fn thrM of the tour categ

=.;:;:.~dec::' s!¥.:\~~~n~m=ma

gradu.te aTudente was tbere a drop In the
return rate. Returning to h1a report on the St.
Louis mooting, the Executive Vice President
related a consensus among the participants

. ::~I ~=~g~~s:~~lt~:~t

t!!';r=:. I~
U.S. Senator from Rhode laland encouraged
academic omcera and unfversitlea to seek
bett.- Ualaon with members of Congress
concemed with educational affairs.

-11'·,_,.

The Sacietary reported on her attendance
- at the last meeting of the U/B Council,
where President Ketter spoke on the present
situation of OUf University. At this
occasion the President had mentioned some
of the crltarta apeclfled-8¥ the Chancallofa

~~ ~ ~:.r::.tr!n~~ :::,·~!':t'r'~~r

oomparat&gt;Rity of budgeting and Includes 'the
following characterisUca: a full range of
dogr- offered by the Institutions (B.A.

=~h.:;:',;~;.f.~~=·r~~~e2ow~'~

rnc:w. than 5,000 students In the graduate

diYislon; atrong . commitment to Ph.D.
programs: oM' of the top 100 Institutions

~~~~,','::'~ate-Is expected to
llddreas the U/8 COuncil on Issues of
f.:ulty
next
. _concern
. . , -at OM of
...Ita
_
, meetings.
ol~

A. Jolin Naylor'&amp; dMignallon 81 Associ-

::.c:~ ~-;:!"b::n~~ ~~fa":

respective format . After some revision of the

~c:"'~~~~g~~~~:.~':..r:te~:fe:ed

=-;:.

for ~bor 5
The following Items will be Included in

'FS~~. fr1'715',1e~' the Report of the Chair to

!i ~:r:;' .on IIHI Acadomlc C.blnet mooting

1. MHtlng the enrollm•nt c.riets of
1tl1-12. Richard Dremuk presented a

~:~:~ ~:r·~r.g;~ p~~~W:. p~n .~~~

These tragets are roughly the same as

t~ose

;=.h.:c,e:hl~~~:~~ .:r~~~n: =~

th1s year's enrollment fell sharply below
what was budgeted.

pr~::t ~~~~fo~t~frau~~e ;]~! n~~
8
b~t~ ln:{~;"fo':!'a~:uf~~: ~~~~~~~~~

='a

--...-.-lc

....._Com_Cll!lf1le

Dl........... ol the F-fly Senate.
1m1ttoc1 to attend.

be to provide academic leadership at the
undergraduate level that Is sensitive and

Center (such as the on-line real·tlme
registration) , so that It has not been
possible to maintain the work force

t: and
report directly to the VIce-President for
Acad6mic Affairs, and the Vice President for
Health Sciences!
~
•

least a year behind schedule, and requests

follows:

~~:!nd~a~~· th~o::rr:rn,s:=l~e ~~~e:t~~

of the Dean of DUE.
"Profeaaor Robert Springer, Chairman of
the Committee, summarized the report. He
stated that the Committee believes the

3. OourJ• Sch«&lt;ullng/Room Utilization.

:0"::: d~6u~:'e ::~s.;rJ~gln ~~J&gt;h ~~

~':Ofcl .;:s=:,t'~~~ ~~~~~~~ o,~;

utilization at various times of the day
throughout the week. It Is clear that room
utilization Is maximum between 9 and 12 In
the morning and between 12:30 and 2:30 In
the afternoon, falling off sharply on Friday

Oe;an should be reaponstve to faculty Ideas
and should have significant Input Into
administrative decisions. The Dean would
report to the VPAA and VPHS. Thll. report

~~-~ ftd,:~"~T~ ~:O-ex~,!;2~a~
1

=~ru~.~~ ,t~~ldad~~·~~~artftftr;

seminars are scheduled on Frfday afternoons, anct that this accounts for thtHower
room utilization; but the data were not on
hand to check this possibility.
It is not clear what further might come out

of the faculty rather than the Olvlalon of
U~rgraduate Education. Professor Farnsworth stated that undergraduate education
Is the bottom prlortty on thla campus and
that unless the administration recognizes
the essential natura of , und:liraduate

g~t'~~~ ~::~~~W:I~~ ~~;~-::~~~~'::~~"81

~:m!!f7o f-Y~~~~~~~~m::V:x~:~~~
~~~etos~~~~gnv:~t P~'!:ld~~

more claaaes at 8 In the morning and intO
the middle of the afternoon.

11 ~iOMMtlng

rather than to the President and concerning
the shift of upper level advlaement to the
faculty. It was suggested that the Dean
should report to only one Administrator and
J
to the Faculty Senate. " '

with VPAA and DOE Dean.

.Conclualona and Aecommenctetton:

reasoo to challenge ttte-.~,..ldent's decision
on matters of admlnlstratflte structure and
reporting relationships. It Is apparent ,

~~=8d !!',~~In t~~e ';;J:·~~ t:!"ttc~~~

might be construed as bllurcatlng the
auihorlty and res~onstblllly of the Dean. It

~:rn~~a,~f~; ~~! c'::rriJ~~:.! ~:~~~~ :~:

Dean Is to be the single administrative
person with overall responsibility for
undergraduate education ;" whose powers
and dutlea, such as they are, extend to the

~:,a=..gra 1~~pe1s ,:~:e'&lt;:,~r t~re=~

embarrassment.
Since further enrollment shortfalls would
undoubtedly mean budget cuts and

~~,r~u~~~:op,rar~~~ttn:?~~~=

f::e":~a~!':a':=J:::?: :n~=

"direct administrative responsibility" of the
VPHS should, on this reading. portaln to
budoetlng, stalling. and Implementation ot
programs, but not to the establishment of
programs, the approval of coucaea, or other
matters within the normal powers and duties
of the Dean.
To endorse theae concluaiona without
unduly constraining admlnlatratlve arrangementa, we recommend that the Senate
adopt Recommendation 11 ol the 19n
report.

!/HI faculty could act In their

~,';,~~~~~. ~~~~~~ .;"'.!":..!~~
1

retontlon rata. ~e will undoubtedly be
=-'~'ll.':.• about this In. coming weeks_

R-'A&gt;n tho Soopo of DUE Dean tt/15/78
I. Th•lnu•. A letter from President Ketter
to Jonathan Reichert of 2/1/78 outlines· the

l:w~1g;7~J~ oil.~~=s·'~f ~:ofo"b

lie '*' not
-0.
. -8lble toNDonedIdentify a apaollar
for
poalllon lOr the N.......,_

to Academic Affalra but also .to " other

li

Taxt ol

=~~ros,'·~~~!~~~rdw~nad:.~~cm~ntl~,,~~

Forum cllocuaalon. The ~ lnd-ed
t1w1 the Mow, 18 laaue ol tile ,..,_..,.will

•

Rc~= .g~o:m~e~~~~~tru~~re ~~~

Ia willing to make a

-"''I
~ on the procedural
~ ol tile altuatlon.

~d;h p~t:a~.::.~l~t =~~~~0: t~

~u~~Y't:"t~~n:~==~ ~;

memorandum

authorizes or#
a separate

:~~=~~"h ~ ~~~t~:f~e::

who Ia alao an articulate advocate, a
guardian, and a aource of meaningful

~rvoro:r

::..n;:.: ~uc!~"~~~t

naatfr be Ullgnod to a alngle ofllco.•
"H o - . we CO&lt;Iaidof ll to be HHnllal that one oil'- -broed reaponalblltty lor
the quality, acopo, and content of our
~~raduate . curriculum •nd nothing

,.::h~~"'a::~l~ho E~
bofll IIHI· VPAA and the VPHS:

report

,!'::.n:='lty-~u~.=~

'·

.

and nothing alae; and
.
Be It further reoo/- that the dlitct
administratiVe reeponalblllty for undergraduate programs In Health Sciences

~o~~lt~n r= 11~ ~~!=:.lng

II. a.dtground. The Ficulty Senate EPPC
resented a report to the Senate on 5/3/77
a continuation of the meeting of ~/19/77) .
Vhe report aald tn part:
"The committee believes very strongly
that establlahl~ and malntalnln~ a

~-

Un~:~~~; ~nt~~ur.o i:,.:sg:,O::,fll~ wW~
t:,:~:t':.n~f1 ~1~~Yu!:.:ohenJ:t~t!pr:=

~~~~~~y~.P~~~r::~~. ~~ ~~~~~.. ~r~!

President's

.

be accopted

1

responsibility for administration of under-

..,. r.gal

Pr_..r - l o n l :

an~':'=1iJI: :r.,..:~

~g=~:'::~':ms,w~~enJr:~\ ju;~

:':rt ~ln~.:':!''-":.','t!

-

re/~u~~ ~~:t u~~tce'ht:61:.'nJvec•:;tl~g

:~"n~:nf:c~:'"~f s~ar~a ~1s:~=~~

' =~~~ t ::,t~~n ~ae~uU:J~~:::

-

~~~'no:, ~~~:a~~ ~~:nn~m__rY!f~:eR~~

0

daactlptlon are prominent: (1) the Dean Is
a~eo to be Associate VPAA and to report to
tl\e VPAA; (2) tha Dean hU brood powers

""'*'

~~ ~~a~~n~~r;:~l~n,~f ~t!'l r!Po~97JS

~o;·r~:~~~~sh~~e=~~~t!g by~

Hoohfleld'a lnclualon 111 the
F~ . . , _..
Planninp Com-

fOund, -

1

enrollment (4590/5090). None of these four
component assumptions Ia certain, and
some are based on optimistic assumptions,
such as that enrollment trends will suffer .
no adverse effects from a 1979 recession
and that the retention rate for undergraduates will rtse from about 63 per cent to
about 69 per cent . The plan for meeting the

C.

-

re{8)~~v~!~n ~~~~fdu~feaponalble

In subsequent-v.ears.
Key Items are: (I} 3000 freshmen each

more Involved with students both In ctass
end out. To some extent this might Involve
vlslta to High - Schools or to teacher
cont~cee. but moch·would Involve taking

~

with the reasonable expectation that the
DBMS would be complete within 2=.:r-years.

r~~'2iu~lklrt:mr,.:&gt;~~ ~ r;rro:r~r~!~

~lp----.

~':.:t'::''"Pn ~

un(~)'~~ti:'~~~~~ti~ :';~h~~~~ :~5ciU1d

asslg~ed to thts work on a fu~me ~is,

at least for the time being .

the Educational Planning and Polley
Committee for their consideration. The
motion canlect unanimously.
The meeting was adjourned at 5:17.

5

tio(~rThe University should continue to have
one officer wllh broad responsibility lor the
quality, scope . and content of the

fs

Item 18 New Buslneu

eJ&lt;PrH8ed that

B. A ..-Jng of IM Facllltlea Planning
Comm- will\ Vk:e ,._ldent lor Facilities
Planning, John - · to Inform them ol the
~ ond , _ ol !lito Offloa Ia acheduled
1ar IIIIOndlly, . . _ . , . . 20, at 2:30p.m. In

~ents In the s~bs:iary
programs whenever
0
tp'hew=l~~re that It will require 30-40
OmanBMyea
. - rlsn toJ·uwnoerk to9u716a,ll t1h4e detaplllse O!_.•.,..~e

=:p~~~~:~~~~~n~.W~ear~~~e~~~,.:~~

~~.,.e~~{:~v!: 1~s~~~·&amp;,~ =f~

r;,~~~~ ~o'!!~ne~ ~~~:a~~awye ~r=~~~
0

~~~t~~:it: c:~~gel~~ke 6~~iou!~ut

report on committee
structure, Introducing committee chairmen ;
Amendment lo the Prospectus for the
Colleges; Pro~l on academic calendar.
The FSEC unanimously authorized the
Chairman and the Secretary to Include
addltlonaJ Items In the agenda.

In oonflfct wltll hla cllal""""ahlp of the

:.:r

1han If he had to obtain funds tn compefltlon
with the operating budgets of the several
~~~·~~1n~7~o~~:~~-;PC on th is ~alter Is
summarized in Its first .three recommenda-

automatically make the required adJust-

th~:~~n~,;.irman's

=~ ~t:r ;,-:~~~~·tr':::~~

programs would alsonave to b8 revised .
With the Data Base "Management Syptem-

;:t~.:~~~cor.~~$:~~~C:::. ~~~ ~~
~h: :f':P~~~ c:;~~~~~,: ~~S

~~V,~.:,~~=ci (r,~r: m~~~~~R~

officers from Lond Grant and Slate
unl..,.ltlea which he had attended In St.
Louis, where future development of such
Institutions and their enrollment prospects '
were dlscuued. Quealloned about retenllontatlriUon rates at this Unlverelty, he

Academic Vice-President and the VIcePresident for Health Sciences. The Dean
would then derive his authority directly from
these two offices. From this position , the

:ot~~~~:~ ff,~fore '=il fh~ese '=?t?on~~

d tl
(T 1:e} failed
""ifm/t::'l: H~l eale':tar committee also
brought In two alternatives to the resOlution

e«~~~· ~ r~,:,."f~O'rdedF&lt;&gt;Qei.
"c:.'!'f~ut::J~~st':nt:atatemanta

c:on&lt;*T11ng onrollment targets and how to
, _ them, m - at tho Academic C.blnet
Meeting aftd summarized In the Chairman's
report , the Execulfve Vice Pres ident

search directions for locating the ,_grade
corrvctly.
This fs simple enough In Itself, but there
are -40-50 additional programs which search
1

ra~:"~i.It~nar.t~1 ~:O~tsA mot:~:

=ty5a~~ ~.!tY~

the VPAA and the DUE Dean on teaching

•

·

Ed!:.t'"':n
be actlw In both . . . .. thwelore, tile
committee 10011 tile only logical . . _ .
ment Ia lor tlle 1Doan to ' - ' to both lho

understood as pertaining to the budgeting,

=::

the approval of courses, or other mattera
wllhln the normal powera and duties of the
Dean, Including the functions spelled out In
~7~¥l/'Ph 2(g) of the P&lt;Hidant's letter of
1

�. . .u...
Women boWI~rs
open season,
eyethetop

DiscretionarY raises
Here's-a list of 121 professionals
· and 493 faculty members who shared
in the latest round of 'merit' pay hikes

UIB's women bowlers opened the
1978-79 season as the host team tor the
111nual Western New York Invitational
Tournament. Wednesday, at Squire

Hal~ Jane Poland, starting her 8th
MISOn at the helm , thinks. the Royals
have the potential to be better then the

~~U8 ~~4n t~a~al"'~~ t~u~~!i

One hundred twenty.seven members of
the professlonaJ staff and 493 faculty

members shared In 1978-79 discretionary
awards, the Personnel Office has announc·

competition, and placed third In the
National Collegiate Championships at
Milwaukee.
Returnees Include senior Sue Fulton
(Kenmore East), U/B's Most OutstandIng Woman Athlete In 19n-78, who was

ed.

finishAnother outstanding v'l)eran Is
senior Cindy CobUrn (Kenmore East) ,
.me won titles In the New York Stafe

~~~~~o~•. ~~~~!~: ~~i~~J .P~~~~.· ~~'m'e

:t~~~ta~ ~ornb~f~d~~~~gl'e:."d

~~:~:e.~ th~h~e::~t N:~~~

Those sharing in these " merit" raises
were:
Profualonal Staff
Rowena J . Adams-Jones, Dorothy e .
Adema, George W . Anderson , James A .

C. Baxter, John A. Beltrami, Arlene A.

g:ycr·~: J~~~~~.'·~~~~~~me~· s:r~~~:

Charles T. BrunskiH, Ruth D. Bryant, Arthur
W. Burite, Edward .Dewey W. Bus.h.

Anthony C. Caito, Roger B. Campbell,
Invitational last season. She was
James E. Carrier, Wesley T. carter Jr. ,
racently the recipient of a Dorothy M.
1
Haas Scholarship.
':
~~~~er~~~~::r!~~~n~8r~=:'na~0~~
Other letter winners back are Marylee
Dechert, Jane A. DiSalvo, Catharine L.
Branlecki (~orth Tonawanda! , a sophoDohn, Robert C. Dombrowski, Lawrence D.
more; junior M.ary Anne Buboltz
Orake,Rtchard F·. Duffy, Charles F. Dunn,
Clarence F. Dye.
(Kingston), end soph Terry Strassel
Christina H. Ehret, Robert W. Engelhardt,
(North Ton awanda).
Bast newcomers are sophomore Gall
~1~~ PL. En"~~he~.lbe~lo~8n~8 ~:C,~:
Simmons (Kenmore East) end Junior
8
Lori Mostollet (Orchard Park) , both Erie
~0:'::. g~ef!.~Ltb ~Y ~~~'::~oPtia.GA~~~8
Community Colleg&amp;-North transfers
.me could fill the Nos. 3 end 4 slots on
~- H~ Jo~~· ~~"sa:~. e=~!te ~:
the varsity team .
~:!~~ia~r~~ JHo~:'~:.ssJt,c't.':~• ~:
Contending for other bertha are
Hooper, Mer1e Hoyte, John H. Hunt,
Buboltz Straaset, junior Lori Mitrano
Thomas F. Hurle)'.
(White Plains), end freshmen Sharon
Voldemar A. lnnua, Denise G. Jackson,
Ruazczyk (Cheektowllj;la) and Patty
Anutaelo K. Johnson ; Keith Johnson ,
Wheelock (Conklin).
In as~alng her team's chances this - ~-~~~..J~!\t".,';i.!ea~~~~'fc't:~·rpa
season, CoaCI) Poland aays, 'We have
Kucharski, Suaon D. Kulich, Carman J .
the potential to be as good as last year •.
Laurendl , Rosalyn R. Lenzner, Wilda Levin,
Richard A. Lldge, William C. Lobblna Jr ..
or better. We have more experience with
Potrtck
J . Lyons.
the ECC transfers." .
Wilbur J. Mattison, Ellen McNamara,
Fulton, who will serve with Coburn as
Roaemory Macca, Elafthet"los- E. Mermlgas ,
a co-&lt;:apjaln, will rnlas early season
Plater Metz, Henry J. Miller, Charles W.
matches ·While reco~ng from minor
Miller Jr.Pr Mobel S. Munschauar, Daold

~· ~~::r.:'v~l:u~a~~~~ • ~'f~wokl~~~~:·s~:lf~~wA'Il'r: ~:

at Las Vegas, Nev. on OeCember 30-31 .
The Royals were second In the
All-Events category of the presti~lous
~"fY last year, and ~hlrd In the. earn

~S\:"s.'nR~~~ A. Relcllla, John
A. Rl~. John R. Roberta , Mory Anne
Rokltka, "Edword L. Saindoux, Henry J.
Sallman, John F. Sarvsy , Louis P. Scott,

~-rera!~''ll'O:.~~~~t~l1~ne';

David M. Smith, Richord J . Spanbauer, Mory

30-31 , at Arizona State Invitational , Las

vey;:
20, at Rochester Tech ; 24, at
Buffalo State; 27, UIB Invitational; 30,
at Erie CC-North . •
Feb. 3, at Ithaca Invitational; 8-10, at
ACUI Regional; 15, at Cenlalus; 24, at

NYJar~:;'fl~~l~t7i:t~~i .

Alum will Jead
Tax Institute

Lublck, Who Ia .,_tly asalatant
-~of tha T - v tor tax po~.

ol~·=-s:o:
':r~:'mm:
cum
laude g - .
on "The
Tax
of U/B, will ~

Emarglng

F_,.,.l

legialatlon," I
Bator. joining the TIM8ury Dapertment, Lublck- a pert-In the focal

law linn of_H~ Ruaa._Andr.we,
Wooda &amp; ~- He ...., a
part-time f8CIIIty n*11ber m UIB Law
School .m.. 1\e tauglrt • ~
=~~Inti ona on F
1
~lntly ~-.I by the Offloa of CNclit

~.,: ~'tv

Buffalo A.- Chapter of the New York

~n~Y of Certified Pub~lc
The progown ~talna nine workshop

-lona. Among the topics covered
during the -lone will be family tax
planning, defend oornpenaatlon, II·
quidatlona, ~lp ~ and an
updale on New York Blat• bualneas,
~· _and

g i l t -.

Regl8tratlon for the .P.!QIIf8ITI Ia 150.
prtce lnCiuCiea ~... workshop
~a. a CQCklail petty Thureday; a

The

coffee 'hOur, luncheOn and cocktail
petty Friday, "-tlal reglalratfona .,.

~-=·lnfonnallon call Sharon S.
~-

831:aoi ,

program

ooordln81or,

at

~~:~ N~k~! .e:.,c~::7: ~ tiOe.N~?rrd~:
1

1

~t h':r~·L~~~~~·R~ft~tl~~~ ~ ~.?.~
1

A. Olszewski, Albert J . Olazowka, Harold R.
Ortman , Lance F. Ortman.
Robert E. Paaawell, Francl sco Pabon,
Anthony Papalia, James G. Pappas, Byung ·
H. Part&lt;, Saungkyoon Part&lt;, Dione C. Part&lt;or,
David W. P•rry, Jamea S. Patrick, Albert J .

~!~~~erR.FP:~;;:,;:,:R~~:nJ~·p:~:::
~~· &amp;:.2ly~rar;)_T. ~~~~-.M=

Plesur, James · R. Pomerantz, Richard A.

P~:~~Grr~~.P1~~~than F. Reichert ,
Morna Reichlin, Robert I. Rela, Barbara R.
Rennick , Negoah S . Ravankar, Alan M.
Reynwd , Edwordo Lao Rhodeo, David G.

~:~:,si!,~':.'.rtlR~\~;.o:'d RB'm~'";;

~~:.:. ·J~~~~~1;\GI~~a~·. ~~lnE. R~
Morton Rothstein, Anthony J. Rozak, Ell
Ruckensteln , Motl L. Ruatgl.
Mendel Sachs, Dare!&lt; A. Sandora, William
H. Sanford Ill, France&lt;~ M. Sansone, James
R. Sawusch, Reinhold E. Schlagohauff,
John H. Schlegel, Nell Schmltz, l_Jurenoe A.

~~ F!r!{. g.~~d...;tog~t~;~;

Norman C. se,vero, Stuart C. Shaolro Pout
J . Shsrlta... Mart A. Sharrow, David 1. Shawl
Richard ,. . Shaw, Mart&lt; E. Shechper, El
Shafter, Robert K. Shari&lt;, Frances s.
Sherwin, Gerald R. Shield&amp;, Harriet R.

~~:~!'.-~·

1.:. s;~~ma~...~aJW!m R;r

Stewart, ' Russell A. Stone, Edmond N.

~!!:'t~~~'aJ:~.
~a~~~~-~~~~:t!;
Madeleine M. Waters , Linda B. Webb , Ruth

Peter

T.

~~~~:.an~Wr~~~nr. z.:I~~·s=~~re ~:
5

Zuck«man.

1

~~=~·~"Jr.~ ril'ch~~~ s':i.Jc~on':~~~~~~

~:~~~~C~I~n~¥~ft~.~· ~'~~~:: :0~~:',

Linda H . Swlniuch.

Anttl P. Talvltle, Oavid W. Tarbet,.Oale B.
Taulbee , Jacqueline K. Thompson, Kent N.
Tlggea , Richard J. Tobin, Conrad F.
Toepfer, Janice Beyer Trice, David J .
Triggle, Vlrg lnla·M. Troy, Constantine Tung ,
Jaromlr Ulbrecht , ~med A. Uthman . Judith
B. Vanliew, Carel J . Vanoss, J . CreJg Venter,
Kenneth R. Vogel, Mary L. Voorhesa .
Yleh·Hel Wan, Tunoyvue Wang, Oonafd

~erman, Sldne~dde\man,

~i. W~: ~~'= w.~a~~~'ct!::3..'"f.

Richard R. Almon , Michael Anbar, Woyne K.
, . , _ MlirtaLAndrea,MIIaA. Aroalw.
om P. ilaht, Joens .
Frank Baker,
Norman Bokw, Kennelh F. Barb«, Thomas

Sidney M. Willhelm , Jan G. Williams ,
Marilyn J. Wllllama, Word Wlll-aon ,

A

ounls, Margaret A. Acata,

~~ftb Ag~orAtb'i:. AR~. Alle~d~;:

Bal-.

t.l'.:~"8~•~~~w~~~annr'S::.!:

~=-o~·S:r: J::ronMe=.~
Bhatt,

Bemal, JQMPII E. Bema!, Bhal J.
Woyne F. Blalu, Irving B-.non, JohnS .
Blo a-ge D. BIIMII Jr., Raymond P.
BIMonette, Cecil A. Blake, Monte Blau, .
Malvin BloOm, G.- G. Blumbe&lt;g, Barry B.

oY ~tie "t.tl:l
1

=

..

tg~vl~;/~

~. Lung and Blood Institute.

Klocke. a graduate of the UIB School
ol Medicine, joined the faculty In 1805.
He Ia CUITMIIIY chalrmtlll Of the ~y
Advl-v Board ol the Cotonltry ArterY
Study whtoh ""'-'- l?
He
Qfant to
, _ _ bMio "-ledge ot oerdlopulmOnatY dyatvnctton and lmprotled
diagnosis and treatment of '-1/lung

=

ho't:a't~~~00,:.\t;.,

ell--

~:ra~~J.=·~ta;"~v~:
ezr. B. Zubrow.

Zlelezny, William D. Zltw,

•FSEC
~-11,oaU)

~~m~ .

Advisory Committee to the Mayo
' Found.tlon'a Biotechnology ~
Retlourca and ProGram Project.
~beta of die oornmlttee meet '
annually with .-char~ at the Mayo
Clinic, Rocheeter, Minn ., to revl-,
counsel and
~,
to the

~fu~

'i':.ol!£=..~'t.~~w~~t'".loll~~

Wright, Conotanllne A. Y..-la, A. Nell

the princlpiM from 1-!i In the O&lt;dW of

Dr. Francia J. Klocke, chief of the

J:l"de

=::.cr.,,~~: MM~.t'"wr=.'R~W1tk~:

-~.theCommltta-­

4f&lt;locke on
Mayo P.nel

=,Y
.=::·
t!:.s =

~~ 1:\':r.:-A'ut~. ':'l~

George H. Nancollas, John F. Naylor,
Wilma J. Newberry, Wade J . NewhOUH,
David H . Nichols, Peter A. Nickerson,

g it~S:I."·E:tc·~,,:t1f~

~iegs,::=.•sh~

Helen M. Strickland, Ralph E: Symonds.
Juanita ·Terrell, John T. Thurston,
Mat1orle L. Tiedemann, Sherrie L. TooUe,

F~l%hn

~~~II t~re.;:n~~~

~~=~e~~~~~.HM~=f."~~~· R:~d~:

Meoanl , Dale. D. Meredith, Mr.;;,oel 1.1.
Metzger, Albert L. Michaela, Sarunu R.
Mlllsauskas, Mike M. Milstein, John F.
Moran, Lbla L. Moaovlch, Trudy L. Munford,
Clarl&lt; A. Murdock , Betty R. Murphy , M.
Luther Muaselman .

~~~:O.:.hrf:.i~~"· :~~-· gJ'~~~s'n\rt~~

Winona B.

The 25th Annual Institute on F-.1

McKenna, Paul J. McKenna, Belzora F.

Slaunwhlte Jr., Ruth L. Smiley, Evelyn l.
Smithson, Norman Solkoff, Andrea Soom,
Soren E. Sorensen, Mary C. Soukup, Robert
A. Spangler, John A. Spanogle, Alan H.
Spiegel, Irving J . Spi~g Jr., Francea V.
Stalman, Arbert T. St~mann Jr.,

A. Wheeler, Clifford B. Wilson,

Apr. 1&amp;.21 , at National Championships, Milwaukee.

D

-2
-4

-~
1. The eclldemic . .ohould ballad
e l l e u t S _ . I n -.
2. 11 the Un-ty 18 committed to at~
two · ooneKUtlve d!lllog the
aummw, 13 to 1 4 - In the.........., lftUII
be eet ukle to fUiflllthla commltr'*1t.

-~

3. The fall and OAring-. . ohould be
of equal length .
4. Eoclt ahould be oulflclenlly

::f. .:, ":n!l' ro-::.:1:".::a-:::-:.=

aufflclent lime to covw odequ.tely tile
materiel ~tod .
5. Woeka ohould be ll&gt;tact with no
be
~":"ted equally Olton.

- lnt:,rru~~~ ~n!'i::·lhould

7. A long · if giVen . ahould be
acheduled In the midd(e of each ........,.
(fall and apr1og) .
8. T - ahould be a study day 111 between the end of ctaesoa and tha
beginning of final exams.

.

�·'Hurnot: an Merriment
n., "Hoodah' hot !guaranteed to make
you otand out In o crowd); 'ldlooto.'
·-kfoot - of madmen: end the 1!179
Cilrumba were among producta pitched
in z:;_ny advertlelng parodln preaented

t~,:,:.~o~ed~~t•;..~m:!. P'::C: ~~: _

Saturday boforo Thonkoglvlng. Tho
UUAB Muolc Commlttoe and SA't
Spea,kera• Bureau were co-aponeora

..of

the . pair whooe repertOire of quirky
charactera made lt ..am aa.Jf hundreds
were In the aCt. The duo ware fonnerfy

of the Rreolgn Theatre. UUAB promlaed
an evening of humor end merriment.

T h e y -.

�To keep track of
U/B's eultural

events through
Febru8l'J 1, save
this magnet

(lpublicationof ·
The Office of

Cultural Affairs

This issue of ~~ covers c:ultural
events for the two weeks prior to winter
reeess, and for the two weeks following, i.e.
November 30 t.o December 15 and January
15 t.o 31. In all probability there will be
January event.s tbat have not yet been
planned; watcl! the R.,.,.Ur weekly
Cole:ndar• for those. The next issue of
mag&gt;U!I
will be published Tburaday,
February I.
'Theno is a rugged individualist approach
t.o arts programming at U/8, a tradition
with eerWII good points - flexibility and
variety - but with the pidaiJs of serioua
date c:onllicll. The Offioe of Cultural Affaira
will attempt t.o keep a muter calendar of
camputl event&amp; in O&lt;der that groupe can
plan their programs witboot disc:overing,
wben il-ia t.oo late, that there ia a competing
program lcbeduled for the aame time. We
can't promiae that eoolliets will be avoided:
the IDU1u joiN pbiloeophy dies bUd. But
we can try.
We11 periodically eall the groupo that do
tbe moot programming. But p i - eall Ul
too, wbeo.7ou've deeided on u. eveat and a
date. The Olllce ol Cultural Allain
telopboae ,...,....., 881-211ll and 881-2568
(tbe latter .. a eampuo-reotrieledliDe).
.
-E. B.S.

In tbe bqi1u11ae wu EvOD!aga for New

Millie. Lal.er eame E¥oailip ... New Film.
llodl are ....,......ol bJ U/B ......... - IJii

C...terof tbe Creotive ADd i'Wfol'llllllc Artl
(Creative ,....,.._, and the Comer for

Media Study, respectivel,y - and boUI are
boepitabl,y houaed at tbe Albricbt-Koo&gt;: Art
Gallery.
The next Eveninga far New Film will be
presented on two cooaeeutive nights,
November 30 and December I, and will
feature experimental filmmaker Stan
Brakhage. A writer and th..,..tician, as
well, Brakbage bas strongly inDueneed and
encouraged an enUre generatioa of
filmmakers.
The articulate Mr. Brakbage will ocreen
and diseuss two groupo of films. On
November 30, be will show "Short Films
1975." ten untitled films i.nJpired by t.be
poet Osip.Mandelatam, and 011 December 1,
his "Sbnrt Films 1978" which BrUhoge

deoeribes as "foot films verstnc on
portraiture." One of t.be "otan" ol "$bart
Films 1976" ia Jane Jirakbage, wbn ·la Stan
Brakhage'o wile, c:ollsborG« and subjeet of
many of bii'movieo.
#

David Tudor

�\._

For complete details oo ticket prices, times,
etc.. of events, aee t'I'IQ.g'Met directory.

medium with tbeotrieol imagery." (The
,play bas a jazz ICOn! for suopbooe aod
tympaoi.)
Ch&amp;n~cteristic of Shepard's wotk is the
ooe set, open stage look-spare and cleao.
Jacques Levy, who directed "Red Cross" st
the Judson Poet's Theotre in New York ,
writes that "st&amp;rtling tbiogo occurring in
sud! (an attilospbere] become magnified. •
He adds that Shepard is more interested in
doing something to audiences than in saying
something to them, aud what be waots 1&lt;&gt;
do bas no relstioosbip to the purging of
emotions through identi.fication or involvet
ment. .. It. is,"' he explains, .. m01"8 .like the

way changing a room's temperature does
something to the people in it."

Bussottioperaballet

I
~

1./

aiJ&gt;cham 1r Dauee ~ in &amp;1!alo lutl

111011th).

Tudar'o eavlronmental oompooitima involve oudl tblngo u licbt ayotema,
televioicm. film, g_. projoctM&gt;na. He wu

cmeoffourmembersoltbeE:q&gt;erimentoin
Art and Todmoloa who deligDed the Pepsi
Patilion ot Oaaka, Japon for Expo '70. At
- n t , Tudor ia ereotiDg a """:"d aud fog

Audible aad VISible
Pieces OD F1utes

environment for au islaud in Sweden,
appropriately titled "loland Eye loland

Ear."

Oil Docomber 8 ot 8 I?J4. David Tudor
will p.._m a looture-demonstntion at
Media Study/Butralo, 207 Delaware Av·
mue, n-part ol tho "Composers Inside
Electronieo" project. (The latter, funded by
a grant from tho National EndoWIIieot for
and &amp;u premiered many works for the

nute.

- Ann Holyoke bas lived in Berlin since
1971, aud bas doDe extensive graphic work
for animated rum. there. The Berlin Seliat.e·
purdlued oome ol bel' works in Hl77, aud
tbio year coouiliasiooed her to do a series of
drawinp. Her nute drawiogo aud colilges
will be part of a project oo wbieh sbo is
....-kiDg with visual artists and muaicians,
to 'be eeeu &amp;Dd beard at the 1979 Berlin
Feotival.

The Theatre of
s.m Shepard

• Sam S~ia an Amerieau playwricbt

the Alta, is supportins the residency of
Tudor at Media Study, along with lhreo
otbnr oompooen, Ralph Jooeo, Martin
Kalve aud John Driaooll, through Decem·
bel' 15.) Tudor's lecture-demo title ia
"Alt.ering Signal Sources in Real Time."
The subtitle is perhaps more int.riguios to
the layman: "how to make the ordinary
extraordinary."
who eame to oatiooal reoogniiioo for bia
work io the Off.()ff Broadway theatrical
oceoe of the sixties. He hu woo the OB!E
Award twice: "Red Cross" was the first of
bia plays to be given that prestigioua pnu.
It, together with Shepard's "Angel City,"
makes up "The Theatre ol Sam Shepard."
to be preseot.ed in Harrimao Theatre for
two consecutive weekends, and opening
tooight at 8. (See clireetory for details.)
"Red Cross" is a 'play about penooool
relationsbips1 in tbia caae amoog a man and
two womeo. "Angel City" rues a look at
Hollywood: a mystic is ealled in by movie
moguls to doctor a disuter movie. The
dnc:tor of both playa, John Morgao of
U/B's Theatre Departmeot, ~ "Angel
City" ao "attempt to uoify the musieal jazz

Indefatigable piaoist aod programmer,
Yvar Mikhuhoff, is still coming up with
gnud ideu, gnud programs, gnud titles.
"Bussottioperiballet" will be perfoi'J!led by
Professor Mikhuhoff, who will olao double
u oarrator, and. by guest daocer·
ehoreograpber, William Kirkpatrick, a
member of New York's Mimi Garrard
Daoee Company.
Sylvano Bussotti, the ltolian composer
born in 1934, bas created, together witb "his
oollah«ator of the put bill-dozen years,
the rtalian daoeer Rocco, this body olseveo
worka for danoer and pianist. The
perfQ11D81100 opeM with a very quiet piece,
"Foglio d'Aibum." followed by "A;!Wbathes"
meaoa "oear the deptba"J · a oot of
cltodlitie sounds produtied by'ilt p1anlst
and realized by the daueer. "Musiea per
Am;o., ia a claasical eoneeptioo aod
"Sensitivo" a gupbic .aoore in which "the
dancer's body ia in contact with the inside of
the j&gt;iano." "NoveUetta," is ao Alice in
Wooderlandiab mad ocene for solo pianist,
and, finally, "Per Tre." ia de!Cribed as "a
kind of autopsy oo the piano" performed by
pianist, daoeer and au usiataut.
The uousual program ia set for t.ooight st
8 in Baird Hall; the direetory bas the
details.

Films
Films are abuodant oo thia campus - too
abundant to list individually in the mDg~Ut
clireetory. Consult the Reporter Cal eodar
aod \.he
for weekly iistings.
Further inf«motion at 881-3541 (Squire
Hall loformatioo), IJ86.291V (UUAB films),
and 881·2426 (C..,ter for Media Study).

Spec!"""

Watch For ...
•The Baird Hali concert oo FebNary 2 by
pe:rcussioniA Jan Williams, a Music
Department faeulty member who happens
to be ooe of the greatest percuMioniats io

this country-or anywhere.
• .. Seek on Brecht.. .. an evening of songs
by Bertoit Breebt and bia musical
coilaborators-Kurt Weill, Paul Dessau,
Hanna Eisler-performed by Buffalo
singer·aetreas Lucia Bedt. At the Ceoter
for Theatre Research, 881 MaiD Street,
February I · 4.
• A winter vacation entertainment. for
children, preoeot.ed by Buffalo's TOY
(Theatre of Youth) Company, whieh win•
perform a special holiday show at the new
Ceoter for Theatre Researeh. 881 Main
Street: "The HJck, and Seek Odyssey of
Madeline Gimple," a play for ebildrelf with
muaic, ICrobal.ies, mime 4nd magic, writteo
by OBIE Award-winning playwright,
Frank Gagliano, will be present.ed ffom
December 26 tbroUJb January 2. The
December 26 opening ia ot 7 PM; all other
perfoi"'III.DCM are 2 o'doek tQ&amp;t.ioees. For

�ticket information caD the CeutA!r for
Theatre Reoearch box o!lioe, 8(7-6460.
Es&lt;abliahed in 1972 by ~ Cromer
(who will direct the- play) and Toni Smith
Wilson, the TOY Company wu awanled
the 1976 Winifred Wan! Prize by the
Children's"Theatre Association of America,
"for out.suhding work in ebildren'a
theatre. "Tiley have been invited-as one of
15 children's theatre groupo singled out for
this honor-to present "The Hide 111d Seek
Ody...y of Madeline Gimple" at the first.
National Showcase of Children's Tbealloe in
Chlcago next March.

Static, Kiiletic,
Instant, Fleeting~
Bones
In the old free associal.ioo game;- the
words in the tille of t.Jtis lligbligbt, which is
the tiUe of the Zodiique Colnpany'a next
coocerl, would he the response of the
compa)ly &lt;lirectol". Linda SwiniuchJ to the
given word, ·dance." "This is a concert,"
says Proteso:or SwiniU&lt;:h of her December 8
and 9 program (oee
directol-y for
details), "of and about dance, ol the things
that dance is and u5es."
Nine works choreographed by Swiniuch
and five other ~ue Company members
will he perlotine&lt;f.:Juz dancer/ chorea·

"""""'t

g:rapher Tom Ralahate's piece "'For Four" is
for ..four dancers plvs an intruder": music is
by Herbie Hanooek and Cerrone. Jeanne
Goddard's pieces are caDed "Background"
(s!&gt;e u.sea the dancers as - a living
background to which the soloist reacts) and
"Numero" (it's built op numben-order"evolving from and rewrning to choooj.
Hannoh Raikeu wiD premiere her first.
group pieee, "Kworttet.;• to t~e music"'of
Poulem: and Be.njamin Britteo. Linda
Swiniuc:h's "Vista" is a programmed piece,
wit.h the dancers working from a 800re that .
the audience members will abo he given.

The..&amp;.aped voices in this work are those of
Saul Elkin. Ed Smith and Elise

. ad.ors

Pearlman.
Also on the program are ..Halltime,"
"Wintersong," "A Day in the Park" and

"Baroque Suite."
Professor Swiniuch points out that this
will he the first appearance of the Zodiaque
Company in the new Center for Theatre
Research (681 1-!ain St.) and that it wiD

!.

.

Tlcketa

•

NOVEMBER CIIAF1'S SHOW &amp;

30
Tlovoclay

SALE

Slepard.. •

See

,

Creative OnJft C...Ur: " annual holiday
exhibit and sale of handcrafted objects.

·W ALIUNG TilE DOG: AN OPEN FORUM

CnftCenter, 120MFACC. E.llicott.U AM·
4PM.

poet. 438 Clemens,
Amherst Campus. 8-5 "PM. Free. Sponsor:
English Department's Gray Chair of Poetry
and Letters. · -

WALKING TilE DOG: AN OPEN FOIUJ1ol
ON TilE ARTS
.
Stmt BroJdo4ge, filmmaker. 488 Clemena,
Amherst Campus. HIO • 6:30 PM. Free.

.

FILM SCREENING/DISCUSSION

kinetic.

THEATRE
T7le Tlectre of Sam
November 30 listing.

Slupord. •

See

MUSIC
U/B Pen:ourilm &amp;ue!!lble, directed by Jan
Williams.
Guest
conductor,
James
Kasprowicz." AU of the works on this
program will he heanl for the first time in
Buffalo. Baird llecital HalL 8 PM. Free.
Spo~ Muaic Department.
'

Albright-Knox Art Gallery. 8 PM. General
admission $2.00, GaDery members and
students $1.50. Sponaor: Center for Modis
Study, Media Study/Buffalo, Albright•
Knox Art GaUery.

Evewirtg• for New Film: Stan Broki14ge.
Albright-Knox Art Gallery. 8 PM. General
admission $2.00, GaUery members and
students $1.50. Sponsor: Center for Modis
Study, Media Study/Buffalo, Albright·
Knox Art -GaUery.

MUSIC/ELElC11l&lt;INJC ARTS
David 1\olor, • pianist/oompoaer: lecture·
demonstration. Media Study/Buffalo, 207
Delaware Avenue. 8 PM. Free. Sponaor:
Center for Media Study, Media Study/
Buffalo, National Endowment lor the Arts.

MUSIC
Job Faley, guitarisl. CorneD Theatre. 8
PM. General admission $5, students $3.
SpoDliOr: UUAB Music Committee.

4
Mooday

MUSIC

MUSIC -

Slee Butlwv&lt;m String Quartet 0!/cle: ROwe
- Quartet. Final program of aeries. Quartet
No. 4 inC Minor, Opus 18, No. 4; Quartet.
No. 16 in F Major, Opus 135; Quartet No. 8
in E Minor, Opus 59, No. 2. Jl4ird llecital
HaD. 8 PM. General admission $4; U/B
Faculty, Staff/Alumni and St. Citizens $3; .
Studeuts $1 . Sponoor: Music ~ent.

Yvar Mil&lt;luubff. pianist, and William
Kirkpatrick , dancer in "Buuottiopera·
ballet."• Baird Recital Hall. 8 PM. General
admission SS, U/B faculty/staff/alumni and
senior citioens $2, student&amp; $1 . Sponaor:
Music Department..

POETRY IIEADING

Derai••

A.RCHITECTS/BUILDINGS/CONCEPTS
SEBIES
Ralf!!IO'IId MoriJICI""', architect/ planner
from Torooto. 335 Hayea. 5:30 PM. Free.
Sponaor: Frienda of School of ArchiteCture
and Environmental Desip.

6

Wecineollay

BROWN BAG LUNCH 'l'm:ATRE

RewaU- IJrw• 1Wo. 335 ~· 12
noon. Brinl! your lunch. Free. S.,...-:
-Friend• ·of School of Ard&gt;ltecture and
Environmeutal Design.

MUSIC

Let&gt;orlOv, one of the moot
promihent American poets. CorneD The·
atre. 8 PM. Free. Sponoor: English
Department'a Gray Chair of Poetry and
Letters.

THEATRE

Ccl/egivm Muicwm, a 22-memher group,
directed by Barbara Wiae (inatnun..,ts)
and Robert Willoughby (voice). 16th and
17th century music. Baird llecital Hall. 8
PM. Free. Sponaor: Muaic Department.

7:l«Uro &amp;:pre••·

Woldman Thealloe,
Amherst Campua, 8:30 PM. Geueral
admission $2. ~ • . studeata $2. Sponsor:
UUAB PerfonDJ.Dg Arts Comlnittee.

!
s.a..-day

---~~···"'

3
Stuoday

FILM SCIIEENING/DISCUSSION
.EveniJtg• for. New Film: St.,. BrakluJge.

Sppnaor: English Department's Gray Chair
ol Poetry IJid Letters.

sometimes

MUSIC

admission $3, students and Mlnior citif,ens
$1.50. Sponsor: Theatre Department..

ON TilE ARTS.
Deni1e Levert.ov,

static,

boneleas burlap baga" and lighting were
designed by Lewis Folden.

U/B Wind &amp;uemble, directed by Frank
CipoDa. Works by Gunther Schuller,
Gounod, Carl Ruggles, Bernard Rogers,
and Maurice Ravel/Pierre Dupont's
"Bolero." CorneD Theatre. 8 PM. Free.
Sponsor: Music Department.

and "'The Merry Wives of Windsor."
Harriman Theatre. 8 PM. General

DECEMBER THEATRE
I
Tle Tleatn of Sam
Friday • November 30 listing.

sometimes

I

John Morgan, associate profeSS&lt;ll" of
Theatre and director of "Serenading Louie"

Tickets, where required, are available at the Squire
Hall Ticket Office (iJ1 advanoe); remaining ticketa at the
door one hour before event.. I. D.~ must he presented
in order t.o purehase t.icketa at Student/Faculty/ Sta!J
/ Alumnind.e.

iht.roduce seven new members of the
{)ompany. Sbe adda that a aetting of "30

·THEATRE
7\e T7leatre of &amp;1m SllqJonL ~
NOYember 30 listing.

See

7
'l'lnlnolay

THEATRE

The Tlealre of &amp;1m
November 30 li.sting.

Slupord. •

....... ... , ·,

See

3

�Dt:CEMIIla
. 1

,...,.

FIUI
U.. Jtca.r., U/B pwlaate otudoat ud
mJIIIDAker, ~ " diocuaiDg , _ ,
sloort ....,..tive lilma: • Allernate Diltrae·
ll0111/Subttltute A&lt;tivitieo." Media Stocl,-/
Bulfllo. -207 Delaware Ave. 8 PM. Free.
Spo.-: Media Stud,-/Bulfalo.
MUSIC

8JJinf ~ E'uemble, c!irectecl by

Ju Williamo ud Yvar Mikhasll&lt;lft. A

........., of poot-18150 worb. Tbe enoemble
df 5 piaDilta. • flutist, • clariDetilt
ud • pen:uaiaollt. Baird Recital Hall. 8
PM. Free. Spo..-: Musie Departmeot.

I

I

·I

POETRY BEADING
Ed Dtm&amp;. Tbe Kiva. Baldy Hall, Amberst
Campus. 8 PM. Free. Sponaor: Engliob
Department's GrA1 Chair of Poetry aud

1

Letters.
8
Frida,-

TIIEATR.E
7lte ~ of &amp;tm
November 80 listiDg.

~•

See

POETRY READING
WOIM7l'l Poelrfl WorbAop. Amherst
Women'• Center, 376 Spaulding, Ellieott
Complex. 7:80 PM. Free. Sponsor:
Women's Studies CoUege.
t
DANCE
ZodiiJqu Balta ComJ'd"v:• "Statie, Kinet·
ie, Instant, F1eellng, Sones. • Center for
Theatre Reaeareh , 681 Main SL · 8 PM.
General Admission $3, Students and Senior
Citizens $1.50. Sponsors: Center for
Theatre Researeh and Theatre Depart·
menL

9
_.,.

TIIEATRE
TTie 7lteatre of &amp;tm
November 80 listing.
DANCE
ZoditJq1u
8listing.

Da~~ee

Shepard. •

See

Company. • See Deeember

MUSIC
piano; Kenwp Boldt,
piano: Gart/ ·Burgeu, tenor. Baird Recital
Hall, 8 PM. General Admission $3, Faeulty/
Staff/Alumni and Sr. Citizens $2, Students
$1. Sponsor. M!Wc Department.

l'rmo. AnchaxlkG,

10

s-day

TIIEATR.E
7lte 7lteatre of &amp;tm Shepard. •
• November 80 lioting.

See

LECruii.E
Cap;taiUm mod Literatvre by writer Ruth
GeDer. Women's Studies CoDege, 108
Winapear Ave. 2 PM. Free. Sponson
Women's Studies CoDege.

Free. Sponsor: Center of Creative and
Performing Arts.

Mu.ieDe~t.

13
Wedaeaday

BROWN BAG LUNCH THEATRE
Dick K ohlu, contemporary folksinger and
acoustic guitarisL See Deeember 6 listing.

15
Friday

MUSIC
Mvic and Fi/nu of PAill NWl«k: Mr.
Niblock will be present. Baird HID, Ronm
100. 9 PM. Free. Sponsor: Center of the
Creative a.nd Performing Arts.

16

MUSIC
Euening1 for New Muic: Works of
Webern, Luciano Berio, Maurice .Wedding·
ton , Yoohio Hachimura and Nigel Osborne,
performed by Ursula Oppens, piano; Jan
Williams , percussion; Eberhard Blum.
flute; Weronika Knittel, violin; Ken Ishii,
cello; Pamela B. Ad.!lstein. vi~la. Albright·
Knox Art Gallery. 8 PM. General
Admission $3; Students with ID cards. U!B
community, Senior Citizens, Gallery Members. Sl. ADS vouchers aceepted. Sponsor:
Center of the Creative and Performing Arts

,

MUSICIV1SUAL ABT
El&gt;erllard llhml and A"" · Hol!/olcc: •
"Audible and V'llible Pioees on F1utea."
Hallwolla Gallery, 80 Eaex Street. 4-10
PM. Free. Sponsors: Center or the Creative
and Performing Arts xnd HallwxUsiWlery.

Satnrday

mEATRE
See&lt;&gt;lll( City,

a Cbicagp.based comic
improvisational group that has spawned the
lik of Nkhols and May, Gilda Radner,
D~ Ackroyd, John Beluchi, et.c. Clark
Gym. 8 PM. General Admission $2.50,
Stud•nto $2. Sponsor: UUAB Performing

and Mosie Department.

Arts Committee.

.......,.
11

........,.
lZ

ABCIDTECTStBuiwiNGSICONCEYI'S

SERIES
Joint Hejd-.k, arehitett/ educator from
Cooper Union, New York. See December 4
listing.

TIIEATR.E PIECE
Dleftarcl Bl1noa will read John Cage's
· . . - . .." Baird Hall, Room 100. 8 PM.

...... "'*-"'~

Gl C.,. Hoi, IIUNY.U
~N.Y.&amp;.-

Admission $3, Faculty/Staff/AlUmni and
Senior Citizens S2, Students $1. 'Sponsor:

JANUABY
20
Satnrday

Zl
Somclay

MUSIC
Art&lt;:llael A ndrioccio, guitar, with Gary
&amp;rg..,, tenor. Baird Recital Hall. 8 PM.
General Admission $3, Faeulty/ Staff/
Alumni and Senior Citizens $2, Students $1 .
Sponsor: Musie Department.
MUSIC
Patricia CoOO., violin, Step/ten Mane~,
piano. Baird Recital Hall. 8 PM. General

Non-Profit Org.
U.S . Postage
PAID
Buffalo, N.Y.
Permit No. 311

31
MUSIC
Wedaeaday l:J&lt;rrleu Revoanl, bassoon. Baird ReeitaJ
Hall. 8 PM. General Admissioo S2.
Faeulty/Staff/Alumni and Senior Citizens
$2, Students $1. Sponsor: Music Depart·

ment.

Exhibits
Sttulent Art &amp;hibU.: Druwingr. College B Gallery,
Ellicott Complex. Opening Deeember S st 8 P.M. with
wine and cheese reception, and prizes awarded to artists.
Through December 15.
'

R~cent Painting• by Robert Rilerrum and Recent
Drawing• by R. D . Sehroek. Alamo Gallery, Seek HaD ,
Main Street Campus. Through December 12. Monday
through Friday, 10 AM. to 5 PM. Sponsors: Art
Department and Office or Vice President for Health
Sciences.

Robert Coh.ew: Print• on Fabric. (Also one other a.rtist, to
be announced.) Alamo Gallery, Seek HaD. Opening
reception Deeember 13, 7 PM · 9 PM. Thro)lgh January
2. Monday t hrough Friday, 10 AM . Lo 5 PM. Sponsors:
Art Department and Offiee of Vice President for Heahh
Sciences •

Alamo

Photogrophy Ezhibition.
Gallery, Seek Hall,
January4 · January 22. Opening: January 4, 7 · 9 PM.
Sponsors: Art Department and Office of Vice President
fc&gt;&lt; Health Sciences.

Gro"'' .l!.!zAibiti&lt;m of Area Artiru. Alamo Gallery, Seek
Hall. J&gt;.nuary 24 • February 13. Opening: January 24, 7 ·
9 PM. Sponsors: Art Department and Office of Vice
President for Health Sciences.

U/B Artilu at SUC/eora-4. 1C U/B artists seleetedoto
..hibii at Ruth E . Dowd Fine Arts Gallery: Sheldon
Berlyo, Hxrvey Breverman, Donald Blumberg, Seymour
Drumlevitcb, Tyrono-{leorgiou, WOlard Harris, Dusyne
Hatehelt, Catherine Koenig, Jolin Mcivor, Tony
Paterson, Walter .Procbownik, Don Robertoon, George
W. Smith, Francis Toole. Monday and Friday, 9 • 5;
·~y. Wednesday, Thursday, .9 AM to 9 PM.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
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                    <text>of administrators who are predominantly male. She also.noted that the number

~~f~;:';.~a~u~(g~,\~,Y;',~~

few years.
Besides battling over discrimination
In employment praclicQs, WOIT!&amp;n must
work to combat tha lack of confidence

~~~u!':.v~h~~ ~~~e~~• .:r~f ~~~~":~~
~ennedy

maintained, is pilrllally caused

by a sexist society which deprives

women of skills needed to sUcceed In
certain areas, along with dlscoiJtaglng
their attainment.
Finding time
After gaining respectable, worthwhile
positions, women .... have yet another

::,nj~~~'::;~ f~ p~~~~~ lfn~~~:O~~~

-Siaff

By Joyce Buchnowsld

Association Saturday. Focusing on
"The career Woman In Today's World,"
the conference was designed•to _follow
up last year's successful workshops on
"Women As Agents ol Change. "
Before discussing the results of her

time to mainta~n a home and a job, rear
Children, and still keep some In reserve
for per.sonal growth . In a broader realm,
career women must also be concerned
that they do not fall Into the common
rut of dwelling on their own
professional survival: Instead, they

Although career women In America
face a myriad of probl ems, some
Imposed and others self-roncocted. •
cross-cultural studies collducted by·
feminist scholars show lllat women In other societies have successfully
combined work with rearing chiidren wtle.n creative child care patterns were
employed and domestic work was
•
shared.
One of these scholars, Professor
Elizabeth lapovskv Kennedy of U/B's
American Studies Program gave a well
received morning keynote address to

U/B l•sn offender
NQJ only do many people view women
as Incompetent in certain kinds of work.
said Kennedy. but often · females are

-~,'!rr:ro~~ ~~~~~~~~~ c~~~=r~~~

~~~s'1ti~~P:.C:l'"~~~=se ~ey ;:::_

~':~a~ :~r:;~:e~~n~h!..d~~:::'n~

Kennedy cited U/B as an example of an
Institution which has .an upper echelon

particularly t~ose who are political
moderates, organize forums and speak
out on their positions.

·sTATE UNIVERSITY_
AT BUFFALO

1

fe~lnl~f:~;~n'ed~d_ou:~~ ~haf ~~;

felt were typlcal _problems faced by •
career women.

Coverage of Saturdeio "Car-

W~

:,:.n; C:Onference appears on pages 8, 9,

1
should explore ways their positions can
be u·sed to have a positive Impact on
other women .
Kennoo~ predicted that career women
0

tt.nnedy: WomM here hew to batde.

·we aren'tthe most progressive

Turning to a discUssion of cross-cultural studies and their Impact on

~k:ssl~eu~g~,i~~·w~~~:~~~~f ~~~~~ ~~r;:;~~. ~~~~:'.,sre~";~~ th~~ w":me:~
are often surprised to fi nd that such
research has any relevance to their

··s.. 'Career Woman,' s-ee 11, cot S

NOV 16,1978
VOL. 10 ~NO. 11

._..,.oni)'C......:abMclof 150 SlUdenrs~a¥1Sfl ~
niJht at the~ a - d ! Facility at Main ser.t. A lllentmerch
to the ruc:tor ~ lollow.clby a JrOUP readl~~&amp;. The event- one
of • .-tes of activitieS lor 'Karen Silkwood Week,· organized by
v - ' -peaceancl_,oftUCiear IJ'OUIIS at Buffalo State and U/8.
" The siJht -•~ve:· bystanders fhouSht.

�........

l

~11,1171 ,

Incidents mar
bus strike;
it continues

Budget cuts are a possibility,
Ketter says at U/B co.,. neil meeting
Budael cute area likely possibility for
the 1919-«&lt; !local year, President
~ L. Ketter told the U/B Council
Ff1dey.

Haotlng mlaaed enrollment targets for
the paat two years, the President said,
U/B -.y possibly "may be asked to
In budget or
In-~ next year."

-a d.,._

an lncn18S8

~~ap..'m":ulf~mos:'.~··an:l'~
•

Unl--'ty as aJW!Iole will face...,......
problema In llletdlng how "to bring the
lnatllutlon 1nto1lefance without hurting

~,;;;aalon, Ketter said, Ia not to

118 an jqfl,ltute 91 J'"'pology. Allll"'UU~
aorne .-..ngernent of resources may

be necasut:Y, he Indicated, we cannot
bedrl-. eolelyO, student demand.
"I can meet any enrollment quota,"
Ketter emphasized, "but thet would
distort this and other Institutions In the

area.•

11 cuts h...., to be made In budget, he
said he would rather see them In the
form of "Increased saving&amp;."
That way, the money would remain In
the basic appropriation and thus could
be more easily restored when enroll-

=~tf~et~a:rc:,~t~~r~tlt"~eeV'.::r~

to a $30 million endowment [In 1962
dollars], a physR:al plant that was '1ree

~;~~;~:::.rv ~~~;~~~~~~~i

which mortgaged that physical plant In

~;h~ ru'~'f'c.!~~~·~~

construction
Since the merger, Ketter recalled, afi
SUNY master plans and directives have

=r~ren~{! '~11,:\.!:'e~m,~~s'stT~'

That remains our mandate and our goal,
he Indicated.
SUNY Is the most heavily-regulated
public university system In the nation,
the President noted as a prelude to a
discussion of how the system works ordoesn't. .

B~~ld~~,~~=er recalled, an "absolute
building freeze" on new construction
was Imposed, but U/B was directed to
continue taking In more students.
In 1977, though, student numbers
- started to drop. The Blizzard of 77,
busing and crowded conditions were
variously held responsible, so the State
~~g~o~: h!~7~?~p,etm~'f o~~~9~~
enrol~ment targets. [Cfr as Governor

will be the case] .
Ketter aald he mat have to call 'o n the.

Carey told • protesting studarlts last
week, "I gave you more mo11eY\han you
were41upposed to get." ]

months.
News of the bleak budget outlook

missed enrollment targets. There was a
sizeable dip In Millard Fillmore College

~g:'~tlo~s ~lp Al~y w\~h ~~p.,"~

~=t:'.x~~~t':r~\~~ ~,a:;~~ :~:

major Item on the Council agenda.

What the Council did
The Council alao:
•decided to dedicate two Amherst
buildings [Lockwood an~ Baldy] this

-==~=;the Ubrarles to hold an
~Pt::,'~he .=,'l'/;~e'l6~~I!, P~:h

Collection; •
•listened to a brief pr~sentatlon from
Bob Cronyn, preal~ent of the Dental
Student Aaaoclatlon, on funding
problems In that school; •
•paaaed resolutions Introduced by
Student Representative Michael Pierce
calling for parity of funding for U/B
within SUNY and Inviting Chancellor
Clifton Wharton to come see conditions
111'81-hand; and
·~ from Chairman Robert Mlllonzl that Or. Newton Garver, the

C 1den~:_:~ F=~~ens:n-~1· ~~

lllldergr.suate- Student Aaaoclatlon,
will be ln.tted to,... presentations at
fUIUN .,..,.,tar" Council meetings.
[MHionzl Mil e.ller been opposed to

=-~student~~~~ at~,
In hie .-.port, Ketter -iewed for new
CouncH membera how U/B came to be
a 111ft of Stale Unlventlty, and how
rigidly controlled the SUNY system Is.
He

-.a

~

~

a

provided

briefing

on

llalda and diec:uaaed a new

beiiiQ propoucl to ldeoltlfy
llialllullona Cllllftl*llble to U/B for
~ of ~lnlna appropnate
...... of fundlngMCIII&amp;fflng.

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

WNn the rt.ld Commlaalon [a blue
rlllbOII . . . . liiiPC)Int8d by the Gooiilr-

:f!L!b~:_
VU"J:
iii;"...
,......,
• .....

,_.....,_

........ In .... IJniWralty -

new ~~~~t~~~e :~r~~u.z'e~~af~

~er~rag~~r.,m~~:rigbe:~. .vp~le 'a;'~

not staying here," Ketter said.
A study Is now underway to p~nlnt
reasons why that Is true- altho
the
phen\)111enon Is not unique to U/ or to
SUNY. Stony Brook also lost large
numbers of students at the upper
division, as did live other SUNY units.
Other SUNY campuses experienced
difficulties with entering students,
Ketter said. One four-year college, for

~~~~1re~~~t~~~er~f&gt;'so

Registration trends
·
Total registration at the University
(apart from Health Sciences which has
held Its own) has dipped from 22,000 In
1976, to 21 ,100 In 1!it7, to 20,900 In the
current year, Ketter reported. The

. ~~~:~~ h:~:~~Jm ~t~ J&amp;\~ri
those three years; freshmen have ·
jumped to well over 3,000. But

~fv'/;\~e~!si~k~~~~f~~r=~~ =.'

Around 80 per cent of those who
enter as freshmen want to get Into
management, engl.-ring or the health
professions. They can't - and, Ketter
said, the University can, shift funds
d
o accommodate
uden
Interests, .even If that were desltable.
l.eaa-lnodemand areas of the University
are heavily tenured and the tumo~ rate
In these fields Is prectk:ally nil. New
monies just aren't available.

heA~~YT~~:::s.:Oor:':!c'::"l~ydl~!~~'1n
Management, for ,xample, Is 28to 1; In
Law, It's 26-27 to 1; in Englneerlng
21-22to 1; In Psychology, 13-14 to 1; In
the humanities, 8-9 to 1.
There are no simple solutions.

.... ln&amp;lllirtlona

~ly, Ketter
Ml&lt;ed 0/B
graduate centers
rnatltutlona" with

has

...... "'in"-'ty c:antera" ahOuld
. . .......-. the ..... Rlpoot
of 1t1am
In
Wlalam.._YIIIIt.
.

•-*" - -

.......

~
- ........
....11la
would
UIIMIIIO....,
allli: 1M
Coon:lll
MCI
............. of . . UoiMrllty ftDDII-

....._

..... .,..

:.::=~====
...
we:;iiiiii.';i'• • ..-..far
:=;.
ala= ¥.......,..JIIIblle
I

-=:1.:.:-1: .SUNY

........... -

!!!!,

~

of llle

the

=

~

tolclllle

~::=~~a:::
571w
.. oo£·
~-: PCII'*" 0111, U/8
,.,J;_.i,.IUNY.
In adilltiofl

aald, the State DOB
and other SUNY
to Identify "peer
which to comDBJ'e

fac~:~:har~~· :!;rcise, Ketter said, It
has become apparent that the !.our
SUNY university centers aren~ all ahkl';
U/B and Stony Brook are comparable,
he suggested but Albany and
Binghamton are "different animals."
·
Institutions comparable to U/B,
Ketter said, have to have a broad array
of degree levels, professional and
academic, and an enrollment of at least
15 OOO. students. They have to have a
substantial commitment to graduate
education [a graduate enrollment of at
least 5,000 or 20 per cent of the
' enrollment total] ; at least one doctorate
should be conferred for every- five
master's. T-he institution should demonstrate a history of quality peer
evaluation , and should rank among the
top 100 Institutions in the U.S. In terms
of research funding.

Twenty-five Institutions meet these
crlterla, Ketter said, In ~dd ltl on to U/B
and Stony Brook. Among them are:
- Wisconsin , Michigan, Michigan State,
Texas (Austin), Washington , Berl&lt;eley,

~~~mb!ft'ate~0 ro~/;, ~?~:: ft~hdo~~:

Virginia, Kansas, Pittsburgh, Iowa,
North Carolina and Rutg~ .
These are the schools we should be
compared with for budget purposes, he
said .

c'!".!~,ut ~~~k_er3edlcatlons, the
Council decided it wants to retain
responsibility for formal dedications. II
asked the ~dmlnlstratlon by the ne&gt;&lt;t

ro_ee~~~~~:~~~ ~~~!~~r~:nt_g~~~;

dar;~t~-~~c~:nf;~~:;'~~ra~n,;'l~-~~er-

.

noon Monday near the Main Street
Campus.
The picket, Mrs. Marian A. Moshldes,
a drtver on strike, was treated at Sisters
Hospital for hlp and ankle Injuries and
relsased In her doctor's care.
Alexander L. Kochkim, the student
was charged with fourth degree crlmlnai
mlschiel.
• •
·
Ttie driver of the bus Involved , Ronald
L. Buttermore, was not charged.
Repons on tlfe lncldenj conflicted .
Moshldes, who was picketing with
other drivers at the Sherman campus
entrance on Bailey, said the traffic ltght
at that Intersection was In her favor as
she walked across Sherman Drive. The
bus driver was making a right turn off
..
Bailey.
"We were walking slowlh." Moshldes

1

~~r.;,7S,::;.~h~~·q·~~;sn~· :h! b~:~~ ~~=

said . She said the left front of the bus
hit her, knocking her to the grour.d and

~~~~!~n91 :~~ts~~ep:~h~es~l~~ed

off. The
Campus pollee reported, that Mo-

Holiday buses _.
Regular service will be terminated on
Wednesday, November 22, as follows ·

last bus leaving Main Street (via Ridge

~=pu(~lilc"or.;M·(~I':"t~l~~~eav~~

shides tried to hit the rear view mirror
on lhe left side of the bus when she
sll~ped and fell to tha ground.

funds
Late In the session, Pierce Introduced
Bob Cronyn, president of the Dental
Studenl Association, who protested to
the Council concerning the "Inequity of
funding" for the U/.S dental school In

damaged the mirror on the other side.
He apparently Is a member of a small
coalition of students which formed late
last week in sympathy with striking bus
drivers.

~:: ~~ol

coa'~~~~~nil~t~n~~.'8. kcandldate

0

• Campus), 9 :45 P.M.; last bus leaving
~:::~~), ~~gQ~~~) (via Rktge Lea

An hour1y service from Ellicott to
' Governors to Squire will be In effect

~~~Ye\J~=w~Wi~;o~H~t~~~drJe

hour from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.; -and will
leave Squire on the hatf.ttour, from
Hk30_!.m. to 10:30 p.m .

mlrr~h~ ~~:0~~ b~f~~~e ~~"; v~~~

sai:S

at
ngu~'l!r; :;::;~~ C:f,r~ P~~~ ·
Roswell Pari&lt;, pointed out that his
meellngs on Friday and Monday and
school also has less space than Stony
was attempting to enlist student
Brook. " We're waiting for Squire," he • suppon for the strikers.
said , " but.. meanwhile we have an_ _ IliiUilJC!lence au.heJllm,llean.un.rl!?Tedltat1on-vts1!1n'the-sprln ·
Mirhts, In Diefendorf Friday night was
We also don I pay our acuity as
addressed by one of these students
who urged his fellows not 10 ride the
much as(hey ~et at Stony Brook. A loss
of space, fund mg. and faculty Is eroding
buses and to join drivers on the picket
~~?~Jf!t~~~~.~-~~r~~~n~~~w has lines.
. .
The Dental Student Association has
Members of DiviSion 1302 of the
sent letters 10 the l"!!lslature to the
Amalgamated Transit Union , AFL-CIO,
h~ve been on strtke agalnst Blue Bird
Governor and others to get ihem to
, stnce November 1.
hear our case "Cronyn reported
As specified In Its contract with the
Ketter said "the dental schOol Is a
problem," but that comparlsons with
University, the company has continued
Stony Brook are "falling on daaf ears"'
the U/B Intercampus bus service during
the labor dispute using supervisory
That's a new institution with uniqUe
stan-up costs
personnel and ottlera as drlvers, and
U/B can and is making a case for
enlisting &amp;qulpment and drivers from
increased denlal.fundlng, the President
other bus companies . •
said, by Inviting In experts to compare
•S., 'Councll,' pove'-S, col. 1

Malone chairs
englneeHng unit

113&amp;-2345 Ia 1he number to, call for c.mpua Conilltlona Report, a new

~~~=-on

Minor Incidents began to mar the
Blue Bird bus strike Monday as a picket
neai campus said she was hit by a bus,
and a student was . arrested lor

halls at Amherst.
Chairman Mlllonzl added , " I would
ask that if we Invite speakers that we
get some information about their
oratorical ability and sense of lime."
The chairman was obviously thinking
about Seymour Martin Llpset who
plowed his way througti a 60-page
~:f.~on l:~ fa~t the Capen Hall
" I would ask · that, In light of the
current fiscal situation , anything that' is
done be of the utmost simplicity," said
Student Representative Michael Pierce.
"I can't emphasize that too strongly,"

Conditions report -.

1118 ..... UnMralty of lluffalo

....... IIIII.....,. of a ..... public

per cent

funding f,atterns, administrative and

Wedneeday, November 15,

~

Campus

1lle

, ....,. conalata of a brief telephone recon:llng, will provide
lllfilriMIIon 1111 wllet'* the Uni¥W81ty Ia open or cloeed due io
~.......
.
In addltloa, the - ' will be U8ed to alert moto11ats of lhe conditions of
"*'- and l*tdftD lola on the U/B C&amp;liiJ)II8&amp;a and wiU be upCajed as
=-olllloMcMnge, -"'JtTedlnlcal SDeclaflst CMrlea T. BrunakiU.
llnlnlldll IKited lhll two
- • for activating the aentice
to

are

...,.._ • quldc "*I10il of nfonnatlon to rnember8 of lhe Univerolty
- l t y and to help keep open the NQUiar Campua Securlty/Unlverolty
Pollee telilphona linea.
"'n day&amp; wiMn the -'her Ia bed the telephone llnee are contlnuoualy tied

11::::.; :_~~~~ ~~n~~~=

:f.=--~-=.,

qulcldy oaepond to -IIIOICIM, • he aalol .
lbe .-.port will .. ._....., -y II8Cfi morning and updated as changoa In
="~ oeponed br pMrol carw and .,.,_...
lhe !:ampua.

""'!'

Dr. Dennis P. Malone has been
appoint'¥! to a th~ jerm as
chairman of the Department of
Electrical Engineering by President
Robert L. Ketter.'
A member of the U/B faculty sinoe
1965, Malone- aa chairman of the
same department from 1988to 1973. He
also served as coordinator of the
Electropllys1ca Resarch group, now
known as tiiJ Laboratory for Power and
Euvironmental Studies, from 1974 to
1975.
•
Malone's present research work Is In
laser engineering and physics and
plasma dl•gnostlcs. Before coming to
U/•1, he w.os a research physicist at the
Cornell AeronautiCal Laboratory. where
he was pnncipal ln-tlgator on
projects Involving the d~no ;tics of
10nt&lt;ed gases and plasmas.
The author ol numerous technical
papers. Malone's research has been
Cited_!~.~ ~~~11}ber oJ,iOI'f'IIP/+
,

�- 1 8, 11711

Leboyer M.e thod: it's so simple, yet so diffi.cult
What people refer to as the leboyer
technique of childbirth is actually an
"attitude" which manifests ·Itself In a
method of delivery tl\at recognizes ttle
newborn as a "somebody."
"It's so slmole, yet so dllflcult to do,"
says Dr. Frederick leboyer, the
controversial , Internationally known
physician and author of Birth Without
Violence.
leboyer spoke to a receptive and
mixed crowd of students, health
professionals, young couples and 11188
residents Friday. The audience lined the
back walls and sat In the aisles of a
Farber lecture hall to hear his
untraditional view a on childbirth.
leboyer's appearance was sponsored by the Continuing Education
Department of the School of Nursing.

Tr~ul~l::n~~ ~~~=. who ulckly
·
engaged the audience with his
Chev.alier-llke accent and charm ,
maintained that birth should occur In a
"climate of tranquility and openness,"
Instead of In harshly-lighted. noisy
de~~~~~;'~o leboyer, many doctors
are oblivious to the fear and pain a

~aurice

~e~~ro'i::~=t1i~i!t ~~~~1~fl~

-

=:.as'::~heo~ort:~~:::'ec~n ',:~1 ~g:
~~~~nar:ff,~~t system

are not
"In truth , It Is the opposite. Babies
heve a com~::,ete awareness of all that Is
00
t':,g
Leboyer
contortjld his Ieee Into grimaces

..O.:'J:rsc:r~~-message,

~~~t ~~~~ ~~- n~v:n~· ;~~

infuriated," he remarked.
In Birth Without Violence , he
describes the Infant's facial expresslonsasa"maskofagonyandhorror."

The method
Under "the leboyer method," the
father has the option of being present
during birth. A dimly-lit delivery area
gi'(&lt;!s the stark. antiseptic stage a more
serene ambJence.
After the baby Is bom, It Is placed on
the mother's stomach . Then, Its back Is
slowly •and rhythmically massaged by .
the mother, father or physician. The
very act of touching Is significant, says
leboyer, since It is "silent communication" which can transmit a feeling of ,
tenderness and well-being to the
newborn.
The baby Is nev!!rtumed upside down

~o~~~t~;,e'te '!;:rst/~:~~. :::,
Infant Is Introduced to different
sensations slowly and In a manner
which decreases any possible threat.
leboyerurgesthat !he umbilical cord
be severed only after It stops pulsating
- and bacomes a "dead link" between the

~~;:,n~·st~~? ~~~~ ":~;or,!~~: ~rts~

patience on the part of-the physician,
but he feels the walt Is an "invitation to
both the doctor and mother to respect
the baby's own life rhythm."
After being massaged, the baby Is
:~rnort~ ~~mth(~ys:;: J.l'ure'i
,water. The newborn Is gr.en a
to
relax , open its eyes and hands and
explore&lt;ts own body. .
· hears no cries of outrage during
IIMi .Qtassage or bath, but merely short
. "chirps·· or surprise and discovery.
· Circumcision

c~

le:~~te'lo~e:!\~n~ :~~t.'~~e jg!

that Infant circumcision should

be

~~;:;:~~~ r:,r~~~ ~~~u;ew~'~";S:::

There's no point, no reason, except for
religious purposes " he argued
Regard ing his ' opinion on tiome
blrths,L,.boyer said a physician would

S,.,..,John

have to be either " mad or brave" to
deliver at home, considering the threat
of malpractice suits and the unavailability of emergency equipment.
Despite a protest from a family

re"J;~\~':.\'

f:;:, t~~ h,~d~~JCti~~
certain unnecessary procedures (sue;.
lion, shots, eye drops) are . often
undertaken Immediately after birth for

precautionary rather then medical
reasons. "Childbirth Is an easy, natural
procedure, but doctors often took for
trouble," he Insisted.

'pre~~Y!

~~\n1s\'::

m::'z:!,
not because physicians lack concern for
the Infant but because their Orientation
toward childbirth dllfers. "Nobody Is
guilty," he said- "only blind."
-JB.

•Council
(lrom-2.coi. S)

us wltb other dental schools nationally.
"We have a vital, nationally-known
dental research program that's, deterIorating," Ketter agreed.
And there Is one comparison with
Stony Brook which Is valid, he pointed
out. It costs $4,000 more here- for a
dental education. The State provides
costly dental kits for Stony BroOk
students; our students have to buy
them - for $4,000.
Also, Ketter said , the State has no·
equipment
replacement
program.
They've never bought one piece of
dental equipment here. Whet's here was
. here when we were private, or has been
bo_~ght with grants; some of It now
- neiidi1ol)1!l'eptaced:-'We-h«Ye uepc&gt;&lt;~--f.,...,
going forward to Atbaoy about this,
·
said .
Inequitable fundlna hit
With Ctlalrman IO!IIIonzl watching the
clock for a 4 p.m. adjournment, the
Council followed up this dlacusslon
with hasty passage of two resolutions
Introduced by Pierce (and aetonded by
Rose Sconiers).
Pierce had a preamble:
• t as well as other students know
that' there have been several financial
con~tralnts placed • upon the State
University of New York system and that
SUNYAB like the other centers, has had
to undergo many cut becks.
" When closely looked at there appear
many instances When cutbacks were
not fairly and equally applied, and the
results of such unequal retrenchment
have seriously handicapped the overall
well beinp of students at the
University.'
The resolutions put the Council on
record as being willing "to utlllze to the
fullest - extent possible all of Its
resources and abilities to procure equal
and adequate funding for the pro~rams
and services of th is Uni versity, ' and
urge the Chancellor or his designee to
"visit the State University of New Y~
at Buffalo for the purposes of aeetng
Orst hand the conditions that exist and
recetvtn~ representations for remedial
actions .'
~'\

NO-AGENT ADYOCA TE NEEDED
An ed'IOCall Ia ......, to , . _ , the
"no-egef~CY" pM111on at the
21 Ill*' fonlm on bargalfltng ...-:Y
a~temat-. The forum wHI be Mid In
Moot Court (O'IIrlen Hall) .. 3::10.
AnrIn partlcfDetlng,

"-'*

In_...

. ~ c81t *"'an o.- et ':2Glla.

We could have been 9-0, Dando asserts
- "We played well enough to win every
game," commented U/B football
mentor Bill Dando summarizing the
1978 campaign whlcll ended Saturday
with a loss to Alfred. " We were In every
game," he continued, .. but I felt we
could have done better. •

to~es)te;:;~· o~ee~:~fu~~r;~~~ ~

Concerning U/B facilities , Dando
said, "we have the best field In the
division," but added, "the stands are an
eye-sore ...

Dando was pleased for the most part
with his second-season as head coach,
but thinks next· season will be e\Uln •
better. "With e few breaks, a good

winning record," he concludad.
"Fan support was great · .,e whole
season," the cosch exclalrnecl. "We had
3,000 people there each -~-· He
thought the fans were YIN tmpreaed
with the caliber of U/B play. "They play
as well as Division I teams," waa 1
comment overheard by the coach altar a
hard-fought contest.

::~~~~~~~~~,r~m-zft~~~State, and Albany. Fine contrlbut~ns
by Jim Rodriguez , Frank Price, Mark
Gabryel, and Larry Rothman were
~J..~n~liny turned in by the Bulls
The rear began with tOO potential
.
~ 21~. 2 p.m. Mrs. Kirsten Milbrath, director, 'Amherst
footbel players and ended with 69.
Dando e~plalned thet his recruiting Is
Senior Citizens Oltnter, will tlhow alldea on "Aapecta of Aging In Japan and
done through visiting high schools,
Cltlna." Open to lhe Unr..ally oornmut&gt;lty.
o.-.bttf fi-~- Dr. Rlldl Beneldlk, "Aapecta of Unl-slty Ute In
sending letters, and mainly by 'players
Informing their friends . "If we continue
South Africa;" Mrs. A...-tla Y-*dlk, aonga In o.nn.n, Engliah and
getting the same caliber players from
Afrlcaana, IICOOmpenlM by Mrs. Elma Wileon.
•. __ Til.~- ~- erw held In the Ernerltua Centar In HerTI!IIIItl Llbnlry.
nigh schools each year, we'll have
soml!thlnggolng:' he11tated.---·-- -·-··t.:.:.::.:.::~.:.::~------------------------'

Emeritus news

�VIEWPOINTS
When you vote: vote a 'person'a l commitme_n t
To um..~~yco-au-;
I write thll letter about the upcoming
t.a8Jnlng egent etecllon as a member
or (Tn the cue of NEAl a former member
of all th.,_ Otg8nlzat one seeking your
IIUPj)orl. In ~lcular I am not writing as
a joflnnle-c:Ome-lately officer of UUP.
My ,....,., for writing: my lnCf88111ng
oonc:em the level of dialogue at
Which elect~ng Ia currently taking

pi~IS 11 bell charecterl.ted for me by
thla from a _ , NEA brOadlilde: "Q:
What 8bOut memberl of the professiOnal atalf? How will they fit Into
AAUP? A: That Ia a blatent falsehoOd ·:~ .", but the m01t casual reading
of NY.,Ul publjcallonl auggesta thai
too often their tone as
thla has well. 1 h... fought within UUP for an
etecllon baed ori 118U88 end -respons-

!I:::I~~~~~':~:U~~~~~ con~ to
This Ia en Important election. Not
only o.. ealarl• end worldng condition~ but, 8ljleCially for our young
coll-ouea end those In smaller
pn&gt;grwna, our ~lc futures are_
dlnoctly tied to the agent elected.
Collet~guea In other SUNY units and In
many ofh• collage• who have
wiiMaaed retrenchlnent at fimt hand
• 11111 more Mn&amp;ltlve to this than most of
us are llere. Every sign points to a most
difficult future; I urge you, therefore, to
atudy the laauea end the positions and
to vote on thll beals. But then I further
urge you to join lind to become ecllve In
the organization that wins.
Polntl to be clarified
There are several points that should, I
believe. be clarlfled:
(1) The bargaining unit was estab-

~~.:.n~~~~~! ~ttm~':::~":~h~t~~

academics.)

At

any

rate:

Good guys and bad guys?
(4) The yood guys vs. the bad guys.

~~~~~es co~~~t..\':%h!!J thrr".:~~~~

choices, I am especially concerned
about the Idea that somehow getting
one group in will solve all of our
.problems. Both major groups have bad
track records. \ One reason I became
active In UUP was my reaction to what 1
felt was a disastrous 1977·78 year.)

one when w~ loSt regular Increments. (I

neither.

recenlly read In an NEA broadside that
that settlemant was wonderful because
It gave such an across-the-board por
cent Increase. But on the other side we
hear how much bette&lt; Is the current

~~di~~~re!;;d:ger~'pr~~=~~al~ncha.~,ro
"~p,ent ,"

their moral suasion as their members
drift away.
Some of the large items paid for by
dues are: Albany staff and lopbyists
negotiating team expenses (I believe
that this Is the largest single itemTri the
budget of the current agent) , and
statewide delegate assembly meetings.
State -and national affiliation expenses
are relatively small b~dget items.

this would exactly balance.)
Clout
(3) lf1hars all there Is, why all the
fuss , and - more Important - wby the
dues and agency fee? Th~ answer Is
clear and simple: clout. Neg&lt;:&gt;tiallng a
contract today in t.h ls advocate
relationship Is no longer what It was In
the years before the TaYlor taw. I, too,
am nostalgic for· th ose days when we ·
didn't have to muddy our hands (and
our reputations), but I am convinced
that those times are gone. Witness In
this regard some of the contracts f.otced .
on us, in particular thai early pre-UUP

llshad 'bJUbe state to include aCademics.
end non-teaching professionals (but
not office employees like secretaries) of
the SUNY colleges, unlvershy centers,
ag end tech schools, medical centers
end central offices. Until recently I was
uncomfortable with the academlc-I'ITP
combination because I felt· that their
concerns were so different. Now I learn
that the combination is Important
because administrators In other states
are sliding lines back and forth between
the two In ways harmful to employees
in both groups. (I note hens my opinion

the third ballot entry, would

a {~,"~;h~~~~heu~':f~~'['a~3 u~~t i~
end what Is not the agent's task. The

~~ira~~t~~~~~mr., t~r~f~~~~~~i~:r~~~

· ~&gt;:y~n~?~Ya~~ :~ ~h~~~ ~~~~~~bb1

the fact that Buffalo has a continuing
increment program. We can do without

~~~rn::,ble 1 ~~~~~/;tln~0;tiT~nt~cJ

Clout means political power and In
our case It means pontical power in
Albany. And, yes, political power
carries with It all those negative
connotations we look down on from our
Isolated Ivory tower. If means pres:
Suring individual leglsJators; i! means
endorsements thai m~e you most

us want to put our hands. The agent Is

these smokescreens.)

Intransigent state team and mooltoring
that contract. Two activities tHat fall

~~~:~nc!hsup~~~d ~'W,~~at!~

management sessions held locally to
address general staff ooncems. And
that's about it . The lines (here at SUNY
Buffalo at least) have been carefully
defined · end cooperatively managed

·

uncomfortable; it meanS personal calls

to the governor from the biggest guns
you can bring to bear. Yes, that all

ra~~ft';'a:,~· p~~~~7b~~~aat~1l ~~~al~

;~~lsa~~~~r. Bo~~dNa~~~n~ 'tJ'J~fk~~~
1

end the AAUP. (The distinction between
agent and AAUP roles would be clouded
In the case NEA won, but I believe that
the advantages and disadvantages of

this well and are heavi ly Involved In th is
kind of activity. AAUP too knows this
game tor tney see It from tne onverse:
wi tness the ever--declining l'hfluence of

~~~e~;[~~~~.fJ.~~Pwl~~ {e~fi;~ne~

_

solve the central problems.
The real problem of any agent is
gaonlng active support and hard wort&lt; by

~r~ebe~tds:.':9%~ct~eoJ~;~~~~susw~

and that's all of us - "taking over" the
winner. In the. ,tlnal days of the
campaign each organization will be
offering its best face and you will be

· ::;rrcfr·~s~~~ ~~r;~~g~~~~ ~;.~e~r~~~~

a vote for a colleague's altruism without
a personal commitment Is to vote not at
all. Instead vote on the 1ssues and vote
a personal commitment. Be prepared to

ask now and tater: Whet!o- was I and
where were they when we were - and
will continue to be- needed.
-Gerald R. Rising
DeP;_artment ·of Instruction

Right of Con$cience group protests abortion mentality
.

eouW::':::. Jan='Y. t~h~s~r~~~~

all the states' laws against ebortlon, the
laaue was Immediately raised of what
then are the legal righta of those who
object to abOrtion. Pro-abortlonlats
golflll on the -offenalve appealed .to the
0QU11s to rule the! any hospital that ·
~ Medicare payments had to
open Ita fecllltlea lor ebortlon. The
oourts .aald no. The rights of

::"~ or':d~::.ro~~rs ~

8bortlon. are .!lnder a cloud. What of

~t~~

t: m:ln~~~~:.~

--oL. IIJelr right to enter
pot....onii- ICIIOOii'T' Many_ will lilr
you u.t the heat Ia on to conform to the

llboltton ll*!lellty.
Of Ita iety nature ltle eortlor

~ ot":c.:C.~Yin~!oo~lt

... not 11110w exception, but can thla

E
«

beal~torwmoveall

!tom conaclentloua ot&gt;eortion? It may be that· no·
n - Cllll be f8QIIIred to

**&gt;or
llllfolm « llalp perform . , abortion.
llut lftYOIW Cllll be rwqulr.d to _ , up

~Aione_...,_..ltaleven

........_ of high 8Chool 11118 are
~to- .... ......,.. frilm the

... ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . end
,..., . _... lhel*lloltiiY IIIII where
.... "pfoduca ol ixlnlllplton" will be
-..c1 •
• fetal deeth c.\lflcate
llgned. llelflll 81 the bottom of the

...a .... _
____
:.....,-::.
...... ....,.___
,_ __
_..__
~

-

_...,.
-::::=r.;~
~
...

Noll.-... ,.

__
_....

. . . . o.fll

INollil.~

,-

.. a.~

~'~
.-::
-A.QOIIIB

~­
.......
-.........-

-----

,;.
•
Institutional totem, they are typically
assigned this task as If there were no
difference between ebortlon and other
'
operations.

Lau direct buljuat as aura
We students at the University of
Buffalo are now confronted with an
attempt less direct but just as sure to
lnvolve conscientious objectors to
abortion In the ebortlon system . This Is
the action of Sut&gt;-Board I to demand as
part of our mandatory student health
Insurance co-.ge for ebortlon, which
coverage levi.. on each studOIJt who
needs the Insurance an additional

~llar'Js.e-Ya':la""-\1,-~~~~

conaclentloua objector far more than a
dollar. They demand nothing less than a
SIICrlflce o( moral principles. Those who
would reduce this Issue to the matter of
a dollar are being obtuse, choosing to
Ignore thal objectors gladly pay what Is
a greater amount 1or pregnancy
coverage, choolllng tO Ignore that there
Ia a quantum leap bet_, general
health care end the abortion procedure.
To overturn this policy, to organize
opposition to 11, we announce . the
lormetlon of the .University of Buffalo
hts of Conscience Group . Our first
..
9.!1101. that or petitioning Sub-Board
' ~wa ·their declalon to Impose a
mandatory payment _lor aborflon. Some
Sui&gt;-Board members parrot the line ttlat
objectors are free to- buy "altern~tNe"
Insurance (much more ,1;9stly and
beyond the reech or many which Is why
there Ia a atudent plan to begin with) .

~

~P~=~Io~ ~~: rl~J'~ :l~

tl.., way Which does not require anyone
to surrender their morel principles.

..... atudenll to loin
We need atudents to join Ul to
Clrcutele our patlllona whereVer they
gethar. Reeponaeto oureHorts 80 far Is
1

=~
~o J:1a ';,~~C::.s ~~~
thla cempus, and we went Sub-Board to

know It, a Sub-Board the! mey hll¥8
auapected thla Ia 80 when It deCided on

lhll policY during the 11Ummer Wh811

atuchnte - . . eway. We need
volunteer. to continue our petition
elfort. We CM be .-.:had et: U.W..Ity
of lluffalo Rlghta of Conaclence Group, ·
c/o 8 , ~~ &amp;quina !WI, Box 22; or
81 . . , _ I~· We will be
......,.,. lllb'- 81 &amp;qUire Norton
!Wie,...... •.UI " - patltloR11'118dy
lilt elgnlng or teldng.

!

The University of Buffalo Rights of
Conscience Groul" Is just that. We are
not an avowedly' pro-life" group. Many
have signed our petition solely because
they respect· conscience and believe
0

~~rt1~~~eT~~ou~~i~r~~i~edol ~~Yf!f~

Rights of Conscience Group is not a
"pro-choice" group. We leave the Issue
or abortion Itself to the larger society
and Individual efforts . As .a group we
are focused on the limited question of
the University of Buffalo's mandatory
student health Insurance plan and Its
mandatory payment lor abortion.

that forces anyone to pay for what they
believe to be the killi ng of Innocent
human life. This runs counter to that
spirit of ~m.erlcan law which in our

~:e~~'::~~:~tY:O~'~bi:r~~ ~~~;. g~~~
1

rights · of conscientious objectors lo
abortion should be even more established and respected given that lha
unQot'n are no I aggressors. We ask then
for respect of conscience. The word
respect means "to look again, " and we
are asking, demanding , that Sub-Board
" look agaln" not qnly at their policy but
at the peo~le whose consciences they
have chosun to Ignore.

Different philosoph lea and bellels

e--are-;&gt;e&lt;&gt;J&gt;I~any--dlflerent~.Kruon.---..-11~

phllosophlesahd beliefs, from different
beckgrounds, different nations. We
reflect 'the variety o f this world. but on
this we agree - that t~e rlg!&gt;ts of
conscience of many students &amp;this
University are being violated and we are
aroused and opposed to it,
There can be no j ustification for this
roughshod disregard of one of the
highest faculties humanity· possesses
..,.. consclencel Certalply not when
conscience Is here weighing a matter of
life and death . We will not accept ,
cannot reconcile ourselves to any policy

ToriA:;h.o~::r:r
c~

n

•

--

DlloramAII~

Co-Cha........,.. •

__

co.a-

to ,_,.
Ato-P. Ford

No11CJ o D¥orol&lt;

Beth O~JIOlQ..
Quy v. Q!nh

Regina•
A n - p._.. ·

~~Ai.=\':"

Pott T~ro
JoJ
s.ma

Danlellyono

OonMh Kouohtk

Holiday Brunch
The Faculty Cl~b Is sponsoring a Sunday Brunch on December 3,- from 11
a.m. to 2 p.m . m the Talbert Dining Room, Amherst Campws. Adults $3.50
per person ; children under 16, $2.75. Infants will be admitted free.
Raservatlons are required and because of space limitations will be
accepted In the order In which they are received. Checks should be made
payable to The Faculty Club and sent with the reservation form to 265
Harriman Hall , 3435 Main Street , Buffalo , N.Y. 14214 not later than
W&amp;dnesday, November 22. No tickets will be Issued - present your name at
the door. For further Information phone.831·3232 between the hours ot 11
a.m. and 2 p.m. No sales at door.
To: Faculty Club, SUNYAB, 265 Harriman, Campu•

Please reserve:

DEADLINE:
NOVEMBER22

-------~"dulls forSundey Brunch at.$3.50

- c - - - - - - - -'Chlldren (under 16 yr.) at $2.75 each
Cbeck for total amount J.________,ls enclosed .
NAME
ADDRESS ______~~-+~------~--~~~~----~~

PHONE

�..... ... : ...

Allen responds
to those who
support AAUP Editor:
I suppose I have to respond to those
who, In last week's Reporter, lamented
my analysis of AAUP's "alliance" with
NEA, though the facts really are
unambiguous to anyone who actuallY,
studies the telCI of their "Agreement. '
They b611 down to this:
1) AAUP Is not now, nor will lt.)&gt;e If
NEA wins the election, the pofentiat
collectiv4 bargaining agent for SUNY.
Only NEA, by law, can assume that role
and the sole influence AAUP could
possiply have Is If their hoped-tor
subsequent merger ever takes effect,
which is entirely -at the discretion of
NEA.
2) Between now and the election plus an indefinite period thereafter 1

~~~ :'hFchwh~~ ~":iir..:,r:~~~Y':'~~r~

majority on the "State Steering
Committee." The Chairman Is appointed by NEA. The AAUP members are a

permanent minority.

.

3) After the election , should NEA win
- and only NEA and UUP are on the
ballot- they can unilaterally scrap the
"alliance," leaving AAUP in the cold,
before any new contracts are negotiated.
Those are the actual written terms

~~:~~~~!sw=t~~ ~u~~~~r,:'g

to' get AAUP
houid· prepare for
di-lntment, because the fine print
says nothing of the sort. Read the
NEA-AAUP " Agreement" (It wae er1nted
In the last Issue of NEA's SUNY'
Alternative" and sent to your horne), but
read It with a lawyer's eye and ask
yourself what does It actually guarantee? It guarantees that NEA can use
AAUP's good name until the ballots are
counted, after which they can do as
they please.
_ In shor1: If you vote NEA, that's what
you will gat - exactly as It says. My
viewpoint Ia that If you want to change
our union's character (and I'm the first
to admit It needs change), then use the
UUP's democratic structure to elect new
officers. Because to substitute NEA for

~~~~~J~!o w~f~~; ~~~~f~~e=~~~

ab11lty.
The funny thing about all this Is thal1
wouldn't even be the Incoming
President of our UUP chapter If Tom
Connolly'lladn't persuaded me to run_(6
months ago) usjng those very same
'argumepts. They were valid then and
they are valid now. 1 don~ begrudge
Tom (or Shonnle, orlra, or Murray, etc.)
~ ll!f_rigrt to change their minds, but
from a egallXffi\fi)tvlew-tt-islate to do so effactl..,lyThe only choice available now Is
between NEA and UUP. Make your
decision on that basis, according to
your Inclinations.
Sincerely,
-WillillmS.Allen

Ballots coming
Ballots for the SUNY taculty-ataU
bargaining unit electJon will be mall""'
out December 4 and counted December

'The _GyJD
Sanford ~ontends Carey and Legislature
have closed the door on this University;
our students deserve better, he writes

0

Governor Carey·:

~'Rft:r~i~!l,~oor~e!s Y~rk"~~~~~ f~~

th!
nearly- six decades, a taxpayer, an
alumnus of the University of Buffalo
and as an individual who has devoted
his entire adult life as a member of tbe
faculty of the University of Buffalo and
SUNY in the Department of Recreation ,
Athletics and Related Instruction .
1-was Inspired by a letter written to
you by Professor Ed Michael on
October 16, 1978, and published In the
1

~m;',P~· B~?l'a1o~f~; ~c~g=rs~9~~

and feel that you have been remiss in
that, as of this time, there has been no
reply.
·
I, like Mr. Michael, am greatly
disturbed by the fact that this University
of nearly 25,000 students, not counting
facuny and staff, is forced to live with
one- athletic building constructed to
care for about 5,000 students and a
bubble in which fire laws prevent the

as~~b~~-~.a~~~~1.g'.:p8part

from the mljOr mass of llye-ln students
by, the .distance between the gymnasium and the dormitories, Is totally
inadequate for the numbers to be
serviced for classes, recreation and
sports. In addition to the lack of space,
the lighting In the only utility
gr,mnaslum Is so poor that many

~~~~~s~~~~r::~:~~~r~e~a~~!

locker and shower facilities are aged
and too small for their Intended use.
The swimming pool, almost 30 years
old and probably our best facility, Is like
1 1

~~~O::dsft'N"l'~:l\t~~~hnes~ft ' ~;~::'~;.;'~

on tired machinery and beginning to
show Its age. Like a...rythlng else, It Is
not large enough to .service our
students for recreation, the number of
classes or the variety of classes
desired.
Students don't believe promiPhysical fitness Is big today and the
University population Is clamoring tor~
::::;e :C':n~:':'de"r!!~~ ~~ro"~~~ngy~i
and the State legislature. The students
bell..., nothing that lsn' visible and for-.
that they cannot be blamed.
We were first told that we would be

~~~~ :~~:~ t~1~ ~':.fft.'lh~
8

t~J.ro~~S:III be 1~rok~~~~ ::~ 1 :,\~

activity area as th .• uiln actTYlty-'s-pace
wi ll be housed In Phase II. I remember
listening to you at the Amherst Campus

~~~~m~~~ r:' f~n~ ::~

wondering at the time how many of
those faculty present knew what that
meant In terms of new available activity
space. Of those I talked to later, most

==~~ l::'lo'':~t"::~ ~fla\':

Pro~~~~ Wh~~~~

;r:~ ~~ro:,-r.:ta~~ ~ ~ponse

to a succesoful cJIIenge campaign
mounted by NYEA which was able to
submit cards signed by 30 per cent of
the membership of the balgaJAing unit
Under State law, a cl- malor1ty of
ballots must be cast tor one of the three
eptlonaln the election.
If no one galna a "'*"tv In the lira!
balloting, a runoff will be conducted
~the loP two.

Levine, fought valiantly to retain the

~~~.~~~~ f~ t~:~~~e ~ru;ch~:e~~~r~~

1976 the several deans and provosts In
joint session arrived at a dl•tributlon of
the mandated cuts which edmlttedly
took Into account enrollment data. My
Impression Is that the number
proscribed was fewer than the 12
stipulated In the October 8 statement,
but I may be In error on this. At least
one other Faculty was forced to endure.
an &lt;&gt;qual or larger cut, If memory serves
me adequately. ·

~~;~~9 Joo:",:e;~'l'n~~Pt~,!.!~\":\:

deterioration at a great University
before it's too late. Our students
deserve better.
Sincerely y_ours,
-William H. Sanford 111,
Associate Professor
Recreation, Athletics &amp;Related
Instruction
Head Coach of Swimming

ev~~;::' ~~~iy~~~!~~~~~~~~~

reducing the trend-away from Arts and

~~- t~ng,~,!h':,f p~~~-=rg~
such that the Colleges responded to
1

Story was not
gOQd enough

~~-:=f:~":"=~~

Editor:
The No~ber 2 feature ar1lcle,
" Advisement: Are Faculty Really
Indifferent?" was a well-written reYiew

Quality Is not a-function of size. The
University Is aw""' of the dtattnctlon ot

:a;J.cl~t~s ~~~ ~bu~~

aurlf
remaiRs to be demonstrated on this
campus, however generally recognized',
thai the merits of 1ormal t...tructlon In
the humanities are appreciated by the

8

~ogr;;;'m ~~~ /fow&amp;::."~t~~se".:l~

only part of a concar1ed effor1 being
made by the total DUE academic

=:~e~\~~~~~.:,or:r.,ot:.:e.~s~~~7D~~

Mar1iou T, l;tealey, director of advfse~;~~o~? D~W'Ced by Dr. John
The staff Is effecting changes to
Increase ·the edvlslng services by
lntegratlng--professlona.Lstafl,Jacu.l!Y,
and student peer advising Into a
well-coordinated University-wide program. We believe academic advising Is
lmpor1an(. and a vital pl!fl of a student's
educational progress, well worth the
time, effort, resources, and commitment to make It better.
-June P. Blatt,
Senior Academic Advisor
DUE Coordinator of Training

the-

=-~===-~.=.:r=
-7)-Jolwl-=opl•boo;

1M·-

14). We ...,.,....,

10 -ifound

1

:;:::r.r~ ~ he" ~~~~s~~~-::;es!~h~~

pursued their normal chauvinism.
It Is unfoltunatelhat Arts and l.sttara ,
should feel set upon . It should not,
however, fall to Dr. Bunn to defend the
past or to antic! pete any different future
without substantial demonstration of a

of

tor-r Otafy.
-RTII.

Schanzer heads
Latin Studies

~.:~lyhc;~~~h .!."3 ~~~:~!:~t~r.;

eo.te-.

'lirtlclea he to author of-orie lilternatlonal
reference work, and hal anothir book of
International dimension abOut to be
published.

Delay In building has already coat t~
taxpayer untold thousands of dollar8

~~orsc~~~~~~~~~~~ ;;,o~ss~~-e~~:

:r.::~~:~i&gt;~a~i~~.e~~rc'i," ~:n,:r·=~7~~

Dr. George 0 . Schanzar hal agreed to
..W, until August, 1911o, as chairman
of the Unlverslly-,.lde Latin American
Studies Committee and director of the
degree program In latin American •
Studies (a Master of Arts In the
Humanities program).
Schanzer, profeaaor of Spanish
American Llt-ure, hal been on the
faculty since 11164. He fdtTnerly was
director oJ graduate studies In ,Span[ah
and acting chairman of ~illh, Italian

W8111em New York, this university could
be a financial boon to the entire area.
With proper sealing, the athletic
program could well suppor1 the entire
phyalcel education, o:ecreatlon, and
athletic program.

over the deliberations which led to the
decisions to delete lines In 1975/78 ond
1976/77.
It Is only logical the! the .Faculty
should assume a defensive posture. But
it would seem that Information beyond
that cited should properly be Included
In any full discussion of the current and
future status of the Facully budget.
One significant omission is a
justlflcatlon of the base budget of
1974/75 from which the cuts . were
apparently made. If I recollect correctly
the previous Provost found the number
of lines then allocated to be larger than
a University under the pressures of

for many years. I would hope that our

ED. NOTE:

1/1&amp;

~~~~ ~e~:~:':'r:';m ~c~h:s~~~~rd~

due to the rise In cost of material and
labor. Even now, it would be cheaper to
erect Phase I and Phase !I concurrently
than to delay Phase 11. It would also
help the unemployment In the Buffalo
· area, which Is considerably higher !han
.most of the United States.
Just this week, one of m best
-freshman swimming prospects announced to me that ha will be leaving
SUNY at Buffalo at the end of his first
semester-because of the time he wastes
dally just traveling , by - bus, between
campuses and the l ack of available
recreational activities on weekends. If
this situation affects the student who
nas established an Identity on campus,
It must really be difficult for the
individual without a team or club with
which to spend leisure time.
It seems to me that you and our
legislature ha.., closed the door on the
needs of this university. I have always
been proud to ba one of Its graduates
and even more proud to be among Its

· date.

Since 1970, we have had a number of
cutbacks In the original structure. The
aquatics area hashed such drastic cuts
~~at~• st~ P~~~~Bf"'~~ that what rernalns will allow abOut a
fraction of the actlvltias originally
nounoecl.
planned .... I ha.., been Involved with
Approximately 18,200 Bcademlc and
~ """'Y swimming' committee and held
~~-=-~~~!!.~~"::o~ Unl-sity- almost every national office In_ the
College Swimming Coaches Aaaocletlon of America and the original plana
un\:r."''r:
would have been per1ect to bring the
affiliated with IIJe New York State
NCAA Chemplonshlpa to Buffalo. We
United Teechara, the Amencan Fedil&lt;a""' the largest of the New York
tion ofTeechero, and the AFL-CK&gt;;
Unl-.lty System an&lt;! the apai:e on the
•The New York Educatono ASIOclaAmherst Campua Is adequate to house
tlon, Which Ia affiliated with the
a Phyalcal Education plant which will
National Education Aaooclatlon and Is
not only house our siudent body but
committed, If elected, to forming a new
also _... the needa of the community.
federation with the Amer~ Association of Unlv«alty Prof....,.., and

uni~

Editor:
I feel obligated to respond to

""?n ~':8;:-r~In~:'ehma numerous

1

::~~tb~\t~h=t~~!n~ ~1~w~~~~

to pose a task for the Faculty of Arts
and Lett~. not Or. Bunn.

v=rl'~

-----~--__:_Pr.:;o~f~eaaor
Emeritus
-riell!ng at
Melbourne State College,

.-

Auatrella.

�Turning Point
Mikhail Baryshnikov llfta Laalla Browne
In e ballet acene from the FridaY and
Saturday UUAB movie:

Thlnday- f6

Haled as a '1lrldrnertt in lhe presentation of
livi1g l1islory on flm . • fhil movie 1o a _..mJ
portrait of a people civided and a nation on
OtetmkofcM-.

ART~'

&gt;WECIAL RADIO BIIDADCAST'

~ .....

-~ .. -"""*'

delign, ~Stale Unlvaolty, wil diocuss
2nd floor, ---Hal Gololy, 2917
Mllnsn..1p.m.
•
II on lrttemationofty recognized deolgner, _a nd II atoo the-~~

hlo--

:.~

St..,.nlo: Gary Stoon ..., a speclof edition of
Oi ol Dog. Cen1nli "'"" Grtl, 2519 St. lbroadcasf via WBFO (88.7 FM)) . Sf at dOOr
benefitS WBFO. 11 p.m.

-lans

turned relUCtant
so1e-&lt;nd&lt;er0 1o d&lt;.t. DIOne Keeton maneges eocne
tunny momenta as a zealouS ecltcr.

bumbling fifth ...,.

HOCKEY'
U/8 n. PlottsbUfVh. TonewiO&gt;de Sports Center.
7:30p.m .

SCHUSSME1STERS SKI CLUB*
The Sc:hussm8iSI:ers Ski Club is holding a bu'5
captains meeting in Room 234 SQuire Hall at
·7;30p.m.

lor---•GropftiiL
FILM'

&amp;~army

woo-

(19.:!). t46 01e1..-1.
1 p.m SponoonldbyBiaat-.
Al-lloclt , . , _ ..., a o.ly plot. but standout
by Lena Home, llil Robinson
FetsWoler_M&lt;!Oooley~ .
'

CACFILM'
Rabbit Test. 170 MFACC . ~ . 8 Wid 10

friday :.._ 17
HORIZONS IN NEUROBKlLOGY 1
.
MuttJple Reprnentatlon In the Motor System:
Two Handa are Better Than One, Or. Peter
Strick, VA Hosp1tsl . Syracuse . 108 Sherman .

1p.m

·

FILM'

Po- Poncholl (Ray, 1955) 150 Ferber.
3 Md 9 p.m. Sponsored by the Oeperfment of
English.
ANATOMICAL BCtENCES SEMfNARConVol of Cell Surface Archtteetur. Jn New·
mol and f"""'! Cello,
George Poele , fk&gt;Swoll
PatkMemoriailnstitute. 182 Farber. 4 p.m.

Or.

THIRD WORlD WEEIC •
4 p.m.-A1n1 show. Rocm 233 Squln!. "lltacka
llrifannfco,"
n Engllnd, produced by
Davfd Cox (producer may be present).
7 p.m..-t.ec:ture n j Am sh:&gt;w. Haas Lounge,
Squn. Aepresentstlve from ~ Pafriotic
Front: nMdi K8ngoi (;:ANU) . " R-Ion ond
~In Zimbabwe: lan Smfth VIsits' the

M-.

-=

Notion"-~
=:"' SVUgg~es"* n ~.
"Spoor

tho

-

"""
'and

LECTUIIU .. BASIC NEPHROLOGYI

Or-::-:.-w.:.~~:w~
- - eont.r. 5108 Sltermon. 4 p.m.
CoffM. 3:45.

~by tho~ ol Physiology

-. and~&amp;~.

An.,._.

'

STA11ST1CS COLLOOIMMI
• _ _ ..
Seoopla Doolgn Ia&lt;
"' " - " " " " - . . Singh, vtsf1ng .......,.
- · U/8. Rocm C.28, 4230 Ridge Lea.
4 p .m. Coffee in Room A-16 813:30.
•

CB.l &amp; IIIOLECIJUR BIOLOGY SEMNAR I
~ o1 High _ , . on Ligand Binding

"*-Or.

Gntgor1o

w-. ~of

"* - ·

lJniverolty
.......-·
4:15p.m.
Coftefaf4 .

114 Hoclt·

p.m. AcmiSslon S 1. students; $1 .60, others.
8ily Crystal !who loves a oua•1&lt;•l&gt;ect&lt; but Ia
marryW1g a gllf he got pregnant on "Soap") is
himself pregnant this time irl a ~o crazi·
ness. that only Joan Rivers ooutd !_lave ~ed

ARTLECTURE"
De'lid Salle speaking on Jack Goldstein an·d
Current Issues In Contemporary Art. Bethune
. Hal. 2 p.m. Co-sponsored by the Art Oepanmenl
and HalwaiSGallery.
An exhibition of--daclt Goktstan's graoNc wont,
""" phooogreph records and • film installation Is
~view at Halwals (30 Esse1t St ) untit

November

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR I
Future Trends In NASA Arionlca and Control

MUSICAL THEA TRE•
The Three Penny Opere, directed by Saul
Blun . Center for Theatre Research. 681 Marl St
Bp.m Genelai_,._S3;studentsand,senloc_
citiZens S 1 50 SponSQI'ed by Center fOf Theatre
Research end Department ef Theatre.

OPERA'
The ....,., Wtvea of WlndSOJ, ~ed by
Muriel Wolf. BUd Recilal Hal . 8 p.m. Genelal
admission $3; abnni. facuttv. senior~ $2.;
students S 1 . Sponsored by the·
. t of
M_~sio .
•

- - ~ Edou&gt;d G. Rynaski. Flight Research (Jepar1meot, CalspM Corporation . 337 Bel. 3 p.m. RefreShments at 4 i'1 308
Bel.

PLAY'

CIVIL ENGINEERING SEMINARI
A....rch in Struetu,... and Soli Mechanics.
T~ . Department ol C1v1 Engin·
eerlng, UIB. 104 Parker. 3:30p.m.

citizens:

Or.-

COMPUTER SCIENCE COLLOOUtUMf
Actlftty SCheduling Via Nlitural '\.anguage

e!".:::O.~~~~~~

- '· Rocm 41 , 422.6-J'idge Lea. 3 :30p.m.

Coffee a n d - 813:30 In Aooln 61 .
TliiROWORLDWEEX'
3 :30
Discussion:. Hlotoricol ond
Economic
Mlnaritloo ond Thl!d
Woo1d "-*'CMncotlorWII*ns. Blockt&gt;stor·

p.m.--P~o&gt;e~

P~ on

~~Albany;

Afro-~

MUSICOLOGY LECTURE'

-

ial ; Juan AngelEiMo1
Silen. Wiinbe,
Pueno Alcon StudM&gt;s
~~Department. Harvard. 233 Squire •• -

# ·

A~Mundro

On the Performance HlatorY of

Scorloffl'a Firat Opora. Fr- A. O'Accone,
profeoeor of music and g.a1rman of the Facqly1lf

the~

o1 fi'1e Arts at UClA.

Baird.

Araenlc and Old Uee. Kalhl!rine Cornel
Thealn!, 8 p.m. Sponsored by College B and the

~=~:u~·=.;::!!:..'::
~ . 50 .

olhers.

LIVE RADIO BIIOADCAST &amp; JI&gt;ZZ BENEFIT
Foallooao, Buffalo jazz artists: t&gt;J T&gt;:&gt;ney, Lou
Marino, and Max Thein , .with Bvln Sheppanl.
• Live 1rom the Tnllf""""""e Cefe. 9 p.m. S3 at
door beneftta WBFO. ,.., bt'Oidcast.on WBFO
(88 .7 FM). f'llrt of the station's """"""'""lp
special progiOIMling . .

8 p .m. General admi&amp;sk:wr$3; students and senkr
dtizens $1 .50. Sponsored b)' the center tor
..]heatre Ae&amp;ee'ch and Deplr't:ment of Theatre.

w-

0P£RA'

UOAIITliiRDWORLDWEEXFILM'
Tho SoW. o1 ChilL Conl.,.ence Theatre
Squire . Cel638-2919for show times. A........;
charge. See Nov. 1611stingfocdelals..

-

UUABMIDNIGHTSPECIAL'
Rocky Horror Plctu,. Show (EnglMd ,

1 97SJ~

~:.- Thealn!. Squln!. Midnight. Admission
A mad, wel'd sati'e on monslerynOVies,

~

Md beeCh porty flms , o bise.... orienlation .
Last yew's- scraalings
, sogetyourbcketsealfy.·
-•olsel-outs,

The

-.y

W,_ ol W I -. d&lt;ectJd by

Monel Wolf. Baird Rectlll Hal. 8 p.m Genera

~ts

'*"""'·

$3:
facqly, 4emor crtizens S2:
Sf . Si&gt;OniO&lt;ed by the
o1

Departmenl

MYSic.

COFFEEHOUSE'
Utah- Phillips, 800QS of tt)e Southwest. union

=·~::;~~,:,cThe"':e~~.:~~~=

Spon$0red by UU.A.B Coffeehouse commtnee .

UUAB FILM'
ThF Turning 1'olirt

(1977).

Conference

~~....~~.atiot,&gt;llboJOClfla..ll'ilb..g...,..__~•lp.m.
8t1nQ raincOats, wat.erpilstota; c:ostunes
Theatre. Sq.We. Call 636-2919 for show troeS
~~~~M~~~-~-~rol~n~the~.~"~
. ·---------~Mm:S~dW~.
H160 llwough 1968 aa aoaocllle protneoc of
1Q Aooe Banc!Oft ShirleY Mec:Laine. Ml&lt;hll

ttlrppf ...._.•• O.y. Tutbtb. 214 Wende .
7 p.m . by the Center for Media

Sludy.
L E C - n . - ON AIIA.AFIIICA'

-....__on.,_"'-"'""'" 1ft

- . , . ., . . . John - t
or
y -· 234 Squn. 8 p.m.
'

-

, . ~Open, directed by SatA Ell&lt;ln .
eem.tor-~ . 881 Moon5t6p.m.
fJIInorll..,......, 53: a n d - citizals
'1 50 Sponsored by tho CeniO&lt; lot ReoOon:tt and the Oaponmont ol Theetre

111e -.y w- of · .,_ed by
- - 8MdRecdiiHol. 8 p t n $3;
dll&lt;ens 52

- ·faculty,-

-·--ptr;o

--

s1

Sponodred by the Oeparfmenl

C.

oi

Sir John F -. whose

Ford
(aolll
~
by ......,.,
puriU1I
of - - Twooei&lt;-Gtyts
· MistresS
---~and-Pogo (Denise
ond c.ct Am Sinnoy) 11 the -

_"* ...,.,.

--Ciud

""""
---~-~

- . I P.•· . . . , . _ 1&gt;1' ~Band tho
11 SO lor~ Band
IIC ......... 12 for U I B - a n d -

------·
---~

----~UI76)Con·

.---.

-

. O. J . Grout,geneniedftor.

Saturday .......

•

- -...... C I I - f l l o r . _

PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR I
lm.-.lon Dlur_Mia,
Ar1hiK B. Oulloos,
~ B. Pierce Foundation Uboratory, vee Uni·
versify S108Shemlan. 4: 1Sp.m Cotfeeat4 .

I.ECTURE'
The Slnking American Dottar, Or. Rk:hartl
Erb, Resklent Felow at the tn.tttute for Public

Baryshnikov and l:eslie Browne. BaBet bet'Mnd tne
scenes prov;dea the fr'ameW&amp;tt 104' the story of
two women who remain friends as one beco1Tle53
great ballet- and the Ofhe&lt; retires IO ..... a

_.s

family.

TliiRD WORLD WEEK •
3 :30 p.m. Panel Discus&amp;ion: Roclam and
St..-.otypea abouf MlnorftiH, Boooe SciWmer
octNe 1n ~ ~; AbOias ..;
Nascimento ..Pueno Rics1 51.-s UJB· R lJgo&lt;ji

Or.

--.....TMEATIIE'

-·

. ,was

He
decorated wltb the "Cavaliere"
of the Ordcir of Marti o1 the ttanan .Republic in
1974. Hii ..Aiessandro Sca1etti. on equlfocJ nel
Hmbionto," _whlch wes presOnted at the 1975
meetO&gt;g of the ...,.._, MU9i&lt;XJiogy Sodety n
Loe ~. w11 be included in The Opens of
. Scortoffl, 1n the HarVard-..- 1 n lnl..mk;.

FIUitl'

106

Sociology Deparfment. Boston

Sco&gt;ln!

' ~- 233

-

7:30p.m. Native American Program: A Ques·
tlon of Genocide. Diane Bums. lntemahonal
• Treaty Councl: John Mohawk. editor Akwesaane
Notes. Film show. also. 233 Squire ·

CONVERSA noNS IN THE ARTS
Either Harriott Swartz iltefviews Peter Reyner
Banh8m, arct\lteCtlJttl MtooiWl ~
(Civonnel8). 4 p.m
-

Pelley · Jotw&gt;s ~ School 101' NJ·
vanced lnt8m8tional Studtes. 209 O'BriarL 4:30
pm

IRCFILM'
Hany and Walter Go To New Yotk. 150
Fort&gt;er. 7 Md 10 p .fl\, $1 a&lt;tnlSSion fOI' non·
feapeyers
Stsra- Ceon. EIM&gt;C1 GaUd, Ceine.
DIOne Keaton, """ Clt@rles 0onw1g H sets and

IRC FILM'
Harry and Welter Go To. New York.

:~f~~- 7

end 10 pm. $1

110

admlss.on ·

MOVIES FOR THE NEW JI&gt;ZZ AGE'
~
1928). a Holywoocl comedy
wtic11 &amp;occeedon potong fun a t -ick ~
: : ~ MMon Daves, who w~ ' one of

~-:.:"'~.="'~

p-'" (

.................. --·---.,. most

To llet - I n

the~

• call

~ - . .. but

__................_.. ....

tlalllla ... -

c:&lt;&gt;rl18diennes of the slent.

thai's - story. &amp;iifalo

CACFILM'
TOOL 150

fa'bor 8 ....,

~Sf . -;St.SO~

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

.

~

.a. EneCounfY HiotDrlcll Soc!My, 8 p.m.

Jter: IOpell only 10 ..... wltll • pro.
......... . . . _ ... lheiUIIjact• •n..IO ... JIIIM!c; •'CIIIIIIIO......... ,;i'jj;
lllllllltltJ. llnleail ......... .....-.
lklllll Oltloe.

UUABMIDNIGHTSPEC)AL'
Rocky- l'tctute (England 1975)
Conference Theatre. Squire. Miclnlghl Aon-.ssoon
charge. See Nov- 17 listing fOI' delalfs

-

f1)

MUSICAL THUTIIE'
, . ~ Opora, directed by

- .. Cenlarlor- -

pm ._

Sunday-19
•

WRESTLING'
Versftyvs AkJmni ClarkGym 1·5p.m
THIRD WQIU.D WEEK •
...._
3 30 p m. PBI'lt!t Olscu&amp;Skln Strugg les fOf
Change in the U.S. and In the Third World.
represenJatrvea from El Comlte. MINP. New vonc.
Cit¥; representative from the United l;eague.
MISSissWpi, representa~ !rom the United Front.
New Yorit G•ty; Malik Shaka . lree·lanee corres·
pondent who l;ved and travelad ., Tanzania.
Zambia. Mgota, .....,._.., Botzwana and
Zaire 240·8 Squr"e.
7 :30 p m _Puerlo Rican~ : Puer1o Rlean

Obituary, Filmore

Roofn. Squire

Poetry readif'IO

by Pedro Poetrl, poet and pia~
MUSICAL 11IEATRE'
Tho T"'-!&gt;nY Open, direcfed by SaUl
Ellun center tor Theatre Rese;weh. 681 Marl St .

~~~~~~-~·;;:,:n:-

- - R.-chand OeperfmenlofTheatre
MUSIC'

s...

· 681 _,St.

Ulll ~-- Kalhal1l1e Cocnol-

8 p.m Sponsored by tho Deplr't:menl of MusiC

�·.·.·

.. .. ..
·

_-

Election forum
The Fecult7 and Professional Stall
senates wil sponsor a forum on the
collective bargaining agent election, on
Tuesday, November 28, at 3:30p.m. In
the Moot Courtroom O'Brian Hall. ·,
.Sp,ol&lt;i'spersons for UUP, NYEA and the
no agen! option will be Included on the
pro~ram .

Room 335 Hayes. 12 noon . Sponsored by lhe
School o1 Archnecture &amp; Envlronmenbll Onigo.

Saturday- 25
MOVIES FOR THE NEW JAZZ AGE"
The Kiss (1929) : As You Dea.Jie Me (1932) ,
two Greta Garbo fims. Butfato and Erie County
Historical Society. 8 p .m.

ST A fiSTICS COLLOOUIUM ~
The Language of Subjectl've Probllbllity.
lessor James M. Dickey , UfB and University
College of Wales. Room 8 ·51, 4230 Ridge Lea.
10:20a.m.

PrO-

FILM "
Breathless (Godard, 1959). 150 Farber. 3&amp;nd
9 p .m Sponsored by the Department of Efiglish .
ARCHITECTURE FALL LECTURE
SERIES"
·Architects/Bulldtng51Concepts, Jerzy Sottan.
l!rCAitect. ltducator. Oepartmeot of Archl1ecture .
• Graduate Sctloot of Design . Harvard . 335 Hayes.
5:30p.m.

CONYERSAliONS IN THE ARTS
Esther Har_rlott Swartz: intervie;;John Logan,
poet. lntematJOnal C8bte !Channet 10).-6 p .m.

w-

-.y
of Wlndoor. cirected by
Wolf. Ba;rd Recital Hilll. 8 p.m. ~
admisSion SS; alumni, loaJty, -ons.$2;
The

Muriel

students $1. 5ponaOnld by !he Oeponmenl o1

--

Music.

UUABFILM"
The ' TumJne P - (1977). Conference
Theatre, Squire. Cal 636·291-9 tor Show times

Adnrisslon(:llal'ge. SeeNovembe&lt;'ii.....,g.

UUAB MONDAY NIGHT SERIES•
Face ·of Anoth..- !Japan. 1966), - 7 p .m.;
K~roneko (Jap;yl , 1968), 9 :15p.m. 170 MFACC.
Bhcott . Free admission .
Face ot Another concems a man. honibly disfigured an Bn industrial accident. who receives a
new face ffom a demonic: physician .
·
K-ylhology. mysticism and a banshee
cry against war are combined in this tale of two
women who return to revenge their murder by

Tuesday- 2 1 .
LEC:ruRE"
SlroWgloo for Suoceuful L_...ng In Coi'Knowing hOw you team can make yOU' a better
ieamer. The way students team end factors affecting teaming wttt be discussed by Or. Bruce
Frllncta from the Department of Higher Education .
262 Capen. 1·2:20 p .m . Cal 636·2394 tor
additionol details. Sponsored by lhe Writ;ng and

--~ ollha ~ l8aming
Center.

Monday-20

-t

~ou.-oo

Htgh School (WiSEtlflCW'I) : 17 • Parallel . 214
Wende. 7 p.m. SponSOred by the Center for
Media Study.
WrthoUt a word of conrnentary, titrnmaRer Wiseman's High School doeS to the American ectuca·
UcSnal establishment what Hearts and Minds does
nliRD WORLD FilM SERIES"
Racism In B&amp;ack Communities: Bush fMma.
Conference Theatre, SQuire. 7 :30p.m.. Free •

ARCHITEClURE LEC'I'URE"

MUSIC"
U/B Jn:z Ensemble.
Ellicott . 8p.m ..

Areh-lldlngo/Concopt&amp;, BruCe G

'&lt;.ON VERSAnONS IN THE ARTS

Either Hllniott $wertz interviews Jotm Logan,
poet lntemat"""" ~ (Channel '0). 6 p.m.
WESTERN NEW YORK SCHOOL
BOARD INSTITUTE LECTURE"
Res:torlng lndlwldual lnitlati•• end Growth In
America, Congressman J3ck Kemp ExecutN'e
Motor kln. 4243 Gene&amp;ee Stree1 6 ·30 p .m

Call636·2460 for addrttonat .,formatiOn
ALMS"
The Seaahetl end the Clergym'a n; Rhythmus
1121; Sy,.,phony Dl.aoonale; The Film• of Oscer
Flschinger I. 146 Qielendoft 7 p m Sponsored
by lhe Center lor Me&lt;lia Study
UUAB MONDAY NIGHT SEliiES •
W h i t e - ( 1932), 7 pm : The Dowfl Doll
~25 p.m. 170 MFACC. EJiioon. Free _

.....
Be4a lugool. Madge
--. o y- , - F1vof
and 8noldon tusl . A-.ery
eer1e. .strange film about zomt»es wot1UnQ in a
..._.,.~byowhite-.

wno-

The DM11 Dol, wotp 1.Jon01

llan'ymOre

an0

--.o'SutliYon.lsa~tatootan

..._from
tq,_ _ _Oovf's 'llliii\d

peoote
lodol ..... l n d - -h)'l&gt;llOtJZed -out

ALM "

The Big P•F11de. 146 Oietenc:b1. 7 p.m. Spon·
sored by lhe Center'"' Media Study

Tuesday-28

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR N
Problems fir" Flukllzed-11ed Combustion of
Coal. Ralph Yang. Department of Chemical En·
_gineering, U/8. 26~ ~ - 3 : 30p . m .
PHARM.O. SEMINAR II

~~~~~~i~;~;·p.m~resent.tl~, KathY

WOMEN'S BOWLING"
Western New York ln.ttatlonal. Squire Halt.
6p.m.
FILM"
Hallelujah._146 Oiefendorl. 7 p .m. Sponsored
b)' the Center for Media Study.

GENE KELLy NIGHT AT
UUAB WEDNESDAY
DOUBLE FEATURES"

THE

Anchors Aweigh (1945), 7 p.m.; An Amoricon
In Parts (1951) , 9:20p.m. Conference Theatre.
SQuire. Free admission .
Anchors Aweigh is the story of two saiofs on
leave, a musical spiced with lively songs plusGene Kelly's famous dance with 8 cartoon mouse'
- An Amerian stars KeDy, Leslie Caron , ~
Levant. and Nne Foch. Frve Academy Awaids
5pf'8llQ from thls musical teatunng lavish dances
by Kelly.
The ~ erroneously lis1ed tllese tor October because we weten 't 8IMW'e of 8 ac:hecUi')g

chor_,_

change; !hey will be ahown "'"' -~
MEDIA"
--.. ActkHI, F.et and the. Self, • talk poem,
ea.no Antin . An moroV!sed ~InQuiry
by this poet and arn:r;t;c. -Media Study/Buffalo,
207 Delaware. 8 p .m. Free. Spomored by the

Center '"' Med;a Study, -

OUANnTAfiVEANALYSISLAB
LECTURE SERIES"
Hypothesizing UncorTel•ted C•u~es tJ1 Correl•tlons: A New Method.
Peul R. Lohnes,
cha&lt;man , Educational P s - y. 21 3 Baldy.
Noon-1 :30p.m.

SbJdy/Buffalo,

HaUwalls, Art Gallery of Ontario.

RECITAL"
Weronlka Knittel, violiliat . Baird Aecital Hall.
8 p .m. General edmlsslon $1.50; students, ufll·
versity community end senior' citizens S 1. 'ADS
vouchers accepted. Sponsored by the Center of
lhe Cr;eative and Pertonnlng Arts and lhe Depart·
ment of Musk:,

1

0

Lionel llbof, professor ol Engllshoa critique o1
English
tacUty membot Marc Shell's
The Economy of Ut11reture. Professor Shefl wil
be pre&amp;ent tor~ . 309 Clemens. 4 :30p.m.
F.... . Sponsored by !he Department ol Engliah .

ham , architect, Slcidmofe, Owi&gt;gs &amp; Menill, Ch&gt;
caoo. 335 Hayes 5:30p.m.
·

_

-or.

ALM"

ALM"
Days entl Nlghtl in the Fcn~t (Ray, 1977) .
150 Forner. ~ and 9 p .m. Sponsored by fhe .
- o f English.

depraoted samurai .

G~:.:::~:F~I:~-.:...~111-=

of
Science BuiiOing. Buffalo State Colage, Room
404 . 3p.m.

GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEJifNAR"StudiH of G~t lakoo Sodm.-ology, Nor·
man A. Rukavll'la, CMada C6ntre for lnland
Waters. Room 18, 4240 Ridge Lea. 3 p .m.

Monday-27

OPERA"

BUFFALO STATE COLLEGE CHEMISTRY
·SEMfNARf

~e Comet Theatre.

Wednesday- 22 .
FILMS"
Valleytown; The Cbmlng of Sound. 146 Diefendorf. 7 p.m. Sponsored by the Center for Media
StudyUUAB WEONESbA Y NIGHT .
DOUBLEFEATURES"

Magnificent Ob$esslon ( 1953), 7 p m.: All
That HNwen Allows (1955) , 9 p m. eo.itereoce
Theatre, SquirQ. Free admission.
Megnlflcepl Obsession stars Jane Wyman,
Rock Hudson and Agnes Moorehead ThiS tim rs
about a rich playboy 'Nho devotes hrnself tp
surgery flQttMH' toreslore'the sight of hiS k:Jvet"_
All Thet .......,., Allows, with the same stars. is.
the taH! of a widow who, instead of withering
away beSide ber lV. falls in love with her young
gMdener lWld arOUiel the Uere&amp;disapproval of her
children and lha """"""""·

BUFFALO LOGIC COLL601JIUM . Quine on Loq.C.I Truth, Jotv1 cOrooran, Department of Philosophy. 684 Baldy . 4 p.m.
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR K
ldeniUte~~tlon ol Mu.tUnrieble Systems., Professor N.K. Sinha, Group on Simulation Optimization , and Control , F~ulty ot Eng;r&gt;eennQ. McMaster University. Hamlton .. Ontario . 2 14 -Norton.
4p.m.
·
STAJ15nCS COLLOQUIUM f
Decision Th8ory, Professor James M . Dickey,
UJB and UniverSity CoHege of Wales. Room A-15,
4230 Ridge Lea. 4 p,m. Coffee Hour at 3 30.
COLLEGE BALM"
L'EeUsse (1962, Antonioni). 17.0 MFACC. El·
ltcott.7p.m.
.
FILMS"
WlnJer S.. Ice Champ; Jquar. 214 Wende.
7 p .m. Sponsored by the Center for Media. Study.
THIRD WORLD FIUI SERIES"
~

.

•m ChUno; From SplkH to Spindiea; The

W•y the Eagle. QoofereOce Theatre, SQuKe.

7:30 P·rt:' · Free.

Thursday- 30
BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAR

M

.Trace E - t a In Cflnleel

_lcl...,, Or. K.

Michael Hambldge, protesoor ol pediatrics, Uni·

verslly of. ~ado MeOcal Center, 26 Fadlef.
12noon.

· ·

.

· QUANnTAfiVEANALYSISLAB •
LECTURE SERIES"
Hypothealztng Uncorretet'ed C•u~ of Cof..
relatfonl: A New Method, Or. P8uf R. ·Lohnes,
Educational PaychotoQy, U/11 . 213 Baldy. Noon-·
1:30p.m.
•
FILM"
CabJn In_ the Sky (\943}. 146 Diefendorf 1
P.m. Sponsored by Bl~k Studies
. An ~ black cast stars in 8 film musical abouJ
8 fiQht between heaven IWld the devl:
sTAnsncs couooutUM 1

Phllooophy

of~ P - . Pmf;;...,..

James M . Dickey, UIB -and Universlty College of
Wales, Room A· 15, 4 2 30Ridgoltea. 4p.m.
WALI(tNG THE DOG: FORUM ON THE ART$"
Stan Brol&lt;hoge, fimmaker. 436 Clemens, 4 o30
p .m. Sponsored by lhe Gray Choir ot Poetry an0

Lsfl0111.-totEnQtloh_
I'OETRY READINO"

Wednesday-29
STA TIS11CS COl LCIGW*f

. .,..., - . ~ OOc:i&lt;ey, U!B- ~Cologe
861 . 4290 Ridge Leo. 10:20 a.m.

M.
of-. Room

IIIOWMUGuiNcM'IIIEA111E"
-

......... """'""" ontl-.g. With gultw.

, Donfoo u-ta.. Kalharine COmel - . ,
8 p .m. Part..ol lha "Wilking !he Oog" ~
sponsored by lhe Gray Choir, ~ o1
Engliah.
- '

_,...., ___ .,.....The

SCIIEEIIU«&lt;IDf"

- - ... give ..... one! ..,_, _ , flma
• ... 'CMNdlr,' ,..a11, coL

a

�........

Age brings
more problems.
for women

Women at work
Most men can't accept them as equals,
· conference speakers argue; women have
to be 300 per cent better. to get ahead

"Changing With Age: What are the
Options for Women" was the topic of a
0

~~:',.~~n~OZ.S~ 8r~"idtzln~r. L~0n~~

both sociology professors at U/B.
The two workshop leaders tried to
examine the various choices - and
problema - laced by women as they
pase through "developmentlil stages."
'"With lncns&amp;Sad technology and a
longer life-span, women are spending
leas and less of their lives raising
children, " Levine slild.
"'And as consumerism-becomes more
Important - everyone wants the good
life - more and mora women are
entering the labor force."
But, Levine '~!lid, the early retum·towork movement was marklld by a
romantic vithat "we'd all have
wonderful jobs and careers." Later, the
swi'!IL, fweas
. "Yotuoknoernw,pathtehydeafoth
r attwhee
hou ~" 1
I•
had to recognize all the options for

women
"But . the options for women really
aran1there."

0

ProblemHelnemaanof ~ad·=ad that we may
"Internalize our own expectations based
society expects of us. Often
on wonfen 1 - great problema In passing
from childhood to youth , to middle age,

atTn an attempt to show the bewllder1ng

=

No¥ember 16, 1'878

sp i ralin~ inflation.
Work1ng mothers are even more
highly taxed. tban other ~ working
women, Hare later noted. Even though
child care is presently considered a
business expense, only a percentage ol
it Is deductible as a tax credit.
"How many Congressmen .would
allow themselves to deduct only part of
thei r biJsi ness expenses, such as
airfare?" she asked .

By Linda Grac&amp;-Kobas
News

a..- Staff

Most men still cannot acceot working
with women on an equal basis, speakers
and members ol the audience at the
Alumni Association's "Career Women"
con ference on Saturday asserted,
pointing to discrimination that follows
the work ing woman from her paycheck
to almost ever( level of male-female
communlcatiGn .
Dr. Oaphne Hare, In the luncheon
address, described how the federal
government In its Income tax and social
securi ty systems "sub&amp;idlzes a certain
type of lifestyle, In which It's okay for a
man to take a woman out of the
economic
market.
"The government
is very willing to
subsidize household nelp In a given
arrangement ," Hare explained, referring
t&lt;Tthe man as breadwinner/woman as
housewife couple, adding that ' the
present s st
treats working
neither ai'in~~iduals nor adurts':"omen
Asking the audience to ra ise hands 10
i ndicate their pr-esent status.. Hare

::,~n~boh~tlf ha:.,.~er~:;,~~· :~:~g

m1

•

clir
.

~

e

Q"n:

,

..&amp;A(.

· ==-======d..===:;o==
·

1

•

Sex dlacrlmlnstlon In taxeo
She pointed out that the effect ' of
income and social security taxes on the
economy and culture were "a form of

cent.

:n"d
thenWh~emetonwcanorkiook forward to a fairly
1ile n
~ctable auceesalon of education,

Hare used the example of a young
man earning about $25,000 a year who
"doesn't like to clean hi s house or pick

hissed.
,,
Some women still heve a long· way to
go.

housekeepers are so rare aa to be
nonel&lt;latent) a salary on wh ich she

highest taxes are single persons and
. second wage earners, who IJ.!IUaily are

cycle~o~.:..~~al:.:o'b'r·~:r~~~

children, middle - · "launching" the
chlldNn, and whello do with old ~·

~o:.,;rn:~=.'~ m:m:~~~~'!etr
'J:,

00 1

fgt~~~'fo~"t'~li.?n that h..S been almost

~~~s ~fJ~~:~~f ~= ~r~!.""t.'::~~al~

~~itr:tits i~"':a~k:t~em:~~s hf;~al

1

1

•

-r
·•

.·

de;:ro"p h~~P: ~g:;:~ti~,e~ "~M:"l,~~

i)oasting , zinging and the -alllllty to
recite obscure sports statistics, Bunker
advised that women must at least learn
how to establish a repartee so that they
don't get frozen out of all-male groups.
" At least we flave some laws now,"

~~~Fn!~s "! ~~" ~;crl~!"~orw'::~~~~

display
of variables
as becomes
women more
pass
h
h staGes
and work
ant, Heinemann and Levine
workshop participants to consl·
der the problema of six hypothetical
WO""'f'. These Included : the woman
who completes her aducatlonh 'starts
aer1oua work, marries and has c lldren,

:Jducat~n~~"':r'les~~aaco~rJ~~

wo mweork
n, iwnhgl.le a lew were married but

Subsidizing lV·watchers?
After Hare's presentation , she took
questions lrom the audience. One
woman polo ed out that as a single

otllce atmosphere, making IJ more
personal , but haven't yet modified the
pecking order, whlch.tends to keep men·
on1op.
Bunker emphasized the need for
women to support each other and
develop support systems. Especially in
committees where women are out·
numbered and men tend not to listen to
them , women must help each other In
. getting heard.

womaQ, she gets back 100 per cent of
her social security benefits, while a
married man , when the spouse's
beneiH8 are-ad dad, ge~Ao.J&gt;ack 150 per
" I'm subsidizing married wl!men to

~~~a~~~ ~11:at~~~v 1 ~11 .~:Y~~~~

no~~ge .~:f~~=s~o ~~~~p:s~:~~~~~

~~:an ":.f'::~:iie ;nr g~d=la~~:::um~

when she entered II almost 30 years
ago. "Laws won't change attitudes,
though , and It will take at least another
generation or more for men to really
accept women."

'

.

About the ButfakrCiub

au~l~~~'fn~t~ [~:!s:!fngfr~~t ~~~

was a common experience for most
women . One wo·man noted that many
men meet lor business lunches at the
Buffalo Club or lor "squash at the
Saturn· Club," both of which exclude
women.
Bunker and Penman agreed that
professional women should meet with

::;:.~~S:~"~'t~~~~~~~fn;~g~l~::

- or avoid arranging business functions
at those places.t The women In the
group agreed that arrangements such
as the Buflalo Club's separate entrance
tor women are Insulting .
'
Bunker nofad the need for men to
"cublcllze" professlonal women, es·

~:.;'l~s ~~'11~~:..~~'\r."er 'i,",!.Tn~~:::P.
• "If he's really smart, he marries his
only II she has been married for a
or castrating. She pointed out that
certain number of years (now 10) and
housekeeper," Hare noted , " because
~male" characteristics' such as aggrestheq not only does he get someone to
that ''you're really · subsidizing the
siveness are valued In our present
g~~kh~~ r~~o':;':~a~s~:c:~t dJ/osp: ::~j
nres:,~~ ,to keep someone In a certain
culture, while "female" characteristics
20 pet&lt; cent. "
And , she noted , II a man divorces his
such as nurturance are devalued.
As tor the woman Involved , where she
wile after 10 years and remarries , even II
" But, If a .man adopts nurturing
characteristics, he Is even more highly
~.:;'="~~ ~ 1l:,1; ~ 1 :,.:::,w;~:
used to get paid for her housework, il
he remarries more than once, theoretmoat Of the women focueed &lt;&gt;n the
~t;;:'s s'::e"'fs'edco
, !!',:.pe~s ~~;h~ugsbanfordl~s·
lcally all his wives may collect social
ra:~ . o/.'gu:.:.edno~':.g·~~~= ~afe~~~
comproml- women Inevitably make.
social securlty'";...d If they are st ill
':ro~f~ f~~ 1b0 ~~s they ha: e been
adopflng 'male' charal&lt;!_erlstics Is often
For example, a women may opt for
married at retirement age she will get 50
" You may be subsidizing not only Q.ne
called 'a bitch.' "
....,.._and
a aerloua ~but not
per cent of what his benefits are. So
wile but two or three, " Hare stated, as
WonclwWomen
:'1!1 ~aUt~..~~;~T,!'~~~":
together the couple collects Increased
the crowd's murmurs golangrler.
Bunker terms the woman who Is able
_,nMeflts for decreased contributions.
111 .,,- -.moothty meshl..,,._ _be
lo merge her roles Into a androgynous
role8 u m - . wife and~ person.
anied -working- women on-ra;~"'--~w_ men vi- working women
character with both assertive and
ment, heve a choice of collecting either
The atiltudes merr tf8)18 against
Wotlultoop participants also conslhumane qualities. a "Wonder Woman."
c1ere11 the problema f~ by single
50 per cent of their husband's social
· working women and how to combs!
She adds though that most mert react to
_ . , _ , alngteparants.
security or 100 per cent of their own,
~~~~adw~r~y exg~~redB~a w~~~~f.
1
women bo~ses as though they don't
One 41-y--old women who has
:'r!:e~xp:!"~iuF ~~~st~~ taf~ ·t~
associate professor of psychology at
have any power.
Several women In the audience said
~
~;~k ~=
low-paying jobs, most would receive
U/B, and Ruth H. Penman,- former
frllnda to 110 0111 alone.
more money by collecting on their
e mpearl
.oysm]enattFdlesveh t,~pmentT [!1yans. ager [f~- - they were Involved II' sliles and thet
they were constantly patroniZed or
"They act like I'm some kind of
husband's social security. So any
y
Price.
Insulted by customers calling them
fJorltilrapeqon 11 1 110 p l - . by
mane" the women pays to social
The two women were a v~ effective
"dear," "honey," or making overtly
m:·;,... alogia_.. expreaaad
money
sexual remarks.
Penmarr" asld In certain cases women
~ with the "lmpltc.tlon that
fr'~~tthe woHman dl~~":l:'
Fe~~:." escrlbed real-world exper. have to take abuaa from men to keep a
::,c,~:,. not an adult If you'Ve
~.,:::'. ~ax b=et ~{:sed' o~ t~
Citing research done by Butty Aries
customer and advised that they don't
at Yale University, Bunker described _ take such put.OOwns personally. But
money she earns added to whet her
husband earns. So In addition to the
patterns of Interaction that develop In
couple paying double social security
.ofllces.
·
and Income taxes, It Is placed In very
Women who anter all-male business
those remarks.
•
·
The Butt.lo llr8nch of the NAACP Is
" Enecgy Ia a major piece ol your
high
Income-tax
brackets.
~~::/::!~:·
s~:
fos':nd,
~~=l:':~r;':
l*tlell*lna In lhe national NAACP
decision wheiher to combat oVIIrt or
"'ne lllllllloii .._... Cruaade 11178.•
'Sin Tu'
actions are profou~ different from
unconscious sexism,'' ......Bunker said.
Mllu.IIMIIItlerelllp ~ . .: SS. Ten
0
" You ·can't change-the attitude of every
mayncy ~~tth at:.We~Y.soc' ~~~~!)"e," out of
a
Obet8clea and oompror11lThe women attending the workshop
came up with a f()l"midable list of
obstacles for almost every "comblna-

1

•.

1

1
.-...upo....,.,.

S:.

28

:C:~~~.o~:_~~.~.,:'=~i~

't''

-

~~;n&lt;;~~g~r~~ ",'!"~~~·~~

NAACP drive

::.~:'::.~":~:~d:.n::n:~~t:r:

.

dollw "af1ata" clonetlona or a S25
~ion may 81eo be made. A lite
IMIIItlerelllp Ia lliOD (payable at S50 or

I10Dper~).

Cantnllutlona ~ addrUead to:
~J.1 Eut
Buffalo,

Sl.,

sin~=~n~~':: rn·~h~"PJ~1~!

to change some Inequities In the tax
system and credited that movement
1

:,added
~~~~\~n
~m: .:Wc!J.:!~ r~
that It was during thet period thet

Service. effective Immediately.
President Robert L Ketter Mid the

descrt!loeS the range
of ac..semtc tetpOMiblllnet handfed
by the Department. 8lld reduces the
polllblllty of COIIfullon with any
adler IMfar Wilt on c.ampus.

fEtT~~Si ~6"~~~~~i~k

there's somtr

thing wrong with themselves, " Bunker ·
noted, adding that most women
0

11

=~~t==~~r. t~rh ~! 1~

groups.

:::~l~~nmr':.'r~i~~r,~a ~~~ ~Yg:

be reasonably succellaful and where It
makes the most dltf"""ce to you."

rn~~-}~e ;,o:,~~ ~::~.w~d

munlcste with each other. Their
converastions often heve nothing to do

husbands should pay social security tax
tor them.
However, she added, the politics

::
who domlnatu.
·
All-female groups, on the other hand,

F- moiel ore aaiialtlve
She added that J11ale colleagues who
are sensitive to women's Issues can
help, though they are few and far
between.
Real sexual harassment Is often
aimed at women, Bunker asld, and It Is
In" this area where women's support
systems ·can be most valuable In
standing up to a male who turns sex
Into a power play.
• Penman ended the session by

more egalltuian lr groups, she lour~.
and the dominant role Ia passed from
one woman to another.
Aocordlng t~ Bunker, r-.:1)
indicates thai women can change en

" hidden rules" tor getting ahead that
exist In every place of business.
"Remember," she asld, " you still
he~e to be 300 per cent better than a
man to get ahead ."

people disco- the Infamous "sin"

~~L ~f.'==~~~~~~~~~
N.-~
The DepMtmenl of Counseling Psy·
chology, F..:ulty of Educational
Scudles. bas been -..med the
o.p.tmenr ofEciUnseiiOS and Human
,_name~

0

8

pa~!:''::op0sed

that the go-.&gt;ment
tax Individuals "aa If they were adults."

==~ ~~': sl:~em-=~.!,:

change to come. Go!oeminent officials

cite tne high coat of mal&lt;lng changes,
8lle said, while meny ~le wanl to
aubaldtze keeplng ~at home, and
blame Working women lor

8

'Z~:f~.r=n~:X:":o~~ eup:-

=hl~~n ~:s te~~· ~!~"gj~g·~~~
1

::n;t;,~':~~~?e~. ~w:.::s .~

::,.:o~~~~W::~~sc.::'uu~ti

~~~~'rcM';,e,~':;'~.="!:.r.ll.ri'J~~

�Volunteerism: a boon for women or an abuse?
By Ann Whitcher

pl~~o~u~~=r:n example of how a
woman might be used by a typical
volunteer group .

lJ&lt;Weroity-

Volunt-lsm once meant · rolling
band•ges, endless t)ours on the
den-mother circuit or stretches at the
church bazaar. Whatever the activity, It
was usually labor that was free-and
female.

ml~~tf:'~:sro~~~~::,~:,'~~a~~:~;

pestlng labels or stuffing envelopes . It's
not the wor1&lt; we're objecting to. We
don't denigrate any form of work. But
we do oblect to volunt- groups which
won't ·aJfow women to meke policy

altiu"'!~~~=t':t ~~~~~~h~i~

~"9~?l!!\"t~,:J!?~t \~~ "1~~\o"r:'~

decisions.••

volunt- service. Is volunt- work only
a shabby way to exploit women or is It a
raal , chance to sharpen skills and
compete for paying jobs?
Representatives of both feminist and·
traditional service organizations were in

A1':!~~t~a'.:!~ one

of about 35'
women par1iclpallng in the wor1&lt;shop
and board president of the Syracuse
YWCA , scoffed at the Idea that

~~t':O~'fng A::'v~ru~~:.:'sh"'!Y'n~
workah'Jr.

sponsored

by

the

::~~:=· ol 'ft:'etr ·~~of:~ w;;reo-r~:

U/B

~~u~in:r~Aa!!{W,; ~a~~~tro

Today'sWorld."

'

NOW haan'taoft- Its atand
According to Buffalo community
retatJons dlreotor Lou Ann Paareon.. .the
Natlo!W Organlallon for Women
(NOW) hasn't softened Its 1971 stand
against "exploitative volunt-labor not
direoled toward the social and
economic betterment of women ."
But she emphasized that NOW sees
nolhing wrong In volunt-lsm Itselfespecially aa a war, of gaining polltlcal

an,:,=:,O~~tYta~"!.'.;'~:'"J~t\~~~

=c
Organization for Women couldn 't
survive without its volunt-s. And
-·re aa altruistic as any volunt-

gr~:On

aald NOW volunt-s in
Buffalo established with their own
money "Simple Glftr," a home for
battered wl- and their children.

It helped

'* lltld a

job

.

~~·J:fat=~p~.::.~b/:;
the Ame&lt;lcan Lung ANOOiatlon

of

Wastam New Yor1&lt;, said .dtunteering
can develop lOb akllls and foelill ca.IIC*a. Her own volunt- exowlence
fietped her

11114 her

~t luU-time

~a!f..J:'!'::'Pe..on dlaagtaed on

lhe ..a.nt to whloh volunt-. are

::o'cdr.:C,': ~~:'::.=;, ~

.

service they perform doesn't require any
financial reward .
"Just how can you be exploited if
you're volunteering," she asked Pearson pointedly.
Adamsen said she has a " very
responsible, "f.ull-tlme administrative
volunteer position" wit the YWCA, a
job which gives her a "great deal of
satisfaction."
"No one co.uld pay me to do voluntwor1&lt;," another woman commented . "I
love it . I'm volunteering because I want
to."
Money 'distasteful'?
Some women attending the wor1&lt;shop
found the emphasis on money Itself
dlstas'teful.
.

job-prospecting tool. And whlleW per
cent of the parliclpants .said they were
employed and also did volunteer work,
only a handful sald1hey had been able
to use volunteer skills to get a paying

~~b.;.:~~?:~~! ~~·v~:."~f!:~y~~~~gt.;

Improve employment opportunities.
Turner advised each potential volunteer to take stock of her talents and

~f~~ ~ofu'nr~.i:~u~~oC',\l:t.!-~ United

NOW more pragmatic
The NOW approach to volunt-lsm
is similarly · pragmatic-If a little more
overtly constructed as a political
self'help mechanism .
Pearson advised volunt-• to wor1&lt;
hard to learn public relations technl-

:l.'::'c"ti-r::=lypr!~

an~so'i."c'gu~~~:~~~r;:·riumber of

volunteers has actually gone up with _
the rise of modern feminism . " But
exploitation still occurs. One woman, ,

:~,~~r~~" ~u,n~~o!':';v':=:t~
put on the coffee. She quit on the spot

and h a s - volunt-.dJince."

A good jc)b IMintlng tool
~
lioth Turner ani! PMraon agreed on
the elfactlvenees of volunt- wor1&lt; as a

. ~:g,:;:gg~~~'f !~~t=l•~_t!~
suggest a contract arrangement, one
that would set definite /lOurs and
ensure security for both volunt- and

agency."
01

1~~~~~~ ~t

this ap roach
would help the peld volunt- :"mlnlstrator too. "Many of them lose
self-esteem when volunt- wor1&lt; Is
downgraded ."
Interestingly, Adamsen end other
representatives of tredltlonal voluntservice gr.oupa were sympathetic to the
current emphasis on flndlng paying
jobs.
The YWCA volunt- said the days of
the stereotyped ~alllotl.' lHltclbuety
dabbling In· l&gt;'h11anthroplc actlvl!lee,

m~~~Y~ermany women are compatl
for that one peylng job. And they ~
know volunt-lng may be the one way
to get it."
_-

Library schedules

"The women's movement has placed

so much lmi)Oi1ance on the 'almighty
dollar,' that 1hose of us who voluntare made to feel gulltv ."one said.
• 'Oh, you'ntonly a volunt-; peoo.le
say. Why don't you get a raal job.' As if
the work we do ISn't genuine, a, if there
is n~rlunlty for lnterrelatlonshipe

:::!.~~o~~~

be val uable If you have those media
contacts," she advised.
On either front , the road to volunteer
happiness Is not without obstacles.
Turner admitted that some volunteers
are shabbily treated by 'Paid ratatlers.
:J;,~~ht~~:~tt~~g~X.,~s"!Y at agencies
Another woman expressed disillusion
with the apparent dishonesty of a
volunt- group she once respected .
"After they let think there was no money
for a paid position. I found out the

agency had plenty of money for this
_
job."
Other participants said they frequently found volunteers unreliable, that the
absence of structure and· _paychecks
precludes real job discipline and
efficiency. Turner responded that many
agencies are probing the-:reasons for
volunteer dissatisfaction. And Adam-

Llbr•riea
Thanksgiving recess hours for the Univealty Llbrar1n:

~'EV,

u.....,

r:~~"'"' ~'lire"!! ~mlED ~\!;~ ~~lD
• : 30p

~lh ~Library 8a -11 p

Llbro';,a.studloo Llb&lt;ory
L--llbrary

g::
~
8a-11p

:,U~t-~-'"11 9a ·5o ·

==='
Library

8a-5o

8a - 9p

9a- 5p

2~-

CLOSED
CLOSED

8a-5p
CLOSED

9aCl-5oED
OSI

2p·8p
2p · 9p

ag~~g .1to~ED ~criED h_P'~l,PD
CLOSED

9a·5p

12p-5p

~p--~f : 3Qp

CLOSED
ClOSED

Ba-Sp

h't"O:fD
9a-5p
9a-5p

CLOSED
2p-10p
1p-6p

~~:.Sp gt~~g ~O~ED

loialftStreoUIInry . Ba-Vp
-R~l.MLibrlliy B:~p

vg

CLOSED

8 : ~~

• If the bus strike iaatill in progreae the Undergraduate ftbrary will close at 10:•5 on
Wednesday, and• 10: ..Son Sunday.

�~11. 1978

SENATE
Ketter tells FSEC
he's with protestors
-

MlnuiH of the Foculty

s.noto Executive

Committee m"tlng, ND'IMiber 8 :
The meeting was called to order at 2: 43 to
consider the following agenda:
·

\'·~rt 1 Apprcwot o,l MlnutH of Novsmbor

The Minutes were approved as dlatrtbuted.

Uon occurred_. the President pointed out that
the demonstratiOn was . a culmination of
long·standlng frustrations and that he was
In sympathy with those frustrations.

:r:~:e~~o ~~:C~rJ~.J:~m~~~~~

~~:1t';;~'rres~~~'e:';teti!hstu~':~'1~~

Buffalo, and Senator

~~r~n~~· .:u~~tu~~••t~~h haasm=~g ~~

being arranged.
·
Or. Ketter announced that the U I B
Council would meet F:rlday, November 10.
The sole item on the agenda was a
presentation by Or. Ketter reviewing the

J~~~~r.: fro~~e ~~:~~~~:~!e~rs~~iv':

;:=:r~"l':· ,T,::::,O m~~l:~~~m

Its 1.5 million circulation, Is a major
source of such mlslnfor'inatlon, he

~~~-~1~:~~~ .!~.~:at:n~!

SliMlY In which 73 per cent of the
queatlona cleating with this field were
anaW8I'8CI wrong, Herbert aald.

---tlle~"11 tile nutritional claim

Is spectac-

rr'::
rr~..:::~~r:so~~r. ~~~.::
and u - suoerlatiyes. vou can be

reuonably suns It's an 'exploitation'
book," he advised.
•
Durlna Ilia _..:h at Millard Fillmore
HospltaT, Herbert also warned of

=

't;;,O:
doaes

••.:r:ol
'V\\~\~ c.hW~'~
potential~
~3
8

Iaiii) to the

l:"vece;t~ = C : n ~~ "tef~t~

1

excretion. This IS especially dengerous
for the llftiiiOWJI, whoM syatems and

~of their urlbom lnlat~ta muat work
- - Once lniW~ts affected by u~-.,.born, tt.lr systems h beCOme eo ..:uMomed to rapid
....,_.. of the vltalnln, tflat IIIey can
develOp • "r.e»und" scurvy IIIey 1111 nonna1 ~eweta of "C" In their
cllela.'TIIecondltlon. lafiUDINilael. can

... : " " * - ~

called

......---·a.uamioalllllll. Hertlert

position, although announcements of the
event indicate that such a position will be
0

~,;e.=~~~nJ~ h~~p3e~~e~~f~1 t~ h~~:
11

someone knowledgeable in labor relations
explain the consequences of a no agency
0

For~~ ~iwte ~YP= ~~~~~:tW;~ac~~~

Senate Chairman Newton Garver and
Profess ional Staff senate Chairman Cliff
W ilson. Each party will be given 10 minutes
for an Initial presentation and 2 minutes for
·response . General discussion from the floor

~O:estf~~:'!:u fgrrgw t~~;!~:!~uo~a~ed
Roport.ofthe Socreury.

·

The Secretary requested a volunteer to
• attend 2 Professional Staff Senate Executive

f:~''':~d m:,~~ng!itfrid ~Y~!Ik~t:stYO~'!;~
December meetings.

"~:ow!:~r::::::~~~~~~~ff:~

It
:
mixture of synthetic chemicals-none
of which were vitamins. And current
studies indicate that one of these
chemicals, dlchloroacetate, may cause
cell changes.

It~~~~!~'"r:'~~edR=r~he committee
='~t~~tt~u~%a~e;u,~ ~e!~r~~~~:

~ valid oburvotlons
_
"There's not a single, valid observation as to 'vitamin B-15's' benefits. All
are anecdOtal or based on uncontrolled
studies," he naiad. Recently, the
government won its first case against
use of B-15 in a New Jersey Federal
court. "But meanwhile," he said, "guys
are making millions and other !Jeople
~~~~~·~~~~q, cancers they or lnarily

which Is exacerbated by excess VItamin
Herbert advised that smalr dally
C, he pointed out.
vitamin supplement dosages aren't In
Pregnant women, too, should be ' themselves dangerous, but warned that
carefUl of megadoses, he said, because
Improper use of these nutrients may be
despHe the fact ltlat excess Vitamin C Is
responsible for more damage and death
oudily excreted, at cerialn aaturation
than has yet been docur:nented.
Iawiis, It takes on chemical properties
and ceeMS to act as a vitamin. When
this occurs. the body must s~ up Its

::~ca~...,::'.=n:r t~ :,,,\"'f~

Moot Court is being advertised by posters
and through a notice In the Reporter. There

:r" ~~w:\al~s\~ ~

recomrrfendatlons by the next FacuHy
Senate Executive Commttteemeetlng.
Item No. 5 Old Buslnen
A. CommiHH Nomlnetlona.
It was APPROVED that M. Plesur continue
to serve on the Athletics Commlt1ee.
A. France was APPROVED to serve on the
Admissions Committee.

faculty

facilities.

'

3. To be aware of and , U necessary, to
Investigate operiUons and decisions per~

~~~~gth1: ~_r~rti;11~ t~~~e:~. c~.!rt~~
1

1

safety, converi1ence, or comfort of students,
faculty and staff.
4 . To meet regularly, at least three times
each term , and to submit an annual report to
the Senate each May.

C. Unlnralry·wkl• prot:edures on Aca·
demlc In teg rity~
• Last year's controversy surrounding
cheating has cast
doubts on
the
eHectlveness of existing rules for dealing
with such questions. Or. Ketter has
requested that the- Faculty Senate review
existing procedures for dealing with
questions of academic Integrity. It was

:feP~~~tl~~~l th~~~~~er ~dre~~~~~~~
i-

D. CoUeg•• Chartering.

~~c~-:~~~ft~~~Ke~~~~':~~c~~~~n~~ ~~
~~~~~r~~nlo ~~l ·v~~':)·~~~rtd~~tfn~t!•rg
~~~· ,~:~,~~f; d:~~r:'o;:t b~: t~~~

chartering process to Insure communlcafion

~re~,:~~~h~~=::r~f U:t;,?~IBJ:e~~r'~~

1978 letter to Chairman Garver refJec:ts the
basic concern's of th is Issue.

Item No. 8 New Business
A. Admlnlstratl'fe rHponalbmty tor under·
graduate HNitlt Sdencn programa.
A lack of general understanding eXists
r:egarding the Intent and potential effect of
the Spring, 19n report of the Educational

~:"n~~~ang,Po8.;Y ~~7!-:'~::·s=.~
Und_prgraduate Education. CoordlnatlorYOf
undergraduate programs and the authority
of the DUE Dean with respeCt to approving
undergraduate health sclenc.es' programs are
among the issues which need ctarlficatlon. ·
It was A PPROVED that a committee
consisting of B. Howell, L. Michel and the
Chairman be formed to review and

f:;:

~~'n~rf:n':t~ ~==ti~! ~~~}~:~to the .

c!,.-,::J~~::,:o~tt[!:!::':::r:: c!,0,,:,1~

too.

Nominations were approved to represent
1

f~-~~2'~ f.f~:=inber 5 m ..ttng

of
the F.cultr S.nete.
Formation of an agertda for the December 5

=:~:s=.~e rx~r: ~:;.t~,,:: m:~~
1

T"~

Cllslrman

•1100\J_.r

~~~~~~~~~1st h~eiheh~~ar ~n th:az~

Council II of the ;t,q.eri&lt;;an Psychiatric
Association.
§mall , who served as Cl)alrrnan Of
U/B's Department of P~chiatry tor 27

Awards for librarians

Th~ Chancellor's Award lor Excellence in Llbrarlanshlp 78/79 Is an
opportunity to recognize librarians at SUNY at l;lulfalo for their outstanding
achievements and contributions to librerlanshlp.
mem~~(~~~~:f.Y be made by iflY l!brary stall member, University facully

tlllltnt to nominate should be communicated to Tamara Frost, chairperson
of !he Nominating Committee~ 636-2448, as ·soon as possible. The
Nocninating Comml11ee will assist a nominator In pnsi&gt;aring the required
doasler or 11 nec:es88(y will compile the d0811ler attsr the nomination has been
made. Doulerl mUIIt be completed by Nov. 27.
Any Staff member holding a library faculty position or ~n&gt;' member of the
proleaalonal atoll with a Masters of Library Science daQnse Ia eligible to
.-lve t h i s - -

that

he

November 22 meeflno Of the !Xecutlve
Committee Is canceUed.
The meeting adjourned at 5:22 .

Small is 'psychiatrist of the year'
Dr. S. Mouchly Small, a psychiatry

r

(d)

1

Is still no on, to represent the no agericy

Laetrile-a~used .

and

~~~~ ar!:' ~~PC:::,~~e::'e ~c!n~~~~:~ro:,c'~~
11~ :d,~~~~d ::-~a~~!~be'~czt ~:t~f~

"Interest til and use of Laetrile
continues because It's a highly
organized, big business empire with an
annual income In excess of $1 billion."
Turning to pangamlc acid or "S:.15,"

priorltles

0

'2~ ~~"'f~~~f:rn~~~ ~~:S~J·

priorities
and, as necessary, to present to the Senate
and the university community Information
and Issues relating to faculty Interest In

Discussion centered on the reporting
relationship of the Dean of the Colleges In
relation to daily operaHons versus the

Report ot the Cltalrman.

~~in'l,:;hlc~~rc"~ a~~but:c,\~!~

maintenance

Committee.

formulating their recommendations for how
these teductlons.are to be accommodated .

An old fraud
Calling Laetrile "an old fraud , not a
new one,.. Herbert noted that bitter
almonds which are rich in cyanide (a
-Laetrile component) were used In the
days of the Pharaohs to execute
enemies of the priests.
Today's cancer patients are similarly
poisoned by Laetrile rather than cured
by It, he noted. They suffer progressive
deterioration of nerve and muscle
accompanied bY gnsdual loss of vision

Pl~ning, 1he UB Foundation, and others ,
with respect to (a} faciiiUes needs for
teaching, research. and o ther educational

purposss, (b) construction priorities, (c)

~~b~~~:~~·a~~~ B:~~~:r~ro~: ~·~

proposed amounts of reductions In their

contended.

~~rt be";'d~

8

As yet we have no Indication of the effect
of this year's enrollment shortfalls 011. the
budget , although It Is certai n that any
reductions will be even more difficult to
distribute than in former~ years. Our primary
concern will be to Insure that whatever
reductions are necessary do not further
endanger our potential enrollment. Asked
what mectlanism exists or will exist to
ins ure faculty participation In a11y mandated
reallocation of re90urces, the President

noted. A vitamjn, he explained, is an
organic molecule, the absence of which
In the diet causes specific symptoms.
Reintroduction of the substance into
the diet corrects the deficiency. Neither
Laetrile {also called Vitamin B-17) or
fiangamlc acid {"Vitamin B-15") are
vitamins by 1hls description, he

Plan~rlng

Facllltlea

Comm itte. on F.CAitlee Planning

~rer:;.r::;~~G..~r:ct~~:!~9~~r:~r:~::e

Follow«s of many current health
lads an1 getting sick while promoters
are getting rich, according to Dr. VIctor
Herbert, well-known nutritionist, physician, and attorney.
He&lt;berl, a speaker at U/B's "Facts vs .•
Faddlam• Nutrition Series, was specifically critical of the Increasing use of
megavitamin therapy, the use of
Laetrile for cancer, and reliance on the .
so-called VItamin B-15 as a quick
"pick-me-up." Proponents of these
"remedies" claim they are being
attacked by the medical community
because using these substances-costs
less than conventional treatments. But
health frauds can be extremely
lucrative, said He&lt;berl. "and at the
expense~! 1/le consumei's health."
He also assailed the proliferation of
"deceptl.,..1 nutrition Information being
given · to the public via books,
f01108Zlnes and the media. FDA
stiltlstlcs, he claimed, show 85 per cent
of this nutrition Information Is either

the

Chorgo to 111o Foculty - . . Stondtnv

R•pott o f Ute Ptnldent.

Health faddists suffer ·
as pr9moters get rich

Cltarv• to

The following chacge to the Faculty Senate
FacHitles Planning Committee was ap.:
~~ed~~~~~~sly "(M OVED Wolck,

~· A~m1~1s~{~~ntU~cu67t:'•~-;st~~~;lt~~

11om No.2 Offlc«o' Roporta

the Unlvaralty of

s.

CommlttH.

years, received

•
the

honor at the
~:R~~~~~~~~J'~~~~~al meeting, Nov.
He was setected In recognition of his
longh creative career in psychiatry
whic Included being a pioneer and
contributor in the field of community
psychiatry. The citation also recognizes
his role in training a generation of
psychiatrists, many of whom occupy
key positions In the academic world.
His Interest In continuing medical
education Is noted as well as • his

1

8

~~~b~: 1nt~~~~~~ l~y:~;~:Jy

chairman of the Muscular Dystrophy
Association's sub-commlttes on Search
lor Therapeutic Agents and vlce
chairman of the MDA Scientific
Advisory Council. '

pr~~es~~on!t ~:::fillg~ ne;'J' h~

••
received several awards over the years
lor his work In psychiatry and
psychiatric education .

�.........
tress &amp; gloomy outlook
should be controlled
Coping with stress and accentuating
the positive were the topics for two
related workshops at Saturday's conference for the career woman.

When an Individual experiences a
high or low in life, the body undergoos
stress which must be dissipated in
order to maintain good physical and
mentar health, those attending the
stress workshop heard .
According to Dr. Lucille Lewandowski, clinical assistant professor of
psychiatry at U/B and chief of alcohol
treatment at the V.A. Hospital, the
Initial physiological changes · one's
body experiences during stress are
Identical whether the stress is caused
by positive or negative clr~umslances .
For example, either a s1ate of euphoria
or depression may cause blood

happiness."
When people approach a situation
with a positive focus, they tend to think
of il as a challenge, find It easier to be ·
assertive, and retain personal energy.
On the other hand, Rallcki maintained,
dwelling on the negative makes us
" apathetic, passive and helpless."
Ralickl said that during the " Blizzard
of '77 ," a friend of hers In the real estate
business decided to view the inclement
weather 1Js a challenge. She proceeded
to rent a jeep and call on clients. Before

Ws the response that counts

uals seek out people and circumstances

exists from other areas..

str~~~ r::i:"~~rdo';':,~~:'t~~p:rk~~~~

things they do well (even jogging), as
well as cultivate support systems,
possibly through partici pation In

ory_:n~~~~~·s~,IJ,J~tg.;'~'!~~~other of

two children, emphasized that an
individuaJ should discover various ways
he or she can decrease stress. A
problem results whim a " limited
repertoire" of coping mechanisms
exists, and people begin to overuse
liquor, medication or even loco to
defuse a situat1on.

•

Career women , particularly those In
male-defined positions, can easily fall •
victim to the "wonder woman "
syndrome, that Is, dol~ more work

~~ i~.,r:,o~~r,a~';f.,""~f b'~s:.,~o~~

ccrworkers. Lewandowskl said women
must ' 11eam to say no.. occasionally or
~~.. lha prospect of getting " burned
Yo~ control how you see things
88

neg~~fJ. ~~~r.~~~~~~t~ wl:~~~ti~';,.;'~~

the storm emergency was over. the
woman managed to sell three houses. ·
Her competitors, on the other hand,
stood immobilized in their offices
bemoaning the bad weather.
First you have to be worthy
· In order to think positively as well as
active arid assertive, an Individual
must 1irst "see himself as worthy .of
happiness. " But this sense of worthiness will never materialize, claimed
Ralickl, without positive feedback .
Like Lewandowski , Ra licki _.. . . recommends that people seek positive
feedback to bolster a sagging selfimage. " It is up to us to nurture
ourselves. " " People need to learn to be
good to themselves ," she explained.
And being good to yourself, according
lo Ralicki's standards , entails a proper
dial along with plenty of rest and
exercise.
Negative thoughts create stress and
set up a "chain reaction of negatives"
which cu lminate in self-defeating

~~=vi~-S:~?v:ar~i8t~~:; anc.!~·divi~

assimilated by co-workers. Soon a
morale problem can develop along with
the possibility of improper decisionmaking.
Ralicki urged that Individuals rectify
the causes of their -debilitating
thoughts. Otherwise, their continua~e
can result· in both emotional and

phAft ~~~~~~!1r.,~i
1

believes " negatives
are life-defeating," s~e knows people
often fall Into self-defeating habits and
refuse to change because " change is

professional staff position .
Who I!I8J - t - ?
Any member of the Unlwrslty Community.

,

~d~=?be .......,bled by the person who makes the nomination to

Include lnformatiCIIl concwnlng the person, hla/het poefllon an,d supporting
lettera of recommendation f&lt;om
eources.
_;,
,...... ......._ _ , . , . .agiiiiii!J, criteria tar Mfectlon of the Nc;;.,lnatlng Commit!. who will assist you. Feel

I

1 - to contact
D!lfr.
·
Bertha Cui""-· Qlllce of Servloea to tile H• • 831-3126; Judy A.
Dingetdey- O.U.E., 836-24110; Stacy Johnson y, 836-2417; Shirley_
D. &amp;"toot .OiftceofVIoa ........t for R-.::11,
; Robert L . Ganyard
- Hl810fY, f13&amp;.2211; Altllvr l. Kal- - C = m Oewelopmant 111111
lntllructlonal Media, S.2484; Carolyn E.
y - Admissions and
Reconla 831-2103· Henry - Coleman - Medielllat Chemistry, 838-2852;
· Adrienne Mc(:iinrr. Stuelent Aeeocfatlon, 6311-44110; ~th Johneon - M, F.C.,

831-2203.

\,../\

..................................?
DllcM!IIIr tl, tt711. Compl.ted dossiers muat be "\((Iioed by that date by:
Keith"· J.,.,_, Chairman
.,_.... ....~
NomiMlton Commillae;&amp;caltence In Professional ~-·ce ~-us
c/o MIIIMI FHI_.. College
Aoom 2,...,.. "'-"A
_ Main
Cempua . ~

a-

(from page 7, cot 4)
not previously shown in Buffmo. Albright-Knox Art

GaUery. s p.m. General admission S2; oallflrv
members and students $1 .50. Sponsored by the
Center lor Med;a Study, M- study/BUffalo ..
All.o.-::.-ht·Knox Art GaHery.

UUABFILM"
Tho Spirit ol tho BeohiYe (Spain, t 974). Con·
terence Theatre. Squire. Call 636-2919 for- show
times. Admission charge.
This beautifulty filmed award-Winner is a portrait
of the tsomtion of the iodMOuaf within the family.
()epicting the torments of Spain at the end of the
CMI War, the work fs considered knportant in the
development of the New SpaniSh Cinema.

ANNUAL HOLIDAY EXHIBITION AND SALE
Entries are being sought lor the Annual Holiday
Exhibffion and Sale 5p0080red by the Creative
Craft Center. This year's event wil be hekj

Wh81 Ia the ~lo&lt;'a Award for Excellence In Profesalonal Service?
A financial 111111 certificate recognition of exceptional ability in a

-=.,-:.n:::="
-r

•Calendar

.N~tlces

Nominate a professional

-us

';11;,1.', ang

scary."

~~~ ~~:h;e ~oi~:,'~~Y~~~"lt!!"[~.;~

Who -

0

of ~'1.-~S:.::~Y,~~:':.I'lo~f~~=

Being the martyr
People who dwell on negatives have
developed a type of n~alive credit
system , continued RaiJckl. . "Their
pay-off Is being the martyr."
·
Asked Jf there Is anything an
Individual can do to change a
negatively-oriented person, Rallcki responde&lt;!. that an Individual can cnly

choose to focus their thoughts which
determines their outlook.
Mrs. Maq- Rallcki, director of Focus
Workshop, offered this comment while '
leading a workshop on "Taking
Charge."
Every Individual has the "power to ·
focus on the positive," said Ralickl, and
since the "choice Is ours• we ,also have
the power t~ " control our own 1 1s little that can be done.

I

/

'
(fn&gt;mpoge1,cot.4)
\ were too bus)do seek po(ltlca,l office.
lives. She explained thai since the u.s,~~ Sin"!', chiid "!1';8 was not available, a
is considered the most lechnologlcallv 1-d~ed blrtb rate ensued; this finally
advanced society, it Is also assumeil
reS'I{ted in a-4)J)pulation crisis In "the
thai it must be the most progressive in · ~ country.
terms of women's rights.
Cuban ;,w makes men share domestic
' I think this is a common assumption
work
we get from our text books, but one that
In Cuba, however, women have made
Is not borne out'by the facts, " she said.
greater strides In terms of gaining
As wage labor came into being with
equality. In ·1jl75, the Cuban governthe birth of industrialization, Kennedy
ment passed a law which made It
said , women became "locked Into the
mandatory for men to do half the '
domestic sphere." But this "Is not our
heritage," she charged. ) 'Our struggle
domestic work. Although the Cubans,
like the Czechs, were committed to
1
~o;dt~:dlai~ ~r~;~.;:,~s:.e.:~r~,o,.~~~:~ equality for'women, the year before the
worl&lt; 'law passed, only 3 per cent of
1:l~lc,~·~~~~J'':n":?.;r~~~~~·~~o~~~~; . those
elected to public office were
societies" would prove t~at women
women . Two years after, 25 per cent of
have traditionally " done public, producthose elected to political positions were
·
tive work ."
women.
Kennedy concl~· by saying that ·
Egalitarian tribe In Colombia
~:~r~~~~~e~~ ~ ~s!.,~o;etf e~~~n:
In one egalitarian tribe j n Colombia
which she studied , Kennedy -reported,
better perspective on their own
no division of labor was evident outside
problem~ She also urged the audience
the home because both sexes engaged
0
10
in productive horticultural work. Little
domestic work existed in their. simple
effect for all women.
households. Women were responsible
for the cooking , but chi ld-rearing was
IMPORTANT LATE NOTICES
equally shared between husband and
w1fe, siblings and the extended family .
Received after Calendar deadline were
Equality of the sexes was evidenced
these
two late notices:
during divorce situations when both the
man and woman assumed custody of an
equal number of''chirdr.en.
November 16, will be held at 6:30 p.m.
Accordi ng lo Kennedy, this study [as
In 330 Squire. It had originally been set
well as those of other, similar societies]
for Amherst.
shows that women have the capability
Stephen C. Halpern, Political Sclof doing a wide range of responsible
work outsi de I he home.
~~';:~u':::!;ywll~=~n:n
Kennedy reported that communist
Judicial Review of Title VI ol the 1964
Czechoslovakia attempted to · create
Civil Rl9hta Act," at a Law and
equality for Its women by bringing them
Philosophy Symposium, Thursday,
into !he. labor force. The effort failed,
Nov. 16, at 2 p.m. In 406 O'Brian.
however, because women were not
freed from domestic tasks and thus

~h;~~ ~111 hga~~"! lgn;,':,",:;,,c~~Y~~~

physical and mental well-being.

which render positive feedback. According to Lewandowski , lhe body can
handle some unsuccessful reso lutions
of stress if enough positive feedback

•The Career·woman

51

pressure to soar as' well as spur gastrJc

:r~~! a~d~~~;A~~~a~tt:ct~~, ~~~s
Lewandowski told a crowded room of
participants t hat stress itself does not
produce physical or menial .problems .
What does Is one's respon se to it. In
fact, stress Can provoke positive results
by providing the Impetus to accomplish
tasks or think creatively .
Stress has a debilitating effect ,
however, when it is chron ic and its
cause cannot be resolved . In order to
cope with this type of stress ,
Lewandowski suggested that individ-

n

:."':~~~=ember

29·30 at

AJI enbies will be juried and must be original,
handcnlfted art or craft workS .
Entries must be received by Wectlesday, Nilv·
ember ~2 at 5 p.m. There is an entry fee of
S 10 but oo commission on sales.
Umlled 8tl8C8 is avallallfe..
636·2201 for~formatioo, or register at the
Craft Center.

caa

CREAnVE CRAFT CEHTER
Ouriog the month ot - - 1978, aaft
wori&lt;shops a r e - In potl8!y, - ·
f)holo!J'IIPhy,
·glass,
photography. .-ld batik.
~or a oornptete achedi.Ae 0(

non·-

......... __

- -· -636·220t, 1· 5p.m., "'
f-tO p.m.• Mondoythougll ~. "' 1·5 p.m.,
Rtday !Old Salwdly. ~ ... b e In tho Qwft Cenlor. 120 t/FN:iC, - · !Uing

-a..

-ENGIUIII

Wyoming , January 2 through 8 : Smugglers Notch,
Vermont , January 7 through 12; Stowe. Vermont,
Februaly 16 through 1 9 .
·These tripsa-e open to &lt;M!t)'OilO. COI831·5445

for detail~, or stop i'1 Rocm 7 Squire.
STUDIES SKILLS LAB
TherStudies Skills Lab at the University teaming
Center. 364•Baldy Halt, is open lot Morino In
reading and studies skiUs. Hotxs are: Monday,
Wednesday and Friday, lO ·a .m.-3 p .m. ; Tuesday,
1 1 a.m.·2 p .m. The lab is open to all U!Bstudents.
UNDERGRADUATE APPLICAnONS FOR
SCHOOL OF MANAGEIIEHT
The deatline date for submissiOn of apptications
for the undergraduate program in the Schoof of
~ lo&lt;6tlring, 1979, has been extended
to November 29.
'WRITING PLACE
Do you have due? Come to the W&gt;ltlng
Place, a free drop-ln center
who want
help Siring, dndllng , "' ~ their Wilting.
We are at 336 Baldy Hal on the Amherst
campus. The Writing Place 1s ""'"' ~
12·4 p.m. and nights, excepl Friday,
6·9 P-"!· For fur1her information, contaet Barbara
Go&lt;&lt;lon &amp;1636-2394 .

tar-

Exhibits

____ ___ _....
____
~.uox-

n.eva--w-,-.......-

"'

_,.......NonhT-~Gol·

-

·

Abtght~ M ~- '"-V&gt; Nov·

- 2 8.

....._.~

ligna- a-logo.

I

-... ......... a-,,.....,

MTm.T

LAi.auACJE M111V1E

· Trip 1o
Thirll&lt;ogivlng. 23-26. Tho prtco Is 586. --Nghla In.---(~~

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. . be
II

';

�u

Ju

n opening?
Not .q uite so
t

Champagne reception marks
inaugural performance at
Theatre's new downtown site
By Irene Haupt
Any doubts of whether Brecht's

;it':n":io~~~'lluHc;.f;.~::r,:~ ':ct~idt~~

rest . Saul -Elkin's troupe has been
J:::"Ying every evening to an almost full

ll,":tJ:~~~~sJumber, Elkin said, "if
~~~~f~n¥~:St:~.a\~ ~~~~aft~:,'g t~

house.
"On the same Saturday we performed
to near capacity. the Convention Center
was packed for Michel Legrand wlth the
Buffalo Philharmonic and the Studio
Arena was playing at so. People are here
and after so many years of suburbia,
they are ready to be entertained
downtown. It is very encouraging ...
"Three Penny's" worl d Is a Brechllan
vision of &lt;lecadence, Immorality, and
perv&lt;Jrslon, where everything, including
humans, Is for sale. Although It
represents the aimless, rootless,
jobless population that crammed Berlin
1n the 2Qs and 30s, It Is set here in the
underworld of London, circa 1900. f\nd
If
want to catch the show, you still
have three evenings and one Sunday
matinee to choose among
Blood Sweat and Teaii
There were some voices complatnlng
that last Wednesday's opening night

you

0

~:e t~~a~ Jugst ~~~~=:~~nR

:::
•OPENING NIGHT" for a theatre whose
future existence - will requ i re ~ more
" bloQ{l . sweat and tears."
Thill phrase was used by Sally
Traeger, a member of the board of the
Theatre District, who welcomed 200
patrons on this $35-a-seat "champagne" evening. Among guests we@
President Robert Ketter, Congressman
Henry Nowak, former Buffalo school
superintendent Joseph Mench , Buffalo
realty dealer Edward L. Hengerer,
raatauranteur James Mastrantonro, and
other U/B officials and civic leaders.
A cham~ne reception and gourmet
dinner at 11M Buffalo Convention Center

followed the play. Ray Leslee's
musicians unpacked the;r instruments
and the actors celebrated with great joy
their first performance.
Overheard that evening:
SSI/y Tr8eger [who organized the gala
opening): " . .. two weeks were not
eno.ugh to call on everyone; we worked
so hard to make this evening happen . II
was lovely to get the applauseJor all the
effort , but it was Saul and his actors
who were the stars of this evening.
Without their tremendous effort, the
, occasion would not be here to
celebrate:" She praised the U/ B
adminlstrjltion for Its efforts, as well.
Problems
A member of the cast: " This is
actually lhe second complete runthrough we ha.d . John Emmert ,: Linda
Lavorgna anQ.Phyllfs Seaman were In a
car acciden . ~yllis is In the .hospital

~it'\,g~':ct~~ s~u~~~siin~r':!;'fb~

headache. Debbie Gates, who played
Lucy had aQ~accldent In the ~ckstage
area and after a short hospital stay had

\?,;~in~a~!;h b':.cta';!~ o~~ee~'];.; .

alrected in great palo_. Many musicians

=~\~~ller~~~~:.,r~.t~!~o~~u~~~;~

to clean the theatre, washing down

walls; actresses cleaning the bath-....- place mfght en·d up a dlscotheq.;., or a
restaurant. "
.
Saul Elkin: " ... we are so thrilled
It, but there Is still a provision In the_
that we raised some money and that the
lease that the theatre can be bought
U/ B administration joined us for
anytime by anyone who has the money.
opening nlgbt. We want to thank
everyone for making this evening
possible. "

r~~e"nd~~~ ~?t~~'Wo~~":ttn~lf;~~d:

r:,;~tuW:. a'~=~ e~.t~~~:;:,~u~Ys

�</text>
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                    <text>Carey

_

Inflation

The Pope

feing at U!Bwasn' t
exactly like being
with Jimmy Cart~r.
See page I 2.

Two from campus
wereour.unoffic-1al
representatives at
John Paul ll's
investiture.
Seepage _S.

Some .strange ones
have been turning .
up during the strike.
See page I I.

Th.at's what's ailing
the capitalist
system, says
Economist Robert
Heilbroner.
What's to blame?
Seepage 3.

After visiting-54
c_ampuses, he's got
some ideas for·
SUNY... See page I 0 ...

;

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

NOV9, 1978
VOL.10 • N0.10

~EOC
Located 61) the 'firing line, '
this downtown_agency provides a leg-up
.for a population all _too often kept down

The

Educational Opportunity Center,
located In a former office building at ·
.......,_ 8lld w.hifllllon
downtown, Ia a plllt oT U/8 unlike

anttt!'~:o~~o:~:'lf~~:;l~.;

of the
educational war as Its , director Will
Brown puts it, the EOC Is. charged wfth
helping provide a leg-up for a
:fl~~~7Y~~:'do~:;_.!gnored, If not
Its student enrollment of some 700 Is
70 per cent black, 70 per cent female;
there's a fair-sized contingent of whites
(20 per cent] ana a sprinkling of Puerto
Ricans and ndlans. The a-..ge age of
a given year's student body seldom falls
below 22. Some of the people served are

aaoldaa80.

"This Is a high · risk population ," ·
Brown reporte. They are poor, educa-\
tionally dlaadvantaoed, problem-prone
- " people who all tnelr lives have ~
~~.:~·re lnfer!gr, that they can't
ThMe etudents roam around a
building n - daalgned' for academic
purpoeaa, jamming and clogging the
only two elfVBiore available to holst
them up and down llx atortaa and a
~I.

'The .........

Entry from outlkll Ia down a nanrow,
dingy oorrldor (01108 you have checl&lt;ed
· In Willi Security pollee). "It's like
watkklg the IMt lillie," a.o-&gt; g r t - .
(He'• iiOfMwtl8l critical of the!Mdlord,
the U/8 FounclaiiOn, InC., from which
the Stille ._.. the building. They
Cl&amp;.fiiUch In the Will' of uplceep, he
complelns).
~ the entry point 'and the
aowCiad aleviiiOfa, EOC'a 18CIIItlel
'from oomfortable well-

CIOn,

~••toa ...,
peel

"llllllce-do.~

well-lighted, weiHtoolced
tO,OOIMoluma lllnry; a ralldilltl lllb
wltlt lndl¥idull wort&lt; boDtha and an
~...,of~; • print

:!:::::::'r:"t:"~
wll...

a11e1 Galor WOik.

~...

Thara'a

•

den18l ~ .-tOn;

~

....,. lillie ....

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Oft

-rr:=d~

-.,.,.11

:rr~m:'~'::cau~~~;,';~':'~:.'

eltlllr aide
lor

h.ncit-

-

An Intake Interview and testing are
the only edmlsslons requ lr:ements.
Two secllons of the California
Achievement Test are administered
(about an hour and 40 minutes of
testinal to gel a-reading on where the
applicant st8(1ds educationally. In a ·
sessionwlth one of FCC's counselors,
the Individual's Immediate goals and
obJectives are assessed and a realistic
progrem'llutllned to meet them. .
"We tell the 35-year-old housewife
who wants to be a nurse, for example.
.exactly what that's going to cost her In
terms of lime and commitment , what
she'll nave to' gtve up In terms of her
family, " Brown explains.

Hklh echool equivalency
Some EOC enrollees enter the
Center's high school equivalency

g'~~) (o:= ir;,~':esEn~~e~~
prepatallon for a Stat&lt;Hidmlnistered
exarn{GED).
In many cases, I he diploma which the
State Education Depertment Issues to
tho .. who pass that exam Ia a ticket
Into tha Job matllat, to a promotion , or
to college

IICC8jllllnc;e.

r::-:
~,.:. :-..=..rr.;t~ ~r.J~~

College

=

~:.~~onr:~=~~~~.::J

ll:f-lona, In bualnaaa and In the

':l~aen·.!'r'~. ~-~.:.~

conlldenoa In their 8blllty to do
oollegeoleval work. Some who hav&amp;
come 6ut of title piOQrwrt have gone on
to mad llchool, two . . at Columbia, at
Weal 0118 Ia In taw achool at U/8,

.~~~~ laf.nr:!cs~::;
' - progrwn applied to 309
collegea and unMnltlea; 112 accepted. -

v_...............,

1 Athlnl=~~
~udenta . . IIWMd .. clerl&lt;
CIOn.,.
of' a
fOod line Under a

:::u:.~-!'~·
Yet 1111

learn that they can achieve att.lr all.
The elght-year-oi!J.OC Is open · to

;;;...:· ""'"""=... "'*"

qulak OOfl'l/
printing
apeciall
• ~
tore, or dental
~ 1llara Ia alao
a - - In Qfllllhle (lfteludlng
photogfliPIIY)
· EOC"a dental -'atPia llrO!Pm.
rwcru~tment diNctor M...,le. Jofinaon
- · Ia one of only two accnodlted
PftiiiiBift• of lla.Jdnd Ill w.tam New
Ycwl&lt;. U/8 dental faculty play a role In
0

'This Is a high-risk pOpulation ••
All their lives th_ey've been told
they'-re inferior, that they can't-aChieve.'
the training which, during a ~t'a
- - . d -wr, lnvolvela Clay a week
In tile dental cllnle8 on ,.mpua..
Enrollment'" title~ lellbout 311.
Ma. Joh- ..-d. Ttia p'-tlaht rata
latOOperoent.
The llfiiiJIIIca - l l l l i l l n pro-

=. -

gram- IRvo'and
dealgnprlnltnO
work. ..
ltilril
the _ , lldlle to .llilln emplclrIn the QuiCk 00111 fliJid or • 1m
..-..wtaln film ......
eto. One
__......oftlllese;
.......

::!11

=-~~=
QriiPIIIOII atOdlnte

Haws.

0

-

wtttle

1-.n . . _

...... they help Nil • prltll allop
which tum.l 0111 all the fonDa,

tet,terlleada,

I'IICflllt~t

brocluna,

�.........

l

No.ember Sl. 1978

The Deep
$204.000 grant from the Navy
support~ a study of health risks

faced by deep-water divers -

H-aymes Room still there;
it's. ready for lunch
8

~:pe~~~~nn ~n~~~~l~ ~ f~f'.:1

What- beCame of the Tiffin Room
81 Main Street? a faculty member who

g::ro';r!'
plate, soup, salads. eggs Benedict, a
Reuben and other sandwiches.

~~: !:,~t :.:f:P..':,~·~=rn~~!lf,;,

Hay..- Aoolb," answers Lee Wood,

~~~~~~Squ\~~

011

~-;::c',~~~~renew

Specials
•
· Pally specials are provided , too.
Monday of this week, the menu offered;
' •breaded pork chops (with m~hed
potat'l!!~ u choice of chel salad « a
-mgi!lf!I&gt;IJ!, apples•uce, _and a Ires!! h~t
1~1 of breed), for $2.50,
·
•a " Haymes Club sandwich" (the
run-on description of which sounds like
the one lor a Big Mac: " Slices oltenller
turlley breast and ham with melted

menu

IIIia fall .net Ia continuing the month!~
buffets he lnlti...UUI Febru~.
Thla hill's bulfe.t--'ea haa an ethnic
lheme. Octobei- .. uw , a Getman-style
"'Occobette.t" ~. and Wood was
toyinG wltll tile JINe of a "Mexican"
mOtif lor ~- But he's had
ltouble lining ;;UI! •• lllal 1118C88881Y
- I I - . .net-other ~Illes.

~~m~~c:,j~~·e,Pt~~!'~:lia't\';:

~~l~.~~~~ ~~~~~Io

rn':lie =·right, but the theme Is still up
a .........,....
What- lis thame, tne bullet oosts
$3.&lt;45 and ollefa a . selection ot I Ish,
maat(a ••steamship round" carved at the

:!::.:01:,
·e~l~~::l; ~u~6Yi..:
- w i t h II also.

~

The Haymes Room has a lull
aelecllon of heartier potions, too, for
thoae Who care to lmblflo.

IIWI~.;:,~ul~ lu~~~:::u ~~~';,~

muahroom, spinach and swlu cheese,
hllm Md c:Meae, western, and one

:=~~ g!,~~ce~tsl:f.'n

n.er. .. aa .....,Y vwtetlea of crepes

8Miood, muahroom and
t.con, veget8rian, and cherry), . lour

(turtcey,

g~eJ!~n~~~~ ;"~?c~~ a ~~'F.I.edan'if~
;:up ot tha soup'of tho day~l• and
•a " Bartenders Special , an 80--cent
Bloody Mao:y.
n1o H'l)'mes.t;\Ooirl~Wood 9Pin(souj.,
has the only waitress s~lce avaUabl e
at Main Street. Everything on the menu
Is mad&amp;-to-order In Its own kitchens
(and not shipped in In mass-produced
titles as Is the food In the regular
relines).
e facility Is named for the late
Velma Haymes, a beiQved Food Service
"fixture" for a number o~years .
Wood says he aerves about 80
:.':~~~~~- there. He'd like a volume

r

He'll be hapoy to s2ow you to a table

J~,t'::a.~u:~~ou'!d fll.~;~!e0~
8

~t~e lunch" '!!'ithout leaving Main

Deep-water diving, one of the most
hazardous professions, presents a
number of health risks t~at are being
studied by U/ B resear.chers.
T.he study Involves volunteers who
exercise underwater by pedaling stationary bicycles in a specially-designed
chamber simulating conditions a)
Ydrlous ocean d.epths.
·
Dr. Claes Lundgren , a U/B physlol·
ogy professor who received a $204 ,000
grant trorn the Office of Naval Research
. to condiJGI the project, said the
incidence of job-related deaths among
professional divers Is extremely high.
The risk of dealh for North Sea oil rig
• divers, he noted, Is higher than the
general population's risk of dying from
all combi ned causes, Including acci1
dents and homicides.

The 'bends'
One hazard inherent In deep water

::~~tionL~;~2~e~s t~:~- ~'ifs': ~ hlc~
1

8

the U/B project will be studied to
determine pulmonary (lung) ventilation
elllclency under varying - conditions
· While pedaling -their bikes unilerwater
the volunteers ¥1111 wear breathin9 gear
similar to that worn by deep sea divers.
The researchers have determined that
the pressure dlfierence exerted by the
water on lh&lt;t diver's chest and in the
breathing gear Interferes with the
diver's breathing. They want to
determine why this happens and how It
can b·e avoided.
· ·
"Divers subjected to the pressure
found apP.roximately 200 feet beneath

~a~;!r,j; ~~.~ft:'n~=n":rc,~ccess to

As a resul~of the study, he Indicated
Information may be gained which couki
lead to Improvements In the design of
divers' breathing gear as well as' In the
composition pf the gas they now carry

~ub~r~~!~~~~ w~~d~i:';'~os:lt~o~RZ

can occur If a diver moves too quickly
from high -pressure underwater to

water's surface, use compressed air
deep-water divers use a mixture oi
oxygen and helium .

relatively lower,Pressure at the surface.
The sudden pressure• change from
underwater (where tho Ioree may be
~qulvalent to seven times that of the
surface) ·releases nitrogen from the
blood; this causes bubbles, or •
embolisms, which block the flow of
blood to vital body organs. The "bends"
occur despite special, procedures and
gear designed to prevent them.
" Such hazards have always been
present for deep-water divers," Lundgren said. But the lncreaslniJ nu111bers
of professional divers employed by the
military and industry have prompted
scientists to become more Involved In

Applications In treating lung dlaaase
"Whatever Is ll!amed In this project
may also be applied to help sclentlsts
learn more about problems In some
lung diseases as well as those
associated with other conditions which
can be tceated using oxygen under high
pressure In a hyperbaric chamber,"
Lundgren pointed out.
Volunteers, he added, will be
monitored constantly while they are In
tha wet compartment of the pressure
chamber by personnel In a dry portion
of the same chamber. Four or five

research concerning the hazards.

Undirw"er resource -.,¥81J .• • ,_
" Since 70 per cent of "1he earth's
surface Is water and because there's ar.
Increasing economic need to recover
energy resources such as gas and oil
from deep beneath the seas; he note!~ ,
" the demand lor professional divers will
continue to grow."
According to Lundgren , volunteers In

~~~~at:'~eb!111 s~t~~~ to0~:!~~~~

~~~.!"a"n'J~al~~:~ne~w~l '::!

on tbe scene to deal with any
emergency which may arise.
Lundgren said a large portion of the
total grant monies have gone for safety
precautions , specialized gear, and
expenses for the ch.amber In which the
experiments will take place.

Clarence Conner aQpointe~
head of financial aid office
Clarence A. Conner has been named
director of financial aid to students.

th~u8~Pce ~f 'Jir,7~~~1a~~~m!~I;~.,d
1

approximately $17 million In authorized
benefits, Including bank loans, to about
10,000 students.
A native of Ralelgb, North Carolina
Conner is a graduate of West Virginia
State College, where he received a
degree in business administration. He ·
earned his maste.r's In counselor
education from U/B.
1
Conner served in posts with the
BuHafo Municipal Housing Authority
and Family Service Soctety before
comfng here 1"'1969 as assistant to the
dir\l(;lllf'ofiinancial aid to students.
t1!!.'4
ember of PUSH and a
truafie'(,i'St., John's Baptist Church ot
Bu~-_

1 - -arber in line for a facelift
1~Fwtler may get a lace lift.
O..n John Naughton of tha Medical
School •s applying to the Annual
Partlclpallng Fund for Medical Education to supply funding for the
renovation project which may cost up to
$120,000.
144 F.roer Is one of two larger lecture
rooms avatlable to medical stut1ents.
According to Naughton, II funding Is
secured, the renovation will Include a

:11
::"!11:~:~~/:'!,=~ V,~~~m.,::
with adequate blacKboard spaos.

Because aisles will be constriiOied
the perimetef' of the room
1

~~~~~

~Ill :m~=~~~ ·.::!,~ .

mately_t70.
Allh •ugh th" reduced -ling Wtll
affect tile currant 1Ch6dule of Joint
Ieete with ~cal and tAntal
.tilden , the F8Citltlea Plllnnlng COm·
miHea the Aoltlclal F8CIIIty CoUncil Ia

ut1Jing that the•eouncll encouraga the
renovation.
If remodeling Is started In the
summer of f979 , Naughton said the
room will likely be completed before ·
classes reaume next fail.
The condition ot tho lecture room was
a bone ot contention with tht UaiJIOn

ft:&gt;:~t~e: ~~ =~ ~~r}~n:e

ut the School's reaccredltatlon.
Their next visit Is scheduled for the fall
011980.
PHONATHONVOLUNTEERS
Medical I~= like to
.............
lftllles-nd
Annu•l Alumni
to rafaa
luoock lor tht !MIIIcal ..,._. ahould

oontect Dean IUughton'a oHioa.
l.at ,..,, the Plion8lhon entlated 110
, :;;.~ ..,Suated from )liB's

�Hellbroner: Chickens of the 30s have come home
The same g~ lnt8Mlnlion
which &amp;bored up -an ailing capitalist
system In the 1930s Is responsible for
today's unprecedented econO&lt;nl¢ woes,
' Robert Hellbroner, ihe trendy New Yorio
economist, told an overflow audlenCf'
Wold man Theatns Thunsday night.
•
"The chickens of thti 1930s have
come home to roost In the 1970s as the
undertyln~ causes" of the present
criaia ~ HeolbrOMr aaid l.n pnt8811tlng the
1978 J - Fenton Leeture -Under
auspices of the Office ol Cultural
Affairs.
Those measures wh lch saved the

=t ";'!:'n~n\hr~v~==t ,~

shoring up the demand for goods, and
the -lfare state structure (relief,
unemployment, Social Security, etc.]
&gt; wh ich was designed to head off social
d[scofttent.
• These approeches dealt " extraordl·
nari ly -II' with the problems they were
meant to solve, Hellbroner recounted .
Then came World W81 II, followed by
the greatest sustained boom In U.S.
hlstO&lt;Y-a l&gt;oom that lasted untll1973.
That , of course, was the year of the
OPEC crisis, the Arab 011 boycott, a
lime when oil prices quadrupled and the
boom went bust. ·
• 011, however, Ia not whal today'&amp;
crisis Is all about, Hellbroner emphasized.
Anew aliment
What manifested llself In lhe eer1y
1970s and Is dogging us now Is a new
" aliment of capitalism ," which · tacks
tnsdllional symptoms.
Unlike the 20s and 30s, the
unemployment situation Is not "dread·
lui." To the contr8fY, 11 Is steadily

lm~~lf~p

(Gross National Product) Is
recording steady growth, also, even
after the Inflationary factor has been
accounted for.
,
The U.S. trade
(which widened

gar,

::~:::~t~~~) th~asace~~aW~her~
narrowing of late.
CO&lt;porate profits sre at all time

hlt~=~~ii.dicla are on the plus

side, Hellbroner said . ' We should be
living In an era of gOQd feeling , a lime of
buoyant expectation."
Instead, he said, we see dally
headlines about the dropping value of
the dollar overseas [or did until
mid-week last week] . We have]ust lived
through the greatest single short term

~~~~np~~g~ ~\ 7oo po'l'n~s s1~~
1

0

01

matterof'Weeks . .,£__
Things are not as rosy as they should
be according to most measures.
Why?

Inflation loth• cancer
lnflallon , Hellbroner said .
That's.the cancer now eating away at
the capitalist system .
Until tne 1950s, he noted, lnflallon8fY
rends, if they existed at all, were minor
and self-correcting.
•

~o!f!:Y~e~~~d~ g~,::.t~:_~.~ok:;

worry, the author of Beyond Boom and
Crash contended.
·
Then, ln the 50s, we experienced a
"mild inflation.:' The trend became
• more dangerous" In the 60s, until
· today " It Is clear around the world thet
somethlnr Is at work which has.

changed the entire operation .of the
system ."
Economists are uncertain about Its
origins and mechanisms, Hellbroner
admitted, but all will agree thatlnfljltion
Is a modem animal, that It stems from
changes wh ich have occurred 1n our
time.
·-

lieTI':OO~rea~u~?t~~ 1: ~~
88

government haa assumed" '1n 'tfie
economic system since the 1930s. -.
Government policies set in .place then
to remedy the demand shortfall which

~~~\~ \~!h.,"og~r;;~ft~ ~=~r~

support lie at the root of Inflation, 'he
argued.

Out of balance
The level and pace&lt;&gt;f spending are no

~~e~:~~~~:,~~ ..¥~~e~:, ~~::'~

of expenditure pumped Into the system
worl&lt;s In the direction of full utilization.
The necessary tension between supply
and demand Is out of balance.
Worl&lt;ers no longer feel Mnaked and
Insecure" against the system, Hellbro-

~~ cg;~~~~~~ th:a?~=~·~t rr::.vi~~
notl;,n of • rugged Individualism'! has
given way to a " psychology of
entlllernent;" worl&lt;ers ask for more and

=~ho~~~~ ..~~:t asbe~e:;,~~ ~~
society.

thew~~W~;~y~g~b';';,~~Y~~t.::t

~~r~~~~~~~~'rh:::'!·~:~ y~oo'i.~

of control.

m~e ~=~~a~;o:~~rw. s~~·at~~~

~v'!h.~e.n;·~~~=~d ~.~:f~~~r~
man-In· the-street.

again.
"My guess," Hellbroner v.~tiJred, Ia
"that we'll have .,. year or two 'Of
Proposition 13 and then pay the piper as
we find we have to have • more
government, not less:.7'

•

FMIIIanbargllln
~
• That's so, the NeWlSchool for Social
Re-ch !acuity IIIIIITiber aakl, because
- live at a peculia&lt; junctlft'OI - . .
While the ~ Ia let for calling ~-nment on the~ hand, a growing

~~r~y~"!;«:t,::d:;: !:::."''r:.':e

ment, agalnat~reeources , _ to
sustain population. ~"We've ~ a
Faustian bargain on•nvclear disposal."
We don1 know whsl we're doing to the
atmosphere as a result of the.tons and
tons of halrapreys and underarm
deodorants - ·ve sprayed into~!.
·

nl~.;:,n~!:' ~~ ;:,:-~:::~

1

Hellb[oner said; It can't regulate a
process whose end result has nothing
to do with costs.
We have to make our peace with the
environment, Hellbroner said, and In
the long run It will take a I'II8Ufliii'IC8 of
government control to cope Wltlr the
problems.
Noanawera
" I'm not sure what 1

should do to

~".11~~~!.';"c':,~ ~fu~~ 'Lyh~~~·~~~

what gowimment should do about the
not one of
He wasn't here to ..write a program,''
he said, but . to promqte "understandIngs and perCeptions, ao people can see
the historical precedenls and roots,
and , thus, understand the «&gt;elal
narrative."
"That's nice, but I wanted to find out
.what I should do to hedge aaatnsf

~~~~Yn~!f,~':J~rs~:!"

~~~~f tr...rcn.:J:C: w~~"::=

Nothing wor1to
•
It seems no matter what the
for easy answers.
Administration tries, It dllean't work. -· There ana none, IPI**!tly.
The more gooemment doeS to ·combat
discrimination, social decay, the
tangled root cauoes of poverty, etc., the
less elfectlve the programs appear to
be. .While coats (ind taxes) ooar,
•payoffs" become less and less visible;
An exhibition of works of
raalatance to goY8fllfiNIIII Sl*ldlng
art faculty membera .::." on d
growa.· ''Tile ~ 13 ayndrclnlr

Cortland showing
U/B faculty art

lfi=/B

~~oar-.
::ac:Giiiiiiil!
........,._ 1t 1lwiiligll .......,
,..y.one from
13.

~-.pinal-tile~ ·

men1 IIIIIJPOfl~whlch

:::'.,~\':~~ce the 1930s," elf..
1'iie clash betwMri theea phttoaophles '-Ia to en Jnatablllty that muat
be solved In one of two waya, the
economlal uld. Either government wUI
be puahed 1 - eggraai.., mote
far.-lng, coetller poogrwna i&lt;Weelly

combat aoctal ila, Or ft will "CIIII It
qulta."
Hell~
thlnka that In the
short-term future, the latter Ia more

-

:l:;.:y~Pro~~~~~

be 1 - welfare, leu spending, lo_.

for.-

11loae who - - ' thltl ...,._,.,
Heffllnla8f - . fook
bini

r.:==..~:::r=:r-s:

=

~=:aa~a.
IIMIIIgb, , _ that ....... .

=c:::~:::.:ug~

=',;.~,

Paintings, acufl*lll!,~....,.
-.nd photograph&amp; - · aliDoilt bJ

.....

rourr-., m8onbera c1 t11e AA Qai!M· •
men!:
....,, Sheldon
DoMfd

~g-:a.,....

=~~
K08fllg, John Me'-,
son,

.a.=

~

l'lllw•

Walter ProchOWnfk, Donefd
RobertSOil, George 9mfllt and ,.,.....
Toot§.
Many of the artllla are
Internationally and their may be
seen In coll.'!!!en• all ow.- the wortd,

---Ill

-.n

c.:

~=ro..Rd;U.~-=E.ura!»
In .....
COUIItfy . . . .u cl ...
~ ._
lll&lt;lot8lt.d In tile..._ . . . . . . . .
the~"-· lMWIIIInlt'

W....m and the Alllrlght-Kn..
The director of the Cortland

pilary

oaya the allow will be "'-Wing.

�No...emberg, 1818

AAUP says Its hlstor.y remains untarnished
Edlklr:
Thio Ia not tha kind of letter' that I like

o;:==

~-:-o/~~::
·~
whom I
much edml111 and reopect.
)l8fY

::=

Let it be clearly understood, then, from

Ronald Barner, Aaalstant Professor,

~=ca!,;c~~~~~~~~ya~~~

N.Y. State Conference AAUP
Steven Crane, Professor, Canton
Agricultural and Technical College

But AAUP's honorable history was
not made sitting on the sidelines. As an
historian, Prof. Allen ought to know the
value of a strong and effective tradition
in any kind of politics. It helps one
know one's true Interests, and prevents
one from selling out principle. We, the
officers and executive ccmmJttee of
AAUP at U/B, belie"" that our present
bargaining agent has never been able to
grasp how a union of academic
professionals ought to conduct Itself or
what It ought to stand for. We are
convinced that unless ' the AAUP •
tradition ls vigorouslY restored on
SUNY .J;Bmpuses, the quality of our own
University Center and of the SUNY
sy,stem as a whole will continue its

ns~~ru"~Y ~~~l~~ha~':'~~sor of Eng.
Richard Solo, Professional Staff ,
SUNY at Stony Brook
• November 2, 1978, In which he
Edwin Duryea, Professor of Higher
COIICMmnl the entrance of AAUP Into
Education , SUNY at Buffalo
Thomas Connolly, Professor of
English~ SUNY at Buffalo and Tiltsopportunity finally came, he made the
surer, N.Y. State Confe111nce, AAUP
wrong choice. When my o~rtun tty
(Alternate).
•
..
(4) The chairman of the "State group•
probably means the chairman of the
position •
elected delegate and
election steering committee. See Item 3 ·
a r~~~( v~:p~,~et.~~oJ~~:~.·.. however,
member oltha Elaocutive Board of UUP,
above.
and I -.ne, almoet simultaneously,
l~) lt. ls true that AAUP representashould be more than an empty_
an ilttemate member of the stat&amp;-wide
tives were not present at the PERB
· rhetorical gesture. There really are
election st-Ing committee of AAUP/
hearing on October 26, because (See 11
sqme things for hi m to basad about.
NYEA.
&amp; 2 above) AAUP is not In the election.
He ought to be sad at the wretched.
It Ia precisely because AAUPllas had,
contract negotiated by his union which
AAUP did not collect votes to get on the
to quote Proteaeor Allerf, such an
ballot. I repeat: the agreement to form a
permits the arbitrary dismissal of
"honorable hletory as the long lime
faculty - or staff by "management"
new organization calls lor It to- be
protector ol..,_,lc freedom and ... (a)
formed alter NYEA/NEA wins tM
decision.
~
past reciord • a professional organizaelection.
He ought to be sad at the AAUP
tion" that I arrived at my decision to
censure of SUNY . for the actual_
AJII'&lt;OY811
support an ~-~ between AAUP
and NEA lo merve (after a successful
national office of AAUP has
election). I ortgllielly joined UUP, and
the ag11tement to merge. The
this fact was a1Mrty known by all
uncll of ,AAUP chapters In the
New York State Conference, through its
parties, In a n i i o - that tl)e local chapter, et I
on ita Executl'ill
officers, has already approved the
a strong ce to uphold AAUP
merger. The New York State Conference
pril'!'iplesln Ita
lberations.
I ot AAUP, at Its semi-annual meeting,
Architect Robert T. Coles has Issued
held at Columbia University on October
a protest to Buffalo Mayor James
21 , 1978, unanimously confirmed the
Grillin concerning '1he actions of the
bell to
d to
agreement to merge. The Executi....,
tax-exempt School of Architecture and
Proleuor Allen's article point
point.
-council of the national AAUP has
En vironmental Design supported by the
To begin, IJe terms thol agreement a
unanimously approved the agreement.
State University of New York, In
"temr,orary alllanl:e." Only tne election
soliciting
commissions from various
di~JV~~Ie~~or
st~i:~·s,~!~aiN~~n~~
1
agencies of the City o~ Buffalo on a tee
unilaterally call off the llgreement and
basis ."
NEA signed an agreement to merge and
Implies that AAUP does not also have
SAED has placed Itself in direct
form a new organization alter the NEA
this right. He Is wrong. Both sides
competiti on with privata sector arhas won the negotiating election. Now
reserve the right to terminate the
chitectural and planning firms , Coles
let me tum to tiJe seven .points
agreement , but only three months prior
said. Many of these firms , he said,
l!rolesaor Allen makes after this
to the termination of the first or any
"have experienced one of the most
. misstatement.
subsequent contract.
the outeet that' I em not arvulng ad

article

="~~~~~~
~~=~
In the Reporter,

published

~.~= o-r=·, ,:o~~~e~h:;!

:.:rr·J.:-AlJ~'."l'·~~ ~~~~·~;

=

ao.ns

~ ~~~~

=~~ =~~eeTh~ l~'rJ~or::!J t ~

disastrous depressions in the Construc-

~~~t· t!': ~~"' tF.~'ro,. N~~~~.y

~~::.~.u~ ~~~~~

'':r: pi~ on t~Je_

(2) II NYG;_/NEA wrna

t~lectlon, a

merger with AAUP will take place. A

constitutional convention will be called
to wiite a constitution that will
Incorporate the position papers on
. ..,_,lc f1118dorn and teou111, due

~"if':O:,d ~'=!rJo~n~P ~n

i::

.-wly formed organization will then be
the ~nlng agent.
(3) Proleaaor Allen has his time
sequence confused in hla third point.
The joint election st-Ing committee
comes Into being (now actually exists)
t»tore tiJe election to manage that
election. ttconolata of ele¥en members,
but notice the ~ and affiliations

of.l"C:~,f~ ;.,:::a~~ ;

Alall Willeey, NEA Profeaalonal o•
Peter Kane, Proletlaot of Speed!
Communication, sue Brockport
Raymond Mum~y, Ubrerian. sue

O.wego
Sata Ck:ceretll, Aaaoclate Professor,
Ha.lth Related Proleaaiona, Health.
c.nt.r • Bulfalo
8llanJn VUI.._, A-...nt Professor,
Empkw 8llle College

_ .....
______

&amp; . . .....
,. . ...
_..._
,.,.
_ ...... _-...r __
......,...,._..,
~­

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

----

- . la..CIMffl -

· - . .. , ....

- · DoSANrrS

Members of the AAUP Executi....,
' Committee at U/B:
Murray Brown

Tom Connolly
Ira Cohen
Shonnle A nnegan
• Gaorge Hochlfeld

Ewatr..=~=

Chapter Officers
Jo
Maaflng (Presldantl
Ed
(VIca !&gt;resident
J_amea Sawuach (
-Treasurer)

Coles accu$eS SAED
of horning ~n on city business

gr'

NYEA/NEA collected the necessary

And when -he Is prp,perly sad , he will
understand why It Is necessary for
AAUP to participate In this election. He
will cease sounding like an embarrass- ed apologist, and he will come back
where his good sense must tell him he
belongs, with us and with AAUP's
" honorable history."

Archit~ct

re~

About the__, pointe
.
J1) II is true, as Allen states, that o~

dismissal of faculty at various
campuses .
He oughf to be sad at the
incompetence of his union's leadership.
He ou.1Jhl to be sad at the coarse and
vulgar tone with which Mr. Wakshull
~~r~!'J?.'" on the ldeaa of collegiality

Moat aerfouo mlotoke
The most serious mistake in
Professor Allen's " V.I ewpolnts" article Is
his statement : " After all, UUP offered a
0

fr~::~~!Lt~e~~r oft'::,A~fJW~~
~~ a;."/r~~r~~l~.idAI:::'.:' ~t~:;

office of AAUP and sought a merger in

:::;.de~~~.rt ~urw.u:;~~ll an;:.,lsE~f:~
Hartman. AAUP was willing to merge
with AFT provided UUP could be
eliminated and replaced by a new
or~nlzatlon composed of AAUP and

~ha.ik!~~urde~.j ~~·g:~r~hw::~~

accommodate the often photographed
Wakshull. The two members of our
local chapter of AAUP who participated
In .these merger talks In New York and
Washington and who can testify to the
accuracv of t/18se remarks are Professprs Murray Brown and Edwin Duryea. Si!lrllficanlllh no 111embers of the I0¥&amp;1
UIJP chapter.;were Invited to participate
l n these tell&lt;s.

~~~:s~~!:. ~~t~rl~v~J~~~rr:;~~

of
In every phase of higher education to
see that this merger will produce. a
contract that will guarantee the rlgftt~ of

~M~~ gr;~~~~~e~h=!h.z:'J~i

NEA will correct the abuses, permitted
under our p111sent UUP_contract, that
resulted ln the cenau111 of SUNY by the
AAUP at Ita last national convention .
We d.o not rely on nostalgia, as
Proleaaor ll.llan flatea: rely on a
I1ICOfd that Ia untarnished In the
defense of 8Cidemlc righto.
Sincerely yours,
- TIIomaa E. Connolly
-Proleaoorof English and Chairman
AAUP Commlttaa on A - l e Tenure
and F1118dorn

tion Industry; they are dependent upon
public sector projects for their
survival ."
Coles said In a letterto Griffin that In
August he had responded to a request
for proposals from "qualified consultants" lor a study of the development of
the Ellicott District. When Invited tor a
follow-up interview on his proposal , he
said , he learned that the City's
Depar:tment of Community DeveloPment was considering a proposal from
another private firm as well as one
submitted by the schools of Arch itecture and Management at UI B. The U/ B
team, he alleged, "had not originally
been selected for the Interview but ...
was Introduced at the request of certain
high City officials ."
Coles complained that SAED at U/ B,
which, he noted, Is not accredited , has
undercut by a third his proposed fee.lo
do the woOl, he charged, SAED will
make use of tuition-paying stuQents
and " faculty who receive five figure
salaries."
The result , Coles contended, is an
unfair competition situatlort_which.will
ultimately Ioree out of business the very

~'::f~o~~~~':

ong:,~:Y ~J' et~~hel[."'u~~~~cul~rly

concerned about · the " Intrusion" of
SAED Into a "consulting role." The
school should not do this, he said ,
"because they lac!&lt; the broad experience necessary-to be professional
architects and planners." There is a
teaching and
difference between
practice , he argued . ln his own case, he
said, II took seven years of education
and two to three years ot-l.oternships
before he was licensed .
The Buffalo-Western New York
Chapter of the American Institute of
Architects " has had a special task force
studying the competitive role of the
School of Architecture and Environmental Design for almost a year," Coles
told the Mayor. The architects have
"asked the State Education Department
to investigate the School's actions in
presenting Itself In competition with
private professionals In the practice of
architecture, actions wh ich many
members are convinced are a threat to
their own :...:rvlval ."
SAED Dean Harold Cohen , the
architect reported, has said that the
· School Is not praeticlnQ architecture,
but Is simply doing the pr&amp;-planning
necessary befo111 actual architecture
canoegln . .
"Such a limited definition of what the
professional practioe of architecture is,
by a non-architect educator, Indicates a
gross lack of understanding of the
broad capabilities of the profession ,"
Coles argued .

pr~:.~w~~~ G~i~~ t~o~e~~~ a fs\l~~\~

redevelopment study.

SAED' s Price finds Coles'
.accusations ' slightly flattering'

- lJIB' s School of Arcllltecture and
Environmental Dealpn Is In a way
" sincerely flattered' by the protest
against Ita making a proposal for a
' study of the Clt(s Ellicott redevelopment prognll'l'l.
Assistant Dean AI Prlca says that
while the School does not Intend to
dignity Architect Robert Coles' accuSations and statements abotJr its
invotwment, he feels SAED can 't bll as
Ill-qualified to handle !he task as Coles
Editor:
seems to suggest. Otharwlse, Price
Prof. William Allen says that he is •
~!~~· ''wily would he even worry about
"saddened" by AAUfl'a decision to
Price says the task Is not beyond the
the bargaining campaign In
parlnerellip with NYEA/NEA. Despite,
Sc;hoo{'a ability or 'authority. Neither
or partlapa because of, MUP'a
would SAED'a Involvement In this or
~::.:.:·~~las be~ the bounds of
AAUP stay home
"We v'r.w It as an DPPorttonlty lor a
IIIIa a good child, kael&gt;lng Ita virtue
community~ projact," Price aald.
intact, while he and &amp;amWakohull cany
" And we lime _ , Intent of tuvlng
up to the City the final declelon on who
~It~ .. dirty bullneaa of "union
wilt be aelacted to do the ltudy.

r...,ac~ld tHea~-

firms which mitt hire SAED students

"If you point a fi nger at someone,"
P~ce mused, "your other th ree fingers
are pointing at you."
•
He said the crux of the matter seems
to- be differing Interpretatio ns ~! the
C1ty's Intent in the study. "Coles has
one Interpretation; we hav~ another, "
Price said.

Kaplan-honored
Dr. H. Roy Kaplan, associate
professor of sociology, has been cited
by the Amerocan Society for Public
Adm lnostration (ASPA) for an article he
subl'lotted to Its " P.,bflc Adminlstratlon
Review."

Mo~~~A~aa~cl"~r':~~ ~~p~u:~mh~s

article " Humanism in Organizations: A
Crotocal Appraiaal." The award Is given
annually to the author of tiJe best
academic article published in Public
Admimsi!Btion Review during the
P•evlo us .vear.

-

�Not~l. 1871

_......,EOC-..Jno,..,.._,
•TheEOC
(Irpm pogo 1, col. 4)

foreign-bam Buffalonians and has
some outreach sen~ ices. Senior citizens

~~~;es~~,! t~1 ~h ~f:sos':.~ e~~val~

community center at 1490 Jefferson,

:~~ s~~~~~~t~~n~~!!m ~~

sessrons offered at a center In the
Puerto Rican communlt~ .
,
Will Brown has been director of EOC

~r,::."J~:efat'~~w,~;:;g~r:_e he has

Recruitment: EOC ~no one to '(aid'
Recruitment poses special problems,

~~~~~~m-;;nFo~':"'~.:;e,:,'~l~ ,:~Is~~

and recruitment unit heeded by Ms.-

t~n"r,~~~~:ig:,r: e~~· li:~

s't~'!~~~~~;::,~er,:~~~~hools

shrlnl\, Brown says In an alternpt to
define his problems, those schools
tend to "raid" the less -well-Qualified
student clientele which was once the

·~~a' r.;~Yr;:o~~rs~=~~~c.se

formerly thought of as " EOC material."
"We've got nobody to take students
from, ·• Brown explains. Enrollment Is
down·""Qhtly.
•
Some schools are suddenly Interested In the educatlonally and
economically disadvantaged, he feels,
only because thay ans "playing the
enrollment numbers game."
1

~~n~n:~~~u~f~["~~

stJ;.:its
thelr budgets. Once enrollment Is duly
completed and nsported to the State,
though, Brown chargee, concam lor the
students ends. Moet Institutions have
to report enrollment only once e
semester. Aftw that It's fN8I'Y q\1111 for
hlmsaff. AI EOC, howe¥W; budOe\1 are
"dally at,.,danoa repottt; we
haVe to be surw etuclenta are getting
what they need ana want fN8I'Y day. • ,

-on

T-bualoUnoaday
EOC can't offer the ~lnanclal ald
tnoentl- thot d!ll4il- tnotltutlona can,
either. Ito students ...,·t ellalble for
BEOG TAP or anr of the Sfate and
federai prognama. ''They'rw lucky If they
get two bus tolt- a dey," Brown says.
EOC also recetvea ,... funding per

student (only $120!1 per Individual per
year, compared to $2,000-$3,000 at
other State-funded campuses).
..We're like a one-legged man In a
100-yard dash" when II comes to being
competitive In student recruitment,
Brown admits. That's if you look at

money:

When It comes to quality of offerings
for this perticular student clientele, and
the level of services and Individual
~~r~~jl"~~~~·.!h~C::,\~· eoc comes
"I hate to see people playing n~mbers
games with these students," Brown
says. "The experience. of being
accepted Into a regular college program
before you're ready end then falling can
,be devastating . It can lead some
studenls to give up completely - some
who might have made It, ~ Jd they_
started slowly and developed con~~~~ .!n a program like that avallab.le
A role ori .;mpuo?
·
Brown feels EOC could.eastl~ extend

;~esrnhe::,~~~r:~~~~o~Y fg,·~~£..~

prepared students alreadY. enrolled 'at
U/B. :rhls would rei eve regular
academic departments of a burden lhet •
many of them don~ wan), aeyway, ,O.nd,
he contends, "our faculty are the beet lft
the State for doing what we're doinll ."·
EOC has 47 faculty FTEs (57
ndlvlduals full and part-time) and a
total staff of 98.)
Brown has proposed the Idea of a

I

~';.~:"~~'::r,\l~~~~~~~~m:~:

efforts currently going on under
auspices of the Learning Center and the
Upward Boundl'r6grem.
This Isn't too popular an ld• with
eorne. he-admits. But, he says, those
who tttlnk remedial efforts have no

=g:,

~f~tr;:.,~~;.ft:': ;~n,!!

1850a, Brown uya. "Fully 70 percent of
today'a college etudenta wouldn't liVen
have been lldm/t~ibla1u yura ago."
And "80 per cent of students at
Stanford went to pnap aclloola" first. ·
'Who's fooling whom tlbout remedial
educatlon'l" Brown would llka.to ~\!0,.

· ·-aplrlt?
The EOC has had aerloua Internal

problema In Ita day, at leaat once

~r,:~gln~::l!.tav=~C:iou~~; w~

the paat, but has the climate chenged

totally?
"Just look around and then tell me,"
Brown responds to that question.
Internal relations have been a major
concern of his tenure. "I talk a lot about
team work,'' says Brown. Signs and
oosters all over the building refer to
•our Center," ''your · Center." A
Director's Honor Role recognizes
superior Individual achievement. Stu-

:.:;~"ninc~11i~tu~~::,ssJ:~~~s-a~~

Burger King nearby - sell =flee and
doughnuts out of a small . room on the
fifth floor. Profits pay for a ~udent-

!;'.;J''~ ~~yy:!/ht.r..':-i.~ ~~~li~~ ~~,

togetherness.
Conduct codes, Brown reports, have
been "made .Clear'' and "enforced'' In
O&lt;der to "eliminate students whose
presence and activities were very
disruptive." During t~a second half of
last year, he says, "more than 25 ·

:=7ts 1~di~~~:':.,:Sor ~::'cl~~~~

smoltlng pot, or being generally
disruptive. Prior to the Implementation
of this policy, pot smokfng was
epidemic, end as many as 30 wine and
whiskey bottles hed been collected In
onl!t,d.:lY&amp;" lndl;;atlv.e of the kinds of
"problems" that the EOC can, arid will
solve, Brown~ndlcates .
Another mator problem stems from
an attrition rate of above 60 per cent.
Some of the reasons for It are, of
course, cllent-&lt;:entered, social ones. It

~~!Y'!oh~ ~Ire ~~!:':f!a;;

heve. Many of eoc~rentele have low
levels of Internal discipline, poorly- •
' developed success habits; others have
un~latlc pia: they want now what It

~~. t=-~~~ ~mr~~~.!~1v

high rata of llln.aa which ptagun low
Income people who live In aubetandard
housing arid aubalat on Inadequate
dleta."
·
EOC • oparationa ' - h-' lhoncomlnga. too, which may ' - contrtbut-' to theettrftlon !Me. ~with

="'.::.=...-~

~

ha
miMcl and ohorlened; a CIOIIlP8\aiiCY·
beesd modulw ayatwn ol •IIJUolton
has tmp.......,led In some .,_ ,
and the contMII of curriculum tai!ONd
to reduoe dupllcatton and tr-amentatlon; entry Into ciUIM Ia now
permllted at. alx fl-week ln_.a

during the academic year. Learning labs
In writing and math have been
organized to complement an older,
more well-established reading lab.
Th&amp;se units provldej ndlvlduallzed help
to those who can't keep up.
'DIIemmos'
But thele ans other "perplexing
probl~ms" jBrown refers to them a."dllemmas" which are not so easily
addressed.

for~~lah~r ~n~~.W~~u~. r~I~~~~J=~~
;:'~~=~::~~:!;~~~v~'i'e~t~~~::;-:n~ays

Yet, the director points out, "penaons
seeking the services of the organization
are, by dttflnltion, those who have not
been successful In the public schools

:s'l:::.:~~','r t:~~J·.l,'l:

to cope with auch a structure ..tier In
their lives, by whet atnllch of the
Imagination Is It presumed that the case
will now be any different?
•we are dealing with a population
who have children and other noeponeibllltles that restrtct thelr fnoedom to
direct their total attention to thelr own

needs."

511111 ohortage
Like fN81"(0ne alae, Brown Ia plagued
/ by "ln-'equete staffing," pjrtiCUIWiy In
the counsaflng where In-depth
support above 8l&gt;d bayond normal
student...,.laor con~ 11a to be.Jtvan.

, :;~::~~

to~

Ieete.~

Intensive lnt81'8Ctlon, he
have to be, for ~. apaclal
Spanlah-apeeklng and native An\arloen ·
counaelorw; a cou.-ar 011110 ~~ In
concerns peculiar to
EOC could uae moro .-.p, too, In the
ereaa of development and ..--ell.

-.IIIC.

Finally, Brown saya, th.,. .-. no ·

::~~~ =~~~':,fl:t~ =~

to develop ..-.Ices much beyond
current_.a.
"The fact that EOC Ia echlevtng a
mNSure of auccesa under lldver-..
conditions beWa wltneea to the
commitment and concwn ol the
majority ol faculty 8l&gt;d etaff, • he eaya.
8ut ·~natltutlona .-. not maintained
on commitment atone; he amu..
wryly.

�Nowember&amp;, 1878

He paints buildings
~

Richard Heu will ulk about
an eye-foollne - o r pelnting -""
" ' - - c a n tranafonn old bulldlnSP tod8ynt;ln211Heyea.

CALEN AR

'olrty Hany 11 • bloody po11ce · .-,g
In which he playS a Siol Franc:loco
cop out to csplute a,loc\g·halred mass rrurdere&lt;.
o.u- •lin Jon Vdt;/0 IW1d Burt Reynolds

UNDEAORADUATEOERIIAN CLUBI

Clinl

A ""'Y ..._...,. meeting wil be held to elect

new olficenl tor lho """*'o _.. 334

ThW'SCiay - 9

Squi'e.

7 p.m. Anyone whO wishes to nominate someone

fLII•
, _... I n - (11143). 148 Dial..-.
1 p.m. ~I&gt;I'Biod&lt;Siudieo.

for office or to vote ITlJSt attend. AI German
atudenta •• welcome and enc:otnged to 8.ttend.

-EDUCATION LECTVREI

een...

~

Tho'""-"' 0 p o r a , - by s.u acn

tor Thostre -.:11. 681 Mail St
p.m. General
- $ 3;·- - - - $ 1 .50.
5ponscred 1&gt;1' lho Cenlar for Thealre Research
IWldlho Depor1mont of Thee Ire.

U.WIIEE11NO•
•
For 11
I n - In sludylng law In a 00dll-orlncor;unc:1ionwilllanolher

w._. ... - -...._..

ORALBIOLOOY SEMINAR N
Recent Amnc..tn Calcium Phoaptt.te Mln12noon.

CDIIPUTER SC181CE COLI.OQUIUIII

MaiNol , prof.....-ofllngufsticsiWldtol~
- Linguls1ico lounge, C 106 Spa.id&lt;lg. Ellicott 1
p.m. 5ponsonod 1&gt;1' lhe Depor1mont a1 Linguistics
IW1d lhe prospecliYe Grad&lt;ete Oroup on Serriolic5.

.On-~lnAr1lflc:lol~

Dr. Reymond · Depor1monl ol Ccmou...
Scionoo, Univer8ity ofBrftioh ~- Room •1 .
4226 Ridge Loa. • p.m. G&lt;&gt;ffeo and douglwluls
wilbo~ot_3 :30p .m . lriRoom81 .

HISTORY LECTUJIE"
The RIM of the Ruu-.n Entnipreneur-or

_

Coow•'•

St.lkJng the Mulkowtte Merchentry, Professor
Samuel H. Boron, Univefolty of North Carolina,
Chapel H~ . 304 Dle18MOO. 1·2 p.m. Anyone
Interested .ls 1nvttec1: free admiaaicn. Sponsq'ed
1&gt;1' lhe Deper1menl ol Hislory.

Feky TalM: Robert
Short Actions
• .-~. ~chalrprofes·
eor at U .S.C. Tho Kiva, Baldy Hal. • p.m.
'Sponocnd!&gt;l' lho - o f Englioh.

~OFceua 11DiicuuR

COUNCIL MEETING"

IIIOl.OOY DIST1NOU191ED VISITlNO

p.m.

Saul

Coffee

-

et4.

The Councl ol lhe Universily wil hold a
n&gt;gUior meeting, •• 2..Jl.ll1. In lho Martin Coo·
Iorence Room, 587 ~ -

MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY SEMINAR M
O.'sJn end Synthelll of Antitumor end An&amp;
wlnl Nuc:- Anologo, Dr. Mroo1sv Bobek,

WAIJONCI TIE DOO: AN OPEN FORUM
ON TJE AliTa"

Expenmenlll Theropeulico Dapar1monl. Roswell
Pori! Memorlollnatitute. 127 COoke. 2 p.m.

- -·
poet ~
- 4 :30p.
m. ~

CIVIL EHOINEEIIING SEMINAR M

oulhor• .:38
1&gt;1' lhoGno)oChalr

m-

lnlho-oiEnglioh.

IJae .. -

-LECTURE·

fr19-ng,

Plonnlng and
Dr. Anbl TeMtie, Dopor1ment of

·

238 ...... II p.m. ~ 1&gt;1' lho School
a
1Dooliln. The
- . . ...... . . , _ . .. lho_.
, _ L'Ool I&amp; lho ... o1 on ·~·
111 - o n a1 deplh m form

-COIIIPUTER SCIENCE COUOOUIOMI

-n1ic-._

App'aacl~IO
Prolesaor Jol1n Mylopouloo, Daponnont of Com·
-

putef - -· Unlllerslty-ot Toronto. Room 41,
4226 Ridge Lea. Colfea ond dOuQhnU!s-wll

boservedot3ii)Aoorn81 .

...................:.5'

c_.,.4f-aiiiiW&lt;ftFIIIICIIona

J. ~. ----...

Or. JUiila

-~
S1{18-...n.

-St

of-Schoolal

.... ,,.,7).

Clltl3t-lltew _
___
~-·

c~wge.
Scan .

.......,. ..-.-Aiclwd-.

~
-l'llt';' -

.Jontry

""'*'·

*"\'cia

A

POYd1iltrlat

..-.~-­
~----

.
.
. . llilee
"' . . . . . . . . - I n No ... llul

- ..... 111..__
.....
., .... .., ...

1urn

IICFLII"
l.ot'aDoltApln.150-. 7 - 1 p.m.
I« non-~
-.oyPdliwondM~r*'i

..,_In__.,. l o - money
-

'"' a puny

w-.,

pols

I«~

wtllc:h are

heo hyprlotic -

bOx.r (-..usly played by

..Jimmlo
to 1um him ..oo a " ' -· This
coUd bo clledlho - - - . Y8f0iont&gt;f
"The Sling."
FII.JI•

....,.. end....._ 147 Oiefendorf.. 7:30p.m.
FrM. ~ 1&gt;1' lho Peeco Cenlor IW1d o

_ ....... _ .... _rnorol_
" " ' -· ~ ..._wtnnlno

- " ' - -·

ol . . -

~

In"

FII.JI•

docu·

0

.

- · - _.. nigh-

.. .,._.._alllloc-..,.

'*"'-Y

...

II&gt;&lt;U . _ molhers' righls to
335 . _ 7 30 p m Sponsored
1&gt;1' . . - of . . Nabonal

-

..-y

eon-...-

~-.-w

CACfiiMI&lt;
111rtr Noww,

·a-Cologo.

8 pm - . _ 10 pm
HO WACC. 9coll 11 , - I s ;

lt. I O -

mfttea.

UUA8FILM"
Equws (1 .9 77). Conterence Theatre, SQuire.

Cal638·2919 forohoW timeo. Admission charge.

UIJAB MIDNIGHT SPECIAL •
Coming Attractions ( 1968·71). Conferenoe
· Midnlghl AdmiSSion char!~§.
This film kK&gt;kl backward Into the memories

Thoolre, -

and forward into the fuh.K!J.. of Frances FI'MCine,
an eleganlly dowdy lrsnsveslite of and beyond

a certain age.

Saturday~

11

CDNllNUINO EDUCATION FORUM FOR
WOllEN"
Tho CsrM&lt; Warnon ln-Todar'o Warid. Capen

MOVIES FOR TIE NEW JAZZ AOE"

.~u:,

Dr. Elizeell&gt; Kennedy, ''Ctc6s-Cullural ~·
lives of Womon'a WO!i&lt;," Or. Han!,
''Fedl!fal Ponollles for lho Wdrtclng Woman."
Worl&lt;shops. S1 0 Includes """'""-· luncheon

Media S1udy I lluffolo.

IIUSlCAI. 'IlEAJRE•
nw_., Opera, di'ected 1&gt;1' SaU EM. •
Cenl8rtorlheolre-. 881 MslnS1. 8p.m.
Genetlll edlftlllort S3: 8lJdenta Mel senor citizens 1
·$1 .50. Sponsored by lho Cenler IO&lt; Theatre
-.:tlondlhe-IOfTheatre.
I

Tho

--to-..IOIOO-ofwoo1&lt;shopo
fOCOiinQ on intereats and concems of !he WOf1dng
wl , be 1 - by
a 80fios of ecllon-orienled W0&lt;1&lt;shopo which wil

-··the

otwing of ~: exchange
ofldoos,oelf-e&gt;&lt;l*ntlon,oncllho-fora

poraonol pion ofoction.

::s ::w~~- =·.::~

Coonly Hls1cricol Soc:lely. 8 p.m. Sponsoo-ed by

ond ~ - Cal Nancy M.D. Sypnlewsld al
831 .. 12,1 f C &lt; - abOul regis-. Sponsoredl&gt;y lho U I B Alumni Association.
The U I 8 Alurml Aaaociation Wtvttes alumnit

COFFEEHOII8E" \
.

II*'Y-.-of- - -

~ muolc. ~~- Squ••·1
S1. ~ by lhe

8 :30 p.m. -

UUAB~~ .

HUNOARIANFDU&lt; OANCES•

• : 15p.M. CoftMet4.

-....
(8wlonj-- young-----he..............
--·-·
-.... . _

Stet•n Gronman and John Renboum. guitar·
.... Cornel Thealre. Elicoll 9 p.m. Sluden\11
$2.50. Sponsored by UUAB Colfoehou&amp;e' Com·

woman. Koynote -

PHniOI.OG1' - ·

oiiO&gt;g lodge. -

COFFEEHOUSE'
_

IWldT-.Hols.9Lm.-3p .m . ~..--:

In,._......

CMIEnQO-'"Il , U / 8 , 10.PwMr. 3:30p.m.

Tile All II T - L'Oo( - d -

'linulng Education.
The controverslel French phy8ician advocates
thai ~f8flts tie bofn...lnto a tranQul environment
which incLtdes none of the harsh lighting ex noise
of lho lyPical labor and delivefy ....... He has
also recommeoded lhet lhe newborn boi1Y be
either gently massaged « placed in wvpn water
to make the entry into a ''new wand" more
p6easant for the chid.

.,.llzatlon, Dr. George H. Nw&gt;c:Oias, professor
ofchen'islry, U / B. Room 107, 4510 Main Slreel.

LIHOUISTICS COUOOUIUII SERIES M
The Thecntical Status of OfacoutM, Made'eine

· - .....-lor- Dr.

NURSING LECTURE'
Birth Wl!hout ~ Dr. Fradenck l.eboyer.
G-26 Farber. 8 p.m. $1 · Sponscnd '
by lhe School of Nur$1ng's Daportmenl of Coo·

Friday- 10

~- Moot ~. O'BtiaQ Hal. 3 :30
p.m Tho ollhls -ling Is lo lnlroducO
- · .. lho IWdy Cenl8r fC&lt; law f'l&gt;licy.-.dloe-llo....-J.D. ...,M-4.
or Ph.D. progromo. For lurthor lnfonnation, cal
838·2102.

t.JrWwaity. 114 Hochstetler. 4:15

~~~50~:~~~~'

lor Theatre Aeoearch and lho Daportmenl of Tho·
aile.

Mythology and Politics In Archak: Athens,
Alan Shoplrn, Tulane Unl\le&lt;$11y. 148 Dial..-. 1
8.:15p.m.
Sponsored by Art Hlslory.

-

Roiomon. - · o f Biology, Jolvls -

""' " " - " " ' Opo&lt;a, direcled by Saul
EJ&lt;in. Cenlar tor Thealre Aeseerch, 681 Main

LECTURE"

MECHANICAl. EIIOIHEEIIINO SEM1HAA I
The P - Ice c- Study, Prolosaor Ches111f
Langwoy, c:hoirnwl, ~ ol Geological
Sc:::ienoel, U I B. 2Qe Funu. 3 p.m. Cotree at
2 :45.

-

MUSICAL ·THEATJIE"

( - siudo Aroo)a Theatre).' 8

511111, . . .. School ol · Univer8ity ol Michlgon. Nllgora u.w.r.fty. 2 :30p.m.
Cal 838-2481 ltJr lnlonnation on
location.

UTUIATURE LECTURE"

..., earned Academy Award nomirlationolorbe&amp;l
.,;cn..e, direction IW1d editing. Four busineasmen
set out on a canoe ~ down a wild Georgia
rtve&lt; looking IO&lt;WIIfd IO riding lho rapids, but
lhelr advenlure become5 a nlghlmare of W&lt;Vival.

IIUSICALTHEATRE"

In Highor Educodon. Jo.l 5 .

Ess-.

Kolman and oludlttl llagyer of 11&gt;0 ~
Folk Donee er-nblo. Fllmora il!&gt;Om· Squi'e.
Wotbhops 10 a.m.-noon and 1-3 p.m. A party
at 8 p.m. General $2.50 P11f class,
· - $2. - - - to party $3.50,
S2. Cal Vserie Tenieff, 811 ·4628 for
""'elnlormetion. - I l l ' .. U I B Balkan
Doncen.

FOOTBALL"

,

U/ha._,4HredUn!MroltJ.AotorYField. 1 p.m.
Tie cur10ln rings down on l001bel ' 78.

AFNICAN ORADUATE STUDENT
ASSOCIATION IIEEtiNGf
331 Squire. 2:30 p.m. Coffee and &lt;louQiw&gt;ulswllbepr-

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
£ather .....,... S..rtz kll«vtews Hem June
Psllt.CcuW~~8) 4p.m.

IRCFLII•
let's Do It Again. I 70 MFACC, Elitoll
7 .nd 10 p m Adrhisslon S1 for non.feepeyera_

S e e - IO!is-.gforCACFLIIS•

Dirty Harry, 8 pm . ~ 10 pm

150- -

- · $1 ; olhenl,

$1 . ~ See-10iolllnglor--

FACADE: AN ~Of' caEIIRAnDN"
C_.. Qa1oe Up ., o - n BlocO

..._.,
-Cohen. - · School of Atchiloclure &amp; Erwinnnonlol Deoign. Folowad by
music, -.g, Wine,

eiiGft ond llu!loriS. Hayes

Hal. 9· 12 p.m.
UUABFILM.,
The ..... _L.-W-(Fronce, 1917).
· Squi'e. Cal 838·2919 1"'

Cooteronce -

ohOwlimes.-

ct.ge.

Truflsura funrieot, moot charmingly~
111m In _ . . obout a bochelor who is obsessed
willlwomen .

A-

,

UUAB -OHT SP£CtAI. •
Coonlft9
(1968·7.1.). COnference
Theatre, Squi'e. MkjnlgPil. Admoosion charge. See
November 10 liollng fC&lt; detallo
•

�-1,1978

7

..
VtSIIcn Forum of the Student Bar Association .
Also featumg Prof. John Quogley , Ohio State

PROGRAM FOR STlJDENT SOCCESS
TRAINtNG WORKSHOP•
Winning Weys to Meet People. Jene Keeler
Room, 107 MFACC, Elicot1. 7:3()..9:30 p .m.
FrH. lhformation and registration , ., 10 Norton,

UniVersity Law ScOOa.

r

ARCHITECTURE LECTURE'
Architects I BuUdlngt I Concepts, Eberhard
Zeidler, architect, Toronto. 335Hayes. 5 :30p.m.

$3&amp;2810.
MUSICAL THEATRE"
The . Threepenny Ogera, dlrecled by Saul
Eldn . Center for Theatre Research, 681 Main
St. 8 p .m. Genenll admi6sion $3: students and
-senior c:Jifzens $1.50. SpooSO&lt;ed by the Center
for Theatre Research and the Department of

UUABMONDAV NIGHT ALMS'
o - of Nteht (England, 1946). 1 p.m.;.
Cu.-.. of the Demon (Engllnd, 1958). 8 o50
,p .m . 170 MF~CC . Elicott. Freeedmlsslon .
D~ of Night is considered one of the fiO&amp;St
Engiih horror fUms . - . . -. concem1ng an
English arditect who Cs forced to live In a

Theatre.
- MUSIC'

recuning nightmare.

CurH of the Demon, a modem English hbrror
c&amp;assic, starts with an hwestigation by a young

Tokyo String Quartet, p6aying QUartets by
Mozart, .m - Kleinhans' Mlwy
-'Seaton Room. 8:30 p.m . Student tickets $2.50.
Presented by the Buffalo Chamber Music Soc:Jety.

woman of

her uncle's death and h!ads to the
terrifying unleashing of ancient demonic forces

upon the earth.
FILMS*

Wednesday -

The Fall of the House of Usher; Lot In Sodom;
The Crazy Ray; Banet Mechanlque. 146 Otefendorf. · 7 p .m. Sponsored by the Center for

fllM•
"'" fn a Glass Booth. Conference Theatre,
Squire. 7:30 p.m . Sponsored by the Jewish
Student Union.

OUANnT A nvE ANAL VSIS LAB LECTURE'

SPOKEN ARTS BENEFIT AND BROADCAST'
Poets Robert Creeley and Joan Murray, with

m

Carl K - Tralfamado&lt;e Cafe !broad·
cast via WBF0 (88 7 FM).) 7 ·30 p .m. $2 at
door benefits V"BfO. Part of WBFO's MembershipW-opecialpr&lt;&gt;gfM11TUng.

after this session._ Reading of tapes from other
tnstaJiations will be covered.

POETRY READING•
Murtel Rukeyser. 1878 Oacar Slt.erman
Rudlng. Cornel Theatre, Elicoh 8 p.m . Free.

WALKING ll!E DOG SERIES•
Po«er Rick Oi8ingham will show slides of lncfian
artifacts and his own Work. Bethune Hal, 291 7
·Main Street, 2 p .m. Part of the 'Walking the Dog" series of special
..... senW1at's-.poosored by the Gray Chair Of the
~lofEngl!sh . •

. Tuesday- 14
PROGIIAM IN UTEAAlURE A-PSYCHOLOGY
PRESENTAnoN•
..Mefville'S FtSt: the Execution of Silly Budd,"
by ProfeaSO&lt; Bart&gt;ara -Johnson. v • Univen;lty

Oepor1monf01French.,., ~liYeuterature .
322 Clemeno. 3 p .m,
ll!IRD WORLD WEEK'
3 :30 p.m.-Wcrbllop.

Sunday- 12
FACULTV REctTAL'

Dawtd F -,

orgonis1

T-

Beth Zion,'

WOIU b y - · -· Slgfrld KargEiert, Boch, c-Ffond&lt;.

Kefy.
7:30 p .m.-&lt;naugLnl Loc1\n. ftlmcri Room,
Aaanle, c:hoirmln, Oepon·

Squire Hal. Dr. -

mont Of ComiT1iricotfon • .m Kenneth Johnson

-

Wal1dPeaploo."

Bob ~g ·s Big Bond Orgy. W8FO (88.7
FMJ . 8-12 p .m . Part of WfiFO'I --.Nil

COI.LEGE B F1I.MS'

FILM'

tho-"'*-"

u-

FILII'

Lowyeq'

by the

In
c1 the 01tlldra.
Chun:h, E1rMooa _, W.t Fony.
' 7 30p.m. - " " " '· ! Sponooradbythe

u..--.

'

Anb-5eJdonl ~ of .... Guid, ancf Women,• studiesColege.

--n:-end

MUSICAL 'IMEATRE'

•

Tho T . . _ ep... &lt;hctod by Soul
Elkin. Canlo&lt; for 881 Mall\

senior-St 8pm

S1 .50 Sponoorad by the Cooter

tor Thean ~ .,.,
Theon.

tho - ·

of

UUA_BFIUI•
Thollon-t.-MW- ("'-197'7)

c:onter_. · 5q.ore Cal 636·2.919 for
show- ~-c:horge . SOe-11

""tlnglor-.

Monday- 13

~ ..........
U.S. Mlnort1y and Third

Cornnu1lty O!gorizer,

- " Relo1ionohlp MUSIC•

Weel&lt;optiCjll~

tat floor lounge, O'Br11n

Hal. "lllnottt!M In - · Schools: "
CaM of Olacrtmlnallon.'' AfflnnatiYe Action Committee at the Law Schoot .-y Exler.,., LonOne

o.w-o " -- 5 p m. Fnae Sponoorad by

the Oepor1mont of Muolc.

-

RlcMnl""""""' (1971 , Alta CoLwlcl of Great
- ); Nlglit Fog (1 955, ReonalsJ.
170 MFACC, e.cott. 7 p.m.
•

n.o' -.p. 214 Wende. 7 p.m. Sponoorad

Cenlet"" Media Study,

NEW11N1 ClUB LECTURE'
" " - ...... blologicol . . . -

c1 tube concoptloft, Dr.- I'Wro
E . ~, directo&lt;ofltle--~
Kennedy tnstfMo fof the Study of
Ae~- BioetNcs Ill GeageloM!Unliloraily.
-

Hu"""

the -Centor, - AuditorUn
Pat1&lt; ol
Memoriollnatilu,
EOn.c.tlon Streets. 7 p.m . Free actrnilllon. •
Dr• . . . . _ . - - .. MCrOiary gen.... of the Popol Ccmn1iUlon !!" Cootrof from 1964 tlw&lt;&gt;ugh 1968 -

F-

a-ofthe-·o~oo Popu·

lotion_,

Planning from 19fj8·1JI73.

· Jenny and friend

_..,._

GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR•
The Gen.sls of Mllgm~Uc Ore Oepoelts,
Anthony J . Naldrett, Unlv«&gt;lty of Toronto. Room
18. 42&lt;0 Ridge Lea. 3 p.m. SponSO&lt;ed by

Foster.Lecture Series of FNSM.
BuFF.ALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUMN
C.!. ln(fa on Logk:ol Truth, W.T. Parry,
~Y. U I B. 684 Baldy. 4 p.m.
FOSTER COLLOOUIUM SERIES #
Electronic Spectrum of ThlofOt"rnnkfehyde,
Dr. David Moule, Brock Univef's&lt;ly, St. Calherines,
Ontario. 5 Acheson. 4 p .m . Coffee wil be served
iA 50 Acheson at 3 :45. LECTURE•
Polltk:l•nd Cutture In Quebec Todliy, Malcolm
Reid , crttic and supporter of Quebec separatiSts.
The Kiva, Baldy Hall. 4 p .m. Co-sponsored by
the French Undergraduate Student ~ ·
!he !leportmOnts o f - t.arv.eoes .m Hslory,
and International Cofk&gt;ge.
Mr. Aekfs literal and political accoUnts of
Quebec revolutionary nationatism, as published
in his first book T1Je Shou1lng Slgnpolntsheds light oo the Caned;an turmofl of the 1980a
through the eyes of a young revolutionary. Mr.
Rekt wKI discuss civil peace problemsr solutions
and !heir eHects on the Quebecois, from the
\Oewpoint of a trensp!Mted Canodlan.

Computer Storage and ~trte.aJ of Information

on Magnetic Tapu, Or S , David Farr 213
Baldy. 12n0on.
.
tt is tlO()ed the user wll be able to store
and retrieve hCs own date end I or programs

BuffaJo Comedy Workshop members Tony lewis

-

15 ·

BROWN BAG LUNCH ll!EAT RE" '
String r~·s orvertmento. 335 Hayes
1 2 noon. The trio cillnsists of Weronica Knihe&amp;,
violin, Creative As6ociate; Ken lschi, ceUo, Cre_atiVe Associate; Rtchard Fields, vlo&amp;a, princiP8l
cetlist with the Buffalo Philharmonic .

Media Study

[);llingham is an assocOIIe of artist Georgia

O'Keefe.

•

PROGJIAM FOR STUDENT SUCCESS TRAINING
WORKSHOP•

Successful tnteMflring:

nps

and Tectlcs.

232 $Quire. 4·6 P.m. F1ee. Information and regis·
tration, 110 Norton . For more information call
636·2810 .
ll!IRD WORLD WEEK •
4 p.m .-Mexicari-Americ:twl Progam. Room 233
Squire. "Cblcana.-March TOWIIrds Progreaa,"
Tlno Mejias. SUNYAS, co-author of North Aztian.
Two f*tls: Cbu11• Frontw-.. {Phony Frontiers' :

"'-'"'lena.

•S.. "Calendar,'~ 11 , cot 3

�•

Ncwembef'l. U78

SENATE
Fogel reports
,at session
oftheFSEC
Senate

Executt,e
18

CommiHM

MlnutM,

'\-0::,1·
!:~ called iq_ order at 2:39
p.m. !O con~derthe following agenda:
Item No.1 Approval of Minutes
_,.
The M inutes of OCtober 18, 1978 were
approved with the following correction :

~!~fe~C!1 a.;'h~~d 5 l~~d ~~~~~~S:) ~e 'J~~~

mulated."

tt8m No. 2 Officers' Reports

A. Pte~#denfs Report
Acting Executive Vice Presldellt Char1es
Fogel repprted for U!e · President who was
unable to be present. Despite Jhtt Blue Bird
bus strike, our busing schedules should4
remai n un1nterrupted since our contract with
81

~~~~ts8:: ~~~~=~ ~~~he !:~~~~~fa~gg;

dlsput~ .

SUNY Central · personnel changes were
announced at a recent Administrators
Retreat : James Perdue, former president at
Oswego, replacing Loren BarHz anc;t Paul
Silverman becoming th·e new President of

-

'

the Research Foundation are among the

,

changes. Silverman's reassignment leaves
the post of Provost of Gfaduate Education
and Research vacant for the time being .

)

Polowy, Belewich were among tho's e wh9
went1:o Rome for the papat·investJture
I

N

It was a w"'*' of memories which

would never gtve up.
It was all worth it. Scurrying to the
organizational meeting of the Western
New York delegation, trudging to the
photographers at 11 p.m . to have
passport pictures taken, and staving
late at the offiCe to 'make sure things
went smoothly during their absences .
o.- they arrived Jn Rome, it was even

=

~o.,rtv!""=tdbJt "Y,Y,:""ih:

nerve to elbow back), pressing to get a·
closer look at the new pontiff. ·
Monica Polowy, business manager of
the Creative Associates, and Larry
Belewlch , an Instructor at the Intensive
Enpllsh Language Institute, were the
Umversity's unofficial representatives
at the historical investiture of· Roman
Cs~~~~~~T.;:,1 ~fn~1 ~~~Pt~.; was not

bltte&amp;sweet experleQCe," she recalled,

;~~~~~~~~h~p ~~:~~~r~:~

cultural
background, Monica be11eves the new
pontiff has made the papacy "more of
an approachable entity. " She ,is eager to
see how he will draw on his strengths
. -like his political savvy- to deal with
Qrobtems facing his church.
.
Possibly because of her own affinity
to the arts, Monica Is hopeful John Paul
II - an old thespian and art lover

~~::!i..

-

w~l t~:".J~~~a~~

,

~~~~'l!t.~~~ 1~~np:'t'\Y~9Atf·~~~:

ov~~";~~~ to do it all over again, Larry
said he ·would, hands down. After alf,
where else but In Rome can you see a
bmlaacsks ~rdnldna t vgngivin gvearyutmognrua ph s at.ter
·I· 9
nlr 19 0 1 11 1
·
-J.B.

~,:'~COMeCI.
whl:rJ~B\~oev~::~

New Vorl&lt; contl""""l 11 th row eeats at
• .,._.

1M oer.mony that Sunday,
~.:;:,was ~.\' ~~

During

~1m~tc!; ~~f~ ~~ ~~:~vetoob~:rv!~.' ·~~

contributed lo making his trip "more
overwhelming than expected."
'
' Nothing, Larry Insisted, could detract
from the excitement of the occasion.
Not even the little old lady who first

i: 1:h~~cy"~~~~~rnc:~~1·t~t,,~~! ~~!"wfl)~h"~;

m~~: 11fh".i~~e~fs L.!~.::~ss~~~n =~r~~

A __ _..

,_,..___
Clll'cllnal """'' Wojtyla of Krakow,
Polend. As a matter of, fact, it was her

regulations regard tngJ&amp;sldency , ,panic.ularly
for such students.
'

fh~ce~~'l?~:~· a~BJ'o~~ced

that a handicapped football game will take place December
2 at 7:00· p.m . and that the Silver Wheels
team l'las requested vartous segments oLthe
university to solicit volunteers to participate
In the game. Non-handicapped volunteers
will be required to play the game In
wheelchairs. The game ts reputed to be very
rough , and no volu nteers emerged at this
time.
•
The election to select or reject a bargain i ng

~~~~r~~e;el~~ ~~!;1f~~v~ ~~~~-=~~~~

~~7:n:~' a ~~P;~ v~~n=~':~r~BJ~:

1

U.-tlllllln.... -

·

8

the November 28 open forum at which the
opposing agencies ¥.1111 Qresent their views
and answer quesUons. ll was APPROVED
that the committee be composecl of two
Facult)I'Senate Executive Committee members and two Professional Staff Senate
members. W. Wamer and N. Garver were
appointed from F.(;.E.C. There wss general
agreement that a· debate format should be
avoided and that adequate time should be
reserved for questiOns. ~

wlllch ehe .,:.r- has "opened
8 10
llll•--ln
U. modern chlm:h..
lfteOid ~·with IlliG'.
r::::.::.1a~~lna ..d:"e=: Spc;»rts law is focus of conference;

-

at the Retreat of graduate

discussion

"'

wm- uve his final years In his native
Poland.
RealizinQ that by now people are
probably I ~ring of hearing Poles talk
about their " symbol of inspiration,"
Larry offers no apologies. Instead he
• says, "Poles, particularly those in ·
Poland, needed this. We deserve to

:~/i:ct ~~J:s(S~ 18:'1 m~~si).h~

·~~e :;~:;.'or~' ~~~~e :9~c!fro~e1~~s1~m~

tute and while studying one summer in
Poland.

desire to become an actual participant
is wiped out.
Candidly, Larry said he was expectlng a rather dull plane )Dad of fellow
pilgrims. He also was expecting to see
very little of the pope, perhaps one
good look at best. What he got,
liowever, were lhliareting co-travelers,

an altogether unfamiliar experience,

~~~~81 ~~~~~~~u~ak:~~g:~~~ :fforo:r~e~:~·

at the Administrators Retreat. The current
State of New Yort&lt; policy is to base
budgeting for hig her education essentially
only on lnstructfon. It was agreed that ft
would be desirable to make the_ same
presentaUon to members of the staff of the
Division of the Budget. .
...
TheJ ncreased number of people be_J.~nd

~;~ ,';;'t~n~~~~u~~gn~sh at:~~a~~~n ~~~r-

both an " aggressive leader" who will
concern himself with gai ning religious
freedom for Catholics · In communist
and third world countries, and a
visionary who will explore ways i n
which the church can. serve the social
needs of Its people.
·
He also predicts the new pontiff will

:,onJ;-

5

to1&gt;e conslctered In making selections.

rrre~~s. ~~d ~~=~~:·of ~~en~~ w~~~i~~

through comm issioning special works.
Better than he expected
'
Uke Monica, Larry Belewich also
decided on the spur of the moment to
go 10 Ronie, despite friendly warnings
that he would likely see more of the
lnvestltllre on the tube. Television ,
Larry ' contends, has ." jaded people's
sensitivitieS" to such a historical event
1
1

1

~y~~~!~~en~f~~:emarito~:~~a:~r~

tried to tackle him , ·then vi,rtualiy
jumped on his back to get into position
to shake the hand of her spiritual
leader.
.
-The wide appeal of the papal
ceremony was brought home to Larry

Aggressive and visionary

1Je~t1~:;~~0n° o~f:; ~~~~Y~l~~~i~~~~~~

University Centers and SUNY Colleges .

,

::m~~lbl&gt;' =:.n~~n ~~~~~~~:;

the I!M~Jflt~n.

1

hom No.3 R-lollveo " - ' • _
There were no

repo!1s at thla time.

IIOIIJ No. ( Commlltw A.«io
There were no reports.at this time .

bY

i~~?altpaopwl~~dpreuedlff;;t ~h~~l!8r.bl~n~~wy~r ~!!~n~!~ Tm1::
~~f~s~ co~::•= &amp;.~~f~gAt~,:~~~~ •
ltom No. 5 Old ' Buol_o_c;;..,,;IIIM
were

''""""-

with

--·

- e n d 18nt1111111118- could unite,
end eet~ln lhllrown way, contribute to
U.loi'Ofllle~.

•r,.....-., IMIIY
heiiPY f - in
- pr... It • epirliliai high,"

_ ralleCiad Monica, 'one lllel "nltnfolced
our llumanlt)'." "In the r.ver context,
Wltww'alll-."ehel.,...eddad.

Saturday, November 4, at O'Brian Hal,
player's dlsadYBJI(Bgs because a lawyer
as tile Thlnl Annual Law Alumni
who only has two or three clients does
Convocation was held.
not have t!&gt;e experience to handle hl.s
A morning pat:tet discussion replayers' negotiations. The obvious
viewed: ~IIlii a pleyer, reobJactive Is to reach a "lair and
~ling a frw~chiee, and the uee of
agreeable" decislon .
,....option claUMa. Comprtaing the panel
Moderator
Swados
contended
- : Robert Swedoa, aectetary of the
" sports Is not a big business." The take
NHL; Pat Gillick, genen~l m~ of / I$ much less than In the average large
the Toronto Blue Jays; William Lerner,
bus\ness:
·
ettomtY for - u a - b a l l playe&lt;s;
"A player is not •~&amp;uaily interested Jn
Ralph Halpern, Mtorney fOr the Buffalo
• how well the team that drafts him is
Billa; end Ed Rutkowal, former Bllts
doing, he Is more Interested in personal
concerns,• said Lerner. "He realizes he
playar and oum111tly a WKBW football
..,.ya,
only has one team to bargain with (the
DUring the couree of U. dl~n.
one that drafts him). Becauae the only
thai when negotialternative Is playing out of the country,
etlng a
a conlfact, • lawyer must
the player will usually come to terms
.._the
worth. "It Ia important
wllb that team," he •ufJlmarlzed.
not to pl-lllm too high," he pointed
Following the panel, a luncheon was
out,
the player wl~more
held In Talbert Hall, at which John A.
IMD he Ia worth end
uantly
Ziegler, Jr., president of the Nail,... •
111.1 .lllflatlonary effect
tiM!
Hcickey Leaaue. spoke principally 1o00ut
-.ue."
how dlfficuli it Ia to IIVOid violence In
"A~~ role lias chanlled olliir the
the NHL.
•
_ . , • CIIUicllllldded. "We like to have
"We expect the playera to throw their
U. lawr-IM:COfi!IIIIIIY the player Into
gloves off and light oooe In a while,"
U. n-oott•ll-." y_. ago, a lawyer
~egler said. "VIolence Ia a part of
not .nawed to atlllndad any
hOC:II8y."
•
eDIItl&amp;t Idle.
Zlealar Ia • former attorney for the
....... NepCIIIdlld by ·~
oatrart Rid Winge.

Rullcow:rlalned
wen

"'**'•

''*

approved

for

the ·

/

~e~W:,"~~~~:nF~tta,~~~~~ T:~~~
nent).

~~ le:~~~l~:J!~Ic;&gt;;':~·an:r~..;;g~
~ Bylaws,

sibiiCy ;
EJections;
F.cllftles
- Planning; Faculty Tenure and Privileges;

~~~~Ocr c~~:u~~:Yv:a~~~d-;h. 'l~

Hoc Search Committee on Prealdet'ltlaJ
Evaluation Procedures. CommlttH member,
lists are posted In I he Senate Office.

ttem No.8 N• Bualneu

c~~~.;.=:a~"c;=n~~~~18tC
~~ul~;ar~ ':u~~erwn:,~nd
1

orq:.:

~~~~"~~a ~ mC::•~::c=:.CS:~

Dr rtowell or other members of ttle
1.10mmit1ee.
A. Kuntz asked aJI preaent to inform

f~:,~n:r=:.·~:.r.::o::.~'":':ff

graduate students w'ho ant able to proctor

. r~~~ t',~~~:re~=o:~~o;.m~~ :,~

for tho
who have experlence and are
appointed as aupervlao,.. tnquirtea abould
~ d~~-::.~~ the Student Testing Center at

6

The meeltng adjourned at •:55 p.m.

�Love Canal problems may
be worse than wet ink
By Joyce Buchnowakl
-

... Staff

Or. Beverly ""' Paigen : a cancer
researcher at Roswell Park who is
sO&lt;netimes referred-to as the "mother of
1

=" ~~so~ ~:~1:: .~f~~e~r:

~

Big bands

An Impact on the clean-up
Health Department scientists, ac1

Dean Rossberg of
plans a
6-hour 'orgy' of the best of them
as part of WBFO's membership drive
New Orleans Is where It started - in
an X-rated quadrant of the city. The
belle of the Mississippi gave birth to
ragtime, and from that progenllO&lt; of
jazz eventually came a mutant grandchild called the Big. Band Sound.
But New 0rleans Is not where ragtime
stayed. A forced migration occurred

Instrumentation also changed ~ause
of the Introduction of new Instruments
like the french horn and flute . The
popularity of caribbean and South
American sounds ~I so had its effect.
Although the newer Big Band Sound
may not be as personally appealinp to

spurred musicians. to pack up and leave.
As the years passed, the unwritten
music found Its way on paper, and by
the 1930s the sound , which was
O&lt;iginally a black a1t form , was
commercialized and played by while
musicians. The derivative was called
the Big Band Sound .
Highlight sounds ol the Big Band era

~~~~~~~v~~~ee'1~~~7 ~~ ~ei::::ra:~

~~~d~"t'~dcl-= ~PW.~':' ~Yo~~~~:

0

1

~~i~s ~~es~~t~anfro:' e~~~~~

12-1 9, as WBFO kicks off its Fall ·
Membership Drive.
Dean Robert Rossberg of the ·Facylty
of Educational Studies, and one of
U/B's. resident jazz and Big Band
aficionados, wil) reign as king of the
airwaves, Sunday from 6 p.m . until
midnight, as he spins tunes and plays
speoial requests during a " Big Band
Orgy."

R~~~~\~"::o~~o:":'fhe advent of

radio, the end of prohll&gt;ltion and the

opening of ballrooms were 1nstrumental

in popularizing the sound . " The music
is essentially a rhy1hm lc state!"enl,"
explains Rossberg . It's the rhy1hm that
gives the music Ita " usance and
power." The rest Is an embellishment.

rt;,?sor~~~~.:O~~

!~~~~~~~~~

••;
by
Duke Ellington, Coun1 Basle and Benny

~~r.r.:.ns;u~~.":.o,:'t~~.ra:~~r~0r:r~~.

to as a " clone," differed because, IO&lt;
one thing, bands became larger. The

Rossberg , he believes that music1ans
are now better schooled arrangers.
While he may not consider them in the
hold their own In the talent department.
Rather than divide musicians into
various groups, Rossberg prefers to
view them as all part o.h)ne developing
continuum.
Never again as popular
Even though Ross berg claims we -will
never witness .the demise of the Big
Band Sound as an art form , he seriously

doubts whether It will ever aga,ln be as
popular as II was during the 30s and
early 40s. The reasons- are obvious.
Gone are the ballrooms and college
proms, the natural habitats of Big
Bands . Mone~ Is another factO&lt;.
Rossberg estimated that larger bands
had to gross between $10,000 and
$20,000 a week just to break even,
considering the cost of salaries.
lodging and transportation. Also, the
technical quality of recordings Is so
improved that most club owners would
rather play cheap tapes and hire a disc
jockey. Besides, who can disco to
Count Basie?
·
Injecting a plug for WBFO, Ross berg ,
who calls his weekly Big Band Sound
program on the station '1herapy," feels
the University community is lortunale
to have such a ~u.ality station at their
disposal.
As the promo reads wJ:ajch announces

his Big Band

Or~y ,

"listen , love and

maybe even learn .'

Overnight parking restrictions
go into effect on November 15
tro"r:~·~~~~n;r.~ ·~~:•,gr:~~

12 modntght and 6:30 a.m.-except In

cena•n specified areas.

AcCO&lt;~tng tq Robert E. Hunt , directO&lt;
ol Envoronmental Haallh and Safety,
- lh1s restrtC1ion Insures- that tots can be
cleared of snow and · made ready IO&lt;
vetuctes the following morning. Vehicte. par1&lt;ed In posted lots, 0&lt; areas of
lots. alter midnight wtll be tagged.
Vetucles are also subject, to towing
wnen plowona is mandated." Hunt uld.
On '"" Mam Slreel C8mpua,
ovwntl"'l .,.wing..,_ will be provldad
·on cleaognalad _ . of the Main Slteel
lot and on Shemlan l'.culty and P.,.....
F.cuny tots. SIUdenta ....,. use the
Sherman end Port&lt;• Faculty lola as

completed shows a high Incidence of
kidney and bladder Infections, central
nervous system disorders, and other
health problems .among those living
near old streambeds and shales east of
the Love Canal.
Paige;:;'s presentation , along with one
by Richard Llppes, attorney .lor the Love
Canal Homeowners Association , Was
sponsored by U/ B' s Gray Panthers.
Palgen said she recently returned
from a meeting with State Health
Department scientists In Albany where
she presented her llndTngs.
Depaftment representatives had previously denied that chemicals dumptd
In the canal had any connection with •
health problems of those living outside
the immeidate Love Canal vicinity.
Paigen's study reveals, however, that
the migration of chemicals throu~h the
soil has adversely affected restdents
living away from lhe canal along paths
of underground water flow.

well.
AI Amherst, overnight parking will .be
provided In lots 1, 2, 3, 5 and 7. In each
case only a portion of a lot will be
available. OVerfJow from lots 1 and 2
should park In the f!lllllerly-most
portions of lot 3. cars adjacent to, but,

not in prescribed areas in lot 3. because

~futh~v,rz',;gwar~~ tn ~~ orbe5 ::iYig~

1

expanded as cequired.
Student vehicles which are to be
· ~tored" (not used) IO&lt; the winter must
be removed to " storage" areas, Hunt
satd. At Amherst, call Mr. Lemke
(2026); al Main Street , call Mr. ~cMUian
(4016). Thoae--...hicles which are not
moved woil be towed at the ownf1(s
expense.

;~~~~re ~e,P~~;n·d:t~e T~Y~ul~

conceivably spur a modification of their
original stance. It could also have a
substantial Impact on the handling and
clean-up of the pro~em .
Paigen said she t&gt;eca:me interested in
the adverse effects of chemicals on
humans two years ago when a plant
reportedly dealing In chemicals known
to cause cancer and birth defects

ex~~~~s~n ~~a~y~reaucratic

and scientific bungling after the explosion, little if
any research was conducted to discover
II nearby residents suffered ltr elf acts
from the chemicals. Determined not to

~::J'"Ir.~~~al~n p~~"'L.g:l~n~~
episode.
High disease rates
Accord ing to the cancer researcher ,
increased incidences of suicide, ner-

:~~!P:;':~i~~~d :,h~;~1~~~~·1iv~~g

near the paths of old streambeds in the
area. Paigen also found higher
incidences of miscarriages, stillbirths,
birth deformities', and crib deaths.
Many of the women questioned had
experienced only normaJ births and had
never miscarried before moving to the
Love Canal vicinity , she noted .
The study's control area contained no
streambeds and was located north of
theC'IIlal.
Paigen reported she was able to
predict the location of a buried

~~~~d~n~ ~het?gu~d,~eg~~r~!e~~~~s;

'check with Albany verified
her
suspicions regarding the locatloJ'l.'
Although case$ of r~p l ratory diseases were not found fn· slm_llilr
clusters, the ll!searcher note;olhat \lte
path of chroAio resplratO&lt;y l&gt;ftlblems ,

fr=·~~ni; ~~:~;u~~~ldof ·~~~~ill~
winds.

They were not aware
1

m~~~~'"{Jp ~e~hf~:r:.~epra:: bt~::'a~

residents were not aware of the
chemicals or the dangers which might
ensue from their
esence before
buying or building i he
.
They found out lat,er, Lo es s id,
when . their fences, swimm
ool
linings and basement walls started
deteriorating . Eventually, " hot rocks"
(hardened chemical wastes) could be
heard exploding and residents could
actually · see chemical waste oozing
from the earth near their homes. Their
complaints then prompted a State
investigation.

..~~fo;:.,~:ltsw~~m";~~~~edioLl~
olflcials for years, receiving only the
run-ar.ound.
•
" Thi s is not a case of government
suppressin¥nlnformation," claimed the

~!:~r~s~r~~;u.~i~~~~t.;;;:,7~~i'e.\~··

they

Avoiding panic
Lippes wondered how the Stale could
insist that " no . problem exists" past
the streets wi:Lich Immediately surround
the canal. "I don't know where they got
their data," he said.
The reason IO&lt; the Stale's cautious
3

~~~~f3:pa~~~.9~~~ng ~~~!nts~ ~or~

over, the cost of clean-up and resident
relocation likely Influenced their opinioo .
.,
Lippes said no Injunction was filed

:Pf~~·.;:;.us;;•~·~~ 'li~ed~~s c~';.",';;~

that immediate procedures were necessary to contain the migratiotl of the
chemicals .

Hooker said don't build, but protected
Itself
Even thoug·h Hooker Chemical
advised the Board of Education not to
build a school on the site - and had to
be strong-armed by the city before
selling the land to them for$1 -Lippes
called their action "unconscionable."
He claimed Hooker was aware of
future dangers that could result from
the chemical dumping and that "even If
they weren 't, they should have been."
The ahorney reasoned that If Hooke•
hadn1 been worried about possible
future ram ifications, the company
wouldn't have bothered to include a
clause In the deed that .exempted them
from any responslbiflty for such
occurrences.
Lippes contended Love Canal may
serve as a test case In the area of
chemlcat contamination of citizens. He
noted that the federaJ government now
only proclaims an area a " disaster area"
if It falls victim to a na1ural catastrophe,
like a flood. " This is a flood, too, a
flood of chemicals," he argued .
The case may possibly have a
· broadening effect on the presently
"restrictive approach"
to
Federal
disaster. dollars, Lippes said.
The attorney also maintained ti,at
" local, stale and federal governments
want to sweep the findlogs under the
rugmso they will not have to deal with
racllfylng a.hazardous situation.

3&amp;"tehman
fellowships open

Thirty New YoJ1&lt; State Herbert H.
Drinking water
t,ehman Graduate Fellowships In the
Paigen , who seldom eats Great Lakes
lish , explained that the drinking wafer · ~~~!i~;i:r~c::atr..'b~~io~~~;~ation·
of Buffalonians was not affected by the
The awards finance study In a New
seepage of chemicals Into the Niagara
York State College, public Of private,
River, because the entry points are
~~~d,t
~pd~~ a master's or Ph.D. In one of
downstream of the City. However,
Nlag.ara Falls residents " may be
• $4000 Is awarded for the flrst year of
a!lected," she concluded.
graduate study, and $5000 thereafter, .
- Homeowners'
attO&lt;ney
Richard
up to a maxirT)um of four years.
Lippes, who Is also president of a local
Awards are made on the baals of
chapter of the Sierra Club and legal
promise of successful completion of
counsel for U/B's-5tudent Association ,
the program, as determine~! by
gave a history of the Love canal and
academic record, teat SCOrliS and
told how It became· the dumping spot
quallllcatlon appraisals, and on · the
IO&lt; Niagara Fans sewage and chemical
relevance of the student's research
wastes from Hooker Chemical Co.
and/orprofesalonallnterea1s.
Applleanta must . be legal U.S.
Lippes told the i!roup Jll Squire Hall
residents who expect 1o receive a
that 25 years ago a clay cap was p!Jt on
baccalaureate degree no later than
the canal to seal it. Severlll years later,
wllen the area experienced an Increase
In population and 1he city decided to
build homes and a achool. niN!flhe atte,
API!IIe&amp;tions have to be' flied with
the cap was somehow b r - .
tl)e Slate Education Department by
Breaking the cap allowed moisture to
January 22, 1979, and the required
build up. Thla, In fum, lad to .a higher
from
water table which forced chemicals to
the surface. The altuallon"alao speeded · the Bureau of Hlahw and Professional
the deteriorati~ of druma, burled
Educational Tatrng.._ the State Educa-beneath the aullace, which conlalned - tlon Oe!&gt;artment, vultural Education
the chemical wastea,llp"'r explained.
Center, Alt.any, N.Y. 12230.

1

~~:d'~~:r:~~b.To':!~~~·1~~
au~~..:.,,,:~:~l:ble

- l

�Nowember9. 1978

Wharton tells Senate: 'We ~eed-- SUNY-wide unity''
., Rlctwd A.llggelk-

SUNV811•tf~":.' ~ ~~ect~velfr\crW:,~~

potentilll lor collective action, but we
need a real of unity within the
llniWNity ayatenr."Wfth this comment,
~tor Cltlton R. Wharton, Jr.,
concluded the opening session of the
80th regular meeting of the University
F8CUity Senate held 'Bt Brockport
'*'-'lllr S-4.
Baaed on .tllita to 54 of the 64 unlto
during lila flrat eight .,onths as
Clwleeltor, lila ~tetlon covered a
broad renoa of toplcll related to the
SUNY ayalem, and Included references
to public IMWYk:e, financial problems,
~ efforts,
attrltlontretention,
dactlntng enrollment Rrojectlons, affirmative act1on, and g"""'ate programs.
It Ia nacesaary "to Improve University
funding In real terms In the face of
declining public support," altered

oert~n ~r~:~~0A~~!~

tlon, thenlby plll!'ing a new emphasis
on funding by other tllan state

resources.

Onnta, .........1lullilfMi.h.b
Dr. Wharto11 pJ1'(11ctecfthat the trend
In future fedWal reaeatCh funding will

be to concentrate on "larger grants to
f - and fewer Institutions." This\
DOlley could benefit a SUNY system
\flat can function effectively as a
consortium with great di-slty and the
potential ability to capitalize on Its
unique Stet&amp;-wlde structure. The
Chancellor pl.ced greatemphasls on all
phases of the r-rch effort, another
m~r theme In his address, calling tor
considerable expansion In this area. He
emphasized, too, the need to attract
resources and funds, while expand jng
and Improving local Incentives for
r-a.elforta.
Durtng hla vlalta he was also
"lmllf'llfMd" with some physical facllltlea, but admittedly, there ere cases of

~~:;,~~te!"o~ J~~ R~~~fnlverslty.
• That

Untversfty

the

Faculty

Senate

source," the local College CouncHs and
Boards. 1ie desires to Improve
communication among the Chancellor,
unit Presidents, and local Council
bodies in order to develop "a greater
sense of participation on system-wide

requests "1hat the Chancenor instllute

lssoes."

any resulting im~lemenung Instruments.

a

ft~~~~~~~r!t'1rin'~Cg~g:~~g~

all University · Policies 61\unctated by the
Chanceftorln response to Univer.sity Faculty

~~:~Y r~a~~O: ~~~= ~~~~ver:~~~
C~'W.!t"if'~":~ra,;t~~!.,tt:'m:=~

of
the University Faculty Senate to fncorporate
in the published Sum~ry of Proceedings of

~~~e:t,t!n~~':;~~~n ~~~~n~:e'\.1:S~v~~

~:~tr:;:!'~a~:a='~':rn~~
Be It further:J18Sotvedthat this practice shall

of articulation and transfer'' between
and among SUNY units. "Tlme after
time, alter time, students say that it i,5
easier to transfer to, and get full credit
from private Institutions tllan move

::,h~~ ~~sfnUNYst~~~· ..w~~ut~~~1~

prefer to stay~ he uggested a further
need to lmpr
the articulation
process and enroUtnent patterns. He

r~~r:t~c:a~.~.~nfo ~~~~ ~~~\~~

patll! at community colleges and other

•1q assure greater coniparablllty"
,, ofunltscunii::ular
content to correct_ the
sftuatlon.

Capitalizing on the ayotem
SUNY should .capitalize on Its great
advantage Jn being able to provide
"enrichment opportunities for students," and "many specialized offerings
that cannot be matched elsewhere" at
other less diversified educational
Institutions. ·
1

1

ex:;'rf:'l'~~Ycll"~r~:· ~~~ ::'a'!. ~'!: 1:11

to capitalize on the totality of the
system ," Dr. Wharton stressed the
"absolutely phenomenal opportunities"
for unique specialization and facu lty
lntervlsltations. "We could put together

r:g~!:jJgly p:~'::t~:S :~a~tu:'~i~ a~

faculty," he said , noting that this was
already being done on a consortium
basis by some private Institutions.

deTt~r~~~ r~W:~~Rz~~n~~~.:~

lnf=:an~ :=1:.':~;~~ ruJ

.....,,

base, tfle retaining library shall assume
responsi bility for entering the record into

must be respect for the Uni-slty
system as a-whole.

the pace and ectlvity" of affirmative
action efforts In SUNY. "I do feel that
we need to be fer'more committed to
afflrmelive action tllan In the past." He
also noted that EOP and EOC programs
rept8Mnt "one of the ·few activities by
which to provide a vehicle to make the
SUNY system available to the econorn-

baca.-e ol the . &lt;n.ttural
tanclency" to eeak aavlnga 1ft~
- a n d auppllea. "We can live with
IIIla only lor a ahort period of time," he

the system so h may be available to the

. [:,Vdiv;';j'~~~:W, b~~~~~~'::,,;'~~~m':~J:r'~

of certain graduate programs , and a
lack of SUNY-wide collegiality. ''We
need to develop a system of
disciplinary-wide dialogues; we don't .

~

re'l)',t'W'~~· cited a growing concern.

I ' Labeling his final comments "lm- ,
presslonistic." h'e emphasized system
unity, decentraflzatlon: lind Individual-

·~
-="J'.!",:.',!g"
pr:s~
"t.chnofogtc.lly _
__,t
. and de-

lerlor8Md equipment. One preliminary
estimate of oollia - e d o - the next
five ye.a to 111medy this situation
exoaeda 1300,000,000.
Utnry 18110Uroaa represent another
budge! problem; aome campu- are In
aat1818ctort condition, while "the
quellty ol olllenl Ia th-ened by

~~~=g~s~~t:r~fsh ~~~o~i~1':'a~lt7a~~

over the need to develop •etter two-way
communication with "a ·unique re-

"'=1'.:.':.
•h~h:..,~~ugr·.n'l:'~
tlonary patterns," the Chancellor said.

Expressing _.lcular Interest In the
DUbllc -·dimension, Dr. Wharton
Ia moving toward programs "that further
energize related ~ ectlvltlea, "
-"'"Y
for faculty, since
Sli~Y "Ia not where ft should be In this
- - . " Furtllarmore, "nothing Is further
from tile truth tllan that public
lnalltutlone do not private
funding," and "the exoetlence of any
Unlveral)y systtlm'ls judged by how well
It can get flexible dollare from the
private sector." "'"

added, ''whereby we can Improve and
reduce the degree of effort required,
.while still satisfying accountability

0

k~:y a"=e( ~~s~l=~~~;ed in
1

pr~a,

he

Iotlla~~

thlll, 'We can~ • IIW&gt;Y'Siudenta as
you like, end they can taka anything you
_ , t - SUNY Ilea It all ."

'tsll ............
.............. and WlmlnlatraJive ularlea DOIIIIIIt... - - ...,.. and
.........., ......... lor SUNY.
pm8ldanta-- Alary .
teo.ta "would have
been to per cent
higher • a 1CHnonth faculty member,"
had they AIINiined ln.the ct.-room. We
- - "1-'ly non-competKive" when
It conwa to
18Piaoe-

Tlleno--

-·
.....................
,.,
adm._.,.

M"ceRI

,._C8RIIJIW' _ .

...,...., ,.....lllloal a-1 IMI'• ..cl

-=-=~~
.........................

_...
...........
'-·"*
_......._..
.........
"*
......-a

afteatOIMr_ . . . . .
......................... Is

~h~~ett!':nl:~~Yapp~~:;e ~fP:erst~~
1

the SUNY Administration to ieal&lt; the

restoration of f.:ufty and graduate
assistantship posltJons to those graduate
programs which k&gt;st such positions as a

~~~~ t':: ~~~ ;~~~ '::' t~~~o~

programs. (Faculty Reoearch and Graduate
CommHtee)
• That the SUNY Faculty Senate recogn izes

m~,;:~ ~~~h:-:~~3 o~e~~~~noo.. ~':i
inf"ormally with the Senate to respond to
questions. One major concern that

~~d~:f:SS~1~t~f t~~te pr~:,~~r!!~~~~is!

and comprehenatve manner the rk:hness and ·

=r~ ~r:..=~= P:S..~fr:d

;::'v';;l~.:ftel~o;:'~nat~e th~~~:'::.:ll:l

speclolltleo 1&gt;1 the faculljl. (Faculty Researc~

.,., Graduate Committee)

~~=s . po~~alr::l~;;,::l~lo:.

• n..t ""' -.un-t:y'E8Cifty s.-e
~w~~
~~A=~:::..~~~
strive to commit increased financial

Blinken explained that the Trustees
appreciated team ing about faculty and
staff feelings on such matters, and
indicated that this topic was slated for
further study and recommendations.

resources for SUNY graduate aasletentshlps

so that

1

Censure ond faculty representation on
councils

u~:h~f~l~sko/ rt'h~ ~~tabd~ah,~1 1~~oufo~

1

•The SlJNY senate urges the Chancellor to

~!~~~., •a~~s!rl~~PdJ~~oa:!e :,C~se1 ~~

Educatlonal Services to develop plans for
identification, bibliograph ic accessibility ,

=~~~~s !us~~~l~rstr~~f~~~~~~~~:p~,:~ez

havln8 the vote of censure resc tncfed. (Stony
Brook
•
• The SUNY Senate recommends that the
Chancellor i nitiate steps with the Governor
arid the legislature whereby a faculty
member from each SUNY campus becomes
a member on the local councils. (Stony
Brookj

learning / research materials. (Comm ittee
oo l i brary Resources)
~
• That the Chancellor establish a policy
under wh ich each campus Ubrary has the
responsi bility for permanent retention of
last copk!s of unique library materi&amp;Js . In

·c-- -t
Records (2).

Account Cieri!: 10-6-Crectt.f'ree Program,
Accounts
Otfico of
Accounts
12), Medl&lt;it Schoof-- Olfioa.

Po,.-.

~.
BudgoiOIItce, ~·

-

A-nt'Siotionory EnglnMr SCK--Amherst
Maln-.ce. -tCampus. L&gt;MtNo. - 6 7.
~"'I Jonllor SCH-Amherot Malnte·

lln~YoBi1y

Operator 110-7•

A-tont81atlanory~~

Plotlt(2).

-~Une~-3t~35 .

-t!I0-1~--·

~~c.::..a-- 110-1~
(c:oon..tor, l'l'ogown

~&amp;-) , PR· 2-EOC.

. ~ Opor.- I0-1G-.Unl-.ityCon1Juling-(8-. - ponry, ...... ahb).

- . . . -School---

B-8036.

fACUlTY
AeiiiiMI ......... (ChlciPa,~~
ctololry, F-8t33.

--IT-~**"'

Ollce
(l / 1 /78-t0 / 311781.
.
• ~ - . ...,.,..... Cine-~~

-~.F-8134:-

--=:.".:::::~

F-8t35.

Dote Entry -

CompJtlngSeM:oo.

- l l n i ' F·
.. -

- • n t SQ.4-Admioolons and

MollaSui'P'JCiort&lt;~Mol!21 .

C~VECMLSERY1CE

-

1

that aJI offers of Q!Bduate assistantships be
accompanied by such a waiver for the...-full
academic year. (Faculty Research and
Graduate Comm tttee)

programs , and BE IT RESOL VEO furtter that
the Senate urge the Chancellor to restore
University Awards Committee fundillg, at
leas t to the 19n-1978 level , at the earliest
possible ti me. (Committee on Resea rch)

-

1

=-~~~~-t;:~n~ :~~~,~~~mn~C: to ~ 1~l

~~l ~~ed ,;:to~~h, ln~~:ln fun8~8

NOif.COIIPE'nnYE CIVIl. SERVICE

sen;t'.

~~~~~:~he0fh~ece~~~~dA~~fnj:f~~cf~la:g

• That the Faculty senate express Its
appreciation to Chancellor Wharlon for his

Jonltor ~ Plant. Main Street.
UneNo. 31497. Pe&lt;manent.
Jonil« SG.e~ Plant. Main Street.
Une No. St 526 , Permanent.
Y-lo Oporator SCH-l'hysical Plant,
AmherstCamp.os. Line No. 3227 1, T""-""Y.

•e competitive witnt thoa8

:r;~~:~~~;a~~~~:v~rslty Facutty

The following resolutions were passed
during the two. day sessio n :

0

ttM!Y

~~:~ bl,;~:~r w~~~~nl~~~ln ~

Resoluti ons

=~~ Hl~~s:On.::n~:n&amp;'f.::

.......

Concerning VJ*Iualllatudenlll •

public service efforts, in order to " more
vigorously and quickly tum around the
fortunes of the state so as .to' build a
greater tax base" for future state
support for public education.

again

mainland officials who era tnt-led In
educating 10.000 students In the United
States by t864, was to point out that
SUNY consists of 64 different cam~. 340,000 atudenta, and 3.,700
- - · Aaaln .......... d'-'lty,.,.

tlces CommiUee)

~~~t,~,:,':t ~o~¥se:;,~~~~~~i

lcaJ!y,~=~~Y~~Iea"':-=·~ to
lntematlonei

t~:1~~!:eiJ~~~~&lt;~~ rr:pr~~~~sn,u~

Budget outlook
During the traditional question
· period , the Chancellor fielded questions from the floor, Including · the
- Invariable inqiJiry about the Immediate
finanCial p l ~ture .
Responding that It Is " too early to

-

(8 / 7IHI/711j.
Dote E n t r y - Operator SCH, U&lt;w.oitY
C - * &gt; g - ( 1 / 1/78-tO t Jt I 76).

CIYL IEIIYICE -.cDiiiP£TmVE

--=---.
.
........ . . ,.........

--. ~-. --.
-.~-~

11 :30 p.m.-a a.m.

-

__

-12.MIIaolly. •
Fer ..,.._

~-

p. OI.~

"*""- _.,.

~oou~~y

UMwollr ........... . - ni----~­

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

"*-'~' .. -

..,.,.

.... 1-' ap.

�n
•Calendar
1f!om - 7 . cot.4)
7:30 p.m.-A ploy,

~

Muriol Woif. Bair'd. Recital Hal. 8 p.m. -$3; alumni, focUty , - - $2;
....-... $1 . - . by tho llapanrnont of
Music.
C. Soot! Aogora ploys Sir JoiW1 F -. whole
I'OITII01Ik:puriU)toftwomonled-, Misnol
F&lt;&gt;r&lt;l Joung -...ely by Adrfonne T-w.-Gryta ·
and Del&gt;oroh Bataman) I R f M - " - (Deolse
Blaclonore and Ca'ol Am SirmoYI Is one cenlrll
action oflhe otot

Room, Squire.

"F·· Son Frandoco
Mlmo Troupe.
AcOnlsslon
$3bylhe
per penon.
Tlcl&lt;efl
.... . -.. the sQuire Hoi Ticl&lt;et OffiCe.
PHARIID. SEMfNARt
P-~omy Sepals, DoWj Janicl&lt;e. 248
Cooke. 5 p.m.
FILMS'
Anemic Cinema; Retour a .. Raison; L'etoUe
de lief'; Emak Baka\a; Un Chien Andalou;
Us HurdNI. 146 Diefendorf. 7 p.m. Sponsored
by tho Cenle&lt; fO &lt; - Study.

UUABALM•
I
Tho 6alllo of ChlteiChlle / CUbe 1976). Con·
terence Theatre, Squire. Cal636·2919 for show

charve-

times.-

ttaled as a '1!n:lmertt in the presentation of
M&gt;g hioto&lt;y on flm,• this """"" Is a poweffif
portrait of a people dMded and a nation on
lhe brink of cMI ww.

UUAB WEDNESDAY NIGHT OOUBLE FEATURE'
Now Babylon (USSR, 1929). 7 p.m.: ThrM
Songs of lonln (USSR, 1934), 8:50 t&gt;.m.
Conference Theatre, SQuire. Free admiSsion.
Now 6abyfon is a
reConstruction of
1\18 Paris Commune of 1871 . whose prfncipol

- ed

setting Ia a luxurious department store.
T - Songa ls bull oroond ttne Central
Asian folk
about Lenin-his life, death and

sonos

~
u
-.and

..

SPECIAL RADIO 8ROAOCAST'
Stonnanto:Gwy Storm with a spec:laledllon of
Oi of Dog. Cenlnil Pari&lt; Grit, 2519 Main St.
!via WBfO 188.7 FM)J. S'1 at door
benefits WBFO. 11 p.m.

Notices

- - - upon lhe ....... of

ALM'

ANNUAL HOUOAY EXH181T10H.AND SALE

Journ~l O'un Cure de C.mc-gne (Bresson). ~=~~~theby~=

10 A.cheson. 1 Md 9 p.m. Sponsored by the
~ol-~.m Ut.........

Craft Center. This year's event wiA be hekj
w-and~- November 29-30 at

PRE.UWSOClETYMEETING'
{
330 Squire. 730 p.m. Or. Jerome Antt-WII

lhe0ontor. t20MFACC, Eiicott.

=.:;.,

tioo!,":;.":.,"!~and.,..,..

·~Sct_!&lt;&gt;ol~ ~.,:"ed~

tondingtowschoolllhouldcometolhlsmeeting.
5ponoored by Plocetnenl and Careet~.
.•
'(I.
THEATliE'
..
tr

IIUSICAJ,

Tho~~-by,

be crigNI,

receiYedw ~- Nov·

Enlrioa rrust be
~ 22 at 5 p.m. There:~Tin entry

t!.·E:kh,u
.

tee of

S10f&gt;ulnoc:ommiosionon~"
LJmlted epece is evallbte. :tid i lf. &lt;i'
Col 636-2201 f0&lt; Information, 0&lt; rogiater
atlho&lt;;&lt;&amp;ftCenl8&lt;.
1 , 0 , 1o "

Center .Jrx Theatre Research, &amp;(' 1 , I )~ilo·
-f.
"
") 1 f ;U",H
8 p.m. GenenleOnission $3; sbJdentsendaenicr
CAEA.nVECftAFTCEHTER~
0 ·
dtizeno f1 .50. SpQn80&lt;ed by one Center fO&lt;
Ouo1ng tho month of
" 1978, cnoft
Theatre-andtheOepnnentoiThoa"".
ora OCilediAod i1 118ry. ·jewelry,
phologrophy, stained
phologrophy,

glass,..,.,._

and · FO&lt; • ~w a&lt;:heOJie ()( ' information, ~~'220'1 ~· 5p.m_, or 7-10
p.m., Monday tti"oUQh ~ or 1-5 p.m.,

Thursday- 16

Friday IRf Solu'day. Reoistratli!tl'lt bo . :;,.~~18&lt;, 120 MFACC, Elicott, clJrfng

Lanny Somm .....,.....,e pofeuor.of g1lriJtic

""'-·2nd

daoign, Pennsylvania State UniYersity, wit $haJia
flo()(, Beftlune- Gallery, 2917
Main Street 1 p.m.
'
Is ., lnlemationalfy recognized de-

'*""·
'""' Is for Horum

lheGtapblk.
Arnorican
~ucha

~·

AlM'
' Stormy W•thor (19&lt;03). 146 ();ef..-t.
1 p.m. - b y Black Studies.
Ill-Black mUstcot with • aily
but ....-..
porforrnanceo by lena Home, Bll -.son.

'*"·

FataWoJWand~Wison .

ALM'

'Pathor PancheN (Roy, 1955). 150 Farber.
3 1100 9 p.m. ~ by tho Dopor1rnent of
English.

\

IIEETING

ROO~-...v~

loolllng fO&lt; a conference / !Meting room i1
the OCIIdernli; of Amhorol ftncludrog tho
W-lbootrv and T~ Ctoo(rbor)? They ora
available on a frat come. flrat a.ve ball kK
use by S.A. ~ otudent goi,upo, focUty,
andstaff. .
Fc:i further information, contact the Res«va·
tionS Office
AdMty Centora/Room 17, Ciopen, Mondoy.f'ridoy, 8 :30 o.m.·
5 p.m..-636-2800.

fa-·

UNDERGRAOUATE lliiRARY HOURS
_Undergraduate Ut&gt;noy wil close at 10: ~5
p.m., Sd1dey through llusdoy t.rltl fulher notioo,
because of the bu8 alrike.

-

'Arsenic' production owes much
to beJ'!Irid·the-scenes people
By far one of thll most ta&gt;clng
backstage jobs for this particular play Is
ths of properties; all the decorallons
must be period pieces. Aandl Bauow.
In charge of props, has scounld·Buflelo
for Vlctorlen. furniture and combed flea
markets and thrift shops for ~be
requlelle tea aets, glassware and..otl\ef '
brlcabrac. On the play's limited budget,
she has bartered pieces when It W.S
lmpoeslble to beg, borrow, or steal
them from thl!caatand/orcrew.
The ,t..mherat-M.tn Slnlfl area has
been blanketed with publicity poaters
thai were designed by RandI Silver, and
hung by almost~ In the cut and
crew. CUI member Ben A.,._ has
had the U/8 radio atallons ...nounce
the corning production for....,, .......
Coordinating the activities, -lgnlng
the 01e111 heads and ucrtflclng a CIIMI
deal of a1eap to OVWMe the Pl'oductlon
Ia the director, AoMie Senvenlaty,
aaaiatad by Ginny E018f8!1 and Stu
Strulln. J~ tine , _ oiganlad the
productiOn ...It, 8hlllllng In wtMn
..,lun...,.. ' - lalloid to produoe,
covering for abeMt actors.
The audience will none of IMM
Individuals November 1F&gt;-17 wllan
•...,_,lc and Old ~· Ia l*fonned In
the KCT, except tor ~a a fleetii'Q
gllmp• et a curtain call. 8ut thaif ,.. Vk
will be Mer~, _,If they',. not.

....

-·

_____ _

--y~

" " " " ' - · Dllr, T - . 2 1 4 7 p.m. ~ by the Center fc&lt; Miclo
Study.

,.,...._a.-,_by_Eioil,

-.-&amp;. 'IIIEA111E·

Unry,
- -·_
1 - ._
ah0._ _
............
by3
__
PltOIO,IIIIAPI.
~
I

--A. .

~--.-CirMno~.­
llwoughoul-.

Carlllrlor--... __
--S3:_and
_.,..,_..,'-_"' __
-~
"""""~~. -13-22.
-Hal
-..and .....
-,a
1 ..... !11,8p.m.

11.50. ~ by ... Cenoar lor _

_. ... ~oftt-• ·

Tho~II-CIIIIo--al

OPEIIA'

Ttoo llony -

...... -

by

(1817..... - 1 -5om

�D

Nowember9. 1878

Just tha day bafore, Hugh Carey had
ooen on tha national news, his beaming
face sandwiched" between those of
Menachern Begin and Jimmy Carter as
they preened on the sidewalks of New
York.
"

.

As the crowd pushed forwara, one
student, fighting to ..,tay at the front,
shouted as he was jostled: "I missed
the war protests but I'm sure as hell not
going to miss the U/B gym Issue!" •
'
During the lull In the ceremony, the
~ren fally dapper junior senator from

ern"~d!rasaf/!7'w':':i :~~"9!'.:u ~~~~;.;
~l"'~~e 1"::i :T7~n~t~d':'n~!'~Pm';l'wd
hell" that Amherst Ia only half-bu~

a:wp:~rkof D~~t.or;~~~~~~~~ h~

that U/B has to. put lip wlth &amp;
50-year-old gym and can 't get money to

~~t~t?u~~fc:~~ :.~~~afY.iJ~~:.'- f:'~

aa hall, but good natured.
."Half done- how come, " was one of

the student demonstrators' chants.
"Where's the care In Carey" was
another.
"Bullshlt, Bullshlt, Builshlt," was a
third.
The occasion which stirred the
-exclternent started out to be a

f~f~~b~'::'t,":,~~. c':;:,';'.1:,~ton ~~rwhl~r-

will get underway later this fall on the
Main Street campus.
Carey was invited to tum ground and
win votes through Identification with
the long sought-afte&lt;.project.
That was before The Spectrum and
lhe Studenl Association decided to call
lor a demonstration.
Bla day
NFTA's "big day" became the
students' big chance to vent their
_ ~e::,~~~s and Indignation on the
Some members of the subway
agencY' a platform party were livid when

election tour) was Invited by students lo
take a look at Clark Gym. He did.
Carey, later presented with an oversized
ticl&lt;et to .Clark, didn' t use it.
'
No-ahowRetx&gt;rts are that County Executive
Ned Regan, who had come Jo campus
for the groundbreaking , took one look
at the placard-bearing - students and
decided not to get out of his car.
People were beginning to th ink Carey
hed done thllt also. Shortly after five,
though , he arrived , an hour behind
schedule. No! blinking , he marched
through the din and up to the platform.
Students chanted, yelled , booed . It
was reported that Senator Moynihan at
the last moment rTpped down a banner
bearing obscenities, presumably - to
protect the governor's delicate senslbllilies. He needn't ha~e botl&gt;ered.
" Your Chaucerlan -English" doesn1
faze a boy from Brooklyn, said Carey
who was alternately conclllat01y and
belligerent.
.

st~"ent~:o~~~'::lha~. 8/,':::,~fto:ro~~~

ton , and President "Netter," " Kitter,"
whatever !&gt;Is name Is, on getting the
U/B gym project gQing (construction
bids on the first -phase are due in a few
::ksa~~o~~~n ~~~ thew~ndAf~!~~
~~:,~~~~s~~~~t :,'!~~':' 0 ~~;,
sources said Saturday).
NFTA PR person, Invited the placard
He advised U/B students not to boo
l'lJOOnjl demonstrators to leave.
the mention ·Of Syracuse because
A formida6felrunnYf!oos, chlllrm•=--c;"'he"'rrue ~*af~.re ~ama':iv~' a coed fro~
of a clttzena "watchdog" panel on the
The Jeering crowd was making him rapid transit line who led an earlier fight , popular In Syracuse, Carey said. They
IO have the system built underground, ' were also acting In such a ·manner as to
-even tougher. '"While some of r.ou
"lose taxpayer surport" for a gym, he
=~~~~,;~ ·~:/"!~,:::,~ e~ wntured by way o a threat.

1

1 80

-

: :"

=~-;:,e-ereW.~. ~l8tna ':lJ~

IKit

Interrupt

ao1TM14hlng

~

IKithlngtodowlthout~."

hed

"!lUkes-•- to gettheee wl!npa

told,• a -

slightly above studenl

-ae waallllatd to comment.

C o n g - John LaFalce, attemptIna to vamp till Carey arriYecl, spoke
::=r:.:r,r.n )uat about anything you
He~ the bOoting crowd for at
'-at .,rv.nlng what would have been a
dull-'on.
"Bullahltl Bullahltl Bullaloll!" came
the.....,......

'T... a.._..

Flnal:l;.:..=:::dled
Cheater Herdt,
, -'ruoDIIng with a

NFTA

falltr PA av8IMI. ~ to ''eke a
lnlli" In the IJIOCOedlnga until the

=

~:mwrtwd. crQWd walled,

IIIOINII

wtltcfiiiM

they
to flU a~ of ground
1111*1 olf In front ol the

o:.nLt':.:

-=

~
~OrIt
..UWumlnf. B)' tile time ~

..wfllll, IIIII)' .. 11M e1 ~ otflolri
etooCIIMifwlilft}lluwellflll plalbm.

·~:!:/;~~. .

"literary wrestling
eeach." l£d Michael who hed written
-.him a feller of prot•t about the
Syracuoe dOme.]
Carey asked to debate Jay Rosen,
editor of Tile Spectrum, then needled
him by citing a particularly florid
passage from a Rosen editorial.
~mt!~~~~ ~~ ~ood dripping from

0

He - tried a few crowd-soothing
tactics. The audience was not persuaded.
Tben without a word about the
subway he waa off In a flurry of flashing
·
'
pollee car lights,
Standlng atone n_, the aide o1 the
platform, fonT* Buffalo Mayor Stan
Makowski shrugged and noted his
del
ndig-htlcnh".i!l•t being able to stand back
8

~~atev~d~\:"o'F.~":-~:1'~~~

couldn1 see or h - Inquired as Carey

left.

+

a~~~ndbreaklng lor what?" another
They did as a matter of fact - but

only with the aid of klleg llghla alter·
everyone hed left.
'
-

Non.J&gt;rolitOill
u.s. _Posusc
PAID Buffalo, N.Y
Pcrm1t o. J 11

�</text>
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                    <text>Arnette

Snyder

McGuire

He's happy to head
a-convention center
In a town that didn ' t
wantone. See
page 1.1.

He gives his formula
for being very, very
successful: start with
sponges!
SeepageS.

U/B' s man of I ,000
What does It really
faces readies one
. mean when they say
mare for 'The Three- 'U/B Is closed'?
penny Opera.' See
Seepage3 .
page 5 .

. Snow

MlnlmMket

.1'

Get your Christmas
shopping done early;
make sc;&gt;me Jewelry,
too. See page 12.

NOV2, 1978·
VOL.10 • NO.9

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

FEAS_dean ays·U(B divisions need
to cooperate IDOre, CO~pete less
tn the face of e constant increase in
~!":JY\S::.~f~~~ with slightly less
"'That•s our dilemma," says Lee. It
may be the mirror image of the problem
lacing the rvst of the University. Built's
a problem, noneth,!tless~
•
..

Dean George Lee of the Faculty of

~i=~ !'/l'n,ttr!'L~~•.,~\~~

In aoclety at large the time has come for
people to Slarl thlntdng in- terms of
collebcnlion rather than competition.
The ~ty l&amp;..,etogoua to a large
racing hulll. .._ beUINM •. Unleaa .
paddlea together, it's hard to
get a "ct.r, oonaiatent direction."
Of cotlnla, .,.... •muecle men"

Twice M MMY undeogreda par I8CUIIy •
"We are producing twice as many

-rona

:::'.::.."l!r~~d,:''::

~~~~

-

offt.e
public engln-lng schools In the
nation," Lee indicates. This hes to hurt
the graduate effort, but at that level,
" we're 81111 corn.,.able to" 'most public
Institutions, he says.
"Compared to the major private ·
produce almost four
inSIItutlons, times as many undergreds per faculty ,
but our graduate student output and
research efforts are, accountably, not
asgreal."
·

~~ .r:f:~ 0:'v.:f n~':: f~~J.

the Unl-si ty's some 1~ or so faculty
lines) . Most reputable private unl- slty
engln-ing schools have approximately 100 faculty, but average faculty

=-=:~~=~=~·-m::
want.

SoOner or later, though, If people
keep pulling In oppoalle directions, the

Ia going to aink.
George Lee himself is generalLy
though! of today as one of those
""'uscle men" he mentions.
His large, mushrooming Faculty Is
one of three " let cat" ensaa in the
University where students are l ined up
for admission (Management and the
coming on line.
'Even though the controversial academic Master Plan proposal advanced
by VPAA Ronald Bunn argues that the
lfnlver&amp;IIJ muat not be distorted by the
current populilrity of some disciplines ,
try telling that to those earmarked to
lose lunda because of dwindling
student intareat.
" I'd like to hllve George Lee's
problerlll." headS of tess proeperoua
unlta cornpillkl. "Ail he has to worry
about Ia how to lind enough chall'll."

~~~he

does h...,
probtarna finding eaeta, but Engll)8ering, seya Lee, has funding , stalling ,
and even enrollment concerns, just like
olher campus untta.
Fdr exemple, undergraduate enroll·
ment In FEAS In the past live ~ has .
inCIINSad threefold - from 760 in 1973

to~~l· has actollllly lost faculty
IIIIM - only 2 to 3 to be aura, but
enoullh lo set llle undargred student·
'lllculfy rat io -'ng hom 9.3 to 1 in
1872 to 29.3 to 1 IIIia - t e r. By
- - . -. the natlonat...-ge for public
....-.;tils Ia llbeul 10 to 1, end aome
prt- un-.ruea .._ Sludent·lacully
ratloe more like 5to 1.
_
OTPS IIUdgetS in Engineering h...,
diiiDed .,., I!He. past fl ve yews.
'The money arid linea FEAS loet, Lee
pOillll CMII, w.rt lo Albany; 10 did the
1ftC1MJ ..c1 p.aonnet IO,JI by other
teultlel ..,., PEAS diclll't ~ llloee
fuftlll .. people 111111' think.

lnllnewiltt IUNY'adiNCtiW lhlt U/11

4111t1aP ill~ -'lotte, FEAS 11M
,..... ocillnllllld 10 (dwgld with,

!1111111~-F~ ~
::.==.
;.

r="'Cio.tllil

--

ha~~~":J:~~(~:;'~g~ta~~:~r;~:~

~

(~rc'h~~';:,' 'tliln'::t~.orB~':;~~.st~:'ct.1)~:
cio-to250t

Not the cauu of atlrltlon 1110111-

Another f allacy about I'EAS Is that II
Is aomehow responsible for t!Je
Unl-slty's rather alarming attritlon
rate at the aophomore ind Junior liMits. .
Forty par oent of anterlna freshmen
- . t to be engln-., the campus '
llf8IMI'd ne has bean signalling lately.
When lheee students get to .be juniors,
the grapevine goes on, they find they
can't get the program they want, so they
leave.
•
That's juat not ao, Lee explain a.
FEAS Ia one of very lew units here
which accept majora as freshmen . Any
student admitted. to U/B as a freshman
who w.,ta to gel into engt.-ng Ia
automaticallr ln. He or she Slays as
~~ed.-.ge requirement

::J&amp;

tnt-tingly, !he retentlon rate
111110ft11 t - engln-ing atudanla Ia
1

~.:i!= ihoal, who enter u

lr&lt;*&gt; Ia 10 high, In let, thai tranafeni
are penalized. TheY .._ to h - a 3.0
- · to be accepted at U/B . ( thOugh . SUNY pollc~ 8fiCOUIIICIM
un'-lllty cent. . to admit gqduatea of
t_.y_ Jl&lt;OI78ITIS and transfers hom
_._hare) . "We~uat can't
them
ail," Lee notee evan tnouah, he Ia
~ud to uy,
/B'a Ia .the only
complete• angl.-ng echoOI in the
Slate \Jniv.attr ayatem).

t•

"TJ..~q on

'I'd like.to have George Lee's
problems~' heads o( less prosperous

units have been heard to complain
disciplines must tle relatively content
here. But a 18111( sticky spots ans
beginning to emerge. Limits on
numbers of IIWdanla who can be
IICCePiad Into certain courMJ wlth lab
componenta, (eoil rnecllllnQ and
mtcmcomputer aystema cleelgn cour.a
.... two - p i • ) -lllllrting fo C*!!l8
alog)8m lllfl£1. 80metim. 120 or men
lluclenta ~- 11 '-II whenl only

::!.:. overlolld
-.:::-l:it .::.
theMXI-. wt.en-~

~-OI~go
.
_ to do
_.,,.
.clmita..... !abe •
101M, but 1M Plablenl II

to

Wilt twlp

DO!nO to be

--=lng .,.,_.... ='"='=-'"~-=.

inwtte a PollyMI'II'IIIIM,....ion:
. . . . . , _ , _ in the ~

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

'(ltfit/IIIM~ -~ - -~

._

~

But he's just as int.-tad in IIW!ng
his strengths with the rvsl of U/8 • hi
Is in solving his own dl~.
Collaboration Ia his byword, bar.
Already, Engi.-ng hu • )oint
dellnae prog,., with M a n - '
wtilah proviCIM stoo.tlta with 1 ldnd ot
dual beclcaround which Ia l~ly
in clemancf in the tacllnologleel
.
Both until benefit.
0

.

EngiMnlg anti . . . _ _ . . .
•
Ue , . . . INl.tnG. . . . . . often
.....,.. . . lllltllklllftg, unfelllng
."ltC:hnoctell,. lhlt 1111111 - tllal

='='.!:"~
~~
.._.. - IW . . _ . 1lut 1W tile
I

.....-,

........"ciU.P'OIIIeJ.

l'iill IUIIQIIIll •

-"-'·

Cloultoll:1clge need

�l

tto--··-"'

noth lng ,more than a trede school
obviously not heel much contact
eng ln-. like Or. Lee.
·
What he's propoelng In generalis that
his area usume a more central
collaborative role as an Interface among
. thll disciplines and between lhi
. university end society.
It's not that novel a thought , either
he says.
·
'
· Look at any list of those lnslltutlona
generally considered to be the best that
the American educational establishment has to offer.
They are ~)ch In the
social sciences and basic
be sure.· But· like It or not,
out , " lor &amp;V&lt;!fY distinguished

Which aiM out" lor en Integrated
Unlvenolty cun1culum, he feels.
Engl.-lng llducetlon should tnt•
grate the humanltlea lind- the natural
- aocl~ aclencea ao the engl.- will
be at horne In two cultu,.... The Idee
hea ,_..,., much lip ..vice but has
rarely been C8ITied out aucoeasfully.

c!:n~tt':~ .:.utthl~;

en=

=.t::
spoken to Arlat""d Letters, too. On the other hand, a course or .
COUI'MS on contemporary Issues In
•.englnMring could be offered to nonenglnelonl as part of general education,
Leil augges\i. Moat people outside the
field could benefit from a better
perspective on what engineers are, what •
they do, how they go about solving ·
probttlfTls, etc. When the people's
representatives are responsible for
llf..,d-&lt;leath decisions dealing with
technology, the " people" need &amp;II the
beckground they can get, says Lee:
He's Interested, too, In wPII&lt;Ing with
Educational Studies on ways· through •
which morio Information on engln-lng
"''" be channeled to high school
students through counselors • and
science feculty. AnOther project invol- developing p..ograms to explain
englnMring options and opportunities
t o mlnorfty and female students, both
of whom are currently under-repr•
aented In FEAS classes (although
women this fall make up almost 15 per
cent of the enterfng class.)
More and more, Dean Lee feels

~::'= ~1

~~0,~~1 C~ITI~~

t\\'e
be
lum, Interacting with all the d7sctpllnes.
It Ia after all the field which bridges the
sclencea and the arts, which translates
the dlscoverfee of aclence Into actual
benefits to mankind.
FEAS can voice Its desire but
"auoceaa will rely heavily on the
cot.._,.., attitude
faculty ln.
other unlta, and more Important, on
thai of lhe pro.VData and deans and the
..-ntc vice president , of the

of

Unlvenolty."

Aft..,..plen · • ""
.
o.n t . robk-Mer"'tte helm ofFEAS
m~ 1aat v- when he ·returned
from a ubbatll:al epent at the National
Science Foundation (NSF).
He hea trfed to open lines of· frenk
oommunlcltlon with hJa facult~ . fo

at

=pof~~~rw,~.~~~~·e~

National trends obviously Influence
and Inform that effort.
:

bet~og lr,: t::':S~ 1 o~rO::.~~

gr.duated

by U.S. colleges and
un..._.ltlel ·and those . needed by'
govwnment and lnduatry each · year.
Some 75,000 ehgi,_.. are lost
annually - . ... of retirements and
deelha, promollone to manii!Miflal
poeltlona, illc. But only about &lt;10,000
B.S., 16,000 M.S., and 3,000 Ph.D.

l:P.':'.::.S~P.I:~~; ~·=

to .,pnoo"'*y 18,000 In 1V76.
Vollilla It 11 Cl- that tile need for
81111.._. - will ,..,..n ·constenr or

-~· •t~lpete
or lor

~UI, LA\

.....-.:h.. Qi&gt;

.

' .

~. ~lcuiarly

ar-~uate

"!.I.e:

.

;z,
~MWJ lfi!W'I &gt;

at .t~.. ,.,

le¥8!. The ''ll.:lltlonat appll&lt;:a-

flon type Dl elli!l.-lng t~nlng should
be IIMdfecl bY Oll\lf. apptOP.rllte .
011111111181 Of SUNY."
.

~':t~ee~fng ~~~~~ ·a~

s~f~

w":tfi as
professional schools." .
.
1:1/B must' have the same kind ol mix
he feels . Rather than engaging
debates about who deserves more, the
FEAS dean thinks,· "all o f us at the
-- - l:lrtl-elty sb&lt;&gt;uld sit down and worl&lt;
- together to ·srnve our common
problems."

ln

...

than debating who deserve~
more, all of us~hould si.t down
and work cooperaHv~·ly togeth_er'

. Women execs
often have·to
'tread lightly'

theWh~~a~f~~~~~~l!er'!~~re thd:scr,t1~~

manager," 9ne often finds descriptlves
attesting to a popular stereotype and
excluding whet are generally viewed aa
female qualities.
Those In executive ,positions are
expected to be competitive, decisl"'
and self-assured, but when, women
exhibit •! hese tendencies, they are
characterized as " pushy broads."
Or. Kathleen Connor, GNSH, 'director
the D'Youvllle College Center fpr
In Management, noted this
at a WOII&lt;shop at the Amherst
sponsored by the School bJ
lnlorrnatlon
Studies .
I

�,.

- . j .~ ·

When the radio says U/8 is closed,
employees !:lave three opti-ons;
new_'conditions report' planned
It's a cold December morning. Your
clock radio clicks on and through the
cobwebs In_ your head , you h - Jell
Kaye, Danny Neaverth or Stan Roberto
report lh'!fe s been ten inches of snow

ov~&amp;~R~~:closed,: they sey.
If you're a student, you can snap off
the radio, roll over and go back to sleep
with a clear consciencs.
·
If you wor1&lt; here, though, it's not that
simple.
"U/8 Is closed" doesn't mean that
U/8 is "closed." It only means no
classes.

He Is, Burr C. Folts, assistant Vice
president for physical fecllltles. Folta
to)Jches base with E.W. Doty, vice
president for finance and management, by 5:20. For IIQreement to cloea
the University, Doty Calla Ketter ~ by
5:30. If l'.etter ~~Qreeaii Doty gate the
message to -Public A alra whlch then
notifies radio stations by 8 . .Public
Affairs also contacts Buffalo State,
~urlty, and a number of deans and, ,
directors. II evening cluaes are not to be held,
announcements authorized by the .
President will be mede by the media

du~~9~~h~::.'\Y.;n~ to listen to tor t~
official
announcements
Include:
WBE]'t, WGR, WK8W, WE8R, WSF;O,
WADV, W8NY, WYSL and WPHDjaU
Buffalo), WLVL (Lockport), and ·w JL
and WHLD (Nlagara Falla).

That's so because the President
merely has authority to cancel classes
In the event of a bad storm ; only the
.Governor can "close the University."
That Is, only the man In Albany can
excustr State workers from coming to

-"' work.

Three&lt;&gt;ptlona
'
Because he doesn't usually do that (It
took almost two years and the pressure
of a close election to get the livg
blizzard days of 1977 restorell , you'll
reCall), a U/ B employee has one of
three, options when he or she hears
"U/8 Is closed":
,
a) Stay home and charge the day to
personal time or vacation leave;
b) Takeaday"without psy," or
c) Try to get to work, despite the

'Animal ouse-' antics
said not very funny
By Fr.d Van LMven
Aeponor inlom

Discharging fire extlngulsbers, havIng water wars, kicking In walls,
trashing lounge equipment, moving
parked 1:81'8, pinning ~le In heir
rooms with lumlhn,, eettlng off fire
atarrna, activating smoke detactcn, and
stacking fumltunt In stairwells and
Included In the
elevators In dorms "mischief" a small group of students
have-lnvolwd In thla ...........

-

snow.

Wh~h~1: :~y~~~:?an~ouncsment
1

not
always made by 6 a.m ..?
Because the weather changes.
What are you suppose:d to do If you
hear the announcement after you've
already ventured out 1nto the storm t o
try to meke II here?
- Cuss loudly and then use your own
common sense about turning around or
corning ahead.
This I~ Buffalo, after &amp;II, and some
Inconvenience because of snow and ~
cold Is to be expected.
There's not much the University
administration or Al~y· can do to
·meke It Miami Beach.

the occupants' chief concern Is "having
to -~ed~~~;"~~s~~:nt'i:'e~ia~:~';"P~~
a good time." Students become so
Involved with the movie that tney try to
1
Imitate it. At; Robinson outlined,
"students go down to the pub, have a
the president, emphasized, bul thit
lew beers to build up their courage,
President cannot give anyone a day off
then take out their frustration~ on the
with pay. "We're sorry, but there's
Nove.ba~y~
walls." He •xpl8lned that Geneseo and
nothing we can do about II. •
-1No mber '"-·~-1
-u your option Is ib try- to get to work,
'"" usua
ve
-..,..,, sa
other colleges have.experlencln·g,,
hofromlida.l~
hoi. l~y" lUMIO ls.out • •
similar problema.
.. - YO\I cannQI be legally denied 1118
A flaunt of S9000 ,was given by
r"'~oppor1unlty to work. That hu happel)ed
Richard' Cudek, housing custodian, lor
ln ~~J:.m.=,:.nd,t':,1,.•~ io
Rather than attempt to tntllrpret,
dan:lagea Incurred to...wlndows, elevaa case .brought Ill Buffalo State, 1hat
we quote:
·
ten, furniture, -walla, and bathroom
you must hawl.a,ptace to WOfl\ once you
"The f&lt;&gt;liVWfng'are " - deslpatlecl
flxturee- just In September 1978. This
get 10 the campus (either Ill )'CUI: ftlllllar _ ~ holidays ln·- Nowmbef for
·.
"more than double that ol
focatlon or at an~ eltemetlve aile
eUslble ~te Mid "-rcci f~ ·
,September 1977," Cudek reported.
announced In edvance). The Unf..,.lty _employees:
~ &lt;
_
, · Officer Robinson aaJd that recently a
· cannotlockyouout, thue forcing you to_
-· ''lledloaDq,
plain clothes detail was aet up one
weekend eapeclally to catch the
takliaVIIC8tlonday.,
. 7oCIBSSe$atescheduledandofflces
troublllmM6rs. Sewn ....,.,, resulted.
Why don't tha radio stations make al. 1
should be open:
Three .,..,. - . made lor kicking In
this c\118f whiiJI they annouoce a snow
•
walls, .two lor discharging lire exclosing? Obviously, they can't. There's
lllo--L- j 11: cf~flecl s..:V1ce
tinguishers, one lor -throwing a tresh
too much Information 1118)1 have to air
~
and no time to get Into all eorts of
employees for whom Saturday Is not
can_thro~h a plate glass window, and
qualifying or explanatory remarks about
a regular workilay s~~&lt;&gt;Utd be credited . ~~h ~mft~~-ng people In their ~ID
each Individual case. with one day of compensatory luve.
Stations also can't announce or
Professional Service employees for
Robinson centends "these pranks are
juslll}l- the decision wheii U/8 Is not
whom SaturdAy Is not a regular ::not fun when they nssch tha point of
closed and others are. Neltl!er can the
workday and who are requited to
criminal mischief." •Many- student
campus operator, Cempul securtty, or
.
•
~--~.. be-~
residents on campus hope the end Is
the Public Affairs office If 20,000 -~le
work on Saturday, "'""'"'
...._....,,,...
, _ lor what they o;onslder to be a
are
Inquiring.
None
of
1
offices
·
with
one
day
of
equlvalelt
luve.
"boiheraome, anno,ing and frequently
male• that decision, anyway.·
.
(Professional employees not required
'dangeroue atrlno o iii&amp;llclous mischief ,
and vendallam.,,.
•
to work. set no compensatory leave.(
"ft t ., .... ..,• ........,,
Campua condiiiOna .....,.C
':
No classes are
To help sor.., the "!ll'e we?, " "aren1
sd&gt;ecllllecl and'offtces should be
we?". protilem, a n.,.,, taped ·campus
Coflllltlono" repo(t Ia 'being lnlt)ated
cl ..... ~tral~ ,aapuldbe
thiS f"l bY Sef:urlly. By-dlallnllfS3S-2345·
maintained ...·.
'
you can lind oui whether we're opet' -or
··"CiaUifted 5efvlce employees
closed, what driving condhlona are·llke,
~reel~
on
any holiday
enc1 what~ways or en.~cee (ff
are ciOIIlliKI or lmi&gt;II&amp;Uble. It'a SOrt' of a0 · should receive either hollda)' pay or
TraffiCt:ent..., wlthout.Dallbleat.lllp.- -. compensatory ttme off clependl!ll on
Information lor lfilS ...,art wilt be
. their preYIOU? electlon'Wider the
complied by. Seclrlty, ~ "l&gt;n
terms of thelrcontrKL
lnforin811on gl-*lfroill roM~-- . . - ..Theda)'After~frldoltr.
craft lrldlta-own palrola. Tile tape wiN
~-14. Is not an official
be updated anc1 ~ - • CCJI!dltlpna , hOliday, but
It Is • . , 011 wltlch
dlctale.
-.

=~.:;. 8r~ R~~al~~i~~ .!'~.:.~~~

'-'la)o,........_

.,_.Day;....,._,

........... u,

ariYr ··

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

-'dee""*'-'

ct--

on
or Who
off on . - days? Doea PreAient
Klllter lust look out hie wtnclciW lriCI flip
.~,

-

No. A ralher axnpllcal*l prooed~n
• . . II _ . . .•. ,....._ the ..vtc. ~
N1111M1 4lurillg 1118 night,
the ............ ClmPua llea,lrttyOIIIcer
laiqw~Md.

Men ttuaa haH·ot U.S. women work

.

nollllea....,...PIIill....,......

II . - Cl8llftDt • · . . . _ or If
....... Glllllllllona ....... u..
8Uf*VIacn IIMdt ,.... tllllr lloeMa 11J
11
r-.1 on a....,.
~ plllftt d.....,;.
of • • • ~ lndlclleJIIIIIt. Anlhlr1ll 8ncl -lor ..... IINall tMn
milliOn-- ihe • of 11 _..
loall • . . _ . . "*'-oondlllona
, _ --~
.., IIMdt ....... ~ - by
01 tM IIIIIIIOn
5:111 a.m. The ~ --.rtty ahlft
·
1*-' ...
- lleuJanBnl Cilia --lndlwlclual .
fuU·t~

u.s.--..

Tile-"-...

~ lor -"-

-,c

~

,_lor

no classes are scheduled and which

_becCIIMSforltudenllpartolthe'~weelcencS. AJthool&amp;lotlle

Unlwnltywlll be officially ~-on
that day. only~ sevlcawlll
Ill! mei!IYifted b)' employees
spectflc.aly deslanated to perf&lt;!""
thole servlceL All
should Ulke Frida)', No--. Z4,
off with the Clio)' cUilled..,
-c:ompiautory leave. (If. aa.lflecl
elllcted holiday
. paylnaiMdoiC0114*..aoQ ......
asaNMIItolhavbW_.,.on....., llectlon Da1 and v--· Day. that

OCher......,..
5erYice.....,.. ...

....,..lhouldbeldleduledto . .

.,; ....SWCMionCIII)' on ftldllr,

,._..14,)"

Q,oitlttonllCall~.

-

:

-

�-

UUP calls AAUP actlon*irreleyant,'·'sad'
By WIIIWn s. Allen
Eloct. UUP,

placard~ aometlmes on smail
power boats: "Matriagee performed by
the Captaln of this veaee1 are velld only

SUNYABCanii&lt;Choplor •

UUP offlceB at SUNY /Buffalo have
now had ·.,. opportunity to study the

=el

-:=\on~~ ~~~

NEA'a effort to unaeet UUP aa the
'*llalnlng -uent for SUNY. Their
RIIIPOn.., on en emotlonel lewl, Ia one
of sed.-.. On a loglcaiiiMII they think"
that AAUP'a actions are Irrelevant
except Insofar as .some faculty
membera might be Influenced by
noatalgle to believe that this makes a
difference. How-. UUP officers are
flm)ly oonYlnced that AAUP members
.,. being Inveigled down the garden
peth - and the lura Is appearance
rather thcueallty.
The sadness stems from a profound
raapec:t felt lor AAUP's honorable

-

=~~ f~~r!:ll-!!.':Je fo~t~or~~

r1ICOCd as a p&lt;ofeaalonel organization. It
would dlamey us all If thla ventura Into
union politics on the national I!Mil were
to twnlah that prior record. Also UUP's
locallelldera h..., a deep respect for our
"*'Y fine colleagues here at SUNY I
Bulfelo who ~.£0ntlnuiod to remel'n
membera of AIIVP', often with oonCUITW'It membenlfjtp In UUP. We doubt
that ell of them want to be associated
with NEA's rather negatlvlaUc campaign . We also doubt that AAUP
membera would raelly approve of what
Ia being done In . their name II they
naallzed the full ImpliCations of the
NI;A·AAUP alliance.
7w.,.lt'anota,_...
It should be understood Immediately
that this Ia NOT a merger of NEA and
AAUP, but only a temporary ,alliance

=:n.,::::.:r~OJ,f~~nJo;;;,,::,~

partner In every· - raapect except
IQtellectuelly ., That Ia, AAUP officials
g81ned a formar opportunity to
com,.,t on NEA'~ actions, but the
t»termlnlng voice .ramelns with NEA.

8Peclfleally~

(f) Only "NEA" will be on the ballot .
when- vote, not "NEA·AAUP."
,
(2) If NEA wins, only they and not AAUP will become the new bargaining
. agent.
.
131 Further, the new "joint" S-'ng
Commltt.. to manage the challenge .

~c~-,~.:. ~ort}l~l;~

w::l'

official
ca8l the deciding vote.
j4l Tile ciWrman of the 11tete group

Editor:
With the depredations of " Proposition 13" In California beginning to
manifest themselves In that most
populous state, many voters from Los _

~g.?t~~~s~/i,~ .ffPap=''t~~~~:J:

emf~~Ciore,

:.::IWI-goodwflfofpald NEA

Ill Ftlnlw, tlllnl " notlliriQ

In the ·

..llailoe ~about--........
or~AAUP _....,._, wfH vote

=~~.i=
'~
01!1.:
lt.d
.
1'1 To 01111 It oft, NEA It 11w u.tlw - - ol tlw ......-. to
........ tlw allllnoe • as the

...........

11act1on • • - - unn-..or.
~ .

All tllfio ltmllllll -

of 111oee · joke

....am

..__
_
-----.....-,.,........__
......

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

---_,-·-__-A.
-....
--

. -"""'" •• o.tts - · - .•. , .....

'w
, - . o_,..
_

Q.OVIJIIt

JOIG~

-....,--...

analy

Executive B....S of the Buffalo
Center Chapttr of United
Unl..,..lty Prola111ona Incorporated (l.oclll 21110 AFL..CIO)
unanlmoualy aupporta tfta etlorto underway by the labor
1110'181118111 to alert 1M public to
!_he lnapproprlaten... of the
. •, I'IOpoeltlon 18 appo-. to
currant !local and aoclal problema.

ra~;::s~n,Y.!h~o'secz;~~~"ss~~esca~~:~~

death and destruction , both:
Loa Angel11 City .Fire Chief _
John CUrard County Finl
Oejwtment Chief Circle Bragdon blamed the Propoailfon f3
tax-euttl~ m11aon lor the

It Is more than Ironic, then, to lind
out thet the New York Educators
Association (NYEA), ·an arm of the

:=.:.. =.~'ror:-t:.tt"~

Sharpe agre's with Michael,
says SUNY destroyed U/8 sports

llllllble to emotller the flraa
-~lcldr., beiON they gr-.
\o~t~ll- Erenlno
Nawa,

Coach Ed ltlllchaal
The Go-..or, as usual, really hu
DearEd:
,
knowledgs of what he Is talking
Thanks lor the copy of your le.tter.
To have the chief executive of a
You are, of oourse, one hundred per
note that ·a private university has
cent oorrilct In all YOI! say. Having
only big lima athletic program In
worked In the Athletic Department
jurladlctlon Ia en lndlctment of his o
during the building years as both Tlckat
edmlnlstratlon which has one of
Manager and Sports Information DI. largest state unlveralty systems In
rector I shared all the hopes and·draarna
country under Ita wing. As a aldellgtrt;
of that period only to have the State
am sure Cornell and Colgate wore
·University hierarchy destroy 1hem In
very happy with that statement, el
one fell swoop by making mudent fees
-The point Ia that New York should
non-mandatory, then leaYlng such
decisions to local stude,nt option and
flnelly refusing any kind of · - ·
the exception of Alaska.
backing to ensure somecontlnuttyto an
,., athletic P,rOgrarn.
Unfortunately our r State Unl
It got to the point where from pay
- . a much more enthl'BIIed
period to pay period thoso of ua on the
ldaallatlc plana .., programs
staff did not know Whether we would be
dubloua merit ttw1 programs
paid by Faculty..Student AssociatiOn, or
enhance the ayatem 11•11 and
the State, or even If we wera going tb
support lor It. Whethtr It will be
gat paid at ell. As a Coach, I am sure
ciiMaad Ia doubtful, but certainly
you are familiar with the problema. As
have lo try and I oom- you for
you pointed out, they crucified the · efforts in that dlractlon.
athletic program just at the point where
Sl
It was to the point of bei ng succeaaful
-John A•
especially football. What we have no.;
, Su
os a travesty.
Townol m

=~¥:.~rr.::..:l~r0~ ~';\':l~

r.,"';:! onc!ftf~\:"''~~~!ar~:'~~1~ .
question.
Of oourae, there Ia another way to

I'8IPOIId to the naal aspirations of

Callfornlena, New Yorkers and all
Americana ellke to· lower taxes. That
. atep must be t~ i'n the dlractlon of
cutting the lnf7!1ted $116-$130 billion
mill:-,. bl,odget. Su= lor' Rapn&gt;-

~

stele~

=r'~~rr!,~~~~ .~0-.::..~

= :.roa: .:;'n

r.1

uo;tla

amendment would shift $30
billion- from military expenditure to

~ expenditure without the addition

• a..,.....,.

~~7Pai~1C.:::ferE~~:~of~:::'eu~1 .!.~

Dlamayed by the expenditure ol

sue~

miNion.
•
Tllla put waelc, HOMrd Jrtia
(c:o-autllor of "Propoettlon 13") was
~
at the opening_
ol llulfllo'a , _ - l o n eenttr l
(Mr. Jarvie cancelled his Ylatt at the -v

National Education ASaoclatton (N
has endorsed Petry Duryea, New-y
own " Proposition 13" candidate,
go-..or In · the UI)CO{)'ling elect
Equelly surprising Ia the fact that, u
October 14 (aporoxlmatelv 2 weeks
the NV:EA endorsed Duryea),
Amertcan Association of Unl
Profess!'&lt;~'
(AAUP) concluded
agreement with the NYEAINEA
" work together to win· the bargain
election against UUP (Announce
AAUP, NYEA/NEA join together ... )."
Although not mentioned in
Announcement, It may be that
AAUP's conditions l or merger
NYEA/NEA did not Include
endorsement of Perry, Duryea. But,
Is not spelled out. Does AAU
alliance with NYEA/ N EA mean that
AAUP lias jumped on the bandwagon
· ~oposltlon 13" demagoguery? II
the AAUP has chosen a peculiar way
eschew II.
Sin
-G-G
Aaslatant Prot
Social Founds!
Educat

::~~~~'l!'a :~ b&lt;J:.1~. H~~

massive firings of
employees from health care to lira
departments to education may - soon
beoome a reality. Clearly, "Proposition
13" Is substantively not the boon It
~peered to be. For example, In

of any new taxaa. Such a reoonveraton
Ia abeolutely mandatory In our priorities
II-.,. to ha-.e raal nationalaecurlty In
· the form of quality public health care
public education, llraflghtlng , fuli
8111Dlovn-t, etc. Naturally, a $30
billion transfer Ia naceaaary but not
sufficient. It Ia, h o - . a good atart.
Tile legally recognized bargalnlog
agent lor the faculty end nontllchlng proleslloneJ ataff of the State
Unlveralty or New York, • United
Unlveraity Profeaalona, Inc. (Local 2190
A~/ AFT} has elwaye ~ aenaltive to the problema mentioned above
In 11177, the UUP pused a atelawtdoi
rwotutlon Ceiling lor the cancellation of
tile B-1 bomber program . At that lima
one of tllo" PfOPOsed -.pone would
' - coat 1113 million, While the entinl
~ion budoat for the city of
_..nat! lor 1'Y 1117&amp;-'77 was S87

last moment.) Prior to that surprise
cancellation, and In rasponse to his
appearance and the message underthe following statement as Its contrlb.,..
lion to an arrti·"Proposltion 13" prass
conferance called by some Buftal&lt;raraa
trade unions and citizens' groups for
Friday morning , O ~t ober 20, 1978.

right way to cut taxes. Alrtllldy, hiring
freezes on campuses of the University
ol California, State Unlvers'lty of
California, junior colleges arid public
school systems have shown that
" Proposition 13" Is a grave threat to the
qualltl and availability of public
education and to public sector

I'! Callfornle lendlorda has not been

atingle AAUP

-~!;/!'t'y lt~1 wd~·~~~

Is AAU~ on 'Proposition 13' bandwagon?

u:.~not_t:':: ::.:-'.l!t~

.... tlllnl -

oHiclal ~t: only NEA on.. That Ia
.,..... AAl1P 1181 no /eflalt!Mdlngln
IIIIa matter ... II entirelY dependent

As before, we continua to wei
AAUP members as members of
and as elected officers (as several
now). What thalr national organ
has decided can have little real
on the concerns that matter to
directly hera at SUNY /Buffalo. AA
past has lleen honorable. We hope
future will be, too. But we must live
the.praeent, with Its demands of

Us or them ·
UUP, has no ln1entlon whale- of
campaigning against AAUP because,
given the terms of the alliance, It Is not

~~u~~\,:,~:~8! 'jd~~~~~o~

Ironically, the potentlel firing of
masaas ol state employees due to
"Proposition 13" or similar bills
thnaalena tp edd to the welfare 'lind

(5) To~~AAUP't aubordlnate

,

~fa:~e =: 1 ofR~~;,~.; N~

quoted as deacrlblng the e1 lienee as "a
pertact marriage." We leave It to
lemlnlata to exptaln what this Indicates
about his oonceptloil of marriage.
Given these 18!Jilt, what has really
happened Ia that AAUP officials have
lent their organization's good nama to
-NEA with no guarantee of any dedding
voice or futura Influence except what
can be gained as loyal servitors.
When we ask ourselves why this
one-sided agreement was permitted, we
confess perplexity. Alter all , UUP
.offered a full merger a year ago and

~=~e'r.!! aa-nt

~~~:")

a releyant party In the lorthco
bargaining agent election . The 1
remains squarely one between UUP
NEA, or, as we see It, between
academic union run by ourselves (
vs. one run lor us b~ outsiders (the
~~~~l~rs of the nat nat NEA O&lt;g

they have committed themselves In
writing to a totally subord lnant rc!a.
One theory advanced Is that AAUP
(as a national organization) · is In
desperate financial straits. it llas lost a
quarter of Its membership over tile past
three years, at Its recent oonvenllon a
p&lt;oposal to ralae dues was votedilown,
and the organization hashed to take out
a second mortgage on Its national
headquarters building tor needed
working funds. NEA, ol course, has an
annual Income of $60 million from the
million-and-a-halt primary and secondary school teachers asaessed dues by
II.

,

Management names chairmen
Thnaa School of Management f8CUhy
bean •pointed to

membera llave

\

::;-~_,.!~AasAdapartment chelr-

• . ......,.., . lutto, dean of the
School, has announced.
Dr. Raymond G. l'lunt, professor of
organization and humM NtOurcea, has
been appointed as chelrman of that
::::fartment which contains faculty lrom
St '::trta~~~~·· Organizational
u "
-.,..wer Studies. unt
~his B.A. end Ph.D. from U/B.
· Stanley Zlonta, prol1110r of
~~ tclence, has been ap.
chairmen of the Department of
_!i_yatama Whk:tl Includes
ty hom ~ InfOrmation

=:.,nllld
;;c;:o'"""'

·

~yatema

and Health Care Syst
Zlonta received hi• B.S., M.S.
Ph:O: from the Carnegie Institute
Technology.
Dr. Ronald J . Huefner, professor
accounting, has 11een named 10 hal
the Department of Operations Anal
The department contains the t
primary faculty cluatare of Accountin
Finance, Marketing, and Quantilat
Methods. Hualner holds the B.A. I
Canlalus, the M.B.A. and Ph .D. I
Cornell.
Dean Alutto also. announced cont
uatlon of Dr. Lawrance Southwick
chairman cf the Department
EnYlronmental Analysis and Polley.

�~2,1871

he Hkes the challe.n g·e of different looks _
the title
actor Jim

rs

•.:~~ar~~

performance to performance.

He looks different, acta dlffer.ant, Is
liferent.
Consider his !)all-reptile, hall-man
Cellban In The Tempest; hls zany
"Hamlet"- with Groucho glasses, his
"earnest• young man In frock-tall coal
ln ·Wannsee .
• McGuire will show his 35th "lace" to
t;luffalo audiences (his 15th In a U/B
production) , beginning next Wednesday night when he becomes "Mr.
Peachum" In the Center for Theatre
Research's production of the Three .
Penny Opera (the &lt;;enter'~ ' Initial
offering at its new downtown location).

Enrolled here In '67
McGuire, Buffalo Irish, first enrolled
at U/B as a freshman In 1967. He's been
around ever since except for a time
spent In San Francisco during the
"crazy years"
!he late 60s and e8rty
70s.
•
He eveQtually completed an undergraduate degree In English, although
even as an undergrad his heart ·and

even.

-~'Joseph Papp tried to do that In New
Yneowrk, sbtuut g.~t boMcGoedulroeutrecalbecaleduse_ ou_lerthe' .
tf.
~-· 8
audience demands aren, that great.
Both Moliere and the-experimental have
been well received.
saT
idhe pchGIIuolsore,phys o t thpreedseenptartwmorkent ,
1 10
8
M&lt;

~,I:'~W: ~~~r~~~~~ ~~~m~ ?~ n~::

0

~~~~ ~:R~..J~t~~~tje~~'l,l;.h;:,'~ih~·
~g~~io~l~ .. :,:'ac~th~!"' · lor a TV

Last summer, he complete(l a Master
of Arts In Humanities here and now is
oAe of two resident artists at the Center
for Theatre Research. Ray Munro, an
associate In directing; Is the other.
McGuire teaches an acting course at
U/-Banllatheatraco\JrS&amp;at ECC, and Is
0'
Involved wlth Shea's Buffalo In apllot
~r. Puchum'oJook
program almed Ill d8veloplng· a
· How wiii " Mr. Peachum" look?
• children's theatre workshop.
Two weeks before opening night,
He'd be lntenssted In working on an
McGuire (who devises moat ot his own
M.F.A. In Thilatre here If Albany ever
appro- the granting of that terminal
make-up) wasn't ~re .
theatrical degree "Jt would bit the only
n " I'd thought about shaving my heed
MFA. offered bBtwMD here · and Penn
half-way back," said the actor (who
State," McGuire notes, "and the only
without griiase~nt.looks to be In his
mld-20a). "But I've heard of actors
one wl~hln SUN¥." Albany Is still
~A~~~::~~~ _to tlnd that the h~lr • thinking It over_ '
Mr. Pellcbum brings McGuire to
within· one of three dol.81)' theatrical
if still not settled on how the
unsavory Paachum
should look,
roles (counting his work here, at the
McGuire nonetheless had drawn a beed
6'h what the character should be.
San Franclaci)) Brecht made n "plain as day how to
As an undergred at U/B, he did-most
play the role," said McGuire who
of his work, not In the Theatre
developed his own distinct variation on
Department, but with the Student
Shakespeare for this summer's Cell ban.
Theatre Guild. While affiliated with the
' Most Cal.lbana are done standing up,
NOW theatre, he aald, he learned a
ttoe actor Indicated. "We know he's
great daal working with Its original .
SIJPpoaed to be a 'monster,'" but It was
director, Gerry Miller, and with Louis
h)s own notion to make the aberration
Martinez who succeeded Miller.
"Into a hall-snake which slithered around
on ell foura for most of the
~and IW...
_
performance. It waa a stroke of -genius
His asao&lt;:latlon. with the Theatre ·
moat of those olho saw the production
Qepartment In more recent years has
agree; and an Invitation to cardiac arrestfound hlnl closely aligned • with
because of all the acrobatic clambering'.
chairman Saul El~ln. Ell&lt;fn,~ ,McGuire
~ ~~ ~~~..,...,. ..,.,ndlng," McGuire said
said admiringly, ·~akes .wn'il''~~ ~lven
sfmpty. ~t.illl'd wen&lt;.!'•,
and multiplies It like thlt" !Olives .aod
ll
- ..
.
..
fishes. • The summer Shakespeare
-~ther kind of moiilner
ft.~~ Is ~oo,;:.~ex'fo'plepr~~tro':fs: .
Mr. Peachllm Is another kind of
including dance. That, says McGuire, ·Is
monster, ' McGuire feet&amp;: "He is a
"a tot." ·
capitalist par excellence, solidly midWith the openinq of the downtown
dle-aged , and street smart. A manipulatheajre, the .actor thmks the department
tor_ Who 'unionizes' the beggars In
(especially I~ Center for Theatre ,
l!ondon , using strong-armed tactics. A
Aesearch, lormert_y " hidden" at Hoyt
ruthless businessman- to the point of
and Lafayette streets) will become
caricature.
much "more visible," more known to
" I don't know where his soul Is
the general public. Its location In the located; he may have sold II."
theatre district will enable It to "feed off
The"part Is one Which It Is difficult to
the energy" of that_..hopefully highlyadd layers to and unnecessary to read
charged milieu.
·
between the lines to find out more
nils semester necessarily Is taken up
about. •
with the transition to that new location
Brecht was pretty straightforward In
his Intent. "There are ways to var1ate the
character, but no way to play h•m as a
Toy Threatre Company are scheduled).
'nice guy.'"
But spring will likely the wbrld
It's easy to recognize some of
premiere of Eric Bentlay's ~Tho Last of
r-ouraetf In this, McGuire added. It was
the Amazons,'' and, possibly, a Cllakov
alter all Brecht's Intent ·~o stick a 911rror
pia~ (the latter a project ctoae to
In tho audience's face." The pla~ht
McGuire's heart). "He.'a. a cheltov
-admittedly ".didactic."
ffreak, • a downtown entert-_Jnment
Yet, Three Penny Optn Is also a
lWflter
says.
.
mod&lt; o!J German "high opera.~ tho
llerOic llilurea of that genre having been
r.paoecf by despicable cllaraCte&lt;S In ,~,:'t~:::~::~na~u,.-~
found Is a fr-ni to mix the claaalca
,.... "PIIople will recognize that, too, "
and tho contemporary, the experimental
tile actouald.

~t~~ ~!:,a d!'f:fnY-t.~.:'rl

t hird season of Shakespeare in
Delaware Park. He's been part "Of that
since it started .
" My mother sa~s If you can keep

~~~!h~~~\~.9 ~~~~~!'~J:l~u~~~i

Shakespeare. " I guess we're almost
there."
Flexible and 'blllsed'
McGuire likes to consider himself a
"flexible" actor· He's been "blessed"
with different types of ~oles, he said
gratefully
Nobod1y. wants to g' et st-.,ck playing

.:,~~mJ:,~hl~ga~·-:,er:,~ ~:;, al~tl~

=

~~fin~':.. ~~i..:'aa~a:;~ r~

--

a_"prim~ry coaslderatlon , although ," he
::,OJFv'ld~~~~ ru'r'.':!l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

himself to studying pbservtng and
training In both eiq,erlment81 and
traditional styles (the former with ·the
NOW company and the latter, here).
" I like challenging roles," he said,

~hJ. phal:en~e o1
f dltt-;~ 'Dfkskfj"

"Saul encourages this flexibility,"
McGuire noted o( his f11110rlte dlractor.
"He has Instilled In me a trust -of the
rehearsal process, a confidence that
things will work out."
.
Elkin's Is a cooperative style In whlctt
cast and director disco- together
"what the plar, Is about, whet's lns)de
and around it. •
Elkin "likes the Imaginative actor who

~~~:~:~~~~/'on~~':.::."s ~n~ \~,~~stl:',g
g't,jig~~~J':i'i~ ~.:;:~~~.ef~:~~P~-th
1

1

But "an actor does go astray
sometime,• he admitted sheepishly. .
"Saul keeps us on the right track,
sees that we don't go'tlff on tangents."
A major downtown ci)mpany
McGuire has only a year to-year
commitment with the Cenier lor
Theatre Research. Bu~ he's quite
lntarested In -'ng a· majOr lnatltullon
"develop" downtown
poalbty a
widely known self aup~lng nssldeftl
theatrl~ company. He would like to
mak!l It wort&lt;.
.
Wh h ack
led
hlil hoWes
eoa.i'"an~ N,:wvo:r"dty ~- ~
undeniable "lura," he knows, too; that
aspiring actors In both locatloi)S h - to
Invest a lot of time In getting ahead, and
can't alway:teven get an actlng,job, let
alone parts that they want.
"I'm fortunate to be able to work h'ere

=

and

~~~ ~~.1:_ ~=

framework of the play).

~.:!.';'o".:· f~~~J ~k~~:._.91ve ha

~slate'::'fwl'ih ~~~~.:.,~, ln~e~ an~

1

d

1d~yvei~

II

Managem~nt

gets grant for
und~rg·rad international program ..

ed~Jia~l~~~y ~w~~u~a~..:o~h~le ~~

.Management to better prepare students
forbuslness management careers at t~s
international level.
'~ o· •
D~r
Bhe1J. B
c)a\~p tes~~&gt;~: :
of 0 ~ lzatl9
ai\'
r&lt;;e,s.IJI ",
the
~bql,
, tlijs v.:eek \{lat ·
the
.S. Off
Education has
approved a $31,000 grant to develop a
foreign hinguage-culture compQ11ent In
U/B's undergraduate managemllnt cur-

~~~m~;t~.h~h~ro~~~~~;.'~f "Us ~~~~

Letters.
• ..
Bhatt pointed out that the new
undergraduate segment will dovetail
with the school's International Mana~te­
ment and Policy Analysis Project, a

B7l~c~al~f ':38~Wo~~ '';~~~ b~E~e

The grad!J81e program was proposed In
1976, and Jb.e. orlglnal one-year ~rant

·rr::~~": ~~t~ro~'U':·~nPt

o""Ot.
·,
Bhatt, w h o - aa d)rector of both
tho graduate and undergraduate prOjects, recalled that the undergraduate
proi&gt;OUI waa aubmltted • detlplta an
understanding that HEW would be.
reluctant to finance two l81ated proJects
on tho aame campus. B\11, aa 8hett
explained, the "lnnovathllli natura" Of

~~~rad.:'~~":!'':S

:::
tho Faculty ol

Ar1J end Lettera, Md tile

'8UCC8U olthe

ur-tueta pro_grwn a-

Sclloc.l 01 ~ tile
- . . y cndentlela to Win the -enS
~.

the

ln~h":~~=~"::lr'~,a, ~Ill offer

lang~age . .)earning, opportuqlllee In
French,
Ia~·. ~iilsSian or ~.

.~~~po :;to,_.t_~_tjl,l:lural

:Nje • . .llfl\&amp;~t ·!Vm

!I

" 'llUif~~~fA

ml
anotber proposal that would
.expand the program to Include Chi.-,
Japanese, Arable and Hindi languages,
along with their nsspactlve cultural
aspects.
Joining Bhatt le. submitting . the
,undergraduate proposal were Dr.
George R. Levina, dean of Arts and
Letters; Dr. Mlchaal M. Metzger-,
professor of German In the Department
of Modem Languages and Uteratures;
Dr. All&gt;ert · L. Michaela, dlractor of
International Studies, and Dean Jo1eph
A. Alutto of Management.
"The Improved curricular opportunIty," Bhatt wrote In his ptopoaal, "will
CO!llrlbute toward the training and
development ot future managers whll
will be operating In a hlahly
Interdependent International contexf."
He atao noted thet the lq~
cultural training would • .,a
loglcalatepplng-atone to~~~
coura. In tho tntemat!OMI ~
rnent and Polley Ahatyall ProJect.
The !.net, thrOugh I~ wltb

#

=~~::-'a::=:.:.U.f.a~:

=~..J~=p===

- technlquaa . - y tor IMnaglng
In an lnternlillaMI ~-

.

"

�Comins Home
,
_ f'slnda encl8ruc:e ~- to _ . . , . bltiiW legKy of •lmmonlln the UUAB . . . - for s.turdav otnd
Sundey.

CALENDAR
___...._,_..,_,.. frlday-3

-- .

ilcna..., _ _ _ ..... _,.

===s'~=====

LECTURE'

.., c.met-..,.

CENTEII FOil STUDIES II CUI.lURAL

, _ . . , Or. Jucl1t\ Duchon.
Jane Keeter Room, Elloott. Hl p .m. Sponsored
by tho Cenlor
in CuiU'II
and lnlln&lt;:fiOOol Anoly1is Club.'
In -

_ _ _ .. _,.(1835). 148

~-

lp.m.---brlllocl&lt;--

CIWI ~ Ill' _
...
0 . whocUII-eorne

l-

nt•--IHOP·
._..... ... ~.and_ea.-_

'l'banUy-2

lor-

ICifY eoenea. Racist over-

CIVII.ENGlNEEIIIHG&amp;aiiHAII.
~·R-Baaln Planning. Or. JaM 1«&gt;1«.

l'tiYIIC&amp;IAS'IIIONOIIYLECTUIIEI
Opllooly- - - O r. Bruce
D. lotcC&lt;&gt;nD, · -.ctor. Bronch,
- - L I I b. -,.-alphyolco,
U/ 8 . 2 1 8 -. 1:30p.m.

A llultlmlctotomp _ ,...
S y s - -n:ll. Pl'of....,.. laiTy D. Wittio,
Dopnnent al COmputer Science, U / B. Room
41 , 4228 Ridge Lea. 3 :30 p.m. Coffee and
doUghruls . .
3 in Room 61 .

Ollnd) """"""""

.,~·-"*"" · -

CIIIAYP_OF_

o,;., __....,
p.m_.
.._
_ . . 337 Squft. 2

.. be---

8poclll f'nvWn: '1lld . . !me Conal Dumc*&gt;g
al ~ ~ our Niogora

----·
-·
- -·--c.--&amp;.cii&gt;IY?"~

~.

-

- - - al !me Conal
; Or. 8ovef1y Poigen,

......

logo.

carniii'OIII'OUCY _ _ •
.....,.._ -

Col-

. . - , . Ffwd Emory,
· 'lllo,_llollolor.llue Room, Fecul1y

-

CUI. 3-5 p.m.

-

-_.be - ·

F«turlhor-c:-. BS1-4ll«.

AIIATOIKAI.ICIEIICEI-1

-of
~

Dlo-

COI.LOOI•• f

-·t

INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERtNG.&amp;EIIINARt
118Wiela MaNgemenl In lndu1try and In
-~~~~ea.., Or• .Amc*l Reiomon, professor al
Wos18m Rooerve urn.
S3B Bal. 3:30p.m. _ _.. in 342
Bel following t h o -· M locutty and otudents

....... -

.Case

~

.... oordioly tnvltod.toattend.

I'HYIIOlOGY-*

......-v
ol T.........llary
Ea--.-Or. Stefan - - · Do&lt;&gt;ort·

Fluid

and llicJI&gt;hYOica, Unive&lt;aily
of Lund, Sweden. 5108 Shennan. 4:15 p.m.

mont a1

~

- O F caL IIIOI.ECULAIIIIOI.OOY

c:--= ~ I I M j &amp; -~
- Or. G. G.
-. ~ci~ . Comol. 114
- . 4 : 15p.m . ~ol4.

_.

' l l l o - . ; 1 . . - - - 2 1 4 -.
T P.M. by h Canlor

~·

u1a-. ...._
-.,
....

lor -

'

o-ooo~~t Co~~oga.

Olfl&lt;

........... ---=:.~~--~

. --.. ...

. - . - - . - . , . . . . , . 123

-e-.Callleo17:311.
. . . _ ....... u.,.llllllflhl

-~­

·~:-.:.-:=-~-. T -

...,_,
llr.-..,.__..,.,_,.,..
.

_

.. ............-..
-----·-------

L · -.~)'·
------al

_

................. - -. 112

,

,....... -polltlc:ol

apoken throughout

EJ.roc&gt;o, tho United - ·

eon-.
-and
-loralrool
· •tlemlllinll
to tho TAPOL
problem in tho
of tntemational

-hove-

,.. a lonn« TAPOL. 8he .-etates tha men.._
anguish and physical auflored by
fellow prtsonors, who ti&lt;e
been
tried or chlwged. DllrtnQ her thr8o ~ 01
_,m.,t, 8he endured oven:toW&lt;led """"
- · Inadequate die~ · ob&amp;onCO.ol ..-,g motartals and strtnoent.1Mitatlon and communicot1on
restrictions.

•

Born in England, &amp;he studied ot tho t.or-.
Schoota1Ecclnorl*:s.Froml952 .... h e r from prison in 1971 , 8he liVad in -

with her husbend and · Prior to tho
1965 .-y tstceovar, 8he aa a clvl
aervant l'ltho field of oconomiCa.
Sponoored by tho TIWJI Woold 51udonl """""'"

~ g:,..::.=~.::.:-.:-~
SclonceG&lt;Data51udont~.

Sunday-5
UUAII,._..
COOling- (19781 . COnforence Theatre,
Sqojfre. Col 838-2919 tor show times. Admissl&lt;&gt;O

Honry-.

~

D&lt;.-'"""-

l~lfTt.

~--

occ:ount of tho ....... """"" and hang-&lt;Jpa of tho
period al -~-

CDNVERBATJONe II THE ARTS

c:.::.=.~.~~~~

--

'

e a . - - - i n - J o l l n Cago.
tnlafno!!OnOI C.. (c:na.w. 1Oj. 6 p.m.

'
taus;., and that

-.tllut pllologrophy, -

FILMs'
CACFILM'
CamatK~.1 50F..-. 8iond10~. m .

Ticl&lt;ols S 1 lor~~'''" S 1 .SO.for olhota.

""':...0.:

and

t.AW-CONVOCAT10NI
Sporlo and . . U.. O'BIWI Hal. BegN ot
9 a.m. ()pon to lbmi end altho Fecul1y •
al ~and- · S e e _ ....
' onPIQ87 . "":.
•

VOI..LEY8AU..

•torr

•

Volloftlall Dlolrtct T - L Ctork Halt.
10Lm.

~-

_.-an exhibit

Tho UIB _ , •• CU&gt;
endg -_
50- _ . . . ,.. .._

/ crafts·

cnlt~ .

__
__
.. _ tor-..c
Finl,
ar.c.w .

~-

-_..,..___
--·111111111'
8
- - --.~ .

10o.m . ·

5 p.lll, ~- ..... door: 50 cents

--;25-torc:hldrwn.

........ . . ---c:.. , . . . ......,. _

=

IIOYIES FOR THE NEW JAZZ AGE'

SaturdAy..--4

_, _

_ 1 p .m.

..,_

~ ... 4 .....

....__,,..,_.._,.._

.

- I TOWAOC, - 7 p.Jo. and 10

eo.n.

Historicol Society

CEll I MOlECUlAR IIOlOOY SEMINAR.
E:. Coli Exonuc&amp;euell: Further Chatacterilltlon .,... Cloning ol lha - r o l Oeno, Dr.
S1eohen ~. llepor1ment "' Microbk&gt;togy,
.Johns Hopkins Unli1e&lt;olty 5etlOOI of MedicN.
114 t'focllstetter. 2 :30p.m. COffeeat2:16.

il'w'e the aame dormitory room and a bbide
Wgin from "-t&gt;v SITith (Condloe Ba&lt;Qeol ....
fumy. pert;OI)IIYelnd-- pair"IUY acc:uno

~-

· 25 Nottingtoam

" "Monday-6

.

-mateCN«.
--IPECIAt"'
----tniofltmotow

.
I - l e a l -...
Or. R&lt;nld E. Bolt. U / B. Erie County

Buffak).
8Socioty
:15p.m...
Sponsored by tho al Weatam New York.

CenloriOlda...-al-groupo.

far-.

.........

LECTUR£1

Jacl&lt; Nicholson end Art Glrlunkof play two
- A.mherlt COiege atl.ld@nts in the late 40s who

, _ .-yCOuncl.

....

c.met~ . •

intnOO&gt;eeia. Slnceherreteuein 1971, llhehU

UUAIIFILM'
A Special Day (.,..Y, 19771. C&lt;lnference lMo·
tn\, Squn. Col 636·2919 for show times. •

CACFII.M'
c:-1 ~ ITO MFACC, Ellicott. 8
!Old 10 p.m. Ticl&lt;ots Sl rtor atudents; $1 .50

-------·
---...

~t-inthoU .S.

pnsoner (TAPOL). Is an authority 011.~ rights

fornon-~....

t..EC:n.l

322'IFACC, Bcoll. 4 p.m. M lnfor·

ua18 · - al ec:onolrics. active in tho -

IIICFILM'
......._ 150 Ftwber. 7 p.m. and 10 p.m.

FILM'
'
Tlla ~ oa- a 11m by Pelef Watkins that
drwnatiz.es the effects of nuclearwt!Jf. 147 Qiefen·
dor1. 7:3!) p.m. Free; 5PoM«ed by tho Peace

~-

a.-.

Coffeeat4 .

. , IAglool Trutll, Clwloo. t..orrDol.
~. U 18 . 11848oldy. ~p . m .
Thohtala_al_by_
1og1c1ono on - . al one altho oontnll
logic.

c!:,~S.:.":':~~
.. _
.._
__
byhUMw·

Iormor-

polltlc:ol
prlsonar, .._.ttonaly ~-......von
....,... rights in Slolor CII1Cild
anodafTi&gt;mtnoPI1illpplnos, a....,_.altha
Francilcan M"&lt;SSionloiOS of Mary; - · grad·

ooncem.

COWUTER scENcE COUOOUIUIII

-$1

- ---ol-lloCOt~l
Cer1oo, Dr. l'lul D. CC!onw&gt;, ~ .al
. 1 7 8 -. 4p.m.

-ALD LOGIC

104Pariter. 3 :30p.m.

be

-

~oi~A--­
Rtgllts.
148 llleleMOff. 7:30 p.m. Spoolon

(~2fi!'":!i"f:

=

(19391. ataning John Batrymore . Buftalo and Erie
County Historical Society. 8 p.m.
·
A apociaf get-out·tho·vofo program featuring
the two moat irreverent political comedies of the
· ~ed by Me9il Study I Buffalo.
UUMFILM' •
e-.g (1971!) . Coolerence Theatre,
Squire. Col636·29191or show · Admissloo
charge.
The Vaetnam war Ia the lopic of this fim.
At tho core a1 tho otory Is a kMI triangle
compoaact al • (Bruce Deml.
who Ia _ , to• Nom, his wife (Jane FOndal .
...,.inhls-.:e-Yduntioorwa1tota
- · · hoopitaf, " " - ....

moots.-.-.
· llhe twa an

.., (Jon Voight~, -ptaglo.The
...... - . . i n . . -.

--IPECIAI..
.....

.

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

(U.S .A.-Itafy, 18751.

~~-

~'

Naoth; Tllaby- the · Center
146 Oiof.
endorf.
7 "'
p.m.""'Sponeored
fOf
MediaSlldy.

UUABMOMIAY _,__FILMS.
T t • - -l19431. Tp.m.; Thollody

Sno- (19451. 8:25 p.OI. I TO WFNX , -

FrM edmiMion.
The

s..nttt

~Val

Victim is tJIU8Ity considered
Lewton's "dartt nutEWJ)ieee,'' a fkl
_..,.,.,.. .in tho heart

about • group al al New Vorl&lt; City.

ThoLugoof,
lady -just
· atomng
and
Beta
Is not
onolhor Boris
a.-Kot1olf
B ttvitter,

m::-:

:!.~~~.=o:..

wei as thoaa looiUng for tho mocabro.

FILM...
1
Tlla O&lt;aot --~Choplin (19391.
Coni.....,. Theon, Sqo,b. 7:30p.m. Sponsored
bythoJewioh-UIQ\.

CHINA TOOAY'
, - . T-......gy and - I n CNk
Prof. Zweig, ~ al Economlca,
SUNY at Stony a.-. 148 ~ - 8 p.m.
Tt*d In e...,.. of tectui'M on ''CtWla Today:
From UodOI-••• T - - l i o n,'
by CNna Study Gloup (GSA) and the
U.S .-o-Peopte'aFriendohipAaooclatlon.

�~--~--~-~7

.....

NHL head
will ~eynote
Law session

-.lion

blinding ... horses. and leoms lhol
ltoe boy's
tor...,_hes lll&lt;enlho ploco
of ~ and aex in t-os ""- But he tinds
too, 1hol tho bOy's
tor horses is grealef
than OllY1f*&gt;g he hes ever felt, and in tum
realizes the tutiMty of his own tae.

IIC&lt;:IJI&lt;I(j Q(

-*"'

Nodces
CREAllVE CRAFT CENTER
During the month Q( November 197B, craft

photography,·-

WO&lt;I&lt;ahops ""' scheduled in pottery. )owelty.

glass, non-.-l)hotograpny,
complete schedukt or other
infom\ation, phone 636·2201 , 1-S p .m., or 7· 10
p.m .. Monday ttw'ough lhursdey, or 1-5 p.m.,
Friday and Salufday. Aegis. .tion will be a in the Craft Center, 120 MFACC , Ellcott, during
the hours ltsted.

and batik. For

8

PROGRAM IN LITERATUAE &amp; PSYCHOLOGY
PRESENTATION
''Melvile's Fist: The Execution of Billy Budd,' '
by Professor 8art&gt;ara Johnson , Yale Univenllty
Dep.-tment of French end COmpirative Utentture.
322 Oemens. 3 p.m. November 14..

SKICLUB

--to

Af'Mftk: lntcndcatlon: Caae PrnentaUon, MatOMC~ Ctvymko . 248 Cooke. 5 p .m.

FllJIS•
Menllmontant; Ent. .cte; Ubetfall 146 Diet. endorf. 7 p.m. Sponsored by the Center fOJ
Media Study

Tuesday-7
BIOCHEMISTRY IIEIIINAR I

WABWEDNE6DAY~FEAfUIES•
Here COrnel Mr. JOf"ddn ( 1941 ). 7 p.m.:
o-n to - \T114 7), 8 :45. Conferance 'Theatre,

On liNt Aolo al Coupling Foetor 8 In tho
Enefgy Transdudng Atpen of Mitochondria.

Squlre. Free admission.

139Cary. 4p,m .

lighlef, played by Robert Montg&lt;&gt;me&lt;y, premallnly,
sent to heaven.. wno has to find himself a new
body. One of the better vtntage fantasy films .
The current ......., Can Welt is based on It
to Earth star&amp; Rita Hayworth, Lany Part&lt;s.
and Edward .&amp;erett Horton. Terpsichore, muse
of the Dance. is atlowed to return to earth
to re-choreograph a Broadway musical m which
""" Is bawdily portrayed .

r..........,

DEPAATMEHT OF ECONOMICS SOIINAAI
A Compoalho lnduotry In
Equll~
brium: An Applk:lltlon of • Problem In lrweru
Optimol Conlrol, Doe -Dechert. Oopor1ment of
Ec:cnomlcs. U I B. 210 O'Brian. 4 p .m. A Colfee
Hour with the speaker will be hetd at 3 :30 in
608 O'Brian.

VOLlEYBALL•
U I 8 VL Fredonil, Manaftekl State.
Hal. 5p.m.

..

H.,. Comn Mr. Jordan concerns a prize-

o-n

C~

CONVEASAllONS IN THE ARTS
Either Harriott Swartz inteMewa N.m June
Polk, founder of video art. Couller Cal&gt;io (ChonnelS). 6 :30p.m.

FilMS•

Utter,. . lll:llerie; ... ,.... of Shima. 214
Wende. 7 p.m. Sponsored by lhe Cenlef fO&lt;

Meola Study.

t..ECru.•

-~- lrlblro, Or. Cloude Welch,-ll/ 8 ,

232 Squire, 8 p.m. Filii in 8 Q( by laculiy and ~ atudento on C&lt;Jmlf\1
rese.t:h.
- b y lhe
CormiiiH,
... ~ (Q( .the Councl

Alrlc:an-

""tntemo1Jonol - ). and""' Grodllate Group

oo Contlnutty and Clwlgo in 'Asia and Africa.
The .... diocuoalor&gt; wil be followed by wino

"""-·

WednesUy-8

"-----·--T--.
. -·
OEOI.OCIICAL 8CII!Nca-AA·

s - . Aaooii
Plul o. -.l'toyol 0n1w1o 18, 424QAidgo loL 3 p.m.

Tooooto.

·

Thursday :..__ 9
Pet~~dJH In Harlem (1943J. 146 Oiefendor'f.
f p.m. Sponsored by-StudieS .

___, ........

.,..,....
0,.

"

-

Or. t:ngory L
PonnoyNonil Sllte ..-oilY 5

~- · ~ p.oa..Ootloetn-~.. 3:46.

help starting. drafting , or rev;smg their writing.
We · are at 336 BWdy HaD on the Amherst
Campus. l)le Writing Pla&lt;;e Is """" weekdays
12-4 p.m. and week nights, except Friday,
6 ·9 p.m. F« further lnfonnation, contact 8erbera
Gordon at 636-2394 .
·

~t,:,~~·Y~~n~~~ B~me~,:r~ Rft:~ir.

contracts with the Buff"Jo Braves; and
Rutkowski , former Bills player and
WKBW football analyst who Is a
legislative aide to - Congressman Jack
Kemp. The program tor the ConYOCatlon will
begin with an informal coffee hour at·II
a.m. AI 10, Dean Thomas E. Headriclc

~d

~xhlblts

~ Etr~.:::· ::~r.tro:."'':m o~.=

AlBRIGHT-«NOX EXHIBIT

alumni ana friends before the panel
discussion .
Lunch, In Talbert Hall, will be
preceded by a cocktail party In the Law
School library.

The Ve•utus-Woocty. O..Criptiona; Stelne:
Mechlne VIsion. North Temporary Exhibition Gal·
leties. Albright-Knox All Gallery. Tfvough NOV·
ember26. The exhibit consists of two new.)fideo installation&amp; as well as vkjeotapes, photographS, de-

Awards and honors ·
.
Anthony Renaldo, vice president of
the Law Alumni , will be master of
ceremonies at the luncheon program . In
addition to Ziegler's talk, the luncheon
program will Include two.o111er·events.
lhe Edwin F. Jaeckle Dletlngulahad
Alumnus Award wi ll be ~tlld to
Frank G. Ralchle, Jr., a graduate of the
class of 1919. Ralchle f9!M to _
prominence shortly after his graduation
from Law Scflool and at the age of 29
was one of the youngest people _ .
named In Who's Who In America. He

signs and drawings, documenting the artists'
original tnnovative achievements. It ls supported
by 8 grant from rhe National Endowment for
the Arts .
.
Woody Vasulka is associate professor'of media
studfes here.

'Photographic l'mpnooolon&amp;, by Bill Greene,
Urban Extension. Oeleware Came&lt;a Gellery, 2635
Delaware Ave. Throughout Novembet".

HIGHER EDUCAllON LECTUAE8
Conau.....Um In

Hleher

Education. Joan S.

· SChool ot Education, UniYerslty- ot
Michigan. Niogat8 Uni'(tlfslly. 2:30p.m.
Col 636·2481 '"' specltic Information on
focl.tion .
.
Star1&lt;. -

-

' -

Faoltnt•,--law811Jdenlsand ~..
senior'S inteiested In studying law In a broad
social· context or In COf1unctiort wfth another
discipline. Moot Courtroom. 0'8ri8n Hall.· 3:30
p.m. The purpoee of this mee.ting is to introduce
students to the Bakty Center for Law and Social
Policy and to explain l1s combined J .D. and M.A.
or Ph.D. programs. For fur'thet"' information. call
636·2102.

DIVISION OF CEll. &amp; MOLECUUII -;BIOLOGY OtS11HOUISHED VISITING

SPEAKERS I

- .. ~-· . . -.Dr.
Joma

Rooemon. -

ot Biology.

Seul
HoptUns

UnfveraitY~ 114 ~. 4: 15 p.m. COffee

at 4 .~

I

8

1

;~tal~~~m=~~~nln 1~ ~

.=

later named 'aa a a~ proaecutor by

MEETING•

~~:f'j~s~:mE':·'t V:.=:r.r'=~

ship - on the United Stetea Judicial
Conference on Rules- of Evidence.
Reichle Is a member o( 1111. American
Judicature Society, the International
Academy of Trial Lawyers and Ia a put
regent of Canlslus, and a regent and'
past president of the Amerloan COllege
of Trial Lawyers.

Clna,ol'28
_
The graduating claaa of 11128 win atao
be hOnored a1 I unch. Among those
expected to attend from thai 50-y-

~~;,:~: =~s:.~~~~:

Alfred Brim, Hyman Carrel, PteriOn L •.

.~:::'
· eec~'.• Fa?.=:'; M~=~t..,:
Guart;l'a, Claude V, Klater, , _ D .
a......

Lawla, Jr., Roland E. Loge!.
R.
Loomis, f-.d0f11 Morrtaon, Joeeph R.

~ - 262

-~-·

Do you ~e papers due? Come to ttle Writing~
Ptece, a free drop-in center for students who want

PHOToGRAPHIC EXHIBIT

FILM•

~-..::=-.....!.-. .;.;

- . E-. - a n d

-

Si&gt;orts ~IMillots
_
_
On the panel with Swados will be Pat '
Gillick, general manager of the Toronto
Blue Jays; Ralph Halpern, a senior
partner in the firm of Ralchle, Banning,
Weiss and Halpern, the attorney for the
Buffalo Bills; William Lerner, the

WAillNG PUCE

PHARILD. SEMINAR I

•

War and"- Or.

2nd,_ l.ooogo, Red .locket. B p.m.

~. 3 : 30p.m .

In the morntng: a panel discussion
will cover negotiation of a spot1a
contract , representing a player, reprll'
sentlng a franchise, the Rozelle rule,
optl on clauses, tax problems, current
legislation and an update on recent
\ cases in this area of the law.
Robert 0 . Swados, 'a senior partner In
the Buflalo law firm of Cohen, Swados,
Wright , Hanifin, Bradford and Brett,
will moderate.
Swados has served as the vice
president of the Buffalo Sabres and as
the team's legal counsel for a number of
years . He Is currtintly the secretary of
the NHL.

detais.

-Stone, Aoooclole- Q( Sociology ,

ASA I AFJIUCA

Momlng~MI

The Sci&gt;.Jssmelslef's Ski Club wil be holding
a Sid Swap on Mon&lt;tey, November 6 . Col
831·5445, or come W.to Room 7 Squire for

LECTURE WlnllllJDES•
U I B.

John A. Ziegler, Jr. , preeident·of the
Nat)onal Hockey League, will be a
featured speaker, Saturday, November
4, as the Law School and the Law •
Alumni
Association
preeent
the
School's Third Annual Alumni Convoca- ~
· lion.
.
Ziegler, formerly a partner In the
. Detroit law· firm of Ziegler, Ml.ouae &amp;
Wi se, became counsel to !lie' Detroit
Red WJngs In 1959 and HMid In that
capitclty until he was named cllalrmM
of the NHL Board of Governors In 11178.
Last year he succeeded Clarence
Campbell to beCome the first American
president of the League, and onl!'--lhe
fourth president In Its 61-year history.
Ziegler will be · the program's
·
luncheon speaker.

WABFIUt•
-- - (18T7)._eonterence - · Squire._

Col8311-29191or---- -·

"'a
-~- --~-·~
onctodbyllkNY'-'-· - - - ·

(llurton) -

... oby

)'OU"'I ....... .

Paprocki, - Philip J . Penny, Alfrild B.
Sll_,an, JoaepJtlne Sc8ocla ~. ­
Arthur Steclcar and Judge MICMilll f:.
Zlmmer. A ,...nlon din-. orgw~lzeit br
Mr. Fray' and Mr. Klatllt', wRI be IIIIi!
thai80WIIng . ·
Those wlalllng to llltfnCI the
Cori¥0C811on will be . . . . - a $10
111glatratlon tee to co..r ell of the da(s
Cllecka may 1111
to
AhOCiate Dean Alan S. c.n.t, a1 the
Law Scflool, John Lord O'Brien_H ..l.

-t•.

..m

�C ntroversl~ seU-m.ule nallllo~lre

UJBcan
nominate 7 for
explodes all the myths about dumb jocl(s teaching awards

,.,....._

.,,..,_~

Asked by a student If he would ever
consider buying another pro team,
·Snyder responded that he .might, but
only when his children get older.
Although he aqmltted he enjoyed thevisibility of being a team owner, Snyder
revealed-, "I couldn't stand the abuse my

1

..:.,..~ ~~ :t'b:~u!roJ'~~b l~

t

mytlllt'a Paul
Snyder, Western New
YOlk's controo.stal sail-made mlllton-

.ar..

children wert! receiving ."

He spoke to a small gathering or U/B
etydenta taat week In the Squire

Conlenonlle Theatre. His

Another student asked if he ever
really had a commitment to the Braves
or If he merely viewed the team as a
financial venture. Snyder replied the
commitment was· present on his part,
but that he believes "the community
also had a responsibility to the team·."
He reminded the a~dlence that the
Braves were the first expansion team to
make 1he play-ott but that they were
seldom successful at the gate.

appearaflce

was sponsored by the School or
Mllllllll"ff''lt.
inyder, whosa topic was " the
Enlnlprenaurial Businessman, • ch)Jckect the Idea or a prepared text fur a
candid, off-the-&lt;:ufl run-through of his

'T~~~o ~:J~.A~~:~~~;. h.ad
no money; he came to U/B " with
nothing" exoept a football scholarship.

or.

~t.!=t'y ~.;,~;~~-~.sx !~~~~

Hlslsvorlte
Ot all his Investments, Snyder said
his commercial farm and general real
estate business, called ~nyder Darien
Corp., is his '11nest Investment•: and
personal favorite.
.

:,:, r:r.:Y~i. ~~~- that he
Aecalt"P. hla own
col:!:te days,
1
t~

=
·t h = = f,.,th= co':::ing
aconl-.cellke IIi Is."
•
In 1957, at the end ot his academic
- · he began Interviewing for jobs
and came IICro88 a man named Ralph
Wilson (no relation to "the" Ralph
Wilson), who was the vk:e president of '
- f o r a frozen mut company.
'dlaco-.1 that the young
an amateur w,...tler like
eo he decided they would
the Interview after a good
and worl&lt;out. Later, while the

:=c.,~sC:,~'J:. ~,:, ~~llsn~~~~ .

job chauffeuring him when he came to
8ullalo on business. Sny- accepted,
With the provision that when Wilson 's
ankle mended, he would offer him a
aa1ea poaltion with his company.
That happened. A couple of
montba. later when Wilson's cast was
removed, he Informed Sily- that the
company had
been sold and had no .-!lor addll onal salesmen.

just

No-.I

re:::::::h:'ft ~~f:Jn~r.r.:J:r
was lndlcati.. of what he could expect

from futunt employers, he waan, going
to-d In line tor more.
"That was the tlrat and taat time I ever
worked tor anyone, • he noted.
Meanwhile, he wasn't etarvlng. Using

=

:::.::-y::::::cs~:=-~~ ·~
deal Involving -

II you can

Aal~~nv.--clelec:the
1tnld tt, o.:C:,:::ewhlie
around Bullltlo, he
from the ywd of
Street. While
Snycler-.t
being
an em-

to

nn out

-.-.r

~eel, ,

·1 dlcln1'

would

...n know w«.t ...-.-.. 'll,deP

form-·. Snrdlr chucklad.

wh~~~erhisw:or =.,e~rc":~J~~~

explaiaed to the buyer that the store
was Instrumental in helping him receive
an education , since It was one of the
buslnes"''S that had supplied funds tar
U/B's
letlc scholarships. Snyder
figur
tier's should show some
Interest In his future considering It

~~~~~~~~ ~~~ ~~"~;,er:;~:~~y~~

Sattler's would buy the hamburgers
with one provision, that Snyder
demonstrate and sell them at the store.
He donned a WhUe hat and apron,

fr"~aa -~~~gs':,f~ ".:ltd~~~~~~r~

that wee~end, making a profit ot
a
case. The next order from Sattler's was
for 1000 cases.
By the end of his first year In
business, Snyder had moved Into one
more store, h1red 45 demonstrators and
sold a million dollars worth of
hamburger. Five years later .In 1963,
Freezer Queen sales were $10 -mllllon a
year. By 1965, after expanding Its line of
frozen foods, the company had doubled
Its volume to $20 milllon .

'J

Plua
During the period when Freezer
Queen was expanding, Snyder took a
business trip to Pittsburgh where he
noticed that lr0Z81l pizza was a local
favorite . They'll really eat this up back

=on~s t~?:'lf:'.\· fro~':,.~. sold

Not long afterward, he tCjllk the
product to Canada. They liked It even
bet1er, so Snyder bought a planUhere
which had formerly manufactured
frozen Swift products and made It the
new home ot Freezer Queen Frozen
Pizza.
The Canadian gowernment, however,
lmpoaed an embargo on Imported
frozen foods so Swift asked to buy the
plant bacl&lt;. Instead of making a quick
sale, Snyder woil&lt;ed out a deal ,
agreeing to manufacture Swift products
.- (along with his pizza) tor 12 .cents _a
case. Thla was· no act of altruism; the
plant shipped about 80,000 cases a
week.
~, "That ~ was
one of the finest
experiences I've ever had," Snyder
smlled.

Inhi bited him in business. It did and Jt
didn't, he recalled.
Initially, at leest, his.. transactions

~~~~~eas'f.:'lf'/,~s,;~~d ~~~~

attent?on to scholastics. On the other
hand, it may have worked to ~;i:
advantitge because, '1hey couldn't
figure me out," he admitted.

un~s~~~Jerh~idc~t:~~~~s :~~

"entrepreneurial" in nature and that he
likes to handle. all union dealings
himself.
Last week Snyder announced he will
resign his position with Nabisco Inc., ·
now the parent company of Freezer
Queen Foods, effective the end of the
year.
More to come

True· tQ form, he ·said he will devote
mosl of his time to developing yet
another c6mpany called N•gara TradIng. ACCliffllng to the mulll'irilillonalre,
his new concern distributes imported
foods (like mandarin oranges) but saves
consumers money by going directly to
the producer and almost ellmlnatln.g the
marl&lt;etlng function .
He predicted the company will do $10
million in sales this year.
Snyder Is also opening a long-term
car parl&lt;'lng service near ..e Buffalo
International Airport.
Asked to imparl closing 'words of
advice to would-be entrepreneurs In the
audience, Snyder said, "stay single and

pu~~~o!'~~k

someone elsa must
have already thought aboutlt.''

U/B Is authorized to nominate saven
faculty members who teach under-

~~~~~~. ~w~s f~-"~:ft~nce f~
1

the SUNY-wide level.
According to Or. Walter M. Kunz, •
associate dean, DUE, the deadline tor
nominations and supporting materials
to reach the local scr~nlng COf11\'llttee
Is November 30.
Oepariment head~ have already been
asked t..o make nominations for the
recognition whlch ' carrlee a S500 cash
prize.
Criteria to be considered (and
documented) are: positive evidence that
the candidate performs superbly In the
classroom; schoiiiRihip and professional contributions; lime and concern t

~'rand~~~"~~ ~~~'.:."':.,~~on"'~~

student perlormarlce.
Those previously receiving theaa
awards are Ineligible this year:
- · They are:
·
William S. Allen, Normu Baker,·
Lealie W. Barnette, Thomas C. Barry,
Orville T. Beachley, Jr., Robert 0.
Bereman. Charles C. Bemhalmer,

~~~:· 'W,'o~a,R~chard~~et~:
Clemency, Ira S. ...co'lien, Robert M:

=H~~Ebert~~;{~1.'/~tltn~'
~

t:

~~. R~am F~:

Hemllton, Rhae Ann Hawkes, David G.

~~r.s· ~g~~3 Jj.:!~:.1""Eit!l::~~ ~:

Kennedy, Kenneth M. Kiser, James
LaFountain, Roger S. Lane, George R.
levine, A. Dean .MacGillivray, Hlnrlch
R. Mariens, and Joseph Masilng.
- ·
James McConnell, John F. Moran,
Orville T. Murphy, Catherine L.. Olsen,
John J .. Peradotto, Milton Plesur,
Robert G.. Pope, Irving H. Shames,
Joyce E. Sirianni, Norman SoikoJf,
James A. Stimson,. Gordon E. Swartz,
Warren H. Thomas, Howard Tleckellnann, Claude E. Welch, and Sol W.
Weller. •
In another action related to Chancel- ·
lor's Awards, President Ketter this week
named a· screening committee for the
Chancellor's Awards tor Excellence In
Professional Service. The panel 'includes: Shirley Ahrens, Summer Sessions; Barbara Evans, Educational
Commu.nlcatlons
Center;
Richerd
lldge, Student Affairs; Or. Richard
Jones, Health Sciences; Rita Lipsitz,
English; Or: Diane Oebacy, Physical
Education; Or. Mary Mann, CommunIcative Disorders; Grace Staerker,
Graduate School ; and Joseph Dunn,
Biochemical Pharmacology.
·

To lila -..n-, Gulf onlarad a rail c.Tlleer- ell ~aiiDI
to the
_ . Stnlal~~
I and
offantd
t~
How he managed tu get Into pro
'I refute: • penny per - basketball is another story. He knew the
Braves had a bad record but bought the
aponge. AKar all, they war. only lresh .
He sold tM e;tOnGit8 to Gulf for 10
tranchisa on the advice of his financial
advisor.
·
qanta aach, ....mrml'lll the old adage
SOme Interesting basketball anecthet 'One man'a trash, Ia another's
dotes he passed along Include:
Tile IMiddlna entnspraneur
groa.cll17,000 from ihat Impromptu
•He was able to get out or a costly
contract with Elmor&lt;&gt; Smith by putting a
l l l d - Mile IO sell Gulf six
provision In that Elmore had to measure
btfoN tilt eupptler got wtnd
7'1 " . Snyder said when he first signed
of wtl8l happening llld decided to
Smith, he thought to hlmsalf the athlete
-him off.
looked smaller than he was blllad .
....... Snrdlrhad .-lved what he
When Smith's _performance started
COMidaiWcl a raw deal from a ffolen
loild outfit, ,. deold.cl to go lnta the
slipping, SnyderClernanded that he be

~-

t -.

-load•

-bullliale.

measured . Sure enough, Smith
~11'10" .

was a

•Ernie D.'s agent got SnYder to offer
him a muttl-mlllk&gt;n dolfotr, contrect
becausa of Ernie's l~tnj:y linger work. It
- s that during negotlatloM, the
811-0iympic
twirling a
~ .round . . {..,. of ....

-.n

~-101.....--sby

E
""" a
"*' Jte
~ "AtW"--riA':'
.... """" . . . ... ...., liP
better _ . _

did £mle twirl
.,...m.-..
._....

lhltl

I

Fun fer funds.
E....,._-

'11111 ~ .......... oflha - l l o c l a t y of Clwl
atvc1enta
,... .... ~ ...... of....,_._.~.114.1natouchl-

..... ,....,...... .....,_._......._ . . . _10the~W..,,
............. -~ ............,...,._atapertyatt.rthe ..,....

�thai thought, Is at summer orientation.
Ask a typical freshman what he or she
remembers about orientation, ·he aald,
and all you'll hear about Is the parties.
Why not. put the pre.freshmen Into
actual classroom situations while
they're here? ·
_ Yes, agreed Fleischer. There are
classes ~oing on all summer. Why
=~: :h!::~""tatlon groups all In on
And why couldn't the prolae&amp;OII who
teach thoae clalsea, talk to the
orientation vlsltora? Franc;e wondwecl.
We ahouldn'llet that aor1 of contact
walt until the first WMke of the fall,
Fleischer said.
" It's a zoo around here then," he
indicated. Yet, " somehow clalsea do
meet, pecple do lind the right rooms,

-1

~1y ·r:.~"~=r. ~o:~~':i':i'~:'~~

of enthusiasm In spite of the
circumstances. The! pecpie lewn here
at all continues to be a great mtot~'

=: : ==':"':,

edvr:'.::::nr.~=~Ou~~~g

Whet - ' I I ................. aakl?
Anna K. F..,.,., who spent - . 1

:~
Wlln't sure

hOw

~=
advlaement
can

lmJII'Ofltia orientation '
•The time to begin to foster closer
studl!"l-lecully refatlonlhlps, Rosen-

help In the groping and mtatak•mal&lt;lng
which lreq.-tly charw:terim the first
two undergr8duale ,..a. 'What could a
oclanoe protanor really have told you?"

she aMad Aoa.otlal .
J..,. BIMI of the

Division

of

~,:.~~"&amp;:mu:.t:T~g;:!

A '-"tY - p o o l
sun, lha hwd-led corps of DUE
lldvi1011 (12to handle an undergraduate
population of 12,000-14,000) would like
to 81tmltah a POOl of faculty [810urce
peraoos to wllom they could refer
undecided fnlahmen and oophomoreo
lor an "Informed eocond opjnlon" on
queotlono o f - ChoiceOnce a otuctent malcel a choice and Is
acc.pted Into a department, he or she
h8l II)08aa to a faculty edvl- In that
field . H'l the flral two yews where
1111111 occur.
The YideotaPed 111ocueolon1 was put
logM!Ier, Btatl e&amp;yo, . . I oOn~US·
,......alelna tool to be uaed When she
.wl Olhera lrorn DUE ,.., ]ll_ daanl and
Cllplrtment heads and cllNctty to
~ groupa, In 1111 attwnpl to enlist
1
jllrUclpetton In the advl-'

=t'

the 11HW English pro1811011 _..

Student-faculty rel&amp;liona

=

8

Fl~~:fi. ;g~l &amp; ~~~::'g

•student-teacher lewnlng relationship.

~~!~.~~~:

~~...:=i~·:;

otaharad acadwnlc lnt-ta. "ft . . . , . ,
. somehow awkwwd to adviM a atudent"
before you have taught that Individual,
Flelechw eald.
•t don't want to talk teltllden1a about
GPAI and r e q d l - lnate.l of
Sh~
~.- -Wickert
com
ned. "LLII - fffld out -.out a
11
1'1 ln181ieclu&amp;l abllftlel and
lnt..-..tl." ftNI, -.cl "'IMMII I'll know
hOW 10 edvlw hiiQ."
.
~ he Aid, either he or
FlelechW alta down With IIICII student
whO h.- made up , . 01 ..... mind to ..
an Enaliah majOr to 110 wtt81 ft
- ~l'lncllnO outllbOut Nqui....Ca
fr.... Datalogaanclon.- - n d

=-:

.::

..... - t a to ...... - " "
projllcl, henm.cl. A l8w

apent.

~~=
~=- -~...:
_
••, . . good."

..__
----..,.."'......,.

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

ut

I

f

It takes expwlence and IMming to ~~e-~
a good advisor, she ooncl\lded. But
•any prof..- whci Ia lnt..-..ted CM do
II."
Interest, It -..a, Ia the eeaence of
!heart.
-

United Way progress

u~ Ed~~&lt;*Jon Advl.ment

Olfloa (who..!!!!!. : ' h w the taped
tw -.cl HIM Sedita of DUE) auggeeted
thai blalmlng atudento often don'
know wn.t queatlon1 to ask. DUE
advl-. try to anticipate difficulties
and raJ• q.-tlono lor lhwn. But
frequen.);!~lha eald, fnllhmen "don'
listen.
haft ao many preconcepliono the! a
experience 11 often the
only way to aet them to taka another
- look at IOmetlilng.
·

.

�~.!!.'.::~ ~. ...,.~

Nowetnbw2,1978

Japane.se
exchange
understudy
J..,.,_

A
language program 11J0118Cnd by the Counqll on lnt.ernetiORIII Studlet hopes to establish an
~program between U/8 and
_ lnl8rM!lonal Christian Unlverslty"'(ICU)
~
lnTokyo.
Although negotiations are not yet
complela, two ocholarahips are evaillblalor the Surr.mer Intensive Japanese
f'loOIW!IId ICU, 11179.
~ atudenta should contact
Mac ~ Michl!, coordinator, JBJ&gt;lAnguage end Studies Program,
COuncil on International Studies,
Richmond Quad, Ellicott, 636-2075 or

~

U/8 JapaMN Language Pro11f81111S open to all Untwrslty students
at vario'\18 levels of lang,uage compatency, .. wall aa to Individuals from
the community. Emphaals Is on
ecademlc and llngulatlcs aapects of ths
t.nguage and on culture.
A workshop. " Intercultural CommunIcation between America and Japan" Is
also Included. 'The wori&lt;ahop oiJera
leCtures In such dloclpllnes as

t~:.~·~~~,o~~~~: ~r~~~

' administration, and linguistics.
Language lnatruction Is aimed at
developing lour basic skills: listening
cornprehenalon, ~lng, reading , and
wrlllng. Sludenta ere expected to attend

t.n,."~~:=~ion,

contact Ms.

}lllchll at836-2075.

College B staging
a·wacky comedy
The College 8 Players, with help from
IRC, will p&lt;eaent their version of Joeeph
K..-llng's Arsaolc end Old Lace,
Wed~-Frlay, N.,.....ber 15-H.
·
Ol..ctad by Ronnie Benvenlaty and
tw two aaalatenta, Stu 8t'1JIIn and

::'..""~c:::'.,~.~~~P~~n

The play Ia a oomacly about two old
111111*1, "'Martha and Abby 8.-ater,

tllelr ttww

~~aPMWa

(Mor11mer: ' a

=;='1~-.!:::::~
wttfl an Identity prublern), and the

troublaa they encounter when the ladles
11y to puque · a hobby of thelra rrieklnG old .... happy.
The~. • group of atlldants with
an 1nt.erwt In lheldra although not
~ly ~ l'lllljora, ere an
-valle group whO hope the ehow will
be aucoaat
they can oontlnue with.
alftU&amp;k:al next aamaeter.
T~ ere SUIO lor "Cellage 8 and
IRC feapayera, $2 Jot U/8 atudenta and
aenlot cltl-a, and $2.150 lor all otflera.
They avallllbla Ill Squire Ticket
Olfloaon Main atr.et and In tfla Collage
8 Offtoaln Porter Quad at Amtwat.

a ao

VIet vets are

U/ , GaiJery-join In outreach program
The U/B Art Department Is cooperatIng with the Albrlght, Knox Gallery In a ·
unique outreach program which uses

~J~~~'r~~o ;:C::'~,'~u~ft/xlng

art
This semester, six art education
majors from the campus are working
with the program, helping - provide
activities and lnstwctlonal programs at
a - lety of commun1fY cantera and

-~~a~y~~n¥1-: &amp;:r~~~~'c!':t~

Delaware, the Erie County "Detention
Genter, the lmniaculale Heart of Mary
1

~':'::,1~. ~e~::;,. 'B~nl~,u~dth: ~

County Home and Infirmary are
repreMntatlve of the 33 community
agencies which benefit.
Individuals aerwd rangf! from the very
young to the very old. Soma suffer hJ&gt;m
mental or phyalcal handicaps.
U/B'a aaaoclatlon with ·the effort·
began IMt y-. The outreach program
Itself Ia 14-yaara old.
· ·

11na . _ . ondlt

•

;

Sludenta gat three aanlester hours
cnodlt by ::ring up for Art .a-1 ,

=~
or ,:"~~~ '..~~
Problema In Art Education," - In the
apr1ng.

•

Taken under either heading, the
cour.se meets the "methods" requirement for teacher certification In art
educeuo·n by New York State. Since
what a student. actually does varies
from semester to semester, the course
can be taken twice (the second lime,
usually, as an independent study
project). Students with questions
should check with Jeanette Harris, who

~~~~~~::_ W:a~u~~~~7.-:::fcl:.on~~~

~~

w~

At the steff sessions at the gallery,
students are exposed to museum
management behlnd-the-scanes and
also learn about various materials and
techniques they aren't exposed to In the
course of their studio cl•l8s worlllng with paper machs or making
masks, lor example.
Studio art maJors aren't the only ones
who cen enroll, Ma. Harris explains.
Students In aoclal work, occur.::lonal

~':,11~~:::.::::':71~=~~

"alive and
again," Harrls
wanta to Inform students. At one point
weloorne.
It had been "retr811Ched:" · ·•
•
The Community Ouireach Program at
Students who enr~ll attend ths r
the gallery, which Ia now directed by
weekly staff meeilng of the {&gt;ulrNch
Franlt Viola, hlmaelf a practicing ertl,t ·
Program and must visit one of the
and trained art educator; began In 1984.
participating community centera Initiated aa a neighborhood &lt;native ert
week where they are reat&gt;onslble for
program (one of the firat of Ita kind In
ooolluctlng an activity In .a field~ the nation), It waa aimed at expoalng
their Interest. Students ..~1(&gt;11&lt; with ·
children to baalc ert conoapta -and
of five ertlats who are on tha "Pro!
materials. In 1970, It na-chrlatanad
Outreech•ataff. T&lt;/le ert galleey provides
"color wheels." Mobile ctaearooms
(renovated buses) added that y - made
transportatiOn to thslleld sites.
·
It posalble to expand activltlaa to
An aiel to IMming
_ljbrarlei, senior cltlzena centera,
This field worll sxperlenca, Ms.
tiouslng projects, etc.
Hams saya, enables a student to learn
. U/11..-letlon Ia - " ' - ftrat
· first-hand whet klnds of things he or
shs.does best.and what age groups hs
In the fall of 1977, tfla program again
or she relates to most effectively.
=~=thath:f~~" A~y.O:.::~t~
The joint vanture allows ert atudentato
use the gallery end Ita reaourcea u an
educetlonaltool Willie Introducing them
to a wide range of community cantera
where they can gain pnoctlcel t-lng
ly,

ex~~it~dents Per11l:lpated during

the first - ' e r of the uaoclatlon,
eight In the aecond aamaeter, and alx
now. "Enronrnent In tha prodUCitva
Interchange Ia projected to lncr.. aa
the.. actFtltlae can be coonllnalad," a
gallery apokeaparaon aaya.
The Alllrlllht-Knox prvgram haa
brought !rae ert tnatructlon 6nd
materlale to • total of 1CM,2115 atudenta
alnoa Ita lncaptj9n. ln addlttonto 1101111
- out to thaae lndiYiduala, llllempta . .
to brlflg groupe from aac11 of
tha participating Center&amp; Into 1M gallery
for what'lor moat of tflern Ia tMlr llrat
expertenoa with an ert mu-m.
The J)IOIIram'a live lull-lima lrllata .
(four proftclent In the Ylaual erttt and

m-

0

::~..: ~Aar;.:.:

r ..::.':t

- errangamant provtclee Native American
high acllool atudenta an oDI&gt;Ofnlnlly lor
both _,1111 and 1.-nfrig (two era
employed thla aa llludant

aldaa) . •
· · So auccaaarurhaa the program bean
tflat CETA In Buffalo picl&lt;ad II aa one of
two outatandlng proJecta II hal haiDed
dewelop In WeafiWn New York. The oilier
• Red c.- Coronery&lt;Pu'-Y
Raauecltlllon unit which hal bean
cradltad wllll.vtna at '-11-llftt.
"Wa.,. 111ua aq'*-1. wttflam.a.tng
'activity,· aaya or. MillY "~ a
laoluNr ill the Albright-Knox ~IOD

-·ao,
can

a1w
ballefta.
An
ton 01 and
familiarity
with ert
GIIMfle a llfa 111at might '

at laall

=..o:::--=.~ouehad

by

�I

~~ffalo is not the pits,

DOCUMENTS

1t s the 'core·, Arnette.says

Policy for non-academic
use of ,.fac-ilities is listed · ·

Glenn Arnell' Ill, colorful head of
Buffalo's new conventlon cen.ter, was
told by' a high aohool counselor that he
•wasn't college material" and likely
would never make the grade. He
couldn1 forget that bleak prophecy, so
when he graduated, he took great
r.::r.~:r/1!."g him a short note-that

The' Polley for NonA - l e UH of Facll-, p r l - In Ita

EDITO-R'S NOTE:

:::~=' '1.."'..:..."":: ~

T-

Arnette Ia a firm believer that one

uoe Un-IJ lodll- · All
lndiYiduato and~-- ihea-lon
of tlloH -a ~ I n - In Baird,
Capon, Nor1on,
or
Halla muot contact Linda B. W-. Olfloo or
Fodlltleo Planning, .U Cn&gt;H1 Hall
~36-2614). Sj&gt;Ke ,...uoeto lor Balrdi ~n .

need&amp; a challenge In order to produce.

"That's why 1 came to Buffalo, a city
~didn't want a convention center."
The &amp;m.huaiaatic, glib Arnette, who
sometimes seems more like a rlngma,ter than an administrator, addreSsed members of the Western New
Yorl&lt; Personnel and Guidance Association )ast week at a conference at
Amherst. The meeting was held In
conjunction with the , career and
~\:;:"'en! offices at U/B aod Buff!l)o

"'.!:i, ~ ,.to!l- !:,.~ =:id •:::
o~mktod dlroctlr to thole rospactiYe

liked" by area poUticlans. But then
again, he reaaona, he's " not runn ing In
a popularity contest. •
Building a convention center in
downtown Buffalo was a "risk," he
admitted, but a "g"ood one" . that will
bring jobs and create revenue. Arnette
noted the "Convention Center already

r::lo~e~1 =~';,eran't;J:~e~~ed~~~

opens his newby hotel, more employment opportunltfea will emerge.
· · Amalie linda It hard to understand
1

~w~~:,O=J. ~:"no~ t~~p

e:.mn,';:
downtown hotels ''that aren't In good
shape" have a 72 per cent occupancy
rate, while hotels elsewhere In metropolitan Buffalo report 86 · per cent
occupanc~.
•
The sole hotel In the area which
Amelte feels Is "close to first class• Is
the SheAtton Eaal , end thatla In

~~~r.:ro-ne:~·a ~.fir::~~~~;;

that • can ~ accommodate prospectiveconventioneers. Otherwise, he fears
those who vial! Buffalo will create an
avalanche of bad publicity
""their .
needs go unrnet . •
·
Turning to the mld-Cc:tober gnlhd
opening featl.tttea for the canler,
Arnette reported that the Renaissance

aa

r;.:"\';::;~J:'of':l:'~a~': ~~n~:
three decades.
·
Cartor and the au...;

jau~~ ~~~="'l".!t~=n~:~~~

day late ani! a dollar short. ~ considering
lie senl his regrets about not being able
1
1

~~:~o~~~ ·We ~~ t:"~ed o~ ~Pn!

polltlcians but not lor the people,"
'
Ameile protested.
Among other luminaries he Invited to
the grand opening was the Queen of
England. She also sent her regrets. '"Ws
wantea the Queen of England to CO(lle

-.

rnenation ofllcee.

Ities.

To permit the appropriate schedulln~ of

!:~~~Ogttw;h~~se~:,ce a~~ ~~~at ~g:
observance of requirements for financial
responsibility, all requests for use ·of any

~~: f~.~~e~~~ ~rr~ch~a,~=d:~~
~~r:~m~r:~S:~~edi~~etr:~~Yi'~!eot '}~~mr:s

Not ~;pits; but the core
Arn tle said Western New Yorkers
should wake up to the fact that they are
"all working to supf.":'rt New York City.
We are not the pits, • he continued, "but
the core. We are the backbone of the
State.'"
Taking a shot at those who refuse to
go downtown because of the "bad
neighborhood ," Arnette told the - aud- ·
lence that "If It wasn't for the
mlnorl tles, downtown Buffalo would
have died 12 to 15 years ago."
_
Ceiling Chip""pewa St. " most Interest·
ing," Arnette said the only difference
between that section and Boston's
famll!l "combat zone" Is that " they have
Hollywood lights In BOstOn ." '"- ·• ·
Although he feels Buffalo should
"ciOllh up. Its act,• he says elimlnatlng

Planning , 434 Crofts Hall.
The request should be made on forms
provided by that office and should contain
all needed Information, .Jnclud lng but not
limited to :
1. Name and function of the group ;

can tell me how,-yoli'll make yourself a
fortune :~"
·
· • Amette_eitlpl)asized that ~ ~e .Qonven·
tiOD Cenler as Well as 1he amenities of

halls);

~: ~~ere=~~~?nrm:=~~:;

4 . University factftttea, food service,
perSonnel requ ired , and other special
needs ·
5. BUdget and sources of funds .
The Coordinator for Non-Academic Sched- .

~~~;j~t.t~nC:~n~et~~~~~~~a'liur~~·

space requested , support facilities and
propriety.
•Coordi nator for Scheduling and Inventory {for classrooms, lecture halls and
allied soaces):

•Oiraetor or Beai!h, Ph!'Ol C"al Education

and Athletics (for athlettc buUdlngs and

grounds);
·
•A:s lstant Vice President for Auxiliary

rc,O,:~~~~it ~~ tll~mg:&gt;b~!':Y"· I~T~

Enterprises (for dormitories and dining

•Assjstant Vice President f.or Phyak:at
~~~~~~~a~?~g ~~r-1 .c~pus grounds
•Designated officers of gfoups that hold
space on extended asslgnmenL ·
/

do,~M~of~~n':t~f~~:o;~~ta!\:~su~ a."
Western New Yorkers and be counted,
we will lind ourselves sitting around fn
our little sub"urban territories looking at
- ~~~o~\t~e~hetto created by those
Arnette believes the Buffalo Convention Center can present a challenge to
area residents as well as instill in them
a sense o! hope tor a brighter future for
thecity.
•
Western New York has an oppbrtunity and you , the people, are holding Its
, future . If you cart! believe Til it, you
can't possibly expect others you'll be
wOrking with to give a damn ."
-

E

"'--=

al programs with extracurricular opportun-

to the queen of the Great Lakes," he
satd .
•
lamenting how Buffalo often gets a
bum rap· and the short end of State
finances, Arnette Insisted, "It's time to
stand up and be counted. Buffalo Is not
the problem ; it's the State of New
York.'"

Holiday--Brunch

hfi*I,N.Y.14214

t~es :1~r:~:~::!W:'~r ~~~~~~ ~u~~~~no
r:~~:~s~~~~=~~~2:t~~ ~u~r~~~

Amette

:

c~rdt::!~~:}~r =~-~~~~wrche':luti~~~

Office of Fa_cill tles Planning, tor conformity
to ' State_ University regulations ·ana·
University at Buffalo policy, Including the
follqwlng COf!dltlons : • ·

·

~O~~~enf~~~: g~e~~bl=!~t ~=
Untverslty.

·

~n~~~ r:e:c:zn~~~.~en~uJ:~~~~
ment of ~reement for Unlvers~ty groups) are
eKecuted and filed.
In a case where clear

Preaident for Finance and ManagemM'It prior
to the event, and a sta1ement of actual
Income and expenses filed following the
event. A contract similar to that used by

=~~~~~hr:l!ra~~~spo":~~~~~=~~::

large.
2. Student or Student Group Request• lor
Campus Ares or Cl.,srooms.
The .six recognlzed - student aaeoclatlona

L~~~SSfu~~~·:!~~:u~:,s~~~~~.=i

Association , Dent~l Student Auociatlon,
Law Student Aaaoclatlon, and Millard

Fillmore College Student Aaaoclatlon), tha

SECTION I

s rh';;" Faculty Club is apon-lng'8 Sunday Brunch on December 3, from i 1
~ t'lril;11i'J!. In the Talbert Dining Room , Amherst CemP,us. Adults $3.50 ...
l!l!rtPer-..chlldren under 16, S2.75. l'lfants will be admitte&lt;! free:
The menu includes: Bloody M81Y8. orange juice." scrambled eggs, glaz.ed
ham, link uuuoges, chlcllen a Ia king o - home-style biscuits, pofato
i?lhCIIkea with ~pleaauoe, molded jelto salad, assorted relishes, pastries,
C:US. fruit tarts, fnllt.
, •
.
~Ions .,. requlrad 811d beCause of space limitations will be
ed In the order In which they are received. Checks should be made
le to The Faculty Club and eent with the re_...tion "form to 265
man Hall, 3435 Main SliM! , Buffalo, N.Y. 1421• not latw than
..,_.}',JoiUWH'flber22. No tickets will be Issued- present yournamalll
lila Cblr. For further lnformatjon phone 831-3232 between the hours 0111.
ll.m. Wid2p.m.
•
.
.
·

To:===rAB
. ..............

1

r

Politician a don'tlite him

llk:r;a,~~ ~~~~:'~\!1~~ ~~e:~n.9no~t

n

jl;

-

of
Will

lor
with
and

~~~~~~rs:~c:s ~~~.:dd b~ ~=

President for Student Affalf8 .. . . tholl
representative bodies from wh.ich a student

g~ ~~~~rn~. ?:.O.~~:.t t~~~;h ~:;::::,
~~~:rr~~~~~::h~~h:J{Yrfre:•

accepting all flnanclai reeponaiblllty for
damage to University property and for
·.Inord inate cleaning requirements. If feea we

~~~rg~~hel~~:'ta~~d :r:be~:v ~
University authorized fiscal and dlaburslng
agent, financial statements ahowlng groaa
income ·and Itemized expen181 expected,

m~ ~~~~:'orr1~ &lt;;;, r~~~~c;&gt;~.=~ .~

Operations and Systems prior to the eY&amp;nt,
antl · a statement of actual Income and
expenses filed following the event. A

~n"~~tys~~~~~ t~~h~ =lr!ltt"~;~

event or the damage potential, or both, are
large.
..
3. Non-University Groups and lndl'lldu•lt.

~u~ro~~~~~~~~r~h:n~:~~f.t~~etwl~
~~~ ~~:'~~g~~ec~~~~g:v~~~~"!:,'::'YObtaJn
~rr:,~~~rs:I~~~A~h:cJe~s~~~~tt~

administrative office ..or recognized atuderit·
cro~m. lndJcated in ~lnts 1 1and .2 of
c. Groups or Individuals not sponsored by ran academic·unlt, administrative office, or ....

~=~~ed

=-=

approved contfKt.

g~:. --~oit\~
.-:

t~S ~~~~¥U:L~7ve~~~ P:~~~:"ree:.-".:9

by the Director of Pubifc Affairs pr1or to

retaaee.

e. The group- or lndiYidual rill')' be required
to pay to the Unlvenoily all 110~1 lncutred br

the Unl~lty as a reault of the ~Wenr
Security, Maintenance. materials, etc.),
ncludJng damages, if any, and must be

!

:!~~~~o !~f,n ~~~~~rw;~~~~~~te:qu~
ments for Insurance cover~~ge for the eYent.

�. . .zizta

\

Mid-East
lll.ternational College is looking
in that direction this fall because
it's Russell Stone's area of interest
The International College Fall lecture
..,.... Ia lool&lt;lng at the Mldd.l e East
beC*IN Ruaeetl Stone, a fellow In the
College thla - t e r, has been closely
eyeing that naglon for some time.
·
LUI year, Stone was In Israel doing
on public opinion .,Oils
conducted alnce 1967 aa a way of
-'uatlng the manner ln which Israelis
to lsauea of war and · peace. The
lludy - done with two others - will
-ve In book form within the next

-a.

C·ot;:e~e'r:p'lf~~-w

for compar_!ble
Stone will highlight some of his
findlrlga In t~e second In the
International College lecture series,
~:~:~no~~;~ber 6 , at 8 p.m. In Red
To round out that series [which began
with Egyptian-born UN careerlst Yassln
Ei-Ayouty), he hopes also to line up a
spokesman for the Israelis to provide
Insight on that nation's reactions to the
Camp David-accords.
1
'.
International College has as Its
focus, Stone says, not so much the
deVelopment of credit courses In
International or area studies (there are
plenty of those already under auspices
of various study groups, the Council on
International Studies, etc.). IC's role Is
rather to provide " supplementary
experiences," Informal contacts- be, _ , American students and foreijlnenl that will trigger students' Interest in
International ewnts.
Stvdentln-t 'di-lntlng'
That's no easy task, he points
out. Suprisongly, ' "di5"ooolntlngly"
enough, lllere's not a · lot ot student
Interest In International affairs these
da~nce the - i y 70&amp;, stone says, the
vtetnfl'1 altermlllh and recession seem
to have combined to tum students
lnw.rd, to make them more Interested
In occupetlonallasues.
·
Within the social sciences, there has
been a shift of lritereot to the analysis of
the Internal AmiiQcan society.
, , .,. .
Students at lJ/B, Stone says, are
"Interested" in the Middle East all right,
bulthatlnterestls primarily partisan. A·
large contingent of Jewlah students Js
at
1
-Israel A ab
rid stud 15
~; moit 'par1wo faahlo~ly

:.'_PJ

=.:

pro-Palestinian .
But, In Stone's view, there's an
of objective analysis. That's

=~-.;:,~~:
~
nd
dl

:::l~~ .:,~

"";'0't.-sera~ . of Israeli pubfic
opinion were carried out using the dats
bank ot a non-profl1 organization, the
~811tute of AJI&gt;IIed Social
Since the 1187 war, that IIQIIf'ICY has
~ riQUIIIr eurwya of the Israeli '
populetlon. Before the Yom-Kippur W!!!
In 1873, the polla were COI!ducted four
tlmee 8 yew;
then, they'w .,_,
~
. two .....,. end

=•· == ··:

....... ........,....._
EKfl 8UMIJ cown several toplca.
· 8olh commen:tal firma and government

~~r;c"':::.r:'

rn:'thu~ beat:~ust~
q~..:;• :~

=~~~~ ~7,0:~ '::

_ _ . t o whiCh p.lnt a picture of the ...,.. of ~ well-being In iarNII
~_
The ' - wllh ""'ICit theae
~lona lire....., makeS It possible
to..._ In fl,. daUIII how the nation"

,..q

to apec111c _ , , ., 1n1m
- l c Cflwa to lntemetlonal In-

ciiMnla.

Tttt au~"~eY _, alao be (and Ia) uaed

~.f

~

1

IIOW the nalon . , _, now 11 the

~-- In ~. the people's

.,......_ to ghe '-* occupied
IIIC . . . . . . .'L-,
~·

Stone feels, Is to watch how feelings
about all these Issues jump around in
response to events of the day.
Charting the fluctuations
.
His rasearch on the data gathered In
the polls has yielded a sheaf of graphs
charting these fluctuations over lime.
Significant events of. each ~ear are:
Identified on the charts to pinpoint
reasons for each shift.
For example, Israeli perceptions
of the Arab Interest In peace soared
alter the 1967 war, only to decline to an
all-time low as the so-called 'War of
Attritlon ".continued alter the cease-fire.
U.S. Secretary o f State' Wllli~m -Rogers'
plan lor peace (Issued shortly before
the Kissinger era) again -caused those
perceptions to rise'.
.
In the Waite of the Yom Kippur War, at
least half the Israelis Indicated they
believed the Arabs were ready fGr .

B"N";c~;.,i~ern '1..':'.~ vi~~:~~~~~~fa~~~~~~

again as Israelis began to think the
world was turning against them.
- Sadat's visit to Israel last yaar

r.~~jl~e~~h~~ocg~~? ~!~~rb~r~e~~

In pu ulng peace. Less than two
months later, however, as conditions
worsened, less than 50 per cent were
wi lling to trust Arab Intentions ..
Stone says that the current conciliatory steps between Egypt and Israel are
not surprising. The ·Israeli man-ln-the-

~!~:~bl~a~ls=:t~~tl~g:pf~h.fn'0[~

Syria.

_

-

Does the government watch?

Is the government of Israel a close
:::~~~~lst~r ';,'.'r~~ ~~l~l~n~~e them
Not conspicuously so, Stone says. In
fact , It sometimes seems
that
Menachem Beg in chooses to Ignore
them -totally.
When the premier said at the time of
Sadat's visit that the public would not
stand _ for giving bacjt any occuple&lt;r
territory, the, polls ~howed to the
contracy that only 5 per cent of the
public was adamant on that Issue. The
vast majority of Israelis salil they would
agree to " some" territorial conces_slons.
The public was clear, too, on j ust
what they would give· back. Once again
1
~~~~~~gtyhpS.,\~E: 1per
1'~~i~~~a;·~t::,~
~s\'~,eJ. ~u~~~~~ ~~~n~a\:i~nf:.'n~~

40 per cent of those polled said the:t
would return The Gaza Strip, but less
than 20 per cent b~~Cked concessions
concernlng the West Bank. Practically
~~~~:a':,s tf.:l~h~::::"s~~~:.Stumlng all of _
Of ·course, said Stone, public opinion
data Is subject to Interpretation. Begin
could loo!&lt; at the data and say,
accurately enough, that very, very few
Israelis (only seven per cent) wo.11ld
agree to returning all occupied lands.
Sociologist Stone not.S that nothing_
-parable to the'l.araell poflal!lxlsts in

t"''~i~l Th~ ~~noAm~~:l

~e Gallu~ll

on

asks WMI&lt;Iy questions

presidential

per1ormance,

Saturday is Minimarket Day - time
lor an evept that has come to mean the
unofficial opening of the holiday
season on campus.
..
.....
Sponsored by the Women's Club, the
market Is a poc;ket-slzed bazaar, a block
of the best ol the Allentown Show ~
transplanted to campus. This yeer for
the first time, It will be located In the
Fillmore Room at Squire. .
Individuals from both campus and
community are welcome to ·orowse and
talk -with craftsmen as well as buy.
Special · actlvities lfre planned lor
children. A donation ($. 50 for adults;
S.251or children) Is requested.
.)Vhen the doors open at 10 a.m.,
Saturday, several members ol the U/B
lamlly wfl l be manning booths, In
addlt1pn to other craftspeople.
Mrs. Otty Snyder will again have
rugs, wall hangings and things to waar
which she waaves both on and off t he •
loom .
.
Mrs. Pat Thomas, in associ ation ~th
the Amherst Garoen Club, will offer, as
she has in - a l years past, "all sizes

~ s!'.."flrt~eo:s ~:nf~fot!i:' m':Ri~~

but

1

=~Co~r~fon~~ b"h~~-p ln lon _ :~:.:'fi~u~:;;.e:J~~:: ~,1";h~t.;
Can't do It...
Sociologists and other social researchers in this nation can't get the
fine readings that one can get In IsraeLThboerthe~.wl1oeekndydoques
1drutmlonssucanch 88plntpolhh!'!
·al
~
""'lch took hold alter 1he Yom Kippur
W. and the 18111811 Incursions Into
Lebanon, and the nation-wide eletlon,
al1110at euphoria, wtilch followed the
Anttbbe raid and Sedat's vlalt. It's evan
poaaltlle to tell without Ul!lng when
Israelis feel realty II8CUI'II about peace.
Then, says Stone, great" dl-tlstiiClion with the economy end other
Internal mattera ..,.,_to be expreeaed.

1

Noa-Profit 0,.

u.s. ~ostagc:.
PAID

··,

Buffalo, N.V
3

"'!Jirit No.

Baads available In the Brody-Rels
collection are mede of ·glass, stones

~~c~ 1~.:,m~;!'J.~~· ~~;.o~01 :Chn~:

beads, and shells - beads from all over
thewortd.
·
·
Mrs. Brody brought some back from
Japan and Denmark this yaar (Including
lleautlful Czech-made glass beads), and
Mrs. Rels collected a number. of
different kinds on a recent trip to the
Southwest.

So~t~~T!J rag dolls, stuffed toys, a
::i;';;,:;en~:.ll·~t"&amp;d ~~s. f~'::~
~;:,:~~ :~c- , will be shown by Mrs. Emily

Prices range from $4 to around S1.li
lor the macrame; there ans some "really
nice Items" avalllt!le, she Indicates.
Mrs. Jenkins has been doing this
kind of work as a hobby lor a number of

Y.:f~ ?~ykl~s ':':"~.:~;::.:,;

::-ii.

been able to conoentrate
'111&amp; will
be her first Minimarket appllliNnCII .

$25.

~~J""'.J:u;~~ ln:l~s·;nar~ t~n ' B•:,~~A~'::!=and Mrs . Ellen Rels,

________:: :;: :,__--:-----------:;======-]

""*"'-·

Minimarket '78

11

~'=' a~ e~~ao!.w~g~(~'::~~~:

cords, threads, thongs, etc.) needed to
make ;e-lry with those ~s .
The two women will have a few pieces
ol jewelry for sale that they have mede,
but the idaa Is to do It yourself.
Space will be provided and the
necessary tools will be aval lable 101"
fashioning the ~ you select into a
work of jewelry..art of your own design .
Mrs. Rats and Mrs. Brody will be /tappy
to offer advice, suggestions, and 8
helping hand.
Mra. Reis notes thet the beads-by
themaet-,..... from threa for • penny
to • much aa $4 apieCe. The findings .

::,~y .~·~~

beada lor • little a 10 cents. ll'a a
lor lhltclllklf*l, Mrs. Rels
not111- Strangely enough, she says,
clllklnan tend fo.be raont creettve et this
thlln uro--upa. Men 8hot,llcl enjoy It,
coa, 1lllll rilale jewelry
good project

f«J,'C,. l~o tie&lt;"".'

. - : • • has

_

-

lnlerN11'-1 table
Also featured will be an lnnovetlon
Introduced last fall by the Women's
Club's International CommiUea, a
special table of homemede baked
goods and crafts cnsated by U/B foreign
students Br)d/or their wl-.
" Where etee can you find homemade
egg rolls next to baklava?", Sandra
Pearson, ·chairman of Minlmarktl 78,
asks.
This special teble affords foreign
students and their families a chance to
par1iclpate In a University event and
also helps them earn some needed
spending money, Mrs. Pearson notes.
The International Table did a brisk
business I&amp;St yeer.
The craft ahow and sale will run from
10 a.m. to 5 p.lll. In the Fillmore Room
and the ed)acent cafeteria.
About 50 craltapeople .., elq)8Cted to
participate.
•
.Retreeltments -wlll be available In the
· Rathskeller In the Squire Hall basement.
In edditlon to Mrs. ,..._, other
mernbenl 11f the MlnlrnwMI commlllea
..,, Mrs. Etiaa Wareham; Mra. llettv
laade; Mra. Lelia Baker, and Mrs. Judith

Hartman .

'

�'/
a publicatiQn 9f

The Office of
Cultural Affairs
Eodoer

-s....:a. _,editor

To keep track of
U/B's cultural
events through
November 30, save
this magnet

-~~~========~~====~~~~~
~
Boom and.Crash
Tonight at 8, one of America's moot
prominent and most interesting eoonomisto, Robert L : Heilbroner, will deliver
t he 1978 James FenLon Lecture. The
subject is of great concern - anxiety may
be a more accurate word to all
Americans: .. Facing Our Economic Future:
Inflation, Taxes, Survival."
Dr. Heilbron.. heads the Economies
Deportment of New York'.-Ne:V School for
SociAl Research , and is a ptolifie and
best ..lling writer. His latest hook. which
bas just been published by NortOJ).'"'is
Beyond Boom and Orad , and mueh of the
contents originally appeared in the New
Yorker magulne. Heilbroner will talk this
evening ln an informal and wide·rangj.ng
way about what he considers to be the&lt;Diain
problems faeing espitalism today: inllation,

government (the paradox or growing
suspicion of government even as external
pressures are increasing government's
role), and tax reform (e.g. Proposition 13) ~
. This is close-to-the-bone material for most
segments of society.
The free lett~, arranged ·by the Office
of Cultural Affairs, will be followed b1 a
question and answer period wit.b the
artiepl.U Dr. HeUb.roner, and will be beld
in the Woldman Theatre on the Amherst
campus. If you've never beard of Woldiiian
Theatre, don't despair. Just follow the
directional signs (starting at either the
Maple Rood or Milleraport entrances) Lo
Parking Lot 5, behind Capen/Nortoo, and
ask the campus polid!!tl!an posted outside
the building for further guidance, if you're
still uncertain. Woldman Theatre is above
.the Nort.on Cafeteria, and can be entered by
taking the c:afeteria stairs, or fromoutside.

Folk Dancing ·
It seems that aaurprismgly lArgo number
of people, repreoentlJog many walb' ol life
- from nostalgic ethnics Lo Ioven of danoe
Lo lawyers and oc:ientioti - are not cinly
fond of folic dancing, tbey are addic:ted Lo it.
In the same way that avid tennis pla1ers gn
t.o tennis eamps t.o Improve their skills-and
enjoy good matebea, or that bridge
• enthusiasts travel from t.ournament Lo
Lournament, so does the folk dancing cult
convergejn various cities, to daoc:e and to

learn.
oCeadnodoo- pop

t.o ....tribute to tbe ._n of The Ceater
inelud.S ~ Bulhlo . - _ Lorna
Hill. as Jenny (tbe role~ crMted by · far . Theatre a-.rdl. Tio:kets t.o • tbla
perfo.......,.. are 1215. and induclo "' after
Lotte Lenya); Ted KryeUo u Madleath.
E1ioe Pearlman as Mn. Pooeb~Q. ud theatre diJulei- at tbe aew Coanation
Center;
eaB s.Jiy 'fraeler, IIIIC-81117.
popular - · J ...... .MeGuiN (tbe CallboD
ol lut - · · "Tbe Tempeot" in Suhoeq- performaneet (Nov&lt;mber 9
thro.,P November 12; November 1l
Delaware Pari&lt;), u Mr. Peaehum. Jolu! B.
Emmert ia tbe Stroot Sinp-, wbq_ opens thro.,P Novembor 19) will be Ill. re£Ular
rib tbe well·kaown "Ballad ol MaCk tbe priceo
clirectory).

&lt;-

KD!fe."

PoiW Peoebum ia

played b7 ainpr·
Mary Elilaboth BroWll. and ber
ri-{al. Lucy La&lt;Ut. by ~ Gates.
llitbanl Weap. a ctfl.ed CIDIIIit adGr (be wu
tbe clnmkeb Stefaao in
~) lA
lUck tbe KDife'a priDciJ* belldlmaD.
Moaeyiii&amp;Mw.
.
Britioll ad« DIYid Lomb ia Police

n.

CommiaoioDw Jadie ("T!pr") Jlrvwu.
()peDiD« lliPt Ia W-.day, November
8, at 8 PM. and will lie eolollrUod by, a pia
beeelil orpnlood by 0011l1D1111ity --....,

For COIIIpiele delalla COIIidret prima. tm.o,

ete.ot...ma.--- ..._,._
Tbe Kat.lwiDo Cemoll

'1'lloatn. . .

of

_ . . , t M - lilted iD ...... lo
....... tbe " - " Ellioolt ~
Amllent Caalpua.
'
'

�A clwlcteriotie loraat -.lito til

iii0ftllllt1IDCI..n..r- ............ .,.__
..., in • putT at .,;pt.

"Part7" iD

.s"""""" - or
dqt.ioDe -ubopo.
............ bJ the

w.

bolll"'
portoeted 1M

a..--~ ciiDdJic,
....

Ia
of _..,.

pvtlr:ipMI&amp;, wlliclt ....

...... . . . • ltately EDcJioll . . . . _
.....,..._t.o ... ~~
....... Aaorafew"-tof~otrenuouo
ad ........., ICI.ivity, the cia--. are
- . 4 • "refno•wta." .., Ulldentated
......_.. "' tile _ _ , . qiiOillitJ of
....._.. . . . food tloa makes up the

boun of big band musie.
Otber Earfeat evonta:
•"Spoken Arta Bouelit," featuring poets
Robert Croeley and Joan Murray, with
Buffalo Comedy Worbbop p&gt;embeno, Tony
Lewis &amp;Del Carl K-alko...ti. Uve from the
Trallimadore Cafe 011 Mcoooday, November
18 at 7:30 PM. (12 at the door goes to

~"'::-a-

..m be Hunprian on
&amp;blrday, NoMaber u. wben tbo dired.or
ad a prilldpel perfarmor o1 N- York'a
"11--" .... o.-~. IWman
udi.... Jobc1-, wll be broaglot to U!B
bJ 1M ..... na-s. EYerythiug will
t.ue l'i- iD 8qaire BaB'a Fillmote Boom:
IDIInliliB- ud ll'ta1ooaa worbbopa &amp;Del an
evniD&amp; putT. Tho latter will include a film
o1 Hilllprian
a U.... perfCII'III&amp;II&lt;e of
HmopriaD - . llllCI tbe ebanee_ t.o try
out t1oe ~~ iaotnoetion by re&gt;iowing the
~ taapt at tbe .......ubc&gt;ps. And, of
....,..., Hunprian putriel. (See direet.ory
for lull deWII.)

wBFOl:

a-,

-Rediseoveries

O..loloodays at t:30 in tbe lounge at 309
ClemeDO Liane! Abe~ profeuor of English

&amp;Del a ~gullbed writer and critic, bas
been giving 1 aeries ol ooDoquia, during
whleb be anaJyzea boob written by
membeno of t1oe faculty. The colloquia have
come to be.laoowzo u "Rediooovering": the
tint ....,;.., in tbe aeries· :wu ol Kenneth

Dauber's ~ H&lt;AOI!oortoe; and
Abefo baU-oerlous responae t.o
Dauber'a title was that his talk _would be
called "Rediscovering Dauber .• Irving
MMey's book 71le Gapirog Pig: Lil~
Jlelarrit&gt;rp/l&lt;&gt;rir, Wll revJeWed 1D
OetGber u weD, &amp;Del oo November 6
~ Abel will disc:uu Reoe Girard's
tu Sacred. Girard i.o tho only
faculty member who won't bave tho
_..twoity to agree or diucree with.
Prof._. Abel's peaetnting ma17...,
.a- be i.o tbe oae writer \1Dder
.....;deratioo in the oollOquia• who ia 110
....... at U/B. However, focuhy member
Mare Sbell will be on h-1 to clefetod bimoolf
.., NonmbOr 20, wben PrcJie.- Abel
,....... SIMoll'a DeW-.
of·
LiUPattiN, • will Lealie Fiecllor at the liDal
oolloquinm, o.-oloor 4, wben ~

Abel -~ Fiedler'• - - ·
Froola. Tho colloquia are free llllCI t.o

aU.

-

The Merty Wives
, Last summer Shakespeare's comedy.

''The Merry Wives of Windsor"' was
performed at
e Theatre Department's
annual Shakespeare-in-Delaware-Park. Beginning November 16, the Department of
Music wl1l present Otto NiCOlai's operatic
version· of the play, ffirect.ed by Muriel
Hebert Wolf. with the University Philhar·
l!"'nia, conducted by Harriet Simoos.
C. Scott Rogen playa Sir John Falstaff,
whc&gt;se romantic: pursuit of two married
ladies. Mistreas Ford (sung alternately by
Adrienne Tworek-Gryta and. Deborah
Bateman) and Mistreas Page (Denise
Bladanore and Carol Ann Sirmty) is the
central aetion of tbe plot.
Two nationally prominent the.\tre de·
signeno will create tbe settinga: :-ot
designer Van Phillips. Dil'ec:tor of Des1gn
and Technical Th&lt;!atre at -Purdue Univer·
aity, who bu done productions !o~
university theatre u ~ well as for
profestional groups, including the San
Antonio Opera and tbe Houston Ballet: and
lighting designer Lee Watson of Purdue: an
Obie Award-winner, who has devised
fighting for the New York City Opera and
for the first U.S. t.ouroftbe Bolshoi BaBeL
"The Merry Wives of Winda&lt;&gt;r" plays on
Baird Hall November 16 through the 19th.

v-..,._ ;,.

no-....

-

•"St.ormauia" all Th~y. November
16, live from Central Park GriD, 2519 Main·
Street, when "Oil of Dog" producer, Gray
St.orm. is DJ until 3 AM (prizes for dance
conteSts and doaneeil to win a record- only
$lat the door fOI' WBFO); and
oon Fridsy, November 17, at 9 PM,
"Buffalo Jau Artists Live from the
Tralfamadore" ($3atll110f).
Besides th...,. efenta there will be live
broadcasts of talka, folk music, chamber
music (indudiilg 1 Uve broadcast by the
Tokyo Quartet), lots of Schubert to honor
the !50th anniverury of his de.\th, talka,
and a concluding (Sunday, November 19 at
6 P-M) "Almost Anything by Request,"
when you call WBFO at 831-5393 t.o ask for
any kind of music or spoken word . U it's in
WBFO's"library, ~eyll play it.

Earlest
"Earfeat" is tbe name. for eight days of
apKiol prognunmi.ng (November 12-19) on
U!B-bued pub1ie radio atation WBFO, A
variety of evonta will be aired tivo during
tbi.o poriod, whido • hu been designated

Listener Support Week (the lt.ation will~
it.S li.otenen to ph&lt;&gt;ne in their tax deductible
pledges, to support WBFO). A aamptinif
November 12 at 6 PM - Bob Roaberg s
"Big Band Orgy. • Roaberg may be the only
university dean who is .also a di.oc jockey,
on this oc:euion be1l officiate over six

Muriel Rukeyser
Poetry Reading
That great lady ol American lette.r•·
Muriel Rukey_., hu been oolected t.o g~ve

the second IJlDJII(

o..,... SDYWIIlan Reading

on Monday, November 18, at 8 PM in the
Katharine CorneD Theatre. Those readings
wore eatabliabecl lut J8ll' bJ Ansie Baird
and Claire Sllvemws, iD -mory of their
father, tbe late 0..... Silvo.....,, who was
associated with tbe U/B EnctiJh Department from 1955 to U81, before becoming
DiDeet.or ol Librarioo at the UDivenoltyMuriel Rukeyaer- bornm 1913 in New
York, whore abe aUII rooides. Educated at
Vauar and Columbia, aloe taiJIIIt at Sanob
CoDoge lor several yoano. andreceived a D.Litt. from Rutgono m 1961.
Her winning ol tbe Yale Younger Poets
Award in 11185 wu followed by many other
poizea: the Nal.ioaal lruoti&amp;ute of Arta and
Letteno A~ 1 G-aloeim FeDowship;
...,.. .., AmoricaD
or Leanoad
Societies FoDcnrobip are dew.
.
Early in 19'19, MeGraw-Hj)l will publish

-1--LI""'..,.

Couox¥

_.-.. And ita perfCJr!liliieea of tbe
COIIIplete eydo of BoeU&gt;oveo Qllll'teU have
been wide!, aeelaimed.
Fint violioo &amp;Del ao-lowidor ol tho quartet
ia Bretislav Nowotao,; .-.1 violioo is lWei
Prib)ol: Lubomlrllalyiotbe viollat; and Jan
Sire,~- Tloioo ia tbe'iooond 1ut ...-rt
in the aerioa, whleb oonqudeto December L

Rukoy-·a eoa.:t.1 Po.at, the cuiminatiOD of 44 yean ol writing, which has
included, bolidea 18 ......_ of (!Oelr&gt;:• I
play, 1 newel, aevoral biographoei.
chlldreo'a boob and tnoDolatioal of the
pciOIDio!OctavtoPu.
Muriel R..,._'a ~ Ia free and
opent.othe'JIQIIIie.

L

.__,_...~2.1978

�Watch For ..•

Youogbloocl.

Gene Youngblood:
Th~ Theory of the
Obse.
r ver _
Geoe Youngblood i.-tbe author of a book,
Eiparrded C i - , and of "The Mass Media
and lbe Future of Desire," whic:h appeared
in The Co-Evolution Quarterly. The last
hall of Lbe article's HUe, "The Future of
Desire," is ai.O the title of Youogbloo&lt;fa
forthcoming book, a major portioo ol whieh
&lt;i&lt;als with the epistemology , which bu
arilen out of biology. Youngblood'a

research on this sub~ has delved into the
work of Humberto Matur&amp;na., a Chilean
neurophysiologist. His November 8 lecture
at Media Study/ Buffalo, "The Theory of the
Observer" (see di(e&lt;tory), eomes outoltbat
research. It "'ill;iifws on "the nature of
cognition and
empirical humanism
which is now possible as a result of the
biological explanation of cognition which
resolves such ancieiit questions as - What
is the nature of knowledge and reality?"
Youngblood has leetured widely on his
theories of the impact. of mass media · on
h_uman evolution, and the potential of new

tech nologies for creating a communica·
Uons/eultu~re revolution. Presently he -is a
Reoean:h Fellow at Buekminst.er Fuller's
Design Scien~ Institute in Washington,
D.C. and also at Media Study/ Buffalo.

Films

f'ilms are abundant on this campus - too
abundant to list individually in the magn-et
directory. Consult. t he &amp;pqrter Calendar
and the Spectnun lor weekly listings.
Furt..her information at 8Sl.:S541 {Squire
Hall In!ormation), 636-2919 (UUAB films),
and 831 ·2426 (Center lor Media Study).

6

MUSICAL THEATBE

Ln'ERA'I'URECOLLOQUIUM•

=:~~~~=~~er::.~
Clemens lUIJ "(lounge), Amherst
~pus.

ARCHITECTURE LEC'I1JRE SERIES
Jo~~

M. Jobmo•..,, arebitec:t., New York..
385 Hayes. 5:30 PM. Free. Sponsor:
S. A.E.D . . _

NOVEMIIEil LI1'EilAnJRE LEC'I1JRE
2

'l'lnonclay

Literature, former pr.o!eaaor &amp;lld editor of
Flroglio~ Litn.u~ Hiot"'ll (ELH) at Jobes
Hopkinl. "Fairy Tales: · Robert Coover's
Short Fict.ioos Revimtea.~ The- Kiva,
Baldy lUll, Amherst Campus. 4 PM.
Sponsor: Department of English.

7
Tueaday

AN OPEN f'OilUM ON 'l1IE ARTS
Jo4~ C'-berlaio: aeulpt.or. 436 Clemens
Hall, A.mbenl Campus, uniNa olberwileannounc:ed. 4:30 J'M. Free. Sponsor: Gray
Chair of Poetry and Lel.ters.
8

FILM .
Jock GoltUJ.U.: Sereening and Discuaaion.

'Media tudy/ Buffalo. 8 PM. F:-ee~ Spooaor:
Media Study/ Buffalo.
3
~

_ MUSIC

Coool&lt;M,.,....7'11 CAowtber Etoumbk, di·
recl&lt;&gt;d by Y - Mik.l&amp;tulwft: "The Neo
Romanu.,;.· Works by Prokofiev. Poulenc,
Samuel Bari&gt;er, Giaocai'lo Menotti.. Ned
Borem. Boird llecital Hall. 8 PM. Free.
Sponoor: Depart~Mat of Mwoic:.

rowEDIOU8E

LiN Nwll and Bill Slllk, Briu.h and

~
tnd&amp;io!&gt;al - · wiLl&gt; gultan
anol
dolciJD~r. Rqaios Room. Squire lUll.
8:10 PM. Studenta Sl. Spoo10o: UUAB

.....,.
I

Colfeobouoo.
POEftY IIEADING
Nftl Baldooiot. poet &amp;Jiii~n .. of U/ B'a

£illllioh ~
Ia&lt;. ia Jllew - YO&lt;k.

w-..

Poets aod
This ia the

. 9
Thunoday

ROCK CONCERT
Little Feot;'With Em Kaz · Oroig Fuller
Bmtd. Shea's Buffalo· Theatre. 8 PM.
General admission $7 .SO and $6.50,
students $5 and $4. Sponsor: UUAB Music
Committee.
·

J"""""'
Cope. eadowed ehair prole5110r at
U.S.C.,ecbolar ol-Renaisaan&lt;e ud Modern

Wedaeoday

WORKSHOP
Berl""" tile In•..- Game. Jane Keeler
Room , 107 MF ACC/ Eilieott. 7:80 · 9:30PM. Free. Information and registration ,
110 Norton Hall, 636-2810. Sponsor:
Program for Student Suc:eess Training/Division Of Student Affairs.

OPEN FORUM ON THE ARTS
JO&lt;kiOn M&lt;u:Low, medis poet. See Nov. 2
list,ing.
10
Friday

ware

Avenue. 8 PM. ~n: Ceot.er for
M""ia Study a.od Media SWdy/Buffalo.

MUSIC
~ Oooanet•: Slee lleilboven String
Quut.et Cycle V. Baird lleeilal lUll. 8 PM.
Ge-al adnlieaion $4, U/ B t.eult)', .wt,

MUSICAL THEATRE
'lle 'llreope•nr Opera' See November 9
listing.

LEC'I'URE

Dr. Sam Baroi, Univenity of j\ICJ11.h
Carolina, Chapel Hill: "'n the Bile Or the
Russian Entrepreneur, or Stolking the
Muscovite Merchantry." 304 Diefendorf. I
PM. Sponsot: Department of History.
COFFEEHOUSE
Stefaro Groumao and Jo4w Rerobowa,
guitarists. Groooman playa bl- aad
ragtime guitar and Rellboarn ila pwformer
of the 'Ciuoics, folk aad juz. ConeD
Theatre. 9 PM. Studenta 12.50. S.--:
UU AB Cofleebouse CommiLtee.

Hall. 12 Noon. Free. Sponaor: Friends of
S.A:.E.D.

MEDIA LflC'JUilE
Geloe Y ...,.gblooG, • media theoria; "The
Theory of the Oboorvw: the New
Epistemology and Ita RelevODCe to Media
Studies." Media Study/lluffalo, 1111 Dela·

.MUSICAL TIIEATBE
The 'llTeepenny Opetu. • direc:Led by Saul
Elkin, Conler !or Theatr.e "Reteareh, 681
Main St. 8 PM. General Admission:$3;
Students and Senior Citi7.6a: Sl.SO:
Sponsor: Cooler for Theatre Research and
Department of Theatre.

BROWNBAGLUNCHTHEATRE
Wape Step4u, Acoustic Guitar &amp;Vocals: "Music, Past &amp; Present." 335 Hayes

WORKSHOP _
Effective Com-lli&lt;atio~ SkiiU. 234 Squire
Hall. 4-6 · PM. Free. In!ormat.ion and
Registration, no Norton lUll, 836-2810.
Sponsor: Program lor Student Suc:ceaa
Training/Division of Stu~ent Affairs.

Drawi•g• by Doug/4$ Cooper, Hayes HaD
Lobby. Through November 3. Sponsor:
Sebool of Architecture and Environmental
Design.

Tke 'llr«peJml( Opetu. • dii"'OCted by Saul
Elkin. 'Center for T.heatre Research, 681
Msin-8t. 8 PM. Opening nigbt tieqy.are
$25, which includes play and an aftertheatre dinner at the new Convention
.Cooler; call Sally Traeger, 884-8967. This is
a Gala Benefit for the Center. Sponsor:
Center lor Theatre Research and Depart·
ment of Theatre.

4:80 PM. Free. Sponsor: Department of
Errglish.

'l'lokel.o
TickeLa, where reqaln!d, 111'&lt;1 available at the Squire
Hall Tic:ket Olli&lt;e (in advuoo); remaining tickets at the
door OK hour ltofore evonL I. D. c:ards must be praented
in order to pnrebue tickets al Student!Faeulty/ Sta!I
I Alumni nl.e.

Exhibitions

21 Arti&lt;t• - Alamo Gallery , Beck lUll.
Main Street Campus. U!B and Buffalo
artists in all metlia. Through November 21,
weekdays 9-5. Sponsors: Office of V.P . for
Hea1th Sciences and Department of Art.

alumni $3, students $1. Sponsor: Depart·
mentofMusic.

opening reading of the 1978-9 season of The
Burchfield Cooler Series of Poets a nd
~ril-ers. Burchfield Cooler, Buff..:O State
College, 1300 Elmwood A venue. 2:80PM.

· MODday

oCranberry Lake Piek.in' and Singin'
Society: old·timey string band in concert
and for square dapcing. Fill!IIOM! Room,
Squire Hall, on December 9 at 8:80 PM.
Only$1.
•more Brown Bag Lunch Theatres in
December. On the Stb, t he Renaissance
Brasa Trio, an&lt;! on the 18th, Dick Kohles, _
guitarist and folk singer. In 335 Hayes,
Wednesday&amp; at noon; bring your lunch.
•Creative Associat.es events. Ebnlwrd
Bb&lt;m and A"" Hol~oke at HaDwalla on
December 10 for a free concert of "Audible
and Visible Pieces on Flutes" (4 - 10 PMI:
MuSic and Films-&lt;&gt;! Phill Nibloek."Jor live
performen and tape, December 15 al 9 in
100 Baird. Free. And the oeoond E.,.,.;,.g1
for New M!Uic of the aeuon, Dec:. 16. At
lbe Albright-Knox. with works by Webem,
Luciano Berio, Maurioo Weddington,
Yoshio llachimura and Nigel Oabome.
•the eoncluding recital in the Beethoven
String Quartet cycle. The U/B resident
Rowe Quartet will perform the program on
December! ._
• poet De&gt;U.e Levertot!, who will be
Robert Creeley"s guest-on December !, in
.. An Open Forum on the Am,.. seminars
which you will find in the magut directory
listings for Thursday a!lemoons . Creeley,
reeenUy appointed Gray Professor of
Poetry and Letters, calls his oVerall series
"Walking the Dog" and it includes some
evening events as. well. For example, an
evening poetry reading by Denise Levertov
will be arranged as well. Call 636-2574 for
time and place.
-

II
Sotanlay

MUSICAL THEATRE

Tke n ....,.,.~lt Opetu. • See November II
liS"ting.

CON11NUING EDUCATIO
FOaVII
fOR WOllEN
7k CAJre.,. w..,.... ;,.. Toclq'r Worf&lt;l.
Capen and Talbert lUila. 9 AM · 8 PM.
Keynote ~era: 9:80 AM Dr.
Elizabeth Kennedy; 12 nooo (luaeheonl "Dr. Daphne Hare. W........po. SIO iaeladea
............,., hmcheon aDd _.,.., Call
Naney M.D. S,..,ru.wlki at 681-4111 for
iaformalioll about regis&amp;totioa.
!JI B Alumni Auociat.ioD-

s_,

3.

�JU.It DA.NCEK--.. -JwJitj ~ ol u.e ll_.m
FoUr: l&gt;uee Ea.omhle. New York:
Hampriau Folk o.-., FiiiiDore Boom,
Squire Hall. 10 AM · DOQD: worbbop. l PM
• 3 PM; W'Cllrbbap. 8 PM • perty. GeeroJ
admiuioo 12.50 per ~ otuclent.o.12 per
clua. Gen«aa od!niui.., ID pony 13.50,
stuaent.o 12. Coil v..ne Tenieff, 8'71--'826,
for more information. Sponoor: U!BBalbn

DIIDCUII.

COFFEEBOUSE
Sr&gt;ari&lt;llllvdt.er, soags of blues , work songs
and Appalachian musi&lt;. Haymes Boom.
Squire Hall. 8:30 PM. 11 . Sponsor: UUAB
Coffeebouae Committee.
IZ

MUSICALTHEA'l'IH:

&amp;.day

n... Tltreepemrv Opera.. •

See November 9

listing.

· MUSIC ·
DavidF'wller, organ (faculty recital). W&lt;&gt;rka

by Mendelssohn, Hande~ Sigfrid KargEiert., Baeb, Cesar Franek. Temple Beth
Zion. Delaware Avenue. 5 PM. Free.
Sponsor: Department of Mosie.
U
M-.y

ARCWTECnJRE LECTIJRE SERIES
Eberlwrd Zeidler, archit.e&lt;:t, Toronto. See
November 6 listing. Sponsor: S.A.E.D.

SPOKEN ARTS Bf;NEFIT AND BROAD·
CASTO
Poets Robert Or-eelet/ and J oon Mtl.fTay;
with Bvffalo Comedy Worklhop members
T~ Lewio and Carl K o100llwwtki.
Trallamadore Cafe- and WBFO (88.7 FMJ.
7:30 PM. 12 at door benefits WBFO.

17
Friday

Mviol Rr~Jrev-:• 1978 Oaear Silverman
Reading. Cornell Tbeat..e. 8 PM. Free.

,

14

WORKSHOP
W;,.,o;,g W11!11toMeetPeopk. Jane Keeler

t'..!,"t"M:.:.- Training/Division of

19

of W'mdsor. • See

- 18
Saturday

S~y

- OPERA
Tile Merry Wives of Win&lt;hor. • See
November 16- listing. NOTE: This perlorm.anc_e begins at 2:30PM.

20
Moaday

MUSICALTHEATRE
Tlte Tltreepenny Opera. • See November 9

MtiSI!)ALTHEATR.E '
.· ___ ;...,;. ,
The Tlt"'epenny Opera.. • See November 9
"listing.

li~.

LITERATURE COLLOQUIUM•
, Limtel Abel, professor of English: a crit ique
of English Department faculty me mber
Mire Sbe U's Tile EC011., of Literatwe .
Professor Shell wiU be present to respond .
309 Clemens HaU (lounge), Amherst
Campus. 4:30 PM. Free. Sponsor: Departme nt or E;pglish.

IIIIO.WN BAGLUI'iCH THEATRE
String 'l'ri&lt;&gt;: Weroniea Knittel, violin
(Crertive Associate), Ken lsehii, cello
(Creltive Associate), Riebard Fields, viola
(principal violist of- Buffalo Philharmonic)
and Eberhard Blum, fiute (Creative
Aoooeiate).
27
Monday

Stuxul/ol htterviewing: TiPI 47&gt;d Tache~ .
282 Squire llall. 4-6 PM. Free, Information

ARCWTECTIJRE LECTURE SERIES
Jeny SoU01&gt;, areb.it.e&lt;:t/ edueator, Depart·
ment of Architecture, Harvard. See
November 6liating.

and regiotration, 110 NoriDn Baa 686-"281.0.
s,.on-: Program for Student Sueeess
Training/Diviaion ol Student Affairs.

St1Uirt Sltapiro, folk singing bumoris("336

AN OPEN FORUM ON THE ARTS

~~~~.~~."A.~.D~oon,

WOilKSBOP

16

.

ARCW'I'ECTUREl.ECTURE SERIES
B!""Ce Graham, arehitecl. in~ partner in
Skidmore, Owinga &amp; Merrill, Chicago. See
November Slisting.

listing.

MUSICAL THEATRE
7Tu..1l"'epennv Opera.. • See Nove mber 9

,......,

MUSICAL 'l'ffEATRE
7le ~reepemry 0pm,. • See No\iember 9
list.lng. NOTE: This perlonnanee begins at
4PM.
•

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST AND /AZZ
BENEFIT
.
Buffalo jazz artists "Footloore, "AI :n;.,ey,
Lou Mari•o_. and- Max Thein, with Elvin
Sheppard., live from the Tralfamadore Care.
9 PM. $3 at • door benefits WBFO. Also
broadcast on WBFO C88.7 FM) .

MUSICAL THEATRE
7\e 7lreepe1i1rv 0pern. See" November 9
listing.

Room , 107 MFAcC!Ellicott. 7:30-9:80 PM.
_ Free. lof_.tion and registration, 110
Norion "Hall, 686·2810. Sponsor: Program

Coff~bouse.

listing.
OPERA
The Merry Wives
November 16 listing.

POE'l1lY iiumNG

11oeoolay

•
I
t
cOmposer and singer. Cornell Theatre. 9
PM. Students $2. Sponsor: UUAB

MUSICALTHEATRE '
7le Tltreepe=y Opera.. • See November 9

BROWNBAGLUNCHTHEATRE
F...e. Sponsor:

lArry &amp;Ill, •isual ll'tisi who worka with

glass. See NnftiDber 2liating.

MEDIA
· David Antin: "Fiction, Faet and the Self, a
talk poem," an improvised philosophieal
inquiry by this poet and art. ernie. Media.
Study/Buffalo, 207 Delaware Avenue. 8
PM. Free. Spo~rs : Center , for ~
tudy , Media Study/ Buffalo, Hall walls, Art.
GaUery of Ontario.

IIIVSICAL TIIEATRE
7\e 7l"'-IJ Opooa. • See November 9

.

~

OPERA

W"-•

DellnrJ~
of Willdoor, • direet.ed by
Muriel Wolf. Baird Reeital Hall. 8 PM.
faeulty,
_ . , c:iU1eu $2, Studenta $1. Sponoor:

c.-at. Admlooloa SS, Alumni,
~olllulie.

fftrOAL IIAIJIO IUIOADCAST
&amp;...-. . Oery 8Wal wiUI • ~
eolltioa eiOilel Dog. CSiorm-.. a muaial
--eerie from CeDVol Park Grill.)
c.&amp;nl Put Grill, I&amp;UI MaiD St. and
WIIP'OIIIB.T Fll. 11 at door IM!De!IU

Wllf'O. 11 PM.

Utalt PUiipo, at UUAR Colf.....aae,

MUSIC

Nor 18.

w....,i/w Kmttel: violin recital. Baird
Recital" Hall. 8 PM. General admiaaion
1!.50; Students, University eommWlity and
senior citizenaiL AD.S vouebers oeeepted.
Sponsors: Center ol the CreatiYe and
Performing Art.a and the Deparlm011t of

OPERA

7le MerT!/ Wive1 of Wimll~. •
November 16 listing.

See

COFFEEIIOUSE •
UIGA Plaillipo, ....ga. of tbe Southwest,
union balls, railroads, etc., and Kau Wolf, ·

Musk• .

30Thunclay

AN OPEN FORUM ON 11IE ARTS

'

Stait ~. !ibDmaker. See .November

2-liating.
Noa-Pro6i Org.
U.S.Pootap
PAID

lluftM, N.y.
Permit No. 811

FILII/UlC'ftJaE
~~ for NrtD Filno: Stan Bnkhage.'
- The noted experimelltal mmmaker will give
• talk and ,_nt filma not
p~yobown

iD BUilalo. AJbricbtrKDox

Art. Gallory. 8 PM. Gea.al ~n 12;
GaDo.y mombera and atudollt.o 11.50.
Spoo;.n: Center f9r Media Stody, Media
&amp;nd:r!Balfalo, Albri&amp;IK·KDox Art. Gallery.

"

\

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                    <text>Old age

CARE
A U!B counselor has
• put together an
award-winning
program in which
teenagers assist t:fle
elderly. See page 5.

Millions

It isn't what it used
Prof. Roy Kaplan ' s
to be~ but it isn't
new book on lottery
yet what it should
winners tells what
be, 'wrinkled radical' &lt; 'it's really like to
Maggie Kuhn
get one"s hands into
contends.
the pot -of gold at
See page 3 .
the end of the rainbow." See page 3.

Impresario

Dome?

Senior Ron Baron is
~ sports agent who
represents a stable
of pro prospects
Seepage 11.

Coach Ed Michael
can't understand
why Syracuse gets a
Taj Mahal-like dome
and we get nothing.
See_page4.

QCT26, 1978

STATE_UNiVERSITY
-AT BUFFALO

Reactor:
The Nuclear Science and Technology
Facility was picketed lui Thureday by a
small group of demonstrators protest·
lng-&lt;levelopment of nuclear energy and
disposal of hazardous radioactive

-·

The group chose to demonatrate at

J.'::~~ F~!!ll.:. ?anlzer

· -of
symbol

con"'3"u
a T::l
w011&lt;1-wlde

~at

nuclear Issues.

Nu~-'"~;:!":(~ledraed~ ;l~k':..!,~

and "Split Wood Not A1oms .~ the group

VOL.10 • NO.8·

Chon says pic!&lt;ets 'unrealisti.c'
news- cameraman. The group chanted ,

• No more, no more nukes, radiation
makes me puke. "

In all , a poignant scene.
Members of the group also voiced
concern over what they termed a
"dangerous leak" at the facility last

~!i~~~~·~~-~:~~~=
when leakage was occurring, was there

any threat to public health or safety.

•ge numbers, _,to wat~ .

stat-! called .....-Uc

~~~~."'!~'::n!r\~~~o;o:::

AI~~~~~ t~ern:;:,~~al:t~'t':e::li~;

A brief
of worda and
danger of widespread death and
geetuoea took· p i - when a lew
destruction If a nuclear reactor power
a!Mdenta In Ac:hMGI taped a ban- ' · ptw&gt;t were to blow up. He cited Norman

foP:O::.'~~=:
~
Beyer partlclpaled mon-tarlty; then

1e1t alter being ll'lleiVIewed by a TV

China:

~~~=~· d~=r~:vo:~
safety of reactors.

Willie Chon agreed that th~ protest-

SUNY -one of IDout 30 unl..atty
.,-na and tnatttutlona In tile nation

1n11tae1 by the U.S. SC. o.p.nn.rt to
eubmlt ptOpOUia for '" axtendlld

-oa;hed

with tile Idee bV the
Chinese. according to Dr. Wharton .
The long-term program, If · It

=~,~~mel'~~ 1~=

uate, undergraduate and ..apec~ students. It Ia expected that the students
wUI arrive In small groups, aapeclally et
lira! .
.

of a\udent ClllChanga with the

Clwlglng ......_
.
"Thla contac'l by tl)e Ch'- points

SUN'!' Tlllk Force on Student
~~ China Ia clleiNd by

thougb It wu totally unexpected, It-

~• FlaDublle.
=:. ';i'\;..,' - . 'bf ~uateDr.
.::r,!.t Dr~·:."~=¥
PI'OIIIM'f.

. . _ . lot . . . . .
~lnD
\118IL- 8llpllan
~-~
Rolllrt
L. l(jltat;
C.
DllnMtt. ctnctor of • the lfl\aM!Ve
~ ~ IMIIMa, and Dr.
-

~~~~ ':;,e= .2:r;·dr=~Y. ~~~

proposal calls lor_ the environmental
monitoring of Lakes Erie and Ontario to
map any radioactivity preSent.

~~".:::~:.:~~~

that U/ B's
facility provides about 60 per cent of the
short-lived radioisotopes used In the
nation, mainly lor the eaat&lt;!fO United
States. Moat of these radioisotopes are
used for medical purposes, such as lor
radlopharrnaceuticals lor diagnostic
tests. Others are used for biological and
medical · research, or for tracer

.

techniques in physics ana chemistry
research .

_ Philip Orlosky, operations manof the facility, said U/B's unique
posltlon · only six miles from a malar

:~1'~en:"of~o~~!~ w~~!ast0~n~

from 15 hours to a few claya to polnta ea
Jar &amp;Will' ulllmzll and Hawllk

=

~dating

-

Some carbon dating le al80 done at
the facility . Frank Thomaa, ..a-eon

;:::;o:~~lst,

.~..,-~,:-:::

most part ~h U/8 anthropologlllla.
Another SMfice the facility pn&gt;vldes,
Orlosky pointed out, Is the !eating of
material such as seals on equipment to
be used In nucl-·centera.
"We're very a_, of envln&gt;nmenllll
needs and"Would like to pl8)' a very
positive role lor the. public;." Chon

~.!; :.:-~=~~~~r.: C:::!
In the nation and notes that mbnlt~
lor safaty by ..-al Uill-lty anc
government agencies Ia conat*'t.
.
~ l

SUNY eyes-- exch.ang~ . with- mainlan·a

StataUnl. . .lty~CIII1on R.
wtwton Jr. 11M appoint.~ ~
tMa, lnclucllno tine 11'0111 the Stat•
UnMralty at lkiflalo. to ~ on a IUk
ton:a to devCIIop • atudent 8IICIIMge
. ~ with the Paopla'a Republic of

~v. ~.

L~eaq~o~~~~ ..~,s~u~~~~r ~'r'f=

wor1d·wide nuclear i ssues, such as
corporate i nvolvement and careless
disposal of waste.
• All tests and re-.:h dOne ilere are
¥"!!!:· V. ~8Cflnl ili"*&lt;tor Of ·tlllt , ralated to j)eacelul lllllla;" Chon s,ald,
eddlng that no classified worl&lt; Ia done
fiiCIHtY, counlered that the reactor,
in the facility. He noted that researchers
Which· underwent nepalrs and refueling
hare h...., applied to the Department of
and was reactivated earty this year, le
safe. He said figures quoted by the •

of about 35 people llltracled attention
from the three local tetiMslon news

111e1.........ixcl*lge

ers raised questions that should be
resolved In public -discussions, he felt

_..., pfOIM-

., lllalory.

...........

'-""'
'ftla ,...._ ........ of atudenta

--~~ofChlnala
~ .......... of ............ to China
a~loll...._. by
FIWik

Dr.

CllliciOr ol .... Wh1le Houae'a
Ill . llcianCa and TeollnOiogy

IIIOIIOy. AftiWI ~. U.S . offlclala-

~lr:'?·'d~.

c:s=·.=~ -~~

Indicates that the soCiety Is stabilizing
and that the government wants \o
modern itt Ita technology very qWckly ."
lni ·laf discussions with Chinese·
deleg- revMied that they are
cintereated In a strong ernphula on
vocational and tachnlcal training at the
underQraduat• level, with other areas of
rntereet lncludi'lll high energy physics,
agriculture, energy, ·~· ·computer
science and 1 - aclenoe. .

fEll
"We
arevery hopeful that SUNY ·wiU

ancrtM 8l8la

be c:l)oaen by the~
Oepjlrtment to partiolp!lla

In

IIIIa

exchanaeprogrlll'l'l,"
~=
r)Ot onfy Offer the tacllnllill
they are looking for, but
our
lnt""slve Engllih ..._._ IMtltuta
can provide an onentatron irld Engllah
language progrwn."
• The target data fDr the ~'U

g:n'::Yn:"tat':.~-= riv.t

1

the

program la.atJII at the-Initial . . _ and
that the SUNY Tal&lt; Folce Ta ~ng Ita propoeal.

fargo:. living on bOrrowed.p~we~ .
Farguaon ~c _Company wudcad
almoat around the clock ,lroni SundaY
-lng to Tueeday, lll.,ta 1181oac11101to uee elaCitlc: ~ or
lluDdry fllcllitlea and ·~ly to

_ , . . electricity In tdh the Fargo
ancii'Wtar a-~a.

�.

1

~

, ..p

1'.
I

!

-..-A AUPi· ,~ 1 .

.

'

l •

Faculty organization·enters ,
col.lective bargaining arena
by linking up with NYEA/NEA

BRIEFLY·
'
.-...e of -.IIIOrttles-

He'JI find out; too

"Fhe last time the Tru~tees held
Govemmentai policies vis-a-vis
a ·'public hearing·· In Western New
civil rights of minorities In the future
York [at Buffalo State In the fall of
wtn likely .concentrate largely on
1976]. an ashen Mrs. Maurice Moore,
questions of equity, a speaker at the
chairman of the b6ard, listened to conc:ludlng session pf last week 's
two hours of bitches and moans.
Bill ofRights·Conference Indicated
then asked plaintively, "Doesn' t anyIn O'Brian Hall Friday.
one love SUNY7"
Charles V. Hamilton, Sayre Professor
Now, new chairman Donald Bllnken
of Govemrnen~ at Columbia, said
" The focus'WIII be on how best to
wilt get a chance for an ans~r to
narrow the gap (economic and
that same question. The Trustees are
educational, primarily) between the
conducting another public hearing In
status of minorities and the " general
the area: 2-4 p.m .. Nov. 2 , th ird
public." This will call for Increased
floor, Building A , Genesee Comattention to offlc)al.and vol_untaty
munity College, Batavia.
programs In "affirmative action."
:those w ishing to present prepared
Where before. much attention was
testimony (five mtnutes limit) have
centered on " protection against"
to register by letter w ith M iss Martha
(mainly- discrimination and
j. Downey, secretary of the University,
segregation), the future promises to
SUNY Plaza, Albany, 122!16 by Nov. I .
focus on "achievement o f '' (mainly, ·
Individuals who want to speak exequity status).
~neously (for up to three
te
Governmental policies, especially
mlnu£es) may register with a hearlrig
registration officer the day of tbe sesthrough EEOC, w ill , Hamilton said,
sion.
ref',ect efforts at voluntary compliance
with " guidelines, goals." This will
Having apparently learned from
, that 1976 Buffalo session whic-h was ·
Involve pr&lt;&gt;ddlng and court action.
We will see I~ attention paid to
taken up solely with UIB complaints.
tightening the definition o f.
811nken emphasizes that only unlver" minorities." ln40ddltlon, we will
sliy•wide Issues are to~ raised
likely see a growing debate on how
at the hearing. 'tlf you have Issues
best to deal wlth..the "effects of
.. . oriented to a single campus,"
past dlscflmlnatlon.:· The Supreme
he advises, write to the Board I
Court, In •II likelihood, will serve
u the ultimate arbiter - as In the
Bakke cue. the Upcoming Louisiana
,..-on cue, lind the Detroit
With the Globetrotten
pollee-hiring issue, Hamilton
Sam Pellom, former UIB basketball
predicted.
·
star, Is currently on tour as a member
of the Harlem Globetrotter o rganiza'
ti on.
~-c--.
Pellom, who holds all UIB reboundCraft wares, from hand-painted
Ing records , and Is the No. 2 career
china tO _s tuffed animals and hanging
scorer, p)ays with the Washington
tables. Will be on exhibit and sale,
Generals, a team which opposes the
Saturday, November 4, when the UIB
world-famous ' Trotters during their
Women'sCiub conducts Its seventh
. exhibition appearances.
"""ual Mlni-MMI&lt;et, from I 0 a .m .
The club will t our the U.S. later
5 p.m. In til€ Fillmore Room of Squire
this winter, and w ill spend three
at Main Street.
months In Europe starting In April.
The Mini-Market, at which some

..

5 0 - craftspersons and artists will
sell and demonstrate techniques, Is
bell18 held u" benefit for the Grace
W.QopenMemorlaiFundatUIB. '
The fund. NUlled after the wlf~of
r-tnChancetlor Samuel P.
Capell. -.,llllscersawards for
KAdlmlcexcellence to sophomor
whohaw_.,_.~-ages

of :S.9 or better.
•
A cloMtlon of $ .50 for adults and
S.Z5 fOf~~ Is
requested,
'fOhlch Wllt'j01dwarif ftie Atwaftls.
Fooelp students will be offering

bel.,.

1979.
Pellom Is expected to stay with
tl)e Generals for at least 1978-79,
_ but could move up \O the
Globetrotters' team In the event of
in)ury or Illness to one. of the
regulars- after he learns the
routines, or In future years If he
performs well .

Poetry~

-vtns .

The Poetry Collection will finally

be ,..,located to the fourth floor of
planb, herb5. and exotiC lnterMtional Capen·Hall during the week of
November 6 , Saktidas Roy, director
foods
for
-~:.C"""
cookbook.
con\plled by
Qf the.Women's
of Unlversl.ty Libraries, has announced.
Club, wlll"'ao be available.
In preparation for the move, the
collection wm remain closed from
• November I through 19. The col• lectlon will be available by appoint-ment only during the week of
November 20 and will resume regular
hours on November 27 .
Roy thanked the UIB community
for "patience and understanding whfle
the collection was partially Inaccessible. We are hopeful that you will
find the new Quarters spacious. convenient, •nd conducive to research."

1976 fiscaL crises. The censure
The American Association of Univerresolution cited the retrenchment
sity Professors (AAUP) has joined the
provision In UtiP's contract-as weak and
New York Educators Association and
the National Education Association · Ineffective - as giving SUNY manag&amp;ment virtually a free hand in laying off
(NYEAINEA) In a bid to wi n collective
Individuals and eliminating departbargaining rights for 16,200 academic
ments.
•
and professfonal staff members at
Before the censure was voted , a
SUNY.
•
report of the New York State Assembly
The hybrid association , whose
Higher Education Committee had
formation was announced Monday,
expressed . agreement with AAUP's
hopes to ·challenge United Unl~erslty
findings - quoting the study upon
Professions (UUP), a branch of the
which the censure motion was based _ ·
AFL-CIO New York State United
Teachers (NYSUT) and American
. and had also condemned the 1975-76
retrenchmeryts at SUNY.
·
/
·
Federation of Teacher.s (AFT).
The Public Employment Relations
Board (PERB) Is now preparing to hold
National help
formal hearings on election Issues.
Under the agreement announced
NYEA/NEA and AAUP leaClers said they Monday, bpth AAUP and NEA will
hope ballots will be mailed out
commit national staff and leadership to
sometime before Thanksgiving .
participate In the electioneering proAAUP's Involvement in the election Is
cess and campaign planning under
part of a coinprehensive .. Organizationgeneral
policies to be established by
al Agreement " with NYEAINEA. The
the joint steering committee.
pact reaffirms the two organizations'
If elected, the new organization
commitment to AAUP -positions on
prOmises that collective bargaining will
academic freadom . tenure; governance,
proceed as outllnl'd In NYEA/N EA's
and related prl'!clples; establishes a
decentralized bargaining proposal . Unjoint steering committee to give
der that plan, each-campus will •elect
direction to the representational camrepresentatives to a bargaining council
~~~~~~~~roa'::d A~ ~~~ ~lx st~g~ structured around five· commun ities-ofinterest within SUNY: arts &amp; sciences
faculty union at SUNY, once bargaining
colleges, university centers, specialized
ri~hts are won , In which all members.
colleges, agricultural and technical .
Will be affiliated both with AAUP and
. colleges, and health science centers.
with NYEA/NEA.
.

is

'Worse than a tallure'
Or. Eugene Vasllew, a . SUNY/Bing-

ar:~::P~~~oa~:~~~:.:eN:u~k~f ;t~~~

~~~~~R&amp;'l!~:;es~~t.:'t~~~~~fiJ~

and , national dues collected from The
SUNY bargaining unit to · the SUNY
effort In order to provide " a superior
direct-service program."

e~~~~~~~~~~h~~~~htoh~~~~~~~obyt!

or

- (SARC) ,

hailed

the

Agreement

as

worse than a failure.
" Only NYEA/NEA has embraced the
r.rincl ples which have been advocated
10

c~ntl~~ed ~~n ~~dl~:n~P·~y~"J~~

has. the professional exp~lse tp wage
the campaign and carry on the
bargaining which will follow."
NYEA President Edwin J . Roblsch
referred to the alliance as ·· a perfect

T~~lza~~~m~\1 ~=n i~heefi:C~
un~ess

one party notifies the other of Its
intent to renegotiate someth ing
which must be done three months prior
to - the expiration of the first or
subsequent contracts.
· '

~fcha~g~j~,.";i~~~~nh~~~hs~~~~~~~ -

AAUP baa been looking lor·2 y-•
AAUP for two years has been looking
at getting In on the SUNY bargaining
process. It was opposed to UUP's
policies and· performance, but did not
know whether to: make a challenge on
Its own, join with another challenger, or
try to deal with UUP In " an attempt to
f~form It," as AAUP spokesper.sons put

AAUP cenaure
•
fi'arlier this year AAUP's national
convention censured the SUNY adm inIstration for making arbitrary retrenchments during the Un iversity's 1975 and·

J(';uf-~~ or~anl:t'~~~.'zlng a joint
AAUP wanted an election to do th is;
AFT did not .
There had also been earlier, unproductive talks with NYEA/NEA.

ought Jo be measured and the practicai
and vllai skills they myst possess to
represent their membe's effectively."
In a recent letter to AAUP members In
SUNY, Vasllew charged that "having
An unsuccessful card campaign for a
UUP [as a bargaining agen t Is ] even · - separate challenge was tried th is past
worse !han having no representatlo n,.at
summer.
all. " He called that union's agreement
· Twice, AAUP attempted talks with
to "contract language ... on r&amp;UUP and Its affiliate, the American
trenchment . .. a positive danger to
Federation of Teachers. A near
SUNY professionals."
agreement this summer foundered on

Over_1,000 employees aHended
orientatioo sessions oo HMO concept
A total of 86 HMO orientation
sessions for State employees were held
at five locations during 10 days In early
October; Joseph E. Lippert, m!lllager of
employee beneflts·edmlnlstratlon In the
Personnel Office, reports .
Sesslons covered all three shifts so

Personnel. 'lndlvlduala have until Oct:
31 to elect the new pl., or tnake other
changes in thelf health c6virllge, If they
wish.
Lippert Indicated that many employees expressed verbal dlsaatlsfaclion with their present health Insurance

!n~.:"p':,~~ri~t~nt';:'~e~~ui~':f ~~:!: ~~r~~~~a:Slj!C::,~~ GHI plans) at the
GHI Is almost useless, 11 was said,
questions about the "local HMO
since only a S'1J!II number of Western
operation (Health Care Plan) .
N.Y. "Physicians will even accept it.
A total of 1,004 employees actually
attended these sessions
Lippert
Blue Cross and Blue Shield were heavily
• indicates. Additionally, hu~reds of
criticized for lack of coverages,
phone calls have been received '--deductlbles and slowness of payment.
requesting additional Information and
Major l,ledlcal also drew fire: for the
~et ns .•that ·distributed af theslowness of jhelr claims payment and
_
their "paP&lt;l(Work game" l (requiring a
A
f
formal rejection from Blue Cross /
sa 0 11ow-up, Personnel Is referring
Shield- even 11 procedure/treatment is
clearly not co-ed by them). _
all lnt01f118ted Individuals to the open
hou- et H~h C.. Plen'e medical
The orlen!Mion -Ions were highly
center In CheMtow.ga, each Wednear
da~ and Thur8Ciay nlaht (S:30 p.m. to . success ul, the Peraonilal edmlnltator
8: p.m .) during Ocfobllf. Additional=~::...
of
ly, HCI&gt; telephone numbenl (847-1480
mystique of their complicated health
for mmlnletrattw tnqulrtee and 888coverage l)fOQram and provkle them
31100 tor mec1toa1 lnqulrtea) . .
wtth • helr,:ul ..__,118
ghlllftlololeraetedJ*ttee.·
'
-........,_._..
Upper! 8fld tbetea of Monday ot thli
Partlcu'-ly m1)11188ed _.2nd and 3rd
week, • tot.~ or 1811 co~-- forma
llhlft wCIIIc.era and h08pttal-bMed
~
.._...,,
~who .....nr - • repreMnta(---.)
r.,._,.... ,..,. been ~ In !Mofouretaflona(--t()ol-buls."

10

W:'= Tt:

betnv

_ft. . . . .

�On TV'o· "Tbe Millionaire," tt.. .
representative of Mr. John Beresford
Tipton uaed to .come around with a
check lora million dol lara and _,one
lived happily after-after 30
minutes of dramatic adjustment.
In real life It doesn't work out exectly
that way. Some people do t&gt;ecome
"Instant mii~Maalres" In the IncreasIngly popul. .ete lotteries, but the

:}f~~ftl'!'~ ::::S~~~of :l~n~S

requires more than 30 mlnutes"llo tell.
It requires a book, In fact. And UIB
sociologist H. Roy Kaplan has come up
with lt . lila Lottary Winners Is 1ust out
from Harper &amp; Row.
The book Is about the winners and
what happened to them; how the money
waa uaed; how Jobs, llfe-styles and
relations with family , friends and
co-workers were changed; what their
thoughts and feelings are about the
whole experience.

Four yaoora and 15,000 miles
Kaplan Inte-rviewed more than. tOO
winners II' five states-nsarty all the
$50,000 and $100,000 winners Jn
Western New York; nearly all tbe $1
million and $250,000 winners In New
Jersey; one third of the $1 million
winners In the U.S. It took four years
and 15,000 miles of driving.

~ Wrinkled

radical·says
more has to be done-

With bunned white hair, ·a purple
dress , tights ant! brown, laced Hush

~:w:.':,~-~~~~~!~~~~~

be doing a more mature -•ion of the
" we've come a long way, baby"
commercial.
H!or ...._ wu - I a i i y upbeal,
filled with hope, but n.-theleoa Kuhn
maintained thet Amarlcan society stnr
haa a long way to go In Integrating Its
older citizens into the mainstream and
~~~=:~~~fto.obla," the fear of
"We must take steps to Immunize

~.;,~::d~r:!!"!: :~aer~~~~~e·~.:,o~~

Theater Friday.
Kuhn Is the articulate head of the
Gray Panthers, a national coalition

=~~t.:l ~ai:Y ::;:~~
wortdng for older Americans and social

c~~~- refusas

to usa tha descriptive
"senior citizens." She prefers " older
Americans," but says that a new

:;1y~:; :c:'u=•~~,:;~ect

changing

M8n1, M110 and C. Wright Milia
Besides reading M8n1 and Mao, Kuhn

~~·:::: =·~=b:::rttl~:'?~

older Americans from a perusal of C.
Wright Mmo.
Kuhn lnoloted that people must stop
· placing proftt, efficiency, and numbers
~ of PIIOPI•. lfW~ 1 ·or ~lawlr\il,
societal
lila
general wUb • ·
sensa of privatism - thai Is, asking
how It affects me or what lain It for me,
people should look at situations with
what Mills terms a "sociological
imagination." This would provide a
broader context tor enalysls and
eliminate ¥l-ing a problem without a .
thorough scrutiny of the aoclety that
produoee lt.
Unl-altles can be the "change
agento" of the future, off..-.cl Kuhn,
becau.. they peoples ol all ages
8lld , _ . who can provide a "human
~" lor experiiiWitatlon. They

_. 'or:

tr

Uo oall ~ ~ data which
~ly

can conlddlct dabiUtatlng
regarding 8fllng.
For eumple, KUhn QUMtlonl the
-.1111111 "wladOm" whlch lncllcatae
thltl older Americana ~ liVIng In
_ . . . _ a d houalng. They may
alicloM tfila type of !Widanoa o.nonlng 11011*, aha ,..mtatned, bolt If a
vllb1a IHerNll.. ~ .... doullll
whether th8J -'«! opt tor IM88
'WniOrcltlan"dwNIIInga.
attlt~

~=:..~

ZPou

ttvea

remove&lt;!.

younger housemates with whom she
resides. All are under 35. She would like
to see more such " alternative family
situations" where people can "do
together what they can't do separately."
Thls kind of "network of emotion" can
lend support to the lildlvldual.
tno
"I glw them hope and they give tflil1
strength," she said.
What Is needed, Insisted Kuhn,. is a

~~~~u~\:. P~ ler:.r:"'fn'~~nt!~

dependence that maximizes our full
humanness."

·

Besides creation of housing on a
cross--generational basis, Kuhn atso .
wants work to be •restructured and
humanized ." She informed the audience
that she would like to see "a sabbatical
taken in ~ decade of li{e," during
which time Individuals can regenerate
themsalve_s and have the opportunity to
think about their future occupational or
personal objectives.
"We must stop 'dividing life Into
segments In which It Is fitting to do
certain things," she protested .
Kuhn told! a story of an elderly couple

=-~~~~~~~~ :~-:~~-:-~.;.!~

Parthenon , but when the time came,
they didn't have the strength to climb
the stairs.
Kuhn would also .like to see work
altematlvas. Spouse-s with similar
talents might share one job, she said.
And there could be an apprentice

~=':\,~ :~i'~l~ ~l'!erlcans ~
By. 1~ 1 • l&lt;~~n Is hoping that the

United Nations will establish a
Congress on the Ag ing which wil l
examine the quality of life of the elderly
throughout the world.

Consumer education
conference slated
A Consumer Education Conference
(for teachers and proapectl-.. taechara
In the field of consumer education) will

~hef~=~~r..:.~~~~

Norton.
Theme ol the will be
"Consumer Roles and 1..... In o..
Cotnpatltl.. MB111et Syatem .•
The progrwn ta apon110111d by the
Conaumer Cfwdlt Counaallng Service,
BuflatoSUia, and U/8.
Saaatona will run from .II a.m.
(precedad by ooffee 8lld reglatratlon)
until mlckftemoon.
Studanta lnl.-ted In the flalcl welcome to altend "-«11~.
DIOVfded they lftoftCI~

by3

Oclollar 30 with , _ C.

c::on.-

~.
Counaallng Service, ~1728.

eduoMIDn81

of the

re~rts,0 r:~~al;ludyco~:lv~iend~ 1 ~

discover whether or not people continue
working after economic Incentives are

neighborhoOd he never frequented,
stopped for a paper In an unfamiliar
store, and just happened to buy two
lotte~ tickets (the flrat he'd ever

~~Vd~~ ";o~h:.~~r. ~~- 'l:: "concentra~

Others had friends
on
their numbers at the time of the
draw1ng.
• • Big winners ale&lt;&gt; ' later racelved
requeets to purchasa tickets lor .

~r:c;~rc..~r.n~~~:k~~~~~~.%·

off. ' Winners were often mobbed,
rubbed, and touched for luck so much
so that aome .weno bJUiaed, mauled or
clawed," Kaplan "'P9f1o.

But he quickly disco-ad there waa
more to the story than the!.
For example:
•Thirty ''millionaires" had tC? move to

, . _ gna II back :·
Yet, despite tha. problema,

~~Y~e:,:',f',g=~ltlons , requests for

~~r~~~=-~~~= ~ 1g:,:

~n':t~~rl~~~8~d~le~~a'.:':.~~~~~~~

or,:r.::;p

•Some came to the point
to
othera about what had hap
to
them, aven fabricating lntrfca e stories ·
to allay suspicions that they were ·
lottery winners.
•Relationshi ps within families were
strained. Some children felt they didn't
got .,heir share" ol the spoils; long-lost
relatives showed up, hands out.
•Some · hsd to leave their jobs
because of actual or anticipated
harassment from supervisors, coworkers and customers.
•They were heavily taxed, often
recelvlng loss than half the ·amount
adveotlsed (avon those who took'thelr
million in 20 annual Installments of
$50,000); many felt harassed by the
IRS.

nl;~mgu~It'~ 'J~~Ito::,sllnogn 'b~
~nnV:~';.,e;'~· ".':,~ ~~ ~~: e:t."e"~l~.;

enormous tax bill came.

the
"trepidation, the , hara&amp;ament, tax
problema and conflicts with friends
and
6
relatives;• Kaplan fo1und that 'no one

winners still b~eta and 'tope to
win ag-.~
wtJo !lad naglttth8
expertencea felt the ~had given

=

:=...~~rlll.i. ~~

""=:l~~o

::::::c:

:,-.n; ~ - ·

aasleted by • gnant from lila~
Foundation of State UnlvweiiY and
- . t l o n of the manuscript Tor the
boOk waa supported by a gnant trom the
Raoearch and Dlwelopmant Cotnmltteo
of Pitzer Collage. Kaplan alao acknowl·

~u~~~:o:r~,ty

'::':.:

behavior .from my colleagues In the
Deoartment of Sociology.•
A specialist In the sociology ot work,
Kaplan Ia also author of American

~:7::!"rt., ~:: ,:~~m~mOf:".f";

study ol million dollar lottery :rn_ In
C&amp;neda.
· H.a holds the Ph.D. from the

=. of s~..:"J.•u..I:.J
m;.~~~~:..r:dt~e~m~~~~ 'r~~~a'!~~ -~
day, and l~a habitual lottery-ticket

menta.

lo-."

Some longed lor tha 'Good Old Days'
An associate r,rofessor of sociology,
Kaplan saY.S he eam!14 "ltl!'l 0~"'1.1~
of the econ):&gt;'n'llc n~lfj of worklng,
at flrat the wlnneni- ravel In thelr
security, but years afterward they
look l ~g for something to occupy their
time. Few have embarked on new
careers, developed other Interests, o•
tried to realize fantaales harbored
before winning. Their lives are 't&gt;ften
filled with nostalgia for the 'good old
days' that were tree of high mortgage

are

par..~-r~,..~ ~r=·~~~~

.

were from low lnooma lavela, -aging

~=..:.~~~rat=-la 'f.:·=-~

-.11 whtch changed their lt.ee, many
offenld etOrtes ol a rellgloua or paychlc

nature.

·

Soma Ylawed wlpnlng aa a gift from
God-"A . - d lOr their platy." Allar
all, the oddS agalnat It . . . 80 .high:
they 1111181 ..... ...... aelecfed, they

=

~ poalbly "maalufDured"
lllgne 8lld ~lone after the -.t,
thin CMIAIO ...... them. 0na winner
llleillad hla hind "'laalld" on"llla Clay of
lila lftwlna. Mollw'a

~=..n-=:e::=~~on.· one
11W1wolltup--'ltllr-'r8uflday, -t. dllwlnt allillelllj In •

Chicano council
offe~..f811PWShlp·,'

r·

The Nat16nlil ChiCano colmcn on
Higher Education Ia lnt.-ted In
determining names of Chicano proleesora and faculty in . - e l l lnatltutlollll
in the U.S.

CC:~'fJ:I~Io~.::;

=

ships and wants to get ID'*'llatlon on

~~~f~~k!=.7:r:oo~-.:. at
Increasing the number o1 Ch'-'holdlng tenured poa1ttona In ~
. - e l l lnatltutlona. It .. llllde
poaalbla by • g.- trom the Ford
Foundation 8lld Ia admlnlateled 11r
Educational Taatlng Sarvlca.
.
The ldaa Ia thai an
1ft lila
etlll..flmlted number of tenured Chtc.lo
l80ulty can ba IIOOOmPIIahed llr
~IIIII.laadiiiQ
~
IICliVttlea
to -_publlcatloil
_ , to

mer-

tanu~e.

Any Chicano Bl*lemlo who . . .
oocup1ad a ~ poaltlon tor no
._. than two and no llwl 1M
,... .. eligible. "-de ... .., lnlm

arw..::.=r:=,Cln* ciiNalld
eo 111a
lt., ......,,
ba

NCCHE, 1M7
c.Hfamll, IMJ04.

�~2$,1171

Readers come
to defense of
cartoon strip
l!lllar:

._ '.:'":"~~ 'r ·~Pu'liY.
:_e,
employed th,. lnatruments
funAIMnl8l to cnatlft writing - A
11

Dlllcll, 1111*. Mid a aenaa of HUMOR.
l'or thle r.aponaa h o - . I will

my tongue from within my

-

diNk.
o..kt Gerber atatee In his ratller

~C'\e~~..E&lt;!.~t:O. U::

. . . . . . «*111011 'Pulz' of October 5

nor111e equai)Y offensive leiter" (Schnoz
on "Prtnoeea Ia faulted) heel any place
In the Reporter. Mr. Gerber - I and
many otherl realln the Reoort&amp;r "Is
gennly regarded as the official voles
of thle Unlveralty," but does this mean
that ..-ythlng tlierein must be aimed at
Wid appeal to only the moat superior,
noble, and dignified minds? Suppose
we fervwltly Aled the Reoorter from
. cov« to cov« and ecnrtlniZ. even ttie
moet miniscule tidbits of lnfonnatlon;
...,·t we permitted to have at least one ·
small Item that would provoke a chuckle
ora smile?
In defenaa of the cartoon " Putz" (I am
not related to either of Jhe two
II.IR8f)tlve " Pull" authors) of October 5,
I t - NOT •an lnault to the Unlftralty's
women atudents."lt was a aatlrtcal vtolthe airs and n - alsplayed by so
many of our felloW Homo·aaplens. The
canoon contalnecP' 'sublle" comic and
humorous overtllhee, not "subtle
antl-eemllllllll." - . ·
With Ngard to 'lhe Implication that
my letter was "little more than a piece
of callOw bigotry'', IT WAS NOT. It was
a prime u.Tipla of how ona race- the

=---:.-..:..c:r-..:re~:
NOT mlelntarpret tha humorous lor the

"off-lve."

·

Sincerely,

-Jan~

Eftlman

Editor.
It Ia ID my extrema horror that the
moet l~lve and Iunny comic atrlp
that the Beporter haa run, . haa been
dlaoontlnued. Thla cartoon was not
dii!MIIIful and a good parody of
donilltorY life.
I IIIII to - how anyone could be
allencled by anything In this cartoon
Whlah was done In nolhlng but the best
of eplrlt.

Editor.
We the undersigned wish to express
our support lor the continuation of the
very Iunny cartoon strip, 'Putz.' We do
not feel that the authors have ever been
ollensl
rather that they have simply
II" at the fo ibles of our
pok
University.
-Andrew Staple
Howenl J. Group
Dewld Shapiro
Andr8WEbert
JoeOiavtri
Diane Marsh
Elaine Salzano
John T. McCabe
Sue Price

~=J~cfrt

OlgiAmthor
ClndyO,...,
Barbara Hlldaoa
-ttlilnart
Mlcllaal Joaaph
Robart Stillman

porter should not have taken the blame
(or the credit) lor the content of 'Putz.'
We are solely responsible. /
and others could oot see the cartoon, ·
Satire often Involves eXaggeration
'Putz.' for what It Is- a humorous poke
-and caricature but, as In all cartoon
at the different people and aspects of
strips. there Ia no one-te&gt;-one corthis University. I feel that It Is not
t"¥pondllnce betwaen the ligures
dangerous, ralher It Is a harmless
representtid and nsallty.
cartoon which only olleDded a lew
It would be absurd to suggest that
overly sensitive people who took It too
every one at the University Is similar In
personally. I slncsrely hope that one
carloon won't cause the editor to end
?~~~~l:r t~ ·~':::.~~~~~y~~~
this "experlmen)" and I am looking
are, and It was the Intent of this cartoon
forward to enjoying more of 'Putz's'
to satirize thll88 whose main concern
encounters fn the future.
seems to be the accumulation ·of
-Ksthlaen Colea

E&lt;lll':~s disappointed ;hat David Gerber

Editor:
We were shocked at the - "contre&gt;versy" generated by our cartoon stri p,
·~: This cartoon Is merely our
NDmble attempt to satirize llle at th is
often humorle~s Unlvefalty. The Rt&gt;-

ao ..toua that It cannol take a little
Ioiii? I tlllnk 'Putz' Ia one of the funniest

001111C atrlpel'-- read and I found

...,.... ......., .-ltlng ech . _ of
1M ....,... lD the next 'Putz.'
. _ It - ' t lnalucled In an . _ , I
- .-y dlllppalnled. To cut out this
_ . . . _ . . . . . . . ,..,.... for the
. . . of • lew ~altlft lncllvld.... I fell, -*1 be making a great
mlat8lca llld a d'-'rlce In dail:ln the

· ~-ll)oallttla

er.

Slo=

-w.... F.

:..:.::-...::
..
_
------·
_.,_..,.....
..........
A _

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

=~~

,.._
-

.. , . CNIIIo .............. , ...

~~~t ..~G·~t~~~Ghi~~ ~~~·

than

A~~~m8on~s~P

Carey gets flak on Syracuse dome
functional and there are no plans In the

future for a new one.

•

A 'sad lldmlulon,• a 'concern'
Ideally

.

you should have atnYed the

;,~~~'; h~:em~~t ~u~~Nc~~~~l Tor rr~:

l=

taxpayer. I brought this matter up to an
Empire Games Official and w.a.s told that

has

~~ ~n ~~o~h~~~~~~~· ~~~tAl:

adequate enough to host anything ·nke the
Empire Games.
glvln~ the subject

!1::."

:'=t~~~~~i!~
an~ :t.":ierhJ~; ~:!':r:.~
a great
0

l!lllar:
Ia It -that thll University could be
eo Glolldomlnded, ao -..lght-teced, or

material possessions. This, we believe.
cuts across all barriers of race, color
and creed.
.
Advocates of Intellectual freedom
from Milton to Mill have seldom agreed,
but on. one point they hearllly concur:

~Y

Institution such as the State

-~~~~ftJ~ N~g{! ~rul~= at~~
athletes. Well, to dJte, we cto not. ~ne was

supposed to have been constructed at the
Unlveralty at Buffalo, the largest of the State

Unl-.lty Cent0t11 .

We are mlaalng out on millions of dollars
worth of free publicity lor our State and
State Univenllty, by not having a visible

ajhletic p%ftram In SUNY·. Look at the

l;~~:&amp;~b,:,!!r,;,~:~-:,:S_:c~::S

lt. Moat of the faclllttea necessary to

:C:~~Y ='ceat~~etfchY~=sed~atl~~r
atudenta are Jn Phue II, a building complex
which has never been mentioned of late as
even targeted for conatructlon. Thla facility
wiH contain a swimming pool, triple gym ,
weight training room, combatlves room ,
fencing room, gymnastic room, dance
studio, squash and handball courts. and a

~~= ~~·Jov,:~:'t~~dli~':'~ :Ot!1~~~
:~.~~ ~O:a'. w~at11ta g1'-='ti~;~~
:~:r~~".ci ~=·;~~w.0:;: to~~ tha:

~,:et~~~ho.;, ~~oo~'!:l~:•to~

hockey rink, the entire facility would G9 up
at once. The fact that thla dldn, happen Is
all the more dJIIIcult to accapt, when one
realizes that conatrucUon ooeta have
escalated 1s-20 par cant a ooer the past
live yaaro and that Waotam New Yor1&lt;"s
economy hu been one of the moat
depressed In the country.

get !rom their state .JIUppotted athletic

tw!~rv.";:uoned:: ~tt:r ~~~-r.:,~hr~
Montreal, w:'Jrom New Y~ State. I am
aure thle Ia true, but you wtlt 8l8o ftnd that

programs showcasing the academic aocompllahmenta and research at their state
"Supported lnatltuUona. This certainly_
doesn't hurt the states Involved when a
bualne11 has to rMke a dec1alon regarding

State hlg~ ocllool-lor athlet&amp;l . . known
as "nomeda." They will go
tha atlllatlc

~~::St.:~. ~:~~ !~':enap=tl~

r::'=.t'!ts'~" ~~n:u!r~~t~i ,Tt:z:drn:h~~

of

hla

family.

"I

Love

Now

Yor1&lt;"

ed~t=~-:-_::,:uJI~urbed about

=-lon =

Ia the 1801&lt; ol adequate laclllllaa at SUNY
Bulfllo tor pttyolclll education, -tion

=~ral~~~:"i

~t!':7t

- - 1MJ cannoc uaa Ill&amp; laclllttaa
tor
-becauaa !bey must
b e - t o r - "'atlllallel. Many of our
-

hawa joined fltniU oanterl, tannla

~I dublin-to

~~7~t~t~~!:":.:.":"Va:'t:

:7~~1::~

w,_

:oov=:..:-:..:c:..:err:

unl-.ltieeoltha &amp;ou1hlnl and Mldweelem
statH athletic and haVI g._ them
poaltlw national vtalblllty. We In BUN'(,

::='
Jr:"Z.~ ~:Z :""',.:W
YOftl State raaldantl. H - , we ....,tier

:m

=

:;;:gn
:..~~'='---::::".l:l~
tohalp":..'ew Vor1t Stata - ' I "'!hh'

mur,:

r,:..r:nb:':':.'":.:ra:.= U.:
r::!t'i"havt•~:\\:T.~"ft••~: :-

~

--"-=r-...=··..:...teet.,: .~=:.-: :::.: r::,cl~ '=
-.ty their

-~::=.~~==r..r...=

---

be - Tllel'tiler -tired - ·""'
.....
of walling.

hoa1tla of

...... _~
~=-=c====~!
......... ~
.

.

~ ~,~ ·--·.:.·i~ ' . ··.-~

\o t.

"'1·'

~ ~~~~ ·.

redlrec11ngtham .

-

living In Buffalo. He came to Ill&amp;

~~m~o:;~::.-:i~W:n:::r~e,~~

~~~~ t:r..l~ H': :~ :~

calling velloua . _ poliCe clepaltmente to
- I I , _ - haG- completed ao
that he would haVI I place to Nn. Dlcll
auff- • atra• ,.....,.. of Ill&amp; loot training

-.oc:..r.·-·.ooll
::-,•J; · , , I . , - Ool

�..

'

. Oct«. 28, 1171

.

Bulls could
use_another
'Bu_s ter'
Wanted: A small or medium-sized
~Lf?e .a seasonal ·positlon as mascot
Quslilicstlons: Must be cute, petable, a sports buff, and willing to work
outdoors In inclement weather.
Salary: Not commensurate with

exre~~nc;:s~~ef,~~Y A~~!.';9 - ~anlels,

buslnes_s manager, UIB athletics and
recrsatlon department.
Daniels Is not exactly optimistic that
he'll be able to rustle up ma~y qualified·
candidates for the opening but he's
willing to give It a shot. After all who's
willing to work for peafl.uts these days
(or In this case, grain)?
According to Daniels, the Bulls (who
now have a two-game winning streak
going) are working on a shoestring,
no frills budget. They get $20,000 a

~~~,;,~'t~!!~~,g~u ¥~:~~~ '{~;i t~
8

t:

1 1

8

!:'~ 1or rri~:~~i t~ ~ Ts s~!~~~~inf~

smile to the face of even the most dour
U/ B student. '

Doyo of Buster • ' ·
Daniels recalled the days when U/B
had a combination Irish Dexter-Black
Angus mascot called " Buster the Bull."
The bull belonged to an Elm a csttleman
named Chester Malach who volunteered
Buster's services and his own for horne
and out-of-town games. Malach was
grsat Bulls booster and even built
trailer to transport B.uster to and from
football games.
Dick Baldwin , of U/B's Public Affairs
Division, said Malach ne- got any
pey, but that, to show thelf appreciation, the University would pick up the
tab for the Malachs' hotel bill when they
took Buster on theroed.
A real ham (so to speak), Buster and
his descendants loved publicity. He

CARE J]rings teens and elde-r ly together
By Joyce Buchnowskl
-

ReporterStatf

Although at opposite ends of the age

~.'~~ ~~r~ugp c:'.,dmg~~~~~~

times, both feel lonely, segregat:::l' and
alienated from the societal malnstrsam .
For the most part, the two groups are
both considered unemployable and
unproductive by nature rather than
design.
.
0

th:~xa :~u"J!nta~t b!~.:'n ~ft~:~S:~

~~/:. ~~~·~dol :~~~~_r~~~~;:j'~J:~lrv'~

-

-

made his debut In 1957 when Liz Taylor
and the late Mike Todd came to U/B for
·
Malach never seemed to mind that
most people believed Uz and Mike
actually brought Buster hens as a gift to
the Unl-alty. As a matter of fact , he
was the one who carted Buster to the
airport for the presentation. Later, he
even named a cow after the vlolet-&lt;~yed
Elizabeth.
Buster's first season waa a blg~le . He

a speaking engagement.

1

~i.':tl~.:'":ln~ t~ ~~~~";' ~~

?~ ~~,,;~ ~.::~~:~~~~~~~~"hi~

"dossier" read , " Boston Knows U/B's
In Town as Buster VIJIIts the Common ."
Then there was a Sports Illustrated
splash about him In 1963. _Those were
the days.
lleeftooa........Malach Is now deceased; his wife Is
out of the cattle business and Buster is
merrlly grazing on a ranch In Longhorn,
Pa. The Athletic Department would love
to buy him, but with the coat of beef
today, thlt would be an expensive
proposition. A pragmatic type, l;)anlels
would settle for a slightly tattered bull
costume, but even that would coat
almost $700.
,
It's a sad situation:· no money, no
mascot . But If anyone knows of a
generous rancher, or tMin whece-to find
en old bull costume, be sure to contact.

!l:,:~~-.!~ .hit!,~, =~h~ B~Ta

fnd thel•ano bun . ·

00

Named In nursing
Or. LaUra Meclachlen, -latent
pro'--of.....,...nuraina..~~
iwned ~ of_ the """""' of
Nlnlna'a ~ of G..suate
Educllllon 11J PNIIdenl ~ L

~len recelveCI both

ancl Ph.D. from U/B.

her Ed.M.

One of ten full- or part-time project
coordinators eccompany the youths on
their first visit to make Introductions
anct • break the Ice. Afterwards,
vblunteers and projact coordinators
meet once a month to Iron out any
problems as well as to get feedbeck
from others invol"!_ed In the program .
Small chorea 1nd companlonalllp
Once situated, volunt-s may do any
11
0

~~~p':,f~, ~u~f::~ onc~~~:- wl:,~o;!~

~~~~~ s':r:wa~~m~n d~~~s 11p~~

contact with ~uffalo's elderly residents.
Why not try to harness the energy of the
r.oung , she thought, and put It to work
~~fae who could most u~ !Hlelplng

volunt-s help out.
of AthccorosedlvnlsglttedoChanarlstsehnut~lnn's85
. per ceuaent
Bees

fn•~en~~esa!"·~~t h"a':,~l~g ~~son~~=

~~rn"; 1~.:'~: 1ft.e~r~~t%.

comer" near Project Hope headquarters
In Riverside what they thought. These
wens kids, by the· way, who would not
exactly be considered to be of the
Goody Two-Shoes variety by society's
standards.
;
That day, Project CARE (Concerned
Adolescents for the Retired Elderly)
carne Into being. It began with a dozen

~="!n~e~h=~er ;~~~sg~~

became affiliated with the Youth
Department of the Diocese of Buffalo .
(where she worked as a vo luntaer) and
the numbers continued to grow
steadily.
_

800 people In 10 - Today, a cadre of some 800 young
people working In 10 areas of Erie and
Niagara countr, ana - brtdglng the
~~~~
el~~-e~dlng hands of

?,:'

U/';:·~~a~t~rkJ~c!~o~g:,"~;'ran"d

as a part-time lecturer In College H,
Christensen Ia justifiably proud of her
"baby."

~~P~I;!it~h"of e:~Yyo~ ~!:pte~

~'T~~:sW~ro~~ ':,'d'~:,.ai~~~:J

~~eegl~he~~~.nlt~

her furniture. It was the first time In 25
ysarli her fumltuns hed been moved. Her - I
whole life was changed because of
them ," Chrlstenaeh saTd. ·
For Easter, the woman gave both
girls a pair of nylons as a thank-you.

Diocese haa been busy sending pecketa
of Information all o - the country to
those lnt-ted In starting almllar
programs.
·
Like the Beatlea once aang, " AU we
need Ia love."

icar.._y and the dome
, _ _ 4, col4)

under theae primitive oondltlona. Let me

=~:~:- ~::r":!n~~~ h~~~~~:~~~
wonder why? Just th~of how much morw:
he could h•w done for New Yortt State'•

~~~lr.:o :::'~\~,\':'

ho run for 1

t...-. from vartolla faiths ·elld aoctoeconomic bKk!IIDunda
Eact! youth Wlio
ProjeCt CARE
muat t8M three ~-· training ..--.lone which focua on value
explcntlon, the D&lt;Oblema of the
elderly, elld ~ill alluattona feeing

-~~- body, Donnta Delta. Tiler _..
.Jiho dtd lhl "'eg -· Mr.

yo/l"~~ul

~~~·:::;r.;:;:~,··~"'1,:.:=.
-~

1

Cl'ldl

1

:::!'m!.-"''or'a':~1:=.~::11na ~~~~

tlon for tho conotructlon of BUNY a1 Buffalo.
1 feel thlo Cl'ldll wu mloplaood. Thla Cl'ldlt

==-.v::.:~~~
tile-'l'twmrnl"'! merwly al&amp;llii&gt;ed H.
tD -

York -

..

~Y ~ ~~andW.:
yWIIal -

-

Y.ork o,tt~~ !aolllllllve -lp. 1111a 11
~-- toc~t~y. The - our.
-

u..-.y'O::...tzt
....~""'-=
_,lc CII!Mnga, and_..... to toe thl

-Leg-to
::::::::=--':.a":::'.:; .
:.1;·:::.
-..plellon of the

nlnlna period, lnterwted J0Ut11a pelr
up .nO pay ...a1e1y wtalta to en eldlrlr
lridiWWal « couPle IWdlnQ In tlwlr
nelg/llloltloOd: TM proximity 8VOkla

Ia -..fortlna to " - w110 . . ally
. . . . bit ofaupport ~-

«

:Px':o~~h·~~':...'"='aa~'rU:

awrage term Ia two ~"The kids join Project CARE to help,
buf they nsoelva much more than they
glva," she'aald.
Through Interaction with the elderly,
Chrlatenasn nsported, volunt...-. leern
hqw to be more j&gt;aUent and h... a
better understanding -of deeth and
dying. Most Importantly, h o -, they
learn respect for their own parenta.

ll'o oil-,.,._
' Of lalo, I hive beauh to undetatand how
politico .,.. played fn N- Vorl&lt; State. I've
ll8d lbout SUNY 11 Sto~y Brook11 . fine

jolna

Ctooe ,...tlonahlpe
•
Generally, the ¥olunte.a -..p
cloee relattonahiPS with the P!IOPie they
visit, explained Cllrtateneen. Th8y often
continue to keap In touc11 long after
their official commitment Ia through.
Although IIIICh pair of ¥01u- muet

ana of the
Christensen told the story of Projact
CARE volunteers who started visiting
an 86-ysar-old woman who was
considered senile. Within six months
after'Volunt- visits began , the woman
manifested psychological changes and
started responding to the TLC of her
youth tsam.

In April , Project CARE waa selected
aa oni of nine recipients of the 1978
National Volunt- Activist Awards
prJ18811ted annually by the National ,
center for Voluntary Action and the
Germaine Mantell coametlc company. It
markbeenedhontheoredflrsbt tltmhea yoaoung_ people hed
•'I tl ward
Alth~ ProJIICI ,CARE Is run by the

~lo~~.:=..~t':..~~

The volunteers wens thrilled with ihelr
present, and didn't" mind In the leut
that·the nylons hed ilsrk same running
up the legs and needed garters to keap
them up.
,
then there ana the volunteers who
decided to bake a Cl!fse one day to help a
bed-ridden woman' and her husband
celebrate their ~th annl-.ary. It's
often the small things that realty count .

=:-'--c.."::.:'..=-:;,"::

II• _.of thl- -·York- j1011t11oa
offer

...:0..":":
...
':r--....~~~~.:
- balftG -tor..., •IUNY • eun.~o,

- 1 M _,.,., , ~. """'

I· .;;_: ··.-&gt;:;.· ..

�. .. .

•

HA~LOWEEN

MUSIC'

-·

a-..-

Thursct.y-26

..12.f'olote In-llano, VICI..IWborl, M.D., J.O., , _ o f medlc:Ole.-Down·
- - Ceroor, llrooldyn; clllof,--Bronx..
l..abonltory,
a~.
28Fif'b8r. 12noon .

v-. - ·

~Oylhe~ofBiochemistry,

..... - .

Dopor1ment of Medk:ine, Millard F..

U 18 -

FILM'
a.-Putu,..(Connoly, 1936). 146 0itfen·
dotf. 1 p .m . ~byl!lod&lt;SbJdiea.
_
Tho Safptures, oa _ , by ploywrlght Marc
Connely, wftll ., ol·- cost. Rex .lngram,

Tho

Fino Arts Quortot Cycle Ill of Tho Steo

· Boe-n String Quortot · Baird Reci1al
Hoi . 8 p.m. $4, genera oc&gt;n;ssoo; $3 _for
tacutty, staff, atumnl with 1.0 ., and senior citizens:
$1 lor students. ~ed by 1he DepiWimenl
oiMuse.
:The quartet-Leonard Sorkin, Violin; Abram
Lofl, \Oiolln; llemai'd ' ~v . viola; snd George _
Sopkln, ce1o--ere artists·iNaktence at the Uni·
venNty of Wlsconsin·Milwauk~ -

-s---..--....1
tiiECIWIICAI.--·
6ddio--..

PHYi.cs l

~-- ...

Dr. Bna D. McCombo,

~.

Pirtorrning Ar1S Comml11ee.

SemioonduetoRs

-. --l..ol&gt;.~prof­

~ SpOooh,
Dr. ~ - · prtlCfpol ~ en·
~. AdYw1ced Teclnology Cenle&lt;, c_..
1

v--·

Cc:lrpcntion. 206 FumM. 3 p .m. Coffee at 2:45.

Art""".._ In-.

St-bury. Gale(y 219 , Squ;re Hoi.
~ UUAB Cuf1ural and

8 p.m. Free. Sponsored

ol phyllc:a, U I B. 21 B *""'!1on· 1:30-2:20 p.m.

AliT IISTOIIY LECWREI

1117-11124:

. UUA8FIUI'

(1\181&lt;8\lejev. 1975). Con(etence

:U~~~
tc!:,tas~~a =~~
bathilg

coveted nude
ecene. When first reieased
In the U.S. It was seized by Customs!

Dr. ~ .......,..,., ~ of Onil
Biology, U l B. Room 107, 4510 Main Slreel.

8TA'IIITICS COI.I.OCIWM I
flll'wD~ ·Ior ......

......... Vlo ,..._.,., DUollly,

~-

Tho--

Gou!)g-Ho
Kim,
- 4230 Ridge
·of
- .. , _ , C.26,
LM.4p. m . ~lll3 :301n-.,A· 15 .

o Tool
lor . . . _ . . . . . . . . Eflecloo
- ..._
Dr.
Bae1ner-By, ~of~­

c.tt-....
--·fOrComogio
·p.m. Coffee
at·4 .L\'Mroly. 114 -

- · 4 :15

~by ... DNilionol
lliology- Chemistry of BiologiCal Systems Sen&gt;-

..... ~ ... ---'IIMIQulot
· 7 p.m. ~ by lh8
Sludy.

------&amp;1·---Hol.
-. . ----.O
. . . .,. . -.g--. IC.34
.......- .

_,

~-.c:ALBIUCA~

-lor ...
-

- · 7-11:30 R.m. Fnlo 10

~--

-

-

'

l8c:Uiy.

u,.

'-'·

--li-CUiaiEETINCIM

- - . . '" 1*111 -

SQr,ft. 7-11 p .m. ltolp ... be

lor .... ¥elY - . g of

c;... 1o

-~

.,Y

-

--. -c,olo~ll:

IIIEDICINAL CIEMfSTRY SEMINAl! N
Chomlllry oi4-Th~ra, Dr. Ranesh Shah,
Department of Biology, U I B. 127 ~ - 2 p.m.

,~b~:::;:/~-

SWMt Mcwle (Makavejev, 1975). Conference
Theatre, Sqtke .~ can 636-2919 for show times.
Aonisslon charge.

Spoee (1953) (lo 3·0).

See Oc10ber 27 oating for delalls.

CAC MfDHIGifT FIUI'
H Cimo F""" Outor Spoce (1953) (In 3;0 ).
170 MF.ACC, Ellicott. Midnight.
c..tson snd Barbara 'Rush. Good
photography ond a large budget help 10 make this

UUAB MIONIOifT SPECIAL'
Allllld(~ . 1977). Conterencen-.
.......: '

Squire. Midnight- charge.

trst-grade sd-fl ont-.ment. c..tson is stalwart

Sunday-29

-acCident-,_

MUSIC'

Squint. t.lklnighl. - c h a r g e.
j;!pmO &lt;lOOM) Mnyn
_
_,receives
...._•_
_ '-"S81101)1appetlta.
CliarOOMi
radiooclfve
skin graft, sllfl

~··

John
-Galle&lt;y.
·· by3 - p.m.hord
Ilium. NNSlxty-l'wD
FFree . Sl)onsonld t&gt;y the Cooler of .the ~
and Performing Arts.

AS she pu'liU8S har"-"'"'tcr..-...oo, Mon1roa1
Is afflicted with a newf hyper·Vin.Aent strain of
.-.(which mokes for., i.WICOmf..-a &amp;bway
ride , believe us!) .

MUSIC•

et!a,~

COMPUTER SCIENCE COUOQUIUII N
An ~h to -leal Dlognoolo Booed
an~~-- Profesao&lt; B. ChondJMeknn , Deportmonl'of Computer IIIII tnl01'1!18·
lion Scioooe, Tho Oliio 'Stale lkMnlly. Room 4 1.
4226 Ridge Lea. 3 ;30 p.m. Coffee and dough·
nu1SIII31nRoom81.
llHITED WAY CHALLENGE FOOTliAU'
!ho Arnortcon Soclotyol C - 1 Engln-•
118. t h o - · Socltity ol-nlcai _Engln- - ( - ~~ Acheson l'lold, 4 :30
p .m. The kJeer pays $50 to 1he campus United '
Woy ~ - The ctwck wll bo presente.d 10
Prpt: Howald Slrauos, chairm8n of 1he Uniled
Way-In 1lio FacU1y of~ s n d Sclenceo.
CACFIUI'
. A"- 170 1o1FACC, Elk:ott. 7 m 9 .30 P-"\
- $ 1 ; - $ 1 .50 . . ·
.
~ Ia a·lllllor organizer who
-lo11iotopofo~lrucl&lt;lngunlon

Ullng-mothodawiiW011&lt;, Gooddroma.

'illcFILM• •
9

r~':.m~·s! ~~~~

.......,.
_ _ _ _ ap.m.,..-----~·

-.147~ .

Tho plot....
.,._,..
• ~
"-.cool_......,_,.ond

....

~Lee .

'IIMI-,.oltho ............lrld~Hng

- - - . - - - - $ 2.50.

7:30p.m,
TheN- ...... ""' beginning &lt;(ttno FrQy
-*'go' ol 11m - - by 1ho WttY Peace

-~.---

DIIAIIAIIIAHCE'

-·-·

Centw _.,

, _

=..~:m Fr:'"~
51

UUABFIUI'
Julio (Zmemonn. 1977). Conference Them,

Satutday- 28

Squire. Coi "B3e·2919 fur show times. Mnlaaion c:hlrge. .

VOLLEYBALl'

a number of CM1PU1

•'

~- Admit·

/

U 18

YO.

Uni'nfolty ol Aochoolor. Rolary

nel8). 4 p.m.

FILM'
•
Nnlmfte (Allman. 1975k 1-50 Fort&gt;er. 3 aid
9 p.m. Sponsored by 1he ~~ of Engioh.
Slars Uy Tomlin, Sheley Duvall, -ry Gibson.
Ronae Blakely; Karen · Ge&lt;aldlne Chaplli,

CACFILM'
FIST. 150 F -. 7 and 9:30 p.m. S1uden1S
51 ; O!het1o $1 .50.
IRCFIUI'
Creeping Fleoh. 170 MFACC, Bfk:otl. 7 ond •

Keenan Wynn and Keith Carracftne. A stunning.

bold· wOO&lt; of art commenting on the Amorica'i
dream, while fc&gt;cusklg on Nashville, the ctun
centerandputt\irel C8&amp;lftl'of ~try music.

1~p .m . Acinission, $1 fornon·f~ .

•DRAMA I DANC£'
All F-Ie Caot "Some Enchanted Evening"
lrld Koriornu ond Cornpony (fonne&lt;ty Iliaci&lt;
Dance Wort&lt;shop). Ha:Timan Theaire. 8 p.m.

ARCHITECTURE l£CTIIRE'
An:f.!ltecllilllulldl-1~ Don Slul.

F n l o -.
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Either tt11rr1ott -..rtr: Interviews Mere• Cu~t­
nlnghun, dlncer end choreographer. lntemation·

EVENINGS FOR NEW IIUSIC'
WO&lt;b of Schoonberv, 'lletv, William Kroll
Albright-Knox Art Gallery. 8 p.m. General a&lt;Onis· •
$3; sNdenla, lactAty. Slaff, - - $1 .'
ADS vouchera a y -. Sl)on!pl'ed by 1he Center
of the Creative Md Perlonning Arts.

81~(~10) . 6p.m .

FilM'
II (l..wig, 1930). 148 Diofandotf. 7 p.m.

f-

~~~~-=-=

KOREAN NtoHr'
With tenor Jn..Soo ParKin e program of opera
arias and hlghligtits, snd Korean folk snd lYric
eongs. Waldman Theatre, Norton. 8 p .m. $3.'
~by Western New Yoni KOI'8Wi As·
~k).SOO Pari&lt; lh8 leading tenor wfth the
Opere- theSeoii ~lc
before oomlng to 1he U.S. In 1970. He studied
in
the
U
/
8
Muaic
[)apwtment
for two yeais,
1
the&lt;1 _ , to New YOI1&lt;. He oppeared 1n the
· U / 8 Opera Studio's "La Boheme," and reoentty
. . - his dobot with 1he ,......, Colon, Bogota,
~lnLo-lrldLoTrowlall.
'

-··•.-(Kazan.

A~·

IIU8IC'

The stu..-e Gregory~ Dorothy McGu&lt;e••

:!.~ ~to1:, ·:;':..:It~
_

-_.I&gt;Y1ho~1o1Music.
Comol · 8 ond 10 pm.

SJ)on.

FACUlTY RECITAl'
Allen Slgol, ; Carolyn Qodlo~ piano.
Baird Recital Hoi. 8 p.m. Genelol edmiSSIOII
$3; U / 8 fecutty , staff, llk.mnl $2: students
$1 . S&lt;&gt;o!uoor!d~lho~tofMuslc .

UUAI MONDAY ~HORIIOII FILMS'

·
oncl Trto wfth U I 8 Juz . En-

v:

to be • Jew in a Chriatlwl world packs · an
emolionaiPIA'&gt;Ch.

-51 .50 -byMediaSiudy i Buffalo.

_ , ·ean.

I

1947). Con·
Sponsored

terence Thoolro, Squira. 7:30 p.m.
by Judaic-.

-National

~bylho~ot- . ..Oc:o..-.&gt;J ,-.!Emoio~
-

droml.

br'hn!!Y directed by IM!g. ft'a his fir&gt;l talking
film lrld
Olbhlnlenaity In a performance
by -l..omtwho-liio aaeen debut her8. 1

.

MOVEa FOil THE NEW JAZZ AOE' •
•• _ , " ' - . , 111g111 !19371. one-oCthe

5:30 p.m.

Architect, Boston. 335 Hayes.

==s:v=:=..,~r::.r;.
Karisnu and Company, snd Emma Bookstore.

- -· slaTing
--Wid Erie
- l;!oiYWOOd
- Hlolorlcol
""'"""'"Jtic
.... a..tas
County
Society. lloi'Of.
8 p.m. Buffolo
Admis·

- $ 4· - - - - &amp; 2.50.

ORAl BIOlOGY _ . j N
•
Phyalologlcol.,._.._., -~In­
molo, Dr. - D. SwlNon, Department &lt;i
l«&lt;ogy. U1Mirolly, Aulllrola. Room 107,
4510Main.street. 11 :4Sa.m.

""

CONVEIISAnONS IN THE ARTS
Esther Harriott S..rtz interviews Ham June
Polk, of \/ideo art . f3ourlef Cable (Chan·

~~~--"Soma- E...-..g·
~ (lornwty
Block o..c.
-.op1 . . _ . · 8 p.m. Ganerol

---

Monctay-30

FOOTBALL'
~ . 1 : 30p . m .

Snow LOid Ca• StudiM In Nlagera Frontier,
DevidTq. 1 0 4 -: 3 :30p.m.

l o f t y -. The~arePalarCua/W!gsnd ,

......... .., .. .,..,._..olllloin. -

'

a.m.

-D ......
- 18,
OU.W;
a-tot
In
ap,
nb. S;porbmlnQ
f'\9
In B
. . llljor, ap. 133; IIIII CliariOI ln. F mojor,
ap. ll,no. l . aa.7FM·WBFO. 7 :50p:m.

----o-.-.~-0..0.

i

•

U 18 lnwtlollonol Toumornent. .Ciall&lt; Hal. 10

'

PnHOQIIO-· ...

-F « - - o o 1 8 3 1 ·552e.

LM--·-

~IA-IIontiLoulnlho-..

CIVIL ENIIINEERING SEMINAR I

1118T-.e~IPEAKflll

Jason Robards. W~nner of tiYee

by lh8 Ooportment of Music.

~-3: 30 .

~ol-. 104- . 4p .m .

and

v~

CAC MIDNIGHT FIUI'

UUAB MfDNfQHT SPECIAL'
,
-~~. 1977). C o n l - -.

ORAL BIOLOGY SEMINAR I

One. 214 -

Redgrave,

- academy BWMdS/

Frlday-27

u-ncacouOC!UIIid

Con....

beat

two women. The st81'8 are: Jane Fonda.

UUABFIUI'

The stan we Carol l..ai.Ke as Miss Worid
1984, J*1o Mallo as chairm8n of lh8 Chas11ty
Bell f'ol.oldllllcri. snd s.n; Frey os B Mocho.

--...c1 c.ta•alaalc 1 tndu 1"heor1M
lor Lie~~ Dr. Sodoll,

-

"Julia," a chapter In LJUan Hellman's memoq
Pentlmento. is transformed lnto one ol the
films ever made about the relationship between

The grand opening of the Governors Wine
Cellar. in ihe basement between Roosevelt and
Lehman Hals, 9 p.m. Free.
Music will be by Tom Fenton . Bob Abbott and
Jim Iarocci . 5pol;:lsored by the Governors' Pro·
• grarnming COmmittee.

once again In the face o1 faceless Ctll81ures .

4111* - To Die, w-0011oge. 309Ciomena,
Amtwwt. 4 p.m. ~

-

-

.!:::;.,~Call 836·29 19 fo&lt; show times.

Wily .,. -

'

n..... ·

=~- ~636-2919 for shoW times. ~

POETRY READING'
~

~ LECT\IRE I

GRANO OPENING'

IIUSK:'

•

UUABFIUI'
•
Julio (ZllvJemann, 1977). Conference

at.-....

-

NIGifT'

tnec::=·==~~~~SOfedby

Tho Ane Arlo Quortot Cycle IV of tho Sloe
-Siring
Bt*!IAocital Hal.
8 p.m. $4, general _
, $3 for 1acully,
staff: a1unn1 with 1.0 ., m senior citiz.ens: 51 for
Sponsoled b\(the Department of Music.

Leo ~ (Ftlriee. 1155). 1· p.m :
Eyeo Without A F - (F....,_ i959) , 9 p.m.
170 MFI\CC. Blk:ott. Free adm·Siiarl.
~

~~-~occo-==~
=epo=~
!Jonor hli!t.
women

tho -....,. of tho

to •
" -..,. -

Two

plot

·· hullbenl' but .. Is not

�......

7

ANATOMICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR I
Spetlal Dlatrlbutlon o* Dendrttet In C.t vt.ual
Cottox. Or. Paul D. Coleman, Untveral1y ol . ,
Rochester. 178 Fatber. 4 p m.

-

.

BUFFALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUM f
Camap on .Loglce l Truth. Charles Lambros,

•

~~ u~s~a~~~·= by various I
aog;cians on dlffe-et-t views of one of the centra

t

"""""'&gt;'S ol logoc
DIVISION OF CELL &amp; MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
DISnNGUtSHED VlstnNQ SPEAK Ell I
Structure and Mechllnl&amp;m of. • Muttf..enzyme
Complex: Pyrunte o.h~M, Or. G. G.
Hammes, O.,ll!l'tment of Chemistry, Cornel. 114

Hochstatter 4:15p.m. Coffee at 4.
RLMS'

The Huntert; Lee Maltrea Fout. 214 Wenda. _..
7 p.m. Sponsored by the Center lor Media

Hellbrolier Is.Fenton lecturer
Robert l. Hellbroner, described by_
Nobel laureate economist Paul Samuelson , as "one of our lew Interesting
writers on economics," will give the
1978 James Fenton Lecture, Thursday,

~g.,~~ }ut~: ~~~·,.;;~~'"¥ax~~:

~~"":'~ ::,':}::; ~=Yt~m:~
others. One of the current phenomena to
be exam I ned li Proposition 13, anjl Ita

tmg~~"tl~'ll'~oner,

a nationally known
economist and chairman of the
Department of Economics at the
Graduate Faculty of New Yorl&lt;'s New
School lor Social Reaurch, has
published numerous booka on political
economy and contemporwy trends In
capitalism, the moat ,_.,, of whl9h,
~Boom-Ctuh, _,.out of a
aeries of ertlciM on Americ:M capitalIsm, written lor the~"' Yorl&lt;er In 1978.
Heltbroner was educated at Harvard,
worked briefly as an economist lor
private business In foreign lrede, then
began his career aa an economic
esuyll\t wlf articles lor Harper's . In

w-

A Spoclal Day (liMy. 1977). Conteronce
Thealre. Squn. Call638' 29t9
times.

1

0

Hall . 7p.m.

'"'allow

A0mis81onchage .

The speciil dol' is Moy 8 , 1938, celelntlng
H-s visit to Rome. In which an .,_,. '*!l"'

-between -(SoP* Loren) •• ""'"'
out and we.y -

· and'Gobrielo(Uorcelo

Mas~) . • former reditJI ennouncer. The
accl0en1111 rMetlng brttgs tholtl~tor-.t
.The Fenton lecture, arranged by the
Office of Cultural Affairs, will be held In
two hour&amp; of comic and touching confiOoncea.
the Woldman Theatre, 112 Norton, at
argumentsandaetf-sean:::tWlg.!(' ~
Amhers~. Housed In the Capen/Norton
JAMES FENTON LECTUR£' 1&lt;complex, lust above the cafeteria, the
foclng tho-.....: FIIIIN . . - , Tuoo.
Woldman Theatre will be pointed to by
S..tmal, Dr. Robert L Halbrooer, nationally·
signs, ("Hellbroner Lecture" ), beginning
at the _Flint (Maple Road) and _ known ecooomlst and chairman , Daportmenl of
Economics. gtlldl8e looJty of Now YO&lt;I&lt;'o Schocl
Augspurger Road (off . Millersport)

~~~r;~·.; :!~:::,~ ~c:,,j,r~r,Yce~~~~i ~

stationed behind Capen/Norton for
additional directions. The date and time

(f~~~~·!~~~~=~n~~~:."'~~: ~c,'::;

~=t,y~;,.~=d~=

Is-

Norton.
Antllerol.
6 p.m.
'"' Sodal
· -(5now dote
· 112
8.)-bytheOfficeofCUturaiAHon.

.;,

....

Dr.--.----

and place - Wedi\esday, November 8.
Just In case.)
·

Nodce5

FACULTY RECITAL'

1145-1872. Dr. Ronald E.

Frino Arschonob, -

~t.

Privacy, Secrecy, and Reputation, Richard
A. Posner. Lee and Brena Freeman Professor
of Law, University of Chicago law Schoo&amp;. Moot
Courtroom. O'Brian Hall. 8 p.m.
'

OEOl.OOICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR f
c ...... Mopping Prablomo In tho a..nnllo
P,owlnco, Sydney B. ~. Royal Ontario

UUABWEDNESOAY-NIGHTDOUBLEFEATURE'
Murder at the Vantttes (1934) , 7 p.m.:

2p.m.

Scoriol em_. (I 93•). 8 :40 p.m. Conference
Thea.., . ~ · FreeUnisslon.
Munlor ,,... Jack Oaklo. Kitty Calllsle. and
Dul&lt;e Ellington . . . hla c:wchesln1. lWo nudonl
lake place in. Deco . ~ io thla bawdy .
mu~ tcu-de-force feetu1ng Gertrude Mictlaa
fl an exotic nunber, celed ..Sweet~...
----)liotr1chonOJohnlodge.
onOis • lavish an0 often baroque r--'dntl of the
~of ole! Rusaia'a Catherine the-Groat.

MuHun. Toronto. Rocm 18, 4240 RiHQe Lea.

c...._ and~ College.

EC~ SEMINAIIf

CONVEIISA110NB .. THE AIITI

-

~-----RoJ­
· Coo.rior c..

T--

. . .- . on:hll8ctlnl (~ &amp;( . 8 : 30p.m .

FIUI'

Tllonolor'o-...;
....... Nllht &amp; Fog. 214
_
, ....... Carrol;
· 7 p.m. Sponoorwd by tho

Me&lt;ioStudy.

eo.-

fOf

A Comp.eftho lnduotryj n T""!'!'ory_Equlf!brluta; An AppUcatton of a Problem In lrwwM
~I ~. Doe Dochort. Daportment Ql
Econorrks, U I B. 210 O'B!ian. 3 :30p.m. Coffee
hour with tho - - wt1 be al 3 p.m. In
80801!rtan.
atEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR·et.nlotry ol Cololyot Tho qotolylle

-..o

~ lluolc SOCiety Concert I.
1lf Rome porlormt. 11.8.7 FM-WI!FO.

8:20p.m.

MUSIC'

ll&lt;.flaloa.-.h\.M:SOC:ialy.,........_
RGMa. ..._.. r:....., conductor• .-. a con·

-.e muoic. lnCtudong Vivoldo'o

· Mory

B30p.m. - - S 2 5 0

1-

Sooton Room

FOSlBI COLLOQUIUM SERIESM
C6ole Encounters of ~nother Kind: lon-Solkl
Or. Nicholas
Purdue un•
_,;rf_ 5 Acheson . • p.m. Coffee In Room 50
ot 3 •5. Sponsored by tho Deportment ol Chern·
iStry

w-.

-.o.•
' _ , _ . , T h o - .. _ , . . . , - ·
~.us

248c-.. 5om

•

RLM'
_

----

WednesciA¥-r- t

.......

IIIOWIIUGI.Utii:M TIIEATJIE•

~--

Thursday-2

~=:.."'e:~:Un=o.'=::·
262
~ . 3: 30p . m .

UVE IIADIO IIIIOADCAST

s-. -

3p.m.

,_ . . 1111M _ , Opora..., musc dAclor

_,1Renoor. l949). 70-.on.
7 pm SponocndlfvJIIOOooortmonlof-

'-andl.Aw..,..
FILM'

-·•eDiot..-f
Oy""'
c.n-: torNodoo Sludv.7ii.m.~

. a.rtlo a-lii~ (1935). 148 [);ofenOorf.
1 p.m. Sponsored b y - Slu6eo.
C!lan (playeO by
Olln4V .....,..,.
murder on...., ~ expedition. StlndwO
c::;:n., whoduntt-some eca-y ecenes.

w.,.,

PNYIICSA-LECTUIIEI
Opticaltr £xcllld I

0 . Mc:Combo. - e n L.lll•

--

Do-..
ember 1 . '"'

aui.nlaaton

•of llflf)liCaliOnf lo - -

SKI CUll'
The Sid Club ... be holcllng
their
Swoc&gt;
on -·5«51or-.
· I . Slop
In
117Sid
Squire
Ofc81831
_ ,, , _ . . . , _ goupbn

The office wt1 be at&gt;an on 3Jrom 9 a .m.·9 p .m.

- B.
1 . 2. -

STUDY SIILLS LAII
The Study L.oll .. tho Univorolly '--'*'11
~·-· 38• Bal&lt;ly Hoi, lo lor ..utng In .
-ISI\IdY
- · ...: . Mondoy.
~.and Frldoy. IO_Lm.-3 p.m.;
II Lm.·2 p.m. Tho L.oll l o - lo ol U/8

.-.o ...

T-.

-·

f'l!lce.a-clrop-ln_tor_wno_

help atartlng, cntting. Of nrvlolng """ ..e.g.
We . . at 336 Blidy Hill on the .............
Willing Ploco lo ...., - - 12·4 p.m. on0 nights, oxcopt Fncloy,

c.npuo. The

6·9 p.m. For further inlormdon, oontlct

a.t.a

aruoe

' I IF d 1111'11,: Or.
- - lhnch.

....-.,..,....,ot.-.

FOR POLICY.,__,.,

.........- .. - . . . . . ,, Ur Fred Emery.
- . . - . llluo Aoom.
- . , . w111 be

""""' of Tho Facul)&lt;. ~ 3-5 p m
I·

'"' the Spring 1979 moy up
applicatioo loons In Crosby I 51 , and ot tho DUE
oHices In Squire ·205 Of 370 MFACC. ·

Gonion .. 638·2394 .

U / B 218Nonon. 1 30pm.

CEN1E1!

SponSOfod by the~- Hlslot1all Socloly
of Western New Yont.

WIII11NO PLACE
Do you hove - d u o ? Como lo tho Wl*'tl

RLM•

'

Batt. U / B. Erie C&lt;o.w\ty
· 25 Nottinghom Cot.n,
Buffalo. 8 :15p.m. on November 5 .
Hisloricol Socioly -

SCHOOL Of' MANAGEIIIIENT APPUCATIOIIS
Students who wish to apply as entering J&lt;noro

MITCHELL LECTURE'

1:30p.m.

0owoVo Stato Colloge. Aotaty Reid.

U 11 ...

.

Thomoo Holpln.
Bard- Hall. 8· and
p.m. Genen1l admis-

sion $3 ; $2 "for faci.Aty, staff, alumni and senior
cibzens: $1 fOf stii:tents. Sponaored by the
~ I of Music.

PHYSICS &amp; ASTliONOMY LECtvRE #
Opllcolly Exelled Somleonductcn. Dr_ Bruce
D. Mc:Combo. hood. Semlconduct6rs Bnonch,
Naval - e n Lab. odjunct prolossor_pf phyaies.

· SOCCER'

VOU£YaAu•

cen of -

UUABRLM'

~~~~~~st Lt~ V~~~.tyE~~~~~~'"'~~

tralora subscribe, featunsa In Ita new
pullout section, "1he Chronicle Re-,
view," a lengthy Interview called
" Robert Hellbroner on the Doom of
Gapltallsm .''

and Envtronmontll Peslgn .

lJ./ B. 282~ .

U I B. 262 ~ . I :30 p.m.

Foor

.

VOl.LEYBALL •
U I B n. Gen .... Community ColleQe. Clark

celebrated book, An lnqu{ry Into the
Human Prospect. And, most Interestingly timed In terms of his lecture here,
a recent (October 16) Issue of The•

LECTURE

1s tho . . . - - o f
Franju. tho haunting tole of an

Ell--...

CIJ

~t.!~-.:'~':.\1'8~"~~ ~~!~"~~:~:.;~~

01

A-

PHYSICS &amp; AI~Y LECtvRE •
Opllcolly
Dr. Bruce
D. Mc:Combo. t.-. Somlconductono Bnonch.
Naval - e n lob, "'*'""" professor of phyaies.

v-nuos;

:tt~~~~~~Oh~rou~e':.tne~~m G~l!-~7~

called It •a brilliant echjevement." It

~~:,~ c~~~~o un~::~:~~ !~

Tuesday...;._ 3 t

-

Wordly

devoted to a -discussion of his most

tac:.with-of-~.

p.m.

The

~~"r,~:.~~pss~~:~~ss:,!~ ~~~r;;~

who, alter oocldontaly
dlsllgt.mg hla daughter, YOWS to replace her

Owk Hel. 5

~k,

extensively on educational television,
where he was the moderator. lor the
"•
Court of Reason.
A profile of Hellbronar appeared In
Science In August 1974 . The September
1975 Issue of Zygon:. Journal of
Religion and Science, of the Center for

-insane plutic
a-vosau:geon

UIB ... -

first

1972.
Since tQ8n, he has written several
books, all of which have been respected
by scholars at the same time that they
have been best sellers. In addition , his
artlcles appear regularty both In
scholarty journals and In the New
York Times, New Yorl&lt; Review of Books,
Dissent, and Foreign Affairs.
Hellbroner Is known to be a highly
articulate speaker who has ·lectured on

Survival," will address luues that , at

eye.'

1953 his

Study.

Exhibits
. .Tho
. _v--w-,-..,-;. _ _ T.._wyE-.(W.
~-«HHX~T

----oftwo_,..._

·8
Ablghi·Knox
...,
-2
..

cw.y

Through - ·

.... . Celender..' ..... ,t.cat.4

�•"

•

~Cktfftn welcornee

•

s.ut Elkin to downtown.

It's finally offictal:
U/B's downtown·theatre
~tett.MoitheClty,Unl-.lty

:'!n~~~~o ~=tft' o~f~~

the old Studio Arena Theater ls now lhe

naw home of U/B's Center IOf Theatre

R-a&gt;.

-

o

rn:;'ll'!,.~e .'g~=lt~nt~:~~

conalderlng that Th.~N~tre hed sponsored
a performance on the premises a week
ewller, 119 leek of enthusiasm was
-.~dent.

ReplwMntlng - President
Ketter,
George Levine, deen of Arts and
Letters, said he believes the Center In
1

:::~r ~~Ill:~wl~u~fuv::.;arl::n:.~ f.:!

community." Levine, said the arrangement wa somewhat anticlimactic
•continuo"" Commitment 1o the City of
Buffalo." ·
Theatre Department Chairman Saul
Elkin was "thrilled" over the lease and
also expreaaed satisfaction that the
Center Ia to be part of the City's plans
!Of a downtown th•ter district.
.
BeMIIng. Buffalo MayOf James
Grtfflli ~that he hed .-nan article

~~.:.~.:~=y~~~e~~.;

uld the Cerrter'a relocatlen downtown
Ia "proof of the pudillng" that
oooperatlon can exlat between the City
end the Un~lty .

Griffin also pledged that the City will
make potrce and other support services
available In the area.
Studio Arena Executive Producer Neal
DuBrock noted that when he first came
to Buffalo with hopes of establ ishing
the Studio Arena, people w_amed him
that the City would never support a

=~~rs~n?..fl:'a~t ~,:o~l~ t;:~ntr0~~~

Du:~~~: ~::"~~ ;,.slstant dean of the
School of Architecture and Environmental Design, · and Charles A.

~~~r;e!h!~:'.u~~~d~~o~no~;~3~·~

afllrrn their supper) !Of the project.
The two.-year lease agreement lor the
500-seat, 20,000-square-foot theatre
was signed by DuBrock and Harry
Spindler, vice chancel[or I
nee of
State University of New
rl&lt;. Th lease
luslve e of th facility
gives U/B
for
er
cti
~
other
cult al eve s. A , Including mortgag
paym nts, Insurance, taxes,
re Irs an
maintenance, will run

~ions are ':~iJ'~"'rn~'i!Y:Se~enewal

Meanwhile, the Stud io Arena Is
enjoy(ng Its larger, remodeled home
across the street at 710 Main Street.
. ~~.~~~~\".Ph~':. housed the Palace_

Gerda Klein:
'loo_
k at what you ha¥e'

miles eastward toward Czachoslovakla,
to avoid advanc~nAllied troops. She
was one of about
women who lived
through the Ofd .
She was never reunited with her
family , however. All perished at the
hands of the Nazis.
With the thought of that one
unfulfilled dream, Klein. urged the
audience to ••approach your hOfnes
slowly like a stranger." "Don't search
for something that Is missing, there will
always be sOfnethlng, but Instead really
look at what you have. "

Keynote speaker
Klein, who Is authOf of The Blue
Rose , which deals with the problems

~,:'~lrel~~~a~e"~t.:'n~~sor

:!~'111 ~:,nl:llyL~f~~r:r,edauCo~~~~~[,~:

cal account ofJewish suffering during
World War II , gave the keynote address.
Recalling why she wrote The Blue

~~;~pt~~ei~ p~ .ab~h_:':,&amp;~se~ati~~;
1

of her neighbor's mentally retarded
child .
'
•
Watching . several
nelghborhoo&lt;J
youngsters at play one day, she mused
to herself how they seemed like
flowers . But Jennie, the retarded child,
seemed separate, . a part of j.!another
world " and a different reality. She was
taunf$(1 by some chlldnm and shunned
by others. Jennie seemed to Klein like a
"kitten without a tall ," a "bird without
wings.'' and among the garden of
children, a "blue rose."
·
Klein 's heart reached out to Jennie
because she also fell that she was part
of another world, or had been, the
unreal world of the Nazi concentration
• camp.
II was because she shared th is
otherness with Jennie, this "sense of
being me, yet separate from others:•

Chicago legal scholar
Is Mitchell lecturer

~r:·~~f~~~~~~~;;o;:,~~1~;;~~~r, ~~~

to Increase compassion, then at laast to
rn~~~~~h~~~st~dlng . of thosa who

-

·

Thirty-two years ago this fall, Gerda
Weissman Klein came to the "Queen
City" frOfn a Nazi concentration camp
expecting a "city of tomOffow" replete
with skyscrapers and perpetual blue
.skies .
.
There were no skyscrapers and skies
weren't always blue. But rather than feel
disappointment over unmet expectalions, Klein Instead embraced Buffalo
with motherly acceptance because, as
she explained, " I was ready to love my
new home."
With sincerity and warmth of
expression , the celebrated local author
and lecturer captivated the attention, II
not the hearts , of her audience.
The place was the Stlitier Hilton's
Golden Ballroom and the occasion , the
1 97~ Commun ity-University Recogn ition Luncheon ; which this year honored
seven area women for outstanding
contrlbuOons 10-lhe Niagara Frontier.

One ....... 'borlntl' -mg
One winter's night- while still a
prisoner of the Nazrs, Klein hed askeCI
herMit whlit .tie would went If only a
single wlah could be granted her. What
flashed through her mind's eye wa a
acene of a typlcai -.lng at hOfne with
h e r - ' - end family . She told her
audience that the thought of "juat one
men 'boring' -.lng at home" with
=of-:y=al~ the "driving
During mid-winter In 11145, Klaln,
etona with 4,000 CJCNr capttwe
In Sileela.- loroecl to march 1.000

Award.wlnneno
At the luncheon, Charles M. Fogel ,
acting executive vice presiderit , presented citations to seven women for
achievements In the following fields :
Arts: Maxine N. Brandenberg, 'executive dlrector of Arts Development
Services, Inc.
·
_
Bualneas: Mary L. Herman, com!Of New
Communlcatlona: Gledys K. Drewi&gt;low, a public relations specialist who Is
currently working with Worthington
Compressors, Inc.
Community Semce: Helen Urban , a
nutritionist who has been an active
community affairs volunteer.
EdUC8tlon: Sister Mary Charlotte
Barton , GNSH, president of D'Youvllle
College.
Government: .Marie V, Richardson,
19th District Erie County legislator.
Prof•alona: Dr. Jean Northcott,
research chemist !Of Allied Chemical
Corporation.

Kopra heads
Contracts office
Miss Elizabeth A. Kopra aaaumed the
responsibilities of dlnactor of Contracts
Admlnlatratlon, effactl¥11 October 23.
Dr. William Baumer, U/B controller,
· announced this week.
·
Mlaa Kopra hu been dlnactor of the
Payroll Department, and pmlously
served aa-I member of the staff of the
University Budget Office, and as the
seniOf edmlnlstrative aaallllfant In the
offices of the Physics~ Plant area.
She holds the M.B.A. from U/B.
" Her eblllty to understand and deal
wtth the complexities of governmental
regulations, to dlnact the operations of
staff, to ensure that appropriate •
services to the Unl-.ity community
are provlded,- and to dQ all of this
c'-lully and efficiently, will be
lmPOflant assets In her dlnactlon of
Contracts Aamlnlstratlon," Baumer
uld .
Mrs. E'-lne B. ~fer, who has
as dlnactor of Contracts
Admlnietratlon fOf many YMfB, Ia
ratlrlng u of the end of thle month. "It
has been a pl-ure lor all of ua to wor1&lt;
with her," Baumer said. 'We thank her
- ~";~:,.rl_:t ~na to the Unl-.ity,

1

�ENATE

Jazz

U/B proposes new,
appr~ach to cuts
~ II F_,tiY
ExocUt... COm- M-ng :

· - of

seno..

=..,!•it~ 1 ~ of ~ mtnutn ot

Benny -Carter is here as guest ·
of new program in Music:
twq performances are scheduled

t,.,• · CommltfM
No. 5 Old Bualappolntmenta

Benny Carter. renowned alto saxo-

1. Calendar Committee. The Chl!rman
re&amp;d a letter from Or. Ketter requesting the

wtl~h~~r~t\:Wf~gOcc!,=t~~n~·f~:Pt:g~~

faCulty to set up acade~c and pedagogical
rcrincl~les on which the calendar should

"":.' ::,;.,~oo':':';.:!:~

to)hls group since he had ~cipated in the
formulatlon of the Ca~ndar reaotutlon. It
was further APPROVED that Professor

of Social SCiences hii,S eliminated "and
Admlnstratton~ fro~ Ita. title..

.

Charles M. Fogel, Acting Executive Vice
P,Pident, reported for tho Preafdent, who

C~t":f.!:n~~ :i'~~o~'rf.'"ar.'C::a~h.~
ltated that the .State's fiscal condition was

=~"r.:r~s=..!J~F~~~:~:~;:,~

-Jean to austere ... We missed most of our
cora campus enrollment targets this year,
with two exceptions: advanced graduates
(abOut on target) and first-time lmshmen
(nur1y 600 over target). The Health Sciences
were about on target. The overall shonfall
from our budgeted enrollment target Is
greatest rn continuing and returning
students. As..,...a result we must revise

~.0:~~~~ n t;hi~:. ~:e g~~o~~~~~~
1

ror 191'9-80. The drop Is very sharp,
lbOut 1700 atudent FTE's below what we
requests

would have been abJe to target if we had met
our targets thla year. Jhla decline Ia believed

~~e~c!:~~~:~~=kt:.'i"or.~,·~~~~· :v~~
1~~~:~:nn:rnr::~w~~r ~~~:1tfm~C:,dJI~t
to keep our faculty and staff linea In
p
order to be prepared to meet the demandl ~ f
the Increased enrollment when It Is
achlovsd . To do eo, SUNY ( Buffalo will

t::sr: ~ ::=.eaJ~g~~h,:~~~~
limit our expenditures, will permit local

determination of the manner In which the

mcr.•x:o:~u.. a...,....,

11

:~'t:~·ot th:a~,~:~edeo:'~tttt!:c~17t
~~~~~ H•~::iG).s~~~ackh~'!!&amp;a ~~!;

~:~~ "~:n~~uag:~~tt~~ 8We1 "~':~!

named persona will also rewor1&lt; theC8Jendar Resolution .
2. Admlaalona Committee. The following
have agreed to serve on the committee : B.

~t~h:~· &lt;~~::t;,an!· &lt;~~~~~:: &lt;~~a'fn~}
1~),

(Me~clne).

and F. scR mpfhauser

t'rfbr:~"~~~\~:. ~:,~/::~'{~ ·have

A
agreed to serve on the committee : E.

~)~e(,."ilm::et~ooR 8t.anR'!•~~ !f:~f~
(P~osophy). Additional nOm~nations were

approved .
~ - Faculty Tenure and Privileges Committee. Nominations to the committee were

apE~ ~~18t1cs

0

Committee. Nominations to

th:.co~~~]!:' w;fe ·c~:~~· mHtlng

10/10 I 18

ot

.

ln~~~::s~~n·,;:~~e~~ ~~out~~ t~~~1~'f~

report of th ~ General Education Committee
at the October Senate meeting. It was
suggested that a more structured plan for
discussion-perhaps a wrttten outline

-~:~~~~a:! ~~~~\~h:n:~~~7~e ~:;.~~
0

might stimulate creat lva discussion . It was

also noted that many Senators did not have
a co~ of the General Education preliminary

~~~:~• ~~\~ ~~oba~~~~~~

. ::::. n:~~~~~hhe e~;;.~~~rr=~~t:~3 ~rf~:
meeting .
ci
tor S•n•~• mHflng ot

~~:::n~~:~w~ :=r:;t; t:~U~"m.~f:

the November meeting of the Senate be

.to

Tho Chairman reported that NEA Ia willing
partlcl~ate

.~;~~t

1 8
1n

In an open forum designed to

position. Wf now need to find someone to

who believes In no union ; someone familiar
with labor law who could el(pJaln the
conaequenoea of having no union; and
investigating other unlveraltlea, such as

~~~re 4'~~h .P,:'iou~~· ~s~~~~ ~

preva iled. The, m.:Sng Ia scheduled for
November 28 at 3 :30 ln Moot Courtroom

(O'Brtan Hall).

Item No. 4 CoinmlttM "-la
There were no reports at thla time.

-;f 7 f,r'da

~~f:~~ = t~:r:f ~~~P~R~~ib ~~~:
0

1

CANCELLED.

'191"1

lt.m No. 8 N- Buolnea
The Chairman aat(ed for volunteers to
proofread the final coplea-of the Bylaws of
the Voting Faculty and the Charter of the
~ru~1to~~~~Ot;.~~hel, J . Trice and A.
~ere )l'f'lll be no meeting of the Faculty
Senate Executive Committee October 25.
Instead an Inform-al meeting with the
Facilities Planning Committee wil l convene
at 3:00. Attendance is voluntary , although
F.S.E.C. members are encouraged to
attend.
The meeting adjourned at 5:21 .

Urban Affairs, Placement
hosting campus conferences
The U/8 Office of Urban Affairs Is
hosting a reg ional conlerencle of New
Yorl&lt; State HUD 701 Worl&lt;/Stud~
b'~~{:ms, Thursday, Octo~ 26, In 14
Approximately 50 faculty, staff and
students . from Cornell, SUNY/Albany
and UI B are expected to attend .
RepresentativH from the national,
regional and local offices of the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban
Development Uii.JD), the N,.w YorJ&lt;
State Division "of CommJJri'!ly Ajfalrs,
and several local governmental 'agencies will also partlcfpele.
The Buffalo Area 701 Worl&lt;/Study
Program Is dea~nated-the Comprehensive I'Winlng
ponunlty Program. It
Is administered y the Office of Urban
Affairs Wld Is financed in part by HUD
and the State of New Yorl&lt;. The Program
Is designed to ualat local govern- mental, quasi-governmental and nongovernmental organlratlona with plann1ng, ll18rlligen*rt end community
develoJlll*lt actlvlltee. It ptl)vides a
source of IMIIJ!Qwer, comprising
minority end other dluc!WntlllleCI
students, - to pertonn IIIIa aeat.While~for~-

In th-flelcle:

•
wtll Include

The 8urt.Jo Con'on "Program tnn...atlona
l'nllll.m8" end will tool&lt; at the

WOt1callapa

and

~ from the petSpecttve
lludent j)81tlctpMte. -

of

~

The Filii Cont..- of the Western

New Yoo1&lt; .......,.. end GuidanCe

AMoc:l.alon (I'GN will be held friday,

~27 ...

Amheral.

The ail-day conference is entiti~ ,
·•change Artist for Careers: Methods,
Regulations and OpponunUI~s" and Is
Intended to present ways to Increase
communication between various employers and persons In counselingrelated fields .
The day's keynote speaker will be
Glenn Arnette Ill, director of the Bulflllo
Convention Center, who will discuss
"Buffalo's Future and the Convention
Center'' at 9!15 a.m ., in tile Woldman
Theatre, Norton Hall.
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act
of 1975, which establishes guidelines
for services to the handicapped, will be
explained In a panel from 10:15 to 11 :15
a.m. Participating will be Bertha N.
Cutcher, campus coordinator of U/S's
Office of Services to the Handicapped;
M!',!X Lang, administrative assistant In
U/B s Legal Assistance Clinic; Wade J .
Newhouse, associate dean of the U/B
Law School , and Marcia Seran,
coordinator of the Buffalo Public
Schools Dlstrlcl Committee on the
Handicapped .
.
A luncheon lr0111 noon to 1:30 p.m . In
the Talbert Dining Hall wtll feature
.-~&lt;a by Robert Patterson, - director of the N- Yoo1&lt; Bt.,e
Peraonnel and GuldMoe AaloCIIIIon.

~eo

apeak=:': t:;:,'W~..:!

Yottc~f;
ea-t~on

Gerald Gloae, occupational
plenner • .nd Gene TD!a,

State director o l - education .

Theconf-oel~-

'l=tadby

the Weetem New or1&lt;
net end
Guidance AIIOCIII
In conJunction
with the P**'*" off~ at
U/B 8l1d Buffalo Stale.

phone soloist, composer ~ arranger, and
- film music writer, will lecture and
pertorm here, Friday and Saturday,
·
- October 27 and 28.
Carter will present an admission-free
seminar, " Jazz: Art or Business?'\ .on
Friday, October 27, at 4 p.m. In 233
5

~~~·concerts

are ;ated (for 8 and 10
p.m. , Sahlrday, October 28, in the
Katharine Cornell Theater).
The seminar and jazz performances
are being sponsored by the Department
of Music and the Music Committee and
Speakers' Bureau of UUAB .
His own compositions
The concerts, costing $3, will feature
Carter assisted by the trio of AI Tinney
on piano, Nick Maltese on bass, and
drummer Lou Marino. They will be
performinQ Jazz standards and will
appear w1th U/ B jazz ensembles In
performances of Carter's own composi.tions and arrangements for jazz
orchestra.

Ca~e~ f~~~ c~~;,e~lo"~g8 'wfti~l ~~~~~~~~

~~.:'c~fJ~~u~~?1a~1 :.semble , under the

The 10 p.m . performance will feature
Sam Falzone directing the TuesdayWednesday Jazz Ensemble.

· Bl~!~e ~~~nB!g~~n~~eD~~~:,e J~~t~:?,~
When Ughfs Are Low, and You Are. I fl .
add ition , works of " Fats" Waller,
Vernon Duke, Johnny Mercer, Duke
Ellington, Dizzy Gillespie and Errol
Garner will be performed.
A car- spannlnq decades
carter, now livang in Hollywood , has
enjoyed a career that includes associations with every important jazz figure
from the mid-20s to the mid -50s.

an~';;o~~"o~:Ji~?th fe'aci~n~ ~a~~esnf.;

1

5

Harlem : Charlie Johnson, Fletcher
Henderson, Duke Ellington, Chick
Webb , and McKinney's COttonpickers. •
His own orchestra of 1933 Included
musicians such as Teddy Wilson and
Chu Berry who later went on to receive
wide recognition.

tr~~~~~i~~~U~r pea':r~~~ ~~J"",;~~
posed , and provided material for Benny
Goodman as early as 1934.
In 1935, Carter began a three-year
stay in Europe, and played a major role
in popularizing jazz there.
·
.On returning to the U.S. in 1938, he
formed the first of a series of.....bands
which , over the ned decade, would
include many of the most prominent
0

gv,~;;~ie,0 ~u~~e oa':f~ ~ome;;;

Pg!t':T.
J:J. Johnson , Dexter Gordon, and Max
Roach.
In the late 40s, Carter began a new
phase of his career: since then, he has
worked mainly In Hollywood, composing for movies and television .

The 33-year-old Jazz specialist, who 1
says he!s been interested in the music
since age 10, is associate editor of
Journal of Jazz Studies, and a member
of that publication's editorial board .
He has written articles on jazz
discography and has partltlpated In
scholarly conferences on historical
musicology and related topics.
Patrick is also writing a book about l
the life and muslcl of Carter. This
project is being undertaken with the
assistance of PrinQeton sociologist
Jlllorroe Berger, and Carter himself.
Additionally, a Ill tbook on jazz
structure and style is·In the works.
In explaining why he feels U/B is -an
ideal arena for his scholar1y pursu\ta,
Patri ck said, "A large urban university Is
part of the necessary conditions for a
program in ,jazz studies."
__

·1

I

,

•o 1

A lOng tradition
Buffalo, he--- noted,

has)i ,.&amp; long
tradition of Jazz. He reportS 'fhat the
Buffalo and !Orie .County Public Library
.,..has the second largest collection of
popular music In the country. The
larg.est Is housed in the Library of
Congress.
" And In radio air play," he added,
· "this Is the second largest jazz marl&lt;et."
The jazz expert notes that there is
considerable support In the Buffalo
community for ~ comprehensive academic program in Jazz here. This, he
said, wlll include ensemble performances balanced with historical and
theoretical studies of this unlqualy
American music form .
As to the lull acceptance of Jazz In

~W~~~~'"!~u:~~Y.im'::!\:~_.t;&gt;e"eves

•I

11

" It will take place," he predict~ .

One of throe greats
while diverse in his
Carter accomplishments is most often
cited ; along with Johnny Hodges and
Cl1.arlle Parl&lt;er, as one o~ the three great
jazz soloists on the alto saxophone.
He continues art active musical life,
composing and performing , and Visiting
colleges and universities for - jazz
symposium·s. In 1973, he was a visiting
lecturer at Princeton. In 1974, he was
awarded an honorary Doctorate of
Humane Letters by that University for
·his contribut-ions to American music.
Coordinating the U/B seminar and
concerts is James Patrick of· the U/B
jazz faculty , Department of Music.
Further Information can be obtained by
contacting Patrick at831 -341 t.

JOBS
PIIOFESIIONAL ITAFF

Main-.
Main-·

1Hl033.
.
... - · fiii.2-Phyoicol - F - ,.,..._ ~. PR4 (Aal!lltont Director. ~~-·

---.-1--AUnnl-.
11-8034.

IH!035 .

FACULTY
-~-141126.

-

ar .........,_ (..., llflonl-

&lt;?:=:,;;~.F-8127.
Aunlqueproggm

-

P.,rlck, a jazz acholar and former
lecturer at Cornell, waa named director
of the.Jazz Program here .rtler this

year.

The Program may be unique In the
United Btatea, aaya Patrick, Whoae
principal echoledy-concentratlon Ia the
history o( Jazz.
The 1101CIIr alan MFlllrom Princeton,
Patrick ill or will be te.:~~lng oou.-- In
jazz ~end an lnlnlduetory course
on the hlllforyol jazz.

--~.141128.
Y I A i g - .......... Vlllllle ....
........
G '::.+•~1=4111.
A-,-arFol"'
...
chotogy(41.1411JO.
-I'IPIIJIII•o-~Bu!l.o"&amp;lll.-.yt ... ...,_ \

--··---····- l

~.F-8131 .

- - . F - ! . 1 3 2.
&amp; . - - , Twt-o
~

- •++w. A~IOott .
-(PR~(T--). ~2.
\
;·.,. ' , , . \.1\

'\·,• ,._ , .... ~'•'.:.; ...

'

�unclergr.cluate CC&gt;Uf8a . . also subject.
Wfl nole further tl)at a certain humber of
c:oure. .,. born In the Colleges and
then become adopted by academic
departments. Collegiate grading pollclas are being watched. If there Is still
anxiety about these l]lstters, as there
was some years ego, then one may have
to - k the causes here too in the
University as a whole rather than within
the Colleges alone.
As the most general principle, we

~u0~i=tu~u~f~,rert=~/'c

L . . t tM

We . _ prepared this report In

....,.,.... to your memorandum to us of
IIIey 2, 111711. We , _ touched all the

pointe lllleell In that memorandum,
though not - l l y In the same
order. Till taak set us waa large and
oomplex; the lime 'available all too
- · We acknowledge g1111efully tha
oordlallty and coope&lt;atlon of. everyone
from the University who was Involved In
our WOIII. They made our Ylalt not only
Informative bul pl-.t.
We studied the voluminous docu-

=::=:: .!r~h "!a~r"!:~
"""'*-&lt;~

people during our two days on
We cannot p1111end that thenafore echleved a complete
~lng o1 the complex history
and ~ clrcumatenoes of the
Coltegee. We found, nevertheless, that

c.mpua.

:=:: rrn:::w-: t~roo~.:
iona,lllld -~t them below.

I. The Collegee ee Reeldentl81 Unlto
While there lire many special
.JIII)Ortunltlee for~ undergraduate In a
r~lad :Qnll(8rllfy, there can

~;.':J:n~~r~ f:~:g:
~~':'~'1'~~-r.:=.

A llklnlflclnt number ol the atudents
who Ttveln Unf..alty housing are In the
Cotlegee, and the students who spoke

~~~::\'~ tf..~~.:~,\~.tW!
-

awt~nt

ol the strong sense of

comii1Uflll¥ reeuttlng from Collage

pertlcipallon. Though the quality of that
of community porh'aps varied
from college to college, It waa based In
all the Collegee on coope&lt;atlon and on
the ahwlng 01 8CIIvttlea and prognams.
We would auggeet, how-. that this
- o f community could be enhanced
by an lltemPI beher to define each
oolleae llhYaiCIIIy .nd .-chlt8Ciurally

wltlifil tlie Ellicott complex.

life of the &amp;ueges, and would hope
that fn the interests of both the

~1:li~!u~d~~ 1 dt~ ~~;;:sltyedth~
all levels of the University
tlon.
.

ad~nlstra·

IV. The Go....nance of the Colleges
When limes were good, and there
seemed to. be no end to- the supply of
students and money, the word
"governance" was little heard In
aca&lt;Mimlc circles. Then came the lean
years, and academics now talk about
governance a good deal (though no two
people would easily agree on what It
means). Put simply, . the central
qu~ Is: Who makes what decisions
and 'N&gt;'-7 - to which may be added,
who watches over whom? We cannot
resist adding the parenthetical thought
here, that if the trend continues we may
and up spending all our lime watching
over everyone else.
81

theGI~~~~I::'n :,c;n t~f.'hSn~:H~~ 'U

seems reasonable to look at the matter
In two ways: how the . rest of the

~""h~!Jl ~~eln~l=e~n ~~~~~as.~~;
Internal affairs.

pr~:••Pr;:~~~an'::'e~.l~~o~~r.:hl~~

the

University

watches

over

the

~~~e.T!:~ ~ell'~~=~~: o'r~~~~

Its parts, of a kind that we are not aware
of elsewhere In American universities.
We found that the process was

~~~~Yt~~:'g!o ~id~h:a::,~i:~~
~Se ~~'::re~;l~wued~x.,P,:';~l~;.,e~~
1

claimed

to

have

Improved

their

~?1ers~:,'d~ ~~~ ~~~~:'r~,'!!ar t~

ben:lft from the obligatory re-exarnlna- .
lion of their objectives and activities.
We found corroboration of these
oplnlons from our reading of the rechartering descriptions of some of the
· Collllllft. We conclude that this
remar'kabie experiment In self-evalu&amp;-

l~on lr.:.:'.cce~!f~l~r"l~! th~~~~~~~

expressed that 1&gt;8(haps the process
should be applied to other parts of the
Unl-.11~ aa well; we decided not to

priorities for o-.11 b~ allocation,

as alternaliY88, and more talk of the
. Collages providing Important elements
to complement undergraduate life In
dimensions which the academic departments and dormitory operations cannot
provide. These are encouraging signs,
but the equilibrium could be easily
upset If there Is not further progress.
What happens next will determine
Whether the Collages develop Into an
established integral part of the total
undergraduate programs of the Unl-sity, or regress Into their former
embattled minority positions.
·
We noted In the . programs of tha
Collages a number of ways In which
they and the community outside the

~=~~~ ~~e ~~et'::taT~'s.,f":J::

Colleges, 1&gt;8(haps because of their
partlcular themes. In the lime we had,we were not able to get enough
first-hand · knowledge of these Interactions to form a detailed opinion. We
did hear of enough examples, however,
to see that this was an area of

,.ij.-w.

V. The Collegle- the Reel of the
c:.n-~tr

~Colleges

lnter8CI with the rest·of
the uawer.tty; they alao lntenoct
with the bfoader oommunlty beyond the

~-=~t~~=:,~th~lllch

:C.":.:=~~~.=

of the IJIIMqlty loelar ..,.,... to be
thai of • truce, I( not of • peace. We did
not la-k to any~ critic .of the
Collegia; . . do ~l.nd that there

-aallldulad
- to~
thc!N~ who
11181( wltli
but -Ulllllll8 10 do eo. The ehrllla.t crltiCiam
fflllllbolllelcll8- - • lnutad, and
ltllllftiiiiiiM-Ioolllllca lhollln any
orlllodo• 1*1 of • major unl-.lty.

~:t:re~oo".Ziht~!~re ~~=~ r~~:i.Ft~!

University can begin to be delineated In
detail. We ere convinced that they have
such a role: therefore all of this effort,
all of this commitment, has been
worthwhile.

.·

Co~vene~~[ S~~~ l"e~'=~r:l:',~ u~h=

-

dee:lnterest In their future. We shall
watch their further development both
because of thl~ and because of what we
may learn from this unique venture that
may apply to other major universities.

~~:~'.":~ ~!v~~~~ :;,e~l~~s as a

VI. Concluolon
We shall now gather tha parts
together,• . and restate briefly our

About the ...tuators
II.S: et.odr.-ber, chairman of the
panel, Is Perkins Professor of Physics,

l!,spo.;;,~~!~l.::t :;::~g~i&gt;:hi~~~~~~~
questions: Wbere are the Collages
now1 Have they been worth It?
The Collages have survived a critical
Infancy during which their very survival
was at limes In doubt. The most serious

::'~~ ~~ :.~:r.r~~ha~~:

least made a start towards meeting the
obligations to which they are committed , to satisfy certain essential
needs of undergraduate education and
service to the community which are not
otherwi se met. They have developed a

~~~ ~ _:~~=~~ ,ll,o;ye:,";:g:~~~

sense of nelghbortlood for groups of
students~ The{, have made a beginnln~

l~.:fi~':n!';',~e~~Pn t~~r"!ct7~~~~h~y

~~:te:~~J.~\~'t~.~~

Colllige, chairman of the Department of

:~~c~en~ald~~~':.~~~:t~edan:'~~~~~

ot the Solid State Division of the .
American Physical Society.
Daniel Arn8UCI was executive director
of the Thomas Watson Foundation

:!'~f~r:~f~snf~~'l::~f~~ C:u:~~~~
liberal

arts

colleges

In

tha

u.s.

~~~~:~ ~::,l~ar~~ f{::},r::,ts~~'::

which organizes educational experIences for young leaders In Europe. He
ls a classicist by training and has
taught at Lawrence University, Appl&amp;ton , Wisconsin .
Alberta Arthuro Is president of
Chatham Collage, one of the few

have taken elements of the University to
the community: neighborhoods, minor~~mt~~~~~::~;::e~~~ ~fo;"~~,~~
Ities, women , 4 problems of the
environment; and they have genersted
appointment she was the dean of
community Interest In the University as
undergraduate affairs, Faculty of Arts
well.
•
and Sciences, and acting dean of
In trying to get a measure of how
much all of this amounts to, we bore In
mind the setting In which th is took - admissions, financial aid and women 's
place: the turbulent founding years, the
education at Radcliffe. Dr. Arthurs was
physical expansion and fragmentation
a lecturer In · English at Harvard and
of the campus, the shortage of money,
Radcliffe. In addltlon, she haa taught at
the lncr,.aslngly conflicting loyalties of
Rutgers and Tufts.

~:n~:rd ~~s~~~:O~i ~ ~

ex~C:SJo,~~~~~r ,~u=fiar to the

internal government of lhe Collages,
and Ita major responsibility Is to work
with the Dean In the allocation of the
Collegiate budget among the different
Colleges. It Is obvious that, whatever
fonnula Is used, there will be some
Collelles which will get less than they
were struck by the fact that
thoee Colleges whom the formula
favored were willing to help out the less
fortunate ones: a mode of collagl'lte
behavior which happens also to be one
ol the admirable though not well-known
aapecta of the Oxford Collages. We
sensed that the budget has so occupied
the attention of the Council that It has
only recently begun to pay more
attention to matters such as curriculum
.nd long_,.,ge planning.

the faculty to their profeaalona -.sua
their University. Most of these
problema are now endemic to all
universities, 'and so we are eenaltlve to
the context In which BuHalo haa been
able I~ bring the Colleges to their
position today: wa think It Ia a
remarkable accomplishment.
Many
muat have contributed to ft;Jn what saw in our limited lime, we have been
most Impressed by the ·Skillful and
Imaginative laadtirahip of the Collages
by Dean Spltzberg, and the thoughtful
and extensive Involvement ol Professor
Reichert ~ling the Faculty
Senate. The· efforts of these and others

:!.~~\-t.~Ta =':l~o:;:~i.=

United Way progress
j"
o\ACMfftCT\IM AND ENYifiiONtllNTAl DOIQN

MTS MD L.fnPI
otOIHEEJMNG AND Af'f'UI:O f(:!£NCU

lAW AND JUNSNUOf

- .........

NAT\1""'- SQDICD AHD MA'ntau.ncs

"IPCMITWO TO I'MieOlMT

-

ACMIMCAnAMI

-

GMDUATE AND ".UWQN)frllt.L lOUCAT10N
UNDERGMDUATE EDUCATlON

cotmlfUINQ loycAT!Ofl!

"'"''mu~

..._
----------

~.,....,.,...en

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VII'~

~natll . . . ~n-s

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,.

!• . !• ,. I" !• !•

�lmp~esart·o

Petro i~~lltifieel
potential' leader

Ron Baron isn't interested in O.J.·;
it's the Juice's agent who
inspired his plans for a career

~':.c.~~~c~f ~~e r~:.r;.,n &amp;u~~~~
1

Educatiop Invited her to a special
National Forum for potential women
leaders, held In Washington lhls month
prior to the regular national conference
oftheACE.
Twenty women .from throughout the
U.S. participated, she said. Ten
national panelists (Including• several
women who hold college and university
leadershi p positions) joined the participants In small group· sessions to
discuss Issues of national , lrl'slllutlonal
and parsorial concern - the /ob search,
professional 11evelopment n training

Most young men Interested In sports

=f~:'t~l:..;':d t~g~g~aJ~i~~s s~~!

about being the Juice's "agent!"

~~a~!:l' not~~~:~:t;vldu~~j~

busting aalary, sits back annually and

=~~ ~~~~to:-/';~~::::e~.WOO}'

Nlceworklfyou can get it.
Baron's convinced he can.
All you need Is a braak, Ron says. "It
j ust lakes one." •
Wangle a good contract for one
player and others will be knocking down
your door for you to represent them,
too.
Baron, who holl88 to enter law school
next fall, has afways been a sports
fraak. Too small to play the major
~o".:..~ ~l:::~".;,"y~~~anaged to remain

~rp:o'~~il~:·r:l'a~f;;'~ioo"f ~~thew%:~

universities to the soclet~, ~anclal
~~:t7o~f uf:~~~c;..,a~d ~~f!~t ~p~~~

common core curriculum, Institutional
cooperation, and combining traditional

'

1

Transferred as 1 ·oophmore

wa~'fC:~~Reh:r:,~~nfr.l~~·.~

then Sports Information Director Dick
Baldwin; later, he became assistant

sports editor of Tile Spectrum .

Baron designed his special maJor
with the asslstanoe of Ora. Sal Esposito
of Phyalcal Education and Raymond
Hunt of Management. The program
combines clasawork In both those areas
with a field work lntemahlp In . a
profelstonal eporta organization .
That practlcum began last May with

~..f.'lt'on:"'Jl:::toras of~t!tan~ocl:'::.~

Lancers of the North American Soccer
League.
Ron
-

PLAY-IIY-PLAY
S.on cloM the Dlay-bJ-play
ol the U/B llulfs' home

Redley, president of the State

on

In-Donal

10,

C8ble

='=-u:=.;..!';y'r,,.s~ul~~
ROI!ry Field, Saturdey, at 1!30 p.m.

Then, U/B athletic director Ed Muto
and football coach Bill Dando put him
In touch with Doug Hafner, a player

~n~~ e~lft:'\:,..wl~~mt~n B~fa~

administrative. assistant In · their pro
scouting operations 18$1 summer: In
that post, Ron was exposed to the
Intricacies of player selection and
recruitment as well as to the
Ins-and-outs of contract negotiations
between pl8yers and teams.
Tellcedlotheguya
"I got to talking tc:r'lhese guys (the
players) about how they go about
lindlng aqenta, what they expect of
them , etc. •

-~he~r.: :::.~k':1~~
from Centrallltate(Ohto) .

Ladd was -.tuelly cut by the Bills.
Baron stepped In &amp;n4 used some of the
aawy he had plclced up In the Bills' front
office to COIJICII.,s In the Cenadlan
Footbell Leegue (CFL) about Ladd.
Ladd, lmpreaead with this upstart
kid, told aomeofhls lrlenda.
By mid-July, ''Ronald L . a.ron and
Asaoclates, eporta representati-" had
been born.
Baron had hla father, an attorney In
Forest Hilla, draw up a standard
two-,.- cont.-:~ which gives the
fledgl(ng agent a ,_to negotiate an
aor-nant with s pro , . , for each
lndl'fkfual who stgna.

cut=

~.......

one, as did an ew11er
81118
8colt. the lhlnl hlgtleet
..-! ~ running beck,
" - ClniW Stille). Ricky ~. who

Mtl-.....,

•eo

......... ......_ 81. (NUn-)

..c1 IMIJO b)' the 811111,

IIMin'a lltllble. 8o ~
HniCI Gllk8r wldl

l&lt;lcllarY.
......,._ Injured_.,.

llllllliWWII

w110 Is now on
nat. a.n.t
with DIIIM

.._,..--out wllll ....

e folllllir .... - "

. . . . . . . Ill Auguat. . . . .

Co~ege

at Oswego, the only woman president
signed , t.o o. Baron thinks Paige Is a
definite .NFL prospect.
He's seen scouting repOrts en all .
ates, and they've
these men, Baron

g~~ ~r;•:~1.; 1 :;~ht te~:; ~If ';,!'c~~~~
ume.

•

&amp;kl~os willing to talk?
Between now and next season , he
hoC&gt;peLsteatomlnsterlenst holnse orpromspecoretsN.FLThoer
FL
0

=~ 1'!i:t~'::~~f:;,~~~~!g ~':

his eye on two players still In
college,-Just to ba ready for the day
=
·they "might" have need of an
. If he Is able to mar~&lt;et one of his
gmup, Baron Indicates, then " I can go
to some NFL draft choices and pos~lbly

slf~rb~\f;~f ~~~·n;;

only -'ground ho;.rr:
surveying. Helped by - former U/B
bask e!bal l co ach Leo Richard son, he
has been In touch with the European

==l.:-l8dlo~·WI~";! . ~~S.,~~ ~~~~r'r:~:;;:ge(~.;

C8frled

~d~N~~~~a~h~~~r~~jj'~~~ ~~c~~':r'~

~~ary~~e,fo~~r l:'l'r~sl~~tlnf!

StHJ~~~u~~~~~~~~'::,':r'\~~
- gram lhere).

ACE

C&amp;ml Smith Petro, associate deen of
the Coll-a, has been Identified as a
Vl!l)man wfth the potential to be an upper
level administrator In higher education.

miR~ lm~~.be~g Si~ S~':,'~,:n . who

~~~~~a~d~::/sfr~~~(a4~mma\'jo;r~

-s ·.

0

of a SUNY Institution .
..
Counseling Psychology
Petro, who received her Ph.D. in
counseling psychology at U/B , did her
dissertation on an aspect of sex role

~~r~:.V~!s ~~~~~cl~re ~~~~~~~
1977. She also serves as an adjunct

~fs~~~~~~~es~~;c~ol~y

o:/::!"':;!

has developed and teaches graduate
courses In the " Ps cholo y of Women,"
and " Women and
She Is

~ubllc ~ollcy."
~~7c~1 a'l~~c:::-~ 1~P ~~fc'1'ri':nj,~
duties there relate to a required course
on " Human Sexuality" for sophomore
medical students.
Petro Is now looking for other women
who might get "plugged Into" the

~~~~~at;~~~~~~c:·~~.:~~~.~~~ -

In . Syracuse soon. That session, In
additi on to ·workshops and other
programs, will attempt . to Identify
women who should be Involved In tha

~~~~~ O:Or a ~~~P~:ce~~i g~~

~=~~~{b.~et.a:::. ~~h~ &lt;;&gt;~~~e~:,a~
women In administration . Anyone
NBA. Ron Baron and Associates have
Interested on campus Is encouraged to
to start somewhere . And the lesser • contact her at the qolleges, 636-2316.
1
d thl t
f
11
The Office of Women In Higher
1
.:R~n"o:.."n s~h!t~s ..;~Th!;"~l!e, n~e
Education of ACE began Its National
feels.
Identification Program In 19n. Thto
At20 B
1
babl th
pro/ect is the central elfort by which the
1
Off ce addresses Its primary goal of
pro spOrts"r.~~e~f.rfn thlco~Jt~.n~~!t
adva~clng women who have shown
doasn't faze him .

~~pat\~~.~ ~~~~ p\~~ersaten~o~~~i'~~e_

their agents rvou .:an never do enough
for someone you represen t"), and that '
pro sports m.,agement isn't enamored
with those who dicker on behalf of
players.
Determined
But Ron Baron Is .... ntermined. 11 l'm
hyper· 1 love the ac sary relationshl p,'1he Indicates. Net 'i o mention the
anywhere from five to 15 per cent bite
anagentgetsofaplayers salary.
•
He sees no reason to stop at sports:
"Maybe 1 could be an entertainment
agent. too."
Today, Baron Is as concerned about
his own future as he Is abou t that of any
of his players.
He wanis to go to Ia . school, but
dldn t score well on the law boards last
summer. "I don't test well," he admits,
but"l know I can do it."
He's taking the exam,. over and will
be In law school next ' •" ". P predicts.
'Tit lind a school thaJ v. • ·~• e me. I'll
go to Tuts•, If I have to; n• says with a

wl~c'eH~~·~o:Pt,~.m= aE~=~ton

r~~:::\c a~";,lni~~~{on. positions

In .
Because of the relatively few women
at policy-making levels of admlnlstralion, the agency says, the higher ·
education co~munlty suffers a loss of
1

:.';,'3 - :::'~u:~ ~o':~'·~g~~7!'aJo~ea.'\~~rs
11

and other professionals .. 'Women
administrators, In tum , may be deprived
of a basic right to equal consideration
for high-level positions. Since higher
education faces critical problems, thaie
Is a need for competent women
administrators who are· more than
:\'~~~!!'ally Involved In policy determlnaTwlllve states
The program began In the twelve
states and regions ~avlng the largest
number of Institutions and students:
California, New York, Pennsylvania
Illinois, New England, Ohio, Texas:
North Carolina, Florida, Virginia,
Michigan, and Wisconsin. h has since
been expanded to 37 states. ~atworks
have.been estabtlahed within each alate
and among states; alate forums have

=n~lgr~~ 3!J'.at1Y_ states

and are
Eskimos probably won't have a
The general platl for th.e dewiopment
moment's peace until t'
·~e a ~eal
of the program Includes (1) aelectlon of
With Ron Baron and As
_
•_._•oo
_ _ _ _s_ta_t_e_coortll
______,._who
__h_o_ld_IM_:g_h-_1-~1

E eritus news
No ..mber 2 • ;g. 1 p.m. (note change In time). Or. JUdith T.
Melamed, Oej)3n -· t of International Studies, wtH d l - "The U/B
!:xpl" · nee tn Trauung and Hoating VIsiting R....., T..allers During the
Surr.nl&amp;rS of 19n and 11178. • Open to the Unl1ierstly cbmmunlty.
·
No-ber 21 - Slides. 2 p.m. Mra. Kirsten Mmw.tll dljwctor A""*M
Senior Cltlans Center, will show alldea on "Aapects of Aglilg tn jiPM Mel
China." Open to the Unt...-.lty community .

administrative posts; .(2) appointment·
of state planning committees composed of representatives or all higher
education systems within the state; (3)
formation of state panels of men and
women who influence and shapa state
educational pol icy; (4) Identification of
women administrators within each state
and development of programs to
promoto their advancement; (5) appolnl{nent of
National Panel of
prominent educators to enhance the
system of state networks; and (6) the
holding of ACE National Forums to
b&lt;tng together established and emerging edtl1:ational leaders to discuss
critical Issues related to leadership and
management in higher education.
The objectives of the National
Forums are to (t) Increase the
opportunity for wonljn administrator&amp;
to ba Included In the tnr.loration of vital
issues In higher eduat on; (2) Increase
and strengthen the on':ijolng networt&lt; of
people Interested In ,equal opportunity
fo'r women leaders In ~lgher education;
and (3) Increase the ~umber of highly

a

~ea~~ll"kn~~~T~ ~~:~~~~tors

j
.

who

· Carnegie Corp«atlon

Yo~els~:PcJ~g~=~ C::~

for the three-y- program.

• •

wo~:n fu.::Jn~~~l tr:' 1~.J&lt;:1':xt':J
enterprise Is a prime goal of the
American Council on Education. The
National Identification Program for the
1 Advancement of Women In Higher
Education Administration Ia one step
toward achieving II. ACE Indicates.

•Calendar
(lrom-7,CGI.C)

~. ~

lations. .. -

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signs lnd

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documenting tile - ·
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�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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                    <text>.STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

OCT19, 1978
VOL.10 • NO.7

Rights
Commager suggests Americans have
used government to advance liberty,
but we haven't gone far enough
By Joyce Buchnowskl

business. "

Reporter Staff

Although " not always effectively" and
often "grudgingly," " Americans have
used their governments as instruments
for advancing equality and liberty."
Professor Henry Steele Commager,
eminent author and historian, offered
this comment in O'Brian Hall Monday at
the opening session of a week-long
symposium on " The Constitution and
the Bill of Rlqhts in the Year 2001. " By

~~ee ~~~ ~~ . ~~n~~~5i~"6~1~~aghe~wc~:rd

to retract his statemen t.

Throughout the 19th century, said
Commager, the government tended to
make, rather than change its rules. The
emphasis was on equal laws rather than
on equal protection.

Then came FOR's New Deal adminis-

Antipersp· ants
Most are like leaky raincoats;
some were hazardous, says
U/B prof on FDA evaluation panel
Too many antiperspirants are like
" leaky raincoats," says Dr. Ell Shelter.
You buy them to keep you dry, but
the water pours In anyway.
Shetter, an ·associ ate ·professor of
• pharmaceutics, School of Pharmacy,
~
speaks from experience - four year-s

=~~~ P~~~~~:;'~~~e·~~:t ~t~

membet of an Independent "expert"
assessment panel commissioned by the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
The panel's final recommendations
and proposed ·regulations based on
them were published In the Federal
Register this week - but won't ba
official lor at least 90 days and
maybe a matter of years, given the
delays which manufacturers and others

can cause.

~~~J·,~'::.¥~J~~ea~~e7

:!:

and Secret from Procter &amp; Gamble,
Right Guard Extra Strength and Soft
and Drl Extra Strength from Gillette,
and Arrid Double X from Carter-Wallace
. - were "voluntarily" removed from
over-the-counter sales after the.J"nel

"~~~~faf..~~~-' i'ft~s~~Wpersp~
ants still on the market under these
names have entirely different IngredIents now.
Aerosol antiperspirants with ZirconIum
would
subject
"millions"

tration which worked more aggressively

to expand the "scope of liberty and
justice." It even changed prevaili ng
social and economic rules to provide
both equality of opportunity and
cond itions.
Commager also credited the New
Deal with giving a "substantive rather
than procedural meaning to equal
protection" under the law .
"The New Deal took up where Wilson
left off . It carried through one of the
great revol utions of our history; the
establishment of the principle and
some of the practices oi the welfare
state,.. he said .
Commager noted , however, that a
"vast body of unfinished business"
remains In the areas of liberty, justice

=~:"F~i~, ~ ~~~ t'l!,;~'l::ra~~7

Long-haired crimes
The distinguished white-haired scholar questioned whether Americans
really have equal justice under the law
when those who "corrupt the social
fabric through corporate skullduggery"
and " infect , maim and kill by pollution"
do not receive the same prison
sentences as those convicted of
committing · what he termed ··longhaired" crimes.
·
"Marihuana Is habit·forming and
dangerous; so, too, It seems clear, are
cigarettes. Those who sell marihuana
are, in some states, subject to 10 to 20
years In prison. Those who make and
sell cigarettes are honored members of
society who sit on Boards of Trustees
and on whom universities gladly confer
honorary degrees," he sardonically
pointed out.
The Federal system is no batter,
Commager contended. :'Extreme dis- ·
crepa,ncies in penal codes and prison
cond itions niake a mockery" of the

co~~~~~~~~U,:IJ,u!'it~~~~~~~t:"b~~rt

order

to produce documents can
languish In jail . An attorney general

who contumaciously refuses to obey a
Federai ~ourt order to . produce

documents even more vital to justice,
can persist in contumacy for over a year
· without inviting either dismissal or

Impeachment ."

Judicial retreat
Commager warned the audience that
- --America Ia Jn the " midst of· a judicial

.

·s..·c-_.. - · · - s

to ~~':e'W!~~1K c~~'i'aQa~~'WR:r:
~aled, some forms of the substance
had been shown to cause lung disease
In test animals.
_
The panel concluded that the benefit
from
using such products was
"Insignificant" when compared to the

antiperspirant formulations containing
Zirconium compounds in an aerosol
.spray formula.

~~~pi:!nt~ sfn q~~~~ont'::!re t~~ ~~;
effective than non-aerosol products
containing Zirconium or aluminum .

1

'Removed' before the ban
Those formulas - contained In Sure

•SN 'Antiperspirants.. • PID• 2, col 3

wa~ ~~~~~~~p~IY~~~n~~":'h~n~~~~~

Arts
The Univers~ty is alien to them,
five artists agree, but campuses
have provided nurturing when needed
. · Are the arts and the Unl-slty
compatible?"
If they eren't , they should ba,
compo- John Cage offered at the
beginning of an evening of answers to

~dm~~nf:::.C..Tw=!Yin ~~

Under the eegls of the Office of
Cultural Affairs and prodded by that
agency's director Esther Swartz to stick
to the question, Cage, choreognspher
Merce Cunningham, poet Robart

~~e~~m= ~f,:t~ F~~d"l~.
Albright-Knox, exchanged Ideas for a
f.--wheeling two hours.
Egged on by an . appreciative,
ovei!IOw audience of about 400, the five
_,all
the lot, ocrambllng for new.
ground from which to launch attac;ks
~nat the university aa an Institution.
Tlila, In the same ~th with
acknowledgment• that the oellaame

o-

=

::ld-:;:n;".l:,"u.:r:'=
- - · The audience couldn't '-too
menr ltlt'-tabli811mentaalvoa.
c-.,. ill1lobd Buckmlnater Fuller:
IAI'a chltlae both aoclety end the
university, lie agraed, so no one -

p;..a::,~~~~··

let's

de-Institutionalize

The .... C811't be taught
The arts can't ba "taught." anyway,
said Caae, himself a drop-out from
formal education at age 17.
Teaching should ba a meeting
between teachers and students, he
Insisted . " It's not certain who Is to
leam."
Too, Cege said, " I'm not confident of
Institutions; but I have complete faith in
lndltriduals."
Nonetheless, he Is "grateful to the
universities. Much of the liveliness of
American art Ia due to them. My music
would be little known without them . In
Europa, the uniYeraltlea aren't at ail
Interested In the arts."
Pemaps they ehooldn~ ba In ttt.e U.S.
either, Creeley began, lor " the arts can~
be committed to static, secure
patterns," can't be addressed u "a
subJect ." neatly dluected Into semester-length ohunka.
Rocking the 11oM
•
Morton Feldman, with a hint of
· - ·Atto,'IIOiiei,OGI.t

Marathon
Several from U/B are involved
in the 1978 Skylon event;
they run because it's there
Running In Saturday's 1978 Skylon
Marathon (from Delaware Park to the

=~ ~ow.;j~ ~~~~:ls~n~er~~~

more.

That's like:

qu;'r't:;..~~He tr::_;

times

~:';!.n~.,t!t.~~~

around
around

a
the

Buff~;:~~~\~~O:.t~:.~ cJr::

way from Buffalo toN- YOI1t City; 01
•driving at 55 mph 101211 minutes.

!

,

Even when a runner finlshee well
back In the pack, he hu been running
steadily at eight mllft an hour.
"There's no good nsason to do It, and
- a i good reuons not to," eays
David Tarbet, U/B profesaor of Englleh,
and a vet"'*' marathon runner who Is a
member of the 10-person ata.ing
committee for the Sky ion -.&gt;t.
Tarbet cautlona, h o - . that he Is
ualno " reuon" here In a "~ narrow
_
_.. E~ mwmhonerhu his 01 her
mot I - aa he knowo well.
In addition to Tarbet, - . 1 others

· - - - .·-to,oo&amp;.t

�. . .a ..
• Antiperspirants
~-t,c:ol-2}

Register In 1975; bul II wasn't until
August 19n that the final regulation

ape::;::;,~hlle,

though, Shelter

~··

=;'!f~~r~~~~~ ~r:"~:7t~~u~..;~

within a yeat of the Initial publication of
the regulation .
.
Manulac1ur..-s had at first attempled
to prove the prOducts sale, but
capllulated when the FDA decided to go
ahead with the ban on the Zirconium
sprays In advance of the full final report
and recommendations of the panel.

U/BF names two to

fund-raising posts
...!: u.~~,t"!,e: ':: ':1ra
--...,Inc.

. . - Snyder, Yice president for
dlwalopwil of the U / 8F. has
- " " " " ' the "''P'*thl*lts of D.

:....S.~as~~~C:

o f - hnb.
er., has SI!IIWid as radio and
cirador of the U/ 8 News
ear- lor the past IOU&lt; years.
~. he was rews ditec:tor lor
~29.

He

~

secu"""

il be , _ , . - for
gifts from corporations and

8~;:~t~fc!':!!;~~OI:!r,;t=~

in the U.S. Air Force as a member of
Armed Forces Radio and Television. He
is a member of the Ant ique Automobile
Club of America

Nenni"""has serwd as director of
-aJlJmni affairs for the U/ 8 Alumn i
Association since t974. In her new
post. she will be responsible for alumni
giving , the Century Club, all constituent
lund programs, and phone-a-thons.
A graduate of U/8 with an M.A. in
student personnel, Nenni is a member
of the Life Wor1&lt;shops Coordinating

:r::=s.,:=-:;;.,'1:.'!':!~ ~="1'~ t~eo~ t:,'r,r~aW~;;:~
State issues final word
on restoration
of snow days
dinoction,
Annual CorpofaleAJrmnce campaign.

At the Gooanor's
the
~t
of cmJ Service has
- . . . . - the restoration of certain
..:allon aafits chafged by State

emtJ~oyMs.-

to tie eligible for this restoration , a
Slaleanployee:
t. must ' - necessarily
- . t from
of extraonlinlly ~ conditions during the
peo1od Jan.-y 29, 1977, through
, _ . . , 5, 1977; and
2. - . In ~ce as of
August~. 1978; and
:t not - . _,ned for
_.y ,_,., Jan.-y 29, 1977,
25, 1978.
ernp1or- currw~tly on the
,.;n be aedited with vacation
.
1. inthe-...ountastheamount
dwged, but

-

·because

~

""t':ly
,... ,:ly,::-,::-.::::a"~:
t.wanc~.,.._,............_

n..

on .,. 8IAijecl

o1t1cY1 -

to

and a "'\Iiden! counselor at Canisius.

on time sheets and on leaYe record
summaries with the remarl&lt;: "Snow Day
leave Restoration. •
Because some employees are at or
near maximum acx:ruaJ and may not be
able to take lea.... this month, the
-line for adjustment has been
defened to December 31 , 1978.
Employees eligible lor vacation
restoration Who ha.... terminated aft..August 25, 1978, ate entitled to
payment. leave aafits restored under
this policy are to be added to other
acauecl vacation for which payment is
claimed, up lo the maximum ol30 days.
For termina\ed employees who haYe
already received payment, a second
claim should be filed. Both claims
combined should not exceed 30 days.
Questions regatding this procedure
should be refened to Personnel ,

635-2650.

LeyY receives

Frene h priZe
•

---*'-lhouldllleobe
credltlld eligible.....,._ wllo .-e
~ on wftiQrt s-r IIWJ- no-..........., - o r
- - IIWJ eligible 10 ..,. and
.........._ - - · No such empo,..-.-bot-aredlothe
..,.all _ , in lieu of being
_ _ __

Dr. Gerhard L.,.,Y, distinguished
professor of pharmaceutics, has re' * - I the Host-Madsen medal from the
~ion lnternationale Pharmaceutlque's (AP) Board of Pharmaceutical
Sciences In Cannes, France.
·
The awatd, established in 1955,
honors a pharmaclst who has dislinguished himself by his wort&lt;, and

~~ u.!:

~ t~n ~~ =~s~t ~

. :.: "':, =---.:

_..,,2.-dWaedloaic:lt-.3.
- - ,...-10
snwioully - - and . , _ . _
by tile . . _ - , or 5. ...... lor _.y , _ . . than

be-· •. - as

~-c:onclltions.

_,__Oit

No form of
time or
C11i111 - - Ia aotllorizlld by the
~for .... .........,__
. _ offll*la - • to lcddng-lolhe camlng- -

:-=-~to-:='"~~
......... c 1 us.

. 1--=t 10 future
dr_

. , . . . _ - - - by -

:=-.:

named in honor of Dr. Erik Hosl·
Madsal, president of the FIP from 1935
to 1953.
A p - In pharmaceutics and
pMnnacokinetics, Dr. leYy joined the
t.:ulty in 195a He raceived both the
B.S. and Pharm.D. from the Uni..alty
of california. Born In Wollin, !&gt;ermany.
he was educated in Shanghai and lat..assistant pharmacist
in a United Nodions Hospital for
~'in 1948, he omigraled to San

-.,_.,lice

leYy has ...... honored by IMtitutions and orgonqaions lor his
ClOfttributions to the f'oelcl of plwmacy
i n - · , _ . , including the u.w--slty

_ ....:.::..
=-'~
=-=~s-:::1~.
-=-=
:=-'tor
.. ~
........_ _.,of
----~
... - - lo

- - ~ ••
.......

this policy,

the
"'"· far.
lhrougli

......, 5. .,., ....,. - - ol _.y

llilllll .......... ell* ..... ~

.-.~---·-.....
__ ...._.
...1

-

--

--ol--

(Finland), and lhe

Soc:ioly of sa...-.
in 181111, h e - tbea.t
prla lor the
s-1* in llie

'*' . I -s.:o.ac-.ln
·~--1--.d-~oflhe
...
of c.litornia
_ _ .,.....__

!~"'

~

A basic safety Issue
The basic safety issue, Shetter says,
centered on Zirconium's potential to
cause inflammation in the lung which,
ov..- the long run, could go unnoticed
until the organ's function was affected.
Zirconium had also been found to
produce minor irritations when applied
topically. but this was not the major
conc..-n.
The action taken against the
Zirconium aerosols was one of three
choices the panel allowed itself when
classifying antip..-splrants.
• The second option was a finding that
the prOduct is gen..-ally recognized as
sale and effective and Is not mislabled;
the third, was a conclusion that
available data is insufficient for a finaJ
classification. Und..- the panel's proposed regulations, prOducts relegated
to the latter grouping may remain on tt-.e
marl&lt;et tor a specified p..-iod, if the

~~~.:~~n; i~r~=~~~R

guidelines lor testing ate not followed,'
the FDA is empowered to pull these
products off the marl&lt;et.
Mosl are sete - applied toplc.lly
Generally speaking, Sheft..- said , the
group of experts found that most of the

~:;;:,s~':~~fi~r;,~~;'arl&lt;eted are
All aerosol formulations have been
grouped in the testing..fequired category, howev..-. While the evidence
" looks like" these are sale, their
long-term chronic use remains •·a
worry," Shelter points out.
A series of studies are now being
designed which manulac1ur..-s will have
to carry out once the regulations are
final . The tests will probe the
long·range toxicity of aerosols, u~!ng
experimental monkeys ov..- a periOd of
th;ee to four years.
The FDA will completely monitor the
tests, Shetter said. The agency has also
laid-out GLPs (good laboratory procedures) to be followed in the studies.
No matt..- what the tests ultimately
proYe about aerosol safety, a..-osol
application of antip..-spirants has
already been found to be less effecti\'e
than sticks or rotl--ons.
The panel considered the question of
aerosol propellents. too, but det..-mined that these (Including fluorocarbons] a.re not a hazard to humans
under normal use. Dang..-s posed by
perverted use and
en'iironmental
ill-effects of the propellents were
beyond the scope of the panel 's chatge.
Deodorants . . cllferent
Sheft..- notes that the panel he was "
member of did not look at deodorants at
all. A deodorant - which attempts onlv
to mask odor or to decrease the number
of odor-causing bacteria In p..-splratlon
- Is classed as a ci&gt;smetlc. The FDA at
present has no jurisdiction ov..cosmetics (although Shelter beHeves
that cosmetics, too, will eventually

~~o:'~m:'E::1:!:~~totr~~a,]~~n/s

currently pushing such legislation.
A drug , however, Is anything that
modifies nonnal or abnormal bodily
functions. Since an antiperspirant
· wor1&lt;s to retatd sweating. It thus affects
a physiological process.
Some products are both deodorants
and antiperspirants.
The expert panel looked at both · the
safety and efficacy of antiperspirant
products, at 1abel claims, at directions
tor use, warnings. etc. It: evaluated O'ier
60 volumes of safety and attlcacy data
SUC&gt;Piied from within the manufacturing
concems; eonsldered data from othar
~title literature; aollclttd expen
0111!'""' from re-rchera; end telttd
act,.. lnoredlents (there are only aboul
5 or 6 dilferent ones In ell the verloua ·
formulations available on the markel).
E. Will~ Roeenburg, M.D., a
dennal~ist on the IIICUit~ Of the
u.w-.ity of T e n - wu chllrrna~
~ 1*'81- Memt&gt;eca, 1~ lddluon to
~= J. Wesley Ola)'lon an
toxicotoglat wlln tilt
DA·

~e...a,abactll'loiOQial~h

!iii

....,.,... In sl&lt;ln b,a11111: Zi~WM

Malley and Jane Rosenzweig, practicIng dermatologlsta; and Robert Scheuplefn of HatVatd and the FDA another
d..-matologist. Non-voting representatives of consumers and the antl~~~l~ant industry also served with the
The panel was one of 17 set up by the
FDA In 1972 to eval_uate all drugs sold
ov..--th&amp;-count..- (wrthout prescription)
which had been intrOduced between
1938 and 1962 (when testing tor safety
and efficacy prior to marl&lt;eting was
required lor the first time). Products
intrOduced before 1938 were somehow
" grandfathered in." In the decade
between 1962 and 1972, the FDA
attempted to conduct these checks
through int..-nal panels. The external
•expert" ~pproach was finally instituted
to provide well-&lt;locumented scientific
bases on which to take legal action
against manufactur..-s of products
found potentially hatmlul.
II started with 'Mum'
Deodorants date back to lhe late
1800s when "Mum" became the brand
natne pione..- in the field. The first
antiperspirant product. Arrid , an aluminum chloride cream , appeared in the
1930s. It was not until the late 1940s
however, that the industry gained
momentum .
Sev..-al of the panel's final recommendations for the future of antiperspirants are interesting, Shetter
feels , if not as headline-grabbing as the
Zirconium a..-osol ban.
J,.abelllng changes
Manufacturers will be asked to put on
!heir labels a statement of how effective
the prOduct can be expected lobe. Most

~~~~rn~ ~s;::!u~~h'Lt:,~;t~6te~~

The norm is somewhere between a 20
p..- cent and_..10 per cent reduction . It
you sweat heavily, he advises, " you 're
still going to be wet. "
To be _called an antip..-spirant, a
product wtll haYe to be proved capable
of producing a 20 p..- cent reduction i n
sweat in at least 50 per cent of a target
population, when applied once daily .
(Anything less than a 20 p..- cent

=~~~:~

=• =e~~

t;...~~~

have to be a " Clear" notation about this
11

~\'lfr:g ~~1 !:':'t~i.e

on
to contain a
statement that will be limited to one or
more of the following phrases: " Helps
reduce wetness," " Helps reduce datnpness," "Helps reduce perspiration. "
Watn ings against possible Irritations
are also required lor some Ingredients,
and directions must state: " Apply to
skin of underarms. Not to be used
gen..-ally o - the body."

ng.,J~";'p~~~~~.: ~~~

all!:.;r,:;,sse
As lor feminine hygiene sprays, they
were eY~~Iuated by anoth..- panel.
Billion dollar lab
Americans spend approximately one
billion dollats annually on prOducts
claiming to reduce axlllaty (und..-atm)
Odor and perspiration. These Include a
wide variety of antiperspirants, deodorants, and deodorant soaps. It is
probable, Shelter says, that relatiYely
few consumers give much thought to
how these products accomplish their
purpose or what their limitations may
be. It appears many people are unawate
of the distinction between antlper:spir·
ants and deodorants and ollen use
antiperspirants expecting deodorant
action or vice versa.

~~~=~
~=-'~"':.:.~~~~
the products ara sate - · even if

r:.

the
preoccupation with them sometimes
borders on the silly.
As The New Republic once asked
editorially: " Do the armpits of America
really merit such attention?"
1

Newman adds priest
With the addition of a new associate
minister/ Rov. Christian J . Puehn, to
the ste I of the Newman Campus
Min istry (Amherst Campus), the Center_
Ia expending Its services lo the

Un~~~~:ye~'!.'~~u~~~~er

has announced
that on two Roman Catholic holydays,

:r::,~~:'!tflla: :l~i.!l'~nU~I:~Itf6

Capen Hall at 12 noon lor the
Oon¥tnlence and ob..,..nce of stu·
&lt;llnta, 111CultY._1 and atafl. The dates are
Wt&lt;1n11day, roovernblr 1, the least of
A II 8ainta and Fri&lt;lly, December
the
1fllf!IIICUII I Oonceplion.

1

e.

�October 11, 1878

Cunnlngh•m : Vou c.n't tMch ct.nce.

Buck: Where do the •rta bllong1

•Are the arts and the university compatible?
(from page1 , cot. 2)

Groucho in his delivery , wa s outraged
and outrageous all night.
" If you get a deqree of doctor of

~~:'~2r afd~~r~~:.;,,r~ ~~:~~i~~i

Chri st died . A music degree Is basad on
the fact that Beethoven died . Teaching
is based on precedent. "
But the " arts" are based on

f~W:.:~\~P c~~e.x,s;~~ a~7r:

t::'cl'.";
fCage, lann is Xenakls and himself , he

~~~~,:'~~~ ~~~s~~~~s~~~s~'[o "{,~~
They rock the boat , so to speak.
A univerSity Is not a place to rock any

~!:thi.e~~t~ a~r.~~e 1~df~t:,~dents

' Tenure shouldn't be allowed In a
creative department, he suggested.
" Yes, I'll resign mine If everyone else
will, theirs."
Security Is dangerous for an artist ,
Creeley agreed ; It saps creativity.

~~~~~.~~!~d~h~~uy~ · a university
structure wh ich savs one teacher is as
good as anather, he continued.
Universities don't want the " stars," the
top people In the field , he said . " That's
show business," they th ink.
"Why put a composition department
In a music department?" the composer
asked no one In particular.· " Why not
pu t it In a dental college?" After all, " a
composer puts something In and takes
something out ," he quipped .

students' MA shows in local galleries is
•·good ," he thought.

art~tar: n~~~d;r;~~Ybe~~n~ ~:;~~~0c~~
3

They are ·•proscribed .·•
Art ists themselves are often ham-

f~~u~~i n~~~:iv~f fat~u~:Xs~fJ;:p~~at!?b7~

shots" when they openly res ist the
paperwork and committeework which
stifle creativity.
"I don 't know where the arts belong ,"
Buck said .
e arts " belong " In a setting like
Block Mountain , Cage, Cunningham
and Creeley, veterans of that educational experiment in North Carol ina, finally
agreed .
Black Mountain was Ideal
AI Black Mountain , cage noted , "'you
didn't graduate or COfr!e I&lt;? an end . You
were just as much in It when yo u left
there as you were when you were
there."
Th e facu lty didn't examine anyone ,
he recalled. They brought people in
from more structured places to do thst .
C.age '1aught" com position, only no
one wanted to take II. Bu t he stayed on
and ·~ a lk ed " to students, he recalled

'.:..~ ~iack Mountai n, you dld.n't " learn"
~t~~!\P;."?.E~~;~~;e~,r~ il,".,PP:~~
10

middle of a lake . Everyone marvelled at
the view, Cage said- everyone, that is ,
but the librarian who kept complaini ng
that the tree on the Island " was In the
wrong place."
Creeley recalled that ·Black Mountain 's most memorable feature was that
"faculty and students had co ntrol of the
program ." There were no trustees; no
administrators; no bells to end one
class or beg in another. "You taught as
long as you were engaged." Poet
Charles Olson mi~ht beg in a class at 7
p.m . and end 11 al one the next
afternoon .
AI other places, Creeley said, he has
heard professors literally sl op In
mid-thought , rather th an dare an
incursion onto Prof. Y's turf . Everythi ng
is artificially compart men ta lized .
At these same other pl aces, the arts
are viewed jaundlced ly as what you do
after the ··real" business of being
human has been attended to. They're
the first to be cut In ti mes of crunch .
Cunn ingham also recalled Black
Mountain with feelin g. The pQet Olson
danced In his classes there, " moving _
across the floor like a \!lalrus." Learn lnr
has to be like that , he said: boundless
continuous, free.

1

place, so you ·'learned' then , for
example - threeti mesa day. "
The d ining room Incidentally had a
marvelou A view of an Island in the

What the hall ara you doing?

dofeg=~Y't~:~~~~ l:~~~':f ~~c=~

who came across a you ng man working
on an not-Im mediately recogn izable
r~~~::;.\eal the San Francisco Art

~------------------------~
Dance Ia 'experienc.d'

Merce Cunn ingham , who took courses In theatre and dance at a
professional school , aQ_reed that you
can't " teach " dancing . You can only
teach " techn ique" which helps keep
people from hurting themselves . " How
would yo u teach dance, when the
dancer has to learn by exper1ence?"
Again, though , the choreographer
acknowledged, It was the college dance
departments wh ich brought dance ·to all
parts of the U.S. at a time when the art
struck most of the American public as
"odd ." The dance teachers often did so
" at great risk" to themselves (In the 30s
and 40s). These "I nd iv i dual~" nurtured
the dance- " despite the system ."
An artist has to be a rebel ,
Cunningham ventured .
Today , he said, " dance Is popular,
but rarely Is there fine teaching."
Someti mes, teach ing activity borders
on the criminal, he said, describing a
class of 40 he visited on one campus.
The teacher made the students exercise
In such a position that knee damage
was sure to result.

th~g:~~~ aott"l~f ~~~;,':,';tg~m~se a~

teenager he was told by a glee club
director that he "had no vo ice." " I was

de~~~~~:"e you doing?" Duchamp
" I don't know what the hell I'm
doing ," came the answer from the
student.
" Keep up the good work," the elder
artist congratulated.
" There's a secret understanding on
many campuses," Feldman went on,
" that no one really expects an~one to do
anything creative. You're just supposed
to know that Christ died.
"I have a young friend at Bennington
who Is taki ng a seminar on s-pontan - eous dots.
" Academ ic freedom has become the
freedom to be academic."
Buck agreed there's no lree exchange
of ~~~s~~ '!'~~.n~:!~~~~ ".:Jr~ho:eialk of
stultification, there are very few artists
today who don't have some kind of
university or college affiliation.
The fact that we're all here talkl.ng
this way , cage conceded, reflects " a
certain compatiblllty."
Not at all compati ble with the
even ing as it turned out , were one
student's expectations.
''When I heard Cege, Cunningham
0

~!l?ou

can 't always look outward to
others. You have to make your own
excitement ...

---------------------------,

_,_
~men :

...

~, , -~-

You Clln' t rock the bon.

35 ~!~~~~~~ ~~!'J. again."
" That's not funny ," a woman In the
audience hissed.

Ph.D. 's find jobs in business unde.r pilot program

Down the orgenlzatlon

human ities has placed about 40 per
cent of those who applied In priVate
sector jobs, the Nation-al Endowment
for the Humanities reports .

Robert Buck of the Albright-Knox
talked about Institutional conatralnts
agai nst young faculty , about those
organlz.atlonal aapecJa of the University
wh ich clash with f~m .
.
Wh ile the unlveraol'(&amp;e.s a
by
providing technical and economic
11JP110r1 for artists, he euggested that It
sllould att...,pt to breilk down the
structure of Ita lntllflor life, to to It
that atudanta and faculty taka chances
off the campus. U/ B'a policy of hanging

_,,ce

A pilot project designed to find

~~la';';.~n~~o;J~:~~ ss~~~fn ";i~~

o~~~woir'y""'th~x~::en~~rfro~~:f.:
Education Department Is being funded
by a grant of "$205,028 from the
endowment plus an additional St60,000
in contributions from corporations and
private institutions.
·
Some 500 scholars with doctor.ates In
field s ranging from archaeology to

8

~gu~~'r'.'!~:.~!t!~t ~ !.~ tl::'~l:

be." Frankly, she thought, It hadn't
been all that much .
That's your problem , not ours, said

foreign languages, or nearing . their
Ph.D.'s, applied to take part In the
seven·week. summer course at New
Vorl&lt; University. A class of 50 was
picked for the "Careers In Business"
course. Concrete job offers have been
made to 20 class members so far and
more are expected, officials said. More
than 50 major corporations participated
·
in the summer prOject.
Ernest May , chairman of Harvard
Unl-slty'a Hlslory Department, who
lnltia.ted the project along with Dorothy
Harrison, an aaalstant education
comm issioner In the New York
Education Department, said the pro-

!

#

..-·

gram Is Important not only In lllfmS of
finding /obs but in demonstrating to
potentia humanities students that
stud ies In that area need not lead to a
" dead end" because of the current
teachi ng situation atthii college level.
Scholars who have Ph. D.'s or heve
done advanced work toward a doctorate
In the humanities can apply for the
summer 1979 session If they apply by
Jan. 15. Applications should be
addressed to Dorothy Harrison , New
York Stale Education Department,
Cultural Education Cenlllf, Albany,
N.Y. 12230.

�. . .u ..

4

VIEWPOINTS
Arts&amp;.. Letters rejects premises of Bunn plan
The following otatement wao op-

...-cl bJ tho Focully of ArU ond
loiters on Oct-e. 11178:
The Faculty of Arts and Letters
proteots the continuing erosion of its
reoourcea brought about by tha de facto
Implementation of the Draft Academic
Ptan . We must re/ect this plan or any

pl~~~ft':" ~,m~~re~~sLetters

accepts the need for an academic plan
and endorses the VPAA's attempt to
deYelop one. We also endorse the Intent
- of President Ketter's statement In his
'tecent State of the University message

~~s~~~~::'lg,ft~';l'a mw"~i~"";'l~~
used In allocating resources." However,

we disagree with both President Ketter
and

VIce

President

Bunn

In

two

sl~~~~~.:;: =1~ plan should not of

necessity "suggest" the criteria on
which decisions can be made; It must
be based upon criteria which are
established, from tha beginning ,

ex~:r.,~~;:,';l':::'e~f~~~~!~·s- wh ile
a significant Index of social chanqes to
which a university must be senslt1ve cannot be the predominant criterion by
which a university such as ours
measures Its present strengths and
future deYelopment.
Ouellty, Intent and commitment
In addition to considering enrollments (and student-faculty ratios), we
must consider carefully the quality and
structure of our Individual academic
programs at both the undergraduate
and graduate levels; we must consider
the quality and Intent of our present
university-wide baccalaureete requirements; and we must cons1der the exte't
to which we are willing to continue to
preserve some programs, whatever their

SUMMARY OF ARTS AND LETTERS CUTS
lnotructlonal
Non-lnotructtonal
FTE'o
FTE'o
1974/75
1975/76
1976/77
1977/78
1978/79

Line
Dollora
$ 48,621
166,291
182,116
74,591
100,986

1.00
2.50
3.00

8.50
12.00
2.53
3.00

TOTAL
26.30
6.50
.
$572,605
These figures are corrected to exclude the School of Architecture which
separated from the Faculty In 1976/77. It should be noted that some of the
FTE's In the School of Architecture were generated by transfers from
departments in Arts and Letters to Architecture during the time it was part of
the Faculty.
The Faculty of Arts and Letters lost 32.80 FTE's between 1974 and 1978,
and $572,605 In line dollars , a cut of over 10 per "'!nt. Included is $60,584
loaned to the Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs, a debt
incurred by his predecessors wh ich Vice President Bunn was not able to
repay.

Sourw: F«:ulty of Arts •nd Uttan

to a supermarket philosophy of
education that undermines what we feel
to be the real aim of education - the
development of Insights and values that
give order and cotierence to one's life.
For us, such an aim Is realized primarily
through seri ous exposure for all
studen ts to the core disciplines on this
campus, embodied in the three major
Faculties , Social Sciences, Natural
Sciences and Mathematics, and Arts
and Letters.
In Arts and Letters we are constan tly
and painfully aware of the decline In
enrollments in many of our programs
and the Implications of this decline for
our Faculty as well as for the University.
To be sure, the flight of students from
the humanities to vocational and

~~~g~~~g~ ~'~6t u ri1q~e t~i~~f~
8

1

0

(with the exception of composition) as
pre-professional requirements, and the
lack of a coordinated, .. structured
curriculum .
·
Over the past three years, we have
made sustained and serious efforts j o
reverse the decline. We haveo eceived
neither help nor encouragement from
any source. Instead, we have been told
that this Is an Arts and Letters'
problem; we ~ave been told we must

!rlf~t'"~ to ~~::,s~·~g~r~:~~~~~.

:;;,d ~!
have been characterized as "enjoying" a
8

;~~~·.~:~rdi~~~~~c~'fa~~~~o,;, T.~~j~~~~.!

our student-faculty ratio -

essential resource for our pedagogical
mission at th is university - students.
We are here to teach and we want to
teach.

~~~~Wcll~~~~i ~~.-~nfZs~~sll':t~

campus, but there are several factors
that are unique and which have had

:.'o~dh~J"~-=~~~~~t'f.:.,:fng 'Z:

The most notable of these are the
split campus , the proliferation of
Collegiate courses, the fact that most

Specific concerns
In his State of

~~~~~~:~~:~ :f.~~ ar~,fe~P~u~s~~

reallocation

one Institution In our society

t~at

has

well as to Ita tl"'"llmlsslon.
In no way ' , we wish to belittle the
Importance cr enrollments. We recognize that, like any social Institution, the
unlvet81ty must respond to changes In
our economic, social, and Intellectual
cllmateo.
The social upheaval engendel:ad by
the clvll-rtghta movement of the 1960's
produced radical changes In our
academic programs and degree requirementa, and an enhanced awareneos of
the need to pay mora than lip-service to
eflactive tiiiiChlng.
The economic racesalon of the 1970's
has creatad an atmoaph. . which has
allowed students lnct~~a~lngly to
aecrlflce a broadly-basad education In
favor of vocational training; and true
educational relevance has aomehow
become reduced to an attempt to meet
minimum requirement• for employ-

ment.
H o - much we may deplore some

=

of theM chlngeol, we l:annot Ignore

them end we have to te.n to live with

:t:""u~=

~t~~~

linked to our cepeclty to maintain
enrollment etapqdelermlned level.

'A ................loeophj'
On t1w olller.ftend, we must object to

the AQdln)lc 1'18n'1 rwltance on the
atudent-t.collty ratio aa tho operative
atlllldenl upon which ecedemlc declatona . . being mede. We muat object

. .laura .

.. .....,... _ _ pub-

,,.,_, - """"'*"'

~

by , . Dlmlon ol
A,_,.,, Sfofe Unlwwnlty ol Hew

Ycwi&lt;Ofa.ffalo. &amp;ll~-...-.fo.
In IJ6 Cnoffs Noll. Am/oo&lt;ol. ,.,._

CDfod

,.,..... 6Jl.:M2!'.
""-ol...ollcA_,
JN/IESI. OoSAHTIS

-----~

IIOIYT T MAalTT
1.---\
IOHNA. aoura

JC)Ya-

serious Impact on our programs.

we are

~~~~Y. ;~~~en~::er ~~r~~~~~:r~:r~~~~

the

University

~:rsa.9~i&gt;~~~~;'~~"' 1 ~e·:.e~Y ha~ 1 .s,:a'':,'l
can

be

mounted

and

conducted over a long period of time
This already seems to be happening in
the case of some units, as I am sure you
know." We do not wish to be identified
with such opposition simply because
.Arts and Letters has been earmarked for
incremental reductions over the next
few years. Instead we wish to raise the
level of discussion to Include all of the
issues we have raised above. we
specifically urge that:

niJ~l .~~~ ~~~e~~o'TI~~s~ra·~:~~~r~

humanities courses must be viewed as
a problem with university-wide implications and that effective responses to I he
decline must be a matter of universitywide responsibility.
(2) The upper administration recognize its responsibility . to broaden the

~~~;:;"~in~fcri~e';j':~g'~~ reft~":~~ tr~~

aims of a university education and by
promulgating a philosophy of education
which emphasizes the lnt"!!ral relationship of all of our diSCiplines, and
especially the vital role that the core
disciplines of arts and sciences play in
the general education of our students .
(3) The VPAA suspend any further
reductions of university resources from
the core disciplines until such time as
Ute. effects of a Program In General
Education have been observed con~
cretely, measured advisedly, and
judged wisely.
Unless we view academic planning as
an opportunity to reestablish and
reassert our roles as university
educators, we seriously risk the
disintegration of our core disciplines
and the loss to our students of the
opportunity to explore and understand
what all human beings share: history,

~~::~,~~~~~~~e~~o~6;.n"~.d,,"~~~~~J~~~~~

expressed , and communally known .

We feel that the Issues we have raised
In this statement require a response
from VIce President Bunn no later than
lwo weeks before the Academic Plan is
submitted to the President , and in any
case no later than November 15, 1978.

Prof offended by cartoon and letter;
UUP did comment on the gay issue
Editor:
Neltherthetasteless cartoon, "Putz,"
of 5 October nor the equally offensive
letter of Jan Steven Erdman, which you
published on 12 October, had any place
In the Reporter. The cartoon was an
Insult to the University's women
students, and In addition contained a
smug and not so subtle antisemltlsm, which for me Is not at all any
less serious should Its authors turn out
to be Jewish . Erdman's letter, In
attempting to take the matter one step
further, Is lillie more than a piece of
callow bigotry; I know of no
Interpretation of freedom of speech
which o~llgates an epitor to give voice
to such voews.
That junk of this sort should appear
In the publication which Is generally
regarded as the official voice of this
Unl-slty Ia totally unacceptable and a,
shocking comment on the judgment
and professionalism of -those-who
control what Ia printed In the Reporter.
We In this community deserve and
many of us will demand more
responsible and fair-minded reporting.
Sincerely,
- Dm dGAssociate Professor
H[lltory

in last week's Reporter article on the
question of the U/B Council's extenslon of. Its non-discrimination statement to Include " sexual orientation or
.affectlonal preference" among the list
of no-no's. According to that article, he
queried UUP about this and we had " no
comment ."
In actuality, however, our President,
Prof. Gibson, sent Ketter a letter on
Oct. 6 outlining our position In some
detail . We would not want your readers
to think that the UUP was indifferent to
th is Issue, which has a clear bearing on
employment and promotional policies
- both of which are of obvious (and in
fact, contractually stipulated) concern
to UUP· as the bargaining agent for
Faculty and Staff. Therefore; 1 would
like to share some of the comments that
Prof. Gibson did, In fact, make to
President Ketter well before the U/8
Gouncll meeting took place.
We began with the notion that, rather
than extending the list of things that
. should not be discriminated against , It
would be better to enunciate a positive
position for the University to follow.
After all , even the 10 Commandments
did not put an end to ~In; In fact both
Rabbi Hillel and Jes~s Chri st found It
desirable to supplant them with positive
Injunctions: In the former
the
eertoono . . dengetouo •• we have
-...d. The
I.Widertook publifamiliar "Golden Rule; " in the latte;, the
cation of "Pull" ao .., oxperlment. It lo
commandment to " Love thy' neighbor as
thyself!" (Affectlonal preference?)
Hence Prof. Gibson urged that
"rights to employment should be based
the
Ia oulwelglled bJ complalnto
upon (and explicated In terms of)
competence and performance" as
often lltrlba people aa offenolwe.
agreed upon and as related to assi9ned
Fr8111dJ, - dldft, tlllnk _, of thla was
tasks. He went on to say that " Provate
- - c.an-.w ..... ,_, liMn . beliefs ... IIBve no logical relationship
.......... -1101-lntentto ~·
to crtterla rooted In such a conception
......, • ottend ....-. Our IIIOioaiM
of competence and performance . ., He
forM-InJ......... - Rnl. concluded by urging the President to
affirm, In a policy statement, the
Edlklr:
blanket position tl'jllt a person's private
President Ketter was either misbeliefs "will not be . permlttad to
quoted or mlal"!onnecl In hla atat~t
threaten employment rtghts."

ease

"-riot

.
.
=- . :=:!! ':

::..~
c:', ==~.:==

.=

~

To put It succinctly, UUP holds to the
position that as long as an employee
(or for that matter, a student) does the
job they.slgned up for, It Is none of the
University's business what they think
about or do outside of the Un iversity.
We think that's an Important
"comment." It Is also one that the U/ B
Council, our University community, and
the general public ought to hear
repeatedly. Our "affectlonal preference"
ought to be for the rights of the
Individual, period.
-Williams. Allen
Professor of History
President-Elect, UUP

Public college
costs up slightly
The median total tab for tuition, fees ,
room and board cllatlles_for students at_
major U.S. public universities rose7:S
per cent for 1976.79 over the preceding

~~~\on8al slus';Yocji~f~~;o~p~~~~ B~i;:~

sitles and Land-Grant Colleges Indicates.
#
The Increase Is one per cent above

~"~~nfe~'p~~~· ~~~=~~~o~ ~~ry ~v.ef~¥~

to July 1, 1978, according to
calculations by the Natlo'nallnslitute of
Education In Washington .
The median total charges - tuition,
required fees , room and board - for a
state resident attending state and
land-grant unl-sltles this year os
$2,221 , compared to $2,061 for 1977-78.
For non-residents , the bill wen! up to
$3,406 from $3,221 In 1977-78.
For tuition and fees, state residents.
pay a madlan of 2.6 per cent more than
last year, which contrasts favorably
with a 9.5 per cent median increase on
room and board .
Inflation and the need to maintain
quality were the most frequently cited
reasons for lncreaaes.

�JO~S
FACULTY

AultUnt Llbr~~rian (Head of Main
bnlry)-U~l..lbraries. F-8119 .

Street LJ..

Aaoclllte or Full Ptofeuor4Aathemebcl,
F-8120.
Auoclate PrafHsor~ Prosthodontk::s, F-8 121 .
VIsiting Aatlttllnt frofHtor---soclology ,
F-8122.

Auh:tant Prof...or 1%
F-8123.
AaaltUnt Prof...or (%

time)---Radklk)gy,
titne}--Radiok)gy,

F-8124 .
RESEARCH
Steno I SeeNtary (SQ.5)-Medical Education,
. R·8038.
Senior St~ographw (part-time}--Pttysk)logy,
R-8039 .
.
l.obcntory T..-n (tal&gt; As81.~.
R-8040.
.
COMPETITIVE CIVIL saiVICE

TJPIII SG-3--Induslrial Englneemg (port-time),
(2) , 5urQ81Y, Chemical
Eno&lt;&gt;eennil. l,lnlve&lt;ony Ubtw1es (7) , E.O.C .

~Records

s

.

Nursing

.U/8

Turtles
The prevloualy0.1 U/ B Mod Turtle rugby
club took on Hobart, Saturday, Oct. 13,
losing 11-4 at Amherat. Top performers
were Bernie Snyder, Brian Frazier. Steve
Day, and Scott Maney. Observing

tradition , the team hosted a beer party
for the vlaitors 'afterward. The rest of the
Turtles' schedule: October 21 , Tournament at Buffalo State; October 28. at
Batavia; November 4, at St. Bonaventllre. The U/ 8 guys are the ones In the
lighter unlforma.

Bu
k:al Planl,

Cenlnll Duplicating ,

Science, Medical Sc:hool
•

Olflce-Ed. -

· Phys·

Cred~· Free Program, Me&lt;iclnal ChemIstry, News Bureau, Statistics, Psychiatry, Schoof
of Management, E.O .C .• Urology.
Cieri&lt; SG-3--Personnel , ~. Accounls

~"'""""""''Records.
Fir. Clont S&lt;W-&lt;Jiagnoslic Se&lt;vices-PEM.

H01pltlil Attend•nt SQ.3 (part·tfme}-4Jntver·
slly Heal1!1 Servloes.
'
CredenU.Ia Anlatant SG-4-Admisslons &amp;
Records (2).
Mall &amp; Supply Cleft&lt; SG-~ Mail 12).
Account Clerk SG-5--Credit-Free Program,
Accounts Payable , Office of Student Accounts
(2) , Medical School Business Office.
s.nlor Typist ~7-university l.l:wwies·
CircUation.
hnlor Steno SG-8--Chernlstry, Univaralty
Budget Office . Ololatyngology.
St. Datil Entry Machine OpM'titor $0-7Computing Se&lt;vices.

Sr. C..,_ PurchliH SG-7-Purchasing .
Aulatlint Stlitionary Engineer SG-8-Physical
P1onl(2) .
StlitiONiry Engineer SG-12-Ptlysical PWll
Nurse I SG-13-university Health Setvicea.
Etectronk: Computer Oper~tor SG-1 G-Uni·
vnHy Comoutino Se&lt;vices 13).
Sr. Electronic c'""P"r.r Oporolw SO-tO-

unrvetSIIy Comoutino Setvioes.
SEASON~L POSinONS (NS)

Typlal
SG-3--Pedodonlics
(8117 / 785 / 15 / 79).
Steno SG-6~ School Business Office
~1 ,' ', '/ ~ ~o/31 / 78J, MCrobiology 1811 nB;

3 71

Dolo Enlry Machine OporoiOr SG-4--UnJver.
~Comoutino5e&lt;vicesl111/7 8·1 0 / 31 / 78) .

Cieri&lt; ~-1e Clinic IOenlislry)

(9 I 78·6 / 79).

NON-COMPETITIVE CML SERVICE
LobarataryCe-~orso 4 Pl'e~oblology.
Leborotary Macllonldon S0-12-&lt;:IYI Engineering.
.

-mo

For lnformolion
1ecu11y
end profeaaionol ...... end lhroughoul Slalt
UniYer&amp;ily, conoull o1 " - localiona:
1. Ridge Leo. B&lt;-.; 4230, Room 1C:
2. Cory Hoi, Room 115: 3 . Hil, Room
2200: 4. 6 Hoyeo "'-x C: 5 . ~
Hoi, Room 106; e. Hoi, Room 111 :
7. F-Hol. Room 158; 8 . -~ .
Room 128; 9 . Rlctmond CMd, - . ;: 10.
- H o i, Room 106; 11 . 0 - Hoi. Room
319: 12 . .as Woohlnglon St.: 13. Copen Hoi,
Room 414: 14. Crolla Hoi, Room 106.

. SlttO .,_..., .. _

.......

~

ap.

partunltJ/--~·

Califano undaunted
by Bakke decision
A review of HEW progf8111a and
regulations to determine their legality In
light of the Supreme Court's declslon In
the Bakke caae shows that, In gen. .l,
"the Bakke decision wl!; not lntaffllnl
wllh or restrict HEW progf8111a of
special value and concern to minority

~~~us':~' i':~~.;=f~\~~i

Howard Unl-alty recently.
The Secretary sald he bel._ there
ate two major lmp!lcatlona of the
court's declslon:
• "Fil'8t, the declalon lea... Intact the
power of the courts and of go..nment
agencies like HEW to order apPI'OIIf'lata
remedies when thllnl Is an official
fln~J~of~~ d : : f ; ' 1 = ol the
Bakke decision Ia thla: ~ may be

=.\W!
:count !T ,.:~Tort~~
promote dl-.s~ In their etuclent
bodies."

�........

October 19, 1978

All-Female Cast
All-fe""'le

Cut and Ka ·

~1;.m:"k::!f.:_~ dTh"::;!,.':~~

Tueoday, Oct. 24, onci' beg
through Saturday, Oct. 28. Cu~'::
8 p.m. M# oeneral •dmiuion·

studenta end Mnlor .citizens. AII:F
~=In~!! perform "Some Encl

CALENDA8

end c..cer Therapy to Nu1rition." Webster Hal,
Milan::l Fanore Hospital. 7-8:30 p.m. Free to
UnMiralty sblff endlaculty. Prerogistration requ•·
ed. For further InformatiOn cal831·5526.

Th~ay-•9
LECTURE I

..._..,.lty to Pneumococcal

s.. Frondac:o. Kncn AudilotU!l, Chld-

Chlldran ol ParJidlaa (Came). Conference
n-tro, Squi'e. Cal 636-2919 fO&lt; show times.
Admission charge.

· 233 Squire.

7 :30p.m ,

UUABFtLM•
Children of Pa,..diM (Came). Conference
Theatre, Squire . Cel 636·2919 for show times .

Sponsored by Women's Studies College, Th&lt;d
Wof1d Student Association, Buffalo Women'sl..bera-

Admission charge.

tion Union, Latin American Solklarlty Committee,

~· wtl be proy;cjed by lhe Joe
Square Deneen! """' lhe Amherst 5enOO&lt;
Cenlllr end by lhe East Aurora Hot Shots, an
lnAunental O'OUP. prior to Maggie's scheduled
llllkabout3:3(T.
- b y tho U I B Gray f&gt;aolthers netwon&lt;.

Called the "Gone Wrth the Wind" of art fltms ,
thiS movie has an i'resistit:Me flamboyant charm ,
rhe Vllllge Voice has saki. Framed within the
g i d e d - ollhe thOatre, tt;s lunan"""""
concerns the crisscrossed passions of a group
of Parisian downs, chartatans and tragedLans
Wl the mid-nineteenth century.

Action for Women in Chlkt·, Political Science
Department, and the Council on International
StudieS.

SOCIETY OF ENGINEERING SCIENCE
STUDENTS GENERAL MEETING I
104 Pwt&lt;er. 3 . 15 p.m. Dr. trmg Shames
wil be spoaiWlg on Wood Tunnels.

Technology, lndiYtdual R~htl 1nd Gowemmentlil Power In 1 Mill Society. Professor
Christophe{ Lasch Department of History,

WRINKLED RADICAl. •
..__ Kuhn. ~ Cornel Theatre.
p.m. Adml:sskwl is tree.

-y

LAWOBATE

U.S..-xko end u.s.-ca,.dl

Tre~ties

on the

Execution of Penel Sanctions. Speakers are:
Leorwd F. Walentynowicz, former administrator
ol lhe Bureau ol Security end Consular Affa;,.,
State --~ end Professor Abraham Abramovaky, fonnor member ol Pace University Law
School, now l'isl1i1g- at U I B Law School.
112 O'Brion. 3:30p.m.
Sc&gt;onsored by lhe International Law Society.

AHATOIIICAI. SCIENCES SEMINAR I

o.=.~~-=

4p.m.

.wFAI.O LOGIC COU.OOUIUIIII

c.....-tn -...,.,·Gobrial-...

·- UnMiralty.
104 Ofef.
eooat.
4 p.m.
5&lt;&gt;onsored
by lhe Malhemetica

Deponnent Calfee Is Commons Area at 3 :30p.m.

In Malhemetica

FIELD HOCKEY•
U II ... -lo Stata Co11oge. Rotary FiOid.

4p.m.

University of Rochester. Professor Frances Fox
Piven - Department of Political Science. Boston
University . Moderator. Marilyn Otxon Zahm , Esq.,
Exerutive D&lt;ector, Neighbortiood Legal Services.
P1nellsts: No&amp;an Johennes, Director of PubUc
Services, WKBW-TV: Prolessor Thomas Heedrick,
dean, Faculty ol Law end Jurisprudence, U I B ;
ProleeeO&lt; Bnlger, Law Mel Juisprudence,
U I B. Moot Co&lt;rtoom, O'Brian Hal, 8 p.m.
1lQ is the seventh session of the week·
k)ng conference sponsored by the Citizens Forum
of the Niagara Frontier Chapter, American Civil
Uberties Union, in conjunction with U I B.

sr~.;:,;,m~:~~Y~
- . . . andf&gt;tw"*X&gt;&gt;ogyand~ .

CANCELUTION
Tho FrenchW- 11m tJR9W11 8Cheduled by
UUAB
concelod.
· t ,_boon
o-.g
(_ _
, _· ~ o1

Boys kl Compeny C. 170 MFACC , Elicott.
7 :45 and 10 p.m . Tlckets $1 for students:
S1 .50foro!hers .

BILL OF RIGHTS CONFERENCE•
More Than Their Rights.: The Future of Minor·
ltl" In Amerlca. Professor Chartes Hamilton Sayre Professor of Government, COUnbia UrWer,.;ty. Professor Joan Hoff Wlson - Oeporment
of History, Untversity of Artzoni. Mod«1tor:
Prolessor Flllnk BrOwn, Educatlonall\drr-"'.istration.
U I B. P1nellsta: Michael Heaty, Buffalo CourierExpress ; Patricia Youngbluth, president , Buffalo

Chapter, Notional Organization. ol WO&lt;nen: Pro• fessor Mofefi Asante, Division of Communication ,
U I B. Moot Courtroom, O'Brian Hal. 8 p.m.
FinaJ session of the week-kwlg conference
~ed by the Citizens Forum of the Niagara
Frontier Chapter , American Civil Uberties tJnion,
in coojuoction wtth u ' 8

MUSIC•
U I B Wind Ensemble. Frank Cipola, dir'ector.
Katharine Cornel Theatre, Ekott. 6 p .m . Free
· Sponsored by lhe lleportnent ol Music,

Buff1lo Brlla Trio. BUd Recital Hal. 8 p.m.
General admlsskln $3, U I 8 faculty, staff , Wumni
$2 , Students $1 . Sponeored by lhe 0epW1ment
ol Music;.
AI three ,....-. ol lhe Buffalo Blass Trio
•e rnembenl: ot the Boftak) PhilhaTnonfc: David
Kuelwi, trumpet: Duane Seetve;1, hom: end Donald
Miler, trombone . The progrwn includes works
by Beethoven and Hindemith .

MUstC•

RlmMy Lewta, Jazz pianist, and Freddte Hu~
bard, trumpet. Shea's Buffalo Theatre. 8 :30p.m.
General admission $6 .50. $6 ; students $4 .50,
$4 . Si&gt;onsored by UUAB Music

c:on.mmee.

ALM•
Jenie•s .llinle. Women's Center. 376 Spaukj-

UUAB MIDNIGHT FILM •
Rubber Gun. SQuire Conference Theatre, Mid-

~c!!PJTI. Sponsored by lhe WO&lt;nen's

night. Admlssion charge .
Sleazy, flls1 and ~ous dealings In Montreal's seamy dope sub-&lt;:ufture. Allan Moyte
stars as a sociology student lnvofved with 8 group
of addicts klokhg to retrieve a smack-fiRed

Tlio-Tubular-Tra-Sy•

Or. Gartwd H. Giol&gt;loch, ~ Prolesaor
ol Phyolology, Yale UnMiralty School o1 Medicina.

suitcase.

Frlday-20
BAG LUNCH COLLOQUIA •
P.-ceptlona on Emlronment

tho--.

HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOlOGY I
Cannr Coding o1 Porfpliotol Temporatura ln-

- . Or. Dennis - · OiYtsion ol NetJro.
ourgery, Albeny College ol Union Univeraity, 108Siiornwl. 1 p.m.

MATHEIIATICSCOU.OQUIUM8

llngulor c.6Wo, Or. Jocli, Pemsyt~s- IJniYerafty. 304 Diefeooat. 2 P m.

·Saturday- 2 •
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Esther Hlrrtott Swartz inteMews Buckmlnstlf'
Fuller.~ Cable (ChannelS) . 4 p.m.
CACALM•
loya In Company C. 150 Farber. 7: 45 and
10 p.m. Tlckets S 1 for students; $1 .50 for others.

INOUSTIIW.---..·
-CGot-

Sioozy, lost and dangerous dealings In Montreal's seamy dope SUb-cufture. Alan Moyte stars
• • sociology student invotved with 8 group
of 8ddiict:a kx*ilQ to retrieve a 11Tl8Ck-filed suil-

_
.. ____ _
---···-T41 , 4226 Ridge
at 3 p.m.

- - - by ... Cano&gt;ullng

~"'~--­

c.nw' end lhe

l'll't--.ooT-1

•10 Hang.
Oowalllo 811111 4.

Or. Suit
- 4 : 15 p.m. ~ at

led and Sola (Abram Room) . 146 Q;etendOff.
7 p.m. 5p)nsored by the Center tor Medea
Study.

Free admiuion. .

When Homlcklll

wea

first reieased, Time

woman's gradual descent into mildneSS, lokJ as

c:o.tmNCICOU.OQUUI•
A ....., "' sa · r Pc•w CoMp~utty,
and clouglruto

FILM•

ol the 30o-40s boy-meets-gir1 ,..,..
end woo Richard Dreyfuss .., Oscar IO&lt; lifo
porfORilllflc:e. Script by Nej Sin1on, also ston1ng

-

UUAI-ALM•

~~t'm. ~

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Esther Hlrrtott Swartz inteMews Meree Cunningham, dancef and choreograpl1er. tntema"""'
Cable (Channell 0). 8 p.m.

end better film then Payclio." Has been celled
~~ .. lntelec'""' plane

,J~=Conlerence Theatre, t.tld-

- - Doloy, -

FILM•
Thl..,.s Like Us (Attman, 1974). 150 Farbef.
3 and 9 p.m. SponSOftld by lhe Oepertment of
English.
A marvelous second screen version of the
1937 novel by Edwanl Anderson, which was
first f*ned by Nichotas Ray in the 1949 entry,
''They Uve By Night. " Keith Carredlne and Sheley
Duvall ' star in this story of 8 pa1r of doomed
lov.,. during lhe Depression.

.!._ho Clooclbye Girl (Ross, 1977). Cont-

CIVIL--II

a -. lltt.ilnatftute.

SEMINAR I WORKSHOP•
American Folk Muak: St,.t.s, Mike Seeoer
6100emens. 1-2:30p .m.
Warbhop on lnstrumentll TechnJques wt1
be ~ frQrn 3·4 :30 p .m . This wiH include
techniques of the guitar, banjo, fiddle, ;ew·s
harp, and autoharp. PeoPe coming to the tnstnJ .
mental W0&lt;1&lt;shop should bring !he• instruments.
Seeger Is wei known for his concert appearances and for his appearances over the past
two decades with the New Lost Ci1y Ramblers.
He has collected , edi!ed and perfonned on many
LP atbums. He has been 8 consuttant to the
Smithsonian, and 8 member of the Newport Folk
Festival Board of Director&amp;, has taken pwt ...
many~ American folk festivals, and has taught
at the Unlver&amp;ity of California.
5&lt;&gt;onsored by lhe Engl;sh llepertment's Bulle&lt;
Chair and the Center for Studies in American
Culture.

maoazne fotMld it "a more OC'iginal, more exciting

-Mason, Ouinfl Ct.mnings,

~-Or. 104 Plrtwr. 3 :30p.m.

Monday ........ 23

UUAI ALM•

ol ~Or. E. Nigel
Cotlolt, tJniYerafty ol ~- England, ~62

~ . 2 :30p.m.

~--..-.,-.
c.oc.r

Ths bl1g!it "' .lilly "'"""'tic comedy ("""""'''
ed for the Best Picture or 1977) is set in the
tradition of the 30s·40s boy-meets-girt movies
and won Rlchard Dreyfuss an Oscar for h1s
perfcwmance.

UUAIMONDAY N~FllMS•
_,(Castle, 1961). 7 p.m.: Repulsion
( - . 1965). 8 :40p.m.' 170 MFACC, EJicoH.

CountY

IIIIEI*:INAL~y-•••
----,;ea~Cil-636'2919-r~ ~·" - ·
Admissloncliarge .
.
~--Dr. K. G. .satr.gecu,
Tlis......., end witty
~ ol Torcnto.
-.....
tcniO&lt;ltic comedy (nominal·
127 Cooke. 2 p.m.
ed !C:V the Best Picture of 1977) is eet in the

Ul&amp; . . - " " " ' _ . . . . , o1

UUABALM•
The Goodbye Girt (Ross , 1977). Conference

Theatre, SQuW-e. CaR 636-2919 for show times
Admission charge.

MOVIES FOR THE NEW JAZZ AGE"
. Tho liltW Toa ol o.--.1 Yon (1933), star·
nng 8..-bara S1anwyci&lt;; Platinum Blond ( 1931)
stamng Jean Harlow. Buffalo end Erie
Hialor1cal Society. 8 p.m. $ponSO&lt;ed by Medal
Study I Buffalo. Admission is $1 .50,

oap.--.. o1 Bioc11om1Ay,

_ , ..__o-__
____

Free. SponSOred by.

'Also featuring alto Hemet Simons and the Men
ol the University Choir.
,

ARCHITECTURE lECTURE:
ARCHITECTS I BUILDINGS I CONCEPTS •
Clio--., a-chltect I educator. Urwersi1y
ol Calilomla at Los Angeles. 335 Hayes. 5:30p.m.

•net Wll.,..lng

In ....... Or. Russel Slone , - · ol Sociology. 123 Wikescn, l!i-.g 2 , ElicoH. Noon.
Sponsored bylhe Environmental Studies Center.
OIIAI.IIOI.OOY
&amp;oralogy ol - - Or. Owight Lambe,
Jr., c:liaOman, Deponnent ol Mk:robiology, East
T . . , _ State UnMiralty. 4510 Main Street,
Room 107. Noon.

~--,_

. Unt.w.lty Phllhormanla, Je&lt;nes Kas!&gt;roWk;z

BIU OF RIGHTS CONFERENCE"

LEC'IIIIIES IIIIIASIC -OI.OQYI
-

CACFILM•

FACULTY RECITAl. •

P. Elinoon, UnMiralty ol Toronto. 178 Farber.

MUSIC•

·_~t~Mu~~~m-

PRESENTATION AND DISCUSSION•

WorMn In Cube, Mlv'garet -

ren'a Hoepitlll. Noon.

Sunday-22

UUABFILM•

NO~ICTION ALMS•
To The Shor• of two Jim~~; The a.ttte of
S.n Pietro; Fai'T'tlblqua. 214 Wende. 7 p.m.
Sponsored by lhe Cente&lt;IO&lt; MedalS1udy.

lnfec11on-

c.....m ~ndlng and " - " " IO
T,.._
Dr. At1hJr J . Al)mlnn. _ , o1
Cllll&lt;ma.

VOLLEYIIAU •
U I B Yl. SyracuM. Clartt Hal . 5 p.m.

caoe.

about •and
- hill unusual-.
·· anngo "'"'
Reputelon is 8 biUmt tim about 8 young

bro-

onty Roman Polanski can.
MFA RECITAL •
#
C - Clition, pianist. Bolrd Recital Hall.
8 p.m. Free ldrniaaicwt. Mr. Cifton will be assisted
by pianist• Flina - · viofiM1 OebOr8ll
Weiss, celia! Filley Pewee, and Joanne Lowe .
- Sponsored by the Deponnentolt.tosic .
POETRY READfNG

T-

• Anclraf v - - , , wno has been acdalnle&lt;l
as Rusaia's greatest modem poet, m whose
venoe . _ 1r&lt;1m "'*&gt;gies o1
to lhe
Shooting ol an-.ta at Kent State UnMiralty •
... ,._, lr&lt;lm lifo -'&lt;s. Kollwlne Cornel Theatre.
. 8 p .m. Sponsored by lhe Deponnent ol Modem
~ and aa-. A wine end cheeSe
- - - b y tho
folows ,
Or. ~ F - . U I B Engiah profooao&lt; end
autlio&lt;, wtl Introduce lhe poet who last
- t h e United - I n 1972, end to deSCribed • In outapoken cri1c of the USSR's resi'ie·

-0.0.

tiono on -

- . and a forthrigh1

�7.

ond
louble

Inning
lnulng

1tfme:

*2.111.
omolo
ranted

LIVE RADIO .BROA.OCAST
Blu" String Bind, Martin, Bogan &amp; Armstrong ,
Uve from the Tratfamadore Cafe. 88.7 FM .
WBF0. 10p.m,

PSSTor

E"oghleen different

PROGRAM FOR STUDENT SUCCESS TRAINNG'
si&lt;ll·bullding and personal
growth modules-orognm begins the week of

October16 .

Thursday -

26

SEMINARM

Vftamln B-12~ollte lnterrel1tlons, VICtor
Herbert, M .D., J .D.. professor of medicine , Down·
state Medic* Center, Brooklyn: cNet. Hemato6ogy
and Nutrition Laboratory. Veterans Administra·
tion HoSpital, Bronx. 26 Farber. 12 noon .
Sponsored by the Department of Biochemistry.
U I 8 and Department of Medicine, Millard Fill·
more Hospttal.
PHYSICS &amp; ASTRONOMY LECTURE II
Impurities 1nd Defects In Semiconductors,
Or . Bruce 0 . McCombe, head , Semiconductors
Branch, Naval Research Lab , adjunct professor
of physics, U 18 . 218 Norton. 1 :30·2 :20 p .m.

ART HISTORY LECTU REN
Art 1nd Rev~utlon In RuSSII, 1817·1824:
Why the Avant G1rde Hid To Ole, Professor
- - Vahan Barooshian . Wel&amp;e~ Colege 309 Ckwnens,
Amherst. 4 p m
•
MATHEMATICS COLLOQUIUM/I
Generalized Cohomofoglcel Index Theories
for Lie Group Actions, Or. Edward Sadel.
Unrver-sity of Wisconsin. 104 Diefendorf . 4 p.m.
CoHee at 3 :30

....,.ted

advocate of hLmM rights. Hta re&amp;atiOns with his
own government hove reportedy
b&lt;tween~anddisfavo&lt;.

Wednesday -

25

BROWN BAG LUNCH"

The 8uff1lo Jau EnHmble, a nine-piece }au
group of professional musicl8t'IS 335 Hayes Hall

Tuesday-24
MUSIC•

•

.,

Pllno etuclent recite!, featuring students of
Steven MMes. Baird Recital Hal. 12: 15 p.m.
Free.
PHYSICS.ASTRONOMYL£CTUAEt
lmpurftiee and Detect~ 'In Semk:onduetora.
Dr. Bruce 0 . McCombe, heed, Semiconductors
Branch. Naval Reselwl:h Ub, adjunct professor
of physics, U I B. 282 Capen. 1:30-2 :20 p.m.
SEMINAR

Praftta Before PeofM: U.S. Agribusiness In
the PhfNpplnH. Marie Santos and Evetyn Terez ,
two Flipino nnl orgonizers, wi1 on 1l1e
effects of U.S . c:orporate practices on fanners
and WOII&lt;enl In 1l1e Phl!;ppines. 337 SQuire.
3 p.m.
Sponsored by the North Buffalo Food Co-op.
Third World Student Association. CAC Peace
CenterProject , endRacheiCarsonCollege .

Noon.
Sponsored by Friends of the SchOOl ol Architecture and Environmental Design

PHYSICS &amp; ASTRONOMY LECTUREM
lmpurltln and Oetectt In S.mlconductors,
Or. Bn.tce 0 . McCombe. head , Semiconductors
Branch, Naval Research Lab. adjunct professor of
physics, U / 8 . 262Capen 1:30-2 ·20pm
MANAGEMENT GUEST LECTURER•
Plul Snyder of Nabisco-Freezer Queen and
Snydefs Darien lake Corp , will speak on the
Entrepraneurilll Buslna11men. Squire Conference Theatre. 2 p .m. Coffee and doughnuts
wil be S8&lt;Ved lollowWlg 1l1e talk .
SOCCER'
U I B Q . Oneonta. Rotary Field 2 P m
LAW INFORMATION OAYM
-Thom. . E.HNdrk:k, deanoftheLawSchool .

BS I MIA PROGRAM APPUCANTS

~ ~pr:S::'!:.:!:!,:erLa~~~A_

An Informational meeting about the 8S in Bus·
iness Admnistration I Master of Business Admin·
iatration Progrwn wil be held in 146 Oiefendort.
3 :30p.m.

panel of administrators, faculty, and students
w11 answer questions. AI students Interested in
attending Law School are invited . Moot Court·
room, firstftoof , O'Brian, Amherst Campus 3 p.m.

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Either Herriott Swartz inteMews Nam June
Petk, founder of video ar1 CoJrief Cabkt (Chan·

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMtNAR M

nel8). 6 :30p.m.
COLLEGE I FIUI'
S,.__h (Ford, 1939). 170 MFACC, E~
licoH. 7 p.m.
01ant Trao.or, ~ Wtt(fWI, and 'ThorNs Mitchel
star in this weslem dasaic about 8 group o1

OISTINGUISHED VISITING SPEAKER M
The NuciHr Overh•uaer Effect ,. • Tool
for lnvestlg•ttng Blomofeeullr Stnactura, Of.
Aksel Bothner·By, Department of Chemistry ,
Camegie-Meb"\ Uriversity 1 14 Hochstatter. 4 : 15
p m Coffee at 4 .
Sponsored by the OMslon of Cel and Molea.Oar
Btology and ChemiStry of Biological Systems Seminar Series .
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
PROGRAufl
Facts nraua Faddlam .•. Nutrition Edu~
tlon tor the HNith Profeulonal. Webster HaH ,
MiKard Fillmore Hospital 7-8 ·30 p.m. Free to
Uruversity staff and tacutty. Pre-registration required. For further information ca1183 1·5526.

FIUI'
Sp1ono (Sp;es) (Fritz l.angl . 146 Q;elendorf.
7 p .m. Sponsored by the Center tor Media
Study.

EVENING TALK•
In - - Ccriklo ond
Dr. Vlrg1nlo Wyly, protesoor of peycl1ology, Buffalo StaM Cofloge. Red Room , FICU11y
Club, _ , Sfnlef ComQus. 8 :15p.m. Sponsored
by lhe 8uffllto Chlpter of the Association for
WoolonlnSCloncw.

w-

Clio""-'

UUlUIWEONESOAYFILMS'
I Shol .looM Jomeo (19491 . 7 p.m.; Fo&lt;ly
Guna (1957), 8 :35 p .m. Conference Theatre,
Squire. Freeadmfs8ton .
I Shot Jeae J.mea Ia directed by Samuel
Fuler end stars Preston Foster and John lreUind.
It ia Fullef't fQI film as wed as being his initial
folmic meditation on the psychology of 1oYe and

2-,.,

Oedsions, Oedsions:

caat

For information concerning registration ,

636-2810.
SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT APPLICATIONS
Students who wish to apply as entering juniors
for the Spring 1979 semester may pick up
application forms in Crosby 151 , and at the DUE
offices kl Squire 205 or 370 MFACC , Elicott.
Deadline tor submission of appications \s Nov·
emben .
STUDY SKILLS LAB
The Study Skills Lab at the University Learning
Center, 364 Bakty Hal, is open tor tutoring in
reading and study skb. Hours we : Monday ,
Wednesday , and Friday, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.: Tuesday,
11 a.m.-2 p.m. The Lab is open to al U I B
students .
WRITING PLACE
Do you have papers due? Come to the Writing
Place, a free drop-in center for students who want
help starting, drafting, or revising their writing .
We are at 336 8a'dy HaH on the A{nberst
Campus. Tho Wrt1lng Piece is open
12 ~4 p .m. and week nights, except Fr1day,
6 -9 p.m. For further tntonnation. contact Batbara

-ys

Gordon~~

636·239• .

Exhibits

Blood of the BNsts; In The StrHt; The Quiet
One. 214 Wende 7 p m Sponsored by the
Cente&lt; for Media Study
LIVERAOIOBROAOCAST
SIM BMthowen Quartet Cycle Concert Ill:
The F'~ne Arts OJartet. performing Quartet in
0 major. oo . 18. no. 3 ; Grosse Fuge ;, B
flat maJor , op. 133 ; and Quartet ;n F ma;ot,

lations . . wei .. ~·· photographs, designs and &lt;hwlngs, documenling 'llle rists'
original innovathoe achievements. rt Is supported
by a grant from the National Endowment for

. op

59 , f)O . 1. 88 .7 FM·WBFO . 7:50p.m.

FILM SCREENING I LECTURP
Ewenlngs I« New Aim: Bruce Conner. Abight·
Knox Art Gal'ery. 8 p .m. General admission $2 ,
students and gaKery members $1 .50. Sponsored
by the Center tor Media Study and the Albright·
Knox Art Gallery.

November28.
The exhibtt consists of two. new "video

ins~­

the Ails.
Woody Vasulka Is assoclale professor of media
studies here.

ART EXHIBIT

hl~::r r:.:.':'~.p;rli'lgsn..:..,A~
by tan

Bu!ftlo rista.

~ 8 , 2nd

lloor,

Porter Quad, Elicott Cotrlptex. Free.

Ttvough Nov..- 4 . For flri1er lnfonretion,

POETRY READING•

leon Stoknbury. Gallery 219, SQuire Hal.
8 p.m. Free. Sc&gt;ocisored by UUAB Cullural and

Wlquire at 636·2137 .

_Perlorrnmg Arts CommiHee.

OOUGLAS COOPER EXH1111T
The &lt;nw1ngs of OOug1oo Cooper on-rdisp1ey
In Hayes .... lobby ttw\1 Octobo&lt; 27 . Hotn

UUAB FILM'
Sweet Marie (Makave;ev, 1975). Conference
Theatre. $Quire. Call 636-2919 tor show times .

--::::=~~lnto~ln~·--,WfiE'fiSCT1TI!JIHI!IIH-NtOHT A~·THE-- ------Adm
-J~~~-.I.!!!~L..!LMisa
FIU(S'
LoulalliNI Story; Loulatana Story Study AMI.
2 1• Wende. 7 p.m. Sponsored by the Center
for Media Study .

Oct-

Careef?Majol?, 10Capen. 3·4:30p.m.
October 24-November 21 : Is I! a Man's Workt?,
201 Capen. 3 -5 p .m.
October 24: Devek:lping Effective Behavior.
107 MFACC. 7:30·9:30 p.m.
October 25: CreatiVity in Problem Sotving:
Idea Fluency A Fnt Step. 4.-6 p .m.
October 25: Shy Persons' Anonymous. 335
Squire . 3 :30·5 p .m.

ALBRIGHT-«NOX EXH18IT
The Vuulkaa-Woody: Dnc:riptlona; Steina:
Machine Vlalon. North Temporary Exhi&gt;ition Gal·
leries, Albright-Knox Art ~· October 21 ·

ALMS•

Whit Can Transport PhenomeM Say About
the Thrombotic Proceu?, trwW'I A. FeuefStein.
Oepa1ment of Chemicat Engineering, McMaster
UniYeroify. 262 Cec&gt;en. 3 :30p.m.

Oct- 18 ond 26: More ()pennesa-More
Fun. 334 Squire. 3-5 p .m.
Oct- 2CHI"""'bor 10: Know Thysell. 232
Squir"e. 1·3 p .m.
October 23 and 30: Where ... Am 1 Going and
How Oo I Get Then!?, 232 SQuire. 3 -5 p.m.

World

are 9 a.m.·5 p.m.
4 p .m. o,-, weekends.

~ and

11

a.m.·

MUSICEXHIIIIT

.-+--

1984, Jane Male as chairmen of the"/Chas'h';;;itity
ji;.;--==;T110~-'ft:iritir~~;;;ortfi0Ciliii1Ne......,.....1m....
Arts,. Muoic Ll&gt;nry, Blird Hoi, through~

Belt Founda!Kln , and Semi Frey as 8 Macho.
A tw out political fantasy featuring pldophilie,
sex in a bed of toose augar, .-ld a choco&amp;ate
covered nude bathing scene. 'Mien rrst re&amp;eased
in the U.S . it was seized by Customs.

31.

#

Yiolence .

Fo&lt;ty Guno stara - · Stanwyctt and Bony

Solivlw\. In spife of an lncompr_,_ plol

each scene end shot in this Western is lui of
brutalorig;nllity.
CONCERT'
~. a concert tor

flatn.ments. Moe·

· mlcrocomput.,.. SQJdy I Bufftlo.
207 ~ AYWIU8 . 8 p .m. Free.

POETIIY IIEADINO'
Oulrtrdln: Roeemerie Wtklrop, Brown Univer·
sity. Tr'llt8rnedoreCafe . 8 :30p.-m . Free .

Notices
-'-JAL IENEFIT POTTERY SALE

Tho CrliOtive Cnlft Cenlef is~ Ita anooo1
pottery sale. 120 MFACC, e-.1. 0c.- 19,
1-5p.m.
hems lor- irQJdo o vn.ty of . - . .. IIUCI1 .. pilchoro, plonlors, bowls,
· mugo, polo, end .., troya.
BcMhtUWIIond--wllbo lrcbled.
Tho Pilon rw&gt;go from
lo $5, the
gofhg lo . . Cnlt Cenlof lo help

jars, -

s.so

Mdtheworf&lt;lhopoofldcrort-.

_,,,In

"Ce......_,.

To llot
the
call
Jean Shr..S. •t 836-2626.
Key: fOpen only to 1 ' - wllh • ~Int-I In the eubjecl; "Open
to the public; ••open t o - - . of the
Unl-.lly. Un.... otherw!M .....,....,
ticlleR lor -.ta clwalng .-lulon
be llllfCNMd .t tlle Squire H.al
Tlck.t Olllce.
-

'*'

�.........

•

SENATE

Executive Committee minutes
for October 4th and 11th
I I - of

the

4

October

Execull,.

~=:::-'.JC: 'called to order at

2:32

p.m. to conaiSer the following agenda:

= . . : . 1 l m r • l of the Mlnutas of

the Minutes of September 27, 1978 were

appr&lt;Mid ..

d l ot~buted .

No. 2 Off,_ Aoporto

•

~~n:!i~~·r::~:"~n

discussions

between Chancellor Wharton and the State

=':':~h~g~~:o~·~~u:~~ ~~~~~:
Republic of China. A ..commlttee at the State
level will be convened to design and

~~~~ ~f~r:~:~;;~ur:~x~t':

~h:~~ g~!~

will be activated by next
We are among nine Institutions In SUN Y
which did not meet enrollment targets for

:~ ;

th:.':

:~~ i:n~~YTh~~~r;;.,~

:'~~~~~~~~d~e~~ry~~~t~o~c;.:r~,f:
scrutlnJze attrition and retention at this

~~n~"='~;,,:e ~~ Jev~~~ ~~:~~~~~=~
:,~d~~~~~ P~.,t::;:~!~~~~nt~ a~~!~~
1

towards an Improved retention rate. A.
Kuntz will head th is group, and secretarial
~=!~~~~~ o'-fJ!~e.be provided from the
b. Repott of tile Chairman

The

Chairman

prorm:sed

adl

d

t

a

stronp,ly

~~~ ~~~= :g.~~~.''p=~~~oro~t;'/8
thl

1

t th

1

1

~rus~~~ t~en~n~Pe :Ot~ :cToep~ed ~;:'ya 1 ~

1978

d th 8 t th
1 ed d 1
1
0
Jmpl~~ntlng the :01fc~ fsngunacc:p~~bl:.
Despite administrative criticism of the
policy FSEC sees no reason at th is time to
re-examine the Issue. It was MOVED and
PASSED that the letter be sent to President
Ketter.
A memo from UUP Vice President J . Rising
and J . Wise requests that the Faculty Senate
organize an open meeting or series of open
meetings at which representatives of the

~~~~~~'rg ='::~t ':~~m~nf~v7~r ~~1:

::!V~t~s. ~~ftr:.·~~~gco~h:ltt~~gr~

08

:!':~~~·c~tys:~rg~ess~g~a~ s:::Je,11~t~r~~~

charged the FSEC officers to Investig ate a
mechanism for arrangl n~ it. It was agreed
~:u~d1~:: ~~~:.;;,t'ecf.1 of No union To expedite comm ittee appointMents the
Chairman proposed the formation of a
nominating committee charged with prltpar~3e~ ~~'~h ofwnr~~!n fo; P~~=n~~~of,n~~
slate. The _proposal was A~~ROVEO and B.
Howell , E. Segal and N. Garver were
:'r;.!~of,!.~,;.un~ Committee.

!~~e;~~~~~~!t~!:er~=~~~1~t~h~h~~~~~~~~

SUNY was placed on the list of censured
~~sl'.!,'tJ~inns}~~~~~:~i~~~ annual convention
Wh ile FSEC Is In agreement with t he sp irit
of the resol ution, a more clearly stated
summary of the problem and a restructuring
of the resolution was deemed necessary.
FSEC Instructed the Chairman to restructure
the resolut ion and It was AGREED that the
modified result then be presented to the
Faculty Senate at the November 7 meeting.
The meeting adjourned at 5: 20p.m.
MlnutH of October 11 Senate Executive
Committee meeting
·
The meeting was called to order at 2: 451o
consider the following agenda :

:;:~t!oi,1 19~gprova l

of the Minutes of
The minutes of OctOber 4 , 1978 were
approved as distributed .
Item No.2 Officers' Reports.

:~abl:~~ ai:::~~ent. The President was
b. The Chai rman . The Chairman had no

repon .
The Secretar,. The Secretary had no
report .
Item No.3 Representatives' Reports.
Repon ing on the Academ ic Cabinet
meeting, N. Garver stated that the
enrollment shortfall is even greater than first
reported . The final tally indicates that we are
1700 FTE behind our enrollment target. No
other SUNY unit fell below by more than
900. Also discussed at the Academic
Cabinet was the academic calendar. FSEC
agreed that some attempt to identify
principles governing the creation of our
academic calendar Is In order at this time .
The Secretary reported on the meeting of
~~=~U~~;~~~r~:JJ~~~~~ {t,!t ~~: ~~,~~
faculty representative to the Council is
needed. The Chalnnan will explore the Issue
and report to the next meet ing of the FSEC.

9

'':.mc~':n!.Cf,~:ml!~"
Prlrlleges

~::;,7;·

Tenure •nd

F:c:~~ortA~;o i~~,;e~~=~ id~~~~o~~~rd a~~

Tenure (better known as " PAB ") has been
received from the Committee on Faculty
Tenure and Privileges. The Chainnan

~~~~~~t~~ ~h~o~~:~~:~~ ':~l~:n t~:s~~~~

to it. c. Garverick, L. Kennedy , s. Kroll , and
W. WoJck were named.

~r,:,,::;tsa . Old Buslnus-Commlttee A~
• · DUE Cu"lculum CommlttH. Add itional

TtMr Secretary requested a volunteer to

~~'f"!.,~e:, ~~=~ =•t::~~~lve01eo~~

mlttee as the llalaon representative for
FSEC. A . Kuntz volunteered and was
IPPI'OWld .

"!";-!':/~~

=;:::=

The Chairman dlatrtbuted the committee

:::.t=~z%uv~g.

t~e s~~~ug~~nce~rg~~~d ~~~~~~~

r:stwS:n
tatlves of the AAUP as the first step In
having SUNY removed from the AAUP
censure list. AAUP's 1975 and 1976

0

ng,m~n3~f.rl.s1o~-:e asg~;.~·...

Add_ltlonal
nominations were approved.
c. Reuen::h end Creaflwe Act1r1t1. Add itlonal nominations were approved.
d. SCrwnlng CommlttH tor Cllenc.tlor'a

'Talent Search' program
begins under $77,625 grant
A Tale~t Search Program to aid
economically disadvantaged students
who have 'demonstrated academi c

I alent has begun under a $77,625
two-year grant.
The new program -is adm inistered at

U/ B in conj unction with lhe Upward

g~f~~~ ~ro~J~g'at~~t~fr(h~u~~~~~~~~

ol Health . Education and Welfare.
Robert L. Palmer is director of the
Talent Search Program . He also serves
as director of Upward Bound and as
assistan t to the vice president for
stu d~nt affairs.

Will serve 1200 students
"We hope to identify and serve 1,200
local students under the Talent Search
program ," Palmer explained . He noted
that while Upward Bound focuses on
counseling , tutoring and instruc tion for
approximately 130 educationally and
economically disadvantaged yo uths ,
Talent Search will concentrate on
providing counseli ng and information
to studerits who are from low-income
families and have already shown some
academic po tential .
" These youths need encouragement,
guidance and co unseling to help them
complete or return to seco ndary
sc hools and contin ue on to pursue
higher education ," Palmer said. " Many
of these students because of their
background and/or inadequate counseling and guidanc·e have not developed
high educational aspirations or taken
full advantage of educational opportunities ."
Palmer emphasized the need to
involve parents in educational programs. and said that Talen t Search wi ll
attempt to acquaint parents with their
children's potential and to make them
aware of the importance of academic

Ten Ind ividuals have been na.;;ed by
Pres !den t Robert L. Ketter to serve on
the nominating committee for the 1979
Chancellor's Awards for Excellence in
Professional Service .
The panel is asked to solicit
nominations of, and collect complete
dossiers on
individuals
on
the
professional staff deemed worthy of
this recognition for outstandin~ service. They will forward the information
to a campus-wide Screening Committee
which wi ll submit to the President fo ur

names for forwarding to SUNY .
January 8 Is the deadli ne

Named to the panel are: Ms. Bertha
Cutcher, Off ice of Services to the
Handicapped ; Ms. Judy A. Dingeldey,
advisor , DUE; Ms. Anastas ia K.
Johnson , Department of Sociology; Mr.
K1lith Johnson , Millard Fillmore Col·

A~~~~z (repr.,.entatlve from Prolesslo~al

were approved.
II. lpfewa CommlttH. Nominations were
'r.P~,::S,OnaCommlttH. Nominations were
app

HEAlTHSOENca

ttom No.I N- Busl-•

socw.saaoco

1

He added that parents will be
informed of scholarship and granl
programs.
Community agencies involved

Staff persons from U/ B will work wilh
com munity agencies such as the St.
August ine Center, Oelevan-Grider Concerned
Citizens
Assoc iation,
the

Neighborhood House Assoc iation, the
Community Act ion Organization of Erie

County, the Fillmore-Leroy Communil y
Development Corp ., and others to find
youths who can be helped.
" Hopefully, Talent Search will nol
only decrease th e number of young

people who drop out of school bul will
increase the rate at which youths of
financial or cultural need complete
secondary schools and enroll ,. with
adequate fi nancia l aid , i n posfsecondary educational programs. " Patmer said.

0

~%~; ~:,;~~~~:ero?fl~~~~h~'~:'eR ~t!..~

L. Ganyard , Department of History; Dr.
Arthur L. Kaiser, Curriculum Development and Instruction al Med ia; Ms .

Carolyn E. Haensl y, Admissions and
Records;

Henry

Coleman ,

a

Medicinal Chemistry ; and, Ms. Adrienne McCann. an undergraduate.

land sale
Th e SUNY Trustees recently aulhor·
ized sale of several parcels of property
·near the U/ B Main Street Campus. The
parcels, three of which are on Wlnspear
Avenue and one on Allenhurst Road,
were purchased by the University of
Buffalo before Its merger with State
University.

..

.

progres~

I" I" I"

.

Mr.

graduate student In the Department ol

United Way

~~~~"6tte~P~~~~~~~~~:hr:CV;:~~n~;

worttof the DoynoCommttt•.
~~tuoTPreaktent Ketter hal accepted
t:he Pecptlld Proepectua..fot...lba...CO
ttw.
aourceatoof conoem with
lhouklwere
bl ...,.,..,
reconatltuted

=

for

forwarding the dossiers, Ketter said.

lm~t
of leeching rather than
retroapecttw evaJuation. It wu AGREED
thet the TMChlng Effectlveneaa Committee

~~'::::.::.-:c=.:,~::=l~t:~~~
p..Cing empt\Mia on continual

achievement to later educational and
occupational opportuni ties .

Professional awards panel named

the award t.o the screernno comm ittee be
~~~~~O:d . The suggestion was AP•· Ubref1 end lntormetlon ReeourcM
eom... lttH. Nominations were approved.
t. Acedlrmlc FrNdom end Rnponalblllt1.
Nominations were approved .

lMue

October19, 1978

I" I" I" I"

A ..CHITECT\JIII.EAHDEN~OHIIIENTALDUIGH

.ursuoLETTus
01

0

0

contlnj~thie :l';·!A!I I!le!l c~s~;Co;m~m;it;lo :.~N;o:m:l:na:t:lo;n:•-i'"il!'" '~~~··~" ~'"!~" '~ocu~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1

~~~=~~:"eo=~h': :t~f~

(.,!g~ "::o·~' i~chart~n~hlt co~~~

[~~~~~'rt~e0~~:"~:e.'.'~~of~t~'t!r ~g

the)r .....onlng and ,......,..phalzlng their
I'ICOm.,.,.tk3na In • memo dated
Sep!Miber 211. FSEC ACCEPTED their

FSEC meeting.
The meeting was adjourned at 5 p.m.

r:: ='=!~x~!~~~~

c~~~

the Chair·

. .-:=-CoM. .- "t::,':"=

~:==
11 .-.~1M._..,

~
_~.!'.!..,")!'tsc• !~~~

"=-~=

~~

=:-.,;;..LI~ ~mrJ:'n~

-lluledencfnaadytobeglnltowof1&lt;.
.._--

Nomrnatlonl

APPAOYED.

1

to ~ commltiM _were

c.,.,._,
-ion•

to tile oommltt.e
APPROYED. - -

were

-..-ion• _..

=::.:::~':::::-'or
.__,_.__
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ._ . . .....,._... l'8l:ufly - · haa

~~~~t~-=· ~~:~~~YeU~~ ih:a~=~~

3 reappointed
in Medicine
Three reappointments to department·
al chairmanships in the School of
Medicine were annouhced this week by
PresldentRobertl. Ketler.
Renamed were:
Dr. Wayne Johnson as chairman of
the
Department
of
Gynecology·
Obstetrics, for a term ending August
31, 1982.
Or. Elliot Ellie as chairman of the
Department of Pediatric~. through

A~~·k~~~te~~.

chairman of the
Department of Radiology, also through
August31 , 1981 '

LAWAHD.IUIIIS,AUOENCE

MANAGEMENT

r~.AND.M.UltEIWICI
..

::::::::,::,7EDUCAT10N
CONTINUIHGEOOCATJON
'"uaoantn:ECUTMvteE· I"M.IKIENT

AUOAnNO ro~

ACA.....,..,._

FACOUTOESI'UN-0
FINANCE AHCIIIIANAOhtEHT

I"USUC.VfAIRS

ALUIIIMI.usoctA TtON
UIIFOUNDAnDfit

IN"'JIMAnOH .utO Uff\AIIY ITUCMU

EDUCAOOMAl STUDIES

-

--

�.......

~11.1178

r

_W ill free pre~s and speech survive in 200·1?
By the ye..r 2001, Thomas I. Em orson,
Yale law professor emeritus predicted,
the political-economic structure of the
United States will pe collective r&lt;1ther
than lalssez-falre in nature, advanced
communication will afford more citizen
Input Into governmental matters , and

~f"s~'r:r~~~!~~s5s0e;:s~ keener sense

Emerson and Professor Henry Abraham were speakers at a session of this
week's Bill of Rights symposium
devoted to l:Uscusslng the future of the

~~,~~~~~';;,~l~~~ol";.'::cPatj~~om

..:~.~~~.:'r':.xtJ~"',t'ef:nl;:?:·e~e;:~~
government Intervention" In the country's economic structure, going as far
as direct control of major Industries and
marking an end to free enterprise as we
know It today.
American political structures will
also undergo a transformation . Govetnment bureaucracy and powers will

~~~rec~~~n ~:r~"~~~:~~~ t~~o~Ri~~~ci~
1

In the c;leclslon-maklng process.

Criticism ond feedback
In addition , Em~~rson speculated that
advanced technology will make communication facilities readily accessible
to individuals and citizen groups , so it
will be easier for _government to secure
feedback from Its citizenry, and
likewise easier for criticisms to be
8

'~~!"~:1u~ns~~=~f 7~~~~~~s~~~- ~

the collective will also undergo \
metamorphosis, according to Emerson.
Instead of being based on personal
gain, Individual values will be founded
on a sense of ~lal obligation .
The collec1lve, on the other hand , will
likely depend more heavily on education
and proP&lt;!Qanda for social control , and
less on coercion. Society will be less
violent, concluded Emerson , but more
susceptible to manipulation.
on the basis of these predictions ,
_Emerson projected that there will
probably be Increased pressure from
government to soften the comer-stone

~~f~~~~m~~.g::'tro~~f~~=~og;

expression through Indirect means will
likely be accentuated, Emerson maintained thar lndl~!,duals must have
"minimum rights" to food , clothing ,
shelter and employment, regardless of
political opin ions or associations.
Although the right to organize Into

p;o~p?.!~u~~v~c: ':J;J',~W::i~ '~::,'~~~~~

Emerson stressed that the right of
association must nevertheless be

gr~~~~~~';".!v~!~!;~~';da~r~~·~.;

which to maintain an Individual's
position against &lt;!buses In government
power and bureaucracy."

Moderator Peul C.mbria (.t mike) wtth Ant~
~nettm

those 1Rorklng for the enhancement of
~~:~y,!.i~~~~ar~'!:t . "lose touch with

~~~~s ca~s o~X d~oo":.~:1 '~u~n~

Abraham , "namely the art of the
possible."
Abraham told the gathering that
freedom of the press Is a well-protected
right. He noted that the highly
publicized Farber case Is " not a good
0

~~~u!~~ht~l~~~~0: or'g,f~i~~:~~
more than II does freedom of the

press."

The future of the Bill of Rights Is
dependent on a continued fundamental
commitment to the Constitution, said
Abraham . There must also be a
willingness In years to come to " play
the game of politics and government
according to the rules ." That Is, there
must be adherence to "the law of the
land" and "dissenters must tolerate
opposition ."

pXf/::'~~;~v~~~:~~~~:ts sporadic
outbursts of civil disobedience to occur
in the future , he thinks their basic aim
5

Government oecrec~ ahould bl limited
wl~~pf\'!'s ~~slff~~f~~ ':,';n ~~~~:~;.:'.;
Because lnforrryallon will be crucial to · assaults on freedom of the press from
both the private and public sectors, .
citizen partlcl pat ton , the right-to-know
will be of f/"'"lal significance to the
Abraham predicted that no significant
~~:;!~~~·be :V"';~enl~ ~~ecyh sho~~d changes will oc~ur In either the print or
and
Y m
• e sa •
the electro-medta. He conceded there
any exceptions (diplomatic negowill always be pressure regarding
I Iat Ions or military tactics) should be
inclusion or exclusion of certain kinds
·
"specific and narrow "
To secure freedom of expression ,
of programmmg , but predicted that
radlp, television , and the press will
Emerson emphasized that It must be
essentially remain free of censorship.
"Incorporated Into the educational
B&amp;e&lt;~use of judlctal vacillation In the
system and taught to each generation "
In addition , non-profit assoclatio~s
area of libel and free press a~? fair trial ,
organized around economic, political
Abraham remarked that the , Prognosis
and cultural lnteieats and Issues along
for the future Is uncertain In these
areas. He did say, however, that the
with uni-sltles, will have 10 be the
principal vehicles of citizen dissent and
~ext several decades will likely bnng a
continued dichotomy between li~lese
social criticism In the future.
- -The-elllzenry..must-&lt;Olao...anaur•Libat
In the public and non-public realm , but
the function of the mass· .medf8 ~aHh&lt;ri;tiJ)r~G&lt;&gt;Iffi.-.wUI-jlrobabl
maintained Emerson said He projectm9ve away from continued expansion
~ that mecUa revenues . will not be
of ,!he public sector.
exclusively tied into advertising but
Even demonstrably ;5ubllc officials
likely will be subsidized by publiclyor persons may get am~~· symP&lt;IIhetic
funded organizations controlled by
hearing from the bench, he added.
public prestige.
A::~:'~~V.:::J ~~~~~~. ~g~rt~!!ill'~~~
Emerson sald he believes an ef!ecllve
be able to restrict press criticism of trial
0
0
~~~~e 10:":! 7ut~:e ·~~;·~~~~t" il~ conduct , but that judges will continue
maintenance "will not be easy." 11 "will
to set aside convictions because of
require deliberate attention , full aware- ' media publicity.
ness and constant effort ."
Repof1er no more lhon on ordlnory
mortll
Abraham does not envision a
Abrllwn no loaa of commitment
resolution within the next quarterAlthough Interpretation of the Bill of
century of the matter of a reporter's
Rights moy vary somewhat In the
refusing judicial inquiry on the grounds
future, Henry,.Abraharn , Doherty Profes- of Go~t at the University of
Virginia, said he does not envision that
. relevant material and data "should not
IOCiety will relinquish its commitment
to the hallowed gu.,.,t- of the Firat
~dr~lvll~rta'f.Y. more _than that of an
Amendment by the y - 2001 .
By arrnsisting on procedural guarThere Ia aome d.nger, however that
antees embodied In the Bill of Rights,
Americana may "expect too much1' and
_Abraham speculated , judges will
that the nation's opinion leaderS and

1

1

g~e~~~~~~~i1.:~~~:tt ~~~~~"-

probably have more control over their

~~du~ru"osn b;&gt;;,0:,7'.,P"~~p~es~~~:.lv~!

during trials. This, he contends , will
help to strike a fairer balance between
free press and fair trial.
By 2001 , Abraham also predicted , the
Supreme Court will ultimately recognize
1

~~~a~l~hln °~,~~~ns:e~~~? a'c~rJ~~es 5~

whatever their sexual preferences. He
does not believe, though, that any
changes will occur regarding laws
governing public manifestations of hard

co~~~~~g~f~soclation

will remain
secure for the American electorate,

:~~~~c ~~~dk II~;Ti~eov~r~X

of

the

Panelists respond
The first panelist to comment on the
presentations was Richard J . Rosche,
representing the Erie County Bar
Assoc iation .

Rosche stated that he Is pessimistic

~~~~~~~u~~r:, ~~~~~~~~~~~%fn"o~g~

he noted that information Is essential In
assisting the electorate to property
direct political pressure, he predicted
government will become more secretive
and the populace, as a result, will be
less Informed .
Rosche said that he believes the
courts and the press are the two best
means of defense to counteract the
"negative effects of the Burger Court."
A

~~': ~~~~ u~ews

featu re writer

~~~=ss~1~~~~a~~~on~~~~fc:~ ~hat ~
0

1

reporter's data or sources snou10 not be
considered privileged information .

Jay UeftJ. Ab~Nm (cent~tr). and Roeche hightl.
~

Abraham responded that he has

(g~~~~=~~~~s '!'~d ~~,':,~~~~ ~~~~g

needed evidence In matters of criminal
justice, and repeated his belief that In
such proceedings, a " reporter should be
treated like an ordinary citizen ."
Professor Emerson , on the other

~;~rter~~'~vll~~hsh~~:dan~ '~:~~

lute," since government cannot · be
counted on to "purge Itself" and the
press Is the main institution that
provides checks to abusas of power.

ca~"~"a':~ to%nh""c1:Jsl~~=~· ~~f"!~~:

maintained that the Importance of

~~~~lgh: an;'~~~er ~~~~~lon~~ss

Civil Liberties 'ormplt'

au~l!~~~e~ha~a;"~d t~s J~T n!~~~~~g

civil liberties, he agreed with the
" Sports Illustrated" description of
Buffalo as the "armpit of the east."
Jay explained that although laws
have been on the books for over three
d~des which protect an Individual's
right to solicit contributions for
political purposas, people have been
arrested In Buffalo and sunroundlng
~,;'~,,:::[~~o,!gftvl/~.'s and for other
" Buffalo Is behind the times some 35
years," claimed Jay. He added that
when everyone in the Y""' 2001 Is
en/oylng civil liberties, Buffalonians
wl I have to walt until 2036.
The Bill of Rights Conference, co-

~~~~~ t~llg~~ean~ct;'mo~w ~~Be
p.m. In the Moot Courtroom, O'Brian
Hall . See " Calendar," for details.

•Commager opens Bill of Rights conference
retreat from the policies and principles

to discrimination In access to jobs,
schools, housing and medical care.

retreat" may t m 1 t
" b 1 ti
one...
u
n ° a su s an ve
11 will be up to new Supreme Court
appointees to r&amp;e&lt;~pture the " Innovative,
creative philosophies" of the Warren
Court , he maintained .
C&lt;llling Inequality before the law the
"most pernicious of all manifestations
of injustice," Commager npled that, in
the social and economic arena, it leads

charged, because the U.S. has Ignore!!
the constitutional admonition to prd
mote the general welfara" and the
"constitutional authorit'\r to provide for
it. "
He argued that ".ondltion dictates
opportunity" and that minorities aa well
as the poor, Ignorant, and sick and old
"do not have the opportunity to change
their conditions."

(frompogol,cot.•)

su~~.:.'~a'f't~e ~~~~p~hlc:!ca::'ll---fnls--h~,.-Commaget:-1

Rector of Polish medical school will visit here
The Office of International Health,
HEW, under the U.S./Poland Exchange
Program, has arranged for a visit ·of
Professor Konstanty Wlsnl-skl, M.D.,
rector, Medical SChool of Bialystok,
Poland, with Professor Nathan Back,
Department of Biochemical Pharmacology [355 Hachstetter) , from October
26-31 .
Professor Wisniewski has won
recognition an1 prizes from the Polish

Min istry of Health and the Polish
Academy of SCience for his work In the
field of Insulin research.
The purpose of Professor Wisniewski's visit is !Q get acquainted with
research carried out In the U.S. In his
area of Interest.
Anr,one who would like to meet Prof,
Wisn ewskl O! arrange for a lecture,
should call Dr. B&lt;lcl&lt;, 636-2838.

�October 18, 1878

LETTERS
Panel on.
the president
asks$uggestions
Editor:
Guidelines established by the SUNY
Board of Trustees mandate periodic
evaluation of the work of campuS"
presidents who wish te be considered
for an extension of their appointments.
IInder those procedures, President
Ketter will be subject to such evaluation
If he decides, in September of 1979,
lhM he wishes to be considered for an
- l o n ot his term of office.
The Gufdellnes of the Trustees
prowlde that a president wishing to be
ao -uated shall be reviewed by an ad
hoc review comm ittee consisting of a
rapreMntative of the Chancellor; the
ehelrman of the faculty senate; the
chairman of the student association;
and a representative of the administrative staff selected by the President. The
Guidelines maKe -each of those persons
solely responsible for ascertaining and
reporting to the ad hoc committee the
sentiments of the constituency which
he or she represents, and limits the
access of constituents to the ad hoc
committee to this single mandated

;:,'j~Y~ti:l.~t ~~:r~u~~:\"~~ st;"l~~~!l

committees and there shall be no
voting.
The Ad Hoc Faculty Senate Commitlee on Evaluation Procedures has been
charged to meke recommendations for
the guidance of the chairman of the
faculty senate In the discharge of this
responsibility.

tio~~efz~:,:~t,:~~~;~~~~ra~~Pt~e;~
to how the chairman of the faculty

~~~~~ata~~t~t s~~~~~~:~ ~~f~ga:~

mind that the Guidelines prohibit any

;~:::;,~Ish~~~!~~· fu.f~er ~~ml~!es.the

·In particular; the Committee would be
pleased to hear from any members of
the faculty who were present during the
197• evaluation and who might have

sugg::,s~~~f~~~~s~" ~:,t e~~er!:r7t~:n.

may be directed to the undersigned, the
chairperson of the committee, or to any
of Its members who are: Dr. Michael
Frisch, History; Dr. Diane Jacobs,
Microbiology; Dr. Gerald Ri sing,
Educational Studies; Dr. Fred See,

~.g~~~rst;~.i'P~l'8~i ~rec~~~w,:

Hugh Van Llew, Physiology.'
Sincerely yoors ,
-Jacob D. Hyman
Chairperson
410 O'Brian Hall

IBM 2471
terminals 'out'
Depanmants who currently own or
lease IBM 2741 terminals were notified
some time ego that University Comput-

:;g2~1~~) 0~~~: t~rv::u~~

and that a diflerent type of terminal
'4(0Uid be ,.qulred In order to continue
using Tweet or Demand (the two
subsystems on the Univac 1106
available for tim&amp;-sharing applications).

ter~~:S~at., o~~h~~h~~0~2~~

-

'Homecom.l ng'
Homecoming 78 began at duak last Friday with a
giant bonfire at Amherst, eponaored by the
Inter-Greek Council . Terri Hall, a junior from
Grand leland (waving. abova) waa chosen
Homacomlng Queen by a panel Including
President Ketter and a member of the Bufhilo
media. She wee introduced at half-time along with
U/ B'a 1968 Lambert Cup football team. After the
game. alumni and friends headed for the beer
bubble to toast the wet gridiron victory over
SUNY/Albany.

•Marathon
(l"'"'pogo1 , eol.4)

(about Brendan Behan) at Garl Meyer's

~~~,;'t,SQ t~~~~er~c~,'~,4~~ue~:~a~~~~~ri

Ho~~~~:~;ae~n~~fe~ ~~~~9d yesterday
1

the Saturday run .
The U/B field
Dr. Joho Peradotto, dean of the

and is speaking at noon today at a
public luncheon of the Buffalo Rotary
Club at the Statler.

expected to break the 3-hour mark In
this year's event. He's "thin" and "looks
ready, " reports are. (The winning time
will probably be around 2 hours: 15
minutes, Tarbet expects. His own best
time to date has been 2:55.)
Others In the U/ B field Include:
•Dean Thomas Headrick of the
Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence, who
Is new to the race this year.
•Robert Reis , professor of law;

Center at 2:15p.m. today (a conference
which members of the U.S. Winter
OlymonpligchTtearnat w711.13aOI,soRaottnendW
).ayne, a
T
nationally-ranked marathon runner, and
a favorite in Saturday's race, will speak
and show a film on marathon running at
McKinley High School.
Tomorrow , runners from arounP the
coun try will tour the Buffalo watertront
and the Albright-Knox and will attend a

Management;

at the Connecticut

~~~~~n ~: ~~~er&amp;r;;'~~~te ~~~a~~~"·,~

fer~~~~i!\e~hew~~wh~l~ffa~o ~~~nWo"~

m:~;~.:.,~~elssy:t~s~:atesgh~~sso~i · ~~!ron~l'!~W~ fr~rg~~'l1ro.:LaB~ir.~j

En~~i~~~ Willbern, assistant prolessor,
•Alan Flelltz, a law student;
•Alan Blrnholz, associate professor.
1

0

0

~~r~ ~g~'e~~ ~ift. 'n~i~~l~~. t~~~"r~

hiS'tl me record;
•H~dWolf of English , "who is
certain t
art atleast," I arbel says;
•Mitchel Harwitz, associate professor, economics;
·

street

Armory.

Rut~re;~e~~'1,'jfci7~~~~~a8:~~;;orge

Sheehan , author of a best selling

:to\ ~~~np~~:

~~~:;f~ ~7'l,~~~·~u~~pf~\~e

(a S1 donation is being requested).

Shea's will also be the scene of a
display of runn ing shoes and recreation
equipment.
The run Itself begins at 12:30 p.m.
Saturday behind the Albright-Knox on

A-la of running
That's one of the appeals of running,
Tarbet admits. " It provrdes an Individual
of 30 or older with a means of proving
he~~~hJo ~~~~h;~~~~ x,e,:;;thons?

1

1

fo~~:d~;,t ;:,~~!:'~uf; ;"~~~~r~~h~~ t~~

magic three or three-and-a-half-hour

~;~~on sl~~eth:\e e.:'eu~t . t::,e~u~~:fer f~~

.must have a certified marathon faster
than 3:00, while all women and men
over 40 must beat 3:30}. Only a few are
out to win.
To meet one's goal In the run Is to
:
achieve a sort of "ecstasy."
" I lived three months off my first
marathon ." Tarbet recalls .
That's the key to the thing,
apparently.
Joggers jog for health reasons or for
recreation. But a marathoner like Tarbet
[who has been clocking between 65-70
miles a week for the last eight weeks In
preparation for t he event} Is something
else again.
Runners put all practical considerations aside, Tarbet explains. They'll
often run "hurt ;• pushing themselves to
the point of exhaustion.
" It's the psychological satisfaction.
The thrill of meeting a physical demand
and challen~ ."
They run beCause "It's there."

la;r::,c;lu~s~e~~e~~=~ciate prolessor, ;~~~i~:~~~ffe"t ~i;~~t: ~:~~"J~~
Dennis Heflneman, operations manager
•and probably others who will
at the Skylon .
-for-UCS.-88id.lhl&amp;.w.eell
complain of being overlooked .
.
The decision to d::r::
o::po;IB"'M';-..,...,,....--'-"~wanerGtiltr,-asslstant-professor.-Beeutllul-and.unlqua;;:--;:::-:;;-;;:-::-;;-=~-~
support stemmed from the Computing
communication , described as ··the best
The Buffalo run bills Itself the "most
Center's need for advancing to the next
marathoner on the faculty," has
exciting , beautiful, and unique maralevel of the Univac operating system,
decided, though, that once-a-year at
thon In the world."
Are you a student with a weakness In
Mennernan said. " It Was determined
Boston is enough for him .
Rightly so, Tarbet thinks . The course
note-taking
reeding
studying
or
thet substantial development effort on
From elsewnere In SUNY . Pete.
along the river to the Falls, Is beautlfui
testing? Th8re Is a place that Is 'more
the part of software personnel would be
Jeffers, a professor of physical
this time of year. The weather usually
than willing to help ~ou - the Study
required In order to Include 21•1
chemistry at Cortland, Is entered. He
Is, ·tpo .
·
Skills Lab at 364 BaldY Hall.
won the Nlegara District AAU 5(}-mlle
The local organizers are known for
Vannelse Collins, reading and study·
support In the new operating system

1U1lS"1.11b--can help-

:~c::J~ffo8'cl::v~n:=ra=.;nt~&lt;;,~

~~~~~re~~~r:,!~,;l~~t~~tt~~~ o~11t~~

~~~ ~a~tf~~~;.and

l:"
=~~~·~ 'r~r:,:~
Which offer today'a time-alwlng user

The overall field for the run, Tarbet
Indicates, will probably bs the best ever
asaemlllad here '- particularly because
the local event has been designated as
this year's AAU national championship

the care they teke
"We're lucky In a way;: says Tarbet,
that· the New York Marathon (which
attracts some 10,000 Individuals each
y,ear) and a large one In Detroit come
mmedlately before and after the local event . This helps keep things here
··small " enough to be manageable.

r'..._
o1-ta
The,_ Itself culminates a week of

runners nationally. • oar reputation is

Mel ..-.lcelblllty.
HerlrlerMn emphulzad

Meadow. The festivities continued
ear11er thia- with a Marathon Fair at
the Buffalo Zoo end a apeeial
performance (lor the runrwa) of
"conversations wtth en Irish Raacal"

good also, he notes, -Ialiy Re~
Zimmerman of Kenmore. a 37-year-old
who haa run a merathon In 2:18.
Zimmerman dldn1- take up the
apart until ha-32.

aystem or human resources to a
terminal wblch has been declining In
use and popularity o - the past several
yew8."

Willie the IBM 21•1 off. . several
attiiiCIIYe features {print quality is one,
oo.t Is another), Henneman saJd there

:=~~g~~~-~'lrabl"m~

thet the
people
wllou.IBIJ27411ennlnalaoutheCDC
~ 173.
-

.-MeY ~ doea not ooneem

marathon distances he has. He has run

32 marathons and won 8.

~t~~.1e!'r~~n ::t ~~~~:lew~~

~:f~t~~~m~~t~~t~~~h~?"t~:~!i
~~~n~:ot~~of~~:=u:8

f~!nh~fa~111Wt1~rdf~:~~~~~~ :t~J:~7 :

who need help Immediately and don't
have time to teke the entire study skills
course.
·
Upon entering the lab, you will be
asked to take a test to uncover the
nature of your problem . Then, one of
the tutors will suggest different
0
1

::'~t~~:rl:!u~ t~! ~9alt~~~~~~~~f~tra~Y
The tutors Involved are Instructors

:~?,',.~~ ~~':/ ~~!:: ':l~'af~&amp;.~di~~=

end thet 30-50 students make usa of the
lab each semester .
There Ia no fee; lab hours are:
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, 10
a.m. -3p.m.; T-y.11a.m. -2p.m .

�October 11, 1878

MediaS~udy

........

n

Four artists playing key roles
in SUNY-wide arts programs;
Vasulkas have Albright-Knox show ·
Four artists from the Center for Media
study are playing key roles In film and
video programs sponsored by the"
SUNY-wide Committee on the Arts this

ye:~sociate

Professor James Blue will

~~~e~T~~NJo~f~~~~a~nedt'¥h~ PM~~~~:
established to enable campuses and
· their communities to screen works of
excellence by Independent film and
vldeomakers, and to discuss them with
their makers. Blue Is a graduate of the
Institute of Higher Educatfon in Paris
and directed "The Olive Trees of
Justice," a feature made in Algeria,
which won the Critics' Prize at the
cannes Film Festival In 1962. He has
been a Ford Foundation and a
Guggenheim Fellow and was formerly
director of The Media Center at Rice (
University In Houston .
Blue will screen: "A Few Notes on
Our Food Problem" which was
nominated for an Academy Award in ,
1969, a film which authority Basil

~~~~\h~a~h~J ~o'r1~~ ~~~:~~;;,~~

1

a feature-length study of an African
tribe undergoing change because of Its
shift to a modem economy; " The
March " which documented the 1963
civil rights march on Washington led by
Dr. Martin Luther King, and 'Who Killed
the Fourth Ward?," his most recent
work about Inner city deterioration in
Houston, shot on Super-B Sound-Snyc,
and broadcast In three one-hour

~'tli~Ter~:,~~o"nu~h T~~v~~~'l.es!r~lfs~

Blue will spend two days In screening
films, holding seminars with classes,
and meeting with local film and videomakers. The Program he Is participating
in Is in Its fifth year. ·

A new venture

,

Pr~~~~:orb~a~~~ar~~u~~~ vfds!fa~~

by Adjunct Professor Stelna and
Associate Professor Woody Vasulka are
Included In a second program spon-

~~ -~~~~~ =~fs~:te:l~ir~~g:

gram was Initiated this year so film and
video curators could select groups of

Prof creates
PT scholarship
A Clition Springs, N.Y. woman nas
been awarded the new I y established
Griffin Physical Therapy Scholarship for
academic excellence.
Mary Lynne Wood, a senior In
physical therapy, Is the first recipient of
the award created this fall by Physical
Therapy Professor Dr. James E. Griffin
and his wife, Frances, of Williamsville.
Dr. Griffin has been with the
Department since 1970; he came here
from the University of Pennsylvania.
Academic excellence is the only
criterion for the scholarship .• Awards
range from StOOO to $500, depending on
the selected student's grade point
average. Miss Wood was awarded $900.
Dr. Steven J . Rose, chairman of the
Department of Physical Therapy, says U
is admirable that a faculty member 1s
willing to establish a scholarship to
help defray the cost of education for a
_ student whose academiC achievements
are superior. He adds that the Grlffins'
generosity exemplified one of the
Department's objectives to have
cohesiveness between faculty and
students.
"In the Department ," notes Rose,
"our faculty look on students as
professionals who are In the process of
learning - not aa a group separate and
apart from those who teach ."
Griffin an active researcher as well
as teacher, has served as consultant to
the Niagara Frontiec Asthma ASSOCia·
tion, the Acoustics BranCh of the
·Bureau of Radiological Health, the

~":'~~un8~:,tat;~·· ~.~f::a':

A - y of Sciences and the Food and
Drug AdminiStration. He has published
eX1enaivety and Ia a '-milmber of the
Amencan Aaooclatlon for the Advance"*'t of Science, the New York
A - y of Science and the American
Congresa IO&lt; Rellabolllatton Medic_lne.
He has active on v.-10us
Uno-.oty commln-.

films and videotaoes and distribute
them to campus and community
audiences together with extensive
written notes. The artworks and the
notes are made available free-of-charge
to any campus which invites one of the
artists whose work is represented or an
informed cri tic to discuss the program .

pr~~~~m fn'~~~ltig~~~i~~irifs a1~ s~h~h
ci,~~!~~ M~iga~~i~he~~~~~a~~riie ~~;~

Sharits is represented by three works,
" Word Movie/ Fiu xfll m 29" (1966),
" Piece Mandala.End War" (1966) and
'"Tails" (t976). He will speak about the
entire program at State College at
Potsdam on October 29. Works
included were. selected by Thorn
Andersen , fil m programmer for Media
Study / Buflalo; the participating film
critics are Noel \.arroll of New York

~n~eA~~hiv;~~:~dMX~a: f'~u~~tho':t~R~

Soho Weekly News .
Art ists participating in the video
portion of the program were selected by
John Minkowsky, video / electronic arts
curator at Media Study/Buffalo. They
are Peter campus, Cara DeVIto, Joan
J o ou&gt; ~. Andy Mann , Bi ll Viola, William
W~n . and the Vasul kas. That duo is
repr~sented by five tapes: " Vocabulary," " The Matter," " Heraldic View,"
. " Solo for 3," and "Rem i niscences
(1973-4) ." Participat ing video critics are
Peggy Gale of Art Metropole, Toronto,
Johanna Gill of the Massachusetts
College of Art In Boston , and Davidson

Gi~~?~~~~f ~he"rrs':i'o"s~~~:~~grw~f

the
University-wide Committee on the Arts,
has said of this new venture:
" Film and video are among the most
impor1ant art forms of the 20th century,
but the personal works of independent
film and videomakers are hardly ever
seen in most communltlas , even In New
York State. There Is also the situation
that , unlike traditional art forms , there
are as yet few critics and historians to
lend understandi ng to these new works .
It Is therefore Important ... that such
screenings take p)ace In a doubly
informed context in which notes are
provided by leading programmers. and
curators, and the artists themselves or

~~~c~~S:~~~~grrl~i!~tso~~~e~~sent

to

TheVaoulkao
The Vasulkas will each have a
month-long exhibition at the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery, opening October 20
and nJTTning through November 26.
Stelna's exhibition is called " Machine
Vision;" she will speak In the Gallery
Auditorium on November 7 at ·8 p.m.
WoodY,'• exhibit Is entitled "Descriptions; ' he will speak In the Gallery
Auditorium, November t4 at 8. The
exhibits are curated by Linda cathcart
and an illustrated catalogue of the
Vasulkas' work, suppor1ed by the
National Endowment for the Arts, wi ll
be on sale at the Gallery Bookshop.
Born in 1940 In Reykjavik, Iceland,
Stelna was trained as a musician and
was a violinist with the Icelandic
Symphony. Woody was born In 1937 In
Brno, Czechoslovakia, and ~tudied
metal technology and hydraulic mechanics at the School of Engineering
there. They were married In Prague In
1964 and came to the U.S. In 1965. In
1971, they co-founded The Kitchen In
1

~t!':t.:fo'ru~ tfcir ~~we~~~.nltm~a.:'~~

must c. Since then, they ha~e collaborated on videotapes and environments
and have shown their projects throughout the U.S., South America and

~~~~~- i~t~i~~~an~~~:o.;:~~~

has held Individual artist's grants from
the National Endowment for the Arts.
The Vasulkaa are also just finishing
six half-hour videotapes which they
produced in their home-studio lor
WNED, Channel 17, under a $&lt;40,000
grant from the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting and the National Endow·
ment fO&lt; the Arts. Stelna, in
collaboration with Jeffy Schier, a 1978
U/B graduate In electrical engineering
and ' student at the Center for Med ia

The first event was at the Polish
Community Center, October t6.
Both Stelna and Woody Vasulka will
show and discuss their most recent
work at the 42nd Annual Meeting of the
Mid-America College Art Association at
the Renaissance Center In Detroit,
October25.
.
Dr. Gerald O'Grady·, director of the
Center for Media Study, will moderate
the studio session In " Video Media"
which will include, beside the Vasulkas,
artists Diane Spoderek and Jim Hart of
Detroit , and video critic Jotin Mlnkowsky.
A traveling critic
Minkowsky, who took his degree "in
media study and Ehgllsh summa cum
laude and was a Phi Beta Kappa In 1975,
also took an MAH dearee from the
Center for Media Study Tn 1978. He Is
currentir, completing editing a book on

or: &amp;~~l;,t;';,"tf~nj~~rt:,~~:ej~~~

~d

returned fmm a 10,000 mile trip which
crisscrossed major U.S. centers. A
$2~ grant from the Madia Arts
Program of the National Endowment for
the Arts suppor1ed his three months of
research . He saw new work, selected

Fn~~~n~l~ '!t'1~~a ~3~!~~~j

new music for a book, and studied the
structure of video and electronic arts
exhibition In the U.S. In November, he

~dya,\s ='t~g d~:::~~ ~

:!,;:,":'~~~~':~~~•.In

computers at a aeries of · local
community centers under the regrant
program of Arts DeveloP"*'! Services.

Micro-macro
O'Grady , who Is also director of the
Educational Communl'ftlona Center

a special

and president of Media Study/Buffalo
as well as director of the campus Center
for Media Study, commented that the

:g:~i~r."/g~~O:, h~~u::OI~~~~~~

and national projects Is typical of the
agency's " micro-macro" orientation:
•
"We are committed to encouraging

~~e ~1,'!\'~ ~~~ ut~~~::!\'\~~.!

State, but that is a wor1hy mlaalon only
because we are recognized In the
national and International arenaa."
He pol nted out that, laat summer,
James Blue was Invited to Ia.!
sessions at an International coni~
on ethnographic film In Australia arid to
presenl his own work at the Grteraon.t
Documentary Festival In canada. Blue
at so began a new film In Mexico.

hl~~~i :C~~.Vug~~~~w=:tf~;~J;

- 10:00 p.m . each night, eateflahlnq
the first summer Institute In film an~
video at the University of Alaska In
Juneau this past June. "Just as the
Center lor the Creative and Performing
Arts has 'June In Bultalo,' the Center lor
Media Study Initiated 'Jvne In Jun-..,'"
O'Grady saJd.
"The arts In the Unlveralty .,.

~~ln~~~tl:;:,a:_t~0rcoe"=J:."•S.:,'jo

Elkin's Center for T~re A - m
sponsors Shakeapeere In the Pwtl. here
In Buffalo every eummer, while Norman
Holland's Center for the Paychologlcel
Study of the Arts has an ..,nu.. aDring
conference which brlnga ua all oi the
leading national prec:tlt1oner11 ht thllft
field."

�October 18, 1978

Hill -a nd Spyro-

Snow,

Campus concert-goerw faced • unique
dilemma Sunday night. Would It be
Phoebe Snow end Den Hill at Clark Gym

- or Spyro-Gy1'8 at the Cornell Theatre?
Efther was en inspired choice. Fens were
winners whichever they chose .

...

•
1\nn·t'rufittlq::.
~t. S . Pn~;ta)t~'

.

..t\11)
UuffaJit, N.Y.
Pcrmi1 u , 31 1

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

OCT 12,1978
VOL•.10 • NO.6

Students boycott Couilcll hearings
The Council of the University Is
"condescending" and has a "contorted
view of students," acting SA president
Karl Schwartz said In opening a Mo~day
afternoon session that was supposed to
- have tieen an " Informal" hearing of
student concerns.
· It was that word "Informal ," Insisted
on by Council Chairman Robert I.
Mlllonzl , that was the rub.
Mlllonzl hed carefully adjourned tha
" regular" Council session before
opening the second event.
·
The· student representative to the
Council, Michael Pierce, was to chair
the airing of student views ..
Pierce repeated for the Council his
Insistence that student officers should
be allowed to speak at "regul~"
sessions of the group just as
administrative officials are, and that a
1D-mlnute period for airing stud.ent

.~c::c~h~!~,~
P.:i'~~~~
are

Students
a fundarilental constituency who should have Input , Pierce
Insisted.
,
st~:~ ~~~~t this Council hear the

wh~~~

tn:.,: .r:~to~==

on al• separate topics, Pierce recognlze:d Schwartz.

The SA official wanted to know II the
Council intended to respond to Pierce's
request .
Mlllonzl Indicated the Council was
there only " to listen. "

continued, "I$ to provide an academic
environment In which all students have
the opportunity to e•plore and expand
all of their potential. This Is lm~sslble

'SA Ia boycotting'
"If you are not prepared to respond ,"
Schwartz warned , then SA Intends to
"boycott" this session.

of segregation . As long as this body
continues to count as unnecessary, the

The GSA~slllon

St~~~ A~~~Fall~'~.e6',!,::~t~:.~.raduate

As president of the GSA, she said "I
am addressing this body on behalf of
nearly 6,000 Individuals. In the name of
every graduate student on this campus I
protest and seriously question a .body
constituted for the purpose of governIng this University, which actively seeks
to Incapacitate and eliminate the voices
of students from Its decision-making
chambers.
" This University was created primarIly for students," Plnn said . "Students,
with their fresh and eeger minds are the
stimuli of this Institution · of higher
learning, Its reason for e•lsting.
Without students, the concept of a
university loses Its meaning ."
The mission of. this University, Plnn

Its priorities and commltlt*1t. Thla
body muatend Its efforts to degrwle our
representative, Mr. Piefce. The attempt
to deny him his rights as a legitimate
member of this body was a flaara:rt
violation oflli81aw or this State which
even this body is e•pectad to obey and
uphold." [Last month, Council Chair-

~ec:~:'ognsa~,~~t~ t~~~~,Y~t~~o~~

=. ~~~~~z~~~n:r=t ~ ;t;;..':

views and thoughts of students, this
111

~~~-~r~%,:, o~f~~ff~~~~t~f ;,'f;1!t~~~

The very fact that I am allowed to
express the concerns of my constituency In this Informal session which was
carefully managed and controlled Is
recognition and verification of the fact
. that this body vlevls students as a little
less than human, void of any valuable
perceptions or constructive Ideas."

could not make motions. It turned out
later that under Section 358 of the State
Education Law, he can.]
Plnn called on the Council to "end Ita
· pre8811t course of action which will
succeed In making a mockery of this
1

:a1~~~~:~.~~~':fd, ~1n~c::~!lar.;

you to get on with the tuk of
overseeing the running of this Unl-slty or to admit that you are lncapeble
of.per1orming this task."

Unwilling to be truted thla way
The Council seems to believe, Plnn
weni on, that students need only an
occasional opportunity to air their
"apparently Ill-conceived and unfounded discontent, or to let off steam. We as
students, the largest constituency on ·
·this campus, are not willing to be
treated In this manner. We are not
satisfied with this half-way measure.
We are demanding more than that . We
are demanding that this body reevaluate

NOt tuat atuclenla
"Was that ~~genda Item number two?"
Mlllonzl asked. The prepared -c~enda
had lndlcafed that th• second speaker
would addreas TAIGA problema.
The student bodies will not pwtlclpate In this h"!!llng, Pierce said. "The
agend_a Ia null and vo.ld."

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

Senate: bylaws, general education get airing
The Faculty Senate Tuesday approved thnaa ...,.ndments to bylaws of

~':t~tl~arla::.:::~r.~h\:~;fy~~:~

with qualified 8Cedemlc rank having
more than a ~year appointment;
reduoed the chairman's term of office to
one ~. lond lidded • vice-dlalr
· • poaltion; end euthorlzed elactiona for
SUNY Senators by the voting faculty
-professional staff.
They also approved a n - Senate
Cherter lor rruill ballot to the voting
f8CUity.
\...----\
•
Acconllng to Professor William
whO "-dad tha rwvtalon
· commlttea, the Cherter will "provide

Or.!-.

~~~~-..::s eo: "'r..S.::~

apeqllng IU... Mel bYtawt·
After i-'WIQ a complaint from a

member of i he· School of Information
and Library Studies who said SILS
raculty. feel they are "losing their
identity" In the new Senate formula for
representation,&amp;inatorsegreedtokeep,
the matter " under active consideration . '

~~~=Baker,

chairman of
the General · Education Commlttea,
eaented Ita preliminary report
•tin today'a Aeportet).
After the report was thrown open for
dlscuaslon, Professor Jacob Hyman
objected that It neglected to conalder
the "lmpect of eanalblllt._" and the
"tMJII... of t..rlng" on knowledge.
Bakar ,..pondlid thai' the omission
was "one of wording rather than
oonlldefatlon" Mel tllel, In fact, the
commltt.. held dl8ouued the ~

r.

&lt;-

concern lor It was ''lJiflecled In Ita

documentation."
One Senator cautioned Bakar that
Interdisciplinary courMa at the Uilherslty would not be "wetl-reganled or
-11-taught" unless the committee

See text of
General Education
report, p ..8

=~~~::" to;:'n:l~~:rom-=

where their mouth
8CIIdemlc lncentiwe

on - . 1 occaalona.

Another Senator expreaeed dieappointment that the report "confined
lt..rf tb • :r.:flc 11118 group/" lnateed

~u:'for:- ~ .!~he Idee~

student. .

Bakar told tile Senator that the
commlttea
the aublect In Ita ·
queatlonMI,..
f~ty and admlnl8tratlon. Although the 8Ublecl was not
Included In lhe INPort, he aid that

.sci,..-_,

to

(eachthem.

Ia," Mel liM
IICIIfty whO

to

·

Baker ana-.cl that that mattw Mel

bean raleed In comml- Mel .,..

·

=~~~~h1~.:",:.re giv«&lt;

.......

~

to

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

.

Pnlilclent Robert L Ketter spdc8 to
111e s.n.t. I'IQMIIng guldetlnee ll8ld
for ll*1t lncrelieea.

�.......

OctCII&gt;o&lt; 12, 1871

Musial Chairs
It .......-.1 to be a try for the
~-ofR-'mualcalchalrs

. - . thlo

.,.._--at

EHtcott
-Satunllly. Tha numbers t o - wen
100 chollrs and 1,112 partlclpante.
ha,. had 1.100 chairs but not
enough -Ia. It - • fun anr-Y·

BRIEFLY
More selecdve aa~at

a.Hicadoe
Several departments and members

of the professional staff are
associated wtt11 Healt11 Care Plan.
But an affiliation agre~nt has not
yet been signed by Healt11 Care Plan
and the State University of New York at
Buffalo School of Midlclne and the
other Healt11 Science schools, the
Personnel Offl~ clarified this week.
Health Care Plan Is the new health
maintenance organization now open
forU/8 enrollment.

Hdow- u.e eartyl
It was Halloween ahead of schedule
for the ........ last week. Two
front page pictures were transposed.
a headline put jim Blackhurst In DUE
rather t11an DC£, and we said those
kids who were knocking down chestnuts at Main Street, ate t11em, too.
Those chestnuts are not edible,
Informed one caller who declined to
Identify herself. "You people ought
to check.wtt11 the Biology department," she fumed. We should have
taken the week off, maybe.

Albany
The constraint which has guided
t11e administration of SUNY Albany
was underscored again In President
O 'Leary' s faculty message t111s fall .
a report from that campus Indicates.
The events of recent years.. the
President said, " have required us to
become more selective In our ambit ions. We have moved from a vision
of a University encompassing a wide
range of programs to one which
contemplates a more compactly
shaped universi ty with strong liberal
arts undergraduate programs and
selected graduate programs of high
quality. "

WINrton visits No. 3 3

A preview of an art exhib it ion,
tours of fine arts and Industrial arts
facilities, and consultations with
students, faculty, and administrati o n
were on the agenda as Chancellq_r
Clifton K. Wharton v isited the.State
College at Oswego. the 33rd SUNY
campus he has toured. Mrs. Wharton ,
_accompanying her husband, queried
students about their opinions of t heir
academic environment and asked
ca I' I!IIM
what they believed to be their most
Important campus experiences outside
Dr. George Bobinski has agreed
t11e classroom. Wharton said duri ng
to continue as dean of the School
the visit that he Is determined to fi nd
of lnformat!on and Library Studies,
ways In which students can take
President Robert L. Ketter Indicated
t111sweek.
advantage of outstanding programs
Ketter told faculty In the school that within the system, citing Oswego's
Bobinski, who underwent a formal
Theatre Department as an example.
evaluation last spring, has brought to
SILS "a level of accomplishment and
distinction of which we can be proud."
Since coming to Buffalo In 1970.
Reward offered In computer ·
Ketter said, Bobinski has guided " the
theft
school effectively to accreditation"
A reward for lnformatlon leading
alid has developed a series of CO"
to the return of a $40,000 computer
operative ties wtt11 other University
taken from a Main Street laboratory
Wilts.
over the weekend was offered Monday
SILS grads have assumed a variety
by a member of the Pharmacology
of positions around the country, and
and Therapeutics Department.
particularly In Western New York.
The computer unit, valued -at
"Solid academk and professional
$40,000, was stolen from Cary Hall
foundations have thus been laid,"
between 6 p.m. Friday and 3:30p.m.
Ketter concluded.
Sunday.
The theft was discovered by Dr.
f"rederlck Sachs, professor of pharma$9--cology and therapeutics, who went
to the lab Sunday afternoon to do
ln the flnt four months of the cursomeworit.
rent . - e l l fiscal year Ouly through
The computer system .consisted of
Septeuober) University Investigators
aftd other faculty received 139 grants four units, each weighing 60-70
pounds, which were bolted to a wall
aftd contract -.cis totaling
In the basement area of Cary. It was
$9,103,677. '
used to store research data collected
Sbdy-one_.,rds In the amount of
In pharmacology experiments.
SJ.181,675wererecetvecldurlng University Pollee said there was no
September, Robert C. Fitzpatrick, actsign ot forced entry; later reports were
• • vice prelldent foe- resurch, says
that use of " •duplicate set of keys
In his report for that month.
was suspected."
~proposals were submit·.
The system was one of 140
ted c1urJns the same 30-day period,
Nkolet model computers In existence,
INIEkllll•~otS3,515,4141n .
Sachs
said, and was small enough to
OUI*Ie fundlna.
have been place&lt;! In a car trunk.
Slnc:e July I, I 03 prciiXUis requestThe tlllef or t111ews knew what t11ey
... $7,018,041 havebealforwarded
were doing. he speculated. The Job
tojllll&amp; ltllve.,..,._._
was ciHn and they took the operatIng manual wtt11 them.
A box of I 0 blank memorY discs
was taken. but I 0 Imprinted discs
(a record of a year's work) were
left behind. AliO left was an oscllloec:ope display accessory (similar to

ao......

su.5

•••• .a ....

aTVsueen).

U/B carries no Insurance . It could
take three months to replace the
computer [which was purchased with
federal fuods about a year ago], once
money Is found to do lt.
Prof. Sachs made the Courier front
page and was Interviewed ,; live-" on
WBEN rad io at noon Tuesday.

HAlf-time udvltles
Spectators at UIB' s Homecoming
game Saturday against SUNY Albany
will be treated to half-time activi ties
remlntsc.ent of another era.
The Inter-Greek Council Is planning
a motor~de around the field to
Introduce the Homecoming queen
and her court~ In addition. team
members and coaches from U/B' s
I 958 football team will be Introduced.
The I 958 Bulls, celebrating the ir
20th anniversary, won the Lambert
Cup. They were considered the top
Eastern " small college " team.
Post-game activities for half-time
guests, alumni and friends Include
a beer tent get-together. Later. the
1958 Bulls and their families will
meet In t11e Red Room of the Faculty
Club to view game highlights of some
of their gridiron triumphs.

'

lonftre for Homecomlns
Students can get In the mood for
the Homecoming football game th is
Saturday w ith a dusk bonfire Friday
night behind the tennis courts on
the Amherst Campus.
The Bulls, along wlth their coaches
and cheerleaders, will be on hand
to see SUNY Albany burned In effigy.
Afterwards, students can continue
cel~bratlng with a beer party at the
Pub In Ellicott. The party should start
around ~: 30 p.m.
Both events are being sponsored
by t.he Inter-Greek Council .

Pilot divisions over the top
The two U/8 units participating In
the Pilot Division of the 1978 United
Way Campaign both exceeded their
goals Jn the advance drive which
concluded last week.
UnJverslry United Way spokespersons Indicate that the School of
Medicine raised I 13 per cent of Its
goal , for a total contribution of
$22 ,619 from faculty and staff In
that unit. This was the first time In
recent years that the ~ool of
Medicine has met or exceeded Its
campaign goal.
The Division of Finance and
Management returned I 03 per cent
of Its target. or$ I 7,3 7 4 .
The U/8 Pilot Dlvlslo~ total was
$39,993.-Thls represents a maJor
start .toward the overall goal of
S 125,000 to be raised by the end
of October, according to James R.
!&gt;eSantis,"campus drl'!e chai rman .

-

�EI-Ayouty: ' C.mp D•vld

!f~M,..

J)Mce.'

Mid-East: Israeli-Egyptian peace predicted
A peace treaty between Cairo and

f~[~~leifr. w~~s~n sl~l~o~ty~h~e~~
political affairs officer at the United
Nations, predicted In a campus speech
Monday night.

t~~~~::g~~n~fw:nc:'h~e,!~ e:;:ro~:

which

open

In

Washington

today,

EI~~~~!Y~!~~fldent?
wli~~re t'r:: s~~~ti~~ sa,;l~i't;; s~~~~

command . A hawkish minister of war
has been replaced by a " dove." The
Egyptian war machine Is " winding
down ," and the army Is being converted
to other oses.
At present , said EI-Ayouty, the
Egyptians and Israelis have almost
worl&lt;ed out a line of "Interim" retreat for
Israeli forces In the Sinal- a line wh ich
returns almost 70 per cent of that area
to the Egyptians.
The Camp David accords stipulate,
however, that the peace treaty will be
signed before that withdrawal. "So why
Is a retreat line already 90 per cent

~p~~ato~~~edu'~e E~~~~~n~~~s ~~

"official peace" Is only "a formality"
away _
The current, renewed crisis In
Lebanon (where the Israelis reportedly
shelled Palestinians from the sea
Monday night] won't hamper negotiations, . he Is confident. EI-Ayouty
believes that despite some tough talk
at the UN Monday (calling the accords
International crimes), the Syrians [who
control the Lebanese situation] aren't
really trying to sabotage the EgyptianIsraeli peace.
Puce with Syrl1, too?
In fact , said the diplomat who also
teaches pert-time at Stony Brook, the
Syrians themselves will probably come
Into the peace agreement plciure even
before Jordan.
" Since the Israelis have not yet
responded massively to Syria In

:;~:~~,'~o~~A~:'JY ~~gaf~[~g ·~~~~

00 ~

.

EI-Ayouty said he has lnformat1on
that Soviet Foreign Minister Gromyko at
a meeting In Moscow In early
September left the Syrians henglng on
the question of whether or not the
USSR would beck Damascus In the
event of another war with Israel. The
Soviets were equally evasive about
providing the Syrians with the sophisticated weaponry they sought.
The Syrian foreign minister left
Moscow believing they couldn~ count
on the Russians In another crunch,
EI-Ayouty said.
"There Is definitely Interest In peace
In Damascus,'' he Indicated.
EI-Ayouty emphasized he Is not a
spokesman for the Egyptian government· he Is a UN car-1st, but visits his
home nation fnsquenuy and maintains
contacts there. His P.raaentatlon was
the firat In a aerlea ot"iflscusalona on
the Mld-Eaat tieing aponaonad by
International COIIegelhla aemeater.

On.,._- elnce

1170
s.dat h• _ , on a courae toward
.....,. with IWMI _ . IInce he
~ ~ 81 1he helm of

Egyptian government , EI-Ayouty Indicated.
Military leaders In Cairo told him as
9

1

:r~ ~n~ ~~~~1~ ~~~n~ggld~~Y~~

another war with Israel.
The Arab world Is too divided to

r~?;:?.:'e 6'1 ~~~~nf~g f~~~~:~..J.uEf't,~:
1

~!~:~~~~ r:d~~~en~~r ,~x~~~~~o!:il~
Arab Solidarity Fund . [On the other
hand, the major Arab center - Saudi

~~~~~~~ p=~lar efro~s~up~~~'6'u~;

feels.]
Also, the Egyptlarf militarists told
EI-Ayouty, the nation's weapon system
has huge gaps (because the Soviets put
"strings" on replacing those weapons) .
Like Sedat , the U.S., In EI-Ayouty's
view, wants peace In the .Mid-East for
several reasons :
•It would be rewarding politically to

t~a,~~~~~ther

th~

war in
reg ion
and the possibility of a confrontation
with the U.S.S.R. there;
•We're worried that an Arab "attack"
on the dollar could dangerously weaken
the currency; and
•We're concerned about what might
happen In the event of an oil production
slowdown .
The carter Administration, i n a
drastic departure from Nlxon-Kisslnger
·diplomacy, also was ready to attempt a
peace agreement without the Soviets,
whom major Arab conservatives mlstru•t. This was appealing to Sadat.
The U.S.S.R. apparently doesn't
mind, EI-Ayouty assesses. Under the
camp David accords, the UN Security
COuncil play§ a large role In the
settlement (and the Soviets have a veto
there, anyway) . The Soviets also want
to Improve relations with Israel, and are
wary of the lnstabllijy caused b~ ­
divlslons within the Arab "rej"ectlonlst '
states. [A total of eight clvl wars are
raging In the Arab world today.]

No trouble 11 home
Despite the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. ,
EI-Ayouty said, Sedat decided -to seek
peace for his own reasons and enjoys
the backing of the Egyptian people.
Rumors ol trouble at home ara false, he
reported .
A separate peace between Israel and
Egypt, EI-Ayouty said , will not solve all
Mlddle East problems. It would mean

f~~~~~w~:ta~~~~c~ro:b~~!'1~~=

to trade and to the exchange of
ambassadors. But whether or not there
will be total InteraCtion between the
two, depends on how the rest of the
agreements come out.
COuld the camp David agreements
guarantee future peace In the area?
" It dependa on the Araba east of
Sinal" and on ultimate ecceptance by all
concerned of plana for Gaza and the
West Bank, the UN official concluded.

ThePaleiiiMiuue

Not ao, an emotional Paleatlnlan
woman reaponded with aome heot.
" Paleatlne la the lsaue," ahe lnalated .
~~ran~ didn't touch on the

·our land Ia occupied. Jewlah
Immigration continues, deportation of
PaJeallnlanl goea on.

se~~~f1s~~~~~ in ~~~~~/!:f,n!7~
1

preThe woman said "we demand our full
human rights to return to our homeland.
A Jew from Brooklyn can go, but I
cannot. I didn't kill Jews In Germany. "
Palestinians want a secular state
where Moslems, Jews and Christians
can live together, she said .

"It doesn't work In Lebanon," a proIsraeli student Indicated.
"You defend Sedat, you defend Camp
David, " the Palestinian woman charged
' the speaker. "But camp David did not
settle the Palestinian Issue/"
EI-Ayouty, who Insisted he had been

§~t:~~~~~ =~~~~~~~~ ~~e:~~:.d not a

•Students boycott
(fiom

pogo1, cot 4)

Susan Chamberlin , the secretary of
the Faculty Senate who attends Council
meetings as an observer, asked to make
a point to put things " In perspective."
The Insinuation Is, Chamberlin said ,
that students have been somehow
singled out lor exclusion from the
Council. The faculty are excluded, too,
she said ; they do not even have an
official representative.
The Issue, Chamberlin suggested, Is
"the make-up of the Council ," something which Is set by law and Is not the
doing of the adm inistration of this
University.
Schwartz was not moved.
"This Is a mockery of the SA
officers," he reiterated . He asked
students to leave the room .
Nothing prevents II
Council member Rose Sconiers,
trying to mediate, noted that the law
delineates the dulles and powers of the
COuncil , and that to fulfill those dulles,
the group has to have Input from the
staff of the University.
The fact remains , Schwartz con-

:~~d~·u'~~1 nf~~t;;:'~~~:~~~ ~~~u~~;,~ntl~

they wish .
Mlllonzl countered that members of
the administration who give reports to
the Council " aren't there because they
want to be." Staff do not decide for
themselves that they will be heard . "We
call on them ."

The job of the student representative

~"aJhl~s?'sup~f~~. ~~~~f~z~~PJ~st~~e~~

input.
·
Dr. Richard A. Slggelkow, vice
president lor student affairs, had been
mentioned by Pierce as an administrator who has spoken to the Council.
Slggelkow rose to make It clear that he
has no "grand entree" to Council
sessions; he reports , he said , when he
Is asked to.

Appalled by tlmund ~
The only other student who spoke to
the Council approached the table as
most people were leaving the room.
" I am appalled by the time and piece
ofthls meeting,'' he said. (Three p.m. In
567 capen). The room was too small; It
was inaccessible, he charged.
.
"There were plenty of empty seats;•·
William C. Baird, COuncil chairman
emeritus, pointed out.
"Yes, but students can't cut class In
the middle of the afternoon," the young
man said. He suggested an open
hearing at night, preceded by plenty of
publicity.
.
"These students aeem to be saying
'it's our way or nOthing'," one Council
member was heard to mutter on leaving
•
the ..Oom .
"Oh, well , It's just confrontation ,''
another said.
" We tried,'' Chairman Mlllonzl complained wearily. 'We tried."

•Senate

(!ram-··

col4)

According to Ketter, the University
was allotted $42.1 ,553 In discretionary
funds. He predicted that about 300 to
400 Individuals would rec"elve between
$500 to $2.,000 In merit money. 1,600
Individuals are eligible for merit
Increases, he said .
Ketter told Senators he allotted 10 per
cent of the total sum for Individuals
who did outstanding worl&lt; on University-wide committees. He also will use
that money to meet special needs of
vice presidential units, and to reward
scholars who received national . or
lntematlonal-nltlon.
Three criteria were used by the Health
Sclencea for merit lncr-s, Ketter
said . Money waa given to Individuals
who had received "dry promotions,''
the! Ia, no aalary Increment when
promoted by the department. The funds
alao used to rectify Inequities In
salaries, to I1IWWII lndlvlduala who
performed outstanding edmlnlatratlw
aervloea, and to recognize thoee who
made significant - . h contributions
or who showed outstanding teaching
ability.
VIce Prealdent Bunn requeatad that
1
deans and depWtmejrt heeds In
Academic Affalra gl~ merit ~-

close to $1 ,000.
According to Ketter, the prlorltlea In
Academic Affairs were to use dlecrelionary lunda to correct aaJary
Inequities between sexea and to make
salaries more competitive with those
found In peer groupo elsewhere.
Money waa alao eorrnarked to
recognize "especially rnerttortous lndlvld uals." Ketter said department heads
had the responalblllty to det~lne who
they were.
A Justification had to be written for
each person a department head 1
nominated for an Increase. The deane
and vice presldenta alao added their
comments.
While reading through the recommendatlona from Heolth Sclencea and
Academic Affairs, Ketter aaJd he got the
faellng that the racommendetlona from
department heeds In Ul8 core campua 1
weklhed more ~ly than those
from the Aeolth Sclencea.
The Llbrarlee used o-thlrd of their
allocated eum to OCifT"eCI lnequltlel In
aalarlee. Money aJoo uaed to
recognize merltortoua perf~
defined by auD&amp;rVIaora), acholerly
writing, encllnvo'-'-t In regional«
Mllonel OfVMIUIIIOM.

&lt;•

�........_
J

4

~12,1178

apld Transit: problems loom at Main St.
ConatTUctlon of Buffalo'&amp; l'llj)id
t..Wt 11}'81em will begin with a 110-90
foot hole In thll ground In thll u~
Loop f*ldng lot at Main Street some
time thla winter.
That ,_.,. doing
with that lot
(officially known aa tha·Abbott lot) and
enlarging or changing the
prtmery Main lrt11181 entrance to the
campus, Pr8aldent Robert L. Ketter told
the Unhwalty Council Monday.
Trucka will be moving In and out of
thai entrance with loada of rocks every
four or five minutes, Ketter said.
'We can expect problems for two to

-r

_...,ow

-~-·

Tha Ntag.ra Frontier
Transit Author.
Ity hu told the University that the
underground blasting required to tunnel
from the perking lot toward Main Street
those ·on campus, but
will be "felt"
not heard.
"St. Joe's windows will be the test, "
the Pr8aldent said.
Spaces lost In AbbOtt lot, Ketter
Indicated, will be added on near Baird.

by

Wlult the Council did
In an abbreviated regular session, cut
short to make way for a special hearing
of student concams (see separate
story), the Council:
•approved a " footnote" to the nondiscrimination statement In the Student
Rules and Regulations which broadens
the definition of sex to Include "sexual
orientation;"

by·,:~~Pa~fo'~ ~fr~~~lr~~:~

and College Trustees of State University
which urges more con88&lt;Yatlve policies
on students' dorm visitations;
•heard updates from Ketter' on
construction progress and the supplemental budget; and
•was asked If It wishes to reconsider
Its policy on "dedications" which
ll!88&lt;Y9S the right to dedicate new
buildings solely to the Council .

Gloy rlgllta

•
The question of whether or not to
extend the U/B noll-discrimination
statement to outlaw bias on the
grounds of "sexual orientation or
affectlonal preference" had been tabled
at last month's Council seas ion.
Student
Representative
Michael
Pierce had brought It up as the result of

~d:.~::C~~g~~l:.l'c':. i~o~u=i

Unlveralty constituencies and the SUNY
legal counsel before acting on the
petition.
Pr8aldent Ketter reported these
reaponsea:
•SA would back the change as
"worthwhile;"
!MFCSA was " supportive" of the
Intent, but found the wording "ambiguous;"
•the Professional Staff Senate also
found the wording vague, and feared II
might cover '1oo wide a range o(
potential actlvltlee;"
•the Faculty Senate Executive "Committee, while 111C0Qnlzlng· that there Is
no ~lion that discrimination on such
grounds can and does occur, nonetheleas did not like the wording and took
novote;
.
•Unltad Unlveralty Professions, the
=~~ bwgalnlng agent, ~ "no
.SUNY counsel reeponded that the

=~~~Pt.::!

r=.: ~~";;t

___

becauea the change would have been a
departure

the text of the
atatement
preacrlbad by both the Board of Truatand fader811aw . SUNY Couneel at that
time relatred thll matter to the State
from

~acrlmlnatlon

..
-

. .Ibid
-

-

,.,..

l'hundpy by , . Dlmloft of
· , _ Unl-.lly of -

y. . . .lo. .IJO
. . .Crofts
.. - .... ~
ooted
Hall, . . - . , ,, T_,. -

,_..,.._,
.,__til _ _
JAMESI. o.sANTIS
fdl~
._.T. ~

""-JOIIWA

aouna

--

JOIQ~

-...~-

'

Attorney General who ruled that the

change could not be legally binding

without an act of the legislature.
Both the Aaaembly and the Senate
refueed to put consideration of any

such change on their agendas, Ketter
said.
The College Council at Geneeeo has,
Indeed, amended the statement In Its
rules and regulations, Ketter reported,
but that change has no bearing on
anything but student-to-student . C9nduct.
That would also be the case here,
Ketter said, If the Council were to agree
to embellishing the statement.
Slnca amending the statement
"wouldn1 really mean anything ,"
Council Member Rose Sconiers, an ,
attorney, proposed the "footnote"
broadening the definition of "sex" in the
original statement to Include " sexual
orientation·.· That way. she said, II
"could be used In court." II might not
hold up necessarily, but It could be
used as a basis for going to court.
Pierce Indicated this was aCceptable
to ·him because students wanted an
opportunity "lor redress, " not just
some fancy slogans.
Council Member M. Robert Koren ,
also a lawyer, objected . The section
wi thout amendment suffices, Koren
thought. "The additional phraseology
gives no additional credence. By taking
any action, the Council begs the
question."

"D~~~e ~~~~~~ a.!~~yer.;.;'.?e~i

anyway?" he asked .
999outof 1,000
Dr. George L. Collins, Jr., suggested
that worrying abOut the courts might be
unnecessary. Violations of the rules
and regulations are for the most part
taken care of In University adjudications, he noted. "Any change we make,
then, will hold In the 9119 out of 1,000
cases which are settled before going to
court." Coll ins said he salp he felt the
footnoting should be approved.
Chairman Robert I. Mlllonzi then
"Invited'' Student Representative Pierce
to make a motion to this effect " under

~~.Fe;;".,';! ~:J'~~e:JJn"~a~.•section 362

Last month, Mlllonzl had announced
that Pierce was not entitled to make
motions. The chairman cited at that
time an Interpretation he had received

from SUNY counsel. That proved to be
an outdated I nterpretatlon .
(Some graduate students this week
objected to Mlllonzl's "cavalier" al&gt;'
proach In "Inviting" Pierce to do
something ''which was his (Pierce's)
right .")
·
Pierce's motion passed unanimously.

"Dorm behavior

So did another propbsal. this one
made by Coll ins, to simply "receive and
file" the motion on dorm "behavlo~'
from the Association of Council
Members and College Trulltees. That
organization In August voted to urge
restrictions prohibiting cohabitation
with the opposite sex and mandating
quiet hours In campus dorms.
This institution has its own regulations on quiet hours and dorm visits
which work satisfactorily, Collins
pointed out.

tak~f!e~~[ bf~\~~ o~~s.s~:':S,3.':g
Is therefore academic.
"Since .our present regulations work,

whlt~~=~p: ~~:s~~;· applauded.
Pierce sard students were "shocked
and bemused by the absurdity" of the
proposal . Students are capable of living
their lives without guardians, Pierce
emphasized. The regulation would be
similar to the Volstead Act of the 1920s,

~;'.,,su.~~~i~· .~!ln~s: sgfngp:~~rbi:roa~
when we're all in the same condition?"

Conotructlon update
Reporting on campus construction ,
Ketter noted that:
•bids for a classroom building for the
Amherst spine will be advertised the
first of November, with contracts to be
let some time In January.
•the chamber hall project is already
~~~:~~:.~~~.; bids are returnable by
. •sltework for the field house project
ts going on now; the steel will be bid
later this month ; the rest of the project ,
10

November.

all ~~ee~ompletlon dates are likely . for
The President reported that the
supplemental budget did not contain
any funding for library acquisitions, or
for busing . Salaries were Incl uded for
only some of the U/B personnel at the
Ene County Madlclal Center who were

formerly funded by the County.
Meetings are scheduled In Albany on
how to resolve paying the rest of the
personnel at the County hospital, the
President said. The busing shortfall will
be made up from monies freed by the
hiring freeze.
In December, all
University budgets will be scrutinized to
see If funds can be found for library
acquisitions.
Reason a atudantaiPierce called attention to student
complaints about bOth busing and the
fact that Library hours have been
shortened again .
These are the reasons students leave
· here, Pierce said.
He presented a petition signed by
some 130 students asking for remedial
allocations from the Board of Trustees
" for the purpose. of remedying
inadequate bus service," moving that
the .Council accept the petition as a
resolution .
Council Member Koren said that lor

~~ .. ra'~~~on~~ h:::ti=~~s me;~' · ;~~
adequacies, not just vague statPments. "

Also, said Measer, 130-some signatures out of 23,000 students is
"unimpressive."
" I could hold a plebiscite If you
prefer," Plerca retorted.
Ketter suggested that any resolution
on busing be addressed to the Division
of the Budget as well as to the Trustees .
He said he would work with Pierce to
provide a proposal for a broader
resolution, Including statistical information, at the next Council meeting.
That·would be perfect liming for the
deficiencJ budget, Ketter pointed out.
~~~~ ~Pd-~!~=r~t Is usually drawn
Another resoltltlon sug.Jlested by

r:~;~ ~~~~~h~a~?e t~ll~r~erar:~~a~~

Student Affairs whom he described as
~~~ ?.lD',!'~ f:t~cfe~~~~ at the University
Mlllonzl suggested passing that on to
the Council's standin9 committee on
ijf~lng buildings an
campus facil·
Discussion of the Council's position
on dedications was scheduled for the
November session which was set for
Friday, November 10.

LETTERS
Vietnam conference draws criticism;
'Schnoz' on 'princess' is faulted
Editor;_
Contemporary life at anr point In
history Is composed o
multiple
frequencies of trends In culture and
sclenca, that traveree the social air.
Perhaps one of the more dlscamable
wave le~gths that Is being emitted Is
that of academic social knowledge as a

f~:~~~~.~;..;'::t ~~~apnn~
::""JJ:'!ti~::U.."' ~~8a ~~~~~~ o!

by

forum sponsored
the Dept. of
Political Science and heJd Sept. 29-30.
The lead-off workehop In this
program was scheduled to tackle the
qu•tlon of United States objectives In
the - · I.e., why was this country
Involved . Perhaps an appropriate
sub-title could have been "History as
reading bet-n the Ilea." Yet, given
the topic, a qul~ulshed panel of
dlscuuanta p
to argue the
technician's cry - "was that anyway to

runawll?."

There was a total lack of dlscuaslon

:f.
·=~=.~o::f ~~:~
Stat•' political or military objectI - or

an analyela of the cultural, economic,
political or social ,_.lng or conaeql*loee of thll struggle for all parties
lnvotv.cl. Again It was a caee of History
not aa a,_.,. but aa an end.
In today'a circular whirlpool of
acedemlc aoclal knowledge, historical
conoepta . . -lngly exhumed for
atomlall, recooatltutad ch.eofaylng,
a Monday IIIOI'I'IIng qiM!Miacklng for

~~~•nc,II\1u:=e0~
now

world Ia at beet biography. It

- t lhe If It Ia aalely laotated.

hermetically sealed In a vacuum .
Social sclenca seems to procaed
from the mlsconstructed technician's
axiom that "objectivity Is never having
to say you 're sorry." If this Is construed

:.:~~:J~I~~c~b~!~v~~er~to~~ ~~~

ian sense, Ills far from it. Ills a method
which leads to a one-dimensional
highly en tropic exercise lending little to
any attempt at Increased order.
Sincerely ,
-Frank Buttertnl
Bob Baron and Jim Paul
c/o Reporter
I have to lake exception to your
cartoon In the October 5 Reporter (Putz)
In which you depict the stereotypical
Jewish American Long Island Princess.
:~m ~~~~u~':,"t~r!~~~ by the size of
You fellows have drawn and written
this cartoon without accurate Information conoemlng the J.A.P. · of
because If · you had, she would have
been drawn with a perfect pug nose
The three highest bills Incurred upon
fathers of these women are for clothes
jewelry, and the plastic sur11,90n!
'
.
-Jan
Erdman

5

u.

s-

Editor:
II seems never to have occurred to
Guenter Lewy (and some of the others
who spoke at tbe Political Science
Department's symposium, "America In
Vietnam") that the United States was
wrong to be In Vietnam In the first
place. Even If o~r government had
somehow managed to win the war. II

would have been wrong . This simple
truth seems to have escaped some of
the political scientists who participated
In the symposium. Apparently, they
learned nothing from the war and find
solace In academic excesses and
rewriting history to conform to their
preJudices.
Why the Reporter gave front page,
extensive coverage to Lewy's views
remains a mystery.
Sincerely,
-Walter Simpson
Coordinator,
Peace center

Pannlll elected
to AAHC board
Dr. F. Carter Pannlll , Jr., vice
president for health sclelljes. has been

~:_:~of DI~ec't";.e:trft.e1 e~s,;:,rat1~~

10

for Academic Health Centers (AAHC).
The nine-member board governs the
activities of the Association which
established Its Washington offlca In
~~~~~ un#~~~atY~t from the W.K. .
AA~C Is a national education
association whoee membership Is
composed of the chief administrative
offlcars of the nation's university-based
health canters. Reflecting the Interests
of Its members, II Is the only national
education association which Is Interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary In Its
focus , Its primary Interest being total
health manpower education.
Pannlll's election occurred October 7
during the Annual Meeting ol the
Aaaoclallon In Ponte Vedra, Florida.

�........

Bill of Rlgh~s
will

Week-long conference
consider the future of
our constitutional liberties

-·Prof-. Ccn-

By Stephen C. Halpern

PolitlcoiSclence, U I B.

.., project director ollho
Futuno ollndividuol ~

00 lho

The Citizens' Forum of the Niagara
Frontier Chapter of the New York Civil
Liberties Union, In connection with the
State University of New York at Buffalo,

l~tu~~o~~~~Yduaal lf'~~~esn~ A::."er1~e

October 16-20.
'
The purpose of the conference will be
to foster communication between
scholars and citizens about the values
In our Bill of Rights and their place in
our nation's future.

The principles nscognlzed In the first
ten amendments may be considered the
core values of the American political
and social order. As such, the future
status and vitality of those principles is
properly the subject of both scholarly
Inquiry and general public concern.
Funding for the conference Is being
provided by the New York Council for
the Humanities. Killian Vetter, executive director of the local chapter of the

~~~~ :!:.~',~s,~l~l~i;,d.;~';!~~1~~

sons. ·

The Buffalo Citizens' Forum , a
coalition of approximately 30 local civic
organizations, was formed In April,
1974. II operates under th.e auspices of
the Niagara Frontier Chapter of the New
York Civil Liberties Union and with the
assistance of the League of Women

~~~:rJe T:S~~r~s::: 'rh~:.,~~mw'~,~~

civic groups can Improve communication with state, local and federal
legislators In the Buffalo area ..
Uttlo research on tho futuro of
conatllutlonalllbertlea
The study of the future has, In recent
years, become the subject of serJous

~~o~f'f~;~~~:'res~S:g~t~~h:c~~~~r~i

many academic disciplines, there has
been little research examining how
future conditions and changes In the
United States may affect traditional
constitutional liberties .
A few thoughtful· scholars have
treated the subject In an Indirect way

~~c~~~fo~:c.:h~u~ 1~~~np~rur.'s~~~~~~;~

':a:te~~~u';'~~flt?~t1~':.,~~~ms that are

Political scientist William Oplluls In
Ecology and the Po/illes of Scarcity,
economist Robert Hellbroner In An
Inquiry into the Human Prospect , and
11

~~~,~~~c;:es u,!J~~1~7, ~n~ft:~'::fr

surprisingly similar reasons , that within
our children 's lifetime, we will be
compelled to expand considerably the
powers of the state while reducing
drastically the scope of Individual
libert ies. Those organizing the conference hope that It .will prompt original
scholarly re'learch and enliven public
discussion about the future of our
freedoms .
Conference format
The conferance will consist of a
keynote eddrass and seven 90-mlnute
0

:~h~~·o":~~~~~~o~ ~~~~~~~~
l':~~~~~~c~g~~s,;~~~~~e':~a~fg~:

the problems they view as importanl.
Second , II avoids presentations focusnarrow and specialized subjects
which might require substantial background knowledge and be of little
general Interest to an audience of
non·scholars.

Ing on

The Keynote Address
The Keynote speaker will be Henry
Steele Commager. He will analyze how
social change In the next quarter

~~~~~~c~~ f~~ecJnP';;Ie~~~t!h~ rg~~

political system . The presentation is
scheduled for 45 minutes. Norman
Dorsen . director of the Arthur Garfield
Hays Civil Uberties Program at the
New York Un iversity School of Law, will
respond to the Issues -raised In the
keynote address In a fifteen minute
presentation. Brief summaries. of the
remaining panels follow:

Panolll. Tho Bill of Rights - Its Roots
and Evolution In American Society.
Although all other l'anels will focus

~pe~~~~~\:lstheo;-ut.!~!~~~ls ;aenel ~~fl

provide a pers pective on the placa of the
Bill of Rights In our national history.

Our commitment to have such a panel

stems from the belief that we cannot

~l~~:gr~;~~ ':::'rc'~~~~~~u~esO:n~~e~1

their roots and evolution in our society.

Panola Ill and IV. Tho Future of the First
Amendment.

Ju~f~n%e~/a~~~ Jt~~z~";,~~~~~~

that it was " the Indispensable condition
of nearly every othar form of freedom."
Panels Ill and IV will focus on the future
of that cornerstone of the Bill of Rights.
Panel Ill will examine the first pert of
1

~~ s~~~~~~~!S. ~~:~g~~"an'~~:;
9

elation . Panel IV will be devoted to an
examination of those clauses dealing
with the place of religion and religious
freedom In Ame0can life.
Panel V. Social Dovtanca and Individual
Llbertleo.
The provisions of the .first ten
amendments attempt generally to limit
and structure the way In which
governmental power is exercised

~P,~~~~~g: ~;~~: ~=~~hl';%n~

will examine possible future trends In
governmental regulation of social
deviance. Speakers may consider how

r~~~~:~~slh~f n~~r:~ f ~~b~~~'gllc~!~
1

dealing with mental patients , criminals·,

~en~~~~~l.e c:~r:~~1er,~::'.fo~~n ~~~~~

Discussant -

Professor Norman Dorsen ,

~,-1,.,~~;;. ~~:,~«&amp;~~~LCI!~·u~~~

Professor Paul. Murphy - Department of
History, University of Minnesota. Profesaor
Alpheus Thomas Mason McCormick
Professor of Jurisprudence (Emeritus) ,
Princeton University. Penellata : James
Magavem, Esq., Sarah Si mmons, Elwood
~Bw~ardlow Ed itor, Buffalo Evenlnq)

3-4 : 30 p.m. -

TM Future of the Fht

=~!.! ~nd P~~=:&amp;!.':ss~~

Thomas I. Emerson - Lines Professor of
Law ~ Emeritus), Yale University Law School.
Professor Henry Abraham Doherty
Prqfessor of Government, University of ·
VIrginia. Mod«ator : Paul J. Cambria, Esq.
Panellttt : Richard J. Rosche , Eaq.; Marla
Scrlvani , Buffalo Evening News ; David

Gerald JaJ, Esq .

Panel VI. Govornmontal Regulation of
Economic Liberty In a No-growth
Society.
There Is consensus among some
scholars that environmental hazards,

~=:::-::: :m;.!~~r: ~'::r!::!~~~

:~~~~~n~~~~uys~fg;~e:,. vu:l'~at.!:::l

resources will necessitate a much wider
range of governmental regulation over
economic activity. This panel may deal
with such subjects as governmental
regulation of land development, home
ownership, consumption of vital natural
resources, modes of transportation,
size of family and expropriation of
private proP.ertY.

.......
Al..,..,_.....,.. . . l l ...

T h e - of~ ... dellber81aly
bloC tor two,_.., Fnt, H 11'- the
ICholara lliaq!lala latitude to dalermlna

Hill.
The achedule lolloWI:

Panel VII. TechnOlogy, lndiYidual
Righll and Governmonlal Poww In a

~~~h~:;:~~lwnt'examlne the nature of

Individualism and Individual liberties In
a hlg~ly technical an~ bunsaucratized
society ln_Cf!!8fl!!li!Y compoaad of and
perhaps controlled by large public and
private organizations.
P - VIII. Mora Tlwl Their Rlghta The Futlft of Mlnoritlaeln Amarlce.

anar:'~Pft:~ r~::,...~,:,~=llflac~d

minority groupo In our nation. It wtft
focus on minorities which ~
atruggled for political poww and legal
protection In the 1aat two and on.hall

c.toa

c. Alden ~. Jolin Lon:l O'llrl8n

Columbia University. Professor Alan Stone,
M.D. - Professor of Law and Medk:lne,
Harvard Univers ity. MocMrator: Or. W . Ralph
Michener, Director, Buffalo Psychiatric
Center. PaneUttt : Lydia Keltner. Director of

~~~l:~o~~~sB;,f.';~r::~fn;;re~~~try;

~~~Po~o!!.m..-t .._,_,

R~t:a~~E.;iu~n ~~~ %~::f'!~ Soc~r::~

g;~~r=~~!~'i nd;:~n~~:,~l':i:~~~~~r. and

will be followed by brlet questions or
comments from three discussants
chosen by member organizations of the
Citizens' Forum. If lime permits,
questions from the audience will be
entertained. Each panel will be
sponsored by a group within the
Citizens' Forum with a special Interest
In the subject of the panel. The oral
presentations by the scholars will be
do&lt;lveQ from papers they will wrtte for
the occa81on. We plan to publish
the papers for an edited volume on the
subject of the conference.
Obviously, no conference or edited
volume ~d analyze the future
viability of al provisions of the Bill of
Rights.
oplcs of panels - .
dalermlnad by lcW!tifylng categories of
problema which may ralae Milani
!::'~
about lndlvtdual llbertlae

=

MonclaJ, Oct-18

10 a.m. - Joan Boozer, Killian Vetter :
Welcoming Remarks ; Stephen Halpern ,
Introductions; KernoteSPNtw- Professor

8·9 :30 p.m. -

The Future ol the First

ol BualnHo Actlwi!J ond

eon.u- Algltta

In 1 No-Growth Sodety. Profeaaor Herman
Daly Department of Economics
Lou isiana State Unlveralt~ Professor GeraJCi

~~rZ~~afe 088:J~r~t ~~";'k:'A~~~
Lipsitz, Esq. Panottata: Joseph Newton,

United Automobile Worl(ers, Region 9 ; Ann
Podd , Buffalo Courier· Expresa ~ Robert L.
Bailey, cannon Design, Inc.
Thurlday, October 11

8· 9:30 p.m. - TechnologJ, Individual
Rights end Q.....,montal Poww In a Muo

Soi:le!J. Professor Christopher Lasch -

Department of History, Untveralty of
Rochester. Profeuor Frances Fox Plven 8

~~~~-.~~~:~ari~~'b~On z'::~~

Esq.,

Executive Director,

Neighborhood

Legal Servlceo. P -: Nolan Johannos,
Director ot Public Servlceo, WKBW-TV ;

~~o~:!s:dT~~~.:~::~.~~ l~P!:.".~

Marshall Breger, Law and Jurisprudence,
U / 8.

Pfeffer - Professor of ConstltuUonal Law ,
Long Island University. Professor Marie
Augusta Neat, S.N.D. - Department of
Sociology, Emmanuel College. Moderator :

~ ..~~~~"'/~~· t~q.Eid~~';.';;notLt!f::'
Professor Peter Galle, PoliTical ScJence,
Cenlslus ; Douglas L. Turner, Editor, Buffalo

~~i~~~~~~':&amp;~~r:~e~~"t;rur!:eolslattve
TUMday,Oct-17
8-9: 30 p.m. -

o......mont p-ond the

Algllt to be 0 1 - t. Pmfossor o.vtd
Rothman

-

Department

of

History,

Basketball schedule shifted
U/B's varsity basketball game with
Brockport State for 1978-70 has been
rescheduled at the request of Brockport
officials, U/B Athletic Dlnsctor Ed~Rtn
M uto has announced.
The. Bulla lllld been elated to play
B""""""'~ n the opening round of the·
holiday tOUrrtamlllll ' at BI'Oekp&lt;!ft,
January 5-6, 19711. Under- the new
aur-nent, U/B will not ~· In
that event, but will play Broc:lcPort at
home In Clall&lt; Hall on l'lllnday, Mln:h
1, at8p.m.
In .cldltlon, the~-- TCIUmlll*ll
In Eiuton, Pa,, t . IMiln Mt tor Ft1daY
end e.wns.y Dealnlber 2ND. ~
lllllltta, In
10 U/B llld 11oM
IAf~
WIH lie ~
Unhinlty- llld ~ llolltWn Col-

*iiiOii

eou.a.,

~ ooml*teechadula tor ... Bulla,

under

tirat·r,::: .Jiaed

Collch

Bill

~Po'Jl':..;.:SS sled. ~ Mike Tramuta, _Ia

Nov. 30, at Siena.
Dec. 8, at Howwd; ~ U. OF AKRON;
12, at Canlalua; 18, at I'OIIdem"; 211-30,
at ~ayatt• Tour-.t.
11!, HARTWICK; 18, e1 Allleny";
20, GENt:SEO"; 23, e1 o . - •; 28,
BINGHAMTON"; 27, at Bt. FrwiCia, Pa.;
29 at Cortland".
Feb. 1'-FREDOHIA"; 3. BAOOICLYN

Jan.

COLLEGe; 7, GANNON; tO, • RooMe-

*

T.!!1!.'i.~~-at Youngatown SW.J.. 17,
.PLAllaautNH"; 19•• Nflllllra; ""· el
~6B~\'e·~ Oneci'tla"; 27 '
Mer. 1, IIROCKPOAT".
"SUNYAC Gema. c.pa Indicate home

pmee.

�.......

.. .

Ulttl

Fnonceo Ulttl, ce111ot. jolrw v- Mlkhu·

hoff pl8nl8t. for • Sundoy night - ·
~by the Center at the
ond Porfonnlng AIU.

c....-

CALENDAR
be r - . g hie.

lhursclay- • 2

-

l..olo1ga, 352 " -·

on-"'"'"
C.F.C. F "*&gt;go

-

a-.; • .

Ellcolt 8: ~

p. m. ~byCIIIIordFunwCologo.

-IIIT'IR"KJC:W..awol
232f11Pw.--12.-.

UUAII'ti.M•
- - (Lucoa, 1873). Conterenco
- · Squire. Col 638-"2919 l o r - --

Tho-D. -........ Cr. -

F. Dlt.uca, . , - - chlmwo, ~
o1 ~. Cologo ol AgrlciAn- Ufo
- · Urw.llly ol - . . - _ 26 Farber.
12 ,_,_ 5pof..-od by ... ~"'-

~c.mor.

yet__...,~

The boc*willia • OCCol 01 l1lghar -

. v-·- -

-lim

- c : t w g e.

-~~~~
tho--

Cindy Cllflt., a

___ .,a ....

lbout

can car-cul1urv- phal fttown01'82.
-11&lt;8 to be a high

--oltllollat~l

-·
.......

C. DtiT1IIOUISHED vtamNO SPEAKERS

c.nsu.-toCrw-tln:AL,_SI&gt;u1llo?, Or. Clonl Szogo, 11. · • :15
p.m. Colfee at • · Sponoonod by tho DIYtlion ol

C o l ' - BiOOgy.

Tbe . .ttle of China; War Cofnel to AmerSca.
t•6 Olol..-t. 7 p.m. Sponaored by tho Center
tor-Study.

CONTIHUIIIICIIIEDICAI. EDUCAOON
PROORAIII
FKtt weraue Faddttm ••• Nutrttion Education lot tho Heolth Proloalonal Bulfalo VA
· Room 301. 7-8:30 p.m. Free to Uni·
- - - fac&lt;Aty . Pfefogistnolion required.
For further OllotmOiion cal831·5526.

UNDERORADUAT£ GERMAN CLUBIIEETING
33-C Squire. 7 p.m. Anyone who to
anond the Oclobe&lt;1est this coming SWrdoy,
the 14th, nusi attend the meeting:, or cal Bob
at 831 -2760. The CU&gt; Ia I~ tutoriol
.....-. Thont wil ala&lt;&gt; be • praenlalion

fridAy- 13

..,_t

·

lord ~ Hoapitai, .Webster Hal. 6 :30a.m.
medical o!OOMts
wil be Unltted without leo, but must register.
For 1\nhor Ollotmalion cal831 -5526.
Sponoonod by The Medicol Attandlng Stall ol

Fecutty l1l8I00«6 ol U I B -

~

- ol Medelne.
Continuing Medical
School
Education,

ORAL BIOLOGY SEIIINARM
TM NOtuno ol tllo S..bglnglftllllctcblolo In
tho Human, Dr. 5qnund S. Socranol&lt;y, Departmoot ol Mk:tt&gt;blotogy, F0&lt;1yt11 Dental Center.
Room 107. 4510 Main Street. Noon.

c~o..-..,T-r-

COLLEGE I QUEST ARnST ~

IIIEDICINAI. CHEIIU111Y SEIIINAR I

on

dant. 127 Cooke. 2 p.m.

-...KIEASY lli~ALPARTY•
23-0 Squire. 8 p.m. ~ to
yo&lt;X

-.cy -

-

-

FfM -

~-

-

· i*JO .muolc -

- Sponoonod by tho -

AJao
dlncing.

-·
-·"'*'"""'-':-a..,,-cu..
ooc:illlon

-

tho -

· -

· -

....

Spnah

n.-.,ancltlloArto:AieTIIerc-

, . _ , ~ : - Bucl&lt;,- ol
Ablght-l&lt;no&gt;c Art~ Jolr1 ~- " " " -·

, _ ol PQotry &amp;

~

U I B;

(by
-.:a

CUrringlwn, clorar-dlao_ ........ · " " " -- -wilbeEotha&lt;

--·
_....,..,.Colato-.

--.-OOJifallnlloraAnl

-.- -

· 112 -

~~"""to-Aml no­
gtycoolclo . . . , . _ , Taylor, grad sru-

FILII•
~

· 8 p.m.

.

..

Or. llctwd
-·~-·
----~""--·

-·

HORIZONS IN NEUROIIOLOGY1 PHYSIOLOGY
-

Ge&lt;wd---

L-.oe .... - (The Red - tho Black)
(Stenchl),
ot.nng
Dlnteux. ~,46
Diefendorf. 3 and 7:30 p.m.
Sponoonod by tho -

-t

llhc._n.._ In v-..ry

--

FILM•
Prtma Della A-uzlona (Bertotuccl) . 70 Ach·

eoon. 7 and 9 p.m. Sponaored by tho Deparlmont

"'MociOm ~ -uterallnl.
UVE FWlKl BROADCAST

CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE PAOORAIII
T... ~- ~aiMPallont. Mi-

IIIIOwM lAO LUNCH COUOQUIA •
An ...._..., TMoty ol Earth'a Olaclatlon, Or. Fred M . Snel, Dapom1ent ol Biol)hysical
Scionceo. 123 - - . . Quod, Ellcott Noon.
SponaoredbythoEnWtnno&lt;ltaiS1uciesCenter.

- her pmto.
&amp;puffing
wil lhow
Cologo
e. •st- Porter
Cluld,
Ellcott. B p ,m, Free admislion.

"'New-·-·

Sponoonod jointly- Horizono 01 Nour-*&gt;gy

..OHER ED 8EIIINAR f
,
CIHNnl ' - In Hf&amp;llar Education, L Hodgldnaon, exocu11Ye ol The Pro''""""""' Olatltute, ......,_,
AB·
ooc:lotiono. Speuklng OWng Room, Ellcolt 8 a.m.
Sponoonod by u 1e·s o1 Higher Education.

IIOCHEIIICAI.PHARIIACOLOOY .-...RI
llllct.ftlllll far .... fii1CIII1a ~
1ft ....._, ..,._, Or. ~ P.
1\VJWif, oep.1mant "' "'*"'""'&gt;'ogy, ~
307 Hoc:l*eHor.
3:30p.m. Colfee wll b o - at3:15.

--

lnolgllto Oa'"""In tllo
· ol -Slnglo
....-..c.ll
Dlocllalge
_..,,Or.
V. E - . l.aboralory ol Nourq&gt;hyalology, National Olatlluto "' M«ltal Haalth. 8108 Shorrnon.
• : 15 p.m . Cotfeewl!be8ei'Y8Ciat4 .

f'ATHOI.OOY_,.I

Plo- ... by • Corelnogon,
Or. Bo . . -. ~t ol _ , ., VA
. 176Farber. •p.m.

MIT. Room •• · 4226 Ridge lAL 3:30 p.m.
Colfee doughnu1l . . bo at 3 .,

Room61.

ol Modem l..an-

- - LltonitLno.
CIEOlOCIICAI.scEHcoiEMNAR.
~- ol --..ppl Volley
Type 0.. Dopoalto, 1-kbM L Bamoa, Pennsyl- .
ll&lt;liYwolty. Room 18, .2.0 Ridge
I.a. 3 p.m. Sponoonod by Footer Lecture Serle•
Fecutty"' NnnJ Sclonooa n Malh8matica.

Sloe-

•

Ouanol Cyda c..-tJt The
A. . . Quartet, per1orrni'1e o..artet No. 10 In E
flat mojor, op. r•: Quartet No. 2 01 G mojor, op.
18, no. 2; and Quartet No. •• 01 c olwp mojor,
op. 131 . 88.7 FM, WBFO. 7:50p.m.

MUSIC•
Baathowon Strtng Quartet Cycle H: TM A-•
Quartet. Berd Hal. 8 p.m. Geneni admisslon,
$4 , U I B facully, otsff, alumni $3; atudentll S 1.
- b y tho Oepertmentol Music.
CACALJI•
Wortd'a O..Otaat L.... 170 MFACC, EJ;ooll.
8 and 10 p.m. S!udenta$1 ; othere, $1 .50.
Gene Wider as ..a Valentlno-lke CelutokS Cas·

--

OA Y UIIERA nON FROHT COFI'£EHOUSE•
107T~ . Sp.m. Everyone welcome.

DANCE•
Mwee Cunningham and

Ora~

Company:

U 18 NIIJht. ShM'a Bulfalo, 846 Main Street.
8 :30p.m. - $ 1 2, &amp;8.50, &amp;8. $4. 1\discount ol S2 Ia offered to U I B fac&lt;Aty , staff ,
a!OOMts. Sponaored by tho Olflce ol o..tture1
Affalro n ShM's Bulfalo Thaatno.

WABFtLII•
. American Oromtl (Lucas, 1973) . Conference
Thaatro, Squire. Cal 838-2919
lhow times.

lor

- c t w g e.
-

-

~

COWIITEIIICIENCE COUOQUIUII

A_a(.._U-ng,Proleuor .
llor1IIOid K.P. Hom, Mlflclol lnt.llgonoo Lab,

p.m.
tre homeoomlng and there 'I be a queen.

ALII•

LoRouea at 1e (Siencllol). starmo

Ge&lt;wd(The Red

n

n

tho Blackl
DanieUe

- ·- 146 Dlelendotf. 3 7:30 p.m.
by tho ol Modem lan ·

--Lftera11Jreo.

(Oovld &amp; Albert Meyolos,

1970). Contorenco n-tre, SQun. MlOO!ght.
Admlaalonctwge.
"Rape , ITUder - tfo just a ohot away." The
prophetic violence of Mlck Jogger tho Rolling
Stonoo Ia lncamatad 01 the ol lhla .._
chronlcting their '69-'70 tour ol tho Stoteo.

... - 7 ,

Don
lql,
"' ·
Nlgora
F...Tronolt
~
- 104Plonnlng,
Pwl&lt;er.
3 :30p.m.

1o

FOOTliAI.L•
U I I .._ SUNY I Allany. Rotery Field . 1 :30

WAI-OHTALII•

aY1.. PIGIEERitlliEIMAR It
CIIJT-~-IIo

WOllEN'S TENNIS•
lllg Four Touma-m. Amhonlt Courto.

a.m.

-rtz .,_poet

COHVEIISAT10NS IN 1liE ARTS
..._ Hanto1t
DaYid
lgfta-.
C.. (Chonnel8). • p.m.

eo.-

CAC Filii•
Wortd'a - - L -. 150 Farber. 8 - 10
p.m. SIOOMta 1; other11, S 1.50.

-·

s

T-.

SAturday- 14
IUS TOUR•
A tour ol Bulfalo stops at tho Bulfalo Zoo,
Albright-Knox M Galery, Bethlehem Steel, Allen·
town (-.o ihe night spots oro), and much, much
more. The tcu leaves 262 Fargo at 9 a.m. and
rvlurnl at 5 p.m. Sign up in eHher 262 Fargo or
302 wtbeon at the Elicott Cc::lrnpMix. The coat is

~so,.::=.~..:~-~;~:

2319.

Sponoonod by CMS, ACC- CUS.

IAIBALL•
U I I ws. Cotlloncl Slalo ( - ). Rotery
Fletd. 10 a.m.

N~.,..-1 (The Dol Sia-). by Toklo
dlroclod by Sotau - . , portormed
by vllltlng ocba. Downtown thestre,
681 Main S1nlet (Old Studio ...,_ Theatre) .
Sp.m. Oonarol-: $3; -tsWld sen·
lor citizens, $1 .50. Sponaored by the Center fO&lt;

· Dapom1ent o1 Theatre, and

Thaatno -

Bulfalo State c.._.

MOVIES FOR 1liE NEW JAZZ AQE•

c..- (1933) . Bultalo- Erie Coonty
Hlo-Socloty. 8p.m . - S t .50,S.50
f o r - . . - 12-. Sponaored by Media
Study I Bulfalo.
Frri Lloyd'o Academy Awwd-wlm"'e ocreen
Yenllon ol Noel Coward's ap1c ploy. One ol nine
beat fllrns olal, accon11ng to wa Buooel.

FBaird--·

RECITAL•
plono.

'

of

Arocha- - . , duO8 p.m. FrM. Sponsored

by the oep.1mant"' Muillc.

DANCE•
Cunnlngllofto .... Do- ~n,.
ShM'a Bulfalo. 8 :30p.m. Soo ~ 13 Noting
have •
U I B-.nt.

lor do-. Thla p o r t - -

UII-DANCE
Amen Room,- Squire. 8:30 p.m.•! a.m. Ad·
15. Sponoonod by the U I B- 1\kJmni

-

Graffiti

--Aaao&lt;ilolon.

Meh- the Piece to hMg out bock In

........

-now

the.- old c1rta of·.-.....-, Gmtltl,'
the IJUAII-. tonight-

UUAII'ti.M•
.... ~- 1875). Comrwlce Squire. Col e35-29181or- ·c:twge.

·

�.......

~12,11171

7 ..

lnstiMe of Amer1co. W...... Now Yorf&lt; Society,
and the U/8 Department of Cluolca.

MUSIC"
.lozz -

Hal. 8 p.m. Frail.
ofMt.U:.

Som Folzono, director. Baird

s.&gt;onoorod by the Department

POETRY READIHQ•
P - 11'"-'" 322 Clemens. B p.m. Free.
Sponoored by the Department of Engbh.

Grayaon, ond Kelly. H'a a rrualcol o1&gt;aJt I'M&gt;
. - . on loove, looturfng Kelly's flmouo donee
with. c.rtoon mo..-e.
An "--con In Porta r-.... Kelly, ~
Caron: Oacar leY8flt, Nina Foch . F1Ye - . y
Award&amp; aprong frcm this eye-popping rrua1co1
with lavlohby Kelly, and
directedbyV--.

choo-

FRENCH W&amp;K UUAII FJLIIS•
, _ _ . , _ , 23 Quol Du

c- -

HIO --(France 1975). Cit 636-2919
IO&lt;twreoodplar:e.
Psocat Keno, ., editor o1
c1u cr.-,
is presenting e program of contempcnry French
lims being shown In Buffolo !0&lt; ti)O llnlt twre.
Funded by WAB and Media Study I Buffolo.

ea-.

Tuesct.y- 1 7
EMERITuS CENTER EVENT
ClartMt Recltll, Protesaor Alan Sioef, acconpor)led by Ms. Caroline Godlol, p;ano. 161 Harriman. 2 p.m. The Unlveralty COI'T'II'TUlity Is wei·

come.
DoUICEAS WORKSHOP SPECW.IIE£TINO"
To -...s lecture-demo, prospectiYe worf&lt;·
shops, and committee IO&lt;metiona. 161 twriman.
3:30p.m. AI wefcome.

BUFFALO C~ITY STUDIES
OAOUP IIE£TING.
The Role o1 Nolghbortlood Shcpplne In Butfalo: Past, PrHent, and Futu .... 123 Jewen
Part&lt;woy. 8 p.m. The lorum diacuaalon wlllnclude
panelists George Zenger, director of ~­
hood revltalizaHon; and Professcw Arun Jain,
School of Management, U I B.

CONCERT•

CONYERSAnONS IN THE ARTS
Esther Hlrrlott Swlrtz interviews Buckmlnat•
Fuller. Couierc.M (Channel S ). 6:30p.m.
COLJ.EGE 8 FILII"
Lady From ShllngMI (Weles, 1948 ). 170
MFACC . Ellcott. 7 p.ln.
S11n R;ta Hayworth and Onion Woltes. An Irish
saik:lr accompanies a beautiful woman and her
lawyer hosband
8 cruise and becomes a pawn
in murder.

Yvar Mlkhlshoff, piano, arid Suze LNlRehtun, mezzo soprano. Bak"d Recital Halt. 8
p.m . General admission S3; faculty, staff, alumni
with IDs, senior citizens, $2 ; students, $1 .

POETRY READING"
Outrider&amp;: Jlrold Rarnaey. Tratfamadore Cafe .
8 :30 p.m: Free.

on

NON-FICnON FILMS"
Llaten to Brltlln; Am Were Stlirted. 146
Oielendorf . 7 p.m. Sponsored by the Center for

Thla ~ oplc ....terpioce by the
aeatar of Lut Tango In Parte focuses on the
1vos o1 ""' best friondo, m orno.
prodigal """"
of I'M&gt;
doaporatl8
·
()pe&lt;otlc
with brute
-tic
Ioree, aociol
like Clodlatllet

11.

•

Btlng a kJnch. Thla lllonget thon Gone With the
Wind: 2•1 "*-.Jtes. to be exact.

0--

UUAI~flUI•

1970). Ccnleronce
- c l w g o.

n-tro,&amp; Squlro.

(Dovld

Mayales,
Midnight.

mont--

Mode Study.

thei' organizations. ,.,.,...

the School of Nurwlng and University Ptacemen1
and Ceraer Guidance .

enterbWIIng and sophisticated detective yam
based on Raymond Chandler's novel about an
-lllattoo1. PhilipMaf1owe.

MEN'S TENNIS"

Sund.ay- 15

U/ 8
3 p.m.

n. lltod&lt;port Sisto. Amhots1 Courta.
•

FILM"
l.aRougo 01 lo -

(Tho Red and the Blacl&lt;)
(Stondhel), ou.mg Go!wd l'hlippe and Daniele
llllrrioux. 170 IIFMJC, - . _ 1 p.m. Sponoorod
bythe ~of-~and

Uerattns.

CONCERT•
Spyro Oyra. ~ Comoln-tro , Ellcott.
Then! wll bo I'M&gt;"""""' 8 ond 10 p.m. Admillloo
is $3.5 0 - ; $2 .50 f0&lt; U.-.;ty
IIICUI!y, oto!f ond · Sponoorod by Cologe

B.
They hit the clw1a- thN ._ . . Song;"
now they're beck on ~. You'l want to be

......

MUSIC•

P- · voc:afisf: Dan Hill, guitarIst / - . _. Clori&lt;Gym. 8 p.m. - S8, &amp;""*&gt;II S.. Sponoorod by the UUAB Mu&amp;lc

~.

A-.a... ofaUUAS-bll.'

WOMEN'S TENNIS"
U /8
3 p.m.

n. lltod&lt;port Sisto. Amhots1 COurts.

UUAIFIUI•
1100 ~. t875) . c:onr.r.noo
SQun. Cit83&amp;-2818forahow-- ctwgo,

1..---\

Moncl.ay-16

n-n.

Wednesday- 18
BROWN BAO LUNCH"
Carolyn Gadiell, piano, and Chartee UreHe,
trumpet, ,.,.,-. of the Bultelo Phlhonnonk:.
335 Hayes. 12 noon. Free. Sponsored by the
School of Architecture and Environmental Design .

OUANnTATIVE ANALYSIS LABO.RATORX
LECTURE SEAlES I
Introduction to MAPS (Multiple Anatysis Program System !0&lt; BehoYionll Science Resewch) , ·
0... Robert Nichols, Department of Psychology.
·· 213Boldy. 12noon.
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR I

· u..-.no Ooo ~rallona,- G. Word ,
Electr1c ~y . Scl&gt;enectady. 262

-

~ . 3 : 30p . m .

PHAAMACOL'OGY &amp; THERAPEUTICS
SOIINAR t
The Effec:t of Selenium on the Dtstrlbution
&lt;of Cadmium end Mercury In the "-t. Or. J .
Crilpln Smith, uaoc:ate protoaor, Department of
Phon'nooology and Told:ofogy, Unive&lt;&gt;lty ot
Rochester. 108 SherrTBl. 4 p.m. Refreshments
at3:45.

LECTURE SEAlES: ARCHITECTS /BUILDINGS I
CONCEPTS"
Jolin C. Hailtnoaa, oh:/lllect. · Tho ~-&lt;·
chitecta ~tlve . ~ . ...... 335
Hayes. 5 :3!Jp.m.
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
EatMr Han1ott S..rt:r: Interviews Peter Rayner
a.nt.m, erchitect, about his mcMe making . '"ter·
notionolc.M(Chonnel10). 6p.m.

MUSIC•

Y- - - · piano; Fra,... Ulltl, celo.
Bainl HaL 8 p.m. Genetol S1 .50; a -. loaJity. alalf, ond-c:ltlzena
s1. Stx&gt;noorad by the Cen... of the C...Ot!lle ond
PorfonMg- ond the llapw&gt;'nont of Muolc. ·

U I B .._ Unfvreralty of Rochester. Ctattc: Hell.
7p.m.

Aoom, Squire Hell. 10 Lm.·2 p.m. Sponoorod by

FILM"
The L - Goodbye (Altman, 1973). 150 Far·
bar. 3 and 9 p.m. Sponsored by the Department
offngbh.
The • - ""' Eliott Goufd, Starting Hayden ,
Men&lt; Rydell, and Njna Y8ll ~ A gloriously

FILII"
"-I (~) .

1&lt;6 Q;ofor-f. 7 p.m.
s.&gt;onoorod by the een... ror Media Study. -

UUAIIIONDAY NGHT MOVIES"
llogloalllyat.ry T - (1966) 7 p.m.; C..m
(11169) 8 :16p.m. 170 MFACC. ,Eiicott. Frao

-·
-··

.......,..,.._.,..,.the- "on ther&lt;&gt;ed"

O
t hIIN
- ..
~-cla 11m
record of the "Goodbye"
oonoert ot one fX lh8 greatest· eixtiea' ..IUPW·

Su~eepttbUity

to Pneumococeel Infection-

dorf. 4-p.m.

· Kh:l1 Audlor\.m; CNd-

Collon*, Son ren's Hospital, Noon.

WAINKLEO RADICAL •
MogiJio Kuhn. ~ Comol n-tro.
p.m. Admisalon is fnle .
Entor1alrvnent wll be proyldeJd by the Joe
Riley Squon Oencero frcm the lornherat Senior

soom.

talkol&gt;aJt3:30.
SponsoraJdbytho tl / 8Groyl'w1thersnotwal&lt;.
ANATOMICAL SCIENCES-ARM

English.

P. E!Non, U.-.;ty of Toron1D. 178 Farber.
4p.m.

In...-.

BUFFALO LOGIC COLLOQURIIIf
GabrloiStolzenborg,
Mau-.otico, - - . , U.-.;ty. 104 0111·
80000. 4 p.m. Sponoorod by the Malhomotico
Department Collae I I - In - - t i c o
Commons Aleta at 3 :30p.m.

c......-

FIELD HOCKEY"
U /B .._
4p.m.

-lo Stale ColoQo. Rofory Field .
·

~of

To

Tllo--

Ill lwo

~

Tllo-

___

Son-..; F........._ 1&lt;6

~.

Ill

7 p.m.

Sponoorod by the Cenlor for~ Study.

FAENCH W&amp;K WAll FILIIS'
;...-,"'. ......... ( -. 1976);

FOSTER LECTURE SEAlES M

Eloctronlc

....

-......-~-- o l - s r - J , D r. Aiclwd

~FILIIS'

FACULTYCOUOOUIUIII
Rodloc-ne, Professor Lionel Abel. 309
Clemens. 4 p.m. Sponsored by the Department of

on

Center and by ttoe East ....,. Hot
Olstrumental group, prior to Maggio's -

Cryatolllno Tra,..

a l - l ~oa, 0... PBLi Moearthy,
Conloius Cologe. Room 5, """"""" Hell. 4 p.m.
Colfeo wtl bo served ., 50 Acheoon at 3 :45.
SpoosorodbytheOepartmentofChemiatry.

MICROBIOLOGY fiEMIIWI •
Antigens Ill llo.....U.n Coil s.m- and
~ lllaloglcal - . 0... ~ Mlgn)m, professor ond choirmln. llapw&gt;'non1 of~.
U I B School of Modiclno. 223 Shennan. 4 p.m.

La

.1u111J1o Ptollo

.,,.__,,.

(Tho Flol Jungle) ( - Van

...

dor - ). Conlorwlce - · Squi'o. Cit
_
636·2 8 1 8 f o r - -. - c l w g o.
ficulty IO&lt; o ,_ """ ' - odjuoting lo the
,_ - .. Frw1k. though nof prurtant.

ro....--.
.
The- ......

.

.luiiiJIOII·oMW- "o f _ . . _ _

--$3,
.--.-c.- -·- ·™-'-"'*=-w-.·

,

of.-Frwlcha.-

FACULTY RECITAL •

--Trio.~- Hill.

WOllEN'&amp;~·

uta.._..._.~.

lornherat Courtt.

4p.m.,

S2,

~St .

8

p.m.
u / 8 lociA!y, ..... Spar-.d by 1 l ) o -

o f -.
Mthrao-.ofthellullllo-Trfo

FILIII"

(Verlov), 148

~ - 7 p.m. ~ by ... Cenlor for
ModiaSiudy.

. . - - o f the llullllo
Dowld
KuoM. ; O . . . -. ham; ondDonoltl
by_ond_.

Uglll 011 . . . -

...,.,

Pr-.ior

~.

-

Women, Eunice Upton , art historian. 148 Dktfen-

-KEUY ~AT '!HE UUA11

· -of
...0
An:lloologicll
-l'logrom.
7
-. Sp.m.
-

ART ..STORY LECTURE I
o.gaa and the Image ol Wortdng Clan

--YOO.UFEA.,_.

ClAAICS LECTURE I
-

LECTURU·
Current Underltandlng and ApproKhM to
Traotmont; 0... Arthur J . Ammann, Unlv&lt;nlty of

VOLLEYBAU"

represented to di3cuas with students the empk)y·

Thursday- 19 _

·

~by ... An:lloologicll

-·---- .......- -·
-

-

· .. -

._.... (11145). 7 p.m.; A l l (1861). 11:20 ...... ~

---.~

___

-··--:·c..,,._,.......

FILIII"

378---

~~-~- Spar-.d by ... _

..

�........
,

•

DOCUMENTS

General Education·panel issue_s i~li_tial report
In accordance with Its charge In April
of this year, tho General Education
Committee Is submitting a progress
report to . the Faculty Senate for Its
October meeting. The ' flrst part of th is
document sticks close to thai charge; It
Ia MMntlally a factual account of tho
Committee's activities since It con..,., In the spring. The second part
• attempts to lat.,out for the senators

:~"'l:-'~lch 'r~~or&amp;m"r::ft~ar:ffl

confront aalt moves this fall toward the
development of formal recommends·
tiona to be submitted to this body early
In 1979. A third section attempts to
anticipate eome features of the work of
the committee.
PART I. COMMITTEE ACTIVITIES.
A. The Retrlftal of Information and
OpJ'I'n':· the Committee's work Is
ImpOrtant to the majority of the
Unl-.lty, It waa fell that such a task
could not, and should not,- be
undertaken without more substantial
Information- than the Committee posseaaed or was readily accessible. We
therefore decided to divide Into subcommit!- to gether neceasary data.

~'::::m~O:: f~'lr:w: eac_h

of these

·I Departmental information
I . Student Profile.
1). Referei&gt;ce and Research .
v). Sounding
.
n Environmental Sub-committee
wi ll study the problems of classroom
alze, busing, personnel limits, time
constraints, scheduling , etc. This

~

~~~~der:;\~ns ~SS: m~ ,g~t~~

mentlng any proposed General Education l&gt;rograrn.
· ·

I . Deliberation.

While gathering Information, the
Committee aleo began to discuss the
principles guiding a quality General
Education Program and their application to lhla Unl-slty. Thus, In
meetings of the Committee as a whole
and In leas formal study groups, ·we
critically reviewed the discussed major
works drawn from the extens ve
literature on the subject of general

::ca~~ - ~~~Tv~ell=~~~~~
-~~"st:'.:;r~ell~n,W,~"''! ~~

C...Weetam Reeerve. During July, Dr.
Arthur Levina, Senior Fellow on the
Cerr)egle Council on Polley Studl6s In
Higher Education at Berkeley, met wllh
the Committee and attended an open

=:.Tona""..=-~r-;:'~3:!:;di~:::J

how Institution• deelgn and Implement
curricular reforme. J'he Committee
continues to draw on the edvloe of Dr.
Levine and the Council.
PART II. ISSUES AND CHOICES.
,

While the Committee Ia aware of Ita

=~~:::!Yco~a~~

the Faculty Senate ewly In 1979, we
hope to ... thla Interim report to
initiate dlacuaalon with you that will
help us In formulating our propoaala.
We do not claim that what lollowe
con811tutee a comp;eheniiMI nwl- of
all the poeelllle '-·Rather, we seek
to lelenlily and Introduce pertlcuir
· tliat to us of oentral
' -im!IOrt8nCB.
It Ia difficult to puraue
exfenatw~y a comptexctueetlon auch aa
- . 1 eduC8tlon without falling Into
lha habit of - ' to cllehee. The
Committee Ja nat Immune from auch
JII'OIIeiWIIIee and hopei you will tolerate
.. In Ifill matt•.
.....,. cWinltiOna of gen..-81 educelion e.. -.. on..~ ower the
and ...., deaiiNlfOne of goala lor

==

r--

~-;..mada~
. . iicMiwred In

..

... .........,._ ":iS
oats 1111

iii..... ... ....

,artiOn 01 the

. . . . .&amp;... ~ . . . . . .

~~--:
iiiiiiii!!i·~·~·:.::=== 10.

-

0..,.1 Education:

2). Knowledge Areaa and Modea • o1
Thought.

ele~!~t~n a~~enJ~J~r~pl~~e t~~,:~-:::

1). Depth, Breadth and lnt!llll'atlon.
Many traditional undergraduate programs provide for study In depth within
a major field and for balancing breadth
through some· simple form of distribution requirement . The ass~mpllon
behind such a requ irement Is that a
simple aggregation of courses In
diverse fields will furnish a general
· education . The Committee appears
agreed that an Ideal general education
goes further, particularly In developing
the student's Intellectual capacities to
Integrate knowledge from a wide range
of disciplines. A recognition of linkages
between seemingly Isolated bodies of
knowledge and the major would
enhance and expand understanding of
the student's area of specialization and
concentrated study. The desire to
ensure breadth of ·student knowledge
and the sense of Integration and
cohesion ) s by no means unique to our
Committee. Many of the models for
general education -studied by the
Committee evidence the attemp,t to
pursue these ends. St. John's ' Great
Books"
program and
Columbia's
Contemporary Civilizations are but twQ,
though among the best known, of such
moilels.

t..:~~h~a.fs~= fo:,~.~~ea'1::'mm:;
~:";::. ur.~ha ~rwW:.'fc~e ~~~~u~~~

disciplines In the attempt to demohstrate their Interrelationships and place
In an overall scheme of knowledge. In
the Committee this has come to be
termed the " Bronowskl Model" because
the Asoent of Man series seemed to ·
perform eome of the functions
auggealed hens. Alternatively, coher-

:lj"~~~ht ~u':'c~~~ byofeo~u=

deelgned to emphasize the proceaaes
whereby knowledge Is acquired and
applied.
One of the moat basic decisions to be
made In curriculum deelgn Ia whens to
p i - the Initiative In the development
of Integration . Should the curriculum
ltaelf emphasize the means to coand unity In general education?
Or, lhould the dleoovery and development of these goale be the reaponslbllity oJ the Individual student? For
tnatance the well-publicized Harvard
Plan, though atreaalng ln(egratlve
purpoeea In Ita prellmlnaty ratfonale,
Nllee - l l y In practloe upon the
lnCIIWiual atudent'a abUitl• and
tnaiiMtlona In dewelopinl! theee. Our
,._.t unclerllrMu.ta curriculum Nllal
..._. IIIICiualvialy upon the 81udlnt to
prvwlde ~ outalda the
ind the opinion Ia forming In file
~ tlllll the faculty ahould
- . . . . , . ~ity In thla

.....,ce

-- -·

-~·t'!
::: .........

..,..or

curriculum of a General Education
Program , one of two basic approaches
is usually adopted . The f irst centers
around kn owledge areas, defined In
terms of established disciplines or of
less conventional groupings. A second
approach stems from the belief that, on .
both practical and Intellectual grounds,
the goals of general education can best
be achieved through training In the
modes of thought, methodologies, and
" intellectual tools" which are often
shared across disciplines. . Strong
arguments can be made for and against
each of these approaches. Since It
conforms to organizational structures
already In place, a program · based on
knowledge areas would likely be easier
to Institute for both t hose admi nistering
and tho se teaching such a prograrn.
However, others argue that, since the
given corpus of knowledge within a
discipline Is Increasingly subject to
extension and revision, the needs of
students are better met by the
development of analytic skills that are
often Interdisciplinary In nature and
application and which enable a person
to master changes In subject matter
Independently . The view that such ·skllls
should thus become the organizational
foci of a general education program Ia
persuasively argued In P.H. Phenix.

~::!fu~,~~~::':~~~s;,!,s';'M::'.:~7tn.

of
Most of tha existing programs
studied by the Committee rec"lQnlze the
validity of both ·organizational principles, though the majority appear to
favor the knowledge areas as organizational components and seek to develop
modes of thought within Individual
courses. Again, the Harvard Plan,
appears to follow this pattern.

recognize diversity In attempting to
meal a universal need?
One possible eolutlon has be&lt;in
discussed In outline In the Committee .
This would Institute a requirement In
general education for all students which
could be fulfilled by the completion of

~~=I ~.J t~o:=thO: cfr~ug:S'r!;c::".,';

a aul!:stantlal group within the undergraduate population .
4) . Baalc Skill a.

There are some for whom lhe
pri mary, If not exclusive , purpose of a
General Education Program would be
the Improvement of basic skills of
literacy and computallon amongst
undergraduates. Hl'wever, It Is not
necessary to place such overwhelming
centrallly upon this purpose In order to
recognize the critical relationship
between basic skills and a successful
general education program . While It
does not appear unreasonable to ask
Instructors of general education courses to Include among their goals a
conllnuing development of, say, skills
In literacy through carefully-&lt;:rlllqued
written assignments, It Is much more
problematic to expect the correction of
basic deficiencies. If such correction
requires separate courses, should these
carry credit? If eo, should they aleo be
allowed to meet part of any general
education requirement lhet might be
eslablls~ed? What level of proficiency
Is adequate for . participation In a

~=~::~,,:3u:t~prg~;:"'t!v.~ah~~

can Its attainment be judged?
While the Committee recognizes the
importance of these questions, we feel
that their resolution will probably have
to await the development of concrete
proposals regarding the -central elements ·of a general educalion program/programs.

3). Commonality or Dlveralty.
From Its discussions and enquiries to

PART Ill. ANTICIPATIONS.

~~~.P~~ ~;;:.m!l'"S'uJ~:ant•~:~ ·a1~
students will be exposed to eome
coherent, challenging and stimulating
program In General Education. However, as slrongly as this hope Is felt , the
Committee also realizes thai our
student body Is extremely diverse. A

1). Schedule.
While by no means unaware of the
difficulties Involved, the Committee Ia

~~re:;:,~ha!n~~!:-~nf:rtr.:. s~fd~~

practical level, major requirements take
up &lt;!lrectly or Indirectly a very large

~~.!:, ~~u~;:.:,t'\!~n~~ ~=

that proportion Ia much amaller. The
Committee Ia thus laced with a choloe,
or rather a judgement, concarnlng
balance belwMn the belief that the
Unl-.lty haa a.reaponslblllty to ensure
that all ita atudenta htvelo eome extent
t.en - - l y eduealed, and the
rwcognliion that our student body Ia not
~~omoge~_..,
milking a uniform
progrM~ for all unclargrliiluloee lmpqctlcabla and, In the CJ111nlon of eome,
~- How fer Mould we go_to

~=?n~~~y t~~!de~,t ~~ ~~,;t&gt;·~·y..:~

present this body with a formaY set of
proposal~ by February 1979.

2

)·-r't."!"'=:J='·recognlzes that lhe
basic design of a General Education
Program Ia only the first stage of Ita
taak. Once the overall acedamlc content
of the program Ia determined, It will be
necessary to eslabHah procedures and
standards for lmplemenllng lhe program on this campus. Implementation
raises a oumber of laauee which the
Committee (and eome of Ita subcommit!-), ' - alnaady conaklerwd
to eome degree. Th- Include, among
others:
(a) The criteria by which cou- will
be deelghated aa aatlafylng ganeral

·-.o......-.·-···-2

�College ·B show
Goli«Y B ol the College of Creative
Arlo oncf Crafts onnounceo tho opening
of Ito l lrot 1rt oxhlbltlon of the
oemeoter. ·
"The Not Reedy lor Prime-Time
Artloto" ohow lo an exhibition of
paintings, drowlngo, prints, ond sculpture by: LD&lt;rolne Delgel Monn, Bert
Grobe, Bob Gully, Donne Kuo, Dovld
Monn, Dione · Monh, Ken McMohon,
Jone S.ngermon, B1rb1r1 Schiller, and
JohnToth.
Mony of the lrtloto hove exhibited
and won owonlo both In local end
notlonol competitions. Each ortlat's

=k.~s

: ~:~~ tl:';":~~:~~~

Incredible mix of media, techniques and
Ideas.
The Unl-slty community Is Invited
to attend a wine anct cheese reception
lor ·the artists, Saturday evening,
October 14, 8-11 p.m. In the gallery on
the second floor of Por1er Quad.
The exhibition runs from October 14
through November 4.
. Questions on hours, location, etc.,
can be directed to the College B Office,
636-2137.

Arts and Letters facing 'most serious crisis'
Eroding resources and a continued
decline In enrollments have provoked
"the most serious crisis In the history of
the Faculty of Arts and Letters," Dean
George Levine said In a recent memo to
his faculty .
Yet, the Dean emphasized , despite
"continued depletion of resources lor
use elsewhere In the University," Arts
and Letters has been able to pursue
actively the recruitment of both faculty
and stall. Eight lull-time faculty were
recruited for 1978-9, four of them lor
one-year visiting terms for the purpose
of maintaining programs.
Of the lour regular new appointments, Levine said one was a
replacement, and three were In
response to an unexpected.opportunlty
lor development. That orpor1unlty was
the
appointment
o
Professors
Rodolphe Gasche and Henry Sussman
In Compontlve Literature and Professor
Carol Jacobs In english . All were from

Levine said , Is directly attributable to
enrollment declines. " Unless we can
find ways of revers ing this decline, we
may well find ourselves confronting
further cuts and possibly even the loss
of programs. I think the decline can be
reversed ," he told his faculty, "but not
unless we all recognize Its seriousness
and not unless we develop together a
coherent strategy for coping with the
problem."
The most serious attrition has
1

ocg~~~s~nL~'!fn~ ~f~~~!'T~nt! ~r~~~~:

ll\ght of students from the humanities
to vocational and professional pro-grams Is a national plj,enomenon and
not unique to this campus, but there are
several factors that are unique and
which have had serious Impact on our
programs."
Most notable of these, .Levine said,
are the split campus. the proliferation

~:~~~~~~ c5~":~~,; ~~~~ t~::,.~ods~

:'r
:.:,r::,~~· t~~''f::'~Yi Tr~s·~:1~~
significant strength In 1Yterature and

not Include Arts and L.ettersp courses
(with the exception of composition) as

~~~~,~e rc:u~ra::',"ih:=fi"..d J~"t:'~:

fa~P~':s~~~~.~:~r~':i~r~~iu~ .:h:
General Education required curriculum
ever becomes a reality here, this will
obviously have a positive effect on
enrollments, but , the dean cautioned,
" we cannot realistically expect the
results of current planning to have any
Impact until 1980-81 . I am convinced
that only our own Inventiveness In
developing new responses to an
apparent lack of student Interest In our .
courses will help11s through the present
crisis. Whatever form tt.~se responses
take, we must maintain the Integrity of
our academic programs so that we do
not deteri orate into a series of service
departments."

Hopklna four, will not arrive until
September 1979.
Levine said he has every expectation
of contlnul"l! to recruit outstanding
professors, 'whatever the pressures
from the vice-president. "
Arts and Letters has to approach
recruitment " with a strategy that will
allow us not only to preserve the
excellence we have now but to remain
receptive to the possibilities for growth
and deotefopment ," he said. " My
Intention, the&lt;efora, Is to continue to
suppor1 those naquests for recruitment
that can be justified by the necessities
of teaching C*f, and the maintenance
of programs. At the seme time, I
conaidtir It eaaent" i tO the Intellectual
Well-being of thle faculty that we
remain receptive to those oppor1unltles
that may arlee lor the -loprnent and
orow111 of progroma."
~-IO...,._Iclp

tile depletion of reai&gt;urces for Arts
IIIICI leiters DOW the put alx Y-"•

1

·

Jol~!':;:''::/dwi:F~:satternptlng to
develop a joint curriculum with the
Faculty of Engineering ·and "pplled
Sciences: " Jim Bunn of thi! English
Department has egraed to help
coordlnete and plan such a CUO'iculum .
My int-I in this (as well as Dean

.••·

Lee's)

has

been

prompted

by

a

conviction that there are few endeavors

that are not somehow Infused with the
values of the Humanities. The lecture
series which -Professor Bunn is
1

0

~~~~~·r97~ ~"i~~n8se~ of d;;~~~.~~;

by the Humanit ies- should, we hope,
demonstrate some of the more
meaningful ways in which these
disciplines have i ntersected ."
The lectures will be given by
members of the Faculty of Arts and
Letters as well as by several
distinguished visitors and will be
available for credit to all students In the
University, lncludlnQ those from Arts·
and Letters.
Student recruitment
•
The dean said . he has also been
working at the Faculty level with the
DUE advisors and the Office of
Adm issions and Records in . -lng

new ways of attracting bealnmng
students Into Arts and Cetters,
particularly during spring recruitment ,
sessions and the summer orientation .
It is at the departmental level,
however, that tha most significant
responses to the enrollment decline can
occur, Levine reasoned . " I realize that
the most effective response many of us
can make Is to continue teaching what
8

~~r~~~:,:,a~~~~~~. ~s~~~r.,wc h~:i

or even modll lcatlona in our course
scheduling might produce results.
Perhaps now Is the time for us to
consider placing all or a portion of MFC
teaching orr load . Perhaps we can make
a greeter effort to . - students from
more than the tradltlonal18-21 year-old
range. In short, whatever the form of the

~~~~~.!1i~~~~~~~~~:S~:'r::t \r;.;··:~
1

problem of declining enrollment is ouro
alone to resolve ."

Personnel, funding cuts
cause pinch at Libraries
Because of personnel cuts and
inadequate fundinA over the past two
years, Libraries Director Saktldas Roy
told a meetlng of student representatives last week, the Libraries have been
forced to cut hours, cancel 300 journal
subscriptions, and decrease Intercampus loan activities.
The Undergraduate Library Is now

who need particular journals lor
research which are presently unavailable In the Llbrarlea should contact a
subject specialist to make a p u requlaltlon.
Students were told that ftudy caneia
In the new Science and Engineering
Library In Capen are open for use. The •
SEL, how._, has Instituted a algn-ln

fewer.
On the bright aide, Roy reporte(l that
coin-operated Xerox machines will be
available within the next two months at
all .llbrarles. Copies will be five cents
each.
Student representatives were asked
to sPf!led the word to their respective
groupi that those experiencing difficulty In finding llbnlrv material and
receiving Inadequate assistance at any
reference desk, should contact the heed
of the llbrwy unit con!*"ed.
It was also suggMted that atudenta

because of cigarette burna fou:f on
carrel rugs .
After hearing complaints llbOut
excessive fines for overdue booka,
llbrarllna reminded atudenta that the
Libraries cannot keep money from liMa
but must return It to the State. 8ooD
can be ,.,awed o - the phone, they
pointed out. If there are no other
requests lor them.
The Libnary at Ridge Lea ia now open
and contains materllla for computer
science, paychology, atatlstlca, · and
geology, atudanta were informed •

~t:~~ ~?~~~ ::::'':nd"t"~k~~~s11g

r~u~: k:~~ek o~:opl~s:~

�October 12, 1978

PSS
Supplemental Budget, retention
problems are aired at meeting;
change in make-up of Senate mulled
In keeping wllh U/B's commitment to
equal opportunity and affirmative

support · services (i.e. libraries), and
Area V, University-wide administration,

advisory body. to Jesse Nash, assistant
vice president for affirmative action and

With the new breakdown , the ratio of
Senators to constituents will increase
slightly to 1 :20. The increase helps
offset turn-over problems due to added
· membershlp .
Ermanovics emphasized that no final

:lrs'1io~y :·=:~T.~"1,: toco,;;~'~
hu~~u";:d~io~:~.lent,)

Dr.

Ronald Stein, his assistant, told the
Professional Staff Senate last week that
tile committee will be composed of two
..-ntatlves each from the Health
lc*lcea and A.,_mlc Affairs, one
..-ntatiYe from the remaining vice
C"t!:,'~~f~s~ representa·-..n aald the committee, which
,_.... lis formal char9.e October t3,
will IICI as a Unlversoty monlloring
deVIce to-assist the Affirmative Action
Office.

operation and management.

that Senators with suggestions on area
compositions should contact him or
other members of the committee .
John

Warren ,

chairman

of

the

Constitution Committee, relayed that
some " procedural changes" will have to
be made in the constitution to
accommodate the new members, but
added that the document was " fundamentally sound."

Retention/attrition

Recommendations regarding constitutional changes will not be presented
to the Senate unti I after the Membership CO!IImittee has made its final
report.

C~ \:':~~ o1~1be~~~~~~orr.;~.;

Professional workshops
Senator Patrick Young , chairman of

In an attempt to come to grips with
ihe retention/attrition problem that has
plagued the University for the past two
decided against returning to U/B thi
y - will be surveyed. The edministration wants to know why these students
have chosen not to finish their

~~~ln\'&amp;~n~~e~.::ing

students were contacted via phone by
members of the Student Affairs Office
and were asked the same question.
1

0

~= ~Ptha\ su~i~l~ted :~~;~~~e
0

majority of students stayed away for
various acedernlc, economic and
pansonal naaaons; only 58 Individuals
attributed their defections to an
atmosphere "not conducive to their
studies ."
The Spectrum quoted President
Ketter at that lime aa being "pleased"
the! only a few aald they did not come
back because the University was too big
or unsympathetic to their needs.

The Supplemental Bddget
Turning to the aupplilmental budget ,
Stein listed areas that recelvild no
funding or amounts which were less
than requested . He reported that a
$7118,000 request for library acquisitions
, hed been turned down by the Division of
the Budget (OOB). In eddlllon, before
submitting the budget to OOB, SUNY
eliminated a $24:!",000 request for
multiplexing data communication serYicea tor computer terminals, and a

~·~.!l~~~f~~~=~":"~?.;..

facllltlea renovation to accommodate
relocated Unl-.lty units and $556,000

:::.,~n~Y ~~=.!. ~:'=::m~':~

$275,000 and S4t4,000 respectively.
DOB approved $275,000 tor renovation
but grwoted $422,800 for moving

expen-.

A $383,000 request tor Ridge Lea
- s • ...,..,g with $300,000 for utilities
for buildings under construction at
Amherat, Incorporated into the
general SUNY budget .
Aooordlng to Unl-.lty Comptroller
Willi..., H. Baumer, lunda tor multiPlexing busing will be supplied
ilwough Internal nsellocation of 76-79
Unl. . .ity lunda.
Another portion of U/B's supple._ . , -aet request contained a
· $2,527,000 item tor salaries of medical
faculty employed at the County
hoel&gt;ltal. SUNY chopped the sum to .
$2.4 million, and U/B ·fJnally was
allotted $1.8 million.

Sc:ott Stevens, prnhMnt of U/B's Amerk:8n Society of CiYU EnglnMra, wfth concrete
cenoe etSEL
·

recommendations have been made and

the Human Resources and Development

Committee, reported that the Senate's

~~:e7~pm':~tr~~F~ ~~~g~~:r~~~g~

their evaluation consultants. The consultants were Professor Jack Loftis and
Ms. Deborah Garvin from U/B's
Psychology Department.
After administering a questionnaire
to those who attended , Loftis and
Garvin found that 95 per cent of
respondents felt that " the workshops
gave them somethln~ to Ro back and

~P~~n ~~i' grrr~o;:ic~~=~~~n :..13"!~~;,

"would recommend the workshops to
co-workers," and 87 per cent noted that
attending the workshops "made them
feel more a part of tile University
community and professional staff."
Senator Bud Kuntz, chairman of the
SUNY Senate's Personnel Committee,
said he would forward information

Concrete canoe is first in
series of Engineering exhibits
Studen t engineers are planning to

take advantage of lobby space at the

~~~~ci~~c~:~~~~~~~~n~~:~~sLi~r~;re~~

projects for the next several months.
According to Rick Ferraro, president
of the Faculty of Engineering and
Applied Sciences Student Government,
the efforts of several student engineering societies will culminate the third
week in February during National
Engineering Week. At that time, the
groups hope to find space on campus to
accommodate ali t heir exhibits.
A 280-ib. concrete canoe constructed·
last April by members of the American
Society of Civil Eng ineers is the first
display to grace the SEL lobby (on
Capen - 2) . The canoe took 600 manhours to build and was entered last
spring in a concrete canoe invitational
at the University of Toledo. Women
engineers from the local ASCE fared
better than the men, placing 9 out of 20
in their race In the canoe. The men
placed 17th.
Ferraro said future student displays
will probably include:
•A rocket belt capable of propelling
humans through the air. This James

Bond favorite wil l be constructed by the
student chapter of the American
Institute of Industrial Engineers .

~~~~~~ ::::m~~ J[~~r~;;. ~~~~ r~~
~si~~:!~~~ '!,':~~~a~;e ~';"~'';:~~~~~
nature.

0

=~:et 0orc~·r~~or~::;,s~s ~~ :iW~~
national speakers.

Responaa to Bunn
,
Senator Stacy Johnson repQrted on
the PSS committee response to Vice
President Bunn's Academic Plan . (See
September 28 Reporter.)
Johnson noted the report should not
be viewed as an addendum to the
A.,_mic Pian but rather as a
document to be incorporated into it.
Slggelkow'a ..nel
~tudent
Affairs
Richard Siggelkow

Vice President
spoke "off the

:ror~h~ ~~V:.'I:~-vJl~'"l!ru~
1

Group on Attrillon/Retenlion, which he
chairs.
The 32-member committee which
first met last February was asked by
President Ketter to identify and
consider factors that effect student
retention. Ketter said the study group
should look at how "we can humanize
our bureaucratic structures" and "create
the best possible campus climate."
The study group's final report is due
next fall .
Siggelkow aald his discussion had to
be off the record because the study
group members " heel insisted• on it.
In !!,hat seemed to be an "on-therecord
statement, Siggeikow told
Senators that Parker Washburn, his
administrative assistant, is now in the
process of revitalizing 1 program in
which studenta are matched up with a
member ol the faculty or professional
staff for the purpoee of facilitating
intowperaonal exchange • and to help
counteract the alienation aome atudents experience w'- entering a large
untw..tty.

lllel~=c:t:=ed..l.'!ct"':~n=.'::~

WMhllum, at S.2882.

!~~~";,~':t:~s~~~m~r~~~;:~'alo~et~r~~

on the nuclear Industry and nuclear

power plants.
Ferraro feels the exhibits will give the

~g~ver~:y crhn;:mu~~~ro~~tt=~:rt.:-..":l~g

disciplines as well as increase the
visibility of student engineers on'
campus .

I'" ,. ,. )• )• ,. I" )• !• )••

Asked If there were ~ money in the

wramsshor.:· s~~r~~
1979 seem like a "re:Jistic goal."
One Senator remarked It would be

Enai~:~~s in the American Society of
~echanicai Engineers will draw on the
resources of local industry for their
exhibit. Ferraro Indicated that the group
Is hoping to secure a cross·section of
an automobile engine.
Last but not least , students in the
American Nuclear Society pian to

United Way progress

·

~~~~~~r t~:"~r

•A liquid fuel rocket from the
American Institute of Aerospace and
Aeronautics; Ferraro said students in
AIAA hope to take the rocket out west
for a launch.
•A computer-related display capable
of giving teletype feedback, from the
institute of Electrical and Electronics
Engineers.
•A distillation column commonly
used in chemical processes (Including
making moonshine). This fun exhibit
will be constructed by students from
the American Institute of Chemical

AACHI'TtCTUI!.EAHO UMfiOMMOIT.t.l. 0DKUi11

HEALTH

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SOCIAL ICtlNCU
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CONTINUtNQ myc:An9N.

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AUIIIMI ANOC&amp;AnoN
UI U'OUNDATJON

UICYUilTT UaMNU

-

IN"""'UTION AND I.JaMI'Y STUDIES
EDUCA TIOMALITUOIU

Trustees aet on UBF board
The SUNY Trustees liave elected one
new member and re-elected six others
to the University at Buffalo Foundation,
inc., Board of Trustees.

..

~~:::.r.::.~·.~ ~~Y.f·~~w:e

officer of th• John W. Cowpar
Company, fnc., a local construction
firm.
• lie-elected ,.,bare Include William
M.E. CIB111aon, chairman and prwldent
of G.-p~tlca Controls Corpcntlon;
Charlaa tHabokl Ill, prwlden1 of

Western New York Savings Bank;
Frederick S.· Pierce, president of the
Niagara Envelope Company; and
Leonard Rochwarger, praaldent of the
Firatmark Corporetion .
Other re-elected members 8te Donald
A. Roes, president of the Rand Capital
Co&lt;J&gt;oration, and Paul l. Snyder,

chairman ot F...._ a--. Foods, Inc.

ex~~f;,.ROtt~:· of':::!t ~"a:

Corpcntion, Ia chairman of
Foundation IIOMI of Trust-.

the

�~12,1171

.. .1£11&amp;

30o physicists

•General Education report

will attend

(from~ • • col. 4)

meeting here
MOt8

than

300

physicists

and

:lli':C,
"r.:'e~\~\s ~~= •a:=~
EJectronlcl Conference of the American

Pllyalcal Society's Division of Electron
and Atomic Physics, October 17-20 at
the Statler Hilton Hotel.
Hosted by U I B and the Cal span
Corp.,
the physicists will hear
approximately 20Q techn leal papers on
fundamental processes In electric
dlsc~ea, area, gas lasers and the

at'/'n~.;:;'·are

worl&lt;shops, tours of
U/B and Celspan facilities , a tribute to
the late physicist Dr. Leonard Lbeb, and
a speaker wlio will discuss weather and
climate on Earth and other planets.

mi~~~:J:y~ &amp;,~=ej:,"~r~~e~~~ 1

to 10 p.m. In the Rendezvous Room at
the Statler. The conference Itself will
open at 9 a.m. on . Tuesday, Oct. 17,
with the presentation of papers.
Highlights of the conference are:
•Dr. C.K. Rhodes of SRI International
will moderate a worl&lt;shop on " Fundilmental Processes Associated with·
Exclmer Lasers," Tuesday, Oct. 17, at
7:30 p.m. In the Hilton's Embassy
Room . •
•"Dissociative Recombination• will
be the · subject of the conference's
second worl&lt;shop, Wednesday, Oct. 18,

education requirements.
(b) The 'determination of the best
ways to provide incentives to faculty
and departments to commit energies
and resources to the general education
program.
(c) The development of an effective
academic advisory system.
The Committee's worl&lt; thus far has
concentrated on the design stage, with
limited attention Ia impiementation . We
expect this aspect of Its task to loom
larger In the Committee's deliberations
during the Fall semester.

3). Oueatlons for further Exroratlon.
(a) The desirability o a foreign
language requ irement or some alterna·
tlve means of ensuring student
awareness of foreign cultures .
(b) The position of transfer students
in relationship to any requirement in
general education .
(c) If new courses are considered
necessary to the development of a
general education program , the means
of lde.ntlfying , recruiting and then
assisting faculty to teach those
courses.
(d) Exploration of available teaching
environments.
(e) Relevant consultations on the
logistics of implementation.
(f) Consideration of the need for
remedial instruction and the availabi lity
of resources to meet any perceived
need .

~;~~s &amp;.~~8n~&amp;fi~ B~?.!e~lty ~~

(I) DEPARTMEN'I'AL INFORMATION

Dr.
Leonard Loeb, a pioneer In the field of
gaseous . electronics, wlll be held
Thursdily, Oct. 19, et 11 :25 a.m. In the
Embassy Room .
•Celspan and U/ B's Laboratory for
Power and Environmental Studies will

The purpose of this Subcommittee is
to collect information concerning
departmental programs to be used in
developing a general education pr&lt;&gt;gram.
In the early part of July 1978, a
questionnaire, with a covering letter,
was sent to the Chairmen or directors of
all 68 academic units of the University .
A total of 32 responses was received, or
almost one-half of those sent out.
Some resrcondlng departments l nd i-

1

B

1

Pit!lb~;p~u~ 1 't~o~at:;;emorY ~f

~~icfft:~ T~:f"Y f'r.o~h~:~is:~n~

p.m.
•A banquet wHI be held at Talbert
Dining Room, Amherst, Thursday, Oct.

~:u~~~nr~~at g(~S:~

by a social
Dr. lferner E. Suomi, profeasor of
meteorology and director of the Space

~~~c:,.~ngf ~=!r~~~t::,n~' ~';::

be guest speaker at the bahquet, .
discussing "Weather and Climate: On
the Earth and Other Planets."
Dr. David Benenson of U/B's
Department of Electrical Engineeri ng Is
coordinating the event .

Springer chairs
NSTF
search
Dr. Robart Springer, chaiAnan,

~ineerlng Science, Aerospace Engln-

che~p~g ~d ~J.earc!~',~f:!npo,.

!

1

director of the Nuclear Science and
Technology Facility (NSTF) .
Dullea are to aarve 88 manager of
operations for the NSTF and .._.,h
manager, 88 wall 88 o - - of the
. financial 88pecta of the Redlatlon
Protection Department .

Ex:~tl!.uW:f~reaC:::::.~~tl::f.

Fogel said In charging the a.rc11 panel,
should have academic credentials
equivalent to thoae required for
appointment as a full or 8880Ciate
profeaaor with tenure. He or aha ahould
have a proven record of 1-ch ualog a
reactOf' and dernonstrmle lldmlnlatratlve skills. The ability to develop a
strong r-a. relatlonahlp with
aclldernlc ~ments ahould be
another major f..:tor In aelectlon .
A slate of 3-6 candid- ahould be
presented to the dean of the Greduate
School by February 1, he Indicated.
On the MM:Il panel with Springer
are: Dr. M~ A. Acara, Pherriiacology; Dr. Alan K. Bruce, redlatlon
safety officer; Dr. Donald R. Brutvan,
C!Mmlcal Engl..-tng; Dr. Joaeph K.
Gong, o..J BIOlogy; Dr. William E. Hall,
CommunitY-EcolOgy and Environment,
Inc.; end Mr. Philip Orlosky, NS~F . .

PIITZ PUSHED OUT
Into IIIIa · .......,

....
...... -_,oilier . ......
._to,.._
Putz Clldll, ..... II

To . . . . - . . 81ic1

... (... ..,ille .. -).-~
.......... lor a . . . .118'!11

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

Willi- .u. ...... _,,
. . . . . . . . . . . c:.-oiiiM .........

~..:=-.:.
.......... u,~=
........

SU

MMIITEE

~~~a:~ff gful~u~m~~pi~~~~ ~~~

1

fhi:
presumably _contributed to the low
response. Telephone follow-up and a
second mailing , when necessary, wi ll

~~~ry d~~rJ ;;~~\~~~~p";t"~e;.~:

Input. ·
The questionnaire does not seek the
opinion of departments on the matter of
general education. Members of the
University community will have an
opportunity to express themselves
through the Sounding Subcommittee.
The Departmental questionnaire seeks:
(1) to Identify the objectives of various
academic units in the University,
including any sense In which the
. graduates are said to be "educated" and
the number of students enrolled; (2) to
Identity the requirements, Including
prerequ lslt's and extra-departmental
courses, that various de~artments have
In their programs; (3) to obtain
information .&amp;oricerning courses (e.g .

~~~~~cysta~~~"T~~n~he e~r~\~T~~i

with a view of consideri ng some of
them as appropriate for general
education courses; and (4) to obtain
Information about what students do

wh.;::'.'helJ'=~~t~:m ~~ro~~ently

summarizing the responses that It has
received . An ' attempt wi ll be made to
Identify any patterns that might
emerge, and the Information will inform
the Committee's deliberations . In those
ca-. whera further Information Is
required from a particular department ,
that department will be consulted on an
lndlwldual basi~ .

ambitious. In some cases, the data
were simply unavailable. In other cases,
they were not conveniently retrievable,
either because retrieval would have to
be done by hand or because the data
were in several different computer Illes.
We were edvlsed that the data base we
sought would requ ire substantial
programming time, for which the
Computer Center did not have resources, partly because it' was Impossible to
tell which file contained the record of a

r~~:rb~!~'!;~t.,;,;;:~o~~~~alhtt:~:~~

do it was measured in months.

The Subcommittee has thus concentrated on two lines of approach.
First, we have asked Adm issions and
Record s to generate some basic data on
Our student population. These will
include breakd own as of Spring 78
according to: class, area of permanent
residence , major department, entering
date, and age. We have also asked that
data be run for entering students (Fall
78) , separatlnq freshmen and transfers,
outlining thetr previous scholastic
records. Unfortunately, we will not be
able to determine how these records
relate to the students' experience at

SUNYAB . We hope to receive this
information soon .
Second , the Computer Center has run
for us data on all courses taken by
undergraduates during Fall 77. The
data are broken down by major area
(approved or intended), class, and level
ot course. There is both a consumption
report (where did a given group of
students - e.g., sophomore English
majors - take their courses?) and a
contribution report (who took the
200-levei Eng lish courses offered that
semester?). By co-mbining the consumption of the four classes, and
assum ing that the pattern of courses
taken by a given designatlon of student
(sophomore English majors , etc.) is
rough ly stable over time , we can
con stru ct a general profile of a program
taken by the "averagOf' student In a
particular major over four years. At
presen t , we have t he raw data to do
th is, and we have asked the Computer
Center to collapse them in certain ways
so that some preliminary Information
can be more read il y extracted .
(Ill) REFERENCE AND RESEARCH

SUB-COMMIITEE
The Reference Subcommittee has
conducted extens ive literature search·
ing on the topics of general education
and curricu lum reform and develop-ment. in add ition to ordering and
collecting tbe major books on general
education , doctoral dissertation and
ERIC document searches were con·
dueled in order to compile a
bi bliography of relevant periodical
literature, research ·reports , and monc;
graphic materials. From these searches, Important and helpful excerpts and
works were culled to form a core of
0

1

~~~~Ytt,!;;a~e:~~r~na g~~e,;,o~ kn~ ==
ledge base to Inform their deliberations.
The apprqprlate books were ordered and

~~~~e'l::o~~[F.:!· ~t;.n.:r~'c:= f~

access.
In addition to the published literature
on general education, the Reference
and Research Subcommittee also
collected comparative informatloif from
approximately 60 other universities
wh ich have recently reviewed their
unded'lraduatecurricula. Th is effort has

~~\u~on!.~e re~';;~lt~: ~!1c':.'1~~

models to review, Including Harvard ,

./str.,f~ti!;,~:~~i!~~~~~~~~mmlttee

=e:.;~~.'3'ur~~tia~::'~ :!:

has compiled a notebook containi ng the
academic requirements for undargrllduates of approximately 60 unl-sitles roughly comparaple to SUNYAB
in size and character. This notebook
wi ll serve as an important and
convenient source of reference as the
Committee begins · discussion on
specific programs , couraes, and r&amp;qulrements.
The Reference Subcommlttae has
established a library of reeourcea ,
literature, and reference materials on

~~l~':" ~reahr:':'en~ o~":~:

Cornmlttae members .

(U)SSU~~.:.:.w:~LE
The Subcommittee regarded Its teak
88 twofold : (1) to conatruct a general profile of undergreduate students at
SUNYAB, and (2) to aaaemble a data
beae from which specific questions
1

to aelect samples of greduatlng seniors

demographic chanctarlatlca, their praSUNY'"AB backgrounda, and their
experlenosa at SUNYAB. This would
have permitted detailed analy- of

~=.':': ~~.:,at~ an7t-:lr
0

performance In them.
·
Unfllf1unately, ourconaultationa with
Admlaaiona and Recorda and the
Computer Center led to the discovery
that our initial hOpes were too

~~I f~u'i1,~ion~.:::,·le~~~~~":'~
(lw) SOUNDING SUB.COIUIITTEE
The sounding aub-commlttae w88
=~=-~ to meet the following
. 1. Gather data from a ~tatlve
sample of lldmlniatrators, faculty, end
studenll relative to their attlluclae
regarding~ education.

2. Solicit recommendations from a
representative sample of edmlnlstrators, (acuity and students regarding the
development and Implementation of a
general education program on our
campus.
Three survey Instruments were
wr\tter tos~:~~~tti~~ da:,a.;.,n response
Adminis trative Intervi ew Questionnaire.
2. A 45-ltem FBCulty Questionnaire.
3. A 34-lteJil Student Questionnaire.
Conatructlon of the au ....y lnotrument(a)
The entire general education committee participated i~ providing items for

:,';,~si%~:sl:~~~al~as ~~~=bll~~~t ~~~

.Sounding Sub-Committee categprlzed
the Items Into six major sut&gt;-~ectlons
(i.e. Demographic Data, General Perceptions, Faculty Role, Content;
Organ ization and Student Concerns) .
This interv iew questionnaire was pilottested on a small number of
administrators and subsequently refined for use.

str:~~.J~uR~~~~ty so~~~Z.'!l: an~";

Student Questionnai re . These questionnaires were further refined for ease of
administration by the Survey Research
Center, SUNYAB.

Individual Interview Sample
All upper level adm i ni~trators were
interviewed, using the Admi nistrative
Interview Questionnaire . In addition , a
sample of selected chairpersons and
faculty members was interviewed using
a modifiedNerslon of the Adm i nistrative
Interview Questionnaire. A total of «
separate Interviews was completed.
Each Interview took approximately twcf'
hours to complete.
Faculty Sample
A computer'generated stratified random sample of faculty by academic
rank was completed by the Computer
Center. The original sample size was
400.
Student Sample
A computer-penerated stratified ran-

~~g,S.,~';;~~~~~~~d~~: ~tm~r.~:.,r~~

the Computer canter. The original
sample size was 750.
It Is anticipated that the data base
generated by the Interviews and

~~~~~~~ai~sm~\\l:;:v~l~hthl"mC::,~~~i

information regarding both the development and Implementation of a .general
education program aT SUNYAB .

Luce Scholar
ncminees sought
The Luce Scholars Foundation has
invited U/8 to submit two nominees for
Its 1979-aO program.
Nominees may come from the senior
class , graduate/professional school
1

~~~~~~~· 1~ 8~~~1~:. ~~ju~J

faculty. They must be' American
citizens, no older than 29 on September
1, 1979.
• Noml naes should have:
•a strong , mature and clearly defined
career Interest In a specific field . Except
for two proscribed arees
below),.
there is no limitation on the fields
covared by the Program.
•demonstrated a strong motivation
and potential for acoompllahment
within that chosen career lnterMI .
•a record of high aclldernlc ach'-ment , psrtlcular1y In the field of their
specialized Interest .
•given evidence of an outatandlng
C8j)8City for l~hlp, either on
campus or off.
•a more than usual openM88 to new•
Idees and a sensitivity to their fellow
human beings.
• Nomlneea will be considered Ineligible If they have a profeseed ,
Interest In or heve concentrated
• aclldernlcally on: As/an eJfeira, lnclud- •
lng language, literature, history, polltics, philosophy, or any other upec:t of
Asian studies; and lntemat/onal ,.._
tiona, Including lnternetlonel bualor finance, diplomatic aarvlce, lntwnatlonal Journal lam, or imy relatlld field.
Individuals will also be coneldered
Ineligible If they have . ai'*Y hlld ..
algnfflcMt axpoaure to Aela, whether
through aervtce In the P.-oe Carpa, a
parlocf of hnlgn atudy or ,....,_ In
Aela, axt~ travel In thai region, or
eome o t h e r -·
· Nomlnatlona muat neech tha Prwldenfa Offloe by Nowmblr 1. au.uona.
lhould be dlncted to Dr. M. Cwlota
81 1131$-2801.

c-

a-

... . !.: : :

�........

0

Attrition

Studies show that great distances
between buildings, living off-campus
tend to turn-off students
By Joyce Buchnowskl
• Roportor Slott

There Is no simplistic rationale for
Why U/B has r:ecently been experlenc·
lng student retention/attrition· problems, University spokespersons lndl·
cate.
.
For the past two years , the University
has fallen short of Its projected
.....,.ollment. Although registration quotas wer8 met In almost aJt areas,
officials have found that an Increasing

f~~~~~~~A:! a:r~~;'~~:n~~
problem

Is

keenly

felt

by

the

~~;:'~~!!:,~~"a':o:~C:nr!t~~~\ 1/:~/::

Possible explanations tor retention/
attrition problems nationally are sug-

=~~5=~~~\~o~gy'1.11~t!~~!t~n"ci

Carol F. Creedon, a paper Which the
Reporter has learned, has Informed
many of the deliberations of the U/B
panel studying the problem (see

st~~n ~~~·~11-;,..utloned that
the pro~em Is a result of "an extremely
Intricate Interplay of ideas among a
multitude of variables," so attempts to
~~~~~l'd::t~ie causal factor would be
The authors explained that, only
since the '50s, have researchers

~~~~~~~~~~ o~hestu~~~~. E~tis~~~~~
research prove,s, however, that environ·

ment plays a major role.
1..8r;elnatHullona Ieee problema
A "1969 study cited bY. the authors,
notes that large Institutions: "a) reduce
students' confidence In themselves In
terms of their social acceptability and
scholastic ability; b) are less likely to be

~=~~ c':im~~~t7!~; ~) ~~~ng:~ ~~~~
an

contact between students and faculty. "
Other research has con(lrmed that
Institution's physical size affects
attrition rates. Panos and Astin, In a

:::a~\~':Jen';:~~~": ~~~~ ~:e g~~,;n~
1

to another on campus, the greater the
attrition.
Housing seems to be another
significant factor. According to Pantages and Creedon, "r_,.,h has
conclusively shown that students ·nvlng
oH campus are much mons likely to
drop out than those who live on
campus."
An .lnt......tlng footnote Is that the
authors cited divergent views pn
retention factors of students who reside
In fretemHy or sorority houses. One pair
ol ..-chera In 1965 found no
significant difference In attrition rates
for th- atudenta, while an earlier

study In 1956 cor.ciuded that students
living In such qua{lers reflect the ·best
retention rates. Still another study

~r.f~~ n~~~ 1\:t 'lg~in~r:s:~~ ~~
fraternal organizations on campus
"decreases the overall attrllion rate of
that Institution ."

Dropping out
Pantages and Creedon also reported

~r;,~~c~u~~.~~n~~t~ru~~~. 8f

Demos, It was found that the decision
to withdraw from school Is made over
an extended length of time. Other
research which focused on the
communicative process Involved In
dropping out, noted that students
generally spoke with their peers about
withdrawing but did not make contact
with faculty or staff until after their
decision was made.
A 1965 study by Boyer and Hall,
however, found that students who wish
to drop out Qarly In the year "are more
tentative In their decision ," so an
interview with a counselor could
succeed In persuading at least some of
them to stay.
In their conc)uslon, Pantages and
Creedon recommended that colleges
"design and Implement effective lnter~~f!!'Jut~gp~~fl~n~o minimize the
Whattodo
More specifically , among their
recommendations they state that more
comprehensive orientation programs

~~~~~ f~sh~;~~~~;anes'\~t~~en:~r

The authors advised that orientation

g~~p~:,mgerf~g~!d th~gug~~nu~ u~~':," y~~~

Instead of at one time. Counselor
service should be better publicized to
·the university community, they recommended . "An active outreach program
for risk students Is essential ," they
said.
The authors noted that an "early

Gerda Wetasman

K~eln,

IIIIth or and

Honor Outatw~dtng Women acheduled
lor nex1 waek. ·
Sponsored by the U/8 Community
Advlaory Council, tha luncheon will be
held, Wadneaday, October 18, at noo,,
In tha Statler Hilton Golden6allroom.
Mrs. Klein, who now resides In
Kenmora, Is known lor her bookS, The"
8/ua RoN, which deals with mentally
handicapped young people, and A// Bur
My Ufe, an autoblog-"lcal account of
Jawlah ...rtarlng and survival during
World
A natl,.. of lllelltz (Biellko), Poland,
whaN aha Hvad wHh her parenja and
brother llhlla Ger..- arml• ocSi:upled
that country, ahaanclherfamlly wwe all
-t-ICIIIJiqlfon camps.
In~. 1M, .. lhe Nazi

w•••.

............. crumblifiO UncMr advanC-

•.ooo -

Ing AJ!Ielf 1r00pe. 1M
......... of oemp al Slleala _..
- - - 1,0110 ...... .atward toward
- ~~---:QNideiiNIU.tlr lhea.tapo.
Atlhe end of1lie nwdl, aha- Ofl8

Arts panel tonight
The reildency of Merce Cunningham
&amp; Dance Company beg ina tonight W.lth a

l~~~~~urt:.;~m~t~be:~~~!&gt;A~':

of lnternationalfy known figures In the
arts lncludn, bealdea Merce Cunningham, his compant,o music director,

~=~erco-:.,ohn1 er "r.irtrn-~,1~=

and Al~rlght-W.::.x Art Gallery director,
Robert T. Buck, Jr. Moderator Is Eather
Harriott Swartz, ..,esldential eaalotant
for cultural affairs. The oympoalum Ia at
8 p.m. In Weidman Theatre, directly .
above the cafeteria In th~ Capan/Norton
complex at Amherst. To guide you,

::n::,.~:!"!tl::. ~nl"'t!t~b.tr~.:

In Parldi\Q Lot 5 (tha tarve one .-r
Governors Residence, extending 1o the

bock of Capen) to further ahow the way.

a~t.r/r,aJ.:~fli;!t~~~it~r~l~a~~

and tha F - of lhe BuHalo Theatre

~~~nrn:'~ r:n~eo.::~:·: .

Shea's fuuafo Thaatrs. Friday Ia XU/B

r~~:~· .:~ ~.r~.:~-:~~ :nnda~

performance of "Summ.apece," a
claaolc • of the Merce Cunningham
repertoire, for which U/B·baaad ,corn·
poser, Morton Feldman, wrote tha
mualc. Profnaor F-an will conduct
the Craatl.. AuoclaW. when the work
lo ptayad on Friday night.
Thla Buffalo appearance of Merce
Cunningham &amp; o.nce Company directly
follows their aolck&gt;ut Broadway run.

1

~:'d ~f,~':.~';:, ~~~~~~~l"'!na~

peer counselors, along with faculty and
dorm advisors, are Instrumental In

helf~~ato~ed~ag~~~

also suggested t'l:t freshmen be given greater
exposure (In classes and dorms) to
older students who can serve as role
models regarding study habits and
commitment to the college.
In one of their last nscommendations,
the authors suggested that new

:=o1!c~~g.~~~u~~r"l~~tP!~r~~~
~~!~t::f~idpr~~~:Ya~3rt~a'.:s\~~~~~
faculty advisors, they said.

Author Gerda Klein will
address Women's luncheon
==·du~~t~~m~:;;~
Unl. . .lty .R4icognltlon Lunchean to

Mere. Cunningham.

{li'OIIdlltr

of fewer than 200 survivors. The
concentration camps and march had
claimed the lives of her entire family
and all her friends .
She met Lt. Kurt Klein, commander
of an advanced contingent of U.S.

=~~n~~~~'l,'l~ '!h,"::r ',~~,:.~~

then came to the United States.
Mrs. Klein's address will precede the
prsaentatlon of awards for outstanding
service to the community and a
profession which will be made . by
Charles M. Fogel, acting executive vice
prealdent at U/B. To buy tickets, call
636-2925.
.
Women to be honored are Slater Mary
Charlotte Barton, GNSH, president of
D'Youvllle College; Maxine N. Branden·

=lop=tut~t~!:"f~:;:; G~ :~~

Orewelow, a public nslatlona apec(allst;
Mary L. Hentian, community ratatioiis

._visor for the New York Telephone

Company; Or. Jean Northcott, research
chemlat with the Allied Chemical
Corporation; Merle V. Richardson, 19th
District Erie County Lealslat()(, and
Helen lkban, a nutrltlonlat actiwl In
community affairs.
Nun·t'rofit 0,-.

V.S. Pu~t:a~c
PAlO
BuffaJn, N. \ '.
Pcrn1h Nu. J 1 t

•Calendar
~-7.col.41

LECTIIAE I DEMONSTRATlOH•
Rlchonl wt1 ond g;ve s
-..,.ntion oo Xoroa Art. College B Office ,
451 Porter Quod, Elicotl. a p.m. Free.

STUDY SKI..LS LA11
Tho Study Skits Lab at lho Uniller&gt;lty Lowmg
Canlaf. 384 Boldy Hoi, Is open for tutoring In
reading and •)lo&lt;!Y · Hounl ore: Moodoy.
~. and Friday. 10 o.rn.-3 p.m.;
11 a.m.-2 p.m. The Lab 1s open to 1111 U / 8

T-.

students.

Nodces
CRAFT cEHtER

Craft"""""""'

in pottory, - · · poltefy,
jewelry, • - gloss. non·llllver photognlphy,
photognlphy (block and whlta), c:andloiTWing.
stone setting, clolaonno · ........ dt·
- · floor loom w.vlng, and lldYIInced photography . . achodulod cU1ng lho month 01 October. For lnfomwtion, lll1ono 636·2201 IMondov·
Tluo9aY. 1·5 p.m.. and 7· 10 p.m.: Fr1day and
Saturday. 1·5 p .m.). or Ylolt lho COnlaf at 120
MFACC. Eiic:olt, - . _
MBA DAY AHO ~STUDENTS

1978·79
Copies -

138Croaby.

MBA- ... now..-.
been placed In mol -

outside

PROQIIAII FOR STUOENT SUCCESS~
Eighteen """"""' ska-buldlng and personal
~~lho-oiOctobor 18.
llnx:lu8s
prog&lt;wn
..
-·
at lho DSAdooCit&gt;lng
Progrwn lho
Offiee.
1OIH
10·
Nortoo

Hoi.

RESEARCH FUNOS

-fulda ... from l h o - - o l - - - l o r t a c U t y - - - ..
Fundo ore to bo 1.-d for octlorH:rionted public
lnlsrest.--.:hl)nljocts. Applcotion-ls
~1.For~andrui-lhorlnforlre.

tion. CO!'Ioct lho Centsr for lho ~ o1 Aglrpg,
Buttor Amox A. 831 ·3834.
.

-who-

IICHDOLOF IlANA~ API'UCATIOIII
to 111P1Y • on1or1ng Jun1ora
lor . . Sc&gt;rtng 1878 moy pick up
fornw In 151 ~. in . . DUE
- I n 205 Sqoft. or In 370 11/FICC, Eltootl.
~lor- ol oppllcodlono I s bor1.

""'**""'
]ho -

rn-ilac:we
lltd cu. ..

1-.a ..

---111'\'llllonatl.a.-21.
- · 8cPp Hoi. 8-11 p .. .. " - -

·~·

Exhibits

Not_,,.. -

AliT~

The

.

r-. Arllol-

ol prlnll, -.go, . . . . . and ........ by
lin Bulloto . . - . ~ II. 2nd floor, -

Clua&lt;t
Elioolt Cclq&gt;lox. tion, inqulrull538-2137.

PSST&lt;W

·-

-t

WIUT1NO PLACE
Do yOu - d u o ? Como to . . Wrttlnil
Plsce, • - drop-ln centlor f o r - who wont
help ·~· drafting, or - . g l1elr wo1tlng.
Wo . . at 3311 Baldy Hoi oo h
Campus.
Tho Witting P1sce Is open ~ 12·4 p.m.
and nlghll, except Fr1day, 8-8 p.m. For
Ulhor lnfonnatlon, C&lt;ll1lllct-. Gonion st
636·23114.

n.r. ...

·

For--

bo.-and--at

. . opening ,..,.._, to bo hold Octobor 14
ln~ B .8-11 p.m.
OOUCIL.UCOOI'III~

c:-

Tho -.go ol Douglao
00 dloplor
In Hoyoo Hoi lol&gt;by .... Octobor 27. Hounl
. . g a.m.·5 p.m. WMkdl)ls lf1!d 11 a.m.·

4p.m. oo...,......:

-lbwy.-

IIUSIC~

,

•
Tho Centsr ol . . ~ and Petfamlng
Hal. IIYolql Octobor 31 .

Atfo,

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO I .. , ,

OCT~ S; 1978
VOL 10 • N0.5

We.expected

25,500, gof
'24,579
Thla fall's enrollment flgurae may
have "looked llka" 25,500 the flrat nek
of the aemaeter, but the vial on of those
w•ing otit the eetlrnatea was fuzzy, the

'fr:{{,IT.=i1:'/':N

has turned out to
- be about 900 students. short of that
5

:~~~·J,1&amp; :!~~:~ t~~~~het~;.:

freshman class Ia SOI'Oe 250 students
Jerger than pred~ - 321111 12 Ill.

exact.

The Initial projections would have put
the University right on budget '-1,
officials aald. Now, we will be ahorfsomething which· Prealdent Robert L
Ketter told the Faculty Senate Executive
Committee-thla week will not ...._,.
notice In Albany et budget time.
Charles M. !=ogel, acting executive
vice president, Indicated that the
shortfall In erwollment occumod among
ret..-nlna atuclenta - "pertlcularly In
M!Uard Flllm01'8 College and aaoondarlly In DUE." Tllflllla for r..hmen,
profeaelonal atudenta. ,and grad at..denta were eltller'lllllt or excaeilad.

VIetnam revisited:

Why the drop?
Why the drop In MFC ....:1 DUE?
No one can say with any assurance,
Fogal Indicated. Studies have not -been
made, tlut WHIIIe, 118 prornlaad. .
Pemape, atudinll get fad UP with .
l;lualng after being here a while, he
did not show
suggested; althouQh _ !·~~complaint In a
up aa a aubetanl"f
0

Was it their fault or ours
that we didn't get our way?
, Panelists differ on whether it matters
Whether 1M ~ d~
mtnt from VlelnMI Ia to 11e , . . . _ ...
a mHitary defMI or not I a largely a matter

of aemahllca, In the opinion of Guenter
Lewy.
America
Lewy, author of a
In Vletnem, was the llrsl - " " " at the
campus confarllnce on .-ppralalng the
war, last Friday.
It /a rather cleer, ha uld, that the
U.S. did not ach- Ita key objectivethe creetlon of a , _ and Independent .
South Vietnam . "II America want a to
pnwent similar fallu,..ln the future It Ia
__,tlal that ' " find Ciut as preclaely

new-·

:l'm~~~~.~· ~"'1::"~~~~flatil of battle, the expenditure of ~12
billion and much dedlcation and good
will, the outcome was'auch a flaaco ."

Of couraa, the final battle In 18.75 was
loat by the South V I e t - . but thla
marety laada to a raptnalng of the
-'lon, L~ contandacl. Tha South
Vletnameae aimad ~JRVNAF) had
bean equipped and t
by the u.s.
during 20 long ~. They had been
taught the Amllrfcan way ol - · Why,
than, did they collapaa 80 Ignominiously?

!. ,

Maaaachueetts proteaaor - -· ,
Tl!a 8olltll V l e l - Army was
weiHqulpped; but its equipment was
poorly malnta(ned. The per1ormance of
the troops was Impaired by Insufficient
attention to the values of training and
continuous combat drilling. Officers

=~~~K!·emg,.:::fu~d~~h~f ~
1
~/o npe'i~ Americana," Lewy

recounted,

President

Thleu

would

=~~~·~~~ry"f~~rlc':.~~Wt~~

merely be transferred to some other
Important post. Some of the 116
Vietnamese generals evacuated from
Vietnam 1111'ivad In the U.S. with nothing

~~ :~'7~~ m:~~r~~~!':::e

0=

poaalble by llllcltly-galnad wealth ."
The entire Vletnarnaae society waa a
mesa, Lewy uld. Thleu waa not the
kind of person who could be a widely' reepectad leader. He had no mass
support. Hla government was as corrupt
as the mlntwy ....:1 was . heavily
Infiltrated by Viet Cona.
. AIIO!IQ as the Amerfc:ana were. there,
corruption was acoaptad by many as
toltnble becauae the fat often came off
Uncia Sam. later, h o -. the graft
affactad the dwindling Income of
ordinary South Vlelnameea ....:1 lncreaa-

. ad the unpopul,&amp;lj!)o of the gOI!III1ll,Jlent.

~J.'l~~o~';'di':rno~~~~

IMtfall.
·
: •
Wllo was lila ...-11
A aacond~ln ~n
Despite often-hilatd chargea thet the
problema,
?"'
lniallatlve
~
• may ba that
South VIetnamese were American
80 many u~ 'Want to get
puppets, Lawy contended, '1he U.S. In
Into 80 law majora. Thtra'a no ..., lha
fact lacked the leverage necaaaary to
Unl_..lty can accommoctata all wflo
prevent Ita ally from making crucial
mistakes. Aa a result of anti-colonialist - enter aa r..hmen Inc! axpact 1o
concentrate In Management, Engl.-lnhlbltlona we refralried from l).resslng
lng and the haelth flelpa. One aurwy,
- !Of a dec1alva AK&gt;rganlzatlon of the
101' example, aho•th41 40 per oant of
South Vletnameae lll1'nad forces under a
combined command aa had been the - thla ,_;-a froah w.m to ba engl.-a.
~ th8v 1.-n In :!hair~ Of
case In Korea."
·juniOI' ,_.. thet t1111r can't get the
Would a different approach have bean
major of thalr • choioa, many go
•
any better?
el-here. Maybe n'ra going to " Lew)' wasn't aura_
, but agreed with
1
Robert
Komar, former chief of
,
pacification efforts In VIetnam, "that n
IIOIII'CII aakl.
'
would have had little to loaa alld much
':to gain ·by using more vigorously our
Aakad If hla Unl..,..lty-wlda panel ori
power over the Government of VIetnam
attrition Gld retention has any plaualble
expl-lona, ..,...lveOI'olherwlae, 101'
~;~r";J:•
th':i:: ounr- the claaaiC trap Into Which great
powers h - 80 often fallen In their
not .. The penal haa bean meeting only
reletlonahlp with W8llk a111ee, •
alnce aprlng, Slggelkow lndleatad. Ita
prtmwy Job, anywe, he adVIaad, Ia to.
lind ...,. of nilklng U/8 mOf8
Wa dldn'l IIMw
attractive to atuclants whO . . hera now.
"We haw to find out how to kaap them
hera," he uld.
have likely been the same, 101' deaplte

:=

w.

~::'

..s:.e

-rn~Of~~1=.--111W::

~~enC:::tlrr~~l. sl~~":.S

how

.t~;. '(:!y~:= ~~~':':~Yci

.....VIIiiiiiiM,., . . . . 1,0411:1

Why_........,_.....,

Wby - . Initial regl-lon aetl-_
maiM overblo-?

~~~~~~~

aattlng atudenll to advlliloa l!llllater
alleed al at.lf, 10 to
-apaek, during the flrat week ohol-'.
- · A&amp;A offlclala _ . looldna Ill the
uma time last yew, Fogal Uild, wing
that aa a baall on Wllleli to ~ X
per oant of atoo.nta raglallnd llftw IIIIa
point last yew, the rWIIJIIng -.t, 10

, that the Offioa -

:.:.=.:-c,..~~to
lbe trouble -

lhlt a muoh 1..-r

~hed~-'Yiiilcl

~-OOfl!(ng=---·
a..s

to .,._.. ........

The two,.,._,~. Tille
elllllnataa

~':Zi.

... .. ....,...
.-.-.uw
buret .... NaNtrllllon

alolacl, FOQII IIIIIL , _

IIICitW

hliln, "-'

~ IIUdanta

-

ftltlng to

willie ..... _ , , . -

...,.._ IIMI,

he ....-.

111111 MY

further llllfta •llllliollllnlllota wtU In
- -.al
clllllrlbutlon
al lllucMnta
1111111111
._
...,..., not
In 1M
..~

................. ·--·-··-·

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1

0...1,1171

.:

Reconstructio-n
Expert says rebuilding
costs less, creates more jobs
than Insisting on new str~ctures ,
By Joyce llclc"-aall

""""""'-

Thelocal developer who plana to alnk
mllllona Into crsetlng .., entertainment
center from the old DL&amp;W Station In
Buffalo can take heart from noted city
planner Gene A. Bunnel~ who told U/B
eog Inearing students last week that
such projects generally Colt two-thlrda ..
teas than new construction, create 60
per cent more jobe per dollar, and end
up with "mora peraonatlty'' than newer
structures.
•·
Bunnell, director of the· Building
Reuse Project tor the Maaaachuaetta
Department of Community Affaire, Ia
author of Built. to Last: A Handbook on

=~:~gaw~/%ed ~ ~~"8 gra:!~ fo~S:
8 11

8

study on "Removing Obstacles to
Building Reuse at the Local Level."
Bunnell spoke while showing slide
after slide of _successful renovation
projects throughout Msasachu.~tts. He
0

~f;~ ~~~~~~e ,gH6u~~l;. ~~~h ~~Ia:

have experienced an Industrial decline
and a sense of negativism resulting
from II. Lowell's residents, parilcularly
Its youth, have fell that leaving ttie city
Is essential for success.

·1~:"h'a~n~~~~~~np.;~:'~ ':~d~;:!,• ~~~:

that Ed McMahon was born there,"
· Bun'n1111 remarked.
Now -the situation Is ,.beginning to
tum around for tha f011om city. Plans
are !lnderway to tum Its numerous
deseffed mills and connecting canals
Into an entertainment/recreation area.

ConstrtJctio~

Once a Problem, now tha hope
The abandoned mills were once
considered the "cause of the problem,"
but now they stand as the city's "hope
for the future, • Bunnell observed.
Evidence of blight Is atilt visible In
Lowell, said Bunnell, but residents now
look at the city in more positive terms.
"Thay think about what makes their cttr,
unique rather than like everyplace else, '
ha Indicated.

Cowper ready'to start on
;entwo englneerlrrs bufJdings, .
flrstacademlc structures since '75

State u;;,..,.,IY

The
~atructlon
Fund tw1 ....._••• 178,000 contract
lo the Jolin W•.Qiwper Comp.ny, Inc.,
, of T~:tct;bulld two engineering
bullcll~ .. Alntjeqt.

a!: ...::c:=:'m'.:~:..ar:c:

c.nnon Dealgn, lflc1,,

of Grand Ia fane!,
Will provlda offtoa, .tabomory ano
Cla8lfoom ...-,tor tha departmentsof

Clvlri.:nc1Eaal~=:=~1r~~ed

dlractty _ , of and wiH .ba connected
10 111!1 ~- Clifford C. Fuma
Hill by a~ pacleatttan bridge. It
Will ba three aloltaa high with
~mately 3!1~000 net eq,.. feet.
The F - bui10IIIQ ~ tha U/B
Of Cllliililcel Engineering
llllfta.~~per» tor other_ engineering

:r.::·
of

F-.

the WMIBulldlng,tocatad nor1hwill ba two_alorlal, and wtll
lflllllllldlila _..20,000 - nat

....
:xi
0011111111

a1e1tcn. whloh Will oonllnue
.. ~of Fuma1 and Bell
...... Ill .... F£A8 eubocMipua, will

--..ot~brlckaand

a

..... . . _ . - - - flcade.
"Dr. Jolin A. Hill, wiDe ........... lor
................. thalboth
,-wll ooritltln a large IIUIIIbar of

........ rzr.-

IMtruCIIonlt

and

construction morat011 um at the campus.
Those buildings- the John A. Beane
Center, the Samuel Helm Warehouse
and the Philip Oorahelmer Lab
ar.rthouse - are . nearing exterior
completion With some early Interior
work underway.

as

~11sc:'f~~usfrl:!l"l::;1/~\,!u:,:ng:

transformed Into excell&lt;1nl housing.
Such renovation projects, Bunnell said,
preserve neighborhood Identity and
stability along with putting property
back on the tax rolls.
Renovation has other advantages
over new construction . Often tha
facades of older buildings contain
finely-detailed sculpture which Is

P.nlng lola, ...,.., bike patha
Other construction projects underway Include Interior roads ,
perking Iota, a bike path, 88Yeral site
~ton jobs 8nd some utility
dlatributton.
Nee! noted that one of five pai-k[ng
Iota now under construction will be
....ty thla fall with the other four ·to
follow next aumrrier. The Iota will aild
.., eddltlonal !500 perking spaces. ·
The bike/pedestrian oath which runs
from Cepen H811 at the center of the
campus to Maple Roed paralleling the
Flint Campua Entrance Ia complete
excapt for ramped curb cuts lo
accommodate both the handicapped
and bicycle&amp;•
Mewlwhlle, the Department of
Transportation contlnUM w011&lt; on · the
~ of Mlltaraport Highway and '
on a llrldae which will connect the
Audubon Partway on campua ·to the
Audubon Part~wey which runa through
the State UDC'a Audubon Community.
The Mil~ Nlocatlon Ia alao
axpM:ted 10 be OOI9Pietad In 111110.

0

.

almost lmpoaalble to duplicate today.
Moreo-. older buildings are generally
well constructed and have varied
lnteriora that bestow a aense of
chanacler. In addition, these vintage
structures uaually contain more floor
space than their newer, more aleeklooklng
A prectlcai conaldetatlon, In eddltlon
to a lower cost lector, Ja that renovation
projects can aiao ~ piiMed ao that
portions of a buildinG can be occupied
while work Ia underwiy on the rest.

repl-··

Not just._....... .
A building doe6 not h..., to be a
"monument to be worthY. of renovation, emphasized Bunnet . He noted
that vacant aupimlatketa with "raw
space" can easily be transformed Into
community centn, while old schools
make excellent houalng or office apace.
The bonuses from such undertakings
usually Include high ceilings, a
neighborhood setting, more storage
Sp!IC&amp;, and a mature-looking landscape.
Many newty-conatructed apartment

;".,:'~~:at~~he"::u':;at~on 10

lngs of older Americana, aaya Bunnelf.
They also do not generally have enough
bedrooms to house a family with more
than two children.
One reason why older buildings have
frequently baen razed to make room for
new construction Is that tax Incentives
• have eneouraged ft .. Bunnell said
Massachusetts Is now working to
rectify this situation . The state Is also
reassesslog and rewriting fire codes, so
older buildings are not unduly
penalized .
Another factor which has Inhibited
renovation Is that architects have
preferred to create thalr own designs.
Bunnell rep011ed that, fortunately, more
architects are now becoming IncreasIngly aware of the challenges that exist
In reworking older structures.

It has to ba weiLdona
Talking about the renovation In
Boston's .Oulncy Market area which
spurred a renaissance of activity
downtown t~ere. Bunnell 11181sted that
no one, nof even the developers,
realized the lmPIICI It would have on the
city.
'
In order for other downtown venturas
to be as successful, Bunnell said, the
renovation project must be well done
and must provide attractions not
available In other areas of the city.

Hoyt talks on environment
'

"Tha state of the environment In 1978
"I don't think any Industrial counties
In the State have met the standards. As
has people very worried," says
Assemblyman Bill Hoyt.
a means of environmental progress,
lha DEC negotiates with cornpanles to .
As a member of the State Assembly's
Environmental Conservation Commitmeet the aiMdarda, wtthou1 jeopardlztse, Hoyt Ia attuned to Buffalo's ·
lng the job opportunltlea that the
company oHIIn!" ataylng In Buffalo,"
probte s, as he Indicated In a
preaen'r..tion on " Environmental PolleyHoyt explained. fhe ChOice must be
Making" at tha campus Environmental
balanced betweero forcing companies to
Study Center's "Baglunch Co11oqula"
close down and leave, and simply
.Friday.
accepting the envtronmant for better or .
The Legislative apparatus for policyworae In order to ' Insure economic
stabilitY and growth.
makl.ng Is like a ladder, Hoyt said . A bill
Hoyt suggested that Industries be
can be killed at any rung on the way up
After a bill Ia drawn froin the hopper
given tax bruks to help them meet
environmental etandanla. He aald atao
Hoyt described , It Is directed to t!Mi
proper sub-committee. If they pass It It
that ''Owr ·the last 7-8 years,
goes on to the tull committee.
environmental progreea has bean mede
Following debate there, 11 Is marked on
as a consequence of atlffar taws being
tha State ·Asaembty calendar. If and
passed ." Student• and faculty strongly
when tha ASMmbly P888M the bill It
dlaagreed, referring to the amount of
negotiating BethleiM!m Slaelllaa carried
muat alao be acc;epted by ~he sana'te.
The final procedure requires tha . on with tile DEC In or11ar to bypaas
Go-nor to elgn the bill Into taw.
predisposed a1andanll. "Bethleham
"It makes It easier to gat a bill P888ed
St~ will -ually fade out, but It
when thechalrmen . . tn favor of it." he
cant shut down I-na 7,000 or 8,000
aald. Hoyt expNSMCI coni~ In
worl&lt;era lobleaa," aald AAIII!Iblym.n
Peter 8811e, • commlealoner of the
Hoyt· One atlldent Informed the group
Department of Ejlvtronmantat
!,_~-~leham Ia Importing~ from
tton, 01'- ~~ Chaliman 1 the
.,.. ...aandolharetaWe•wt.
A-..llly'a EJWiron'-.1 Con~
Prof.._ Frwd Snell 11n1ug111 up the
a.rnant
' - of .rwouroe _,.,end aked
tton Commtttaa and Senat
Srillth, cflalmW. of
Senate
why thai bill ...,, orllntad towards
nacyctlng? "fleuM Instead of - : · .
Envtronmenllll Conaet*IOn Commtttaa
In getting ~ II8Hed
said Silell. ~Y crMte Mother
Into law.
Industry to Clean up
AaaemSiudanta• and '-•"..,._.., ..
_..__
_ ..__ . -~~~~
.
- H -orleiltacl
llgl-.l but
II added
mono
that

eon-

U::

-taer

=~U..:~~!.'!!
.wlroni!WIIIf
....,_.._
8tutlent =..t::'~
One
a1r ua111y
elo. ' - not

'-·

~-:- !.,~
Cofteer=--l of &amp;w WI I
neaotialtthel.::o•~ to
Yat,

the q_ua111y

- · - - ···

the u 8lao lncliideil a tl,metable for
811mlnatlng land IIIIa.
PoliCy-making cleolalone -

corn-

pllcatecf by the eco.-.~c ~
Leglalatora leek a
thli - ' " ' - t a l
qulllty of life .... ~ atajjlllty,
Hoyt llild.

~--'·~·-•boocur.
at-

�~

......

DentistS on the run
U/B dentf11 freshman Peter Purcell
captured top honors In the flrsr
Annual Dental Alumni Run September
30. Purcell completed the 2.4 mile
Delaware Park course In 13 minutes,
42 seconds. The Run was held In
conjunctiOn with the Greater Niagara
Frontier Dental Meeting, September
28-30, sponsored by the U/B Dental
Alumni Association.
Dr. Robert Henog finished second
at 14,05, followed by Dr. Dennis
Blair who completed the course In
15,09. Herzog's office teamcomposed of his wife, Mary, Kathy
Lannen, and hlr~1self-took the " Best

Office Team" trophy. Some I 10
dental alumni, practlclng"dentlsts,
• wives and students participated In
the meet.
Of spec.l allnterest In the run was

Dr. Edward Dom, an 86-year-old
practicing def'tlst from Buffalo, who
walked the course. Dom Is an Internationally-known participant In race
walking and a lpngtlme physical fitness enthusiast.
Another participant who believes
fitness knows no age, Dr. Bill
Wlenbeck, 72, of Williamsville,
finished 75th.
, _ . . , . _ N o. 2_1._ndlondNo.1...._.

~enlists told .fitr-ess., important_to=to~al wel~l-bein9
lilY Mary llelh Spine

ba~nc:!'ul~lete":'.\."-. ~=· o~

self..,ateem .,., ImPOrtant to bOth
physical and'" emotional -It-being,
thoea attending the Greetar N. . . .

~m~er:'...:::..:"to~~~~:~~

fltneaa 8lqlarta.
Dr. K..,..h Coopar, conald~ by
many the '-ding MllhoriiJ on fltMSS,
told a - ' t y
.,aluatlon
which lncludee teatlng Ia
lmparathe lor " - who to Degln
a fttneaa progrwn. He ...d atraaa
testing can ,..... thoel whoM electr&lt;&gt;cardlograt118 ap.,.r n«maa Wilen tllk8n
•at rest," but tum lllnOrmal upon
physical exartlon. Cooper aleo pointed
out the danger of death from '-1
ettack under euclclen exartlon. Each
year, he noted , there Ia in "epidemic"
of fatal heart attacka IJCfOM the oountry
during football-. ".But lt'a noc the
players - ~·a the lana In ·~atadiUII\I
and at home ln=t ol '
· ,..._.alan
eata who are
ng It,
• audde:l
atraaa Wid exert ' thelt
.Jea -~

OIOWd-.,

~~:::,~"':':-why

lhould
exarclse r.guierly may one day
ln. the
position of a .,_-old man who did
not," Coopar ...a.d. That YGIIIIG man,
unuead to exan:lae, had 10 driiQ a ~Mar
he'd ataln to hll-. which- a mile
o.- more away. He wea . _ found cleM
of a heart attack, hla bl)dy unuead to the '
atraln .
~
While It's acceptable to lkip • day o.10 In a .-gul.: proggm cleelgned 10
at::.'!!*' the put_, and GMIIo-

..=.-,:

':-:'xarcl:r'~ ~

.. _

--

81101hartwo wiMICI will be~ to
rebuild to the teve1 pnwtoualy eatole..cl.
And, althOugh
101M 2.5
mnnon
In the
today,
he poln
~~tom. ol

:r= "*- ...u.s.

_...
oountrr ....

noted that 200 years ego, 95 per cent of ·
.~~':de ~"t'~t:;,~ ~ '::,.,~
the wor1doao waa accomplished by
recent "warnings'' regardlnst •"dangarmusCle but that today, 95 per cent Is
ous" chemicals In food . Only two to
done by machine. Judging from ·the
three per cent of the nltrlt.. consumed
~lgurea on obesity In Ariler1~ too
many people lint eating more "Iori..· . " by Americana are In the form of cured
meats such as bacon, h_am, and
than they're · now able to bum
bologna, anyway. ''The othar 95 per
up through wor1&lt; o.- exercise.
ceht comes fro.-n radishes, ~ and
While she. acknowledQed that many
other vegetables we eat. Although
women getlnvoi...S In diet and exercise
nitrates are present In these foods, they·
programs In O&lt;dar to look mo.-e
are con-'ed to nitrites by the-.ctlon of
altriiCIIve, ahe said prevention of beck
bactarlaln the mouth." And, he added,
pain ahould be anothar rMaon . Some 80
life expectancy Ia Inching upward ~
per oant of low beck pain which women
year. That's some Indication that the
auffar could be prevented through
presence of charnlcala In food ian,
exercise, she aeld. By not exercising
causing the damage we are led to
arm and. ahouldar muscles edequately
beii8Y8.
to lilt and carry, women are throwing
the burden onto their backa.

-::carn::w:: ~:::::~~-:;'~.rea::.':.~·

ly
aeld the educator, wife and mother,
" but they' ll glvethiolr Jobs and families a
bettar ~ .J f they take the time."
Othtn, noted, arit 10 Inhibited
that they refuse to jog or walk outside

~~:,.-:,~:.:::~~~:.~':

to put their dealre to took and tear
good above 811Y Inhibitions. Just lgno.-e
!hoea who at.,.,"- advised .
.
-

Facldlela arallacl, IIIII ohentlcela .......
Dr. Frederick J. Stare, author and
nutrttlonlot, told the audlenoa that
lnatead of liking weight ofl with
aenalble dleta; too m...y people fall fo."facl" .-glmena. Thav wWll to belleoe In
magic, he aeld. "Moat n11QaZ1Ma eapaclally thoee aimed at a 1an1a1e
·audience - oonlllln at leeat one diet
which proml- a great weight toea on 1
*Y llmltacl Vlrlety of foode." ... noMe~
thai
hlghlyttOutecl "Mayo Diet"-

.n~ol;;;~~l!..~:_~~-~lllfl~llalad
the
Clinic- wltlt
........

CJIIIInO and

-..::~--Wltr I
......- •ill*•rna.,......

IMitm..tCIOit...._IWMtiO.....,
:.~ .1111111 ................. Cooi*

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........ .. v;:;:r the
·....,.
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........... CoiNII Fft- . . llld ..... 11101111 ..... ODIIInllled

. . go~ wtlll ..__ 8111
•

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The
ol

Menial health Ia -~--

co~~~~~~;.k/.':'~lt•:~~~~!•:.ao~~

boll the· definition of " mental health"
down to one term It would be
"self..,.teem ." The highar a paraon'a
·of aelf-wO&lt;Ih, the
self..,ateem or leas likely he 0&lt; Ia to Indulge In
self-destructive behaYior, aucll aa drug

abuea.

·

·

ch;;tn:;::~!"g'./: =.::.r~~

contributing fectortJ 1/&gt;Ciude whether
parents wara ...tjldnahe, whether
dlaclpllne-lm~-herthe

~~~~=~~~'::.C:..'I'It~ntrol of.
Salk al10 noted that--airwa, rather
than aon1athlng to be · avoided at all
coats, Ia a aort of "8ppca of life" In
certain alluetlona. A" new Job, which
presents a challenge 111111 oppol1..,tty,
could pro'liele thai klnd 'Of ..,_, On the
other hend, though, a"'lliemo to the
boas which remalna: uhanl-.1 and
Ignored by him could produce a
!':'~·\'~~~ Cleflftltely not of the
"Perhapa. one of the moat atraaaful
altuatlona Ia boradom,• Salk laid. "This

::U'~~~n Qra:::: ~0~

aaaembi;'Yine among adulta.• Both .,.,
examplea of people'aau.npta t o themael-. to put their dwn marl&lt; upon
aomethlng.
·

.on·~-:r.:.,~':,! ;;.:.m=.
how
"Panlnta often eat the Pattern o1
their child,., will tater oope with

:raaa~=wh;.anc:a,~• ' ; :

children to avoid tillar trouble. ng

·

�...aaaa

~5,1171

SENATE

LETTERS

Reports top
busin$SS at
FSEC, Sept. 27

Levine says
Cornell article
'Inaccurate'

·-alllpi:'ZI:
T1oe ..-lng of liMo Executive CommlttO.

Edilor:

I think the Unl-.lty community Ia
...ut1ec1 to knOw · mont mout the
01*811on of . the Katherine Cornell
TheiiNr 111M fat Thu..-y'a fMporfer
_...,.s. It Ia unfortunme that the
.utiiOI' of the article choee • a m.Jor
of lnfonnatlon • part-time
..,.,._ whoM peat ~ of
IRillltiblltty cauae tor conalderMIIe ~t to the Unl-..lty.
Thelecta--: .
(1) Th-. Ia no erial a. Thera are
- ' cendldalea lor Mr. Pietruszka's

,

=:.=~==:.
r.r:
'-llomrou.

~

a 28
Sel*mbar ~ etory on · the
Klitwlne Oomllt Themre would c:aualDemGeorge Levine (1) hea
..ulioil" for dellruc:tMI cuta In the Arta
lludael. and 121 11M been
"IMiblolled" by lila chairmen for doing
110. The,_,. (M C8IWful ....,. of The
- - - could knOw and Infer) . .
-nry: lie 11M
thoee cute,
.... - - ~y joined him
In that oppoeltlor'
We

..

-that

!l _ .
.,.. unara

:C::

Despite previous

For one thing, It's the study of signs
sign-using behavior, a lfeld
relatively new In academic circles In the

and

u.s.

It's also ttoe "theme" around which a
new U/B graduate group will be
clustered.
And It's the topic of a roundtable
discussion which · that prospective

~'/!e13,rfnug22wg/.~:'(l p~~~~ay,

Serving 88 organizer of tloe group and
lightning rod tor campus Interest In
the subject Is Dr. Paul Garvin, professor
olllngulstlcs.
Semiotics may be "new" _on U.S.

88 a

ft:lr~:"~;,~~~~=~foid~~~~ea~u~~

notions, It dates to antiquity.
The term ltaall can refer to a
particular' theory Of to semiotics In

~=ith~~~~O: J~~;~~\'3~ysls

can
Bealcally, there are three schools or
aubdlvlalons, Garvin says: a French
approach, a Slavic orientation , and a
Pelrcean thrust (named lor the
American Philosopher, Charles Peirce) .
On campus, notes Garvin, there Is
Interest In both of the first two
8

~~t:~ r:i~cloom:'~~~~~:J~

g!,~~n :f.!: =~o~ ~=~~?al~
member, or simply one who gets
·
mailings.
A listing of courses, presently offered
or projected, wblch have semiotic
content, or 'are of fnterest to semiotics;
Is requested from each . professor
receivi ng the questionnaire.
Garvin knows already of three or four
spheres of campus Interest In wh ich
studies are being pursued.
A large number of Individuals In
English and Comparative Literature are
looki ng at semiotics as a new approach
to literary criticism, he reports. Among

l\'~~:,:;e,.;~(Eo~~~s J~"~..j.,C:~~ '

Gascho, Henry Sussman, and Carol
Jacobs) .
Several faculty In architecture are
drawing on the field as a new approacb
lo design; others, from. Psychology,
Philosophy and Llngusltlcs, are Interested strictly In theory.
Garvin himself Is studying the role at
signs In language behaviors and how

~\~J::is

to coalesce that Interest
Into one of those Interdisciplinary

School.
Recognition 88 a greduate group
raqulrea a formal proposal and to
develop that, Garvin has begun to

=:1n awh...:,or~ t!'.~~"ft::r· ~~
1

ln'l1:'r:,e-li.c,ugh,

even

before

of11clal approval, he's beginning to plan

:1::. •::,~~or.•:;::
about . A dlecuaalon of "Semiotics In
=~t:::;:~·~

Painting" wilt follow In Nowtmber. Alter
that, Gwvln aaya, "we'll - · "
Up to 1!0 faculty appear to be likely
candid- lor tile group, Garvin
bel-.. He's finding out how "likely" .

:=on:.:.':'~~~~.q::~~·~n.:l:::i ~~~
--v

lor the proposal document

people are

~~·r~~n~~ t!J~.;'II~f~':O~ ~;:.·::~~-

:J:~~~~~ ~~J:. ~reua~ea:~

Other disciplines with possible
Interests In the field Include foreign

languages,

art,

theatre.

claaaics,

communications, and computer sci-

ence.
-

Vary few universities In the U".S. have
programs In semiotics, Garvin says.
Colorado and Brown come to mind; as
does Indiana University, home of the
nitlonal society lor the field, where a
major center of study Is located. ,
· A graduate group In semiotics here
would be a far C'Y from the Indiana
program, Garvin admits. It would be
small, with only 'modest support . •
But It would at least mark an attempt
to get something Rolng In this field
~C::~::'.::r~Yi:.•e wit the lmpopance ol
''We have tha basics, the roots; now

we have to cultivate the tree."

Rosalyn Wilkinson appointed _
director of traln_
i ng i,_ Personnel

---.IAollllll. -

-A._....,
..........

.._,
Oiet
~-

~­

...._rm~

Ma. Aoulyn Wllklneon h• been
rwned e l l - of training In the
,....,_. DeDWIIT*Il, Per80nnel 01Rollwt "--'11M announced.
She llolda a B.A. In llubllc retmlona
Oklahoma, and
from the
. , M.A. In
fnOIIIOCial ~I­
CilY from the tJiifiMr81ty of MIUourl.
l'ilriiOn 8llld Me. Wtlklnaon "hea
........ ~ reoogriltlon lor
. . ........ In training, llllbllc
and JclurMIIam, .... hea

Un= of

.
=

lilhlng compreloenalwt pre-retirement
progrema lor - . 1 large area
employers,. such • Harrison Radiator,
Unfon Carbide, Hens and Kelly's,
Catholic Charities, and _Moog, Inc.
In conjunction wltli the OHica of
Affirmative Action/Human Resources
~pment and the Committee tor
~lrement Planning, ahe also
=~ tha Unlwtralty'a program In

---...~··­
In
edu0111on81,
and
0:.1111:.111:-Ma:ln:ftl:I'I:O,_IIIIOIIIYr :::.:;or of Erie

Her · appointment, ""--on aatd,
·.....,p~~aa~zae the Unl-.lty'a commitment to -ataff a..topment at all

: . "';..:,ult~

Suggaetlont to ...,.. 111 Identifying
:=r;:..na.,~ wHI be wetoomed, he

bual-.

. . . . . _ . _ Pfenning Pro-

l:i.:. lar
~

-

tnetrumenlal

In

to the

calcuratlonaand projections are responsible ;

Interest. "Lukewarm ," T'moderate" end
"Intense" are the choices. A further

·~::~;;.u:~ul~n~~~~:;

a~nce!Jlents

contrary, It Ia now apr,;;;;;;jtlhat we will not

Prof. Garvin is attempting to find
who's interested, plans discussion
on what the field is atl about
arid to take a readlna on Individual
What Is Semiotics?

a..pua-. -·

A&amp;Lunlt
heada.are
'distressed'
EdiiDr:

T1oe PrMident announced that the
Supplemental Budget ohould be poaaad by
both hou- ~ldnHe toni~ ~September
~= 1ufl4a ~~~~uatc &amp;ug~=:.,~
Hall aiod design lunda fortlie [)ental facility.

Semiotics-

LET US HEAR FROM YOU
The llaporter . . . _ JOUr views on
pollc:lea, etc.

_would, In all liKelihood, have been
cloeed.
The statements about the Faculty of
Arts and Letters In the. Reporter article
were not only lnaccurme but ii'I'88PO"alble. We have a right to expac1 higher
atandardaol joumallatlc Integrity. -G-veR. Levlne
Oaen,
of Arts and Letters

T1oe Mlnutaa of lllpt«nber 20, 1978 .,...
_.,.., .. distributed .
•• ""'""'of floe-

~·rundlng

r:.:lcen:d~ ~-" :::: ~~f;

=-=-~-~of 1M lllnu .... af
-No.2 ~"-'-

lor the poa,l tlon of
technical di111Ctor of the Katharine
Cornell Themer Ia not an Arts and
Uottera' problem. H ,_.,.h.. been.

(3) The Income Fund Relmburaoble
Account Ia not now adml nlat
through the F.culty of Arts and Letters,
nOf hila I t - ~!eM.
, - (41 118111101ntlna a graduate ...tst81)t
• technfc'al di111Ctor had been a
viable option, Mr. Pietruszka would not
.heve tJeM empiCMid aalong • he w•.
(51 I votuntioeNd to eaaume personlll
reaponalblllty lor the Theeler •
a
aeafure l!f.=,wlllln order to naaolwt a
atapute
enotller admlnlatretMI

;:r.;:',';''.::, at 2:35 to con alder the

=~~a -liiiPfOBCh

for tlie opllmtallc projecllons form&amp;My

~~~~~~v .:~~r":o'hft~~~.::~ol~'n~~

Buffalo'o bMgalnlng poalllon at the Ociober

11

1!t~. mo:"~ ' :netA'r:;"r.;co~~~~~-

l::..fer, g::P.:te and professional &amp;IMII{
tho shortfall exlata primarily In the

undergraduate daytime retumlng enrollment

and In Millard Fillmore College.
Letton .,. being _ . to all laculty and

staff to crM.te effectlw awareness ot our

~sr~~ o:.-defurned~~~.e ~~
01

Program IICC8Uiblllty u well u physical ·
1

=:~" :7et~r~.~ti:0° ot sw:.'!~
11

1

conatllutoa a legally recognized handicap.
The P,..ldent will dlacuu the crliaria fO&lt;
~~'J'.::~e'~.=;"S.::.t'!'.e October 10
11

~e "t:l~~ Jt!~~

copies of a

letter to Prealdent Ketter summarizing the
FSEC'a dlacuselon of September 20
:JI~~~fon t~l~u:~lng
the non-&lt;tla-

of

c. "-tfof!M,..,.._ry
The Secretary had no report.
11om No. S c-mlttoe ~

a.

e,~a. . c-m~ttoe :

of

The Chairman dlatrtbuted copies
~=:;c's.=~-lona of the Charter
the

of

s.teoJI~~Sgt~?h~Egyla~ ofJiho ~';/~

Faculty and tlie Charter of the Faculty
Senate be approved u modlllad. The
motion PASSED.
''*"No.4 Old luolneoo

t ~t\':l!"~mltteo.

The

~:.\'~~~~~n "a.~ ~~-:.,~Ml~

Nancy Fabrizio (11180r. Anal! no Hlcka !1979~,
Kenneth Ki- (1880), Bernice Pou 1980 ,
Alfred Price (1880), Myleo Stalin 1979,

~~rt1!-ndar~l'r:!On~ow;~'- ~~ittoo
~~...::ly-wlde Registration Commli·
toe. At tho '"uelot Of liMo P,..ldont,
nomlnatlono_.._....., to - t·ihe
faculty on thla commlttaa. T1oe purpooe of

. r:::..

=oc;;"T.:•~o en.:,ra ::"'=~
lnvolvild In :,'?'lotratt.n; to

!::"de on-go,:::S

=~0 .::-~~ ~lflca-

tlono; and to - a -ltatlve function
to i.he~C:.':c".:'l:::..
AI the

::.O":!tr.:..~o~ou":EC~i:lc~~

c-mttteo. A alate of namoa will be
prapared by tlie FSEC - ' " ' " ' " from

~:.c:? J:;.~=ngSc=~

and Natural Bclenceo &amp; M.ttoomatlca.
4. Admloolono Commlttoe. Nominations
for the commlttoe- APPROVED.
Commit·
-5. A-..lc Planning on nameo
tee. Olacuaalon ~~= ~'"':'th':,:.\:. commlotoe.

:.

c:::::'"::. ' r.gon!ing tho
academic celandlr wlili f,PP/10\'ED and will
~·

I

be - t a d 11 liMo OO'Iober 10 mooting of
tho Faculty Senate.
-

Trustees OK 3 deans

The SUNY 11&lt;*11 of Truat- took

~ routine actlona nagWdlng U/B at

their September meeting In AI'*'Y last
week.
Three deena, pr.vtously recommended lor appointment by Ptealdent
Robert L Ketter w.e conflrmad: Dr.
Duwayne M .
dean ot the,
Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematlca; Or. Kenneth J .,LII'IY, d"":l

...nc--.

~-·~ec::~~ty::=~ ~{

.,_,.,r

fh.

Dlvlalon of Uncler'gr.tume EducationAnderaon. 51, ,,
chle1
aclenllat '" the Otvlalon o Polar
l'logrMoa for the NSF.

�~5, 1171

. . . .£) . .

FOotball fantaSies

•

-

: lt'o okay to IMigh

you 11M d-..cl,
and - If you don~ Ilk• 1he
way tht pme'o golnv. you
can ttka your btll end pedal .
homal

�~s. it7a

Puadlse

CALENDAR
................... _.. _ _...

-----.-----··-- --·_.. __ _
___
c:~wga_~- 1877).
- eon.
- -. BQUA. Col11311-2111111or-

--·
-'
a
...-.
-u.-...v-- .
T---

'lhllrsday- 5

goo-.

• • - o l c. wlbo_by . . _
~ ol . . U / B
CU.. Fanore
Room, BQUA. 8 o.m.·1 p.m. Allonii!J1-

IIIOWN IIAQ WitCH COU.OOIM •

c.._.._ o1 Tile E~ Dr. Poul
Olollng, Dopor1mont ol Pofl!lcel Sclonce. 123

-----~lo-

focully--Colloge
e.tiblt.
Fln1 Plflclng Lot.
p.m. -fran
rN« 200 ..-,.,.

-..onau.s, -

•

PHYIICa-~
IPICW.~·

T- ·tDy_,anclllo~

- c · -· " " ' " " " - -· f'dy·
--oi-Yor1&lt;,~~

• ol~ U/8. 2 1 8 -. 1:30-2:20p.m.
0,.,-.Np~.

OU.lNTITaTJYE ANALYSIS LAII

.. (statlsticol Pocloige lor
- - . .. 213 Bold)'.
12 noon. ~ by the FOCIJity of EducatlonoiSiudlaa.

SocioiSclonce), -

c.-·- --·

337 BQUA. 2 p.m.
~

3p.m. To-finll

=-~--re:

-.a-

. __- .c,.....__.,._..,
iii
~ I! 1

AIIATDIIY

----·ft-CI.Ual
...
----Dr. Kllnh, IJnl.
.....,o1Toronlo. 1 7 8 -. 4p.m.
'

· ~a..cn.·

-.--......

.. -. 0...~.' 106
- . . p.m.
~ In 330 BQUA. 7 p.m. To . . . lor .... I D - I o r . . ~

andlloo-afow-olaorm..y T~.

Wllr We fllllt ,...... .. War; n. ~-·
----~- 148~.
7 p.lll. ~ by . . Centor lor ~-

--IIIUCATIDII
.... - -. ._.-v........

- o i - Y o r 1 &lt; , .......
Dlniot

-101.7-I:JDp.a-ID~­

.,_
._
~~~~~~~~~~-----.-....,
...._ .....___...
,__

11

.....__

..... . . . , _

~
Poly-'

ol~ U /B. 282~. 1 :~2:20 p.m.

You ....tllgn ut&gt;ln-ID porticjpala.

---ln--

, _ - - 170 MFACC, - . 7

~by-ln"'"'-l

W.UFUI'

~ Cato1Jo1o: a,.
p JCIIIdty and
Ea 1
1 .... HerYy Cdlrrwl. Qlld AJdent.
127 CooM. 2 p.m.

.......,. Eoe (~ . 1977). Confotenoe
, _ ._ Squn. Col 838-2919 l o r - -

Tliaa.lt~-·-~

do!nvltY and daopojr In • atyle
wll at
once~ and doiQht l!ergtralllllc:lonagoo.

Ouoc:herer Obotol
-- · Dmd
. 1 0Duoct.w,
4 -. 3 :30p.m.

lA1-.llo.- . - -. DIMd Corrd&gt;e,
a trapeze artist.

CIVI.--..·

Admloalonc:lwga.

Sel·ln-11120.BIItn. ..... _

UUMFUI'-

- - - (~. 1977). Con· · Squn. Col638·2919 for show

--c:lwga.

Gt.YL.aiiATIONFRONTCOFFEEHOUSE'
107 T--.1 Hal. 8 p.m. Everyone is

iwlled.

lJy

FILM'
F.W. M&lt;rnau'a FaUOI (1928), a - ol the
Gormon _ , , cinomL Buffolo ' Erie County,
Hislorical Socialy. 8 p.m. 5poM«ed by Media
Sllldy I Buffolo.

cacFIUI•
olhoro.

Comol - 8 p.m. Aecoption
- I n ....... ~ Room. 5poMored by

.. ._.._.,Engloh, .

Don't K""'* ... II !he story of two
.OJ'o M!1lnll out ID ,_. !hot rock 'n'

....._ _

( - ). 148 Olot...X.f. 7 p.m.

...ry1hlng"""' •one

tlln _ . ID ''the _..., 11m
_.. ft'o a - of !he IUOCOII·

~CIIIip--.n,Or.

y-

8-l,youty;- ~ - - offiCer •• !he
~ !IIIOM ....
profeuor of paitiall

'*"-•IIUUI'ft..,.-·

An _ _ , - · aoft-ocn dopiction of

ol Saint -

-outlot lor today's youlfl."

-TIDIIIU. COIJ.eiiE LECTURE SERIES'

-.--.-..-c:lwga.
-

....-·
flmta--... ____
___
ln~llii!!orlnt- •

- c - . 1877).Confotenoe~

~-...-Engloh

'

Tho Clift caa'tltalp n - . Jayne Monsllold
and Eddie Coclnn In • alary of • . who . . . to mold, hia mol tnto bono box otfic:e

Thlo
,...
of ilia alai _

...ty lo avoid

•••IL

. . . . end -

T1ia Clift CM't 1ta1p H -(1956), 7 p.m.;
Don't K""'* ... _
(11156), 8 :50p.m. 170
MFACC, Elloott. £ ! , M -.

~by . . Centorlorlotedlo Sllldy.

I1.&amp;0ior-. .

,.. llll'l*io- Gal your -

...

-llloi!rtllnlo!'oliews Potor Roylw

......... ..:hilact, about ... mcMe moiQ!g.
lnlemo~ ~(Charnel 10) . 8 p.m.
W.U_Y _ _•

-

llrlnO _ _ _ end,...,.endbo

-.y...-.

COIIYEIIIIATIONIIIfTHE NITS

_ -

-

- a,
,10
· 170
end_
1.2 _
p.m.
,,
for
•MFACC,
.._.
..,_
llia_fl!n
_
_
_

a:

· fiW'II'good-.

CONVEIIIIATIOHI .. THE NITS

rollo • ":

CAC . . .•

-

-

......... CcuW~(Ciw&gt;no!B) . 8:30p.m.

""*"'

Rodcy Horror PlctYra - - 150 F -. 8,
10. and 12 p.m. $1 lor . - I s; $1 .50 lor

· POETIIY-·

1882). 160 F -. 3 ond 9
Dopor1monl of EnQIIh.

-ln•-alaryofomonoflho
- - - - - - ond Sholoy

and10p.m. - S t l o r n o n · f -.

I

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p. m . ~..,.,.

IICFUI'

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....

M~y~9

CONVEIIIIATIOHI .. THE AliT'S
-f-.CcuW~(cn..nol8) . 4p.m.

tNTE11V1EW IIOI.LS WOMSHOI''
Room 240 Squn. 2 p.m. 0,., ID the,.-.

-·
---···-.... .........
.. ___ _
......
..
__
...... "' ...........
......,.--............
..... ---·
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. . ----01**... ...._..1'1 _,_...,Far_
....,_,.,...,,_

.,

--- 2 p.m. Cor-. ony ~~lot cloliilo .

PHYIICa" AS'IliONOIIY LECTURE·

T - tD ,-_, al!d llo Appllcallono,

·--ft-CI.Ual
.
~lot3308QUA.

the

LEClVRE IERIUI

IIIIATP-~· ·

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l n l l _ o l _ _ of_Colage" .
Wliowl-.oon.,. Middle Eaal

--·
- ......FU_- ..............
............._
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...........

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._ _ _ _ _ _ _ PIDom,
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. . . . . . . . . . , _ , 1877). Conlarara
.

-c:lwga.

- - . . . .. Oil-211181or- -

-

�--------

Nodces _

ATTEIITION CIIWIUATE STUDENTS

--now-lntheGSAolfico.103

lor and P,h.D.
-T - Hal.·up
lo $160 and $260
Olll1llo:allona
nu-,, Oc1ol&gt;er
18, 1978 01 ~:30 p.m.
con,.,.
the GSA offiCe, 638-2960.
are fMilded
eerve on the
Granting -

~­

'*"'by

Comploted

I--·-

N!y -

VoluntMra

· -

to

G.R.A.O. -.:11 COI.wlcl. Duties wll ' lndudo
i'ii'Aowtlg llll*alions lor ,..,._ · - - p-ols.
col .... GSA olfico, 838-2960
lorlnfco'orelion .

COUNCIL MEETING
Tho U I B COUncl wll hold Its regular monlhly
OMeting at~ p.m.. Monday, Oct. 91n tha f'resl.

Jewish Family Group
is 'non-traditional' ..

dent's Conference Room. ~- 5 . AA _..
hearing for Oludenta follows at 31n 587

-.o.-·
- · .. ---.BruceWednesdAy-11

-.Piwm.D,. , . _, 2~~. 6p .m .
QOU"

u , ...... -

Ronoomopc.Co&lt;.n-

tryCU.. 1 p.m.

---~·
- · Logo! 1111ML 282

Forgo Quod,
eJic:olt.8p . m . Tho~-: Mra . -.

-·-·group

~.llullolo~;IAeQr11ftn,- .

ol

~

_

, ond .....

"""' logol -

..

I[TB. ~ by the

s-

c.-.

CRAFT CEHTER
Craft worl&lt;shopa In pottery, children's pottery,
jewelry,
glass, ..;.,.- p h O -.
phOtography (btod&lt; and white) , ~ .
atone settng, Cloisonne enamel, mac:tlf'l"'8, aik·
..,...,, floor_, weaving, and photogoptoy are cmng tha month of Octo-

. bor. For informelion, phone 638-2201 (Monday·
nu-,, 1·5 p.m.. and 7·10 p.m.: Frtdoy and
Seturde)', 1-~ p.m.), or visit the Center at 120
MFACC,.EIIcort, Alnl1&lt;nt.

::;~~ei~~H·~=

7p.m.; W_In . . _(11144), 8 :40p.m.

SQunConlonlnoo-. F r o o -.
In Doo T - Von D r . - . .... Doctor
lo
- l hIno
the
hon
hod
mod
ln
-.OII'Un
H ol lio
o- l o -

lhlo by' c:clopoOig ....
bombing . _ . . . . . . -

W_ln . .

"""· .-. BoMolt

~
·
· ond rozlng ...

ond Aoymond MooOoy, lo •

~~lllno· ln....,opo)'doc*&gt;gy

a n d - ' - Y ~ to1o . .. You
"'-howK.Io-poylaand--1

programs, services and costs .
'Not rellgloua'
. Most of the 20-or-so member families
are "not religious" In the traditional
sense, Shelter says . Living In non-

Ulo Woolcohopo are aodlt·froo and ~
ol dlorge. Thoy .... open lo • ..-.ta.
loaAty, Olllf, olunw)l and _ ., Reglsn.tlon

is . - - y lor II worl&lt;shopaln 110 ·
- - 1. 838·2808.
T - y , Oct. 5-The Aeif-BII&lt;ed Hems.._ta nu-,a l'ltl Oct. 19 fran 7:30·9 p.m.

;"~~s~Pif'Yu~~~~~/1,~';~~~~!~~~~~~~~~?~:

Seooiono wll oonplooelze dewloplng a comedy
etyto thot . - ycu- perocneli1y; '*""&gt;g .,
fron1 al .. _
, comedy brelnatorTo*lg; and

feels . Nonetheless, they remain Interested in having their children
understand " the history" of their
parents and grandparents: " We don't
want to see those traditions die,"
Shelter says.
At the same time, though, he
. indicates, members of the group want
their youngsters expl)sed not to formal
dogma but to what th'ey themselves feel
•
Is best.
Instruction, tailored to these parents'
desires , Is conducted In a Sunday

how fTW1')'inrQ • d*:ken c.'l put you In • lower

and

-,,Oct. 1-f'ood for the Morrow and To-

. cloy..- Mondlya, .... - - 13 frcm 3 :30
·5 p .m. Lo.n lo .-e groin, yooat
quic:k'-lo .,_ rutrttionelly without

moot Roglotrotion- . _ , - ' ol.$1
to COYe( food coMa.

-·

PSSTar
- F O R .n1DENT SUCCUS TRAINING

T~Hnc~Ay- ~z

~-·-~and­
growth..-..
ol Oclobor 16.

-t&gt;ogR""-

Tllo-D-..-,Or.-ond--.,

F. DoUoca,
~
ol ~ . Cologo al Ago1ciJUol and Ulo
~

. ..__,_

_281'-. 12

__. . liM-VA
-·
---·
·
·-------VA
....... ......
. - .. llpor...-l by . . ~ al -

"'*'"'*Y and . .
lcoiCenlor.

dolcrting the pogrwn .... -

-

v-·- - .

at the DSA f'i&lt;9Wn
Hal.
.

ci!fice,

106-110 -

8CHI II I IEMIKI CI.U.
Sid _Ctuli lo now holding Ita
..-ohl;&gt; do!Yo. Tho olfico, toc:olodln Room 7

Scl*'e.

we

be OC*t 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friclly.
•
T'he newdalaign T_.... . . now

on.-.

'ATHOI.OIIY - ·

---.,.~

Dr. 8o -118 -·
· ~
ol -.
Hoopllof.
~p.m .

·

~~IDUCA~

Hoo!llll. .....
to
...,__.,.....__
,..,.....,_,_..a.
ID1 . Hl:30 p.-. -

Unl-

lor--____._............

Farlld&amp;

.....

oGIIU1-418.

~

Exhibits
-~~
Tlll. chwlngo ol Duugloo c - on ciiPoY
In ..... -

~
Oclobor 27. pJn. ~
tnd 11 a.m.-

. . I LM.-5
4p.aon .........

'

·ft:'eh 00~e~,''t:s.m'l:'~~~~{&gt;'~n ~~!~~~

Family Group also celebrates major
holidays, as was the case for Rosh
Hashana last week, and an occasional
Sabbath .
.
Ser:vfces are a blend of both the
traditional and the contemporary with
emphasis pn the latter - "so everyone
from 1he youngest to- the oldest can
grasp what Is going on," Shelter

exw,~n~roup, which also Includes
single parent families , haa been In
exlsteno;e for 8-9 yMra now. When lira!
formed, It waa compoaed mostly of

==~~ ~~;u~~~~Y-~u~

one other similar, though mote fonnal,

unaffiliated Jewish auoclatlon In
Buffalo. Meny others exlat throughout
so much so thatthera Ia..,
orpnlzatlon of non-affiliated Jewlah
!~*country,

GIQUIIe .

£eGh 11f0UP ta quite dltfer.nt, Sheft•

"' ........
............
1•-...r.
fp.-....,_.,
.. _
..,_..,._

. - ; .peciflc lnterwla t'WIIItl tram
li'iliiiiJM oullure to tbe Helnlc-lila own
"*''ff;- Ia ~. with no
llello..,- type of Jewllh

uu:a'!Wi I i ~ ~
, _ ~-'1:111-11118
~---S::.."'-:...~=--~~-

IIIODurlllled lo Inquire, Sheft• em-

'

18731.

o...r~ ..· - - -.. _ _ _ ., _ _ _ .. '12.

~[~~~.; ~"':~:~re~a~=~~s t~adro~e.::~~~
active Pn the group. Those wit~ younger

;·~!ft~~~~f~~.. :\\~ ,:,O:;~a'...;~H::'nua~

LI'E WORKSHOPS

OooT-VOIIDr.-(lMig, 19331.

~:'/::rrl:"~ro"t~6':tg ,

In addl;lon
to shaping the thrust of the educational
experience, Interview and hire four
teachers who carry out the Instructional
program. There's an emphasis on
values , on the history and culture of
Judaism , and on basic H -. The
instructors"olten are U/B students.
The children enrolled generally range
in age from kindergarten to _eighth

=~~~!t~~~fh~~'.!,'i'l~~~vi'J'u-:rs!~;,!!;:

ThtncMy, OCtober 12, from 10 a.m . to noon.

-

SQun~--Fooo-.

tradltlonal lnstltutloils.
111

lf.!rf f~~;n~o~r.:mm~u~:g~~!h~o~~~u,::
834-2617, or Bernice Noble, 833-2868.
They are the C&lt;H:halrwomen of the
association, which Is known as the
Jewish Family Group.
That group, according to Or. Ell
·Sherc!, associate professor of pharma-

HMO AS AN ALTERNA11VE
Prolesaons ~ Giboon and Thomas Connolly
and Sl*tey Alnnoo ol ' Suomler Sessions have
vtalted tha ol Heolth Care - ..
toe., end w11 be available to talk to members

W.U-Y--·
- .....-..... bln- -tax-.
-.--G.Ro
----·-- and
CcnP. -.oyCologo.

A Kol Nldre s-ervice for Yom Kippur,
organized by an Informal group of
Jewish professionals (manr of th:em on
be held
the U/B faculty) , wll
· this week at the home of a University,
couple.
·
lndlylduals Interested In the services

,..-...., lncllwlduela ...

. . _ . _ ltlm the Jewl8h F-lly Group
le -.lui not to 11eoc1me too ~"118-

n.. .. . •

frlelldly,

CCIOI*MM

....,..._ IIIIOftll IMI!Ibln now, end
lllllllnltt l o ' - h .... wey11le only ooeta 1nciiiNII .,. for the
~ program. Equally atwed,
a--~- mlnlnlll, t. aya 1
...,.cltltY' when CICII1IpeNd to th- or

.

chWI,'N:; ~.:~:o.~~one, children ·
are encouraged to participate IIi the
group's activities.' Youngsters sounded
tbe shofar (ram's hom) at Rosh
Hashana, for example. And Shelter's
son designed his own · bar mitzvah
ceremony. " After all, ' the pharmacy
professor feels, "he was the one who
was becoming a mao. Why should he
have had a certain mold forced on him?"
Aside from Its other virtues, Shelter
thinks the Jewish Family Grou~

~err~~:Ch,~o t~ 1=r:ua'.!~~ Je~:;.,

;::l.1ng

fulfilling than just
the kids off
to some cold brlcks..nd-mortar Institution" - especially for !hoM who like to
" th!nk" about their religion.

Nursing group
names officers

New officers hew been eleCted tiyU/B's Gamma ~&lt;-we Chapter of Sigma
Theta Tau, the national honor aociaty of
nursing.
Officers for this- yMr are: Prealilent Kathleen M. t.az.ua; Vtc.Prwlclent Madeline Wiley; Secretary - Donna
Juenker; T , _ _ - Cheryl Wrlggte.
worth; Fac:ulty Mvlaor- Judith ROiilti!C
Membership In the honor eoclaty Ia
baaed on superior actt~. Ieeder·
ship qualltlea, CNatlve WOflt, loatarlna
hlgn profealonlll at8nclenla,_-'f.
"*lltothe..-.endp~aftbe

profeaalon, _,.JIIVVIdlna unity lhrOullll
social, educatlciMI, and ...W. -=tiY!o
tletl. Enroll.-.t In the cMpler Ia
CCllllllOMd of 140 leculty, atudlnla 111111
alumni.
•
Thla vW'!__. t'-'11 Ia "Nuraanf
~." wnn8pelkere end....,.,..,.

~-~n::.
Proooai.l.iltiii~.

llr; ....

.

LohnM lleads ~
Ed P.,ch
Dr. ,..,, R. LollnN -

~==-~y·~-~.!!--~
~to='31,f.1.

u::;;.. ":P"'~:.".r-=

11'-' ~ ~~~~~~~~- . . of
yourooiiMgiMiildlcata the wlcla~

lupfiOft

~:.-=~~~ !
IIPfiOintll*lt.

•--:

~

�)'"

.

........

.JOBS.
.....o..uo-.

Comparison of health care benefits
ITAT!WIDE PLAN
HEAlTH CAllE "-AN

CUiFIIIIWI CfWIL -.viCE

1LUE CIIOS&amp;«.UE.IHIELD
~AN LFE

--~~~.

~-.
(2},
lbgory,-·Aocordo
a-My, a ~.

1'111-.o (21.

~ l.llrwtoo

(71, E.O.C•
..... - I Uulc••· Cennl Duplcalng,

-£d.
-.
.
,
.
,
.
,
,
a
l
.
.
_
,
.
,
----"*-Y·--·
u.
....-.-·--··"*·-··
----.Cid~~-. -.o.­

lool -

Ollloe 131,

-

o.&gt;'o Ofllce.

aom...wya
(2).-·
~-.
()d,f',. " " - '

~-.~~!Win~~,--·

E.O.C. lll.tlnllogr.
aootl ID I Uo ..

l..lnrloo, A&lt;:ccua

,.._~ -·

-.. .
-·
- ( 2 1.

-·....,-~ Mol(21 .

-

" " - ' Plolnll. -

~al--7~

~ (21.

I..IJrw1oo.Or.

__
OHI PLAN

aLE CROSS
GHf

.

.

--__

'

.,.,.. ..._

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

--

NOT COVERED

--

____

~--tar~l

NOT COVERED

.

- - · · •-wlology. ~

_

-Ollloe. ~.
· · OllomiRy,
Ur-.ny Budget
Oec*&gt;gicoiSCionceo,
Ef&gt;.
gltll.

l r . - - , -Opoo.-IICH--Com-

...

111*11-

lr.aooti-ICH~ (21 .

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

,~

-~...:::~~.IQ.12~;

_.,..,._...IQ.11-Secuo1ty/
~-·
-1·1~--·
~-·
~

..-..C&lt;Inlpdog-.
--(1111
....

-c..-~8CHI(2-.

porwy, 1

~Cornpl1ing

Ser·

~. a.-- IG-14-

... -

..... -

(8 / 11'/7&amp;-5116/ 7~

........ 'h1:G Sahod ....... Oflce
(111178-\0/311781; Dhlolon of~

(411/78-113117111;
(111/7&amp;-5 / 31 / 7111.

......

-

_.,_ --- ..... __
...............

--·

Aftw 48 houni of~ c:.e, ~
.,_the~ S60ct.duclble

f'tlARIIACY AT THE

IIEIICA1. CS&lt;T£11

,.,.

.....

eov.ng.'wfll...,hciMckJIII

01....., *'**'"..

~

~-{111
/3·
1 / 781
.
- - . - - -1 78-10
-u....ay

'*"' • • , ! " . -

(11178-8/ 7111.

C~M: ctloni~Ay)

......... A-IQ.I-' ~­

-(1111 1 7~7 .j l7111.

. . . I C**' ITAFF
T - - 1!11-1 ~- 5o1wty

--or
-----·

I ......... . , _ ,

a

lr:. •

, 8-8Q32.

•• ,..... 8ohoal of

7
C ...... 7M-8dioolof-. R·
8037.

'ACUI.TT

----v

---

_

..-...

-

-.-.F-8118.
------~--

........-...

-.

NOT~

-

NOOiAAGEforo45~olc..

s.ne •

'*~yew.n.t

STATEWIDE PlAN

-byHCI'

'

-

NOCHARGE-

-byHCI'

OUT OF AIEA COVEMGE

ll&gt;ulnol"""' _ _ _

UptoS25klortromhDIOitl("

..........

lhen 80% . . the sso decaictibkl

---___
______
..--==-:=-NO~­
b
yiCP-

..._
~-=

""~-­

,..

--

UptoS25toortrom~
(biAnotboth)perlnpM!enl~

....

Colowed • .., ....

�~5,1871

BRIEFS.
c-DtoiiNr . . . . . .
On Monday, Octo~"9. at 3 p.m.,
the U/8 COWKII will hold a special
open forum for student concerns In
. the "Jeannette Martin Conference
Room, 567 Capen. Among topics to
be discussed will be the review of
the academic plan, the collegiate
system, and stipends for graduate
students.
Michael Pierce, student representative to the Council, stated that

a two-hour session was originally

BIKkhum

ments here toward credit-rree professional credentiallng programs or
refresher courses. Sessions on tax law
changes for businessmen and account-

Enrollment dip
DCE Is also

ants, for example; seminars for judges;
up-dating sessions for lawyers1 Jlbrarlans, social workers, .. educators, ar·
.
chitects, etc.
UCLA runs programs like these for
130,000 Individuals each year. The
University of Washington , for 125,000.
Credit-free offerings are only part of
the story.
a

division

whose

=~~0:::~~~ hast:=enu~\e:~~~/:ce~Nk

cui ties In ac~levlng enrollment targets.
It Is also the agency responsible for
_offering "~redlt-free" courses which
faculty all too often (frequently unfairly)
view as merely frivolous.
With next fall only a couple of
·

~~~~g ~:;'Jtin~~. ~~~sd~! th~~'::,

dean have In mind for coping wl.th
challenges and fostering change where
change may be demanded?
Blackhurst hesitates.

1"Je~l:'e"~~~~~~~~~g:,o~;~l~~~'::

to
and . talk about specifics before he's
discussed them with the deans and
department heads concerned, or with
.
tha people In his own division.

tal~~~ n~l~n::'J 1 ~~ t~~ ~~e:~nd

of

a-.1 dncilona
For the record, he prefers to speak of
general directions.
a~re':..:.e logistical problems to be
For example, the Division which he
heeds is too f.-.gmented, he feels. Units
are scattered through Diefendorf Annex

(Adult Advisement), Hayes D (Urben
Extension), and Hayes A -(MFC and
Gredit-Free) at Main Street, and In
Capen Hall at Amherst (his own office).
Each unit, while separate, Ia not quite
large enouqh to take care of Itself.
Phones
not tied together Into one
•
system . Thlnga like that.
F!hllosoplllcally apeeklng, he'd like to
bring all continuing education activities
closer to the academic units of the
Univwslty. DCE llhould be viewed as a
unit which provldea avenues for
departrnenta to extend their concerns to
"non-traditiOnal atudenta.•
E..,lng progrwna, Blackhurst says,
have tradltlonally been a phenomenon
of the urban, private Institution . Large
state unlvwsltlea have historically been
situated In small towns and have used
the extenalon concept to reach out to
the wider public. Here, we -have an
opporiunlty to reverse that, to bring
people In - In to the campus where
they can lake advantage of our libraries
and our naaldent faculty. There's a
two-way benelh&lt; adult atudenta are
broldened -through expoaunt to young
people end young ld-. The flip aide of
that exchellgecan be enriching as well .

are

Cndentlallng
Thoee stl!le 'unl¥tnltlea which ara
sh...ted In ilrtj8n centers (Minneeola,
WMIIIngtlln end UCLA ara three) h lended to II'- emphula 01t largelcale continuing aduamton plOIIIWIII
wblch . . ~lmpai1ant" to tll8lr commun-

~wlng

their leada, 8laekhlnt

. . . . . . . . . . maybe_ ...... -

Ci-edit couraaa
The course file for evening credit
classes Is lnedequate, Blackhurst
submits. Many part-time students,
relegated to studying at night, ~n't find
the courses they need to complete
majors. There's no art , no theatre or
music, for example. No physical
education .
There are -too few student services at
nlnht. Any student at this Onlverslty
faces a scattered bureaucracy which
often requires him or her to chase
around.;lmong several offices to resolve

:'n~~~.ll~~~~e~,/~~~rm"~u~~d!n1t~~

planned, but that It has now been
teduced to 6D minutes and six
S!feakers. Tile SA, GSA, and Pierce
himself will each select two speakers.
Pierce Is not totally content with
Flexibility
this "Informal"' bearing. His attitude
While he's asking these .questions,
Is that students are entitled to direct
Blackhurst wonders, too, why departcommunlc;atlon with the Council. As
ments don't recognize more frequently ·
far as the Cou"n cllls concerned,
than they · do that the resources
Pierce says, "'they doQt have a good
available through Continuing Education
conception of this University." He
can be used to provide' more fieiclblllty
for their o_wn budgets. Why don't they · also questions the conslst~y of the
use OCE resources to cover peaks In
group and feels their philosophy Is:
their course loads, for example, when
""we'll let other non-Council mem~s
they aren't sure that a surging demand
speak at our pleasure, bUt students
will last? Instead of pushing for more
cannot."
day faculty lines, why not just add a few
extra sections at night and see what
What Pier.ce hopes to"accomplish
happens? When course demand Is
during his term Is to let students
down, conversely, why not use
know
the Council exists and that they
Continuing Education as a means of
have a representative who Is
reaching new clientele, the "nontraditional " students we talk a lot about
accessible. He wants It clear that
but do so little for. There's some $3
students can get problems out In the
miUion In flexibility available each year,
open where they can be discussed.
Blackhurst notes.
Pierce can be reached 12 to 2 p.m.
But doing any of these things might
daily at 261 Squire Hall .and also
mean an end to watching the clock and
through
the Student Association.
·
that makes some people nervous.
The administrative direction he would
like to chart for DCE, Blackhurst
Indicates, Is one which urges departments and . schools to extend their
Open Office Hours
concerns to 10 p.m., one which
_ President Robert L. Ketter will hold
encourages them to share In the
the third "Open Offlce Hours"'-on
success and failure o~ evening and
ofthefaii1978~Thursday,
·credit-free offerings.
October 12, from I to 3:30p.m.
" When these units want continuing
Students can arr~lt\!!l.'h aPP.!;&gt;Int:)~':.,'~~~~fr~h~~st"s'::i~~ · they ment with the Presic!e'rW!;y calling .
" And the Un iversity will gain from it."
636-2901.
~'!All'
_
. rn.stz.

Ebert sees defects in .Love Canal plln
Inherent weaknesses exist in the Love
Canal Pollution Abatement Plan which
the State has proposed, Dr. Charles
H.V. Ebert· of the U/B Department of
Geogiiil&gt;hy said this week.
Ebert said he was speaking as an
, Individual and not as a member of the
U/B Love Canal studygrou,r.. He said he
offered his comments to any perl!Ons.
who .are Interested 111" making the
abatement plan as realistic and
effective as pos.alble under the
circumstances. "
Ebert said that " the overall plan for
preventing llddltiona/ Joxlc .materials
from spreading from the Love Canal
Into SUITOtif1dlng areas probably Is the
best under the existing circumstances."
Removal of toxic materlala
Plana for removal of toxic waste from
the canallteelf appear to bit"realistlcaliy
perBceuti,Yedhe, t ood. ,Ebert
'"he ac
eacknholwngled ged • s
0,f 50 11
1
881
,
beyond the canal border, Is more
~1:!!~~1e and should be carefully
Ebert made these points "to
stimulate such a review and to suggest
appropriate modifications:"

~ au~e~.'h;~~~~~~~~.b~~~~

be -made at Increasing distances lind In
all dlractlons from the canal to
· determine, as quickly as poaalble, the
geographical e•1ent of the toxic
diffusion. This survey should not be
restricted to auperllclal soil testa but
muat lncluda water aampllng from the
water table. Care muat be taken to
Identify perched water tables [at llmea
produced~ underlylng;tay
stratal and
1

~~~;t~Pu".:'ed
::l'and/~~=
2. Before Inatal ling the dlalnage

pi pea, Ebert urged, a careful aoll textunt
-'Y•I• must be made In order to
determine: (a) son permeability and

caplllaryconductMty,and(bllhe~th

=·

=--=:t,.ot;nnaged=·

tt!

~-. ~.:. ~

example, an extra 3 or 4-foot depth that
terminates In layers of lower permeablllty than those above lowers the
effectiveness .of such Installations.
Probl
. •Ammo alnjordrapwroblng mout nwautnersaturated
3
It8 1
swoaltfesrywstemnos1s' t hr~ wfac t thnalyt caplnsllgllnaryl_
111
111 0
1
1iflcently, move from flne.textured soils
Into coarser media; that Is, water
cannot be easily drawn out of tbe silty
claf loam bordering the canal.
·
I a dra;.,age pipe Is Installed In a
fine-textured soli only -a specific
-amount of water will drain out, Ebert
explained. Ttte amount declines with
declining texture size, I.e. with smaller
pore apace and Increasing tension .
Some clay soils actually have a
drainage capacity of zero, he noted.
Once drainage seta In, he continued,
water tends to be held baCk In the pores
until the capillary potential, or tension
outs/dethlasoll,exceedsthetenalon of

0

=~';:'o~~!, ~'ff:sonl'; m~ ~

=

zones of low tension to zones of high
tension.
Since soli pore tension declines
1
1

!'= Y~~ C:::

of a great num~ -~of permanent
monitoring wells at~lncrMalng dielances from the canal borders. Theee
wells could have a relatively small
diameter and could be caeed with
perforated plastic tubing.
The wells should go to bedrock, or at
least Intersect the permanent water
table, he suggested.
By lnatallrng . such a · monltortn'u
system, he seld "It would be poaatble
to: .(1) check water tabla fluct...tiOna ,
(2) measure the deg- and kind of
pollution, (3) get a realistic perception
l)f the extent 01 the pollution end futunt
dlffualon or, let ua hope, reduction of
pollution, (4) get a reading on the
direction and rate of toxic dii!Ual011.."
Ebert lndlcatad that auch
syatema h - been uead aucoeuful Iii
checking• the enc:roechment of
118
water into soils In coaetaJ.,.. MClin
reclaimed Ianda In the Nettw!ands aa
well as In other countr!M. In IIWI)'
Instances, he noted, property_.
themeel-. after .--tmg
~~.:;:'~~~=ly~.," by
pr1 t
thorltlea
appro a eau
.

mon=

•=

~~-=~ ScienCe hiring

removed, Ebert recommended that
water be Introduced Into the border
zone of the polluted area to leach toxic
materials both out of the ground - •
zone and the solia_ To I'I!Did spreading
toxic materlala beyond the point of
Introduction, Into non-polluted
soli, a second dralnage lntenleptor
system should be Installed along the
~·:S:O.S~mmendallon Ia
"to Install a milch ur-ter
capability than jlfWetllly p1-..c1
placing a network of plpea, wit
approprlalelaWala.lnto the IUbeoll."

~

llonlloitne -

· .,.:.·~~~=~~

::,~~n:.t:.:m.,::.z

A study of the hiring of science and
facul~ by • two- and
four-year colleges ahowa that about 11;1
per cent of new full-time · fltCUIIY at
lour-year Institutions had doctOrallia or
were expected to receive them soon,
while only 12 per cent of new faculty at
two-year Institutions had IUCh ~
dentlals. The study was oondlll;ted for
en~lne8rlng

~~nal

=-

J:..'= Fg._.und;~~~

HlllharEducatlonP8nei(HEPI.
The phyalcal anc1 80c*l ecfenola had
_the moat doctoratea nllallw to II*!
Jllnaa, while
end 11111a1
-· b
11C1eno1f and

::...
=-

IIIIGI=IIadlhefwwell.For..cllof

11111 ~-,:::
...-.s DO Clllll9 - I

�•

•VIetnam

~.,-.!;k"!:,.,.

Winning '-111 end
mlnda," the U.S.·- l y 1ewnec1 to
fight a oo...tennaurgency wet, anct
U8&amp;d Ioree lflllirgety lnldltlonaJ waya."
The military bui'8IWCflley wea unbend-

'--·"
HIHICINda of hllmleta - • destroyed

M.....,..

Respon- to L.ewy
After Lewy concluded, panelists were
given the opportunity to respond.
Lt. Gen.· Robert Gard , president of

Ina.

So While the enemy fought battles to

lnfl...ae public opinion, we fought " to
fln'-11 the enemy." The Communists
loll more men, to be sura, but their
leaders realized that American coffins
going home were mora algnlllcant In
the lonB run.
The ..S., Lewy argued, Ignored the.
l8ct that the enemlea whom It wes
-1&amp;1 to defeat were not those
• Whom we wena cheslng through the
Jungles. The rural peesanta were the
ana we had to "oonquer" - with
klndneea. But we only bombed and
filed II them While chulng the V.lat
Cong. The VC "clutched them to-their
by our ''friendly llra"-aomethlng which
one ~ laid Ia "practically never
forgotten by t11oee "*"benl of the

DOIIUflllon who loet their homes."
mugeee CfMied by u.s.
ectlona didn't help, either.
•

No_.. doee
. _

"The ,.cord
not bear out
clwga of genocide or Indiscriminate
killlngf'of clvtllans," L.ewy laid, but our
levlahly-employed, aoplllaticated technology "CfMied e wldeapreed feeling of
realgnation, _.nesa, and unwillingnesa to go on" on the pett of civilians.
Tecfleleal superiority Ia, lh!J!;
1191 only I evant in a wet like VIetnam,•
l.fty
uded, "It may be a negative
lector." Weapons alone, moreover, are
_,. decisive. "il-Ia fighting morale,
resolution end able leadership whi h

'

c

·o~ aide" had II Hie ot any of thesa.

and Kor.

, however, Lewy

, ' that bombing neither

counl8r

~c:,:.:., ~~?~"rta n~a

a
It didn't wort' ' VIetnarn either. What

l::"b'.~o~sso~rh~:r;,~~' 11::.!•r~~\ ~

Professor Jerome Slater of U/B's
Political" Sclenca DepArtment argued
against t.wy's notion that the U.S. did

~n~~re ~rve::Po~m'~· i~r~ue~ 1 ~

"*'

=:n==~ ':~t!

u.a.•

~~~~~~\~.:.=,,;J.o::;,!!fr.;

v~~~:'.Yt~:5'.'f •does

.

not do Wefl'punl. . It has a "compelling lntenaet" In entering a wet end can see

eome ..degree of auoceaa ..,

Moreover, Tucker noted that "wer can
· only ..,.. simple, decisive functions"
and cannot be uaec:l to rectify a
multitude of lila. _
_
- Mcnle 1811'1--lty
Dr. MlchMI Walzer, professor of
and social ralatlona at
Harvard, aald Lewy· was oornact that the ·
low morale of the South Vietnam....
impecWd the war effort. "But high
moqJe does not mean high morality,"
he lnalaled.
Wal- took exception to Lewy's
Insistence that the U.S. should have
·a~ out of the jungles, ham leta and
• hills." He wonderec:l aloud Whena the
U.S. could light II Lewy'a advioa was
taken.
Fielding qu.tlona (and ciitlclamli)
from the &amp;udlenoa regarding their
-'tiona, or lack of them, Gird and
" - ' - ' ~ that the political
QOOWIIIII&amp;nl

~
h e - -The
at~
.
. _ _t.lllncl
... t
Yleti!MI.''

:r:.:=...-::=-.o:~

_ _......., . ..-.... u.a....
.._ _...., the

''~Mod

of the

........., ~ ..... the "'loolttM»
. . , . . _ _ , 1oa1ca1 ..d ...

......., .... ....._lil-'d'lffalra.
....._, TIICMr pOinted out lltld

......."··· """.,_,.........,In
~.... ~-'"flying lllgll"

=:a::r....«:...~

.......

Mr.

a

h~~u~r!~s~~"att~~~~~~~~r/~'~~

censure."

'

obligation under random and haphazara
standa(ds, the former bar association
president indicated.
"The joint and several responsibilities

~~sWn:;,•~~'t~s;,~n?n 1a ~ue~Pne!J

professional duty that each lawyer tithe
his . share of free public service lncludlng devoting a reesonable portion
of that effort to insuring the availability
of a lawyerto all who need one."

·

Chesterfield 1-j. Smith, past president
of the American Bar .Association, hed

70 per cent of middle claaa not aervad
"It has been repeatedly estimated
that at .least 70% of middle Income
Americans are not. now adequately
se..-.ed by lawy~. that only about one .
out of seven poor or Indigent Americans
receives legal services. Both estimates
appear too low," Smith said. ln.1975 the
combined budgets of a// tax-exempt
public Interest 1aw canters was less
~~yr~;,.'_ncome of rwo major .
Smith Isn't even certain thet the ric~,
are well represented by lawyers.
"While many suggest that the entire
legal system has been structured only
to provide legal care for the wealthy, 1
personally doubt that even the
wealthlesJ of individuals feel that tha
means , the mechanisms, for the
delivery of legal servlcas of good quality
:~e~~~r.."~';;,.,~~!cas ·are readily
More than 150,000,000 Americans ere
neither rich enough to comfortably
alford private aHomeya nor !)&lt;)Or
enough to· be eligible lor governmental
legal assistance, Smlth noted. Then&amp;
8111 millions mo&lt;JO eligible for legal aid
but w~ do not get It becausa then&amp; Is no government legal aarvlces program
naec:llly evallable to them.
Meanwhile, the organized bar has
held. back. Public recogAition of tbe
-problem Is ecceleratlng at a geometric
rate, while efiiiCIIw reaponsas to It a:-a
atilllegginp, behind.
"Legal natitutiona inuat chanoe "
Smith said.. "And government must
provide a helping hand by aubatantlally
enhancing In all feaslb'le ways
accaaaiblllty to the oourts or other
dispute resolving mechanisms lor both
the poor and others now either un·
repre'!'nted . or under-represented in
such forums becausa of the cost.''

UJ:f]

II did wae: gal~ foreign aid far in

of

"The public who grants a small
segment Ql the populace the ~xclusive
privilege of making a living practicing
law has the right lo demand that tht&gt;se
so favored provide a measurad, ernount
- perhaps inlnlmum of onoHllnth of free service to those who cannot
otherwise obtain legal services ....
· "The lawyer who unreasonably

=t!o~,..:lkat~he l~h1l'c;' 1 ~\'.,~~

l!h~o~~~::,~:.r:,~e;~ s~~[~ityor
·a
K• , ea
and Vietnam , said he had no
" fundamental dlflerencas" with Lewy
but did object to cartain poi ~ts raised.
Gard reminded the audienca that
defending South Vietnam wes a
relatively diffi cult undertaking (In terms
of generating a _real war &amp;flort) because
Vietnam was a "peasant societr, that
hed little to do with U.S. security. •
- He said It was unfair lor Lewy to
expect the South Vietnamese to
function as effectively as the armies of
Israel or America: considering their
unsophisticated military and political

Vietnam. ·He believes thet leverage was
' there, but the will to use it wean~ .
. - o f lfa ~. ooet {he u.s. let
Slater said the U.S. learad II it pushed
men than
•North loll, end
for any internal reorganization, the
UldermlneU.Sllmoral authority. (Nonecountry might fall to the Communists.
• ....... "ch8raae of lndlecrimlnate
Slater also reJected Lewy's claim that
llomblna
cMIIan t.rge!l " - been
winning the ''hearts and minds" of the
,..,..., iO be utteny fefae," he llllld.)
South VIetnam.... would r-e helpec:l.
The perti~"'-Y- bomblncl In . He maintained rather that the U.S. "had
the 1170a (during the CCIUIM of
no real chance" to accomplish ttlls,
llaleiMiea In pe-. negotlatlona) may , conalderlno our allen lanouage, cus-·
.... llelpad bring 11110ut a - . f t . . ,
lorna and beliefs.
IAwY edtilltted, "but It felled to ecfl.... t Dr. 'Robert Tucker, professor of

That's what former ABA head says
bar should do with lawyers
who don't work free some of the time

Law Conference In O'Brian Hall lest
Friday.
·
The conference wes called to
appralsa the state of public Int-I law
In the U.&amp;., to examine unmet neec:la
and demands for quality legal services
and to bring the collective experlenca
and wisdom of those speaking and
aHending to beer upan whet can be
done to meet the lagal servlca needs of
millions of unservec:llndlviduals.
,
Much , much more Is whet can be
done, Smith argued.

Were the mlltary hem"'-?
"respons ible democracy," but a people
i,ewy acknowledged tllat many
" lntemally _dlvlded'by minorities.'
mllltety leederll still ~~~~ they - .
Professor Earl Ravena! of Georgelwnllrung by oVerly reatilctive rules of
town University, a Defense Department
'""'J&amp;&amp;I8ffl8rl, which Were designed to
policy-maker In the -t960s, said he drew
U.. cl_vlllan life and property, tliat they
an opposite conclusion from Lewy's
lmpec:fe&lt;j by political constraints. - contention that the U.S: would have
In petticular, the mllltetlats argue, Jhe
won the war If It had "waged It
aiOw ~to bambino the North 1n
-.:lifleflmtty." (See separ;ote story.)
:::,;: tll80,a__W.~..coally to the U.S. _ IM~wnthete
'
:

Strateg~n In World War 11

,Censure theml

defeat ... L.ewy aald.

"The South VIetnam...,, and Indeed
American soldiers ear11er, It Is ervued,
coulct h..., won the war had they not
been lruatrated by _political oonatraints
In the U.S. and the collapsa of the home
front . Thera is no denyino that the
raductlons in U.S. aid did weaken South
VIetnamese ability to resist the
well-equi ppea Northern divisions, and
war-weariness and antiwar santlment in
America werQ widespread . However, the
nonachievement of U.S. goals In
Vietnam had other and deeper reesons.
To Ignore the beslc causes In favor of a
facile llab-in-the-back legend will glve
rise to more Illusions...
In the long_run , he emphesiztid, even
more damaging to' America's poaitlon lri
the world than the actual failure to
achieve our objectives in VIetnam
"oould be the unwlillnoness and
Inability of the military institution to
understand and ieem the real lessons of
the debacle."

era."

~5,- 1171

.. .IZ!Jta

Smith admitted It Is herd to make a
living by working free, even II only lor a
pert of ~ht time, and even II such work
Is labeled "pro bono" or "public ...,Ice"
or just . "professional duty." "The!
understandably Is the economic,. reason
thet lawyers often sidestep with
rhetoric their Individual obligation to
see that all Americans h..., available to
them quality legal services." But It has
to change.. .
·
The best way for the organized bar to ·
meesure the Individual service requlrad
of a lawyer will vary from area to area
and perhaps-from branch of the law to
branch of the law, Smith concec:fec:l . "It
must always be reesonable under the
Individual's pettlcular clrcumatancaa sanctions should be impoaec:l only'if· a
responsible authority determlnss that .
the lawyer unreasonably Ignored ·
profesalonal obUgatlons." Only a bar
f~T~.'~~n~~group should determine

Ewwy lawyer muat help ·
The obligation Is an Individual one
Smith said. "But In aggregate, our
efforts must satisfy our collective
o.bllgetlon . The !agel structure requires
lawyers who devote all their effort to
making legal services available to all
now either un-represanted or under-

r:f.'..:::C7~edio~~~"';r..:':,~.=,e,~

delivery o? !agel sarvlces, helping with
civil rights law or poverty law, working
as a defender, of those charged wltll
crime who 8111 unable to employ
competent counsel, provl!llno oounsal
to mllltary personnel, worklllliJ In a legal
0

f~~~~"fri a ~b~~~~e:\~~~
:::\"~ fn'oc;:'~~·au~~noeas m~

environment, consumer protection, civil
IIbertIea, privacy, and the poor oontlnue
to be either not rapresanted or under-

~!;n1~~= .,':.~~1 ¥r:"i=~

making quality legal services widely
available will of a certainty be of Increasing lmportanoa over the next
quarter century."
'

II public 88fVIce Ia left to lndlYidual
choice, Smith . laid, then thera Ia no
guarantee, In Spite of the amoUnt ot
time and dedlcetlon which our
.profesalon brings to It, that the aerv1ce
.will be oomprehenslw, that the
coverage will meet the neec:l. "Ae the
lludy of the ABA Council lor Public
lnt-t Law noted, the demand for
public 1~1-law oomae about In pert
_ becausa of the ...,ura of the economic
market pl-. H that Ia eo, we muat
c-e new rnechanlams that fmJ)n)ft .
the operation of that market p1aoe
'
"Some 1awyera muat devole · 'pro
bono' effort to providing economic end
lealsletlve lncentiwe that wiU ckaw
otfter lawyers Into . . - u , . g ~­
ly ~ lntenaeta. Tfila-promoting leglalatlon for attorneys• f - and expendiiiQ pUbllcly-aupportad
legal aervlcea olflcea. It ,_,s working
through bar aaaoclatlona to aupport
public lnt~t law II1J118tbat can dllwote
continuing attentlorf"to public l n t ~s. It may,.,. working IWder In
_ , community to expand ·~~~e
poaalbllltlea lor group legal &amp;eMoM or
~plena.•
,
The conf8Nnoe1_ _w_hlch atao '-II
auch legal !urn....,. as 0111r1ae

=:--of~·
Rameer
Cln.~larll
..

Herman ~. Mlcllall n_.~
otheq f~ on , _ to
=~the . . . . ltlladln._.
II
In IIIII II i1111

ao.·•

-a...._..,._,

for~

. be IIIICM*I'ic!. 1w
Nlllad
co -.
r • ;.:.to
the Ameltcf8h
"--atlon (AU)

=:..~on

Public

ltiiWeei

�Shoot-out?
Ravena! suggests we might have
to 'exceed civilized bounds next time,'
if we haven't learned from Vietnam
Hind-sighted critics, Earl Ravenel of
the Institute of Polley Studlea In
Washington aaya, are likely to be as
wrong asthoae who m.cle the mlstal&lt;ea
they carp about.
Thus, he told the campus conference '
· on VIetnam S.tunlay, ·"It Ia aald that
thoae who remembenad Munich got us
Into VIetnam .
•

' reaponalblo
v~.::,:m~\\r:=,'•ut!"'~~ c;;.~&lt;;JI~~
power In a timely and
efficient way In some future cue."
Ravena! 88 one of thoee critics rejects
this ~mpllfl«&lt; lnt8fl)l;elatlon of the

""'it.":'l:C,C:
~,'lJ1e~~-he said, ano
not that we should avoid a//
confrontations-only similar ones..
·
The mosl Important strategic lesson ," he arQued, "Is that there are
constraints that limit the production and
projection of American military power.

~~n~t~~~~l~us07p':,~.,C'It~~~~~~~=

emphasize e~temal , situational con·
stralnts; others emphasize lotemal ,
particularly economic , constraints."

Former Viet POW says ·
War isn't over for some
A U.S. Navy officer, Imprisoned by
the North Vletnameae for aewn years ,
says the war Ia not yet o - for either
the Vletnameae people or U.S.
servicemen atlll.clualfled as Mining In
Action (MIA).
Capt. Richard. A. Stratton, speaking
at the U/B Dental Alumni dinner
September 29, aald he holled the U.S.
government would withhold any financial aid to the cumant Vletnameae

.

~;.~ :ll~.~~~~~,:u;~ng.l~
~t,!'r,:~:~~~~~,~~w~n?:,:~r~r-

'ng.
.
Tortunad, humiliated and deprived of
adequate diet and health care by his
captors, Stratton cnadlted hla survival
and that of hla fellow POWa to the
strong leadership exhibited by two
colleagues and to a eenae of
self-4llteam encour.ge&lt;~ by the prisoners' families, churchee and country.
These factors- not any training by the
military- - a fonomoat In INI&lt;Ing the
rstumlng POWa men " who could sUffer
In behalf of their nation and upon
re!Mae, hold heads high and atlll aay
'God bleaa America. • "
·
Stratton utd that although some feel
the VIetnam Warwu either toat by us or
W88 a etalemate, he bellevea the U.S.
presence there allowed that no longer
would we all beck and watch others
"devounad 88 W88 true In Czechoaloval&lt;la and Hungary."

J..:ttofelltr8Ciea
Despite pr1ton deprivation and
beatings, Stratton fol(j the audience
that the Arl""'*11' eenee of humor•
survived .. .,.he ~Ill who summoned When p r l - . h.cl oral lnfectlona, to their dlamey also
l8f'V8II .. phyatctan, kltc:t.l butcher
and veteriNrt811. During one eapeclally
difficult dental problem, Stratton said
he PIQUeded ' thla •-of-all-tnadea
"dentiat" Who doing poorly to atop
,hi a efforta. '1 h.cl to," he said . This not
only &amp;eYed Stratton hlmaelf from
further ~n. It al*1ld the "pr8ctltloner''
humiliation and' "lou of , _ _.. "The
rnM wee trying ," aa1c1 a-ton, "but the
outdated c.ch Nov-'ne (an aneathetlc) did not -'&lt;. In attempting to
drill a~·--· he kept getting the
COlton IIUt "-to '-"the mouth dry)
ling ln the C11111 - · which- ruaty."
AbOut a ,_ ._, after rwnwed
Infection ......,.
a-ton "-ted bV. Clanttet Who ueed the ~ *-alne and ruaty drill,
but WhO .... than rudlmenlery

lrWnlna.
llnftoll told the U/8 denlleta and
their....._~ tn llfleon the
POWii
I a - for ihelr - " ·
\!alng Willi the aruCie
lllrillla.
floeeilt.
'!.!!::!!..~

_
....
...............
=

3 .....

~ ~-- them
lela, ..., IINIIIId.
..... . . , . . . .

_r

IIIII .uH
dldm«e
..._..than did
11110 __,...., lcnOIMd

What distinguishes the critics, he
said, Is what ihey would do about the
con~tralnts. "Tha Instrumentalists-the
military-analyzed the micro-mistakes
and learned the mini-lessons: that a
stubborn , unorthodox enemy might
have to be countered, Isolated, fixed ,

. The bracelet• hellled

:.=

A~:rl~~ ~~~ ~~~hv~~~pw~r:t

lets engraved with the names of the
MIAs saved many POWs. The Com·
munlsts, he said, wanted to influence
public opinion In a favorable way
through the ''likes of Jane Fonda, Or.
Benjamin Spack and Ramsey Clark who
were Involved In Issues that weal&lt;ened
the political and economic fabric of
America. But when our captors. became
aware of the thousands of Americans
who were wearing the bracelets vowing not to ~al&lt;e them off until the
soldier whoae riame was engraved on it
was free or declanad dead - we began
to get better treatment."
T.here were many Instances of special
talent and determination among the
POWs. An 18-year-old seaman ap-

tft~/Fye

~~~~~~~r~h~d~~~~~

,';g,Te
-and other material - backward, used
his talent to memorize (backwards and
forwards) • the names and Social
Security numbers of more than 340
aviators captured 88 well as personal
Information about them . Upon his
releaae by the Communists, he was
able to provide the U.S. government

::::,:=~~~e~r:~:.:~:n~,!~,\?~t~

~~~~r.r~~·~~::;::'o~~"c!::.~"=·~

=.=orrr~,.~~herhfa-~t;;ts o'il
balance.

•

!':.'!~C:!'oy~/\~~~\'6~.unr~r=

critics-generally
proportlonallstsconcluded that the Inhibiting and
defeating features of Vietnam were
quite special to this· situation ."

4 reaaona why ·
Conventional wisdom, he

s~gested ,

~:;,~~t?ohn~i~ j&gt;t..':'B~.:!l' ~ta~:-~

the VIetnam war (2) because of certain
mlstskes (3) but we could dovlt o -

=~::Jd 1~ ft~t~,%/~.:'.:f~in:."~l1(4 }

we
Ravenel's strategic critique, however,
suggests th is amalgamated wisdom Is
wrong on all four counts: " (1) The
United States gained some objectives In
tbe VIetnam will'; (2) mlstal&lt;es were
made, but It was not the mlstal&lt;es that
were decisive, and Intervention and
escalation were quite understandable

~~o:;:'~h~~~ ~~~~~~h~~~,!',':""~~

(4) we cannot expect to Improve either
the conditions or our performance."

Aa~~~~;g~~~~~~~~y ~,\'! ~~~~~
0

and Kissinger redefined and naduced
them, settling for a temporary stalemate. ·
"
There were no! critical mistakes, to
any of the senses of the word. There
were no things ·~ hat we should have
recognized, but did not; or that, If
recognized, would have produced
different decisions; or things that, If
rectified, would have made a crucial

Me.d council ~ooks--at
third year entry .plan
An ad hoc committee of the Medical
Faculty Council will soon · begin
l~lgatlaf, the &amp;!'ulblllty of eatat&gt;-

~~~:ould
r-~ :=~ r~r::

..
their thirD
of m.cllcal SChool after
sucoeaafully completing a special
five-r- undergRaduate curriculum.
L.ut spring, U/B'a M.cllcal School
egnaed to ecoept a handful of students

from w~1:-'!T:.,:';:,•.:.=·
: , , beginning Clinical train~
CUNY hee no hoapftal affiliated with lfa

=

~ed~~~r= =~~

rn":
of New York City that have a allortege of
physicians.

.elm-. .

• ..

Hall-way through their undergraduate
work, Katz uld , CUNY atudente can
)IPPIY for eecunad .clmlulona Into
another Unlveralty'a clinical progqm.
Cunenlly. eight medical acllooll"offer
eeriy edmlaalona to ..._ CUNY

.
..:=! ,,_,.._
A lew Council membelw 11.c1 - -

18

to":'lnet-:.rt=ero

Cllnleellnettuctlon .

"":::3:: o:-~ce~
- &amp;chOOI 0...
told tile r:-11y Council
~ Katz

teet week thel CUNY'I prognam Ia ·
geered to lnner:=illlicllrila wllo
...belen
oollege, thel
they CiealiW a, prirMrY _ .

tiona .tlout the advtublllty· of llirtlng
an --.....cl fiiUIIIMI ' - lhllllllght
limit.,_ to ~tlflc - - ·
One Council memller l8lcl . . . . . .
IUCII a progqm mlgllt ~ a
~ion of ph~ Wllo ' - e
narrow appiQIICII 10-l!fe and palleM

--·

cu~

.

ta ~

~!~Ptr~:.-=~ hunwlllortent.c~,J''Z:"11M llllaral lrta .and
Nqul-.!a tllal ,......

~~the
~-~---..

..aponded

atuclante• for ~ Oladlcllnli In

..-.._.
I

I

We can't do 'bMier'

~~i.!\~:.~~:=:t~'l:~

In
peculiar capabllltlea and constraints of
our polltical-aoclat-economlc ayetem to
the features of probable future
situations."
· Instead, he argued, we will elwaya
mal&lt;e about the same quantity of
mlstal&lt;ea, more or leaa-thqugh they
will differ In detail. ·
Another major fact, he said, Ia "the

-~~~~~:~r ':!;~-:a:,:~-:~',~!.~
economy. " It Ia capital 1ntenatve,
attaching a high value to the trade-off of
American· dollars , against American
lives. It does not directly engage all of
the threats that we might experience;
and It Is annlhllatlngly deatructlve

~~r~t'',~ ~~~- ~~on"J'~~s'~O::

property, beneath-the capabilities and
the nature of our system to fight .an 'unAmerlcan' kind of war, such as
Vietnam."
It Is, thus, a fact with profound moral
as well as practical Implications, he
said , that we cannot wage the kind 61
war that even our allies would have us
wage on their supposed behalf.
The trouble

The trouble Is, Ravena! submitted,

r~s!ha~.:.::...~,a;:. '~!~':n10th~~:.

Doctrine-and certainly the war-termInation strategy of Nixon and Klulnger
- - a acknowledgments of, and
partial responaea to, constraints." The
:rouble Is that rfleny atlll dream "ot.
' overcoming the conatralnts, manipulatthe ru'Ing 'the parameters, c
of the game, buying
chance,
preparing for next lime ,
, dOing

better.••

!:m' ,.

'"

But, he aald, ·~ o cella for
renovating or ,.,tructur!flll· our forcea,
weapons, or doctrtn-._, o no avail.
We can't, 88 a aocletl'..a&lt;Produce and
proJect military forces orr18fforta much
different from what we have done . . ..
We should scrutinize Oll{l'!perfomwiCOI
and our non-perform- In Vletnem,
not to determine how do belt.-,
but preclaely In ord.- to: ..C. why we
can't do better In the future . And we
should tal&lt;e care to o~eem this
lesson, so we will, at- cl- of 811Y
situation-however compelling Ita par-

!!~:: ;~'l'~~~\an:Sca1'l'~h~:r0-~~
much the same thlnga."

:Better

·

now 1lwl later

Of courae, heecknowledg.cl,lhla Ia a

:.Tc~-=~s:c'ftrc
~\':U:,.=
prescrlpllona can be derived from It,

and they will look very different hom
the preecrtptlona that ere being dtatlll.cl
and purveyed by many ~pc~ay.
"The International riolltlc:ai-mliltary
~erma of tnade' ere IHflng agelnll the
feasibility of Intervention, egalnet the

they become Involved In various types '
of community health programs. After
gnaduatlon from .medical school, they

s-ued

difference In the outcome; or that we
could have rectified even If we knew we
lied to."
· Though there were not mistakes,
Ravena! continued, the cholce,ttiatm - wu no leu dlautroua.

c:::r~":r,:

==...-:-...::.:

of force. Each luture naplay will be ,_.
difficult, more eluatva, more co.tlyrmooa dl-rQUa lor our eocillly political eyatem. With the .,._..
distillation of COIIWnllonel wlldOm, w
might well become lniiOiracl, but find
that we could not - - ' ' or a.. ~..
muat exceed prudent 01' chiliad
bounds to . _ t our WilY out."
·
It - l d be better to l*'t thta belen,

not att.--and ~IJ not duringthe-next round, "-'a! cautlon.cl.
A...,ft ... ar

111111
The - - of hletory, ... aatd_, cal!
conceptual .,lfta In and profound CfWIOee In the

-egy.

for

we ftiCCIII'IID
_..la In the lramatlonal . _ _
Interpret them .. dlellengee to wNall

~ thl'ougll wiiiGII

•

*

mull rwpond.
Only tile l.-nlng of 1UC111 . . . _ wll .

==
=·!!'*

=·:r'..:',..:...~=..:..: .

'-:r'.:.. -:.:.~.=.·~:

Ylllnlm; but . . . . . . . . . . NI10IIIICIIIIII
Olljeola of -

..,.

�u

~5, 1178

Lobbl"g for

ch.estnuts
to
-to-

n- ....

-eel hlml
lind. retrieve, end the
from Of Jhe on the Meln Street
Cempue. The 1011ulrnl, though, juat u auc.,...tul end
he didn't
anything.

�Merce Cunningham
&amp; Dance Company
Netf. to Mart.ha Graham, the figure who
bas probably exerted the greaten inBoeooe
OD modern daoee is ~orce Cuooingbam,
N6W Yorker magazine dance critic. ANene
Crooe, hu ooined the word "Mercism" to
deocribe hit style wbieh bas been oopied by
ID&amp;IIJ' diociples. And yet, unlike Graham,
M...,. Cwmingbam bas always reinaioed iD
the avaof..ganle.
Cwmingbam's philosophy of daooe is that
it's pure JDOYement, not about ph&gt;ts or
psyeboiOIIJ. He does oot choreograph to
music, but selects or eommissions a 8COJ'e
that iDt,egrates with the choreography only
iD that the daoee aod the music take the
sameamouotoftime to perlorm. Of course,
the musie obviously affects the mood of the
daoee.
• Oo Friday aod saturday, October 13 aod
..14, U/B's Offiee of Cultural Affairs aod the
Frieoda of the Buffalo Tbeat&lt;e are
preseotiog"lllera! CWilliogbam aod Dance
Company at Shea's Buffalo. 636 Main
Street. Friday Digbt is "U/B Night," which
meaoa that there will be a 12 diteouot for
memben of the Uolve~ rommunity oo
licketa of all prices. The program will opeD
with _ a periormaDee al ooe of the
Cuooiogbam ela&amp;ca, •s.un-r.pa.e: with
..,...., by U/B reoideot oompoaer Morton
Feldmao, wbo will oooduct the Creative
the U/B-'--1 coatemporvy
muoic group. Alao oa tile are a
eolo, ......._ ~ lor Merce Cwmingbam
(maoic by Joba Cap), "SowHidaDee" (IIWiie
· by David Tadorl.aad " S c j - "·(musie

Aoooci-.

'

.....,.,.eliioa K'""'il. ·. .~
. ·
~(~~clueeerilktar.tbeN­
. J"orl n.,ou. ja her ~ of lfeo!,e
~·· Broedway· - · . . . . IIIia .
year, ..........
....Uve
miDda Ia- tbe-~----ot;·-­
_.. ......,... oal)&lt;
--._to have P""" ua the . ........,._.
~ Ia ....... ADd It the
al hit oold-out Jlroodway IOUOil, be W'U

·. -u.

a publication of
The Offiee of Cultural Affairs
Eotbor

Jlan;lou Swartz, wflier/edk«

A Qu~stion of
Comoatibility
Beesuse""i.he Office of Ciiltural Affairs is
briDging Meree Cuooiogbam and Daoce
·Company here (see ""''}MI Highlight about
same); aod because Jobo Cage is Music
Direc:tor of that oompaoy aod will lie
oomiDg to Buffalo. too: aod because Morton
FOidmao, Edgard · Varese Profe1801" of
Compoeili!)ll at U!B hu oompoaed for
Cwmingbam aod is a cloae oolleagoe of Jobo
Cage: and beeause Robert Creeley, poet
aod Grv Profesaor of Poetry aod Letters
at U/B, taugbt .rib Moree Cwmlagbam
aod Jobo Cage It llllldt Maomt.ain College;·
aod beeaUe all of U.. aboYe haft
oollabarated wltli the New Yart Sc:bool ol
-rinal ortllta: aod ....... RoiJelt Bar:k ia

To ieep track~ -­
U/B'Iieuftural
events through
October, save
this.magnet .

director of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery,
ooe·of the oouotry's out&amp;Wadiag galleries of
modern art - it oeeurred to the omce of
Cultural .Affairs that this--group might have
a gODd deal to urto ...h other aod to ao
audieoee. Coo.ooqueotly~ • aympooium bas
""'" &amp;I'I'&amp;DgeCI for Tbunday, October 12,
eallod
Uoi..-ty and the Arts; Ana
They CompatibleT'
•
Modenij_Dg IIIia- of em..dluriy
artieul&amp;e aod outopabD patio- wl1 be
Eotbor i j . - Swart&amp;. l'nlldealill
~t fer Caltural A&amp;ln. The will tab P'- iD tbe Waldma Tloodre ID

-no

lo---

Ncortai- Bd Campuo ~

"the -

u..

Aellent
aldie three

joiDed llaildiDp: Copoa. ,.... lllil
Nortoa). &lt;l.- to lillloD.Io ...... If :roa

wlob.to...-

�obadeo ol Jeek Kerouac}. He never
o6mpleted bia meclieal studies, never
bee&amp;me part ol lbe establishment. His
.........mstie a.etivitieo ultimately !ed to his
expUiaioo (u an alien} to London, where he
oontinued his marginal ea.istenee. Yet he
was remarkably inDuential among the·
artiata of his ti,me, who &amp;ponsored his
publication of a litera.ry magazine, "Les
Cahiero de M. Golberg." His blat work wu
"Disry of a Dying Man," a self-analysis of
his physieal dedine in a a.aoatorium , where
'
he died ol T.B. at 89.
fn his biography of this atrange figure,
Auhery tn&lt;es io Golberg's writings the
evolution of his peroonality from student to
ana.rchist to a.eathete. And he ooncludes
that the t.rue revolutionary element is not
made up of doetrinail'e th_..tieisns, but of
the marginal figures who have no affiliation
with the eot.ablilbed order. "If yo'u are not
part of the eot.ablishment, you are mueh
more creative," Aubery contends.
- ProfeSIOI' Aobery is now tea.ehing and
writing abeut Quebec:. He e:q&gt;laina that the
French Canadlano a.re deecendants of
ch peuauts, and tb&amp;Uoe feels a loyalty
peuaut c1aaa from which he himself
deri . Further, Auhefoy is interested in
the rights of minoritiea or underdogs "to be
themselves" Jews, Quebeeois, the
workingdua. Why this pronounced attraciioo to theoo groupo? "The lou of land and
the tra.ositioo to cit71ife wu oUT downfall,
our humiliation," aays Auhery. "We lost
the independence of oUT pea.a.aot ancestors.
The Jewilb population baa been urbanized.
Perhaps, unoooacioualy, in my study of
them I have been tryiag to learn to adapt to
the oompl .. atrueture of modern urban
life."

Creative 1\.ssociates'
FHteenth
Season
A new ..ries coDed "Room 100 Concerts"
will begin this year, Jogieally enough in
Room 100, Baird Ha.U. The idea is to present

OpeDiDg Ntpt at the
[newl
PfeHer Theatre
The ee.Je; ,.,. Theme lleoMrch will
-

in ill aew quarten -

the ' P!eifer
larmerlr the Studli&gt; . Area&amp;
88lllaiD Street - With two
. . - . ....... performed br a
J....- - · Oet. 1'- The

~.

~.

-

_..,

a

eurta.in railer is a ehort ela.uiea1 dantedrama for puppota, and the play is a
mllaboratioo by a well·known Japanese
poet, Tokio Tomiob, .and Japan's leading
atop deaigner, Setau Aaakura. "The Doll

Siaten" ("NiDcJo-Sbimal':iD Japt,DOMl uaea
bot.h puppeta aud•acl«a, ilomb.iniDg Qcient
and contempoJ'U'7 theatrical techniques.
The theme is one frequenUy uaed in

a consistent seiies of performances t,y the
various Creative Aasoeiata, rather than,
as in previous years, occasional reciials:
traditional Japaueae theotre, that of
For the Information of newcomers to the
.. women seduced and abandoned, women
eampus, the Creative Associates are young,
ateadfut and faltbful." &amp;.age designer profeaaional performers of oootemporary
Asakur&amp; has botb deaigned and directed musie, housed in the Music Department as
t.his production, which is touring SUNY
membe'i'i ol The Center of the Creative and
eampuaes in September aud October. An
Performing Arta.
English !W'I'ative will lie integrated into
Tonight, October 5, is the first of the
"The DoD Sisters" for the American tour.
Room 100 Concert.s (9 PM}, and '!'ill feature
a new piece oompoaed by the Center's
Musie Director, Morton Feldman. Feldman,
eotypes that· Aubery heard in France
wbo jokes that his titles are more famous
insisted that JOWl were always aligned
than his compositions, hu coDed this one
"Why Patterns?" and baa written it for the
with Communist&amp;, but the young Aubrey's
own ae~ of stereotypes, baaed oo the three
remarkable U/B-bued pereussiooist, Jan
Jewa of whom he'd heard - Baron de
Willia.ma, German Outlat Eberhard Blum,
Rotbacbild, French Premier Leon Blum and
with Feldman in the double role of
the mayor of Aubery's hometown of Le
composer a.od pianist: Another work on the
Havre - suggested to him that Jews · program, Ravel's Sonata for Violin and
Celio, to . he performed by Creative
represented privilege and power. However,
l.b&amp;t did not jibe with their ootraci&amp;atioo Aaaociat.ea Veroolea Knittel, cellist, and
br the ooeupying Germans during World · Ken Ishii, violiniot, Is a departure from the
War ll, nor with the details ol the Dreyfuaa
Ceoter'a previous tradition' to avoid
affair about which Aubery later learned. He tradition. To preMDt RaVel OD a New Music
d«ided to study tbe Jewish population in
program aeema ultra oonaerv&amp;Uve. But it
France, to resolve these cootradiet.ious in
will be intereating to mix twentieth eeotury
his mind.
elauiea with mllllie bot oil' the - · and
Alter World War ll, Aubery worked for a
will probably increloo llllllialee . . .
time u aloogaboreman, then found a job a:;
A similar p.....,._ mbrture will he beard
a newapaper writer with Le Havre·Libro,
011 Saturday, October 18, at 8 PM at the
eventually becoming their Paris oor·
fll'&amp;t "Eveolnga for New Maaie," when
respondent. fn the early 50's be received a
work&amp; by SeboeDborg end Berg will be
Fulbright tnv'el grant to tbe United States
presented with a 'WOI'k (1874} by
to work u ~ reoun:h auistant for a
William Krait. Kraft, • Colilomia oompoa·
proleuor at· DuJoo U.niveroity who wu
er, will b e - t a t i l e - . His music
atudying the F'1wdl Reaiatance. Auhery
for the U!B Pe........_ EDMmble and
took the Duke M.A.' equivalency examinareciter (a.etreaa Liz llillor} will be
tiooa at oigbt, returning to !.be Sorhoooe in
performed in the AI~~r~Pt-Knox Art
Paris, where in li66 be received a
Gallery's aeulpture cour\, wblle tile setting
doet.cnte. Still lucinated by the Jewish
for Schoenberg's ·~·(cham ·
populotioo, he wrole his diaaert.ation oo. her cxmeert} and the Berg plooe (which be
"Jewish Circleo in r-tempoeary Fran&lt;e." · declieated to Sdloalllerll."lo be plaJed by
a.-tly, -a.er book refleeting Uroula Oppa.. ,._, ad VIII'Oiliea
~·a ...- . , . . . _ in Jewa. baa
Knitte~ vialill, will be Ia doe AJbrtlbi--Knox
booa rolouod, a biocnPhJ ol M..W.U
auditorium.
GolfNtv: 1,._11101. Golberg, a Polilll Jew,
To make the ,week-' -more gala,
oont to Giaeva at 18 t.,. his well-to-do
Eberhard Blla will porfoao Jalm Cage's
"ee! " - re . . . _ Ooluingham for
...... - - ol ........ qnotu
apiaoi.Jewa ill Polilla llllinnltiea. Shonl7
Voice Uo-pealed Ullillg Microphone"
......... lola ......, ... tbeil' ..-..,;
11971} oe SUIId&amp;J, Oetober ze, at S PM in
........ Golberg unalJie to 6nd a
lloe Nina Frelldeaholm Gallery. "11-.ies"
ti...ao..l ill GoMwa, ..... emilnted to
moana "the row clowa the middle." and by
....... 'lbla ill 1812. FluaciaBJ
Cap'a,_ oftbe I au.., IDl daneer Moree
doapente ad _,.._.,taiiJ
CaluoiDcham'• (of orllich this
ia fulll, be 11M .. w1tJa 1D lntriping
Goloorg,
a ... - - · allaapled .... failedafter
- aaidde.
lila frieado llllloet.ed . - o f lo&amp;ten ...... tlwlaat.. The tJpe
........ lila .. amid JDedlcol ' - aad .._ of tile lo&amp;ten .,_at the
llallieiiii4Pooblialo hisaaorc:loiltle .........
dllapaia ........ ..,.ut7endotyle. "To
......._ Aallory la10 Ill&amp; Gallq 0.. nod ............. &amp;o ....... COIIUQellta
Ia .,... 1.o&amp;la ca-. u "aldlld ollllppie" tile ........ Alt,r-. ... baa beard
...... . . . . . .... - o f the o.da

-.w..

-t

�1aagu1ge work by Kurt Scbwi--. Jmo..,.
that be will . briog tbia Cap work oft in
~twisting triumph.
BacktraUing to Oetcber 15, the
irrepressible con&lt;ertizer Yvar Mil&lt;hasboff
will join Franees Uitti in a performance of
the w...U for piano and cello that they
played on their European !.our lasl summer
~ w...U by Lejaren Biller, Bussotti,
Micl&gt;ul ~. James Sellard. The
recit.al is _..red by the Center.
NOTE: , ~ Center's Music: Director
Feldman has 10me fortbc:oming gig&gt; worthy
of ...,.mont.: he will be the ·r..tured
com-r Ill. tbe Berlin Festival, with a
performanee of his 'opera, "Neither, • on
Qct.ober 19 and his chamber music
(Feldman performing) on OetOOer 21. On
November S, a ret.roopective concert Ill.
Wesleyan Univenity (ConnecUc:ut), and on
November 21 a production of "Neither" Ill.
the Manhal.tan Schon! of Music in · New
York.

Outriders Pootry
Readings
1'be weekly Outriders Poetry Readings
(Wedneodaya Ill. 8:30 p.m.) Ill. the
Tnlfamadore Cafe. 2610 Main St.reet.,

Bufblo, have resumed again olle- 011
extremely popular and sueeesofuloeries_lut
spring, and will cootinne until December
13. Purpooe of tbe .-ies is to briog poets
and writers ~g their work into a
relaxed and informal community .U.og.
All readings are usoally free and open to
the general public, and followed by live
music: Outriders director, Mu Wickert, a
profeasor of English hefe, indic:atea thai. a
foundation grant from Poets and Writers
Inc. has ....been received for t.he c:t.l.IT'ent
series. "This means," Wickert ssys, "that
we can bring prominent poets from out of
town , in addition to providi:Dg a forum for
local and regional talent." Readers. during
the next five weeks of the program will be:
Members of Serendipity Arts Unlimited
(Oetcber 11), Jarold Ramsey (October 18),
Ro5emarie Waldrop !October 25), Doug
Crowell (November 1), and A. Poulin
(November 8).
Serendipity Arts Unlimited is a writera'
group active in Western New York since
19'16. Jarold Ramsey is poet-in-residenoe at
the University of Rochester. Roaemarie
Waldrop teaches Comparative·Literature at
Brown Univenity. A. Poulin is on the
C.Culty of SUC/Brockport. ~d Doug
Crowell tesches fid.ion writing at U/ B.
"ln the eight years of Outriders'
exis1.ence," Wickert maintains, "this promises to be the most exciting series of all... .

8
Suday

WatehFor ...

... Or rither, lilln for WBFO's "Earfest"·
November U through 19. Keep your dial at
88.7 FM for such specials u "Big Band
Orgy," "Spoken Word," jazz groups live
from the Tnlfamadore Cafe, lin evening of
listener reqiM!Itl and, as they say, much
much more.

•E""""'""t arod toriter Room Hejjbnnoer, who will give this,year's lames Fenton
~ure on Thunday, NO?ember 1 (snow
date, you should exeuse tbe expoession, is
November 8) in the Woldman Theatre,
Amherst Campus (in tbe new Non.on Hall).
Dr. Heilbroner, chairman of Economics ai
New York's New School of Social Reoearcb,
aythor and frequent contributor to the New
York Thneo, New York Review of Boolu,
New Yorker, etc. will t.alk about what we
are all facing with a mixture of
apprehension and bewilderment: inflation,
iaaes (reform or revolt) and just plain
economic survival. Arranged by Office of
Cultural Affairs.
•"The Tiaree Permv Opera,.... the
perennial music theatre favorite by Brecht
and Kurt Weill, directed by Saul Elkin. lfs
scheduled to open November 7 in the new
Pfeifer Theatre, 681 Main Street (old
Studio Arena Theatre). Sponsored by the
Center for Th..._tre Research.
•A •eminar, "'1'1l"£ Career Woman ift

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST

12
Thwoday

6

SYMPOSRJM•
. Robert Buck', John Cage, Robert Oree/elf,

Compatible?" Moderator: Esther Harriott
Swart%, Presidential Assistant for Cultural Affairs. i\llpidman Theatre, 112
Norton Hall, Amherst Campus (building
next to Capen Hall). 8 PM. Free. Sponsor:
Office of Ciiltural Affairs.

MUSIC

13
Friday

Rtxml 100 Cmlcert:• Premiere of a oew
pieee by Morton Feldaian, and worb of
Ravd and Bernard Randa. llainl Hall,
Room 100. 9 PM. Free. SpoDJOr: Center of
the Creative and Performing Aria.

POE'I1lY IIEADING

Gale Carritler&amp;, Robert Do4/, V'oc Dov&gt;oo.
Lulie Fiedler, Sa/111 Fiedler, .AMG K. ,
l"nDoce, Jolin Logra, Carine Polite,
Williclm Slflvuter, David Willben&amp; : Poets
have been uked 0101 to read from their
own w...U. Cornell Theatre. 8 PM. Free.
Reeeption immediately following in the
Jane Keeler Room. Spon10r: Department
ofEDj!liab.

The Katharine Cornell Theatre, site of
many of the events listed in 1 fftQ9Ut, is
located in the Jooeph Ellicott Compte~&lt;,
Amherst Campus.

_ Merce Culmingham, Morlan Feldm4r&lt;:'
"The University and the Aria: Are They

'l'lcbta
Tickets, where required, .., av&amp;Uble at the Sq\li!t!
Hall Ticket Oflioe (in advance); remaining tickets at the
door one hour before evenL I. D. earda must be presented
in order to purchue tickets at Student/Faculty!Stajf
alumni rate.

Friday

For complete details on tidtet pri-. times,
etc. of events, - !Mgllel dlreetory.

Smith Oild Brian Bedford. $21 includes
ticket . to play and roundtrip bus
transportatioo. Reserval.ions and $10
deposit aec:epted until Friday, Oetcber 6.
Call Larry Belewich, 636-2079, or
836-1)273
for information. Sponaor:
l.E.L.l.

Uonti/M Price - Live from the White

. House. The internationally acclaimed
opera star aings music by Handel, Richard
Strauss, Puccini, Louie White, Ned
Rorem, Samuel Barber and others. 68.7
FM - WBFO. 4 PM.

OCTOBER
5
111..-.day

Thday'• World, • on November 11, 9 AM 4:30 PM. Registration ($10) in Capen Hall
Lobby. includes workabops, materials and
luncheon.
•Hvllg4riml folk doloce worko/wpo, given
by the Hunsarian folk danoe. tNcbers and
periormera, Kalman and Juditb Magyar.
On Saturday, November 11, mornins and
afte,_, capped by an evening party. All
events in Squire's Fillmore Room,
sporuoored by the Balkan Dancera.
•A poetrY reading by tbe renowned
Ahriel Rulc.eyoer in tbe Cornel) Theatre on
November 13 at 8 PM. Reception to follow.
Sponsored by English Department.
•A possible residency on campus during
Oetcber by famed Hollywood movie
director, Fnmk Capra, who made 10me of
the best films of the 80s. Call '!'hom
~deriOn or John Minkowsky at 847-2555
for informal.ion.

LIVE RADIO BROADC_AST

Slee Beelltwen Qvm-t"et Crfcle Concerl II:
The Rowe Quartet. f'8f(orming Quartet
No. 10 in Eflat major. op.::?~: Quartet No.
2 in G majq-, op. 18, no. 2;-and Quartet
Ng. 14 inC sharp minor, op. 181. 88. 7 FM
- WBFO. 7:50PM.
MUSIC

&amp;elhoven Strifl!} .Qvm-let Crlcle ll: 1le
Rowe Qoulrtet. Baird Hall. 8 PM. Geeeral
admission $4, U/8 faculty, staff, alumni
$3, students Sl. Sponsor: Department of

.

MUSIC
Gart! lh&lt;'1/UI, tenor and Carlo Piftto,

piano, with Deborah Carbaugh, IOprODO,
SuJe Leal, mezzo-ooprano, Joel Bernotein,
baritooe: "Open ffigbligbts." Baird Hall.
8 PM. Geeeral admisaion $3, U/B faculty,
staff, alumni $2, atudents $1. Spon10r:
Department ol Musk.

DANOE

Music.

BvffaJI&gt; D&lt;in&lt;e Sllowc&lt;ue: Zodioq\le Dance
Co.. U/B's resident dance company,
performs "Omens," choreographed by
Tom Ralabaie, and "Aubade." .choreographed by Linda H. Swiniuch. Other
local dance companies on-program. Shea's
Buffalo Theatre. 7:80 PM. $5 and $3 - call
Robert Cole at· Shea's Buffalo Theatre.
Sponsor: Shea's Buffalo Theatre.

DANOE
Moree C•lmi&gt;lgiiGm arod D&lt;w:e Compoalf:
"U/B Night." Shea's Buffalo Theatre, 846
Main Street, 8:80 PM. "General Admisaion
$12, $3.50, $6, $(. Dilcount of $2 on uy
price seat for U/B faculty, staff, atudents.
Sponsors: Office of Cultural Affairs ud
Shea's Buffalo Theatre.

MUSIC

Jazz l!!ruemble, Phil Sims, director. Baird
Hall. 8 PM. Free. Sponsor: Department of
Music.
9

M-lay

Fn.M ·
Films of Merce Cunningham and Dance
Company: "Rainforeat" and "Westbeth."
Squire Coofereilce Theatre. 7 PM, 8 PM, 9
PM. Free. Spon10r : Office of Cultural
Affairs.
LECTURE

MicloGel Laoodooa!nt, Free University- of
Berlin: "Ernst Bloch: Metaphysics,
Aeatbetic:a, Marxism." 822 Clemens. 8
PM. In Engliab. Reoeptjon to follow.
Spon...-.: Deparimollts of Modem Languapa and Philooophy ill uoociatiolt with
Goethe llouae of New y ark.

LllC'I1JII£ SDUE8: "Aaaii1ECTS/
BUILDINC8/00NCEP'I'8"'
PeU.. BlaU, arehl.- and edaeator,
Archilec:tural Ooater. lD5 Ht,reo
Hall. 5:80 PM. Free. Spon.-: Sebool of
Afthit«&lt;.ure and Eavironmeotal Deoip,
EXCUIIIIION

SUwlfrlrtJ l"utivlrl: "Private Li••" by
Noel Coworcl ,..._. rill llaQio

14

• Saturday

DANOE
, Mere• OoumiolgiiGm arod Dalocc Cowv&gt;af:
See Oetcber 18 listiDg for apec:lal "UtB
Night" prices. This
have U/B discount.

pe~

......._
•

DRAMA

Nillno-&amp;llilaai

(De Doll SiaUre) 0 , by
Tomioka, directed by llolau
Asukura, perionned by vliillnc J . -

Takio

act.ora. Pfeif• Tlloatre. 8111 MaiD 8lreot
(Old Studio Areaa Tlleatre). 8 PM.
· General Aclmloaia.
otuo~oDU ..,..
oeniordUJena$1.50. Sponlon: ee-ror
Tbe&amp;tre Re.-rch, ~t of '111e·
atre, Buffalo State Collep.

sa.

,

MUSIC

A....,._.

Shoieat• · of P"mtG
BoWt:
duo-pWio .-..dtiL llainl Hall. 8 Pll ........
SpcJa.r. J:loponiDoat of MUiit.

UIBIIOIIElOOIIING DANCE
MlUard FiUmare Room, Squire Hall. 8:80
-PM • 1:00 AM. $5.00. SpcJa.r.
Alumni~.

MUSIC .
l'iocl&gt;o

a..... .

.

vocaliot.

0..

Bill.

pltarisl/oiDpr. Clark Gym. 8 PM.

�Dreamland" (1976), "Mongoloid" (1978),
"Valse Triste" (1978) and a selection of
earlier work . Albright-Knox Art Gallery.
8 PM. General odmission 12. students and
gallery membel'!l $1.50. Series tick_e ts
available. Sponaors: Center for Media
Study, Albright-Knox Art Gallery.

POETRY

READING
Leon Swkubury: Gonery 219, SqUire

Hall. 8 1'M. Free. 'Sponsor: UUAB
Cultural and Performing Arta Comnu'ttee.

MUSIC
&amp;ethov.,. String Quartet O,cle Ill: Fine
Am Quarl.et. Baird Han. 8 PM. General
odmission $4, U!B f!~!:ully , st.aff, llumni
$8, students I!. Sponsor: Department of
Music.
DRAMA/DANCE

Z7

All Fe'fiiiJI.e Cnlt and Karia- mod

Friday

Company. See October 24lioting.

GeDeral Aclmloaicm $6.00, students $4~00.

IRJSIC

y_. JIJJrJtulloff, piano,

~.. VItti,
8 PM. General
~ $1.50, studeDta, faculty,
·. _... ciu- Sl-.00. Spoaoon: Eenter of
•..,. ~ tile
~ PerformiDg Arta llld the

!"''iD,- Balnl Recital Hall,

MUSIC

'

.wr.

c.-m

·t r. 1=~:=:::~~~~-~

...,.;if ~-~·

.- ,
·. ~·-;.,.{_,,.J:l: """'c.
.........
aad
.. . . Aldieec:ta'. COiaboratiU, Cam·
~

·:t

porb&gt;ev '

.,

U/B W'md Entbi.k, Frank Cipolla.
director. Cornell Theatre. 8 -PM. Free.
Sponaor: Department of Muaic. Featuring
wO..ka· by Walter .Hartley" Handel, .
. _·Dv..U, DahlandStn~. '··

·~- :t~~;·~~~zp4.:;.
·

.............. s.io OotcJiier~lioting.

'i •

LIVE RADIO. BROADCAST
Slee Beetlfot&gt;t:lo Orick Cotocert W · The
Fine Arta Quartet. performing Quartet
No. 11 in~ minor, op. 95; Quartet No. 6.l!_l
B fiat m&amp;JOI', &lt;&gt;P· 18, no. 6; and Q)Wtet
No. 15 in A minor, op. 182. 88.7 FM ·
WBFO. 7:50PM.

· $6.00, students $4.50, $4.00. Sponaor:
UUAB Music Committee.

a.--: UUAB Muaic Committee.

~~&gt;c"'-i!i;ic·-

iiloll~

Moaday

J - E.,emble, Sam Falzone, direct&lt;&gt;r.
Balnl ~- 8 PM. Free. Sponaor:
DoputmeDt ol Muaic.

·I,ECTtJRE

. , ··~·

MUSIC
au~~~o.- s~ Qvartet Olde TV: Fiu
. • ArU Qlowtet. Balnl Hill 8 PM. .Geeeral

'. _

&lt; liclililooioD.,U;'-ujiB .faculty stiff, oiiiiiiDi

: :+. ' ." "

. .;7~::-:_ :

F:ree

,~~,~:~:~~~~~~ ·~1~.

·; z3 .·

• MUSIC

Balnl

-~L

., i

SERIEs:

ABCIII'IJ:CI'S/
.BUILDINGS/CONCEP'I'S
Cbrlu Moore, 'arcllitect and eeucstor,
University of Colifornia at Loa Angeles.
See October 91isting.

POETilY IIEADING
822 Clemena. 8 PM. Free.
Sponsor: Department of English.

K'-"'

24

Tueodaf

28
Satlirday

25
Wednesday

Opening and performance.

Media Study/Buffalo, 207 Delaware. 8
PM. Free.

MEDIA

MUSIC
y.,..,. llikioa/wff. piano: "Liut Rarities."
lloinlllall. 8 PM. c-raJ Aclmloaioo $8,
UIB fllealt7. stall', olllllllli 12, student&amp; Sf.
l!poaar. ~ ol Muolc. Aloo
looUorl8t s- Looi-Bebfuu, mezzo.

=.llruo
lbll.

s PM.

No (faculty Ndtal) . Balnl
admlooiaD sa •. U!B

c...~

' ....,., .... aloDal

12.- CI&gt;deata SJ,

a,-. n.,.:-otM-. AD U...
......... of u. lkdWo Bruo Trio o.w x.a. ~ Daue s.mlt,
loora; . . . n..ll Miler, tnBhaDe - ..........u.lkdr.lo Pbiloarmoaie. llr.
....,. 811111 ..... Miler .... .r.o .. the
. . . . .,.,.......•• ,......_ fllealty . .
. . :-. ............. wmb by J!Ht.

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

Z6
Tloaroolay

...... ~ 'jaa piiDist. 1'miiJie
......... tnooapet. &amp;Ma'• Buffolo Theatre. 8:10 I'll. ~ AdmiooioD suo.

. 29

MUSIC
John Cnge'• Sirty-Two Me•o•tic• performed by Eberhard Blum:• Nina
Freudenheim Gallery. S PM. Free.
Sponsor: Center of the Creative aod
Performing Arta.
MUSIC
Miclt.Gel Burke, organ recital. St. John
L)l!beran Church of Amberllt. 7:30 PM.
Free. SJ&gt;011110f: DepartmentofMuoic:

DRAMA/DANCE
Company. ~ October 24 lioting.

UVERADIO BROADCAST
Stu &amp;etllowro Qoorlet Cvcle Cot&amp;cert m
· The Fine Arta Quartet, · perfoniliog

30
Moaday
'

arcblteci, Bootao. See October

MUSIC
AU. . Sig.l, dar!Mt,

D major, op. 18, no. 3; Groose
Fuge in B lW major, op. 188; and Quortet
in F major, op. 59, no. 1. 88.7 FM •
WBFO. 7:50PM. ..
Evenirtgr /tw Now F;lm: 1Jrvee CoMer.
Tbe foremost eolloge artist working in
cinema will preMDt hia four latest films,
"Crossroad" (1976), "Toke tbe 5:10 to

LEC'ruBE SERIES: "ABCIIln:CTSI
BUILDING8/CONCD'TS" .
Dolt Stvll,

91isting.

~tin

PAID
8ufblo. N.y .
PI!J'IIitNo.Bll

...... t

Sunday

AU Female Cnlt aad Kariam1t mod

Noa-Profit Org.
U.S. Postoge

.........""".."'-

MUSIC

~· Gadiel,
piano (Fanity Iledtol). Boirclllall. 8 PM .
General ~ 13, UIB faculty, stdl,
olumni 12. studenlo 11. Spoaoor:
Deportm~t ol Muoic .

PILM SCREENINQ,LEC'ruBE

lftBC

DRAMA/DANCE
and Kariamu mod
Company. See October 24 lioting. Benefit
for E~a Bookstore.

All Fe'fiiiJI.e Cnlt

Benny Cnmr and Tno with U/B Jan
Ensemble. CorneU Theatre. 8 and 10 PM.
Admission price to be announced: eall
881-3408. Sponsor: Department of Music.

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
Marlin, &amp;ga.., &amp; A ..,..trong • Blues
String Band. Live from the Tralfamadore
Cafe. 88.7 FM · WBFO. 10.PM.

..........

II
Twooiay

I;IVERADIO.OADCAST

1lfl/fvM&gt; ~JiuitSocietr Cnoocen/V'Jri,uooi Di Boma
WBFO. 8:31PM.

~-

~

...

88.7 Fll .

Exhibitions

Drawisg• of Dotogllu Cooper S.A.E.D.. ~ Han
Lobby. 'I'hloush November 8. Coopor, a former lltadomt
of A-.iate " " ' " -'Willlam Buff, llaa .....,ntlr bod a
-.maa obow at the c.._- Ma.11111, llc:olfe Art
GoiiorJr. Pittobarp. Widle waridJJc in Ellrape, be ....
.......
I [ ! d by thHit1 o( Franldurt, Clermon1 to shape
a public llup lGr tile fo,_ city by tbe uae of·gnpllic
media. DcJaclu CbaJier turi'OIItl)' te.cheo at Comegie-

.......

••

Departme~~t,

MUSIC

and

Ampersand• A concert for instruments,
electronics, .microcomputers.
Media
Study/Buffalo, 207 Delaware Avenue. 8
PM. Free . .

Muoic

Eveninga for New Mtuic::• Works of,
Schoenberg, Berg. William Kraft. AJ.
bright-Knox Art Gallery. 8 PM. General
Admission $8, students, faculty. staff,
senior eitizens, gallery members $1, ADS
vouchers available. Sponsor: Center of the
-Creative and Performing Arts .

POETRY READING
Otttriderr: Rosemarie Waldr6p, Brown
Uoiversity. See October 181isting. Free.
' DRAMA/DANCE
AU · Female Cnlt and Kariamu
Compo11y. See October 24 listing.

MmiA

.4..,........t•

~

AU Fe'fiiiJI.e Cnlt: "Some Enchanted
Evening" and Koriamu and Compo11y
man 'Theatre. 8 PM. General admission
S4, students and senjor citizens ~.50.
Spoosors: Department of Theatre;
Kariamu and Company, Emm. Bookstore.

-~

;r£. ·~- -~d~~~ to~
831-3408: ·

(formerly Black Dance Workshop). Havi-

18 , ~TKYREADING
'
.
W - y ~lji,iritkf'~: Jorold R&lt;mUiey, Tralfamadoloe

p&amp;te. 8:so...PM. Free.
;r
o ...
IIROWN BAG LUNCH
•1'Corolp · Godie~ piano, and Clulr/u
Lirette, trumpet. Memben of Buffalo
Philharmonic. SS5 Hayes. 12 noon · I .
1
f.ree· Sponsor: S~D.

DRAMA/DANCE

S§7~ ·$1 .. Spouor: ~-of

. IIUIJ&gt;~ .. Can

,c

Pem-

)

... --------------------------- -- - - - ' - - -·

·

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                    <text>Anthro-museuni:
a illillion artifacts
By Joyce Buchnowskl
Reporter Staff

The Ellicott CompleX's North Ubrary
is now being transformed Into a
research museum for the Department of
A~thropotogy which will house close to
one million artifacts, the majority
excavated from Western New York.

Pr~~~~~:n~~~n ~~~':,"~~~~he&lt;!lf~t'tf[y

will be a "resource of national
consequence" that will house one of the
finest collections of Iroquois archaeol-

ogf~~ ~~;~~~~~ill

contain an exhibit
room, a teaching laboratory, and a work

room . The work room wil l feature the
book collection of the tate Professor
Marian E. White, who willed her library
to U/B's Anthropology Department
where she worked for over 15 years .
Because the museum will contain "her

tile's work," Barbour-says it will likely
be named for her.
·
ln. addition to the White library, the
museum will feature books from the
Center for Cultural Transmission and
the Human Relations Area Files, which
are instrumental In cross-cultural
research .

-Professor Raoul Naroll and the tate
Professor David Stout were responsible
for acquiring the files .
It's functional
Barbour expressed satisfaction with
the layout of lhb museum, terming It
" functional" with respecr to space
- provided for research , analysis and
storage. He also likes the fact that the

~~~~Yn~sh~;:,ky/~~~ 1 ~~~..~~~~~~~~~':.'f.

•See •Anthro Mu..um,' pege I , cot. 1

S~P 28,1978
VOL.10 • NO.4

STATE UNIVERSITY.
AT BUFFAI,.O

HMO:

new plan stresses preventive care

A new ·mode of health insurance and
treatment which em.phesizes preventive
will be availlible to U/B employees
beginning in January.
. Election of the -new option must be

~~ dt~"itt!':!o.:;:=1~ra;r~~:ri~

changes in insunonce plans.
The oew option allows employees covered by the State Health Insurance ·

~~Y~~~~~=t~flji~'j'Xt'nP.f..:.'l:'~i~~~

Plan , Inc., a new health maintenance
organization (HMO) which began
operations in Erie County September 1.
An HMO is defined as an .. Organiza

lion of health care professionals and
facilities that dellvera a comprehensive
range of health services to members
who enroll voluntarily and pay a llxed,

r,;et~~dHf:o:~Tl:~rl:'!~'fn t~';t:~~

which the HMO selects.
HMOs have been and are being
organized throughout the nation In line
with federal legislation,. Sponsors of !&gt;l8
legislation sa~ it is deslgQed to help
control health care costs while
Improving access to services. Millions
are enrolled nationally.
In New York State, a Cspltal Area
Community Health .Plan- In Altiany, In
operation for two v-s, already _ .
a number of State employees. A
seven-yesr-&lt;&gt;id Genesee Valley Group
Health Plan hes some 36,000 subscribers In the Rochester area.

located at 120 Gardenville P.aikway
Was(, Cheektowaga. Thl! skylighted,
well-decorated center wjii be the scene
of open houses for State employees
each· Wednesday , and Thursd~y in
October, from 5:30p .m. to 8:30 p.fTI .

Eye examsMe a standard paa of
HCP coverage, too, another extra that
most health Insurance doesn't take care
of.
The State's contract with HCP does
not extend to drugs or lenses and
frames fQr glasses, but since HCP
opetates a ph8fl1111CY and an optical
dispensary as not-fpr-profll enterprises,
Gosh in says, . there's a •reasonable
:f=f!}~~~~le:.~.es In both will be
HCP also: has a. physician on..:all
24-hours a day, seven days a week; will
provide care in your horne when
medically necessary; covers expentl80
for emergency and ambulance a.vtces;
and takes care of out-&lt;&gt;f-U&gt;wn traatment
and hospitalization (through an arrangement with Prydenllal Insurance).
-Its consulti~icsl and surgical
specialir.ts stmltarly are under special
contract. When an HCP doctor ratera an
enrollee to one of them, tllere Ia no
expense to the pat tent.

Goshin, its president, and has a staff of
four primary care physicians, a larger
grour. of "consulting" surgeons and
~l:'af!ists , and other health profesExpanslon llfedlcted
Within fjva years, Goshln projects,
the not-for-profit corporation lwhich
has ·received both federal grants and
start-up loans from private sources] will
operate two or three medical centers In
80

~~o&amp; i~~i'vt~~~~'!~~~~~~n:~::'~~'ar~:

he says, it will be completely deficit free.

"We're looking at expanding already ."
0

0

~ ~~~ i~~~~~~ in t~~·.!.r~~~~~£ ~

second center, when openell, will be
located In the Amherst-Tonawanda
area.
Howflworka
Those lointng

ijCP,

f?~.!nar• ~~~lei~~ro~

Goshtn

ex-

a&lt;;:::'tt!
family practitioners on the staff . Thet
physician will be responsible for that
patient's care just as a private practice

::l!.'::t':',rve:',:. r.:-~=t ·~

don,

HMOand~'-lth"'-.

r

also never cost more than $2.

~!f~\:!,~1 ~t·t·hi~h~d~ve~~~~r. ~~a~~~

E..-..cl by the State
The New York Slate Department of
ph~~~c~a;;~u!1t~ake a " health statusCivil Service has· asked ali State
agencies to make HMO options .
assessment" of the new enrollee early
available and has tssuad a statement
on in the r-lonship. Procedures for
endorsing these organizations as , thi s witt be detailed in a malting which
·valuable alternate delivery systems."
each enrollee will receive ' prior to the
effective coverage date.
The U/B Personnel Office, howe-.
The mailing will also lriclude a-letter
emphasizes that " the decision to
remain with your present health
Insurance option, or to transfer . .. is
are complaint a. "We tell tllMI to call me
entirety up to you."
_
directly lf the7 are ever dlasattsfted with
Personnel has scheduled o0me 80
the quality o care," Goshin adds. "Try
orlantaliOI) sessions on then- plan for
to get the pnssldent of a heelth
campus units during a two-week period
=~:=.:'::.'1 on the phone when
beginning Tueedly, Oct- 3. All
dapartmente ,_been notified.
These grtevanoe procedures for
Thd.e electinG the HMO option will subscribers are mandatad by federal
, _ to pa)l' s.ee a pay period tor
~:!~8rBo~ tl.':t:.'~Y~'b~
tndlwiduat ~ and $8.35 for tam tty
success depends on people eLecting our
- .. Payroll deductions will begin
typo of co-.ga. If we
make
l)aCimbar 20, 1978, with coverage toDe
subocribera happy, wa'llloee t'*"· And
~... January 4. There will be no
the word gets a1011nd. -We're ~s 111
..... In ClQV8I'IIIIe for an individual who
the cutting adgaol public ODin ton.
trillalarw- and liealth Care Plan, Inc.,
The bale dHf-.ce bat- an
(HCII') ..;. no axcluaions for pra-exlat-

lftt CIO!tdltl-·

only expense in addition to ·baatc
premiums Ia a $2 per person cfiargefor
all sent~ed at the H.-Jth ewe
Medical~ter during a given day.
- The Center, incillenMIIy, li equipped
with a diagnpstic laboratO&lt;Y end an
X-ray facility. Lab- tests, X-rays, etc.,

HCP may be newly-&lt;&gt;perattonal , but it

~":!' ~~~: y:arr!~" ~~~n~i~~

· "It's the kind
.:. of plan consumers
might design'' ·
~st~n~t..Jn~~u".:\ :;r&lt;::,~nefY~r

=

Toogoadtobetrue?
If 11 sounds lllmost too good to be

~~P ~~~~er~l:o!":ht~a

!

defined set of benefits, while an HMO
actually provides care. HMOs emphasize preventive medicine, early
diagnosis and treatment, and ambulatory care, Goshin Indicates. Most
conventional health insurance benefits
revolwi around admission to the
hospltalaftw acute Illness has set in.
HCP, though, Ia aleo a complete
hosplhltiutlon coverage plan, • Ia any

=is

~~r~~~·~~o~
and South

Deaconaa,

Children's
Bulhlto Marcy hoapftala.

·~~~or
madlcsl lnaucomJIOI*It in the plan, but neither Ia

tllere any limit on dol... or claya for
hospltlll-lluecf care. The anrotr.a Ia
fully· m-.1 Glnat "cMiatroppllc"
rlak, Goabln poln{l out.
, ·
Otbw feel- of "-"II C.. Plan . .
thai there . . no daductlblel, and any bills oroljlll!l forme to fMI out.' Jhlf.

from in-patient care to p.--ntlve care.
HMO enrollees have hoaDIUIIzatlon
rates some 30-eo per cent loww IMn

:~~~~=s pl~y

p==-. about 80 per oent of their preml..,.. Into
hospital-baaed care, he ·uya. HOP
expects ita hoapltal expen- will be
newer 50 per oent of that int.ke, u has
been ~he experlet4te for established
HMOs. The money saved on hoapltal
J)ayments, Goshln uya, makes pnwen11.., care benefits POMible.
Then, too, HCP rates are allghtiy
higher than the standard insurance
plana. But HMO rates In general tend to
riee lees quickly, Goahin adds.
Hulth
Plan, Inc. is a lederally
qualified, Stat.-tlfied hMith main~- organiZation, 1aya GOshln. Ha
madicsl atalf member~~ are

ear.

== ::

:board

":.

~. elm:~
M..me, a former ueoclata dNn of the

U/B Medical School, who wu head of
the Depert"**l of MadiCIM at

=-:m':.t~:-'a ':tn:n'eesC

.

-·...o.·-a.-t '

�. . aszta

1
All tied up

lluffalont.ns proudly sport their

Buffalo ties and make a f~tlsh o f
presenrl"llhem to visitors and outof-t_, relatives.

DOwn SoUth, a similar tie Is dotted
with cotton bolls. Texans have their

l.ontlh«&lt;IL
Now. Lilli has a tie futuQrig the
not...,lvesally..loved "book sui"

ldell&amp;ned as the official .campus logo
by,thetrendyNewYork firm of

Olermeyeff and Geismar In the later
·~).

The llookstilra lwlve stocked over

500 of the ties (silver seals against

.$eptombor 211, 1178

a field of IWIYf) which they're selling
for $6. "It's a S I 0 tie, no doubt
about It," says manager Kevin Seltz.
"We had a lot of lnt!!f6t In this
from faculty members, alumni , the
athletic jlepartment, etc.," Seltz
lndlcatH.
Already wearing the ties, 5eltz
says, are such campus fashion le!'~rs
as P&lt;HI~t Ketter and Ed Doty of
Finane~ and Management.
Mrs. Ketter has or~ed 25 of them,
gift wrapped, to take along on the
Kette:rs' upcoming visit to our ''sister
university" In Kyungpook, South
Koru.

BRIEFLY
A..tc.a .. Vletllut

c..-ter Lewy, who opens the

campus conference on reappraising
VIetnam at 11 a.m. Friday(~
C.lendar for schedule), Is the author·
of an a!WIIysls of t!&gt;e war destined
to both rat~ lwlckiH and ~t people
tO~f18.
.
~laVS.U. (Oxford
University Press) Is a systematic:
a!WIIysls of the coiJrse of the wa ,
of American strategy and tactics, of
the travail of VletiWimlzatlon, and of
the causes of the fiiWII colla~ of
VIetnam. It also examl~ the qUHtlon
of ArMttcan " guilt."
Did Lyndon B. johnson trick
• Congress Into pasSing the Gulf of
Tonkin R~lutlon? Old General
Westmor~land ' s war of attrition have
any chanc~ of adll~lng victory?
Wlwlt are the facts behind bodY coun\?
refusMs? drugs and fragging? Were
the mock trtals by antiwar activists
Indicting Arnertpn performance real
or staged? Old .the bombing of Noo;th
VletiWim vlolat~ the laws of war?
Lewy ts the first outsl~ the
government to avail hl~lf of the
dasslfled Information about the war
contained In the archives of the
American military ~ICH .
Part of the book Is a record of
the American Involvement from Its
bealnnlngs In the 1950s ~the
french abancjoned lndochiiWI, to the
eKalatlon In the 1960s, to the
sraduat dlsef1pgement and South
Vtetnam'sdefeatlnthe 1970$.
Part acldresRs Itself to accusations
...,_the Amedcan conduct, actions
which critiCS have ~ounced as
~If not criminal. Lewy
cle'als with these char&amp;a of a~oct~.
the._ of free..flre zones.
bomiMrdonent of ,POPUlated areas,
- oflncencllary wellpOftS and
hlllllc:tdes. and -ltles committed
bJ llldl¥1duals. "'concludes that
''tflll '-of clvlllan life In VIetnam
_..,...,_~In World War II
anci~Cota Mil that concern with

. . . .--a

llllnlrlll&amp;ltW the rawees o f - was

.......,.. At the -time, he argues

tr-stc mlstak~.

- - - I t - l o s t but because
It-baled on faiR Mrategtc
~
• Lewy and the OChers on the
canfwence pMelapromlse to prompt
provocative ciiQISIIon.

v

Profeslw And students write
a book
Dr. Aleksander Gella, professor
of sociology, has Written a book In
an unusual way. It was conceived
at his graduate seminar on " HumanIstic Sociology" during spring sem- •
61~. 197S. ProfHSorGellaproposed
to eight Sl\ldents t~at they work
together under his guidance on a
bigger HSaY Instead of writing
Individual seminar papers. However,
one seniester was too shott a time
to complete a book.
Lat~r. two of the participants In
the ~mlnar contlnued'to work with
Gella, and beca-liis Junior coauthors. They are Sue Curry Jansen
and Donald F. Sabo, Jr., both now
working for their P~ . D . 's. Sabo also
has a ruching ]&gt;osition In the Depart·
ment of Sociology here. ,
The book ls ............ 5ocJolosy:
. . ~._ . . CGMeooopor.,
...__, and 'has ~n published by
the University Pressof America. PrOfessor Gella gives the namH of all
the other participants In his s=lnar
In the "Foreword."
The work Is divided Into three parts.
Part One, " Humanism versus
Positivism." Is a criticism of the
pr~nt ~velopment of science In
g~eral and the 5oclal sciences In
particular.
Part Two, " Historical Root5, "
pr~ts the main contribUtions to the
humanistic trend In sociology.
Part Three, " Societal Problems,"
~Is with "problems of our days
which need a humanistic aPPfoach If
- wauld Ilk.; to avoid a global
.
cataarophe." Science and technology,
wrlta ProfessorGella, are "lndls~sabl~ tools If we are to successfully meet the coming world
crisis. However, without a human-_
lstlc approach, ... proliferation of
the tKhno-sclentlflc complex may
&lt;HUit In the emergence of an Inhuman civilization. "
The book cloSH witt\ an
" Appendix" IO(fltten by Ms. ~nsen ,
who alva a review of " Humanistic
T~ In Rec~t Sociology."

Carey said·~· In SUNY
" Pollster, pollster, off the wall,
who 's the vilest of them all?"
Hugh Carey, answers William R.
Hamilton and Staff, a Washl.ngton.
0 .(:. polling firm , which recently
conducted a survey for NYEA-NEA
S.UNY.
.
According to that organization's
newsletter, Carey Is the most un- .
popular among SUNY faculty and staff
of all maJor political flgure!'now
active.
...
The Governor received a " 4 7 per
cent negative rating from SUNY
academics and professionals, with .. ,
. 30 per c~t assessing his performance
favorably. "
Carey's GOP opponent In the u~
coming election got a 2 7 per cent
favorab] e/21 per cent unfavorable
rating In the poll. Like Howard
Cosell among sportscasters, Carey Is
thus both most hated and most loved.
Carey's " treatment' ' of State
University was cited most often by
the 50 per cent of those polled who
oppose his desire for a second term.
for com~ rison. pollsters asked
respondents to rate Nelson
Rockefeller. Rocky emerged with a
4 7 per cent favorable/23 per cent
unfavorable rating.

Handbook makes a comeback

Football and dorm wars aren't the
only things making a campus comeback this fall. For the first time In
. y~ars, the University has produced
a~ llancloook, a compendium
of rules. regulations and other bits
of Information that might be useful
to new undergraduates.
_
It's now being mailed to freshmen
and transfer stu~nts rHidlng on and
off campus. Copies have also been
~rved for handicapped and fol)"lgn
============;===;~_/ s~nts.
/
L
.f« upperclassmen'who still haven't
~ltllltyoeirturned all the ropes, a limited supply
A contl~ of U/B poets has ~n
of 5aod-* IIM6oob will be rna~
asked- to read from their own
available et S~nt Affairs offlc~s In
works In an evening of poetry to .
Squire, c.pen and the Millard fillmore
be~. Friday, October 6, In
Cehter In Ellicott.
the Katharine e-n Thutre at
Revival of the handbOok had ~n
Dllcott. The program, begiMing at
recom~ by a committee whlo:ch
8 p.m .. will re.t.n members of the.
studied~~ problems a few yurs
Ellglllll faculty reading various works
ago. The gul~ was edlt.!d by Ann
by collellgua and OCher wrttas. "It
F. Whitcher, associate director of
Is. kind of·~.-· poetry
University Publications ~rvlces .
........ '' salciM £nalllll Department

.-a-oman.

P.ttclpants will be Gale Carrithers,

Jolin Lopn. Carte. Polite, William
~. ~Dc¥1o. Davtcl

. . . . . . ... l.esllefledler.
WlnHnlldleae

"""'follow.

Sex...Lattack at Main Street
A woman, age 20, reported to
U11lverslty Pollee that 5/le was sexually
molested'Sunday night at approxImately 9:40 In the vicinity of
Goodyur Hall at Main Street. She
told Pollee that the man was armed
with a knife.
The woman, a sophomore at U/8,
described her attacker as a white
male about six feet tall with brown
hair and a medium build. She said
he had on a blue down vest and
flannel shirt, a red and green ski hat. and gloves.
According to University Pollee. the
. woman had ~nat Clemerit Hall "
studying with her boy friend when she
left to get~ book . The attack took
place In the area where there Is an
overhang on Goodyear Hall.
The woman was taken to Erie
County Comprehensive Medical
Center and later released.
All pollee agencies In the WNY
area were alerted and Joined the
search for a suspect .

Too much too soon
The TV networks do It all the time.
Now we 're doing I t - scheduling
events of wl~ Inter~! head·to·head
against each other. · ·
•
Frlday"and Saturday, two blockbuster confer~nces take place within
shouting distance of each other along
the Amherst Campus spine: cloning
~ems the only solution.
"A Reappraisal of American ,
lnvolve-nt In VletiWim " occupies
the Woldman Conference Theatre In
_ Norton whll~ the Law School plays •
host to a mammoth 56Sion 0, public
Interest law f~aturlng such luminaries
as Jacob javlts, R~y Clark, the
former prHident of the ABA and
oth~rs . (See Calendar and ~par ate
~torles.) '
'
,
At Main Str~t Friday afternoon,
a Buffalo native (Gene Bunnell) who Is
an authority on recycling old buildings
will speak to civil engl~rs and
others. The subJect l~a~ especially
timely becau~ of Sunday's
announcement of aS 12 million
renovatlon.of the old OLLW ~po,t
downtown Into a sort of Ghlra~lll
Square East. ·
Before you can drl~ downtown
following that, the Dental Alumni
meetlr«1Whldl.-n from Thl,lrsdaY
(nto Saturday) will be featuring
Navy Captain Richard A. Stratton.
a former VletiWim PCY'N. at a dinner
at the-Statler .
Some -'&lt;5 all we get Is D.W.
Griffith.

�200 out
for rus_h,
G.reeks:say
Still in the midst of fall rush
representatives o~ the Inter-Greek
Council (IGC) report that the student
turnout for sorority and fraternity
functions has been " goodl' with some200 resident and commuter students
taking part In various rush functions.
Presently, severt fraternities and two
sororities are active on campus,
althou9h only Tau Kappa Epsilon
fraterntty and Chi Omega sorority are
" officially" recognized by the University. The other groups have been given
tentative recoqnitlon . Next year, however, Dr. Kha1ry Kawl, admi nistrative
advisor to tile Greeks, IGC Coordinator
Kevin Miller, and IGC Secretary Barbara
Braun predict t hat saveral more groups
will receive official recoQnitlon . More
fratern ities will likely begon organizing,
_
1
•
too, they say.
In order to gain more visibility In the
University and the outside community,
the Greeks, during October, plan to
hand out suckers while accepting
donations -for the American Cancer
Society. The organizations hope to
engage In " friendly compatltlon" among
themselves to see which group can
collect the mQst money for the charity.
Homecoming 0,...,
Each sorority ana fraternity will also
sponsor a candidate for HGmecomlng
Queen . A panel of slx)uda.t,includlng
President Ketter and a nleii&gt;ber of the

r

~~alow~res~e wl~~:~~.. a~lnr~
Homecoming game October 14. It won't
be a beauty cbntest. cand idates will be
judged on the basis of their academic
records and service to the University
and Buffalo commun ity.
In praparatlon for the Homecoming
~rl dlron activities, the IGC will also

A"r:.1!s~/~ro~::;n;'~h~:1t~t · ,~\~
Fillmore Room on the Main Street

~::'r,P~~· a~i0 tl'nl~r~~f~~u~~t~4&gt;'~: .

will be a charge for beer al .the Flllmor.e

Rfnm..::JYon, the Gnseks have Tolned
forces with the U/ B Alumni Asaoclatlon
this year to produce tha Freshman
Record, a sort of yearbook for Incoming
freshmen . The two will join forces again
October 1-4 lor a Homecoming dance In
the Fillmore Room .
Mora sororlt!M?
Once a Panhellenlc Council Is
established &lt;&gt;n campus, Braun believes
more national sororities will be
attracted to U/B. No council has been

~~m~lz:

":o::"
~ o:.:'!!!l
why national sororities

1

Ano~er reason

are hesitant about establishing chapters here and in SUNY In general, is
that they are not sure that tha Board of
Trustees wop't one day decide to again
ban them.
In 1953, the Board of Trustees
outlawed Greeks from all SUNY
campuses, cl~lng that they engaged
In discriminatory practices. When U/B
became part of the State system in
1962, It was obliged to follow the
dictates of the Boand . Two years ego,
the Board decided to lift the ban.
Approximately 250 commuter and
res ident students presently belong to '
the revived Greek system. Kawl , Millar
and - Breun all believe that /olnlng
fratern ities snd sororities
s an
excellent way for . area students to
overcome "commuter blues" and
beCOme actively Involved In the
University mainstream .
Although some people still think of
the Greek system as. a vestige oHhe
1950 • rah-rah" era, the IGC represent•
lives feel Gnseka are a viable part of the
UniversitY and .that, despite eome Initial
setbacks, they "are hera to stay."

. COLUMBUS DAY
Althoullh MotlllaJ, OciOber I, 1178, le
an oftlclel hOliday, c1aa.- . .
adladuled and all om- IMuld ba
open,
Office,_........._

the,.__.

ProleaaloMI Serflce

~· , .
holl*y -

quhd to wort on a
Nce!Maqoll. .anttlmeolf.
01111 s.mce amploJ8111 NqUirad 10
- ' Oft I hollda, ihDidd ....... allhar
hDIIdat pay •
lllaDenCitlll Oft

=-u=••t ':..:

--.ct.~
01111 llalwfoe .........,_ ,....... 10

Uililertlle..._ol

• HMO: new plan stresses preventive care
(from peget , eol.-4)

professor of social
medlchie.

and

preventive

bo!~~ ~~;e':,~~~s ln~::."'C:.u~~~~~~

of
lsts, such ds Daniel Roblin;

labor

~'l"t~':~F L~f6t:h y~l~~a~:Ol8:' ~~~~
0

0

Mosher, Erie County health commissioner Is one); academics, Dr. Ber1ha
Laury of the U/B School .o f Social Work,
lor exam~le ; bankers, ·etc. Dr. F. Carter

~~~~~~· Is ~~ :~"!Jl~~~~~~~ ~~~

board .

.Wh~h7u~~~~~~~~~;J1~1~

associate
himself or herself with an HMO rather
than -with a more lucrative private
practice?

e,.,"Jf~~,C:: ~~~H~f~~S:'$rJ:'Y~~c~~:
rl'd~ ;:~m~~~~l:'h'r~e..u~~.:.~~ :::,Sci

Is oriented to a high professional ethic
~~:r,sor ~.::;: g:!:fu":t~n the faculty
The group practice setting offers
opportunities for lntellactual stimulation and consultation, for a team
approach to health care which many
physicians . appreciate. HCP staff
doctors al§o.bave no worries about the

~~~~~~~es~~eil~ '::'~'~ra¥m~~c~7rti

Insurance carriers. Finally, the HMO
setting makes It possible for a
physician to practice the kind of
medicine he's been trained to practice
- preventive care. ·
In an Interview with John Bray of the
U/B News Bureau and the Reporter,
Goshln pointed out that HCP's interaction with the University ·eX1ends to educational programs, too. M.B . A~t udents
interested Jn haslth care management

~~p:~ r~ru~=~~~~~ ~~t~r,::.~

llSYchology has done some work at the
Cheektowaga Medical Center as ha~ a
medical student Interested In the
organization of haslth care. The HCP
pharmacy is' staffed with two lndlvldu.als who are p.art-time faculty In
the School of Pharmacy. In the future,

there may be an opportunity lor
Pharmacy grad students to work there
as well. Students, however, are not
involved directly In patient care In any·
way.
Health Care Plan is, or will be, open
to major area industrial concerns (such
as American Optical, Graphics Control ,
Bethlehem Steel , Ford and GM), to
school district~ . and perhaps to some
small businesses through the Buffalo
Chal!lber of Commerce. Goshln is
surprised that _the response among
employees of companl
which have
already joined the Rl3n has averaged
about 10 par cent of those eligible better than three times the projected
estimate ..

tar~e~~~~~";,~~[~ma!h!e~~a~~f~~~"a1

staff may have to be added earlier than

~::~.::=t~. !~e ~tl~. rng~:~f!:'i';~ l~
0

.about the same as the Jiational average.

Soma arala.y
Insurance carriers and the medical
establishment tend to be leery of
HMOs , Dr. Gosh.ln admits. That's only ·
natural, he feels . But the originally-.

(A"f.i'l\v~~~~.,l!'l:llffi.";.~l :, ~~
1

1

recent action by the AMA's House of
Oeiegates, while not exactly supporting
HMOs, at least endorses pluralism ,
diversity and new choices In health care
delivery.
A forerunner or nat!Onallnsuranc.?
Are HMOs the forerunners of national .
health Insurance?
_ People mean different things by
national health Insurance, Gosl&gt;ln says.
If It comes to pass In the U.S., ha
predicts, It will·come about In the 1980s
and will embody "plurallam." In Its
wake, there are apt to be more agencies

::~: ~s~~rd?rfe~e~~;. ~~~~~~allons
" But national health Insurance - Is
different from a national health service
such as in Britain."
Does an Individual who opts for
coverage by HCP commit - himself or
herself to this optfon forever? No. Tha ·

.

.

Individual can change again during the
next annual transfer option parlod.
Individual membership In an. HMO Is
not possi ble, but . an lndlvlcfual can

I

1

;~~nvl:;e~lsg[a'l:'·~:l:;~~~t .1 'f~ I

means, Gosh in says, that the Individual
can continue with Health Care Plan by .
taking lip the same premium payment '
wh ich the State had been laying out
plus the Individual contribution. In
other words, the group rate still prevails
l or the lndlvl&lt;'ual. This does not hap pan
when you convert Insurance coverage;
In that case, you have to pay a higher
lndlvldyal rate .
The HMO concept Is not lor everyone, ·
Goshln admits re8dl!y. Those who are ,
satisfied with their present Insurance

~~~~s, cl~~~·. ~~~~~:!r· ~~~lvl::,ual: 1

ph~~;~r,: ~0=~1~ ~~=~~i

choice In health care; that Is, ha favors •
having both HCP and a conventional l

~~u~~~:;'~", o~~ :~~!:!orn~vi~ I
ualry rather than as a group, "ao no
Individual will be forced to join tha
Health Care Plan I~ he -or aha does not
-ntto."

Abaslcd'"-Thls broadmlndedMSS, haw-,
doesn't preclude his milking some
rather candid contrasts bat-. the
HMO concept and conventional health
Insurance plana.
Blue Cross and Blue Shield, he
contends, grew up out of the concerns
of hospitals ' and doctors, not from a

g:~um:Om~~~~~~~~ll'rn th~~

~~g:rc~~fr~~~~~~8 .::.,~m''"·

The HMO concept, on the othor hand,
with Its emphasis on such things as
preventive care, office visits and lull
maternity benefits, Is the kin'a of plan
consumers themselves might have
designed.
, To paraphnasa Jimmy Car1er, ~shin
says, " It's the kind ol care lhe people

deserve."

Religious Studies shifts to Classics
The· University's ·Religious Studies
Program (ASP) has been relocated
Into the Department of Classics with
Dr. Thomas Barry of that department
serving as Ita executive officer.
_ Thll ASP hed operated for several
yaara under the Division of Undergraduate Education wlth Dr. William H.
Baumer at Ita helm. For some time,

~::.~ ~dl~:~~~. ~'It:,"~..\~~=

departments snd faculty •. . to provide a
more appropriate ·~1c home' lor
this program."
Wfthln Clualca, ASP will be parallel
. to the Program In Judaic Studies, which
Ia aleo wt of that deparlmant and haa
• been lor a numbwol yewa.
ASP's exlatence haa been "ahadowy''
up until now, Ita , _ director, Prof.
Barry, eubmlti, bacauaa It haa never
been recognized by SUNY as a degree-

=

=~~
~;oy=·R:..~I
~=~
haa been active with the ASP lor - . 1

y. . .J that SUNY haa recognized
rallglouaatud!M aa "legitimate."
RSP oflara two typ111 of cour.a,
Sarry pointe OlJI. ReguiW de!*1mantal
COUI'M8 are croea-llatod aa ASP
olferlnaa. and the~ 1111111 own
coui'M8 taught by adlunct faculty who

rabbis and ministers who saive tha
several campus-based denominational
organizations.

en~.Jlr:gxl::'~ ~f ~sa s~us~~~ua::l

1

cou""'" th is semester at practically no
' cost to U/ B. While the University
doesn't fund them, It nonethelesa
eagerly counts the contact-hour credltr
thasa courses bring, Barry saya.
A student cannot yet major In
religious studies as auch; he or '""muat elect a special major wlthln
another department-- tn Claaalca or In
Philosophy, lor example.

krv reports that. an executive
commruae lor the ASP Ia now baing
formed and wlll Include.&amp; rap,_tatr.i
of Judaic Studies (Whoae courMS are
aleo croaa-11- with RSP).
With the RSP now under Claaslca, Ita
couraa ahould yield Art1 lind Lettera

~=~~::..:-~ho::..,
~1
budgat !lid a "real major," Barry

projecte.
•
~~- 01oee1y 81 .hand. he belieASP 1111 - . 1 c:our.-· WhiCh WOI.IId
ba ~Ulllla lor a ganaql ad.-lon
program. Clrlalnly, WI -'VIle IUIW)'

oliMjor WOrld.NIIglona- l*tlcularly
those In the Weal - would be at home

i;!;:!~~;'r-~---;t~~~;;~~ty t~ ~~~ , • .~~--~~-~-:lion~

The new ASP · executive oHicer '
emphasizes that the program Ia not ._,
,.._lor proeelytlalng . All the· adjunct 1
faculty (who, lncldenlally, . . wellqualified acedemlcalty) t1awe subacrlbad
to a statement to that effect. Their

cou.- meet all academic -.cl8rda
snd must go through the nonnaJ

channels lor undergrad..._ courM
appro-41 . Tllerw'a no dogma, no
doctrine.
• With aanctlon from Al!lanY 8lld Ita
,_academic~.....,,

I

lllrrY bel"-

-ve

that the ASP will be llble to
llegrornltl=theahailoat... 8lld ~~~ I
rong progrwn ........""'
the gam of human exper!enoe.
· I
' .

Legislative
Internships open
a.unclafg,.._

The New York State
an ~unity lor
:.W.1au!

le offering 1
10

~h ~/::'S:..::

Aaalat.nta~. ~ Ia a lull-lime
lntemahlp In a s- a..tor'a offloe

from JanuwY through May, 1871, tile
batt.- DWt ol the Leglelatl.. -a..
Application muat be m.ia ttvough
the .CieeiGMtad c.mpua llalaut olflcjr,
Prof. Mll!ll Hudclleaton._
Speul6lng Qued , Arnllam. ·~ . . .

c.-

21118.

�. . .bilK

VIEWPOINTS
Cukan
Mott says she's out at FSA;
she says she's not, points to
record of achievement in t_h e job
Rich Molt aays that Alexandra Cukan,
of the board of the

ch81,.,.,

8

=:."t-:~n~ 1:"~~~~· an"nh~:

lhe'eoutonherear.
Cukan anawera that she has never
been mede aware that Mott. president
of SA, hu any vision, and that she's
still legally at the helm of FSA.
Mott says that Cukan Is •not

m~~::::~~t~~ ~~:,,r.r,s .~

....,nt, she lan~ really qualified lor the
job.
She's out, -and that's that, Molt and
SA contend. T"-""' Ia, additionally, they
say, some confusion over whether
Cukan wu confirmed as a Mott
appointee to FSA to begin with. The
Student Senate minutes on the point
are vague. To boo!, SA's lawyers say

M~~~n~!.rl~~\8 :ll~::;~:::· s

have-~-

her to stay where s
.
Ewen II there Ia some technicality i!rW
her appointment, she contends Molt
must still follow the prescribed SA'
process lor her namoval (that Ia, that he
must con-.t of the SA executive
committee and the Student Senate).
1S PMP1e In 1S monthe
Cuk8n argues thet she probebly
knows more about FSA than any other
student on campus. She• .-ved on the
board lor a lull term under the Dennis
Della SA admlnlatratlon , ·a nd has been
there since April under Molt. In that
18-morith period, ahe points out, 16
people h..., held the other five student•
poaltlonaon tile bollrd .
Bad feelings bet_, Molt and
Cukan came to • head but . _., not
reeolved at flat Wadnesdey's FSA board
of dlrectora ~lng .
There, Cukan says, Molt - who .has
appointed hlm8811 a member of the
bollrd tried to keep her from
a~lng .
Other board members,
h o - . let her have her say.
Cukln , who tw.lhea fins when she
gets on the subject, says that on top of
=hlng el11, Molt Ia now tMing
wh~ _::18
18.proposala lor
• FSA has talcAin action In a verlaty of
In the pat alx months, says.
Cukan, who flnlahad her uncll!rQneduale
WOfl&lt; here In Auguat and Ia now enrolled
In the M.B.A. progrern.
She' ticked-off theee strides rather
comprellenalvely In a chairman's report
lftPWad tor that uproarious September
211 board meeting.
•

=:c

...........,
~u::· ~·~hera!~~

~~o::-::-mm':f. ~~

etta Idle but OOita FSA 122.~ a y_. In
~.

"W'- the IUbjeCI of the AmherSt
land -llrat bro.ched ~
most

"'l:!·

=~=lyltentai~Y.

Cukln aays. "My po1orlty In punulng
IIIIa IUIIIKt ._ ... been to utll~ the
land for 1M baneflt of the Uftl_.lty
- " Y MCI to In-thalli rwneina

A,..... ,_____
----...-. .~•am

- - " 1 ' - ,..._

- - lloooNor., lho -

----·__
_--

....ol

_,,•~-. -... r.r.

...... ut-MM.

..,...-.....eNol

..arr. ~

-A.QOIITB

__,_

a sound Investment lor the Corporation.
To achi8Ye a timely and professional job
of Investigating the sltuatlon,l arranged .
lor two graduate assistants from the
School of Architecture and Environ1

=~1~r~~~7s ~o"r"~tf~e\~n':j":.':,':{ f~

recommend alternatives for Its use. "•

·Kate Carroll and Andy Allinson,
student Interns who worked on the
project, which w.as Initiated last May,
were each paid $1,400 by FSA. They

~~~~ ~~~tz~ur;':Vt'~lo~ar~. ~d

Ibrahim Jammal of SAED .
Their resulting 60-page report proposes three varying levels of development lor the site, each growing out of a
basic theme of using the marshy,
wooded , nature area for recreational,

11.~~~~~:! ~~ ~~r~~ r~rp~~~:

medium and low level . Investment.
Nothing approaching this report has
been done In the dozen or so years that
FSA has held1he land, Cukan says.

Folletfo
Then, there was the matter of
Follett's proposed takeover of FSA
bookstore operations (and their construction of a new bookstore facility on
Parcel Bat Amherst) . Cukan served as a

~~~b:~1 ;o.".:'~~~~h~:n ~~~~~~~~~hr~

go to court to stop the deal unless the
LET US HEAR FROM YOU
Thl Reportll' welcome• your vi-• on
campu1 concema, ewenta, policies, etc.

="
.!.-::::.~ '= :::~:::.
-'"""yOU.
. er.;:

Interests of students and FSA ern-

f~?r.,'!":h::t~~ J'~~\~· s~~~:y~~

"that w.e had concerns that had to be
satisfied ."
The actual lease agreement with
Follett's Is now being worked .out , and
FSA will have the right to rev iew It
before It Is flrial .

Mll'ketlng encleudlto
Last May 30, Cukan also initialed a
marketing survey of FSA's constituents
and customers, again taking the Internship route. Working with Prof. Stephen
A. Goodwin of the School of Management, a member of the FSA Board
himself , she had the Board approve. a•
$1,000 .stipend and the granting of•
course credit lor this two-semester
.
project.
· She also moved to take cqmpetitlve
bids on next year's FSA audit. "This
does not Infer that we are dissatisfied
with. our ~ audftora, Naramore,
Nlleis and Co. of Rochester," she says.
They'll be Invited tO bid, too. But, since
"this same firm hu been auditing our
Corporetlon lor the put fourteen years,
It 11 eciYiaable t o - the 'fresh' critical
look -lllble when" a n- firm comes
ln.
· The Idea of an "organizational audit,"
_ . t e from a financial one, was also
broached with Goodwin, Cukan lndlcalea. Her Idee was to have this study
.of FSA management conducted by an
outside professional firm, sometlilng
whiCh, .., says, the fll'lli'agement also
lavonsd.
She 8f1d Mott ct,ehad on ,this, too,

proposed budget lor the year was lor
the first time studied line-by-line by a
committee of the board. Approved In
July, It will be published In a lull-page
ad on The Spectrum within the next few
weeks, Cukan Indicates.
Image
Cukan has been concerned, too,
about FSA's Image. Several years ago,
the organization was depleted In

~~~=~s a1~0~ lar~.J,:'~~f.us !~~z~~

changed somewhat, she says, but • our
Image does leave something to be
desired. Some of this Is due to the
nature of the services we provide e . ~ ., Institutional food but some
thongs can be done to Improve public
relations with our patrons. Many do not
know what the FSA Is or what services
we provide.•
She wil l address this Issue In the
months.ahead If she remains In office.
Cukan reports that her troubles with
the Moll administration In SA date back
to earlier In her term when, after she
was ·unanimously elected chairman of
the board, she resisted Molt's attempt
to name Bill Flnklesteln, business
gta;~i~r of The Spectrum , as treasurer
She says she resisted pressurs io put
F lnkl~steln In until Molt agreed to name
another treasurer, Tom van Nortwlck,
who lett lor enother job oft-campus.
Wnen pressure was renewed to appoint
Flnkleste]n, Cukan on June 22 said/ she
would resign. Mott pleaded with her to
stay, she says, promising her more
autonomy.

As soon as van Nortwlck resigned,
Cukan went to representatives of the
MBA program to ask their help In
Identifying qualified candidates for the
0

~~::;:,r~r'~~s;hl~~~h:~~~nt t~ ~

selected would sign up • lor sn
Independent study "Internship" to
compensate lor . the fact that the
'tlm""'onsumlng post carries no stipend . -Neither does the chairman's job.
Several candidates for the treasurer's
oost were Interviewed this summer,
Cukan says , but she delayed making a
decision until fall when more students
might be available.

. Aokld to raelgn
,
Then , In mid-August, she claims, SA
President Moll decided to pay stipends
to both the treasurer and the FSA
chairman - at which point she was

as~'::~.!~ r~!:,~~-

Molt wants to use a
steamroller approach to have students
who will do .his bidding take over FSA

:'t~e~~~fo~t.::,~ ~?h:r'~':![~~s.s::Ss~

strictly pollllcal ploy.
.fSA Is a business, though, Cukan
says. There ens over 1,000 employees people who nesd th011 jobs. Professional managers h..., been employed.
"You just can't Irresponsibly play
politics with something like that ," she
contends.
·
"I didn't think this would be an
' apolitical position," Cukan says . " But
this Is carrying things too far."

Supplemental Budget

=~· !::ur~~.J~~":

. At deadline, the ll,eporter w~s advised that the long-delayed ·
Su~lemental Budget for this fiscal year was to have been passed by
midnight Wednesday.
·
As recommended by Governor Carey. these approprlaflons for U/8
were Included:
·

"'-ttprlall dllruptlon of rnanegertal
actiYitlea.
Cukln has encouneged • naw conoept
under which she hOpaa FSA • can

•$1.6 llllllo. In,capital fun&lt;is for construction of a Music/Chamber
Hall at Amherst. Estimated completion date for this project ("""n as a
significant step In making Amherst the center of University cultural life)
Is December 1980.

:,.~~f.l~f.

::ro:::.=,::;

=~J;=. ~e~~~~:!
r~·~~~~
~~=

r:uo::J

campus actlvttlee. A plant sale was
sponsored eerller thla - . e r ea a

~~%·

!"Yt.:J''":t..:.S

~.::9

-m.ily ba UMd to JlfO!kll nscraetlo!W Pf01P1118 81 l.ilca .La Salle, and to

~t::"C::
~'::'.:.a:'II:V:::
Olvlalon .

,.....ion

AIIO unc!W her leadership, FSA'a

•$4.4 ...._In capital funds for site l m_provement utilities and a
fire control system at Amherst.
'
•

•$1.1.-.o. In plannlng funds for Main Street rehabilitation
(Including money to plan conversion of Squire Hall to Dental School
"se).
'•$5011,000 In planning funds fo~ Amherst projects.
• $~~- 9
C ....... In operating bUdget money for ~larles of medical facu lty
at t ..., ounty hospital.
1
I

�September 21, 1111

SUNY?
Chancellor emphasizes what
the University means in terms
' of economic contributions ·
SUNY Chancellor Clifton Wharton Is
on the hustings these days about as
frequently as either of the two major
gubernatorial candidates.
His mission: to "sell" the State
University to the. voters and taxpayers,

rn~~l~tm~~~:~~j~~~a?lf~o~~~~

to the economy.
The latest variation on that theme
came last week in an address at the 64th

~;d"uus~~ie~';:\ll~~w o~orl.~ta1':s.:fl~~

.Placid. .
The theme of the conference was ''We
Mean Business in New Yqrk State."

So

do we

to~Ut~~ ~~~~t~i~ff:~~~ss, too, Wharton

world mean that all businesses tace
lncreasin9 complexity and khowled
requirements. Many of them lack tl:
resources for extensive and lndependent training ·or the accumulation of
current knowledge and expertise. But a
local State University campus might
1

~~frf~Yer~~~"/. Xo.!l'e':ig~~~~s ~:;v~cfs

just one example of a public university's
effort to do for business what business
cannot efficiently do for Itself."
Tho Importance of engineering
In addition to special projects,
Wharton said, "we are also developing

~~ess~~~~6~ irrip"!ta~g:t~C:,~~~ne!~
and

Industry.

One

of

these

is

:rv~i~l':~i~Hn:th~~rsdvi~~~tocfn';l~~r~
Sure, he acknowledged , tne slide In
New York's economic fortunes has been
part'c0 lart i ort t
"
dramatic: .
The ct!an~~llorancif:lsa. ."dramati
• Since 1969, recessions In New York
turnaround In the demar.d for engi neer~
State have begun llarlier, lasted longer,
In the last 10 years . Recent ligures
and have been more severe than in other
show that through retirement , death, or
~~ ~~~~i~tu~~'lf· of the 19708 total
normal job attrition the United States
out-migration was almost 10 limes as
~~~~ 1~h\':rc:~~! 11 er;.t'~'"7r&amp;;b
great as In the entire decade of the '60s,
people. The problem Is that universities
with mJch of the loss coming In the
are graduating a total of only 60,000 industrial community.
which leaves a gap of some 15,000
•In the export of manufactured
n~ l neers needed yearly.
go~ds, we are being outstripped by
' One method of supplying more
engineers Is to attract students by
California - wh ich moved from fourth
to f1rst .place in one year - and by
offering new and creative programs.
This Is not difficult at a time when
Michigan, Illinois, and otlio.
The enUre Northeast Is on the ropes, --complex technology changes as rapidly
Wharton said. It I~ the only part of the
as It does in the 1970s."
country that has suffered a net loss of
At U/B , the Chancellor noted,
manufacturing jobs over the past 15
" significant work Is now being done in
years . Energy costs more, and Is less
air quality engineering, as well as
available, here than elsewhere.
research Into aerosols, lasers, coal , and
A detwmfnotlon
even earthquakes and high winds. Of
Yet, the Chancellor Indicated, he
special Importance to the Buffalo ar~a
detects a detennlnallon to get the State
was a seminar - . offered to lndustnal
moving ahead again
leaders and busonessrnen - on the
1
r• t
d
subject of snow removal.
R
I
enc~~glns g~ ~id ·a urnaroun are
.. SimJiar expansions are taking place
.~ 'Income,' for Instance, was
in the curricul um of !he Engineering
up 7.9 percent last year, which Ia nearly
Schoof at Stony Brook.
$700 higher than the national average
What Is SUNY?
a~s":~~~~~~~~ ~~~~h;.:;:;t~~':&gt;w about
People sometimes ask, "What is the
150,000 more New Yorkers employed In
State Unlversi!X of New York?,"
non-farm jobs than a year ago Every
Wharton noted. My program of v1sillng
Industry except transportation : cornall &amp;I campuses !,n my first y~ar, already
municallons and public utilities has.
half completed , he said makes the
I
answer . abundantly clear! It Is a
expanded employment.
•According to a July survey by the
first-rate educational Institution, with
National Association for law Placemany centers of national and interna!ional academic excellence. It Is also an
ment, New York continues to lead all
other states as the most popular
Impressive network of research, devel.~
location for 1977 graduates of American
opment, and public service resources.
law schools.
The Chancellor said he Is "optimistic
once talking
about public higher education and Its
•Companies that
about leaving New York ara now serious
support of the State's economy .

i'o

were

~~~:\nr~~~- M!"J o~~~:~, (:~~~~

and Plasl1cs - are spending millions
on expansion.
•New York's Index of Business
Activity registered 115 In July, six
points higher than"at1he beginning of
the year.
•The factory output Index reached
111 for July, the highest level since
November 1973.

~~!~~:a'1n ~~~7~~~ ~,a;::. of~=~~

higher education reflecting the health of
an economy In a lock step fashion .
When jobs are available, the employment of new graduates Is up . When
state revenues are healthy, academic
programs expand. And, by the same
token, a university finds that Its fiscal
support declines when times are hard."

Monica Polowy:
an arts 'facilitator'
What Interests Monica Polowy most
about her ne~ Job at the Center of the
Creative and Performing Arts, Is the
chance to act as a " facilitator" and
"Improve the quality of life through
nurturing the arts."
When Monica first stepped Into the
position of managing director of the
Center last spring, she admittedly did
so with "some degree of trepidation ."
The feeling was understandable considering she was hired to fill the shoes
of Renee Levine, a woman who was
considered an Integral perf of the

~~t~~:tra~~t~o.:ngecl:~on:f~':[~
shape Its present . But deciding to meet

new challenges, Levine left Buffalo to

become the director of admissions at
the California Institute of Arts.
Monica Is pleased that the Center Is
considered an enclave of new and
Innovative composer/performers In
Western New York. She · Is Intensely·
proud otlts lntematlonal reputation and
the talent of Its artistic directors,
'Morton Feldman and Jan Williams. She
is quick to cite that the Center Is
" unique" because It successfully,

fsu~~~e~~!rr.:'g"Yt~ ~ 5f~~!~s~~~
1

longevity Is not a feature similar centers
can boast of.
.

w;~~~~:&amp;.~n ~~sln:~~'rn tl;".1tat~~

2 chinese delegations visiting

transfer tax has been reduced . At the
same time, Statewide cuts In business
taxes should come to 5250 million .for
_
1978

A delegation fro(ll the ' People's
Republic of China, believed to be the
first scientific group under the present
Peking regime ever to visit U/B will be
guests of the University Monday
through Wednesday (Oct. 2-4).

mc:neagseer,G:'adlll abete Sgtuuesdetnst ?s'socthelatUio/nB,
0
"
a 200-member organization .
Web-Chung Chang, president of the
organization. disclosed his group Is
sponsoring a performance of Chinese

Whtl SUNY Will do
SUNY, Wharton said , Is committed
to ·assist In restoring the economy of
New York. This "may well be our single
most Important contrlbution)durlng the
next quarter of this century."
Already, he said , the system's 15,000
scientists, professionals, scholars and

Jr., associate professor of mechanical
engineering, while he was attending a
Dynamic Flow Conference at Johns
Hopkins, Sept. ' 1S.21. The Chinese
delegation also attended the conterence.

donation will be accepted .
From 4-6 p.m., Oct. 6, the students
will be guests of honor at a reception on
Goodyear-10, hosted by Charles M.
Fogel, acting executive vice president,
and Mrs. FO'gei.

the United States.
Dr. George said the ,$&lt;:lance group's
visit Is being jointly aponiiOfOd by the

Room 107 of the Fillmore Academic
Center at Ellicott.

~,Ne;r1 ~~~~y~~nd~~ns:~~t":t~~

~~~c:~n: ::~:s.!~':~ng, w:,t."~~~
Include energy conoariration,

health

care, m.,power training, .,d agricul-

tural reaearc::h :"
Wharton said SUNY's definition of
"public service Includes spacial training
courses, ..-ch projeCts, the storing
of Information, .,d response to
technl.,.l lnqulr~,_fl might be the use
of campus f@e• or the public
enjoyment of culture .,d recreation.
Many ot our programs are in fields of
eervlce that only a non.profit agency

~=av".:::.vess:re"1:' ~-

..
375.000
tmall butl..- with fewer than 800
jobl In aKII. The dynamics of today'a

lnJ;~~ ~~·~r.~~~~ w1m~a~~~eo~:

1

0

st~;t~ ";;~':~ ~~~~~ftc ~,C~~~
rr~:~~~';hS.,r~~~~~=~~~~~0~;;,~

~- ~ ~~"a"~~~~~~:~~ ~~ixl'~dal2

A~at~""!l\1 ~=uatt~e ~l~r.:'J
81
~~"7'!:o p~m~~:~;!d':'::S~~.~~~

~~=~%'!t~ns=1:'~1::

lr.:Hai~Hs,::,.. firstmu~r..,.'r::!,er ~~
~~!r~~e~~mg,~~,~~l from U/ .,
M:;:,l,;:r l~olere:"~~~:'"Por dlrec~'ffc

relations; budgets, grant pro~.,d
concert schedules. She also hlree
extras for performances and enjoys a
close liaison with the Center's rasldent
performers.
-Although her employment · at the
Polish Community Center helped

gf~P~~ ':~l~l':;J''!lft."~·g~~;.:

=

AHalrs Director Etither Swartz. Monica
worked closely with Swartz while
school here and thinks of Iter

attendi~

::,a : . ; f ~~o;;·
ht.=:zah!ro
encouraged hw to attend H....W's
Summer Institute of Arts Administration, an area In wl)lch she now lntenda
to receive her mastent.
Because of decteased funding .,d
the more conservative IIPProech to
music prevalent In the 70s, Monica eatd
the· Center Ia !JOing througb . f1
"transitional period' and Ia

....,.._1!11.

~~,g~ec~~r· ~.:'rgh ,:::.~

C

dwindled from 15 to alx, mMing ' artists available for part~.
Because of lhla, the Cent_.• . line
edmlnlstrstors decided all concerta thla
season would be held In Weatwn NIIW
York. Artists previously performecl In
New York City .,d elteWhere.
Varied fundinG

.

aw-

Currently, tfteCentwla funded by the
- State Council on the Arta, from
U~iveralty funds, !rom monay
to Ita "Meet the Compow' llfOIIIWII,
( and through a g~t !roM the s.y1n&lt;&gt;w
H. Knox FoundatiOn.
,
But more monly Ia needed to help
the tenaiqn of "doing more With
tesa," ao.Montca Intends to
the

=

.:J:I()re

=:··~~!t='':!:"'~~ln..1
munity.

She 8180 w8nta to COIII*IItale effort•
on Increasing the Oentw'a box oHice

· Pl., a call for the group to visit U/B .

appeal.

~.::~-~ 1:cr:.~ :.t w~lthasM:~

To help In Iter PR alforta, Monica Ia
contlclarlng ualng TV • a madlum to
the to a~...,..,_,.
''!hOI ~ -.lble
She Ia atao "wllllilg to touch liMa" With

"'*•

t..-dltional visit to Niagllrl Falls.
The colteue students from the
Republic of Cftlna Will vltlt campus Oct.

u.

Hlatortcel trust
Given her pride In the Center, It Is n&lt;&gt;
wonder Monica feels she has inherited a
type of "historical · trust." She experIenced a similar feeling a few years back
when she . acce~ the directorship of

.

~~ a ":ure'::.mon~

SponiiOfOd by the Talw., Talevlalon
Corp., the 14 students, a captain .,,d a

on,_mll&amp;lc.

,.

�September 21, 1171

CALENDAR

CONFERENCE ON AIIEAICA IN VIETNAM:

- b y lho CeniOr for Media 51udy.

FM*TIEII

Cflrta ~- ""'-' - Flln&gt;ore Room~
. Sq.n. 8 p.m. $2.50, ; $3,
p,_,tl&lt;f by WAB Cuftlnf one! Perfonning

non--.

OEMTAI.

-~-

- ! a-l l o &lt;
- -0..
l o -11500
l h l-l - · l hond
oS
Hlllon. ~ by lho U I B Donlll AUml

-through-.
- · .. -

1811 LEO BAECK SPaKE~~•
...._.and Chrlldans:: New Hope In a Troubled

-ahfp.

b o g N - ond con-

lho

Among hlgHighta:

-----llun,lod

"" •

_ . - •• • - · Ft1dly, et 6 :36

---

-lllftiY.aCLW~

33211cJft-.---12·1 p.m~

__

- - -.Poly1oc:Mio

_............,,_,
-.-v-·

.__.., .... Pllllp -~~ ol Phloeoplly, U I B. fl84 ~- 3:30 p.m. lnlcwmol

_..,_.,__

CIU..-.a:uLUI.auiCIY~
.,..._ . . . - . .. Cell ~--·
•:to.........,
Dr. ,.._"ftol:lt:linll,

•

Depertment

-.tel*

F-

Illo Loo lectures honor the ""'"'"'Y
of a Gennln rabbi who mintstered to both Jews
and Chrtatilna In a Nazi concentration CWI¥).
Aa "Cathotic Ctwiatians,"
Joel&lt; Chandler
aayo, ''we H la..our duty to help create
a dlmlte ol trust and ~ " based on

o:.=7,;:.a.:....,-:,:vb. Sib.nlov'•

-·-LB:T~N·

Center,

o n - ondthe Holocauat.

·-_.,for

- - ~- ... AppeMIIona, DlwlleiC. - .
o1 New Vorl&lt;, ....... proleMor of
phyolca, U I B. 2 1 8 -. 1:30-2:20p.m.

· an export In

thook&gt;gy from Motquette ond Ia - - proof nolgion at
S1al8 Colege .
New Jelwy. She Ia aJthor of -pieces

-

by Dr. ~~· ......,.."'""'lho U.S.• Air Force one!
NaYy, . . be on a 2 .5 ccx.ne In

---

Dr, EY8 -

~~ - Newman

15 llniYerolly ·Ave. 8 p.m. $Ponlorld by the
Newman Club.
Dr. Floledwler holds a Ph.O. In Clwtstian

,Copt.
._
••
' o l.A. '-" * " ' "USN
.I-n -

p:m.

,_ a

ISSEX~V?

1'llarsclay - 28

::.'::'•A

A RE-APPRAISAL •

fUll•

-

-

I

u - fi&lt;Lrosawa. 1975). Conference
for ahow times.

· ScP-e. Col836-2919

~~epic

11&gt;ou1 the slruggles
ol hol'i!y IOUII1o chart the - . . . of Siberia
..ound19DD.

llrl\leroilyol~- --·
Norton t.ta1 (Atnhem) . 11 a.m. Sponscred by the
Conferences In the Olaciptines, CoU'lcl on Inter·
national StudieS. ond Political Science.
This Ia the opening of • major two-day
conference.
Each of the three feahnd papera will be fol·
lowed by • panel discussion and • QUOSOOn·
and-enswer period.
BROWN BAG LUNCH COLLOQUIUM•
Enwtronmental Pollcymakfng, Assemblyman
Wdlilon Hoyt 123 Wil&lt;eson Ouad . Elllcon. 12
noon. Sponsored by the Environmental Studies

Center.
LECTURE I DEMONSTRAnON ~IES'
Submitting Statistical JOb&amp; from lnt.,.ctift
Tennlnota, Dr. S.D. Fan-. 213 Boldy. 12 noon ..
Sponscred by tHe Faculty of Educational S1udies'
Quantltotlve Analysis l..aborolo&lt;y.
Open 10 .-yone. Free of charge.,
-

PHYSICS AND ASTR~V
' SPECIAL LECTURES•
_
Sconerlng n.ery ond Ita Appffco-., Don·
laiC. Mat11s, Thomu Pons Profesaor, Poly1ochnic
- Institute of New Vorl&lt;. adjunct profosoor of
physics, U I B.- 262 Capen. 1:30-2:20 p.m.

. CONFERENCE ON AMERICA IN VIETNAM:

frlday-29
LAW CONfERENCE•

. temt&gt;er 29

lnleraet Law eon,.,_.: Sap-

lnd 30, 8 :30 Lm.-5 p .m. Moot
Court, 0 - Holt. Thorewillb0vw1ous--

..
- . . - -... t~.
1 , .. Hoohllllllw. 4 :15p.m. Cdfeeat4. -

on P&amp;*Jic nw.t taw -......: Senator Jacob

&amp;..&amp; 1411 ~- 1 p.m. Span~-·

-·--~See story, page
11 .

• -

We-

Mflllory ~ What Did
to Accompllall? " - ' Guente&lt; Lewy,

Jowlta, DoYid
~
Cfll1t. ~~ - Smith, ~-­
post ABA

A RE-APPRAISAL •
Uw, Mcnlfty, enct the Wer In Vletnem..
" - ' Michael Wmec, profeasor of_..,..,,
ond aoclaf relations, llniYerolly. - . . ,
Auditorium, Norton Hal (Atnhem) . 3 p.m. Sponsored by the Conferences In the Otaciptlnes,
Council on lntemational S1udies, and Political
Science .
CIVIL ENQtNEERIHG SEMtNAR•

Economic end Community A.dnnt.oes of

Renon:tlon: Wetwfront Oftek)pmenHSolton,
Gene - Bulnel , Massachusetts ~ Deplrtment ot
ComrnlolltyAffan. 1 0 4 -. 3:30p.m.
A native of Western New York. Bunnel is
arthor of ..Buld to l.ast: A Handlook on Re·
c:ycting Old Buldlngs."
He has served as c»-ector of the BuiJdlng

~':,.:.~~:

from the Deper1ment of Housing and lJrtlan
Development for a study of " Removing Obstacles

to Building Reuse at the Local Level. ··

COMPUTER SCIENCE coUOOUIUM •
Camp&lt;rtot HendUng o1 Spans! Data, Profeasor
O.....F. -~ofGaognlphy, U I B.

Room 41 ,-4226 Ridge Lea. 3:30p.m. Coffee
and doughnuts wit be .....-l at 31n Room 61 .
WOMEN'S TENNIS•
U I Bwa.lluff'atoState.Amhefst Courts . 4 p .m.
PHYIIOI.OOV &amp;EWNAR f
C-..pk: . _ . . , . . In
4: 15p.m. Conee~beservedat 4 .

CACfiLM•
c-log 1 70 MFACC. Ellcon. 7:45
.w:t 1 o p.m. $'1 for students; $1 .50 for others.
Before "Who
Stop the Rain ... this Jane
Fonda / Jon Voight tim was haJed as a maJor
-..oogn In,.,. about what ttiiVIetnemdid to uo. Although iis reputation polea In the
-.ke of the Nick Notte opus, tt makes interestrtg
~ In comection with. this .........,•• aym-

w•

-onvtetnsrn. -

u- tKurO.owo.

; Squn.

oha&lt;ge.

FeU-

men. three women end a OOrila are
stranded In a -tem0te Vlclorian manSiOn with a
Cf&amp;Zed holtesa whose husbend_ sHs in a jar. ~ louChtng , frightening and
sexy.

Saturday- 30
LAW CONfERENCE•
Model Public lnterMt Lew Conference. See

Sapt- 2911stings.
CONFERENCE ON AMERICA IN VIETNAM:

A RE-APPRAISAL•
The L.Meona af VIetnam: Where Did We Go
Wrong, end Where Do We Go From Here?

Paper: e.t Ravenel, "Institute for Po6icy Studies,
Wsslllngton, D.C: Woldmsn ~ . Norton
· Holt (AmhenJQ . 10 Lm. Sponscred by the Con·
terenc:es In the Oiaciplines, Councl on Inter·
national Stud!H, - Poltical Science.

woMEN's TENMS•
U I B n.
10a.m.

~nd

1975). ConfOf8llCO
Col636-2919 for a/low. times.

_ctwge_

.

Slo1e. Amherst Courts.

CROfi&amp;.COUNTRV'
UfBn.~-.--. Oswogo

Slo1e. . . . , _ Canlpus. 12 noon .

BASEJIAU•
UIIYLCanlofua(-. PeelleFoeld.
1 p .m.

• Not oJCOCtty the Worid Series, but a pleasant
way to _,clan early fol afternoon .
MEN' S SOCCER•
U I B YL Hough1oll
2p.m.

.

c..,_

Rotary Field
'

CONVERSAnONS IN THE ARTS
Eather Swartz interviews poet Dawtd lgnetow,

~~jChlnnel8) ._ 4p.m.

CACFILM'

Coming Home. 150 Farber. 7:45 and 10
p .m. $1 for students; $1 .50 tor others.

FtLM•
Dlohonored (Josef von Sternberg. 193 t 1
Buffalo &amp; El1e County Historical Society. 8 p.m
Sponscred by Mecla Study I Buffalo.
TNs is "''n Sternberg's third fiJm with Marlene
Dietnch. Vne of the ten best American sound
fims, acc:orcfOlg to Jean-Luc Godard.
MUSIC"
S..tew.. , wfth ex-members of the Alman Bros.
and special guest. Clark Gym, Main Street.
8 p.m. Sponsored by UUAB.
The Gauntlet (Clint

Eoatwood,

1978). Con·

terence Theatre, Squire. Cel836·2919 tor Show

times. Aclrnis$bn charge.
A modem ~ faces the conWJined ,fire·
power of the mob Ha pollee occomp11ces
as he tries to trllnSport a reluctlnt witneal from
Laa Voges to Phoenix. A-~ •
chase lim slatTing Ctlnt Eutwood ond SondrJt
Locke.
..

Sunday..:_ 1
BASEBALL •

UUAIIFIUI"

-

Cbnf,....,.

UUABFILM'
Cororiary

- - - Dr. JoM~. 51 DB Shennan.

-

UUAI-FILM•
Thun&lt;len:nck (MacDowell &amp; Kuchar. t 975).
Theatre. ScP-e. M'odnlghl. Adm;sslon

,

;:

UIIYO. Nfogata UnlWalty ( -.
Peele Field. 1 p.m.
· -

,

IFA RECITAL •
ctwtMie AM K..,_, frenctl hom. Baird Redtal
Hal. 3 p.m. Worl&lt;a by Forster, Mozart, Glie&lt;e
ond Poulonc.
EOPAWARD~·

. F-laugh, - t o f the Buffalo Boonl
of Education, wil deliver the l'l'lllin eddreaa. More
U.. 200 - I n the Educotional ()pportunHy
receive -.warda for exceptional
ach-..nt. SpooAding Dining Room, Ellicott.
5p.m,

" ' - #i/

-.'lila-clwge,
UUAIIFLII'

(Clint ('ostwood, 1978). Con·

- -· ScP-e- Coi638-2Qt9 for a/low

�7
Big Clint

.

.Clint Eastwood P.lays still enother
nriatlon on hit. Dirty ...Herry' macho
tllt!R• In 'The Geuntlet, • this w.kend's
blazlng UUAB film , Seturdey end
sunday.

Monday- ·2
ROSH HASHANA
()aSSes do not meet today or before sundoWO tomorrow. Instruction resumes at 6 p.m.
TuesdaY. October 3 . Offices are ooen.
liEN'S TENNIS"
•
u 18 va. Canlllua Cola.Qe. Amher&amp;t Courts.
3p.m.
PHARMACOLOGY 6 THERAPEUTICS
SEMINAR. ·
laoprot~ Excretion and Metabolism In
tho ·toololod PO&lt;fuMCI Rat Kidney, Dr. Stanley
J. Steller, PMAF Fellow in Ctinic8l Phanna·
· Oepertment of Pllarmaoology and Then!~ . Oep101menl of Pediatrics . 108 Sherman.
4p.m. CoHkwllbo-. ·

-

WOMEN'S TENNIS"
U I B n . SL aon.w.nture. Amherst Courts .
4 p.m.
CONVEASATIONS IN THE ARTS
&amp;tllorSwortzlnterilewo*
foLnder of video IW't. kltematierlal
10}. 6p.m.

Tho Big Night su... John Barrymore .m
Preston Foster-concerns a young man &amp;88f"Ch.
lng for the man who mercilessty beat his father.
F111e dWection and performances.

VOLI.EYBALL•
_
U I 8 n.·HoUghton CGitoge. Ctortt Hal . 7 p.m.

Tuesday-3
"'" CON='i::~~~ .. 1S39}.

170 MFACC,

Ellcotl. 7p.m.
Stars Greta Gwbo !Old Melvyn Douglas. A
comedy about • CC&gt;I!W8de Wllo learns the
mewling of fife a'ld love from en American in
Paris.

•

NOMICTION FILM"
-VIctory. 148 o;e1..-. 7 p.m. Spoo·
sored by the Cente&lt; IC&lt; Media Study.

Exhibits

A TTEHTlON GRADUATE STUDENTS
Graduete Student R....rch Gr8nt appltc.
Uona are now available in the GSA office. 103
Talbert Hal . Granting tevel tor
and Ph.D.
candidates, up to $1 50 and $250 respectivety.
Completed appHcations due by Thursday, October
19, 1978 at 4 :30 p .m. Arty questions, P'ease
contact the GSA office , 636·2960.
Volunteera are n..s.d to serve on the
G.R.A.O. Aese8f&lt;:h Counci . Duties wilt include
reviewilg applcations for graduate student gants.
It nterested. please callhe GSA office. 63&amp;2960

HEAL111 SCIENCES LIBRARY EXHIBIT
Modlcol ond Blologlcollllunodon&amp;. o display .
of the work of U I B stan member, John Nyquist,
M:S. in Med!C"' !Old Biofogicelllostrallon.

master

Thursday-S
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
e.u-Swortz i n - lludonln-F•tlef.
CotnWCable (Channel 8). 8 :30 p:m.

Notices

PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY
SPECIAL LECTURES"
Tomonogo· 1D Thoory •nd Ita ApPtlcodono,
Daniel C. Mattis, Thomas Potts Professor, Poly·
tectmk: institute of New York, adjunct professor
of physics, U I B. 218 Norton . 1:30-2:20 p .m .

lor Information.

MUSICOlOGY LECTURE•
Cllalcal Rhetone and ltalt.n Instrumental
Music of the Renlluance, Wtllr8fl ~endafe.
professor of muak:ology. Duke University. 106
Baird. 4 p .m . ·

BOOKMOBILE
Colege Marketing Group's bookmobie exhibit.

Oct- 4-l.oct&lt;wood parking lol, Main Street.
9.a .m .-4p .m.

-

October s-Aint par1ting lot, Amherst. 9 a.m .·
4p.m .

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
PROGRAM S
.
Facts wenua Faddlam ••• Nutrition Education
for the 'Hellth Professional. Butfaio VA Hospital,
Room 301 . 7·8 :30 p.m. Free to UnNersity staff

ARCHITECTURE EX-T

The drawings of Douglot ~. fanner
student of U f B Associate Professor Wiliam Huff,
are on display il the Hayes Hall k:bby. Cooper
has distinguished h~ for draftsmanship and
drawing tect"lntque, and has recently had a oneman show at the Carnegie Museum, Scaife
Art Galle&lt;y, Pittsburgh .
.
EIGHT BUFFALO ARTISTS
Elgllt llulfaJo ' ~ ~,
Wginla Elk&gt;tt,
Gorver, Grief, Prochownlk, vtginia Tllou , Ma1he V.uer't Hooft,
and Roland Wise. Tlie Members·~ . Albright·
Knox Art Gallefy. Through October 8 . -

w-

'"'---

DROF4N CENTER
Hassled? Talk with us today at the Drop-In
Center. Open Monday-Friday, 10 a.m.-4 p.tl). at
67S Harriman (Main St.) !Old 104 Norton (Am·

and facutty. Preregistration required. For further

-

herst). Also open Monday evenings at 167

information. call831·5526.

MFACC, Elicott 5·9 p .m .

Wedn~ay-4

NO~fCTION

PHYSICS ANO ASTRO-Y
SPECIAL LECTURES"
Tomonoia 1D n.-y ond Ito Appllc:odon&amp;.
Do1iOI c. Mattis, Thomas Potts ProfOSSOf, Potytectric Institute of New Ytrt., ~ professor of
Physics. U I 8 . 262 ~ - 1:30-2:20 p.m.

FILM"
Why We Fight Prelude to War; The Nazis
Strike; 0 1""• and Conquer. 146 Diefendorf.
7 p.m. Sponsored by the CentEJ for Media
• Study.
ROOM 100 CONCERT SERIES"
Weronika Knittel . Ken Ishii, Ebel1'lar.d Blum ,
Mario FalcaO, Morton Feldman, and San Williams.
1 00 Baird Hal. 9 p.m.
Sponsored by the Centdr of the Creative and

GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR"
leo ond Sond-Weclgo Palyg6na. Ronald F.
Black. Unlv«slty of Connecticut. Room 18, 4240
Ridge Lea 3 p.m.

Perlcwmlng Arts.

CIEIIICALEHOI--AR*
Tllln Liquid' Fl._ oncl , . _ - • • Aotatlon
llld Stability ol F - and Emulolon, Ivan
~:~: Sofia IJ!Wenlly, BUgona. 262 ~ -

Summer PerediH (lindbtom, 1977). Con·
terence Theatre, Squire. CaN 636·2919 lor show
times. Admission charge.
The film e)Q)k)res the relationship among four
generations of ~ in a prosperous middleci8S$ fiWnily gathered for a tractitional hoatday at

service to the University and to the profession,

UUABFILM"

and c) demonstrated scholarship and coniinuing
P&lt;Oiessk&gt;nal growth. Facolty, students, and llbnity
staff are urged to send recc:mmendations to
·Ms .. Tamara Frost. Cataloging Department, Central
Technicat Services, Lockwood Ubrary, as soon
as possible. Recommendations may also be sent
to heads of the Unit Libraries.
.•

their retreat .

I'HARMACOU)QY a THEIW'EIITlCS

-AAI

LIBRARY AWARDS
Uke last year, five Chancellor's Awards for
Excelleoce in Ubrarianship will be given state·
1o outstanding ful.
_time prolessional barians.
A nominatir&gt;g committee chaired by Ms. Tamara
Frost of Central Technical Serkes has been
appointed to seek and acoept local nominations.
u 1 B is eligible to send three nominations to the
Chancellot"'s Advisofy Commlttee ih Atbany by
March 1.
The foUowing criteria have been estabfished:
II} demonslraled ski il · b). outstanding

its ~~~!~t!=

,

Ptaduc:tion ol C'holll...-glc '-lr••glc- Cell
lN by Cell F -. Dr. Rolf Heumann, Max
Plonci&lt; lnstiMe
Go&lt;mony. 101

by December 8 . A tlnive&lt;sity·wide Screening
Committee headed by Profesaor Kenneth Joyce,
orolessor of law and of the Faculty
Senate li&gt;raty Committee has been
by the df"ector of lbaries. The cominittee w11
· se~ec~ line nomos from among 111oae nominat9d
to be lorwanled to
by February 15.

-ted

fl.&lt;-·

t.y. 4p,m. - 0 1 3:45.

IIOCCER·

the"""-"'

UI In. -..ollato. Rotary Field . 4 p.m.

FILII•

Tho End ol ... - - . 146 ~7 P.m. Soonoonod by the Center lor Media

Study.

-

fACULTY IIECITAL•

Loo - _ -

flWd -

Hoi. 8 p.m.

Goner.illdnlloolqn: N ; lociAv. -S1·. 1Dt.aentor__,"S2:-:

Soonoorocl byllo ~of Muolc.

LIFE WORKSHOPS
Life Wort&lt;shops ere O'edH·fn&gt;e · gene&lt;ally
free of cher.ge. They .-e open to students.
loculty, stolf, olulmi !Old spouses. R e g ls nece8la'Y for al ·work.shops in 110 Norton, •
Amhenlt, 636·2808. Jho folowing work.shops

we alii~ for reglatretion: ~Writ­
Ing: : Focto. Mytho!Old - t l a n; Gom1on

wllh

~ !Old

To uiteventaln the "Celender," 'call
J•n Sltr- at636-2626.
Key: IOpen only to lhoaa with a prot....,.llnt.-1 In the aubject; •open
to tile public; ••apentomem-. of the
Unl..mty. Unleea othenllee apeciOecl,
tlcllata lor _
.. c:llarlllntl Jlllmlaalon
cen be DUrCIINed et tl!e &amp;qun Hen
Ticket Oltlce.
'

ond

euture: CUIIunillJo!Unr. Women

Alccholiom: !Old Tapping EnergyAitemotivea._

Oc-

SKI ClUB-DRIVE
. Tho - - - . Sid Club II , _ holding
Priooo gq !!P
5.
. The olfice .. localed ;, Room 7
Hoi, wit
be open · 9 o.m .·9 p.m. Sept- 28, 29,
10ld0ctober4.
The Oub'a new design T·ahlrts we now on
Slle. M sizes ate........._,
Its

.....-.rip..,.._

sq...

~rownBag

theatre resumes
The Friends of the School of
Architecture and Environmental Design
(SAED) will resume their free Brown

!ft~ ~~~~~~~a~~~~~o~~mir~~\:e~~~

Piano," featuring 1wo members of th6
Buffalo Philharmonic.
•
Carolyn Gadiel ; who plays violin lor
the Philharmonic, will be pianist lor th6
performance. Charles Lirette- will be on
trumpet.
Established three years ago, Th6
Friends are a non-profit sopport group
which uses memberahlp llues and
monex from planned activities lor
exhlbots , scholarships, library de-telop- ment and other projects "In behall of
SAED . .

o~';,",.fo~i~~ T~e ~=•· ~YBro';',;

Bag Lunch Theatre Ilea In nicely with
SAED Dsan Harold Cohen's philosophy
that "Bdu.-tlon should be a total

ex~~~~~·;~m, which debuted laat fall ,

has presented 25 live pertorrnanca,
from B!u&amp;l!rass to opera. Audlencaa are
JUSt as vaned, says Bakay, end Include
a potpourri of students, faculty , stall
and area residen ts, all of whom enlQY
th6 free entertainment while eatlrig
lunch .
All performances are held at 12 noon
in 335.Hayes and last about45 minutes.
The Friends are also In proceaa of
organizing a docent program directed at
educating high school students to th6
physical envlronmento· Volunl-s lor
the program will receive extensive ·

~l~i~~~re~~atl~~;~ S::~~toot::~ore

-

�•

s.ftomber 28, 1878

_ComPlaints?

SENATE

You may fare better ·
with r:!lanufacturers than you think,
U/8 sociologist advises consumers

Executive Committee
hears.froin~ommlttM
President
Facul~

--- ByMIHCa111n

•· Report of the Prealdenf
At the request of the Chairman of the U I B

the
~he , Cha irman solicited suggestions for
addlt1ons to the agenda of the Academic

11

g~o~~n~·d:r!~~~~~~\~~.r~~r!~n~~~.u1~

•one of tha thnse top specialists In tha
nation lnJha sociology of law."

u~Z ~:f::."Rg::'~~~~J~

lnvolvjno

in the Reporter.
A concerted &amp;ffon is underway to complete
the required plan for kjentlfylng and'

overcome, and a wariness about dealing
with the problem in this way .
The report of the Colleges Chartering

:~~~~H,f;of~~~~~n ~~~~~~~~a~~Ur"8~~

~~~~~!~~~n~srnct':'e~ ·r:~~~:~ngb~' ~~:

pi lance is mandated under Title 504; the

building access will be very costly. The
8

d~W~~~~;~,~te~~ ~'1~ct,CiftCf: naa~~
Impossible to be sure what they requ ire -

and they raise some serious academiC
Issues .
b. Report ofthe Chelrmen

Rou

F~nnd~~~~~t:S~'\~~h~~m~ris~~~g~a~

•The mass·market retailer, as a large

MENDED that appointments be made in the
same way as other advisory committees, viz.
through nominations which are generated

~~~f!~allr:f~ ~g~~~~~~!t afl~~;~~~~

research

~~~::;~~~ o~~fff~~lontowl;~h~he P~~~~~~:

f:"P'!:'k;~ 0~0~h~~!~ beco'~~ra:d!hi~o~

that a bona'Xde consumer complaint
will bring desired I'IISUits more often
than not. The Flevlew Is the official
publication of the Law and Society
Assoclatlon.

01

~~~~~e:ri~~~~~~~~~

r:l:

~~~~~~8a~~~~T1, ~~ ~:S!~':.u~sp~b;~~

adjunct prolasaor In the Law School

~~n6~1~0 H~r:'d~~~Ps~~~~: r~~~~:s ~~~

The Chairman read a memo from Or. Ketter
requesting Input regarding the non-dlscrlm·
lnatlon code (mentioned above under
8 1
8
0

=rlawit~s:fpr¥&amp;{181~i~~~~g~.A,o

here. Dr. Constantine Yeracarls, chairman of Sociology, describes h lm as

~ ,!~~ o';~~~'tTou~"t!~ulfy~arter and

the non-discrim ination clause of the
Student Body Rules and Regulations . The
President also is awaiting Word from SUNY

~:'.fr~~~~~t~~~~~m~l~e~lllingness to

~I.!L=r~%r'~~~\l.::.~f::s~

Senat8. The recom·

Committee) to draft a proposal for Inclusion

~~: /r~~e v~7'c:~~e~~o~~= =:rdT~k:~~

That, In .._,oa, Ia tha opinion of
sociologist Dr. H. Laurenoa Ross, who
naoantly transferred his bess of
~Ions from the National Science
F'oundatlon to U/B.
RON, whose expertise lies In tha
field of human behavior as It relates to

ship or the

~r:~'W. G:inA:(~~Y~~·"·r:,~h~~~~!~ -

Approwal of the Mlnutel of

!!:'-;~,!;.!:!-t.

As a consumer w;th a merchandising
complaint, your chancaa of obtaining
:~~action may be greater than you

Dnct ciMIIngl called mor. ~lve
Rosa beiiiMIS that consumers generally are well-aclvisad to take any
leoltlmate complaint directly to the
seller lnvoiWJd, rather than attempt to ·
gain satisfaction through a costly eourt
action. He conceded In an Interview that '
this is somewhat contrary tp findings of
consumer advocates, such as Ralph
Neller, who nscommend ch~es In

...

Mlnut• of Sept. 20 ExecutiYe

meetJna=
Item ··1

~~:n,~~e!~P~~v~he b~ar~~~s 81~~~rr'!'~~

~6 : ~~r~~na~!r~1th ~n!~~~~ th~\ ~~:~

~~'Judf~~~:t :r:o~~gme~'t ~~sre~

~~~~~~~ ~~~~~ ~\i~~~~_Fumas, Cora P .
c. Report of the S.crerery
The Secretary_had no report .

Item 13 Commttt" RepOrts
There were no committee rvpons .

Item 1 4 Old BuainMa
e. CommlttH Appointment•
Due - to time constraints, committee
agpol ntments were postponed.
_
a draft
1 : ~o~r::d:f "=~ruuon
resolution submitted by Segal, Farnsworth
and Blackhurst was_discus.sed and referred
back to them for modification.
2. Discretionary Increase resolution - A
~=~~~~~~ ~~Jt~~~g~~ =~dm~-m::d wf:r
recommendation to the Senate:

Faculties. FSEC declined to make nominatlons last year on the grounds that

=:~~ra~.=,~y~~~~~i~t:. fectlve

transfer of some or all of the cost
involved In c:Omplalnt-handllng to
manufacturers and shippers.

~~~rn~~~9J~~~psp~t~ci~~d ~;at~~~~

Conclusions In the published article
are basad on a case study directed by
Rosa and• Dr. Neil 0. Littlefield as

chants In the same way they have

~eu~auo~f rat~:rha~ th!~~~~n~"l!:.1~;n:!

:~~t~1~~ th~u~ti,!lng~~ of~~:o:,~~slt~~

such .

Chairman RECOMMENDED the creation of a
VIce Chairman position to serve one year as

"WHEREAS academic perlormance. Ia at
l(last In pan responsive to conditions of
rewards, and
WHEREAS"discretionary awards should be
oren rl.? y~s~~~~tk"i~'dtveD THAT the
Faculty Senate of SUNY at Buftalo
commends the inclusion of funds for
g!::r~~nary lneteases In the recent satary
FURTHER commends the Inclusion Ot
provision for meetings to review the crtterta
for such Increases, and
FURTHER urges the Inclusion of substanttal discretionary funds In future agree.·
ments, together with a provision for review
of the criteria forthelrdistiibutlon .
Discussion of other follow·up reports was
postponed due to the lateness of the hour.
hem 'I 5 New Bualnna
•· Agenda lf•m• for the October 10, 1978

::i~~= ~~!{ ~~~n~~~n~u1! ~;-~~ t~

~:~~~\t~'O~Iudlng

~~~~~~~ 0:~:' i~u\!/sr.ern~,;
coml~ to

U/B, Roaa .-..d as director
~~a In Law ~ Social

g:,:,c;e':,

The 18-month case study relates to·
the complaint experlenoas of the Fred
Schmid Appllanoaa · and TV Co. of
Denver, which Is called "Western
' Television and ,.(ppllance Company" in
the research paper.
The Ross-Littlefield research, geared
to retail sales of television sets and
appliances, showed that "Western"

=~~~~a ':,~pne~o~~ ~~~:r;~'l~

'T. ~~~~:1oond

.that those In
higher Income brackets tended to repor1
ro:.~~~e~~-... than _those In
In some caaes, the Ross-Littlefield
team disco-. complaints were
raletad to "ayatemlc" rather than
"functional" flaws. 1"- would Involve
such sltuetlona as lnedequete drainage
of hot - • for a waehlng machine, or
1..-quete · signal strength for a
telewtaion MI.
,

,......,.__.
)lie~

said thev~ao found
"'CCCUUonaa evidence of predatory
blll.wlor on the pert ol conaumera."
One a111:t1 caea, the Ron-Littlefield
rtpOrt said, Involved a customer who
raceiWJd a th.-apeed clothes dryer he
ordef8d with a fl-SIMiad control panel
ettachecl In error. Tha oonaumer, as
Chronicled In the . _ t , "demanded
tNt the'etons prowlde.
dryer
to 110 w1ttt the penal."
. lil..,aialng complaint u a probiemaolvlng mechanism, Roas and Llttl&amp;fleld CMM~ to _ , conclualona,
beNd on the CMe etudl_ II "Weatem&lt;'
and lntenrlewa with ..,._,,,tl_ of
all mal« appliance dealers In the

,,,.,peed

o.--.

-=

IIIIJ"'...!!.'!.~~noa
. ~ -.plalnta . . oenerauy

:~~~tlo~~lrc,i:a t~".:-~ fir::gl~""st.• . ,nan~

relatecl'observation, Ross and 'rutlefield
noted that the success 1of newspaper
"action lines" may well lie In their
capacity to distribute lnformatlonr
" wh ich may affect the purchasing·
decisions of large numbers of people."
•Consumer groups are apt to find
"broad suppon among retailers" In
promoting complaint as a problemsolving mechanism. This:\riew Is based
on consideration of 'the alternative of
lengthy and sometimes costly litigation.
Ross and Littlefield also said effor1s
should be directed to "Increasing the
negotiating power" of low-Income
consumers who tend to remain silent
because of apathy or belief that
complaint will be futile. In such cases,
the researchers observed, "even a
liberal complaint policy will be
Ineffectual."
:;:.'~

coneumero for their time and

Concluding the report, Ross and
Littlefield pose this provocative question:
Is the consumer entitled to any
reimbursement for the time and trouble
lnvoiWJd In resolving a complaint?
As Rosa and Littlefield sae It, many
peraoha with complaints are "Involuntarily drafted into the process of
4nduatrlal quality control.
"Time spent walling at home -for
servloa personnel, or travel to exchange
an unsatisfactory item, are not fully

=~rS:t:fu~~ ~7em~~':; ~~J?t~:

wrote. "These costs are externalized
upon random consumers by both
&amp;DPllanoa manufacturers and retailers."
· II merchants were to adjust prices to
take Into consideration the consumer's
troubles and loss of time; Ross and
Littlefield suggested, "not only would
tha market be made more rational, but It
Is likely that complaint systems, with
all the advantages unco-ad In this
resewch, more often would be utilized
.. . by consumers."

Ford, ~ndera named
-:c'tt.
rtewpolnt or oonaumer
PIOIIICllon, ".nllanclna tile complaint .

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

=·'::~~..;..~

-~
---~COlt
tl&amp;an
.., ...........,
lnlliiiiiiOn,•
•
•
~ ... ll&amp;odlflld to ...... 8INIII

It

was

emphasized

lhat

the

~~tl:tl:~:::~d ~~~~vet~."n c:i~gprt1~tf~
:~~~~~~~~~~a:'~~o~ld":":ub~ftr~s ,g~
review by the Research and Cr~lve
~~:::!:;es a~~~~:t regi~Ur:h(a~:)
8

should also be reviewed . The recommendstions were APPROVED.
Having investigated the possibility of
obtaining an administrative Intern to
supplement the Educational Polley &amp;
Planning Committee, the Chairman reported
that the plan is not feasible due to the
unique functions assigned to such positions
and the fact that only one position exists at
the pr..esent time.

sir~~~~~ld~:r mt~': 8~~~~ ag~~::~ra\~:

.

~~~c:l~r;;E~~:cl~S:J P~~~7:::"~~~~t~

Chairman-Elect and will lead .to Chai rman-

S:n~::f~=~~9a for the October 10 Senate
Orders ""' the Day was
The meeting adJourned at 5: 00p.m .

Management will cite
Dunlop's Neville Procter
A. Neville Procter, presJdent and
chief executive officer of the Bulfalcr
b;&gt;sad Dunlop Tire and Rubber Corp.,
will be honored as "Niagano Frontier
Executive of the Year" on Thursday,
October 26, at a banquet sponsored by
the Alumni Association of the School of
Management.
The association's 29th annual Awards
Banquet In the Terrace Room of the
Statler Hilton Hotel starts at 7:30 p.m.,
preceded by a cocktail hour.
Selection of Procter as 1978 " Niagara
Frontier Executive of the Year" was
1!nnouncad -by Dr. Joseph A. Alutto,
dean of the School of Management,
along with plans for the banquet.
Procter's selection is the culmination of
a nominating procedure that began last
January.
Procter, a native of England, became
president and chief operating officer of
Dunlop In 1971, and was named

er.:'d~~~r~nch\~t3~~etiv~cera:

lllnCIIId In a _ . thai aetlsflee the

flllll!ll!n'-"' .. eup.norlo exJIIndlng the
.-.. (al-fonnll ..... lnlllltu&amp;na, Mo.
.......... ellllpllfled and

~~7!~~N~b:'ah~c~hci'~rtr!~~dt:v!:1 ~~=

1

~~~
~i ft:d~~ =~~
Related Ptof...lone. He reJ&gt;1aoaa Dr.

Thomas W. Robinson who has acoeptad
apoaltlon at theUnlveralty of Kentucky.
Prof-

caa.r.o

Bandera 11 acting

director of the Program In Comparatlvit
Ut-on, elfect ... S e p t - 1, 11178,
for 011!1 , _.

chairman and chief executive of
Dunlop-canada before being named
dxecutive vice president of DunlopBuffalo. •
The holder of a master's with honors
from Edinburgh Unlvwalty, Procter
joined Dunlop ln England In 1850 and
hail( -loua high poeltlone with the
firm In oonnectlon with 1t1 OPeretlone In
Brazil, Spain and ICigerla before being
rwnec1 president or Dunlop- O!neda .
~er. alao a dlractqr of Trfco
ProdUct.a ·.~· and Houdaille Indus-

trfn Inc., was the 1975 r~lent of the
t!:,-~l)!~':t.::salea a Marketing
Further Information regarding the
October 26 banquet may be obtained by
calling the School of Management at
831~1 . Deedllne lor reservations Is
October13.
\•

�~21. 1a71

•

(

. . 12211&amp;

•Anthro museum
(!Tom pogo 1, cal41

helpful in the study of art ifact col ors.
1

art~~~r~ghy~heB~~7 ~;;'Jl~t~ ~h"a7

space will probably be allocated for the
sludy of ethnography and physical
anlhropology as well .
The museum will provide an
1

:%'.~=~~~~~nt~canaen~~lf~~ a 'f;~~~~

"apprentice relationship" Yll
their
Instructors, says Barbour, with wtlfacts
replacing books as teaching too ls.
So the facillty can become _operational as quickly as possible, the
Anthropology Department has permilled Barbour and the museum's
acting associate director, Stuart Scott ,
to cut down on their normal academic
loads.

WNY, Indian exhibits slated
Scott, who is in charge ol exhibits;
said he wants to mount a d isplay on the

~~~1h'6'~~~c~~~~~~ ~~~s~5j~.~ ~:~~

October -opening . Scott also hopes to
receive fund ing !rom the National
Endowment on the Humanities for an
exhibit on American Indian artifacts.
As it how stands, the museum will be
8

~!~~~e ~~sl~tt!n~c~i~3 a ~~~sJ:~: · o~
;'!.~~=!!'~ci,;r~~c~~~~~~oyn A~~~l:ri~~

has also olfered to help organize the
l acillty . Barbour noted th at many
underP.raduate and graduate students

...

tiona I.

l

~=~~~~gu~~n ~a~~ea:h~ea~~~ 8e0n~rgf~~~~

~

~

2
So wll theM tum-of-~ry wooden MWW ~-

Wo~en'~ education slighted everywhere, study says _
Complex, culture-related conditions
tend to cloud the reasons why, but
malorditferences in~ucatlonal access
and atlainment exist between the
sexes, according to a cross-national
review recently completed by a research
team In Educational Studies.
As reported In the fall Issue of the
FES Newsletter, the study, sponsored
by the Ford Foundation, was carried out
by Dr. Jeremy Finn of Educational
Psychology, with graduate students
Loretla Dulberg and Janet Rels.
Wortd-wlde, the researchers concluded , " females do not enter schools,
are not afforded the instructional
opportunities. and do not reap the
benefits of education thai males do."
Finn and his associates Identi fied
three levels of educational opportunity
for women :
·
Umlted..,.,... IOCietln
The first Is in so-called limited access
societies where ·women are strongly
discouraged from beginning seconda(y
or higher education, and are expected
to remain In the home. In some areas,
women from elite classes may have
more open access to educetlon, but the
vast majority"do not. Examples Include
much of Latin America, the Middle
East , Afrtce and the Indian Peninsula.
UN estimates are thet In Latin America,
20 per cant of &lt;nan and 27 per cent of
women ere Illiterate. In Africa, 64 per
cent,of men and 64 per cent of women
cannot nsad or wrtte; the corresponding
f igures for the Arab s..tes are 6t per
cent and 8t per cent. Ninety per cent of
rural indian women ana Illiterate.
Tochnlclen ~
fechniclan aocletles Illustrate the
second level of educational" opportunities for women. Here, education for
females 1e essantialiy vocatlonaliyortented , tudlng to occupation&amp;
generally not aa prestigious or
remunerative aa those for men. These
technician aocielles exist In much of
Europe, the llrttllb Isles, the Soviet
Unfon and China, ,,.,..; , J_, and
South P.ciflc nations. But "cultural

~:~~~.~ o:=~~tf~~~.~.~~~~

Finn team points out .
Th, United States, for example, is ·
ciassllled aa " educationally-open." Yet ,

;:::~~:.-J:?=:~::.~~.fJ',~\~~~

au tMI

can be attained pr.c:tlcaily

by

~r...=:;,_educatlon

' - • - . found to be amall in
technician aoclelles. England. Ireland,
Wal... "
Western Germany, lor

example, provide an average ol 8. 7 to

~;,~ ye:;:;.~~."ch?~lln~fer~t~~~:=,~

females make up almost 50 per cent of
school populat ion through the secondary level. In many of these countries
female participation i n the work force
" is mandatory and assumed ," the Finn
team reports . "In fact , In East Germany
a wife Is given legal sanction to be
'poilticailf and socially usefu l against
the will o her husband.' "
Women 's attainment is encouraged In
these societies. "Girl s seeing their
mothers leave for work each day
assume similar expectations for themselves. Ext ended lamilles and day care
facilities accommodate young children .'' However, the tendency for males

to hold hiqher prestige or admi nistrative
jobs rema1n s firm .
Open societies not much better ·

Open societies are classified in the
Finn study as those in which women are
able to pursue virtually any level of
education , although subtle barriers

r~~~nd~x~!- Tvhp~i'i"ec:ts"ti'~et~~~h~~eo!~~~~

data Indicate that In some fields sex
differences In attai nment and attitudes
are as large in Sweden as In most other
western nations."

Allee is • fsmous tamale
The Finn study report says .It has
been lound In open societies that girls
and boys are both aware of the male
dominance In school subjects such as

mathemat ics and science. In studies of
children's att itudes, both sexes are less
tolerant of girls assuming typically
"masculine" Interests than of boys
assumi ng trad itionally female roles.
"The rigidl y followed sex roles may be

Dr. Thomas G. Gutterldge will be
executive director of the School of
Management's recently established
Regional Economic Assistance Center
(AEAC) , Dean Joseph A. Alutto has
announced .

- the United States. Canada, Australia,
France, Sweden , Norway and Finland,
for example - also have high levels of
public awareness of the need for equal
opportunities for males and lemales, as
welt as volumes of research on
schooling which describe curricular and
psychological processes of sex dlfferentlatll&gt;n .
.
Yet, the stu&lt;Jy report says, even'
" where the school system does not
overttr limit the participation of women;
socia processes cOntinue to mediate
against full equality. In Sweden, for
example, the comprehensive Schooling
program of recent years Is a -lous
attemPt supported by federal
legislation to provide the same
ecfucatlonal opportunities for all students. Curricula have been redesigned,
Inquiry panels have been established,
awareness programs are offenad regularly, and counseli ng is encouraged to
teach students that they need not
follow traditional sax roles In education

~~h~~'l1roa~OV:i~~~~:~\s f~~Ab~:

~ =·~r=j~ri~~~~~~~~: ~'i!i

to come to fruition because of the ,
lnoulcetlon of traditional values from
the earlles1 ages at home. In fact ,

rn;~~~~~. '::';:;..:.

=

r:x::.~

study suggests. Textbook and test
analyses have shown that females are
portrayed as docile, passive homemakers wh ile males are universally
depicted In Jobs outside the home
having higher prestige. In fact, one
.analysis of elementary mathematics
texts found that .S out of 49 famous
people described were male; of the

~;:_,~w;.:!rt~"J~uded 1

one

was

Gutteridge will direct
Economic Assisfance Center

literacy and. educational levels and also
by more awareness on the part of
women of their own potential .
~ The study notes .that the education.
systems of open societies tend to keep
both sexes In school for long periods of

~~p~~rye:~:'fo~ . W,':J!, g~urft~;~t;

seen as a consequence of children
seeing sex-appropriate behavior modeled by other Individuals, teachers,

•

t,:ugg~~~s al~=sR!~odJ~:;~or ,~!
stltute.
REAC was ~ormed as an "outreach"
facility to provide assistance to area

in~;t';!!~d~~~~~:'ler. a lecturer In

as~ate director., She was formerly
assistant director of the Center for
Polley Studies. She has served as
acting director of the College of Urban
Studies and presently serves on Its
governing board .
Gutterldge, an associate professor of
/ human resources and Industrial relations , has been a U/B f.culty member
sincet970.
He holds a bachelor's in Industrial
engln-lng from General Motols
Institute and a master's degree and
Ph .D. i~ Industrial administration from
Purdue.

Prior to coming here, Guttertdge waa ,
employed as an Instructor at Purdue,
served aa an assistant to the marketing
vice president of lnduatrlal Nucleonics
Corp. and In several peraonnel
capacities for GM's Buick Motor ·
DivlsiQII.
He has served, too, as a management
consultant for - a t private and public
organlzatlona, end Is the author of a
.numf!erl of published artlcln on human

resouroa developmant.

D~~~~;eh~~s::&amp;:ier\~ ~~~~~'fn

social work related to community
development.
Long active In community affaira, she'
serves on the City of Buffalo's
Landmark Preservation Board.
· AEAC was cnaaled to help private
buslqeas and government officials
solve economy-related problema.
pne of Its ongoing pro)acta Ia
develoF,ent of a regional "econometric
model' that would ald C'.menl
officials and buaineaa
In
forecasting economic tranda.
Another Ia development of a
"technologlcel transfer capMIIIIty,•
wheraby Industry can Gain acoesa to
m::::P.erial, engineering and tecllnic.t

I.
(

I
I
·l

I

!.

l

~~n~ ":f"n!:*r~. t?n.=,~ II

products.
,
- · AEAC al• Ia inltiatlne a referral
service tor businessmen .,.d government" officials seeking . oonauttetlon
assistance In d-loping proiMaiONII,
managerial and technical IIIII Ia.
Another program calla ior develoPment of specialized bual- - a .
studies bv stuclent-facully · • - •These studlee wUI • .,... aua11 functions
ea marketing, llnanoa; -nting,
operations r~. -1101111*\tal
analysis, organizational bellalrlor, personnel administration and labor ,..._
lions .
In recent months, REAC stall
members ooncluated r - atudlea
lor the CHy of Buffalo and a major
dellart..-t store.
IlEAC also plana to g....,.e lleUI
Internship f)I'OIIraiDJ for Mlectad
gradllale atudentl, ·"7
_

�.........

••

~ss says Bunri plan-

ignored staff's role-The Prolesslonal Stall Senate's
response to the master plan do«ument
·advanced by VPAA Ronald Bunn last
spring is in large measure an addendum

to that plan , detailing the PSS's view on
how P.rofession_al stall can and " must
be ut11lzed" in' plannlng.
-The seven-member PSS committee,
in a document made'" publfc th is week,
welcomes the Bunn paper as. a first step
in an overall planning process within
Academic Allalrs.
" It is especially importa~t for SUNY
at Buffalo to remam a . viable and
prestigious national institution of
··higher educatlon ,"-the response agrees.
Stable or declining funding should not
stand In the way of that.
The PSS "recognizes," too, "that an

" At the vice _presid-ential level , we
would expect thai the Professional Staff
Senate will be called upon to provide
such membership. It Is in ·the Senate
that all areas of the University are
represented.
" AI_ready in some faculties, 'alfinity
groups operate to the benefit of the
faculty ," the PSS response points out.
~ For example, 'Assistants to' act as a
body to discuss and try to develoP.
solutions . to some of the problems
which arise at the department level and
wfiich affect each department In similar
ways, e:9 . registration, secretarial
understaffmg, etc. These 'affinity'

11:~~ P'eot~~~;i~~P;~~~!teS.t ·P~~1e~:Fou~~
Stall should also be members of faculty
.wide committees lor the same reasons
-r.i'::''l'~foPia~~~~~s ~~;r.:snrs;.:~~~ as at the vice presidential level. "
Within departme~ts the PSS points
1
out , " professional stall act as liaison
with any olllce on campus'arid do so for
to the benchmarks that are to be used In
many different reasons-lor faculty , stall
evalua)ing the performance of f~ultles
and students. In same departments
ana departments along ,-what appear to
there is more than one professional
be, an Infinite number of dimensions."
stall person . In some departments
But, the response continues, " the
_consultation with professional staff is
role of the professional staff was nqt
an ongoing activity an&lt;t'thelr expertise
addressed i n the Bunn plan. "
is recognized. In others there Is not the
A number .of reasons wily
same understanding of the role that the
It should ha\111 been for any number of
professional stall member fulfills, and
reasons, the response points out :
this is detrimental to departmental
"The multidisciplinary nature of
,
planning ."
professional stall Interaction with
Prolesslonal staff at all levels, the
facu lty, students, other professionals
resPonse says, "add a... dimension of
and staff provides a perspecl illll that Is~ · uoderstahdlng the unlv~rslty- structure
needed component In the planning
as It relates.to lacultv and students in a
process. Professional staff provide the
_way which is dillerent from th.elrs and
Unk behyeen the many offices ol this.
necessary."
campus and Central Administration,
and Interface with them in the Interests
ol all ~he members of the Unl\lllrslty
panel would
community.
/
•
like to have professional stall Involved
" Another contribution of profesIn University nisearch activities, too
sionals within departments and faculProfessionals should be encouraged to
ties is t heir knowledlle of the operations
apply lor research funds where their
and procedures necessary to Implement
expertise warrants It, tile panel
poli cies and programs - details which
suggests. "They should also be sought
are often unknown to the faculty
out as resources for Information, as
and administration which can
well as possl_ble employees of specific
enhance the effectiveness of · those
grants. Faculty and stall should feel
free to cooperate on grants, ellher
PD,\~~:• p";~~p:.,am..:;d the knowled~e througlr
a consultatl\111 process, or
·are both Important to the design of an
through a co-director or employeracademic · plan ," the PSS contends.
employee relationship. We feel that
"They are necassary for adequately
these activities wou ld build a talent
assesslnQ the Impact of new programs
pool for Academic Affairs to draw upon.
and pollctes."
It would also promote Individual
professional development for . stall as
A suggested tromPw&lt;&gt;rk
·
welt·as laculty."
A framework for expanding the role
Participation of prolesslonal staff In
ol the professional staftin the planning
process Is suggested :
all of these areas Is seen by the PSS
as being necessary when " planning for
"This tramework has as Its basic
assumption that a planning group,
the Institution , Its parts and Its
members ."
"
~ii~7e~~~~~e;:~~r~~~~:r~ra~ka~g
Josephine Capuana, Howard English,
Gayle Hardy-Davis, Valdemar In nus, '
professional staff for · lmplementatlon,
should from the outset Include
~~r:~~~~~h~~~f7;.,r·~~ Llf~~tz;.t:~
members · of the professional staff as
ment .
members of the group.

~~Yon ~"J r~~=ar~~~~'thfi J'~~~!

-Cotnell -T heatre

R~:'~~rt~~~~:e

·Sophisticated fafility may be
without a quafffi~d techntcian;
funding is:at the root of the problem
If money Ia ,...ly tile 1'001 of all wll,
f - at ·•tt&gt;rUnlv«alt~hould know It
better - than the t&gt;e
uered George
Levine, dean of Arts and """'·
.
Levine hU been lambasted of late· for
a8llllng for a amall piece of the financial
pie for A&amp;L deputmenta, especially
Engllal&gt;; now he has another moneyoriented problem to aolllll. Where Is he

=~.~~:::~~'10~0 ~~':a)('!.~~~::

Cornell ThMtre before tomorrow, when
John Pietruszka . ends his three-year
association with the facility .- Pietruszka
resigned last month In favor of a more
secure, lucrative and. warm position In
Florida.
According to Pietruszka and hili
lm1'1181llate supervlaor, Dick Cudeck, the
technical director does not ha\111 a line
position. His Ulary, plua equipment,

:::'1~'"m'*~'1.S, .::0~ f~

ministered through Arts and Letters and
from au':j!emental lunda -obtained

=rTheatra"=~·of~=~:

• for technical nah-a 8nd $10 per
hour for performance lime . . depoalted In the aoqount. The lhMtre·
does not clwge a lee when
technlcal ...lat.-la not ~ulred.

.....,..llort

Since the position Ia not . tuncled
1t1roug11 a de!*trnent. the tlleatre
enjoys "II8Uifal turf" status, . not
behOlden· to any pwtlcu._ unit or
PI"SS"· Although tile Cornell Thaetnl
~~~- priority to ilfoupe · who naed
jllrfOnnMCe time (a oppoad to

::::-:':=~ICI.:t="~~~

and Ia _ . . . , . to .,1 groupe and
orpnlrllllclna In 1M UnMralty commUnllY- " Ia tlw only designed
epeclfiDIII)' 111r ,.rta-oce on the

for tllelr new llrt/thMtre complex.
Given the fact tllal the theatre's
proJected Income for thlsy ear Is $6,000
and at least an eddltkinal $9,000 Is
, needed to cover. operating and admlnistratl\111 costs, Pietruszka Is fearful
Levine may_ be templed to hire a
greduate assistant to run the highly
sophisticated , costly theatre equi pment.
La-ulta?
He suspects that II th is happens, the
Uolverslty could be subject to lawsuits.
II, let's say, an llccldent occurred from
1m property rlggad lights. , Pietruszka

~~~=~~sfb~~-r~~f:~~~o~a~;~~~~~

or,

for

that

matter,

for

abused

~ ~~~~n~ ~':.rJ:n:~~.~~~~&lt;i~~
light, a mishap could easily occur.

.

p.::=p~r~b·~~~~~ra:if~~!~~.;

-=:r~~ w~ on~~~.:~.r.;!~mWNEO-TV,

which

the .Mark

airs

1!:-:''!."l'.:i
~~~-~~~~~i
Pietruszka's replacomeiit Is qualified.
Emergencies do happen and It Is Ul! to
the technical director to solve them .

A'H,..problem

cue

~

IIODCl
but
Ifill len'I IIMd

In point occurred S8'18ral
months ego, 30 minutes before
Ruaaetl'a program was to air 11\111. A
powcw o~ occurred due to a
solenoid malfunction. Through me
==-~.!.OC::::,J:~~· ~w'l'~
a UMble po- source and transferring

ln....... hle~llabelnfeMWed

altatc,echn~~,:e~~!;v~·hmon_.,.10tooornehlre

~ac:-..
i.e-.
...-=1ft
a
.,ao
........
ol~.:..~=
===.:-~,111111

. . . . .,. .

_... • ___../ And . . . . -

=r-"':.:&amp;-00::::.:=::
··- - .........
- ........
Allllit loinIt EDcutlw
lal , . .

ilfi!T,~~
..
··~':.! "'
·-=-~-==

..

Education alumni plan
d ean , s-recep1101'1,
.8 aldy Iours
.

employee coutd spend 1he necessary
amountofhoursatthetheetretosatlsfy
all Ita ~· Last yeer, the thMtre had
110 performances, and of necasslty,
many technical rehearsals were 'achedui~~~~81:;:'~?El'~;.;'On-ow but
he still does not ~now his suceessor.
As a precautionary measure, ·he aald he
notified all~~scheduled to usa the ·

1&lt;

.

-

dnctor ,_

from an lncr.M fn u - f - or by

=Y~~=~nf..~Pau:!:~~.:!:t~~~

the

I~~

only

$1,100;

~auch';;ff:i• . ~::C~
eugment the~- 8ul auch a ventura
,.. to lit fWidMd "CM!full~," ..-ned
Cudeall, u-111e Unllfemlt)' ao. not

=

llt-.IIIINd ._.....Hion"lor
'-IU.~,. &lt;r .,.,1.. ,."

~ ~

'

Ro~:~ll \fep~~;s~r~on,~r ~~: ~f~~
undertaking · ot t.he recenUy formed
Educational Studies Alumni Steering
Committee.
_
The reception Is ~lanned for Friday,
•

~:~~~ti'pl~.t~~ 6 ~~~~'lf~~s~r~a~1~
presant

a

talk, , followed

by

a

r.'~~W~.e~d~orto.fr~Sof ~~em~~lld~g~

will be available between 3,p.m. and 4
p.m. •
The Alumnf Steering Committee,
which began meeting In Spring 1978
with a group of Interested faculty, was
• Initiated to foster a lormal Telatlonshlp
between - the Faculty of Educational
Studies and Its 8,000 .,umnl. .
·
Dr. Joseph Manch (l;ducatlonal
~dmlnlat..,lon) and
Dr. Charles· . acRoy (Higher Education} are co-

fshair:~sg~:.,gl t~~ co;ml=i .w~~~
representatives from lllleh department
In the Faculty, representatives from .PI
Lambda Theta and Phi Delta Kappa, and
Florence Fredin, assistant dean, FES. .

w£~:~.~eJmane~'fc'l:"Bec~-~uerbecHIIgheherlr dE~

h
lion), Marl on E. 61 ,;;
Remedlal Education), Charles Blakeslee (Educatlonai.Admlnlatratlon). Freda

(Element.,:~

~~~:i'on)(,E~:;;,e,::~"a'hAf'm!-l~e:"~:,!

Kappa), Anthony DeJulio (Educational
Administration), Ann E~ (Higher
Education), Merle Hoyle (Counseling
Psychology), carole Smith Patro:
~Counseling PsychOlogy), Walter Polka
Curriculum, PI Lambda Theta), Mary
hllnack (Curriculum), Joseph Zampogna (Instruction), and Susan Zlrln
(Counsallng Psychology) .

Shields speaks at' Ohio event

Gerald R. Shields, asslatant &lt;!&lt;ian at
th8 School of Information and Library

~~'1~n L~~.:Vh~d 'f'nll:J;:_.....

malkin Servloao In Columbus, Septem-

bern:.

is

conference
one of a aeries
lbelng hetWhdlteln
loMI
,...._
- - - -~
uled for the f.,l of 1~.
·
Shtelda w• the only~ Invited

u~-aiConalel~o-!.~

''l!lll~Pm9.LO~JilS.\l!!f'.l¥

500 delegatee and observera. He point-

~mt!:~nt~cl~~~~~~=rt~~

lnformatlj)n to the fui)CIIonlng of a
democratic_ society. '

v.!'teld~.:::.,~ :ner~n~ tl:,r.~

Albany":J:Ja peat May and Ia an .. ternate
del-'• to tha National Whlta Houae.
Conference In 19711. He wu .,so a prlnclpal apeakar at the Georgia Conference

WI !&amp;1tJg fiC! I'!JR!m.~~~~".~

�b«U. 117e .

n

enry VJII, Hapsburgs, ot_
hers were 'Royal composers'
ty Ann Whitcher ,

once forced him to watch a friend's
execution.) Even after he succeeded his
father In 1740, Frederick could still be

IJiiiyenitYI'IAllic:atlona

lienry VIII - a powerful ruler wlih a
yen for marching so'me unlucky wives to
111e executioner's block. But Henry had
1 soft side. He was an accomplished
nutist, singer, lutenist and organ
player. And he was responsible. for
manr. of the vocal ~leces we now call
the' Klnp Henry VIII s."
fl'enry s surprising artistic lncllna' tlons and those of about 15 other
E&lt;Jropean monarchs are revealed In a
current U/B Music Library exhibit,
f8988J'Ched and organized by music
librarian Judith Coon .
Coon says she became Interested i n
the musical accomplishments of
western monarchs from the midd le
ages to the late nineteenth century, and
bsgan .c ollecting books, records and
.
other documents last summer.
She found that many of the ro yal
musicians were anything but dabblers
wrapped In ermine robes. Queen
Victoria's husband, Prince Al bert
(1819-1861), for Instance, was a ski lled
musician and composer. Was be really
thst good?

l~~~".::~b~ls, ~~~g 'J~zar';lsa ~~:!:

wauler, " and Goethe an "Imitator of
barbaric ShakesP.eare." But he did Invite
outstanding composers like Csrt
Philipp Emanuel Bach and J.J. Quantz

~~~r~~~rta::~ ;~,e~~~:~b~g,~oN'./8~

he was reportedly Impressed by the
kina's understanding of counterpoint·
and' fugal technique.

.

Hortense waan'tao good
Not all noble musicians were good,
Coon admits. Joeephlne's daughter,
Hortense, was strictly an amateur,
although her clever musician-secretary
Drouet transcribed §orne of her
melodies.

&lt;1~s1':~f~\'.d~R~fn::r l~u~~~~r~~~

the first of that country's noble
musicians. According to _legend,
Richard's minstrel friend, Blonde!,
traveled across Europe singing a
melody known only to himself and
Richard. When Blondel heard Richard
sing It in reply' from a dungeon, he was

Aatalonted ·aa anyone elM
"Let's put It this way. AI bart had as

ab~.'~~..~&lt;~~1:r~~h o;;~~:oiher

m~~,,.:,a~~p~~r~tltne~::!~h ~~i~~

~:!:,~~-s ~~g~~a~lna,ew 1 l~acfttl~~t"o,'".;

Engl•nd just wasn 't a very fertile time
musically ..
"Everyone knows that many Eur
psan kings and queen, were lmportlln
as musical patrons, especially iluring
the Middle Ages and Renaissance. And,
of course, the royal musicians had all
the educational · advantages of a
privileged class. But It's not commonly
known that many of them were serious
musical artists."
Don Carlo Gesualdo, Prince of
Venose (156(}.1613) , was the most
gifted and original of the noble
composers. He composed six books of
five-part madrigals and various other
• pieces. Critics say his bold , complex

flourishing musical service at the
Chapel Royal and lncraaaed tha staff of
this group of musicians and clergy to

7\~~ wtfe~l~o ae~lt'e'/1~9~~-Jf,"[;,
r:\~~~~~~~~~~. ~ngs;, ~~!:.~'\'!':1~

motet. His daughter, Elizabeth, was
also a skilled harpsichordist. But the
1

~~sic~~~ u~~~ly ~~~~ni~ 'thealap~~:'.:

named after the "~lrgln Queen"
probably apocryphal.
\

Prince Albert at the Mat
Prince Albert also composed lieder
and an opera, Diana von So/ange, which

:::S'!'~~~~,~~~:J' rn':t1~Tnex~~~~:~v!j

by his contemporaries. Ll~e Henry,
Gesualdo'e personal life was more thana .
little checkered. The Italian pr!nce

:::~~r~~ ~~,t:.eh',':':nl~?t~~~r~7Pe =~~

Une rendering from manuKrtpt ••cribed to Alfonso X.

de~/l~~~~~tely,

most of l)ls church
music was destroyed In a 1755
earthquake," she reports.
Thibaut IV , King of Navarre and

her lover In 1590.

It da.t " beck to Oevtd
The U/B librarian says her approach
Isn't chronological, but she does trace
the royal musicians from David, second
king of the Hebrews. " David w'as the
first and most famous of the royal
musicians," she feels . " He is, of
course, the composer-librettist of the

~~n~f h~~~~gf~i~ t ;~~~·o~,;~
01

20 1

Many of his beautiful melodies survive .
and some have been transcribed into
modern notatiOn . Also, Louis XIII
(16(J1 -1a.J), father of the "Sun King ,"
Louis XIV, was a composer of
madrigals, ballet music and some
church music, much of which survives.

~msa.=rd ~~~;~~!t~~:.:~r~n~~~

abounded throughout history."
Alfonso X, the Wise, King of Castile
and Lecn (1221-12&amp;4), wrote at least a
portion-of th" famous .1. canrlgaa 1ie
Sants Marla, according to Coori. And
Juao IV, King of Portugal (1604-1656),
was one of the first royal mualcole&gt;-

~~,~:Cti~tharJ .':~~~~'f~ :::~::~
theory. "RememberlhatJuao, like moat
nobles, had heel excellent training not a small edvantage In hie musical

Is

The Hapaburgo
Among royal dynasties, Coon feels
the Hapsburg emperors had the
greatest musical Impact . Maximilian I
(1459-1519) wasn't a musician , but he
did establish one of the finest musical
courts of his lime.
His brother's grandson, Ferdinand Ill
(1608-1657), established the uanan
opera In Vienna and composed churen
. music and madrigals as well as any

e?.rl y German attempt at opera. An aria
was later Incorporated by Wllfrend
Ebner as the theme for his 36 keyboard
variations.

Other Hapsbolrg composers In the
exhibit Include Leopold I (1640-1705)
who wrote 15 oratorios, seven . operas,
17ballel suites, 155 arias and numerous _
sacred compositions, and Joseph I
(167a-1711) who played the harpsichord
and composed both secular and sacred
music.
Celled by Voltaire " a marvelous rarity
among princes." Frederick the Great of
Prussia (1712-1786) was a brilliant
military strategist who held off armies
from three natio.ns during the Seven
Years War. He was also a renowned
flutist and the composer of more than
100 flute sonatas .
1
As a child , Frederick had to hide his
flute lessons from his boorish, often
brutal lather, Frederick William I. (The
elder Frederick would wake up his
sleeping son with a cannon boom to .
start the day's military exerclaea, and

~:,s 8~~'r.~u:!. ~~~l~'s Metro~oii-

Coon says that the 'f'OI'aiHIIU81oians'~
wor'k did not always go unnoticed by
the great composers. ·Frederick the

~re~!~~ote~~=1e l~fte~l:'s~Y B~~

Beethoven picked up some thematic

~f~:\ J6"m"'e g,n~~~.;~o~:"r!':

was used tiy others. .
" Many of the royal composers were

P~~h~dC:"m~::S~~~in;sti:J'~~o~ur:

Gesualdo, for example, was the ruler of
a very minor state, a state very
unimportant politically. In fact, moat
musicians who study hie work now
don't even pay attention to his royal
status."
But Coon contends, It's still

:;;::r~~rgm~~\:':Yco~tfsc In w::;
dlletantlsm and mix serious m':fc with
the demands of political and military
power.
· The exhibit,. part of a continuing
series sponsored' by the Music Ullrwy,
ends September 30.

r

Law School hosting model national conference
Supply of Public; Interest Lawyers and
the Demand for Public Interest Legal
Sen:icea, " .at2:30 p.m.; 109 O'Brian.

The first national Model Public
Interest Law Conference, designed to
inform lawyera, bar aasoclatlona,
bueineae, government, and community
leaden about the· potential of public
lnteraat lew p..ctlce In their communhlea, will be conducted Frida~ and
~l'::f.' September 29 and
, at

Satunlay

T~W~r· re'!• •n:~ 'fou·,~~ ~~ .

Obligation to ~... Public Interest
Service." beginning at 8:30 a.m. In
room 108.
Among more than 80 conference
~lclpants
will be Chartae H.

Holle ol the conference are U/B'a
Faculty ol Law and Jurl_...,ce and
lha Erte County Bar Aasoclatlon.
hel~n
~ o~ panel a will be
The oon'- fa national In that It
Will
a
tile
modal
aubeequant
'-'ated _ . . _ _
to befor
aponiONid
by

';=

the

~

8peclel

a.

«:. t~
W_.

a. i'=tltl:';dr.:~

legal affairs editor for Bualneas

~o',ne; 1~ ~=•Halt:", t.::::fc;
~tatlon,

ANoclallon (ABA)

Committee on Public tnt.-t

LaW Center.

will run from 8
m . • 5 p.m. IWI8f ~lona on
&amp;at
wiU !!lOin at 11:30 and will

Gooorgetown Unl..alty

Halpern, author"ol lha book Balancthe ScaJea of Juatlce, fa the aon of

Practlea.

~-The Friday~

:::S,

.

and'~:,:;::, ~rm:~al

acholar
Keynote ~ wllf ba Cheaterfleld

H. Smith, IIIII P&lt;Wident of the
Amarfcen S. Aaoclattpn, WhO Will
epell&lt; al 8:20 Lm. Friday In the Moot

Court"-tt.
r''"1t.s~~~ u_.._
Panel

. . . . . . . , . tile Public
.... ,c:..,,;o·,v~IIICJ al 10 Lift, In tile
Otlilrt AOaln, line! "Tha SCiurDI of

.

1

A

on Ftid8y ·~ daallng ·

with the representation ol "Unpoftl'lar

~~~r~db~~fl~K~~~;·:dr~':

of the Center for eonatltutlonal Rights,
New York City. It will be held In 108
O'Brian .
·Among dlacueaanta at this aeaaion

~/1\::: ~:-~,~ldgr~?"[l~!.dl=
(ACLU), and Dr. Grace G. Blumberg,
U/B professor of law.

At • p.m., Friday, the Hon . John T.
Curtin, Federal Dlllrlct ' Court Judge,
Buffalo, will be modetatO&lt; lor a panel
on "Prlaorwa' Rlghta and lha Private
P..ctilloner - Pro Bono !)pporlunftlea
for_theWeatern N- York 1'111ctfttonar.•

The MM!on, to ba held In 107
O'Bf!an, wUI deaf With ' - o1 ...ncee
that can be provided to llle ~eel
and will tO\II)h on· Eighth A~
guarani- ..,atnet "cruel and unuaual
pun_lehment:""
•
Among partli:lpanta . will be lomw
U/B faculty
Herman Schwlrtl,
now chlaf couneal, Office ol ......_

"*"'-

~-0~~.-=:·.:.::

oounaef to Att~-tnmala.

·-

Starting • public lne.wt llnll
A key ..alon, beginning at 2:30p.m.
on Saturday, Ia titled "Starting and
Maintaining a Local PubliC I n - Law
Firm."
Moderating that will bit Mlchaef E.
Tlgar, Eaq., or .npr &amp; ~.

~-.:l'~~=·atwm'a.c.;: :':!::
s...n-

lha attorneys In lha Clllcligo
In tha 1111108, and hal ,..,...,..led.
Angela Davia.
·
Alao participating In lhla 1111111 panel
will be lormer U.S. Attomay Oeneral
Rameay Clark, a founding pertner In
Clart&lt;, Wulf l Levi~ York C!IY.

~at:':b ~

Javtta, ::::, : . " :
lntroduoecl by lha Hon.
8.
Oeamond f-c:fllaiJudge,NewYOfk
Court of :;._.._ The lunCII wiH ba In
Talbert Hall:
A ~WCePtlon, upon conclu8lon of tile
oon'*-ln wiN begin at • p.m.
Saturday,
tile !acUity lounge. 1145
O'Btlan.
, . _ lnleiWIIIed In
oonlinnoe IIIOUICI -act tile
ol Law and .....
Joe u.lcowlki, • U/ .._ atudlnt, Ia
·.-.llnallng-lfllll*lla.

a..

attands..
:=101,.

�n

Wewononel
We won!
of the new Division Ill program, was
We won!
seven games In coming.
The last time a U/B football team
Some of the players had tears In their
could say that , the Buffalo News noted, - eyes: you couldn't.blame them.
coffee cost 79 cents a p_ound.
Some of the-fans went crazy: you
couldn 't blame them, either.
have football for six years.
.
Coach Bill Dando mused that It had
baen "eight years, eight years without
11
being able to walk onto the campus and
some 3,200 at Rotary Field, the first win say we won one."
·
·

~~n~Zs ~~~~ 'tl.e~'f'u;!~ ,::r;;;:r~~

~Jl 'vi~t~d~~ 'ifr~~:;g;r·'l:.~~~ '

' "We won one," he added.
Figuring heavily In the victory was the
passing combination of (.!lmmy)
Rodriguez to (Garry) Quatranl. the two

~~J.~~ ~~~~~~~~""!~asJ)~h=~~~~
'&gt;aseball .

Rodriguez hit Quatranl with a 38-yard
~s to Ice the game with seconds
remaining. They hed teamed up. on the

..._,...

--...

first U/ B score of the day - a ~yard
pass.
•
The Buffalo Jllls edded ll'ome color to
saturday's non-stop grid excitement .
And so did those Inimitable U/B
fans .
•
All they'd yell for the Jllls -s:
" Br~kport sucks! "
"That was really bush ." one of the
Br~~tog~~~:n':~~ after the game. ·

��State Univershy of New Y_ork

•=•

Board of Trustee_s

AND

-·

For the ....ntenence of Public order and Supplemental Regulations
tor State UniYerslty of New Yen at Buffal
-

building or :facility after It io 'normally

c:looed.

~ Refuoe to leave

.aay bulldiag

or

~~~~~sobyao
(h) OIJotruct tbo

free movement of

poroona and vehicles Ia aoy placo lo,wbieb

~ ro1ea apply.

-

(I) Deliborate1y disrupt or prevent tbe

l:t...,ful and orderlf c:onduct of ~-

Ia~ !ft~ t:=.., ~an~~.:~~
his

vieWI, _ jncludlag

Invited

~

(j) Knowingly have Ia his pooaession
Upoll any premiaes lo ' wbieb these rules
revolver,
• or tllber firearm qj weapon without tbo
written authorization of the thief
ad.DUnistrative officer whether or Dot ' ·
Uoenoeto poeoeu tbo same bas been issued

IIW:It. any riDe, shotgun, pistol,

(k'f'

~

to
-Jiir':fi;•lacite others to
any
of tbe acts herein probibitocl with specific
latent 1o pi'OCUI'O tbom to do so.

3::

wbo shall violate any proviJion of these

ro1ea (or of the rules of aoy individual
instith
' ~u~~~_s u ppalllembeendis~'~~-~.pslusempeenntiad
'ng
- ~ oh
.......,..
ed
or censured by the appolatiog authority
prescribed Ia the polio es of the Board of
Trustees.
535.7 Eafor&lt;&gt;olllelltpiop-am.
•
(a) The chief administrative officer Shall
be responsible for the enforcement of these
rules (or of tbe rules of aoy individual

10

othe; staff
mombet- or authorized visitor shall be
subject to any limitation 9r penalty solely
for the expreuipn of his views · nor for
having uoembled with others for such
picketing and other
purpose.
orderly demouiratloos Ia public areas of
crouad and bulldiag will not bo interfered
With. Thoee Involved in picketiog aod
demonstrations may nat, however, engage
in ~ c:oaduct ilt violation of the
pi'OVllioaa of tbo p.-.....liag section.
(b) In order 1o &amp;!ford
maximum

p....,ful

=~:s,S:!'S~:b'auw..fO:~~~bee~~

administrative officers who are authorized
to take -oction Ia ac:onrdaoce with sucb rules

::!ff:t~ or app"':riate to carry them

c=..to ~~~ ~~~

(b) It is not intendid by aoy provision
herein to curtail the r!Kht of students,
fsculty or staff to bo hearcf upon any matter

m.titution of tbo State University

u.orJrw~~:'!:rt.J:n:..t·~~

::"~.!\: ::~.:t~~ti~~;

plaaaed asaembly, pickotiog or demoutrs·
lion UJ*I tbe crounds of sucb m.titution,
ito p,_ed loCale and Iaten~~ p1!rJ&gt;OSO,
proVided, however, thst the 1f1Vmg of sucb
ilhall not bo made a condition
.......... to any sucb asoembly , picketing
or deiDODitratioo and provided, further, _
that thio proviolon ilhall not su_persede nor
.,-.Jude l.be proeeclures in eqoct at sucb
ialtltutioll for obtaiDiDg permiosion to use
!he fM:IIItieo tboreof.

i!~~re~~ ~:h:!e~lf~n; :;:~..!~~

viol&amp;tion of these rules (or of the rules of
_ any individual institution supplementing or
implementing tbeae roiea) by sucb persona,
wbicb , in the judlfiDOnl of the chief
adQoinistrative officer or his designee, does
not poee any .immediote threat of injury to

511.5 ........_ -A _penon who shall
vlolale aay of !he .,..,._._of u.- ro1ea
(c.- ofl.be ruJeo of any iadMdual institution

---Iiiii

01 iDipleJDelllll!l_ these
raloie) lllall:
(a) U be Ia a licoaMe c.- I a - . have his

..,. b JLe toremaill upoll tbe campus or
olloor J!I'OfM'ty w!Uidn"" aDd ilhall tie
dired.tilklloevel.be .,..u-. In l.be event
of bla fllilllre ... nluOaJ to do 10 bo ilhall_!!e

=........ .

"1Mt·::t:~Yilltor-

bo llibje&lt;t to
(cl U lot II a ltudont. bo IUbje&lt;t to
~ ... _.. ....... dlodpllaary aetioD
• &amp;lot ...... of llle may warraat,

-=tr. ../8. !J.f-=:· ....
ldl

-

lot IIi a

'-*1 ...,.._

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

..--

I

of
ha'riQa a

~-.bopllty

1(........__..~

kldioadololcr

lei'ililldoafii.W.~.-oudl

..... .......,. ...... llle fMU may
....................... wllllaut,.,

.., If ... .. • 111111 - - Ia l.be
........ _ _ _ ., l.be dd - ·

_

........ --.:111"' llle Clvilllenloo

.........
.......................a
,._....a.
"iiii••a.wr ...........
...............
,., ...u--.
.............................
,.,
...

-w..... ...,
~

of

llid

__
,~!.•

= .:'.!.:flon
"t:-

u.-

"t~~~j.

limo to limo, f.rocadures appropriate to

tres-

u.-

-535.4 Froodoa of opeoda aad - b l y ;

~

_

·a-

REGOtfiTIO_HS.

speakon.

· ·

&lt;:t'::..

ROLES --

express

periOD c.- ~1. sucb officer may make
:-~~vJ ~~;..._his
~effort to learn the cause of tho
-'-'-shalliaformaoyliceosee•mc:oaduct Ia q - aDd to penuide those
;-hoshaD violate aoy provisions_ of_ ~bese
edppil .therein to cleoist and to resort t.o
raJoo 1oo: of tbe ro1ea of aoy individ)lal
poi:al_!.olble metllacla for the resolution o1
iDstiWtioo
supplementiog or in!P~me~tiD_g
0111 ~ which may bo preoented. In
- roieal thst his Uoe.,.. or mvtt.ation 11
doing 10 aucb olfioer shall warn such
t•
..,..
shall ''-~ him to leave tile
persoao of tbo eoooequences of persistence
witbdraWD and
liflOn.
m tbo probitNt.d CODduct, Including their
&amp;mpuorolher_Property oftbe instil don.
ejoctioa from any premiaes of tbe
Ia • ...,;t of his failure or refuaallo If&gt;
laltltutioll where tlleir c:ontioued presence
oucb oftieer ahall cauoe his ejocUoa from
and c:oaduct io in violation of tbese rules (or
7:J.;u..r viOlator. who
of tbo ruleo of any individual institution
is neither a student nor faculty_ '!' ~r
=~-Iiiii or Implementing these
slalf membo~. t b o :lnf~= ,
(c) 1a my cue wbere violation of these
~ or ~ to mala on the
ro1ea (or of l.be ruleo of any individual
bo ..us": ,;U,r property or'the la.o?tution
- ~ SUDOiemontiog or implementing
~'-~ him to leave such. preuuses. In
th- ruleal
not .cease after sucl!
auu """"'
L - - - • to do 10
waruiDg and Ia otber · euea of wilful
l.be event of his failure or ,..,...,
,violation of aueh rules. the chief
oucb ollieer shall eauoe bis ~n10~
adailiiiotntive ollioer or his designee shall
-sucb campus or property. N........,..
~
,._ ......._of ••- viola
fro
bdivisian shall be i:oastruecl to aa~
C&amp;UR woo e.,..._.
.....,
tor
m any
preoence olany sucb periOD at any tin!"
.,...,...- which bo· oecupiet Ia such
~"!&lt;&gt;!. 1o sucb violation nor to affect bis
=ed~pliosry
liability to proooc:ution for
-"-"-~-'-'-"-"
lolteriDg
u pretcribed Ia tbo Penal Law. or
(d) Tbo .,.._
........_...ve oIIicer or his(c) In tho cue of a student, chargel for
~~ ~tbhe S:Obmslic
violation of aoy of these ro1ea (or ~f ~be
..,....,..,_ r 11111 I
. 'dual institution
neceoury Ia eauoiDg tbo·'election of any
ro1ea of an;r: indi
. vt
- violator ol
ruleo (or of tl.e rules of any
aupplementing or implementing tb.,.
indi'vidual iDititutioo Monp)ementing or
rolea) shall bo ~resent.ocf and shall be_ besrd
~
and.dete~- !J!e-~ beremafter
implemeDtiog these rolea) and he msy
rovided Ia section 5S5.9ofthis Part.
req.- tbe State Univenity; couosel t.o
p (d) 1a the cue of a faculty _member
apply 1o any court of appro~riate
·
•pomtment
jUriadic:tion for~ lajuDctlon to restrain the
having a c:ontioumg or ~rm a~
' ·
violation or threatened violation of such
chargel of misconduct Ia viol&amp;tion of these
ro1ea (or of -the rules of any ladivid)lal
rolea.
n&lt; .8 ~ In matters nf tbe
institution supplementing or implementing
tb- rules) shall be inade, beard and.
....,
determined Ia accordance with title D of
sort to wbicb
ro1ea are addressed, full
- Part S38 of the policies of the Board nf
and prompt communication among all
components of tbo illltiiutional community.
~ihe cue of any staff member wh?
faculty ; students and administration, is
holds 1 position in the classified c:M.J
highly cletirable. To tbo extent thst ·time
service. described Ia section_75 of the Ci~
and cireumstaaceo permit, such comService Law, charaes oJ misconduct m •• munication should preoode the exercise oJ
viol&amp;tion of these niles (or of the rules of
the authority, and resj&gt;onsibili'dual '-~'t "
1 entiog or
ties granted and imposed in these -rut~•- To
aoy ·indi V1
~w Uwon sup~ em
these ends eacb State-&lt;&gt;perated institution
im_plementiog ~bose rules) s all be _made.
of the State University shall employ suchbe_ard and determined as prescribed m th&amp;t
section.
•
procadurea and meaos, formal and
(0 Any ot her faculty or staff member
informal, as will promote aoth communics-

-

tioA
535.9 Notiee, looadloc aad detenniaatlaa
of c11anreo aplut
(a) 'l'be term chief administrative officer,
u used Ia these ruiM, ilhall be deemed to
moan and Include any person autboriud to
e•erci!e tbo powers of thst office during a
~~ilit thfetrehelalaocru~~- the absence or
UUO&amp;U uty
~·
(b) Whenever a complaint is made to the
chief ad.DUnistrative ollioer of any Stste-

-ta•

0

~'t~ ~~t~:d.~~ ': :f.":r~~~~~f ~
0

rules prea&lt;ribed in thio Part (or of aoy rules
adopted tJr ao individual institution ·
:P!~~'::~~I.:"t:~ing :b~ ar:cbes!
violation may have oocurred , ~shall csuae
an Investigation to be made snd the
statements of ttie c:omplaiaants, if aoy, and

~h:,1:":: ~-=.«uo;~"i!r:.~~

from · oucb inveotigation and statements
that tbere is reUonablo ground to believe
tbat there bas been sucb a violation be shall
prepare or caute lo bo -~ ~
against tbe stucleat or students aile
to
have c:ommitted aucb violation whic shall

�state the provision p,_;.,l&gt;ing the offe!llle

~eo=~~';.~,:- fa&lt;:ts alleged

doeumentary evidenee iD his nwa behalf.
Tbere m&amp;J be ...-at at t.be llearinc: the
otndent charged aed blo repreoentst.lveo

named therein by delivering the same to
him or the~ personally, if pouible, or, if

tioo; aed, unleas the otudent sbaiJ request a
cbed hearing, ouch other ...,hero or the
inotitut.lonal commUDity or other penons,
or both, u mar be admitted bJ the bearing
committee. A m-ripL o1 the prooeec1ingo
shallbemade.
•
(i) Witbin 20 dayo"after the clooe ol a
beariJiathe bearing committee-abaliiJibmit
a repO&lt;t of ito fincliDgo of faet aed

sh~ t!":~'!.t~"tb~"!!:.~ :.n!f~

~~t!~~~~t!

at \is 0&lt; their Usual place or places of abode .
while attending eollege and abo to his or
=..m~ addn!&amp;l or _addn!&amp;les, if
· (d) The DOtice or charges so served·sball
lilt a date for beariJur thereon not leas than
10 tlian
daya from the date or
oonioe which shall he the date or mai1in,r
wboro - . r y to offoet servire by mail:
F.n-toappearih re1p01110tothe ebarges
... the date 1iud r.r bearing, unleas there
bu beea a
.for good ea0ae
abowa. ..,.0 ~ deemed to be an admiasion
of the IM:ti ltUed iD ...... ebarps aed sbaiJ
WUTaDt IAidt as may then be
~
Be!O&lt;O
ouch

....n

ur

...,tin.....,.

takln'

u.r-.

relernldto.~ea::=·an~

who bu failed to appear, in the manner
iD oubdivialcm (e), or ito propooed
aed .--mmendatiOill to be
' oubmitted to the ebief administ.rative
ol!ker aed shall ao submit ouch findingo and
"""'"'IM!!d•tioos 10 da,. thereafter unless
the otudellt bu meanwhile shown good
fO&lt; blo failaro to appear, in which ease
a date for bearing shall be lilted.
(e) Upon demand at any time ·before or at
the bearing the student charged or his
repreoentative, duly deoignate&lt;l, •ball be
!urniobed a ""1/Y.or the stattments taken by
the ebiof ~t.lve offieer in relation
to ouch ebargea and with the names of any
other""- who will be produeed at the
bearing in support or tile ebarps, P.rovided,
however, tbat this shall not p..,aude the
testimooy of wit:Deues wbo were unknoWD
at the time or oueb demand.
(0 The ebief admiplat.rative ollieer may,

~

=

=~
O:..:'::r.\::&amp;::d ~:
hearing and determinatinn thereof, when·

ever, in his jud~t . the continued
presenee of such otUdoai would eonatitute a
elear danger to himseH or to the safety of
persons or property on the premiaes cl!the
iDititutiOD or would pose an immediate
threat of diJruptive interferenee with the
normal eonduet of the institution's aetivities
aed func:tions, prOvided, bow~ver tnat the
chief administrative offieer shall grant an
immediate bearina: on request of sny
student so IUipOnGed with respect to the
basil for aueh suspension.
(Jr) There oball be eonatituted at each
instltutlaD a beari!ig
eoaunltlee to bear ebargea agalnat students
of violatioD of the ruleo for maintenanee of
public order prescribed by or referred to in
this Part. Sueb committee oball consist of
three memben of the administrotive staff
aed three members of the faculty,

SW.e._..-

=-~J..~-~:

~for~o1the

ebargea to the chief admiulotrative offieer,
toptber , with a tranocript of the
proeeedingo. aed sbaiJ at the ...... time

=::"?.of.:~~e~~i~

da10 thereafter t.lle, ebiof administrot.lvo
offieer shall make blo determil!ltiOD
tbereGII. Final authority to dlamioa the
ebargea or to determiDe the iuiJt
tbooe
against whom they are made aed to e~&lt;pel,
ouopend or othenrise ~liM hem sbaiJ
be vested in the ehieladlnini8trat.ive
ollieer. H be shall rejeet the findingo of the
hearing committee lD whole or in part he
shall make new findings wbieh must be
based oo substantiol eviilenee in the record
and shall include them in the ·notiee of his·
final determination which shall be served
upon the student or, students with respoet
to whom it is made.
·

or

.

PART536

~Raleolortl!eMaia-of

!=--enity

~':'.!¥!:
of
Approt&gt;ed bw Uniwmtt Covn.:i1
&amp;ptemh..-1i75, Board of'l'nuue•AugtUt 1, 1976

536.1 Dionaptlooa
A penon is f:ty of dilruption when he ,

-,, :~~ ,ri\boU:~::t:; activities;

or

(b) obetruets University activities.
University ac:tivitie! include but are not
limited to: teaebing, research, administra·
tiOD , pubUe Beivic:e, function , or ot her
authorized aetivity or prog'ram on
University premiaes.

536.2 U11011t.boriled Eat&lt;f.
No person shall break mto or illegally
enter any University building or room nor
shall any penon enter or remain in any
private room or offioe of any student,
faculty member, administrative officer, or

(c) No person hired • for purposes of
enforcing securit y, whether in lieu of or in
addition to Campus Seeurity Officers, may
have in his possession in or upon the
buildingo and grounds of the University any

other person in eha.rRe thereof, or in

firearm or other deadly weapon without
specific written authoriu.tion from the
University official empowered to give such

person or per1011S authorUed to uae or live
m that room; nor shall any unauthorized
· person enter or· remain in any University

authorization.

Regulations on each eamp111 shall include
the manner by wbieh eamp111 visitations by
non-students shall be devel"'!.ed in
aeeordanc:e with the Peual t.w.
·

~tbouiU:D e;;,~ni~:r:r~~

building 9r facility at a time when t hat
facility normally is closed or after t he

~~~-~=.r:;~~~

~d ~k!beot.:e:ta ~atib:

include, but arjo not limited to the following:
buildingo",. parking toto, otbletic fields, and
all eampua areas.

. member shall serve UDtil his oucceosor or
replacement bu been deoipated. No
member o1 the committee sbaiJ oerve in any
cue wbere he il a witDela or ia or baa been
directly involved in the events upon which ·
the ebargea are based. In order to provide
for cueo where there mar be such a
uallficatioll aed for cueo of oboenee or
• the chief administrative ollieer
sbaiJ doolgDate 011 alterute member of the
adminlltrat.lve staff aad an alternste
member of t.be faeulty, aed his prilldpal
&lt;leoi«MM obaD deoipate 011 a1ternste
ollldeat member, to oem ill aaeb cueo.
ADJ 11ft IDOIIIhen of t.be mar

536.3Tioeltud--ofl'nperty.
(a) No pei"WQn shall take, steal, burn,
destroy or otbenrise ~ any property
not his own. on the Univenity campus or on

deoianated b}' the members named by the
chiel administrot.lve offieer. Eoch· ouch

=

an;r University property.
(b) No person, lD any manner whataoever, "lball deface wallo of any structure ot
t.bi Univeraitr, either on the inside or the
outside. said otrueture. This includes the
use of paints, poe1era, aed -advertisements
affioed in any areas other than those
deoignatsd for ouch purposes.
·

or

,
UII.4Pio,.-AJ..o ... a u . - t
A - is ruiJty of pbr*al abuoe and

~meed~ :'~J!r..:t. ~~;~ ·-ulto.

otrilteo,
At any iDotltutioD whole
ebief
tbreateaa, or intimidates any - · or
admiDiolntlft ol!ker ~ t.bet the
(b) be ~ in a ol eonduet,
DIUIIber ol beoriDp whldl wiD be required
over any period ol time, or f'OP.OOiecll1
to be hold Ia, or may be, oo p-eat Ulat they
COIDIIIito aets whicb alarm or serioualy
. . - otberwlae be diiP-d of with . . ~another pe.-- aed whicb serve no
- a . l e opeod, be ...., delermiDe Ulat
purpose; .,
the lleOrlD« committee sbaiJ of lix
e) be ereateo a eoociWaa orblcb UllD8COI·
........... ol the admialltrat.lve staff .... lix
aaril7 eManaero .. tbreateaa t.be bealtb,
_.,_of the faeulty to be doolpated by
adotJ, or w81!-be1Da: of adler-~ or of
blm IIIII of m otaileoota who sbaiJ be
o&amp;ber_.trODtf"Div~~deolpal..t bJ the IDOtllben ao doolpated
bJ blm.
.....t the ebiof
511.5 . . . . . . . " - ud ~
~olllooroloall deoipate ODe ol.
IAidt IDOtllben • ehalrman who may divide
(a) It 1o a vlolatiaa of N- Y ar1t State
the llllllllbenldp of the committeelato three
t.w aed UDivenit;r R.ecuJaUc- for a
dmai.-1 OMit t o - of two IDOtllben ol. - t o . , _ a rille, obotpa, llrearma,
the admllllatrat.lv staff, two faeulty
. . - - . ~. or uplaoiY• in
members and two otudellto aed mAT aaoign
.. the bailding ... grolll!do of t.be
e1wsouch dlvilioDI far heariDgl
Ual..-r wltbout _.;ate written
iu1J lour~ of _ . ouch ciMIIoo autharilatloD from t.be appropriate Uaivv·
_,. -.duet bearillp aad make .........,.
o1t7 allldaL Tblo iDdadoo romaa eandleo or
IIIOi&gt;datlau .. bereiDifter provided.
olmllar combuollbloa .. expta.lveo.
(b) The beariJIIOOIIIIIIIItee aiWI DOt be
(b) No-.eltberaiD&amp;IYO&lt;iDbaaDd
bJ
t.be
teciiDI&lt;al
ol ~but
=wit.b
atlleftor, sballla -~:..Oil~!
IIIA1 bear • recoiYe any~..
a n y _ - w ._
~ whicb Ia relo\'ant IIIII material to
....-,, _lmlfe. dlrlt, ltlloUo, , . . ,
t.be
- will
- ...-ated
bJ the ......
cadpl, -to· purpose
club ...ofo&amp;ber
tl.laa
.......,
~ to •
lad ....
1a1r adaptable
t11e
• .....-.
or I' ot1w tblftanud . . _ _ iDeludiD&amp; .,._, .._ .. almllar artldao,
~·.......
A otudeat apialt~ ~
~ "".!~.~-aldo.-a&amp;lllotie
clolli1M
may llfiiiMI" VI ......
.............. ~ ~ ol. blo dlolco. .Be _,.
lllid8riall ud
... ....,., ol. .........
..,._ IIIII uam1ao aplut
opecilo or purpose .., t.be dar iD
.... Mil may prod- ud" . . - - . t

r.. ......

""*

run

·

536.6 ~·lbtc aed Demoaotratioao
(a) In regard to on-campus student
aetions and de monstrotiona thst tend to

~~:~~t! ~:~t!~~rr~~~J=~~~b

student will take the consequence of his
own actions as an individual before the law,

u:~::~ity~~;~ ~~~e TJ:~r:s~~

sny damage to puhUc or private property
must be borne by those regally reiJ!Onsible.
(1)) All members of a University .
.c ommunity must sbsre the responsibility
for maintaining a climf.te in wbieh diverse
views ean be expressed freely and without
harassment.
(c) The State University of New York at
BuHalo bas traditionally supported the
rigbt of ita otndents, faeulty and staff to
peaceful protest . • Always implicit is the
underotandinJ: that deiDODitratoro will not

=~.'h :nt!. :u;:!"or1!ii to~ i! .

maintaining order and to uaure courteous
reception olany eampua speaker or viaitor.
(d) The following pertalm to the eoeduet

ol those members of the . UDiveroity
community who feel compelled to expreoo
=.~~~llting aed Other
1. Pldtetin« .. demonstrating must be
orderly at all tliDeo aed obould in DO way
jeoPa:dlae publle O&lt;der &lt;&gt;r asfety or
mterfere with the Uni..roity'o procrama.
2. PlcketiJur or demonstrating must
not iDterlere with ent:raDceo to buildings or
the - ' flow of pedestrian or vehi&lt;ular
trolfie.
a. '""- involved in ~ or
~ may 'DOt iDterfere by
llliDidiDir wit.b orpniled -w.p or other
aaaOiDbBeo fO&lt; the l"'rpoM oflwuanent,
aiDes tbio mvadea the ridlto of others to
OMOIDblo aed t.be rlchto tl speabn to free
expreao!oa. •
4. PlobtiQa or demoutrating may DOt
obotnoet or pbi*a1J1. laterfero rib the
iDtetlri&amp;Y of the . . . . . _ , 1M privacy ol.
t.be . . . . _ baDa, .. the fuetioillDa ol the
Jlb1*.al plaat.
.

511.7 ............ , . , _ . . . - ~1•;:J
U*-Y
• (a) Aio.T .....-!' DOt a atadellt. emploree,
a , - ala.,..... or an.....,_..- t.be
parellt ... lopl .......... of a lltadeat iD
iaeDdanee ~1M
"""-laltero iD

......... • ..

u......,

~~.:.,u.:=~
............. from u.e Preoldeat. CjiiSIOIIIal•

violation of pooled niles or regulations
governing the uoe thereof, aball be guilty of

~j t~!"Ne':Y~"'S"~te~~ual~:)

(b) UDder New Yarlt ~lAw...._,
240.35, a Is ruiltY ol ~when
be loiters or remains ill or about a oebool,
eolleae or UDiveroity" building or BJ'OUII!Ia, .
not having_ an1 reasoo or re~
involving OJiotodr or or ~T. far a
pupil or student or any opecific. legtUmate
,.....n for being there aed not having

:,:t:.i'..ecr..,~the=.

any perooo
(c) Under
Yorlt Penal t.w SectioD
140.06 a pe.-- is ruiJty of ~
when be kDowillgly enten or remains
unlawfully in or upon ptemloeo. Treopaaa Ia
a "Violation" ~IW&gt;ie by a fiDe, or

If.:."

imf'.t1"fi:!:'NewupY':J5~ t.w ~

140.10 a penoD is guilty of erimiDal

no.,... when be
lmowillgly entero or remains unla~ iD a
building or nal .--tr W"!ald! Ia
m-ol .. otberwlae -.laNd iD a ..........
treopasa in t.be Third

deoigDed to exdude lntrudero. Tblo Ia a
Claal 8 Miode-. .
.

UII.IS.....

The judldal bodlao Mtabllobod to
coaalder ·ilmiiYilur ....... "riolaliODs
ol.tbePI'OYiaiaaa-..Jiatbio---

t.be IDler-~ JadloiarY. ll&amp;lldoiJt. Wide Jadleiarr, IIIII the COaua"lttee for 1M
MaintenaDeo ofl'llblloOnlor. n-~
bodloe have t.be J!O"W to IDIIIIat.a
to llllal ...... Iii 1M preoldallt. that !a IIIADCiaiGrT
orapaloioll
Ia ......,._,..wl the Wloorillc ..... of
UDCtloas:
•

If............,

&lt;al·w.....m,.

(b) Nolatioi ...

(e)~.

--s.

(d) t-of..moe.-:

(1)

-

Dealil ol.

.... of ... a~ ...

... a deoipated time.

. u...:.~from ~ .. o&amp;ber

..moe:::=

r.-

(8)
of ......
COIIIIIatellt rib the a&amp;.. Coa
the reh•HI!tadOD of 1M otudellt.

= ..

be

....

Jtla:t!'':~·=of...the"!

dellalt. - * ! of tiBia. The

-

Iii ...

"'\t:'lJ:;,.""' ... 1M

prilballaBduriDc
""" 1M
be
tr expaloiOD from
(I) llaopeaiolall from the UDivwsltr r.r a

c=r-.,.
iDfraotiaD
period
"of

dollalla•18d611e~oftaa.

1&amp;1 Blrlolololla ,_. t.be U"'-*1.
Oi)8Diil ............. -.y be

.......... briM tJalvenltTotrllaali.

�Hal--.. . . . .

Approwed ~ Uni--'IJ Council
Sejlllmber11,1178

J.---.. . .
_., .... ,

5.70 Emlnnnonlal ~too~!' &amp; Solely

IY . . . . .
--l,ai.S
--l,al.t .
6.00 Sqln Hal~ !\&lt;US

TAILE. c:arTEII11 .

6.05 Antplificalion
6.10 CRamUse:.-Focititios·
6.15 Gambling
6.16 Dnvs
6. 17 Weapons and EJqllosives
6.205&lt;111citotilrls
6.30 A&lt;Mirtlsing

--•.co~. s­

1.00 (1)Scape

(2)C.,.,..~policeolficels

-

1.10 ~"'liA-

1.20--~tor~lion

1.25-

-

2.10 Thol1
2.20 COiwwslon

•

uo - . - Stolen"'-'Y

.

2.40 -Use.-~facilitios
2..50 - S o l e . - . , _ e e . , . .
3M ....... .- UoMrsily S&lt;41P1ies., Downon1s
3.10 llogisn1ian.-Siudentllrgolln11ono

•

3.20 -flequestotaUniw&lt;sllyOffldal·
3.30 FalseAeporting
3.-40 llnvsah!Nareotic:s
3.50 Gambling

Ptogram Facllltles

V. Offlcoi1Stu&lt;I11111A-n11--l,al.l-l,al.2.
7.00 Payment ol Tuition &amp; Fees Reguiations
7.10 NewY0111:StateRegentsandlorTuition
Assistance Program and-Stato Univ.,.;ty
SchcWstip Tuition Assistance
7.20 UniYe&lt;slty Scholal&gt;tip and Loans
7.30 TuitionarxlfeescoveredbyWaivtn,
Gronls II' G"""""'""tal Agencies
7.4 0 - 7.50 T-oniCnldil-.
7.60 tqlaid UniVIJISity Accoun1s
7.70 Ponaltios

·-~-~~-~~~lloo-pago

1, 011. 1 - - I, CII. !

·----- .
t%=t=
4.20 Ncin-lllscriminlion

-~~----l, al. 2-

_ ..... s.

5.00 -Dislmesly
5.05 -Sole.-Oisserla11ono,Tllesosahf

u-..,--.-

vt.
Rtrlplftd .....,_, . . .... 2 - - l, al.4

Term""*'

8.00 CRandUseolfa&lt;:ililies
8.05 ~

S.IO llistlpesenlltian - 5.1 5 - - Calm&gt;IL&gt;w
5.25 SmCIIdng ord Fqod S1ult
5.3 0 - -

8.20~

- 8.25 Sew11yl1-.:e-

5.35~--.-Religious-

8.30 Gues1st1-..Stulents
Pots
1/isitatim

to A1llnll Classes"" Cerlli\1 Days
5.40 - c . d
5.50 Plf1dng lloQulallon$
5.5 5 _ V _
5.60

lloniiOfliUsW_.,

8.15

8.35
,_8.40
8.45
8.50
8.55

a...go .--...

A~ Ia IIUI1t1 ol theft when he or she,
~rapert7 not to be his/her own.

Ut'l1ooft

AlcoholicBevOfiQOS
Solicitation
FweAiarmsandfhfighting~nt

..a..temJc

st.audanls or' rules of . ~be
Univenlit!'.; The University cannot be held

~"!i ~.,..~~:.e":!~t~s ~
involving Violations of the law which

occ~r

:..:::::~ g,~versity .m.:~!\:1,~ ~=

nsture, advel'Miy : " t h e University
educaUoaalmiuion.

· In uy University~ proced~.
oae ol the hlsbeot priorit.ieo of the
Univenity io~ oa!eguard of a studftt's
Fourteenth Ameadmimt rigbt to- due
"""'"""· Duo prqeOol io not an evui.. lenl
..-pt but raUier limi&gt;IY
•
ihe
rpdlDieDtuy elem8ato of "lairW i n an
...,..,...,., 1
To thia end, all ·
Unlveriity
proeeclures will at
lust.tf«d
a dear otatement
ahlle......,.. oplutllim ar loor, ud the
ol Ule erideD&lt;e .._ ~ the

Secaodl,..

....._ .... buod.
Ule de!~
obalfbo
hooriag, be allowed to
___,_ ..... ..__....,.~.and
,.-~~~o lleronpooltioll,.........,and
............. ~. DO diodpliDar)o odloa
will be tabu uqlooo the .......... ....

ct-.'*

..

•
1. All rulerof the Board of Trustees of
SUNY, ud alllaw.-of the City of Buffalo,
Town of Amherst, State of New York and·
United States of•America including but not
limited to the New York State PeliJ( Law. •
the New York 'State Vehicle· and Traffic _
Law, the New York State Edueation Law, (
and the State Liquor Authority shall apply
on the csmpua and shall be eolllideltocl part
of the Student Rules aDd ReJulat!ons.
2. Campus security/unrvenity poUoe •
officers are appointed pe..., officers under
the Educstion Law. All such the:r have the
authority to . make arreste. ~ are

deleDdaat will baft been afforded 11ue

,.-llllderlllelaw.
•
In __,,tile u -1 expec~.o and
llb..,lla......,..aopoMterarDOieoo ·
....,..._ ... llberly tilu Niota for odaer
........ Ia ooelot7. The UDJorenltfs
........ lllerelrn, lo DOt to· ~ ar
• t.be .........
~

-

m.ton

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

.

A peraoo ia guilty of converwion when
be • abe, alter having lawfully obtained
poueuion of the property of another,
wrongfullf transfers, detains, aubst.autiaUy
changeo, ~. destroyo or misuses the
property without the permiasion of the .
owner.

UOP-of~"'-tY

A _person is guilty ol poeoeuion of stolen
property wben be •
abe knowingly
atolen propel'tJ, with intent w
benefit blmae1f/biroOif • a person other
tbm the thereof' or to impede the
reooverr by oa o.mer thereof.

-

U:,':,""

2.40 UUatloori.ed Uoe of University
Fadlldeo w Sen-.
A person is guiltt nf unauthorized use
when he ar abe aDJ University !acility
-~ ......, without proper autboriiation.

~~~U:v'ib~Yor=r:."nrs!::U::
campua IOCUrity/Unlversity poliee e!ficera
are actually in performance ol their dutioo.
Among their added powers is tbe power to

~
................. Aicoloolic:

l:f=·~~.Jl'~~to...~~

A.-io..-.,.ol

power tO laue appearan&lt;e tickets·

rt

I

daaleol

AD.-..uc l&gt;eVeraP wben bear lbe ....

1.10

or often far aale, IUIT alooballc ~ oa
University propert7. witllout fuD ~-

~~~
=m:r~?".::r~
siate, and !eden! laws and shall apply to all

permiuion of the Alcohol Review Board of
the University.
-

All rules and regulations in these
chapters shall be considered aa supple-

~: trt~~~N:vy'!f ~

1.00

of
._ta

U5Defililtioao
As u.ae4 herein, the term "person,. shall
include not only a natural pepon, but alao
any student club, student orga.n.ization, or
stqdent government of .the University,
unless a. contrary meaning is inherent in
any Rule or Regulaiion.
,

uo

Kepotn&amp;loa ol Sboole. Orpaludoao
A person is guilty of violatiOn of.
University policioo when be or abe violates
University policies or regulations concern·
~ ~~~. stpdent o~tions

-

~b..&amp;"Wo! ~"!:~

whicb maj be invbked, aee J&gt;roeedutes ol

apecific

University

Diodplinary

Body.

~t~:.~~..=e~ :~

orclo&lt;, Student-Wide Jlldidary and ~ter·
~ JudidarY
avaflable in the
Olllee ol Studeat, A!Wra, RoOin Ill, Nort.on

are

Hall, Amherst~-

~arto..-llaerimel

3.20

.

~

·

A
is .JUilt:r- ol fall~ to comply
when hear abe,lalowbrcwbaviDJ. reuon to"
!mow
io a Univerd:r offidal.'
!aila to eomp with a reuoD&amp;ble request of
web u .
ollldalla tbe perfoi'mance
of his/her duty. Far llle purpooea of ~is
oeetiOn the individual ~ • class
shall be .COillidoNd • umm.., official, as
sba1l aay 1leaident Ad-n- or Head
Reoident in the ~ Halls:

'*"""

a._.

ol ~ UIIIYeralty

that=

1.30'

Rules and

~StucleDt

or

:::=~t;!~~rda;filel, doeuments,

university c!isciplilwy body.

uo

Stq&gt;pllea

ct!.:s=~t~=~ty .~(ffruU:!rsi~;
:'/'~an~ ~n~= "\.-;:~:

i!':'v!.t~cs~o~~ tL"":p:::=

There shall be no limit under these
chapters as to punishment to be impooed.
· $ucb pwlisbment ahall be at the diacn&gt;tion
of the judicial body and sba1l be limited only

University

- A-penon is Jlllilty of misuse of University
IIUDDIIeo and dOewi&gt;ento when be nr-sbe:_
1: forges, or
.
"'
·
2. alten, or
8. uoeo without au~ority, or
'· receives without authority, or

1.20
. Any offenses srising oilt of any of the
laws mentioned in oections 1.00 and 1.10

~~t7

of falaely reporting sn
incident, when~ the iDformation

b::!::~arsbe-==be~~

1o be a&gt;a-..,.d to aay Unlvenlity or
eommnnlty authority.
. -

Rules aDd

....... ol

f.. - • niltY oloa_ltttelllpt to Yio1ate
.&amp;be ~ ........ ...S Jleplallaola, or to
_ _ . .............. ar • • witll iateDt

---.1

ol_.ll&amp;1itllalli . .

n.e.,y:;•:r and
will

....

pert ollla

:=,.~or his/her own use,

uo~

::r.:.ner::,~l~o:;:.
campua ti:.,~
pro_perties owned, rented, or·leased by the
Uruversity. Recent legislation gives csmpua

.....
=.!? Ule
.......... , . U:niversity Student
baft
tllat If tlleoe minimal
. . . . . . ol "fflr play' .... falfllled. Ule

-10.-lll~

=:. . .or

st~ento.
·
In sdclition, studento are encouraged to
obtain and familiarize themselves with the
followin..J University Regulations: Academic and Departmental Regulations. Univ{!rsity Motor Vehicle Re,wat!~Di ResidenCe
Hall Regulations, Uruversity Health ud
Safety Regulations.
'
·

::~~

5.20 - - -. Alcoholee.,..

I. Generid J,lUles and
1.00

6.45 ~SeMceandlastandfound
6.50 Aoselvations
_
6.55 RolesGOYOillingAicolloiicBeY8&lt;3QOS in
SqtireHall
6.60 Gocorations
6.70 Use of the Haas lounge
6.80 Use of the Fillm&lt;n R0001
6.90 Scope and Enfon:emeot
6.95 AmlleBt Student Ac1M1y centers and

2.00 A - 1 0 - SUieniRulesordRegullliansartocCirlitaaine

CCIIIIIIIiaolaD Gi ouc:h erime. -

Regulations :

6:40 Posters

1.3 0 - -

'mudate,it will be coocemed&amp;bout student
rehabilitation.

ar
arllle
=-=-~==~
I

1.40

llnp...SN.......U..

PooMuion without preocriptlon of any
aaroolle, barbitarale, ~nMII drug, oro.f
oo-&lt;*llod "pop
• and "trOD'
qnlllaen" is C!ODtntJ
fedenl and/or
state law. Any aludeat found.to be in illegal

�- - o f clrup- be .....,.ned to tbe

~ elvll

autbcJriljn lad
1 aloo
subjeet to diodpllJwy oetioD
Ute
•

Univ~

"'ty

p.._

For lnf~
7lsble A, lloii
page iDdlcoteo the prohibited IU~
oJid tbe D&amp;ture aDd oeverity of the peaolty.

1.50

.

~

No otudeat ahall gamole for mooey or
ol.ber valuables on t!nivenity property or
bl any Unive~ facility.

n. Polieies Related to
Freedom of

....

Expression

AcMoi*F.-..

.

Tbe UniYenity oupportl Ute J?riDciple of
1 eoneept mtriDiie to

IICidemi&lt; freedom u

~~-at~ ~:nal~

in~~

...._.;bility oftbe memllers
ot~''.:i.,~ eom.mllllity. Samuel P.
Capen, Iormor Ch.aneellor of tbe Univerlity
of Bulfolo, wbo ia remembered for tbe
tnditioD ol oeodemic freedom be iinple-

ill. General Policies
and Procedures Standards of
Student Conduct

~~~:~ in~936~rahip

of tbe
"Aceoptance by an institution of the
principles a1 academic freedom implies that
teacl&gt;en in tbst institution are free to
inveatiple any lllbjict, no matter bow
much it may be hedpct about by taboos;
tbat tbey are free to make nown the
, reoults 01 their " inveotiption and their
rellectioD by word of mcut.h or in writing,
before their dauel or elsewhere; that they
free u citisena to take part in
public contrvveny outside the institution; that no
repreooive _,.,..., diJloet or indirect
be' .pptiec! to tbem no matter bU.-..
unpop.ilar tbey may become through
opi&gt;oOinlr powerful intereatll or jostling
eSiablioliecl prejudlceo, aDd no matter bow

are

~':!:~~.::t::t~~~

that their eontinuanee in olfiee will be in all

~~~·:...r~lli.~&amp;:;'~=

~~::l;~:rnilil:~h~:.~~

one's own without ~owledging the
particular debta to the source (quotations,
paraphrases, basic ideas), or otherwise
representing the work of another as one's
own: (e) cbeating: receiving information
from another student or other unauthorized
IOU..I"Ce or giving information to another
tt&amp;adeat with intention to deceive while

advaneement will be depeodent on their
acientific competence aDd will be in no way
afleeted by_ tbe popularity or unpopularity of their opinioDI or I utteraneea; that
atudenta in Ute institution are free, inlolar
u the requl!'ementa ol tbe oeveral
eurrieuJa permit, to lng~an; sub~

~

·,

w.t-

Stimulants

-

F-y

a..
c

lgram

5grams

Hallucinopnie
Subotan&lt;es

1 milligram

~==
1 gram
5 grams

sTam

c

~~

A-m
A-ll

c

1 gram
6 grams

A-m
A-ll

A-m
A-ll

25 grams

"-at
5 grams

A-m
A-n

I

"-

Up to 25 grams-'

Solo

2ndolfewitbln . , . . .

·::::

Srdolleue
wlt.bln I yean

Clo-d.

P-.lty

Violation

Up to $100 ~e.

Violation. ,

-

~

or_$500 fioe

a--a..,._

Opto25...-.

CluaA
Mlodemeanor

Up to 1 year jail
or S1000 line

o....a-

Over25grams

CluaE
Felooy

0.....11-

0....4-or

11111loa-

ClaAD
Felony

0....18-

a-c

~o':&amp;':'s".frr~! ~~~heu'\}':,fv!~t;f ~~

Service under a license issued tg the
Facuhy -Student Association. Sale anO use ·
of alcoholic beverages are governed by the
New York State :Akobnlic Beverage Law,

~~~~~!tb=-~~~~uob Au~{i.!".:

..:1es

Council. (For apecific
goveming
Section IV; ' Reaidenee
Squire Hall, Halls, see Section VI)
_

5.210

--

~wBev..._, Alooloolle ....-_

~s::;~eL.!~=

to 4yean
pruon

Up to 1 yean

prioon

UJ!to15,_..

Felooy

lo......,

·"

diploma,
2. No penon shall sell or o~er for sale any
dissertation , thesis, term paper, essay,

5.15
Aleobolk Beverapo
Alcoholic beverages are sold on the

u~

• 2i
=~
oeven-etptl o l ' t a .. A
IDdoiiloa ~W&amp;yl, ........ planea, trlina. terminala,
.......
Yl aDd lobllioO ol baildiap, pl-. ol
- -pArka.
. ud UJ
tloe peblie or 1 oabalutial P""'f' olpei'oooa

---

=~!~ co~o~ !r ~:~·

5.10
MW-e.......,.tadon
A ·person is guilty of misrepresentation
when be or she intentioitally perverts t he
truth-lor penonal gain o; favor.

Up to 3 months jail

ClaAB

= Jlla1=·

any assistance in the preparation, research
or writing of a dissertation, t hesis, term
paper, ~ssay. report or other written
assignment intended for submission to such
edueational institution in fulfillment of the

1

Up to S250 fiDe
aDd/ or 16 days jail

Violation

Gill~
«
I
eoatalniJir marijUIIll

O....J.tpaolllllo .

insti~::f~o ~.:! tb~ s~t!rof ~~;'t~:r~

::uclo~ wit~C:: tb:Sta';;h:fNe~YC:~~o~~

Up to 1200 rme

~-or

Over25,..._or

5.05
Ulllawlal Sole ol Diuertatlollll, Tbeoes
aDd Term Papen
, 1. No person shall sell or offer for sale to :
~rson enrolled in a university. oollege;

submission to such educational instit.ution
in fulfillment of the requirements for a
degree, diploma, certificate or course of
study.
A violation of the provisions of this
section shall constitute a Class B
Misdemeanor. (Education Law, Section,
213-b)

The penalif for a Clus A-ll Felony is silt years ,t o life. The pe~alty for a Class
A-m £~1ony II one year to life.'Jt is important to note that the probation _period for
convld.Jons of a Clus A Felony ia life. The sentence for a ClAss C Felony shall be
fixed by the Court, the maximum not to exeeed fift.een years.
Ne,. York State re&lt;ently amended its penal law, the criminal procedures law and
the ~_y court ad. in relat ion to the possession and sales of marijuana. The
followmg table slliiiJD&amp;riJes tbeoe changes in marijuana offenses.
"-

;Artici!f~n":ls~ beV~.·

dissertation, thesis , term paper, essay,
report or other written assignment to any
person enrolled in a university, oollege,

Felony
Claas

Solo

A-m
A·ll

A-m
A-ll ·

3!S

r::sotb~h::J:n-:;~~ st.(e) en~r:'!::i!t

. distnDution or aeeept.am:e of examinations,
laboratory results, or confidential aeademic
materials without prior and · expressed
consent of the instructor.
All allel!ed casu of academic dishonesty
are adjuclicated in accordance with tbe
University Procedure on Ae&amp;demic Integrity . Copies of the procedure are available
from tbe Office of Student Affairs, Room
111 Norton Hall, Amherst Campus.

::~ :h~~~lls~~::f~:J:n!.~s~h

TABLE A

p-

10 grams

LSD

=·o~u:!~. ~ ~~r:!::nJon• (:po~

censide.-.ble part thereo()Jrepared by any

5.00
Academic Diaboneaty
Tb,!!J development of intelligence and
strengthening of moral responsibility are
two of t.be - most important aims of
education. Fundamental to the accomplishment of these purposes is the duty of the
student to perform all of his/her required
work without illegal help.
The fOllowing actions constitute rilajor
forms IJf eumples of academic disbonesty
among students: (a) .submission, to satisfy
academic requirements, of material previously tubm~tted in whole or in substant.i&amp;l
part in another course. without prior and
•"Pressed consent of the instructor; (b)

any

the acent or employee ol ....., a lieenoee,
any written evideneo ol ace wbieb Is .......
fraudulent or not aetually bia own, for the
purpooe of purebuing or attempting to
porcbue any aJooboliC beve....,., may be
arrested or summoned aDd be eXamined by
te having juriadietion on a charge
of ·
Y IIIII'ChuinR or attempting to

completing an eumination or individual
assignment; (d) falaification of academic
materiala: fabricating laboratory mat.eriala,
notes or reports, forging an instruet.nr's

' '·

- . -1","-'

1---

ol Ute State Liq- Autboritf apply to
Squire Hall aDd Scale Univormy Ol New
Yen at Bufralo. Special a&amp;&amp;entiob thouJd be
paid to the lollaoriat regalationo;
L "Any- wlio miarepreoenta ille ace
ola minor ,.._UDder tbe ace oll8 :rean
for Ute purpo. olladadJoc the lale ol any
alcobolii: bev.......- - deliDed ia J.ljo
Aleoholk BeY....... c-'111 Law, to acb
minor, Ia IJIIilty ol ........ aDd .......
~ tbeeaf aball be_...... 111 a
fiDe ol IIIII. \Uoi.IIIO, ... by
'-*"'-nt for IIIII. _ . . tltaD
or
bjbado oueb fiDe ......... ,_
"(ABC

II_,.,
I

0

Law, Anlde i. 8edloa tkl.. ,
z_ ·"lutt ,.._ ..... tbe ... olll,..,..
·~- . . . to.., . . . . . . . .
tbe AkiGIIGIIe ...... Colitrol Law, • to

_
3. "No retailer shall permit or tuffer to .
- appear a.s an entertainer, on any premises
licensed for retail sale hereunder, any ..;,_
penon under the age of 18 yean. Failure to
restrain such a person from so lpJ?O~
$hall be deemed to constitute pennwion.
(Article 8, Section 100, 2-B)
·4. "No person licensed to sell alcoholic
beverages shall suffer or pe:mit any
gambling on _the licensed premiaes, or
suffer or permit such premises to ~me.... disorderly." (Article 8, Section 106,6)
~
5.25

Sm~

aDd Food Stoff
Smoking is prohibited ill areu desig·

Th~ ::..!u~cl~de ;~: .!m::f'£1!1::

elevators, classrooms, and lecture halls.
Smoking is also prohibited in tbeatera, and
libraries but in thoee cases certain areas
may be specifically desigoated to permit
smoking.
Smoking ia prohibited on all buses uoed

!'lud~~~ ~ fFl~ staff and
In addition, tbe briDpng of beverages
and food stuff is prohibited in the lecture
hall of the Jooeph P. Ellicott Complea,
Katharine Cornell Drama Theater, and tbe
Hall and Haven Libraries in tbe complex.
Additional areas may be so designated upon
the eonspieuous poeting of -appropria.te
signs.
5.30
. Studeat a--da ·
1. loformation about a student, including
but not limited to any peraoDally
identifiable Information, """"""" or Iiles
mar be releued without ·the student's
wntlen permisaion in tbe follo..mg only:
a. The University ' will releue tbe
following directory Information upon
request" student's Dame, current address,
telephone number major field of study,
'dates of attendance, degrees aDd awards
reeeived_. The Univenity will releue neb
Information if Ute atudent indioatea Oii
bia I ber lal.nt otudent da&amp;a form, UDder the
~Item. that be or abe wlobeo to be
lilted m the' student d~. Tbe student

f:YU::~~mi~
written notifitatiob

to Ute Offioe ol

Admiooiaoa mol a--da.

b. UnivenitJ ollldala, induding Faculty
and Staff wllo have alesitimale .ecfucatloaal
int.ereat.;
c. in --uoa with a otuclnt'a
applicatioo for, or receipt ol, fiDudallid:
d. aut.borioed ....,_..aatift . ., ~.::
Comptrnller ~ ol tbe UaW
,
(li) tile Seeretu7 ol HEW, (ill 8llt.e
Univenjty or other edlaeal.loul

' ltudeata
~other
C2.8eeo
iDformatioa Jlbout
may Ill releooed ia .., ...,
DO

unlea:

·
.
a. Then ia written . ,...... &amp;be
atudellt ~records to be ...........
U t e - . for neb releue, aDd 1D w.....
aDd with a copy of the .._.. to bo
releued to Ute atudent if cleolnd. .......

eoafidenLtal ...

b. ' lnformalioa
Ia ...........
..
.....,uarill
judicial onlor,
or,..._

::..:::t..~; ":":&lt;.";. .T.D
-

......~ ia a d - oltbe

"7."'~.:::s-'b:rin~u~ .
~J~tJ!I '

r:w-c...u.a-

. . . . 1171-79/._.../s.,....lowD,It11/5

�.....,_ "" &amp;ll)'1lal'tlcuJ clay or dar•- No
f - of &amp;D)' !dad •hall be cbarged by the
iutitatioa for makiDg available to the aaid
ltadeotlucb equivaleat~:r4. If dulea, elWIIinal.ioDI, study or
wartt requiremeata are beld oa Friday after
four o'dodt pciil meridian or oa Saturday,
limilar cr mobap - · elWJiiDations,
study or work requirement. ahall be made
nai&amp;bleODother claJII, where it~· le
and practicable to do ... No
fees
sbaiJ be cbarged to tloe
llleso
dulea, elWIIinationl, study
work
reqniromeata beJd on otber claya.
.
5. In eftectnati.ng tbe provislono of this
- · it ahall be the dnty of tbe faeulty
and of the admiaistrative officiala nf each
iutitutlon of higher education to exerdao
the fuiJeot meuure of J!OC)d faith. No
OiiVene or prejudicial effect&amp; ahall result to
any otudent becauao of bit availing himoelf

-t

of~~I.r;v::::::.t~t ~eel

by the alleged failure of any faculty or
odmlniatrative officiala to &lt;Omply in good
faith with tbe rovialons nf thii aoction,
. oball be
to maintain an action or
proceedipg in the Su~reme Court of the
f:OODty fil whieb sud! Institution nf higher
education lo loeated for the enforeement of
bit righta nnder this section.
7. As used in tbit Je&lt;:tion, the term
"institution of higher education" shall mean •
school&gt; under ttie &lt;ODtrol of the Board of
Trustees of tbe State University' of New
Yorlt or of tbe Board of fli&amp;ber Education of
the city of New York or any e:ommunity
collep. !Education Law, Section 224-i) ·

entiu

Blaieo,

tloe

(B)

&lt;II'

(D) lltaie

(C)

Secn!lary,

~bead

an

of an edueatloo agency

edoeatioDal authorities from
k&gt; otudeat or other ~

..

bni11J -

~.:r~-=~ ~ecr.,~~

...,....ned edueation program&amp;. or in
with the enforcement of the

Fedonl lopJ requiremeata whieb relate to
_ . programa: pnmded. that ueept when
eolleedoD
~ identiliab~ informa-

:":. ':.., data

!=

~...%

oball be p-...1 In a IIWIJier which will
aot permit tloe .....-al identification nf
lltudipta and tloelr pareata by other than

t.bc.e ollldalo, ' and 1ueh personally
identifiable data oball be -..,yed when no
loailer for 1ucb andit, evaluation,
aDCf oalorcement of Fedonl legal require·
menta.
. 4. With rnpect to tbeao Je&lt;:tions all

:S~~n:;::r.or.:a~: ~~~

required to 1ign a written form which shall
be kept penn&amp;Dently with the file of the
student, but only for inspeetion by the
student, indicating specjficaJJy the legitimate educatioDal or other interest that each
penon,
or organization hss in
~tb11 information. Such form shall be
avlllab1e to tbe school officials responsible
for retord maint.ena.nee as a means of
auditing the operation of the system.
5. .lltadeata oball bave an """"""'nity for
a bearing to challenge tbe content of their
~. to insure that the re...nb are not
inaccurate, misleading, or otherwise in

•rney,

=·

O:,~h:..

::-xr. ~ ~t;:,~~i~~f~:

:::_~i:wr:oo o:r ~lie~!
~data &lt;ODt.ained therein.

l:"'l''ie'State Univeroity of New

York at
Buffalo com_pJioa tuUr With the Family
EducatioDal Ripta and Privacy Act of 1974
In itt tnotment nf student educational
._...._ Tblo
wu lnt.onded to protect
tloe priqey of oducatioDal ro&lt;Onb, to
-.bliah tlie riPt of otud'enta to inapect
and ...... tbeir odueatlonal ..-.Is, and

Act

~~fortbe-or

~ ~ andor~IMdjng -~

llludeiltl' aloo loaYe the riaht ~
IIDIIIplolata wltb tloe Famil.Y 'EclucatioDal
Bipt&amp; and PrifteJ
Oftioe 1FERPA)
_ . . . . , lllopd r.o.... b7 tloe

Act

~l:':er:..;::e.Act.

Uartloe

Act
.._ ..:...-:=-:-:::doe~:
. . . wlllo tloe ......,..._ of llle Act.
,...- JIIIII:J' aloo ... wild
~~tupt.olllld Prmey

~

_... ft ..a.&amp;IIDod b7 WI laolbtloD.
A """ of llle polloJ eu be falllld 1D llle

OIID of IIIDdooil.&amp;&amp;ln, a- U1 N 11111, .bbent c-pa..

... ...._.u....,.._ ..

~
. . . . . . AatoM a.- ~...,.
1. No,.._.-a be apeiW ,._or be
..._. ......... u a atadaolt k&gt; an

=":atofbe~nalllo~
-oft,::
to auead . . , _ or to

roll&amp;iaaa

beliefa,

~ ID 1111,1 ••

..tl ,..• •_

'

lee

atad7 or

• a pcrtiadlr dar or

.~·Aa.J llbldoiDtiD an~ of lli«ber

..__ .,..., • ..w., ...._

orbio

~~--of':.:
da)oarda,rl.be

._.doe ............
._..,_IIII,J

Gri111,1'atad7

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

2

..,:;.::::,~" : r= :::~

....·-...
..,=-=-..:
....:.... .........

. ;a;;~.._

A student identification card (!D card)
will be issued to a student,.at the time of the
student'a first semester o~llment. This
lo a penn&amp;Dent four (4) year ID card and
will be validated for each academic
semester (fall and ~pring) after registration
hss bietlouceessfUIJY completed.
Tbe ID 'eard serves as official
identification a.s a State University of New
York at B.uHalo student and entitles the
owner to library privileges. Upon payment
of fee, the validated ID card will permit
admission to home athletic events and
campus cultural events, participation in
student sponsored activities, and special
off~pua student ~ts . ID cards are
NON-TRANSFERABLE. Cards which are
used illegally will be confiscated and turned
over to the Office of Admissions and
Reeords. Students accused of lending their
canb to others or using another' a I'8J'd will
be brought before the Student-Wide

;:,;r.:~~ ~"s;~~t"M~

and llegullltions. ID canb should be carried
at all times. (In case of loss, a student
should obtain a new card from the Office of
Admissions and Reeords, Hayes B). A $2.00
charge is made for replacement.

· 5.50 Parldac lleplatiou
1. Vehicle Registration. Each student
who drives a motor vehicle on campus must
register each vehicle. The sticker is to be
2.~ on the back of the rear view mirror.

clau registration there are several

~u:'~~r~te!:~:;e,~

the veMe 11141 be registered at the Office
Security /University Police.
Each student shall be bound by the -posted
and publiahecl traffic regulatioM. The

nf Campwo

~atvio~.!:!J:To:"'~p:~~

:tk:' NJ1o1eroc1
motorcycle, or other self-propelled
in bit/her
or

doe

JWDO,

with
oilllicle be or abe Daa In hia/ber
. . - .......tn~~-heorabeloin
.Violotioo.
AD bearinp and appeala regarding
IIID'fiDa t.nfiiO viola,tiona in Buffllo are
heud atllle AdmiDlatrative and Adjudicatila Bureau, EDi&lt;att Square f!ulldinJ..
llalralo. In tbe TOWII of Amherst they wiD
b e - at llle Town Court.

ul!.tt~N,: Y~ a:':..= v~~

lleplatloao be obtained dnring clus
,..w..tioD or from the Olliee of Curlpus
lleeurity!Univcrolty Pollee.
8. "--ta. AD ltudenta must obtain and
offix a permit to llle back of the roar view
mimw for 1111,1 vebiclo parked on campua.
~of a permit ntUlu tu llolder to
peri
tAcn .. Cltlfll1able ... tlu
t. Spedal l'ermita. Studenta who need
llplldal ....-ldDa' ClOIISideratioll due to
hUclieap for \ealtb ro&amp;IODI, must apply
far cpedal pormiAion from tbe Ofllee of
~ Seeurity!Univeraity Poti&lt;e, B•ll
Ball, 1748 llllllonport HW)'. Certification of
~ mua_,.,pany application.
5. I'Utiac Policy. Autoalobilo' parking
. . llle .......... lo eoaaiderod to be a
,..mmeae rraatoc1 by llle Uaiveraity. The
~ is aware that at peal&lt;
poriodo lllere lo a critieaJ ohortage of

"""if

aaou..r--.,-.-

.

.

ar

~-andia~tokeepup

... &amp;lie heovy demaDIIIi ol a

.l."'winr

.....and faoulty _..u..,- . - u y

- . . _ ud luid permit. In ......- to
.... CIUtdalr u equitallle u .,_o,1e; an
olllfllo .... "'..., ....... ...............
........ llld lo ...... dielll otrielly.

_....,...m ,,\ n a, 1171

au excuae for viO\atioa.

6. Parking is prohibited :t all times On
the roadways (except as posted), sidewalks,
lawns, grouncla, lanes, and throughwars of
~ aroaa. The University may bave
illegally parlted vehicles towed away. The
towiag apnq may._ a charge.
7. Partial FiDel and Penalties. City of
Buffalo oarlil!&gt;g ticket~ are iasued on the
Main Street Cainpuo. On the Ridge Lea and
Amherst Camp-. Town of Amherst
tickets, are iuued. Anyone lriahing to
appeal a Buffalo ticket must &lt;Obtact tbe
.l'ai-king Violations Bureau, Delaware
Avenoe, Bulfalo. Amherst ticketa are
·~in the Ambers! Town Court.
g:"JAbiJity. The Univeraity aceepta no
liability for ~ or damage to a motor
vehicle or itt &lt;ODteata.
5.55 A~ Velddet
A motor vehicle shall be deemeq to be
abandoned if left for more than four days in
one spot. The vehicle shall be disposed of in
&amp;c&lt;Ordance with the law. The last

registered owner of an abandoned vehicle
sball be liable· for the. ceet of ita removll,
storage; etc.
r
5.60 CJaup ., Addresa

~~~o::edkeeJ .
~:~~- "'t.i/~add~ .d:.!"r ~han~

A=io:!ud!:j
require~ent

is in and of i!self a violation

triable before the Student-Wide JudiciAry.
In addition, upon charges being brought

5.40 ldendficatioD &lt;Ani

~

Each otudent Is upected to work out a.
• acbedule of arrival at the campuo whi,ch will
allmr him time to find • lef&amp;l-parltlng _P.Iaee.
lporance of .-.ulatlons li not eonaidered

~ :?d.:d~tti: ~t=~:. ·~"!:

Records for service of process. Service of
proeess for disciplinary pu'1"""'s shall be
deemed complete when notice ·thereof is
mailed to a student at the address furnished
to Admissions and Reeords.
5.70 Eaviroamental HM!th and Satet;r
Health related aspects oi the envaronment and matters of personal and general
safety are functions &lt;1,f the Department of
Environmental Hellth and Safetr. Personnel of the department provide eonsult.ative

:d

=

se~ee~v~tie~en~ ~~J:S:~

,_...ation rooins, student offices, contract
food!~ cafeteria, DUE Advisement,
and tbe Eduational Opportunity offiees.
d) Tldrd Flow - inclUded on this fioor are
WBFO, student offices, student publications, vending lonnge, «&gt;mmuter lounge,
reservation rooms. and the International

Reoouree Caater. . .

Amplification equipment - all radios, tape
ro«&gt;rders, re...rd players, bull horns,
televisions. publ!i address systems, and
their accompanying apeakers.
rosters - all paper, cardboard, or oilcloth
announcements.
·

6.00 ........,. BU Bodldlac H...,..
• t: ~?&lt;~.';ili;Hau .building houra are to be
poeted m the foyfirs. Annnuneemonta are
also to be madef.rior to ck&gt;oriq. Any _person
found_in the building after clOoing without
proper authoriaatioo ohall be considered In
violation of tbio aeetion and any other
relevant Rules and ·ordinanees of tbe·
UniveraitJ: or the state.
The Houae Council JDaT grant after-hour
privileges whieb, on petition, demonatrato
an extnordinary need for lucb permlaion,
2. The Night Manager on duty may grant
student., faeulty, or staff .-pec:ial written
permission to remain in the D11ildina after
lwurs in emerpney situations. In all other
instaneea, the Director of Squire Hall, or

~ro:· :"TJXt :t~.peu~.: l::

advance.

3. Any group wiohinJ to use tho building
outaide normal building hours may be·
......iecla &lt;barge for the oerviees of Squire
Hall personnel.
4. WBFO-FM radio peraonnel shall be
allowed a minimum staff for the operation
of the station a.nd its progri.ms as a
standing exception. This exemption does
not include guests or family of personnel.

6.05 A.,." tfee

l. ReUonable u.oe of amplification
equipment In a reserved space lo authoriaed

~~~:.~.::~~~
in volume should be &lt;Omplied witb upon
notification by .Squire staff.

· 2. Amplification may not be used ' on any
of the steps of Squire Hall or directed out

any_windows.

.

6.10 Care and Use of Fadllties

completion without personal injuries or
property damage ss a result of negligence
or error of omission.
Department personnel also survey
on-going activities. When necessary,
directives and recommendations are· issued
for changes which may include elimination,
substitution or alteraUon of portionS of an
activity or definite cessation of a total

1. Intentional misuse. vandalism, or
destruetion of equipment. or facilities of the

activity.
Assistance is offered and concern is
exercised in the areas of: student assembly,

building or taken from the building, except
,by special permission of the Director of
Squih! Hall, or the designee.
3. Animals are not permitted in Squire .

speciaJ activities, academic programs,
ext.ra-eunieular -activities, housing, food
service, traffic regulations, fire protection,
eye safety, _ inseet control, accident
inveStigatioq and emergency practices

tr;J" ~rr::~tions are not reposed ~
a single document; but. eonsist of policies
and procedures adapted by the Environmental Hellth and Safety Committee; rules
of the SUNY AB Executive Council; rules
promulgated by SUNY; laws of federll,
state and governmental subdivisions and

:"~ !'!:~ed !t;J:rof:'~nt~:

consensus of nationwide, and oft!n world Wide opinion.

. No person shall inte!ltionally refuse to
observe health and safety procedures an_d
regulations established for the protection of

peAcMC:r~T='=p~ttera of
envirx&gt;nmental health and safety lo available
to ' all students from the Department of
Environmental Health and Safety, 9IJ7
Michael Hall, 881-3301. ·

IV. Squire Hall Rules
and Regulations
~

Sq.m.. Hall - Included in Squire Hall are

meeting rooms, dining l'OODlio, lounge areas,
offiees, terrace area. interior and exterior
stain, all wall, eeilintr and Door surfaces,

and all furniture , eqwpment, fixtures, snd
partitions:
a) Grwlld Flow - included on tbit floor
are the Reeord Co-op, Bookstore,
Recreation area, Ratbakeller, and student
offices .
b) Fleor - included OD. this noor are
the Bookstore, The Dorothy M. Haas
~.
Operations Complex - whieb
includes the Information, Ccimmunieation
and Loort and Found Ceuter, Lobby
Counter, OPS ~ Offic:e, Canter
Lounge, Ten-ace, 'l'lcbl Olliee, Confere,_
Theatre, MlDard Flllmon
llle Main

a-.

Floor Cafeteriu, Poot Olliee and eheck
eaahingaervloe.

-

&lt;) s.i'ooiol n- - IDdadod ... IIIIo lloor
are llle Blodoat ~ Ollloca,
219, llqllirc Hall A4triPioa
A' I I 2 o?btofiiOao,

~

a-.

doe..._.... s.v-•c:a..t.
LIII)Ni7./llloole .....

~=:~ ·r~hepH~~~ar.a~~

prosecution Ly said council shall not
preclude action taken by internllauthority.
2. No equipment of ~If! nature or other

~~~~:.gr!~t g:t

=.:: ~t~j~~

=t:'t..

•

tim~~~=~~yep:~

dogs.

.

6.15 Gamblin&amp;
State and city laws and ordinances
·~:;r=g gambling will be strictly

6.16Dnop
Dlegal drugs shall not be poaseaaed or
used in Squire Hall (See also Section 3.40).
6.17

w- aoc1

W~nsin

Esp~oo~ves

U.': U~~~;;,""&lt;..:"se.ti':,:~ofthe SUNYAB Supplemental Rules).
6.20 !lollciWieel
"Re1olved that no authorization wiD be
given to private eommerdal enterpriaeS to
· operate on State Unive~ ~or in

~~=~~~.!.~~=-~:

laundry. dry cleaning, berber aDd·
beautician aervices &amp;Del cuhural eventa. ~.
This resolution shall not be deemed to ap~IJ
to Faculty-Student Corporation activities
~eel by tbe Univorolty." (Board nf
-28,
fReaolution u amended February
1973

· UO Advenlol.c

-

l. A notiee of any produet, or aerviee
sponaored by a non-Univertity relatod
poo~ or individual oball not ~ on the
- mtenor or exterior surf.- of "'!";ire Hall.
Any interpretation of this pnmoion shall
not violate tbe State or 1 Federal
conatitutionally protected right of free
speech.
2. Literature and publications sueh as

:Outed
:'k~~~he ::dJvidu~
or group ahidel by all Univeraity Rules and

lleplatloao.
U?l.,_
,
l. Noticae and advmtisementa conformlag to llle provioiono of Section 6.80 may be
ao larpr tban 400 oquare ineheo and
number DO more tban two on any partieular
lloor for 1111,1 oae event. Notiooo and
ad-..rtioomentl' may not be pooted for a
period lnapr tbaa two weeks. There 1IIAJ
·be ao more tban 0110 OVOI'Iire 14 ~ by 7
foot) adYertlloomeat or notioe pooted in

�Squire IIAII, at either tDCI of the Main nTbia ~ ·~ not be applicable
malerial posted lll areu granted to specific

u;

'T.~"V"~ =g~~;ertisemento or
notl&lt;el

must

be

submitted

to

the

loformat.ioo CoUnter lor posting approval

aog_P=~~~0wit~s~s~~on

~

attached

o~y

tbumbt.aclta to ·

~ ~ ~~ert!:.tte':!:.!:

mulli&lt;ma 011114. Ride Board and Help Wanted Board
notieeo ..-lng the requjrements ol the

bcJ&amp;!ds,do not require lurther
~-areN; ;,"t.:.:.ua~='!!~

delipat.ed

and dlo&lt;ard.

•

.

5. Notlees w!ll be diacariled after the
event . . . - a bold is requesiMI and clearly
jpclieated ... tbe medium.
--.._
6. Atq 'rlnlatinD ol any provision ol this
sec:tioD oiWI reouJt in the immediate
removal and deotructioa of any notice.
N.u- pootecl in autborUed areu but not
eoolc&gt;rDiiq to on other provisions but
posted em iiDautboriaed aurlacel invalid~
• ~=:=~~subject to immediste
6.45 a-m- 8eniee ud ~ ud
F.....
1. There io no public checld!fg service
provided. Leaving any belongings in a

fhtlic=~:~io~=
.

~-

at

2

tt! 'M':f.~~U':,,:S g:..~

~\':.~
=~i~u'!~~:J'
University Police alao maintains a lost and

found de~nt u do many other individual l!1Wdings throughout the campus.
6. 50~

1. Only officially ._,.;.ed student

~~~~:::·tt.=n'!rJ.~~~r'kni~

~~ r::~=&amp;n~":'r~:

rooms shoD be aseiped by the
Reservations Olfioo.. After normal R.ervat.ion Ollice hours, ,_yation req.-..
should be direeted to tbe N'lgbt Manapr on

~:.::
::I..r
stances.
,

-.:..:....r=

• 2. Conference rooms and other laeilities _
shall be aasisroed -on a lirst-eome, lintserved basi.s, Dut. eoa.sideration is given UJ
the time, size and use of rooms, nat-ure of

·~·~a=~:t ~ !i:i~

ut.i.lizinlr Squire ReaervatioM apace. In
unusual circumst.anees, "'"'options to this
~~-granted on petition to -the

3. Aey individual making a reservation
takes full .......,.,.. and organisational
I'MpOilllbilltj lor damage, theft, or
vandaliom u a eoDMquence ol tbe use ol the
reserved room(s) and/ or equipment, or
!rom failure to notify appropriate Squire
Hall St.alf of the termination otoaid event(s)
in ~ to inaure that ,_(s) and

oqwpment are -..red. Au clamqM msy
~ to tbe i.Ddlvidual and/or
4. Caoeellation of,_. must be made to
the Reaervatioos Ollice at 1eut 24 hours
prior to the date of tbe reMrvation. Failure
to meet thio requirement miJ jeopardiu
future reservatioM made by tbe individual
"! group requesting tbe Ofieinal ....,rva-

tion.

.,!, ~~ :;e:.=-~~
ma~r
events" if in tbe judpmoat ol tbe

uire
• tbe
Houae Coaacil tbe ewDt entaila ~
Mods, ..........,. and/or problems. A

2. No alcobolie beverages may be
brought into areas where it io being sold or
served. Only alcoholic beverages. purchased
!rom theFSA Food Service at the S.U.N .Y.

at:.~~-:r:!~tedwlll~~.~'f,; the
RathskeUer at designated boura specified
by the Alcohol Review Roard .
.... Alcoholic beverages will be served in
the Haymes Room during boun of service,
and for catered events in Food Service
.designated areas.
5. Alcoholic beverages will not be
allowed in any room other than those
designated in Paragraphs 3 and 4 of Squire
Hall e:r.eept by special permission of the
Honse Council •nd where eatered by Food
Service under the feUowing conditions:
a) Method of service and what ill to be
served is specified.
b) Number at event is not too large for
lilequate controL .
c) A~ of oD individuals in attendance
shall be etghteen years or over, ezee~ at

.Hall Admlaio&amp;nticia iD OODjuDetioo

::W
~ ~or"'~Uou;.)\!c:d ~rvi: supervision. to insure compliance with

~~tbe~~~~

Stale ABC Laws.
d) Non-alcoholic hover.,.,. must also
be ..rved.
e) Tbe groups must- show weD

:.=--

~R:....~~=~

avAilable in !Joe ~ Ollice. oiWI

_ohall be -.lderod

~of

e. lleoopiood lladoat . . . . . - . are

OIL.~U:ot~~~

make , . . . _ ... tbelr ._..uv.
llot u

........

org&amp;lliatioa ud ........ tbe

..__.........

us ..... ~Aioaloale

.

I. AI....,.._. o1 tile New York Stale
Aloohalle ~ ea.tnl Law ud rules
ol u.. ..... ~ Aaldlcri1 -be

0

0

~~l:J~~~~~ ~.=

w!ll be admitted.
6. Alcobolie lleveraps purdwed in the
Ratbstelle&lt;, Tlllin Room and rooms lor
c:ater-ed events. may oot be t&amp;lten out of the
area. but must be eonsumed 01111 within
U.C.areu.
~ruT!""~ oot be sold_
8.
are
~ by tbe ABC law of tbe terms ol
tbe JI'8A Food Servi&lt;e License. .

..__

r:u..Alcobolie

~of~verages

,

~-=~~
oll8
shall . . .... ........ permitted

1. No , _ iD Squire iiAII msy be
deoonted or altered pei'IIWIODtly or
t&amp;tllpllni!Jy, stn&gt;cturoJI)' or otbe~.

""'"t""~
ol1117 t1J18, ..............
111111. • U.. lliiHaild ,._.. Is

:::=...Ball.IDIIItorbe=~-~1

)'ears

to
.................. tbelioo-

_

or

~---- _..... ... u..

...............
__.-tile~·~"'·............

• -'leiloallr ............. be

.....

laler

.... Y, . . . . . . . tbeo&amp;ariol .............

=

wllbout lint being Jlf&amp;Dted .......- by
tbe u - Counell Ond/or tlie Direetor of

m
....-.
01111 - . . .
odva- ol any

wlllob may be

--- ..........
.

2.
tape miJ be to
allix......._towaD...,__
1:
fllrDioll tbelr . . .

.........a..- -

wifoilotcllounolllle - · ... ollout-

hours before the next reservation of the
room, whichever is sooner. U the
organization fails in · their clean-up responsibility, they w!ll be charged for the
c:ost of having the job done by Squire ot.alf.
4. All provisions included m Seetions -".6.10'snd 6.50 shoD be considered part ofthis

Seet.ion.
6. 70 Uoe of the Baas Lo1llll"
I . The Dorothy M. Baas Lounge ill

~-=~.::: ~fp~:~e [':'geanf":::::tp~:_n,
~=gt~u~ ~i'a!': r;~~c

e;i;:fj
!&gt;_eJ!n before 3:00 p.m. Monday fb'rough
Friday.
·
,
2. Tbe reserving party is reopo011ble for
the set-up of the Haas Lounge and is
further responsible for returning t he Haas
Lounge to its proper configuration after the
projp-am islJVer.
,
3. Written eonfirmation of the reservation sball be requfred of all groups
requeSting the use of the Haas Lounge by
the HOUJe Council and/or Direet.Or of
SquireHoDortbedesignee.

6.95 Amlaent Stoode.t Adtrity c-ten
ud Precnm Fadlldee
Student Activity Center laeilities are
located in the Norton/Capeii/Talbert
Complex and include the Woldman Theater
in Norton Hall, designated meeting rooma
and lounges throughout the eomplexos,_

~ffi::t, f.J'b.:m=J C:::n ~~~

Talbert Chamber·
Officially recognized student organiza-

.=.;~ ~

t=~:~:::.~:

laeilitios usigDea to the Studeet Activity
Centers through the Reaervatioos Ollice in

~~l1,~~~elin.,:s"0~

desire to aerve u many ...,.,.,u.ed
organizations and groups u ..-lble within
very limited resoun:es. Pre'- w!1J be
given to ~ otudent orpaiatioos
wben .,_n,JO. a-rvatioD req- are .
assigned on a lint c:ome lint bail,
however, eonaidention Ia si't'en to tb8 time
Of the ""ent, Uo, inteDdod ol tbe .
room(s), nature ol tbe 11':""1' or fuaetioD,
and avallablllty of &amp;i:llltlie. AaoS.ak

=-=be~

- Auoelato Dinletoi- ... 8tudobt Acdvlty
ol tbe~a-Room· sball L- ,
Centen or blo or
- ~ UMillardae
""'
r~
""
Uae of -pli!ladlaa eoi"'-t in any ol
otrietly JOverned
tbe_ "Squire · IIAII
tbe!Jdlitieamaot.-ft aolY-appronl
~rvations Guideli.nea-- Policies ud
from tbe
Otllee, and If
:;=.::;;,:;.,.~b;he..';-~
granted, maot oot tat.tore rill D:1
. Univenity grwp -..lying with "tt.~;.:· . . _ _ , ..-, aiM- ..,._._
Guidelines.
~ ~ ..............

bor...,_.

a..·-

br

=·

- uos-uo~~
1. The Houe Coundl and/or

tbe

Direetor of Squire iiAII L-OL--~
olllmltinc aayeveat taldng plaao in uire
Hall tootudenta, '-lty, ..:all ud , _ . ol
the UniYenlty.
2. AU rule&amp; ud NRUiatiou ol U.. Stale
UDivenltJ ol New York It Bullalo oiWI
&amp;IIDb to !~quire IIAII.
-! .- Violailoaa ol any I,Jale or Rep1atioa
m&amp;J' he . . - . d by tbe
Coaadl
before ihe 8Wdeat-Wide lllllidarJ. ...
·-.....-tbatadloobe.toba~cam,a.
- ~ytum..ltyNioa.
in (Ids
Code Ol!all. Jll'll!lllllt ....

a-

~=tile......

-~~ ~!
-..~oltloo
........
....,
tbe
-..olSqulntBall.
•

frolll ,...._

or

-

... ~u.to lllllllak to

tile

~mab·~a:=

ol tbe __....... _ _....._ and IIIAbMID
•L. _ . . .• • - -wu~.
ADy lll&amp;kinc a ....-at~oe
....._ full _.... ibd ...............
__...__lor a&amp;Y damuei. t11eft,
~..:....U...aal..: eit1ior U.. - ~ ·
tbe - . . 1 .-fo) and/or~ or
from tbe faDure to euure the oOeuritJ ol
tloo .-(s) ud/tlr eq~ Ill U..
.....,.,... ol tbe evoat. AJJ7 _ , _
iDourred u a ..wt .. tbe ....-atioe msy
be - - . 1 to the indlvidul and/or

,

~-

~ "' tbe _ . . . t.dllllaa

maotbemodetotbeliuwY-OIIIoaot
.._
IUIIoun prior to tbe ,_,......_

.....,.to-lllioueqwla
'III!IJ
__...,...,.
_ _ ......~
.......... .......... ~ tbe

�person who bu received a lettel"- revokin«-.

braad\ of military aervierel: may reeeive a
refund of tuitJoa IUid lees upon immedial&lt;o

~~may make a request to the

~g the re~.:'far

g;'~.,t.~~=J:nJa;:eA.I: ~

-

i:t=.,..'i!e.,_

eveat the student b.u completed aulficient
...clemic work to receive Ocademie credit.

~~~N=~~~:: "-

are aubjeet to~ ..n.hout notic:e at the
diocretion of the !Jmversity.

~~h.;~. ~ :: :.=~p?r!
~rul~-~Ss"':u!~e.:"ib':"~~nsan'd

7.68 Uapald Ullivenlty Acceuta
A student with an unpaid ud ovenlue
univef'S\t&gt;: account will not be permitted to

guinea pigs are allowed if all rooinmates
are agreeable. !Usidents and their guests
are not authorized to have larger pet.s such
as cats, dogs, monkeys, etc., in the balls.

r.';td.~~~~v~"!

~an~h;bei&gt;&amp;"::rs~u"dentQe~=
(881-2031, 831-4785, 831-4741).

If a student is dismissed from the

University or any ol its related divisions for
cause other than academic deficiency. a))

lees paid or to be paid shall inuned~ately
beoome due and payable and shall be
forfeited .

:vi. University
8.00 C..... IUid Uae of Fadlijleo
Proper ·care and- use of furniture,

equi~mebt, mat.e,riala, IUid the building is

~u::!:J-."~1 ~u'l~ment -~lo~ging to the
University

HC1U5ing

Office,

such

within or taken from the building, unless
special written permission bas been

blu:!~~·.:~ty :!':::f:g ~ffi:~

indi~ualloungea; there will be a charge to

return any unauthorized furniture lrom
student rooms.
Sereens and windows must remain in
'their proper place. U screens or windows
- are removed, charses will be assessed lor

ref&gt;'U:,me~~.

and regulations regarding
eare and use of facilities may be issued from

~w.r~ 8lfi!~f=:!I J:~ua::

Tbe University reserves the right to
enter the- usigued room. University
offieiJis, where praetieable, will give
U-hour advance notice to an oCcupant
before such entry except in the case of an
emergency. The student's rieht to pri~acy
is in important consideration exercised

before t.he entering of~ room. For purposes
,of health and safety inspections, University
officials are aptholized to enter residence
hall rooms without prior notice.
Student.i in the residence area are

. eXJ)eeted to abide ' by and observe the
ordinances, rules, regulations and stan·
dards of the University now in ef!eet. and as

also eomply t&lt;ith the terms ~nd oonditiOns

~~:z'r!:

:de~::.:!d :Wf~~esU:

attached to all Housing Agreement eanls

·and as may be posted in each res.ideoee ball.

Students shall not hold tbe University
responsible for any expense, loss or damage
resulting from violation of sueh ordinances._
rules, regulations or standards or because

of

the

8.05

negligence

of

the

student.

Ceol&lt;inJ

In oompli&gt;nce with the New York State
Multiple Owe~ Laws, rooking is not
pernutted in sleepmg rooms. Cooking iii tbe
Residence Halls is '&lt;'I!Strieted· to areas
specilieally designed lor that purpose. List&amp;
ol areas iii whieo eooldng is pe~ted are
distributed at the beginning of tlie school
year or may be obtained from the Office .of
the Ares Coonlinator.

8.06 Refricenton
J.Jl student-owned or leased refrigerator&amp;
must be insPMted and registered a&lt;eording
to estab!ialied procedures. Refrigerators
must be kept in studenl rooms.

These will be posted by Resident Advisors
IU!d/or distributed to each student room.

8.10 Dnlp
'
IDe~ drugs shall not be ~ or
· Only the re~red oeeupant(s) of a
used m the University Residence Hall.
room are permitted to maintain residence
(Also see Seetion 3.40)
tbereiD. Regiotered oeeupanta of eoduoom
are linanciafly respoasible for keeping their
8.15 o..,-. Weapona
No weapoDS are. permitted in the
room IUid ita oontenta in ROOd onler IUid
free from damage both by themselves and , residend! balls. (Also oee Sec:t.ion 536.5 of
. the SUNY AB Supplemental Rules)
by others. Room damages will be assessed
on actual labor plus material oosts.
AD1 otudellt who a.m.. Univ~
8.20GuabU.,
-~ .w be billed for
by
No gambling is permitted in the
ille Caoit.odlal s.meoo Olliee
the
residence halls. (Also see S{ocl.ion 3.50)
Olliee ol 8tDdoat Aeoouata in
wit.b
8.25 Seearity of R e - - Halla
the~~~~
Residence haJia oeeurity procedures are
be refel'rfld to either the
designed to permit easy ....,.. to residents
~=-~~rYJud:.m:. o..-J~ ~: IUid their gueota (oee also Seetion 8.80). Tbe
doors to u.c- residence balls which are
Non-otudenta will be referred io _the
loclted abould remain • loclted to provide
only to residents (who will be iNued
~te~ !::~ in the or card ke'fa) and their gueota. Any
buildiDao at all'f time except animals
tniMof to uo1at the handleapped or u
........ in t h e - eatitled "Peto •• , _

n.e.g_

::"":!.:

:JL

~r:::~~T:t.,.~!":

Sioetiaa 8.15)

.

•

Tile Uaioenlt1 ,_.... all rlgbta wit.b
.-,.uueat IUid re-aaipmeat of room ecenmmnd•tionJ aod maJ. at
Ita oole dloc:retloa, ouch
-modlliODI makiJI&amp; all appropriate
~ ad,;-at ol the ........... It is
............... ..,. ..,....ttha&amp;OB)'f allooaoe is
rooped. 10 the

=--'
;:!...'::r!reqoeotlnat!....r-:
-..s.

be':;
Ooeapoats
a room
...._ be ollldall,y ebe&lt;ied out of
lholr ~ room before they ean be

-latoa--.
.
the-.......

Tile- ol~
balls il_
lor ..........,U ol the
'l'lle
IUid ..,_.m- lor

---'

loalolblc.

~.,--ball

. , _ . . a•ailable in tllo Olliee ol the
~-.a
CaomdL Oal'f .._,._
to_
..... widlltl tllo ......._ iallo.
, . , .... .., ...... the&amp; the
u.lftnl&amp;y ............. ~ t. ~
~ • • ......_ ... _
... llladin
.............. ..-. tllo c-t ol Claillo """

,, ....._ball_,._...,.

Tbe c:urrent me policy cimceming open
~=in'r~ "(1,:P~:v~d~~ ~~:;"{.~{

5\&amp;te&amp; that the reaidence haJia will
have open hours at all times. Provisions
must be made to be aure that the rights of
those individual atudenta who do not wish
10 participate are not violated. All visitors
e.! bolita-under the poliey are aub~ to all
~reviousl1 mentioned U'niversitJ: Housing
Rules IUid Regulation&amp;. (espedaU'f Sec:t.ioD
8,80)
'
Aliairi

as

furnishings, furl&gt;iture. stereos, television
sets or reereation equipment may be moved

.t::'.ted

8.40 Vlaltatloa

-

may be issued from tiJ:n,e to time. Tbef 'will

Housing Office Rules
And Regulations

'

8.35 Peta

By regulatioa of the State University of
New York at Buffalo;·peta are not allowed
in the r'eoidence halla. TbiJ is the ...,.ult of
safety IUid health rules and for the welfare
of the peta. Tbe Of1iee of Environmental

made!Jwles:r~

stat.ement or tnnKript of bi.l/ber credita
until bi.l/ber tuition, lea and all other
eharpo authorized br the ~te Univeraity,
1DduCiing but limited to charges lor
clamagiDg Residenoe Hall property have
been paid. Tbe University does not ad u a
eollectiDn .Oi!'~CJ lor oommerc:W outside
groups or lDdivlduals.
_
_
7.70Peuldeo
No student is eligible to receive a degree.
&lt;ertificate oii&lt;COD!pli&gt;bment, or honorable
dismissal until all charges due to the
University or to an,. of its related divisions
are paid in full, IUid all l1nivenity property
b.u been returned in acc:eptable oondition.
Tbe Univeraity reserves the right to
chanr, or add to ita lees at any time:Offieial information eooee~ tuition and

J':..tion.hearing _-

thla..........

Any penon in 0111 reaidenee

ball

.

building

~~':."~~
~~ or Campua Seeurity/Univenity

8.45 AloaWie . _ . . _
AD federal, state, ana loeal lawa
governing the poooeaaion IUid .&lt;0111umption
, of alcoholic beverages. will be in effeet at all
times. In onler to beat serve the interests
of the dorm students, the lnter-Residenee
Council may reoommend to tAle Aloohol
Review Board restrictions on the
c:onsumption df alc:ohoUc beverages in the

residence halls. Tbe regulations ll'!verning
alcoholic eonsumption u establi&gt;hed lor
each residence hall and approved by the
Uliiversity Alcohol Review &amp;a.rd are :

Ckmont Hall - The consumption of
aloobolic beverages will be permitted in
individual rooms and in fioor lounges. It will
not be permitted in the main fioor public
lounges.
Good.11ear Hall - Tbe consumption of
aloobolic beverages will be permitted in
individual rooms, in the-upstairs lounges, in
the kitchenettes, and in the buement anadr.
her. Con.sumption is not allowed.in the lint
floor loungeS. Aleoholie beverages will be
permitted in the Goodyear Soutla. Conferenee Room only if the propooed uae is
.oo indicated when the room iS .-rved, the
event is ,.Pproved by. the MAin Street Ares

~;.,~~::-'r!mrA:tvi"t:

Co~ Hall - Tbe oonsumpllod of ,.
alooholic beverages will be· t&gt;"rmitted in
individual room&amp;, in the televiJioo.room IUid in the kitchen. Conaumption will not be

r.=,~f~b~h~~s=r~~=

and will never be permitted in the study
area.
.
.
Scllt&gt;ellkbpf Ha/1. • The oonsumptiOn of
akobolie beverages will be permitted in
individual rooma a11d in the lower area.
Conaumptioa will not be permitted in the
main lowlge exeept oo apeeial oeeuiona
specified by the Main Street Area Council.
Govetooon Ruideftce H.U. - The

""~ %.t=

:ra::d r.:''tl:

~·IU!d Snl floor lou"B"'. Cooawnptlon...ut
not be allowad on the main floor level
,.,...pt in uaigDed
un1eU a apedlk event is
by the
~ide- Complex Ares
.
Any planned event involving the uae of

reoidec.lnai'ten'

~~~=-~~~
IIJ!d, individual aulte ........,, be
opproved b1 the Inter-~ Coomcil.
Jo1ep/o Ellicott Cowopla: - Realdelitial

Areu - , . OODJUIIIptiaa ol alcoholle
beverages will be ~ in iDdiYidaal

lloar""'- ....

studelft - · i n apataln
in the ldtebenettea. CoolaampdOD will DOt ba
)Jlowed in the MaiD Floor ~ ... in
the ..-tioa ... the Olllalila Jl!ua

~·I unleaa a"-=Collin~

wit.b~-~
Hoaa~Dc

CoaDdl, the
Olliee IU!d/or tba Ollloe ol

Fadlltiea Plaulag.

uo
~ "' ....... !ICooddts
Any visitor to a residence hall must be

a.. , . - of a resident or Houaing staff
member. Tl)e boat uaumea "'"POft&amp;ibility
lor~ IUid their aetiODI whlle in the
reoicleDoo hall. AD ruloa IUid replatiODa
whieb - " ' to resMieDee hallotnciODta aball
alao be lit 8lfeet for . - . in addlt.ioa to
UJ'f ~ wbieli appl'f ajlecilk:aiJy to
vlalton or , - . Any --lltlldent «
--roaideat atudollt bne hlal\er
atatua u • . - i n the balla .....ad by the
Direotor o£ IIOIIIiJir. Tlda .... ba . . . in
writiac ........... Jioaok'1 ol - . . - . """

ftele 11'18-71 libdee Uti lteplatioM are allo a..uallle 011
ea.eUe aa,e"fw ... ....., la,.Jred ..... Ollke of Semeea
to tle Bul'esp,ed,14t Geed)oear BalL ·,
I

·.

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              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>Newsman

fallfest .

football

Law sttJdent Gary
Papa does morning
news and weekend
sports on Channel Z.
Page II.

Squire Fountain was ·
jammed as the
' Spri ngfest' finally
came off. Page 7.

At.Rotary Field this
year, y-ou ' re on your
own. Page 16.

Ed Studies
New dean sees
_bright future with
redirected resources,
innovations. Page 3.

.

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO I

Leslee
Whether it's
Shakespeare or
Brecht, he's
Theatre's 'house
band. ' Page 15 .

SEP 21, 1978
VOL. 10 • NO.3

Love Canal: t-a sk group meets this week
By linda Grece-Kabas
News Bureau Staff

--of

Formation of a University task group
to prOYide technical assistance to
homeowners in the Love Canal area of
Niagara FaJis·is underway.
George Lee, Who has been named
11M Unl...,lty'e - l.ron-

l::l':r~~t::t0:!:iu~ ~:,!;'~~~.:

. ne~ay, September 27, at 4 p.m. in
room 152 Parker.
ul want to meet with various members
of the University community to receive
Input and volunteers," Lee explained. "I
hope at this meeting to find out what
people are already involved or planning
to get Involved In various studies of the
L6ve Canal.",
lnfamoue toxic dump
The Love Canal Is the now-Infamous
and irllernationally-known site In
Niagara Falls . wbere toxic chemicals
burled by .the Hooker Chemical
Company ebcut 20 years 811" have

=.!':.:ni}o~h~J~~~~o=s. ~~rv!~:
1

~~!~·t~h:nr~l~~~~=e:. h:,~

birth defects to be higher tC the
average along the southern portion of
theH';,"O::,:;:n, along the canal and on

~h= ~::''to~~

•oa:

~~~~~~~~'f..:Ss\'!: ~~=;~

agencies now Involved In sat11ng up

:-:u,~~~.::~r~~;:i&gt;~~ngd~~:

system which many hcmaowners feel
will not only be unsuccessful , but
potentially dangerous toowort&lt;ers and
- y residents.

'

" " - - IISked torald
Lots Gibbs, president of the
Homeowners Association and, Incidentally, the sister-In-law of former
U/B aulstant professor of biology
Wayne Hedley, wrote to President
Ketter on Auguot 9 asking the
Unlvera11v'o ald.
"In a oltuatlon of such technological
GM~~J'Iexlty." Mrs. Gibbs wrota,~'we . .
unable to the valoalty of
aclantlflc opinions being offered by
war1oua aganclae. We are requesting
11181 you riwllce -'labia to ua the vaat
atora of expertlle within the Unl...,lty.
·n " ou( IIOpe that you will Iooft •
ICienllflc adviaOfv oommlttaa from your
lllatltutton to wtilcto we _, tum for
ldvto. and .a~s~ance. Of critical
are fl!J*!a In toxicology,
OIIJ, jiOiogy, hyd~.
lltiY. ang"-'"11 and madlelne.
e.cutlwe V1ca Ptaldent Alblrt
.... NPIIad to the Glbba lett• with
110111 111111 LM would ae the
UI)Mrii!Y'I
Lae held I

.
=

..,_1811va.

---

meeting on August 22 which was
attended by about 40 lntareated 1~.
Alao

1)feaent

-

Erie

legislator William Pauly; Joan
.
Lorin~ commioalo'* of 11M Erie
Coun Dlpartment ot Environment and
Plann ng; and Rloh8rcl Lippa, Bufflllo
-ifonlilentll ....,..

~ling

~~-

the

w.;.

· ob..-.ed t1181thenl
need for effor1o
to be madlt In more than one dlnectlon
and t11811he Unlvlnity oould aX1and lie
~laaln bothoountlaa.
Uppes explained that 11M !loin&amp;-

=-:~': %:::'':'~~
gov.nmentalln~.

At thlll meeting, till obtained a !let o1
faculty "*"'*- wliii!VI to ~ ·
ln.olved In a group cltllllng with Low
Canal ' - - He haa apant the- • -

weeks contactinG wrtou. . IJnlwnaltJ
deane and oHIOIIila and " - tormad a
tentati.. atewtng comml- to al4 In
coordillllllng 11M Un~·
mental eltorta .

-•ron-

�w-·

TIM Amherst "'ued
-.t~nuet~
..ty IMt Friday a.m. u the "Cyy-" of
ao..nora Nllillatecl agaiMt liMo War-

riors of EIUcott who had imlluahed
ttwn the pnoloua Tunday morning.
Raw eggs, 111awtn9 cream, and toilet

=-~~~-::::;
anxloua to wort out • puce at a
conference to be floated by President
Kellar,

BRIEFLY

,

' ·

Document dlnlc:s sloatecl
U/B ls a quality university and should
.not be prevented fro m achieving Its
maximum potential because o f the
parochial Interests of a few private
colleges.
Was that Robert L. K~tter respondl ng to Rev. fames M . Demske's recent
call for a halt to U/8 Amherst constructlon?
No. It was Robert S. Marsliall,
president of Daemen College.
Marshall , chai rman of t he Small
Colleges Commi ttee o f the Commls·
slon of Independent Colleges and ·
Universit ies 1~
York State. said
that while lie has " deep respect "
for the views of the Canis Ius
president. he " sharply" d isagrees
with them.
Marshall argued In an Interview
w ith
that " The
pri vate colleges of Western New York
will not be served by the tragic
strangllng of one of the fi nest
universities of the State. The presence
of this universi ty In our community
Is a valuable and Irreplaceable re• source," he said .
Completi ng Amh erst means jobs
for a depressed construction Industry.
Marshall cqntlnued. It means gai nful
~ployment. Once these Individual s
" are making a decen Income, " he
proJected, " we, atDaemen, are con-

the_,...,-

fldent that we will be the choice of _
many of them" for the education of
thelrchUdren:
" All businesses and Institutions
In Western New York will benefit
from the early completion of the State
University of Buffalo Amherst
Campus."

Is t11at •It taes1
"TCICMyBulr.lo bec91MS a metropollnqutvalent to New York City-It
hasasubwtly."
ThAt's what 5efl!ltor Jacob favi ts
- e d l.st Friday when Buffalo
aot a $50 mllllon commitment to
bKk cllglns-out ot the first phase ...ot Its NPid transit proJect- from Ul8
~.:-.:OW~~London

have subways. too.

The Govemrnent&gt;Oocwnents Department of Lockwo od Library will
sponsor five two-h our " Doc Clinics"{
during
week of September 25.
Those who enroll will learn how to
locate and use government
publications.
,
The Department has approximately
I 50,0 00 titles distributed by the
United States, New York 'State and
Canadian governments. and the
European Economic Community. As In
most libraries. only a few are~lsted
In the card catalog.
Information coriia lned In
documents Is often the most current
avallabl.,. While some titles In the
Department are more suitable for
history students. especially those
studying American history. many
others deal with current social .
economic and political Issues.
Ed Herman, the assistan t documents librarian, will conduc ~ the
clinics. United States documents will
be emphasized, but t hose Issued by
New York State will also be discuSsed.
Histo ry students Interested In older
sources, or others Interested In the
European Community orCanadlarv
c ollecti o ns can make special appoi nt·
ments with Mr. Herman. Call636-282 t
to reserve your space, since all groups
will be limited to twelve people.

the

Fa~:.&gt;'c~~~~~!~,:~;;::~-ld between
2 and4 p.m . fr(\m September 25
through September 2 7 and between
9 :30 and II :30 on September 28
and 29.

ICeeplna their house

J

Puerto Rican Studies rePc&gt;rts that

-~~=t!'s~~~~~ ';';,1~

other two-year period, during which
time " there will be continual maintenance of our academic; activi ti es
and proJects within the program."
Controversy flared last year when
It was announced that the Universi ty
would be relinquishing the house and'
that Puerto Rican Studies woulil have

o vacate.

Under the Jaylts pronouncement.

lluffalo *-their peer as""'".

And to think: Just ~wee!&lt;, some
people had us only two skips ahead

ot Sandusky.

ss...._--..,
Seventy..,lght grant and contract
awjllds totaling $5,822,002 were re-,
celved by University faculty In July
and August, Robert c. Fltzpatrlclr.
actiiQI vice presldem for research;

said this week.
In August atone. 43 grants !n the

-.rot ol $3,328,444 _,.,received.
MoA were mafor renewal and continuation grants to carry proJects Into

the new reseArCh fiscal year whlctl
bepnlufy I .

forty-five proposals for new pro-

I«G. totaling $3.522,987 were submllted to prospective sponsors during

July and AuJust, Flt&amp;patr1.:1&lt; said.

re~ pon

Second open session
-. President Robert L. Ketter will hold
the second " Open O ffice Hours"
session of the fall semester, THursday,
September 28 , from 2 to 3:30 p.m .
1
Stud~nts can arrange an appointment with the President by ca ll ing
. 636 -29 0 I.
'
The President will also take P4tt
In a call-In program, the first o f a
• mQnthly series, to be a Ired live on
·wsf0(88.7 fM) friday, September
29, at I p.m. People with questi ons
can Gall the station' s number and be
put through to Ketter.

IIAkke Poapers

sta te s, " all criteria are

· applied tQ each applicant regard less
of race , while preference points are
awarded for 'affirmati ve action
potential. · Minority applicants gain
points If they have worked In
poverty areas, such as through VISTA.
or If they grew up In a rural poor
area. In th is way, preferential
Gonslderatlon Is given to a wide
range of factors.that ill'" considered
valuable In the selection of future ••
doctors who will most likely prove
responsible to the most seriously
unmet medical service needs In our
society."
The report , After-.., Is
available In single copies from the
Assembly Education Subcommi ttee
on Postsecondary Education, 51 19
State Capitol. Sacram""to, Calif.
95814. It will be published In book
form this fall byjossey-Bass.

A document showi ng how college
and university admissions programs
could operate under the Suprem.e
Court's Bakke decision has been Issued
by a subcommittee of the Cali fornia
state legislature wit h support from
looluitobUe c:Oialna
the ford foundati on.
·
Faculty are Invited to visit the
fohn Vasconcellos, chai rman of the College Marketing Group's booksubcommittee, said It "Intends to
mobile exhibit, October 4 from 9 a.m.
assist campus and government policyto 4 p.m . In the Lockwood parking
makers In creatively {espQndlng to
- lot, Main Street, and October 5.
·the Bakke decision." He added: " In
from 9 a.m. to 4 p .m . In the Flint
the coming months- 'i"Y choose
pa*lng lot, Amherst.
to use Bakke either as an excuse
The exhibit will feature over 3,000
for lessening our commitment to
new titles from 275 publishers.
equal educational opportunity and .
Freshm~n through graduate texts and
Improving the human conditions of
supplements will be available for
poor communities or as an opportunity
perusal. Many complimentary books
for revitalizing that commitment. for
&gt;Rill be Issued If the text fits the
those who choose the latter, this
COU{se description.
report eught to be a handy tool. ..
Over 500 publishers use the services
T~ study describes admissions
of the College Marketing Group. A
procedures at flve American medical
sales representative will be present
schools and one Canadian school
for assiJtance.
wblch the ICucly states effectively
The exhibit Is :IPOnsored by the
meet the Bakke decision. Qwn as
University Bookstore.
a ''prime example" Is Michigan State
Unhlenlty'aCollese ot Human
Medicine admissions
"In
the MSU admission..-," die

prosr-.

'

�,

Sot*onbor 21, 111t

FES
New dean sees an opportunity
td r~direct energies, maximizeJesources;
the faculty appears to be willing
"it seems 'more like a University and
Rossberg said, Fisk led a movement
less like a cookie factory here now, "
toward expanded degree offerings. He ·
Dean Robert Rossberg pfthe Faculty of -/sought an expansion and ,enrichment of
Educational Studies said as he pointed
graduate wot1&lt; and a greater breadth of
~'!J t~~~~_w from ~Is third floor Baldy students from beyond Western New

- 1
The move of the Libraries to Amherst
mad~a

{~~at ~~F~~~ed~~f'Ju~~a:~gJ:

difference, he Indicated.
,gfforts by members of his faculty to
clvlilze" _Baldy through the addition of
relntings, pictures and potted plants

period.
F&lt;om Fisk's resignation In 1967 until
now, Rossberg indicated, FES' has
. develoJ:t even more depth and an

winds of winter · will, of
course, continue to be unnerving until
additional buildings begin to thwart the
momBuentetvuemn soof,tsahelgaRieoss.sberg, " many of
d
us are reaching the point that we're glad
tob&lt;lh&amp;re."
The same blend of • realism and
optimism characterized the new dean's
lnlti" addre~s to his faculty recently.

• :::'
constricting demand for education
periiOOn&amp;l.
Rollo Handy, "an articulate, brilliant
philosopher," as Rossberg characterlzes him, was dean for pert of this
period, and helped guide FES to a
'Closer •relationship with the social
sciences.
1
Where Fisk was "an ever-present,
demanding lather figure, " Handy

~·~~ti

.,;du;r-uo~~~n~W~~es r':~:r~:,e;~ ~

admitted. But the division also has the
talent and capability to be Imaginative,
td "redesi~n its ormunltles, re-direct
~ur::~9
u\':lma~axl~~e i::!,:
more, not less,
The willingness ~\"his~ faculty to
lncreue productivity - perhaps even In
ways "we can't conceive of now," is
"very gratifying," the dean said. 5o is
~~J.D~:"~: l::;~~aflon to do so

f't,";,

Ross~~llenged.

A hlatCKY of change
Educational Studies comes by Its
flexibility, resolve, and amenabllity'to
change quite naturally, Rossberg feels .
Since Its beginnings, Ita leadership has
fostered thai kind of outlook.
' Teacher education began here in the
early 1920s under the wing of the

=!in~P=~':lt.!h:n:,;

the U/B faculty roughly parallels tbe
tenure of samuel P. C8pen (from tfle
20s through the «&gt;&amp;), was the first to

~ ~~~~~tlon em
as a
separate deportment, unde~leadfif..

ship of Dr. L.O. Cummings, formerly of
the Harvard Graduate School of
Education. Cummings became dean
when a SchOOl ot Education was
authorized In 193l. He heeded things

..

~r~n ~.~ ~nd~~~am~~~ F":th~~~~

t~ ~~f~';\f~asi!mre~fl7;s :/~

~:~llym~~.J~~~~ee~~~. ~~ssi!~~

said . Any apJlllM8nce of laissez-fairer
was strictly Illusory.
Over the past three years, Rossberg
ASSOCIATE FES DEAN
;$avid Nyberg of the Department of
el Foundations Ia the new
soclate dean of the FJculty of
Educational Studies, effective lmmediately and continuing until Aupust
31,1980.

if he had to single out the one faculty

met'llber with the fealeat impact pn the

~~el=~twO:uld e:.; ~r08~~!l, ~d
who died lh 1969.

aelected
~o~.:l'Yln~~~~~::¥.• :"~;~~t =~
"a non-traditional lifestyle" at a

time "wh·en It was much costlier to llo
so,'' Adelle Land was "always more

a1;~;. ~~~res~~ar~ h~~~~c'::~P.i

But once the lssu8' was settled; her
reaction was neither one of despair nor
of anger. She'd sar,, "OK, how do we go
about accomplish .".II our new goals?"

,'::/ ~f ,~.w~

The Fisk era
By 1953, T.R. McConnell had ·
replaced Capen as chancellor. G. Lester
Anderson, a weiHcnown scholar ofhigher education, was vice president for
academic aff&amp;ir11. They brought in ·
Robert S. Flak to heed Educational
Studies. Flak served lor • decade end
one hall, under McConnell end
Presidents Clifford C. Furnas end
Martin Meyerson - at a time of great
ex~sion of education in g-.1 end

of~=~=~
P==~ded a
progressive phlloeophlcel orieRtatlon,

1

~.~~,r:g.:ft~ ~h"~~7,Y ~~e~to~~C:::~t':."~·

courses at schools and other educational Institutions. This would be similar to
the way surgical teams from one
Institution now visit others In order to
demonstrate some new technique. Both
the visitors and thosa being visited
learn something. Curreritly, RGSsberg
said, a mathmoblle project within FES
goes into the field with information on
the latest concepts In math education.
"We could do that in a variety of ansas. •
His i1nt1re agenda, Rossberg summarized, represents a need to reverse
the trend. toward over-specialization
• which the Nobel Laureate 1.1. Rebl has
described," Rosabera said.
Rabl 'lias notecf lhatl excesel.Je
Which the Nobei'laureate 1.1. Robl has
described," Rossbera said.
Robf has noted that loxceaslve
specialization In hls field has pr'oduced
applied physicists who can't think and
~~~~ fl~~~l~t~ol~~ can't remern-

Russell Stone joins
International College

~~;:~~v~ecalr:r. ·E':n I,Cf~=:::
when she was nearing the end of a half
century of work.

which Rosaberg describes as "laughable." Cummings apparently leaned
. m:,eo~e~~~(~~ dedication and desire

:,~~~:l:'~'le ~p~

Similar possibilities exist with law
and engineering , and between education and various departments In arts
and letters and social sciences.
Specifics will emerge soon, Rossberg
promised .
The dean sees a need for new
alliances with other Institutions In the
community. 'Buffalo State's resources
and skills l n exceptional education, lor
example, need somehow to be
combined with our Interest in offering
doctoral wort&lt; In that area.

Adelle Land

change lor lha better. "Sha never dug in

0..'-0;'--

Soclal agency links
Links have to be forged, too, with
area social welfare agencies, in such
fields as child care, perenl education,
and pre-school programs. FES already
has a small capability in this
increasingly-critical area, but more
needs to be done.
Rossberg envisions a day when FES
will deal In "on-$lte educational

fi,~'!~:.\~s . In FE~a~ral sk!~TenC:?
curriculum development and research
design which could be ' of benelll to
these programs, the new dean
emphasized.
·
,

noted, the Faculty laced "an interim
situation" with an acting dean , Walter
Petty, placed in the awkward position of
being asked to establish directions,
without a firm hold on the reins of
power.

Cummings "demanded" commitment
from faculty. Their allegiance produced

R'*""'V

Rossberg said, "we have to
establls" priorities lor. the reallocation
of resources within the Faculty.
"We have to lace faculty development
and re-develo~ment. If some areas have
!fried up, we II have to lind money to
re-educate some of our faculty to do
new things."
The territorial imperatives of the
several departments will havl! to be
tempered, Rossberg suggested. A
free-flow of people and Ideas among the
vari ous programs has to be encouraged.
FES should forge- new alliances
within the University, he prescribed particularly with programs in the health

ioo,

an~~~~~onrt:,. ~~:tmO::::s '"'S'r~

of
Russell Stone, associate professor of

::~::~~s~~·~~ha~~~~ d!~~·t t!!Y,~~~

~~~~/o'r t':."e t::ll'.!~s~sl:~~9~8~

1

the
The appointment, College spokes-

~~':,di'r:'~dac~~OV:m~Pnnl::gi\'o,:

~~~erst~~ln~~~~~h ~~~~~~~

Agenda lor the fut ...a

Shaped bY. this tnidltion, Educa,lonal

tlon of the Council on lnternatlonel
Studies, the poslllon carries with it a
budget for a conference or series of
speakers, as well as for subsequent
publication ot proceedings.
Stone is a sociologist who speclal-

~r:~t~·;:~r~R~':~,o: ::k::,~

future concerns whlcn he has, ldenHiled:
•
There has to be a "revlt!lllzatlon of the
pursuit of . educational noals, a

1~~~~ :~d~:..~~e~r~~~~~~

ph~~~~&lt;;:o~'\!lr=r~~~h;p ~:.:.:~

countries, and theories of social
change. He teachas soclol~y co....,s
in these areas aa wen aa In soclatogy
of the future. He hu '-&gt; a vllllllng
~olessor at the Hebrew Unlvwalty in
Jerusalem, and ' the Ben Guiion
University of the Negevln Beersheba.

.,.ollment and finances must lead FES
to SMrch lor broader populations to
serve, lor ways to fncrgsa the
attractiveness and usefulness of its
programs.

:a.;:.
~~hea la::Jl'fnet:~
Applied Social RMaarCh, whenR he

-

began working on hla cUITllnt etudy of
aoclal indlcatora of public .,ltuda In
relation to maJor ...Wain lareet end the
Middle Eut elnce the June 1967 War.
He has also conducted field ~ in
Tunlalll and Afghanla!M, .,d has
writlen on upects of
In
Egypt, - I n tile OPEC_,
of the
~Eaat.

=-t

A native of c.n.da, he attended

..

:::~~t:::t'-'·~ ~

'-a Ph.D. 110111 Prlfloel~

111111 Midclleljllat IIIUdlel.
atone 11811 publlellld - - ertlclaa,
chlptwa, Md ,..._. on VlriOul
....,.at&amp; of •ntapment 8lld c:tl8lae In
the Middle ~. Md "- dlllf .nd

OCIIotrlbloletl ID bDalte on ~ hi
Tult/M: SllldMIIII lfletlocltll....._
81111 OPEC . . _. "'M llllt" Jllll

fmtMdotO/Ion ~~~.
At U/8, he hu been cNirnlllll oJ the
lntardleCtplinaiY arlduate groul! on
lnl81118tional o...iloP!Mnl Md Envlt·
onmentaiPfanntnojl (IOEP).
The lntlnllltlciMi CGI'-114! ..........
bllglne on Monday, Ocloblr t.
with Dr. Y..tn &amp;Ayouty, eentor
pl'llltlcel alfatra olfiQer (clliet,..AfrlciJI
$ectlop), TIW Ulllled ~~ He Ia
also prof- of polltlcaleelence (111ft·
· time) m ~The tllle ~ 1111
t.lk will be: •
the
DIMd
c.z,p.m.

Su~:!!~ ...

lnr=m~·~~-- will

begMI!tw~~
0ot011er U • I p.m. In the

KlwL Slone. ... IOall •
_........
w.. .........•
•

I

�~21 ,18 71

. . .am·

Rapid transit
European cities use modern equipment
to whisk masses In and out of core areas
but the systems don't P.ay their own way
At the very minute Buffalo officials
--.In Washington receiving money for
allah! rail eystam modeled after similar
MQl.... In
a E~ expert
t~~n=.ngl ;.g ~

:.,.=:

Eu::/r,

IU=f~:r.:::":e~~~~'l::.~~hat

they mow people In and out of cities
conveniently and comfortably, using
modem, lnnovatMI equipment; they'Ve
a1ao reduced vehicular traffic In
congeeted - · and have helped
lmprowt the environment.
But they do not pey their own ways,
Curt Elmberg, deputy director of
Gruter Stockholm's transit authority,
cautioned.
Nor are they expected to.
The percentage of costs which come
from the fare box Is based on political
decisions, Elmberg noted. It varies.
In London, fares account for 70 per
cent of operational costs; In Stockholm, o42 per cent; In Paris, only 30 per
cent.
.
Tllua, Buffalo's system will coat
taxpayers aomethln,g 'to run; but If th_e
European experleoce Is any criterion,
that coat wltl be *orth it.
If there Ia one oommon denominator
running through all the European transit
systems (which vary In equipment,
operations, fares, etc.), Elmberg said, It
Ia that "service for the customer is most

lm.r::'ti~ be. These systems don't
supplement prtvate autos, he said. They •
rap/acethem .
·
A typical European transit authority,
Elmberg said, serves an entire rag1on
and embraces all modes of public
transportation, from subways down to
mlnlbu- and taxis.
The StockhOlm ayatem
The Stockholm system, for example,
servea 23 municipalities scattered
aciosttaland area which comprises two
per cent of.Sweden . A million and a hall
people Ove In the area.
Stockholm's subway system has 900
cara serving 94 stations along some 60
miles of track. The lntagrated Stockholm Transit authority also operates
1700 buses, a number of ferries, and
suburban rail service. 430 million
Individuals use the system each year.
There are 11,000 employees.
Public transit there Is for everyone,
the handicapped not excepted . The .
system ope&lt;atea 135 special vehicles
for the disabled. Any time a
handicapped peraon makes a trip to
school, to work or to receive medical
t,..,.,ment, that trtp Ia free - whether
the Individual makes use of one of tha
special vehlclea or rldea In a taxi .
Pleallrevehiclea
trtpa are '""'· too, If the
-'AI
(mlnlbuaea) are used .
" - n trtpa IIY taxi coet
cents to
·..,point In the franalt authority wea wlilch Nna 100 miles from north to
lOUth, and
miles east to ·
a...nty-two IIUCh trtpa per yew are
permltfad by taxi at 1M! rata. The
national gcMf'llll)ellt IU!)porta this,
l!lmlle!O .ald. A whooolng $'70 million a
yew 18 ·lladCieled · lor handicapped
lrenllt In G...r. Stockholm.

eo

eo

...=:~tg.ra:;:~.:

U.S. oltlee are now doing. Juat the
appoelta. Urbln.l!llawl hUn't !181 hit
Europe with tha IIIII*! • In the

_____
,.........
_..,
__
...,...._.
Alf-_
,...

A _

._
i ,_
1 i, . .

_
_
_
l_
_
_
_.
. , . ,_
. . _o
o
l

-

....

....

~ - · - . ..-Tolo-

..., ...__,
"*'
.-rr

......
..a•a••._
IQNIIA. aoura

U.S. Transit is helping keep It that way.

Cera bernd in aome cities
1

s~~:::'~o~ ~~; r.u~.,: ::,~'fr'~'N:
but cars are· physically blocked from
free access Into busy areas. Gothen-

~~~~~~~'l'c: ~:~:~!s~l~~~c~~~~
01
;~ ~rr3tr:g t~::" :.~~7s ~~mb~f~~

prevent entry from one of the inlerior
zones Into another. Seventy per cent of
private vehicles disappeared from the
CBD alter Introduction of the concept,

. ·~:::~Jt:'r.::~:'adB~~~~~~ t~:n~~t~~
a resolting swell in pedestrian traffic.

re~~?c~·~~.fs"i'~/~t&gt;'!:~w.:'se~k~ut

the

so~~~~: q,~· ~~c~,:,~.;~~l''~ ~~=

on

environment," not as a restriction
traffic. You have to be · politic about
these things," hp counseled.
Rubber-wheeled trains
Europeans have made major strides
;~a:ft~'~r~ntl:,~e~~~ment lor mass
For example, In Parts, new rail
vehicles run on rubber wheels, using
concrete tracks (although steel wheels
and tracks are still there, too, In case of
flats or blowouts and for switching

r:.'l':'~T!'r~~~te:;;,J"~:..~:~i'~~~
~~~s ~~ ~~Ts ~t~g s~t:~~~ttwo

Vehicles are also becoming more and
more lightweight In order to conserve
energy.
Larger buses have also been devised,
particularly In Germany. Some have up
to sixteen axles. In Stockholm
"articulated buses" (held together with
flexible joints like two subway cars) can
carry uplo 130 passengers- 70 seated

"'1n~:!n~~~~ave been made as well

In how vehicles are powered .
Moscow has a system of electric
trolley lorries for making deliveries to
department stores. The lorrtes move

~~rrg t~~~~ar:tlld~~~rn~~~~= cl~:e ~~

possible- perhaps.lillthln a mile. Then
they use a normal combustion engine to
move off the tracks and ..Into city

streets.
A _dual-bus Is being tested In
Germany. Electrically-operated, It lol-

~i~:s al:g,: ~~~f fu'rerh~ade~'fr?~

:_~:;~~es ~~!t ~~sc~~~ged'1-"~~~e~i~~

operates along the wires; the batteries
enable It to move about In areas which
lack the overhead wires - for up to two
and one-half hours. There's even an
automated method for re-coupling the
vehicle to the wires when it returns to
that part of Its route.

Eacalaton and -•tors
Getting people In and out of, and
around· In, subway stations t!¥- also
brought on technological lnnov~ons.
Paris has horizontal eacalators ('1ravel-

:',:'~y
: :wl~a =~· ~~:,~
burg even has slightly Inclined

travelalora to moYII people up and down
hills adjacent to stations.
Soma other stations In Sweden make
use of " Inclined elevators" which run _
aide-by-ekle with the · omnipresent
escalators.

In~=~~..:.~=- h;"f7'J:.'!:,";
1

who love · to 881 I'IICOfds, boast the
longest one In• the wOrld - In Kiev's
UniYIIralty Station. That moving stair-

=-:~• =r-.2,~ ~.!;.
one-half minutes.
Subway
Mtentlon

'=

-lone themsel- get
In EIJIO!Ie, too, Elmberg

na:'oicow'.s marble halls, c:haridellera,

and Lenlnlat fnlacoea established a
standard of elegance In the 19301.

eyatema 'n ~tallat
'*'0Modem-day
1111 _ .. moatly
for oolonod Illes,

lie llllcl, alti!OUIJh a un. iQ
8loclcholm enjelyj a . . - o1 . . _
llaliona," . _ out of aolld granite
_ . , t o 100
the .....,_,

,_below

~~~~ -.....~ tllagiWIIta lalelt •Is

and

u.. ....... Solne of the ,..,..._

are breathtaKing, as Elmberg proved In
a series ofJIIides.
\ . '
Speeding-up ourface travel
Surface travel remains most Important In Europe, Elmberg said. So ways
have been devised to get transit moving
more quickly on the ground .
Separate travel lanes have been set
· aside for public transportation - light
rail and buses. Some of these run
contrary to the flow of vehicular traffic
on the same road or street . Roads built
exclusively lor buses have been found
efficient, If expensive. Pedestrian malls
with one or two lanes (or tracks) for
public transit have also proved effective
(this concept will be used on Main
Street in downtown Buffalo).
in some jurisdictions,• buses.
pulling out from the curt:l have the l"9al
right-of-way over other traffic; cars have
to stop, much as they do for school
buses in this country.

And

Honor systems
• Getting people on and off transit
vehicles as last as possible has led to
.. widespread" honor fare systems,
Etmberg said. In some, you prepurchase tickets which you later quickly
validate as you get on. Nobody checks
routinely to see If you have a ticket.
.. Roving inspectors'' make random
checks to keep passengers from taking

adjf~~auq~,; caught without a validated
ticket, you can't be "lined" because of
some i"llai mumbo-jumbo. Instead,
you 're assessed "an excessive fare." In
Stockholm, if will run you $22 (Instead
of the regular 50 cents). Illegal parking
in Stockholm draws the same line.
One 'honor system which Elmberg
encountered In the Soviet Union

~~:·:: t~~~~!~ Aft~~~.J~g~'l:'~

Wl!S a knob which was subsequently
turned fn order t o get a ticket. However,
the knob turned whether or not money
had been dropped Into the box.
When he asked Soviet otflclals how
high the cheating rate was, Elmberg
was crisply Informed that "In Socialist
countries, people do not cheat."
Later, ovsr vodka, the same officials
admitted that usually about lour per
cent more tickets are taken than there Is
money In the boxWhat happens to a socialist citizen

ca~~~~~\~~:~P~!:,~h~a"J:~t~?posted
where he works!

•Love Canal
{tram - 1 . col 4)

fa~yha~e~=.":t~t~d~~,:'cL~~'m~

and Dr. Bart:lara Howe, who would like
~~ t~~f i~~~~:~~. in soclo)oglcal studies ,
Dr. Martin B. Wingate, director of
materpai-fetal medicine, and Dr. Robin
Bannetman, head of the Department of
Genetics, both at Children's Hospital,
have expressed Interest In offering
genetic services to pregnant women In
the Love Canal ar.ea and. In studying
tl)elr reproductive histories.

No actual teots
~
Lee stressed that University scientists will not do actual tests on the
canal site.
· '
"We will be very happy to assess
aspects of studies or reports," Lee
explained, "but In no way can we be
expected to provide an experimental or
data base effort."
•
Lee Intends the steering committee
to coordinate campus scientific and
technical expertise, to study environmental problema, and to serve as
liaison for the Unlveralty with cornmurilty and regional committees.
Lee has been appointed by Ketter to
- t U/B on a new Erte County
Teak Force on Toxic and Hazardous
Subelance Control. Organized by Environmental Commlulo- Loring, this
group hopes to conduct an overall
enalyala of CUITIIIIt regulatory prograrl)8
which lmoMI toxic and ·hazardoua.
subllancea.
Lee requeet.t that faculty lllernbera
'"'-ad In becoming InvolVed In the
.._ Canal Teak GroUp but who are

=

tg,:':,nt.=,~y·a -In~

Unit•d Way
is raffling
Sabres
tickets
For every, 50 cents per payroll period

that you contribute to the United Way
this year, you'll receive one chance on a
pair of tickets to a Sabres game.
Five pairs of tickets (lor seats In a
private box) for a game to be decided
later will be raffled off the day the

caT,f,;:!s~~8!!f.'i.~~~~e=":~~an

of this year's UtB United Way drive,
said Issuing raffle tickets on l he basis
of payroll deductions Is a way to spur ·

:::~r~~egr~~rrt~·::wn~~vantage

Of that
"It's easier to give a little every two

e~·ho~h3~n.Won':~ r.:'as~~~p

S}Jm.
/;iampus-wlde solicitation for the
drive does not begin until October 1,
DeSantis said. But his general
committee has been m&amp;!UJng with
campeign workers from various divisions for the past two weeks.
Two campus units - Finance and
Management and the School of
Medicine - ~re part lcipatin~ in the
pilot divlslon ·of the 1978 Umted Way
campaign . The pilot division, DeSantis
explained, Is a group of selected
agencies from thro"ghout the community In which solicitation Is
conducted In advance. 'The Idea is to set
an example for others.
The two UIB pilot units have a
1

~;::~~ s~~~~ ha~~ s~~s;.r~

by Friday, September 15. The pilot drive
concludes October 1.
The overall University goal In this
year's drive Is $125,000, DeSantis
Indicated. It's been the same lor the
past six years.
The 1978 campus drive features a new

~e~~lin~n~a~~"r.~~r;~J:sW~~-~~

answer booklet about· the _United Way
and what It does, which is being

·

dl~~~,::~'l?y~ 0 !~~pl~~er

cent of
full-time emplorees partlc'G;tll in the

?h~~~rt:~ ~~rsc:~r~~~~p~ttl~n~aid,

Fulbright bids
due October 1
The 1979-80 competition for Fulbright
grants for graduate study or research
abroad In academic fields and lor
professional training In the creative and
pertorming arts ends October 1, the
Institute of International Education has

~~~~~~":::;,:J'~m~~:!::ra~ awards

Purpose of the grants Is " to Increase
mutual understanding between the
people of the United States and other
countries through the excha'!Pe of
persons, knowledge and skills. They
are provided under the term$ of 1he
Mulual Educational and Cultural Ex.change Act of 1961 (Fulbrlght-Hays
Act) . and by foreign governments ,
universities and private donors.
Applicants must be U.S. citizens who
will hold a bachelor's degree or &lt;.l~
equivalent before the beginning date oY
the grant. In most .cases, applicants
should be proficient In the language of
the host country. EXJl8pt lor ceria in

~~~~~~.,:w~~D. ca~tdld~~=s :;'~~ n~l

application. Candidates for 1979-80 are
Ineligible lor a grant to a country II they
have been dolng graduate work or
conducting ree-.:h In that country tor
six months or more during acedem1c
1971H9.
Creative and performing artists are
not required to h - a bachelo~s
degree, but must h - four years of
professional study or equivalent experience. Social work applicants must
have at least two yeatll of professional
fltpertence after tha M.S.W.; candi·
an M.D. J!I.,
dates in medicine muat
1
ttoes:;l':trc:.,
the aeadem~
and/or proleaslonal record of the
applicant, the validity and feasibility of
the proposed study plan, the applicant's
~n and per-

lll!f

=0,

1::/C

r'n~n'll~~es ~~·hava~~g;,&lt;;;;

opportunity ,for extended

re~~

study

or

Fulbtlght Progfam
advisor Is Dr, John K. Simon.
Application forma will be available from
Ms. Dorothy Sc:Nktman, Council on
International Studies, Room 124,
Richmond Quad, Ellicott Complex .
f1PT lnl~lon and adlllaament,
contact Or. Simon at 838-2191 or

836-8696.

�~21 , 1171

· j

I

i

Campus conference to reappraise
American involvement in Vietnam

Lecture series
wlll .look at

Just what was VIetnam all about?
What were the objectives of U.S.
foreign policy there?
What means were used to carry out
those objec ives?
What are the actual eHects of our
Involvement, on the U.S. both at home
and abroad and on VIetnam?
On September 29 and 30, U/B will be
host to a major conference entitled
"America in Vietnam: A Re-Appraisal."

In 19-49, A. Nagarajan and Mong Hang
Tan .. members of the China Study
Group-GSA, recall, ''the Chinese people
liberated themselves and eslsbllshed a
new social order; Mao 'Toe-tung
declared that the Chinese people have
stood up.
"Today, 30 years after the Chinese
liberation, many developments have
taken place; expertm...,. have been
madeJn the development of the national
economy, and a major socio-political
movement has been launched In the
form of the Cultural ' RevolutiOn.)
Meanwhile, many natural disasters,
partlcularty earthquakes, have aft~
vast areas of the country, killing people
a_vd destroying resources. Yet, China Is
a much stronger country than It was In
1949."
.
Nagarajan and Mong continue~
" Recently, the Chinese people have
proclaimed their determination to
modernize their eg~lcu/lure, Industry,
natlonel defense, and science and
technology. They wish to transform
China Into a modem and powerful
socialist country by the year 2000. Is .
this possible? Can a developing country
with over 850 million people achieve
this goal? What are the Internal and

'China Today'

The event Is one of the ..Conferences In

the Disciplines• funded by the Greduate
School on this campus; and has

C"g~~v~ o~~~~~n~~o~~rgf~~!~om

The

Purpos.._.
PJJrpose of the conference; . Its
organizers, Richard Cox and Jerome
-Slater of the Department of Political
Science, indicate, "Is to contribute to
our under~, as citizens, and as

::l~~~~f/e t:~ ~~~~:Te~~~r~~t~:

involvement In Vietnam .ln our view, the

time Is ripe f·or renewal of discussion

?ans~ .df:~t~~,.';.',hed~~~W:"'u~ar.;~~~~~:
Importance of the war, and its
enormous Implications for American

g~~ef:n an~~~!Y,~y Pf~~~~es,ci::,~~~

::,~rr~ ft.~~c~o;:.,~ut!n""'ln~~~;~

reevaluation of that criticat event.

surpass the United Stales, the So•let
Union, Japan, and all other E:uropaan
countries In the next 22 years? Will then
China be a superpower? These and
many other_questlons are of Interest to
everyone who would like to understand
the dynamics of how a weak country
can become a strong country relying
primarily on Its own people and

" Perhaps ." the organizers continue,
before lhis
. "some tim~ had to
ceevaluation could begin. es a result of
the general weariness with or revulsion

from t~ painfulness of the whole.
episode. In any case, In the last six
months or so there have been some

;~~;:~~;;,~~~at~~~ c~~~Y t'&amp;.,"rt:;'~

resources."

pleased that some of the' most
prominent figures Involved In this
renewed discussion and debate will be

To answer some of these questions,

!.~e,~~~r~d~~~fec~~~e"~e~u~:~~Pn~

""r~~ro~~~r'~~;~~l:::.c;,ec;

upon both Internal and external policies

will be
as follows: There will bs three panel

ft~~~r.1h~ys~r7~a~J7t ~~1~~ l~~~::~

array of China scholars, some who have
resld.ed In China for years, and others
who have been contrlbutin·g tb the '
building of friendship bst-n the
American and the Chll)888 peoples." •
Mong and Nagarajan say.
The series Is being or.ganlzed by the
China Study Group and the Buffalo
Chepter of U.S.·Chlna Peoples Friendship Assoc:latlon, a number of SA and
GSA organizations and academic
departments. Specific lecture topl~a
and speakers forth is semester are:

~c~s~~t?shoeu~h f~~"fl:.:wp0a~~~ ~~

foc:us on the analysis an,ll apl"aisal of
the political and mllltary aspects of
U.S. Involvement in the war; the second
will focus on the legal and moral
questions raised by the war; and the
third will deal with th~ consequences of
U.S. involvement and the lessons for
· the future. Each panel wUI begin with a
»45 minute address, followed by
about an hoor of roundtable discussion
among the panel participants, and then
will be opaned to the audience for
questions or brief comments.

Panelloto ·
Panel participants Include Cox,
Slater, and Terry Nardin of the
Department ol Pollt~cal Science · here

~~;~e~~~~::,~uA~~..~~~~'presldent
of the National Defense University:
General Gard has a Ph.D. from Harvard
In government, has served In Vietnam In
a command position, and has published
articles on American foreign policy and
civil-military relations in a number of

pr~~~r.:'i,!g,.umGal.!nter Lewy of the
Unl-sity of Massachusetts, author of
a recent book, Amer/cs In Vielllsm, that
has already attracted national notice
and Is likely to become the focus of a

:'e:,ba~~~enal, Institute for Polley
Studies, Washington, D.C. Dr. Rawnal
served In a high pollcy-nwdng poaltion
In the Department of Defense In the
1960'&amp;, and since has written extenaiM· lY on the VIetnam war and Ita
Implications for U.S. foreign pottey. His
moet recent book, Never Again:
Leaming from America's Foreign Policy
Fallu,..a, Ia about to be pubtlehed.
•Robert Tucker, !"Ofesoor of In,.-.
national relations at Johns Hopkins
Unl-aity. Tucker Ia widely recognized
as one of the perhaps two or three most
distinguished scholars In the country In
the general area of ArAerlcsn foreign
policy He not only ' has written
numerOUS scholerty boOks and ertlclaa,
but aJeo a number of highly provocellve
lrtkllaa for the lnforined DUbllc In
joumala auch as the New Ytirlr
CommfJIIlar;, and foreign Affairs.
•Michael Walzer, profeasor of gov·
""""""' and ooc:lal retattona, Harvard
!hll..,.lty. Prof- Walzer has
-po~ 111 1Med aJCtenoiveiY tn DOiltlcal
phitoeoPhY including a . - . l book,
Juat and Ui./uat Wars. thai airelldy Ilea
t.en recognlz8d .. one of the moet
and etagantly..-gued wor1&lt;a
08

·nm•,

'::C

In ~terence
foltowa:

acMdule

Ia

as

Panel 1: Political &amp; Military Objectl•es:
What Old We Seek To Accompll.sh?
Paper: Guenter Lewy; Discussants:
Gard, Ravena!, Slater, Tucker, Walzer;
•
Moderator: Richard Cox.
Time and Place: September 29, 11
a.m., Woldman Auditorium, Norton
Hall (Amherst Campus).
Panel 2: Law, Morality, and the War In
Vietnam
Paper: Michael Walzer; -lllacussants:
Cox, Gard, Lewy, Nardin, Ravena! ,
Tucker; Moderaton Jerome Slater.
Time and Place: September 29, 3
p.m., Wold man Auditorium, Norton

Hall (Amherst Campus) .
Panel 3: The Lessons of Vietnam:
Wllere Old We Go Wrong, and Where Do
We Go From Here?
Paper: Earl Ravena!; Discussants:
Gard, Lewy, Slater, Tucker, Walzer;
Moderator: Richard Cox. ·
Time and rtace: September 30, 10
a.m., Woldman Auditorium, Norton
Hall (Amherst Campus).
Dr. Laura MacLachlan has been

~"u"atech~:J::;so~C!~r~mr~t ~~

School of Nursing for a three-y""'
period.

New study of mumps supports
'f indings of UlB epidemiologist
A U/B apldemfole&gt;alst whose r&amp;-.:h linking juvenile iJiabstee with the
mumpo •trua caused controversy three
v-s ago, says a report taaued by other
-""'"last week Ia consistent with
his findings .
Dr. Harry A. Sultz, profeaoor of soc:lal
and pnsventlve medicine, noted In 1875
a cyclic pattern In the Incidence of
childhood diabetes which reaembled
that of mumpa. He also observed there
w• a t " ' - to four-year time lapse
peaks of mumps Infection and
onHI olthe diabetes.
This - ' e d that the mumps Ylrua
peralata . fn the lneulin-productng
piiiiCI.a 1ona alter cttnctal aymptoma
of mumpe dlaapp118f8. Action of the
lingering vtrvt, Sullz contended, 111tera
lnauiJn.tlroduclng cella. Thta cau- the
bodY to produce antlbodlaa to deetroy
them, halting tnaullrtp!Oductton.

=.=-..o:.:..:=:.~· ._
EMEAITVS NEWS

.l'lluNdlty, . . . . . . . . Jt. 2 .......
......... Trio ........ (plano, olllo;

.......,.AI.......

Last week, a team of ..-.:hera
reported In the New England Journal of
Medicine that antllloilleS •nat the
lnaulln'il(Oduclng cella ~ found In
youngatere who had diabetl!!' rnetlllua.
The sclentlata from the Unlverelty of
Chicago, North_,ern Unl..,.lty, and
the University of Mlasourt, aald S2 per
cent -of lnaulln·t- younOatere wtth
the diabetes hed theea antlbodlee
present In circulation.
.
"The time lapse repor1lld three y-.
~ bet-. expoeure to the live
mumps Ylrua and onaet of diabetes
mellltuo Ia consistent with the length of
time it would 1. . tor an .utotmmune
reeponM to occur, auell •
that
deecribed by thee8 aclentlata.'' Or.·
Sultz potnta out.
tt'a also poeatble he ailda that thlf
patient'• failure to eliminate the •lnla Ia
-'tcaltr delennlnll!, tor only a

=~: =-~.=r-..::

:::

~-:-~~ 11ve wua c~Mop

"EpldemiQioglcal cilia provide
· - to llltiilectld ..... - e l l - 8lld lhllr ,_... - . "
Sultl noma, "but 80IId ..,..._ -

..,.! .::·~~,.P-:.··.= =•'=·!" .,......._,,
.....,.,

eua11 •

In

1o~P~~::~i~!·h?n 'tf:lf::~llnJ,;:,

Hinton, American technician who ·has
llved In China since 1948, preaantly
working at the Red Star Commune just
outside Peking.
October (dste to be set): "China,
Africa and the wortd (China's Inter- •
national policy)," Susan Warren, author
of "C~Ina'a Voice In the United
Nations," "The Real Tibet," "Taiwan.''
"China Trade Facta," "The China
Debate," and olhera.
November 6: ''Current. Political
Developments In Chi!ll. • OM Burstein,
editor of "The c.lt" Md . - . t Ylaltor to
China and Karnpuct.. (Cambodia).
Lectures arranged for the next
semester are "Education, Science .nd
Technology In China.'' "Meo'a Philosophy and the a.-ton of MOCIMID8lld H ti9n In China,•
Righta In China." "China: l'rom Under·

"'*'-

=-~=t J.:"-:.: :.C,4:':i~

"F...._,.

China." Speakera wtll be William
Prof. K.T.
Hinton, author of
Fan of YorkUnlveralty, Prof. VIOtorU ol
Stanford, Prof. Victor Slclel of Albeit
Elnoteln Medic.! ColliDe, 8lld otllere.
All ....,.. wilt take p...... II 8 p.m. Jn
148 Dlefendol1.

Me,d students .
honor,MD's

Two phyolclana and a aurglcalauPIIIY
company h... _ , hotlot.s by ·lhil
local chapter of the Stuelant National
Medical AIIIOCiillon, 8CCOrdlng 1o John
DeBerry,thechepter prealdarlt.
Dr. Winford Quick, clinic.! Instructor
of family medicine; .nCI Dr. werner K,

=

=.r~
..moe Ing,h=:f'V«
the edolcetlon ol

outstanding

medical atuderlll.
SherldeD Surglolll Inc., 4525 Beller
...... llcanoi*l
~
otgllllaiiOn
for conamanltY I
I lor their
aUDI)ort of lhe IINMA 8lld IIIII In- City
Well tte.lth Clnllr II 486 WMhlngton
St.

�/

I

~21.1m

·ti

Hey, Chick,. you wanna 'make-out'?
If -

With' . thick foreign

-IIPIJI'OIIChe8 yo~~tn a CMtpue
h81hny or on an et-or and
lnqulrea II you're "homy,'' don't be
dlllfNIY8d.
.

That "wlld and crezy guy" Ia nkely

Influence of drugs or alcohol," the
newcomers are advleed, the word
for It Is ''wasted. •

come close to being complete," the
handbook cautions. "For this

V.. "R~n::.:aft'~lnded

reason. you must remember never

A 'fag' at ...,. tum?.

to hesitate or be embarrassed about
asking for clarification of a meaning

"Slam: Insult e person ."
· "Slob: A lazy, messy person "
" Tum over a 116w leaf: adopt a
better course of conduct. " (After
usi ng all those sassy terms, one
might need to.)
.

Aa though compliers of the
glossary expect foreign students to
meet one at ..ery tum, th111e terms
lor J&gt;omosexuals are thoughtfully
provJded: a choice of •rag, •
"queer," or "gay."
"Americans haWI developed certain pecullarltles In their 8Wifyday
language, • the Introduction to the
glossary notes. " As a University
student, you are sure to encounter
certain colloquialisms which could
not have been predicted by ari

)Uat ptaetlclng uelng a Jllou.y of

"heepful slanfl ph.- contained
In thla ~· Foreign Student
HandboOk.
"HoiiiY." defined In the handbook
as "dealrlng sex; Ia but one of
1

=-~=~1 Y,~=ro~';!

("aexualty exclted'1.
That's cool ("pleasant or nice")

as 111 as It goes, but be wary If that

foreign student asks you If
you went to "make out." Since the

~':.%'~. ~".:'c~u"Wor~e~~koll~~

~-k~~~~~ .:•!. ~=~~~'l'r:

unique to a certain group of people
and are fo_rever changing."

Information on aomethlng," you
can't be sure whether you're being
Invited to .,puci&lt;Br-up or pull Ojll
some papera. Play It by ear.
So there11 be no mistake about
What they'111 being Invited to
.smoke, the glosaery provJdes new
forslgn students with lou!&lt; names
lor marijuana: Q1118S , pot, r...rer and
~Int. Dope Ia defined for them as
marijuana and other drugs." Acid

Commonuuge
•
The glossary Is Intended to "give
an ldaa of the more common of
u:,~~" ~ well '!: a.. ~:!,,~l
during a stay In .au&amp;!lo." Yet, for
some nsasoo, "snowed under'' Is
defined only as "having too much
work." For Buffalo, shouldn't a
more literal translation be offered?
"No list of this type can even

::=

~~~~~:" ~~~~~.t~·~riJ:Cf~!

1

0

~f;,s::r;, t~er~;h wO~uen~e

helping you bfcome familiar wit~
the oddities ol their language, and
many acqualhtances have begun

~~ : ~':u"!J~d~~~~~~

idiom."

' Gront

Some random examples of other
definitions · the editors· consider
.. usefuiMare:
"Bsstsrd: a man with a disagreeable personality."
·
"Bitch : to complain ; a woman
with an unplaasant personality."
"Chick; Broad: Young woman
(offensive terms to some women) ."
"Dr/va one up the wall: to make

on2D~:":i,r:~!l or upset."
" Fmsl&lt;: a person with long hair
and unusual clothing .•
"Gross: som~thlng crude, ~sual­
ly unpleasant ... Often something
to do with sex."
"Pusher: one who sells drugs."

person,

~k/nny-&lt;1/p: to swim In the nude.•

Academic jargon
For academic purposes, there's:
"Cum : pronounced' 'Kyum,' and
,refers to a person's cumulative
grade point average." Whew I
"Jock Course: Jl course In wh ich
It Is generally considered to be easy
to receive a good grade with a
minimum of work."
SQuore pai1CIIkea
Words to aat by are also
included: Bagel, brunch and cocktall are carefully defined; a
"hamburoer." Is revealed as "a
staple of most student diets; a fried
or broiled gr.ound beef pattie served
Ofl a bun ." A waffle Is a " square
pancake" with "square lndenlatlons. "

It loses something In translation .

CoJDputers: .U/B profs ~re. get~ing them.to 'think'

--By flllltCao11n

The electronic computer, one of the
moat .,_lng Inventions In modern

~=Jon~

t'::
thouft procesMs.

0

~:~Pate \u~:
•

~ect~:;t::!aco~~~~~~e~~'f~
lWIU •

able to mlllut declalons through
1

'~PNhel~~wo"::. 1n :CS::

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

ft'a hlppenlng here right now on a

............ toll

.·

For edlllple, there's 27-yaar-old Dr.
, _ R. Sllwuech, an assistant
proleaor In the Department of
P8ychology. Sllwuach, the deparl·
ment'a youngest f8Culty member, has
' - ' p.tlally auoceaful In ello&lt;ts to
convey the apok8n word to a computer

:ii:!'

end
Inget.
the
ment of Computer
llcience, Or. N olaaV. Flndlerand Dr.
sc-t C. Sbaplro 118 conducting

lndlpendent atudiea to demonstrate
that a computer - property 1ed - can
"uoo.atand" h111T1811 1111Ctlona and
come to logical concluslona.

..,title

An article by Flndler In a - t lssua
Am.bn telle about his
efforts ay.d to playing the
giiM of flve.c:anl draw polt8r, In which

ol

-a.

a~la~to~

one or more ..,.._, Stetlatlcal
lllfonMIIon In the- .ttcle Ia bMed on
the playing of 3,0011 handa.
" - . . . . ....., ..... the

Think lor yourull, 'C3PO'
The new thrust Is to make the
compu er- '1hlnk for Itself" after being
fed lnfoi'll;lation that sets the stage for
logical conclusions. In computer
parlance, such Implanted Information In
a specific prog...m Is sometimes calllfd
a .. semantic network."
The concept would seem to 1glve a

:fv':.as~p~t~.:\~~.~ ,!"!i&amp;~~~w'r~

friendly , talkative robot of "Star Wars."
sawusch wou ld like nothing better
than to "cacry on a conversation wlttva
computer, " but edmlts he's tlliYellng a
rocky roed.
The main stumbling block, he said, is
getting the computer to recognize
sooken words.
"In any giWin language,'' he mused,
" there are varlallons In speech
Inflections, such as pitch and loudness,
and variations In prom!nclation due to
cultural accents or speech l mpedl·
ments.
"Until such problems ara overcome,
· speech communication with a computer
would be limited to a relatively small
range of people."
:
C-A·T _ .
Meanwhile, sawuach has been able

~oc'::~~~~ ~";;"J'~~.bf~ ~~~~ l~

these Instances, the COil!PUier responds by typing out the spoken w-ord
or flashing It on a vldeo screen. It also
sends a "map" In some exparlmenta to
show ftow It recognized the word.
. Worda of two syllables or mQfll,
phraMS and complete sentences

~::~~~t~. ~.:J·4~~~~

inatanoe, Ia glbbertah to the machine,

Aid SawuaciiBut he'• far from dleoouraged and

e=..,- ::;:.:.~ue :t'~~"':l,'; 1~ ·
~~~.':-!' t0the8poken word.

llwiiM~~~~~J
wrttten words and numbsrl are now fed

Into comput. . With - l n g results.•
'l1len a.ne thla rtlatorlcal question:
team to recognize

;:. .::.'.::;:;{!'

Onoa OOfiiiiUI8ra recognize the
apollan word, Sawuech Aid, techloglolll ~ Will be bounda computerOIIIIIrotlacl "'IIOoe typewrtter" and

.... * - ' ~

that

~

aellatacallar.

llliellllone awtll:hboarda
to tl!e human wotce to

a vocabulary of 1,000 words or more Is

'"'Xl:::'~~~~~~~~gr~~networks

against several "others." Some. of the
players In the game are computer
programs and some are human
players seated at terminals IQ differentrooms.
•
Tho subjecl Is asked to determine
which of his opponents, sometimes
about seven, ·are human. Computer
programs ara adjusted so that t~alr
speed In making plays does not give
them away.
"The nssults of these 8XI&gt;8rlments are
not yet concluelve," Dr. Flndler stated,
" but It appewa that unless the subject
knows the decision-making mechan-

are "conceptsr that Identify Individuals,
actions, propositions, facts, beliefs,
relationships, hypothetical situations
and other categories that apply to the
field of logic.
In addition, Shapiro explained, the
network must contain a set of
deduction rules that, ~i:feally, laave no
room for er.ror. On the other hand, ·
semantic networks are modified as the
need arises.
A comprehensive traatise Is to be
published next year by Academic Prass
In New York City, . combining tha
experllse of both Shapiro and Flndler In
and man In a sta,tlstlcally significant
the technology of "artificial lntelll~
numberofcases."
"'
gence."
(See Reporter, August 3, for a more
Many research centers have delved
detailed account ol Flndlet'a work as
Into the ability of computers to make I published In the Scien tific American.)
decisions vla' selnantic networks, and
It loolce llkll fate ·
the game cW chess has become one of
the chief vehicles i n 1ransportlng
po~~. ~=~erorlt;,~l~e~r J:!:l~~
t&gt;uman Intelligence to the computer.
plottln~ war strategy, determining a
The poker study again
,
Flndler's application of poker es a
research tool, though, appears to be
computer appaara destined to take on at
unique.
least some or our " thinking .!!.
"The game of poker Is parllcularty
Shapiro cautions, however, thet
Interesting,", Flndlo( wrote In Scientific aome of the problems encountered In_
American, 'because It provides a
the quest for "artificial Intelligence"
realistic environment for decisionapp~,.!~ be in~~~'l,'!t~'!d. "are just
making Involving risk and uncertainty."
. He sees the uncertainties of the game
lmposslbMo write due to the
aa being relevant to such 11181-llfe
complexities Involved.
considerations as economic planning
"At the praent time, we don't Jcnow
political campaigning and war strategy:
for sure whether lt'a humanly possible
in that decisions must be made on the
~:"~~~ter
with everyday
basis of lmperlect Information.
.
• On the -other hand, he notes, chess
But he Ia equally certain that the
Is a game &lt;:&gt;f parlect Information''
present state of the .art will beCOme
because "all the olamon~ of pest and
mors refined • - a . continues.
prese~t situations are known to each
Chances are that "C3PO" would
player."
lllltl!8·
In poker, Flndler added, " players
must form assumption• about their
opponents' hands, a taak mede more
difficult by the major role bluffing playa
In the game."
In his research, Flndler takes Into
T~e--~nnnen 'a Club of the University
account the bluffing factor In prOQillmWill hold a memberalllp tea, Saturday,
mlng the computer to outwit human
September 23, !rom 2-4 p.m. In the
opponents. It even comes down to the
Faculty Club, Herriman Library.
type of bluffing that might be
At 2:15 p.m., Mra. Robert L . Ketter
employed, such as OWir...,phuizlng a
will give a welcoming address, to be
given hand to win a single game by
followed
by announcements and a shorl
Inducing opponents to drop out or
business seealon.
under-representing a strong hand to
At 2:45 p.m ., members will have the
keep. the other players In the game.
opportunity to algn up for one or mors
In carrying out the expartmenta
~~~;tlvltlea groups. The grour,s cover a
Flndler and a group of hie atudenta ua8
wide range of Interests, Inc udlng arls
expartenced players who 118 paid a fee
and cralts, French, gourmet cooking,
for !*llclpatlng. The fee Ia "bet" so
hor:oebaclc rldlng, skllng, needlework,
players will face "a real financial risk "
and antiques.
He fur1her noted that permlolon io
Mrs. l,pna Aflendoerfer Is hospitality
carry out the gambllng-lllnl experiments
chairman for Saturday's ...,t; Mrs.
Obtatn.il from pollee and the
Kathy Feliciano Ia membership chair·
ethlca oommlttee.
man of the Club; and Mrs. JMR Jain Is
actlvtttee chairman.
................?
The Club wHI hotel III!Oiher prognom
Generally, -=II of tha cornputer'e
on October 18 and 1a planning Its
hClppOIWtla II Raled at a
annual minimarket , Saturday, Novem·
computer terminal and fa aaQcl to ptey
bsr4.

~'J'." ,c:; ~:rr:.£'i~Y.:-:::.~!':.~"~::g~,::

0,:

:?t~: ~It =r'lt ~.:a~ v~\:

Women's Club
plans tea

unt-,·e

�I

F Illest
Five INindo, lrM beer and fine weather combiMd to
produce a mellow Failfeot for SA and UUAB at the
Squire Fountain on Main StrMt last Friday. The
plclurestellthe otory.

�........

,/o

Soplembof21, 1871

Cra_zyMel
Mel ~ flta right In at the Institute
for the Yry Verr ,._.ou• In 'High
Anxiety,' UUAB'I Soturdoy.Sundioy
film.
·

CALE DAR

County Hlstor1t:al Society. 8 p.m. 5ponsonld by
-Study I Buffalo.

CA~~emalc:e

lhurscl&amp;y - 2.
~INIWIICNEPHROLOGYI
-~-..D-. Fnoidyn
G. Knox. Mora
~~of PhysIology end lliophyejco. 108 Shennlwl. 4 p.m.
COI!eo,.. be at 3:45 p.m. Sponaaed
by~all'tlyololagy. Medicine, and

F...-.

Phwmocologyend~ -

-.FlCTlON Fli.IIS'
Tile RIM; Tile Plow Tllat .,_tho Ptelna;
Tho City. 148 Olofllf)dorf. 7 p.m. Sponsored
by lho Cenlor lor Media Sludy.

---nUUABFIUI'

aa..t e,.. (Young,

19771. Conference The- Cell 636·2919 tor show limes.

olno, -

Kael"lhe moot..,.,.
tionlly occuraiO - 80 moot frlghler*lg meMo llboul Alnetiawlpriocna- , __.
"Shor1 Eyes" Ia lhe .prison l8m1 for a.l

-

- l h e - altho low among lnmaleo.

o1 a.u Gnte. 170 MFACC.
Elicotl 8 and 10 p.m. $1 for students: $1 .50
torot!Mn.
lmoglno Marty FoldmM and MK:I&gt;ael Yorlt as
.__,_.. twins and youve got 1ho of
1hls nonsense set in the French Foreign Legion .

CONCERT'
..
Cycle t .lullllord String
Qua- ~ Seaton Room, ~ Mualc
Hall 8 :30 p.m. $4 genenJI admission; $3,
facutty, staff, alurml with 1.0 .. senior citizens:

UUABflLM•
Short Ey.. (Robert M. Young, 19771. COn,.....,.. Theatre, SQu... C811636·2919 for show
limes. Admisslonclwgo.

$1 , S100oola.

--=. _

UUAB MIDNIGHT ALMS'
Night lund! (Amos Poe, 19751: Blank a....
---(Amos Poe, 19771. Caof"""""' Theatre,
Squire. Midrjght. Admission charge.
Tho defln;five •,...
spliced, unsynched , _ of lolalcloorientatigo."

·

SIM a..thowen Cyele t: Jullliard String Quar-

Saturday- 23
AElD HOCKEY'

UUABFilM'
High Anxiety (Mel a.-., 19771. Conference
Theatre,
636-2919
times.
AdRMssion clwgo.
Stars Mel a.-.. Cloris ~.Bachman and Harvey
Korman . There's laughs galore In store f()( Hitchcock bulls end comedy tans alike In this rnedcap
craziless set in a most pectJiis" private asylum,
the Psycho-Neurotic Jnstitute for the Very, Very

- -Call

_

FOOTliALl'

uta ·...

~·· , _ , - l.eltet-.EnYtroriQuollly "' IJfe
_.....,_D".
Cenlar. 123 Wlk8oon Quad,

-

-

-

- .. Brtng .... blch.

LECTURE DEIIONSTIIATION SERIES'
tnncNctlon 10 the Text Editor, Or. S. 0 .

Sponsored by 1ho
Focully of Educolonol Ouanti1allve Anal... ~- Thlo Ia 1ho oecond I n . -

......

--?
_. Edll..._....,. _A-,_
-OponiD--. FJMalclwge.

OIW.IICII.OOY - ·

-~

•

D-. Anthony

~ "' All

~

J.

• -· of rricroblology,
'-"-""ly
of South · - - Roam
~07,.510--12.-..
- - WNTINCI WOIIKIHOP'
Roam 2 o.t.ndort. 2 p .m. ~and ,.. be · ~ by Women 1n Man-

-'-

.

CIEOLOCIICAI.IICIEIICEII-·
Tile
y..,. of &amp;ah;

-42.0 RlclgH.a.
· """"'O3nlotlo
p.m. .......... Room

18,

-or no....,

. . . . OfJle&lt; . of ,_....having
euch •alolhl end tnnacaJs.

-

WIG~f

CIVLENi

~

-

T-.

D", E.Z.
vloit·
~- ~ 01 Clvl

.....---lng -

~U/8.104-. 3p.m.

An-IDIIo-,..beono\p

I'JIYIICII.OOY-.

...... - . D ".
-~--A­

.,~-

/lr. 5108 ,...,._lt4p.m.

- 4:15 p.m. COI!eo

---1'
11111·.
---·-1ar·7---.
.....
CIIIIIIIng.,.ty1ar--. ~---

-

.att.

-

~

They olmoot puled H oil last week; meybe
this ia the week.
~
Brockport, considered a jock schoclt, for some·
reeeon uoualy las an
Corne out and watch.
A speclol fealu'e of Sah.nlay'a game wit
be ., appeiWWlC8 by the Butfaio Jlts, the reoenlfy r&amp;-111)4ed ~tor the Buffalo Bills,
who wll perform in a benefit for the Western
New Yorlt Cllaptor of lhe MuoaJiar Dys1rophy

b e -. Far
· .,.. 838-31115 or 83&amp;-

Oil, 1110 - '
lllllllllllonlarnan 1 Ill$ 1

-'I!) p.m. '1

'"'show

Nen(ooa.

lniUCCeSSfl.j--.

UUAB MIDNIGHT AlMS'
Night lunc:h (Amos Poe, 197 5); Blank Goner8tion (Amos Poe, 1977). Conference Theatre,
Squire. Midnight - c h a r g e.

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

Forr. -213 Boldy. 12 '"""'·

""'

Bnx:kporl state. Rotary Field. 1:30

p.m.

Sunday-24

CONVEIISAT}ONS IN THE ARTS

- - r t z l n - p o et'llaflloP'"'-·

CoiMiar CMM (Chonnet81. 4 p.m. Rerun.

MEN'S BASEBAll'
u 18 .._ LeMoyne con- 1 - .
Peele Flekl. 1 p .m.

"";,~1170 MFACC, ~ 7 - 10 p.m.'

$1 ~fornon-f"!'P"Y""·

OVERGROUND ROAOSHOW ' 71'
Jenny Way, CC&gt;..&lt;lQy rod&lt; guitartsll-t,
Glen Wal-. folk sJnOer / Jnstn.men_.; and
Sbolllolcl, gUiartol. KattwlneComotlbeatre, Eli&lt;:olt. 8 p.m. Adrnlssian: $1 . ~

CACFIUI'
.lui R-ka d - · Geolo. 150 Farber.
8 and 10 p.m. $1 for students; $1.50 for olhenl.

.....,...

UUABFilM'
HlghAnxlaty(Met•s.-., 19771. Conference
~~caa 636-2919
times.

'"'show

Monday-25
MEN'S TENNIS'
U 18 YL Buffalo Sut.. Amherst Courts. 3
p.mr
PHARMACOlOGY ANO ~PEl/TICS.
VETERANS AllMNSTRATIOH HOSP!T AL
SEMINAR II
Drug Acetylation Proc~tnamlde 1nd Lupus.
llf. Marcus
proleSSO&lt; of pharma.
cology, Cornell. Room 803C VA Hospital. 4:30

-ber!J.

p.m.

tet Uve from Mtwy Sealon Room of KleW1ans
Music~- IWFg (88. 7 FMI. 8 :20 p.m.

U /8 .._ Potsdam Stato. Sweet Home High

IIIOWNIIAQ LUNCH'

tho Fone Arts Ouar1et, 0cto1&gt;er 26 and 27 ;
1ho ~ Quartet, No...ilber 8 ; and lhe Rowe
Quartet in the finatconcert on December 1.

UVE CONCERT BROADCAST

'School. 1 p.m.

Frld&amp;y-22

Each )1901' '!i"&lt;e 1955, U I B's Music Oepart·
ment has snsented 1ho I::Omplete catalog of
Ludwig van .BeelhoYen's String Quartets in a
seriesofsbtn&gt;ellals.
The five remalninO cycles, al to be pertooned
at 8 p.m.· in BUd Recital Hal at Main Sb'eet.
Wit fealu'e: The Rowe Qu....t. OCtober 1 3;

'

by College B.
Fnt in a aeries of fou' ewtninga of acqJStical music, ranging from mandolin to grand piano,

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Esther
lntervkt-...."5 Ham June ' Palk,
founder of vkli!o art. International~ (Channel
101. 6p.m.

Swl"'

FilMS'
Tho Rlnl&lt;; Eaoy 5 - Qolcf Ruoh (Chaplin!.

146 Oiefendotf. 7 p.m. Sponsored by the Center
for Media Study.
WOMEN'S VOLlEYBAll'
U1Bn.GeneaeoSt.te.Glar1&lt;Hall. 7p.m.
UUAB MONDAY NIGHT SERIES: ROCK ' N ROU
MOVII;S'
The T.A.M.I. (19851 ; Big TNT Show
(19661 . 170 MFACC. Ekolt. Cal636·2919100'
show times. A9e Two famed concetta.
T.A.IU. /eotures tho Beech Boys, the Ro!llng
Stones, Jan and o.-, Smokey Robln&amp;on and the

Mii'IIC:kta,andmore .
TNT llj)()(IS Ray Charies. Bo Oiddley, Joan
Baoz. the Byrd&amp;, etc.

Tuesday-26
MUSIC'

Voice Student Aecttal. Baird Recital HaA.

12:15p.m.
WOMEN'S TENNIS'
U 18ft. A"'-d. Amherst Cour\8. 4 p.m.
CONVERSATIONS IN TliE-AATS
EoiiMir- I n - poet Do11k1 lgnatow.
Co~M~arCable (Channel81 . 6:30p.m.

COLlEGE I F'llM'

~ Morocco (Joeef von St...-g, 19301- 170 .

MFACC, ~ - 7 p.m.
NON-FICTION FilM'
The P - and, tho land; And So They Llvo.
146 Diefendorf. 7 p.m . Sponsored by the Center
f()(MeciaStudy.

Weclnescl•y- 2 7
IIEN'IIWIEIIAU. •

n.

• U/8

~rockport Stele ( - ).

PMjfe Field. 1 p.m.

-...r-,_ .. .........,..Diolill

PHYSICS A - LECTURE'

c. Mallia, -

, . , _, Polytechnic
-ai-Yorlt,~~al~.

U I B. 282 ~ - 1:30-2:20 p.m.

GfOLOQijAI, IICIEIICEII-'
Cloology al!d Logal Alloln, Donald COates.
SUNY I Binghamton Room 18. 4240 Ridge Lea.
3p.m.

CHQIICALENGINE&amp;IING-RI
A "F_V_" d Fluid Tranoporl
TlloOugll
s. Ale-Stem.
~t of C-.cat EnglneeMg, Syrocuse
~ - 262~ . 3 :30p.m.

""""*-

IIEN'S - ·
U I 8 n. F - State. Amhersl Courts.

·,

3:30p.m

-~-V-Ciwtgo
To•a ......... -.-_,"""

a~. -J- ~. -COrporobl.
5
• • p.m. ~ In 50 AchHOO.
3 :45J).m.

�~ZI,It11

Senior'"- SCM~theskllogy (Meyer).
~

Purchasing, Unlve!&gt;ily l.lbrarie$,
encea; MusM:. Chemistry: •

Sci·

SenlorCior1&lt;Pun:haaaSG-7-Purchasing(2).
Senior Sf-~ ISG-8-&lt;:enln!ISit&gt;n!s.

Allll...n t - r y EnolPient, Arnll&lt;nt .

SG-&amp;-Ph,.-

--caahler~oi-Accoonts.

T-

Sr. Lab
SG-12-aotogical Sciences.
Campus Security ~ I SG-12-soc..ily I
Uni-Potk:e(S).
Nurse I SG-1 ~niverslty Heatth Service (2}.
E-.,.le Computer Opotator SCHO-Unl·
-Computing So!vices (3).
_. Sr. a.ctronk: Computer Opefator &amp;e;1._
Unlve&lt;sl1yc0mpuling_Services.
10 MONTH (NS) SEASONAL POSITIONS
Typist SG-3-PedOdonHcs 18 I 17 I 18·5 I 1 6 /
79).
Steno SG-.5-Medtcal School Business Office
(111/78·10 / 31 / 76). OMsionol~
Educalioo (4 111 78-1131179) . Microbiology
(6 1 1178·5 / 31 / 791.
.
Data Entry Machine Opanltor ~
ComputingServicesl111 1 78·1 0 / 31 / 78) .
• Cler1&lt; SG-3-Poslgnlduate Clinic (Dentistry)

(9 178-6/79) .
FACULTY

M£N'S SOCCER'
U18 n. Clnialus. Rota&lt;y FIOid. 4 p.m.

Notices

of !he wool&lt; of U I B staft member. John Nyquist.
M .S. in MedicS and Biologicalllustration.

Sr. A.ulat.nt I A.NOC18ta Ubfatian {Senior .
Serials Catsloge&lt;)-Cenlnll Tochnlcal So!vices·
Serials Oepartmen1 1 Unlve&lt;sl1y Ubnlries, F-8112 .
Aaalstant Prolnaor-Occupatlc:lna' Therapy,
F-8113.

PHARM.D.SBIINARI •
' To Trat or Not to TrMt . . . febrile
So1Dno. Elaine Ankelstein, l'twm.O. 248 COOke.

AOMISSIOpjS. RECORDS
1.0 . Cards wil continue to b8 issued and f
or _ , e d In 161 Hwriman between !he ho&lt;is
of noon and 8 p.m. on September 25 and 26.
~IS wishing only to validate !heir 1.0. Cards
may do ao in Hayes B.
•

MUSIC LIBRARY EXHIBIT

ucalioo~palionallhenopy,

5p.m.

.FILMS'
Tho COps; The -

The Strang Mon.

146 lliefendort. 7 p.m. Sponaored by lho Center
for Media su:ty.

GSA SENATE M£ET1NG'
First ~Meting at lho ye..-. 233 Squk-o. 7 p.m.
UUA8 wEDHESI)). Y NIGHT SEJUES:
IMMIGRANT I EMIGRANT DIRECTORS'

Rodtlea -(Ophulo, 1949).
s~~n Jameo Mason C1d Joan Bennen 1n a
melodrama abOut a worren 'Wiho has kled a
~ to protect her family and finds hentelf
in the cfutdles of • blackmaier.
lePIOiirl()phula. 1951).
Cllude Oouphln, -

DolrioUX. Simooe

Simon. Baed on ttna atones ol kMo and
vanilybyMou-1.

Conlorenoe-. SQuno. Cal636-29191or
show times. Free admission. ·

Students may resign from Fal1978 e&lt;xnes fn
Hayes B. Doring most ot 5eptember. !he OAR
Will be open from 9 a.m.-8 p .m., Monday through

1:.=·

~U ,

Y'""- -

VISITING SP£AKEM _ , . , . ,

S y - and

-..o ol

Q l y - - . Or Pllilips -

T-

· Oeplrtnent

~ICTIONFIUI'

Nau,. Ullll. 148 · 1 p.m. SponSOfedby lho CenWfor-S&gt;.Idy,
UUABALM•

PROFESSIONAL STAFF

---computerSdenoe, 8·8029 (PR·2).
Alllla1an1 to Dlrac1or (~or Business

Ps)dWetry. School at Manogement. EOC. Umlogy.
Cler1&lt; SG-3-Acc:ounts ~~11 A.ulatar.t ~~s &amp;

Center,
A - n t Olractcw Gf Admlplona IAaMiont
l);reClor lor Reglstralioo)-Admiosions &amp; Records.
B-803 1 (PR·2).

'

Mall •
(2) ••

=a:,~~

SUpply Clert&lt; SG-3-2929 Maia..Sl

Account CIMtl .. SG-6-Student Accounts,
Credii·Free Prog(am, Payroll. Accounts ~
(2) . Office of Studeot Acc:ounts

Senior

Typist

SG-7-lfniversily

Llbnwies·

~-

A C8fTll&gt;ir&gt;g 1rlp to VermOnt IS being planned

29 thn&gt;ugh October s . Open

lor -

Scllu-

to all. Stop In Room 7 Squk-o lialllor dotsis.
SKICLUB

sat

Club IS

nbw holdlno

Hs

annual - - drive. Office hour$ "" 9 / 27 .
9 / 2I!...C1d 9129 wil be 9 a.m.-9 p.m, In
Room 7. Squire Hal.

Derau uza.. (Klxouwa. 1&amp;75}. Confenmce
Theatre. Squire . Col636-2919 lor show times.

-clwge.

ISCM~try.

(3), Dean's Ollice-Ed. Studies. Educationat Sludiea (part·timel , Elementary &amp; Remedial ~
Education (2). Pll,.- Plant (Main) 12), Enginaer·

~niv~~-~=~r;rt..;..~:

apptica6ons lor gnWa!e studeot gnwrts.

SCHUSSIIEISTERS SKI CWI

Colt Surface

ol Bi&gt;togy. _ . . _ , . . _ ol
114 Hochsteftlr. 4 :15 p,m Coffee a1 4.

Technician

Clarttj Oeta E n t r y - Operaior)--soclotogy.
R-6035.

:=E:::~~Meyer)~~
B·"'1-".:""...!-~~~Engif-.)
~===~-==
~

for information.

CEll AIIOLECUI.NIBIOLOGY OIST1HGUISHED

F-8116.
Aaaoclate Profeseor Pharmllco6ogy &amp; lberepe_utiel and A.Aietant ProtMSOr Pedlabica-'

t.eboratoryTachnlela~.R-6033.

Typist SG-3-8iologlcal Sciences, tnduslrial
Engineering (part-time) , Physical Plant (Main) ,
&amp; Records (2). Campus Mai. Surgery
(Meyer), et&gt;Omioo-y, Chemical Engineering, Pur·
chasing (2). UniVersity LibnvieS-Healtt! Sciences

on

DROI4N CENTER
Hassled? Talk with us today at !he Orop-ln
Center. ()peR Monday-Friday. 10 am,-4 p.m. at
675 .....,._, (Main Sll and 104 Norton (Am·
hers!) , Atao open Monday evenings et 167
MFACC. Ellicott 5·9 p.m.

F-8115.
Ubrwtan (Asallntelllln!ry Loon t..ba-riM)-lod&lt;wood Memoriol t.Jbnlry·lntel'bery t..oao.

R-~tory

COMPET1TIIIECMLSERVICE

ATTENTlONGRAOUATESTUDENTS
Graduate Student AMellrch Gr~~nt appllc.
t1on1 are now avaiabte tt the GSA offiCe, 103
Talbert Hal . Gnln1ing level lor ll185le&lt; and PIID.
c:andKiates. up to $150 and $250 respeCtively.
Completed 8f)fllic8tions due by~. October
19, 1978 at 4:30p.m. My questionS, pleaSe
contao1tneGSAollice. 636-2960.
VotuntMn are needed to serve

F-8114.

Autatant Librarian (Asst. u,, for lnform&amp;tion
Oisseminatioo Sonllce)-+teallh Sciences t.Jbnlry.

RESEARCH

J0 b 5

K lr)lerested. ptoese callho GSA ollice; 636'2960

28

Fr.@def~Ck

ANistant Profeuor (onctor of Graduate Ed-

""'""*"""&lt;&amp;~. F-8117.

-·office.

~

Thursday -

Hen&lt;y V. Prince ,_,_

Fr1day . OARwilclooeal 4&lt;~p.m~ on5ept-

29.
•
SC:t-..e cards confimllng Fall 1978 registra·
tioos w11 be availalble in Hayes . B for students
who hiM! not yet p;ci&lt;ed lhem up.
located
The .mor~te
In Hayes c . ;s"""" Mondloy 1trough Fr1day from
9 a.m.·4:30p.m.
\

the
G.R.A,O. Research Coulci. Duties will inClude

PHYSICS. A~ LECTURE'
Sca11oring T - , and Ito Appllcatlona, Dan·
iel C. Mattis, Thomas Po1ts Professor. Poly18C11nlc
lnstib.rte of New
professor of
- Ph)'slcs •. U I B. 216 · 1:30-2;20 p.m.

,

The Royal Composers. Music Library, Bai"d
Hal , through September 30. All exN!);1 of books
from !he ooleclioo of !he t.Jbnlry wl!lch deal with
EuropeM royatty who were also composers I
performers. Includes scores and mamlsetipts

, A~- - . g epic at&gt;oot the struggles
of~ souls to ehor1 11&gt;a ~of S4befja

Exhibits .

W&lt;ll¥&gt;d{90Q

ARC&gt;ITECTURE ~

/

The ~

at

Dougtaa ~. -

...-,to\UIB Aaaociatef1rolossor-Huff.
. . on dlaptoy in lho ~ Hll lobby. CoOper
.... ~-lor-and
tedlnlqua. and- had • oneot lhe Comogio ..,_.,_ Scaife
Art Gale&lt;y. Pinalugh

-

man -

EIUifT _,ALO AIITIIn
£lgtlt ............

__

w_,.__

s.tmcu

_

~-

V.glniaEIIoott
- - · -Or1ol,
"""""""'v•una~-

Art_.,

.

a n d - - '!he-·--,,.ttlbdghl.

Knox

_Through~&amp;

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

HEALnt..-:D...aAIIY~

Academic Calendar
The Official Academic Calendar for the rest of 197!1'79 foll~s:
FIRST SEMESTER, 1878-711
Rosh Hashana Obslorvance
(no classes helclt
Classes Resumed at6 pm
Yom KippurObllerVance
(begins at&amp; pm- no evening classes)
.
Classes Res..,.ad at&amp;_pm
Thanksgiving Recess segins at Close of Classes
Classes Resumed
lnstruc1ion Ends at Close of Classes
Semester Examinations

SECOND SEMESTER

Instruction Bealne
WaSfllngton's Birthday -Observed Holldar,
·
Mld..s.n.ater Recess Begins at Close of C asses

Cia.- Rettumed

.

lnatructlon En$ at Close ot C ' Final Examinations
' COMMENCEIIIIIIT
"DIIrialonltl

--ta.

M. October2

T. October3
T. October 10

'~:~0::~22

M. NoveMber 27 F. December 15
s. December 16s. -December 23
M. January 15
M. Febi'Uary 19
S. Aprll7
M.April16

F. May11
S.May12S. May18

Sunday, May 20'
If authOrized, will be emonged.

�........SENATE

Septwnber21 . 1171

I'

Executive Committee ~
minutes for Sept~ 13
=•m'::. : ~r••' of Minutes of
6
The minutes of September 6, 1978 were
APPROVED as distributed.

19

ttem No. 2 Report of the President
•
The President was unable to be present.
Item No. 3 Report of the Ch•lrman
The Chairman , having attehded

the

~g}~~~Jial:ib:::tl~gwr?:te~h~u~~~~m~~

~ ~1e~~~~HO~~f~~eic~~~n~~~mm~it~
8

I

recommendations. Although unit reviewsare to be completed by the end of this
semester.. lltUe has been done. As presently
constituted, the CurTiculum Committee of
DUE Is unable to handle the mandated
review and will have to be expanded. The
Steering COmmittee charged to examine
logistical aspects of the implementation has
been appolnted and Is chaired . b~ Walter
Kunz.
The Chairman ,distributed the Annual
Reports of the Committee on Athletics and
the Facllltles Planning Committee and had

Books

What d~ou do when
a volume is racist or sexist?
Burn it or butt-out?
When Peggy

In, dlreclor of U/B's

~g.u~~~~vi~r:'c..ee~:.:r·..~'!" ~[.':~~9.
Everyone, Including her friends , seemed captivated by his novels, but this did
not pAIVent Nevin from holding an
, altogether contrary point of view .
Why? Nevin strongly objecled to the
")ypea" of women porlrayed · In
Lawrence's boOks. "Either they were
bltchee or submissive, good women"
Who submitted to a man's sexual
desires in an ..abandoned, enchanted
way." she explained. Obviously, Nevin
saw that Lawrence's deplctlcm of the
female was based on myth rather than
nssllty. Countless other readers, however, did not recognize the misrepresentation and were greatly Influenced by his works.
Nevin, along with Dr. Kay Martin,

re::;:~l t:~l~ti':lo~oer:h:~~t~~~=~

at a campus workshop sponsored by
the Schoor of Information and Ubrary
Studies and the New York library
Auoclation's Intellectual Freedom and
D•·e Process Committee. The purpose

~:..lh~~~:;':1~?i~e~~~r:,O!1~~u':~i~h~

ramifications of their censorship or
non-censorship by librarians.
.
According to Nevin, author Norman
Mailer believild that Lawrence, more
then any other wrJter, captured the
essence of the "eternal male on the
prowl" and, as might be exJ*:ted,
Mailer's writings also portray a
distorted eensa of womanhood.

...........old llud'

'

-~P~::~t~ls~,,;~~~, ~-~~:

"so pitiful" that she n-ly found
'*-If In tllllfll While &lt;Mdlng II.
Then, of COUIM, there Is Marabella
hlorJien'a The Total Wo,.n which
Nevlil clalma gr;e her a "gastric
re.:tlon." Aa NeVIn rMd ahort excerpts
• from the book eepec:lally one
Nferrlng to -u.llntercc~U~W as a way
to ~ up" e. hueband'a battery the -'lon hom the .Wienct ..ned

--ldMitlcel.
todlly

~
attn plan their ,._
around a "CindeNIIa m~· aaya Nevin.
They . . W81til!ll lor a' nee to reacua
Md aupport them lor
,... of their
llfta, • lnatud of planninG a t..wr.
baed on aall-rellanoa. lven with
· All.,.
--'lieto dl-.oroe
· happen
women
bel...,. Itcan
to
them
IIIII 11101*1 "to !!!" married and live

'-IIY-alt•.
felielp aplode . , _ female mylhe

IIIII oblllln a -

,...latk:

per8peC!Ive

=..=;~
_..,lit
A_,_.,.._,,
=.liMN/~=:=~~~~=

a.r ~-= booka aa Our
lite

tough," she WRs determiRed not to be
bitter. She suggested to the audience
that they also not lose their " sense of
humor" when attempting to correct a
racist/sexist sltuallon thai may exist In
their own libraries or worlds.
Martin spoke about .the dilemma ·
facing librarians today: do they selec1
books on their literary merit regardless
of their racist/sexist aspects, or do they
subJugate literary meilt to moral
criticism? Although Martin said she
cannot envision herself In the role of
censor, she would take a bock like Little
Bisek Ssmbo, off the library shelf,
especially In colleclions that did not
include a variety of, books depleting
blacks in a better ligh: . Martin recalled

~!n~'!a~~~~~~~k~:p!'\:ft~"'r.:::~

there were no blher storres about
blacks.
Unlike some critics who believe a
racist/sexist conspiracy exists In
children's literature, Marlin noted that
Bartlett Jones feels otherwise. She said
Jones feels more empirical evidence is
needed on the subject before conclusions can safely be drawn .
Flushing out the 'Isms'
If any questions of racism or sexism
In· children's literature should occur,
Martin suggested that librarians correspond with The .COuncil on Interracial
Books for Children and Foundation for'
Change. She seld the group Is
concerned with ." promoting positive
change In children's lllerature" and also
provides ~ check list on how to detect
the "Isms."
Responding to questions from the
audience, Marlin said she approves of·
chlldren'e literature Which ehows realistic characters confronting real life
situations. She also approves of
literature which depicts dJfferent types
of lifestyles, such as children living
with a divorced rent.

Job woes
awaltsome
college grads
About 21 par cent of the ooiiI!Qduatee ~ 1m and 1985 wlil
liava to eettle Jor jObe thai d not

· ~:lr ' : as::Jz.~rec11'c~
thl~week.

fcncaat!

lha-1~1on

ubllahed

1~

of Ita Cpatione/
Out/0011 tor Cot/Wia
eatl·
mataa t11et 10.1 million college
graiuatee In the 1878-8!5 partocl will be
vying tpr 7.7 million
In jobe
tredltlo'hally filled Ill'
uataa or

a. .-.

openiC

NqUtrtna a - - · thua

na about

2.7 million, o r : n cant of the total, to
eettle for ott.
The 81.8
'
thoae

ho-. "*""=" ..

,....... to . . . oocuPIIIona

- - . ..... orne.~

snr.=10....
---~
The

="".c.

and

.

NO.

~6~suft~~f:~S:rC:es~~:O~~~~c!ft'~nc~t~~:

for awarding discretionary salary Increases.
The ssue --was further discussed under

~p~~~:a'~:O~~·

:re~~h~B~;:~s:.81&lt;f.&gt;p1es

Pr!si~an:?~~~7~~~~:gr:~!: C::m~~~

tee-have been made. They are Hugh Yanllew
and Diane Jacobs (Micro-

l,';::~~logy)

anThe~~~~~a~~~~~~:!,ed1 ~he0=~on1 ~!
elections of Senators and assure that

r~:c~~fe~~r:~ .::~~g~n!~;!te~~~~
thls time; ~owever, the Issue will be
considered In future discussions concerning
committee ltructure.
Having unwittingly omitted the Secretary's Report from the dat's Agenda, the

~:~~unn°c~ r:7~~nD's~u~J~~m~;u~!

lmPiet of the SUNY Board of Trusteeo'
· actio n &amp;uspendtng classes durtng Ros'h ·
Hashanah and Yom Kippur followed with
unatffmous agreement that the Issue has
Important acaderillc Implications. The
Chairman will refer the matter to the
Calendar Committee and Segal, Farnsworth
and Blackhurst will draft a resolution for
consideration at the next FSEC meeting. ,
Item No. 4 Otht&lt; R - ' •: Charter of the
F.culty Senate
~
W. Greiner pro~sed two amendments to

~i~~:l g~~:r~oa ;~!~;t~r~~~f ~~~=~~

alignment of the powers and duties of the

~1f~~~~DSet~t=~~g!"~,~~~~U~~~t ~~~

,response to an Inquiry from the facufiy of
the School of Information and Library
Studies, the committee discussed Senate
representation for that faculty . KroU and
Greiner will examine the Issue and report at

~~: gG~l.L~.t~;:~~gih~*:.PS~~~~~~r~

~~:~1t;~ ~nY&gt;~~:o~~o~~h~ Ct~~rt~~~~~

and J. Blackhurst . It was ~OVEO that the
Charter be approved In modified form for
submission to the Faculty Senate at th"e
OCtober 10 meeting. The motion PASSED. Item No. 5 Comml"" Structure and
Nomll\lltlona
1. Feclllflas Pfenning CommlttH. Michel
and Hyman presented a alate of names for
nomination to the committee, and announced that J . Naylor has agreed to continue as
Chairman of the Committee for one 7tear

~!:W:e e~~~"~n!e~' ~~l!do~~cr_lnat ons
2. Educ.tlonal Polley &amp; Planning
CommftiH. The FSEC ACCEPTED Kuntz's

ro:~~~!rt~;~er!f~rad:,~t~1u:uc:lo:'t,a~

chairpersons of the educationally related
committees" and that the Facultr senate
Chairperson serve aa Chairman of the
committee . It was further AGREED that the
primary function of the EPP Committee be
to coordinate the Issues and efforts related

to ~~:~?s':'Pro~i~~~~~Smtnlstrauve Intern might furtliir act Is an effective
liaison between the EPP CommfttM anct the
office of the Vice President for Academic
Affairs. The suggestion was APPROVED .

.

.

ttam No. 8 Other Buafnetl
Dlacuss1on centered on criteria for
discretionary salary lncrsases.- It was
MOVED (Segal) and SECONOED (Trice) that

!!'i~hc~~~~~~~=s~~~!,~~!:td~~~ ~~s~::~

~~~r~~~~!a ~&gt; ~~~~tc~~ut'~~ ~h\:

criteria. The motion PASSED.
It was MOVED (Trtce) and SECONDED
(Garverick) that a committee be appointed to

~torb!t~~~~tfh~unc!jg t~~~i~~~~~~~

draft the resolution .
The msetlng adJourned at 6 :00p.m.

to be distributed at the October 10 meetfng.
The amendments were APPRO\'ED.
Dlscussion ~ of the Faculty ,Senate Chatter
focused on the size of the Senate and the

'

~~~v ,0~~~:~~~~~ ;~~~r~~\~f d~~,:.~
;~en~r~~t~.~i~~f::~·e.~~r~n

HOdgkinson will open
Higher Ed's _lecture series
dlr~~~ T~e H~p;~~~n'!;; 1~:fl~~\~~
~ffier~~enn ~ha,:"'R~~e~n~~~~n~i

"Seminara for Western New York's
Higher Educators," sponsored by the
U/B Department of Higher Education.
Hodgklnson, who ap~ here as
an Iconoclastic Fenton lecturer a few
years ago, used to be direclor of the
National Institute of Education, HEW. .
He will speak on "Cumont ltaues In
Hlfer Education," Friday, October 13,

!:.no~~~\;_sne

on campus to be
As In previous yeara, the sart)lnar

~~ ~=~ ": ~~~~: ~~e~
1

tlon,

Educational

~.:=~~~

0

11

Teatln~ Service,

-~-~ii

t:ic:
Student Outc:om.."
•Allred L. Moya, deputy oommlasloner for higher and. continuing
educatlon, U.S. Office of Education,
1"The Status of Continuing Education,"
Friday, March 111, 8 a.m., Canlslus
College.
•Gerald M. Goldhabar, aasoclate

~= ~~~=~=leatJ:mu~(!:

lion," Thur.day, ~Drtl 19, 2:30 p.m.,
Erie Community Collage North.
.
In the subject) wfll be rotated among ~ ' •Robert A. Aelcbley, vice president
_ , Weetern New York campu-.
for unlveralty relatlbna, Brown Unlver- •
Precise Information on room locations
ally, "A New Look .at Alumni
Ia usually not avallable until ehortly
Relations, " Friday, May 11, 8 a.m.,
before ..:h ~on .
·
D'Youvllle 'College.
The f8111alnder. of the 1978-79 sarles
Walter C. Hobbs and A. Weatley
will feature:
Rowland of the U/B Higher Education
•Joan S. Stark, "-"•' the School of
faculty are co-dlreclora of the M!111nar
Education; Unl..alty of Michigan,
sarlea. On the edvl~ committee .,.,
apeeldng o.n "Oonaumerl8m In Higher
Slater Mary Cllarlotte Barton, praaldMt,
Eclucatlon, Thureclay, November&amp;, at 2
D'Youvllle; Joaaph F. Bieron, dean, aria
p.m. at N~ Unl-.lty.
and aciancea1 Canlslue; Patrtcla Curtla,
•K8nneth E. Young~ldent, The
academic VIOII !nt~ldellt,
Council on Poe1aac0i
AccnclltaRobart R. HeeM ~ldent, The
lion (~ F!ld"'', Decilmbar 1!..._ 8
Chautauqua lnatitutlon; Rev. Cenw J.
ol V"'·~·· Hla topic: ·· •na
Leonarcl, C.M., cleen, Colleae Of Ntl
..._.
- - • Aocndltlng AQencand Bclencea, Nlagwa Onlverelty;
Robart A. PaMreorl, aaaoclatlon .tee
-.1a11n 0.
NaUonal
-'«&lt;ent lor -=ademlc alfalra, Buffalo

sarles (open to anyone with an Interest

o.men;

fi:e•

i15'

lnllnal.~ ~ol ~~~
on,• FtiCiar,
~

lmpleme~tatlon of the new. 1t was AGREEB
that the curTent officers of the Faculty
senate complete their two-year terms and
that the terms of appointment of Senators
will have to be adjusted to assure continuity
and conformance with the as-yeHo-be
approved Charter. Following a dlscu~s1 on of
the size of the Faculty Senate. ,.1. Blackhurst
agreed to prepare and propose an
amendment concerning thl s Issue for
consideration at the next FSEC m·eeung. l.

..._,

,

Lm., U/ •

~Mnu~~~~

Hoeplal;

and

Jeck

C.

Wat.on,

~ N~ Community College.

�'

he's unpretentious and· i!ldustrious
·can while he can .
Between work and school, Papa's
schedule is admittedly sometimes"hectic," but fortunately )le has an

~~:'~~r~;~gt~f~t~to'fr"Jmt~1 ,;ay,;

Amherst) , cooperative professors, and
a good boss. Papa relayed that TV-2
News Director Stewart Dan ' has
graciously "filled-in" for him during
particularly trying periods, like during
exams, while bls professors have
consented to let him take tests during
unscheduled times.
'

0

Pa~:"J',:~ ~~s o'lf~ed~t':e;\,~ c:1~~i.;

work short shrift. He also regrets not
having more time to spend _at Moot
Court competitions, especially since he
won best orallst last year in the
_ Desmond Appellate Advocacy Competl-

Tes~
Starting at ground zero, he )olned the
staff at WVPR, a commercial radio
station at the University. At 19 he
became the sports director, and at 20,
the news director. On to relatively

Mary Beth Spina
Edilorio!As3oclate.Hea1111Sclences

~~Tv ~!;::!,• ~po;"~f:'ect:.
~t\1-~Bfn ~~=Rie,d~hl~. ~7~eaJ

8

qton"'="=!. ~- ~\';: c!

01
..

•

• Plrpa II -..mlnad not
De Cluglll In 1he -

..

~--=- "f:'.hola~

-•·

No 'Image'

~n~~s.~f.. ;~;Y. ~np:;:~~t~~
lsn1t one, doesn't have one and doesn1
want one. Basically, he's a shy
Individual who likes to . "keep a low
profile" at school. Occasionally, students will talk sports with him or
mention th"t they've seen him on the
air, but that's just about all the
notoriety he gets or wants.
There are times, however, when
working in television definitely has Its
advantages. Not too long ago, while
cashing out at the pookstore, an
expensive law text was Inadvertently
not packaged with the rest of his
purchases. After discovering the
missing book, Papa went back to the

bookstore to reclaim It, but thought to
-himself '1hey'll oeve' believe me."
Luckily, _ one of the employees
recognized him during tile transaction
and had pul the book away for hlm.
As far as his friends' attitude toward
him, "nothing has changed" since he
got his break at WGR, but Papa admits
that his parents "get a charge" out of
hlsjob.
_
Would he leave Buffalo if he received

.
Am.ougll IIICiocl choiiiiiiiOf ......
may helP . . _ !Ia ~Jon · In
...,,.. lftd chtliiNn; W. nllt·a dellnlttM

measurement in nelllborns. Immediate-.
ly after birth , cholesterol levels In the
newborn may be higher then normally
expected for a varietY. of reasons, and
may not necessarrly Indicate the
presence of FH II.
Another kind of test
For this reason , Vladuti)l's test
concentrates on levels of betallpoprotein , which contain cholesterol,
rather 1 han on cholesterol levels
themselves. Even If elevated betallpoprotein levels are noted, though, family
follow-up and follow-up tests on the
infaQt are necessary to validate a
diagno~ls.

While usual blood cholesterol tests
use wet blood from the. Infant's
discarded umbilical cord, Vladutlu's
test determines levels of betalipoproteln from a spot of blood, usually taken
from a heel prick, and dried on filter
pa~;,. most states legally require ail
newborns be tested for another
condition, called PKU, by means of a
dried blood sample taken three days
after birth, Vladutiu believes the same
sample could be used for FH II

~:nti~f~;;~~~=r.ns~~.ylng use
Viadullu: who developed her test

~

~~~ t'f J~C:Ina r:~~onhl!n ~:~J:
1

nature, one. wou~d conclude he would.
But Buffalo holds a special place In the
heart of this sportscaster - his family
and friends are here, he just bought a
home, and he wants to inlsh school.
As Papa explains, It would have to be
• one heck of en offer'' to get him to
leave Buffalo now.

.'

for heart disease under ~udy

A test being developed at U/B and
Children's Hospital may pro.vlde an •
Inexpensive screening tool to identify
newborns wlth a relatively common,
as
hereditary disease which can lead to
premature heart attacks.
The&lt;lisease [familial hypercholestroand 11 p.m. news anchor.
lemla Type 11 (FH II) lis characterized by
defective or mlssrng cell receptors
• which permit too much cholesterol ' to
Alwaya a ·t-ttc'
accumulate in arteries and block blood
~r~,n~~~o ~l'w~~~dh~~ :~
flow to the heart . At least one In every
fonstic," but partly becluse of his size
500 u.s. Caucasians has a form of the.
(a stocky 5'8"), he never seriously
disease In which the trait Is Inherited
entertained the notion of making It as a
from one parent.
Heart attact&lt;s may occur lo these'
professional jock. Even while at
persons some 15-20 years earlier than
college, his Interest In Buffalo sports
would be considered nor;mal . One study
never waned. He had local papers sent
suggests thal one In every 20 males
to Cornell so he could keep abreast of
who suffer heart attacks before age 50
the local teams' latest defeats - uh,
have this form of the disease.
acorea.
The pragmatic side of Papa prevailed
Those Inheriting the trait from both
When he made hla decision to enter"law
parents INlY have fatal heart attacks as
school at tha University of Colorado in
early as IS-months-old .
Boulder. Now, firmly entrenched as a
tran.fer student in U/B's program, he
A test lormnaecrMnlng
IIIII haa no real intention of wor1dng as
Dr. Georgirene E. Vladutlu, a U/B
an attorney - at least not to the
research assistant professor of pediaforea.able lutura."Yat, he realizes that
trics, Is evaluating and refining a test
hi a degrw may one day come In handy. ~
she has detl!!loped which would be
In thla age of apeciallzatior\, ,_, In
feasible for mass Infant screening for
the eiectromedia, Papa could conceivthe condition.
·
ably use hie J.D. to do legal reporting,
Early Identification of such newborns
like netwcn newsmen Fred Graham or
would allow them to be put on a low
c.t S1ern. Strangely enough, some of
cholesterol, 1\lgh polyunaaturated fat
the blaaMt names In sports announcdiet. Some researchers lndlcale this can
Ing aTiO are epac!uates of top law
lead to normal cholesterol levels by the
SChools, tika the guru of sports
agel of one. Such a diet 1;188 no apparent
oommentatora, Howard CoMII, and
detrimental effects.
Don Crtqui . ·.
It has also been auggeeted that the
sooner the Infant Is placed on the dlet,
the
more beneficial the diet Is In
Secutttrlllallllal
controlling build-up of fatty deposits on
loloraOow, a taw degree can provide a
artery walls. "But," says !)r. Vladutlu,
C8flaln - n t of security to a peraon
" the long-term ef!locta of the reduced
lnvohad In the leiaVIsion Industry.
cholesterol diet on Infants with this
Often a raporter'a rtslng alar can sink II
condition Is not yat known."
Since no-n~llable, Inexpensive testa
which lend th&amp;mset- to mass
locik della not dlaW tile numberS. A cue
SCAI8fllng
of Infants have been
In point Ia the - t •premature
avattllble, moat ~·with the mlld.ratlrWnJenf' Of WIYB-TV'a Chuck Healy,
form Of the d l - - d'-QnoNd much
• -.an ~- who tlad been
later. This may not !like P'- until
wtlh tilt Rl!lop tor o..- two deOidea.
- e r o l ...... In tile blood ...
Olllllk dlcllhe UDIPIIM!* - he glaW
checl&lt;ed following a II-' attack, or the
aldlr.
.
indlotielal la .hoapltallzed lor olll.-

ollllllmllftOI'III-

tion.

under the direction of Dr. Rober1
Guthrie, the reSj!archer credited with
developing the PKU test, Is now also
comparing tests taken using dried cord
blood with another procedure which
determines cholesterol levels · In wet
blood.
her.COpllraoborajecttlarng wDithr. heCrhoarnlethsls p artuecokf,
9
Gl1
direc1or of the General Clinical •
Research Center, University of Clnclnnail; Dr. Tom Foley, Children's
Hospital/Pittsburg; and Dr. R. Redheendtan, U/B clinical Instructor In
medicine end pediatrics.
"If this new test, now In the
develollfT1ental stage, ls accurate In
ldentifylng..the true'FH II Infant, It could
be easily ·Incorporated Into hoepltals
with a minimum of expense," Vladutlu
says. As she pointe out, H'a -ler to
identify newborns at risk en muse
through hospital screening than tatwalt
until later attar 1-.lbfe artery

da;n~e ~ ~·

':/':.,.::!act

I

FH II

J'f:
.::t==

bei~
~=h~. the
researcher aeya hera Ia the
claaalfied as a ...,.ltlve to a aingle apot of dried, whole blood.

t~~:,~:: r.::.co=o~t=
Maternal~d Child

Health

eernce.

Latin American fellowships
available for doctoral students
ba
high.,~:~.='l'n ~~~-;: t~ :::'.:'.~:.':.
':~ o':.!·.C:
• To provide opportunltlee for scholara

candldatea must

Clrlbbean, the lnt•·Amerlcan Founda-

irn::o:l
the dleaertatlon.
Fellows .,. eelected by . a multJ.

ti~t~=~=~.r~
f::::tng

FelloWship Ia dealgned to
enable tlle Fellow to eludy tha c:tw~ge
proceea t~ affiliation wllll a hoet
country lnatltutton.
Doctoral and po~OIW fellowships.-. open 1o ~In the ttOCial
sctencaa and pof.atona with knowledae of LliUn A-'ca or the

:=:::·

c.rlbbeM. Appllclnla muat haw a
multldllciDIIIIIfY
Problem
·rillsiht lftclade
auall ..
~. ~ ealf"'!!llllllld
lllllerprl8e~·lon.
flld
nnl c:ndll.
to

:'~""' ,n:.10

.•

:.=~r.~
Stipends

enrolled In

team of

echol8rl -

tor -.c11

abroad _ ,
to country but - .
about S550 per month.
Reeewch will ba euppclr18d lor a
minimum of alx mantlle, Mel up to a.
maximum of twentr-lour I'IIOIIllta.
Appllcatlona fGmle may ba -....a
by wrH!nu to: "-'tlng Fellowllllp on

from oountty

SOcial CJMnaL lnW-Amartolln ~
110ft. 11111 lllllllon Boulennl, RoeaiJh,

·~......._.,l·
~­

..... ·
-~-=:"-·

�DOCUMENTS
Revised Search Procedure Guidelines
~C::·~

dates, who seem

Panel lor the Review of
s..at Procedures, established about five
_ . - · 11M reoently aubmltted updated
8nd revfled guldeHnea to assist hiring units
In their affrrmatlve action search proced....,.. Theae guidelines have"been reviewed
by the Academic cabinet and the VIce

papers, professional Journals and

fo.-n

were applied.
'.
Hlririg units need not restrict themselves
to search procedures llsted In the
Authorization t• Recruit Form but may
modify or go beyond them to achieve the
desired affirmative action results.
_

announcements7

-·

You will note that there has been added

~' ~~~il:e·~~~ ,:~;!~~h~~

~N~~::i·d~=~ who apply for the position.

IV. SEARCH PROCEDURE REPORTS

Authorization to Rocwlt Form (ATR)

ft;ci:~;:fn·~~~sS~~~1o 1~g~~e

Form prescribed for obtaining authority to
conduct the search .

should clarify the procedure ~ tor such

'*1:rd

possess the stipulated

=:~~rt~, ':f!e~~rn"~ ~~~u~rr.d'~~:!~

=::;,:ad ~t 'rh~u~~r1o:n: :i:.!.~

•

to

quanncatJons, tor eonslderat1on in ftlnng
tacully and professional staff vacancies.

Av:\\~~~~~J:.'!f! within the geograph ic area

like here to thank the Panel tor Its

~~po~an~u~,\~"J'"Po 'fnY~~~; ~~:

ot the search- who seem to have the
stipulated quallftcatlons for the position .

representation of women, minorities, and
handicapped persons in our Facu lty I Staff

Documentation

Instruments used In the search. These
include copies of advertisements , letters,
announcements, list of resources contact·
ed , dates of -telephone contacts and names
of persons contacted , dates and means of
follow-up contacts and names ot persons
contacted, notes detailing the responses to

renks.

~5u~ f~e" :1~~'ot ~~e s::~gill t~ !~J't~~~
1

1

8

0

source of the information.

Handicapped Person
Any person who (1) has a physical or
· mental Impairment which subatantially
· limits one or more major life activities, (2)
has a record of impairment, or "'{3) Is
regarded as having such an Impairment.
Mlnorltlee
United States citizens who are members

~'m~~n~oll~~~r~ca~'hl~~~a~ro~rs ~~a~~
8
~~v 6rt:~~~~-!m'!!~~~· P~~~rc"'Fsfa~de;~:
American .

Seerch Procedure Report

pr~~re:r~~;ri~ngfo~nltre=nyn ~~=

search.

Ill. SEARCH PROCEDURES
Reports of search procedures should
reflect such activities a~ postlngs, advertls·
1

:~tu-:,~?o~~~ ~~u~~1 1°na~f ~:~~ce~ratgur~~=~

activities as recruitment at conferences , and
contacts with professional acquaintances.
1

!~:.o~:el an"J60m~~eok:rvb~~u:V ~t1~~~ r~
Identity and recruit minority, women , and

rr:?N:~ ~~~:::~ f~.~g~,~~t~

units, or non·mlnortty and male candidates
for units with a predominance of minority
and female personnel. Examples of such
efforts are :
.

sec~~o~~e~t~rc~:~~reJh~~~~e~n:~~

the protected groups and the unit's use of
rosters In the affirmative action search.
• Contacts with appropriate Internal and
0

~:~~~~~ a~i~~~~Yoth':~~~~~ o?~:~t,:l
~,;!~:~es~~~~=n~~~;;':~ald;r~\~~

'" groups. Internal resources Include academic
departments and other units of~ ~he
Unlverelty. External resources include local,
state and natlonal organizations, such as

:g: .-:ddemup~~;.:~r.sServf~~s~~':,':~
!:h.~nt::; ar;.reo:= ~0 e4~~~~:~
uaoclated with the above types of
resourcae.

• Advertlaements

·

and I or

announce-

:;::"ts~:'cf-h ;::l~t:'st ;~~~-to= ·
l n - 1 1 should clearly ll!dlcate the

':,."e,.."~J:,': ~~=!..:~~~~ ':ro~":J
~ attemptl
-

by·the hlr1ng unit to
U!&gt;-to-&lt;lale "availability pool" lnlor-

nlllllon &amp;lid, Importantly, attempts to uee
the ..,_lon to ad1lance the al(lrmatlve

action--

.
of actlw commtttees
within the hiring · unit to P(ovlde the
•lrwolvement

=~ ~J:.Ians:ll~&gt;e..MPI~~~~~
...,.,pie, may be aided
Aftinutlve

~

the

Action I Human

ot:Pce of

Resources '

The hiring unit must complete each Item
In the SPA. Brief explanatory comments on

Section A.

correspond·

1

Specific Atflrmatire Action Procedures
undettalcen
Entries should be briefly enumerated, and
documentation of each activity should be
appended.
Documentation should include:
A copy of each published advertisement,
announcement, etc . ...
A copy of the Professional Vacancy
Announcmnent that the Personnel Department routinttly circulates for hiring units

relue:in~ ~f ~sns~s~:~~~~hn:h~o~'::~~~·n="

dence.

ft the same correspondence Is sent

~o,,n;,o;,v tt~;~g~r~:~~~c!'hf~~to~:sc:~t S.n~

necessary.
Brief not~

detailing

the

following

~~~:~ionc~nta~~~rd n~m~;legpone r=~~

contacted, date the Contact was maJ:: and
the response .
~
0

ln~~~lnt ~:J ~gr~~~ro;.~~nc~n °~~~~~

mendatlons of a speclfic candidate (s), a
suggested source of candldafes, etc.
Responses to each follow-up effort should
be noted on the instrument.

r:vi~Yby n!~~n~t~~san~'za~~~~~!d'::11~
rages. and unlvEtrsltles, an9 other sourceswith - documented Information s~owlng
whether the individuals were contacted-, how
0

th~~=r:re;grr~~~o~~~~::!~n~:S~~tS:rina-

uon Illustrating any extraordinary afflrtJlatlve action procedures used at conferences,
through professional societies, through
campus resources, etc. - with notes as
delineated in 4 above.

Section B.
r
Criteria used In selection of candidate.
Criteria

for

the

position

~f:~~cal~nJ~~~n3o

W!t

sho·uJd

be

thqeu;,,r~tl:~~

sought.
• Any varJation from the criteria stated In
the ATR should be fully explained.

Section C.

_

-

~

Comparison ot minority and women
eppiiCllnts with others in the applicants'

pool should be detailed. The suitability of
each Individual minority
woman and
handicapped candidate seriously consider·
ad must be explained.
_
Hiring units are reminded to explain the
dlsposlUon of the appllcatlori ot each
minority, woman, or handicapped candidate
not chosen - when a member of another

p:o~a~d~~~fl~~l c~o':rectrrJ! r~~~me~;

Chancellor Boyer on February 14, 1974 :
..While It Is unlikely that each successful
search would yield the same tjoc·umentatlon
of effort, It seems appropr1ate to expect that

~~~~t e~:;~:8wo~~d I~ ;o~~~~~ve;:;':

ment or such documems as : 1) letters of

!;;~':Jc'Ys, ·~?ac:~~':,~"~~~~. ~rofer:'~~~~~

asaoclatlons, -minority groups, women's
groups, and the like; 2) advertisements In
professional JoumaJs, newspapers and

minority papero; 3) lottefll to specific

Individuals referred by any source or
received by the University from those

:~~~~~~':: ~~, r~~~:w~' ~l~rvi~1~oAr;

persona and women ; 5) letterw offering

~!!~::algo~~~~~!,Y,~~~.~ f:~ :?~~~
=~:s, a~~ve~:n~~nt~~ ~~~rr.:,~~~ l~

interviews, interYiews, lnvltatlons to accept
a posWon; 7) sound evidence that the
background or qualifications of mlnorjty
perwona and wom'n who were considered
was Inadequate, tncludlnKK: but not limfted

~~U:rat!sact~~s

requ,n:~ ,:~~~

Development, Pa"""""'l Department and
dlvlolonal alflrmattve action commit-.
w.. etatemento deocrlblov the affirm•
tift action without ..,pportlov
- i o n dO not lllllflce. Nor- the
Panel
the afltrmathe action to be Mtloua II Ia conducted by
or by admlnletrltlve - - t s
~Y • - In the unit's
hlrl=dect~
all '
faculty

=w.'l" ~'lc~.ba~~g~~t"di.:' n!~~il:b~~

=:.:.-.. ..... and=.

not the avallabfllty pooL (Refer to
&lt;Winltlons.) II any of tho th,... protected

can-

--not
:"mr-

-t·=

~itlons
...- ~-toct~":.~
-'* tO ~I
lllilf ~~~~ Pfl4
tn tltilllllone a IOCII

•pec'-lly

.,_ not

fiiQIIoa -lllle
. . .-, . _the - " " "not
tor
- - . - a hiring unit
. _ _ . . . - ....... 1.

...... ll--.
..
.......
,..,..--lor

~~.

-

CIIII'dtnad

illlnniiiM- . . . - . .

:

r=~r=c~~e~~f~~~d~u:n~ut~

required; and 8) aound evidence that the
1

evidence, promlaea a performance superior
to the olher app11cants considered for the

position."

SoctlonD •
This MCtlon refers to the applicantS' pool,

. ='r.
~-~t~~y~::,a.,p.l;.;
dn&gt;uP

-

rmJat be provided.

·

I the"";~= =~~~~:o~~~·~
Pflntad - a t the top of -one.
The complated SPR -~ be algned by the

V. REVIEW PROCESS
After the SPA is signed by the authorized

~~:s~r:W•ir!• ~~~~1t~~:gr~n~ ~~:f~~:

~:r~~~~~lari:f;~rv~~=~io t~ePa~!:~~

an entry-is mlssln.g and not

ex~lalned ,

the

~~~ m:~R~ ~~~m;:s!o 11~: ';~r:=~7~g u~i~

reviewed by the Panel . The review consists

ol1. An examination of each entry In the

SPRo

•

·

ref~8c~ ~:~;us~~~~~!th:m~!n:e~~~lc!~search. The Panel also seeks to understand
the relations betweeo the outlined search
plans originally specified In the ATR and the

~{·~hr:;:;:,~!rb~ft~d~oct~Pa'~d's,,~~:fn~~~

tlve action efforts il the search does not
produce the desired results . The Panel Is
under no obligation to accept the search
ptans described In the ATA even If they were
carried out.
•
_

~~~~J::h:~11~a~l~~o~~~:st!:!~~uth:

~anel may taKe Into consideration the turing
unit's performance on previous submis~
slons, as well as other factors , such as the
presence of an active Internal affirmative
action committee, the size of theJalent pool "'
for thit pertinent di scipline or fletd, the
unit's performance in recrujtlng women and
handicapped persons, etc.
3. Aftet the discussion, the Panet reaches
a decision which may be to :
ad~lt~=~~~de~~roval .. with or without
b) Recommend that approval be withheld
- c}'~:~.;~:n~"t~:f':cif~~be.deterred usually In cases where an Important aspect

~~~~h:s ~ert-~~~:~~wY:~~ =r~~

lion, or where affirmative actloo · search
procedures have been Insufficiently documented.
d) Refuse to review an SPA - when a
sltlon does not fall within the Panel's...
risdlctlon or when a commitment to hire
as already been made.

~

SP~ ~~~'~'o:~t/r~e ~~,::;'~::/~·. i~:
slgnatu~s) only Indicate that the SP~ has

·

been reviewed .
5. Within the 72-hour time limit for the ·
Panel's review, the SPA and the Panel 's
recommendation are transmitted to the

~~~~~~~~~n~~f~~~"v~~ vl:srJ:~!d:;~~o:e!

the search, he I she wllllistrlbute a copy ,of
theSPR to the following units: the Initiating department", the appropriate dean Of
director, the~ director of the Office of
Affirmative Action I Humen Resources 0&amp;velopment, and the manager of employment
In the Personnel Department.
6. Minutes of each AtYiew session are sent
to the President and the Executive Vice
President.

�zt,ten

.i

! i

.

Awards
U/B community group will salute
seven outstanding women
at Statler luncheon, October 18
'
Seven Western New Vorl&lt; women will
honored for outstanding service to
lr community and professions
ring the 1978 Community-University
ecognitlon Luncheon.
Sponsored by . the U/B Community
dvlsory Council, the luncheon will be
ld at noon, Wednesday, October 18,
the Golden Ballroom of the...Statler
llton. Charles M. Fogel, acting
eootlve vice president, will present

ta~o~s t~ ri'ien
.worpe1~ for achieve0

~rt~: nMaxi;:., :.'"Br~~d:~berg , . exe-

live director of Arts Development

B~~f~~~- Mary

L. Herman, com-

~~;'\Yel;~~~~.,"~~t~~so~ for New ·
Communications: {31adys K. Dre......./
pw, a public relations specialist Wt1?is
"rrently 'worl&lt;lng with Worthington
~mpressors, Inc.
.,..
Community SIIIYlce: Helen Urban, a
"tritlonlst who has been an active
mmunlty affairs volunteer.
EdUC&lt;~tlon: Sister Mary Charlotte
jarton, GNSH, president of D'¥ouv111e
• ~~!nment: l.1arle V. Rth dson,
h District Erie County legislator.
ProfHSions: Dr. Jaan Northcott ,
esearch chemist for Allied Chemical
~poratlon .

lranden'*ll
Mrs. Brandenberg has been executive
llrector of Arts Development Services,
~c . (ADS) since Its 1973 inception . A
nember of several arts boards and
iommlttees, she Is considered a
)(imary force behind the advancement
tf the arts In Buffalo.
A graduate of Wells College, Mrs.
'randenberg received her M.A. from
i:arnegie-Melion University and has
l"fVed as a lecturer at UIBand as a New
Iori&lt; State Cpu nell on ' the. Arts field
&amp;presentative.
Under her management and direction,
~rograms and services of ADS have

~;:~~ve~h t~ea~~~ ~ ~fn~f!l
1

ongagements, including both the
ecently-lr.stltuted Performlnp, Arts
toucher pr~ram and the 'Buffalo
iheatre Walls project which spoAsored
~ painting of outdoor murals on
tulldlnps In the downtown entertainen! district.
twman
Mrs. Herman hss worl&lt;ed for the New
11&lt; Telephone Company for 20 years.
er responsibilities have ranged from
slness office representative to
upervisor of ernr,loyment to communY relations spec allst.

~
l

~~.:rc:.n~ l?~1K=:."s~! !'.na";,~"Ja'i:

f Mercyhurst Seminary in Erie, Pa. and
· eens College In New Vorl&lt;.
The awards selection panel noted
at "The rn9jltion of her nllme In the
ew York Telephone Company or to
inclpat community leaders In the
~ion
enlists envious familiaritY,
ici:eptance and recognition, pius
peel for an ambitious 1&gt;8rsonallty."

~

-

Miss Dfewelow Ia currently worl&lt;ing
a public relations consultant for
ort!llng!on Compreaaors, Inc. Her.
auoclallon with Worthington,
nee 19n. represento a retufl1 to a

company where she worl&lt;ed for more
than 30 years.
In 1972, she became the first woman
public information officer for Erie
County and two years later the County's
first woman director of communlca·
lions. She has also besn active In a
number of United Way campaigns and
has received a series of communica·
l ions awards.
Her rise through one of Buffalo's

~u~f! r;s~;:! ~~r:~~~~~t~t~~n;

histo~c string of other "firsts." Associated with a manufacturer ~ heavy In-

~~s~b~:ri\~i~;;i~I~Y~~~t~d:~~~~n:!~t~

-

!':,",i;;~a~~e~~ ~h':P~~\·u~: t~:t;~~~
Department, the firs1 woman purchasing expedltor, the organization's first
woman coordinator of public relations·
and communications , and Its first
public affairs manager.
Urban
Mrs. Urban , presently a consultant
for the Nutrition Project of the Erie

~~~!Yf~d~\~ ~~f ~f~n2"~~~.;:~~~r:a~

lty College.
She received her B.S. from the University of Nebraska and an M.A. from
Columbia. Mrs. Urban has been an
active contributor to community service·

organizations, Including the Buffalo
Urban League, UNICEF, YWCA, Salvation Army, and the Council of
Churches. She Is also active i n the Kenmore United Methodist Church.
For many years she has structured a

profession , volunteer work and active
home management into that wh ich she
terms , the "good life .... Her commun ity

worl&lt; Includes such th ings as a sewing
class for Inner city women, theJluff alo
Hunger Task Force, cooking a church

?~,~~~'ii-~ !~~;~~~~~a;~;.,~~j~l,f~g~u-

Slater Mary Charlotte Barton
Sister Mary Charlotte Barton, the
13th President of O'Youvllle, was
appOinted to that post In 1968. For 20
years prior to that, she served as both
teacher and administrator.
She Is credited with bringing abour
several significant changes during her
tenure at O'Youvllle, including the
revision of the-college charter, shifting it
·from a totally women 's college to a
co-ediJcatlonal one.
.
Her humanitarian principles and
O'Youville have been synonymous for .

•Procedures
(lntm-12,coU}

VII. WAIVER OF AFFIRMATIVE
ACTION SEARCH

over a decade, the selection committee

noted . She was the second -woman
elected to the Board of Directors of the
Buffalo Area Chamber ot Commerce, is
a trustee of WNEO-TV, a Council
Trustee of the Buffalo Philharmonic and
a contributing member of th'e Landmarl&lt;
and Preservation Board, ,the Advisory
Committee on lntegr.ation in the BuffalO
Public Schools, the Planning and Pro-

Polley

• As previously explained, a full and open
affirmative action aearch must be condu~ed
In all hiring covered by theee guidelines.
However, hiring units 1'1\8)'" be confronted

with

circumstances

•

which

Theee
• Late reaignaUona that create a need to

SMreh.

fill a position quickly wlthoutldequate time
to conduct a full aearch.

~':,f' g~~~~o~~r:h~a'::~\~ !l'~,f~~

=· %.:

· ·Extended lllneao or deeth, c!Mtlng

slmllat needs.

Committee for 1 Community Improve-

•m,.;R::.~~:o
o~ ~W~
~-her

ments.

Rlcllardaon
Mrs. Richardson ls presently serving
her second term as 19th District Erie
County ~lslator. She Is a member of
the Ene and Niagara Counties-Regional
Planning Board, tile Economic Development Board and the Integrated Financial Managerneot lnforrnatlon System.
She received her bachelor's. from St.
Lawrence University, and taught social
.studies in the Hamburg echool.aystem
before being elected to the Legislature.
EdUC&lt;Itiohal legislation Is her forte.
Most recently she hss besn influential
In legislation limiting both taxes and
tha _.-ascalatlng costs of county
go_,ment.

ex=lonal

{~~~~% •.:C:~ncr~==

:;r.a'

with
own edmlnlatratlve
•.Situations w"- an-...~- upwon:t

~~llltlt~~-.1.::::"~ ~

Che~plcal Society, and . was the first
woman to serve as editor of the Section
journal, Double Bond.
A re-rch chemist, ehe has also

~; r,~~::~o,: t~e~~fl:t~

• New Vorl&lt; Chapter, and as vlcechairperl9.(l and 'chairperson of tha
Chernlst~lon; Science Technology
Division of the Special Llbnlrles Association.
Co-chairmen lor the awards luncheon
t.hls y-are Bernard F. Mulher,n, Mnlor
Northcoll
wee president ot tile Liberty- National
. Or. Northcott Joined the Research
and Developtnent Department of tha
Bank and T"'st Co., and Edger T. Orullard, president or Bafbar and Orulln,
National Aniline ~lvlalon of Allied
Inc.
Chemical Corporation In 1956. Slle Ia a
recognized expert In chemlcal ~ ·
The co-chairmen noted that the aeven
women were eelecWd ffOII\ allal of 129
InformatiOn siiiYlC811 and Ia author of
some 20 c:hemlcal end library eclanoe
~by a committee of communpubtlcllllona. .
_l t y T : n l : ' :
luncheon
Or. Northcott .-IYed her Ph.D. lfom
Ihe Uftl_.ily ol Sydney (A11111ralla).
are $8 and can bll obtained by oontactShe Ia a , _ Clleli!nan 01 tile Wealll3\.~. Office Of Public Allailw,
ern New Yorll Section o! tile Amerte.n

8::'te

action/ equal employment ~unity
go.to Cjlthe University.
·
Only tha ..._ldent or hlo tleolg- Ia
~ to waive t.lle alflrmld~ ,

-

.

1. Deona or directors wrtta • dum to th' appropriate vice ~
All:tueotlng tha waiver. Tile r.queot ahould
specify (e} tha name, Nnk, end cunwnl .
position of tile person lor whom tha

:;::::'a:

:n::-::M~re:l::S~~~l:-

- · lllld (c) tha reeeon(a} tile -

Ia
oought2. The-appropriate rice f)I'Miltent a
nocommendatlon on tha l'equeot forwerdatlle memorMdum to tha . . . _ _
- with commento explaining hla I lw

~3. Tile

..._,&amp;nt-

'

111e .-quest to tile
for edvlce on-~~ Ia luatltunder tile Un-y·o Afflrmldlve Actlcll
Polley.

--In

u.:-~~=gl!'l:~
Wilting.

a. The l'l8akllnt
1nlliMIIIa- hlrtnghlo
unn-ilion
through tile

~the
v~oe..-..

�~21,1178

CC: a notable undergraduate teaching effort
....... ..,a.-.........lo--....
~=·•••1111-

. . . . . --·-10

. . .·
.. ""-l
an T-*'8,"
Collogo,

............ _.-ln ...
. . . . . , . . . . . of

... - ,...,.. In Amerta8n
u~

-..·

.... ,

"I thl nk of myll81f as the mother of

=::.~~egr·;~:-.{&amp;:~

• of fillowa end the college'• fi,.t master.
In 1970, while. teaching genetics here,
PaJgen was one of a group of faculty
...0 otudents who organized an Earth
Day program. "It aroused such Intense
l n t - at the Uniwrslly, we felt ahould m• environmental studiM
available. The project started on an

::~~~·~~~so!:"~ ~.::: f~ :::

original group- were all from different
dlaclpllnes. Nobody was an environmentalist at that time. We began RCC
In order to t..:h basic Information
about the environment In as holisti c a
manner as we could."
RCC, one of 11 colleges, doee not
· offer degrees; the dozen or so of each
oemestet'a 250 students who major In
environmental studlee receive their
degraea from the Faculty of Social
Sciences and AdmlnlotralliMe rest
of RCC's students are mlq
In the
natural and social aclencea, nglish,
phli~hy, art; geography, nursing,

. ru~n

.~~~ ~fd ~~~ J,'~~:e

dlacrpYines Into a like-minded group Is
their appnsclatlon of and concern for the
environment.
.
Introductory, lntennedlate, and advanced lnterdlaclplinary courses on
environmentally related topics form the
RCC curriculum. Many are erose-listed
with academic departments and can be
used to satisfy distribution requirementa. Tholl8 not croaa-liated count
toward the electives necessary for
Qnllduatlon_ RCC has no staff of Its
own, and faculty .,. plucked from Just
about fNfK'J comer of the SUNY Buflalo
campu-. as well as from the
community. Practicing professionals,
such as lawyera, ara hIred to teach
appropriate coureea. The curriculum Is
controlled by an RCC faculty/student
committee and by the collage's faculty
.
curriculum committee.

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

"We pride ourselves on offering
,..l:l!o.oi-t:..Md courwa that touch on a
variety of fields," says Peter Gold,
RCC'a lntenll8, amiable acting master.
"Departmental oourwa .,. ~ narrowing. They pick a eiOQie aubjebt and
examine It In great detail. In an RCC
courae, or a cro...llated one. we
8XP!ora the material from many
dlff....,t angles. For lnatanoa, there ara

=~~,~~:-~~t~
IOCia1 l*'l!*lll.. or the Malth

MiliCI&amp;- Our energy

~help them
llldll*lllviiY In a tOially different
-.y." Enelgy,
the Environ- . lor one, cleala with the flow of
an.gy I~ the .,vlronll*lt and In

-

'"-·and

•=.cP.:.:.='Inog:-'c::'.;.,.~

=

.-gy Into ullblll

aupply and

::c::-lllo~&gt;111811t'
~.allact8

on enwt-t

-=:I~

••Ill!

~·a~ CIOI~IIated •.

··!.::/~=.!
to

Gold's o,.,;(-&lt;joor policy Is no mere
metaphor.
office and Its surroundIng rooms are a beehive of environmental activity: Murals are being painted
newslett6(s · proofed, demonstrations
loudly planned. 0,11tdoors he can't walk
20 feet without being waylaid. by a
student or colleague.
Gold Is particularly vigilant about
maintaining the Interdisciplinary aspect
of ·indlvidual· courses. He describes an
instanc.e where RCC's environmental
politics course, which Is cross-listed
with political 'SCience, was being taughr
by a professor "who knew politics
backwards and forwards, but didn't
include enough emphasis on environmental Issue$. The following semester 1
explai~ed to the graduate student who
came In to teach the course that
students had been complaining that it
was too easy, and that I wanted It to
becOme more sophisticated In the
environmental sense. It was done ...

an Interdisciplinary program you're
asking them for a contribution in a
sense - you depend on their goodwill.
·And - sooner or Later you run out of
goodwill. This fall we're planning a
graduate seminar In environmental
studies that Involves two biologists, a
geographer. a geologist, and a
biophysicist- ~II on overload ."

l!llnOII'S NOni: Tile - - NpOrt . .
.,
.............

eo~egtt·a bw1 of tt. nam..ake.
assigned to each college on the theory
that housing students · with common
Interests facilitates the formation of
strong, lasting friendships . To become
a residential " member," a student need
not enroll In any set number of courses
at that college; members are chosen

0

0

~fe1~~~1o~ 1n t~e

'co1\~~~

W:.fd"':he
Jepresents. Thus RGC members must
show a significant environmental
Interest and Involvement In out-of-class
activities.
Sanae of community

Students' extracurr:cular projects
reflect a strong sense of comm.u nlty
and a desire to bring abOut Improvement. The RCC IJ(Oup ~as worked on

;"";~ r~~~g ~rn,\~rf,:de~ l''~:f.;
County's air and water quality, and
studies of the physics, economics, and
politics of reprocessing radioactive
waste. They also take turns preparing

~~~\~~~~~7t,=~P::,.al:..~~e ~~~~1.::i

and members are
friends .

&amp;n~ouraged

to bri ng

sa;~n 1 ~11~rg~PI':e~~njr.~nj~~~':~~:.;;

of the col?eges, "It's Important to find
personal space where people with
similar Interests can get together and

:'t:"~r~l':'mm~~~~yeol~~.~ef~=~~t:

community connection, and students
really view themselves In terms of their
Identity wUh RCC. It's the partect

::re~~ a~~/:.=~efO:':;, o~'::!'?rad-

RCC students are referred to faculty,
In appropriate disciplines for guidance
on environmental questions that arise.

~':.'ntlns~~i':d anst~~~'l:'"'~Y..,dee:;~

dubious about the feasibility of an Army
Corps of Engln-s' proposal for

· ara:~~II~. ~~~~be 1~s~ru~~
0

active environmentalist!, Including
the curators of plants and vertebrates at
the Museum of Science, .a nuclear
energy expart, anclaclentls~t Roswell
Park cancer research center.

lnt~~~~n~s~'t pr::~: .!."u~tidti~'T
C-:r·;o':"'~;:::!!'::'..:':.'aJp:;,~~::

to learn to communicate with each
other, and then draw on their Individual
bacP of tricks to address problema nof -l(lg all the different approeches
Into one grand scheme, but examining
alternate approaches. In some lnterdlactptlllary subJects like biochemistry
or phplu the ~opment of
...."'.. 'etll-oGIIactousty
WOflcecl out. At R
lt'e knowing when
to look to diSCipline X or diScipline Y.
No atuderlt will become expart In four or
live different dlec!piiMS. He'll al-ys

~rs~rm.b~~~~.t~~~

Instructor say, 'I'm a biologist, but I'll ·
alao get an environmental lawyer to
chel with you.' This kind of learning

CP~ ~ra!:.sb,.~o~a:fa ~~!:; ,

of unity but a raapoctfor dl-.lty.''
. . . 01 cllllcultlea

....~,:~,a: tta':l'::l~~n.:r,

dlfflcultlea. "lntenllactplii'IIIIY lanl """"
, . . , . , _ , . I - t a LeaterMIIbratll,
poNtlcal actance proteuor and dlractor
of the Envlronlf*ttal Studlea Center, a_
gladuata lactllty. "When klda MWclt the
ttwy look -a1ng to

&amp;

... trncl ...... um..J~

- - - lilaAlao,
lftleRIIecl.....,....
. . .of
. -lburled.
In..,
............

111011

of

...

'-ally

~-a-3~~
I

His

Adds Lee Dryden, the master of
College H (Health Studies and Human
Services), " RCC enables undergraduates to perceive Interconnections
amo.tradltlonal ma}ors, something
that generally doesn t happen untfl
graduate school. From the faculty
viewpoint ; I !hink it's exciting to
interact with people you might never
otherwise talk to. I'm a phllosopher by
training, rubbing up against health
science people, both of us threatened
by the radical differences In our
backgrounds. But after that Initial
excitement wears off, an Interdisciplinary program·can suffer. You often 11ave
programs that glow like lighted
· matches but don't burn for very long ."

Focusing on a goal
Another of Gold's pet concerns Is- to ·
help students focus their learning on a
goal. "Students who come from a
-straight classroom major can't say what
they want to do. They're too

Rl~g~y ~~:"'::::~ been troubled by
rigidity In some quarters of the
University. The Recreation Department
will not cross-list RCC's outdoor skills
courses, "so we offer them, but they
don't count for gym credit ," says Peter

-

~;~g ~~ \~~~ ~~~~~~~n~su~~~~~

~~~dih·:~h~.:~r~~n~reo:~:.,~r'f~

I've learned to accomplish what I'd like?'
rather than, 'What do I do with my
degree?'"
To the dismay of several faculty,
there Is no procedure for keeping tabs
on graduates, so the long-term results
of an RCC education cannot be
evaluated. But there are Indications that
the program Is a success. Gold reports
that_ the mixture of disciplines with
environmental emphasis seems to have
helped many students get Into top
graduate schools, and students themselves laud RCC for Its breadth of
opportunity: "A political science degree
would have narrowed me down,• says
Denise Zasowskl, a doctoral candidate
at the University's center for policy
studies and a very active RCC member.
· " It's very Impractical to keep a student
In a s1n91e discipline - you need a
mlxture.' Notes Ste~ Walt!, a-geology
and geography major, "RCC offers the

Instructors. We tell them, Well , you
hi re the Instructors.' But It doesn't
work. They seem to be threatened In
some way, but I sure don't know why.''
And a complaint abOut the structured

~~~re ~hi~~kEn~~r:J~g ~cul~~~c;:"~~

biomedical engineering. All h/s envlrbnmental work must be extracurricular
because the department won't recognize his RCC courses.
~
How has RCC managed to hold Its.
ownb&amp;:?rtlcularty on a budget of only
7

~ t'mport~~tec~~':.\'~~ffsae:s~~~

more than pay our way; we cover for
other colleges. For less than the pay of
one full professor the University gets
2,000 student credit hours - so we're
actually a bargain. Also, we don~
threaten the autonomy of dl'partments;
we stay small and don't offer degrees."
Part of the speclalness of RCC Is Its
Integration of the contributing disciplines. "''m always talking to students
J!nd faculty In other departments to
keep abreast of what's going on there, "
Gold says. " I sit out front , I'm always
accessible, and I try to create a climate
of wanting to work with other people to

~!'~::~~~ t!lro~~.:cfe:S~~t,~~~i

~:·:d~~P. ':f.:h,~~:;::~: 't~ ~~ ~:~

ourselves Into the academic en"JJronment of the Unlversltv."

:_ca1::U','f:ll~n':f'es~~~n~!' ~ u~~t ~~~

oriented. We build on the skills we

f:~~g:

88

0

!.?at!

q~~lr.~.e J'i~!.rec~,e~:

f~~~ An':J'n'~~ve K::/1~, ~~

·

ffs.
majoring In environmental design and
planning at the School of Architecture
and Envlronmental Design, praises the
use of professionals as Instructors.
Student evaluations of RCC pro~lde
the confirming statistics: "We're
pleased and surprised to find that 70 to

~rf"pa~n~~;. ~~~~e~~c-Korop~~

tell entering stlldenta that the chances
areS to 1 they'll like whet they find.''

�-.

Leslee

Music director of theatre unit
has done a dozen shows here
-from Shakespearean rock to Greek myths
..j•m a flake," musician-composer Ray
Leslee grunts white attacking a lump of
macaroni and cheese in the Faculty
Club.
He's wearing a red T-shlrt recalling

::'e. 0~r!::~t·~ihe ~::!~~~s sT~:;.~.el~
11

he has one for every play he's done at
U/B he has a complete wardrobe.
He's done the music for a dozen
shows while earning both undergraduate and graduate degrees (a
special major In music theatre and
composition and an M.A . In the
Humanities) and being composer Inresidence at the Center for Theatre
Research. Now, he's earned the title &lt;11
music director of the Center.
"House band," Is wbat It means , he
adds.
What It comes down to Is that he has
to compose, play, direct, ferret-out
musicians, or just whistle Dixie Whatever Is appropriate or required . For
Shakespeare In the Park this summer,
he also booked guest artists for preperformance concerts and gave the
welcome rap , each night.
,
Leslee has scored slx Shakespeare

~~~~\~~~.~~n~i

1

m1!~.9 c\~e~~~~

Which Is clearly his tavonte. Another
effort he singles out was last season's
"Myths," an ''experience" combining
dramatic dance and his music. He also
did the "scenario" for this piece which
centered on the Greek legends.

~[· ~f::'J;:st• this summer was
~ciutarsfa~';:~e .;r:;~:· ot~~~ ~~~ ~ "
11
;;;;3"cl'a':."~ Xu~!,.;~~~~~~~;:n~::,~

mash" at the end of the first act.
"The Tempesr• score was full of
dazzling electronlcs,[for the 'xecution
of which Learee gives credit to -"Peter
Picclrnn, a "wizard" In that field. He
made us " such a thunderclap," Leslee
says. "/ couldn't stand the thought of
having a drummer stand up there with a
sheet of aluminum to get that effect. "
Piccirilli atao built the. synthesizer
Which Lestee played .)
For''The Merry Wives of Windsor," i n
August, Lestee Cfllllted a more baroque
blend of oboe, plano and tuba, as If to
flaunt his versatility by the very
contrast. "I like the variety, " he smites
intently.
When not Involved .Jn some U/B
production, Lestee writes for the New
Yorl&lt;-based
"Tequila
Mockingbird
Chamber Ensemble" (violin, vibes and
tuba). Recently he cqmpleted a score
for a locally-produced TV movie,
entitled "Skeleton Key" which will air
on Channel 4 this fall. Fred Kelter, a
local film figure with whom Lestee has
worked before, Ia the director.
A disco 'Thnepenny?'
Commanding moat of his time now Is
a production • of " The Threepenny
Open.," which Is due to -ring up the
curtain at the-Q8W Center for Theatre
Research, November 7-20 (In case

you've been to the moon , the new
Center is theo/d Studio Arena) .
One of the two masterminds who saw

fit to stage "The Tempest ," in a "Star
Wars" motif (Theatre Chairman Saul
Elkin was the other), leslee was
tempted to try a disco version of the
Bertoli Brecht-Kurt Weill war-horse
with Macheath changed to a "superfty. "
" Make It clear," that that was just a

~~o~,' ~:r~~~r: P~gj~~~·~~~~i=~~i~ l~

doing It that way, especially since we

~r;teer:i~~de~Ve~r~h~·;.h~"~a~~ugne~

insight from the author himself.
[Bentley, lncldentially, Is teaching a
graduate seminar on Brecht this
semester.)
'
Leslee, 24 , is a native of New York ·
City. He has "always" taken piano
lessons and written songs, was
Influenced by the Beatles , Jlml Hendrix
and Bach , and attended the Manhattan
School of Music. He toured fora year as
a keyboard man with "Jay and the
American : playing nightly to "10,000
teenyboppers ," before gravi tating to
U/B.
A music major first
"I came here as a music major,"
Leslee recalls. "Then I met Saul Elki n
who became my teacher, mentor, and
colleague." That changed everything .
di;~~~o~:.. l'm an ex~hlpp.ie, " a- "music
Lest winter, Leslee strayed from
Buffalo long enough for a trip to the
.
Great Northwest.
There, he taught at Olympia COllege
in Evergreen , Washington, working with
musicians in conjunction with the
Theatre Department. He was also
associated with the " New Mime Circus"
i• Eugene, Oregon , where he did the
music for Eugene lonesco's " Macbe.tt. "
lonesco came on opening night and
"loved" what the brash young composer
had added to hi splay .
The play added to fhe music, too, of
course. People seem to like music
better if it's married to something else,
Lestee says. " II takes on a visual
meaning, then ."
'Death trap?'
Leslee composes for specific projects and . "not in a vacuum" as som~
composers might. He ,enjoys It mor, .
that way.
There's a Catch-22, though. " It might
even be a death trap, " Leslee fears :
" You can't lmr,rove your musical

te~~n~~u~~J =~ n~~hf~'r:li~tre if
you're only concerned about technique."
While he has complete artistic
freedom when approaching a U/B
show, he has.to "think practically." The
total theatrical experience is what 's

:.':oo;'.:'t.c~~~~o':s ~:~~~~1fti

rounding up enough talented musicians
to perform them also help shape his· .
·
scores.

Audie'nces, Leslee says, are vet)
important to him . He's aware of their
every shuffle and cough, constantly
looks l or sl gns of restlessness that

~~~~'t~ ~~errre!'~~~~!~?:'~Z'~ y~~

mean what do you know?" he resp()nds
to a layman who savs he liked "The
Tempest" music, but really isn't
qualified to say so. "You know whether
you liked it or not," Leslee says. That's
all that matters.
He appreciates honesty In an
audience, a taste he acquired while
associated with the COmmedfa delt'arte

fn ~~1{:,~~ .\~:~r~~~~~h'Tt'm~l't':lren. " he says. "II they don't like
something, they'll say so. Adult
aodiences are more up-tight. Nobody
0

88

wl~~r~ ".t~t~ t~k~nro !.!f~~k!i;hln

the Center for Theatre Research a
coterie of musicians who, like himself,
would compose for and perform In the
theatre. "That's where It's g·olng
everywhere," says Leslee. Yol.l'il no
longer have your Bernstein&amp; who sit
home and compose a score or
musicians who just-come lo and play.
Musicians ana becoming equal, contributing members of the theatre
ensemble. He hopes to 1181 up an
independent study program to help'
bring the Idea alive here:

Alumni unit seeks visibility, ~ervice points
Striving for high visibility and
community a.v1oe points, the U/B
Alumni AAOCiatlon wltj sponsor a
day·long confere~~Ce this fall on the •
topic, '"Tile c.- woman."
Last
the Aaaoclatlon received
much community support, not to
mention leedt.ck for thelr 'Women As
Agents of Change" and " Outlook: The
Next Oecede" conferences which together attr.c!ed some 800 alumni and
tMklente.
other The momlng lleynote IPMker for the
~ 11 poagrwn will De American
Stucliee
Dr. El~ Kennedy, Who wiN e l l - "Croaa-CuHural

y-.

...-.o&lt;.

~onw-·ework."

After I·w::...:· ~r:.h=

In tile~ o1 Medicine, will
.......,.. Peneltlel for the
Wollllin. • 1W epeeGh wiU

. . dieoltiiiiNIQrY natiA

of ~Jeculltr llldtu ..ruc:t.....
lbolit ......lng wJIIIIIO . .
the

aft'::%111~-'='=

problems facing working women. The
workshops wilt be conducted by
professional women, authorities on
their respective topics.

program's

planning

committee.

Dr.

Susan Carrel Kulick, vice president for

the Alumni Association's conllnuJng
education program, waa committee
chalr.J*WOn.
Bealdea thlf fall program for women,
TentatiYe toplcl
the .Aaaoolatlon will also attempt to
A tentative llat of topics Includes: · • bring alums beck to their alma mater
"Women In Management: Being a
Woman in the Buslneas World;"
on the gridiron. Live music,
=;'·E!!l'l.:;/='\~th9 J~~ . Albany
beer, wine and III8Cka will De provlcltod
"Stress;" ''Volunt-lam: C...
opment_or Protaalonat Exploitation?;"
"Changing with Age: What . . the
• Squire. Faculty Md 11a11 . . Invited
Optlona forwor-7;" "Money MtNge&amp;leo.
"*";""A C...lfnd Menllige: c.ri H
Wort&lt;?;" lllld "W-In ~:
Your Legat Rigldl." Allothar WO!bhop
Ia being
on protllelna fllclng
WOIMft lit ~lllill piOIIU'a ••
IIIII - . 01t peNOIIII or-tfl.
Tlc:ata tor the - 110 tncfu&lt;Jing
~ "''lndaJ. ~ clr.ctor

·-c.-

C.::

:r::;:!

orliU'ni;;i''ilti*;;

~ap~ca-

IIIIOutll
'
tlon jllaOedUIW

....,...., by

.lltllarRiriii,...... . _
/Mieothe

=h :.~~J';~gB~~ot;j~4,;
~rr:.r:.~ihe~~= w~a':

Everything you want to know - and
more
What else do you want to know? he
asks.
"I ta_uptlUoogw.(iling In poJtege B ~
"No. liaven1 tried to really 'Uii' my
songs."
~
.
"I had a dog, oncel " .
"Now, I'm going to have a brownie. •
Over that dessert, Leslee wnaps up
his feelings about U/B thaatre and his
role in it.
It's· an Incredible department with
incredible people of the finest
production staffs anywhere. If only It
were as rich aa H Ia good .
.
Getting Shakespeare on every sum~
mer is an lncnedlble feat - but one welt
worth the s - t when you consider that
20,000 people ceme .out for II this
alona.
And to think I II started beCauae
Saul Elkin waa watkl::f th~ 1
~:m~:'f~e Park one day an "saw th

one

v-

.

~~~= a:;d.n~.:~l~bo":

nl;;:':
CJUtlve setlsfiiiCIIon and a performance

outlet. And he "worked for 11."

•=~=~.\!:.·&amp;~~~!'bec:omea
Well . . . . "That'• the hlppMI thing

about theatre. It ~· · You do a
show. And H's greet. Then It _,_
Things are alway' changing."

�..........

o~lt-yOurself football .
They said Division Ill football was a
no-frills, stripped-down affair. And they
were right.

·

At U/B, it's a downright ' do-lt. yourself project.
- •
. You want cheers? You stand up and
~ them yourself, as several students

Johna&amp;~d~~r~~e !~~~ ,:&gt;.;,";;.d~~~

You want music? You and your
friends hum the Notre Dame Victory
March as'lo'ud as you can . There are no
.bands. The Star-Spangled Banner Is
provided by means of ,a tinny tape prior
to the game - as are several "stirring"
marches. Once the -"game starts,
though, you're on your own.
You want to be entertained when

~~~~~~~hi! ~~".l\em~~h~";';~h~~

third and 40? You,llsten to 'those sitting
around you:
B-Jn Baylkle? ~.
"This is like high school 4ootball!"
one student griped.
"Like high school? Bayside games
_ , better than this," his friend,
reepondecl.

" I'd rather hear Howarc Cosell than
him ," another groused after the P.A.
announcer had given a long spiel about
the College Football Hall of Fame at
Kings Island, Ohio- which , incldentai-

!~Os~~:?osnaffo~~!~~6o~1~es~g9:s.'?f
Inspired by Dando?
•
~
· Jhe Bulls must have gotten one of
those messages fr9m Coach Bill Dando
at half-time Saturday because they
came back in the second half and almost
pulled It out.
There they were in the shadows of the
John 'Carroll goal posts, down only by
four points and with just enough .time

lei}~~ ~~~ (and they are vocal) roared.
8

Even the boys from BaysiQe got
.excited.
B.ut ... the Bulls drew a penalty to
sfall the drive. Earlier, they had set the
Streaks up (or scores on a pass
Interception and a fumble deep In their
own territory.
.
When It's do-lt-yourself fpotball, It
· seems, you have to beat yourself, too. -

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                    <text>THEATRE

--

fOOD

Attbe .
'Bullpen,' they
do It illl

AII-Femille Cut
will open
filii season;
'Threepenny
Opel'•' coming

for you
p.8

p.4

ACADEMICS

MEDITATION

Prof' s book

Is guide to
Inner peoace
p.4

VOL I NO

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

SEP 1978

10~

14
Gay rights, Jewish holidays, funds
draw attention at Council sessi.o n
Dr. George l.

mock·pe~lexed.

Collins.

Jr. , was

re=~atr.~o~i~h~/~~~~~d~~~

propoaed that the anti-discrimination
statemerrt In the Student Rules and
Regulations for 1978-79 be expanded to
outlaw bias In connection with "sexual
orientation" and "affectlonal prefer·

ence.··

Affectlonal preference, Collins pondered aloud . " It occurs to me It might
mean animals."
That was the only flash of fire at the
first Council meeting of the year
Monday.
In a mostly routine session, the ·
Council:
•Tabled ectlon until Its next meeting
on lhe petition to extend the nondiscrimination statement;
•Declined to Incorporate Into the
atudenl rules a stilement requlrli\Q the
Unl-slty to cancel classes oh Rosh
Hashana and Yom Kippur;
•Approved the student rules for
publication;

C.O:.~(~o ",a;. ~= ~~poTr:.,~:..,~r;.

drafted by Chairman Robert I. Mlllonzl;
• Heard President Robert l . Keller

report !hal SUNY is requesting a 10 per

A similar statement has been adopted

cent increase In dollars , a 6 per cent
increase In students, and o 4 per cent

by the College Council at Geneseo . he
Indicated .
Dr . Collins noted that he, lor one, had
no objection to the Intent; "but Ia this
the place for It?" he asked.
Council member George Measer
Inquired If there "has been any trouble
on this?"
No one said lhere had been. Pierce
reported, In fact , that gay groups are
already permitted equal sccess to
student facilities.
The nonoodlscrlmlnatlon statement as

Increase In people In U/B's 1979-l!O

bu~~::,:g::day, October9, for a special

open hearlnQ of student concerns.
Student Representative Pierce, •on
behalf of my constituents ," raised both

~~:ue~e=~".:; :~~:!1e~ud~~~ .O:IPa~~:

Vlca President Anthony Lorenzetti had
given the Council the annual run-&lt;lown
on changes In 27 pages of rules and

'.:g~~~~~~s,~v;:,m~7~."::'a~~~e':'::v6".:;,

of the major functions of the Council.
Most changes this year Involve
clarification of language, Lorenzeltl
said .

a._t:,._~t~esented a petition alQOed by
~k~~~sr:~:~~ ~tt:::::~ f~ ~~~d~~~

discrimination statement.
The r&amp;Yised statement , Pierce contended. would put the University on
record "as being a defender of the nghts
of all people. "
It's "not anything to be ashamed of,"
he said .

~~era':f~~s~.n t~:u::ud:~~.Rul,:s ~~
minimum right~ statement required by

~~- ~~~~~'d,: e~~:~~~;,~· :~ttre~"1.;

Individuals " In whatever relationship to
the Unlverally," II goes beyond just
students .
Tha Faculty Senatehaan'tbMn aaked
to consider this, Keller seld . " I'm not
sure that the Council's passing this
would have any Impact on faculty or
union contracts ... he added .

un~i l~'~!~,g~,:!:l::~~~~~R !~~ ~~"k
1

with Albany."
Rose Sconiers moved the tabling,
noting "we have to be concerned, too,

about recourta for students." Would

~7~~:'c~~~ p:r:~~=\~ r~~llr..,';::l)e ~~

students, or would , II just be a
statement that doesn't mean anything?

J~-;::.:r,:es of the Jewla.h Stu~~! ~~~~r~~~f.':f\~~~rc:"tie~v:~ ~~

slaternent prohibiting "classes or any
other courSe of Instruction" on .. those
days of religious observance known as
Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur."
Although this Is already In effect as a
rosull of a Board of Trustees mandate'
Issued last year, Pierce said JSU Is "of
:he opinion that II would be best If It
were formally Incorporated In the rules
and regulations."
Ketter recalled that he had asked the
Fsculty Senate about !his year before
last and that the Senate b8d been- opposed to the policy. State University
Counsel also objected, he aald. But the
Trustees nonetheleaa mandated II, and·
the Unlverally abides by that mandate.
That's why we h8d to start classes so
early this year, Ketter aald - to make
room on the calendar for those
holidays .
He reported the! since the Trustees'
•SM'UIBeo.incu.• pege11 ,col 1

EDITOR'S NOTE: Following Ia the taxi of Pr•ldanl
Robart L Ketl_.a 'State of the Unl-.lty' addreaa
given Sunday et the dedication of Baird Polnt.
Each year the President of the University Is
required •to present an annual report to the
Chancellor and Board of Trustees of State
University. This report , which Is basad In large part
on annual reporta of the various unite of the
Unl..alty, typically discusses major ectlvttlea of

=r.."=~~~~~=- ~a:n': ~=~~

then . In many ways, a brO.O.brush description of
the " Siale of the Unl-.lty." 1 am pleased to have
this opportunity today to ahara with you soma of the
oubatanca of what w111 be my report for the
.c8demlc yeart9n-78 ....
Tr8dltlonanli, the basic purpoa"" of a University

=eJ'l~=~"=- ~~ ~=:.:: :"~. r.:-t!'.;

upon the letter by Stale ftnl-alty's new
Chancellor. Here at Buffalo. we concur In the belief
un~lty muet 1 - haVe a strong
commitment to public ~ca . Thll .-v1ca can be
aapaclally beneficial at thll Ume as New York·Stat•
aaeke to reg8in the atature and economic well-being·
It has loll In recent )'Mra.

ttwt a public

l'ullllc-**

A prlmatY'P81T1Pie of the type of public aervlca
. _ . _ . , . . _...,,._tO.ool.t

�........

l

._14,1171

Help for aliens
New federal regulatlono .-quire
alieno w11o &amp;pllly tor U.S. Sod8l
Security C8ldo to hna an lntem- with
I Social s.curfty olflc:llll and . , . _
proof of birth. R . - t e t - from the
Social Security 0111.,. will ba on
5

'*'lrc'.~io.:~-r~. ~ 5

~

pt."m . •
Applicant• ohould bring panporto or other proof of birth.

~pan.

BRIEFLY
Phone book d u e Word from the printer Is that the
1978-79 University Directory should
arrive on campus during the week
of September 25 . h will then be
distributed to all campus unitS by
Maintenance personnel.
In recent years, the 200-page
directory has not rolled off the
presses until late November. but this
year University Publications and the
Personnel Department set earlier
deadlines and everything was shipped
to the printer by mid-August .
Ucause of th~ new deadlines.
some recent faculty and st aff

additions and some Mpartmental
addresscllaf1geswon't be Included.
These
entries will appear In a
supplement to be published early In
the spring semester.
This year's directory will be bright
yellow.

11lat was no riot
Reports of a " riot at Ellicott"
Tuesday a.m . wrned out to be false.
a University spokesperson told the

a~happened was that about
midnight, some of the friskier
Inhabitants of two quads In Ellicott
(Fqo and Wilkeson) got Into a loud.
but friendly shouting match.
Then, they decided to make a raid
on Governor' s. About 200 made the
trek across campus-some, spraying
shaving cream In their wake.
There was more good-nawred
shouting.
··That was no rlot ; that was fun,"
the spokesperson said.

Lev to br-at-In aalrd Point
Something described as " a sixseven hour mosaic spout ' folk-.1-slng ·

on «vel)'thlng.at.UIB'~glven
"living" at Baird Point, Sunday. September 17. by the Irrepressible
Michael Stephen Levinson as the
malden event at tha~faclllry .
Lev, • sort of J)e'rma.nent Oxture on
the periphery of the University, claims
the Sl\ldent Association Is sponsorIng.
The marathon harangue In verse
will Include Insights on: how the
World will end 185,000y~from
now. "how the Chinese people
bec.atne yellow-skinned, .. what really
hap;~ened when Moses w.;nt up Mt .
Sinal. and what occurred when Lev
walked-and-talked with God " on a
40-day, 40-nlght trip on an ocean
going ship." You'll also leam, Lev
promises, "how tO cut your rent In
half and deflate the world ' s
economy."
At the climax, "In the midst of this
thyme-packed poetic. historical presentation, " Lev says he "will publicly
expose seven ye&amp;r$ of OA lnterfer·
ence In the students' affairs and
present" his own "undergraduate
ac.demk master plan nd vision of
the total University."
Ever modest, Lev says the event Is
"Homerk In breadth" and luure to
draw be&lt;ween 3,000 and 5. 000 students The announcement gives no
ooec.~nc time- bot with seven hours
•-•y. It probably doe5n' t matter
Equally unc ar Is wtwthrr Levwllt
don tosa and laurel -eath to match
tlwcolumn$.

Abortion cova.ase
Abort ion.
The word Is a red flag In Buttalo.
So. on Monday when a student
wrote to the Spec:tnuo protesti ng
the fact that the mandatory health
Insurance plan now Includes abortion

coverage at an extra cost of S 1•
all media-hell broke loose .
Everyone from the coordinator for
charismatic renewal in the Dloce~
of Buffalo to casual passers-by was
Interviewed on his stand on .. the
controversy ... •
Never ml!ld that the decision by
Sub-Board I, Inc . [which arranges for
the Insurance! to Include abortion
coverage represent~ only a return ro
what was done two years agoor that the decision had been based
on recommendations or students.
faculty and administrator&lt;.
Never mind the fact t h a t Catholic chaplains on campus Indicated they doubted many ··students.
even the nearly I 0 ,000 Roman
Catholics. have been upset by the
abortion provision .··
The media were going t o get t heir
story.
Interviewed were: three priests,
two ministers, two admlnlsuators.
the protestlngletter·wrlter. the editor
of the Spec:._ . Sub-Board representatives. the director or the campus

health service and several students
one TV station found sitt ing on a
bench.
Only three things were clear ly
established :

•That the $1 aborti on fee . a $1 . 50
Increase for longer hospital coverage.
and a new S2 administrative fee
bring the cost of the Insurance plan
to$ 73 . 50 a vear.
•That the plan Is required of
students who lack their own private
coverage ; and
•That " abortion·· makes ··good
headlines" qn slow news days.

Snowd&amp;ys

Demske .utd Des.urtl.s

Apparently. y v u' re going to get
your snow days back .
Although the official word has not
yet come through. UUP and CSEA
have both announc~ ' ' victory·· In
the ir campaign to have the Blizzard
days of 197 7 restored to employees
forced to charge off absences.
UUP says Buffalo State. U/B and
Fredonia employees are affected.
Only those still employed by SUNY
as of August 25 . 1978, however,
are eligible for restoration of the days.
UUP notes .
Restorat ion of the lost days fol lowed lengthy d iscussions with OER .
Civi l Service Commissioner Bahou
subsequently Issued a directive
restor ing the days for &amp;II classified
state personnel involved.
UUP President Samuel I. Wakshull
then protest~ . to Govemoi""P'ugh
Carey and aides. the exclusion of
UUP bargaining unit members.
Immediate steps were taken to
grant that restor-ulan as well.
A memorandum Is being Issued from
the office of SUNY Vice Chancellor
lerome Komisar to the affected
college presidents outlining how
restoration Is to be made.

The Very Rev. lames M. Demske.
S.l .. president of Canlslus. thinks UIB
construction should be halted . and
more students channeled Into private
schools which already have space.
Not that Canislus needs them. mind

Reslstr.adon doses Frld&amp;y
The Office of Admissions and
Records has announc~ that reg istra tion for Fall. 1978, Is remaining
open until the end of bus I nes~
hours on Friday. September 15 .
The closing date Is effective for
day and evening students In the
Division of Undergraduate Education
and for those In the Division of
Graduate and Professional Education.

letter sets 'open office bows'
The first session of " open office
hours" for students to meet with the
President is scheduled for today,
Thursday, September 14. from 1:003 :30p.m . These sessions will be on
a bi -weekly basts. By calling
636-290 I , a student can schedule
an appointment.

you .
It 's the " other schools " Father
fretting about.
" I am amazed that New York State
continues to pour millions of dollars
of tax money Into building~ at public
Institutions. when there Is plenty of
room In Independent schools. where
students can be educated at much
less expense to taxpayers. " the
Canis! us president said last week
at a faculty meeting there.
lames R. DeSantis, U/B director of
public affairs. replied that U/B' s
present construction Is to serve Its
pre-sent number of students and Is
being financed by bonds that are
repaid with tuition and room money.
What's costing taxpayers, DeSantis
noted, are costs Incurred by delays
In construction. for example, U/B
pays aboul S750,000 a year for
busing and $1 million for rental
of space pending completion of
Amherst.
Present construction Is for existing
programs which are not offered elsewhere locally, such as civil engineerIng and graduate music programs,
he Indicated.
Hf' added that U/B's enrollment will
remain close to Its present 25,500and not rise to 45,000 by 1984
as Father Demske charged.
Not to build-out UIB. DeSantis said
furttier. would mean economic disaster
forW.N .Y.
Demsk~s

Best sellers
Right now, of course, textbooks are.,alllng fastest: but this was the status
of best sellers In the U/B bookstore as of late August:
U/B Rank
I.

2.

3.
4.

5.
6.
7.
8.
9.

Natlon•l Ronk•

The Dragons of Eden by Gar! Sagan
The Thom Birds by Colleen McCullough
Your Erroneous Zones by Wayne Dyer
Looking Out For Number I by Robert Ringer
The Lawless by John Jakes
The Delta of Venus by Anaie Nln
Passages by Gail Sheehy
. The Complete Book of Running by James Flxx
The 8ook of Lists by Davod Wallechlnsky. Irving and Amy Wallace

6
7
3
5
10
4
8

•complied by Jhe Chronicle ol Higher Edu~tlon trom lnlorm•tlon ouppllad
by college .!Ioree acrou the naUon.

�~•c.•m

Peradotto: 'General education
will be number one ·DUE concern'
The new dean of the DiYislon of
Undergraduate Education Is sure the
question of general education will be
his primary concern-this year and for
the next sev8&lt;al years .
A classics scholar and former head of
that depanment here, Dr. John A.
Peradotto Is discomfited by the
..natura! ~ purposeless entropy" wh ich
all too often besets large Institutions of

for Teaching Effectiveness can operate.
That unlveralty had a tremendous
audio-visual capability Which teachers
could and did make usa of to enrich
their classes or to tape their own
periormances for self.&lt;:rlllques . There
was also a cadre of veteran teachers
who would, on Invitation, sit-In on and

::~~~~~~~~~~~n:.:lfrti1~;~.;J~s~;

hiYt~~e~g:ngthe

th~at:~g~heJ~n~~ro~t.ate

Intention of ltlelr
administrations to tum these large
institutions Into the centers of
specialized graduate and professional
~~\~~ ::;.~/~';:. frequently become,
It's just that as Individual Interests
take precedence, fraginen iallon Inevitably follows and " undergraduate
education goes to seed."
AI UIB. " we're behind schedule In
doing something abou1 It ," he th inks.
Remedy Is coming
But he's optimistic that the Committee on General Education, chaired by
Professor Norman Baker of History , Is
likely to quickly remedy that shortcomong. Peradotto Is an interested ,
active member of 11\e group.
That panel-due to Issue an In itial
report In early October-Is on target to
meet Its deadline, the new DUE dean
reports.
While no def~ have yet emerged ,

it:'ad~~~ sash~~~ ab':fu o~~c"a~t~~!1

~~~;~eles out of which a program will

The committee Is just beginning to
look at specific models , Peradotto
reports . But , fle feels , trs already clear
that final recommendations will avoid
the extremes of " purely divisional
requirements" on the one hand , or of "a

=~~~~fmg~lt~re'f?ujl~n,ath":'~~r~

Small Institutions often take-the latter,

riiiJ.~:"~r~;,; flnall agreed on here ,
Peradott~eels, will ~ave to be flexible
~f~p,:;, ~o..:¥~t t! !~~1e~~gre.?lnn=•

of educational principles.

c.u.. lor optimism

He's optimistic:
(a) that such a program can be
devised, accepted and puti!WD practice;
b) that the several departments will

~,',':t1t~~ ~~~~~n~:~.!' ~~:r:;

can exist as no detriment to their
programs;" and
c) that students will welcome the new
requirements.
Many courses now on t~e books are
tailor-made for a general education
program, Peradotto points out. Making
use of those should help sway reluctant
departments.
And the •conventional wisdom"
Which holds that the generality of
students are zealously guarding their
"freedom" to choose their own courses
may not hold water, he beil~vea . He's
observed that many students resent the
"lack of education" which they
sometimes feel they are now faced
with.
· Peort• go Into mad school and taw
schoo meekly accepting a veritable
straight
Jecket of requirements,
Peradotto point. out. " They don1
decide whet a doctor or lawyer ahould
know , and then dealgn their own
programs ." Thet would be absurd .
"Isn't It equally or more absurd lor a
freshman to be left on his or her own to
:':~.'1 know What an educated person
on~att::;u~.,:r~ ~~'f=~~nap.:C,~
Instead of trying to thraah out a
definition In a continuous dialogue

~~= ~~~~u1~~~. We·:.~':!

of
the v.y taw pt-. of repute which
operat....,nder a total efectlve system ."
The lime Ilea oome to change that.
Unl... "each of ua at the Unl...,.ltylar.ulty II*Ttber or admlnlstratorbelllna to develop a MRM of rasponalblllty lor the entire lnatltu11on,"
Peradolto feels , "the Unt...,.lty will
crumble I
aT~ of Babel ."
Peradotto envisions -oence of a
~llerad ayatem of undergraduate
education at U/8:
Firat a blocl&lt; of hours cte.oteq to the
major tieid ;
A - " ' bloCk cte.oted to general
ecluc:Cion '
And atlli a third chu of aedlta to be
taken oo-• a atudenf efecta. With
the benefit of the general education

0

Is not

11

~?:~'':ee ~o~ t i;· ~~.~~~t:"r~alb~:a;:

and equipment ."
We can at least : re-evaluate the
present system of student evaluation of
teaching which neither students nor
faculty seem to take seriously any
more; and encourage-but not Impose
-peer evaluation .
As things stand now , Peradotto
laments , a chairman or colleague asked

-....

program. however , this aspect of tha
program should come t o reflect " more

~~sJ:~~!~~at;~: l ces " on the part of
He'a en IIIOCIItl VP
As dean of DUE , Peradolto Is also

~~~Pd:~rer~/~~;;, ,~t ;;~:~~ ~a}~,:i~:

rn line with earlier recommendations of
the Faculty Senate. The DUE dean , the
Senate said , should be less of a "clerl&lt;''
responsible only lor processing paperwork and carrying out a program largely
designed by departments . He or she
shoukf be an " educational statesman ,..
who helps shape decisions affecting
the nature and quality of the entire
undergraduate program , the Senate
suv~~~late v-p,tllle gives the DUE
1
~:Cars,~n:alor ~hr~,r;!~·~?~e~"~v!~"~~:

office more clout In making a case for

increased emphasis on effective teachIng as a criteria for advancement.
A second major concern of his,
Peradolto Indicates , will be to upgrade

l:::'~'~Rt. 1~~~~~~":3~~t':n~ ~:"s~:~:

but Ia wider, too .
Just as the move toward general
education Indicates a desire to get beck
to basics , so, Peradotto bel ieves, "we

=hi~~. v~: t~!'cr~~ln~ .;:&gt;~":~ tf~~

rewarding of it ."
We give lip service to the Idea that
aood research and good teaching are
rnseparable, he says. But the fact Is
lhel careers, national visibility , and
rewards within an Institution are all
based 1)Jl anarch. He's no1 " against

;~ar~~i~e~~1t1 ;tm~~1 :ou~~ke r~"w~

teaching .

What they did In Texas
At Texas / Au stin , where he was
chairman of classics a few years ago,
Peradotto ssw how a first-rate Center

to make a tAnure ~ommendatlon may
never have even seen the Individual in

question actually teaching . They
essentially rely on student rumors .
Admittedly , the rumor mill Is often

9~t'!~s ~,c~~~s ."w~~t" .. ~~alc~:;'o"u~ ~~~

::~ .~~~~~h~:'~6 g!vF;~~~~~~'6i;;,~~

methods for evaluating them ."
Peradotto also wants to promote
faculty Involvement In the academic
advisement of undergraduates and
wou ld like to see a " more academic"
cast to the summer orientation program
for Incoming freshmen . The latter

~8ou/!t~~~vl~:nr:-l~~lns,:tu:,n~ ';~~

richness of the Institution ." he

~eels .

Academics and admlnlotratlon
Academic concerns constitute that
pan ot his new DUE job which
Peradotto " likes best. "

st~d~nt~ ~n3" 1~~ ~g~':;d~~!" 0reo~~!:;
15

"open hours" when students can drop
in. He'll continue to teach, too .
Then there's the other side of the
coin .
One of the less wholesome aspects

of his first week In the DUE chair, for
example, was his discovery of "the
tremendous amount of paper-repnr

~~'t\'n~~!'/~e~~~~~~ w~~~";!g~~ur~~

the office ."
This touches on the whole notion of
"standards, " another concern which he

apWat~~~~~~z~~~.,O ~~~~''M~ ~-.!':n ufor
0
~~:.,e~~~ug~e u ~JJ!'i'ftrab?~~ un;:~~~~

sary grede changes, Peredotto notes.
But It looks like "we need an even
lighter rein .
" I'm not fCJr riding herd on faculty In
any .vay. They're responsible lor what
goes on In class. But no one could be
naive enough to believe that all these
are legitimate changes.
---" Acfmlnlatrallon, pure and simple, Is
not something which I particularly
enjoy," he complains. " Bu1 I think evary
one should take on this kind of
assignment for a few years at some
oolnt In an academic career."

Physics names
'eminent' scholars

Dr. Aklra lslhara, chairman of the
Department of Physics and Aslronorny,
Ilea announced the addition of two
eminent phyaiclats to the department's
faculty.
Terml '!ll the two scientists ''major
additions to the department, lslhara
said that Dr. Bruce D. McCombe of the
Naval Research Laboratory and Dr.
Daniel C. Mattis of the Polytechnic
Institute of New York will join the
faculty this month u adjunct profes-

sors.

In addition, two active faculty
members from the Untvwalty of
Rocllaater will join the department.
Both McComb&amp; and Mattia ... known
Internationally, lalhannotad.
CUrrently head of the Semiconductor
Section of the Naval R_,;h
Laboratory,· McComb&amp; t. expected to
help the department ~op aemlccinductor .--ch prolecta, t.lhan
aatd. The eddltlon ..of McComb&amp; wtfl
make U/B " llrat ctua" In the aeneraf
area of oondenaed matter phy8fce, he
1

~C:=L.ate of

Bowdoin College and
Brown Untvwalty, McComb&amp; Ilea eerved
u a member of commltt- on high
magnetic llelda In aotlda and on

electrical properties for the National
Academy ol Sciences. Ha Ia the author
of numerous technical publications and
the recipient of several awards .
Mattia Is very active In the field of
theoretical solid state g;yslca, es1

~~~~ ~~t~,.':r~::r or'~~~rca ':

the Polytechnic Institute of New York,

~h=~~r.=u~~f~~:C~'trh~~~,:.:

of Yaahlva Unl-alty and u a reaearch

physicist at the IBM R-ch Center In
Yor1&lt;town Heights, N.Y.
A graduate of the University of Illinois
and the Muuchuaetta Institute of
Technology, Mattia has published
widely In technical joumala and Ia the
au1horol The Theory of Magnet/am, and
Mathametlcai
In On• blmenalon (with E. Llab .
Both profeuora will ~~ a aer1es
oflecturee this fall.
The two other eddltlon• to U/B's
Phyalca Depart.m ent .,.. Or. Mille
Manllelmer u ...latent proleuor of
exper'lmenul solid ateta phyalca, and
Dr. F .T. Hloe u vlaltlng uaoclate
proleasor of theoretical phyatca and
quantum optlca •. Both .,.. from the
Unl...,.lty of Rocheater.

""rica

Mildred Blake:
'beloved friend'
d many students
Mildred H. Blake, beloved friend and
"mother away from home" to countless
UI B graduates and students, died last
week after several waeks of hospitalization.
For nearly two decades, the quiet,
unassuming woman served the Unl-slty In various capecllles In the Division
of Student Affairs. Most .recently, she
held the position of assistant to Dr.
Richard Slggelkow, vice president of
the division.
Rememberi ng his associate, the first
~rson he hired after arriving at UIB ,

k~~~e~o~y~~~~ · ~~~r~"g~:.'e,::".~. ~~:
:rek!g~~e l;~~gu~~~~:~~'!"n'::n~~

various projects, " alwaya willingly and

al~~h~ ch:~ul~ ,"terrlflc

Impact on
students ," Slggelkow recalled . Miss
Blake was the only employee of the
division whom students ever singled
out In their Survival Guides as the
"person to go to."
In recent years, she was responsible
for organlzln~ the Student Affairs

~~~:. ~=r~~nal~n ln~~~um~~~'!fr~

fostering a clo- relationship between
Student Affairs and the academic arm
of the University through Initiating and
organlzl~ symposiums Where students
:::~ !~:~ Yn~:::.~t'~~~~act more closely
As a member of tha Amherat Centre!
Programming Committee, Mlaa Blake
actively promoted and facilitated
programs and services on the new

~W!~!d.s:,~.r,:~t~ec~":n~';:rat=

for Improvement.
Another of her long-time usoclates,
Dr. Anthony Lorenzalti, described her
as an " Indefatigable worker who exuded
warmth and understanding."
Duri ng her three years aa the, ectlng
assistant dlractor of the Placement
Office, Lorenzetti said Blake, through
diligent efforts in the Buffalo communIty, developed numerous job opportunIties for U/B graduates In business and

ln~~st1:lA.:t had a very apeclal way of
letting atudents know aha cared."
recalled Mrs. Rowena Adams, another
of her co-workers. "She wu alweya
over-extending heraelf to atudents;
Mildred's time wuthalr lime."

ul~~ ~fr!::='.te:'l:th~ ~~X:

In sociology and the M.A. In counMior
&amp;Qucation from U/B. BeeldM working
wlth many student-oriented groupe, aha
also wu a member of the boNd of
directors of the Faculty Club and usoclated with the World Hospitality
Organization .
Patlbellrara at the funeral ~
members of the Unl-.lty community,
with the exception of Dr. Slggeltcow'a
son,Jamee.

COIIIIECTION
The lui · - of the llepotlw stated
thet Sharon Ledlr, • . '-"'
ltucllee, .......
hlr cloctonte 111 !ftlllalll...,.._
"-

- - " ' w-o.

New Tor1t U11Mra11J. Our ............

)ulllpiiiiJ 1M 1"11· lla. lAder Ia Ill
the . , _ . ol _................

ate.

�..._,,_

Theatre
·All-Female Cast,'
'Threepenny Opera·
on fall schedule
After wowtng audiences here laat
aprtng, the All-Female Cast wtll open
ll WI rourod of Thealra Department
uctlona October 24 with ''Some
hanted Evening," directed by Lorna
Hill.
The production Ia baaed on atraem of
ooneciouaness poetry about a woman's
r.pe experlencee, written by local
author and poet Linda Palo Phillips.
Although originally presented last
March, the production will differ
algnlflcantly thls semester since half of
the poems being ataged by the Cast are
011glnals! Thrae of the Cast's members
- Magdalena Estrada, Elise Pearlman
and Monlque Mojica - wrote the new
poetry for the production.
Song and dance will also be
Incorporated Into the event . Of
1)11111cular Interest should be the cast 's
Interpretation of Mlck Jagger's " Mid!)~~h~~::,~C aa well aa the pop tune

e

According to Tom Dooney, who Is
rapleclng lorna Hill for one year as
aaalatant to Theatre Department Chairman Saul Elkin . the cast, through their
songs and a dance entitled " Rape: A
Salle! for Two," will atteml)t to "debWlk
:::: ~:1e o~~~s~s~l-y"']~ '::J'~~
culture.··
Local musician Joe Head haa written
a place entitited "Guilty lady" for the
production .
~
·
K.Wmu and Company

~~~i. ~~~~S~ en':::~b~
1

which WOI1&lt;s out of the School of
MovaJnent In BOffeto. The dancers were
~=~~~~~ted with the Blac~
Karlarnu , a choreographer and the
director of the group, 11 a fDmler U/B

.lapentM thNtre group ls coming.

student.
The new Center for Theatre Research
(the old Studio Arena) wil l be
christened with Bertoli Brecht and Kurt
Weill 's "Threepenny Opera." November
7-19. 5aul 'Elkin will direct and Ray
Laslea will t&gt;e.muslc director.
The Theatrii'-Department will also
stage two plays by the new American
playwright Sam Shepard . His " Angel
City" and "Red· Cross, " will be
presented together and directed by
John Morgan . Performance dates at the
Harriman Studio are November 300ecambe&lt; 3 and December 7-10 .

M'rr~~~~~~~~e

Canter for Theatre
Research will move Into Its new home
downtown by October 1. So far the
move wu postponed a number of times

because the Palace Theatre, the luture
residence of the Studio Arena, was not
qui!'! ready for Its new tenants.
Doonay Is currently drawing up a
proposal for a CETA grant which would
permit renovations to the old Studio
Arena. Accord ing to Doonay, the lobby
hea to be spruced up and the Interiors
painted . In addition, the department
would like to knock out the dry walls In
the box office and classroom area and
convert that space Into a small theatre
seating about 100.
II th i s plan comes to fruotlon, the
theatre could have three shows playing
at once - in the main theatre, In the
small theatre , and live entertainment In
the cabaret-style lounge which U/B
planners hope to create from the current
Starlight Cocktail lounge.
Exterior renovations wi ll probably
Include a new facade and a glass

canopy covering the walkways . Money
for the face-lift and canopy wi II come
from the federal dollars Harold Cohen.
dean of U/B's School of Arch ltec~ure

~~?P E~~[~~~en~ 1 ~s+~~~;:ca~:;;,~~

concept . The covered sidewalks go
along with Cohen's pedestrian mall
idea.
To try to keep the facility as act ive as
possible, the Theatre Departmen t , the
Canter 'or Theatre Research and the
State University College at Buffalo are
jointly sponsoring a performance
on the fourteenth of October by a
feminist Japanese theater group wh ich
uses puppets and actors to dramatize
story lines. The production , entitled
" Ningyo Shimai " (doll sisters), centers
around the dilemma of Japanese
women living In a subservient cultural
role .

Centering: a do-it-yourself way to be whole

--

Br Joyce Buchnowakl

help perfect their personal lives.
Moreover, through the meditative
process , people can tune Into ··a
un iversal fun d of Information called the
collective unconscious. "

The process of attaining " whoi&amp;nesa," psychosvnthesls or what Is

=m~:.[~~ ~;'.aag]~ng ~~~~
momentum of late, primarily because of
the mushrooming human potenOal
movement In thla country.
Some popular methods of achieving

Ira helped him
Tucker claims meditation has helped

~~f!~sTo ~~~~bly 's~~~tfv~~n~~~~~
8

~f!~ ,.:~~~s ~1:u:A~t':~

ing man by nature, he credits
meditation with making him a better,
teacher by helping him create a more
healthy , relaxed atmosphere In the
classroom .
By using the pr&amp;-medltatlve " detachment" exercises outlined In Centering,
Tucker feels he now has less
"emotional Investment• In the success
of h is students . yet " cares more
Intensely for them."
Moreover, ne feels relationships with
colleagues have Improved because
meditation has helped him realize the
transitory or trivial nature of things
which previously upset him .

o1

adaptations
them-Guch aa Sliva
Mind Control , Transcendental Meditation and EST. Transactional Analysis,

:~~. ~~! ~~~:..,T:=rrc. :;:~~
the same end .
Unfortunately, these methods, however beneficial, often coat mora money
than the avenage wage earner can
afford, ao In a sense, are viewed es
luxuries of the alfluent .
Even those who can pay the price still
are hesitant about or refrain altogllhar
from self'-lmprowment programs, fearIng thalr "lnnw fabric~ will be exposed
to othera.

A booll with

wide~

U/B hlatortan, flrofeeaor Melvin J .
Tucker, along wtth San~ G. Laurie,
an Engllah profeeaor at Niagara
Communi!~ Col~haa wrllten a book

=r: n~

:::~~ '=t

inner wide
have the means or t~umption to
begin a aelf-impro-t program .
c.nterlrlfl: YO&lt;Jr Guide To InGrowth Ia an Mally digested, yet
thoroughly -chad book on the
· 11
benaflta of medHetlon . In a can be viewed aa a popularty-

==

=~=~~t~~~
~~:!~~
begin madttatlng and "how to•
11

1= =ici::C&gt;Uf~ -:~

aoothe the body, mind and aplrit. In
todey'a fMI-pacad , mobUe, and ulcer-

T-

rldden eoclety, heiwn knowa, we can
all use some affordable soothing.
Tucker believes the book Incorporates the beet methods of various

=~ ~~r~rr~~n ~':ln~q~wh~
1
fl:':!Tu~Ju-: ~~h';'b:"'~~~. ~t&gt;!

twlat to the courea wu that besides
formally Investigating the use of myth
and aymbolln Weetem literature, Lauria
also devoted time to meditation . This

: : d~:=eto:!:\fy a~":~ta ,:n":~J!:,~
metter.
Impressed with what he lewned and
by the potential beneflla of meditation,
Tucker decided to approach Laurie wtth
the Idea of a r.lnt writing venture.

f~=~le ~f~~ry ~~~::.,~

m&lt;n fully ralete to tl\4! "cosmic
t-danlal force that fiowa In each

~~~. ~oroa, o':':~~~ the
Through ~atlon, Tucker and

Lauria bel- people can IMm
aetf4XPiotaiOI'J tachnlquea thai can

As far aa professional pursuits are
concerned, Tucker aays, for example,
that meditation gave him the energy and
concentration needed to meat deadline
for a chapter he wrote for a volume
called Hillary of Childhood.
The authors hope that Centering will
enable raeders to lead more productive
llvea. They also hope It will teac~
people how: to be happy with who they

are. to live in the present, and to take
responsibility for the direction of their
lives.
For those skeptics who doubt the
effl~ of meditation or .the fruit 11
~ars, ucker has only two words: tl'y
Cantering Is $2.25 In paperback from
Warner-D;stlny (some 60,000 In print) .

.LETTERS
Editor:
UUP wJahea to AlfTIInd Ita constltUMICY that the ,_,, settlement calls

::,d: d~lb~~~~ for diacrBtionary
" In the Agr-.t the State and UUP
have agreed that upon the naqueat of -a
departmental or profeaalonal area
oommlttee -IWted for the purpose
of 'nlaklng raoommendatlona to the
College Pnaaldant conoamlng dlecre~~-aalwy ' " " ' - · the College
• ' \ " ' ' t or hla designee &amp;hall meet

with the committee to discuss the
criteria upon which the President based
hla racommandallona to the Chancellor
for dlod'etlonary Increases. The President's designee lhatl be managerial
confidential."
It behooves depart menta and areas to
form their commltt- If they hawt not
yet done ao.

-Jamee Lawler,

CornmunlcaUona Co-Chairperson
UUP

�~1&lt;,1171

su y

Welch: 'The coll.e ges are not
~h~t they were; they've grown'
U/B s coflegoate system has !'ad a
I lamboyant,
controversial
hostory.
Mothers paraded on Main Street In protest of the alleged "excesses" of some
O! !he system's earliest units. More tr.,..
dotoonal faculty haW! been known 10 tum
urpl~ at .the very mention of the col·
eges exJStence. Thelr budgets have
been pared whenever a crunch has
come. They'"" been probed, fingered,
looked OW!'. evaluat&amp;d, re-evaluated
and ~tudied again.. more !han any other
entitoes In the Unovers;ty s history. The
Huii·Yeartey Report-;-the forst step In
&lt;levlslng. an academoc Master Plan fO&lt;
the Unoverslty-advosed doing away
wit~ them altogether.
Thos fall, the colleges find lhemselves
without a permanent h.ead . and
sometime this year at least f•ve of the!ll
will undergo still further study , '"

"In contrast to the antagonism which
was very apparent some years aoo the
mood between the colleges and tne'rest
of the University today appears to be
that of a truce, tf not of a peace. We did
not speak to any outspoken critic of the
colleges; we do understand that there
were some among those who were
scheduled to meet with us but were
unable to do so. The shrillest criticism
from both sides now seems muted and
the problems now look like those in any
orthodox pan of a ma)or university: prl·
orotles for overall budget allocation,
student FTE's, quality of teaching, and
so on . There Is less talk of the colleges
as altematiYes, and more talk of the
colleges providing Important elements
to complement undergraduate life In dlmansions which the academic departments and dorm•tory operations cannot

connection w1th chartermg questions.
Claude Welch , an associate v1ce president for academic affa1rs . wa~
pressed Into service as ··,ntenm , acting "

provide. These are encouraging signs,
but the eqUilibrium could be easily
upset 1f there IS not further progress.
What happens next will determme

dean of the colleges for th is semester
after a search panel failed to agree on a
viable candidate to replace Irving
Spltzberg In that top post.

whether the Colleges develop Into an
established Integral part of the total
undergraduate programs of the Unlvers1ty. or regress 1nto their former
embattled minority positions ."

r.

Shaky?
In light of past turmoils and apparent
present uncertainties would Welch describe the collegiate situation as
"shaky?"
•
By no st"'t
of the Imagination, he
responds .
To the comrary, Welch says , the
colleges-as they approach the tenth
anniversary of their incgptlon- have developed a "solid, academic foundation .
They are more clearly complementary to

~l:.'¥t,!~~!~ge~~~~~~~~=~i3;~

tial programs which-though smallhave con tributed positively to student
life. They have undertaken academically·
respectable community-related actlvi-

~ii~!iu~~~eh~';',':.;t~~~~~~t~~ ;::;::~e~~

that have always marked them . But they

r,'~,.!~!ft/~n ~~ t~o~as': :pan

of the

of ~~~8 "Z,~"ah ,;,o~~v:n.. "1t~:o cg:'~:
when lrvln9 Spltzberg came In as dean .

~r~~~ndd.:~~~~1~~~,';:;;'~:.l:~~

contributions, In securtng for the
colleges an lnnova:l..., place In the Unl·
verslty-despite normal tendencies
toward depanmental specialization ."
Of course , the system remains
· unconventional ," Welch acknowledg·
es. " The University doesn't always
know how to handle that. If they were

~o:;~o~r;;,~ti:,a~t.n'.:'ye~•.'~~~;~.~~:;~

tingulshable from departments. T
Outtlde panel approve:, too
Welch's assessment Ia concurred
with by the report or an external
evaluating committee which studied the
colleges last spring and reported to
Academ ic Vice l&gt;resldent Ronald Bun n
this June.

A~~~~~~~~~~u!'.;j;~~:,:'J' ~~~~i':.:

What next?
What is going to happen next?
First of all, the search for a dean Is

~~rc~ ~y~ gr.u~~a r~H~~i,"t~~~~

18

8

ology. is the new chah of the panel
wh•ch was split in its recommendations
for the post this summer . Welch hopes
to assist the restructured committee 1n
findlnQ candidates wjlo satisfy the van·
ous cnteria posed b{VPAA Bunn Also ,
masters are needed for College 8 and

~r;p~{~~~e~t~~~~~~~~~~e :~~: J~~~

Indicated) .
Meanwhile . Welch Intends to shoulder operational respons1b1IHy for the

~~~~~~e~~~~~~~~a~~~:e;o~~~~~~h~rsg

~~il~~~~~ ~~advi~~~~a~Js~~~~~ ~e:~~
~=:~~~ ~~~~vl~~~~n~it~~~!h~~~~~~~
chair his first meeting of the College
Council today .
Welch will represent the Collegiate

~(,1~~ an~ "w'ffiP~~e~la~~Y ~W:~~

0

steps tor the requ ired evaluation of
on-going units."
A suspension of chartering activities

~~~z~~~n;:;::rt''~~ ,::d~~~~~i~~e~t~~~

ls settled. But the VPAA has decided
that these activities must go on as
scheduled.

Wh:~o~~~~o':':~i

study this year ,
Welch indicates, are College B and
Women 's Studies (the chanerlng panel
last year request'!(! that these two units
be carried over to enable It to make In·
tenslve studies of three others) . Worn·
en's Stud ies has been a source of
controversy.

International College (whose Initial
approval last year reQuired a revlew In
the fall semester of 1978) Is up, too, as
are two of the units looked at last year
but found somehow lacking: Cora P.
Maloney and Urben Studies.
FumaaCoiiOnty Clifford C. Furnas College last
yaar received a stra1ghtforward en·
dorsement for a three-year extension .
The chartering commi ttee reported It
was Impressed with CCF, Its fellows,
its core of 60-80 students, and its
" fascinatiRg Interdisciplinary courses ."
CCF's ~mlnar program" and social
and recreational program did, In fact ,
help to "reduce the anomie of a large
university." the panel found . Also
praised were a participatory governance
program , "a responsible fiscal policy"
and facilities sufficient to meet the
" diverse mterests" of CCF members.
The committee viewed " with some
concern the dearth of faculty-student
Interactions in the living/learning envi ronment; and the low enrollment in
courses ."
And II noted that the CCF charter did
not meet the requl rements ·of the Pros·
pectus In that II lacked : dellnllion of
college membership, a description of
the rights and responsibilities of the
ml:lmbers, and a description of the process for selection of Council represent atives .
Cora P. Maloney
Cora P. Maloney College (CPM) the
0
0

~fs~~~rt~~ry ~t~Cu;;'!n~~~r~~~~~ is~~=

of definition and clarification of focus,
matters which must be resolved If CPM
is to fulfil ' a vital and promising
miss1on ." C.PM seeks to serve its
members-minority students mostly" as a manageable, caring, hom&amp;-based
community within ·· a larger. less
mdivldually-orlented Institution without
promoting self-defeating provincialIsm ."
CPM was asked to: clarify Its
mission , appoint a functioning academIc review panel (A.AP) to make an early
report, Implement the recommendation
of the ARP In 6 months, "Implement
realistic, functional, simplified gover·
nance procedures," and stand for
review again this year.
Urben Studtea
The College .of Urban Studies (CUS)
11

~~~:~g ':nor:rh~~~~,.,:e~:!r rri
February 1979, lt\8 committee said .
That riH!valualion, It recommended,
should seek to verify: (a) tho extent to
which a content and Instructor
evaluation has been carried out , jbl the
degree to which the results are re lected
in spring 1979 course offerings, and (c)

~~~~g~:~~~tl~atl~fn p=~~ull~~utu~~

semesters.
The prevlo~s charter for CUS had
mandated such a study but It hed not
been carried out .

1irector of the Thomas J. Watson
Foundation; Alberta Arthurs, prasldent
of Chatham College; and B.S. Chandr.,..

New Public Officer's law
beefs-up employee protection

sense of community, an • extraordinary

~~n~ ln\~~aw ~u~~ ver~:r~~~~~~n

C'we~l:~'~:~;_rg~~t~·.,:~

diversity," a communal sharing of
resources , progress. The units were
praised.
" The colleges have survived a cri tical
lnlancy during which their very survival
was at times In doubt," the study panel
report recalled .

........

.. _ _ _ pul&gt;,_ fhundoy lor .... Dhrlo- ol
l'ul&gt;hc .. - .. s- Unl-.1'1' o1 YOI'ir Of luffolo fdlforlol oHJc.s ore locotetl "' , . Croh. Ho ll. ~1 , .....
f&gt;I-OJ6.~

Dhcfo&lt; ol hololk AH.In
JAMESI o.JAHTJ$

--.JOHHA

aouro

Governor Hugh L. Carey recently

~s~~~~~~~e~~~·~o~~ w~c;Ag gr'~~:

Accord ing to Mr. Walter Rallhan,
University counsal and vlca chancellor
for legal affalra, this bill : " ...
strengthens the protection available to

lor requesting representation and Indemnification under the
new statute Ia the same aa the old . 11
requires that when a defendant recelvea
a summons and/or complaint, that
within live calendar days he or ahe
should forward It directly to the Offlca
of the Attorney General (State Capitol
Building, Albany, New Vorl! 12224). The
Individual muat atao reQuest that the
Attorney General fllpresant him In this

~:,n&lt;&gt;; ~111~w:'.\' :u~ ~=

10

1

and employees are sued Individually aa
a result of any cauae of action which

-=ur'!' ·~~~::t tt':!

~r..fo'~ .:flch

employee waa acting within the !!COP&amp;
of his public employment or dutlaa .... ' "
The protections ot the new bill foave

="~~~~::_~,:,P~to:- "t:l~

contains two Important additional
featurn . Firat, It CO¥ere any cf•ll action
which a State employee may be a party
to, Including aulta brought egalnat
auperviiOfllln caaaa where an ernpjoyee
ctatma th~t his or her federal civil rlghta
have been violated. Second, there Is
provlston lor ~tatlon by priVate
counael where representation by the
Attorney Gener.a would coMtltute a
conflict of lntareet.
·
• The new taw, tlU the old, conttnoes
to exclude trom - . . . . acta or
omlaalo&lt;la Willen occUINII oulaldll the ·
emplor-'a ecope of ~ fJI
dutleot ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . wltiC:h

'

emft:~Y;'ooedure

=terbeAf~~th:S ~~~u:,C:
Ronald H. Stein, aaalatant to the
president.

In caaes where the aummona artd/CK
complaint must be Immediately answered, Steln'a office will arrange with
Unlverally counael lor the dell...,y of
the appropriate papers to the Buffalo
Office of the Attorney a-.1 .

N.:"~c!t!":-s~n=Jhet!~!

Unl.-alty of New Yorio at 'ulfU&gt; CK
Unl.-alty offtc«a, u ciMc:ribed by
their official title, aummona end/CK
complaints ahOIIId be 1 m =
forwarded to Staln'a office ~
lllearrano-ta may be made
the
Unl-.lty Couileel'a Ofllca.

merit raise
guidelines
The following guldellnet lor 187&amp;-711

~c~er:;r::ro~~::Y~&lt;==~
~v:~~'1::u~n:='~u~~~~l
General PrO'Itllona
Tho pool of funds

available

for

g:s~~:'\~~o::~: l!s0~r .f:ec~:
1978) for all persons conttnulng

In

=~~~~~~
~~~~~. ~~~~.=~d0~1~~~==
persons paid and receiving a basic

1

ann ual salary In bargaining unit 08
positions, or on leave from Aoi.ch
positions, may be considered - Tor

g~sc~~ti~:~Y ~~~r~~!':!ikt~0~~=. ':."~~

temporary staff whose services ended
prior to Juno 30, 1978 are not eligible for
an Increase from this fund {nor are such
persons eligible for tho general
mcrease) .
All increases will be recommended to
the Chancellor by the campus Presl·

::,O:~talug:'~,~~:s~:o;s~,e~f c~,:~~~

established for the purpose of making
recommendations to a College Presl·
dent concerning discretionary salary
Increases, tho Coii:\Ye President , or .his

~~~w~~tl~~~~~~~ee~ .~aw~:t~ri~

the committee to dlscu11 the criteria
upon which the College President
based his recommendations to the
Chancellor for discretionary Increases .
Tho discretionary Increase Is to be
added to ad justed basic annual salary,
where the adlusted basic annual salary
Is the Juno 36, 1978, basic annual salary

r~~~e!~:. 8~~~~ec~~~u~~~=~tt':~~~
6

the minimum , If any .
Salary Maxima
The salary maxima for bargaining unit
08 positions have been Increased by
6.5 per cent. Revised maxima and the
newly negotiated minima for tho various
ranks have been established.
No discretionary lnCfll8.se may result
In a basic annual salary which exceeds
the maximum lor the academic rank or
the extraordinary maximum of the PR
grade for the Individual's position, as
appropriate.
Academic staff receiVIng stipends as
department chairpersons are further
limited by provisions of the chairperson
policies In that salary plus stipend may
not exceed the 12-month maximum
salary for the rank .
Range of fncr•-·
The discretionary lncreaae for a
full-time employee shall be no leas than
$500, no greater than $2000, and ouch
Increase for a part-time employee shall
be limited proportional to the &amp;;{'·time

rar~r::,~e~.:.;Po).:.s'lntot~~ cas~' o~

unusual circumstances warranting ari
Individual lnctease not within the
allowed range, consideration may be

~~e&amp;:~,~~~,[~:::lj~.w:;w.:~ 10
EllectiYe Dataa and Reporting of
Recommanclattona.
Discretionary Increases are effective

l~ t~~nd~~~~~~ a:,~:,.':~h~~~~~~

creasa . .Ja expect that Initial payment
will be made In pay period 117
(November &amp;-22, 197!) retroactive to the
appropriate date In each cue.
Roatara
Preprinted roatere of atall will be
forwarded, with provlalona thereon lor

=~~~nC:~:~:. ~lll

h.::

to be returned to the Office of the V1ca
ChanceiiCK lor Faculty end Staff
, Relation a, In Central Admlnlau.tlon, on
CK before October 4, 11178. '*-!pt by
thai date Ia naceaaary 1n order to
provlde lor rwfew In the Dl¥1elon ol the
Budoet and lor adjuat"*'t of budGet
certificate line llama, both of ·.wllfcn
must precede P&amp;Y"*''·

Law market gO;Od
The National Aaaoolallon tor Law
Placement raporta that 113.11pw cent of
the
gradual• of IIPPfO¥*I taw
achoola were employed In (_...Iliad
lobe within alx montlle aft8r Qreduatlon.
lta report aald 53 per cent oA the
gradual.. a n t w p&lt;Ktlae, 1t.7

ten

:ncce:.-:-...

',,~

::J'
::"~~-==-c=n~•
JQcttce.

�........
f

.__,.,,17,

'A Geisha'
Kenll MIZDgucllfa tum Ia the UUAB mCI'IIe at
Squl,., tonlght and Friday.

CALENDAR
CerTetell 5-1

oa 5hermln

Thursday- 14

o.t.,._

IIIEN'STEMU"
U IS va ~ Un......,.. Aml1orOt OourU
3pm.
UUAIIFUI"
A OoloiiL ConNrenoo · 5cp-e Col
836-28181orohow- - -

A
Conference Theltre , SQuire cal
636-29 19 tar lhow twnes Adrnisaion ChlfV8

lAC FIUI'
The 01hor Sldo ol Midnight. 1 50 F..7 and 10 o m (Non-feepeyert, pick up bckets
aiScoa-e Tic&gt;&lt;e1 Olflce .. dirt._.. )
CACIOOVIE"

-.,~ ,W1It1A1Pocono

~f11.MS·

Night- OtWoon; Triumph ol tho Will.
1 4 8 - 7 om 5Qon8ored by lho Cen1e&lt;

lor--

Ek:on

7 4 5 Wld 10 p.m

170MFACC.
Admission $1 tor

studrwltl. S 1 50 fat others
'Love Story" on wheels Btng a ha"tdkerchlel

CONCERT'
Maeqwa. Kathlrne Cornel Theatre EIICon
9 p m AQTvSSK)O $2 50 at the door. $2 111
aovance (at Squn TICket Ofhce)

Friday- 15
HYLA I SllS RACISM AND SEXISM WORKSHOP
216 Nor1on C~l 9 em lo o4 pm
Advlnce reQ!P"ation • SS c.l the Schoof ol
ond IJinry so.-.(636-2412)10&lt;
additiclf'WntonT'IIIbOn
The conference d look 111 whethef ex no1
acme daac ctti:ta' boOks •e seJOSt ex
rw:::.st lnYotved .,
"laJn,bon IS whether re
atrtcti'lg auc:h t)()()Q .n'10161tl to cen!IOf'Shlp

LECTURE DEMONSTRATION SERIES"
Introduction to 1lme Sharlng on 1M CYBER,
Dr so • .., 213Boldy Noon SoonSO&lt;edby
lho Focully o1 Educolicnll !&gt;.Jon1l1011ve

--

Alvlylita l.llboratory This 11 the trs1 ., a ttw"ee
O pen \o ewwyone Free of charge

FAUFEST"
AYe k&gt;coll;llndo plus boer SQuwe Foun,...
ArM 1 p m • 1 I m 5Qon8ored by UUAB
tC a rWn date w necessary , rt wll be September

A Ciaa8tcaly-onented progressNe rock biWld
Muque expects rts III"SI S10Q1e record to be
out thtsmonlh
The grOUP a manager Tom Drew 8810 lhe
Blltlak&gt;-based muSCICI'lS aoprOXItnate the tarml181'
aounds ot such groops as ·ves· and -Emerson
Lake _lOCI Pa6mer
MerrtJers we CJewl K.iwle assor1ed key bOardS
moog synthesizer ana e&amp;a stmo mactune _ Paul
Wlcox. bess 1 2-atnng guttaf ana bass pedals
Car1 Cno lead guitar ancl pedals and Milte
Setamone perCUSSIOniSt
The group exelu$rVely play$ ongnal muse

UUAII MIONIGKT FILM'
~ .. (Vadrn_

19671 Contetenoe Theatre
Squire 1 2 "*'rnght AomtS5'00 charge
Stamng Jane Fonda M ao o·Shea and Marcel
Marceau _ thts ts 1 tar-out sctenee heltOn comoe
stnp about .1 4 1st century astronaut (Fo~
and het assc..ted ~n terotanetary escaDades A fT1D

20
Comohovol\ln

Saturday -

CIVIL EHGINEERING SEMINAR I
Europeen
c.n~

£&amp;~

wtth Public Tranat\,

322-2om

16

MEH ' S VOLLEYBALL •
lUg Four Scr1mmao-. ~Hall 9 a m

ant.g hell held more thin 20 _ytwa ex·
porlonc)owilhp.CIIic

-

---and-·

-~­

• conoul1lr1e ~ "'· among .......

lhl ~ CormWttee on Miniat.-. of Trwll·
..... lho Orgonlzolion lor Economoc: ond

.... ~- - ...

ond--

c-o-

T,.,..,Au111011tyln _ _ _
... 12 - - lho Golhonbu-g
olllghtrol _ __
ol~

In lho clooign

Atnonghlo....-nt.-- ..... ~
ol-.rt&gt;on--ln-ond
• ~ atJOy Of ....,.,. tw::liMI between
'llrioW rnocfrel.. 1.0 , t'IIIIO truck.

PIIYIIOI.OOY - . u ! l
- T - I o l n f l l e r d M , O r. -

FOOTBALL"
.,
U 18 vs John Carroll Untnnlty. RcMry Fletd.

1:30p.m.
The home footbel season begins You won 't
went to rTIISI • nwtute of It to see it the Buts
w. .,. Wl"' Predictions we that today won.,
bo lho dirt

-er

COHVERSATIONS IN TlE ARTS

_ _ ........... - - iloademy

Awonl r10111Ne. documenlary
C.. (QIIrtlel8) • p m Rerun

charQe

ShoW ...... -

"pm

' FILM"
UUAII

Cooner

UUAIIFIUI'
A.n Unm111'Tied Wc:wn.n (Mazureky, 1978)
Conf.-enoo · 5&lt;Jft Cal 636·2919 fO&lt;

IRCFIUI"
The 01hor Side ol Mldnlghl. 170 MFACC ,
Ellcott 7 Wid 10 p m S 1 etWnission for non·

..........

CACIOOVIE"
o-tiold, W1lt1 foJ Pocono. 150 Farbef
1 45 and 10 p m AdrntSSton $1 for students:
S 1 50 tor OChers

MOVIES FOR THE NEW JA12 AGE"
Monlleur v...soua (1947 ) Buffak&gt; end Ene
Coooty H&lt;storlcal Society 8 p m Sponso-ed by
, . _ Study I Boftllo
c.- ~ - Martha Raye. and lsobel
Bsom sta'" In thiS tn01111 table set In the Detre&amp;SIOfl era

Considered one of Ch&amp;DI11's best

flm$

l UA.B MIDNIGHT FILM"
Batt»re~" (Vadrn. 1967) Conference Theatre.
Squtre 12 tflldntghl AdiT¥SStan cha"ge
More Fonoa

Sunday- 17
MEN ' S BA.SEBALL"
U I B vs Mercyhurst Coli~• fdoubieheaderl
Peele Field 1 o m
FILM"
Harltln County-U.S.A. !Barbara Kopple) Moot
Courtroom o·anan 7 D m SoonSOJed by the
Law School
Sruo.es the devek&gt;pment and recent reforms
W11hm the Umted M1ne WO(t(ers from fnt-hand
accounts o1 orgamz~ng tn the 30s to coverage
of the t972 Mttler·Boyte C811'\P8)Qft. Vab+onskl
murders etc StuT!ng gnpptng documentary

Tuesday- 19

LIVE RADIO BROADCAST
Annual Jot'tn F Kennedy Center Fnedhetm
Awards for orchestral and chamber muSIC com·
posmon wtth l!ve concert broaocast leatunno
theWII"lmnowortc.s WBF0(88l.FM) 7 30pm

CONVERSATIONS IN THE A.RTS
Esther Swartz intefVtews poet Marge Piercey.
Couner Cable (Channel 8) 6 30 p m Rerun

ROS' GREENFIElD COFFEEHOUSE'
Su111n Spert, Hute . m.n• Seifert. p6ano , play·
no Co..oem-Mozon 25 Gr...- Street.
near Main &amp; Jewen 9 30 D m Ac*nlsslon S 1 50

MEN 'S AELD HOCKEY"
U I B vs Unl'terslty of Rochester.
Field 4 p m

WOMEN'S TENNIS•
U I B vs University of Rochester. Amherst
Courts 4 p m

COLLEGE B f-ILM •
The Cabinet of Or. Caligar1. 170 MFACC .
E•con 7 p m Free 800\lssion

NOIU'ICTION FILMS •
Land Whhout Bread; The Sp.nith Earth.
146 Diefendorf . 7 p.m Sponsored by the Center
for Media Study.

Monday-18

CONYER SATIONS IN THE ARTS
&amp;ther S..rtz flteMews Buckmlnster Fulloer.

lntemabonll c.. (Chanlel1 0} 6 p m

UUAB MONDAY HIGHT FIUI SERIES'

High School C o n i - (. - Ati.old. 1958):
Oo Johnnr, Go (Paul lM'Iders 1958) 110
MFACC. EJocon Call 636·2919
snow twnes

lor

In High School, whcll stars Russ Tamblyn .
Mamie Ven Doren .-ld Jan Ster1ng , a new student
gou "' with thO high school dope-talung cmwd
Only. he's en undercovef cop Wow•

FIUI"

--

The 8ir1h of a

7 p .m

"-tlon (Gnffittl) 146 Diefendorf

$ponaored by the Center for Media

0 w ·s Wlr1Jed vtakln of the Crvi ww and
Recon5tni:tion. A spnrwting, int8fTIWlable , Ment
lilm -

•

IlLUSIONS'

SM8 SPEAKER SERIES •
How Toct.r'• UntMniUet Fall Short o1 Pr•
pertng BuiJn... Ma,negers. L8'MS A Jacobs,
direclor of lho . . . . , _ Ccoporotion . Conlerence
Theatre . Sqtke 2 30 p m

·--

Rot3l)'

· leeiLnlg lho original cast of

A.ncn Ko&amp;e'a Wortd al Ululfon. Amore Room.
Squire. 8 p .m. Tickets are $3 at the door
Sponsored by Gampus Crusade tO&lt; Cmst

LECTURE"

in

Blko. Aperthekl, •nd the Crtslt In South
A.lrica. Donald Woods, fCYTI'I 8f editor of The 01lly
Dlopaleh
East I.Dndon
ol 1t1e most
wkle4y syndlcotod In SOuth Afnca Stu·
dent Center Auditorium, Canisd. 8 ' 1~ p.m
Free. Sponsored by lho Buffalo Camel on WOtld

and """""

Affairs.
Earlier 1n lho day, WoodJ wil be on """"""
for a luncheOn sponsored by the Councl on
lntemationa Studies. Faculty interested tn Atnca
have been irMiod

Wednesday- 20
CHBIICAL ENGINEERING SEMINARI
Sca~p FlukS Mixers In Tradftlonlll and U~
uouol AppllcaUono, J . Y Oldshue. twmo E11uC&gt;ment Co , Inc., - l o r 262
3 30 p m

c.-

MEN'S GOLf•
U I 8 V'l C.nltJd, Nt.g•r• U., Ransom OakS
Coonlry Club. 4 o.m.

'P.w6.. D. SEMINAR f

fntecttYe Enctoc.rdltla, Peggy French . PNWm
D condida1e 248 ~ - 5 p m

UUAB WEDNESDAY NIGHT FILM SERIES"
The Doii (Emat l..ublloch, 1V19). O.Sign lor
u.tne (Ernst l.ul&gt;oloch, 1933) Conlerence The·
otre, 5qun Cal 638·2919 lor ShoW ..,..
Admission is free
0oo1gn IMIIXeo Gory Cooper, FrodonC Mardi

'The Rowe'
The RO..e Q..tat - (clocltwlaa from
left) Patricio Coboa; Allene DICecco·

P - Benjamin; luca DICecco - w11i
~~;. Faculty Recital, neat

----in--CowardThe-about """" . . _. - " " " " " " " ... "*&gt;gle
~od "1 0 0 bcated.. tor the rT10'Me ra 1933

COMEDY ACT'
POftC.ho Perrlah

.ws Stu

l.oulgo. PonarOuad. -byCologeB

SMperio. 2na floor
8pm
·

�Credlt.f
working with
WNED-TV

September mar1ts the beginning Of on
1

:~:r:1~V: .fn~6:.~P~~.n~t:tl': 1~

Western New York .
U/ B Is among n&lt;ne educaflona&lt;
Institutions offeri ng credit-free courses
based on
some ol WNED-TV's

campus klcahOn WI day to add courses IS
9 15
Drop-add locatiOnS .-e
2•0 Squn, """" 5I -Qoen lrom 9 am ·
8 p m eKCel)l on Fnday Hol..rs after 41 ' 30 p m
.-e reserved tor MFC and Grad students
210 Fronczak. Amherst -()pen 9 a.m ·41 30
p m tiYough Friday ()oeo untl9 1 5
Schedule Cerd.-Avalable in 16 1 Hwriman
until9 1 15.
1.0. Card ~ to al ntw students fl 161
Hamman until 9 15. trom 12 noon-8 p m
Monday ttvough Fndly Students wanmg date
of birth on card must bnng vabd do"l\lef's hoense .
passpor1 , or br1h OEWtrhcate Permanent 1 o c.os
lSSued last S(W"II"'Q can be vaiKSated at any Drop ;
Add kx::abon for your corwen~enee
OAR Office hours-Heyes B. Open 9 am 8 p m . Monday through Fnday dunno the month
o' Seotembef Hours after 5 p m are reserved
lot MFC and Grl'ICS students only
WOMEN'S VARSITY BOWLING TEAM
FirSt meebng wilL be Fnday September 15
at 4 p m 10 Room 3 ~ All women student"'
whO want to try out should aMend FOf more
~nformatiCM"' contact Coach Jane Poland 306

Clarlo. Hall

•

~~r~~sihe1 nc~~~';.,g ~~~;, s;~rr:S:
EVENING AT SYMPHONY and severa
new sarles, such as THE LON(
SEARCH (comparative religions) , EMERGING PLAYWRIGHTS ~nte m por·

raA~~er~r;lo,y~1 p~~t~g~ph~.LOPI NG

Telecourses are sweepi ng the country , but the WNY effort Is unique &lt;n that
il Is credlt-(ree. C!asses will combine
the convenience of at-home viewing of
telev ision programs (several of wh ic

will be telecast on Saturday morn&lt;ng)
with the opportunity to meet and share
ideas with others . Discussion groups

will be led by credit-free Instructors
who are subject specialists
Viewers will have a chance to call Into
I he stallon for more lnformallon during
WNEO's " TV FOR LEARNING / READING WEEK ." On September t9 end 22,
at 12 noon , represen tat ives from U/ B
and other area institutions will be
Joined by instructors ourlng two
half-Pou t presentations: co urse format
aod con tent will be d iscussed at that
time, along with preview clips of the
programs .

For more inlormatlon, call lhe U/ B
Credii-Free office al 831- 430t .

Exhibits
MUSIC: Fot.CULTY RECIT.t.l '
The Rowe String Ou•rtet and Leo Smit.
&amp;wd Recital Hal. 8 p m $3 general admtSISIOI'l
S2 tacutty . staH, alurrn With ID's and seniOf
Clhlens S 1. students Fao.Jty Senes bckets
r i be honored
WOf1(S by Banok . Haydn and Caesar Franck

Closed on S....noay ~ Ofl&gt;vtOus
excenence •s necessar, to ~a~t..~ DaJt r Cer&gt;~e1
programs A w10e ranQ£: of craft &gt;~o
snops w•l'
be offerea e g pottef) 1ew~ rna;..tng phOto
graphy weavm~ w()()(l WQ111:111Q etc Pnont&gt; 636
2201 tor workshoo tnt ormatiOn

ana Saturday

CRErnT~REEPROGRAMS

Thlirsday -

21

NON+"ICTION FILMS'
TM RIYer; The Plow Tnat Broke the Pt. ins;
The Ctty. 1•6 Otelendort 7 p m Sponsored
by the Center tor Me&lt;M Study
UUot.BFILM'

stwt E,u (Young . 1977) Conl,..ence The·
atre , Squire. Cal 636-2919 for show times

-dlorge.

Wol-by criticobutdidlit1le~

Notices
ot.NOTMER IIOYE
lnterditdplinafy Dogreo Programs in the Sooal
Scionoes, 1onnet1y lOcated In C·213 ~ ­
twve'"""""to B· 123RedJocke1 . ~No

2

Telephone tUnber8 retnar~ the sane Robert
Gonyord, 636·2591: Sue Fe11e&amp;, 636·2592:
Terry Toljo, 636·2592

ot. TTENTION GAADUot.TE STUDENTS
The deet*'le for SUbmle8lon of ' " Wlh"er
requMts for Fll. 1978, tS Septembef 15, 1978
at 3 30 p m PMase send al requests to the

GSAoffice . 103T-Hai, Amhen;l()ampus
Graduate Studec)l Resaltch Grent •ppl&amp;caUont we t'IO'W evailble tn the GSA office, 103
T_, Hal G&lt;onbng lor mas1er .,., 1'11 0
candodotes, up to $150.,.,

S5espoctJYely

Comoleled~Ciuoby

' October
19,.1978 at 4 30 P~m Any
, ptease
cont11c1the GSA office. 636·2960
Volunteers are needed to serve tr1 the
G R.ot..D Councl ~ wll onclude

'~
-""
grwluole
_.
_..
W
.._GSA
o&lt;tloe,
836-2960
fo&lt; nlotmoOon

....,_,-col

--.a,_... ..

BOWUHO L£AO\ES

fcnning In lho talow·
&lt;&gt;11 COIIogonoo _ ,... FIIC&lt;My I Slalf, ondllom!S
FOI' ho1hor inl&lt;lm'don col 831 -3547 01'
11110 Aoom20Soun

ccmo

~ot.LO~IIONIC

The Bu!IIIO _ _

._,_.New

-------""
- -...ng""'- .lou-· '"'"'
$25
- 0 1 ',_"'"'
""'-'- ~
-1
$21

-

cr;y • o 50 poo-

-

Nlll&gt;..-.•or-10

'*" doooount con- Symc&gt;hony

Al-conbo...-""'*'11•
"On
Dovs Solo • 10 bo ..,.

eo.nc...

CREATlvt. CIW'T CENTER
Tho Cr-.. Cdft C . . -

•

120

MFACC._ •Of*l t - ~pm and7 · tOom
-....., --.gn Tluodoy , ..., 1-6 om Fndo'(

The OffiCe lor Cred1t-Free Program~ •s olle•
tnQ more than 150 Short COI.Jr5eS_ conterencf'S
ana workshops esunno the comtng months Pl'o
grams are ottered 11"1 Anlhropok)gy . H1story So
dology. AntJQues Fl.fflrtll"e lntenor £3es9n Arts
Crafts: Business Management. Commumcahon
Psychology, Computers Counset1ng Dance
Movement . Health, Investing Tu Aelatea Issues
L.aoguage: MUSJC Theatre Entertaanmenl Na·
ture I $Qence 1 Technc:Mogy, Photography , Real
Estate, Skll Development. Sports Aecreabon .
Travel,
Wll"'e I Cooking ,
'Mibng l l.Jterature
Yoga 1 Oca.il. l Meditation Cal 831 -41301 lcJ' more
information
UFE WORKSHOPS
Lite Workshops are credit-free IWld geoeraly
tree of charge They are QPen tor students ,
taoutry. staff . Mnmt and wouses Aegi:straoon
11 necessary for a1 work&amp;hopl in 11 o Norton.
Alntwlm, 636·2808 Tor&gt;g!ll Is the last nighl ol
evening office hOt.n .-lei you may reglSier uotl
9 00 p.m As ol tomon'oW. the office 'Nil be
open from 9 oo . 5 ·00 p m.. t.tonday . Fnday
Workshops til early. so don't deiay1
A tour -oege tabk:ld istJng of all W()f1(shops
beng offered thts tal lS avaiab&amp;e 11"1 1 1 0 Norton
tt was n.rt as a speaa~ msen .., &amp;est ~ s

Reporter.
REGISTRot. TION NEWS
Fell AeglstreUon-Matenals •• ava4able unU
9 I 15 In Hayes B AI students 11"1 . . dMBkw1s
can PICk up mat.- there-DUE . MFC &amp; Grad
Drop I Add-Students may crop acid at etther

EIGHT BUFF ALO ARTISTS
Eight Buffalo Artists-Seymour Orumlevi!Ch
VuQ•nl3 Elholl Wallet Garver Harne! Gnel Walter
PrOChOwn•k VII'Q1!'118 Ttllou Martha V1sser I Hoeft
arx:l R&lt;xand W•se The Members Galler)' Albnght
lol.no-. An Gallery Through Octobet: 8

U/8 represented
in Charity run
While lois of people prefer only 10
1alk about physical fitness , several U/ B

HEALTH SCIENCES LIBRARY EXHIBIT
Med ical and Bi ological Illustrations . a d1SP1ay
ol the- wc;:w1\ of U 9 staH membet' John NyQUISt
M S 11'1 M eo•cal am:l BloiOgiC&amp;IIIIustrat)()O

Health Sciences faculty and students

MUSIC LIBRARY EXHIBIT
The Roya l Compos•s. MuSH: Ubrary
Han ITVOUQh September 30

Park .
U/ B occupational &lt;herapy junior
Diane Trickey bested the time of her

6all'd

PUT US ON YOUR LIST
Tho Reporter ''Calendar" hopes lo
provide tho campus with a comprehensive weekly listing of .....,to and
actiYitln, from films and meetings to
scientific colloquia. We'll print both
your notices end your publicity photos
(II spec, permlt••lf you au'f.ly ut with

..

~=J .~::~·.t'f:. ·.:u~ ~ ~~8d!.~

636-2626, by Mondoy noon for lnclualon
In tho following Thur~y' t I taut. Or,
molllnformotlon to Reporter "Colendor"
136 Crofts Holl , Amhont. We need your
aoslat.nceln making tho "Colendar, • 11
complete 11 posolblo.

f:s~~~~~~:O\YI~~~~~tj~~ ~cf';:..

lo the public; ••open to members of the
Unl•ertlty. Unle11 oth-lao specified,
tickets for events char~lng odml11lon
¥:;ko~orr~:.-aed It t o Squlro Hall

prac trcea what they preach by compettng Sunaay In tile 12 .5 mile Second
Annual Run for Your life competition
from Eastern Hills Mall to Delaware

;:-:.~r f~l~:~~g~~~m~\;~~~ t~:~~~~s=~~

one hour and 31 minutes. Magrun 's
time was one hour, 41 minutes, and
Talty's, one hour, 46 minutes. A
Canadian won first place In the event ,
which attracted 3047 runners, wllh a
time of one hour.

Do~~~ J~~:,e~!r~~~latoh~~~f,~:bef~

Betke and Tracy Rojek finished fifth In
their category at one hour, 56 m:nutes .
Joss ond Cohen are assistant professors; Betke, a gradua&lt;e student; and
Rojek, a therapy assistant at Tri-Del
Nursing Genter.
A men's relay team from Oontlstry,
composed of Drs. Ernest Hausmann,
Robert Genco, and students Kevin
Cresci and Paul Weyman, finished &lt;n
one hour and 37 minute&amp;. Each relay
runner ran a lit lie over throe miles In the
race which extended from near Sears at
the Mall down Main St. to Jewett
Par1tway , &lt;o the Park. Others partlcl peling from the School of Dentistry
Incl uded Will Prout, Or. Rober1
Rosenthtl and B!.. Robert Herzog .
Donna Joss sal d she was amazed al
the people along the race route who not
only cheered participants but thoughtful)! provided them with orange slices

an.. T~:·:~~u~:S~~~~'r fr::gthe 'aidelines' mede It al~ worth tha effort ," she
added .

40 million
will c han{Je jobs
An estimated 40 million Americana ·
between the ~as of 18 and 65 are

~e:g~~~~r~,;:ro"~1r

c::;~0

return to some form of education or
lralnlnft• according to a study Issued by
the Co ega Board.
Most are presently employed and IIY
financial need Is a prime motivating
forca In considering a career change,
although des&lt;res to seek more

~~=~~~~ a~~~e~: Fv~~e:::=,n:~-

The study, 40 MI/Hon A mer/cans In
Career Trans/lion, supports the belief of
many that Increasingly large numbers
of adulto can be expec1ed to partlclpete
In educational programs and will need
more and better counseling and
Information to facilitate the procaaa.

�s.-14.1171

FEAS has
' very a~tive'
transit group
Jyl=~:·
Wllh the first federal lunda for
:onatructlon of Buffalo's fight raff rapid

=~:r!~~~
~~~~-r~=
•ystema thai w.-e long dlocredlted, or

11 t.at Ignored, by urban plannel'a are
lW&lt;Ing a comeback.
RObert Paaawell, professor of civil
engln8Wing, remembenlthe lean years
about 10 years ago when he was the
lillY ..-cher at UIB doing any
Jlgnlflcant wort&lt; on public transporta•lonlaauea.
Now. he notea.~. .nva professors In the)epartment of V&lt;¥11 EnglnHrtng here
ve producing Innovative wort&lt; In
:ranaporatlon planning and technical

=~· ~J~'Ifh~f:n7no

e:
1969.
U/B's "Transportation Group" has
NOrked with all levels of govsrnmenj,
from city, county and State agencies to
the massive U.S. Department of
Tranaportallon. The group has collectively published mono than 150 pepers,
reports and booka on the "state of the
11ft" In transportation planning and
theory.

135 atudento -.ollad

st~::;xl~t..:Xrot1~ lnunt&gt;':"~&lt;afr:~

M·cBuiiPen's

portatlon courses. with ebout 25
graduate students doing edvanced

wort&lt;.

.

Actlvsly Involved In national transportation atudlea since 1970, Paaawell
uses Buffalo as a ~odel to focus on
C'::~ and spec lie transportation
He

Is

currenllr . evaluating
1

0

data

rm=~of,or B u~~~ t7g~~e r~l"':'.';:l~

transit system, under a $56,295 grant
from the federal Urban Maso Transportation Admlnlatratron, examining the
oyatern'o potential Impact on ansa
:::l't~::':.'t. land value and raaource.,
With his wife, Rosalind, Paaawell will
- t a paper, baaed on two studies
conducted In the Buffalo area, at the
flral natlonal conference on women's
tra..l Issues to ba held In Washington,

~-:;:~..,::~~~nt':dui~

National Research Council .
Aloo preoenting a paper at this
conference will ba Perty and Susan
Hanson, formerly membara of U/B'a
Deportment of Geography, Hela now at
Middlebury College, Vermont.
•
SpecW
· othesis
f - -Ia that distinct
The Paaawella'
groupo, In this case women, have
1

dr:T~:~~..! ~unb~=-!~\W~:l

beck-egaln ruah hour highway use that
uouatly lo the main concern of urban

.

'~::'//:':;:public tranaportation moro often th., men do, the

=-=~~~~
-::"~~ ~~~
baing aa hung up on the "macho" Image
of IMI.

Jmzy -..

Aleo conolcleNd In the otudy wwe the
noado of women wt1o are full-time
homooftlall8fa In the euburba. The
~of neadad ....a. ouch •
....-Mia, -.,.nment atonia,
..,_.. anc1 ~- loroea the
k'IIIIIMn to .... a large

.......

~

of llfiOit tripe to dl'*-"1

The ...... o f - IIYinO In the city,
........,. lull-time ' - - - - ancl
&amp;leo ~111111, . .

. . eldlrtJ, -

......... _....."--Mad

........................
......."='===

.,...._. . . , . to IIIII 11om .....,.._.
llaM.... I I IIIII allunllll&amp;.

...
- :.=.-;-······=
~."

AI the Bull pan, they do II all for you.
If that sounds familiar, It should . The
Bullpen- located at ground level in the
Talbert wing of the Norton-Capen!r~'J:to~~~ald-;;. ts calculatedly
"It's America's favorite -Y of
eating," says Jim M-ha, manager of
Food Servloo for the complex .

·B~~n·frl:"~o.Sa:n·;, f~··,~
8
~~~~lj,8~~ples~~ :fri~~c'ott~~es,

hot pies, various drink machines, and a
cash register. All the food Is prepared

~9:~ t~e;:/"t~h~l~lea ~;~~~ ~"t:'s w~~

familiar In fast food places.
The Bullpen's eating area Ia across
the hall (In a targa sunken room). 11
features both booths and tables, Is
colorfully decorated and has large
windows looking out on a polio.

170 meals a day), but Food Service
thinks that's because nobody knows It's
open .
Now you do.

11'1 whatthayllka'
,
Marie Fro]llera, supervisor of the
Bullpen, thinks It's going to be a

success.

ha~Mtiur= ~~~~;tkl~yt:~ :,~

different.
" It's what they llkel"
And ior hamburgers, the Bullpen Is
cheaper than the Norton line.

You can get a quarter-pounder, with
or without cheese, or (for $ .95) a " Big
Bull" - ''2 all beef patties, special

sauce, etc." on a sesame seed bun.

Eat In or toke out
You can eat there - on serving trays
purchased from the same outfit which
supplies McDonalc(s - or take-out the
repoat (In atilt bags and plastic
r::::rtt~na~~=~~ they might bring
The Idea for the "Bullpen" Ia cradlted
to Franco Kroese, anlstant manager of
Food Service for the Capen complex.
The food linea o - In Norton _...
overloaded - eome relief was needed,
but nota fuH..bfown second cafeteria.
Fast food seemed a good bal.

On a ""-trrng

"We had to 181 up on a ohoeatrlng
and couldn, rroake any major alterations

:;:,~h~=.!!~?n~...~:);o~r~':

said. He took one corner of a foodllne,
Instal lad a harnburg6r grill, a deep fryer,
a rotating haaler.Oioploy eaao for the

Dental meet will stress fitness, nutrition,
hear from former Vietnam POW Stratton
Physical Fitness.
·
.
This oeaslon Ia oponsored by Blue
Crooe and Blue Shield of Western NYorl&lt;.
Cono- .lad&lt; Kemp will delhw
llelurday'o luno::Mon lpeech, after
which ......,. wiii .COAducl a panel
dleeuealon from 1:30- 3 p.m.
- - . . . . eohadulad ThU!_BCiay, Sep,.,.... 28, . . Dr. Gordon Ch-.en
of Pro.o, Utah, who will dtecuu _ ,
In naatcnti¥a dentist~=
El._ of Reno,
-loft· of the

At a dinner on Friday at 6:30 p.m.:
Capt. Richard A. Strattqp, USN, will
rela~!e his experlenoeo ao a prleoner of
war In VieiiWn for alx YMfl after hla
capture In 1887. Much d - during
hla eorvloa - · Capt. Strafton Ia now
commander of Navy Recruiting, AFive, Gnaat t..akea, llllnola.
Saturday will open with the FlraL
Annual Dental Alumni Run led by Dr.
Kenneth Cooper at 7:30 a.m. Partlclp;anta will run a 2.5 mile couraa In

Delawarw Pari&lt;.

Alao achadulad to opeal&lt; at luncheon~= the ""-&lt;-ay .-tng are
Dr.
~. ptMident.-.ct of
~ 8ociety . of New Yorl&lt;,
.....-- 8, IIIII 8erMnl Kilbourne
.... - - - o f . . . . . . . Ot
..
..

�ATE
Executive committee minutes
September&amp;

Item IIComm-Nomlnotlona ·

-

llem 15.

It.....,._ of ... 111lnuteo of Auguot

ao,tm

The mlnutoo of Auguot 30, I V78 (oee below)
weno APPROVED

-·211.-tot... - t

.=:::
ot~u:!.
~ ,.=r- :•

:r~~'l:f.~

:...

lnvl~ ~~=~':f:n

conceml'ng merit mont::' enroiiiJ)8nt. and
poaOR&gt;Om
onoueol.

"*'"'

It~~~!'!!"',.:'.:;:.~t"ho has been

Invited to attend the monthly meetlnga of
tha u 1 B Counoll u reprMentative from the

Foculty.

~~!~=~~~ ='l~=u=••:,~~~

ouggeotlon from the Executive CommUtoe

fOf 1 substitute. Following dlacuaalon It wu
decld«&lt; that tha Secretaty would ott~KI In

the Chairman•• obs4hce during the Foll
eemeater.

Nominations were discussed under agenda

11om I

7Dlotrlbutlon of ExocutlYo Commit·

111 end Senale Mlnuteo
Dlacuulon and a:t}on on

oocured undar-ndallem 13.

th la matter

Item 11 Otw luaJ-•

There wu no other bualneaa.
The .,_lng odjourned at 5: tO p.m.

¥:":~~-:,::.~tm!;~to

::r:T::;:

alon regarding dlltribuUon ofM tnutea, thus

agenda Item 1 7 was conoldered at th iS
limo. The Chairmen
the following
0

P':\'l:l""

"l'~'WO:,':,'Kdylo~~ ~1~u~.:."'=i bo mailed

to eech voting faculty within ten daya
\•xcluatve of official University recesses)

::!~~,::~ ~=~~ ~r= :!:~·=
all aubatantlw laaues, u mandated In the
Foculty Senate Bylawo, Article 11, Sect. 4,
para. (d) .

2. lollnutea of the Foculty Senate Exocut~
CommHIM will bo publlahed In the
Raporlor, with c:oploo mailed only to FSEC
membera and a amaH llat of other persons

"':6V"Ebi~t.~ndora),

SECONDED (J.
Rlolng), and PASSED,
It woo further afltwd tMt thlo policy bo
• ""lowed In the Spring,

ft~!==porta.
Item ~~-. . otComm-

Furthtlr nominations to the Prealdentlal
Evaluation Procedures Comm ittee were
"PP!&lt;Ned.
" - " " ' afHI er.t,... Act/rlfr CommllfM.

Following prwlous dlocuaolon with the
preMnt chairman of the ReMWCh &amp; Creative

ActlvHy Committee, W. Wold&lt; end J . Rlolng

recommended

that the charge to

the

commln• u weU as the report of the

oommlttM bo nJ¥1owed. It wu agreed that
the committee should be rconl1:1tuted ;

:::s.:.~~~:!:.~:. =~~~
of the Eucut lveCommltt• .

Adool•lotoo.
C. Garwrtcl&lt; and S. Kroll naportod n10u11o

ft!.d~~u,:.~:,~:~~~rti:.~=r:an..,oJ

Kroll made a recommendatk)o for the chair
of the commHtM. whtch was appt'O't'ed , A
vor1e&lt;y ._...,....... ldentHiod Including

11, 1171

~ s1~~6!,~~Yw v:,r ~=' ·~c\':c':et'~~

,_

: : , ~~~due'!nlzod

~~::::::1:::

a e• ofllct, momboro of ·
to uaure

=.n=!:"~

tr:r::l w:m~

-ldlltlona ooncomlng ...._ to bo
doelt 1&gt;r tho now Admlaolona
Comm-end wlll alao uplore tho outuo
of tllebri$F:':-1Com
.
mlltM.
J.Hy-...cll.
......,.m.-that
the cllelnnon of tho commlttM bo

.

;~~ ::"'~n.!~~ p~mg:

Hr- .:::P'will draw up a ""* of
f:-:""::"':= ":r.!or=:

=:z..,_,... ,..,.,~.

=:-:r:. ol-=-~-=..::":
policy,--A ~~- ..cl 8 . - . propooed Diet tile

-t---.~intlloworl&lt;of
piMnin8-

tile..,_, ~- - • Mrt of
orpn'. .'l _, ltfur:ll\ft. A .,ntten llf'DIIOMl
frM~ tiWR wtH lie ~uleMII tor~

=:.:eo-"="'

IMIMIIIIIIIIIIOI'M_.,. _ _

-

'=•"="'
"==-==
- :r:::
....

~-==--::':!5

• - ..._........,
'=".:...-. ..

Senate, the Chair felt obligated to oppose
such a proposal, although recognizing the
need to maintain the quality of the Law
School. A separate salary scale wou ld

~~~ ~::,.ev~:;. ~"~~-mJ~~~~~~ ~g~E~

(9 . Howell Seconded) that the ~saue be
referred to the Committee on Faculty Tenure
and Privileges for discussion and report by
mld.OCtober. The MOTION PASSED.

~~· ~:?~~.~o aw~kJ~r,Yt. r:!. ~'tthf~

th~ii:Y'· Foundation bids for the Health,
Phy

are

f Education , and RecreaHon build ing
tn approximately three weeks, and a

Item -14 R - ' of the S.C..tory

~::.1~td:l~' t!"ido:r~~r r:n:r:~~~~~r t ~;
1

conatructlon . ·
Becauee approval of funding for the Music
and Chamber HaH Building Ia In the
supplemental budg:t , no reallatk: estimate

~~fl~~:~~~~~tto'::~et~ ·;~~~~!e~t~
~:e:.=~~x£:1~i. an advisory roup

deeJing atmoat exctualvety w ith acaSemic

=~~.:::~ ~ e~r~~:ty~t/eea~~~:

Vice PreskJent for Academ k: Affairs, the
Viae Preaident for Health Sciences, the
llbrary Director, and the OlrKtora of the

=~.n!t_~~~I ~:=:t~~~c~~~
0
~,.=.nre£arf f.sen~:. ::~'!ti .:"~

student repreeentatlve.
Untyeqfty-wlde concerns will be further
dlacuaaed at ...monthly meetings of the
o.n·aeouncll .

_

The Secretary called for a volunteer to
attend two consecutive Professional Staff
Senate Executive Committee meetinga as
liaison. J . Rising volunteered .
Continuation of the card system of
determining attendance and collecting votes
at Senate meetings was discussed. J .
Rising MOVED and
M.
Farnsworth
~78~P~~EWe _system continue . The
DlstribuUon of Executive Committee and
Senate Minutes was discussed with the

w.;:~~;•,vo~~~~~~:!¥:l~~tt&gt;c':tb!~ig,~,~nu~~=
In question. Action Is DEFERRED.
Item
The

15 SChedule of s.n.te M•tlnga
Chairman

proposed

that

Faculty

~·f~=:~~~~becnh:~:ih2t:~J,;~~~~~=
0
¥h.s":~:~~~;~'PP R"(;Vt'}f J(':gWD

Trice, seconded Wolctt, PASSED UNAN·

limit any approval of the Bylaws to those
sectJonl which govern faculty con~tlon .

IMOUSLY)
The system of Alternate will continue
unchanged : Elich Senator Is to designate an
alternate for the year, who may be present
and vote In the place of the Senator at

were promulgated... the President has
attempted to reach a common ground

ltam 18 COmm lttMidentJncatlon

The President r-ned that ha has been
repeatedly odvlsed by SUNY Counsel to

~~~~~~.c!!lry ~:t~ ~~:~~~~~ty,~~

between the legalistic view of SUNY

Counsel and the ooncema of the Faculty
senate and Intends to find a safe way of

::,~:!;'gyt~:.ttYo~l~: r:ce~t~ey

have been

:u

.:::~rn~~~e~~~f~tt~'::~=~~~~ ~~
:Hr:!n~::=~~~:· ,~~.:~~:

r=.

loeatlona :
L Ridge LM (serving Payc:holo~f' Com·

houra/wee.k.
2. lolal~ St. (Math collection, oalecled

~~f

;~:r~~ sr:~rr')' w~~h =~~~·~~::.c~~~~
~~~~i~~~~=~~~g~''t~~· ;:~~~

11om I 2 R - ' of the Proolden't

~-a:=~ ~~:.,rr:!r""..~

the Admtaalona Commltt•

f~~wsChairman

9

reported on a meeting
recently held fn regard to rank and salary In
the Law School . The Law School pro~ses a

corrected.

~=-~':.f~iJt~l!::."!:.~ten:r!~~ci

Commlt1M -

l. Michel questioned the status of the
Bylaws Preamble; J. Hyman responded that
the legal status Is not clear but that the
spirit of the preamble Ia gene1'8lly regarded
as Integral to the Bylaws and the preamble
serves as an aid to Interpretation of the

elim inated "and Admlntatratlon" from Its
title. The minutes were approved as

o.-tuate .clml..lona, attrition of under-

f.:':."O:':i~IIKiol:::r;•d~~r:~::!1~,

1

August30

Bids hne been receJved for construction of

~:~~--.

~':~~~ ~~O:Io."nd 0\ore?t,~nd~frit t~~

:~.~:I:J th~ tPa~:'Fa~ll:h:y1~~~~
:~~~sh;=ae~ th~~~~~ln~~~~:Oc~l,:

ham I 1 Approval of the Mlnutaa of Auguat

of the Auguat 30 Executive

Senate during the poll yoor. Executive

=

Faculty Senate this y~

Committee members were aakld to submit

to a(lbmlt reoommendatlona for merit raises
tor tndMduala who have made outstanding
contributiona to the wortl: o1 the Fculty

:n~t':u~d::~~~~~ t~~~~~~t ':~

Into the over-zealous Invocation
of
- penalties .
.
Chairman Garver commended the PresJ-

K•m I 3 R - ' of ... j:helrman

Reporting on enrollment tor the Fall
semester, the President stated that we are
approximately 1 ~12 per cent higher than at
the same lime last year - a considerable
Improvement over last yea(s 5-6 per cent
shortfall. Final enrollment figures will not
~.::,lll,l&gt;lo unlll the end of the third wee!&lt; of

The Chalrman hal: been u:ked b)' Or. Ketter

·

=~~:. ~~~":ro!l~at~""/4
reference material&amp;

and

perkldlcala for

lolanor,ment, Social Work, Civil Engineer·

~~;ma."H="~..=':'J
c!ddca=~:
1
~ ~~~~~~N.

Chemlatry and SILS
oolleetlona will continue their teparate

atlltua.

t~ R~~.r=.rn: to;:\\':~ln

::rot.:

OMmlngty premature tlcl&lt;ollng octiYI!y
olnaody occulTing. No lnfonnotlon lo
ovall- oo yet ooncemlng the ovatlabUity

~~'!"t":~N!:~r:~~~P~,.notat meet ings

=

The Chairman distributed a list of Senate
Committees. Olsc us~lon centered on the

:::r;=
for

jmp~ed

:gore;,~ ;·~':t~~~'!'t~~=

organizational funct ioning of

~:m~~cul~n"!~j J ih~~sJnt, M~EO h&lt;;c

sub-committee on committees be formed to
propo,ae a commltt&amp;e stNcture for the
Faculty Sonata. The MOTION CARRIED (17

r~ ~c:1rer~~;.~:,7::r;· :,~;;.V::' ~~~~e

sub-committee.

ttem 17COmmfttMNom1natlona
Executive oomml«ee members were
assigned the· task of l nveatlga11ng the
current statua of varfous Standing Commltteea and preparing a slate of nominees for
cons ideration 41 the . next Executive
Committee meeting.

1t1111Ua-lual-o
Olacuaakm centered on refreehmenta for
Senate m•Unga. It wu decided not to

-·

...... Senatore a fee for auch ameniUea ;
-mento w111 bo at Sonote
meetlnga to the extent that ava1lab.. funda

The me3tlng adjourned ot 5 :45,

.

Baird Point
dedicated
The sun · broke through the gloom
Sunday afternoon just es the Baird
Point amphitheater dedication was to
begin .

o~ht~:~~;~u61'1:-e o~~an~ Jf~;:u~e;.

of Millersport-had been almost 20
years In the making; the sunshine was
appropriate to the realization of the long
dream .
The Ionic columns wh ich dominate the
, structure had been saved In 1959 w_hen
the old Federal Reserve Bank was
razed . They were brought to campus
and put In storage until now.
Mr. William , C. Baird , chairman
emeritus of the U/ 9 Council and a
member of the board of the U/B
Foundation , Inc., opened the ceremony
by officially presenting the structure to
the University as a gill of the Baird
Foundation and tr,e Cameron Baird
Foundation.
.':""""
Mrs. Jane D. Baird unveiled the official
plaque. She Is the widow of Cameron
Baird who organized ' U/B's Music
Department and conceived the earliest

P~'::'t~r~r aA\':'mf~~:"'~~~~r88~".'·

Burt
Hamilton , ot Midwest City, Ol&lt;la., who
was Instrumental In the University's acqulslllon of the columns, was one ot
the guests at SundaY.'• events also.
In 1976, James CzaJka, a U/B student,
conducted a study of the columns, pos·
slble sites and designs, and developed
an inillal proposal for Baird Point.
Czajka, now an assistant professor
here, worked on the study with Martin
Kleinman, an Instructor.
The gift was accepted on behalf of the
University • by Robert 1. Mlllonzl,
chairman of the U/9 Council. Mal1&lt;
_ ~!He~,t~~'l!k~u~he~t~~lrd families on
10 faculty and staff received OutstandIng Achievement awards (see RepOfler,
September 7) .
" The amphitheater we dedlcete today
Is a stunning example" of the private
contrlbullons which contribute to the
strength of the University, President
Ketler said . "It also Ia symbolic of
another factor which I always have held
to be essenllal to the succeaa ot the
University. That Is, . the UniY9flllty Is
only as strong as Jhe talent and
commitment of those who ....,. IL The
Baird family has lor "*'Y
decades, and thay ha¥O with uncommon tafent and commltmenl.
Moreover, the faculty and llaff we~
.hononod today typlty lhe beal ol t11oee
within the lnelltutllln-p4n0111 ol lnltlall¥0 and dedication whOM performance algnltlcantly detennlnae lltla UniY9flllty'a 111Put.lion."

�........

s.-t4,1171

t

•State Of the University
f i r - - I. col. I)

developments occurred last year wh lch will
significantly affect our teaching efforts. The first of
these was the adoption by the Faculty Senate of the

th8t c.n be provided by the Unlvowslly Ia the recently
~ Regional Ecbnomic Aaaiatance Center.
We began formal development of lhe Center during
the PMI yew; Md, according to the Dean, a high
prtortty In the School of Management In 1978-79 will
be 10 m.ke the Center fully operational. Our hope indeed, our belief - Ia that the Center will have an
Important Impact on the revitalization of the
Weatem New Vorl&lt; economy.
Another Important example of the public 881VJce
the University renders Ia provided by the School of
Architecture Entertainment District Project. The City
of Buffalo asked the School of Architecture and
Envlron"*"al Design to aaaume the leadership role

~~~.gar h~~~:::;, Ref:o"':r - eq~r~;,~n~~ledT~Y~
administration openly had advocated this policy for
several years, and the action by the Senate should
help ensure that students receive ths full amount of
instruction for which they have paid .
Genar11 education
t'n a second development, Academic Affairs,
Health Sciences, and the Faculty Senate
established a joint committee to review the
undergraduate curriculum , specifically, the general
education components of those programs. I stated
In 1975 In the Introductory statement to our planning
process that a major task facing this University
would be the development of a general education
program. I believe very strongly that this University
has the resources and the talent to create a program
that Is unique within higher education, one which
demonstrates that It Is able Itself to grastrthe
coherence of Its full offering of disciplines.
In addition to the work of the General Education
Committee, It should be noted that Individual
departments, schools and faculties frequently
·ravlew their offerings with an eye toward
Improvement and more fully meeting the needs of
students. For Instance, the School of Nursing and

~=-:r:=:·dr:.~~,'t~W~r~~ :!u;:~,~~ '~
the,_.,. reaction wt•• ch greeted the unveiling of
t1teae pl8nalatethla summer.

.,......_Cenel

In a more somber vein, moat of you are aware that
the Uhlveralty has been asked by varlous elected
olflclala and residents of the Love Canal area to

:;:;,~ther:~~~g.:fln~ful~~~}~t&lt;'!"dt~cou~~:

disposal problem In Western New York. A number of
Interested faculty members have met to organize
themselves Into a multidisciplinary task force

=·red p~r.Jh~=~·f ,o~~t:::~rn o:h~.n~l:!';"~'lft
contributions to our awareness and
understanding of the P'oblem - ana, hopefully,
they will be able to contribute significantly to Its
solution.

make~mportant

1

~so

~.1:!f.~f:.:~.:,:~~~~~ ha::.;~S::;

;~~re~:e~7~ e~;,o~~~~~ss~~r.::~~.rn~ sea~e:.r:::rsi

'We are determined to overcome
our present difficulties In order
to continue to build .... '

Yort&lt;.

LMa publlclad oonlrtbutlona
However, the community aa -lias those of usln

the University, must not &lt;Mitiook the valuable public

services that are rendered both programmatically

..._,ca

units. For lnatanca, the Faculty of Natural Sciences
.nd
contributed algnlflcantly through
the Western New York Science Forum; the Facufty

~..~er':,~!~~~k~u~tl~~;'j~~ ~"",lle\~;-=

the Faculty of Social Sciences through Its
Paychologlcal and Ita Speech and Hearing Clinics. I
alao should note that our Computing · Canter
currently Ia working with the Buffalo schools
ayatem In the development of a program for early
IIQOI education to computer usage. Again, a public
.rvlce, the Faculty of Arts end Letters has begun to
pPint out forcefully end,l believe, very appropriately
that tha City must have healthy cultural Institutions
aa wall aa a haalthyeconomy. The Daan notes In his
annual report that the Faculty of Arts and Letters

c~~.:~~u~;,~.'~.~ut~d~~ ~t':t~

continued.
Indeed, the Unl-alty aa a whole must continue

~!:~~~.::r~~=~~~~~re~~~

believe we at Buffalo can mal&lt;e substantial
additional pnogreaa In pursuing the gael we adopted
In thts ,._. ago. That goal was to
naoognlz:e a apeclal relationship wtth the community
and n1111on to In thla relationship
according to our III*Mmlc Interests and abilities.

.........

A aeoond emllhaala within State University, and a
m.joroneat this Unl..,.lty Center, Ia fMMreh . The
a-c.ltor llaa -.cl that he aKpeeta the r.-ch
profile of State Unlvwalt)' to lmpr.,.. significantly. I
'-urged aucll ~~at this campus, aa did

~T===-~P~~n~:r:!:Ym~~

aa a reeuH of 1 ' - W1111108 aa by the realization
amano a glOWing numllar of faculty that In t h tlmaa outalde euppon Ia - t l a l to maintaining
the vtt.llty of lllelr ~t· n. nlllllbar of 1-.::11 Md training awards
,...... lw Ute l.lnlwerelty hom outalde agencies
11.-d rr-4071n 11177 to ee In 11111. The dollar
..,. of.._
approximately 53-million
~ 11!!!__"-:!'"11 from S20,82t,e35 to
lli-~-P.~J•-. _ _ . llgu* . . not
• . . _ . , I em lliformed by our
....._... . . . .._...., expendHurw during the

-a-

......._ , _ 1111 -.led the 122-mn11on

_... . . . ,..... _ _.NPQrt.

What the Bunn plan aaya about itself
A second Issue that has struck me since the
Issuance of the draft by Academic Affairs Is that
some com..mentary seems to me to have Ignored
what the dhlft plan says about itself. In other words,
the draft clearly states that Its proposals are modest
and that planning Is a continuous process. Indeed,
the University's annual budgetary process Is a
recurring exercise in planning and In the
Identification ortnstitutlonal priorities-. Internal and
external program evaluations and accreditations

~~~~s ~o~~~~o,t\~~~~~~ ::,xefr"~S:~· ~::,r,?~!~~~.:'d

future plans each year In their annual raports. This,
It seems to me, Is the Important point to be made:
units must plan for themselves within the resources
avallabll!. No one else can do 11. The draft plan
released by Academic Affairs respects this fact.

1

l~epl~~f~ 0.:, ~~~J~ ~m~st;,:~~ngs~~~.'~g

the past year. ·t
want to call attention to efforts
currently being made In the Faculty of Social
Sciences and ths Faculty of Arts·:lnd Let1ers to serve
themselves by better serving the broader needs of
the University. These efforts , by these two faculties
wh ich have suffered serious declines In student

at'fot the Schools In the Faculty of Heattl:'Sciences,
are -11 publicized. In fact, ths • public service
project• and programs ~ted by the
probably will
pro aaaional schools have been
continue to be In the public eye ore often than
those associated with the more traditional liberal
arts and science ecademlc departments. This Ia true
not only beceuae of the wide range of professional
schools at this Unlveralty, but because of the unique
and sometimes dramatlc needs of Western New

and Individually by other academic and support

~

allocation and raallocatlon - of the need to ensura
that we do not seriously jeopardize the viability of
already outstanding units. I know ha Is receptive to
persuasive evidence. Simultaneously, I belleve It
should be pointed out that our Deans - and 1 know
they understand this - have a responsibility not
ontr, to seek additional outside resources but to
jud clously allocate the State resources they have at
their own disposal. Issues within Schools or
Faculties should be resolved whenever possible at
those levels.

encourage these efforts to transcend t he Insularity
of the discipline, and take th is occasion to state that
It Is my hope that other units In the University will
encourage and cooperate In these endeavors .
'Blunt Word a about planning'
Curricular change, of course, ultimately Involves
planning at the department level . It Is a basic part of
academic planning . During the past year, the
University made strides In Its academic planning
efforts with the Issuance by the Vice President for
Academic Affairs of a draft statement of planning
priorities tor the next five years. I believe this

~a~e~:~e!:.,a ~;t~~J':;!nfs'l ~~:t~~d

and read since the Issuance of this statement , I
believe the lime has come for some rather blunt
observations about academic planning at this
Institution.
We began to consider drafting an aClldemlc plan a
number of years ago, essentially as a response to
complaints about the allocation of resources onca It became clear that there were not enough
rasourcea to satisfy the needs or desires of
everyone. Persona who felt that their units were
somehow being given the prpyarlllal "short end of
the stick" were especially Inclined to claim that the
process was arbitrary and capricious. Since that
lime, a great deal of rhetoric has been advanced to
cast academic planning, In a more philosophical
context; and such rhetorical flourishes can Indeed
contain valid reasoning. In essence, however, an
ecademlc plan must necessarily suggest the criteria

:::~ ~!~o~~~r.:l'=:l1t.~~:tf';,:1:.0!l

by ..cademlc Affairs accomplishes those ends. It
recognizes that quantitative material can be used to
Inform ecademlc ~udgmenta; but It clearly stal.l!s
that such judgments cannot be bound by Ifill
quantlllllva. The draft plan also Identifies current
lmbel8nces In resources In the ecadernlc areas.

~lor the

VPM

P8rhapa the m081 belle decision which hed to be

made In approaching such a statement waa whether ·
to reallocete reaourcaa Incrementally or m.ke large
Md _,..,c ahlfta by actually eflmlnetlng
progriii'M. The VIce Prweident for AC*Iemic Affaire
dacided - Md I support him In thla dacJalon - to
.,.. the 1=-tel epproacll to aetectl..
rullocatlon. In fact, thtaal..-ly 18 being practiced.
n... Ia, of occne, a oacognlad danger In ualng
the l..,..,_lal IIPP'08Ch. In one lnatMoe, 1111lta
alalad 1o . . - . . adtl"'-1 rwourcaa Ina)' oonelder
ttwn totally ~. On tile other hand, 1111ita
giving up will oonaldar - from their
vantage point - lltel their alraedy Inadequate
-rcaa . . being raided. uar-. alnce
lncnnwllal ~- ptOINGtlld,
to any plan ol laallocatJon oan • ~ and

_.lion

""" ..,_,

oancluctad
- l O b e-=a.=~·11111a.
. . _of.O..unlta,aa

·--=:=
...... Vloe

-

. . Aoldaonlc . . . . . fully

of Ute lltfloultlle IIIOOhed

lft -

Succeasln appolntmenta •
Since planning at the unit level Is exceptionally
Important, the University, has been fortunate In the

g:~Y~ft~~ ~:;:::;::·~~~::JP~~ ~~~:s ~~ro~

deanships In Academic Affairs. These deansh ips
Included those for the Faculty of Educational
Studies, the Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics, the Faculty of Social Sciences, the
Dean of Continuing Education, and the Dean of
Undergraduate Education. In the Faculty of Health
Sciences, searches currently -are underiNay for
Deans In Nursing and In Health Related
Professions. Also, I think It should be mentioned
that the Dean of MediCII)e pointed out In his annual
report that the School lied been highly successful
this year In obtaining a number of outstanding new
department chairmen.
In addition to such appointments. distinguished
senior scholars were at1racted In Academic Affairs
In such areas .as Comparative Llteratura,
Engineering, Mathematics, Soctorogy, and Law. In
Management, recruitment was considered to be the
moat successful ever conducted. Overall, of 319 full
professors In Academic Affairs, only elewn
resigned during the past year to accept

-:r:n~lr~~~~sr0::V:thtfo.!.':.'!~\tor:;.1,-.Jeh:~ ~!s ~g'~

stated as forcefully as possible that - now face a
serious situation In regard to our ability to Identify
funds which can be used to Improve the salaries of
selected facult~ members In danger of being lured
away by other natllutlons. Our flex1blllty has been
exhausted . Also, I want to point out once again that
our administrative salary structura Ia not
competitive. Presently, we are working with Central
Administration of State University to develop a peer
Institution study which hopefully will have some
Impact oh thE&lt; Division of the Budget In this regard.

There era problema
We do, therefore, have rroblems. I especially
want to say that we do. Las year I was edvleed to
dell- a very positive message at a meeting of
Department Chairmen. I did so, anll as a result some
of the chairmen were left wondering If - were all
working at the same Institution.
There are a number of problema. Some of these
Include ragllltratlon, housing, end student attrition.
In each of these areas, I have appointed groups to
define the problema and come forward with
recornmQnded solutions. Moreover, an especially
distinguished group waa appointed this lest year to
study the operaJional procea- of the Unlvowslly.
This committee will review a great variety of aupport
services to determine whether end In what waya they
cen be more supportive of our fundamental
purposes of teaching, raa.n:h, end 881VIce.
Funding and facllltlee
Two problema, however, ""' moat frequently
mentioned In the varloua·unlt annual reports. Thare funding and facilities. Funding for additional
faculty and support ataff Ia highly deSirable. We
alao need lunda for equipment replacement for 0111
libraries, and for our computing canter. We need
capital lunda for the completion of the Amhowst
Campus and . tha renovation of Main Streat . Such
needs, however, are not . - . They have bear! with
ua throughout the d~. -.1 10 a certain dagnae
ara ah-..d In many lnatancea by other lnatllutlona.
Whet thtn, Ia the atata of the 'Unl..,.tty of
Buffaloi Ilia an lnatllutlon with problema, ~. But
It haa an excellent faculty; a dedicated atafl; a well
qualified student body; M&lt;f en lnterMted
community wtthln the prlvm MC!or. It Ia an
tnatHutlon of not lnconaldermte reaourcee. It Ia a
untvwalt)' o f - ' " · nettona~ty and tn-tor-.Jty.
With 1'- elements In mind, would therefore aay

mr. ~~::.~~; ::u~= ~:!':=::"-=~

determined to surmount our - t dllflcultlee In
order to continue to build .upon tha al:ad-ic
achl__.,ta of the PM! - to emphaalz:e the
lntarNiatlonahlpe of taMlhlng, ~. and
aarvloe, to ~ the hlah aim of unifying
t'-Y and practice· thoullht
act ton; of cr.attng
an undaratandl~ 0# life wlth the llvlnJI of it .

ana

- RGIIart L.

~

�. . IIdia

Council ............ (at table, ln&gt;m lett): Mr. M, Robert Koran, Mrs. RoM
Sconl. ., Mr. Wmlam Baird, Mr. Michael Pierce, Prnldant Ketter, Mr. Robert
Mlll..,zl .
·

Council mambere (at llble, from lett): Or. George L. Colllna, Mrs. Phyllis
Kelly, Mrs. Harrlat 8rown, Or. Jamaa Phllllpa.

•U/B Council
pogo 1' CGI. 4}

-

ruling on 1he Jewish nolldays, he has
received pleadings from Mosl:;,m
students for oboervonce of Romadon
and from Catholic associate bishops for
on academic recess on Good Friday.
Both have been reJected as Inappropriate, Ketter aeld .
Or. LDrenzettl of Stud
lfalrs
suggested thal the regul1tlon gtiVIomlng
theM holidays Ia • rule for the
University end not for students end as
such would be out of place In the
student rules.
The matter was dropped.

-c:
~~~~~~":~~~~~ t~,:~h.:::fc"hln~~

R1:,

Rules were approved as

result). They win be provided to
students In on lnaer1 In on upcoming
Issue of the Reporter.
Why not )uat have a f81ture story In
The Spectrum hitting the highlights,
Council member Pt;t,ll• Kelly suogea1ed . " People read I II."
/

Annual..-1

-.

Mlllonzl hurriedly skimmed o - his
onnual report before the Council
IPi'ff::·!tnothlng contro-.lal here,"
he assured. Just • almpte record of the
ll:tlons of I he yew.

In In g::,~·~=~~~~~~h"!:P,::
replacing long-time ch•lrmon William
C. Baird who retired), and the addition
of three new members: Mrs. Sconlera, •

~~f:e M~'. ~~~ u~~=n~ro':~

and Or. JIIM8 F. Phillips, • graduate of
the University's School of Medicine end
presently a member of Ita voluntcllnlcll faculty. [Mra. Brown end
Phillips attend'ed \heir first meeting
Mond•y.J
"Perhaps the moat lmpor1ont molter

\f..

~~~~': ~~~~\· =~~

cc:,"at
"occurred during April end M•y when

= t al~~~~lo~~~~~~:;.!t":
Student Auoclatlon In I'8Qird to the
stewlrdahlp of Prealdent l&lt;etter. The
Council determined th1t It did not have
power under tha Educotlon Low to act
on the molter of the contlnu1t1on of the
President In Olfloa. However, the
Council hMrd studenta and tiiYlewed
CIIMully • report prepwed by the
Student Auoclstlon. It also received
and considered tha 'overwhelming
avidenca of aupport' for the President
which was ..tdent In material addreuad to tha CllainNin end Members
of tha Council. Aa • naoult, tha Council
unanlmOuely ~tad a .-..ofutlon 'In
COIIIPIMe aupport of "'-~dent J(atter.
"The Col:ncll tllao IIPPfO"ad a report
.. • which ctlllad upon atudantl,

--1

admlnlatr8tlon, 18culty, ond ..........,.
of tha Council to pull togalher lor the
ol tha Unheralty. Tha
..-1 Dladaad ond commlttad tha

Counolfto 6o
Mil, It

0110118Ntl0n -

at I thlt It oould to
le

thla

attl1uda

thlt

of

aupport upon which

tha Council concluded tha old yaw and
.-.....1 tha new academic yaw of
117a-7t."
lila had no oblectiOna to the report ,
._,..,.told Millonzt,lllll In the fut ..e,
~ tha Counctl P ' - h - occesa to

dlloumanla of thla natlftln •once?
"Wa running aa-l"" • daadllna,".MillonZI aaid.

Thabudgat

hl~u~~~)~ ~~~~~gf~ ~9~ir.'K;.'i~

told the Council . In dollars, that's an
lncresaaof $9.536mllllon .
Including the supplemental request
(not yet acted upon), U/B expects to
have a total of $96.503 million In State
funds this yeor, Ketter lndlcoted. Next
year's request Is for $106,039,680.
That figure would enable us to add 70
Instructional FTE linea and t06 nonInstructional positions. We won 't be
able to fill them all , though , because
the State requires a ceiling on
employmen1 at about four to five per
cent under the total authorized .
This year's budget Ia predicated on a
head-&lt;:ount enrollment total of 24,588;
In 1979-60, the headcount enrollment

lf.r.laf~~1 1bJo1 n.:'ri~r' e~~11~l,;.;t Tr~:!

of 916 (4 .t per cent o - this year's FTE
total) .
The accompanying chart Indicates
how the requested budget Increase
would be distributed across com pus.
Ketter broke the budget down In a
vatlety of ways:
•In 1979-60, U/B expects total
funding (from Stata end other sources)
of $160,0113,&lt;400 - 15.8 per cant of tt)at
($106 million) will come from Stoia
funda; 14.8 per cant ($24, 1t5,900! from
till aourcaa ot atudant aid; 7.7 per cant
($12,368,000) from other apon-ad
progroma; 8.3 ~ cant ($14,935,000)
from aponaorad i'Maerch; and 2.2 per
cant ln&gt;m endowment.
•The State budget pie will be divided
as follows : Instruction and departmental research , 55.4 per cent;
maintenance and oporatlons, t6.3 per
cent; general Institutional services, 6.7
per cent; Libraries, 5.3 per cent ; general
administration, 4.8 per cent; student
services, 3.9 per cent; residence halls,
3.7 per cent; organized activities, 3.4
per C4!nl; extension and public service,
.3 per cent; orgonlzed research, .2 per
cent.
•Payments for aalerlaa and wages

will comm1nd 73.1 per cant of the State
budget total; 14.8 per cant of It will go
for auppllaa, equipment, etc.; 8.3 per
cent
lor
utllitlaa
(a
whopping
$8,846,000); 3.8 per cant lor temporary
aervJcaa (students end other part-time
workers); 1.8 per cant ($1,661,&lt;400) for
llbrery ocqulaltlona; end 1.4 per cant lor
raqulradaavtnga.
Forum lor atudenta
The Council accepted a proposal
from Chairmen Mlllonzl to hold an

~~~~ct~r 3.t~~e~t~. m~fnn~~

Jeannette Martin Conference Room on
C&amp;pen-.5. The Council will convene for
lunch on compus that day and will hold
2

ar~ulf~~~~J'r!~ ~~\e

would be
opposed to such a forum without
specific ground rules on who would
speak, for how long, etc. There should
be some Indication, too, Koren

tl~w~~~Z~f -:..~ ":!!op!c;:l~l ~

on
agenda, time limits end a limit on how
long the session will run. "If more wont
to speak then we con hear," he said,
" we'll do It again so all con get a chonce
to be heard."
Student representative Pierce would
prefer a regular open question session
("u In Partlament") at 'each Council
meeting- If only for 10 minutes.
"Let's try It this way and see whet
happens," Mlllonzl countered .
He gave Pierce responsibility for
setting up on agenda foo· the October 9
session. Interested students may
contact Pierce through the Student
Association .
'For whom tha balltoila'
In other business, Mlllonzl told
Pierce that he has received on opinion
from the State Attorney General to the
effect that under the law, the studen1
representative to the Council con not
make motions In Council meetings. He
been remiss In permitting that lui
lllonzl Indicated . A copy of the
n has been provld
to the

lnCIM&amp;I
$1 ,719,300

1.8%

%of
Total
18.0

$1,637,100

1.7%

17.1

$ 900,700
lion
$ 102,100
Position Annuallzollon
$2,154,700
Prloa lncroaas.
(for Utllltlea, Postage, Tal•
phone, Library, Minimum Wage,

0.8%
0.1%
2.2%

9.4
1.0

Instruction Progrom Growth

~~~re~~~~-~

~~~".~~~~~~'!!Annualize-

~-6

Equipment ~_,.,t
New Building r:,:'lnga
savtnga Reduct n ,
Library ltnpro-1

$

3011,400

-%
0.11%
0.4%
0.2%
0.3%
0.5%
0.4%
0.5%

$9,536,&lt;400

11.9%

s

s
s
s

4,200
885,000
387,600
t511,&lt;400

$ 437,000
$ 405,600
$ 457,300
Other
(for Buaalng , Gnaduata Fallow·
ahlpa, Animal Facllltlaa, Canter

=~t'rrn'r:"ter

John Donne,"
,

•

" Ask not for whom' the bell tolls.
" It tolls fo ~thee . " '~

-•Transit
(from pegtJ&amp;, 'c oL 1)

Highway Admlnlatrstlon which will
produce a hondbook for trsnsportatlon
ptonnera. Before coming to Buffalo, ha
had been Involved In a ll)jldy of
trsnsportatlon In the Son Fla'hclscoOakland area, comparing the affects of
construction of a highway extension to
on extension of the B•y Area Rapid
Trsnslt (BART) system. He haa also
worked lor the Illinois Department of

::~".~~~~~~~~"&amp;~os~. of
Another essocl1te Ia Wilfred Recker,
who returned to U/B this umeater attar

~~~~~ ~:":~In:~ ~~: ~~~= ~

st~~~tf~~~=v:~~- group ere Mark
Applesteln, who Is Interested In the

r~~~~~7~~~. s~e"f~T~a:,n~~~

works on the appllcotlon of larg•ICIIe
systems -theory.
Such studies are not mere academic
exercises, Pauwell points out. Federal
law mondatea that all communltlea of

~.~::~~~~~:':'"~~~~~
onijolng

plonnlng.

Much

of

this

~~=~~:ol~~dad locolly with U/B

~:~~~~~·~ e:ll:lf:n •Fa,:,~
p.m . In 104 Parker.
Tomorrow's apaokar will be Curl
. Elm:::ft, lnternltlonelly-lcnown apart

on-&amp;,:'~~~':' =rJ-r.:· 322
Acheson at 2 p.m .

Loselwh'ls
suggestion award
Vernon G. Loaal, a aMal mata1

General'

aver- A&lt;-Jwnlc Progrom

1

df&gt;9{S:~",!t;::,';:~: Yof

Pierce mused:

Civil Engln-lng this fall will offer
weekly umlnars on current toplca llka
public trsnalt, renovation of bulldlnga,
snow load coaa atudlea, rtv. bealn

Where increase will go
MAJOR COMPONENTS OF REQUESTED
'711-60 BUDGET INCREASE

students' lawyers, the Council chalrmanseld .
•
Students will fight that In the courts,
Pierce promised.
Mlllonzl then asked for. nominees for
a U/B Council representative to the
State-wide College Council end Trustees Association. "Oh," said Phyllis
Kelly, " Harry Charlton from AI bony
called me end appointed me to that last
week."
" Oh ?-, " Mid-MIIlonzl.
Finally, student representatll/8 Pierce
Informed the Council that a student
murdered on his way back to U/B for
the fall semester will be awarded a

11.3

3.8
2.0
3.2
4.8
4.2
4.8

:fS:.~o~~Aif;!l&amp;AC,

100.0

~~~ a~-=o~':
devising a apeclaf allllflll*lt drtlljlg lor

uM In naplaclna brocMia on llr'liMn
claaaroorn erm cNirs.
Prior to adoptiOn of thla t*llc:a, tha
brackets had to be aant to an oul8lcla
mlchlne ahop for drllllnll. Qurtng tha
flrat yew, uea of tha drill Jig rwulted In
net aavfnga of approximataly SB75ii
according to Ro~M!rt C. Fltzpstrlck, U/
vice praaident for '"-ch .
Loaal joined U/B In 1982. Ha had
worked at Bell Aircraft end It vartoua
sheet metal joba befed coming hers.

�SEL

Capen

What'o blue and gr8en and five times
88

aaUbrary
6"/W.(SEL),
:c:;."cl.""'
~
for one.
81

~==~g

Now open on the aecond and third
levelo of capen Hall at Amherst, SEL Is:
•aglow with low-backed, stuffed
cllalro In navy blue, royal blue, and

='thaneWt.S:i
c:.:~.byg::~l ~::" ~R:~:
the UGL below); and

•abounding In a wealth of Q!&amp;der
atatlono. (Hero and there among the
otacka, In eight oaparate lounge areas,
In four group-otudy rooms, and In 48
lockable Individual ccreto are a-1olal of
1100 -ts. There were only about 275 at
Main Street.)
SEL Librwlan Jarneo Webster, ·who
came to U/B two yearo ago after 20
v-ro with the Calopan technical library,
oayo the new apace provldeo room for

~~: ~~= 1~~~~;'~~~

to 198,000 volumes and nearly 1,000
peo1odlcalo).
For FNSM end FEAS

-

SEL, he explains, oervea all departmenta In the faculties of Natural
Sciences and Mathematics and Englnewlng end Applied Scienceo, and has
recently taken on the extra neaponslblilty of providing baalc materialo for the
School o1 Ptoarmacy. The only Health
Sclencee unit at Amherst, Pharmacy Is
located In the Cooke tower, juot acrose
the way ffom Copen.
will also administer the new
"Weal Llbrli!Y" to be opened at Ridge
'-- (for Computer Science, Slatlatlco
end Geology, among ~) and Will
make • POrtion of Ita collection
("*'*'--ice ~ In partlcu'-)
_..,..to the- Main SITMI Ubrary
(WIIIcll will be !\In by ~ood).

sa

The SEL staff Includes seven
professionals and 10.5 support posi·
lions.
M~aphlca

The new SEL headquarters - besides

~v~~~ ~r~tl'.::m8 ~n~=u~~~~
~o:;"~:f~e':.'t~n t."xpa."d~e!"l';l:Pc~h~

:sl!,ooo

handle up to
microfiche and
microform Items, 60 portable mlcrc:&gt;flche readers which can be loaned out ,
~ desk-top readers stationed throughout t~e library, several microform
reader-printers, and a microfiche copier
will, when everything has arrived and Is
In uoa, enable SEL to greatly expand
the availability of aclenllflc and
technical reports.
Now, Webster sayo, If an engineer
wants a given technical report, chances
are nine out of ten that "we don't have
II." It can be ordered within six weeks,
but that Isn't aJwal' helpful. Wlth the

~~o"2u/~Z'~~ ~n~ic~~j~"W~~
~~az.·d e~::,s''1: h~~:~r.; ~~~sf

overnight. The library's own holdings of
theoa reports will be Increased as well.
It will take about a year to get the
micrographics unit fully equipped and
In operation, Webster estimates.
Computer -.:he&amp;
Much sooner than that, SEl will Qe
able to offer another pr&amp;\'louoly un-

==

o~e:';'':ir~ren:::~~;:

baoaa.
SEL'o circulation deal&lt;, refer8JIC8
department, abatracts, Indexes, and
current periodicals are located on
'-1·2 of Capen. Also on that level are
offices and a space eventually to be
occupied by an audlcrvlsual department

which will serve all University Libraries
units.
Webster refers to the third level of
Capen (which SEL occupies In Its

~~:::-:tr~~fe!~~~~~~n'.f~~~~ A~, :::

library's reeder stations are to be found
there.

M~!~braa7

stack level Is a greatly

~w~~r:."t' m~~~ll 0ra ~l!h off~
:rc~:·:n~eun~~~'t.=~ ~;Fn/':'~~:

Both Its holdings and the sneer amount
of floor space i t occupies are

lm~~:::•ewoodson,. curator of the
collection which preceded the rest of

~~~!n:~a~ren~:pa~~... r~"!.m~~~~'l!i

::"~~~~~~~ncl~~~ndf~! u.~~~ro~~~l

Survey and Its Canadian equivalent, the
Department of Energy and Mines In
Ottawa. SElls one of only a few U.S.
libraries with a full range of Canadian

topographical maps; Its holdings also
Include complete aerial photography
of Erie County (done In 1972).
Woodson stresses that the map
collection Is no archive; all the maps
circulate.

ca~h:u;~!~~~~su:~h ~"G~ra by
Geography, Anthropology, lind Cr.;i
Engineering. It also serves a large
community clientele, representing varIous companies 8nd Institutions which
are Interested In geological and
hydrological studies - even real estate
agencies.
SEL:S books, micrographics and
maps are not all In place and ready to
go. Not all lights are working, a few
carrels haven' yet been bolted Into
place; the healing and cooling "yatems
ar~~~.~~~l:~~~t~~s~~ib':~~saays

"things are much Improved" over Main
Street where the building wso lin and
cromped and most of the fixtures,
make-do.
Things are going to get even. better.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>VOL/NO

STATE UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO

SEP.1978

"10·1
7
looks like _2 5,500--or tnOreJ
as registration for fall winds--down
U/8 seems headed ioward a fall
semester enrollment of around 25,500,
Richard Oremuk, director of Admissions and Records, said Tuesday.
By last Friday morning '(the latest
count available), a total of 20,461
students were "In the registration file,"
he sald; this reflected completed
registrations; and did not Include those
whose registrations had been initiated
but were not yet final, he sald .
Dremuk estimated that about 21 ,500
s1udents hed begun registration,
compared to rou9hly 18,800 at the same
time last year. For the most part, the A&amp;R director
Indicated, the huge process has been
moving along rather smoothly.

an~w~ndror,:'.,g;.~~ ·~~~nsc~f s~!~

considerably on traffic in Hayes Band C
Where only initial registrations are
being processed.
·
Tht drop-and-edd line in Squire was
quite long ea?1y last week, he
acknowiedl':l, but It
later. The

:r,.

:\:?'acti~::St ~~~tn!' !~~:";?o!~
for a while, Drernuk sald . Meanwhile,
-v few students seemed to be aware

of or using the aecond drop-edd station
in Fronczal&lt; Hall at Amherst.
Traffic in Hayes B and C was stead~

:,~ t~~t L~rasOa~~dtu•~"'~n

expected. 'We were looking for a
greater Influx Qf students after the
holiday," he indicated.
Tomorrow, Friday, september 9, Is

:::
~~.t-Ff J~~a~:~~~s1=~:
sePtember
Ia the final day to drop
1~.

wtthoul flnenclal llablllt~•
.,...,.. IIW011it•• ftQUrU will not be
INI!nable until the third- of classeg:

at's new

on camp

this fall?

What's new this fall?
The most significant ch':!Pes are the

~'Z~~~~=rr,.,~~~.~

wtumea and 3500 reader stations were
added to the Amherst Campus In the.
new Lockwood Memorial Library and
the Undergraduate and Science ancf
EnglnMrlng libraries Which occupy
81*&gt;8 In Capen Hall.
Some 3,000 freshmen make up the
twgest Incoming ctasslrl U/B's history.
Those who have expressed an intended
major are favoring the Engineering,
M&amp;Ngement and Health and Natural
Science dlsclpllnes. Geographically,
the n811t class consists of 53 to 55 per
cent who come from the Eighth JudlcJal
District (Westem New Vorl&lt;). ·A'he •
namatnlng 45 to
per cent come from
otherpW1s of the &amp;late, other states and

•r

ot':"
~n~ of departmental ••
tocatlona, Anthropology hu moved

,,_ the Ridge Lee Campus to the
a-dding Quadrangle of
Joaeph
l!llicott Complex. The Mutlldleclpllnary
Cent• lor the Study of Aging has
~ from Ridge Lea to Annex A on
the Main Sti'MI Campus. The Adult
Ad¥~t Center hea moved from· 3
Allenhurst to Dlelendori Annex on Main
~tree~, 8nd a portion of the School of
Hlelth Releted ProlePJons has moved .
ham F~ Hall to thB Stockton
KlmbeH T - . al.., on llllal.rl Street.
The moat vlalble changes 110 those
.e.1e11 110 a nsault of ,_,t oonalnlctton at Atnhentt. Wor1&lt; ._ begun In the
rwiDCatton of Millerapo&lt;t HIQhWII)' ea
on --.1 lntemaf .campus
~and th-1*111"11 tot&amp;. Three
"111 118 und-ay. Thay .,.
' Do&lt;ahlernef Lab a-.tl&lt;luH,
Ia connected to the Biology
autldlng; tl1e Jalln A. a-.. Cent•
wlllch wttt tile lltiYIIcal plant
lfiOpe and olflcea, anil lila
"""'
. ."" wllictl
will ~ •
_ . ~...........
= .IIOtllllw
....
................. ~lnh

the

••II •

5

the

a.m...t

--·-·-. -·

(

�~. l, 1171

l
Wbere's that?
~ bulletin - · lor bul route
common
/
_..,...1-..d-rwaywound.

C:.-:.:. ::r.: =.:.-: o~

BRIEFLY
let.Mk

UpdAte on follett's

Non-members of United
Unlwnlty ProfHSions who wish to
demand a r~fund of a portion of their
AseKY Fee payment from the Union
must do so by September I 5.
As outllned 1n the Agency Fee Act
oll977, andclarlfled In a court
dec;lslan last spring, refund demands
can be made only between
Sg&gt;ternber I and I 5 of each y~r. The
c0rre5pondenc.e must Indicate that
the.send&lt;or demands a refund of the
portion of payment which onl)l''lncl~tally relates to negotiations
for wages or t~rms of ~mploym~nt ."
According to UIB Classics Professor
Thomas C. Bany, who was Involved
In last spring's litigation on the
ma~r. thase claiming ~funds must
write a certified or registered letter
to Mr. Sam~l Wakshull. president,
WP. Inc .. 15 Com
or .. Albany.
New York 12205.
Barry's Interpretation of the union' s
refundr~lutlon Is that "Ag~yFee"
payers must also send a duplicate

The target date for the start of
construction on the proposed Follett's
Booksto~ on Parcel Bat Amherst
has been delayed, John M . Carter,
presl~t of the U/8 Foundation, Inc ..
said this week. The ~lis still on,
though. Carter added.
Exuding optimism, Carter said
reservations that some ~tl~
and faculty may have had about the
, proposal (under which Follett's wfll
take over all campus bookstore
o~atlons) seem to have disappeared
after a series of m«etlngs In August.
Final discussions between Carter
and Robert Iverson, president of
Follett's College Stores Division,
were to have been concluded this
week, Carter said .
Now. Carter outlined, attorneys
must take all agreemenrs worked out
about the store and translate them
Into a legally-binding lease. which .
In turn, will be reviewed by All
parties concerned.

of this letter to the union's Slate
tr~rer. Mr. joseph D. Drew, same
address as Wakshull's. Letters must
be postmarked by the fifteenth of
September; the union will Ignore any
application for a refund submitted
after t~tter date. Barry Is
avallabf" for questions at 636· 232 7.

we can work,·· Carter said. although
he now admits that a fall start for
construction of the S I mill ion. 20,000.
square· foot project n~r Lake LaSalle
seems less and less likely. "We can
shoot for a spring start and have
some part of the facility ready for
a fall 1979 opening," he still hopes.

State Unlv~slty wfll cOntlnu~ Its
program wfth the Soviet
Union daplte the recent trials of
Sovl~ dlssl~ts and the resulting
strain In lJS.USSR r~latlons .
Provost Loren Barltt announced
the SUNY stand In ~rters sent In
August to Individuals ~tlonlng the
continued relationship.
.
Stare University has received many
protests, Barltt acknowledged.
"The University's exchange
. program has been reassessed In the
context of the Orlov, Shcharansky,
and Ginsburg trials," he said. But
"because of the academic advantages
of the prog.-am, members of the
University Board of Trustees have
concluded that the ... exchange
shall continue."
Despite this policy. Barltz
went on, " any Individual may. of
couf\e, refuse to be considered or
may freely withdraw at any lime.
One SUNY faculty member selected
for Inclusion In the exchange has,
as a INitter of canscl~e. withdrawn.
The University wfll make special
-anaemenrs to accomm&lt;&gt;CYte to the
c......., plana of any faculry member
o r - t who wf.,_ to withdraw
from the exchange.· ·
~xchange

" We'regolng to work as fast as

Advisors (
A 14-person advisory panel for rhe"
Parcel B Bookstore has been established
by the UIB Foundation, developers of
the proJect. The group wfll have Input
Into store policies. procedures and

operations.

·

Five students will sit on the
committee-one representative uc.h
from : the undergraduate Student _.,
Association (SA), the Graduate
Student Association, the Millard
Fillmore College Student Association.
and the combined Med-Dent-Law
student associations. The fifth
student's constlt~y Is yet to be
determined.
The Faculty Senate Executive
Committee has named five faculty
(see page I 2): the Professional
Staff Senate, the Administration. and
the U/8 foundation will get one
repr~tatlveeach , as will follett 's
Bookstores (their local manager).

DeAn's Council formed

Coventry entrAnce

A new Dean's Council wh ich will
meet monthly Is being formed by
President Robert L. Ketter. Its
membership wfll consist of the various
deans, the v ice president fOr a.cademlc
affairs, the vice president for health
sciences, selected members of rhe
President's st'!ff and Ketter. The fourth
Monday of every month will be
reserv~ for meetings, Ketter said.
The President also Indicated he Is
enlarging the Acadejnlc Cabinet to
Include the chairman of the Faculty
Senate. the chai rman of the
Professional Staff Senate. and one
student president r~Presentl ng the six
student governments. The Cabinet
will continue rq nleer once a monthon the second Monday.
Ketter will also continue meeting
with vice presidents the first and
third Monday of each month .
The President said the new dean's
group and the expansion of the
Cablner reflect a desire " to create
more formal mechanisms whereby
various groups may have direct,
scheduled exchanges with me. "

September 20 Is the new target date
for opening the Coventry Entrance
to the &lt;\mherst Campus, Francis !j..
Sullivan. manager of the Buff-alo/
Amhe~t Field Office of the State .
University Construction Fund, ·
estimated this week.
That entrance will connect with the
Millersport bypass and then feed Into
a new extension of Augspurger Road
(the street which runs In front of the
c"'mp4S spine ar~) .
Since the Millersport bypass opened
In late August. there has been no
direct access to the campus from
Mlllersport-except at Frontier Road
north of Lake LaSalle.
The September ZO opening will
alleviate that situation.
· A new access road from
)\ugspurger to Bissell Hall (Campus
Pollee) and a parking lot next to
Bissell will open within a few days
of the Coventry proJect. Sullivan
estimated.

it41ses
New "-1Ds1e.nture

A new v~ture In off-campus hous.
lng within' SUNY began recently with
the purchase of two apartment build·
In~ In Downtown Albany by Student
Dwellings, Inc.. a not.for-profll cor· _
poratlon affiliated with Albany and
governel:l by a board of seven
stu~ts. five faculty and admlni·
&amp;trarors Clnd rwo persons from the
comr:nunlty. After honoring existing
leases •nd helping CUI'[enttenants
relocate, S~t Dwellings will rent
the units to Albany students. The
corporation has hired a student as
-'ntendem ol buildings and the
University's 5wMnt Association provided a $20,000 grant to Student
Dwelllnp- down payment and
rehabilitation.

Two proJects are bid
John W . Cowper Co. of Buffalo
was the apparent low bidder for
construction of two Amherst Campus
engineering buildings. Cowper came
In at S9.178,000 when bids were
opened by the State University
Construction Fund last week.
Siegfried Construction of Amherst
was second low-with S9.240 million.
The bids are for shework and
construction of a two-srory civil
engineering building with 20.000
square feet of space and a fourstory 40.000·sqU"are·foot mechanical
engineering building.
The two will adjoin Bell and
Furnas halls In the engineering
comple,x at the northern edge of the
campus center
They are parr of a S48 million
bulldlngJ&gt;IIckage which Gov. Carey
ltfs promised wUI be underway before
the end or the year.

The State' s Division of Payroll and
Audit has advised that the slx·and·
one-half percent first phase of the
salary hike negotiated by United
University Professions for SUNY faculty
and professional staff wfll be Included
In paychecks to be Issued September
I 5, retroactive as appropriate (to Joly
I for 12-month ~loyees. Sept&lt;!mber
I for I 0 -month). Enabling legislation
was slgffed by the Governor August and the State has been making
the necessary payroll computer
acjjustments slncr; then.

7:

�Sept- · . 1978

. . . 12£11&amp;

Advisement

Main Street, Ridge Lea
will have lib[aries
-

DUE assistant dean outlines
new approaches for giving
undergra.d s a guiding band .

The Ubrarfes have not desartad Ridge
lea and Main Street , their director
Saktidis Roy, emphaalzad to th&amp;
Reporter this weelc.
A new "Main Street Library" will open
In a matter of a couple of weetcs In the
former science .and angln-lng facility
on that campus; and a "West Campus
Library" will spring up at Ridge Lea
within the same lima period.
The new facilities ware decided on
late laat weelc by President Robert L
Ketter alter a wide range of consultation.
·
•
The Main Street Library will contain
the Mathematics Collection, and
reserve and aalectad reference materIals, as well as periodicals, for the
"departments/schools of Management
Socl ai Work, Civil Engln~ng, EngiO:
eerlng Sciences, and Theatre approximately :45,000 volumes [and 40Q
study spacesJ . It will ultimate!{, offer all
:=~lbrary aarvlces, lnclud_ng a card

At feast one young woman was cryl
on the steps of Squire last Thursda~
morning. It might have been her love
life, ~t It was probably her class

ached e.

In i:te on the second floor the
droP'and-add line was snaking arOund
turning In on ltaalf, winding tighter and
tigllter, like a convulsed boa constrictor. [A 'Similar line at Fronczak at
Amherst was like a supennarket
ex~ss counter, but that's another
story.]
" Four-and-a-half hours, It took me,"
~en~~- looked like a lreshperson
Csiculus was closed. So was English
101 . Chemistry lat!s were fu ll
"My life Is ru ined," s6nieone waa
shouting. ·'WithOut freshmen chemlslry, l can'tevertakeanythlng elsa."
Luckily, relief, comfort and people
to talk to were nearby. The DlvJslon of
Undergraduate Education (DUE) Advisement Office waa Just around the
corner In 205 Squire.
Th1Jf8 was a_Una-up and a walt, but
you could get to someone.

Not enough~

Thera aren 1 n.,ny enough. someones, though, Marllou Healey pointed
out with a tinge of discomfort, but no
traca of defeat. Ms. Healey Ia the new
assistant dean of DUE and director of
advisement.
The advisement stall has been
pruned from 20 to 12 In the past three
years, she reported. Where the ratio of
students to advisors uaad to be 350-&lt;400
to 1, It's now 900 to 1. lndlvldual
attention has become Impossible.
Even group aaaalona are hard to
manage. With vacations, there -re
only an average of nine advisors
.avoilable to asalat Aha 300 freshmen
who altanded MCh of the two-and+
half-day orientation aaaarona th is

summer.

-

All this at a time when attrition/
retention atodles show that students
mlu peraonal contact and too often
feel lost and alienated hera.
"We have to appro.ch advlaement In
a different way," Ma. Haafev has
concluded. The DUE staff have · to
become coordinators and reaource
people who direct atudtnts to others,
managers of a 6ort of extended
advisement system.
What does thlll mean?
Ms. Haaley hu five examples.
1. New lhla fall Ia a "Freshman
Colloquium," DUE 101, a one-eradlt
course which Ia more or leu an
extension · of summer orlenlallon.
Coordinated by Kathy Kubala of the
DUE staff, It alma at Introducing
lraahmen to aJ I the Univwalty'a
academic optlona. "One-third of the
lreahmen want to be engl~; another
tllird want to be president of Ganaral
Molora; and the raat we going to be
doctors," Haafey aaya. The course which Invites In IIICUity -to talk about
their Individual disciplines will
attempt to ahow thens raaJ ly ora more
cholcea than that. It afao provldaa a
general briefing on "How to, .,.lve
academically'' al U/B, where tOIIO, who
to tum to In a tight apot. Haafey hopea
the c l - will also got Into tha laaue
of general aducltlon, which Ia now
befo&lt;e a campua-wlde panel . [Some
form of general education will illcety be
nsqulnsd here In the future.] Six
eactlona of the Colloquium are baing
offered (about 25 students In each) .
Next year, thens'll be maybe 12
aectlone.

..... ~t

" - advlaamant Ia DUE's second
, _ appn~~Ch . June Blatt ot the
fulf:-llme adviaamanl ataff Ia heading an
~ .. fail - t e r traininG progr.m for 15 Mfectad atudanla. ~
with eccurate fnformlllion and achoofad
In technique, they will be ready lor
action by the lime of advance
raglatratlon lor the aacond
1111 llrat In will -.tuaJiy become

-tar.

::=~~a~fA~~r:vt~

MW DUE adv~t outpoat In EUIColf

(370 MP:AOC) - will bloom&amp; the "pe6r

~t-."

l " - ltudentl (mora of whom will
be trained
eucceadlng

-

not

*"
_,.

to

-••1

teplace

the

PVf~ ~t alalf, Healey

The MSL will be open approximately
100 hours a weetc, Roy said.
Main Street Is also the site of the
Archltectura and Environmental Design
Library (In Hayes Hall), the Health
Sciences Library (In Stockton K~mball
Tower), the Music Library (In Bairdl
and the Chemistry Ubrary (In Acheson :
In addition, Roy said, Prasidant
·
Ketter haa aakad Facilities Planning to
Identify another- space at Malo Street
which can 1&gt;8 used as a study hall (this
:,::~~~ not be run by the Llbrartes, he

emphaalzes. Rather, she says, they'll
be a "front line" In the advisement
battle ready to handle quick
·
questions and referrals.
A third new program will be geansd to
thai large group of freshmen who are
"undecided majors. • In the paat , these
Individuals have been left to flounder on
their own . "Soma didn't get It together
until the end of their junior year,"
Healey says, a bit late to end up with a
meaningful program and still graduate
on time. Shelley Fnsderlck Ia In charge
of designing "exploratory sessions" for
students In lhls category. They'll attend
workshops In decfslon-maklng, and
perhaps some brown bag luncheons at
which faculty will provide lnfonnal
career lnlormatlon . Placement and
car- Guidance will be j oi ning In this
pr~ .
•

The new facility at Ridge Lea will be
located In the same building aa the
cafeteria and will contain : raaerve and
aalectad ralere~ce materials and periodIcals lor the. departments of Psychology, Computer Science, Statistics, and

Four major personnel searches are

now

the _ Un\YW'8ity

~~~te~pg~~~~e;'.!ar':~~~

~~s=~
3~it!:.~~~~~=·:
DeVInney; Wade Newhouaa; Becky
Kroll; and Robert
Department)-

Daley

(English

Underaraduata Ut..y
t,!r. 'Yoram Szekely has resigned aa
head of the Undergraduate Library to
become haad of the Underg_raduate
Ubrary at Cornell. Ms. Norma segaJ Ia
acting haad of UGL until--&amp; permanent

~.~~·

wants the DUE advisement
staff more deeply Involved In aum~
orientation. Many freshmen arrive lor
orientation not knowing that they're
expac:tad to make fall aemeater
academic choices while they're het'8. "It
cornea aa too much of a ahock now -

~~J'~n~~~!t:"llr.~::.',~ name to
Opening the Main Street and West
libraries, Roy said, will place' even mora·
of a burden on the Libraries staff (who
are already operating more facilities
than fast year with fewer empio)'MS).
To staff the new operations, 4.5 fines
have to be commandeered from
elsew'&gt;ere In the system, he said.
This means, Roy Indicated, nsducad
hours and aarvlce cuts In other
Libraries' units, reduced Journal subscriptions, etc.
Cuts will be outlined later, he
promised .
Many Libraries OP'!f'ationa have
changed since spring, Roy pointed out
lor those who were away over aummar:
Lockwood (Incorporating the former
Hall and Art libraries) Is now In n
quarters In the Amherst Csmpua Center
(between Baldy and Clemens); the UGL
Is in Cspan 'Hall (ground and first levels)
as Js the newest Amherst addition, the
Science and Engineering Ubrary (Capen
2and 3) .
The former Hall Library space at
Ellicott Ia now a computer satefllta/
study ·space; and the Art Library there Is
becoming an anthropology muaaum .

raplacament Ia appointed . .
. A - c o m m _ h_
_,
appointed to conduct a "prompt, but
thorough and careful ....:h." Members
are: Erfc Carpenter, chair; Serafino
Porcarf; Martha Manning; Barbera t..y;
Susan Beeancenev; James Wabetar;
and Max Wickert (English Depedment).

,_,Curator
A search com{nlttaa haa also been

~~ ·~:;:ra.r.:ltl~~u~lf.:~

Members of this commlltea ora:
.5honnle Finnegan, chair; Metlasa
Banta; Norma 5egal; Homer Brown
(English Department); Thomas Connolly (English Department); Herbert Finch
(asalatant director lor Speclel Coltectlona, Cornell); and Manuel Lopez. -

..~:~~~::t=.~

fourth

~h

Ia l!Rdetway to 1111 hla

~'::'~-:':'~=~~I~
dlvidual ov.,._ 19 proleaalonale end

-45 clarlcal alalf membara an--' In
cataloging, acqulaltlono ancf Mrtale
work for all Llbrllrlaa ~~Rita other than
Health Sciences and Law.

Buses said running close
to schedule despite snarls

un~~~~~t!.": l~l~~rade the

~feaalonaJ IINQ8 of DUE advlaora.

Although construction, road paving
and 111-t!Diad.lraffic signals are alowlng
traffic "'To and from the Amherst
Campus, lor the moet part, bu- ora
running cioN to achedule.
According to Busing Director Roger
McGill. bu- can be caught _ , 10
mlnutea and frequently ~. from
7:10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through
Friday at the ragular -lgned etopa.
Service contlnuea Into the _,lng and
~:.encra but at leaa lraquent

ec!,.!:oce=~ .!,':,.=:.,or~

being enticed to convene In Buffalo;
thlo loll, threa alalf members ora giving
popera 11 the Mme nlltlonal meeting, In
Memphis. '

,._.........._
M8rflou Healey Ia new In DUE. She
has an enthualaam and drive, a concern
lor a lormerty ovwburdenad and .
sometimes delnotmizlld alalf, and a
natural affinity lor llluclenla, who have
often baan Just aa OMtlurdanad and
.IIIey pau· through the

=::!:.

By moillfYing bua ..vtce to the
Ridge Lea Cempua, McGill wea able to
"fill In, the gape" In echadullng which
occurred laal
the Maln-Amherat
run. The rnocllltcatlon wea made to
catar to the growing numbar of people
who nead ln:naportllllon bal-. .Mal n
and=AmherltL . ,.,.,loualy, bua MIVioa to
Rid
ea lila up 25 par oant of the
budDel but MMc8d only
'*-' II lo II par cant of Ita

r-on

- Good advl-t, - aaya, C8ll help
solve the problem of attrition which
haunta U/8, to be aura. But lt'a alao
eaaentlal to the quaiMy of an
Individual' a aducatloh.
·

hodgapodge.

In

the search group are: Shirley Heaaleln,

advisors lor their majora.
- Healey hopes to gradually extend the
concept on a department-by-depart-

=-~~=~~~-::-:=
many atudanta wind-up with a

underway

U b(wfes, Director Saktldls Ro)t said
this week.
Ms. Madelaine Starn haa resigned
from her appointment aa head of
Lockwood Library to return to her
former position of head. of Lock'(tood
Collection Qevefopment. Ms. Diane
Parker has agreed to serve aa acting
head of Lockwood, allactlve September
1, until a pennanent head Is appointed .
A aaarch commlttaa will aa81&lt;, review,
and recommend qualified candidates to
Roy. It Is hoped, he said, that a

f=:Jl~ 18o~~~~~~~Yw ~aa~·~~u~

sou: a.=r~r =~c:.= 'fo!::.

~~r~), h~'t! - ~t~~r.Jr:~~~

decided not to go through and change
all references to " Ridge Lea Library" ln
the card catalog. It waa aaaumad thai .
people would just know thlt there Ia no
Ridge Lea Library any more. The totally

Libraries seeldng to fill
four top echelon positions

FIICUityaaaloFaculty advisement has been talked
about lor r-a but little has been done.
Undaunted, Healey has a new approach . She wants to secure faculty
"volunt8«'11," willing to act aa advisors
1i&gt; accepted majora In their own
departments. DUE advisement staff will
act aa consultants to departments to
train professors to be advisors.
A letter aha sent to department
chalnnen o - the SU"\mer drew "a
surprisingly healthy reaponaa," aa she
describes it.
- Already, Dr. Constantine Yeracarls,

among 5,000 COinM. WitlloUI proper
adYI_. to help them ltMir

Geology (approximately 7,000 volumes). It will operate 75 hours a week.
- The Ridge Lea unlf will not be cal lad
" the Ridge Lea Library," Roy emllhaalzad. When the lonner Ridge Lea
library WJIS. closed (end the plan was

-

~-

....... Of 1111 cihllnge, mora b have bean addad during peak partoda.
Alao, additional uneclledulad bu- are
-labia lo tllllllaiiOft atudanla when

-~'----·--·-·--· - ---------

In order to 11001d poaalble a..rcrowdlng on buaM, McGill - ' "
thllt atudenla who do
lObe Ill
either Main Of Amlllrat f« c1eaa lllould
ralraln from IMinO the 1M.- ..M cleaa
braal&lt;a when lila .,...... loed Ia
undemandably heiVIer.
To ,.... It _,.. f« ltudanla to
Identify ~ llolng to Ellloott and
Go.-nor., McGDI haa dhldad tile but
'aheltar 81 Flint Loop Into two - .
Now,_b_ ootng to the Main 81111

not,_

:.=

=~
~ ~s:-...r.:.-::
headed towarda Ellloolt and GcMmora
'II llltop at the north end.

Adlllllonal ,..._..,. and ~
llonl . . , lla ............, . . . . . .
A. lt:ogllr, _ . . . . . . . . , , ~
~ ~ Clllllr. - ~~.~-"
- !,!1
_~!!!
__!&lt;.,
__

--===== ==

�.......

4

September 7. 1978

/

Students have a significant role
in governanGe. There is no question about
whether or not they should participate.'

Ketter sees .colleglality as ke~ to governance

=:;:

.

G,....

Student

!·~'~lila S~ Auoc:ia-

.!::1':'t-1: 1u=:;
. , . . _ - I n the...........,dlei,fort.
- - · ·-

illlll&lt;lna _ . - o f 111a Un....,ty. Do
_

......
-

1

roll I thl1

fOil
.......,.. have
n
..-a?
,.,.._,1&lt;_: My actions already

have demonstrated that 1 believe
students have a significant role In
governance. There Ia no question about
Whether or not the~ should particil:::
;_
where that participation moat proper1y
'ani elfectlvely should occur and what
..form it should taKe. Unfortunately,
tanawhereeraare nolo "t'h··~ qauxpea':fo'~s~nl~~
questions have existed since the
mid-1960's and have pertained not Just
10 the role of students but to every facet
olustthe.gothvemla anlncestlaptu'pareiontg~.-.~manynot
r
lion
nstitutlons of-higher education In this
country. Recognizing this, one of the
flrat things I did when I became
prealdent In 1970 was to appoint ·a
Unl..slty-wlde Task Force on Univer·
slty Governance.

t",: 1 d~=~::~. Pf!~:.~· ~

I

2. Reporter: What did thll group
con~«-. Their ~mme-A,._, --·
·~
,....,..
Wiiiiiiiil!i~iiilit-.· '-1!
at a

"'fl*"'

lilt
Articles of Goll8fllllllce had been
endorMd by students, faculty, and

~~~·.!u~:S~~~t~a~=s~:,'z;h

which the Faculty Senate, the various
student governments, the Professional
Stafl Senafe, and others could work
together on matters of mutual interest.

s.•~lldentty

through formal and informal cooperalion.
Of course, ha saw limitations In
terms of faculty l n-.olvament. For
example, he felt that no faculty
·committee should be allowed to
participate In developing • budget
ln-.olving itsalf in ankdecialons relating
to financial policy. Is reason for this
was simple. He felt that ...the faculty
would not be able to set aalde partisan
interests in such matters.
Capen also saw that the usa of

maintain that it's totally unrealistic to
talk about University governance
without an awareness of all of the
players and what's possible in the way
of declslon·making.
R...,...
H
d
vr- your
0.nd':!::"a'r'oner:maoklwn
owl
~.J::t....,
....
g., •
,.,.sident «attar: In pragmatic terms
It's quite limited . To a great extent It's
confined to operational decisions
designed to conform to policy
deci sions made at a higher.Jevelln State
University or even Imposed by an

that these boards, II they chose, could
be Just as dictatorial or Just as lax as
they wanted to be.
Un~_::ltreceny
of tl~ut1~~ ,:::~rg,er o~t~'!:
he
University of New York, the consultative
role of the faculty has been called for in
the Policies of the Board of Trustl!Gs.
6. Reporter: Did ~ envision a role.
fc.- atudenta and ala I?
President I&lt;attar: in matters of
wovernance, he was concerned prlmaroiy about the facu lty role, and I think
this was characteri stic of the times. It
was a simpler age, 1 guess. Also, we
were a private institution and that made
a great difference In temfs of
governance. When we Joined State
University, our lives became Immensely
mono
eel. Our
lit to make
1 com I
Y
red
greatly·

institutional autonomy in State Unlversity these days, we have to define it in a
most restricted sense. We have to. look
at it in operational or management
terms. And there are circumstances
when we are not even allowed that
degree of autonomy.
I'or Instance, the Legislature and the
Olvision of the Budget in recent years
directed not only that we take faculty
reductions, but specified the academic areas In which these must occur.
Another example: The Division of the
Budget dictated our move from rental
facilities into student residential space,
even though there was clear evidence
that student housing would be In short
s 11
her
pi
Th
~':J'.tlot \~s~~ decr:ra;; 1 1 n~
classes can be held on the Jewish holy
daye of Roah H.,...._ and Yom Kippur.
Such decisions are operational and
should rest on this campus and not
elsewhere. We have to do ali we can to
res ist these encroachments.

or

~=~~an=~ or~~~ce an~

=:r:..

7. Reporter: You mentioned Cepen'a
::,"~~~~~ b~=~
~ y=
ahara thla feeling?
,.,.sldont l&lt;attar: We have a Unlverslty Budget Committee. which has
faculty, staff , and student members.
Une officers presen t requested budgets

It diW!'t work-

~:::~~ ara.:ic~: ~= . t~a~~

was actually compellnf, with

recommendations to me as to what
should be incl uded In the University·

believe the members had difficulty in
~~lng conJu~~.!._uthlde beA.ssemJur1sbdly:s
- - of
_ ..... ~
l~olionel lasuea became problematic. I
balieve finally the Assembly members
felt their concerns could be dealt wlttt
more appropriately and effectively
through alreedy existing organizations.
lnt-t In the Assembly concept was

should point out, however, that I would
never taka a University allocation or
reallocation question to the Faculty
Senate for a vote or to the
Professional Staff Senate, or the
Student Association, for tf11lt matter.
That would be unfair to the Senate especially if it in)fOived a shift of
resources or the elimination of

~K'.U...: As a new organlza.
lion, It

=~~ ~cr:;;.9'~:::. .:..:~

0

not austalned .

W• thla a aurprlalna
deo.,._t In of the lllflllrlll

4.

~~~porter :

eo-n-

durlo\e thla
~~ 1&lt;-: No, not In retroapact. The1'11 ware a lot of currpnta at the
time which may have worl&lt;ed'-Qalnst II.
Studentl were becOming more in-.olved
In their own governance. The profea·
a1o1w1 staff a1 thla Institution were
orgMJzlng a Sanaota of their own. A
faculty Mel eblt union also had begun
to funCtion . The Faculty Senate heel Just
reconalltuled ltaelf lrorn a tow,.
-Ina type body to a ,..,._,tatlve
one. Tfia Whol .. climate at that time, •
Wilen lila tnstnutton had lust gone
tllrDullll•l*lod o f - dfaruptiona,
- aiiCtuiRy more oohduc:M to .,_fe
_.... to !Ninbln or ao&lt;panc~ the
lftO\IOillliW at thair !*llcular organlza.
110M ltncl ~t.-~CIM .
-

about

~~.:~~· ~~:rJY T~~~~~~~'!':.n:

~o~r::ry ~~rar~:~c:::: ,i;;ea6W,~~~~~

are paid to make such decisions .
Consultation and discussion, yes; but
the decision has to rest ultimately with
~:nt':l:l!.. are going to . be held
I also should note that several of our
Schools and Faculties have budget
_ committees, or their equivalent, to
assist the Dean in his budgetary
decisions.

a. Reporter: You'.. mentioned true-.

f..:ulty, ... tt. Mel ltudlnll. Are theM
the only group. lnvoiYecl In the

oo-~·?

,.,.,,.,..,, 1&lt;-: I wish that were

~·~~t~g~=-~~~~~~~rn

some way, either directly or Indirectly,
influence tha decialon·maklng process
- are government: the Governor, the
legialafure, the Dlvlalon of th$-Budget,
etc.; the R811enta; the Board of
T,ll_; the Ciontral Administration of
State Unlvwalty; the faculty, staff,
atudenta, Mel alumni of the University
at Buffalo; the Uni...,. ty Council; the
many accrediting ~lea to which we
are responsible; lllld the local commu,.
ity ltaelf. And that's the broad
groupings. Actually, you can break
them down much further.
•

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

:::::~~:~m~;t ':':"!~! =~~~ea:!o~

'1;.

11. Reporter: lan't It true, though, that
you can "!Ike Juat about any daclaion
you want.to make within tha -11'111nla
lmi&gt;OMCI from above?
,.,.,ldantl&lt;attar: The University can't
be run unilaterally, arbitrarily. That's
the reality of the situation. The

~~~~~n~h:d'~i~o::'~=o~: ~~~~

this. The Policies of the Board of
Trustees specifically require "that the
President consult with the faculty on a
number of matters. I extend that to
stair, students, alumni . I consult with
the University Council, and at times
with affected groups within the
community. Some members of my stall
ctlticize me for consulting with too
many people. But I believe it is
necessary.

~m~:.!::'' th~~.· .~· .:r.:n·~

political raality?
P,.sklent l&lt;etlar: Definitely. People
should be heard when they have and
want to state an informed position on
an issue. Discussion and consultation
are the essence of collegiality •• and I
believe very strongly in this.

13. Reporter: NMIIrttlalna, you are
crl\lclzed, too, for not conaultlng
enough.
,.,.,#dent I&lt;altar: Certainly. That's
perfectly natural. I'm sure that there are
times when the process could be
extended. Or maybe someone who
could make a contribUtion to a
discussion is Inadvertently overlooked.
In general , though, I believe anyone
who wants to be heard will be.
14. Report1&lt;: Ia It aufficient Just to be
heerd; how-?
,.,.._ll&lt;attar: For some people it
obviously isn't enough . If a decision
_lloea contrary to their view , they may
l'eel that there hasn't been enough
consultation. Or that ~hey've been
Ignored. Fortunately, thla type Ia a
small minority. The vast majority know

~~~:!~~ •::,~n;,p~~. 'f ~::

to ba the beat lnt_.. ol thil entire
Unl..-atty. Tiley ai80 knoW that in or:1er
to Clltennlne !hoM l n t - • e
daail of--...... Ia NQI!Ired. n•a the

or-

~~ .•.~i••~·~ ..,..,to .... ,............ ......

15. Reporter: 1 ~ 1 '.,~ 11 to overcome
1
thla
o .--·•lam
In the
Unl-al., •

sen.!:

CX::1:n-:'
' ~~ar~~~= w~~~~~ m::;~
administrative officers would look more

It
1 th t t 1 u 1 era it N rth
o en a
e oa nv
y. eve ..
less, I understand that their Job Is to be
advocates for their· own areas of
responsibility I play the same role
within the SUNY system It's a basic
part of the Job; perhaps the most basic
part of all . That Is, you are there to
obtain the resources which will allow
faculty and staff to do their Jobs. When

~u~1s '!'~ ~:~·~· e~~~Y:~~~"'il·~~~~=

t~ ~trary when funding Is In sh;,..
It h

1

~~le. -

as

bee d ·
thi
as . n urong
s

18. Report~&lt; : Don thia mean the
Prealdant becomaa cast In the role of

ref=~~~~tt~~~~!,~~~-::.''y~s.

But 1 don'l believe It's limited to the
President'!! Office. It happens In every
supervisory office up and down the line.
1 don't think anyone enJoys having to
make such decisions. But they have to
be made.

17. Report1&lt;: You'.. been called
authoritarian.
.
,.,.a#dant l(ettar: Yes, I know. I
imagine that I do appear to be
authoritarian to some people to whom I
have said "no." Or to some people
whose view of the Univera.ity I happen
not to fully share.
18. Raporllf: So you don, lael you
opaoataln thla m.,.l*?
p,.sldenl «attar: No. My own
Inclination , as I've said , Is toward a
collegial system.
19. Reportw: Let's retum lor 1 minute to
the topic wa were p..-aulng at the
beginning; tho! Ia, atudent participation
In governance. You uld your actions
have damonatrated your aui)I)Oit for
such participation. Could you ba more
specific?
,.,.,klant Kattat: Well , I've included
students on all University·wide committees the President's Review
Boa!'d, the Committee studying our
operational processes, search commit·
tees for Unlversity·wlde officers, the
Student Retention and Attrition Com·
mittee, the Huii-Yearley Committee,
etc. Also, It should be noted that we
had a' student member of the University
Council before any other unit of State
University, even before this was
required by the Trustees. More
Important "- at least to me - are the
r~ular contacts I have with student

~l.:C,":~~s. ~g~·,n,t~~:ron a~~P~~~~':

I obtain in this manner i~lluence bOth
my own decisions and the manner In
which I view decisions by others in the
admlnistration.

20. R:ar: Are atudanta ellactlva In

•,:.~:r~~ar:

1 ·believe they're
effective when they attend meetings
and are determined to make a
r,ontrlbullon. Of course, not eveqone
agrees with that . Some commottee
members complain abOut the need to
educate students each year to the work
of the committee. They point out that
students fall to attend meetings. They
lear that confidentiality may be broken.
Conversely, students may feel that their
opinions are not given sufficient weight
or that they are not given full
lnformati6n . They may become frustrated with a lacl&lt; of action . 08Spite
these contrary views, I'm convinced
titudenta can and do wor1&lt; responsibly
within these Unl-alty·wlde groups;
and t ball- many faculty would agree
with me.

•. ·~ · oowrnenoe·.~t..~l·~·~~

�Sept om bet- 7. 1178

Dr.-Beyer-Trice looks at .
$-a lcoholism in wom·en
!!,.M=~

That will be the new stipend ceili.ng
forT As/GAs, Ketter tells the first
Faculty Se~ate meeting for· 1978-79

errors, should be dealt with through iln -

Abuse of alcohol has long been
recognized as a problem affecting the
wor1&lt; performance of men. But what
about women wor1&lt;ers?
Dr. Janice M. Beyer-Trice, a facvlty
member in the School of Management,
and her husband have come up with
some '11p of the Iceberg• conclusions
regard)ng alcoholism among women
and how to cope with the problem as 11
relates to their jobs.
Dr. Beyer-Trice, an assistant professor In Organization and Human
Resources, pointed out In an Interview
that the problem of alcohol abuse - es
it atfects wor1&lt;ing women - has been
s-pt under the rug until recently. She and her husband, Dr. Harrison M.
Trice, a· professor at Cornell , have
combined efforts In research ing the
need for job-based alcoholism programs for women , and are currently
writing a book on the subject.
They presented some early findings
at the annual meeting of the Society for
the Study of Social Problems In San
Francisco on September 2.
Most programa dealgned for men
While many employers have estat&gt;Hahed jot&gt;-based alcohol abuse prop,rarns, Beyer-Trice noted, most exist-

~"!"'/~

$5,100

=· .

~~; ~art; ~ua~

1

more research had
done on male
g problems.
rather than female dri
But times have changed and new
Information Is becoming available that
Indicates the need to modify existing
jot&gt;-based alcohol abuse policies to
meet needs of women.

pro"t::~~s n~f ·~:;~~ J:,~~~~

rn ::::

wor1&lt;place have been done, said
Beyer-Trice, many guideposts In past
stud ies of fe111a1e alcoholl,*m point the
way.
It Is wall established statistically, she
observed , that "drinking patterns of
women are actually approaching those
of men In American society .• One study
placed thot ratio of male to .ofemale
drinkers In the United States et 1.3 to 1
In 1965, compared to 1.. 7 to 1 In 1940.
Beyer-Trfce further related that more
recant .studies show "a consistent
upward trend for femalea and a
leveling-off of male alcohol use since
1973."
Soclofo!llcoil c:hanQee
This cnange In tne drinking pattern of
women Is attributed to modem
sociological factors euch as the demise
of the all-male bar, emergence of
mal•female drinking crowds, mass
home consumption and afforta of the
liquor Industry to stimulate a female
marf&lt;et.
Beyer-Trice said that many employers
still lack specific policies for dealing
with problem drinkers on their payrolls,
and even those who have such pot lcles
are often rei~Jetant to meet the
challenge of alcoholism among f•
males.
Most business and Industrial managers are men , she noted, and "many
men find It dl(flcult to face the reality of
female aicohdllsm.
" They tend to ascrtbe problem•
affactlng female emp!,%- to almost

anM~',:~~."!·~e'~d. ~ employ-

ers are faced with a deCline In work

efficiency, which becomes a cost factor
In f~~~;tloa~gna of drfnklng or drug
abuse, auch u a pattern of being late
for work or a noflceable Increase In

•What's new?

,..__,, .... ,,

campua aouth-1 comer, near Maple
Roed. On all thrw buildings, ..-! of
the extttlor work Ia COf"Pieted and work
has begun on Interior&amp;.
~-•
New .cademlc prograrna ....ng
lntroduoad In t878-711 Include a
llf*l.tlal• program In International ·
Offered tl!rough tha School of Management .,wl Oepartmeot of Geography;
Wid a numbe&lt; of joint deQtw
offered through the Bakly Cent..- ""
Law and Socllll Polley.
Millard Fillmore College, tt'TJ U~
alty'a Evening DMaton
ne.udrng one In
~new progrwna. 1
eoclal g..ontoloOY end commun 1ty
,_..1 llM!th aervlcea, another In
public relationS end ad¥ertfalng, and •
- " * c.dlng to a Bachelor of
~I Sludr.ln ArchltactU111.

JIIOIII1II!!!

1

~~i~~~~e.:'."W/:tan/t tre ~ineB~~:,
11

she cautions employers to be certain of
their ground before bringing about a
confrontation.
"While statistics on the number of
working women with alcohol abuse
salprodb,l~mit "rs loargeicallactokclongnc,'l'udB
eetyerat-tTherlcere
h
is a parallel between this problem and
the general Increase In the use of
alcbhol by women."

M~~~~frf~cl:~':~~l

jot&gt;-based
&amp;lcohollsm policies may need IQ be
modified to take Into account whal she
termed the "clear Inference" that males
and females generally over-Imbibe for
·
different reasons.
As she sees the difference, men tend
to "'progress" as aJcohol abusers " via
long-term social learning ." Does th is
mean developing a habit? "Yes,'' Dr.
Beyer-Trice replied.
Women , on the other hand , " tend to

~r~~:l'~r.":~~~~~~f:~~e:,;~ s=:~c

For women , progression Into abuse Is
then relatively rapid."
In applying this knowledge to
~based policies affecting women,

thltfh!r!r~e::l'!ct~~ ~::::er.;~!~=~

afford a ready-made opportunity for

intervention."
Such an approach would deviate from
the standard "constructive confronta-

~~;er~~l~h~0:b~~~~~~~~- ~:~

. an employee with poor wor1&lt; performance resulting from alcoholism is
offered assistance to attain sobriety,
usually sick leave for treatment , if that
is deemed advisable.
If the employee's performance falls to
improve adequately, disciplinary · pro-

~~~~~~':.:rJ'~~.ra'Ja'r~sr~~~ ~ '!.1ft

eventually lose His jo6 If he doesn't

·sr~':J'O::ft~~

with women, Be er-Trice
believes, It might be more adlsable to
fool&lt; at the problem or problems that

::;or~.::~:r:' '·~e~r:.n:~::~~~!r.:.

She calls thi s Y.muted" confrontation.
Women more nnponalve to

social

forces

"Since It appears that women are
more rasponslve to social and environmental forces , and that these forces
play a relatively large role In producing
their problems, they should be used as
positiVe factors to reverse those
problems,'' Beyer-Trice said .
• one factor that should aid In this
attempt Is the greater propensity of
women to seek help and their
willingness to dlacuss their pensonal
problems."
·
...- The go-easy approactf In confronting
the female alcohol ab~aer Is all the
noore advisable, Beyer-Trice continued,
because of " the greater danger of
attempted suicides among problemdrinking women. •
On the other hand, she pointed out,
studies Indicate that female al.coholics
actually achieve suicide less often than

maleado. ,
·
" But this Ia hardly an area Jn which .
management wants to gamble on
probabilities," she aaserted.

P..-tlcl.,.{tton bJ labor
In ge.\eral , Beyer-Trice recommends
that management, whe111 applicable,
make .,.,ery effort to ln...,. participation
by labor unlona In de¥eloplng job-based
alcohollam pollcr.. (Thla has been the
case at U/B where there Ia a joint
CSEA-management effort·/
In •traditionally femln zed occupa- tlona," auch • -...chlng, nuralng and
aecretarlal wor1&lt;, ahe recommends that
employera work with applicable proteaalonal organlzatlona, u well • unlona,
In eettlng up llloohollem poticre. lor
women.
Aa Beyer-Trice It, today'a
llbellltad women . . placing 1 ' - - ' fn the natlon'a -'&lt;Pl.,. In growing
numbelll and . . no longer "hldclan" •
hi&gt;mebodr.. Thla
aile
feeta, provldea an ~portuntty tor
.-c~~era to "..-:11
the female
alcohol abu- end to ohert a courM of
action to daa1 with the problem.

-venae.

Although funding Is not In hand,
President Robert L. Keller announced
to the f-aculty Senate Tuesday that the

-~~~~~~:'orh~f ~~e~~~~~ h:g_~~~'ir;

!~~~~!t!'fo ~"'j'!,~!:..::'?ro~~~~

to$5,100.
·The low stipends have been a bone of
contention for students, faculty and
admi nistration for severaJ years. Ketter
said the former stipend level left the
University "totally non-&lt;:ornpetltlve In
some areas for nearly four years."

chP;;
~~:~J~~ ~~n~~~·8:'vis1~~e;r"~~1:
Programs lor the National Science
Foundation, has been recommended by
President Ketter for the position of
Dean of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, he told the Senate. In his
position with the NSF, Anderson is
responsi ble for the overall management
and plan of bipolar science programs.
Anderson Is a graduate of Brigham
Young University and received his
doctorate In 1958 from Purdue
University In soli chemistry.
Previously, Anderson was a professor
of soli physics at the University of
Arizona. He was. also chief of the earth
science branch of the U.S. Army Cold
Region Research and Engineering
Laboratory.
Duri ng his 11 years with the Cold
Region Research and Engineering
laboratory, Anderson was a visiting
professor at Dartmouth , the University
of Stockholm , Hebrew University and
the Univers ity of Washington In Seattle.
He is expected to 'an'lve here in
January.
Other Informational !Ieins relayed to
the Senators which have not as yet been

UCS moves

Ellicott branch
Univers ity Computing Services (UCS)

~:i;~~.:'l~''~~~;g,T-f'Wn~e:~~

Quadrangle Into the area once known as

:~~~II \~br~e Th~~~~:~

Ll=c::

Academic Collegiate Center on the 2nd
0

or ~~~ le~~~ move, the only satellite ·
compu':flng site at Amherst will be Jn
Clifford Furnas Hall, Rooms 205 and
215.
On September 11 , the new Ellicott
satellite site will be fully operational
and open to students, faculty and
researchers between 9 a.m. and 10

~~e~rs"cl_:Ys':; ':::.d ~h'lsmcia%"'! ';o":;ri

after, UCS will expand Its public
time-shartng terminals by adding four
public terminals to this aile. Consu111n9

no:

=-~gwl~.!'rsav:"~~~h•o:ri~~

assistance with their programs or
Instructions on how to use a public
terminal .

..:~?t~~d~~s .;!ri,:.l~~..!so,ot':se ~:::,~
lot (the ent11111C8 nearest the "DO NOT
ENTER" signa that are jult before the
Core Roed). From there, Denn le
Henneman, manager of ~Ions at
UCS says, ''lake tha aacond door on
lour. right u you walk lnto tha Core
Roedway and filther taka tha el~or to
the 2nd floor or taka the frr.t . door on
your right which - • to theat.lrway."

~P~~~:'~.:.'1en=:a~

students are wetoome to 11M the afte
~a.g:=,==· . . durfng

the subject of articles In the Rflporter

are:

..

•Student enrollment this year will
likely be 6 per centto"10 par cent over
the budgeted target.
•The John W. Cowper Co. of Buffalo
was the low bidder on two engineering
.Aaboratorles and will probably be
awarded the contract in the near future.
-•The construction contract for the
gym has been divided In three parts
and must go through separale bidding
procedures. The contract was divided
becallse the architects have not
~i';'e,'~~~t&gt;!~:C ~s~gn of the final
•The music and ctamber hall has not
as ye\ been advertised for bid and will
not likely be acted on until after the

1

De~r~~~~;;~:';'~':."eds at least~.3
million more In the 1979-80 budget to

~~~r r~~n=~~n,:;x~~::J;~1~ ~r'~~~g~l
0

which $104.4 million Ia tax dollars.
·
Professor Norman Baker who chairs
the General Education Committee

=~l':{e!,hga!t~~~S::~~;"I'n~o~:atl~~

and opinions on general education from
University deans and Influential members of the faculty. The committee also
::::fared a questionnaire for students

eng ~'::'n"~~~{~~7Po~a~:;s ~~~~r!i

about 120 other institutions regarding
their future plans (If any) for curricular
reform .
_.Join Initial report from Baker's
;committee will be aired at the October
Senate meeting .
Professor Jack Hyman, chairman of
• the Senate's ed hoc Comm ittee on
Presidential Evaluation Procedures,
said President Kettefs 1979 ,perform-

~~~ee:~:t;.,~n::! ~~(. ~;;t~:!.~

According to the guidelines devised
by the Board of Trustees, H Is up to
each member of the University's ad hoc
Evaluation Committee to act as a

::,ft'~~~~~s ~:"N~ ~~::.::~:;,'!~

for judging the sentiments of their
gr.oups. Members of the University ed
hoc committee Include the chaiCn
1

~~~:s~ ~'!Y~~u~~afe~~~~C:~t~i

the student body, and a member of the
administrative staff selected by the
President.
The next meeting of the Faculty
Senate will be October 10.

• Governance
~~-4,col.41

.21 . Raportar: Would you adwoalta -'IY
,.--tatton of atudanta, aay; wtth
faculty or ataff? That - • to be what.
_,.ltudanta -lei IIIla.
PrNidaltf IC-: No, I personally
would not. Knowledge and experience
are factors that have naal elgnlflcance In
thase types of matters, and atudenta,
almost bJ definition/ . . :ctlcee.
algnl lean!
they
are mons tranalent than . .
ulty or
staff.

Morea-. to a

_...., ...
........
................................
22. Reportar: You . _ . ..._. IMt
~

AaeoaiMfon lo ....... . . . . . . . . . . ...

ll&amp;ftfatpatlon ... .......... .. . . . .

leN!a. Wit,... dDIIIIe?
,._,.., K - . ,.,....... tt.t would
be an u~• lnlnlefon bJ the
PrNidant. In fact, I lhl'* that It -uld
be tl» height of llllthoftt8rlanam. Aa
1'.. fald befoq, I have no IIIW!IIon of
playing that role. I am flnnfy of the
opinion,
that a dapertmeltt or

how-.

dlvtalon that dOaa not algnlflcently
Involve atudanta ln Ita oo-nanoe

Gets Fulbright

1

==-~'fnr~
=:1':u~n~':.:
aMk the contribu!lona of aludenta ln.
the work of tha Office of the PNeldant
end, hopafulfy, thla-pla will have a
poaltlvelnfl-on othar . - o f the
University.

23. Reporter: Collegiality?
,.,..,_. K - . Dell nltaly. lt'a •
protactlon we have agel1181 " - who
to .............
ltarlanlam•'-•.,_...of

-=zebe
the

IIOIWWIIIIlhelrown.

�~T.1t71

Appol~tments- '78_
Three major Unl-.ity administrative
concludad late last week as
Pntaldent Robert L. Ketter recom-

=O::~eo=~~~~ E~=w~':!~

Social Sciences to the State Unl-slty
Board of Trustees.

con~~=er~~~d~":ns"Pc':

deans of G.-.duate and Profeaalonal
• Education and Educational Studies.
The latest three recommendations
climaxed a nU!'Y of apJ!91ritments and
rMppOintments made ·&amp;lr-"&gt;r to the_
beainn"*of the 8Cademfe yew.
Retter aald he 18 recommending Dr.
John l'eddolto of ct.asics as dean of
the DIYislon of Und«g.-.duate Education, llr. " - lll8cldlurat of Summer
Seaalons as director of the Division of
Continuing Education, and Dr. Kenneth
J. ~· chalrman of Psychology, as
.g,.:.he .';,~~y,o!,~'!!:''1~cec.;
etfec:11W&gt; September 1: MCh was made
in tine with the recommendations of
the -wroprfate ...-ch committee and
the endorsement of the VIce President
for Academic
_
Ronald Bunn .
·GI!Ilfllll
_ _Affalra,
_

-t-"

81ackhurat, 45, hea been director of
the U/B Summer Sessions program
since 1967. He .--IWtd his under·
g.-.duate degree from Drake Unl-.lty,
Md hea done g.-.duate wor1&lt; at
syracu·ae. Befono Joining U/B he was
...lat.,t to the dean of the Maxwell
0.-.duate School of Citizenship and
Public Relatione at Syracuse. He came
i'*e aa aaaiatant director of Summer
Seaalona In 1984.
A - l i e admlnistnotor, Blaclchunot
hea held MYeral Interim roles at the
Unl-.lty. From 11187 to 1970 he aervad

:S~n-==~:•_t:,ct~t.t~

Cornmlffee for the Eat.t&gt;tishment of a
School of Library Science, acting head
of the School of Social Worl&lt;, ••ecutiWt
of1icer of the Departjnent of Music
during a period when that department
wea without a chairman. and an
aaalat.,t in the Offici of the Vice
Prwklenl for Acaderqlc Affalra.
81ackh ...l wea awwded one of the
flrat SUNY Chanc.IIOf'a Awerds for
ExoaUenc. in Admlnisllllllve Service, In
1977. •
Reports .re that Blackhurst will retal11
raponalblllty for Summer Seaaloros and
that both Contioulng Ed and Summer
Seaalona will move back to the Main
51-Campus.

DUE-..
"***of1o, 45, cene to U/B as an
-Iaiani proleNor of ciaaaica In 1966,
remaining here untll 1973 When he was
Mmad _ prof- and chelrman of

. .aaJaa

~ c:~lfV ~

pub·
_, "'""""v ... "'" .,...,.... ol
,...,.. Allows ' S - ""'-"'r o1 Yri ot lulforlo &amp;lltortol oHl&lt;os ... locofed ~ Ia Crofh Hoff, A/nbenf Te,._
A

-

,.,_

......

Oiredorolf'uDH&lt;Aflows
JAMES I OoSAHTIS

-~

~T~TT

---

AlfwJOHNA aoonu
JO'fa~

classics at the University of Te•as/
Austin. After a year there, he returned
· to Buffalo as a full professor and
chairman of the department. He held
the chairmanship unti119n.
He has also tau~ht at Western

~~hin'l.\~n ~t'3seolh":e ~~D~~~~::;
Northwestern and his bachelor's and
M.A. from St. Louis University. He Is

~~' ~~~~ ~~:,.":' ~~r~v't"h':ti~ ~~

adltor-in-&lt;:hlef of Arethuss, a journal of
classical studies publishad locally.
In 1972-73, he was a fellow of
Harvard's Center for Hellenic Study in
Washington, D.C., and the recipient of
a National Endowment for the Human!. ties research grant for the Investigation
· of narrative structures In the Odyssey.
He received a Chancellor's Award for
E•cellence In Teaching In 1975, and In
1976 received another NEH grant to
conduct a summer seminar for college
teachers on "Myth and Modem Theories
for Interpretations." He has served a
thre&amp;-year term on fhe board of
directors ot the American Philological
Association, the national professional
association for classical scholars. A

=~~ ~~::·cl:r.:;~,::.:,:;::

to familiarize classicists with structuralism and related theoretic trends In
literary and myth analysis.
Listed In Who 's Who In Amenca and
Who's Who In the World, Peradotto is
an enthusiastic marathon runner, and
was entered In the 1978 • Boston
Marathon .
Levy, 32, joined the U/B faculty in

::2o:'~:..~~f~:~:::,~~";',~f:~:

An associate professor, he recelvad a

~~~ ~,'":9~~~:'"'~~:~m:'A'.n .!,.~
!:'i.~ ~~D~",!~"P~~U~~ ~e::/~u!~

also a lecturer.
Levy has written journal. articles on
applying rnneral statistical th:o;r, to

pro.::~~~ =.:0~1~~:1:~!~;&amp;.

the American Statistical Association.
the Psychomet(IC Society, and the
Biometric Society.

-

"\

Auauat appointments
The State Unl-.lty of New Yorl&lt;
Board of Trustees at their AuC

;r.ee~~':""~ agr;~~adD?:is~~ of
Graduate and Profeasional Education.,
effective November 15; Dr. Robert H.
..........,., dean of the Faculty of
Educational· Studies, effectiw July 1,

:!ut':*!~-

p::i. ~1~W:

August 1.
Moore, who held the post ol dean of
the School of Education at !he State
Uni-slty at Albany between 1974 and
1978, spent the previous 14 yews at
U/B in a wide range of faculty 1111d
admlnlatrallve slots.
Roaaberg, who joined the U/B faculty
In 1956, haa held a number of INChing
and counseling poaltions. He 101as
a counseling paycholoaiat at Naw Yorl&lt;
Unlvwalty from 185f to 1853, an
asaiatant oht.r IIIYohologlat at New
Yorl&lt; UntvwaJty, a lecturer in psychology at W-unw lulheren Memorial
Collage In New Yorl&lt; City, and Ia peat
cllNCtor of ...e.bliltatlon OOU,..,Ing
here.

..:-==.:-ro.~=lc·~~= .
alnc. 1818; lit will ba

~bta lor
budgeting, flac.l .., .....
nlng anil lftelltulicliMI - a .. Ha
jolriild IIW U/8 ataff In 1118.

~Ida

Dr. Andrew W. Holt, associate dean
of the Graduate School, Is aervtnS as·
acting dean there until the arrlva of
Dean Moore.
Vic. presidential actions
In two other vlca presidential level
actions this summer, President Ketter
recommend ad that the Trustees appoint
Dr. John A. Nul vice president for
facilities planning and announced that
Mr. Chert" M. f.ogal wlilserYe as acting
executive vice president during 1978-79.
e..acutiYa VIc. PrMldent Albert soma
will be on leave for the year.
Neal has been serving as acting vice
president since April ; he setvad for six
YIWS as assistant vice president for
facilities planning. He Ia also an
associate professor of civil engln-ing.
· Fogel , who just completed a tour as
acting dean of the Graduate School ,
was assistant e•ecutive vice president

fr~~'f:'~~~r~~~~t 1~79

as a fellow
at the prestigious Netherlands Institute •
for Advanced Study In the Humanities
and Social Sciences (NIAS).
~rtmental

poata
Other individuals receiving recent
school and departmental appolntments
and the posts to which lhfY have been
named include:
•Dr. Ruth Gala Elder [flasociate
professor), ectlng dean of the School of
Nursing , succeeding Dr. Jeannette
Spero who has lll:ceptad the ~ahlp
a! the iJnJ-slty of Cincinnati School of
Nursing .
•o- St.man Merle of the School
of Social Worl&lt;, reappolntad to that
poot, elfec:11va Auauat 30.
•Dr. Philip G. ~. Clillrman of
the Oaoartment of Social, Phltoaollflical
8fld Rislortcal Foundations of the
Faculty of Educatlon81 Studies ettectlva July 1. He joined U/8 In lt75 as
profeaaor of higher aducatlon and
f~iona of education . He hO also
a.vad aa diNCI« of U/B's Comparative

Eel-ton een.....
oDr. awt.

c..p.,

8t,..leo, a ~ tarm •

Educational
dlrwctor of

the Learning Center, effective August

30.

•Dr. Jay LMWIH, director of Acedemic
Computing In the Computing Services
Division. Prior to his appointment,
Leavitt was on the faculty of the
Computer Science Deo*1ment at the
Unl-.lty of Minnesota, Minneapolis,
and was aaaociate director of the
Computing Center th8nl.
•Dr. Ho-Leuno Funo [associate
professor] , chairman of the Department
of Pharmaceutics. Dr. Fung succeeds
Dr. Milo Gibaldi who ecc.ptad a
deanship at the School of Pharmacy at

th~~~iv::~~f 'f.as~=n .[chief of
urology at the Veterans Administration
Hospital, and clinical associate professor), acting chairman of the Department
of Urology, effectiWt July 1. Gonder
succeeds Dr. William StaubiU who
retired.
•Dr. Al&lt;lra lalhwa, reappointed
chairman of the Department of Physics
and Astronomy, -through August 31 ,
1981 .
•Dr. Mamn I. Herz [professor of
1

~~':';?;,~\of~~. ~~ Mena:':

Health Institute in Atlanta], cR::trman of
the Department of Psychiatry. Hen ·is
also a former community services
director of the New Yorl&lt; Psychiatric
inSIIIUI&amp;# t
•Dr. Dannla P. Mal-, a three-year
term as chairman of the Department of
Electrical Engineering, effec:11ve fugust

30.

•Raymond w. Reinig Jasslstant
director of Physical Plant] , irector of
that department, succeeding James
Serra, who recently retl.-.d. His
reaponalbiHtleo include evaluation of
requirements for , _ facllltlee, re'llew
of pllllls and spaclflcallons for
mechenlcal and etectrtcal equipment
installation or modification. and requlr:e:..~ntenance and operational ~-

•Dr. WUilam Thom-., reappointed
Chelrman of Mualc, for another
thra.y- tenn.
•Dr. Ward Will...._ [theatre],
.... . ~t. ' oeoe7 . oat . 4

�s.p,..,bor7, 1i 78

. . .am

7
• Appointmen_ts
(lrom J)lige B, col. 4)

associate dean of the Faculty of Arts
and Letters for a three-year term~
beginning August 30.
Colleges
1
Just as the semester began, Dr.
Claude E.. Welch was named Interim ad
hoc dean of the Colleges, In addition to

~~~~:r~'~Pc..d~:~~~d:n'td f~s~:mrc

affairs.
Welch said his Interim. role waa
approved l)y both the College Council
and the search committee for a

r.::b~=~e~!~~ =~~N~

School of Architecture.
Welch said It Is VPAA Bunn's
Intention to get the search going again
as soon as possible.
Having just reltlmad from sabbatical,
Welch said he Is working closely with
the Colleges' associate executive
officers, Carol Petro and Richard Menn.
His commitment to the Colleges Is for
the first seme~ter, Welch Indicated.
Na,ed to other posts In the Colleges
were:

In the rlghtllghtthls summer, the flyi ng dust and Ionic columns altho Baird Point
~»r~structlon site combined to provl:le a VIew eerily remlnlscenl of ancient building
_sites - or at least of the excavation scene from "The Exorcist." The new
amphitheatre - located on Lake LaSalle w&lt;&gt;&amp;t of Millersport - will ba·dedlcated
Sunday at 3 p.m. It Is tho gift of the Baird Foundation and tho Cameron Belrd
Foundation, was designed by Buffalo architect Pater C. Castle and usaa the
columne which once stood at the entrance of the Buffalo Federal Reserve Bar.k.

•Dr. Lae Drvden, a lecturer In College
H, master ol that college, effective
Immediately and continuing for the
remainder of the chartering term of two
years. College H Is an underS'aduate
~~"Jl~~e~:=~ed with hea th and
•Dr. C. Alan Soone, associate
professor of Spanish, a two-year term
as master and chairman of the Fellows
of Vlco College, effective September 1.
Named after the 18th century Italian
humanist Giambattista Vico, the
..COllege offers a program of Interdisciplinary studies In the humanities. ·
•Dr. Merle Hoyte, a one-year term as
master of Cora P. Maloney College.
•Dr. Carmelo Prlvlt.,.., professor of
biological sciences, re-appointed- to a
three-year term as master of Clifford
Furnas College. Furnas College Is the
largest residential unit In the collegiate
system here.
Endowed chairs
These actions were noted concerning
• ·
endowed and named chairs:
•Dr. Selig Adl..-, Distinguished
Service Professor, f&lt;&gt;!lP~Inted to the
Samuel p. capen i'roleuon~hlp ol
American History through August 31,
19
Eric Bentley, widely known
playwright, theater critic and professor
of theatott-T to the Katharine Cornell
fe1~~ :~ro~r:'X~g~!f';'1 ,~fJ:.mber 1'
He was first appointed to lhe
chair-named after the renowned late
actress-In 1974. He Is the only person
ever to hold lt.
•Dr. Stanley Bruckenateln, chairman,

;aor.

Pc:'~~m:.n~~~e'8~y'e~~~t~

eoo-.

Chemi stry through August 31, 1983.
•Dr. James
director of the
Music Library, appointed to _ the
Birge-Cary Chair of Music, September
1, 1978, to August 31, 1980.
•Dr. Robert er-ley (professor of
English), named Gray Professor of
English, September 1, 1978, to August
31 , 1983.
•Dr. Leslie Flecll..-, English, reappointed to the Samuel L. Clemens
Chalr,- through August 31, 1983.
•Dr. Frank Jen, Department of
Operations Anal~sls, School of Man-

r9~en~~.,.~~~ ~~~~e ~~~~

Professorship of Banking and Finance,

thr!'&amp;~~u~~: ~f::ior, Center for
~~~~~ s~~d~~~~..~~~?P t~

American Enterprise, through Auguat

;tir~winl8m

31

Thorh-,, Music
reappointed to the Zlegele Chair ol.
Music, _September 1, 1978, to August
31, 1981.
•
•Dr. .......,..., W•wtnk, Distinguished Profeaaor, Oepartment of
Classics, reappointed to the Andrew
V.V. Raymond ProfAaorshlp of Cleaslcs, September 1, 1978, to Aug,._ 31,
1983.

AAUP probe set
The American Association of Unl-slty .Professors has named an ad hoc
committee to In-ligate Unlwralty of
Maryland Presfdent John S. Toll's
decision not to appoint • Mandet
profeaaor u chairman of the uniVer-

~~~- ~~"';c.~e::~~.\1~11~~

New York Unlv...lty, had been
approved by the depertmental ~
committee, tile dlvlalon pt0110et .nc1 the '
campua chanolllor.

�........
Travolta
John T.-tta beComes tha dlaco dance
king In the popular "Saturday Night
F_.. wltlcll UUAB Is screening at
Squl,.tlvollglt Sunday.

CALE DA
_

__

chirga_

Who-hoohoiAd.bocolodJoMROYOita?

lhursdAy-7

- )'011'-

UUAIFIUI'

Tuoo Chain S.W Moooocno ( -. 1974).

l'lAiff aAU:'

cl.rtna 1111 -

f r o m - ol plonla
· T - Hal
· 10 LmAI p.m. Span-

llonquol,_., -

- I l l ' FSA. SA.

o l ---

Conwlollor--

ProgtwnOftloo.

"'*110.

""o l - 114Htington
c_,.N.A.A.C-P.
•· T-.ohlpol~
~ R. Vogel. 706 0'8rWI. 3:30 p.m. 14
- . . . - o l . - . l o t - = 1 1 _ ...
b o - l n 5230'aW&gt;. F« ..... lnformoli:&gt;n.
oontodl..orl.e38-2101 , 52.30'8rWI.
_ _ _ _ (TVRI ... _
PHYIIOL.OOY I OIW.IIIEDICINE _ , . , . ,

o l - ' " " - .......... , _ _ tlr.

ol

~-

-

ln-

FUI'

....... (......). 2 1 4 - Hal, - - Col831·2.42.6 .... . . _ - Sponoorod
IIV . . Centor to&lt;

-Siudy:

UUAIIFUI'
-,....,.t&lt;..(-.1977).Con- · Squft. Col 038-2919 l o t -

--"'*110-con you oay- 11iogonr?

-

Gooo' -

Thol tllo -

-y

--~~~-_,MorvePJerc:ey.

Cour1er'CMM (Cilonnel8). 4 p.m. Rerun.

UUAIFlUI"
Night F - (Bidwn, 1977). Con-

forenoeThootro.l4*e. Cal836-2919 lot._

VISITWO ARTIST SERIES'
EHzobolh 5uc1ort&gt;o&lt;g. ooprono, and Oowfd
Storobln, gUW. Beln!Recllol Hal. 8 p.m.

u..-.WBF0(88.7FM) , 7:50p.m.

CACALM'

Orotofuf Deod. 150 F-. Col 831·5552
lotllhowtimes. - $ 1 .

UUABFlLM'

Te.x.aa Chain Slw Me...cra (Hooper, 1974).
COnftnncO Thoolre. 12 rnkjr;ghl. Admis·
oion chotge.
( Not)econ'ITI8Itdedf0fthe~ .

.. moybo tho

boot'""""' IIC&gt;CnfNW'I

ThoiJoM T.-~oraund In hlo IOide&lt;·

Sunday-10.

"?

Wednesday- 13
CHEMICAL ENOlNEERINGSEIIINAR I
o.natty Behewkw of Low T.npen~twe Pure
and Saline WaW and the Effecta af o.Mfty on
Buoyoney Induced .. llenjlriW&gt; Gol&gt;hol'l.
!lepaftmen1 of ~- u / 8 .
262 ~- 3:30p.m.
PHARM.D. SEMINAR •

leod uoed to bo T.-. on

Thol tho -

"M

Saturday-9
COtfVERSAnONS IN TilE ARTS

- Cetchlt1
--"'*110·

-_ _
-.u.
~ ol GIIOibootomllllc
__s-t08s-.&gt;on.
Phy**'IJy, -

- 12 midright. -

~butjuotrightlot~.

OMolon

LAW ANDECOHOWCS WORKSHOP I
&amp; - , Zonlne ond tho - o l

-

Squft COnf&lt;nnce . oion

COfJ1IlUO pin -

O.Cubltuo u - Th«opy, -

_._

Dodoric:ll,

Awm.D. CMCiclete 2o48Cooke. 5

8ut _ , -"/. WAB giYes you_four nights.

P- m~

FILMS"
Ottffith
Progrem
etc.);
_
_
__(Comer in Wheat.7p.m.

FUI'

MFA RECITAl.'

....., - • eo-. (V0f10oll. 214
- H a l. - - - Col831·2426 l o t Sponoorod by tneeem...to&lt;- Sludy.

Conont Scott Rogerw. - Ba&lt;d ReHoi. 3 p.m. ~ by tho Ooportment
oiMuolc.

5pon&lt;ored by tho Center l o t - Study.

UUABFII.M'
&amp;oturdoy Night F - ( - . ,, 1977). Con-

MUSIC'

frlct.y-8

- )'011'-

ference ThMlle. Sq.n. Col636·2919 for llhow

-

PLAIIT aAUi:'

. - c h o t g e.
Onololl-1

f r o m - ol plonts

""'*""'*'" - •

cl.rtng--comjlUOpin-. - -·
Squft
(In
Comr!'AJier ~ - 6 Lm.-4 p.m. Sponoorod by FSA, S/4.

CamrnJior-- OMolon"' -

-----FuHor.

Monct.y .:._ 11

Progtwn Oftloo.

OIW.810LOOY-t
a _ _ ._.....,_,

CONVER&amp;ATIONS IN 1liE ARTS

Ph.D., clllol, llllctollk*&gt;gy ond lm-----~E.
nu"*''IYUb. - - o l l l o n l o l -.

od!O...

~.

- - 1 0 7, 4 6 1 0 - - 1211000
CACFLII"
-_
. ___
110 MFN;;C. Ellic:ol1.
Col
$1 .
831
-li&amp;.i21o&lt;
UUAIIFLM'
_ , ...... -

ln-C..TV(Chonnof10).6p.ni.
He .. gol1ing • old, but thoro's 10 much
,.

U f B COUNCIL IIEETWO
- · Conleronco - ·
3 :15p.m.

Copon.

W A I - Y -MOVIES"
lot~
_ __
,_
_
lo lily
llollfoo;
s_- In tho Por11;
.._...., 170 MFMX:.. Elicool. Col 631-2919

-

PUT US ON YOUR LIST
The Reporter ''Calen&lt;*'' hopes to

provide the cempua with a comP&lt;ahenahe .....,Y. llallng of - 1 • and
actlvltlea, from fllma and ..-lnga to

1=d

aclen:!t\:~ula. ~~Jt~"~:

~~ttaWrou eupply us with
ta. The .-vice Ia 1-. To
nlonnallon, oall "-1 Sll.-,

113&amp;-2828, by ~noon lor lnctualon
In the lollowiiiQ 'l'lltndar'• · - · Or,
mall '"'~ to l'IIDotfw "Cal. . . . . 1~ Qofta Hallin.Amherat. We
-~
wow ......,_
INking the

._.......poalllllii-

101*1 onlr to u.o. with •
r:cllutaMI ..,..... In the aubject;

ap.,.

10 1M pu&amp;IIIC; • 'Ill*' to
........ of 1M Unl..-.ltY. Un....
.......
tlcl&lt;ale
ClhqiiiQ ~-- can
be lor
pore~~-'
lithe 8qWa .... Tlc:Ut Office.

.-.....on

5&lt;1\.--.

FIUI'
Flnll T - , Y.... X. l(XI. XII. 146 OiofoRb1.
, _ _ _ 1877). Con- 7 p.m. Sponoorodbylhocent•forModioSiudy.

- - . Sq.n. Col 038-2818 to&lt;-

Key.

146~ .

-t•

------.....

,.,..._ do&lt;unontary C.. (Chonnof
8 ). 8:30 p m. AeN&gt;.

Courie&lt;

toAoom'20-.
BUFFALO PHILHARMONIC
The Buffalo et&gt;illonnonlc is now olfemo a New
Series featuring five promlnon1 Jozz artists. wi1h
Peter Perret - conductor. The
. sell lor
• $25. Another new four concen Popular Classics
Series sells lot $21. Also " " - · lot ...-,ts
onty , ts a 50 per cent ci&amp;counl on .,Y Symphony
Series. AJt series c.n be pun:hased di.K.ng 8
" On Compus Ooya 5ale.. to be 811·

""'""""'·

Tho

a!EATfVE CRAFT CEHTER
ereot!Ye Croll center located ot 120
MFACC, Ellcott, ... upon 1·5 p.m. I!Yough
ltllo Friday, for reglolnlllon . Begmlng Monday.
~ 11 , tho center,.. bo opon 1·5
p.m. ond 7·1 0 p.m., Mondly through~ - olld 1·5 p.m.. Friday ond Sllllrdoy. Clo&lt;8d on
&amp;..loy. No proviouo . _ , _ , . , Is .-..ry
to ,.. In COnlor progromo. ... range
ol
wl bo """""'·
pot1e1y,
,._,.-.g, ~- ~- -WOI1&lt;·
lng, etc. Alone 631-'2201 to&lt; -""hop lnfonnO·
lion.

- . tho conlllmporwy kiomo for hlo lnolru_ , ond hoo oonO.ICI8d on now harp
tecl1rWqueo In tho u.s.. England ond In 1973 ho W8l - - tho Fnt f'ltze '"'
Pertormlnce In COnlllmporwy ot tllo Afth
lnlomotionol Harp conteot hold In Jaruoolem.
Fllk:ao ls "'
professor at Fllldonia

CSEA QUARTERLY IIEET1NCI
L.ocaf 502 lnvl1M all . - o to ahore In lhe
Fall meeting , ~ 14, T - Dining Hoi.
~- 5 :30p .m . ,_ b y - ot 6 :15
p.m. Tlct&lt;ets are $3 !Tom tho CSEA Office.
Box 16, Hoyeo Hal. No r_..tiona occepted

::::a~-.:-==":t.~

State

_,t

n .anenttv aerves

8S

cn1t-

•·8··

afterSept-8.

chwmln of the ....

Board "' Oirec:1cro oltho "'-leal Harp
Society. He 11!tuml . . . - - "' tho Center
oltho Creot!Ye ond Pertormlng ...... lot tho 1978·
79 &amp;eUOO .

FREEDOM OF N'OfiiiAnoN LAW

... , _ o l -

Low~

tho

Unlverolty ot Buffolo ond olhor _.,;eo of tho
Stale of New Vorl&lt; hoo too.~ In elfect * -

Tho---.cc..-

, 1978. of "'recol'ds... n 11110 dectlrH
•JWlulry1
new deflnition

UUAIALM"
Squn.
lion. Cal836-2819 lot llhow -

COIIVIMAT10NS IN 1liE AIITS

BOWUNCI LEAGUES
New l:lcMflng leagueS ... forming In the folowi'lg
categories: Men's, FaaAty I Stoff, ond Dorms.
For fu1her lnfon'nation Cll 831-354 7 01 come in

Motto Folcoo, aolo twp. Boird Reci1ol Hal.
6 p.m.
$1 .50 '"' gonono1 ~ ond
$1 lot Unlve&lt;sily community. ~ by tho
center ot Creative ond PerfonnlnO Arta onc1 tho
!lepaftmen1 of Muoic ..
MR&gt; Fllk:ao, a nat!Ye ol Portugol, received
• diPomo In twp from tho-~
In Uol&gt;on- p u r o u o d - otudloo I n ond later ot tho Eas...., Scftool ol Mualc&gt; on
o F1Abrig111 gnnt. Ao both porfcWmer ond muM:·
oiogist. ho hoo Intently Into tho ol

Ton~ Tho Southo&lt;noro. Conference Thootro .

Tuesday-11
-

-=

ModioSiudyisblgonOW. Grfffith.

Nodces

-- Name a home permanent n:S a group that wl

-ogoln.

lholall reconla""'
-·lotportions of recordS ..tlich lal wiWn • number

«

oCcatogorlooole~.,.-..­

othorCop;oo "' tho low be from UniYWOily
f'IAlic:otionl
· 136 Crofts Hal,
~ ollnformolfon_.. _ _

Thursday - 14
MEN 'S TENNIS•
UIB .._ Nlogoto Un'-""Y.-- Couna.
3p.m.

UUAIAUI•
... -~-·--Col
836·2.818 f«"'--

-"'*110

b o - lo

lJnlvor8lty'o Reoor&lt;lsA&lt;:cesl

Offloor.- W. Engellloldl, ollhe aomo toco-

llon Reootdo bo ~ at 136
Crotts or ot lhO locolion at which they ... kelll.
When ~ . . acceos to _ .
Unlvoroity dOCuments, !hoy ... bo infotmed of
ouc:t1 doclolono In writing by tho Rocordt Acc:Ma
Offloor
"' Fr-.. of lnlotmolion , _ . .
may bo ~ """'" 30 dOyO by 'Writing «

w.......... ......

~
oo1 ond -

J - · J r., UniVe&lt;SiiY .,..,.
a...-.. for logol offah, State

~-.-.NV

12248.

lEW LOCATION
Tho - - Office / ReM&lt;volion Office
hoo 10 231 Sqon.
phone

"' a-.

~

Tho

�•

~7.1171

..

. . . .1111

VIEWPOINTS

-·

after 4 :30 are reserved for MFC and Grad

210 Fronc:zol&lt;-&lt;loon 9 a.m... :30 p.m. Monday
ltwu Fr1cloy. Oponuntl9 / 15.
Sehedule Cordo-A., 161 U1ti 9 1 15 from 9 a.m.-8 p.m. except 9 / 8
when lhe office clooeo 4;30 p.m.
I.D. C.rdl-tsaued to II new students In 161
~ t.ntl 9 /1 5 from 12 noon to 8 p.m..
Monday lhrough Fr1cloy. ~hi wanting dale
of bi1h on cwd must bring valid &lt;*iver's iicense .
_...,orbir111certiflca18.
OAR Oftlce hours-Hoy&lt;&gt;s B. ()pen 9 a.m "
8 p.m., Mondaylhrough FridoYdunng Sept...-.

Hours

atter

5

at

p.m. •e reserved for

MFC and

Gnod-tsooly.
8UrNr'a Check.ltops-AI students with a Ten ·
tative Schedule noting a Butuw ~top must
be cleated by lhe Office of s..-.1 Aooounts
by Friday, 8 / 8 or lhe regla1nltion wil be can·
oelled.

Exhibits

v....,..,
and- --·-Grief.

ElOHT BUFFALO ARnSTS
Eight Buffalo A111........seymour ClrumlevHcli;

Wllller
naou.Hooff,
Tho--.·
cw.y, Abight·
Knox Art cw.y.
7.Qctober 8
Vl'gilia81iot1,
~ Virginio
Wise.

~

Fol......,._ _ _ _ _
REIIISliiA110NIEWS

untl

8 / 8., Hoyooo B. M - . , ol dMaiono
picl&lt;up--.....oue. MFC &amp;&lt;bd.

"Purz .. Is a comic strip experiment which th~ Reporter will run
this S&lt;Omester. The creation of Bob Baron of College B (text) and
jim Paul . a film and psychology major (art work), the strip Is a
sru~nt vl~w of University life and Is presented as an attempt to
look at ourselves with humor. Some surely won ' t like the barbs
they may receive . If you don' t, write usa.letter about ft . We' ll
give you equal time.

MUSIC UIIRARY EXHIBIT
The Royal~ Music llblwy, Ba;nj
Hal,lhrough September 30

~'==-«:~-:"'sat~-- from 8 a.m.-I! p m. • _ ,
240
~

Fr1cloy 9 / B - . -

at

~: 30

,.;.. Houro

Credit-Free offering ·
to help PhD's get jobs
1

a ~~~~=,;oza~nl~~~~~.!\' st~u~,:~i
Ph .D.'s for the world of business."
After afl , fretted the Time magazine

~wr:,.~~ !":ur::,f~";~f ~.=~~g.!}~~

the humanities. The degree Is no longer
a " one-way ticket to an Ivy Turret.•

o;~:,e:ia~r ~t~l!:"~~!:f.;:r ano~

an

~u~tl~e~~ p~:~ w~·. g~:n!,":J

A.B.D.s (all ~ut dissertation), who
hoped to get a foot In the corporate
door. The sessions - held in the NYU
Business School near Wall Street also attemoted to Interest business
execu11ves In the Ph.D.'s. Where else,
_ the businessmen were asked, could
they find people with the analytical
skills to deal with all kinds of
problems?
Re-education has to worl&lt; both ways,
one Ph .D. said, " Businessmen see us
as people with no feet on the ground;
·we see them as ogres ." Similar program
Here at U/ 8,

the - 0 lice

for

~r~:te'~a:J~;o:t;~~ea~'or,s~

;;,~ns:~f~P;,T·P~!~;,~~i. ~h!au~~~~~

Resources Institute of the School of
~=~f~':;'t~~~ · and the Adult AdvlseTheiee is $15.
About the course
Weeks 1 and 2 will be devoted to
"career daclslon-maklng ," under Martell's guidance answering the
· ~~stion, what is It you really want to
In weeks 3 and 4, Margaret Nevin of
the Adult Advisement Center will. have

~:c~:r~~. ar,:~s~~~:t'~':.':'V::u a~

asked to assess his or her aptitudes,
skills, daydreams, and feelings as they
relate to various car- clusters.
Clarification of values Ia Intended to
help _focus on possible new or
alternative car- choices - -or to
encourage rcerslstence and creativity In

then'::"~~ ~~~..::l~a~~~"r'wm

be
back with "hard lnforma11on on lha job
market," using employment data and
other literature and calling on guaet
experts. You have to know where the
lobs are, Martell counsels.

M~.:'o~!"e~i G~=P:·

~':

and the .Greduale Student Association
d=of
are co-sponsoring a slmll811y Innovasources Institute, will handle weeka 7
tive experience for Ph .D. candidates.
and 8 . Developing a compreheniM job
Rather than urging them to ball out of
search' strategy will be his tt.ne.
a~me altogether, howe-. the U/B
There'll be suggestions on how each
course seeks to have terminal degree
candidates do something almost ail - individual may 1111111&lt;et him- or herMit
and on how to use altematlya
radical : plan their job searches.
Time was , Gene M811ell, director of
plafh':ell!t.\'~C:iul Resume• Placement and car- Guidance,
"Successful lntenlewlng• will be the
recalls, when Ph .D.'s didn't have to
focus of weeks 9 and 10. Stephanie
think much about finding a job. Getting
Zuckerman, career counselor In charge
the degree meant a comfortable slot In
of
social services/car- planning, and
some amiable collegiate setting.
Mary Ann Stegmaier, asaoclete direc:Academic skjlts were all that mattered.
1
In today·s hrinking marl&lt;et, though,
lfni~:=-u~s~:.:,:~t
~~
· M811ell says, the doctoral student has
instructors. The resume seSlltOfta will
to think mO&lt;a about how to sell himsell
look at ways to organize and structure
or ttersell as a unique Individual: after
all there are more Ph.D.'s to pick from
than there are teaching jobs open.
suggeet a strong candidacy; the OMS
Gettlng a job requires a atrategy. It also
on mtervlewa, at how to prepwe and
means thinking llbout aome of tha'
present 'oneself poaltlvel y.
alt8t111111.- to teaching,
Studenta are lrM to pick and chooae
~ ciialt-free COUrM to help prospecfrom among the Miltona, telacting
tive Ph.D.'s dO all 1hls bealna on
only
thoM atMa In which they mey be
• campua, Friday, llel&gt;lembw ~. and
weakest, Martelllndlcatea.
COI\Itnues a.och f'rlclay thereafter
For
additional lnfotmallon, oontact
through Decamber 8. Tha tan -'ona,
lila CNdll-F- Olllca, 831-4301.

in:N,' 't;.

=~ur:~::~~!tab~ un~ ,t!~

H..-plst
sets recital

�Soptombe&lt;7, t97S

of our best'Outstanding' faculty and staff will receive
$1 ,000 cash awards from U1B Foundation
at dedication of Ba_ird Point, Sunday
Ten of U/B's best - four faculty
members, four professional staff
members, and two classified 88IVk:e
empl~ will be honon!d with

~~l~~~o~~~l{g::: ~~~.•u~t"':;

dedication of the Baird Point Amphitheatre, SUnday afternoon, Sepfember 10, 813 p.m.
Alao on the program, to which the
entire campus community Is lnvltld,

-:JI~bet..=~~b~th~~~~~
;;:!':,d:f~o/!,o{ :f'e~t~nlverslty"

by

A reception will follow, also at the
amphitheatre site, Just west of
Mlllerapon Highway, South of Ellicott.
In case of Inclement weather, the
dedication will be held In the Moot
Counroom, O'Brian Hall, at the same
time. Alternate site lor the reception Is
' Talbert Dining Room In the Gapen
complex.
which
Receiving the awards consist of a plaque and a $1 ,000 eash
prize- will be:
Faculty: Dr. Leroy - G. Calftthan,
professor, elementary and remedial
education; Dr. Murray J. Ettinger,
associate professor, Department of
Biochemistry; Dr. William C. Fischer,

fn~~~~e 8r':'fe~~ De~an~~~ar~~

associate professor,

Hl~~~sslonal

Department

of

Stall: Mr. Donald A.

Bozek, assistant director, Food Service;
Mrs. Benha N. Cutcher, asslstanl
director, Services for the Handicapped;
Dr. Allen H. Kuntz, director, Student
Testing and Research; and Mrs. Muriel
A. Moore, assistant to the director,
Learning Center.

.
II ' ""' IOYMI..~/~.,:j~
records, Admissions and Records; and
Mr. William A. Prudden, purchasing
agent, Purchasing Depanment.
The awards were Instituted to
•recognize those members of the
University staff who, durinq this past
ecademlc year, hlMI unselhshiY._glven
of !hair time and energy."
It Is expacled they will be given

an~~~rriauons

were solicited
throughout the campus.

from

On the selection panel were:
Alexander Brownie, biochemistry; Ruth
Bryant , counselor education; Doris
Michaels, arts and letters; Christine
Wackerle, Student llssoclatlon ; and
John Carter, U/B Foundation.

:~l~f.l~~or~. We~~se':ff~\·~~~~

Fisch·er was director of Graduate
Admissions In English In t975-76, was
a member of the original University
Collegiate Committee (which ~as
Involved In establishing the Collegiate
System) , and Is a former member ol the
Executive Committee of his depart-

hu::."ord~~ ~~~:~r ~~~ai~HJ~~

Robert Ganyard
Professor Robert L. Ganyard hes

the search committee for a dean of FES,
and on the Faculty's executive
committee. In other years he has been a
member of the Faculty Senale and the
Executive Committee of the Graduate
School, and hes chaired the FES
Committee on Graduate Programs.
others," a letter nominating him for the
U/B Foundation award said . "It is a
remarl&lt;able accomplishment b¥ someone who rlchty deserves any honor we
can bestow ."

Murray Ettinger
Dr. Murray Ettinger was nominated
by a colleague for "his excellence,
innovatlveness, and devotion In teachIng, his creative and superb research, "
and his .. very Impressive contributions"
to the Medical Faculty Council as
chairman of its committee on academic
and student affairs .
A major contributor to the biochemistry teaching program In medicine and
de tistry, he Is especially Involved with
, so time Ill-prepared' minority students.
or theae students, he and
anothef. professor, Or. Alexander C.
Brown ie, developed a supplementary
course which runs parallel to the regular
one. ..There Is clear evidence," a
colleague notes, · ~hat In a large number
of instances this enables students to
achieve satisfactory grades and , i ndeed , sets learning methods which pay
off In other aspects of the basic science
program ...
Consistently recognized In student
evaluations as a top teacher, Ettinger
also offers courses for both undergraduate and graduate students.
He Ia a m
be&lt; of the Blolnorganic
Graduate Group, whtct. consists ~;~f
faculty from chemistry and blochemls-

l:7nd':.'ddr~~:;~~~~~~J:-t~t~:ti~r ~i~~~

have " I he most graduate students In his
laboratory" of anyone In Wochemlstry,
During Ettinger's tenure as chairman
of the Medical Faculty's panel .on
academic standards and student
affairs, a new approach to rtha
assessment of student perforrntli1C8
was devised . As another faculty
member describes it, "he was very
Instrumental In getting us to Identify
problems as early as possible in a
student's car- In the Medical School,
and this has led to appropriate
modifications of that student's curriculum. The curriculum may be
lengthened as a result , but the policy
insures that students are retained and
successfully complete their training
program. W.e have been worl&lt;lng with
these guldellnes for several years now
and It Is clear that they wort&lt;.
William Fischer
Professor William Fischer was
nominated for his participation I•
Affirmative Action programs, ren9lng
from curriculum development to Unover
slty committees and community services.
Prof. Fischer began his service at
U/B In 1967. For the first several years
he taught Introductory courses In
American literature and more specialIzed ones In the 19th and 20th century
American novel. He also teaches
Afro-American literature.
~ has taught, In recent years, a
graduate seminar in the novels of Henry
James, and In American literature, and a
large number of dlaaenatlon-relatad
courses. He has directed seven
dlssenatlons to completion In the last
four years and presently has four more
completed In rough draft. His graduate
students have found acedernlc Jobs at
the Unlverslly of Indiana, Notre Dame.
Trinity College, the University of
Vermont, and the University of
California (among others).
A member of the U/B faculty since
1967, Fischer holds the M.A. and 'Ph.D.
from Berl&lt;eley and dll) his undergraduate wort&lt; et Williams.
He has been a member of
English depwtmen commltt- and
has ..-..d on th Unlvwsfty,Wfde

-•l

..

~r.~~.::~n.e, ~~ ~ t~r s::~
l'nlcedu-.

ment.

1

~au~~~J hl~~~...!~~;h ~e~sl~~~~l

and at the University of Houston. A
spokesperson for · his department
Indicates he "has taught virtually
everything normally offered on even the
more extended menus of American
history both at graduate and undergraduate levels," with emphasis; of
course, on his specialty, American

co~~~~ ~::,cte:e~!~~~:;;''?;:~s~e~loped
perhaps .a dozen new courses. A
colleague notes that "his preparations
are extremely thorough and his lectures
are easily and clearly delivered; he
entirely masters his materials and yet
manages to cultivate an Informal
atmosphere In which, unless he Is In
full rhetoriClll flight, discussions and
questions can arise spontaneously at
anytime."

N:~a--;; i~e:~~~rR~~~~~o~~~s=

Instituted a " situational approach" in
some courses Which they team. teach.
Some of thei r students are assigned the
roles of major historical figures whose
positions they explicate or defend In the
classes' exploration of maJor historiclll
crises or Issues. Ganyard has also
cOnti nued to introduce undergraduates
to-documentary readings and research .

Despite or because of It , student
evaluations indica~ he Is "exceptionaltx welt-regarded ."
At tha graduate level, he has trained
many doctoral students who have gone
on to ..excellent academic posts or
good governmental positions. • Small
wonder, notes another faculty asso-.
elate: "Doctorates under his aegis come
hard. He literally fine combs every draft
of every version of every chapter of each
dlssartatlon . He Insists on precision of
statement, and on exhaustive and
judiciously assessed substantive Information or data."
Ganyard Is also director of the
Interdisciplinary Program In Social
Sciences, where he has overseen a solid
expansion of the numbers of programs
and a geometric rise In enrollments, all
under the strictures of limited resources.
.
While he has _ found time for
author,shlp, for editorial posts, committee chairmanships, various director-

~~~!:"~J~~:f'c~;'~~~~~~~~::;

that " tha most lmponant tasks that we
undenake and the most onerous
responsibilities that we shoulder lie In
the classroom and the seminar room.•
Don Bozo
Don Bozek, assistant director of
Food Service, has been described as
"one of those rare Individuals who not
.only knows what he's doing and does It
well, but always moes the extra effon
to present suggestions and Ideas
~~~~less of the extra wort&lt; It means for
He has been employed by Food
Service for 17 years, through a number
of changes, all of which he has
contributed to In multiple ways.
Donald J. Hosie, director of Food
Service, elaborates:
"The design of the Food Service units
on the Amherst Campus, Including the
Commissary, took shape with the
counsel and advice of Don Bozek Also
In the absence of a food service director
for one. semester, he provided the
!""'essary positive leadership In 'bpantn~ these same units.
Don survived the troubled years of
the 1960s and took a positive position In
dealing with young people. As a result
he. has been a major figure In
represel\llng student views on all
primary declsions Involving changes In
services. The Wilkeson Pub and Poner
Sub Shop, which are opan untllt and 2
In the "10fTTlng, are examples of his
=:1:.!~ meet changing student M4'VIce

�.......

~7, 1871

Most of us at the University fall to
realize that Food Service/Vending Is a
$3.5 million operation, another adminIstrator points out. As a result, he
continues, people "have no Idea about
the lime commitment that must be
made by the management staff of this
operation. In this regard, Doo Bozek Is
truly superior, a standout In every sense
of the word. There are countless
evenings and weel&lt;ends where Don sees
to It that Catering, Student Clubs, and
other evening operations are functionIng the way they should be. All of this
service, of course. is over and above the
management and direction. he is
responsible for throughout the day."
The tetter nominating him for an
award suggests that " faculty , administration, community leaders, and stu- _
dents have all benefited es a result of
eon•s contri bution to the design ,
Implementation, and follow through of
many varied services designed to m'eet
the needs of l nd lviduaJs, organizations,
and the University community.'"

ject. Task forces ,. which he has
served were conce 11&lt;1 '!lith academic
planning, academic reform, Institutional goals, and recruitment and advancement of women In university careers.
Kuntz was Instrumental In tho Initial
organization of the Professional Staff
Senate, serving as Its first chairman.
He Is currently a member of .the SUNY
Faculty Senate and a member of its
University Planning Committee.
Kuntz has been a member and

&amp;'=~"~asow~· a~f:.,c'\~t~tai';h~~

national school board associations, and
has ~erved on the Citizens' Advisory
Commi ttee for lhe Buffalo Pollee
Department. He has been a frequent
consultant to Western New Vorl&lt; school
systems. _
His letter of nomination noted that
"his willingness to put aside his own
personal gain in order to provide
services to others is an indication of a
quality of selflessness which Is rare
f~~~~ ~ ~:;'..~~-9. the .most outstanding of

Bertha Cutcher
Bertha N. Cutcher Is beginning her
third year as coordinator of the
Univers ity's offlciai "Office of Services to
the Hand icapped .
Before that office was established
however, she carried as an extr8
assignment , responsibility for worl&lt;ing
with the visually and physically
impaired . Her experience over those
years led her to develop and submit the
proposal for a federal grant to establish
~te office. Her sensitivity to the

Muriel Moore
Muriel A. Moore is cred ites:J with

playing a major role In the development
of the Un ive'* Learning Center as it

exists today.

assistant , communications lab coordinator, assist'cm.t-director, and acting
director. She has been an Instructor In
the Faculty of Educational Studies
since 1975.
Prof. Paul Lohnes of Educational
Studies , a former acting ULC director,
notes that three years ago, the Center
was In diff iculty. Its director had been
disabled by a term inal Illness. FES, to
wh ich the Center had just been moved,
received no explanation of why the shift
was made and was suspicious of the
quality otr the enterprise. The Center
staff was unsure about Its mi ssion, its
competency, Its new home.
All this has changed ; Lohnes points
ou t , " the Learning Center Is now
accepted and comfortable In the
Faculty o f Educational Studies. It has a
competent and confiden t staff of about

1

ledge of existing resources and
commitment to help students locate
needed resources enabled many to
maximize their opportunities at the

~~~~e~~~d~~~ se~~o;;'i,'~'!:\i:;~~~aEstabllshment . of the Office of
Services to the HandiCapped was no
small accomplishment. The University
was one of eleven Institutions In t he

~~ry ~r r~,;:tl~~ndl~~e fro;01::;,~

exemplifies what co-worl&lt;ers destrlbe
0

~ ·~r::,~y ~!r ~~~~:n:h;~~P~?~~

example she: applied for and received
scholarship/grant money from Clairol ,
Inc., to defray expenses for mature
women students; obtained funding
from the U/B Foundation for a program
to help support mature students while

~'::'ncr'C:t:e~i~~~~et~ ":::Yn~~

tutorial

program

for

disadvantaged

=~~e;:~~i:~~ct;o~f~u=rn';''~~f~

developed an Interdisciplinary course/
currlculum on human sexuality which Is
now offered for cradlt through College
H; designed and led the campus's first
c:ar.r decision-making workshops/
seminars; and Introduced and estat&gt;llshed "Action Une" to cut through
bureaucratic "red tape" for students.
Cutcher haa recelvad many professional recognitions. She Is A member of .
the Executive Board of the NYS
RehabllltatiQD Association; and a
consultant to ...-aJ collages ragardlng
federal requirements for handicapped
access and student services. She has
addresaed the SUNY Board of Trustees
ragardh:f programs for the handica~&gt;::'{e~lo~a~c':x.sr,:'~~;~sentatlons at
Ms. Cutcher Joined ~B In 1966. She
was assigned first to the Office of the
Associate Vice President for Student
Affairs and then to Placement and
ear- Guidance before assuming her
present responsibility.
Allen Kuntz
Dr. Allen H. " Bud" Kuntz, dlnsctor of
the Student Testing Office, came to the
University to administer a small testing
operation with a part-time graduate

r3~"~ a ~~~:J':o sec~::,"t:r,:.nd ~~

=~t~~e~~~e~:~o.':' ~=~~~~

which now provides test administration
a"nd consultation to both University and
community and publishes re-ch on
U/B students. The data help:,ovide the

~~~h~,:"~~:t~~h~ ~.:'atr r!~~~ng

to the Unlveraity· experience. N

ly. both the research &lt;Mlh,od&lt;JiiiiiW~&gt;d
the content of the results
t ln-lgators with r
at
Kuntz also leac
rsa each aem er, hu
to rofeo01onat
bUcatl
and confer
s, and aa provl!lad dla~«tatlon
guidan
y studenta.
He partiCIJM~tea regularly on Unlverauy comm1t1- He waa direc1or of the
UnivwSity Teaching Effectiveness P&lt;o-

·

She has been associated wi th the
center since 1971 , serving as teaching

these":.~e;'~~!. i~:;'"~~~~e:;;~n~\ ~~~~~

~~s s~gt&gt;~~: 0~t~:ntorn:.~~

n

~~~ff~~ an~~i~~vld\~g s~~~~ficas'Q\j .

students each year. It has become its
Faculty's major organ of outreach lnto
the undergraduate student body. Mrs .
. Moore, In my j udgment," he continues,
"deserves more credit for these positive
changes In the Center than any other
person . Aer directors and most of her
teachers have been part-time people
with other professional responsibilities
besides their Center tasks. Mrs. Moore
has been the4uil-tlme executive officer
who has provided the necessary center
of the Learning Center's life."
The letter nominating her submitted
that " she has provided a teaching model
-

;r,~t~~;~e:.i~/:S;.,~~:s~~~-~:

_ ~~~:r:pm~~~~~s ed~";..~~~g ~s '':;;
the Cenler's special students, and
Inspires this student-centeradness In
her colleagues. She Is a very good
· person, a very hard- worl&lt;lng person , a
positive person, and In every way
deserving of recognition."
Carolyn HHnsty
Carotr,n Haensly joi ned UIB in 1942
as a typ st In the Off ceof the Raglstrar.
Today, she Is assistant director of
student records ln. the Office of
:::~~~i~;!,;~ Records. That"s 35
Taking a deep breath, she describes
her employment history: " I have been
responsible at various limes -for the
evaluation of undergraduate and graduate admissions credentials, dagree
certification, commencement procedures, evaluation of transfer credit,
office managemen·t , student registration in the day divisions of the
University, student records , ~radlng

C:,=~~~~i~"i''~~tn'J;,ofa':f~.~~ngi

various forms for students, designing
of office forms, formulating and
carrying out cross-raglstratlon r:orc&gt;cedures in conjunction with other
Western New Yor!&lt; colleges, evaluation
of Study Abroad records, worl&lt;ing with
the Computing CeQter and other offices
In setting up the original SARA system,
and providing information to various
admlnlatratlve officials, rac;utty, depart. ::;~~~~ ~!:;~~Js~d students ragardlng
She has: served on several Universitywide commltt- (including a Prealdenlial Taak Force on " A Sense of
Community,"ln the .rty 1970s.). been
act1ve lo prOfeaalonaJ organizations,
and been a member of the Angelus
Singera. the Kenmore Choral Club and
the Choir of t,hll Cllurch of the Good
Shepherd . Shawas also advisor to U/8

Selective Service registrants for over a

decade.

The letter nominating her for an
award attested to: her dedication to
"academic equality and academic
freedom ;" her "extraordinary adaptabilIty to changing distributions of power In
academic and ' administrative hierarchies;" l]er "management compe-

-

tfo";:; ·;;~a~~;~i~t~t~~~1"8n=i~~-

obligations to humanity."
Carolyn Haensly, that letter of
nomination said, " welcomes someone
IQ the University In such a way that one
!eels it Is home; her presence
perpetuates this atmosphere. There is
no greater contribution to any institution.''
William Prudden
Ding-A-Ling the Clown Is a familiar
figure to retarded and handicapped
children ln. the Western New Vorl&lt; area,
and has-been for about a decade.
Behind the make-up, he's William

~h":fo'i~;,.t ii,~l~~~~~~~/r~\~h1a~~ agent

~
,\

of~~d~~~p~~r":,'~r;., t~~J'~~~~~~o~

furniture , phonograph records , art
and library supplies; maps, drafting

:~~P~~~ 'su~~~~~0'&amp;nt';!i ~~~'::;
~~~~~e~r'~~~~peryts:.'d t~e r!~~~~~ .
1

10

I

itation and redecoration of the
University-owned Frank Lloyd Wright
House on Jewett Parl&lt;way. He Is a
consultant to other New Vorl&lt; State
agencies on purchasing/warehouse
management problems, and a consultant to Cornell Aeronautical laboratorIes.
Several years ago, he ;ind a group of
his friends formed the ·Master Masons
Clown Association of which he was the
first president , and the business
manager (until December 1977). The
group entertains at such agencies as
the West Seneca Developmental Center,
the J.N. Adams Developmental Center

ffe':::rd~u~~hdr~ th:t"~~~~~eb~

Palsy Center and the Tri-Del Nursing
Hpme. They also do promotional work
for stores, TV, Insurance companies,
etc ., with all remuneration donated to
charity - for example, to the Cerebral
Patsy Center tor braces, wheelcha\ra, or

ot~~~~~m:~· has taught the art of
clown ing under auspices of the
University's Credit-Free offerings, has
been honorad with the title of Master
Clown by the Association. No other
clown may hold that tltle·for the life of
the organization. fn the circus and
clown world, this ls the supreme
compliment.
"The campus has gained much gOod
will from his endeavors." the letter
~omlnatlng him as~ad.

Dr. Bruck
is honored

Environmental causes of childhood
-cancer, and coronary disease In
children were among topics discussed
Wednesday, September 6, at a clinical

:t~~~iinge~erK'~~a B~ck,J,S:Iat~~

Children's Hospital.
The program, sponsored by the
Department of Padlatrlcs, was held In
the Hospital's Kinch Auditorium. Guest
speakers were former students or
fr~~t)',u3~uo~u~r31 ~ruck, who" retired
Or. Bruck, whose principal re-ch
interests have Included plllmonary
(lung) disease, · cystic fibrosis, and
diabetes, joined the faculty here In
1945. She Is a graduate of Friedrlck
Wilhelm Universitaet Medical School,
Brestau, Germany, and came to the
U.S. in 1939.
Moderator of the day-long program In
her honor was Dr. Mitchell I. Rubin,
former U/B chairman of pediatriCs, who
was Instrumental in !fer move here.
Dr. Charles U. Lowe, special
assistant for child alfalrs-OASH of
11EW, spoke at a dinner honoring Dr.
Bruck at the Plaza Suite.

Dr. Phillips
On
Council
Dr. James F. Phillips

haa been
named to the U/B Council, for a term
ending next July 1, G&lt;w.tarey•s Office
announced this week.
Phillips is a specialist In Internal
medicine and has taught at the U/B
School of Medicine.
He succ:eads William C. Baird of
Buffalo who M&amp; retlrN from the
Council.

1

�n

September 7,1978

SENATE·

TheiRC
Dorm association works to provide
services and activities which make
living on campus more enjoyable

Executive Committee :
minutes for August 16

~~~~ '!'~Pn'r::~Tta~~~..'r~.a good

EDITOR'S NOTE: Prof. N-ton Garvor, nP'"Idanl ol the Faculty Senate, hoe oskad
the R.,orter to meke what M considers lo
be o contribution to lmprOHd campus

ao.

communication by running the official
mlnut" ot the mMtlnge ot the Senate'•
Extcutl.. CommlttM. We aie happy to

Or at least ~m Paul , preside&lt;&gt;! of the
Inter-Residence Council (IRC), thinks

~~'"tr~~g~c;,:u~ g.;;":,O~\:

comply with thot requoot.

Hertel and Elmwood Avenue entertalr&gt;ment otrlpa.
There's just one catch :
The ohutlleo will be available only to
thoee dorm students who ~ the
..,luntary IRC activity tee. Thalli set
'-Ck a freshman $15 for the year;

~r=~'r=~~~ b~y

Men than free rldft
,
The IRC tee not only means ttee rides
to the bars (the details of this shuttle
se&lt;VIco, Incidentally, are still being

~~- J::S 0~·~.~~~~-:;

rentals, travel pacl&lt;ageo, beer blasts ,
coffeehouses - on moat things IRC
sponsors.
R~ents are being bombarded now
by a memberahl p campaign; the targat
Ia 3,000 teepayers.
Thoaa who join benefit moot, butiRC

~~1:r~~=~e~. ~~~~

.

a not-for-profit corporation, the orgar&gt;lulion runs three "convenience stores/
della": the Elilcotteosen In Ellicott, the
Grub In Governors, and the Under-

~u~.,::::~ ~~~~~~=~ =Y~

llleiOCI&lt;Ing the atoreo with. more .
· , _ l&lt;lnda ot aanGwlches, etc.
There's also a iravel 'ervlce which,
Paul hopes, will be ati~ to charter
planes tor vacation_trips - In addition
to the buses lttradltionslly hires to ferry
students to Albany and New Yorio City
during academic breaks.
Around town, IRCB runs buses to
Billa' games and other events.

~r=orr::; aa~~=o~r::,·towad
back Into IRC -

for better goods and

services In the stores, tor dorm parties,

tor their movies, for pool equipment
(which Is given out free to members
only), etc.
·
IRC Ia more than just food , tun and
1

~· ~u~~· ';!ul s=rfb:i

It' In a
oantenoa? It's the activities and service
organization tor dorm residents. Its
goal toto make dorm life better.

Slx'gut'To promote that better life, standing
COftlmllt- we now being organized to
work on a eertea of gut concern":
1. IWallona wllh the Housing Office,
the auper lendlord tor ali U/B campus
raldenta. a.n..lly, Paul acknowledges, Housing Ia emenable to 1RC,
encf ha policlee . . drawn up with full

=

~"f~~~~.":1:'8 :~~

to a auggeated change In
policy which wOIJid glw eech
~· l - I n g tr.hlnen flrat cnck et

~ =~·

Meny naeldanta feel
IIIey ..,'1 tettlng lhW money's worth
from Food
IIIII lAC pqaident

-..mea,

lndl-.
WilY.
.._..,
drtnlla
ln for
the ·
Pub
be·
eahe
or aaka,
mora

=18M IIWI

thoee In off-c8111PU8

a. ._,As f• aa a.'-08 n u - of

dorm ltudlnla . . concemad, !hera
-~ _...,.; IIIey don~ Nn on lime;
...,IIIey clon'l

run,....,_.., .

.m..- ...

4, .....- - . F«
- · ..... GIW'IIea. dorma . . , , Up!
• - . . or In • 00011 . - r aa IIIey
...... ... ~ l8cllltlaa . . too
aMn 0111 ol Gf~Mr.

t. 08Mif ,..,,..,

They're

,,..

.....,...
- ilwiiiJ
onlY lllfM buriWa
...,
__
..,_llelfalloor.

1.

A.._

T-.

lUll

..,,

~ - - - · eltiW; lAC Ia -"'nD
flit - · fllltiOUilltJ ........ 8111111;

:-....=-=:::-.:..,= =~
~--·

APPROVED .

':!, tha~

ffh..
tRC feepayers got "screwed last year"
and may be just the least bit wary of
taking a chance again.
They ohouldn~ be, aays Paul, who
was elacted by dorm residents last
spring on a pladga to clean up IRC's
act.

=·

Item 11 Approval of the Minutes of May 24 ,
1978
The Minutes of May 24, 1978, were

a

11

Th;::c ~nl~r ~o campus dorm
residents have a full-blown organlza·
tiona!, legislative and executive structure. IRC Is much like a mlni.:Student
Association , except that It mixes
undergraduate, graduate and profes-

f~~nat'nt~"::.~~sa,::·~~~~~ll:,e.!,~a~;

which has four officers of Its own (two

~~~~I: e~~~~~ th~~g~ ; P,!~thi~\':Ji

representatives to the 150-member IRC
" main body" assembly which meets
twice a month.
Atop the entire structure Is the main
bodv executive stele which consists of
(in addition to Paul): Mike DITommasso, executive vice president; Matt
Cornick, vice president for I~B ; Kathy
Berger, vice president for activities
~ann lng; and Kevin Bryant , treasurer.

u.!:~":~~ut~r.;&lt;l~~v=se~

dorm life, with President Ketter, and
with the Student Assocletlon president.
The five were elecle4 frem several
different " tickets" during the spring
campus elections. Despite the fact theY
didn~ run together, they work togellier
well, PauHeels.
A senior psychology and film

Wo~;"~g :,aj:n&amp;~h~u~~~n

~~

living on camp~s.
Sure, there are problems, but "living
on campus Is great," he says. He usad
to commute from his home In Orchard
Park, but now he wouldn't think of it.
It's like anything else, though, he
advises hewcorners to Buffalo; ')ou
have to getlnv~lvad . •:
Each area different
Each of the three dorm areas has a
distinct character, reputat ion , and
following among students, the IRC
head explains.
Perhaps because he lives there, he

!:~· :;1:! ro"ft~;.o~~crc~:~y e#'C::,~

can wangle a single or double room ·tn
one of the turrets of that self-contalnad
illlieworld.
•
There's a growing spirit of commur&gt;i!r In Ellicott, Paul feels: "I'm not sure
It a the colleges or what - but trs

Item 12 Report.of the President
The President being unable to be present,
Vice President Albert Somit met with the
committee and reponed on Fall admissions.
Enrollment targets were not met last year,
and for 78-79 we spumed an Increase pf 700
in our Fall admissions target. It appears that
we are likely to be on target with Fall
admissions, resulting in an Incoming
freshman class of 3,000, an Increase of 400
over the freshmen for last year. It seems
.likely that other university centers will also
be. close to their enrollment targets, but that
many of the four year colleges are llkety to
fall short.
Two sorts 'Of quut~ns arise because of the
Increased admlsek)n: (1) the quality of the
students admitted and (2) the quallly of
student life.

Item It 3 Report of the Chairman
The Chairman reported on the reactivation
of .the Bookstore Committee and the
Admissions "Committee, and raised questions about the status of Various other
senate commhtees . An aa hoc Committee
on Presidential Evaluation Procedures has
been constituted In accordance with the
charge formulated on 6 / 24 I 78 and the
nominations from the caucus of 5 / 26 / 78;

Jacob Hyman (law), Choir; Michael Frisch
(Htat.), Gerald Rising (tnatruc.), Fred Sea
(English), Erwin Sogol (Psych.), Robert
Stern (Pol. Set.). Reorganization of

~1 :;&gt;1bi:;t ~~~~~..:."f·~~~=- ~h~o~r~mm~tee on

CULTURAL TRANIIIIISSION MOVES

The

c:-

Tra ut ·a •

for Sllldlaa of Cultunl
Ilea - * to · 313

.................... I, Ellicott c-.·
....... Allillar8l Caoilpua. The ....

'?, '
.,.cn

...........: 111-L .....Idlnll. .......

. _ . c..pea., .......,.., ,._
~The -

.......

IIUIIIbar,

the Presldenl
The Colleges"
Senate at its

meeting ol May 16, 1976; with .lblo proviso

that the quallflcatlona for the Dean be left tO
the discretion of the VPAA, to whom the
Dean will report. It wu MOVED,

SECONDED and PASSED to nofer the

President's letter to the Colleges Commltte.e
for their comment .

nom •• Nominations to Joint Committee

Amhen&amp;t)," Pauloayo.
To eech hit own.

Ketter on the

flam 8b Food SO&lt;VIce Standing Committee

ll'~.:.,"g,.~1Weit, "It's Governors." 11

:::!.."'Tor~~.::;,~co=ce':~
"They don't w.tl to come out hera (to

was MOVED, SECONDED, and PASSED that
themaUerbeTABLED.
Item faa Letter from Pres.
revised College Prospectus
In a letter dated August 1 ,
accepted the " Prospeotua for
which was approved by the

will drop very little, pertlaps one point on
each criterion, so far as the mean or median
student Ia concerned. In particular It seems
likely that the Incoming class Will have
aJmost as many students with a near-90
average as last year ; the majority will be In
the upper fourth or f1flh of their high school
class.
(2) Two questions abo~.ot student life arise ,
one htlving to do with housing, the other
with faculty counseling . There Is a potential
Shortfall of 400 beds this Fall, due to
construction being behind schedu~ so that
academic units have displaced dormitory
space. Two policy questions which arise
have to do with the priorities (1) for available
student housing, and (2) for office versus
reskientlal space.
In response to questions, the VIce
President discussed the difficult choices
that the University faces In provktlng library
facilities; he reported that It ta likely thaJ
Deans of Natural Science and Math, Soclal
Sciences, Continuing Educat ion, and
Undergraduate Studies will be named by
September 1st.

fl~.·couree,

Center. Qne Improvement Ia In store:
the old ROoeevelt dining roo 111 Is belnH
converted to a wine cel18f' which wl
feeture •a mellow, jazz atmosPhere," in
cont-tto Elllcotro frenetic F'ub.
Main Street Ia another story again.
Thooa wlho live then&amp; tend to atay !here

nom I 7 Drop-Add dates
The Faculty Senate Executive Committee
reviewed some correspondence originating
In the History Department and referred to
the Senate by the VPAA , concerning
drop 1 edd dates. There are sound pedagogical reasons foe. lrylng to reduce the
" add" period. After discussion reYealed a
variety of Interrelated problems and the
existence of a Task Foree on Regletratlon , it

(1) It oppeara thot the quality of students,
as measured by our three standard criteria,

committees will be a me}or task In the Fltll .
The Executive Committee will have to decide
whether to do this entirely as a committee or
the whole, as last y•r, or to designate a
subcommittee to pruent nomi nAtions, u In
previous veers.

there's an "Isolation"
factor, butiRC'o working on that, also;

:tem It 8 CCTV Master Plan
It was agreed that the development of a
CCTV Master Plan Involves questions of
"Policy requiring Senate Input. Since the
matter lies within the general province of the
Sen8te Committee on . Information and
Library Resources, the Chairman WHI
consult with that committee as to whether
they can undert•e the task or whether a
subcommlttei should
be specifically
charged with the matter.

0

Procedure• to a
' committee of tho SUNY Reoeerch Foundatton, with local oppolntmonto made by VPR
Fltz;&gt;otrlclt, who uko for nominations tor
one slot foro peroon not In Haolth Sciences.
A alate ofthrw wu APPROVED.
ttem I 5 Bookototw AdVIsory Com.mlttoo

(~~';";'~~u~lon hu ukad

tor fMI
nominations to IIH flva faculty positions on
en Advloory CommntH ol twelve persons,
which will wot1t wnh the manager -lntad
by Foliotra to run the BookatorH on
campus and wffl advise the Foundation
about the modification end I or continuation of the • - og,....ent with Follott's.
The following nominations want AP·
PROVEO: K. Batbor (Phllos), (TV), A. Dory
(EngQ. (80), C. Donnla (Engl), (81), Slllr1ey
Heaateln (H .S. Ubrarlaa), (81) ond L.
Schnolder (Hiot.), CIO). (IIOVEO Hyman,
SECONDED H - . PASSED -lrnoualy).

•

The FSA has asked FSEC to name faculty

to

tho

~SA

Food

Service . Advisory

Committee. Professora Stephen Dunnett
and Milton Pfesurwereapprovfld.
Item 8c Parcel ' S' Advisory Commi ttee

Correspondence from Richerd Mot1 (SA)
and John carter (UBF), eoncemlng the
composition of a propoaed Parcel
Advisory Committee, to advise UBF on the
development of Parcel 'B'. The matter was
rsfemKJ to . the Senate Committee on
FacllUies Planning for their advice.

:a·

Item ld ReslgnaUons

,

....

Myles Slat In asks to be replaced aa•Chalr of
the Academic Planning Review Committee,
artd John Naylor as Chair of the Facilities
Planning Committee. Action tadefiK,.d. -

The mee11ng adjoumad ot 5:07p.m.

B~•• of the houd.; ~.-d.

Executlft
CommHtH mtnut• for Wedneedar, August
30, ware oHar the TUMday noon

=~"-line. They wHI -

-•

MFC r eturns
to downtown
Millard Fillmore College (MFC), once

~~~~~~r~:.C,N!.~e·~11.':fatf:~~W;n8

select list of cradil courses.
For the first time in several yaara, the
U/B Evening College Ia conducting
• classes in the heart of t.he city, Dr. Eric
Streiff, assistant dean, announcad In

A~!t!:!ttiopa,"

he oald, "lhatlhls activity
will be viewed ao another visible sign
of the Unlvenolty'a cornmltmenf to tne
community, and may contribute to
eHorto to rejuvenate downtown Buffalo
by retaining or attracting parsons to the

ar~~:~~v ~Yf::"~;;.. we being
conducted at U/ B'a Educational Opportunity Center (EOC) at 4116 Waahlngton
St., which otherwloa aida educationally
and financially dlaadvani111Jad student s
In, pureulng college atudlea and
vocational training.
•

m~:~- ~~ma:~n c~7.•ll. co......
available at the EOC . .: "A SlineY of
Algebra and Trigonometry~&amp;:30 to 8:1 0

llp~bllc ~:.:nlcetar:!," &amp;~6

r.;m ·t~~u~~inf.'tr.:;~~=

Buolneaoaa,"
Tueedeya .

&amp;:30

to

11:10

p.m.

._.::: ~~~~~.~:r,~.al~o!:~ ~: ,~\r;.:

beoament) 8f'e "Elementary Fund
Aocounting, an Introduction to Acl
counting for Public Sector and Other
Non-Profit Organiutlona," 5 to 8:15
p.m. Mondaya and Wednesdays; and
"Public Soeialdna. the Prtnctple of
Perauealon·,n 5 • '8:15 p.m ., Tuesdays
and Thuradaya.

�......

~7 . 117S

n

Tasl&lt; Force is mulling priority idea
If "400 students" were still "desper~
ate" for places to sleep this semester,
you wouldn1 have known It by visiting
the Housing Office In Ellicott late last
weal&lt;.
\here all was quiet.
Maybe ten or 12 students are
checl&lt;ing In with us everyday - kids
who are really up against It, Housing
Director Madison • Boyce and his
assistant Cliff Wilson conceded.
" But It's nothing like In 1972.
llen
those without rooms pitched tent near ,
the dorms on Main Street.
One reason why not Is that after "the
crisis of the 400 honieleas" surfaced In
mid-summer, sewralthlngs were done:
The Uni¥erslty "found" 136 additional

~Yin~~~d1:,ff~~u~to~l=~
and on a couple of ~loora of Pritchard

Halt at Main Street. Another teo
individuals were '1emporarlly" tripled In
various dorm areas across campus In antlclpatl"" of the usual number of
no-shows . among those who have
signed up for the 4,698 available
campuos-.
OFF..CAMPUS HOUSING UPDATE
Tu-r morning, the otudent-run
Off·Campua Houllng Office In ~Ire
~~~~ thet IIMJ rulh that had t..n
evident there In late Auguot - •
wtncllng down. Moet people to
ha•• found something, Mid Shelley
Siegel, off-campuo houolng eootdlnator. SM,noted, how-, that the
Office lo IIUI hll&lt;lng llellngo and
~ally WlnliiO .... about IIYeilable
unllo clo.. to the campu-. (TIIoee'
wtlh llatlngl ohouid call 831·5534 or
5535.] The office, heeded by All.,
Clifford of SA, wtll remain open and wtll
lake llolingo for October nollablllty ao
0

~:~or~:r~e:,tlltt &amp;:'o~::-~:

been rented olnce Auguot 24, Ms.
· Siegel Mid. Thlo repreoenta about 500
atua.nto, ohe Indicated. Off..Campuo
Houolng 11 moving from 343 to 342
Squire oomelfm•thlo-'&lt;.
lllen, too, an emergency Off-Campus
Housing operation was set up in Norton
Sub-Board and SA with some
administrative belp. That office helped
find homes for more than 500 students,
reports are.
by

""-*'

'Herd to tetr wtuot
"The 400" was a llgure representing

=z~ne.;~pu!t ~~S~I~t~~~t P~:

ably went elsewhere. "ltps hard to tell ,"
Housing Director Boyce seld .
This tlme of year, a lot of things are
still hard to tell. Housing, for •~ample ,
didn't get a line on no-shows until
Tuesday of this opek .
·
The ~ould·be lodgers who
coutdn~ be accommodated real or
Imagined - reflect a shift in student
attotudea lirhlch Is causong strains at
untversotoes access the country. The fac1
os that n Buffalo and Berkeley,
Cambridge and Champaign , more
students want to live on campus.
U/B officials three or four years ago
fogured the University would never be
able to fill all the dorm spaces coming
on Hne at Amherat- (the atweys
abundant naysayer~~ at that time dubbed
EllicOtt • " white efepllant" that would

ner:, be,.~ ~~~Ytnce Amherst

-hi_,.,

haa t..n occupied been
able to 8COOillllllldlol• _.,one who
houalflll, Wol.x&gt; said. We
-·tii'IIJ*ed tor the onolaught.
The MilOne! trend wun't the only

..

thing responsible for the crunch here,
though , Wilson and Boyce point out.
U/B accepted record numbers for this
fall and , too , acceptances were being
issued throuphout the summer (up until
last week m ..~ some cases) . Anyone
accepted prior to June 1 had no
problems getting In the dorms, the two
administrators say . It's those who came
later who suffered (some were told with
their acceptances there wouldn't be
room , but some weren't) . A number of
parents (particularly of freshmen)
raised hell with legislators and others .
The admin istration didn't like the
clamor.
'" ~
Task Force will study tho problem
Now, the whole question of housing
is golnR to be studied by a

:e~~~~s~;"8r.'!.:'~~o~~s~~~;~et:~

associate vice president for student
affairs .
The Task Force has been charged by
President Ketter with looking at:
1) the question of whether any given

:;,a~~'fr~~f~~?·';!,~uiJ,~ml~fuJ~~1~;

etc.) should be given priority for
campus housing , and, If so, what order
of preference;
2) the current use of dormitory. space
for purposes other than student

housing (I.e. offices, etc.); and
3) other possibilities which may
occur to the Task Force for Increasing
the present number of student beds.
Housing Director Boyce, who Is a
member of the panel, feels personally
that the Idea of .giving priority to
freshmen (the supposed babes-In-the- ·
woods who can1 cepe on their own)

kg~!d r~~y:uien~:~~-n ~00o~·~~~~~~

until September. Nor, wourd rt be fair to
those who have lived In the dorms
before. Essentlalfy ,'they'd be kicked out
in many cases.
No, Boyce says, " the system we
employ now seems most functional. "
He agrees that some sort of priority
policy Is probably going to have to be

~~~~ougg~·e ~~'if~ f~~d;tfa: ~";~

dorms anytime soon.
The college population, after all , is ·

~~~J~ed~~~~ia~~tb"u~J';e~..r~~~:!

h9using with a jaundiced eye, anyway.

It loses money for them .

Whatefoe?
What then?
For openers, moving academic
departments out of dorm spaces would

free-up another ~ spaces for
student use.
Perhaps , the U/B Foundation or
some other prlvate 'agency could make
dorm-like spaces or even jlpartments
available. But new bull.dings would cost
too much for students te'Tent, given the

skr;-~ke~;~.,;o~do~~~~~";~~~asizp

::;r~iw~;~,~gc~~~~dth: :::ak~~sl~~
the University . Might not a policy w~lch

1

" protects" fresh , for e~ample, e~acer­
bate an already-troubling attrition
problem among upperclassmen.
" It's a horribly complex situation,"

th'ife\!tunt~o~oyce and Chairman

Lorenzetti (and eventually 'the entire
University) get a handle on It t)lrough
the task force will be: James E. Thayer,
assistant to the vice president for health
sciences; James Paul. president, Inter·
Residence Council; Marllou Healey,
assistant dean, Underoraduate Education; Thomas t&lt;. Craine, assistant vice
president for academic affairs; Allen
Clifford, Student Association; and
Richard Dremuk, Admissions and
Records.
·
Final recommendatiQ.ns are due In the
President's office by November 15.

Music Department plans 200 events
The Department of Music has
announced a 1978-79 Concert Season of
more than 200 presentations, over half
of them free of charge.
The perennial highlights of U/B
concert life, the Slee Beethoven String
Quartet Cycle and the Visiting Art ist
Series, are being joined by a
newly-created Faculty Recital Series.
The Center for the Creative · ·and
Partormlng Arts will offer Evenings for
New Music. Baird Half Center Recitals,
and Room tOO Concerls as well as the
annual June In Buffalo Festival , thus
providing a backbone of contemporary
music programming .
Student performances will include
events by the Wind Ensemble,
Symphony Band , Uni versity Orchestra,
Percussion Ensemble. Jazz Ensf!mble,
Opera Workshop, University Chorus,
University Choir, Contemporary Chamber Ensembles and the Collegium
Musfcum .
In addition, Perlormance Degree
Recitals as well as Non-Degree
concerts will be presented, the latter on
most Tuesdays at noon and Fridays at
3:15 throughout the fall and spring .
The Musicology Lecture Series will
~n.,C~~~Pa~lst~~tures by 5omtnent
Every year since t955, the Department of Music has presented the
complete c~cle of Beethoven's String
Quartets in •a series of six rec1tals~
Th...., performances are made possible
through a gift of the late Frederick and
Aloce Stee who, In their devotion to
chamber music, and especially the
Beethoven Quartets , bequeathed a
perpetual living memorial to Beethoven .
For the first eleven years, the cycle was
played by the Budapest Quartet; the
l.eriox Ouartel succeeded them to 1966.
Sonce then. sucll renowned ensembles
as the Guarneri, A(Tl-S, Fine Arts,
Tokyo. JUJfllard end Cleveland quartets• •
heve bMn featured
The 1978 Slee Cycle will again feature
the Jullliard . which will open the Series

on September 23, followed by the
resident Rowe Quartet on October 13,
the Fine Arts on October 26 and 27, the
Prague Quartet on the 8th of November,
and the Rowe again on December 1.
The VIsiting Artist Series, also an

:~Rro~~so~f ~~~e~t';e~~~~e~ro~~e

chamber ensemoles and recitalists.
The coming season's Visiting Artists
will include soprano Elizabeth Suderburg , with guitarist David Starobln , In a
classical Spanish program on September 9; pianist Anton Kusrtl In a
Beethoven-Mendetssohn-Scrlabln program on Vale!ltine's Day; soprano
Benita Valente on a recital of operatic
arias and songs on a date to be
announced ; the Five Centuries Ensemble on March 3 in a program
spanning, as the name of It,;; group
Implies, the music of this and the past
four centuries; the Trio dl Milano, on
March 21, playing a concert of classical
trios; the New Vorl&lt; Consort of Poetry
and Music (Jl!rforming Medieval and

Renaissance music) on April 4, and
French violinist Regis Pasquler on April
6.
The program of faculty recitals for
September and October Includes: Rowe
String Quartet, with Leo Smlt, plano,
September 20; Leo Smlt, plano,
October 4; Gary Burgess, tenor, with
Carlo Pinto, plano, "Opera Highlights,"
October 7; Buffalo Brass Trio, October
t9; Allen Sigel, clarinet, with C&amp;rolyn
Gadiet , plano, October 25; and Michael
Burl&lt;e, organ, October29.
The series will continue throughout
the year.
Tickets for music events with
admission charges are available at

~~~~nJI~i~~a~~~~~C:Is ~~:r~~o!~u~l~

at the door an hour prior to concert
time.

c.;~~~r::~e~:,:; g:.r~~J~~rmatlon,
For further information, contact the
Concert Office at 831-3408.

'

United W(Jy sessions
Brief United Way meet in~,. and orientation sessions jor campus fund drive
leaders have been scheduled at the followtng~ocatlons and times:
Date
Time
PISeptember t1
2 p.m.
Jeannette Martin Conference Room
567 Capen, Amherst
2 p.m.
Charles Room
September 12
245 Squire, Main Street
September 13
9:30a.m.
Jeannette Martin Conference Room
567 Capen, Amherst
September 15
9:30a.m .
Charles Room
245 Squire, Main Street
2 p.m.
Jeannette Merlin Conference Room
September 18
567 Capen, Amherst
The Public Affairs Oflice (636-2Q25) requests that l_,.s notify them by
Seplember 8 about which aesston they will be attending.

. 1 •..

�...
~7. 1171

Ph.D. candidate
)

seeks.volunteers
for cust~ study
Divorce and the re~ulting arrangements lor custody of children have
changed, but no one Is sure what the
changes mean.

Perhaps you can help a campuJI
researcber lind some answers.

oar:~':he r'u ep~~~. ~ ~~~B ce~~.~:
8

0

candidate points out, the lather
routinely received custody of minor
children In divorce caaea; he had

·p~r'~~h~~;ever,

early women's
rights activists had begun to make
Inroads for the cause of the mother's
retaining custQI!y; by 1920,
pattern
was the norm .
'
Today, women are awarded child
custody In 95 per cent of all divorce

that

cases , she says.

.

In reeent years, though, more and
more battles over custody have taken
place, with lathers que_stlonlng the
notion that - they are not equally .
prepared to parent. Then, too, more
women have become willing to
relinquish custody lor 4 career.
• Yet, because of a continuing ligal
assumption that mothers are the better
R.,._ (a.tt) •nd LAder. newcomer. to Women'• Stucn..

adds ~ew Profs .
Women's Studies College plans to
Ita course offerings aa well as
atr:p,then community Ilea with the
ntment .of two new faculty this
Or. Sharon Leder, who holds an
appointment In American Studies, will
work primarily In the area of Women's
Studies. She will supervlae faculty In
the Women In Contemporary Society
teaching collective.
.A writer and poet, Leder nacelved her
doctorate In English Literature tr;om
New YO&lt;!&lt; Unl-alty. She previously
held poeltlona at the SUNY College at
~ • Kt-..uat&gt; Communlty COllege In New York Clly. Moat
~tly, Leder worked as ·a lacul~

l'frr.'

::::r~~:"~~:~laln~~:O:,R~

external degnse offering which enabled
those working In areas of human service
and lnatltutlonal reform to obtain a
bechelorol science In human services .
~gurlh,ngJ&gt;.!rwappoedlntwmltenh'Boact EPSiaantta-d
,,
(.,._ •ork•
the Community Council of Clinton

bu

-v-.. . .

~n..'!.!,?.'!._ll, anSIIIzeehSaatatale-soauw~ededwdalty

"'~
h
the State Department of Social Services
In student counallng and career
guldanos.
h.~or~ an~ o tnt~hlng , mLederen'a
· - .,_,
•v......,
u.. W
"Movement. She~coordlnator of the

1

1

0

~~~~:.. ~ .\:'~~~~~

Cooperative, and a member of the
edltor1at OOWd of Tile Radical Teecher.
The MCX&gt;nd newc:omer to Wom.n'a
Studlea Ia Ma. Jewell Parker Rhodes,
who holds a joint appointment In the
departments of Am.rlcan and Black
Studlee.

A~~.C:=~ ~=•= ~~

Radio Artlata, RhOO.. waa the sole
.criDtwrltar and prtnciPIII per1ormer In
"Ceieroouelna," a c:lllldren's program
and on NBC affiliate WIIC-TV In
Pltt8bufgh.
Rhodee formerly taught thMtna and
danae, hM publlehad short atorlea In
..toua lltenary maaazinee, and Ia
cun.rtly completing her doCtorate In
Enoflell at Cameale-Metlon. Her dis.nation Ia a no..f..,titled
Child whlcll Ia ...-tty ..,tenad In a
Harper and Row OOII'Iplllltlon for first

My Mother's

noo.~s.

,.._....,...,....:r'laiA-Ita
Both ....., a
Rllodee -

pleaaad
Ill' the . . _ ,.. natuna of their Joint
IIIIIOIIIt-. By capitalizing on their
pertlcoUr .....,ta aa well aa cotlaboratlng on ..toua .-Iamie ..nturta auch
aalndel*ldent atudlea, the uae of each

10--

~
~~~. :~

E

~h~~~~o."beRh=c~f!'t~ t~~te:~~~~

especially In light of the fact that black
women were tredltionally lgn o~ as
Intellectual~ and have been recognized
as novelists only since 1892.
According to Rhodes, the prime
objectives or her courses are to promote
racial understanding, give a working
knowledge of the feminist philosophy,
and enhance her students' compos!tlonal, reeding and analytical skills.
Eneau._glng b l - !em 1e pertlclpetlon
Rhodes envisions her role at the
Unlvers ty as one or a "resource person"
who will "encourage black female
participation on campus." '
This semester, she hopes to organize

~~~~~~ac:"t,.'::,t'!,rl=l~ S:h'::

their work with· the community. ';I n
addition, she Is working on a research
grant which wlll be used 10 bring notled
black female sp&amp;;!kera here.
Wlth James Pappas, chairman of
Black Studies, Rhodes will soon begin
the tn
1 tlo
~fmf[:ti:,e0
.:hlc~sd~s
wltb t.:!:
problems of a light-skinned black
woman who denies her heritage, passes
as white, then returns to the black
community. She will also aaslst Pappas
In o~anlzlng a national conlerenca
scheduled lor this spring which will
bring black educators and artists to U/B
lor the purpose of promoting racial
understanding.
Rhodes also ap~ed enthusiast~
about oontrlbutlng to a series on racism
currently being developed by Student
Affairs as well aa about worl&lt;lng In

fTir:.n

conjunction with the Afro-American
Cultural Center and the Black Dance
Workshop to bring more cultursl
preeentatlonstocampua.
In addition to . her academiCally'Of1anted cbores, Rhodes Ia writing a
$300,000 propoeal · for the National
Endowment lor the Humanities (t(EH)
for a docuroentary on mulattos In the
U.S. and Lalln Am.r!ca.
She was asked to write the propoSIIJ
by the heed of the Minority Media
dfYislon of NEH. If funded, the
documentary would be produced In

~~~~~~:gc ~=.:.,~d ::;

primary reaponalblllty would be lor-chlng the preeentaUon, but
becauee of Rhodea' media beckground,
she would also provide Input In other
.,....,

WM

. .:"

Mid.,._.

Yl~: =~

incorporating materials she developed
while teaching a writer's workshop to a
large num~r of third world women at
F1fn"eon~ril.;'ue aspect of Wom8f)'S
Studies here, which In her view best
exemplifies the serious mlndedness of
Its method Is that ·~ he political
Implications of the program are
Incorporated Into the teaching meI hods."
L.sder said there Is a "step-by-step
process" through which students can
become familiar with the College.
Moreover, through use of such methods
as rotating cha,lrs and co-teaching,
students can receive a better understanding of how divisions of power are
lm,P{:'.::,"'~e policies which are
by-and large not recog I ad b
ther
Wome~'s Studies
r.:;,~," Y o
lhatead, Leder ~ntalna, Women 's
Studies !lflerlngs elsewhere often
resemble more t~ltlonal programs In
that little relatlooshlp can be found
betwaen -llty and what Ia taught In
the classroom .
.
.
Women's Studies at other universltles, acco~ing to Leder, are also no.t
as " tolerant" of student participation In
governance as is the UtB unit . They
tand to neglect the Importance of
collective work.
L.sder f.als our Women's Studies

·

r~~~a ~~~~~":.,'3 t;~ s~~sor!i:

System . Because of this, she lnte~a to
concentrate her efforts on making the
new doctoral ~ram In American
Studies a success.·
Leder ~ews her role In Women's
Studies aa that of a liaison person who
r
.
can rein orca Its ties wltb the Inner city.

!r...re~~se'1o

•:;=. P 1fn'! 1~~u~

community through work-study actlvlties and by d"""loplng lines through
which more area women can ~e
associated . with the College and Its
curriculum.
Demyatllylna ltteratuna
·
Through futiM'e collaborations with
U/B'a Women's Poetry Collective,
l.Jider will attempt to "demystify
literature" tor local working class
women . Her goal Is to get more
community women to publish their
work, b[, making them aware that

~~~ s .~ ~~(,..:" ·=~~

lelauretlme."
For too long, Leder maintains, male
critics have atyml«&lt; women writers
with the notion .that ·~heir range waa
too ~w ." Also, she bellewe that
working class women have not
attempted to share their written work
becauee many IMI that the language

pro-rr.:.t":'t o:
which combh... the pleasure and work
prlnclptee, alnoa ahe will be able to
publlcorthelargerwodd.
1nt"11'8le her Interests In literature,
. In general, Leder WMIS atl those
peycllology, education, and social
lnvo.. In the Women's Studies
c:t&gt;Mg..
·
II(OQnam here to ''recognlm their writing
As ~aor of the WO&lt;tWI In
efforts aa a reepectec1 part of the
Contemporary Society leeching colleccurriculum." And she Intends to do
IIWI and co-Initiator of one of Ita
what she can to lamlllart• atudenta
aectlona, Lader hM atnaady made
With .more outleta lor conaclouaneaa
• .DIIa ....._IM lllc.tliiiG.A . •• 901'1ct!&gt;iltlol) _JQ._ IO.. ~UIIItn_Jix _ •• ~i!lll, _,• _,_ . _ ---·· •••.••• '

~··

the atat .. of
lluc!* ltlroug'-1 the ~ty. In
...-.nta In geneql, and In the Buffalo
- M y.
, AA!ofnled aa a vlaltlng eealatant
...,..._, AIIOdaa l!t the ltrat black
10 ,.,.,.. ta:utty - u • Jn
aa u the 801e
' - ' l y _ . . , In Bladl
!lope

course entitled "Black Females In
Literature" and a seminar on "Black
Literature: Interracial Marriage and lfie

. ....,...

l:::Xng~~ n:~. ·r:ih~n=".:

~e~~· p~o~e-~ue:t~~n~~~'nt11~::..!:!.~

• case of a dispute:

-

Quntlona

0

T:'~~!~a•;.r::;, ~~l:t~ r~"1~nPeoal

presumption th,a.t children raised by
mothers are better oft?
And , just what are the stress areas lor
single parents (male and female!? Are
they different lor men and women? How
can services for theM single. parents
beet be constructed?
To get the answers (which will form
the basis lor her doctoral dissertation In

~~~~~atS~~c:~lJ ·or~~·t~:e:'~'!.~i~

families - some In which the mother
has custody, others In which the lather
has custody, and some In which"=

- ~~'rl.~~~.
ag~rsgr:=~l!ll~v~ncraaalngly oommon, she pajpta out). ·In the
~o~~n~us~~~=~~~on~:"'~f~::

children will divide their time betw.an
them; tho court butts out.
For purposes or her research, a

l::t":m~u:~l~~tny::,re~':,'!.'~:.!

custody of one or more minor children,
and must not have remarried.
To date, Luapnltz has Identified and
Interviewed slxtaen paternal custody
families and tO where joint custody Ia
the rule.
- Sha'a starting now to Interview
mothers with custody.
Mothera allltad to contact her
Ms. Luepnltz would like to h - from
any mothera In .Ibis situation, and Is
eager to lind proleealonal woman (In
order 19 derive data comparable to that
established lor the fathers, many of
whom are proleaslonal men) .
The Information she needs lor her
reSMrch can be gathenad In one
session, she says. That -lon •
consists of an Interview with the panNI!
(about two hours) and a self-concept
test for the child or children. The

~~~~'r:. th~on:_ ~l~~ ~1c';....f.~

8

88

loll Information Ia atrlclly confidential, Luepnltz aasunas. No narMe or
Identifiable Information will be ueed In
the dlsa«tatlon.
Thoa who have participated ao far,
she says, have "found the experience to
be lntereatlng. and fn no way
unpl..sant."
Women who would llka to be
Interviewed, can contact Ms. Luepnltz
at fl33.0068 .

tow~ ~~e:.;. ~~~~ ~r. w,r'~~

Levine of the U/B Psychology Oepert.
ment, hopes to com~lete lntervl::mT~/:~! ~~,:?~· he d~atlon
There haa newr bMn a comparative
study of custody llka hera, Me. Luepnltz
uys. Both lawy«a and judges looking lor, and n~ thla kiDd of
Information.

Pennsylvania sues
The Pennsylvania Higher Education
Aaslatance Agency haa flied wage
attactlments IIQ8lnat 15 student loan
defaulters cymently employed by state
go~ment. Amounta owed by the 15
nange from $500 to S7 ,200. The action
wu tllellrat ua of gamllhmant by the
~cy under a new -•taw enacted In
1

nJ.· ....

.·. ,

."

,,

�T

,(

~7,1t71

football time again; Bulls open Saturday
It's football time again.
Coach Bill Dando's Bulls finished
two-week period of double session
drills each day with start of the fall
semester, and have just two more
practices before the 1978 season&lt;&gt;pener
at Cortland State College, September9.
Normal attrition has reduced squad
size from tOO-plus to 8-4, several of that
number on the l njury list, Including
start Ino, center Gary Pioytcla and Gary
Feltz, last year's fullback .
Dando Is still sorting through the
!alent ,vallable and his big decision will
come a1 quarterback, where sophomore
Jim Rodriguez and freshmen Angelo
Scappa · and John Dombroski are In
contention.
Mark Gabryet , last year's leading
rusher and scor'er as a freshman, is set
at halfback and top receiver Frank Price;
also a S&lt;&gt;Phomore, Is the flanker.
Fr~~J~hman John Black and soph Jim
Ha4arer are battling for the fullback job
With f'oltz sidelined. .
'
Veterans In the olionslve line are
)unlor guarda Jim Vaux and Tim Karnes, aenlor tackle Joe Prevlll, moved
from guard, and senior tight end Tim
i.AHorty. Senior Gary Braun will .
action at guard, and junior Craig Cllbus
STUDENT TICKETS
Free student tli:keta for football
and hoclley ill 1178-78 are belflillaaued
Monday t""""" Friday from 8 a.m. to
11 a.m. at the Ct11rk Hall Ticket Office,
Room 113, Main Str"t Campus. A
student ID Ia required , but there Is no
1

~~~~ld.:l, f~ g.es:,~-:..,~ce

0
':

atudenta on both campu-. No
student will bt admitted to football or
hoclley gamee without both an I D and
season tlc:ket, and a1t11ration or use by ·
another 1*M1f1 will reault In conii.C.tlon of lha -oon ticket for both
&amp;poria.

was moved from tackle to center after
Plotycla's Injury. Freshman Joe Maxon
Is pushing C1rbus for the pivot pqst.
Newcomers on the line will tie split
end Gary Quatrani and tackle Jim Pepe,
both sophomores.
There will be considerably more new
faces on defense, where only four
regulars from 'n are listed as potential
starters: junior Iackie LArry Rothman ,
soph tackle Dave Florek. soph
linebacker Dan Vecchies , and soph

sa~~:r.,~;:,~t ~~~ng.iDante

will be the
middle guard, with senior Kevin Groody

and fresh man Randy Retzlaff at the
ends. Fres~man Shane Currey steps In
at linebacker, so ph Rlley•Washington, a
Bulls' basketball player, is at the left
corner, frosh Frank Berrafato at. right
corner. and freshman Bob Costanzo at
free safety.
Retzlaff. Currey and Berrafato vll!re
AII·Western New York high school
1

1

gi~~~a~: s~~. W~ ~f~~ ~~~~~~re~~~~e~~~

Dando solves the quarterback
situation , and the defense can
overcome its youthful inexperience, the
Bul ls could surprise a few 1978 foes .
If

j-------------------~~F~rs;u~~;~~------------------\
1
September 9&lt;
at Cortland
•
I
Septem~r 16 John Carroll University at Rotary Field
September 23
Brockport State at Rotary Field
I
I
Septem~ 30 at Waynesburg, Pa.
1I
I
•l£
I1 '
Octobef'll7
at canlsius

I

I

October:~

I
I

II ' '--"
I

Albany State at Rotary Field
(Homecom[ng)

I

October 28

University of Roch'ester at Rotary Field

I

November 4

at US Coast Guard Academy

November 1t

Allred University at Rotary Field

0

1
I

•

PRICES FOR ALL FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS AND THEIR FAMILIES ARE AS FOLLOWS:
Season ticket prices: (Five (5)-Home Games)
$12.00 reserved (Between the 40 and 50 yard lines)
8.00 reserved (General Admission )
3.00 Individual game ticket&lt;o (Reserved seats between the 40 and 50 yard lines)
2.00 Individual game tickets (General admission)
t .00 Individual game tickets fO&lt; 12 years of age and under (General Admiss ion)
You Save $2.00 When You Purchase a Season Ticket
FILL OUT THE APPUCA TION AND MAIL IT TODAY
-&lt;.

Total

-·checks pay~ Jo: U/B Foundatlon,Jnc. (Footbell)
Mall to: Athletic Ticket Olflce Room 113, Cleril Hall , SUNY / Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14214
All-g-awtat1:30p.m. - Freeparldnget Rotary Field
NAME _ _ _ - - - - ADDRESS _ _ _....,...._...;.....,-~--"T""-------

�S.,.tembo&lt;7. 197S

U/B ·as ~ig plan f~r Theatre District
Who Vllrlety asked, would "spend
SIOO,OOo,OOO to r....,stabllsh Buffalo's
downtown theetre district, which at the
moment consists of one 5QO.seat
regional playhouse, one porn alta, one
55-year-old showplace with just occasional usage, and a lot of 'for rent'
signs?..

The national show business week::?;

~~1n1 ~~e ~':.t!'~nw:.'!t i,\sd:~~s as

"the

U.

of

Buffalo

Architecture

~w"h~~·~~~~~Po",;;,./'::v

::::

City and the Theatre District AtJSOCiaticn and unveiled In mld-AutiJtt In a
32-paoe full-sized newspaper.
Glvfng the projeCt Its due, Variety
acknowledged that aome thi::Ss are

r~;;w~ro•i= ,~n ~~~i~~g~os:rr;.;

street to the former Palace Burlesque
house (refurbished under a $950,000
federal grant); UIB will occupy the old
Studio Arena (renaming It the Pfeifer
Theatre and planning a major program
of use which will be launched by a
revival of "The Threepenny Opera);
Shea's Buffalo has been designated a
national landmarl&lt; and renovations are
underway; "ey•popplng murals" now
decorate the walls of a theatre parking
tot; the ':Sm~~'": ~d:;be~S
=:"have replaced perverts at the
abandoned GreyJIOund Terminal (now a
precinct house). Someday, there'll be a
subway.

:zG.~e;f~"start. The UIB team 's plan
tor a totatrenalssance of the entire area
would run to some $100 million over a
:zG.year stretch; $60,000,000 for new
construction and ~ million for
renovations.
U/B Architecture Dean
Harold
Cohen, who headed the study aald that
existing buildings In the area, many of
which represent the 189().1930 period,
were found to be structurally sound for
the moat part.
Under the ~ian evolved by the task

=kt
~/:":~~/:n'~~~~~ ~·~~~~
~~~~z::J ::,xi~~ ~~c=

of Main Street between Chippewa and
Tupper. Cohen would rather salvage a
building than demolish it.

Downtown the...,. _..
h w-..

B'!J:';~[~~f.:::,~::unded by Pearl
Street on t?! west, Etllcott Street on the
east, Tupper Street on the · north and
Huron Street on the south.
A total "recommended area" for
rehabilitation, which contains the
" target area," extends northward from
Huron to Goodell Street and westward
from Oak Street to Delaware Avenue.
Cohen proposes " bulk treatment" for

~-"~l 1 ~at~1~!::r·~,':ee~h~u:;:

and Chippewa, with uniform facede

:mp::!'~"'f~s J'd,'/Pon th!o :~~&lt;Jc:~~=
e~ating theaters In the block - Shea's

Buffalo, Studio Arena and the UIB
Theatre - there would be a " proper
mix" of commercial and entertainment
activities.
A model of the rehabilitated "600

block" shows a canopy effect along the
front of the buildings. and ..weather·
protected pedestrian " skyways" from
oarkl ng structures on either side of
Main.
•
The plan also envisions rapid transit
access to the block via a station at Main

~~~o~ b1f~~· !o~ t':t~ n~a~~.::J ;~~{r,
0

1

Street In the Entertainment District .

Elhnlc fetllvata
An Integral part of the plan would be
to allract cultural and ethnic groups bv
having them establish all or part of the(r
activities In the district . Also envisioned are parks, an outdoor theatre,
landscaped spaces and an art gallery.
The district will be grouped Into a
variety of zones. The 600 block of Main
Street will become a family entertainment zone clustered around an outdoor
meeting plaCe to be known as Theatre
Square. To the east ofthls area, near St.
Michael's church on Washington Street ,
the former site of the O'~ldoor market,
would become " Washington Square."
This area will function again as a market
In summer and will be used as a skatiJlg
rink In winter. A major new building
would be constructed at the south end
with rental space and parking.
What would become of Chippewa
Street? It would be "an adult entertainment zone," explains Cohen: "The
current condition of the area should not
obscure the desirability of having a
place In the city where one can find
~lghtclubs, bars and other late evening
entertainment. Few vlsllors to Plccedll·

~,.Z~c~~ t~ ~","~~~ndi~'~ni::':o:~

find these areas offensive, despite the
adult-oriented nature of permissible
commerlcal land uses. The mosl
Important consideration Is not what Is
permitted, but how sensibly It is
planned and controlled. The attractiveness of Chippewa Street as an· adult
entertainment zone will undoubtedly
Increase as the Convention Center
- reaches full operation."
· A Sl million federal grant would
provide "aeed money" for the Initial
transformation of the ''eOO block."
Cohen aald 1800,000 of thla outley
would be made evalleble to Hnance
mor1giQ88 for prtvala deYelopera end
the rwnelncjer -'CI be UMd by the
City, tllrough • ncM-ii'Oflt ~loft.

to provide "street fumltura" and other
public elements.of the project.
Potent! oily one of the biggHt
He has described the proposed
development as " potentially one of the
biogest, most Innovative and most
rewarding urban revltallutlon projects
In America."
As for the entire "recommendecl
area,.. Cohen calfs for "creation of
housing opportunities" such as apartments that would attract "singles" and
newly married couples, persons Involved in the arts and middle and upperIncome residents.
" The people of Buffalo have an
opportunity to create a unique urban
development In !he downtown area
which -will enhance the quality of city
life," he observed In a summary report
to theCIIy.
Cohen said the entire "target area"
could be rehabilitated In a matter of five
years. He added, "You'll see results in
one year.
" And 10 years from now, " he
=~i '':'•;;~:.¥: be celebrating a
A city ~w~er at heart, Co"'hen came
to UIB In 1 97~ from the Washington,
D.C. area where he was Involved In
motivational studies at the Institute for
Behavioral ReaMrch.
Cohen, who grew up In N- York

~:.:f· ~'tt"::' ~ lnp~\re"~~~~u~~I'Tn

Brooklyn.~ allended the lnatltute of
Design In Chicago and taught In that
city. Hla stfdlea also toqk him to
Northwestern University and Southam
Illinois University.
Cohen obviously relished the taak
placed before him by Mayor.Griffin who
Initially Invited him to see what could
be done to ahore up the Theatre
District.
"If the city needs helP., the Unl-slty
should get Involved, ' Cohen com·
mented.
To Vsri~'$ queation of where tha
money will come from, Cohen and
Theatre Dtatr1ct aflclonadoa would
lll1ely anawer: government .Iunde, the
tooo.t Which the multi-million dollar
ntpld tranalt Ia IUppoeed to offer the
entire downtown area, and prtvete

~.

IIIey Claim, '"-'• • lot of
lntarwt by aome building Jnwatora In
o-Iling In on the ground I fOol'.

��About LIFE ~
WORKSHOPS
LIFE WORKSHOPS are devoted to
developiDJ loomillc-- DOtworb
at~. allowinr peopla to olw'e

iutorHia. aldllo, mdicleu iDa free omd
iDforiDalooltiD&amp;- 'lboy civ•1"" tbe dwJee
t o - - peopleiD ODd .......a ~ba
Ulli-&lt;enlty.
we esperimeDt
wiiiiMW aouneoftorinp. whilere~
t.boM tba have been popular ond
..-.tuL 'lbo worbbapa are opeD to aD
memboro altbe Unlven!ty community
(lllucleDU, faculty, .wf, alumni) omd t.heir
_..... Tbe7 are voluntarr on the portal
tbe leedero, ~-credit, omd generally
freo.aJ-dlarp to po.rlidpantl.

Eodl---

Registration
Registration
·
begins Monday
September 11
Regiotntion il e....,tial. It.....,.. tllllt
7"" will be informed of eebedule eb._
and tluot the loadu will pn1pore I« the
eorreet number &lt;&gt;f partldpOilte. Moot
woo:bhope """'DlDI&lt;IIIato oaly a llmJtad
.number al people. You 111&amp;1 resistor iD

penon crby pbona(ifthereilnofaa). At
that time WO will pn&gt;vida JOU with updated
lntormatioa ouch u ~ol oupplieo
requiNd. PI- notifJ uo'.iio6ity"" with to
-!your~.

-

How:
Vlait ... pbona

110 Norton Hall, Amberot, 636-2808
Wben:
September 11·14
8:JO a.m. • 8:00 p.m.
llo!linaiDr September 15
8:80a.m.. 5:00p.m. Mondq-Frida;r

Arts and Crafts
IliAci; AND WHITE PHOTO
PROCESSING
Mllldara/~ 18-0c:tober 16
r~ October%)18:00·9:00 p.m./353

Sqalrollal
Leader: Ken Landau, phol.o buff with
toeebing experie"""
W..tuliop Deacriptioll:
Learn buie develOpment and printing
proeesoes for blaclt and white film.
Pert.ieipantl must have ...,.,.. to a eamera
(other than a 110 poelr.et type) and provide
their own film and paper. Registration il
limite!~ and will be confirmed .upon payment
al$5.00 (euh ooly) to cover the eoot ql
ebomi&lt;&amp;ll. The fee include&amp; memberohip in
tbe U!B PhOto Club whieb eutit!M you to
tho ueo oHhe darkroom in addition to
woo:bhoptima.

BLACit AND WHITE PHOTO
PROCESSING

·--......-..

D.lee, , _ Udi.Aatloa wll

be-"*'

Leader: James DIVineeDIID, photo buff
w..w....~

Learn buie development and printing
proee1101 for blaclt omd white film,' u well
u apecialeffeeta in tbe eamera and
darkroom. Pert.ieipantl must beve ...,.,.. to
a eamera (other then aUO poelr.et type) and
provida their own film aod paper.
Registration illlmitad and will be
COIIfirmed upon pa11110ntof$S (eub only)
to arver the eoot al ebemieala. Tho fee ,
include&amp; membenhip in tho U/8 Pbol.o Club
which entitlea you to tjle uae of the
darkroom in addition to workabop tima.

CREA11VEDBAWING, CARTOONING
AND DOODLING
,.....,.,s.,a.beri~1f

)........... Od.ober 18)/S:GG-10:00
p.a.I&lt;Jr.dft Craft C.-, 1%0 MFACC,
tll1oalt c...,lu
Leade-: Joe M. Fileber, clireetor of
Creative Craft Center
w.....,..~

·~ tbe Jo7 of drawiDgf
•Boeame aware alyour ereative abilities!
oGet advice in deoeloping your skilll

You will be Introduced to buie design
thaory and todmiques wbieb will be
·
domonatnt.ad by tbe leader.
Eoeourapmenl wiU be provided to preetiee
drawiJII a wi~ ranp of aubject mau.er
(portraltl, landaeapea, animala, cartoona)
ua1nc various media iDcluding pencil,
eharooal, mark-. erayola. e~ Materiala
will be provided at tba first eossion,
however you will need to purebue supplieo
I« Lbe remaining ~0111.

THE IIAU'·ILUED HAMS
,_..,.,.,....t8-0dober111
7:JM:tlp.a.IIM ..... IIal
I.-lor: St.aft
&amp;Wvial~
wllo hu 1ooaed fer food"" CIUppewa and
who h u - booed oft 0... ~tap at "Caleb
a Riollll a.· in New Yen City, and otber

a.-.

................................
~~
......... ................., .......
....,.
niPidolbo·

...... .....---

....u ............., , ,
,

~-

HAJI.&amp;UI·IIAM .. .

, . .. _

.... t.u, .............

comic or performing in a eomedy group, and
enjoy the company of fellow neuroties.
Sessions will emphulu&gt; developing a
comedy style that reveals your peroonality;
relaxing in front of an audienee;·eomody

brainst.orming; and bow marrying a chicken
can put you in a lower in~ tax brackeL
1NSPIRA110NAL WlllTING
Tblll'ldapi~Z1·0ctober261

3:GG-5:00 p.a:/201 N - HaD
Leader: Don Booth, free.lanee writ.er for 20
yearo who hu published over 200 stories
and articles

Worbbop Deacrlpdoa:
lnspirat.ional is loooely defined for the
purpooeo ofthia workshop. New writers
who are interest.ed in learning to inapire
their readers are eneounged to participate.
The topie at band will be ID}'tbing that il
important enough for you to olw'e with
othero. Critiquing original pieces (article&amp;,
short stories, poems, ote.) will comprise a
pcrtion of worUbop time. Don ia prepared
to provide infcrmatlon on aditing,
interviewing, publiahing.and m&lt;&gt;redapendins on group interooto.
INTBODUC'110N TO DRAWING
WedaeedayiiSeptenberZO-October%51
7:30-9:30 ...... t%40 Sqalro HaD
Leader: Pat Wertmao, MFA

Worbbop Deacrlptioa:
l!articipanta will be introdueod to t.l)e buic:s
of perspeetive, the use of line, and the
davelopment of fcrm and compoaition.
Participaota must supply their own
materials as will be diaeuued at the first
seesion. Bring a pencil and sltetehbook to
the first meeting.
JEWEbRY MAIIDiG WedaeedayiiOctober 18-Nov...a- 8/
7:GG-10:00p.a.len.tlveCraftCeater,
120 MFA,CC, Eli&lt;ott C..plu.
Leader: J amea Puglisi, uailtant direetor of
Craft Center

Worbbop Deacriptlae:
You will gain a buie underotanding of the
possibilities and properties of a precious
inetal. Eaeb penon will design and ereue
hia or ber own pn&gt;jeet (ringa, pins,
pendants ... ). Purebue of neeeuary
materiala will be required.

YARN OVER
MODdaya/October 9-November 131
=5:00 p.m,.IRenrTeetloo·H -. Z
Leadero: Rita Walter and JooieCapuana,
long·tima knittoro
Workabep Deacriplioll:
Learn the buies olyarna, l&lt;Dittingaod
oaaential bocinning ot.i:teha. Regular
participation in tbe workabop abould result
inyoureompletinc aamallartlcle. You will
need to 111pply your own maLerial.a which
will be dileiiiMd etlhe lint meeting. While
priority will be lfvea to~. othera
will be ~00 a - available

basis .

Foods and Wi,
FOOD FOil THE MORROW AND TODAY
MODdayiiOctober9·November 13/
3:30-5:00p.m.~ ll'ouae, 2

Unlveraity AV11lae

Leader: Jean Sebu!U., home economist and
former leader of our broadmaking
wodtsbop. "Staff of,Lifo"

Worbbop Deacriptioll:
M.s. Sehultz diaeuuea the importanee of
grains, vegetables and fiber fooda for better
nutrition aod the implieatlons of nutritional
habits on energy resou.rees and personal

health. Learn to make whole grain, y.,.n,
and quielt breads and bow to cook
....mtioMl!r without meat. A free copy of
tbe cookbook Food/tw lAo MtwroW aod
Todor will be given to all participants.
Registration will be COIIfirmed upoo the
payment alone dollar'(cash ooly, pleue) w·
cover food eoota.

H•atth and Fit
EXPWRING ANOTHER LIFE STYLE:

NATJ.lB.AL HYGIENE

Wed..eaderafSe,._._JII.Oeteber 18
(exd...!locOdMMr 11)/N-·1:00 p.m.IZ32
Sq.lrolfal
Leader: Jeannette Wisbtman, natural
hygiene praetitiooor

Warbllop DeacrlpliM:
Natural bypne, a preventioo oriented
htialth syatom. teaehea that people should
supply tbemaelveo with tbe buie
requirement&amp; al nature aueh u organieally
grown food, alaop, and uoreile. Jeannette
will acquaint worbbop participants with
the componalita of natural hygiena, diaeuss
bow praeticlnc it hu bad ao impact oo her
life atyle, and eaplore ~
modifleat.ioaa u appropriate to your needs.
NUTRI110N UPDATE
Tloeadara/October 17 .... %4/7:30-9:00
p.a./ZU Sq.lre lW1
Leader: Su.oanno Grossman, R.D., M.P.H.

Worbbop DeacrlpliM:
The workshop wiD eombineloeture and
diaeuuion to auilt part.lelpanta in selecting
and maintaining a )IOOd diat pattern. Topies
to be co~ induda baaic nut.rtt.ional
iDformation, an up-date on diet modifica·
tions and the individual's role as a
consumer.

Volunteer t&lt;

�througll t.be practice and omderst.ailding of
this art. Ac:live potticipation will fooo&amp;er
one's confidence, awaren
aod physical
weU-boiag. Lectures and presentations will
bo foUowed by a work-out. Wear loose

fittingdothiag.

ae
WINE WISOOIIl
11nondaya/~21-o.toloorN/

8:0&amp;-8.. . p.a.IZIZ 8opdn Boll
Leacle&lt;: Geoffrey Schall, a OOIIDOisMur

MEDITA110N

'11laradays/Bepteoobor%1-o.t.loor 19/
8:80-10:00 p.m./232 Sqalre Ball
Leader: Stevea Turner, bu been practicing
and teachiag for S'lr years

Worbloep~

Each oeuion will bo devoted to tbe wines of
a cllf!erent,...;.. - u:amining bow Wine ia
made, regioDal chand.eriat.iea,
lllldemaocliJir labola. and t.ut.inr of
a&amp;~~~ples. Cowttrieo iaduded an Franc:e,
ll.aly, SpaiD and Port up!, Germauy, aod
t.be UDMd Statu. Begiltrotloa will bo
cmfirmed b7 the,p&amp;111ltDt ol $10.00 (caab
oaly)toeoverwiDe-.
W()l[ OOOitiNG
........y/~H/7:00-t:OOp.a./W
J ....u .......,
Leo.der: 'Millli Lanoa, bu bad......., ia
• Cliiaeae cooltiaa and uoea a wok regularly
for food proparatioe
wor~u~~oep-..-,

Nutrition aod """"""'' will bo otreaaed ia
UU. worbbop which will teach you the
advaalagoa of ia&lt;orporw.1iac Chiaeoo foodl
In everyday meals. Iaduded will bo

clemOIIlltniJODI ol wok COOidDc techniqUM
aod ~of diabos prepared.

Worbhop Deocriptloa:
A basic iatrodudion to iadividual and
colleet.ive meditatioo with esplanatioDI ol
the theory u well as the opiritual practice.

BELLY DANCING
Frfclaya/Sopi.-IMr ~%7/Nou·
1:00 p.a./33t Soplro Hal
Leader: Carol StepheoSOD, professiooal
MlddJe Euten&gt; dancer
WertuloopDeacripdoa:

a..... ilan opportunity for bealtb-ori81lted
people to leanJ the aneient art of Middle
Eulern daociag. You will Jearn t.be buic
"'navel.. maneuvers and pin an appreci&amp;t.ion
ola fine donee form.

ltUNDAUNJ YOGA
........ya/Oc:toloor17· o_._%1/
8:00-7:00 • ••. /W Sqalre Ball
or
'lbndaya/Oc:toloor lZ·N._._ 18/
8:00-7:00 p.a./!33 Sqalre Ball
Leader: Sat Singh Kbalaa, uperienced
Tc&gt;pleiCber
WorUbtp Deacripdoal
Develop Ol[p&amp;Oded ............. greater
flezlbiUt:r of body, relief from tensi&lt;&gt;o,
deepee and more relaxed 11.ate of
~!~~rouP yoppooture,
b....UW.r and meditalioa. Bring"" or
blanket and wear loose fittiag dotbiar.

THE MARTIAL ART OF KUNG-FU
For Womea: Moodayo/Sept._ber
18-o-mberu (aoduoOctober!J/7:00~ p.•JWS.O.O Ball
For Meo: Wedoeadays/Sept.omber
ZO-Decemloer 1S I• duo Noveoaber ZZ(/
7:80-9:00 p.aa./339s.un Ball
Leader: Paul Harrioon, uperienced
instructor with a Bllldt Belt ia Kung-Fu
CREATIVE DANCE
11noradayatSo,t-. Zl·N&lt;rNooloar t/
5,..::10 p.a./33t 8qodro Bol
Leader: Carol Kaminakl, former YWCA
donee iastructor

W..U..;o Deacriptloa:
Leora 10 d*'lptine the mind and body
."

I

SHJP.fiiL\PE
"'--11 .. n..n.iaya!Sept-w

••. _ , , ........ OU...3(7'
ooa·1z01p.a.t*lt~Hal

Leader. Ann ~r. experionced
Ulic:slutrudor.

-

Worbbep Deocripdoa:
ParUcipaots will bo introduc:ed lo all donee
techniques with the emphuis oa lndi'ridual
improvisatioo. Each oeuioo wiD foatunolll
least1!0 mioute ol improvisaLioo and
esereiae designed to h )p expaod
participant 'a creativenesa ia dNiina with
Lime. paee and motlon. Beci._,
welcome.

,

) be a Leader!

�Informational
Eltffi'EBEHAVIOR KILLS
ThOI"'CCa,.to.t.ber I !II :011-4:00 p.m .l23%
Squire Hall
Lead..-: Bea Roth . University Coun!eling

crter

Wn.Mp o-ripdoe:
You have a right to your r..linga, beliefs,
and opinions! '--rn lO ....,pllbis and
pra&lt;tlce expreuing them through
clitcussioo and exei"Cdes.
COMM\INICA110N Al\'D 11IE DEAF
'lhndayo/~ lZ-Oc:tober%!!1

4:G0·41:00 p.a./ZU Sq-olre BaD
Looder:
Virsinis. Principal St.
Mary'a Scbool IJ&gt;r lbe Deaf

s-

,......,o-ripeioe:

The tbreo -.ioos wiD eover languap and
~ prGI&gt;Iemaoftlledeal. baaic ... or
lbe manual alphabet. demonllrations with
deal ebDclren, aDd cliscuaaion o! lbe
edocatloaal. -uJ and vocational
implication~

of dealneaa.

11IE LtFE AND 11MES OF 01.0

TESTAMENT PROPHETS
l'uoadaya/~ 1!1-Nov...ber 14
tud..dlq Odober 31/J:lO-S:OO p.m./107

NortoeHal

Lead..-: Wuren Blumenthal- experit~~ced
Leacber and aulbor who has studied at
Jewish Theologic:al Seminxry in New York
City.
W...tuloop~pdoa:

Clarification of the teacbi.Dga and objec:ti,•ea
of Old Testament propbeta (Amos, baiab.
J..-emiab, in puticular) WiU be provided.
The worX.hop aim will he to make Lheir
honX. more readable xnd to promote the
eompetence to judge and evaluate their
cont.ent.s.
WALK ON 11IE WILD SIDE
, .........,..,~zo.o.tober l1 /
6:GO-I:OO p.m./108 NonLead..-: Mary Maida, a student of nature
endeavoring to feel at home in the outdoors.
Wwkallop~ptioa :

CtJLTUBAL ZIONiSM

W.....uyo/~~ZS/
7:G0-3:.10 p.a./33% Sq-olre BaD

Coordinator: Rog..- Chriatian, program
c:oasulLant of lsraellnformat.ion Center
Wn.Mp~ptloa:

Curreutlbougbta. colleop(a and
oootemporary viewSoo alternative
lileotyles found in Israel will be discussed
along with the history of tbe cultural
development wilbin each "style. • The
format,..iiJ include films, alldea, discuuion ,
and guea1 speakers.
GERMAN LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
Taeodayo/8esUmber 19-0c:tober IDO
duo .. Oc:teber 10)17:00-8:30 , ....t%3%
Sqaiie Hall
Leader: Heidi Zacher - German Club
member, German Edueation Major, who hu
vioited Germanyaeveral timoa, iDcluding a
Spring '78 semester of study iD Heidelberg

u

Develop an undeTSLandi.Dg of whxt grows
naturally in your immediate environs. In
wild planl identificalion,you will learn
whKh plants are edible and which an
p&lt;&gt;Uooous: you will alao be introduce&lt;! to
plant puts by name. Field trips around the
Amherst Campus are planned, weather
permitting. NOTE: HOU!eplanta will not be
iDcluded in the topic area.
WOMEN AND ALCOHOLISM
W......,.,.tSe,Umber 20-Novomber8 /
7:10-9:00 p.m.IZU Sq-olre BaD
Leader: Rosemary Creenxn, R.N . working
with Alonholism Services of Erie County
Worbhop ~pti• :
Designed to raise eommunily a.nd personal
awareness, the workshop will focus on
Mlentifieatioo. intervention and
rehxbilitat.ion ol the female alcoholic. The
format includes led.ure, discussion, guest
speakers and a film . Not for women only!!

aurvival aldlls if you were \o \ravel to a

German speaking area. The Germ.in
culture, cuatomo and language will he
explored through a variety of wa) s,
including slides, film. and eooversation.
RAPE: FACTS, MYTHS AND
PREVEN110N

Worbhop ~pdoll :
Basic instruction in the fundamentals of
poeket biUiards will be given. Pra&lt;tice and
putici;.xtion will be made available xnd
encouraged.
BACKGAMMON
W....... yo/September 20-0d.ober 4/
7:10-9:30 p.m./10 GapeD
Leader: Joe Tobin. backgammon enthusiast

Worbhop ~ption o
Entertain your friends! Amaze your family!
Participants will learn the basic three
c:ascade at minimum, beyond that they
should become more in tune witb their
bodies and increase coordination. Be sure to
bring three 2 1/z .. diameter rubber balls.

La.· NoooiZU Squire Hall
r-dero: Deborah Mounic:ou - volunteer

TAPPING ENERGY ALTERNA11VES

tud..dlq Od.ober 10)/8:00-9:00
p.m./Sq,.U, HoD Pocket BiB.iuda room
fbuemeat)
Lead..-: Gregory Hill. 197'1 ACU ·I regional
poeket billiards champion and national
finalist.

BASIC THREE BALL J UGGUNG
fridays/September 22-0ctober 6/4:00-6:00
p.m. / 339 Sqllire Hall
Leader: Billy Rya.n. amateur clown &amp;nd
juggler

S.t11rda,.t~~ber21/10 :30

W.nilooplHocri,U..:
Putielpanta will he provided with a general
overview ol the upecta confronting aoeiety
today iD the .,..a of oexuaJ ....Wt. A
vari y ol topies aueh u preveoUo.n.
community re80W'Cel, IIOciety'a and the
vid.lm'a reaction to ....Wt will be
pl"f!!eDted to i.Dcreue iDdivldualawareoesa.
This will be accompliabed Lhrough leet.ures,
group discuuion , and guellapeakera.

POCKET BILLIARDS
Taeodays/~ 1!1-N...-ber 14

Workahop ~ptiono
Meet people, have fun and &amp;earn 1. new
g1.111e! Joe will explAin the sel· up ofihe
backga.mmon board, show the met.hods of
5\.a.Ddard moves and supervise play. U you
have a bae.kgammon set, bring it along .

'Worblaop o-ripdoe:
Thia workobop will provide you with basic

supportive advoeate, Rape Speaker'a
Bureau, and Maryaon Freedman cbairpenoo of Rape Speaker's Bureau,
member of Erie County Committee on
Sexual Auault

Recreation

.

CHESS
Tluaradaya/SepWDber Zl-Oetobor IZI
7 :00-llolO p.m./244 Sqalre BaD
Coordinator~ Mike Wawrzyniak , Chess
Club president with aid of club membera

ANYONE CAN J UGGLE
l'ueadaya/September 26-0ctober U
fucl..dlqOctober 10)17:00-9:00 p~/10
CapenBaD
----.,_
Leader: Jack Pericak. teaches juggling
inlonnally &amp;t Delaware Park

Worbbop ~ptl&lt;lo :
Through demonstntiona by Jaek and guest
jugglers, supervision and practice, you too
can IUTD to juggle witb relxtive ....,, Bring
juggling balls to the !inlsession (3 tennis
balls will suffice).
THE BASK-l:'M'ES
Datea, time aad loeotioD te be provided 1t
time of rqiotnlion
Lead..-: Soyka Dobusb, from the U/8 girls'
basketball team.

W...tuloop~ptioa :

Learn the basics - or improve your skills!
Ontl hour inst:rud.ion periods will be
followed by an optiooal game period.
RACQUETBALL
lmplemeatation of tl:la worbhop is
dependent•eourtavailabillty. Datea,
time and 1-tion to be provided at time of

-.

Worbhop ~pdoa :
•
Gexred for women, this workahop will Leaeh
the basic rules xnd skills of basketball. The
importance of proper warm· up. offensive
xnd defensive plays wiD be included.

Looder: Cbarles Scbw&amp;TI.&amp;, eDOJ1J' and
eaviroftmental engineering major

Lead..-: Tom Wertmxn, skilled racquetball
play..-.

11IE BOOPERS
Dates, time and loeotioD to be provided "'
limo ol rqiotnlioa
Lead..-: Robert lncit.ti, experieneed
baskelballcoach

'Wn.Mp ~ptloa:

Worbhop DeaeriptioG:
Puticipxnts will learn the rules xnd
regulaLions of racquetball and have the
ppportunity for indi~ualusist.ance in the
game . The leader willsu
st dilf..-.nt
t.eehniques and strategies designed for a
winniDg game.

Worbhop ~pd.., :
This basketball worX.hop is~ for
men . The "rulea of the game" wiD be taugbt
through a aeries of practiee drills and games
designed to develop speed xnd
coordination. The coneept of team play will
also be c:qvered.

W.......yo/Seple.boo-~'1!&gt;/
7:G0-3:10 p.a./ZSZ Sqalre HoD

F1&lt;1ual ioformatlm co.--ning Lhe .ODOrgy
crisis will be provided: deaip of energy
eODJe"ation t.oclmiqu 1 for the home will
be enonuraged; plana for oolxr "apptianc:ea•
will be dlstribuLed; and diacuuion of this
important iasue will tab plaoe.

LIFE 1101UtSBOPS
110 '-Hall
~o&amp;Bull.olo

AMent, Sew Yorll 14

~

....

~ ·tn -Vrofit

tlrf!

l ' ... Po-.tll(!t'

PAlO
Huffalt1. ' ·'"

Pn mir ' '· 3 11

REPOIITER/.I.ife 1\orkohopo/ Page 4

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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-

.

~:

t ,000: Ten will receive awards Sept. 10

Ten members of the U/B
community will receive S1 ,000

~.:."'3~1~;~~~~~-= ~

the Baird Point ampllilhaatre
projeCt, Sunday, September 10, ~ 3
p.m.
.
The awards are funded by the
U/8 Foundation Inc. Winners w~
Mlected by a fl..,.peraon panel
oonalatlng of rel)fUentatlves of
faculty, profeNionaJ staff, stutmtaFo~~a~~ staff, and the

On · the panel were: Alexander
Brownie,
bl""'-llatry;
Ruth
8ryllnt, eotlfW8Ior education; Doria
Mlchaala, arts_,., lettere; Christina
~arta, Student Auoclatlon; and
Jolin Certer, U/8 Foundation.

The Reporter l.med 81 ~line
th811heu 10 lndlvlduala will nsoelva
the awards, which arelntanded to
begin a tredltlon of recognizing
"dedication and marttortoua" on·
the-job and community efforts:

H. Kuntz, director,
Student Taaflng and "-ch;
•Mrs. Muriel A. Moors, ualatant
to the dlnM:Ior• .__,lng Centar.

Cluafflail Sanlca EmtllciYaM

F-.lty

•Mrs.

·

E. · Heenaly,

Carolyn

~~:J~~!r:'3'fl=t recorda,
•Mr. William
A.
Prudden,
pul'llhulng IIQBOt, Purchasing 0.
oartment;

Ptofeaalonel .....

•

•Mr. Donald A. Bozek, ualatant
director, Food Service;

tC:.~~ffl~~1 ~~"(o~~

t-ta:t~C:::;

•Qr. Leroy G. Galllhan, professor, elementary and remedial
educ8tlon;
•Dr. Mum1y J. Ettinger, auoclale
professor, t&gt;lochemlmry;
•Dr. William c. Flecher, uaocl-ate professor, English;
.
•Dr. Roo-t L. Ganyard, aaaocl81e profeasor, hi .tory.
The awards will be preaentad by
President Robart L. Ketter who wilt
afso uu the occulon to p.--rt a

. ::Jor "State of- the University"

.J::i

•outatandlng" faculty, pro-'
fesalonal eMVtce, and .claulflad
a.vlce awards were Instituted to
""""'''"lze thou members of the
University ataff who, during thle
· put ecedemic y-. have uneeiflshly 11.1ven of thelr time and
- energy.
.
It Ia expected that the awards will
be made annually.
Nominations were aollclted from
throughout the carnpua.
Thoaa planning to .Uend the
dedlcallorHlC&gt;IIVOC8tlon are urQed
to brlnQ blanllela or ...., ~­
Se811ng 81 the -pll~ le on
theg......
'

Eurnploo . . . ._ . , _ _ , - . . . . , . _ - - - .. ploy ......

Flndler:
A I&gt;OI&lt;er game between men and
mechlnea going on at tile Ridge Lea .
campus Ia In the national spotlight.
It may sound frivolous at first but Its
ultimate Intent Ia to develop computer
programs which make declalona like
humane do.
The currant taaue of Sclenl/llc

~.!.,~.,.carr~ a 'Wa"~,.=

~ler.

Nlcholu
tzndler aaya the
proJect 18 aimed at "exploring the
cognitive prooeaMI Involved In pol(er·
playing" and at developing machine
atratagles or computer programs which
play the famlller card game according to
a vMaty of dlff...,t principles.
POker Ia "partlcularty lntWMtlng" to
the branch of mathematlca known u
game theory, Flndler writes, "beca\IM It
prov1c1ea a reallatlc anvlrorunanl lor
c!Kblor&gt;-maklng Involving rlak anCI
unoartalnty. •
"
Among other problama, he aaya,
polter po- the question of how to
II\8II8Q8
money · on a long-term
bula-eometlllng *-1 to many
llalda: economic plannl,. political

::rn~r:tcT~n~~t!·m.::· o~

bull of Imperfect lnformatlo!'-..athlng a1eo qulta commonplace In
-vday lila. 11 lnvol- bluff and
bluater. PI_. have lo lntegme •
dlfferept types of data, while
o the "continually changing"
loal "1-" baing preunted

opponent.

Obvloualy,
Flndler wrttes,
It's
difficult to reproduce thla type \ool
daclalor&gt;-maklng ln a computer P~'&gt;-,
gram. " It 18 thla difficulty," how-. he
aaya, "th81 m8kea tha programming of

_tllo_hl.. programolnDr.-• . . . . . . - .

he's teaching computers to play poker
P.Oker an attractive problem . . . .
Solutions to the problems Inherent In
1

lfo~f~!~~~ :,~~~~ al::':o.;:'~

depend on
Intuition."

human

Insight

and

FIJ.._-.jdraw

The U/B experiment Involves the
brand ol I&gt;OI&lt;er l&lt;nown u fi..-card draw

:~ Strength
=~:;.; ~=~
":roi:.C:Jl'~¥~1=.
of hand Ia the most

to change strategy? Wl*1 Ia a player
willing to buy Information and how
.much? How do a Nyer's Images of his
opponents affect hla declalona?

game, In attempting' to obtain
fnlormation about an opponent's
playing style, and In trying to give off
misleading Information to opponents.
To program a computer to play well,
Flndler reports, It Is naceaury to
understand how a per80n (consciously
or unconsciously) conslr\lcts and uaea
a model of any decision problem. He
wanta to detennlne _ . I other things

~~=~"Yn

Raal _ . . , llelold
Participating at.-.ta are paid a fee
which they actually rtak In the o-nes
(with approval of bo1ll the ·Polioe and
the Un.....,lty'a ethics oommlttu). This
element of monetary rtak makes reaulls
more reliable It Is felt.
Flndler'a artiCle delitrlbea the programming ayatern uud to Involve thll
computers In the~ ­

1

•=~ent~ =

._,_,
.
100 frosh get jump on chemistry
ImpOrtant factor on which decisions are
made, Flndler points out, but bluffing
playa a large pert-In trying to win the

• One hundred U/B ln~ahmen showed
up a month early for clasa this Mon~y
In order to get a 'jump on a traditional
problem co&lt;ne.
Collag&amp;-leval chemistry, a requirement for a variety of undergraduate and
graduate majora and professional
studlaa, Is one of the moat challenging,
demanding courses that students face
In their ecedemlc ~ .
The
Introductory couru
usually
Ina tn the flral semester,
causing d fllcultles evan for many

;eral

00

~~t~ ·=~~~un':!~ro~hto ~ ~

stumbling block for ~me; others

are

=\~.:J~ f.:rre:goc:'~ ~f1 .;
1

1

Flunk ana drop-out rates are higher
than they should be; and many students
who pus, do ao at a laval with which
they are dlaaattafled.
Or. Robert D. Bereman, an usoclate

th":

~;\~~ ~~or~"fm~:;f?l~~': d~

a player evaluate his position and those
of his opponents? What causes a plll:yer

professor of chemistry here, hu been
bothered by the problem ever since he
ran the freshman program for hiJ
department. During his two years In
that NSignment, a recurring -story
b8came all too familiar. MI\IIY students
avoid science In high school In order to
keep greda averages high. When they
get to college, they find ihat their career
goals require chemistry and ' 'they' AI In
trouble."
Something should be dona

a =c::i,:..~usl*~·r.!:;.~~
Excellencalutaprtng, Mdtheldeathat

~~~~g ~u~t:Vou~ba,.:~.
students who could benefit from extra
coechlng and, u a reautt, go on to be
successful In regular chemistry coursea?
He first raised the question well o -

-~.- !

·

a year IIQO. A lot-of people helped gel
the answtn _
Initially, Bereman thought In tenns of
e Cl*llt course, but on polling U/B's
entire general chemistry enrollment , he
was surprised. Yes, the students
answered, such a class would have
been quite beneficial to them; but, no
they wouldn't want It to show on their ·
·
· - •too .,_,. - 3 , col. 2

n-aJ
Sum.......
- ISSUe
I'UI
Today's is the final issue of
the 1978SwanlerReportel'.
We will begin fall semester
publication o·n Thursday,
September 7. Have a
pleasant August .

�.......

2

Auguat s, 1171

HowMDs view
the retarded is
under study

•Ffndler teaches computers to play poker

(Iowa-,.
Thent .,.lh!Winteractlng p8rta u
cal.~

he
outllnea It: "An executive prc&gt;g!aln
man11g4111 tha flow of Information and
the tfllnaler of control between vartous
OCIIIIPO'*\tl. A 1-ve 1111 of utility
progrMI8 performs tuka such u
~ errora, oollectlng and oomput·
lna et8llatloal data, calculating probl&gt;...... ~lng game -lona
eo on. Flnaiii.Jn:~rowlng collection
o1 IMChlqe
1.., 01 player
JII1ICIIWM _,.,... the ayatem."
oompu1er strategies .,. not
cal-lone of pure poker strategies 01
::::"~, tlwl .,...crille e apecllic

. A study of physicians" knowledge,
attltuilea and practice regardinp,

=lr~~ ":t=~~nl\1!=tr",:~.~m~"ei

!i

In the Division of Community
Psychiatry jll SUNY at Buffalo. It Ia part
of an axtenalve, HEW-funded lnveatlgallon headed. by Or. 8..-ry Wlller
(Department of Psychlat!lJ on the
Impact of delnatltutlonallzatlon on the
mentally retarded, their families and the
. community.
The Impetus for the study oomes
from the growing list of publications
which underscore the Importance of the
physician In dlegnoala and manag&amp;-

n-

::::c,.,_
111:::..:::=:~~=
a1
he aaya.
~complexity,"

lloiM o1 the atrategles make
decl8lone 8ltlctty on the beela of
•.....,... lntellllience" -by following
.............. Mi!IOOIOIII rutee. Otherw
- . . . . 1tunw1 declalon-tnllklng by
relying on ~ton• from Poker
bOiiU
llodlnge about

=~..\'/n
hl:,'~1!,1r;raon and
Initial ~ndlnga from Ule three-year
delnstltutlonaltzallon study conducted
bOa Ora. Wilier and James lntagllata

t:;,a

end .,..men,_

~,,.e,art~:'t~~~ Ps~~) ~==t~.

" " : ~~itrategt.. , Ftndlw says,
InclUde at le8ll eome ....,_ta of
- - clecleioiHnaklng, "which Is
~ br the uM of llklellned
dlclelon criteria." 11te ~ group
. . .~ -.1oua Intuitive ectlona of
.,art ~. fonnutatlng rulaa that
De li&gt;oorpOrated Into oomputw

relaued from Institutions and placed
Into tile community the family
physician Ia •the professional who Is
consulted for assistance moat frequent·

~~ -~~~~~;:! ~:~st~~~~~f~
physician contacted flu not been
Involved with the retarded Individuals

J1'011'81'18.
lillie ............
P1oQr-. wtttdl Flndler and Ilia

~~~~tr.:":AiA

Handbook on flttnlat
Rlllaldatlon outlines a significant role
the physician In IIIIa field, there
remains much confusion u to juat what

end

. . . . . . . . _ clew.toped Involve both

"ataalc
~·ng atrategl.... 11te
atatiG onee atthOuafl they may
~ iilufflftg attl\er at random 01
In.....,.. to_,..n oomblciMiona ol
....._., ctwtge. 11te ~lng
do Clllaooo- • axperlance Ia
-an:~ atliic program, fOt
...,...., IIIIa llriCtly -vtng to the
odd&amp; o1 winning wltlt a pertlcula- hand.

AnD~'*---==-~
"the RH
:=h.nd.
mc:;end..=:..... Rlicltlln .and o.y
~

... fiH IQCieK the
ol at8Jing In a .,.,UCUia-

...,. . . . l*tlc:uW - ' · taking

IMo _ . euafl .....,... . . . . . of

C'.lt:-:-'~pl.:-potatl~-;::;
llllled _,.,., o1 ~ wtto can ect
lftlr ihii IIH !*YW. and the amount of

-:..
-=""'
e.:

_., a.!*YW muat add to the pot.
Findlw~

-r-

then atlemptato
" - pro.,.the

~· mecfllne playwa.

•=•"-•._,_,. end become
-...:htnlle",....

of

bettw and
Poar~ . . being conducted wlttl "-.,_,Ina. pi~ leome
o1 wltldl.,. • ~little mora than a
~ ~ ltlached to a baalc
•
ol gem&amp; ruteet. 11te playoffs
-.mine 11o1o the ~lng oompon-

=lunctlon~wltfl-::..=;~
11o1o '::: .... o1 ~t In their

'*"""=:;:
.,. -

be In
dlanglld.
St.aic
lftcluded
the gamee
to
ol , . , : : CDnplalty oNite Mluatlon

=

A _,.., ol

=::.'1

oampciiiWa

101

¥:e Ct'Z::~'.:'~::!'!'~ :'I~

have been deYiaed tha we able to draw
general concluslone from ~llic

-t•.

-

=om

~~on~..-:e~l~=r
order to dl~ poaalble

• causal
re«aiOna between ..ants In thoaa put

:,:'.:'.Jf::'::~u.=,~~ 1:,":

~ close to English and can be
taught atrateglea which II chacka . 101
OOtnpletaneaa and conslatency, aaka
~Ilona about and atructunos for use
In en actuel game; and two which atm at
ctalrtlng nonnatlw alrategln: •trat•
Cllao! that tell til&amp; play.- what to do to
maxTmlza The amount of monliY1n the
long run . One of - thla lattw pair
constructs • deecrlptlvlt "decision tree" _
lOt lllech opponent and for an entire set
of oppon.rta, cMraclerlzlng how lllech

or lor which the formulation of auch
solutions Ia cumbersome 01 prohibit·
lwly expansive. Aa the raaaarch I have
deecrlbed flu demonstrated, computer
P&lt;91Jrama -tan modal the human
approach to decision-making. The fact

~lo~": p=:.do.r:rx:~

"=

decisions for the same - n a human
beings usetn their cognitive processes.
This statement Is oorroborated by a
aeries of experiments cur(8ntly being
performed .

~~~

~~~~~~~~~ ::~,·~~r:

:1:sd=~r.::r~-:!'-.n'd .:'.:'J: =~':"~~ 'h':C'::ls'l:rsofJ::~:

component• from them Into • • super
player."·
Appllcatlone

~ponents

are very experienced poker

dlrl:..~ua::' ~nn::acll~e ~~em~~
In a statistically significant number of

Flndler aaya, "T~ ere obviously
many applications outside of poker for
thaae tewnlng atrateglas ... .Laamlng
programs In g--.1 . . Important In
pointing to future directions In
computer prognammlng. Ultimately II
ahould be poaalbla for pro_grammera to
aldll

there .,.

caaas."

The Scientific American notes that
Dr. Flndler's reaewch team, "affectionately kQown u the poker group," has
Included: Heinz Klein, John Menlg,

=~.cl;~:"'~";l~~na~o~~~~:n

Gould, Alex Kowal, Jeff Lesinski, David
Allied, Steve Feuerstein, Paul Bunting,
David Glffar, John_ f'!leur, Andre van
TllbOtg, John ~ghtle,
Charles
Peerson, G&amp;OfCia Sfc!i8rman, Terry Roy,
Steve Hag!~ O.my Kolla, Joao
M.rtlna, and t:.mesto MOtgado.

=-=--~
.,-:;.~ur.:rr :":: '1:-:=
......
__ .,allllon- Dr. Ogra wins same award

. . . . . - - OQIIIII!Dn, clelllllone to

............................ .,,..
=
~-£'~7~
.......
.......

...

.. ...,

lnonllr

......-:-:~"=~-=

.. -- =IIi:·
....
:-..:...~
!!.!111111!1!~
....Olle==1\111
lllaut ....

.....=
•

""

--

ldlnllfle8

·--=-~
y.ll

• ..:=lilll?tt.. .........

• . •, ...,ln ..... .....,
..-.~.Finllerlndl-

......... l&amp;8mllltl

~

~~~~~~ge.J ~~~":'Y ~n ~~·~~

d=':.::n:: ~=~"~.,:

"Computers

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . alwlg&amp;81111M
...-...ol~-and
.............. For~ a

re'=sl'u"Jien~~~~~~~~~~:Si.ow

physicians ~ew their roles In the mental
retardation field, the extent to which
they engage thamaelvea In life planning
and the coordination of services lOt
their men tan~:.,retarded patterta, and ttl&amp;

11 ~l~ ·:=.~~:::mur,: ~
m-.ngement for a retarded member. The
ukllld to play poker against a number of
opponents. Some of the opponents are
player programs and others are human . and modlllcatlon of medical and
players seated at terminals In different
residency curricula Is needed to aid
rooms. The subject must determine
physicians In their professiOnal ITI&amp;nwhich of the, aay, AVen opponerita are
agement of retarded patients and their
human players. (11te player programs
families .
are edjusted ao that their speed In
To encourage p8rtlclpatlon by area
moves does not give them
physicians, continuing medical educatneaa grow • need artaaa, both In small · computing
away.)
The
results
of
these
8l&lt;panments
-11tepa and In jumps, simulating the way
..llon credit will be awarded (category 5b)
human• lawn.
The final program
lor participation In the study. As a
~t nn,:nre~ts ~~~u:~~~ut~:f~

::;..::.:'1or'~:c'!'/8. ','!:~
=:.==~-=-..:::.
progremmlng
to communicate
In the tk~MIItlc
elfacttvaty with oomputera.
can be ua8d to solve
problema lor which
no
T=-L.=.,~: algorlthmk:,
or atep.by-atep, solutions
............... h

· greater physician awaraneaa of oom·
munlty resources for the retarded
Individual. T~ Ia limited Information
available at the present lime, however,
on just how physicians may use their
roles to bring maximum benefit to

Spock &amp; Sabin received

named profeaaor In both pedlattlca and
mk:robiOiogy. He Ia a native of Kaaflmlr

(India) and was IIIWIU&amp;tad from the

Clvl- Medical CoCo=l'-atLudhlana
there. He OO!Tiplated
training
at the Goowilll*lt Mad
College

(Sri_,, the avtatlan Medal
Coltecjit, Binghamton Oelwal Hoepltal 1
tile IJn'--lty o1 Chicago Hoapltala ana
Cllntea, and New Yortt IJnlvw.ity·
a.n.ru. Medical Center.
He II !*tilled by 1M American 8olrd
of "**lattlce and lila N8tlonal "-CCIatry
of M~lata
Ia a FellOw of
tile Royal 80ctaty ol Medicine, the
Amer1can Collage of Pflyaiclana and the
American Acadimy of P.,tatrtclana.
Oara Ia .,eo a member of U/8'•
c.nfw lor lmmuno~~~ consultant

end

~~c:'":n~~t~.T.I:

Public HMith !larva and the World
Health Organization .

~~~~-~t~on :.lr:'~~:ldedct~m~:r~i

participating physicians with the
resources available In the Western New
Vorl&lt; region for their patients. In
addition, participants will have the
opf&gt;ortunlty to give feedback concernIng other Information they would like to
have sent to them . At the close of the
study, copies of the results wJII be
presented to all those who retumlld the
SUrYIIIJ.

Two research uslatanta, Sharon
Kraus, a doctoral candidate In tha U/B
Clinical Psychology program, . and
Michael Ross, a sophomore at the

~:;::,~1 here,l'l:_}on":fylaJ~

August and t~~atrtb::l'lon ahortly
after. They hope Western N- Yortt
physicians will recognize the ImPOrt·
ance of this study and Jhe baneflta II
promlaea to br1ng by promptly ratumlng
the aurvay forma. All Information
provided by rnpondanta will brflald
strictly confidential and mulls will be
presented only In aggregate fOtm , the
two aay .
QuesUonnalras will be aent to
pedlatrlclana,
family prectltlonera,
paychlatr1sta and child neurologists In
the Western N- Vorl&lt; area,.' l'urther
lnfOtmatlon may be obt.lned by
contec:tlng Mr. Roes or Ma. Kraus at
Meyer Memorial Hospital. 894-t2t2,
Ext . 380 or 451 .

Optometry head
gets SUNY post
11te prMidant of the state Unlveratty
Collaae of Optometry In N- York City,
Dr. Alden N. Half-. w• appointed
ec:tlng aaaoclata chanoellor for Meith
actencea olthe state University bT, the

su~a1f~~at~: J':m=~'lw.

offloer of the Optometry Col • • will
continue In the ectlng aaeoctate
chanoellor'a poaltlon until a -ell for a .
permanent edmlnlatraiOt Ia comptatad .

�Avgul1 3, 1178

Carter names
Wharton to
hunger panel
State Unlwn~tty Chancellor Clifton R.
Wh-'on, Jr., who for more than three
decadell has been active In the
economic and :t'!rlculturat development

~"'r::Pr,'~m':f~~~ ~~h=~~~

to Pnoatdolnt Carter's newly created
eornmtaaton on World Hunger.
•t believe the Commission has the

:::n~~\,~~~ufn'::,~l:~ol'?..-=

~=;;.~~~ld tn 9::~~ wt~~ona

privilege and a pleasure."

~s ~=::nai~I;., w~~orts;u':r,

United States egencles and international organizations In a · major attempt to
combat domestic and International
malnutrition.
In addition to helping establish better

:"'f".!n~. ~~~.co~m1;~~o~ri':W1 ~~:

dellote considerable emphasis to the
longer-term problem of Increasing food
production In developing countries.
"The food shortegea of the early

=

=t.•teC'on~m.::.SO:: ..

'::'0.:.:'~~~ t!!'t'w":inw;, fo~~
food and wortd food criala amou~a to

only abOut 5 per cent of the total
11178-n grain production. And the race
b i ; l - loocl and population Is atilt

on ."

~

This 1111111&lt;s the fourth lime a U.S.
president has called upon Wherton. In
1978, the Cllanoetlor wu appointed to
chair the Bo..-d for International Food
and Agricultural O...lopment, AID,

~.!;..~r::.·~~~te~=t~ ~
expanded ' role for U.~. egricultural

colleges and unlvera.ltles In helping to
solve the crltlcal food problems or the
developing world.
'--1 yew, he was named wlryner of
the Joeeph C. Wilson Awaid for
achievement and promt• in International affairs. The award recognized his
serYice In Southeast Aala where he
brought economic analysis to bMr on
regional problema or development and
trained many or tdda)"s '-ling
economists and egrtcutturai· economists in that part of the world.
,

Pnos~~~.\Y.lhn':n~~S:S =~~
1
:!t'~r~~':: ~r ~:\:::' R~!~el1!!:

Pnosldanllal Mlasion to Latin America.
~on
Ia a member of the
Cornmllllon on U.S.-Latln American
Relatione and a dlractor ''Of the
Rockefeller Foundation, the Agricultural Development Council and the

~~w".f=~~::..yonthe

problema of development and Ia editor
of the book, Subsistence Agriculture
and Eoonomlo Development.
Sol M. ~inowltz, well known
Washington lawyer, Ia chairman of the
new Cornmlaslon whose members
Include Congressmen as -11 as
food
and egricultural
prominent
scientists. Among them are Norman
Bortaug, winner of the Nobel Peace
Prlu In 1970 tor hla contribution to the
•green revolution" In grain production;
Jean Mayer, nu_trltionlot and preoldent
of Tufts University; and Steven Muller,
political aclt~ntllt and pruiM&lt;ot of
Johns Hopkins Unlverolty.

Carrel joins
Law
staff
Alan S. cam.t has joined the Law
School .. uaoclate for external
affairs. He will direct and supervise
progrwno In law school and graduate
pl**'*'t, gnont and gilt solicitation,
alumni and bar association relations,
public Information, and continuing
education for lawyers and for laymen
lntereoted In lew.
He IIIIa a newly expanded position,
rnarldng the otrong concern of the law
school for good relatlona with and
aervtce to the legal profession and
pUblic, Dean Thomas Headrick lndlcetee.

I

An alumnus of Hamilton Co lege!

cam.t graduatOKI from the Law Schoo

at Buffalo In 1987. He wao a member of
the Law ReYiew. For ten years he h

.,_, auoctetOKI wltfl .and a member o1
the firm of RoMn, Yaatnow. Roberta,
Rich and cam.t. In ,_,, yeoora, he has
.,_, ~rman of the Erlo County
lllr Job
Commltteo a
member of the a-d o1 Oltactoro o( the
Law Alumni AMoclatlon.

"**'*''

•100 frosh get jump on chemistry
~--t,col.4)

academic recorda.
James

Blackhurst,

director

~l::l:i ;,es~~:;an·~"'f.Jl.:!lz':!,d

of
'/::

g::,asJ~~~~~~~el';,r=~~~~

l:'.2. ottan

ra1Ya short or desired levels

V~~t~:ureE~m~· =~~t~~u:~~:
moreo-.

Blackhurst felt, made It
reasonable thai the credit-free option be
pu"ued.
Rich Fleisher, the innovative dlnector
of the Credit-Free Office, didn't heve to
be persuaded. The couraa was booked
: , : ::/~,;;.,::.hlng like It had ever
The next challenge was how to get
the word out to prospective students
who could benefit. New associate

~=\~ua~-:,~ari~~u '::ey~~

advisement staff lsoiYed thet by booking
Bereman Into each of this summer's
freshman orientation programs where
he gaY&amp; .. pitch for the experimental

~"a.':"'cr!~u~~~o'O~C:.:.;~,=:,at~

~~~~~ campaign among Incoming

tOO regloiranto
Results were

overwhelming

(100

l'r'~~~t~-r.l~;,s,o'!~f~1\t~mp~~

over and above the modest $100 tuition

In order to eat and sleep In campus
dorms).

This response was especially gratify•
lng for Bereman. : 1 ~rked for o - a
·year to sell t~~"ll,,l\11~ · Yet•. ~
still has at
, ; n i gh~; WOrr;Y•ng,
about how. thl
• unuauat effoit:l"'
goiog to tum out. "It could bomb, • he

=~ ¥:'~ Tor~7~d~~t~~~~~d~~ ~:·
1

for the Unl-alty, both of wh.om stand
to reap major tianeflta If the concept Is
successful enough to be repeated and
extended . 11-metlcuiOjls preparation and
enthusiasm on the part of the Instructor
can be consldened ffarblngers of success, though, there's no reason for

concern.

Bereman Is careful to explain wh(, he
0

~~~~~nclnt.:,~~ d~1st~ ~a ~~~

baaed on teaching - projects, he
iemlndo. To the contrary, the program
cuts Into hlo reSMrCh time. He has "all,·
the problema of anyone with a large,
active r,_.,h group," and time Ia
Important . For examjlle, he's published
nearly 50 scientific papers during his
eight years hera, and will oreaant lour
more paper• at the American Chemical
Society meatlng In Miami just two
weeki alter the four-week course has
been completed . He doesn't need the
extra work.
" But dOn' picture me u a martyr,
et
• he requesto. • rm doing It
bec:auae I think It should be trled. I'd
have dOne II under any clrcumotanceo.

We should all be out to Improve
teaching" he feels . And to help
students. "II the department and the
University somehow benefit, that's just
a pleasant Sl&lt;le effect."
General college tlpa
The couraa Is Intended to help make
students college-wise, In addition to

r..:'s~~~ ~~...~~~ro,"6:':, ~~~~~es

~~~e~~s:'~"o:~~~ ~~~=:

they straggled tnto the opening lecture
Monday. "If you're late, mo$t faculty
would prefer you 1o· come In the beck
doors: All campus lecture halls haYe
· them," he tipped them off. In large
lectures. "you can not lnt&amp;m~pt with
questions, either," he said. • " Your
freshman chemistry lecture will haYe
about 350 students; you mUll team to
organize your questions for necltatlons."
Not&amp;-taklng Ia lmll9rtant, -he advised.
• 11 a professor feels that the material Ia
Important enough to dlscuas In a
lecture, then he probably 11\lftka It Ia
lmportan\ for you to understand.

~:=a~·Je'W'~S::,~\n~

.r:J':. ft!

students take on his lectures.
"You 'll need a good calculator;- too,"
Bereman Informed the freshmen-to-be.
"Science exams are now written for
calculators; problems are longer and
harder, and nobody worries anymore
about simplifying the numbers they
giYB you to work on ." Tfle difference between college and
high school, Bereman told the group, is
mainly In the attitude of the people
running \he courses. In high school, a
teacher's motivation Is "to teach." His
or hllr job depends on how well • you
do." In college, though, "It's all up to
you . Most Instructors simply pnasent
the material; success Is on your
shoulders."
• _
That's because, he suggested, " a
college education Is still considered a
DriYIIege, while a high achool education
Is a requirement. "
Thera'll be preuuN
Though the course Is credit-free,
Bereman promised to keep tile pressure
on, just like It will be In freshman

~~~~~t.~.lo~~r;~ !,&gt;&amp;AI~~. h~~

tell those who are Interested tuat whet
letter grade he would haY&amp; given them If
'the course had been for credit .
That' ll be the tip-off on how naady
they have become.
The couraa Is meeting four times a
- f o r a four-week-period which ends
August 24. There ere two lectures and

~~~ ~~~~~~"l'~tort":f!' ~u\:

available on l'rldaya. There Ia no ' lab
section, because Bereman aaya, the
lab component o1 fresl1man chemistry
at-'• oil at a fairly baalc level.
A good grounding In theory Ia baalc
to good lab work, though, he points

out; otherwise, ~get ltudanta
running through --experiments "cook·
book 'fashion -using all the tight
materials In the right aequanoe, bu1 not
understanding why.
What lecturee will ccwei~,
~·
,. .
In his lectures, ~ Ia covering
the electronic structure';,ot atomo and
molecules'; the phyai'Ciil
or

-ea

::'!?!b,;~le~rn ~:n-J:'':.:t1:.':.'s

the'"l:lr.":::~w~'::'re·~=~I~

=

similar number of necltalloo l)ow8 will
enable him and four atudent aaalatanta

:~r.~ r~~:"io'l:i

exoeflent ,grad atudente with eolld
teaching backgrounds to run necttatlons.
The couraa Ia deelgned to accommodate a large mixture of backgrounds.
Both those Who• science bacl&lt;grounda
are weak and lhoee Who simply want to
assure that'they dO well In the fall will
be challenged.
Succeasful completion, Bereman
empl;aalzea, won't exactly make
freshman chemistry eeay, ''built ahould
at leaat put the student In a position to
compete with the beat prepared
colleg&amp;-bound freahm,n."

Putnam Way
flunks 'test'- ·
~~ ~':Yn~ .!~1f"J.a~ted
1

when

the gates

on Putnllnl Way

==t~08ff'~o15En~ro~.:J .'
Heall_h and Safety says thla: • .

,,;r.=~'l:l~~~~~a; ~~

daslgned to be a closed roadw•y for use
by pedestrians, loop b - and persona
requiring limited acceaa. On July 15th
the gates were closed and the card
r - s and t-Jalon remote controls
actl¥ated In order to teet the oyotem and
to make necessary modificallona for
efficient operation. Testing and OKijuotment wilt continue until August 4th.
·on Auguot 5th, the gate arms will be
removed and the roadway will be
available with the usual restrictions of
access for aervlca vehlcll!S, short term
loading and unloading and pick up and
discharging of passengers. Parking is
permitted lor only those persons who
are handicapped.
"The Initial considerations for use
and restricted access to Putnam Way
and current and future use conditions
will be studied o - the next lew
months 'to assist In - determining the
appropriate use statue for .this
roadway."
.
Translation from a soo.rce who
wishes to remain anonymous: "the

::r::.~.':.~:ro:~dh::c~~o;;,~~-:::
beck off."

�·.

Follett's welcome, reader says
Edftor:
I have been lollowlng the developing
story about the potential of the
proposed lease agreement with Follett's
Bookstores, because I used to patronize
the Follett's at the University of
Michigan In Ann Arbor, when I was an
undergraduate student there (19671971) .
- While Follett's was not my favorite
Ann Arbor bookstore, as the prlcee were
eometlmee a bit higher on texts than at
other stores, I dl9 use It regularly.
Ann Arbor had a Wlllllth of
bookstores that carried texts (five of
them) , and thera were several other
non-textbook stores for brow-.. So,
students and feculty had a fantastic
choice for book ~ng . You can
spend ~ whole day just shctpplng the
bOobton!tt.
f I -. _- \ ' ..
Comparatively, Buffalo Ia a V1111table
wuteland for ~lc books. I return
to Ann Arbor (and Follett's) or go to
Boston now when I need to shop for
books. Under such conditions the
~ca of Follett's would be a vast
lmproote~T~en1 . . - the FSA and private
operations now In town_ Follett's has
stood the teet of flme In Ann Arbor,
where some of the textbook stores 1
knew aa an underQ11111uate hav! come

Ho-.

_
----.....-____...,_,...
_..,_ .. _&lt;1

"'

----..-------·

........ ,.o..-.-~·_,-.rr

-·"*'
llloolllr----

---

and gone. The potential lor open stacks
of texts Is highly desirable, and
Follett's usually carries a pood supply
of pens, paper, and al the other
sundries needed by academia.
Based · on my experience with
Follett's In Ann Arbor, and -lng the
one In Albany, I think Jhat the majOrity
of the Buffalo IICIIdemlc community
would find a Pollatt's-run store to be a
great boon. It's just too bed that Buffalo
can't offer Follett's a little competition.
Sincerely,

Director, TheA.-'=J.'Jt:=

IELI trip
·draws praise
Editor:
My. compllmenta to lEU's Larry
Belewlch for orvaniZing a thoroughly
enjoyable trip to the s.ratoga
Performing Arts Center and Tanglewood. The price waa right; the people
pleasant; and tha entertainment - was
splendid.

-

-Ann Whitcher

University Publlcatlo_na Services

Toll won't appoint Marxist prof
Unl,.,.lty of Mery~Md President
.John S. Toll (fC&gt;m*1y of SUNY /Stony
Brool&lt;) unounoad July 20 he had
decided not to IPPOfnt a Marxlat
to head the unlveralty's
ment and Polltlca Department.
Ton, who became pneidant of Maoyland
July 1, Mid he b-.cl hi8 deelelon aolefy
on the candldata'a QUalifications and
alter cone~~ltlng with administrators
and senior fBC~~Ity mernber8 In the

="'

~•·~

"~ell 01

The cerA.~~•.
lman, la an
-lat•
PfOieaaor of political acleooe
at ~New York Unl...tty. His IIPI&gt;Ointu.rt:

rMnt had liP~ -.Iter In the
v-' by the ~tal ...,-ell
committee, the dlvlalon provoat and the

campus chancellor. The appointment
became a center of controversy as a
number of state officials and acting
Gov. Blair Lea Ill queatloned the
wisdom of appointing a Marxist to a
major position at a state university. The
final decision In the case originally was
left to President Wilson H. Elkins who
retired July 1. Elkins left the
reaponalblllty to the ui\l..,.lty regents.
Toll, how- ennOII{Iced he ,had
raeched a decision In lha matter last
week ..
Ottman held a news conference
threatening to aue the unl..,.lty unleaa
h e - oonftrmed Immediately. He also
IIIIOka at the unl,.,.lty at the Invitation
ol atudanta supporting hla nomination .

�-

Th"se Ionic columns- noscu..d·from th" wr..ck.,'s ball wt&gt;..n t~
old Federal Reserv" Bank In downtown Buffalo was raud In t~ fat"
I
·s- ar" now at Baird Point at Amh.,rst wh"re the)! will be
Inc-Orporated Into the amphitheatre now under construCtion on t~ Lake
LaSall" shor.,lln.,. Th" columns wer" roused from a 20-year sleep
behlntiBalra Hall at Main Street Monday as wor~ g"ntly lifted ~
onto trucks for the triP out Millersport Highway.

Moving out

Three confer~ntces are-part of 'Linguistics in August'
U/B moves to center stage In the
International world of llngulstlca during
the eeoond w.1&lt; In August as the
campus department In that discipline

==.;..~ pi~a hoat to · three
~ment . Chalrmllll
Wolfgang
Wolck refers to the trl•stage event as
"L~Ioa Jn A~ust."
The "a..1ure
to the week'&amp;
activities, he uyaJ Will be a two-day
presentation of Oral Preprinta by
Students," thlllls to uy, reports on re8Mrch In progreu by Buffalo students.
Davtstudd Gin
. tHhiMie
~"=f. ~ ~l:'.s~ep
181
. the program::;hlch will Include

~~~~8th~"u!"~ ~,!1~ ol~st!!
aonoets(by William
~~ to0 ,a =0onE;~=~~ab~~
~~~~~ ::.~~~~

· In Shakespearean

In ellc;ltl~g the recognition tactics used

by Buffalonians In Identifying members
of various ethnic groups) . Five other
student projects wnt be highlighted. arthe .sessions which begin after lunch

which approach -Is preferable.
Several distinguished scholars from
around the world will present papers:
Henning Andersen , University of

and continue o!!

~hc\':~~=r~~S.,~~'!l:o ~~j

Linguistic Aasoclatlpn of CaNida Md
the United ·States). This conference1
expected to attract an attenclance OJ
some250,1sthei8CO!ldmostimportant

'Synctwony and Dlacllrony
Oil Tuesday, a locally-sponsored and
arranged symposium on "Synchrony
and Dlachrony In Linguistics" Is
expected to atlract some 100 faculty
and graduate students from here and
elaewhera.
"This Is a hot Issue In the field ,"

discuss "Language Changes In Relation
to Social Change;" Bernard Comrie,
Cambridae; Patricia Donegan and David
Stamp, bhlo State; Charles N. U,
Unl-slty of California at Santa
Barbara; Sandra A. l'hompson, UCLA;
and Talmy Glvon , UCLA.
Climaxing this week, the Elllootl
~8~x ~~':,.~ the(' ~cu"se o:,.~~g Fl~
,.,..

convened In Mont,.; next y-. lt'a
booked for Calgary; .the following y-.
for HGuslon.
.
The LACUS Forum QJ&gt;8M wed"""*Y
night. August 11. just as the "Synchrony
and Dlachrony" event Ia concluding.
Rulon s. Wells of Yale will give the
"Inaugural Lecture" on "5emlllltlca In a
Linguistics ~-~~~~4
___.. .,.... ,,.,.._

~~:i ~~~ - 6 ,

=.'l!n~l~~·~,e~~ ~~";:;

~;r~'"~~~lcaJ:""'~ '';-~~

~ W-3J:C~'~ "11~~~;'~s 8d:t7~.;

"synchrony"

as the

study

a

of

~78.~~l'c,:,~~:' 1:, o{;: r:.'l~~~ t~r
~dl~t~y·~':rth: s~~t. o~~~~e~~~

·controversy In the field cent~s on

S/U change outlined.
•

The Faculty Senate has unanlmotla!Y passed a resolution setting a new

policy for S/U grading In undergraduate courses. Included below are rures set
forth by 1M policy and the m1111ual procedures to Implement lhe policy
effect!Ye September 1978.
,
_

~tudents wlil no J~nger be allowed to elect 5/U grading for courses that

elth« -

,

_______

.,_lefy P'l'(equlsltes 1
lion liNH 11ri no~-rnaior oc;:

requnn-ta tor their majora or that

for2~~::.,~ t:;.!~~ajo~. StU radlng o
non,pwequlalte cour- and It elacYed must
done so by the end of the
third lull week. of clas- - September 22 1978 for the Fal\1978 semester
and February 2, 197'9 for the Spring 1979 semester.

f:

l'loceclutM
1. A request to the Instructor, lor S/U grading, must be made by the
student on a standard three-part form available In tha Division of
UnGergraduate Educllllon Advisement Office, Educational Opporiunlty
Program Office, or Millard Fillmore College Office.
2. The atudent Will leave one copy of the form with his or her advisor. The
instructor will retain one part of the form to remind him or her thet the
student haa elacted the S/U option. The student will retain the other pari
Which will Include the Instructor's signature to prove, If necasury, thet the
S/U option wes elected.
3. I! will be the responsibility or academic departments to enforce the
ebow poliCy.
·
wou:;
~::;, ~ :k~ tg ;e!r~~tl:':f8r= ~.a! the student
b. Students how-. will be notified, ~ statement on the request
form, that they eleCt the S/U option at their own r1sk and may not be able to
recover the leiter grade should they chenge their major. In cases where the
lett« grade cannot be reco-ed the student will have to petition hla 'Or her
dapenfl*lt for a wal- of the policy.
e: Chllllgaa from S/U to a letter grade must be Initiated In writing from
the deparlll*'t Into Which the 'student has changed hla or her major. This
wrftten request must be attached to the ChanQII of Grade form when It Is
aubmlttad to the O.U.E. ee.;a .Office for processing.
The manual proeadues outllied are temporary. As soon as available, data
~ng capability for ator.,ga and recovery of letter grades will be
employed .

t!;!':

0

0

.....,

Personnel realignment
creates 2 new units
Classified Employee Relations and
Research Foundation administration

~~~ ~n tf:'ll~~~~ t~!'t~

Robert Pearson, U/B personnel director. announoed this week.
Barbera Burke Ia the new personnel
manager-research,
responsible
for
coordinating and Implementing a full
range of
professional
personnel
services for all
U/B
R~
Foundation employ_ _ These services
Include policy lnterpnstatlon, thor
appointment process, poaltlon clasalft·
cation, wage and Salary administration,
emptoyea nslatlona, benefits edmlniitratlon, training, etc.
Michael Lewandowski Is managw of
Classified Employ411l.Aelatlona, and will
be the President's designee In this area.
He will be responsible for representing

management at conferences with
union officials, and for processing
grievances and notices of discipline. He
will • also be responsible for the
processing of ·complaints alleging
violation of civil rights and labor laW..,

~~~~.~~!':."~~n!n'Tt~tl~~~~nre1-;..~o:,:

aement programs, etc.
Pearson Said that both admlnlatrators
have "demonstrated In their previous
assignments . a high degrae of
competence, effectiveness, and dedication to their work. I am conlldent that
this realignment of respons1bllltles will
bring about Improved servlcas to both
areas."

He said the frequency and complexity
of service requests In the two areas
made the reallgnm,.,t of functions
necesury.

�Auouet 3, 1111

.Ewell was a prime iorce.in.U/B's research build~up
Of. Raymond H. Ewell, former U/B
rice pn~sklent for ~ and a
p101es8or emeritus of chemical engln·
....,g, died Thursday, July 27, after a
tongHtneas.

In World War II. He was listed In Who's
Who In AmiiNica, Who's Who in
AmfNican Education. Who'! Who In

!f:B1u:~r;e,.,:,~r:t.~·~Wh~~ SciiHice,

011,;~"'=:~~-=u~~.·=
a.c.ne wtce president lor research here

Dr. ewell was a member of the
American Institute of Chemical Engln·
eers, the American Chemical Society,

llla.tember, 1957, and held that post
until his rwllnoment In October, 1972. He
eleo a protusor of chemistry and
chemical engin-'ng and .-ved as a

::':~::~~~st~e~~trg~alEn&amp;~.:;'~~

Unl-slty Research Administrators. He
also belonged to the Cosmos Club of
Washington, The Chemist's Club of
New Yotl( and the Saturn Club of
Buffalo.
He Is known, too , for a major
avocation, that of gounnet cook and
author of books on where to eat when
out of town.
He wrote more than 70 articles,
reports and chapters of books on

COMU!Ient to the gowrJ~ment of India,
1M United Nllllons, the Ford Found&amp;·
lion, and the World Bank on problems

o f =~,:guta:!f.'.e.t from the
~. Preelclenl Robert L. Ketter

::::' """ ....... he.~ ~~~••r e =
Unl-.erally's funded
lncrused nearly eight·
fold." Ketler Mid that "Dr. Ewell's
_,..on dedlcellon coupled wllhllls
lkllltiM a firat"fllle scientist and broad
la-'ldae of the --.:h field • • .
conbtbUMdalgnlfleantly to the develop, _ ol tills Unl-alty a a maJor
lor -.:edernic ~. The
of hia and knowtedlle wtn con- to be felt Ill IIIIa lnstltutlon for
,_., ,_. to come," Ketter lidded.
Tlll8l U/B
funds When Ewell
._. In 11157 ....aunted to $2.64
mJAIOII
This
as a result of
the . . . Which he helped build, the
Unl..ralty enJoywcl a sponsored n&gt;~ vol- ell a- S22 million. He
eapaclally helpful In developing
In~ and aealdng funding
lor pn&gt;jac:ta In outside the'healtli

~

,_., .,.011

~::0~\~&lt;Y.inJ':~:~'c..e~p~~. ~

Industrial development of India, Soviet
science, and education. He was founder
and first editor of the Ch&amp;mlcal
Economics Handbook .
Dr. Ewell was one of a vanishing :
breed of unl-slty administrators who
were committed to the Institution In all
of Its activities and endeavors. One of
his favorite pastimes, which uaed to

""'*"

-a.
don-.
v-.

-a.

A memorial convocation !,or Dr. Raymond Ewell will be held Friday,
August 4, at II a.m . In the Alden Courtroom. O 'Brian Hall. Friends
and colleagues from the UnlversiiJ faculty and admlnlstratlon·wlll
speak during the convocation.

~.

In 1857 Buffalo ~ted a
challenge to EWetf "It WaS . an
tn-lng prospect to ~P a
medium unlverllty In atze, pres!lge and
finenclal , _ _ end ~ It up In
the hlar8n:hJ of un.,...ltlea.

~a::'~~

lor ....-ch at
U/8 c:reated lor Ewell. "I was
wortdna In India • the lime as a
coneulfant on lnclu8Ctlal ~pment
fer the Indian ~"*''·" he once
.-!led
In
lntervi8'f' .• , got
a IMler from my Gld friend Clifford
,mo -Olen piMidenl of U/B,

F-.

a_.,..,...

::.~r~~~k=~
-

.,_. taught d*nlcal engm-tng
In the 11130a and

.a 11111ar un_.tlea

~~~~~Mlll WMhlngton durtna World War

1 wileD bo4h wort1oec1 lor !he -lonal
.,.._. ~ Cammlttea.
..._. . . - M M8llllant dlnlctor of
........... ..,..._ Foundation In
110m 1IU to 1111ie, an

....... IIIRI"'diad e

~I

tor........,.oiU/8's

='*--In

the
educmion

glllllulle

=- 1:.

~-=~~

....
~rw:-:'
~---of his

pet • - • ·

;:;-...iii!MI~oftheU.S. He-

==:~==:.1 .:lt~

~ ......
_ _ , by the Semel
Unlan, In .,.UOUiw.
Alllr 1118 ........,. from U/B, he
-*ued to wrfte end . . , . a a

~

eo a

number of rweaerch

en.rta -'dwlde, perttw'-'Y to UN
en.rta to~- world food supply.
He- ........ edvocete ot t h e tar a ou• 11r111e11 progrwm to bull.d
. . , . _ plarlta - . d the world In
~ ta . _ -.,.
atarwtlon In

....,diu•.,..,tm - -

He

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

he .aid,

1101...at • a

on ..,......,. a

Milone.

-

.,.poetum
ttunerY Wor1d,"
for this

.=t..:=:=J =-:::s~
E
e....
-

~

Unllacl Nllllorw
ona 21-dey
the 8llbjeOI of , _
pocluatloll, whiCII Shuttled

New 011111, India, and Kiev,

.....

He 81*11 much of 1872 In

011 a round ot aaricultural
~. c.pplllof111r ..........he

.,..... Ac1111erftJ of'Bclenc:ea

In the

·

Memort.t Con.voutlon

45), chemical economist for the Shell
Chemical Corporation (1945-48), chair·
man of _the Department of Chemistry
~ Ch.@mlcal
Engineering at the
Stanford Research Institute (1943.50) ,
manager of the Chemical Economics
setvlce of the Stanford Research
ln_stltule (1950-53), ecbnomlc consult·

go..,;,.

menta ollndla and the
ant lor the
Phlllipplnes, consultant for the United
Nations Cantil! lor
International
Development, and the Agency 1t&gt;r
International Development.
Presldent'a Medal
In 1948, he was awardad the
President's Medal lor Merit for his work

~~~~::~.,n~m~. ~ast~: g~"J,~~~

~~ ag,~:l :;t:.,r:;;,ce~~~r!rf~ra~

ioappropirate scientific terms In the
titles ·o f doctoral dissertations and
masters' theses. "A university should
never present Inaccurate or sloppy
lnformatiS&gt;n In thfs regard," he would
Insist.
Survlvl",j are his wife, the former

~~~!JI~sh~~\!,~ ;~~~~~~~~!;

brothers, Stante)' T. of Arlington , Va.~
R. Bartlett of Houston, Texas, ana
David G. of San Rafael, Calli.; -and a '
sister, Mrs. Nancy E. N lxo~ of san·
Mateo, Calif.

-Homburger was devoted to the law·
eel that difficult balance In all thet he

Dr. Adolf Hamburger, 72, pasaed
away July 9, 1978. He was a noted
authority on civil procedure and, a
beloved and revered teacher.
•
lie joined the lull·tlme faculty of the
Unl-.eralty of Buffalo Law Scl)ool just
.after II became the only New YOrk State

!/.,",Y.h~~Jc'.,~~~hl~~~~~t~
:::~~~~!t~~:t~~~~~~~~ ~.:Jr:~e~r~\:

the law

0

lt..r~~~·.,~~u~t;., m'!Yt"~ ~t~'l:

.

Unlwralty of New York In 1962. In the

::SUn:sefi~~:S:~~~~~n ~w:::,;

sa-ra

educmlonal effort, to legal
SCholarship, lind to the School's
standing and rwputation, not only In the
State but also Internationally. These
8

1

time to time an'11n making his learning
and teaching experience available to his colleagues .
Dr. Hamburger's reputation as a

-lns,:l~:=~~~:r.~:. ~~

~

last y- of teaching was spent
at -the P - Law School, helping his
good friend and colleague, Robert
Fleming, at the Inception of a law
school.
Dr. Hamburger received his J.U.D.
degrea from tile University of Vienna In
1929. After admission to practice In
1833, he continued ln private practice In
Vienna until 1938, when he carne to
Buffalo, Wh- he hed spent some ti!TlB
a a voalh. In 1941 he graduated from
the UnlvaraiiJ of Buffalo Law SchOll),
wtth hon«s, and admitted to tf\8
New York bar In ~1144. From '1944 until

::! ~="'1t!:e st~~d~J:f'e~n!,~
r~=~ -:;;o~~as~th:,.~~~~whl~

rwmalned a algnlffcant focus of his
SCholarly actlvitlea .
While In pnvate practice In Buffalo
betwean1948 end 1883 he taught at U/B
on a part-time balls. Except lor a
aabbatlcal - . In 1115-70, he taught
fult-1- at U/8 from 1962 to last year.
Civil priiCtios and procedll'e and land
trwwactlons were, In that order, his
pnnclpel of teaching and
achc~Wahlp, but he alao tauglrt o~
subjects, lncludlna oomparatlve law
and prof-tonal etnlca.

=~al~~~;=t~i!~~t~~:~~~~n'~

H""!buquality ql legal craftsmanship and the
uncompromising Integrity tl)at marked
his own work. It Is no easy task, In
reaching law, to In~~~~ 1 habits of
precl'll!on In handllng,.',~f)nlcalltles
while lnsjstlng upo11 ,Lhll.: (oader view,
that ' ct1!1'cal scrutinyti&lt;lllnlcalitles
which Is necessary In order to determine
whether they serve the ends of justice.
Dr. Hamburger achieved and maintain-

or

Women

.

~ ~~~~~ .:c:~~~ .~~9-.:

14.3 per cent of the total In 1971 to
7,803 or 22.9 per cent of the total In

~~~H:~.I:l~~

27,534 to 26,273.
In 1978, home economics continued

In Wh1ch hie acholarahlp was
held by the bench end bar of the State.
~ qualltlea that awned him
thlll Ateam were _.....,. In his
- a s a teacher. AIWBJS the oornplete
~

~ .,,lsh~·-=~te or.:~~.

year (1969-70) as Fulbright Scholar at
the Institute of Comparative Law at the
• University of Florence, to which he
returned again In the summer ol1972.
Scholarship In the field of civil
. ~cedure and the effectiveness of New

e~~~rC:,Cyed.,'l~alw~~~e~e"':;' 8:;::'~/~

were even more enriched by the
challenge of his dedication to legal
educatlon:hls friendly willingness to
share Ills- learning, and his flashes of
wry humor.
·
-Thomas E. Headrick,
Dean of Law.

Ph.D~'s

Both the percentage and number of
doctoral degrees earned by women
lncreaaed In the past six YB11111 but
women continue to stay In "traditionally
feminine fields, • according to a new
study Issued by the National Canter lc.r
Education Statistics. The report co-s
doctoral degrees awarded - except lor
flrsl professional - between 197().71
and 1975-78.

HltiiiiY ....... .., beMII ber
Foi many yaerJ, Or. HGmburger was
chat.- of the New York State Judicial

Conference AdlQory Commtttea on the

As a faculty member, Dr. -Hornburger
was always sensitive to the neads of the
Law School's program, and repeatedly
accepted assignments lo teach very
large classes because of student
demand and because no one equally
qualified wes available. He was very

~~~~~snalnprco~~~~9.,J~e~"fr~

~~!.~a u'::;. ~~~~~~ ~wl::
10

dee~y .

Sensitive to student neads

~~~~u~~~: ~".~:i.!::r l~

~~t':': ~~e~~~~i~:n:~~~
=~.l~u::"O.::;~=~; ~~

cent; and education, 33 per cent.
lo-st
Dlsclpllnea awarding
the
percentage of doctoral degreas to

on rise

women were engineering, two per cent;
law, lour per cent; theology, loor per

cent; business and management, five
per cent; and agriculture and natural

sciences, .seven per cent.

These and related data are reported In
Doctoral Degree AwMds to : Women.
While supplies laat, single copies of the
report can be obtained free by written
ro:&gt;quest to: George H. Brown, acting
chrel, Systems Design and Analysis
Branch, OPVES, Natlonal Canter lor
, Education Statistics, 400 Maryland
Avenue, S.W., Washington , D.C •.j!I(I?D2.

Altbach will head
Social Foundations
Dr. Philip Altbach of the Department
of Social Foundations, Faculty of
Educational Studies, has been appoint·

~~= ~~1~'T.~~o:,~re,roc
L. Ketter announced this weak.

�7

Auguotl. 1171

James McGulr" (l.,ft) (Callban
'Th" T""'pest') Is a country Judg" In
thO! curr""t 'M&lt;orry Wives of Windsor,' a Th&lt;!atr" ,O.,pa""""'t production
running In Delawar" Park through August I 3 ·(.,xc"pt Mondays). K"lth
Watts and Phyllis S&lt;!aman (right) play a pair of young lo""rs.

for-

~----4)

1971). 146 ~ -

-ctwgo.
Tho--- bultor--..- - ·
--...

""'Cenlor

""-"'· Squft. Cll 638-29\9 ·- - - -

2: 30p. m . Sponaorad

by

Study.

SHAKESPEARE ON FILM'
King loor (Komtsev, 1971). Squire Con·
n-tro. 7 p.m. Sponaorad by the Center
forModioSiudy.
tereooe

...
...... .....,_.,flrtlmoi&lt;.... .,....,._,_ -era..,
FRIDAY-18

t:JCTUIIEI ~· '

hlo 110 MFACC, Sc&gt;&lt;&gt;no&lt;nd
by h -Center
for Medio 5\Jdy.·
UUA&amp;FII.Iff•

1.aot To- In l'arfo (lttoly, 1972).

8 p.m.

lEClUIIE I SCREENING'
.loiiRulllnondOINV- - 1
pertcrmors. 110 MFACC , Elicott.
8p.m. -byC&lt;InlorforMedioSiudieo.

THURSDAY...:. 24

com""'"""

- g o.
- Cll638-2919 for allow &amp;nos.
- c·
lw

SATURDAY -19

STIIUCTIIRAL METMOOOLOGY IN FILM
ANALYSIS'
•
&lt;:&lt;* ond Whloporo (l!er!Jnan, 1972). 146
Dietendaf. 7 p.m. 5ponoored by the Center !a.Media SIUdy.

VIDEO'

-

. .- . . . vldoomlol«&lt;, ...

NOTICES

SO'- -

vldoollrpeo, olong with Kh Flllgorofd.
101 8lfdl/ (Tho KM). 8 p .m. Sc&gt;&lt;&gt;no&lt;nd by the
Cenlor~ModioSfudy.
UUA&amp;FlUIIf•
Tho
!luling

Cluo

(Englond,

Confonnoo -

· -

- Cll638·2919 for

----clw:Vo-

Hl71) .

PelorOToole lwlga on o . . - olol during lhlo

bizolrolookoth_....__

AOMfSSIONS &amp; A£COROS

Ho,_.

Office Hou,.
8-For A&lt;~Qusl. the olfic&lt;o
wtl bo Open daly Monc:l8y IMJ Friday from 9 a.m.7 p.m., e.cept ao noted: Aogo..el2·4, and A&lt;lgusl
9·11, olfic&lt;o wll - . a t 5 p.m.: A&lt;lgusl 18
and 25, olfic&lt;o w11-. at 5 p.m. Stanfng A&lt;IQusl
30. 1l1o office wll be open un1ll 8 p.m. during

-y

the firlt line llwu Friioy.

of fall aemoster -

·

3rd- --...ua1 doy 1o resign from

-·~y . Augual4 .

.
......tro-oN '71--SchUJto Corda wil bo

SUNDAY-20
-

""""'

CleM

(Englond.

1971).

- Cll638-2919 for

-- - ~ctwgo.

RECoAO CO-&lt;lP

- - ( 8 1 1 /785131179), Ule No. 34864. •

The U I B Record Co-op In Squre Hoi is open
·Friday nights from 7-9 p.m., end Monc:l8y
and Fr1day aftemoons from 12· 2 p .m.

SEE SHAKESPEARE IN 1ME PARK'
Tho lhn'y W.... &lt;II Wlndaor. Rose Garden
area of ~ Park 8 p.m. August 1 ttwu 13
n;ghlly. except Monc:ley. by the
Deptwtmenl of Theetre. Free.
John - - writes ;, the program noles for
... procU:Iion
lo - of Windsor
·speare
wrote lheL
The "aooordlng
Merry Whn
in tate 1599 at the request of Queen Elizabeth I,
who so "'*'&gt;'ad the port of Falslllfl In the history
playa lhal she askeq lhal lhe chanocler bo given
a p&amp;ay of his own •..
"The lhn'y Wlwu al Wlndaor represents
Shakespeare's last effort at producing a \aoghilg

MONDAY-21
- O N FlUff'

K... ~car-. 1970). 5quft Conlerwnce
- - 7 p.m. Sc&gt;&lt;&gt;no&lt;nd by h Center for

-SUII'-

TUESDAY-22
--...;ON FlUff'
- - - ( - 1 9 57). 1&lt;400iol·
by h Centor for
.

. . - 11 un. -IIU!y.

--·

a1WUC11IIIAI. METitODOLOGY IN FlUff
Tlte_T_oi_V.,Kani i O I I T - OOr Pen Von Kont~F-. 1972).
1 &lt; 4 0 - 7p.m Sponaoradby111oCenlor
lor-IIU!y.

-No-/

odd

w i l - ploco In Hoyoo B.

-I!Jorn'

Ul. - · --"'~~""" ,_...,..
• 1.0 . Corda· can
ol

-...--/odd
- . g an

-

In

locotlon -

- Anyono

1.0. Cord can .....-. one
t81-frorn.-to8p.m.. fromAI.Jgust

3 0 - - H i.

Tho

tllik to? Como to ltlf 0rop-1n een....
hours
we 1o
p.m. et 104 Norton, Amherat
Compua, and - ·· _ , sweet
Compua. /VI E1icot1 offico. 187 MFACC. is_.,

•.m.-•

Monday night&amp;. 5 p,m ·Iii p.m.

COMPETlTIVE CIVIl. SERVICE
Tfplat &amp;0-3--l.ow l..bwy, lrOJs1rill ~
~b'y . Chomlcol E~ . Music
limo).

s"'"oSG-6-Meddno,
lJrWeroily

P\lrcMsng, -

l1'liUCTUfiAI. METitODOLOGV IN FlUff
ANAl.
w VIII•
. ..,._., ... ()&lt;go _ _

(1*\·

Sdonce,

Houaing,
Music.
Mathemolico,
School --Office (3),

· Union .
Elomontary a - · Edualtion 121. Pt&gt;yolcal
~ - lJ-.Ny~lroiT~

(parf:lirne),

Clortt&amp;G-S__,Sdenceautnry (3), -1·
.. Clinic (Donllatryl (1*1·- ).
""""""' Clortt 8 0 - 6 - - Accounta,

.er.M~Progrwna. PoyToll, Accounta ~ ­

Otllcoof-IAocounta.
Typkt &amp;G-7~ !.brw*·
Cirt:Uotion.

~=:::;~-""'-¥,_Ciort~CH-Centlots~tno.

~-~ -­

Amhoral

- ·.. ..._.,

PW\1, Nmont (2)

WEDNESDAY- 23

~

a..·. Olfice.Ed. - .. Educalionol _

DROP-IN CENT£11
Too much on Y01J1 "*'d? Need aomeone to

Grounda """"'"'
tiG4 (t.._wy unll
10/11178 then -l--f'hyOical Plont.
32083.
~
( - . r y unlit 11/22 I 78 then
-t)-PIIysical PW&gt;I. Amhen&gt;l, Uno No.

-·Unoso.tNo.
34668.

• Linguistics
(from page 5, CCII. 4) '

of llngulstcs on "Linguistics: From
Where to Where?"

(port-lime), Biological
l'tly1iicel
_,,
..--c-wT
_SQencea,
__
Surgery,

1-tcx.n- after 5 p. m~ '"' ~ for MFC end

,_...,_~80-6(3~

Hal.

•ed

111o-ofAugual14. .
~ D r a p l - - St.
240
SQun from 9 o-m.·. 1 p.m. A&lt;~Qusl 21 -29 .
~ unll 8 p.m. during the firll line of
aMooa. Amhoral Compua, 210 Fror'oCZII! Hoi
frorn 9 a.m.-4:30p.m.. .t.ugual ~ 15,

_..--....

- · Aalstanl SCH--Igraduolo Clinic
~-~- UleNo. 34722 .

Tho lhn'y W'"" of Wlndaor lakes the form

of a &amp;eJt· farce desc::ri:Mng counby tuncis. 'fhe
joy ;, the ploy comes from ClbservK&gt;g the sl1ifling
fortunes of fOOls going about their own .-ld others'
Peasures. We are not
to witness the ethical
clash between lhooe ruled by the ITind end by the ~. nor any roti'W1Ce besides the
affection with whiCh the c::hlnctera are reveeted."

JOBS

Monc:l8y""" Friday.

Dlr*f-SQ·

~CMLIIEIMCE

lectures will Include one by Robert E.
Longacre (Texas-Arlington) on "Why
We Need a Vertical RaYOIUtion In
Linguistics (to be presented at the
one conference session scheduled fO&lt;
the Buffalo state campus), and the

comedy ....
"Without serious social comment or the COI'Ilpound meanings found in the earlier c::omedies'
treatment ol k:we or of appearanc;e and fancy,

to ol _ , . who regia- for Fol
bolore111o.t.ugual1 - . .. Corda wll be mailed

eonwo.

Ooto Et*y-OpO..-~
CompuiW1gSeMoos(11 t 118-10131178).

-

UUA&amp;FII.Iff•

Contoronce ""-"'· -

Psychology._...;..,._

for ycu ~lion In a
H Interested, cal 831 ·1386, Monc:ley-Friday,
lila.m.-5p.m.

~ so.t-Pilvolcol

I 0 MONTH (NS) SEASONAL POSITIONS

S t o n O I 0 - 6 ; - - - - Office

(1 1 1 178·107 31 1 78). OMolon of~·
E....,.tion (4 1 1 / 78·11 31 1 79): M~
t8 1 1 1 78·5 131 1 7G)

X:~~!11:1t_'~lk~d:f'ft;'!'~~:;.:er~:=..':

50altort~

sc~~~,:She;"ro:"'!h:' tt~. ~

Germany, and Northern Ireland will be
heard, ranging from the technical to the
trendy-from copulative ..tis and the
" semantics ol polysyntheals" to "I&gt;Miy
talk" and oexl sm In langu.ge struct..-e.
One paper deals with the uea of the
lerm, "hit;" another, with l'lldlo
commercials.
Several members of the U/B
community are on the LACUS program:
•Judith L Wlngerd, s)&gt;Nklng on
"Grammatical Categories and the
Marl&lt;lng of Tempor111 Distinctions In
Haitian Creole;•
. •Jonathan James Webster, giving "A
Sociological Description of Christian
Communication;•
•Madeleine Mlllhlot, "On lnvestlgat·
lng the Relations Between SPMI&lt;Ing
~ Gesticulating ;•
Buffalo Engllah
•.Elizabeth K. Cerlock, "Prosodic
~:r:~. ol Three Varieties of Buffalo
•Linda K. Watts, "Prosodic Analysis
of the Speech of an 88-Year-Oid
Woman;" and
Rad~g'~~~~;~~lc Analysis of
Moat cQnlerence sessions are slated
for 170 MFACC, Ellicott. Partlclpenta
will also be using housing and dining
facilities In Ellicott.

olf~s~~fo;a;a~:~~ ~~~l~~;·

arrangements.

�. ,........

. . ISLIIA

THUASOAY-3

-..--·

.

FACULTY MTllCOU.OCIUIA - ·

n.-..-~--

..

""~

c-.

---.~ciM.-y.

:1011-=::
:;;:; F0....V d,.. ...
.............

L.ottoro

.._ , _ , ~_

---$3
.., ___ _

___
no.-·----

OfiliA•
-~.. T i l e - . . Bllnl

- - . B p.m

- · $2 UIB toa.ltt. - · ...
-.tllf&lt;&gt;r-~-. . . . l1cloel

0.00 -

.. ~

-

. . . ,......_, . . . . . . . door. SponoareC1
.., . . _
Dopnnonl'o(lpora - . , p

~

T-. -

---·
------. -.--- ... _..
...

Hooley

...... \llrglniiiSiolr,Midoolgn--

c:ornor.. ...

-~· - - 1ighlng
clooign , Cynttio
~-

,_ '*" • -

.

onticalo •
....... "'
.. - - . - ..... Bo..

-

---""-~"'

.
..,. _
. ._
_ .. llo-qlo
. . . -_

"'"""'""'"''""

a.1y
oboul '
_ .bnl&amp;q&gt;l
, Poompond

-·......-----·

-~ fiOtY
- o~
1o aoote
slory - . --

WOII&lt;ing
muc11 c:ireum·

-.

.-u!W.IETMOOOLOGY IN FILII
•

(IMig, 11131). 148 ~ . 7 p.m.

~by . . Oonlllrl&lt;&gt;r-SU!y.

- - A IIIAMIO F£S11YAL •
- - - -. HI51)'IIoe0.. · 1854). ~
-·~- Col e:J6.2818for--

.... --

-~~

Yass:

--(J'-);-.. . .
FRIOAY-4

-

Yass Hakoshlma uses _two approaches to mime: the mimetic one
of literally Imitating movements-as In "Eagle," where the Incredibly
rapid flapping of his anns depicts the wounded bird-and the Marcel
Marceau Illusionistic method of suggesting the reality of · Invisible
ob)~ts . Add to that the mystery of japanese Theatre and the expansiveness of modem dance, and you have some notion of what you will see
when Yass Hakoshlma appears tomorrow night at 8 In the Katharlne
Cornell Thea&lt;re.

AMI_,.OEINRUI'
(Aihor)

Sound
2 :30 p.m

-403 -

~byBioCeol«tor-Siudy

SHAKESPEARE OH ALM'
Henry v (OIMo&lt;. 19441 148 Olelendorf 11
om SponoorodbylheC«&lt;Ierfo&lt;.._Siudy

UUMFUI: A IIRAHOO FESTIVAL'

--110

- - - - ( -, 19511 ...

1lle 0... · 11154) Conference
· eo.n.
Col 636-'291111ot allow ......

STfUJCTUftAL IIETHOOOI.OOY IN AlM
ANALYSIS'
-O..nd- / Lo~ ...... ~.
1937). 148DiolendM. 7""" Sponoareclbylhe
Conlortor- Sludy
Ore o1 Blo moolpr&lt;M&gt;CO... ~Ww ftmo . _
, _ A closalc

ONIIA"
-

&amp;ltlvln 'o The Gondolier&amp;. Blird

-

•'*"·-

- - 8pm - - . .: $3

_.. · 5:1 u r s fawlly,
; 11 .... l1d&lt;e1o
.. otBQ.ftT-OifiooCW10.. ocNonc:ecllh&lt;o

-·
-

· . . . . . . . . dOor

Sponoorod"' ...

-

$3

--·
-

WEDNESDAY- 9

Englol1 . . _ _

no.
-ON

- 1-

146
230p.m -byfloConla&lt;

llognlllc.m -

(1871)

contor.nce
·

lor-~

FILII'
- , _ , . .. t h o - (Zelfirell, 11186).

~Oor&lt;lonl&lt;lce'lbooWe

-CIWgO

ETHNIC AIE!ICAN F1l.ll F£S11YAL'

--A~

Tlle ....... Woo-SouBI~Aoom .

-·-AitW- ..
----·-..,.._"'
--'---

c.noor "" -

.......... , _ , 170 . .N X : -

....._

--- ~-

BLOOOIIIIOtlllE •
Rrnot8Aoom, So.ft, 1Pun.,.p.m.

_.._

.. hor pho4oglopNc -

.,

170

WMFILII'
Tho Plio.- Gl ~ (Buruol, 1974).
C&lt;xdereoce Tlleolre, ~- COl 636-291111or

IWplt--

SATURDAY-12

llt!MAUI'
F. • 4£nglond, 1908) Ccnlorence Thooh.
SQuire Cole31!·211111klr--ChoriiO

AIITaAMILETTaafAQA.TYCOU.-·

SUNDAY-13

~~on

.._,_ ,m.-

UU.UAUI'
K.• .{E/IQIInd 111081

ANALYSIS'
Tile flouftci.Upl Sz~ , _
111651. 148 Dlol-. 2 ,30 p.lll. SponoareC1"'
tor Medlo Sludy.

""'eon...-

8HAK£SPEAIIE ON FILII'
~

by Blo Conlor lor

... porlormor,
lllcholoo ~ 101 8oldy (Tho-~ 8 ·30 p m. by
Blo~lorfO&lt;MedloSUiy,

THURSDAY -17
ST1IUCTUIUU.IIEIIIOOOI.OOY IN FILII
ANALYIIS'
•
-(BfMoon, 1917) U6 Oieloooaf.
7 p m SponoareclbylhoOonlortor"**Siudy

UUMAUI'

-"'~-a.-.4PIO

_ " ' .... ~"' ........ l..o......

STRUCTUIW. ~OOY IN FILM

ELECTRONIC MUSK:'

o n d - 101
lloldy (Tho I&lt;Noj. 8 p m Spcriorod !)\'flo C«&lt;lor
l&lt;&gt;r-Slllly
•

,.,.,..., llofNo- - - ... End
....... ~... J o l l n -. Oo!Jor1·

TlleNo_A_n~

~lltllon--Are ... O...SOuBI
Loc:IU&lt;e 'lOOm, Ccmmunlcollon Cenlor. Sla,., 8 p.m. F-. Thlo lo Blo lool d f l o - ·

-I-.1971) . Squn~

EL£CTRONIC IOIIND'

THURSDAY- 10

ETHNIC AIEIIICAN FILIII'UTIVAL'

Thoon. 7 p.m.

WNX:.-8)&gt;m _ b y ... Con1or
gollolloo, n:ludlng BloOocrge-

STRUCTUIW.IIEIIIOOOI.OOY IN FILII
ANALY-·
CCWIIofopl (Godonl, 111841. 148 ~ 7 p.m. SponoareclbyBioConlorlorMedloS1udy.

- S l l l l y.

l&lt;&gt;r.._Slllly
-

SHAKESPEARE ON FILM'
Olhollo IW-. 1951). 146 Olelendorf. 11
o.m. SponoareC1 by the c.n...-lorModle S&gt;Jdy.

WEDNESDAY- 16

----110·
--.;....._______

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

TUESDAY-15

For-lion,tel878~13 .

FRIDAY-11

col878~13

~I.KTUIIE'

-

UUA8FIUII'
Tile Phon- "' &amp;.-.. ISUnuol. 1874).
Conlorenc:e · Squn Col636-21119 lor

7· 10:45p.m. F1M.

8p.m. Ftw.
_.,..,._,.....wilbe-WotdFor ...... -llon.

-·~.1-141-

Vlodlmlr Po1rle, sc.-. lim ._.,liclon, ond
aJthor ot flYe books, give~ I feclure CW'I end
oaeoMQ o1 Chollo&amp; Vkb'o flm, Tho~ ond
EMco'o - Occ:.,_ 109 O'Brion.
8 p.m. by the COnWior.Medlo Sludy.

DANCE'
- · ..... Oondng. -Room, Squn.

~C... . - - .

MONOAY-7

7 ..... _ . , . _ "' . .

-

recnelo
Blo ohouling motch 1r&lt;&gt;m Who'• Alfold of yqlnle

- - . . -.... Col-211111""--

. --

.

LECTURE"

7p.m Sponoorod'by

..=.,""T::"~

SIJNDAY-6

. . . . . . . . . . _(11171) . ~

-..

Pnnoio"olion.....
- e~~
d. "'
....
C&lt;xder.,.,..
........
l)opoRnot&gt;l"' lJngliolca, u 1 8 .

~

- · . . . . Col836-2111t " " - -

.....

~. Sesaionl . . 9:30a..nr-4·30p.m.

ITIIUCTUIIAI.IIEIIIOOOI.OOY IN FILII
AIIALY-·

·-dW!Ie-

_.

Slf'IICiwony ond Olo&lt;:twony In Llngul•tko. 170

WACC.

MONDAY-14
SHAKESPEARE OH FILM'
Othollo ll!orgo.QIMer, 1965). 146 Diefendorf.
7 p.m. Sponsored by lhe Conler for Medie
Sludy.
I

, •

UNOUISTICS SYIIPOSIUII'
_

SATURDAY-5

..... -

.-.n-

charge.

ewr.rt ..._. In Pltlentt' Raghta. Jlne Keetar
Rocm. Ellooll. 7·9:30 p m. Spot-.ored by ~

H-CologoF.

· - . .I .
. ,ol
.Blo
-dOor.
- y- C&lt;lmolP.lll.
_ . , . _ " ' ... -

DANCE'

Fall&lt; donclng. Rrnoto Room, Soulro. 7-9:45
p,m. Sponsored"'""'
~PANEL DISCUSSION'

Opora-.tlopoiUiB'o - l o l -.

SQun. Col638·29191or allow times. Admission

ond .... Offic:&lt;l ol Summer Seosions.

STRUCTURAL METHODOLOGY IN FILM
ANALYSIS'
Elghlond o HaN I Olio, E. Mezzo IFeiO&gt;i. 1963).
146 Dli!fendorf. 7 p.m. Sponoored"' .... center
lor Media S&gt;Jdy.

loot Tonga In Porjo (lloly, 1872) C&lt;&gt;nf~

Thooh.

•S.. 'Cetenctar,• Pltve '1 , cot. 1

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>MlllerspQrt

Temporary bypass will open )\ug~:~st t 5;
permanent rerouting also under construction;
acc~ss to .campus will be limited nex_
t month
A tern~ new route for a portiOn
of Mlllereport Hlahway dnctly- of
the campus will be opened llbout
Auguet 15, the State Un'-etty
Conetructlon Fund (SUCF) an11011nced
thla week.

conatructiOn of the
the carnpua from
Mid -.ton of
Augapurgar Ailed . to thlll Coventry
Entrwlee, and -..ct1on of a new
- - t'llllllway Mid peotcJng lot for (he
Unl. . .lty Polloe (81....1-Hall). The
perking lot rapt- an ulatlng ·one
whlc:h Ilea In the pdl of permanent
roeds Into the Arta Mid Lettare aile.

the

bypMe:

Coventry

em- to

Mill~ H~

=t::

~..:or=: b;;..~ ~0:\ll\.

~~~x~F~I:a
north of l...ak8 LaSalle. A new ..,try point

will be open before the start of the fall
semester.
The bypau and auoetated roedwey
projeCts are J)lllt of a allewortc utilities
contract for- the Arta and Letters
complex being completed by Oalcwo..
Conetructlon, Inc.
"
Francis R. Sullivan, manager of the
Buffalo/ Amherst Field Oftlc:e of
the ConetructloJt Fund, told the
Reporter this
that the bypau .,111
remove traffic from the aile of the
long-awaited Hf&amp;lth, Phyalcal Educa-

w-

-

:~er.d to~~~torat~fn'J,~lft!; ~~~:hw~:=u=
bypUe turns- -..ty at a point
Roed, should ... Cempua ..,,,_at

..

~=~~~ or:~.!rhe~':lot~

the exlstlng MllleQ=rt
HI way south
of l...ak8 LaSalle. B
portions of
Millersport will be
lc::aded ~ the
new route opens, Sullivan aald.
,_,anent roed unclerwar. Permanent relocation of Mllltinsport
Hi ghway to the eut aide of the
UnlVW'IIty campus Ia also now
underway under a D.O.T. contract with
Bero Construction; thle te echeduled for

·~ :::'.':::'.:1:.. ~~~ - ~

'='=

Plant Ia part of that activity.
· The Conatn.ctlon Fund's roed project
includes two Other phaMs'ln eclc!ftlon to

Saul

PllaM 2 . . . . Al9* 22
.
The eouthem 1*1 of Coventry
En!,.,.,. Mid thl-ard -lion of
Augspurger Road (ehown aa PllaM 2 Oll
the accompenytng map) are exoected to
be completed by Auguet 22, 11171. The
new parking lot for Bl....l Hall ( " ' 3) Ia expected to be paved belllnt
September, Construction Fund Manager Sullivan tndtc:eted.
"-ndlng completion of PllaM 2, traffic to and from the Alnhenlt

Flint or Frontier Aoeda, Sullivan laid.
AcOin to Un'-elty PollOI e1 Bl_.l,
Hall and to the MalntiiMnoe Building
during the Interim will be aftllabte only
from the Amherst Carnpua vta
Augspurger R~ .

The end Is ne.r
Next week'slleporter Is
the final summer Issue.
-The-usual T uesdaynoon
deadline Is being ~
observed.

U/8 Theatre Chairman
Saul Elkin is the
amorous, uproarious Sir
john .Falstaff In the
'Shakespeare In
Delaware Park'
production oflhe
Merry Wives of Windsor
which opens Tuesday at
8 p .m. See 'Calendar'
for details.

as
Sir

lOtan

Research ·for t#Je.year
exceeds $22.3 million
U/B'a . - e l l proggm ,_....,
Mid
contrloCta
tot.llng

IIIWita

122,371.2111 during the ~ ending
J - 30, -.ordlng to a PN!ImiMJY

eummatiOn .......ed 11111 . . . . by
Aobwt C. Flap.trlck, ctlng vice

~=J: ~·dollar amount 11

14,J;: ~~ ~ ~; • 427,
per c.nt, he Indicated.

lnci=J:ll.ll
Fl
aald the ~· tOW! will

ttw

probtlbl' go_, higher- ..,d of
~ 8Cttvtty le compt«ely recorded.

eee PfOPOAII to outllde agencl•
._tlng ellghtty rncw. than
milliOn...,.~ during there-.
1'1tqlatrlck noted. Thla Is a deCline of
2 .4 per c.nti n the number of proposals
Mid 1 diOP of 3.t per &lt;*II In the dollar
MIOunt of l unda ,.qunted.
Lalit )'tllll"s total wu depreased
allghtly by some pollc u of the caner
8dmlntstrallon's f irst y- In office, •
Fittpettlcl&lt; aeid In panicular, some
'undlng egenc ..s _.. not allowed to

sec

,apend any money In the lut month of
tiler-.
Nonetheless, Flltpetrlck said , the
current ligures rep.-1 e significant'
net geln over the pnwloue y -.
He ettrlbuted the rise to a continued
1er11e number of grant proposals
su6miHed by faculty and to an

:=:" !~= ~,:""~~
projeCts.
This hu bMn the caM lor the put
- . 1 ~ . Fitzpatrick pointed out.
•our proposal activity, lor example, Is
:0~ about 50 per cent over three yeara

Ourlng the lut month of the llacal
report y - (June 1978), 55 grants and
contrcts were received, amounting to
$2,134 ,947.
Included In theaa were several
smaller new granl a lor 1 variety of
projects: a study of the Buffalo end Erie
County mortgege finance and housing
markets. to be conducted by Harolll
•See

'"....,eh.·pege l . r:ol . 4

Map shows location o
I of new construction), the Coventry •mrr ... nr.,.A ugspur~er Extension (Phase 2). and me Po lice
access ! oad and parking l.oc (Phase :3 ).

�l

"""27,11178

. .ldild

~~Ao!'l·~ s~e!a?pus~~~!e~y~ss!?·~~~:!B:d~ o1;;ior8",:.·~

... FBA
eclleduled lor Tuei!CiaY, Auguat 1 (at 1
P·~H12._
!he Aepoi1w '-ned
·U/8 Foundation Prealdent John Ill.
Invited, but will be on

III

Capen. ),

=.,-

FeiiM!cioi~St;_~~~llJ"'t!i

U..,

howiww,

Al.-.dra

Cubn,

~of~_FSA ao.rd, ~d. She

1

11~· C: ::i~·the
Wlkll ~~~- mlagi¥1nga on the part of
8hiiMnta IIIII olhen oow the plan for
Follltt'8 to buttcl a , _ lloc*atore on

••n; =.tk;"

::::.:.:.:,.:,.~
0W all U/8
-....nt mllgiYinga remained late
=-~,=.~.=:::or..=e:,:

Wedo,..,.
ao.ns

The thrust of the questloniHftd.

=~en~r,.e;::,t~h:.:~~~~=

1n last Friday's
thought.

Sp«;trum,
_

Carter

uaeSo~~~n~1 ~ll:~~.u~~~~~u~

aald:

Prallta?

*~~~~~t~.!:'!:'~~yaaku::
proflta on the U/B bookatora operations
=l::.==~cJ~o';'!r -=-~..::.~

DINctora of the
AMoc:latlon (whloh
-'II go out of the book81ore business
under the tanna of the proposed
. - . 1 ..., adopted a - " a t
lltrldent atance t - the proposal,
.o.1ng to go. to court If - . . r y to
protect the FSA'e right to continue to
oper81eHabookatoreS, unleaaoruntlllt
11 "fully oonvtnoed that the propoeec1

No doll• figures wera dlacuaaed,
Cwtw aald. Dollar fl~urea contained In
the story on the meeting must have
been CalCulated by the Spectrum writer,
based
on present or Drolected
bookstore sales, Cwter apeoulatlid.
•Follett' a prlcea on books at Ita
SUNY/Aibeny bookstore are enywhere
from 50 cents to $1 above list prloea,
c.tw coaceded. But that's because
~=~~~onro~.t;!'aln:'::.,.~~

Paroel 8, Ia In the beat lnt..U of all
oonoemec1 (See...,.,.. story,e).

goes to take care of
II&gt;8Cial
tranapartatlon chwgea. A almller
situation exists at the UniYeralty of
California at Senta ~ but thla
be the case at Buffalo. We're on

The

~ltyoaudent

of

~ou!:s.t~u!oiJ:l.= tt;

John c.tw, told the
ly
lnfanMd about the poeelblllty ol1111y
!r:B=..:=
raleed 111 lillY of 1ae1 week's
~ c.n. Mid. Thwe . . .
~. be Mid, end . _ had
_ . . " The -atudenta dlcln't ~~gree
Monclay 111111 he had not been d

:=:..::-u.

:::....~"'rt:.:.:,:m

won'

t~=!:ihatFollett'a hedattempted

to eell used books u new books at
Stony Brook wera completely discounted In a study by Stony Brook's own
Internal auditing department, Carter
aald. A co!{ of tnat report Ia available,

':: ...~~~rwi.or.thattheSUNY-Aibeny

"'-'ccllble plablema, either.
He Mid . . ..-~ a lettw from
AleUIIIh CW.. chalrmen of the FSA
ao.ns
of ~ wllloh - l y
_...._ the F8A dtt.otora"iWtutiOn
on the - · but thlll he had not yet

~ lt. •

...,. ..... ..,.._.
Clner Mid bolh he-and the Follett's
..... had clone "---+"olng

;Oiiii"!O..._~~.;;;;:~'aed

llr ehiiMnta. Thwe wiH be no protllem In

III'CIIIIdlng the FaA with a copy of the
IIMI..-.DR11108111,_~ aald. The othw
.,_Iori whloll ,...,. requeeted has
-. .~.~. prorided by Follett's,
-· - -

edmlnlatratlon Ia unhappy with Follett's
operations on Ita campus. Carter
referred the Report• to en article to the
contrwy In the July 11178 newaletter of
the Hatlonal A
latlo
f Cern
AUXlllaty Semoea~That ~:...
bv E. Norbert Z.ohm, ger1en11 managw o1
lfnl-.lty Auxlllwy Senolcea, SUNYAlbeny, deecrlbea In glowing twma.
WWhy We Leased Our Bookstore." (See
box thla page)
Cwtwaald .hedldn' know what FSA
Chairmen Cukan m.nt by hw reference
to "clandeetlne" negotiations. ''We've
given them all the Information ·they've
aalced for and we're naedy to hold more
..-lnga. We've got no secreta."
Carter Insisted that all negotiations

wrtl::

Mel

members emerg!!d from their session
with Follett's representative In a
receptive mood towerd the proposed
agreement.

briefings on them have been

;::~~~~!·;,.·~d. 9.~hl~: !~·.!~~=:

St~n::-~

the committee was
"basically satisfied," but noted that
how "!!_,thdese ogreementa wO&lt;tl out In
1 1

track. of the o--&lt;kllng concern
here-that of quality. Follett's has

~~.~~:~ t:f;!~~h~h~Z:: 1 :_~~b:

they

f'hi~I'Qood-::~:;,=t~~f:r:.~

are now."

Fea~Hy

staff Ia." We h8Ve provided minimum
pn:&gt;vtal9na lor quality, Dennla aald.
The s-te committee heed noted

rMCtJon 'poaltlwe'

~;e;n~~.·
'":poedlt::by:
s.,,_ ,......I. heed
~c.;:ro~~~ o~~~~·~!Choff=

~:.:~.~=~'?'~oh-=
:a=:.'J.~00::.:0~~':1

ea;:F;ooul
~ ty

entlolpeted by r-ollett'a end the U/BF.

at above llat

Follett's Mel the U/BF h8V8 llgiMd In
principle, acc:ordlng to the Foundallon
praaldent.
.
Proleaaor Dennis told the ~oner
that Folletfs end the 1,1/BF have
Indicated wllllngneaa to Incorporate
Into the 1 - contract"a clauee calling lor a Fec~lty Senate/,.tlldent ed'tl~
committee, and enothw guaranteeing
that a specified minimum M&gt;ount ol
apece will be devoted to no~textbooks .

pric»a 1111d that textbook
ordwa would' be filled u 111Queeted by
leculty (end not .under-ordered on the
assumption that the leculty member
has probably Inflated ectual demend lor
the courae). Both these assurancea will
also be In the'- agreeinent, Dennis
aald.
·
Dennis Indicated that Initially the
Senate ~tall- wera chagrined
that they had been left out of w~at they
1

at~~tJ:::: ~~":~~ ~

h~o1/:r.. ~':.: ':fu~

aside for books, both Cartw and Dennis
confirmed; the 'lemalnlng on•thlrd will
go to SO&lt;aJ
aottware (T-ahlrt Items,
et'iJe Of thet.o-thlrda of the total set
:
lor booka, at /eeal one-third will
1

equ?v:l'!:,~:' ~~.~ ~~S,.!: .

total retail apece.
The 'purpose of the Feculty-Student
advisory commmee, Dennis outlined to
the ~orter, will be to aaaura that the

dee! with policies for the dewlopment
of the entire tract.

books" which they would llka their
students to buy and naed, but are not
Ired
t xt It Ill 1 t

.......use of that, she sald, "we want
to get as much Information as poaalble.
We want to get as much of the
Unl-slty as possible to know what's
going on. We don' have enythlng
against Parcel B, we Just went what._
Ia done to be out In the open .
"I've been on the Board since last
summer," she said, "Mel until Just
recently we wwe n._ told that F=SA
was supposed to go out of the
bookstore business."
•
Cukan said that John Carter's
statement about student leederahlp
changlhg from veer to year (Mel thus
not keeping abreast of Parcel B
developments) "doesn't hold water.
John Carter hasn't always been
president of thl!l U/B Foundation, • she
pointed out. "Feculty and edmlnlstra-

~·· poaltlon

F..,. Board Chairman Cukan sald that
remO'IIng FSA from the/ book business

}=Yec!
~n co:,:;:,'!:~1,; ::.;..,~
departments to recommend "good

;:'~~!
..~~fl~:.per
cent of
,.___
..--

:r'~hat ~ee .:,0..;0 ,.e nm:'.g::::'.:,~

stocks these selection a. This will go a
long way, Dennis and othw feculty feel,
toward assuring that the quality of the
store's trede book offerings will be of the
highest calibre. II these books do not
sell , how._, the agreement provides

ahrl:!':rn,

oou-.

Z.ohm continues:
WWithln months a naport was
r:--ted by um ...ltv Auxiliary
s.Mcee lnllfiiiCI8II'*t to Ita ll&lt;*'d of

:=:.m;:~~~~he.:::

, _ ...• A!tw propoeala wwe ,_...,
from the lntereeted companlle and

Their experience
Is described
as'good'

~ty ~. Follett College

aeof Clltoago eelected on the
beela 111111 they - . beat QUalified to

hllllclte the Albeny 'ltore thlll had now
c-;
to -11,2211,000 In totlol aalee,

~"~=ld~

-'*'... J - 1, ao thlll Follett would

,_. aufflclent time to Nftii)CMIL P'talbooll ordwa, IIIII .....,_. ..,.. the

~ ~"'-:'.rm. of ... -.tract,

:!

panel will hear complaints from leculty
.00 students about operations of the
bookstore and will also field gripes
from bookstore staff about feculty 1111d
stud t 8 h 0 1 h
probl
f
en w m g t cauee 111 ems or

=~t a~put~t~ =~== ;rn~~~~r:a?tl~rett~ndtc;~.':;J' !~

.._...,.-made.

r..:":":lh
them, h o - . that he hed only Just
- . t l y entered Into dlacuaalons with
the compeny about their building their
own structure at Amherat. ''We lied no
:lJ.o IICCI!Pt thla explanatl~ ,"
In eddltlon to worltlng out the details
of the bookstore edvlaotY committee,
U/BF praaldent Cwtw told the Reporter
thet he Ia also moving to ,...tabllsh
the Cl'lerall Parcel B ed'tlsory committee

~~1v':. i~.u 1 %:'n:tm:ud:m

~t':t~d=~:.·c:..:~!hrl,'::

By 1i731 Z.ohm writes, the store on Services, nagerdleaa of salaa. The
the new Albany campus, then run by a contrect also covwed Items such as
not-for-profit campua corporation, hed provisions lor cancellation Mel term Inaloll . a- $300,000 In two years. tlon, notification deed lines lor textbook
"Contributing to the loaa was high ordwa, procediltea for purchasing 'used
high personnel books, hOttfi of operation, pricing,
Inventory

textbook Inventories, .00 what appeared to be en unsolvable overordwlng
- altuatlon In new textbooks." The
atudent body was unhappy Mel the
leculty, dlaaatlalled, Z.ohm raporta.
- .... of
--.
.,.,......_
A study of operations
"H Ia fair to say,"
Z.ohm - · that moat colleges _..
aatlafled with their . _ operatore,
that not all
.,....lzlt)g, of
problelne could be solved by the .....
• opwlllor; but enough ao that the overall
~~-and student community wwe

•••

lm~.:ss~~~~~~t! =~t~ ~~::

students
want 'everything
in the, f'open;'
f aCU Ity pane I IS
. ·,b aSICa
. II y Sat IS
Jed,

handled with relative- because of a
clear underat.ndlng between both
parties as to what merchandise would
be purohaaed end undw what
conditions textbooks would be purchased by Follett. Remaining 1~
· ventortea In both categories wwe either
pieced on sale or returned to publlahera
Mel auppll8fS.

'ti•Jsh' awolded
"During the surnmw the store was
.completely remOdeled so sa to praaent
an entlraly new Image and at tha same
time provide for con-.lon from
clark-service to self-awvlcelor textbook
aalea at book rush time. The latter
problem which might be mora appropriately relwred to u a 'book rush' went
off vwy smoothly to the aatlafactlon of
the Unlvwalty community end the
atudenta In partleul•. Feculty _..
aatlafled with the hendllng of textbook
ordwa1 and wera pleased with the new
atore aaalgn Mel new manaoen-t.
"Follett aenda U n ' = Auxiliary
s.vtoee an Income
quartwly
which Ia quite a change from previous
. . . . when Unl-.lty Auxlllaty Ser=.,to':'IO:...undwwrtte quartwly
"One thing evident Ia that l-Ing
may not be the aolutllln"for all collagea
experiencing financial and awv1oe
problema In their bookatore. Careful
,..,.... and atudy of the particular
problem at eny campua location Ia
- . . followed by thorough
=•=:..~~h many outalde groups

tMIJIII....ny Auxiliary aemo.. leMed
... ~to follett lor thNe ....
and In turn ~ a 'commllalon'
'--«1 on a ~t of edlualed grou
alllee with at~UWW~teed mlftlmum to be ..;,o;~lculw experlenoa haa been
peld to tile Unl..ralty AUld llaty

t~c.,o:~~~o.'::~~t~~/~~·~d

Follett's have not
provided FSA
?~~f:~~~':,.:!'hlng they asked for
For example, Follett's claims to have
40 campus bookatore operatlo~s . but
the reference list whloh has names
only 23. FSA furthw has received no
sample contrect agNement; no Independent audit report ; no copy of any ·
proposed 1 - between Follett's and
the U/BF'.
In fact, Cukan sald, "I h8V8R't eeen
anything In writing on eny of this."
Rich
Mott,
praaldent o1
the
undergraduate Student Aaaoclatlon and
a member of the FSA
sald the
FSA resolution on the proposed
agreement reflects no "rigid" position
on the matter lor or against. It simply
means "we want to get mora
Information," Mott agreed wTth Cukan.
len Snvdw, asslatent ~B vice
president 'tor auxlllarv • entltwlaea,
enother member of the F'SA board, and
supervisor of the present bookstore
operation, said he abstained from
voting on the resolution.
He aald he felt the concerns raised
wwe valid, but that -"-'&gt;• they should
have been artleulaied dlractly to the
President by the student aaaoclatlons
concwned, not channeled through FSA.
Snydw aald he atao thoUght some of
the wording wu unn-...,lly strong.
Bulca:!X, what the resolution I!Je&amp;nS,

ao.ro.

.

::::~ th':~t::n~~~ ';'~~~

matter at.nda now.
"-raonally, Snydw sald, he atlllfeela
the leased bookstore operation would
be a "poaltlve" development.

·

�Juty 27,1171

FSAsays
court action
a possibility
The following motion concerning
bookatona 1 - ~tlatlona '*-'

:"!,.,end~ed :r~~-.:
Student Aasoclatlc1n Board of Otractora
"mM!Ing, July 18:
"The Faculty-student Auoclatlon
requeeta that Or. KMter uee the nut
Faculty-Student Auoclatlon Board of
otractora meeting to dlecuee the
propoeed ag..-.1. Further, thl-.c
~lng will be well edwrtlaed and
open to the Unl_.lty OC)IIJmunlty that
they might determine flrat herlil the
IIPPfOil(1- ot a propoeal of this

typa"The

Faculty-student Aeaoclatlon
until It II fulfy COIWinoed that the
propoeed ag..-.1 Follett
llocikatorw and the Unl..alty of
Buffalo Foundation, will be In the ·
I n - of the faculty, atudanta, and .
.staff of thl• Unl..alty, will oontlnue to
operate the Main Stniet BOokatona and
Ita two aatelllt• on the Amherat
campUs, end will eeek the protection of
the courts If - . a r y to oontlnue Ita
operations.
"The Faculty-Student Aseoclatlon
Board of Dlractora requeata coplea of
all llfOI)C)Md ag..-rta from th&amp;
Unl. . .fty of Buffalo Foundation
concerning the development of "-reee 8
for their examination and auggeated
al-lon.
"Follett llookatorw Ia requeeted to
pro'llde the Faculty-81udent Aseoc. .

~~--::.::::.~ of~~~

Fences:

they can control snow
denMiy settled urban areas. Men
has to become ainerter, he uya. He
must learn to llw with the -her end
uae leaa energy In dealing with II.
The Foreatry Servloe scientist
acknowledged that none ofthe methods

11 Ia common knowledge, uya
Prof.._ Rorwld D. Tablei, that
anowdrtfta form behind certaln terrain
feeturee Yet he uya we continue to
build highWayS, r;Jiwaya, canals,
~lwaya, end ...., buildings that are

1110(8

(lOW 11 ~ been conaldened" _.., and
CIIMper to plow, nemoY8 or ehovel anow

Buffalonlena well know It's blowing and
drifting that ceuM most of the
problems for winter drivers.
Futnnsn loul...-cl
Asked by members of the local praas
what recommendations for Buffalo he
would care to edYance after a curaory
tour of the Fuhrman Boulevard-Skywet·
Waterfront area, Tabler said It was h s
Initial Impression that this roed-y
network wu somehow not designed to
be efficient during snow storms. to
begin with, he said, the so-called New
Jeraey median b..-rlera In evidence on
the system (concrete barriers between
lanes) serw to accumulate snow end
ceuse It to be blown preciMiy at
wlndehleld 1...1. "No roed designed for
snow should h... NeW Jersey barriers,"
he said.
Other, perhaps far-out meaaures are
tachnlcally possible bill not nsally
prectlcal, Tabler suggested. For
example, you could regulate the snow
which blowa In off the Lake Erie Ice

Th~~~ .~.:::·. Ia that up to

then to control It through Yllllous kinds
of protectiY8 atructiAI. The energy
crunch and eplrallng
coeta of
"brute force" labor for snow remoYal,
how-. h... changed that. Now,
J~~!:.~ =n!~ a growing Interest
How to do this has been a 1011 ert
since the 11130a, Tabler points out. Bill
Ira beCOming mora and more of a
conoern f« heavy snow .,.... In the
u.g;.. Tabler 11 a principal reaearch
h("rologlst with the u.s. Fo,...t 5erv1oe
a the Rocky Mountain Forest an d
Ex\:lment Station. Ha _. In
l u . nt~~'ntly~pon~~bthe~~=

::Z

Summer natltllle for Fluid ynamlcs
end the Chamber of Commerce.

NoT:'~d ~!~"=Y of the U/B
Newa Bureau at a pnau conference In
Crolla Hall that he was not here with
=htepec/to!_lfdonrecorneIn~=~~:.
lndl
...
[he ~~or:e;:-~~:'::o~~
project In Wyoming n hopaa th~ aorne
of the prjncJplae employed thera might
be applloebla local11.
Wyoming, he told Bray, has been wry
progreaalw In Ita hlghw•Y operatlona;
the State has aucceNfully uaed
wtltlclal berrlere for more than eight
yewa to minimize drifting problema on
roedwaya. A snow fence system

'"I:

~==::~'\~~~=
p&lt;OY8d effect1Y8 In th,. w•ya, he uld:

by eliminating the need for costly anow
nemCMII, by lmpro'llng vlalblllty, and by
significantly reducing aluah and loe
formation on the roed aurf-. The
, _ . . 12-feet tall end . . designed
to withstand 100 mll...,...hour wfnda.
Oealgn - . baaed on • method devlaed
bv Tabla!" for eetlmatlng the snow
alorage C8;)8City required at each fence
811
~ulta, he contended, h...
UYed II..... well .. dollars.
T8bler noted that the bulc dealgn for
all new Wyoming hlghw•y• Ia dictated
by a computer program
wtllch
calculatel the Ideal geometric configuration to mlnlinlza snowdrlftlng on
the roed . Computere are alao uaed to
monitor wind velocity and visibility
petterna durtng bllaarda and to
regul•te the flow of traffic accordingly.
_!~~ feela eome of the ume
~· can be uaed aucceufully In

fi..

typical ..,..,~a- held with other
L- unlwrattl8a, and a complete listing of
unl_.lty rer-..A copy ot - thelr
laat Independent Alllllt I'8IIOrt ehould
hameaa nuclew .--:tore to melt the loe
aleo be made aYallable for FacultyIn winter. Again, though, Tabler
Student Auoclatlon 111.-:tlon."
emphasized, none of theM we .,..ctlcal
The queetlon ··oallad, and the
at this point.
motion paued on a Wile of 7 In favor
Tabler edmltted that wtlflclal snow
none In oppoeltlon, Wid 1 llbetentlon:
barriers such as the Wyoming fence~
Voting for the reeoldllon _ .:
1
81
Studenta: Rich MOlt, SA; C.OI
Block, MFC; Mild• Newman, Q8A; and
aavtnga within ten YMI"S· Thla eetlmate
Ruben Lopez. SA.
does not take Into .:count such other
FtJCuffy: Joaeph M•llng, PaycholseYings factora as fewer accidents and
ogy; Stephen A. GOodwin, Managefewer traffic t...,pa and delays.
ment.
.
CSEA : Robert Smith.
Aa old .. cia VInci
Administration: Len Snyder abSnow fence aystama, Tabler explainstained.
ed, do not block snow but rather ceuM
E.W. Ooty and Robert Wagner, two
It to pile up off the roeds whera
edmlnlatratlve ~tall- to
other
engineers went It to. The basic
the Board, .were not - t.
principles of how theM fences work
were described by Leonardo da VInci
but have been largelr forgotten lately
because of cheap fue end labor.
Will the same theory or aorne
-latlon of 11 work In en Individual
driveway? Tabler wu asked by a
Millard Fillmore College will offer a •
reporter. Citizens of Laramie, Wyoming,
smell number of oour.ea Ill downtown
use these prlnclplaa auoceaafully,
Buffalo locetlona IIIIa fall. "We hope
Tabler said, but In Buffalo the housea
that thla ectlvlty will be ...._, •
may be too close together. Along this
another vlalble algn of the Unr..r.tty'a
llne he noted that lmaglnatl~ uM of
1
commlt"*lt to the -.muniiY,"
lanaaceplng
end architectural design
Donald R. BruMn, IIOIIng daM of flie
can be used qulleeffactl"!el~ to eliminate
DIYialon of Continuing Ed~. uye.
anowdrlftlng problems In Individual
"It may oontrlbufe to afforta to
yards end driYeWaya.
·
rejuvenate downtown ·.Buffalo by
T~~~~~h~."':.! ~onofto..:,~at ~ ratalnlng or llltractlng pereona to the
area dUring .-ly -.lng houra,"
July. I am up to here with all t~la B.S.,"
Brutvan notee.
he said.
Three couraea-ln matllernllllca,
"That stands for blowing snow," he
public communication, and ~
added with a grin.
~~haYe .,... acheduled
. ... the

::u~~~Ygt r~~~:: ':'J,!~~~n
1

'=

:;:,.~~'7~.u~~ t!~:'~1~

successfully In Alaska. Creation of
aorne sort of surf- roughneaa on the
Lake Ice ltMII would ateo cut down
blowing. Flnelly,lt might be possible to

r~ t~ern~: Toi 'f.!.~h==

MFCtooffer
courses downtown

1

Ellicott isn't motel, Boyce says
U/B Ia not In the motel bu•lneas at
Ellicott, officials said this week In
response to a oomplalnt ralaed by the
owner of the Unl-alty Manor motel
across from the Main Street Campus.
Paul R. Streublnger, owner of the
motel, charlled the University with
renting double rooms at Ellicott for u
little u $10 per night, undercutting hla
price of $24.
U/B hu actively attempted to lure hla
customers away, he edded.
U/B does not rent rooms to the
general public, Medlaon Boyce, director
of houalng, naaponded to press
Inquiries . Oilly those attending ooureea
or cernpua ectiYitlea auch u conferences can rent a room, he uld.
Streublnger Hl&lt;llll • letter to SUNY
Chancellor CliTion· Whwton that hla
recorda lndlcete that during the put
year or two, hla room rentals have
decnsaaed approximately $20,000 • y frorn " anticipated levels ."
· wa were ehocked to disco-." he
told Whwton , that U/B wu "ectlvell
soliciting many of our cuatomera ....
· The motel owner alleged that the
manager of the Unlveralty Manor, Ray
Stanton, had successfully tried to rent a

room on cernpua reoenlly. He produced
for the press a receipt signed by a dorm
employee stating that Slenton rented a
double room on July 17 for $10.
Hundreds of customers have laft the
motel for the Unlveralty, Stanton
charlled.
30 lobs are on the line, Stanton and
Streublnger told the News.
U/B spokespersons categorlcelly
denied the allegations.
Records here show that Stanton wu
able to rent a room because he told the
employee at the WilkesOn desk that he
was on campus for a pwenta'
orientation .
Stanton said he didn't tell the
employee anything.
Housing Director Boyce In alated that:
" Ray Stanton checked In on the 17th,
end u far u we know he' a still with us.
He said he was the parent of en
Incoming student .
•once In a whlla, we get a parent of a
student for a night beceuse they can~
drive down to Naw Yorl&lt; that night.
Although we resist that, on occaalon we
mlg,ht do something like that .
In Ierma of somebody just walking
off the street and getting a room , that's
highly unlikely.•

~~~~~:r:~~

Two

additional

couraea-ln

fund

:'!:J'f:c~~~d=~~
with the cooperation of the Meyor'a
Office.

•Research
~-1.col~

COllen oi the School of Archlteclln and

Environmental
0

Oealgn

($22,315);

a

:l:::Yc !.n~r,:,,t'rnd,n~lt::f:.-:.':
higher educetlon, to be oonducted by

~~~~:f:'ld~ln\~~=~ !
0

~~=tlo~~~ ~~haof

sr:

language end cultural training for
unoergreduate management maJora, to
be conducted by Blial Bhatt ($31 ,000
from the U.S. Office of Education); and
a study of the uee of oont.--ptlon
among edolescenta, to be undertaken
by Graham Kerr of SociolOgy (under a
$10,000 grant from the Brueh l'olfndetion).
Moat of the month's grenta were
major continuation end renewal funds
::~q~r~d!~vestlgatlona In health

�.......
ored?

Adult ad.visement ·u nit ·rnay be able to help

er...i'c.rttn

Statistics lor lut

rr--

1:'**to gee
.

yW also show that

mono married men and women applied

~'l::gf:"=t:~ld~:::, dr!~-;

~ your job bores you. Or you"nl
a oollege dropout and would like t.o go
your
Maybe you're e
lldlled ttadamen, l)ut can't lind a job In
_ , choeM field. Then ea-Jn, you may
be a retired executlft who wants to "do

felt their mam.ges - a threa.t ened .
There wwe 226 women and 88 men In
the married category.
Nevin usually advl- those thinking
In terma ol a new " * - to look belorelhey lellp. They thould !eke time to
I...., all they can about the new career
at a lltnly, ahe counMia. They might
also become volunt- worf&lt;era In
car.r...elated joba to lind out II they
en\-':,Y.the work.

dell,....

~lng "tol.-epbuay .

-

"you ._
a problem such .. theM,
. . Peggy Nevin can help you.

Mn. MarQanll B, Nevin Ia director ol

UIB'a Adutf ~t canter.

forltoda_ ... _

In 1870, the canter Ia the , saya ~~~~~:.m~~~~~j
career Information I'Ve-a.nc"
lnt ot- Ita kind In lhat It catera to the
....ta ol both men and woman. Before
lite lorrAine SaNa Award
ttwt, Uld Nevin, auch centera were set
The·canter thla y - presented lor the
up to - * l e t - only.
llrwt time the ''lorrelne Saben Awwd" to
- Nevin, who Ilea ...-..c1 u director ol
honor a non-traditional atudent - man ,
the elno» It was founded et her
or woman - who returns to achool to
..,.._iOn, works on the theory that
"makegood"lnanew career. The award
-'unity knocka more than once 1
With a little help.
~':'a;'.:!,.~clr..~~~-rn:' ~·uth
The Clftter offera both Individual and
Parnes of the Town ol Tonawanda, who
counMIIng.
c:erne to the center about three years
vldula wt\o vtalt her office at 3
ago lor guldanoa. She declded to
urwt, acrau from tt,e Main Street
~e her college education after a
CWIIP.Ja, wilt dl~ that ahe goes a
. . beyond the •open dOor policy." ·
Her offiCe Ilea no dOor at
Navin a1 so"I:.\Ia of a builder who came
to the center nocently, saying he wu
"bored." He aald hla bualneaa, which he
allt8ln both educational Wid eatablllhed In the mid 50s, wu a
~- SometlrMS the - e r Ilea In
aucceaalul ventura but that he dldn,
nt.«&lt;rtcll"**t addltl\lea, auch .. want
to keep at It "'the rest ol his lila."
~. -.t Of cr.lta.
The oenter might. edviM Ita job
After completing a counseling
Clllnt8 to eocplcn the _.bllltlea ol
course, she relates, the builder decided
oontlnulng ttwtr educltlon to lmpnl\'8
~

:a

*''·

rn:t.:'-=~~~ t:i

July 1:7,1171

:~:~!.:'r=~~.~:..~·

=.:;

that he wu leading a "good lila." He
also convinced himself, she says, that
he not only should "stick to his
auccesalul business ventura" but buy
another small buslneaa "lor the fun ol
.

It~

NaY n also lalla ol a woman In her
mld-30a, with a "small family," who
came lor advice. The woman said aile
wulntereated In medicine.
Navin relates that the woman
returned to UIB, .-ned a degree In
. bloatatlallca and "Ia now working In
Buffalo In a job ahelo~ . ·

Don't quit .nil you bave
.QIOther fob

Nevin, henall a "collage dropout"
who returned to school, ·has 8 bit ·of
advice.lor those who are thinking about
changing jobs.
•Don't eave," she says, " until you
have a new job. •
The Adult Advisement Center Ia one
of lour departments ol the U/1;1 Division
ol Contlnul.nJ Educetlon (DCE).
thar:'e ~:,:

=:

tw:··~=~~~~

.....,quarters lor the center Ia own:::!'by

the University, bljt Ia expected to ba
sold soon. Nevin hopes the center then
will ba moved to a campus location that
would put It In closer touch with other
~partmenta ol DCE.
Nevin, who currently Ia working lor 8
doctorate In education , has attended
both Buffalo State and UI B.
Last year, the center wu closed from
May 1 A9 August 10 because . ol a
cutbacl 1n state budget allotments lor
public iervtce actlvltlea. When It

rWo;:.~g~~rt~ w.:::l'i~:'=&amp;re

two counseling Interns, a hall-time
clerk-typist. two graduate aulatanta
and two volunteera.
'
In eddltlon to counaellng, .Mra. Nevin
Ia an active lact....-. She eatimates that
ahe reaches 1,000 or more peraona a
y...,. on the lecture circuli.

Ceater's tlllnl-..e

houae

The
at 3 Allefthuret Ia the
center's third home. The center apent
Ita llrat two y-. In WUIIamavllle aa an
extension unit. For the next two r-ra.
It wu situated at Ridge Lea where,
according to Mrs. Nevin, "no one could
lind ua.•
•
Nevin points out that the center's
· educational referral program shows that
baing away from school lor an extended
period or time generally Ia no handicap.
"The acalernlc work ol a returning
student hu no relation to the student's
previous performance In school," she
advl-. . "In fact, the acedernlc
achievement In later r-ra Is usually
much batter ~uM the returning
student Ia more motivated. •
The center can baa buay place. Nevin
obaervea that the unit ·axperiMcas a
notable Influx ol I1Kiu&amp;lla lor
counseling when an area plant closes or
a major layoff Ia announced.
But wha- the reasons, aile and
her atafl welcome one and all.
While drop-Ina are not enCt&gt;Uraged
because ol stall llmltatlona, personal
appolntmeota can ba arranged by
- calling the canter balore noon at
831-2238.

==:-n~-=r=.~~~

lefter

=·

'Salary' story misleading, Kristal says

=-•t

. . . . _ llao
g'-l In job
.......... and lnl*tng .,..onal
- · In adcllllln, the center offers
lnlormallon on
tranda and
-Meletaln
ling.
Group ad¥1- worQitopa . .
conducted both clwhiQ the day Wid
OneforIUGia
proridee
!linD
. ,~
. _ 1-.g
mlcJ.
_......__ olilatbar, for both"*'

~~=-· ..Uiled

n.........,.. ..

~~-:h~erl~'l&gt; ':1~~~~~~~'1:.;

Impression that the ligures reported
were lor salaries.
There are many paople In the
community with the Impression (partly
due to quotes attributed to - a
high-ranking U/8 edmlnlstrallve official
In a front-page Buffalo Evening News
article lut summer) that U/B faculty
are underworked and overpaid (accorcJ.
lng to the official the faculty receive

"Changing

'lullsdc'

Nwln polnq out ttwt the center
- . . a "Naalatlc approach" In guiding
"-who aaklor -latance.
l1lraagll a program ol Miltold to
l II •ot. lnclvld- .,._ '*'Ill In their own gcod
~. " exptaina. "TTiOM who
- t o ua aaklng lor Mllatanoe ' - a
lot ollnlonMIIOn within themMI-."
The Wilda to 1.-ep formal
-lng • a minimum, Nevin uya, but

~ ~~ ":t:"r=:~o:~). l-:ll~

s::.:..

e

lome of u- who oome to the
lor help lhlnk they l'leed
..,cllillrlc gu.._, Mre. Nevin uya,
but ... oonelclerthem . . . . ..
'We try to gee them better organlzad

Dental education

"'*'-''•a total ol -

Individual

-. . 1111.-t.
lnllrviMIIII,
.. _..,
llao ....iiilsd the II1IUP
.........,.,lo11.

--~-'t,.tSO
~ ........ of both "*' and
-who-tothecentar._. ,_.
- I n .... a.to-30 age
£11!!;.In thla
8lid

_...,._,....
__,., .... _"'

r.... _ _ _ _ ,.,.

,...._ _,

_ , • • • Q-. .... -

_,
,.,.-...otlol
_

-

.. a -

-IUCIMIWIIO

......

~­

, ....

rv-=

alodenta

~'ft"'~ ::=l:l:.gt=. ~~~·~

"people management" techniques they
l'leed.

-

To do something about thla difficulty, a U/B program llrat qffered
optionally to dental students through
WI HEW .TEAM (Training, Expandild
Auxlltery Mali"agenient) grant two years
-uo Ilea - . enlarged under a grant

,=. , E"
for---llftiUP-.- =::.
.__
_
....
----..y-__,_.__
__
__
--- to 11M them a U'-lyle a little c1oeer
to
desire," . . . . . .

~.':';:.;' ~= t:":~ t~r
latter-earrter.

,r:rav~:

-Merk I. Krfalal
Aaalatlllil Proleaaor ol Psychology

Dentists now learn how to run offices

:=:::~~=.:~

.....,.., and to determine auch other
,_ •
fllwlclel at.t111, family
allllaltlonll, wilting- to move to
....._ -iOn and wltether or not e

t;:'~-:'!ft.WI~':.:.

thai articles like the one In fast weak's
Reporter only add fuel to the lire since
there are no clailflcatlona ol terma, .
explanations of jOb I"IKiulrernenta, or
careful de8Crlptlve statistics ol the
aelary and compenaatfon situation. It
may surprise readers to lind that many
ol ua on the Aealitant Prolasaor level
work In excess ol 50 hours a WMI&lt;,

.--...

Dental Mnlora now participate I~ a
- . - e r courae, a three-day
WOikallop and a IWI&gt;-..ak clinical
c:onoentratlng · on man~ akUia and teohniCI\IM. Thla
oornblned appiOACh, Ml'l Dr. Thomas
ow.do~ atudenta.; to develop
.,._
with p.tlenla and dental

.....,..,_, *''

:cs~p~~~:,tl=

to lllldlratand how to aetabllah , _ and
achedulea on a oo.t..tlectlft baala.
OINanlo, TEAM cun1cuturn ooordlnator1
Ia a CliniCal MIOCiate proleuor 01
dantlatry.

-

J:B:'_..
lan't deelgned to IMiw

"-"
"The

::~.~~~

t h e i r - o f , _ Wllloh 8ffect
plOd~ and .tlectt. . _
In lhe
.
. .the
oltiOe."
WMn ~ - ed. In
~ _ , part of denial
eduolllon, Ill ,.,..., tile llllldulte
Cllnll.t glln II • ~y

-----~·-··-·­
educaiiOn,

or~"'riaa--.
OM pltt.ll In danllll

ow.do ........... tlwt .udlnta who

:Jan-::"~-=~~~:v.::

lldll8 "No

to. IICIId of h - fal:tora.

,..._

.,.,

- - to be IIWted
II 'mouth' ,.._Ulan ee
wltlll'leedl and .........
to denial ...._ . ••

DINardo points out. The same kind ol
unthinking approach In dealing with
dental employees can lead to lowered
ll&lt;Oductlvtty u well u to a high
tumo- rete lor both personnel and
petlenta.
Although law dentists todey work
alone, many know 111116 about datermining how many auxiliaries to hire,
what SChedules and aalarlaa are
reasonable, or how to write job
deacrlptlona and conduct Interviews lor
job applicants. •
"New practltlonera, and evan those
who have been In practice lor a while,
may ba unsure u to the duties I"IKIUirad
gl,.!nl:,en.!.-Ja.aulatant or hygienist,"
lolhlheoryandjnCtioe
In the TEAM courae, atudenta touch
on all theM lactora and their effact on
the delllal olfloe:
Dudng the three-day Intensive worklhoc&gt;. for example, theY're taught
~ ol employ.. lntarvlewlng, Job
dMcrlptiOn planning, achedullng guidelinea, and how \o hOld aflactlw ateH
...-lnga .
An underatandlng o1 coat eflactJ\oe.
- . also lllWaed at theM ..Uiona,
helpe them dlllermlne whether to rent or
~ new BqUIP"*'t, what they
a~Qjld clllrge for vwloua prolentonel

=.=:.

~~rl=

~ who elact to p-.tJdp.te Jn

the TF.-$M'a two-week Clinic
INat
dertl*' clinic p.tlenta at
UIB
a aettlng which -rages
~ion
of theM ,__,...,,
t-=ti~Eadl atudent baa elum aa
clinic
so he or aile can order
auppU.,
.... ........ and den"'
~. and
--dlractly with
IJIQbleine ol p.tlenta and ernl&gt;lor-.
Dr. Nelaon Blackmora, the TEAM
program dlractor and a p10l-r of

'*'

. clinical dentistry, aaya lha clinical
experience hM bean -11 recelftd by
petlenta and atudenta alike. ''The time
patients spend In ,the w81tlng room hu
- . minimized, and aorna other
changee resulting In smoother operationa ' - bean made aa a reeult of
students' auggeetlona," Blackmore

sa~xt spring, TEAM students will have
the opportunity, to uae computera u
tools In affec:tlw 11\lllillgelli8t. They
will 1118 termlnala at GoociYMr and
Parker on the Main Street Cainpua, to
aaslat them In dlll-lnlng ecltedules
based on a hypolhattcai p.tlent loed.
Thle data will theil be uaed to proJect
hypothetical coat.a and prollta Md u
the baala lor atudent daclalonmaklng In - . 1 rnanagemMtl ..u.
Bleckmore aaya some 87 danlal
studenta ' - comDialed the three-daY
workalloDe and 84 .._ p-.tlclpated In
the TEAM Clinical progtWn.
"lnataed ol ~lng on often
~lw trial Wid em~r method&amp; to
dowelop e welk)peraled dental office
and practice, theM atudenta, aa -11 u
others who tOOk the baalc 111C1Uirad
COUrM, will be better prepl!red to
establish and maintain plaaunt,
'll&lt;Oductlw -ofllce altuallona soon after
graduallon," Blackmore believeS.

lggers has
Fulbright grant
Dr. GeOrg G. lggera prolasaor ol
hlatory, has bean~ a FulbrlghtHaya grent lor the 1978-n aoademlc
yew.
loaara will do --.:11 on historical
wrtflng alnoa the 18th century at the
Max Planck lnatltut fur Guchlchte,
Gottlngen, Germany . .

�Mj27,1171

Funny ~nan
Would-be Woody Allen turned his back .
on Price Waterhouse, is running a campus
workshop while he gets his act together

--

- By~~

Growing up In Brooklyn, a boy "gets
alo~," If lie hal athletic pro-a, Ia
~c::::~
h-weoa to have an
St- G..n, Who lays claim to two
doting ~dmothera who thought he
waa the - g-eat thing atnce sliced
bteld," ewned peer approval and
lnnumerllbte atapa on the back by being
Iunny. And funny he atilt Ia.
A Miiy aredUIIIe of U/B, G._, Ia
what st-"Martin .mlllht call " a wild and
c&gt;r+a+z-y guy." lfut he Ia also an
Intelligent and articulate young man
who ,_,tly turned hla back on a
well-paying Job offer with Price
WaterhoUM to de\oote all hla time and
energy to the art of cr.tlng laughter.
h:l'~f~?att~O:t~. moxie to his

·n!:::rvlro.

.C··=

tnt~'::~t~orlntlrutt"::

are pulling" 7or him-people like Life
Workahopa Director Cerole Henneaay
and her ataff Who arTWIIIed (with some
gentle peraueaton) for Green to lead a
Comedy workahop thla aummer.
Ita purpoee, eccordl ng to GrMn, Ia
simply to provide a place where
"aspiring comedlana or those Who just
went to try their hand at being funny''
can perform.
No_... In eltlnlc ~
"There Ia no couree In ethnic Jokea
202," he explains. Unlike other liege
periormera auch as alngen, dancers or
actora, comedians have no place to ao
lor lormallrflnlng 80 one mull learn by
doing .
.

be·~~· ~~ ,:r',:,.?P~:.~~~

enjoy the company of fellow neurottca,"
he Jokingly edded.
rhe llrat hall hour of eech 110-mlnute
workahop -lon eaaurnee a night club
ambiance, wtth GrMn emceefng and
atudenta acting ea en audience lor eech
other'a routlnee.
GrMn makea - t y eaalgnmenta In
spaclflc . . . 80 participants have
ample time to IAPife matartal .
Following the atand-up routines
cornee a -ion on lmprovlaatlon, then
G..n playa back audio tapea from the
llrat half hour end the claaa makes
conatructlft crltlclama of Individual
periormenoaa.
The wol1&lt;ahe&gt;p began on JWMt 29.
"People . . getting good oow, end are
baing mono competltlft. They are also
a mora rMIIIIIc audience llftd won~
laugh II the materiallan'tlunny." G._,
offered.
Wrltlnt Mllllty Ia lmpottant
Being eble to write one's own
material Ia en lmrn:,ant auet to any

~.; &lt;;.: end~~~~.r~~
~y~~1~.: ~~YHA:f:;

(who went to G&lt;Mn'f hiQII achool and
Whose henglng photograph he venerated for four yaera) and St- Martin.
Their albuma, along wtth a aubatantlal
asaortment from other comedt-. line

Truzzl:

a campaign to tn-tgata reports of
- . n a t pllanonwla 11M apttt with
hta former col'-u.z. according to a
l'liPOrt laMI8d lly the ,._ Vorl&lt; Tlmn '

Nawa Sarvtca.
Dr• ....,..to Truzzl contends that the
" - I bacama mono lft(ICCUpled
wtth ..-nctng eUCh raport.a then with
tn-tgattng them fairly.
Truut, a ilocloloalat of ac1an&lt;:a Who
taecn. at EMtern t.lk:lllaan Unlveratty
In Ypal..,tt, bel'- tMl the atudl of

~r=~ ahould no ba
TNZZJ rwiOfl8d ea edltOf of the
group•a maoaz~na then called rhe
z.tailc, and aetabl ailed a new journal ,
=:-tcacon~ttng..':::. I~ bo
lllagRJna le now called The Slrept/ca
~~~C:,':: and the new one, Zetet/c

1

et~~·~r~~~~~.a~~

:P.:;: :=-;~

fall Ia another Important factor In a
comedian's aucceaa and longevity.
Green, who considers himself a " rank
beginner." appeared at catch a Rtalng
Star In New Vorl&lt; Clty, waa heckled, and
did seven mlnutea of material In a
record five. But like MacArthur, . he
tnatata he will one day return .
Despite strong protests from his
roommate, GrMn often drags him off to
Judge his new material. He ctalma he
knows It's a winner If he can make this
periurbed and "captive audience" of one
chuckle.

Wh~~~~ bright accounting major

who worked summers aa a stock broker
trainee with Merrill Lynch and aa an
edvance man for a congressman decide
to make comedy such an lnl"'lral part of
hlallfe? Aa Green puts It: "It just mekes
more sense to ba Irrational than

~~~n:·b~r;~r ~othz:~.T~.~~:~~
alt~=~':!ftf:•::~Ug~hl~:-~! ~

=

grow::J up (his faiher died at an early

:We wtthh~~~':~~otl:~

~~

~~~~~e.=li. ~~or::.~.:;~t

G._, waa able to tum away any
:::ljl;~tve emotions by uatng laughter for
Beets therapy
" It beats 20 years with a therapist,"
he muaed .
This fall ,
hopes to laed two

a....

=~ ~~r ~~~ah,::~~rit!:~~,g~

Unlveralty community to vi- hla
students' performances. He also plans
0

~n.=k ~~~~~f/~t~:~.: l~~:g~~

spots. Meanwhile, he will continue to
write and " get the bugs out• of hla
routines.
Green haa every Intention of " mektng
II." His enthualaam and atlck-te&gt;ttlv-aa are tnlactloua. But right now,
he considers hla primary needs a bit
different from the Maslow hierarchy:
food , water, a double bed , a nice girt
and a Bugs Bunny cartoon.

Michigan prof defects from Kurtz group

One of the acholafa Who helped start

==

the floor around hta stereo.
What makes a great comedian,
Instated Green, Ia hla ability to " apeak
through hla heart" and "let his
personality emerge through hta materIal.'' Popple can Identity with a bullied
and perplexed Allen , a no-respect
Dangertteld or a Macttn who often
portrays a typical " whoopee cushion"
type of partygoer Whom everybody
unsuccessfully tries to &amp;YOid .
'Making It' not eeay
As might well be Imagined, mektng II
In show bl1 Is no easy task, but G._,
Intends to survive aa a comedian by
meklng It a " 24-tlour job.'' " I never atop
thinking of jokes," aaya Green. He often
awekea In the middle of the night an!l
quickly jots down a good Idea or line he
can Incorporate Into routines. He
describes hta act aa "sarcastic wtth an

the~.!:;:~lflc ~=i~~~o~~'al~";;:.f~

the Paranormal , grew out of a widely
publlahed denunciation of aatrology

=nbleJ:.Stt:l=~~~~h~~:;
proteaaor of philosophy hera, maintains
that the nation Ia awaah In a rtstn~

~ 1~or:'~'7 =u~tul:r ~

phenomena; he eeya thta portends
grave coneequanoaa for a aoctaty
r-lly Influenced by public Df~nlon.
"Thla Ia abaolute nonsense, accordIng to Truul, the Ieeder of the
tnekaway group.
Truzzl told the Time• he little
danger In lhacurr.nt popularity of paranormal matten. The rising t n t -. he
contends, raflecta a trar\d In which
believers In theee toptca are abandonIng supernatural axptanatlona and
eeeklng enawers through eclence.

With the demysttflcatton of religions,
Truzzt aatd In a telephone Interview with
the Times, betlefa that uaed to be the
focus of aecrat aoctattea and myateterloua cults are now being tested for
natural explanations.

AI~ ~~J:~ ~~=n:~ ~ of.tn
unldentTtled flying objects; J. B. R~ne.
a Duke Untveralty pavchotoglat , to teat
ext.--naory parcaplton,- and Michel
Gauquettn, a French paychologtat, to
teat aatrology atatlallcalty.

"I think thla Ia only healthy." Truzzl
told the Times, adding that he believes
many such lnveallgatora are deeltng
with "matters that preeent legitimate
puzzle araaa lor science.
" I don't doubt that gg per cent of

~~~~::J.I~r~:ly fatsei~ Tt~

to be based on en e==rlon of the
evidence by people qualified to do that,
not on outright condemnation . We
ahoutdn1 just dlsmtaa thaae things out
of hand."

Profs contribute to dictionary
The New Grove Dictionary of Music
two major articles. Pro.leasor David
IIJid Muriclanr, which haa called a
Fuller wrote two major artlctaa, and
"'*r tandmarll In musical lextc:o- . Professor Jamea Coo- wrote one. •
gra:phy, contatna contributions from
Bernice L. Poaa, aaalatant dean, Arta
aeverat U/B faculty.
and Letters, aald that unit "Ia proud to
Professor Jeremy Noble aa a
have these professors Included In the
member of the axecut1ve committee
company of the loremoat scholars and
(the wortc took eight yewa) and wrote
historians of muatc In the world."

�....u ..

Job prospects improved,
two surveys indicate

Moscow'79
Grad students and faculty who would like
to be part of Soviet exchange program
can apply to .International Studies now
application forma which will be
accompanied by complete Instructions.
At thla time, the em~hesla In the

~~~~~~=~~~C:~u:;;n~~~

aceclemlc y..,. and semester programs.
Thus fw, SUNY faculty exchangees
heve specialized l n Russian/SOviet
I!"'Quagea and llteratunaa, Russian/
SoViet history, economics, labor
relatiOns, and public administration.
Whether or not Russian language
competence Ia requlnad will depend on
the specific lntenaata and nature of the
scholarly project of the Individual
applicant. MGU will provide translatIng/Interpreting a«vlcea only to full
protauora on a limited baala to be
planned In .lldvance.

Procedure for applying
1

wl~~/: ~~ ~~':c/1 ~n°~~~~t7'~.'l

Studies. The prospective applicant
should be prepanad to discuss the
scholarly project he/she would like to
undertake In the USSR or an Idea of
What ha/ahe Intends to do there. After
the ·preliminary discussion, the faculty
member should request a aet of
application forma . The forms specify all
of the data requlnad and provlda
procedLRI Instructions.

=

0c1::.,~·~r:J~:~~r~:r.'ll~~:,:;
1m and

Mmester 1980. In

=-~lor aJufr..:,S~~yO:. a
1

The SUNY-wide nominating committee will conv- on or about
No.-nber 15 to Interview candidates.
Committee daclalonl will be announced
to the applicants wlthl~ two Wllaka.
By Jan-r 15, 111711, detailed
IIPPIIcatlona and supporting data will be
forwarded to MGU by the Cenlfal Office
of International Programs.
U/B applications from both gnad
at.-.ta and faculty lhOuld be
forwwded to Dr. Albert L. Michaela,
dlnactor,. Council on International
Studies. Or. Ronald Bunn, vice
pnaaldent for aceclemlc affalra, would
llka the applications to be aa-eened
hare before going to Albany. If the

"""\rc':1on~l= aaJ~~~florf.
:nl
be made locally to provide funding .

..J:.•
f:U:,Y;~c'l,': 'i1:":'~:re
studanta for a fully-. or 10 for a single
- t e r. It authorizes an exchange of
junior faculty (through associate
profeaaorl within a total of 20
man-man ha par calendar y..,., and lor
a compwabla exchange at the full
profeaaor level.

12 receive 'seed' grants;
others get funds, too
ScuiDture Project," $1000; Stanley
Zlonte, ep..tlone Analyale, "Multiple
Or1terla Problem Solving with Dlactete
A!Nm81'-." 11200; and Ezra ZUbrow,
Antlvoflology, "&amp;II million of Number,
SID and ~ion of ""'-&gt;&gt;ogical
Sitae In
'New YOII&lt;." $2!100'.
The following projectl, recommended by the Unr-alty-wlde com-

w-

=-::! .,;:,
:o=., blu..J~
-.roe.

from-'*

IICCOidlng to Dr.
Anchw
HOlt, acting Un'-alty ~
for gnlduata and prof8SIIonaJ education:

w.

E=of~:;K~I~yln~':

Cllanne4 Unk L.engthe. ~S750; James B.
Au-n, lAw. '1iijunctlonl and Labor
Pldcetlna: An E'mpfrical AnaJyela,"
$1000; ......... J . liNger, lAw, "E'Ihloal
the Altocafon of 1,.91 Aid, "
11000; J . Aonlllcl Gentile, Educational

..._In

~~=~~,;

Contingent on Anolller." 11100; Carolyn
l(oqmjyer, PIIIIOeoptly, "''Npamlon
for ~~~~~ the Impact of Famlnlem

on

l'lll~lcel

Bllan

Setu.

ScllolerWiip," 1547;

Cl¥11 EnQ"--ng, "The

lnter.ctlon of Two-DI"**IIonal Buoyant TUIIIu- Jet with the Bloplng
Bolt ," $1!100;
Sidle Biological Science,
"Ph"Y'Tologtcat Studlel of Flight Distance ~I In Honavbeea."
$1700; and Dev1d Tarllel, Englleh,
" J - eoawa11 and the Law." S!ICIO.

'!!.!:!::

July 27, 1871

'

Job prospects lor college gnaduates
this year are batter than a y..,. ago,
according to two national surveys.
Improvement was reported by both
the College Placement Council and
Northwestern University's 1978 Endicott report . The latest CPC survey
showed that 661 employer respondents
heve hired or pll!fl to hire eleven per cent
more college gnaduates than a year ego.
CPC noted that an earlier pnadlctlon of a
16 per cant Increase was softened by
the fact that the federal government
Increased Its hiring of college graduates ·
by only live per cent rather than by 23
per cent as anticipated fast fall . In the
private sioc:tor, however. employers
reported a gain of 14 per cent -exactly
the figure projected.
The Northwestern survey, conducted
by Frank S. Endicott, retired director of
placement and professor emeritus of
aducatlon at thai university, showed
thet 76 of the natlon'slargest employers
plan to hire 17 per cent more bachelor's
degree graduates than last year - an
estimated 14,590 In 1978 compared to
12,4861n 1977. At the master's level, the
firms expect to hire six per cent more
than last year. They hired 2,779
graduates with master's degrees in 1977
compared to a forecast ol2,9441n 1978.
" Demand lor graduates In engineerIng and other technical fields continues
to dominate the job market ," Endlcoll
said . Compared to a
8QO, demand
for bachelor-degree eng n ~s Is up 27
per oent and demand for bachelor-lavel
accounting and business administration graduates Is up 12 per oent.
However, demand for liberal arts and
other non-!echnlcaJ graduates Is down
three peroent .

CPCflawes
Similar ligures were reported by CPC
Whose survey co-s positions available
In employing organizations In business,

~n~u!:,'.rc.tYg:f'l~~rr~~~:~:, e=~~

teaching positions. Four broad discipline categories are surveyed at all
degree favela . Three of these discipline
categories ended the year with
substantial gains: engln-lng , 26 per
cent; sciences, mathemaUcs, and other
technical , 13 per cent ; and business.

~~C .1:-t'::~~~~.e s{::,'!'~ !":~~

cent decrease rather than a 20 per cent
gain as estimated last fall. CPC said
thla was due largely to less-thananticipated hiring by-' the federal
government which Is the largest
employer of graduates In non-technical
disciplines repnaaanted In the survey.
Although federal hiring was at the same
level as last year, the hiring of
non-technical gnaduates by the private
sector and by local and state
go-nments continued to decline.
" Many of the employer-respondents
In the survey commented on the heavy
competition for engineers and this was
borne out by the Increased activity
naported." CPC aaJd . Hiring of
engineers was up 25 per cent at the
bachelor'a-degree lavel, 34 per cent at
the master's level, and 33 per cent at the
doctorel lavel .
C&amp;ndldates In the scientific dla-

..

:r~ ~~': '~:, ~!=~"at·:~

bachelor's level ~ur 13 per oent) and at
the master's lave {up 30 par oent).
However, job opportunities among
responding
employers
for Ph.D.
scientists decreased nina par oent from
last year. The business-related disciplines experienced an Increase of nine
par oent at the bachelor's lavel,

:..~~an~.::~;.~~'=·=;
than anticipated, how-.

By type of employer, eleven
categories boo~ed employment of new
college graduates by 15 per cent or
mora o - last y -. Greatest lmproment was registered by petroleum and
product e. other bualneaa and Industry,
building materlale manufacturers and
construction, utilities and transport•
lion,
-ospaca/alectronlcs/lnstrumenta, and food and beverage
procaeslng. In contraat, live employer
categorlellndlcated dacllnea In hiring:
metals and metal producte, local and

~~~vem=~~t~~1~1
peckaglng , and !Ire and

rut&gt;'~:.

s.- &amp;&amp;aln next ye&amp;r
Generally, moat respondents predicted a continuation of thle yws
trends ,or next. Demand for majora In
angln-lng, computer sclenca, and the
geological eclancas Ia axpec·ad to

1

·1~'/da~ho~Pdh;....,~·~u t~~tor:'i~

11

In Endlcoll'a survey ha asked
employers about gnaduatee who feel
over-qualified for available jobs. Moat
of the responding firms Indicated the!
very few graduates reject lob offers
because of What they cons der to be
over-qualification. While some gnaduates may consider themselves o-quallfied , most of the employers
responding to the survey did not bellave
many gradual.. are
qualllled. Endlcoll noted tha eo per
cent of these firma do not hi re collage
graduates lor jobs that do not require a
college degree. The remaining 40 per
cent said they sometimes employ
college graduates In plant and clertcal
positions which are non-technical In
nalure. They are also employed as
techn lclana, compUter programmers,
sales repraaentatlvaa, or lor other
hourly compensated jobs throughout
the company. When asked whet
happens to these gnaduates, moat of
the companies which hire collage
graduates for lobs that do not require
degrees said they are able to promote
those who stay. In some companies,
howe-. many of the graduates leave.

naa//r

0--

nps tor students
Endlcoll also asked employers what
can be done to solve the problem of
over-qualification.
Moat
frequently
mentioned was the suggestion that
college students davelop marketable
skills and that they make reaJia.t lc plans.
Endicott aald the following ware
representative answers from the firms:
" Students should be helped to bring
their expectations more In line with the
real world .... The number of graduates
exceeds the needs of education,
government, and business .... Encourage students to give sarioua thought to
their career goals and to prepare
themaefvea accordingly .... Companies
should realistically repraaant positions
offered without trying to Inflate job
responsibilities .... "
'

Ketter makes
5 appointments
Five appointments · ware announced
this week by President Robart L . Ketter:
•Dr•..Robart er.atay has bean named
Gray Proleaaor of English, for the
period September1,1978, to August31 ,
1983. "Thla appointment Indicates the
hi gh academic regard with Which you
are held," Ketter told the POet .
•Dr. John Dulldn Ia ectl~ chairman
of the Dapertmant of M'atharnatlca,
effective Immediately.
•Dr. P - Oold will continue as
acting master of Rachal Caraon Collage
from Saptatnbac 1, 1978,' to August 31 ,
19711.
.
•Dr. C. Alan-tloone of the Department
of Modern Languages and Uteraturea
has been given a two-y-. term as .
master and chairman of the fellows of
Vlco Collage, alfactlve September 1,
1978.
•Dr. Lea Dryden Ia appointed master
of College H1 affective lmmadlatell and"·
continuing ror the ramaJndar o the
chWiertng term of t -

v--.

SUNY grant

competition open
tr:uJ~~~~~~C:~~::'su~~
~r~:· -~lea_.~~r

}:;

orJ!;I

Research, 520 Caoan Hall, 83&amp;-2977.
The University Awwda program olfera
lellowahlpe and grant•ln-ald to full
lima faculty membarl to carry out
,..._ch, lnlllataa.tlve projects In the
fine erta or puraue other echolarly
actlvlllel. An applicant may choose
from one of three programs.
Prog,.m 1 consists of the faculty
re-ch fellowlhlp Which usually

=•

~ 1~r.\'~. ~~

~am

~: ur~

lor two
2 consleta of a grant-In-aid

':.=

~d :::rta 'roaxl:~
re~h costa connected with scholarly and creative actlvltlel.
Profl'*m 3 consl11a of a faculiy
r-.fallowahlp with il etlpend of
~~i~~ ~-:o~~.~t-ln-ald lor a
Applications going to Albany must be

~.-~~~:J::'1o~roR"J.~fl~ ~~~~· ~~~

October 13, 1978.

�7

Venezuelan educators
will visit in August A group of 81 admlnlatratore from
lnatltutlona of higher learning In
Venezuela will be on campus for a week
In Nrly August as part of an
Inter-American seminar on problems of
higher education.

~~~~r~"Coth~~~c~rl.,:;~l an~~~

sectors of education, will spend the
second half of Ita visit In the U.S. at
Harvard.

dl!.,.~l~

W1eDriJt1lberteo~~-~n
International Studleo, which Is the host
for the Yleltlng educators, this Ia the

=

~~~~r ::r~r.;:;.r.ro:ved~

r,::.r~~.:-!~l:::..rapldly expandTh- yew8 ago, a group went to

=~f::.~~~r==~-=
so effectlw, Mlcheelo laid, that the

:t:."Bnt!-.~~ t~ apl t~\"ri;
1

second yew'e ~ram betWMn Ithaca
(for a view of a
vate university) and
Buffalo (for
public university
JMQPeC!Ive). Thla ve-, Harvard Ia the
private unlwrslty hoot.
Forty lndlvkjuala attended the first
ywa ~·· Now, there are 20
more. There Is aleo an extenolw walling
llot which has prompted the sponsoring
organlz.atlon to consider the possibility

::Y.'':tc,

J=le:.

of
-:.:.on
coming here, not to copy, but to
o b - how we have gone about facing
and ~lYing · chllllengea of rapid
growth and ~opment . Venezuela
hal one of the wortd'a rut..t-growlng
educational ayatema, he aald. It Ia a
special tribUte to U/8, Mlcheeta thinks,
that hive - . aetec:tad as the
ptOtOtY.J)8 of the major publk:ly-

aurm~.:.,~~~8d In the
Ylaltlng del~lon Include: the Military
Academy of Venezuela; the National
Center for the Improvement of the
Teach)ng of Sclencea; the )unlor

colleges of c.r.caa and Mwacalbo; the
Educredlto (Educational Loan AssocIation); the Army Institute of Higher
Education ; - . ) pedagogical Institutes and Institutes of technology;
the Ministry of Education ; the Central
Unl-alty of Venezuela; and Simon
Bolivar University/ to mention a few .
On-campus In ormatlonal sessions
(wi th simultaneous translations) will be
led by: President Robert L. Ketter; Dr.
Stephen C. Dunnett, director, Intensive
English langu~~ge Institute, on "Models
of Governance In American Uni--

~!Y:t:.-..t Po'·the~=en~..~~.ai~~~~

~~tala;'=··~~-;:~·~

president, health aclenceo, "Authority
System Hlerarchleo;" Dr. Charleo Ebert,

r,&gt;f~~~of ~~tz:. -~~~~'ln~
Baumer, controller, "Fund Raising and
Budget Planning;" Dr. Bhal Bhatt,

~=~~f S'c~~a~~n M~~';;:,

"lnternatlonaltzatlon of the Management Curriculum;" Dr. Michael Frisch,
"The Development of American Studies
and Latin American Studies;" Mr.
Richard Dremuk, director of admissions
and records; Professor Edward Seidel,
Empire State College, ''The Unlvenslty
Without Walla; • and Or. Ronald Bunn,
vice president for academic affairs.
Moat of one day will be spent at
Gen- Communltl College, looking
at the programs o tw~year I nstitutlons.
Besides comparing notes o~ IICadernlc questions, the group will meet
with Buffalo Mayor Jamea Grtffln In

~ ~~JC: ~'l!lu't:-3·:::~ !~~

champ11Qne reception at the Wm .
Hengerer Company downtown by that
store's new pnaaldent, Mr. John
Murphy. At Hengere(a they will receive
some tips on shopping In America and
1
8
wi!J,'!;.ql t":'.! ~':';,~fu~1 ~C:air1pa to
Toronto, to Artpert&lt;, and, of course, to
the Falla.

::::::=....-

Poetry fe_st is ending
Campus ewnta take place In Clemens Hall, Amh- . and In the Abbott
Ubrary "Poetry Room, Main Straet. For specific locations at Artpert&lt;, Inquire
at Poetry Festival Information Desk, Log Cabin, Art park.
All......,ta are free and open to the general public, except as aaterlsked .
•Cradlt Free Worl&lt;ehopa: restricted to enrolled members.
~~~;~ fnf"~i ~ce registration encouraged .

1

Thur8dey, July 27
AtArtpM11:

At SUNYAI:

AtArtpM11:

2:()().. 8:00pm ••Niagara-Erie Wrltere Book Fair-first
day (display apace available for. poetry
)oumals an~ small pres~ publications)
3:()().. 5:00pm ••N .E.W. Wort&lt;shop with Dennis
Maloney (emphasis on reg ional poetry of
New York State)
tO:OO..tt :OOarn Open Offloe Hour with Anselm Hollo
(433 Clemens)
3:00.. 4:00pm Lecture by Anselm Hollo (438 Clemens)
4:()().. 5:00pm r,:ct~o~a~f"~~·.=~~)
8:» 8:00pm •eredlt Free Workshop with Anselm
Hollo (438 Clemens)
8:» 9:30pm Butler Chair Reading by Anselm Hollo
(438 Clemens) ·
Friday, July 21
2:()().. 8:00p.m . ••N.E.W. Book Fair-2nd day (-July
27)
.
2:()().. 4:00 p.m. • ·wort&lt;ahop with John Gill, Dennis

~~~Jiwa~em~~[· ~~e o~':a~

on
lion and hlatory of small presses)
4:00.. 5:00 p.m. Poetry R81101ng by Anselm Hollo
At SUNYAI:

Noon- t :oo p.m. ~~::,o~:r~"o~D~';.".'(~~~t"~~
Poetry Room)
8:00.. 11:00 p.m. Lecture by Robert Hasa (438 Clemens)

Saturday, July 21
AtArll*t:

2:oo-

e:oo p.m . ~~r ·M"'· Book FaJr-3rd day c-

2:oo- 3:00 p.m. • ·~orkahop/Readlng by Robert Haas
3:()().. 5:00p.m. ~ Reading Ill (~one welcome)
4:00.. 8:00p.m. • N.E.W. Workahop with Graca
Amlgone'o Poetry Here and Now

Sunday, July 30
At~ :

4:00 p_m. ••N .E.W. Book Fair-final day ( July27)
1:00.. 1
p.m. Poeta' and Artists' Picnic
2:00.. 3:00 p.m. ••worttlhop with Dan Murray, Sh-la
Ray, and Max Wickert
Poetry and
Frtendahlp)
•
4:00.. 5:30p.m. Performance by The Four Horsemen .
2:()()..

Ufe -

your pootidpollon . . •
In 1ho Fol 1978 orogrwn . 0 )'OU -or 1hot you woold h 1o - . ,
- - - of 1ho U / 8 """'""-""·

-

o -

Ufe-.,.,.

conlact tho
ollice ot 11 o ·
- . _ 838-2808. 1o ob1o1n o ~form. In tho - l crodil-

--ctwvo.

how_,,.._,.,,end_.

-

-.e

ond Ad-.. T--Grrto In o ~ .._, , _ - .·

UFE WOIIKaHOPS

wor1&lt;o/1oc&gt;O
oflenJd to tho U / 8
"""'""-"" (-.rty. atoff.
on • Mde vorioty of a.tljec:ll lnc1udO&gt;g yoga.

New-

joz;zdonoo.
--. oomody. ~
Spanish. end...,. end--·

can repeat ~ « deYelop new ones.
Proc&gt;oaotoforthoFolorogrwn.,.. -August 11 .

Anolylio. F-8085.
· - (1*1--)-flxed _
,
Oonllolry, F-8088.
- o r - l o ,_--()ompulor

Sdonc:e. F-8087.
A-n1 or - • ,_--&lt;:ompu~or
Sdonc:e, F-8088._,.
Aooloton1or_lo_GIInduatrlol

-~end

F-8089.
Aoals10n1 or - l o -

Hunw&gt; -

·
of IVrwl

~---·

F-8090.

A......,ftt. Auode-.

Of

Ful ProtMaor al

Flno--&lt;lporationoAnolylio. F-8091 -

PSYCHOI.OQY EXPERIMENT
The Paydlotogy Depnnont wil poy $3 mini·

....,. lor your poniclpalion In • Psychology
tf interested, contact Ms. HEMdi
WeWuss , 831 ·1386, Mondey·Ftiday, 9 a.m.·
5p.m.

e)(peliment.

RECORO Co-oP
The U I 8 - C&lt;H&gt;p In Squire Hells open
Mondoy·Fridey nights from 7·9 p .m ••
Monday
end Friday eftemoons from 12·2 p .m .

end

JOBS
NO~ CIVIl

SERVICE
Cloo-, 50-4--&lt;:uolodiel SorW:es, Moln St.
UneNo. 31591 .
c...ner. SQ.4--0 ~:slodilf Services, Almerst.
Une No. 40282.
JonHor SG4-4&gt;hyalcel Plant, ~
porwyuntl8 130 1 78 then - 1). Une No.

c-.

31479
PROFESSIOHAL STAFF

Ptol-·

- ·· Schoof
"' - " " Relolod
-8-aQ21
.
Foci- Progrwn Coordt,.tor (081--"~ . 8·8022 .

FACULTY
Vlollfng ---or~~~~~­

lalo~Sc:ionceo, F-8077 .

AMietant -Praft~Mor----Ctwt!OIIIITI6tllll AtWyeis
&amp;~. F-8078

Alolo10n1
F.aQ78.

----·-~

5)'011rn8.

. . . . ."' , _ " ' Accounll~·

tiona Anofv*. F-8080

Alolo10n1-clllo_._.
_.,.,_,_. Sya-.. ' , . . _ , Scionce.
F-8081.

~~:oe~~

--.

......." ' _ " ' -ntt-OPordono

Anolylio, F·~

-

AMiotan1 , , . . , _ Gl Flnonce, ()porationa

.F·fl08•

....

-~

Craft Center
sets workshops
The Cnsatlve Craft Center hat
ennouncad two workahopa for August:
Jewel ry-maklng atart a August 8
(afternoon and -.lng sessions).
Pllotography (camera operation)
starfa August t (two sessions) .
The Craft Center Ia located In 120
MFACC, Ellicott. Call 838-220t (from
1-5 p.m . or 7-10 p.m. Monday through
Thursday) for registration Information .

~:h&lt;;:nter.,\'~fer~~_;~neJy o.!c~r.'r:l~
year-round.

.-

�.....
_
----

July 27, 1171

. . . . - Cenlor, -

-· lor·-· /acuity,- ·For 1\lrthar ~nf&lt;&gt;nn~Mon . coi871H1313.

_
T-.
............
_......., ... .._,_ ,Speooeond

___ ____

_,~Uiolol-­

-Dowie~

...... 311taon..•pm

·Gibert--·· The-..

~ o1

110&lt;*W -

_.,...

--

The-· . , _ - muoic-

...... -IT..r,. -"'"-Yo (A.
1827). 1&lt;18~. 7p.r n . -

-

..,..Oololorlor-I!'ICIY.

eon-. -

Sclnf·Aatchor.

- . - ( l i l l y, 18711

OOniWonoo

The In
plot Ia - lntilcala - ""' · - d
c:arWa
where ft 111\M place. Bolh

· _,.,., 01183&amp;-2819 l o r - -dlorge.
_
. , _ _ _ IMng..-

""""' -

-..-·a~lbcuthii-

--- ... _,__
-

-

&lt;jay ... jux1opoaed with iiiiirtdog gaiety to cnoala a ito&lt;y tho~ rruch circum- .. andal_,rty-..-.

The-.,-orw_ __ _

SHAKESPEAIIE lll'lltE PARK•

.,_,___

~Y--IGr

waa

Study.

MJOMDHITCHCOQ{•

~ 1011 ~- 9 p.m.
!lpaNG'Od
llr ._
. Cenlor
loraa.dy.
,. _
_
ln-ln1831,

--1.

-114*1&gt;-..rllrlr'CI'Id.._.._

- Hilchcocldan
plots moka
rruch - It's ., bland - d laughlar

WM1977). OOniWonoo
· _,.,._01183&amp;-21119 for- limos.
-

(lilly,

- d w g a.

THURSDAY-3

------·
SATURDAY-29

FACUlTY AIIT8 COLLOQUIA-·

The.....,."''-- and w-"' cwr-

---.~"*""~309 Oemena. • p.m.llr the Faculty d At1a ond 1.--.
SUm!or l'rocJim on . . _ , _
, 5peooe
the &amp;.nmar Sooalona.

~-lll'lltEAIITa

ond

- Courter ~

Chamol 17'&amp; .... -

(ChamoiS). • p m (.....,I

STRUCTURAL IIEntOOOI.OGY .. F1UI

' - audl, ccmor ol
- - - Fony. 9 p.m. ~ $2.

-____ . __

- I
-C
I-7
0 io rJ I I. .. b
! fe
t --.
-

l l r - . 1 h o . _ _ . a _.

---

----~-~~~~---­
-. ,·~--­

SHAXESPEAIIEONfiLM•

s.--

- -·~laiObadhe'agoodl

Study.

WEDNUOAYSU..a!FORUII"

-(187•1~-.
ScJftCll83&amp;-28191or
_
_ _ dwga_

_T_'a _

_. . _ _ , . . _ ..

____ ......,__ondlla-.
._._

A yoong

c:GI.OPa (ployod 11r CWola L...-o
~-.,.,.. thalr rrwrtaeo

.,.,. --(will~~~~-

TUESDAY-1

11 a.m,

- ___

lng I pot1lally
---

-ad-

MONDAY-IJ JJ

....

.......,.._

Cenlorllr_...., _,
ill 101

1 ·:10 p .OI llpor&gt;-

. , ..0111111,
.,_, -

..... _.,-~~~~-Cenlorlor­
_.,
~-- ---- -1838)

1011Diofan.

Crlola,

- - - cHid paycl'iolrlal~ ~- ("CCIIdran d
(Chamol 8). 8:30

- - - CGullar

c.-

p.lft INN'l

-.v.s·

STIIUCTVRAI.IIIETitOOOI.OGY ll(fLII

·

... of - · - t.a. ToMo
Da -(Clair, 1930). 1011 ~- 7 p.m.
!lpaNG'Odb,l tho Conlartar-SU!y.

__,.lll'lltEPAIII(•

The ..., -

.. Wlolclior. -

0.-

. _ d - . Pork. 8 p.m. ~ by
1ho~d-. FrM. ·

~In-- Part&lt;" - - with

";:_

~~h.~~"'.=----ln~~
;;;;;.olt.oo.~

- ..~.

"The -., - "' ~-· 11a1 ollortat pr-.g a "loughlng
COIMdy
._...,. -

-

.

...,,.

_ . or lw com-

-

....., ., 1ho -

-

o1 -

or d -

-

·

.,., rwq,

~~:._--'!..a~'"":.!.': ~
iOr., ..,. .,., , _.,_

-

"""'-.rng .. ahiltlng
.,.., ,_...,. _ _ ..

--..-··-·

..

~~~a..

_ , . _ .. _

_ , _ _ ......,.., . . _ . , . , _
-'Y ,.,.,....,. tho

.. "'" ,_, -

........... ( - -. 1930). 1011 - . . -.
2:30 p.m. 11r tho Cenlar for -

~-about a~ otor who-

bor cilughlar'a •rcr ...,.,..._FeaLna

. . , _ _ __,,..,._

.

p.m.

-l.on'e-EianWtdnwlnalart~tllio..,..

....-... paycllologlcal a1me -

t.-rotly

-llrFI!tz~lht~tlm-

~ ..... -lnlonaMy llr l.on'e,
h l a - -.t. Ha playa.,_, -

- - - l n -. '

.-.g

-

Gibert--··The-_,

OI'EIIA"
-

Hal. 8 p.m. ~ ptlcaa . .: $3

-: - ; $2U/B~.-.: $1

lllr -

- T1ckola ... b e -

dtho
_T1ckat
_ Olltce
_ atthedOor.
- -..
!4*•
.... In
bV tho ()pan! - . o p d U I B'a oapnnont d
Mualc.

The...,_., _

--.viEIII'IltEPAIII(•

__ _

. _ d -.Pork. 8 p.m. !lpaNG'Od 11r 1ho
~d-. FrM .

WM....-a-...-.·
---c-.111611The -

lOr---

OM ~ 11160). ~

-- d w
· Squn.
g a.Col 113&amp;-2819

r....,-.,..,...,,..,be_t

- - O N fiLM•
- _ (~
-.
. - t.
7 p,m.
. . , . , .1850).
c.m.1•6
rcr

Madia Study.
7hll lt'a t..annc. ~ &amp;...
Shanlal. The proO,JCionla bealtiiiAir- 1n
oolcw, ln Italy,- though . . . . . .. -

NOTICES
ORONIICBITUI
Too rruch on y o u r - - _ . . ,
Coma 10 tho Orop-ln Conlar. The ......

""'10?

. . 10 a.m... p.m. at 100 -

-"""""*'oiObe-.
In t h o - - f o r

~
"~""':""-=
lnlala161111al1ho-do.--l.

-

1-

ANAI.Y-·

•

SfiiUClUIIAI.~YIIIFILM

aCOIMdy.

. . . . . . . 011 ....

ol ~ Moot COI.Room, 0 -. 10
a.m., wlth~lon---at2p.(n.
-llrtheFacultyd~-

~TIONIIII'IltEAIITa"

__
_
--..----IUftdDoOI/....
_____
.... ___
--I"A---ca-.
.. ... __ Jolin-CII~1•1or---c~wga.

Fullor, a--'n-. ~

t o - tho

ANALV.S•

M (Lang, 1831). 1011 - . . - t. 1'
$j)Cf-.d llr tho Cenlar for- SU!y.

-

--lla~ll-

In bolh ~ti; ft'o., -

'*-

-..c197•1~------

-_IIJ...-t
-..

WEDNESDAY- 2

c -. 1908). 1011 Olelendorl.
Sponp-ad 11r the Centoor lor Media

O!oon- bolh playa tho leading- ond

SUNDAY-30

.._._
__

ASIOACOUSTICS LECliJIIE I
SpKlal " - ' " ol , _ - . Roger E. A.
Amdl, , . _ DlallngUahad lAcUw In
Fluid llylwnlca. 100 - 8 p.m. llr tho FocUiy ol ~- Al&gt;lllod Sdonoas'
for Fluid llylwnlca. .

'-.--'**'·wtich '*--. rtrt.

--

- - ...... Loa/lngllaacf1ho~

=-7plll

e..-----

S..CaryGronl,
Mt. - - - ' I ' had
lun dActlnQ tl1io . , . _ . , _ apy ·
and you'l lun -""*'~~ ll Grw1t accldantly
l&gt;aconM entangled In ona d typ1co11y

llr~c.-.---.e.

'*'4111

FrM.

F1UIS OF ALFliiD HITCHCOCK•
_ . . , - (1959). f46 Olalendorl.
9 p.m. ~ by the Cenlar for Modla

- 2:30p.m.
-llr1hoCento&lt;for-SU!y.

........ . .
-·

d - . Part&lt;. 8 p.m. Sponp-ad 11r

the~tol-.

... _

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-

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the

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-.y b!ougl1t about
llr t h o · - ·" * . - ooclaty. Pomp-

FRIDAY-28

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at ""' Cameo

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and rompa c:ornl*!a lunar .,.tnoa
with -.a eociol
on 1ho

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.. . . - . Ooly tim_..,
..... both
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pooi1lon
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daaigl, Wglnla - . aet doo!ll" - - dlnldlon, Butlar; IIQh4lncj daaigl, oo.Gur-.
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.

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- H a l. 8p.m. _ p t l c a a _ $3
: $2 U / 8
....,.., S1
Tlckola ... b e at SquA Tlckat 011tce ona In - . : .

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.........,.., ... Fecully o l - - ! . - .

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~nlghta. 5p.m.-9p.m.

r---~~~--------------------------------·~&amp;M::~·ea::~:::·~·:~~~r~·~::-~'
PUTUSONYOUIIUST
"
hopea to provide the campuo with •
com..,.._... we.ldr hllng of end 8Cti¥111H, ftDm fllmt and
· - · to oclentlflc colloquia. We'R print both your notlcea end your
publicity phot" (a epece pem~lh) H you tupply ua with gloeay prlnh. The
a.Yice Ia lrM. To -.:1 Information, call Jean Shred•, 631-2821, by
M~ . . _ for lnclualon In the Collowlng Thrnclloy't laaue. Or, mall
Information to lleportar "C.Iendar," 138 CroHa Hall, Amhetat. We need your
aaalatance In making the "Catend~ •• complete •• poaalble.
Key: l()pen only to thoM with • prof•alonal lnt.,..tln the aubjact · •open
to the pub!lc: • •open to members of the Unl-slly. UniHa oth...w toe
apeclllad , tlcketa
charging admission can be purch11ad at the
Squirt Hall Ticket Office .
The

,._,.., "Ceeendr'

lor_,,

•

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Soviet officials and an American author

-........... - j f r o m l e f t ) -~!enVY. group-oltheSoYiet-.onow !Jiudying

.,
here:

_, e - Embosoy
~VIce----~.--_ o l t h

--v-

Awwo-wl'ri'lg
ou1t1or Oonold - • erd'IQ • - A1ere
. Ho'agl¥al--ond-otlcllon.....tllng-

-.g~on ; ni-Olnlott.&lt;hctordlthe~Engloh.._

JULY 20, 1978

Salaries:
U/B paid Ita full profes8ota an
average of $37,.00 total compensation
during 1977-78, IIQ&amp;In ranking first
among SUNY graduate centers, accordIng to the annual faculty compensation
report complied by the American
Asaoclation of University Professors:·
That $37,.00 figuns, AAUP says,
pieces U/B In the 95th percentile
among all university-level Institutions
In the nation for compensation at the
toprank. ..-~
At the rank of asaoclate prolesiiOI',
h o - . the local ...age of $28,.00 Ia
the lo-t emong the SUNY graduate
centers (although only $400 lesa than
the highest). That pl-. ua ]uat $40
below the 95th percelltlle avwage for
asaoclate professors at all universities
($28,440) .

U/B faculty still among best paid
AAUP figures Indicate that compen·
sat ion a--oes for autstant.professors
here ($20,200) are also Just under the
•-age of the top lve per cent
nationally ($20,870). U/B assistant
professors have the highest averages
among SUNY g!)ld centers. ·
Instructors fare less well, averaging
$13,000. This pieces U/B below the

21l}~~~!e ::~rnalr.!''~~~~~.e

offering avwage compensation. at the
top rank higher than U/B_are: Brooklr,n
Law School , $43,800; Columba.
$37 ,500; the Fashion Institute of
Technology, $41,700; Nassau CommunIty College, $38,800; Rockefeller
University, $43,QOO; and Westchester
Community College, $38,500. CUNY
flgunsa are not Included In thlt!" year's

AAUP report. as __extracted -Ill-~
Chronicle of HfghiN Educellon. The
figures In the Chronicle are taken from
the AAUP's " Annual Repor1 on the
Economic Status of theProfeaslon," to
be published In the August Issue of the
AAUP Bullelin . (Reprints are evallable
for $2.50 from AAUP , One Dupont
Circle, Washington 20038.)
Across the nation, compensation was
up an average of 6 per cent at University
level public Institutions, the report
figures show. Faculty at private
Unlverslty-18Y81 Institutions nsoelved an
average compensation hike of 5.1 pe(
cent (those at church-related unl-slt~~ 5.!tl:.:'i"':.'1· e compensation
figur!_s by ranks
Institutions are:
professor, $30,950; associate · profes-

r-:::H

~.~~--ft-~~~

$18,610;Tnstructor, $14,880.
These figunss for full professors at
some othllr major un Ivers it lea are taken
randomly from the report: U. of
California
(system-wide),
$35,.00;
USC. $34,000; Yale, $31,100; U. of
Miami (Fla.), $31,200; North-em,
$34,200; U. of IUlnola (~
Charnpalg_'!l. $32,200; H--.!, $40,QOO;
MIT, $37 ,:JUU; Princeton, $38,900; Olllo
State, $32,800; Penn State, $32,000; U.
of Pennsylvania, $37,700.
AAUP ba8es Ita flgunsa on Information for avwage full-time faculty
by 2,500
compensation reported
colleges and universities to the
National Center for Education Statlatlcs.

Follett's: here for talks; ready to build?
Reprsaentatlvee of Follett'a Bookstores were on cempua yesterday
(Wednesday, July 111) to meet with
Student and Faculty-Student Aaaoclatlon repreaentatlves, and.wlth a Faculty
Senate Committee.

atudled at that time. The ma)or focus
of the study, waa that any cempus
bookstore should have a gnsatly

r:."1ett'1 within the neX1 ten days to two
WMka Is lxPIICted to sign a • - to
devetop a 20,000 aq...,.foot bookatore
on Perce~ B at AmherJt.
Yeatenlay'a meetings · apperently
....,. called to allay any poaalble
atudent and faculty mlaglvlnga about
the propoaed leaM ....,.gernenl.
A few faculty Individuals have
.--rtly voiced ooncem ~whether or
not Follett's will be nsqulnsd under
term• of the • - to •.provide a
cornmlt"**l to tha lntlllectual life of
the Unlviorstty.• Tnanalatlon: these
faculty want a concrlte commltmeht
that Follett's (or whoever might come
Into Perce~ 8 with a bookatorsJ-wUI offer
, _ •-llhlrta and trlnkala and more
high quality non-teX1 booka than · tha
preMRt FSA-operated bookalores. (Sea
Reporter, July II).
In 11175, a apaclal committee of tha
Faculty Senate atudled campua bookatora operstlona recomm.ndlng quite
atrongly thai
go out of the
DUalneaa
that a commercial fifm be
brought lnl Parcel B. Thnse major
laMel of col~ atorea - Detroit
TeX1book Stores, Thl Follett ~
tlon, and Barnea .nil Noble, Inc., "!"'•

trede bookstores throughout the nation

0

"'i::,'l'~? tt.! uttP~unJ!ilo~,:.:

FSA

e~~~~~u~aS.::~mended

that Barnes and Joble be Invited to

~!~ ll'rin~~~Jft~~lyo=Y~
1

;j~~~1 ~af':.n~~ ~~e N~~rl~;l.~~~

"Thla kind of experience Ia of particular
value In a college store that wants to
ol1er aa large a eelectlon of good trede
booka aa Ia poaalble without JeopardizIng lte flnancea," the Senate commltlee
nsport auggeated.

Not ctltlcllf of Folletfa
Th.ll report was not critical of
Follett's by any masna. It noted, In feet,
that that corporation Ia the largest
wholesaler of teX1booksln the U.S., and
thalli openates college storea at several
locations, Including Johna • Hopkins.
Follett's store at Johna Hopkins was
found to devote IIOI'R8 60 per cent of Its

fi~~~!"::ld~k~u conducted
talka with Barnes and NOble and thet
their only Interest In Parcel B would
heva been to rent or lease a building put
up by lhe Foundation . This would not
heve been a viable alternative, Carter

aaid .
Follett's, on tha other hand, will be
developing 111 own building under the
~poaed teaae at ~st of
approximately $800,000 I
a ahall

j

alone. Interior design will be extra.
Carter said Follett's will also be paying
out an additional $200,000 to bring In
utility connections to the bl!lldlng.
The U/ B Foundation will spend
$500,000 for ecoess roeds , parking lois,
and common spaces for the Parcel B
project as a whole - but this outlay Is
geared to all future developments on
the site and not lust the bookatons.

Ad'tlaory committee?
The Faculty Senate report of 1975
Indicated that Barnes and Noble make It
a standard part of their contractual
agnsements with colleges and universitIes to set up an edvlaory committee of
students and faculty to provide Input on
the needs of each cempua community
to be served. The Senate at that point
urged thet a similar provision be a par1
of any contract between the U/B
:::'::.~~~ -any commercial operaCarter ·told the Report, thla -'&lt;
that this kind of clauaa will not be a part
of the basic conlract batween the U/8
Foundation and Follett's. H~. he
aald, such an advisory committee of
students and faculty
could
be
guaranteed In a memorandum of understanding which ·could be made out In
eddltlon to th'8 basic contract . He
pointed. out that Follett's reprMer~ta­
t l - were more than eager to all down
"with the Faculty Senate people"

- ~r~~:~~~~ ~;·:..~·~o~·.&amp;IJ~

cornmltled to the Idea of developing on
Parcel B "one of tha finest bookatores
lntl)eU.S."

.

The proposed leaM with the company

=~:~

::, l: ;oli:i~ ::00cM.r~

bookstons operation• on tha campus,
Including the pnssent Squire and
Amherst facilities. As a reault, FSA
bookatons operatlona would be ellJIIlnated; all preeant FSA llookatcwe
employees would be guananteed jobs by
Follett'a at their ptMent aa1artea (9in,
see Reporter, July 8).

OU.Ieaeea
Follett's tak&amp;-o- of all bookstore
pperatlona makes H n~ to
""''OIIate two other leMea, Carteraald.
The U/B Foundation will first of all 1\M

;~om~~~~ f=:n:h~=~~
subl-

these

anaaa to

FoHett'a.

~~~= J'ti ~O:Ut&gt;!"JI~

a.s

.:=

the Parcel B • - . Carter aald, but
should poaa no problem becauM
Follett's already openatea bookatonoa
under almllar 1 - at SUNY Albany
and at the State University College at
Oneonta.
It Ia hoped, Carter said, that
construction on the Follett'a ators at
Parcel B will be und-ay by early fall
(tha contract will apaclfy that It must
be). That atora will open on or about
_Auuy•UJ 1979. Meanwhile Follatt'a Ia
-- - ·..

-2,~1

�.luly.20,1171

l

·u.s. preslcJents
'

•Follett' a·

fl

fl

f1

Plesur tells Soviet Scholars
that while some have been inep~.
none have been •evi I' - except .. ·
Amertea has had ov• 30 presidents,
tOatorlan Milton Plesur told UIB'a
troupe of visiting Soviet 11Chol818 In a
lecture Monday, and none of them up to
Nh&lt;on can be called "evil."
Maybe_, Nixon wasn't evll 1 Plesur
acknowledged. Perhaps, as tne late
Walt• Lippmann put )t, he was ]uat
"tha mosr em~lng" president we

convened at the White Houaa with the
poaalble exception ·at Jelfereon dining
alone." To Pleaur, that statement ran~a
In the same category aa Ike •
aaaaaament of Washington .

-had.

• - accomP.'Iahed what he aaid hed
da." It waan t much, granted, but he did

Pleaur's discussion of U.S. presidents cantered on ranklngs accorded by
historians In two polls conducted by
Arthur Schlesinger, Sr. A tally by
Schlesinger In the 19408 found that
historians ranked. six former chief
·executlvea as gree\. The elite Included:
Uncoln, Washington, FOR, Wilson,
Jefferson and Jackson In thai ord•. A
1860s poll found Jackson relegated to
the rank of · n - greats," Plesur said,
along wtth Theodore Roosevelt ana
H8njTruman .)
The only out-and-aut "failures"
Identified In thesa polls were Giant and
Harding, both ol whom were duped by
bed · companion a, Plesur granted

cn:'olt,abl~ also R bllcans, he
edded, although that h:f"nothlng to do
1

1

wl~ ~h-

two, Plesur aald, Harding

waa the aedd• case lor he was mona

victim than acoundrat. Hedldn, want to
be president. A fuzzy-minded glad1\ander, ..he wes used by machine
politicians who ordered him to do their
bidding. Hlswlle ("olderand leas pretty
than he") was also very ambltloua.

~~ded

his awn candidates lor
the "failure• category:
_
•Zachary Taylor who diad from
consuming ,,oo much cold milk and too
many cherftes·"
•Taytar'a aucoeaaor, aur own Millard

Fll!~~ Coolidge,

"weaned, alas, on

ad~~~~;"~.

the only known
presldentlal "alcoholic. • Plfli(CI'a wile
the root of hla problem, Plesur
aald. Their only son waa killed In a
railroad accident. She retired . to the
White Hauaa living quar1818 and · n cema out." They "should make a movie
ollt," he auga-(ed.
,.._ur tola the Ruaalana that he
~· a-ge Washington (wha
awore. with vigor and haCI a fierce
tamper) waa really "the laat great U.S.
-'dent." He built a government when
there wae nona. Pleaur fell ahort,
though, of ambreclng Ela.~howar'a
....-hat o...tllown pralaa at G.W.
Washington waa "the greatest ~uman
being tile Engllat&gt;-a.,-lng race ever

waa

prod,.._~··.!:':J~!.~...=a and
Thamaa Jelfer.on high, too, although
he till nka Adame auffera by con treat to
Washington, and that Jelfer.on dill
mona before and aft• bla pnaaldency aa - . r y of - • and aa founder of
the
of VIrginia. John

un1vera:'r,

'=:

=:.~
~e,.rt-'!:':~~!
notawonhy collection of t.Jent

ever

Polk

cict

what he Nlkl .
Plf!&amp;ur's own list of favorites also

lnclu~ Polk, "the only praaident w~o

lt. Andre-.t Jackson, great or near-great
as he may be, 18, In Plesur's view,
worthy of note on three counts: he was
the first president from the (then) West,
-waa the first "common man" In the
White Houaa, and had a short luaa.
Uncoln's reputation
haa been
embellished by a lot at fictional
mystique which haa been _raportwhed lash
tact In the nearly 5,000 books
c
have been turned out on him (nMrl~ one
a week since he waa shot). The Great
Emancipator, Plesur aald, waa really
less Interested In the plight of alavea
(he dldn, "free" them In the territory
which the unron controlled), than In the
fortunes Ill tkle North. He waa the
con summa~&amp; politician.

~~~~~sidents,
aa~eodare

Pleaur

GSA leaders
find Bunn plan
'unacceptable'
The Executive CommlttM of the
Graduate Student Aaaoclatlon has
found the academic plan drafted by the
vice president lor academic affairs
(Reporter May 4) '1o be unacceptable.".
The GSA executive committee will
ehara this reaction to the Bunn plan
with the lull GSA Senate at a meeting
next Wednesday (339 Squire, 7 p.m.).
The statement of the executive
committee outlining ita raaaona lor
apooslng the plan follows:
.
"The following criteria are aet forth
tor the evaluatlana and projections lor
the future olthe academic units: ·
" 1 Programs should be well concel..id In tnelr needa and purpose.
"2. Pregrema · should reflect the
Interrelatedness of teaching, research

~3~~iams

which rate highly In tha
combination of quality, need and
efficiency aha\lfd be expected to have
the greatest claim to lliSOurces.
"4. Quality at a program's students
and applicants ahould be an Important
consideration In addraaalng Ita future.
"5. Potential lor faculty development

ans'i:":::'~ -=~~~~n~terla

are
acceptable In Ierma at formulating a
broad overview of the mlaalon and
direction of a Unlveralty Center
composed of many vital academic
units. The essential problem Ia that the
criteria are never used to evaluate tha
academic \lnlta. The aaeeaament and
aaaertlona concerning the academic
units are baaed on faculty .-a. and
student enrollment. This daes not -m
to be acceptable when one Is
determining the future of an academic

Roosevelt
waa
the
"noisiest," a good ahawman wham
historians don't always take seriously.
•Woodrow Wilson waa gravely . "'!'fhe statements describing "the
"flawed .• A proleaaor descended from a
direction of theo academic unlta echo
long line of preachers, Wilson had a
whisperings heard at this Unl-alty lor
remarkable first term which saw a
some
time. lhe faculties of Engineering
prolusion of so-called "prograaslve
and Applied Sciences, Natural Sciences
legislation." But the Congress raeented
and MathematicS, the School of
his haughty approach to them and Its
Management and the Law School Ne
resistance to his League at Nations did
the only academic units which can be
him ln. One of Wilson's blggaat
expected to be allowed to grow. This
mistakes as a wartime leader, Plesur
will be done with the Unl-altr.s
aald , waa "the Invasion of Ruaala."
blessings. They can expect to race ve
•FDA haa a reputation lor being a
the bulk of the allocations, while the
socialist or worse (or better, depending
other faculties must aaak external
on how you look at It) . He waan,,
sources at support (take care at
though. Rather, he waa "the aavlor at
themaalvea) . II the idea Ia that financial
American capitalism." An elfactlve
teaources
are the determining factor In
commander-ln-d'llef, one of hla greata department's continuation ae a
eat feats waa getting the U.S. and the
aucoeaslul entity, then that leaves ua
U.S.S.R. together IQalnat the Nazis.
with a very grl m picture of tha next live
Yet toward the end he eaamed to
y-. tor Arta · &amp; Lettera, Social
encOurage the "Cold
"The lnore I
Sciences, Educational Studlea, Social
learn about him, theleaa I admire him,"
Work, etc. Thla la daflnltetr, at odds
Plesur said.
· with the administration's des re lor this
•Harry Truman was "at least,
to remain
a
University
Center
aurprlalng" In that ha pfll(formed more
outstanding on both the national and
el1actlvely than anyone expect~. .
International level.
···JFK? A thouaand daya lan't enough
" It Is our .general recommendation
that the evaluations and concluding
to !'e~~s.He, Plesur submitted, "derecommendations lor tha academic
serves better than he geta." His
units b&amp; re-conatltuted ualng the
Vietnam policy waa an abomlpatlon, to
criteria alated earl I• and that -gnoater
be sure, but there haa "never been a
emphasis be placad on the Instructional
end ottheacademlc units.•
president before or after with 111ore
decent, progressive domestic legislation to his credit."
The u ,s. Invented the concept of the

War."

C!:'::Y·
a.:·~~~ ,':''"1.'::,,, '::!
submitted, the office Itself haa been a
success, even though many of Ita
Incumbents haven't.

HRP moves
S...W unlta of the School ol Health Related Proleaalons have recently
mowed to Stockton Kimball Tow• at Main Streat.
The following mini-directory outlines the changes:

Room435

831-3:434

Room435

831-3-434

Room412

831-2731

-

Dr. Maurice J. Gonder, chief at
urology at the Veterans Admlnlatratlan
Hospital and clinical aasoclatl! proleaaor In the School of Medicine, haa been
named ·acting chairman af the U/B
Department of Urology effective July 1,
according to President Robert L. Ketter.
Gonder •ucceeda
Dr. William
Staubltz who retlrad his chalnnanahlp
this aprlng . Gonder haa been on the
UIB faculty alnce 1960. Prior to t~
time, he was chief of urology at Ireland
Army Hospital, Ft. Knox, l&lt;y.; and at
• the 97th General Army Hoapltal.
Frankfurt, G.many. He received the
M.D.Irom the Unlveraltyallawa.

lslhara renamed
Dr. Aklre lslhera haa been reappointed chairman of the o.-tment
of Phyalca and Aatronomy by _Praaldent

Room515

831-440&amp;

Room617

831-3342

Room704

831-2341

Room409

Gonder beads
Urology
.

Robert L. Kett•.
Appointed to a one-y- term aa
chairman In Septamw, 1977, lalhara
will begin hla aecond term August 30,
11178. The- threa-r- term will run
through August 31, 11181 . .
'
lalh818, a prafeaaor of physlca.lolned
the faculty In 11184. A native of "Tokyo,
he haa aar.ed aa a vlaltlng professor at
the Unl-alty of Alberta, the University
at Brusaels and the Uhlveralty of
Rochester. He Ia a graduate of the
University of Tokyo and Ia widely
published both In the U.S. and abroad .

�Tempest·
In
the
Park

"Shakespeare In the Park" Is anythll'l$1 but dull and dated.
The "monster" Call ban Oames McGuire In a half-man, part snake, part
fish costume}, the zany Jester (Gregg Maday with clo&gt;yn make-up and
traditional court fool garb), and tl)e drunken klng's butler (played
by Duke, the Wonder t&gt;og, the cast list says} do a rock song and dane"
about "Freedom" at the cloSO! of the first act that leaves the audience's
mouths agape. " Man, that Shakespeare was way ahead of his time," one
of the crowd marvelled fac.,tlously Saturday night. "That Is a great
number.''
It Is- despite· the fact that It's a Ray Leslee Invention (or more
accurately, becauSO! of It). Leslee's music (he Is also credited with
co&lt;oncelvlngthe proJect with Saul Elkin) Is one of a galaxy of bright
spots In UIB's Star Wars Interpretation of "The Tempest" now playing to
large, enthusiastic audiences In Delaware Park (nightly at 8 through this
Sunday, July 23). Other hlghllghtso Jerry Finnegan's Prospero; the Ariel
trio (Elkin's shatt.,rlng this sprlt" Into three Is a true masterstroke. the
c:rltks agree); the staging; the lighting; the sound; McGuire's athletic
performance as the monsteroJust about everything .
As the program notes Indicate, this " Tempest" Is not played as a
5"ntlrnentallove story between Miranda and Ferdinand; It's about
dal)ger, mystery, revolution, liberation, education. and SO!If-awareness.
A midsummer's night dream of a production, If you will.
Said one of the showgoers Saturday, " If 'The Tempest,· can be this
much fun. what will 'The Merry Wives of Windsor' (August I· t 3)
be like?"

Comtt"'-"·

/

�2- U/8 program'S deal
with risky pregnancie&amp;

Grad School approves
two additional· 'groups'

=.

~~:"t....'or g~ec":mcr.,ou~t-:r,:

Aeductng the Ill""" end death rates

~:Whv:.. C..~t~~

-programs which haw~ lnltlat.d
~yaic:lana In conJunction with
CllildNn • Hospital.·
Women wha become pngnant during
e~~o-.- Of aft• 40 or Who " -'-In medical problema run a big•
l1ak of deeth and newological «
...,._. dlellblllty to the fetus then do
- n o t In • "high rlak" category,
-.ling to - t 111-ura on .

Ill' U/B

CllletMrlcal care.

!loiN..,. to 15 per cent of West~
...,. Vorl&lt; pragnanclea tall Into this
.-.gory. Of IIMi WOI"IIIM"IIn this group "*'W' ot Whom auff• from hypertenelon, d~. kidney d l - or other
ell--. - about ten per cent audden comptlcatlona befora, during,
Of.,., datt..y.
•
About 50 per cent of thoee Who ara at
"high rlak" can be Identified ewly In

::Or:=c::.· ~~u~:~~~
dat'--1 In tl*r own community
hospital&amp;.
During the peat eight months,
pll,.alcl- from the lJ/B Departments

:.~=~~'=:r~~a~~=

from Chlldran'a Hoa~tal. hiMI pre- . c l up-to-date !;;!ormation on
-lquea dealing wtth "high risk"
dat'-les to phyalclana end nurses at
I I - hospltafa.
Thla ReaiOIW Education Program lrr
Pwtnatal \lectlclne, -~ Or. Martin

=:::.= :!ct~!~ .,.ldtl
~al.:.:

dllllll and mcwtlldlty In
rlak"
lll'tllnanciee Ill' bringing thOitilkaly to
lwiCIIe eucll cun.nt medical
InformatiOn and .,lowing for uchange
of .... and problema.
-

Tile....,_--....

lloellelleill

"If a : : : . wtth a 'high risk'
that datt..y should
be mede et a medical
In onler to
..,eguwd the life or health of mottw or
lnfn, the patient cen be ttw~af....ad
llrlor to del~. • Dr. Wingate notea.
For_.., Chlic~Nn'a Hoapttal policy
....,... to phyalclana who hold
'-Pit-' edmlealon privilege&amp; eiMWhere
al*llpOIWy prlvl• In on1er to admit
and follow their pilllanta to Chlldnan's,
II IIIey chooae. If the pllyalclan,
' - · Ia many miles from Buffalo.
.. or .,. cen rat• the patient to
iiiiiYalc'- In the Maternal - Fetal
Ylidlclne Dtvtaion for del~ and
follow-up care.

Pllllenl

cent•.

........ c...utlft
Within th- ....U, a one-bed
C.. Unit wtli open at Children's
u~ lbe 8Uaptoaa of the
Hoepltaf and the U/ B Depertment of
. ~/Qba!Mrlca Which will allow
monitoring of both mot•
and felua. Slmllw to an lntenalve c.re
Unit, the Specie! C.. Unit will IIIIQIIIIII-Inllned - - to -ell the
around the clock t:.1ore or

=-1

==
=
··-·-·Ther"-......
::rc..SI~~

............ to ..., the unit . . the

alngle .._. llnporUnt f-=tor In Ita

........... - · Sci-' of. Medicine
!*IIIII II eun.lo Genenl'a ~
..

7

C..Ufttl to~tt.m.
..,... lllllarlty of 'high rlek'
PI. .•ICIM - ' i need the facllltiee of

a..--. care 111111.• Dr. ~e pointe
out, bul lllole who do wlll ......... AIIIICM.Gh the unit
lnlllllly Ill*\ wftll bed

y-----.
_ __ .
-·,_
-----

It

wtli
and

A _ _ _ ,...

___ _,ol_ol
_ _ _ _ , . , .... OIWo....

,._
..._., r.-.
-··~~~-.-..
_,,_,.,.
·-~
IOUII A

a.ouna

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

lo-

accompanyl~g monitoring . equipment,

Two proposals were reviewed and

II will expand as need grows. In the
future, It may aerve as a multi-bed
regional maternal cara unit. Unit
equipment was purchued by Chlldran's
Hospital and Iii B.

Graduate Dl~n annual raporl points
out.
The Buffalo Community Studies
Group has been operating Informally
since 1974. It was conceived to bring
together llbnirlana, archivists, faculty
and students •in\-ted In the atudy of
Buffalo and the Niagara Frontler. from
dl-se Jl8f8pectl-. Ita mernberahlp,
beyond U/B participants, Jncludes

Regional nura.y

Since about one:thlrd of babies born
to women who haw "'high risk"
pregnancies, are themselves "high
risk," the Regional lntenslw Care
Nursery (ICN) at Children's further
enhanoaa the value of the special..
mat&amp;mfl cant unit.
.,.
"Not all babies who need th'e special
services of the ICN are born to mothers
who are 'tllgh risk' ," says Dr. Wingate,
" but statistically we know a certain
percentage of them will be.
"Thus, Identification ol1hese women
early In pregnancy can alert the
obstetrician to take steps to minimize
medical complications "Which could
occur to either mother or Infant or
both," Wingate bellews. This, in return,

:r~~~~~~~~ !~~.~!hlrn1=:lty~::;.;

and the Buffalo "Historical Society .
Among their objectives are to Identify
and describe source materials fully, to
provide ·a research guide giving an
overview of Buffalo source materials
and to prepare a program to alerl
researchers to the availability of source
materials.

~~~~~~t~~~~:=~:;r.-rh~~
~}rc:;:,~:Yt,~::/m~~"!t~~n ,h-:.,~=~
1

~~!.he:~ c~e~~all:fe!""v:..Ofb~~ .

service, the Grad Division's annual
statement says. Membership has been
open to faculty, students and dietitians
from the Health Sciences schools and
hospitals. Members of other departments who haw an Interest" In some
aspect of nutrition are also Welcome.
Among proposed · obJectives are the
develo~ent ·and utilization of present-

pragnancles.

Head, neck
cancers are
study topic

0

:~ ~!\,~~~~ ~ S~n'::Jem~;~

~~~~~~~7:d~~~ma.:;,~

minor emphasis In nutrition, to recruit
graduate students who could benefit
from the opporlunlty to work with !his
dl-se group, to continue Involvement
In undergraduate education nutrition
courses, to serve as a center for
iolcirmatlon on nutritional activities in

of education pr~rams to make both the

:.~ :'~h'h=.~ltr.;~~e=~~~grr;::

U/B proleaso• who has received a
$150,000 Nallonal Cancer Institute
grant.
Dr. George W. Greene, chairman of
the School of Dentlatry"s Pepartment of
Oral Pathology and chlellnvestlgator of
the thrae-year grant, said cancer of the
head , neck and oral cavity, which

=~~l:ln ~\: u~ h:n~P t':: n;~
Now. though, lncrealllng Incidence

A nominating campaign has been
launched to lind Western N- York's
seven most "Outstanding Women" lor
1978.
The awards program , begun In 1971 ,
Is sr,onsored by the U/B Community

~oc:::J~~:.':Pa~s~~~~::'.:l

e-

s.:r-lng Ia
dftelopment .
Routine screening of patients lor oral
· as well aa head and neck cancers has
only recently been Introduced. In
medical and dental curriculums. Thus,
many practicing professionals need to
' - " and apply tt\8 techniques on a
n~guler beals In their own precllcea.
The lmponence of screening, Dr.
Graene aald, baa been underw:ored In
the U/B Dental Clinlca whera students
apotted au~iclous lesions or
patellae In pallenta mouths, leading to

-'~~al~~~an,:;k cancers

Ia auch that a pat !ant may have no pal n
or bleeding until the condition haa
advanced. With proper routine ac-nlng, ""-tor, auspicious tlaaue can .be
detected ewty and -lyzed.

A-.the_of_
· or all canc.s, thoae occurring In
the oral cavity or head and neck can be
among the worst In t.ma of effects,"
Dr. Graene pointed out.
In the ebl*lce of ewty dlegnoala and
treatment, disfiguring aurgery Ia often
II8CMIIIII)' to the patient's life. And
me &lt;llallgurament can bring about
payclloioglcal problema not ee p.--J,
ent In thoM who auff• from lnt~al

cenc..

~u:'~. =:n•andbe~~

oolleag... at U/B and Roawell Part&lt;
Memoflallnatltute . . eleo being aimed
a! the publk:.
•
"If e patient underatanda the
lmponenoe of ewty detection,"' Dr.
Grwne Mid, "he or.,. Ia Uklly to eak
the clinician for a routine ecraenlng.
Juat U
WOII*I,
ttvough public
education,of the
. - . l t y for a PAP * I to detect ewty
CIYMCOioalcal..-., men and women
ihould IIi tamlllw with the need for the
=-~ =~lng lor oral

become--

New Vorl&lt;.
Seven graduate groups hiMI been

~";"~d"!,~~';..con..:;,';!!lllh:~~~:
Blolnorganlc Studies, Blomembranes,
Human Critical Illness, International
Development and Environmental Planning, Mod~ German Studies, and
Neuroaclences. The group on ContinuIty and Change In Asia and .Africa was
glwn a one:y. . probation during which
tiler, will be "expected to strengthen
the r program and participation. "
1
1

el~~ve"W!11 ~9~:

¥t.': t!'n~l~gn=:::.'l ·.

Perceptions group which Is now under
the Environmental Studies Center.

Winkler editing
three texts
Dr. Sheldon Winkler, associate
professor of restorative dentistry, Is
editor of a series of three textbooks

~a~tK.w~u~~h~~.n~~:·~~~~~bgr~~ ·

books will be out next year.
Ten other dental faculty will join
Winkler as authors In the first text,
entitled "Essentials of Complete
Denture Prosthodontics." They are,
Drs". Norman Mohl and Alan J . Drinnan,
professors of oral medicine; Robert E.
. Ogle and Lance Ortman , assistant
professors of ramovable prosthodontics; Herold Ortman, professor of
ntmovable
prosthodontics;
Frank
L.auclello, clinical assistant professor
restoratlw dentistry; Norman
of
Schaaf, professor of restorative dentistry; - George Smutko, associate
professor of restoratlw dentistry; and
S. Howard Payne, clinical professor of
restorative dentistry.

Nominees are being sou.g hf for
'outstanding "!omen' awards

been relatlveJr "unknown ."

~';n~ena\':,'~i t~~';ltt~~s alike
Many of the education programs
being developed under the new grant
. . aimed at clinicians. - focusing on
technique&amp; for routine, comprehensive
acraenlng of patients.
The ewller this form of cancer Is
dlagnoeed, the graater the cura rate and
tbe leu need thera Ia lor extramety
dlafigurlng surgery.

West~

.

~~~r~ af"t~'!"':s..:;;~~n~m~~nlt':.

University Recognition Luncheon, Wednesday, October 18, In the Golden
Ballroom of the Statler Hilton.

m!;.h~~a:ra ;~aua:,s;a~~~~ ~0,::::;;

categories: arts , buSiness, communlca~
lions, community service, education,
government . and the professions.
Nominating forms· are being maued
this month to various Institutions and
organlllltions, but also may be obtained
by writing to: 1978 Women's Recognl,
lion Luncheon, Office of Public Affairs
516 Capen Hall. Telephone 636-2925. '
Co--chairmen of this year's luncheon
are Bernard F . Mulhern, senior · vice
president, Liberty National- Bank, and
Edgar T. Drullard, praaldent of the
advenlslng firm of Bartler..Qrullard, Inc.
They pointed out that tickets lor the
lunch may also be obtained through the
Office of Public Affairs or from
=~s of the Community Advl~
Gerard J . Frank, chairman of that
council and executlw vice prealdent of
Leavers &amp; Frank Inc., said that
nominations must be received by
August 15 to receive proper consider&amp;:
t1on.
• Additional nomination packages .,.
avall•ble," he further edvlaed, "and will
be forwarded on request.
"This Ia your opportunity • Frank
aald, '1o recognize outatandlng women
In our Western New York community.
"Selection will
be baaed - on
professional accOtnplishment, com~u".'ll:r..~!"'ol-1, end lellderahlp
llecauM previous award raclptenta
era Ineligible for nomination, a llat of
paat ew.d wlnn.a Ia being lnctuded
wtth the nomination forma. Aleo .
Ineligible for nomination era cunent
U/B atudenta end U/B faculty and atalf
membera. In addition, the rules note
1hat cltallona will not be ~ed In
llbealltla or poathumoualy.
The ..cognition luncheon waa not
held lest ve- to accommodate an
alternate ve- echedule. The OctOber tB

""""' will be lhe first under this new
schedule.
•
1976's "Outstanding Women" were
Brix Barrell, business; Helen J .
Buddemeyer, community .services;
Aileen L. Carroll, proleaslons; Angela
S. Cruser, aducatlon; Sandra Elkin,
communications; Oia Lee Lewis, arts ,
and Elloeen D. Oughterson, govern,
ment.
"Outstanding ·women" nominations
will be accepted from throughout the
elght-&lt;:&lt;&gt;unty West~ New York area,
Fr&amp;l)k said.

Karl Gay
.
receives tribute
Editor:
Through the medium of your journal,
I ahould like to haw the oPPQrtunla;.of

~~~\::o

:r.=::uc:a,:,o ~wold

~al Utnry, lor all the wort&lt; that
he hea done o-llie ve-e lor poetry.
He haa given a huge amount of
encouragement and aupport to poets,
small preae publlahenl end poetr:y In
gen..S, building up not ~ly a fine
library archive but aleo an lnt~tlonal
sense of comradeship and scholarship
which Ia both rara and exoaedlngly
valuable. Hla correspondence with
those In the poetry world haa drawn a .
web of frlendahlp through the art and
his racognltion of the lesser-known

h~s;!n"';~ho-=0 ~f •=~~~

=s
the en form a credibility end dignity.
Hla comprah-lve purchaalng of
"avant11arde" material and the publicaIlona of amall, llrlvate prea- haa
financed a revolution In poetic thought
and production, end he flee placed the
library aqu-y upon the aoene as the
majorone of ita kind.
Hla rall~t will I - the worlds of
lettera end • .,...,.lng the poorar lor
hla departura: I em aura that I apeak
with the· voloa of many· poets and
poetry.oretated people when I wish him
much happl""" for the lutura.
Youra faithfully,
llerlln Booth
Soaptra Press
Knotting, Bedf~lra, England

�Orientation
'78

·'What you accomplish during your four years at U/8 depends pretty
much on you ." President Robert L. Ketter told a group of 250 or so fall
freshmen who began a l 1h -day summer orieotation session Monday.
The group, one of the larger freshman bands attending orientation this
year , was the six th to come here for a preview of University life. The getacquainted sessions - run by the Division of Student Affairs- will
continue through the end of the month .
Ketter (who said he was Instructed by orientation organfz.ers not to say
anything ''controversial '') told the new students that U/8 offers the
" greatest opportunity" for education available anywhere. There are 128
separate departments, he said, and If you don' t like their offerings. you
can ' 'design your own program ,·· through the Ad hoc; maJors option.
" You will be running Into people here. who are deeply Involved ill
research and/or community-oriented proJects," the President tol_d the
freshmen . " Get Involved yourself." he urged, and " remember, teaming
takes place not Just In the classroom."
Freshmen will be set adrift In a campus community of 35,000. Ketter
told them. So don' t be afraid to ask about things you don' t know, he
advised.
Ketter said he has " open office hours" set aside and that any student
who wants to see him has only to come to his office and sign-up for the
next available opening. ·'That might be anywhere from fl\&gt;e minutes to a
w~ away." he said, but "you can see me: ·
The President announced that In addition he Is going to have a regular
weekly half-hour call-In session on W8fO next fall , so anyone with a
question can contact him and get an answer.
Following Ketter, the freshmen heard from Karl Schwartz. vice
president of the undergraduate Student Association. and from the
catholic chaplain at Amherst. Rev. Edward Fisher, representing the
campus M i nistry.
_
A "family" of 18 stugent orientation aides were on hand (and will be
throughout all orientation sessions), wearing T-shlrts emblazoned on the
froQt with a stylish "Orientation ' 78" logo designed by Banry Pfohl , a
U/8 art student.
On the back, there ' s a " Welcome from the U/8 Alumni Association."
In this year of the T-shlrt. these were Joined by others reading, " Yves
St. Laurent." " Bruce Springsteen," " Daytona Beach," and several
" Adtdas. "
While here, members of the orientation groups live In Ellicott and
attend small group advisement sessions. registration workshops..SA
workshops, library orientations, academic discipline colloquies, a
presentation by the colleges. fraternlry and sorority Information
sessions'. and a presentation by University pollee. For recreation. there ' s
a' Mon~e Carlo night the first evening, and a live band In Wilkeson Pub
the next. The frosh get campus tours - and, yes. they are bused back and
forth to Main Street so that won't come as a shock In September.

-··-

�World economics pose threats, Japanese envoy says
.

~

The world tot1ay faces eoonoml¢
problema potentially as threatening to
wo11e1 p-=e and stability as the
problema of the 1930a, Shotaro
'talcahaahl consul general of Japan at
New YOII&lt;.,' said at a cernpola conflnll08
held M11er this month.
"Fortunately • Takaheehl told the
MMion on lm~ng w.etern New

It Ia crucial that 1he U.S. dollar ba
stabilized, Tllkahashl warned; "thla cen
only occur as the world gelns
confidence In Amertca'a determination
to fight lnflallon and to reduce Its
lmportect-oll bill."
·

- l c problema-through en lrnllllfecl. but nonetheleaa workable
lramewoltc ~I binational end multinational oooperatlon."
U.S•.....,_ relatione are partlcuIItty atntlnecl, Takahashi aald, betauaa
of en $1111111on U.S. tNde deflclt with • •
that nation .

did not point out that "our joint
measures to closa our trede gap
he-to date-been somewhat leas
auccesaful then anticipated. American
exports to Japan have Increased, yet
Japanesa exports to this country are
contln.ulng to, grow In value, largely
because or the continuing ap:lfl!CI&amp;tlon
' of the yen, particularly In relation to. the

!~i!"w~~ ~:m.W:t:=l::

. . . . . . . . . . . . . gllp

The con8UI aener-.1 outlined steps
t.un to Cloee the gap:

t.~no

1. A Joint Trade Facilitation
Committee, operating through the U.S.
~t
~m~ ~d the
.J...- MiniStry ol International
Trlllle end lndually, t.a been formed to
help Identify end rectify Impedimenta
en Amerlcen exporter may encounter In
doing ~ In Jill*!.
2. An Import Promotion Mlaalon

m

:':at":.=!~:':!.~un~%:!'!':f.
to purch8M, around $2
01 .,.,.ged

lllllkln

fn U.S. expotta to Jepan.

"£Queety lmpOtlenl," T......,l noted, .

.,. MlaeiOn opened up. dftc:t

IMW

conMcta . . . _ Amerlcen menuf.c. _ end ........ ,....... . bypes-

elng .... - - d!Ributlon chennele.
Nope 11181 ""'*"-' ~ will
aplolt , _ -c~w~oe~a o f - to
llw -••D~R. ~ llf·

w.

"'*-·---····"
.
3. Negatl8llona . . ___,.to_...

....-n•a 11o1111n0-

lnclua1MI t.lr-lha
Melv-......

Sllln Slkura
for the
uclu8lw ... of Amer1cen expor1era
-,..-.During lila PMII 20 ,_., thla
_...end Ita pmlrcruoo elllp haw
Ylaltod 130 porta In 112 COUII1r1ee,
-.-11M
aporta
llbroed.
:lng
plana
. to
It M a floating

=

dallaftn*d etoN to IntrodUCe American

JI'OCiu!ita to .... . . . . . , _ - -·
4. Bolli IIONftlll*lta . . !tYing to
a.NCt miaOoiiOaPtlona that.stnt exist

allaul ..... - • "ctoeed" mar1&lt;at.
"TTnugh your o.p.!ment of ~end our Exfarnat Trade
~-JETRO,"Tal&lt;ahMhlaaJd,

.... . _ been IPOMC)rlng _....,., 8llll*r 1o thiS - · ln cltlea
~ .... Unltad Statea."
11111 palh WIIICII both natlona haw
- 1 general
~ .... 10 atlmutate ctom.tlc
_ . ~. wlllla hOlding

ce-.... .....,_

dDMt Ill
lnlllllon;
10 open
- and
-·
....,
..,. w.tcra
fCIOCia,
thua

..... _.._,from .... -"

=--=...nae,.:
=:.-"&amp;.,.:.,....... ""-'-'
....eellln; ... Ill bring -

........
. . . Into

w..... .

Thera . . atlll ptablema

Deaplte

hie

optimism

tor

the

~~~~.0:~8n ~~=~.r-!1, 1:

::fl~~~~~·~~~i t~~t~~lu~

Increased only slightly, but prices of
these Imports, In depreciated dollars,
are climbing rapidly. The official trade
fiQures, therefore, continue to show a
wode gap In our trade.•
·
Japan regards the reduction of Its
trade and paym'ent surpluses as its
most pressing responsibility to the
wortd communlly,, the consul general
said . "We era maKing extraordinary
efforts to fulllll /,hla responelbillty.

~~l1c~t~: t~u!tr!~~r;:' d~~

tic demand . . ..
•
· "Wa 11111 also Implementing an
lll'll8fll8n&lt;;Y Import program to purchaae
American processed uranium, aircraft,
and certain other high-technology
products, and are now studying
lillllltlonat measures, such aa the
advance purch- of Imported oil and
non-ferrous metala for stockpiUng. We
are working hltrd, too, to convince
Japanese manufacturers In certain
aectora not to axceed last year's export
levels. Alao to help . reduce our
International paymanta surplus, we

:::"
~~fc'~,.~~~ub~~
three )'M(s time, and we are working to
encourage more Japanese
lnveatment abroad ."

direct

"'-'*"•
- bettar
for doing business •In
The )lroapecta

.

11

~=aah~~oo=. ~n d~ ~o

Japan's huge mart&lt;et of 113 million
conaumera-aecond In size only to your
vat Amertcen market-era wide open
to YQ!I ," he said to businessmen In the

audience,
Buffalo's 1200 diverse manufac·
turing oompanlea are alllNidy leading
exporters to Japan of food machinery,
machine tools, elecfrlc motors and
drt-, chernlcala, l)llarmaceutlcala,
1nc1uatr1a1 pumpa, chlklren'a toys ~d
lubricMia, he acknowledged .
"Certainly, 1 ' - Ia potentlat for
expenc~Jnil tile vol- of In tha88
~. but~ lhara . . still
ettW ~forwtlictla.-1}'--aet
•lata In .~~pen, 01 oan ba Cll..eed ~ en
...,...... llllfl&lt;etlng effort,• he

d program set
of International trade

.

auggeated.
Takahashi bellllvea top that the
p&lt;eseni situation offers new opportunltles for attracting Investment to this
area from Japan.
"Although the decision to Invest, and
where to Invest, Is one thet must be
mede by buslneaa on the basis of sound
management analysis," he said, " It

seeina to me that Western New York
State offers the prospective Investor
certain edvanteges. You ere, of course,
competing with other parts of the
United States that are also looking for
reverse Investment," Tatcahaahl cautloned. However, I would urge you not
to overtook the opportunltles which
may exist .... "

• Calendar

_;::::.:.:.:.:.:::::.:.:...--------------------talkto?CometotheOrop-ln.cent.... lhehotnart~

(lrqm-l,col. 41

tO a .m.·• p.m. at104 - · ArrltMnt Campus.
and.....,., Basement._, S1reel c.npus. Nl
ElicOtt office. 167 MFACC. 1a open - Y
nights. 5 p .m.·9 p.m.

WEDNESDAY- 26
1

WEDNESOAY.-FORUII'
-ntdllg the 5 o - , :z.ec:t...te Clements;
IJnlveroi1y 01 vermont. Moot Coortroom . O'Brian
Hal. 10 a llY. with QOOStiOn and ana- period at
2

~:.med

by the Faculty of Educotlonal,

PSYCHOLOGY EX~
The Psychology Depa1rrionl wt1 pay S3 mini·

~~:: .="',!U:. ~~

Welnfuss. 831-1386. Mondoy·Frtdoy. 9 a.m.·

5 p.m.

Studios.

LFE WORKSHOPS

WORD AND IMAGE IN FILM'

.._,bini (- y sl.

Blue-

Thla lo It, High Kukua,
.w-otU&lt;M of Jlntfny,

( ~1 .

Produc11on Sljllo (Ashe&lt;). Donetlng PortlclpM
(Lioldow). 403 Wende. 2 :30 p.m. the Centorlor Media Study.

by

STRUClURAL METHOOOLOGY IN ALM

ANAI.YSIS'
Blockmofll-. 19.29!. 146
2:30 p.m. by the Centor for Moclo

Die-.

Study.
A sQotler&gt;d YartH.or-. doleciMt 8IO!y 1hll
..-~·a-- tim. Baaed on a ploy
by'Cioarloo Bennett.

PHA- D. --.vii
Fl-..ytlc Thotopy, Kathy Pizzolla. Phann. D.
. . . . -. 248~. 5p.m.

SHAKIESP£AR£ ON FLII'

Ule Wotl&lt;8hope at 110 · 636·2606 "'
oblaln a ~ Propoool loon . In the - '·
--charge • .,._.,..,. -.opa have been
olfered to the UIB conwnun1ty (faculty, alaff,
- l s i and ._ . on a wide YWioty of

inCluding
tozz - · -IIIA&gt;foc18,
·eomody.-Spnsh, and._
yoga,

~
and
....... 0&lt;- clollelop
· - MW- OMO. Gel
""'involved
Col 636·2606. ~ for the ,..
_ . . . ...... August I!:

IIEC&lt;*l C()(IP
The UIB Co-&lt;&gt;!&gt; In ~ Hal Ia QPOii
-.cloy-friday ~from 7 ·9 p.m., and Mol1day
and Friday aflemoona from 12·2 p .m.

Homlol (Kozi(ltseY. 1966). 146 Dlefendorl. 7
p.m. Sponooted bytheCentorfor'Medla Study .

GSA SENATE lloiEETlNG t

-n1 -n1

JOBS

PIIOFESSIOHAL
to CNo.,_ (I~ 9 monll! \
posllloniPR·I . -..8-8019.
Technical
PR·1 . Phlwmacology &amp;

Room339 ~ . 7p.m.

ETHNIC AMERICAN ALM FEsnYAL •
The Italian Amortcen~

~ and Other lllririgera and Lo Dok:e
Foota. Sooth · lechn room. Conwnoolcalion
Cen..... 8Yffalo S1ate. 8 p.m. F,..... The com·
monlalorwtl bo AllortGrWlde.
.

Forfo.&lt;1her lnfonnation. col676·6313.
FIUIS OF ALFRED HITCHCOCK •

&amp;cro_. on o Train. 146 Dlelendorl. 9 p.m.
-bytheCenterlorMedaStudy.

T'aut and

_ . . t U ~- ..

Aober1- and Farley~..- on alnlin
and form In unholy poet Involving murdo&lt;.

~ . B-8020 .

FACULTY
ln-,OpendhieDan~. F·8674 .
--.~.F-8075.
-m-.Pil~.F-8076 .

-n1

RE8EAIICH
.
•
St. Typlal ex St. - . TEAM Dontiatry.
R-802?.
,·
Dhctor 6 T.......... ~ ­
( PR·~ equivllonll. IUnln -..o- lnatiMe,
R·8023.

T--:
_,, ___
--:--CI*t·
C~CIVL 1E1!Y1CE

1J111o1

~.;.!:.

...

aar-o.

4. P·"'·

: Pllyslcof

---~-.u: Schoolof

Ule ...
~of

Sl&gt;or*nd by ... F-.«y of -

lllologlcol -

~) .

FACUlTY Allt&amp;COLLOQWr-·

,_...._liMIT-.

ICW -

Plonl: Centnl
&amp;.r·
gory: ~: ~~ : ­

THURSDAY-27
, ... c:_, -

.

Ule Wo!kshops seeks your pao1k:ipation . . .
, - I n 111 Far 1978 prognwn. Kyou have a skit
ex talent that you would like to aha'e with olhef
members of the Unlven!lly community. contact

~

~AGora

-

~"'-""~­
~~

~--.a:-·~~-:-

-

~

·-

f'llloolcolf'lonl.-. .

_Cioflll ....

Clooll .... -

miUCTUIIAL llllmiOOOi.OGY Ill FUI

.......,,_

(2): Doon'l Qllce.

/ - . , . _ , , _ _ (!):

-

-

..

Llnry (31:

~~_,-1

AIIAI.Y-·

--~ :

(A.
Room. 1927). 148 Oiolendorf. 1 p.m. Spor-.a
by the Center for MoclaSiucly.

en..-~: ..... :-~.

UU.UFLII'

gnll)hy: IJnivwofty-- s.orw-.
C l o f l l - IG,7 - ~

-

-

SaWTnol)'o

--...oys

- . - (lblly, 1977). Conference
- · ~. Col836-2919 l o r - - -·

- .--limgi.Wldof

Adrnie8ion charge.

!

CleYino..-:o ~ylll&gt;oulhisaacent

from ..

Nllldher'l tyftirY'Ijclf ~to a poeition • a
Plbfoooor of flnguiotlco. Only 11m """' to win 1!01f1
the QrWld Plize .-ld Cittk:e' Prize at the cannes

--·
on

,.,... . , -

1-.rty ~ · .

----~: Goo­

(21.
-CiofiiiCH-CenlraiSioreo.
._....... 111M-~ Ser·

-·
-··
--·----0ific:e

'

--.-,~fiiH-Pioysl·
cal - . .. ~~ until 10/26176 then
10~..-

NOTICES

IIIIOI'-IIICSil&amp;'
Too much

-

~.

~ mind'/ -

_ , . to

(111178·10/311781: OMolon of ' ~
Ecfucalion
(4/1178-113117DI:
Microbiology
(811178-5/31/7DI .
Dolo IEn1ry- OperoW ICH- lJMoor.
oilY Ccmputing SoMceo (111/78-1 0/31/781.

�:r

...uaa

.hllyiiO,It71

Moving the Meyer

Eight members of the U/Bfacultyand staff, who areal50 members o f
the 365th Evacuation Hospital of the U.S. Army Reserves, assiS!ed In the
move of 450 patll!nts from the old E. I. Meyer Memorial Hospital to the
new Erie County C-omprehensive Health Cen~ last Saturday.
.
The moving operation. known as Operation Mi'yflower, began at
8 a.m. and ended ahead of schedule sh~ly befofe ~p.m. Some 130
reservists helped bring about a smooth transition.
•
Each hour, 50 patients were moved over the one-mile distance
between the two facilities vta an underground tunnel. Hospital personnel
guided thef)1 from their beds to cans or wheelchairs, then the
· reservists took over. Intensive care patients were moved last~ Two
reservists accompa~led each patient; those In Intensive care were also
a trended by a nurse or physician.
Col. Charles Lipan I. commander of the reserve evacuation hospital and
associate professor ol dental radiology at U/B, headed the operation.
Lt. Col. joseph E. Li ppert, U/B manager of classification, salary and
benefits administration, Is the executive officer of the unit.·
It was one of the few times an entire hospital has ever been moved,
Meyer officials said.

Assessment of new German campus sounds familiar EIIIJOII'S IIOTE: The

- . o - of a

.., •..,._In_&lt;lflldl&gt;lnoor-

--.w~~oloundllna~jluM... ClarWWif bW

_ .......

-

,.._- .. -

_, -

The

· buO . .

SU~gor!--

The Un'-slty of Stuttgart wu for
many y . . . crowded Into a -'-s of
amaH buildings In the o.nter of one of

=~YC: ~tes~ ~~,.~~::,..~

-

to

make~

giant IMP to the
&amp;uburba, and a targa tract of land

procured for the ordtlfty establlshmtlnt

of the aclentlflc end technical par1 of

the Unl-alty on the new campus .
A majority of thi s building program Ia

•=r.e~:;.. ~oaved"l:.'Tt ls0~u~

· report that everyone with whom l talked
a.ms to feet that the new campus Is
something of a failure . Most of the
laboratories and offloas are In two large
high-riM buildings with a collection of

~~ ~~~. ~~~d~~ld~;: ~

dormitories.
The design Is not visually stimulatIng, and the conlinulng construction

- makes 8Yerythlng look unfinished.
Typical or the illck or concern lor
people In the planning Is the fiiCI IN!
there Ia now no c:.nter for student
Tecrutlon, no athletic lacllltlee or
playing fields, no unl-.lty cultural
program, and no con-.lent publlc or
unlv....,lty transportation
to take
students Into the city.
Some, who have rebelled against the
factory atmosphere, have left. The staff
are also d lsaatlafled. They faal that the
Individ uality of groups and depanmenta
Is loaf by pntng them Into huge
omnibuses of bulldlnga. The final atraw

7

I

�.luly20, 1171

ART PARK POETRY FESTIVAL CALENDAR
Campus events take p i - In Clemens Hall, Amherst, and In the Abbott
Ubrary Poelry Room, Main SIAiet. For specific locations at Artparl&lt;, Inquire
at Poetry Festival Information Desk, Log Cebln, Artparl&lt;.
All events are free and open to the general public, except as asterlsked.
"Cnldlt Free Workshops: nostncted to enrolled membere.
• 'Open as so- permits; ad..,ce nsglstratlon encouraged.
Call636-2575 for Information.
·

llllnd8y' July 20
• ~Niagara-Erie writers (NEWl Workshop
by Senondlplty Arta Unlimited (with
Nancy Ban)s ....s Cynlllla Ball Wllllains)
Open Office Hour with M.vln Ball
.
(433 Clemens)
.
l&gt;lsc:uaslon: M.vln Ball &amp; students

3:00- 5:00pm

At Artp8rlc:

10:00-11 :00 am

AtSUNYAB:

-

11 :00-Noon

·

(436c-s)

•

2:00- 3:00pm l&gt;iacuaslon: M.vln Ball &amp; studwtts
~436 Clemens)
6:30- 8:00pm Cnldlt Free Workshop with Manrln Bell
(A38 Clemens)
8:30- 9:30pm llutier Chair Reeding Ill' MatviQ Bell
(438 Clemens)

FrkMy, July 21
2:00- 4:00pm "N. E.W. WorkshopwlthAIIenOeLoach
(sll&lt;!es, poems, rituals inspired by Hopi
Indian life) ·
.

AIArtpwl&lt;:

1~~~1t~~ ~::~~~Yt~\c~~"s:r~309

AISUN.YAB:

Clemens)
Noon- 1:00pm Aulographlng &amp; Discussion: Marvin Bell
(AbbOtt Llbraly Poetry Room)
2:00pm ·Lecture by Berbara Holland (438
1
Clemens)

:oo-

Satunllly, July 22 .

'

AtArtpark:

2:00- 4:00pm ··workshop/Reading with Barbara
Holland
4:00- 6:00pm Open Reading II.

AtArtpwl&lt;:

1:30- 3:00pm "Basho" (poem/play by William Na-o
and community group)
3:00- 5:00pm Performance by Mike Finn &amp; Jim
- ~ McCiu~ln
.

AtArtpark:

3:00- 5:00pm "N .E.W. Workshop by Earth's
~~p.!;:;ws (emphala on feminist

Sunday, July 23

W~ay,July28

10:00:.11 :00 am Coffee Ho!lrwlth Anselm Hollo (309
Clemens)
·
11 :30-12:30 pm Discussion: Anselm Hollo &amp; sludents
(436 Clemens)

AtSUNYAB :

4:00-

s:oo pm ~~:S~'!:~~~~rm~~~~ ,438
Clemens)

The Reporter will print the calendar of ewtnts for the final days of the ·
Festival next week.

-- -- -

-lltDEI.AWAREPAIIK'

_.......,_J_
... ......,y_,.
......

F'ACUI.lYMift~-·

..-......

of

Thoro
monoo.

a.-..

&amp;IIIah- -

_

-- -

-

-

This .. the llufto6o .....-.of the
woo the hit of the Now c..t.l Flm In
Now YOf!&lt; INs May, • wei oo t h e - tntemotionll Flm F - . .. Set on on 18111 oontury c..t&gt;on
. . _ plont111on . the ,., on tho Qw1ltion

I CoftliiM. 14e Oiefenck:wf. 8 p.m.
expen~

Study.

- Spt

AtYte Suter lnd Ka1
od by tho Centor for • Modie

10 - .

1 p.m Spon-

b¥ . . Cor.-lor-8tucly.

.........IJ&amp;A._p_•

to&lt;--meMo-

- ctw
- Squn.
g o.Col838-2919

- - - .. title~.

A--b¥~Ctilt) ... not
. . - o f the c:onfeoolonoj _,at hill

own
-

-~
_ _ .... _ _ Aofw_
~. 1825) 108 -

... be • -

-Of' Ali'IIED HITCHCOCK'

........

-.

-

Centorlor- ~-

_....,..._,
---=-·::.=:-==.~-~
~

--

~·· · -

. FrM.
-.
.;... of - . , Poo1&lt;.r8p.m.
9pof-.d 1&gt;¥ tho~ o l - - tho
-

cioc:uiO ,., _..., ol ~··
1 p.m. on -.ctoyo ..:1
Allgust23.

-=

w..._,.

ploys at

throogh

IIOIIDAY ~AT 1ME IIOVID'
FIN ( - -~- 170 MFACC,
$ .25. Sponao&lt;ed by

- af

Ellicolt. 8 p.m.

the~_Engloh~--

SUNDAY-23
SHAKESPEARE IN DELAWARE PARK'
WiliOm _ _ . •• T1lo
gll"den .,.. of Delaware Pwtt. 8 p.m. Free.
Center
lor _ _ _
~odbythe0o!&gt;ot1montotn-n..:tthe

T...._,_ -

eo.._hltobootogroupof..-wwlloget
ontongloclin t h o - of~ to&gt;Ctbul1ooque
g01o cb1ng study ol *&gt;g In the English
~- Gory Cooper. v.y · - In -

g::,.~~bylllr1*"'~-

RLMS OF ALFRED HITCHCOCK'
ThL
(195T). 148 Diefendorf.

w,_ -

----··-T-to&lt;------·-·
-----c-.-TllloT-- -ln_
-----.. --ttwlotMot'
-wtmmod.-a-.
_____..._ -WMA.II'
-

-

-ctwvoYou'l wilh )'OU _...In the lind of cotton.

- - o f - P o r k . B p.m RM.

........ ~&gt;¥ .. ~of--tho

Cor.- l o r - ... lie • -

. .. Wind 1111311). Conference
· Squn. Col838-2111111or--

UUABRLM'
The t..ut . . _ (C&lt;bl. 1977). ConfOrer-ce

-- c t w
· SQun.
Col 838-29111
g o_

SATURDAY-22

iocn portor-

Th«e .,. be • concert betore -=t1 perfor-

""'"""·

MONDAY-24
'

~TIONIIItTHEAIITI

--.-~o~r.-..:a-;

~ ...... (""CIIIdnln ol Ctioio" ).
Co&lt;.wfor c.. (Chonnel8) . • p.m. (Rerun).

~108-. 8p_m_

b¥ . . _1or_8tucly

_____

,1_,~

-

-

~·a

T1lo

Cor.lor
- _
of _
. _
Pork. 8 p.m. FrM.

· ..... CIIN&amp;-21118

-bytho~of-- ...

. .. . ,_. _ 1 0 - - . . -

Thoro ... bo • -

.....
Aooll ...... lfldl'lloo\l_
_
-----~,..,...,.....-.

bolore -

-

-

~
at ... by
I n - Engliol&amp;

CONYEIISAT10NS IN 1ME ARTS

~,

. . . _ ("A Cloc:l&lt;wOf1&lt; 0rongo1 . lntemotionof
~ (Chonnel t 0 ). 8 p.m. (Rerun)

studying
~­

(O!Mor. 11108). 148 _ , _1 p.m.
-bylloc.ntortor-Siudy.
Arol of ......

-- ~~-Bpm.

FRIOAY-21

..-A RECITAL"

~ ftpu-:..-::
:-::p..::
... _
o f~
_ "":,"::.
__

-

~ONRLIII'

Hamiel,_
_ 196t). ue Oiofondorf.
11 a.m . 5pono&lt;nd by tho Center for Modlo ·
Sludy.
Thil il • en.ct ~ of Mool ~··
1IYoting ....,..,.,.. ol ll!lo - BUt,
according lo""" · . . ~ coot
"'rw1gMfrom-lot-• ..:tthete&gt;d hoo
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>:Jackson
Racism takes toll
Of'\ everyone,
PUSH leader says
~:n ~~h~v:,s:.,Pr."linlt~:

S... Humanity (PUSH) told a recepllva
crowd In O'Brian Hall'e Moot Courtroom
laat WMk that Amer'lcana must ahlft
their alghtt from "educational existence
to educational excellence" ind al.m fO&lt;
maximum rather than minimum standerds In education .
F!:,~ BPgnr:"UC:i: a~:;d~ by the
St:::l;ng alowly, graduallY, building
momentum, then exploding n!Q bursts
Of oratO&lt;Ical e""'l'Y, Jackson's ap_,h
at times took on a sermon-like quality.
Refetrlng to the Importance . of
ed.-tlonat excellence, Jackson called
racism Ita ..,umber one Impediment In
America.
"Racism has aerved to divide our
communltlee. It has split our concept of
ustlce traumatized our schools and
O&lt;Oed 'ua to build schools Where we
don't need them. Racism has pitted

1

l

18

~:~ag~~~h~ d~t~~ ::::
:~ :,!~~'h!J~~;I~I=t~o~
lamented.

RllcMI leolatlon lllualoM
Jackson noted that segregation takes
Ita toll on White children as well as on
black. Racial Isolation cauaee Whit., to
grow up with an "lllualol1 of
auper'lorfty," said .Jackson . Then,
"when thalr bubble buratl," whites are
unat&gt;le to cope with the realities of a
heterogeneous and pluralistic society,

oftJ~~~~l:':O:u::~~·;;

pending tuition tax credit legislation (as
eponeored by New YOII&lt;-Seria!O&lt; Patrick
Moynltwn) puMS Cong....,., Amer'lca
wlllmcMI toward a "thrse-tlarad ayatam
of education:" a euburllan system
-tlally baaed upon class, a private
acllool eyatam baaed on race. and an
Inner city ayatem baaed on alienation
8ndreMn~t.

Jackaon also predicted that If Inner
city schoole collapse because of
lneufflolent funding, the population will
have to be.r the bigger and costlier
burden of rehabilitating those denied a

~~~iio~

careful about being
penny rich and dollar dumb. Education

coats, but rehabilitation coats more,"

Somlt will be ·o n leave

7

1

fr~~ .::.'J~ ~~~~~ the Dutch
.equivalent of the Center for Advanced
Studlei In the Behavortal Sciences at
Palo Alto. While there he will pursue at
~~~

.f';e:h:=c~~~f~sJ~iernatlonal

Political Science Association's Research Group-in Biology and Politics,
he will be organizing a panel on that
topic to be held at the Aaaoclatlon'a
triennial meeting In Moscow In 1979;
2.He lntt~nds to do some writing In
the same field; and
3. He plans to begin an " update" of

heRS:,=;,g to Proposition 13 as
another barrier to educational excellence, Jackson called the law "more
• punitive tMn redemptive." He told the •. L~.hls~c::?'chof ~~~~~~~~i~~:. ln }~:
gathering that many CellfO&lt;nlana voted
Development of American Political
fO&lt; the mMSure becauee they vi-ed It
Science: From ~u~ess to Behavioralu a means of etrtklng out against
Ism, first publls'J"" In 1967, by Allyn
affirmative action and the welfare
and Bacon .
system . But as a result, unemployment
In that work, he and Or. Joseph
will llkaty lncrMM among whltn.
Tanenhaus of SUNY /Stony Brook
chide many modem political eclentlsta
fO&lt; their sketchy knowledge 01 the
. . . - t a another threat
ortglne and early baCkground of the
to educational excellence and oppO&lt;field. a-use of this lack of familiarity ,
tunlty fO&lt; blacke, JackaQ_n charged . The
the CCH.uthore contend, political
Bekke ruling "elowa down the process"
science has been both a " product and
of cloelng the numbera gep between
prisoner of Its past." The volume
white 8nd black prof-lonala, he aald.
Jackaon urgecl, ~. that blacks
"not gN8 up" atnce the Supreme Court
at the se.me time clertfylng Issues and
has "made bad declelone befO&lt;B" which
problema confronting political eclence
were later rectified through leglalatlon.
He reminded the audience tnat blacks
tod&amp;e of these laauee, which Somlt will
did not ,_... the rtght to vote, or get
be studying Intensively next year, Ia .
open houalng 0&lt; - s to public
"what
the biological eclencea have· to
accommodatlona1hrough the Supreme
tell ua about pOlitical behaviO&lt;," "the
Court, but rather through " laglelatlve
extent
to which social behavior and
rernedln."
political behavior are ln'fluenced by
Jackaon etreaeed that blacks cannot
" stop thle regression or the ewing to the
m~rs g~~~~ ~~~~~oil lies,. Soml t
right" by puelvaty sitting beck an~
Indicated, extends the debate on the
developing a "dependency eyndrome.'
nature of human nature to Ita
They muat lnateed Initiate counteractive
Implications for the political process.
leglaletlon .
For example: Is man Inherently
· Juat a emphatically! Jackson said
l~Qgreaalve? How can man be an
l*cUwlll not be capab e of organizing
altruistic being and yet survive?
a ,..latance movement If they become
At the NIAS, which Is located at
vlctlme of moral 0&lt; spiritual decadence.
Wassenaar, near The Hague, Somlt will
He called maas media dl~lon , dope.
be one of a number of visiting fellows
and hedonistic phlloeophlea "worms"
from around the world .
t11at weeken the moral fiber.
He has been executive vlca president
He warned against tredlng " ehort
here elnc;t 1970; before that, he was fO&lt;
P'-Ura fO&lt; long term pain ."
four years a prolessor In the
&amp;.ybQdy ''Wanta a resurrection but
Department of Political Science wh&amp;;~
eeya humbug to cruclfblon ," llf. seld.
he aerved as chairman from 1966 to
·-·..-.· ~. col 4

~m"

·:r~P!:~:~~:~ t:~rec%~~~~~ ~~

*"'

nex~ y~r

Executive VIce President Albert
So mit will be on leave during academic
1971H9 as a fellow at the prestigious
Netherlands Institute for Advanced
Study In the Humanities and Social
Sciences (NIAS).
In making the announcement of
Somlt'a leeve, effective September 1,
President Robert L. Ketter Indicated
that a famiHar- figure lri the University's
-admlnletrstlon, Chartee- M:-f'ogel wtll
be acting executive vice president next
year.
Fogel , who hae just completed a tour
as acting deen of the Greduate School,
was assistant executive vice preeldent

1969. From 1~1966, he on the
faculty of N. Y.U; he served as dlrectO&lt;
of doctoral programs In the Graduate
School of Public Administration there,
among other administrative positions.

ha~"tre\~ n~~=~ s:Be~:::~rr~

General and TeChnical Stud....
Praldent Ketter said he Ia delighted
that Fogel has again coneented to take
on a major lnter'lm 8aaJgnment. "Hia
dedication and cornmlt"**t to the
smooth operation of the Un'-slty oow
the yeara apeak fO&lt; themeat-." ketter

gf~"1'~~~~~~=-~~~~cl ~.~~

The Computing Center, tha Ubrsrlaa,
and the Office of Admleaone and
RecO&lt;da wtll continue to rwport to the
Office of the Executive VIce Pn~Jldant.
Ketter aald.

:
live posts. He wal an assistant to the
president In the mid 1960s, was once
assistant dean of the School of
Engln8fl{lng, was director of the former

said.

Holt Is acting dean
Or. Andrew W. Holt Ia now acting
dean of the Division of Graduate and
Professional Education, Executive VIce
President Albert Somlt announced this

~------------~

week.

Holt will fill the post until the arrtvel
on campus ofDr. Gilbert D. Moora, the
dean-designate.
Moore Is expected to be here
permanently around mid-November,
Holt Indicated .
Meanwhile, Moore will be on
campus at " Irregular Intervals" and will
be In close contact with developments,

~m't:::;:~ ~:r~:·olh.:;e'!~~~~~

July 21.
Holt , who has been assoc[ate dean of
the Greduate division since 1964, said
he Is looking forward to lllloore'e
rejoining the University. "Gil MOO&lt;e has
had consld-.ble experience In the
upper edmlnlatrallon here and Ia readY
to provide excellent leadership," Hoft
predicted.
Somlt expreaeed the gratitude of the
Unl-alty to Holt for lending his
edmlnlatrallve talent and Interest to

assuring a amooth transition In the
Greduate Dean'e Office.
Holt has been on the Unl-alty staff
since June 1960. He holde the Ph.D. In
higher education from U/B.

�l

Health food buffs
found 'harmless,,- but ·•.• •
,
S~lologists

worry about their Insistence
on biological solutions for social Ills;
'It's not that sfmple,' Lewis 8.. Brissett argue
U/8 M&gt;Ciologlat Uonel Lewis (and hi a
~ Dennis Brtasett.) take on
-n.tlmnl Health Food Movement" In
~ 1878 Journal of American .
... ....., to a cergo cult or a maaalanlc
- · t h e two contend.
Much of It, the authors grant amiably,

l:..:tty~~~a :
1

bs:r:m: ',; ,
to ua." the two write, that "In
tiii8.Q of the abaurd, one should not

=·~l~t~e:J:::la -:"~~:'
wit~
Identity - a - which often Incur

wt.. he must. In comperlaon

deCeit, violence and aometlmee death,
a commitment to the hMith food
- t.aurety-. Innocuous. •
But ....
Thenl Ia 0118 e l - t of the
which Ia troubling: "This Is
the lnalat..- that probltima of a
DeYCIMJioaiQI and IIOCiologlcal nature
ini t.t lilndlecl on a biolOgical baala.
In thW 11Qe wl*l man's social
(aymbollc) lllbn ... finally been
u 181:1; ..,.,. the social
. . . _ _ flnllly IMbn enough to .
ott. Mlullona to man'a problema, it
-~~to f'lllllllt solely to the
of huiiWI exiatance offered
bvblology.lnclead,lt would be pleaaant
lflt a l l - t1w1 elmple."
'--11 Mel Brl-" ergue that while
desirous of
health food_. . .
lmprooad health, 11:18
lor Identity
Ia the~ motivation. The
"dadlcllled u.-,• _.,beCOmes a
oonwrt.~. "fully elaboraled
_.ng ayatwn!"

...,.18had

......,._iOn

=

---

11 .............
To (ltll a lllle on that "meaning
ayatwn," '--Ia- and hia w-author
lumad 10 th&amp;3 llteN!ura of thjt
healtll food rn.-ouala8ncl crttiQI rawtew. The manuals
lllghly - l d e d by health
food I t - In two major metropoUtan
- . . All but of the .olumee had
lleln wrtttan or -'&amp;ad In the last

--12

.....

peraon who consclentloualy follows the
dictates of health food manuals goes
beyond mere good health. n
Health foods, the~ of one book
promised, can also lead to:
"increased sexual_potency/Lons 'Life

apan'~"'fR~~!.~~h.;';~=~'l:artBfl:

.~eight control/and much more."

Anotller author advised that the "right
foods":
1
" . . . have the ability to so super
c~e your emotional system that you
c$1 beCome transformed into-a brand
, _ per-aon. Theile magic minerals can,
In a manner of speaking, .reptlice a
1

~~Jm~~a~ti{ntc:'~hs~ll~ e::"!

harsh word Into a gentle one. Thay have
the magic JIOWtl' of changlnll a lonely
person Into a popular leader.
You can save on doctors' bills, .
llentiata' billa, and drug billa, another
book avows.
Still another reminds that "In doing
your part to haip America build st.ronH
and heathly future g81W&amp;tlona, you w1
be meeting your highest and moat
solemn obllgatlons or citizenship."
"'f course," sociologists Lewis and
Brlasett mock .
Bla commitment
·
'the commitment which is required to
reach lha life promised by these books
Ia "all-encompassing,'' Lewis and
Brlaaett submit.
One author they surveyed urges
readers to "study and learn how to
choose, lor deposit in life's account,
only the richest things life hes' to offer:
the most highly nutritious food; the
cleanest, most co~structlva habits; the
moat optimistic, chMrluJ attitudes; and
the deepest devotion to God ."
-s- now,• anottjltr manual exhorts, .,hat for the
yodr long life

'='

r~,;; 111 y= t = 1with; ~:!lore!\~

Whenever poaaibllh"
Authors of health food manuals love
to bllater the eatabUahment, · tile
aoclologista found. "Doctors partie·
Thll two ~lata diiCUI8 their
come under {Ire. They are vlewed
flndlnOI under ....... ....Singa1 In uularty
well-Intentioned but often Ignorant
_ . - - JllfllllltlltG the words 01 the
and
_
, llang&amp;r9US . . ~ • At tha least
llelllll fDOd lltOPie tlwmeal- to make
they are not dMmed experts on
a-OUIIJI(e lcioll• .... -trlc.lf
lllltrltlon •. ... Llkewlae, ministers are
cutlaaled lor holding lea Cf811111
of " ' ...... food - - . . '--'• and - aocilila, businessmen lor glvtng away

~~ccimrnon ........

~~ge.

In addition, his hair waa falling out
so rapidly that he waa threatened with
baldness. An allergist phyalclan pl'eac:rlbad a concoctiOn of three, lnoredlenta: a commercial. pt11P1ratlon of
liquid vitamin 8 complex, ffileh I)IOod
Squeezed from 11-. 1!1111 enO\!Qh
alcohol to prevent ~liege. The blood

boxea of cand)', blllt&gt;era lor ~lvlng
SWM!s to their - young clients.' The
educational eatabllahment gets bad
notices of Ita own for Ita rOle aa an
"unsuspected, unseen collaborator In

ll:~'!':c:.::t~=h~1~1n

11

'i'n-e" ~jl!.eez~~ro;,: t an ":d~l.!~rC:::~

What ..-..·mlaaln9
What the muses are "missing" Ia
plen\Y.. The health guidebooks maintain
that good nutritiOn" promotes Improved body f"nctlons 1 warda off lllneaa,
Improves peraon81 appearance, - upgrades the mind, and curea deviants.
Is presented with an amlllinll
myriad of vices, virtues, and solutions,
the two sociologists report . "The
maladies range from 'cell delerloratlon'
throueh 'nerves with a capital N ,' or

:d~~ ;:;~~~':~~~:::=:~

this mlxture dally." He reportedly told
the author of one of the health manuals
that thla brew "was so unpleasant to
teste that when a child In the family was
given the choice of a dose of It or a
whipping he chose the w~lng.

"'ne

~~"1:.~ ":::ul~e forrer:~:.PHisu=
stopped falling . out, and gradually
regained Its natural black coloring."
1

:~:..ro~~ u~r~~k~glr:tl=~ .

1

rh:":Jo"Pn~u~ o~~~e::~tum of men and
The most COIJlmOn solu~lon lor each;
lewis llt)d Brlssett found, Is "either
Wheat germ or yeast or both.''
These and other energy foods,
examples from the llfereture contend,
wlll make any Individual more adept
phXslcslly, b!l he "a gardener, a
~
boy, a conquistador,

The health gurus ar~ ' JII of similar
tips lor Improved mind and psyche,
achievement of long Ute, and proper
sexual functioning. Amlno-benz.olc acid
can stimulate the male libido, LeWfs
and his co-author discovered. VItamin E
combats "vanishing gonads." One
previOusly wretched female attained
f~lllty, one of the books reports, by
eating millet cereal .-y morning and
drinking the fresh juice of beets, celery
and cabbege.

.:rir::r..ve':.e&amp;per

Among alckneaaea and related
medical problema that natural- 1oods
can aucceaafully prevent or tnaat, the
sociologists found claims about:
heada!:hea, cheat colds, asthma,
~1. psoriasis, eczema, hay lever,
hiveS, Infections, polio, anemia, stammering, arthritis, rheumatic dlaeasea,
encephalitis, myxedema, diabetes,
coronary thrombosis, migraine, ulcera,
and even cancer. "One author or
another," the two reseaR:hera reported,
"asserts that each of these can be pr&amp;vanted, Improved, or cured by a good,
natural diet."

M•ts
Meats, lor example, "help overcome
stammering,'' one of the books
indicates.
Lewis and Brlssett were surprised
that "the outcome of good eating most
discussed In tlfa books wes good
appearance." Skin, nails, eyes, teeth,
muscle tone are ali enhanced, the
health food proponents contand. Hair.
too-especially hair. .

tr!'t~~~=:st'o ~s:'?&amp;e!:~t ~~
two aocloiOglata thought might be "an
~r;~ing commitment to the good

It seems that thla man had been "run
down. Hla hair had turned white,
although he had not yet reached middle

llrlllltt '-'11, """"'- • '*- llltacl&lt;
on the "othef .,.._. of ~Baing

op=fc!"cJ.nd='~,::l:'a,:~~.~~i

only they spruce up theJr diets. ·

-

VItamin E lor uniMx
Finally, the "scourge" of unisex can
positively be eliminated with a little
. more Vitamin E, one of the more
militant of the manuals proclaimed.
"Yes, the nation Is cestrating Itself,"
the author of a book entitled, Feel Like
a 11111/lon, wrote. ''Our serious lack of
vttamln E, so important lor the pituitary
gland and Its hormone manufacturing,
Is undoubtedly helping to upset tha
normal secondary sex characterlatlca In
young men and women.
"Experimental woik w)th animals
shows a loss of secondary sexual
characteristics alter two or three
generations on Impoverished diets.
Males lose their heavy masculine frame
their make up begins to resemble th6
female. Females also tend to lose their
distinguishing build ao that both sexes
llpproach a state of p.nh~yalcal lleutrality,
The male no longer has the strength of
body that normally makes him the
breadwinner and dominant peraonallty.
'The female no longer has the pelvis
=It~, required lor easy Child

B~ out the wheat germ oil.

:::=: ~-:n:::n..--ri8t-; Lobbins named.to urban task force
tired, being - · being

• the

.,..._on
canuz::·........,
"MMIIIr-• "'**-pie
llnd4n:J

~.:om Ia

.... _......
llle diN

~A:::
....... (

auger and
of Ita oon- f r o m J.l.

riDIIIIIIQIIZine):

of auger

llldiGIIDII flll_lllnjJ to •
tOWMI
flodll8 wrote. . . . . . •

en...
.....,Chnlleld'
a
IIMfor....,the _ .

IIIII criminal. WM hll
~ l8clor
OOIIIi1lluMCI to lila lllllna a
~
tlllar-tlllllllld.
......
nt11n1 to

,..._......,.-Did

.... 1111= .. ...., Thll ......
Ia
GM Ill no C11*110n IIIDut
lt.

-

............ from lOw

~-.--811-!.!. ~ ..._. from the

_,
..... ___.__

........"Gi".;t;i'.. held out to

.... """"'""., ..

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

--~"',....
-···~-........... ,....
y. . . .

_,_"'_

~.-- ... ...

_,,_,
-.o..cltlol
.,._._
IOflll A O.OUTIU

--

~fldffOI'

JOIU IUCHHOWSI&lt;I
_ . , c..-lar &amp;llw-

the

U/8 -,. ~ted on a .-lyformed task !orca which will recomll*ld waya to Improve urban affairs
educatiOn at col'- and universities
throUahoul the natiOn.
WliTiam C. Lobblna Jr. aasoclate
dlractor of the Olflca of uibaii Affairs,
was 1WIIed to tha apeclal task force by
the 1~ber Council of University lnatltut• lor Urben Alfalra at -Ita 1978
llllftiMI -'l~ln DenVer.
.
bOIIblna, whe ;at a3 Ia the youngest
111-tW-Iorca. nqtad that the

~

ltU.IIIIIIonal "--inG IJIOk,.;

oo1&lt; Ill the current status of

urban affairs educallon ·and decided
there Is room lor Improvement.
They agreed, he added, that urban
affairs educatiOn hes beCOme "stagnant
aod unresponaiva to lha needs of
disadvantaged elements of u.s.
society.• ·
The 11-.nember task force, according to Lobblna, received -a mandate to
recommend uniform standards -''lor
develOping quality degree and certificate ~s . • In additlor~~ the teak
Ioree was dlracted 10 • cooatder
development of urban allalra education
lor those already professionally irr

Drug information center closes
Bulfalo'a Orua Information Center,

CJI*8IIad lor fiW yewa undar the
~

of

the

U/8 School of
!'llll'ml!cYJ_._IIeln dlaoontinued In the
' - of mmtnlallad Federal funding
=-=~-Daniel H. Mwray, (j..,j

n.INe ..vloa, which ~ to
u manr aa 4,000 c:.lla from phraJcl-

and !IIWIMDim e.~~~ v--. provided
tnfonMtlon N181ad to the uee of drugs.
Including dOMgea, IOlliolty, location of

hard to lind riledlcaJions, aide effects
~"'rldrug inteniC!Iona. Although ,the
.. ...,.. ty of the Center's users were
primarily in t h e - - of Syracuse a
toll-free line linked the service with
I'(Oieaslonala statewide.
Murray noted that eiiQrts to interest
hoapltale, Which were the greetest
users of the service.._ In a subscription
plan to .Uow the \Allier to continue
- e unfruitful.

volved.
One of the basic criticisms at the
meeting, Lobblna reported, waa that
Jll8llY urban allalrs study programs are ·
"Hooding the~ with graduates not
adequately trained."
Another criticism, he aald, Ia that
existing programa fall to "expand
opportunltiea lor mid~ educatiOn
lor public --.Ice JQctltiOnera."
Further, Lobblns aal~, many urban
studies programs are mought to be
~overly emphaalzlng narrow ·aPII!;Ialties
such .. housing, health and cnmlnal
Justice" lnatead of "multidisciplinary
knowledge and alllila. ','
Lolibina aald the task force also
would explore the application of urban
studies ln general adult aducalion
programs and profeaalonal educational
seminars.
Dr. Robert Berrett, director of the
Urban and Regional Studiea lnatitute at
Mankato State UniVII(Sity in Minnesota,
Ia chairman of the ~~- Also
represented are Old Dominion Unl-·
slty, Norlolk, VL; the New School of
Social Re-.:11; and Georgia Stale
Uni-alty at Atlanta.
·
Lobblna, • member of the U/8 stall
since 1974, became aaaoclate director
of the Office of Urben Affairs here that

aameyear.

Carey names Ms. Brown to Council
tWrlet Wllllama Brown of Buffalo
hu ~ apppotntad a member of the
Council of ·the Uftlvwaltv. Go....,or
Carwy'a offloa -OCMICed thia -'&lt;Ma. Brown, a reeding apeciallat with
the Nlla8ra Faile echoola, repl-a
Aclbert ERich (who hu raslgned), lor a
term to explra July 1, 11180.
Ma. Brown holds both the bechelo(.o

and master's from Bullalo State. She
has held positiona aa a senior
counaelor with that cotteae'e Inner City
Stll(lent Counseling Servlca, and aa a .
lead Instructor at the Opr,ortuhltles
lnduatrlalliation Center, Bul alo.
The Council does not IM8t o - tha
~:.:.;~ next aesaion.wlil be In early

.

He said U/B Initiated a graduate
program In applied public allan
studies In 1977, which leads to a
master's degree in social sciences. It is
part of an inlerdlsclplinary program that
also oilers graduate degrees In
environmental studies, urban studies
and general social aclendlla.
Lobbins aaid the task force will
conduct its lir.ot meeting in late July.
The timetabia calla for the teak Ioree to
preaant a " working docume"'" to the
council by April , 1979.

�.lvtyU,1111

•Jackson
( - - 1 . col1)

. . . .tal~
Panantal detachll*lt alao hee debllltetlng etlacta on the young, aaya
Jackson , parents .,._.,.
should be-the vehlclea through whlch
lalth, detarmlnetlon end ~~~~~
lor educatiOn - lnatllled.
men aduc:aAlthough .Jeachara_ -

~= ~.::.,:::Y..:'1n ;:"mt'.t~

an authority
Spaeklng owtro-_
spectlvaly, he said It was no coincidence that nuns often were the moat
effective teachers. They were ._
matartallatic. C8nld lor the "whhla
penon" and damandad panantalln~

ment.

Putnam·Way access to be restric~ed
u

controls
wall as an Intercom and TV
camera which will ba tied Into the
Security Office on Mrllarsport. From
there, Security offlcara can remotely
control accaas and exit forthoaa .. tthout
keycerds who have a legitimate need to
enter. Loading aiid unloading pr1vllegas

Put...., Way, the ona-wo,y loop road
which cloeely clrclea the academic
spine .,.. at Amherst, will become a

~~~~Ju~~u~~~f'~

the

Office

of

Facftltlea Planning
announced this WMk.
Thenl will be three entrance-.xlt
oatea to the ro.dway, located across
from Governor's on HadleY Reed. east
of Fumaa Hall (off Whlta Road), aitd on
the north aida of the P-7 lot (near
Clemens and Lockwood).
Acceaa and exit at the Hadley and
White Road galea will be by keycard
• only, Secooty ...-tetwea lndfcate.
The P-7 entrance will have keycerd

~ur~ o1~f.J~saJ.r,h.:'t =s~'?jj

not be available solely for dropping off
passengers. The Flint and Hamilton ·
entrance loops are to ba used for that

pu/f~ds are .baing Isailed to campus
service and 88!:Urlty vehlcl_., to the
permanently llandlcappad, and to
petrona of the Child Care Center,
Security spokespersons said.

ea -u

The temporarily handlceppad will
enter and exit through P-7.
Busaa will ba banned from Putnam;

=~~~~~!Y~nw~~~~:: :.'1o~~~

and Hamilton loops (where shelters ere
baing contructad) .
Legal parldng along Putnam Way has
always been restricted to handicapped
and aarvlce vehicles so the limited
access represants no change In this
regard.
Putnam Way was planned and built
as a service road only, Security officials
sald. The entire spina area was
speclllcally d~nad lor unreatrlctad
pedestrian t ,

.,.eyer

membeni

patJ::·other
of the U/B stall
will be lnvol'lad.
One of -.y few'dentlats nationally to
be In charge of a medical hospital In the
Army ReMrle, Lipan! expects the entira
operation to be completed -within ten
houna ollta 8 a.m. beginning Saturday.

It Ia believed this Is the first time a
U.S. Army Resarve unit has been
raqueatad to move an entire civilian
hospital population, according to
Upenl. The unit Ia glad to put Its
expartfea and training to uaa through
such public .-vies, he said.

~~~biro'~~~:!~:!

Ph. D. placement·
The Division of Gnaduate and Profeaalonat Education continues to conduct
aurvaya on p'-'*lt of PII.D. degree nsclplents. Tfie most recant one (as of
4/1/78) lncludaa aU Ph.D.'s and the Ed.D. raclpientsln Health Education from
the February 111n, June1tln, Saptamber ten and February 1978 conferrals.
A almllar aunoay has not been conducted lor Maater'a degree raclplants. The
condanaad aummery of the doctoral survey follow a; a more detailed raport ta
-liable upon raqueat from tha Gnaduate
office, 548 Capen.
'

o.nra

,

FACULTY

Tolall

I •) •

E.n-

Ph.D., plo,ad
Ed.D.

. . ..
~
Poet~ata/

... l J l t ll !-I

·un- ·hlg!* education

employad

•

%
4

Alta • Lettara

25

21

Ed•a.elonallltudlaa

73

58 80

3

4

~

27

20 74

0

0

Halllllaa.-

84

~

•
0

2

Un-

"'"-1
• %

Marion Dickson. Juanita
Terral!, James Thayer, William Wachob,
Carolyn Wara.

19

Areell

7

5

60

4

7

~

35

18

51

0

0

15

43

2

6

lloewa11Part&lt;

To181a

10

9 90
08

13
302

201

"lncludea tha Center for Policy Studies

10

B~':J~mlng:

J:~=~,.;~t~-e~:,.~~~;y

Wynna, Shirley Ahrens, John Veal .
Retummg: Mary Jane Day, Judy
Dlngeidey. Jane Dl Salvo, Gayle
Hardy-Davis.

Area Ill
Newly Elected: John Warren , William
Johnson , Len Lewandowski, Joe

0

R"R~~~!~~~acC::.~~

0

0

92

0

0

Fredericks,
Young .

2t

26

9

Area IV

10

0

0

12
4

84

0
11

0

Areel
Newly Elected: Paul Ciazkowakl,
Barbera Mierzwa, Mary Harren, Anaataala Johnson, Rita Lipsitz, Ruth

12

34

6

Listed below ara both the newly
elected Senat&lt;irll to lhil f'rofeaalonal
Slall · Senate and tlioaa Senatore I whO&gt;
are nllumlng to serve thlNiecond y - 'of
their two-year terms.

15

0

55 89

PSS lists
Senate roster

3

0

62

:.::. ~h~7B' ~;:,~

supervisor; Sp/ 4 Grace Mellentlna, unit
finance clark, a U/8. payroll clerl&lt;; and
Sp/5 Cynthia Jackeon, unit adminlatnatlve specialist, a U/B student assistant.

11

19 33

ScMolol
~~·

Security officer; Sp/rn,rlst~na Dulski,
unit legal clerl&lt;, ti U/B senior

3

57

locW klanoaa •
Adnllllllnetlon

~~~~:t;~8f~~.,C:.ff~p8,f.:;~n~ o~
~.:l.ca'r~~; as~~'· 1~1~td ~~i

0

(Incl. HI'ER)

...... ..._.

1

~~~r,~::

Agnes

o...v-~ ~-. l'lwm.

D. ~ .

2.ac-e. 5p.m.

" NlgM'o - (Hoi. 1968).
-~--

148~. 7p.m . ~by1heeentwr

for-Siudy.
-~ .. IIBAWAIIEPAI!It "
-~·o ThoT-.Qirden .-ea of Dlllwlwe Pwk.. 8 p.m. Free.

by1he

o...--1&lt;&gt;1- -""'

OF

8

Arat time lt'a bean IbM

hour
Each hour some 46-50 patlenta will ba
moved a maximum of one mila from the
old to the new building via an
underground tunnel. Mayer penonnal

41).10 .....

PHAIIM.D. - 1 -

Cent... for-~ .

- na~:o",t~\~ =k t~~th:ap'/:~':?;,p~~~
0
move them to the new facility .
~rd~:~g ms.Jv~~~~t o~ pert'.,~,·~.,:~
Col . Lipan! and Unit Executlve Officer
Lt. Gol. Joaaph E. Lippert said patients _ :::';::::?'~nnel during the day-long
In Intensive care wJif be moved last.
Lippert said no visitors will ba
Their medical conditions will ba
permitted In either hospital over the
stabilized Immediately before transfer.
weekend In order to facilitate the move.
Lippert, U/8 manager of classificaIn addition , there will be no emergency
tion, Slllary and benefits administraroom service from Friday morning to
tion, ssld an estimated 150 patient~ will
midnight Sunday. Surgery schedules
make the trip on carts; the other 300 will
will halt on Thursday.
ba In wheelchairs.
.
"Security will ba stationed at all
For patients' sslety, two Individuals
entrances and only hospital employees
from the reserve unit will accompany
and unit pirsonnel will be permitted to
each. Jntansil(ll cere patients will also ba
enter during the move," Lippert pointed
accompanied by a nur:aa or physician
out.
•
from Intensive care. In addition , Meyer
Other U/ B personnel who ara
:':fo~-:"~d~~~i~fonn~ members of the 365th Evacuation
Hospital Include MaJ. Thomas Van
along the route.

::a:g~~·mwr.;·~"n"ne\u~h~h:m .

•Calendar
("--4,col.2)

-

UlB reservists will help with Meyer move
Just as Mlly aettlara tnavelad from
the Old World to the new aboard the
MayflOwer, patients tnanslarrad July 15
Memorial Hospital to
from E.J .
the new Erie Coun\Y Com~nalve
Health Center will make • the trip
courteay of the 365th Evacuation
Hospital Unit, U.S. Army Reserves,
u~ "Opefallon Mayllow'lf."
i\ocordlng to Col. Chwtes Lipan!,
commander of the unit and associate
proleeaor of (dental) nadlology at U/8,
llbout 150 parsons from the unit wlll
aaalat with the move of about 450

The difference bel-. a good
teacher and • graat t.cher, conclUded
Jackeon, Ia that a gram teachar "geta
Into the mlnda
as the '-Ia of
students."
-

Oevendori Dean
Tlburzl, Patrick

~~~~~c!:,~~eg~~~~n~llmllnn ,

Returning: Madison Boyce. Carole
Hennessy, Helen Wyant.

FIUIS
ALFlED teTcHi:ocK•
Jamolco loon. 1M! Dilil..-1. 9 p.m. 'Sponsored by 1he Center for Mlilio Sludy.

THURSDAY- 20
FACULTY ARTS C:OUDOUIA SERIES'
Toucl! ond Qo: s - _ - ol ~
• In tho Am 1120-1120, J. ~
Townsend. Depottmont ol Englilll . 309 aon...
4 p.m. Refreel1rMnts w11 be eerved.
SponaorOd by 1he feculty of Arts ~
SuTmor Pmgrwn an ~ 11Spocos and
1he5uTmorSessians. .

STRUCliiiiAI.IIEntDIIOLOOY .. FlUII
ANALYSIS'

Tho ol lllo HOu.tDu lUI " Huotrv (llnlyer, 19251. 148 ~. 7 p .m.
- b y 1he.Centwrlo&lt;- Sludy.

_ __

SHAKDI'EAIIE .. DBAWARE PARK'
-~·aThoT

~

gordon

of 0...... Plr1&lt;. 8 p.m. Fnlo .

- b y 1he Dopnnent o l - - " " '

C e n l a &lt; l o &lt; - -.

In-

UUAII Flt.llll"

--Tho- (11139). Con-.oo
Col 836-29\ll tor ·
~~c:;:vo
.......10ocodomy-.
-_ _..

-

· 5cJJjre.

11m~ .

Aholl. - -. - . . ,. ~.-.
Bole. Aunt " " -· PriNy help 1he South
lose both the . . . .nd the peece.

WDIID AND_ .. FILII•

to&lt;-

~--loly: -.o-:

~

148

by tho Conla&lt;

~.

9 p.m. Sludy.

NOTICES
OAOI'4N CEN1al

Too mucn on )'OW mind? NMd eomeone kJ
.... to? Come to tho Drop-In Cenla&lt;. Tho holn
am.·• p.m. It 10. Hon:::ln. _,....

•• 10

"'*"

Clmpuo.
Elllcot1
ollice.
Qwnpuo. An
- 1117 'IIIFNX.
· -10nlghta.

Mondoy

5 p .m.·9 p .m.

-to&lt;

UFE-IHDI'S

Reglstnotions ... slit being
municotion tho--Deof." ~

2().Auguol3, 9 :3().11 :30

--Is -

"Com-

~.

a.m. TNo a n d -

I . J t o - -. . QI)Onlo~Co!mullty
.,.,-. Sj)OUMS. For fl.wther lnlcJmwlian
regiatnltian . contact the Ufe - -

office. 1 1 0 - . 636·2808 .

Ute
by the DMiion
Aff- Student Dewlopmont
Pmgrwn
Office""" s..m.- Sessiono.

of Student

RECORD CO-OP

ThoU I BReco«!Co-&lt;lpln 5&lt;JJireHIIIOOIIO"
Mandov·Fridov nights !rom 7·9 p.m . - Mandov
_F_,ah..,_,.lrom 12·2P.I)l.

JOBS
COMPETITIVE CIVIL SERVICE
Artlot Ooolgner ~ Centnol llupticomg, Line No
34858

�Juty1S, 1111

. . . , - - o1 -..Park. 8 p.m.

---FwmiiYMA*:Sf

Froe.

~bylhe~ol-- ·

tbOConlorlor--

.... - .•• - - - b y

Dr. - . 1

-

w. -

· -

·

12:15

~­

SUNDAY-16

2 by p.m.
!he

lo

A...,.__..,~

UUABFIUI'
1975) .•~.
5&lt;JJft. C11636,29191orehow
_
__

-&lt;M-.

-...,_a-oi~.
lor D)lwnica
ond ~
Prol.&amp;nnprw

-

--the

.-.-.

11-eiiN-•IoP-onlino

~-T-

. . . . , . . , _ , 1 8 7 0). 1"8Diefonddof.
~ by ..... Cent« lor Modio

SHAKESPEARE .. DELAWARE PARK'

7 ......

!!Uir-

_ _ . . •• Tho ' - - " R&lt;lse
garden ...,. of Oetaware Pft.. 8 p .m. Free.

--play$·
. -.--·
--ell_,_,Theca.•~

-.y concerns !he trout&gt;lod
*""e. fWd
-.ct a anwl 1&amp;6and's

~ by the -

In _..

d 1

ond Keitl1 c.r.clne C'1'm Easy")
price of -bylhem..........

the Center for Theatre Res&amp;erch.

of Theo1re ond

l
--o
wr
ho - l h e -.deB.

MONOAY-17

Hotottn-

CONVEIISAllONS IN ntE ARTS
~--vtrvtt ~con­

233 5&lt;JJA. 7 p m
. ., ~ F. Morris. _., Regtonot O!foce.
NYS ~ol- Hygiene: John Pehn,
COnn! &amp;to COnwnunlty Center.
_ , _ LeYine. Soclolosl&gt;' Oopor1menl.

UJB:- ~-.
-ol&amp;toOounly.
~by

and writer, and .,.,..,_ of the Gor1rude
Stein cOde In ~ during The TWM!ies. ln!er·

natlonaiCol&gt;leCCiwlneiiO). 6p.m,

--Asooc·

Qllogo H ond So.mmor Sesobns.

-IIIIEI.AWAREPAM'
~·· - ,_ _ Rose
...,- ol - . Park. 8 p.m. Free.
.,.., to clnctod by Dr. Saul Bdn 004 ....

the

ond .... Contlor lor

... o . - - ol -

llllog-. - o n d o p i c n l c -.

ell .. ""-

IUIIIII

(W. - . .. 1978).
· ...... Col e36·2819 lor

~-

*"Y ol -

A-

"*'

on lhe ""'·

1878

c..--

--·-.g~. ~lhelnt«·

.,....,

MI'ACC.•EIIcolt. 8 p.m. Admission: s: 2S. Span·
sorad by ""' I n - English t..anguoge lnatt·
Mo .
A lasti&gt;OI)Od- allod the~ world,

ntnporticUiarlhe--

., ~-and his~ !"dY
~-by John a.r;moro ond Ca-ole ~) .

F1LMS OF A1FR£D HITCHCOCK'
146 Oiel..-tc9 p.m. Sponsored
by tho Centwi&lt;Jr Media Sludy.
n. story ar •
cc.y Gnlntl
ond • refuQeo gOt llnglld Betgmlwl) '-"dortakino

110"'"""""' _,,

•.._,.,.-in

BrazJ and suspected by
a master lf)Y c:Nef. Heavy on the romantic, but,

.... -.horo.

... to ol --~_,

Wllllo;

c:- - .

~------

8 p.a.

~

in (

~

8

_ _ _ . , • ...,.

AWW'd

by .,. Contlor for Modlo

~-

TUESDAy&lt;_ 18

CONVSISAnoNS IN THE ARTS

----~ ­

Prize winning writer ("0111dren of Crisis'1. Courio&lt;
Collie (ChannelS). 8::Jo p.m. CRerun)

STlWCTUIIAI.III£TltOOOLOOY IN FILM
ANALYSIS"

. - ...... pilnlll - - Hoi. 8 p.m.
. . . . . . . by ... o.--oiMullc.

__
I

AIIEIIIIEI.AWAREI'AIIt'

-~··-,--­
..__ p.m. Froe.

-·--·
----

..--"'--- 8

----~ol-ondlhe

..._.(I~

. . . . . . . by . .

1 " 8 - . 8 pm.

---~

--/
---....

At Artperk:

SHAKUPEARE IN IIEL.AWAMPARK'
Wlliom ~·a Tho T_... Rose
Qll'den _._ of Oetawwe Pa1t. 8 p .m. Free.

At SUNYAB:

_ _ ... _ _ Theodor
..nTUT£ FOR FW1D DYNAMICSM

....
.......

-...---~---~~~

...

-!'It~. 1t18)

n.... .....

011-·21118 lor

At

ArtJ-1&lt;: '

2:00:. 4:00 pm
3:00- 5:00pm

2:00. 4:00 pm
4:00. 5:00 pm

-Y-FORUiil' -

Ooolfn ell~ Lu• ..--•10.'eot.&gt;, _ , af the ol ~ A
n.KNa.BoldyHal.
10 a.m.. -~ o n d - - 11

gl~c"u~';/~ Lo.!JsL~~~:~7.:.%';' 1

(o436 Clemena)

·

• 'Workshop with Carlene Polite.

~Emphasis on the llteratul'li of the

.!~~~!:'~~~)Mac

Hammond
(Emphula on styles of reading poetry
alo.u d)

Sunday, JUiy18
At Artperk:

~~ . U / B .

• 'Workshop/Reading with Harriet Zlnnes
Poetry Readii!Q by Louts Simpson •
Autograph I~ Dlacusslon: Louis

Saturday, July 15

---CIEIIFUI'
Gill CGodotdl. 1"8 Oief..-t.
I p.m. by the Cent« tor Media
Sludy.

WEDNESDAY- 19

2:00. 4:00 prli
4:00. 5:00 pm
11 :00-Noon
1:00. 2:00 pm

- b y the ~I of "-e and the
Cent« tor Theatre Reaewch .

..... _ _ . . . ,.,_2tol0p01.
. . . . . . . . . . . _ _ _ 11!111.-o

~--

7p.m. Spon80flldbylheCent«

lorMediaSiudy.

Ronov. ~ locturer In F1u;:l OynorntcO.
! 0 . 0 -. 8p.f11.

3:00. 5:00 pm "Niagara,-Erle Writers !N.E.W.) Work·
shop with Daniel Zimmerman
10:00.11 :00 am Open Offlce Hour with Louis Simpson
(433 Clemens)
11 : ~Noon
Coffee Hour with Louis Simpson (309
Clemens)
1:00. 2:00 pm Discussion: L. Simpson &amp; students (o436
Clemens)
3:00. 4:00 pm Lfi!Cture by Louis Simpson (o436 Clemens)
4:00. 5:00 pm Lecture/Reading by Harriet Zlnnes (438
Clemens)
6:3().. 8:00 pm 'Credit Free Workshop with Louis
Simpson (o436 Clemens) '
8:3().. 9:30 pm Butler Chair Reading by Louis Simpson
(438 Clemens)
Frldliy, July 14

- - - ... ...,.co.w . Grilfith, t9t9).

•• _.,AI..

-

AtSUNYAB:

SIIAKUPEAIIE ON FlUIII'
A NIQIII'o - . . CD;otorteRelnhordt. 11135). 1"8 Diefendot:l. 11 a.m. Sponsored by the Cent«IO&lt;- S1udy .•

148~.

FRIDAY-14

••

Thursday, July 13

.

-

"

o-

Ho -

1

1'4111r.
1172.

Inquire
All events are free and open to the general public, except as asterlsked: .
'Credit Free Workshops: restricted to enrolled members.
• 'Open as space permits; advance registration encouraged .
Cell 636-2575 lor Information.

AtArtperk:

..... ~

-· ·~-lhe-Y..-, to

ARTPAAK POETRY FESTIVAL CALENDAR
Campus events take place In Clemens Hall, Amherst, and In the Abbott

~:~~;~'r1 !:.n\'?;,~~t7o~tg:;k,F~gs~\~~~~~~s at Anpari&lt;,

. . . . - -. -lingllngtnspofs.

--8p.m. ~bylhe~

_ , linalfoh.

book.

MONDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES'
, _ _ century ~- Howks). 170

-----a-vo.
-a..-.
.
.
--·-·---.
..----...-"'
-·--"'
-..a·--w&lt;Wntl-___ _
...
_..._.._
------~-~.

! o n d - , . _ - " ' - "· Sponooted by

I-

SHAKESPEARE ON F1LM'
F - tweleS. 1966). 146 Oief..-t. 7 p.m.
- b y lhecenteo" '"'Media Sludy. •
0..00 Welles could be chariSmatic reaOOo

"Workshop with Raymond Federman
Concrete Poetry)
~{Yt~a8~~~;heslzer1&gt;erformance by
~Emphasis on

Wadneaday, July 111
At SUNYAB:

6:3().. 9:&lt;10 pm

At Artperk:

3:00. 5:00pm

2p.m.
-bytheFtocU!ycof--

Discussion: Marvin Bell &amp; creative
writing students to436 Clemens)

Thursday, July20

~I'LIIFUTIVAI.'

----·~

- - and Ow a.A~o~oSiote
Days. South.
tocUo-.~c.o..-.

1 a'Od 8 p

m FfM Don Golden wit

be the

~

FO&lt;-inlormobon. &lt;01878-6313
WORQ AND-liE II FlUII'
"A".~403- 2·30pm
bylheConlorlorMediaSI\Jdv.

_,_.

~

alNIC- .n401101.0ClY IN FIUI
-

~

I D i o - CClrune. 1923). 148
P m Sponooted by lhe Cent«

""-Btudl'

· - · c -.· - s, col.•

"N .E.W. Workshop by Serendipity
A.rts Unlimited (with Nan.cr Barns
and Cynthia Ball Williams
· AtSUNYAB:
10:00.11:00 am Open Olllce Hour with Marvin Bell
(433 Clemens)
11 :00-Noon
Discussion :' Marvin Bell &amp;.studants
(431! Clemens)
•
2:00. 3:00 pm Discussion: Marvin Bell &amp; students
{o436 Clemens)
6:3().. 6:00 pm
Credit Free Workshop with Marvin Bell
(o436 Clemens)
8:3().. 9:30 pm Butler Chair ANding by Marvin Bell
(438 Clemens)
The Reporter will print the calendar of events for succeeding weeks In
subsequent Issues.

�</text>
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                    <text>That's what Management has had
in its faculty recruitment for fall;
14 newcomers will join staff, Alutto says
By linda Graca-Kobas
News Blx- Staff

Fourteen new faculty members will
join the School of Management after
what Or. Joseph A. Alutto, dean of the
School, terms Its " moat successful year
of faculty ri!C{Uitlng."
The new faculty members ha.,... been
drawn from major schools of business
across the nation, Alutto noted,
Including Columbia Unlversttr,, Car11

~rt'r::'t':., ~~lv~! tintv~~~j
Rochesler.

It Is possible to recruit

y..;?r~d=·~~c;: .~'d~~~~Pbl;h~~
fn~~lw,h~~~~alr:~~ ..~~~~':J~~" What Is required Is a high quality
Institution In which they may effectively
pursue their car-s. cooperation
between pr1~ate and public sectora In
order to illoerate necessary support
facilities, an(f an aggreasl~aenta-

s
Cassata's class is hearing directly
from those involved in daytime TV;
this week two stars took their turn
" Maybe I've been watchln~ too muc ..

~o~~ka~l 'f~~~~~n ·:=~

Ald. " But I could swear I just saw the
wldcw Edna Thornton ("All. My
Children" ) and Dr. Seneca Beaulac

("~!':~~~~:,~~:.::.ra."

the trendy or " cult" thing to say, but he
was not moved .
Sendy watcl\es John's show sometimes, she said . Both egreed "Ryan 's
Hope" sets the quality standard for
daytime TV. Sendy will •atch " All My
Children" (ABC's most popular daytime
stiow), only when thera'a-an especially
good bit sha wants to see. That's not
often . She was once hooked on "Tt141
•See ' Seepo,' ,... s. col. 2

The berUY8d "widow" (who but
~ly lost her hua'*'d to the pol8on
he had Intended for her] and the
~wned nauroaurg-. fwho lusts
attw a ..,.torlal c:andldata's woman]
- ,_.IY there. Or rather the actora
Wllo play thoae parts - John Wid Sandy
o.twt.t, h~ and wffa In real life _ . on campua to talk to Dr-. Mary
By .Ioyce Buchnowald
Cuula'a Communication 488: "DayFlopotlw 511111
time TV- A Look At the SOIIp Opera.
·
What's with the University BookIt's C:Uaata'a theaia thai the II08P8
stora?
.., an lmportani, Influential social
Is It really a victim of benlgn neglect
~on (aa wall aa the economic
as some critics say? And have Its
dynamo which ganarma. 110 par cant of
admlnlatratora forgotten, or wor:ae yet,
all TV proflta] - that thay'ra aornathlng
n&amp;Wr really understood its ecademlc
mission? Or, are thera mitigating
circumstances praaent which can at
reading and aa.p-watchl!111 to get a
::Ss.!rlgyexp::;:eso:~: co~~!
handle on thaN ctramu. Thay'ra alao
'-tng dt..ctly from people lnYOIYed In
Unl=:xn~~"l~:id Snyder, execuall p h - of daytime TV production.
Last week, It waa an executive from
tive director of the Faculty-Student
Association , for the last 10 years , the
~ and Rubicam, a New Yorl&lt;
0
Unl-alty Bookstore has not had
the
Clalra Labine and Paul Avila
the
produoels/haed-wrlt8f8 of
Ryan 's
bookatock apace and r:oom for shipping
and receiving ,• he said.
Hope" will be on hand.
The National Association of College
Stores recommends a minimum of one
Tw.eiUn'twn
and
ana-half square feet of eelllng
l.alt Wednesday it was the stars'
per FTE. Snyder feels that an
t~ their _ ,_ and fouc-year-old facllit~~a1c,~~ -=ld25~
dallghlera In tow, raatlaasiy climbing
on, jlo!llng, and squealing at them, the
Gelli'lala aat In the front of a baMment
moved ita admlniatrativa offlcee (down
~.softly anawerlng questions.
the hall In Squire) to provide for mbre
- They, thamMIYea, watch little TV,
stotaoa room, has aoma 10,000 aq. feet
they told the class. " Most of It Ia not
of selling apace available to it .
III!Ofth -tchfng," John USB{Isad
Ully.
,.
Comell's bookstore
By comparison, Cornell Ur)l-aity.
Ceaaata auggestad that might be (ust

dimensions of Ita Instructional programs.
"The blend of outstanding new
researchers and successful senior
practitioners reflected in this ~a
recruiting continues at an eccef-ad
rate the School's development as a
teaching 1111d r - c h lnstitutiori of
national .significance;" Alutto Ald. The
U/B School of M1111agement was
recently rated one of the alx best MBA
programs In the northeest by MBA
Magazine and was Included among the
top 30 schools of bualneaa In the nation

~nl~~~of ~~fom'f.~=ey~t the
en~l?me~h~l J::un;e"~ ~~-tl~
undergreduala, .ao part-time under-

grad..-, 250 full-time MBA candidatee, 300 part-time MBA students, and
65 doctoral students.

The~
The,_ Management faculty are:
Donald A,_,, who will ect as
associate professor of management
::::.nncl':n t~~~lll'e~fy~::. • vantages
systems 1111d director of corporate
The School of Management's .adminrelations fortt...-School; Or. John Bamlr
Istration believes Its success In
of the University of Texas at Dallas,
recruiting will result In direct local
assistant professor of managet!ltlnt
science;
Dr. Elaine Bennett ' of
~e~ts l~".:tghJ:~~~rcart~::~t~
Northwestern University, . assistant
Center~he additional faculty will also
professor of envlronmentaillllalysla and
allow greater resources to be devoted to
policy; Dr. Ralph Bergmann, who will
graduate aAd undergraduate manage· be visiting professor of lnduatrtal
ment Instructional programs.
relations.
In addition to the new faculty, "Aiutto
Also, Or. James Brown of Indiana
noted that two major admlnlstcative
University, assistant professor of
poaltiona have been filled. Fll Van ·
marketing; Or. Lawrance Br-n a# the
Vons, former vlce p..aldant of tha
University of ROIOllM!ar~ aasoClats
Recycling Division of Gulf and Western,
professor of IICCQ!!!!!In..Jij Dr. Blplsb
Is the new director of the Center for
Outta of the UniYiiijily of Pltteburgh,
assistant professor of m1111agement

~~~~~~1~:mer 0::,~~·~\i-ect,;o:;;

13dmlsslons here, has been named the
School of Mana11ement's assistant dean
for external affa~rs .

From GenevA .utd Wurlltzer

Among new faculty are Dr. _Ralph
Bergmann , former hsad of Special

~~ty~mf! ~u~heStu1di~tt'~":.

national Labor Organization, Gen..W,
Switzerland , and A. Donald Arsern ,
former chief executive officer of the
1

W~ t't~"i~.J:,ft'J,;

of Bergmann , Van
Vprls and Arsem to the faculty, Alutto
Indicated, the School of . M1111agement
~II be able to add to the practical

~;J~r:~t..zr: ..;.)~:~ ::~r:;i,r ~~

organization; Dr. Raymond 1iunt of
U/B , professor o ~lzatlon and
ment of
chairman of t~ ~
Organization and Hui!\an eaournes.
Jagat Jain of Llikebaad Unl.....rslty,
visiting assistant prolfl:aor of accountIng; Dr. Johng Lee of"\.oulslana Stale
University, assistant _ proi&amp;SfOr of
accounting; Or. · .-vlnay Pandlt of
Columbia Universtty, assistant professor of management aystama and
· science; Dr. Donald S!mat of Wisconsin
Unl-aity, aasil!lant profeaaor of
organization; and Or. Yuk•Ho So, of
Carnegie-Malton, aaslstantprofeaaor of
accounting.

What's with the Bookstore?

~.!:·~!.:"merwor!h~~~:t~T~t~

~~~~~u~~ b~ 7~

Mar•·

=u~M~~~~~S:l~l~~~:;::s~

:S

~~· ~~~!m ·=~::.ce.-·J::

wh lch has a student population of
about 15,000 has a 34,000 aq. ft .
bookstore. Several
~o It was

.,l_..
==-.~~evlo:~~~~~!:

bookstore operallon .
Cornell's was one of the bookstores

studied by the Faculty 5anata In
1975-711. As a raeult of that atudy, tl!eSanata racommanded that the , _
bookstore on the Amharlt Cempua be
· run aa an lndapandant, t....r operation
rather t~ by the FSA.

�July I , 1178

UlB nurses
study use of
thermometer

,:;:::wtl~
~~,_.... :.&amp;:t~

may help reduoe the
lnfec11on, will 111Qiater
_ _ . . 1~ If UNCI f&gt;'OI*IY ..
tor
mlnutM, a local study has
t.n~. Elgllt mlnutae has ._, the
- &lt; l e d etandenl for the last

.,_.,

.-s

...

of

uw.

,....

M8ltlla F. Marl&lt;arlan, a graduate
-"'a etudllnt, and Ruby D. G..-, a
~ of the maatef"a prog..m· and
a nllni~ lnatruetor at Union

l=e

~~~~~~J·

''::'~

algnlllcant d"'-&gt;ce In recorded
- . . . - . whether the thermometer
-~~~~~under the tongue lor thnee, five,
elallt or tw.he minutes.
'Not only -would three minutes
,._..t a time aa.tnga for nurses on
bUey '-Pital floors, It - would also

:~ .=•-:.::-!'~in=

teacher at the Meyer Hospital School of
Muralng. The shorter tlme limit, she

=·..J•.io=~· l:W:"P~~~~~~

oertaln d l - atates.
1o1ar1&lt;ar1an and Gra- conducted' a
study 8ft101111 80 nursing students at

~~:.~~:.'':!,~-:=~

cyclea of thnee, llw, eight and twelve

mlnutae ualng an un.,..thed tilermorneter, euch asIa uaed In the home,
Wid the SM~e thermometer covered by

J-T....,IIIWid lllaetlc; covering.

"Wa 8180 found that for healthy
people to hold It thermometer In thefr

mouths for elaht mlnut• was
uncomfortable," G'ra- reported. "1maglne- much mora uncomfortable It
lalor-wllolalll,"
"The ~lnute time required to

os
1 .....
1978
8
~~ :~=· srxc'~

~~-~raleud,_ternlnperat
n.".ra and..-! Jn

..,,.

••

...

wtllch eald aiaht minutea Is .aqulred,"
.........., ancfGraWIS report.

New Trustees' chairman visits&lt;campus
Donald M. Bllnken , newchalrmao of
the SUNY Board of Trustees, wai JQ-e
Wednesday June 21 for a day ~ g
tour of Main Street , Amherst and Ridge
Lea.
/
Bllnken, squired by U/ B officoals,
first drove through Main Street,
stopping to view the Dental Clinic, the
Animal Facilities, Physiology's r&amp;sea.ch facilities , and the Health
'Sclences-Ubrary.
At Amherst, he toured the Katharine
Cornell Theatre, the Bubble, and
O'Brian Hall. At ~ ldge Lea; the

presldentandchalrmanoftheexacutlve
committee of E.M. Wao'burg, Pincus &amp;
Co. Inc., and as president of Marks and
Spencer, Ltd. , U.S.A.
In recent years, he has served on a
number of boards In the following
capacit ies: president, Brooklyn AcadPeumb ycao f • Mnusic..i. memmlbetteer,; Comtreasmenu~aryer,
&lt;,;()tTl
,
11 110
Friends of -the Whltnev Museum of
American Art ; trustee, The Institute on
AMfafanlrsandSteescrllenngceCo
; mmemm ber
ee, Fofre igne
111
0 1h
American Jewish Committee; treasurer,

eo:~r~~~~~l~=:~he ~~~~~~ in

1

~':fc:,~cuen'::.~t1~~s~'::'r:i~~~rdo'\ ~;~

11

the Investment banking business In
'New York City, serving as senior· wlc:e

Mark Aotljl&lt;o Foundation . He Is the
author of a book, Wool Tariffs and

Ainericsn Polley, published by the
Public Affairs Pnsss In 1948, as. wall as
of articles on trade and cultural affa)rs,
and lh.s a pion- collector of the " New
York School" of abstract painting .
'
Bllnken was a member of the Task
Force on New York State Arts and
Cultural Life, appointed by Governor
Carey In December, 1974; has served as
co-&lt;:halrman of the &lt;;:oncemed Citizens
for the Arts (New York State) since
1972; and Is a member of the Citizens
Committee for New York City.
He has been a member of the SUNY
Trustees since 197&amp;; his term expires

~u~f,~e~S:;ci his

wife reside on Park
Avenue, New York City, and on Lily
Pond Lane, East Hampton.

- policy to assist exporters, conference hears;
us lacks
/

-

Japanese executive says Americans 'reluctant' to trade
n.a u.a.
eao
truly_.,._...
.19

~t has so farl..led
to~ a
pollc;y to
_... U.tl. --~~ unfemlllar
wltiiUia -.port~. a raprea.rt•
1M
a 1111111!'· ,...,._ tredlng
-.p&amp;nlf
~ at
a CIIITipus

of

_..... Frtmor.

K8n lluzuld, aealatant to the
......,., Mltaubllbflntematlonal eor-·
IICQtlon, 8DI8Idllll at a day-long
- * ' 011 "I~
'Tnode Relations
with J.epan," halcl ei Amherat under
-.pol-.t~~p of ~t, InterlllllleNI StUdlea Wid _ . . . other U/B
~·ta Wid local and ~al

vo--tallgaRCiae
lluzuld 8lld " - ' ~ manlllac. . , . . _ to tile export
- - · It wHI talca time to~ lhfa
lllllude, he aald, bill It will 8180 talca

-

S::::: of-=::t,.,'1:
~
and 1M Departrrw\1 of
~

~'

.
.
-.
.
.
........
=
=
-

a:.r.:=-CIII.;::-=
of
.......,ta.

IIUIInlle _......

..,EIMtt,

h U.S. and
He the

Cllraotot of Inter-

.....,., u.s. Olpart"**t of
Clllllaillf-of tile thtnoa
-~~ " - ....,.,... to do ln

"' . . . . . . giant -

Eisel I said the Department of
Commerce for Its pari, has stepped up
promotions of the types of goods which
the Japanese are especlalfy Interested
In: computers, chemicals, powergenerating equlpment1 lasers, blomedical products, · ataclronlc compo!!eRta, end some consumer products.

bel'l::-g.,'?..:~them~=~~

not make ll'terythlng they need
""'*'ially high tec:IIJII)Iogy goods." '
The U.S. Trade Cilnter In Tokyo, he
reported, has b..tnieflwly engaged In
~tlng tho• . ttttas which Japan

-ur-=

allould aoon11na1e pro.
lllilllonal ....,... • Mil w IWIIIMr
~ . . . . . _ to U.&amp;.

....... M .......

U.S. trade deficit. That deficit with
Japan alone will amount to almost $12
billion this year, he Indicated . As a
result, he urged, that nation has to be
the local point ofour efforts. Japan , he
said, has agneed, to open markets, cut
terltfs and ease restrictions on some
food Items-In short, to help encourage
Imports from the U.S.

growing

~Wi~· ....,t change In climate In
U.S. .JapeMM trade, Elaalt aald, "the
bailie now In our court ." But to break

t':r.!.':ep~m~=~~~~~:,u~.

on the part of U.S. bualneaa.
One-allot CAah afforta ..-doomed to
fall, he wamad.
ltatart.IW11111811
The U.S.-.Itlpan Trade Council, an
funded by the Japaneoe
~~
to p&lt;omole Japeneae
jjrvdacta In tile U.S., _.aented
b)' Ita diNctor Robart Angel.
·~ iiOMd ttlat U.S. trade deficit
llfQIIIillla IMOan In 181111 and --.
_ _ . . and acc:elerMed by the 1973

agency

olrlll1ala.

'All U.S. can take one of two
:ar.-'*
to IIOivjng Ita problema: he

a. '11 can pUll baCk to wit~ In Ita own
bordera, reduoe Ita atandenl of living ,
Wid try to ao It atone; or
b. It can
~·and compete
with tile world.

"11...._

The U/S c:onlet'enoe ta an example of
tile tatter~. Anget auQU*ated .
U.S.
he lndlc;eted, has
nil led too long on the eXPOrt of primary

bual-.

pryod uhcerts nwah tonchswwill tbeh t eert yr 'n'bouegfhotrt"
b• 01
11
11
1 1llttio
0
0 II
on our part .
Now , though , Angel said, U.S.
manufacturers must begin to "sell"
abroed , to create markets for their
wares. That's what Japanese mlmufacturera have done here, he pointed out .

"In a sense," he said, "we can't blame
American manufacturers" for their
reluctance
engage In the export
trede.
" You have a vast market within the
confines of your continental boundarles. Many manufacturers are content to
exist with sales within the U.S.
·

The American. consumer has been the

9
by.. ~~;ou~~~ o!.~~~:~;v~r ~:::S~~~
last year, those manufacturerseXP.Ortlng
goooa constantly are a mere 6 to 7 per
cent of enterprises existing In the U.S.
Over 80 per cent of exports In U.S.
industrial goods are handled by only
200 large corporations. This shows the
majority of U.S. companies are
completely IHnorlng overseas markets."
Suzuk'. be 8\088 this has to atop.

·

='•lc':rd~f j~~rs~s~·~::ns:.:":~:

sumers can . be the beneficiary of U.S.
compaDles' efforts there.
0

Ja~~s~~~~~~·~ S~~~kl

noted that " since
Japan has accumulated lar_ge foreign
reaervea, we are trying our utmost to
assist exporting of American goods to

overseas ma.rkels."
,
But he complained , "we find most
American manufacturers rather reluctant to enter Into the export market.
Domeatioally there·fs a vast market for
American-made goods, and the manufacturers here do not study or make
market surveys of wh.at types of goods
are required by the foreign markets. The
tendency In this country Is merely to
ship the surplus overseas. Americans
are excellent merchandisers, yet they
fall In the foreign markets because 01
this attitude.
·

co~ fln~1·w!or h;,:m~!f1;'~ s~~~
1

food-addltiw regulations. We have
mona than the U.S., particularly In the
area of food coloring, sodium nitrate
and nitrite content, and also resltl~
tiona on the amount of some heavy
metals such as mencury, lead and other
hanmful auljatances. So unlaas you
conform to such 111Qulatlona, some of
the manufactured food cannot be
exported . Thla oerlalnly Ia not a tarif(
~. but etriC11y a health rastrlct1011 ."
Suzuki said he expects the Tokyo

=dt~.:.,.ne:\~~~:~~~h~~JhS: ~~

-n as lower Import duties on many
produC1a "whlc;h will make export of
U.S. goods much easter."
But, he notad, U.S. bualneaaea have
to actlwly seek out such trade, Instead
of just trMtlng It as an afterthought .

Japan has to trade
Japan has had to become an
extremely trede conscious nation, '
Suzuki said. It Ia an leland where 100

~~~·~~ ~,ft::,~~~nt~t a::..~~~~~

of territory, moreo-. only about 18 or •
17 per cent Ia wable.
" Please Imagine What It means to
depend on overseas aournea for 99 per
cent of fuel oil, 99 per cent of Iron ore,
~~ruron.r.er cent of all sources of
Japan emphasizes trade because It Is
"the only way to pay for Ita high Import
of fuel and other living necessities."
Japanese trading companies play an
unusually Important rota In facilitating
the nation's export and Import trade,
Suzuki said . In recent years they have
come to play an Increasingly significant
role in trade among countries other than
Japan.
Almost 8,000 corporations In Japan
are classified as trading oompanles ,
engaging prlmwiJy In exporting, ImportIng, or a combination of these two . The
largest ten 'Of these are called general
trading companies and have a minimum
annual turno- of S8 billion , Suzuki
noted . Mltaublshl la thelwgest , dealing
In ll't!'Y,lhlng from "noodles to
missiles . ' II hu 738 people working In

the lJ.S.

�. . . .Lid

l

Better use of
nitroglycerin
being explored
Dr. Ho-leung Fung, profesS()( of
phMNCeutlca , hes received a $115,000
gr8Atto W~ore a more effactlve use of
nltroglyc6rln In tr6atlng heart patients.
Dr. rung's team will study how the drug
Is ebeorbed In the gut and In the lung.
Although nitroglycerin hes been used
for a century to treat angina pectoris, a
condition which oocu111 when blood
• supply to the heart muscle Is
temporarily Inadequate, Its eXtent and
rata of abeorptlon remains unknown
Dr. Fung eald. '1t had been thoughi
administration of nitroglycerin works
only to reduce 81Aibblng chest pains and
enl-.ge - • I n the heart, but there Is
new evidence suggesting that t~e drug
may actually reduce Injury to ti ssues
which results from the constriction," he
esld.
Studies have also shown that
aff8C11veness of dosage levels may be
aff8C1ed by factors such as the state of
the di-e, age and diet. Exactly how
these contribute
to
the drug's
ebeorptlon and Its efficacy In Individual
rutl~ts will be one of the facets of Dr.

stu;He~ r;creool!e~~~t~n~~~':iu~=

dosages of the drug In the future, he
suggests.
The project will also focus on study
of the enzyme ·which metabolizes
nitroglycerin In the 11-. So quickly Is
the drug metabolized after Bdmlnlstratlon that accurate analysis of Its levels

In ~1e~~s h~ ~ LJ!Bdl'::!g~~ol of
Pharmacy, however, have recently
devised a technique which detects up to
one-billionth of an ounce of the drug In
one ounce of blood plasma, making It
easier to determine wh§ther enough of
~~ active Ingredients are persisting In
the body.
"There's a revival of Interest In 1hls
· chemical which has been used for about
100 years, " Dr. Fung said. "While we
know It Ia beneficial to angina patients
we still don't know the fundamental
factors which affect Its use," he
indicated.
Gaining more Information on nitroglycerin absorption through the lung
may particularly ald.munillons workers
who work with It , Fung noted . It Is
known, for example, that these
Individuals who breathe the drug
regularly at work may develop angina
symptoms when they are removed from
day-to-day contact with It-for example,
when they go on vacation .
Many of these people put a paste
containing nitroglycerin on their hats
when the)' go on vacation In order .to
prevent chest pains,
Dr. Fung
explained.
•
The relationship between levels of
nitroglycerin In the air and the degree of
tolerance they produce will also be
stud ied by this research group.
Among the most Important drugs for
heart patients, nitroglycerin and Its
sisters In the organic nitrate clesa are
administered to patients In three ways:
tablets or capsules taken dally to
prevent angina attacks, tablets held
tJnderthe tongue when an attack begins
and an ointment rubbed on the akin .
Graduate students assisting Dr. Fung
with the research prl)j8C1 are Edward
McNi ff, Gary Maier and RlchSIJI

Morrtaon .

Ciancio named
to ADA panel
Dr. Sebastian Ciancio, chairman of
the Department of
PeriodonticsEndodontics In the Buffalo School of
Dentistry, has been named to a
subcommittee of the American Dental
Association organized to recommend
pollclas and activities related to diet
and dental health .
Subcommittee members, who Include representatives of dentistry,

=·~·. wm·ad~c:'t~~8~tre.,..~

on Dental Health and Health Planning .
.Ciancio Is also chalnnan of the ADA
Council on Dental Therapeutics.

Writing project
An

lnterdleclplln~

Center

for

~~~~wl~.~ ·~h~ s c:Zti~~~r.:~~~

Writing Project , at wh ich area teachers
will study how to Improve wrttln g
lnatr&lt;JCtlon . To be fully operet~~ID•I by
the fal l o f 11179, the lnterdlac-.,llnary
centw Ia affiliated with the Bay Area
Writing Project run by the Unlveraity of
C.llfornla at Berkaley.

/

(lrom-1 , col2)

Young and the Restless ," sl1e admitted.
But only because of the pace of its story
line: "I they said there was to be a
startling revelation tomorrow, there
was ." Otherwise, she th inks " Y &amp; R" Is
" the worst show on TV."

All so.ps not the wme
Not all soaps are the same. the- two
actors contended . " Ryan 's Hope" Is
grounded' In reality; most of the rest
ar.e set In the "classical, mythical
midwestern city of medium-size," with
mythical , hard-to-swallow situations to
match. Ryan 's Hope Is written to Its
58
1

~.:s·tl~:~leaa:~~n

=

fh:"':g~

premiered (more In tune with John's
paraonal qualities was the Implication).
John can suggest storylines. He once
objected strenuously to Seneca's telling
a I e (and won his point), and recently
put his foot down when someone
thought Seneca shou ld do the "hustle"
with Jill. Instead, John (who Is now
rehears ing a nightclub act) suggested
that the character play the plano and
sing. That bit will be In th e script soon,
he wasl'romlsed .
AMC s Agnes Ni xon, on the other
hand , writes to character. As much as
Sandy tries to fudge It , for example.
Ni xon's scri pts Insist on a dowdy .
"country" Image for Edna. Her dialogue
Is lilted with " I reckon ," " I do declare,"
"I ain't ." She's supposed to look

:~'::~~: "l~~~e ~~~-~~s~ttl~ti~

writers don't really watch the show."
She has confounded the writers on
another score. Her role as .. Edna" was

~":.~~ ~~ra~s~o~"6r~e~~fJw~'::

wouldn't like. It turned out , though , that
the AMC faithful loved her. " Maybe they
ldentlfiad with a woman who (even

:::u~~:~~J ..w~a~n~~~~t[g::t~ ~
everything short of killing hef, so he'd
be free to marry another; finally he did
try to kill her.

1

~:itl~~dt&gt;':'~! ~~~rlr!. wlth

AMc
Making the best of that role just
shows what a terrific actress Sendy Is,
John beemed proudly as one of the
children squealed and pulled on 11er
nose.

Soc.l.. content?
Neither of the Gabriels was as high
on the aipni!lcance of the "social
content " o the soaps as Is Cassata
(who has her class doing a content
analysis of th is summer's story lines) .
They do deal more with social Issues
than nighttime shows, both acknowledged without much conviction.
Amonft these issues, they listed rapa,
new ch dblrth methods, the family
unit, and religion . And AMC has
certainly been Into proetltution for the
last year or so, Sandy notfl!l. [Complete
with the . most loveable, funny little
blond pimp you'd ever want to see (Billy
Clyde Tuggle) . A mort realistic , really
menacing black man. was dropped
SOII)ewhere along the ~ay . I
But , cautioned John, some of the
shows exploit controversi al subject
matter just to grab ratlngs. ''One hand
- shes the other."
About the only taboo lah , Sandy
mentioned , Is homosexuality. "The
Young and the Restleu" started Into
that . ut backed oflln a hurry.

Study work
What kind of work Is acting In the
soaps?, a cless member wanted to
know.
" More respectable," than It used to
be, John answered. There's really a
chance l or some standout oerlorma11C8f1 " like the time I took the ashes
of NeiT .!S'eneca's first wife) to Jones
Beach and spread them on the water."
That was a touching scene, a
classmember agreed .
A role In a soap is also steady ·work
J ohn added. "For a family man , It's nice
to have that guaranteed paycheck 52
weeks a year. "
"You don't work eV8ry day, either,"
Sand y said. Four shows a week Is
usually the outer limit . And often It's
les s, leaving f?lenty of time for home
and children. ' It's like a part-time job."
When you do work though , It's a long
day (bu t not as gruelling as a day on a

T~~~ s!,S,:~·Y ~~~.p lca'.ndsat..:~ee":r7:3:J

(depe~ng

and 9 a.m.
on her call).
Th ln'gs moYe along from a dry rehearsal
to blocking , to a camera run-through '
folloWed by a "note session" o(
criti que. The cameras don't beglh to roll
untl l4 p.m. 'We're usually out by-six or
six thln y, " she reported , unless there's
reall y trouble.
AMC tapes a complete one-hour-long
episode each dal . "W.e can't shoot
ahead like Johns half-hour show ,"
Sandy said. And characters have to be
" wrlt hln out" for vacations . " Ryan's
Hope," on the other hand, tapes ahead
and closes down shooting altogether so
the whole cast can vacation at once.
When the cameras start rolling at 4
p.m. each day, Sandy said , they stop
for noth ing, unless you blow your tines
completely. The forgetful are aided by
teleprompters, but some j ust ed-llb.
i ll's the toughest kind of acting," John
said.

F.nre.cdons

What about reactions from fans?
Soap fans are reputedly the most loyal
and Involved In the business . r:1o people
come up to them on the streets as 11
they're really the characters they play?

It's happened to othere, John eald.
Some mean or bitchy charact. . have
been -uftecf. Not "Seneca"
and • Edna," though. Poeslbly because
both are "sympathetic" characters.
Then; too, "we live In New York," John
reminded , "and New Yorkers are blaM " ·
Don't they even stare at you?, a wonuin
wanted to know. "In New York they
don't stare at anything," he eald. '
In Fort Wayne, Indiana, It was a
different story. A teen"!!!! waitress kept
shouting and pointing, There he Is, It's
him" when John stopped In an all-night
diner at 2 a.m:durlng a telethon.
Then , there was the time when he
played Taddy Holmes on "General
Hospital ." 'This character supposedly
ran off to South America with Nurse
Jessie's niece. Simultaneously, John

neartr.

=m~~~~o~'ln~e~tW,~g~

playing Jessie soon received a "tip"

!rom a fan telllnw her that "Teddy

Holmes did not go to South All)!ll1ca.
" He's in Los Angeles, worklng In a
clothing store," ~h.JI.. !f!1 wrote her
helpfully.
:: "
\

Wlult'sAbe.d

-

Would the two actors reveal what's
ahead for "Seneca~d " Edna?"
"They give us our scripts only tour or
five days ahead,"
pleaded. "They
don't tell us anything. ·
Yet , Sandy said~ She's sensed that
"fun things are aliead' for Edna and ...
~i _.!'m not permit,!_ed to talk ebout

tt11!f.

And, said John : "I don't know, but I
think Seneca and Jill will wind up
together. That 's where things seem
headed as Frank am! Rae get more and
more Involved. My part - will pick up
: =:.too," he predicted . " I'm cold right
" I heve a confeeslon to make," a
woman In the.-- of therclasa spoke up
as time was running out.
"What's that?" John aaked .
fri;~J~ ~!)k you're sexy. So do aU my
"Be sure and let ABC know," John
grinned .
Class dislnlesed.
·

.(

Grad dead/in~ dates
(Some d~tes may be changed over the year. It Is advisable to check with the.
Admissions and Records Office, Financial Aid Office Student Accounts
Office and the Graduate School on their respective dates.)
Thru
Continuous registration for l'atl1978. Students registering by
F. Sept. 8
Aug. 2wlll have their schedule cards malted to them.
W. Aug. 2
Last day to register for Fait 1978 with schedule card to be
mailed to student.
F. Aug, 4
Last day to resign without academic penalty - 3rd Summer
Session courses.
F. Aug. 4
U.t day of classes for 2nd Summer Session .
F. Aug. 11
~~mm.':'m~~~~ - tuition payment due or 7 days after
M. Aug . 14
Schadut;' cards - Fall 1978 - mailed to all registered
students as of Aug . 2, 1978.
M.Aug . 21~~~'/1' ~iif/add for advance reg istered students In Hayes B
Tu. Aug. 21
F. Aug. 25
Last day of classes - 3rd Summer Session.
W. Aug. 30- On-line drop/add for graduate students . Hayes Band location
F. Sept.15 at Amherst Campus to be anoounced.
W.Aug. 30
ID Card dl atrlbull(lll begins - Falh4 973-- 161 Harriman
Library.
W. Aug. 30
Classes begin - Fall Semester 1978.
W. Aug. 30
Cross-&lt;llvlslonal reg istration begins: First· day greduate
students may reg ister for undergreduate courses ~ First day
undergraduates ·may reg ister for greduate courses. (Note:
students must obtain approval .)
Th . Aug. 31
All degree requ irements (Masters and Ph.D.) must be
completed and form s llled In the Grad uete School for
September 1978 conferral .

1

�.ftltyi, 11H

lEt/ o
open to~
For the first time this summer, trips
organized by the Intensive English
Language Institute (lEU) for foreign
students who study there will be
opened to the Buffalo community.
Previously, trips to cultural events
and historical sites outside Western

~efh:~;ka~~r~:or:~~~r

FE~S of-fers progra~s for community
Tille sum...-, U/B'a Faculty of
Engl.-jng llld Applied Sciences Is
1*1 to combat the "Ivory
T _ . lmege of the Un'-atty - an
lmege -lrnes regrettllbly perpetllaled by thole who !NOf1&lt; In the
IICedlmk: milieu.
Prot- Wnllam Gaorge of the
Mec:Mnlclal Eflg"--ng Deponment Is
OO&lt;Ifdtnattng ~ programs In
ODC&gt;jleratlon (W
. the Buffalo Area
awn11er o
merce. They ere
~ to ~ lnforJNtlon to
community~ about two
lmpcWtant, un.b.:llllt relatively mun-.. eubfecta: .. _ removal llld fire
dOing fta

..t.ty.

.

The luncllaona .,. part of a mcxe
extM~Sive
pn&gt;grwn being offered
through a s..1111 lnatltute of Fluid
DyMmlca. al_..nated and directed

~tlal

by
lhet the Unl-slty strive
to br1dge the communications gap
~ Jts
aoedemlcs and the •
community, saya George. One -Y to
t.gln, he thinks. ta
showing
pr811tioal ap'pllcatlona o
reMarCh

bl

~.

The ooat of the programa Ia being
antlrely - t t e n by the Faculty of
~ng lind Applied Sciences.
TIIOM attending pay only for lunch.

-c-......,

Beeldea the progrwns' obvious
- · J i m Jordan, 'rice pnaaldent of
economic~~ tor the Buffalo
,.,.. a..nt.r 0 Commerce, believes
theJ ere eignltlcant becauM they
.....-t of the ftral Urnes the
u.w..tty llld the Chamt.r .._ been
Mile "to find oommon ground" on wtolch
u., CM-'&lt; lor the ~t of the
CGIIIIIUftlty.

.......... the . ~ men . . - . saya Jordan. Ia that the
Unl..-tty Ia no1 a.klng for fundato run
the IIIII ralller v i - It u a gift

to the community.
Fire safety will be discussed July 13
at12:15 p.m. at the Hearthstone Manor.
Guest speaker will be Howard W.
Emmons, Gordon McK11y Professor of
Mechanical Engineering at Harvard .
Emmons, who has held both

~b~~~\,~ ~~rO:t"~1}~ ,!e~t::.,w~r:::

leading -authorities on fire safety. He
heads the Hal'Vard Fire Research

~'1.:: -a~:~ ~~ ~~=,:s'f-::::

program review panel .
In laymen's terms, Emmons will
discuss progress being made in
understanding fire and the Importance
of reliable tests and lire codes to ensure
fire safety.
BllzDrd '71?
The second luncheon program ,
" BIIuard 79?1, " will klature a presentation by Or. Ronald D. Tabler, who is
1

';:t~pt ~s \~em~:'m~!e':~":w':l'r~~~~rl~g

s~!b\:.c:~,~~s~·~~ar: ~~ff~~~~~

~:rr:,~:J~d~tt~o.:,~~~~;~slblllty,

~~er~~ie~ 1=c~0~y~''JY.i~~

Forestry 5enrice. He Is also a lecturer at
the University of W¥omlng and a
consultant for the Wyoming State
Highway Department.

George believes the presentation will
be of particular Interest to Buffalo's
waterlront Industries which have had to
=~~J':f~~:S~ dll&amp; to Impassable
Short couraes
In addition to the luncheons, short
courses are being offered through the
Summer Institute on Fluid Dynamics.
The courses, geared for the engln-lng
and scientific community, are being run
In cooperatlon with the Office of
Credit-F'ree Programs and cost $100
each.
A course on "Cavitation and Erosion"
scheduled lor July 24·28 will utilize the
expertise of Professor R.E.A. Arndt, an
authority In that area. Professor Arndt
Is a visiting scholar from the University
of Minnesota where he Is director of the
St. Anthony Falls Hydraulic Laboratory.
On August 2.-4, another short course
will take up " Dynam ic Flow Measurement Techniques." This course Is cosponsored by DISA Electronics, a
leading manufacturer of now-measurIng equipment and will be staffed by

r

::!'t'v~~~n~a~~~~ftu~r:nf.roressors

from

~e course Is timed to run just before

the Sixth International Heat Transfer
Conference In Toronto.
All faculty making presentations at

:~:::::ne~~~S,::sG,:~ge~~~Pca~s. without

,'m ~~'r.!:'~~

room permitted, to a handful of others
In the UniversitY. community .
By opening tis trips IELI hopes to
Introduce more area residents to Its
foreign visitors, and at the same lime,
to provide a vehicle through which
better know and
students can
understand their Buffalo neighbors.
Larry Belewlch, an I ELl instructor and
coordinatOr of the trips, believes lEU's
emphasis on extracurricular activities
as a way of-- promoting . a be\)er
understanding and apprecjatlon · of
American culture makes Its program
•unique."
_
" Not only do these activities make
the students' stays In this country more
pleasurable," says Belewlch, '1hey also
help to make their studies more
successful."
To ensure that the trips are

~~~~~P~~~=n~~~~~~J~~=~.; ~~~~h

outing to about two bus loads. He Is .
concerned that there may be a " point of
dlmln1shlng returns" II groups get too
large. So, for the time being, trfps will
be offere:.l on a first-come first-serve
basts.
tELl 's Initial weekend jaunt will be to

::: :ua~a~~·~~~:'~? ~~:~~~
City Ballet. Buses will leave here Friday
evening, July 21, and return Sunday
evening, July 23.
Tickets have been reserved lor
performances of ''TI'te Goldberg Variations, " "Jewels," "Symphony 111' C," "In
G Major," "~mermuslk No. 2," and
the Saratoga premiere of "Trlcolore."
Mikhail Baryahnlkov, considered by
many to be the leading male dancer In

~~1cc:;:~~'J,· :::~ ~h::,~ ~~~d~~t

Ballet. There Is a posalblllty he wlr. dance In one of the above performances.
On the return, the group will make a

~~o~~w~~utt o~':.t :.:~~;"~us\~

fest~valln the United States, to attend a

matinee pertormance of the Boston
Symphony. Klaus Tennstedt will be
conducting .
Because the trlpa are not designed

~':at~~~ !t"'!o~~S:nP:~w~.r~~~~

----·-

------

--M-4=-...-_,MMUn
JOMHA ClOIITIH

-~

WI It Cl*c* fdltor

the weekend Is affordable; between S55
to $65, depending on the type of room
occupancy. Food Ia not Included .
08fdllne for reservations is July 14. A
small deposit Is requlnsd , with the
remaining money to be paid at
depart_ure.
Bioaaom F•tl¥el
In August, Belewlch Is . planning a
weekend trip to the Blossom Ftstlval .
The festival , nestled In lush roll ing
te&lt;raln outside of Cleveland, Is the
summer horne of that city's acclaimed
orchestra.
8

wl~t~pea~~r;.h~:u~a"~u l i~~t1t~f~",f.

�Julya,tt71

a turn of the century architectural
wonder and cultural enclave located on
Lake Chautauqua near Jamestown.
Belewich Is trying to make arrangements lor the tour to-attend a cultural
event there In addition to taking a look
at the grounds.
The price of the trip has not been
determined .
Theatre enthusiasts will delight In a
weekend trip to the Stratford Shakespeare Festival, In Stratford, Ontario,

~=~=-

~h::betK;.up"T~

td5-:! ..
Winter's Tale," and " Titus Andronlcus."
Lodging will be provided at quaint
guest homes. The coat of this trip will
run between $4G-SSO. Again , food Is not
·
Included .
On October 11 , an official academic

·=J ~:~~~~~· ~~= ~h~a:l~~g I~
1

catch a matinee of "Private Lives"
starring Academy Award.. winner Maggie
Smith and Brian Bedfbrd.
Dinner , may be Included In this
outing. The prlce)laa not been set .
All buses are currently scheduled to
depari from the Amherst Campus.
Security will be asked to watch cars
parl&lt;ed on campus over the weekends.

lnl~ati'i:fg~~~e ~~~~ a~:

available. Reservations-can be mede by
calling Belewlch at fl36..2079.

More toter
If these trips are SUCf8SSiul ,
Belewlch hopes to coordinate several

~~latdct'l~~u~t:~tlsn~o.!~~~Rabl-:~~

most airlines, Belewlch thinks he could
arrange overnight jiunts to Minneapolis
and Pittsburgh, to hear their orchestras
and catch a loot bell game, to boot.
In addition to the wtl81&lt;end and
overnight outings, s.tewlch. Is also
planning tour- t.o six-day trips to
Orlando, Florida, and possibly WashIngton , D.C .• over sprlriQ vacation .

hl~~,c';sc l : ' =~dl:ti~a!~r;~~~~

and Beaton lor the past several years,

but thlals the first time that the Buffalo
community will be Invited along .
Althou'l,h Belewlch Ia not bullish on

=~::~~·bl..:. ~~~~~ A':': ..:~ti!!~ ti.X

he makea It a point to emphasize the
posUive aspects of the 0.-n City.
Belewlch streseed that those who
don~ want to take advantage of the

~·~~~·;~e csg:!~tf~~~ ~arl&lt;~~

Chautauqua Institution, and/or Stratlord themselves. All are within a
two-hour drive.
"This may be a back-handed
compllment;bul Buffalo Is a good place
to live tiecause of Itt proximity to so
many p~-.; Belewlch aald. There's a
lot to do on a minimal budget, he
added .
The moet upsetting thing Belewlch , a
Rome, New York native finds about
Buffalo It that the city 'hU not fully
developed Itt potential u a cultural
center.

t':

~~~~~
B.::=loall .!~OS a'i?.rslror~ ·
com~ to other medium slze cltiet,
and 'It has nothing to be ashamed of ."

Theatre workshop helps youngsters
learn about car-eers in dramatic arts
To be or not to be?
That Is the question lacing high
school thesp ians cons idering careers in
the dramatic aris .
Fortunately lor them , the Theatre
Department , lor the third consecutive
summer, Is conducting an apprentice
· program designed to provide a realistic
perspective of the profession and to
serve as a developmental veh icle lor
creative -expression .
1 he workshop , also sponsored by the

Center lor Theatre Research, Is
funded by U/ B and by grants scavenged
~~ai~~~ . Elkin , Theatre Department
Accord ing

to

Gregg

Maday ,

the

=~~"J'~~e~~~~\~rt~7~e~Judn~g~o~;

senior years were selected lor the
program. No auditions were held .
Instead, applicants who exhl blted the
most interest , enthusiasm and sense of

responsibility

~ -chosen .

Last semester. l etters were sent to

~:~ ~p~h:~~ft?~n~~~ig~~r::;:,~~~s~

of the response , says Maday, came, as
It traditionally has, from private Institutions .
The three-hour formal workshop
beg ins at 9 a.m . each day . First, Meday
takes the students through physical
exercises to limber the body and reduce
tension. Afterwards, comes voice
training , then scene work where acting
techniques are discussed , developed
and practiced . Maday also covers
r.roper audition procedures and mono-

o~~~~ect~'~:: the apprentices are
busy "performing " crew responsibilIties . lhese may Inc I ude work on
costumes , make-up, lighting or scene
construction lor the department's
"Shakespeare In The Park" performances-an acclaimed community

theatre event which drew some 10,000
Western New Yorkers to Delaware Park
last summer.
Students who are- given bit parts In
the Shakespeare adaptations must also
attend evening rehearsals. _
Maday , a graduate student In theatre
at the Carnegie-Mellon Conservatory
and a former high school English

~=~.f ~~~~ou~\s 1~,:W:,s &lt;n~~

of
to mention perspiration) necessary lor a
.,...._ in the theatre. Long hours, hard
work, and a lot of memorization are
inescapable realities. He also emphasizes that the theatre arts deal with

~~! . ~g~~~o:.'ddlll~=~

reflection of social OO!l&lt;l111ons.
Maday dlscusses.!.'.U\ls llSPecl of
theatre ~&gt;~&gt;Cause he feels It's necessary

:~~:h~=r~=s:
doing anything lm

1:st!'fo~ t~:

t ,"

-

Don't push middle school stude
Before developing and organizing
curriculum and special school programs, educators should consider the
stages of brain growth and development
In children.
or. Herman T. Epstein , professor of
blophysles a
Brandeis University ,
made this suggestion last week while
addressing a forum on " Adolescent
Growth and the Middle School ," the
first of the Faculty of Educational
Studies' Summer Forum programs.
An internationally known scholar,
Epstein has been a professor of

-----

:~r:~~~J,; ~:of~~~f."u~~~~s~~~~~

University of Geneva , and the University
of r~~:~~~~;, was a joint presentation
by Dr. Epstein and Or. Donald H.
Eichhorn, a noted theoreticlan/practioner In the middle grades.

lk•ln growtfl suges
Accord ing to data presented by
Epstein , brain growth activity happens
In stages. These maJor developmental
stages occur In children between 3-10
months , 2-4 years, 6-8 years, tt&gt;-12
years and 14-16 years of age. During
each stage brain srnapses rougllly
Increase by a factor o 10, enabling the
brain to handle more complex Information.
A cross~ultural study (of at least 10
countries) cited by Epstein, showed
that growth In the head circumferences
of children was greatest In youngsters
around the ages of 3 , 4, 7, 1t and. 15;
midpoints of the brain growth stages.
The same lltudy also revealed that -

~:'~~~:~~~"taP~"· ~':."l'h ~~!~
1

boys of the same age. ,¥;e situation
reverses Itself at ~e 15 When more
growth activity Is found In males.
"Th1s suggests that girls should be
educated differently than boys after
around 10 years of age . Becaute of this
Increased brain growth, girt• could
tentlally benefit from a 'more
,.ljjoroua' curriculum," he said.
Epstein, however, warned against
lorcl ng " premature challenges of the
type found In high school" to chlldr!l"

on the middle grades . If this Is done, a
child may "team to pay no attention to
the point ollt becoming a habit." Later,
When further brain development does
occur providing the neural receptors to
comprehend more complex material,
the child may " turn off psycholog-j cally ."
Instead, middle schools should
provide a "consolidation period," says
Epstein , "where children are helped to
develop and mature skills which have
already been lnititated ."
Epstein also cautioned educators
about attempting to " push gifted
children ahead ." Even children with
high IQ's do not develop new levels of
analysis until they are at the right
chronological age, he said.
"High IQ's affect the rate of
development of an already established
skill , but do not affect the onset o~ 11.
You simply cannot push gifted children
ahead. You can help them to work
laster, broader and deeper at the
Intellectual level they are at, but you
cannot push them Into the next
cognitive level. •

We shouldn't push compleldty
Societal expectations regarding what
should be accomplished In middle
schools often run contrary ·to the
Implications of current
research ,
offered the forum 's second speaker, Dr.
Donald Eichhorn .

Widely published In the areas of
middle school Instruction, organization
and planning , Elchhom serves as a
consultant In the U.S. and abroad.
EIChhorn Ibid the audience that
middle schools have tnadltionally been
expected "to provide a more serious
conceptual challenge In education."
The decision to move biology and
algebra to earlier grades is Indicative of
the type of challenge lhe community
expect:~ middle schools to give their
students. he said .
•
1

Wh!: ~~~ s~~~~\~~": ~~~:C,s~~e!t,"':l

they can turn.

Eichhorn spoke of the success of
curricular sequences where
students can "lind their own level of
competence," thereby reducing the
" failure syndrome" whfch could hamper
future learning experiences.
He speculated that the adoption of
new curricular structures tn the middle
schools may be one reason lor
declining SAT scores.
·
Elchhom suggested that middle
schools continue to emphasize education outside the classroom . He saoo
such extracurricular activities as scoutIng-where children can work tor merit
badges based on individual Interests
and motivation-should be encouraged .
open-iM~ded

�JulyS, ft71

•What's with the Bookstore

(to.--·· ool..,

AJtllouglt the FSA Ia non-proll1, It
atUI must "epply eound buaiMSS
Dtlnclplel" In · Ita operations, says
Slnoe It reoe111ea no Stat'

::=...
low-pn)flt'l~,.,,.:t=~:r~~~

high-profit material auch u T-ahlrta,
.tlarta, ~ .,., other

gym

~Ia.

Some IIOokatores will chwge more
l o r - . but U/B prefers to poal only a

::::....~1=-;!J.tt:..~-

Aa It -.cia, ~xlm8lely 70 per
cent of the Unl-.lty Bookatore'a S2.2

:n:::-~l:=~m~x~
par cent

v--1

booka .,., 25 per cent

Oilier~

11u1 If the IIOokatore suddenly
. . . eligible lor eome sort of subsidy,
the "type .,., total amount of apece"
would still pnlhlblt "a browsing ....-lor
~ '-Ia," SnYder lamented.
· Anotfler f~or Whli:li should be

==t~J~~~~~t~l::ru~:

run two At.tllte.op.atlona at Amheral.
"The ooat o1 duplication ..ta Into the
ITICIMY lhet could tie uNCI elsewhere,"
S,.yder aeld.

P.-cellca .... U..IaM
Then, of co..... ~,.,.la the I'Wcet B
COIIIfllleatlon. PMl8t B Ia to be

a

pm.Miy~ operated on the Amlwilt · ~· which will

~U::iore~ft:~ u~~h"r=oU:.~~S~n

1:
developing this project .
Snyder, who was promoted up
through the ranks In Finance and
Management to head FSA, cannot
remember a time when he was able to
plan ahead for more than one year . The
reason was that he never really knew
when construction would begin on the
lease-operated Parcel B bookstore
• faclllty. He couldn't get any final word,
either, he said, on whether the
Unl-slty wanted FSA to continue Its
operation on the Main Street Campus
once.. the new Parcel B store was
constructed.
This hu taken a toll on the morale of
bookstore employees. Not only have
they been uncertain about their job
security, but, as Snyder commented:
" lt'a hard to build pride In an
organization that can't plan for the
future ."
Since taxes, utility costs and a
myriad or other factors essentially

c:'
.:SU:e ~S: P~'r B~peg~~~: ,:
supportive of the lease-operated alter·

native. The advantages from a service
point ol view are that the maj9" 'outside

~::a:hg:~~

:: ~~~~;ed~

usually offer a good used book service.
This translates to dol ar savings for
students .
On the other hand, he said , the

University has to make certain that a
more proflt-«&lt;ented lease operation
(which can base the salary of Its store
management on the year's profits) has
adeQuate Input from students and
faculty regarding types of expected

services.

Snyder feels certain that any
potential drawbacks can be worked out
on contract negotiations.

Anal negodatlons
U/B Foundation President John
carter told the Reporter that he Is

:lfo:,".,~ ~~;a~yo~o::u~/:,'!,~.:":~~~

the Foundation will meet Its goal of
having a new bookstore underway on Its
Parcel B development by this fall .
carter said the store would likely be
between 10-15,000sq . ft . "with room lor
expansion as the University grows."
The Foundation is "committed to

~e'1~~!~:. ~~g~~;!b~: =~~ore to
The Foundati on's original goal for
completion of construction was last
fall , but carter Indicated that a major
change In Income tax laws served to
deter Interested developers . In addition,
construction on Parcel B must conform
to the "architectural vocabulary" of the
Amherst Campus , and all-brick buildings are expensive to build.
Two stores at Amherst?
Snyder maintains that , Ideally, two
bookstores would be good for Amherst.

,

Best sellers
The followtng Ia the latest flat of beet-aetlers In col'- bookstores
tlwougllout the Mtlon (comr,llad by The Chronicle of Higher Education from
reporfaltom 47 Mlected col -bookstores around the country). Comparable

=~= 1:: :,r:*~{:,!'~~~~~\·~f"~ ~~~:n~rtng

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

Tille

The L.a.,.,

Alllhor
John,._

Coma: ANO'Ifll

Robin Cool&lt;

Signet

The

" - F . Fix

Random House

o..lciW.n.:hlnlky

Bantam

Com,,.,.
unnlng

8oolr of

Thelloolrol

Uala

YOINE,_e

.......
z-

I=. ._

Jove

N.v.n.....

2MPB

, 2NF
13MPB

AlrrJ ....,.

WayneW. Dyer

Avon

9MPB

G811Sheehy

Bantam

0/w.'a Story

Erich Segal

Avon

11 MPB

:t:ln!Wol

Alen o..n Foster

Ballentine/Del Ray

10MPB

HowToS...
'l'ourOMIUie

ErlcaJong

Signet

If !.He/a A

Erma llombec:lt

McGraw-Hill

ltllltd'a Eye

8owl of Clletr'-.

~~~
/lpDordlna

-=

to., "eyabell" count by U/8 Bookstore offlcllls, this Ia how

.t •. .._,~z,..
- - bompare
I. QNM: A NOW/I

C.::,:~
tJ: ,..,_.....

f.I·

tO:

&amp;::

YOlK OWn Ufa

lllltd'• Eye
ol Fllfltl «JI
OM.. . , . _

.

I

Lack of supplemental budget
stalls one building, UUP raises
A supplemental buciget won't be

1::ss~d~~~re'm"g!~~at'l,'~, unt~'a':''~o~~

significantly affect the U/B construe·
lion recently announced by Gov. Hugh
Carey, Albany sources said last week.
Authorization to sell bonds for live
Amherst pro)O(:ts was given last week
by , the Pub ire Authorities Control
Board. And funds for four (civil

~~~':l':nn~o)~t. ~:n,~:.:'r~ .f~r,·~J

a central engineering bulldlnll) have
already been appropriated .
Money to start the filth (the music
hall) Is expected to be In the
supplemental budget bill to be passed
whenever !-makers decide to recon-

~sn:,~~~~~~ ~e_a'ja~:;s F"r':mor~~~8 ~~
Amherst who has been the principal

cha~ra~u~e . of \JIB projects ~ the

~ramming

1 NF

Just as bookstores across · the street
from Main Street have made the
University Bookstore stay on Its tiles,
Snyder likewise believes that the "entire
University community would be best
served by competltloo" at Amherst.
carter, however, does not believe
there would be enough business
volume at Amherst to warrant two
stores. The prospect of another facility
could also ~amper negotiations with an
outside company. Any bookstore company that comes Into Parcel B_...w lll
probably take over all
campus
bookstore operations.
If and when a contract Is finally
worked out, Snyder said he will do his
best to make the transition for FSA
employees "as Invisible as possible."
He predicted that moat bookstore
employees would be absorbed by the
outside company and that employees ~
"would not suffer financially" from the
transition .
Besides personnel matters, Snyder
will also have other problems to deal
with-like how much eQuity FSA will
retain from Its up to $2 million
Inventory.
Snyder maintains that a leaseoperated bookstore on Parcel B should
not be viewed as a "negative reflection
on anyone at the current bookstore or
on the FSA.
'With what we have had to work. with
and our limited goals, we kept our
heads above water;· ha said . "It's the
best we could have done."

said the other lour
proJects can go ahead.
The Republican-controlled Senate
paaaed only a akeletal S22 million
supplemental budget before adJournIng; the Democratic Assembly had a bill
for S93 million before II.
This Is one of the first times In recent
history, the Legislature has adjourned
without agreement on a supplemental
budget.
Lack of the supplemental budget
holds up also an authorization for the

~~"~

":l

s~lB ml~:~~ au~r;:::

personnel who leech at the Meyer
hospital.
Gov. Carey aought the following
other additional Items for U/B In his
supplemental request, according to
aorneWhat garbled and conflicting

_, reports .

•$1 .46 million lor tennis courts,
volleyball, handball, and basketball
courts, a baseball diamond, a softball

~~~~Won~~h 'n,r:e~\~t~~ f~~~~~~

education proJect;
•$2.26 million lor another 1,948
parking spaces, and.access roads from
the campus to a planned relocation of

M'!'=.c~r~~~wu~fi,ues ·,o serve the
music and theatre building;
•$1.26 million. for renovations to the
U/B Main Street Campus.
•$1.06 miUion for renovation of other
facilities at the Main Street Campus and
for moving, after the renovation Is
completed.
The Office of - the SUNY VIce
Chancellor lor Faculty and Staff
Relations said this week that the 6'h

ruryc~t ~: s = f~l~u~~m~~~tee:
supplemental budget Is passed .

Reactor reopens
The U/B nuclear · research reactor,
closed for repalf' and refueling since
last fall, reopened yesterday (Wednesday, July 5) at full power.
The dorector of the Nuclear Sclen~
and Technology Facility said the
nsopenlng Is a source of -celebration for
manr, local users of the reactor's

~':ft~ ~~~r~~~~~h'f~ :.~~~

use; grad students who use the reactor
for research; business lind Industry,
etc.)
When the reactor closed last fall , 11
was estimated that three months would
be needed for repsJra.

�Jutr t. 1111 •.

7

PSS

ARTPARK POETRY FESnVAL CALENDAR
Campus &amp;vents tal&lt;e place In Clemens Hall, Amher.at, and In tbe Abbott
Library Poetry Room, Main Street. For specific locations at Artperl&lt;, inquire
at Poetry Festival information Desk, Log Cabin, Artperl&lt;.
All events are free and open to the general public, except as aatertaked:
•credit Free Workshops: restricted to enrolled members.
;;;.?t~~~g~ fnf:r!!il~~ registration encouraged.

Ketter tells Senate that Student Affairs,
Alumni helped recruit '78 freshmen;
committee suggests ways to foster 'community'
EHor11 by the Student Affaire and
Alumni offices helped brlng ebout the
lna.M In number8 of freshman for
naxt fell .
Prealdent Ketter told the Professional
Staff Sanate (PSS) laat w.k that
Student Affairs mede e concerted ellon

~~ ~~~':: ·~an~~~eb~trr~~

mailing laat year.
'
In .adltlon, the Alumni Association
made WT811gem811te with some of Its
mernber8to call students who hed been
accepted to U/B, In en effort to provide
them with any needed Information
ebout the Unl-.lty.
Ketter reported that students accepted tor edmlsslon have~ notified that
little If any housing on campus Is
available. Preference for housing was
given to students alreedy residing In the
dorms, he explained.

BaT~;rt~~~~~~~~t~~~~:~p~~~:::~

10. The dedication program will Include
presentation of U/B Foundation awards
for outstanding services by members of
the faculty and professional and civil
se&lt;Vice staffs, and what Ketter termed a

"t~~~~:hof ~~~~n.:r~r..::~res~;~

~?=~~~~;~~~s~~~~:~~~~n~~

projects at U/B, Ketter said :•logic did
not prevail" In the situation, but rather
"the Imperatives of an election year."

se:.~~L~I:~:t~n:f~~k,":: ~~~r~~ f~

early as

three

years ago,

but

It

:'t\',Fd'g~~~ agn'l::'~~n ::'.~ Bf~!

money.
Ketter concluded by calling the Staff
Senate a unique organization In the
SUNY system, one which serves a
" useful function" at the University . He
said Senatofs have provided him with
useful, candid Insights Into a number of
problem areas.
- c
Afterwards, the PSS presented a
~aqua 10 outgoing Ghalrperson Ellen
~'fe"f~~hl:'·~"'eclation for her

" In what ways can a sense of
community be fostered at SUNYBuffalo?"
1

m!\:~ ~h'! ~~~~:'sl~~?e~:!ft'~~::

wori&lt;shop on C&lt;eatlve Problem Solving .
The "sense of community" refers not
only to relationships among people on

=r~~i. ¥~~ ~~:. ~e~~::~:r~

refer to one or the other or both .
1. The president should be more
visible on campus, e.g ., visit offices,
2. Vice presidents and deans should
be more aggressive In promoting
esprit de-corps In the various divisions
and schools.
3. There should be a greater
development of "club" ~~etlvltles (e.g.
bowling and bridge) tor faculty and

staff. ·
4. Ute wor1&lt;shops should be
expanded .
·
5 . University-wide gatherings, e.g ., a
picnic or fireworks display, should be
held.
6. Recreational facilities must be
Increased. Bike and jogging trails could
be built relatively lnexpenslvely. /
7. A "commuflitY listener'' program
should be started which would allow no
credit community Involvement In
selected University classes at reduced
tuition rates.
8. MorJ&gt; community service ventures,
such as Christmas tree mulching ,
should be organized .
9. With t~e emphasis on nontraditional students and their unique"
needs for evening and weekend classes,
flex time should be endorsed , particularly for student services like Financial
Aid and Admissions and Records .
10. Pari&lt; benches and picnic lables
should be available for lunches and
coffee breaks .
11 . Wind shelters (or a dome) should
be conslructed on the Amherst
Campus .
12. Sensitivity training should be
encouraged for people In offices which
communicate (and conflict) with each
other regularly .
13. Television and radio programs
(like U/B Roundtab'le or faculty
interview programs) which greatly rai se
the consciousness and stature of the
University In the community should be
developed.
14. Easier access to University
services and less red tape are essential
for part-time students.
15. The use of campus facilities by
employees for weddings and parties,
etc., Is desirable.
st~~-~u'l'J'~~~!t.lng services for the
17. Good working conditions, lnclud- ·
ing consistent PR ranklngs across
campus, are essential.
18. Job related staff travel (e .g .,
conferences) Is Important.
19. 100% tuition remission for staff
~~tt~~~ .:!::'~:h . members would be a
20. Orientation sessions for new stall
and faculty are desirable.
21 . Rental boats (canoes, rowboats
and smalf sailboats) for the campus
lakes .
22, University credit and credlt-lree
courses presented on Channel 17,
WNED-TV, and WBFO Radio.
23. Free staff admission to U/B
football games.
24. More recognition of faculty , staff
and students In the form· of awards for
unusual or exemplary accomplishments

admitted to a California medical school.
The S.. opinion of the court left no
clear guldeposta tor the future use of
quotas or goal a. Or, at 1esst, observers
couldn't agree that II did .
State University spokespersons lndicaied thet SUNY and Ita units would
be unaffected by the Supreme Court
declalon because the syatem has no
•quotas."
.
SUNY Chancellor Clllton Wharton
issued thla slalernent :
"The edmlsslons criteria and procedure• used by the campuses ol SUNY
d1ffw slgn1flcantiy from lhose emPloyed by the medical school a1 the
llnl-aity ol California at Davis. For
SUNY, the relevance and applicability
ol the Supreme Court decision In the
Bakke case will therefore require careful
11Udy. Unlike the Davia med school. for
harnple, State Unl-alty does not
malnlaln apeclllc numerical goals thlt

- 3:()()- 5:00 pm ~~r::=~~r~·:- (NEW) ,Wor1&lt;shop
10:()()-11 :00 am Open Office Hour wfth Gerald Stern
(433 'Clemens)
11 :()()-12:00 am Coffee Hour with Gerald Stern (308
Clemens)
1:oo- 2:00 pm Discussion: G. Stern &amp; students (438
Clemens)
3:00- 4:00 pm Lecture by Gerald Starn (438 Clemens)
6:30- 8:00 pm •credit Free Workshop with Gerald Stem
(436 Clemens)
-·
8:30- 9:30 pm But.,.- Chair Reeding by Gerald tern
(438 Clemens)
'
~

Friday, July 7
AtArtparl&lt;:
AtSUNYAB:

~~~ ~~gg ~ ;~i~-r:~~~~~~~rt.~th Kerman
11 :OCl-12:00 am Autographing and Discussion: Gerald
Stern (Abbott Library Poetry Room}t :oo- 2:00 pm Discussion : G. Stern &amp; faculty (436
Clemens)
Saturday, July'S

AtArtparl&lt;:

_ At Artpark :

2:0Cl- 4:00 pm ··N.E.W. Workshop by Nichols School
Poetry Group (William Morris, director) .
(Open to pre-college students)
3:00 -5:00 pm ••N .E.W. Labor Writers Wori&lt;shop
(AFL!CIO; Emanuel Fried, director)
Sunday, July9
2:00- 4:00 pm ··workshop with Carl Dennis
Tuesday, July 11

AtSUNYAB :

2:()()- 3:00 prri Open Office Hour with David lgna1ow
(433 Clemens)
4:()()- 5:00 pm Coffee Hour with David lgnatow (309
Clemens)
8:30- 9:30 pm Buller Chair Reading by David lgnatow
(438 Clemens)

At Artpark :

3:()()- 4:30 pm ··workshop with David lgnato,w

Wednesday, July 12

Thursday, July 13AtArtpark:

3:()()- 5:00 pm ••N .E.W. Workshop with'Oanlel Zimmerman
_;j
AISUN)'AB :
10:()()-11:00 am Open Office Hour wltt&gt;-"-ouls Simpson
(433 Clemens)
11 :OCl-12:00 am Coffee Hour with Lou ;SJ!npson (309
Clemens)
, •
1:oo- 2:00 pm Discussion: L. Slmpso.i'&amp;·'s'ludents (436
Clemens)
_., ...... ~
3:()()- 4:00 pm Lecture by Louis Simps~"~ Clemeqs)
4:()()- 5:00 pm l.ecture/Reeding by HeMet Zinnes (Cl8
Clemens)
•
6:30- 8:00 pm ·credit Free Workshop with Lou1s
·
Simpson (436Ciemens)
8:30- 9:30 pm Butler Chair Reeding by Louis Sim pson
(438 Clemens)
The Reporter will print the calendar of events for succeeding .w-s In
subsequent Issues.

fo~5 st!W~ ~~~~~~itYa~~:or~~;en,::

cocktail parties and a winter carnival
(with Ice skating on the lake) .
26. Many of the above should be
described Jn a cultural-social handbook
for faculty and staff .

/

1

AI Artperl&lt;:
AtSUNYAB :

'

or service.

Wharton says Bakke decision
won't affect SUNY's policies
w:.~t o'nhem;.;~;.,a; ~~~ ~aJ!~
~~~~~ ~~n~a~~C:r~~~d t~

-I

Thuraday. July 8

could be construed as affirmative action
'quotas.' Moreover, there exists no
special positions reserved for women
and/or minorities to the exclusion Qf
others.
_

tio·,;~~:\~ ,;~~~~ma~l~~:~~~l;d~

any IndiVIdual . In fact , Its alms are
precisely the opposite. Affirmative
action seeks to sal up more flexible,

•Calendar
•

~"""pogo

I , eol. 4)
Aulstllnl Statkwl•ry Engineer SG-1--flhys.cal

No.'B80.18.

Plant. l.la01 St . (lerriPO&lt;W)I I.Wltil IQ 1 25 178

FACUI.TY

"""'""""'"""'~

Auoctoto - - IDiaQnostic Radiology).
Radiology , F8063.
•

10 MONTH (NS) SEASONAL
Steno SG-5-Mediclll School DoWless otfJCe
(1 1 1 17 8· 10 1 31 1 78~ llMsoon ol ~
E&lt;lucation 1411178· 1 131 1 791: Mtcrobio1ooY
1811 178-5 131 1 79)
Doto Entty ... Oporotar ~
ComputngSe&lt;Vices (1 1 1 1 78-10 131 I 78) .
NON-COMPETITIVE CIVIL SERVICE
Grounds WOfiter SG4---Physk:al Piant, Am·
he&lt;'sltl.._.-y..-.tiV I 13 1 7 8 t h e n -J.
l.NNo 34665
•
Grounds Worl!er sa..-f'h ya~ca~ Plant. Am·
"""'' (1.._.-y untl 9 1 18 I 78 lhon
Une No. 34492

- J.

PROFESSIONAL STAFF
Dlreetor of Annual Bt'ting, UBF, k'lc , Posbng

-·Cholt.Sodoi&amp;--.

Aalotontor~to-. ~ ·

F8064 .
F8065

Aulalllnt Protenor, Pediatrics. F8066
Asllstlnt Profeuor, Phwmecy, F8067.
Aulstant Prot- (~01) (2), Pediatrics. f8068.
Asslotont Proloo- (Hematology 1 Oncologyl.
Pediatrics , F8069.

Auocloto --(Hematology I Oncology),
Pediatrics, F8070.

Aulstont P r - - !Ambulatory Pediatrics).
Pediatrics , F8071 .
Aulatent or Auoc'-te Profeeaor (Putrnonary
Pllyoicianjlntemlst)l. Pediatncs, F8072 .
Visiting Loetu,., (Dnctor ot SMA Lab). Offlee
of Oeon, NS &amp; Math. F-8073

~~:.:s~~~~ l':,"g~~=~nt~":itcr~~~

measures Include not only qrades and
test scores, but also academ1c training ,
life hlst&lt;lf)', personal determination ,
and luture career goals.

Su~~Jne pr~i~n~ln re~~~~t~: t~~
current SUNY admlss?ons policies are
legally correct. While we shall , of
course, examine the ruling In greater
deplh , we are confident that we shall be
able to
continua .our vigorous
af(Jrmative action effor1a. The State
u...-sity remains llrmly committed to
equal educational opportunity, and we
are dedicated to Its spirit and practice.•
'-4

PUT US ON YOUR LIST
The Rept&gt;rter "Calendar" h-s to provide the 'c ampus with a
comprehensive w"kly listing of ..ents and 8Ctivltiu, from films and
meetings to scientific colloquia. We'll print both your notlcee and your
publicity photos {IS SPliCe permits) If you supply us with glosay prints. The
SllfYice Is free . To record Information, cell Jasn Shreder, 636-2626, by'
Monday •noon for Inclusion In the following Thuraday's lsaua. Or, moll
lnformahon to Reporter " Calendar," 136 Crolla Hall, Amherst. We need y&lt;~~~r
nslstanceln making the "Calendar" as compfete as posalble.
Key: f()pen o~l'! to tho.. with a l&gt;fOieaslonal lnterast In the subject; •open
to the public;
open to members of the University. Unlaaa otherwise
specified , tickets lor events charging admission can be purch- at the
Squire Hall Ticket Ofllce.

�July 1, 1171

--·Association.

~~4 1 94

For mont intormlltion. cal

531~19 .

POE11IY FD11VAL •

Tho

U I S . - Poo4ry _ . oontt1ues

-.o-,..rn-luue.

.Tile--

twouglloul -

-

FILII"

-

-

..,_.

rwo-

a Kelogg , 1968).
141 DlolorGwf. 6 .30 p ...- ~ by tho
loJ- S1uc!y.
. , . ... lho v;n,., .. Jolin

CenloJ

---

MONDAY-10

--~1967). 110MFACC.
_

JAPANESE FILM"
Salbltu lcl!ldal Onno (The Ule of 8 Woolan
by · or The Ufe of Oherui (Kenjl. 1952).
146 Diefendorf'. 6:30 p .m. Sponsored by the
Cenler f o r - S1uc!y.

•. _ of lwo .limo" cha-.c:ler-

-· ""'·~
FILII"
_

7p . m .

~by--. .

""' 8s-mtnu1e doc~ a1&gt;ou1 a stale

c..

--fn-llypro•

lho-

. The
--fn--~ofl&gt;orrtn
· - No oommen10ry
is
S l o f t o l -. ln1871 . ,r-OI.tlic
.,.,..,., ol - - . . - . . . , .... wNch coot
overS1 00.000 In legll1ees.

-FILII·

....._Cai531-2G1tW
,_
_ 1872)._
Conf1lrence
__ _ -

·

u.-·--Soly-.

"'-·
-onO.......,-.book.

.. -rn~-•-.m

---..--

.IDol ...,.. doaoll!on1. - . g nigh! CUI MC
-'*""'~-Thoflrn-.
..... ~-fn11172.

...,._by..

- - - Y- 141

~- 9

0...1or-91udy.

playfnell!e-.

_...,a-

FilMS OF ALFRED HITCHCQCK"
Doubt. 146 [l;elendorf. 9 p:m.
'Sponsored by tho Center lor Me&lt;io Study.

"~.... lnlhegrr&lt;IHiOchc:ocl&lt;
tradition
. A n;ece suspects
· he&lt; uncle ol being
ll1e -.y mun;erer: tJnltonnty good por- b y T...... Wriglllm.-eouen.

p.m.

....

Juc1te -

~by

(Ford). 403 - 9 p,m.
the Cenle.-tor _S1uc!y_

TUESOA'Y - 11

__
_
__ __

..,

.-..--··
..... 01'--·__
_
_
...... . ·-.......... ._"' __ - ........
r-.

·

a . -. 4 p .m.

._

-.;_

..__ .,._

...... C..C:..(Ciwniii•P-111

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

_'f!l'!l!!l'!!!l~·------

. . IUIIIoola4ul ...... ......

atMam~

P1o!Jwn on~ I - I Spocoo l{ld

.._

Refreshments wil be served . Beanora Kcneoiowska wil be the commentator.
For lurtherinformanon . cal 878·6 3 13 .

PHARM D. SEMINAR II
Muoelo Aaluantl, -garet Chrymko, Pharm.
D. Candidate. 248 CoOke . 5 p.m.

'

'JAPANESEFtLM•

SonrtzuU:DolniT_No_ (Sorriz1Jl&lt;a;
Peasants of ll1e . Second Fottress) (Shinsul&lt;e,
197 t ). 146 [l;etendorf_ 7 p.m. ~ed by

ll1e Center"" Media Study.

SHAKESPEARE lN DELAWARE PARK•
~··• Tho T.._ot. Rooe
. . . cl .Oolowore Pwtl. 8 p.m. Ftee,
flUIS OF ALFRED HITCHCOCK•
~. 106 !lief-. 9 P-pl· ~
It,&lt; the Center lor Modlo S1uc!y.

emotions---·Ill...,..

" the
-·of
·within
confines of •
occupied by
of 8 torJ&gt;edQ_ed ship by a U-boot
· Jolin
-Some
_ good__perlonNolces
othenl_ by T WORD AND WAGE IH fllll•
Los--. (Trulfout). 146 Oief.._,. 9 p.m.
Sponsored by the eo.- for Modlo SbJdy.

c -. 0our1or C.. (Chlnnol8). 8:30p.m.
f1UI•

z- c-J. 110 MFNJC. Ellicon.

7p .m . ~by--.

F~tiGlloP~:&gt;&lt;--..o, 1970). t.So;,f.._,_

• br1ngs his lBchnlquo
10 ..hoi - '· lhOwW&gt;g 011-loo-.ugty-otpiOyompnglho-

StuQy.

1 p.m. Sponsored by the Conte.- for -

-

Made In ltoly, ll1e story c:&lt;&gt;nCerriS the lroubled
-ccxne of a slave rO\ICit eod a sm111 iOlapd'a
bol11ofornotionf&gt;ood .

fllll• .

CMl (_.,.,., 1969) Conlenonco Theatre.
7 pm. ~ by ll1e Center klr

-91udy
.
0...--.----Qm

~ ..._ eut.J -

N.O.TICES
ADMISSIONS A RECORDS
Office ttou.......OAR in Hayes 8 is open Ll'ltl
7 p.m. on ~ and Tuesdays. The office
regu18rly closes at 4 .3 0 p .m.. We&lt;i&gt;eadey lhru
Friday. Du1ng the fonrt week of classes for each
Summer SesSion. the office wa be OPEW1 to 7 p.m:
Monday lhru Tht.ndiy.

s.m..- AOQII1QI~ continues

in Hayes 8 for the 3rd Summer Session.
,.
Second SeuJon-Last day to resign oourses
wittloo1 finonCtat penoMy is Friday, July 7 : last
day to resign wry course ~ second seSsion is
Friday , July 14.

DUE and Groduoto lleglotiiltooi-.Fd SemesiEH'-Materials miy be obtained in Hayes B
during July. All s--.ts submitting regis!raliOn
ma1erials by July 31 .ntl have thor schedule
cards mailed to them in August.

MFC 'floelotration-.Fd Semester-Maleriols
w11 b e · - In Hayes B starting on July 10.
DROI'-INCENttA
Too much on VOIX mfnd? Need someone to
talk to? Come to ll1e Drop-In Cent..-. The ho&lt;n
are 10 a.m.-4 p.m. at 104 Norton, Amherst
c..npus. m . - Basement, MaJn Street
Qwnpus. M Ellico11 olfice, 167 MFACC. is open
Monday ojghta, 5 p.m.-9 p.m.

- cloto.,--

UF£ WORKSHOPS

-:Wine WISdom I

Thuradeyo, July 6·AuQuot 10 1 4 :30-6:30'p.m.
Ufe _ . . . _ 10 1111 .:cepting registration
for K~nolillnl Y - (T~ I July 16-Augoat

~7~~~;;:~":':':".~

Kyou're a~ conmunlly- (t.cdly,

staff, student or -IPOl*tSI .-lei you're in.._~
In registering Or-~ !nlormltion, the Ufe _ . , . , . olfice In 110 NortQo.

--

636-2808.
~by the

DMslon of SI1Jdont Allan
DowlotX'*" ,.,.,... Olfice and &amp;.nrner

-

.

RECORD co-op
The U I B -

Co&lt;lp In Squire RollO open
Monday-Friday nights from 1-9 p.m .. m Mondly
m Friday allemoons from 1_2·2 p.m.

THURSDAY- 13

-

.,-_ ___

_Coll _ _ lllttlar _ _ _
....-~·~~~~-~Tho-

wilbe-.

CllllftMA-INTME-

~

SATURDAY-S

CarOline .. ~ H&lt;l. 309

..._by~

-

- - · ...
-.
1A
e - 8 p . r n,
.._....,
..-a.lor-91udy.

.

FACULTY NITS COlLOQUIA sauu•
_
_
_.k..
~ciEnglioll,
Ow _
.._...,
Epc:
EJra
,._.~ Canloo,

Unlllwoity of -

. . . . . Coll13&amp;-ft1111or
__ _ 11172)._
Conlwor1l:e

.,...,.

ETHNic-AMERICAN FILM FESTIVAl"
Pofft; tn America; For the Benefit of the
Country; The tmmlgr•nt Experience: A Long,
long Journey. South tectt.xe room. Communica·
bon Center . Bufh*l State. 1 and 8 p.m. Free.

WOIID ANII.,.GE IN ftLM•

~-=--=-~=2 ;30 p .m. Spon-III' .. O...Ior-91udy.
.

-~

WEDNESOAY SUMMER FORUM"
Whot II u.tng, QMd fnd Problomatleal In
the Phllooophy cl John o-oy: Tllo Soelal
Phl' - h y o1 John Dowoy, Sidney Hook. Moot
Court Room, O 'Srian. 1 0 a.m., with quesHon Md
answer session at 1:15 p .m. in the Ktva. Ba6dy
Hall.
Presented by the F~ of~ Studies.
•

MONDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES"
To 8o 0&lt; Hoi To 8o (Lubitsd&gt;. 1942) 170
MFACC, Ekott. 8 p.m. Admlsslon: $ .25. Sponsored by ll1e Intensive English i.Jing1oage Institute.
About a 1TOuPe of actors in .Potand who do their
bit to outwit tt)e Nazis. All excelent comedy
with Jock Benn y Carole Lombard

FRIDAV-7

-..

WED~DAY-12
BlOOOIIOIIII,E;
The Red Cross --.ot&gt;11e wll be In Squire
Hal, Filmore ~. from io a.m. to 4 p .m .
H wil reh.rn on AugUst t 1 , sarpe time and pUce.

----~~---- ""

hlo -

A Qm yo~~~loYed .

UUABflUI•
Coftllogrdon (Jopon, 1958) Conlerence The..... Squi-e. Cal 636·2919 for show times.

COHVBI$AT10HS IH TME ART$
Eltt..- SWartz fn tetvtews con-c&gt;OSer and writer
Vlrglln-on.ln!orrelionol
(Chomol10)
6p.m••

- · _, thC&gt;uDh he ploys tho port of a

9 p.m. 5ponso&lt;ed by the Conte.- for Mecia
Study.

or 1

___ _

· With a locus

. _,

o n a . . - . - b y -.

-aiuMINMLAWAIIEI'I#r."

...-- o1-.

__ . __. 8_
Pwtl. 8 POl. Free.

ThopiOyil-byOr

--llaol--·-•1•~-

· - -.. FILII·

----00
UUABFIUI" .
Klnp ol

lho-

Oon--.ce -

(W Genneny. t976).
· Squi-e. Cal 636-2919 lor

A senelttve story of two men on the Ml,

:::.:'"
c:.--:.~ :~~rn:;
F-

Sloula.tn-.-

- " " ' - -p,_., ~by
._~ol-mttocentoo-tor
-.-.:~~.

Mitlon8rondo~o

............... Britioher...., ""!_raYs t h e - - ..

JOBS
l)l&gt;llt~T-SeNooo(Sor1ojs):

Surgory: Chemlatry: Cl1emicll Engineering: Music
(Pirt·lime)•

-

SG-6--Muiic:

. . . c1 ~
8 p--m. Ft-ea•
-~··
·Pwl&lt;.
-T~-

WOIID AND lliAGEIN f'UI•
, - - - . . , Valley. 141 Ole!.._,
9 p m Spon-od by the c.nt« lor -

Orthopodico ;

---,
SChool-~-u-tMa!homoticl: Pll)'llcl a Aalronomy:

~:

Olfice (2): 0...'1 Olfice,

Student Affoire-Studenl

enceo; ElomonlltY

&amp; -

lkU&gt;; -

~Piont, MafnSI .
Clortc ~ Sclenceo

1:

Sci-

Education 121:

Unry (3). Poat·
~· C1inlci'*-YI ll*l·&amp;nei. .
-Clortc~ ........., Crodil.
Free~. Poyroi : Ac:col.onta~ .

-lyPiot ICH~-Utnr1es-Circulollon.
.

- - I N·DEUWAIIE'AIIK"

-

- I ..

COMPETITIVE CIVIl SSIYICE

-grlllhy.
-· -

~:

Qeo-

Clortc-10-7-4'\Jrc~ (2 )
- - Clortc IICM-Cen"" Storea.

--.
~-~--­

·- ·ea-. ·p~ogo7,coi.3

....

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>3,000
Freshmen
Largest-ever beginning class
should boost fall registration to15,500;
their academic credentjals are •strong'
U/B's largest-eVer freshman class 1

f~:e~:?ers~~JI,;en~ ~o~ ~c~f i:

"Some stua.rte Ollittl . lower hlgl:l
school averao-- Mnllted," Ore....aald. " but they are a:x:epted because
they compensate lor tholr average with
a high standardized test score."
So II you hear a horror 'Story to the
effect that so-and·so knows someone

expecled to reach 25,500, officials
Indicated this week.
The freshman figure represents an
Increase of 300. or about ten per cent
8
over last year's entering class.
=.'"B~t~~~o~~~~~h~:
The proJected total enrollment Is ~:!:o
about 1,500 over last fall's.
that kid had a standardized test
"We were down last r,ear, but we're score conslflerabiy higher than some=':lf':~~~t=. Rae- . onewltha90average.
Dremuk baaed the lnsahman aatlmate Good ~atlon
on the numbeta of paid tuition deposita
Good students pick U/B, both
alnsady received .
Dnlmuk and Somlt suggested, because
Both he and Executive VIce President of our reputation.
That's not aomethtng which Ia limited
Albert SQmlt pointed out that the jump
In numbers ofU/B fnsahmen comes at a to the western part of the State, either,
time When enrollments throughout the Dremuk said. "It's a State-wide
reputation . We have experienced an
Slate and natlonaredecllnlng.
At the same time, Somlt sal&lt;!. the lncnsaae In numberS [of freshmen) from
academic credentials of our students the rest of the State as well as from the
continue strong.
Western New York area," he reported.
U/B'a reputation starts with the
Prell..an.vy frosh proftle
faculty, Executive VIce President Somlt
Dnlmuk relaa-r results of a aaaesaed. It's enhanced by the fact that
preliminary profile study of the "we offer a broad range and diversity of
Incoming clue:
programs, graduate and undergraduate.
Thue Initial statistics, he said, Tha batter qualified students usually
" shoW that the mean high school aaak out such Institutions."
average lor members of next fall's
For examDie, Dremuk Illustrated, the
fnsahman clue Ia 88.3, with a mean tw6 most selective high schools In New
clue percentile rank that remains York City, schools Which "are probably
essentially unchanged from prevlOua, the bast In the State, II not in the
years," that Ia, In tha upper one-filth. nation," rank first and second among
Dremuk explained that u Ia the case our major Ieeder schools .
with moat selective Institutions, the
U/B makes a conscious effort to
University uses the criteria of high enroll hall our students from Western
school average, rank In class, and New York, Dremuk u!-:! . When the dust
standardized teat scores to determine settles alter the fall regi stration
stampede, we'll probably have clolli! to
ellplblllty for admission .
The {.H&amp;on we are realizing such a 58 per cent from WNY. he noted .
hi gh ~ average Ia due to the
conslderlbly large number of students Good fOI' the State
Who will ba entering with averages In
But our obligation to serve the entire
the IIO'a," he Indicated .
State Is Important, too, both admlnls-

'g:

--

tratora agreed.
Besides, Dremuk muaed, It's of great
benefit to WNY to have the mix of
downstaters that we provide. " It helps
combat the 'boonle' Image of Buffalo.
And II helps bring the State together aomethlng which Ia Important to New
York's future growth. •
What about talk that U/B hu been
draining freshmen away from other
schools In Western
New York,
psrtlculeriy other SUNY units?
The fact that we're up by 300 would at
most mean a loss of 30 freshmen from
each of 10 WNY area SUNY units, the
A&amp;R chief said. That's hardly sizeable.
But It's not the case anyway. he
Instated . We haven't '1aken" students

from anyone. We've been -nacrultlng
them torus.
Stepped-up~

What happened, Dremuk speculates,
Ia that because earty applications from
the downstate area ware off, many
schools decided simply to drop their
recruitment efforts there. U/B, on the
other hand , lntenalllad Its program.
That's part of our obligation, he said,
"to Inform high school students of the
opportvnltles available hera ao that they
can make an Informed choice about
Where they want to attend collage."
Recrui ting serves another purpose,
too.
•SM l3,000 FrMhme-rt,' Plste 4, col. 2

�.lunett, tl71

Med Council
names Ettinger
president-elect
The Medical Faculty Council last
- k voted to name "Dr. Murray
Ettinger, asaoclate professor of blochemlstry, as their president-elect .
,
Ettinger will succeed Dr. Michael
Cohen next spring when Cohen's tanm

ea&amp;~!:d:!. e~ftl~a elected Include:

Dr. Glen Gresham, parliamentarian;
Ora. John F. Moran, Robin Bannanman
and John Cudmore, steering committee
members; Drs. John Gaeta and Martin
Plaut, executive committee members.

~~~&amp;r~::ro~~~~,:~\',v:"~~tte\~

Appointments
Search for grad dean ends with Gilbert Moore;
Wagner will be assistant executive VP:
Elder. Shapiro get acting assignments
The--=~! lora~

of g&lt;aduate and

:::.-:.~:-=io~~ c;::c~d~

a-tt of T N - that Or. Gilbert D.
.._.., dean of the Scbool of Education
at SUNY/Albany, banamed to the poet.
In makinG the announcement of his
Mlectlon, "-'dan~ , . _ L. Ketter
Indicated that .._.., a familiar figure
,..,., '1lla top choice" lor the
-'lion on the part of a -a. eommltlea cllelrwd by Or. Cheater l.a!lvway of
lhaOaDart- of Geological SCiences.
In addition, Kalter aalcl, ''the r1ICOIT1manclatlon hall naoalYed ~ enclora&amp;"*11 by tha vice prealclenta, provoets
and daM\a, and lha vr-tuata atudants."
.._.., 52, bacame ~at Albany In
1174, following a 1~~ auoclatlon
with U/8. Durtng that decadG and
one-llalf ,..,., lla ..we! In a
..nety of admlnl st.rative

Solid repututon
During his earlier tenure at U/B,
Moore developed a solid reputation
among all segments of the faculty .
His appointment In Arts and Letters
(deeplte a background In a totally
distinct field) won strong support from
a faculty group which had opposed an
aartlet admlnlalrallve selaction .
His S81Yice there and In a number of
equally challenging assi gnments acroas the campus rasulted In his being
known as a .. university man"-someone
who heel a concern not just for a narrow
Interest area, but or the entire
Institution.
He was thought of as a "collegial
admlnls1rator,'' one who liked to
maintain contact with students as well
as with faculty .
In a 1968 article about the Faculty of

::::~: ~fud/;:· ~~::SPta~e .!,!'~

s1udents are Interested and wuXng . We
mus1 capitalize on a staff which Is
enthusiastic and committed to d4Weloplng an educational philosophy and
practice which Is relevant to the needs
of the latter part of the century. •

J.

Weg-

has been
~ to tha SUNY Board of
TN.._ far appointment u uslstant
--.1M vice prealdent,.Exacullve Vice
Pruldent Albert Somlt has announced.
eun.ntly aarvlng u uslatant vice
prealdant for academic affairs, Wagwill........., hla n - duties In July. He
will handle Untv.alty-wlde budgeting,
flacal
planning and
lnatltutlonal

- a ..

A natlwe of Buffalo and a U/B
Weg- )olned tha alaff In '

~.

, . a an accountant lor the canter. for
n-.t1ca1 Biology. In 11188, he -

Ml'llad aaalatMt fo the provost of the
of Natural 8clencaa Md

f'.aallY

llilatlleinalk:a.

..":;.,~:..,:~~=

flanl1m to 1878, . , _ he named
. . . . . . . vice prealdent for academic
aflalrL

~:-~~tr:"'~

prwldent held on .,., acting baals
br Dr. John e.G. Boot. Son\11 hu
lllllnUad hla thanka and IIPPrBCfatlon
to lloot, who p i - to return to lull-time

...

teaching and ..-ch In the School of

Manegarnant.

Dr. Ruth Gala Elder, uaoclate
professor and dlractor of the research
aaquence In the Sctlool of Nursing, has
been named acting dean of that School,
Preeldent Robert L
Keller has
MnOUilced.
Eldar succeeds Dr. JeannaJte Spero
Who has accepted the deanahlp of the
Unhoaralty of Cincinnati School of
Nuralng .
Holding a )oint appointment In the
DepertnMiilt of Sociology, Elder Ia a
111111.. of L.ondon1 Ontario. Sha )olned
the leculty '*- '" 1. . . . . -lvad
the B.S.N. In publiC ,_Ill n&amp;nlng from

u.

u~~

o1

~

~o

(london); l!lld the M.S.N. In mental
health/psychiatric nursing and the
Ph .D. In medical sociology from Yale.
Professional articles of which she Is
author or co-author
deal
with
communication and Interaction between nurse and patient. Her most
recent studies have focused on nurses'
allltudes toward unrestricted access to
contraceptives, abortion and sterilization.
While at U/ B, Elder has served as a
consultant on the Geriatric Nurse
Practitioner Program , on a multiphased self-In struction program In
growth and development for undergraduate nursing students , and on
sociological concepts relating to the
nursing curriculum. She has also given
presentations dealing with sociological.
aspects of aging and dying, alllludes of
patients with arthritis and other chronic
diseases, and changes within the field
of nursing .
She is a member of several
professional associations In both
nursing and sociology, and has been
active on commlllees In both of her
departments and at the University-wide
level.
Dr. Stuart Shapiro has been
appointed acting chairman of the
Department of Computer Science,
effective August 30, 1978, and
tanmlnallng August31 , 1979.
President Robert L. Keller said he
m - the appointment
on
the
recommendation of Dr. Paul Reitan,
provost, Natural Sciences and Mathematics, and the vice president lor
academic affairs.
Rose H . Sconiers of Buffalo has been
officially named to the Council of the
State Unl-slty at Buffalo for a tanm
ending July 1, 1987. Ms. Scon.lera Is a

=er

~p t~::J~~.?'a:e A:::~~

lion. She succeeds G!lraid C. Seltarelll
of Snyder, whO raslgned.
' Ma. Sconiers hu already attended

:::.::~ 0~;::,::~~- '::.ds~~
May.

Kerman leaving
for Michigan
Dr. Judlih Kanman \ assistant to the
daan, Office of Creel t-Free programs,
will be leaving the University In
mld..July to become regional director
lor Ann Arbor, University of Michigan
Extension Service.
Kerman said that " Earth's Oaugh-

:::n~~e:::e:;,~ =\%::'e"Y~l:':ff~~

for the lime being .
Mothering, her book-length prose
poem recently published by Allegany
Mountain Preas In Olean , took an
hOnorable mention In the 1978 Great
lAkes Collegu Aaaoclatlon New
Wrlt&amp;r8 Awards competition, Kerman
raportad . Thera are flrs1 prizes In both
poetry and fiction and four honorable
"*'trona In both categories In the
~petition .

and Dr. Arlene Collins will continue In
her two-y881 term as secretary.
Council members who want to serve
on standing commlllees are asked to
contact Dr. Cohen at Children's
Hospital.
This marks the first time Council
elections have been held before fall
semester. The bylaws of the organization were changed last spring to allow
lor earlier balloting . It was left that the
change would enable "the Council to be
organized earlier In the academic Y881
and thus conduct and complete more

bu~:r:;:,~u~~R~~Ie y~ Dr. John
Naughton announced at last week's
Council session that Dr. Marvin Harz
has bean selected as the new chairman
of the Psychiatry Department.
Herz was formerly the director of the
Georgia Mental Health Institute and a
professor of psychiatry at Emory
University. He has also held the
position of associate professor of
clinical psychiatry at the College of
Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia
University.
Herz will assume his dulles here In

Ju~er the summer,

Nau hton said, he
will concentrate on deve?oplng a good
working relationship and affiliation
~~"fc~~2J.n~~~h the new Erie County
The dean noted that although no final

=~~t" o~a~~:; t'l::d~:p.,a:~l~h:~

will receive In the State's supplemental
budget , he anticipated the sum would
be considerably less than the $2.4 million requested .
Leier, The Buffalo News reported that
Gov. Carey had asked the State
Legislature to provide $1 .19 million In

:~~ds L;g,;,;r~~esta~i~u~na.::pin~,rr,~~~
passing a budget.

Rowe Quartet
invited to Japan
Qu~~~ w~~r~:ln~nRuf~~~: ·~1~:'..~

city" of Kanazawa, Japan, this fall for

r.~~;~C:~ .J,nnu!.~"e~:l::':tr:~:

musicians from around the world .
On Wednesday of this week, Dr.
Ryolchl Oka, mayor of Kanazawa,
presented letters of Invitation to the
Quartet at a campus luncheon.
U/B President Robert L. Kellar and
Department of Music Chairman William
E. Thomson were alao there. Both have
been Invited to accornpany the Quartet
to Kanazawa, located on Japan's _ ,
coast.
The Rowe, who came to U/B In 1978
from the Unl-slty of North Carolina,
~b'.::a:is.wlll be arriving In Japan,
The group will perform two concerts
on November 1 and 2, during the Arts
Festival.
Members of the group are Patricia
Cobos, first violinist; Arlene DICacco,
second violinist; Ltica DICecco, cellist;
and Pamela Benjamin, violist. The
ensemble was recently featured In a
special television show produced by
WBTV In Charlotte, North Carolina, for
which the station· won a prestigious
Peabody Award for television programming.

SUNY-Albany
bans smoking
Smoking Is prohibited In all
classrooms, lecture halls; and laboratories al SUNY-Aibeny under ·a new
policy passed by the University Senate,
endorsed by the University Council , and
approVed by Acting President O'Leary.
A system of complaint and moral
persuasion has bean established to
enforoa tha prohibition.

-1

�l

UGL
It, too, has come to Amherst
with riotous colors, panoramic.views;
give it a chance, Szekely urges

~

The Undergraduate library has come
to Amherst , too, arrayed In riotous
colors, offering panoramic views , fitted
out with over three times as many
reeder stations, offering some new
services, and looking forward to
lncer,tton of an audio-visual system
with n the next year or two .
UGL Librarian Yoram Szekely, who
admits he wasn't at first "tMIIed" with
the Idea of the move, now pronounces
the new facility "very nice."
Located on the ground and first floor
levels of the Caperi Hall library complex
(with entry from the first floor) , the new
UGL Is spacious , well-appointed ,
bright, and functional. Full floor-toceiling windows on several sides offer
UGL TOURS
Orlen1811on toura of the IMIW Under-

r:::~:l\1,;~~~=~!~t1~i~~

-the next few wMka: Thursday, July
6, at 7 p.m. (with Librarian Yoram
Szekely u guide); Tuesday, July 11, 3
p.m.; and Wadne.day, July 19, 10 a.m.
ThoH lnt.,..tad In taking the tour
ahcMIId check In at the Reference Desk.
The orlen1811on takas about on•hall
hour.
views of Ellicott , the spine courtyard
area, the Tiffin Court area within

Capen, etc.

Seating lor 1400 Is offered In 400
carrels, In a wide assortment of plump,

~~~::_~t ":r, ~~!~~~~naa::ln~.;:

hues), In various pits and "snuggle"
areas (like the ones In the Law Library
where you sit on the carpet and slide
under and around a reading or work
surface), and In a series of small,
semi-private rooms. A "purple plt" area
at ground level Ia reserved lor those
who want to smoke while &lt;~tudylng .
Not all carrel• will be wired

are

co~~~~~·
;onr:.~~~ to ~~3.;
electrical outfef::' and lndtvf:suallyoontrolled lights . The Initial design
called lor all 400 to be plugged Into a
central audio system so a student could
listen to material of his or her choosing .
The Idea was that students would go to
a central A-V area, select materials they
wanted to hear from a record and tape
oollectlon, and then be assigned carrels
where !hey would plug-In earphones
and listen.
Budget limitations have curtailed that
scheme somewhat , Szekely Indicates .
Right now, there Is no audio .
capability, whatsoever. ln a year or two ,
UGL will have 50 of its carrels wired Into
a central system . The Science and
Engln-lng Library (soon to move Into
the second and third floor levels of
Capen) will have another 50 carrels
wired . The control center lor the system
will be located In SEL, but It will serve
both units .
UGL Ia beQinnlng to build a library of
audio materfals for the time the system

;!::..':
~r~~:s~:~~~ ~ ~:~
a smalr grant from teaching lnnovatlon

funds to buy materials for a specific
English lit survey and Intends to add to
these. A slide collection Is also being
developed .
The room earmarked for A-V use In
UGL has been turned Into a classroom
for a course on how to use the library to
be offered Jointly through DUE and
History. It will be used, too, lor
orientation sessions for Incoming

students , for conferences , etc.

Gr~~~ ~!~Mf:;lrers

for the first lime
In that library's brief history a number of
group study rooms (small rooms where
several people can work together,
available on a flrst~ome, first-serve
basis) . It will also have two typing
rooms (Szekely Is considering making
rental typewriters available for use).
There will someday be two copy
machines (leased and operated by the
Libraries for students to use at 10 oents
a oopy) to replace the present
coin-operated FSA machines (which
too often malfunction and leave
students and librarians frustrated,
Szekely complains).
Another first for UGL-&lt;~t-Amherst, the
head librarian points ou1, will be an
Informal, not fully~talogued paperback browsing collection (to be located
at ground level near the "pit").
The new facility has the potential for
serving on an around-th~lock basis.
Chain-link divider r,anets recessed Into

~~~1:111n9g~~he

:;st =~~~~

;:;"

~

reading-study area that could be used
2~ours a day. This area would have
access to the circulation and reserve
desks but not to the stacks. At present,
though , Szekely says, there Is no
provision for the staff necessary to take
advantage of this feature on a regular
basis. More traditional hours are being
observed.
Whara where
As you enter the UGL on Capen-1,
you'll find the main circulation/

r:~n ":~tk a~ ~;!;.;'~"3e!~ ~:

straight ahe".J (behind stairs leadln9,
down), the so-called "vertical file'
(road-m~s , pamphlets, caraer Information, etc. to the right rear, the current
pertodlca s browsing area to the near
right) , and bound periodicals to the far
right. The stacks are downstairs.
Reeding areas are scattered .
Exits are equipped with an electronic
book detection system to protect the
oollectlon (as was the case with UGL on
Main Street) . Individuals with properly
checked-&lt;&gt;ut books, however, needn't
blink when passing through these gates. '
The new Undergraduate Library has
space for about 120,000 volumes .
f'resent holdings (60,000 books In the
main collection; 5,000 volumes of
bound periodicals; 5,000 reference
volumes; and 3,000 reserve volumes)
take up about 60 per cent of available
room . Acquisitions are proceeding at a
pace of about 10,000 volumes a year.
Despite Its move to more prosperous
surroundings, the UGL (which was
begurr on a shoestring five years ago lr.

~~\lc~~~~n ~~~~~n~ew~~~~~J~:~~~I!

from the University community. "We
accept books on all subjects ," Librarian
Szekely remlnds-" texts, monographs,
back lseues of certain periodicals,
books by faculty , etc."
Szekely Is aware that many students ,
like himself, were or are skeptical about
':J:n":'t':J'Rk~~~~ to Amherst. Some don't
But , also Uke himself, he thinks
students should give the new facility a
fair chance . " Come out and look us
over," he Invites . " Browse around ."
Those who have been out at reedy,

Sz~~e:~~~~sih=~ !0c~~~~~-

that even
some of the most unreconstructed Main
Streeters can be swayed .

One entrance for all
Now that the UGL has opened In Capen , entrance to any library Sf)ace
within Capen must be made through the UGL entrance on the first floor. This
entrance door Ia opposite O'Brian Hall.
Specifically, entrance to UGL, the Science and Engineering Library,
Spec lei Collections (consisting of the Poetry Collection, Rare Books, and the
University Archives), and the Ubrarles' Director's Office will be made through
the main entrance. Presently, OGL, the Unl-slty Archives, and the Director's
Office are tha only unlta In operation In the Capen Llbrarlea, but the Science
and Engln-lng Library and the Poetry and Rare Book Collections will be In
p i - by September.
~
Ualng tha UGL antran
elpa provide eecurlty necessary for library
operationa. Once Inside the GL, elevatora are available to reach any library
li»CM whhln the building .

--·--·

Japanese ambassador will speak
at conference on trade relatiQns
Shotaro Takahashi , Japanasa Ambassador to the U.S., will be the
featured speaker Friday, June 30, at a
campus conference on "Improving
Trade Relations with Japan."
Takahashi will be honored at a
luncheon hosted by President and Mrs.
Robert L. Ketter at 12:30 p.m. In the
Spaulding Dining Room, at the Ellicott
Complex.
The conference, sponsored as pert of
the U/B School of Management's
International Management and Polley
Analysis Project, will provide Information on how Western New York
businesses and Industries can develop
an expor1 trade to Japan.
This Is one more In a aeries of
activities the School of Management Is
organizing to this end, Dr. Bhal Bhatt ,
director of the Projec1, Hid. "These
activities are timely not only because
Japan has built up a $12 bfllion trade
surplus but also because a new
awareness Ia emerging In Japan for
positive and mutually beneflclal trade
relations."
The conference will open In the Moot
Courtroom, O'Brian Hall, at 8:30 a.m .

=

~f~~~r orMJosa~!1t~~i

panel sasalons will be he'fct"Pn the same

room .

C. Victor Ral- of the Erie County
Industrial Development Agency (IDA)
will chair a panel from ~10: 30 p.m. on

the " Potential for Western New Yod&lt;
Exports to Japan."
Panel membenl. will Include: Raymond Elselt of the U.S. Departm.,t of
Commerce's Office of International
Marketing; Robert Angel, director of the
U.S.-Japan Trade Council; Ken Suzuki,
assistant to the prealdent of the
Mltsublahl International Corp.i __ y~
Nakata, execu11ve d irector of the.._,
Trade Center, and Jojl Aral, manager of
the Japan Productlvlty,Center.
" Knowing the Barriers to Exports"
will be the topic of the eecond panel,
from 11 a.m. to 12:15 p.m., chaired by
Frank J. McGuire of the Buffalo
Chamber of Commerce.
Included will be Or. James McConnell
of the Department of Geography and Dr.
Stephen Dunnett, director of the
Intensive English Language lnatiMit.
Bhatt will chair a question and
answer session that begin a at 2:30 p.m.
His panel will include Paul Harder of the
u.s. Department of Commerce; the
three J~ nsprM«rtatl- from the
morning panel, and Harold Fletcher,
r~.::u11ve director of the Erie County
Cooperating with MW!agement In
organizing the oonferenoa are the U.S.
Department of Commerce, the Buffalo
Chamber of Commerce, the Erie County
IDA, and the Council on lntametlonal
Studlea and Intensive Engllah lAnguage
Institute, U/B .

�·.
.lvneH, 1171

,....,1 ......

The f'realclertt aald he Upec1S the
committee to complete Ita findings end
.-menc~a~lona on purehaalng by
.Mnu.ry 1' 18111.
n - will be aubmltted to him to "be
eMNd With the ..,proprlete Yice
PtWkllnt 8nd the public, • Ketler
lncliceted. ~. he added, "If It
a--, • the PIMI "1118Y eleo aubmtl a
~lei oonlldentllll NpOrt for the
only of the PfwkMnl."
"-~Waaldthe-oommlttee, whlcll
wl8tlt811vt_, totllll Prwldent, will be
......-ct _t.,..ly to .wcly "a graat
- - al C111!11P1a Gl**iana" In 'Wth

:=

iiiiiiiiiiiiliilb!W...
iilii .... Ollllllllilllel•l..." ,.,..
111ft. He ..... •

.m •

gl-

::n-..-~::a. 'f.ct:e~,.
--~__., ..

CllniPUa.

from

of the group h - been

eelecled an the t.ala of their O'f"n
Unlnlatrat..,. lind ~I ex111ft!-. Koanw ...... Memblrahlp ....
a-, llmlled to nine, he explained,
...... of Ilia belief "that • email
Ita taka moat

==:,:,.._.....,

oe. ................
KMt.- a.ld

~lonal . . . to be

llllelyzed alt.- purcha.ing will likely be
~on .. -..II!Mla. Some of
theei . _ , he ~. may Include
"II'Wihand-. ptOCU-1 end
aitlftlnialnllton, ,__,,.. actlona,
8lloCIIIItDn 8nd NNbllltatlon al ....,.
8nd flcllltlel, clue
eohedullng,
edln'-lanl, NO~. e!ucMnt houaing, atudent - . . . flnenclal aid,
.....ty. 8nd OGm!IVIIntl and audio-

_

.--n.....r
_.,._,....
______
. . . . _ol
....

--.-~,--

-ol--

. . . . Crollo -

~--

· - . . ,..

(If-.

-1. _.,

II U/8 were to sit back, content to let
students eaek us out, we might not
maet "our enrollment goals, and the
-get end our ability to aetve students
In the future would auffer," Dremuk
aald.
So I ...teed of sitting, the Admissions
atalf haa recently stepped up Its
vlaltai'IOn plOg(llm to high acllools and
lunlor cot~, college fairs end
1*81118' l.'illhts. ell~ the State. Ths
aupply of literature ~Lit U/8 has been
both Increased end Improved. A new
"Guide to Undergraduate Ma.Jora" was
~felly
helpful to prospective
11Uden1s, Dremuk Indicated.
Then, too, Dremuk said, Where othsr
schOOls laauad notices to students by
Jenuaty 5, U/8 walled until February
15. 'We, thus, had a larger pool to
aelect from."

More follow-up ·
Once a student was accepted this
y-. he or aile got more follow-up
attention . More than 3,000 students and
their parents attended post-acceptance
programs throughout the State (some
1,000 on three consecutive April
S.turdaya a1 Amherst).
Other schOOls have traditionally
~acl1ed admlaelonsln this way, but
I I - a new departure for us .
OVerall, Dremuk reported, U/8

==.=~~~~~:~·;~~

total

numbers of ..,pllc8nta
said, we're seeing

~lnlng, he

are

more

1

~J~ 'l~-:.!~a:\Y1pr~~J

===·

'"'Ject

The
IJ'VOivea building ten
IChoola of eclencea end hUmanities,

...

L.::.:=======:--~

a

for
of
to

=l!,~=::Ju~=~~~
ICJrll.,_bldon the contract .

~~

......J ,

and more " U/ B-only" applications from
students. SUNY has raised the cost
of making multiple applications. We're,
thus, seeing fewer total applications
but more serious ones. Thi s Is true
across the country, ths A&amp;R director
Indicated. In the past , each lndlvldual
applicant might have generated 10
admissions appllcetlons to various
schools, he said. Now the figure Is
.closer to five or alx apiece.
Despite the record size of ths new
freshman class, Dremuk said, many
students were still re/ected not because
they were " unqual fled , but simply
because we don't have the room .
" If we had the room to take 4,000, we
could still have enrolled 4,000 qualified
freshmea ," he estimated.

'Sex Appeal'
Dremuk expects no long-range
enrollment problems forU/B .
This University has "sex appeal" for
students somehow, he said.

fg~~ew~J'~r-C:::o~~t~,;:;;;.~~

~me from those who come here. Given

Klocke named
AAPmember

" If we ever do gat the money for the
campus build-out (and I'm sura the
State will finally com~letethe project],"
Dremuk said, .. we II never have a
problem. We'll be tustloo attractive."

Dr. Francis J . Klocke!. chief of ths
Division of C8rdlology at u /8, has been
elected a member of the prestig ious
Association of American Physicians .
Only 500 senior academic physicians
specializing In lntamal medicine are
members of the Association which was
founded In 1887 to advance scientific
and practical medicine. Election to
membership Is based on candidates '
dlat1ngulahed activity In patient care,
teaching and research. Dr. Klocke is the
second Buffalo area physician currently
a member of the Association; the other
Ia Dr. Evan Calkins, chief of U/B's
Division of Gerontology.
A native of Buffalo and a graduate oi
Manhattan College and U 1 B School of
Medicine, Dr. Klocke Joined the medical
faculty here In 11165 as assistant
professor of medicine. He was named
chief of U/B'a Dlvlalon of cardiology In
1976 •and Ia currently professor of
medicine and assistant professor of
physiology.

our busing situation and our distorted
campus," he said, " It's amazing , but we
do maintain our reputation.

Saudi project dwarfs Amherst
oontract eetlmaled at 13.4 billion
said to be the largeat on record oonatructlon of the University
Riyadh's n - campua, 8CCOrdlng

- • OoiANns
:=rr

--:..~-

•3,000 Freshmen

1:'.~9.!:, ~~af~~~·lo~:ru~~
I brary

with

-lnQ

for

8,000,

a

1~oom hotel , four lecture hells a
114-foot-hlgh forum, a museum 'of
sciences and natural history, five dining
halls with a sealing capacity of 8,000, a
comr,uter and medical center, a
stad um sealing 25,000 parsons, a
mosque for 9,000 worshippers, a
mass-transit system and a university
press. The campus reportedly will cover
12 mi llion square feet , have a daytime
~a'lr~t~~f 31 ,000 and a teaching

And averytlme you buy 70-&lt;:ents-agallon gas, you 're helping pay for it.

�By Ann WllltcMr

UrMni!Y~

A s:layful man Ia the tource of new
hope1 Nya Alain Robbe-Grlllet, quoting
the pnllo80Pher, Hulvlnga.
And Robbe-Grlllet, novella!, filmmaker! and on.tlme statistician and
agrlcu !ural engln-, delighted an
aUdience of abOUt 90 students and
faculty with an entertaining discussion
of text and lmaile, June 111, In the Kiva
Conference Room of Baldy Hall.
The 55-year-old Frenchman, whose
worl&lt;a Ignore · narrllllva structure,
characterization, or psychological play,
was hera' for a three-day colloquium on
"lmagas, Words, Spaces." part of a
summer-long program sr,onsored by

Robbe-Grlllet
French novelist-filmmaker Insists
novels can'tbe transformed to film:
says neither should have 'Balzacian continuity'

le&lt;;~':l,1~:"o~f s:,';a~o~e~iy

blend of past and present, refuses to
Introduce even a trace of "reality" Into ·
his films and novels. In his second
novel, The Voyeur, lor example, a watch
salesman may or may not have
murdered a young girt. And the storyif the word can be used safely - Is told
with dizzying geometric precision,
leaving some readers fascinated, If
somehow gasping for a reassuring TV
show.

V-egetable$ may
ward off cancer

ntms are more cuttengtns

His films are even mora challenging.
Thera's no attempt at realism except In
the senee of play with disjointed places
of real objects to create some dazzling
labyrinths: tn his film "Eden After,"
shown hera as part of the colloquium, a
glass breaks, but we don't hear the
sound of Its breaking until moments
later. And In the same film, a tiny
Tunisian post card becornas the entire
tableau for eerie and violent characters.

Rea8.rch by aclentlata at U/8 and
Roswell
Park Memorial
lnatltute
suggests that those green vegetAbles
mother urged you to eat may help

prorJ~ ~d~""G=;
1

profeeeor of
sociology and social and preventive
medicine,
told the
Society
for
Epidemiological ReMBrCh, meeting In
Iowa City, Iowa, lest week, that the risk

11

,t!'~~~r!::n~o~ ':'h~akrran~~ ~!~~

roman, says he's had a great deal of
time to think about the relationship
between words and Images:
"Thera can never be a transposition of
text Into Image," he says. "In traditional
concepts ol the novel, the text
represented the world. And novelists
chose Images to represent this world.
But the difficulty is that wJth the new
novel , the goal Is precisely not to
recreate the world ." ·

~~!:::P w~ncer~~lnt~ra:':: ~

1

ne~~b~~;~~~:.:r!.:.h~~. ~w~h~o~:;~

into film .
" It just can't ba done."

VIsconti f•lled wtth umus

~~!lre~~~J,ha ~::.a~ecc:'mfe~~ '!:'~~~~

expresses continuing action in the past ,
the passe compose Indicates action
completed In the past, and according to
Robbe-Grlllet " fixes things and establishes causality."
He concludes that any attempt at
replication Is pointless, since there is
no method for translating words with
images, that any text will lose its
poetry .
"Curiously," Robbe-Grlllet
says ,
"filmmakers have felf that they had to
reproduce the world In the way of
nineteenth century novels, like those
wrllten by Balzac.
" Even In some university film
courses, students are taught certain
tricks to parmi! this sort of trans-

~~tl~'t;;;1:u~:!,'tb~G[!IIe!,sa~ru~

technique tof8Const~tute" what he calls
"Balzaclan continuity."
Robbe-Grlllet says that It's the

;~~:~o: ~~d~~w~~~~::r.'h~~ ~~~;

that this Ia what he experimented with
in films he made between 1968 and
1970.
After the showing of his 1970 film
" Eden After," June 20, In the Squire
Conference Theatre, one viewer told
Robbe-Grlllet he thought the film
voyeurilllc and sado-masochistic, us·
lng •x and violence for what he termed

-~~:~rm~fl:~hed,

and said he
was merely playing with masculine and
feml~ lne stllfeotypes, aap!l(:lally with
the macho male flgura .

Point of view Isn't the u.me 'Aithough Robbe-Grillat Insists h t
him and text ere separate quantities, he
dld compare them frequentl y throug t)out the colloquium - especially on the
qu cion of point of view.

nat~! do I think of critics? They ere
critics. And what do you by
natural? A child who haan't been
conditioned to u.dltlonaf I~ ebout
writing will write things much clol« to
the no-u roman. This Ia not to NY
that the nfiw novella 'natural,'· but then
neither Is the kind of literature that Ia
supposad to necHale natura."
And what of a modem writer like Saul
Bellow who u - all the tnadltlonal ·
what
he thinks of me. •
Dr. Raymond Federman, professor of
English, and Dr. T. Jeff8111011 Kline, associate profesaor of French, and
associate provost, Faculty of Arts and
Letters, a8rved es translators thnoughout the colloquium, Which also
Included the reading of a paper by
U/B's n - Jones VIsiting Profeseor of
French, Louis Mwln.
The colloquium wes organized by Dr.
~J:t!' Slatln, proteuor ot Engl:ah at

~~~~rf~l~~!:.:d~:!t:.Sa balflfng

Robbe Grille! discussed Luchlno
VIsconti's attempt to make Albert
Camus' The Stranger into a 111m.
Although VIsconti lrled to adhere
stri&lt;"~ly to the text , he found that the
city of Algiers had changed so
drastically, that tha beth a depicted in
the
novel
would
have
to
ba
reconstructed.
Another problem, Robbe-Grillet says,
is that It's Impossible to put into film which Is present - a novel like The
Stranf,er which Is written almost

uked how ha felt abOUt cr1tlca who
call tha n - now! excenlvely formalIstic, self-conscious, and not at au

Fo•
" In traditional literature , there 's
almost no point of view. With Balzac ,
for instance, you often find a sh ift from
Interior to exterior with no marl&lt;ings. A
novelist like Balzac floats above the
story, omniscient , aware of everyth ing
both Inside and out. "
Robbe-Grlllet says this kind of thing
is Impossible In film because the
camera Is always there and establishes
Its own point of view ... The camera is
really tha film's first person. But in a
novel, there's no .such thing except

~~~Je~~ ~h'l'ceh P.:':e'!g~!,o~lns~n~!~~

technique .
"The eye of a novelist like Stendhal
has continuity - It proceeds from one
thing to another." But the eye of the
camera, he feels , Is completely
different. It is Immediate and global.
"There is only one movement, ..
Robbe-Grlllet says.

About the novel
And how does the visiting filmmaker
feel about the novel Itself?
says
that
since
Robbe-Grillet
Flaubert's time, novelists have become
more and more concerned with the act
cil writing itself, along with a shifting
point of view. Writers of the new novel ,
he says, show less and less concern for
" systems of probability ."
And
correspondingly,
It's
this
concern for higher and higher "degrees
of Improbability" that has become
Important for Robbe-Grillet and other
novelists of the noveau roman .
Robbe-Grlllet says that Flaubart was
one of the first to Introduce the
Incongruous. " When Charles Bovary
drops his hat In the first chapter of
Madame Bovary, it has nothing to do
with causality of the novel .. .. And
that's why that dropped hat Is the first
object o the new novel ." It's this
Introduction of the totally Improbable ,
Robbe-Grlllet feels, '1hat has changed
the landscape of fiction ."
Making an analogy with painting to
Illustrate degrees of Improbability ,
Robbe-Grl llet cites Andre Breton's
defi nition of surrealism: "a oewlng

m}"0~~~;t!'J'~~~~1~;~~~,;" kind

of
jolting inccingrulty that 's at worl&lt; In I he

FNnch fllmmak•rat Squire.

new novel and which gives it energy.
And as the novel achieves higher
degrees of improbability, he says that It
will run itself out and achieve '1otal
entropy ."
Robbe-Grillet makes this a lillie
clearer: "In the music of Bach , there Is a
certain probability that a sequence of
notes will follow a given phrase or note.
But from Beethoven or Wegner until
finally
with
Arnold
Schoenberg,
Improbability Increases until we have
no tonality at all ."

ar:lth~~1gh ~~sa~~ th~~:;~~~J:l:~

Robbe-Grillet did talk about the way he
does see their relationship.

R•uschenberg.nd M•srltte
Robbe-Grl llet said that while he's
worked with artists Robert Rauschenberg and Rene Magrltte, he has refused
to work with artists who merely want&lt;&gt;Q
to " illustrate" his worl&lt;.
He and Rauschenberg, for instance,
exchanged text and Images over a
three-year period. The Idea was to not
nave text or image lead one another. but
that one would generate or affect the
other In an il')congruous way .
Robbe-Grlllet tells the story of how
Rauschenbarg sent a picture of a
factory along with a text in which
Robbe-Grlllet had described a beach.
This was Intended to give Robbe-Grillot
the Impression that he had seen the
factory there. " That's how the factory
was Integrated Into the text," he says.
At the opening lecture, Robbe-Grlllet
answered a number of audience
questions - sometimes not waltlnq for
the Interpreters to translate questions
back Into French.
He said that the notion that the
unconscious is structured like a

~~~~V~ :~:~·~e~:m~o~: !~l':y~ ~~

the posalblllties of tension between
systems - which a few years ago
would have been called a dialectic - ,
as well as the possible distance·

~:::en.nt~err..;, a6! h!.~rlf,~~~~~~ ~~

another.

Wh•t ;about critics?
In a separate interview Robbe-Grillet

especially cabbage - are fnequently
included in the diet.
The local Jlludy also suggests that
cabbage, raw or cooked, and other
· members of the cabbage family such as
broccoli and brussels sprouts offer
protection against colon cancer. •
But , Graham sald,lhe local results do
not
support
findings
by
other
resaarchers who have reported a link
::::fgrm~~~r meat-eating and
The U/B researcher said epidemiological study findings by the Buffalo
team were based on comparisons of the
dietary patterns of colon and rectal
cancer
patients
with
those
of
individuals who have neither form of the
disease .
These findings, he noted, agree with
labonltory tests conducted by other
scientists.
Graham said that several years ago,
Dr. Lee Wattenberg of the Unl-slty of
Minnesota reported that rats fed
cabbage, broccoli and brussels apfl)uts
sho.wed Increased levels of benzpyrene
hydroxylase, whlcfl can Inhibit cancer.
And a current study by Dr. Wat.tenberg
shows ttiat rats and mice given
compounds derived from vegetables in
the cabbage family have f mammary and stomach tumors when

the~~~:"sa'fci'':e~~~~~o~~ll Parl&lt;
8

study, unlike lab studies by Scientists
such as Wattenberg, focusad on eating
habits. The diets of 256 white males
with colon cancer, 330 with rectal
cancer, and control groups of white
males of similar ages with neither were
examined.
Although the team
pinpointed

=~R:.:s,:,e~~go~~~~vr~~~!l

that other vegetables of the cabbage
family worl&lt;ed a similar effect only
against colon cancer.
The cancer patients In both gnoups
included fewer raw vegetables of any
type In their diet than did their
cancer· frae counterparts.
The study findings show, however,
that frequency of meaHtatlng was
similar In both the cancer and
non.cancer patients.
Graham stressed the need for further
research to explore the relationship
between vegetables and meats and

cancer.

Others involved In the study, funded
by the National Cancer Institute, the
American Cancer Society and Roswell
Pari&lt;, are Drs.: Hart Dayal , former U/B
research associate now at the Medical
Collage of VIrginia; Arnold Mittelman,
chief of Roswell Parl&lt;'s Colon-Rectum
Service; Gregg Wllkinsor1', former
associate cancer research sclentl.st at
Roswell Pari&lt; now with tha Envlron-

C':r~l1~/~~ec6~is AJ:t'lli~ . ~~ao':,~,:1~

cancer research scientist at Roswell
Pari&lt;; and Ms. Mya Swanson , U/B
research analyst.

�The Russians

40 ac:holera from tha U.S.S.R. began alght • - • of atudy at tha U/B Intensive

_ar~ he~e

and Mra. Ketter last Friday (photo 3), the Sowle! group leader pr-Ied Ketter with
a traditional symbol of Ruulan frlendahlp -YOdka. (4)

.

~~~~~~ ~n:~~.~~~ ~~~~~~~':!tlnr.!7r~h~~md'.u~~~~~

aulatan~ d~or, Olvlalon of Public Affairs. At a picnic at

the home of Prealdent

U/8 ranked 67th in federal funding_in fiscal1976
U/B.-.nkad !17th on the nat of the 100
lnltltutlona receiving the moet federal
lunda during the 1G711 fiscal yew, •
,_.lor* Sclence Foundation ·report
~Tile total MIOUnt .--1-.d hera during
tlllt pal1od $111.1811 million, NSF

e.ld.
Tile NSF NPOrt. 1-...:1 ennually,
- . c l en eddttlorwl q...rtar thla

,__from
September
to
v.....,_t
a,_
...., durlna the Dariod q ...

July 1 through
32.._1ft, In 8dclttl0n
Fiscal
1v'11. Thta fa bec8uM the federal
ahlflad to
flacal yew
In
tion.
For tile lull f!Hnonth !*loci U/B
1-'-1 122.487 million In U.S. lunda,
IUclna It 73rd MIOnCI the top 100 for
the toi8111me - - by the report.
No oct. SUNY unit made the top

100.

• .
HEW, tile NSF report aaya, obligated
of eny agency to
. . . . . , . . end oollagea-13.11411 bll·
loll-• 24-per cent 1 - - ower 11175,
. . . _ . . . ..... MIOng the ... IMdlng
........ Altoglther the atx IMdlng
....... NepCIII8Ible for 117 par
aiM of ell ....,_ fullda, the -'~on • In 1G711. In ..tdltlon to
. . . 173 ... of the total), . , _

tile.._.. - •

-~.~~tc:;

,... .,., ..nr.~­
' : : ... oant)

Energy

-~~~~-­

. . ,.._~ant), NalioNI~
............. .t.dmlnlan!IOn (two
... ~..... - - other" (line par
..... , .... flllllla _,_ all ~

topped $5 billion.

dl~~~~~~~:.: t~:' _ln~8:'.:::~J

.-.nklngs occurred as the result of the
addition of the thre&amp;-month transition
period. Only two agencies, the U.S.
Office of Educetion and the Environmental Protection Agency, obligated
-aianlllcentiy larger amounts during the
15-month parlod . •
Howard . Unl-slty In Washington,
D.C. (-with $121 million-) Is shown
lor the first time aathe largest recipient
of federal funding, rellectlng the
Inclusion by HEW of amounts obligated
directly to the Howard University
Hoapltal. "II the hoapltal had been
added In ewtler yews, Howard would
haft .-.nkad lira! In 11175 aa well," NSF
uld . "This Institution 1'11C8ives the vast
l'l\8jorlty of Its funding ..:11 y"" from
the federal government through a
Congnaaalonal block gr&amp;r~t, and Its high
renk rellecla prlmarlfy federal support
for Its current operating expen- rather
then the m~~~~nltude ollta scientific and
engl.-Ina program (only Sll million) ."
Othera In the tap 10-.: 2. Mit; 3. U .

for the top 100 was lower than that lor
smaller institutions .
6

obWgat:r $2.~ bT,Yt:,~c'f~r .:.'d!~~

science activities, six per cent over the
previous year's total. In constant dollars
this was eqlllvalent to a one per cent
decline.
Federal R&amp;D obligations to colleges
and universities Increased by nine per
cent to $2 . ~19 billion In 1976, equivalent
to an Increase of just under two per cent

~~un~~j~~~ce~~~f ~~~~~1. ~~~f~~

Department of Defense provided nine
per cent. More than half of all R&amp;D
obligations were alloceted to the life
sciences and were traceable to the
concentration of HEW funding In this
area, the NSF report said.

Reading skills haven't slipped

U.C.-San Diego; II. Columbia; 10.

Today 's public school children are
better readers than their parents were 30
years ago, according to an Indiana
University study.
The two-year study released this
spring compared sixth and 10th grade
students In Indiana schools. A new
statewide survey was mede there In
1976 and compared to the last previous
statewide reeding teal done In 1944-45.
Stale School Superintendent Harold
Nag ley and two faculty members of the
Indiana University School of Educellon,

Harvard.
Among the 100 IMdlng Institutions,
NSF noted, the rata of I~ waalar
atow. lor the top ten than for the
IMI8inlng ~--~~ prtnwlly to the
~ In Ed-lonal Opportunity GIM!a whlcll ecoount for a much
t.v- propolllon of the total for the
........ lnaUWUone. Similarly, tha rate

nternatlonal Reeding Association at a
news conference to explain the results.
Eller Ia professor of elementary and
remedial education at U/B •
"The moat algnlflcent thing Is this the nation aa a whole Is concerned
today'~ children do not naad aa well,"

r. ~~"I.·~~;C:t;Sf.'"JI:i,:';;:"~;

In constant dollars, or about the same
level_ of funding as. In 1972. HEW
provoded 53 per cent of the R&amp;D total ,
almost the same as Its 1975 proportion .

IV:::~e:~~~:. ~~m:;eltf;·oiT~

Dr. Roger Farr, associate dean of the
Indiana University School of Educetion,
said.
" Any well-done study such as this Is
evidence to the contrary. Children are
reeding as well as In 1944-45 -actually
reeding far better."
·
Eller emphasized that not only the
new Indiana study, but "all the studies I
know about do not show much reason
lor the public to believe reeding ability
Is declining."
The reeding ability comparisons,

~~s. u~':u~ t~=d!~nt

Reeding
•Stxfh grade students who tool&lt; the
test In 1978 outscored the sixth graders
of 1944-45 by eight months on total
scores, and on all eight subtests.
•High school sophomores In 1976
outscored their 1~ equivalents by
10parcent.

�. . lntta

8 , 1171

7

Buffalq, "that lmprQbabl~ city crawling with poets. There Is
not a bar on the west side where, with a little luck you cannot
find one , on a bad night. And they come in all shapes
and sizes •. each with something to teach another. When I
first arrived, it seemed to me a kind of small miracle and it still does- that that nineteenth century city spewing
twentieth century soot Into the air has been blessed with
the madness and sanity of poets. Bless 'em all . , . "
-BobHass
- Thoughu on Butt.Jo from • len. rMr.tl ~a. 1171. IHrlc*t. CMifon*.

Poets -o f every description coming in July
Poets of eYefY description will be
convening In Western New York this
July. The occasion : the first annual
Artpark Poetrv Festival. The time: July

t;~r %ton~· Ne'IJ:e ycf~~ce~l~~:"'u/~ .
campus.
The Festival Is the result of a unique
experiment In cooperation between
Artpark (a facility of the NYS Bureau of
Parks and Recreation), U/B, and
Niagara-Erie Writers (an alliance of
creative writers from the five-county
region of upstate New York) .
• A comprehensive schedule for the
1Festival was released this week by U/B
English Professor Max Wickert, coordlnator of the program, and David
Midland, executive director of Art park.
The program Includes almost every
kind of activity aligned with contempor' ary poetry: public readings, creative
writing courses, a poetry book fair, a
series of workshops, formal lectures
and informal discussions, a Poets' and
Artists' Picnic, three open nsadlnps,
1

=t~ ~{:),~~ ~~~::anm":J."~'~~~~

music, synthesizer sound_, and theater.
Best of all, U/ B's Wickert says, most
of the Festival Is free , open to the
public, and Informal: " The parklike
acreage of Artpark, which already has a
history of hosting a variety of resident
artists In sculpture, painting, the
media, theatre, music and dance, will
simply be a playground (and working
ground) for a procession of poets ,
editors , publishers, and critics."

Awud winners
Participantaln ihe festival include the
winners of some of the most

distinguished poetry awards known Lou is Simpson , winner of the Pulitzer
Prize; David lgnatow, recipient of the
National Institute of Arts and Letters
Award; Robert Hass, winner of the Yale
Younger Poets Award ; as well as two

poetry-wlth-syntl\.eslzer.
•Folk music enthusiasts and environmentalists will be treated to a
performance by Mike Finn and Jim
McClurkin, who combine poetry,
alternate-lifestyle idealism, and modal
harmony.

Five widely published members of
the U/B faculty will be actively

Publishing dps, too

~~:nl:~ln ~=IIP:;:~t~~~ k~;~nt

~~~a'n, ~c ~~~~nd , R'[.~.~~
Polite, and Wickert .

·

ev~~n~:~~::'ert~~f~~m~~mething for
ad~;·!~s!8~~z/s~ay lsw:,~u~o ~~~e.~d h:
wOrkshop by the women's writers
collective, " Earth's Daughters. "
•If you are Into black literature,
Garlene Polite and Cynthia Ball
Williams will be there.
•There will be a special sess lo~ for

eJ~~~~~ys}~e~1~.;ofsh~c::'C:J; ~~~~

Group directed by

William Morris,

~~ch~~f::,~uul.:n~::;r~~~ ~~~~h?~
"P~t:l.~t~Pa~· :orkers and labor union

members will find , Wickert says, " that
creative writing affects them deeply If
they check out the AFL / CIO Labor
Writers ·Workshop, led by Buffalo's

de!~~f1 ~ax;;;~~:;.E~1r,n:·,~~~~;ed

in Allen Deloach's workshop on poetry
derived from his two year experience In
living with Hopi Indians In Arizona.
• Those whose bent
Is more
experimental can attend Raymond
Federman's workshop on concrete
poetry, or listen to New York City
avant-gardlst Camille O'Grady's work In

ARTPARK POETRY FESTIVAL CALENDAR
Cempus eventl take place In Clemens Hall, Amherst, and In the Abbott
Ubrtry Poetry Room, Main Street . For specific locations at Artpark, Inquire
at Poetry Festival Information Desk, Log Cabin, Artpark.
All event a are free and open to the general public, except as asterlsked :.
'Cnedit Free Workshops: restricted to enrolled membera .
•
~~-;,;~ =O:::i~~~ce registration encouraged .

WednHday, July 5
At Artpartc:

2:00- 5:00 pm Open Reading I. (All poets welcome to
read . 10 minute time limit. Bring your
manuscript, a picnic. lunch , and sign up .)
Thursday, Juty 6

AtArtpark:
AtSUNYAB:

3:00- 5:00 pm "Niagara-Erie Writers (NEW) Workshop
with Sheryl Robbins
10:00-11 :00 am Opan Office Hour with Garald Stern
(433 Clemens)
11 :00-12:00 am Coffee Hour w1th Gerald Stern (3C )
Clemens)
1:00- 2:00 pm Discussion : G. Stern &amp; students &lt;•36
Clemens)
3:00- • :oo pm Lecture by Gerald Stern &lt;•38 Clemens)
e :30- 8:00 pm ·credit Free Workshop with Gerald Stern
(o438 Clemens)
8:30- 9:30 pm !Iutter Chair Read ing by Gerald Stern
(o438 Clemens)

The Report..- will print the calendar of events for succeeding weeks In
aubaequent l..u...

•Poets who are simply Interested In
publishing , or would-be publishers who
want to know more about how to bring
poetry Into circulation , will have an
opportunity to work with editors of

rn~~~~id~a~a;~ne~.;,~~~~ Dgfl~~~i~;
Poetry , Dan Murray of Street, Judith

~~';~~ g,' c~~7:~! . g~~f~~eJ~p.,~~;~~

presses - John Gill of Trumansburg 's
Crossings Press, David Maloney of
Buffalo's White Pine Press.
•Others may simply want to take a
look at the display or sale items In the
Niagara-Erie Writers' comprehensive
Poetry Book Fair during the final week
of the Festival.
• Those
Interested
In
relations
between poetry and the visual arts
should talk to Marvin Bell , whose fame
is not only as a poet , but as an
exhi bit ing photographer; or to Mike
Finn , who publishes his poetry together
with his evocative drawings; or to

~~~~\s Z~~~~~l~ns~~P ".!ft~rt th~n vl~.,'l

arts .

News of Death (1955), A Dream of
Governors (1959). At the End of the
Open Road (1963), Selected Poems
(1965), Adventures of the Letter/ (19?1);
a novel ; several books of criticism, etc.
A prize-winning poet, he Is pmfesaor
and director of the Poetry Center,
SUNY /Stony Brook.
•Marvin bell, associated with the
Iowa Writers Workshop since 1965 and
holder of many prizes for such works as
Poems for Nathan and Saul (1968),
Things We Dreamt WeDI6dFor(196f!), A
Probable Volume of Dreams ('611), woo
Havoc ('71), The Escaoe Into You (71),
A Residue of Song ('7•). Stars That See,
Stars That Do Not See (77). He Is also
an exhibiting photographer.
•Anselm Hollo, Finnish-born writer
closely associated with the early "Beat"
movement1 whose books of poems
lncl~d'e Maya (1970) and Sojourner
Microcosms (1977), and six others; and
sixteen books of translation from six
languages.

DuAl visitors

35 poets
Altogether, during the four weeks of
the Festival, Artpark and the University
will be vl~lted by about 35 poets,
authors, between them , of some
hundred books, active In half a dozen
states of the Union (as well as In
Ontario) , and hailing from all o - the
glob~~ .

"it was our Intention," says Festival
Coordinator Wickert, · ~o be as fully
democratic, pluralistic, and crosssectional as time and budget permitted;
I think we have succeeded V8fY well.
Poetry after all crosses almost all
boundaries - and It can do so In a

sl~! •:~geir:.'d ~~ a ~~~le ~~:;em:;,

courses on modem poetry at U/B ,
Including a Credit-Free course open to

l~~~!"ii,';' r..~~:;·d~~~~!~~s~~~.::,~r~~

Professor Wickert , 306 Clemens Hall.
telephone 87!&gt;-0910 (evenings) or
636-2575 (days) .
Wickert says the activity Is viewed as
a pilot project , and thet It Is hoped the
Festival win be held annually In the
future .

Butlerpoets
Four of the poets will be here on
Edward H. Butler Chair residencies,
giving lectures, vlaltlng the Abbott
Poetry Collection to autograph books
and advise staff, presentrng a public

~~I~Freeand~lci:\WPed

Contemporary
Wo~op.. "..

They are:
•Gerald Stem, author of The Pineys
(1968) , The Naming of t~Msts (1972),
Rejoicings (1974) and Lucky Life (1977),
the last of which won the prestigious
lamont Prize. He directs the annual
Theodore Roethke Festival In Easton,
Pa.
•Louis Simpson, Jarnacla-bom author of The Arrivistes (1949), Good

Poeta:

A

ln.. F~':;
Summer

" •• ,_, ....

Visitors who will present one talk or
reeding at U/B and another at Artp811&lt;
Include: David lgnatow, one . of
America's moat honored poets; Harriet
Zinnes, poet, nowflat, and editor who
now teaches •
College;
Bartlara Holland, poet and prof...tonal
1

a-·

~~~=!t11 ,~,:.kot~nal~

of poems and editor/founder of
Crossings "'-&amp;; s t - ~-aid,
one of New Yoflt'a rising young negl01181
poets; Robert H..., formerly or U/B
wtio now teacllea m St. Mary's College,
Berkeley, Calif.
VIsiting poets who will gl\111 one or
mora reedings or workshops at Art!*!&lt;
are Allen Deloach; Dan Mumey, editor
of Street magazine alnce 1873; Dennis
Maloney, editor of White Pine"'-&amp; and
publisher of Buckle magazine; Shnseta
Ray, who won the Atlantic Magazine
Fiction Prize a few years back.
Visiting regional writers Include
Nancy Barnes, a founding member of
Niagara-Erie Writers; Judith Kerman of
U/B, author of a recent collection of
poems, Mothering (1977) and several
other monographs; Sheryl Robbins,
who runs a poetry workshop In senior
citizens centers and nursing homes;
and Dan Zimmerman , chief executive
officer of Niagara-Erie writers .
Poets have appeared at Artpark and
U/ B before, Wickert says . " But this
kind of concentrated ventura brings
them In relation with each other and 1
mora Importantly, with the genpubllc In a superllly productive, healthy
and vlalble mann..-. •
·
~

...

·-· .....

...

�June21, 1t71

An 8 5 - doc&lt;.men'"'Y . about a stole
mental hoapitalln - t t y produced, and edited. No """""""'"'Y Is
needed in this retl-tjfe cn.nber of horrons . The
State o l -. In 1911 . pnNOnlad puiJiic
eKhibitioo of thla extraorclnaty Nm, which cost
the filrTvnaker over $100,000 li'1 Jegalfees.

FACULTY MTSCOUOQUIA-·
--..~~~-W-Ift~
Art Hlolory. 309 aon-.
4p.m. - w l l b o - -.
~ by tho Foculty o1 Arts and lett&lt;n
~ l'r&lt;qwn on " - 1I Spaceo and

-

Alln-.

UUABFilM"

... ~--

Coborot (Fosse , 1972). Coolerence Theetre ,
SQuie. C816G8·2919 tor show times. Admission

---(
Mrol\
Bolli-

FILJII•

cha&lt;ge.
Based on CMstopherlshe!wood'a boot&lt;.
•
Uze Minell Is sensational as Sally Bowk!s, ...
the entert~Wler ln pre-Work:t War II Sertin, and
Joel Grey's decadent, dazz!Wlg night club MC
won him an Academy Awerd. The lilm won e;ght
Academy Awards in 1972.
·

1!U9). 146~.
tho Center lor Media St\ldy.
d&lt;.ring tho Fnonch are
- ..
- . _ I.Miy,
ol o
secret d;ory con"'"""V
,
elldllngoosune-.....;
1 p.m.

~by

good coot. cnnwned kAI"' oction.

-

Cunwn01gs; -"'- Dohl.

UUMFIUII"
_ , _ ,_

WORD AHO IMAGE IN AlM"

One Hour Wlttt You. 146 Diefendorf. 'g p.m.
- b y the Cente&lt;lor Media Study.

_ 1875). c:onhwenco

- · S q u i r e. Cll638-29191or show--

- d w g e.

NOTICES

To_one.,_lor_n-.ySOUld

. . o good kloeot lnt, but then .•..

. - -··anguish,,..
....

----·

~ 1o oct

LIFE WORKSHOPS
Thurodoy-28-''Comedy Worl&lt;shop," Tlusdays,
June 29-July 2QJ 7-8:30 p.m.; "Sign-On," Thurs·
doys, June 29-August 3 / 7 :30-9 p.m.
ute Workshops' Summer 1978 program is
now underway. Members of the U I B community

to..-tho~ .... tllebosis
lor !his 11m oet IQOin8t • ren.lcably hot art:!

WONIAHDIIIAQE IN FtUI"
_ , .. - - ClriW&gt;aogll!lt1f'nlgrorn,
Flrol 20 v--. Pt. ~ Flm 20 vooro, Pt.
XII, Flro1 20 Yaaro, Pt. XX. 146 Q;olendorf_
9 p m. ~ by the Ce(&gt;ter for Mode
Sludy.

and spouses can still reglstet for ''Kundalini
Yooa" (Tuesdays 1 Juty 18-August 22 16· 1 p .m 1
and "Communication and the Deal" (Thursdays 1
July 20·August 3 19 :30-t 1 :30 a.m.).
·'Wine WISdom" has been rescheduled for
ThurSdays / July 6 -Augusl 10 / 4 "30.6.30 'P.m. I

232SQu•e.

FRIDAY-30

·

WORD AHDIIIAQE IN filM•
Film. 403 Wen0e. 2:30 p.m.
-bythoCenterlorMediaSiudy.

ment Program and Summer Sessions.
ADJIISSIONS &amp; RECORDS
Office Hours-OAR in Hayes 8 cs open until
7 p .m on Mondays and Tuesdays . The office
regularly doses al 4 :30 p .m ., Wednesday thru
Friday. Oumg the lira! wee!&lt; o4 classes lor each
&amp;.mmer Session . the office will be OI&gt;Ofl 1o 1 p.m.

WAIFIUII"
T l l e , . _ (Anlonionl. 1975). Coolerence
- · Squire. Cll638-2919 lor show ttnea.

- d w g e.

TIIADE COIFEJIENCE•
WNY T - Jopon. Moot Cour1room,
O'Brllr\HII. 8:30a.m.·5p.m.

Monday tnru Thursdey.
Degree Carda-Deadine date for filing ·· ~­
plication lor Degree" Is Monday, JtAy 3 ; lor aH
September 1 . 1978. prospective graduates.

~-totheU .S. SI'oWo
.abo 1he ""'lured~ at o con-

T--,;

w.tom-

and~ - Yot1&lt; and.._,_
Thell-&lt;loy_ ... _ , _ o f
U.S . and Tr.lo and ....,.

latence- ot dloc.-.g
relotions-

--

Summer Reglatration--Registration continues
in Hayes 8 for the 3rd Surmler Session.

Zodlaque•• Unda Swfn1uch : .,.. Frfdey, •t the Albright-Knox Sundey, at ArtPIIrk. Juty4.

HIHitpt

~by~of~See

lla'lces tor poems I poems for dances.

-olorylnlhiliosuo.

WEDNESDAY SUMMER FORUM"
School I Community AnponatbUity for the
Yoong Chlkf, Jesse Jackson. Mool Court Room.
O'Bntwl. 10 a.m wtth QUeStion-and-answer ses-

SeeJ...,.301istinQiordetails

- - '011 tiENIOII CITIZENS"
-- -

Eno County
a WOtttlf'1op

ana and
1or

.1uc1y

eo......

the AolnQ ... -

of the

UUABALM"

F o r n o . - col831-1 729.

Godl•-·

Tho
PortH (Coo!&gt;olo. 1974). Coo·
terence Theatre , Squn. Cal636·2919 tot show
tmes. Admission cha&lt;ge

-·_____
..._-...---___
_
____
_
. __.......... __ _
and -

tor senior cltiz:en centet dk"ectors
· 233 Squire 9:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.

MON.DAY-3

eo..-- Cornel-.

-...........
.... -..v"'--

~ &amp;uonmer- 1\'o-

gnm ,._.l _ l~.--

~ ol MW ~lor poems I poems
1o&lt; by the Zodioque Co., a
of the
bylleOIIoool
_
_
U 18 c . - l o
&lt;- . : t l,_ GGIOi-Mid

'*'

.. --""*from
..---"'
._,._, "'Engloh---

In.

-~~- ~~---...

,

...
. ,. ..
_byb
_y
_
___
--.
.:

_,

_,.,_

.....
____
.. ......,.-......... _
.._..
.
-

- b y the Center lor Media Study.

..
--·
--dwve.........
_end_......,_.._.,. ....
,

p.m . ~

---~-

SATUROAY-1

-

--·-··~
1974). Con· aq,... Col 1136-29UIIo&lt;
.._
--114-. --. -~.

'--.n~.o~-.~

-..eA-•THEMTS

------~

as rhe second of six Summer Fon.m programs.
Jackson. the national director of PUSH. has
· gained recognition for hie efforts i'1 the cause of
humonriglits.
The Gr.pea of Wrath. South ~ture room.
Cornrrulic:ation center. BAtalo State. 1 ~ 8 p.m.
Free . Richard Brown wit! be the commentator.
Ang~Saxon Amel1cans are the focus of today'&amp;

'

JAPAHESE FILM"
lldno (To UYe) (Kurooawa Akira, 1952). 146

~~ .
For further Information, call878-6313.

[l;elendorf. 6 ::j0 p.m. lor-Sludy.

WORD AND -GE tH FILM"
r~~e eomtne o4 Souncl.

-Thlrty-.. . .

by the Center

146Diafondoif. 9p.m.

~byllec.-lor-Sludy.

"--'~"'-­

one of Hlk::hoock'• bat.

-~..,...~-

Compoa, bogliri'lg ot 8 o.m.
_,or..,.. _............ ..,.,.~~ hopefUls)
'"'*'II beginning oll2 ,_,_
For lhoM who haYe ~ eeen a ' bk:yde
f'IIC8 before, the Courter inbms w , ''It

... _be

'*'

In.-"'

bo a tni,l eiCCilng oo bikes
whiz by
colors• • blur ol apood.•
" ,_ to-- bike wtl bo giYen 1o
oneluclcy-.

are 10 a.m.-4 p.m. al 104 Norton, Amherst
Campus , end Hamman Basement. Main Street
Compus. An Ellcon office, 167 MFACC , Is open

~ and Nr!oUs IICtion -

~

os reporter Pat O'Brien ond odltcr Adolphe
Menjou- corruplion and eoch 403 Wando. 2 :30 p.m. Sponoored
by the
CenterforMecaSI\Idy.

___ ....__

Sponoorad by WAS.

- JOBS

1 46 Q;olendorf. 1 p.m. Jlponoorad by the Center
lorMediaSiudy.
FIUIS OF ALFIIED HITCHCOCK •
Youngond"'-t. 146~. 9p . m .

-bytheCent«I~MedlaSI\Idy .

-N&gt;o

Cort•. eo..- c.. (Channel 81. e :30 p.m

o.--

· THURSDAY- 6

Co. Art-B at Artporl&lt;. 3 p.m.

30tialng " " CONVBI&amp;ATlONSINTHEAIITS

In

JAPANESE FilM"
. . . . -. . (Equinox ROw«) (YUJ!ito, 1958) .

DANCE"

FILM"

WEDNESDAY- 5
IOdoy

- - - ollolodlcino, R·8014.
Dontol Alololont-Onillllology, R-8015.
COMP£TITlYE CIVIl -VICE

Trohilne Alclo SCW-€d&lt;.&lt;:atlonal Conwnooicetion&amp;Cen!er, Line No. 34962.
HOM-COMPETITIVE CIVIl SERVICE

(8 1 23 1 78-6 130 1 19, 22~ in. per _ , _
· so..-Ptiyslcol
" - · · - SCJ.4.-&lt;lrol
-(tem·
Jonltot
Plwlt, Amherst
porwy untl8 / 30 118 , then petml0\8nl). Line No.
34599.
Gtouncla Worli« SG-&amp;-!'hysical Plant, Arniwnt (t~untl8 1 2 1 78) , l.lne No. 3209t .
Laborot SG-&amp;-!'hysical Plwlt. Amherst (tanporwyunt19 1 15/78, t h o n _ . ) , l.lneNo.

40388.

TIWI lim With the Vie!Mn os John
Wl)nehudeoll with ott American
is
,.. - - of lwo Jimo" characterizelion. though he plays the
of • ·

manen() . Line No 40388.

~·~~~

and tllrough J\Ay 30. See - ·
atory a n d - ol8¥01111i, tlloiilloue

RESEMCII

The
(WI)ne &amp; Kellogg, 1968) .
146 Oielendorf. e :30 p.m. Sponoonod by the
Center for Media Sludy.
.

w..._"

Clllllr. eo..wc.. (Ciww&gt;ai 8). 4 p.m

PO£TRY FOTIVAL •
Tho U I 8-Artporl&lt; ~ FeotMII beginS

10, 1978.
DROI4N CENTER
Too much on you- rrrind1 Need someone to
taJk to? Come to the Drop-in Center. The hours

Monday nfghts, 5 p .m . ·9 p.m.

Various perfonrOng and ensemble groups every
~ ot 1 p.m. Herrinwl Ubr1r)i s t -.
COM of -1
(6 p.m. ~· Room, Squire,

81CYC&amp;.E-DAY"

lAidlofluo -

Friday, J\Ay 14.
DUE •nd Gr•du•t• Reglstratl~al Semester-Materials may be obtained in Hayes B
during Jooe and July. AI s--.ts submitt&gt;lg
reoistration materials by July 31 will have their
schedule cards mailed lo them In August.
MFC Registration-Felt Semester-Materials
will be available in Hayes B startWlg on July

COFFEEHOUSE•

TUESDAY-4

Frw.

s.eond Sesslon-L..ast day to add courses
Is Friday, June 30: last day 10 resign courses
without financial penalty Is Friday . July 7: lost
day to resign any course k'l 2nd session Is

Tho F""'t. P - (Miestone, 1931). A lim

FlUIS OF ALFRED HITCHCOCK •

_ . . , - . . . . . . . daalgnod

....._ 1 4 4 1 - -. 11

SOlal2p.m.
Presented by !he FaaAty of Educalional-

ETHNIC-AMERICAN FILM FESTIVAL'

T..._,...-

W~-INAUII"

(l.ut&gt;itoch) and Buo on
, . _ (8oU _ ,, «13 Wen0e. 2 :30 p.m.

--·
___._ -Wily,--

,--··-.-tolyaf----~

FOt ftxther information, come to 11 o Norton
or cal636·2808. Ufe Workshops are sponsored
by the OMsion of Student Affa1rs Student Oevek&gt;p-

'*'

.

FilM"
TIUeutFollloo(W,_ , 1967). 170MFACC,
Etiicott. 1 p m. Spon50&lt;ad by American Studies

-..- Volllcto Opetatcw SG-7-Physlcol Plwlt ,

Amhero1 (t~ untM 9 1151 78.- lhen per-

Maintenance Asaltt8nt SQ..I--Phy&amp;ical AMI,

Amhero1 (temi&gt;O&lt;WY un!M 8 / 30 1 18. then per.
manent). Line No. 34568

•
Motor Vehk:le Operator SQ..7-Physical Plant,
Amherst (I~ until8 / 30. then pormanen!J ,
Line No. 32282
o.-.t - n k : S&lt;H2-I'Ilysal Plant. Main
St (permanent). Uno No . 32036

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1388878">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1388865">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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                    <text>Censured-.
SUNY receives place on AAUP ·' list'
for retrenchment 'irregulat:itles;'
U/B not one of units covered by ·probe.
The AAUP t . voted unanimously "to
the Sun Un'-Bity of New
York (SUNY) lor Ita .attona In firing o 100__tenond end non-tenured faculty
during the period of -chmenl ."
tncldenta which .drew the oanaure
OOCUII'ed Ill Alt.ny, Alfred A&amp;T,
BlngNmton, ~. Cortland, Pllltz, ~ lll1d Stony Brook. U/B
notlmOived.
The action wu !Men allllf an
lntenal .. ln.-ligation of chwgea by a
commiHee oomPoeed of aome of the
moat eminent lapl
In the
nation, .ccordlng to AAUP.
The Comml«ee'a report found thet
SUNY '*I lllofated the generally
..cognized prtnclplu of licedemlc
fl88dom enc1 tenure endoraed by the
American AMoclatlon of Unl-.lty
Pro'--- (AAUP), the Aeeoclatlon of
Arnenc.n Colleges, and a- 100 other
prohalonat higher edecatlon orgenlza..
tiona.
Proi-PIIul H.L. Wattllf. !&gt;kldmore
College, prMident of the New Yorll
AAUP Con'--, etrongly supported the oenaure motion bacauM

financial crl•ls Involved "th!Miened 1he
survival o1the Unl-.lty and thus waa a

censure

~r~:'u~~!~wlth~7.:~:,.~~·~
1)11nclple·s.
The commiHee

=:m:ri,. cu:cu~f

~;:Gp-!Md

1 -1
• - CWial
ect1on of ~
a
almllarflndlng by the .......,..bly Higher
Eduo811on C0mm1Hee In Its recent
reporf on the retNnchment.

I
I

~

·-·c-.·-s,col.4

Duryea pledges

UlB build-out
Republican gubernatorial candidate
Perry Duryee on -a campaign vtall to
Buffato MOiiday, pledged •completion
of the Amhllf&amp;t Campus project as
~~
dutl
the 19101," If
1

r=.:

d the project '*I been
n = ~f:l~~·s naeda and .
He said the Carey edmlnlstra11on has
bungled and stalled • on campus
· construction, and had mede numllfO.IIS
pledges for projects which heve newr
materialized .
With Republicans In the executlw
office, Duryea aald, Amherst will raally
get moving again.
Duryea

No. ·z

I

I

~~~ • ~

=n~1tratlw st"'act~rre{u~~.V;.;u~~

. article aut~"the Chancellor or hla
designee" to dettlfmlne the level of
organization at which the retrenchment
Unlv«slty-wlde,
will be applied campus, department, unit, piogram, "or

thld BUNT can hwdly claim that the
..u.nctoment wu """tiel to Ita
aurvlftl In 'ilew of the _ ,
ftllenCIItu- undert81&lt;an by the SUNY
Admlnlatratlon In Ita purported $15

'

the '

Agreement blltween th• Stale of IUw
York and United Unlwraity Profeas!ons,
Inc. Article 35, which deals solely with
retrenchment, acknowledges the possibility or a Ntrenchmenf lor such •
reasons aa financial exlgoncy, reallocation of resources, reorganization .of

~.~":Y""'·~
f~~~'':
be fAd- mede.• He atao pointed ou1

l

that

1

achO...

Th'.

found

':X="&amp;~r ti:"'C:,~ect~= =nl~~

We're no. 2.
At '-tin tllfms of totat enrollment. Flgurea for fall 19n show that U/B
~~,:"f,~~ ..:::::1o~r."' inatltu11on of hlgn ... learning In New York

!"

The following table tells the atory:
t lnatllutlonel Ran.ma by Total ~t EtlrolhnMII '
~
New York ~fate: Fai11ITI' end Fall1t70

......

l m - York UnlvllfS~:t)tutiOII '
2 SUNY at Buffalo
3 SyracuaelJnlveralty
4 Brooklyn College
~ Long leland Unl..alty
tl OueenaCollage
7 Suffolk County Community College
8 HuntllfCollege
.
9 Naaaau Community College
10 P-Unl..alty
11 St. John's Unt..alty .
t2 Columbia Un'-alty
13 SUNY at Stony Brook
14 The CltyCollege
15 Fordham Uni-.lty
18 SUNY at Albany
17 8enWd M. Baruch Collage

::

=:~rk-~~~~:~~~~~

NeW Yo~ lnatltu1e of Technology
lor.,. 20 lnetltullona
ToallorNewYcnState
20

ToM~

Fall
11n •
31,197
24,on
21,719
, 21,200.
21 ,193
20,5Q1
19,ecft
17,816
17,595
16,922
16,714
18,561
18,453
15,508
15,163
14,817
14,173
13,447
13,0411
12,895
380,417
n&amp;,524

Fall
1170
30,863 23,763
21 .841
26,609 •
20,356
24,828
l;iln
21,641
18,510
9 ,934
13,253
15,705
12,108
20,845
12,591
13,240
11,381
13,176
10,861
4,717
333,308
137,813

·Groundbreaklng_
Baird family, Ketter tum earth
for2,000-seat lakeshore amphitheater;
Ionic columns will provide backdrop
Membllfa of the William C. and
·Cameron Baird families joined Presl·dent Rober! L. KaHIIf Tuesday .to break
ground lor Baird Point, an open-etr,
2,0011-seet Greek amphltheatllf to be
built on the A!llheral Campua.
A gift of the Baird Founditlon and the
cameron Baird Foundation, tlfe multipurpose taclllly Is sCheduled for
completion In Saptembllf. Genllf&amp;l
,oontractor Is the John W. Cowper
Company Inc. of Tonawanda.

G.

~11.":1~1., ~~~~~~~·::;, ~

~:rec~lvlt~:.=-tlonal, cul~ural and
Rank
1170
1
4

5
2
8
3
25
6
9
23
11
10
18
7
15
12
19
13
20
50

• Heedcount -ollment: lncludea all full-lime and part-time. undergreduate,
ttrat-proluslonal, and graduate atudenta.
•InCludeS all components of each lnatltullon .
• l'rallrnlnaryopenlng fall enrollment.
80UIIC£; Office of Poatsecondary R-ch.
Information Syatems and lnvttullonal Aid
New York State Educ811on oeattment
Albany, NY 12230

The deslgn taatures an Informal
arrangement of Greek-style columns on
marble platforms of varied heights. The
main focal point, three centrJIIIY·CIIaced
col~mna, will rise to a height of 35 feet

_~?&lt;:~~~~~
::~ho'fet':..~n taB~.:.
Seating will be provided on I !era.
Federalleserve coi-ns

The Ionic columns to be used are the
seme ones which graced the entrance to
the old Buffalo Fedllf&amp;l Reserve Bank.
The ~six columns, which were
sectioned during the razing of the bank
In 1959, Wllfe brought to the Unl-.11y
through the eHotts of tho late Cameron
Baird, former Chairman of the
Depertmen1 of Music, and U.S. Air
_Force Major A. Burt Hamilton, (Ret.),
who now lives In Midwest City,
Ol&lt;lahoma.

lAke level lowered
In preparation for the conatructlon,
the contractor toWIIfed the . _ of Lake
LaSalle by, - . 1 feet. Thirty-fl..
calaaona or support poets 24 lnchaa In
dlamet• will be placed In tne ground to
support an eight-InCh
reinforced
concrete alab that will serve as the main

~!'::J; ~= ~7:::. ~:~~t~ !:'~~.:'::

rntored to normal , a portion of the

platform will jut Into the lake.
A numbllf of large marble blocka six feet long, six feet wtcle end U...
feet high - will be ataMI at .-ted
heights along with _ . . ehorter
columns, providing an lnlomllll back·

"'~~~~rn~~or;rOor
square
am=:feet , tho

-

of 3,.00
will be

~p~~ ~~end=-~
electrical end ,;ounc~
wl.'' a1ao be built 1n1o the

tiona for
l:llf:.-'t
The

State

Unlveralty

ao.d

of

- Trust- eccepled the llalnl and

C8mllfOI1 Baird glfta dl»''ng aiiiMIIIIQIII

Decambllf, 1m, anc1 appRIINd MllllnQ
of the amphl~ In F*-J, 1878.
The Baird famflv hal tong been
associated with the Ont...lty.
· - '--.oldng.'

~

_..,_1

Research tops
$20 million

·

The Unl . . .lty received more than $20
million In ra~ grants and conlract
awards for the flret elewn months of
the 19n-78 i'ePOrt year, Rober! c.
Atzpatrlck, ect fng vice president for
.-ch,aays.
For May, 1978, Fitzpatrick reports, 2t
awards and contracts amounting to
$1,238,370 were received, bringing the
total since last July 1 to $20.241,307.
-.
Also during May, 70 proposals
requeatlng some $4.25 million Wllfl
presenlecfto prospectl.. sponsors.
Fitzpatrick notes that propoaala
submitted o - the past etewn months
haYO decnaaeed by 3.3 per cent from tbe
same period In the previous yew.
Numbllf of award a haa lncnaaaed 5.4 per
cenl.
Dollar volume for grantf and
contracts Ia up 11 .3 per oant thla year,
he lndlcatea.

�.,..... u, 1171

"We aren't acting on the presu.mption
that there is a big thundercloud out there
called student opposition,.

but we want student opinion"

Baker fields q~estlons on ·g eneral education
refer to as a freshman profile. That Is,
they are attempting to get a clear sense
of the educational cajlber, potential and

Q. . . , . , ,_ ..... _ _...
1fn....,. Ia Ill a state of flux :
~tile----?
A. I think what you Identify as a state
olllux Ia macle up of reactions to what I

~.. to be two problema within
1n011t undergraduate eunicula. What
eome people we dlalreaaed by Ia a
...,..,_ ol the educatiOnal experi·
~~~q ttudenta . _,. to acquire as
underar*luatea. That narrowness Is
aometl..,.. the product of pn&gt;prol-lonal ot' vocatfonal owrapeclallatlon bu11t Ia eertalnJy not confined to
!hoM two areu. The othar thing that
concern• people Is the opposite
phellomenon 8lld that Ia random
dl-.lty; tiw1i Ia nothing that
- ' - t1w1 .ny given student alter
four r--.wllt ,_acquired what many
people wcUd think to be - t l a l to a
GOOd -..tton. So you'nl ructlng In
r.t to two - ' t e problema. The
.-10n to tiOili ~ tltuatlona has
IIIIlCh-' 1M General
Education
Oamnlln.e on tttla c.mput and a v.~ety
o1 dttfeNnt .atlvltlel on othar

~~~~t~~~~~n~..t~r:;'~s.to
complt~ a sense of what ;{[tferent
departments with In the University
require of their majors and the
distribution requirements O;Utslde their

'Q. WJo the conunlttee be slvlns
recommendations few the
Another subcommittee, we have
developmenfof certain courses
termed the "sounding" subcommittee,
or will you -rtc with what
1s :;&gt;,;;1?uct~~t~ a.J~~~~t~~td~st"':~er~.; • yoil b.1lvel
maJors.

or

r.'vets
vice presidents and deans, In
which - raise a whole spectrum of
· both theoretical and practical considerations surrounding a potential program
In general education. This sound
~ubcommltt811" also
plans to
together a questionnaire that will 1le
given to a random sample of faculty and
students ,at the beginning of next
semester. This wilt provide us with a
wide reservoir of Ideas as -11 as give
us assurance that we have gone through
a thorough consultative process. There
are other groups and constituents that
this subcommittee wilt also try to
contact, such as the heads of special
programs and those wjlo have a major
~tattoo on this campus.

com~tt:!'fi~hw=~~~'f;lngt~

do Is to Intermix as we go along; to do
two things almultaneou ly . .we are

:.Z'~p~o8g~haasm=~~~. '!'.\'d"a:'fh::

aanv

tlme, to begin discussion · of
general principles concerning what
might or might not be done
lntell.atually, academically-and practically Ill the ganeral educatlon
program. We are trying to do botb nuts
and bolts wort&lt; and theorizing at the
aame time. By using thla approach, at
the end of the summer when we make

~.::,~·!.~~rr.~ ~ ~ ~~u~~

lnfonnatlon on which to make concrate
plana and a good deal of theoretical
dlacusalon beblnd us.

Q, 11M the COIB•fttee re41cbed
My ..... In dellberadons7
A. I'm not sure what you mean by
snags. I aanse that there -Is an
encourrogl~ dlspoeltlon towards gen-

:=,~OX:;: =~n·f'e~ gr~up,

b'l}

to_.., on the comtnlttee w~thr.:"tha

whole Idea Is abs..-d. My Instinctive
ruction Ia that the. committee Is an
Individually
and collectively
able group. don't get anY aanae of
Hnea of dlvlalon l!etMM people, that
tt..'a a hard camp and·' aoft camp or
anything of that sort. Obviously, when
we come down to addressing ourselves
to_,. coricrete proposals, there will
likely be differences of opinion, but I
don't get a n y - of that now.

r'-"1

_....__
___"*-..
,.......
_. . .-. -_,
.....

....

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

,.__

-"*--·__

~-.- ,

,.,. _,.
_,.,_"
-....a..~

J/OiflfA ClOCI7IB

--

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

decided one way or the other, but my
perception at this point Is tha~ n
program which may or may not contain
a range of options within It ls a more
likely outcome than merely a designation of existing courses.

Q, How closely do you feel
the ~ee wll fullowthe
~••ad-of the
Sdnr.U eo ....._ report on
. -... edaudoft7
A. 1 he Schwartz Committee report Is
otlwloully a tource at ldau which we
-looking at In the aame aanM u the
IWvard mOdel or any olhert. Because It
hu a dihlct relallonllllp to this

~i.=·t~ J,f."~~nr.!t t.~~
aa- ordiNQree will! the report.
Q, Do,_ ..... tile co.•lttee
tlecWeto ....... a

s-ale+wc..._,....,... cw
--·~certain
c--..ullllelll&amp;la ....111111

M'a•-andadwlse

...

....... tot.al&amp;e-1
A. Again, I wouldn't MY

we

~-

A. My notion Is that probably part 'of

}~~f!n~tl~";/'=e~~~ur:.,&lt;;~'~

may Involve a mix of speclffcally
designed courses and exi sting ones, or
existing courses with some adaptation.
Some ot-the Ideas expressed In the
committee as to what a general
education should seek to do are ends
lhat would probably have to 'be
addressed In part by newly created
courses.
,

Q. Some people think tlwlt the
committee DYY base decisions
on declining enroUments In uts
and letten, and the social
sdenc;es. Can you respond to
thls'l
A. Yes, I'll add rea&amp; the $1UHtlon In a

;~.n~~~=·~r.rn~n\~g o~~

· from the social sciences and two people
from arts and letters. The committee
also has three people from the healthprofessions Qlus a Professional Staff
Senate representat[ve wtto Is also from
that area. There are two people from the
natural sciences, · one from . the
SchooL of Management, one from tha
Ubrarle&amp;, one from engineering, and
the dean of the law School.
What I'm trying to emphasize Ia that
111&amp; membership of the commltteals not
slacked. II you didn't know the
commlttell' members' departmental
affiliations-, It would be Impossible to
guess them In terms of the ralatlve

:~~~:la~";:!W~~s~li.:,~o~t :."8f":t~r!

to arts and letters or the soclalsclencaa. This doesn't mean that It
mlgt&gt;t not help them, but It Is not
primarily perceived thla way, nor are thil
deliberations of the C&lt;'mmlttee proceeding as If It were a lifeline.
-

Student Association officers during the
course of the summer, and In fact, both
student representatives on the committee are SA ofllcfl(S.
I suspect there will be objections on
the part of some students to any IJOIIon
of requirements. ·Some students may
- look with su!J&gt;ICion on tha committee's
approach t"ll&amp;neral education, particularly students In the vocational areas
where a great deal of lime Is tied down
with the majot and In already required
courses outside the major. They may
feel ari undue pressure on their time.
But I think If we go about this process
deliberately, and In a thorough
consultative fashion, we will reduce to a
considerable extent that kind of
automatic reservation .
We are not acting under the
pr&lt;&gt;sumption that there Is a big
thundercloud out there call~ student
opposition. But In the processes of the

:m~;t':"li~~ .a;:n~rt~V !..?h~~ru~~~~

opln9on Is likely to be over a broad
spectrum . While ,we will not be
necessarily circumscribed by any such
reaction, I think we will pay close
attention to ft .
Q.Howlmport~lsg~al

education to the quality' of the
-uncteraradiNate prop.... herel
A. I half answered this question' when
I spoke of the perceived slidrtcomlngs
of undergraduate education. Many feel
I he University as a whole Is nat meeting
Its responsibilities In terms of a notion
that Its graduates have a certain breadth
'1lnd.contact with a range of areas.

ot P[~~.'!l~~~
more

11

liufd~;:;~~efso1r'ri~~ v~~~

career areas

get

filled

up,

1';~=\~"!,:'~~!-:m~~~~ loo~~
and In addition to, the basic tra~g·or
professional requirements for the
particular •:ttld. So In the long run,
students may benefit from a general
education program In a pragmatic and
very direct way. The committee's
concern lor students Is thus not
exclusively Intellectual . This Ia one
reason why potential student opposition may not-be as great as people
think. I think there Is an acute
awareness of the pragmatic poaalbllllles among etudents.

Q. Do you perceive any

Q. Do you tl*lk the COIIImlttee's
r~ommenclatlons will result In
a touahenlna-up of the
unclerpadMte tturrlcul-.7. . . _

wean ~ve

A . One of the reasons we plan to
circulate a questionnaire to a random

The

probl- aheadl

a •
.,..y of
trom our
I flld IQII!Btlc;al
)",
A . I don't think the committee ·
amptci, ll'flie comm ae
ld88
I
1
ttl
h 1 k
k
that a component of the general
~g~~~~~·f=·t,~~u~~:.,:n~s~ ~ education program will be large lecture
previously existed on this campus. on
courses, we will have to deaf with the
the other hand, 1 think from the
fac;t that there Is a shortage of those
discussions of the committee so far 11
now on campus. There wilt be problems
would be reasonable 10 presume thai
In finding the room and the time for
most of us think In terms of a prograrn~ple to. undertake a meaningful
where a certain portion of t
ram In general education.
curriculum would have a range of
ne of the reasons for sounding as
broad a range of opinions as poaalble Is
choices whlcn are more prescribed and
directed. If thai constitutes tougheningthat tha committee wants to belance an ,
up, then 1 think most people would
Ideal of What we would like to do with a
sen~ of whal we practically can do. We
envisage this happening. Many students have expressed a desire lot
don t want practical problems to stand
greater guidance; lhey feel lost In the
as a total blockage to good Ideas and
Infinite range of t:holces that exist In
Ideals about general ed~catlon . But, on
tha loose requirements outside the
the other hand . -don t want to come
majora. This progr.m will give some
out with some theoretical plan that will
coherence to at feast part of what Is
be blown right out of the water because
tallen outside the majots The -naed lor
we haven't considered the practical
this 11 not exclusively a 'taculty notion
consequences. lt'a a question of
but also Is a 'tudallt concern
'
balance alld something that has to be
·
th?j}~~~ou~~ ~t~~~~o'lfh'.{· 18 to
Q. How do you fftl,u.dents
succeed aaattongolng operation, It will
will ruct to the committee's
require euppon and cooperation from a
rec-menclatlonsl
wide range of people across the cam.f.us

::;'eft~~~ ~~~."ru! 11~ 1'!:tf~~ ~:. g:lt~

1a1 problems atem111

i;cult~~P:ff.r:;;:. ~!Jmt~:'.~;~,o':!~
support

and

backing

of

the

admlnl.~~'c:..:.~, :!~:!.~';.":':=.";

�"The Lockwood Library is
not a mausoleum in which
are preserved precious and
untouchable relics of Man's
achievements; it i$ an active
workshop ~or the creation of
the .. standards and the
background requisite to .t he
intellectual life for which the
University stands today."
- Charles D. Abbott,
8nt ~ ol IAnrioL A~ of
&amp;olu IMd .v-~ io ,... ~
M&lt;r~Mf'ial !A~ of tile UMwnity of
~1935. p. n .

�.Me 22, 1171• THE_ NEW LOCI(WOOO IIEJi10RIA1. U~Y • 2

ClllomelforMS,.~
1'11 Doe hloo did
• - 111111&amp;
-·
..;p.ue
Non"
lllat
up """ OlllOOtlll7.thiap ....t ill wbol . . .
~ llbnry tnafera .,.,.
lllldertlbii ill the-.;. u.s. '

..,. of !be

Tile apeaecl wklo hloo urtrial
ot Abbo&amp;t Llbrory at llaill B-. t.akillg a

boot..._ the otacb, md.uJiarcloom at a

table to read it. Wblle I'Gioc lo eacr-&lt;1
iD hla oubjeet, """""' __.. ruob ill,

~thed~-:3 ~~

~.' AD _ are lolded ' oa a vau.
traDiportC to Amhent, thea UDioaded ud
put ill Ill- ill the JIIIWLockwood. Polee.
llill obliYioua to what baa bappooed,
finllbes hla readiDc. 1&amp;""" 1Mi11. then
spilll ~ill bjo chair to relurD the boo,lt.
Sure o_,p, there'a a ,.._ for it ill the
ataeb, juat .. t.hen waa wbc he ..-eel
it badt at MaiD s-.

'No&amp;..,bd.....a

It cllciP't ro qulto IAat woo, but 11moat. aa
• Ma;rtlowor movora lllld tbe U/B ~
Mlf proved that Loetwood'a 760.000 or 10
boob, card catolop, docum. . poriodi&lt;ala. computon, ote. wore, 'lDdeOd. •A
Moveable Feaat" (the titlo of a ligantlc,
dlltailod piaMlDg manual pnparod br a
LibraryCommitteo).
'
Tho move waa carried out ill tbroo &amp;taps
between May 15, 11178, ud a projeetod
eomplotioa date of June 12.
"
A carofu1l,r coded. cilroDolocioal move
~ wu oatobliabed, pillpqiDtillg what wu
to he moved, wheaJ ud ill wbol order. U a
book were to get out of eluoificatioa
number oeque~, it would he aa good u lost, Library lUff memhera cautiODed.
.Everytbiilg wu color-kered. plaDned, and
cboclted - rigbt down to bow many plutic
coven and large rubber banda _would he
Jllledod. One cbecUat, f'!r eumplo, ticked

THE
HISTORY OF
l .O CKWOOD
other important Jlfta. ill recognitiOD Q( the
twenty.liftil &amp;DDiveraarr of the Library, d&gt;e
pciOVy manuocripta or S.rt Graves, the
Eqliab poet, ......., .,.-ntod by Mn.
Artbur Locy, widow of Thomu B.
Lockwood. Tho matoriala were eomP*d of

Ptiwaa-

aumorous dralla and more tban 7,000
manuoeript papa. Theoe materials, along

history.

wit.b the Poetry CollecUoa, will - ·
he bouaed ill apeciaUf deolped facilitielm
Capen Hall OD the Amborat Campua.
I..ocltwood l.4l&gt;rory baa heeD the ..,e;;., of
aumeroua aipifieaDt evoeu ill \he book
world. Of ita many uhlb!U, IOIDO d. tho
more notable have iaduded tbd Marlt 7\oai,.
E:Uibit bold boJII6 to COIDIIlOIIlOrato tho
-t.Ar1 of the birth or the author. The
Ezloibitioto ., BiWo• ill lillie dlopl.,ed 35
Bibloa publlahed over a period of four
-urioa. T.. of the llilllea, laduclillg the
Tilldalo Bible ..........-1 bJ Hearr vm,
..... ... loon from J. Plarpoat Morgan.
'~'~~roach the theoo aad almllar
edUbitlou &amp;Del oetiriiJoa have heeD
,...._...r br the P'riHda of Loc.kwood
ll8moNI LllrarJ.

Tbe POii.ah 11oma in Loc.kwood Momao'jal
L•brary wu dedieatod iD 11166 ill boaor of
the Polia.h poet Aclam Miekewtu oa tho ooe
hundredth anniversary d. hia deatb. It aow
IOI'Ves u a ceDtor for Poliab cultural
By 1960 the original coUectioa of 65,000
had expanded to 860,000 volumes. The
deetdo from 1960 t.o 1979 marked tbe
greateot siQgle growth period by far ill the
history ol the Library. and today the
colled.ioa uceeda 900,000 volumoa. As tho

Ubrary outgrew lbe orlcinal building, ••
annu wu attocbed to crowded
conditiooa and a oabotanUal portiqp d. the
colloctioa wu plaald illlltonp.
With,itt move t.o opaclous

new q~rw

oo tqe Amherot Campus,

Lodtw~

Ubrarr ean boule a11 ito colloetiooa Ulldetrod. for the fitot time ln tea yeora.
ApptOOd&gt;iag Ito flfLietb liAJllvoraary,
Loc.kwood Memorial Library loob forward
t.o contill.U., _.tee to the ·uatverm7

CClmmiUIIty.

�3 •THE NEW LOCKW~ MEMOIIW. LIBRARY • JUNE 22. 1871

olf IIi

_,_,.~~-.at equlpmea$ and
truob,100 dallieo, 20 t-wbeel
hlll&gt;dtnacb. a1Dinlaam or 110 boabarta, e

IIIJIPir: u

wilt boanb. ao bias. 100 p1u11c ......... JOO
top. I oallide elevaton (to bring
boob dewD " - tloe
....U at
_AI&gt;batt), 2 rampo to w!Ddowa, 100 tota
bono, 2 nll-a-lifta. and pl;rwoocl for lloora.
Eodl ~ ... pre.ot wile oeedecL

....,.r

,.,.

.......,

eo atudento hired
by lla,tlowerl and l...ibrary stall ...ned
two oblfta a day, MYeD day&amp; a week. At
Abbott, eKi&gt; ahlft iDdii&lt;Hcl 6 driveN, 2
outolde eleYator aperaton, ..,. ililide
apentor. 1 eart-plliiMn. 2 loaden for
outolde ........... 6 ....... to load book
carta. S helpeN lA&gt; load trucb,_~· floor
oiiJMIM'Ioqro, &amp;Del ...., ovarall lupenloor.
SMtioMd at tbe Mfw Loc:ltwoocl were: 2
ole'l'atoraperaton, a belpero.., uoload, zto
.._.. (iDdudilla'-

·

- !lUll!

eart1 Ina tnxb to elovitora, 2 to

pualleartotr- olovotor. to tbe olad&lt;-

12Wiloaden, &amp;Ddtwon-~

'nlll miDI-anDJ. could move 51,000 boob
• day, projec:lico1a ...... Aa it turned out, 100,000 volumeo a day
Bowed out and m. The IIIOYe WU eompJeted
1D day&amp; ahead al aohedule. "lt ·~like •
well-oDed -mbiJtliDe, • Madeleine Stem,
head of Lockwood Lib.W,C, roporto: "There
wore DO bottl-.:b, DO elovotcr brealtdowua, DO. hit.ohM at aiL lt WU
extraonllnary. • All tbe more ao when you
eonoider that u the Abbott eollection wu
moved in, boob from the former Bell
FaCility (oome 200,000 volumes), from
Ridge Lea (85,000), and from the art
coUectioo were dovetailed in, in aequeoce,
along !lOme 80 miles olltllcb.
1'-._.a
Tho new buDding (desiglled for future

iDdudeo only tW F'l'E paaitiGu (~
expana1oa aJoq ito ~ 'l!'aUI provideo
gr6iring ......, al aboUt 100,000 volumeo,
by •*- part-time otudent aaaiotantll &amp;Del Will be "eomfortablo" for the uert five'
the oame niUIIboN autllort.ed tor tbe old
y_.., Ma. Stem uyo. With iJlterior . fadlity.
aad.• ..._ Stem .....-.. "But bot:aa.
~·· it can -..e without oeriouo .
crainping for 10 ye.... Eventually, there
al lUff euto &amp;Del the hlrlag frwao, - - ' t
be able lA&gt; apucl oar oer:vioel. ln faq, we
- will be bright, modem furalturo to mJteh
mightev• havetoeat bo&lt;lt. So wbile -·re '"
- the ardlitec:tuN (old fumituro itl being uoed
ploued with tbe new buildlDc; we're aloo
temporarilrl- Locltwood-at-Ambom boast.
deeply~"
an iDteriiJr eourtyard &amp;Del eye-pleasing
Mary Ellen Heim. biid of Car.vieWI of the campuo !alto. lt il more
Periodiealo &amp;Del ~. c:halreil tbe
functiooal. better dell&amp;ned for modem
hl&gt;rary oporali0111 than wu the old building
Lockwood moving wllidl
(although it odmittedl;y loeb the pie·
iucluded: Gayle HardJ, head ol ~. '
11 Lockwood: Edward H.-man. uoiltant
turesque charm and gradouo dignity ol its
precleooooor).
_
doeumellta librarian. and Dr. a...agi
"lt'o a beautiful facility, • Ma. Stem sumo
Rajannan, uaiatant to the Loc:ltwoocl unit up, ..one we've been waiting fer, for 10
head. Mr. Saltlidu Ro.r il direetor of
Univer.ity LihradoL lllr. Lll-ry n.,-er,
y.....•
general manager, Bu&amp;lo Van &amp;Del Btonp,
SUIIJo tloe•. ,
eoordinated the project for tbe mo.-en,
But the lUff ali&lt;Jtted for its operation.
with F.odlitieo PlanDiJig.
&lt;

·u·.

.,

�-

JUNE 22, 11711 • THE NEW LOCKWOOD MEMORIAL UBRARY • 4

.

Collections

General ~·rente
Art

Business
Edueatlon

HIIDWiitiea
Social SeieD&lt;OO
Govenunent Doeumeuto
Microforms
Perioclicob
Em ADD Colleetion
Friends ol Lockwood LibrarJ CollecUon
Juvenile Collaeticn
Polish COIIeetloD
- ....... "!

Services ·

Computerized Bibliographie Se~
Copy Service; Graduate Reserve; Group
St1Kiy, Seminar and -Typing Rooms;
Interlibrary Loan; Library lnstnletion:
Main Card Catolog.

Locations:

"'

a...-tLevol
· Art Collodion
FintFIMr ·,
Government Doeumento, Central Teebnieal Services
Seeoeol (Mala) Fleer
"Cireulition; General Information and
Referenee Serviee; Copy Service; Graduate
ReoetYe; • Interlibrary Loan; Current
Perlodieals- and Mieroforms , (for the first
time, eur&lt;Qt periodieala are available for
browsing]; Friends of Lockwood Library
Colleetion: "New · Books," near the •

Referenee/ l'itformation area..._

Thinl~r

ComputerizeD Bibliographie Searclnng,
Golleetion Developmeql.. Bibliography,
Bound Periodieals. ·Education, Getieral
Works; Juvenile Collection.

Foarill noor

AnthropolOgy, Businesa, Economics,
Geography, History, Politic&amp;~ Science,
Social Worlt. Sociology.
'
Fifth Floor
LaQguage and Liteeature, Philosophy,
Psyehology, Religion; Polish Collection;
Easi.Asian Collection.

a.,. .... ~· Sten p-eK ..__"ataewl.oekwMdMile s..-r, Pla.D. eudldate at

Mr.

the Ulllveraity of Maaltaba.

Circulation
AD SUNY!Bnffalo faculty,

staff _ and
students with a current valid ID may
• borrow materials. Others not directly
associated with the University should,
.inquire at the Circulation Desk on the
second floor to determine if they are eligible
to borrow materials.

Library Instruction

Any individUal or group desiring library
tours, prese0tatioDB or specialized bibliographie instruction should inquire at, the
Referenee/ lnfermation Desk.

Buildin.r Features:

• A live-aideif"lanclaeaped cowt at the
central core.
&lt;Twin~- one inside, one out. winding dowD to the courtyard.•
· ~ - d noor bridge to Baldy and
Cleme""'
.
•An eleetronie surveillance sy.... at the
·main eutranee to detect unregistered
ebeclcouta.

'
•A 12,000-iquare-foot Friends ol Lockwood Room, with woodburning ~­
•Provision for future automated eir&lt;ulationayatem.
·
•Electric forced air beating.
•Ait eonditloning by central ebilled water
plant ren&gt;&lt;&gt;te fnxn library.
•FI~t c!eilii&gt;g ligbting,
with
ineandeaeentlounge lighting.

Floor Plans

On evf!TJ noor beside e~votor

CoSt
S8,87t,OOO
$2,000,000 for equipment

-

�. . Junta

June22, tiT&amp;

40scholars
arrive from

(1.--t.cai.Z)

such other le\iel of org.nllatlon of the
Unl-alty as lhef deein&amp; IIIJPIVPrlale."
Pursuant to thla proytalott, tile AAUP
report said, the a.a.-IIOr
the
presidents of eaeh of the .-,.nine
applicable lnstttutlona at the~
"his designee" tor pu~ Qf
retrenchment. "Required under the
bollectlve ~nlng Ag,_t to
consult only u theY though1 IIPPI'O'
prlate," AAUP~lnted oul, ~~

the USSR

...me

A group of about 40 scholars from the
Soviet Union were to arrive here
yesterday, Wednesday, June 21, to
t&gt;egln an eight-week course of study at
the Intensive English Language tnslitute(IEU).

ho~ ~f'~h~'l:rsLa~g~1Tgt~~!~~u~~

~s;:.~·~l~g =.,~p

English at SovleJ universities - who
also studied American methods of
teaching Engllsli as a foreign language.
While In Buffalo, the scholars
partlcpate In a wide range of
educational programs as well as
cultural ev8f)IS, excursions and trips to
area points of...,lerest.

Sever.a v~'-d

The. report of the l,_lgatlng
committee describes the delfelopment
and administration of the~
programs at the eight local lnetllutlon8.
Although there wen~ vartatlona on

.

sa~· ~~e&amp;h:'~u~::::e~lr~t~o~t 1 ;~

~~:~~=· !~e ·~= ·~

program _a second lime because of
excellent evaluations given th.e program
by last year's participants. The project
Is admmlatered by the international
Research and Exchanges Board and Is
funded by the U.S. Oepariment of State.
The following Ia a schedule of events
f:&gt;r the Soviets' first weeks In Buffalo:
Thursday, June 22: The group will
receive orlentaUon sessions from 9!30
a.m. to noon In 267 Cepen Hall,
followed by a luncheon In Richmond
Cefeteria, Ellicott. A tour of the
Amherst campus follows, from 1-3:30
p.m.
Friday, June 23: The scholars begin
classes at lEU In Richmond Quad,

violations of aound academic practlcea
as exp111888d In Commtttae A's
Recommendfld lnatltutlonal Regulationa on A~lc Freedom and
:renure. The facultlea played IC beat a
minor role In diCermlnlng Whelher
budgetary conatralnta at the apeclflc
Institutions -.ltated termination of
faculty appointments. The faculty role
was inad8!1u&amp;le In determining where
within the' academic program terminations were to occur and which particular
faculty members were to be dfarnlaeed.
In selecting the particular faculty
members, ' some edmlnlatratlona paid
little heed to the Importance of tenure •
commitments. The dlsmlaaed faculty
members were given no hearings by "
faculty bodies. In many ~. the
notice given the dismissed faculty
members was seriously deficient and
efforls- to lind suitable positions
elsewhere forthern were minimal."
Although the. Policies of the Boarrl of
Trustees provided that In the event
retrenchment were contemplated the
Chancellor should " seek the edvtce ot
the Faculty Senate concerning the
policy to be followed In the reduction of
staff," the AAUP panel said ''the central
University edmlnlstrstlon failed -to

~~;~'!nt J~.l'~rs~Wo~ Lh~!W::r af~

picnic at the Ketter's home at 6 p .m.
Saturday, June 24: A look at a unique

r:~e1~~ ~~~r~c;"E':st~ ~~~~~lng

mall,
Sunday, June 25; Niagara Falls, from
the U.S. side, 1-S~t.m .
Wednesday, June 28: A University
and community reception, sponsored
by IELI and the Buffalo World
Hospitality Association,
7 p.m .,
Spaulding Dlnlug Room .
Thursday, June 29: A tour of Buffalo
organized by' the Buffalo Historical
Society, 1 . p.m., featuring ethnic"
neighbOrhoods and other major attractions.
•
Friday, June 30: A walking tour of
downtown Buffalo, also organized by
the Buffalo Historical Society, 1 p.m.
Saturday, July 1: Four-day homestays with local families over the Fourth •
of July weekend. _

~:::..f""~ ~re.,:~1n1,1 t~

•motion. The admlni11Wlon ~
disregarded the Ek8d'a pollclee ·~;;r.
as the policies supported by the
• Assoc iation."

Contruy to AUepted----The Investigating committee concluded that "the. central and local
- administrative actlona violated aound
academic practices. • It found 8110 thai
"the retrenchment plan, ~ ·and
set In motion unl....,..ly by the central
University edmlnlatratlon, was oontrwy
to accepted atandarda rel8tlng to '
faculty participation In ac.demlc

Craft Center
lists hours
The Creative Craft Center Is open 'tor

~~. aua'::er7_ 1 ~o~~~:Th~sda~iicS!v~

~turday-Sunjlay,

graft,~ 0 ~~ier

1-5

p .m.

.•

(phot~

ra=:~~·s ~ ~:":. f~~::

has facilities and
equipment for pottery, jewelry-making,
weaving, enameling , lapidary, silk
screen, and photography.
Special
workshops
have
been
scheduled during June, July, and
1\uguat In children's ceramics, pottery,

~~~:· ~"r~ln~n~~:t;:,';;,wa~j
636-2201 or visit the Craft Center at 120
MFACC, Ellicott.
The Center operates a small stote arid
all the necessary craft suppll• end
toole--Uable.
•
F - for the summer program are:
Studenll and family, $12 (all summer),
$8 per -•lon. Staff, faculty, alumni
and family, $24 (all summer)• $12 per
,_.lon. Community, S35 (all summer),
S20 per -lort. Senior CIIIZII!ls'
dlecount, $12 (all summer) , $8 .per
seaalon;..

uw hosts meeting

for librAriAns
A ~ram on "Teaching Legal
RMMreh,' sponsored by the American
Aaaoclatlon of Law Libraries, Is now
underwev at the U/B Law Schoof.
Roy M. Mersky, profe!lsor of law and
director ol..-ch, Unlversilll- of Texas
at AuatJn Law School, Is director of the
lour-&lt;lay -.lon which began Tuesday
and concludes Friday. Robert C. Berting, lecturer and assoclale law
librarian at the same lnalltutlon, Ia

~~:; ~:~:Ofessora

lrom around
the oountry lire members of the visiting

'acs::Z~&lt;&gt;;"~hed~~~i. ·o, 11 lea. taw
proteuora, and reference and public
-.vic&amp; librarians from 311 etatea. plu' ·
Pl*to Alto. MexicO and canada. are
attending.

:a.

exigency." Although the ecUona tllken ~
- e apparently consistent with - but
not requIred by - the provtalona of
Article 35 of the collactfve bargaining
agreement, the AAUP report noted,
"that clrcumetence doe&amp; not exculpate
the edmlnlstratlon, tor the tact that an
. action may be contractuelly C*"'leslble
Is not regarded by the Aaaoclallon as
determinative of academic propriety,"
The ret~! plan at ih8 State
Unl-alty of New Volt&lt;, the lflftlltlga-

oentral-:ni..,;:
a

l~~Hat~m::-

without any ~ Of

~r~:n:~

300attend
Immunology sessions
Some 300 aclentlata and phyalcl- from nine countrlea r.lua the U.S. and
Canada attended the four-day Slldtl lnt-tlonal Comocat on aponaored by
U/ll'a Center for Immunology et the Nlaawa Falla Hlhon Holel. The meeting,
held J..,. 12·15, InCluded a wine antf ~ pert}' et the AlbriQhi·Knox
Art Gallery to gift .-leers and l*!lclpanta an OppOrtunity to vet together
and anloy
and the Gallery' a art. Dr. Filllx Mllarom, chairman of
the U /II o.p.tmant of Microbiology, waa chalrmM of the Convocation
'Program CommhtM.
tt - Dr.
Cudlrowk:z (right),_U/11 PrOfeeeor of pethology and e
Con-lion 8peeker, dlacu- 1118 ..-~with Dr. and Mrs. F. Carter
Pannlll Jr. tt lhe Albrtgllt-Knox r.ceptlon. Dr. Pannlll II wloe .......,, of
IIMithec:l-·atU/11.
12- Dlacuaalng a eclentlflc point ate Convocation epeekers (from leH) Dr.
a - - t o Pemla, Columbia ""'-shy; Dr. P - J. Lacllmann, Medical
" - c h Council Lalloratory of Molecular llloloaY, Cambrldoe, England: and
Dr.lran M. Roht, Mldcleeex H08111181 Medical Scliciol, London .
ta- CenterlorlnununoloayiJnctor Dr. JameeF. Molin, rlaht, chela with
Dr. Jeen·FrMICOI&amp; llacll of 1M Nephrology Reeaerch Unit of Perla' Nec:lcer
Hoapltel, who apoke at the opening -aton of the - I .

con-ron

o.,._

ltnMclal

:t;'tu.:.r::r.::

overseen by the edmlnletrailon with
disregard lor the rlghta of tenure, tor
due notice, and for the role 01 the
faculty fn Institutional go.wnment." -

Neter honored
Or. Erwin Neier, proleaaor of
microbiology, was awarded the Medal
of Merit by the German Stata of
Baden-Wurrternberg In ceremonies In
Stuttgart last month .
Nelllf, also director of bacteriology at 1
Chlldren'a·Hospital, Joined U/t;lln 1936
and has published more lhM 300
articles . He Is the author of a textbook
and haa developed procedures which
permit Investigative tools to be applied
In a clinical microbiology laboratory.

I

LOCKWOOD UIIRARY TOURS
To11ta of lhe Locltwood 11-w1
U~Qry will ba off...:! from Monday, l
June 2e, through Friday, June 30, at 11
a.m. and 2 p.m. Thoaa lnt-*1 In
taking thalovre are asked to meet In the
lobby oppoaha the Circulation Deal&lt; on
the - . 1 level of the new building.
Tours will be limited to tiHIndlvlduala each.

T

/

�.

'

fiiONDA Y NIGHT-AT nE MOYES•
ThoAwfuf""*\Mceny, 1937). 170MFACC.
Elicoll. 8 p.m. $ .25. ~ed by the

THURSDAY- 22

il-Engliah~-e .
Tho afory c:Cilcemo • ~ ooupli (nne

FACULTY STUOENT ABSOCIATIOH

80ANI OF I*ECT"'IS IIIEE11NO'
10~. 2p.m . •.......,.;.iawelcomo.

0uone and c.wy

V1wo ~t (Eiia !IRon. 1952). 146 Olofen·
dod. 7 p.m. Sponoored by the Center for Medii

doctec:= l~n:tft~~

~=".rl;..

H. v.u.; In 1113. sm. then htalm-ta
' - ewolved from - l o n a l ~lied
llllllhematlca to-~ ~plication of
oampu~eq to the humenltles, pertlcul..ty In P,!MIIrY, fine wta ..,d
llngulatlca. T - lntMMta found
~ In hla ectlng • CC&gt;-;OfgWitz.
ol the flrat lnt8mlltlonal oonf-.ce on
"The Compvler In the Humanities" '
(1~. In 8ddlllorr to hie written wort&lt;.
ttt. w11e. Rulfj, Ia en ..uat who rnekes
. . - . . . . - ofcomj)i~Wq In her wort&lt;.

. . ._1·-·

·~

.

FI'Wik 8IIIMit lelrd~ lnduatrlallat,
- t o Juflelo In 1.., and founded
- . 1 "'-· He ...-a prime fon:e In
the bullcllnll ol -- ~ Brldae and
...S ~ die CouMII of tha Unn...Hy
from 1 . untllllll -.all in 11311.

~~~~--of-.1

llldCIWmlnt ~· In the 1120a, he
aw.rded the ~lor'a Medal In

1827.

Two olllla eona continued the close
lwnlty --.ctton.
Ceilllron e.Jnlil who wa ecthe In ttte
~ IIIII of
uffalo, orgeniDd the
~
of Mualc: 11.e 811d
H Into one of the Unlwtalty's
He ...s • Ita chairman
-.tlln 191111.
,..._C.
civiC: Ieeder
8Rd llldllatrllilla who - t l y retired
.,._ ~ on the UlllwerW!IY Council
Ill' •
cfllllnMn of the
Coulloll
- t o 1t77.
1tlll cNirJMn of Gtublr Supply
M II ,_tty eavtng hie
a - - . . of file Boliid of
, . . _ ol theUIB'Foundatton, InC.

=

8elril,.,-

=l...!!!"f

•G•a... ed

-··--lJIII

llurnmet llaflaballcwo Aogiatratlou continuoo

Injured llan, Dr. Dooglas W. WiOnore. Chief
Qf CIIOOa Investigation. Anny Medical

Center. Fort Sam Houston, Texas. 139 Cay.
4p .m .

CONVERSAnoNS IN THE ARTS

hove called l osewlng,

~- Cortor.

Flt:M•

SATURDAY-24

lly Son (Lao McCarey, 1952). 146
Oiel..-1. 8 :30 ~.m . Sponsored by the center
. for Media Study.
Helen Hayes. Robert - · Vtn Heflin , and
Dewl .JNger head this body :miSOUfded dran&gt;a

CONVERSATIONS IN nE ARTS
IEMhor-... iltOtViowa British writer (..A
C1ocfcworf&lt; Orwlge'J Anthony llurgeu. Courio&lt;
(Chaoool8). 4 p.m. I"'"'")

c-.

c:t.orvo.

and Survival Botany. Col831·4301 lor mtorma:
tion.

WEDNESOA Y SUMMER FORUM'
A - t a.-tto and the Middle School,
- T. Epotoil and Donald E'ochhom . Moot
Cc:ut Room, O'Briln Hal. lect1xe at 10 a .m.:
questk)n·and-answet sessk:ln at 2 p.m.
- b y tho FoaA!yoiEducationaf- the- olslx Sunwner Forum prognlmS.
Dr. Ej&gt;oteil. ~ ot biophyolca at a...dola.
ia l&lt;nown for hll worl&lt; on ne&lt;.«&gt;sclen1ific lm·
pllcotiona ot bnoln growth · periodization for the

~the~-and

UVE ltADfO IIIOADCAST'

-

able
-·
Canadien Minoe
Mast..-ilClass,
Speed~
A, Speed~
8

WEDNESDAY- 28

ltls-

-

nu,tt-l.lozz. From the Ttllfomo-

dono.Cole. WBF0(88.Tft.l). 10p.m.

reoega turllcA 1ol the middle grades.

SUNDAY-25

Dr•.Eichhomio aledlg

i n t h e - gnodes.

~

'

WMFUI'

lllelr presentation wit dell with Implications

----

otmeclcalandeducational........-cnfororgonimo
middlo.grados cu'llcuum and ilatruction.

ltorTyandT-(1Q74). 170MFACC'. Ellcott .
chwge.-

Coi836-2Q1flo} show tmes.-

Roplocoo- ~ ~

ETHNIC-AMERICAN FlliiFESTIYAL'
lolahdoln ~ and Popl South lectuti.
Center. Buttalo 5tatv. 1 and
8 p.m. Free. Gloelo Foal wit be, the commentator.
For fl.nller iltcxmatlon, cal878,631 3 .
Sec:ood il o wootdy aer1eo ot ,.,. on various
etfw1lc groupo, to be !Ufl'l!lted with oommentary .
~ ...,.._,. . . the focus of today'S

_ room , ~

MONDAY-26

.IAP.AiiESE fiUI•

No-

Olon
( 1 1 w - of &lt;lion) (Mizoguchl
KQ. 1936). 1411 ~' 7 p.m. Sponsored
by the Center tor Medii Sludy.

program.

JAPANESE Filii•

Waterworks Day
set for Squire
Wedneaday, June 28, will
be
'W81efW011ta" O.y at Main Slreet; free
muaic, g . , . and axlllblta will be
IM!ured In the- Squire fountain area
from noon to mldnl!lht.
Music 811d comecfy from the Harrlm811
steps will begin at noon with - The
Polntlase Brothers, a local bluegrass
b811d , followed by: Bill Marasclello,
.folksinger; Wendy Grossm811, folkalnger; The Farrell Brothere, local
country-rock b811d; the Buffalo Comedy
Workahop; Jim Ringer and Mary
McCaalin (from the Mariposa Folk
Festival/; flnlahtng wlth Spheres , a jazz
quartet rom Rochester.
Gallary 2111 wtli mow outdoors ttl
exhibit work by local artlata; 1ltld with
the help of the C!utlve Cralta Center,
artl..,a will d~strate thatr, ekllls
throughout the altamoon . Magicians,
)ugglere 8Ad clowna wUI help flfl In the
apecaa811d ed(l\o tha festivity .
Activities will be available both
Indoor&amp; and outdoors. VollayiMJI nata
wtll ba aat up on tha lawn• all day, 811d
frlabaa exparta ehould ba on hand to
damonatrata lhatr akllla. lndoora, the
Squire Recreation Center will be open
from 1-6p.m., for bOwling, bllllarda 811d
tabla ..,tria lno charge for atudenta,
fMUI1y ontaft).
,
UUAB planMnl say It will be a day for
all to h - hm (hopalully In tha eun) .
Faculty and ataff,tamillae and atudants
. . ln11iled to llrtng blankela and aport a
eQti p"*lt and stay all day. Bear wiH ba
aol~ and Food Service will aall
ta. If It ralna, moat activities
refr
will mo,..lndoora to Squire.
For IliON Information , call tha UUAB
~lvttiaa

Una 831-21118.

.

There is stil tine to ~er for a number
of U I B Credit·Free COl.I'MS. Openings .-e aval·

son is a Communist. An ..-rossiog e-.ple
of 1950s pebiotisrn.

Elon lbstyn. 1.-ry . _ , . . . , a n d - Atz·
gerald c:omploment M Comey'a ~ Awwd
~-oNowYcrk---­
up
cat a n d - 8C&lt;OSS
the U.S . on Ilia lost odyaejly.

who-

the 2nd and 3rd &amp;rnmer

CREDIT-AlEE

or a ~s reactions wl'ter1 she leMls her

UUAIIFIUI'
HonyandT-{Mazusl&lt;y, 1974). 170MFACC.
Ellic:ott. Col636·29191orahow--

tor

'2nd
d8y ,... ili!W registration
ls .T.-y. Juno 27. Laat claY~ add""""""'
for 2 n d - ia Jo.ne .30. lJost day to"""""
eo&lt;neSwi!OOut-·penaitylsJOiy7, 1978.
101 --.Last day to _ . . . tny-coo.ne
il 11t-iaFrlday:.Jooe2S. 1978.·
OUE a n c i - llaglslra-.-FaH s -_
as~....-- may be obWoed il Hayes 8
dOOng Juno OQd &lt;kjy. AI! S&lt;Gnltting
~-bYJoJy31 ... -~
Cords- tci them il AI.Jgust.
IIFC Reglotnllcwo-Fan --M8terials
Wll be . - in Hayes l!Sbw1ing on Juty
10, 1978.

- - (Channol8).
- - 6 :30p.m.
~Cable

Computi:X!:..""-·

up hla IIPPOintment
here, ~ wa on the fw:Uity of the
ConiPutar Science o.p.!"*lt at the
Uni_..Hy ol Mlnneeota, Minneapolis,
8Rd aaeoclata dlniCtor of the · Center
thana.

~1 . 1978 . prospactive~.

il Hayeo 8

tiKICIIEMfSTRY SEMINAR.
f ' - Oxygenotlon and - - I n

e

!hru

Monday!hru~y.

12noon.

WABFIUI•
c.too a WNoporo ~ 1972). ConfeRn:lo
· ~- Col838-2919 f« show-·
- c h w g e.
AgMs ( - -..son) ia dyir'IJ of c:ancer
il the eorty 1900s. Her older and younger sisters
(Uv Ulmonn , Ingrid Th&lt;Ain) come to her t-ane

w~

oopen
f -II&gt;tor7 each~
p .m.

llagrM"CordH:lo!odh cfi(e tor flilg -~­
tion for Oognoo.. ia Mondoy, .kAy 3. for all •

Y. S . Bokhle, Dol*1menlotf'hlomacology. Royal
c.._ of~- of England. 102 Shennan.

~

---'·
Prior to tMJng

Dumg---

Friday.
&amp;.mmor _ , the office ia

lllWWII
PalloofoGicol and l'llyalologlcat F - . A"11111Rat Lunv. Dr.

_,;ng-otgenlus. -

Ia the new dlractor
o1 ...cllimlc otmpullng within Unl-alty
Dr. Walter M.
...,.,IJN, d
ot u~. has

~

7 P.m.6fr...,,_,..
reg
'*- at 4:30.J!.m.•

P!!ARMACOlOGY AND THEIW'EIIT1CS

FRLDAY-' 23

Dr• .1f1Y A.

Ao.s&amp;IOI!Sa

•

--In

"*'

- - .... il
-to-ricl.a s1ory
of-~-Err-.o~
Anthony Quinn _ , . , o.c. for Ilia depiction
of~··--

ofdae UCS

other's

tor their dvoroo doct&amp;e

TUESDAY....:.27

Study.

'"'""'-·Critics

Giontr .-~ag~ng each

love .,... waltilg
to become final.

FIUI;

Leavitt huds
audemlc side

illormalion. UYely, o&gt;O:iling oootune - . . ,,
goodcaat, cnmmedfulofoction.
Robert C\.mmings; ...,_ Dofll.

,

- - (The Only Son) (Ozu Yasujin).
1936). 148 [);efendc&gt;1. 7 p.m. Sponoored by
the Center for Media Study.

THURSDAY- :29·
FACULTY ARTSCOI.LOOU!A_,.IES'
Tho~ o1 LetWo anoi-W- In Cub11m,
Alw&gt; 8inholz. M HisforY.-309 Clemens.
4p.m. -blwltbe........,.
Sponoored by tho FOCIJity of Ar1B !Old Letters
So.mmer l'roQtlm on " ' - / Wotda l Spocea and

-

~Session .

li&lt;eavooclfde;oattht.buttf)on . ...
.
·
Jacll Nlchotson'sllnQUil!l. hl8 " " " ' - to act

.

FtLM'
T h o - - (Mnl.1Q491. 146[);et..-f.
7 p .m SC&gt;oruoored bylheCent..-torMedio Study.
Bo&lt;h torcoo do.roiJ the F"'"""
are

-lion

~=~-=

28--0iooce Wooi&lt;stoo!&gt; . Wed·
nesdays. Juno 2~ 26 . 1·2 p.m.;· walk on
the Wid Side. Wednelcf!Ya, Juno 26·Augusl 2 •
6 ·7:30 p.m.; Yoga for the t.lild. Wednesdays.
J .... 28-Augost ~ - 7 ·8:30p.m.
lloglnnlng June :z.-vme w;.oom. Juno 29·
AugUst 3. 4-6 p.m.: Comody Walootoop. '[htndays,
June 29·J&lt;Ay 20. 7-6 :30 p.m.; Sign.Qn. llounodays. Jun_e 29-August 3 . 7:30·9 p.m.
'
Kl.Wldaflnl Yoga and Communication !Old the
Deaf begil il J&lt;Jy. Pwtic1pation ia 11-Y •
tree~ -charge. and WOfttshops we open to U I B
community~ and apouoes.
Sponsored by the OMslon of StUdent Affairs
Develc&gt;po'*&gt;! Prcgnon 9'1lce and So.mmer
Sessions.
-.
For additlonol intomoation and rogistRdio'n. stop
by or ca1 Ufil wor1&lt;11oopo, t 1o Norton, 636·2606.

R...,ch

and to fUller !he - · are the tor ftlis oet oga1nst a rernar1&lt;alily hot and

o1 o aecrol

:t=:.,'::tt!Y:,.::n,.:.;:::.

&gt;ft....n:h AniNnt--Phannecology &amp; Therapeutics. Posting No. R-60 t 0.

To~oot:Oexistenoot..-..-.olhe&lt;mayaotm

o!ter -

of

AESEARCit

Admlooloncharfle.

_

FREE S-TUDENT SEASON TICKETS
• • Free student """""" tickola lor footbalt and
lloct&lt;eyil 1978·79will be laouodiiich ~y
tram a o.m.·12 noon oW!Ing Juty"8 • the Cion&lt;
Hal Ticket Dfflc:e. Room 113. ... student to ia
reQUt-eci; there Is no fimlt on the n&lt;oo)ber
tOs
ttoat can be PAI!!"ted by '"'Y ·one indMdual,
for the OOIW8I1ience of studenta on both ~ ­
No siOOent w'l be ..antttad tci tootbal or lloct&lt;ey
-~ W'i1hout an 10 and season ticket My

JOBS

-

UUABFILM'
ThePusenger (Antonionl.1 975). 0onterence
Theatre. SQolro. c01636-2919 t..- show limes .

L -·-

FR~ OtA8ETES TESTJNq
The C.E.T.A. spe&lt;:lal project team of the Amet:i·
&lt;*' Diilbetes Association 8IY'K)I..nCeS free diabetes....
testing to be held at 5Qure· Hall. Main Street
~. w~. .Me 28, from 10 a.m.-3 pm.
Please retnoln from eating or c/oewlng gum
tor two toouns prior to testing. Everyone ]I en·
couragec1 to take advantage ot this 8ervice . •

diorf contaiMg

ANiatent-8ehavloraf Sciences,

Posting No. R-80 11 .
R - h Aaolalln1-Ptlamoacolog &amp; Theno·
peutlc;a, Posting No. R·8012 .
Sofolor Clari&lt;-5Qciotogy, Poatio1g No . R-8013.

NON-COIIPETmVE CIVIL SERVICE
Janitor SG-e-Custodilll ~·. "'Main or Arntoerot (tetroporwy- 8 ' / 30 / 78.
Line No. 34320. '
.
Janitor SCH-Cuatodlal Ser.ices. Mlm or Am·
toerot(""'"'""""tj, UneNo. 40214.
Jonltor ~yaicll Plsot. Amherst; Line"'
No. 34599.

then""""""""''·

,..----------------..,----------:--,-.....:...-,
PUT US ON YOUR LIST
1'lla lt-rter "Oetandar" hopae to provlcla the campus with a
_.......,,.... ....tdy llatlng of
and actiYitl.., from fllma and
_..,.. to ac:lanttflc colloqlola. We'll print both your notices and your
publicity photoe .(n 8paca pannlta) It you aupply ua With gloaay pflnta. Tha
. . - Ia tr.a. To r-a Information, call Jean Shrader, 63S-2fl2fl, by
MonUY noon lor llld•lon In the following Thuraday'a ' laa~ Or, mall
ln'-tlon to lt-rter"CaaenMr," 136 Crolla Hall, Amt..-at. Wa need your
aaeialance In mMing IIMt "Caaandao" n -~ ••..PO••Ible.
Kay: lfOpan only to 1'-e wltlla prolaaa!Oftalln..-aatln IIIJ aul!)act; •open
to the public: ••open to -bars of the University. Unlaaa otharwiM
apac:lflad, Uc:Uta for - t a chqlng edmiNion can ba purchased at tha
·
•
Squire Hall Tlcbt Otllca.

av-•

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Amher$t gets $48 ~nil~lol)·- boost
• $48.8 million In new U/B construction proJects, to be underway by fall , were
&amp;Mounced here Foiday b.~&gt;: Governor Huph L.,-Carey.
Carey had pledged to· move forward' witb Amherst building two years ago at
the dedication of Ellicott. Last June, he swooped In with Lt. Gov. -Mery "Anne
Krupsak to look at a campus modal and reiterate an earlier announcement-of $16
million In support facilities projects. Friday was the big one, though.
Carey also announced that he Is going 1o-raquest $1 .26 million In planning
•
funds for a Soii(&gt;Ot of Dentistry reconversfon project at 'Main Street.
Tbla, he ealcl~ will be In- addition "to ttl&amp;- $8.11 mllllo~ ..and.
axpari!T181'1tal facility'' tor the Faculty of Health Sciences (the Foster Hall
renovation), "which will be under construction shortly," according to his
tfmatabla.
·
Carey's firslstop at U/ B was the Talbert Banquet Room In Capen at Amherst.
There soma 200-250 members of the University community and others had
gatharec1.
_
"I see a lot of construction trades people here," Carey teased before making It
official; "I!&gt; is must have something to do with construction ."
It did.

C..p&amp;lp rhetoric

"Our campuses exempi]Jy the facilities and

enables many br~ht young people to develop their talents and contribute to our
future prosperity, and not the least ot Its contributions Is the oontlnued
employment II provides.
"This is a record we cannot, and will not ignore. Ills a !l!'?"rd we will continue
to Improve UPQO, and the projects announced today will 18M! aa physical
eYidenceO{_oJl!£2!!1!11.111)1ent."
_
_
•
•

A 'sr~ day'- 'fRauldns's Day'
President Robart L Ketter.called the announcement.&amp; great day for U/B. Moat
of those Who tumad out agreed.
_
.
-

re;~s!'~~~~~u~l t~':'.n ~~~~s ~~~r;a::!i.J:i': (ll~tu~8til:',!~

White .P"'l.nants.
The Governor said the day should be remembered as "Jim Freriimlng Day" in
honor of the Westem New York assemblyman (Who Is chairman of the
Assembly's Sub-Committee on Economic Growth). !'ramming, Carey said, has
bean " persistent, unendurable" even, In "his determination to get UBI Amherst
moving."
•

•

To Millersport And MAin Street

~~ ~~ ::r~:~~~nmlt~::' :':!~~·;C:~h":\~i~h,:~,o~~ /~e;::~~~!~:

Following-Ills stop at-c&amp;pen, Garey made a whirlwind visit to construction
workers at a roadwork project near Millersport Highway. There he smiled and
shook hands with hard-hats a~d mugged for photognopbers by clambering onto
a bulldozer. A black construction worker handed him a statement about the

as viable parts oflhe State University Center at Buffalo.
"Oesrtte the aftllfJ{lath of our State's 1975 fiscal c&lt;lsts, I have been ever
mlndfu of my commitment to see continued construction and increased
Improvements throughout our University system.

=fJ!~Y f~~e~~~~,'gr~~~~~~t'~~ut't" ':'.!,=1~!JUctton

work force. The
After ~ersport, Carey rushed to Maln1treet and In and out of the Squire
Conl!_rence Theatre Where Hsalth Sciences officials heard his pledge for
renovation projects.
_ wt!~:t ~e,:::~~':~o:'.,,:::~~~9.e structures, C8rey_sald, •represents one o! the

9

ca~l:'; b'l"~ u: ~m~:;~:s~~P~~~i7e ~~ ~~tonJ~&lt;Wo~r~!!\~~Yf~~ ~~~

- students, bufwill also contrlbllte significantly to our efforts for'1111 Improved
economy."
Getting on wJih It, Carey said he has directed the Housing Finance Agency to
submit applications to the State Public Authorities Control Board for approval
of five major projects, and three related sltework projects at Amherst. These will
provide an estimated 1,300 jobs In construction and related Industries.
Approval Is expected later this month to be followed by bOnd sales for the
wnrk later this aummer, he pledged.
_

c:.rey's lht-

'

Carey's list Included:
•
·
•A L - r • Hell project which will provide 1,275 student stations and will
reduce tile need to bus students between Amherst and Main Street. This could
save up to $750,000 a year, the Governor said - not to mention thousands of

ho!'fr:~':J'~~~Y Constru~tlon

Fund wttr"advertlae ;or construction bids
for tt&gt;ia eettmatad $4 million project In August with .constructlon scheduled to
commence In October," he reported.
·
• •An 111 .4 million Depertrnent of Mualc Center, for which the Govemor wilt
re&lt;jueal funds in lhe.aupplemental budget.
Conatruetlen of thla facility Is expected to begin In September, and its
completion will allow the Muslc ~ment to vacate Its current location at
Main Street . The new center will Include a 750-seat auditorium Which will be tbe

-='=='~~~~~~.-!no

FacliiiJ, and an Mtlmatecl $5.5 •
mllloll Chit ~no Building, whlch, according to Carey, "will allow the
eng'"-'".g program to shift from Main Street to Amherst ancl provide excellent
training for our aspiring ybung engl_.s."
·
•Ait2.5 mlllon e..lth alld l"'plcal eclucatlollatruct..., which, Carey sald, ls
one "of Dur htghM1 priorities.
This facility will contain a lleld house with an Indoor track,-locker rooms, as
_, u equipment atoraga and therapy areas. (It Is phase one of a two-phase
ph~ edlrecrMtlon projec1 .)
•An 8ddltlonat $8.4 million in sltework to provide acoass roads and athletic
f1e111e lor the physical education facility , and an electrical distribution ·system
~to provide power to the new facilities.

SO ,._s of prosress

c..y

noted that eertlar last ~he " waa rrivlleged to dedi()Jlle the first
home in SO years for ttii Centra AdmlnlSU:ation of our State

~~

-~::~~Mr..

said.

we h..,. grown to be the nation's largest University," he

to educate

th!f~~~~~~~ ~:~:J,· brings to New Yoik State the best minds of .the world, -

Before hitting the specifics, the now sllver-halred.Govemor soun!l'&gt;d a few
notes that smacked of campal~n rhetoric.

0

ex~~

0

,.

-

�.lune.u , tt71

Architecture
will offer
evening BPS

Changes In
~
. .IIOlliDCed

A new evening prOQf&amp;ln leading to the
Bachelor of Professional Studies In
Architecture will be offered next fall by •
Millard Flllmora College and the
Department of Archllectuf8 of the
School of Architectwra and Envlr_onmental Desogn .
The program will be echeduled on a
part-time besle and will requ)ra thrae
years of evening study f~ completion
-of a 66 semester hour upper division

.......

John MIWo-rt hea balln
8CIIng c:halrm8n of ttw
of l:!letory ''effectMI
," tor a tenn to 8XI)If8
.-1878, ExacutMI VIce
~
Albert Somlt told the

T.-AIIIIur~ wiU ...- u
~

OM!Iaulng

8CIIng
lllalnnlng August 30 .,d
uti1ll a permellellt chairman

arcAill1\':::~': =l:'~tetudents will be

........ e-tt Indicated.
...

....,_lon

~oi!MIIIa,

left 11r tiW

to fill the vok1

of Dr. Clifton K.

:lion"':
:.-s-Ron:d tl:n~
_..,..tor ...,.lc

•

affaire, and Dr.
, Aitllur euu.r. ..-t of ttw Faculty of

IIDIII . . . . - 81111 Aclmlnlatf8tlon.
. . . .._.., lur1ller - • on U.

''1:-

will ratum to full-time
......_ Md ta '8CMcluled tor a spring
. . . , . . . . . . . - , a - - I n the

11D111 ~ P!owo81'a OHice said.
lila fliiporfw ....., ei!MIWhere
lhlt 11 a apac1a1 - l n g of the History
'-city In -tv June, a vote was taken
w111e111 -Mimlngly repudiated the.
~77 Annual Report
lllnflrYa.ley.
At 111e -lng, attended by
8oC111 8otlnc:a Proooat Butler and
v..-,, 111e f*:ulty aleo voted to

="""•t'a
v....,.

~

Sexual climate
affects Ob/Gyn

for contributions

m1111a to tJw Hlatory ~t during
lila ,.,...... cllllimW1.
Pwowoll Butler wu out of town and
be r-=hed for comment on

_..._not

1M clwlgaa by Jfeporfer deadline.

Women are
JO..aal·theme
eao. Aretlluu, a journal
twiOa • y.w by the
of Clualce,~ lasued a
number on
In Aidi~ty" (Volume 6,
numbar1: 8llrlna 11173).
MDw In ItS lllid printing It continues
to be the joumel'a moat poputarvotuma
In lndiYidllllf _,., lhe edltora uy.
H Ilea balln ..-cf aa • llll&lt;tbook; Ito
' - been widely cited and

admitted lor 191'8-79. Entering ltudents
must have completed two yews of
college study (a mlnlmuiT) of S2 credit
hours) and must submit-an. application
byJuly31 .
For further Information or application
forms contact the director of Millard
Fillmore College, Dr . • Eric Streiff,
831-2201. •
The BPS In Architectu.. Is a
preprofessional pegrae which can
supplement associate degree programs
In architecture, civil or construction
technology, and provides a base lor
graduate laval stUdies In Architecture. .

Today's sexual climate has had a
tremendous effect on gynecology and
obstetrics, especially In office practice,
Dr. Allan W. Siegner, a U/ B cli,.;cal
associate In obstetrlcs~ynecology.
contended In a ''viewpoint' place In a
recent Issue of Human SeJCUSiity
monthly.
"Women of all ages now respond
more openly and with greater sensitivity
taking a sexual
to such things.
history, providing sexual education,
dispelling mrhs and discussing marotal
- and sexua
dysfunction," Slegner

as

--Minority Career Day

f'M .,_.

.,.._t
_... ......,._..anod
puiiiiiNd

ow-

.-

(Top photo) U/B dental students Huron Hill (left) and Marta Alvarez explain
the consequ- of dental deca)' to medical student Richard Roy during an
Engl_.ng, Scientific and Technical car.... Conference held 11 Squ.,. liall
May 20. Mora than 300 Bulfolo minority studento and their parents ottended tho
dey-long program to 1-n 'more about car-• In the health sciences,
enillnMflna, and physical and computer sciences as well as flnonclal aid
prclgmna for col~students. Participating In the workahopa sponsored by
U/8, 1M Commun
Action Organization; the U.S. Army Corps,of EnglnMrS,
end tha Linde Divis n of Union Cart&gt;lde - . r'presentatlves from nursing,
pharmacy, medicine, dentistry, occupatlonolthar,py, medical technology, civO,
IMChenlcal end Industrial engineering, physical sciences and computer

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

.

(Bottom) Petar Carson of Ceraon Computw Corp. explolns to a group of
at..s-ta the Intricate wol1&lt;1ngs of computerized equipment as wellaa the future
potential In the field of computar sciences.

CIT presents University
with S 10,000 gift honoring Kraus
The CIT Financing Corporation
f8Cenlly p,_led a SJO,OOO "f8COQnflion award" to U/B In honor of Calvin T.
Kraus, a 1935 gf8duate who Is now
president of the corporation. •
Prealdent Aobart L. Ketter accepted
the a~ end announced that It would
be used to prcwtda laltlallundlng lor the
Calvin T. Kraua Conlenonco Room, an
alumnf - l n g room for the School of
Manllgement In Crosby Hall.
-we are delighted to f8COive this
grant hOnoring· 811 alumnus whose
outatandlng prof-lonal achlll'iements
warrant auCII' f8COQI\Itl0n and we are
ar.tetul to CIT for their cooperation In
ihla progf8m," Kattar uld.
CIT, one of tiW }l&amp;llon's largest
multi-line financial eel\llcal organtza..
Ilona, the ~ . . part of •
program NOOQnlzlng oontrtbutlono of
Ita prtllclpal oftlcolrl, dlnoc1ora and chief
execUII-. _,.,..,lng 'jc)7(:1T Chairman

loeallon lor their own meetings.
Kraus, who received his business
degree here In 1935, joined CIT in 1945
as a branch manager In the company's
consumer finance subsidiary. Alter
advancrng to positions of Increasing
responsibility, he was assigned to CIT's
fleet leasing company as assistant vice
president when It waslormed1n 1958.
Kraus was elected vice prosldant of
CIT Service Leasing in 1965, executive
vice president In 1967, and president in
1968.
He has participated In the Executive
Rrogram of the Columbia University
Gf8duate School of Business.

Starting July 1, 1978, prospective GHI

~~~~t,~~;/':~'':!~~r~:;,'l1~

..tllch our prinCipal ofticera and
~ NCeliMd ltlelt c~ag,_ and the

before '\reatmenl begins, the U/B
Personnel OffiCe has announCed .
GHI (Group Health Insurance, inc.) Is
the~tal lnouranco carrier lor all State

_,.=::"-created
to.:~
pr..way our :r,::

=.~.:'.W:...: . :
In a

....,
·
U/1 -...,....,nent 0.... Joaeph A.

~'=•='=

.:=, ;:...:'f:::

eo11oe1 with ., ..,proprtete lacUitv for
en ~lng number of ~I
~I

8CIIvit.... while also
offariiiQ management elumnl a central

Most women, he said, no longer react
negatively to sexual
words • or
expressions. "Women today expect
their physician to be co'mlortaple and
knowledgeable, empathetic, and nonjudgmental, helpful , In preventing
sexual dysfunction ," he continued.
" The increased sexual awareness and
expectations of women today affect
their partners in various ways," Siegner
said . " Many men respond posltlvel~,
willing to be open, to verbalize theor
sexual feelings, and respect the
equality of women afod men In tliis
Intimate part of their lives. A small
group of men, how8'1er, appear to
develop adverse feelings and sexual
dysfunction because of Increasing
pressure and demand lor performance.
"Many men hava also responded .fn
another way to the ·sex boom,
sometimes pressuring and causing
anxiety aM dysfunction In a woman
who may have remkined sexually
conservative or rigid ."
Accordlng)o a recent study, Slegner
said , "young women Involved In
premarital sexual relationships may
have Increased 30% o - the past five
Ye&amp;rs. Such women are also more prone
to change partners II there Is
Incompatibility - practicing 'sequenJial monogamy.'
, "The modem sexual climate has
probably contrib.uted to the lnct¥SB in
divocce, since many women are no
longer willing to remain In a chron ic
poor relationship, with secondery
. s8)(ual unhappiness. But there also
seems to be an Increase In second
marriages among the young, with
greater communication, ff8edom, and
pleasure In their new partnerships.".

Estl.mates will be needed
f or d ent a IInsurance coverage-

wa~.. s. HolmM Jr.

~~ :O:O""u.!hr!.tf;!.~lo:'~~

wrote.

~~~~"'!tT;~-;;t::,~~~r.:~~~~;!

~ent~f,;;,~:p~~~n~~ Manap~t-.

Under the new proceduf8, II a claim
will be 1100 or more, the s~dard GHI
?:::,al
126ol6), should be used by the dentist,
and aent directlY to GHI for review. 1
The dentist should describe tne
propooed traatmeqt and estimate the

t&lt;;;::,&lt;; ~=~:'·t~~~".,b~:

sed
charges. GHI will review the pJOpo .

f~~~e':.~?.~~~~ ~~\~':1ezo~~':in~t~~

~~ ai~~~C:,~1!:re~8~ CC:':lu1X~~h ·g'~~

disallowing the anUra claim, Personnel
warned .
The Civil Service Departfnent's
Employee Insurance Section, which
adminiatenl the program , .. ld the new
system will benefit bolh the patlant and
.the denllsl as both will know In advance
II .bo
G 1w1H
ward
, , pay to
a1
The new procedure Will have no effect
on I he " deductible" the ernplayee pays,
on the types of care covered or on the
maximum benefils paid ~Y GHI.

:":o~ (;e':t~nt.H

�j

June15, 1178

Physics graduate program wins accolades
The Graduate Program In Physics Is

~~:::,~da~l=t~~~~~':!p~=::tn~

outside evaluation committee
reported,
"We are very pleased with

has

this

~~r'!'ve ,:rh~,:~~~~:::."anrep~r P~.;

Depart mel\! of Physics and Astronomy,
said. lsit;lara was commended by the
committee for his successful efforts In
achieving harmonious relations between various faculty members.
Not only was the eval~allon report
encouraging, lslhara noted, It was also
¥8!'1 realistic. He pointed out that all the
reeomm~ndatlons of the committee can
be accomplished with support from thG
University administration .

Hlp points

~~~~~~~!~~,~~~'me

:~~ri~~=!{e;:"";~~~t~ve-:=

aild Mathematics: both space In
Fronczak Hall and several hundred
thousand dollars In CCF equipment
funds were dlvert'ed from Physics to the
use of other departments."
This diversion " was perhaps wise
when viewed from the larger perspective
of the University as a whole, but

better, and faculty membera active In ·
research have become- even more
productive.
.
•The move to new facilities and

~~~~~:"~~;,i'/:~~~~~~~~'::m~~
l~e~ft~~dand ~~~~le ~~atmadf~~~~

~r.rcrsr:~~ft.~~~~ ~~~&amp;f.',{ r~

::::

rate of administrators to make difficult
and often unpopular decisions, but we_
hope that It can-be more aptly done In
lhefuture. "
The committee concluded ..that its
" obvious potential for becoming a very
good deportment in the future" justifies
continuance of the graduate program . It
noted that t!)p fact that all Its recent
graduates found suitable jobs In spite
of the difficult economic situation
showed that the good training students
received fulfills a need.
'
Since a department the size of U I B's
can hope to strive for excellence In only
a limited area of physics, the committee
said , the evaluators supported the
pa~sent thrust of replacing retiring
faculty with " good young experimenters
In condensed matter phys(cs." Thwe Is
already a core of "good young faculty"
present wh lch can be bu lit around.-.

Improved.
Gr&amp;d Students haprovecl, too
Tl)e committee found a change In the
graduate students, a!:. Faculty fell
that the quality an
motivation of
graduate students w re Improved and
• reported that the attrition rate declined.
The commi ttee attributed this good
morale to the move to Improved
facili ties and the attentiqn students
receive from active faculty researchers .
The report , though , commented on
the " great bitterness" In the Physics
faculty that resulted from Albany's
reduction of C&amp;pltel Construction
Funds. " A great deal of faculty \I me and
energy
went Into planning
the
expenditure of these funds ," the
eval uation team noted , "and to have
expectations raised, then lowered, and
then combined with uncertainties

more
balanced with an lnoreased strength In
experimental condensed matter physic~
and more lnterdlsclpUnary with, the
development of a successful collaboraJion In biological physics.
•"Outside -research support for the
graduate progragt has risen six-fold
since 197• and seems likely to go
higher;" •The committee ludged thal about 25
per cent of the department's faculty
have natrona! or International reputa- • parts of the Faculty of Natural Sciences

e;~~~~lo"s~~~~e~!;'offtu"n':l's"f.f:~~;'!

fawlty nunibers need -a-Jots
The committee expre~ hope that

the number of faculty will not dec:t-.
and aaid that ovfll the next five y. . . the
department should be strengthened by
three lines to a total of 25. H illao helped

:~~~~=-un::'t:''':u:'~t:f"~.;

ca~::l f.:r~~~~·~the

,_

faculty are not active enough In
r-rch or tralnlng.graduate llluilenta,
the committee aald, although H noted
that attrition may be the only way to
solve this problem.

The graduata student stipend criticized as being too low 8lld the.

li"~~!?a':t ~~~~'Y:oW=:o:::

unlvereltlea, 8lld that the minimum
support period for students ehould be
Jive years.
·
Two other problema noted by the

=~~ ~.::"_,:~~II=

will be solved as development at
Amherst continues.
Mernbera of the evaluating committee
_... Dr. Elliott W. Montroll, Einstein
Profeasor at
the
Unl-alty
of
Rochester; Dr. Elizabeth U. 88fanger,
associate . dean and p r o f - of
ghyslcs at the Unl-slty of Plttebu~h;
J, u~~~ ~~~erflaefDf=bat fro:;;
Chemical Eno~t-~ng .

.J.d

UUP settlement said 'worth 9 per cent'
Across-the-board raises " worth more
than 9 per cent on an annual basis,"1

:;:~: ~~~~s~ a~ ~\!'~~!edrh~~Y:n~~

salaries for all ranks are among features
of a contract fCCO&lt;d reached between
United University Professions (lJUP)
and the State last week.
In a special " Negotiations Bulletin"
mailed to members of the bargaining .
unit earty this week, UUP attributed

:C~!a~e~ :~ lt~i&gt;!;~~'t's%"nc~ ·P'::' t~
1
bas~!l~ 'tllu'tb~~esldent sam Wakshull

1

1

particularly heralded the merit raise
provisions. "The accountability required ragardlng administrations racommendallons for discretionary funds
begins to make go-nance more
meaningful and realistic," he said.

Six ;md one-Mif per cent

.

$10,000, $12,000, $15,000, and $19,500,·
UUP reported . For llbrartana and
calendar yeru
professionals ~th
appointments, the basic minlma are
also $10,000, $12,000, $15,000, and
$19.50!J.
.
'

According to the UUP mailing piece,
members ot the bargaining unit will .
receive a six and one-half per cent raise
across the board effective July 1, 14, or

!\W'~~'fve 'an~f~era~~';.~~te;,"O:~:{J

LVsest of the ye.r

per cen t,. effective March 1, 1979.
UUP said one per cent more Is set
aside for d iscretionary increases -with
guidelines developed wh ich " al low the
peer groups establ ished for recommending persons for such Increases to
request a meeting with the college
president." The president or h is
designee, UUP says, " shall meet with
the comm ittee to discuss the criteria
upon which the President has made h is
recommendations to the Chancellor."
Basic academic year mi nima established for professorial ranks are

" The settlement,
while
clearly
justified , may be the largest secured In
higher education bargaining this year,"
Evelyn Hartman , who coordinated the

The State's original offer was • per cent
plus 2 per cent In dlilcnlllonll')' funds to
be allocated by 0911ege presidents with
no strings attllchlid.

anJl:. b,:l\':'~~ t~ :b!:

acrtiss the board !ncr- and
.discretionary funds did not come until
the final meeting which lasted 16
houts," UUP aald.
The agreement was unanimously
approved by the UUP negotiations

uuJ'u~~t~~~~..:lfff,:!.t =~~ut.to

:~1::'.:!:'1
~~~:'atfrl'ca'==~'lo~'1:
membership.

The Chronicle of Higher Educa?lon,
Increases have been running In the
nelghborhQod of 5.2 per cent with merit
the major Ingredient. For a period, the
size of the proposed discretionary
allocations for SUNY was a major
obstacle to settlement, .UUP reported.

(AAA). Ballots will be mailed by AAA on
June 15 and are returnable to AAA up
unlll5 p.m., June29. AAAwlllcountthe
bellota In their offices on J~ne 30.
Only UUP (Tlernbera can vote.

A,:!~~lonA,:~~nhan~~~~~=

English Department hosting_regional meeting
The 1978 Northern Region Summer

~~en ~~[, t&gt;in~:~h at ~fB~::
•

21-24.
The meeting Is sponsored each year
by tM Assocfation of Departments of
En~;llsh (ADE) . Spme 61HO chairmen
Institutions throughout the
from
eastern thjrd of the U.S. are expected to
attend.
The three-day session will Include

; :,r::.•h~s,th~::··,o~n~~t~~:t:~~

partlclptpts .
Delegates will be housed In the
Ellloott Complex as the UIB English
Department shows off the Amherst
campus to Ita ~s . Sessions will be
hei&lt;J In EII\POtt and in the Talbart
Banquet Room at C&amp;pen.

Red!« Is the keynoter
Leslie Fiedler of-U I B will give the
keynote address on Wednesday evenIng, June 21 , at Talber;t . His topic: " The
Responsibility of the English Profession."
•
The conference opens at 1 p.m. that
afternoon, with reg istration . The first of
a series of workshops, organized
according to degree levels of pllrllcl patlng departments, will begin the formal
program Wednesday afternoon.
Sammye Gr- of Illinois Wesleyan
will give the ADE Presldantlal_ Address,
Thursday morning at 9, followed by a
session on "Redesigning Graduate
Programs for the 1980s." Edward
Sharples, Wayne State Unlvt!fJIIty, will

&amp;~a}~'llta't~!m'~a~~~rnth::!.;'~~l.e

of

-

Workshops on composition, personnel , and attracting majors wi!JA&lt;&gt;und oUt

Th~~~=a_~om~~~tpro~~~atea

will
convene at the lj:laza Suite restaurant
for a dinner session. Waller Ong, S.J.,
of Saint Louis Unl-slty will s'l:J: on

~'ZJ:~~n:'t~ n~~lo~~dent ~ar~

Modem Language Association. ·.
,Friday m'!fmlng, the full conference
wi ll cons ider " Composition Programs,"
as 1t hears Walker Gibson of the
\Jnivm;slty of Massachusetts. David

~~f~~~~dc~~~o~h!md.::Cc\'~~~

to " Stafflnq In the Two-Year College, • a

lg~s. i~o~ . %~=~~~ byeo?'o~
Douglas Roycroft of Erie
College will moderate.

&amp;,mmu~y '

r

T--. of.,....... toO
Informal tripe to N;.g&amp;ra Falls are
slated for Friday afternoon. Delegetea
.,. being advlaed, too, that tc11n ol
"the city of Buffalo can offer examples
~J&gt;I French an4 German gothic revival
architecturet • theatre with Interior
design by lffany, numerous tum-ofthe-century mansions, and the Albright·
Knox Art Gallery.•
1

N:.~~ N~l~';].:.lJ~7:.a ~:for

the Psychological Study of the Arts
will talk about "Improving Cluaroom
Teaching."

Workshops, following • brUnch Ill
Ellicott's Student 'CI~b. will conclude
the seminar. on Saturday morning.

College expenses going up 6 per cent
(

American college atudenta will pay
an average of 6 per cent more for their
college expen- next year, according
to ~ recant study by the College
Schotarahlp Service (CSS) .
Reporting on lis survey of t ,555 U.S.
collegea and unlveral tlq, CSS notad
that overall expenses at tour-year
private Institutions will Increase 6 ,1 per
cent for the 1978-1979 academic year,
while expenaea at four-year public
lnstl!ullons will be up by about 5.3 per
cent. At prl•ate colleoes, where tuition
and teas account lor the greatest
prooortlon of coats, a student wi ll
prc!:ably apend between 45 and 52 per
cent ot his or her budget on tullon and
• a· public unl- alty studenta will
aperid about 21 per cent. In addition to
tutllon and 1 -. studenl!a!! four-year
I)Ubllc unlverattlea oan e x - to pay
additional $1 ,953 If they commute.
12,822 If they live In pn vate housing.

an

and $2,40311 they live In the dorms.
Although II costs about $1 ,996 more
for a private education , CSS reported ·
thel the non-tuition expense di fference
between public and private colleges Is
much less - particularly for resident
studenjs living In private hom~s .
Between public and private four-year
Institutions, the cost of non-tuftlon
Items - room and ' board, transportation , books and supplies, and personal
expenses - varies by less than $60.
And there's no more than a S400
variation from region to region for all
on-campus res ident students.
css found other rtoionat college
' cost patterns In the annual survey:
Highest tuition charges were found In
the Middle States. with the lowest

~~JI~ .:~.:,';: ln~~So~1:J'~l:!

lowest non-tui tion expenses, w ith !he

greatest expenses found in the West .
The Western part of the country Is
most expensive for resident sludents
living In privata homes, the report
noted . Colleges In the Southwest
reported the highest costs for the
commuting student. And self-support-

lng students - thoae not living at
home, not claimed by their parents for
tax purposes, and not receiving more
than $800 In financial support - will
find the West the moat axpenalve part
of the country, the CSS study

•

.conclu~ed .

Medicine bono~ 7 faculty members
Seven Buffalo physicians were
honored with awards at the School of
Medicine's May faculty ITlMting.
The Louis A. Siegel Award for
excellence fn teaching was presented to
Drs. John Wright, profaeaor and
chairman of the Depllrtment of
Pathology; Sattar Farzan , clinical
associate profesaor of medicfne; and
Stefan Madajewlez, re._ch cancer
clinician I at Roswell Park Memorial
Institute by Ul B medical students Ellen

Tedaldl and Anthony DIBenedetto. Ms.
Tedaldl also preeented the Houae StaH
Teaching Award to Ora. Nancy Nlel88rl and Richard Lewis.
•
Dr. John Naughton, Medical dean,
presented the Stockton Kimball Award
to Dr. Leon · Farhl, profesaor of
physiology. Dr. ClYde L. Randall,
lormer acting dean of the School , now
professor of gynecology-obstetrics,
received the Dean's Award from Dr.
Walter Scott Walls.

�4

A first

GRAY
PANTHERS

Orville Murphy and his wif~ lived
In EIJicott fora year; they're leaving,
but they might return in 3 or 4 years
can't be ective In a constructive way,
Murphy commented, "they'll punch
· holes In the wall ."
HeN"t•UIB first:
Pro'- OI'Ytlte T. Murphy and his

wile lhed In the donna th Ia

y-.

A 11'0'- In the History Depart- · Murphy felt the y - was a
~ul experience, but bleSies
Blloott tO be ~gl-..d and
-pllceled.
"EElicott hu polflnllal," he said. "It's
one of the moat beautiful buildings rve
lived In, I!Ut It hu to be made

1/weble.•

.._ f_.. the complex waa designed
• a complete dell VIII}' eyllem, one
which enooongea IIUdents to· . be _

=:t:..n-=.~ ::~~~.:~. ~':'=.

bec:auee the technology Iaso complex
11181 It Ia el.weya bre&amp;klng down. This
encourages lnvol...,ent through frus-

trat~. couldn1 do the most simple
_things like turning the heat up or down,
or opening a window without getting
Malntenenoe, • Murphy said. " For
example, I got a call from students that
thMI was an arvument because of a p.rty ln!JI~ thr,:.w:o~c:"~'~t:i,~
too,ot; so I suggested
opening the window, but they couldn1,
they needed a key.
• Anolher example Ia the lime
lllt...uonal Coi'-De wanted to gl.. a
011- dinner. 1 - - ' e d uelng tile
. . _ In the c:aleterii, but they were
told 11181 the ..... so ~lghly
IOplllalated, thMt wu~ no way they
could uee ttwn. •
The lludenta had the din-. all right,
but they had to bring the food down two
fllghta ol atalrs to the cafeteria.

~was

......., ...

11M an .,;,_to lheee kinds
ema. "AI thl!)' come Into the
ng to qplace thlnge and
rel...,llh, they llhould simplify the
techno lOllY. Why not put temperature
~ l!nobe on the rw:llatora an!l
tatm. on the windows?"
He- ftell the exterior environment of
l!llleoCt 8110 encour8Q11 a paaelve
81tltude.

of

bu

--~ ':1: :::-.:'.=."'::::' ;~~

better nat aap Into them. In winter,
81uellnla U.. In a stage of al-. They
_,'1 '*e to the anow and have a
puel. . _,onee. The Unlvioralty could
ciD a lot to develop crou-c:ountry
lldllla • .ncl toboggen runa; they oould
clllcllf the oondUlOn of the taka for lee
lllllllna. An -lronrnerlt now as
...U.could be turned Into a p._ that
-'II be aotl.... y enJored .•

Loslns touch

"Living In Ellicott helped us to wea11..
ourselves away from a big house; now
- we plan to buy a smaller house on the
edge of campus. Do you realize-the
fantastic amoulll of lime spent
commuting that could be avoided?" he
asked. The Murphys won 't live In the dorms
again next year because of other
commitments.
_
"Our c:teclelon to leave bas little to do
with the ..lue of the experience and
since we plan to get a house nearby, Will be able to enjoy the -advantages
anyway. I'd Ilks to go back to the
resldllflC8 halls In three..or four years. I
have already epoken lo my wile about It,
and I know she would~ too."

Barthelme

square dance on campus, but people
ara goln'g to see
more than
do-sl-dos from the Gray P'anthers.
. T~e group now In an embryonic
stage of deveiopment at U/B, i .. part of
a larger ~ational organization founded
eight years ago by Maggie Kuhn, then a
65-year-old forced retiree.
Since Its Inception, the organization's
goals have broadened - In dimension .
Now the Gray • Panthers no longer
em·lslon themselves as merely an
advocacy 9roup for retirees, but rather
is a coalii!Q!l of all age groups working
for human liberation and social change.
11Je Gray Panthers presently have •
over 75 chapters or " networks" across
•the country which strive to rslse the
nation's consciousness regarding the
debilitating effects of ageism . Beca.u;;e
they v ew aging as part of a total . lofe
pr
they wQrk to allay the needs-of
all aoe groups ani:l help combat the
effects of ageism directed at any' of

th~ :;' "accomplish this, the organization
has created task forces In such major
areas of cori&lt;;em as health , housing ,
media, welfare ra1orm, . nutrition and
mandatory retirement.
.
1

I 00 memben hereOn campus. the Gray Panthers were
organized by Jake Kramer, who now

~~f:e a~i~~~cY;~u~~Pg~'"';~;,;, T':1;~

Millard Flltm·ore College Student
Association and are- also closely
aligned with the Community Action

tio~r?o~~~esl::';:,.,~~~~f ~h":t,:r;,~:f;

and the group's advisory board who
were Instrumental In helping the
Panthers break ground here.

m:.::rz~t!yan~h~,~~~~~. -~~a~~~'::,~~

enthusiastically. Contrary to what some
might presume, tho majority of
members are college age students; only
about 10 per e&amp;nt are older members of
the Un l ver~lty community.
Kramer. a recent 65-year-old graduate

f~ ~~~~a~~:.!\lr~~:ndcg~~~~es~~u;~~

group has received from U/B studQ~~ts.
He said he Is frequently approached on
campus and asked for more information
about the Panthers.
Kramer Is now helping coordinate a
free workshop on gerontology schedul-

~~ ~~r~ ~~k~ L:::;~gd,1:o~

will vl~lt
of

Reporter Sial! -

They made tl)e1r debt:~,~ last mo11th at a

Corps .

Tbey'U Uve DeMby

~~

also as a vehicle for lntagretlon of the
elderly Into society's mainstream.

By Joyce Buchnowakl

Murphy moved Into . the dorms
because In the last lew years he began
to worry that he was losing contact with
students. He feels he has regained that
contect through the experience. •
"I took part ln the earlier discussions
when Ellicott was supposed to house
prolesS0/'8. With my two children off to
college, 1 decided to give II a try now."
He and his wife moved In last
September. Although forewarned that
students were nolsy, Jhey were not
disturbed once, he salcf.
·
" I saw more movies this year than I
have· In the last tl'n ; I saw mJlllY
productions at the Katherine Cornell
theatre and my wife got Involved In the
Craft Center. living here allowed us· to
participate In these events much more
easily and mueh more casually. Our
response has really been very positive.
We. feel like we have actually learned."
Asked how students reacted to a
r.;otessor In their midst, Murphy said,
They took a wait-and-see attitude, but
soon wanned up. You should see the ·
gilts they gave us - pottery, paintings,
their food specialties. We often ~hared
meals. We talked about ge~eral
problems of education, what a
university shoulll be like, and our
frustrations."
Murphy also offered Independent
study on autobiographies and biographies In Western Civilization for
people on his floor. He took part In a
symposium In Ellicott sponsored bY,
Vlco · College and had " marvelous ·
discussions at the bagel breakfasts
every other Sunday.

Engllati

has

~me ::.:=~:r,..·;l~-~:.'11~

Profeaaor of Engllah durii!Q the period
July 1~1. During hla vran to the
c;ampus, Barthelme will conduct a
WOIIIahop In Writing Fiction, given lor
h!O hours of cnocllt u pert of the apeclal
...,.mer tmagea/Worda/Spacea program of the Faculty of Arts arrd Letters.
The wO!bhop· will meet ·MondaysFrldaya. from 2 to 5 p.m., In 322
Clemana. Raglatratlon Ia limited, but Is
OINIIIIO all membera of the communlt~t.
whether or not they are lludents at the
Unh..,alty; credit Ia transferrable to
ather lnlthutlona.
Fof lnform81ion about reglatration,
call the Ofltoa of Summer Seaalona at
113&amp;-ZIIZ2 or the Department of English,
113&amp;-25~.

llartllalme, one of the twp leading
a!*lmental wrftera In the country
today (the - - .. Jolin Barth), .. tile
author of The 0 . . Fatllef, UnapeakI'NctloN, UnMtunll Acts, Snow
W/11,., and othe&lt;' bOokl, and Wll the
wl,_ of the N811onel Book AWWd lor
CIIIICI-'a u-.... In 11172 for The
Sllflht" ltrW/ular Fire Engine ar The

-

HI,..,. Tlt11Mrlng D/lflfJ.

While on CllllpUa, Barthel me wlll11iva
a publiC readlnu or lecture at a lime and
~ to be announced, and will bring
as hla g - Joaeoh McElroy and
either OtKe Paley or AnM Beatty. who
wiH -!ao give public readings.

of the Gray Panthers' Youth Task Force.
An the end of the month , Kramer wi ll
meet with the Panther's advisory board
to lay. plans for the group's activities

~~~t%unl~: t~i:.~~n~ ni~~al

==

tournament and Olympics for the,
elderly. In addition , the Gray Panthers
would llklfU/B to host an elder hostel
next· summe( so senior citizens could
use University dorm and eating
facil ities while attending classe§ or
• t0

I

t

I

I

-

t ~

I

; I

•

I

•

~

;

t

t

I

till _

.A~·~~
.;1~
,,...
t~\
1:'

,,•
I

-

't\

Sped.al ;affinity
The Gray- Panthers feel a special
affinity'"1or youth since both age

P/~n"tt.~se:r:~d f:~rt= o~":g,..:,•sae;.;

influence. It I&amp; l mpprtant, Kramer
Insists. that the young. and old not be
Isolated from each 9tlier. The Panthers
believe that onfy throu~h •a Joining of

r~~~~~~}~l~~~~t~i ;:?::.;;r~:outh

As far as their local long range qoals,
the U/B Gray Pantliers have "ambitious
ones " says Kramer. They want the
elderly and low income brackets to have
free access to U/B health clinics and
also want senior citizens to be
permitted to register gratis for credit

courses.

VIolence has
Its place
" Most people need to imagine
violence, no.t experience it," U /B 's
Leslie Fiedler · said In an article in
the Knight-Ridder newepapers last
month .
•
Fleaier's belief thai. violent fantasies
are useful was juxtapose(! with the
National PTA's recent aelecllon of
"Donnie and Marie" as one -of the besl
programs on TV. The artlcle asked if TV
violence Is as bad as It's cracked up to
be.
.
The story referred to Fiedler as " a true
populist papa when It comes to vlolenco
In the popular arts. "
Whether It's Bat.!)'lan , Baratta or
Othello, Fiedler 1eels violence can be
"educating, entertaining or just plain
llberaUog." the piece said .
Fiedler told a recent ~ymposlum -on
violence at Albion College that the
" bluenoses" have been on the attack for
years, ''railing against the excesses of
the Brothers Grimm, wringing hands
over the dangers of c;s&gt;mlc bOOk pow! and now rushln~ _ to 11 negative
judgment over televiSIOn violence."
He w•tc:.hes 'StAnky•
Fiedler, the article reported, watches
"Starsky and Hutch" and aoep ·operas.
And loyes them.
The main function of violence In the
~rts, ~e said, "Is to release ua from our
customary Inhibitions and restraints.
"By puttirlg us momentarily out of
control, ... It frees us from ell moral
codes and taboos, permlta us a
vacation from our .-yday .norallty ,"
he said . "This kind of temporary
our
madnese Is necese.y for
psychological well-being . We demand
that art provide us with 11. 'We forage
around for it."
And we forage until we find it,
because "these momenta--of prlvllaged
Insanity" free us briefly from "the
tyranny of the ego and 1!18 tedium of
everyday life."
'
A psych!Mrht dlwanwA concerned child paychlatrlst,
Michael Rothenberg of the Unl-slty of
Washington, was quoted as Devll's
(or Angels') Advocate. Fiedler's musIngs ara "irresponsible anl1 reprehensIble," Rothel\l&gt;erg waa reported as
saying.
·
An outspoken and artk:ulate critic of
TV violence, Ro,henberg has analyzed
years of research on !he effects of
television on children :
·
" 'I know there's a risk (of
censorship), but I'm In the position of
balancing risk factors,' Rothenberg
said. 'I think the risk of a public health
hazard and mind pollution Is greater
than the f'lak of censorshl~ . I've made
mychoice."'
-

FulbrJght grant

•

Marilyn G . Glenn . VISiting assistant

r.,~~,::'~ ~u\~r~g~t~~:n'Je[~· ,~:::'f;

sociolinguistics, at the University of
Lodz, Poland, during academ ic 1978-79.

�.klne11,1t71

June

in

Buffalo

1-

Brant Is Info SPACE music (music In
The fifth annual "June In" Buffalo"
which he is concerned with the spatial
Festival concluded Tuesday night with
placement of Instruments In the hall for
a program of music and film devoted to
acoustl~ reasons, to balance sound).
the wor1&lt;s of VIrgil Thomson.
During the two-week event, which
•Virgil Thomson, who wouks say
. featured six noted Amartcan comonly that he's "known for his operas [for
posers-In-residence, there were eight
which
Gertrude Stein provided librettos!
- putlllc performances of the wor1&lt;s of the
ana music, criticism." "Ask others, l
six and of those of other twentletb
you
want
to know more," he advised.
century composers.
•
•CheriH WUori,_, co-director of the
Among those in resldance were:
Group for Contemporary Music, whose
•Ben Johnston, who Is Intrigued,
among other "1hlngs, with the door music was featured Friday, June 9; and
• •Elliott Carte(,. a member of the
safety symbol used on campus. That
faculty at the Jultllard School.
uses in his music '1o adjust standard
The director of the . festival, which
even tuning to create a closer naJural
was co-sponsored by the Department of
vibration of strings and winds."
Music
and the Center for Creative and
Jornston played and lectured on the
Performing Arts, was Morton F-'«&lt;mllrl,
mus1c of Harry Partch who died In 1974.
U/B's
Varese Professor of Composi•Henry Brant (in the englneet's cap), _
tion.
who says his music reflects the history
of American experimental music-part
•The only thing I can say about my
lves and part Varese. From lves he took
music," Feldman offered, Is to quote
the "collage of his music;" from Varese
:-:a:,;~~nf~~e said : .... . tt's
:_t~ e Instrumentation." Most recently :

P"'!'aps

J.
I

I
l

�June15, 1178

"It appears we are perceived as being different
in educational and intellectual ~capabilities
just because we do a different type of work."

McNamara reviews her year wi~h the PS$
there
=-of._
~following comments
.._ Ellen IleNe....,., outgoing
Pro,_lonlll Staff
T1wr - her opinions and do
net n 11111111) ..nect tho• of other
PIS ............

EdiiDn

-

..-e

Q. Wlwlt do )'OU dlmk
tbe
-tor acco...,ushments ol tbe
PSStllhyeul .

=

A. The byword lor the Professional
Stall Senate was communication . We

=utc:::~.~.h~ ~~~

But I think liNer( accompllah:.t:nt was to the Idee of communication.
One of the major rvm•s. lor me; was
~

~~:.'T~~n:nly ~~~ -

monthe lhel PBS officers were not al!le
~ with hlm. We (the . three

to

=-~~~nty:,~ta:,

tile E-.IIW Commll1ee and ge!l81"81
~-

We ..eallllehed 1111atlvely regulw- ......... tors.n.tono. Two of the • IMI on a regiiW beals, and the othera,
81
' -tot U.
onceExec:utl
aThey c.me
tilde
.. ··
Comml11'!8
with
=-~euggeetlona, and -

.

.

a-

Q. Were
mentsl

;any dls;ap!!'Ollit1

ln~ituJ~~al ~~~':fs a~a"ros ~dd~he i!:,~

that a representative of the PSS was not
permitted to serve on the Uni-sltyWide Committee lor lnsiiiutlonal
Funds. There are professional stall
people now on that committee and that
was considered by the panel as
sufficient representation; but, in fact,
these people do not repr,sent the PSS
constituency.
.
Professional stall also did not
respond greatly to the opportunity to
submit propos8Js lor lnslllutlonal
funds . This also was a disappointment

~~alf~·a~o;;,~erlie:d ~~~ ~o:~~~~

:::e hh~"!, ~~ fo~an~:~g:;~~::,Sto~­

..
inlvldual research . Part oHhe lack
response, t'm ure. Is due to that . We
have not been received with open arms
as far as carrying out research.
We run mto the same problem
concerning Internships. These seem to
be suitable lor faculty llecause faculty
can reduce their worl&lt;ioad. But who is
going to do the job of a professional
staff employee? It appears we are
perceived as being different In
educational and Intellectual capabilities
and capacities because we do a
1

cr...loped a , _ format lor

?~rr:~~· f~Tsof :;~~is~ th~~e~~e:
through many areas.
'

~uaa...,arton

ou- Glbaon, who
UUP; Willard Ellloft,
who dlecuuad ln811tutiDnal funds;
Delld ....... wllo 18111ad about anergy

Q, Is there .ay WAY you feel
tills Attitude un be dispelled?

=="~~~=
Ill.,.
flllllllllltMio Act and the Unl--

A . I think we've started by making
suno everyone knows the attitude
should be dispelled . II, In fact, we are
needed to Implement academic policy,
lt'almportanttha\ we contribute at least
to the development of It In the early
atallea . I think we have cut through on

Aleo,

w

~-=~us.=
...... teeing the
had

allY'a III'D!IIMI to adll- compliance
....., Ita -mMdalaa on handicapped

_.,...,_

lneddllton, . . eetabtlehed a worl&lt;lng
........., wtlh the Faculty Sanate.
of 11118 IIIII wtn continua 1a
llllnutw . , . _ , the
....... ~-On. trial ballla
far-~. a
of aach
__..,. ~U. wUI attend the

Ont............
_ of

,._....1..

otlllfl ..........
. . . . . . of the PU &amp;acutlve
Oranillllllle..., - wltll . . ~..
~ to d'-aa our neacla,
...... lftd
w. had a
~-'Oft with tt.n. H a
lllg . . . . . . . . . . till .,.., of the

-...mu.

.
.
.
=

............. • .-11 of poor
«!OOIIIII!IUIM!iii~niii'aliia•._.}fllll .....,.._ So . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . mptlque and
It . . . . . , poaltlw .
llld It ........ up Ill lclncle of
-~untolllon.

--~~ofthePSS
........... _ _ ,Com-

our INII«

.......... eupporl hom . .

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

.~~~.!:'/:'atllllhere,

co~:":,~

Its effectlvenessl

A. I do thlpk there Is a weakness that
may have become evlcfent when the PSS

~ai~sts;~:~~~~~~~~~.'r~~~~~~~

Inclusion of professional stall from 'the
U I B Foundation, the ~esearch Foundation,
and
the Faculty Student
As5oclatlon.
I don't know lilt's really a weakness,
though it may be perceived as one.
Because of confusion In the deliberation on . the matter at tile last PSS
meeting. I am wondering how we
actually perceive ourselves. The Issue
said to me that we may not have a.
collective ld..tol what the-Pn)fesslonat
Staff Sen
should be. I'm not sure if
this Is a rBai.Jo'eakness at this point. but
II we go back arul forth regarding the
composition of the Stall Senate, I think
It could develop Into one In the future. I
think by bringing In these presently
unrepresented groups, the Stall Senate
will be greatly strengthened.

Q. WhAt ..-e your comments
reg..-dlng the stAte of the qntversltyl
A. I think we are too protective of our
own untts, 'Whefher It's an office unit,
the PSS·or the Faculty Senate. We get
Involved In protecting our own areas
and don't communicate lor lear the

::::n.P~s~~~~b~~ru~~~~~~~d:. ~~~
~:!!:a.:,e~u~~:s~~e l:':v:~~t~:::· o~~~

this. Personally, I think

ev~one

Is

:,::~~~~~,c~~:~~~:':;~~~l~i3u~~~

group will go to another and delineate
the reasons why Improved communication Is necessary, then I think It will
come about. But what I lind ridiculous

~::'at

out
not

nee:h·o~~J'~a~~':'~·~rni

As lar as communication with
President, Ketter Is concerned,
lime the PSS approached' him, he
received, listened to and reacted to us.
We didn't always agree, b4l he always
followed ~J&gt;n his promises. II he does -

mry

~~~~ ~:~~P foP~~·c~~~1~~~~aX~Jh~

dllflcult to believe he doesn't&lt;lo It with
other groups on campus.
·

Q. Whoat do .you c;onslder the
most difficult ;aspect of your
ye..- .u PSS chAirperson?
A. The only thing I found draining ,is
that It was definitely like apart-time job
- a very demanding one. II was as
demanding as my own Job at the
University. I think the PSS chairmanship Is the best Internship on campus ~
probably · an Internship In University
politics .

Q. Wh;at ..-e some of 'the. roAdblocks -Pss fues ln. trying to
AttAin Its go;alsl
A. As I mentioned before, one is
attitude, as was exemplified on the
Issue of Institutional funds. I also think
PSS Is viewed as extremely conserva·
live by members of the President's
Office. Dr. Ketter has never expressed
that opinion, but others have. Bx being
viewed this way, we are often seen as

Pn~~~~r~l:i~~hr:~:.h~Pn~ :f:w!'~}

conservative sometimes acts as a
barrier In getting people to listen to .us.
The PSS may not come on strong
verbally, and may not be particularly
demonstrative, but we nevertheless
mean what we say and want action.

Q. How would you llke to see~
the PSS evolve In the futurel

be communicated,
-

t~r,:r we'Ye

The
jus111ke sex
diiCrlmlnation . But at least It's out In
the open and ,_ balln recoghlzed. I
think , we have made great strides by
being on Important committees like tha
General Education Oommlttee and the
Springer Report Committee. I kllow
been opposition to us aervlnjj
tlieoo

na

~d~'::s".,.:rn~~e~~~~~-ew~':r~~~
headway.

·

Q, .Wlwlt will l8lely be on tbe

- - - .............. -.pllallmenl

........ -

1:'~1 i~:i::t~ss:'h'l!t~!:~ r~v~~~

:=,t -.:a"an:"tf!:~th::,r
=lonal stall, so I

Q, How c.a the PSS Improve

- .;'

....... jiiWidjljlta- ..,. -

............... We.._._ 11,000

....... of the · ~ . . . ye..-1
A. I'm cettaln the Humen Reeources
t'p.ll\lelopo,_t
Committee will . be

~~t~l~~~~~80=~~~
-v close

PSS cllalrparaonl waa •
llalaon with the HRO

:'e:·lthw~~~~~~'::ttt!

Advisory

': ~

level, he would provide
oontlnulty tor lha program when he
...umed the Chair.
I thlnll w will have to oontlnua to
wodc on the IIIOtM problem. From a
per-.; _.,_lw, I · think It's
Mglnnlng io IIQplvwa. I don't know II
'**- 10 lniiOhllld In 80 meny
d i n - - myaell and have had 10
much - o a l communication thla
,..-, or wll«t. I may be perceiving the
laaua dlfflnntly from the c:llalr of the
Slaff Sanate, blill IMIMI enthualaam Ia
building and a bal._ lealing Ia
amarg~ng regnlng the likelihood of
doinG aomelhlng about the morale
altulition.
Alflrmatlve A.PIOn will be algnlllcant
__..,_.____
~aethe
,
In
gnNnd

n·e

rm

ll'iomloltl- Dolin. H..toy.

Wilson, Hurley, Dohn _
_will head .PSS In t 978-79
The Proleaaional Staff Senaie haa
elected officers lor t97!H9. They are:
c,.lrman, Clifford B. Wilson, associate
director of housing; vice chairman,
Thomas F. Hurley, assistant director,
Unl-alty Pl-.nent and Career r

&amp;:.'.~r:i~\sf~t r:;;.e:~~n~d~~~~~ ~i.

Continuing Education .
All take office July 1.
, A native ol ~ocheater, Wilson joined
. the U / 8 staff In 1989. He received his
B.A. and master's In student personnel

~M~~~~~=~~~~~rle~

a Buffal

alive ,

Is

received botll his bachelor's and his
~;{'/.er's her~ He joined the staff In_
Catharine L. Dohn joined U/B In 111&amp;4
aa secretary to the dean, Division of
Continuing Education.· She attended
Millard Fillmore College, and-will soon
be completing requlrementa lor a
master's In business administration.
~=ltl:~~n fCI\~Inted to her current
The new ofllcera will heaQ lhelr first
Professional Stall Senate meeting In
-September.

�......

.luM11,1f71

.·

Over 50 faculty are "
In line for U/B grants

7

l.

Thlrty-thrw health-related .--ch
proposals totaling $74,008 were funded
ttvough BRSG (biomedical research
support grant) funds In the spring round
of awwda, Charles M. Fogel, acting
chalrperaon of the InstitUtional Funds
program hu announced.
In eddltlon,
Fogel
said,
the
Unlvensltv-wk:le Committee 4or the
Allocation of BR~G Funds end Special
Fundi recomm81)ded 21 other projects
(totaling $21,281) lor eupport from
Special Funds. Projects In this group
must alao be considered by a
committee of the U/ B Foundation
before a final cor.omltment can be
made. Foge~ said that the U/B
Foundation Ia the major supplier of
these special lunda.

~~':';t~1 y:=,e~w~~~n~~~3!: and

the

Archlt.chn
BoY1111y ~lbort, Design Studies, ''The
Powerhouse: larttln Industrial Complex,
Seneca Street, Buffalo. A Model for the
, Documentation of Key lnduatrlal Buildings,"
.$1200.

""'
Lett••
Saul and
Elk(n,
Theo!AI, "Summer Theotre : •

~= ~':'.;ro1;;~"u~d;~:~~~~;"$~m~

Preludes of Claude Debussy," $622; George
Smith, Art, "Urban Architectural Sculpture
. Project," $100; Divld Tart&gt;et, English,
• James Boswe~ and t"' Low," S500.
Educailonal Studies
"
J. Ronald Gentlle, Educotlonal Psycho!·

~~Kt~·R:,'"~:tavt:'d Co~r;:;::en~~

Anoth8f," $1100; Aobeo:t Nichols E&lt;luca·
tlonal PsvcholoQy, "Family Conflguratlon
and Spocillc AbiOIIes, " $2000.
Engt.-tng

o~fn':.t~~pe~te'rig~:~~ai~ng~~~~,;,.~

System Processes," $1000; Bljan Salale,

Crvfl Engineering, " The Interaction of Two-

~:~P~~~g~~::,ri;r:JJ,~rbutent Jet

with the

Bulls will play
1
9 g amesn.e xt fall

Law

James B. AUeson , "injunctions and tabor

:~~~~P~.A~r!o~r.~~~hfc~•'rss~~~ ~~~~

Allocotlon of Legal Aid," $1000.

utnrtn

Mildred F. Hallowitz,

The 1978 U/ B
tball Bulls will play
a lull nine-game .schedule, Including
live games at Rotary Field , Athletic
Director Edwin D. Muto has announced .
The Bulls played only lour games In
1977, the first season back on the
gridiron since 1970, tying one and
losing three as Head Coach Bill Dando
began the process of rebuilding.
£!rockport State, Canislus and Coast
Guard return to the 1978 schedule.
Additions are SUNY at Albany, Allred
University, Cortland State, John Carroll
University, University of Rochester and

Health Sciences

~~i~~~· ~nsM~:~~~e St~ftec~:on HS~~~
Reservation

&amp; Restorat ion of

Its

Rare

Materials, " Sot05.

Management

. ~~be~!;~~~vol,.!"~::e~t s~~~e,~ro
Sys&amp;em In a Public

Non-P~tt ~gency,"

$1000 ; Stanley Zionta, Operat ions Analysis,

" Multiple CrHerta Problem Solving with
Discrete Alternat ives,'' $1200.

Nlttural Sciences
Michael Aam &amp; Robert Gayley, Physics,

"C t3 FT NMf\ Analysis of Water-Soluble
Impurities in Polar tee." $707 ; James Sidle,

~Jo'o,?,~~ 1sct~;1e:n:hv~=~~~;:1udtro

Honeybeu," $1100.
' Social Sciences
Athol Abrahams, Geography, 'The Effect
of Link Interactions on Interior Channel Link
Lengths," $750 ; Richard Hull, Ph ilosophy ,

''The Ethical and Soclel Potentials of the

Team Approach to Medical and HeaJth Care
Detlvery," $700;
Garol_yn
Korsmeyer,
Philosophy. " Preparatlon for Analyzing the

~rof~rs~lp, .fe~~~Ao~~~ 1~cm~!t~~
11

Communicative Disorders, " Computer Anal-

~~~f ~~~~~~~~::,e:_~ut~roc;.~o:.~.~~\·;~

mation of Number, Si ze and Location of
Archeological Sites In Western New( Yort&lt;;'
$2500.

•

w~;~!b:O~i:S~;.· ~~!:/l~·John Carroll ,
September Hi; Brockport , Septetfiber
October14. !Homecoming) ;
Rochester, October 28 (Parents' Day) ;
and Alfred , November ·11 , the season
finale.
The Bulls open at Cortland on
September 9, and also play road games
at Waynesburg , September30; Canisius,
October 7; and Coast Guard at New
London , Conn ., November 4. The site
lor the Canlsi)Js gam!! has not yet been
determined .

~ ; Albany ,

sc~.:fu~:s~~~ R~~s a ~~~op~n:~t~

dropped the sp0&lt;1.
U/B hes laced sl• of Its 1978 football
opponents in previous years, Including
Rochester, which was one of two foes

:~:~· ~~ ~~~kBc?~d:=;e~~

1957; Rochester has. won 14 games, the
Bulls sl•, with four ties.
·
The Bulls laced Allred 35 times
between 1902 and 1957. The Saxons .
hold a 17-15-3 edge In the aeries.
,
U/B gained live victories and one tie
In 10 meetings with Cortland from 1950
to1959.
Canlslus and the Bulls heve~eyed

~~ ~~~~· ~:,r-.fn"·~~ear~ntll

=

season's 22-8 triumph by the Golden
Griffins. Brocl&lt;pOft hes appeared on the
U/B schedule three times.
Coa~t Guard defeated the Bulla 41-14
last fall, the only meeting bet-n the
two.
The 1978 schedule: Sept. 9
Sept. 16
Sept. 23
Sept. 30
Oct. 7
Oct. 14
Oct. 21
Oct. 28
Nov. 4
Nov. t1

"' Cortland s.-e
JOHN CAIIROU. U.
IROCKf'OIIT STATE
at Waynesburg, Pa.
" C.nlslus
"SUNY /Al.IAIIY
Open Data
••u. Of IIOCHESTER
ill CGast GUOIII
AIRISI U.

1:30 p.m.
1;30

p.m.

1:30 p.m.

l:t5 p.m.
TBA

1:30 p.m.

1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:00 p.m.

"Homocoming
··Pa-ts' Day

Loubere pUblishes a history of the wine industry
go~~ ~'fn/· h;~ub:~io~:,r:,es 11t~n'drl~~

Manau-t
C. CWt Pegels, Management Systems,
" Aollnement of HMO Enrollment Projection
Moclel," $1200.
Nlttural S c l o.r. S..chley, Chemistry, "Gallium, A
ToxJc Eo~ronm.ntaJ Pollutant," $2600 ;
Edmund P.• Oey, Physics, "Magnet
SuaeepUbiNty of Metallo-Proteins," S1750 ;

John

t. Ho, l'hyelca, " Biomedlcol Appllce·

~.;;;,; ~ra ~ H.~cl'.... s~~roa":~Y·:
.. Ro&amp;e a.C l:aulfldes
~been

rn

the Fokiing of

Trypeln tnhlbiiO&lt;," $3350.

regions where It is produced, and tPnally
realized that Its history In recent times
was une•plored .
He became Involved In wine-making
as an amateur In 1968, but It was not
until three years later that he undertook
the first of .._al journeys to the
wine-lands of France and Italy.
There he studied the art of viniculture
and the hiStory oltts development. His
first book based .on these experiences
was Radicalism in Medltemnean
France, published in 1975 by lhs SUNY
Press; it concentrated on an analysis of
radicalism and the wine Industry.
• Now comes, The Red and the White:
A History of Wine in FrenC. and Italy In
the Nineteenth Century, also published
by SUNY.
In the new wort&lt;, Loubere follows. the
evolution of wine-making from practices recommended long ago by the
Greeks .and Romans through technical
changes that occurred In the nineteenth
century. II ·was then \hal a near
revolution In production dernocratlclzed
consumption , changing wine from· a
royal beverage to a feature of the
people's dinner tables.
1
Thla "revolution," Loubere points
out, set off a wave of land buying and
planting on the part of the vintners ol
France and Italy as they frantically
sought to mine the golden age of wine.

po:~l bl~·.~ \:~~~o':f1t;~~~~~";;~
1

benefits to wlnemen) •lso brought In

~~~~·~~r;,..- t':.: r:J.J!~·:-,~,?.:;.11~

some grapevines) were unwillingly
Imported from America. The Europeans
had to replant . usl~g American stock .

Loubere shows how technology
Interacted with economic, social and

·r:.,l,l~~~/'a~":g~~~n~o .ft~~,c:::,c;e,na e~~

hand·ralsed wine, the Industry turned to
mass production by the end of the
nineteenth century.
Loobere u - a "comparative,
descriptive, analytical" ..,proach, cor&gt;lrasllng the lndustties of France and

of Its regions.
Wineman '8spoused a wide range of
politics and economics, he says,
depending on where they lived, the
grapes they grew, a,nd the markets they
of life of the people Involved, from
sought :" While a place remained lor ~ simple growers to ~thy distributors.

~~in.:=o~fs\'~~~:s~: ~;:.~

Gult•r duo to perform with Segovia
Duo Guitarists Joanne Castellani and
Michael Andrlacclo have 'been awarded
a lull scholarship to perform at the
Master Class of Andres Segovia at the
twenty·first " Musica en Compostela" In Sentlago de Compostela, Spain, this

~~r~::: iheT~~~n~~~~ec~~f 8~~~

Relallons and " Muslca &amp;A Compostela" ·
on the recommendation of Maestro

Segovia.
The duo will travel to Spain all•
participating In "La Vacanza Chltar·
ristlca dl Trlvero" In Vercelll, Italy.
Andrlacclo Is a member of the
faculty of the De(lartment of MUlllc
here; Ms. Castellant Is on the faculty of
the State University College at
Fredonia.

•M~Namara
(from pe,ge 6, coi. •t

·

Unlversltt should become more in·
volved In the design , Implementation
and interpretation of academic policy.
We already are lnvotvep In lmprementa·
tlon by the nature of our jobs. But I see
the Staff Senate as assuming a stronger
governance role In this area. I think we
have started In that direction by sending
PSS representatives to the General
Education and Springer committees.
We have sent with trlltm a list of
professional staff considered e•perts In
particular areas. So, while these
committees are developing policies, II
'any questions arise, they c.n call the

e•pens ..tid get answers. II these
people are used, that's the proof of the
pudding . If not, this Is something we •
will have to tackle.

ac:lvrr~u~c:,,::~o t~es~~t~. v~~:

future, I hope Senators bring up more
Issues at general membership meetIngs. It seems the Executive Commiii!MI
Is currently- presenting all the Issues. I
would definitely like to see more action
from the floor. In general, I would ljke to
see a more vigorous interaction among
the Sanatora, additional area meetings,
and Increased aommunlcalion between
the Ext~Cutlve Committee and Senators.

�"""'15, 1178

'The Tempest'
opens July t t
IDthe Park

.

Ul B'a third aMBOn of free Shak&amp;-

C'~ ~-=-~~ ~~ re~:r.

.IWCIMI by Saul Elkin.
"The Tempest," probably the last play
wllolly wrlttan by Shakespeare, will run
tllrough July 25.
The Del- Pari&lt; production will
, _ the play
from Its Island
aetllna. and out of the 16th century,
Into tlie dlatant future. It Is set In a
"St_.." world beyond chrome and
when technology has returned us
fo a prtmltlwt condition.

-•Y

at-.

~r~alicO::~!· bls~::~s ~d"!',;

orlgt.,.. mus~ score 6Y Ray Leslee.

=·

llkCilllre .........
James McGuire,

by

last

1

summer's

tll?e Delaware P..tt production of "The
Wlnter'll Tale." Others ln a large cast
Include Theresa DePaolo, Gregg
Meday, Richard Wesp, Marl&lt; Donahue,
and Laura Kramer.
The second summer production

~~~~~~~~=t:: ;~~·.:n~:,.~
Thlo, one of the moot frequently

tt. ~~rc r~~

tlon, Falstaff. F = had original!~
been killed off In an eerty ..,_ of
"l*vy V; but the Bard rev!Yed him to 1M delight of El~lhano and of
..-cllng~lona of audiences.

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

,

llegrM ~date for fling "ApplicaMl!!l&lt;loy. July "l:'"tor aD

~'R:~~=.:.tinues

UIJABFUI'

-

~. t970l Cont~~A~nee
· ~· C.636·29191o&lt; Ohow tmes
--day rock c~

in Hayes B for the 2nd and 3rd SUmmer Sea;
aions. 1st Seaaion-4Mt day to drop courses
"R" ~and- financlllf penallY
tsJune 16.
DUE end Oraduete Reglatr11tkM't-faft Semester~terills mav be obtai'led In HayeS a duri'\g
June fOld July. AI studenta .submittong regis1ration
mst- t&gt;v July 31 ..-. ......, their _ . . . ,

~ol the hisloric

· Jimi ·· cloong rotio1lon ot .. _
St. ~ Bamer"' he$ been caled ''an awe-

,_,.,ition

some
of Arnerican idools through the
IIJirjtuolilyof music .·
FIUol'

lllplon to -.:ow (Curtiz. 1943). 146 Oief·
encJorJ 7 p,m. Sponsore&lt;H&gt;Y 1t1e Ge&lt;&gt;'"' tor

UUABAUI'
Woodatoct.

--98·

Conf&lt;!reiice -..tre. ~.

636-29191o&lt;ahowtmes.

wlf be avaHable In Hayes B, s~ on July

10. 1978.

.,.__ Int......,..

CONVERSATIONS fN THE AATS
British Writer Anlllony
~ ("A Clock-'&lt; O&lt;onge") Couner C..
(Ch0nnel8). 4 p.m.

UUABfUI•
Folllnl'a So!yricon (ftaly·Fnonce . 1969). 110'

MFACC. Ekott. Cal 636·2919 l9r show IWnea.
Adrniplon cha'ge.
A fan-.agorlcat, ......... . Pagan
Dolce Vila: Felfli co-aJthor8d tho eer-y.

SUNDAY-18
Falatalt will be played by Saul Elkin,
and the "wlvM," .Mistress Ford and
MlaiNM "--le. by Tlllresa DePaolo anti
UUABFUI'
Anna Kay Franca (a profeaaa of
Folf""'• ~ (ltl!lr-FIWlC&lt;I. 1969). 170
Engllall '*-1· Others In the caa1 are: "- MFACC, Elico&lt;t. Col 636-2919 for ShOw ·
"-'1 KaMIIec:, Man;la Wl_,letd, Larry '-chlrgo.
T.,..,,.,... McGuire, Gregg lolleday,
and Pllytlla a-nan.
&amp;.ling tor both productions will
MONDAY-19

be on 1M 1.- beblnd the Aoae Garden

o.-. - ·

• In
Admlealon Ia free.
, fiWfomlancea will be alllged nightly
~~ run of ech play - except

CSEA plans trip
to ..........OOJ[h

:::-ARTS

Elflotl

CCSAS:S
compooer
Cart•. I n , _ C:..(Choilnel
6 p.m
JAPAIIESEFfUI"

'21·

•

T'*Jo - - t o r t I Tol&lt;yo Slory (Oru, 1953).
146~.6 o 30and&amp;p.m .

-Uf~~~!:,"'~~

1X1n lOld 111e Deaf. Kundalinl Voge, Sign-On
(Sign t..anouaoe). Wine · and o111e&lt;s.
Partic;petion Is generally free rod ooen to ..
.....-s of the SUNY Buffalo oomrnun1ty arod , _ -•
spouses. Cal or stop in at Ute WorkshQps
1
office. 110Norton. 636·2808. tordetals.

PUTNAM ROADWAY
Putnam Roadway wil have reatricted access
control es of July 17. Campus Secuify advloes.
AccesS wll be restricted to service vetWdes,
Crooaflre (Omytrytc. 1945). 146 Diet..-:'
7 p m. Stars Robert Young,. Robert Mitchum and - hencfiC:appedindlvfdoalaWIIIl,...,..ls, andspeciol
,...,.... oriy.
Robert ~ . A crazed iniO&amp;efant becomes a
l&lt;.ller. trapped t&gt;v hiS' own ont;.Semillsm. Tense.
TTTLEVSY~·
excellently done. hard-hllting-. •
T'clfO-dey a)'mPOSitA'n 1o be held in Squire
Hal, June 20 and 21 . Pre-reglotnotion ;s requW'ed
ALII'
t&gt;v June 15. For further lnfonnation, contact 1t1e
Boalc Training ('Moeman, 1971). 170 MFACC.
Office of Services fOf the Handicapped, 149
Ellicott. 7 p.m. Sc&gt;onso&lt;ed t&gt;v American Slucfies.
Goodye•. 831 ·4 515.
This tmt is about the induction procedure in
The Rehabiltation Act of 1973 as amended
tho Americen . . , , and tho between
(Totte V) has tho potential to~ and has often
oOedience and resistance.
been cafled ll1e CMI Righls Jlct ol the H8n&lt;fi.
capped. Vel Is known a&lt; understood about
"s pos$billfiesTor changing the lives olmillona.
WEDNESDAY- 21
This Symposiun ;s designed to 1ncreese ll1e

ALII'

~-of~ofTiloVarodralated

ARTS AND LETTERS COlLOQUIUM'

P.... l - Motift, newly·~ Jones
Professor o1 French. w11 jjlve a _ . &lt;locussing
the -!XInsnips of ~ and images. Respoodentt to the paper wll ilCtude French noveftat
and flm direclo&lt; Aloin ftobbe.Grilef ('1.ost v.....
a t - " ). Tho Kiva. 101 Blidy. 6 .30p.m.
A of tho Stmne&lt; 1978 Program,

in a

of papers on the QeOenllltOC)ic of the re\ationships
between the arts .
NARAAnVESANDfMAGESSYMPO-· Aloin Robl&gt;e-Gr'let. Frenth nc&gt;0101st and 11m
director, wlf speak In f'rench on - s h i p s
between novel Md flm , text anqimagea. (Trans·
lation wil be . pro.,;ded). Klvo . 101 Baldy.
6 :30p.m.
Words. Spoces," program
sponsored t&gt;v - lelleno and- Stmne&lt;

~AY~ATTHEMO~~·

a-

To Town. 110 I\IFACC,

Elico&lt;t. 9 p.m. Spcnoored t&gt;v tho lnlen....., EngOsh
LM&gt;guoge-

Dncled by F. . . Caera. with Ga-y Cooper,
. - . Nhx, and Georoa 8Mcroll Cooper plays

~ lleo&lt;lo• • - · - greeting e-llS
writer who 20 m111on · He
•flnllly-.,tnatonacfla'geofln"""''Y
-up a oolec::INe
... - Wm
"' -

by_ aeftW&gt;g

his -

TUESDAY-20

--u..

1'llo 5!&gt;.111.
Squn
_
_
..._,7pm

and9p.m .

_____
wllo t&gt;v
wll -1&gt;e
- - ...

~.

F-..- wllowlla&lt;:l •lnWilrellf
l o r - Sludy
~bylhoCenlor

C'*-",.._ .. ~AIIft.
...._("A~

(Ciwwloi8) 8 o30 p.m.

FILM'
Yin zOpataf (Kazan . 1952~ 146 Olefendod
7 p m. Stars Marton Brondo, Jean Pete&lt;s and
Anthony Ouonn--&lt;ln - - historiCal drama..of

Mex&lt;:an revolutianory loader ~ Z..ta

folowlr)g his
ofMe!cico.

ols!t

from """"'

to ...

presi(jency

__,
.

pail\fings art ol&gt;jecls having ... world
of IOOOic oslheir prlnwy"'-Y.

COMPETITlVE CfVfl SERVICE
Typlol SG-3~trllf TecllQI&lt;:ol Services
ISerlolsHbMH, 5u'ge&lt;y fMe'ter) . Mathemelics.

. _ ~ . Medicine I Orthopedlca,
Mafhemalicll, Physico.&amp; Astronomy, Purchasing .
MediCal School Bu&amp;i&lt;.ess Office, Dean's Office
(Educational Studies) , EOucatblal Studies (pari·
lime)

c--Sciencesl.ibrafy_

-.Clod&lt; SCI-5--SfOOent Accounts, C1'edll·
Free Prognmo, Payrol, Acooonta ~

Sontor Typist 10-7-llniveroity Librw1es (Cir·

p---Clod&lt;

cufa1ion) .

UUA8FUI'
Cfleo lo Whi-.

- --clwge.

ISWe&lt;feO. 19721.

Confer·

JlftCe - . . . . . Squn cal 636·291 9 lor show

I

gotogy._
Cloot&lt;

10 IIONTH(Nfl) l E A -

=(8

- Oftice·
(1111711·1
0 1 31 1·
78); School~ "' ~

~5 ~:~.· : i~.' / 31 1 79);

ADMISSIONS lo RECOIIDS
Oltlce .........OAR

in

Hayes B lo open unlit

7 p m. on Mondays and T.-ys. -

olflc&lt;o

4 30 p.m .. w~ flwu
f'ndoy DuriQg ,... -of for eoocll
Summer SeNo::l the otfce is open to 7 p .rn •
reguforly -

•

-

MiCro-'

·()poqtor

DOta Enlry
~
CompulingSeMcea(l/1 1 78·10 / 31178).

NOH-COIIPEllT1VE CIVIL SEJM1:E
Dental Malatom SCH (port·hme~ Hofl.
Mo---nt~PIIwlt.

Amhorst,1..1ne No. 34554.

0...':) Couner C..

UIB Alumni Anoc:latlon. ReH ~
a DiatlllgwiiMd Alumni AWWd and

w•

Heath
111-'*1 tile Walter P .
Coolie A-..1 '""·conttlllutlona to the
Unl..,..ltyiiJ a 110114umnua.
Dwlial A. IWIIIn. Jr., president of

:::'''ln~~.at~.' ":f.;·

'==' 0:

nominated Rail.
Active In communtty allatra. Aeil hU
__, .u j)(B8ldant of tha Batter

Buel- Bureau .

110-7(2)-f'urclleslng.

Stores unli
SUpenolotng .lanltor8CH-Central
SCH 1"'"-"'Y
6 1 21 1 78, then -f)-Costodoaf SeMcea.
Amhenst.

fl_,.,_.,
c:om,..,....,..
-'no•

PUT US ON YOUR UST

"Calendar" hopes lo prowtdlt the cempua wltll a
Uatlng· of iftnta and actlYit.... from lllma and ·
to -.tile colloquia. We'll print both your notlcll and your
publlcitJ phDioa (. . ,.._. """"Ita) If you aupply ua with glolay prtnla. The
- - Ia , _, To lftfonnatlon, celt Jeen Shr..W, 638-211211, by
lt1ta'ld8r tor llocluelon In lha following Thwaclly'a • - · Or, malt
...Jntornoa8ell
"CiteoMW," 131 Croha Hall, Alnhar8t. We n.ad your
_ . . _ ............... "Caaenccar" .. _...... .. poulble.
kef: IIOpenOIIIy tltoaa wltha_llnllesalonat
th. .ubjiCI ; •open
to the public;
lo mambara of the Unlv.,.lty. Unlfla ot"--H
apecltlad, llcbla tor c:harQing -Inion can be pufdlalad at the
8quh H.U Tlckat Office:
The

comm~tt• which

.

• Sonlor- so.-ftgher Educo!OO, Otolatyn-

NOTICES

on hind
to .· .Aloin
,_
-

An exhibit of ar1 ~s. ~umina1ed
manuac!ipts, etc., whose lConogrepny dealS with
musical themes . Includes 80 - . of Europeen

a--y.

THURSDAY- 22

·

~ . ~b\'U I B'aProf Roymond

Mu.alc fn Art: Music Library, lloird. th[ough'
J~30 .

JOBS

YOf'kFim-Gritica

Confwenoe -

EXI-fiBIT:S
MUSIC UBRARY Ex..rr

JAPANESE FILM '

Ch!Uinatau .._.ton l A Story from Chltamatau (Mizoguchl, 11154). f 46 Oielendort. 6 :30

Written, direct&lt;~&lt;~ and produced by lngma'
Bergman , this _.ering drems about tho rola!ion·
shiC&gt;ofttYeeslst&lt;nlnoSwodisllmenorhouse
was \IOted the belt film of tts year by the New

~IDIICIIISION'

in- - -

Sessions.

. , _, WordS, Spoces," sponeored bv Ar1a and
~ands..m. Sessions.

Mr. -

legislation . . wall ... provide

Popular Mulk tn AmW'k:en Ut.,.ture. 115().
on lW88S of concem to '-det'S il the flekts
1850, with borlio. Prof. Flscher. Deport· "' of business, industry. education and aoci8l sermenl of Ehgfish. Jane Keeler Room, Ellicott.
vice .
4 p.m. Reffeohmenta wlf be ser\'8d.
F1n1t
series of Faculty ColoQUia consiSting

Port"',...""'-·

NAAIIATlYDA!ft)fiiAGESSYMPO-·

-

LIFE WORJ(SHOPS

Cal

SATURDAY -17

in

August.
MFC Roglokoflon-f"ll Sernester-Malerials

Cards maOed to tllern

MediaStudy.
•
Thi&amp; bt a wei-played mcMe adaptation from the
book t&gt;v former - . . . . . . to Russia. Joseph
~ -.r.g Wetter Huston arod Eloonor Prier.

FRIDAY-16

wn:,.w:per:wftr ~~ia~
~lnnegan, the Leontes of the

.=

w-

M&lt;in&lt;tay llw\J Thurodey.
t;on '"' Degree'· lo

to,._.._
to
••"'*"

..,_,In

�</text>
                  </elementText>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <elementText elementTextId="1379776">
                  <text>Reporter</text>
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      <name>Document</name>
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        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1388833">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451404">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
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                <text>Reporter, Summer Reporter, 1978-06-15</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388814">
                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388815">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388816">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388817">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1388818">
                <text>1978-06-15</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388820">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388821">
                <text>en-US</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388822">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388823">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1388824">
                <text>LIB-UA043_SummerReporter_19780615</text>
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            <name>Date Created</name>
            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1388825">
                <text>2017-07-11</text>
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          <element elementId="113">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1388828">
                <text>8 p.</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="116">
            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
            <description>Spatial characteristics of the resource.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1388829">
                <text>United States</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1388830">
                <text> New York</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388831">
                <text> Erie County</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388832">
                <text> Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
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            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
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                <text>Reporter</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1392462">
                <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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Welcome to Summer School

Reichert

Me lemon

On leaving the
Senate, he has some
thoug,hts on Its
accomplishments
and U/B's leadership.
Seepage 1 .

The WB-educated
It-Isn't dead, a U/B
president of
professor who
Volkswagen-America doubles as
shares his Ideas
a king-tells us.
about engineers and Seepage 5.
free enterprise. ·
See page 3.

Chivalry

Bulslns?

WIYt's . .?

Twaphys ed ,
professors have
some tips on how to
get in shape for
swnmer.
Seepage9.

A 'mini-magnet' and
the regular calendar
highlight some ways
you can amuse
yourself these days.
See pages 6, 7
and 12.

Council praises his
'poise, diligence, ··
dedicatiol') &amp;. ab_ility'
President Robert L Katt,ra tanuno at
the head of U I B hall beeh marked by
·=se, dilfGente" dedication Wid
," the Ult:1 COullcll - lllnld
un mOIII/Y on Mliy 17 • II "'l8iirttly
deci....S fUel( 10 l!e In complele~=;.:ion~ President and hla
Further, Ita noaolutlon alated, the
Council "atlall do all In Ita power to

::ls~re;:N:. to.,:,;~~~~;o r = f .
and the educational validity of thla

Un~sl&amp;;~ncil was neapondln t.;
complaints against the Pneatent
brought to It by nop,_tati- of the
undergraduate Student Aeaoclatlon laat
month (Wid lndlnactly to reems of
news~ copy alleglf1il dlaaallsfactlon and disenchantment with Ketter
which has bean publl- o- the past
two months). Council members found,
their noaolutlon lndl~ed ,"no substantial eVIdence ... which would juatity ...y
action that jtheyl should take wtth
neapect to Dr. Kett•." To the contrary,
the -ement uld, the Admlnl.mt.tlon
has futlctloned -'1 "deaplte budget conatr81nta • dictated by the

=

CoiDIDencenients _,18
Wharton tells General exercises that 'tensions:
between public&amp;. private education are foolish; .
Ramsey Clark, Volkswagen head address others
The public _.... p&lt;l~e higher
-.tlon lundl11i1 contro-.y Ia a
"loollah and bogus one," SUNY
a..nc.tlor Clifton A. Wharton , Jr., said
at the 132nd Gene&lt;al Commencement of
the Stllte Unl-.lty at Buffalo, Sunday,

M

~-

~. long as there Ia equity In
ma..ment and In accounteblllty,"
Wharton .-d, "there should be no
dtapo.lte. Unity not dluenalon should
"*"-~1
.
"I firmly bellewl the beat system of
higher edu~lon Ia when both the
public and private sector..,e alrOf1i1 ."
Unl-ally Prealdent R&lt;*'ett L. Ketter
conferred 5,562 degrees during the
c:eremony In Buffalo ~ernorlal Auditor·
lum

.

Wharton, who was _,pointed Chanceltor In JWI,.Y, said t~ while there
we Important differences In style, _
mlaalon Wid character between private
aJ\d public lnatltutlona, they are
"differences that are eaaentlal to the
-diversity of America ltlielf.
"For ·Amerlc...a - aJ\d especially
New Yorl&lt;ers, who enjoy one of the
•Nation's healthiest betancea of public
and private colleges' - thera c.. only
be one Issue: good public Wid pr1vate
education
versus
Ignorance and
deCline." he aald.
•n [a not dlfft,.ncea In source• of
funds that are significant," he pointed
out . What Ia IIT\portant, Wharton said,
Ia "that citizens have a choice, not just
between public and private but among

the full array ~...dl-se mlaalona Wid
apeclaltlee. That Ia what must
protect and defend u the tlllllmar1&lt; W~d
vital strength of education In our fnae
democratic aoclely."
Wharton expreeeed conc:am that alter
l_. of support In bulldlf1il an
extraordinary networl&lt; of public Wid
p&lt;lvatelnatltutiona," New Yorl&lt; Ia today
neglecting to use "Ill finest reso~
for IMPI"ii Into an exciting new era of
elate, national, and International
economic growth.
•
Stagnation end acllne ttw.tened
• fn the decedea &amp;heed," he said,
"those atates and nations which do not
see that the daring, Vigor, character and
•S.. •c-m.nc-ta.' 2, cal. 1

~':ft.~-:'-• divided campus
The rwoiutlon of support adopted at • 110-mlnute epec:lal meeting
during which members of tha Councft
Individually naacted to the charges
against Kelt•.
-

n-•=:!7*.._.the grou.t,: a

Alao
by
noport by Council Ch8lmiiln
L
Mlllonzl whk:h ~oded K8IMr lor
· •tones~" and ~· and c.lled lor

an:il~onzJc::"',::. noted~ Ia much
to be done~ heN. "The Battle of the
B~et and the eetabll*"'-t ol

ro'
cc!::."W t:= ~\:',.ua~ -::=edmlnlatnotlon, faculty, and .n.nt.r. 01

the Council pull t~ to get the loll
done. Wit, the members of the CouncH,
pledge and commit ou....._ to eta
everything we OWl to this and."
The lone dlaeanter on the CoUACII'a
program of pralae for Katt• was the
non·vo)lng etudent
noprwentatlve,
cynthia Whltif1il. lola. Whltlf1il termed

~=~·~
~of
-;:::dar:
ooncema.
-

Whiting charaed ~ the special
meeting (originally echeduled for June)

~~be~=ed~~n:'u~lM~,c~

Wharton came to town to give the
•See "Ketter.. p-oe 5,tCal. 1

�·.

. . .u ..

J

Junel,1t11

•COmmencements '78
"Unless there Ia advanced learning
there Ia little ec;gnomlc progi'IISS.
Today'a economy Ia baaed on mod&amp;m
science, great art, computers, sophisticated analysis, hlgh technology, and
new diiiCOYeries.
all-u:;:::

t=~s ~ meg:'.calt\f~

~=~1)-:"Yt:.t~·~ndlcated,

"no state In the Union understood this
better than New Yoll&lt;. New Yorl&lt; has

more colleges and unl-.ltlea- public

mel private - than any other state. The
-atata ranks first In the number of
degrees conferred eech year. We have
more cc:uate training programs than

an~Y .:::·now turning our back on
:':.,~~~~we-;.,~,:;::;~· t::!
Importance of what Ia one of New lly or1&lt;

State's greatest assets and one of Its
lnduatrtea'l"

~

No -.-Ia, .....
He told the audience:
•t hope you wlll never develop
amneala, and forget that education Is
one of the moat precious enterprises In ·
our Nation. Or that a good college or
unlvaratty education , available to
everyone who Is able, Is Uterally a
matter of life and death for millions of
souls wllh a dream.•
Degree candidates wens presented to
President Ketter by Charles M. Fogel,
acting dean of the Division of Graduate
and Professional Education, and Dr.
Walter R. Kunz, acting dean of the
Division of Undergraduate Education.
Dean Elton 0 . Smith, Jr., of St.
Paul's Eplecopal cathedral delivered
the lmlocatlon aad Benediction. Phyllis

~~~~~~t~~eu~! ~~:!:::~l
...m.ra.

........... a..o.llol'•llecMI
Alao at the General Commencement,
WIIIIMI c.-on Balnl, a Buffalo civic

...,., and lnduetrlallat, was presented
the tll78 Chancellor'• Madfl - the
C8ll be bestowed

111ot-t honor wllldl

by the University.

Baird, whose lather Frank B. received

~~~e,=~~~rh~~

rm:~r.:t~ ~

years. He ~lp tlil Council chairmanship from !WI!J1o 1977 and Is presently
Its chairman emeritus.
The Chancellor's Medal was est~
llshed In 1925 through a beq~MSt of ·
Chancellor Charles P. Norton, to honor
citizens who "personify civic patriotism .
and vivify public service and whose acts
dignify the performer and Buffalo.''
· Baird Is currently chairman of the
board of Gruber Supply CorDoretlon. He
Is also serving In his 16th year as a
board member of the Unl-slty at
Buffalo Foundation Inc.
In March ; the Foundation held a
special tribute to Baird In honor of his
many years of service and contributions
to the University and community
(Reporter, March 9).

EnaJ.-. h - Volkawegen'a Me~

May 20 durl~..commencement exeraJses for the School of Management In
Kleinhans Music Hall .
.
Frank D. Cerabone, diractor of the
Buffalo Area Office of ~ U.S.
Deparfment of Housing and Urban
Development, was guest speaker.
Cerabone was racently nominated by
HUD to parficlpateln an adV1111ced study
program on business in contemporary
society at the Brookings Institute.
Dr. Ron-ald F. Bunn, U/B vice
pnaaldent for academic ~flairs, conferred 635 bacheior's-d8gfM8, 175 M.B.A.
deQreea,lllld-seven Ph.D.'s.
Opening remarks were made by Dr.
Joseph Alutjo, dean of the School of
Management. Thomas H. Chittenden
Jr. , president of the Management
Alumni Asaoctation, gave the alumni
welcome.
Also speaking were Shelley B.
Nussbaum, vloe president ot-rttnr

~~:y~~~t:,d'tv"llm~'c.~=~

JameSW. Mclemon, president of the
president o.f the Graduate Management
Student Association.
·
Volkswagen Manufacturing Corporation
of Americe, told Engineering graduates
Salurday, May 20, that the world Js
getting smaller and engineers must
Good adiiColtiiMI In a good ac:hool
concern themselves with world matters
Students graduating Sunday, May 21,
as well as with technical problems
from the School of Pharmacy were told
Mclemon spoke during commencethey should be proud of knowing they
ment exercises held on the lawn In front
have completed a rigorous course of
training In "the finest pharmacy school
of Parl&lt;er Hall
An alumnu's of the U/B School of- in the world .''
Engineering, Mclernon was presented .
Speaking during commencement
ceremonies at Kleinhans Music Hall ,
the first Dean's Award lor Outstanding
Dr. Milo Glbaldl, chairman of the
EngiMering Achievement, the highest
Deparfment of Pharmaceutics In the
honor the engineering faculty can
present.
School, noted this pride should
engender confidence.
Bachelor of Science degrees were
awarded to 323 ' graduates by U/B
He urged graduates to be active In
President Robert L. Ketter. Master of
profession!'! organizations In order to
redress economic wrongs which have
Science degrees were granted to 23
candidates, and 12 doctorate degrees
!&gt;een Imposed on their profeaalon.
Dr. Donald A. Larson, associate vice
were conferred.
•
Dr. George C. Lee dean of
president of the Faculty of Health
Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Sciences, conferred the B.S. In
dell-ed -lcornlng remarl&lt;s to the
Pharmacy on 70 degree candidates, and
graduates and their families. A
the B.S. In Health llctenc:ea on 18. The
reception was held In Squire Hall
M.S. wea awanled to three graduates,
following the ceremony.
~el~t';:;, ~ .lt sl , and ten others
LaFalce ec1c1ree-. Social Wen grade
The School of Social Worl&lt; awarded
49 Master of Arts degrees during
commencement exerciSes, Sunday,
May 21, In the Katharine Cornell
Theatre.
Congressman John J. LaFalce
presented the main address and Dr.
Sherman Merle, dean of the School ,
conferred degrees,
Eleanor Berger, director of admls·
slons for the School, and Elizabeth
Harvey, associate dean, presented four
awards.

The Archie W. Swanson Honorary
Award went to Theodosia C. Ahern · the
Haseltine T. Clements Memorial Fund
Award, to Thomas Freeman; the Gwen
Goldberg Memorilll Award, to Kenneth
B. King ; and tfle Niles Carpenter
Scholarship-Alumni Award, to Merle
Harris.
A reception In the Fargo Cafeteria at
Ellicott followed the exercises. _
Dental grllclwrtea ' - ' ADA TruatM
A trustee of the American Dental
Association told those attending the
School of .Dentistry's Comm811cement
•See neat pta9e

�Junea.ura

"T~e

nature of today's challenge is different.
It may not be as much fun

but it will be
our countrY.'' -

far more important to '

Volkswagen chief review~ years of progress
By J.W. Mclemon

, _ ,_v""'"- Monutocturing
Corpomion of Atnetlca

It was a great thrill to be asked to
return to my Alma Mater and be with
you today. Whert I accepted the
onvitalion, I asked my wife Nancy who

~~'!r ~:.e '::r u;"c'::::J~n~ee:eer!:li..r.~~

By the end of the 1960's, a deep shift
in priorities was t8klng place priorities were changing . For the first
time In decades, our productivity was

confident that In the 1980's, " '
large-scale unit will be the size of a
shoe box.
Time and distance are no longer a
problem. A 16-hour trip, with two or
three stops, to California or England In
a conventional plane now Is done by
jets In one-third the lime. I came o -

=~~~v~~~~aW'~~fng'fc,",,,~as"=~

~~'/'~~~~ ~lft~~~:~~~ia':\':nt~~ f~~
~~m ~~g~~~~~~~~ s~~~ t~c':,~~~~ - :'e~~o~0~:g d~~~p~~.VeE~~~~

out 9 of every 10 talephonea. Then, all
we'd have to dO Is lind a trw enterprtee
country like America to eell us-'- on

~.:!.to ;:r' :,'":::1;lnPrito

the
business world Ill a .-1 eerloua time.
You muat decide who will make
decisions, and whether you want to
continue to exercise your right to
, individual economic freedom. The

don1 feel badly If you can't either 25
years from now.
We were known as the G.l . Class of
1950, some 375 plus strong, I' believe
the largest ever to graduate from the
School of Engln-ln~ . There was no

Satellltes circle the globe every 48
minutes. Men walked on the moon
almost ten years ago now. Crippling
diseases like Pol io are not even known
In xour generation .

responsibilities

1he old campus. We got Into the
partially finfshed building In 1!148, and
got the wings put on In 1950.
Exams were held at night In most
cases,.and the awr:::Le student age was

dreamed of color televisions? Black and
white was just starting In 1950, let alone
a set you &lt;:ould carry from room to

e~1:1~~ g~~a~d ':J:.v~~t a~y:e

economy or govern manta! agency.

restraint system&amp;, but the facts are It's
difficult to predict what will happen
when a peraon under the Influence of

In_.... and dlanga ......

;~r;:r~n~h~~;s.:e ~~-.~~~~

~~=y ~o,~r ~ho e.:~. ~

ror

w:

tough
a younger returning veteran
like myself, who didn't want to s1udy at
night. There was always " Bittermans"
across the street with draft ' - ' and
good songs. Jobs weren't too plentiful.
General Electric paid the top - $290 per
month on a training program. I felt very
Jucky to get In on a new program for
college graduates In General Motors at
$275 oer month.Many of us stayed In the _,.eserves
when we were discharged, and your
history' will tell you the Korean war
began In the spring of 1950 .. . and sure
enough, together with many othera, I
got orders to go back ln. I got married in
a hurry (marriage does have Its
advantages) . My enlistment ran out and

:~Jt~'"~~:;~~~Y~fth~ c= no~

1

'49 and '50 went back In service - some
.-er to return.
a--10cenlaagl8ss
Industrial Engl-lng was a new
field, and the only computer was an
I. B.M. 407 bookkeeping machine. Breed
and eggs, bell-It or not, were about
the same price they are today; - ·
howawr, was still $.10 a glass.
In the next three d8cades, our cbuntry
and the world were to experience the
greatest tschnologlcal revolution since
the beginning of !tit' Industrial
Revolu11on. let me give you some
examples.
Data Process! ng gave way to
"Information Systems." Compu1ers
I took o - almost every phase of
business management, and engineering
data and computations. Pocket calculators replaced slide rules. Microcircuits
reduced the computer size so that I am

room .

I look around this new campus and
remember just a short while ago I went
through these fields with my dog, and
now It has become one of the larlj8St
universities In the country. I hear the tax
rate you pay to cover the building costs
Is quite an achievement too .
The point I want to make Is thai
engln-lng technology was responsible for every one of · these advances.
Without engln-lng, we could not exist
as the wor)d's Industrial leader, and we
are, regardless of what you may read or
hear.

their

~\~ho~ '!;u~ g~sp~1~1~e :!:'~
Millersport Highway at .
evening .

B:oo

In the

We can sol.. our problema
It's your job and mine, however, as
engineers, to look at these problems

~f~r,='Yw:n~a~e S:rou:"!:.~~

problem In this country. Don't let
anyone kid you ebou1 that. But, it can
and will be solved, not by government

The nation Wlttltad' whMia
Engineers have faced some serloos
problems In these decades. Let me

~~~~:~~~~~ tz.Jn~~~~~~~~s ~~':r.~

In a free enterprise system of business,
competing with one another to find the
best way to get the job done.
Now let me tell you what you're going
to find out there In business and
Industry now that you are a part of 11.
You'll find that the free enterprise
sys1em, that system that founded and
mede this country grow to a world
leader, Is under great pressure from

H~~ ~~~r::~~;::tf~ ,1,"~~~~!~ a'::~

1960's we could give free reign to our
Imaginations. Whetever Wf&gt; could dream
up had a pretty good chenoe of going
Into production. Our nation wanted
wheels; they wanted mobility, and still
do.
We Increased compression ratios to
get more horsepower, more acceleration. We built cars longer, lower, and

~~~f~'fOC:~t ~"1'!:::J'~ Ru:~~
1

r:.'~..;.~t7~. ":'~~~~1:s:::".::.1~· ~,:::

to see what over-regulation means to
1

~':ff~~ fnc~~~a~nd.,'j~~~

car, but-they didn't sell too well . Why
should they . . . the oil Industry was
doing a fantastic job locatlnQ. new
sou roes, and fuel was 20 cents a gallon.
In Europe and Japan, where gas was
Imported, It was always $2 a gallon, so
1

Improve

legislate requirements for change, bu1
engineers and Independent business
must do_ the job. An example of
government
regulation,
or
o-r"llulatlon , Is the sad _plight of our
raolroad Industry today. ·

acc~~~:~!c ~~~:ns~;:~!~s, ancfo.~~~ .
~n~~n~p ~~~~-ns~~~edJo~1~ss~';::

l~lrs~!t t {~~f11~1:~~s

to

~:::~r~~s~nt T~d cf~:=~ent nat~ 1

=';=

in the last decade, and what we define
as the poverty level In America Is an

~:-a;;:;~r '~':l:·~n ~~~~y

=:. N"~

1n

America, we would have to cut our

81

=mc:,sf~~":it~~~~~~:n~=~

mind the shapa or color, just get 20
m.p.g. Oh yes, back In 1.95(), a man by
the name of Ben Pon unloaded two of
those funny-looking cars called Volkswagens off a ship In New York to sell to
America, and a new company was
formed .

destroy 59 million television sets, tear
ur. 14 of every 15 miles of paved
h ghway, junk 19 of every 20
automobiles, tear up two-thirds of our
railroad track, bum down 70% of the
single family homes In America, and rip

number one priority of every emerging
nation of the world .
The speaker was Professor John
McHale, director of lntegratiYII studies
at the University of Houston.
Architecture's exercises wete held on
the front lawn of Hayes Hall, Friday

Impossible dream of a world where the
rule of law prevails, " he said. "Create a
passion for justice. Work for It and
devote your II e to It ."
The ceremony opened with greetings
delivered by Dr. Thomas E. Headrick,
dean. of the Faculty of law and
Jurisprudence; Richard F. Griffin,

11

!\"~:."~~ ~7.':n?~:"'bes~..=m ~

sys1em In the world today, Juat as a
demo_cracy Is atill the bell form of
government. My experience bas been
the! there are very f - things related to
our basic needs and atandanl of living
that cannot be done better and less

rn-=~e~~YtJ'!~ne:-lan:::

You will find that we have an lttlnual
Inflation rate of 7% - a major concern
to all of us. When wages rlee !tater than
productivity, Inflation nssults. You as
engl,..-s have a big job to gat our
annual productivity growth beck to a
rate of at least 4% If we ant to cut our
rate of cost lncnsssa to 4% annually.
Innovation and technological change
are bedly needed.
On the more positive aide, you ant the
best-tral!led scholaatlcally of any
engineering class In our nllllon's
hls1ory. One of my professors said beck
In 1950, "You now f!now wh- to find It
In the book." With you, I bal._ It's a
IIHie more than tttat.
My own experience hes been that
there Is no substitute for the practical

::,an~hseof,:~cet~"':r~our::·~

lndus1ry. Take advantage of it. As you
increase your responsibilities, you will
never agal n have tha opportunity.
You will also comnlaod the highest
salaries of any griOduatn to dele,
almost five times thlll of the enalnaer of
1950, and that doesn't Include fringe
benefits, practically none of Which
existed then.
You, the engln-. more
Important, more naeded by both · our
country and Industry than biifore In
our nation's and the world's hls1ory.
The nature of thli challenge Ia dlllerant
than 11 waa In 1950. It may not be as
much fun, It may not be exciting, bu1 It
will be far more lmportMt to the
continued freedom, good health and
strength of our lnduatry. and our
country.
1cloee with this thOught. It llloa .held
me In good steed, and lllope It wiH for
you If you choose to adopt It: Jf a man
pays you for tight houra, give him eight
hours or more work In return .

•Commencements '78
(from- 2, col. ••

at Klalnhana, Sunday, May 21 , dentists
must fulfill their roles as citizens first
and as professionals, second .
Or. Lawrence Kerr, an Endicott , N.Y.
dentist , also urged graduates, as
practitioners, to relate to the whole
~'!lllent as well sa to become more
acutely aware of the Importance of
continuing education. He called on
graduates to learn to be polltfcal
,.ctlvlsta In their patients' behalf In the
face of Increasing Invasions of
the profession by government and other
entltlea .
Or. F. Carter Pannlll, Jr., vice
president of U/B's Facult~ of Health
Sclencea, conferred the DDS degree on
85 and the Master of Sclenca degree on
twO .
Or. William H. Feagans, dean of tha
School , welcomed the candidates and
their guesta.
Ed_.Oflls No. 1

S.,::g~ri:~~reda"n~e• t~v\~:n~f-1

of
Dealgn heard that education Ia the

nl'l:r.:a~a~,:.~ld

~:.:C~~lon~f :,~ E~:er:ifun:T.rt!:~

Cohen conferred 75

degrees.

'

Ramsay Clattc adclfH_I_ grada
Don't listen to practical people who
will tell you to drop your Ideals, former
U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark
advi sed 250 juris doctor cendldales
during the 89th commencement of the
Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence at

Al!:~.~n~~wl~to~1~~:~~~:~Y.!7in

New York anJ :..fashlngton , D.C., was
named asslatant attorney general of the
United States In 1961 by President John
F. Kennedy .
_ He also served as deputy attorney

~a~n~';!eratt':.~~~e;~;r~.~~~~
until January 20, 1969.
" I urge yo~ to believe

In

the

presldent-&lt;~lect of the student bar
association.
Music was provided by the University
Brass Quintet. Associate Dean William
A. Greiner presented several awards.
Dr. Ronald F. Bunn , vloe president for
academic affairs, conferred degrees.

add--

Eva
minority atudanta
State Assemblyman Arthur 0 . Eve
confronted the question, "Where do we
go from here?" during the eighth annual
Minority Commencement Exercise,
Sunday, May 21 In Squire Hall.

fr~eak~'i.ra~f~88r::.orlt~e!tud:'C::

collages ,

Eve ou111ned a political
which he S81d Ia needed to
'insure a better Buffalo." He urged
stronger political Involvement among
~rspectlve

mlc:::r~,:en~ awwdad to 225
undergnaduate and graduate s1udertta
for successful come" of thalr

~~c;:..rcw=... utJ'~n::::r

minority student affalra.
Also In attendance were Dr.
Francisco Pabon , acting chairman of
American Studies, and Dr. Molefl K.
Aaante, chairman of the Oepartmant of
Communication, who spoke on
~ac,':un~:~~~~r;;;,.,~.· Cootlnulng

s=

1

Community service aw.da were
presented to: Erie County leglalator

~~er&amp;~~•l!tt,~~. ~C:m:f
Westmlnlater Community House; leroy
Coles, director .of the Buffalo Urllarl
h:'gue; Carmen Rodriguez, director of

Com~~~~J:~'r'~~~~~~.::

tftariaglng editor: of the Latino Journal.
Awards for outstanding aervlcea to
minority students were preten1ed to a

~;~~ o~~wde~p~~':" =\~'!i
Institutions.

�.lu. . l,1171

Lockwood,
UGLopening
at Amherst

Uni·o ns"
AAUP and AFT break off negotiations
on for_ming a merged organization;
how to 'legitimize' it was the problem

Both Locl&lt;wood and the Undergrad.... ltlnr* will be open and
funct1on1RQ 81 Amherst by next

Mol~

- whlctl c1o"e8cc at Malo
Str.el81 tile end vt the aprii'IJ aemester
:- _opena In Ita , _ bulldii'IJ (between
a-). Monday morning,
, _ 12, •
a.m. The mow, which
lmlllwd almoat 1,000,000 books, went
wl"-1 a lli1all, Utna.e spokes~ MPC1fL
- · In fact,
CCIIIIPIMd
_ . .It ctaye
111-.l of

-,end a
~

end floo&lt; plana will be

~ poetec1 ttvoughout the

The ~ Utnry (now In
D~ Allnell. u.Jn SliM!) closed

:the ~n:::-7.;../~::-~
:W.J·~.;
tint floor Clpen

of
Hall. The UGL
will ..,... Saturday, June 10. (They
wiN be In 1M PfOC888 of moving the 8th
end lith). New UGL phone numbers are:
u~nr~ ..·a Office - 636-2943; Circulation end ~ Desk - 636-294-4;
Ref..-.nce Deak- 636-2145.
The Locl&lt;wood Utnrlan's new
number Ia 836-2816; Reference Deak 638-28211; Circulation Desk- 636-281 • .

AAUP to consider
censure of SUNY
A motion to censu,. Ole State
of New York for "the
lnellclniln... flrii'IJ of tenu~ profes..,. during tile 1117&amp;-n Ntrenchment
Jllriod," Win 1111 _,alclered by the
~ AAoclatlon vt Unl-.lty
, . . . . _ . et 1111 llxty-fourth Annual
111111111'11 In New H_,, Connecticut,
~

"1::=.!=~=:~f
a
ltudy ccnducted by lh&amp;

5!
-,-

.......

of tile pollclea and actlon8 of th&amp;
~

Admlnlattetlon end
••~r~!!ii~Col-- and
Vnl..alty
In termlfta11on
of OOMr 115 '-"11)1, of whom 0 . . 80

....m.a

-llnlnd.
lbla

atudy, publ1811ed In the August,
1877,1tufledn of ftle A.A.U.P., was th&amp;
. . . ~ UMd by tile Aalembty
Hill* Edualllon Commlt1• In Ita
.-wt ....,rt • ....,.._,II In Hlg!wr
~- 111T7." 8oth NP0111 _ .
......., c:rttal oA tile way th&amp;

=
...........

UJ=•ta -

/

C*Tiecl out .00
11'1111
on!M-*oframalnlng
.......,_ 1'lleN ....... to . . . been ...
_ . . . dlciiM In tile
of
edualllon,. 11M ~ NpOrt 1181d,
•
• -.It oA the wholelale

•tty

, _ ~ 11aa oww70,000.......,beta
IIIIIGitwlde, IIIII -7,000 ,_...,.In
, _ Yllltl ..._ A vote to _......

8UNY "-*11'-wlciHwlglriQ elfects

. . . . . . . . . . . . . end f!PU!.~!.!IOn In the
uiiMnlt)' ~.
AAUP cor&gt;-

--~
I'IOf.

......
Yorll

W11118r, 8lddmore
of tile New York
• MlJ/P, wUI lad tile New
H:l

~

to

11M

IIIII~

Negotiations between the American
Association of University Professors
and the American Federation of
Teachers (the national afflllate of
United University Professions) toward
forming a new, hybrid collective
bargaining 1111ency lor SUNY faculty and
professional staff broke off in late May.
the Reporter has teamed.
Eugene V.asllew,
an associate
professor at SUNY Binghamton , a
negotiator lor AAOP, told a Binghamton
newspaper that the talks failed "when
negotiators lor the AFT and UUP
refused to guarantee that an election
would be held under auspices of the
Public Employment Relations Board
(PEAS) to sanction the new, merged

or~~~\t:~oni;;.,lcated

that AFT-UUP
negotiators wanted a poll ol affected
employees, not an election.
AAUP, on the other hand , Vasilew
said, believes any new organtZatron
should have a format election to
establish Its legitimacy.
" II they (the AFT-UUPJ negotiators
are not golnP. to reconsider this,"
Vasllew said, • then we have nothing to
·
talk abou~ .·

Not juat an amalgamation
Murray Brown and Edwin D. Duryea,
MUP negotiations representatives
from UfB, agree .that It was this
question of how to present the new
organization to the electorate - and
nothing else- that &lt;:!lUsed the Iatka to
founder. AAUP, they say, did not want
th&amp; new organization to be simply an

:'~~~:r~ ~'J~~ ~~~: ~gr:.~h~'fi:.
pw1 of the Individuals concerned.

That Is eaaentlally what happened
ago. When the Senate
an
NEA affiliate which had been elected In
th&amp; lnltlal SUNY faculty-stall bargaining
elictlon, merged with an AFT affiliated
~ -~

Piofee81ona~ ~ton · (SPA),

cor ~oelor..~u:it~3re~ec,~ ~:

me&lt;ged organization .
Evelyn Hartman, director of staff lor
UUP, said she ·undenitood the talks
brolca down because AAUP maintained
that certain Items are nor&gt;-negotleble .
· Hartman , who was not present at the
..-tinge, said UUP maintains everythii'IJ ahOUll! be negotiable In the
con_..tlons.
"We remain Interested In seeing what
could come from auch a union , Ms.
Hartman said.

SAAC ...... IIane!,...

With the Ialka with AFT now
completely termlneted, the SUNY AAUP
~tetlon Committee (SARC) Is
Aldoubllng 111 efforts to gain signatures
from at 1 - 30 per cent of the
negotlatlnl! unit by the current UUP
cllallenge Period c!Mdllne of August 31 .
So Ia the New York Education
Auoc:latlon, an NEA affiliate, which, at
lut nrporta, either haa or expects

0

r!~Ziya~0 ~~~~ioen~ ~?h .~~"~;~~n~~

however, AAUP will not automatically
be on the ballot; It, too, must collect
the same number of signatures.
SARC Indicates that one of Its major
selling points ls·lts championing of the
Idea of " multi-tiered"
bargaining
efforts, und8f which un its with similar
interests within SUNY (the graduate
and health sciences centers lor
instance) would bargain separately lor
those things which seriously affect
them but are of tittle concem to the rest
of the system.
There would also be room for local
autonomy In barQ.aining, SARC lndi-

caf~~s multi-tiered concept wa:&gt; one of
four principles which AAUP wanted to
"'have bu ilt into any joint AAUP-AFT

or~~i,~~ti~~d

Duryea report there were

no major disagreements on this during
the negotlatrng sessions .
Two other AAUP bargaining pri nciples seemed also to be agreeable to
UUP-AFT, the two Indicate. AAUP
wanted to h ·
Its statement of
pri nciples Incorporated verbatim Into
the constitution of the new organization
and sought an adjustment in ' the
present dues structure.
The question of an election, though,
was a different matter.
Brown and Duryea Indicate that their
readii'IJ of the situation Is that Albltrt
Shanker and the
national
Af&lt;T

~:=n~~~~f,';;\'h~:,fJ'pe~~slorm
Shanker made the overtwe
Negotiations between the two groups
began last summer when Shanker made
a proposal to the national office of
AAUP that talks begin leading to a joint
venture In the SUNY system . AAUP
then turned to Its local membership In
SUNY to help. Earlier, in the winter of

~:~io~:u~:~8~~~,:s";:'m~~

AAUP the official b&amp;('galnlng agent. It
was th1s group which helped to carry on
the negotiations with AFT .
AAUP le'aders engaged In the

SOO'~,a~f~h:.:.;, !uR:~c ~~~~:

person; Gerle Bledsoe, acting director,
Collective Bargaining, AAUP, Washington , D.C.; Martin L~ldus , director,
No-rtheast Regional Office, AAUP, New .
York City; Steven Crane, Canton A &amp; T;
Ron
Sarner, SUNY College
of
Technology, Utica-Rome; Brown, and
Dulyea.
.
Representing UUP-AFT end the New
York State United Teachers were:
Shanker, State UUP President Samuel
Wakshull;
Richard
Teevan ,
UUP
Albany Chapter; Robert Nielsen,
director of the Colleges and Universities
Department of _ AFT, Washington (a
former professor at the University of
Oetaware); end VIto Deleonardis,
executive secretary, NYSUT.

WNY-Japanese
trade is focus of U/8 program
The School of Managemen1 will
sponsor several progra11'1s this summer
and fall to help develop trade relations
betW"lt" the Western New York and
Japanese business communities.
A conference lor 16cal businessmen

, ::;:''lf.~ll ~~ ~l:!seh:::;bJ~~~ :~

~~~r~~~a~~::'er~u~~we~C:.~:~~

A summer Institute for Japanese
executlves Is set lor July 3'28, and a
two-week trip to Japan by local leaders
Is being arrange:! Jar tate fall .
The programs are timely, Dr. Bhal
Bhatt. director of the School of
Management's lnt&amp;rnational Management and Polley Analysis Project ,
noted, in vte\y of Japen s $12 billion
trade surplus and its efforts to Increase
imports from and 111vestments In the
United _States.
_:.t&gt;"The programs help to meet a
grow:ng need lor training future
managers to operate effectivelY. In a
world of global Interdependence, · Bhatt
said .
He added that both the WNY and
Japanese business communities are
aware of barriers to the development of
trade and. business relationships
between the U.S. and Japan.
"We propose to help remove these
barriers of cuUural and - linguistic
differences and a lack of information
and personal contact," Bhatt said .
The
June
30
conference
on
" Improving Trade Relations with Japan"
- will be held in the Moot Courtroom ,
O'Brian H.all.
Shotaro Takahashi, Japanese ambassador to the U.S. , will be the guest of
honor at a luncheon hosted by U/B
President and Mrs . .Robert L. Ketter at
12:30 p.m. In Spaulding Dining Room ,
Ellicott.
The conference Is sponsored by the
SchOOl of Management In cooperation
with the U.S. Department of Commerce,
the Buffalo Chamber of Commerce, the
Erie County Industrial Development
Agency, and- U/B's Council on
tntematlonal Studies end Intensive

EnR~s~n~~uaa:.Js~:utfhls activity,
Japanese business executives will be
hosted by the School of Management
and the Intensive English Language
Institute from July 3 to 28 at Ellicott .
This unlque program will combine
English language training with m'!!'agement studies. ,

llistructlonaJ sessions wHI be mixed
with visits to local Industries and
businesses, and meetings with management executives and government
__
officers.
The Chamber of Commerce and Erie

~UJ"o\~t'~~~~i~~~~=.:~:~7!t

In sponsoring a trip to Japan for
approximately 25 WNY business

:=~r~~s~':r w~::~:d~n~=::ti

captains of Japanese Industry and
representatives of the Japaneae government.
·
That trip has been tentatively set lor
November.

Progress reported on projects to aid the handicapped
32-lnch-wkle .......
•
7. Ellmtnetton ot retocetlon of book
dumpl end "-tanding merchandise
...._ whlcll hinder , _ rrrovement
' wiCNn
Floor elacttlcai conduits have
been with dlaplaya In- the
SquiN Boobtcn.
8. A low tltlle haa been pmvlded In
lN TeldlloOII ~Of tha SQuire
~to---. to book tfata.
10. Cond"'-ta have been placed on
~'llllaalollek
. . . . . DrOWklii'IJ
for
cu~ In th&amp;

a. u..-.

o
n
or:..:=

-fer - ·

~-on~~-

dlaperi8«a
,... been .....,..,
the elde
of th&amp;
dl..,.._....,.lltanon top.
10

1n~r1=::..

13. A 111111 ,......., In Norton haa
been 1110'111 eo It le -.tble lor

Wllellch8ltou--..
1•. Four _...1!111 cur11

outa have
been """"'""· Eltlh1een other areas
... ~ been lcllntlfleil end wtll be taken

.

~oltlii•-.Doty-'d.

~.
~·

In

~

Include

the

lollowii'IJ:
1. Elactrlc door openers have been
ordered for Hayes A 811d B, Cary,
Acheson Acheson Annex, Capen first level end ground level , Baldy, and
. Ellicott (In tunnel).
2. Ramps and cur1) cuts will be
provided lor these locations.
3. Facilities Planning Ia drawing up
accessibility . specifications lor two
bethrQ911ls on the first floor of Squire.
• · Operation Access Trainees are
preparing a booklet that will permit a
handicapped person to determine to
what extent a building and Ita facilities
are-atble.
5 . Bathrooms on floors 3-7, 10. 11
are being mOO tiled In Kimball Tower.
6. The telephone company Ia being
notified where to lnatall towered
tetephon...
7. The entrance to the Baldy Hall
BoollatoN and 8CCMa to the HAP
eectlon of th&amp; Textbook Deoartment In
Squlre .,. beii'IJ rlldeelgned to provide
for wheelc:llalr cuotomere .
6. Hendlettered signa are being
replaced with boldlrj&gt;rlnted signs hung
at lower 1-taln al Bookatorea.
9. Covered electrical conduits In

-fer-.

Bookstore aisles are being replaced .
10. Tray slides are being constructed
lOr the beverage Islands In the Squire
cafeteria.
•
_ 11. A chenge order has been
requested so that the two-Inch curb In
the modified showers In Goodyear will
be corrected.
12. In addi tion to the above, this
summer Food Service Is embarl&lt;lng on
an extensive program to adapt all areas
·
to handicapped use.
The SUNY Construction Fund has
finished modification lor one male and
one lemala shower and bath In
Goodyear to provide lor handicapped
accessibility, Doty said, and-tlas also
Installed a ramp and modified doors in
Michael to accommodate wheelchairs .

NEW AAIJI! OFFICERS

Or. JOMPII Maallng, prolesaor of
poyehology, Ia tile new pr..ldenl of th&amp;
UfB Chapter vt the American
Aaallclatlon of Unf-alty Prof..aora.
Vice PrMident tor the comii'IJ acedemlc
p. Ia Or, Edwin D. Duoyee of the
~ent
of Higher Education.
Or. - ' - llewtoadl, Paydlology, II
HCI'

~..,......,.

.

-

�Junee.1111

•K'8tter
(frc&gt;mt , cot.•l
General Commencement address (Sunday, May"211 .•She protested that the
meeting came at an " Inopportune time
0

~C:ad:: w~lc~!::";,i~~~at !...:.\.~al

Although other Council members
dismissed charges against Keller as
1

~\r=g~,;"!,~ :~~~~Pe. ~~~·~:,s ~~

clear" as far as students were
concerned.
Both the undergraduate Student
Association and tha Graduate Student
Association are on record as lacking
confidence In Ketter, she pointed out.
N-alton'a statement
Whiling read a statement from
Ramanathan Nagarajan , president of
the GSA, to whom the Council wou(d
not extend the privilege of the floor.
Nagarajan argued that chl!'ges
against Ketter are not rumors from
" unquoled or unidenti fiable" sources.
GSA and SA , he said, represent 18,000
students who are not "faceless
entitles."
Second , he said, the grievances and

~~P.~~s~~[~ia':'e":t;.e~';'h;a~e,:'c;;

likes to think. They Involve: lack of
student involvement In poHcy matters
and In academic program revi e~d
failure of the Ketter administration to

imf~~::;~;:.':'~~::~:r:\;!J~~~':~s

victim of a .9whlsper campaign. " To the
contrary, his statement agreed with
Whiling's , "the voice and opinions of
the student body ha'ie been loud and
clear."
Nagara)an said GSA did not di sagree
with the view-or the Faculty Senate that
In gfHI8flll, the normal , established
process of Presidential review should
be conducted and that thi s should not

Chivalry /isn't.dead
Chemistry lecturer is active·in a society
which recreates self-reliant medie.v al. litestyle;
'We could survive better than most,' he says

~~·~~:~he~~;,~· .. ~~~~~~

expressing lack of confidence and have
presented them to the Council as well
as to the Board of Trustees now,
reflects, that In our -¥lew the conditions

:.Srm~~~ ~~'i'da.:.,,~ ::.!r~~g ~:'oc!':;

would be grossly Inadequate."
Becked by the Nagara)an statement,
Ms. Whiting moved that the Council
Uflle AI'*"Y to hasten Ita scheduled
evaluation of tha Ketter prealdency.There was no second; the motion
died.
Among other Council members
speaking at the meeting were:
Wllllem C. Baird, chairman emeritus,

~.: exp~:e'lo·~~~r::r:::-~ ~~

~s

trumP.'fn
atoriaa on the situation .
obserVers have called that
coverage "gutsy."]
Attorney M. R - . K....., who said
he found " no aubetantlal evidence" to
support
student allagatlons
and'
emphasized that evaluation of the
President should be done In Albany
.
"through normal procedures."
Dr. G-ve L. Colllna, Jr., a physician
at Roswell Part&lt;, who agreed "completely" with Koren .
Oeotve H • ...._ of the Amherst
Bee, wno aald "this Unl-slty needs
the leadership and stable conditions
brought here by Or. Robert L Ketter.
We cannot afford to lose this competent
leadership and a man with Dr. Ketter's
educational and business calibre."
When Ketter assumed the presidency ,
M - said , "University-Community
relations were at an all-time tow . The
giving of himself Into the community
and his strong grup of the problems at
the Unl-sity returned the confidence
of off-&lt;:ampus lndlviduaialn SUNY /B."
And, Ma. Phyllis Kelly, Council vice-

{Other

~~~A....!:~~~'..~: theec~~

M_.s appraisal of Ketter's ac·
compllshments within the community;
noted that only ''four members of the
faculty have been publicly associated
with remat1&lt;1 crtllcal of the administration;" said that the "outpouring of
aupport for the President has been
noteworthy;" and concluded that "much
of the dlasallsfactlon of the Unl-slty's
atudenta has Its roots" In the
lncomplele Amherat Campus.

,.:r:..:·~rlan c~t~lz ~h~e~~te f~

the President dOes have waekn-s:
"For lnatanca, he ts too ...u.tlle, too
tw, and too conal derale of tbe IIYes of
~- He cares too much for the
waif. . of thla lnalltutlon and thoae of
ua whoM llwe . . woven Into Iasko of
acholwahlp and ~h . He worl&lt;a too
fwd . He glwe too much of himself thai
wa who teach may h... the conditions
Of leaching and -~he would want
for lllmMif had he
to ~

*_,

~:,..~=~~

.. ·

It all started In the mid 60s when a
medieval scholar at Berkeley decided to
throw a backyard party using the Middle
Ages as a theme.
Now 12 years and thousands of
feasts and tournaments later, some
45,000 people from across the nation
who belong to the Society for Creative
Anachronisms still gather in groups of
&gt;arious sizes to recreate the more noble

as~!~~~hetfc:ll'~~·er,

a lecturer In
U/ B'a Chemistry Department, Ia one of
these Indi viduals. Hollander, who
assumes the persona of Frederick of
Holland at SCA activities, just ended a
six month reign as king of the Eastern
Kingdom . He won the title through
strenuous competition In medieval style
tournaments.
Those who are unwilling to "wor1&lt; to
have fun, find the concept of honor and
chiV.Iry laughable, and have little
Imagination . They would not be
welcome In the group," says Hollander.

~':!t~A .:::~~~ ~:temr~!ir s~~
10

medieval costumes, research reci pes,
and make period food for feasts , and
armory and protective devices for
tournaments.
Artlsano, too
The Society even has Its own
medieval artisans, calligraphers, brewers, coppersmiths, Illuminators, leather
workers and jewelry makers, who.g_ather
at larger affairs and share trade secrets
with neophytes eager to learn the
ancient crafts.
Tournaments and revels are the two

main activit ies of SCA. Revels consist
of feasts , Juggling , music and dancing
-all authentically medieval, of course.
The major "kingdom" events Include

~~r ~~a~o:,:~,'[6~w~fto::!:r.!a':

Christmas which occurs 12 days after
the holy day.
There are six SCA kingdoms across
the country. Smaller groups which are
not as self-sustaining belong to
principalities. Next on the hierarchy
come the baronies, then shires and
fi nally cantons.
When a king wins the throne through
rigorous com bet, he usually reigns with
his wife, but can choose a queen that
would make a good political liaison.
The courtly duo preside at SCA
activities and are responsible for the
governance of their domain. Likewise,

:::~ :~:~~~e':: t!7Jm;,~"'{h~fr ~~;:

positions .
Among the coronation gifts Hollander received from his subjects and other
SCA members were originally composed' songs, authentically constructed
strophic poetry, a stuffed unlcom from
the needleworl&lt;ers guild, and a
cheri shed bottle of mead from the
brewers guild.
Hollander en joys the social lnteraotion SCA provides as well as the
physical acti vitY. of. combet. He also

~~~~~~~ ~lrngasof a c~\'iv18. ~
honor - concepts some believe have
been consigned to oblivion In today's
world .

'KIHad Twice'
_
In combat, a per8on must be "klllad
. twice" before "falling dMd." The
Individual hlmaell decides when
sufflclant force has bean applied In an
unchecked blow to be 111181 • .._, the
concepts or honor and dllvllry come
Into play. Hoii.OO. ...,lngly...,.,. to
combat as "ritualized murder ~
consenting adults.•
Hand-&lt;nlted weapons (which ...
.-er made of -1] and protective
armor such as shields, . . lnapectad by
maraM!s for ufely belonl oombet
begins. Head, elbOw, ru-, hand and
groin protection we 8leo "muata. •
Hollander Indicated that halfnla nights
are consumed ~t~.."preparing for or
recovering fn&gt;o'l" """" SCA ectiYftiM.
He muaad that I~ eoclety'a modem
conveniences aomehow obllter·
ated, SCA members, baceuae Of their
emphasis on aalf-nll,.,_, work with
crafts and ability to "meM Clo, • would.
"survive better than anyoneelee.•
· One day, Hollander hopa to buy a
farm and build a - hall and laumay
field . His goal Ia to baoci!.M eelt
sufficient - _ , to the Of
reducing hla dependance on COIItly

~~-·June13,

Holl_.. and
his wife will hoat a gathering at their
home lor SCA mem~ . Those
lntereatad In attending the affair to
lawn more about the group can contact
him at 83 AcMeon .
SCA dUM . . $10 a~. The money
entitles you to the Society's national
publication and kingdom ne~~Jalett...

-JI.

-Immunology meeting to hear 60 scientists
More than 60 scientists fi'om 11
countries, Including apeclallsts In
diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis
and various hypersensitivity reactlons
will apeak at the sixth lntematlona1
Convocation on Immunology, June
12-15, at the Niagara Falls Hilton .
The Convocatlona, 1hetd alternate

m;~ ~~~ ~:"lm~~n~f':0~~

years, specialists In blood group
Immunology. tha Immunology of
infectious dl....,s and other areas
have been faat~red .
This year's emphasis on Immune..
pathology will be of 11&gt;8Cial lntereat to
practicing phyalcians as well as

="=·

1

;ysthC:· ~~yror:;
Microbiology and program chairman or
the event .
" Many of the dl....,. to be
dlscualed are thoaa which were only

recently well understood, ll!ld well

di:IW~r=·~x~:~~;:;h~d.!i.ne the body

requires Immune mechanisms to .
protect Itself from Infection and
malignancies, mladlnectlon or exaggeiated reaction of the Immune apparatus
may Itself create d l - states.
An Ernest Wltabsky Lecture.. a
highlight of Convocation proceedings,
will be presented at 9 a.m . June 13 by
Dr. Philip Y. Paterson, professor of
microbiology-Immunology at North·
-tern University. His topic will be
" Experimental Allergic Encephalomyaw
litis - New Concepti of lmmunoragulatory Control . •
llle field of Immunopathology or tha
central nervoua syatem, to -be featured
In the lecture, 11 one tn which the tate
Dr. Wltabsky p~. H e - a
worlck'enownad mlcroblologilt, chairman of that dapart"**t at UIBJ....and flrat

director ol trie Canter

hare.

tor Immunology

"Of 11&gt;8Cial lnt-t to clinicians,"
Mllgrom Indicates, "will be Dr. K.
lshfzaka, Who dlscovwed the entlbody
ctaae responalbfe tor hYI*MfteltiYitY
reactions euch as hay f - ; Dr. ,.._ A.
Mlescher, who dlscovwed systemic
lupus ervthamatoaua as an Immunological d l - ; and 0... Netllan J .
balfler and John H. Vaughan who . .
experts In rt..matold arthr1tle.•

~=~c:lher

dante of the

.:,*:!attorn:. ~~

Jfel'o..t,_.t of M~

llre. ~Wick
(Austnel. Noel ROM (Detroit , John
(Canada! and Juan
rma
(Aruerltina) es we'll as _ . . U/8 and
&amp;uflalo epaclellate In microbiology,
medicine, pethology, and padlatrlca,
such as
Mllgrom, J - MOhn,
Emet Beut- and Qtueeppa Andree.
biology , Including

10....-.

ora.

�Junel, 1t78

.a publicatioo of
The Office of Cultural AHairs

~

Images, Words,
S~es -

J

Ja Raffelo "'

.. - .,._.......
_ - to -tile"Balfalo
- . .- &lt;II"'·"
.........
__,....,., . . . loodnl ..-led
..... . . . I _ Tloe

Ellpnl
v- ........_..,~
....._ ol_,.....

- ................., _ Ia ...... ia

_._ ..........
.,lallftll-.
..........
., .......
..,.-.....u.c

..................... pal . .

til* . . Gtllor

I

;arM)

-of

....U.

..... ...... ... 'l1llnda7 wllllllle liree

....

. . ~., llllioct Carter. "J- in

...._.--. ... roar""""'

.,._..ted

by BeD Jolmston, proleooor of
amoiellt tile Unlnr:oity olllllilois.
Tomoti'Ow evOiling, leedin.f eontempor·

aT7 -t.aget11er
· and
pianiat BeDjamiu
Cbarles
·w-u.....
with violiDiat

H...s-.

will periorm four of Wuorineo's
~ for Vloliu and Piano"

....U: "Six

(l.m), "VIoliu VuiaUou" (1!1'12), "1'be

Loag and tile Short" (1~). and "Fanwy
f..- Vloliu and Piano" (1975).
On Maad&amp;y, June 12. Jan WDiiams,
- t e prof- of musie and pereuasion
will direet his U/B Pereuasion
Eaoemble in "American Pen:IISIIion Mnsie
of tile «l'a,• feeturing ......-b bJ John Cop
and Lou~.
"JUDe ill Bullalo" will CIOildude OD
Tueeday, J1111t1 lll, wilb Vu-gil Thomson's

vlrt-.

"Concerto lor Flute, Stringo and Pen:us·
Ilion" (1954) and his "Sonata cia Cbleoo"
(1926), perf..-med by the Creative
Aasocilltea. Mr. Thomson, DOW 81 yean
old. bu hod a long and cliet.inguiahed canoer
u a c:rit.ie. composer and writer. He was
one ol. the famous American eXpatriates
wbo lived ill Paris from 1925 to 19S2, a
colorful member
the clrclo IIWTOUildiDg
wriiA!r Gertrude Stein, who wrote the
libretU. Ior Tbomo0n's two operas, "Four
Saint&amp; in Three Acta" and "The Mother of
Ua All." Mr. ThOIMOII will be present lit
this final concert ol the seriea, wl:iicb will
a1ao illdude the ocreeaing of Robert
Flaberty'a claasit doewnentary. "Louiaialla
Story, • !Dr wbieb Virgil Tbomaon wrote the

or

........

/i special program for Summer 19'78,
presented by Arts ud Let.ten and the
SUDID!er Seeaion. is beU!g cOonlinal.ed by
proleuor of English, Mylea SlaUn, and
consists of performanoea, readillgo and
worUhops in music, dance, theatre, fiction
ud poetry.
.
•
One ol the outstanding events of
"Images/Words/ Spaces," is a eolloquium
frooi June 19·23, "Narrativea and Images,"
cooduc:t.ed by Homer Brown, associate
professor of Engliah. On Monday, June 19
at 6:30 p.m., the newlY appointed Jones
ProfeiSO!' of French, Louis Maria, wiU give
a paper discussing "quotaUons of painUngs
in narrative texts and the functions or these
quotations in narrative transformatio~; "
more simplY, the relationship of worda and
imqea.
!darin, a French literary scholar and art
biatorian wbo is leaving Johna Hopkins
University to join the U1B French and
ComparaUve Literature departments, bas
been a proleaaor lit the Sorbonne in Paris,
and a diplomat in the French llfinist.ry of
Foreign Affairs. ·
His paper will be responded to by
memben of the coUoquium, including the
other very disUnguished gueat participant,
F'ren&lt;b novelilit and film dinld.or. Alain
Bobbe-Grillet.. The latter, who is perhaps
moat widely known for his 1960's film, "Last
Year at'lllarienhod." will, like !darin, .be on
campus tbrougbounhe week of June19.
Bobbe-Grillet has been caDed the major
exponent of the New Novel (Tile Enuen,
Tile Vorevr, Jealouy), in which loe breaks
down traditional noveliaUc .,... of
character, plot, Ume and narrotive, juat as
be broke them down in bia filma. The
viewer or reader is drawn into an
..-ptance or tnlat of tile c:ittumatanoea of
the film or novel, whereupon Robbe-Grillot
removes the etability of the atrueture "pulliiii the rug out from under." says
Assoeiote Provost of Arts and Letters, Jeff ·
Kline - and tbe reaulta are fucinaUng or
annoyillg, depending on your taatea; but
you are not likely to be bored .
On June 21 lit 6:30 p.m .• Robbe-Grillot
will dioc:nss the relalioaahipa between the
novel and film, text&amp; and imqea. He11 talk
about bis own reeent eoUaboratiOna with
abotract eapreaaionist painten Robert
Rauschenberg and J._. Joluoa, and the
uae in bia ficUon or tile imopo of tile French
ourrealiat painter, Majritte. Robbe-Grillot
will apeak in Freaeb, but English
int.ell&gt;ret&amp;Uon wiD be provided. So wiD
refreebi!M!nta. lollowillg botb this ...-nta'
Uon and the one by LoWs !darin. The
local.ion lor the two event&amp; is the Kiva in
Baldy Hall 011 tile Ambent eamp....
In coojunc:tion with Alain Robbe-Grillot's
visit, the Center lor Media Study will
ocreen two of his 6lms on Tueeday, June
20, ill Squire Conlerenee Theatre.
Bobbe-Grillet, aceompanied by interpreter,
U/B profeaaor and writer Raymond
Federman, will be OJ! hand to answer
questiono. The 6lms are "The Mu Who
Lies" (5 p.m.) and "Eden and After" (7
p.m.).

U /8 and Artpark:

~~ettfe!.~~~rore.-

of
English, has put together a feast of poet.s

and poelie ac:t.ivity for this aummer, which

.. ....._.,&amp;lie ........
.....

•

ol AldUieclere

'Dooip'w~of
Lib ~ Bealoao'a

llooip lkudloo.
- ......,. laduolrial lll'doite&lt;ture
laat - · It io an iatroducilcx! to
_.....
IIIMYiaa iaduotrial bw1di!I(S
r.- lloe ,..,.. of 111116- J.ll'lS. and ...... them
Ia lloe IDdllllriol

ef lloe dnelop_,t of

~

and -'al - '

.

.

•

*

.

arebi&amp;eetural l!ietor).lt a1ao a uae(I!J ptece
of
raioin(' for a city that olte!Menls-to knowwbatto makeolita
lnd-.ial treditw~~a.
.
:'l1oe OOW'!!e is. opeo to 10·12 atudent.s (by
pemoiaioicin ol matM!C!tor) and run from

·--a-

JUJ)026toJ"!y14. daily (on site)lrom 9 AM
to nooe . U
contaet Profeaaor
Ban ham lot S. A.E.D .. U.,.ea HaU , 831·5484.

•-reatocl.

will be presented on campus and at Artpark
from JulyS-30. Detaila will be carried in the
/leportl'r throughout the feotival, but here
are aome items to wbetyour appeUte.
Four distinguished poet&amp; will be in
residence, aerially, at U/ B lor lect.ures.
readingo, clasaes. and to parl.icipal!' in a
Credit· Free coune !'Four Cootemp..-ary
Poeta: A SpeciAl Workahop Series. • After
each poeihuspent2or a days here, he wiU
give a reading at Artperk (Fridaya at 4
PM). Gerald Stern there July 6-81, author of
Lwckr Lit&lt; and winn r of the 1977 Lamont
Prir.e: Louis SimpOO!l (July 13· 14), Putitur
Prite-winning poet and prole oor of English
at SU Y /Stony Brook: Marvin Bell (July

�June I , 1178

7

We thought that there was not enough
cultural ferment to fill our customary
monthly
We were wrong. The
campus will be hopping; what wao not
hopping ...ere our -eultqral informant.. The
material reeeived by deldline. time wu too
spane for an issue ol mcrgut. Then it began
to Dow ii&gt;. We were pleued and frustrated.

- 1.

Th" mini-magnet is our eompn:mise
solution. Gapa, as well as our usual
direetory listings, will be ffiled .in by the
&amp;porter. And we hope to have a
midlummermagut.
-FAther Swartz
Direetor, Office of Cultural Alfairs

Bross asks full explanation
based on fact, 'not vituperation'
Editor:
From 25 years In public health, I have
- learned this: Most of the Individuals or
groups that, are supposed to be
accountable to the general public
actually feel responsible only to certain
narrow segments of the public ~sualiy

~~~ =~~: 1:'~;~~ fo~e~t!
11

;mswer Is

more

likely

to

be

an

~""~~o.:'tyn?a~:u~d~~~~- aA~~:c~,::

public Is almost afraid to raise
questions.
A good example Is the response to

1

::JY ~'1lJ.\'$i'Jo ~~e !,et~:!,~~~~st~~li~~
failure to vacate Ridge Lea prior to the
19n-78 school years. The Reporter of
May 18, 1978, COIIlains Indignant crtes

Watch
For ...
.. .The Theatre Department's

.._
19-21), author ol 4 volumes, including 1l.!
Elccpe ho.UJ Y01t; and Anselm HoDo (July
26-30), prolifie poet and tnna!ator, will liiJ
the residencies.
'
1n addition, ma.ny other events are
scl&gt;eduled for Art:pat;k: faeulty writers
Raymond Federman, Mac Hammond and
Carl DenniB will give worbbops on
rooerete poetry, poetry reading styles and
the lyric, respectively: specialit.ed work·
shops (labor writers, feminist writers,
poetry based on work done with Hopi
ladians, et.e.) will be olfeced; Professor
Wickert and poet Sbreela Ray will ooaduct
workshops; there wiD be a book fair, a
poets·and·artists pienic, open read.inga 'and
a wo~ prinhbop.
_
There wiD alJo be "Poetry·in·Performance" the lint S Sun~a ol the
Feotival at Artpart. including an
appearance by "The Four lfGroemeD," a
Canadian ooued-woed group p.--nting
· works in p...,..,u (their critleal raves
include "WODderiul, WODCierfull" - John
Cap; and "Bravo Canadadal" - Eupne
loneoco).

And more: one ol America's moot

distinpi,sbe.t -.ior poets. David lgnatow,

will give reodiDp and cluoes oo July U
and 12; and Robert Haas, former U/B
English Department member and Yale
Younger Poeu Award-winDing poet, who
will be here July 28 and 29, will lecture on
"Rbythlll in-Contemporary Vene" at U/B
(time to be announced) and give a
reading/workshop at Artpark. ·
All events are Cree and open to the public,
except for the Credit-Free-Course. Regio·
tration for the latter is being handled by
Juditli Kerman (831-4301). A -eomplete
sehedule wiD be published June 15:
requests for ume or for lldditional
inlormatioa abould be addreued w
Prol...,.. Max W'lcltert, Department of
English. The 1p011sora for all ·of this are
Artpark, SlliiiiDOr SeNions, the Department ol Ellglloh and NEW (NiAgara-Erie
Writero).
·

third
alinual gift to the city of Buffalo, "Shakespeare in Delaware Park." This popular
summer series uses the lakeshore o·r
Delaware Park u
its nature-made
amphitheatre, and playgoers frequenUy
bring a picnic supper to precede their
viewing of Shakespearean plays. This year,
Saul • Elkin, chairman of I he 'i'beatre
Department, will direct f oontemporary
adlptation of 1h Tempe.t , with an original
musical score by c:ompooer Ray Leslee. The
opening is July 11 ; it will Nn through July
24. The seeond production (Aug. 1·13) will
be fie MeTTJ~ Wive r of Wi...uor, directed
by John Morgan, assistant professor of
theatre at U / B.
Excursions provided by IELI
(latensive English Language Institute).
They ve open not only to visiting foreign
students, but to local students and the
community as well. and include Visits to the
Saratoga Performing Arts Center (summer
horne of the New York City Ballet): the
Stratford !Ontario) Shakespeare Festival;
Artpark; as weD as trips to Niagara Falls,
Crystal Beach and Toronw. There are local
exeuraiOD.J too: the AUent.own Art Festival
on June 11, Beaver laland, the zoo. the
Albright--Knox Art Gallery - yoo name it.
Call Kathy DeMart at 636-2077 for
informatioa.
... The Zoclioque Company (director:
Linda Swiniucb) presenting three per·
{ormancet of new da.nces (or poems:
"Poetry, Pulseo and Promenades" on
Friday, June SO, 8 PM, Cornell Theatre;
Sunday, July 2, S:SO PM in the
Albright-Knox Sculpture Garden; and
TUesday, Tuly 4, 3 PM attbe Artpark "El"
... The reaideney of noted writer. Donald
Bartbelme, sponaored by the English
Department, from July 10 w 24. Barthelme
is one of the two leading experimental
fiction writers (the other being John Bartli)
in this country.
... Lots ol film series this aummer:
UUAB, Center for Medis Study, !ELI (The
Golden Age of Screwball Comedy) and - a_
special oerieo of documen'taries by noted
lawyer/filmmaker Frederick Wiseman,
sponaored by American Studies, beginning
June 18 with "Juvepiie Court" (1'10
MFACC, Ellkott, 7 p.m.). The ReportcT
calendar will carry all details.

~~~~..Pn~r.:;,oc~~:~n:~s~uen~nbut t~

maintenance of three campuses wastes
S5 million of the taxpayers' money .each
year, the public has the right to a
sensible elqllanatlon of what went
wrong.
Dr. Ketter blames his administrative
problems on the 3 campuses. He
blames Albany for this state of affairs.
Actually, it was the Department of the
Budget (DOB) In Albany that suggested
phasing out Ridge Lea. DOB (which hed
the facts on SUNYAB space) refused to
accept the Administration's argument
that "no room exists" to move into.
Subsequently, SUNYAB did draw up a
0

~~e~er~ne~l::!:'':a~ n~~~r ".;r,'~~~~fy
imf~~~:n:.,~· the facts . What Is the

explanation for this costly failure? My
explanation was (1) reluctance of
certain consliWents to make a move, (2)
half-hearted and Inept administrators,
and (3) Inflexibility ' that prevents
changing the building plans to meet a

~~~~~:. ~.:'~~hlo~h:~':a~l~~

Dased on facts and not vituperation, Is
certainly called for.
it was the clear responsibility of the
Buffalo Council to hear the evidence on

Ridge Lea before giving a Yerdlct on
admlnistratlwo performance. Fallura to
do this may II8MI the at~ort-term
interests of Dr. ~etter and hi•

~~~:::'~ncrnt.:::'~ts 1 t ol" t:t :;,..::
pub~lc. The failure of govemmel)llll or

voluntary agencies to be responsive lo,
and responsible to, lhe public can only
· hurt SUNYAB, SUNY, Jllld public
educatl on in the lonl, run .
_

"'£~~=.y~~~:

-Irwin
Director of Biostatistics
Roswell Plll1&lt; Memorial Institute

Herman backs
merit
money
Editor:

·Today I sent the attached letter to
Governor Carey. I hope other f"!'ulty
members who disagree with the stand
of our " representatives" in United
University Professions (UUP) will do
likewise.
1

-Gebor.f.Professor
~=

Depart men~".' ~mput~ Science

o..r ao..nor C&amp;Ny:

0

f understand that United Unl..-.lty

r.;-or~:.rto;: i~t'~7f =rr:.~~ ~~

negotiations of the Office of Employee
Relations regarding the natter of a 2%
increase in dlsctetionary funds. I am
writing this letter to you to Indicate thai
I, as well as many other~pie I talk tp
1

~~h~f~~~:,s ~ri.~o":J. "R!::!tro~~~

discretionary funds not only reuonable

~~~~~:'rn ~=~e..:.C,~~ 1::

State Lni..-.lty ~ New York Ia helped •
by the presence of Inc,_ lor merit In · I
a negotiated oett*'-1.
~

._Gv:3r~

Profeaaor

t
Alumni honor Gicewicz, Heath,
writer for 'S~turday Night Live' _
Dr. Edmond J. Gicewlcz Is the 1978

~:';~l'~e~~u~he P~''6.,~m~~:,X:);:;
exceptional

contributions

to

un!VSS~:lat~d~~sf~t:.'::~ Gicewlcz
1

the

was
among eight persons honored at the
Alumni 's annual Installation of officers
and awards banquet, Friday, June 2, In
Spaulding Dining Room.
Others citeawere: Richard E. Heath,
a Buffalo attorney who received the
Walter P. Cooke Award for contributions to U/B by a non-alumnus, and
Alan Zwelbel, a television · Writer who
was presented the George W. Thorn
Award for outstanding achievement by
a graduate under 40.
Five othecs received Distinguished
Alumni honors: Mrs. Phyllis Kelly,
president of the U/B Alumni Association: Dr. Earl J. McGrath , former U.S.
commissioner of education : Louis R.
Relf, president of National Fuel Gas;
Joseph Silbert, attorney, and Morley C.
Townsend, attorn.., "'nd Erie County
1

1

~! !t riener~
0

Alumni Association
officers installed were: Ernest J. Kiefer,
Buffalo accountant, president; Michael
F. Guercio, sales representatiwo for
Commercial Chemical Inc., presidentelect; and Willie R. Evans, Buffalo
school teacher, treasurer.
Gicewlcz, a 1956 graduate of ~he U/B
Medical School , was saluted lor his
service as a former alumni president, as
physician for all U/B athletic teams, as
a leader In U/B fund-raising campaigns
'Bnd as a medical faculty member. He is

~h~w~y ~::i~~e P_.{~~:::~tA~~o~:=

lion.
•
Richard Heath was cited for his
leadership as chairman of the U/B
Foundation Board of Trustees, which
last year took In S3 million In private
donations In behalf of the University.
Alan Zweibel , a 1972 graduate In
psychology , has won . two Emmy
Awards as co-writer of NBC's " Saturday
Night Uve." He also won a Writer's
Guild Award In 1976. The 28-year-old
New Yorker has written tor a Paul
Simon special . a Beach Boys Special

and material for 53 atand-up comedians. · Zweibel lecturaa on television
comedy writing at ooflege'tanpu-.
Phyllis Kelly, ,._dent of the Alumni
Association, fs "-'!,.of the Nltlonal
Federation of Repubi!Qn Women. She
organized 28 Repubi~Qn-·a ctut.
throughout Erie County and ..wei u
vice chairmen of the ~~~- YOI1&lt; State
Republican Committee, the flrat woman
to be so deal_.ed. She Ia alao a
member of the lJ/8 COundl. •
Earl McGrath Ia an Internationallyknown authof, educator and~
for the liberal arts trwlltion In American
higher educat'lon. Presently on the ataff

~~i.h~~",~~fof=~ :0:
1949 to t953, and haa alao .....S

a

lr~~~ ~Kan~~ ~ ~

chancellor of Ei8erlhower College. •
Early In his.,.,_, he taught at U/B
where he wasoan uslstant to Chencelior
Samuel P. Capen, and also daM of
edmlnlstratlon . He repr8Mflted the
Class of 1928 allta 50th annlverury In
May.
.
Louis R. Rell, an ctlwo participant In
community affaire, Is president of
National Fuel Gas. He has been
president of the Batter Business Buraau
aM Is also a member of the Erie County
Economic Planning Commltt._., and
Greater Buffalo Development Foundation.

Le~se~h~\*'an~ 19~~~'::at~fot lr:

Arner~ Allsafe Company, has been a
generous U/B benefactor. The Samuel
P. Silbert Fellowship In Chemistry,
honoring a brother, was establlahed
nine years ago by Silbert and his slater
Doris. He has also been g-.,ua In
support of the law school and athletic

proJ~":;c.

Townsend Ia a member of
the Erie County Legislature, a former
_president of the. U/8 Alumni Association, and a former member of the U/B
Council .
The Alumni Awards were presented
by Judge William Regan, surrogate of
Erie County and chairman of the Alumni
A.siiOCiation'a Awlllda Committee.

�~

· i

Des Forges'

s~ries

draws comment from student

Important hlatortcal period has • created

. , ..... HHgTan

criticizing Lin ·Prao and COnfucius now

~~~rw:Tn\!~~{3-~~74) th~~~~ogut cch~~~-n~

peri"": r::-:

restoration and ensurfndthat socialist China ....
wilt never change Its color and will always
stand by the oppressed peopleS and
oppressed nations. If one day China should
change its color and tum Into a superpower,
If It too should play the tyrant In the world ,
and everywhere subject others to Its
bullying, .aggression, and exploitation, then
the people of the worJd should identifY. It as

the,...,...-

Since liberation, the Chinese proletariat

........... "CCIIna--k;holers"
.
1t111 negleCt bv -tern "Chrnaf~

that "history Is

:::=-tn%t
theur::~ ':,t.!m:,~or:,~
'*'n...

hllllory.
''China-experts"
. .boand to ml8undetatand what China
atanc1e
the founding of the
.......,.
lc exactly 28~ years
Mel out In the Reporter
, 1977), the founding of 1he
Ia not In "oonttnulty of the
~· II todolls,
- · strongly
i:Gatorm
the Chlneu people'S"

=£

for=-:'

:'::t
:::.,u:. ~"':e.r~.:ac::~
wltlt the raat of the world. Any

' .~=~·.·t=~n..frl
_ 10cua
on

prfnwily
the ~t.
Allclant Clllna until the Ch'lng
.,._,,... ~tllllf-euetalnlng
~ of
lis poHtical and
---tOIIIIc .epe~cta; It h8d none of
• tile WMI'a coiont.llzlng and Imperialist
dwWMrt81ice. Being • land of vast

---~
-of·
.....
from ... raat
the being
WOilcl laoby

:':st~o1° treoP~f:.i:t ri:~ ~~~~~

Fundamental changes In many political and

soclo-econornlc spheres, changes -totally

different from tho put, have occulTed. In

:l..,~~~~~l'o~":o
"d':e'r =~~
lntolloclually, and physically to~ome a

worker wHh both socialist conaclousness
and culture. In uteratura ~and art, the
raYOiutlon in the Peking opera has touched
off a nwolutlon in the other- spheres of
cuttura. The opera stages, which had been

:riJ':~~~!n"::?s ~~~~~.e:~=

and beauties, now vividly reflect the fighting
life of aoclaJiat reooluUon and socialist
construction, and above all, depict tho

-

~:~.~~~~i!ft~te~st~fr:w~~i:~~

overthrow it."
...
Indeed, China has been the beneficiary of
what It often raters to as a wealth of

~~~ ~ n'!iu~~~si t~~=~~ C::~~ne~
1:~~. s1~~~~~or~~"~o;R;~~~:7~8nd~~r~t

the People's Republic , China ha;; beCome
the inspiring vanguard of the Thfrd World .
To many lnternatlonal organizat1ons, .Ch in- ..

=

.

t~~·~:~r:~~~ ~r~:-~~fd ~~~~

gro~~~~t r:g~~~l;bi~~~::N!~nl~~~

gf~~ie~~ ::~~~rl~~::,;s, "!~~~~uno:"::!:

?S
~~h~by ~=~%~~c:rg.,~:r.,~~

=

ence and economic self·rellance, they can
throw off fals:t dependencies."" lneleed,

desprte being a dOY81oCing nation ltaoll,

-pie to tM U.S. that by uniting all forces'

ao~~~lcal and hoa1th wor1t, changes have
been carr1ed out conatantly In Chlna'a vast
rural araaa. Examples ant the cooperative
medicine ayatem, tho training or "beteloot·

to wortd peace and development .may well lie _

- " and medical teams which bring
their aemce to the countryside. Further, In

ted , _ . , In manv highly apaclallzed

oppoattea. Moat lmP;Ortantly. at a time when
people have begun fo Jose hope In the whole ·
Idea of development, -China can offer an
example that Is meaningful In Itself and a

:r:.':l:l. =t':.!~r;:~~'r:' 1~0~~~~

not a dBYelopment that has worsened
cond ition .
·,

~~Yto~t- d~,n~s gd,:~ear~~=~;~~

19 Ita Intellectual uperi,nco. of uniting

0

8

~~r:P~~nT~~~n~~ ~rW:J, th~a~y Ia~
t~eir

volume of transportation , atate purchases
and of commodities, and stale
,..,.,uee haw aU gone up. The mua

In · conaparln8 -the diplomacies of China
and the Soviet nlon~ Henry Kissinger noted

~.::. f~'r.t~h"'"':,~J;,~ft':.~,_~

with because of their dlrectneaa, that they

or

the
country
the "world unclet"
~ (T-...IIal." " - · this
....,...ton
. . .,IIO_flelnlarpnlted lodaoy In
.. of 1 "waatcc h~an
Clllllaak.. Willie ~- Is still
.......... It --'Y libln¥tatea the

........--*"a....-

1::.~.~;...1:,u=

. . ..........
"'Clllnl; It th..
~ M"u-IIICI-.n" or "national ClllauWD_.. •
Is eo often,

...,...,.,,"'.....

..........,, ... ..........,Indicated '?Y
~.'

of the enUre Chinese
population. Moat Importantly, on tho
economic front , Industrial production, the
property

all ourged -

on an unl)f808dented scale .

~tcular, have
found, ending formal relations with the

8~~~n~ft?1~,!e~~ d=~,:;.t ~b~~~::

lnvestm.e:ota from Taiwan , or cease all
economic and cultural relations . with the
Taiwanese people, before establishment of
full diplomatic relations with China Ia

possible. While not selling out their ltgltl-

walled 29 years , and above all, has behaved

::!,~~,,:tt~t~:.n:'..,r.='!~ ~~':: ~::,~r.~

Imperialism. This consolidation ol the wiX
and qood·falth of the -plo of the world Is

f'-kta. Unlike In· the Weet , where science

allies, auch as Japan In

model Parms1 Irrigation systems, and textile
tactor1ea, orten adapted to local circum·
stances. It Is the challenge ot the Ch inese

:I;,"J =k':t u,l'!":r~'~~rpar'~;!~~~y .:=~·

1

~:,.?S:eancft~~«;'~ th:'~':!t o~: w~?~

~dlg~~~gn~r.~~~~~-·~;~:r ~~~:r·t~g~

mate rights, as Chou En·lal pointed out,

heroics of present workers , peasants, and

:::f"mon~~on \'!'!ng~~~~

::~~J~ew'e~~~~~~=~:'fr~~ ~h"e T1~;:~~:

and sever formal diplomatic r:elatfons with
the Chlan.g_govemment, therefore conformIng to its stated "Interest In a peaceful
settlement of lbe Talw.n question by the
Chinese themselves ."
According to the Chinese oovernlhent,

'l~~."ncP'~~P. h~ t~l:.· ,'~!

(~).• o r -

"OMIMI'

·

continent Into dar1mess for a long time. But
where there Is suppression, there can als~
be resistance ."
The Chinese people further believe that no
n nations can solve the problems
of
evolopmont without help. But, II

·the

lila

continued U.S:--milltary presence 1n ,China,
and is therefore a serious violation of
China's territorial Integrity. In order to have
full d iplomatic relations with China, the
U.S. must first terminate the defense treaty

5

8

International

~~tu~~:: ~~~: c'?.r:~~;:,~s h1~ve ~:o ~~:~

diminished with the end of the IndOChina
war In 1975. Further, conditions in the
western Pacific are more peaceful than they
have been for a quarter of a century. Yet , an
ultlmate implementation of the Shanghai
Communique Is still pending.
Historically, jurlsdictlonaJly, as well as
culturally, Taiwan has been part of the
Chinese territory since 230 A.D. l't Is rather
Irrelevant to compare the pies&amp;nt International political settlement of the Taiwan
question to the rule of the Island province of
feudal China, including the Ch'ing dynast!.

~~~~n~~r:!;.';!a~yta~::n ~~n:~~u~m~·as

~h~:t~V:se=p~~a\Fir~~~~~:~~,~~

~J.~' .nil water, ancient
OICI ~ly Nler to llself as

a.n.

. In view ot the present

much confusion both ·among, themselves,

~~~;.~t,~rt':tr:=r.·As ~':~~In~~
w.tam "slnologlsts," busily sel(·
lnllulglna their own expectations, have -'ph-It here lnt ~Iober, "You have to be
there ln order to appreciate Chairman Mao's
too often misinterpreted current
'*'- eocio-economic and political writing ."
- " - · Thoae "Chtna-hiatorlana" who
v;~~~!~rt ~~~~~r:~~=~ -­
Mft been exposed superficially to
IIICient Clllneu history are now
~~~.:m~~~~y h~tt~~~ ~~~~~:~'!;'!'.~~
oonfnlnled with oonfuslon and frustra~~R::~~or ~:'a ~tu~,f an~mh~i~~~~
tion • a lnulti!Jide of new cultural
1eudallsm, and bureaucrat-capitalr:m. thus
llllenomena .... In China today.
fully reversing history and restoring
"""'-, th088 WhO have bean trying to
historical truth. Thus. It Is quito unlikely
IUCIIII8I IC)Cio«)onomic and polltlcal
that modem Chinese history can be
llniCj bet-. old and new Chinese
understood as haYtng " continuity with the
Natory, without a full understanding of
past."
tile baala of ~t Chinese thought,
. . llldeecl wrong. Speclflcally, this
Socialist New China
0011:1111111181Y all-pte to discuss
~ China and the world,
fo~::'gp ~ ~~P~~n~=u~P~;.,!~
Dlftlcularfx, the normalization of
the beginning of ..China•s socialist construcU.S.-CIIina Nletlona, as a compl..,ent
tion, has Indeed turned a new page In their
10 Roger Des Forges' attempts to
cultural revolution, and reflects the
Interpret many modem Chinese historical, mllltwy, cultural, political, social
=~~~~r~~~~~
~~:e!!'!Z1rh ~~~
ICMnoe and technology questions
local adaptation of Marxism. Above all, such
[whlcll " - been published recently in
~~~~~h~
3:"ae~c!uo~=f~~~P~~
December 9, 1976; Aorll
China.
13,20, .nd27.~4,11, and 18,1978).
eallolln" Of the

Junea, 1178

Ii

U.S•.Chlna ralotlon1

that the Chinese -pie were easier to doal

a::'rn

~~~~n:::1tr. tn'f.h~t .:m'rhe
~:~~
~n~~~~\~:~~~~~~~e~~~~~~ ~~

~f:S~~~s :.'~ct~~P':=~~~o~~

principles of

~t.ul

coexistence, namely

mutual respect lor sovereignty and territorial

lntegrtty, mutual non--ogresalon, non·
Interference in another countl)''s internal
offal,., equality and mut.uaJ bonollt. It has
al~ strongly opposed tho
lmparlallat
f~lce of aggression and war, and the

'Onm~~ of~:~~we~. U.S.-Chlna
Alllatlons, aa Chou En·lal affirmed, "This all
depends on the solution to tile Taiwan

=-~·l~u:~f ~~~r wl:!n tt;:th ~~:"8~~

1

and China reviewed long-atandlng, serious

disputes
0

be~-

the two nations, both

:"~ tl!:'h~~:~ aide ,.lllrmed Ia very

10

straightforward and clear. ..The T-aiwan

quoallon 11 the crucial quoatlon obstrUcting
the """""'lzatlon of ,.lations - -

~':.~~:.~, ~:'i.~~\.ol.,::
g:&gt;~..!t,~~iC::wan II~=:

the matherland· tho n-'!:"ot Taiwan Ia
Chlna'a Internal alfalr In which no other

'(f~!: ~~~ /:~T;.~:'m~f
be wlthdrnon from Taiwan. The Chi,_
government firmly oppotfOI any activities
whk:h aim at the C1'8etlon of 'one China, one

~~=:: "":CI)I::e,..two,e';.':!e:~:: ,~~

- t h a i ,he 1tatu1 of Taiwan remains

to be ct.tennlt*t.' "
H - , what tho U.S. aide doclar8d alii I
Ill lmp-tatlon, "The U.S.
ac1u1c&gt;w1ec1oe1 that all Chi,_ either side
of the T - Strait maintain there Ia but
one China and thai Taiwan 11 1 part of

-

on

=.~,J·~~o::-"_,4::1 ':~

I n - In a - ' u l -~- of the
T-q-tlon by theCIII-thern,.._.
With 11111 - ' In mind, It lfllrm1 the
ulllmlla oblael- of the wtt-al of all
U.S. ,.,._ and miMtory 1..-t.llono from

=

~~ Talwanao
r.:-"l:::O."the t.,11on
~
,,__on
In the

-dlmlnl-."

1~~~.~:-,oc~~ :~·h~~ ~~:~ ~mt~t~
paacolul solution. Accordingly, despite U.S.

military encirclement, China has patiently

~~!' ~~~~~::.ro~~~~h%:a ~W~~~~

=r ,:=

described the situation to Mike Mansfield,

~gnt:.Ca~~to
r:f!~ ~~na
bolo"' and af;)or tho algnlng of the Shanghai

COmmunique, " Generally speaking, our
relatlonshrp Ia QOOd and moving ahead. But
are w.e aatlsfted?_I canno.t.aay eo~" Anottier
added,. H1f thia Issue Ia not resolved and Ia
prolo'nged, the responsibility Is not on our
·side but on yours. The one who ties a knot
must untie it."

u~~"tt8 ~~s:"';~u~.k~n,;r!rmoa:~

pe'f:ery
to ao'fve the Taiwan ;ueslion. As Mansfield

~C::~~t~:~Yf:~:~nn~e=~.~~l~~

~~~~· ~t!"st~~~o roe~~~~ Pt,~~~e~
~~n~~~;o~~~~a~~:1:,u;~~~~~~~r~
normalizetiOn of U.S.-Chlna relatione has

~oy~~~ :n:~ed 1 ~~ ''!:~3 o:,_:~~~g

establishment of full diplomatic relations

~~~n~·S:~~c ~~~n!u~rn

~ 'l!'11~n=-"::~~~:: :.Ou~~=o''::i:\'~t~

to wor1d peace at large.

�Here's what to do about those slumps &amp;.. bulges •••
By Jorce Buch-kl
Ropor1or Sloff -

The aouon Is here when all great
minds should check out their bodies. .
If winter hes literally w41ather beaten
your body, leaving you with an ecute
esse of midriff bulge, silhouette slump,
er (If you lucked outl evenly dispersed
but ·unsightly adipose, then, friends,

it'~~;;;: ~':,e~'J?~n~~Y~~it wor1&lt;ed

for Mohemmed All, didn't It? ... at least
lor awhile.
As a matter of fact, jumping rope to
stay In shape comes highly recommended by Professor Salvatore Esposito, ct\alrman of U/B's Department
of Rec:noatlon, Athletics and Related
Instruction.
Besides being a good toning
exercise, jumping rope also helps
coordination and balance. Of course,
the Icing on the cake (If yo~'ll excuse ·
the expnaalon), Is that It's free,1:&amp;11 be
done alone, and requires no special
feclllty or attire.
Start wllh three 30 second bouts and
then wor1&lt; up gradually.
Caution urged att.r 30
Esposito stressed that tho68 who
heve not been exercising regularly.
particularly IndiViduals o - 30, should
check wllh a physician before starting
any exercise program. That out of the
way, two rules of thumb are: always
begin moderately, and feel free to drink
llquida (of the non-alcolvlllc variety) In
order to reduce muecle cramping .
Actually, the proper wec&gt;'., to begin

=·~t,~:~a\fy no. ~:::;~

wrestling team, and a man who
admittedly muat exercise dally to keep
his hulky physique looking good, Is to
do
five
mlnutea of
warm...opa,
conslatlng of bending and stretching
exercises. These -exercises differ from

~~·=r~:O~:! ~ua~h.:U~~

some do_... a dual role.
• eootlng d&lt;&gt;Wn • exerelsea after a
are also imponent, says
Michael, a1noe they help dl Ipate lectlc
acid which 8CCumulates during a
worl&lt;out, and help prevent stiffness and
f.':::.~en feelings of fatigue or exhaus·

wor1&lt;out

Bending and stretChing exercises
lhould t.oorne an Integral part of one'a
~ly routine. If an lndlvtdual perterms
them faithfully he or &amp;he can rNIJntaln
•r.,ga of motion or flexibility." Such
exarcl- help counteract the landeney
of tenclona and muaelea to shorten
during the IQing ~roeeaa , thus
_.lmlnating a " erochety' look .

JOQlling
Michael

personal~

prefers to -stay In

:'~~Y..!c,g~~: O:e~O~fstt;::r,~~~~~

cool-downs, and because of this swears
that he does not have to restrict his
caloric intake to maintain hi'l weight.

ho~~~\!f s~%~e~~ b~Pc':.':"ln~aJS,::~

there's a running battle over who gets to
mow the lawn- another good exercise.
Obviously, one's basic body type Is
determined by genetics, but there's
always room for a little modification to
Improve the appearance and help the
psyche.
Although exercising Is a must to tone

~n"J'1l,• lsd~~~~~~~~e~u'::"e .;.~~

weight and get rid of flab . Since

moderate exercise tends to stimulate
the appetite, Michael personally has
found that it's better to reduce first,
then exercise to maintain the desired

we~1\e

dropping weight, one can
expect to f irst lose in areas where extra
poundage was most recently added . At
least, th is is the way It w ill appear.
3,SOO•xtra calories equals a pound
By the way, to geln one pound,

;,r;.1~~\~~~~.::,~~~&amp;:~~~;.~:or~

lose weight. That's why - If all other
factors remain constant - an extra
slice and a half of breed a day can put
10 pounds on you during the course of a
year. Fat is definitely sneaky.

While exercising to tone up muscles,
one can also exercise to echleve a
"training effact," thai Is, to incrNM
andurance. A
training affect Ia
produced when the ' - t - Ia
elevated to 150 beala or more per
minute for a mlnrmum of five mlnutea.
How fast It takes your body to get '*"&lt;
to normal (In tllflTla of hiNirtbeMal attar
doing Mroblc exercl-. Ia an excellent
lndlcatorofo'"!'ao-aJ lltn-. Some
people, though, ehooaa to exerclee only
to firm up or 6ulld muaelea.
· So take heart men, thoM tanneo
Herculean beauties on the beldl who

~~u~O:.'~u~en::::..::"':'·:;::

cardiovascular pulmonary endUtWlOII Ia
zip.
Not too consoling, Iall?

For$ t 5 (or an ID), you.can use _ camp~ facilities
Feculty, staff; dues-paying alumni
and their spouses can have access to all
University recreation and Intramural

~::~n·h~rf~~ ~rr~as~~~
entitles the purchaser to use tennis,
racquetball and squash courts as well
as the swimming pool. Students are
eligible If they have validated Summer
ID's .
Recreation cards can be purchased at
Clark Hall In room 300, Monday thru
Friday from 9 a.m. to noon or 2 p.m. to

4:30 p.m. Faculty and staff must bring
University ID's. Alumni can bring dues
cards .
Reservations for tennis, racquetball
and squash are taken dally from noon.
They should be mede two days before
the desired date. On Fridays, reserv•
lions are taken for Sunday, Monday and
Tuesday. Reservations can be made In
person at t 13 Clark or by calling
831 -2926. Only one reservation per
person Is allowed .
Recreation aetiYitles are available

during the followinu ttn.a:
Tennis - On the Amherst Campus
daily from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Main Streei
courts are o~during daylight houra.
Swimming - Open Monday through
Friday from :30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Clark-Hall.
Rac~uelba/1/squash - Open Monday
~"t;;'~:~~~ 11:30 a.m . to 5:30p.m.

Softball- Double elimination iOumament; 64 teams accepted.

U/B is joining the SUNY athletic league
U/ B hes
been
accepted • for
membership In the State University of
Yor1&lt;
Athletic
Conference
New
(SUNYAC), effeellve September 1.
The University will compete In 10
men's intercollegiate sports within the
conference: baseball, basketball , cross
country, golf, Ice hockey, soccer,
swimming &amp; diving, tennis, track &amp;
field , and wrestling . The Bulls are
eligible for both r~ular season and
tournament competltoon in 1978-79.
In 1.979-80, the SUNY Conference will

1978-79. The Bulls will continue
affiliations with the National Collegiate
Athletic Association (NCAA) , Eastern
College Athletic Conference (ECAC),
and New York College Hockey
Association (NYCHA).
Varsity baseball will retain NCAA

~~et'l:' ~~~ 'l&gt;~:i:e,",; of the

12-sehool

::',fer~a~~~~ ~~~':::'YPI~irs=h

and Potsdam.
Many• of the schools In the
conference are already on U/B
schedules; ot.hers will ba added for

Robart Riedel, of Geneseo State
College, Is presldent-i!lect of the SUNY
Conference.

At~letlc

Biohazards panel .named
Dr. Joseph H. Kite, professor of

~~U'n~~r'~Yry-~:,~=~ ~~j;:
m·~ ~~w~ ·~ d~v~~~'li.~~~ ~~~ ~:~i tee.

Division along with Buffalo State [also
admitted to the conference at a meeting
held Friday, May 5 at the Chautauqua
Institute),
Brockport,
Freelonla,

Division I status, and the varsity Ice
hockey team will compete at the
Division 0 level.

yeara; Dr. Gordon J . Hall, Mechanical

~~~i !J:'J~erw

JB=y.A2
years; br. James C. Allen, MedicinePresident Robert L. Ketter named Dr.
lnfeellous Dlseaaee. 2 years; Dr.
Kite !lnd the complete committee roster
Edward A. Carr, Jr. , Phannecotogy and
Tl&gt;erapeutlca, 2 y-s; Dr. George
late last month . The panel, Ketter said,
will provide "a most important service"
Greene, Oral Pathology, 4 .yeara; Ms.
to campus researchers. It will report to
Anna M. Heide, Microbiology, 4 y-.;
the President through the vice president
~- Michael Noe, Social &amp; Preventive
for research .
·
Medicine, 4 years; Father Edward
Fisher, Campus Ministry, 2 yeara; Or.
Membera of the committee and the
length of their terms are:
Alan. K. Bruce, Biology-Radiation
Dr. A. Gayler Harford , Cell and
Safety OHieer, Pemlanenl; and Mr.
Molecular Biology, 3 years; Dr. Jemes , Robert ,E. Hunt, Secretary, EnvironF. Mohn, Center for Immunology, 3
mental Haelth Officer, Permanent.

w.

'.
•·
·

�.lunet, 11ll

"In many ways. this is a
hard working and caring administration,
but there are areas it hasn't lJeen able to touch"

. . . .. _................
,lllll--_

chert assesses state of Senate &amp;. U/B
outaolno

~---Re1Choo1

:,
=---n
c.-lllli_
.. _
_
_ ot

general ec;tucatlon program for widely
dl¥8r88 faculty and, In my opinion, a
unlveraltr, which hat not had academic
leadersh p. I don't think the faculty
should be fully to blama lor. the length
or tlma It has taken to establish a
committee.
The report on the research foundation
Is another contribution . The report
spotlighted the awful situation here at
U/B negardlng disincentives lor research. Paul Ehrlich chalnsd the
committee and did an excellent lob.
In addition, the Senate establfshed a

;:;'~~UoYr~~~g.' ~~ch~~t~s~

111sponded to· ttl' tentative Regents'
plan which, I think, hplped to scuttle it.
We moved up the drop-add date to the
students' chagrin, but I believe, to the
ultimate bettermen~ of the University. I
feel the faculty correctly 111sponded to
the students' endless shopping around.
Aleo, I think the structural changes In
the Senale h8Y8 been significant . The
use of alternates Is one, but the
Institution of first and second reedings
Ia also Important . I think It's much
better for a committee to coma up with
a naport In a first reeding, receive
crttlclem , then come back and go
lllrough It again. I lnallluted this
procedure because • I found the!
committees became Isolated . They
t.c.rne the experts, then when they
' - I I crltlclama they became 111Sentful
of their colleaauea. The point Is, that
thwe'a an ecfucatlonal process that
goea on, and It goea on both ways; the
education of the faculty to the
committee and vice versa. I don't think
that commltt- should go off for lotf.Q
time periods without reporting. I doubt
Whether they should A? off much longer
than six months. It a Important that
they touch baM. This ayatem has
nssul!9d In Y8l)' few pjrllamentary
81111118 In the eecond reeding . People
know the , 1 - and know what's
coming. Then! h8Y8 been only a handful
o f ' - whwe the faculty was divided,
and IMI'a no~ an accident. It's a result
of the faculty listening to each other

=.c:.~o =:::=11C:/~~s ~~re

:
vote ie taken.
·
t...., began to dlamlas Senators who
had mleeed -lnga. I dleco-ed to
my delight thel theY did not like to be
thrown off the Senate. Of course, I
Informed their ~ or deans when
ltlla -..red . They had to be Informed
to -ae for elections I« a
::r.:::-'t. In two v-s. - never
led to heYe e quorum In the Senate.
rm _., proud of and 1 think the
feculty ahould be proud of It .
I tlllnk haYing food at the meetings
(wine, coffee, cookie&amp; and cheMe) ls
also a structural chaoge of value. It
"*'-the -lnga more humane. And
I don't think anyone should undereetlmate the lack of liumane qualities
on IIIIa campus. It ought to be In the
I8COfd t11st - paid for the food out of
our own money. The Senate was not
lfMied by the University .

=
==11=."1

Q. Ally . . . . . ollltiHIItSl
A.

~~a.": =~n~~t~l ~~-:,;
I think the gr..-te8t dlaappolnt-

cc-'..:n ~~ac~

t.cutty ahould attempt to .deal with
Wllal- rnpon~bllltlee . . ea faculty
. , . . . . ., FIMponlllblllllee to ct.ae., to lei student• know wMI'a
expacteCI of tllanl, to be timely on that
encttobefalr, to be open enctencou..-ge
Inquiry In
to __.,.. d~t .
and 10 INIIIe ......,.. differing
oplnfone .
I don't ballllwe the l!lenate committee
repon on thla helpful . I thlnk they
mlased the - · and becauae of thla,
the Senate punted . I think the Senate
could h - ~ with It end I'm
dla.ppolnted -didn't.
1 11M no dl.-intment with ~l'e
Senate regarOing 11\e nwlaed bylawa. I

cr-.

have the highest prelse lor Bill Greiner
and his committee, who worked very
hard and did an excellent job. My

~~~IT~~~~~~~sK:/::. ~~~am~~b~:
~'1o'/:/,·~':e,~~;~~t l~f.Jiefi'i,:f..~~~

The quality, of the Facully,Student
11

~~~~ fh"e ~s~ ~~':.d ~d ~':.':~;

Individuals, but they are business- not
unl-slly-orlented . When -you have llil
organization which Is really autonomous, one which Is removed from
faculty and students' needs and does

I must confess that alter an hour
con-tlr;m with him regarding hts
response to the bylaws; I sald to myself
that I'm back two 'years .ago; this Is
where we stertl!d. We've gotten
absolutely nowhere. II makes me sick.
He had copies of that document long
ago. His statement to the Senate about
"designating those parts of the
document which are consultative"
seems to me to be a ruse. It's nonsense.
We asked Ketter as President of this
University 19 respond and he daclded to
deal with b bylaws In a legalistic

dei).IS, you have a dlsasl'!r. Our bookstore Is nothing short of disgrace.
Where In God's name are our students
going to develop a collaction of .serious
books while they'111 at this Institution?
You can 't do It on this campus. You
can't browse and you cannot talk to one
single person . there who knows

manner:-

important educational mission of this
campus and FSA has to ·racognlze II.

Aiso, to hear the P111Sident at the last
Senate meeting say the faculty must
now find ways to evaluate themseiY&amp;S,
almost made me Ill . We have never had
any support from this administration for
teaching effectiveness. We have gotten

Q. WhAt ue s_ome of the Issues
you think the' faculty Senate
will have to tackle next ye.vl

=~.";.~a:~"':'.:'·~~~ g.fo~~!hr~
Rori Bunn'a office. The Senate has tried

for a whole year to negotiate with
Claude Welch and Ron Bunn for

:r.:,n~mN"T";,. f¥~~s Y~':rsa~~~il,~"t.\':i'!

wrote a policy for the administration on
teaching effectiveness. AI Somlt gave
us two TA lines, and -one of the
Individuals. was so Incompetent that
every teaching evaluation fomi from
Nat ural Sciences and Mathematics was
lost . Well o - 11),000 forms were
completel y scrambled . I am Yel)l
t ired of t his admlnlstretlon talking
about teach ing effectiveness when they
haven't given us one'damn thing. In the

=!i~~.~~':n~.?t= ~~c'h"!~~

on teaching

~~~-

effectiveness.

but

we

"t: f~fu'::'to "i,';~",.mg~

:::;~~SQ ~~:C!'v=.::~ ~~g[~~ ':.'.'!,!,~~

lstratlon ; there1s no other place. to put
the blame.
Institutional research Is a standing
joke In this University. The office across
the hall from the Senate's: which was
supposed to house Institutional r&amp;-

'=."'weh~v!t~in"::/f~rlo~l ~~~
Tn which the faculty can partlclpete In a

meaningful way, that Ia to design
questions that ask about th&amp; Intellectual nature and the academic
abilities of the students. I'm not just
talking about accumulating data, but
asking pertinent questions, like can or
can't our students write. Could we In
fact sample our students and find out?
Ever since I've been on the Senate,
we've been promised an office for
Institutional research , but we don't have
, one, and as far as I am conC&amp;rlled we
likely n,_ will. I'm tired of people just
talking about II. I think It's a disgrace.
Continuing education Ia also a
problem because the faculty Is divided
on it. The administration , In all Its
outward signa, Is at best laissez falre
and at worst negative. There just
doesn't seem to be nasi concern about
continuing education. I hear words but I
don't deeds. I think the faculty Is
walling for eorne leadership. There ere a
subatantlal number of faculty wllo are
deeply concerned , and a minority of
faculty that are deed aet acjalnat lt .'Then
::::- ::,~u~~ wh~ua~~t i :.Jhl~~
continuing education , with eorne real
leaderehlp, could do a major job, but

0

11

~ed~f~~~\h~~P-sl~~ t~~Yt•agr.'ir
~t/:.~~,~~~el~d'~~:O:~~YI~ ·

there hat to be soma leadership. I
haven't seen that leadership In the past ;
I _don 't see It coming from the very top
now. Until II does, I don't think the
faculty will be prepared to deal with

o/

~~~~~~lg."'!,usz"~OO::.d~Ft~' ~~d' ::'~

~yt~~g o~OO.~~~e :::~:"'';-~a~~al~
\

.

.

A. Obviously, the Senate will have to .
resolve the bylaws dilemma. But that's
not really Its dllel)lma, It's Bob Ketter's.
I think he can be much more creative in
his response to the faculty .
The question of cheating has been
raised to the Senate, and the
procedures lor adjudicating cheating
will clearly be on the agenda. Tbe
feeling Ia that the current procedures
make II almost Impossible, or at least
extremely difficult to adjudicate these
deci sions.

In~ ~':i~~~n°~/~~~jr~~r.,t;~~

the seeking of a new President will be'
an Important Issue. The Senate has an
ad hoc committee which will be working
over the summer on this. I think the
President must let the faculty know his
decision (111Q&amp;rdlng reappointment) In a

~~ref~~ ~u~~~h~~~·~mr~~~

...
and the qualities they would like to find
In candidates for this position and ty8n
also discuss the future needs of the
Unl-slty.
General (ducatlon will be a major
topic next · year and also the
Implementation of the Springer, Report
on curricular structure. Undergraduate
education Is now In a state of flux In the
nation and at this University. Leader-

~~:;,~~h~~~s'~rc::I~~~:Jn\:..u~~

general education . The trick Is to get
them to see the commonality, to stop
the endless debate, and lind soma way
to deal wiJh 11 . Also It's Important to put
something In place that will heve some
lasting value. It's going to be tough .

Q. What are 50me of the weaknesses of the ~te and bow
can Its effecdveness be lmprovedl
A. I thjn~ !he most difficult thing for

~r~ou~~~u~!Yol :~e el~u~'::'~~~at.!r~~

We have Senators that I have never
heard a word from , privately or publicly .
I'm concerned about faculty who take
that so lightly. 1 have beeO told by the
President that some people don't feel
the Se!l&amp;le represenls the faculty . Well I
don't l&lt;now what the hell does repreSent
t!Je faculty If It Isn't the Senate.
·
I'd like to see the Senate smaller. I
think It's too big - mainly, because
of the alternates. I think It's difficult for

~~t~~~~t~~~~~~fr~'!Yu~~ng.t&lt;t,=:,

and to find faculty willing to work on
commi ttees. I think we would have a
better Senate If It were ·smaller. More
people would be given the oPI&gt;ortunlty
to speak, and I think the faculty would
take the election of Senators more
·
seriously.
I wi sh there were a little more
compassion from the faculty towatds ·
•S.. 'Aetchwt,' page 1t , tot 3

�n

Rossberg to head Education; Rumer returni_ng;
DUE names Healey; Hughes take.s basketball slot
Appointment of Dr. Robert H.
Aosaberll as dean of the Feculty of

:auca~~~:1-:-c:I:.J~~N~

Boanl of Trust- by Preeldent Robert
L. Ketter.
In a letter to Dr. Roasberg, Ketter
expreseed personal as well as official
congratulations for hla willingness · to
accept the responsibility. "Your appointment has been recommended by
the ~ committee and endorsed by
VIce Prell Ident Ronald F. Bunn," Ketter
wrote, "and I whol«-tedly concur
with their Mlectlon."
Born In Brooklyn, In 19l6, Roaaberg
graduated ffom City College of New
York In 11148 and .--1\led hla M.A. from
Columbia In 19150. In 11156 he was
awlltded the Ph.D. from New York
Unl..slty.
Rossberg, who joined the U/B feculty
In 11156, hU helcl many t~no and
counaellng positions. He was counselIng psychologist for the. Federation of
the Handicapped In 1951, and held a
="fCt~ ~~- Vorl&lt; Unl..slty
He was an assistant chief psychologist at New York Unl..slty, a lecturer In

1

~J:"'dtC:O~ ~aps- Coi'T~ror~

rehabilitaTion counaelr.;'at U/B.
Rosaberg Is a member of the
Psychologfoal Aaaoclatlon of Western
New York, the · Western New Vorl&lt; .
Pel;!onnel and Guidance Association,
end the American Association of
Unlvwalty Professons.
He Is a member of the American

='l~tl~ A=~/ron. Na~";~

Della PI, end Phi Delta Kappa.
Rossberg has published widely In the
fields of psyCIIOlOgy end education.
He has also been active In WBFO
Radio (88.7 FM) , where he has a
Oll4Hlour weekly show, "Big Band
Sounds." Station Mana.11er Marvin
Granger describes him as • our resident
big band expert."

Dr. Ralph R. Rumer, Jr., professor of
civil enofnearlng at the Unl-.lty of
Delaware, will return to the faculty of
civil engl..-!ng hare thla September
alter an absence of thnoe yeara.
Rumer, who was on the U/B leculty
from " 111113 to 1975, was active In
environmental and Greet Lakes studies
while in Buffalo. He conducted a study
of the Niagara A'- Joe boom lor the
International Nlagwa Board of Control
in 1974 and earYed as director for U/B's
Center for Inland Water Resources .
Scale models of Lak-. Erie and
Ontario were constructed at U/B under
his direction ao that circulation patterns
end other hydrodynamics of the lakes
COUld be lludled.

M!=:~:::t~\n~~~~~i:g,'~~h~1o~~~

Rumer has also taught at Rutgers and
MIT. 1n 1971, he aerved as senior
research fellow at the C811fornlaln&amp;titute of Technology.
Rumer hU written or co-authored
about !!0 papers or book chapters on
toplca In hydraullca, water resources

=-~\'It:',~ ~~~~~dw~~

hfdl'olooy, hydraulic :::Jiellng, lake
cwculallOft end mixing , pollutant
tranapon and water quality modeling.
Molt - l y , Rumer has been
In a atucly of the
budget of Lake Erie and
the _ , t of almutatlon model
of loa on Lal&lt;e Erie, Including thermomodela and lea tranaport

=IWOI&gt;Ied

=·

The appointment of Dr. Marllou T.
Healey as.asslstant dean of the Division
of Undergraduate Education has been
announced by Dr. Walter N. Kunz,

act~~:eanwl~

responsYblllties

also maintain her
adjunct assistant

1:;:

r.f.!:~al ~dmlnrstra~ment

of

ad~~~ls~'i1onm~~p~k ~=~~

Inc., Buffalo, prior to her appointment
here.
·
Healey received the B.A. from U/B In
1965, majoring in history. She earned a
master's In 1967 from Allred Unl--

~~~~1an'::;.:,';;'":;!s o~w~~~~~~~h~~

in educational adminiStration here In
1976.
•
In 1977, she became acting master of
the College -of Health Studies and
Human Services.

tra~r~ h~~~d ~~hJ?~ ~~dm~rr::;

~:~o~~~r='rd ~~~~~~~.:

e:&gt;sses . He won 47 of his last 54 gamea '
as coach, golng :!S-5 In his fast two
seasons .
His 1~ and 1966-67 cluba

=ed~-...: ~'k'!l'l': s:nr~

::'on:~:ro:, o~:i.C:Iclgrti~~t.!-~
collegiate
b1etlcs (NAIA) tournaments both seasons.
Hughes was named District 31 NAJA
Coach of the Yllat for l966-67. He also
served as director of athlejlcs and as
head of the Physical Education
Oeparlment at Roberls Wesleyan.

po~l~lon"';.';"f::!n~ta~-1~!~~

credited with turning that basketball
program around, posting an overall
record of 121 wins, 105 losses. His
1969-70 team went 15-7, and he had
winning seasons In 1971-72 (12-10),
1972·73 (15-10), 1973-74 (14-9). 1974-75

(15-9), and 1977-78 (15-9).
His cluba tied the achool naoord for
most wlna,15, threetlmeeln fl.. yews,

~..:.k~ ~.:-s:r.1~~f~~

last six ...ana, and received bids to
two ECAC Tournaments.
During 19~77. Hug'- a.ved u an
assistant basketball coach at the
Unl-slty of Florida. which poeted a
17-9 record and finished fourth In the
SEC.

ln~~~"J:.s:/.f~.!'.ff~ ;,~a=

president ford-lopment.
-A native of Sc.-adale, Snyder ..vee~
as associate director of~ at
the' University of Kentucky, L.exlngton,

~';;~am

de'!\= t~ .=,

~~~

he
alumni . Prior to that he was director of
annual giving and coordinator of
parents programs at Dlctpnaon Co118Q1!.

Institutions, and has published various ,.
journal articles dealing with educational
administration.
Several new appointments to the
President's Board on Faculty Appoint·
menta, Promotions and Tenure were
announced by President Robert L.
Ketter this week.
1
Appointed to regular three-year terms
beginning September 1 and ending
August 31 , 1981, are: Mlrdza Nelders,
Oral Pathology; Wade Newhouse, Law
and Jurisprudence; and Laurence
Michel , English .
Joseph Masllng, Psychology, was
named to a one-year term, ending
August 31 , 1979, filling out the
three-year appointment of Newton

~~~·;:ct;:'ai~t~W!~fty~~~:~ties In
Members of the Board represent the
Unl-slty at large and are selected by
the President from a slate of candidates
recommended by the ~ecutlve Com·
. mlttee of the Faculty Senate.
The Board Is advisory to the
President and deals with recommend&amp;·
lions lor continuing appointment
(tenure) at any rank, and with
promotionc to the rank of associate
professor and associate librarian, and
to any.of the ranks of lull pro feasor and
librarian .
"One of the most weighty responsibilities of the President Is tlie
establishment end guarding of faculty
ex1:9llence," Ketter said In making the
appointments . "The Board Is Invaluable
to me In carrying out this respon·
slbillty."
'

he: 1C::~h:fsm:~·'s ~!~lt~~:e~ba~

Or. Salvatore Esposito , chairman of the
Oeparlment of Recreation , Athletics,
·and Related Instruction, announced
this week.
Hughes, who will also be an assistant
professor In the Oeparlment of RARI,
:~~~~~~~~~~ - begin a two-year contrac~

A 1~7 graduate of Greenville (Ill.)
College, he holds a master's from the
Unl-slty of Illinois. He has been head
basketball coach at State Unl-slty
College at Fredonia for the past 10

~:rts B.;~':J"ev~a:;.,,~••~t:'st:.

lor si• y..,. and at Oakwood Townsllip
and Homer High Schools In Illinois for
three years .
He's a native of Oallaa, Te•as.

At

tho..-.,.

-.lby

11.----T-

of tho Faculty
1w
--. FromWt:E41-.Suo~ . . . -.~--.

Gony Rlolng. Lony Mlchol. Myteo Slodn. Bob ............... " Coodt'" Bertie,. Howell, enott.r ~ • not pictufed.

-

·

•Reichert .
• (from pogo tO, Cot. 4)

the Senate. I think we have to
understand that any body like this Is
going to move modestly.
The Interaction of Bunn , Panni II and
Ketter w ith the Senate Is crucial. A
strong Senate will come from the
respect of not only the faculty but also
the administration.

Q. ~- .ve your feellna5 regudlng the st.ate of the Unlvs51ty?
A. 1 think the University has come
through the J;rlses ol the late 60's. We
have straightened out the major radical
problems and have gotten our house In
order. I think we finally have some

~~~~~•.::~:-~~~~~ w~l~".:=t=

carelul and reasoned. I think there's a
tnan there who cares, thinks and
listens He's often slow, but deliberate.
I think there's a morale problem on
campus that Is real . I'd say a large
fraction of that morale problem comes
from things that are not within the
• control of tills UniY&amp;fal\)' . .19 ti'&amp;J ..,..

think Bob Ketter's right. We . .
fragmented, have an unllnlshed cam·
pus, no athletic facilities at Amherst;
students spend too much time on the
buses, etc. Those are sarloua problema,
but they are not the OJtly problems, end
to e•cuse them as the only problems Is
a mistake.
We are going to have to take cuts In
budgets, but It seems to me there are
rational ways of doing It that can still
hold promise for those areas that
e~perlence cuts.
1

h.:,t~~!nn~~ r::J!r~~f ~·~~h~~~.:

10 years at a University rs a long time
for top leadership. This administration
!las done some very good thinp,s; It has

~~'J~~s~yo~:::~~r ~~eh~V:

big areas of n!IQiect. Some of theee are
nobody's lauli. but just a question of

rft,~~~~~~e~;,r:;.'1?;h.~~ ~:"::~

new personalities end ways to revitalize
Itself . That's not trying to put down the
efloris of thls administration, In many
lt'a a very hard worl&lt;lng and caring
edmlnlotration . But there are~ that
1 .hts .QQl beeru.ble,tp IQUG/1
.... ,

·-Y•

�June 1, 1171

Foru10
FES sets series
of visiting speakers
for·second session
Buckmlnster

FuH.-

and

Jesse

=·--..d~=e&lt;sed:.:t~i

JUNE fN MWFALO CONCERT'
by Beo
llluolc cl Hony Partch, a JoMston. a . . . . - of the faculty &lt;&gt;f the School
of Mt,Jolc, UWenlity of - Baird Recltaf ~·
8 p.m. Is 51 for - t s; $2 for
· others.
-

FIUI'

a-

will be

Mr. To T.- ICao&gt;ra. 1936).
146 Diefendort. !1:30 and 9 p.m. Sponsored
by~ for MOIIia Study.
Stars Gooy Cooper
Arthu&lt;. A comedy
masterpiece - . , a coontry boy and
aome ~ .,YOf'h.Cbn a-tists wttil defies the years.

-...... wUI lecture et the morning
.n.rnoon. will be dlM&gt;ted to

The Good, Thellacl, I The Ugly !leone. 1967).
Conference
Call 636-2919 for

On June 28, Dr. Herman T. Epstein,
pro'- of biophysics et Br-..deis,
Dr. Doneld Eichhorn, leading
tlleol.tloilll'"llf8IC!ltloner In the mlddle
wtlf epee~&lt; on "Adolescent
fhwth 111M1 the Middle School .•
On July 5, the Rev. Jesse JIICI&lt;aon,
llllllciMI dtrector of PUSH (People
IJnMid to
Homanlty), will speak on
Young Child, the Family and
Schaol." IWanthood and day care and
achool ectlvltles will be

Aanisolon
c:hwge.western:• starring
This-·
definitive
''Sj)OQhetti
Cllnl Eastwood .
Walloch
Lee
is bloody, tcu..fisted ~of 8tden toot, doubie·

='* ....

"""""an

&amp;wv lhclneaday during the ..:ond

ut•·· ...,_. Saaalona (June 26 to
prominent

~

~no=:.::~~~eo~ro!.~P:~

UUAIIAUil'

Theatre.-·

~

~IOnaiiiMI- .

n
arm-,

•n.

-

a

a

cowboys.

--·

ooncltt'-ll

m

urt&gt;an

..·~ly honored philosopher
8ldner ttoGik will ...-t a program ' on
Jlllr tl, 111111*1 "WWill .. Uv1ng, Dead
Philosophy of
=~·-n.
PhH2SOphy of
le ~ly a Senior
..._.
• 1t1a Hoo-lnstllute
al . . ..
1011 -..d 1'-=e al
- . - . A famllr IIIICienl of Dewey's,
.. 11M wrtu.n atanshely on his

.,.. :-=ulcell:::
or.

........,.

On Mr Ut. Hetelcl

~

edUC8Ilonlll ~ and
IICIIMI8a- lor etudlolle In llft. . . . .IR.

IIIah echoole, and Junior lllg!l echoola.
Jllly •• Dr. ~ aen-ta of
lila um...ity ol v.nnont, wlll.,._,t a
~ 011 ""-lzlna and Per-

no.

=-: - .,

.......

~~~~~~a.e~on.•

a.n-ta 1a
at:ltlllg

ltla -

~~~~-===·...
1'- humanizing
~on

of

lllgllly Nglldacllor lllelr
--on...,_., edrillnletretors and

............ -

,.

n.. Good. n..11ac1, • n.. Ugly (l.eooe. 1sen

- -· Aanls9lonc:hwge.
JI*E ill BUFFALO CONCERT'
Muok: cl Cha- Wuorinen, played by Ben·
,.,., Hudocn. """"· and Clales Wuomen. piorlo •
8Md RKitol Hal. 8 p.m. Admission Is $1 foe

...-.m, $21ocothers.
Selections Include: Six P5eces for Violin and
Piollo (1976). VIolin Variotlono (1972). The,__
and the Sllott (1969) . I01d Fantaoy lor VIolin
ond Plono (1975).

~ .. liMII'IIftfl*ll.•

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

1'11111r .. -

........ .a
.......,., 1111·

I 41nllcl

a World

1'-

IQ
by a

Fellow In
Unlowelty
ol
lelk will. be

CONYEIISAT10IIS fN THE ARTS

,..._lin.

CONVERSo\nONS IN THE ARTS

C.~t~~~~p~~~
.
.....
JAPANESE FILM•
Shin Helke - - t o r i ( T - of the T&amp;nl Clan)
IMizogucht. 1955). 146 Diel..-1. 6:30 and
9p.m ....
Sponsored by the Center for Media Study.

JUNE IN BUFFALO CONCERT•
Atnertean
salon Music bf the 40'~
HamSon. Baird Redial Hal .

John-~

8 p.m.
otbera.

AdmiSSiOn

iS $1

-

tor .ruoents: S2 for

MONDAV NIGHT AT THE MOVIES•
My Mon Ooclf&lt;ey. 170 MFACC. Elicott. 9 p.m.
Admission Ia 5.25 .. SPonsored by the Intensive
Stars Carole l.onll&gt;ord. Wollam Powell and ,Alice
Brady. The story centers around a rich Young
woman who flil'lds Godfre)t-at the city tbnp
in a treasure hunt o-ne. hires him as a butter,
and . .

TUESDAY-13
Ealher ilter.oiows ~ writer Anthony Burgou (A Clockwor1&lt; Onlno!&gt;l· Co!Jrier Collie
(ChannelS). 6 :30p.m. (Re-run) . _

Ftul'
Young People (Owan. 1940). 1461Jiefendorf_
6 :3D I01d B p.m. Sponsored by the Center for
Media Study.

Se6ections n::tude: Conceno for Rut, Strings
and Percuuton (1954); Sonata d8 Chleu
11926): and a film. The loulola.. Sto&lt;y (1948).

(RoSS.

--·-his--··-.Diane-.

Stano - . Men. &amp;.an Anspacll and Oiane

Anst&gt;oct&gt;•
him Into(so-,
the arms
of hls

out cl hla life n'l -

LIVE IIAOIOIIIOADCAST
fl- - ! . l e u ,... Tra~
Colo, tootumg Mln&gt;oloY Votoua. Bob
· n:f sn- Slagolo W8FO 188.7 FM).
10p.m.

SUNDAY-11

NOTICES
ADMISSIONS I RECORDS
Office Hours-OAR in Hayes B is open untl

7 p.m. on Mondays and T.-ys. The office
reou&amp;arty closes at 4 :30 p .m., Wednesday thnJ

Fri&lt;ll!Y. Our1ng {tle lnl - a t etaases for each
Summer Session the office is ·QP80 to 7 ..p.m.

~thnJ~-ior~ --~for Pogree'" Ia Monday. July 3 , for al
September 1. 1978. prospocttvegraduoles. Summer Reglatnotion-ReQISinltiOO cpntinues
in Hayes 8 tor the 2nd and 3rd Summer Sessions. 1st ~~ day to add coursesJune 9 . last day to drop coitnes without "R" .
grade ilnd wflhoulfin.,.. penalty ;s Jooe 16. .
. DUE and Graduate Aeglatmlon-Fall Semester-Materials may be obtained in Hayes B duf1ng

~~~J: ·r,en.,: =~1::

Cards mailed to tflem in August. •
MFC Aeg1&amp;treUon--fatl Semeater44atef:ials
wm be available In Hayes B starting on Juty 1D. 19ZS.

UFE WORKSHoPS

CONVEASAnoNS IN THE ARTS

Play.,...... Soon
1972) . .17D MFACC.
Elioolt. Call636·2919 for allow times. -

"'*""
.lnO&gt;Ia fifm. - . l s a -

=~'=~ ~'":':'··~:::

some redefrdtion of American Ideals through the
spirituality of music."

otherS.

lnleMewa
"""""""'
Elliott
C- . .. lnlemationol
CMM!Chomel10)
. 6 p.m.

UUMFlUI'

WEDNESDAY- 14

Life Wor1tshop$ will offer several workshops
8hd third sesskwls this &amp;.rTVnef,
Wosdom, Comedy Wori&lt;shop. Donee
Wo&lt;f&lt;shop. v - and others. AJJ ,.,.,-. of the ,
oomm\nity m their Sj)OUSjiS , . , In;
vited to par1icipate . Fc:w fiXther details, contact
Die Wo&lt;l&lt;shopsofflce. 110 Norton. 636-2808 .
~seoond

~ Wne

UtW-,.

MORTON R. LANE S.U. FEDERAL CAEDfT UNION

The SUMler ho&lt;.rs are: Mal-l S1reet (lnfol)nation
Booth. Hayes)-Tuesday l lhUrsday. 8 :15a.m.·
4 p.m. Amherst 1368 MFACC. Elioott)-T.-y /
Thursday. 8 :15a..m.-4 P.:...m.

EXHIBITS
MUSIC UIIAAR'I' EXIIBIT
Mualc "' Art. Music Ub&lt;wy. Baird;-11\fough
Jl.lle30r

JOBS

JA•ANESE FILM'
Donzclio

!The Lower Oepths)

(KIX068wa).

146 Diel..-1. 6 :30 and 9 p.m. Sponsored
byU&gt;e_center for Medla&amp;udy.

THURSDAY- 15

eor-

-~;&amp;.wgory;

FILM' .
~to- (Curtiz. 19431. 148 Diof·
. . - !. B:30 m 9 p.m. 5ponsor.s by the
Center f o r - Study.
Thisisa-·played movie adoplationfromtlle

booi&lt; by-.t.g
formerWalor
to -Eloowlor
· -OoMoa.
1-Uiton and

COMPETlnVE CIVIL SERVICE
Opomw SG-6-Centrol llupicating.
Line No. 31019 •
Typlll SC»-Centnol tectonCII
Sorvtces
(U·
_
_

SCI+-Mualc; / Otthot&gt;edico:
_
_
_
, _ _ (1*1·-).

-

: Physics &amp; Aslronon&gt;y, FVcMalng;
Oifice ,

SG-6-Studont-

_Cierlt-SclonceaUb&lt;wy.

-Cleric

·

~-

_

Free Programs: Payrcl; Accounts~ .

Cnlcll·

UUMFIUr
Play ....... -~ 1972). 170MFACC.
Elioolt. Coll11311·281 g f o r - - · -

chqe.

M~lf·ll

I 1-1
---?~lnn.1 88 i Nioolr1l
Fila- , 8 Lftl.·5 p.m. For ~idler-.
cai-UI*&gt;n• 83f ·2027

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MiarliiiWI'W--f4o. MIIIoytllot

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X-ray billings
The Personnel Department Is receiving an increasing number of complaints
from health insurance enrollees who have received separate billings from
radiologists for services provided on hospital premises. typical .complaint
Is one from a patient who received emergency room care ut later received a
bill from a radiologist tor the " reading• of his X-reya - instead of having this
charge co~ by Blue Cross u part of the total hospital charge. This
situation ruulta from tha fact that a number of hospitals do not retain
radiologists aa -lad members of their stalls but, Instead, rely on private .
praclltlor.a to provide radiology services on hospital premises. In then
-cases the radiologiata' charges are physicians' charges rather than hospital
charg~ and are blUed directly .to In-patients and out-patients alike by the
radiologist who provided the service .
Where this practJce Ia In effect! enrollee&gt;L In· the State Health Insurance
Program must- reco~ red oiogista' charges as follows :

t

MONDAY-12

lllholoclmllhlc

~tii . . OIIellllllt thio . . . olltla

.'.

JUNE IN BUFFALO CONGERT•
Mualc by-VIrgil Thornaon. BMd Redial Half.
8 p .m. Admissk)n is $1 for students: S2 for

SATURDAY- 10"

1umnw Forum pro.

·::..•·
wll be ranowned
, IIIMI writer Buck..._. Ft=.1 .._topic will be

This Is designed to l!eiP women ln
- t to adYance theW care«s by 1e1m1ng •
from top professioMs how to dre&amp;S fat suocess.
hell&gt;lno their "'l)Mizatlons "';'&lt;~themselves .

Engll!h~lnstitute .

UUABF1LM'

jiiiWIII.

c.e. ..

- - (Wadteigll , 1970). Conference
Theatre. SQun_ Call636·2919 for show times.
Documentary oflhe historic tow-&lt;loy rock cole-

Conference Thealre. SQun. Call 636·2919 for

~. dNn of

U/h ~ of Architecture and
1!11..,_-~-· wHI apeek on
"Daalgglof _ _ _ &amp;wllonmanta.•
Dillin CoNn
dnoted IJIOjecta

v.., aeef.-

FRIDAY-9

:::lc..

....,._ -

m

~piW!nOB. -~-~

s-

~ 18 111C0gnized u a nstlonal
,._illltumen rights -..d In efforts to

WA8F1UI'

do not do.

cblhilg.JIIlll"ii&gt;riot to,sell-wl1ch self-llelp boQl&lt;s

hMdllne a Summer Forum of speakers
~~!:'.:.Y the Faculty of

of

reqo#ed to '-n the IWI of aelecting I01d ~

of.._.
of Noolnlol
O_ _ 1110., ... _ will be
.......
-

thll ~ ..... - · t o _ _ . .

-

con be

~-tho!-g~Yon the - · - ordormollon

s1h~':::':.:::~ ,;th~S50 d=i~:;~ ~~na~::'~=!:~llly and, as·

GHI Option '- If the services are received on an out-patient basis .payment
will ~made by GHI In accordance with their schedule of allowance. GHI
ll"rticipatlng radiologists will accept tills amoum as payment in tuli.
If services are rece;ved from a non-participating radiologist. the patient Ia
liable for any exceaa of charg.. over the allowance.
If the services are received ~n pn in-patient beals, GHI will make no
payment whatsoever, and (he patoent ls Jiable lor the entire charge.

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                    <text>•

i

;1,!

•

.fl

If

.J

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO .
VOL. 9 NO. 31 MAY 18, 1978

"1 an uaure you here and now that 1
will not yield to IIIIa Innuendo. 1 will
continue to exercise my authority aa
p!Mldent to make decisions which 1
conalder to be In the beat lntereata of

~ ~~~~~· t~:.t~~~~o~':':\1\"g:

Instances, Ketter feels hla hW!da'will be
tlad alnce he will have to to the
mandetes of State law or the ac.rd ol
Trust-.
·
For exemple, Ketter predicted that in

l~tl:!,tu:C~:'~rd:~!""~\:O:aJ.:/:

met with O'HifWhelmlng enthusiasm by
with .promotions and tenure. He noted
President
that such areas are governed by
Robert L. Ketter aald at this Tuesday's
collective bergalnlng because they
Faculty Senate meeting.
Involve conditions of employment.
- "aa-1 on 1IJe vat1oua personal
- Professor Wllliam Greiner, of the
dtecuaalons and phone calls 1 hiM! h.t • U/B t.aw School who ·chalrad the
ower the put - a l days," the
Bylaws Committee, aald he will asll.
F'Naldent. aalcl, "I beiiiMI the latter
SUNY's ettomeya to deecrlbe their
diatrlbul.t by the executive committee
oblectlona to the document. Apparently
. of the· WSenate and the action
SUNY's legal t:buna,J· found no fault
the graduate faculty
taken yee
with the preamble, but only with the.
J:lnt to the
I!ICIInatlon ot 1he
bylaws themael-. The attorneys told
Ketter It SMmad the preamble and
~ ~;.:.=~et~~~ byl-s
"cema · from two · ·different
that previously have been defined and
worlds" and were " written by different
.,. known to elf." (See other stories this
people." They. feel the bylaws give the
J)llgtl.)
faculty more power than Is legally
.These groups, Ketter said, '"aYe
theirs. .
conveyed to the University and the
Professor Wade Newhouse, also from
oommunlty that thla faculty will not
tha Law School,~ told Senators they
eng~~ge In the campelgn of innuendo
must expect tension to exist between
and unsubstantiated charges that haa
"collegiality and strict observ8!1C8 !;)I
~ conducted 11\fl!ugh the press and
the law" since the lllwa that govern tlie
in whispers. Those tactics have been of
-Unlvers1ty may aubatantlally cllfer from
great ooncern to many persons. "
the '#lay It functions . Newhouse said he
views this tension as healthy,
ODod -encl
Although the Board or Trustees
On othar fronts, good news ~d bad
mandate that the faculty must devise
, _ . emanated from the meeting. lhe
bylaws under which they function , t'here
good news Ia that Senators linlally
Is no legal need lor !he President to
approved a proapectua lot the Colleges
approve them. Presidential approval
and new bylaws lor the faculty. The bad
need only be glvM to that part of the
newa Ia that President Ketter was
bylaws pertaining to the faculty's
adYiellt by SUNY'a legal counsel to
consultative function .

-v aegment of the camp, "

~

'*'

.

.

=.:=

go:u~ .:'/~~
t~~~d s-t~.- how-. that

he per80118lly linda no difficulty .with
the d,ocumenl. intanda to wort&lt; within
It' cona.t aa much as he legally &lt;:*&gt;,

~-~~ :J:' ~~:u~Yt,1.e""ro.=

to

detlata

from

them.

Gr df

In

some

Allheif 1111nual m.tlng Monday, the

==

!f

poatpone a motion of

a'~,!":!,'::'"~~:Ot~

..... · 1
which
all
,,_ . . - ng,
uau my gets a
small turn out, drew ooter 130 lacu~t
.
Still, U -n~ as packed 81 ft ml I
have been. There .,. about 1,
Qr.tuate faculty·
PrMumably. moat of the faculty who
did attend, came In response to a call lor a no cqnfidence vote In Ketter
proPOiad by Professor of Blostatlatlca
- Irwin Bross.
.
In a memo to Acting Graduate Dean
Charles Fogel, Broaa aakad that the no
confidence vote be put on t~ agenda
following Fogel's presentation of the
annual report. In -.!dillon, he requested
that tha vote be taken via secret bellot
to preclude any ''vindictive" action by
the admlniatratlon.
A mlfJor •uption flared during the
..-1n0 when Brou objected to
F&lt;&gt;get'a placing the vote under new
buat,_. lnateed of t..Uag It aa a
.....,.te agenda Item as Brose OlllillellY
...-tad. Foflel reeponclad 'INII the
ag.onda waa aifeedy aet up wban he
received the correaponclenoe 11111111
Broee, so he felt that putting the IMtter
undar new bualnesa was a talr way .of

handling it.
Foael recogntaa Chon
\'Yhen the time C81)1e • for new
business, Fogel, who did not see any
other arms waving for attention, called
on Ptofessor Wan-Yong Chqn. Chon
asked hta colleagues to vote on a
resolution which supPOrted Ketter
•moat strongly for excellent leadership
provtd8d under the most adverse
external conditions this Institution has
laced ..
AgAJn, Brosaobjectadthathlscallfor
no confidence was not handled first .
Hla objection was shared bT Professor
William Allen who told Foge that he did
not feel Bross was being treated fairly.
Fogel repeatedly atetad that he did
not want to do anything undert&gt;andad.
A vote was then taken on a challenge to
the chair and Fogel's action was
supported by a margin of 2 to 1.
Next, there was debate on tha
legalities of when and how to conduct a
secret ballot vote. A vote on the matter
was taken with the majorlt~ ·deciding
(n-67) not to uae a secret beilot.
Some faculty present commentad·
that the timing of a no confidence vote
would aerve to weaken the presidency,
cauee further dlvlalona w1thin theUni......Uy and create more pr061ems
wtth Albar&gt;y. Others complained tl'i8t

The P-'dllnt.remlftdad the a.n.lora
It ~ beceuee of l8glalllllft cllmencl
thai U7B h8CI to
Ill ~ La
lnate.t o1 building ..sdKioMIIdltlee.
He noted that • aubat.nt181 -.nt of ·
coriatructlon could ' - beWI Plkl lor
with the money apent for ranta end
bu~:...... lor _ , . ...__._ wilt
-·--~·...- , _ . , .
lna.M ~!he ftiiCt ,.., laid KetW, _
' and a no-wtn decl8lon will - . , _ t o
be rnede on who will be 11'-'
preterence ln. Ellicott, atudent8 or

..m

•

~ta.

kettw alao NpOrtlld 1M! the a..'a
r - le a rwult ol c...,'e

hlrlftg

FIIYIIssue' of -yeM'" · ··

current e~tclrt*

Today's Is theflnallssue ~
of the Reportel' for the
·
regular academic year. We
thank our readers .for their
interest and support dul"lng
the year. A s.mu.er
Reportel' will be pubiJshed:
june 8. 15, 22 ~nd 29;
july6, 13, 20. and 27;
and August 3.

employ-

~

·Girlerad walkways. Plana.,. underway,
how-. to secure private funding.
Ketter Is also requllellng that the Board
of Trusteea reconsider their decision

:tJ~~t~ f~~d~u=
permission to another SUNY unit to
build.auch a facility.
•
Shortage of apace continues to be a
major problem . Kettw told. the
gethenng that, necently,..., ..$800,000
grant was offered to an lnd!Yidual at
U/B; but that he had to advise IIOalnat
accepting It, because the necesaary
space could not be allocated.

keep

to -......

or .,.... · ·

conatant, the number of
on the Stale's work Ioree.

~:!i ~nee..s!Mitaca~

=: .·

Qr.tuateaaiatanta atill.ba hined. K8ttar

=~~c!'::V :!.:~

the lnlaze.contJnuee.

~ ..._.Npart

,.:.~ f=r.'J=-"~
pnliNdthegroupforthalrWQIII~the

~:-se!..~Jr;~~~

reaoJvtno the
-eonl8l:t 11our
controvwsy, defining the role al. the
Dean of U~~C~ervr-~- EduCIIllon,.
eatabliahtng an acedlmlc plennlng
oo.d, devlaing_a proapectue lor the
Colleges, I8VI8IIIg the .t.cutty ~
reepondfng to the Huii-Yewley Report,
making -~allon8 to ,.....the
problem. ol late~ end .....,.lelllng
proce6uree for use of S/ U grae.
Nonethefwa, Reichart laid.-· muat be .done In the coming ,_. to
rectify probleml In the ol
~~ ellacttven.a, inetltullonal
;"the Facuft,_student Alaocll-

tion, special admi•IOnl. end ContinuIng Education.

uestlon

ttys

Unlw.~~l:r,'a grllduate faculty voted tQ

."lnclelinl

Katt.nreport
In his annual report to the voting
faculty, the President touchlid on
se-al problem areas which need to be
lmpro.ed. A""'"~! those mentioned
were: 1) A -anlsm fo~aculty
~M~Iuationa has to be diM!!~ and
made consistent
throughout t"!

~. 21 "-ctt ~U\Iee mu.t
be IIIIIWved. Kattw Mid 11181 morwy lor
the Chancellor'a Fund end lellowahlpa haa been raduced. 3)
AffifJnatlve action eflorta muat be
lncnaasad, eepeoilllly Ill the of
WOJ1181l and mlnonty te.:hlng U81atenta. 4) Duty Ioeiia ol te.:hlng
aaalatanta and graduate ..,.._.
muat be evaluated to ~ unfelr
-overloading oleomellf*luata atudente.
5) Tha queltty of life at U/B . Ieawe
much to be deelrad. So fer tha 51ate haa
not allowed any money lor art work or

----·-~eot4

H8(Yard. Kittel: let z.Jen at up a m.l
charges egalnatietter were too vague
unit, Biou said, luat to plac8ta Z81en.
and that ltie O«JDp he r-il(ed-no neal
evidence upoll3lblclra good decision · ~ also ~ (hal thenl woukl , _
could be ba8ect: been
suffiCient ·~ to
department a out of Rldga La 'iaat ,_.
Attempting to-make hla complatnla
If Kettet'a goal !'Waa to uee IJ*l8
more spacllfc,- llrOaa- told the faculty
ellicltintiy inateed of
Albany
that the " stoc:k::answer to all chalaes
.•
.
against the Kener .tlftlnlstratlon lias · . that mOre bulidlnge...,.
been to blame everything on the loglatiC
Bross complalnad that lila apece
problem of three separate campuses
"tactic" dkl not make 8IIJ .
and to blame Albany for the three
considering that total floor apece at
campuses.•'
both the Amllerat and M8ln StNet
He charged that "gross mismanagecampu- iaat ,_. ..__,_sly
larger" than the oorreeponcltng apece in
ment" by Ketter resulted In the
1970, whlle-numbera ol atudenta and
"completelt unnecessary operation of
faculty have~.
t~e Ridge ea Campus ln the 19n-78
"In my opinion, If the ~t apece
academic year. "
•
Bross contended that
Ketter's
were efflclentty uaad, no more
construction -uld be - - . y,• he
conclUded.
or gross favoritism to certain persona
After the faculty heMS other
complaints llbout Ketter, Pro'and programs;~stone Cop' admlnNewton G._ ~geated u.t lnate.t
ol voting on Chon a confidence motlon'or taking a no confidence stand, the
ellectl~ way; [and) 'Edifice Complex'
priorities that sacrificed aducat(onal
-=':ct~ly consider poetvalues In a push for bulldlnga."
GwVer aald the hyperbole used in
Chon's
atat-t "Cioea not eet wet!
Havoc in stetiatlca
'
with critical thlnlcwa."
Brose then outlined how Ketter
~ added that the F'Naldent'a
supposedly played_havoc with the U/ B
Appolntmenta, Promotions and T111ure
Statistics unit by showing favoritism to
Dr. Marvin .Zelen, who now Is at

mo..

convl.=

l~!~~-t:ac:rsad~t\nA~~\~~-=~

:t=1ng~~~ declsC:::'l~ :::n-"1;"!:9

:=rng

·-·-'""""': -~~.- ·

Council should take no action, Faculty Senate urges
The Faculty 8-te
Executive
Commltt• this week urged the U/B
Council •to take no substantive action"
'-able cr unfavorable on charQea
agalnat President Robert L. Ketter "faid
toetoN It by S.A. rep"'sentati-" (at
'-1 ...ak'a Council meeting).
In a letter to Robert I. Mlilonzl,
chairman of the Council , Faculty
Chelrman Jonathan F. Reichert,

a.-

=r_ 'oe::!.tl:.theC:.,":W:.ofal~

urged !lie Council "to taka this occasion
affirm the view that It ahouid be the
normal course lor the .tmlnlstrative
partonnance of a President to be
nMawed periodically, aloQQ mora than
live~ lnt-'l, in a pr&amp;ets In which
the Council. faculty, atudenta, and
prolaaalonai stall participate fully R!ld
la1:1y ."

to

'Oon, aui&gt;Mrt the IWIJUier proceu'

Reichert said that while It Ia ''surely

r:'.:.~r!~': :.r~~e ~~~"".: t~t!

S.A. representatives, we reapec;tlully .,.
urge. you not to allow this occaalon to
cause the Council to unlntentlot)ally
subvert tha due and regular process

Special Meeting
A special meeting of the
U/B Council has been called
for 2 p.m ., Friday, May 19.
In the President's
Conference Room, fifth
floor. Capen Hall.

through which thla University should
conduct periodic evaluations of Ita
administrative officers."
Reichert noted that tha President's
1

='t~af ~': et~~!!~:lf~ ~~8
1

preoadent, threatening to the lntearltY
of the Univeralty and Ita ability to~

and hold effective leederahlp, II the
Council went to give _ . the

appewance that It lntencla tci be a torum
In which. the Unlw.~~lty'a President may
be triad during hie or her term In office.
"While underatendlng that under
~~~s':J~.'or.,.~ln::.,~ ~d
extraordinary circumstances the Counhealthy way lor this University to
cil may feel that Ita legal reaponalblllty
requires It to review charges against an
conduct
~~- of
appralalng the
Its -'01111
·-.~mrn1iftfatlve , _ _
Incumbent Preeld1111," l!elchart conahlp.
tinu.t, "we also truat that the Council
- recognizea that thle woukl be an
'l)aneefoua Pwwcedenf
extraordinary. course outaide the
Council's normal rvle. We know of no
charges which would warrant extrathe press, aeem to ua to be~nconslatent - ordinary action by the Council ~nat
with the University's commitment to
Dr.
Ketter.
We also think
It
careful and dispassionate llll81yals · of
lnapptoprlate lor the Council to use
lmportanl 'Issues," said Reichert. "We
such an occasion to make a favorable
think that It would set a dangerous
evaluation of an Incumbent President."
to be arevl- of hie .tminlatratlon If he

~~~~S::;:m~r~~~ J;'rh:

�........

Mlly 11,1178

Nursing gjads told
their'star is rising

Director says
·cutbacks hurt
the libraries

c::..-r:la

eeclft
to eupp
cieS. He • .,

.00 endowments
.alocatlon deficien-

TNIIdS In America'S health care
ayatem we congruent with the nursing
proleaalon's mlsaion end thoae enter·
lng the field of nu(Sing today do ao at a
significant time, the audience attending
tha SchoOl of Nursing Commencement
wu told last Saturday.
Donna M. Juenker, associate profes·
sor of nursing, end acting director of
. undergraduate education In the School,
said at the ceremon lea at Art park that
theee trends h... to do with WhO will be
served In the health care system as well
as with kinds of care and methods ol
del !wry.
She said she befieved the clients or
patients whom nurses will seM In the
tutuni will diller from those of today In
several Important ways. These clients
will be better educated by formal
education , by the media and by active
conslimer groups; they will be more
Interested In maintenance of health . No
longer will their entry· Into the health
system be ·motivated primarily by a
desire to have an Illness remedied .
With the shill 10 prevenllve care,
Juenker said, heellh leeching and
guidance- roles In which professional
nurses h... long excelled will
become more and more Important...
Jlienker predicted that atartl::£

~~!s~!-~ftr::.~P~:'.

But
.m.-.olnted out that thesa technologl·
while lifeenhancing- alao create specialization,
Impersonalization and frBQmentation of
aei'ricea. The situation, she em·
phastzed, cries out for nuraee whoae
specialty lncorporatea wholeness, humaneness, end oonttnulty of .care.
Ms. Juenker alao 1old the group thet
the health C8l8 ayatem u we know II
todey may be changed In the future.
She predlctad that hospital care will
diminish In ·proportion to a dramatic

biWy 8!1mlnl-or he

~~~- to hire after theJob freeze, will

car ·'tireakthroughs

wor1&lt; cloaely with the /B Foundation
on this.
Before coming to U/B In 1974 u an
uelatent director for technical M!Vk:ea,
Ror held poatliona at VIrginia PoiY)echnle -.mute, Helwnl Unl-alty, ttie
UnJwralty Of CaHtomia at Santa ena.
Md In hla ~ India.

:

Upd eon
_
Library moves·:-~

Amhaltl.

••

~, tb~

.;".':d~":="&amp;r~b:Z

_.. ::f.,_-,
001•......-eecond 8{ld '
c.pen-' at Amherst.

thlllllloora of

1"- Ridge .: Lee ··~ will be

...:tlolated Md atoi:kild with lft«\'8
eollectloM .nd _,. journals tor the
o..\ll*lta of Paydloloay, Computer
8dlnoe Md Geology. [ocetion and
openinG dille h - not been decided.
HeJ/l/IINy In Ellicott will move May
20 to
..,..It will be 1*1 of the
- UOL Or. John Neal, 8Ctlng vice
~I for 1.:1111'" planning, Said a
"good ohunk" of lha - ' Hall
u~ ... will be ueed u a studY
apide for atudenta. Computer tannlrials
will ... , be loc:etad ttww.
An Utnry will move from
EII-I 1D the bUement of the new
LaclleiMOd L"-'Y tiii1Y thla
tt
wlllllloelr open tfleencl of June or early

c-.

nr.

eummw.

Jut&amp;. S/10. Collecllon,

part of the Art

Alitoly Oepertnient... wlfl nimaln In Its
~tloc*lon

In ~llcott .
Dnctor Sektlda
Is
a
~ l =·eanJ!
....._ ol aucto a facility, acconllng
to Aor~,pon
lha wtlllngneea
of Mlilh.
, Md
An:lllt8Ciure

u::'J.

Roy

!:'G... !tl
; : , ............

m:r.

~0 tg..

If . . ........,
- · ltlla Main
- - ~ llblwy wuld aiiiO
.
. . .- 410«111
atudy
........
oo~~ao~~on.
Md JoWnala
8oolel WOitt .nd
....
(AIIbcllt) 11M been
..-.ote alta lor the

=-...

. . . .IJd
Tbe ~date for library

beaks t.akeAOMt tfll&amp;

---~~~teltded
to
June IS. Boob can be
returned to •ny campus
Htiraty.

· FJ:,o;:,"Ft::S7;onY~!::Je
sA,::.~ . tor
Ruth T. McGrorey LNdershlp Award:
Undergraduate: Jan Sllberstem; Grad·
\iate: Marilyn Sanderson.
·
s. Mouchly Small Award: Theresa
Ceprlottl.
Anne Sengbusch Award: David
Powell.
Also acknowledged lor being named
to "WI)o's Who Among Students In
American Unl-alllea" were Lori Arkin,
Holly Hutchings, Susan Hyzy; Ellen
Maurer, Laurel Pfeil, Laurie Polls,
Robert Rolrano, Joy Runea, and Diane
Wop c.
Or. Pannill commended Dr. Spero's
contributions u clean of the School and
noted this ' would be her last
/ Commencement el&lt;efCiae at U/B. Dr.
Spero- will become clean of the
Unl..alty of Clnctnnatl'a SchoOl of

Nu~en~~~'l/~.:"Aikln~. · paator

of
Firat Unlt8!1 Methodlat Church, Wells-

~~~ ~veh~ ~r::,"y ~~d :::
graduating' nu..- while - he wu
hospitalized at Buffalo General u a
stroke patient.

Be lactivists?·-SIL~ _grads urged
-

SILS' .85 degree candidates were
presented by Dr. George S. Bobinski,
dean of the SchoOl. Degrees were
conferred by Dr. Ronald F . Bunn, vice
proaldent lor ec8!1emlc affair•.

Ellen Woodri ch, chalrperaon and
founder of Erie County Citizens lo Save
Libraries, told the graduating class of
the SchooJ o( lt\lormallon and Ubrary
Studte,J Sunday. that they should
consi(Jer themselves "'the new activists"
In defense of libraries.
Delivering the main commencement
address In the Alden Courtroom of
O'Brian Hall , Mrs. Woodrich urged
gr8!1u-ates to be aware of the need. to be
more aggressive In defense ot llbdrlee
end to work at promoting community
support lor I hem.
,
•

Also In attendance were Mrs. Lydia
Laub of the Unl-allr, Co.u ncll, and Dr.
Charles Bernier, pro eaaor of Informslion and library sludlea, who will be
retiring at the lll)d oft he aummer.
•
A
atuclent:P--'
multi-media
show, depleting the School's 19n-78
year, acccmpanled the ceremonies.
/

EOC honors Hassett, Smith
The Educational Opportunity Center
presented two awards slits ll fth~ual
Achievement Day Exercises, Friday, In
the auditorium of the Buffalo and Erie
County Llbcary.
·
Wllllarll D. Haaett Jr., whO-serves on
·ttw statetlnlll'. .lly o( New York Board
?I TrUsiJIS_, received the,annual " Friend
of the ,~;~·. -a.ror 11!' ,uppptj ,o{
eilucatton lor.the dlsad~ntaged .Bellnda K. Smith, treasurer of the
Buffalo North American Indian Club of
the EOC, received an award lor
outstanding ec8!1emlc achievem'ent.
The award wu recently announc8!1 by
lhe SUNY Office ol Special Programs In
Albany.
Mlaa Smith Ia a Mohawk from the Six

~

Nations Reaervatlon In Canada end Is
sponaored through tha North American
Manpower Program,
Florence Baugh, prealdent of the
Buffal o Board mEducation, wu guest
speaker.

Summer Sessions
The first of three U/B
Summer Sessions begins
on Monday. June 5
(registration by May 31
Is ~ecommended).

Problems in Poetry

"**·

rc1e-

proleaslon .
Dr. F. Carter Pannlll, vice prealdenl ol
the Faculty ol Heelllf Sclence.!'J
conferred the B.S. degree on 1;s:,
nursing graduates and the M.S. on 69
others.
Dr. Jeannette Spero, dean of the
School, presented
the
following
awards:
Alumni Award: Jane-Andrews.

ltal care
Is clearly In nursing's beat rnterast,"

The updal8!1 llat of U/B llbiWy ~

..::::-

~=u~.!:fveor::=~ nr~h~~

ri~•=:37or~':f-hos

eng,~~~~~ Abbott)

Ubrary
on tha Main Street C@mJlUS closes
MeY2"1 end....._~ Jane 12.
TIM Ulldetg/MIUeiiJ Ulnty (UGL~
clo- at Main Street..June 16 and wll
be In lull operation June 20 In the
buMuenl and first floor of · C8pen at

she 8!1ded , "lor the background,
professional competence and lntereats
of nurses are particularly suited to the
needs of clients In ambulatory
settings."
"All these trends h8"11 a common
denominator - they all point to e need
to emphasize the human dimension of
heal!!) care," Ms. Juenker said. She

8ecauae of walar dfllllllll8 to the Special Collection 111M walla end floor on
tha fourth floor of Capen, the move of the Unlveralty Llb&lt;Wiea' Poetry
Collection has h8!l to be poatponed Indefinitely. The Poetry Collection wUI
a1 '::.tt~ Llbrwy building on Main Street Campus until the

.=.

18
Thla -icloated anag and the tranaler of the Lockwood Library
Collection from Abllott to lfa ,.., locallon at Amherat h - forc8!1 Unlveralty
Ulnrlaato=_...to the Poetry Collection . Effective May 22. access
to the
lon will be by ~polntment only. The Poet Collection
will
tO a.m, to 5 p.m., Monday through FrW.y. Patrons
-'Ina lo uee the oallac:lion will bave to make prior appointment with the

be~

Po~try'Callectillll

llalf.

•

;nltli Uni*IIIY L.ltlrar* 811PreClate .,. lnconll8fllence this may cause
pattona anci wllf try to lllinlmlz.e the lnoorwenlence In every way possible.
Allaolnt11*118 to uae the Pqatry Collection alter May 19 can be m8!1e by
calllrig ellhar llotf. Gal' or Ma. a...ty VanclerKooy at 83t ·2~. 11 poealble, a
Clay'a _ , _ -loe would be ~preclated .
'tf'

•• • •

, .._.. ,,.,

�!llay11, 1t71

5,500
That's how many degrees we're awarding;
Chancellor Wharton, Volkswagen's Mclernon
are among speaker~ for V\feekend ~eremonles
U/B wiN -ard-approxlmatety 5,500
deg,_ during thle Ita 132nd commencement-., ,
A total ol 3,807 Individuate Will
I'K81ve bchetor's degrees, the Office of
Admlealone and Records rePOrta; 1,485
will I'K8Ive muter's; 445 will be
epnted ecldemlc or profeselonal
~::!ct.25 aaaoclatea degrees.

.v........,
.,=•w.

chief

...

~

....... - "''

B~ffalo

Mclernon, a
area
native ll!ld U/S alum,.us who recently named president and chief
executive officer of the Volkswagen
Manufacturing Corooration of America,
will eddres8 englneering grilduates,
Saturday. May 20, m 2 p.m. on the lawn In front of Patker Hall. In ceaa of bed
_.her, the program will be held i n
Twelve aeparate commencement
Clark Hall.
exerct- have or wlll be held , from May
A native of KenmOre, Mclernon 7 through May ~ .
graduated from
Millard
Fillmore
When the last 1978 degree Is
&lt;!:ollege, the University's night division,
confemld, the total number ol degrees
with
a
bachelor
of
sclenca
degree
~n
aWMiecl by U/B since 1846 Will near the
Industrial. eng t.-lng. He later did
100,QOO mart&lt;.
graduate work at U/B and at EmorY
University In Atlanta. ·
The largest 1978 ceremony, the
Mclemon was with General.JIIotors ,
General Comrnenoement,) s ~heduled
for ZT years. For the last .seven i5'f lhQ$8
l.r~af"·· ;~:Xum~ay l,;.,~:'o~~ years,
' he was general ll)anufacturing
manager o.f GM's Cfieyrolet Dlvl slort: In
Chancellor Clifton A. Wharton of Stale
Uni..alty will dell- the maln lddreas.
that post, he directed oj)e(etlons ot a
26-plant network In which 24 factories
SPMkera for divisional commencements Include a U/B alumnus who ts.
produced parts and components for GM
now head of Volkswagen In America
vehicles and two assembled Chevrolet
trucks.
and a former attorney genenol of the
ln September, 1976,.Wesl Germany's
u.s.
Volkswagen
management
chose
Mclernon
as president of Its American
General Com--It
1 division alter a nationwide .search. VW's
General Commencement Is open to
graduates from five divi sions: the
fl~~:r~~nv::~~g:r. r~~~~~~~
Faculty of Arts and Letters (excluding
Ct Huntington Township, Pennsyl-the School of Architecture and
vania,
with corporate headquarters j ust
Environmental Deelgn), the-Faculty of
.outside Detro it In Warren, M lc~lg an .
Educational Studies, the Faculty of
The assembly plant began operation In
Natural Sciences and Mathematics, the
April, 1978, with 1,200 employees, a
Faculty ol Social Sciences and
number that will grow to about 4,000
Adminlstretlon, the Division of Gradwhen
th ~
plant reaches Its f ull
uate and Professional Education
production of 200,000 Rabbits a year.
(Including Roswell Park Memorial
President Robert L Ketler will confer
Institute but not those who receive
327 B.S. degrees on engineering grads.
:!,~t~~":n:~~~ng,v:a~~ The · ·numbers of those receiving
advanced degrees In eng ln-ing were
Undergradullte
Education
(special
not avallaNe Ill RfljJorter deadtlne.
majors and esaoclate degree raclplents .
·
direCtor of the
n Seotem
Those co-lng
Bultalo Area Office of the Department
1977, Febnlery 11178, and May 1918 are
of Housing and Urban Development,
Included.
W\11 be the speak.,. for the Schoof of
General Commencement wt II feature
- . 1 c:llangea from - • yews:
U.. muelc will be provided by the
M..lcHall.
. Dr. Ronald F. ·Bunn, vice president
for ecldemlc affaire, wlll confer 835
Cipolla, aeaocl8le proleesor of muelc.
bacllelor'a degrees, 175 MBA's, and 7
Ph.D. deO,_.
.
An lncluel.. comm811C81Y*rt proTen .w.rds lor outstanding achleve~tie':".:l."::":.o~es· .ll*ltwill 'be_preeented.
101!-.lr for grlduates 1111d parents.
A 1aiVer number ol faculty have
Dr.. Milo Gibeldl, professor and
atgnecl up to 1*\lclpate, Dr. Anthony
chairman of the Department of
"-Pafla, the cllalrman of the Oepilhment of lnlllfllctlon who ie the new
==rrd.:.'!~ ~~~~ ~~;
commencement m.rWial, reparts.
Pharmacy commencement, Sundlly,
Dr. Papflla eatlmates that about eoo
~- Will participate, a number
M'8'/1&gt;.:~'fa~~!:'c"t:&amp; vice
aJigh11y higher thWI last yew'stumou1.
president for the Faculty of , Health
Dr. Gordon Harris, Larkin Profeaaor
Sciences, Will confer a total of 96
o1 et.nlatry, will again be University
mara~*,
aealgnld to carry the
.,._tal "*» In the traditional
proceaalon . Dr. Arthur l . Kat• Will
u herald, 1111nounclng the various

:--~'c...t.o,..•

i.ro;,.

!~~~. ~·r:m~~~n~.,e,~~a':,';

.

:t":J:-~:r .:I~E=

......_,

~,~~-

L

Ketter

will

81

~=~~;!: =~~~ t'o "':

dlatlngui- BUffalonian .
·
A bi---whlta U/B flag wilt
fly rrom the platform at the Aud .
c.ndldates participating In this event
are -.cl to - b l e at 2:30 p.m. In
the b&amp;Mmenl level of the Auditorium.
Cape and gowns wilt be wom. There are
no limite for -lng family and guests;
ticlleta are not raqulrad .

Alctli-- _. EM111111~ Design
The ~ of Archltecjure and
EnvlroM*Ital Oealgo will confer
degreea on 75 gqduates at oeremonles
on tbe front'*"'" of. Hayes Halt , Frldlly,

M~ ~":· John McHale

dlractor
o1 lnMgratlve atudlee at the Unl..,..lty
01 Houaton, will be pt1nclpeiSPMker.
SAED will ..,an:l :ill B.A.'s In
profeeaionai studies In archlteclure; 22
B.A .'s in enlllronmantal design; and 14
muter's In architecture.

............... ""'---

The Sellool of H•.i th Related
Profession&amp; will hold l~mmence­
mant, Friday, May 19, • • • p.m. at
Kleinhans Mualc Hall.
Dr. Donald A. Larson will confer
degrees. There will be no speaker.

degrees :_~-o. 'lllld ~- D-~
· Various lredltlonal•awardl will also be
presented t!l students.
•h r.. 11n•

Social Work.

.,1.. . :~ ._. .,

.

Forty-nine Individuals will • racelve
master's d~gfQ:m the School of

f::"'':r..W~~=-~·,=· ~~;

Ellicott.
· ~ ,.. Congreaaman.,John J . LaFalce will be
the gu.St speaker. Dr. Sherm1111 ·Merle,
dean of the School,.will giVe welcoming
remarks and confer deg,_, B8lbata

::J~:!\2~- be

the master's
Three awards will be presented.
Graduates w!ll man:h In to the tune-of
"Stayln' Alive, • by theBes G -.
A reception will. follow the ceremonIes - In Fargo l::afeterla.
.

Dentistry

School of Dentistry graduates will

' - io"commancoiuO&amp;nt ~-tw Dr.
lawnlnoe Kerr, an _Endicott, H. Y.,
dentlat and a .. ol the Anler1c-.
Dental Aaeoc~mion; at thalr - t'.!:::fi~ 21, at 8 p.m. at~

~tder':i 'o~ F=~

;,r. ;,;;:.

SC:Ienc'es, win confir 111 1&gt;.o.s.
dagrMI, two M.S.'.. and 1 Ph.D.
AWMia will be given at the DlfQI · ·
AWMis Din- at the Gllll!d leland
Holiday Inn, May 18.
1Aw8ndJurt..........

Aameay Clliirl&lt;. u.s. altOmey _ . .
under lyndo!! ~ and -.thor ol
Crime In , . _ . , will be the 11f1nc11*
speelulr .. l..n and ..~
ceremonlaa, Sldurday, May :0, • 1:30
p.m. In the Art1*k me1n a.dllorlum In
leoilaton.
l..n will -.11 approximately 250
J.D.~ .

MFC students hof\or Milton Plesur,
cite Gray Panther al annual dinner
Dr. Millon Plesur, professor of
hi story, receJYecl the fire\ annual Carl
Naish Award of the Millard Fillmore
Coli~ Student Aaaoclalion (MFCSA)
at the . organization's annual . dinner,
Sunday, May7, onGoodyaar-10.
The award Is named for the late Carl
Nalah who was given-a special award
last y - for hla dedication to MHiard
Fillmore atudenta. Plesur, who was
also guest aPMker at the dinner, has
taught In Mi"C almost continually for
the past 28 y-. and "haa shown great
support for all ajudent activltlea,"
:,wrci'.!,n~P~=';" J . Stiffler, new
MFCSA prM.nted a aeries of awards
during the evenlnQ:
Til• Philip BtriOflla Award, named In
memory of a former MFCSA executl"'!
committee member who had epilepsy
and died while still enrol led .,...., Is
given annually to a student who has
overcome handicaPs )"hlle working on
his/ her degree. ThiS year's recipient
was Jacob Kramer, a senior citizen and
active member of the Gray Panthers.
Aller receiving formal recognition from
MFCSA, he started a chap!.,. of the '
Gray Pant hera on campus.

....

O...'a Key, Special Awwda
The O..n 'a K•y was pruented by Dr.
Donald · A. Brutvan to MFCSA officer
Stilflec: for "outstanding contrtbu11ona

~~~~~~-·~·~~ts~~~.:he_:udr,:.:

student organization's director of
student affalm durtng 19n-78.
A spacial aWMI was preeented to
Robert
Stockdale of the
Math
Department for hla devotion to
studenls ,~._!!IY ~ bla Friday

~=~~-byRbard a=:~•:

-laor.

engineering -laor for MFC and the
who alao MFCSA faculty
cited for hla dedication to atudanta 1111d
I he aaaoclatlon .
Executive "t::'mtnllfl&amp; ~ tM;. _..
given to all out-going · -tiacutlve
Committee mernberl by Dr. Ertc Streiff,
asalatant dean of Continuing ~-­
lion, 1111d 1111ot~ apeclal awaid was
given to Dean Brutvan for'hla dedication
and devolloo. Thta . .ard wu prnented
by Ms. Gloria long.
A final , special award was given to

~'IP~ ~~:=: r~ J~~

0
-

an~

hel ped pull togeth.,. acllvllle:'Tor the

spring-•.

F..:J. . .

U...,A_.
.
Uterrt
!of tha flrat
~~~ lah
bJ Dr.~ Dlty .
by the edtor
Crawford, the conteet Judoerf by
Daly, MichMI o.monc1 Of the
Courier-e._•. Me. Crawford and Me.
Stiffler. Winner. ware: ....,.... lloi;quln, Lauralong, and Tony Fenwa.
"The Midnight 011" AWd presented. by J - Storm&amp;, a fanner
editor, to Ms. Crawford for tw
as editor In 197r-78.
The outgoing MFCSA anoutlve
committee
Included:
Angelina
J-ekoa president; Katharine J .
Stiffler, dlractor of aluclant .n.n;
-Gloria
Carol Block,
~~Oil.~
ord, edlt~r ol
Tt&gt;e new Execullve Commltt.. · Ia
Angetlne
J-.t&lt;oa,
president;
Kailwlna J . Stiffler, v1oe president;
Greog Danoian, director of student
affaire; Carol Block treaaurer; Laure
Crawiord, editor of " Midnight 0 11;" and
, Kurt VanDevelde, Sub Board I
representative.

o~ 0~

..we.

Lontu,.
.,_c::i

�member w11t1 .,
.-.cord."

~ery .teaching

lllbd, only two ~ alter
hla ~ntment, to 18M on the onerous
lltlea of M!Yina aa dlnoctor of

=
He -

.,... atudlea. ''Thla kind of
tal a:lmlnl-lon Is one
which • brings a faculty member
clo.t to undergrai!uaie studenta; It
takea tact, humor, ~ a certain rapport
with undergra:luMM. Jarvie -'11 to
haft .ccomolllhed this feat with-·"
hi a nomination 1et1ar said .
Student evaluatlona eccompanylng
hfa nomination apd&lt;e of " a faculty
.-nber who Ia entirely accaaalble and ,
willing to talk to bla.atudanta, who Is a
gllta:l teacher, and a superb ac:holar!' ~

-r

•Dr. c.e..tne L. ate.., aaaoclate
--.nattca. Olsen was
rqnlnated by a group of her
departmental peers. A letter from three
of " - collellg.- pointed out the
I
y
• do2!'mentlno - teaching
e~
u est.-.ct as
, ut l'llllde wry c'- that
she haa l»en·l*lloularly aUCCIIIIIUIIn
~.

~

~~~ =:..~~~~

inalnlelorS In •taaa·glanlouroua" basic
OW8flod&lt;ed when recogn ition Ia d ... In Dr. Olaen'a cue, though,
Mitt. hW fellow faculty nor students
haft~ IIIIa omlealon. In fact ,
IIIey l1lpOittd enlhualaatlcaliY libout her
_,,.. In lntroduotory Cefculus. Her
.tforta to ~P atudenta with apeclaJ
problema . . aleo termed

cour-. . .

.
.
;
.
.
=
tmpN8Siwt,_t;

-

·-r

.

o. ,_, aaaodite

of IIIRitJ. Pope deacfibes
quite rnoclaatly u a '"stand-up
lectUf111"." He Itt not given to flashy
lnnowatlon, the letter nominating him
lndlcalaa. - AatMt,oo be rell ries his
material u lie paue It on to &lt;~tudent o .
Hla.cl)alrman -notee. thai his handouts
. . minimal compaltld with the deluge
of -Inflicted OI&gt;'Stl,ldents by -'ter"
IMtrUctors ( -v on Impressing
chal"'*'wlth--olea). Pope haS
Incorporated ooncern lor student
writing Into lila ..-et matter and his
atudenta ap.,..- to lie very appreciative.
Aa en Oldlllnect n:_l!llillter, he Ia often
_,gilt out by Ioomer atudenta to
offlc181e at weddings and chrlatenlngs.

J

t

•o."'Z:.~~·fl:,tMt~ ~

IICif

c:heracterl- h.- u "superb-gifted," t
l*tloularly noting her skill an&lt;f ability I
In lnavvctlng atudents from outside
Anllllopology.
Her atudent le«era and eveluatlona
uniformly outatandlng, and her
oollaag.- lndlceled that her lludenta
. . piltlo!Arty well prepllnld. While
afteli ~. IIIIa Ia an especially
ll!!od -.-ring atlck" of teaching
~!Ill letter nomlnatlngilet.

---.................... __ .
......

f'ruleaelofwlltaff members cited are:

.tr lli a.. o f . _ _
............. Alwwna lillian - CIIM&lt;
Ill ttl1 .. a --.no. She has rtaen

..._......

11110 · llld ~ the ~onal

..... _.an_....

~

SUNY and. New York State) Because of
her knowleCige of tbe legislation
pertaining to m~ated accesafblllty of
***"lc programs and facilities to the
handicapped, she haa become a
sought-after consultant and advisor to
various units of SUNY and Central
Adml nlatratlon.
.
Her Mnaitlvlty to· the disabled was
highly developed before SUNY I Buffalo
.-ved the HEW .,.u. "long before It
- I n vogue,• a nomlnallng letter from
handicapped students aald.
· Ma. Cutcher haa demonstrated
untiring efforts on behalf of students,
many of whom seek her out In crisis
situations where bunaaucratlc avenues
do not provide tile - t l a l human
touch, her nomlnetlon t.tter pointed
out.
.
•llenllnf. ~................ -

.... ~. Sincenia arrival here In
1W4, GrMger Ilea ' led a major
~ion within hla-n - · Aa a
hla .-.cord ..:counts, In

=.._,

~=~::'A':'.:

lncnaaed faculty l*llalpetlon In 1111
...,...• -.Ilona, Ilea lntllcncllt-lllerlng CCIUI8M In public ra:llo
==~lng and eno"--ng lor
...,.... hla lll8lleat contrtbutlon,
1111 letter -lnatlng him said, Is the
IWUit 01 theM manw rolaa: "he Ia 11181
1n11 ' - - commltWd to a poa~ura of
~.-viol to the community.
1111 '181e11t and QOOdwln that he has
llllf1ured ~ ~ed Ilea accrued ttl"
8UNY In lm-..rable waya .• He has
been Cltecl bf aucll organizations • the
Amer1can Bar' Aaaoclailon , and the
Corporation lor ~Ubllc Broa:lcaatlng.

-

"-t

..........

• •lla. lemloe
~18nt prowoat
01 1111 F8CUIIJ of llld Letters.
Ma. Poaa haa _,ad In a variety of stall
poaltlona alnce- 111115, from lhe
departmental to tile ¥Ice presidential
level.
Statements of support which came
from supervl~ and cotluguea In all
levels and araaa of the Unl-slty
cqnslstently relenwd to Ms. Poss'
highly develo~- of '1natltutlonal
commitment. ' She has ''always been
able to beyond the particular
constituency which aha happened to be
S«VIng ." theM atatementa agreed.
Because of this aha haS 1»en In demand
to serve on comrnltl- of a Unl-sltywldenature.
One letterdeec:rlbed her u belonging
to tt.l smell "-"- 01 kay personnel
that y - aftllr
prowldea the
"Contlnully, the eUiblllty, and around
Whom the. lnatllutlon carrl• out Its
-'oua tUncllona under different
.....,.p, pollclea, and goals. These
ere people who tteve to be professional
In the fulleet - o f the term. •
;Mr. llalioiar D. ........ ...,._
. . . . . . . . . . 111111'1$ ....... ,~!." the,
winner of en -ard for exce .....ce n
IMQr1anlhlp. Lopez llaa t»en here lor
thlrt_..
and waa one of the first
"*"'*- of the llbrWy _laculty to be
promoted to fulllilnrtan rank.
Nomination letters emphasized the
MIYice that Lojlez provtclea to fledgling
achOiara. Preeldent Kalter Indicated
that Lopez' a accomplllhmanta reflect In
·a "'what we're all trying to do: to
lnatlli a loYI of the dogged and
stubborn pursuit of knowllldge.• His
.ccomP.IIIhmenta remind us, Ketter
said, ' how much we depend on !he
profeaslonal llbrarlan."
·

r-

v-.

�Fighting
~Mt·lwaukee

tumors'The Milwaukee Tllmor Is the scourge

-&lt;;If law enforcement ~~genclas, felling a

=~~onrc:~=~f all ~oooften
The utrPollce, though, are . doing
something about the dreaded Tumor (or
"bMr belly," aa It Ia more widely
known)-through a program of exercllijl
and athletic activities.
U. John Boland, the 38-~-old " old
man" of the Ioree. Ia one of the leaders
promoting lltnass-- he and lormtir1J/B
football player o- Chernega (who
holda a phyalcal education degree from
Boland Ia sports coordinator for
the «ce and Chemega Ia one of the
developers and- prime mo~ In ' a
weight-training program.
'
MOat of the lime, the two explain, the
campus aec..-lty olflalr alta at a deak or
In a car lor moat of hla or her duty ahlft.
The crunc:h comes when thera'a a call
about a lira on the 1oth floor of an
Ellicott tower or a light on the third

here!.

,,

floor of Squire. " You can 't stand around
Most recently, . a o•,U/8 Pollee
walling lor an elevator, • · Boland
Volleyball Team placed fifth In a field of
submit..: And yo~ can, be ready to . 30 (and was the hlgheal-ranklng
~llapae after climbing flights of stlilrs. •
American team) In a tournament In
T,..,-e are times, too, wHen officers have
Toronto, sponsored by the Royal
to chase after fleel!'g suppects _(most of
-Canadian MoliQted Pollee. Besides the
Mounties, the Metro Toronto force was
whom are much younger).
In short, Boland and Chemega say, a
ctampus offic« needs to be In shepe.

..:,~land ~~ or~:;,ed :~:oflera;::

bask~all , volleyball, and bowling.
These teams play agai nst squads
representing other area pollee furlsdictions through the Niagara Frontier
Pollee Athletic Association (NFPAA).
Several member&amp; of the' U/8 force
repraented the NFPAA In the New Yor_k
State Pollee Olympics last year, also.
Some.won medals (Including Chemega
and another officer, Cliff Platt, In
=~~g&gt;NF~~.tthrae U/8 officers

~~e~~h :l:~~t::l"u:u~~:J;~

(U/ 8 had -th&lt;88 teaiRaMitered . ~
The' U/B cops also once fielded a
team In campus Intramural football.
"Students get to know us just as regular

Pnuy..:,::::t ,fc~~~·~~~.~~~S.~ev~
Palefsky, anot'- member of the force .
.• -.;;o;

Champagne
andm~~

.

-

.

~ -uta·
o.Y.......,._
at the
---..,.onlc.
A
..-.ny

.
_.. """"-,_
..,.,..., at . . . _, tt.. - by ' the

·Micheel ·

- t t y 0..

~

~

~

aled
-- _ -"""'·
,..._
.
._
- --and
.......
at the-home of Dr: and Moa. E.K.
, _ of Buffalo a-. Mia.
, _ to cha.,.._ of 8

--

su-.-, _,.

1'11--lfc
. .........
,.,the.,.._ _ _

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

{)rom leftl I'IIHharmonlc aololota
~""-

....

;:.t;;_..;.~-~

ChariM Haupt. Prof. OavN ...,._
the baardl the
chalnnan Of the - .

&lt;-..-.

;

.

The point Of:ote.athlelic teams (on
w!IIOh some (Ill memb8rs of the
13-mernber f0108''partlctpate) Is to build
an esplrft dtr' corps within the
department. those who play also get to
know other pollee officials In the area
on an informal, first nama baals. "It

helps us In our wort&lt; and al8o In being
· 'accepted' by other policemen,"- ~
Boland. Too often, thoaa not of
the Unlven~lty Pollee tend to "'-Ill think
of them as night watChmen.
Chet'nega notee thai the heart llltack
rate among law enforcement otfloers Ia
high nationally. The point of the weiGht
program (which was eet up with the
coneullallon of Dr. !Ia! ~fto -of the
Department Of Recteallon, Athlallca
and Related Instruction) Is to help
develop all-around conditioning. The
Department has et Ita heedquarten1 on
Millersport Highway an eight-station
tlniWrsal gym, ...liable both to~
who follow the pracribed regut.
program Jlld to thoee who juet - t to
use It caaually. There's no tequ/,.,_1
to use II or 8Y8II to !&lt;eep In trim. Just a
lot of~ preasuraln the~.
Chemega notes. After all, he uyaabout
the Unarmed -fon:e, ''withOut fttr.. and
stl"'lnQth, we)It got IIO!hlng."
'

�.·:-;:}\::::·/::.-. ~U,1171

Pretty rBaby
Louis Mall~'s first American film,
except for the marvel of Brooke Shields,
Is close to being a 'coffee table movie"'
V(olet's
mother,
Haiioa
(Susen
Sarandon), are aucc:eaatvlly naellzed.
· Ha«la deserts VIolet to many a decent,
dull nouveau richa cuatomeo: and thus
find her long-aaved exit to reepect8blllty. She II a aelf-abeorbed,
charming, lmpula'ive, willful woman (a
grown VIolet) w!IO comes back for her
daughter at the end of the movie. By
recoroclllng with her mother, VIolet,
with only a allghf Indication of namorse,
In tum deaerta Bellocq, Wllho has loved
end cared for her. "You cannot take
her " he proteets. "I can't live without
her; thai's all." · But the potential

By lEather Swartz
Olliceol CUbh!Aflon

French dlnactor Loula· Malle's first,
AmeriCan film, "Pretty Bilby." has been
benned In parts of Carteda, ~ has
touched off considerable contro-.y
here. Sinoe the aettlng Is a New Orleans
bOrdello at the time of World War I, and
the principal·· character a child
prostitute, played by a 12-)'ear-old
actress, that Is not surprising. But the
movie Is neither pornograpnlc, nor, lor
that matter, erotic. There . ana ~o
titillating .scenes, and the shockers are
sociological, not saJ&lt;ual:
" Pretty Baby" falls far shorl.of Louis
Malle's last film shown In Buffalo,
Carredlne as Bellocq.
"Lacombe, Lucien." the heartbreaking
In a role based on _the real E.J .
masterpiece about a slow-witted
Bellocq, a physically deformed photopeasant youth who becomes a. Nazi
collaborator In 1'rance. But like
=:::'s
"Lacombe, Lucien" It shows "1alle's . Carredlne Is far too handllome to. be
amazing ability to portray the Interior life of an Qllolescent.
~~~~~~~:;!~~s'.~~.,!g~c:,ec:~~r,u~
liron~e Shields, as VIolet, domina!~
Is completely uncorrvlnclng as !he
the
not only because she Is at ots
strange, asexual oreeture whose only
novelistic center, bOfh In her relations
passion Is to photograph Idealized
and reactions to the lives In her
portraits of prostitutes, until he
hermetically sealed world, but ~use
develops ,. coosumlng sexual love for
of her infinitely complexpnd convincing
12-year-old VIolet and marries her. A
pot1rayal of the young girl : She may be
man with these deviances and
an acting prodigy, but one suspects
that much of the J!OWer of the role has
:.\rcnus'=gt
to do with Malle's brilliant use of her
opera.
film presence.
Carradlne tries to plai the perpetual
1
observer by being subdued and simple,
but h comes out wooden. The lack of
society - the daughter of a whore,
emotion In his performance robs his
raised In a whoreJIOuse-but bacauserelationship to 1/iol!l, of Its necessary
Malle shoWs her as a universally
tenvan and uHimate palfl. As for the
performance by Frances Fay as the
~=~:~~girlJ~f.::,gntup, ,:~t~ t~~

~~~~~.g,'e':::l=e·~·=·~~.~~

also the o~helmlng mass of people
who recognize this.
•
Yang was questioned about the
exlstenoe of an age gap among
acientlllc WQrke&lt;s. For example, In the
conf--=e ()n~h 8flli'IIY theoretical
phyaica he a«ended ~ast year, the
~ty were In their .Ws and Yrf few
In the 25-30 age group. But he felt this
-nota .-lollS problem; because In
contrut to las than five people
WOfiiiQg In thla' area In 1949, about 130
aclent~ a t t - the conterenoe 18,9t
.,-. He eetlmatad the total number of
~ lnWIIWid In thla anae to be at least
twiCe this. "There .are about 600
aclentlata=he U.S. researching In
. high enwg
tical physics. So, for
alaf;e co ry like China, 260 are not
~- B.q the gap Ia not too large to
flit.
~·
'

..... -

a prablem In Chl-

~=·~lem
Yang was asked
about ~ ttut availability of

physical 8pace ln'Qftliese universities.
llui1ng the Cutl\nl Revolution, many
academic bulidlfttll and dormitot1es
_ . convwted Into factories . While
11111 lad to ~';.results there
_ . alao
lve aspects:
"Doting the
months all
un-altlea expanding. All
un~ ' - lllllluded more faculty
memllln ~who.4:1tncldentally have
tenuna). The atudent enrollment will
continue to be on the rise lrt near
futuna." The hiGh faculty-atudellt ratio
In China 1~ In aharp contrast to
high atuclent-facuJty ratios Ill the U.S.,
Yang uld. Curl'llntly, chfll'llee ana being
made to .-.t wlth the negative 'features
thai naauitad during the Cultural
~liOn period, while retaining 1he
poe1ttw . . . , _ . of change within the
1111-...... A*!, programs to build
unlv.ally buildings are currently

.......,.

~=

~~"'~s ollf~!;'.::::,
1

~ft~e:•:~:

i~~k s~~g

~~.:~fd~~~~~~·~ar,;~~~gpo~ft 1o~ur~

1

capriciousness, confusion, generosity,
cruelty, playfulness, defianoe, vanity,
and · daughterly amWvalence~ -The
· emerging pot1rajt Is all the more
sharply etched because of the bizarre
setting.
The other Ia unThe other star of the movie Is unseen:
Cinematographer Sven Nykvlat. His
softly lighted shots of the house and Its
decor - the artfully arranged tableaux
of prostitutes, black servants, welldressed customers, and the partying
ana as much a part of that deoor as the
ilandsoma VIctorian Interior, and his
lingering closeupa of the faces of the
film's characlers are eloquent and wise,
BrOOke Shields Is his principal
subject, and no lltl&gt;!lder: her exqulslta
face Ia continuously expressive. Even
when she Is the silent -.ver, lis she
Is through much of the movie,
everything that she and feels Is
reflected' with rernari&lt;able subtlety In
her mouth and eyaa. Her · double
persona - the pathetic child and the
stUdiedly sanaual woman- Is perfectly
captured by the camera. There are ~other r-Ung and
haunting closeupe. The turning point of
the story li'VIblet's "debut" at a grand
dlnneo' attentled by the middle-aged,
prosperous clientele of the brothel.
VIolet, with -all the excited anticipation
of a high acJIOol girl pnll*tng for .her
first prom, has _..ully dressed and.

=·

u~~s fa:,.: 1:,"e0;n~~

..wet-draped IIHW, clothed In white

dress and veJI ("A virgin, bona fide,"
announoea the madam), .,d · the
cloiMJPI ot the , _•• laces as they eye
this aacrlflclat lamb we mona telling and
groteeque th., any worda could be.
The c:emera tllen focuses on the
a1egant face ol the black pianist
(Antonio Fargu), wJIOae function In the
house Ia to entertain the gueets (the
~ua music Ia by Jelly Roll
Mof1on); hla expwalon Ia dlatant. but

::'....W.:f ~':!:t~t.to'=·· ~

=~'=~~::.~ltyu:

,.,_,"the banality olevH." And ataet
ctoeeup of Nell, the old madam, after
her bofdlllo ha ~ oloeed down,

e11owa her al1tlng alone on her bed,

· ...rng

daradly: h'a a herrowlng
gttmpee of flnanNI and personal ruin.

"-1111 c:arr.diM ...........
Of the f - c:har8oWra who are

Intended to be viewed aa more than
llb!!tractlona, only the black pliii'IIJI end

~r~ns. ~n&amp;s ·~.:w~::.~rnatr.~,;

of lifelessness and, exagQII,'al~ J.l!.\\11\1:
ness that delltroy any be.,e1 in ""''· ~~
the worldly owner of one of the fanciest
brothels In New Orleans.
Tl)e photography, the sets end the
music are very aeductlve. But without
the tension that Malle Imparted to the
earlier "Lacombe, Lucien' by suggestIng a moral point ot v.lew, the-film Is
drained of any real sanse ol life. It Is
finally cool and removed, and, except
for the marvel of Brooke Shields,
~~:.ously close 10 a coffee table

'

•Senate

(t.-jiogot,oal.•l
A mona detailed report from Reichert
will be featured In the June 8 •Reporter,

~"PW:ith·."w~~ ~:.,se:l~;f;~~
service.

The Statlatlca ..-tton
When a call for oww bualneas was
Introduced, Senator Nichola Kazarlnoff rose to add- the Senate. He
complained that elimination of the
Division of Statlatloal Schlnott "was a
grave blow to the mathematical
sclencaa.
,
"Statistics In FNSM
Ia now
represented by the undlatlngulshed
Department of Statlatlca."hachiroed.
Kazarlnoff went on to eay tliat a
" strong, exciting" alatlatlca program Is
necessary If the University Intends to
11

"as~~eJ~.:\: =~ the administration for the difficulties and claimed,
with the expected exodus of personnel ,
there will be no Statistical Science
division to phue Into the Department.of
Statistics, as VPAA
Bunn has
recommended.
In addition, he objected to the Jacl
that the revl- of mathematical
aclences was chained ~ Acting
Graduate Dean Charles Fogel, who
doee oot have a doctorate.
Statistics Chairman Norman Severo
oountered that his d81*1ment can
hardly be described aa undlstlngulshed
alnoe an outside. reviewing body
thought the unit performing in a
"miraculous• manner given Ita lack of
funding and high student-teacher ratio.
Se-o also aald that 'graduates with
doctoral and maater'a degrsea have
been ollered promlrrent positions In
gowrnment agencies and also have
received National Sclenca Foundation
grants.
•

�....

Dall
VIsiting prof,
others assess a
7 4-year-old legend

Bross statements c.aiiE)d
'poppycock,' 't9mmyrot'

-lo =-=

I!IOtt: ...... CIIIMera, -

MfiOr

lor ....

='!'.:::....."":~.'=1M_, on 11M
He.-ntld_..... .. Doll'a 74111 ....-,, ••,

---

ByPaula.-.

tt .)

...._

" At the of alx," he begins his
autobiogr.pljy, '1 wanted to be a cook.
At......, I wanted to be Napoleon. And
my ambition haa _ , growi.!Jg stellldlly

ever since."
Dalll

Need anything more be aald?
This fabled, modem-&lt;lay atchem!!J
has synthealzAid the most extraordinaryvisions of WI and life Into painterly.
cinematic and thrw-dlmenslopal reflec' lions of the wortd around him. •
Every painting , like a lime bomb
about to explode, __,public utterance
usu(Vd of a banner headline
somewhere haa catapulted this
. flamboyant mutar Into a world-wide
legend that he himself has been most
astute in creating.
His paintings hang In the world's
great museums, -perating some and
enthralling others. Always, he Is
noticed.

C.uflflowars 111111 conceit
Once he arrived at the Sorbonne In
Paris In a Rolla-Royce filled with a
thousand whhe cauliflowers. On
another occaa1on he declared that the
two lucklast thlnga that can happen to a
conternporwy ~nter have hepp_ened to
him: "(1) to be born Spanish , and (2) to
be named Dalll"

,~,n\':;OC:o.;s o~~·':: ~~~:rv

analyze hla long,. productive and often·
bafflingly oomplex --Rather, what
tollowa Ia a gf8b-beg of commentary
and oplnlonl - aome In paaalonate
lldmlrat~ -vlotantlydl~nful .

The lenattoiMitreMmentls olf8nld by
author Michel Sanouillet,
Jones
Prof- ol French hare this
and an axpart on Surrealism .
Formafly with the Unlv. .tty of Toronto

:1'.,

~~~~~~~~~~3~':
the Unlv.atty of Nice,
lectured at U/8 laat month.

..

Sanouttlet

...__ .,...:

~ t.tSZ:.":,y~~r,;o::

aboutoall:
Nobody In the Surrealist movement
(of ihe 11120a and 308) knew the
techniques of painting u well u Dati .
He wu the bast of that School , having
mastered tredltional techniques. He
stUdied Freud the way one goes
thr~u analysis
he actually
e
.need it.
'are Is a tqnd of alck side to Dati,
Sanoulllet aald . You , . _ quite know
when he 11 playing the madman role or
not .... QIIIUI a man of genius, a true
Renaiaaance man. Plcueo- a CKUt
palnter, but did not
the

Interested In dfl.alls: the changing of
the wine, the tombstone being pushed
aside, the walk on water. We base our
Interest on small details.
Dall does th is In his paloting . He's

~~~;:,~~~ b;~,na~~;~~Fth't~~s'~·H:e

" Painting Is not terribly significant.
It's Just so much oil paint within the
borders of a piece ot canvas . But Dall
has shown us so mu_ch more,"
Sanoulllet concluded.
Other thought a on Dall:
The art critic ol a well-known national
news magazine, when asked If he

c'-

~~y;~red ~a:~ue ~h c!~:::~Jast::
1
~ ~~':' ~~~s~ ~~~!~ q_\':~~f~~llon

reminds me of an outboard motor
"&lt;:ontinually running .
Sigmund · Freud, on July 20, 1938,
alt_e r meeting the lhen 34-year-old artist
for the first time: " Until now, It seems I
/
was tempted to consider the SurrealIsts, who apparently have cl)osen me as
their patro..- saint, as a bunch of
complete nuls .... The young Spaniard,
with the magnificent eyes of a fanatic
and his undeniable- technical mastery.
has caused me to reconsider my
opinion ."
Robert Descharnes, French author/
. photographer and Dall confidant&lt; Dall's
genius , which would have been freely
ecknowledgec:t had It !lowered in the
. Renaissance Is today so out of the
ordinary tha! It provokes our modern
world of -age bureaucrats.
An anonymous Buffalo art professor:
Dallls a fairly mediocre artist.
The late Harvard theologian Paul
TIIIIch, speaking of Dall's " Last Supper'"
painting In Washington 's National
Gallery: The technique Is a beautifying
naturalism of the worst kind. I am

to know, an unusual, global view of the
wortd around him.
Dati Is an exhlbltionlat not because
he's compelled to be ao - he'a much
too •wake lor that buf because
there's a moment In one' s life when
he/- wants to do .-ythlng. That 's ·
part of
hla WI. Usually social
condlliontr.g prevent• ua from doing
certain thlnge, but nof In tha cee of
Dati. Th«e'a a freedom In thla - to do
what- you leal like dolnll.
Dall'a like a magician, fmposlng his
deslrea and lnatlncta on the objective
wortd. Once, during a lalevtslon
Interview In Spain, Dall simply decided
to end the P"9ert1 by putting Ills hand
· oow the c:emano lana. Everyone got
lrantlc. In taltW!alon, Dall knows, II
llkee tMtle to crealethe desired effect .
His WOib alnoe the early 1~'s largely Nllgloua, though not In the
trlliiiUonll - are djffarent; they
CCinMjiOnd 1o dlffwant times. He's
faclnllled with mytha, and our society
naade myths, Sanoulllet augll"!ed· Hla major works like "Cruclflxoon" llld "The s.crament of
Last
Su_-• . . baaed on his diiiire to
...,.11 dolalls.
Oefalta are the key element,
Senoulttet said . When we respond to
the myt
of J us Christ, we're

w

~~~~'::,a".fa;'b..ft'e~ ,:,t'~'s:~·~r;:r~~

we

have. Thai sort · of Ignorance,
promulgated with great assurence by a
member of the UnJversily community, is

pOrtrayal ol Christ in the "Last Supper,"

r~-!8~~~f~:~~~- P,erspective of Jesus In

C:::,

:r=~~~~":n4=~==

m:

Editor:
Monday, at the meeting of the
Graduate Facuttr.. Dr. Irwin Bross
presented three 'charges" against the
administration of President Robert L .
Ketter. One can only hope lhal Dr.
Bross Is a better scientist than he Is a
prosecutor. HIs charges represent
Irresponsible, hyj)erbolln , drivel . Virtually all of us who 111'e aware of the
situation on this campus know tbat Dr.
Bross's ..charges" are poppycock; the
danger Is that those external to the
University will take serlousJy the
tommyrot which he offers.
For example, he argues that the
University does not ne8d . more
facilities; that there Is currently

ho=c'lr..:!~t~s~~f~Yc~u~~~iere:

Dall
wore a carnlltlon behind his ear to take
away the smell. He used to eat tins of
sardines aAd put the oil on his hair.
Rock star Allee Cooper: Dall Is
pr&lt;lbably more confusing than I am. I
never understand anything he says.
Maybe that's why we get alQ~g so well.
• Sebou, Dall's New York afr ~tyllst : I
always save his hair. I h"!"' seven years
of II .

l:'~t:';,l~lda, who Is work ing on
~=~s~f~~~.\~yj!ff~: ~~:..·!~ ~fo~~~
A

C

you feel you ·heve known all your life.. ..

He Is a great talker; he's we ird ,
8

woA'_de~:~;,~r3s t'~;~: - of Cleveland ,
~~~,f~~~~!,'r:.,~;~d~sd~~p,:'..,?~l.i
~~v~r~~:.'.'~:. ~f.O~I::~'r,; :.,g~";"~~

hi s taates so worldly and Inclusive, and
his ability to assimilate the most oddly
aasorted experiences so great, that he
has created the moat differentiated
expressions of any artist of our century.
1984 author George Orwell, referring

~~ ~~:~::~'oJ&gt;;~r~:ya rz~~~=~ ~

conducted In pink limelight ... a bool&lt;
that stinks!
•
Timothy Leary, prophet of LSD: Dati
Ia the .9nlY LSD painter who doesn't
need LSD! (II should be noted that Dall
takes no drugs whatsoever; In fact, his
drinking Is confined strictly to mineral
water.)
Dall on Dati : Let them speak of Dall .
EVEN If they speak well ol him I
Happy 74th . Salvador ...

appalling. The l.ct. Ia that there Ia
probably no othlll' unl-alty In America
which suffers u mUCh u we do from
the conditions aM!ed by Inadequate
facilities. Ttwy effect .-y - ' of
this Unlveratty, from cuiltculuno to

~:::::~\tu~~ ~~~ a;'t!; '~:U:r'~::r

difficulties.
Personalty, I support the lll8llfa" In ·
which Praaldant Ketter 11M conducted
his 81-ardshlp. I also teCOOnla the
right of people.t,~= wtll to take the
ob-se view.
, one ought to
have an honest naaaon to do eo. The
kind of 'balderdash spoken by Dr. Brou
certainly dOes him no c~lt and doea
violence to the concept of Informed,
reasoned_ debate.
Sincerely,
-&amp;IMlay H.
Professor, DepWiment of C&lt;lylllellng
Pay9f!Oiogy

er.nw

.......

f

Charges.~vs-.
uaa:

The eporter recently carried a story _
about a decision by PERB requiring the.
UUP to refund any part of Its mandatory
fee collected from non-members thai is used in activities or causes . only·
Incidentally related to terms and
conditions of employment, a sum
which
in
fact
may · be
quite
considerable. As the s!Qry noted,
refund demands may be ma'd'e on ly from
September 1-15 of each Yllflr for the
prior year's deduction, by fueans of a
certified or registered letter to UUP's
president or treasurer.
In addition to refund claims,
Professor Morris Eson of SUNY,
Albany, whose_ Improper practice
charge -against .UI,JP ...[JlSIJited In the
PERB deelsion, fi&amp;e-wr1tlen to ask that
the following recommendation be
passed on to ~~ of the SUNY
.fJ i!OO

I

1
j

UUP ·urged

J•

Bllffalo community: "II would ~ uaeiul - i ·
If a large number of lndiYkluala woutd~ 1
file an unfair labor practlcea charge
against UUP now that the bterlng
officer haa dectared th11lr procec:t~,n
violatil!e of non-member rights . For
purposes of citation the case Js
numbered U-2951 with PERB. The
charge to be flied Is under section
209-a.2(a) of the State(;lvfl Service Law
as amended."
Professor EJ&lt;&gt;n Is willing to answer 1
any questlon&amp;bn the mattw or brtng 1
interested persona UJ!,,Io date on the t'
latest developments . 11J can be reached
by wrjtlng to him at tile Department of
Psychology at SUNY, Albeny ~ or by
calling him at the following numbers:
518--457-8482
(C8j11pua), , 436-0625· ·I
(home).
Sincerely,
_ , . , _,..._,

!

!j
I

•

PSS ~:g:~orses Ketter Mr. Roberti. Mtllon.t, dl~

1

1

able to us. H.e has conalstantty listened

~::,~:~~~ Cii.;,N - Y

at _
Dear Mr. Mlllonzl: ·
The
Professional
Staff
Senate
Executive Committee has unanimously
voted to express 01ir concerns about the
recent allegations against and criticism
of Dr. Robert Ketter's performance as
President.
II is the view of the members thai Dr.
Ketter has regularly sought our 1nput on
University Issues, pol fetes and pre&gt;cedures . He has made himself and
members of the Admin istration avail-

~~~~~!'ec:t'::~'l: P~~m'1:..concema and
In our meetings wtth Or. Kettlll', tlif
candor as well a hla commitment \o.
the University and Ita conetlti*ICies
have been appantnt . In t h - tlmea of
dls\r.e sa- urge that all conetlt\a!Ciee
unite their eflortato re8ICh tlae d...., of
cnsatlng a gnsat Untwnllty.
•
Very t~
-EIIain

--CI...._

I'
I

'

Chalrperaon, Prolnalonal Steff Benale
.
8. Wl'VlceChairperson

•Yang
(fram pege I, t.:ot 2)
Answering , Yang said, " There are many
areas of dl6agreement at different

~~og~,~~gp:~~:,~~ - ~~~~ts.:!

enormous problems to solve and great
difficulties to overcome. This glves.rlse
to sharp dlsegreements; sometimes
even criminal acts are parformed. But
from an o-all point of view. on the
basic path of transformation that China
has undertaken for Itself, there Is
overwhelming support . There can b6
nothi ng more absurd than the claims
made by Taiwanese newspapers which

r.rw::;.a~.!hgeo~'r":~, :!outd

welcome

th~ns=tn~,::~ qu~f·uc:":;t.r::;g.::
technology by Chi na did not alter the
nation's essential self-reliance. Neither
·ts the policy of material ll&gt;!*&gt;tl- u
currently Introduced In China an
anti-Mao policy, u aome commentators write. The Chinese policy of
petmlttlng growtlt of minorities and
preserving !heir Identity Ia sometttlng
that everyone should emutJte, he said.

The biOOdlnt -.tury.......

.

·

The dlacusaiOn concluded with Yang
predicting that the 21st century Will be

~~'i.eb'fr::d'er!n;~;'~z••r~c,ins~~=
become
today. onty !her.
policie have changed from that ol the

~ddha-llke

19th century Imperialism. In Ole .,_,t
world, the resources . . continuing to
be depleted.
With
the . , . -.
conditions remaining Intact, the h~h

~~~~~Yt~f ~

=

c:~

t:

destroy and kill wilt ~
dentedly In the 21st CMiury. · With
powerful foroea oornpollng -oatnst..,.,
other, there
no altetl)altwe but a
bloody global war. I wish t am wrong,
butt know ram not," Vang aald .
To my question whether social
changes In moll ol the thlnl world
countries would preempt auch a global
war, he replied he wu not confidant of
such a possibility occurring though 118
would desire II, too.
·

ra

Carrel bids
Applications are now being accepted
for 340 closed study carrels located 11
the_n_ LockwOOd Lllnry.
According to Lockwood Librarian
Madeleine Stem , priority will be given
to members of '"LockwOOd conatii-

:'".J!:rl~a\~!·

f=." :d.f~':!~

Letters , SOcial Sclencea, Educational
Studies, SoCial Work, Architecture _and
Environmental Design, and Information
and Library Studies.
Deadline for apJillcatlons Is September,5.

jl
.

�China

and

eUS

�•China and the US

..

it-t_ .. CGI. 41

.....

:d,r·~~r:'~ w'":.tor'~n:r:::~

tnfluenc., let alone oontrol, over thoaa

The Chlnno have ~ relallona will\
Aatan nefgllbcn • " - • India, and
Sout'-af Aala, u;tendedlholr lnlluenc. aa

far u Weatam Eun&gt;pe, Africa and Latin
America, and otllfed an att-lwt to the
"auperpowars' " methods of allapfng wor19

- - 1M ~ ol _,ng 81

~owes.:=~~ t o -

:.~r:;.,::~~~lc-=~~:::

~=ac~":I~~~J:
~~
Including - t e ln the United St.ates whtch ·
stnl don not grant full racognltlon to China.
lndood, the various ~l'lendahlp Auoclatlqna" which the Chlnno haWI -lolled

~~'f'J:' .::.':

fer~'":: s.=,:-~~~

AmoldToyn-. to
lng of -Ita rua11hleiOf)'
the
•nat
towinlto Alter- ,-t
=World W•and twoand.-y~

d.__.

Chtna'a~~---1.

~ •.=.,~=::::r:-oama.:f ~!

_.:-:-..:
.:\:r= w~":'c:-- =-:=.t&gt;t... ~~w..,:-

rog~ed aa m-y the latest manlf::?::tion
of the ao-callod '1rlbulary ayatem.• Jn r81um ,
lor p..-onal commllmonla to recognize the
People's Republic

-on1t1a-

. TofllbM lgncnd,-

American cltlzena are

ft'- the opportunity to vtsll China, to study
.:::~an:~'J'.:'::-"~\a,~.:o~nd ~

thtlr own aoclety llopendo almost en'lT...ty
::OOIIJ:wlll
and:.,C&gt;O&lt;&gt;actouonoso of Ita own
Tha record of tile W•t
China's long experience In cta&amp;tlng. and
recreating world ord.,. under changing

=~~r'~:•J:.mr,•~: •=.r.~,fl~

~~~~~~=v;,·~!.~:.l'~,:l':,Y~~
II to not often ~ntzed th81 t•- ld~ of

1M
-tlelh century. T~, too widely crttlct.- aa h e -

aa
unniiiii-:;t hla

::::;rn.
"";, ,..~lhe
oonaclouanaaa oiAmeitc:a.

.....::

~f~--~--:on...::.·olrn;:,::.:·
.:.~
;:::.ae:~':"!~~~ c:annot 1:
and

to ni8inuiln- their kind Iii
In a wotld which ta .

orclar

~'f=the~n~u:.:.::l

countriM , _ a "tltltloel eth~
to 1n...,. the ..,,...... o1 the
anc1

*"""
=:~
~~~ec~..:z;:,w
.=
1• not only unwo&lt;111y ol Anw1can ~a

-1

be--

• llvtng, -·~
but--to ~ttw.-ydl-11
equal • nation ·states
" "- ' In
ta
daalgned to ao.io1Cf.
harmony bued on law ~ 0 Mii5om - .
Pointing to ttw ·. - o1 ~ to
ap~ In reality. MOot efforta to
Europe
life In ttw
tranacand the. nation state have resulted In _- world '
go on but 11 wiH - . . ,
emplroswhlch, uwehave-., j)rowtdtoo
~
y un~· In hla won1a
parochial and too expansionist to aurvlwt for
"TJMn ..
of lnVttlng a bHII$&gt;ft
vezn'onJiemauve has aometlmn been
w
n the ~..:"
the
sought In various kinds of "International
will rock 11 and oink
ua • He=
organizations• wh ich try to bring toaethar
for an end to 1M g lng g.p .nallon stoles and empl res Into some klnd of
prlooa for raw
a MCI pt1ooa forwotkable order bued .on the ld.-1 of
manulactur.d aooda
for e halt In
equalltr and the fact of power. Woodrow
ln-tmentawhlchcowilo_l_annlea
Wilson a Leoguo of Nations- only one of
of unemployed .In tha ao-call«r "third
se\leraJ unsuoceooful ofiOrta In this
world • "National MCUr1tY" ahould
dlreclton. Today, 1than the · '!-~ and
redelli.od to tncluda
communltlae
R~oalon sponsored United •Nations has
tn Amortoo and to oxcluda r1ch efltea In tha
become noar1y universal with"!he tdmloolon
"third world" "Economic -.op"*""
of China, It might
said tha1·1nTemattonal
should
rothougtrt to emphaala organization haa lor tho first tlmo i chance
prlcHJA.buic cornmodlllea rather thanof unltln~ tho whole wor1d accOfdlng to
larger liroea -National Producta. A-

m::,..

!:"'ot

-local

be

~'!;~y ~I~~ =~ ~""cl~~·~h.V~!q:!'.~

the United

~~~~(~~n~,d=:~~g"~~~nol~~
respective effo rts tsll08ato their own "world

orders" as· a I'J'\ _,a of remaining (or

The

History Deperlment has
8Wif'da lor the beat
- y a wril1en lor depwt~t
COIIfMa during the tat aemeater.
Davl&lt;l Hehr, Snyder, and Robert
A. Wood, Clifton Springs, were
C ' e d the "John
Horton

~~..:w.~=.tt~;

former

chalrman

and

currant

be

~=~~ ~-~.:.!u:..=yt=d:

aenaroua ellorf to to ell _ . . .
"tights" to 2,300 or food a clllj,
c'-' dr1nklng -lc _.
od8quate ahelter -- · a. minim- oi
educ811on. P.ii:llcal . _ auch

g~~•"=-'='~':~o:r=~:'l',:

recent artie!• In the.8pectlvm.
Too mucfl focua on ,.

becoming) "numbel&gt;&lt;1&gt;no," little thought or

History awards
~ted

or

be

nation state" combined with lha realitY of
Westem.omotras aeektng to reorganize the
World In the Wesii!!J),.j,._, continuos to·
·plsgue uo In such dlapora!e conflicts as
Panama, South oAIJIOO (Az.anla) and

cw~~~ Sovlet'U.~ ta:\. and

u:

::~~~~~~=-·~~~~.:«'0:~.'':-haw:=

oflor1s of the Conllntem and the mulllnall.onal corpo,..tlono, the world OMmS little

prolessor · emeri tus o f the department.
Elaine Reynolds, l.ocl&lt;port , received honorable mention.
Kerrle MacPherson , Buffalo , was
awarded the "Selig"Ad ler Graduate
Eesay Prize." Or. Adler Is a
distingu ished . service professor In
hfatory and holds the Samuel
Capen Chair.

closer to • &amp;enM of ruJ community than It
was at the t um o f the century.

Sign ificantly, earlier effor1a to remedy

~r.:·~:=~~·:w;:~~~r.::::~:.

':.

Oswald Spongier trl&lt;id to allow that

~a:l~.~~: =~~~-=

tranacand tho chaos. which hod -ulted In
World War I would do wet Ito notice that tha
Chlnooa hod succ.dedl~uttlng an end to

~{,.~:Jng.~~~es gr' Ch~~ "':\'n~Ji::.

Spengler wu not o profosolonal hlatorlon

Nurses report on respiratory
study
'··
Editor:
On April 111 and 20, atudant nurMS
from SUNYAB held a · lung . function
screening program, aa part 01 a course
concamed with . - e l l. An attempt
made to lind out what tha
lncidanw of reapl.-.tory lnvo._,_t Ia
among lila fllcully and atall at
SUNnB. An - p i waa aleo mede to
COfTlllala lmOiclng behavior and or-vloualung e l l - with Cleet-.cllung
function .
1
A ........., used to delwmlne
tung funcnon. Thla machine Ia abla to
gl.. 1 . , _ of dlfontc
...,..,_,_ pulmonery d._.. (COPO).
Thla Ia donebr -'110

=:J,!Orced
,~ .:.,::,). Aa ~
FVC tfctrD

.._
.,..,..
I udlae (Gnmee and H8yMS,
" " ' " ' - of Clpwtte 8molllno on

llr _._

~~~~~

'*"'If

I'I!V,

IFYC lor non

blacka Ia

~ . l t l l a - that the - n t ol air
blown out of the lunge In one second
ahould 11a 110% o1 the total lunctlonll
lung capeclty. 11 an lrdlvldual haa
obalructlon of a~ a irway hla or her

who were either faculty' 0. stall at UIB .
Twenty seven (or 16%) w.e faculty
memberS, and 1•1 (or 6o4%) _ . atafl
memberS. T'*'..., 90 females and 78
maleS. The age ,.,ge waa 111-63 yura.

::lte~(~ ,OJ.d~g:~J,O!f,.d,=
The mean ega was 38.3 ,_.. for
smokers, 22 (or U .3%) heel eome
lemalea and 'S7.7 yura lor malea. The
respiratory Involvement, while 30 (or
mean height was ' 6o4.1 Inches lor
57.7%) wwe withOut reaplnotory
females and 70.2 inches for males . The
diMaae.
mean weight wu 135.9 pounds lor
females and 170.3 pounds lor males.
The m.., of the actual FEY• 'a Age, halghl. and weight - e used on - 2.574 til... and .... pgillCied ~to detMmlne tha predicted
·-3.27811tens. The,_, of tile actual
FEV• and FVC lor each Individual.
'!f'VC'a •.1124 lit. ., wllila tha
3 ..........
S....IMn ,_,bera (or 10%) --..
black. This dlatlctlon w• _ . . . , . aa
Thl actual FEY ofFVC lor .......
It Ilea ~ ahown that the normal
113% lor t.m11aa and II% lor
malaa; 12.1"' lor IIOI&gt;-IIIIOidoog ,.
FEY 1 IFVC l/1 blacks laconaldered to be
88% . (Folay, "Pulmonary Function
....... and 84% tor ~
ScreMifng Taata In lnduatry"). Sixty
malea; and 12.7.% tor faiMie former
llftCIMq and 113.5% lor ,.__. amoldng
eight pen:ent Ia lleo conaldeied nonnal
males.
lor orientale and Amarlcan Indiana. OUr
of tha
FEY, IFVC
The
sample
not constat of ,_,boors
all amol&lt;4n ... ~. 83'!1, lor
from either of lheae groupe.
non-emokera,
llld
113%
lor former
Thirty alx 1*1*11 ol tha total sample
llllokar8. Aa our rea:utla . - 1, our
_ . amokera. Thera _ . 29 male
~and 31 female amokera. Thirty
~.h-:~::~:::~.::=
thnle percent ·- · non-amokWa.
mean FEY oIFVC. Thla Ia what Ia to be
expected
, a s c igarette smoking highly
w'::e
correlates with decreased llfllll funcThirty o ne percent we.. former
tion.
smmaok
le eransd. m!.r.l'eurorcomer
ns~amokted
-Memllara of tile N~ng _..., IMm.
-·

funcuonal oapao;lt y.
The a.npla lnclud-' 168 Ind ividuals

'18;.

predicted-maan

did

l:":':r.
":o"'bal ::=:: ~~ ~~ or:,=•
-.a. bUt 11111 haa tha aame

one

There were 26 smokers with
respiratory disease (-43.3%) , and 34
smokers without respiratory dl-.e
(56. 7% ). Sewn teen non-amokers (30%)

.:,~~=~

.2!.28

:::::t..

actual

lor

__

_,_,..,______... __.

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

-=.. -- .. --.
~.-

. . . . . . . . . _ _ , _ _ .. lilt

C'-.:t :::.-:·-..=."~ .. ~ ":':.:.-:
-=--~'":'"'be
......::
.._

.OUIIflllatohawt-.

�...,1 .. 1171

Retirees
Fifteen veteran profs&amp;.. staff members
are leaving U/B this year;
·they'll be honored at-commencement lunch
f'lftlln ...-.n lecutty 11111111t.a .nd ·
.........,..... - whOM total eervtce
10 tile Un....,ty MIOunta to a
.....,_. 340 ~- . . retlril)g _thla

...

........ of lha group -

Whldl

....... diiii!IIIUWMd p!Oieeaor, and

'

*-CieMa-'" cling~ presidents
- ..... hanoled wlttt certllk:ates lrom
lhaUn.....,lttlleanftuel Com~
_.. ~. echeduled lot 12 noon,
.......,, May 21, at Spaulding Dining

t -"'-""·
Tile .........:

......

lr. a-lie L a.mllr,- _......,,
....... of IMcM-tloft r i Utnry

,
=

Dr. Iemier jOined the Un'-slty -In
1 • Ill lha ewly ~ ol the ,School of
.nd Ubrwy Studies. He

......_ion
=':·=~==
he hOicla lha M.S.
Ph.D. In

Cllpll

A~of Montana State
and
chemla1ry lrom Ohio Slate. He

the journal,
o-Jolll Abe~Ncfa, lot 28 yeer8,
1,._ to editor, ol*tod. He a technical-advisor
10 the Armed &amp;.!vloea Techn~
~ Aglncy, nt later dl:-ected
tltll unl wlleli II became known as the
~ l:loau!NnlltiGn Center. He has
lllan ..aoc:lllled with auch 11Q811Cies as
lha National ~ ol Medicine,
-

-'sled

wltlf

=:_..oarrom

~~· au-u ollnformalleli sa..-~. and lha Squibb
IMlllute fOr Medlcel AeNwch.
A propanent of . . _ lit-urea"
(bolllid down atrw:ta of papers lor
bulreoleAIIal8l.a.nlerhaacontended
tltll lulu: Ilion bMic to a CURl lor
_ , *-dy alai, - e d
- ' - 1ft·•· an -.lanche ol

-='=.::=..

= ,......
.........

Auguat31, Bernier
to . . . . . . dual - . c l _ ,
...... and "-'tina. He , _
m-rtlon
..... he ........ O f t - ol which he

.... toJint .., _,;-

-here amtthe Ph.D. lrom Vile. He taught
at Antioch and the Un'-slty ol Toledo
before retumlng home to join the
laculry.
.
Just thla ~. he was honored
with a Chancellor's Award !or

~s:~g~·=~e::~t.r=y~e::i

of the Eaetwn PaycholoQical Aaaoclatlon In 11111&amp;-70. A number ol his

.-roll COfttributlona have attracted
wldaspnled attention, particularly his
WOlf&lt; on the concept ol aecondar}lrelnlorcemant, now referred to In e.,..Y
pa~chology text . He was the II ret to ,
e~mentally
demonstrate unconacloua mediation In leacnlng and other
phenomena. He Is author of lour books

~!Ja~u':\::"" h~ ~bi.:Jcl~;;.,~

scholerly contributions to his discipline
with sustained distinguished se&lt;VIce to
the University.
RUlli F. Eaat, .--de management
UIOCiate, Unl-ally Llbrarln.
Mr$. East came to the University In
October 1954 as secretary to Chancellor
Clifford C. Furnas. She served In 'tfiat
capacity, throu,ghout the Furnas adminIstration, and continued as assistant to
the _president under Merlin Meyerson. In
more recent years, she has performed
duties ln such !feas as tile University
Archives and the Emeritus Center. Prior

~~~!'~.~~~·&amp;r~:.rs":.eg:~.,: ~
~~:~.!:'"mt~=- it~ea~~~~

working with church mus.ic as Ctl6ir
director lol"intbe Unltarian-Unlv~at
Church~ ft _herst. She was also act~
In the _' ikf/lal Secretaries AssoclatlOtt
and at n8' time was a member &lt;If the'
local board of that organization. -slie
Ia a former. member of the American
Guild ol Organists.
·

...... w. o&amp;tell, jllll,_, School of

~~-~~the Unl-.lty In
-u.lyollf ~since

.......= ...............

a wlda

......... - . ............ 11.,.....
........ lllltlcll* of tfia SChool of
~ il ._ flclcMitar
State
Hlllpllil. . . actina lltlncipll at

CIO. ~
'
lecturer In IMS, ,
preatlgloue IOialin

lllliiiiiii~IIII'ID ........
...,_
Joined lha U/B

...
....,
__
_ ....
. . ,....._
. . . , ... .1'llor
. . _10
. t thai,
he

==·

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

......, of

..

...,_

fnlm

the

In

..Ida the
Nlftlna

Unlwer'a!'Y

'*

l:·~~s~.:U:.~·~,:! .:.':...,

1948. Jill,

~~~~~

ty ~on~~
, /B faculty ali a
as named to the
, Bak.- Proleasor88

ahlf ::.:..,mert.=inlat:', heln.!!:;
as asalatant ~ ol the then School of
Buau- Administration from 1941 to
11155, u ualalant ylce chancellOr for
aducallonal affaiR tor almoet a d4cade,
1IIIIS-11114, n l u dean ol Unl-ajty
Col'-lla, the Unlvwalty's *lc under• graduate unit lor fresh..- and
-~. In the late 185011. More
~~.he- cling viCe pntaldanl
lot ..a.m1c llffalq, Hli left the campus
In the lalw 1110a lor a tour of duty u
_ . . . . ahanaell« tor apeclal prothe cerrtral statt ol the Stale
of N- York. For two years
during Olld w. 11, he . . . a ll8l1lor
~ 8peclallat tor tha ot11ce ol
Price Admlnlatr.tlon In Washington,
D.C . .

=

......... ........,.,OparatM

Deft.

_,,

!My.

_.,.

A native ol Uncoln, Netnal&lt;a, Dr.
,_....., hla ba8helor's and
1llnW
from the Un...,.lty of
........., n l holda a maater of
~

o.o-

~

=-=

from Georgetown Unlverelty.

He wM a

lnatructor on the ·

llelhaada.

:rc:He

alao

:u;a

==~On

:
."...,
:..
.....
of DIAtll Sc:hool
...
of:....
.._.
11ft .... _ . .

=.~!-,...,

..

1n

~~-~r:~
ISIIIIOn .. Newpaft, Ahada lalancl. In

1N1 -

,_,

he -

to U/B. In

.,.4, lie~ an hOftofaly Doctor o1
...._
lrom lha Un....,ty ol
..,.....
n NOOgnltJon of hie
-*'lluCiona to rwallidl..-.cl teaching
In lha field ol dMtaJ eurgary, In

acllnow*""*"
ol hla dllllngulahed
u an educalor, both In the

-

aer1llca of tha United Blalaa Nawy n l In
of the natiOn'a ~Ill daniel

Oft8

~

..

~w.F.......,....,_n~

.....,
at
lot - - years
.,..,. lllao In prt-. practtoa In Uncoln.
A,_ World W. 11, he .....wned In
lha U.S. Nawy, He- an lnatruclor In
... u.s. ..... o.ntal ~I at

----__
_
__
-_.,

,......_of

echools."

llabm •. Fl8k,
educational
etudlaa and . . . . . . to .... ,JINiident
lor apecllll .........
Or. Flak, who joined the Unlveralty In
11163, aerwd aa dean of the School ol
Edwatlon from that time until 1M7; he
actlnll viCe prealdanl lbr academic
attail8 In -187$-711.
Flak presided
over ~~ In the School ol
Education
an era In which the
number ol lacu y qQadrupled and the
number of daar-. .-.:ted also
lnctUMd by four-fold . N- and
of lnltructtpn and
IMIIarOh added during his
admlnlatrltlon, lnciUCIIng educational
admlnlltratton, oounaelor education,
tlamenlary language -·.educational
payeholoiiY, curriculum planning, hlg~
er educafiOn, and eclen&lt;:a education.
Dean Flak was also director of the

o.n

••panded --

1

~":~Z'!t,1 1:V: h'!:r:Ed~~~~~·

He attended Gr1nnell College as an
undetvreduate, and holds the M.A .
from fhe University ol Minnesota and
the Ed . D. from Teachers Collage,
Columbia Unlveralty. 11e1ore coming to

~~r~lt~-:.::r ~~~;~t~ a::~-:

Unl-.!ty al .Albany. Following hi
~as Education dean, Flak was the
dlractor ol tha Offtoe of EQUal Opportunity and tlret chalnnan o( the POlley
Sludlea Coneortlum .• He has bean a
visiting echolar k1 England and Israel,
was a COftsultant to the NaiiOftal

-~nl=ly ~:;'=~ lnc~~RJI::li ar;~
Peklet., and Weetam Europa. He has
oonducted atudlee on such d l aubjecll as accreditation In higher
education and the Impact ol collective
bargaining on the State Unl-slty
srstem. He was active In the early days
o unionlzallon on this campus.
· .... ' Retlreea.'pqet t.cot3

�n

IIIey 11. 1171

Baker is chairing
General Education"pa~el
Or. Nonnllll Baker of History Is
serving as chairperson pf the new
U/B-wlde General Education committee.
Ronald Bunn, vice president for
acadefYIIC affairs, F. Carter Pannlll, vice
president lor haalth aclences, and
Jonathan Reichert, chairman of the
Faculty Senate, Indicate that they
consider the panel among the most
1mport1111t ept&gt;olnted here In racent
years.
The committee Ia asked to:
1) recommend a coherent program , or
programs In g-.1 education;
2) define tile goals and objectives the
program Ia deelgned to accomplish ;
3) suggest a timetable for lmpl&amp;mentation of the program(s);

,n:l,t:~~~t .::.:~r

e~~~~\,g~

:dd
which should be effected to assess the
Impact of the prog&lt;am(a);
S) recommend whether or not the
program(&amp;) should be voluntary or
mandatory;
.
•
6) recommend modlfl&lt;:ations to
current distribution; major, elective

::~l~~r:· .~!:'=~redreau\r~

program(s).., to be Implemented;
•
7) conslder methods of interfacing
~for~J~~~ existing curricula
8) recommend mMns for use of the
operational and cultural environment to

support thil program; and
9) consider chiiiiQ88 which may be
required In student edvlsemenj .
A flrat progress report Is requested
for the , September or October 1978
meetinll" of the Faculty Senate. A full
report , containing the major elements
of a recommended ge-al education
program, Ia expected to be delivered to
the Senate lor Its consideration by
February 1979.
this Is to be a·standlng committee of
the Unlversitv, and will monitor the
general education program that Is

:ef:~~n:"~:nd~::;~e~&lt;!J'~~I~eff,';

Its lmplementat)on.
The committee will hsve a graduate
as$lstant and secretarial assistance.

Dr~~"o'lw~the fc:'~~r,wit~c':,':; argi

Management; Dr. Gordon Harris;
Chemistry; Dr. Pierre Hart, Admlnlstra·
tive Liaison; Or. Thomas Headrick, Law
and Jurisprudence; Ms. Donna Juenker,
School of Nursing; Dr. Elizabeth King,
Health Sciences Eoucallon; Or. A. Dean
MacGillivray, Mathematics; Dr. John
Peradotto, Classics; Ms. Mary Reichel,
Libraries; Dr. Norman Solkoff, Psychiatry; Or. Robert Sllringer, Engineering
Science; Dr. Albert Steegmann , Anthropology; Dr. David Tarbet, English; Dr.
Thomas Robinson, Professional Stall
Senate; two undergraduate students
and a graduate student.

U/BF reports $3 million
in gifts f~ U/8 during 1977
$338,828.58; Social Sciences and
The 1:1/B Foundation, Inc., .-tved
$3,083,11!511.88tn olft• 8IICI oranta for the
use of the Unl-.lty durtng 1977.
According to the Foundation's
detlon, $87,627.35; and U/B Alumni
recently published annual report,
Asaoclatlon, $2,809,460.09.
alumni support for the period was
~ .4211.54 ($115,4118.52 of It from
• John M. Carter, president of the U/B
endo-t ..,lnp). Other major
Foundation, listed these as the year's
sources of alumni eupport were: Annual
highlights:
$42~~~;
Loyalty Club,
Fund,
•The completion of plans for the
m-,ST4:!8:"
ctub, $121,838.48;
$200,000 Baird Point amphitheater on
President's Aaeoclates, $20,739.08;
the Amherat Campus.
Bequests, $48,730. 13; Alumni Dues,
•The highly successful alumni
$68,912.34.
ron&amp;-a-thon pri&gt;gram that resulted In
Foundation support from other
1 8
sources Included: The Corporate Allio'l,'ft
ance, S57 ,508.112; Corporate Gifts
Service Awards for faculty, professional
and Grante $4511,751 .!14; Found&amp;staff and classified service employees
tiona,
i44:1.~ . 15; Organizations,
of the University.
S338,12!&gt;.411; Frlende, $161,921.77;
•The overall effort by alumni and
Pro(ll88oonat
Service
Payments,
other friends that resulted In the return
S1,o82,884.92; and endowment earnof Intercollegiate football to the
Ings, 1100,421.88.
8
Restrict!ld Income
funds
were
caz'-fl:'e i rnallz.atlon of the 1200,000 first
distributed on campus as follows: Arts
phase of the Pedodontic Clinic project
and Leiters Sll3 817 .52; Educational
In conjunction with dental alumni and
Studies, S1S,211i.li3; Engineering and
Buffalo Children's Hospital.
Applied Sclencee, $215,1143.54; Health ·
•A grant · of. $35,000 to the Media
Sciences, $1 ,388,108.14 [aub-dlvlded
Studies program that hss already
irito: Centera, $31 1688.58; Dentistry,
generated In excess of $345,000 In
$180,804.52; Healtn· Related Profesoutside funding, and
sions, 18,403.011; Medicine, $1176,257 .56;
•Establishment of the Dr. Louis A .
Nuralng , $45,838.47; and Pharmacy,
and Ruth Siegel Teachsr's Award Fund
S124,837.91J ; Lew and Jurisprudence,
In Medicine, the Henry A. Panas!, Jr.
$16,618.118; Management , $81,571.80;
Pharmacy School Fund and the Tops
Natural Sciences and Mathematics,
Nutrition Lecture Series.
·

!~::::~:::::~~:~.o/~W ~t"~~~

·~%~ ' \~/:r.,~,~~

g\~~utshed

Phi Beta Kappa plans
initiation program Saturday
Annual Initiation of new members
'Into U/ B's Omicron CMpter of Phi Beta
'Kappa will be held Saturday, May 20, at
3:30 p.m . In the Kath.,.lne Cornell
Theaira.
Some 100 undergraduates from

=·~ ;:s:,~,n=~::
~-

'

Dr. Evelyn SmlthaOn, profesaor of

f'laaalca and vice prMident of the
chapter, will prMide. Two special
htards for outelandlng work will be
~ted by Prol•aor W. Leslie
Barnette, - . r t o f the chapter.

The &amp;Mnuel P. Capen Award -wl II be
to 8lwon "-vy, a atudant In the
"*'t of Anthropology, for her
"PaleoiJMI&gt;ologlcal Study of Five
loc8tecl "'ummlee from Southern
• "-vy's ..,oneor Ia Proleaaor

81r18nnl .

Hll~ Shlnn«a Award has
GerrY Walsh In the
o Engiiah for his - Y "In

won

~.,:lchs:.'•w,::,ott.,: ~~:,

lc:halll lhuttc.n. Wallh'a a

&lt;&gt;'-Hell lchmltz.
The add....

f~, .,Joll!.'

liO&lt; •

will be given by
PeradoUo of the

Department of Classics, on " Humanistic Education In a Consumer Society."
A reception for Initiates, parents and
friends will follow the ceremony In the
Jane Keeler Lounge, Ellicott.

Gebhart
gets award
Or. Benjamin Gebhart, professor and
chairman of the Department of
Mechanical Engl.-lng
haS been
named. the 1978 Freeman !ichol.,. Qy the
American Society of
Mechanical

En~Z're~owshlp will P,.ovlde Gebhart
the opportunity to review and organize
accumulated l!nowledge on natural
convection phenOmena and Its englnee~g ~~ 11'ir}'g"~aculty

since 1)175,
Gebhart Ia ~aldered an e~partln heat
transfer, convection and buoyancyInduced flows. Before coming here, he
served for 24 years at Corhelt
University's Sibley School of Mechanical and Aeroapace Engl.-tng .
Gebhart Is a graduate of the
University
of Michigan
and .Cornell
.
. . . . ...
•• ..
...
...... ..
. . o# ..... . _ ...
-~

•Retirees
1)1"8111dent of the Unlveralty'a WorMn'a
ctub for a term and was a founder and
flrat "preeldent of the State Unl-.lty
Profeaslonal Aaeoclatlon, the flnlt
raepondad that while few would ergue
with "eeder," some might qUMtlon the · campus organlzallon for DIVfeeaiONI
staff. Belora joining the Unlvw-.lty, lhe
" stat•man" deact1ptlon. ~o one did .
with Aa8oclatee Dlacount Coqloratlon for tan yMrs.
of the P - ,
K.C. Gay, ~-ti,OGI.4)

Referred to ..-nuy by the Reeort•r

IU a "University elder statesman, Fisk

Collectlori.
Mr. Gily Joined ths Unlveratty
Libraries •~•1167 after having eerved for
some thirty years as private secretary to
the poet , Robert Graves. At U I B he has
presi ded over the development of a
wor1d r,nowned collection of 20th
century poetry In Engllall. The

;)'~~~ ~:"~e }I:"cur".~~
wrn:::

Gay took over, there were abou1 25,000
volum&amp;'i; now there are o - 86,000.
After he retires in August , he plans to
oo back to Majorca to live. Gay
comments thst he has "put a lot of
energy Into the U/B collection , bu1 that
It has been worthwhile doing ." tie
avoids most questions about himself,
preferring to st~y in the background,
leaving the spotlight lor the holdings he
cares for. (Gay was the subfact of an
article In the Reporter, April 27, 1976).
Karel Hullcka, proleuor of hlatory.
Born and educated In Prague,
· Czechoslovakia, Or. Hulick&amp; holds
doctorates from both the University of
Prague Jln econom l~ .:. c and the
UnlveiJIIY of California [I n political
science). He served on the faculties of
the University of Oklahoma, ·the
Unl
lty of Minnesota, and the
Unl~ of Callfomla at Berkeley
before coming h""' In 1959. He Is
author of several books and artlclee on
the Soviet Union and Ia a spectatlst In

~n~hfs'!,.~..:"~= o~~':l,;

lnsllfutloris, the Individual llfld S&lt;il;lety.
He has been a lrequent , apeakar at
corT)munlty clubs and orl*llzatlons on
such topics as Sovlet~loeae Rel&amp;tlons, the Russian fnt801811\f9n ln
Cz,echoslovakla, and U.S ...SO.VMif Relations. A member of the A11*ican
Political Science Association, he has

::te7:.anb!:.ma,!~~le~~n ~t~~'::,~

exct18n~ ~SUNY

both Poland and the USSR.

and

.i Sl'l,.. ~

bura Kucharakl ~riilei administrator.
Srl"':'"i'-.~ n r
In ~~K~';~~~
·thet~ni=!~
Office at the
urslng. She
remained with t •
.
) . ,for almost
three decades, ~
as ,., Invaluable
assistant, a lrien(t! 8nd familiar fljjure
to scores of nu lng students and
faculty . In 1965, sh• transferred to the
Personnel Department as an administrator w1111 responsibility for transactions Involving applicants lor Civil

~~: ••res~l:~ ~wn 'rr:,era~
Unlv~rslty post 98rller this year.

JamH W. s.ra, dnctor of Phyalcaf
Plant.
Mr. Sarra has been a staff member In
University Maint-.,ce since 1948
when he was first employed as a
building engineer. He was named
assistant chief engineer with the
Physical
Plant
office
In
1953,
superintendent of utilities and construction In 1961 , acting director of
Physical Plant-operations In 1985, and
permanent director in 1967. Prior to
Joining U/B, he was associated with
American Magnesium and Dunlop Tire
and Rubber Company. He is a member
of the National Association of Physical
Plant Administrators, the BulfOing
Research lnstltu1e; and the Plant
Engineers of New York State.
Ethel E. Sch'!'kft.1• ualatent tor
_ , , . , _ and 1118111Uiea,
Dlwlalan o1
Continuing~-

Mrs. Schmidt jolnad the University
staff In 1955 as director of apeclal
services In Millard Fillmore College.
Shs hea eerved as conference
coordinator since that time, making all
physical arrangements for conferences
held on campus and handlh)g requests
lrom PIIl~ljle groups for use of campus
facn !lei. For the put _ _ ,
she has ateo been administrator of the
Faculty Club.
Over the years she has been a vital
link between Unlveraliy and communIty, rnaklng guptll to the campus f•l
welcome, and Insuring that .their
contecta with the Unl-.lty .,.e
pleasant. She has been active In a
number of organizations, Including

1

v-a

~~~~~ U~~~s.'~Y ':?!~·~t.ons. Shs was

Willa- J. 818u111b:. ......... llld

c:hal,_ofthe ~ofUnllllar.
Born In Buffalo, Or. Staubltz attendid
Gettysburg College on a ~~
IICholarahlp balora taking his medlcel·
degree at U/B. He was chief ol uruloOY
for twelve
81 Aoe1MIII PM&lt; 8IICI
joined hla 81ma ....., In 111111.
Concurrent with
UfB ~.
he has bMn chal,._ ol the
departmenta of · urology 81
Memorial and OltldlWI'• ~u·
eerved as ~ elf
I
Department of Surg&amp;~y In 1-.-, ' served on a number ol H8llllll ~
search commlt!Ma, chalftl*l tl
the Untv..lty RealdencY ()ommltte&amp;
and of tile School of Medicine's
Research and· OeveiCIP"*'t Committee
t o r - - ~. and- prwklent of
Medicine's Faculty Counclf JIK a term.
Now a member of the Cllnlcel
·Council of the School, . . ~ on Ita
executive Q0111111lttee .,d on ,alml'-r
comml- 81 Buffalo a-.1 and. the
Meyer. One of the' ~ of a
surgical technique lor ~ certain
deposits from tut~~Cn ol the lillie ..,.
·organs, Dr. ,.Staubltz has ' - ! an
attending and conauntng phyelcWI 81 a
number of hoepltals, , _ held vlaltlng
proleeeonlhls- throughout the world, Is
a widely IIUbllatled ~. the
aeconc1 Buffalo reeldenl to be
' elected to the American ~ion of
Genltourlni!Y Surgeona (the flrat Dr. ,floawell Park), and was the flnlt
American to be praeldent or · the
Canadian ~IO!O?'C Asaoctallon.

v-a

'*

Mi;i

=

T.Y.Wu,~~

abo~~ ~f=~~-

Wu .. : :: '
the teacher and inentor of , _ Nobel
prize-winning phyalclata. Tr- IMy
deacrlbe his work as chief ecdence
advisor for the Republic of .chi,. unclar
President Chiang Kal-ellek, the flw
books ·and mora Jhan 100
papers he's written, and hla term as
chairman of the [)eparttNnt of Phyalca.
here from 1986 to 1988.
Wu waa bom In Qllna to a f-11)' of
scholars, racelved hla educatlol&gt;. there,
and taugllt lor two ve-e before coming
to the U.S. In the 111308 to work toward
the Ph.D. He returned to Qllna In 11134,
coming here~n
In 1845 to ~
aclentlllc
proj1C181a for
his government.
the ftlgbt o1 the
C!&gt;lnese ' Natlonallat ao-m-tt to
Taiwan, Wu flu 1111Mined In NOI1h
America, ...nng for number ol ,_..
with the National ReeeMIII CounCil o1
Canada, and at the Polytechnic lll8tltute
of Brooklyn beforajolnlng U/B.(Dr. Wu ·
waa the aublect ol a prvflle In the
Reporter May 4, 1878.)

-m

a

•Grad faculty
~-1.0Gl41

.

con'lmtn.. (of which he ta a _.,..,
had bMn concemed about the number
of timea Ketter had elect!ld to ~
the declalons of the commit!•. lnatead
of taking a no conficlerloe . - .
how._, Garvw said, that 11f0UP choee
to view the problem as one C8Uaed by a
"procedural dtfftcutty" - one which
they - . confident Ketter would w01t1
to correct .
nlftiDgortt~M~

ChOn argued . . . . ~
of hie ,_rutron 11y ..,.tno 11w1
"timing 11 crltlcel" for a oote. He added
that he has found K8tt.- to ba . ,
"open and atralghtfiirward per8on" w11o

u.

~r=IJI~cr..=.pon~lcho..~.:-:::::

difficulty.
.
After a hand vote whiCh OV8flllltlelmJngty supported poatP&lt;&gt;f*l*ll of
Clion'e motion, the motion for a no
confidence vcite was rataed. It . tabled, 107 to 20.
,
Dr. William Baumer, asalatent vice
prealdent for finance and management,
tr- llood and told the gathering that,
after WOTtclng cloaely with Facllltlee
Plannll)g on the Unlvwalty's 8l*ll
probleins, he can usura t .. faculty that
no room exists at either Mal(l Street or
Amherat to house the Computer Center,

~~~ttv~TJ:,=-._sclence,

or

~~ ..811lett'!:-8 tor R~\'l'er L~w e~'"l!
u~f~l~, ". -~~~~~ ~~~~.~t~ . . .~

•

�MaJ11,1tTI

__ __

'

THURSDAY- 18

..,
PBIIATIIICAEIIEAIICH.-ARI
Or, _ , L Booa, direc1or, -

of-

~·
--Hooo&gt;iloi.-

.Ont.l ooRI

o l - Medicine,

· - ol ...

~·aHoopital. 12noon.

-

-Ill

PEDIATIIIC GRAND ROUNDSll

,Ora. tlofwY Slab,

Robert Guttwie. Jomos tunbort. McCauley. Kinch Auditorium, Cllildnon'a Hoopltal.
11a.m.

---•-wandThol&lt;-en

011A1. BIOLOGY SEMINAR I

ln-...., John J . Re)lllOids , Ph.D.. '-d, Ce1

r.._......

Sherman . ...t p.m.

---flute.,-Wio·--.piono-:

A Tradltionol Recital f01 hJ1e and Piano. Boir&lt;l
·Recital Hal. S p.m.
$1 .50; '
faculty, staff, aUml wl1h 10, senior clllzeno $1 :
s!udents $ .50.
..
Sponsoted by the Deportment ol MUsic.

Gene&lt;1ll-

SATURDAY'-20
£other :S..rtz lntarviews ~ -·"""
noveiiStllarvom
A - . eo..1or C4l&gt;le (Chon·

' nelS). 41'""·

a.-(her._.....

:L,~-~~of
.-=

IA!IIn, who II'W'!'· lip In a small
In ......... , . . _ 1n her
..... .....,. ~~~~~~~-a llllllllde

CIUIIIde ,..,....,, for ~·; the

Wlllllnll....,_ ola ..,cal~ua ~ng

·

CONVERSAnONS IN THE AliTa

--ln-orchllacluralhlalorion '

......., Qulnan w11o we Fronk lloyd
_ Wright an::hllecture, wl1h ..,.qtions. lntemolio(&gt;lll
~lY(Chonr\0110) .

6p.m.'

DANCE PEIIFOIIIIIAIIC"
Da-Oftd F - by U / B'a ZodioQUe llw&gt;ce
Company ~ ~.. Am-Oonce.

Ar11&gt;arl\.Sp.m.

'

For men Information, coiS3 1-~0 .

MONDAY-29 CONVERSATIONSINntEAiml

•

--ln-arehltec;tlnlhloionon
• Jollq QUt,.n wl1o w1! Fronk !:loyd
Wrlgl1t--.cture, wllllluolnllloos. lnlemalional
~TV (Chonnel10). 6 p.m.

TUESDAY-30
CONYEIISATIONS IN THE ARTS

-rtz In-~ - t and
~rei A - . Courier~ (Chon·
nelS) . 6:30p.m.

.,_, .

·-··---·.
to-to

C~IIIEDICAI.EDUCATION

CONVEJISATIONSIIUI1EA/ITS

v--.

.

-Donee.

Eo--rtzln--·--

MUSIC" .

.. •OCMWed .....,.. who Ia receiving a
_
_.. In the Dlpaltmenl of Art this
81lriag.lolra. L..tn, wlloee huabllnd, Dr.
.... Uwtn, Ia cuiNIItly working In
.-llllrlo ediiCMion at Chtlden'a
ftoiDIIIII, ha t..l lllUIIying In the Art
~for the paM two
[The
~will r.tum to
In Jvne.J
. . 41DW ._Ill exhibit
............... Camtriunlty Center
, Ill Allilllrlt~~ more than 30 oRa,

Univtnlly'o

CONVEJISATlONS IN THE A1m1

4510 MUISiro4if.' 1 2noon.

PHYSIOLOGY SEMNAR't
Whot - - - • - . ,
In a - ? , Or. John Stitt, John B:
-.:e Foundation Lab, Vole Unlve&lt;sity. S10S

~ ,..._ domlnele !he paintings

~

SATURDAY-2r

Physiology OepMmenl, Slnlngeways
Ub&lt;nlcry, Caml&gt;ridgo llnivenilty. Room 107' .

Scenes of Israel dominate
Yocheved _Levin's pa1Htings

-

. Sp.m.

For men Information, col831 -~0.

COOrler ~ (et.nnelS). 4 p.m.

FRIDAY-19

Leod-.. _

~y

...,..~

, c..-ry

Artory

--=

.

·

Sllenlton lntl-l!uffljo

East """'"""'ragiotdDn to......._.s
_.planning.
There II no lee fo( stalin-.

---ri&lt;nlng-to. '

of the VA Hoopltal, faculty rnombers ol
U I B,
In UniYerolty-lod programs,

CDNVERSATIONSINTHEAAJS_

the r l - Jordan. Blues, greens ani!
grays predomloate-tlrowns, too. "I
'-mel! my c:olo&lt;8.lTDaUIIY Iaiiier," &lt;~he.
said. He was a Iarmer who saw •much
more than the average man .•
·
Mra. Levin lip atudled at the
Academy of AItt' In Tel AVIv and
el-henl In the u.s, (during several
sabbaticals she .1411er l"tusband have
1e1&lt;en In Amertcal. &amp;l!e h'ad her first
on•woman _ahoW at Ill&amp; International
Gallery of Art In .._ Yor1&lt;.
Her exhibit at tht llmherat Jewish
Center (2800 H. Fornt Rd.) continues
through Wedneaday, May 31 . Hours are9 a.m. to 10 p.m., Sunday through
Thursday; 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Friday;
7:30 p.m.-10 p.m. Saturday (closed

"May 27-29). .

. Eotlier-rtzlntervieWo-tlllac-·
Cour1or Calllo! (Chonnel8) . 6 :30p.m.

This lwc&gt;doy symposium Ia ~ by the
SChi:loloiMoclclne.ThellullafoV--·
lalralion._,
.,. _ _ _ lion

Acodomyof _
_ •
--Yori&lt;Choptw,
Inc., -Thellullafo

c.iil~31-5526 fOt-lnlerrnolion .

THURSDAY- 25

SATlJRDAY- 3
CONVEMATIONSIN THE AliTa

-

-rtz lnloMowl Cenodon - t """
co..w ~ (Chon·

nova11at 11arvom • - ·
nelS). 4p.m.

JOBS

·

FRIDAY-26
PEDtAT1IIC ORAND ROUNDS*
~

lluc"'ai»NCC........._

Or. Robert

.r. Ooanlclt, , _ ol podiolrtca - gonetico
chlol ol the Division ol Medical 'Genetics
In the ~t ol -irica. MI. Slnoi School

o r - .. Knch Aodllor\m, Cf*nn's
11

•..m...

Hoopltal.

OIIAI.IIiOLOGY
-·
TlloNobnalllle
............. . . . . . _
In tile - . Sigmund $ . Soawtokv. D.D.S ..
~ol ~- FcnythDontalcentor,
- t 0 7, 4510--.12noon.
DPIIIA1WINI&amp;L-.c:TION"
, _ _ _ _ ond . . . . . . . . o i -·~---Hai . Sp . m,
F-- · ~byllo~l

o f -.

'

--NaooM,

DAMCI!-"
brU i B'oZ~Oonce
nn-PN(itOr~

l '.S.. Pnstat~&lt;'
PMO
Buffalo. N. 'V .
Pumi&lt;~.

HI

Ker: IO!*t 0111110 . . _ wltlt a prot...'-1 I n - II\ the aubject· •open
10 .,. ..-!IC: • 4!1*1 10 .........,. of the Untv.alty. Unlaaa otherwlaa
apecllleil, ....._ filr - I a cb8fglng ..Smlaalon can ba Pl!fChaMd at the ·
Squire HeiiTiclbt omc..
•

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 9 NO. 30 MAY 11, 1978

Coilncii .Dow _ ~nulling Ketter.issues

Will meet In June ) after studying .

c../ the situation

.
'I

Student ~~ .. Cynthia WhitIng proposed a full-blown lrwatlgllllon
of President Robart L. Klltter'a
, P8rlormance, but the u18 Cciuncll
Monday voted to table the matter unttt a
spacial June meetl11,11 •
a motion
In the lntarlm,
Introduced by M.
Korwl,
members of the Council will conaldllr
the Student Sanala'a r.pooe on the
President (which the Council ' - d
Monday) u well • other doc:UIIIenla.
letttri, -amenta, ate., both Jor and
against~- "Lat_aach mernblnlf lila
Council make Ilia or~oorn
. . _ . and be
1D
dlscuaa It, at a June _.on,
·
reeolution -which WM ~
dissent - suggested.
The chargel . . too ....,_ to be
treated CBYallerly or lgnoniCI, Koten
said. The actlon, wlllcll trlggared bllnner
headlines downtown_came juet u It
~the C9uncil- qotng to yewn
away the student report.
,
The Council had voted In April to do
nothing about accuaallona -oafnat the
President. Chairman Robert I. Mltlonzl
emphasized Monday's reeolutlon gave
no credence to any of the cfiargea.
Stl.notalona
_ Sco.t t Jlusto, chairperson of the ed
hoc Student Senate committee on

accord=

.
., '

~.
~,

' ''

•" r~

\

n~~t':.'os ~~~'::~~ n:l~

Gayley would like to see his
fall semester meteorology lab
become a year-round weathe~ station
BarrY

Lillis,
Accuweather
and
Weatherlax may get some competition
from UIB - If Dr. Robart I. Gayley,
auoclate proleseor of physics, raellzea
., ambition of his.
1t'a Geyley's dnlem that the University
will eo-y be 8ble to -8bllall a
~-round student-run -ther station,
_,.pleta WUh air pollution monitoring
e~~UIPf'*ll and a lonocaatlng capability.
n.e project would operate on the
bUla ae student radio atatlons
and newapapers. "It would be tun and at
u. _,. lime, a valuable experience,"
ha.aeyl.
.
This· weather alation would be a
- lavleal outgrowth of a ctus whle/l
Gayle¥ now otters each fall t~~~~MSter . It
- l d put to further use equll&gt;f'*ll and
lacllitiR wllich the P!lyalca Department
' - u.cty.bagun .cwmutatlng lor the

........... ....._
clal.

Oeyley'a OOIA8, billed unaaaumlngly
u Phpica14l, '1ntroductlon o
[end now QPWI lor
- - - ...1 regtstmlon) proYidM . .
Q~~~~Grtvnlty lor atudanll to fry running
a mini--her bur-. lor a , _ days
.-:11 Mil. D..tng the aarty wMks of the
- · thi!V receive a grounding In
~

Mat~logy,

theory and practl~ technique which
enables them later to plot professionally-accurate weather maps and
make a short-range local forecast. The
course consists . of both lab and
lectures.
..-.
Facilities and equipment which
Gayley and students use ara housed In
a ''weather station" lab on the third floor
of Fronczak, t-t.JI at Amherst , on the
Fronczak roof, and In "the cage," a
fenced-In observation station which has
been set-up lo a grassy plot due north
of Fronczak (aboil:t half-way between
Putnam Way and P· 5) .
There's a prescribed method lor
measuring air tempensture, Gayler
points out. An accurate thermometer
hes to be housed In an lnstruffij!nt
shelter, at a certain height , at a
specified distance from buildings ana
streets, etc. "Thill's !! out there," he
seys, pointing toward '11\e cage."
There's also a rain gauge In that laclllty.
Atop Fronczak, Gayley has Installed
an anemometer (to rneasul'!l wind
speed) and a weather vane tfQr
direction).. (He.fllead&amp;lnaufllclent data,
how8Y8r, when asked It his wind
meuunlfllents can shed' any scientific
light on "lmpreaalona" that \Ninde at
Amherst are dangerously highilr than

those recorded elsewhere In 111e area.]
Wasther atotion equipment
In the " weather station" Inside

~~~~::s· ·;~~~nR~~~fo'::~ter,;

temperatures In graph form on a
onQ::_week rotation drum . (A more·
sensit ive recording Instrument Is on
order.) This thermometer Is connected
to a bar whiCh juts outside the building
and looks at first glance like a
horizontal flagpole. Next to this piece
of equlpment Is a mlcr.ebarograph (a
record ing barometer) ~ch keeps track
of pressure changes, also-on a weekly
basis. (Gayley can produce from his
Illes the graph
Illustrating
the
precipitous plunge In pressure which
accompanied this past winter's big
blizzard scare. A drop like that
ordinarily Is a reliable sign of -her
trouble.-hil says, eY8n1hough..U- got
that January day was high .1 fhil
Fronczak weather statiqn also has ~ a
sling psychrometer (used to measure

~~i~~~u~~~) r;ndh~::cs,~r:,et~l:

National Weather Service and types
out just abOut ~ kind of weather
Information Imaginable (Including ski
. raports).

----

alii

.

Clftlz8na muat preaa~n gajlllmtMnl
offlclatl to aupport legllllatlon that

._...the conav,.., aaya ,._Nader.

With multi-million dollar orot~~lza­
tlonl apendlng big bucb O!Hobbytng

• effOit., Neder Ufll8d llltoDie to organlz8
to .... gowmtNilt leaders .181dlz8
~ aornelfllnG to io.... II they
dlin'l CIOC)IIeN!a.
Seclal Clttlc and oonaumer lldwocate
Allptl ..... ~d--. ~~~ng lest
weak ._ a dey-lonG"
lrament
P!Mnlna Conl-ee held at the

""'*

"-thatone

Manor. The aYent was

SIIOft-.d by the U I B Multidisciplinary

CenWr lor

the Study of Aging In
_ . i o n with ProJect Awareness of
tile &amp;Ia County Shartfl's Deportment .
Hider ment~ - a l majCM'
categories of lraudf'parpatrat~lnst
end , particularly, older
Amarlcana. He noted that
-theOOUIIIIt • cu....ella," phony h
st~dy .

con-..

~. bogus land deals and health
ecams are only a law of the more
fn¥8lent .
One naaeon such "aconomlc crimes'' '
._. reached "epidemic pJOportlons" Is
that not enough pollee are trained In
In-ligating and abati~ them, Nader
contendecl .
He
am asl~ that
conaumera should
ake this a
political lasue" and put- pressure,. on
local olllclato to assign more pollee to
this type of work.

~=:lh~~butes

;o
the proliferation of economic crimes Is
the ·quality of prosecution." Nader said
penalties ara not geared to help those

~~~=~'
brn:r.~~~"1:. ~~:
m-.c1 that mon~ judges consider
;n•'r:.=a~-dera " work to repay those

~lzlng

and joining consumer
cooperatives Ia an eltcellent way lor

qu~~·ro~-~o~-&amp;.~~~s~iiJ~ -

know lilt Is true that .,_ 30 per cent of
student senators were abeent. wl*l SA
took Its vote on Ketter. It Is, Jlusto said.
Was the vote against Ketter 111-10?
Collins asked. It wae. Then you dldn'
have a majority of a.~atora voting
against the President, Collins Indicated. "We had a majority ot thOee
present," Jlusto ans-.
- Didn't It take o¥er th.rea h.oura lor the
senators to come to that vote. Colllna
queried. Yes, Jlusto laid. But lhenlno debate o - "no confidence;" that
was n8Y8f at I Slue. The dabate was.,_
the call for ousjer.

~~II ~lrm::YMII'::,~ _J';:.tions?
Only Ma. Whiting ....,ondecl.
"I haYe apropoul," aha uld, passing
out multiple copies o1 a typed
resolution .
"Shall I read It?'' she w..ted to know.
"No, we cen read 11. We want to
college, too," said Council - member

George.._.

Ms. Whiting naad It w.yway.

""t:J..-.=.:::.: ~-:! Council
1

to aat.l!'lsh WI ln-igatlng I*MII
conslatll of two rnenibar8 of lila
•S.. 'A«VIII,'-2.coll
Council one ot whom would be the
chaltJnan ' two leculty rnernbera to be
appointed by the F-lty Senate, two
studanta (one eacll to be IIIIIICiinl8d 11r
Stl. and GSAI, and "two rnemblra of thll
unions" (CSI:A and UUP) to .,
citizens, especially those on fixed
evaluative repart on the I'NIIldili1t. Tha
report ahould be Jll'88lfiiiC! to the
Council and lnC«potaald lnto the
buying groups can betWMn 25 per
Council's Annual Report to the
cent to 40 per cent on the coat of goods. • Chancellor,
her ,_lutlon aUIHI8IIM. _
A "reforging of oommuni!Y, splrlt and
"The Council ahould maoil-- tha
nelghborhOod coheal-s ' Is _,._
summer todothla." Ms.. Whiting ..tel.
tlal to JWIY8flt ., lnci'MM of C(lme
Council Chairman Mlilonzl objectAid
-oafnst a.~lor. :cltlzena by juY8rilles
that the Council could not daleaate Ita
Nadaf sug!J88*1. The sanctions ol
authority
to any cornmltt•. ''ft'a o ..
Juvenile Court . . not enough to stop
n~sponslblllty to act" II any action Ia io
delinquents from preying on the relative
betaken, he said. "The motion Is out of
delenselesan- of the elderly, he said.
order. "
tl. ''shame factor'' shoUld be considered
•S.. 'Councll_lllno.._'_2,cal.3
during sentenclng. l'lader predicted that
such punishment• ae cleaning neighTUESDAY HO.LIDAY
borhood streela would halle a greater
For soma unfathomable ruaon, Nrehabilitative effect on youthful offendYort&lt; !;!tate haa ctacld8d to calatnta
ers since they would be subJect to
.._.at DIY on Ill traditional data,
community presaun~s ..
Mar 30, rather than on lha iaat Monday
In May •• 181 up by lha Monclay holiday
MaH-In health plano hit
bill. U II offlcaa wtll thua be QPW1
Monday, May 21, but ciOMd Tuaaday,
~~~~~~.~~id~o questions from the
May 30, the p__,naf omca llldlcataia.
• .... ......,.' pete11 . col3
C..._ . . not In aeaaiOft that weal&lt;.

Consumer pressure needed, Nader urges
l!y...,_lualm

tt:'r.:.:

Student Association Is not alone In Its
displeasure with
the
President's
"administrative style. • ' Stl. voted far
l&lt;etter's ouster laet weak. Th8 Graduate
Student Association haa voted no
confidence In the President alao, Jlueto
seld. "And now the Gnaduala Faculty
ara going to vote. We hope tM~netr.
will coma ln."

.-

:;:,~·~"J: "':'vt~~~..=

�·i

~

lloy11,1171

Ii

.-.council mulling issues
(from poge 1, ..... 4)
Well, can~ we

as~:Ot

vote on It? Whiting

unleaa you

ha~

a Second,"

William C. Baird smiled.
There was none.
. Then Koren spoke up
ruolutlon .

with

his

Lett.,. of aupport

•AccUIB?
Since the mld-&lt;40s, though, there's
a deterioration; temperature
-.gas heve fallen (although there
may now be a tum-around In that trend,
heaays) .
There Is no doubt that climate varies
across decades. What we are not sure
of Is why It changes. If we kneW why.Jt
~ht ba possible to then forecast when

v~?.=' =~~c7::t.rc~ ~i!~~st

Into the alr) s..ms to coincide with
periods of global cooling , Gayley notes.
They-. 1000-1945 were thus ones of
volcanic quiescence. Then, too, the
"gneenhouse" effect caused by burning
fossil fuels has to be considered . Th is
Is a cause of currant debate and
contro-sy; there are those who say
rapidly Increasing amounts of .C02

l.",ri'!,~,~r rl~~~ t~~~~!\'u~:?. 'g,:

which could have disastrous effects on
climate over the next 50 years. This has ,
1o be carefully studied, he says,
particularly since It Is one potential
hazard which man can control.
Gayley and Ram hope to contribute to
the development of climate models by
providing data on how amounts of dust
In the alr In the past have corresponded'
to climatic -lations. They will also
1oo1&lt; at how much and on what cycles
· dust levels ebbed and flowed . Such
Information from the past Is essenti al to
developing models for the future .

aUftllll•

To gat such-"ata, the two physicists
will make uae"ctf polar Ice samples
(.-ung back thouaands of years) which
. . .allllble from the National Science
Foundatlbn Ice core storage unit at
Ridge ._.. (for which Dr. Chester
=~ of Geological Sciences Is

Their work Involves just one tiny
apKt of cHINle model developmtint,
to be ...... But the pelr "hope !o find
algniflcant thinga."
....wmua, moat of ua will heve to be
Mliafled Willi llltanded • 30-day fore· AltlloUgll there . . tho• who
- * I ..etta lOr Juat baina llbla to know
going
wltll_the BUffelo
.,..._ In llf'l ~ur petlod in the

....,a

til"-

wlftlar.
•
MaYbe a U/8 WMthar atatlo!) COWS
~.""tIn thlt.
J

ScneeiiiJ»lavcan cashiln tlme
811111 ~ 8lrvioe end ~
INIII/Confldlllllll .f'IIIIIO,_. haw,

~.,_~r~~
.._lnto4 a.ll
I.

~t.. dO~.=..~-=

....-.-=·~,::" thedll*t....:.::::
~for caet.d-ln accruata will

41e ...... fna.t/o..mber.
~tal tlma ~· muat ba
.-!JIIIted for ~ who elect to
~. a not1oa from the
oma. ~- 0noa the
Ia ..... Per.ollnal ad¥1- It
...... be Cllwltlld; U1118 II lo ba
IIIIMdlllll' dlciict..s from vacation
O!MIIa. Vicallon lima may not ba

Before asking the indulgence of
those pleaent to permit the Council to
end the meeting In private (to discuss
the Chancellor'a Medal Award which Is
tredltlonelly aeaet until Commence.ment), Chairman Millonzl licked off a
list of tattera supporting Ketter which
he Is sharing with Council members.
Millonzf enumerated: · we hava here
letten~of support from : the U/B Alumni
Assooiatlon, Stephen Dunnett (of the
lntenslva English Language Institute),
Charles C. Clemency
(associate
professor, geological sciences), Clifton
K. Yeartey (chairman, history), Jul H.
Wang (Einstein Professor), George C.
Lse (dean, engineering and applied
sciences), Hermann . Rahn (distinguished professqr, physiology), John
Carter (president, U/B Foundation),
end Albert L. Michaels (Council on
International Education)."
Earlier In the meeting, the Council
heard from : Richard Molt, presldenf""of
the Student Association (concerning

=.,~':,';,c~·s ., ~~~~td:'~~:,~'l:

And , " matters related to President
Ketter, " wh ich the minutes Indicated
were discussed In private, are clearly
not covered by the law, he argued.
Also, there should be a vote ori going
Into closed session, he pointed out.
There didn't appear to be auch a vote
last time.
Council member Phyllis Kelly aald
that, In fairness to the Council, It
should be noted that •matters related to
President Ketter" did not surface until
the day of the laat meeting. 'We
couldn't have put out an ag!IR.-." There
may have a technical error
Involved In our going into executive
session, ahe conceded'. "But nobody's
perfect on all points of law."
"Would the Council be willing now to
discuss In open session what was elred
In executive session last time?" Molt

asl&lt;ed.

· !here was no reaction.
Koren then spoke to the earlier
question of whether or not Moll should
have been there: 'Whoever Is president
of the student body should have the
right to request time on the Council
agenda," he said .
Mott rebuffed this, saying h!l didn't
want to be recognized as president of
the student body, but just as a student.

11t.e . . •grey - - ·
.
Reacting· to the points about
' executive session, Mlllonzl said there
are grey areas in the open meeting taw.
But he feels, he said , that taat month's
Studenta on the agend8?
action was comactly taken.
If there was not exactly a vote on It,
Ms. Whiting heel requested that both
he said, he had at least Indicated that
" If ther&amp; are no objections, we'll go Into
executive session."
•
hear the st_udents "this time."
Mlllonzl said there was no question
Mlllonzt wanted It clearly understood
that
matters
discussed
were
properly
that he did not tnten&lt;tto set a precedent
matters for closed meetings. The sal;uy
situation, he reported , did Indeed
Involve consideration of Individual
reactions of other Council members, he
salaries, both within SUNY (where
said. Mlllonzl thought an tnfol)llal
they
are mai tersof public record) and in
1
:':,'1~ t~0f;':~t ~~~~~~~~sea to~,: othdr j urisdictions (where they are not).
As to the Ketter matters, he noted that
from students, whose Input, he ·Said,
he serves on another board of the State,
• we cert~lnly want tp have." In the strict.
where all personnel matters are taken
sense, he argued, Ms. Whiting should
up In executive session "because of the
be the voice of students at formal
0
Council meetings.
•
pledged,
es;:.~:~~.;; ~~- ~~~~p
~.;~ • t want to assure you that we are going
to conduct our meetings In accordance
students, that they have this ln·put. A
with the open meeting law; there's no
large number of students didn't like
question, we're covered by it.
what went on when the Council
The reports of both Dean Alutto and
retreated to executive session last
VPAA Bunn drew repeated questions
month, she...atd.
from Council Member Whiting . She
" I understand ," Mlllonzl responded.
wanted to know where money tor the
"!just don't want It written In stone for
·Raglonal Economic Assistance Center
the future.!!.
Is coming from , and why It' s being
Ms. Whiting continued: " I am a
established at all, when other areas,
Council m.ember. I shouldn't give all the
such as her own Social Sciences, are
s1lJdent reports; other people make
being cut back.
reports who aren't Council members."

M~~~:~~~r,r~:.ll~~~to

~=~'lfe h~~~~~~~~~o ~~II~~=

pe;:'g~:.'h'!?:~:. {~~d~~~~:,;"

!"!i

sh~~\~~~~ ~;~~~~~~ not sure this
-Moll then wanted to know "If you 're
Interested In what we have to say, why
can't we be here?"
" I just wonder If It's the appropriate
forum, " Mlltonzl rppeeted.
·
" In the past when people have come

. ~~~~g:J~P.¥~:·,:~;: t~t",~\~.;
=..,~

"')Y

hesitancy

to

hear

Could we lUll get on with it? &amp; .
Collins aaked .
Coanctl ~ .,... _ , authority,
llloltaap
' Molt then (with consultation from
SA'a at1omey who waa p111Mnt in the
room end from Lew Ro• of NYPIN3)
ra.t from an -laory brief outlining
'-SA'a underatanding of Vll'i?Ua statutes
under which tha Council operates.
_ The Education Law, Molt aaid, c'-ly
00. not aay that the Council h• allY
rote in nwlew 8ftd diaml•• of a
-ident,~ It dou not pn~eludelt.
The SUNY Trust- ara not expreaaly
given thia authority under the law,
either, ha pointed out. But few would
argue that thay can't do it .
Thi .. would ..II to Imply that the
Council do8a haw authority to
diamiaael and non-retention, Molt contend.t .
Mooring on to the -tlon of laat
month'a eocutiwe Maal~1 Mott alated
that the Council Ia, indwo, covered by
the open -lnga lew which clearly
deli~ the ~~~~~ for which
cloNd -lnga . . permitted .
He.- queationad whelhel' the April

racom-

T.':,~r::O.:'!Yoc;;~u:'O!,

Mlai!MI~IId . -.a. .

"Miarln"- dt8CIIII8CI. !he toPic was

tiiOuld be dnctacl to

ex~:.~ ':!st~,, e~aMdtr ~It;::

Academic. Alf"m 'Ronald Bunn (who
apoke on his - - . i c muter plan
draft), and Dean Joeeph Alutto of
,Management (about the n - Regional
Economic Assistance Center).

.....,IOtthla~.

OuiiUona

general and not related to a p8rticutar
person (as the IJIW Indicates must be
the case for an executive J!!ISSion).

aai&lt;S, lndicala that while the matter of

'Can't ba juatllied'
'
"I just can't justify It In my mind," she
said.. Especially when the Social
Sciences are so -'&lt;.
.
"That's your opinion," Koren countered.
I'

un~lll~hsal~ t:=:;::n'::C:~lro:;:

Chancellor Wharton that SUNY mus~
take iln active role In the State's
.economic development.
Council mambara Kelly 1111d ~
applauded the prog.., as a stap
forward lor the region.
Bunn --.t Into the background of his
academic'"plan draft, not,lng that It Is

~ :f~ o:.'nl:•aa:~

•,::en:

dlacueaed broadly u.dy with Academic Affairs .tmlniatratora. More
dlacuaalons will ba tield wilt! faculty
aild students, he aaid.
..;;:~ Ia on t~la comll)ittaa?" Whiting

There Is no format committee, Bunn
aaid.
Are you planning to hive a
commiUae?
We'll have one on planning nwlew
- wtoen thi ngs ere underway, Bunn aaid.
" And we've hed commltt- on g~~~o~~n~l
education and oontinulng educelton
which have heel input.•
"I'd be willing to aerve on a
committee to 111act to the plan,"
WhHing said .
This Is not a committ.. plan, Bunn
sald. "lt'a my own statement based on
the beat edVlce and suggestions I can
get and refleCting my Informed
Ju&lt;!Qments" on the future of academic
affairs. It Is simply .tvlsory to the
President.
There should ba a committee,
Whiting sail!.

�-

I

... ,.,t, tl71

GSA votes
'no confidence' ·
in Ketter

Ketter firm
on foreign
student records.
After a ...-Jng ~
·
with the
District Director ofthe lmm
end
Natu,...lzatlon Serllce (IN
..:I the
agency's attorney, • Preeldant Katt•
stood firm on a Nluaal to give INS
acceas to !Ilea of 188 foreign atildanta

The Graduate Student Asaocl811on
Senate voted "no confidence" In
Preeklent Robert L. Ketter at )Ia •
,_.lng May 3.
Thlrty-th,.. Senators voted for the
following tMOiutlon [one voted against
and two llbstalnedl:
"WHEREAS, GSA Senate records Ita
concern o-the !allure of the President
during the last 8 years - to create a

~.ita

ett:t:'r..l's
the atudanta' recorda
to determine whellla' they afraudulent Information bafono entlirlng
the u.s. when they bail to certify they
had sufficient lunda to attend ei:hoof.
-Supposedly, alter anuwtng U/11, eoma
studenta applied for end recelve!l
foreign student tuition ........
To help protect the pi1Yacy of Ita
students, University policy forbldl
acceu to auch recorda except under
subpoena or -utory authority.

~~nc;:~=~t~:~n~~~~on.:,c:;

responsive to grJI(Iuate student needs,
to attempt dealing with the constraints
estllbllahed by the State structure, and

;~ud":':: ~'I:C~tt'~r.,· t~~ ~~~~~a~l~g
~~~~ru~t~v~t pre~~nt whatt~

of
students and faculty view as problems
are not considered to ba so by !he
President, and
·
"WHEREAS, The contentment of the
Preeldenl with the present stare of
affairs characteriZing this university In a
number of critical areaa Is consistent
\'!!lh the lack of any serious and

R~~:'e!fn~ ~:*'~

~=~~~~r~=rut~i~~ at

,,~s~~:lC:t

"BE IT RESOLVED THAT, GSA affirm
Its view that maintenance of such

Director Benedict J. _
Ferro contended thaf the agency ha
the right to ouch Information under the
Family Education Rlllhta and Priv.cy
Act and the Charter tlie University has
with the I)'IS which permits It to enroll
foreign students . .,
- The Unlveraity's .attorney Ia now In
the process of rev~lng the charter to
see whether the INS claim has any •
statutory loundltlon.
According to an article In the CourierExpress, Ferro aald Ketter's reluaal to
supply the records could mull In U / B
losing Its authority to enroll foreigners.
Legally, the student files could be
secured with a sUbpoena but Ferro quoted by the Courier u saying the
subpoena was "Inappropriate" and
"cumbersome," since the agency has
statutory authority to take the recorda.
Last week, the Faculty Senate
Executive Commlttea voted to commend Ketter lor " adhering to the policy
of not allowing government olflclala to

~tatuanl~ of"~~~~':., the ~~ef~

t~SA Senate to express~':::'complete

lack of confidence In the leadership of
President Ketter." GSA took its stand following a

.

~~Rt~tt~&amp;J~i~;.~r1a(~:'~rt~~~~

.,.

'Confidence'
may come up
at Grad' session
.
The annual mMtlng of the University's graduate faculty Is scheduled lor
Monday, May 15, at 2 p.m . In the
Talbert Dining Room.
According to Graduate School
sourcea, somewhere beiWMn 30 and 35
of the University's 1,000 graduate
faculty uaually attend.
.
Tbe meeting has been thrust Into the
spotlight thlay-. however, because-of
a proposal by Professor of Bloatatlstlca
Irwin Bross the! a vote of " no
confidence" In President Robert L.
· Ketter be taken during it. The meeting
has been rnovid to a larger room than
originally scheduled.
Bross has asked further that the vote
be taken by secret ballot " due to fears
that this administration would ba
vindictive.•
The official agenda lor the meeting
Includes only two Items. 1. The annual
report of Acting Graduate Dean Charles
M. Fogel ; and 2. A propoaal to change
the Unlveralty'o residence requirement
lor the Ph.D. Tl)a change would drop
mandatory residency from
to 2•
_,...er hours, and atlpulates that a
Pti.O. atudenl mu81 attend here two
....,..tera full-time. Under the change,
the aernaaters· need not be conaacu.
live.
~~:O~~~.~!:t~n theM matters, a
Gr8duMa SchoOl apolleapW80,. told •
the lllporW T...S.y that a on
Prof- &amp;roN' PfOPOaal would lwdly
be ...,._1811va of · gqduata faculty
opinion alo bnly a amall number
ordlnertly attend. Acting Dean Fogel has Indicated that he wfll not prevent
anyone from Introducing a motion of
•no confidence." He will point out, he
ha8 Uld, that any vote ~an on It can
only bacon~ the opinion of those

.a

~··

Banks going
to Malaysia
Dr. David J . Banka, aasoclate
protenor of anttwopology, has been

....,_, a grant to lecture on
c.nleulum ~mant In anthropology 81 the Unlveraltl Malaya, Kuala
t.Mnpur, 110t81ayala, from June 1g78 t.o

~was

announoad by
Council lor the International Exchal'fllll
of 8cflolaR' Board of Foreign
Scllot.-hlpa end the u.s. Department

of State.

!:'S:: '

accompanied by an attorney, explained
during Monday'a - ' o n the , _ , . .
lor denying accaaa to lha !Ilea. He cited
concurtlng opinions by such groupa u
the National Aaeoclatlon of ~
Uni-JIItleo and Land Grant Colleges,
the National Aaaoclatlon of Foraion
Sludent Advisors u well u SUN'f's

Top geology student
i

~

Walter Avramenko of Holbrook, N .Y.,
Is the recipient of this year's Pegrum
Award , presented by the Department of
Geological Sciences.
Avramenko Is a graduate of Sachem
High School , Lake Ronkonkoma, N.Y.
He will join the U.S. Geological Survey In field work this summer under
sponsorship of the National Teachers
Association and the-uSGS. He will
continue his studies In geology in' the
fall .
.
The Pegrum -Award, presented In

recognition of outstanding scholarship
and leadership In the geological
sciences at U/B, Is named alter the
founder and former chairmen of the
~=,:.ent of GI!Qj,ogy, Dr. Reg inald H.
Pegrum came to U/B In 1927 from
Princeton, from where he had just
graduated, to start the department. In
his honor, the Geological Sciences

:,a;~::~t~~s,:\~r'!': ~,..~~r~~~~

outstanding geological sclenUsts.

Alumni Boar~ expresses
its support of Ketter

~r:en:""a"~ ~-~~~~t "!esau~

•
poena.•
A Courier-Express edltorl.--.~
endorsed Ketter's decision. .':. ~

problems which exist at U I B, and
The twenty-lour members of the
University at Buffalo. Alumn i Associa- ,..similar ones exist on many campuses,
are certainly surmountable and can ba
tion Board of Directors have voted
resolved through the collective efforts
unanimously to give Dr. Robert L.
and Intelligence of admi nistrators,
Ketter a vote of confidence, thereby
faculty, alumni and students.
expressing their "satisfaction with his
" Dr. Kette" In our opinion, Is doing a
performance as president of the
good job under difficult conditions. We
University," a statement Issued by the
note his recent attempts to pry loose
Association this week said . The
funds lor construction, as well as
statement Indicated that the General
seeking private donations lor many
Alumni Board Is the official organization lor the University's 60,000 alumni,
32,000 of whom live In Western New
disciplines, to bring highly qualified
York.
faculty and administrators to Buffalo
The statement reads :
and to - resolve the decline In
·we admit that problems exist at U/ B
undergraduate enrollments.
which are bound to frustrate students,
admi nistrators, faculty and stall. Nor
" II everyone pulls together to meet
would anyone deny - and least of al f a

Fall event will ·
look at Vietnam '
A twcrday look at "The U.S. In
Vietnam : A Reappralaal," will be
presented on campus September 211-30
with funding supplied by the Conferences In the DlaclpUnaa proor-n.
Proleaaora Richard Cox anG Jerome
Slater of Political Science . . co-

~gC:I";,~· [.f:C,~: :.,~r~~~~t~~~~

lll'!~t7h~~ :;:";~'~,:,~~b~~~i~y~~~~

ba Improved.
" It could ba Improved II the 30%
complete Amherst Campus were moved
forward JO completion ~d the
academic units of lhll Unl-sltywlted.
When students must a\::d 10 to 1•

::.~:..,aact.l'al:e:...::~ Rl~:· L:ov~S

Amherst Carnpu-. they are bound to

ba·~:"urgently

appeal to officials In
Albaoy to lind the n-aoary lunda to
finish the Amherst Campua - bolh lor
the sake of the University - and what Ia
equally Important, lor the community at
1

~urthermore, life within the Unlver~lllt:.::: lac~ty
rad~ct~:::

.:r.:=:'

of ,_,t yaws ware 11181oied by the
State.
" It could be Improved II operating

=~rn~~· ,\n ~":.~"':tol~d~~~ ·,f~p;:

level administrative aalarlea were
peer
competitive with thoae at
lnatltutlona.
" It could be lm~ved, too, II the pool
~tt!~1::;,td :r.,,':r;,':.
growing
" Nona of theM problema and their
demoralizing effects h - been caused
by Robart Keller. He Ia probably mora
a - . than any of the datn8Q8 they have
done to Jhe University. Any other

1

_.

ll':,..;~~~~~~~~~a't~ ~~-=··

~Y:,'= f~'~~~ol=

t':

eminent Ynslltullon· of higher learnf::'g .
We urge all segments pi the Unl-slty
community to so unite..
.
"We commend Dr. Ketter lor his
Interest and participation In our alumni
activities, and ere pleaaed to have this
opportunity to give him our support."

UCS moviog .· •
two satellites

Unlveralty Computing Servlcee announces the move of Its Goodyear Hall
and Bell Hall aatelllle computing oltH

::'C:~~~~:T!o:fo~l!.rt~~·.xi;..,'!fc:~

of equipment and . . - lacllltlea, II not

lni~~·~:U~~ ~t~~ ~.rm1na1,

81

tlm&amp;-sharlng terminals, and'Yhe real of

l~t:'.'i:= '-:i~l':ll .;-:~

to Crosby Hair:., the Main Street
Campus and will occupy rooma .0, ~A.
.OB, .OC and 400.
The computing equipment and

~1'/:.~;:t:~~~=r~~~r~~

~m":'~~~~::2~~1

occupy
The last day of ..,lea from both the
BaU altaa will be May 2e.
Service from Crosby Hall end Furnas
Hall will auwt at II a.m . Monday, June 5,
and will operata II a.m. - -10 p.m .
WMI&lt;daya and. ~5on waakenda.
~end

ci:::=

Theatre In the Cepen complex .at
Amherst .
·
Guenter Lewy, pror- of political
science; Unl..,...ty of Masaachueett&amp;Amherat, will be the fead.olf apaalcar;
- other featured vlaltora will be Robert W.
Tucker, p r o f - of POlitical f1C1ence.
Johns Hopkins;
MICI!MI Walzw,
prol88801' of gowmmen\ and aoc1a1
relatione, Hariard; Ear1 ~. a
fellow of the lnetltuta lor Polley

Studlea, Waahlng\1)n, D.C.; and U .
General Robert o.nJ, U.S. Army,
.!J'.:Idant of the Nallonal Del-

'

=lt~~· '::airs.:"·

will alao
partlclpets. Prof. Terry Nardin of
l'olltical Science Ia expected to taka
part ..
Lewy Ia author .of a major acllolarty

=r.

-11.

.

~~,:~·);; ~::~.d.'!ct~

lor August publicallon by the Oxford
Prees and certain to be one of the moat
~:~=~bOOks of'the fall, Prof. Cox
It waa, In fact, a length~ article
excerpted from the book In the ~

Comment•ry Which prompted the Initial

proposal lor the con(Jrence. ~has
done extensive ~ -lnlng
,_,tly dac1asalfled documents ooncemlng Vlatnaln, Cox ~·
The coni..- Ia being ocganlzad
around three t n - , eac11 of which will
be the focus for a paper and alao for
roundtable dlacuaaiOna. The l'*'ara: political and military upacta of
U.S. lnvo'-lt In VIetnam , moral and
legal aaP8Cta, and conaaquancaa and
lessona lor the future.

..

�...,, , , 1871

4

The.Ghalrman
Survey o-f U/B community
finds agreement on duties
department headS--should perform
category, was _ , . . . . viewed as
leas Important by fKuttr tMII by
~rmen. Administrators, on the other

projeCts, etc.;' Ia leest Important
among"Productlon Activities."

Support hie activities, Fat~- found,
_ , a-afly viewed ae lasa Important
tMII activities In otha' categories; hera,
only recruitment of futHime I8Culty and
daYalopmant of edmlsslons standards
_, ae lmportllnt for the

::r·~~,:.t .:::0~~~

eech term. Fal~ said IIIIa mar well
reflect the belief by edmlnlatrators that
chal"'"'!' are not eclmlnlatralors.
Over th.-fourths of f8Culty fell Ole
chairman shoul&lt;! t88Ch.
•
_

chairperson.

All th,...of the groilpa bellevad that • PR not~
"Participates 1'!_. c:&lt;;!mmunlly MrVice
Institutional supportive

activities,

'
,.,.,.nteges of grown who felt Ml»f""ment chalrmftff "absolutely
must" or "preferably
_
,
ahouldn perform ae/ecreq dutle•.
Feculty
PerCent

Production ActtfttiH

~=~~: ~:-o~':a*6f~~ltles
DellnH teacl\lng loads lor faculty
Conducts re.search projects

Psrtlclpates In community service
projects

'

Chairmen
PwCent

Adminfatratora

82

80

ll·

64

PerCent

n

~

57
73
73

72

agement of the pro)act.

56

56

68

46

1t

72

CSEAmerges
with-AFL-CIO

64

A=~=ltyto teaching

..

72
100

ad~~~lstr~~ro':~ut~hfc:~~ts ~nco~r~

lllllntsnanc:. ActhrltiH

COunaels and I or advi ses st udents

lmfc!rer'ace:!}• '"~aervlceeducat lon

Provides o:Tent at lon
Involves faculty In the decision
making process
lnvoJwa atudenta l n the deci sion

- Eval~r:s

.
l"rn,ementa procedures for reviewtaculty complalnts and I or
· evances

37

C7-

56

85

89

'92

97

95

" 96

64

67

83

;,f.

au_,,..

The Civil Service Employees Association, as a result -of Its new affiliation
with the AE.L-CIO, loses its distinction
as being the largest Independent public
employees union In the nation, but
gains pQ.[Itlcal clout.
CS~ Is-the bargaining agent for
more than 375,000 elate wo~ers;
approxlma!ely 1,900 Civil Service
employees belong to It at UJ B.
A three-year affiliation agreement
became effective April 21 when CSEA's
Board of Directors agreed to join the
American Federation of State, County
and Municipal Employees, an AFL-CIO
affiliate. The agreement was ratified the

68

98

96

89

88

93

33

25

28

57
53
9C
C9

51
100

Production
ActhrlAccapta responsibi lity lOr tho

maintenance and repair of

F~~r..f::X,uclea relati ng to

faculty uae of materials, resources
and equipment
~all purcl&gt;uerequeals
PortlclpotH In faculty recru itment
Rocrulta stUdents
Psrtlclpatoa In development of
departmental admissions

--·

=~=1=~~~:.

PortlclpatH In atudont plocemont
I" eenlor lnatltutlone
Psrtlclpalea In a1Udenta' occupotloMI or Job placement

68

65

56

100
52

60

82

82

68

C5

65

52

39

53

52

55

60

64

C9
C3

· cc
cc

52
ol8

~~ut1~ blo~~~~f~~~~uou;::

largest public employee union in the
AFL-CIO, representing over 1.2 million
people.
Accord ing to a statement from
CSEA's Public Relations "Department ,
the union will retain autonomous
locals, and maintain the same name,
tradamm and any assets. It will also
continue to establish Its own dues
structure, elect Its own .o lflcers, hire
stall and, perhaps, most Importantly,
· ma~e Its own decisions regarding
contracts and political activity. The
union's constitution and bylaws will
also go untouched.
The merger of the two unions negates
·a successful challenge "10 CSEA's
Professional-, Scientific and Technical
U11R by the Proleaalonal Employees
""Flldarallon. a )abor coalition formed by
the New Yo~ State United Teechera and

......._ " - " " AcllwltiH
MM!Ialns llaaona with relevant
community sgonclaa and

oommttt...

Melnlalns lluooa with offiCials
of eenkK lnatltuUon• on transfer
"problems

" " - - public notatlona program
~faculty"' participate
ln conventlonl, conl11rencee, etc

~'===
~':..0:::-f''"nda
._..
_ _ lunda

Alporta dopart"**tal occornpllah"*Ita to.ouper1ora

,..,..._

~~ongr.ngo

=:::o="'on"::Ct

,.

90

91

92

88

75

92

90
90

82
95

-116

98

98

100

U3
87

96

100
115

85

" 82

92

78

86

" 98

75

89

96

n

82

• 68

81"

81

64

n

~

92

92

~~ceA~~::r:rnll:':."81u~C:· ~~

AFL·CIO COI'atltutlon, brother unions
cannot raid eech other. Since most of

~~A~L~~T.at:"~~c::':!ld~=

much lass ll~ety. CSEA mar still be
challenged , h~. by unions not
aligned with the AFL-CIO.
CSEA wilt gain two - • on the
Executive 8oaril of AFBOME, represent·
lng nearly 25 per oent ollta full voting
power. It also galna jurisdiCtion within
AFSCME to organtm unrepresented
, public employ- throughout the State,
not Including New Yo~ City.
CSEA will absorb the coat of joining
AFSCME for the first
by using
money from the union's general lund .
an lncreaee In dues
After the first
Is expected . CSEA maintains such an
lncr- would have been necessary
without the merger.
CSEA must pay $2.90 to AFSCME per
member per month, but $2.66 of It will
be rebated during tilt first rear of the
agreement. $2.40 per capita per month
1!1111 be rebated the aacond
and the
full fee will be ratalnad by AFSCME
thereafter.

~- and-llles

""...-...

~~a
......,..
_ _ opmantalnand
==-·ldantlllas

Aovtoiwe- ~lain
...,_...

-In

~--"'"
lonal and admln-

..
-s='t.r-ol
pol

..£:~=

-=---the·
'::====the

~=:-depart·

""::&amp;:-...
-..........::..":~

----

==-llllillllonll-.............
_to __
~=~·.:a-.........
_
.,.~

r-

anti/Of

~t

those relatpd to maintenance ·ofrelationsh ips between the department
ran~ed
low
and outsiders, all
Evidently, Fal~ concluded, ~one
agrees that chairmen need not be very
COIIOemed about aueh matters aa the
pi8C8mant of graduatee, transfer of
students to other lnatltutlon8, or public
relations. " Hare Is Indeed 811 .,.. In
which chairmen could rail- them·
sal- of a good dell! of wort," he said.
Falk noted that almost My unlvwaltr
and certainly UIB, 11811 apeclallzed
personnel who undlrt.U thwe tasks
more efficiently tllan C8n be clOne by
any chairman .
Adapt"!&amp; activities l1lfer to planning
programs which support !flal functions .
Tlle. activities were~ by all
t. Ability io
naaponclents ae lm
~ aheed ahou , ~thus, be an
Important criterion ror •lectlon of
chairpersons, the ~er concluded.
.
On the IT18IIIIIItlfla front, PNP8f811on
of dapartmentlil budgets and allocations of lunda were per:ceJ'IIId aa baing
essential dulles.
•
•
Activities referring to classroom
managament, though, were not con:
sldered vitaL F8Culty were far less
willing to allow chairmen to participate
In classrooM management than adminIstrators were. Here, Fal~s says, Is at
last a definite area in which the
chairman is actually engaged In a
pronounced role conflict.

77
90

91

91
• U3

98

100

87

88

92

88

81

ills

88

n

311
28

100
28
28

C5

72

68

88

81

98

~

20

y-.

r-.

•
-

dlAb!Ni AVAilAIL! XCOON

~,..,._'Car-. Colt-. CooperatiYa
1 . . aaaln lllllla&amp;elor 1ummar
_pfantfftg - Sfll per plot. T1Mra "'II be
an organizational~~~~~ Sunday, Mar
14, at 302 Wlfk- Ou8d, Ellloott, 11
12:30 p.m., or at the gardena at 1 p.IIJ .
(~Ill Clwtll Oakl). For more
lnlormttlpn, Ctll!at-jl.3JI.

�I

.:;

•r n , 1111

140 new MD's; 23 others
hear cail for social commitment,
an end to our 'pill-oriented'· society
A. challenge to maintain a' strong
senoe of aocllil commitment while
practicing medicine laaued to the
School of ~lclne'a graduating clau
by Oll8 of lti membera In Commencement cetemOnlee Sunday at Klalnhans
MuelcHall.
Clifton l . Peay, a clau ,._,a.
tlw, told graduatea that new Pltyalclans
must support progiiiNhle teglefalion to
enact standards for ~tlw I!Mith
care. Otherwise, he saki, hoapltala will
forever btl museums populated by c;aNS
derived from man's mlauoe of hla world.
" What good Is It for physicians to
continue technological miracles of
diagnosis II they fall to support efforts
to erad icate environmental risks which
threaten our very existence?" he asked .
- Peay also noted Jhat a major problem
lacing 20th century man Is drug abuse.
He urged physicians to help end our
existence as a ''pill-oriented" society by
re-educating patients, many of whom
have come to b&lt;llleve that for every
P'Ql:&gt;lem there Is a chemical solution.
"We cannot allow this habit of
unrestrained prescribing of chemical
agents - btl they sedatives, tranquilizers, or whatever - to continue, " he
said.
Not a privilege
Peay emphasized that health care
today Is not a p_rlvllege, but a right. He
suggested that we must continue to
democratize health care delivery In
order to guarantee each person high
quality , affordable treatment.
11 is the responsibility of physicians;
he ventured,' to provide each resident of
the lJ.S. the same high quality care
wh ich the "great" from around the w6rid
come here to receive.
" Another problem," Peay said , "Is the
high -cost of medical education which
has emerged as a new discriminator as
well as a penall zer of those who desire a
career in medicine." Unless something
is done, he warned, we will have only an
elite corps of affluent physicians drawn
from the upper-elass.
Another G) ass representative, Mary L.
(Molly) Carnes, pointed out that when
she and her fellow students began their
medical educations lqur years ago, they
were merely different people from
different backgrounds.
" But today, perhaps the last time we
will meet together," she said, " we have
much In common, sharing experiences
with each other which we don't share
with any others." She noted that these
common experiences have forged a
bond uniting '140 strangers Into a
family .
Calkin• llonored
Salvatore Del Prete, edltor-ln-&lt;:hlal of
the School of Medicine's yMrbook, The
Iris, dedicated the 1978 edition to Dr.
Evan Calkins, chief of U I B'a Division of
Gerontology who this y811t ntllrad as
chairman of the Department of
Medjclne alter 17 years.
Del Prete aald the Y8lltbook was
dedicated to Calkins lor extltbltlng
qualities which students b&lt;ltie'le are
signs of a truly outstanding physician
- amicability, compassion, concern,
courege, knowledge and understand1"'b.t Prete also cltad Calkins; concern
for patients' wall-belng and his concern
lor them as humM bal, ngs.
1«1 M.D.'s
Or. F. Carter Pannlll, vice president of
the Faculty of Health Sciences,
conferred the M.D. on 140 graduates.
Thay wera led In tl)e Chwga- of
Malmonldes by Dr. leonard A.. Katz;
uaoclate dean of medicine, end In the
oath or Hippocrates by Medical Dean
Dr. John Naughton . Dr. Harry L. Metcalf
directed the greduatal u they signed
the Book of P~yalclans .
Pannlll also conferred Muter of Arts
degrees on ni ne, Muter of Science
degrees on two and · the Doctor of
Phllosophy on 19oth.-a.
Dr. James F. Phillips , chairman of
the aw.,.dll committee, pnaaented the
following :

A.wardo·

Th••l• Honore: Fred H. Gelsle&lt;; Becoelll

AwaffJ: Maii&lt;'S. GJa aman : Gilbert M. BeCk

~~~,;~~~tr~!~ ;8ul~:loch~~1~~~~~u!:,~,.~y
1-'t, ..e

111

SoJtf(tn;.

t.u....d.leod

"·

Uvhe~Hr,

V'~~i~~~ 'b~~ :~;; ~tvr.·~,;. X

\

3 ceremonies

set for weekend
Two
commencement-s
and
an
" Ach ievement Day" ceremony ar11 slated

~r :~~Ofs~~ ~~~~~~m:':'n.~f~

followj_ng weekend or later In the
montti .
·
A.n estimated 120 undergraduates and
90 graduate students w ill recatve

~e~~les~t s.J'~,':~~ M~~ 1~.u':/"Y

rB~i;t"o~he Artpark main auditorium In
Prof. Donna Jeunker, chairman of the
Nursing Education Department , will blithe speaker.

Undergr~le

Sc~~a~, ~~~lo~ ~·mu~

Studies will take Its tum In the Moot
Courtroom, O'Bri.,., Hall.
Ellen Woodrich, chalrponon and one
of the founders of the Erie County
Citizens To Save Utnrlu organization,

wi~~=Jrad:!ea.. , .,_.
selected as a deleaata to the ao.nor'a
Conference on Ulnrtu to be held In
Albany during the flrat weak In JuM.
SILS atuclenta pt.nnlng to oompillte
MLS requi-te during the 1178
summer - l o n will Join~,_.
at the exercl- and will ..0
a
certificate aa a symbol of their flnai

~":'Fifth Annual Ach'-"-1 Oily of

Fri-.

the Educatjonal ODoortunlty Center
(EOCl Ia aclleduled frW
May 12,
at 7:30 p.m. In the auditorium of the
main Buffalo and El1e County Utnry.

~c!:~ef:.:l:':i ~~~~~

Washington Sl.
nie entire campus community Ia
Invited to tha EOC ~t .

Balone heads
Pharmacy alumni
Sal Balone, a 111111 graduate . of the
School of Pharmacy .,.,d a partner In
Gnan-dal Phermacy, Buffalo, Ia the new
president of the Pharmacy Alumni
A.aaoclatlon.
Balone succeeds Edward Dowling aa
president.
Ofher officers named at Pharmacy's
87th Annual Spring Clinic and Alumni

~ he~:,~'!'• S:,~:~~n-fl:tt M~
president; Nicholas G"reco, second vice
president; Hazel Whalen, aacrelary; and
Donald Nash, treaaurer.
•
Dr. Michael A.. Schwartz, former dean
of the School of Pharmacy, praaently
the dean of the University of Florida's
School or PhJrrnacy . roceoved a poaQue
1~

~~e

..~,..,..~l"''!tJ..,"
~

s. .

prolc~slon.

'

hi~t

t'l f
r'!

"'""f' tl"it'! u tinnca 10
u~.-

P"J\~3" Y

�Mar11 , 1178

Con~empt
That's what 'Reporte.r' has
for students, Sartisky beli~ves;
says 'mouthpiece' has 'foot-in-mou~h'

Medieval scholar
Is new head
of the GSA

Editor·

.1c1rae
=:.::

Plnn IIU a B.A. from Roury
M.A. In "*"-! hietort from
81111a(bwhk:h ... produced.
tt.- oq 1M "Role of the AbbeSS in
OIIUidl "-ffmm In the 11th and 12th.

Clnlultel"l.

.......... Latin ancl is curyently in the
.-onc1 ,_.Of a PII.D. program lwe in
. . . , _ , Pltlloeopllicai, and Hlstori011 Feundllll- of Education. The
~of,....,.. in education and
ller , _ of

::r-...on ..

Plnn

obWIIoli.

..... allo p!Wielent-.lect of the

~su.t.ilt

All8oclation.

Wllat'a a ntae IChoiW nu 11er doing In

1M~ -'&lt;!Of c.npua

politics?
Eiliatly wli8t a lot of oilier grad

abldanta lfiOulcl be doing: putting

._. -..y where ller moult\ Is, so to

IP, ; ; . to be CU~tent to _ , paying
~MaiD GSA acllvlty fee," lhl r.calis.
"LLre tile typical ar-1 atudent, I
~but cldn'tbotller to find out
11110ut n.·

Plnn M*'ged as a leading contender
through this quiet process this year.
She was not. picked, she hopes, simply
because she Is a woman, just
because the GSA is sensitive to
minoritiatl in making
up these
consensus slates. (A "balanced" ticket
Is good, but not essential , outgoing
Prasiclent Ramanathan Nagarajan~ an
englnewtng student from India, i ndicated.) . .
During her administration (ahe'll take
over June 1), Plnn wants to get morel)!
the Unlverslty&gt;s 6,000 graduates out of
their complacent little study comers
811ft i nto the GSA mainstream.
"Probably half of grad students don1
even know there Is a GSA." she
suspects.

..

Nc~.v~

t:-er:'rn ·maki ng a11 grad
students aware of the organization's
potential for i mprovement oi their
· ~ic lives," she Indicates, In
driving home that "GSA Is not just for
IICIIvists, not only for GAs and TAs."
Plnn Intends lo make sure, too , that
the organization Is more than just a
bureaucretlc agenl for dispensing
money to various c[IJbs and organizations (although slici ng up tha grad
studentiiCiivlty fee pie has lobe one,of
the GSA's primary purposes).
One approach to promoting greater
Involvement and unde-.tand l ~ will

=~"l'n~t':'~~ot':, ~g!~~~k'~ ~~;~~

the executive committee and students
In each of the University's major
subdivisions. These coordinators will
ail in et executive committee aesslons
(whicli will continue to be open to all
ar.cS atudents). Hopefully, th is will
more effective links to
facilitate
atlldents In general ," Plnn explains.
Plnn also believes GSA should
become more vocal and vislble by
IMing atands on University and student
laaues. But she Insists Its stances have
to be more than just "dleputatlous
mouthing-off."

......
- - the
IMvlclbe
She-thinks
p.._,l turmoil on

:':~l",:~o~e~erm~al~~

as president, but on whither or not the
0fQ8111zallon, the bureaucracy, Is going

to be 8811J111ve to lhe needs OJII1udents
and faculty. It isn't now, Pinn believes:

1

:=::":..:Tuc~en-:! =~u~t~c~

l8rger role in policy-making and
decleton-maklng .•
th!MI and crisis In ·
hiGher adUC81ion, too, Plnn contends.
"flhHoeophy, hiiiOJY, the humanities,
lhe ctalnlca, are being Ignored
nationally, not just here. lt'a not
-'ling Ketter has designed . We
'-elo IIIOW11\eYre lonportant ."
She . . . ......., and the other new
Gil' lwdela as the anllthelis of
"powet..ftunaly mtni-IIOIIIicoa.•
~~lorOffice'**­
a neecl. OIA can twtp
tile Unhnlty. better
lhl
•AaG ......, ati!M*ion - wen,
INI'e.,..lraallwlloul,lan11t?" wtilch

"'*-'•

IIi,.,..,.,

.._,.,.u.rn

=

"*-·"

e . ,. .

..:~==~GSA
-"iT"....;;;'~a· CIUIIIna down on 11er
~to ~gain

lA
bool(a.
ella
to teeo11 moral
- - - .. . . . . . pertiapl- ller old
. _ . _ ~- a...tln.
..,.,.._ me, t111n11
CIUl' to have

-u

rm

u-....,..,·Ptnn~ .

TaiiUefMr..,nothelp-mea

iOII~-'lrC.-n.....,._tn

the off1110. rn be 1111e to IMIIt. •

Your contempt for the atudent
population of !hie unl...ttr as ,_.ad
In your articles on President Kettllf'a
!M81inga with the GSA and SA·...,.._
(the Reporter, Mey 4) sttould not be
permitted to pass or persist .,ntlout
comment. Both ertt.cles portJay students In terms caiculahld to ridicule and
belittle and skll1 the substantive
objections ralaed to not only the many
problems of the Ketter administration,
but also to his evasive presentations at
the"meetlngsthemMives .
Your ar1iciescompound the effects of
the President's clrcumllll\buialort lactics by epncentretlng on his excasaiye
prefatory staternente Jalher than the
content of the students' remarl&lt;s or their
responses to the Presldent. In the
ar11cle on the SA aenate meeting you
1111111ec1 to relate any par1 of the repor1
eva1Uatlng the Pnesldenl and to which
he was neplylng and conveyed only his
views. Your abetting of the President's
• cauae" ln this matter might posslb!Y
construed to be Innocent, ·a
sequence merely of Incompetence;

attit~g.,"'fo~!.Js0~iudS:.~~~n~

.their

Cholca ofverbe questioned
The article on the GSA senate
meeting commences by chatacterizing
the students as " Meatheads" andoroceeds to use verbs such· as'
•charged ," " Insisted ," and "demanded"
to describe their _questioning. In
contrast, the President Is presented
with the more restrained and neutral
"said ," "emphasized ," and " contended." On the one occasion where ha
• snapped ," you Imply he was justifiably .
reacting to provocation. There was
no~e.less prej udiced eye than the
Reporter's might have considered that
the students also " 9uestioned" " Inqu lred " " asked " or • stated " or that
their Objections were at least as well
considered and reasoned as the
President's evasions .

Th• article proves hie POint

- The GSA's lnvltatlon to PresidQnt
KstJ.§r asked that he speak to a prepared

ael of quellions lor a half houf so that
111e nemalntng hour and • half could be
detOtad to • cliaiOIIL'8 with the gradllate
students.. lnst.il, Preeldent Ketter
orated on lhe atruoture Of SUNY, the
Division of the Budii~S. the Trustees,
the Board of Regen&amp;, the Governor's
office, the State Leglelature,... and the
Supplemental Budget ed n•uuum,
AesPile - a l "polite requests lrom the
·GSA executive offto.. to desist and get
down to the business of the meeting.
The Reporter alated that he Initially
spoke for •a good half hour or so." By
my watch It was an hour and a quarter.
Your own article Ia evidence In this
matter, fully IWO;lhirda.of It Ia devoted
to the President a ntm8r11e and not to
. the"atatementa, remarks or questions of ·
the students.
_ Upon the concluding of hla lengthy
preface, strong obteCtlona were repeetediy ralaed from iha floor citing their
Irrelevance to the agenda and the fact
that virtually every meeting with the
President in the last four years IIU been
introduced in lhe fdentlcal fashion ,
designed to circdmwntllial~ue.
•

~':! ~i.th.:\1~~~~

tt!=•=
same lined l"llfllir1&lt;s _.n, and again, .
and again, you cliaraicterize the
students' rem811&lt;8 as having been said
" last year, the year before and the year
before that." if you were so astute as to
notice the pattern, why not · properly
- aaslgn the cause? if you wish to take an
editorial position, p i - be honest
enough to label It as such, and do nol
tender It as "news."
Report• 11M foot-i!Hftouth
For the sake of eccuract, Iaiit also be

:;,o~"3.!':\i~~ =~~~·~ :;'i?J::fa~rJg

lndivldual presumably ..typical " of the
patllclpants at ""the meeting. He is
neither a student, nor was he present at
the meeting In gf.lllstion . if vou Insist on
suspending a policy of objective
journalism and adopting the role of The
MQJJth of the Administration, at least
take the precaution of keeping your loot
outoflt.
-Michael Sartiaky
Graduate Student
II&amp;

UUP chief contends supervision,
evaluation need critical attention
EdHor:
The

quality ·of

auperviaion

.

and

~~~~~io.:\ 1 ~~~~": ~~~

parti cular impor1ance ln lhGaJ parts of
. the Uni-slty where paraons are on
short term appolntmente that may be
renewed or terminated et the whim of
those in charge.
The need for c:te.ry understood,
legitimate performance axpectatlona Is
commonly granted. There is the
aasoclaled need tor objectlve and

Exatmples are noported with painful
OIQNity. The oonoomltenl r-. tend
to have a negative impact on
pertonnar.ce. H would !Me a police
= t o monitor the University hour by

~~~s-=:."8:".:%=:-n= ~l

us
human concern abOut l~ards "for
quailty aupervlaton anc1 ..,..uatlon and
Indignation when they era violated. In
the abMnee of leo-! an&lt;1 conti8Ctual
righla, our collacltve 881118 of decency
lhould assure them lair, humane
attention that an 11M them of the
~'f:.~::J:~~e w~rs eo:P~~:i&amp;n~~d'n ~ damoclean
thnalt of Incompetence
. and/orlllwill. Thoughnotrequined , our
for-H::ece ·are matters ot
and
moral tllandarlh llttoukl ...,.. social
duties. It Is customary 16 -approach
equity .
them In terms of (1) what Is required by
On the positive aide, the current
law and (2) -what Is required by the
Professional Staff Senate workshop
Agreement (often referred to as the
activities can ba expiiCied to have a
"oontriiCI"). llut persons with shor1
·beneficial effect. Ills a atep that should
term aDPOI~t
shave little protec.
be encouraged. It Ia bound. to be
lion althar
law or contract. • insufficient until it Is ayatematlcally .
Preeenl
ic constraints are
built into the .system aod thoae In
tempting officials io lnc:re&amp;se the
charge Insist on adequate procesaes of
IIUfllber of temporary appointments.
supervision and evaluation.
legal and contractual rights are
-R. au-Gibson
._....,.; but they . . not sufficient.
President, Buffalo Cant•Cha~~~
They pfOvide, at bell a minimum
A cjyiliacl eoclety;-IUch a a
~d be ~piiCied to do

~Is

morat.:!fj
:,
:r..,

In the ..,_.ce of clear obli9elion, the _
Inadequacy of au1*11faory and ..,...,.
live performance Ia all too often
ahocklng . Thoae who do indeed have
...,. estmtiahed rights report harass"*"· But thai Ia not the WOflt upect .
Marginal wrm ~ns may be

=~~~-::*·Wit~

c~

live Pf8CIIca or the
eenslbla
-.ons. They also lack rights of review
In the event of such treatment.
These are not Idle apeculallona.

2 studenfs win
art travel awards

Two students In ~ - i)epar1ment
have received 11,800 awards for
iummw tr-1 oU1atde the U.S.
The awarda._ . made _ .l ble by a
beQueet. from Evelyn Rumaey Lord
which ellablilltted the Rumuy Furld in
III8ITIOf)l of Bronson Case Rumsey and
hi e wife Eveline Hail Rum•y.
The students. both etudlo ar1 majors,

=oc:tC:.VS::i.~~~h~~~eektowaga,

�Moy 11, 1tN

7

u·/BF head
offers support
for President
Editor:
We h - been watching with great
dismay the ....,Ia of the past lew days
as they relate to Dr. Robert L. Ketter.
a

V:u~~l.tta;/s :~~~~~"f~~

1~0 since, In our opinion, he
posseaaed, among othef traits, the
personaL qualities of sell-&lt;:onfidence,
physical energy, truthlulneas, humor
and commitment as well as the
• appropriate "paper credentials" to lead

~~~~~!J&amp;.C:::erS::..,""\:s

become
even mono viiiOf'OUS and enthusiastic In

support of Of. Ketter - a respect Dr.
Ketter ~ .-ned through his daily

p.&gt;&lt;formance.

•

In our opinion, this ha8 been an open

~,:~~ll';~~:!':V.-ns~:'i~~1. to the

Addltlonalty, the University's stated'
purposes of t.-:hlng, ,._ch and
public ~MVice h - been .ap,propr1ately
defined and pursued.
It Is a tragedy that In this day and age
the! a
whO public educ:iitlon
so well must be aubjected to unfounded
aJieoatlons 11om unidentified and

Oper-.atlon Access

"*'

en=

m~~~~~ly

~r:..

;eel

that Dr.

State-su.pported project is geared
tow,ard increasing numbers of employees
who are handicapp~d; it's going well

01

~e u=Ft~~

Buffalo -'&lt;a for Itself, we would be
remiss In our responsibilities II we
permitted this criticism to continue
without comment.
We conalderDr. Ketter a very poslliYB
· force tor the Unl-slty and wanted you,
P.S editor of the ReptKter, to be aware of
our feelings.
-John M. Carter, President
U/B Foundation, Inc.

Champagne-event
moving outside
-Champaone on the lawn, 11 skies ere
cleer, has replaced the bar lor SUNYAB
Sund.y with the Philharmonic May 14.
The members of the olt:hestra haY&amp;
been Invited to join faculty and friends
for a "tout to mutual good feelings,"
acccrdin11 to David Hays, who Is making

~'::..ft;"Cfu':.':*'s!:.r~n .=''..f~,~~

~ne t~e1 &amp;e~~,S'b.,~g o~~~~~~~e~~

snow and thrashed by monsoon winds,
Operation Access unobtrusively got
underway.
A joint venture of the State Labor
Departmeht anil the State University of
New York, Operation Access was
Instituted to Increase the number of
qualified handicapped Individuals in the
SUNY work force and also as a wajU&gt;Iassisling individual SUNY units to
better respond to the needs _of the
disabled.

ha!~ ~;, ~i~~nd~';,"J'.freda er;:t::::::r~
1

$215,000 Labor Department grant; three
of them at U/B . There will ultimately be
a total of 20 SUNY-wide.

ad~'fnf.?r~~ t~ss~~~~:e fo~~~~;~~~

accessibility. The Rehabilitation Act of
1973 mandates that a self-study on
accessibility be done by June.
Because the role of ombudsman here

:~a~~~YC:'f~/'ve~~rc'!:!led f~"''\~.

Handicapped , U/B's trainees . are not
intensely Involved in that,area.
According· to Mrs. George Dykes
Unger, coordinator of U/ B's Operation
Access, a University-wide committee

~~ii~~~~~e~~m~~~!:ft~~1n: ~~tYo~~
1

·The panel , chaired by Budget Control
Officer Nell M. Goen , received resumes
from Personnel, the local Office of
Services for the Handicapped, SUNY's
Affirmative Acti on office and the State
Department of Labor's Special Placeg'i~~;io~nd ~ehagllitalion Counseling

..
Access at SUNY Central, U/ B was
Now nearing completion of the
" among the first " of the units to
orientation phase of the program, the
• establish a campus program and also
three trainees haY&amp; visited all vice
has the most Optllatlon Access
presidential areas and most of -the
professional staff trainees.
departments these vice presidents
Und'er terms of the grant proposal
supervise. The purpose of
the
which was written by Dolores Barracano
orientation was to . foster a general
Schmidt, assistant vice chancellor for ·
familiarity with the complex structure
aftlrmatlve action, participating camand functions of the UniYersity. .
puses assume no financial .responsibllity lor the first year of the trainees'
employment. All salery, stipends,
training sessions , transponation and
on H~~~g r~r~tiyPh~:a..:r ~.=~:·
materials are funded by the grant. After
Symphony .
Access, its three trainees were able to
the first year. however, campuses must
offer fre~h Impressions o! the program:
make "every good faith elton" to create
or convert titles at a PR-1 leYBI or above
Despite hassles caused by lnaccea-·
In which the trainees can be
sible s;ampus t:fansportatlon and the
permanently placed:
fact that many Individuals fall to realize
All Operation Access trainees are
they_ jlre professional staff and '(lOt
Lite Wort&lt;ahopa are looking for
students, the three still agreed thet lor a
handicapped, haY&amp; at least a bachelors
volunt- leeders lor Summer 78
degree, and were CETA eltolble.
, first effort , the program has enDepending on the lndlvidual cam countered surprisingly few snags ~
and/or Fall '78 programs. Here's •
puses, trainees may: 1) review existing
Sure, being constantly fed new
chance to ahans your -l&lt;nowledge and
skill In a particular area with members
cernpus practices and procedures to
Informati on about the Uni versity made
it seem Initially like they were being
of the entire U I B community.
determine whether they have an adverse
asked to assemble a 1,000-pl ece puzzle.
effect on the handicapped ; 2) survey
"Juggling," " Pocket Billiards," "Coping with Depression," and "Wine
physical Jacllitles to detect any barriers
But gradually, the pieces b&amp;Oan to form
to
the handicapped and make
Wisdom" were among workshops
an outl ine and the trainees now feel
offered this semester. New IN!Iers may
r;ecommendations regarding needed
quite comfortable with the picture that
repeat previously offered workshops or ,
modifications; 3) act as campus _ has emerged.
develop ' new ones. Participants In
ombudsmen for handicapped studf!nls
For Sally Maxfield and ·Cheryl
and employees ; 4) assist In allons to
recent programs have Indicated Interest
Kishbaugh , who both graduated from
in a wide range of topics, Including tuba
recruit handicapped students and staff;
private cqll~es last yeer, Operation
playing,
camping,
exercise,
and
5) help sensitize the UniYerSity
Access has provlde9 their first " real"
community to the needs of the
employment venture. The young women
Short~.
handicllpped and suggest ways in
1
which each constituency can beat
respond to these ' need a; and/or 6)
~nt, oldest of the trainees and a 1970
interpret and monitor llllleoialation and
greduate of U I B, fa at. . excited but
..
11tate and federal regulations pertaining
more relliii'Yed when expressing his
'POll-. The program Ia funded
to the handicapped and ensure campus
through the Dmalon of Student Affairs
sentiments. Gant once worked as a
compliance.
• counselor 'and moat recently held an
and Student Auoclatlon . Wort&lt;ahops
At U/B, trainees Bill Gant, Sally
allow members of the campus
~~~~~'l"ct~~~~~e Niagara
Maxfield and Charyl Kishbaugh have
community to interact.
worked closely with the diYiaions of
Ar1Yone wltll a particular skill or
The trio like the advantages of being
Finance and Management and Facilities
employed at a large unl-slty center;
InWIIO would like to laad a
they h8Y8 enjoyed atbowlng with
Planning In h~ng to ldantlfy and
~ ahould obtain a '~eader
11
1
P'OIIOMI from 110 Nonon ~Amherat .
:l~r~~~ ":es~~n:. g1. d~~~~'t~
DaadliM data lor recelvl
.summer
proPOUta Ia June t . Cont
the Life
11
yol th?act~f.1esas~~!:.':llngJo~~
roY.~k~~ke-:r~:a~~:.:h~~~~~::
WOfkallopa oflloa lor further lnformapreparing a repor1 on Uni-sitv
and ask 'What do you do?' •
tion(83&amp;-2108) .
tratora, Faculty Club President Ruth
Smiley, and numerous distinguished
members of the faculty will be on hand .
The ptlce of the post-concert altair Is
" up to $5," to cowr the coat of
champagne lor a couple and their
mU8iclen guests. For those who do not
accept alcoholic drinks, Hays asld, an
alternfllhe will be ......,ed.
The
champagne-or-alternative money will be
collected on the spot.
For Information about ticket avallabll-

W:e
co~~~ o:o'":::C."CCt~e.!:a~
which they would like to heY8 lgtenslve
training. The training pe(lod will last
approximately seven mon1hs and may
inYOIYB one or more areea. Slnoe moat

~~nrn!s.itt~rns.=,I~JedM~ F =
Public ittalrs or· Student Att':l!rs, the
trainees should not find It too difficult
to nerrow their choices.

ce~~n~~PEI!,J.'~~~~~il;y'!o~ln~,.;!s ~ !~

successful placement .
At the end of the training phaae, the
work performance of trainee wilt
be evaluated by the department lnYOhred

~r~~hwh.:'~~;'~\:' w~l ~r,:

Office of Affirmative Action and Hurn8n
Resources Development (pert of the
Finance and Management area).
II the trainees do not work out,
departments are under no obllgetlon lo
hire them; neither Is thllre a punlthe
aspect asaoclpted wllh a poaaibte
dapartmental ntjectlon, Unger .,._
phaslzed. On the contrary, the purpoee
of the training perioct Ia to determine If
there "Is a mesh tlatween aldlfs and
departmental need," Unger explained.

·• . .

14;ilh'!:n~:a~. I::t~~ ~~~':

Life Workshops
seek leaders

:~=~~~~.;t"::',! ~n~~~~p=d~o ~tm

~=.-:lter"': c~=. ~
~~=ta~.:'u~afr.c' ~~r.""..!~

IT'~~::':'rr'l:a o~~~~~\\~~~~~:

W.'ii:

-JI.

Ketter peraonan y spent - . 1 hoL'fll
with
the group explaining
the·

~~}~~~p~~ .!.,'j.,~nl=~~:.:

community.
The trainees have,_ apprehensions ·
about
their ability to
function
competently and productlvaly as Plfl of
the University's work force. The 'trio
expressed confidence that any attitudinal problems they m.y encounter
will not lmpe.de their proleulonat
development and likely will be obviated
by an office "awar8M88" aernlner which

:r!l'A~~6'n s81W!"~~~~c'!~

get situated on \heir jobs.
"We don't want to get a job because
we are handicapped but because we can
do It wert,• explains Kishbaugh.
Concerning co-wort&lt;era, she edda, ''We
do not want condescension, we want
underStanding ."
For Kishbaugh, the moat pl_,t
and surprising dlacovery about her
employment at U/B Ia the ·~'­
attitude" she has experienced from
other employees she met during

~en:~~h~~1ee~-:'=· ~

Unl-alty and ~ not a number" as .,_
hed anticipated .
Gant says his pigrst surprise Ia
finding that "!081 o the University
community "seem ,..,oltlva to the
needs of people with
p/lyalcal
limitations." Thefe Is "a lot o( activity
on campus" to rectify problema relating
to accesslblllt,;:.-he finds . His Initial
assumption was that " rhetoric" would
replace corrective action .

�Moy 11,1878

Criitit-Free
offering array
of new courses
The
• Wide
ol ~
'ollwtll8
*to
the
....._ ol " - In
8nd ,

D.H. _Lawrence
· Nipissing College President discusses
meanings of the English-bar~ author,
his own 'Rananlm' north of TorQDto

Olftoeoter.nt-F- Prog&lt;M~a Ia
llfty

.........,_uniiY.

~
elt1'8Ct
the Buftalo

If dllp clown tnarde, youw always
llllllilllld )IOU - the Mhenturoua type,
1111t 111e moet -vv tlltng youw dDne l e - 1M A..,... Cempua In

=..a_

Clwdii-Frw'a Willie Weier
_ , beluatlllethlng.

1 b e - aflw'ed rn cooperation
w1t11 au.t ~... _Inc., .,., the
........... Ollldoor IAI1ter, leetures

.._ ct.r11 ol

CMOetng

on

the

Qllaooglt , . _ In northern Georgia,

.. fllliiJnt elte

lor

the movie,
"'OIIIMw-· line daY&amp; oflnstructlon
• MilD
ekllla m&gt;d r l -

.......-u

-=:.=-...:.the~or

the
. , , . . . _ Ia a course In
allllla tor 8llldoor8 .,lhualuta. lnaludwlln tile -.clay lnatructlon will be
~Y •aistance,
Mil OUidoar equ.,_. purchue and
- . lrllllr..-a wtH be pereonnel from
1t1a Adlfondaclc Mountain Club and Gary
Fox ol Tifft Farma. An optional
backpacking w......,d Ia available.
You uy tflere'a no playground nearby
10 a..d the lclda to when you're
lwllllrlng tor a little solitude? .No
..--.build your own . Credit-Free's
Building A Safe Playground for Children
wllll..:h you hOw. EniOIIeea will get
.tnt-hand experience building sale
equl!ln*rtllalocal .c:hool aile. In

-.on......_.,

=
In

~':;.,~ =~ax::~h~=

--=

~t . The ~ Ia being
IWiatlt In oonjunctlon with the
Wllllamtwttle SchOol Dlatrlcl .
ort..MW
listings lor the

c..cm-F-

,..,_,..Organization and

Tillie Managanwrt, Joggfng and Condl-

tloillng, Single Living, and a HortlcUbri Preellcum. In addition , eChedulad In Home
DM~~an and. Mime, and 'Instruction In
~I wHI be held lor the first lime
111M loul- Mall and O.dlerd Hills
_..u,ajl clube.
The Dlvlalon ol Conllnulnll' Education, 1llrovgh the Credit-Free Office,
will lt)ltlale a Pre-College .Learning
lllltle l'logram also.
..

_..., -ion•-

despite the many elllslons she Insisted
that Zytaruk make In their texts. (later I
asked Zytaruk II a complete !ldlllon of
the Brett latter&amp; was now'"possible,
Dr. George J. Zrtaruk, one of ailven
alnoe ahe hea diad In the Interim and
editors of the forthcoming new edition
her feelings are now a matter for
of the let~Ma of D.H . ~.
posterity; he aald he did not thl nk so
addnaaaed a gtOUP of SUNY·Buff81o
students and f.:ulty Thurad8J -.lng, _ becauaa Brett diad without altering her
Aprll27, In Diefendorf. The new edition,
explicit Instructions to ha.. the letters,
replete with Information about Murry,
1fn,_::lty
Lawrence, and Murry's wile Katherine
Mansfield, printed only wit~ holes In
two-volume 'Nt edited by the plo.them). But while lawrence had a certain
lawrence acholar, Harry T. Moore.
naivete in trusting his friends, Zytaruk's
One of tile people making the new
edition so obviously needed, I realized
overall imrraaslon, based on a quarter
century .0 reeding and studying this
~~~l:,!li','l"a !o ~j~~~~aro'\k, t':w~r,~~ son of a Nottingham area coal miner
who became a great writer;- Is linn:
letters to one man Samuel S.
lawrence was -11 aware of the many
Kotellansky - added 2-40 lawrence
pco.blems that_ his work raises and
which are still being argued over today
In the most haated terms. He knew what
1
he was doing , lnclulllng the objections
to 11. He also ,hed answers to many of
and In unpublished sources.
those objections.
Zvtaruk re-eraated some of the
excftement of those and other scholarly
discoveries he has made since be went
A college of 370 with a lake you can
back to graduate school, alter a career
drink out of
'
l'.:'t~:\~~hool teacher and principal,
Zytaruk currently Is president of the
~.H. lawren,ce Society, eleCted I am
The story goes back stnl earlier, to
re lor his merits as a scholar and also
his boyhood In Western Canada. The
lor his considerable talents as an
administrator. Tn 1967, he was Invited to
: ; ' r~~t&lt;;'~'::' E~~!~~~ar:og~l~
give up his university teaching post at
up on a farm. One day In 9th grade, he
the University ot A1berta, and bacorne
read D.H. lawrence's poem, "Snake,"
the founding president of Nlplsslng
and began a profound lnvol~ant with
University College, located In North
the work of Lawrence that has
Bay, Ontario, about 200 miles riorlh of
completely ch~ged his life. It
Toronto. He has been In that position
has led him to a • whole world" of
ever since, a lull time admin istrator who
lawrence, tar . from 111s original
has had a small amount of time off to
1
~~H~~~~- wrz'.ss~i ~in!~~~ :~~ t~~~ do his research ·On Lawrence. He also
teaches a course In lhe English
Ukraine has something to do with
department there (not always on
1
~tnfa~~-~~~~'t'~wr:::!~~~s~is '!-o~K~;s~ lawrence) .
The college Is located on two
translator of Russian literature, and his
beautiful lakes. You can drink oul of
friendships with Katherine Mansfield,
one of them still; and Zylaruk and his
Dorothy Brett , and John M.lddleton
family do. As for the wealher, compared
Murry.
to the great Buffalo snowstorms, "We

::Ji!&gt;v..:l' ~on~::~~~:-!~~~~,; ~

BJ Artlu Efron
~&lt;IIEnglloh

=j

htgh Interest In lawrence In Japan,
whn there Is also a D.H. Lawrence

P~::','';ul ~~~h~~

1

~~::. ~,~~. rhe::

~~~all~~ on~':.~~~ d"fC:::Z1~

ism , Nanoilu Burdick, who t~s at
East Aurora High School (she told
Zytarllk of a film on lawrence's life that
had been shown there but which he had
never seen), and Professor David
Willbem of the English Deperlment
;ru:~~~~ft. others taking part ~

=

Jl=~~

C:~ Yo~~~.:"~fohu~ t=~~~

The meanlnge of-Lawrence
Zytaruk had told me that he wanted to
apeak on lawrence scholarship, not
give a lecture In literary criticism. But
as aoon as Ills lonnal address was o-.
the audience's questions Invited him
Into a dlacuaslon of the meanings of
Lawrence. The Invitation was read ily
accepted . Ha discussed lawrence's
" Phallic Vlolon," and even · briefly
tackled tile question aaked by Amold
Snyder, about lawrence's Impact · on
modem conaclouanesa. The " Phallic
VlaJonP In feel had a greet deal to do
with one ol Zytaruk'a . - e l l findings,
l'llftltlly Lawrence's reading - In the
mldat Of writing Lady Chatterley's Lo..,
- of the SOIIMrle, a work by the
~wnarv. v

. ........... trww~ated

otoocne by Kotaltanaky.
Ral:iM¥ - · 10 , _ been 0!)8 of
tile lew wr11. . In the worlcl who might
, _ -..oed l.nnnoe at a key
_ . , , 10 reg.d paaalonale aaxual
kind o1 .-tllly_patW:IIaa and

::::t:;J..

~lor
~~r.=.:::
~ had al.o got from KotallartakJ, clenoltng a kind Of-ly paradlaal

oommunlty .- -

finally rtiPiaoed by
the I * - * Phallic vlaion that
~ bella-. Lawtwnce had been
_....... IDWM!I, though not al-ya
~. throughout lila~ as a-

cnatNe.rtlat.

~;.,~e~a'c\'~ta~~f.h h~';;:,~ f~r ?:~~3~~~
0
~lp&amp;~~~~n:_ ~~~~~~ ds ~~u~~n i;::

but alter about five years the
problems got out of hand. Nlplsslng
became too large a college. That
made me laugh with all fl)Y SUNY and

~::.,e,~~n~~H~!~~ !l.':~ 'f.:":'o~e t~
11

unlmagln~tbl~ny

370. There are fifty

~a,:'~'t~h m~,Te~;,~:_'!.dl~~eur 1~ t~~

department chalnnan, Indicating I
think that It Is possible for as many as
lour people to work cooperatively
without choosing a "head ."
Informal maetlnga
Following the lecture and question
period, Zytaruk met with lawrence
students at my house, going on until
alter midnight with some serious·
discussions. He was challenged In his

~:r.:t:;:~~~~~:yp~o~'fn

'Engtlsh....,.om SU~Y-Bulfalo recently,
wrlllng In depth on social Implications
and not so much about per1011al

m~ 'len~l~;r.:;,c:;,

1

also a recent

J'~l!..':t~~!ns~st~

K=:.
Institution of SUNY-Buffalo~ In a lew
months.
Professor William Mallory of West
Vlrytnla Wesleyan Unlvwalty; presently

Femlnlat attec:k
By the time the breakfast lor Zytaruk
had finished lhe next morning , he had
given whet amounted to ,l.hree seminars
on Lawrence within fifteen hours. But
thi s did not seem to tire him , nor did the
whole thing surprise him. Interest in
lawrence is Intense all over the world .
lawrence has survived the feminist
attack on him, launched notably by
0

~.~:.~~·~a::. m~~ cri~~~~r l~~~=

(also In some respects feminists), have
answered it very effectively, and even
sympathetically. I am thinking particularly of Janice Harris, whose second
thoughts on Millett appeared in the
Massachusetts .
Review,
lydia

~!~~chJ~~;,;:;~~ ~~~ as:~~To~a~ t~~

.

~.;},;~·nin ~hlc~i~r~~~D~';'beJ;;r~:
Zytaruk attended_. and Evelyn . Hlnz,
whose work &lt;:ytaruk
particularly

ad~~~~nce

has also survived the even
more hostjle (though somewhat less
well known) attack by males lhat has
gone on over the years, even the
Incredible hate-piece (my students are
usually unable to get through It, no
mailer what their doubts of Lawrence)

ts~ ':.?~~t m~~~o~in~n~s~'s-!
0

cruel letter that lawrence Is

1

oia!

sup~sed

~~:rr.,~~i~~~~t toitthT. dy~~f;~ \\~:
Zytaruk, and careful critics as well, who
have pointed out the necessary facts . In
the case of that letter - which the
editors of the new edition, Zytaruk
says, will print w!Jh an explanatory
footnote - there Is no original copy
and the only report of what It contained
Is that of the man who destroyed It,
John Middleton Murry.
'
'
Hard ~-In
_ _.,
Zytaruk -.ad to be. demonstrating,
through argument and hla own
example, that old Ieeson of r~h :
even with the moat cont~slal
maJerlal, Inflammable aa It may be
within our peraonal fantasies, there Ia
such a thing as hard fectual -.tdence. 11
Just takes the kind Of patience and
lnalght thet George Zytarul&lt; has, to get
It together.
Zytaruk'e lactura was sponsored by
the Department of English.

/

Management,-Geography
init_
iating dual program

~e

~~ement

School of
and the
Department of Geogr
yare lnltlatl(lg
a dual PIOgram
n lnternetlonal
bualneaa and world t r - to begin In the
Fall of 11178.
Thla greduate level program Integrates
Manegement'l International curriculum

~hetrate::~w;¥;, ·.::n~etlonal

/.Three obl.:tl- ot the
program
.,., 1) to pt'OYide a
uate degree
optiOn for tlloaa who wall to prepare tor
carMra In lnternetlonai business, 2) to
foster coll-lon among students
and !.cuny I n - " elforta,and 3) to
provide a continuing educational
service to the We!llern New York
"" • ·~~~ "&lt;&gt;&gt;llmunhy
.,,

V•

v

'"h,;Jolr.HI..,.H\.111

~ru~nag,.,Anl

:.- r

1-.t~-ng

ll.t.i/hbH••tJ,

Ht

.... ~,.

&lt;tud nls will be ,

bl~

to

aklll~ locat;fan~~lls,

deYelop
In
regional and cultural systems -lualion, and the analysis and Jnanligement
of tranoportetlon logistics systems.
Students will also be expected to
develop a minimum competency In a
lol'ltlgn language of their choice. Those

:nr.:=::~~n:~~t~h~ ~t'B'~

the MBA from the School of
Management.
In light of recent events In this
country and abroad, the outlook tor
lobs around the cou11try In International
bu-.lness appears quite favorable,
Management spokespersons proJect.
More lnfonnatlon can be received I rom
Ms Artcno A. Berg •all'" the 5chbol of
•

;~

m

t {P11 2:'·1'.;) "'r

~r

J n

t;

.1 .. C..,Itfti...H
,;
!I,... Dt.~.J; ,tr•• ,..,l\
r.e&lt;&gt;g"'phy IC35-2289). -

[

i

�&lt;. May 11 , 1171

\ Openseason'
for unions
campu~ noJ. open
tor

The
Is
territory"
ali contenders tor fecufty.-ataff
representation, bolt&gt; UUP-and others-.
According to a memor8fldum to
presidents of all State-operated C8IJio
puoes from Jerome B. Komte., SUNY
vice president for fecutty otatt ,relations, _ . , OfDI!IIIratioroa haft
expressed Initial fntereat In chelllnalng
UUP: the NeW YOIII EdUCiilori
Asaoclalfon (NYEA), _...d the SUNY
AAlJP
r.-tatton
oommlttee

(~~\;::'3

Youngster enjoys ....ion dnigned to •Uevl8t11 t..tth ce,.. , . . ,..

'Don't be afraid of the doctor'
A U/8 occupational therapy major
has developed a one-hour pro11ram ,
which includes a 25-minute onglnal
film, to allay youngsters' fears ofhaalth
treatment .
James Ktyczek, a junior, craated the
program for a community haalth course
In cooperation with volunteers at
Children's Hospital. The Hospital
volunteers regularly provide tours,
f&gt;Unch and cookie parties and such
Items as surgical masks and nurse/
doctor puppets In order to r\l(luce tears
and tensions on the part of youngsters
scheduled for hospitalization .
On a more limited basis, the
volunteers also pres·ent slide shows and

programs for area children through
schools and other organizations.
·
Klyczek says that while only a small

ro~~~~f;~!,. ~ost c~::rr~~ ex~~ed ~

health treatment In emergency rooms,
cllhics or physicians' offices. And the
more familiar they are with equipment
and procedures, the leas fearful they'll
be of these potentially frightening
situations .
The therapy student's program.
which was presented to 400 area
youngsters In April , includes )lis film
and a workbook developed for children
3 \'.! to 9 years of age, as well as
puppets, surgical masks and brochures

provided by the Children's Hospital
volunlfllrs,
The South Ogden Super Duper market
donated "Mr. Yuk" sl1ckers, which
should be applied to materials around
the home which are potentially
hazardous to children.

raised in Italy where the love of good

fi!:m.:a~ ~ :?!~.g ~~o~~~embers,

rl.~~ fn~~1sog~~~t'~~~~:;'l'e":, ~p t~ ~~:

When people not familiar with the
clasalcs would make an excuse,
perhaps acknowledge a gap in th.elr
experience, maybe teal "guilty" about
it.
.
No more.
Now, too often, Pinto says, young
people and others seem to feel :il's rock

fgg =~c

no~~~~~;

or
t':.'e
of COllege 8
laments. A waste.
Pinto has a plan to do something
about it. -He's offering a fall semester
course designed to open the eyes of
students and others in the community
to the pleasures of live performance of
the Cfassica.
Enrollment Is open to those who have
never understood or enjoyed the
classics as well as to those who enjoy
but lack background. Anyone may
register through COIJege 8 , through .
MFC, or by way of the Credit-Free .

- . Live,"
pr~;.~ied. "Concerts and COmments
the course will center around flve
Sunday conc&lt;irts of the Buffalo
Philharmonic, lrom October through
eany Oeoember.
Those who enrofl will be obliged to
attend seven additional concerts,
Including rock, jazz and chamber
mualc, and 12 lectures (Monday
fY811ings, from 7:15 toll:15 p.m.).
Pinto end Dewld Hays
Pinto will lead the lectures, with the
aaalstance of Prof . Oavld G. Hays of
Ungutatics, a sort of "musical man In
the atr..t." A non-musician Who loves
music, Hays Is a recipient of a
O..cellor'a Award for Excellence in
taaclling .
Pinto, an associate profeSlQr of
mu•lc. ia a concert pianist (w.- -can
alao lapse Into jazz with the bftl of
them). A natl.,. of Yugoslavia, he was

1

1

exposed .to ·classical music f(Om an
·early age, he points out; thus its
appreciation is not second nature to
most Americans as it ts to Europeans.
Pinto and Hays will be joined by
l?.rofessors, critics and musicians.
Ideally, we will be able to get soloists
from the Philharmonic to come in and
play a piece and then explain It," Pinto
says.
Undergraduate students can sign up
tor the course now during advance· fall

~~·~;,a~~~~~vf~o \~~:~~ ~~~~~:~~~~~~

the class schedule.

It Is listed as CB 287, the reilistration
number is 064904 , and it carries four
credits.
.
Evening school registrants will be

fn':'!e~~eJiY~ t~~in~tr~e ~u~~~ f~~o~~

credit. MFC registratioQ for fall begins
In June and Credit-Free's sign-up Is In
late summer.
Those enrolling will be assessad a fee
ror concert tickets. The Philharmonic
package costs $15 for the five
performances . COsts for the remaining
1

:~~bf~n~~~ :!~u~sk~r~~s t~:~~~

Is large enoug!Yto warrant -it , some

f~~r~~:n~rht;.~~r~a~~l:~''r,~~

among regularly-scheduled U/8 or
community events (some free and some
not).
Concert achedula
Tile Phllharmon c concerts which .
class members will attend offer a bonus
of both guest artists and guest
conductors. In addition to performance under the baton of tt&gt;e
Philharmonic's Michael Tilson Thomas,
the class
will
attend
concerts
conducted bv Nev.tlle Marrlnner (No-

ney~~~~"J.tun:~ the 'Gu~lines for
Orllanlzatlonal Activities and Carnpalq_ns, ' issued by OER," Komi- said,
"all employee · organizations, both
incumbent and compellng, ant entitled
to equal access to ---employees tor

.=

~~zac:;~~~,r'= 1~u~~ll!
~~W,nda'::gel~i~ ,~1~rJ ~~k~r3· ::.

"The film deals with various types of
health professionals and treatments

election be ordered by PERB).

Unl-sfty nwlr8ffty a muat
" During this period the resources of
the University may not be utilized to
support the organizational afforts of
any employee organization. Further, the
University's position during this
organizational and campaign period
must be one of neutrality aa between

children can expect during hospitalization or out-patient care," says Klyczek.
The workbook, which features artwork

~art~;~%~•• ~!~~for~;~o?~fo~:::~tT~~
presented elsewhere.

¥:'~et~':Pnct:re~''= co:!:''=~h

gener!ll

State

policy

and

practice

~!?~~~~~~nf:u:l:f:..~;::
~:~!f~~e~f~':n:~~,"::lf.~:"~n~~~

Carlo Pinto's new College B class
will attend Philharmonic concerts,
is open to anyone with an interest in it
Good music, Carlo . Pinto is sad to

-rn~~~b.ntf':mp~=:..t~~ p~
~~:~~ fr:'md=~t~':,:r =~o"ftl~

they provide as well as with what

Good Music
88

:::-.,.iatdente thet "we
can expect ... a slgnlflcent lncr6ue In
union actlvtty on cempue ellould the8)e
competing organlratlone deckle to_
follow through with a challenge:"
ACCOfdfng to tltt Taylo( uw, Kom'sald, there are "epecffled time periodS within which lncum-t employ,.
organizations are subject to chellenge
- from competlt9f employee organtmlfons seeking certlfftatlon u
the
employee ~1... The next
·challenge period' commences August
l, 1978, and extends for a Ollii-"''nth
period·. During this period a competingorganization may file with the Public
Employment RelatiOns Board (PEAS) a

~~~~a~' 'f~!st ~:l!::.Ozr.t;o":'ut~=

utilization of working areas for, nor

~~h~':l~r.ro.=n=~:::re
~

vember 19) and Lukas Foss (December

~~;.t~~~d:~'la~~~b~da~c:%:.~ ~~f~

~,:~~ ~~~f~e"f.latu~~ v.~f~airr~:~
~n~·~~~~~:. ~~~~~~ ~~i~'.!.?;~
_be8fh~~'j:~harmonlc concert dates,

soloists and program hlghligl'\ts are:
•October 9, Alicia De lal;rocha,
pianist ; Beethoven's Piano COncerto
No . 4, lves' Robert Browning Overtur&lt;~,.­
•Oclober 22 , Garrick Ohlsson ,
&amp;i~~~.~~~:;;·~e;t :."rony No. 5;
•November 5, Isaac Stern, violinist;
ProkofleV'.s Love for Three Oranges, and
Violin Concerto l'fo. 1; Mozart's Adagio
Rondo for Violin, Symphony No . 40.

1

Is It rel8¥anl?
Is this kind of music relevant?
Yes, says Pinto. "Music Is relevant to
personal growth: emotional growth, the
understanding of one's self , one's
fellows , and one's
world.
The
experience ol music Includes technical
appreciation, animal pleasure, L and

~~r~''li:1~g·; :~s:~~t ~~~a~:o:~a~o~

concealed in everyday life."
Pinto feels strong!¥ there is no
substitute for live performance. A
record, heard once, becomes boring
after that. There are no surprises.
Althoufn he ts a proponent of

~~~{~s:vo~d ~'f.!~:'::1:ss~mto
He wants those Who

sl~n

'would
up now and

::;o~,':,.w~oc::'~::C:~~~~ i~"3!~: i~~r,

interest . That -Y he can give the
Philharmonic some idea of how m11ny
seats he'll need, and can make arrangements to book the lectures and
class concerts into a lerge room
(perhaps even the COrnell Theatrej
should reglstrat fon top flO . The phone
number at COllege 8 1&amp;63&amp;-2137.

pargn

efforts

of

any

competing

emtf~o:.~:~~~~-~ permitted to

engage In
(solicitation
distribution
nonworking

organizational activities
of organizational support,
of literature, etc ..) during
hoyrs and In nonwOIIIIng
areas, ~omt- said, provided "that
such actltllies do not impajr normal
campus operations nor Interfere with
work. duties or work performance.
1

~~";"~~"f. t:t::'!i~. "gl11C:C ~

other related araaa.''
. Access to employees for ~anlza­
tional purposes by staff members of
employee organizations . or other
persons not employed by the college Is
limited 'to nonWoriting . areas normally
open to pul;lllc uae. Such areas would
Include, Komi=tW Indicated, parking
lots, walkways, those bulldlllll entrances and lobbies open to the pubf ;,
and other areas normally open to public
use. Employee organizatiOns -are
permitted to aet up manned tmles In
such areas provided euch activity
· neither Impairs normal o.peratlons nor
Interferes with work duties or work.
·
No maatlng apace, unleu ...
The vice chancellor Indicated th-t
"meeting space In State facilities shall
not be made available to employee
organizations for organizational or
campaign purposes unless suitable
space Is not ·reasonably available
elsewhere In the area, the University Is
reimbursed for costs 11\c:urred In making
space available, and lhe request for
space Is made In advance In accordance
with existing campus rules. Campus
mall and messenger, reproduction and
similar ficilltles, shall not be usad for
distribution of organizational mat«ials
either on .,.naif of the tncurubent or any
&lt;;halienglng employee organization."
- During this period all employee
organizations are to enjoy equal access
to employees for , campaign purposes,
Komisar emphasized.

�•

__
.,_
..-..-

China&amp;. the U.S.: Government &amp;. p~lltlcal change,
....... I*Forv-

. 1t1e ell"- heft .-Jw.ra thought

of

=-~="31»~~~
ltltiiRG tagelllw to cnete the good

---the-

having - . highly "plurallotic," ' with
politics playing a -t..ly minor role In the
evolution ol ~. ,...... lo, of courae,
truth to thlo YleW. From _,Y tlmeo,
Woetom • • • ...., expectod
ohare

to

= = t y ~tza~'"::'ulch~=-=d
lancled elltee. Thera wera vartouo fotml of

thenllont, typically
end _ , henlclltery

=:t-:.0::~~.=~·· monan:hy,
e- · within - - thenl wera
ca&lt;1aln legally oonatltutod bodlea, ouch u

- - - " • · H.G. CrMI hU shown thet

;.::.,r.:s' ,::-~ ~t"?,R.Ial=~.:::­

llllllllj.. They,

==~"'=::L.
~~~~~
_.. UIIIIQ"'- end technical
1M~~

ap•'nlll...,

=

~lc

the

end ...,._,_ long

most

atructurea

before they
---~ ecc.pt1ld In the West.
He ... ~ the! Ch~MM

=a:=.=~t!.:ICv~.~~
w.e.m
oow-n-t to reaulf In the
"11M of ... IIIOdem .atete."
Be IIIII as If mey, the more Important
point te tMNtle Qll-, through long
~. deftloped •
of ~ to

keen under-

meke their
lniiiHullona function elfecUwly. They empheaiZIId the need for a

lllndlng

~

. . _ ._., Who would provide a
model far eoclely end would give
diNctlon to a smell elite of broadly
lnllned end lllghty motivated echolarafllallla.
expected to·
~
over the bureaucIIIIJ ~ llltencllng to delalla and by
en atiiiOiphent In which
orltlciMI" tol-ed.

The....,_..._ tnu-

E
a.-_,_..

Huclcer 11M

the oxecuthe, judlclwy end loglalatiwe,
enother.
which wera dealgned to checl&lt; -

suaplc~~r:n=·

g:,t at~-:st t~!

C t a of bualneaa.
.,..
Yet should not cweremphaslu tno

w=.to;;: ,~ P:!'=~p~~':'.:tr...!~ ~~

n.-t used to dftcribe tho basically
'"Western.. state structurea of eoc::lall&amp;s
located In what Ia now tho Middle East.
Thoaa authoritarian ORianl had their taller
day rondHiono l.n the "abOOiute monarchies"
of Europe. Western scholar• have found
antecedents to the so-called ..totalitarian"

~!~ ~~~ th!elrrt~~gsofof H::~r =~~
Nl~~~r, wl must realize tha; a profound

concern for poiJtlca Is just as essentialIndeed In aome ways more essential-to a

~~a=::rr:ro~et t~~W!!~~a:~~"~'ml:i

10

realm which was preeminent In the
democ...cy of Athens u welt as In the early

re~,u~!~ ~~r.,~':"been tho ca.. In America

that we assume that It does not matter who

~elk:'t~'f:::t'~~~nA~~=le~O::
~':m-t~.o:;m.~:n~~~~~~r"m-mr~~

ehown thet the
ayatem, which was
~to checlllhe ruler as -II aa to
....,.... ... Offlctela, functioned most
~ wl*l
there were aetfoaaftdent ru... at the helm.
. Slnqe ertatocreta end mlllt.nata
p1.,.c1 a smell pert In Chi..~~. the IMin groupe contend!1111 ..~ pollcJ the vwloua
"JJIrt•" Of OttiCtela wlfhln the
~While lheu

We haft to ' make chenget In pe&lt;&gt;ple'a
bale Ideas

..,_.Ill
........_oOuld"01...-.·

able to supply uaelf wllh atY the en'Orgy It
needs, It would sooq destroy our natural
environment by producing far more heat
than the ecoayatam can readily absorb. To
bring this sratem under control, we must

which Is the raaJ .aberration even In Western
history and which demands some k ind o f an

explanation.

.!~,;~~r.s:!~~~~ro'i'~~=
J::::.'.. =":;et~:~·r~o:
:.n"'
f
t
t~=~ ~~:~~~~r~ o:::v::~h:~
c~ ::.:m.:::=..o.. := be
_..

1111t11e to crttlelam aa
Strong rulers
count on 111-f support

1ft IIVIall to IWuoe eucll partlea to •
. . . . . . 8c11MIInt-lnthla style
.

to

_ . . • Mllnl tendency
~-·dee­
' but 111011 Ciiln.M feeders
their lllgltlmlley ecconllng
wiiiiiY _ . . , cuHIQI end 1t1ge1

=-~~·~~~~

IIICII
ratioN~ potlclea whiCii
1ft ~ wlfh publiC opinion and
.... .....,.oflhetl-."
.

............ I n _ . ,

~t.;' ~=gth,"'ll:lai toao="~:~

ethical p,..tlge, to attracl . official Yoyalty
end popular support, end to maintain public
order end agricultural productivity.

: . : ' ' : ch~e: 1~;~h!ty~~~~:!:3a~1
t)&gt;llllona or=.ple !lYing In the over·
-oped porta of tho world .
To do thla , HeUbroner argues, we must
begin to IMm from the Chinese about how

1

see, heaven hMra
Menciua compared
end the people to
su~rt me boat or

as the people hear.''
governments to bOats
tho aea which could
sink It at Will.

'=•:0.~ =:n~nd:rth~,Y,;

this
clrcumatancea hed

the most

ol "the hunger lor political authorlly" and
tho "fantaay of political 1-tlflcation."
Unewera of tha cultural , _ which
underllea the _ , Chi...., political
order, Heflbfonef mllt8kenly uaumea that

::::&amp;np·~·t'=.:..-:r:":.:::-''!:'~

llrong political -.tlflcatlon muat violate
the "autonomy" ol email communities.,

=~.~~l~~~~~~~.o~~g\~:~:

profound

American , French and Ruaalan nwolutlons
all grct)O out of the Ideals of tfle

tnstltutlona and would unite all of China
under one rule. History bote out that
conviction. Periods of mllltartam and
disorder ware typtcally condemned aa
periods ol " chooo" 8l)d hartlahlp for moot.

edoed that revolutions rarely sucCeed In
aefilevlny all of their eoals but ther also

!::;!.:ly
~= ~\'~o!tndoo"=Z•~l
would operate mainly through civil

;~htr;:'"!~;!:!.C~,= ~.be.:=~

' :'rc:,c:n.r.:nd'~~gee ~r.~,:S~~ w~~~

they OCCUfhealthler and stronger.
Hannah Arendt celebrated the American
r&amp;YOiutlonin which, she says, the two Ideas
of a "new beginning" and "popular
ertlclpatlon'' came together for the first

Some uprisings. of couraa."""' badly led
or mis-tlmed : ' they resuned In much

~~!f•~nRc~~t1e:-rn:;e~!:ve d : = • r o ,
redress . But ot.tler revolta achieved their
f'urposea and came down In the histories as
r!~~e~Wt,sf'r~n~~~~~ an~ o·~::.;r:,
8

they were sometimes successful In
overthrow(flg the Incumbent order without

g."'na~n

ng:

=ed !hr:a:,{~~i:,qs,e:,~:~

lri some i&gt;lthe great elitist dynasties : the
Chou, the rang and tna Ch'lng.
Other risings were more popular in their
leadership and more successful In actually
creating the new orders. These movements,

~~~~~:ed;=:~!~~~~~e~u~~~~a ~rng:ea•

th:'!!~ ~~·,~en':~r~~ugf;:ic~.'~~=~~' .
fn~estr;:~~de~~=~YnT~V: ttt~ ratJ~~:

revolutions succeeded In found ing orders
which were directly responsible to \he
ma3sea who had brought them to power and
continued to hold them to their populi!\
pretensions .

Chiang called It banditry
While Chiang Kal·shel&lt; deplored I his toni
tradition of popu lar uprisings as " bandit~ ,

~r:o,Jt~~~i h:::;:~a ~to~ Jadi~t~

Leninist, Mao had to keep these " peasant

rh~~~=~~~!

'::~~o~~e't~~ f~

~:~:.~.==-~~~=~~- ~~
unlta, h o - . Hellbroner himself
c11aract-•
the "human dri-· tapped by
the Chi_. In tho rather unaltractlva term•

meantime It Ia lltUe wonder that many·
feet moat condonable In
ccnal!lnlng tha term revolution to tho broad
IVO\~~~ changes o f "neolithic" end
"lnduatrial' tim.. ahrtnk from thlnklr&gt;g
of a t11'¥01utlon as tomethlng whJch they
might carry out lhemael-.
Yet thera Ia, of couraa, another tradition
of thinking about f0¥01uUon In the Weal .

w.temwa

=·~·
c::;:'':fl ~~~ 0::::,-::
auggeatlld that "haavan . - u the people

1:
..modem'" t imes. But as a Chinese (and
thentfore as an amateur historian of China)
he also described the .. peasant uprtalngs.. as
the main motive force In Chinese socJaJ
history.
Mao recogn ized that In the chaotic per1od
- after 1911 "political power grew out of the
C&lt;HTKtly notaa that tho Chinese have been
barrel of the gun," but he also Insisted that ,
as the new order took shape, the " party
to do what they hawe done largely
should command the gun and not vice
becaUM of strong polltlcall-hlp and a
versa." Chinese historians have noted both

:=,,;nor~:~~~:rva~:~u~n~~~

~~ld modrfv't\:l~~ct-=.'~~ ~~

,r.:;::n:.~~ =::1= !"-= r~

0

The economist Robert Heilbroner has
18Cently argued that the tendency o f
contemrcrarv socla1 ~ence to om it the

th.,. Ia lillie evldenoo !hal thenl was any
conneptlon between the appae!'alnce of
Vll(loua kinds of revolullona end tho actual
evolution of cultural·pollllcal onlero of
Woo tom hloto~ P!::i,m Babylon through the

According to t~la theory, a -ment
derNed 111 ~lrnecy from Ita ability to

=..~\=~~- :~t~';; ln:::J~~~s ~h1~

overthrew the Mlng and cleared the way for
the Ch'Jng and they have lncreasfngly
praised the achievements of the revolutionary movements kid by·Liu Pang and Chu
Yuan-chang that resulted In the ' Han and
Mlng. lndeOdd' I here Is .good evidence that

~_: M~:'lat~· c,~~c•p~~~~·:S ~:P~~~C

closely with the ..,.11er revolutionary orde"
of Han and Mlng. All thaoo orders united

~7:n;:•::::~s~~ ~~~~~~ g'~fn. e.;;:~~

becoming Chlneae, eJttondlld close polijlcal
controiOWir society, fostered_a high dog,..
of mobility Into the ranks of the governing
g:':;,:~ remained resJ)C!nalwe to popular
OUrtng the Cufl~ra l Revolution , Mao went
ao far ae to say that ...,1 the truth of
M80tlam can be summarized In a alngte
1&gt;1&gt;-: 'To rebel lo juallfllld.' " To be aura,
thla was an extreme poaltlon, and M80'a
auggeation that thenl might be a Cultural
ReOOiutlon ~ alx yeara haa not been
actlld on by hla 1uoceaaora. Yet while Teng
Halllp-p'lng ond aome W&amp;ltern o&amp;ae--.
may thlnlt that the of "cultural
...olutlona" 11 ....,. In China, a atudent at
the PatUng Artl and Cralfa Factory with
whom I al&gt;bka aaaured me that thera
..certainty wilt be other Q.lltural nwolutlons •.,

1

}f.'~,~~~~~~~lg~~: d~x;~~~ah~r~~~i
.

=ru.r:~~ ~~.~ce sc,~o,,r:~r ~~atr.,s!

violence of the status quo, but his book is
there to remind us that even one operating
wholly wfthln Western traditions can be
sensitive to the legitimacy of revolution
under certain historical clrcumstan~s .

1t ain't - a r l l y ao'

The ~arxlst scholar Eric Hobsbawm long

.

~tie~:~~~~ ~~at hta::!~

;'fc,7r,m'\';.:

dustbin of histOry and showed how they
served as Important ''precursors" to the

~6ruu~~=t~it"~od~" tf;;,o~~~~e .~::::

~t i~ f~~~n ~~~~~ l~g=~~~~w~:

0

a revolution because " It upset men and
made them think as they never thought
before, made them see thlnf.s they never
::'m:;~~ss'rb~ebe~:~.~b e what had
While Hobsbawm has tr1ed to show how
" to be revolutionary In a non-revolutlo('ary
time, " Morgan has called on ua to celebrate
the bicentennial (which, we should
remember, did not end In 1976-revolutipns
are rarely so short) .. by continuing to think

~~~~:s :=~~o~t;e ~h:..w·:c~~rnr:· ·;~~

" unwarranted asaumpUons of our own time
and have the nerve to say once more, 'It
ain't necesaaiily so.' "

th:~~~hdrc~~~~~mt&gt;!f.!ee~or~~nf~~!

which " look backward" and merely change
and " revolutions" whlch look
forward" and change political and social

~rso,nel

~':c•~rrsr.~~r~~ ~:s~~::e thili~;
political orders operate and overestimate the
structural changes which can be expected to
. flow from a revolution . They thus
unwittingly offer U!---a choice between the

:b~~u:0~u~ ~~~~~~~i~~=~n~~~~~~~~j
unattractive to moat.

t~f:rC:~in~o=.- Hg~.~w~ c~~~'::

l~~srh~· ~~t"':'c: ::o~:~n~,'·t~"::~r;P.
Operating wholly out o1 tho American
tradition, Morgan asserts that the .. most
frultlul lntaltectual achievement ol t1&gt;e
Revolutionary period" wu Madlaon'a
construction of a constitution which would

=~~:':· :rr:-m';n~; ~~ ~~~:uo,;

tho "right a of the minority. •

hi;.~ ~'18 ac::!\''"1:, wl~lnc::

revolutionary • tredltlono outai&lt;M the Weal
and that tha moat otonlllcent contribution of

:r..:'r.:!.o::.•t:...,~~~.tt:~':~
majority of thoo peoole.

�n

lloy11,1171

•Nader
(from Plte 1. eol. 3)

•He Is not 1n favor of mail-in health
Insurance plans frequently advertised In
1'18WSP.apers or magazines since they
ere 'notoriously high priced" an~
contain "restricted coverage." Neder
also warned that such Insurance plans
::tiP=.IIy not co-ed by federal
•Due to Intensive lobbying efforts In

Wuhlngton by the other aida, a "major
mobilization" of consumers Ia naceasary before 811 unwalered version of the
National Heillti\ ln-ce Bill c.n paaa
Congraaa. He reported that Senator Ted
Kennedy - the Bnl'a apon- - Ia
changing II to ameliorate dlffanonces
with lobb groupe. Heeler, how-.
blemes the COIIIPromlse on the
consumer, since Kennedy received little
organized support from citizens groups.
•He Is opposedlo No Fault Insurance
because It does not compensate
·tnsurees lor pain and suffering received
during an accident.
54 million stolen from homaa
About ""·million worth of property
was stolen from AmeriC811 homes lut
r.:'vt~~~. an .-age loss of $425 per

eo~~d~~rlr,·:"'8!~~e'::t ~o~~
1

Awareness who conducted -..rat
wor1&lt;ahops at the Preretirement Pian-

~~~"$~50a'!~;x&gt;~:o~~

devices, C8ll help make a residence
less pregnable to illegal entry.
First, some common aense pr&amp;-

=~~~s. hS.::,':.'"ow:=:i"s~ou~~

m::
• sure all deliveries are stopped,'
Since thieves generally case neighborhoods checktnw for homes with 811
" unoccupied look, those pl811nlng trips
should ask neighbors to cut their lawns,
remove any advertising materials left
near the doors, occasionally change the
position of curtains or shades and put
some of their own trash In front of the
house on collection days. It would also
help II homeowners would trim shrubs
or trees covering doors and windows
and could leave a car parked In the
driveway.

A bust for RCC
Thlo bronze buot of AKhel c.,..,n wao preoanted to U/ B'o College of 1he
•me name by the NetloMI Nutritional Fooda Aaaocllltlon. Al1hough lt'o
now at home in 1he College, ACC Maater Pater G'o ld will journey to Booton
for the formal preMntM.Ion this aummer. Gloria Swanson and Gayelord
Heuaer will be on hand. Gold reporta.

Safaty &lt;In leas
A good investment

·Veteran executive to head .'SOM Development Center
Fll E. Van Voris, who has held senior
exacutive positions In several nalional
Industrial firms, has been named
8

~/;:~ ot~ eocd::.~er r;~~:~em'!.~~
Development
Management.

at

the

School

of
'the
1
11
Sc~oot ,Jo;:~h v~ ~or~""!!wi~ edd
valuable perspectives to the classroom
educ81.1on of students and provide
esaenlial practical &lt;llractlon to the
Center''
·
V811 Voris brings to U/8 more than 35
years of general management experience In huvy lndulllry. A graduate of
the Colorado School of Mines, he was
awarded., MBA h8fein 1972.
After j6inlng Bethlehem Steel , In
19311, he wu stationed In five of Its
11111011 pW.ta. He joined the
Unlon-Cerblde corp. In 1956 and eerved
In Ita Mining end Metals Dlvlalon 811d
waa IOC8Ied for a lime at Nlag. . Falla.
He wu elected chief martl8tlng
olfl-for the St. Joe Ml__., Corp. In
1972, and In 1178' wu appointed v1ca
praaldant '811d a-at matlllga' of the
Racycling Dlvtllon of Gulf and Weatern

eaatem

Industries,

Inc.

He

Is

currenliy

lf~:,;~t a'::d v,:,~g~i~e~~s:~~t~t~in~
firm based in the New Yor1&lt; City area.

mJ~ ~~~~r~~~~:d'a~=~e~~ ~~~or.;

bring current knowledge, lnnovalions,
and lnlormalion on new lachnlques
appropriate to m811agement practices to

area buslnessmen.

" My goal at the Center is to make
Ul B's School of Management known to
the Industrial community at large, both
locally and nalionally," Van Voris said .
Van Voris emphasized that U / B's

~:'~f~,:~~"i,:,m:r~s ~~~;:,:,edw~~

racenliy listed sixth best academically
In the Northeast In a survey of deans of

~~o~~~f a'i/~~g:,"den1~ c~~~ufo": ~

schools
study.

for

those

::~~:'!!~,J,w~ fr~::: ng::~: ~~ :..~~'lf

oPmanagement in a nationwide-

~lr~~~ :~'!.nd~~~ ~~~~ts re~~r.'uo~

0

They ere pl811nlng, within the next few
y.... to arr811ge semlners for
• maNIQers which will be preaented by
·
school faculty across the country.

at various intervals. II Is important,
though , that the timer Is not one that
can only turn lights on at a specific time
each night.
If safety devices can delay entry of a
thief even for a few minutes, chances

:a~~~~ :-..J~~ ~:~ gl=~~pf~'7~ tl:::

· track of a sliding gfass door can Inhibit
easy access. Dead bolt (as opposed to
spring bolt) locks help, too.

The Shertft'a ~I , _ , .
mends that for unataedy doors or t~
with glass panes, a double cylinder locllbe Installed in eddltlon to a deed bolt.
In a double cylinder loCk, a key Is needed for entr)' and exit.
To aacure double hung wlndowa (the
kind that slide up end down),
only drill a q--lnch hole tllnlugh _
the window sash 8lld lneerf a 10 pennJ

ona-

na!Jt~:rn.:r.rl:j,. offered by the ,
Sheriff' a Department . . .,
·-lndjcate on a malfbolc tNt you
live alone.
•llacord all 8erlal numbar'a of
purchaaed ltema. Without the n.,.._,
pollee cannot return ._....s ato1.n
_ Items.
•Mark valuables with yow lklc*l
Sacurlty number. TJIIa can ba done
effectively wlth an lnllxpenahla etdllng
pencil.
•File out eerlal numbers on Ped
locks. A 1hlef can have a key mede If he or she knows the number.
•In an emergency or panic eltuallon,
call the operator and tali her it Ia an
8IJ18Iliii!IGY· Onoe thla Ia alated, thfl
operatOr must stay on tha phone til
assist you until the proper euthor1llea
are notified and you regain your
composure.

.con....eon

games .,. a III8Cial brWid of
economic crime that laat
blfUd
$5.5 billion from the unauapacting.
Th8fe are approximately 1,100
varialions ranging from home lm~
.-.t ech..,_ to f - bank ....., . .
who fte.:e life a.tnga Irani people by
pretending they . . trying to Cldch an
employee on the take.
To try to brlnlf" home the IMUIIII8
that anyone c:en fall for a good
comiH'ln, Project A w - - . employees told the story of an area couple who
found two tickets to a Sabres hoc:kay
game tucked behind the wlndahleld blede of their car. Thinking the tlclulta
were a gift from a friend who "owed
them one," the uneuspactlng couPle
went to the game only to return 811d find
lhelrholl)erobbed.
To prevent youreelf from jOining the
" pigeon list," the Sheriff's Department
told the gathering at the ~lrement
Planning Conference, temember 1hat

~~,t~~ t~g P!~ ~~::a~~.::,,'::·:~:
~~~.;'~at~~= ~~lo~-::::S

the reason. Finally, beware of those
who seek you out for money.
The next time a fretting mot~ wlth
babe In erms tells you her car tuet broke
down and asks you to lend her ITIOII4Iy to
take her baby to the hospital, tell her
you'll drive.
·

•Calendar
(from page 12, col. 4)

JOBS

Friday. May 12-8:30 e.m.-4:30 p.m.
Satlxday. May 13-9 a.m.-4 p.m.
Monday &amp; Tuesday, Mey HH 6--8:30 o.m.·
7p.m .

NOif.COWEllTI¥E CIVIL~

Wednesday-Fridey . May t 7-19--8:30 •.m.·
4 :30p.m.

3-4670.

..._SG41__,. .... 7 / 20 / 78, . _
---SG41__, ....

-~---.LNNo.

- ..

6 / 25/78 , 1hon~--­

FALL AEOISTliATION
Registration moteriala should be COI!II)Ie1ed ond
returned to OAR belont you 1eove ~.
~ c.ds ... be In Auguol to ..
• ,_,,. who have ~- In Aprt ond Mey.
Tum in ~ materills MW end eY06d the rush
In August.

herot, Une34561 .
.......... . . ,~-7/20/78.­
"'""·-~----IN-71 .

~-.
- t. UneNo.
34310 .
~,_11011

- . . . . -- In Hoyeo B f&lt;1 rogiiQtion
lor .. aeaeions.

To 8110id' problema, Md. poaalble loae of benefits, be aunt to notify the
when 811y of the following occurs (University .
c......,tly on payroll, ahould call Per-.net , Amherst extension
. - . 8nd ~ a Form PS-«14 - ·~ of Health Insurance." New Yor1&lt;
allould wrtta diNCtly to the tmployee Insurance Section , NYS
o..-t_,l of CIYII Service, The State Office Building campus , Albany, NY
~ Offloa Immediately

__
__
v-..-.- . -2

,....,..,

~ IIEOISTRATlON

Insurance changes

EXHIBITS

'VIolllooe--..,.

..,......

-·
Conw1'Uiicolion
Oeeign
~
.,_for
U / B ol
..._,,.,
Moy 15·26.
Col831354 1 for tines.

Mee

~ ~t1

become eligible lor

Medica~

benefits

•You toee:ome divorced .
•You have a dlaabled dependent who reaches age 19.
•You adopt , or otherWise ~quire, a dependent child with a different last

~c:iu

ara single or diiiOfced and enrolled lor lnd)vidual coverage but

become married 8nd deaire family coverage.
•YolK ~I child reaches 19 y-a of age and Is not a full -time

"'':?:!; dlpendentatudent child graduates, marries; or becomes 25 yeais of

age.

v--.· .

AMIIMftl ,.,...._. t IIIID't. F..ao52.

se.te ,..,,_

•You, .:. a

... 17. A-8C)(M.

-~. F.ao&amp;1 .

-

beceu8e of dlublllty, although unaer age 65.
•Your apouee elias.

6

-,i
"'--- ~. ~.
-~~.

OAUEIIY21t~

•
~~::.: ==~· •:~ age 65 and become eligible for enrollment In

•• ,

FACUlTY

~.

1~~

re-

-

Scianoe, F-8053.

Politiclii~ . F'-8054 .

PUT US ON YOUR UST
The ,._.,., "c.~Mdar" hopaa ... provide the campua """ •
corn...,....sl,. - , . tlatine of -.ms end actlwltiaa, from fllma and
1118Minga to ac:lantllic colloquia. Wa'll prtat both ,...., notic:M and ,.,...
publicity photos (aa apace pennlla) II you aupply ua w1t11 gloeay prlnta. The
..vice Ia fr•. To '-11 Information, call Jean stw.t., 838-2821, by
Mondey noon for Inclusion In the lall9wfne Thtnday'a .._, Or, mall
~." 136 Crolla. Hall, Amherat.
Information to
aaelatance In mailing the "Calendar" ea -.pta1e .. poaalble.
Kay: topen only to 1hoM wltlla profaaalonel Int-I In the aubjact; •Of*l
to tha public; ••Of*l to ,..,... of the un-..ty. Untaaa otherwlaa
apeclflad, tlckata for - t • charging edmiaalon cen ba purchaaed at the
Squire Halt Ticket Olfloa.
_
-

"-tter

VI'•- ,....,

•

,.

�CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
lEather Swartz interviews ·architectural historian
. , . - · wtoo diSctJSSeS Frlll'lk lloyd Wright
..:N~ecue. with ilostralions. International Coble

,__.._._,
__ .,a

·~ne.T-

TV (Channell 0). 8 p.m.

"- .......
.,.._,Dr.
_,
B. ·
...... - . . 81._
awtolophor'a-..,_,.......,._
_..._O*S-

-------~- 12--

IIICFlLII"
.
. . . . . . _ Suponto&lt;-1 70 MFACC. EllicOtt.
7 :30 .-ld 10 p.m. Free to IRC teepeyers; $1
tor other&amp;-...

.... . .

__,,._ ... ....,._

cw....~·

J;ACFILJI•
111or1e.R-utlo!! WIUiout Me, 150 Farbef.
8and9:45p.m. Tlcl&lt;etsSI.

... ..........
---PIU
UW
. .,
·
......_...
.........,,
UIB
. 213
~-

,..._ .. _._
_
_____
......,_ .....
_,___
----12--__
--

MUSIC'

12-.

i..c·

- · - U / B..toae-.t&gt;lo.

An . Ewenlng of Telemann, with Nora Post,
direclor. Baird Recital Hal. 6 p.m. Free admtssion_
Perlonneii wil bo Stepllen
Nancy
Thdel, oboe;_Susan Huber, boauuoon; Tony Kunz
8&gt;d Eric ' - - t o, harpsictiord; - . Wise

-and

~

--·---bl&lt;a.h
_..,____
....
- · Wl:lally -

·

Llndemonn, racorder. Mary Lueliroon Undo McGinley, flute: and Elaine Moise, socnno.

Olver-· lind Don

SUNDAY-14

.

ColflrCIW41- 1 4 8 -. 1 P-"1- Spor,-·

A~mtWcc~~(~~~wel-

.p_..__ __
~·-AI.·
. - . orgoniat.

COITIOI.

IIFA IIECITAI. •
,._, F.-a, pe«:uSSion. - d Recital Hal.
3 p.m. FreeUrti8aion .

TholoiiiCalhloloc:Ue . . bolhe"'-

_.,~-----

~-- ...... ~()(
-"'~---­

P!ogrom_lor
........,_,.,
_
Vinl&lt;O
-··
e lentasie
and vibropliono
Os8lah

ar-·--.
__
--gordO
-----------.--.S
l
____ __

Cooper, .....,_,.,1; Buni1a Marctls' "-Four,
e premiere port0!111811C;e CAol&gt;ert Dick, flute) ;
f'aLj Zom's , . _ . , Doncing · first a.tfalo
portonnance 1&amp;010 percusstonj; Lou Hamson's
Concerto for Yklllln wtth Percussion Orchestra
(Kei&lt;o V.amezakl Furness, ,;om; and the U I 8
Percussion Ensemble: James Hayes, Michael
Pugliese, Robert Mahoney, Walter Hunt and
~ K~tchum; Albert Furness. condJctor.

~__....,alyla _

---~C:OOJNM•••
---.-w~w-.y
~•--•- 202 ~- 8 p.m.

~=.=..-.::.=::.=."""'

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

- . ' - - - IOOBMdHol. 9p.rn.

-

MONDAY-15

- - - - br . . ~ d . . Cteetloe

--....a--tw~af- .

-.&amp;.a.B_.
.._..._
,. ....... - - - . -.mg

Carlo

-~_

jizZ. 451

Urban hula

-~--

" Mach ine Visions" and the
" Urban Hula." a solo evening of
dance theatre by William Rirl&lt;patrick, wiH be presented .on May
12, at 8 p.m . at the Katharine
Cornell Theatre.
Klrl&lt;patrick is a New Yorl&lt;- based

FIIDAY-12

...__.,_,
••

· -.... ~.Dr.

---·-......
-... . ...::.. ....=::.:.........

.................. a.... ........

=.-:'~~...:~:.ed·~~·~~

111111*.-.-.....0Mwo·a......,.. 11a.m.

.,....,...

..,

--~U/8...,_

_

musical paatlct.s.

'--.

~·-··.~~~,.

~

,wl~l.r.=~~:.·~~'::~m~n:Orl&lt;-

._

....
........
-.......
...................-·
.___
---···
·-· ....-......

patrick, will have Its world
premiere. Set to ethnic folk music
of American Indian, Afghanistan ,
Pigmy, and Greek cultures, this
piece will luxt8!'088 contemporary
imllgee with anctlll)t sound.

........ _lfi_DUU&amp;IItll-

0 . . . 1 1 1 - - . . - 1 2 -.

.-...... ..........

,

.......-.Dr.- l u i -.
.... ,.•."----~
_.2,....

............. .,.Coni-.
_

~

Visions Fugltlls titled "Pennydances." Yvw Mikhashofl, pianist,

• . . _. 13110amona,11 :30a.IIL
~,.._

-

shoO:: t~~~r,=.,wt•Jobe~:0~~~

_

Another premiere,
" Machine
~."
to music by Buffalo•
composer Lejaren Hiller entitled
"Machine Music," will also be

m" and "Re-

performed.

William Klrtcpatrick .

UUAB JANE FOliOA NIOHT'
A Ootl'a HouM, 7 p .m.
Stars Jene Fonda, [)av;d Warner, and Trevor
Howwd. ibsen·s ptay achieves a new chension
in this fifm Vetsion of the ''dol wffe" who sl~
the &lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;or on husband and family.

Bulfal&lt;&gt;&lt;tudlences.
Klrl&lt;patrlck presented a concert
of his performance pieces lor
musicians, last March
under
auspices of the Music Department.

~'!s ~~~~e:~ Lc.:'u%~~~~':!d

1

Kluto (197 11. 9p.m.

he
Twyla Tharp, and partic,:P,ated In the

~~~~~ H'Z0i~ra~~nu:"'~~thA~~

170 MFACC . Elicott. Fr e e --

Mimi Garrard Dance Compa~

__,.lc_

BFA RECITAl. •

Flocco, tenor. Balo1tRecital Hoi. 8"p.m.
Admissiools
_ ted by Elenon; Soil&gt;, Pion&lt;&gt;.
He
wil be _aosls.

He waa involved In 'Hair'
Last fall , he was involved in the
film version of the musical, " Hair,"
under the direction of MOos
Forman, to be released In late1978.lbe week of May s-12, Klrl&lt;pa1rick
is giving ·a worl&lt;shop at the
Academy of the Performing Arts 1n
Buffalo.
Alter his Buffalo appaarancn
and a preaentalion of this same
solo """"ing In New Yorl&lt; City, June
15 - 18, Klrl&lt;patrlck plaos a
European tour.
·General admission lor the U/ B
evening is $1.50; tor faculty, staff,
alumni , senior citizens, the price is
$1; lor students, $.50.
College B is the sponsor of the

-----·•-w- __
-

to IRC ~: S1 lor

11".30 p.m. -

~~~·

TUESDAY-16
CONYBIIIAT10NSJN THE ARTS

~-In- . . . . . , ._
_
ncM!Iillt,

-HIIIIIIIo. ...._. _
_

__ _ ,

Ooltl-...-.- -,
.. -

Cculogo. 108 -

· 7:30

nel 8 ). 8:30p.m.
MWFALO~STUDIEli­

MI!ETlljO'
N1 lnfomtOI ~ with l.obcur ltlolcu(!oo
Oo!rld - . - . , , Lockwood Visiting Profesoor
ot Amor1can H"ootcry, U I B. 123 l'all&lt;woy.
8p.m.

- • - e . e p.uo-11

............ _ .. _
~-·

.,..,

...._

......... - -.

Tololn 0 llojor, K. ~ Ho)ldn'a Trio In E - ·
12; . . , a . - · s Trio In E-flot llojor,
O!&gt;uo 1, N6. 1.
Hob.

-·----82:-•• _. .
~

..,... Poul). s.concs
"""' LD&lt;o;ge,
lk**'o&amp;.
. 8p.m. F
r o o -.

L'A-(fronce,l-). 7p.m.
01tector . - , Vogo's maaterpiece, o filnl..-.
lw -

af life on a blr-"l 'A _._

dl'lf:lo.

-lrcm-._.

.-. playa ~ ..
-gongallr liQin

Cole-.

llclooto ,.. bo on -' ll
Forn... infqmouticn, - • Jot;u;

· 838-5580.
~brlwbloclt-olltuallnlve&lt;·

ally

""*"·• IIOioriouo

1932--

Sq.Jinl Hoi Conlerenco

Fargo

Caflop -

1!11ccu41. 11 p.m
-

WEDNESDAY- 17
UUMFIUII'

" - " -CFnnce. 1931). 8:.40 p.m.

OOI.1JQE. FILII"

All -

_

E l l i e - · piano, B M d - Hoi. 8 p.uo.
af Muoic .

..... dlnee _

I '. · - ..,._...llrCculogo B.
_""'- _ _ _ 8Pm-

MFAIIECITAL•

-- ~by the~·

o.-t

______
tlcMtOtunolll-.- Ji....

CAC_
. . _ , . . _ . . _ 170MFNX,

,

ear-. -t
and
(Chan·

COurier~

Shoplierd
eonc.l. wlilcl1 canceled
due to .. ......,_ willie honored. Thla ..... finol
port""""""" af ... Visiting Alllat Series ....

__,.,,

.

Directed br ...._. J . Pakula. with Jane Fonda
and Oonald Sothotlond.

~=works which """"t.
will be llhOwn for the tnt time to

o.p.t.

.................. IJ/83S7-

CON VERSA TlONS IN T_)IE ARTS
Either Swertz interviews architectlni historian
John Oulnon who discusses Fnd lJoyd Wright
architecture, wtth illustrattons. International Cable
TV (Chenl&gt;ell O) . 6 p.m.

n-tre. FrM -

-

- THURSDAY- 18
PEDIAT111C IIESEARCII-1

, Alen
.,.,
... - director.01011- .........afDrltiluui!OO
L_
Boaa,
Rehebot
ollntemal Me&lt;ficine,
the~~

.......... 13; Ut8 '-'ly. - · - -

--I

. - . . . . - - - .......,., On1 Boord
Room, Chikhn'a Hoop!. . 12 noon
•

SATURDAY..: 13
Ulln.Co..-12)
-~·

------·

~- .. TMEAIITJ
eo.-~ca.-.flJ

-4-P'"

pm.

NOTICES
OAR OFFICE HOUII&amp;
~. Moy11-8 · 30all\-8

30pm

·~ ·ca.....,~ · ,..

.. tt .eot.s

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOl. 9 NO. 29 MAY 4, 1978

VPAA issues academic plan-draft;
outline--s shifts In Math Sciences
Plan offers
..no 'sweeping
changes' overall

Bunn calls for
one math unit,
one for statistics '

A draft of a f~ acedemlc
.. ,p~w~n~ng - - . t for IN J..lniNNIIy'a
Aclldeailc AftalradiYieionala'now llelng
circulatlld lor oomll*lt anc1 . . . - .
trona 10 a brOIIII ...ay of cmJPUS

The o.p.rtment of Mathelnatles
II!OUidJunc!loo as a single. Integrated
depa.-tment.
Statistics programs In Academic
Affairs should be provided through a
al11!11e1 1(\tegrated Department of

conatltuenclea, Viae "'-~dent RorWd
F. Bunn announced thla .....
The plan endcnea the Idea ol cruh

Slftatb.

The Depertment of Computer Science
should continue In Its present

~-=s~ac:"':":o:=*~

or~!,"t~~~d"~"establlafied wi thin
Academic Affairs a Committee on

In other - l i d .,_, and for
reductions in alloQtiona or - l c
_ ::=:::?d~.~lli .mora u':"ta· It Ia a

Mathematical Appllcatlons.
VPAA Ronald Bunn has reached
theM foUr conclusions on the future of
Mathematical Sciences. he said In a
mpmo to Provost Paul Reitan of the
Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics this week.
A single, Integrated department of
Mathematics, Bonn said, should
"continue to have capabilities broadly
to serve matllematk:al research and
Instructional neecla of this Unl-slty.•
Both applied and pure mathematics
should be embraced within these
departmental responsibilities, Bunn
sald. "'Tha Oepertmant, In both of these
.,...., though strong, Ia not as strong
u I believe boltl they and the University
havearightto ""'J&amp;C1."
He calllld on the Department, In
consult.Sion with the Provost, to
preeent by October I, a carefully
nsuoned plan lor Ita development o -

t"'n:t-=~~n

An qlnal lhft, appeertng last
Auguat, rwwlewed by ~.
proooeta, and dlrwclore who report
diractly 1o 11u1on a1eo by the Faculty
Senata'a A&lt;*lalnlc Plennlng Blilnl.
lhe "CUrrant effort Ia belnll widely
circulated within "'**"lc Aftalra!Jo-

.

~~,:~~.=...~-=~ ...d

10 the halide ol 1be F.:ully and
Proteaalonal Stalf Sanataa. Bum aald
he will , _ with clepartll*OIIII, aclloOI
end faculty~~-. admllll8!ratore, and faculty, staff and etudent
to diacu• it and aacure
auggeetlons for lm~. I. IJiat
deal of Input from lncllvlcl... unlla Ia
alrelldy lnc:orpoqtad lniO ita 10 .-aea"Certaln groups may wiah to , _
soon, • he nOted. Othera mal ~•.to
walt ,u ntil lata AuaUit •
(during Wlllchtl--l=to . . . .
high prlortty to such rneat1
.
. In October l!&gt;e YPAA WI ....... a
final . . .ion ol lbe ....._,. to IN
President, In line wllh a raquMI 1rom
Ketter, made aubeequant to complalion
of the Huii-Yaar!y planning commtttw..

Mld, ai!Quld be

billld on eeveralaaaurnpllons:

_, ~ nal be • ~n of
lptty lfiCi TAIGA lines, In the
aaaregate, In the pun~ mathematics
..-; The e)llent to which the current
. . . . - ol lines Is ratalnlld In the pure
matllllmMica will d~ on the
pl., itMII and Ita justification;
(b) ~may be a limited expansion
ollacutty linea and TAIGA lines in the
~~!~Plied mathematics area; the extent of
expansion ageln to depend upon
juatHicatl01t ~ted in the plan an&lt;l
on projected a\08llablllty of resources
wlltlln Academic Affairs over the next
flw)IN!a;
(cl Students should be provided

=lcs~:"~'/!l:at

: : g:f.!f.:
...,..; t.... expandlld opportunities·
~ be davelopecl within ·1:urren1
dell- autholtzatlons in mathernatle&amp;
8llil llllould not entail eeparate,
degree authoriZations;
rdl Continuous monitoring ol the
departll*lt.al plan and ita implementation can be expectlld from both the
Provoat and the Vice PIMident for
Academic Aflalr8 10 lna~n not only
appropriate aupport and asalatance 10
...atzJng It, but 111ao a oontilatency
bel-' the pian's oblactl- and the
of the o.p.rtment.

n-

act,..""'"""*"

~
curNIII Pl~alon

ol St811atk:at

ec..... will be Dh8Md out, o-the two

,..,~

te711-80, Bunn eald. During

lhe ._ ,.., .,_.lion

atudenta
~..-oiled In SJ81iatlcai Sci... . . . . - - IQ be provklad opportunhleli to _,...thlilr progr11111a or Hnd

:.:'.t:J'::'m":"ec,~~ 8:jJ~
ac:-~ihe

::"::"~~

nnaltlon period,

::r::,:":

---It•

wtn "-e-n provldlld opportunltias to

,....... tMit ~·· either to
IN a.p.-11 Cit &amp;lallatic:e or to ott..

u

a,-

cllllllc ~.

~"""*
~ o1

within Acapresident

.... wtc:.

""'CIPfll&amp;!'l of the
Statlatlca. once the
e-n ooonpiatad,
...
!o .. cerlfutly delarmlned.
ftlll ....,_.nation ahoqld OOCM on the
........ OOt1tdudl.s in 1810-a1 ,"

.-loci ,...

......,.

-·

No . . . . . . . . . . .

B~~~~.:_

Face to face

directions and In em~ -..
modest, u -..red by the ace1e o1 all
that we cum111Uy do."

ne:~v.t~ .=-::-sJad~

Ketter's meeting with undergrads
turns into media marathon:
SA Senators vote for his ouster
By J!)Jce Buc""-akt
ReportorSiatl

With all the camera cr-., {lllcrophones, reportera and photographers In
Haas Lounge Frtday, one might have
thought II was President CWter, not
~er adclreeatng the atuclent body.
It wu a media rlfHII and students

~~6~~ht~ ~:..?..c'::Jat~N

you check out this crowell" could be
, _ , from cluaters of charged atudenta
who _., psyched or psyching

=~~ec:f~::~v::. :~

..-ned remlnl.-.1 of the "power-tothe-fleopla" revelry of atudent gatt..ings In the late eo.. Almoat, though not
qu!te •
nw. hours later when it wu all
cwer-c.mers crews gone, photographers out of film and ~era relldy
fo ireet tired wrttlna fingers with Deep
Haat-atudent ~ atayecl In lfaM
thtM hours longer and finally votlld
18-10 (with one llbatentton) to call lor
the 1111'nD't11i ot l'realdenl Kalter.
0tar 30 per cant of the SA Senators
_., abeent from the roll call vote.
Acoordlng to-the laat two ~ ot
a Jengtlly Spac:tnmo artlctathe
..-tng, SA PrMident Richerd Molt
tennecl-ltle WJW "'lrnlliOnlll and Illogical"
and also ealdha ~lfllot put his name
on the TMolutlon.
In the - l a u e of the Spactrum, an
edlt:orl8t obaer..cl the -..aion "was
conceived flllt.. hMtlly and baaed
more on j)NGOIIOaptlooa than en facta ."
A ratt.. peculler statamllll, some

on

:m'~.::Hc::m...:.=

=

a ct.fh tmetl for KMter'a poaaldency for
thelaat-.JWMI!a.

and sacrifices will ••. 1111 algnlfl-."

c:=·.::.oo::;..aun:,

aalrl~ ~he

Relldy for oxygen
Student senators were not the only
ones ready lor oxygen at the end of
Friday's aesslon. After some three
hours of answering generally pointed,
well-articulated questions, ignoring
hisses and SRIC8IItkl applause and
enduring vert&gt;aJ tug-of-wars, President
Ketter and an entoui'IIQ8 of lldminlattatlve offlctala also looked worn.
•
Despite Intermittent SQI)hornottc
int.rruptions from a scattering of
st'*tlta, the -lon wu well
conducted by SA VIce President t*t
Schwartz and, given the circumatancea,
proceeded In orderly fashion .
Before fielding questions from the
floor, Kattar responded to the SA
Presidential Review Committee report.

l:'~:'n~h~=: ~at

heJ«:l:

consulting them on Unl-.lty":?teira,
he reminded atuclenta that he , _ .

::Tt..~~ ~in~

ex:.=

from
groupe on tN!tera lnoolvlng Unl. . .ity
Planning Mel POlley im"""'*'tatlon.
Students alao aarve lin -.:11 panels,
be polntlld out.
He IOid atudentathat they would haft

~~=~~~~~~~-"'=

he rMllzlld In 1872 thai . ,
"'**"ic Plan wou111 .._ to be
devlaacl, alnw the budget would "not
allow lor expanalonfat plana.• He hu
been urging Ita ""'opment alnce
he aatd.

Student . . ,.........
51,_1873, KMter reportlld, leaa th811
20 requests for atudent f• funding haft
been challangad by hla office. He gaw
the loltowlniJ e~CP~er*iona for rajacitlftg

--~-a.·.-r

..... •

~r that - . . unable or WIWI!Itng
to improwt out8IIIYea and what we do; to
the contrary, It Ia Intended to raflacl my
conclueion, not caauatly .-:lied, that

=:..::.-=y q~~:

CI.WIWIIJy do and In IN waya In which
we " - organillad oonaiYea to do 11. •
His '-It~. Bunn Mid, is
that "SUIIYIBuffalo wtll and ahould
~ to be, within &amp;UNY, a
U""'---ty Center." It will · - " ' " • to
be an inatltutlon tt.1 ~ that
without • brolld array ol ~
achoole and progrM~a It Ia l-INn a ·
uni. . .lty and that withoUt a ...,._
core of arts end e c ; l - dl8clpll~ It
ianotaun-.lty .. all."
The principal taak, he delinlld - not
one or- oontlnulna 10 upend. "--!,
he eald, - to ..... quality and
lna~n that within the dealgn o1
· ~fll!'l• theq Ia auHiclent flaxlblllty
to be .,._ to olwlga, .....,_ naac1
and good ...... auggaat.

DINc:tlciM

Bunn spoke ot four major dlractlona
for change:
We have to Improve ouraeiYea and
what-do.
We have to provide more opportunl"tlea lor "non-traditional" atudenla.
We have to be aenailiwt to changes
and developmel)ta within the larger
system of lldldilon ot which - . .
1*1- . _ . ot how w11at we do affects
that ay81am. "We wHI oot be excellent
in all . _ becauN we will (101 haft
programs In all - .. We will be
excallent In thoaa - . for which taloe~aiblllty . "
•
Finally, the VPAA eald, - wiU haft
to become both academk:a and
tnan1Qera - unlaaa we flflah bweM&gt;o
erllla I'8III01IIeCI ham \he aoadlmy to

·-'WAA-.. . . _. _,

�..., •• 1171

•YPAA lsaues academic plan draft
mixed . Dissatisfaction and distraction
have centered, In partlcu'-', In the
methematlcal sciences an~ biological

A test for the University

sciences.

Optimism and confidence are cl\eap commodities
In times of expanding budgets. The better test of our ..
·
mettle lies ahead.
Academic Affairs enters the future from a position
of strength, not weakness. Ranging broadly through our
faculty are lndlvi'Uuals of unusual talent and achievements.
By any standard several of our programs are among
the strongest In the state and nation. OUr students,
diverse In backgrounds anp Interests, deserve and demand
the best. While It has not l}een possible to realize
In a timely f•shlon the new camP1Js. space and facilities
continue to Improve. Some of our new facilities are •
among the finest In the country. While Increased support
from the state Is needed and fustlfled, the operating
budget prQvtdes alevel .of support that compares favorably
with a number of other distinguished public universities.
While many developing universities continue tQ struggle
to establish a graduate education and research capability.
ours Is already established and committed to quality.·
Among our strongest assets Is our capal::lty for
programmatic flexibility and change, evidenced by .a
considerable number of Interdisciplinary and
multidisciplinary programs and centers. for testing new
appr~.ches to the application of knowledge and research .
Sllf'IY1 Buffalo will one day be one of the great
universities. Its greatness will be realized, Jlnally. not
because of the quality of I
cademlc plan or of Its
administration, although It will more quickly achieve
greatness If they too are characterized by qualities of
greatness. It Is by the achievements of Its faculty and
students that the worth of the place will be measured.
In our attempt to plan for the future we shall probably
make mistakes. The greatest mistake Is to make no
plans at all .

:!t~~al fu:':ri'1~,1 .J'ftf~blk1 ~hro);'~~

member oL the facuUy should be
tenured without first having pemon-

:,'~l':!=ll~n ~~~~~~=~~~g :::~

research," he said.
B. Reapollaitl//11/es and support of
graduateatudiHits.
Bunh wants policies and procedures
~-nlng GAs and TAs to uniformly
. . - atandards appropriate to a
quality gqduate and research univer·
elty." Stipend leYels should be
Improved and the ceiling, raised. High
priority should be asalqned to
lncreaalng UnlvM!IIy fellowsto1ps to 100
within the next three yetis. There are

;:w
~~~~il:ack;g~Pst~ au~,~
atudenta ehould be .-mphasPzed, he

think&amp;. Granl proPOS&amp;Ia should Include
more opportunltfee for gred student
atlpenda.
C. ~uate Education nHds to
be - e d . Bunn feels "few
CMI~ In thla country are better
equipped ... to eumlne, cl~~rlfy, and, 11
~. 1'11deflne Ita purpoaee at the
~u... l-'." Attention must be
....... he Mid, to Qel*8l education, to

.t=.alble
-=r~·~~~~
effect'--, to ..-..cl-tlme oppor1:tu.
tor *chlng and courae
llaplllllll, .ncl to a atronger linking

of~10-=~.l:"::!· and
ct.! of Uncllrgreduate
!illul*lon 1110 tll&lt;e p._, In his

auth~

.!JIIW·

-r=,~lfoll

"wwil be

....,.... to prcMdl lncnMed I*Wto lllllliilllkMII ......_,.. to wort&lt;

......., ............. llftlta tor the
ol ....lnl thlm to NIPOflllto

==

._.Mil_.._.,

,.rt-tlme

--~8ludlnta."

..:...~~

=tMaa-"*'·• .,. _.
-......_..,...;-'ti;;;"
;.,..
.ncl Ill ..,.....

content
g.-u.te
to·aepltalla on thl&amp;
~oroa~~-

Cllll*funltlel,

•

0

Eni'OI'-1 piMrl,.._ Total
..wit- 1110W111 _, lla ontr llwllted,
..., llld .......... ""' total, " -·
....,.._.,. 811111&amp; Wlttltn orotaaE.

---"-·-~·"

~~:"~~e~~ ~~~tJ'..':lxln ~ l:'u~ty~~

he said .
Again, ne emphasized that "In the

~~:~:!e a~~e J!f~Zatl~~ ~at~:
:"m"~~~s~ra\':a~1~~ ~~~err:,a~~nd~9

reeponslbUltles of
faculty.•

.a . quality•

.acle,oce

{

.

Social~

·Thlalltge and complex facul\y,.8unn
said, Is experiencing a major decline In
enrollments - down by 20 per cent In
the last two years at the unclefgraduate
level and by 23 per cent at the greduate
level. Then, too, "certain departments
... are almost totally tenured and, In a
setting of stable or dacllolng enrollments and resources, mua.t seek means
other than new faculty appointments to
ensure vitality and national visibility,"
he noted .
"Anthropology's mO'Iement toward
national prominence can succeed with a
modest expansion of resources." the
VPAA continued, " but declines In Its
enrollment are a continuing concern ....
1

:~~~d' ~Yex~feda to \:'kg p~~~Y
to outside funding ae Its major source
of Increased support. Geography's
commitment to computerized techniques, though expensive, has placed it
potentially in a position of 1latlonal
leadership .... ·
·
,
"Histoiy and Philosophy, with
considerable strengths but declining
-ltonAid F.lunn
enrollments, may find a renewed role at
the undergreduata level In tl1&gt;1plng to
d8Yetop and Implement a program of
Mana11ement and Engineering, pdmargeneral edu.calloil. lntljl'8sl In policy
lly, "should be expected to 1ncreasJ!,
studies, carried out In coordlnjl\ton,~[th
relev8Jll . prQfasalQJ\4~ ..scl'lools: ..c&lt;&gt;Uid
~_t In , a. cowo11'1'! W~d P}.anned
dhon .
.
.
assist sociology, political 'ecJence, and
Student recruitment and retention
economics ....lhe present size of t;llack
problems also deserve careful stuOy ,
Studies calls Into quest ~on Its 1/lllb!'IIY
the VPAA said.
as a department ... (and) the
Department of Communication Ia to
remain -for the next three years ~Jt Its
Unit assessments and proJe&lt;:tlons
recently reduced level. Srpaller un1ts
The Academic Affairs planning
that are distinctive within SUNYI such
statement contains an assessment of
as Llngulsllcs, and Commun catlve
current status and future pro)ections for
Disorders and Sciences, cont1nu11 to
each of the far-flung division's several
jle.serve SUPP'?r' but cannot expect any
components:
expansion....
.
· Social Sciences mu't make further
Arts and Letters
.
reallocations within the Faculty to move
In recent years, there have been ·
selectively from strong to outstan(ling
marked declines In enrollment In these
.programs, Bunn eald . And "It Is also
areas; efforts will be required to
that soma further • O'lerall
likely
stabilize them.~
" A basic question ... Is l)ow modestly · reduction In resources devoted to FSSA
will
be
necessary eo that Academic
to lower the current level of resources
' Affairs can respond to needs el.-here.
committed to Arts and letters, while
Such a reduction will be phased jlnd
maintaining areas of strength and
limited."
emphasis, so that we have the capacity
to bring about basic etrenathenlng In
other ansaa of Academic Affaire," Bunn
Archltacton .ncl Enwii'OIIIMI'Ital Daalgn
This young, small acedemlc unit is
I~J,':J~~~~~,'a~u'C:1111 s ~~· experiencing enrollment growth and
consequences Which canAot and should
building a aoild foundation, Bunri
1 oot be tolerated. tt 'lnllst be limited by
Indicated. " The I~ accmdltatlon
• an lnalatenca on 11\a ,,prif!clple of
process for the Master of Architecture
bnsadth and diversity:• Nonetheless, •he
was Initiated this year; Its outcome will
have an Important bearing on the
aald, Arts and Lattera In p:;eral
School's future. A modeat eqaanalon of
resources Ia required to bring ... a level
~ogramathelr current level of suppori .
of quality and capeblllty supportive of
EXcept for opporiunJtlas thai might
Ita purpo- .ncl to . . - accraclltatlon
arias through the centeril of excellence
sland8rda."
program, strengthening of ealacted
within Arts and Letters will have
Edomallonalltudlea
to come from 1880Urcaa !~tarnal to the
"There should be no 1111Mt1on about
T - ·
Faculty."
maintaining a vigorous ac:'-1 of educe·
Bunn called for axpiO&lt;a.tlon of an
tllln at SUNY18offail&gt;," Bunn como\mffiC8n Culun&amp; Program, u eugmented .
·geated by Huti-Ya*ley, and em·
This mostly gredu... unit has a
phulzed thld Arts .,d Letters, In
commitment to ..-ch "tMI piKes II
particular, muet aacuno mora external
~tentlally among the" leedetl
of
~ .ncl clevelopiMnlaleupport .
graduate professional IIIIUcatlon In the
"While we rmat .U rao;ognlza that
country. • As a greduate ecllooi, It lathe
there are lllbatantlelly fewer ellternal
~~.developed educal'!'" entity In
funding ot~PC~t....._ henl then Jn most
~ other-·" llw VPMMid, "fila clew
" Broed outline futute directions," the
1llal In - ' r -.. dlacillllflary In
VPAA said, "alloutd lnclullt limiting
Alta IIKl .J,eltQ. we being
·pre-aervlce teacher eduo.tlon to a

f

8

1

:Sn:J'· ..

=

to=-l~~~~hof 1~: c~~~:;{

out~ ~-oom_.le daplrt-

'*"
... - -oflhe
~'*'-·"
...,~F-~;
. . JII'OIIIIm .ncl
......... ....._................
PIOII!Wft
on

Bunn suggested reorganization In
tn•th sciences (see separate story, this
Issue) and called for the retom to a
single, Integrated Department of
Biological Sciences within tile next
tllree years.
"Only modest expansions can be

other fl!NY

Ctl~"

:..~~~~-~~

t - II .... 100m tor COI!Ipl-.cy .
fnnlll_.l ,.,.. deGIInad. Dy algltt per
&lt;*It In the taat two .,.,.. ~lty of
•llllng prOgrams Md departments Ia

==~ h~h ~~..~~~=:"'\:~~~r:~

prog&lt;ema, epeclll attention to cooperative prOIJrams with other liQIIools of
education In U!e
ton and, ln'&gt;a variety
of .,.,..., l'n~tnng of I!IJ research
• capabllllln wt&gt;Ond perellillng theoretical and conceptual problemt .... "
Again, though, he wanrs the unit to
•~p-.d a "dlaappolntlng"
~I
of
external eupport .

rea

�VPAA Issues academic plan draft•
En,p!~llll end Applied S c i -

Aa the only campus In SUNY with
both a broadly dewloped program of
englne.inp education and re-.::h and
a 1W1Qe o fully eccredlled programs
leedlng lo llcena~n SUNY /Buffalo has
eoeclal -.,onalbll ties and oPJlOrtunlllealn engfne.lng," Bunn polnttid out.
Priority wtll be placed on: greduate
educallon, further Improvement of
externally funded research, more
Sharply focused experimental reaearch,
end lnatructlonat and research efforts In
tile environment, and resource

1

:::fla.

Within certain PM~&lt;• and valleys of
enrollment trends, Bunn concluded,
strong and s:ontlnulng demand l or
englnilerlng education and research
upon which long-term commitments
can be beaed: A commitment of limited
additional resources aeems justified, he
Mid, but Ita extent, the schedule of Its
dell-r, and the enrollment mix to

· ==~=~':'~h:::r:::
conetraiMil by "our lntenlfon to Insure
a broad amoy of quality pr?llrams
-he
=
·hout ··Academic Affairs,

lftlonMtlon end Ulnry StudiM

r-.

SILS 11 small and relatively diverse.
Until this
enrollment had been
~

constant . This fall, how-. there a 33 per cent decline - from 13' to 89.
" Future enrollments will h - to be
carelully monitored," the VPAA said.
The III!'Pioyment rnat1&lt;et an!f.l_,.,t
of a:.~r.~t-:~ua=m~a , ~oo.SILS
suggest establishing a doctoral degree

. j'J",N[,~ p~:to~~~";::~u:=t

be

Law and Jurle~
In thi s, the only law school within
SUNY, Bunn noted, we "should
maintain the exiatlng number of
students, or possibly reduce the figure
slightly, rather ' than encourage a
con tinually expanding enrollment."
Th ere Is nead , too, ·fpr a new, more

faculty reeourcee than U/B to data has
been able or wll ling to provide.
/ " lmplementlna thla model will require
additional 18culty and operating
reaourcea _.. at current enrollment

'-'···
........,_t

. .

~lnO:,'!t:o :=.":ec!~'~~h:en::::;

especially careful In recruiting and

=-~~aun1~!'",~~; ~~ t;~':''~~

provt:f.s significant flaxlblll'r, In future
g~~l~Pi ~~~d,n~~ram s the only .
Management will reduce facultystudent ratloa and establish an
undetvreduate-graduate lludent mix of
eo-.o. Slight enrollment !ncr- are
projected · l rr both ·dey · and e.enlng
even If 11 approves, " the problem
programs, but, Bunn said, limitations
remains to secure funding ."
on underllrad enrollment have to be set
Law at U/ B proposes to follow a
and periodically reviewed .
unique model combining ''the tredltlonThree faculty=es were added In
al purpose of legal education ... with
t977-78; five
are coming In
the purposes of providing students a
1978-79 to ass e continuance of
Wider range of experiences through
accreditation.
both the clinical mode of Instruction
If the School Ia to enhance quality
and a research training focused on the
and expand, more resources will be
social and public policy context of law " required, Bunn said . However, ..care
.and legal Institutions."
will have to be exercised here as welt as
This Is expensive, Bunn said , but
In !'nglneerlng that we do not permit
attractive. II calls for a richer mixture of
-enrollment pressureS to force a process
of lnternlll resource reallocation of a
dlmansll&gt;ll that will L'lffi~lze our
commitment .. . to a
array of
quality programs .... n
•

~:a~~ ::~:It~·~~~':·~~~~~~

-Refunds

UUP has to make them for
any parf of agency fee not
used for bargaining, court rules
st:.~/ru'tt'~ a r~;~=lsl~~tfl.!.,~

In his lnlllal reauest for a refu nd,
Eson demanded that UUP and Its
Board , United University Professions,
affiliates provide a statement of Income
the bargaining agent representing
an!l expenditures. J:!e challenged the ·
faculty and professional staff at SUNY, _ nollon that th!l $75 per capita sent to
• must emend Jill Agency Fee refund · the New York State Unltedl~
Tehera and
the S30 - 135' dollar" -per
L IJ!lllcy becau~ II violates the Public
Ia sent t o
the American Federallon o Teachers,
· Employ-· Fair ~Employment Act.
UUP'a affiliates, were spent on matters
lmPftllllll' practice charges were
brought against UUP by Professcn
?.;..~Me:::o;~lectlva bargaining
Morna EaOn of SUNY Albeny and
Thomes Barry of U /B'a Claaalca
Depart..-t. Since both challenges
that "he did not know hOw the
:-'~ ~ht~h~~r:u:; testified
money forwarded to NYSUT or AFT was
&amp;on CIM. He- the flrat challenger.
spent," although Wakshu ll maintained
Under Ianna of the Agency Pee Act of
the money was used for purposes of
11177, UUP can legitimately oollsct an
collective bargaining.
amount equivalent to d - from
non-member feculty and professional
ataff, providing that II maintains a
forwarded to NYSUT and AFT must be
refund procec~u,.. Through this procetraced and accounted for In calculating
du,., non-membeR can demand a
the amou.n t to be refunded. Contrary to
refund of a pro-rated share of the
UUP'a declarallon In Ita brief, It Ia not
Unlon'e 81tpencllturee In aid of actlvlllea
enough. simply to MY thet UUP
' or cau- only lrlcldentally ,.lated to
forwards these amounts for services II
tarma and conditione of employment.
race!- from lta affiliates and that
In the · ,.fund procedure
these services are directly related to
outlined In the unlon'l paper, The
collecllve bargaining. Cl-ly what the
Voice , UUP edded a phraae which
affiliates do with the money once
Indicated the! only thoae moneys spent
received Ia relevant .
apeclflcelly for POlitical or Ideological
activit._ woukfbe subJect to refund.
Mon._ muat be traced
In effect, Barry aald, this meant no
" It Ia clear that the total monies
refund• at all to non-membeR.
received by UUP from members and
~~~ t~:cl!rJI~t;.!;E::! non-rllembera, l Including the total
forwaaled to Ita affiliates, must be
lnclualon of tile phraae 'Cif a political or
traced and allocated In a manner which
Ideological nature' tn the rafund
will not shift a disproportionate share of
proceGIA will necesaarlly affect an
tile coli In the area of terms and
indlvldual'l right to a full atllutory
refund ... and must be deleted •...
~=~f~Yn~-;:.f~~~~ose
• An IIPPfOprlate elllndard of N'llew,"
Although Eaon alao objected to the
.-.commended the Mw1nO off'-, "Is
lime limits let for refund demands, the
one which would allow an employee
organization aufflcient flexibility , to
n-. Ita need 11 an lnalltutlon and at =~~lon~:;-not =bttl':. these
Ref!!nd demands cao be made only
the earne time inau,.. that an
from September 1 through September
lnclivlduef'a right to a refund wtll be
15 of aech year. Non-members who
,_lngful."
desire ,.funda m11at aend a certified or
regtllered letter to UUP's p,..ldent or
_....,_oltjectadto,alao •
treasurer during that lime.
union'•
prooeu l or
Barry explained that the correepont ' - CllaMtlsfled
the refunde, wea
denoe must lndlcalethat the eender Ia a
alleo~tob¥
B.
non-uDion member who peya UUP
CunWntly, If dl'*-"oee cannot be
agency f - . In eddltlon, lett. . should
-"eee out with the unlon'a eucutlw
Ifill that the eender demanda a refund
bowd or clelegale aaaembly, then •
of the portion of piorn-t which only
norrmuoDa can apllt tile coat of
" Incidentally relalae to negotlatlona for
blnlllng .tllltllllon with UUP. The final
W8QM 01'-t ot~loyment . "
Ia oonducted by the
- tl..,..-aald-tllat- 'before he leoel~
chargM egalnat UUP, he wrote_.
lett.. to the union proteetlng their
tt. __..
mull alao be
appeela prooedure and the wording of
....-: "''ince the Jndlvld...'l ahare of
the refund policy, out wes only
the 001t MMIId oartalnty far exoeecl any
• stonewalled" by UUP officials.
........ IIIIa requ~Nm«lt Ia 10
He claims UUP haa done tittle to
-..t~e~m~na that Ita 11118nt or
improve hie economic poaltlon and
-.ary effect wl II be to 10\liit..- with
aay1 the whole Idee of unionization In
., ·Individual.. right to requeat and
higher education 11 "abhorrent" to him.
recelwearefund."

llunn toniae. no ~ for the
·~·

.:m::..;:: ~ batt,:ual~.=

~

Thla unit Ia regionally atrong and 11

_

eyitem Ia an altematl.. un'-alty. Ita
future property de!*Jda on Ita ability to.
end to anrlch learning

comp...,_.

W

operating .....un:ea. •

ou.ln other-· Bu1111 Indicated:
•The EduCational Communlc:tlllon
Center may not be ablll to 8XJ*1C1 Ita
role and -.,onelbUitlee, glwn "our
inability to OMCift D08"1JPPffWWII for
releealng authortzlld lunda for CCTV

~~~~=tth:,or....,~~ It=
'' •n lias' bee'n 'aUCIIIM{aid 'ttW! mUch
could not staff and maintain lt."

~'if.~o~.::-=11:

·disadvantaged panona, If the University were to craata ~ - Centar for
Qevelopmental Education. "Such a
cent• might Initially ooonllnale the
efforte of "EOC, EOP, UJIWard Bound,
and the Learning Centar.
•International Education migllt well
give up lan_guege lnatructlon to Ma and ·
Letters (except for the ln._!,. English
Language Institute) end lalle on
"greeter reaponelblllty for ~ tlonslgn
scholant, for facililatlng ar-nt~llca-

}l:i,and~t ..-.1~=:It:

lnler81ted ~-lonal poograms
and other units."
• " Attlontkln must be gl-. to men
realistic projections of atudent · anrolland scope In recent y-., with
ments, to a careful and Mlectlve
elimination of the undergraduate
budgeting of resources, and to a
program and reductions In facurt"jlnes.
reconsideration of the purpo- of tile
~:~~~. ~ull~mif:'"~~~n;.:\t ~~! Summer Session. In connection with
the latter, the administrative merger of
f~e:':;::~u~:n;~ap~ ~~o~:~;,S,:: this unit with Continuing Education
may be 81J!lroprlate.•
social workers In the region.
•Exceaalvely fragmented urban studThe Collegu
- lea efforts - Including tho• of tile

SoclalW011&lt;

· 1'1ora 'School has been redur.ed In size

eo~~~rat~ou~ ~,;'~ro·'?8u~~or o~

••
several years," he ~l d , Ia not to
dismantl e II, but to hold the system

:u~~~~~.,ior ~~~1111!,"9 p~~~

· duplrcallon of,
depanments and
schools. Academic Affairs, h~.
rejects " the notion that the Collegiate

=

~t~d~ ~:!:~J= ~~~

Extension In Continuing Education, and
the many urban-qrlented coiAe

~~=·.::fa:.;"_act.J:~': :
consolldated and tocllaaed to provide a
bese for leedanhlp, regionally and
nallonally,ln this fleki .

~~~~ ~~n~J.!l:~~

wr~,r~. t~::... ~~~ ~~: ~~=

Ho-.

·n..

...... ..-a

-re

*W:e:"'=.:!t-::::"it.;
l;;
..-a

DOT awards contract
for Millersport work
North

will ellow lor futuns campua develoPman! 11 well 11 the lofnlng of bolh
eectlona of Lake-USalle.
Dr. John A. Heel, acting -vloe

!he ocintTect lncludee conatructlon of

.-altlle ctoalng of a ramp· that
oonnecta Mllleraport with the campus

The N- Vorl&lt; State...Depar1mant of
Transportation (oon hal awarded an

18.5 million contract to tile Bero
Conatructlon

Corporation

of

~;~~oc:r.=~~ · :::".:!ftt~tf~l= ~~·
Campua

a two-level lnterdlange With the John
. . _ Audubon ParttWey (campue loop
roed) and a rHOUted Mltletaport which
will,_,_:! .atotthe~lalle to• apot ,_. the currwnt lnterMetlon of
Mltleraport and North For.t Ad.

!t'li

Pll1&lt;waY.

The ramp Ia located ' * - l the
lnteraectlon of Mlllera)lort and Maple

Ret.

=

- end-1M-~ - Gem~~U&amp;- -

E n - Aoed.

.._.

~that

the

exact date u to

~~~==~;~~':,~
=..~~. advl.:l ~at~ UM
tlon Ia alao Included.
·
the ramp to entw the campua to uae the
Moat of the aectlon of Mllleraport
which pre.-.tly tran.-- the Amhera! Cempua will be removed aftw
relocation Ia completed. The ,.location

-

1

Augapurver ~ and thoM whO
uM the ramp to , _ to uM the Flint
Cempua Entrance which connecta to
Maple.
.

�uffalo inuslcal?

• Math Sciences
(from pogo1 , col. 1 I

A McKinley high school group
performed one written by a UIB senior
who finds plenty to sing about here
lilllttJng
......,'
lilollld
aiiOUt Y::;::rtown•

a mU8Icll comedy cetetnttng
belllcallylng to write o"'
Scr11nton

~~~. Pa. It's a hell of •

or

...a:r..:::...':':,, ~·= .-:
town,
~up; pcpulalfon Ia down. •

_.._,be proud of, can sing about.
Joi't 1't11181Caf. "The Best Things In
ute,• Widell lM7ad last w"""""d at
Md(lnllf "'Cih SCIIoo1 auditorium,

though, Ia jual not "8ooet Buffalo"

Nllltited.

.

•

tra a lllu.tcal ......ton

of Arthur

Wlnlf l'flliltta "Thhi Magistrate," a

cHulc tala of mlx-upa, which the
JOUfll ~ llaa eel -oatnat the
beclldrop of Buffalo's golden hour 111a tam o1 the oentury Plln-Amerlcan
Expoeltlon.

.........• _

-.

~

enough, but the
..-tous

;'::a;"~=c::. ~:~

... ~. rtoytllmlc, ayncopated
- . · lull of unuaual ·~ and
"'llllft8 of key." '11'a difficult, but
.........,, • uya Or. Mfrja Hale,
.......,..~olmualc education.
... •
~ Joe since he was a
- - , _ he dl-ted her
-..... tellhniq~MS" claaa with a
randlllon of a chlldran's song " so
aiHIINa unuaual, lei's uy" that she
....,_, eJC118C!ed the Yica equect to raid

~~-

a '*-'dous moclam Jazz
~{.In Joe'a acore. Hale uya.
OM ...,_, "Be Glect You H - The
Clwlca to Be Allva,• Ia almost "goapet"
lit Olllnllllon. She .-, heel pralee for
......,...,.... "Gee 1111'1 It QIMI To Be
In to.,• "'o I "-aaly W.nt To Oet
Manlecl, • .nc1 "e.ybodfa Golta Have
- - - will . _ 1'1&amp;
t11a11re tlw
~·fUll.
predicted
Just
....,..
A IQ'IIew
......... of
last

cit--

;;:..::.::;::~~
:r=~won llnll prtU a
..... far...
WI 11J

..._

CIIIIIIIn,-

.• -

In

_,...--.of
R, 11W w.t Side

y_-

people there .,. groote&lt; th•n anywhe&lt;e

around .
BuH.to'a a beautiful town.

·~:;~..~t:::~~:~!~:~~~

under,
A epunky ~lnd of city With so much to give,
Buffalo's where I wanna live..:
Home of the Te)Cas Hot, chtcken wings,

BuloboYe OYerythlng,
Beef on week.
•
Gatta get my .second helping, what the
heckt

Ctear from lA to Bean1own,
Or any be(ween town
There's none ao great

J

Get me to tho city of good neighbors.
That's the place where I wannabe.
It's bettor t
Buffelo'a

your SOuthern hospitality.
-1 wannabe.

You can go to the north and go to the south

and •at and we at.
Buffalo fa atilt the best.
tt'a the number one town from Seattle right
down to Mla:ml SMCh .
You~d better moYB over b~ apple 'cause I've
found a peiiCh .
BUffalo' a where I come alive, buddy,
Buffalo's where I come alive.
It's the only place on earth where I can really

thriYe.
Buffalo's where I come alive .

Walk your Bu ffalo gal
Along ~he Erie Conal.

-your lody fair
In EJUcott Square'!!'
Strut your lox

To the Albright--Knox.
T-*• youfllttle flMrle

""...:=.l'ilbllo&amp;choOie.

~

. . . . Clty'a official
@IIIII. A -=ant made, too, llllt IIW
ODiiilcll
acted air
- play.
the ~
dlclln
"ttat

,..
·-DJ=~

"My ehow at McKinley," Joe
8UQC1418Ied:
That's juat what the "Theatrical Lab"
dlel thla Mmester: students spent two
or more hours two days a week lor

=

=s•:,f{kl"for a;.,~c~~~~
lng, choreography, 'ttockl ng, make-up,
.wl solo dancing. working on
costuming, whata.er.
Joe rounded up a 14-piece orchestra,
all U/B music students and all
WII&amp;Jr!t-a. A little pranure w• exerted
here and there on some of his friends.
McKinley
student Laurie Such
J11!110Uied a t6 by 20 loot mural of the
~ mlllway which • twaa JOined
together from elill\1 eeparate sections.
Other McKIQiay atudlnta supplied ttie
weal .nd dramatic talent, and those
" - another .City school, FosdlckMaaten, made the costumes for the
prtnclpala. Olh• cast ,.nberl used
!Nir own (.nd their parents') Ingenuity
to rig ujl what they wore, wllll a tuck
hera, a ocarf there, and a suggaatlon
whara ~te "-members of lhe
~ Ull group (luann Colby,
~&amp;':'~). Madellene Lyslak,
McKinlay

etudent-technlc.lans

lm-

arovlaect the effect of the lights on the

...,_Am midway at night
(ona of the
upects of the

~ tnaiiHMing

41::
muraJ-beckdrpp. " Stunning." Dr. -fllate
a:;;-~) ~ tn't:~ ·:~ro

~ia jOint U/B-Buffalo Public
SchOola ...,tura, Hale aublnlla, llaa to
be the lltat time a city voc:atlonal echool
haa- put on a mualcal. It's probably
the firat lima In _ , memory that any
cltr school llaa undlrtat&lt;an a musical.
Olily tha mora wett-llnancect suburban
schools usually do IIIIa, aile uys.
PR-.p

tJ/B aa welt aa for the music edus:ation .
program whose students' . Interests
dovetail nicely With this kind or venture.
[University-bigwigs who talk about
community relations aren't likely to be
Impressed, tflough, Hale says with a
touch of bitterness. "They'd apparently
prefer me to be worklnd on some
obscure papers; I've been aenled tenure
at the top level
because my
_bibliography supposedly wasn~ good
enough.'1
Joe's play was especially appropriate
for high school production, Hale sa~s .
because~ unlike some commercial
. musi.cal successes, It contained no
controversial elements which might
embarrass or make things uncomfort·
able for both young performers and
audiences of parents and other family
members.
No songs about ..tits and ass, n as in a
recent smash musical by another
Buffalo native, Mlcllael Bennett .
It's not because Joe Is young and
unsophlstrcated. To the contrary, Dr.
Hale says, kiddingly, " he's very
sophisticated, practically a snob.''
. The wholesome, ur,beat nature of
"The Beat Things In Li e" Is calculated.
M~[s In recent years , Joe thinks,
have bi&gt;come too heavy-handed, too
message-laden, have gone out of their
war, to shock and offend audiences .
• People like musicals that are
pleasant ," he says. Aud iences don't pay
money to be offended.

m~~~al~alh~: ~": =~~~l~Pno~ga~~~~

working now on an adaptation of Mark
Twain's "The Prince and the Pauper."
Twain certainly has points to make In
that, Joe ,.ays. But it's still a good
story. The 'musical which will result
from this effort he'd like to have
premiered at U/B (he'll be remaining
here to get his master's). But, there
haven't been many musicals on campus
since the 1960s.

. Joe' a future -

down to Leke Erie.

Soy 1\ollo to Bufloto.
- 1 M people.,. proud
'CalM they won't follow the !'fOWd.
1~'1. weft to aay "hello."
Soy hello to Buffalo. . - ©1tn Jouph A. Wolter

Aao-

ID~~ Counall ::-.:-.:;:

far

bea\liiful town, buddy,
Buffalo'aa beautlful town.

Lakes.

' * ' - ! aa a

·~-No doubt

8uffai~aa
~

As the Queen Clty on those great Great

..... ....mo.

Tile plot Ia

~

SAY HEU.OTO BUFFALO

Hale thlnka the venture waa a
...........,. public relations coup for

What's Joe Walter's ·future going to
be like?

m~~cwar.:,~~~ M~~~~f~~e':J v~~

Idealistic as II may sound, he thinks the .
arts can be used In high schools to help
young people arrive at a sense of
s'elf·worth out~lde the drug culture,
apart from the other downbeat scenes.
" Education In the arts can help
develop total human beings." Joe says.
"We've become too concerned with

k";~l~!ks"°C~ot ~~·t~e ~~· ~nvil,~~~
1

against science; he was an entrant In
the Western New YOlk Science Fair
himself while in high school) .'
"I'll also remain a closet composer,"

._e~f~~~~y~

on Broadway, maybe?
he
Not likely.
Joe thinks Broadway entails too
much back·bltlng, Is too geared to what
sells. " You can't write what you want to
write. The}'_ want evefthlng to sound
~ll&lt;,e ' Oon'l~al)lOn u..
•
";Y

't: .. •~-• •

"""de •"
._- ,

ence, Bunn Indicated. should expect
over the next five Y...U:• - a limited
expansion of Its resourcas.-.to permit
both a qualitative strengtbenlng and a_
programmallc expansion . of Its responsibilities, Including thOee at the
undergraduate level. A number of steps
have already been taken towlllel these
objectives, ne said. A full plan for the
Department's da.elopment over the
next five years will be necessary.
Committee on Appllcatlona
The Committee on Mathematical
Applications, Bunn said, should report

~~~l'rn ·~~~~~in':litf:'~=•\':. r:~~~v~~

membership drawn from thAI several
Faculties and Scheola _eapeclally
dependent In tlleir own progtams of
Instruction and research on courses and
senllces In applied mathernatlcs and
.
statistics.''
This committee -should be " broadly
charged to. review and periodically
advise the VPAA on the availability of
those services within the UniversitY, not
only for the purpose of' avoiding
unnecessary duplication or courses and
services but also to ldeotlfy weakness·

:~c~n~o~r~::':::ft':~~s.'.lu~l~~n~!
memo continued . " Either f9rmally or
Informally we should ~so insure that
this committee, In Its work, Is attentive
to Interdependencies In these areas
between Health Sciences and Academ ic
Affairs."
Bunn said his decisions have been
• strongly inll!jenced by a belief In the
principle ol-1folteglallly, defined not i n
stifling terms of political conformity or
Intellectual orthodoxy but 1 n terms of
reasoned discourse and shared respon·
slbllllles. Designing organlzationaf
structures to escape this kind of
collegiality Is." he said , •a bad principle•
for any university to accept. Structurally
dividing departments for reasons thai
have little to do with their purposes and
responsibilities Is not, I think, the
appropriate intellectual
basis for
sustained development toward . ex·

cellence."

· He said he sympathllea with facuJt)i
who have met frustrati ons within their·
departments In trying to secure a
reasoned and detached hNrlng tor their
ideas and recommendations, but that
organizational artifices are not the
answer. .
'
"My conclusions will not, I am sure,
be universally pop(Jiar," the VPAA
acknowledged . But, he said, "It Is my
udgment that within the understand·
ngs outlln@d we can best 1ind the
getting In which our lon(j·term development In mathematical sciences can

l

occur."

The Math Sciences area was the
subject of a controversial outside
.
review report earlier this year.
An internal committee of the Dean of
Graduate and -Professional Studies, the
Dean of Undergraduate Education, and
the Provost of FNSM, after receiving the
consultant repor;t, suOmltted Ita own
conclusions and' recommendations to
Bunn In December.
A series of meetings followed with
Bunn and faculties of the units
concerned. Bunn also reviewed his
perceptions ef Issues and options with
the Faculty Senate Academic Planning
Board

Philosophy announces
1978 .u ndergraduate prize
contest
,The Philosophy Department this
-announced the opening of its 1978
compelltlon for the Undergraduate Prize

~~~~·::; ~~~~.: ~~~~;,~~

undergraduate work on a phllosop~lcal
theme.
Unique to this contest, according to
ltscllairperaon, Prof. Rlcllard T. Hull , Is
Ita openness to a wide variety of media
and modes of expraaslon : painting and

?k:.:'.n~ict~~e·~~.co,:r.o~

critical or speculative philosophical
essays may be appropriate.
In order to lnture a non-literary
antry'a lair Judgment, though, Hull
said, It Is requested that a brief
slal.,.,.,l of the philosophical theme
accompany ail entries for which. the
theme Ia not self-..ldent. Entries will
be Judged on their success In
expressing and exploring their themes.
Judges will be from the Philosophy
Department's teaching faculty .

Faculty

thro~ghoutthe

University are

r~:re~l~se~ t.:'~0n~.':tl.~. es~re~r;~ th\~

8

contest.
Students are
frequently
reluctant to enter such competitions
without faculty encouragement, Hull
pointed out; faculty who reao term

~~:~! angd~'t:r, te~ prg/:;/3eare8~c~

encouragement, he said.
.
Entries may be submitted n()t later
than May 25, 7978, to Prof. Hull .
cheirperson, Undergraduate Prize Com·
mlllee, Department of Philosophy, 675

:~i~.lnl'sH~~m,:;,com~~~ a~d t~~

phone number.
The cash award will be made d)Jrlng
the summer. The wlnnlno. entry w111 be
placed on permanent display In the
Philosophy Department. Unsuccessful
entries may be picked up In the
Philosophy Department on or after the
middle of June, or will be mailed to the
entrant's summor address.

�Moy&lt;1,1t71

t~oung Suzuki
gave out scholarships.
1978 Grace Cllpen Aw~ winners
were: Ann H. Barnett, Adrian D. Carr,

~bl~g~t~[· K.:~'t~ ~~ir:~~· ~~

. 1.. Gold,

Ronnl~.

Goldstein, Shahld

:=a:i..~= P~~~~~~n~~~~au~a

F. Katz, Mary E. Keller, Daniel R.
Kooclelny, Timothy P. McMahon,
James R. Mlldrew, Joseph P. Minai,
DaYid
M. Schlntzlus, Gary W.
Schrdioder, Amy K. Schueckler, Leurs
A. Wallenhors1, William J. Wanke, Gary
Wolf.
Victor Dernjanenko, John Gleeson,
0

~~~. 'J:i:-· J::1~1~~o~~P~ts"oh,::

Kim M. Dunn, Susan C. Brsun , Karen
Russ, Janet Fox, Glen Kaiser, Thomas
Romano, Steven A. Rich, Joyce
cn-..buske.

----~·

PSS switches signals on who's eligible to join
Aller about 90 minutes of debate at
Ita m..Ung lui week, the Protea\lonal
Staff Senate first passed, then
reaclnded a reeolutlon which cal~ lor
a referendum among professional staff
members employed by the R-.:h

=':,;
...fcrthe F~~~~~o~~~:,:~
The referendum waa to find out

whether
or not theM ataff members want to
become part of the general PSS
membership.
lnateed, Senators voted to extend
membershJp to theSe groups of
employees wltllout asking them.
Wha1 caueed all the confusion was
the feeling ola number of Senators that
con.utuenta of the groups hedn~
dlapi*Yed enough Interest In PSS to
wwrant a change In the cons11tutlon
wllhoot such a referendum. Find out
flrat If theae 270 employees really desire
p, these Senatore said.
Only 12 per cent of the 270 bothered
to anawer a recent PSS survey which
atteml&gt;fed to al88lls thel:fterest. To
the three
boot, no one from any
group$ attended the PS
meeting,

mem-

:S:;,al~ ~~ tl:,-J,c:~~re"~::fe':

would be dlocuaaed and their participation was welcome.
Some Senatore also feared that
disproportional rel&gt;resentatlon would
occur within PSS Area I If the "roups
were Included under lhQ present
constitution. Others expressed concern
that If the groups' representative&amp; did
not attend Executive Cs!mmlttee
meetings, lack of a quorum would
prevent the committee from_functioning
effec11vely.
Dolores Georger, who favored the
referendum, asked Senators why, alter

~~·ilse;r ~g~~~~J~~t,;,ft ~~~c~!:~ra

without making sure they _,, to join.
She explained that the referendum was
a "plliCIIcal" way tp • ~proach the
matter, although to'SOme It may seem
"undemocratic ." Later In 1he meeting
she lamented, " This Ia an open door to
destroying what we already have."
Another camp of Senators led by the
Membership Committee (who conducted the survey) countMed that a 12 per

~::'.,d':-:"~s~taWstl~~ v!11r.~~u:~

and proves that a sufficient amount of
Interest in PSS does exist.

Ukenlng the abaenoe of members of
the three groups to the conspicuous
of _ . , Senators, Bill
Johnson urged hla colleegues not to
consider lacli of attendanoe as the "sole
measure of Interest ."
AnothM from the Memberahl p
Committee mentioned that the three
constituencies do not regularly receive
PSS minutes and may need more time
to familiarize lhernHI- with activities
before reallnteres11s expressed.
"The Whole thing comes down to
collegiality," argued Dr. Allen Kuntz.
Referring to the feet that the Fecutty
Senate has traditionally rejected the
Idea of merging with the PSS, Kuntz
warned ataff members "not to eng~~ge In
the follies of the lecutty."
Senators then voted to abSQrb the
new constituencies only alter a
referendum Indicated that a majority of
the 270 employees wanted ln.
Soon alter the vote, however, more
Senators articulated concern that the
referendum Inhibited colleglaHty 'and
Indicated a cer1aln
amount
of
"defens iveness.• Also, to some, the
no-ahow

~~onw~=ered tt~e exc~:~e am~~~1Y
wonted to Incorporate the groups .

!

scattering of Senatora Indicated they

~~ ~~~~':' ::S"':In,=

"rallroeded .•

poe~~,::.~ =..~~'-J:
gr:'~~~~t~:::.eo:~lo~e,;,~~m~~

tees to draft changee In the oonatltutlon
to pro.kle memt)erahtp for the three
groups of employees.
In other buslnesa, Chaltperaon Ellen
McNamara reported that the ex.cutlve
Committee had decided that past
chairpersons would be eligible to
represent the PSS on the · Faculty
Sellate's Executive Committee. The
representative will have non-voting
status.
Senator Patrick Young, who chaired
the committee which coordinated the
PSS workshops on altiUs development,
Informed th':J[oup that three of lour

~gco~~~

1

Tpr:l k~S:~o~

.:iten:gr:,
on edmlnlstratlvellablllty.
McNamara asked Senators to "get a
commitment" from Individuals before

~d~~~~8 ~~~~~~~~~entatlves

In

�:.

from birth to death, male mortality Is
alllnll.lcllnUy grMter,' r.nglng from a
thTrd h~her In Infancy to three times

~fatnd~~:.~a=!Vorced male

haa ,. , annual death rahl more than

ttne times ae high ae 4he divoli:ed
female. Recent studies on suicide

=-~~~~~ :P.:U~:'~~ ~:.

- ' e r than lor unmarried women.
When compared with women, single;
dlvote&lt;ld or widowed, men are much
more likely to be residents of mental
hoapltala.

No~·~:;r.:=rlala

In SUCh factors as
age of death are too grMt to be
attributed solely or even principally to
blol~y. The dlllerencea ant best

=Is~ ~ ~~on~~· th"err

environment and particularly their
Interpersonal milieu.
The contradiction between the ways
men ant expected to present themselves
In public and their real emotlonal
feelings Is a key to understanding the
maJalse of being male.
When I speilk with men, It seems we
talk In ~ c:bndlpta, a personalized
Intellectualization; taking ourselves and

experience and removing them one step
outward.' Faellnl!s and actions, I think
caused of rlak and lear. Our need..to
shant, and our limited male , _ of
dofng so, literally forces ua to IOd&lt; to
women ln an attempt to glln an

es::!'~la~~m.:'ymuch tnner.personal
experience - which makes up ltla aelf
- as women do. The difference lit thai
men ant socially expected to enctoae
their experieQce behind a "neuromuscular armor". that Is regarded ae
manly conduct.
PoaHIYa no.......:tlva ldaolagr needed
Piggy-backing the women·~ movement, mimicking their aeaertiona,

~~~~~~Yst 0~ha~~stwll~ttlt;:,C::ng ~~

formation of a healthy men~ movement
and possibly doom It to laljure. The
development of a positive non-reactive
Ideology Ia the essentlal ·next atep In,
the evolution. •

~?:~=n~st~,roro:~~c~.;~~

campus through May 6; with films and
groups ~mlnattng • In workshops
schedule&lt;! all daySalurday. [See-boxed
schedu1;_tn tcX!ay's calendar.) •
Toplca such as Fatheta and Sona,
Grow1nSL-Uil' M~, 'Awkwardne~,ol

...

-

j
~

'

~ale F!SI(I_deh1p J cieelgnec~ to heiR
men realize their 111....- ~ce and
to begin to llltlke .orne ~·· (c)(.
tbemselves.
,
. . · · .,_
i..eaMtatton . _ , _ .
;,.
..
· Onlll&lt;e some -{if 'tha ~ oi
women, lhe .._.. =lon'--.ot' be
nelldlly chan* 1t1
legislation.
"--ppe utdom gl1!w 01 ct.iiae In a
.alf&lt;Onatruc~.l
.-lnciluf w•y
where motlv...a. _by Qllllt, elleme or
Mlf-hate. ApJlii!IGIUIIQ men IIJ.that way
amaclca of ~lme rellglort tllld is
dellnalng.
workahopa w111 take o~r
experience and creele ~ supportive
almoaph.,. whMe a IMII . . , tum to
another lor aaalalance .-! u~
In g. liopelully, ha will lind ~Is
problems ate not a matter of Individual
palhology at all, b~ rather an Individual

fh-.

rer~:.:,o ~~~..:=ea.

Is
also a lreedontto experience the reality
of human P8'100a1tfl._ We heve begun
to· Cheri our own w~y. deft!~ ~ur own
etyle; to ectlvely determine the presen1
· and reinvent the future. We ln~te the
Onl-alty'a attendanpe; -men and
women, 1o llxplore with ..a the
• privileges and hazards of bei(IQ.ma1e.
Call831-~'for further Information.

China/US: contrasting views on man a·ncr'riat.~r~ :-:- ~ .,,.

.........

~

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

-~.,....., .

,.. ............. tollort to~
.....,, . . ahouldtiMtiCM of QIINiia

.
. . . . . . .role
.. - &amp;lid of
............
1n-_..,.,_
Donald
......,.._. . . OUIM IN Chi. _ • . , '\IJU.IIIIIC" ...... fll man's
ntllln. In ............. ... Oftlr to
Nlln 1111 ~ In Ol'dar to CN&amp;te
tM DMd eoct.tJ 011 -"'· Confucius

---allld

...
from
aiMrthll
_ -. . . -~ til' lila Innate
llllllly flldlallnaullll rlilllt 110111 -a.

111'81! ' - ' balf. .._... . . . . the!
iiwta .....,.. _ . to be aood Jua1 u

..... IMdl to nm downhill. Haun· Tzu
DUI ~ on man's capacity
but _ , he felt that
.u.!Jon and good oo-nment would
b. .ulllclentto bring out the beat. To be

tar .m.chlel,

81ft, the Taotataowlacted all dlacuaalon

of morality u Ultfmately •umatural,"
and. ltla ~lata argued that man's
lllbn lenclld towenf 1t1a bad axcapt
unc1ar euthorttartan rule. There Ia merit
to ' " - - ~· effort to lind an
8Miogua to 'the PUibn ethic In Chi,_
lhtlugllt; b Ch'- -lnly did not
IIOid b
naive view thai man OOU1d

...... be:M ..... eflortlMaly.

Nonallul- It 1t1a Confucian
&amp;lid ....-n .... of " - wlllall ......... ClonllllanL It 8IIIVIvad b
!!flulriol of llladdlllem which, lllce
T~- a~ phllaaopl1y,
. . . 800111 DlrWinllm Which, lllce
- - - tMIIOmlllllty at tile
for
......... llolll Burig-Ming

(often
llllln8mad . .,..
lim'") .... Cll'lng Ol1fiGIIIIXy

.................., -...............
_.._..on lM 111M

ofman'alnnatil

~ . of
oa ~....,.,... -*1 llulld
all...
0111- . . . . , . _ .

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

...... -

. . . . - oonclllue

to

part of "larger : atnictures. The- Con~
Iuciana stressed the family and society,
tiMi Taolaia atreseed nature and the
• cosmos,_ the Legalla1a the state and
country. All schools agreed ttiat each
, per8!in Is Important not becauae he Is
distinct from others b!Jt precisely
. because he sh~ baeic human
-~ qualities with others . . The Conlucla_n.s
·3 emphasized ewryone's . capaclty lor ·
hul)'lanlty the TaolaJ.a· · pqaJ1ed. 'If. ..
clproclty ~ween men
women,'anC!'''
the Legalists arglled the equality of all
before the Jaw. lt was agreed thai one
had to lind one's own underatandlng of
the Way and to follow It with a sense of
Tha Chlnaaa acc:ept the Marxist view
autonomy dignity and lniegrUy· one
that there Ia no suCh thing aa "human
should
n.Wr subml1 to tha whims of
nature" but only "class na1ure." But
mere public opinion or state authorl1y.
they alec bell..., that every person has
the Innate capacity to transcend class
Confucius said that the will of- 1he
humblest perso~ could not be taken
blckaround and to altaln a true
from him; he deloned true loyalty .as tha
"socf811at conaclousness."·The Chinese
courage to criticize the object -of one's
are not so much trying to create a "new
loyalty If necessary 1o prrierve the
=:~~~ "':"~e}~erna'!hj~hrk·~~~~
Way. One should develop Ideals for
which one Is ultlma1ely willing to die.
·~Ina/ proletarian - nature" will be
Individual interests, on the other
But Cox feels that this change will
able to,..._. ltaalf. We ?,11mp8M the
occur more In the area of techniques
hand, were more auapec1. The public
than In underlying Ideas. He su'l.geats,
Interest wae thought to Include the
lor example, that "medfta11on may
prlv~te Interest Whenever there was a
Mil)' 1th Cadre Schools. These schools
conlllc1 be1ween them (which was rare),
romlnd us of tile vital spiritual role once
_ . eatabilalled during the Cultural
played by the Sabbath rest. Indeed, Cox
the public Interest ahould prevail over
=-=for~ o"lclals who = d
asserts that the ''n- oriental ism" Is ae
dangerous as It Ia promlalng because It
does not take adequate account of the
echool dtlcl-.d that a primary goal was
11y ancl hedonism . In their view, both
fundamental Judeo-Chrla11an Insight - 1he Individual and the society suffered
~~r,:"',!.~~~~~~"?-!aco- 1helr
1hat man Ia a fallen creature who can
from such tendencies. The Chinese
deal with sin only through God . Since
valued creativity In art and In life, but
Cox mistakenly belieMa thai the
t~ believed that ~tr, ~_gut of
Ch1!"1se ant heading ' tor • the same
are
1nvo\'::;
rationalistic and aclen&amp;I!Jc culture the!
Jeal •IIIII'IUIIIcaled enctftfied .. thoae
haa artaen In the Weat,' he ends by
amenta1 t h - . Individuality sellof iM ~. bUt It haa been a
d111tnnt ltraln which has dominated
exr.eaalon and ortglnallty WIO lmport~~?:~p, '"fo ·~~W::ri~!all~:;, ~~
tile Weltam conaclouaneaa.
The
"archal~' while the "Eaat" Ia turning :"ncia f~l~~= ,..er to become
hold '""""''·
to "modeml1y."
•
henlly a · Rei mlat,
argued who
that was
the
The Chin8M lajected the Buddhist
J
111M tflldltlon 1naiall that
denial of the rMIIty of the aall and built
man Ia" ,..,.._tally a "fallen"
Chi- dial*-, US llf)IIO&lt;iunlly
•
on the Buddhlll emphaaie on altruism •
.,..,..., thai hla vary aouJ Ia
The Chinaaa cnallange In this area Ia
to d-lop the doctrlna ~het the Mil was
with aln, and thai _ , With God's aJd -: to question that ltraln of Western
aupremely Important becauaa It wae at
he a.~not llopa to .,..... the good
thought which aaaumes that man Is
the center· of concentric circles of
fundamentally evil and to bulld on that
aoolely here on -'11 but can only
fam11y, soclety,lhe elate .,.d \he world.
a1ra1n which atrea- man's capacity lor
_..to UIVallon In the heraelter.
The Chlneaa alm11arty filtered out 1he
good. The American opportunity Is to
Western locus on the Individual and
This dCiflliNnt view of man ae
-that whateyer the actual truth of the
built on Weatern notions of aociety to
ln,....tly u.ble to evil wae -1nad
mauer (which can never be proved one
develop various forma of socialism .
bymany-uoiWMtern hlatory auch
way or the other), one's lalth Inevitably
u lila . . - t o n of the Jews and the
comes to lnlfuence one's society.
In flu-from many IelMa
Within the academy, tha Chinese
The Chinese today con11nue to be
challenge Ia to ,_llza that the vi- that
highly Influenced by many ·lnherlted
who -life in a ~tate of nature
rToan'a nature Ia avll Ia the single
Ideas about the Individual Jfld society.
obetacle to the dewiopment of
The Marriage taw In the Peoples
=..;::ra~~~:lio ~ -:;:;,::.~ graateat
public education In this country. The
Republic permitted women who had
f81Hblllty Nquinad only lfla moet
unlty Ia to that once we
been oppressed In the old soclaty to get
e our vt.w of man's nature we will
oautloua .t1orta al~orm
IIOCiely.
divorcee lor the flra1 lime, but It was
to rely more on pereuaaion than
To be - .
:raJn
""signed Drlnclpally to a"*'CCIhen the
thai Included tile J
lclaa
on vlo*- In
bringing about
family, whlch waa neganled aa the baelc
fundamental changaa In our society.
link betwMn the Individual and eoclety.
thai - Chak
. . . . thai
In ....
lmiOe
of
Gocl,lfla
notlan
a goad
mind
Mao T-tung owpea(edly called lor
The ..................
can _..., an evil llilelv. 1t1a
Individual lntagrtty and "alncerttr" In
"Enligldaninanl" . . thai ratlonloltty
Chi- vlewl of ltla 1ndlvlduaJ Md
deYeloplng one's Ideas and poiiCfea,
toelety - relevant here. Aa Wing-tall
and he claarty !Mpec:ted (ae well as
Chen and othera h8va ahown, the
leaned) courageous critics such ae the
8lgmUnd , _ , whlilll proniiM aeclal
Chi- always 1hQUQht of tha
hlatortan Wu Han Who spoke ou1 on
lndlvldual ae an Integral anti Mat!'lial
and peyc:llolao.., 11'0111
.... 'CIIIfta,.
coL.
herltoige of sinfulness ·and- damnation:
Yet, It Ia 'Significant that this aeoond
atraJn has reJnaJned a mlnortty vlew In
the West --and thet even today It Ia
frequently criticized as a "Uberal myth':
or a " romantic fallacy." •
Harvey Cox has • studied and
participated l.n the growing movement
among Americans to e pertment with
•
..
x
.
ortenta1 religions, phlloeoph1ea and
styles of life. Me I?~ that tnoat'O!
those liltracted to the new ortentallam
are searching not only for certainty and
authority but also lor friendship,
community, moraHty and wholeness values which are too olten neglacted In
::=f~-:r:, ':::1 ~~~~ ; d A~~
capitalism. Cox strongly eympathlz.es
with these concerns and predicts that
the "new orientallsm" wiH cause
Americans to revitalize those elements
o1 their own religious traditions which
emphasize the nobility as well as the
llmlta11onsolman .

1

and

1

=c:.:=•:a~u~~Jt't::

~~ur:tz;i.,J.h:.,IIY.:'~~=. ~~'f:~(.

=·tile -~lde~~a;sc!, :~
-=~~C:="::t~re

~reVartatl~~y~:':l

''-:L:Ian

aulfuaed

~~of~~~--~

5

a- -

:..:::..~.:::.::
tile

-·o.

�lloy4, 1171

7

Soong writes in his behalf;
Siggelkow concerned 'by SA acttons; .·
the 'Courier' is watching ·c;&gt;ur coverage
Editor:
Soma

times

when

high-ranking

=~= ~~n~~:.'!eiol:''lli:"t~~

dlsinterasledJudgementa on events, or
whose job It s to make dlapasalonate
reports Ol\ these events.
The tactic Ia an old one:They picture
those who are required to observe or ·
report as prejudiced, or as 8dYer8811...
We at the Courler-Expreaa Who , _
been watching your 1'88tll)ent of Ms.
Armao's coverage are tempted, a bit, to

...

:,'ll,~e~=~~ ~~!:~:~~:s,~

on us.
The purpose of the letter Is to let you
know that we're going to continue to
call 'em as we sea 'ern at UB, and that
we'n be. watching your handling of our
work, too,
Al!eu'8 truly,
-Douglaa L. TtiiiMr
ExecutiYe Editor
Courier-Express

....

•

..

n..w.w~o~a ot.,.,.-,...,to.._~.-..ton.

•Ketter and the SA

~-1.-11

·

Ketter-told studentsthat-hiandorS8s
the concept ~lnd SCATE (Student
~m~ Te:'u':
bu!
· N.Y. Sf*,. Public lnt~~t~~at Reseerr;/1
reualgnment of · funds In • Acedemlc
Group: Kett,.- aald he rejecteil thelt
Affairs . . VPAA Ronald Bunn then
$25,000 .reQU88f becau8e the group ·~ reported that he hopes soma type of
oould not -~Ida a etatam81lt lndlcat- - avatuauon' fonn can .. -repared this fall
lng whtlre« how funds would be spent.
"" U•
~~;o~~vf ~ean o_ nderijreduate
He Mid he wanted the money to be
on ~Pil' and that he-ref.uses, on
~
·r .
" . n "· •
• '.
~ pli,- tll tuj,port a ~\l&gt;n )1\al •
Tha'~IOant•Jlti:&gt;lad ,SPIICUJI!IIQn ha,
_'!"""uhtabla to thoM Who give It
~:::..:Jg!,g~~res~~s!'r~ra:c,~~
Re-cwd Co-op: Student 1 - oould not
grudge against the department· 9.J: a
be ueed to support tha Co.-op because,
dislike of the curriculum . Although tha
Ketter found, adaqu.te records ~
department did not 88k for eddlllonal
not kept to Indicate the Co.-op was not
funding for the program, Ketter said
selling ~ than an agreed upon
thst one cannot ~lsllcally add a
monthlY ceiling of $10,000. Ketter said
doctoral· program without needing
funding, tOr
jecle: ,

•'
student. ·eaaoclated

pco-

=.•:tl'fr'.!in

a

mone:

:: ~n:g~8~R::.ft:J~~~t~
when none couldl&gt;e prodi,ICed. Until the

case

Ia decided by the courts, Ketter
said, there Ia little he can do about
funding 1111 operation.
Group Legal Sen/Ice-s: Hla main
objedllon here was that money was
,tOeing u'!Ad In Individual lnateed .of

w::r='J::;:,:....~or~C.::k~~

the luteal" bas~Thla mailer Ia also In
ti!Acourta.
•
Untwr.fty Ph8fm.cy: Funds were
~nllfly cut ott because Sub Board J,

lion, 2.c~to :'bs!~d
.....,...lble

!heno~~
for chwgeS of leaal
negligence. The Pnlaldint reported tfiat
8rfiw&amp; are now underway to lie the
.-.Hon to an «ademlc program
-wlllch
a fund~ base.

would=

,..=.:::,1,..~-:, lft.:t'::':l'~
~

heel

been '11ed to an
ectwMional altu.tlon." COntrary
w11e1 he told, Ketter said, apeakera
-not booked and he objected to the
money
being ...,
....Slo fu!lll a rally.
F
__

to

Aeaardlng.:: 4-courM load, Ketter
said fhal,
on reports of c~it
deva!U811on Ill U/8 the Regents wanted
.-.conflrmllllon of the Carnegie unit. He
said many groups within the Unl-aity
were oonceined about the abuses of the
syatern, as -11 as Its general
educational value. When courses went
from th-to lour hourw, Ketter char~ed
:-'~ ':i~~!Y "didn't change t lr

AlthoiiQi. Ketter admitted he tully
aupporteCI the change et the time, he
IIOW concurs with tile Springer Report
whiCitl ,_..,menda claM time and
CNIS!t hour equivalency.
t&lt;Mtw loki atudants the Day Care
C... eliminated because the
8tudMt MlocleiiOn did not want to
lund Ill ODWetlon and Unl-alty funds
cou1c1 only be veed If t"'-.Canter "'""'
tied to a dapattment. WMn he asked
v.toua department• If they were
In~. he said, none would mak• a
OOIMII!mant.

~y ~:~J'!:l IJC~~?'e$sor

Larry
Chisholm for talking openly with the
Spectrum and denied several limes that
he has asked U/B'a administrative
officials to ' refrain from talking with
Spectrum reporters.
No 'brain drain'
Ketter also denied that a "brain drain"
Is plaguing UIB 8ii!l"told students that
faculty le&amp;Ying are " not disproportionate
- to those oomlng ." Ketter said the
Un'-slty haa Ita drawbacks-weather,

~'\,::ngu~~~~~ud~~4~er::~n:'~;;

acade-mic rallng .
He questioned why, when prominent

='r:lw=~~=t!n~~o:J~,~..arv

1111111 off a eoup (like the recent
I.PP!)Intment bl four Johns Hopkins
profesaorw), the press buries the notice
on page 23.
Many .students SMmed annoyed over
what might be considered Ketter's
"'ler8onaa style of leadership." They
clal~ he would not take . reaponsl·
blllty for his presidential daclalons'and
was not me-king 'himself available to
critical feedback on policies .~
Ketter oountered that he does haY&amp;
dlaagi'Mments wltll hla atalf-mostly
on budgetary matters-but he does not
think they feel " unoomfortable" crltlclzlnt:;lmSaJd that hostility b e l atudenta and administration is not a
unique problem to U/B and becauM of
the nature of hla JC?b at the UniYanllty,
he expecta critic lam.
One student asked why Ketter
attrlbut.. many problems f..:lng - the
UniYarait~ to 11011r"'s other than
hlmeetf. The atudfllf-auggeated that If
he did not h - the power to Influence
daclalons (departll)enlal or otherwise),
then maybe he should caH It a day. ·
Ketter responded that a "r;esldent
can ancourage bllt not ordllr.' Hf told
students .he aenaed an -ntlal
contradictlon In their complaints; on
one hand, they defnanlj that he be
democratic and on the other. they
desire the results of autocratiC power.

Editor:
'
It waa reporte4 In the ~1/JJm (Friday,
• t 28) ond In the Buffalo Hewo (Saturday,
•t28) that the US Student Senate calla for
the ,..,.,.al of
~tar, ,one of the
principal charges belng.hll Jn-aiUvltleo to
the needs of the student• ond' their

Dr.

educational goals.

.:-

.

-

thro!IIJh my cootact with tho Prealclent,
albellllmilod, ovw thelut olghl yearw, thlo
charge Ia open toeerloua queauon. 1 wleh to

mal&lt;o o~atlono Wl!)ch heYe
convinced rna lhatJhe quality of education

and the woll-belog .of !)~r otU!Ie!lll heYe • ,

~::~~.":lly~:na::'~t&lt;&gt;f·Dr.

m::C~'::J ~a~~~~~
Applied

SCionoaa

was

nl'll-od

lost

-~=!"~n~f:: ~~ P,:,t,:~~fo~.~lti

believe It was Or. Ketter"s courageo.ua action
,.. whlch led to the appointment of a new Dean.

Thent was no question In my mind that the

~r~lronotw~g!~O:::Uo'm~"cl'.c!~n~t·

• Dr. Ketter has boon keeping In louch

r~h9~~~ ~o~e:~o r.:4f.':.t• ~"=

Students working In

~search anMaS

close to

his auccenfully seek hla roaearc1t ed•loa.

~~~~·;,re::.:"I.:,at~~ ;r-&amp;~'l'i

~r:,~;e.t'~!!u~a':nl~ =~on"f~

general were timely and perceptive.
• The fire~ volume or a mulli·YOlUIM

~~~t= b~nOr~r~:r,.~nr.£~:1f:oU::

lain presa. I am sure moat coiiMQUM agrM
with me that one doea not write textbooks
for financial galno. Thlo 11 another example

:~:tl%n~:a =~'~tl=re~t o~ 11maJ.r;:~

ax_r::ment at thle

tCtnt 11 Derhape In

order. Ae Chairman of
Civil £nglneertng
Department, I am deproued by the fact that

heavy edmlnlstratiW loads permit llttlo llnlo

~ru:~t':;~: Gr~'=~~·,=ao~'J: t

these activities str1kea an extra appreciative ·
chord .
.
Let me also tal&lt;e thlt -opportunity lo·
comment on the '"brain drain:• Some good

r.ocft~~r:':s~~~~n'!' ~ve aJ~~::u;n~
finger at e number of tacro'ra : Inability of
actmlnlatratlon to negotiate, poor bureau·

cratlc

structure,

Inadequate

resourcea ,

~~~:r=::.~\=·· ~,.,~!;~::.r~

an Important point that one tenda to
overtook ; that le, universities and Industries

~m::m:"~o~~ 0r=•&amp;""~':n~

among unlverelt1ea and lnduatrtea haa been
""""' oo stiH and ~ - The point to be

m- here Ia that a depaitment with good
ond product!.. fiiCultlel wlll have to
constantly cope with lho poulbilily of their
being lur'ld away someUmn with unmatch-able lnoanu-. And thll In my thiQklng 11 a
poaltlve aspect of " bfaln draln." tndeid, a
de-partment would be In a sony stato If no

one

were

movable.

·

m~~~"t"::~t0=:"~~~

ft!HupoJCted faculty membera thlo yew.
Roctu- fO&lt; their repiiiComentl lo
difficult • n .. of oiiH compollllon

=h =~~~fft,~u~':en~\l·s~;
1

otrong. To be 1u111, there 11 also fnfluc of
Sood people. AID"'* senior member o~the

.~&amp;.."\re ~".:~=r.= t:,~r!!

::P

UniWrolty
Dolaw&amp;N, wiU ro)oln the
departmenl thl1 Fall.

BUOELSKI TO LECTURE
Dr. B. Rldlanl
cnau-lallad
pawcfioloty, wBI dell,. a

prom- of

~.

II»CCal, ~not ...,...I, lecture on
Ilia occaalon of hla - - . . , , " - lila

Ufti-.IIJ, on Friday, llaJ 12, 1171 at
3:30 p.m. In the Moot Court, ~ 104
O'BriMI Hall. The thla of hla lecture Ia
"A Unlllacl La.nlng
T1le public
Ia Invited to attend.
.

n-,.•

�T.Y. Wu:
t 70,
he's satisfied
The first thing his friends
wtll tefl you ab9\Jt Professor
T.Y. Wulsthathewas
the teacher and mentor of
two Nobel prize-whining
physicists. Tllen they
describe his work as chief
science advisor for the
Republic of China under
PreWdent Chlang Kai-shek,
the'llve books and mor ·
than I 00 research papers
he's written, and his term
as chairman of the
Department of Physics
here from 1966 to 1969.
Dr. Wu hiiMelf. whOI4! ml1'811'1eilt will
I» tMIII with • pflyalca symposium
' - · ........ rnodeat end philo.,...., llbolll the contributions he's
"*'- 10 hla field end the rneny honors
..s.,.,.
~he hu ' - l p-led.
done my lllln of ..-ch
work, • he eaya. "In the laat ten )'MrS,
rw done ~ of ...-Ice In
T.._ thlll will be of benefit to the
~

....-1on.

I know my own
llmltiillone eo I . , )1181 happy with
c1o1ng the .,... 1can. • .

Noltel a.-e.tes c..ans
~

. . . . wbo will heap
.....-. upon Wu tomonow will be
..... &amp;--...C. N. YllnQ end T.D.
, _ lludlnta; Dr. Robert
~ of
llhYalca at
•
~- 8l1d Or. Aklra
......_ 11"1'-« lind c:MiriiWI of the
~ oll'llyelca 8lld Aatronomy
!We. leah wiH canlrlllule a leot~n to

~:'=-~~-=·::!! ~
~p.m. In the 8y Lect~n Hall,
~-

member of Phi Beta Kappa.
His professors were G. E. Uhlenbecl&lt;,
Otto laporte, D. M. Dennison and H. M.
Randall. His later work shows thelr
Influence.
Alter returning to China In 1934, he
taught as professor of physics at the
Natlonal University of Peking during the
tumultuous years of the Sln&lt;hlapanese
Wer.
In 1938, the war forced the unl-.lty
to move south to Kunmlng , where It was
renamed the National Southwest
Associated University. It was there ~hat

'1::

w~ 'f:'~.:\'d 1~'fwo of my classes
during his aen~r year, In quantum
mechllnlcs and dynamics, • Wu recounted to an Interviewer. "He was' an
excellent student-brilliant."
Lee hed been a freshman In one of the
universities In northen) China In 1944,
~~t~~~ewf~~~g~

enrolled at the- National Southwest
Associated University as a sophomore
In physics.
·
''Since I taught only junior-level

~=,'·
~ ~ ~=~~~~·Ys~( ::l~
sophomore classes were so easy for
him, he carne I~ for extra work and
lema.
"He did all t e problems quickly and
was not only a.hard worker 'but the way
~~\f~.!"'hed problems was unusually

more diltlcult

Wu has described Lee and Yang as
being like "two diamOnds. No matter
- e they are placed. ther ar&lt;L.

~?~~..J~.~~ ~~ ~rk.~ent, .

.::t;s~nl~"ra'l~~t ':,'iu~e~~

1

=.::.~~- dedication can lead you to

In aplte of the constant upheaval of

g::,~er an~0 ~ ~~:,:.~ t':'h~~~~~

other

~udents, Wu produced a number

~~~i.1!':nc!-.~1\::J'::l
9

the Academia Slillca for his essay on
"VIbrational Spectra and Structure of
Polyatomlc Molecules;" In 1948, he was
elected a member of the Academia
lt8ell. The Ministry of Education of
China ~ted hlln With lta-ftm class
ortalor hla
In pflyalca In 1943.

-m

Caaeto the us for~
Wu Mlced by the Q&lt;Mimi1I.OI of
the RefMibllc 01 China to go -io -the
United 8t81• In 11146 to dwelop
pn!pC!ala lor futu.. IOientHic -.loPmenta. He llllked Lee to .ca~~~~fany
him, _ , though Lee atll an
~uate, and ft\ede a special
wlth the Unl-.lty of
Qllclilo In which the U of C ~
..,...,.
a.. .,..,. e q_,.. end ' then
Mmlt 111m • a grwlulite student II he
!Mile the ...... lM'I llrat end only
dealw- hla doctOAte In physics.
While MIVkll - • vtalllng professor
ol flhnloa at tllit UnMraitY of Michigan
..S New York Unherally 8lld as
_ . m ...oclale at Columbia, Wu
fMatolled hla
the Chlneae
oowrnn-~. lfcri~Mw, by then the
~ Wer had ended end the
0 * - Oommunlata begen their 11aht
to ~ the lergest oountno tn the

.,....,_t

_...for

-'d.

~·a -'lmenl lleelng to
T.._ Tn fM w11en Wu ended his
llllllllon llbroed; he decided not to tio
lleolt Ill• China ltPIIed &amp;pert by the wer.
'nil ~lc of China 1181 Ileal! up In
In Tlllwiln In 11141, but Wu did 1101 tmel

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

That ,.., 1111 and hla family

moved

Oltallra ...... he . _ _

- a t olfiOw

..s

heed of
lclf Pltvatoa 8ecllon of the

Natlonll . . . . . . eo.-11 of Ceneda •

peat ... lleld Ulllfl tllll3. He . . , . , •

=:--:a-::,r..:,'!'dl~
1=."*'
:C"= ~of ==rlonu~
• -

.... pei10d, In

11181 Ylllllend 1M ~y- .-nled
the Naill! flrla In Jlll)o8lce. They

partly ~ 1101 hold true In certain
particle 1..-lona. ~ theory w..
aubleq...Uy verified by the work of c .

S . Wu. It gave new direction to others
conducting research In elementary
particle theory.
1

at1~~Y ~~::"~~~~nd~~,~~

Ita fn~llute lor Theoretical Physics. Lee '
Is Enrico Fermi Professor of Physics at
Columbia.

ln~fiut~:!f :r~kl:~ l~h1e963~lytechnlc
"It then had every high reputation as
a small MIT," he commented. " As a
private Institution, they hed financial
dilfjcultles all the time, though they
treated me very well indeed, with a high
salary. But the better they.tl8&amp;ted me,
the less COtylfortable I felt . I began to
feel embarrassed. I felt that at a state
university, such as U/B, J wouldn't
receive such specllll tn~atment."

Wu ume.to U/lln t965
S6 In 1965, Wu carne to Buffalo as
professor of physics. He served as
chairman of the department from 1966
to 1969.
"I contrlbut~othe development of
the physics pr
here," Dr. Wu said
In an unusual urst of assertiveness
about hla accomplishments. "In 1965,
we had about15 faculty members, a lot
of s8rvfce coui'ies and _very little
equipment lor reeearch.
'The University agreed that lacking
funds and space, the physics department should build up Its theoretical
group first," he eonllnUed. "We built
the department to a maximum of ~
faculty lrf 1989, wiMn I resigned the

tar~~shlp beca~ of my du)les In

Wu

Ieala

the

dep-.tment has
' - l better

~lly done well. "It has

gred~e~~ :::U~I-"0 out ,_.ch and

During his post-World War II years In
the U.S. and Canada, Wu did not cut his
ties with the Chi- gOVf!"'ment. He
decided to visit Taiwan in 1956.
"Twenty years ago when IJirst went
to Taiwan, the unlverslly was poorly
staffed and much work needed to be
done," he remembered.
Wu.became a member of the board of
trustees of the China Foundll)lon lor the
Promotion of Education and 0ullure in
1962. President Chiang asked him to
chair · the Committee for Science
Development of the Republic of China's
National Security Council, the highest
1

r::,''~~~n~h~J~ ~~ 'rt.S::• ~~t1:~i

Science Council of l'alwan !flat same
year.

tO yeus on.the T.alwom
shuttle
Wu has spent the last · 10 years
shuttling back and forth from Buffalo to
Taiwan, where he has apent summers
and Christmas breakS helping to
develop a science program. Chiang's
government gave him a budQet -of
approximately $10 million annually for a
development prognom that • provided
grants to lnatltutlon• and the
unlvwslty.

�...,"' 1171

He stresses the philosophical
side of science~ says we need
to have a 'dialogue with nature'
Fusion techniqi!Bs will vary IIQ!y
aolve the energy crlsla around tl)e
beginning of tha 2111 Centuty, Nobel
PriZe Laureate ljya Prig&lt;&gt;gi/18 of tha F Unl-sity of Bruasels said In "an
Interview with John Bray of the U/B
News Bureau during a campus visit leal
week.
.
•
Prlgoglne, here to present a .-lea of
Cowper factures for tha Faculty of
Natural Sciences end Mathematics,
won the 1977 Nobel . Prize tor "his
central role in advances mede In
lrr.,_,.lble thermodynamics over the
.last three decades."
- Before the energy crisis I~ solved,
Prig&lt;&gt;glne cautioned, "I believe we have
~~o~~~~h a _dl~ull peri&lt;&gt;d ot 30
He remalnll optimistic, however,
•provided thera1s-no major catastrophe

suet)aswar."

•

Solar energy alone Is apparently "not
enough to solve the energy crisis." Or
so the experts say- "I am not expert.•

booW.:::~eb~~a;~~ h'.o~~~ ~~=
research to hencl1e hfs admlnlstra!lve
duties.
"Some of my friends conalder It~
been a great loss to me as far as my
reSMteh work Is concerned," Wu told
an Interviewer In Taiwan "but I don' have nagrets As long
I can do
something for my country, I don't mind
any loss of time In nssearch. Over the
years 1 have been sticking to one
principle-handle one thing at a time
and never atop worl&lt;lng."
Wu explained that when he set up his
science commlttee In 1967, he ·
Instituted a 12-year development
, program. Since then, about 1,000
. scholars and apeclallsta from all o 1he world have taught at Taiwanese
universities as visiting lecturers, and
more then 1,900 professors In Taiwan
have been sent to more Industriallyedv9!"*' nations for lllsean:h and
atud1es. SpeclaUJied scientific subjects
are
studied I'!,Hraduate schools.

as

bel:;?.

~~o/:'~~!. ~:,~:bi~~.::J

In the u.s. bllck to Taiwan, which haa a
high rate ol~~enwated by
go~,!.;gned :,.rochatoDan of the
lsland'a National Science Council ln
1873.

lletwn to the MAinl4mdl

~Dr. Wu ' - •Y desire to return
to Malnl8nd China?
_
"In 1M last 20 yeera, the Mainland

~tne:"ey h!: h~!~o ~~~r,w\~rl:~~
"However, I know -r much about how

conditions are there now, so there Is no
r-.1 lor me to vlaUito- lor myself.
Also, since l'¥8 been worl&lt;lng lor the
Chlnesegovernmentln Talwan, lt would
not be good for me to go. II. political
Issue would 08 made of lt."
Wu avoids questlons of polltlcii_.
"I'm not political In Taiwan at all; I
don~ belong I&lt;&gt; a pollticaLDarty," he
said. ''There Is a great deaiOI things I
can do on Tafwan lor the next
generation , which I do not feel I can do
~Q the Mainland."
Though his retirement begins al the
end ofthls semester, Dr. Wu has not yet
maae definite long-range plans. His
wile Kuam-Shlh who In 1970 eamed
her ' doctorate in biophysics here,
dislikes extreme co1d weather; and his
son, Po Chi , r~lved his Ph.D. In
biochemical science from Pri nceton
and Is now sludylng plano In California.
11 may be that the family will reside
there, he speculated.
m;o;,:r; ~~~n~ ~eralt~~~~~t';::
If that comes about
do some
teaching," he said . "But I have ..not
nsallyJ!:fenned beyond the summer.
~tprod~l~lf.: :tl:i&lt;~t~~~~
He aays he'a eatlsfled, ''In a way," and
explains, "my philosophy has been not
to t.ry to be ovwambltlous, so that you
_feel fruatrated ~II your life."

::;:T

1 Fwm

Too fragmented a view ' '' '
Prigoglne, who spends pan of his ·llme at the Uolveralty of Texl!llin Austin

~e.:'~"=~ T~as :~~~~~

wanl to be lnvol¥8d," but sclllnce as a
whole haa to be. "II Is only In liMping
channels open bat_, aclenoa end
society that both can benefit, one from
the other."

base In Belglum, feels that all too often
students get only "a fragmented view of

Anyone can undaratand
That's the reaaon he likes to gl¥8
general public lectures like !he ewles he
presented hwe, the Nobel ~e
' said: ''I try to show thatsclar!ce Is a
Interesting field, one which deals not
t he unCy of knowledge, the p&lt;&gt;sslblllty
for a dlal&lt;&gt;gue among the various - only with hillhly technical questions
understandable- to highly trained
disciplines."
people, but also with subjects of
0
concern to the general public."
Students tend to lose Interest In
" because that Is the type of revolution
scle.oce, he speculated, because "too
you can see In a lifetime. · Biological
often science · Is pr-nted as a
revolution, scientific revolution Is
succession of recipes to do this or that.
so~r~~~~;err:~:·"forward to the
"People only become Interested when
theY.. feel connected through science to
development of mathematical theories
the physical world. Science belongs to
that will .Interest and be of use to
the same class of activities as art and
sociol&lt;&gt;glsts and ~ultural hi storians.
others which permit man to establish a
"The type of .thing I m doing ," he said;"
" tries to overcome what Lord Snow has
dial&lt;&gt;gue with Nature. I'm writing a book
with a co-worl&lt;w, a phli&lt;&gt;SOphar, the
called the two cultures."
title of which will be ·'Oial&lt;&gt;gues with
-- While the study of therm&lt;&gt;dynamlcs
Nature.'
lnvol¥es rules that govern the relation"When you ask questions of Nature,
ship between heat and other forms of
Nature usually aays 'no.' But from lime
energy, Prlg&lt;&gt;glne has stressed the
to time, it says 'pilrhaps.' •
philosophical lmpllcalions of his
That's where the dialogue begina.

~~:.':.'Z~0un~vfr!:in~~~.:dce~~:~w~~!
~lgf ' ~~~~wc';:~,.',y~~~i:\z~

-r

s~~~!~tu~ ~"vo~~o~~t~st"!_,~~

~~~~~esa:w~g~~arc::~~~~~

chemistry and biology. In explaining his analyses of various
systems, he compares the selforganization of chemical and blot&lt;&gt;glcal
systems to the equilibrium ettalned by
1

~~~s~~~er:S f~~~u; 1~th~1\':

comm&lt;&gt;ditles flow In while products end
wastes flow out.
Prigoglne says the Nobel PriZe was
"quite a surpriae for him;• his worl&lt; I~
"not at all in the main line of moderri
physles and chemistry.• In a sense, he
thinks the award may ha¥8 J:O!Il8 "too
early" beceuse "It's only the beginning
of a new development."
_

s,.- travel and amoebea

The NoM! Laureate shared his views
with U/B's Brayonanumberof topics:
He believes apace travel comasponds
to a •very deep need of men to know the
environment in which he Is living." It's a
r-.1 which goes be9ond men, one

:~re~· ~:~r:t ~~~~e -:,.~~~

small amoebas, Prigoglne said, eat all
that's available In a given place. When
there's nothlnf mora to ea1o they

~~~:,g;;~ ,~ar:'ot~g~r..:gr~

the organism disintegrates Into thousands of small amoebas which again
eat ev"'J.Ihing and lh~ repeal the

~::~~~..::;:.,an:z~~.

WSCgroup
protests
Editor:
On two OCCDiona,.Women'a Studlea
College submitted a n . - r t a
which

_.. not publlatled b)' the
11.11 lntortn.llon g'-1 In
sufficient time and _ . -uradthat your paper hed ~ room to
nm the announcements. ·~:wn ao, our
enn.oUfiC8I"I*IIs wwe lndiiCrimlnately
removed without an explanation or
apol&lt;&gt;gy frorn your paper.
We are aura yOu c:.n ~ how
lm~ortanl P.Ublicity Is to a program such
Ref)or7er.

'=

:S
~~J,s=&lt;:!\-r.·.=~
few feminist volcea on CM~put.

It
assures us that we will reM:h the
students and the faculty whOm we try to
serve. We .., both woit&lt;lng toward the
same ge&gt;al of aaalstlng our Unl-.ity
community. We hope through our

~~!,. ,;:r,m:~1'~o:'ar ~~~u~~

productivity.

Sincerely,
-EdiiQtlon. Outrwcb
Women's Studies College .

:: s:~.:::a'rh!

environment. Essentially these •
moe0e1 beh... the way the Vl~lngs
behaved a long lima ego. Only Instead
of a ship, they h... this organism going
&lt;&gt;ut .

m;;:h: -:hkoo"/3• ~~ton~h':
oppoaed to aoclal concerns," he aald, " I
leave that to theJ&gt;COnomlsts."
Prlgoglne Ia convinced that "science
has to pay more and more attention to
the boundary · belween itself end
soci ety." An laoialed aclentist here and
there may still be eble to say " I don~

NOT HER SITUAnON

So that no one gala 1M '"""'' ~~ "!a

examplae tl""' teet , . . - b)'~
PhHIIpa-Pal9 _, the ldncls ofthlnga tllet
In oflloee (IIIII .,_ldlt'Q - ' 1

=-=

Thoiatreior':'C.::~ l~
tllel). AI a wrfter...l.. Me. l'tlllllpa-Palo
wanted ua to cl .....y, elle "..,.aka lor
Iota of othwa ..tlo cannot epaak out.•

She waa talking about aome of 1M
alqiBrlancaa of thoaa others, not her

own .

•

�lloy4, 1178

Ketter meet the GSA, too; neither one is swayed
Bunn panel.
Moat of these points, the President
made In naaponse to a sarles of
questions which GSA had posed.
Anewera, but 'not enough'
frc!:;, t:::'ll"oo~~~ :;';"1flc qUullona .
•Although GSA repreaantallvee aay
they want Input Into academic
planning , GSA never bothered to make
comments on the Huii-Yaarley academic reports. Huii-Yearley, lnoldentally, wU praised by the Carnegie
Cornmlaalol! as baing a "good start"
towwd a muter plan.
•Grad students again will have ample
opportunity to respond and react to the
flrat drafl of an academic plan propoaal
being illstrlbuted by VPAA Bunn this
week. Pewer than ahr unl.en.ltlee ~
nationally, however, "have beeh able to '
come up with such plana,../(etter aald.
•No university In the State has
achieved higher ranking&amp; on RegentaL·
reviews of graduate programs than •
U/B. We're at the top, along with
RoChester and Columbia. T•he only

0

~y~~~ ~~dhl~~::-.o~ '\~.:!:~

simply: Is PhysicS trying to do too
much?.
•He Intends to dcr:e¥erythlng he can
(lnCIIJdlng going to cliurt to get
pennlaslon to Invade the Unlverelly'a
endowment capital, If necessary) to

=-~ a'c\'3/uo~,:~u'r.~ r.:~
11

f.c:ulty-etudent ratios were too high .
members: Melissa Ann Steuer, Psychology; John C. Ramsay, Social
In terms of the U/Bc budget, for
another example, DOB ueps '-)th
Foundations of Education; and Deborah
sciences and non-heatth_acleilces (core
Nixon, American Sl,udles. Ft~CUIIY
campua) funds strictly aepatate. "We
members are Laurence A. Michel,
English; Warriln A. Thomas, Industria!,
can~ co-mingle funds between the
two."
.-·
11 ~ OOB which deekled that
although a f.c:ulty or NTP lin. may "be . senti ng professional staff are Josebroken down Into four GAtTA . phlne D. Wlsa, assistant to the
chairman, Computer Scleoce; Marion
poattlona, !haL stipends tor GAs· and
Dickson, asslstaht to the chalnnan,
TAs were not to go up ecoordlngly when
the f.c:ulty-atatf Ulllon (UUP) neg91Jated.. Anthropology; aod Voldemar A . lnnus,
assistant dean ; School of ManagernenL
pay lncnsasea. Although U/11 requested
This panel wHI monitor the state.- of•
additional fuods for this purpose for •
or 5 years, Its raq..ats were routinely
denied. U.t y-. tliOugh, Ketter said,
·propbaed tranaferS":of linea· - agalo In
DOB finally ~ to have GA/TA
etlpends keep1)ice"*lth the liUJ' raises. t,keeping with recommendations ·of the'
As of April I the Praaldel;lt said,
-v TAIGA In Unl,..lty day dlvJafQils · ~hina
Ia receiving a minimum stipend of
S3100. This Is almost In line with a
(from- I , CGI. 4)
recommendatlol! of
Bunn GA/TA
behalf otthe Minister of Defense, P'eng
committee wlllch Cflled for a minimum
Te-hual. who was dismissed from his
$3200.
post for crlllc[zlng the . Great Leap
.
om.rent
MFC
• Forward .
At the same time th e- are conatantGAs and l:Ai In Millard Fillmore
camjljllgns against " bOurgeois" and
Coltege"(ebOul 70 to 1•1 are paid leas,
"revlalonlst" - tendenclea such aa the
only 11880 for teaching one course o attachment to private property, material
two - . n s (simply because faculty
lncentlvea, and the "sugar coated
bullets" of high living.
We glimpsed something of the
WOUld be to awwd them more than a full
current Chinese conception of creativity
profeuor gMa for the aame MFC load,
when we vlalle4 the Art Studio of Glory
and WOUld requlfe $80,000 In temporary
.Treasure In Peking. There we saw
...nee lunda which aren't available. and
some artlsls reproducing landscape
"'**eaaie Affairs will do what It can
masterpieces from Sung llmu and
=.:.:.~:::.the next thnaa ye.a,
others using wood bfock printing
techniques 1o P&lt;&gt;rtray scenes from
Kelter polnt8d out that at U/B,
contemporary society. We saw lndlvldunlllla, MY, Stony Brook, lndl\ildual de.,.,_ta primary ~nalblilty • ~m~~~t~.':.~'':,~ l~.=~n !'.Y~~=
lor GA/TA atlpanda. The Grad 9clta01
Nil .1Dr1h only two conditions: a
~~\::?to~~~llll:~ls~· style of
atuclent muat make aatlsfactory prograM ln.,. academic P&lt;OUr- and must
Dltf-.nt ln...,....tionJ of,., lndiYidUal- .
aucceaatu111 carry out hla or her dulles
lam
u a GAIT A. Thera era two-year,
It Ia often thought that the West Is
four-yewttmlta on etlpenda l"''le8ed by
distinctive becausa of the emphasis It
Grad School policy, bul the Ph.l). limite
on " Individualism." Thfa Ia true
be extended to five by petitioning

:~:~~i.e:~ ar:~e~ist~~nM:-;;
,~~.' ~~~W.:iy~~~g :~rer~r fc:

=

the

,.._.tor

:: :=

=~·

~~;~~~~n o;::.,,::,..ri8J&gt;~"h~ t~eg~

orderly plan for new facilities for
Psychology, Ketter said, but they w,re
caught In the State financial . pinch
whl~h resulted from New York City's
near dofauiL
·
·
•He• knows of no plan before the
Trustees to, as oiofi student chll(g8d,
"make SUNY Into a trade school.'' GSA officials Seemed not pleese.d In
the lmm&amp;dlatt wake of the meeting:
"We've. heard more probll'ln~~ liut less ·
answers,"
President • R,~llllall;&gt;an • J

Naga'fajan·safd. '"·

'1

·~..

~ .•., ~ ...

r\;:-: .,

corporate body, the elght81KJI/l century

~~:rs ·~~~h~~~~~·~r.yo~fu;.~ ~~~v.·~~

a.~~JJ~~~·~i~~n~.~~ ·~rl~

s: ~~~1:.r~J:
the

history and civilization . Bertrand
Russell was one of the more learned
and sensitive exponents of this view,
and there Ia no doubt that It hal
yielded some of the flnaet fruita of
Western civilization. Indeed, 1 auapect
that some such notion of 'tndlvlilual
creativity Ilea at the root .Df thla currant
essay which purports to explore a
" better" way of looking at the
Interrelationship of China and AIJ*Ica.

g:.-a

the Grad School'a eX11Cutlve oommlttee.
" ' a tn8ller of g-.1 policy, the
Praeldent Mid he prefera that
contlftulng atudenta get prefenance o n.w If and wflen e department
f.c:ee a ahorlfall In State funding and
hal to cut beck. He wu not referring,
he aalcl, ~... Of atudenll fllclng

=

=-::.:.•~.rnu: =~
sa:.-:·T~Wt11 '::.-:.:':lh~
allould ~ adwtwd up front of
thalkntloll of lhegrant1.
1

one_,.IOIMIIbper ...........
e.:h Unl....aty eMparl- hae
further beell IAatructad to Clewelop
writ• TAI Go\ potlclea, tile Pnaaldent
aald. T'- ... beinG lofmulatwd
and will be ~ by 1M ac:ademlo
vice~.

.......

Unl~
=-'~·.::
GAa/TAa hal ~ fOrmed with

,;

Dr.
A,._ Holt, - ' a l e clean of the
~ Sc:llool, •
chairmen. Thnaa
atudenta, nacommended by GSA, are

in t~~~td l~er;:::,"=!, t~t,'f;:,~
lnltlfllAIIallons of the indlviJ!ual. One
llneofthoughtconaldered thelnd lvl d~al
to be diJIInct from othera and a virtual
end In llaelf. This One Included the
Judeo-Chrlstlan Idea that each person
Ia sacred In the eyes of God, the Greek
Idea that matter consists of aloma
which are Clatlnct from one another 1tie
Enlightenment IQea that all Individuals
have fundamental " rights'' which
cannot be taken from them under any
conditione, the liberal Idea that
"Individual freedom" Ia the main
purpoee of eoclety, the "bourgeqla"
ldel that private prOParty Ia the only
sound bella for Individual dignity, and _
the utilitarian (or behavtor•llat} Idea
that the Individual m. .ly aeaka to
minimize pain and malmlze pleuure.
T ' - wua aecond atraln, how-,
which- aaw ·the Individual realizing
1

~~::.:~..: ~~~.:.~ r:~ ~~·~
parson linda fulfil~! through eerv1ce

to God and men, !he Greek notion of the
"citizen" who ~pert of the . _
community Cor
II), the medlavallilea
or the paraon
Ia part of a larger

-

the Puritan (or socialist) Idea that the
Individual finds meaning In life by
working hard to create a batter wor~d for
others, Including future gen"erat~a .

nature of creativity. Tal&lt;f:,g off from the
Western notion o genesis, Westerners
often assume that creatlylty necessarily
entails mal&lt;lng some unique pet80nal

can

~

Clinical Psychology, necessary additional space to guarantee continued
accreditation. He gave a disheartened·
student from M~ent 2-1 odds that

~~~\'b~~lon °~o..":'~e cr~ro=er·~

More chellengea end~

The Chi neae challenge, ...., , Ia
1

1

r::riron ~htc'l."'l~~:.. ~ I n = : : •
"rlghfa" and "lnterests" to the detriment

of l ndlvldual " fulfillment" and "meanIng," and to build on that heritage In
which the worth and happlneee of the
lndlvtttual are inextricably linked with
the life and dignity of aiiJ11anklnd.
The American opporftmlly Ia to that once we understand that the
fortunes of the Individual are Intimately
related to the fortunes of society we can
begin to work more effectively 1::11,"'her
l~dt~::!r. C:n ~Jrr!~ . In whlc a//

ct!f~~ln ~~: ~~~· t~ce c~f".:!
publlahrng yet another paper which
-m• to maJ&lt;.e some "new contribution" lo one's "field," without any
conalderation of Ita Implication• for
human knowledge as a whole. The
opportunity Ia to recognize that
significance of a place of scholarship
depends not only on Ita "originality" but
on Ita rec:ognltlon of some of the
verilles which transcend lime and place
and on Ita approprlat-aa for the lime
and place in which 11 appears.
NEXT : ---polltlcolc:Mngo

the

�May4, 1171 •

_,.
1

FNSMpicks 'outstanding' senior;
·community group cites -five undergrads;
four alhletes get $1,000 Furnas grants

Rlch.,e P. Potnlaazek, CIIMI&lt;towt~p,a, .
haa been ~led the "Outst11nd ng
S9nlof ~" by the Provost of the .
Faculty oil Natural Sciences and
Mathemalle.l. ·
Polnlaalek was given a certificate and
a SHIO gift by Provoat Paul H. Reitan.
The awtird Ilea been presented annually

for~",r:J:::· of Blsho Turner lflgh
School, PolniUZIIk will ~In graduata~~YJ!\=:.hel~ or~~'/:m~t't~

Ang- ne:l YMf, funded by a
thrett-.....- . - e l l grant from the
National Sclanoe Foundation.

Au?!r~=~d.~r~aa=ar0:

U/B, an honor conferred upon the
outvtandi11Q
~lor
undergraduate
chemistry student. He waa selected
student of the year In chemistry by the
Western New YOI1&lt; aectlon of the
American Chemical Society recently.
Last summer, Polnluzek conducted
research In organic photochemistry at
the UniVersity of North C..OIIna at
Chapel Hill as a William Rand Kenan
Fellow.
Finalists for the award
Alexandra· Lynn GibaS, ionawanda;
Jeffrey Gualln, OxtOJd, N .Y.; Neal

:fed,~ma~~'t;,.~Y~-Y~

Char1ea

•••
Fl.. u~e atuden\s wwe
honored Wedileeday, April 2111, Ill a
Communlty-4tuelenl Awanle Luncheon
for outst811dlna oontrtbutlona to · 1M
w.atem New '1'011&lt; community 6urlng
the put_yew.

wd,~u=lt~d::; GJ:I:~::;

..vice the ,,.. " - provided through_

-egenclea. u~~~a.!n~~bld,~

cU .
Awwd winners and the agencies with
which they haw worUd -.a: Pamela
J. Berton of Kenmore, Buffalo
Par.chllllrlc Center,- Jeffrey R. Clark of
Fa rpor1, St. Augusllna's Center;
Adrienne M. Kaczmarek of Depew,

v".lr~• ~-s.

Medlne of Great

~1;i"~l':.: ;~~h:"~l'.}~ien"ci

Progrwn.
'
1
Barton haa contributed four to eight
hours a - of votunt- aeNice to the'
adoleac:ent unit at the Buffalo Pay- chlatrlc Center.

~~~~~on~ d~~u~

pr011lded ~~.. ..-.tc:ea, companlonahlp-;-flieoclaiiZIIIIon and mobilIty ,,.nina 8lld other ...latance.
She lllao g - Mrlmmlng lnatructlon
and ..-.eel as al~ tor a group of
cllenta twiCe weakly.
et.tt .._ contributed approxlm.tely
_,hours a weak ol volunt- aervloe
tutoring chllchn wtth .-ling difficulties at St.. Augustine's Center In
Bufflllo.

tr~;3",:Sin~~-:l •

alao M1'811Q8c1 for ln·a.vloa training for
lhetut-.
Keczmarek haa oontrlbuted about
eight houra per weak of . wlunteer

butterfly

~s

at the N&amp;w . Yor1C St!lle

~ Cham~ , setilng a alate record

In th&amp;lafter9Yent.
From Blauvelt, New 'tort&lt;, Finelli
..:; plat\s to attend graduate school In
statistics.
Frasca, of Whitestone, N. . YOII&lt;,
held a 3.93 GPA In biochemistry, and
was a four-year lettermen as a dl- wtfh
lhe swim team. He qualified for IIlii
•

=~uWon th~

,t:"::w '!f~g~=

Championships.
A member of the Association for
service to the VA Hospital, where she
-Professional Health Oriented Students,
:'o~~~l:,edphaa ~~Y ~cheduled
he plana to attend medical school In
She assist~ In the ~abllllatlon
Seatembar.
medicine ward clinic, where many , ' 1&gt;fotycla, 1 from Amherst, ewned a
severely handicapped patients Mn~
'Mar-perfect 3.97 GPA-ea a pre-med
treated.
blolo.gy major. He was awwded a·
She al~ escorted patients and"
varsity letter In swimming In aQ four of
assisted therapists In ambulatlon and
exercise programs.
Medina has tontrlbuted abo\11 3
hours a week of -volunteer service to
Compass House, a home for runaway
youth and the only Institution of Its kind
In Erie County.
She was a participant In special
training for volunt-.. and was a'
"rap-group" leader. Stie also processed
edmlsslons, consulted with parents,
and assisted In minor first ai d and
health l&gt;(oblema .
Mittman has contributed between six.
and. 30 hours per week to Be-A-Friend .
The organiZation assigned him to b8 a
"big brother'' to an emotionally
dlstrubed child for the past three

8

111

~~~of:!.t~~. New Yllllt,

carrlecl • 3.8.gtade point . . . . . . . . . .

economics : majOr. Ha Ia a ttw.-ttma
varall,y letter winner In bukaCbllll. a
starter on the 18M! diHtnO Na ...tor

y..-.

He was the '-Sing Mil
rebounder as a fre811....,. OA tlla junior
varsity.

Conlon expects to puraue a graduala
degreeln-bualneaa.

,ears.

w:.~::,na~':w
student

his aeaions with the team . • •
Ploty_cia has oot )lilt 'decided on a
medlc81 school. but says he plans to
someday practice lr the Buffalo area.
HaYing wor1&lt;ed as a lifeguard In
aummere, he· ,_ taught achwloacl
llf-ing claMea for the AnleriC*I Red
CrON 0118 vol~ baala. He lla8111aa
been · a ewlmming lnatructor anct

b/or1&lt;m=~~nlry, ::::
winners each received a

~·=teao~"ift~~r~~o~;,~ ih"e"F"~"!
amount to the community agency of his
or her choice.
-•
· The awards wers presented by
William N . Godin, general chairman of
the United Way of Buffalo and Erie
County.

'

.

...

Four varsity afhlefas ha...., been given
$1,000 Clifford C. Furnas ScholarAthlete Awards for the 1978-79
academlcyiiSI.
Winners are -oaorge B. Finelli, "
Anthony M. Frasca, and Steveo M. •
PlotyC:Ia, all ' Swimmers; and ·Chr1alo-

ph~fectc:'1oo"ri ~etb:,:~la of high
academic and athletic standing, the

~o~~~~~n~sy·;~~oF'::'~ "::;::r'rr,~

President Robert L. Ketter, and at the
annual athletic banquet (AI&gt;(II 24) at
Hearthstone Manor, Depew.
The awarll§ were established by the
late Or .. Clifford C. Furnas; U / B
l&gt;(esldant from 1954 to 1966, "to
recognize outstanding und8i-graduate
performance In S&lt;;holarahlp and athletic
prowess. • Furnas himself had won a
similar award , the· Big Ten Conference
Scholar-Athlete medal,
while an
undergraduate at Purdue.
·
Und!fgreduate seniors are nominated
by hesa coaches In men's and women's

~-~~~:;e~~~r~~~~.,~

which recommends award winners, Is

=~f ~teA~~e.:ro~or~~:..,.:c:~
Professional EduCII\Ion .

thi~:'.Pri~~~:v=ro~.:;,A/,;

the history of the acllolarshl!&gt;11rogram ,
Holt said.
Finellf, whO' maintained a 3.6 GPA as
a at.tlallcal and computer science
maJor, was a four-year letter winner In
swimming. He placed 10th at the NCAA
Division Ill Championships In the
l~.(~~~~~~~ :"drtl.s. U/B's first
He won both the ~ and 100-yard

...

May Is arts month on WBFO
May Ia "Public Radio Aria Month"
and National Public Radio (NPR)
mambar -lon WBFO (88.7 FM) II
Celebrating with oow 100 hours of local
and netwOitl programs on the arts.
Special arta programming can be heard
~fon~UI the month on the
PubliC Radio Aria Month Ia a
C&lt;&gt;O!**Ive effort of NPR and 1ha
National &amp;dOWIIIitnl for the Aria.
ll.cc:ordlna to NPR .-!dent Frank
M--.rcz, It Ia "Nf'R'a first m~or
elfart to coordl nata ao much programming atound a central theme within a
d811nltlvetlme frame."
In Mldlllon to regularly scheduled
NPR progrwna and .ne. diiVOtlng
adltlona eild aegmantlto Public Radio
Arta Month, WBFO will pr-1 - '
epeciala, Including:
• The flr8l new mualcal produced for

N..,.

natwor1&lt; radio In more than 25 years, a
revival of the Gershwin classic, "Lady,
Be Good" (Sunday, May 21, a:30 p.m.).

..;!"
e~,w~~~r~=~~:, aTh~-=
Behind the
(Sundays at 6 p.m.,
L~nd"

st~npw~ur

documenfary on the
creative process, "The .Courage to
Create• (Wedneaclav, May 10, 10 p.m.).
Local Arts Montfi specials Include a
documentary on the Buffalo Phllhat&gt;
monic Orcheatra {Thursday, May 2S,
6:30 p.m.); an hour-ion!! special on
" Humorist&amp; and the Arts ' (Thureday,
May 4, 11:30 p.m.); and. The Buffalo
Comedy WorttshOp featurad on "The
Wrller'a Place" (Wednead•Y.· May tO, 9
p.m.). In addition, WBFO a new dally
to Person,"
magartna l&gt;(ogram.'
will pr'eMnt a varlaty of
1 lnt~ewa
and featunaa eech waakd~ I 11 a.m.

____
___
------llltlloll.-.._. . __
.......... .__.....__.

.__.

__

�Arms.

-..
The Russians aren't coming, .
1
and we don't need ali these weapons,
former Carter consultant says
~

the.Sovlet Union Is planning an lnvaalorrof Western Europe. Such a move would
executive
director of the llnns Control Associa0
tion, In a t31k before an audlehce of 50
studeots and facultyjn Haas Lounge of "' Soviet mllltery atretagy Is based Oft
leaving Industry and lnfrastructuna
Squire Hall last weel&lt;.
Intact so that an QC9upylno force has
The speech . entitled "The Nuclear
something lo take o -. Thfs would be
Arms Race: A Race Nobody Wins,"
Impossible In Western Europe. Irs tcio
covered a wide range of aublecta,
big to occupy and could not be taken
Including the neutron bomb, SAL'f, and
problema associated with the prolllera- .• without dealroylng lt.
• The Soviet Union Wants a SALT
- lion of nuclear weapons.
l&lt;lnoade characterized the Soviet
1Qf881T1ent badly and the Carter
leacterslilp as "realistic" and "prudent."
Administration fa holding out for
•
concessions .
"They fully understand the destructive
•capaDIIHias ol nuclear weapons and
•We have forgotten what nuclear
they have no Interest In waging a
weapons mean ... The U.S. atomic
rruclear war against the U.S. ." he silld.
arsenal contains bombs thet are
Ourlng his talk, the arms control
400-450 times as powerlul as the
expert challenged some of the
A·bomba Which dastroyed Hlroshlma
and Nagasaki, Additional nuclear
waapons can only serve to make the
USSR has undergone a malor military
"rubble bounce."
•
buildup slnce the Cuban missile crisis
In the 1960s. " But ," he pointed out,
ne~1 ~=tl~':{'~~u.:Jo~~l =~r?tyf_o~ a
"this buildup can be explained without
drawing the conclusJon that the
The u.s. ,_ to.t alght of other OW.ta
• ''We need," he said, "to rec;ognlze
::..'::'~t!'U'~~nlng a surprise attack
that our preoccupation with the Soviet
111 an effort to paint a balanced
Union has caused us to lose sight of •
~ture df the role of the Soviet military,
other, more noal thnaeta to our society."
According to Kincade, thae Include:

~~ '!':ldR~1/~ f8::'!f1.

~~t1~ 1n ~e ~~~~- M':.o.:!~ ~

~=~~n'!,:::~~~~~t;~t~t~~!

,:=d~~r~: =~r~~ ~~~~~

"

ml;~~ ~.,;~o~~as ~he hf.::!~

posed by the huge nuclear arsenal of

~~~sNo~1~~~~~ear~w,!~h

France

The State should pay women
for keeping house, raising the
labor force, Selma james tells WSC

and

~~~e~~

England

you."

818

nuclear

!,';!lr t=te':fh~g!~e~;
.
.

w...w Pact alllea uivetlable

Kincade characterized the Waraaw

.Pact nations as unreliable allies. He

bondaga." She f.,.ed having t\) put up
with 18 years of such ·post-natal
depression.
She g_ot a "liberating" job In a factory:
"You Wk about consclousness-&lt;alslng.
Just WOrk on an aaembly line for elv,ht
8

~~Z ~od do
Y::.. h~~7't~onu~
problema."
At home
work,.James fought
with b« hu8bend o - the dishes. "If
aile dOesn't like housework." a woman
Ia thought to be P8fWrt8d or u.n,..ural,
11111 eakl. Men think If "you low me,
=~ waah my socks. We are paid In

"ll::,

.ner

obseNed- that much ol lhe Sovlat
Union's military Is deploye&lt;J on Its
· aastem.border to meet the challenge. of .
a growing nuclear .superpower, China.
To the south, the Soviet Union faces
traditional enemies. Thanks to -u.s.
waapons sales, Iran now has one of the
most powerlul armies In the world.
India has the bomb.
Pointing to VIetnam, Kincade stressed ffiet from the Soviet standpoint the
American government -m• to be In
the hands of "gamblers" and "rlektekers. " How elsa, the Kremlin nsasons,
can the thousands of lives and billions
of dollars we span! In VIetnam be

In the ewly 1950s women began to go
on welfare en masse. James said.
"BIIIek women through welfare were
deiJiandii!QIInd getting a wage for their
WOfll. "These women gave leadership to
the mowment In the 80s, she
oontlnued.
"Tile moon don, w- clothes, we
do," -James quipped . "G lve us the
~ to buy clotha, lnst.d of
pultlnf flage on the ~n; otve the
,_.., to the IJIIOIII• lniiMCf ef the
oorponltlone."
.

ex~~~ned~usslans also must ask
themselves: why do the Americans keep
building more nuclear weapons when
they possessed an adequate deterrent
yeara ago?
According to Kincade, Soviet leaders
heve good reaaon to fael thraatened by
theae seemingly Irrational American
acts. Moreo-. while the U.S. faces
only one military threat, the Soviet
government's military buildup must be
under8tood aa a reeponse to thraata
percefwod on all 11dea.

J - f_.a the w - · a llberlltlon

USSR 10 be - ' 4 : flO'"(
In the courae of his presentation,
Kincade contended:
• The Soviets would like to be an
economic
but ttHIY can't
because tha erma race has made
defense eo expensive. ,
•They the .-ma competition
b e t - thalr country and ours as
unwlnnable. Thay realize the U.S. has
the technological' edge.
•Practically speaking,
President
Certer'a decision to poatpona deployment of the contrownslal neutron
W8ltleed meena thlll thta weapon Is
, deed. II 119t for the Soviet Union's

....................
..-.c

"In Ita whiten-." .,.
IIIICieniiiMd lte ,_.r. In nafuelng bl8ck
_
.. ,_.,.,lp, white women are
eulttng their own ttvoata, IIIII Mid.
"11111 - - . t will WOfll only If those
wtt11 pow. will ~ the power of
"-with INa."
At t h e - " lntemellonel *"-'•
v- ~ In Hou.ton, her
tnterNIIonlll W..,.. tor Woll*l Cernlillian -"'«! one thing, J8rMa
iiiiiCJ: to llfot8CI welfare. "Stnoa wetlanl
II the llrat 111011ey " - gou.n
for~. H 11 a'-lhlll It le'the
twy 10 ell womtn'• llldlpel!dela. • A
naeolutlon .,....., 111 the -~
not lie llllallelled
buiii!Otlld • lnorNHd.

M1C1 ......... .._ld
...::ld":1.'::11
':"'..:
With CllgnHy encl In tile follll of ......."
atllledJerMa.

"lie. .......... In Ita eowenoga of the

-'ion, did not ll*lllon the
wetlanl reeolullon, "IIIII ~"We are not de!*ldtng on Gloria
Stetnem."

superpo-.

81

~.=~d ~~~'atu~

- h long ego.

•H Ia unreuonable to auppoee that

~qr, 1 :',l'd ~d~nd:"e:~~=nt 1~

proliferation of nuclear waapons tel
other countrlaa.
Nuclear po_. Is 11utt1ng « nuclear
,weapons capaDIIIty In the hands ot
more and moce countries, he noted .
" Nuct- weapona are not hard to make
and crude bombS can be dropped by
dell\'&amp;fY aystema (I.e. jet alrctaltl well
within the means of mllfly Third World

nations. "

. New,
highly
accurate,
multlwartleeded weapons developed by the
U.S. ana not . deterrent In n.Wfll~
Kincade said. They can be .coriifruia as
first-strike weapons. Their development
by the U.S. lncreasn the chances of
nuclear war, he argued .
Praaldent Certer Ia sincere In his
desire to stop the erma race, Kincade
observed, but, he eald, some of the
members of Carter's Inner circle c;ton't
share the Praaldent'a views. In responee
to the question, ''What can we do?",

Kl~~':g~l"!~-:3r.!:l ~~-Amerl-)

can relations for o-15 yaara and Is theauthor of numerous articles on the
"Soviet Thraat." He Is a retired Navy Lt .
Commander and holds · a master's
degree In Soviet Studies. He was staff
director ol the Join! Con0'!18SIOnal
Committee · on Defenee Production
(under Senator William Proxmlre). More
recently, ha serVed as aenlor consultant
to Pnaaldent Carter's Em8fV811CY Praparedneu Reorganlzellon Ploject.
His UtB talk wu aponeored by the
Community Action Corps (CAC) and the
Waatem New York 1'-=e Center.

Eye tests offered
U/B stall. faculty lind atudeota who
don't want to welt In line at driver's
license bureaua for tha required eye teet
and thoee who need blOod . , . . _
checl&lt;a cen now ~ thae ..vtcea
free at Unlwrwtty Health Servlc:ee.
Michael Half, Main St- Campus.
Or. M. LulherM-Iman, director of
Unl-slty Haalth Servlce8, aeye tha eye
test Is offered Tueed% mornings and

r~u=~'~=~l ~-33~'7:: 1 ~
naa

appointment. Tha Heetth Servioe
the necessary forma.
.
Frae blood preaaure teats are
available from 8-8:30 a.m. Mondeye and
Fridays and are of 1pacl81 benefit for
those whose phyalclans suggest
periodic checks, Museelman says.
Those needing this teat ahould also call
831·3318 for an appplntmenl.

\

�11

VP4A offers

interrrehip&amp;'
for faculty
A new Academic Affairs Faculty
11

¢~~;~!~~~ald ~~~~n~~~nf~

this week.
The program Is Intended to serve tlte
purpo-of:
(1) enoouraglng members of the
full-time faculty In Academic Affairs to
devote a subatantlal portion of their
time, for elthet' one semester or an
academic ,_., In advising and
assisting the VPAA In key policy
development, and
(2) providing academic administrative
experience opportunities tp members of
the fUll-time faculty in Academ ic
Affairs.

no::~t'!;l!.';':S

Oper~s~

.f:u.:rr r~~h.::~yr:a,.:~g

•

be considered. Two associates will
likely be appointed for 1978-79, either
for the fall or sprtng semester or for the
full academic year.
Nominations and self-nominatiOns
should be submltled directly to the
VPAA by June 1; selections will be

The Romans had bread and circuses to
keep them occupied. Here, we have,
among other recent events, operas and
circuses. These are scenes from the

~::~:~;.u:~~-=~e~m 'b';

negotiated by the V~AA Office with the
appropriate dean.

wh~~on~:;res-~r:t =l~n~

during t978-79 are: (1) . academic
planning , (2) faculty tenure policies and
U/8 PHILHARMONIC SUNDAY

~~1~:~1~~~~~~\

Tilson Thomas will conduct Beetho..,.'a Ninth Symphony. The perform - begins al 2:30 p.m., .tter a 2
p.m. talk by Mr. Thomas.
'
After the performance, the
alalnl bar (cub) will ba open lor

-n-

==~":.l'::llt:'t!='~~~ta,

Tlckats lor the concert era on Nla at
$51orS6..n.
Tlcketa at tha .spacial prlca can be
obtained only on campus. Some
departments have a rapraaantatlft
whoaa n - can ba found Oil a bulletin
board. Otharwtaa, Prof. Dftld G. Hayo
acc.pta chacka payable to
the
Philharmonic at his home add,.a, 5CM8
Lake st-. Road, Haml!urv 14075. Mra.
Haya can an•- air quaatlona 827-5511 - ·or Haya hlmaalf can
"soonatlmas" be loti~ at 638-2H7.
procedu&gt;es, (3) academic program
quality assessment methods and
standards, and 1•1 faculty research

su~~tr:~:n~ :s~~=idered

are
requested to submit a formal letter of
application. Indicating: policy and
administrative areas of particular
interest to them In working as an
Associate in the VPAA Office; which
1978-79 semester (If less than the full
academic year) In which they prefer to
hold the assoclateshlp; and the portion
(If less than full-time) of their lull-time
responsibilities they prefer to devote. A ·
complete rasuma should be Included . A
letter of r~aluatlon of the finalists will
be sought by the VPAA from the
candidate's department chairman and
Faculty/Sahool dean .
Selactlon of Associates will be made
by the VPAA on the beals ol his
judgment of the candidate's potential:
(11 lor contributing to the work ol the
VPAA Office In reviewing and improving
academic policies and admlnlstratlv&amp;
procedures; and (21 securjnjl experiences that
wllf enhance the
candidate's professional and Intellect~
ual de¥elopment.
·
Minority and female faculty can be
sure ltlet they will racelve fair
consideration, Bunn said . A screening
committee, consisting both of VPAA
Office stall and others. will assist In
r~aluatlon of candidates.
Inquiries, nominations, and applications atlould beaent to Ronald F. Burin,
vice praaldent for academic affairs, 562
Capen Hall.
PEABODY WINNER
"The " - Str11111 Quartet Pleyo on Your
by WITV,

~lftatlon," produced
~.
N.C., haa

clalmacl

a

.......,_ Peabody Awerd for TV
....,_lng.
The Quartet Ia In
raaldaoloe at U/8. The program

deolctad tha Imagination of , _ _ . ol
a l..tiy u they watchacl the Rowe

!

parf«m. Peebody awanla
atWIUally for radio and TV ach
Grtldy
by the Hanoy
Joumallam, U. ol Georgia.
- • pr-tad May 3

w.

York.

uwen
aments
ool ol
TwentyIn Naw

•

ctrcuses
/

~~.;'.,~.&lt;:&gt;'!'~:~Ct~~";lr ri'~~n~f ;~.:,'::';.!

performed last weekend , and from the
Royal Uchtensteln One-Quarter-Ring
Circus's recent Haas Lounge appearance (they're the whltefa&lt;:ed mimes) .
Music sponsored the operas; SA
Activities, the circus .

�.... 4,.)111

Personnel Issues list of those
who received discretionary-increases
In the latest round of UUP pay hikes
Conldtno, Dontol J . ·Conny, Robert M.
~.
Philip Coppeno, ~ronclo A.
eozz..Ht, Stonley H. Cramer.
Robort Oily, Wllllom R. Donclo, Fred

=~.,..~~K~'t~.MK.f~'~":~:

Rlchord A. Depue, EJt.n S . Dickt•oon. Pout
R. Dteolng, Sylvia Dlmlzlanl, Ellubeth A.
Dimmick, JOillllhan D. Dimock, John G.
Dingo, Sharon S. Dittmar, Eugenio U.
DOillllo, VictCK Dojllo, Edgar A. Dryden, Lee
S. Dryden, Edwan:l J . Dudley, Chrlatlno R.
Duggleby, John ~ w . Duakln, Robert R.
Edwardo, Poul' Ehrlich, Richerd E. Ellla,
JohnW_ Ellloon,fllchordT. E-o.
S . O.Wid Farr, Michael P,-l'enetl, Leo R.
FodCK, Nicholoo V. Flndler, J-my D. Finn,
Jan L. Flocher, Dolo R. Floh, Thoma D.
Flonagon, Frederic J . Flaron, Richard D.
Fir, John C. Fountain, Charloo R. .Fourtnor,
Anna K. F,..,co, J . Bruce Franclo, Gklaon
F,_r, Shtgejl FuJII' Ho-Loung Fung.
G,_,. R. ~. Andrew /1, . Gogo, EIUot
N. Oaie, Samuel ~lent; Morooo B.
Gollogo, llobort · L Canyard, Devil A.
Gartapo, F - M. Gaopwlnl, Marcia A.
GoUin, - . r ! Genco , J . .Ronald G011Uia,
Will- K. George Jr., Marjorie Girth, Franz
E. G - . . , Althoo M. Gianlot.-, Chootor /\ .
Otomokl, PotorS. Gold, Jamoa M. Goldtnger
Jr., J-ph K. Gong , J:jicolao [}.Goodman,
Gene J. Grablner, Saxon Graham, '(itlllam
R. Greiner, Vernon R. Grund, Ell Grushka,
JCKgo M. Gultart, Thomas G. Guttoridgo.
L. Hagerman, Marla R. Hale,
William S. Hamilton, Francis V. Hanavan,
Jamee C. Hanaen, A. Gayler Harford,

Wlttanl R. Hatrto, Piemt R. Hart, Ellubeth
C. tt.wy, Bluart "1'. Hastings, .Ernest
Houomonn, Datld F. Hayoo, Dovld G. Hays ,
R. H -, •John T. Ho, Perry M.
Hogan,- Howe, Barbara J . Howell,
M y - M. H!Whchyahyn, John V:
Huddleaton, Rlchord" T. Hull, Robert P.
Hurat, GoOfg G . ·.~. Hope L. tsuca ,
Nolaon M.loada,l\klra lalba(a. PotoiT. Itflg.
B..--;1\nll K. Jain&gt;i'lyllnl L. Join ,
- - . - 8. -a,Robert
E. -nlnp, - n H. Johnaon, Wayne L.
Joyce, Nlolo H. Juul,

-·-F.
c.ftR. -

. -url.

~-.

Ka-.

~kC.

Tal L ~. Krolchl Kano, EIIM J .
KaulmM, lllj K. Kaut, Richard E. Kay,

-M l - W..JUbby,
-·
Laoorence A. l'111nody,
.looeph H. Kite, llobort L.
Klick, ~ Lv KllmO'ftkl , T. Jollloraon
Kline, ~ 1\. Ktodta, Carol R. Knelal,
-

... Knoplnltd.

John C. t.., a-ar C. L.angwey, Bertha
I. .._,, Ell_, C. Lawn, VIrginia /\.
.._,, ewtoa 8 ••.....,._, MI.,_ J. Le¥1ne,
Mlng I.~.~~ 8. ~Ia, EJNnuele
0 . ~.WI-T. Lin, CIWiet Ll-1.
M. ~· -.naty 8 . Lublnakl,
. M ' - J . ocll, ONn R. Lyono.
.

, . _ . MaoOtn-,,

Marpm H.
P. Medry, Donnlo P.

MeoGIIIIWIIJ, -

eon.t.ntt...

....... Bllphaft .._

-.Ralpll

- - - · M.,y 8 . ........

..-.~~a~~on

N:'

o.F.
E.Matea,

-··-·-1.-,F
ranl&lt;
'-

J........ --.JohnD.-..-rt
.

- - · / 1 , - ........

c. ..,_,

R. Mlndell, Norman D. Mohl; Joseph C.
Mollendorf, RobertW . M~a , John F. Moran,
Murray A. Morphy, luis L. Moaovtch, 1\lbert

S . Mowery Jr. , Clor1&lt; /\. Murdock, Orville T.
Murphy, M. Luther Muuelman, Edwin 0 .

lAC FILII'

Muto.
George H. Nancollas,·John F. Naylor, Dlnb
V. Nguyen, David H. Nk:hols, DonaJd E.

and 10:&lt;3(

Nichols, Peter /\ . Nickerson , Charles H.
Nlghtlogale, Ruaaell J . Nlsangard, Jeremy
Noble, Jamoa P. Nolan , Robert E. Ogle,
CoJhortno L. QJaon, 1\lbert J . Otozowka,

CA~~l

s~:::. ~'O?t~·F':""~~~~man,

Robert M.

.Perez--;Bode,

Thomas

D.

Perry,

Margarel Ploch, Martin E. Plaut, Elizabeth~ .
Polond, Robert G. Pope, Richard/\ , Powell,
"Sherwood P. ~wei, Carrnolo A. Prtvltora,
Dean G. Pruitt.
Kenneth W. Rasmussen, Ronald J . Raven ,
Wlllred w . Roct&lt;er, Jon,thon F. Reichert ,
Morris Reichlin , Donald W •Ronnie, 1\lan M.
· Reynard ,· Robert W.
, David. G.
Richards, Garald R. R ng, Judith S .
Ronald , Robert H. Rossberg, Jerome A.
Roth , Morton Rothstein, Motl L. Ruslg i,
Michael E. Ryan .

Frederick

Sachs,

Richard

T.

Setzer,

Norwood Samuel, Benjamin E. Sendera,

Oentk A. Sanders, FJW\tel M. Sansone,

~~=·N~·:c~~:~~~ ~~~n ~.. ~:.:~
Chrlatlno /\ . Sczupak, Joaaph Sedransi&lt;,
Fred .(l. Saa, Robert H. Sellar, Norman C.
Seveio,_Salt K. Sayrek, Paul J . Sharila, Mary
1\ . Sharrow, lUchlrd P. Shaw, Mark E.
Shechner, Frances S . Sherwin, Gerald R.
Shleldo, J . Stdnay Shraugor, Donald A.
Shullnari, ljarriet R. Simona, Myles Slatln,

W. Roy Slaunwhlte Jr., Evelyn L, Smithson,

Glenn H. Snyd.-, Norman SolkoH, /\Jan J .
Solo, Robert /i.. Spanglot, lr&lt;lng J . Spltzbarg
Jr., Robart W. Springer, 1 ' - Y.
Stalman, /\!bart T. Stoogmann Jr., WHilom
W. Stein, -Robert e. Stolnmoler, Kenton M.
Stewart, Charloa L. Stinger, Edwin J . Sully,
Robert G. SUmmers Jr., Austin 0 . Sw1nson,

Linda H. Swillluch.
David T. Tang, Devtd w . Tarbet, Stanislaw
P. Targowskt;'tl8te B. Taulbee, Harahad R.
Thacore, Carolyn E. ThO&lt;naa, William E.
Thomson, Richard J . Tobin, William H.
Townaond, David J . Trlggle, Virginia M.
Troy, Ahmed A. Uthm~ , J . C.Wg Vent&amp;r,
Richard E. Vealey, N. Vljayaahankor, _t,lary
L. Voorhaaa.
•
Yloh-hot Wan, Tung•yue Wang , Ooneld H.
Watera, Livingston V. Watrous, Thomas W.

Weber, Mark I. Wetnatein, Sam Weintraub,
Robert F. Wola- Jr., Naomi Wolateln,
Cleude E. w•ch Jr., Marten• Werner,
Laondort G. Weatorlnk, JamM J , Whalen ,
Gerard Wloczkowakl, Roy /\ . Wilko', Sldnay
M. Willhelm, Marilyn J . Wllllama, Richard
W. Wllllemo, Jerrold C. Winter, Wolfgang
Woick, Louvan E. Wood, Jr.
_
•
CllltOll K. Y•rloy, Conalantlna Yaracarla,
Mahmood Yoonoeal , Cht•ptng Yu , Dena W.
z.briakle, .. _.. 1\ . ~oi!IP.ll', Zblgntow H.
Zlelezny, Marvin Zlmmeii!IOII~ C. Richard'

= or symposium slated
Dale D. .....-,, Ertl&lt;a /\ .

W.

-·

F•ia

.-R.--.~

~obet.

A ....,-long -~lum on the
II f R/Qhta
_,......,., •ov
o ~In

=-~.!!",;,~of h~

001111'H.:tl:iii' lew, polftlcal ~. -

... ln. ....- . _...

"-""I and
8lllllolagy, Will lie Nlcl on CMIIIUS
blglnnlng nell 0cto11er 11.

-lift =' =•·

a- ........... number
at
IIIII will lie
a.
Nllllonlblp of 1M
• • -~ eoclety
Ill
--.. ~
111 C. Hltlpem 01

E
__
~~~~~~~~~·--·

il•iiM•a.i.W.~iiiiiii

~

.'

. ·~ '

llllill.....-tlr•
ft Nlw YOfl&lt;

•
.......,..... and illy
..... tndCDIIItiiUIIDneflolll
1iDo11 Olwlc organllltlloM and
llldlrr'dtlll

.._..at ... ~and.cope
at ... - · ...,_,. ..,., ClonaiiOM,

Sp.m. Gon

Or.

Pierre

R.

Hart,

F/\CULTYI
Michaol
duo-gui!MI
admission ~

g&lt;w~t from the New York Council

lor the Humanltlea resulted from a

aubmiUad by Halpern. lh
8ddltlon to cltltlr1ng the - t he will be
a ....... at one ol the i*i8la and will
edit the ~tallona IJDr publication in

beOII form.

~ of the oonter.nce Ia
... ~Rifltier a...terof 1M New
YOfl&lt;
Ubertlee Unlon'a Clllana'

o..wr

~ .., The Etta
~.t~oue of Wonwl Vllllra, The
~ CountY
~~

l'orulll.

CouMy

'!-'.....

"'- Qlipeer, National

con:

Olfloe of Public Allalra, U/8.
Moat of the 4CimMiber organlzatlona
, of the Cttlana' Forum will be '
participating.

by!heOopl

!ft~=~~r~~. o~:= ~:l'~!r!; an_::

UUABF1UI

Amerlj:an Council on Education (1\CE)
Fellow In the 1978-79 ACE Fet.lows

Lootdng

Theatre, &amp;
StudenliS

PY~:m~~,~l=~~d:~::t:,:::· ln

Diane K
whc bOOZI

1984, Ia · deslgl)ecf to ~ngthen
leadership In American hlghet education by preparing faculty and staff ior
responsible positions In academic
administration. Forty Fellows, nOO!inated by the presidents or chancellors of
their Institutions, are selected each year

dsy, whcSI
The last

UUABMIDI
H'oAIIYI
12 nolaiigh

:~e~e":~~~~~~~~~~~-~g~~.978-79,

Typically, each 1\CE Fellow during
the academic year, either at the home
lnstitutiofl or on a host campus, Is
1

AMHERST

1

::!~~t ~~d ~hi~ ~c '::11: 1~

participate .In task-oriented administrative activities. Fellows attend woiklong seminars In Indiana, Colorado, and
Washington on tho problema ill
academic administration , read extensively In the field, produce an analytical report, and engagi·in other activities to
prepare them for administrative catM&lt;S
In higher education. •
Moat of tho 540 participants from tho
program's first 13 ~· have made
significant advances Into poaltlona of
leadanshlp in academic admlnlatratlon.
FIIW-flve have become preaidenta, and
over 230 others have become vtce
presidents, Ylce chancellors, proyoata,

~~sul~E=~~~.of

those

Hollander has
a new book
Edwin P. Hlollander, proleuor .of
psychology, Ia the author of a new
book, L-.hlp Dynamlca, being
published this month by the F - Pnlaa,
a division of the Macmlftan Company.
Sub-tilled ''A PI8CIIcal Guide to
Effective 'Relatlonlhljl"" the book Ia
Intended for a proleQfonal audience of
executf-. admlnlatratora, rnaNig8(8,

of leadership t111d their ~t .
More- thanmaterial
300 eourcea
U8ld of
In
covering
from - atudlea

~PH~tlo~ ~leal,.:,;

dynamic aepects of IMderahlp ln. n
hla
tranaac11onat approach to underatandlng "syatem ~" lllld "equity" u
faCtor~ In ellectiW '-!-.hlp.
Hlollander hu been • prof-- of
peycllology here alnce 11112, and pro'«&lt;at of aoclal aclencea and
admlnlatratlon ewty In the 1870a. He Ia
the aut11ot of L_.,., o,.,.a, and
" ' " - · and Prltte/p/ea and lllelfloda
ot Soolai,Payclto/ogy, now In Ita third

.IR£ot..~.nc:-:-fit~-=~-r~=~~on

~am.-. and Jan. Inc.,
The Junior~ of BuiiiiiO, Inc., the
Manl8l Haalth "--ICCon · of ~
Co!lnty, Radio llatiOn WIFO, and the

10 . senior (

associate

to:l:.=~r;:::~::.=:

-~

•

Hart named
ACE fellow
for 1978·79

folio-relations.

grants and pi:C:of In-kind aervlces
Ill ~iOna.
...._ -·""'
:.,
ot h er f oundat lona

The

citizen6S1
Spon80I'
and !he Dot

=~tu~~.n:oC81~to:or.:=

on t h • Bill 0 f Rl g h ts
........._..,_ ~

Send 10P1

Robert E. Puswell, t..aw....ice F. - Pace,
/\!bert Padwa, Theodore Papadomotriou,
1\nthony Papalia, Jamea G. Pappas, Julie H.
Pardoe, Seungkyoon Park, C. C.rl P-Ia,
Rene

s

IliaCI&lt;

forottws.

c.mee1e

been on lhe l.culty ot
Tech
and WMhlngton unw.a~tr. a Ylaltlng
proleaeor at la!Mibul Unlv. .lty on •
Fulbright and at Oxford, Harven:t, and

Wl-aln unl.... llal. In 18fll.e7, he
a Ylalting aclentlat at the Tavlstock
lnatltute of H'uman Relatlona In London
anclafeflowolthalnatituteofArnertcan
Studlealn Pari a.

·'

+

1~7

MF

- ~'ft~.~ : ...
BFARECil
Arlene I
Free. ' Spol

MUSIC'
U( B Sr~
andU/BC
lheatre. 3
mentofMUI

COMMENC

School a
Music Hell.
This is I
!he season.

ORAMA'
Wann
8p.m .

MUSIC'
E-tno!
Sloa
_..,
Lukas Foosi
Dick. Cctaj
...... Gohr)'~

·-'1
end Pori

UUI\IIFIUI

~

-$

�...,.,,.l't
•Calendar
, _ _ 11,co1. 4)

-inHayeaB. _ _ ... OAR_
hour schedulo lor e&gt;&lt;lendad hours of ~-

-60 ochollrs from thlo - - -

w11 -

·

lA cololntion

of tho bW111dote of

Ps~t SlgmundF&lt;eudOioilro-.)
-- . ~Frwnchled\nr
from
Coleve de Fronce 1n Poris. IS the

10

TEACMNO _,-~ AI'PUCA,_
Taachlng Aa-..ohlp applicoallli/la lor . . Fal
1 9 7 8 _ . , . , _ _. . . _ . . ,
t.e.rinO Cen111r, 364 Baldy. F o r - ...
636·2394.

*
._..,_..

E - or. ICiledtAed from 2 p.m. Saturday
thrOUgh 5 p m. SUndey In Ellicott . Coll636-2562
fot infomwtion
-

TW&lt;HIAYS~
F-.~

... ,...,_.,F.......

COHVEIIIIA1101CSIH nEARTS

--ir118Mewsllon-oon. Cou·

~~.:;z::..aa:': hold In ;&amp;7

rier c.- (C1\annel6). 4 p.m.

MFNX. 8oo&lt;L--In10711HCC,

IIICFLII'

Booll.

SUndoJ. 170 MFACC: Ellicott. 7 :30
ond 10:&lt;10 p.m. Free to tRC , _, s1
torothora.
.

May I-AI doy ....., In 101 MFI&gt;CC.
__
....
Elicolt.
• __For ..... -

tha-~tglllll~-.1138-2077.

The top;c of hla -

wll be the argon

performance
~·
c
u s s l o of
no
f c o n -- . . v _--a naddlo_
~ m.JOic to lho daYolol&gt;n*lt of
Froberge(a~atyte .

-A-

a n d - Culellano,
ll*d Aoc:M Hll. -6 p.m. Genenl
$1 .50; UI B 18cU!y, 11811, ell6ml with

~-

ci11Hnl $1 ; - t s $ .50. Sponsored
by tile Deporlment of Muolc.
UUAIIFLII'

l.ooldng llltllr. Ooiodber (1977). Cool'"'"""
lM&amp;tnl. SQun. Col 836·2919 tor show times.

Students $1 ; othora$1 .50.
Dione poye Tony, a j&lt;)Ung WOil18'l
who booz... - - - teacher-by
Clay, w h o - hw nights In -.gleo bora.

lhetost15.....,....,,,orthelaln._.

1

UUAII-TFLII'
K'o Alhe (1976). COnler.nce ThMtre. SQun.
I 2llliclnlght. Students $1 ; - - $~ :50 . •

MUSIC'

TUESDAY-9

c..---~-...-

SPECIAl. SEMINAR I
lti Vlln&gt; ~"',;,. CalcHic:atian of Cartilage
• Bone, Or. ltzhlk · D.M.O.. vi1i11n9
scientist, National Institute of Denial Resear
National Institutes of Heollh. 102 Sherman. 11
a.m. Coffee at 10 :45. Jointly by the ·
()eclorlmenlo of llio!&gt;hysical Sciences and Oral
Biology.

BIOCHEMISTRY-NUTRITION NOON SEMINAR I
Magnatum In the Ntnoua Syatem. Or. Jerry Chtrti&lt;Dw, prolesoor ond chairmon. Oeporlmenl
of Ne&lt;.wology, u 1 a. 2e Ftwbef. 12 noon.

Subpopulallons al Splenic P c.tls RogUlotlng
and A-pan AntlbodJ lldponM. DloUnel
f .unctiOna of. and SeqHt~tlal Requlrem.nt for
Holpor and Amplifier Cello, Or. Donna M&lt;Arheed.

SUNDAY-7

BFA RECITAL •
A-lonch, piano. Bolrd Recltol Hill. 3 p.m.
F&lt;ee. Sponoored_ by tile ()eclorlment of Music.
MUSIC'

u i 8 8Jiftl&gt;honY Bond, fflnk

Ctpolla, director;

Schoalal--~.

KIOW\ans

MusicHII . 1-p. m . ~

~

conwnoncoment of

lheoeaon.
DIIAMA'

w........

by

enc

Bentley. Pfeifer Theatre.

8p..m:

Sloe-from-. ~~

AJtiot.-

W&lt;oo " -· and c . - Did&lt;. ~ . . be preoMI . Abight-K.'lOX
At1,Goi!ory.
p.m. -$2.50;
.
_ S 1.8;30
ADS""""'occepted.
~ by the Cenlor tor the Cteotive
and-.mgArtsanclh()eclorlment&lt;ICMuSic.

UUAIIFLII'
........ ..,..,, (1977). Cootorence
· llqWe. Col636·2919 l o r - -·
-S1 ; -.S~50.
.

-~AF.---.1-

1-.--.r. on-ofM~.
- . , Cologe. 357 MFACC, Ellk:olt.

3p.m. -

·

PHA-aJI.OOY AND THIIW'EIIllCS

"-•-ciMt .............. Do-..id
~·
H P · lot 8 ., 0, Pill., pr..-.r of

. . . . . . . lllonogol. 19&amp;5) 7pm.

Thof/(liiqla~..--~o the

_w,_~_...,....,,

. . .,.,.

ldnainonlhoW.-n

•

.

19&amp;9) a 15 p.m
., hiolory dur1ng three
..... ~.~ tor -...

'-ltCCii&gt;a

Tho ,.,.. o1 -

170MFACC, Eiicoll

FfM-

8hoiAd

atHutlons and ~on to lnterect.tft Form.
Professor Russell Langley, vili1ln9 professor in
the Depatlment of Educational Psychology al
u 1 a. )Professor Langtey Is from AustraiOI.) 2 13
Boldy. 12""""
Llq&lt;olcl VoiOc- and Aotla!Or Dooton, Dr.
Oevld S . Dickey, ~. Inc.. Dayton , 011io.
I 07 O'llrion. 4 p.m.

WOllEN'S &amp;OF11IAI.l•
U I Bft. -loSiate. Acheson Foold. 4 p.m.

U 18- .._ Woalapn Collage. SwMI
Home High Sd&gt;o(jt, -.:30 p.m.·

STUDENT f1LMS•
,
SQun Hill, CooiO&lt;eo&lt;:&lt;t Theetro. 1 p.m. AdmOI·

lion-... proud to pr--1 .. open
uu~

~

lor .......

perform -

of . hlo

com·

__.. ..--The"*.... ~­

~- and . . . . . . "saT'' l()f -

~- ----·

THURSDAY -11 01U. lAO l.lJIIdi•

,

IIIOOEL: , lilt llap-nlng the
_ol_lad_lnttlultiple
t.phnet, ~I
of ~ Paycl)ology. U / 8 . 213 Baldy.
- ,2-I'MXIA
F1lJII•
~
"I'
,
Coller (1Jl7o\). 146 ~ . I pm . Spon·
aored by 8tac:l&lt; $oudoes.

Lt!CTUIIE I 11£CITAL'
, . _ Koonll&lt;. organoot. Bolrd Aacllal m AdmcNo'l free.

4p

Formcn-. coniiCI~­

or Kathy ~ a1 838-2'JT7 or 21170. Thlo to
opentolhe~~- :;

LOCKWOOD (AII8QT1) UIIIIARY'
Ouring !he of Moy 15 """ Moy 20,
l..ocl&lt;wood LJnry . . have regular """""" """"'
with lho following • . _lions;
tntart-ry loan Office wit dose to the pubic
at 5 p.m. Tuesday, Moy 16. ~ tor lnte&lt;·
canpus end interiibniy requests is lily 5. lnterttnry material"'"' be t)iCI&lt;8d "" tiYu Moy 16 at the
ILL office. lnte&lt;campJsbe piclled'"'
·at the cnutat1on !leak lhnJ Moy 20.

'*'

on Wednesday, Moy 17, a-... tor
documents Intercampus tow&gt; _ , . Ia May 5.
Inbe piclled'"'
tiYu Moy 17 1n tile~ ()eclorlmenl.
a1 10 p.m.

docunenl-"'"'

~(_,Ubnry'""'

A-... ...

11 . It .... -

be-...,
.

June 12 at

IHF~TION FOil tt71 DE011EE CANIIIDATES

-tn

AI degree carldidateo who pion .10 -.cl 1ha
132nd......,.. ~- Cooiimeuc••••
at Memorial Audiforlun,, Sur)day, Moy 21 (3_p.m.l
wllrnard&gt; in !he ~In- OOIUne.

pteaae
t h e - - of !he
Audllof1um by 2 :30 p.m. FcUty oMI
be avalat&gt;te t o - you In lon]*tg the...,..,.,
proceuton. - klan~ otgna ... dlract nwcner.
1 0 - - - . l &gt; l y - -.
Robing wll lake plaoe In the ..,.
of ""' Audf1oriuo1&gt;, Secu1ty wll be prOYicle&lt;;l

tor !"W--' ~during the a -.
to - _
-Famly
. nand..-. ....- _Jn.tl!ld
.......

the

wenot'r~wct

c - a n d - - b e - l l ) t h a a s-

_,.,.. ..... ....-.o the ........... .c.. -

~ be ...._ "" ....,. Moy 3·15
aotltloii&amp;qoqHII-

·-

·

MUSIC l8WIY vo.IT

n..

Oboa ....... I!Yough .... 31 .

Hal,

l.Jnry, -

SAED~
~Mid

Pa£ II

, , I Pnii:IMcta

"'
Oealgn. Hoyea
- o
IJ&gt;Iiby,
- Hull,
cane-.
Worliaby""'
fassociate~. School o f - and ·
EnYironrnenllll Oollgn. Tl'n&gt;ugh Moy 12. 9 Lm.
to 6 p.m. Monclay IIYough Ft1day.

JOBS
NON CQIIPETIT1VE CIVIl. IEIIYICE

..

·---nt~)­
Phyaicall'lant,
~ . Uno No. ;l-0440.

--~~­

PhysicatPWlt• ......,.,.,., Uno No. 3137 • .

--Hall,
l.aboraiOrJ
Uno No. 30052.

IG-6-f'-

- . g - Opar.a ~-Du­
piica11ng: Une Noo 31011.

IMPORT ANT NOTICE FROM

21 "'"' -

a:t..~..:.:a"~~-Hal6 p.m. S1 tor U / 8 l8cUty and ; $1 .50
.t&lt;etc1u11;..

• 1.0 . C8rds ere avai&amp;able on Mondays and Tues·
days llt.....,gh Mar 8 oniJ. Open 3· 7 p.m.
This .s )IOU' last opportunity to recefve your I. 0 .
card to.. lho 5prng 1978 semester. 161 Hlmnerl.

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

TRACK' ·

12. ear-.

IEUtnRiclwnonciiH.-. ~A docx*t all46la ""1'**1.
' If

111.-y llelperiiG4-Centrolllu!*:allng.

!.D. CARDS
QAL' BAO LUNCH"
Adapting Computer Programs: On the Tranaportatkwl of CCII'nput« Progrema to Other I~

Mlnglan-1 0 - . ! ! -

the .... -

s.

to5 p.m.

WEDNESDAY- 1 0

-·~"'-· ~'- .....-.-'Pall
IIUAI FUll'
- - - c.nlor. 102 Sho!mon· 4 p.m - .
-..345
. -

Hayes B. -

Main Street Campus. Applica1lon 01
May 5. Onty those stUdents rwiJo ... on en F or J
visa are et;glble to apply . The ~ Aid Office
" open Monday through F~ ttrom 8 :30 a:.m.

Mr•

aMt
I lii*IIICIL_,_
.........,
_ __567c-. 3 :30p....

Reglstnllion materials .., . . , _ to al DUE

be retuned to OAR by May 13, 1971\ OAR
will bit open on Saturday, Moy 6 and 13 tor
yoor ieolstra~oo IIC1Mtiea unll 4 p .m. MFC
regislratoowilbegin onJuty 10, 19!._8 .

atures.

_.iii - t t o - their wort&lt;. •

AliT~·

- ·in

FAI.l REOISlliATION

Fll.M'

s..on BaauUn (W.......-). 150 Fsrt&gt;er,
5 p.m.; 5 Acheson, 6:15p.m. Sponsored by
the Del*1ment of Modem ~uagos and Ule.-·

~-­
andbK:I&lt;.onadoy_to _
__
exa.nlon-.,.,burQ.iAegianllon- Fildoy, .....

q.ry

Student Tuition Waiver ~ions for
sunrner and fd , 1978, are now IIV8ieiJk! at
tile Office of F1'1811cia1 Aid, Buller Annex B,

of , _ """' by the - . . "' the c.nter
lor Madia Study, SUNY I Buffalo. T h e - - -

MONDAY-S

""11111

,-

-= -

OAL1.EIIY 211 vo.IT
~ cdlogo and patntlnga.
219 , SQun . ..., 1-1_2. The ~ Ia Monclay-Ftldly 0 a.m.·5 p.m.

9 a.m.-4 p.m. Sabxday.

Foreign

CHEMICAL EHOINEEIIINO SEMINAR I

MUSIC'
E....... lar-llllhic. - by, villt&gt;lg

-

seo.- _

3 nigl1lil at the lilllr*"'
a n d - 1 0 t h e - . o: - -

EXHIBfTS

FOR8GN STUDENT TUtnON WAIVER
''\ t-• 1" '
APPUCATIONS

=·~Hrist~~-=
tnt

11wu i5. 11c:kaoto . .

NOTICES
OAR OFFICE HOUIIS(all- MaJ II)
6:30a.m.·6:30 p.m. Mondaylhru ~ 8 :30 a.m.-4:30p.m. Friday.

~~~:-:~~~~~ P&amp;'thdooY~ U ~B.

ment of Musk:

C~NT$171'

.

n..
-.,l..aCJand-..100_BalrdHII.
9p.m.
Free. Sponsored by lho Ceotlar of the ~
and Performing Arts andlhe Deporlment o f -.

and gnoduoto

PATHOLOGY SEMINARI

This lo the

The -a~
- Englolt
- May 21
lo
..,.._w,g
t o - .'
. .. D.C.,
lrlptour-·~--4doySand

EDUCAT10MAl STIDES COI.l.OOIM*I
the Doc10ra, ~· by the Society
of Educational-. 202 Baldy. 6 ·p.m.
The speokors . . . redplents from
~""' ()eclorlmenl of Educational~-

FACUI.TY IIECITAL•
tO . -

(
W~D.C.TM''

Sunwnar.-oNIIEOIITIWlON
• 5Maklt 197a lla,gistration,

lo now

PROFEIISIONAI.

ST-

T--.....-~IIhop514*·
.-, . ~.

PR-2, 8-80011. ~

FACULTY
(patl--), donb,
F-a046.

-

--.a.t~.F-8047 .

----.c...~.

' F-80C8.

Cu.atilih'ECIVIL~

--(pati-);- TJIIIOI~. MayerHaapltat.

..._ 801 .lldlcite I Otlhopeclca (Meyer);
_ , ThoOologaa;
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~;

-

Qlllce;

School -

(1*1-&amp;M); - - -.
C l a r t l - - - t . l n r y.
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p .m . _, , ~-· - (8:.30
Lm.•5 pm., 1an_.ry ..,.. 8/21178. ....,

_,_

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....

PW!t. Sl. (vwylng aNn, ~
7 / 19 / 76, th0nponnonen1) . '

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~- Ma- School 0111ce

( 1 / l 'i '78'10 1 31/78: 0Mal6nof~
Edlltetion (2 11 i t9·3 131 179oll-) o

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~ - ~ 11 11/ 78-12 / 31 178 oil
bnltt.

· Key: tot&gt;en only to lhota wltlla prol"tlonel lnt-t 1n the twbject; 'Of*l
to the public; • open to , _ , - . of the Unl-alty. Unlfta olllerwlu
..-tiled, tlc:Uta lor - • • cNivlng 8dml..lon can be purchated at the
Squire Hall TlcU( OHice.
,

-·

�May-,1871

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

IIUSIC"
0 - jazz. F'llmont Room, SQI.ft. 6 'p.m.
$5, $3. Sllons&lt;n&lt;l

. . . . - - . l l r. Bonw11L-.,,
.......... ~.~aiCdooU&gt;.

---1111' . . IINjan al
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OM.. . . UIIIIIrt

All

u.w..lty Cllolr, Simona, dlractor.
Baird Recilol Hal. 8 p.m. · Sponod&lt;ed
by the Docw1monl of Muolc: .

... ~-

-

__

(111731. 146

CIIILB • IE

llielonciOot.

.

UUMfi.M•
~
~ lionel (19771. Coolarence Tliiootre•
Squire. Cell636·2919 f o r " ' - - - -

1 p.m.

$1 ; alliinSl.50.

. . -..w-.

I_,

.,.._~

WOMEN'S WAITlNO;WORKSHOP•
~ S1reet-launlnt. 9 :30p.m. 5pon.
soredby 1he womon·s s-Cologo.

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A chilng exetnion into 'horror that doesn't
tetup. ~

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...

SATURDAY-S

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UIIRAII'I' WORKSHOP"

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Dr. - -· - ·
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IIOAIID OF OIIECTORS MEETlNG II
107 -

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IRCRLJI•

BIOlogy ~

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~Ill' ... Erwionmonbll~ Centar.

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IIEN' S....--u.•

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c.JI5ius College.

1p.m.

IIIII 10- · , _ IDIIC ~;
I laungo, - $ .50·

~TOT.v. wu•
170MFACC, Ellcott. 1·5p.m.
Two Nobel Prize wmers, C. N. Y81&gt;Qond T, 0 .
Loo, wlbonong1he.

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1110-IAO LUNCH"

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.--.

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2 7. 4232 , Aidge Lea. 4;20 p.m. preceded by

Thomas -

FACIJLTT'5TUOENT ASSOCIAn oN

--~~·
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. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . letela•CJ . . . . . New
.

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Day at the~ (Man&lt; Bros. I. 170 MFACC.
Elicott. 6anct10p.m. , _ $ 1 .
Mane Bfolhe&lt;o ITIOYies 1\a!f no plots. Anything
could happen-end did.

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MEN'SIASEBAU"
U I B wo.
1 p.m. ~

.•

!21'Buifalo State Coiag'! .
-

MEN' S LACROSSE"

U I B wo.

State. Buffalo Slllle Cofloge.

DRAMA"

1p.m.

Wann- .11Y 81c Bentley. Pfeifer Theatre.
8 p.m. General admission $3, -ondsonlor

UTERATUllE AND PSYCHOLOO'I'
CONFEREIICE I
The PO~Y of leaching, MW lheorioo.ol •

-S::=:..,':"or~tr!."'theatro~
•

I'

FOLK O,uiCINO AND MUSIC"

...

-.-..-..------ -·-------caowo- -

:=::..~=·:~

MooiQOme!Y, Yl8lllng professor of histOry at U 1 B .
For more iltormation, c811894·2804.

hoi,_.

., _.._..., ~ ~~ol&lt;:.=~=·

-===....
...._CIII..,_tttar---.: ....tuo.

ence Theatre, Squire. 1 p.m. Free adrnission.
This film focuses on tho tabor moVement in
c~ 1n 1he sos. Slefla Nowicki. one of th8
women intervieWed in the film, wiD be at the
stiowlng. The film wil be shown again at 7 :30
· p.m. at 1he Polisll Cocrmunity Center, Hl81

lltacll Sunday. 150 Fart&gt;er. 7:30 ond 10:15
p.m. F&lt;ooto lAC foopay- $1 tcrolhora.
- TOITorisls In a bfiml&gt; , _ 1he Super Bowl

c111zona$1 .50.

- . . . &amp; . CHaaTII'I' .-Ailf
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- - 127Codca. 2 :45p....
.

___..

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of

~;,.,· Malda,- a fearun. documeniary. Confer·

- . - - . . . . -Cli()ll~.

.._.,

10 a.mr SI&gt;ons&lt;n&lt;l

the al 1he • • 'by
lnfonnotionancH.bwyStt.o&lt;fies.

~.114-.4: 16p""ec.- 1114 .

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u.. (1976L Co&lt;lllnnce ThMire. Squire.

~2iilldnfght. -ls$1 ; othero$1 . 50 .

•

0

--=rfAL•

.

.+

......... ~ai-. Room27,
-Nilget.a.2p.tll.

~......_u ,

•• Square
Plaza

f1s&gt;or

~

(-floor ~oungo,u • ra1na1. ~ . ­
.. - . R e - w l l b e -.

~-.

. . . . . . . . . .. U / 8.213-,. 2,_.

. . . Fir

0

lolpnollonal Cologo ... -

Oonc:,e Ill the Rod .,Jacl&lt;el

Men~s

female paychology 1he ..-.nip a pocsoo'a ~ and his wrt11ng and noedlng
oro some of 1he lopico boOlg COW&lt;ec:f dumg
a two-day oooferonce aponoored ·by 1he U 18

Center for 1he Paychofoglcal Study cllle - · ........ tum to pee. 11. cot. 1

conference

Sponaored by Tolstoy_ Coflege. For lnformatl~ c.ll! .!1!'1-5388.
FfltM:
Thursday, ~ "· 8:30 p.m. In the FUlmore Room, Squire - Fps
(directed by~ea)
Friday, May5.jl;30p.m. - Bey-U. S.A .
Foooalng on tile relationship·men and thair parents, on couplea,
and on the expansion of eexual roles, th- fllma comment on "*'Y
Important aapecta of cenlamporary maacuflnlty. There wftl · be rooma
.avallable for open d lacuaalon grollps after each film.

,

Worbllopa
Tl)- are prlma11y OJIIIfl dl.aalon groupe. Whlletheie wfll be f8Ctflta1ora
~!able, the emphula of ..eli worltahop wlfl be on our malafeetlnQa end/or
ax~. Tem.ti.. ICI!adula for Setumy, May IJ:
•
11 ;CI().nooO 338 Squill Hall - Gathering, opening IWIIIIb, collaeltaa,
-food (1)01~-~et~· food eosop~yaf,o), llnal-c18ftda.

Nooh-1 :45- ._.._..

1 : ~2:15-DIQulre-

2; t!H;OO- WO!Ullopa.

'

Regather, eal,talk .. ;

' 4 p.m . - R!IJialllerfonummlng-up. Oial:uaalon of Buffalo Men'a Center.
Starred ( •) WOfll8hope - open to boUI men and W911*1. Workahopa will
lnckldll:
11e1ne ENct: -.piing mala physicality and eelf-lmege.
•
....., ~ lli8rcl-.1n mO&lt;ring, liatenlllQ, leafing ...· becoming
batter 8i:qulilnt.t with your body.
·.
. . . .. Win: CQflllllllltlon and competence; aucceaa and achlaYement.
Grewtna Up lllle: our ~~~- compared to thoM of men In a
lllcallv eli,.,., CIUitlQ (the 8alillil of N... Guinea) .
•...-=thanillofvl~ lnmaleMxuallty .
......
. .. . 8J'HUfl?
.... FtlanJia ... ~ tM nuta and bolla of love and friendship- how
do waeleflna lham, q.,._Cio we "dfllw tile fine''?
_
- ·-.,.. ...... Tti!IIIIW: ahon prwentatlon on men's liberation and
CloifaloptMIIMII* iltOiip taparlence.
_ , : ~.-:! WI!Jrldng w(th "*''• anger .

........... _.,•••••.....,....: wltat'amlulng1
·
•....,. ...... ol ._(and women'• Images of men); perceptions and

~-

.

-

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388729">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
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                <text> New York</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1388741">
                <text> Erie County</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1388742">
                <text> Buffalo</text>
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                <elementTextContainer>
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                    <text>STAlE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL 9 NO. 28 APRIL ?1. 1978

One f()r us
Four members ot" the Johns Hopkins
comparative literature faculty decide
U/B offers great~r latitude, flexibiiity
By Paul Chimera
.

News SU"eau Staff

Four distinguished humanlti!IS sCholars from Johns Hopkins University In
Baltimore are joining the Faculty of Arts
and Letters here, Faculty Provoet
George R. Levine annQunced this week.
Levine noted that the preMnce of the
new faculty "will significantly atrengtf&gt;.
en our language and literature programs
generally, and will give us a national

=adl~~~:~o ~~u~::., ~~l:3;uro'l

crltlcaltheory."
'
· Dr. Gale H. Carrithers, chairman of
the Department of Engllsh, added,
"This Is a real stroke- the kind of thing
that happens once l n a decade."
The four scholars were attracted to

~(,!;, ~.'!'rBf:u~~g~a!~~~~e=~~f~

their Interdisci plinary Interests.

Secretaries
_The NSA is .celebrating their week;
'don't give me roses now and thorns
the rest of the year,' an activist says
This Is national Sectwtaries Week, a
time to celeblllle an• pay homage to the
skilled, dediCated, often unsung offloeworkanl who keep things moving, get
~-~~ - ao tJ
._ , ( t e till!
Uf-11, In pertictnr, _ , . : an
efficient, widespread network .of such
worl&lt;ers (pred9mlnantly .women) whom
you call (or who call one II!'Other) when
you INlly w.m to,_ get the Information
straight, when you want to be sura it's
- going to be done right.
"I never bother; with him," one who's
been around campus for 11 while says
about the director of a key office. " Are
you crazy? Why would I talk to him; all
I'd hear Is some Aonsensa about why:
Albany won't ' permit it. I call her, '
· meaning the director's secretary. "and
It's taken care of."
The Personnel Office estimates there
are some 900 women office workers on
campus: typing, filing, taking dictation,
.answering phones, often taking care of
Intricate edmlnlshlltlve detail.
This week all over U/ E! (as across the
nation), It's their tum. Bosses are
taking them to lunch, bringing candy,
offering a rose or two In tribute.
NSA'a obMrY..W
Thoae secretwles who are active In

the Buffalo Chapter of the National
Secretaries Association (NSA) are.
making more of It than thet.
L:ols: Lewis, a certified profession a'
secrelar:y (CPS) who Is sacratary to
·OeeR John Naughton of the. SCliOOI
Medicine, not• that- the weeK Is · not
just a time to pat Suzie Secretary on the

or::

back.
The week' Is set aside, Ms . .Lewis
reports, "to empb_aslze the Importance
of continuing education
In the
secretarial field, " as well as to honor
the profession.
"The National Secretaries Association (International) sponsors an educational program which culminates In the
8

=~~Y~atl~n co~~ay8nv~:~~~~~~a~

relationships ,

and

!~W.~"i~~de~:::.;l':g~ an't%r~ .~f~

expertise to her job."
The Buffalo NSA took time for social
0

How fast can you 'type
oh big sir
' big sur
lcannottypeforyoutoday
because the' typewriter · .
broke down
and I broke up
laughing.
Because my whole Ufe has
been
How fast can you type
How fast can you sweep
How fast can I get you
tosieep
With me.

IUips-P.alo

public

business. communlcatlom. and deci·
slon·maklng, and office procedures."
Successfully completed, the exam
yields a secretary the CPS designation .
Ms. Lewis says many employers
reci:&gt;gnlze the CPS "In the form ·of
advancement, Increased salary, and
awareness and appreciation of the
9

~~~~ ~~ i.A~:a~fo':.'l~Y,;

Howfutcan
you type?

-Linu

business

lfn~iai~~~?Y~,•;san~n":n,:r~~~f,~:n~i

t,::e ~"i'e~

day, " SIK:Illlarles Day," a luncheon In
~he Statler Hilton Golden Ballroom
~~~ gg~~ ~f t:::C;:!r"?-' of the year"

lt'anot_..gh
All that's. . fine,
agrees
Linda
Phillips-Palo, a U/B office worker
activist currently working In the Theatre
Department.
But appreciation of the secretary and
other office workers, she - says,
shouldn't 1&gt;e confined to one week or
one day.
~ Don't bring rna a roae once a year,
when the rest of the time It's thorns.
Don't take rna out to the Red B11m, and
tell rna I'm a 'ten-lflc girl'," ahe mu-. "I
:~}.!'M" a girl since I was -lrrhlgh
. Phillips-Palo thlnks·aacrataries are all
·too often "office flunkies," even hera at
U/ B. Even more often, she laments,
"we don't even question our atatua."

ln:'J~ c:::: ~~!:,g·~~'T· fb~~.;~lt~

Belkin: "It ne- occurs to a great many
of us, perhapa the m~ty - that we

~~~ne1ed rty~t~

~.r.,oirv~~~

'geadly,
mindless office jobs .... How little we
•SM'secrotorteoWMk,' - ' 2, col. 3

~~ ef~!ct~~at '.~~rbeg~~~r;:rr~~
Fall semester, 1978. They are:
Drs . Rodolphe Gasche and Henry
Sussman, as associate professor and
assistant professor of comparative
literature respectively, .and Dr. Carol
Jacobs, associate professor of English.
All are currently at Johns Hopkins.
The appointment of French scholar
and art historian Dr. Louis A. Marin
becomes effective In the (;all of 1979,
according to Dr. Levine.
Marin , currently with the Department

~ op~~~·;ffrhol:i~':i~~d,!tE. ~~~~
1

Professorship In French.

Will INCh In Pllrla, too
' 't.I8'Wll~th the Fr:&amp;nch ·and
Cornparatlve Ut...atura departmants,

!'l,'ij~g m~~al~~~n~,;al~u="l~i
appointment with the prestigious Ecole
Pratique des Hautes Etudes In Paris,
during spring semesters.
Or. T. Jefferson Kline, associate
provost of Arts and Letters, notes thet
the Paris Institution Is comparable to
the Princeton Institute lor Advanced

-~Morin .

Studies in the U.S.
The Jones Chair In
French,
established In 1930, was last occupied
In 1976 by Rene Gerard.
Marin, 46, S8Mid the French Ministry

~~0~·~:;. ~~~~a:~:: i~~:.,.,':'y~

The scholar/dlplomet also seNed as
associate director of the French
Institute In London trom 1964 to 1987.
Among his credentials Is the coveted
Doctoral es 1.ettrea d'Etat, a degree f scholars In this country have earned,
according to Kline.
~n•IM:ully......... - .
Marin haa MeA on tlle.facuttroH!il-··""
Sorbonne I!F I'Wtl, and has t..n
asaoclated with the Unlvwllity ot
California at San Diego, among· other
academic and scientific Institutions.
He Is author of six books, and the
translator of three others. He has also
written mort than 50 articles, many
dealing with_'!fl h[story and criticism,
· - ·-Hopldno,' _ . , _ ,

New degree
SUNY ~oard approves master's
program in urban affairs within SAED;
also agrees to swap land wjth DOT
~ 1 :;. 1 ~a~je~.~f i'~~l p~~n~:;,~~~~~

and Environmental Design was author·
lzed by the SUNY Trustees at their April
meeting Wednesday.
Within .New York State, comparable
degrees are offered only at Columbia,

~n~~&amp;.~yt':t~~'eN"N~~~~~::~~rv

offered In State University.'
The degree will be offered here as
soon as it Is finally approved by the
Board of Regents.
· In authorizing an amendment to the
U/ B master plan to provide for the new

~~at\~~.,:ru~~~ ;!~~a~:r:::'a~ g:

1980, governmental agencies In the
U.S. will need between 16,000 and
17,000 profesalonal urban planners. The .
current number of such peraons Is less
than half that.
Many mora rnutera level greduates In
urban planning will go on to doctoral
progrema, private resawch Institutes,
and consulting firms, the Trustees
projected .
Availability of lntereated students,
the Trustees' statement aald, Is

=

=:~~~~.%"
~:\'l:lsy,:
wtten It beceme known that a program

was In the planning etage.

T)le program at U I B. the Trustees

~ wl~

"";;t=::. an0~teg;:11~

=~r'!a~~:vt-==

and social, behavioral , economic and

political considerations.
.
The new program will provide elective
courses for majora In areas such as
Management and "nnlates quite naturally to undergraduate programs In
architecture, envlronm..,lal deelan , and
urban affairs," the Truat.a'notea.
One new staff person will be required
each year for a th,_.~ period
beginning In 1979. The I)Umber of
greduate students Is expected to
stabilize at abOUt 30 by 11180~1 .
In a separate U/B-ralated ..:lion, the
Trustees authorized the Chancellor to
transfer· certain lands presently under
the Jurisdiction of St'ate University to
the .State Department of Transportation
(DOT) so Millersport Highway can be
ralocated:"ln tum, DOT Is transferring
1

an&amp;:¥'~~~P':!e-:rac~ng

~

the
Millersport route, at flrat with a
temporary detour that will allow the
University to proceed with the
construction of the Health and Phyalcal
Education Building. Eventually, a
planned East Loop campus road will 118
built and Millersport will be permanently relocated . Thla atap will allow for the
final Joining of the two parta of l.aka .
Lasalle and the ultimate completion of
the campus.
As a result of the land transfen~, the
UniVMSity will gain a strip of land
through the center of the I:Blllpus
containing approximately six acres.
U/B will give up approximately eo acras
for lntarchai\ges and relocation of
Milleraport around the eastern periphery of the campus.

�........
eGovern

~--1.-21

He wants a shift from war pr~aration
tQ programs to improve our society,
won't seek the presidency again, t.tnless.
AmeriCWIS must Insist that leas
money be spent on arms cllleratlon
::~a~":: on P"'QQ'amS that elp combat
South Dekota SenatQf and one time

. -'dentlal

C811dldate
George
a1eo told a packed audience
In the FUlmore RoOm Monday that since
World W.ll. Americana have 118M •too
.priiOCOI!Diad" with , _ of fonllgn
lllt8Ck. 1hla "o~lon" ha8 weakened
the .cDnOiny lnd diverted attention
fralll .,..._ _llfOb*ns, • Cooently,
abOut 2&amp; per cant of the total federal
~~ d~fen~: Democrat
~

contends.

To help eecure money for; energy
convwalon of - t e and

-a.,

b l _ . rnaterlal, upgrading the rail
~.

dlnlc:t giWIIs for higher
eiludmiOn, and aid to cltlea, McGovern
Ia Introducing a "T,.,afllr Amendment"
In the Senate. The bill atlputates that
$4.11 billion be ahlfted from the military
budget to civilian J1f011'81'1S.
~~ ..... the dollar .
flglft le lneufflclent to complete any of
the JIRIQIWIIS but claimed "It Ia a
blallinlnll. • The Senator ..xlldly told
thi- ....,.. .. . , _ , expect the
leg...-lon to..-. bullalleplng that at
leMI
of bla ~ will
1UPPCJ1t lt. Tbla · Ia bow inlnda gat
=:::...and "tbbnge get ataned •• he

_...lid

fllcGooMm alao acsam.ntly rw!ected
f'lnlaldent c.ter'e ~ 125 bllllor!
tu cut • a - • of controlling .
lnfllllon. "Tbere Ia a batt• way to do
1t.• he e.kL The money ahould be spent

oil~ thllt -utd cnme Jobe and
, . _ - the , . . . . clllflclt. Laet yew
alone, about all biHion apent

~-===thlllc:e:r=
::=.
':t.C:::~an;:::.-le

~=~-~
..

he

~ not
c.~ p!VV!da

.,...... that
_ _ . to

~ lioclel and economic
•~t c.nnot clllflne

...= ~..c:'.sdo:;
.....,_• . , . . the ....,. and eel
. . .and prlorltlpa for~.

Without a voice
Notlrlg there Is no women's caucus
. within the .local chapter of CSEA,
Phillips-Palo thinks campus office
workers are helpless, without a voice.
She's a member of Women Office
Workers (WOW) , a militant organization
out of New York that has tried but !aired
1
10
on
"Secretaries Oay" {last year atop a
flatbed truck at 51 sf Street and Sixth
Avenue In Manhattan). Marching bands
blare, and such' f igures as New York
Councilwoman C&amp;rol Greltzer tells them
"ll's clerical workers who run New York

Secretaries Week,

McGovom

•He sees C&amp;llloml a Governor Jerry
Brown as a possible Democratic
contender In the next presidential race.
He warned, however, that Brown's
candidacy now would be premature

~~~~~~.:~:~~~g.~~ct

II carter

•Nonnallzatlon of relations with
Cuba will not progress until Cuba
withdraws Its military forces from
Attica. McGovern ~uestloned the

~~~~et!~rie~~~r~ =~~u~~~~

China and Russia.
•He would support a monitorlum on

~~~~~ a~dl~~~nal~~~~ !ll~!~ u~
adequate~y deal with nuclear
\,,.,-waste .•
~

•The trade .deficit caused by massive
Importation of oil can be decniased over
the coming yews ll•he U.S. slaps up Its
reliance on coal, hydroelectric power,
wind energy and conversion of weate
materials.
•Nazis In Skokie, 111. , should not be

~~e:ma.J:r:::I:W~~e~~!t::a

on "pragmatic grounds."
•Tfle Bakke case should
be
overturned by the Supreme Court.
McGovern rejected the notion thai
affirmative ectlon programs foster
,_..discrimination. Until disparities
between races are corrected, the
Senator said l)e will continue to support
aucb programs.
•He has n.o Intention of running lor
President again, would only consider It
II the Democratic Party had no
= c . = l r a r C : : ! . had a
McGovern's ~ce -

spo~

ecnd by the Soeakara' Bureau of the
undergraduate Student Asaoclatlon.
.
.
-JB.

0/B ·ranks high
In PMLA stats

Cl\l'i;~y . hold a "Most Ridiculous
Personal Erranjl Contest." Last year's
winner reported '1hat her boss asked
her to photograph him before and afte[
he shaved off his moustache at the
office."
That 's extreme, to be sure. · Bot,
Phillips-Palo asks, what about the book
manuscripts, dissertations and other

~~n:o~~;" gron~~~~~~~~ ~:
them?

1978

In beth the public and
private sectors of our
economy, the quality of all
professional achievements
rests greatly on the abilities
of the secretary.
Grateful citizens everywhere, therefore, join in
fitting tr~bute to a profession which has such a
, prominent part in maintaining the efficiency,
vitality and strength of
American society.

¥~!::~0.:~~~ ~~~u! ~unler-rally

~~

~ ..........t

expect of our llvesl We type, deliver
colfee, plug our.elvea Into d~
phoMS, smile, take orders and
unprotestlngly die a little each day."
At the other extreme, Phillips-Palo
argues, secretarlea do administrative,
professional-typework at cut..,..tea. The
department head says, "You h&amp;Ye such
talent, such ability. We ought to give
full vent to your energies."
"And pey you Grad&amp;-9 wages," she
adds.
This saves fighting for a 12-llne or a
GS-14 admini strative assistant slot. "if
they can get you to' do It lor $11 ,000 or
$10,000," they will, she says. And If you
won~. then they'll put In a PR-1 or PR-2
"administrative assistant" slot. Not

-:r.f?
s~~a,;~~h~~v:r:?':w r~~s ::::~
only a sprinkling of 14's around, she

Since the 11M0s, McGovern eatlmllled. 75 per cent of science and
~ ~h ha8 been .ga.ed
t"*-d "pNparmlon lor war." As a
.-ult, Nl.tlvely 11111e has been
:.,tt;end::n.l''r.=:
The Senator lamented that outmoded
technology In American factories ha8 '
contributed to the lnflatlonlll)' spiraL
~ Jndustry hu 118M unable to
compete with foreign manufacturers .
and thua blip prlosa clown, he said.

Aprll27. 1171•

•

ta.:~~t ~~s!.7s ~~~~V:~og:;f~~e~

and then Is off to Switzerland lor the
spring break (two weeks early)?
And, why do secretaries have to do
this work crammed Into wl"dowleaa

~u"n:c':1~~:J~~d!~':a!S,::~::,refffices

Some do'a and don't's
More generally, Phi!Jrps-Palo thinks
that secretaries:
.
•deserve more pay, more . recognition of the multiple responsibilities they
' carry out;
•need to be unionized In the many
places where they are not; and
•have to demand "respect" In order to

-Jimmy Carter
validate themselves and thefr work.
("Don't let him call you b» your ·first
name II he's Dr. so-and-so to you. ")
Looks have nothing to do with It
Neither should office workers be
selected on "looks."
" You don~ go Into this business
1

~rpss~~~~ ~:~:J' i ~ ~.;:,~r:~:~~~~

with the Courier's Pat Biederman :
"Tile emphasis on decorativeness as a Job criterion puts pressure on younger
office workers to spend large chunks of
their small salaries on wardrobes,
fashionable haircuts, and cosmetics.

ol.;!,~ ~':n~n" ~ff~:"!:~J;:· ~.~~s T~~

1

8

older women have a really rough time.
Tliey get a lot of the dirty work In

~~~~~e.Nhdat ~~~s';."~~~;:~~~~~~

::';Wrrn 'r.:'~ r:!I':J~b:. ~m!'n

WhO

A go::!! secretlll'Y"'I&amp; a professional
who should betr&amp;ated es such, Phllllps-

P,~~~:~:'s with!,~ ~s~~~s

. ..

:Js:'t! _

~omen's T~re Collective.·- - . "'t.
'Get It youi'Mif

• ' ,

~ ~

'

·

··
A recent magazine cartoon, which Is
pointedly, displayed In an office In
Crofts Hall, shows old J.R. Bl.filwlg at
his enonnous desk, buzzing his girt."
" Ms. Lipscomb," he says ever so
correctly. "Ms. Lipscomb, will you
please fetch me the ' Equal Rights
Amendment File?"
" Fetch It yourself," the unseen Ms.
Lipscomb replies.
J.R.'s eyes get as big a&amp;-aaucers.

We're eating more. bran
but does· it help any.?
Many Amer1cans hal(8 lncreesed their
consum'ptlon of ·dietary fiber at tlie
suggestion pi ·some scientists . who
contend that doing so cuts the r1)1k of
coronary artery disease and cancer of
the colon.
But Or. l;lavld Krltc'-sky. associate
director of Philadelphia's Wlatar
lnsiltute, says"there's little evl~ce to
show that lncr.&amp;Md rough-a&amp; In the
·dltit Ia a preventive agent In •eltt.
dl_... Speaking to more then .•100

M=. .

=~ • = g
Tof:t
Krltchevsky noted that bran does aid
patients suffering from diverticulitis.
"The data on Increased dietary fiber
as a preventive for colon cancer . or
coronlll)' dlseue Ia Inconclusive," he
said. He also noted that the popular
press quickly picked up on studies

t!,.

=~r.u,~~~~:~ =~and,~

consume Increasing amounts o~ber''
In breads, cereals and vegetables.

Orltaaln'tthe,_

.
"While studies show colon cancer Is
lft!ll'e prevalent In the ' Norlheest and

. lowest In the Southeast, I wouldn't say
grits ,Is the reason," Krltchevsky
quipped. More likely to be fectors ; he
believes, are some lied to Industrialization or environment,
Although a study by Burkitt showed

~ •dl':w81J ~~~=s~r~:=
than Americana who consumed less,

~~=~

.= g~': ~::'~1,rr~~

wwe nol part of the_study_. And wh lie

Bur1dtt showed a high correlation
between lowered Incidence of colon

cancer and hlah Hber diet. other studies
have shown slmllar correlation between
thai kind of cancer and use of solid

fuel sea wellu beer drinking .
Some ott. scientists hiMI advanced
the theory that lncreeaacl consumption
of meat/poultry Is to blame •or colon
cancer. Bvt · although Americana
consume twice es mucb of tlieee foods
• ·as they did 50 r-a ago, there ha8 118M
an Insignificant I~ In this fonn of
cancer during the same half-century
-span.

Rellgloua~ ethnic~~~

Among r8llgloya and ethnic groups,
there are some lntarestlng patterns lor
cancer of the" colon, Krltchevak}'_sald.
The meat-abstaining Seventh Day
Adventists have a lower Incidence. And
Irish, Greek and Czech men and women
are more likely to have It than Polish
men or Mexican women. They all eat
meat.
Krltch8Ysky noted · that previous
assays for determining dietary fiber
have been faulty, perhaps leading to
some erroneous assumptions In
resulting studies.
Despite the feet there's not enough
data to determine dietary fiber's
preventive role, II any. In colon cancer,
· and other:;condltlons, people are avtdly .
buying books which say bran prevents
varicose veins, urinary tract Infections,
and a host of &lt;&gt;I her conditions.
This at least keeps bran sellers from
suffering cancer of the pocketbo~k .
::·.~.• .. '·'

-· ·.·.·-·

...... •. •. •.•

�April 27, ft71

-oorrits
There ~re pr0blems,
but quality of life
is ~ated ·~ood!
By Joyce Buchnowakl
RoporterS1off

· Problems exist In the U/ B residence
halls- some correctable, some not.but Housing officials say the results.of
a recllllt survey Indicate that "overall,
:" ~~:~t~~~
at both Main ·
.The SUNIIY, conducted by Assistant
Housing Director WIIIIM1 J . Conroy,
was en ad&amp;ptaUon of a design
' originated by Or. Lester W. Milbrath of ·
Ul B's Environmental Studies Center. It
yielded data on 42 variables associated .
with quality- of life In donnltorles.
Ou!lllty of llfeL according to Conroy,
.,_.,s ''the ovoralk subjective feeling
about one' s dally life" In residence halls
and, In a sense, one's "degree- of
hei&gt;pln•s." · /
Results were obtained from anonymous questionnaires given to an 8 per
cent random sample of donn students
(approxlm.ately 350) - some from Main
Street, some from Amhet'llt. The
questionnaires were distributed In
November by resident advtaors.
· .

3:;::;,

8
the length of time It takes for dorm
repairs were other sources of co.ncern,
tona say .they "lntultl¥ety sensed,"
but theee are not In the direct domain .of
IICCO&lt;dlng to. Housing Dlnlctor Madison - Housing..
Boyce, Assistant Director Cliff Wilson,
and Cotwoy. Since most ~ablee were
.
rated
11\.: the middle o! both Wh8t'almportant
Studar)t
ked freedom to live your
~~~-~~ and Importance acalea,
own 11~1~adequac'y of heat,. light
lhe tt:ne feel this lndlcat• a goo.O
and -er. and transportation betWeen
quality olllfti rating.
•
cam~ as the thnie most Important
•
varlebtfMf affecting quality of donn life.
lllnua ...U ~ ........... ·
. ·· • On.UHI oppoSite end of this specti'Uiil,
Complete reeutta of. the survey are ' • atonlfl&lt;*lt to quality of life, are
.,._-tled.11tthe box -=o.o.m-'1111 th'l"' · uaa of 8fcghoJ by other students, use of
.tlcla 1~- EaCh~ I~ hu
Ill'"""' dfuga· and availability
' of special
a .,_., "illiportance" and •
· ~llyl '
·eoore (whlclt- Nfa'a: to,..I\OW ,
·
surprjae that
1!1-lng « dtapl.aillg It' Is). HIQI't- ·· r~tll.. ~kecf ~·. uee by
atudlllta ' n
~eo loW In 1111110n8nos; e1!peclaJiy
.illeltMd Willi a, ~ laMrcon...,, Slnce' 'tlt$ Alcollot· Riw!Mf' Board
liicllcatethelrdlapteuvre.EaCh'llfiable
f~ student 1ead'ars hf'S..cl&amp;lmBd •
· Is aleo M8laned • nonk ~ ti(CON;. ,_ ~tl\ill; il®llbllam ·on ca/np(jjS Ia a real
· teflactlnsl· d**llv bel.,...n ,ple.iiog- · pro6·"·.
.....
" - anc! lmpclrtlriQ!I. Ptu.a· rarik '· . Conroy . added that he ' detected a
~ ecorea that ~
"lla-iOr \.Of defensiveness"..· In 'wntten
,_. axoeads ~ ImpOrtance, ·comments which followed' the questhat the t.clor 18 an ~ In residence
tlons on use ol alcohol and drugs. His
haJI living. Minus acoraa (mply thet
guess Ia ttvit students vt- this aa a
pleuln~ · lalla bflow Importance,
"prlvate..area" aM do not like IQ. be
that a j)rolllem may exist. The aim of
aiiked about 11 • .Nonetheleas, a surwy
the plua « the mtnua lndlcatee the
dellllng apaclflcally with alcohol use

con~~at W,: H o~% =•t~

"Yiilence~
' -.nee -

I'll~

-

-

and

~reatowNchthev~lelav~ed

~~=le:.:.~~~r~fh'O:::.'~~ ·change, how&amp;Wll',
commandln~Jotif.elr attention

they

'

•·

ComctJw~ · •;. .''" , .. ·

.
,/

1

~~';l-~~ 1.:h~h:"~ ~~-.!

g::
·
3.875

Main
rank

3.858
3.832
3.784
3.788
3.743
3.736
3.734
. 3.712'
3.701

dtff..-of+3.

~11'-=.,.ln

dlff8.~~

'nonk
provide "oonalatent data" provtng 11181 a
l.:k of -.,.nleuca and ~ion •
. . rNtfor pcgblema, .Conro¥ said. );!Ia •
I1IP.O't iiOied thlt the "neid for soCial
cant.:~ IIIIVotld the boundarlea o.f the
Amharat Clmpua ap~ to oontribute
.tD the ca.-~eta~:tlone" rwgardlng t..,.
two problem areu.
"·

~--;....,..
. , Given !hale aurwy

POl:IUIWIIItcil to lhof. E

hkih 01; fha autWY

for -

1180 -

taltactual

'

' 16.
17

3.!!87
.3:567
3.545
3.544
3.480
3.404
3.321
3.307
3'.287
3.287
3.283
3.277
3.202
3.180
3.178
3.151
3.080
2.880
2.782
2.735
2.726
2.885
2 .476

;

atlillulatlon."
I
8tudenta ' do, how.-, ........ the' ·'
doubtea room ~-ta of Main .
Street dorms to the larDer rooms at
Ellicott, 80m&amp; of whlch liousa four Cir
more atudlllta.
Other maJor .-au of lrrltallon for ·
studanta .-hlch fall more or INS under
the purview of the Housing Office are:
lack of study apee, cte.lllnns ol
residence halls, lack ol cookl~g
facilities, to,the procedure for ·room
asalgnmeill' and falae fire alanns.
Expenses of residence hall living,
student .services, board contracts, and

u

•• ·15

~ ~~.~1-~.r

~ )
flndlnoa. one!

~ logloally aaauma 11*1 atlldenta
IIWia at Main Stll!ll Campus, but
actuaiily the ~~~ rs ~n~e,
Accofdlna to Wlfaon, ll\lt returning
student dorm lottery lncllcatsa ttiet ~
Elllpott Complex Ia, ~·the ..-~

1
2
3
4
5
6.
7'
8
9
10
11
12

4.347
4.257
4.125
4.0112
4.050

-21 on t~ va1able ''Tmneportatlon to

f!

'

repair

proceaa

main--~.,.._ U. ,

repal~-~oftitnwllttor ~·

,.•. •.•

materiel'~-.-.~- ·

1~1-=-

18 -34 versus +8 for the Main

~~~

'

- Clmlntly, coat estimates are bl,Jng · • Cuat~ ....,. ·Ia .,. ·thlll Ia.
gathered for adding cooking facilities In
not handled directly by Houalng,. IMif .
Clement Hall and In the Ellicott
Wilson ' eaild 11\e offlcllila CIIIII*MII
Cori\plex. Although the lack of study
ha¥a .,_., ehown the ·euney ,....,_,
·
space at Ellicott results from Its design,
Wllaon admlttad .th8l CleM~ ' Ill
Houslng,ls at least attempting to 1tiiep
donna Ia not entlr*y up to' enutt. bulthe atatus quo by requesting that
added tllel the ~ ataff; .too,
Facilities Planning reserve Hall Ubnlry _. suffers from ,II; lll!flllpowel' ~~
In· Ellicott-for study apace. That library
Studentll .muat)i\iiltiJi ~ ~ to
was suppoaed to be closed when the ~ .cooperate, he~
~--

Stl'llfl dorm d-llare. "Conilenlence to ·
CkaaN and Other University Activities"
the SurrounlHng Community;"

.

.._ ~--aiRce
"m~':':
. . .,.,...

QUAUTY OF RESIDENCE HAll UFE
N=:IIIO

·::::-~:.:,~~~-:~;:'~

Street that verlllble had an

are

catt ,

Unclervraduata Ublwy openaln C..,... ·
The"Housing Office t.a also tried 1o
tackle the P&lt;Oblem of faiN .....,. by
proaecutlng offenclera In """*-!
oourta Instead. of through ' Internal
procedures. At.nn bo- ' - · aleo
• ~ "duated" so that offendere '*' be
more .ally Identified.
·
In ~Ilion,~ ' - .,_.,-made
to dorm recr.tiOnal equiP11*11.auch •
pool and piiiCH)Cing lalbles; · and iii
Improved. )lemllga Nport ayatMI hu
.,_., Instituted to help . - : . - the
- anount ol time WhiCh ....,_ bafora
repatraani made. ·
HouSing admlnlelnitore

~--~~----~--~-------~------~~------------------------~~--~--~------~~

• a n - or a pooblam.
.
A factor arialyate of survey. results
lndlcatee · ileflnlte problema at
Amher:at. For example, the average rank
~,"

'!'! 11!1118~

Wh8t'a ~~~~~
Most "pi-Ing" to students are
co-ed donna, the performance of their
resld¥1 advisors, end the number ot
pecple located In various residential
818&amp;8. f&lt;mazlngly eno.ugh ~ "QIIIlfnl
attract._,_. of the campus" ·- ·one
of the lectors with which students are
fairly pleaaed.
•
There la'-llttle that Boyce or· other
dorm.admlnletnliore can do aboUt such
problems as lack of tranaportlitlon or
convenience, other then point out the

'

t•9 ..
20
21

-~ .
24
25
28
27

-~
30 -

31

32

33
34

35

311
37

sa ~

38

40
41 '
42

..,_

- - -·-

..,.,_
3 .e37

3.537 ~

2 .4&amp;7
3.3111
3.!1111

~:~

2.8
2.7M
2.117
2.142
2.174
3.257
2.102
2.Ciol7

t~

2..232

' '3.018
3.1;1
2.237
4.ot7
3.823
3.018
3.383
2.825
2.885
2.871
2.309
3.577
3.135
3.188
3.8811
2.1131'
3.Cl31
2.837
3 .411
• 2.864
3.322
3.342
3.184
3.313

4
8
35
11

-3
-7

, -32
-7
-1
-25
-23

8
31 ·
30
311

-31
·20

28

41

-31

-22 .
-31
,-3

33

40
11 .
28
42

. ·14

.!0

8

.

,, .

27

·I ..
11

+I

·10

~

+2
·17
+21
+11
+S
+'13

1
tl

n·

o.

28
23

+4

.

24

+4

7
18
3
2
25
20
34
10
32
14
13
17
15

+23
+12
+21
. . +St
+8
+15
+2

:rr

+27

+I
+25
+27
+24
+27
..

,.
J

.lmpottance Scale- from 1-5;'tlle hlgherlhe ,._,, lhehlgherthe lmponance.
·
,
•• Valence should bo ll)le(pfeled u the leWI of p~nHO or UJ.Iafactlon students feel with a.glvan aspect of Resldenco Hall :

~f~i.e""ru";:'"'~d':~a~!1J~~:,~::C.m:!~~~=~--fn
~

us draft so that a plus sign now suggests an
uaet
that the pleulngneas of the variable • - • Ita Importance,
minus sign suggests a problem In thet the
pleaslngne,.of the variable lalesalhan ltalmponance. The size olthe rank dlfteronce suggests the magnltude·ol the asaet or
potential problem.

t

�Aprtl27,1t71

s
deadltne tor
grants
faculty
.
.

Like 'Holoc::;aust.' it' a triviali~ation
of a tragic and shameful period:· •
'eloquent' liero-proclajms 'wariss-~-:·

Fult:tl,:,.. faculty nave until JiJ'ne 1 to
epply tor·a grant In support of IM&lt;;hlng
Innovation or ·for Conferens:es· In the
Disciplines funding. - c
•
:&lt;,
A(l Awan:llt' Co!Jlmlttee, eonslsting
,,
of the three acting UniVW~~Ity deans,
•
Br&amp;tMrs..rtz
conditions In the V.A:· hospital from
Beetles,
~ 8lld mlnl-sluna
expacjs to"llave· available a moderate·
. a-oiCUbn!Aiim
~
Fonda;~ the ~pleglcs are Q!'OOyY
The dlrectQr want~ to&gt;niCI'8ale the· ' amounroffundstobeusedtostlmulate
"Coming tlome" Is ttle story of Sally
'and Cl!rinli.
feeling of the sixties tlere. To !10 ·this, Y Innovative lostf\ICIIonal techniques and
HYde (Jane Fonda), the wife of 8 career
he relies on .a relentless sou_ndtrack of
procedures forFall1978 and for support
offl-ln the M.tnes (Bruce Oern), lllld
Fonda'~&gt; developm8f1,1 throughouJ the
slxlles' music (Beatle8, Rolling Stones, .01 conferences. ,
•
her _..,cas while her husbarfd Is
picture Is characlerlzlid more I:!Y her
Bob Dylan, etc.), mini-skirts, and
The Innovation funds may be used for
_ , In Vlel , Nem, She beComes a
harige of hairdo and wan:lrobe tljan by
occaslonar joint-passing;-· illlher th'an ·a virlety of purppses as long as the
wo~...-.. ln 8 Veterana;Admlnlstratlon
using craft I~H~:YOke the n)9.0d of that • faculty mllmber C:art demonstrilte· he
any sense oUundamWfal growth. Sh~'s
• hOII)IIlalaad 11188!• Luke (Jon Voight), a
'been aweeffrofli the'fieglnnlng, anti tier
era. And. it -feels as thougll In order to
use of n -· taal:hlngo"-technlques for
' - fOolball star 81 the high echool
prlnclJ::I awakanln..ILhas been se2'ual.
make the Good Guys sound sJ!Or&gt;modifying exl~tlng courses or ·for new
where the was ch-'-ler, he Ia now a
~ndh-ert "re'shpasonbeeAse
topbe~ay~g ~~ m,21~~
taneous (as opposed to the up-IIOhl
courses. Innovation may ninge from
-'tlalc
I8MIIt of combat duty
, .
officers), the director -lias -Incorporated
preSlmtlng existing topk!ill ll)alerlals In
In Vlel-...-n. Through their meeting,
wafmth and sensitlvltyb'f:Volght-:;- that ;
i)nprovlsed speech ) nste&amp;Q .of a for:mal • new ways 10 pnsseiltlng new- subject
Which beCOrriiMI a love .affair, Fonda
when her husband returns fron:J Voet
. script, This worl&lt;s well In the ~ong, "lnatter in a more orthodox f&amp;~~hlon or
- - flom~ conwntlonal '!IPI'88eed
Nam, stlll a jerk, and now-half crazed by _-when 'the ,paf&amp;plegic vete&lt;an6 are- pre,sentlng new-materials with the help
the IQnomlny ot,tbla particular war, we -· discussing· lhe- war: It seernlt very
1 ' w techniques Awan:ls can be
8 politiciZed lll'ld llbersti&gt;d
woman.
SofTiply dlsbelleving. when -she says
lifelike: But it falls- short when strong
::.&amp;dnee up to a maximum of .$2000
There Is also 8 aut&gt;-piOt about
she loves fllm and glves up Volg,ht
dialogue ' is ·n~H~d&lt;!d, '!IJCh . as when : AppllcatJons should be forwarded In
Fonda's friiii'Od, VI (PeneloPe Milford!.·
without noticeable regret :
Voight, relea~ed !rom j he !)!!spital 8/ld
triplicate, lo the Office of Graduate and
and VI's kid brother (Robert Cenadlne ,
speaking agaonst the .war to a group 01 - Professional , EducatiOn, 548 Capen
anolh patient In the v A hospital
(ltd fasliloned, triylal, Inept
boys In a high school audltotJ~m . _ Haii,Jn care of Cindy Bojak,,
,
who ~ ~ peyclioilcally ~
It's really an old fastli.oned movie.
exhorts them ~o!· lo light, -wl.th :s~fring
Ms. Bojak can supply the necessary
pr8888d by his Viet Nem experiences.
There Is a ve,.lon of a chase scene In It:
phrases like, Its all shit, -man. The
lnformatron on what details must be
Fnml this dclma of representative
VI's brother attern11ts suicide, while we
makers -of thos film W8!Jied1f to convey
submitted with the proposals.
lndiWiuala, the makers.. of the illm
watch Voight, In traditional 'cross..a message: It .v,oould have belped to have
conferences In ·: the Disciplines
~-cutting of scenes, try to reach tiie
a good script
•
•
~ to show ua the ....-tat 1ng
. br&lt;lther In time . to p;r_,t it .• When
·
- •
, funding may be used to supPQrt series
affectS of the Viet Nem war on the : Voight and Fonda are &lt;!bout to spend
On some of the nights that "cOming
of lectures and sy~sla of, Interest to
· Allllrtcan people. But, despite Its ' their flrs"Tnlgbt together, .we are, shown
Home" was· piaY.ing in .Buffalo last • members of the Unlverslty-1)9mmunity,
twme. the picture ~· a drag, and,
two detectives. In a car (they tum out to
week, televi sion was carrying the · the Western New Y-"fl&lt; scholarly
wane, 11 Is 'slick, trivlallzi:Jf. and,
be• F.B~. men, on Voight's trail for his
mini-series, "Hqlocaus~.'' It, too: dealt
community, and U\e Westet'l} New Vorl&lt;
8 fhabby and sent mental
anti-war proteS}l ; tailing them, just like
with a tragic !'I'd shameful period in_ community~~ large.
• ~
trellinllll of the horro"' It purports to
In those .old cops-and-robbers movies.
history: the persecution and exterminaProposals for such · conferences
· .-1.
It robs the big Jove scene of Its
lion of the Jews hi World War II..And 11,
should b&lt;rlorwan:led In triplicate IQ. the

s-.

ulha

wii8'"tirto

are

lllflll*:::l',

Alltha~ . .. , _ ,

Cll'~~=u~:'!.Whe1~~F~.;.,:·\~a~

~~:~~~\7~e.a:io~ar~~~~~~~

too, failed to rsallze Its subj&amp;l't.
the lovers will be burst-in on at any
Perhaps theseen ormltleSies1st being
and scope:of1be;proposed conference,
JAinute. Tow••ds the end of the movie,
reduced to ·TV and film "pla~s .
of _potential audiences, both within and
•....., am.~-~"
QUallt'-:
he's lnsensi· ,.rous -husbao\d with the' gun Is
......,
thdexd.dema
d whmore ~ ''""tess
- -~
aY -tnlat;
;;,.,tiOnally
,_
the
""!"aps
_,
n
wlthout the UnIvas lty , o f th ere latlon oI
1
..,..._,.., competltiYe In a male
reiJlln lscent of the old•. fash \oned
wroters an
or....tors,
o are ess
the proposed conf8f811ce_to currant or
1
pro- -y &amp;ncllousy In bed. Voight, ~: ~uspense g~~· t~o. , ~" .
~~~~ ~~· -!'!P~!'at.l~pan!:J _
;..Jl~~~~d '::h.:,n~~~~
1118 1111811~
, on the ~other
• Most:of the- trlvlalizin(ttSO!ftQ'lS. to be .. the obscenltx.l&gt;JJ having lo·.watch ·rv;_ ~wtillre ~{jjprlate, ;pi RO!IIIIb'eJ&gt;IIllets
hand,ls a
, 111
good guys are - the .!1\';'Uit of lneptltude. ~t rn a- scene
commercials juxtap&lt;isetl with reenilci- . for publication of the papers·presented
hippies In
I'•
e,
wheQ VI, grielstr:lcken by .her.cbrother's
ments of gen&lt;icl(je. But Its' sugary;· ~ aL'thol. conference.,
' _ .
_
atrong but gentlil,
•
te .his
suicide, .behavt~cS In a ilrunkan, tawdry
glossy tone sells tickets, If not SQ&amp;P:·
Applications -'Sh&lt;tuld be forwarded
lnflnrtlty, a sllpefb lower because he's
way that is both pltilul anti believable
and that't,a "Pretty sad commentary on
t hrough the.liperoprlate' dean, provost,
lli.Pto"!;K&gt;.IYRICII'J)hollll .,........_..All the
the eQieode ends wlth·-lsecrack tl)ai
the judgment, and perhaps the
or vice president, with lhese .offices
~ wf-lnl CIYerdr..-d matrons ..--. seems Ch~~ly .daslgn·ed fo get a laugh ·
integrity, of the presum'ilb!Y humanltar- • attaching.• evaluative comments as
Who don't WW!t_to hear abol.!l-the bad
from the au lence._.
;.
•
lancreato."'olthisfllm.
appropriate. .
. •
·
. . cliches.

1)le ·

The

or

llaWicfeft Marlnehuabendlaglven'811 the

ti:", ·

::=

0

n

•

-

~

lo

. •

:f

. ·..

,

,

&lt;

Ctal~~? _·us··"'!f~¢,:0f!~~~c.,¢n,~e ~··t.eclln~-~g~
By !lee- Des Faroe. "!t ~
AIM&gt;clll6-o1HIIto!y

.

Jlave Influenced the "scientific_revolli-:'.. . were operating In that tradltloo, as well ~~lthout limits ~ all these ideas gave
!ion" Ia the West.
•
·as under , the Influence of Frederick
rose to the West&amp;Ql defiQitlon.of science
IV
.
_ More lmp~ant .th!'Jl Chin'!~e 9&lt;\leatlEngels•. when they s~nthesized J nsulln
~the study o! natuo:e lrronler to control
.CIIItledldll't_..._
fie pracoclt)' and· tnftuence, , h!&gt;wever,
bef9re Jt was done on th1t West .. The ·· ot.. •. .
' . -' · &lt; ''
Jlllll . 81 lha ·Chi- differ from
was the qilnese tradllion of , Science
-Chinese are .,building on. their own . .. . The Greeks edded.th!lldeas that there
Vv.itii....,. In their eense of time lll'ld
which had -Its own ' lnn!lr'· loglc and
science. as well as 011 the ooclallsm of
os such. a thing as •truth" which can be
p i - 80 th~ haw tfi!llr'oWn dlstlJlfl
cor)ststency-.. Jll~than Siv,\n and ot!)er~ -r Karl Marx, when ~they attempt to -pu"'ued as an end 111'- 118811 and that
pi 8Cienali and t~y
havec begun to "point . out thai 1he
.combine the Jnsights· of - Chinese
mathematics is the most powertul tool
OorNctlng the mJIIIalien.ldaa tllet
Chlf!!!AA oilf!llitlon of science .was_'!9ry
medicine•. which ·efT!phaslzes treating
for getting 111 the truth ernblldded In the
eclence "' ~Needblun ~. broW!. fot eXarripl&amp;:.• 1118 keyldea .of the
the patient , wl.th • the methods of ' natural world. Contrary to··the view ~hat
that lhe'Cbl,._ allooHd great , .'"lnvestlgatlon 'q[ thtn·gs" (l!o' wuf took
Weste111; mi!drctrie; which erni;hasll8s
there waa .a quallta,tlve shlff-;::from
the natural 'IO'ld 'di1V'81Pped ;. the *ho)enlll,liraJ· wQ:rfd, lnciUdlng ·man
·the disease . .When Chou Er&gt;-lal •called
."tr~ltlonat ac~ •J O • "modern
highly _..tlon.l s~ ot'thought to
8lld hunan affaj(S,.
lts_:' provl.n¢8." ''-, lor . tl$ development of . "modern
science," • . !!, :18 now :Jilcreaslngly
dMI with It,
an orglll)ic
Science In Chlmi'l!lc) uc;ted a _nq!"b!lr of" ·r~ science," we may be. sure that he"was
rpcogn~ U..t """Y Jud&amp;O'Christlan
vt1tw of the 011111108 long before that
Sllb;-cat~ee suclj ·· as medicine,
speakjng of a,~Ind. whiciJ grows· out of
Bl).d Greek Ideas were-merely combined
!!law fMCime
.11\ the West •• ~erny, asttoloat ' g&amp;Omal'il:'/:".)lto:yslthe Chinese heritage
. , and -which gives· aiid raised to a higher Intensity in the
1
TMII-W Jilefdhi
qjqera, WlJ'QOw
Clll st~illtt an.!J••Jilllthertllltfe~t:
'The -. ,as much.a\)efillon'to mllllas to material
~led "Enllphterllll8llt" "ld "scientilmow f111it tlie"Ch
~
' Chl.n8e' liiici.'4. 11felt""owl'l ' sllllsll' · of . , things. ,_ ..._ ·
... .:. ' ~
: 1\c. revoluti.on.'~Bycomblnl'nG Induction
1n optics In the w.mng Stafea Period
~Y ai!Jong. theee.J()!II!!!!orlee· .and ·. ''· . D 1 - . • ~- vi 8 1 10 c 1· • ·
wltto·deduction and applying mathiima• and In ~ 8111 was cleilrly Of the highest
ur ng our '
t
h na, 1- was - tics to the testing of .J)y_potheses the
1n " ~~
IMHiil\.r-'""
_...,.....,
llki~: ·
~ ~
privileged to b!l able: to 'discuss my_ Europeans enttano.d ~eetam ni.an's
10 a.
tn 1'lung,....
and I.: . We ijiri:v9' luj1ti8l' l/{d aaytfiat' silice
current r,earciLoo P'!I!Uia.r,uprlslngs in
ability to u(lderstand" natul'8c to the end
made
Ia
d
Chi._ thlluqt!J W88.1yp1b811y holistic
seventeen h centur;y China Y(lth three
61 control"llg 11 m0f8 effectively
..._~ the M
YeeJ:l
the Chi- dfd oot malte ·sharP
specialists from the Institute of History ·
•
7 ..,..
·
~
~- •
n - dlstlilctiOilll bet-. the mind aild the
.of (he Natlonil Academy of Sciences In
Unlwerul aCiMcoi broliiMr thaft W•tern
=:!8..r. ...,.-• • lUper- " bOdy • the obelirvw -~ the obseried
Pel&lt;inp. ·our ~lscusslon was most ' 'aclence
,
u•_....!lll un..._, _ .
the-tiuttrlllld alhlca. SJnce our studY oi
·. use!~ becajlse It was based . on the '
Contrary to the vi- that this was an
IIDt
In advariCIII of tile~ tiUt III8Y - Chi._ science Is still in Ita Infancy, 11
assumption .that ~here· Is no great gulf
echlevement with unlveraalslgnlflcanQI!
would be prematwni. to draw many · .between science 8nd history. Just as
for &amp;II of rroanklnd In all times and
concluatona. But 1he historian of
science hl!a a hlstorY;-so hi~tory ,can be _ .places, Lewis Mumfonl shows that
.CIII-oMIIptJonlutnickbythefact . , atudled _scientlf~lly. Mao once called_ ·universal science Is really something
the Chi,.. _ . to have made- • on historian.~ to use the- past to serve
much broader u..r:t science as It has
u.tr ~ •prog,_"ln the physical
the present, but the Chinese historians
developed In the West'. lm'pllcltly taking
· 8CienOea and matliematlcs In times of
· wl\h WhoiJll talked were wise enou9h to
off from the rop1 meaning ot science,
!Wiatlft
while they made
. kno~ that this must II&amp; combined with
which Is knowledge Mumford slfows
~ Ia the bloloaiOai acletices and
Mao s other , .PrBCI,\ces of . ·"critically • that universal aclanCe Is the study of
tMdlofne ~'!II. t1mea of order.
~ewing the ~E .In ordlii' to. help the natural world, Including man, to the
CertaJntr It II only by undenltandlng the -:' craateJhe fulU18.
-::
ends of understandiog and human
Inner logic .of ailnlila aclence thal we
• The history of 11elence In China
development. Man possesses, a larger
JAMSa.iloMNns
Will be lobje to make Judgments about
prompts us to review the history of
blain 1118/1 most other animals but he Is
Ita ftl:loulell...._..a.
'
science In the Weet. Contrary- to the
set apart from them most I~ by t~
_
view thet religion and science were In
quality of his m./f!/1, Which )ncludes not
oppoeltion In the "West, historians of
only physiological capacity but cultural
aclenee lncreaaingly agree that Western
achievements. Some of . man's f110SI
JOHN A. QOUilQ
sclenoehedltsrootsdeepJn theJudeo- - distinctive capacltl~ , such as the
Christian woo1d vi-. the God who- ability to laugh and cry came very early ·
operltlla outside lh!!-- cosmos, the
in his development: Others, such as the
Creator who made-man to reign over
ability -to creale languages and
communities, were related to his ability
nature, and the Divine-Being who takes
to Himself 1t0 much-of the sacred that
to understand nature but hed little to do

vtltwa

=E

Cllfna ·

..,...ln.

.a-·

..r-*

.·

flwh"'pciift't
111

.
.
.
=

-·--.J
lilt-----

•

'·

"*

ell_.

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

....,c..,...,,_
_.._

~".~•· ~~

is left f'!tt to explore nature •'• '•'' .•.•. •

~J~'r'.'.1

• '-

·.~ ~~~~:::.~--~: eol. 1
..

�Aptll27,1171

GSA wants Ketter
to address 7 issues
~~~'":..'a::".:~

Issues we have referred to; In the
following hour the students would have
the opportunity to raise queetlona •
. -R. lliiganpn
Graduate Student Association

I would like to request you to addnsss
the Graduate Student Senate at Its April 1
meeting, on a number of Issues of
concern to the graduate students.
The meeting would take place
Thursday, April 27, at 7:00 p.m. In
Room 339 squlns HIIJI, Main Street
Campus. I would like you to come,
however, at 7:30 p.m. so that we can
conduct our regular business during the
first half hour.
The Issues we would like you to
address are the following :
,
1. Actual atatua of Implementation of
the. TA-GA Commlttae recom"**CC8tlona:
a. establishment of the minimum
level of $3200
b. guaranteed funding for 2 and 4
years for master's and doctoral
students
c. work assignment of not more than

We, the ... graduate etudenla of
SUNY at Buffalo-, urge Preaklenl Ketter
to ensure that aii&amp;CIIdemlc aep.rtmenta
and units within the Unl-.lty ..:reate
mechanisms for lormaiiZIIId participation of graduate atudenta In p&lt;&gt;llcy
formulation and [l:nptementatlon. This
Implies lhat the departments will be
asked to Institute structures that will
Incorporate graduate atudenta to deal
with the following:
1. Admission of gradUate studenta:-2. Review, promotion, and dlamlaaa:t
of graduate students.
3. Hiring, promotion, tenuns, and
dismissal offaculty.
_
4. Regulations/responsibilities concerning the supervision, guidance, and
evaluation of graduate students.
5. Regulations/responsibilities con~~~.lls. the funding of graduate

EDITOR'S NOTE: AObort L. K wlll ~ . - , . . of 111e

UlB ·'Philharmonic Day~
scheduled for May 14
theSu~~~::y ~~h=~~- Su~~lS:l

Tilson Thomas will conduct- Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, with Susan
Dawnny Wyner, eoprano, Rose Taylor,

=~~~·.~~~~·~·a~;.;

Schola Cantorum . lves's "Thanksgiving
Day" Is also on the program . The
performance begins at2:30 p.m., after a
2 p.m . talk by Mr. Thomas.
After the performance, the downstairs bar will be open for faculty and
their guests, and members o the
Philharmonic.
Tickets for the concert are on sale at
$5 for $6 seats. The Orchestra has
nssarved the best locations available on
the ground floor after subscription
orders, but .only 150 have been set
aside, and 40 were sold prior to public
announcement. The plonB!IrS who
bought the first seats convinced the
Orchestra that U I 8 Is serious about
. good music, according to David G.
Ftaya of the Linguistics Department. A
strong showing on May 14, Hays said,
will make It easier to arrange future
olana for both faculty-and students.
Tickets at the special price can be
obtained only on cart~pus. Some
departments have a nspnseenta.tlve

whose name can be found on a bulletin
board . Otherwise, Hays accepts checks
payable to the Philharmonic at his
home address, 5048 Lake Shore Road,
Hamburg 14075. Mrs. Hays can answer
all questions - 627-5571 - or Hays
himself can " sometimes" be found at
636-2177.
Michael Tilson Thomas, music
director of the Philharmonic, Is "a
musician of the first order endowed
with a formidable brain and a
no-nonsense conducting technique,"
who "has molded this orchestra Into an
ensemble capabl e of the sort of virtuoso
playing that thrills an audience,"
accorQing to the Long Island P-ress. The
New York Daily News said that "He gets
more real music out of works than any
other conductor of his generation" (he
ls32).
The Schola Cantorum , like the
Philharmonic one of Buffalo's proudest

~~:~ur~~.,OrR~~~~on~"· a~an~~~!.,N\~

summer before a sellout crowd. These

~c~e:=tr:.Srtfn"' a'dSS.~l~Y ~lth ~~~~~

Independent concarts. Their music
director Is Thomas A . Sokol.
The U/ B Faculty Club arranged this
Sunday at the Philharmonic event.

Higher e~ucation means
millions for WNY area
Area colleges and universities exart
"a tremendous Impact on the economy
. of the region," hundreds of millions of
dollars per year, a nsport nsleased
Tuesday night by the Western New York
Consortium of Higher Educalion
Indicates.

~:,rt.~:"b'v A.r:nep~Be.~~~":

Ul 8 gntduate student, was a main topic
coverecl by Dr. Robert R. Hesse,

pnssldent of Chautauqua Institution, In
his address during the Buffalo Area
Chamber of Commerce's "Salute to
Higher Education" dinner at the Statler
Hilton.
,
With a combined total operating
budget of $250 million, the 19 colleges
and uniYersltles comprising the Consortium gen-e ,t,total payroll of $165
million and expend another $54 million
on the- purchase of local goods and
services, Heaae lndlcallld.
Ower12,000 amplo,ed
A major employment factor, as well,
area · loatitutlona employ more than
5,500 faculty and a tOial of 7,7110 nonteachl';!f, staff. An additional 2,151 area
rag~~Y~ onals _ serve
as
volunteer
Some 180,000 Individuals educated
by these Institutions live In and
contribute to the well-being of WNY In
thousands of ways, tangible and
Intangible.
The report also Indicated that slightly
more than half (52.6%) of the area
colleges and unl~ltles are Involved in
sponsored research . The total dollar
value Is more than S30 million.
A substantial amount of Interaction
between area Institutions and business
and Industry also exists, the nsport
Indicated.

Internal!....
f'tfl.n achoola have, cooperative
student .. Internship programs with
business and Industry and 16 reported
they encoUrage faculty to serve· as
. consultants.
.
·
~~Peclal o~pus . seminars· and

~~~1:'~~!:"e1ga~ ~~~~~rv~ f~

on-aile educational
programs
In
business and lndusil!.. Another 10
achoola grant credit -ilir work-related
experience.
Area Institutions of higher learning

are also pursuing a major commitment
to public service, the report showed. In
addition to multiple cultural , social and
~thletlc events open to the public, many

~:~~~~1/l':f'e-:a':'a~:bl~~lr libraries and

Speakers' bureaus which dra"l. on a
diverse \ range of faculty, staff and
student expertise exist on 12 .area
campuses.
82,000 enrolled
At pnasent there are just over 82,000
students enrolled In the area collegae

·=.:!~a:''.!.'!:lt~c~,:r !~~~
~::'"quarters

of these students

come from the We$tem Naw York area

and an add ltlonal 18 per cent ans from
other ansas within the State. Five per
cent of students attending · WNY
colleges come from out of state and two
per cent are from fonslgn countries.
The nsport, which was based on a
compnsnenslve survey of the Consortium's member schools, received a
100 per cent response.

·'magnet' is
the human ·one
Editor:
The Apfil171ssue of Spectrum gave a
corrected location for the New German
Cinema presentation for that evening,

=::er:::,. ;¥,~l~ ~u.::,~. . .,.!:::
0

~to ..... "!~. ­
DMrDr.K-:

on~."f~,'~~~:,'~ft~peclflc

deparlmental policies pertaining to TA-G As
e. constitution of the university-wide
advisory committee
2. Role of students In depertmental
governance
Following this letter Is the GSA
petition outlining the ten areas for
student Involvement . We would like you
to comment on each of them .
3. Role of students In unl. . .lty
governance:
·
a. formal membership In President's
Academic Cabinet
b. formal membership In VP for
Academic Affairs' meeting with Deans
of Faculties
·
c. adequate membership In the
various Divisional Committees
4. Role of otudanta In the periodic
...-mlc program,..,....
A GSA position paper published In
the Spectrum (April 5), Reporter (April
6) outlines our specific proposals.
5. Role of students In the formulation of the Acedamlc Plan of the
uniYarslty:
a. what role Is visualized for
students?
b. what steps have been taken In the
past and are being taken at pnssent to
ensure that sludents cah participate at

~~~=~ys'~~~~~~~tlon

of the

8. Dnctlon of the UniHr&amp;lty
There has been a wldespnsed concern
expressed by students and faculty on
the direction of development of this
university, ever since the " Huii-Yearley
Report" was made public. The
President's Mission Statement lor
19n-78, and the changes nslated to the
reaUocatlon of nssources amongst
different segments of the University to
meet the perceived needs have all given
rise to the view that the comprehensive
character of the university and Its
graduate programs are at stake. Given
that different academic progl'lUTls have
sharply differing potentials for attractIng- non-state external funds, the

~~~~~ert'd'l~tuns o,~ ~~~~:r;~·.w

fa':!

state resources
not take Into
account this Imbalance. What are the
views of the UniVM~Ity administration
on this question and What concnste
measures have been undertaken to
Implement the same?
7. Status of lmplarnantallon of
Affirmative Action

aci/6~ ~~a::, ~docricr;agr :~~ ~~·r~v::.

not, In fact, the Reporter that ernsd; It • canBut hwal~onuot acslgtlnvelflcaneffortce.s,Wthhaet pos ltlhecy
was magnet, which Is Inserted In the
•v
Is
Reporter once a month, but which Is an
present status of lmplementatlor. of
arts calendar-newspaper and· a publicaaffirmative action as II nslates to
tlon of the Office of- Cultural Affairs. I
graduate students - In their recruitapologize for the error printed In
ment, funding, etc? What steps, If any,
magnet. It proved !hall, too, am human
are being proposed to Improve the
- as are· the spcmsors of the New ...,...sen~sijuatlooJ
·
German Cinema WMk, from whom 1·
Some -of theee Issues have been
received the Incorrect information.
brought to your attention by the GSA
t_n any case; the Repbrter Is
Executive Committee at different times,

~~:~:s~s ~":l~~..o~r;:. the
-Eat~=
Office of Cultural Affairs

Does this mean we eran't human?
-RTM

:~~~~~~J.'t:':·,~r:.-:·, ~ro::
l~ ~;!~~a~f ~~u:'~~~f~~~"1.;

actions of his administration concern-

ln't-J~e= ':~sihat the format of thG
meeting ~ such that during the first
half hour you would address briefly the

Dapert,_,tal o -

6 . Grievances.
7. Regulatlons/reaponslbiUtles concerning the pursuance of academic
degrees.
8. Regulatlons/nssponslbllltles concerning teaching and graduate assistants.
9. Determination and Implementation of policies and decisions regarding
del)artl-nental academic policies thernseiV!Is (I.e., courses taught, course
content, etc.) . •
10. Determination and lmptemenlatlon of all other departmental policies
and practices that can be conatruad to
affect the quality of graduate' student
education .
.

Boot asked for
an explanaJion
Dr. John Boot
Cepan Hall
Deer John:
We assume that the Reporter of
Thursday (April 13) gave comactly rour
nsason for p~tlng publication o the
technlcalspaclflcatlona of the en~
ment to the Unlv.alty computing
facilities proposed by the dlnsctor of
computing services.
-·
You may be correct that "publication
· of the exact specs could lead to legal
action by vendors." But to call a
proposal made by the &lt;Jinsctor of
computer services "exact epeca" Ia a
serious misuse of language.
Your action auggeeta that any time
the dlnsctor of computer services ~::s

'":at ,::

f!:o~a ~hln0~

:*R
Proposal, he need only put-w:! won1a
"Draft RFP" at the top of the document
to prevent the document from being
1

:'mu~~ \ve trhlnktheyou Uo~~:::

~;~~~ro~":':~typ~bt~'-t~~~

Reporter.

-0~"=

Acting D!r. of laboratories

-Anthon=:

Computer Science

Misquoted?
Editor:
.
An article appearing In the April 20,
1978 Issue of the Reporter quotes Dr.
Richard Slggelkow, vice president of
student affairs, as· saying, "Ita Upward
Bound Program ... has done a betfer job
than the Educational Opportunity
Program ~ terms of Its partlc!f&gt;ants'
ultimate success In college work.
I'm Inclined to believe this to be a
misquote as the compWiaon Ia
Inappropriate. Upward B'ound IS .!I high

~tJ:~ ~~~P:."'M:n;w!r ~n:

students who come to college are
admitted through the doors of EOP and
In this regard {he two groups are not
mutually exclusive.
I hope this clears up what might have
been a misunderstanding .
•
Sincerely,
-Edwanl S. Jenklna
Director, EOP

�Ajw!L27,.1871 •

Paper given at student conference
outlines nature of their cliques.,tells how they escape boredom
Definite cliques exist among worl&lt;ers
In a local automobile plant, along fairly
predictable linea.
·
Except among women hourly worl&lt;-

someone who ts Illegally off-the-job;
refusing to give lnlormatlon when such

...

::,'l,'l~~ln w~l dt;:;\pu':.':'~he~ltu~til~':::

and/or providing written statements to
the union In defense of a fellow clique

These women, especially younger
onea, do not band together but tend to
go /'Where It does them the most good."
A mete worker at the plant i&gt;ut It like
thla: ''The younger women employees
. . always looking for help on the job
end . . willing to put up with the
'flktln9' and 'JIRifllng' thalia required to

•

mem~.

Sklllp&lt;l tradesmen enjoy the highest

Ji~l~s s~!~~~ :~e ar.'oan~.,;,r:,~~z~un~y

management and can be seen In written'
reports throOQil references to skilled
trades' lnltlatlve and pride. • Skilled
~lt.
worl&lt;ers 8fl! also the only group which,
1be ln~t Aid this ' Is most
as a minority, holds ratlflclllion power
obv!OU• on the 8IICOIId shift Where "a
over the acceptance of a new contrect.
~ number of younger employees
Other workers tend to aee themselves
as " only laborer•" or "just ass'emblers." mille- workers, although .' not
Nigh emphasized that workers at the
- l n g fernlllea In the plant, feel that
plant he studied have a reputation with
"If the women want tha job and the . the parent corporation aa " being some
money that goes elong with It, they
of the hardest , proudest workers In their
should simply worl&lt; like anyone else."
division .'' Their ability "to produce has
For the most pert, these older men do • beer. put to the test In the past and they
1
have always passed with flying colors. •
; : : , :~:.~~::.~• t'9 t:J:'/ouo"ugn~
_Nonetheless, he said, bcredom Is a
women "don't waste their tlme.Y with
problem .

Older

them .

-

Informal time oft
It has been met, he reported , with a
reward system for non-assembly',
non-skilled workers, something "not
always condoned by upper management." Under Informal agreements
between workers and foreman, If an
employee can produce a certain number
of pieces before the end of his sh ift , the
rest of the time Is his to read or visit, as
long as he doas not i!'llve the plant.
This makes a difference, Nigh found.
On Jobs where thls option Ia available,
workers tend to work more seriously
with less con-satlon . They don't even
acknowledge the existence of workers
no more than 10 feet away. " Why
bull shit on the job," th':{ reason , " y,oh'en

Siudent -.:11 conference
This "eurprlalng" finding, as he
clllled It, was one of 118'iera1 ret:fOrted on
by CIHford W. Nigh at the Universitywide student conferenoe on Communicative a.-lor, held Aprll14 and 15.

C:.::, co;:,~sf.id.:gan~f" ci'J.t~~
TfW181111aalon, !Mtunod a dozen or more

==~n ~ru?t.,s:-~~

community, Who preMnted results . of
orlglnlll.._-ch. F-..to-fiiC8, natuial-

~"'!!l'll:~~the f~u~

Nigh's paper waa on the - "ethnography of communication . In · an
automobile - Y plant." ·
Other atudenta P'"'l"ted findings
from auch 1181tlnga ila thit hllllY)I
construction ~. fhamea for- the
aged, an elementary ,echoof, a men's
hobby
and a peychiatrtc halfway

Assembly .Uhe

'liDlp,

a l=:.orny
1

alept.-.

..... ldndaof~

==

Nigh klentflllfd major catagorlell of employee cllq.-: eep&amp;nlte

orouP&amp;.:!.~=~. j:dt~
according

to

Individual

ndel; IQI·eldHed WOrkers, according

to -'1 groupa; laborenl; groups o1
empqaee !10, reg&amp;rdleaa o1

ocoupatlonal dau; and mlnortty
ctlquila, primarily blaclla.
The black ell~ . . the moat
uncomllllcatecl and ~· the atroncteat,~. Being black rulell

::loc*.
~~::=
~::
blaca.
over
111oae 35' and

belonG to a

tiRK!P 8IPIQie from tho... under:i!i.
"'OccW blacka, .. Nigh found, "expree8

fwflnaa t11at younger blacka act aa
tiiOuglt the company- tMm &amp;job."
They -

puzzled tllat younger wcii1cenl

. . 1101 -.-.ctul fol: 1M oppadunlty to
-'1 lOr lUella....,.,.. . company."

'f::ll" ofblacka
liiWald

an

. . . . . . , flielln~

an:..,':!,.::-' - -

~

..:a:.

"to be 'not

In
~ iWdb Ia gtdned
not llr gltllng out OJ wiitk but by
~..-Into dolna your worfc
lOr fiDU lllllllout 1Nm llnowlng It- '1fa
told. "The
==-~glial It_, t mora atatua you

............ Nil!: -

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

=-~

"etlelaabletbpr~ve

A _ . , . . .. thla .b)(:. COY8fl~g

'

19

Absenteeism

Is:

heaviest

In

for

the

~~~~ t.= .J:"ftie .=th~go~sl~

ls.rotten. It also rises during periods of
high overtime when "It Is possible to
make aa much In ·three days as It
UJIUally takes five dayll to make." When
non-skilled ovwtlme waa greatly
reduced, Nigh noted, non-skilled
absenteeism dropped by one and onehall per cent a Wliel&lt;.
.

About thee-

~e~~ne~~~es~'::~~r ~{(o~~ns~t~~~

K.C. Gay, curator o.f the Poetry
Collection . Gay, a small , Intense,
energetic man , Is surrounded by his
books at a desk cluttered with
ml!llazines, still more books, lists, and
correspondence. The clutter reflects the
huge task he has of keeping track of a//
poetry published j n English .
•

P!~ g;~..:,~,g~~~~s:!t.fJ'du'l,.,~f Itt~=

:'~~~~~ow~~ec~n a o'ln iqr!enti:~
century poetry In English . And It has
more than doubled In size since Ga_y
became Ita curator In 1967. When Gliy
took over, there were about 25,000
volul'!les. Now there are over 65,000.
Gay will be retiring In the fall after the
Poetry Collection Is safely ensconced In
new quarters on the fourth floor of
Capen Hall at Amherst.· Bom In
Germany, he spent a large part of his
life, from 193&lt;( to 1965, In Spain, In
Majorca, as private secretary to poet
Robert Graves. When he retires, he
plans to go back to Majorca to live. As
here, Gay
he reflects on his

tears

~r':~~:~n~~~~et~~t~~~~~~~ ':f,;:'"a~~~

been worthwhile doing .'' He modestly
brushes aside most que-stions about
himself, preferring ' to · stay in the
background, leaving the spotlight on
the Impressive holdings he cares for.

Theaattlng
Currently, the Poetry Collection is
virtually bursting out of Its assigned
- space with shelves and filing
cabinets of all shapes and sizes
qrowded into several rooms. Karl Gay
calls It euphemistically a ''vary compact

" losing a little of their accustomed
intimacy .'' The distances to the stacks
will be greater, and the Collection will
not be as accessible as it is now - tor
browsing. But It will be much better
protected . Everyth ing will be In closed
stacks. And with the large stack space,

~~fi~~~~~ r~~~ic~n~"l: ~R:~~-

'llo;;
obvious that Gay welcomes the
Increased security that the new location
wil]'ofler. He Is very protective.
Collecting with a purpoM
It Is not by chanoe that the Unlvers1t1
has such a spfendld Poe\ry Collection.
On the contrary, It Is by clearly
premeditated design - 4he design of
one man, Cherles D. Abbott, the· first
librarian of Lockwood.
In 1935, when Lockwood M"'emorial - - ·
Library opened, Abbott· :had 1he,-~
opportunity to make certain choices
about the future of the library. At that
time hli'felt that In eddltlon to the clear
purpose of providing a standard
collection of books for the University
Community to use In research and
general education~ the library should try
to develop strength In one particular
area. He decided then that the strong
point would be Lockwood's holdings of
modem poetry In English. After making
that decoslon, he devoted his energy to
building ' the · beat collection of
modem poetry that the library's
resource-s and his own Ingenuity would
allow.
Early on, AbbOtt decided the
collection should Include not &lt;&gt;l'liy first
and variant editions of a poe!'s work but
as many of the worksheets showing the
artist's struggle toward creation as
possible. This, he reason&amp;~~, would
allow scholars insight Into the creative
process . Boldly, he wrote to poets,
explaining the purposes of the library
and asking for their worksheets. The
~::,~,~~~e the beginning of the Poetry

Gar, has been continuing with and
build ng on Abbott's work. The task that of gathering together the works of
alllmportanl poets writing In English Is enormous. And aa Gay points out, It
used to be easier to know which poets
and magazines to Include. "In Abbott's
atuelent and faculty reaearch. The Idea
~se':t Asl~~~.p~~~ ~~::tr;~~~~~
day," comments Gay, "there was a
for the April conf-.c:e originated With
away In a special vault. The reading
surefire system: after a poet hed
lh8 Graduate SWdent Fellows who were
room is filled with fascinating Items to
published a first volume with a anxious to create an opportunity for
tantalize anyone coming ln. The suriace
reputable p~bllsher, then 'that poet was
atudenta from the academic community
randomness belles a carefully orIn Buftlllo to present research to an
deemed w6rthy of being Included In the
tnterdiiCipllnary auellenoe o f their peers ' . ganlzed and catalogued bibliographic
collection ." Gay feels that was a good
treasure.
.
aa well a&amp; faculty. Students assumed
method until about 15 years
ego .
The eteoance of the Greek-style
responsibility lor all of the work
Things are more complicated now.
llbtery, bulli In 1935, Is a fitting settiQg
Involved.
.
Literally thousands of small presses
for the works of genius It contains
The Center olfwa Interdisciplinary
turn out huge volumes of publications.
" the Poetry Collection Is
t,..,nlng fora wwlety of~ which
And many good poets begin by being
movinp, to Its new quarters In Capen
WI uneleratandlnll of comftlunlcatlon In
published by these little preasea and In
human lnt..-actiOn Ia 8U«&lt;tlal. Ita
the little magazines. It Is Gay's task to
mw'\ ~ts~~th~':":,Sdlt f~
assess this mountain of material and
Fell.,.a Jllld Auoclatea - faculty and
University Archives. A large -reading
decide which poets and periodicals to
=ate atudente drawn from WIY
room will be the central focus of the
collect. Once the decision Ia mede to
new location. In It, a special alcove wilL
well
col.lect a certain poet, Gay tries to
display
a
.part
of
th4!
famous
Jam..stiona.
acquire everything by and about him.
Joyce material. Other exhibit cases will
Not surprisingly, he aaya that selecting
be available lor current exhibits. A
takes up most of hla time. He puts in
aemlner room off the main reeding
many ho.urs during the evening and on
room will ofter apace lor group
weekends to .keeP up · with the sheer
meetings. In eddltlon, one end of the
volume
of published materiaL
Profnaor George
F.
Houranl,
reading room can be partitioned off for
'chairman of the Department of , larger conler~tnoes. An enormous spece
lnlida the Collection
Philosophy, waa elected president of
for ~losed stacks and a large vault will
Gay accurately describes Iilii Poetry
the Alnjlrican Oriental SoCiety for
protect most of the holdings.
COllection as a treasure house. When
19.78/711, at the Soclfty's annual
· Kart Gay has mixed feelings about
asked
what Is In It, he says simply that
conlfl(enoeheld .l~ !e&gt;~;Qnto, April )1r 13.
the mo¥!1. He '!Qmlts that they will be- ·
one: . can . find . " everything lhat- Is
The Center for Studies of Cultural
Transmission has hlld a lonct-ferm
Interest In original r-.:11 by studonts
from dlfterent disciplines. ln~the pe!lt,

=-

c.;~erp~a~n~~ ~~~~~

Ho-.

=

aa~rom-:::;., ~~/Z.tlt:

Hourani elected

Mtre..,.. emiiiOYW Ia adoPtad by a
_.... _. a1ir!daye· alter being
traiiiMrad Into a
full membership

~\Y:i\o~ . Aerb=~ssoa~nci~e ~~~~

open the door, alerting the guardians
withi n that someone has entered.

thoup,h,

the question . Their behavior Ia quite
different. Tllere'a more ~alklng , more
Joking. The ldea seems to be ''you're
here for eight houra, so make It as
enjoyable as possible."
Nigh found that on any given day,
-nteelam at the plant runs about
eight and one-half per cent for
non-akilllld Workers and about six and
on&amp;-111111 per cent for trade-smen. It was
the - cause of about on&amp;-thlrd of all
~~"rf~~l n ~. actions taken at the plant

=tca'~,r.=:::,~=l~:~
genet.t end hoW to atudythem.

Nlgh'a --c:h, wlllclt began aa p8rt
ol an Independent Stuelyi ProgJam- In
urban antllropology, lllld t~~ruet~~:to ~
o1
ernpla,w cl~. lo d
how
" - people INm...- . and to
galnan~ 11bMntaelam .
He -cllad
-ol the work
force In tile plant cafeteria, during
lunch, bnlaka, Wid frM time periods as
they pl&amp;ye!l CMta, . - . talked, and

emPioveW,

By Sarah Gultart
On the second floor of the ol.
Lockwood Memorial Library on the
Main Street Campus, across the central
balcony overlooking the main reading
room , several signs point the way. After
going thro.::,sLh a number of doors , the

Yno:l.~t=~'~wl:~~~~3s~P.urs

~w~r t~a\"1',:~~~ ~~~~~~ ':,~

Karl Gay is leaving the famoiJ

/

1

�7

Ap&lt;11 27, .1111

liS

collection he has nurtured

the walls of the balcony overlooking the
worthwhile _here." Indeed, the holdings
main reading room. Anyone Interested
are Impressive. Thl!y · Include 65,000
could browse among the books to see
volumes ~n first and variant, editions
what Joyce himself read . .However,
(poetry in single volumes and in
during the unrest at the Univer~ t y in the
anthologies, critical studies, bio60s, students threw a fl rabomb Into the
graphies, and so on); 644 records and
library. Joyce's books were moved Into
333 tapes of poets reading their own
the vault to protect them.
wor1&lt;; more than 2,200 sets (not single
issues) of little magazines and
Hol~ph ·wor1&lt;booko
periodicals covering the last 80 yearsByfai"the most Impressive part of the
magazines that are often In the collection and what Gay terms the most
vanguard of aasasslng and encouraging
new poets and new movements In
~f~~~~~ ·~~en\~ th37ent~; P~~?;
poetry. Add to this a unique collection
wor1&lt;books lor Finnegans "Wake.
ol manuscripts, letters, notebooks,
Lovingly filed away In manila folders In
wor1&lt;sheeta, and notes by contemporary
file drawers In the vault , they are a
poets. Among thlll8 various personal
communications can be found a poe\'s . treasure lor those Interested ill probing
the genius of Joyce.
own explanation of his or her methods
A sizeable · addition to the Joyce
and techniques for writing. Md In the
" holdings was acquired In 1958 from
wor1&lt;sheeta, the SCKa!led history of a
Sylvia
BeaGh. founder ,!lnd owner of
poem cao:be trllllled.,
" ~~
·
Shakesp&amp;are and Com.RBnY, ihe Left
In h'ia Introduction to P.oels At .Work.,
·Bank Parisian bookstore that qave
a book containing essays on the poetry
collection Which wes published ·by
~~~ds~rtTs~~ne:.fe'~~~e Amero can
Harcourt, Brace, and World, Charles 0 .
Beach, the original publisher of
Abbott describes the wor1&lt;sheets:
Ulysses In 1922, was a supporter of
"Theaa may b8 manuscript, ~pescrlpt,
Joyce and was ilarly convinced of his
gen.lus. The Beach Collection, a gift of
Or. . Walter ·. and Mrs. Constance
poet. They_may be bound In serviceable
Stafford, Includes some Joyce manunotebooks; they may be looee sheetll of
scripts, some first and variant editions,
paper, tom fragments of copybook
mementoes, letters, photos, and tha
leaves, flaps of used envelopes, bacl&lt;s
second copy of Ulysses, Inscribed by
of gas and electricity bills (~ld and
Joyce to Beach, and some first editions
unpaid, or at leaat unrecelpted)." To
of
Ulysses,
this day there continues to be this great
A James Joyce Colloquium, sponvariety In the materials that reach Mr.
sored jointly by the Departments of
Gay's domain.
.
English of UIB and Buffalo State, In the
The staff Is confronted with some
summer of 1976, drew scholars from
interesting problems in shelving a few
around the world . For the conference an
of the Items becauaa of their shape or
exhibition of selected manuscripts,
packaging. For example, one Issue of
notebooks, typescripts, and page
the magazine Stoodge wes In an Ice
proofs of Joyce's material wes prepared
cream canon, another In a milk pQwcler
can . A poem entitled "On a Mobius _ by Ttiomas E. Connolly, professor of
English here, with Gay's assistance. A
Strip" by Don Gray wes printed, of
catalogue of that James Joyce
course, on a Mobius strip and delivered
Exhibition has just been published by
In a can. Periodicals are shelved In
The lockwood Memorial Library.
boxes; they're not bound for fear of
losing Information from their co-s.
Who uaea the collection?
Joyce, ThomH, On¥• .ncl Wllllema
woTu~~ c,~~~:~onu:!. ott'na'gda~ro~Wr!'c~~
The collection Is noted parllcularty
researchers from around the world. Last
for Its outstanding worl&lt;s by James
year saw the publication of 16 books
Joyce, Dylan Thomas, Robert Graves,
besed on the collection and 11
~~~~~~~~':;::mos!~~~sci..?"~
periodical articles. Twenty-three scholars are currently wor1&lt;1ng on continuing
manuscript•. and U/B's Joyce co'ffecstudies Involving the materials. Last
tion attracts scholars ,from around the
year visiting scholars from such distant
world. •
places as New Delhi, Japan, a(ld Oxford
The acquisition In 1950 of an
as well as C&amp;lllomla and Hawaii were
impressive assortment
of
Joyce
wor1&lt;1ng on prolonged studies of Joyce,
material was englnMnld by Abbott and
Williams, Graves, and others. In
purchased for the librarY by Margaretta
addition, many materials were lent to
Wick- In memory of her husband,
specialists around the world through
Philip · J. Wlckser. Included In the
the Interlibrary loan. All of the Joyce
Wick- Collection are Items that
ma)erlalls on microfilm, which makss It
belonged to Joyce and hed been left
acceaslble to lnvestlgatora here and
with a friend of his for safekeeping:
abroad. The library's William Carlos
photos of family and friends and
Williams storehouse will be put on
personal llama auch as his walking
stick and eyegtasaaa. Included also are
ro:Wt~csh~o~r.:,~~~~~u~t~'::togyoh~~
formal portraits of Joyce's family,
Hall , and entitled The Manuscripts and .
which, Gay points out, have a history of
Letters of William Carlos Williams, will
their own since Joyce carried them with
make that collection even more
him from Trieste to Zurich to Paris.
accessible. More Important to the Joyce scholar,
there are books, manuscripts, letters,
, Karl Gay's ~acy
and notebooks containing various
While Gay has maintained the high
drafts of so~lsodes of Ulysses.
standards established by Abbott and
Another
• of the Wlckser
carried through particularly by the
collection Is oyce's personal library,
former director of Lockwood Library,
some 468 books, magazines, and
the late Oscar A. Silverman, he has also
pamr,htets. Theae materials used to be
established tradltio~s of his own .
.- dlsp ayed In enclosed bookcases along

1

ft.e\~~:::.,g't!:~ :f~ t~"d'tvi~.:J

t::

.....o.r...-.fi"'Ud.

E&lt;!wenJ . . - . 5 -

- One custom that Gay started In 1967
of wh ich he Is particularly fond is the
yearly publication In a limited edition of
an
'!LML Christmas
Broadside,"
leaturl n~ original poem that usually

~,::~'e . .. &amp;er:;=·'~r~~~edN;~
ber Ten -December 19n" wes a poem ,
"The Wilderness" by John Fuller, a
r=.~!~~o~=san~~!u'=.;
~~i~~~~edolu~~':,' ~':k!"~ce~e~o~':

Library and have been well received and
eagerly anticipated by the literary
community.
.In addition to Its own Christmas
Broadside, the library has what Gay

n:

~~si'J~~ab~~e~st ~=ion

cabinets are filled with these Individual
poster poems many beautifully
Illustrated, bold and bright. The llbfary
owned very few when Gay became

~~'l.J.u:~~ a~g;t; ~r:' l~aasrr'ral

Gay was one of the organizers of the
annual poetry reedings , now jointly
sponsored by the Abbott Reading Fund
and the Department of English. He
actively keeps In touch wljh poets In the
area, encouraging them to visit the
collection . Exhibits In the Poetry
Reading Room often reflecl what Is
happening In poetry In the Buffalo area.
For example, lest year, first' editions of
fifteen poets' wor1&lt;s were temporarily
displayed. One recent exhibit featured
wor1&lt;s by three who were to read at the
Allentown Community Center.

collection but he hes mede It much
more accessible to schor.. through tile
cataloguing efforls and by being helpful
to those Interested In finding out more
about the holdings. Reuarchera who
visit the collec;tlon pralae Gay flighty for
his knowledge, his tact, his l&lt;indMSS,
dedication, •and , llelpfulnesa.
He
8

0

~~..:'s. B':l;.~:~Yht.' th=~

knowledge ·of the holdings, "he can
provide the· bibliographic details that
have helped the Poetry Collection
become so well known .
•
Madeleine Stem, now the LockWood
librarian, has p'robebly known Gay ' the,longest among the library. etaff. She
came to the ' Unl~lty Ltbnilea et
about the same-time ashe and has _ ,
how the Poetry Collection has changed
under his Influence. She says that It has
been under_ Gay that the Poetry
Collection has becom!l truly lnterTIII. tiona! . She has watched It gain In
stature year alter y-. She feels It has
been Gay's "slngl•mlnded devotion to
the collection" and his knowledge,
Influence, and connections In the world
of poetry that have made the holdings

~!\l'~;!~?~ci ~~~=

~~~,.!

Buffalo Instead of going to another

r!w3rrf
collection he did virtually ainglehandedly.
.
.
Stem comments that being-a special
collection librarian as Gay has been
calls lor a kind of dual function. On the
one hand the librarian hea to "protect
the collection" and on the other hand he
"has to make It easUy available to
scholars so It Is not just e museum
piece." As Stem etabotatae: "The
librarian ·cannot be either too permissive or too authoritarian. • While
emphasizing that -t his Is often e
"difficult role to play," Stem has pralse
lor Gay, saying he has ,been ~
successful et schl8¥1ng the ..-aary
middle ground.
·
Gay's thorough knowledge of the
holdings, his efforts 81 having them
well catalogued, and hie encouragement of visiting acholara have firm~

maintained the high standards of the .

curator.

His Influence hea been pfwotal.
Although Gay Is not Inclined to talk
· about. hfrnsel!, others are not so
hesitant. Sektidas Roy, director of

Po':ih'l~~t~o~~~~rck ~~s~~~".,.ft~~ •

Gay Is quite well known and respected

:r~.~~~~~yt::a~~=~:~~~ !~~~
~r'~':.~Y,n'l~~~a~~~ ~a':.~

~~~~~:fon~·:mn~~~~~ .
·

Faculty book wins honor
George Buchner and the Birth of
Richards' own English version or
Modern D111me by David G. Richards,
Buchner's 'Woyzeck," careful docu·
associate professor of German, 'has
mentation, and an excellent blbllobeen
aalected as one of
the
Hnsphy. Richards' book belongs In the
I brary ot any college or university
"Outstanding Aoademic Books ol19n"
offering- · wor1&lt; In literature above the
by Choice magazine, published · by the
Association of College and Rese&amp;rch ~- l~vei'Of tower-&lt;llvlslon undergraduate."
Libraries.
__..
The book has also been nominated
The citation reads: " It Is parllcularly
for the George Freedley Memorial
valuable because of the Informative but
Award of the National Theatre Ubfary
concise
blographlca~
lntroducllon,
Association.
·•·
·· · ··•·

�Aprll27, 1171

Women's Club

•Differing views on science &amp; technology
..... _

... ooL4

with .,Y effOrt to oonttol lt. jJnl¥8raal
..,_ not heightened but
It turned ,._
=.,.~ldlng llllbn to trying to

....... ""'*'
1111 IIICIInt

~lc

onlenl of
~ .nd Egypt
rlee to a
...... which exoaulftly "meGIIMIIdlc" and the centtallad "dMna
IIIDIIIAIIIIes" of *'Y modem Europa
Q111M rile to- a aclenca which became

a-

=;,·~~!t:,l:'"::w~l~~

dlllne~

too nwrowl)l, thus
_ . . . lluftWI .tfllira to religion or In
llmllo. Oftwl thla llbdlcatlon of
-..lbllltY lor nattng all of natura
wlihtllalltlfltlon to Ita lnt-.glbles was
~ by ~led "aclentlsta"
11110, dllplte the of their
¥IliOn, ..-.ned to apply their
lllllllocl8 JD Ill
of ltle nalural ·

...am.
~~';:·made a somewhat

lllmlllrpolnt "'Cllatlngullhlng betwMn
. . _ . . . . . . - which hal exlated In
IIIMJ
Ill ,_Y tlmM In human
hllllOry, and "rrM»&gt;utlolwy aclenca,"
Wlllall ~only ~ling

rae-

:::::r....:

down. While ~~?w, ~
men faith tllan Mumford In the·
·prog-" of aclenca, with aome fields
~men "advwlcad" than others, he
....,.... the ooncapt of "1"8¥01utlon"

:'m:.':'::'..,:utt;;:..l'=u:'.!
to In ac1enca long altw what Is
oltln ..-umed to be 1M "aclantlflc
...olufiOn." Toalllller theM two achol-

. . delllrar h ~t Weatem
mrthe thlll aclenca gi'IIPJIIw with truths

thlll CCIIIIplllllly trwl-.cl IOCIII}r and
thlll aclenca Ia of u l l l - '
~ tor 1111 mMklnd. u.._
of"... IIIWI!IIlM tr8dlllon of aclencain
OIIIM, , _ , Mumfonl Ia unable to
uea the 011- caR to show the
hlatorlcal vlllblltty of hla definition of
aclenca and Kuhn Ia unable to question
the lnl)erenl rlltiOMIIty of "aclentlflc
molutlona" In the flrat piKe.

:::...-

and

' ~ltlw

In

The Chi- challenge Ia to modify
1M! .nne~ of WWI8m thoullht which
aclence u!Jie atudy of
nalural
world (or juat the mMerlal wor1d) In
~ to conlrol It (or conquer-H),
and to build on thlll atrand which
dlfiiWI ac1enca u the atudy of the
Wllole nlltlnl world, lnoludlng man,· to
the -.de of undlratandlng and human
fulfill-.!. The Anwrlc8ri opportunity
II to that, r.r from choosing
~ IC'-and IMJiumanltles we
' IIIUil ~ them Into a more
..._., !IIOJfd wlew which does not
...... to be - lehlly Oil anded
..cl wtatch Ia
In
thlll llmlled of having some
diNCtlon Mil purpose. In the 8Cedemy,
the ciNIIIenge Ia to queetlon aorna of our
m«* ct.lihed uaumptlona auch as

tne

.:Sly ...:C.1ea1

the ldM thlll there Ia a form of .._-ch
ao ~- thlll It does not niQUira
juclg-.ta of value or rwponalblllty for
~- The :g::unlty Ia to

!Be ... ~~- car'.:.ow=

~lvaly to help SOlve problema

r.. kiD! ua from realiZing our
hWIBIIt potantlal on thla a.th.

Wlllcll

Western acholara atlll
Chi- history.

:.:

Impose

on

·ho-=-~
~· ~=
toward them. The Chi- were

not

averae to the aclvantagu of tachnology

and wealth but . thay . . . aiao quite
aware of their dengera. They thenifora
made aura that tachJiologli:al changes

would not deatroy the larller nonnative
order which theY hed caral,ully built u~t
over the mlllenla. They ·~tlnued to
develop agriculture along with Industry,
they lived In the countryside mora than
In the cities, ~ maintained the

~;'~.;:!.r:r.:'~ an:J' t:!,cu..:!~--t~~

emphasized dllltlbutlon as much as
productivity. Thev Invented the comPass and large ships but did not use
tbem to expand abroad and conquer
oth8( oountr1es. As G. William Sklnnar
has shown, the Chinese dewloped a
natwofl( of marl&lt;at towns ·which
Integrated. the soclaty ewn as II raised
Its level of commercialization. Indeed
we cbuld go further to say that It
managed to maintain a sense of

~=~!.~lga~ .1~1 s:;.;~lb~':,'::;•• ~
'lsaaulted by the Mongols and then by
the Westerners . but It was never
destroyed .
An lntag,..ed economy

The Chinese today are thus able to
build on an Integrated economy which
they Inherited from the Ch'lng period . It
Is this ecopomy, perhaps even more

~~erl~~:m (~~en;ve ~~~~f:~r~

_.y bad name In China), which enables
the People's Republic to skip the stage
of capitalism and to move directly Into
"socialist construction." Alter several

r,:r~of1 ~~~~~!~~~ ~~~

wofl(ed out their own strategy of
•walking on1wo legs." This Involves
straaalng egrJculture as well as
1

1

~7f~=~~a:.'d~~~~ Z: :1\"'.:·~~h:.':,~

ized Industry, light as well· as heavy
Industry, servli:es as well as goods,
aml!)lecala technology as well as large,
human resourcas as well as mafilrtal
ones, lnvtlntl-• aa well as
productivity. The Chinese are planning
to mechahlza their. agriculture In the
next decade but we may be sure that
they will do It In a way which wll! not
destroy the myriad communities which
are already flour1shlng In the countryside. When Chou En-lal called for ' a
"modem economy" by the year 2,000, ·
he was cartalnly referring - to that
ChlneM concept of "modernity" which
requlrae the harnessing of technology
to ..,.. human needs rather than vice

-·

With their large population and their
view of wofl( as ·good In Itself, the
ChlneM regard machines leas as
labor-aavlng davlcaa than as multipliers
of. production. We saw many Chinese
working IW hand to maintain some
sections of the roadways ewn as huge
.-th moving ~ulpment worked on
other sections. Spokesmen at Machlna
Tool Plant No.· 3 In Shanghai wera
proud of their computerized machlnaa
and eagar to lncrNM exchangila of
Information with the Weal, but they
w.e most . pleased with the achlewments of their own wofl(era who
coopenllad with cedrae and specialists

•.

~ede~:=n~~ ~ e:~~~re·~~

g:,=.:=ng;;::f~~~:::~

their terms. Indeed, an Austr1an
. eng in- we met whQ has been helping
the 9hlneae to build an ultre-modem
Iron casting plant In Wuhan, Huoeh,
remarked that he hed doubts about
whather the highly automated factories•
,pe was helping to build would really
mesh with the laraer alms of Chlnase
eoclety. While the Chinese are currentlY.
In one of. their mora..;;:,e;chnologlcal '

:::-:,;.;'1,: '::o.:' ~ ·~~~=
problaft than any Weatemer possibly
could be.

Amllr1ca and the Soviet Union . ..this Is
not to apeak of the breakthroughs In
Chemistry ' which resulted In many
uaeful products but which also
undarglrd our armaments. Industries

=~~:"sa!." orp~:~~~n=~

slates annual
Spring .luncheon
,

The Women's Club of the Vnlverslty
will hold Ita annual Sl)(lng Installation
Luncheon, Saturday, April 29, at noon
In the Spaulding Dining Room, Ellicott.
Mra. Lawrenca Kennedy, retlrl!tg
Club president, will be presented with a
sterling silver charm embossed with the
seal of the University by the group's

background, It Is little wonder that
many Westerners think of technological
deYeloprnant as the prime Index of
civilization. In the West It has been very
nearly so.
.

;~:s,.:u.~~ ~Va;:;~~~!:~
,mu~:h.:.n~~~h: ~~~by d~rs

1

~'~W:.'\h~~= 'is ":,~f~ea}ti

the retiring president In
~nltlon of her service and leadership.
•
Mrs. Ketter will Install t"" following ·
slate of newly..lacted officers lor
1978-79: President - Mrs. Arthur Chan;
Vlca P.resldent - Mra. Nelson · laada; .
Corresp()ndlng Sacratary·- Mrs. Michael
Ryan; Racordlng Sacrat.ary - Mrs.
Edward Jenkins; Treasurer - Mrs.
Frilncls Sullivan; Membefj-at-Large:
~~·M':."M:i ~~~~ Marbe;
Those celabratlng 25 yeara of
membership In t~e Club will be
presented with a print of a pan and Ink
drawing of Hayes · Hall, Main Street
campus, done by the BullaiQ artist Lisa
Kraus.
~
Each year at the Spring Luncheon,
the Women's Club presents scholarship
awards to selected andergraduates. The
recipients must have completed three
semesters of lull-time worl&lt; In the
University and have malntalnad a 3.9
average. This year 35 students will be
honored at the luncheon. Awards will
be presented by Mrs. Ernst Selig, ad
hoc committee chairman lor the Grace
w. C&amp;pen Memorial Schol&amp;;.shlp Fund.
year

abl~lty to make tools. He points out that
othet animals can make tools and that
man's most complex tool,
the
computer, does not begin to rival man's
mind - let alona the simplest human
. community - In Its complexity. Nor
does man dewiOP technology primarily
as a means of survival; he has often
developed mechlnas which do things
quite Inessential to survival. Indeed, the
momentum of the "myth of the
machine" has become so great that man
continues to develop technologies,
such as In astrophysics and genetics,
which threaten his very survival.
Technology snould be seen rather, as a
particular way of exercising man's

~~r'ri':\~cft~~!~~ ~~;~ ~~e~~~~~~~r~

Mumford's view, civilization In its
universal sense Is the realization ot
human capacities In their most varied
Jo&lt;m; It became corrupted Into
"'civilization" when man began striving
lor the " pentagon of power': property,
production , profits, prestige and
publicity.
Some wofl( Is so boring that It should
be consigned to machines, but It does
not follow that the more machines the

•Johm~

~~er~~~~alo~~~n~~fcY.· '::".:l:~;

were far richer and more varied than the
"monotechnic" cultures of ancient
bureaucracies (which were labor using
machines) and of modem Industries
(which artt labor saving machines). fn
Mumford's view, the excessive reliance
on machines merely led from the
ancient mode of " forced labo~' to the
modern mode o ~~ lorceq consu~ption."

and saveral devoted-to the Fr8J1Ch writer
Pascal, and artists Pousaln and Klae.
According to Professor Eugenio U.
Donato, director of U/ B'a Comparative
Literature pr~ram, Marin "Is ona of the

!:'~~~!tu~ll~.!t"Y&gt;~~~· F~ch~ SCIK!I-

In occupying the Joneao.Ghalr,,.,.artn
joins a long and lmpraaalve. list of
scholars who have 'held the professorship, Including the live major Frenj;h
orltlcs and philosophers worl&lt;lng ln
France today.
Lavine said Marin's responsibilities at
.UIB will be divided between the
departments of Fnlnch and English. It

~~at"o~~seabeenhed~~~~~~;;'I~J

;~~ni~~~f~!u~~s~ ~~~~~~:"'i~~~'r.gf&amp;

1

the~~:'!': fo~ ~1°~~~::', '!:,"~n ~

or

Indeed ' It Is the original source
all
energy available to man II only he will
reteam how to use it. Americans must
revitalize agriculture (com . fields are
efficient users of solar energv). return
to renewable resources (cotton, leather,
wood), encourage labor Intensive
Industries {handicrafts, textiles, food
proce&amp;'slng), and make usaf~ products
(food and mass transit rather than
drugs and automobiles).
The challenge and opportunity In
technology
•
The Clilnese challenge Is to resist
those Impulses in Western civilization
which have led to an excessive reli~ce
on tachnologlcal solutions to human

ru~~:=..n:::.,!\'dt~d~~~~~p .~hou":e m,::~~

chinas , selectively to free people lor
more ..Interesting kinds of wofl(. The

~s~~~~~'=r~~r. j~·~ n"c:\"~~:

Hopkins

( l . - - 1 . col4)

The aun Ia the on ly sale form ol nuclear
-slY
In a similar critique &lt;&gt;I the addiction
to hard technologies, Barry Commoner
points out that a crucial change
occurred when we stopped using
renewable sources of energy, such as
wind and water, and ,became hook~ on
fossil' fuels , like coal and .ofl. The
merely the most recent example of
Western man's search lor a perpetual
motion machine. The .goal hy always
been an Illusion, and the means this
JLme Is more damaging to . the natural
order, distorting to the social order and
dangerous lor the wor1d order than any
of its predeceSSOr!!.

to

faculty members will be teaching.
1

·

Rodolllha GaaCha
Rodolph&amp; Gaache, whose responsibilities will be wholly In comparative
literature, Is considered "one of the
moat notable of the younger generation
of cr1tlcal 1'*&gt;r1sts," • according to
Lavina.
He Is author of several highly
regarded books on structuralism and
epistemology, the study of the natura
and grounds of knowledge.
A native of Luxembourg, Gasche Is

b~~.l~erm~ EnJJl~·

French and
"Ona of the attractions to me of the
Hopkins people," Lavina said, "Ia their
extraordinary range of professional
Interests."
All lour scholars are contributors to .
Glyph, a collective semiannual. journal ·
dedicated to the reasseaament of
contemporary critical trends, published
by Johns Hopkins Press.
Carol Jacoba
Carol Jacobs, a former ,'acting
chairperson of U/B's Comparative
Literature Department [In 1973-1974)
will rejoin the UniYerslty, along with her
husband, Henry Sussman.
Jacobs, who Is currently an associate
professor of German literature at
Hopkins, Is well known lor her wofl( in
textualllnalysls. She received her Ph.D.
In comparative literature at Johns
Hopkins In 1974.
Jacobs Is the author of one book: and

static or monotonous one and that It Is
possible to have a ·~lgh level
equilibrium" which Is lri harmony with
llactll- ruled the Weal
the Interests of large populations with
For In contrast to China, the Weal
limited resources. In the academy, the
1
haa. permitted machlll" a far_~Bf;. _ challenge Ia to stop developlaq
rolf In Ita cultural development. Frqm • programs simply because the existing ·
recenlty awaided a feHowshlp lor
the Judeo-Chriatlan ldaa that labor Is
8COI)Om~
provides funds for the .. 11iZS.79. b~ the American Council of
the • "curse of Ham," through ~he ,
professors, computers lor analyzing the
Learned Societies.
European -.:11 lor ':labor-saving
data, and jobs lor the atudent
_"products." The opportunity )S" to ask
Henry
.n . .
Herlry Sussi'nan, a Mellon Schollu: In
been a atrong bias against hand labor
=:'erJft~~on:e tci~~~~g ,:,"t.~~lo be the Humanities at Johns Hopkins,
which hal led to a dependence on
under control, confident that ecedemfc
received a Ph.D. with distinction In • machines. 0118. thinks ·or the lrr1gatlpn
leadership will sooner or later Influence
comparative llleralure there In 1975.
systems of Sumer end Egypt, naval
the larger society In which we live.
. He Is: editor of several worl&lt;s,
tachnology In Gi'eece and Rome, the
Including the G!~fh series, and author
'-~ plow and steam engine In
N u t - = The nat1n of mon ond the
of various journa articles and literary
Europa, missiles and the computer In
l~ualln ooclety.
reviews .
•

~i'tt.::,n~!v~al ~rur~~g;.~~iesS:.:d

=r/~r '!!':~.!""~··.=·

au.....

.:=

�Aprll21, 1171

'A glUt prog,.m/ blu• alnger ~ ,lotm
Hammond proc181med lt. And- It was.
- _ . . _ . , Folk.Fwtlvol. '{houoondo
, ~ two nights of otd'tlme muolc,
- r i n g the bat acto from the
mountalno end the Meri- feotival of .
llit - · Added -ctlono Included
-~. · demonotr8tlono.
miniMn • mummer'o pl8y. wl\o

con.,..,.
..
oeyo you cen'.t have fun
glltlthecNclit.

'•

11t U/87 UIIAB

.

'

�."l .... ~-- .

AprU7,1171

Bugliosi-finds Man$an·
a-bizarre,
unbelievable.fiend
--..
.
~
same
~
on
--.JID'N pltliOeclllh'ee
·~0:,~;- t~
m~:r'~l~ ;
1
........Ytnoent
...,._lilllm iltOmeY
~

The
of CMrlee Man11011
IIIII lila "ffimmly" together with their
.00 flendlfh,
10 lncfe(lu-

Buglloal, the

ICNIIIIIjt

::::ow~~io~~~

e. . . . . :s:rn.
IIIOit......,..
. . _•.
==
t~a~~an.•

The . . _ IIIII

.

-"«

of the

-~
Mel~

ofllle....._ . . ...,.,...,.
............. till TlllaiLaBlwlca
........._.

·

•uyy•
• - 811.J"'klua•
of
_.
...- ...,._,

=

iMIIII

iiiilllii:aillar._.l*.

~to

.... _.,..,

.......... MMipuJ-

Olhe!fW..--far

him. Yet this
·m;.,. Claimed to
an animal lovei who frowned
~cemaglngorvecje,t_,ia!!~n...and held a ".great
-·
fc roll"""''
His family members, according to

=O:'er,~~s~th':n~M!

as "heroic historic gledlato,.,, • murd8i--

lng''foranewandbaltersoclalorder."

- ca!."":~n·=.~~~=
women .
..a "YOUIIO

with

relative!
.y

all wl.re sub881VIent and generally did
not address him until he spoke directly
to them. Those who did murder for him
did Ill! with gusto and ott.&gt; Inflicted
numerous poet-mortem stab wounds.

Manson used mlnd-&lt;:oirtrol drugs to
• elicit "promises and -:~reementa" from
80

and
. broke. down their eoclal values .and
concepts of morsllt}'. -He ·further
~ered Individual egos by enoouraglng the performance of deviant eexual
acta. Mari!f&gt;n was the "mMStro of the
orgy . and orcheetrated all their
movements," said Buglloal.
-

·.;,/t'~'!''1~l=- H~~~::,~

2

blacks, could -

- exert such _c;ontnil
over the acllona of others, Ia hWcl to

=·

~=~- ~~·r.\\.en:::t .:..,~~0-~~

dominate a fellow human •.::,Vng~ .•
-topped ott by the uncaaor~ .,.. .

~ St=y
he said, Maneon'a
diSCOYerlng and capitaliZing on another's Insecurities. He ~also hed ·the ·
What
your
love
tells
you
~o do.•
P8Cted
fertile •raw mater1al" of the 60s to work
still holde hla hlgh .achoOI'a record In: , with
hippie transients,
the •
Mlllllbera of the -Maneon- familY
high hunlle.
.
· antH!atabllahment fervor, eexuel (188AlthouGh some membenl 'of the
dom, racial tenslqn, and the decadil's " estl~ed ~ murd«ed Cloee. to 35 .
,._,family refuaoid to kill for ~len.
l'llb!IIJ!ousrhatorlc. ..
·
j)!IOple.
•.
'·
normef

~rounda.- &amp;en ~ CNrlea

::;,'!~.:.'!,Ott,'-:~d";:\', =~.~~~

wateon, ManSon's "chlllf lleiltepanf'
reaWho au~':;"'w.!~lk:'':S~Iet!~t! ·

Fulbrfg ht. ·

..------.---~-~--...__._.----~r-:---.;--___,.....-:-:---,·- ·
~-

competitldb
.opens May 1
7

.

.

t.:tt.-.. ·:;

.

The1979-80 competition for Fulbright
- grants for l)"llduate stUdy or~
abroad rn ac;lldemlc flelde and far
profeaalonal trlllnlng In the creel IV. anct-..
!*forming arta beglna May 1. the
Institute of International Education has •
.announced. Approxlrnid!V'!OO -arde .
to 50 countllea will be ....a111111e. ·
Purpose of the granta 18 "to I~

-=:: ofu~=ni-.~oJ:'
countries through the

ex~

~~Vi~':::\=·

of

ofn:.: :,'\

Mutual Educational and ·Cultural ·
Exchange Act of 11181 (Fulbrtgh)-HIIya'

_

~~:,=~~"**· .

AIJIIIIcanta must be U.S. cttlan'a who
will. hold a bachelor's degrM or lttt
equlvaiMt befote the beginning dlllit of
the grant. In moat - · applicants
should be pn~flclent In the ~ o1
the host _,ntry, Exoebt far Oll'taln
apeclfle ....oa...~ may nqt
hold the Ph.D. at -tile time of
llpl)lloetlon. Candldelee lor ~~Ineligible lor a grant tO a·00111111y f 1h8y.
have been doing g...,.. w0111 or

conducting~ lli tllllt

..folloW
____,
_..._._.
-

- .....

•::;:::f:j

-

:

•

•·

~~or ~ durlllo
~
er.tr.e~~ . . . . . .
1101 requlnld • to , _ a ~ ~

eult. Hla tMin "'--lon
, subjeCt
In finding -eilltable

WMn Glachlno 'Forzano ' aubmm.ct a 811etch lor an opera baed
on lila Gianni 8chlochf '-'&lt;!.
Puccini lmnledlately orderea Ita
Rbmto to be wrlltall f11r the- lhlrd
opetaof T1tti Trtpt;cll.
f'~Wiie(ed • . . Metr'ojlolltan
Opera In 1818, 0,.,1 $d!Hctihl M illllllec*le ......,., wtth f " - l!aton'a Nlldltlon of "'0 - mlo
bebblnO catV'' a.ualng the ~
ment of the '-8810 Nlu
on MCOIM. Moat olliln p
without rt• 1M! ~ pteoee,
Schlochl has alamld many of the
gn~Ma of lila openl'lllliJIM. The 1*8
never leta lip; the music cloaely
follows the ec6on and the
orchestration Is aufflclently sophisticated to command the study of
any uplrlngeomposer. • '

clolf.Jl :r

•
•

degree, but must , _ lour . . , . of
" prof88l!lonal etudy or equi¥allirit
experience. Social work apptl_,.a ·
muet have at ,_, 1W9 YaiR of ·
easlonal e~ aflil&lt; the
W. ; candidates In mecllciM must ·: ·

Eor

anM.O.atthetrmeof~.

...-m1c

~ lllilectlon Is bued on t11a
edt
professional feC4II'd at t the
''II!PPIIcant, the validity Mel '-IIIII!JY of
' 1M propoaed study
..,pllcant'a lana..- ~ion· and
personal quillfrcatlone. ~ Ia
given to C.OOidatea who IWte ROt' had
prior opportunity foo: extended atydy orresidence abroed.
•
/
'Fhe campus F ulbrtght Program
, -.lvlaor Ia Dr. John Simon . Application·
' forms will be available from Ms.
, Dorothy Schaktinan, Council , on
International Studies, Room 124,
Richmond Qued, Ellicott Complex. ;

'*"· ..

~~~~ lnJ~!"'~~~~n a~ ~k~'fenC:,:

836-8698.

�.......

Apfil 27, 1171

•Calendar
(lrom-1Z.ool4)

B. MFCrwgllhllon ... ~on.ll.fyl0,111711 . ,

$1.50; U I B fec:IAty, !'O'f, oll.rnnl wllh 10 and
seniotcitiz.,.$1;-S.50.·

~ 5TUDEHT1VITIOII W.AIYEII

~bylho~oiMuolc .

APPUCATIONa .

'

f'onl9l -Tuition-~ for
.....,. and fol. 11178, . . •
the Oftlce of ~ Nl!, B,

BFA RECITAL'
Dobcnh Woioo, llioli&gt;fsl. Bolrd Hal.
sp.m. - l s f r e o. ~bytheoep.i·
mont of Muolc.
-

--~. Apjllc:otlon-11-5.

Only-a.-.lawt&gt;o . . on.,FarJ
. . elglbls to opply. The Ftw1cill Alii Ollloe
Ia open -.dey ttwough Ffldly """' 8 :30 a.m.
loS p.m.

UUABFIUI'
TllrM w- (1977). Conference-·
Squire. Col 636·2919 '"' show limes. Students
$1;olh8&lt;S$1 .50.

J.D. CARDS
J.D. Cordi . - In 181 . _ on:
May1-2,-.doy&amp;T~3p.m . -7p.m .

MONDAY-1

-..a WW!IIng dole of 1*111 on 10 Cord
must-prb'~--~

WE£KL Y MEDICAL CONfEREHCE 11
Dlot-lioott, OJ. George

v. M&lt;n&gt;.

ClAW

In:

vestigator, Depa1me0ts of Medici'le and Bioc;hemislry, Vende!t&gt;lt Unive&lt;&amp;lly. W-or Hoi,
Ml~ Flflmo(e Hospital . 6 :30 a .m. Sponoored
by the Department of _r..1edidne of Mward F•·
m0&lt;8 t&lt;ospb18f1d Bioc1&gt;emiS1rY ~. U I B.

BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAR 11
The Elloct of &amp;torol 5u¥twtlon on Togre.h,.
mena Fetty Acyl Delatl.jfues. Dr. Karen Ferguson, assistent profesaor of dlemlstry. Eastern
mlnolsUnMnity. 139c.y. 11 a.m. -

WEEKLY MEDICAL CONfERENCE 11
ThermogenHia- tta Role In Nutrition, Or.
George v. Mam. career ilvestigator, l)epertrylents

R-rch on lmpn&gt;'llng Oral -Hit, llwln D.
Mandel, D.D.S .. professor of denlialry, Columbia
University. 17 8 Farber. 12 noon.

OoybrMk (le Jour Se love) (Froroce. 1939).

_

_,-ANT NOTICE.,_

8 :40p.m.
Afilrne-...ty'infloentialsllrosd. y O f at hclme as demorslizlng by the Franch mlifary

'

LOCKWOOD(ABBOTT)~

TAKE A BREAK'
Bill Aach•, professOr of English, on the tenor
bar;c&gt;-&lt;agtme and esty jazz. 10 Capen. 12 noon.
BlfnQ your luncll.

Wllhthet-.o ~

_ . . . , ~ Olllce ... dc.etotlle pt.tJIIc
T~. Moy 16. ~ for lnlar- . y - I a lloy L lnlerf l l n l r y - con be piclred 14&gt; thu Moy 18 ot llo

Conference Theatre, Squire. F r e e -.

at 5 p.m.

"'""""" and

MUSIC'
... Cathy lerbetian, avant~ soprano, VISiting
Artist Series V. Baiod Aedflll Hal. 8 p.m. General
a&amp;nission $3, U I 8 facutty. staff, alum! with 10,

GRAY PANTHERS SPRING FESTIVAL •
SQuire Hall Fountafn Area (Fillmore RoOm in
case of rain) . 1·5 p .m. Free food and enter-

1Uoffice.~-canbeplc:i&lt;ecf14&gt;

atthe~Deoktt.ruMoy20.

and Biochemlslry Deportment. U I B.

LEGACY OF THE.ntiRTIES
SPRING LECTURE SERIES'
Phologrojlhy, Alor1 Fern, chdO&lt;
of research, Ubnwy of Congress. 335 Hayes.

I

5:30p.m.

Sl)onsored by the Friends of the School
of Archnect\Jraand Envronmental Design .

A-

CONVERSA TlONS IN THE ARTS
.
~ s..:!z Interviews llatgot.t
~ and poet. lntemationoi-Cellle
(Ciwlnel1 0) . 6 p.m.

a-

GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES AWARD

citi.zens$1.50.
Sl)onsored by the Center IO&lt; Thealre Aese..-ch
and the Deportment of Theatre.

GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES LECTURE I
Crustel Oyn1mlca, Or. Cha1es L Drake, profeSSOf of earth sckwlces, Dartmouth Conege,
Pegn.m Distinguished Lecturer. Room '8, 4240

ZOrdoL lle\N8Y l..oulge, Governors Residence.
8 and .10 p.m. Free to IRC feepeyera; $ .50 for

others .

THURSDAY-4

, (~~,~~ J~ng:.!:"':' ,!~ p-:
FILM'

Mannequln(193B). 7p.m.

Super Ay (1973). 146 Oielendorf. 1 p .m.
Sl)onsored by Black Sludes.

-Y-

hefk-ideooce.
.
(t942)78:-&lt;5p.m.
Slanl Bette DoYis and Claude Rains. The ato&lt;y
o1 Chw1olle
ia ~wty lnl1alonned
from a trouiJiod .,...._ to a -

v,- """

young women.

170 WIFfoCC, Blcoll. Free admiasion .
Who can rea1s1 Joan Cnlwlord and Bette
Davis on the eame bil?

T-.

FILMS'
lYOn the
1'1111 A (Elsensteln, 1948).
7p.m.
The Lady In the Lake- (Montgomery, 1946).
9p.m.
146 Oielendorf. Sponoored by the Center
for-~.

BFA RECITAL'
Mlci!HI •Domino, gullw. Bolrd Aecllal Hal .
B~ .m . Free .

Spo_nao&lt;ed by the Deportment of Music.
GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES LECTURE II
Geology In CNno, Dr. Chlrfos L Drake,
profooaor of -e. eQonceo, o.tmou111 College,
Pegn.rn ~ Lecttnr. 148 Oielendorf.
8p.m.
"
The Pegn.rn Laclure Series Wll8 Initialed last
year to honor Dr. Reginald Pegn.rn .•. . . - and
IO&lt;mor c:l1lirm.l ol U I B'a Dopnnent of Geology,
on lho 50111 ~ of lho ~l 's
looodlng .

OJ. Dnll&lt;e Ia choirmln of the Deport·
- - ol Geology .. Colo.mlllll ~- He Ia
ol-tho Geologialf Society ol Amortca.
. Allhough lho " -'• Repubfic ol a- not ~ In inlemotionll geologicol fO&lt; 26 - · ~ - l l y joined lho In~
Union of Geological Sciences (lUGS) and the
I n t . . _ Union ol Geodesy and Geoc&gt;hyalcs
(IUGG). La01 )'M', s group from lho lUGS
.... lnvitlld to a- to lntemafional
IRf to • - t h e geologlcslaciMties
now In progreu there. Onlke'a ~e tonight
will desctlbe lho8e discussmS.

TUESDAY-2
RESOURCE CONFERENCE Ill'
0.. "--lng Con Agolnot Adutto,
Rslph · Ill-'~- H..e.stona Mlolor.
Cheektowogs.
9 :30 a.m.-4 :30p.m. FO&lt; lnlorma·
tion ..... ....-..tiona, coofaCt lho MIJiidiaclpflna
Cenlor for lho Study of Aging, 4248 Ridge-

Lea.
5ponaored by lho - · PlaMing Project, ~ Center IO&lt; lho Study ol

Aging, Wllh specisl from lho Erie
Cot.wl1y Sheritfs Oeportmenl Project A-eness.
and the Erie Co&lt;1n1y Office.IO&lt; the Aging.

~TRY SEMINAR I

E"-

'
o1 - • oncl

-1
,.,

....

- . - o1

u--.pmont (AieaJ.

150

F.-bar, 5 p .m.; 5 Acheson , 8 :15 p .m . Spon soroo by the Deportment ol Modem Languages
and l.iterah.res.

CONYERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
~- lnlorviews Don

BuFFAl:O LOGIC COlLOQUIUM 11
What Numbero Haft Though~ To Be,
_Charles U!mbtos, U I B. 684Bsldy. 3 p.m.

~~~. -r-,

- -·Coo·

- ·Down-

of the Blologlcol Excllongo - · ·

rfercable Cllannel8). 6 :30p.m.

Dr. Raymond~- Blof)hyaics
stale Medicol Center. 245 Cory. 4 p.m.

COLLEGE BALM'
The -11 11 o Lonely Hunter (1968). 110
MFACC. Ellcott. 1 p.m.
Touching tale of love among misfits in a hot,

PHARIIACEUT1CS SEIIINAR I
Prcoln lllndlng oncl Diopooltlon ol ~'red­
Ma1o Roa:i, g r a d - C50B Cooke .
4p.m. Re-Of3:50 ..

En-

dusty Sou~

town .

Frank Cipolla, director.
Cornell Thealre. s p.m. Free. Sl)onsoroo by the
Department of Music.

DRAMA'
Wenn... by Etic Bentley. pfeifer Theatre.
B p .m. General aanlsslon $3, students and senior
citizens $1 .50.
Sl)onsored by Jt&gt;e Cenlor IO&lt; Tl&gt;ealre Re8681'Ch
and the Deportment of Theelre.

ANATOMICAL 6CIEHCES LECTURE II
v._. o1 the~ or. Keith Porter,
Deportment ol IAolec:UII'. Cel &amp; Oewllopmenflll
Biology. Univerol1y of ~ - 148 Diefendorf.
8p.m.

IRC FIUI'
Zon1oL Clemen! l..oulge. 9 p .m.
feepeyer$_; $ .50 fO&lt;ofhenl.

F~

IRC

.
. . . _ _ ol Cell Surtoceo, Dr. Kelfh -

~-

·

Deportment of IAolec:UII'. Cel &amp; Oewllopmenflll
Biology. UnMnHy of~ . 144 F -.
3p.m.

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING~
-Gao~ Dr. W. J_Wfrd II,
Reoes'CI1 &amp; De~ Center, General 8ectr1c:
Company. 107 O'Brfsn. 4 p .m. Refroshmeots

~-

Blof)hyaics
-·
,• Center. 245CWy.
4 :30p.m.

~­

UUABFIUIS'
auan.,Blur.e(Frw&gt;ee,1937). 7p.m.
A most LnU8UIII fwoe, wherein it helps to
be mad .

be~ -*'II

CNfK ................. - -

boglnnlng In Isle AugL.et &lt;*.ftlg """""'

-

-~
Appicsllorw lot, . . _

......, poalllono . .

. - un~~-.aoy, Mov 1, n 402 Copon:- ~

TEACNNCI~~APPUCATIONa

DRAMA'

_

lor--

Won•- by Eric Bentley. Pfeifar -\
8p.m. Genenll-$3,at00altsand- \
cftizens$1 .50. •

-SE&amp;IIIOII-11011
SUrrnor 1878 Aogislrllion Ia , _
..-weylnHoyeaB.--thoOAR~-

IRCFIUI'
Alclwnond 2nd Floor Lounge, Elloolt.
B Wid 10 p .m. Free to lAC~ ; $ .50 .
for others.

-. .

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

~Band (1977). Conferorlce -

-

llsldy:

EXHIBITS
GAUERY211~

&amp;.-..... oallgs '""'palntlngL _ , .
2111, Squn. Moy 1-12. The - , . II open,
Moo !Cloy~ lla.m.-6 p.m.

· -~~
April Feoi .. - - - ~­
B*cl. ftwou11f!Aprl30.

JOBS

UUABFLII'
Squire. Col 636·2919 f o r - - · -

holn of - t o

T..:hlng - . . o h l p 10ppllcotlono lor tho Fal
1 9 7 6 -... , _ - ol tho UniYerllily
I..Osmino Center, 364
FO&lt; lnlorinallon col
63fl.2394'.
-

Scx&gt;n,.,.-.d by the Center
and lho Deportment o f --

·

$1 ; ofhenl $1 .50.
Newly retitled Willi C.W.. this hlsr·
lous, touching aiOfY llaa Ileal~ f8IIOtlllfy
t o - l f e.

REIIEARCH

- --TEAM"""'""' (-

1.-..y Todw-

Onlllology, R-ll003.·

--(CIIId-

o.m.vJ. R-8002.

ol

FACUlTY

NOTICES
Aldl OFFICE HOUIIS(-IIwu lloy 1S)
8:30 s .m.-8 :30 p.m. -.doyflwu Thlndoy.
8 :30a.m.--4:30p.m. Friday.
9 a.m.-4 P·"'· Sltu'dey.

&amp;13 :30 .

BJOPHYSICALSCIENCES-ARII Field Focuolng (F_, oncl Formodon
o1 C!Mmlaol " ' - In Man, br. Raymond

-t

-"'~- oucll---~
Halp Center. ...

hour- lor·-

- ··.
-,
Cologe,
108
- 8 :30p.m.
.b
e Win-·
and~ ... be prcMclod.

ANATa.i:AL SCIENCES DISllNGUISHED I

FOABON STUDENT DEVELOPIIENTThe a.laior1 o l - - ... b
_ , . , . progrllnto old f &lt; n l g n wllhthslr-toaMW..-olly'""'""""
munlty. - - b e ooalgned t o . -

ment of Music.

--

MO-IIAO UINCH'
-.o Brna Trio. 335 Hayea. 12 noon.
Sl)onsored by lho Friends of the School of
Architecture and EnWonrnenflll Deoign.

STUDENT AIDES NEEDED FOR 1tn-~

BFA RECITAL'
R~ Mahonef, percusolon. Baird Aecllal
Hal. B p.m. Free. Sponoored by lho Deport-

WOIEN'5 WRIT1NO WORKSIIOP'

WEDNESDAY- 3

-a

The~ol~ ...
- . - l n - . b y -lrvlng Block. UniYerllily of _ , Onllrlo, on
MoyS, f976 , 1n68411M'Yot3:30p.m.

and lho """""'

ANATOIIICAL SCIENCES LECTURE II
Celtulir Engl-mv, Dr. Robel1 A. Good.
150 Fa'ber. 8p.m.

MUSIC'
...,
· U f B Wind

l..bwy. Bolrd •

cloy . _ on ov.t1ue

PHILOSOPHY SEIIIINAR

FilM'

UUAIFJLMS•

Hal. w11 grant a -

fnes for al MUSIC book&amp; awld eoores which .-e
relumed to the Mualc l..bwy CiraAstlori Desk on

that day. ,., - a n d &amp;coreS must be r8C8M!d
between the ~of 9 a.m. and 9 p.m.

Ridge Lea . 1 :30 p .m.

Sl)onsored by the Deportment of Engliall . -

Pcnrell of
doss~(.-, Crawford) ,
who rejecto her lazy and ~
(Spencer T~) to become a model and claim

MUSIC I.BWIY
On Monday, Moy 1 . lho -

IRCALM'

FILM·

8110 p .m. on Wedi\eoday, Moy 17. o-lhe for
documents lnteraonous
1s lloy 5.
Intercampus document material con be plc:l&lt;ecf 14&gt;
flwu Moy 1 71n lho Doclrnents Deportment.
. . _ _ ~ IJinoy ... be - ! l o y .
21 llwu June 11. It ""' June 12 ot
Am-.

"*' - -

DRAMA'
Wannsee by Eric .Bentley. Pfeifer Theatre.
8 p.m. Genefal admission $3, -students and senior

The Pegrum AWird, consisthg of a commemorative scroll and modeSt stipend. will be given
by Chester C. Llwlgway, Jr., to the outstanding
Geological Sciences senior. Room 18, 4240
Ridge Lea. 1: 15 p .m.

~

-~--~--

sentorcitizens $2 ; students$1 .
SpOnsored by the Oepartmerit ol Music.

tainment.

-

o.mo

lho of Moy 15 flwu Moy 20.
Lockwood l..bwy ... regUsr- holn

censor ~ 1939, lhls is the stacy of. a kMer's
lastfewho&lt;.n.

of Medtcine and Bbchemlstry, Vanderbilt Untver-

sity.,26 Flllber Hal. 12 noon. Sponoored by the
0eps1m0n1 of - . , o f ~ Flmore fUpilaf

c:ori1g to tho 10

Police _ . . . . Cenlor.

FAU REGISTRATlON
Reglatrolion . - . . to ol DUE
..-.d gnodulle - I n Hoyes B. E . . - oflloe
hOI.n ore ..,.,.,.. for ....,... c:&lt;&gt;n-.lenoo In Hoyes

N&lt;.nlng~ Nine · F-·
8042.
.._
(PaydMfc

N&lt;.nlng~
Nine - · F·
8043.
In~ (Comrn&amp;.ollly
l«nnng~- Edu:olan,
F-80«.
•- -

l.lbrwlenl- ......_

( - Law Llnrfln &amp; of Law Pulllc
SenliceOH.aw l..bwy, F-8045.

Key: IIOslen on111o- with • proiMalone! 1 - t l n the aubjecl; 'open
to 1M public; • open to "*ftbwa of the Unhwslly. Un._. otllerwiM
apeclfl8d, tlcbla for _,Ia 'Ch8rvlng edmluton C8ll be purchuecl 81 the
Squire H811 Tlcll81 Office.
·

�. . .a ..

Apnl27,1t71

8p.m. Genanii-S3. - a n d citiZenaSI .50.
,
Sponaored by the Center l o r - Aesell'ch

fUI•

end the OepMmentof -

_ , _ , _ ( 1 8 1 4 ). 140Diol· . . -. 1 p.m. Sponocndbya.:k-.

U I I .._ lrocllport -·~·
1p.m.

(2) . -

-

Kontuc:Q Filed 170 MFACC , EJNcort.
Bend 9:45p.m. Tlc:kela$1.

Fiold.

Youwonlbeflovertuntoaayou-M.
FOLK CONCERT•

COIIaT11VTIONAI LAW I LAW AND

- B e . - , ' * " - _ , . . , d Michael

PilL- FORUM COUOOUIUII f
lon.o..An.._..~-1
I I Q - -.1'\'of- s. c. Halpern,

LECTURE I RECEPTION
__
The~.,

-CEII11CS~f

Anofyolo oil'

·--VIIITINQ
·

4 p.m.

- · 3:50.

SPEAitERS

- Or.
and
Gone
_
,.
In ,......,_,
GoroYsl&lt;y,
-.gy Doplrtment, ~ of Roc:Mmor.
. · 114 . (Amhorol), 4:1 5p.m.
.t4p.m.
..-oAIID IIOAIID OF DIIECTORs·

Sun Day

334 SQuro. 8 :30p.m.
~·

ENGUIHDEP-I.ECl'URE II

-~~~'---

-George
Zytoruk, ~ College. 303 Diolando&lt;f.
7:30

p.m.

.-.;---col lntPCIET1IY IIEAblilo I .uac•

,..._by-~

-

ffw. -

- 7 :30p.m.

-·
-·

glOW

187 MFACC,
1n

Mlwy 831-2020 or 838-33411. Sponaored
by ·
the

-.gLinry..
-

ences.
The

ond

- 7:30p.m.

c.-,

~

.Hoi. - -.

theme

for

the

3 P·f'l· Squire
Fountain. Sun Day Alterna!ll Energy
Fair. Display of sollll" devices and
kites. _
4 p.m. to 6 p .m. 335 Hayes. Sun
Day Lectures: Bonnie Albert ,
" Energy Efficient Enclosures;"
Chuck Schwartz, " Energy Effi ciency of the Amherst Campus;" Fran

--. . -.. --...a~by.,.eor.tor--.:n

end . . .,..,._,.oil_.

-

..._....,.. 2ncl-lo&lt;o1ge. Rlclmond,
p,t11. 1D lAC "'-Y&lt;n; .

E110a11. I ond 10
1.101or-.

~--·
b y - ell &lt;logklo. -

........ T--.

- -. B p . m . - - $ 1 .50;
U/8
~.
- .·5
- 0. wilt\ tD and ·1
;-$
Sponocnd by . . Doplrtment oil Muolc.

.

IIECITAL•

---'-~·-··

--

flax ~ end foJ Rizzo, ~- Centnol
Llnry · ~ ~- 8:30p.m.
-

- b y -. -

. e n d -.

~-•-DIPUKolzoilthe

~ au.tolU/8.

a,.y ..... -

ot

~
... _
end &amp;lo Cou1ly
.._,_,
. . by
_
CU.ofMIY.

-FUI·
-.....,__ ..... c.
-

..... _ _ _, , _ __11177).
1138-2111111or

- - - · 1 ; - 1 .110.
'INI ... ID be lie opening night

- o f - _ - a - V o r t &lt; F i m -.

........... ----~

_ · -.....,
_,_,end
- .. _
- ........•11m -

cole-

A--Ma-ge

" ' -t
--oil--lnaOnoupaf

l i n g - -Cnwer,

-~

~

.. ••

.., ...., -

lloport

AmherSt Campus.

-----..-...eo...

CONVERSATIONS IN TIE ARTS '
~

(Chsnnel8). 4 p.m.

CONVERSATION's IN TIE ARTS

c.==~"":,:.:::~'=
(Chaw&gt;ell 0) . 6 p.m.

Sdence, Aerospace

148-.
3~--~.
p .m. Retreshmentsot2:30.

f~~;

~

Ia Bom. 170 WACC,
7 :30
and 1 0 :30 p.m. Free to lAC feepayers; $1 for
othe&lt;s.
DRAMA•

,

. w•..,_ by Eric Bentley. PleHer n-tre.
B p:in. General- S3, sffi&lt;18nts and _,lor .

LAW AND ECONOMICS WORKSI:fOP It
_,.,, ~ w. Mlwln, Low

citizens S I .50.
SponaoredbytheCentertorlheaiJeAesell'ch
andthe'Depow1montof-.

Schoof. lJ I B. Room 708 O'Brlon, 3 :30-5:30 p.m.

Yartc,
Lllllnotoglcaf 8lucilea of
· llloiDgy OepMment, U I B. 123

FacUty members end ...-,18 lntereeted in
peo1ic:lpollng in the Worl&lt;ahop ahoold send their
nsmeaendcompuamalng ·addn!s&amp;esto.Protessor
G. L Priest, Low SCtlool, 418 O'BMI.

..sTORY LEC1URE•

UNOUISTICS DEPARTMENT COUOOUIUM It
The Orlglno oil Lang-. Cha1es Hoci&lt;Olt•

$1.50; U / 8 tacUty, - · ......,, with 10 end
- - $ 1 ; - $.50 .
Sponaored by lie ~tot Music.

Quad, Blcott. 3 :30 p .m. For more lnformotion,
cal636·2177.

CACflUI•

-.cBAOLUNCH"

-

w....m - -

- . o n, Bcott. l2noon.
~by ... EiMrorfnonto~Siu&lt;loo center.

Dawla,--

_ , ond the- of Progr...: From Early
...... - - . . O r. David arton
of HiolorY. Vlfe ~­
oily. ITOMFACC, · 2 :30p.m.
Dr. Dallfa, of ._
. 11187
- .,_
Pl1le
_
,

-

ln~~hlobook.

. In

w-.. c - , l o ...-.one_of _
the

~hiiiDrWlolnU.S .

end.,.._

ohtp. Tllo lo end opori lo the IOJI&gt;Ic,
end ..,.,.,..,.... by ·U I 8'a Oepa1ment of Hlatay.

-SoU.-.
p.m.

•

--•oaAPPUEDICIEIICEI
-

-

Cornel~. lilgulstlca Lounge , ~

·

_
--·

'"-'-..............~-JR ~ , . . , _ C. P. YO, ~-

Non-Profit Org.

ooophy, Profeoaor Lynn Aooe. Doplrtment of
Plllooophy, UJ B. 884 Boldy. 3 :30p.m.
_,...,_~

--"--on-and
·
-.. Judy----·
IliOn-·

the me&lt;glng . . - of
Or.
Civil~ - U/8. Room 27, ·• • lover,
aiate(.endchld.
4232 Aldgo Lea. 4 :20p.m .. JnCedOd b y - ·

150 F -. 7:30 end 10:15
p.m. FrileiD IRC loepayor.; llll o r - .. .

.,. old 0110UQ11
,_
Kilo 1D
Kl1ololferaon,

the
you11lllliOa
be~- I'Ougl&gt; _

ln ... 30a _ _ _ _ _ _

_lf

-

· PAID

"""*' aa artllt, - ·

·
Siaay Specell end~ D\Mil.

UUAB-fiLM•
- - A CeUM (1955). Coofen!nce
Theatre, SQuro. 12 midnight.- $1 : others
. $1 .50.
-

-, A- II Bam.
donl mloa I. I _

· 8 and 9:45

UUABfiLM•
Tina w- (1977). eoofenlni:e ·
Squire. Col836-29191or
Sludoilts
$1 ; oftlenl $1 .50.
From the director of M•A•a•H end~
IIlia 11m exptoree the pe)'Che tfwo&lt;Jgf&gt;

show--

WATER R£110URCE18 EIMRo-..TAL

SUNDAV-30

·

-aow-~--

11..-vOI'EIIA-·

--~~··

157 MFACC, Bcolt. 10 Lm.
welccme.
IEN'SIIAIEIIALL •
U IBn. Cataalo (2) . -

._
by Giacomo
end
_ - _.. - - ,
b y - Puccini;
ell ClaQfilno.'
_ _ __ Bp.m. - -

~ Ia

Field. 1 p.m.

I

U. S, Postal"
Buffak&gt;, N. V.

K
-, p.m.
Ticl&lt;of8
S I. - 150 -

v-, c:oo._., ...... _...,., 1'1111-~~·

..

Olannl-.

UNIVERSITY OPERA WORKSHOP'
by Giacomo Puccini; end

_ cl
_
Gen
ral'-Iloilo
- __
Tsp.m.
- by Marco
ell e
GogiB!o.

IIIC fiLM•

-~-.
lulk pi all&amp;: n. __.. ~
grad-· 127 ~._2: 45

.........-............... - -·
-----~;
~....-..
....

~

oa- suta.

SECOND ANNuAL MAY DAY PICNIC •
'tnter'MtJonel Coi'-Oe'• Second Annual May
D•y PJcnlc, pia'Wc .ea near Elteott tennis
courts. 1 p.m. S 1 buys untwnited fOOd and dmk,
and tickets wll be . - tfle&lt;e, or at 191
Red Jackel. -

MARXIST STUOIES LECTURE•
Jus Cogens (lrnperatfN Nonns) In Contemporary lnt.mallonol Law, Mitchefl Fr1WII&lt;IIn, U I B.
The Kiva, I 01 Baldy; 3·5 p.m.
Sponsored by the Wortcshop In Stu&lt;ies.

pitll. la.m.

_...,.....-o_ .. _
----DAYI
··
------......·-.--:
..-..........
_
................
-1p.a. '

Oepowlmont of

·

PEDIATRIC QRAND ROU-It
Why • Child Ia ..,.,.__ Discussants:
Or. Azlza Ms. Pemy Eliot and Ms.
Betty·Thomoro f&lt;O&gt;ch Auditorium, Chldren's Hos·

- - .......... Or. s. ~
· C31 , 4230 Aldgo IAL 2 :32p.m. Sponocnd by the GSA end ._ ~ Paychology

--238&amp;qun.aa.m. ~

u 1a .....
1 p.m.

·semester.

ENMty .........
Duggan;
and Naturof Hloay. oil • Raaaarch Project.
by Joyce Hlolce.
•
This wtl become ., lWVIual or biannual event
In the SCtlool of Nuroln!!·

PIIVCHOI.OQV COLLOCII•IIIf ,

FRIDAV-28

MEN'S LACROSSE•

"Current Status of Solar Research ;"
and Mike Hamilton , " Solar Architecture."
SUN-VIEWS, a Sun Day photography contest, Is also being held .
Submit your best photograph of the
beauty of the SU!L (sunrise, sunset,
shadows, etc.), one per person, to
lhe Spectrum Office, Squire Hall,
by 5 p.m., Monday, May 1. Prizes
wlll ·be awanled In student, faculty
and community cetegorles. First
prizes are free use of the Craft
Center darkroom for one year;
second prizes are free .use for one

t wo-day

Tuesday, May 2
10 a.m. 10

by&amp;lc....,,a _ _ __ _ _

SATURDAY-29

Da~P- r.ic:~r~t:'mor~:-~eh~

Sponocnd b y - Port&lt; -..anal lnstiMe.

- · - • ,_ prOy end lp.... ~-$3. ---•uso.
·-

UUAB MfONOHT fiLM•
A - wm-t A Ceuaa (1955). Cooference
· Squn. 12 midnight. so-.ts $1 ; olheni
$1 .50.
J ....... Dean! SOt Mineo! the youlll
of the 50s got oH on (end feeiOfiMJf/y auperior).

10a.m. to3p .m. Sun Day Tour of
the Department of Bloloqlcal
Sciences' greenhouses near Gary
Hall. Free sunflower ,.P.Iants for the
flrst 100 visitors.
-

calendar of activities Is as rollows:

North Slreets.

OnoSingo, TheOiboro-n't{-. 1977).
· SQuire. Cal 639-2919' for
showtinles. St.-.ts$1 ; olhenl$1.50.

Wednesday, May 3

t~:fano'i" 1~ 'tc,~~le~aii~H ~=

Morgot tp, PII.O.. Ros·

UUABFILJI•
Cooference -

Paulo, " The Use of Plants to Aid
Energy Conservation."
6p.m. lo9p .m. Squire Fountain.
Sun Day's Sunset Concert .

Sun Day Is coming .
And Rachel Carson College, that
campus alliance of . ,vlronniental
champions, Is lead1n~ an array of
organizations sponsoring events
saluting Old Sol.
Joining with RCC are NYPIRG,
the School of Architecture and
Environmental Design, the Spectrum, the Craft Center, the Division
of Blo l og l ~l Sciences and the
Department of Eng ineering Sci-

AI-CIIIO.H.u.---....

,...., . - . . wilt\ -

Sub-

The College wll also introduce next ye«'S
coordinat&lt;n, dloaJs8 goata for ne&gt;&lt;t v-. and
~ Informal dlaculiaion ornong facufty ,
- .etudenls, fellows, .-.d friends .

Co-

-

ear-: ,.oxic

ala_ In Owermr-t, Or. 8eveo1y Palgen,
Port&lt; -..anal insi!Me . Jane Keeler
Room. Elicott. B p.m.
Sponaored by Clnon Colege, the
ev.llrlg includea • end of ·
the acoompliahl•~e~•ta of the yew. Abso on the
program wl be the dedication of a bronZe
bu8t of Rechef Clnon wl1lcll presented .
to the Colege by the _ . Nutrffional Foods
Aasociatlon .

A~e...
"'-a.--.t hKen-a-g, IIID'*
~-

·· Elicort. 8

- l&lt;athome
Cornel
p.m.
Sponsored
by Colege
B. -

U I 8~ 127 Boldy. 3 p.m.

otudool. C508

-

CACflLII•

$1 .50; UIB tacUty, - · - - 10 a&gt;d
- - $ 1 ; - 1.50.

UIIIVERSITY OI'E{IA WOMIHOP'
Olonnl · ~ by Giacomo Puccini; end
Bello dl Donne TUIOM, by Marco do Gagliano.

DRAIIA•

IIMd- -

w-

by &amp;lc Bentley. Pfeifer -

-

· 2:30p.m. General •IIN'Celendar,' pov.lt . cal .. l

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO.:'
VOL. 9 NO. 27 APRIL 20, 1971J.

Cou~ncil says _
no ·a ctio" .~a.;ra.nted;
Ketter pledg~s 'business as U$ual' .
President speaks
·at meeting of
·faculty Senate -

• 0111y innuendos·
against President,
UC determines
"After

a

discussion

·of

rec"ent

" Business as usual." Thai's the
manner In which President Robert 'L
Ketter told Faculty SenatOrs Tue8day
thB.l he intendS 'to proceed 1!1 the Wlllce
of what he termed "anonymouachargJ&gt;S".and "Innuendos" _.sing hla
leadership abilities whfch nave appeared in the local press and In the .
Spectrum.
" As of this moment, I have yet to have
anyone In this Institution come forward •
and make ont&gt; single statement that Ia
suitable. lor
attribution,"
Ketter
charged .
The President said that a number of
individuals have examined ''alleged
situations"~~and foui1d '.'no substance"
in them, but nevertheless have
continued to repeat the rumors:
" I h;lve a feeling that the' items could
be discussed much more openly II they
were brought forward In a forthright
fashion , _but the Individuals h8Y8
apparently not chosen to dQ this thus
far."
Turning his attention elsewhere,
Ketter reported that U I B "suffers•• trorn
low salary seales In So.me academic
administrative positions. For the past
three years, he said, h.e has asked
SUNY, the ·Board of Trustees, tt·.e
Chancellor and DOB to rectify the
~~~ebut_ lilt~~· II anythi ng, ~-

::.!lc'et;. co'K~I::~;p l~:
Unl-slty Council on t,londay " unanl~==~r

mo~~ely deterrnlnad that i t had . no.
evldens:e before It which would warrant
t!)e !aklng of any action within the
1jmlted jurisdiction of the Council In
these matters, as set out In New York
Education law. ~
_
This brief statement was all t hat
. emerged from an executive session of
the Council which lasted about an hour
MOAday afternoon after regular Council
business had been' conducted .
President Ketter left the executive
. session for a while, then returned
before It concluded.
• Just before the meeting was closed ,
Richard Molt, president of the
undergraduate Student Association,
walked across the Gapen filth floor
conference room to slip a note to
Cynthia Y\lhitlng, student repr!lsentatlve
to the Council .

.

'Just w h • t - this Council Intend to.
- do?'
" I would like to ask," Ms. Whiling
soon spoke up, "jus)· what t~ l s Council
Intends to •do about reports of
'diseilchsntment' with the administration?"
•
·
Council Cheim\an Robelt Mlllonzi

sc=~ciO·whatever w-&lt;;.rrt'" ~o

11~

Low• third of Mlmlnlttrdn ~-­
J;; recent SUNY auivey of ielery
scales oJ 124 public Institutions
re;.oealad that,, lor certalil~

l'o~.;.ntW,~"":;r.:I:S·u~J.~-,n~~.,';l.,~

l&amp;lll .
"Where will those minutes be
available?" Rose asked .
"C&amp;II me," Mlllonzi responded .
There were those-who bet there'd be ·
no week's walt . "Somebody will. blab it
to the Spectrym" lor Wednesdey, that ·
line of reasoning went . "Yes, and then
whOBVM-" did It will offer 'intensive
criticism' that it was leaked ."
The Reporter attempted to glean from
some Council ,..mbers just what had
~neon behind the closed doors . " I'll
tell you as a friend," one said, "but not
lor publlcatlo_n, with or without
attribution ."
Lacking what;- It takes to t oax
retlcent-illlger "deep throats" Into dark -

..

e:"...:r,,:rr~.~t~e~= ~~e:,eg~z~~

The Council appareotty felt the
so-called allegations against the
President are non-specific, unsubstantiated Innuendos, requiring no ~~etion
1111 their part. Further, members seemed
to think that the Council, while It has·
the authority to rSI)Ommend a President
to the SUNY Trustees, has no mandate
to take up accusations against a sifting
preside_nt.

..

~=w:t':t'hatlhe Council did or

did not do was shad by Ms. Whiling lor
JoAnne Armao in the Courier Tuesday

:;:"~n~~"l::He!to'~~h~,~~~zr .!r;,:

cherges." Council members felt that to
do so, would give the accusations
Credence. Whiling said . (The "charges,"
as defined by Armao, are " uniii)agl nallve leadership. ~ )

w;r:." 1 ~~2 tglterAr~~n~n· ~~~j

Whiting charged that the Ketter'
. lldmli\lstratlon ls a disappoi ntment and!
leila '1o deal with long-range Issues like
ecademlcs.' Whiting safd she · also
. opjected to the Qlscusslons . being:
· confined to executltl! session (some-\
thing-She did not do 111 publlc.bel ore the
-

•S.. •council, • PISI._2, col. 2j

- J

Fox

Easter eggs
'""A workshop · on how to decorate Easter eggs. Ukrainian style. yielded
this basket of beauties and opened a week of

Ukn~inian

events on

· campus . See page 12.

alt\!Oil.l1h faculty salaries are In J~
upper'90 per cent.
.
Within the coming weeks, Ketter and
officials from Stony Brook will present
the collected data to Chancellor
Wharton with' hopes that salary
inequities can be corrected. The data
will also be presented to the Board of
Trusii!!!S and the Governor's office.
Regard ing the proposed new Faculty
Senate bylaws, Ketter told Senators he
believes "any problems that do exist
can- be worked out" and that the new
bylaws •represent a major step forward
and indicate a collegiality which this
Institution must subscribe- to." Ketter

·

:;!i~ns~~:,"~'foO,::i~Yt~'c~~[l~~~~ ~~

Energy studies center
proposed ·t or U/B

am/~~~~~~~ol "l':ai~~:'U~ns

from
Senators, Ketter said: 1) He Interprets
the recent press articles regarding the
DOB freeze on State jo6s as not
represen_tlng any c~ from the

~~~t~ ::.~~~O:.'~e~~~lea~: ~!:"'J,~

II Lt. 1Aov. Mary Anne Krupsak has r , required t o put aside- one per cent of • pattern has likely been extended to
,her ·l"AI'•I U{ S will peporpe a ?8nter for ! · mf'~.t~ reven~es lor research: lund the
State-sponsored energy stuii1es, press
~~~t To~;'~;,~l~e ~~s :~~
The-News reported that the State Job
reports late last week Indicated .
Governor's office and other _groups to
u1 B officials, while expressing Development Authority headed by ' Investigate tha possibility of establishMichael Curley, a lawyer and a Buffalo
eagerness and Interest In the UniverIng an Energy Center at U I B, and Is
sity's assuming such a rote, · were
native, Is PB!IIclpatinp In drafting the
oow In the process of writing Its generic
0
nonetheless taken by surprise by the
statement . He cautioned SenatorS,
en~f~~ cl~~:?~ ~'b"; ·spokesman told however,
announcement. .
about "lllialng ho~ too
the News , "Is that energy research at
" Weare putting together a proposal, "
high" based on what might be the
UIB would attract a lot of energyPresident Robert L. Ketter told the
" p~litlcal aspirations qlln91v1~uals ."
related Industry to the Town of Amherst
BuCtt~~:i~nll,~:~:d heard talk about in Erie County."
M!lllg•nex..,-109.._..
It's the old idea of creating here a
deyeloplng the concept but that that
Near the end of the long meeting,
was about all .
Professor John Milligan expressed
~?.::Jr~~~o ~~at":~awn~odl;,'nB.;~t~~sh~ concern
that the reaol uti on passed at
.. ,.;~.~~.sbya~~~~sa't:!: orr\~~~~: h~~~:
MIT .
.
the Senate's February meeting which
Gov. Carey's office also has a role In
after she had made other headlines by
. t he discussions, the News said. Carey's
lighting with Commerce Commissioner
· - · -...· - 2, col. :
representative Is Henrik N. Duilea, his
~¥::;)a~Y.s,:'hno.~v~ fa':.~~~~ Po~ ~vl~~ special assistant lor education . Dullea
once worked at UIB In an administraRadio City Music Hall. Krupsak won
tive capacity.
thatbellie.
·
The rush to get everything
The Ne&gt;+S said Its sources Indicated
According to a source in her office, a
done before spring exams
the lieutenant governor decided on UIB
Krupsak plan for State energy research
l or the research center because o( the
Is capped by a U I B energy studies
will gain momentum this
excellence of the School of Engineercenter.
week.
ing, headed by Dean George Lee.
Funding would be realized through a
Other State officials said that the
$500,000 annual budget from the
An elqngated Ulendar
nuclear reactor located at Main Street Is
Energy Research and Development
·reflecting-the activities
another reason U I B could accommoAuthority (ERDA) and millions In

Big calendar

~!et~:~~1r;~=cnho~t ~~~ ~~:~

::';,'~e ~~:ft!';,~ a?t':rn~n~~~~~cl~

of research and services and as a

an energy program .
Privately-owned utilities, which are

:-: .

·I . .. ·.·

· - ·~-gy,' po~o4, col. 3
-

.·..i7
_.,_.. 'i.'
....
~

crunch, begins on the
centerspread.

•

�April20, 187a

Legal relations
with students
have chang~

•Only innuendos
~-t.cal.1)

l.ouncll had the room cleMid). Another
Council member did not remember
Whiling saying anything like that during
the closed meeting .
Whiling, Incidentally, · was not
eligible to vote on the Council's
, statement.

wTheu:'at::::Jr..,~~:,'r,:'d~

clwlged o.. the put two clecad!a· The
.--rt -consumer movement-on campuses, the national bu..,.ucracy, the
fight of minorities f~ equal education
have all played a part rn the change.
Thomas Burgum, deputy counsel fO&lt;
the Senate Appropriations Committee,
relayed this message here Friday as he
addressed a State-wide conference on
"Lagal P,rapectlves: The Chang)ng
Relatlo.ls.••p Between. the Student and
the Un&amp;wr•• ty."
The day-hnq event, held at Amherst,

Heavy air '
The air In the Capen m.eetlng rOO&lt;n
was heavy with expectation as the
meeting
convened.
The
usually
sparsely-attended session was visited
by so many students looking lor
fireworks that extra chairs hed to be"
sent for.
Jay Rosen, who wrote the " Last
Days" - like Spectrum piece on Ketter's
"dwindling support" was there with a
photographer and a reporter. "The
student government" led by Rich Moll,
bounced In late. (They had been up all

~ s~~";;. ~u,!:Y ~~e ~~:;•e~u~:~

Affaire Officers, the UIB Division of
Student Affairs and Its Student
Development Office.
Burgum noted that "students had no
rights at all" until the late 1950s and

;::~:~ · 0~o~~~~ge o;~% ~~=! R~:~~~~. t~

they haCl arrived at a decision, It· was not
aired) . Mrs. Robert L. Ketter was there,
too.

=~~heywh: ;Jl~~,Jec:;.oa~~

ad~~rg.::i:om,;m~~1 ~d a~~~s~~ew~r~

•pnX:eclural" pl"lltectlons before recelv-

~~~~c~V~:::Jo:::'~?~p:gh.~'

·=:

:·.certain
According to Burgum , students first ·

=~ut~!~ tl:rn~~~dw~~t~h=~

noticed that racial mlnO&lt;Itles were
having "some successn -t n going to
court to fight for equal educational
opp()(1unltlea.
With 80&lt;ne Irony, though, Burgum

:J.~

::::

~~~ ;g~~o:,':~~.,':~P. f~~

attorney explained that the 1964 Civil

~':. :;.~ ri~s ':i"f~~~~ti~~:::S t~

same law In the convoverslal Bakke
cue decls.lon Is being used to their
detriment.

"Panclon'aaox
ln.. hie opinion,

Burgum said, the
consumer movement on campuses

. ~~JI~~ ~";. ~~~~~~tl~~ opened a
Burgum said the contract theory of
conaumariem - In which the student Is
"'-"' 8ll a con8umer pay)ng for a

=~~j; '.:,~~tr..,a,:'',~u~';.'~

so much a contract as a partnership."
An unfulfllllng educational experience
can depend on a1number of variables,
Including the atuctenl himself, Burgum

Mrs. Phyllis Kelly, M. Robert Koren,
William C. Baird, who Is the Council
chairman emerllus, and Dr. George L.
Collins, Jr.
What the expectant group heard was
rather routine Council business: a
report on his division by VIce President
for Student Affairs Richard A.
Slggelkow, approval of a re9uest froni
Engineering for authority to ll'"esent an
annual dean's medal', and short reports
on budget and pending legislation by
President Ketter.
· The Slggelkow rep()(1
Slggelkow In a wide-ranging overview ·
painted his division as: eager to help
students, Innovative, dedicated , but
short-staffed.
· "We're a caring component ,"·Siggelkow Indicated .
He ticked off divisional accomplishments, unit by unit:
•Placement not onlY. helps get
potential
students together w1th
employers but also runs sessions
grooming tliem on how to write
resumes, how to conduct themselves
during Interviews, etc.
·

m~;;~~dri~lg~f.':'rEial~~u~~o~~am~"!;

responsible for ·~urnlng around"
formerly hostile relaUOQShlps between
town and gown In the vicin ity of the
Main Street Campus.
• •The Financial Aid Office provided
some $17 million In assistance to about
10,000 students this year; and .11 met

~·attorney

predicted that laws
deming with negligence and fraud will
fllcely . be more troubi88()(M8 fO&lt;
educ8tlonal Institutions alnce In
negligence cases, the conaumeratudenl c:an· sue the Individual
M a s well as the Institution.

1
::l:'l'o~~Jonw~ ~~'J:
· with aoceaalblllty of campus facilities
to the handicapped, Burgum wamecj.
that such legislation must be adhered
to In an affordable manner or colleges
"will collapse under the regulations and
suffer, Including the

~ff~;:l~lfn~~~t ~o"a:r~~~~~~e!~~9e~~~
~~~f:r fo~~h~s ~~Fn~~ed

0

==-'.'!.

c.._.. 'llothlno-·~

Ia ''ilothlng new" to

:::!/:w
c:":t:·co~:=. ~~~
:::,~!theaameokl thing under a
Hollender, dnctor of the Lew and
SocMI Sclelloe program In the Survey
~ Cel!l8r at IJ IB addressed a
WOIIcallop 011 •eonauintriam In Higher
Edueatlon: Truth In Ad..U.Ing."
Author of the , _ book, Legal
Handbook ftx . Educators, Hollanaer
aalcl alate and .federal atatutes now
J11C1UIAI "full dl~ra" In such areas
• 8Cademlc programs, tuition refund
policy, and names ofteachlng faculty.
Laws mandating full disclosure ~
created to ~ the hlgtt rate of
Clllf8ulted atudent loans. ahe said· ihe
prwnt• belna tMI If potential atUdents
- . - euch Information while ln-tlgatlng ¥Moue oollegea, they will be more
tlllillr to ..., 01108 th8Y ara IICCepted
and mora lltceiY to pay off their loans. In
addHion to thl1 lnformatlcin, profeeelonll ICIIools -at llao supply tecta
t and aatary ranges
for
.
8ltOtMy w...-.cl that admlaalona'
Cl1taria- Ill 1.-t a they ap.,_ In
COllege ~ - must eccurately
..rtiDl poiiCHa of the lnatllutlon, or

~

lllulllnt8 _, tlllelegalectlon.
~

- m e r · laaue which
lhoulcl be of concern to administrators
11 ~~~aSof admlaalons testing.
The
Court will
Clloldla
-tills summer which likely
·tiiiU ' - Ill effect on how and when
·-~-..y··-•. CGI.2

au..-.

by President
•Student Affairs also brings In money
to the University - the division holds
outside grants for a ·peer assistance
program for foreign students, for Its

=~-.:'~~nPorsi~:,V~~!~~rB~~n~~~~~';"~

.

:~~~~· ~~~gel~~.:':. ~~.; h~~~~na~

Opportunity Program In terms of its·
participants' ·ultimate success In
cOllege work.
·
•Every component of the division has
something to re.commend 1t, he ~l d .
Still, he lndlc;ated, "we - ~~ ,the

~~~~~~~~~·~t!:ca~~il~j

people who care about their Jobs and
· care about each other. They help one
another to help students ."
,

, don't ll~a a coup'
•
•
Voicing displeasure with the fact t!lat
Law School placement had been taken
out from under his purview. Slggelkow
said "the move was a result of a coup"
hatched by the former law dean and a
former . vice president for academic
affairs.
·

ac::..:~~.~~~h,y~~r;~~.'~g:~~~:t~~~i

me, get me openly."

~~~n:=~ ;..;thou! debete.

the proposal fO&lt; a Dean's Medal In
Engl.-tng which Ia "to recognize
persona who have made significant
conlrlbutlona to the £nglneerlng
prof-ion ." The award will be the
hlllheat honor the Engineering Faculty
will grant.
lt Is to be awarded annually,

~:.f-=~~ ln ~~~~~~=1n~f ,:'r:fe~ ff­
1

1

:::~inp,ih~:l~~r.~~~~••an~~=

recipient will be selected Qnlhe basis of
one or more criteria, Including, but not
limited to: (1 I demonstrated leadership

In the Engineering profession; (2)
outstanding community service; (3)
development ot.a algnlflcant Invention;
pr (4) recognized achievement In
educatlon,lndustcy, business, etc.
Recipients will be selected by a
committee of three to five persons
appointed by the Dean of Engineering.
Engineering faculty and alumni and
technical engineering societies will be
represented .

Th~~:l~:-nrt're~er reported. that he has

no official word on what either State
University or the Division of the Budget
will
support for Ul B In
the
supplemental budget (UIB's supplemental budget shopping list was

r~r~~~~~ ~~eha~ ~ ~ol~~~~e!~~:
8

8

that chances are very good that some
$20 million In new construction will be
. underway before the end of the
. summer. No decision has been made on
precisely which buildings, though .
Candidates for construction Include a
large classroom building to be situated
between Capen and O'Brian , another
engineering unit, the first phase of the
Field House facility, and a Music
Chamber Hall .
· ·
The President Indicated the University is continuing to seek approval of
some $2.5 million In funds for hospital
teaching personnel necessary for the
new County Hospital. These funds were
initially requested on the assumption
.that Buffalo General would lease the
fae!lity (the personnel Involved are
presently paid by the County, and the

~7:~\:rf:slng~~~~~;,o~ll~~~t .!W~

the General has not been agreed on,
Ketter said lhe request for funds Is still

~"eci~e.S~gt ~h~~~s!ht~e ~~'faci\:~:'i~

the General , Ketter said , a whole new
round of •alks will have to be held with
Executive Regan on the future status of
University- County hospital relations .

re:ueci~~nt s~~tu~~s ~~wpe~grne;r,~,~~:~
0

:~rh~ u~\~!~~~r:~.~wrc~ f~~~~a~~ ~~:~

the SUNY Research Foundation and
the U I B Foundalion now seem likely to
be excluded from the bill's provisions, ·
he reported .
Will he do as the Spectrum wlahes?
Will Ketter take the Spectrum's
a\lvlce anf! resign, the Courier's Armao
asked him at the meeting .
.
"No," he said, " sorry to disappoint
them."
Maybe the anti-Keller people have
played their hand too fast , one
source said Tuesday..
At deadline, a Buffalo Evening News
editorial called upon the Council to
change Its stand . ·and review the
situation.

~

Workshop
series opens
tomorrow
The first of six Professional Staff
Senate (PSS) worf&lt;shops geared to
Increase knowledge and skills of U I ~·s
professional ataffera Will ' be held
tomorrow.
·.
The first workshop Is open to the
entire University community and will
focus on administrative liability. The
1

~~~~~mB:~~u~~~~ . '~tt~n~a~~.'~:

limited to approximately 100.
. Dr. Ronald Stein , assistant to
• President Ketter, will lecture on the
State's Public Officers Law; Dr. Patricia
Hollander, director of the Law and
Social Science Program In 'the Survey
Research Center, wlll discuss personal

~~t~on,0f an~Pci~.yeefho~~

hiJ::J

Santoro will speak on liability as II
relates to hiring practices. santoro
represents SUNY In !lie area of State
and federal civil rights legislation.
The three lectures will be followed by
seminars on each of the topics.
According to Nell M. Goeri, budget
control officer and coordinator of the

~o::~.o~s t~l~e·f~~~~r~g.r:~·~~g"p~"s

report which suggested approaches
towards solutions of problems Identified by an earlier University Self-Study.
The report ·suggested that workshops
be instituted to reduce the "tunnel
vision " of the University's " technically
competent" personnel, and to Instill a
"deeper sense of responsibility and
purpose" by exposure to other "areas of
operation" at UIB .
II was also recommended that
···stagnation be avoided" by rotating
positions. within the Un iversity, by

;~~:~n~~~ · ~~dcr~~~~ni!.J gp~6'~~gn~fy
for staffers to broaden Interests relative
to Individual career Initiatives.
Thi~ year,. the PSS has been actively
0

~~o"~~e~~a~~~~~i~~ru~~~ne c".!rr!~r~~~

the
group
Is · Investigating
the
possibility of Instituting Internships for
professional staff members in various
departments wllhln the University, and
has also been attempting to up~Jate job
descriptions and Indexes to be useil as
tools for career development by staft.
Members of the PSS H\.man
Resources and Development Committee responsible for coordinating the
sQries of six workshops are: Patrick
Young , chairman; Carole Hennessy,
Eugene Martell, Barbara Mierzwa,
Margaret Nevin , Carole Smith Petro,
Thomas Robinson, and Clifford Wilson .
McGOVERN COMING ·Senator Qaorga McGovern will apeak st
1

~~BFm~r::YR::: • ~~::a!i~ .fi";r.!~

McGo-n'a &amp;PJINrBflce Ia sponsored
by the Spaakwa' Bureau of the
lfnclergreduate Student Aaaoclatlon_

•Senate
(from page1 , cot 4)

thanked the Presldenf for addressing -

· :r~~~~:. w~~ vr~~~e~s ~~7~~9o~':

men!" of Kette~s "methods" for solving .
them .
.
.
Milligan then proposed a r~lutlon
• which: 1) asked J&lt;etter IQ. :·ePill.· out,
policies" for resolving the problems he
earlier enumerated ; 2) lent strong
Senate support to the President in
0

~:~~~~~~g s~~ ~~~ ~n";!~~·s ~!ad~~:"~~

counsel " on the problems and to "weigh
its opinion ."
.
Some SenatO&lt;s felt
that
the
resolution encouraged collegiality but
were concerned about Its liming.
Others I ell in-depth discussion of major
University problems Is best handled vja
the Senate's Executive Commltiee
Which meets regularly with Ketter.
Items discussed at these meetings are
funneled down to Senators by way of
the committee's minutes.
F- questions are- ralaad ·
One Senator reminded the group that
Ketter addreslies each meeting of the
Senate yet surprisingly few questions

~:s,":t ra~:" :J~r~~g ;nhatoth~~

regarding any action . , the matter. In
the event this does occur, Reletlert said
the group would then consider the
issue.
The Senate heard the first reading of
the proposed prospectus for the

~::eg::: lrvc'!'.?~pl~be~g, ?.:!:~~!~:

doe~ent"

fori! .

an\1 urged Senate support

No radical changes
Reichert, who chaired the Senate's
Colleges Committee, said that the
revised document does not propose any
radical changes. One major substantive
change, however, · is that representatives of the College Council will no
longer have a vote In determining
chartering or rechartering of colleges
but will full{ participate In all
discussions o charierlnQ and can
forward any recommendations to the
President's office.
Another point which Reichert said
may be considered more "political" In
nature is that the College Council has
the right to reject a nomination to the
College Chartering Committee for
caus(\. This has been the - standard
operating procedure in the past.

University Issues.
Fa~~7t"; ~~':.'tech~esno"~in~~=l :~:
The Milligan resolution was defeated. - • chairman of the Chartering Committee
A student representative then asked
with the concurrence of the College
Senate &lt;:hairman Jonathan Reichert
.Council and only two colleges will be
what the Senate Intends to do about the
reviewed each academic year.
recent allegations concerning Ketter...-·
. The Senators also heard tha" ·nrst
Reichert responded that, to his
readlnQ of the proposed Senate bylaw"s. 0
For mformatlon
regarding'- maj or
revisions see the March 9 Reporter.

~~g~~·.h~ E~~~~s d;,"~':n,;fre

i

�April 20, 1t71

First

ladies
Carl Sferrazza
is 'obsessed'
by them

"

carl Sferrazza has this ;'terrific
obsession. " That's what Allee Roosevelt Longworth told him lt.ls (he calls
her up from time to time, he says).
carl is "wacky" over U.S. first ladles,
has been since he was nine. Jllow 18 anq
a freshman history major here, he e;&gt;ts,
sleeps, and_dreams first ladles, collects
their le!Jers and autographs, makes
statues of them, corresponds with the
surviving ones, and recently staged a ·
seven-course -dinner In Wilkeson
featuring · favorite - recipes from the
' White House (for which he did most of
the cooking) .
•
Last week, when Betty Ford turned
herself In for "overmedlcatlon," Sferrazza called thYJl&lt;l hq_spltals In Southern
california to trnd· out what was going·

on .

-

He thinks nothing about chasing
down Jackie Onassls on the streets of

~a,::~d~ B~sgf:U~~ ~~!f~1x~~
~::'de~I~~~~~~.;;,r~sEis':."n~o':..a:r. corres-

Ba~~fJe~ ,rv~~ ~c~Tt~~~~~!~u~~~~c~r·~

on "every FBI list In the country."

A Firat Uody Focus
carl is Interested In the social history

~~n: ~-;.;;.!n,t~f.'~:~~~c!oc~~ t~~

the first ladles "because they're a very,
very Important part of history, never or
ve'{; ;~~~ .!~:t"r~P by anybody."
Who would.you like to know about?
•Dolly Madison? When the British
burned the Wbite House In 1812, cart
says, Dolly (a particular favorite of his)
did the nation the service of rescuing
historical artifacts· before she lied .
•Edith Wilson?
She ran
the
presidency when her husband was Ill,
was really our first woman president, he
contends.
•Frances Cleveland, White House
bride? "The Baby Ruth candy ber was
named after her daughter, Ruth.
Everybody was so happy and joyous
when President Cleveland's daughter
was born In the White House, that It
g::ompted the Curtiss Candy Co. to

1

1

~e~~ t~~~o~~~n:~~~ti:Odedly

~~:~:\o~he fo~ep~l"'r,':,.~~~de~~~

Republican bosses ·and leedars. He
wanted to be chief' justice but she
wanted 1o be first lady. She originated
the Cherry Blossom Festival.

Sfenuu: he hu 70 .utu• at ho"*.

she had a major role, &lt;but she was
accused of being a Confederate spy.
Lincoln's alleg iance was questioned.
Mrs. Truman was a close advisor before
he dropped The Bomb. ~ sldent
Hayes, I think, summed It up best. He
said, 'Mrs. Hayes may not have much
influence over the Congress, but she
certainly has a lot of Influence over.
me.'"
cart 's collection of letters and
autographs and other FL memorabilia
dates back to Dolly Madison . He hangs
out. at auctions and hounds other

schools and organizations In New York,most recently to the DAR . He's
a•ailable to speak In Buffalo, but
nobody has asked him.
Not one to spare any pains when It
comes to his favorite subject, cart
might even be willing to cater a meal to
go along with his talk.
Not long ago "e had all of his floor in
Wilkeson Involved in a seven course
"dinner with Abigail Fillmore." Well,
she wasn 't really there but a giant
picture of her was. "She wes bne of our
founders ," cart reminds those who

more. He has a Christmas card from
Julie Grant dating to the Civil War. Mrs.
Madison's sfgnature Is on a letter wi th
Sarah Polk, both signed in 1846.

to ~et her to talk about the Fillmore
White House. Not so, Carl says. Abigail
was a dandy . She taught . MF to read,
doted on Thackery and Hawthorne and
had Jenny Lind to the White House. ,
Poor w oman attended Franklin Pierce's
inauguration in a- spring frock , caught ·
chill and died. She never made It back
to Buffalo.
She would have been · floored by the
dinner cart and his Wilkeson gang had
for her 180th birthday. Using White House cookbooks his mother gave him
(and then refused to fix any meals out
of) , Carl whipped up a menu consisting
of Grace COolidge's pineapple salad
from the 1920s; Caroline Harrison's
sausage rolls; Jackie's potatoes
suzette; Warren Harding's filet of beef,
served with Richard Nixon's mushroom
sauce (Watergate and Tea Pot Dome In

;r~~;or~n f~~ p~~~C:O~~~h so~ee~~~g

70atatuea
Driven , Carl has created hIs own array
of 70 statues of all the presidents and
their wives. Over the years, his
sculpting style has progressed from
cartoon ish to realistic. " I'm continually
making them over and over," he notes.
This collection of four-Inch high .
figures was enough to get -him Into
People magazine (last August 30) and
also landed him on a daytime talk show
In New York where fellow guest .Kitty
carlisle accidently snapped off l he
head of Ida McKinley.
He copies facial features and clothes
for the figurines from official White
House and Library of Congress photos
and his works have been shown in
Federal Hallin New York City.
Carl also uses the statues and his

~ee~;~~~~aa~~:";~~~~~~f r..'3t~:. ~;.~

~~!~-~~~a~f:~~~~ld~V~.A;~~h~a~.::J '

:~::,=~;dl~1i:b~:ll .~~g:'.,';s~tu:J~

Kennedy's chocolate mousse; Grant's
Baked Ala~ka.

FDr~:c"lrrst

course was a Franklin

I

Roosewlt soup "that was II8MOd to

}~~~~~R~es.\?So '/!r ~ug~r=.,la~

(Debbie Kaufman, Maureen Bull, - Fran
Wolf, Leo Auclllclno) sat up a soup line
and dished out this ·~omato--pe&amp;
mongol"_ concoction along with two
popovers, as people entered the dining

room.

Sferrazza. would· like to parlay -his
interests In the first ladles Into
commercial gain . He'd like someday to

~~v~_lo~;JS;fl.~ t~~l ~,:::,.:~e~~&lt;&gt;:;

immediately as a production assistant
of some kind on Ed Frlendly's·
upcoming NBC mini-series based on
" Back Stairs at the White House,"
which was written by a woman whosa
mother and herself ware maida Ill the
executlva mansion: "I'm Jealous. t'Ciltke
to have a p\ut In It," Cart laments. He
and his father have more possibilities In
mind which he prefers not to mention.
How &lt;;lo people react to a kid who

s=

~~s v~~;;;r.r,ed ~~e~L~r'~~

Hayes, who casually calls the eccentric
Allee Roosewlt Longworth to pick up
some first-hand lore about her father,
Theodore Roosevelt?
"I think all of Wilkeson Is fed up to
here with hlstocy and me," Cart admits.
Some people in the dorm think he's
"bizarre" but say it In "a nice way."
His mother Is a trifle more

r~~~e"!'~-~"='f.~g~~hlt~ =.u:~~~~

"They're all dead. Nobody cares."
"But what about Mrs. Ela.lhower
and Mrs: Truman?," Cart protests.
"Well, they'l&gt;l almost there," Morn
replies.

Jeckle
•Jaqueline Kennedy? This woman,
Carl glows, was one of the most
Important ligures In the 20th .cantury
because "she started a whole
movement of art and culture and
awarenass of American HlstOI}'." He
credits her with the National fodowment for the Arts and Is 'distressed that
people badmouth her because she
ref.used to become a living shrine to her
late husband. Is Jackie really the type
who would usa judo on people w~o

bo~~~e:J. ~~~~·~i~MS,U,hattan,

she was surrounded by a crowd. He
pushed right toward her. "Mrs.
Onassls," he began, "I have every firs.t
lady's llutograph from the 20th cantury ·except yours and Mrs. McKinley's." She
took her big sunglasses off, turned to
him with "this Impish little grin" and
said , "Well you're neWJr going to get
Ida's so I'll give you mine right now."
How about Lady Bird J? C8r1 credits
her with being first In beautification,
first In environmental concerns, if not
always first in the heart of LBJ . [Among
Blrd's favorite FLs was Eleanor
Roosevelt, she wrote...Carl].
·
Rosalyn Carter? "She wrote a letter to
The New Yorlc Times and that was about
it."

Not- Stelnem lmowa .
cart feels the role of first lady Is too
too easux
. often . un~estlmated,
dismissed, en by feminists :. " I don t
think Glori - Steln&amp;m knows the role
Ablaali Adams had In the Alleo and
Sed1tion Acts. Or the role thl!t Mrs.
Lincoln had In the Civil War. Not that

Women's
softball bows

--

Women's softball made Ita debut aa a varsity aport lest Wecln-ay
eo the U/8 Royato clobbered Niagara County CC In both enclo of a
doubleheader on the Acheson field. liz Cousino Ia the Royeto'

coach .

�April20, 1171

Clinic aids
t.hose who have
:t rouble learning

Violence
Capitalism breeds it,
on the streets and in the prisons,
radical criminologists say at Marxist Lecture
a.:.u.. of
profit,

on

Ita overriding emphasis
cepttallam thrives on

Ollllf.alon and generates acts of
vfolence Ulllikely In aocletles.with more

hunwle eoclal anangements.
~ Pinkney, pmtassor of sociology at Hunter College, 'brought this
view to a Manda! Worlalhop Lecture on

cam~w!P"~

at the podium by a
~ ...OCIII criminologist, Herman
Sdlw.tdln'f:at 81S0Ciate profesaor of ·
::,1o1~:
e Unlverally College at
Sch-.dlnller noted that a scary,
punitive tnlriCI In crime control Is
~ng atnangth In tha U.S. Shifts In
power relations within prisons are the

:=at=~~-ft:~:~::;~lb'i.':~rs~

there,heeaid.

VlolenDe 110 -.nation
VIol- lri the U.S. Ia no aberration,

Pinkney contended: "The United States
Ia ., unusually violent society . ... "Such··
behavior hu characterized this society
both d-ucally lind In Its relations
with other countrlee throughout Its
:::.::.

tiie"=ll~~~~.!:er~

~lt."

.

He dl..,uted 0011lentlona by Robert
Anini)' and Konrad Lorenz that human
beings .,. lnatlnctlvely vlolilnt. If ·that
theoiY had any validity, he said, It
would be tmpoaalble to explain the
extatence·of nonviolent eocletlea. And
auch eocletles do exist.
r

No,

Pln~~ded, ''whether a

g:p=vl~·= d=•:Jf~
they live. It ~ upon eoclal

cuatoma and

m&lt;miS, In the same
pref1irenoe I~ certain foods
,.ty... ol clreM, atandarda
of "-lty 11M 0ount1ese ottier behavior

menner u

ower othera,

:::..e::.'=a.by~~n~nr?_So~ -

expta.lne violent ~vlor by examining
the eoclal ·structure rather than the

!~~~:S ~{~'\1 e~d ~~!:\'~ s~~i

vlolentle against blatk people, racism
heel achieved a functional autonomy of
Its own and has served to maintain the
positions of economic dominance of
the ruling class. Lynchings and
conventional race riots occurred on a
wide scale and were tolerated because .
they confused class Interests · by
dividing the worl&lt;lng class, provided
cheap [abor, and psychological ,outlets
for white worker frustrations, thereby
relnfolclng the class structure."
:
Pinkney said racism Is more likely to
. take root · "In a society that breeds
Individualism and competition , than In
one In which communalism and
cooperation are the norm. Studies
suggest that ;taclsm is In the economic
Interests of capitalists and other rich
whites and egalnst the economiC
Interests of .poo_r whites and white
workers. In non-economic ways, racism
helps to legitimize Inequality, alienation and powerlessness - legitimization 'that Is necessary for the stability of
the caol!oJist system as ~ a whole.'
Because of racism poor white)!
Jrequentiy blame their plight on blacks
rather !han on the capitalist system.
They believe their poverty Is a function
of blacks taking away their jobs through
affirmative action programs. Racism
suooeeds In transferring white frustra·uons away from capitalism onto black
people."
No c:Nnce for change
Can patterns of violence In the U.S.
be reversed? " Given the understandable
antipathy of the ruling class for reform
In basic Institutions upon which
~~:::::rk'!:t~.&lt;:~~t~·e~h.:'al'J'"wer Is that
Data on cnnie Jn Cuba are Instructive,
Pinkney said . " Here we have a society
organized on the principles cit socialIsm, a form of soclal.o(ganlzallon that
Is the opposite of capitalism. Between
1959 and 1968 the overall cri me rate was
cut In half - lroni some 200,000 to

1

~~~~~9sog&lt;:o ~~~~~~~~~~ortl:'! ~~:

geMS."

A new clinic has been OP8fled by the
Department of Occupational Therapy to
screen and coordinate treatment of
~fs"a'l,~~:r~:. with , sus·pected learning

penal system have come to be equated
with efficiency.
In this view, rehabilitation programs
are thought to "waste State funds."
Social reforms "are considered worthless because they do not deter crime."
TheOrizing about root causes Is seen as
~waste of time.
Schwendlnger said such claims and
policy conclusions are composed of '
half-truths, stereotypes, and reactlo~­
ary principles. Representatives of ttie
punitive position, he characterized as
'crackpot realists ." They "Insist that
their policies are realistic and prudent
even though their theories are wrong .
and their policies bound to fall."
The So-called neo-ldeallst or "rehabilItative" view of prisons misses the
marl&lt;, too, Schwendlnger contended. It
Is necessary, he said, "to distinguish

:· ~

r.o.. ~--~·=--g

=
·E
lndWa

....,.lana

111
.... UniMd
- · for
CMtlle,
for
llf
1an1larlea: lncllld, for the

Aasaealnatlons used
But, Schwendinqer noted, " prisoners'
unions and espec1ally union militants
face problems that are equivalent to the
worst forms of repression faced .by
labor militants P,rlor to the post-World
War II period. ' To destroy militant
prisoner orgarilzatlons , "every legal and
Illegal means possible becomes part of
the repertoire of administrators and
guards, " Jncluding the use of Informers,

~ . . . . . . lhey-lound.
..._. . . . . ~ . . wwlll

0

::~a=

-

•

. . . . . . tD !Nrii. In

tlrMS
llld -'utfon . _ char8cter._efforts .. • And rlglltly 10, In

llll'ltlllvlew.

,...,.., ciOOII
___,Ibb'illllediecl on r.:lam In

.. u.s.:..._., MttWI -aerfy eeiZiid

dllfet•- •

011 lliGIII
a rnMne of
....,111111 tile opprualon of Afro-

dactn:lonT~=~~ul:.~er';'t'::;! '

.

"store."

_____

~~.:..~~1. of

the Erie County
dalagatlon In the State Legislature told
the News the proposal should .provide
an Impetus to complete the longdelayed U /8 Amherst Campus .
A report that Kruplak was here
Monday to dlecuaa plana withUnl,...ity and other -ofllclala proved to
be false. Meetings were being held '-ln
Albany, theRoporterlewned.
Krupsak reportedly flrst broached the
matter here a month ago during
meetings with Katter and James L.
LaRocca, State energy' director and
chairman of the ERDA.
.-

81

;·~r~~~i~~ :io~e;J1,:1,~"; a Jel'~r~l~~~

lion of whether or not they are learning
disabled," Schanzenbacherexplalns.
Three therapists at the I?Jitchard Hall
clinic at Main Street wof1&lt; with the
child, .parents and teachers to establish
continuity of treatment and the
all-important feedback . The therapist
sees Uie child about one hour weekly.
Individualized homework Is done by
the child under the parents' StJpervision . It may be In the form of a
traditional take-home assignment or
disguised as a game which the child
may enjoy more. Learning to tie a shoe,
for instance, will ttecome a game w1th ·
the child rece"lvlng a specific number ol.
"chips" for doing It correctly. The chips
may be used on subsequent visits to
purchase toys on sale In the clinic

0

(tram poll!' 1, col. S)

court failed to SUbstitute Cejudgement
for thOle ol academiC' axperta. Despite
.what wa fW)Ortlld by some journalists,
Hollender uld the dactalon rutflrma
that due process Is required before an
academic dlamlaaal can legally take
pi-, and that dleclpllnery ICIIon
cannot be decided upon In an arbitrary
orcaprlclouaman-.
.
Hollander wamlid that admlntatretora · ·
can be held peqonelly liable for
dliprlvl"ll atudenta of their -cof1slltutfonal·rlghte, If the 8dmlnlatratora knew .

f~~~:W~n al~ aso~!u 1 1ea~~ln rep:,t~~

lions," says the occupational t~eraplst.
The longer the child's difficulty Is
unrecognized or untreated , the more
likely he or she is to lose Interest In
education and eventually "drop out."
When these children are Identified
by teachers, parents or other adults and

~~~~~~'::r~hlp~ /;!~ng;, ~~~~?;!:

·• Energy.center

Horowltz-

" Some of these youngsters may
develop psychological or behavioral

LegltlmatYng the unions will go further
toward the realization of rights "than
any technocratic fantasy about rules of
equity and procedures Instituted by
legislative agencies and prison authorili!!l'alone."

~
-~ ...,-.~
'==

Other trOubles may result

~~~al rl a~~~.9,1esSc~':!en~'l'rf~:~en_::p;

=:Oo!"~.~~~~~':.~er r;,~~!

-...&amp; .
OJ&amp;:z!!:t!l.

have some degree of disability in
language or mathematics skills, though
usually not to the extent they cannot
learn to read, write, count or spell.
When a child's Inability to function
adequately In .any of these or other
skills is _noted, special help Is required .

p~nclple or rehabllita~n which has
been developed by bourgeois professionals and reformers • ... Ideological
struggles for prison reform should ,
adopt the vocabulary of citizens' riphts
~:~.:mr::~~~~r_'!.therthan tha'_o the
Prisoners' unions 11nd political
organizations "should be recognized as

•Student-university relations_ •

=--::-uo:...~·

~~~~:a~~h~~v:x~t'=.'~aodi,s~~~~~r.;

1Peh~~!n~\Pie ~~~~d~:~dual ";d ~~~~ec\1~

A competition-for profits (l.e.,_greed)
more homicides In Philadelphia (popuIs, In large part, . responsible for
lation less than 2,000,000) In 1970 than
tions, etc .• etc.
viol- In the United States, he
In Cuba (population 8,000,000) . AQd , of
0011tended . ""The profit motive and the
"To curb criminal violence and
course, there has been an even greater
-.lion of pilvate property have
support left-wing political movements
decline In other crimes In Cuba."
created a natiOn ol citizens at war with
In prison ," Schwendinger said , " it Is
The difference between the U.S. and
-=t1 other, and not Infrequently a
Important to secure, by public pressure
Cuba was summed up well by Teofllo
country at war with much of the world ."
Stevenson, the Cuban heavyweight · and legislative enactment , certain
Acta of violence . . not peculiar to
proletarian r~hts , such as the right to
·boxer, Plnk.oey feels: ''When American
Cllllflallat eoclatles, he granted, " but
promoters offered him one million
c.pltatiiiiTI u a system lilakes use of
. ~~~~~~e ~~n fr.:r;li:~~t~'Vr~~~rrr~;
doltara to turo professional , he refused,
enil relnfon:es various forms of
activities and to join poiiYical parties, to
answering, 'What Is one million U.S.
DPPfM8lon, Including alienation, raestrike and to bargain collectively, etc.
dollars compared to the love of eight
lam, aexlam, ln,quatttx and Imperial- , million Cubar)s?'"
These rJ.ghts are not only Important for
lam, to name but a few.
_
l.helr own sakes, but are also vital
Ia punishment elticlent?
GIVWI this opsneatve nature, he said,
~~~~~d~~~~~~ f~a~~h?6e s~~~~~r~~ ~l
Schwendlnger pointed out that the
"nwty of the ICIS of viol- In . the
llylng In prisons."
•
punitive policies within the American
United States, ~ trllglc, rep&lt;&amp;'*':'~lonll
rwpo~~.a
to life
In thta
•••• T. . c:rlrMS -of
........;.....;:._
violence, for exaraple. The FBI
-*dlnl the ~to beiJIUrder,
or
sllould
have known that constitution(lrom"- 2 . c.ol. 1) -.
.., \ tl
forcible ....
and IIIIQravated
! allssues were involved in•a vep case.
ecllools carl , uee 10 testa, • Hblialfder
- " · Moat of
crimes . .
, If, ~owever, i' stpd,Mt "t;~i&lt;l\~~~~-~if~~~­
1
proof of Injury, then doll•
awarded for damages will ba nominal.
~tf*~ln.J:'Unltecl admtulona criteria.
As aresult of andther court decision,
8Wiel, 8nd ! ' - Who -are Ulllble to
In general, 11ollander Indicated that
Hollander lndicaieil, a confidential relabecaulie of tha touchy Issue of
WOIIt ___.ly forced to
tionship between a- student and a
- ' tD . . . . . . - . . . . robbery
academic freedom , the courts do not
professional. can. be broken II the
-....11 1ft order to
like to Intervene In educatlonlil matters
professional in question believes that
800111.-.l..vlelllthat
and }Inlier that such deelslons be left to
an " Imminent and believable danger to
.......... 11lat Ia, the
qualified academics. She cited a
an Identifiable P!'t'SOn" exists.
"quality ot teaching cue• -at the
The confereni:e also heard presenta::" 0
University of Bridgeport where a
tions on the Bakke Case and other
~INI!IIIIIIetothem," Pinkney
student flied suit because a faculty
current Issues.
member was thought to be a. poor
teacher who gave no teste and held no
clua dlecuaalona, Upon counterw.y the few
evidence from other students, the
1*1
-the
litigant loat the cue.

-

"The child with a normaii.O. who has
developmental problems which lnterferew.l th his or her ability to understand
or use language or mathematics skills
often falls through the cracks In the
educational system ," says Karen
. Schanzenbacher, assistant professor
and clinic director.
''While special education programs ·
exist for children with obvious
disabilities - such as mental retardation, blindness, deafness or other
physical handicaps - the learnlngdl!labled child may go unr~ognlzed
and untreated," she adds.
A child .whose ~xpected achievement
based on 1.0. tests differs by 50 per
cent from actual achievement Is

Compatible with other efforts
Efforts of the Department of Learning
Disabilities In the BuUalo school
system and classes directed toward
these children In the suburbs are
compatible with the efforts _of the clinic,
Schanzenbacher says .
" As occupational therapists, we're
more Interested in looking at the child's
level of skills and developing ways 1o
strengthen measurable weakness in
these areas ," she indicates. The teacher
who works with youngsters with
lea&lt;nlng disabilities Is more ~eared to

-~~~Ufu't t!fo~~:,~~l&gt;~a~~ e~JI~~~
1

8

an occupational therapist , but one
person can't possibly handle all -of
those within the sys\em who need the
expertise Immediately," she adds.
Schanzenbacher praises the United
Way-funded Association lor Children
With Learning DlsablliUes In Erie
· County as well as one located in
Nlagara.County.'l"he U/B clinic, which opened six
weeks ago, o~es from 1-5 p.m. on
Tuesdays.
Schanzenbacher 'hopes
hours will expand as services t;ecome
more widely known .
Kent "[lgges, chairman of the
Department of Occupational Therapy ,
wants the clinic to eventually operate
on a full-time basis. He notes It Is but
one of several community services
sponsored by the Department In Erie
County and.Western New York.

Greene gets h9nor
William Greene, director . of Urban
Extension,
was recently elected
secretary-treasurer of the Community
Services Division of the National
Uni-slty Extension Association .
Greene was also elected to serve on
the administrative committee of the
Community Development Division and
appointed lts program chairman .

�their children."
Cheryl Kishbaugh, another member
of the Independents and an Operation.
Access trainee, mentioned that frequently parents of disabled children areoverprotective and unln\entlonally act
as an obstacle to their children's social
maturation and professional develop. ment. The Independents would like to
educate parents to avoid thls_danll'!!:.
A aprtngboard for change
The University should be used as a

;;gi~~~~~~~~~~:'::IP:~~~~
~o~~~~~sP~~ t~n~ a,.::~o~~rg .Sfor~

disability Is not synonymous
.. underachievement."
_

with

0

co~:~h

S:,he a In~·==• ~
organ lzatlon, members have now
decided to add a social element to
Increase sisterhood and brotherhood
and contribute to an espfrit de corps. A
social setting also encow-ages members to " exchinge ldeaa sbout how ther,
are dealing with certain problems '
related to their handicaps or otherwise,
add¢ Kishbaugh.
The Independents feel they represent
the entire handicapped population at
the University, but Ryan admits that
only sbout two dozen people attend

:.ee~~hor0~~V:,.eek~~:~~~~:.:=:

apathy takes its toll .
In addition to apathy, though, the
Independents have to contend with ~pie who refuse affiliation for fear of

The Independents

1

lnd~~d~~'l!' 1!1

They're a collection of all kinds of students, '
working to acquaint campus and community
with the rights and needs of the handicapped
By Joyce Buchn-akl
Reporter Staff

There was no obvious d isability, no
wheelchair, walker or other adaptive
equipment being used by the spokeswoman or anywhere In sight.
A well-&lt;::oncealed hearing Impairment, perhaps. That had to be II.
After a few minutes of conversation
and thorough scrutiny of the representative of the Independents, curiosity
overcame worries about tactlessness.
Out came the all too blunt but obvious
question .
No, Nancy Ryan, a third year
occupational therapy major, answered
In no uncertain terms. She Is n.ot
handicapped. But then again , why
should she have to be?
Why, indeed?
Contrary to what some may assume.
the Independents Is not an organization
composed exclusively of disabled
undergraduates solely dedicated to
. r~~~e~w!~~ campus projects to help
While members do function as an
advocacy agency for all the physically
handicapped of the University community, neither age nor dlsatilllty is a
stipulation for memberShip., There is
only one prerequisite: a genuine
Interest In, as Nancy Ryan put · It,
" helping the handicapped become all
they are·capable of being."
...-.
Watchdog function
Within the University, the group sees

l:gJ:fii/:.~~:;,c~l~; !~st:cll."a~~-g1~

federal deadline for build In~
accessl-

~:::::bl~a~~t~l~"j ~~ 1s:ii~~: met. of the

ar:~~e:l~l';l,"l'le ~r'at!,".?t~d=

accesslbiXty" which Is also m~ated
by the legislation . The Independents
feel that mere prog?am accessibility
still leaves them. on the fringes · of
campus life-enabling them to chooSII
any curriculum but stopping short of
Integrating them Into the mainstream .
She contends that only after all campus
buildings are free of architectural
barriers will the disabled be sble to fully
participate In and benefit from the
collegiate experience.
To help prevent the handicapped from
being locked out of the socialization
process, the Independents recently
asked the Undergraduate Student .
Association either to refrain from
scheduling activities In Inaccessible
rooms and buildings or to provide
attendants who could assist the
disabled In getting to them . A small
Initial step but a significant one, Ryan
Indicated .
She emphasized that the Independents are uware that providing
accessibility llln be a monumental and

Setlillad so far
So far the group Is " satisfied" with
efforts of the administration in
attempting to make campus bulldlngs
more accessible.
last week E. W. Doty, vice president
lor finance and management, released a
llst.ol short-range projects that would
make U/B facilities more accessible to
and functional lor the disabled . The·

~a~~ brnth~ d~~:~ti~ra~~':.':~ 'l!h~~

enlightening experience, particularly lpr
individuals unaware of the muscle
control a handicapped person must

::'6d.:;~~':~ts w~f~~ ·r1:f:~~r;'~ed a~~

~:~~_\fke ~~~ o~~ Ina lr:~~~l 8~~~~~~
or open a heavily-weighted door.
Besides crusading for accessible
dorms, shower and lavatory facilities ,
and other " necessary conveniences"
like reachable elevator controls, telephones and fire alarms, the Independents also want to see that maintenance crews are properly educated about
care · of ramps, curb cuts and
hand icapped parking areas .
" A ramp does not make a building
accessible, " Ryan said, If It is covered
with snow, cluttered with debris or Is
slippery. She hopes that adherence to

establlshe&lt;) priorities lor the projects.

~ftr~~trac~;~~~1ttl~n°:hl~e;~mo;:.'~rts

When It C!'mes to accesslbllltr. the
Independents are pragmatists. "We
don't care how It looks as long as It
works, " explained Ryan. II accessibility

~~~a;!~ t~~~kfnu~ai~Y~~~ca~~ ~~n:~~

administration , that's okay, too, as long

as a " good faith effort" Is being made
and the "Job Is well done. "

t!n~~~c~~a~af,c";'h":i~~~~r!~~:~~
8
8 0
~~~~~ti~~rv~n !h~t~ e~ ~~crio~~Ys tg~

w11T

0

~~~e ~:ln~~~,'i,~~~/~':'~,;::;'lla~~~

that building modification or new
apparatus Is really useful. Members
want to be consulted while a project Is
underway, not jugt afterwards. It's

with safety procedures.

waft,~o g~r~~ut~~sRy':::.tsal!ked

lor .
recommenda~ons regarding the ramp
provl ded lor access Into Squire.
Bulldlqg $peclllcatlons for ramps

~uu~~. ?;~ever:~ ~~~de~d w~~er~

~lng

weatherbeaten 7fuffalo, a r'amp Is
constructed from wood. She also
questions the economic rationale of
building a temporary ramp when 'a·
permanent one would. give longer
service and probably coat less In the
long run . The administration would
likely answer that a ~rmanent ramp

~~~~ V:.~~\:~r~~~!J~~ "f~~u~~n~v:tl~~

Health-Sciences. Even so, the Independents would have fewer qualms about

~d~t"~~~~r ~~~u~~;':~lt~~\:~

would like to begin gathering and
disseminating Information about new
legislation and programs affecting the
handicapped to Interested citizens, but
particularly to the disabled themselves
and to the parents of handicapped
children. · Jn addition, they Intend to
make the community aware of which
politicians are sympathetic to the needs

portatlon and to private businesses.
Bill Gant , a member of the
. Independents and an Operation Access
professional staff trainee at U/B, added
that he would like to see the group
establish a speakers' bureau to make
the position of the handicapped better
known. A certain amount of economic
clout can be wielded, too, he
maintained. Members of the lndepen-

on Its design .

Sh~~~-rn"J'e~~~=~Y::e concerned also

about shattering stereotypes about the

~~~~~~~esAngr~s~~~~~~~3t~i:rual~~

Intellectually lmpaireq.
To help explode this myth , promote
better understanding of the handicapped and demonstrate the need lor
accessibility, the Independents cosponsored an "Awareness Day" last

rr:t~c~::~·~u~ .!~~~t!~~o~r~ugrl:il~~~ . :~.:'.:~~~~~sa~=r~ta~~~fa~~c~~~o~;r~

due In part to the
satisfaction they have experienced with
efforts regarding campus accessibility,
the Independents want to expand their
activities Into the community.
- They envision themselves as some.day actlnq as a resource and referral

~~o~~~e ~~~~~~gm:~· toa~~bl'fca~~an~~

~eufi~~~~~~~:~ ~b~~~~~:~

j;;~~d.::l sl?3eu~r!h l~~l!icpia~~.J~~~~

·

eoro':':~t~7u~uu~~~

simply a common sense,. money-saving

disabilities and a film on the sexuality
of the handlca~ped . Adaptive equlp-

dents are confident that as theY become
more visible to the Unlvwa)ty community and as their function and
structure Is better understood, a larger,
dedicated memberShip will emerge.

sentatlves of several handicapped
advocacy agencies were on hand to
answer questions.
later this semester, the ln4ependents would like to sponsor an outdoor
"Wheelchair Obstacle Course" for the
non-handicapped. The course would be
composed of physical barriers faced

to be bestowed from on high.

~~r~n'i:!' g~~r:!~:;~~'r t:'!~e:;.~J~

·

efforts to accommodate handicapped
customer.s and to shun those which
havenot .
·
As a first community-oriented project , the Independents are considering
contactln~ parents of students at St .

~ary~~~C,.~ol ~~ltrhe .?r:':~~:~d~~tem~l

educational opportlmltles

s=

::,Selr =r,;tilon

~~dy~~;.::,~~m~t!'"";: . more
Barely a. ·v...,- old, . the "Yndepen-

avallab~e

to

Ketter named to
state-wide panel
President Robert L. Ketter has been

~rcf.,"~~~dti~~~r~oS.:.~~'!'tf~~= f~::'~

of o~e year, Chief Judge Charles D.
Breltel announced this-· .
The Commission , Breltel eaid, wilt be
Involved in the selecUon .of the next
~~~j~?X~:.Ss~ll future Judges of ~e
The Chief Judge said he Is grateful
lor the wlUlngness of Ketter and three
others to serve and Is "confident of their
ability to contribute with independence
and excellence to a task vital to the
continuance of the Court of Appeals as
one of the great courts of the nation ."
After April 1, ths previous con~tltu- ·
lienal provisions for filling vacancies to

~~?ec~u~h~ =1s:rgnrioh~ng~
constituted promptly, Breltel said, "to
avoid any constitutional gap."
Appointeesl n addlffiin to Ketter are:
Herbert Wechsler, Harlan Fiske Stone
Professor of Constitutional Law,
Columbia Unl-slty School of law;for
a term ollo.u r years .
.
Rosaleen Skehan Tobin, New York
City attorney, for a term C?f three years.
Richard Gelb, chairman of the board
of Bristol Myers Corporation , New York
City, for a term of two yMrll.

Ghanaian visitor

plans 3 speeches

A two-day visit of a GheMlan faculty
member from the Unl-.lty of Cape
Coast has been organized by Dr. Albert
Michaels of the Council for .International Studies, and Dr. St-. Tulkln
of the Departll*lt of Psychology.
The visitor, Dr. Sam Koral Dogbe, will
give a series of three lecturas on
Thursday, Apr11 20, end be available to
meet with students and faculty on
Friday , April 21 .
last year, Dr. Tulkln taught at the
University of Cape Coast"as a Fulbright
Scholar. He and Dogbe _ , coileeges,
and Dogbe's visit here Is aimed at
promotlog further cooperation between
the two universities.
Dogbe's first lecture will be at the
Psychol'?!lical Clinic, 4230 Ridge Lea,
Room C.:31, at 9:00a.m., Thursday, on
"The Concept of Community and

~~n~~..n~~ ~~~rtwllls~t~s11 :~
a.m . In 320 MFACC, Ellicott, on
"Polygamy In West Africa." At 2:30
p.m. , in Spaulding Room 432, he will
talk on "Culture and Education In
Africa." '
Faculty and students Interested In
rneetlng informally with Dr. Dogbe are
Invited to contact the Council for
lnter~atlonal Aflalrs at-636-2075.

�,..

. llpnf 20, 1178

THURSDAY- 20

._,

EIQtiTH- JAMES A. ENOUSH

--

om . . . , _ _ on -

.

lllology. ,., doy.

Shor-.IM&amp;al. Byrese&lt;vation .

COnloct the School of Dentistry for mooe lnfor·

PEDIATRICS RESEARCH SEIIINAR I
-IF-ISignHicanceoiU..Poly-

- . Dr. Owen Remerl. UnMIIsily of Oldlrlloma
SCience Center. Boord Room, Chldten's
-

. 12.-,.

- F O R WESTERN NEW YORK'S •

HKIHEIII!IIIICATORS II
11M o l - - 1 Technology: Mini I Mlcfol ·
-llllogo. Getllcl L O'Giady, di"octor, Educa·
tionol Conwnunlcationa Cenler. U I B. 2nc:l floor
dini&gt;g . . .. Moot HOI. State Unlvereny College
at EltJhto. 2:30p.m.
MFFALO LOGIC COUOOUIUIII

-l.aglool--. s,.-=
PIWIIIACEUllCS-·
-tad
Ex-..g Nuoibor

PMooollk:ol
Slewln Brown. SUNY I B.

8841111dy. 3 p.m.

Buffalo, New._York ·

-~ . , . , . _ oiTocalnldo

" Buffalo, Now York - An Expoaitlon,"latho title ofa five-day
symposium and photographic exhibit which continues
through tomorrow. At 8 p.m. tonight In 167 MFA'CC, Ellicott,

Drup. Allnld T. Elvin , graduate
- C508 COOI&lt;e. 4 p .m. Aelnoshments at

and

-

3 :50.

a dlacuasion titled " The Future of Buffalo .. will be held.

CELL AND IIOI.£Cui.AR BIOLOGY LECTURE'
Egg--II!Ocl&lt;toP"'-y
at
Dr. Herbert Schuol, usoclate

Exhibits in ·167 MFACC. through Friday Include tho Henry

F-..-.

Ruaell Hitchcock coll~on . a photographic HN\t on loan

from tho Albright-Knox Art Gallery; " A Port111it of Buffalo," a

proleuor, -lm*:III&amp;Ciances, U I 8 . 114 Hoch·

series of photos from the C&amp;P

. . .--.----lollyatealr (Amheratl. 4:15p.m. Coffee at 4 p.m.

Doportmonl of
dl Mls·
Shomlon. 4:15

letlng Intercellular CommunlCIItJon, Or. Oanief

CIRCUS'

Goodenough, Department 61 Anatomy, Hatvard
Medical School. G·26 Farbe&lt;. 8 p.m.

Royal Lichtenstein One Quarter Ring SktewaJk
Clrcua. Clowns, performing animais, magicians,
juggfels, minles. 5cJire Foultain SQuln. t 2 noon.
Free. Sponsored by Student Association ActMties.

Tloa- (1873). 146 Oiof..-f. 7 pm.

terence Theatre, Squ;re. Cal636·29 t9 for show

- . . . . Dr. -

0. -

~ end Toxicology, lJnl-.lty

-·

olllippl -

p.m . ~al4 .

Centor. St08.

UUAB NEW GERMAN CINEMA WEEK'
An Amorlcan Friend (Germany, 1977). Con·

~by--.

limes. Students'S! ; otheB $1 .50 .
Dennis Hopper stars in a chase thriller said to
rival"North by Northwest. "

.

UBOAIIDBOAIIDOFDIRECTORS

liEmNOt
Clwtao Aoooll. ~Hoi . 7 p.m.
-CONTIIOL LECTURE•

Tloa

.....,...,no

DRAMA'

Loulo, a play by. t..anford Wilson
about two suburt&gt;an couples. Directed ~ John
Morgan, with a cast of 4.. • Harrinan Theatre
~- 8 p.m. Gene&lt;al admission $3 , students
and senkw"citizens $1 .50.
Sponsored by the Departmen) of Theatre.

.

-~~Tho-~

Wino, ~. uecutive drpctor, The
Anno COntrol - Haas LOunge, Squire.

7:30P.m.

... """"' lnlellgance officer
. . _ opaciollst with eight ~ of miitary .
· ~ c:inh..tyois of the SeMel
mlltory. He hoe a maa!Ka In SovOit aliiOies anc:1
01 currwntly wntlng a PII.D. on the
r-.r.lp oiS&lt;Mot end Amattcon - - pol·
IC:Iao. He 0. 8lolf direflor of the Joint
Ccomtlttoe on Da!enoe Production

. -

China-,. 2nc:l floor lounge, Rk:hmonc:l. 8 anc:1
10 P'.m. Free to .. lAC feepayere; $.50 for otheB.

..-----~
u.s. lndoalr1al baae.
he Mrved a .nor consurtant to

8 p.m. Free. Sponsored by Art History.

-Is

More~.

"'-"'*-

~=~w::ma::~~~:;
for Survival, a nationol education·
, _ c:orrmttod to stopping the arms

. . _._,.,_ca...

..

COUEGE OF URBAN S'I1IDIES SYMPOSIUM'
Tho Future of Bullolo. 167 MFACC, ElicoH.
Sp.m.
The
are: Clwtes Genrich, president
of Genricll ~; Profasaor Leslet" Milbralf1 .
Environmental Studies center; Barbara Snyder,
Buffalo Evening News; anc:l Terry Martin." Department of Community Devetoc&gt;mont.
•

For,_. ............. cal CAC (831·5552)

FRIDAY-21 ·

or l1o "-&lt;:eDinMr1833-02t 3).

LEC1111E"

. - - - . . . . . . . : • - Capitol and

....... "'-A31·3405 f o r -· 7:30p.m.
~by-a-College .

-TOIKA&amp;.-~
~-· A . , _ Cryotol~Clap-

PEDIATRIC GRAND ROUHDst

- · · KI'*J How. oto.ao, Dr. Owen

Aon· •

nert, u-...y of Oklahomo Health Scloo'lce ~
ler.
ct&gt;ildrJ&gt;n's HO$j)ltal.·n i.~ ~

Klncl&gt;-.....

BROWN IIAG LUNCH COUOOUIUM•
~of P - Oarwatton 9'1lho S.nol •

L.oko.

12noon.

Ken GroeNe. 123 Wll&lt;eson. Ellicott.

Food Day
Food Day Ia a calabrallon - "a
lime to rajolce In OtA' freedom ...c1 a
time to DIIOWiedga our responal·
blllty to ou,._ end the world, •

·~··

lnillcata. "Food
011f8nlzeq
of Ia the "-1
- ·of
·
man•a moat bale lnter.ction with
the -~. Food Day ·off. .
lila dlenoe to explore and d~
how food affecta our bodlas end our
WOitd; how our Individual choices

effect Ohanlle; how changee cen
benefit uaall."
The Rachal Carson College Food

Commlttae hu organized" thectlvltlea on campualoclay:
,..,...., AprtiiO
.
11 a.m. - Third World Panel 8Gulre334. ~
Moon- Add~~~- - Squlna 346.
, p.m. - Politics of Food 8qul.. 334.

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY cOLLOOUIUM'
The Social Paychologk:al Study of WomenWhy Old ft Taka So Long?, Professor Carolyn
WOOd Sherif, Pennsytvan;a State UriYen;;ty. Room
C·28, 4230 RKige Lea. 2 p.m.
MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY SEMINAR M
Dla~yramiCie and

Oth« Quinidine-Like Anti-

127 Cooke. 2:45p.m.

GI8M Sculpture, Professor Eva Harrison ,
N.Y.U. Institute of F.ne Arts . 148 Diefendorf.

for monlto&lt;fng ""'

_
~

reader In histology, Department of Anatomy, The
University, Dundee. Scotland. Room 107, 4510
- ~Street 12noon.

IRC FILII'
Drtwre-fn. 150 Farber. 7:30 and 9 :30 p.m.
Free to IRC leepayers; $1 for others.
CACFILM'
Day for Nlghl 170 MFACC, E"k:oH. 7:45
and 1 0 p.m. TJCkets $1 .
BUFFALO FOLK FESTIVAL '78'
Etk: ...-..... llullalo Gala, Rely Sally, Happy
&amp; Artie Traum, Bill Keith. 8ocHe W-9ner,
John Honold, Pot Alger, John Hornnte&gt;nCI. Fillmore Room, Squire. 8 p .m. General admission $4 ,
U I B faculty anc:l staff $3 .50, students, $2 .50 .
Sponsored by UUAB Coffeohoose anc:1 Music
Committees.

anythmk: Agents, Mdlael Perlman, grad student.

LECTURE I SUDE-IUUSTRATED'

· Corllw'a Emergency
Ae~Project.
·
~ by the COnwrunily Action Corps

-.y"a,_to._,..._,
_
...,., bolrilg · -

CIRCUS'
Royoll.Jchtenat.ln Ono 0......... Ring Slclowolk
Circus. CbNns , performing animals, magicians.
joggters, mimes. ,!Mrshalt Court, ElllcoH Coinplex.
6 p.m. Free . Sponsored by Student Association
Activities.

OML BIOLOGY SEMINAR.
Advantlges and OlsadYantlges of Ketler
Plan TNchlng (Personalized Instruction) In
Dental and llodk:ot Education, Dr. P. J . s~ .

Supported by Graduate Student Association .

IR!: FILII'

c:onar-

-

Gatlerlea, and one on r11pid

tranait. The activttlea are apon ored by the College of Urban
StudiH.

PHniOI.OQY IPECW. -~
- - ... Nolurotty.Occurring

2 p.m. - Tofu &amp; Sprouting
Squina346.
·
3 p .m. - Yogurt Making
Squlna334.
.
3:30 p.m. Food Slamps
(nagulatlona) -Squire 337.
.
Filma...:. 11 a.m .• 3 p.m . , Center
lou'!Qe, Squlna. GuMa Who'a
Comlitg to ........t;
Bottle
lllblaa; I!Md lor the World;
Banking In South AfrJc..
U...._ ...tlabla - 11 a.m.-4
'fl"m. Hua Lou~, ~ulna: Nutrl·

m":.",;lt:orarc::.; n~erb~~·~~~~ .

BOYcott; Addltl-; Breast Feeding;
and monel
Vegel8rl8n Dinner - 5 p.m.,

Squina Cafeteria. Tlckels - S3.1 5 at
Sqoina Ticket Office. Food Se(vlce
Students Free (Contact RCC Office
638-2319).

'

r

ANATOMICAL SCIENCES DISTINGUISHED
SEMINAR SERIESI
A Prfmer on the Prfnclp... of DIH,.ctton
wtth an Application to Low-DOH Fourier Mlcroac&lt;&gt;py, Dr. Daniel Goodenough, Deportment of
Anatomy, Harvatd Medical School. 144 Farber.
gp.m.
CIVIL ENGINEERING SEMINAR N
The Horizontal Subg,.de Modulus, Vito A.
Guido, Polytt!chnlc Institute of New York. 112
.Part..er. 3p.m.
ENGINEERING I APPLIED SCIENCES
SEMINAR I
The NHd for Applying S~stem T~ More
EHactlwefy In tho Aroa ol Digital Filtering:
A Case Hlatory, Professor Adty T. F.n Depart·
mont of Electrical E~ng , U I B.
Belt.
3p.m. Refreshmentsaf4 .
'*'
•

j1

LAW AND ECONOMicS WORKSHOP I
Occupetlon.l Licensing and the Interstate
MC?'bfllty of ProfMaionals, B . Peter Pashigian,
Graduate Sc:hXlf cj Busness. UrWen!ily cj " ' " -·
708 O'Brian. 3 :30 p.'m.
PHILOSOPHY SEMINAR#
H.latory aa Patterns of Thought and Action,
Patrick H. ~OWeli·Smilt1 , professor of philosophy
at Yotk l}nivefaity, Toronto. 684 Baldy. 3 :30p.m.
Co-sponsored by the Council on International
ShJdies.'
' ' -'
PHYSIOLOGY SEMINARI
The ~ of C0 2 Equilibration In Lungs,
Or. JohaMes Pi.per, MaX-Ptanck·lnstitut fur experinen- - · ~. Weat Gennany. stoa
Sheqnan. 4:15p.m. Aefreslwnentsat4 .
WATER ll£souRCES ANO ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING SEMINAR M
U.S. Nawy Engl_.ng Project In tho Indian
Ocaon: C-trvctlon on tho lafa'ncl ol Oloeo
- . U Clwtes Alen, USN, Naval Soa Systems
COmmand , Washlngtoo. D.C. Room 27. 4232
Lea. 4:20p.m.. ~ by refr~nts.

J!Kioe

POETRY RUDtNG
Poetry Reading for the Alleviation of Work:l
Hunger. Haas Lounge. 5:30 q.m. Sponsored by
the CAC110d Western New YOfk Peace Center.
SOme of the readers are: WiDiam Sylve&amp;ter.
Judy Kennan , and Max WICkert .

DRAMA'
Serenading L'OUie. Harriman Theatre Studio.
8 p.m. See April20 listing for dotalls.
UUAB NEW GERMAN CINEMA WEEK •
An Amorlcan Friend (Gennany, 1977). Con·
terence Theatre, Squire. Cal636·2.919 fQr show
times. Students St ; ofhe&lt;s St .sp.
UUAB MIDNIGHT fiLII' ·
Rocky Horror Picture &amp; -.(England, 1975).
Confe.;ence Theatre, SQuire. 12 midnight. Stu·
dents $1 ; others$! .50.
•
There is no need to describe the merits of
this fiin. Since there was ~ selout last
faD , it is suggested you get your-.. tickets ear1y .

SATURDAY- 22

.

~~:~t~~N::~!CAL ~UCAf!ON

-.-uac:ulor Dlsordoro. E.J. Meyer Hospital,
C·Basement Conference Room. Advance regis·
lnltion is encouraged. Faculty .....-,; of u 1 B.
reside~ts in programs affiliated with the University,
anc:l students of the School of Medicine wffi
be admitted without fee, 6i..tt must register in
advance, For further Information; contact Continu·
iog Medical Education, 831 ·5S26 .
Sponsored by the Department of Neurology ,
~Meyer Memoriaf H~tal and School of Medicine.

U I B.
. 'BUFFALO FOLK FESTIVAL '78'
PuPpet

Thootre, -··Ploy, - · Danc-

Ing; c,.tt demonatratlon and worbhops. Squire
HaN. 12·5 p .m. Free.
Sponsored by UUAB COffeohoose anc:1 Music
. - Committee,.
IIEN'SIIASEBAU •
U I B ·ft. WHI Vlrglnlo Unlvorolty (double·
header) . Peeae Field . 1 p.n'\..
MEN'S LACROssE•
U I B ft. El~- Colloga. Arnhefst Campus.
1 p .m.
BAKKE CASE DISCUSSION'
Nacho Gonutes of the Los Angeles Equal
Rights Council and Mae · IHac of the National
Aftian¢e Against Racist and Political Repression
wHI speak on this " revefse discriminatiOn case"
which fs now before the Supreme COUrt, the
wOOo; Pelng done to overturn the tower court

�April 20. 1871

-7

decision In th&amp; case.,.- and "the generai crisis in
education." Diefendorf Hall, 2 p.m. FolloWed by
a potklck dinner at American Studies. 124 'lim-

NATURAL SCIENCES &amp; MAlliEMATICS
LECTUREI .
-The Phyllco of a.fng (nine ;n Classical and
ODantum Mechanics), Or. llya Prigogine, John
W. Cowper Oistingui&amp;hed Visiting Lecturer. 147
Diefendorf . 8 p.m.
,
Dr. Prigogine, who was awarded the 1977
Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his central ro6e in
the advanoes made in the study of irreversible
thermodynamics' over the past 30 years, wiH '
present 8 series of lectures here, Apr1124·26.

spear.
AlsO Thursday, April 20. 7:30 p.m .. Niagara
Branch Library, 280 Porter Avenue. and_Friday,
Apiil 21, 7:30 p.m .. Grace United Church ol
Christ community Bu'&lt;llng. 680 Moselle.
Sponsored by The Coalition for AHV'mative
ActiOn (which indudes several campus groups) .
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Esther swartz i'lterviews U / 8 artist Don Robert·
son. CourierCabtelChannel8). 4 p.m.

IRCFILM•
D-n. 170 MFACC. Elcott. 7:30 and 10:30
p.m. Free to lAC fE!eJ)ayers; $1 for others.
F~ .

UUAB NEW GERMAN CINEMA WEEK •
Strouek (W. _Germany'"' 1977). ConfereOce
Theatre, Squire.. Cell 636·2919.J.or stlow times.
Students $1 : others $1 .50.
·
"'AA Eaoy- wilhout sentimOntaily or political
parano;a. Irs tenifically. sj&gt;ontaneously funny and •.
fust as spontaneousty. ful of ·unexpected pathos."
-Vincent Canby. New YOftl: nmea:

FILM •
The Sewen Samurai (Kurosawa. 1954). 150
Farber. 3 and 9 p.m.
LECTURE•
Normai..Circumstances, Literary Language,
Direct Speech Acts, the ObYious, the Ordi nary,
What Goes Without Saying, and Ot her Special
Cases.. Professor Stanley Fish. Department of
English . Johns Hopkins University. 120 Clemens.
3 :30p .m. Free .
Sp;onsored by the Center for the Psycholoaical
Study of the Arts and the Department of English.

BUFFALO FOLK FESTIVAL 'JI•
Jaqu .. &amp; ... Bridle, Stan &amp; Gamel Roger$,
Jean Ritch .., Friends of Fiddlers GrMn, A~
toinstte &amp; Joe McKenna, Dorothy C•rter. Jay &amp;
Lyn n Unger, Joe Y•l &amp; The NeW Enga.nd
Bluegr~~u SOya. Filmore Room , Squ;re . 8 p.m.
Gene&lt;al admission $4 , U /-6 faculty and staN
s3.5o. students s2.so,
·
Sponsored by UUAB Coffeehouse and Musk:
Committees.

PHILOSOPHY SEMINARH
Appear~nce and Illumination In Hek:legger,
ProfessorGraeme Nicholson, UrWersity of Toronto.
684 Baldy. 3 o30 p .m . ·
Sponsored by the Graduate PMosophy Association .

DRAMA•
Setenadl11g i..ouie.. Harriman Theab'"e Studio.
8 p.m. See Apri 20 listing for dietails.
- .

BUFFALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUM I
Atlndomness, John MyhHI, U I 8 . 203 Oiefen·
doff. 4 p .rri.

-

MUSICOLOGY LECTURE•
Borrowing In 17th Century -{rench HarpsJ..
chord Musk, David Fuller. associate professor of
music. 106 Baird. 4 p.m. Free.
Sponsored by Department of Music .

UUAB MIDNIGHT RLM•
- Rocky lienor Picture Sllow (England , 1975i .
Conference Theatre, Squire. 12 midnighl Slu!lents
$1: others$1 .50.

SUNDAY-23
157 MfACC, EUicoh. 10 a.m. EVef)'one ts

wet·

come.
BUFFALO FOLK FESTIVAL '78•
Country Dance WOftl:ahop... SQuir"e Hall. 1·4

p.m. Free. Sponsored by UUAB Coffeehouse
and Musk: COmmittees.
MFA RECITAL •
Glenn K•IHr, l)iflqO. Baird Recital Hall. 3 p.m.
Free. Sponsored by Department of Music.
DRAMA•

.

Serenedl~ Louie. Harriman Jheab'"e Studio.
8 p.m. See Apri 20 llsllng lor dlelais.

FOURTH QCCUPATIONAL-EDUCATION
LEADERSHIP SEWNAR SERIES I
The P ....... t Stole ol tilt- Art: Yoc:o-1
Educ.tlon Todlly, Lowel A . BtAett, former
editor-in-chief, executive director, American Vo-

cational Association. lje:arthstone Manor. 4 p.m.
Sponsored by the Department of CurricUlum
Devek&gt;pment and lnstructionaf Media.

UUABRLMS•
Lo-(llaly, 1961). 7p.m.
L'Eellue(tlaly, 1962). 9 : 10p.m.
Conference Theatre, Squire. Free'8dmission.
. The second and. third ports of · Antonioni's
Tmogy on personal relations in post·war society.
l' Anentura was the first

TUESDAY-25
TAKE A BREAK •
Informal lecture I demonstration on the Funda-mentals of Jazz Dance and r..,, with Bambi
Bellegia . 10 Capen Hall (near nffin Room).
1 2 noon. Bring your lunch.

7:45 and 10 p.m.

AM~ST FRIENDS MEETING (Quok...)• •

~ toSalwtng~ ~

Chemical Engineering, McMaster Univen;ily. 107
O'Brian. 4 p .m . Refreshments at 3 :30.

NAVAJO FILMS•
A Navaj o WNver, Second Weaver, The Spirit
altho Navajo, Intrepid Shod&lt;w.s, iWld Old ""'"'Lake. 146 Diefendorf. 9 p.m. Sponsored by the
Center for Media Study.

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Esther Swartz interviews Mac Hlirfimond. Inter·
national Cabte....TV (Channel1 0) . 6 p.m. ..

CACFILM•
· Day for Night. 150
riCkets$1 .

CHEIIICAI. ENGINEERING-·

P , _ Or. 0 . A. Woods, o.p.1meort of

DOCUMENTARY FILM I DISCUSSION•
Looking for Renaissance Rome, Professor

James AckeiTnan, Harvard University. 170 MFACC.
Enicott. 5 p.m. Free. Sponsored by Art History.

Wllll•m Kincade: a.cturtng on •rm• control
~
tonight.
NATURAL SCIENCES &amp; MATHEMATICS
LECTURE8
The Physics of Becoming (Thehnodyna.mics
ancr' Dissipative Structures), Dr. llya Prigogfne ,
John W. Cowper Oistioguished tr'tSiting Lecturer.
14 7 Diefendorf. 8 p.m.
Second in a series of four lectures .
IRCFtLM•
Sunshine Boys. Clement Lounge. 9 p.m. Free
to IRC feepayers; $ .50 for others.
Richard Benjamin tries to re-unite a retired ·
comedy team (Waner MatthaU and George Bums).
The old geezers drive orie another and him to
distraction. Funny-sad ~ Simon scieenplay
about growing old with grit.

WEDNESDAY -26
BROWN BAG LUNCH"
Dan Stewens, director of Community Music
School. and Ron McDonald-piano works of Erik
Satie . 335 Hayes. 12 noon . Free . Sponsored by
Friends of School of Architecture and Environ·
mental Design .
NUTRITION LECTURE•
Human Cell Growth F.actor and Regulation ·
of Nc:wm.l Cell Growth, Dr. Harry Aiitoniades,
Harvard School of Pubic Health's Center tor Bkxld
Research and Department of Nutrition. Hitleboe
Auditorium , Roswell . 12:30 p.m. Sponsored by
School of MedK;ine and Biochemistry Department.
Also, 3 p.m., Room 1104, VA Hos.pltlll.

FtLM•
The Conformllt (Bertolucci) . 150 Ferber, 5
p.Tn.; 5 AchesQn, 8 : 15p.m. Sponsored by the
Department of Mooem lN1guages and Utetallxes.

MEN 'S TENNIS•
U I 8 YS. Cot;ate Untveraity. Rotary Cotrts,
Main St., 1 p.m.

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Either SW.rtz i'ltefViews Renee
Csbte (ChannelS) . 6 : ~ p .m.

Le-wtne. Courier

MEN ' S GOLf •
U I B vs. Colgate, BuHalo Stat•; and Clntslus.
Audubon Course. 2 p.m.

COLLEGE B FILMS•
Our Lady of the' Sphere (1970) and Onlbaba
(1963). 170 MFACC. Ellicott. 7 p.m .

WOMEN' S SOFTBALL •
U I 8 ws. Houghton College (2) . Acheson Field .
2p .m.

IRCFILM•
.
Sunohlne Boyo. Dewey Lounge, Govemoni
Residence. 8 and 10 p.m. Free to IRC feepayers; ~ . 50 for othet's.
NATURALSCIENCES&amp;MATHEIIATtCS
LECTURE I
The Bridge Being ond. - l n g
(The Microscop;c Theory ol trTeverslite Proces·
ses) . Or. ttya Prigogine~ John W. Cowper Ois·
llnguished Vositlng LeclurOf. 147 Dielehdorf. 8
p.m.
Third in 8 series of four lectures.

THURSDAY- 27
FILM•
Education of SonnyC.raon (1974). 146 Oief·
endort. 1 p.m .•Sponsored by Baac:k Studtes.
MEN'SBASEBAU•
U I B n. ~ Stoto (2) . Peele Foeld .
1p.m.
PHARMACEUTICS SEMINAR I
A Cfystol Structure Anolyllo of tho~
tion of GrileofutYin Chtorafonnate, Ken·shin
Cheng, graduate student . C508 Cooke. 4
Aetrestvnents at 3 :50.

P.m.

DISTINGUISHED IIISITING SPEAKERS
SEMINARI
'
.
Hlstones, Chromatiro....,...- •IWI GeM
AcUwity In Tolrohymeno, Dr. Martin Gorovsl&lt;y,
Biology Department. Unlve&lt;Sity of - t o r.
114 Hochstetter (Amherst) , 4 : 15 p .m. Coffee

at4p.m.
POETRY READING "! MUste•
Student poetry reeding, with cloasicaJ guitar
pertonnance by P•ter ThorNS.! 167 MFACC,
Ellicott. 7:30 p .m. Free. Studerits interested in
reading their worU sJ-toufd cal Mwy Mickleton,
831·2020 or 838-3348: Sponsored by the
Browsing Ubfaty.
SEMINAR I
Nutrl"on •nd Cancer, Margot lp, Ph .D., Roswetl. BUtler HaD , De4aware &amp; North Streets.
7:30p.m.
Sponsored by Roswell Park Memorial Institute.
•S.._' C•tendar~ ~ge 12,

cot 1

UUAB NEW GERMAN CINEMA WEEK •
S-.ok (W. Germany, 1977). ConiOfence
Theatre, SQuire. Cal 636·2919 for show limes.
Studlenta $1 ; others $1 .50.

MONDAY...:.24
PHARMACOLOGY &amp; THERAPEUTICS
SEMINARW
Potflophystology of Myoconltol 'P...tuolan In
).nglna Pectoris. Dr. Francis KJocke, professor
of medicine, C hie{ of Division of Cardiok&gt;gy,
E. J. Msyer Hospilal . 102 Sherman. 4 p .m.
Refreshments at 3 :45.
CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Eattw Swarb: interviews Mac Hllmmond.. Inter·
national~ TV (Channel 1D) . 6 p .m.
SAED LECTURE"
Four Approechet To Regional Planning, Prolessor Willam Jordy, Brown Unive&lt;slly. 335 Hayes.·
5:30 p,m. Free. SponsOred by Friends of tlte
SchOOf of Architecture and Environmental Oesigfl.
FILMS•
ArtHtctol Light (1969), Surtoco Tonolon
(1968) , Poece Mondoto, and Word Mo¥to, 146
Oiefendort. 7 p.m. Sponsored by Center for

~rk OOMhue . . Count Fred~dr..

M-Siudy.

World Premiere

UUABRLMS•

Morning Oio&lt;y (1933) . 7 p .m. Katherine Hep·
bum won an Oscar for Best Actress for this

rote .
A W-n R-11 ( 1936), 8 :30 p .m. Stars
Katherine Hepburn and 8iz.abeth Allan . This
VICtorl&amp;n drama depicts Hepburn as an ear1y

lighter for liberation-reading forbidden books,
demanding.Aex wi~t marriage, assert!Qg her
right to live life Withtl@t ~ protection . When
rele&amp;SttO, the movie was considered " box office
poison."
170 MFACC, Bicott. Free admtssion .

Joen Catkin Un maskland Lau.-. Kftmer.

A new play by Eric Bentley will
have its world premiere at the
Pfeifer Theatre Thursday, April 27 ,
under auspic~s of the Center for
Theatre Research . The play, Wsnn . see (pronounced Vahn-zay) was
commtssioned by · Saul Elkin,

~~~~~m~ ~rc,~ ~~~~e:· n!~~ ~~~~

and was written beside Lake Erie in
the Fall of 1~77 .

Wannsee is partly the story of the
suicide of Heinrich von Kleist, the
great German dramatist, and ·pat:tiY

~~~~~~g ot.fa~~';, p::y,1~:thr.,~~
beside which Kleist s.hot hlmsel! .
The body of the play Is a medieval
1

r~d'l:~~ d~~tr2:~at~ 1d·k~/8,h';ha~;;.~

zest , and wit . Nineteen UIB actors
a;e participaUng In Its magic and

madness, Its swashbuckling and
derrlng-&lt;lo.
The play wi)) be directed by
author Bentley. The production was
deSilJn~ by t:ewls Folden , and the

mow~~~~:~~~ blp~~n~i~-~a~~d

May 2-7 at 8 p.m. at the Pfeifer
Theatre, 305 Lafayette. Ticket
prices "(ill be $3 general ad.m lsslon ;
$1 .50 students and senior citizens.

�Aprll 20, 18TI ,

a~

Faculty group 'uns~ttled' by
Editor:
During the last week In March the
Third International Russell Tribunal will
begin public hearings on the state of
human rights In ,West Germany. The
Initial intention to organize this tribunal
anooul)ced by the Bertrand Russell
Peace Foundation In February 19n .and
C8m8 In response to widespread
conc8m caused by the application of
Germany's "radical decrees" of 1972
end subsequent, similarly motivated
legislation. The Foundation "has come
to the conclusion that a situation has
been created in the Federal Republic of

~~~~~~:l'~'y e;~::~o':.h~~~

Intimidation." .
The International tribunal Is a central
p.rt o1 the work of the Russell Peace
Foundation, established In ~ 1963 to
carry out its benefactor's continual
struggle on behalf of human rights and
world peace. The present . Russell
Tribunal sharas with the twQ preceding
tribunals the object of ldentilylog,

Libra-ries have
to be s.old
soap'
W.Ger~ans_ 'like
Marketi;g research , a modern-day

Professor, Theatre Department; Berkley
Eddlna, Professor, Department of
Rep,ubllc ol Germany," AAUP Bulletin,. Philosophy; Arthur Efron, Professor,
Department of English; Gane Grablner,
Assistant Professor, Department of
S3 p~~lmn~P·I~~Port of the Third
Social Foundations; Ellzablth KenRussell Tribunal can be obtained from
nedy, Associate Professor, American
lhe New York Commltlee for Civil
Studies; Dale Riepe, Professor, DepartLiberties In West· Germany, P.O. Box
ment of Philosophy; William Steln ,
Professor, Department of Anthropolwelcome (receiving In return the , ogy; Sidney Willhelm, Professor,
Elmer
publication lnfQIW. Germany) since the · Department of Sociology;
Wollstetter, Assistant Professor, Decost of the Tribunal Is considerable.
partment of Economics; Roger Woock,
, Signed by:
Professor and Chairman, Department ol
Social Foundations; Paul Z.rembka,
Albert Cappaa, Associate Director,
Professor, Department of Economics.
Minority Student Alfalrs; Eric Bentley,

~=~~~ 'rJ~~~~n orren~~m~i

~ ~fi.e~~~~ilo~~~:~f!'o·::g;

Ralston charges 'Reporter'
with lacking courag~, perception

Editor:
'
with two Schools who are heavy users
1 am solry that the Reporter did not
of the equipment and, In one- way or
have the c~rage and perception to
another, are potentially able to
~=~~~~~ ~~,.';,a~n~ sa~~n~lon Ill~
recognize me speciousness of the
contribute funds to the upgr!l(le." One
situations, using the 'tlnlted ~ons
argument that the attachment to my
of these two Schools Is the School of
Charter and appropriate local legal
letter last week could not be published
Management which has restricted
Instruments as criteria against which
because "publication of the exact specs endowment funds wl]lch Ills wllllng to
'such violations can be measured. Every
could lead to legal action by vendors."
provide for part of the funding of a
tribunal Is composed of a jury of
The proposed specs of the director of
satellite site \but not,_ I am sure, to the
eminent persona of International
Computer Services ~ just that ,
upgrading o the '-'Yber although I
renown whoee moral Integrity Is above
proposed specs . and rto more or less;
would be happy to be proved wrong by
queatlon. Every tribunal Ia Insulated
they have (or, surely should have) no
such a public _spirited offer from the
leg'al standing whatsoever. But, of
School of Managemen!). I suggest to
from political pressure emanating from
l*tlea and governments as well, so
you that, as far as University Computer
course, the Reporter Is not an
Independent publication .
Services are concerned, the decision on
that, In the words of Jaao Paul Sartre,
If 11 • Is really legal problems
which upgrade alt~trnatlve to support
Executive Prealdent for the first
connected with computer acquisition
has lllready been made and that this Is
tribunal, four principles effectively
about which the University Is worried,
really likely to cause legal problems If
pulde the wori&lt; of the tribunal:
the official RFP still contains these two
objectivity, openneaa, universality and • then there are far more Important ones
choices.
about which to be concerned . In his
~-·
proposed specs the Director of
A related matter. Is It good_policy to
The first Ruasell Tribunal focused on
Computer Services, Dr. Macintyre, says
allow decisions on upgiadlng a
the United Statea role In the waging of
that the obJectives of the University
University-wide facility to be Influenced
the Vietnam War. Convened In May,
could "In prfnclple, be satisfied In two
by the availability of restricted
1887, It considered US policy and
endowment ) unds In a particular
different ways.' One Is to upgrade the
behavior In light of the International law
school? How much has this or_will !his
present Cyber system and the other Is
o1 war. The tribunal sought answers to
by Installing stand-alone computers at
Influence the location of the satellite
the lollowiniJ oq.-tlons: were illegal
· each of four satellite sites. The two are
equipment, the typa of equipment
WMpona used?, wwe POWs treated
which will be obtained and . the
mutually exclusive. Vendors are to be
lnhumanely1, ware targets of il civilian
asked to make proposals for one or the accessibility of the equipment to all on
character bombed?, end was the US an
other of these two possibilities. Fair an equal basis?
aggressor In this conflict under
Sincerely,
enough . But In a letter to me of April s·
International law?
- Anthony Ralston
Bet-. 1973-78the PIPF constituted
the Director notes that the proposed
Chairman, Computer Science
upgrade "has been discussed In detail
a eacond tribunal which focused on
violations o( human rights In Latin
America. At first considering allege'
tiona of officially sanctioned use of
torture In Brazil, the Tribunal later
turned Its attention to the brutalities of
the military junta which overthrew the
Allende govwnment In Chile, and then
the role Of multinational corponitlons .l n
this and other repnsaalve actions In
·Editor: ·
that continues to co-ordinate an
As coordinator of the New York
effective force for accessibility 9n our
Latin America:
In contrast to the first two tribunals,
Research
Group
campuses. It Is NYPIRG that is at
Public
Interest
the PfMBr11 tribunal, ' constituted on
(NYPIRG), Handicapped Access Propresent compiling a report which will
October 16, 11177, In the German city of
ject, I must strongly object to your:
Include a building by building list of
Darmlll8dt, Ia motivated by the desire to
article "Handicapped Modifications to
accessible vs. Inaccessible build ings,
pnwent the eroeton ol democratic
Begin," which appeariod· on 4/6/78.
building by building list of architectural
NYPIRG has been completely omitted
barriers and measurements that do not
norma and prolectlona In an tetr.Md~. The Third Interne- ·
from"'lhe article. If you would_check the
;neet required federal guidelines, and
tiona! Ruaell Tltbunal Ia mandeted to
attendanCe sheet, I r,raaent at the
Unl-slty-wlde problems that must be
pursue ltiNelaauea:
.
Warren Cornmlltae meet ng. Secondly , corrected but which go far beyond the
1. ~ German cltlzena haw
NYPIRG had originally Instituted the
scope Mr. Doty alluded to . .
bean dlnled the right to practloa their
aurvay ol barrier Identification at lllls - NYPIRG' Is a major force werklng for
Choe.~ ~ because of their
Unr-IIIIY and Ia continuing tb teaclits
full aocesslblllty o thla Unl..o.n.~ty, not
poUIIGel Oonvlcllona,
.
Input. NYPIRG- thelet!lflng Ioree In
one of the · "outside ·r;genclas"
cr.tinJI a c.npua-wlde coalition to
ed ·
11
~
.of ="~lP
WOI1t for -rblllty; this, coalition
ment1on •n your art c e.
o1 Cljmtna; end civil laWs or
lncludea The Independents, The
-.and
Stuclant Phyatcar Therapy Association,
- -PaTthrlckank yyoaun,
._.c human rights h and Group leglll Servtoaa. It Ia NYPIRG
R•
beiiD ......... « ellmrn.ted In conjunction ............ procaadlnga.
The trlllunal Ia conatltuted In a time
oil,..... --.n for repfMI!on In
Weat 8111111iny. St.- January 1873 all
Editor:
Unl-slly's computing needs could be ·
clvii...,.IIPPIIcants(that lnchidea all
(About) my anlcla on Computing In
met Involves the addition to the Cyber
ac11ao1 8lid unl-slty taachar8, postal
the April 6 Issue of the fieporltlr, I
173 of a substantial amount of
woriiiN, ......,. operators, doctors
am ... clonc;emed at the poaalbllilles for additional COntrol Data hardware.
and In at111a hoeilllala) w.a
mlal,...,.,...lon of part of tbe headline
Jha Cyber 173 Is a superb arithmetic
- - for ~ and a.. 4,000
wblch JOU supplied:
.
.,.._.. " - t..1 excluded from
~~ne:~~':I'~
h~ ~~~~ ~~~~~~~, :~:
"PreMnt hardware .called 'Inferior';
positions or " - 1oat lhalr jobl solely
specifications under which it
:.':e~1:S:~r.,:~ ~~ld ~~tral or original
on the balla of their Dolltlcal opinions
was ordered.
and entirely legal polltlcal affiliations or
lila Important to em~aslze that any
aatlvltlas ( - lnto/W. Germany,
InferiOrity of the~ lies nolln the
Yours sincerely,
Daaembar 1977), the phenOmenon
qualliY Of the h.rdwaia but ..In the
-Walter M. Macintyre,
baing called Betufa-'101 or job ban
quantity. Aal emrhulzed In the closing
Director, University Computing
whiCh -blea practtoaa of the
paragraph, one o the ways In w~lch the
Sewlces
~ . . In the United States.

1

We left out NYPIRG's role
-in efforts for th~ handicap-ped

w:::.ar::e
._.,
=FE

':.:

It may hav~ been 'intsinterpreted'

~:.:=s:ft:'ro•:

ollanta; 81 Tom Wlcher In the' New York
JI-GI o-m- 30, 1877, reports on
the.....,, numeroua reatrlctlona on the
rtHIW ol ~andante and lhalr lawyers
"'iiatn88ftllna. • 1lla American AsaociMion of Unlvenllty Profeaaors has
11ag1111 to draw attention to the political
llllilatiOn of Weal German universities

Kemp's. SALT role found 'odd'
Editor: •
In your last Issue you make mention
of Rep. Jack K~s appointment to the

f...&lt;:'~~~~ur;.-J t:!'~~~~!~~~v~~

of
that the Intent of those talks Is to limit

nucl88f a,;,s, don't · you find Kemp's
appointment odd?

tool to evaluate consumer demand, _is
heading for your neighborhood library.
Two faculty 'members of the School
ol ' Information and Library Studies
(SILS) have. received a $12,500 federal
grant to put the show on the road.
Dr. Judith S. Braunagel and Dr: John
w. Ellison will use-the grant from the
u.s. Ofllceof Education to set up a free
five-day seminar during the summer of
1979 to train about 25 top-echelon
librarians In the techniques of market
research as applied to library sewlees.
No data-has been set.
VIewed as a pilot project, the seminar
could be the first In a series If additional
funding Is forthcoming, Dr11. Braunagel
and Ellison said . The project Is believed
to be the first of Its kind.
In applying lor the grant, the two
SILS educators observed that the library
patron, like the consumer of any
commercial product such as toothpaste
or automobiles, has "needs, desires
·and patternl'Pf behavior'' which !lflect
demands for service.
The ultimate goal Is for libraries to
gear their wares - books, newspapers,
magazines, recordings, story hours,
film showings, Inter-library lending and
other services - to the needs of
patrons and potential patrons as shown
through
marketing research
and

a~~~:- who

attend the· seminar will
become qualified to Implement marketIng research techniques In the libraries
or library systems they represent.
A key element ol the seminar will be
to delve Into ·the process of marketing
research as applied to non-profit

or~~~~';;'~:rsSald five ol'the nation's top

experts In this field are belng.contacted ·
for participation In the seminar. In
addition, she said ,- an advisory
committee of librarians will be set up to
obtalp their views.
As envisioned by Braunagel and
Ell ison, libraries Involved in marketing
- research would condtU:t consu"1er
surveys arid lnlorn'lal meetings to
obtain a better understanding of public
needs. This lnlormatlon , along with
census statistics, would ' undergo
analysis through a computer program.
The results then would be Interpreted
for Implementation of needed programs.
"It would be a continuing process,"
Ellison explained, "because public
needs are continually changing as
lllestyles change.
" For Instance, statistical analysis
might -even show the need for an
additional branch library and where to
put it.''
At the presenf time, Ellison further
noted, -libraries depend mainly on
public relations news announcements
i o communicate with . the public, thus
lravell ng a one-way street.
"Little attention Is paid to formal ;
scientific surveys thet would pinpoint
the needs of library users," he added.
Braunagel observed that nation-wide
thil growth of library usage Is falling
_behind the growth In population. ~he
blames a "lack of understanding" by
librarians of public 11eeds and desires.

·Churchill wins
British
medai Dr. Melvyn Church Ill, professor of
chemistry, has been -arded the 1976
Corday-Morgan Medal and Prize of The
[British) Chemical Society.
The ·award- Is presented anflulilly to
three ch'emlsts of British natlonallty
who have published during the year In
question and preceding five years the
most meritorious contributions to

ex~~~~~~'gJ ~~~~~~'fir. Churchill was

e~~Jo ~S:nd r~~..:r'.Fnl~~ ~~1'8:s ~:
8

1

Harvard and Illinois at Chicago Circle
before coming to U/B In 1975 as
professor of chemistry.
He Is author of more than 180 papers
dealing with the structures pi transition
metal complexes, particularly_ organometallic "clusters," as determined by

th~~~~~~~~u!~ ;1~Yo~'~,S[i!~ ~ilred P.
Sloan Foundation lrom 1968 to 1970
and has been an associate editor
responsible - for all tryJtallographlc
papers of the journal lnor.ganlc
Chemistry since 19'70. Churchill also
served as associate provost of the
Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics here In 1976-77.
0

�Apri120, 1171

- Redheads
on campuses·
are uniting
U/B lain line for a chapter of RliSP,
"Redheads Are Special
People,"

=~:~g~ a8r~w"nke~=l tor81~ _

dents- and one Irish Setter who '?'o'rmed
the new movement's Initial chapter In

Pr~~~e'R~s~~}!~g ~~- from M~ck,

N.Y. ., who comes with bushy red curly
01

~e's:'1nr~:~f~~P =il~ ;',~n'l::

Rhode Island School of Design,
Harvard, Middlebury and U/B are

~~P..t.,';'~"Q"~ov.;~~ ~:owch=~~~ -

RASP.
·
Purpose of the groWing group,
Rosenfeld said, '.'Is to unite redheads,
to find out why they're special , h.ow
they're different , what society thinks of
them."
RASP gives redheads a chance to get
together and hash out common

pr~~~':'~i'n~~ ~·,P~~~~s?

Well, Rosenfeld Indicated, teachers
in college classrooms usually call-on
redheads because they stand out.
Redheads also take a bum rap for
having " fiery tempers, " he Indicated. To
· the contrary, he sald, " most redheads
are mild · tempered with a pleasant,

~7fY~W~If ~~m~~!~n~!'l~hre!~at~!'en

Also, Rosenfeld argues, red has been
given a bad Image through association
• with the devJ':ii prostitution, and the
commun ist
y.
Rosenfel said members of RASP are
also sick and J lred of being addressed

:::'e ·::.'::1:~ ·~h~~~act~~~r t~~

'Brown' or 'Black.' They usually don't do
it again."
RASP got its star! at Brown when ~wo
students threw a parly for redheads.
The menu featured red wine, apples,.
cinnamon ice cream and strawberry
cake.with cherries.
.
Lots of cherry Turns, too, no doubt.

Chamber dinner
to salute educat_ion
The .Buffalo Area Chamber of
Commerce will pay tri bute to Western

~ed~n~~;~ c~~'l'~~~~~ ~~~r;'~1~.:'~

Hotel, Tuesday, April 25.
The dinner, to be held at 7 p.m. In the

~:~~ns~~~en byBa:~:'~h!be~ "o~
Commerce and t he Western New York
Consortium of Higher Education .
Dr. Robert Hesse, president of the
Consorllum will speak on "The Impact
of Hi9her Education In Western New
York.
Tickets are $15 per person· and

1

~:.~z~t~~;~he :u~ralo rrea cft,~~ber ~
~g;~'rft!~~~~~:.e Ul B Office of

SILS·sets plan .
for___graduation
Ellen Woodrich, chairperson and one
of the founders of the- Erie County
Citizens To save Libraries organization,
will be the main speaker at the annual
School of Information and Library
Studies Commencement, which will be
held on Sunday, May ·14, In the Mooi
Court Auditorium , O'Brian Hall.
Mrs. Woodrich has also been

~~.!rS:n: ao~~~~~

i:: ~-::'do~~

Albany during the first week in June.
SILS students planning to complete
their MLS requirements during t_hp1978
summer session are also eligible to
parllcipate In the commencement
exercise and to receive a certificate as a
· symbol of their final degree.

CAC plans
carnival
"Circles of Friendship" Is the theme
of an April 30 cam Ivai to be held at Main
Street.
·
Sponsored by the Community Action
Corps, the festivit ies, to be held In
Squire ·Hall , will Include clowns,
magicians, puppets and plenty of
prizes. The activities, expected to run
from 11 a.m . to 3 p.m ., are for the
·benefit of all chlldnan In Buffalo and
Erie County. Chlldnan · with mental
retardation from the West Seneca
School and other areas will be In
attendance.

�April 20, 1878

If Pllllp G. Altbech
The parameters of the "crisis" In

Arnertcen higher education are generally known. Among those most affected
by the "new depression" are the

::r:,WI:Iio~~~:t\'::,\,~~· ~ .

flied ( - uae the Infelicitous word
retrench) faculty . Pntssures are on
faculty to ''relool," change speclallza,
tiona, teach more and better and to
obtain outside ~rants . Universities have

=

~u:y,:.,O.'t:~~~Jr~':

Court hu ruled against mandatory
Nt"""-t ac/lemea. Junior stall have
bMn moet directly affected by the
crisis. While some tenured professors
' - " - ! fired, It has been untenured
faculty who ara usually let go. And the
pressures to publish and pemaps also
perish are gr'eateat on them .
II the poat-1/Yorid War II period was
the "age of faculty power" In the sense
that the professoriate was growing
rapidly In size, was obtaining better
remu-.tlon, commanding higher
preattge, and demanding Increased
profeUional autonomy, then the
.seventies (and beyonC!) are a period of
"faculty epprehenslon In which many
of the perqulalt•ot the recent past are
being eroded.

...._.,__tor,......,...prota
~~ ~~ ~ :::J~r.'"{'.:e

·~- • ...,......
·
of the cu11811t situation on
~ ..semJca and recent Ph.D's.

It Ia iily thelia thlll white all academics
.., under _.unt the trauma has been
111'11111811 lor yowiger professors and
fhlll the very future of scholarship and
ol -*"IC ln110¥811on In the United
States will be affected by the ~lght of
In by
the younger - * " l c. Let me
1)081tlng a lew •obaervllllons . which

:=.:.) be...:Sn~,:t.. b~it'i."""~
eump~' '"

..., n.v·
While enrollments In graduate
aclloola., now leveling off or In some
llelcla

Clectlnt"Hiethent has been a time

~
~ Ph.~D
·.,ert':':tl~!~emt~

The quallllcatlona tor • achlevln~
tenunt have, In the present buyers
market, been Increased, placing massive preasunt on·younger faculty. While
the expectations for b talnlng tenure In
uniVBnlltles have always been mdellned and often somewhat arbitrary, It
Is generally the case that the ante has
been upped. More Is expected of junior
staff. In fields whent a modest nun]ber
c;&gt;f scholarly articles uSed to be a norm,
0

~=~e~~
~0: t~ ~~~~Yenr"~~'!
brilliance Is expected. Outside research

grants are sometimes seen as a
prerequisite lor permanent appointment. All this has occurred at a time
when fewer scholarly books are being
published by university presses and
when the access to publication
generally has tightened. And with the
Increased competition lor ....research
funds, junior staff have a very difficult
time obtaining funds. Not only are
younger faculty laced with Increased

?:S'f~~~~~~:;shl~~·f~~rl~ndl~rl~l~~~~
1
~~~~:Ja ~~"f:!h:~c~ ~fiffco.!':Pr~~e~:~

for professional advancement . And it Is
sometimes ·the case that the ante Is
upped, either Implicitly or sometimes
expiiCltly, during the process Itself.
T-requotaa
renure quotas, where they are
formally Instituted or where a more
informal "concern" about a very high
portJ
I
ed
I
~[~ectly oagn a~ntsetntuhre .•nsttera'esetxsisotts'juwnoiorkr
academics. In some institutions, they
are simply barred ltom permanent
appointment. In others, they realize that
the odds aP.alnst being ~ranted tenure
~eev~sanhdgohn. seA ga,!n • tmelslmcopacsto.deor~
rr~
ab!::ilrrnatlv~ action haS had a curlo~s
1mpact on. youAger. staII . While .t he
proportion o women In academe overall
has not dramatically Increased, It has

1 81 66

0

~:,"y Pf.!l~~~art-fhl~ t~:Sju~~~~an~~~

younger white male academics feel that
--..
they are unlalrty bearing the brunt of
lnlllltutiOne ~ the available supply·
affirmative action by being blocked
Simply
In .moat llelds thent Is
from academic ·jobs while their senior
~~:tlr t.:!tve:;:n!f1 f~
male colleagues, who were responsible
I l l - ' 111 once. Aa unl..alty budgets
lor the historic discrimination against
81nnk, lacui~Y. not hired In
women and minorities In faculty hiring,
tenure-tr.ck jl(leltiona. Further, a
are not affected. And younger women,
decline In federal - a . support
who have al least a marginally better
_ . . fhlll polll-doctoral poaltlona, a
opportunity to enter academic ranks, do
key .-n-t 111 the employment market
l:.%:e:'~g:: 0Jl~ 1 ~ ~.:!tm:_l ~~~~~
In m.ny lleldaln the aclences, dried up.
hera 18 not very clear.'1he point here Is
Aa un._..tles and colleges heve
ntiNnc:hed, H hu almost unlverully
that a11 lrmatlve action, ntgardiess ollts
bMn r!!CJngtll' etaff who'- bMn fired
merits on other grounds, has contnt. Tlley . . unprotected by tenunt . trlbuted to the presaurea felt by junior
nor do ttley often " - the Informal
faculty ·
protection of friendship networks.
In addition to these factors, there Is a
m-urlty llbout oontlnued employment • kind of tiMIIutlon of lowering expecta- . g younger 811111 Ia, ea a result,
tiona evident among younger academ· rwnpant.
lea. The long term Impact of this

-eel.
::::::T.:

1

~~n~~~r,;.::ro~~~u~i~h~a~"e~ftvs ~~.·~~
1

~~~~. ~n':r ~~;~n!r~:~~!.rosl~

lor those Involved and also some
younp, historian at a professional
Impact on academic Institutions.
Graduate students at the beSt American
universities (and such Institutions still
award a substantial although declining
proportion of doctorates) are socialized
Into an academic system which
stresses research, emphasizes graduate
level university without a graduate
teaching as the "important" element of . program In his field. His teaching load
career aspirations, and In general · · Is 12 hours per week and he Is unable to
Instills int'J aspiring scholars the norms
and values of the graduate faculty at
these top-ranking universities.
a related area. He has little time lor
research because of his teacl!ing
In the good old days, all this was w ell
and good , since many or the graduates
~Wo~g~b~l~~! ~:ss';i:::'l':,"!:,oJ'u0c~;;
of these Institutions could count on
ancj thus achieve tenure, there is little
obtaining' beginning positions at
time, and In some ways littleuniversities wfth graduate programs
encouragement lor such productivity.
and-some research orientation . All this
His norms are not those of hos
has · changed. Graduates of such
employing irstltutlon but rather of his
universities as Harvard, Yale, Berkeley
alma mater. He desperately looks lor
and the like are lucky 11 they. can lind
alternative employment, aware that the
any positions at all In some fields and '
market Is very tight. Will his energies be
successful candidates- seem to be
turned to excellence In teaching? Or will
llndiilg jobs at lower ranking unl.versia sense of despair set In? ·And the
tles and colie!les. And as a number of
chances for upward academic mot&gt;llity
studies Indicate, upward Institutional
- barring the publication of a Mlllant
~~b.\\',%.'j~~e q~1?e ~~~~~Ta!"l~~~~~u~ book (and who writes brilliant books.
with
a 12 to 15 hour teaching schedule)
career mobility.
- seem limited. While accepting his
late with resignation , my colleague is
not happy with his lot.
,
~~':'~::Ic~ft"::ru~f! downward
Yet ne is employed and is teaching ,
academic mobility has not been
died b ·
more or less, In the field In which he
stu
, ut os bound to be Important.
was trained. I have nol discussed the
Some have argued that the influx of
0
highly trained scholars from the best
graduate schools or tou·r -rear co119Qes
In their fields or -who are marginally
or regional universities wil help to r8Jse
employed In administrative posltl~ns in
standards and provide new perspeclives. A more realistic appraisal may be • universities. While there has been some
dlscusslon recently of alternative
that the infusion of research-oriented
careers lor doctorates In the arts and
younger starr with
"blue chip"
0
doctorates tends to make them, ahd
their senior colleagues, uneasy, unhapments do not reflect the Of!1irrealltles.
1
Pte~chalnndg
goeandesramllyakdelsrecosenatrecnhteddl·rr,
·
Hcu
gth,
,.
fc
ol
What iS to be · done? 1 I h-ave ri'o ·
the norms of academic life are sharply
blueprint tor solving what Is probably
different, senior faculty may tear that
an Insoluble problem. The present job ·
market and the abnormal "bulge" In the
~~rJhtl~ndbeso0~\f~~o~~sh~Yy~~~~ - age-&lt;:urve
of academe whlcb.rneans that
colleagues and In general the condfthere will be relatively lew retirements
lions Ql academic work do not tend to
until the 1980s means that there will be
be congenial to Individuals used to the
lew positions tor younger scholars in
gentility - and scholarly orientation most fields. In some disciplines, there
or Harvard and Yale. Thus, younger
stall may chafe at the high teaching
• loads and at tbe often Implicit lack of
to retire In large numbers, we may well
·encour&amp;ll9ment lorthelr~esearch.
be facad with a shortage similar to that
Bur at the same time they ieel
experienced In the early 1960s. My
themselves lucky to have any academic
concern here Is not with manpower.job at all . Their older colleagues, who
'
alter all have the power of professional
life and death over them, may not be
on younger academics. PerhaPS realizaeither sympathetic or understanding. At
tion of the situation will be a first step'
the very least, the potential tor personal
toward devising solutions. Consciousand professional unhappiness anaJor
ness raising can do no harm.
lnstl!utlonal ambivalence Is present In .
this situation .
Pn&gt;l Altllecll 311 1 ~ 1 h
ectuc:Otlon end (ouniso~lona of
A 'slrghtly fictional' example
dl...,.or ot the
Educ811on
Let me conclude . this somewhat
Contor here.
·

~~~:V~noH~:r.~!~~:' ~~;eg~t!fa'n~~
::'u'b"~=':~~~s:.'i~~:~ela::dd ~~ hh~
~'::~~sit~. ~~~~:~~h:s ·~r~ r~:,"i~~2-

~'l"i'i.~ ';~!:'~"or~·=~~~~~

~~~:f~~JI w~~=~oflin~ ;~d~m~jl~~

~;~;ri\'~rl~~fat~~~~sot ~r~~~;r~":Pep~~~

'3.'~ ~~~tu~~~e~tfrn~lnf..~;,~~~~~~

~~~~~09i~~~s~~:~rtfhrc~'::agtu~ri~'J:

Com'*"""......,:,ton"!::

China/US If: Jdeas of time anq~.I?ot~ce
ByRoe-O.FargM
--otHIItory

NOTE:

"'"--Iii_..,.. otlflllo-

ptoc:e

=-::-&amp;=-:;'::"~;we"..'::!

on~~-....,.

""

IU
Rolla TerrUI once wrote ·thet to
undenlt8nd China - must appntelete
the 011111888 ot Ume and P.lace,
Llll us look flrllllll the Chinese concept
of time. Fntdertck Mote has pointed' out
,that the Ch~ may be the only major
people In the world who conceive of the
coemoe-heeven, ..ttl and man-as
simply evolving through time with no
definite lnltlllllng JIO!IIt Without a
"creetlon myth," the Chlnew had no
strong concern with the beginning of
hllllory, no apeotatlon that - t • of
hllllory coutd be wholly novel, and no
, _ that hllllory WOuld ever come to an

=·

end.
for thla
lWon, the
Chinese
turned
their lull111tentlon
to the act
PI'OCIIN and ~ng of
hllllory. The -'Y claaalc. the Book of
Documents, dlacuued the rlee and tall
of the e.ly dyneatlea end provided a
normative pattern of chl!!lll8 which
r81nalned good lor all time. Ttie Classic ·

r~Ch~J:.::S~h=:.ror~:~

coufd

act effectively to Influence Hs

C011r118. Aaaumlng that history Ia ~he

prime eouroa of hUJnan wisdom, the

Chinese . developed a sophisticated '
understanding of the Interplay of
cyclical and. linear .changes· through
time. The great historian Ssu-ma Ch'ien
brought both.klnds of changes together
In his account of all events down to his
own day, and other historians treated
both elements In their studies of single
dynasties. The Chinese were Influenced
by Buddhism , which held that time js
basically an Illusion, and by Western
thought, which stresses linear change,
but they always reasserted their own
concepts of time and acted accordingly.
, The Chinese sense of time continues
to Inform thought and action in China
today. Frederic Wakeman has shown
that whlle Mao wes a sincere and
knowledgeable convert to Marxism, he
may never have accepted some of the
basic philosophical categories whlch
underlay Marxism along with all other
Western schools of thought . Mao used
the Marxist-Leninist stages of history,
avenin their rigid Stalinist form, but he
modified them to take account of
China's own pattern of hislory.- More
Important, he conceded In discussions
with Intimates that Marx might look "a
little silly"· In a couple of hundred years
and that even under communlsrn there
~~~~~ly to be struggle of one kind or

Ides ol ''UtoPii' atlll Yltel '
Fundamental concepts of things like
time are seldom explicit In any culture,
but we glimpSed the continued vitality
of one early Chinese Idea of utopia
during one of our discussions In China. A member of our group hed remarked
that It would be nice II some day
Westerners would give back -to China
some of the artifacts and paintings
which they took durlng ,Chlna's "century
of humiliation." The guide at the
Klangsu provincial museum agreed that
It would be nice but that It was unlikely
to happen · soon-If ever. When
someone remarked that It might hl!flpen
when the ''great harmony" [ta-l ungl
was established, the guide -chuckiOd
and ncldded. (Ta-t'ung was an eany
Chinese concept of ufopla which Mao
once equated with communism.) Not
only Is ta-l'ung still alive In China but it

~~~~\'r"e~~~~fh":~~~~: /:11~:·t~~

It will take a long time to attain
communism lo China (let alone In the
world) and that eveo when It comes It Is
unlikely to solve all human problems .
This Chines~ conC8Jll of time, which
seems both radical · and realistic,
contrasts sharply with the Idea"' time
which has been dominant In the West.
Mlrcea Ellade pointed out that certain
·

!S..pJ~gett . col.2

�It

April20,1 811

RIP lAid
•China/US II
Hunan to re-establish contact wlih the

(from page 10, cot 4}

Sympo~ium

will honor
Dr. Wu
Two

Nobel

prizewinners

will ) be

r:~~~~;sv.~u~~~ J7~o~;~f~~~~r~

physics, at a symposium Friday, May 5,
from 1 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. In the Sy
Lecture Hall, Elncott.
The symposium, "The Science of
Matter," will salute Dr. Wu on his
retirement from teaching . A professor
at U/B since 1964 an'd former chairman
of the D~partment of Physics and
Astronomy, Wu has also served curing
that time as chairman of the Science
Development Committee of the National Security Cou11c11 of the Republic of

~~;.:'~·itt.!!'~n ~~Y~:~t In Pf~~cy~~=~i~~
education and technology.
Wu has mademany contributions not
only In his research Into atomic and
molecular • theory, plasmas, kinetic
theory, nucle!lr theory, astrophysics

r~:ch~~~~~:,npor::::~~up~~tofa~~~. ~~ Na
~~~~a~~~i.;Di~L~,;~~~s1 ~~ntr%'7~n ~7~ .

speak at the symposium.
Dr. Yang, now Einstein Professor at
SUNY at Stony Brook, will discuss
"Elastic p-p Scattering at Isabelle
Energies" .111 1:10 p.m.
Dr. Lee, now E. Fermi Professor at
Columbia, will discuss "Solitons and
Hadrons" at 3:20p.m.
RoDert Novl&lt;;k, professor of physics
at Columbia and noted for his research
irt atomic physics, quantum electronics, and nuclear. spins. and moments,
will speak about "X-ray Astronomy" at 2
p.m . Novick Is cio-dlrlictor of the
Columbia Astrophysics Lsboratory and
holds two U.S. patentJ~ lor atomic
resonance apparatf.
Aklra lslhara, pi-ofessor and chairman
of U I B's Department of. Physics and
Astronomy • .will lecture on "Surface
Electrons' at 4:10 p.m. Dr. lslhara has
lectured extensively In the U.S. and
abroad and has served as consultant to
North American Rockwell, the Boeing
Scientific Research Lsboratory and the
Oak Ridge NatiOnal Laboratory . .
The public Is Invited to attend the
symposium, which is free and req•lres
no registration.

Research up·
From last July 1 to March 31 , the
University received 308 research grants
and contracts totaling $17,358,256,
Robert' C. Fitzpatrick, acting vice
president for research , reported this.
week.
·
The dollar amount Is running 14.9 per
cent ahead of last year, Fitzpatrick
·
Indicated.
During March, he reported , 29
grants/contracts totaling $1,437,711
were received . Thirty-nine proposals
totaling $3,698,681 were submitted.
Among new grants, Bruce Jackson of
English received $47,376 from the
National Endowment for the Humanities for a study of " The Traditional
Narrative," and Dr. Gerald Rising of the
Depar1ment of Instruction was awarded
$47,734 from tho National Institute of
Education for planning math curricula
which Integrate use of hand-held
calculators.
.
Dr. Thomas~Gutterl dge , School of
Management , •tecelved a $511 ,403
renewal from the u.s. Department of
Labor, for the U/B Inst itute for the
Development of Manpower Specialists.

..

~·~·-

...........

Judao-chrlstian Ideas played a crucial
role In the development of what he
called " history." They Included the
notions that God created the universe
and man at definite times In the past'
that God continues to operate outside
of and above the cosmos, and that God
retains the capacity · to Intervene In
history, as . by sending Christ or
Mohammed to earth to save mankind .·
Th~ significant events of history are
unprecedented , unique and Irreversible.
It Is likely that history will someday
come to an end , either In some form of
cataclysm (religious or nuclear) or in
some kind bf utopia (modernity or
communism) . The emphasis on linear
change helps to explain the three
stages of history, ancient-medievalmodern
or
feudallsm-eapltallsmsocialism , which dominate Western
study · of the past. E.H. Carr was
operating In this tradition when he
recogn ized many of the ups and downs
- of Western history but still argued that
we must retain at least the " hypothesis
of progress" If we are to make sense of
the past. In their determination to
escape the thrall of so-&lt;:alled "archaic"
cu)tures which were supposedly "timeless," both El iade and Carr ignored the
possibility of studying the pattern of
the past. Although both were educated
In "classical " learn ing and interested in
"non-Western " cultures, they adopted a
definition of " hl~tory" which effectively
excluded t ~e majority of mankind from
the purview of that d l scl~line.
We're challenged to reconsider
Th e Chinese sense of time challenges
us to reconsider our Western sense of
time to see whether it corresponds
accurately to the actual process of
change and continuity in our own
Western experience. The opportunity is
to see that by focusing more on t he
pattern of the past we may be able to
understand It better and to relate it
more effectively to the presen t. Within
the academy, the challenge is to
redefine our concept of history to
include human activit ies back to
earllqst tlmesJbased on oral as well as
written recor s), and to insist that

~~'rail'o~he8gg~ b~~~s ff~~u'::1.or~~

opportunity Is to see that by
understanding the pattern of Western

n~~'ro 1~fl~earicebftsa~~eur;~r

the first
The Chinese sense of place was
closely related to their sense of ti me.
Ho Plng-ti has shown that the Chinese
first flourished on the North China plain
where a rich and self-renewing aeolian
loess salt permitted them to produce an

:Pa'!~u~~d" 1 b~~p~:~h~~~o~~d u~r~~~~~

the Irrigation · systems which were
essential to other early civilizations .
The Chinese developed their own
written lanquage which set them apart
from outstders and provided unity
'among various groups of Chinese
speaking different dialects. The Institution of ancestor worship r.rovlded

Sumer fought Akkad, Athens fought
Sparta, Rome struggled with Byzantiurv , Germany fought the I'IISt of
Europe, and America and Russia move
toward World War Ill as If It were the
most civilized thing In the w6rtd. While
decidedly enthusiastic about the
achievements of the West, McNeill
makes very clear that " Instability~ and
"over expansion" have been the other
sides cif the .coins of "vitality" and

~~;; B~er~~;a~~~nfal~~':JiyJ~

Marxism , Mao was able to meld the two
In a way which was broadly acceptable
to the majority of his countrymen. A
few years ago, Llu Shao-sh'l and Lin
Plao talked about the Chinese &lt;~xper­
ience as a "revolutionary model" for
other countries to follow . Today Teng
Hslao-p'lng and Hua Kuo-feng talk
about the need for a "great order" In
China to serve as a base for Influencing
the "great disorder" In the world at
large.
This Chinese sense of place· Is
unlikely to change since the notion of
being •n the center Is built Into the
Chinese name for China. When we
visited a middle school in Shihchlachuang, Hopei , the students wanted. to
know
what
" foreign
languages"
(wai-kuo-hua, literally "outer country
languages" ) are taught In American
secondary schools . When the Interpreter ran down our list and came -to
Chinese (chung-l.uo hua, literally the
" language of ~~ central country" ), the

~~~t~ve~~~:~ c~~l~er1~:~e a.:J::~~s

of the world situation , these students
. noted the linguistic Incongruity In our
suggestion that the " language of the
central country" could ever be a
" language of an outer country."
· Some would regard this Chinese
~rspective on the world as quaintly
'sinocentrlc," embarrassingly "parochial," annoyingly "ethnocentric," or
even repu lsively "antiforeign ." Others
would see it as "irrelevant" or as
"normal." After all ; most people in the
world tend to think of their country as
the center. But the Chinese belief that
they are securely at the center of
world affairs prompts us to review our
own Western concept of place. Western
civilization also began in a productive
ri ver valley. but it was located in what

~s~?~n~i~~e~!c:~~~!~? ~~~·~~;~g~~

the "middle" between East and West.
Moreover, as William McNeill points
out, the " rise of the West" Involved the
fligh t of some of the earliest key
peo'ples, such as the Jews , from areas
of productive agriculture Into the
desert . Moreover, "civilization " "benef ited " from recurrent adm ixtures of
militarism from even more mobile
11roups, such as the Aryans. Western
great societies," the real cultural

~~~s 'Jf'~~~ f~~Pf~~~ec~~o~~~

surpluses . The center of Western
civilization constantly moved, from
Sumer to Egypt , from Greece to Rome,
and most recently , from Europe to
America and Russia. Internal conflict
within these cultures lay behind the rise
of peripheral people to dominance:

~~Ye"b~'!l~m;~ th~h~~st.are

so

Exf:::,"~~u!,~~:~s~J

oqnflrms that ll
was Europe's lnablfl!y to solve Its
internal crises which led It to embark on

.

~~~H.:'~ro!~~~al'W==

:.;'=

long been living beyanc;! his means,
dependent on-and therefore drfven to
control - the resources of other peoples
which he has persuaded himself are
essential to his well being . Both
McNeill and Wallerstein are thus clearly
aware of the pattern of Western history,
and they see Its costs as well as Its

~~~~~~,!;~t ~~';f ':s~~a8w~~a~f ~~~

pattern must become universal. McNeill
predicts the extension of the Western

~~::~!~:~~ \~~ :~~~s~~ ~~~~=~

as the "moderrr world system." Both

~~~;ra ~~:vef"/1/,~ thua~ ~'!'~~~t.:::'~

frontiers ,

that

other

cultures

offer no attractive alternatives to earth
as habitats for mankind.
The Chinese challenge Is to recognize
that the Western system of Internal
conflict and external expansion, always
wasteful, has become obsolete in a
world where man has begun to
recognize the need for limits. The
American oppoftunlty Is to see · that a
people who are endowed with rich
natural ~esources and a vital agriculture
and who are.willing to live within their
means can flourish without expanding
0

~~~~~ e"~~ls?~~rtoa~~m~~o~0s':i

reliant would give us a sense ot
self-confidence which would make

~~n~~nth~s~~~~~~~·:r.. us~=

challenge Is to devote resources to the
humanities and social sciences comparable to those wiJich flowed to the
natural and applied sciences · 1n the
wake of the Russian challenge of
Sputnik. The opportunity Is to establls.h
effective links with earlier stages of
Western civilization which will provide a
base for borrowing from other cultures
without losing our own sense of
continuity and purpose.

0

;;:,n\~~; a"n~'h' J_c~~7g.l~g~nar~~~~

present day . There was much geographtcal mobility within the "central
country," but there )Nas no "migration
myth" of a people from one area to
another.
Living In the center of the known
world, the Ch inese were ' willing to
borrow ideas and techniques from the
surrounding peoples and•to Incorporate
those elements Into their evolving
culture . As sinltlc culture spread to the

~~~~~7~~lngext~"n"J'.~s, th~~~ ~~.'i7~~~

~:J~;a~lj,'l~~·~~=y ~~=r~oa,"~~i~ ~a~l?n~

and most highly continuous In world

r~~~~~ fr:.~elnnd 1~ea~d ~ ~enw:~:n~eit~

1

0 1

the Chinese selectively borrowed
elements from those cultures. In this
manner, they were able to revitalize the
core values of their own culture and to
make them relevant to the larger world
beyond their borders.
Sanse of place continues strong
The Chinese sense of place continues
to be very strong In Ch ina today.

~·~~~;~e~~ s:X~t'n¥s~~[~~g ~~~~~~Ia~~

China, visited the shrine to Confucius
in Shantung , and returned to his native

The C.m.,.. a&amp;..net •nd Buffalo a... Tljo plus one.

Spring festival
College B will present a "SprinQ
Festival of Music and Dance, •
begtnnlng Thursday, April 20 with
the Camenae String Quartet and the
Buffalo Bass Trio,
Other events scheduled Include:
April 22 Buffalo Guitar
Quartet.
Ar&gt;ril 26 ~ ''Schumann and
Spring :" Heinz Rehfuss and Suze
Leal (voice) ; Veronica Knittel
(violin).
May 2 " American Retrospective." lvar Mikhashoff (piano);

are

~~g~e~r~~~~w:!'l~ a:,od ~~!n,~ ;.:~

~~n~~~~jlredbetr:a~n ~t~=c~~=~~t o;,s ~ri~
family to its local community. Chang .
Kwang-chih has shown that the earliest
towns developed In the middle and
lower Yellow River valley, the sa-&lt;:alled
"central plain." The name for China, the

control over those peoples. Since their
political reach rarely exceeded their

often

Zodiaque Dancers.

ba':s~Y. J~li; l~~~~~:.

and Contra-

th:'8lJJ!n- ~~~~·~ ln~i~ll:i;:,nsK~~~
patrick (dance) .
All eV&lt;I!lts are' belog held at the

~at~arJ~~ -c~~~~rJre:d~ls~l~~ot1~

$1.50; U/B faculty , staff , alumni ,
senior citizens, $1 ; studimts $.50.
College B Is the college of the
creative arts and crafts .

.

'

�April20, 1171

•Calendar
(Iran

-'·col. .,

DIIAIIA'

··- • pOy and directed
by Eric Bonley, o WQid ~- - ThMve .
8p . m. ~-$3. , . _ , , . a n d _
c:ltlens$1.50.

-

Si&gt;CI-.d by the Center tor T h M v e and the Depor1mant d ThMve.
fRCFIUI'

.

..._
...,.. 2nd floor lounge, Richmood,
Elicolt. 8 and 10 p .m. Free to lAC faapayef$;
$ .50 kl&lt;.ott.&amp;.
UIIIYEIISITY OPERA WORKSHOP'

--.byGiaoomoPuoc:n;--

T-he, by ~ de Gaglono. Baird
_.Ill Hoi. 8 p.m. Genenol admissioo $1 .50;

df -

U / 8 faculty,-· alumni with 10 and senior
citlzens$1;1~1a$. 50.

Sponacnd by the Oepar1mont d Music.

IIECfi'AL •
cetlof'fo100 Aodtot Tom Rosenberg, celist,
Rex Flynn and AI Rizzo, pian;sts. Central
IJbnlry Auditortum, Lafayette Sq.Jare. 8 :30 p.m.

Free.

•

by flnlhms, Prd&lt;ofiev, - Rachmaninoff.
Rosenberg wa i sludent of Pall Katz: of the
e-.ct ~~ when they wer• resldeot at
U / 8.
Sponacnd by the Buffalo and Erie County
l..itnry and the OOeiftn Aklmnl Club of WNY .

JUAIIFIUI'
Ono&amp;lngl, ThoOO.o-tl't(Fronce, 1977).

Con-.co ThM. .. Squire. COlt 638-2919 tor
- --- t a S l ; Othera$1 .50.
This 11m chosen to be the opening night
- - of this ~· New Vorl&lt; Flm Festival.
,.........., Flllll - - · ...... ''Cinematically

::~:=',=~";!;.':...':::!"'"that

cele·

NOTICES
o\ a A OFFICE HOURS
Exlandod hounl for A &amp; R in Hayes 8 11'\iS
-nonth . . . . tol6wa:
Apolt 20-8:30 o.m.-8:30 p.m.; April 218:30 a..m.--4:30 p...m.; Aprtf 24-2?-8:30 a.m.6 :30p.m.; Apolt 21-8:30 a.m.·4:30 p.m.
• For the
for rwglatraonly, the offoce wil be open on Saluf·
doy, 22 and 2&amp;, and May 6 and 13 from
9 e.m. to 4 p.m.

-.cod·-

FOIIEION STUDEHT TUITION WAIVER

APPLICATIONS
Foreign_, Tultlor! W8Ner applications tor
Sl.l'l'm8f' R
fill , 1Q7a, are now availabte at
!he Office d , _ Aid, Butler Annex 8 ,
- . - ~. Af&gt;pticalion - . e ; s May 5.
)nty thoOe w(lo ate on an F or J
. . . . . oligiJie 8PIIfy. Ttie Ananc:lol Aid Office

10

s _., Morldoy throu!lh Friday from 6 :30 a.m.
!o5p.m.

t.D.CARDS

1.0. c.-. avallb&amp;e in 161 Harm.n- on:
o\prit ZWS, Morldoy &amp; Tuesday 3 p.m.·7 p.m .;
..., 1-2, Morldoy &amp; r.-y 3 p.m.-7 p.m.
S~la wanting d brtl1 on 10 Card
,...obtain prior II&gt;PIOYII- -lion at Can1pus
i'otlce Headquwtorl ...,_ """""a to the tO

Center.

.

Ukrainian week
All come,.. got tO try their hand at Ukrainian pyaanky fEaster
egg making) at a demonatratlori-workahop in the Squire
Center lounge on Monday. Ukrainian Week events continue

today wlth a demgn.tratton of caramlca and woodcuta, alao

In the Center Lounge at noon. Tomorrow. it'll be folk dan~lng
in 233 Squire at noon. Sunday brings two performancea of
''Ei:hon of the Ukraine•., with band urea and dancera (at 3 and
8 p.m. in the Cornell Theatre - $1 .50 for senior cltfzena and
atudent.; *2.60 · for othara). Also Sunday, "Easter In the

Ukralne,"-featuring U/8 dancers. Chennel7. 8 a.m.

- Y - -.. FACUI.TY

UIDSTAFF
"'l*ld .. -airia&amp;m.... A Honing .it tnveotlgotlng tie d 1!111IIOfWY in ... faculty onci at tho
llafe Univwllly d New Vorl&lt; at lluflolo. Pul-

nonary--.--10.__ ................
... _
10
.,...,_d-.Educa-

- _

bM1g- by·ond~-~thOOIIIIjaclomp!y
-

oncl ... -

lniO • -

e.pAd to

.• ntlle-ol...-,.y _ _

- .Nl--·-·
Tho -

PlajKt -

corefiJiy

-bythoU.S.

iUeo

oan--'a-for-~

lho _ . . _ . . be - i n loollopllrtor
lnCI-lnOory-: Sc:nool'ofNonlng.
Squire Hoi, 4 / 20, Aoom 262, 9 :30 a.m.·
) :30 p .m.; Copen - · 4 1 20. 26 and
?50. 9:30 e.m.-3:30 p.m.
·
·

IEQIMIIAYIONDATDFOAFAU, 1171
~lleQN-24foraiDUE­
nl junlora; 26, for DUE oophomares;

oc--

ze.

'lid
for DUE · (AI grad a..-.ts
, . bo regtotorwd at t h o - - ).
AI

f1loce in Hayes B.

51-.i.--TION

su.--

-lnHayesB .

1978 Rogiotrotion Is now

.

--~AI'PUCATIONS
T-.g~~forthoFal
1 9 7 8 - - now..-~ tho UniYeroity

.1-mg Cent..-, 364 Baldy. F«·lnformation call
83&amp;-2394.

•

Dl-

.... t
Tho ·
In - - - . .. oponsoring
a bNncll- p o i \ o f - Apri 30, Sheraton
fnn.8ulfllo Eaot, oi 11 :30 Lm. Tho fee is $2.50
for-taondS.forothera. For f'8MI'fttiona by April 24, contact Women
l n . . . _ !, 245Crosby: _

EXHIBITS
fiiUSIC LBWIY EX..rr
April Foot! Hu- In
Baird. through- 30.

-lc.

Programmer Anelyat (7 positlons)--Untversit)'
Computing Services, PR-2 , 8·8011 .'
..:..odote
(COordinator for c.m:..un)

. -EclJcalionai~~ . PA-4,8-8012.

FACULTY
VlaiHng Aaa~tant Profellor-Unouistic&amp;.J
F-8031 .
Lecturer I Part-tl~~ Carson College,
F-8032 .
LectUrer {12 months) (Hiti·Noether Research lnstruc:~Qr)4Aathematics Deportment, F·6033.

P - I A - t o P--Mathematic:s
Department F-8034 .
Music Ubnuy,

-·nf --Americ:an
----&lt;:ivl

lecturer or Graduate Auiatant I TA~oUege

H, F-8035 .
Yllllng
F-8036.

~NIHOW

Drowt-

Prfnto ond
by Jane Songermon.
Hal. Tho exht&gt;it wil run through Apri 21 .
Thlo is co-oponaored by tile Art Deportment ond
H..eth Sciencea as the first in \~~~'flat will be a
continuing - o f shows in Beck HaR.

JOBS
PIIOFE8SIONAL STAFF ••.
DnctaraiP~Piont(-51. ) , ~I

V.P. (ort'i.yslcal ~acilitles, PR-4, 8 ·801 0 .
Nun : ~rufit

·

Studies,

- - 10 Ful
~ Dentisby,
F·8037.
ANII:tlnt or Auociate Profnaor (2 posiOOns)
-cl\!ll Englneerlng, F6038.

Suporvltlllfl Jontior so-t (3·11 p.m. shlft)Squire Hall; Custodial Servlc:eS, Amherst (6:30
a .m.·5 p .m.-temponvy l.flti 6 / 21 / 78, then per.

Erog;neemg, F-8039.
A.t&amp;llt.nt Librarian (Record I Reference Ubrarian)-Music Library, F-8040.
Aul&amp;•nt Profeuor-EJementary &amp; Aemediaf
Eduailion, F-6041 .

Santor SIOUonary Engl._ 50-14 (varying
shift, temporary until 7 / 19 / 78, then penneneroQ
-PI1yslcat Plant, Amherat.
Principal Mall &amp; Supply Cferlt SG-11-&lt;:am·
pusMail.
·

--&amp;:hoot

NON-COMPETITIVE CIVIL SERVICE
Ubor1tory Animal Carellker SG-5-Farbef
Hall, Une,Nos. 3007:i &amp; 30045.

OrJ.!.

U.S. Pust:tJ.!C
Pr\10

Ruffalo, J'ti.V.
.Permit Nn. 311

• bmy; Mathematice; Atflrmotlve Action; C&lt;lqlpUter
Services; Purclloaing; Medical Schad Business
Office; Schoof of Atchitecturv &amp; Environmental
Design; Onlt Biology; Pl!ysicol -.~ EGJc:ational
.Studlea (port· lime); Sto11oflcal 5oienc:e (!*!·time)._
Cferlt SCiences l..itnry; Law
Ubnuy; Unive&lt;aity l.Jbraries (port· time).
. . Account Cferlt S04-S1udent Acc:ounts; Credft· '
Free Programs; Payroll; Accounlll Payable .
Santor Typlot SIH-Faciities P!omioa. ·
Santor Steno SG-9--NursinQ; Stolistlcal Scl·
ence.
Senior Otert Pun:hooo SG-7~Jno (2l
Senior Cferlt Poyrall sG-7-Payrol.
Senior SlotH C~ SG-1-Central Stores.
Electronic Computer o P.,.tor SG-1G-Com·
putingSennces.

COMPETITIVE CIVIL SERVICE
l'fplol SG-3-Univetsttv eo..\Sellng 5ervic:e 12);
tJrMraity Placement SUrgery; Law l.bary; l..llrary
-catolol)lng.
50-5-The Colleges; Physics &amp; Astron-

manent).

Moll &amp; Supply~- SG-3-&lt;:ampus Mall.
10 MONTH (NS) SEASONAL
Stono 50-5 (11 1178·10 13 11 78)-Medlcal
School Business Office.
Stano 50-5 (2 / 1 179·3 / 31 / 79 Off Tome)
-Division of Undergnld Education.
Det.l Entry Machine Operator sa-c (11 J
1178· 12 / 31/78 Off Tome)-Unlvenllty ComputingSennces .

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1388697">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1451398">
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
. VOL. 9 NO. 26 APRIL 1.3,19ltf .

.

Alumni.get a visi6n gf itfrom an array of a_d ministrators
and a·trfo,of Congressmen
~f ~~

the future -:-

~d

II could

U/B Alumni were tn.ated to a vision

:"'=zed"
ag~m': o::S~~~~~~ as~l .
admlnlstrators and a trio of Congressmen.

·•

Within the next decade, some 200
gnaduates he,vcl, they will - or should
- find more rnoner, in their pockets,
belt~ health · care ~ fewer hospitals,
and a Buffalo whose popolace will
exude a joie de vivre that will turn
Parisians green. U/B will be up to its
figU&lt;Btlve chin in the mainstream .of.
economic development In Western New
York.
Or so Republican Congressman Jack

~~fci.J ~ot~~~~~'1g"eo~ent~~

Architecture and Environmental Design,
and President Robert' L. Ketter
. would have it.

1oo~~~n~~ ~~eH,::rr~~Q£.t~~~~

also heard Congressmen John La Falce
and Henry Nowak and Joan Loring of
the Erie County Environment and
Planning Department .
rhe air's getting better, Loring said ;
fed8r.ll money is being used here to
promote a renaissance of private

?.:'ft ~~t"/~Th F'!.?;;.~~ vine':!~ tl':e ~~~

1

poaiti..iy.

economic malaise oi the U.S. and the
world: let both the working stiffs and
the Fortune 500..companies "keep mare_
of what they make. ·
This will: renew Incentive; get paople
off their ass and out to work; increase

~~~vJ~iat~~7 s~~"'1t,~m:~ld~:

po~~~~~:ro;u!~~rt:r'~resslve Income

•

tax are killing us, Kemp said. People •
(!lake ll)Ore_, true. But as they do, they

g~!.,~~fs.h'll:'eerd~l~~~w::;.::l'fttrwYg

~~in~":rsihe~:et~astet: jh~y go, -~~
If the present rate of inflation (6 par
cent) continues for the next decade, a
worker at Bethlehem Steel will have to
make $60,000 · a year to match t!le
disposable income which $15,000 a year
provided In 1966. This kill s incentive,
Kemp &lt;:ontended . P.eople · say why
bother to work hard; the government's
going to take all the extra money,
anyway. We need a system in which
people maximize their efforts and get a
reward for it, Kemp said - a framework
in which investors get more of a return
on their risk, a system which enablllf
you to get ahead (not further behind) by
working hard :
If we were to reduce the rates of the

P.~~~~:~t~;~~~~~~a:;t~"W.:~d 1, we
In Sweden, Kemp pointed out, the
government takes 62 pe"r cent of an
exorbitant tax rates), and are rewarded
average worker's $11 ,000 a yl!ar salary.
lor idleness and debt (through
All incentive has been lost . in Britain ,
unemployment and welfare payments
the economy is stagnant ) or the same
and tax breaks on Interest payments)~
reasons.
~.. ·
..
_
we are courting •mediocrity and "!!rse,
"Our society, ouf. democracy are in _ Kemp said .
dangM if this -continues, " Kemp
Don't get him wrong . He's not
warne&lt;t. This vlclouJ"&lt;cirCie "of tax and'· · ~ing to put wldows :and orphans into
inflation destroys ·hope, discou(ages

Kempi tMotW-...nounceinenta
•·.
Bet- the announcement that he.is ·
not going to run for Go...,or and ne&gt;lls
of hh~pointment as a Congressional
"Wat
" at the next round" of SALT
talks In
, CongressmM · Kemp
hurried "in and o.ut of Saturday's
sessions on the Future, his briefcase.
. oierflowlng with important looking
~Df~P~~~~st:::,es~n~~;tP{:~%
papers, every hair in place.
&gt; •
A bll~lef tll;n -lie-used to be,- - qoalit}'-ln:lhe .economic marketpiacel•"
wtiitn~lf ate punished for work'
-~e;FP=1:.~~-g~~l:.~~~~~~t~te and
output, for saving ·(through

Q~it worryi~g:

~·s!te"~S::~t"~;S:~eh~n~~ll\TV:.

thehan~lcapped: etc.

· '---"
fnceiifWj1o"CIO'fliliit- Mlidlil
But shouldn't there ·also be an

~= -'

.-

incentive ·for' people "to ·,do•thi .
Kempasked .
·· •'"..¢·:!f.
The prpgressive tax stniaure breeds

~~~':~0~;. ~~~~=id~=Y., ~

.:;::~t.:~~f~:~ore~

lnQMY .

you

Gpvemment - ~wouldn't feH
off either. More ~ 'f'OUid be
creafid;" go...,ment would OM lust a
much if.not more:
_ ·•
_
The economy. &lt;tf ..the IVory Cout,
.

•lurn1opege4,.~1

it Could kill JOti ·

�April13, 1 .,.

Newborn have
rights, too,
Egan reminds

Conferences
·
Meetings on: legal aspects of
student relations; communication studies;
and foundat-ions of education slated _

--·
--

., ..., ~~,et~~ Spina

1'hyalclana charged with medical care

ol tile newborn should protect their
petlents' rights Just as diligently as
othW clinlclana do, maintains Dr.
Edmund ~. chief of neonatology In
tile U I B Oilpartment of Pedlat1iea and
diNctor of lhe Clllldren's Hospital
RllalciMIIntenalve Gare Nurs«y .
Af a aemlnar here on numan
•uee/ethlcs In medlplne last week,
11Qan noted that while medical care Is
untweltantly given to other patients
Without conakterlng the Individual's
"'nnrrMMc value to eoclety" or · "lntlllactual POCenttal ," theM factors are
aftMI pivotal in deciding whether or not
IIIMavlng treatment to the .

:..C..

Stuc:lent-Unlveralty rel-'lons
Haridlcapll8d students In· higher
education, the controversial Bakke case
and truth In edvertlslng are among
topics to be explored during a day-long
State-wide conference Friday, April 14,
at Amherst. The event Is being
sponsored by the New York State
Assoclatlo!'
College · Personnel
(NYSCPA).
.
Entitled "Legal Perspectives: .The
Changing Relationship Between the
Student and the University.'' tile '
conference, scheduled from 9 a.m. to 6
p.m. In Capen Hall, will feature a
keynote address by Thomas Burgum,
deputy counsel for the Senate Appropriations Committee.
•
Burgum's presentation will concern
recent developments In legislation and
court decisions affecting the relationship between students and the

Field school
planned for
summer
would you like to be an explorer this
summer, perhaps discover cultures that
have been forgotten for thousands of

YBf:~- 1978 Archeology Field School
provldQs an opportunity for students ~o
be producers of Ideas and Information .
It's opeJJ to both undergreduatea and
College, the conference will be held In
graduates, In any year, wlth any maJor.
the Jane Keeler Room , -107 MFACC,
The program will take place on Grand
Ellicott.
The session~ are free and open to the . - Island June 5-July 28 and students can
receive up to 8 credits tor participating.
public. Friday's progrsm will begin at 9
Or. Ezra Zubrow, professor of anthroa.m. with coffee and lntroductoty
de~r:t~~~n~ 0u~~na!~s~aurrf~l~y sf!f~

rem~.:!inunicatlon with Autistic Child-•
ren" (10 a.m.) Is the first workshop to
be held, II wlll be chaired by Judith

~~~~rn.:h~~sr~~a~e~\r~~o~f' ~~:;:r.;
State:
.
Students Laurie Me~er. Berry Prlzant,
Bert -Ferraro, Kathy Evans and Carol
Silverman will discuss observed traits
of"autlstlc children and how videotapes
have been used In lden~g and

re::~rh:."~o~~ il:e ~;:,~,'~. '::lhm~

Is that there Is a kind of educational
amnesia; studAnts have forgotten that
they can be producens of Ideas and
Information as -II as consumers."
Archeology Is one of the disciplines
where students heve a unique chance to
produce something Zubrow says. : 'You
don't need sophistication or capital as

"T'- who Insist thet a school-age
child with a pl1yalcal handicap or any 111
young adult get llf~ng treatment
and some good problems to be working
1
may objec! fo providing tile same
~~~fc!,~Pv.,"a~~;~e:~Jidren . com- on .
.
"ArcheologY. Is the last frontier, " he
tnlldment for the newborn · who Is
Research on communication In a
continues; "fi. s ilke being an explorer in
psychiatric transitional living facility
men~ly ," E11an pointed out.
u'nknown Jands. Imagine flndlr.g a
In larger, complex organizations
He
~yslciMI consider -as
un}~~Ye of handicapped students will and
building dating to 250 A.D."
·
a aor1
lne - whether r,ropoliiKIwill be presented In a workshop on
be discussed by Bertha Cutcher of
tnlldmen . Will benefit the In ant, not
"Communication
In
Institutions"
at
1
No Ph.D. needed
U 1B's Office of Services for tbe
w11et11er It cWHI benefit the parents or
p.m. Friday.
"
You don't need to have a Ph,D _to find
eoclety.
Judith Laughlin, assistant professor
Important artifacts, either.
""'"-· he emphasiZed, treatment
of nursing education here, will chair the
"I spent all summer . Wbrl&lt;lng In
Community College.
muet heve a minimum goal of achieving_ County
session
,
with
Adele
Anderson,
Doris
Mexico
and the most Important
The requirements of 'Section 504 of
a conacloua, paln-frile life for the
Lemieux, and Michael Y"'tes presenting
discovery was made by my wife, not an
Federal
Aehabllltatlon
Act
of
1973
the
Int.~!. T,...,_. Instituted or conresearch.
officially
took
effect
June
3,
19n,
and
tinued without t"- rolnlmum goals,
Aspects of " Face-to-Face Interachave complex Implications for higher
he aald, oan be«~naidllhid torture.
tion" will be discussed at 2:15p.m . In a
Zubrow remarks. "It may have been the.
education. This session , beginning at
Ega~:~ Oiled t11e- of an Infant born
workshop chaired by Paul L Glitvln,
only day she carne out to the field that
,
1:45
p.m.,
will
provide
an
overview,
wllli Down's ~ (mongolism)
professor of linguistics, UIB.
summer."
highlighting legal aspects, Institutional
wllo .-lAid .., eperetlon to correct
Students participating - will
be
Students enrollinp I~ the field school
responslbiiiUes and related mailers .
....,_ · 6Jndltton (duodenal atrlala)
Deborah Garvln, Eleanor Oougherly,
will sel up orlglna research proJects,
Another prog(aiTl will focus on the
Kathleen
Cress,
Susan
Green,
lau'l'
dig, survey, and gather data. They will
controv.alal Bakke case, now awaiting
Hunter'and Jerome Nolan.
then write, edit and perllclpete In
final resolution by the U.S. Supreme
~. tile child would die of
publishing their findings.
Courl. Its outcome Is expected to have
Ethn'ogrsphic field studi.es In a men's
within lhnae weeks following
'We plan to have evwy one decide
lmPIICI on affirmative action and
birth. With It, Eallll notac:lt th"! Infant
w~at kind of data Ia needed to test their
university admissions.
~~~~b'(,.g~~~:f~an ~~e~~~~·:C~~~ problems,
-.ld live well TIIIP adultnooa, even
then - will decide which Is
Or. .Jacob Hyman, professor of
11
~ dependenL upon
the moat efficient way to get II togeth8r.
constitutional law at U I B, will discuss
wo~zs;~c~ ~1ng, professor of The
.nc:l eoctetr.
'
students will worl&lt; In teams under
thlslssue.
111
In euoh • ~j which
the
Another workshop will deal with
· my dlractlon; " Zubrow asys. ''We C8n
~ adinl...,_ Ia rare, the
· do almost anything · diet's within
"Consumerl811l In Higher Education: l
~ ihould be .., active 8dvocete
Truth In Advertising." Also starting. at
-~n:~~~~i the passive volceln reason."
t11e Infant's rtghta, Egan aatd. The
Zubrow has worl&lt;ed with field schools
1:45
p.m.,
It
will
examine
the
legal
English and aspects of speech pettema
dDalar lhoukl try to con'lince the
In the past, at Stanford, 1n perllcular.
rights and reasonable expectations of
In the Buffillo community will be
....... to opt for
rat1n1r than
One group of hla students published a
etudents.
discussed
at
11
a.m:
In
a
workshop
......,., t111e allllll81ve role.
successful, wail-receiVed book Olllhelr
Dolores B. Schmidt, assistant vice
chaired by Wolfgang Wolck, head of I"!
.. tile _ . . . . adanWrt In their.
chancellor for' afflnnatlve action and
dlclalon io forbid tile surgery, the
'
Ul~l~~~~f,~cs~ra:!.m':l'~iene
Kraut· ~ Ilea other oPtions" Egan
~~al .:~'s,=:: ~0 t~~ ~~~~~: hamer, An tall 'bhattacharY.Ya, Elizabeth so~eot ~~~n~u~d'r.ame~dous
e.rct, "WWIIPttlncluc:le withdrawing from
WOit&lt;i.hop entitled ''Title IX and Higher
Carlock, Seder Dwelk, and Krlmhllde
·tfle .-Icing a oourt order to
amount of data collacted In pest· field
Education: Promise and Perlormance."
Rolh.
·
llllfom!
~. or llbldlng by the
schools,'' he notes. "Students are
In this eeaalon, the status of women
Mora ethnogrsphlc research will be
~diollloii-"
waicome to use the Information In
In
higher
eiducstlon
will
be
reviewed
presented
at
1:30
p.m.,
with
atudles·ot
he aald, are so
addition
to their own findings."
from a comparative perspective. Quesfacilities for the aged, an automobile
r.tu1 of lnllpgctloe eulta which might
tions
to
be
ans-.1
Include
the
!19sembly
plant
and
construction
...et from their ov.t adwcacy of 8nY
fle?.r~~~ln£..~~
~J'.;:,!sn t:.':
Intention
of
Title
IX,
what's
original
teams. Elwin Johnson, UIB prc:&gt;fessor
....,._ thllt tlley only~ parents
students leem more quickly , "on-thebe8rl done, and what has yet to be
of anthropology, will chair, with J.
with .....
and, mike them bear
Job."
accomplished.
•
·
Allen
Weedman
,
Clifford.
Nigh
and
Herb
. . bunlen of the declalon.
A -ion on admlnletrallve account~I d'::~h o~~oa~~~
Mt;:
AI D0in1 In I'Mdlcal PIIICIIce,
ability and liability, to be presented by
Ap~~~~ ~~~g:'~~n~ill be held at 3 Rosenzweig,
8lkl, the
will be faced
a grac:lllate etiident In
Dr. Walter C. Hobbs, associate
p.m., Saturday.
anthropology,
says.
"These
won't
be
profeuor of higher education at U I 8,
M
=a
will provide a general understanding of
~~~~;~,o~~~
r=u':::s"::l • ~=~'!hla,.::
lega( term:~ along with definitions
=hat=
possible.
and lnt
one !elated · to ernpi~ a1 all levels of administration
.
which an undtntandlng of human
and management In higher educatlo~.
communication Is easentlill.
A student perllclpellna In the field
Sponsors
of
the
conference
are
-the
school
gains
a
market.Oie
skill,
too.
Cost of the ocini8Niloe Is $7 for the
Division of Graduate and Professional
Before, any ladarally-funcled contract tor
general public and 15 for NYSCPA
Education, Gniduate Studeot Aasocl•
cons!fi.ICIIorl C8n llellln, proposed
members Mel students, Alllstratlon
lion, Interaction P,nalyals Club, .and
:roc.10ns haV6 to be.. checked tot the
Information C!'ft be obtained !ly calling
Qepartments of· Anthropology - and
·presence of archeological artifacts on
1136-2527.
'
the aile. The ArcheOlogy survey, an
Llngulstlca.
• .
The conterenoe. which expects
lnclependerit branch of the AnthrOjlolo300 ~ta, Is being
1
1n ~with the
New Yclflr
..tlum of Clllef
F~ group convening
available. 1
you finish the field
Student Affairs ooto.a, the U I B
school, you are qualified and can be
The New Vorl&lt; State Foundations of
Dlvlalon of Student Affairs and Its
peld to work on thetle proJects."
Education Association will hold Its
BtudentDrlvelopmenl Program Office.
Ed Well, a graduate student In
:~rl~/:tfeld~~ his. lnvolye·~·
Ala ..tee of scheduled discussions
lludllll.-dltobeahd
., like getting outside and there Ia an
on Friday, ~tstMis of a number
Btudlee of ways people communi·
of unlv.aljlea and colleges throughout
the State will hear papers on such
~. lnaludlng communication with
people were like who used the materials
autletlc chllclnln and ~Weird~ _into the·
topics .. -~ to..the Social
P*yehology Of Education;" "SChOOl
lhet you find and about the
environment was like In thoee day~."
lntegretloil and Affirmative Action: The
There will be an Information meeting
State of the .Movement;" and ''The Future of Foundations." ,
and slide show on the field camp today
ursc:lsy , April 13) at 3 p.IJl. In 232
Saturday's topics Include: "Educaulre. All are Invited to attend.
tional Pol~ and School District
or further Information, contact
Oraanlatlon; -"The Politics of Values;"
Zubrow or Ms. Jeen Grata, Department
"Uiban Appalachians and the Public
Schools;"·"N- York State Certification
of Anthropology, 4242 Ridge Lea.
awtee Kel! ;1880Ciate professor of
Baqul._,ts;" "Social Class and
-Siophonle w - n
A1Mr1can a t1 - 8&lt;1 DNn G. Pruitt,
Educatlbn;" "Open Education;" and
profeaaor of DeYcholoaY, heve besrl
~~~ory of Ec!ucatlon: Two
a-dad ~ fellowllhlps tor
the t978-79 ai:8demlc year.
,
Sessions are scheduled In 213, 214
Dr. Richard A . Powell, associate
They among 292 facult¥ from
and 215 Norton and In the Tiffin Fjoom .
both fhe u.s. and Canada to recelve
Drs. Gene Grablner and Gel! Kell~ of
grants from the Guggenheim Founda·
the U I B Social Foundations DepiiFt·
Association of Dental Schools' Section
tlon for next Y-~!~:_~~d.!!_~~~~ementa.
. _o_n_~-n~.!'~~~~~ ~d-~!~~'?!".~ ?.f!l~~rs:

&amp;~~:c~~ ::J~:~d~~y~;~e:Js:~,~

='~f~ud:::f ~fia~~atL ~~~~~

~~::crn~~!;.r;'~~:~~o,~n~h!r:r::;

=~m:=:.'"'WI~r:
......uon

=

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or

-verv.

n::::~~~ ~:o~s~~="~~~

ille
aan. ....,...,..,..,

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~..::.:s

...........

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c.J:::..

I~

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lr~:'~Ct."';,J:S"1~~~ =~

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·ance

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�April13,1t78

..:

. .lllld .

-Med S~h'oel
Follies
Would you buy an operation
from any of these people?

The Second Annual Med School
Follies sponsored by second · year
mediCal students brought over 400

~~'!fays~d~~P~d ~~~n~mtop0~th:

evening of laughs, music, song and
dance.
After cocktails, guests were treated
to o - two dozen acts performed by
students, ranglnd from the sublime to
the rldlculou_
s . Would you believe a
oerlormance by , the
Med
Med
:rabem,.ci"-Cholr? A)&gt;d they say medleal
students lack lmeglnatlon l

l

�, April) 3, 1878

(fr-.-1,col.41

io health care eeclt year, Naughton
said. But both the percentage and total ~
. dollar amounts Will likely continue to
rise . .
We have too many hospital beds In
many areas. the author .o( the
contro"verslal Dian to prune and
consolidate Buffalo hospitals conten'd-

Kemp said, Is growing five times fas)er
than those of Its African neighbors.
There's no Inflation there, !lit~.
Kemp said he knows why: llle Ivory
Coast tax structure Is such that no one
Ia toed more than 33V. per cent of his
or het Income. In neighboring Ghana,

~8~01~~!~ V..~.:J~ ~~ff~~i.tf~ ·

~~·a~.~"!::'r,~:J'~n~~!. ~~~

faculty, :~!~dents, and practitioners .
·This would Involve such areas as sales
and marketing, accounting and finance,
planning ana strategy formulation,
manufacturing and technological development, personnel administration,
and other matters.
Until external funding Is obtained,
Ketler said, business clients will h~ve
to be assessed a fee for consultative
services which require more1han bl\slc
problem analysis. He is hopmg ,
\hough, that such funding will become
available from both State and federal
sources. "l'or Instance, pending State
legislation would create State-wide
small business extension services.
Additionally, a Federal Small Business
Development · Center Act · Is before
COngress. The leder.al legislation has
the same objectives as thil State bill and
speclllcaily provides lor a federal-State
pa(!nershlp In • the establishment of
such programs."

out. ~Is unused capai:lty costs money.
Nationally, about 60 per cent of annuaj
health costs go for just running
· 7
hospitals.
· Medicare and Medicaid Have led to
inflation In health care charges because
the systems lack saJeguards for
controlling costs, Naughton said.
Government now pays for 40 per cent of
all costs In hQSpltals, he re~rted.
A shift to "prospective' rslher than
"retrospective' governmental financing
for hospital operations should help
Improve things. Under this system, he
'said, hospitals wilt have to draw up
R....-ch functions
budgets In advance and then live within
The Center's second program will
them . No longer will costs be
Involve
business and economic rereimbursed after a given year, and
- search. The agency will -attempt to
deficits picked up.
genert~te a regional econometric foreReducing overbeddlng· will be a
Gastlng model and also will be Involved
tougher act, Naughton sa1d. Health care
In conducting specialized contractual
planners several years a9o ov.erst~dles, These Include public oplnl0 n
What's wrong with Western New
estlmaled the need for hosp1tal beds,
:-sampling, market Jesoerch analyses,
' York, Architecture's Dean Cohen .said,
some setting figure as high as seven
·labor market studies, Industrial location·
Is that we're dumb, when It comes to
beds per 1,000 population. :roday's
studies, and attitude surveys.
•
conventional wisdom puts the figure In
·"The econometric mod.el," Ketter
ou~~ our priceless. unequalled
the neighborhoOd of about 3.2 beds per
said , will "provide data 'about expectj!d
wider resbllroes lor "&amp;eWers," or tfave
thousand.
changes in numerous variables. These
slmr,ly considered them "honeymoon
The nation's 114 medical schools
would' fnclude total ernployme[lt, un. have done lillie to bring about that
equ pment."
' employment, average wage rate, conAnd we'w all but Ignored our
dispersion of trained physicians Into all
sumer price J~dex; non-residential ana
"brainpower." It's too bad, too, because
areas of the U.S.-whlch the government
residential construction, department
had In mind when It set about to
store sales, new car registrations,
underwrite mad school · ex~lon.
school enrollments, and many other
"energy" whiCh can be "Increased."
Relations between medical edllC!ttion
factors.' This lnlo&lt;-matlon would ~ of
BuflaJq's Is a orie-product economy,
and the federal government seem to
considerable "value to government
Cohen said. Our"'llconomlc health is
have. soured as a result, Naughton
officials and private sector managers In
totally clepan!lent-- on labor-Intensive
Indicated. There's jess ·a nd less federal
r-y metals )rid allied Industries. If
help tOday. Annual lultlon costs at
~:~~ert~~.;:':n~:.p~~~.:'~trT~Iang:~~~
any 1110n1 of theM big, obsolescent
three private schools, at least, have
natural resource availability, taxation
lndu8trlea Cloee dQwn, he said, "we'll
0
and transportation networks."
policies,
be decl.-ed." .lfP're "vulneiable to
The model woulc;t be updated
dla.tw,• Cohen suaaeated, because
excess oJ$5,000 annually.
frequently
and offered to clients on a
the t.ve !Mjorlty orour· work force
While students- can still get lildersl
(338,0110 out of.' some 500,000) Is
scholarships (In return for agreeing to .
su=r,,Y,~~~~ssln~ss research stu.
unskilled, un~ for modern
work In underserved areas) and can still
dies would represent an expansion of
inCiuatrlal JoiMI. . ..
.
secure loans, Naughton said, ·~h_ere's
activities already conducted by the ·
, "We ' - ' t the need for an
an atmosphere of distrust belween the
School of Management, Ketter Ineducational ayatem to train Individuals
dicated: ''The School has undertaken a
:=/s" tR=~::.' and ,medical
from ldndera.t• to middle age,"
Cohen said. "'ur chUdnln ' - ' t been
Naughton thinks solutions to the
~';'
f~te':'~:Jin~n ·~~:S~f~~ 1 ~
given QP~Iona, • let alone our edulta. .
protllems will come via an Increased · produGt development, changes In buyer
Wl1llil we.give lip service to the arts,
partnersh lp between the federal and
preferences, locatlonal preferences for
Cohen aald, we ridicule artists as
firms, and other such matters. By
·r~rat:h~':l'to6'1. Ts':t~~~:..,ans;:dfc~~~
· "non-pnxluctlve and week." It's been
utilizing students· as well as faculty, It
onlY - l y that programs In the visual ·
has
able to provide a product of
and perlonrilng arta have been provided
c~~~s,:,an!vat~~m~;s a:~~ highbeen
quality at a reasonable cost. It also
In the ec:Mola.
has Improved the educational experiWe look down also, Cohen said, on
ence of students and provided research
thoee '!Who want to work with . their
their 'own doctors."
.
opportunities lor faculty."
hands. &amp;we.! Ia honorable ·:only during
Why does U/B take In so many
The third program of Jhe new
time o f - " he mueed.
loralgn medical students? a member of
assistance center Is to be municipal
Th8' ~ly-ortented amq_ng the
audience wanted to know.
government assistance·, -and Is aimed
OUf YQuiii . ."'OrtChanged, too, Cohen
-vye don't," Naughton answered .
. at establishing a better liaison between
Indicated. With budget crunches, we've
the School of Management and the
cut back education to the point that It
various pol)tlcal subMnils and comonly a "custodial, baby-sitting"
munity-based organizations In lhls
function.
region . )lmong servleas whlch can be
':The educational system Is bankc
.·provided, . Ketter enumerated, are
ru111," he cherged.
student lnlerns, policy _ analyses
Our phyaic81 and cultural environcontinuing , educatton, and special
ment - eq~ Important as the
research
proJects deslgnad to facilitate
8ducllttonal
In promoting the
Presldlmt Robert l. Ketter gave im
financial_ertd manegetl)8nt lnlormetlon
up-date' on an .earlier proposal to
uae end~~ of bralnpo..,.. proces~lng. "In view of the current
•
establish
a
Regional
Economic
Assisof whom -come to Buffalo without any
la81eoof=ltveconomic climate · In · Western New
Why do
go to Palla? he aslced. . tance Center (a plan first announced In
familiarity with this aree. -some arrive
¥ ork," he said, ·~he top lorlty of this
January) .
with the preconception that all the
.Notforlta nduatrY.sureJy. But because
.r,ro~ect would be to ass1s , II requested,
The University Is proceeding with
of Ita exciting ·11featyle and cultural
people of New York State are cast·tn the
development of the agency, said the·
same mold as the people of Ne)Jll York
ltlef.
m,:RJf.~~
Prealdent. Eatlmlllaa are thai IJ will. be :f~..:;~:i~~~~~'tf.e
City. Some expect BUffalo to be the
61 the various govern-ntare!.tltles."
d
,but · funded at between -$50,000 and
coldest epOt Inside the continental
AcademTc Vice ;. Pnllilclenr Ronald
J2IIILOliiMnuaJiy.
'
United Stateli; an American Siberia, as
.. ·Tiiii" 'Cifller' wiO ' ~ve two major
It were. Some do ·- not hava lhese
pnlllllllee~ to 11M
eajoy
objec:tl-: 19 "IIIIMI as a centralized,
preconceptions. In either Instance det8ils ollmp!ementatlon oUhe center,
-"r Identifiable, and accessible Ketter
l:':dftlllllrlnlnpo-.
but especially II the preconceptions
lndicatB&lt;f. They are -l09king lor • were present - there Is an expressed
~. ..... end mort.'- . . - Wlhlcle for prcmdl~lonal ec;onomlc
funding; ~oo. ·
•
·
~ ....tees; and to "attract
amazement by these peraons once they
~tluttnlnpoww- ftnll,
,_ resourcea In &amp;\lpport of economic
have lived here for awhile. Th~y
c&amp;
nt aarv1oe ectlvltles which
U/Bcan'tdlrect
frequently become the area's greatest
~
• ~lon
abOut lin
tile
..
to be of value to the region
Keller emphasized that the new
th8IIIN
dlafrlct
ling .tudY
enthusiasts. They praise the friendliencs;
e!'
agency js · geared · to "advise and
ness and helpfulness of the people; the
~ foe- the
• Cohen aald u.t
. The agency will attempt to:
cooperate" only: ..The OniV8flllty cannot
cultural opportunities and the availabil~In that- a:alllmportant.
1. create ~ malrltaJn a regional
direct," he said. "It cannot · make
Ity of professional sports; the eese of
_.me Wid -.oclal Indicator data
choices lor the community. As an
traveling throughout the area; winter
liMe, Including tocat bualneas.lorecastInstitution, It has no desire to do so.
vitality."
sports and water SPQrts; the city's
1ng modele;
·
-Such decisions rest quite propefly wllh
architectural heritage; the spiritual
~ develop pOsition papers and
the leadership In the public and· private
renaissance that 'Occurs each .aprlng
analytloal models which eddms Issues
sectors. When Its "881VIces lire rewhen the weather breaks.
of111Qionaleconomlcconcem;
quested, .. . the' University can ...
, "Invariably," Ketter continued,. "these
3. "lacllltata tnanafer of knowlad~e
develop options; and It can suggest ·
the difference, he said.
Kemp said too many governments are
attempting to re-dlstrlbut~ wealth as
opposed to providing Incentives for
--growth and opportunity.
•
If Reggie Jackson's astronomical
. . _ - . to be redistributed among
the ·lllnolea hitters, Kemp saiCI, Reggie
would lilt only singles.
With Reggie making millions,
=·I
at~~~-r hlt!ers have
And sollljt should be In real life, Kemp
said.

tl:

. Alumni get-a
from an array c
and a trio of

We.c.an be
more like P"aris,
·cohen says

a

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. New U/B .c enter
will provide ·
aid to economy

:s
.. .....

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'4!:'1 ·:

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- "':ton~..-l~lal~-t~:'I'J:P:
Health care needs
pruning and
reshuffling

=- p~~...\:t~rkJg~~~

=

r::ne:'~=~;to

the region a
Pt''~n':ci.::S~- ~t!~t~'l'u~~~d ~ha!
4. develop programs for placement
particular problem. But the· Unlwrslty,
-~~a In JocaJ public and
as an Institution, cannot become an
or ol'ganlzattons;
advocate .... Conversaly, the University
5. ewve as a. claartnghouse for
has .no intention of attempting to
prolesalonaJ technical skill conaultadeprive Individual fll!!ulty and stall
· lion' end
.
members of their rlgllts ot citizenship.
provide' IIC0888 to a variety of
They are fnse -to ape8k on any Issue as
profeeelonal development seminars and
private citizens as long as they do not
workehope.
presume to be ttle official volca of the
Initially, therawllttie tl)ree programs:
Unl-slty."
_
A University bualness development _ Assuming such a "private role 1"
ram will provide the business
Ketter offered his views of BuHalo s
with research, education, manself-Image problem :
t, and technical asalstance
''The University attracts faculty and
t rougn OOiisultlnii ·feami ·coriip&lt;is8ll -or-- ""Slilflron'lttrr&lt;iiJghoot lh&lt;r n~lon, many

· e.'

~ho~~~ t~s~~a~~ ~!~?'XlJa:~uwJgn1~
n:~ x~:e~~~g~~~~n~~~~h': ,tv:,a;,e~~

. read about recently In the reports from
the State Senate and the -Brookings
Institute. In fact, we read and hear
about them all the time. We know the

~~~t?n~~an~olu~r.~'e..,~skn~~ t~~

Clluses .... It Is ' lime we realized thatt
they are not confined to this area. Also,
we could be In much worse shape. We
could live In New . York City, for
Instance. Or we could even be walling
to slide ofllnto the Pacific Ocean out in
Celllornla; that Is, If we did not get
burned up ln-the'br&lt;Jsh firesflret ,'~--- ·

�llPUblication of
The Offiee of Cultural Affairs
Eolller Swarta, writer/editor

To keep traek of

U/B's cultural
events through
May, save
this magnet!

- - . .. . . . . . . pramotioD, $800 from
AllepDJ, ...,.......... by Kermln'a own
........,. • comprloeo tbe pablidty fuDcliDg for

........

But KermiD .... o i i M r - . eDeiV
ODd determinatloD. 'Tm clallta' a lot of
haodiJic,. abe ..,... 8be admita that abe ia
UDCOIIIfortable about tbe ........,. for ...,.
promotioa, but add&amp; that abe'a gnteful to
have tbe tempenmeat for it. Initially
rejected by ~ -...-.Ia! te!eviaioa.
shows wben abe approac:bed them for
interview&amp;, abe called bodt to ~
different ...,tea. If . . , _ of a prooe
poem wu too -.no for tbe .,..... of
C!wmel To "Dialing for Dollan," bow
about a ciUc:u.ioD of pnctieal adviee oa
bow to_pt iDto print?,.. audjeoce of "2
at Home" (Ciwmel1!l milht bemtere.led in
bearillg:bow Kerma puU,be boal&lt; toRetber
' ..,._,.(abetJ..-tit dllrilll tbe b1iaard
of '771. Sbe eoaviDood batll_ procram
direeton, ODd appeared em &lt;GIIIII2er'd.ll TV

Orteroll.

Marketing Mothering

shops, and pursued her serious hobby of
breeding Siamese cats for show.
Since 1S75, Judith Kerman his been
Most recently, she has published a new
assistant to the Dean of Continuing book, Mothering, which she wrote during
Edueation. It's a full-time job. However, at the same period asker dissertation. Rather
·the same time she has: worked on her than being overwhelmed by the simultan·
Ph.D. dissertation in English - a critical eous undertaking of two enormous tasks,
study o( W.S. Merwin's poetry, now being she found that learning about Merwin's
considered for publication by Berlteley ; poetry hel)ed her own ereative proeess.
which earned her a doctorate last ·Kerman · eaJ1s • Mcitbeiing a book-length
September; founded and become.managing prose poem: prose in its narrative structure
editor bf a magazine of women's poetry,
and continuing eharacters, poetry injts use
"Ei.rth's Daughters:" written and published of tiine and imagery. Poet Robert Creeley
her own poetry in two volumes, as well as in eaJ1s it "a most exceptional. book," and
numerous literary magazines; given poetry
National Book Awai'd winner, Marilyn
reailings; taught creative writing work· Hacker writes, ..1 like its c:oherenee, its

evocation of the physical world, its
confrontation of the ambiguities of anger.
tenderness and grief."
But accolades from respected writers, let
'alone the worth of a book itself, do not make
the publishing world beat a path to your
door; nor do they open thelra. Kerman
tried, unsuccessfully, to place the book with
the large p~btishers . .f'oetry is not a hot
i:ommercial item, especially poetry by an
unknown. Finally. rather than beat her
head against the walls of publishing houses,
s~e approached and was occepted by
Allegany Mountain Press in Olean, N,Y.
This means, of course, that instead of a big
publisher's $10,000 advertising budget and

the human being in the wilderness, be it a
cultural or a geographical one, and in
loneliness aild singularity. Wenden' style
bu been deaeribed as "bard edge realism."
All three, while not directly political,
convey an extreme and even morbid

awareness of the contemporary German
social scene.
Programmers for New German Cinema
Week are Stefan Fleischer; aaaociate
professor of English, ODd Geralyn Huxley,
chairman ofthe UUAB Film Committee. On

NewGerman '
Cinema Week
Germany loot ito film industry iD World
War II - it Was taken over by Goebbels'
propaga¢a fiCtory - and ito talented film
people even earlier through emigration. By
tbe mid-sixties, reaction to the petrified
state of the cinema was expressed in an
outburst of aetivity by young filmmakers,
aided by the bounty of government

;:

KermiD ..,.. that abe .... tauPt bene!(
oome lessons in hype - what marltet do I
want to reach? what do I want them to
know about tbe boak7 wbea is tbe best
timing for certain kinds of eoverop? And in
her job in Cn.dit-Free J'rograms, ohe bu
learned to write promotioul """". 'lbis
skill was put to use in t.be"O,.er abe wrote to .
&amp;D:DOIIll&lt;:e the book's publiratioo: "The ridl
and compelling el&lt;pioraloo of a woman'•
innj!r life, a world JIIOI'e rMl than 'realiom'."
Most important, Keriliim believes in her
book and in herself. - Sbe doesn't. feel
....-o,. rejected when tbe aelf·pn~~DC&gt;­
tion doeon'twork.lnstead_..ahe &amp;viaeo oew
strategies. "I may try Iilclt Cavett ODd the
New Yod&lt; ~· K.._ muoes. "Well.
that might not work - but maybe I'll get a
Plutzik Reading at tile• UniveroitJ of ·
Rocheater." She smiles cheei'fuily at tbe
prospect of more challenges, and adds tliat
she has an idea for an article . on the
emergence of regional poetry iD Western
New York. She'll probably have to wait
until after the feminist workshop and
poetry reading weekeod abe's currently
&amp;rT&amp;Dging, to get to that.

the first evening of tbe -;.,., Mooday,
April 17, R. W. Fuabinder'a "Efli Brieat"
will be followed by an iDfonual cliaeuaaioll
led by Mr. Floiacber, &amp;loa:; with Peter
Heller,
of German, BriaD

pror-

• COftllnued on pete 2 ·

subaidiea.

Reminiacent of the critical and popular iDtereot in France's Nell' ~ Wa~~ of the
early 60s, an extran~ all)Ount of
attentioo is now being "given to New
German Cinema. An opportunity for a
sustained examination of wod&lt;o bJ ito
major director&amp; will be provicfted this
month, when films by Werner Herzog,
RaiDer Werner Fauhinder and &gt;Wim
Wenden (which were "hits" of the New
York Film Festival ol 19771 will be
preoente&lt;1 at U/B, funded by the UUAB
Film Committee, the Graduate Group in
Modern German Studies, and the National
Eudo..,.,nt for the Humanities.
The three filmmakers represent a wide
stylistic range. Fusbinder, the most
prolific, tends to utilize campy or
melodramatic · situations, transforming
tbenl into serious themes. Herzog, who is
often called a "romantic" -be denies this,
descnbing himself (romantieallyl as a
"Bavarian of the late Middle Ages. I am
physical." - is interested in the notion of

For complete dela.ils on ticket prices, times.
etc. of events, see magnet directory.
The Katharine Cornell Theatre, site of
aanf or the events listed in magnet , is
iKtaied in the Joseph Ellicott Complex,
·
Amherst Campus.
• • • • • ' .J

"' -'1 ..

fl~

·, .:.:- ~&gt;:.. , .. .....

�Professor Fuller, a specialist in early
French music. ......,ived a National
Endowment for the Humanities felloW1!bip
last year, to write a book' on French
barpaiehonl music. · Thil research led to
discoveriea of many specific inotanceo of
raiding, and he found that by -ing. the
'raw materilla (the "borrowlngo") on p&amp;per
before they were tranaformed, and put into
a piece of music. be could more clearly trace
the development of the compoeition.
Sinoe Professor Fuller, an· ....,mplisbed
harpsichordist, plana to illustrUe .. bls
lecture by performing many examples of
FrenCh barpsiehO)'d m~J~ic, tbls final '
prdgram of the Muaicology Lecture Series
will be a treat-for musie lovers as well as for
tboee interested in the subject matter of the
talk.

-The TV program, "Conversations in t he
Arts," a SO-minute mterview of significant
figures in the arts, by host Esther Swartz
(whose format was sbamelesaly stolen this
year by that upstart interviewer, Dick
Cavett) is carried ,.On International Cable
(Channel10) for suburbanites and Courier
Cable (Channel 8) for Buffalonians.
Effective Saturdsy, April• 22, _the Cowjer
time slot for "Convm-.p;ions" will change
from 12:30 noon to 4 PM (it's alsO aired on
Courier Tuesday evenings at 6:30).
International Cable remains steady: 6 PM
Mondays and Saturdays. Some forthcoming
guests: .,Maeve Bincby, lAndon correspondent for the lrUh Timeo; talking about
"the troubles" in·Ireland, as well as happier
things, and Margaret- Atwood, Canadian
_poet and novelist.
FUobiader: "Fox and His Friends."
on Fascism and the oppression of womea.
PM, Q PM. 2nd showing- followed by panel About striking it' rich in the lottery and
resultant exploitation. 4 PM, 9 PM.
diacussion (-above).
•'i'loOoday, April i:s - Squire CoaforeAce Thanclay, April 20, Friday, April 21 -Squire Cooference TheOtre. Students Sl,
'Doeetre. Free.' '
Wioa Weedon&lt; "Goalie's Anxiety at the . Others$1 .50. Call636-2919 for times.
Wenctera: "An American Friend." Action
Penalty Kick." A ....,.r play_er commits a
mnrder without caring at all about the th.riller, starring American &amp;et9r-direetor,
Dennis
Hopper.
mnrder itself. 7 PM, 9 PM.
W - y . Apri119 - Squire Coaf....,ce Saturday, April 22, Sunday, April 23 Squire Coaferenoe Theatre. Students U ,
'Doeetre. Free.
Fuablader. "Ali: Fear Eats the Soul." A OthersS1.50. Call636-2919fortimes.
Honog: - "Stroszek." Three German
love affair between a sixtyisb German
floorwaaber and an inarticulate Arab immigrant misfits in .middle America.
"Terrifically
funny and full of unelq!&lt;!Cted
mecbanil: half her age. A formula tearjerker
pathos:",- New Yoik Times.
told with irony and affeCtion. 2 PM, 7 PM.

Watch For .•• ·
.. .A ntana e....-t.of •o.-; and
Frieilds" at Artpark Spring, by the

AmDance and Zodiaque companies. AmDanoe, directed by Beverly Fletcher, is a
jazz-tap cornpany in residence at Niagara
University, and - Zodiaque, under the
direCtion oi Linda Homeyer Swiniuch, is
U/ B's resident modern dance group.
Zodiaque will perform S wor1&lt;s: "Aubade,"
to music by• .Poulenc, choreographed by
Swiniuch, an untitled "dark occult ritual
~d .contrasting
eele~tion,"
choreographed by Tom Ralabate, and "Mosaics." a
performance desigued for di\Doers and the
exposes of plagiarism. Not so, says the U/ B Wind Ensemble . . AmDen&lt;!e's jazz
her first book; The Cirde Game, and tbe
Centennial Commission's first prize for a
lecturer. David Fuller, associate professor music in Beverly Fletcher's "Ropes" is
group of p&lt;ien'is that lat:er appeared in her . in U!B's Music Department. The idea of drawn from Tropea, Salsoul and the
oecond book, The Aalmalo Ia ~ Country.
plagiarism is ~very new: these borrowings Commodores. And in "4 X 8 Connection,"
Since then she bas published several
were considered acts of homage - pupils choreographers Fletcher and Ralabate have
.volumes - ' jn Canada, Britain and the U.S. copying their masters, for example. Handel set the piece to disco music. May 24 through
- and her Selec:ted Poems bas just been _ is the archetypal composer of this sort: be 27 are the dates: times - including special
releaud by Simon and Schuster (New
borrowed snatches of music from others, daytime performances for school -ebildreq
York). She writes about a multitude of then transformed them into something and older citizens - may be obtained from
subjects - Janc1Ja4ies, . giant tortoises,
uniquely his own~ A modem example is· Ms. Swiniuch in the Theatre Department
Frankenstein, the Boston Strangler, the
(831-2045) or from Artpark (842-2424, toll
Chirle3 lves, whose music is full of quotes.
menaee of ~ 4 Night in tbe ROyal Ontario
But why is this an acceptable practice for u,e).
Museum."
.
composers, and not for writers? Writers_jlo
... fELl bus eiCUI"'Iioa.a to eevenl111UDD1er
She began as a student of the
it, too, argues Professor Fuller. Shake- festivals, opeQ not only to IELI students,
"mytbopoeie oehool" (uoociated with
speare's plays are based on other write,s' but to the University and general
Canad&amp;'a moet• illnstrioua literary eritic;
plots. Or ta](e the Don Juan legend - bow community. Theseinclude tri_ps t6 Artpark ·
("Oklahoma," "Don Giovailni" and a jazz
-~ Frye), but baa brought to this •
m&amp;nJ' times has it been c treated in
Clllllempclr'uy style when writing abou( literature? And by comparing their -festival), to the Shakespeare Festival in
~paradoxes aild milil ,identity
Variations, it is possible to learn more about Stratford, Ontario, and to Saratoga,' N.Y.
...W.. Her poems are eometimes coofeo- the eraft of each author. So it is with' for performanoes by the -New Vorl&lt; City
liolul, but they allo have an· imperoonal
cpmpoeera wbo work with musical-themes Ballet Company. These excursions begin in
dnmatie ~train, eapec:i.aJI1 wben wrifiDg
previoUSly u&amp;&lt;id by others.
July; call636-2077 for details.
llbaul the~ &amp;Dd biotory of .CaDada
- ................. laaanltieo of a pioDeer. • Uioe the late Wlllltiil. Carloo WiiiWns,
~Allee il both • praetieiug ·phy~
aDd a ' paet. llonl iD Walel in 1928, and
eo!-..1 tJieft and ID Loadon, Abee baa
........... .._, ......._ of poetry,
........'f..... UMorW"""", "-aol
........ A s-llleapondla and, moet
.-.t~,y, ~ .._, wboee ' book
~.._ldlll u "The Welsh SeleetioD of

tbe.......,..PootryFonun."
ftel.-laa'l'loaeo u..y ~

~

r.--------------.
ftit .......... ......... ...
......
,_.y,.m_
.........
.................. _1_8
doll

...a.AIIIe"a....tt-&amp; wboee oldJI cloea DOt
-loalllole loll bdesritY· an artia wboee
tlutu ' • dttut.happleuure."

Bath ........... .....,_..t by the

...-.~.

-· ., ........ ..,._._,_.,,... m-..&amp;.a-the a.~--a
....-.....-1e11111..,.~.'nlotcube Dli:l'.i!=_!!hCJI'd
. . . . . . . ........., I' It !ita 1011...,..
. . . ,. . . . tlllt il .......

.,....,_..-..,_....._Bat

. . p' 1 bat, ill fMt, tM,._tbellq

we

. .\ ...... .,flnt .... mall:tbe'-tn

E
2

-~

&amp;rJ le.,..,. 1011 l e - e••ts

IM7

·~.

happeD, ill U. oolwnn

"'--~

~

1D .....teenth ~

..._ ~ Millie" il the title of
... Aprlll!6~1D108Baird
&lt;4 PIQ, and it relen to the praetiee of

_..,_..

English.

DRAMA

~

. . . . . . . . . . . . .will ..........

.POE'I'RY READING
Margant Atwood• The Kiva, Baldy Hall.
4 PM. Free. Sponsor: Department of

nldiDc the 111uaicaf worb of
~ (ud their OWD) to·fiDCI ~ of
lll1llic wldcla IIIey coald uae in new
• _,.,.....,•. To the layman this •uaeats

SereouJdiR{I Louie, a play by Lanford
Wilaon about two suburban couples. (An
_ earlier play of Wilaon's is "The Hot L
Baltimore.") Directed by John Morgan,
with a east of 4. Harriman Theatre Studio .
8 PM. 'General Admission
Students/
Senior Citixens ..$1.50. Sponsor: Department of Theatre.
·

·sa.

CONCERT
Pretze4 rock,

and Tender

Button~,

REPORTER/magnet! Aprll13, 1978

�jazz-roek. Cornell Theatre. 8 PM. General
Admission $1, Studenta $.76 (at-the door).
Jlpoaocn: College Band College of Urban
Studies.

_ MUSIC
Jo Korult&gt;, viaiting Japanese oompooer,
will present bio worb for tape and
instrumental enaembles with the Creative
Auociates. 100 Baird Hall. 9 PM. ~­
Sponaors: Center of the Creative ~d
Perfonning Arta and Department of
Muoic.

14
Friday

DRAMA
Sererwding Louie. See April 13 listing for
&amp;tails.

MUSIC
U/B Urtdergnrdvate Comporerr Coftcert,
William Kothe, director. Baird Recital
Hall. 8 PM. ~- Sponsor: Department of
Music.

Campua (near the Tiffin.Room). 12 Noon.
Free. Bring your luneh. Sponsora:
Sub-Board, Student

DANCE MARAmON/BEER BLAST
/Je&lt;Mfit.Cor Muscular Dystrophy. Couples
who wish to dance in the marathon should
regiater beforehand. Call Karen Carter at
. CAC, 831-5552. Supporters invited, too.
- Fillmore Room, Squire· Hall. 8 PM. $1

Allain.

POETRY BEADING
Damtie Abre. • Emeritua Center, 161
Harriman. 8 PM. ~Department of English.

donation at door buys you 4 beer coupons.

Sponsora: Community Action Corps and
Circle X.
15
DRAMA
Satunlay Seretlllding Louie. See Aprill3 listing for
details.

MUSIC

MoJnt~) Percv.riitm E-ruemble from "Swedep. Baird Recital Hall. 8 PM. General
Admiallon $3, U/B Faculty, Staff, Alumni with ID, Senior Citizens $2, Studenta $1.
Sponoon: Department otMusic and Offjce
of Cultural Allain.

16
-Saday

LIVE RADIO RECITAL
Robert Dick, Dute. 88.7 FM (WBFO
studio). 741aPM.

20
Tbanday

Zl
Friday

F0n1m:

Works

of

U/B

Sponsor: Department of Muoic.

....,.Y
18

TAKE A BREAK
with Karl. Norman, resident magician at
Forks Hotel. 10 Capen Hall, Amberat

'l1rbta
Ticketa where required, are availal&gt;le at the Sqwre
Hall Tick~ Of6ce (in advance): remaining tickets at the
door one hour before vent. I. D. cardr must be presented
in order to purcbaae ticketa at Student/Faculty/Staff
Alumni rate.

REPORTEJIIIMgnell Aprt11 S, 1171

..;

Licht~m~tein

Musie: "Borrowing in 17th-Century
French Harpsichord Music." 106 Baird
Hall. 4 PM. ~ - Sponsor: Department of
Musie.
·

0... Qouuter Ring

DOCUMENTARY FILM/DISCUSSION
Profe,.or Ja&gt;Mr Ackennan, Harvard
University, will show and dioc:uss bio film,
"Looking for .Renaiasance Rome." 170
MFACC. 5 PM. ~- Sponsor: Art
History.

BROWN BAG LUNCH
26
Wedneoday Dan Steven~, Director ot Commwiity
Music Scbonl, and Rtm McDtmiiJd: piano
works of Erik Satie. 385 Hayes Hall. 12
Noon. ~- Sponoor: Friends of SAED.
27
Tbunday

SereMding Louie. See April 13 listing for

BUFFAW FOLK FE!i'TIVAL '78

'

w-.••. a new play W'l'itten and directed
by Eric Bentley, internationally !mown
writer and critic. Wodd premiere. A
medieval rom.~~~ee of kDichta and Jadi!!a,
told with charm and wit, jaxtapaoed with
the .lory of tbe great German dramatiot,
Heinrich von Kleist, who committed
suicide near the lab of
Pfeifer Theatre, 8 PM. General Admission $3, Studenta/Senior CitiJeDa $1.60.
Sponsor: Center for Theatre Reoearcb,
Department of Theatre.

BUFFAW FOLK FES11VAL '78
~Jrit/k, St&lt;m &amp; Gamet
Rogerr, Je~m Rite/tie, Friend~ of J1'iddkn
G1uR, Atltoiloette &amp; Joe McKeRftll,
Dorothv Carter, Jfll/ &amp; L!IM U"ffer, Joe

•w-.·

Vol &amp; ne New Eroglmod B&amp;ugra., Bovr.
Fillmore Room, Squire Hall. 8 PM.
GeneraiAdmi.ssiim $4, U/B Faculty/Staff
t3.50, Studenta $2.50. Sponoon: UUAB
Cofleebouae and Muoic Committees.

OPERA

Z3
-DRAMA
s-lay · Sere1ttJding Louie. See April 18 listing for
details.

Uttivenitll ()petu Worb/top: Two one act
operas: "Gianni Scbicclu- by Giacomo
Puccini and "Ballo eli Donne Turcbe" by
Mareo da Gagliano. Baird Recital Hall. -8
PM. General Admioaion $1.60, U/B
Faculty, Staff," Alumni with ID, Senior
Citiuns $1, Students $.50. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

BUFFALO FOLK FESTIVAL '18
Cotaot~e Worb/top. Squire Hall.
14 PM.~ - Sponaors: UUAB Coffeehouse and Music Committees.

MUSIC
Department of Music.

POETRY BEADING/MUSIC

Student p(,etTy readi!og, with claolical
fl"itar r-tonr-ce by Pel# no..-. 167
MFACC (Ellicott). 7:80 PM. ~­
Stude.Jlta intel'llllted in reading their
works sbouJd call Mary Middleton,
831-2020 or 838-SS48. Sponoor: Browling
Ubrary.

DRAMA

,Concert: J~ &amp;

Gleim Kailer, piano (MFA Recital). Baird
Recital Hall. 3 · PM. ~ - Sponsor: ·

.

MUSICOLOGY LECTURE.
David PvJJ.er, • Aaaociate Professor of

J:Joncntg; Oruft demmutratiolu and
worlu/top$. Squire Hall. 12-6 PM:r ~ ­
Sponoors: UUAB Coffeehouse and Music
.Committees.

'P11.

MUSIC
Conopooerr

Psycbological Study of the Arts and
Department of English.

l'll.ppet 1lleatre, M"mmer'r P/4!1, Mom.

Dattgltterr ~cti!J!t Blpe Room, Faculty
Club. 8:80
Doiliticio: $1 (benefit for
Earth 'a Daughton m&amp;P.Zine). Sponsora:
Earth'a Daugbtara magazine and Pneta
and Writera Inc.
--

::

DRAMA

details.-

POETRY BEADING
PoUw Joatt and members of Eortlt ·,

graduate oompooers, directed by Mortoo
Feldman. Baird Recital Hall. 8 PM. ~ ­

LECIUBE

&amp;retiiJding Louie. See Aprill3 listing for

DRAMA

Satarday

.
with Bill File/tor, Profeoeor of Englioh, on
the tenor banjo: r18time and earty A
10
Capen Hall (near the Tiffin Boom). 12
Noon. F):ee. Bring your luneh. SJ&gt;oa-a:
Cultural Allain, Sub lloard. Student
Afiairs.
. ·~
Staletf Filll, Profesaor Qf, English, Jobna
Hopkins University: "ltow to Tell a
Freshman (or Anyone J:]Oe) That He'a
Wrong." 120 Samnel Clemena Hall. 8:80
PM. ~- Sponsors: Center for the

· BUFFAW FOLK FESTlVAL '78
Concert: Eric Anderron, · Buf!IJUJ GaU,
Roly SaUy, Happy &amp; Artie 7hnun, Bill
Keith. Bodie W - . John He&gt;&lt;J/d, Pat
Alger, John Ham'IIWIUi Fillmore Room,
Squire Hall. 8 PM. General Public $4,
U/ B Faculty, Staff $3.50, Students $2.50.
Sponsors: UUAB Coffeehouse and Music
Conunittees.

2Z

TAKE A BREAK

LEC'IURE/SLIDE-ILLUSTRATED
Pro/error Eve Haniltm, N.Y.U: Institute
of.. Fine Arta: "Greek Sculpture." 148
Diefendorf. 8 PM. ~- Sponsor: Art
History.

Si&lt;Uwalk Cimu. Clowns, performing
animalst magicians, juggiers, mimes.
Squire Fountain Square, 12 DODD.
Marshall Court, Ellicott Comple~. 6 PM.
~Sponsor: ~ Studen ~ Association
Activities.

MUSIC

· AIICIIITECTURE LECTURE
I&gt;tultu: "Flub Gordon" (and
Popular Design in America). 385 Hayea
Hall. 6:80 PM. ~- Sponoor: Frieada of
Bcmol of Arebitecture and Environmental
Design (SAED).

DRAMA

CIRCUS

WOIIXSHOP

17

25
Tuetoday

SereMding Louie. See April13 listing for

&amp;I/Ol

w.,..,.modPvbliiAing,led by Polly Joan,
small press publisher and feminist writer.
Blue ~· Faculty Club. 3 PM. ~­
Women (and men) are encouraged to
bring their writing. Sponsors: Earth's
· n.:ugilters magazine and fneta and
Writera Inc.

.......y FroM:

PM. Free. Sponsora: Center tGr the
Psychological Study of the Arta and
Department of Eqliah.

details.

' General Admiuion $1.50, U/B Faculty,
Staff, Alumni with ID, Senior. Citizens $1,
Studenta $.50. Sponsor: Department of
Music. _

&amp;ird eo..tem,..., E-ruemble: Yvar
Mikhubofl and Jan Williams, directors.
Worb by Hungarian composers Jeney,
Papp, Dubrovay and Balassa: and by
Americana Feldman, Brown and Foss.
Baird Recit.ir Hall. 8 PM. ~- Sponsor:·
Department of Muoic.

sw..Jey Fill, Profeuor of Eqlilh, , ......
:Hopkins Univenity: "Normaa Cireum• stanees, Uteral Language, Direct Speech
Acta, the· Obvioua, the Ordinary, What
Goes Without Saying, and Other Speclal
Cases.· 120 Samuel Clemo..- -Hall. 3:80

details.

DANCE MARAmON BENEFIT [Coat'd)
See Friday, April 14 listing. Marathon
endr 2 PM. Spouora: Community Action
Corps and Citt!e K.

.,
StepA&lt;m Maner: Beethoven Piano Sonata
• Series vm. Cornell Theatre. u AM.

LECTURE

Sponsor:

BROWN -BAG LUNCH
19
Wedneoday MitclleU Korn• - 12-string guitarist and
composer. 3851U.yes Hall. 12 noon. free.
Sponoon: Friends of SAED, Arta
Development Services, the Junior
League Seara-Roebuck Foundation, National Endowment for the Arta.

DRAMA
Sere1ttJding Louie. See April 13 listing for
details.
-

MUSIC

LEC11JJIE
Pro/alor Willialoo Jord!f, Brown Uaiftr- my: "Four Appn.do8o To Reglaaal
l'lanaing.• 816 a.,.. HaiL 11:801'M. ~~ponsor: FrieadaofSAED.

Cultural A!Iairi,

28
Friday

OPERA
Uftivenit!l Opetu Work.r.op: "Gianni
Scbicchi" and "Ballo eli Donne Turehe."
See AprilZTiisting for details.

3

�Boinl Recit.ll Hall. 8 PM. General
Admission $1.50, U /B Faculty, Steff.
Alumni with !D, Senior Citizens $1,
Students $.50. SpoDJOr: Department of

M113ic.
7
· Saday

DRAMA
w.......ee, by Eric Bentley. See April 'J!1
listinJ. .

MVSIC
Arlefte Lencl&amp;, piano (BFA Recit.ll). Boinl
Recit.ll Hall. S PM. Free. Sponsor: Department of Music.

MUSIC

U/B Svmpl&amp;onl/ Band. Frank Cipolla.
director; and U/B Clwnu, Harriet
Simons, director. Cornell Theatre. S PM.
Free. Sponsor:"Department of Musie.

MVSIC
Evening• for New MUiic: works by
visiting Slee Profeasor from Poland,
· Wlodzimierz Kotonski. Lukas Foss and
Creative Associate flutist, RQbert Dick.
The composers will be preoept. Albright·
Knox Art Gallery. 8:80 PM. Gen~ral
Admission $2.50, Students Sl (ADS
vouchers accepted). Sponsors: Center for
tbe Creative and Performing Arts and
Department of Music.

w-.

DRAMA

8

Maaday

by Erie Bentley. See April 'J!1

listing.

OI'EBA

MUSIC
Ketch"""

~II

Opera WorbMp: "Gianni
and "Ballo di Donne Turcbe."
See April 'J!Iliating for detaila.

(keg

Sdliedu~

•

'

~

11
Tharaday

~

Opera Worb/wp: "Gianni
Sclllec:bi" and "Ballo di Donne Turcbe."
~ Recitol Hall. 2:80 PM. General
. Ailiniosion $1.50, U!B Faculty, St.aff,
Alumni witb lD and Senior Citizens $1,
Students $.50. Sponsor: Department of
Music.

....,

·- 13

LECT\JIIE
•
Alaa Ferro, Direetor of Reoeereb at t~ ~
Lillnry of Congress: "Doeumentlry
PbatosnPby." 885 Hayee Hall. 5:80 PM.
Free. s,...-: Friendl of SAED.

Satarday

IIUSIC
JlicAMl ~. guitar (BFA Recit.ll).
Bllrd Recitol Hall. 8 PM. Free. S!&gt;on-:
Deportmeot of Muoie".

DRAMA

w......... by Erie Bentley.

w - by Erie Bentley. See April 'J!1

Swnsor: Department of Musie.

5
Friday

DRAMA
Wamuee, by Eric Bentley. See April 'J!1
.listing.

8 PM. General Admission $5, Students $3.
S!x!nsor: UUAB Music Committee.

MVSIC
Uttivenity Clloir, Harriet Simons, direc:·
tor. Boinl Recitol ~all. 8. PM. Free.
SpolliiOI": Department of Mus1c.

s.t.riay ·

w.........

DRAMA

.

• .

by Eric Bentley. See April 'J!1

listing.
l

MVSIC

Maaday

16
Tueoday

MVSIC
Micluiel Fiac.:o, tenor. Boinl Recital 'Hall.
8 PM. Free. Sponsor: Department of
Mug~
'

MVSIC

El/i£ SchvlU, pik (MFA Recit.ll). Bsird
Recit.ll Hall. 8 PM. Free . ..Sponsor:
Department of Music.

- MUSIC

MVSIC
Oregmc juz. FiUmo&lt;e Room, Squire Hall.

e

MVSJC
Instnlment&lt;ll Colhgium MlUicum, Nora
Post, director: "An Evening of Tele·
mann." Boinl Recitol Hall. 8 PM. Free.
Sponsor: Department of Music.

14
/ MVSIC
Saday I Albert Ji'Krneu, percussion (MFA Recit·
al). Baird Recitol Hall. 8 PM. Free.
Sponsor: Department of M_!lsic.

15 •

MVSIC
Robert MolttJruti, percussion (BFA Recit·
al). Boinl Recit.ll Hall. 8 PM. Free.

liotiDc-

IV"_,

See April 'J!1

•listing.

DRAMA

lftlSIC
U/B
B\uemble, Frank Cipolla,
clireet«. CDrDeiJ Theab-e. 8 PM. Free.
l!poa.r. Deportmeat of Music.

MUSIC

• ~ • c• A~ 7hO (Visiting Artist Series). Bsird
'
Recit.ll Hall. 8 PM. General Admission $3,
- . '
. U/ B Faculty. St.aff, Alumni with ID,
Senior Citizens $2, Students $1. Sponsor:
• Department Of Music.

Department~ Music.

I

. MVSIC
77le Creative A,.ociat., Perform MUiic of
Hendri:l:, Lacy o!ld More .. . . 100 Bsird
• Hall. 9' PM. Free. Sponsor: Center of the
Creative and Performing Arts and
Depart;ment·ofMusic.

12

MVSIC
.
,
DebonJA Weill, violin (BFA Recit.ll).
Boinl Recit.ll Hall. 8 PM. Free. Sponsor:

MAY

(Creative

Community $1. Sponsor: Center of tbe
-Creative and Performing Arts and
Department of Music.

W......ee, by Erie Bentley. See April 'J!1

s-.lay

percussion.

Associate Recit.ll Vll.) Boinl Recit.ll Hall.
8 PM. General Admission $1.50, U/B

.-MA
listing.

MVSIC
•
Cllarlet Clifttm. piano (MFA Recit.ll).
Boinl Recit.ll Hall. 8 PM. Free. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

ea.w.

Miclla6 A!ldriaccio and Jomme
l&lt;mo, duo-guiteristl (Foculty Recit.ll).
Non-Profit OfJ.
• U.S. Postage

PAID
Buf£alo, N. Y.
Permit No. 311

Rob~ Dick, flute, and Yva.r Mikltcuhoff,

piano:'" A TraditiOnal Recitol for Flute and
Piano." Boinl Recit.ll Hall. 8 PM. General
Admission $1.50, U/B Faculty, St.aff,
Alumni witb ID, Senior Citizens $1,
Stpdents $.50. Sponsor: Department of
Music.

Exhibits -

··

An Exhibiu;, in Two 1'arts - ~ &amp;Del #
pefteptuolizfDI: prodac:ts el llulc deolp. • 2 loeations:
Hayes Hall Lobby and '-'"" Coj&gt;ains Art Gallery, S5
Voorhees Ave. Works by students of Willi&amp;m S. Huff,
Associate Professor, Sehool of Architecture and
Environment.ll Design. Hayes Hall show: April 14-May
12. Les Copains show: April 14-30 (2·6 PM, Wednesday ,
throufib &amp;~~). Sponsor: SAED.
Jac:quolia6 Vizzi: Paintings. Gallery 219, Squire Half.
April 17-April 28. Open Monday-Friday, ~ AM·5 PM .
Sponsor: UUAI! Visual Arts Committee.
Jalul r-banlo: Collage and Paintings. Gallery 219,
Squire Hall. May 1-May 12. Open Monday-Friday, 9
· AM-5 PM. Sponsor: UUAB Visual Arts Committee.
U/B Deputmeat of Coauawdc:atloa Deolp: Group
Show. Gallery 219, -Squire Hall. May 15-May 28. Call
831-3541 for tim~ . Sponsor: UUAB Visual Arts
Committee.

�'prti1S,1171

on
ture:
sion of itdrninistrators
ngressmen

Public and
private funds
blending
q&lt;&gt;ngressman Henry J . Nowak
·predicted that Buffalo and Erie County
will come to be viewed as a "testing
g:,ound" for measuring the relationship
an~wP"rV~t~xfn~~::;:~~~- 'n public wor1&lt;s
Nowak said Buffalo has already
embar1&lt;ed on projects geared to create
jobs In the private sector and
pariicularly In t he construction Industry, and make permanent commun-

the-Buffalo Rl- Ia being spent on
. Installation of Industrial sewers and
related facilities to bring· the waste
dlacllarge of 28 Industries In line with
·
envlronmentallaws.
Without the expenditure of public
lunda for the project, Nowak said
'companies would elther be forced to
Install &lt;;&lt;&gt;slit private sewage tnsatment
systems or abandon their plants: :rhe
project not only safeguards local jobs,
ssya Nowak, but 11lso more than
doubles land available for Industrial
development.
Public wor1&lt;a funds have also been
· allotted for Improvement of city
achools, the Buffalo Zoo and the NavyPar1&lt;. These funds aren't a panacea but
they help, he ,._ld.
OVer the pest 30 months, Buffalo has
received $58.5 million In ladera!
economic stimulus monies . Nowak

~~~~ 1~~=

bigger.

Cynicism
seen as threat
to progress

~tei:;;r.:;~v~':::n~sowV:.~b"!n h~~~v:nt1~

cef\ler, the proposed light rail rapid
· transit line, and the Kelly Island sewer
r,r~~~e.:'~~ N~~~~~d~lgger private
The convention center, according to
Nowak, was directly responsible for
spurring development of a proposed
500-room downtown hotel by Investor
Clement Chen . It also gave Impetus to
the Idea of modernizing the entire
downtown area.
In addition, some $1 .5 million In

m:::::~af:X:~~t.J~s~~~i'N"e-Z'~~e;n~

attitude which neglects to ask how '
government can be I mproved , but rather
condemns it for being "Inherently bad ."
The Congressman agreed that government over-regulates but countered
that "we are a government of laws"
which "cannot do" without such

~~a~~ll,,~Ps~~~~~sn ~r \~: ~rl~~~

act as a catalyst for other Improvements
-the establishment of specialty shops
and restaurants, etc.
This revitalized downtown will be
accessible via the proposed rapid
·
transit line.
More than $11 million of the $12.2
million Kelly Island project located on

-

lf&lt;~:y=~~~-the fUture should
emphasize how JNe can beat use the
vast resources of government," LaFalce

su~~=~~Sald he anCI Nowak have been
wor1&lt;1ng to revise federal formulaa tor
funding which target money to the area.
. For .el(Smple, ~e reported that laat
year the formula for Community Block
funding waa rewor1&lt;ed to•glve mons aid
to areas experiencing a "growth lag" or
loss of population. Buffalo gained
funds.
·
If the old formula hed been
continued. Buffalo would have 111C81ved
approximately S8 million In feclenll

~r&amp;':!.~~~h~~~i~~:~~ead.

the
The city will also b8neflt, LaFalce
said, under President Ciorter'a new
urban policy which will channel

~~r~~:'.!;r:'~:r ~pr~m1'.::

Congressman LaFalce elected to
speak about "cynicism In government
which does not augur well for the
decade ahead."

~:g~:,:~a~~ grS'ri:Z~B~r,:~~~~~g t'~!
0
11
~~~cg~~~ ?~ '!'~hs:~t~r ~~~~~t"';~~\ :!/X

..

=';· ~fu~~~o Y~::

~~7!rs~leo":;;~n~~'!:'a:.s'ar~~~ u'=

LaFalce told lhe audience that "It's
easy to engage In aloganeerlng" alnce
no mental procesa rs required and
people do-not have to really think about
what they ens articulating . Because of_
this, he ·sald, the "tyrionny of slogans"

and Exchange Commission.
" Nobody Is speaking out on behalf of
government," he protested. "Nobody Is
saying let's make It better. We all just
~t~J~~~~:\s'~.. off our backs and out

to work to extend this \ll)proach to
military contracts as well .
"Everyone Ia for cutting taxes," said
LaFalce; "It's like motherhood ." But the
Congressman warned that ·serious
consideration has to be given to the
amount and type of tax decreases,
targettlng these to distressed areas,
too.
''There's a certain type of negativism
that becomes self-flegellatlon and a
aalf-fulfllllng prophesy," LaFalce said.
'We must be positive In our attitude
about what our resources are,. what our
abilities are and what we can do." With
a more positive attitude, he pnedlcted,
"there are great things- can do In this
area and a great many tlllngs we can get
accomplished." ·
'li, ·
,

u,~r~,~~~~~~s~T.rtf:.s~'l:'~~~

ers of the forum, made a -special
presentation to each of the three
Congressmen who participated, for
being officials of "whOII\ we can be
proud."

··~
Computing proposals 'covered-up?'
~.:9.

Editor:
(Submitted with) this letter are the
requirements, proposed by the Director
of Computer Services, Dr. Walter M.
Macintyre, which should be satisfied by
~sslble
enhancement to the

SOMETHING'S MISSING

The letter by Dr. Anthony Ralston on

today'a "VIewpoints" J~~~Qe ref.. to 11.
detailed statement of apeclflcatlona for
a new computer ·system which was
drafted by Dr. Wart• M. Macintyre,
director of Unl. . .lty Computing
Services. Dr. Ralston Wtlllted ua to print
those apeclflcatlona; Ralston aekl he
reJects the position of Macintyre that
the specs have to remain conffdentlal.
Dr. John e.G. Boot, assistant to tha

{!}~{:f;:~~~~r;:rsu·~~JIP~;.::'~~~

here.
be of substantial Interest to many
readers of the Reporter and, moreover,

~~:~~.~l~a~)';~~':7dl~~;~,';,'~ : : t~~~:
r~~~~~ed~~u~ew~~!s'r\~~e ~;~.,'i

~~!:tt~~~':t~~o:m:nthabeJ:!~~!

(RFP) to go to Albany and then, if
approved , out for bids.

Environment
is getting
better

.

..

Joan Loring, COI1)mlssloner of Erie

Count~'s

Department of Environment

~ut t~~~on~:it':t=,.,g~~~':r:!:
next decade.

Why? New feclenll legislation such as
the Cleen Air Act and the Resource
Recovery Act mandate local consultation and participation In the enactment of environmental laws. "People close to
the problem who have to pay for it
should design the , solutions," she
·
offered.
.

The commissioner charged It Is the '
responslbi11ty of the citizenry and their
elected representatives to ensure their
rights are exercised under1he law. She
noted her office consults wfth such

~~~f"~u~~~ .E~~~o'N'J'aen~~ ~~~~H:;

Transit Authority, the ln:Pustrial Development Agency and various town
councils before environmental decisions are rendered or plans devised .
In nssponse to questions, Loring
said: 1) The county does not have the
legal authority to restrict development
to certain areas, but;!torder to save
money, Is actively e
uraglng ~evelopers to build in al
y established
sewer districts. 2l The county wor1&lt;s
with State emRioyeee to help check
lni1\.istrlal' 'tlriller ·polluters: buloecause

er that publication of the exact specs
coulil laad to 1-t action by vendors.
We . . not printing them. 'I1My consist
of tbree ty-'tten J111888 of hlallly
technical langu:'.rv, an~y. . Moat

We find much with which to agree In
th.e Director's proposal, some with
which we disagree and some wh·ich we
think displays a poor understanding of
modern computer systems . But our
intention here Is not to discuss the
Director's 'j)roposal In detail . Other
forums (see below) are grobably more

~ ;;:':'..:!J'thla~ri...ae ~--:~::

fore, cannot be widely disseminated
and c11Jjcussed as they should be
because they have not yet been 5een by
our masters In Albany. Indeed, such a
claim makes a particular mockery of
what a university community Is
supposed to be.
When one of us wrote to the Director
pointing out the ridiculousness of

every right.

we· bealn by noting that the first
version ol what Dr. Macintyre calls a
draft RFP was, ao far as we can tell ,
generated entirely within his organization. We note particularly that no one In
the Department of Computer Science
was consulted even though we are

~~:;'~~nt ,c~r;:ldr:~tlal~~ o~y s~f~ln a
'1hat premature r,u~catlon could weH
cauaa grave prob em si n procurement of
equipment since vendors could claim
that competitors had access to
specifications befons they were released." It Is, of 'Course, absurd to
suggest that publication and dlssemlnation of the proposal of a university
computlnq facilities director for up~lng hos facilities Is not possible

1

~~~~~;"~~:Xt\~ fo~e~~~:~~a~ u~~:

~e"n"ta~~sn p~~1o~~~ ~~1\"c!~n~nr:rnf~

educational users of these facilities. So
much, however, for our well-known
paranoia.

·

com~tio ~s: r.'e~s~~ :1.e ~~!\'!of ~!!
0

1

1

Yor1&lt; there Is no possible bar to such
publication in a medium freely available
to anyone who wants a copy. We
.

~Jit~:a~\on tl::.t re;~rcun~n:.Vcce~~ar~'3::

draft RFP to as few people as possible
Is to assure that as little as possible of

rn:,rt

}~~lll::~=e~ J\~~~~'Weu~~~

compelled to note that theae meetings
were planned only after aome membenl
of the Academic Computing Advlaory
Committee objected to the lack of
~nlverslty Input to the plans, that their
hasty schedull"'lo undoubtedly pr&amp;vented the attendance of many
Interested people and that . the 1111nouncement of tha meeting , omitting,
as it did, all but the blandest discussion
of the overall problem, did not give any
potential attendee the appropriate facts
needed prior to the meeting.
Sincerely,

~ ~~~~~!=

-Anthon~=

·:!'~~~~~fe:trl::Z'J:".:n~~=~g

~~~~ri~~~~~~~rJ'~~~~~~.,o~~r~n~~~

More to the point Is the fact that
when this draft was distributed to the
Academic Computing Advisory Committee by the Director he stated that
"this document Is conlidentlal at the
present time" because " It has not been
aeen by Central Administration In
Albany or by the Divi sion of the
Budget." We find It ludicrous to
suggest that proposed specifications
for an enhancement of computer
facilities are confldentl~l . and , . there-

week

a copy of thla technical deacrlptlon
should talk to either Dr. Ralston or Dr•
Macintyre. Of mont wkleaoreecllnt-t
Ia Ralston's ctftlclam o( tha way In

ft~~ror~lat:x~~~~~hlsioRa:h:r 'U':,i~~~s~!~
community why we have had to use an

1

the original proposal Is changed In the
final document . More paranoia?
In the Reporter Dr.
Last
1
~nactn!':a~~~~nW'ed~~ay
rhfs
week at which various alternati- for

Department of Computer Science

Dr. Hudecki gets
MDAgrant
A $26,000 continuing grant from the
Muscular Dystrophy Association has
been awarded to Dr. Michael Hudeckl,
research associate profesaor, tc assess
action of various drugs on chickens

whl~~~~d~~trog~Y- Hudeckl , who
himself has the disease, there are

~~~''fc:'~~~::;::t ~fut~~h~~~~~~l.d Z'~

~:~~~'bn ~~:~fJ~~.;-~~~ I~:::'~W­
k~ g~~g~~a~v~~~:~rtr&gt;~DM'e~~~r~

Institute.
Dr. Hudeckl, associated with the
Department of Cell and Molecular
Biology, 'also has a two-year National

~~~\~~~e~u~~v':urn fe~~fus~ ~~1~u~

~th

normal and dystrophic chickens.

~~~=a~o~,r~~~t~tl~ ~~~~:~

muscular dystrophy.

..

�.......

Apri11 3, 18T8

~hlnese offe·~ challenges ·t o U.S.
What China stands for is often misunderstood

,

ByRogerV.O.. ForvH

~-==-'

--oiHislo&lt;y

NOTE: This 8888Y - which will appear
In two parts - Ia a sequel to one which
~In lh"tRel&gt;orteron 9 December
11m1 entitled: "A Historian In the
People's Reoubllc: Initial Views." It was
bealin on the plane home from . China
ana first drafted In early 1977. I found It
much euler to characterize cbntemporwy Clllna than to relate It to America,
- · ao I decided to reed more on
America, Marxism and the West. The
result Ia still p_rellmlnary - a mere
photograph of aome thoughts In
prooess - but I want to share It with
othera In the hope of stimulating some
dlacusalon.
I
The Chinese pose military and
diplomatiC: challenges to America, of
oouraa, but they are han:lly of. the kind
they are uaually thought to be In
America. Neville Maxwell's book on
India's ,China war persuaded skeptics,
such as Henry Kissinger, that the
Chinese resort to arms only under the
moat extreme provocations. Unlike the
Americana who are still stationed In
South Korea, the Chinese withdrew
their forces In the 1950's; unlike the
Russ'- who haw many troops
outside their borders, the Chinese have
none outside thel~ tOday. The Chinese
.my Ia large, esJ*;Ially If one counts
the militia, but'ttia a small percentage
of the
Monaover, It Is
haBYIIy en
In ·public works
projects I de
Ina. The Chinese air
Ioree and ,....., are small and Ill
equipped ,by .VMtem standards. the
Chinese are moving to remedy this
situation; . they•..,., alao developing
nucl.- weapone and long range
ballistic missiles. But they are d8cades
· from 881'1oua·;;valry with the Soviet
Union and the United States, even If we
assume that P8lftY Is their goal.

s.R"·

In faCt the Chinese are probably not
striving to equal the mllltatY strength of
the "su_perpowera" tor they are
developing a defenaMI rathet than
offenaMI poatUAI. Jha Chtnaee defense
Ia beaed primarily on an educated
Ia and 88CO!Idar11y on an extensive
ern of air raid •halters. Joseph
eop probably exaggerated the extent
of thai eyetem, but It nonetheless
constltutae a -'&lt;&gt;us element In the
.chinese ~- On our visit In
NCMinlbar 1978 - saw tunnels being
the giounds of the Imperial city
and walked through six
nels In Chengch&lt;:&gt;w, Honan .
Thaee latter- C8PIIble' of IICCOmmodallng 18,000 people for weeks, and
they equipped with air filters,
teltiphonea, clinics and recreation
.-nL Begun In
the height of
the tension with the Soviet Union, these
llhaltera are designed to dater - and, If
.....-.lui In thai, to survive - a
Rualan attack. A response to Mao
T. .tung'a C8ll to "aookl halla!Mnlam
and build tunnels deep," they are clear
proof that the Chi- are -determined
lo raa1at the 8Ujl8fpOW8I'S ..without
becoming like ~~--~lf..ll~~- was

=

1989 at

=-ra~~hee'&lt;~'='A""l\.:f1~

..rund , _ and tile cspaclty to
become a "world power" by the end of
IIIIa century. We aiMiuld lldcl only that
the Chi- conception d
"world
_.. to differ aubatantlally

hom 0\M' own.

,..

·

._~·though

enr':!un::Jr' s:=.~~o~~'!, Tl~=

concluded lroiR thia that Chinese

mlltt.ry Clll*lltlea ll8lii! not be taken
-'Dualy - either on their own IICCOUnt
or•acountertotheSovlat Union. This
~ th&amp; feet
Chinese military
cilpeclty I~ - likely to grow rapidly In the
fplure~, Aa ;Jciilrt Hinton pointed out hare
1111 fall. the Chin- -will develop
....._, 11tllltary capability fs neces~ to defend themselves from the
eupiiiiCIWin. But, more lm~
thia tendency to write off the
mHitatlly IGnores the ' maln
military challenge - whiCh la

that

E
1:.""=

on.:=t:"c;:Jatl~:,!:

......,.. In our utatrme. The Chi' - liMn = • I l i o n In part as a
• thw ~
t hOPe to com·l late

IIYWHII
-

i!I!IMIIjlftiiil~illllllll~liiil

.._ -

U.S.S.JI. or the !J.S.

futuna. But they are

MIICIN In their

I)R)JI08ala.

OCIII¥IIRiad thai • itratagy of

Is desirable, necessary
The Chinese position on dtsarmamant can be understood partly In terms
of past Chinese strategies for dealing
with powerlul and aggressive outsiders.
Contral'y to Western mythology, the
Great Wall of China was often Quite
effective In def!lllding the Chinese from
armed horsemen sweeping down .from
the steppes. The underground air raid
shelters can be seen as a re-creation
under new circumstances of that
defensive network. The •call for
,,disarmament corresponds to other

Mlng lo.yallsts lasted . for several
decades but they were finally defeated
by. forces from the mainland and Taiwan
was Incorporated firmly Into the
Cf\lnese pollty.' There Is keeJI awareness
of this historical parallel In Taiwan
today and a growing acceptance of the
inevitability of an American withdrawal.
It Is only In America, with Its Barry
Goldwaters and John Birch Societies,
that public opinion Is still not prepared
for this fact. Clearly the Chinese on the
mainland ragan:l Taiwan as primarily .an
Internal issue. During the course of our
visit the matter i'lld not come up, but we

:rv~~~~JrynPfowd:at~d 'R~~~~:Irs u:ro:

We also heard songs by school ci)lldren
on " liberating" Taiwan and 11llmpsed
posters proclalmln_g that ''We will never
• forget our compa~r1ots In Taiwan ."

1

~l::rcnh~f3 ~n~!sc~~~~s~ra6hrr::~

celebrating New Year's day. It Is less
well known that the Mongols adopted
gunpowder from the Chinese and
combined It with metal firearms tb'
conquer China for a hundred years. And
few are aware that the Chinese
demonstrated a capacity to use firearms
effectively .against both the Mongols
and later the Manchus but that they
were even better at creating political
orders , the Mlng and Ch'lng dynasties,
which made warfare less necessary. It

:u~!\~~~e:?;...;=~s~nJ~'? · ";,~[~

order" in East Asia that the Chinese did
not develop an armaments Industry
~:'~~le 10' that which developed In
The Chinese challenge In the military
sphere, therefore, Is primarily tc

~g:,~~~~h:~m~~~':n:Tn::'~:Wv:

one at that) of creating a world order.

~n~~e{~':-'a w~~o~~J'r!~Yba~~ ~~
~ug,:'~~li~,t~trel;fo ~ea~:\f~t',~:

oc to last as long as one based on a
superior political system (like that . o"'f
the Chlnesel : The carter adrrflnlstratfon
has belated y ~un to. recognize -the
opportun'fty' of 1Jsihif''€1ilna•s-_mllltli!Y

~'!~'Cn:::'n.~t ~:::;.\':,';"i~g~ ~~h~

misguided discussion of whether to sell .
arms to China evolves Into serious
"COnsideration of the opportunity 16 ioln
with the Chinese In pressing for the
abolition
of
nuclear
armaments
throughout the world.

.·

.

Diplomatic' challenge "mtaunderatood,

too

·

\;

.

The Chinese challenge . In the
diplomatic area Is slmllarlfJ mlsunder-

~~~:S~ -rfi&amp; v'b'-hrn:'e' :!~f''~

"normalize" relations with the United
States by exchanging full diplomatic
representation as was Intended by the
U.S. State Department In 1949hand as
was envisioned by lh!! S anghal
CommuniQue of - 1972. The . Chinese
therefore call for the termlnatlon of the
American military tr&amp;llty . w)th " the·

~~'!,~~~:h~ch ~g:,fcj ~o~~"!!~h o~~

year's notice. They also demand the
wltl;td.._. I ot · the tj)oussnd.' 'or ·: so
Ainilrl
~ I!~ , sttl t:st~ttonad · ttiere
ani! , f
Stloi)&lt;of mllftary cl'edlts
Wl'ilc!l
own· e'IIOimously In' recent

...

.

~

'

Whaf man{Amertcari$ fgnore Is ·that
these damaJidS . are not -SO much'
diplomatic as j)olltical . The Chlheie are

.m: ~ue~~tny~t~u~: .~nl:~

Chinese civil war; ' /usl' as we finally
withdrew from the V etnarnese ~lvll war

:.,e

as1
f{~.Jr~m:~~ ~~~~ran.
Involves rival claims to soveielgnty over
all of,.chlna, the Taiwan Issue Is of
much greater lmponance to the Chinese
than It Is to us. As ·Ho Plng-tl pointed
out, this disparity will reveal itself
QUickly In ·any - showdown · over the
Island., The Chinese are patient on

:'::,':n

~·':.a::n=i': ::Yt.~ '!h 1~~~ : : .:m
0

1

haw to liquidate sooner or later. It
remains to be seen If - 118Ye· laarned
anythlnll f!om VIetnam or are ready to
repeat !hat" experience on· a . colossal

acate.

The Chinese c:Onfldence that sooner
or later they will regain Taiwan can be
understood In terms of their own
history. In the aeventeenth century,
forces loyal to the fallen Mlng dynasty
fled to Talwan and held out against the
new Ch'tnp dynasty which had aeeured
It~ centro over the rest of China. The

on a small aspect of reality, .but they
obscure more -than ' they -reveal. Even

~~~n~r~ta"f:n~~P~~~~~~~!n .~o~

New York Review of Books or Peking
Review, they do not begin to do Justice
to the complexity of the Issues. Clearly
these cliches must be abandoned
before we can get down to realities.
Anothlfr·cllche
But there Is another cliche respecting
Sino-American relations which Is nearly
as misleading and far more difficult to
challenge because it Is shared by many
Chinese Jll'd Americans. This Is the
view that both Cnlna and America are
relatively "new" societies. The Chinese
today constantly speak !!bOut "old
China" before the revolution of 1949 and
"new China" alter that date. A contrast
Is made . between the "old China" of
mllltarlsm,'dlsorder, corruption, land-

~rwe":Pi1,e'':~rn~~~ea~~sw;~cf!1~~~

Catch-22 situation
•
American misunderstanding of the
Taiwan Issue Is~ so profound 'that we
consistently
misinterpret
Chinese

- ~~=:· an"~W:~'!!~S:.,· c~~~.~;ry an~

order, morale, community, m=y

~~~k ~~'!.'l~~~o~~~~~lnasr~a~u!~g

~~~~~n~tf.:' ~h'l;'!i'::~~~&lt;;fs~~:t~~~-'ht~·

knew the situation before 19491s struck ·
by this contrast and It emerges clearly
In the pages of such magazines as
China Reconstructs and_New China.

they say that the issue can ''walt," we.

i.~~mit?zaff'o~" f~,e ~o~~r~: ;.~~!
f.:'~ -~~~~~e~~~- :rgt'.alo~lt!..~'th~eyJ~~

by force , we say they are threatening us
In more academic circles, this c.llche
takes the form of a st\arp contrasf
and we cannot give In to "blackmail".
This Impasse Is unfortunate because
between "traditional" (or "feudal")
the Chinese have been willing to
China with Its "Confucian society" and
"agr.arlan economy ;• prior to t,he
entertain the so-called "Japanese
formula" whereby In return for an end to
"lmr,act of the West" In the nineteenth
:::..~ra'tlc!'~ds' oc"malodlst~'rn) 'c'hl(noar ln"n1ehwe'
diplomatic representation on the Island·
we w_ould retain rights to trade and
Invest there. This Impasse could
twentieth century with Its ''modernlzlna
become dangerous 11 the Taiwan
society" and "lndustrlaleconolny." This
authorities are able to circumvent
perspective Is dominant In both
safeguards and use1he products of the
Chinese and American academic circles
Ammaneurlfcaacnturseup,pleled
. and)!
Is. well ex-pressed
the pag!'S
of
h lr onwunclenaruclpelaarntswe'ao·
such' Journals
as ModernIn'Asian
Studies
pons. Even If we want to ignore the
·and Modern China. Yet this perspective seriously un!lerestlmates the l!lements
legal questions, thl s practical -danger
should move us to settle the Issue
?f continuity In•contemporary Ct&gt;lna. It '
sooner rather than later" r.~.'•'· ~:J:t':Js/fS::,'~e' ! ~~"A\!!ata'n'tm,!!!'T88t.
):&gt;e1,
The C.hlnese challen~e In !fie
u unDb•o
u "''
diplomatic sphere, then, os mainly to
significance of .contemporary China for '
live up to our stated principle of
America.
·
, . ~- _ :-r!lspectlnQ the territorial Integrity of
This task. Is made ·all 'the
other natoons, Including China's. The
difficult {)ecauae. the . &amp;Ssum_ptlon ot
opportunity is to transform our · "nov(l!ty" stands JaiiietY: ion.cl\allengeil·
relationships-with Taiwan from the ' In our' own view ,of Amttrican history.,
present cOlonial' f(amework. fii one of
We ·Americans have' long · eonsldered,
mutual benefit for~s and for the Jiec5p1e
ourselves to be a "new people," who left
of Taiwan . , American. corporations
behind all the old problems of Eurol!!ll
which are now Investing ~heavily 1n
and -Sill out In new directions In a "new
Taiwan should change their focus lrom
world." This emphasis on change has

1

1

1

.;o:e'

~~m~·e·::,e.,:::;~ fo~~e ~~~~.=~·b~~
relationships

which are · mutually
who now look upon
Taiwan as an. area·for traln!,ng atudtnts
and obtaining archlval'materlals should
begin !o respond seriously to the- ideas
of 1111 Chinese SChJ)Iars. whether In
Taiwan or on the Mainland. If this
qccurs, Taiwan can cease to be an
q_bstacle to Slno-American~e"'changes''l.
and can become lhJd fili'glnntng'IOI
normal relationship between ihe lf'nned·
States ang Ch!pa.
.,
,, ,
~ ~,
-~
, .. ...-a t n~·· ,.i, . .. .
..,
It will be.cii!Bf b)' how thB.t underlyln!i
, thesa military · and diplomatic Issues.
there ·are Important
ltu 1
1111 1
and social questions. ~s J6~oi' f.:lrn:k·
often· po1nted out, China.;:and. A"l:Brlca
actually have a great.dealln common In
all of these. beslc areas. They .are both
sub-continental, ropulous eountrles;
with great culture .pretensions; highly,
developed world views, and ·significant
techno.logles. They both think of·
themselves as being democratic, with
tredltions -,of ~ revolutlon and popuiJif
government. lhey both value aoclal
mobjllty and talk much about social
justice. It is oo these and othe~ grounds.
that one might· expect friendship rather
tAhan enmity between .the two peoples..
s a professor e.r 1\lanklng University
told us "Tw.o s ch gr t
1
th ·
Chinese ancj ~ t~e AmS:ri=g ~ole
ought to be able to overcome ther,
differences and work together for th
rQood-of all manki'nd."
e_

_l:'~strl'!!l~~:;,e,:t :dr=:,,i',.~~t ~~

perpetuated by those historians of
America who write about the national
history with no Teference to earlier
Western societies or · to societies
outside the West. In 1976 a suggestion
that ·Americans today might have
something to learn from "the American
revolution of 1776 was denied by a •
• young American historian visiting this
·., campus with ·"the ,. assurance that
"hfstory always changes and situations
are never the same."
preyal~nce of '
. this view among professors and-&lt;
students alike may nehr to explain the
Sllf.l.llje study o hiSI?JY. in our
8T\1.'1&gt;F.J;\OOis a~d the d!!I)Ruity of •
.
ng lifudents1o'hlstory '~otirs'811 at l
our universities.
'
'
R~luatlon ol hlatory ...,ul--'
~·-. , ...
To be sure, the general public
indulges In historical !lllaiOgizlng wtolch
assumes the relevance olthe pastto the
present. Some would see America as a
typical "empire," entering into decline; .
others wo~ld see It as an ''olcf'tBQime," ·
rope for revolution. The problem os that
these popular analogies are not taken
·very seriously by hard-no;ie9 professlonals who are too busy developing
new approaches (such ·a~·' psychohistory, or Quaptltatlve history) to think ~
much about the enduring meaning of '
history. Since ther&amp;- Is fliile dialogue ,
between historians and the pub11c ·
laymen are left to choose between two
polar truisms: that " history -never
repeats Itself," and that "tfio·se who do
not study history are oorillemned to
Yet It Is ~lear that tile Slno-Alnerlcan '
r~peat II." In such "'! ..atmosphere,
relationship has usually been: ond of
hostory can hardly be taken .seriously love .or or hate; the effort to ' foster
much less be expected to provide an
mutual understanding has repeatedly
understanding of.the place of America
bogged down In ml51eedlng cliches over
In world history.
·
·
differences. In America the most
P,:';'Pular cliche Is that America Is
Any effort to discuss tlt"e significance
'democratic" while China Is '1otalltarof ,China for America therefore, requires
lan~· In China the most-comn)l!l'n view Is
a re--evaluation of the historical legacies
. that China Ia "aoclallat" while America
of both countries .
Ia "capitalist." Clearly path views ~ouch
Tlola "aay will be c:oncl- next week.
beheficlai~Sctoolars

a&lt;,

l)le

�Aprll1 3, 1171

7

•calendar
(lr;.., poge I, col. 41

-~-: Ctw*Gorwfch, ,_

ol Genrich Compony; Prol""""' ~ Mlbrath,

FilM'

Cenlar, s.t..a Snyder,
Boffalo Evening-; and Torry-· Deportment bl Conwru1lty DoYelopmont.

LaO Olwldodoo (Bunuol, 19501. 150 Farber.
3 and 9 p.m. 5ponaored by lho Depor1ment of
English.

FILM'

NOTICES

lllaw-Up (Anlonlonll. 150 Fatber, 5 p .m.;
5 Achooon , 8 :15 p.m. 5ponaored by lho Oopert-

A a R OFFICE HOURS
Extended ho&lt;n for A &amp; R In Hayes B this
month .-e as folowa;
Aprll17-20-8:30 8.11).·8 :30 p.m.; April 218 :30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.: April :IA-27-8:30 am.·
8 :30p.m.; ApriiZI-8:30 a.m.-4:30p.m.

mentof-~and llteratures.

COLLEGE B FlUIS'
,..,_.. (19211; C.rnlal of Soula (19621.
170 MFACC, Elicof1. 7 p .m!

pu-

Forfhe~of-ror....-

FILM'
Hungil!r In AIMrlca1 a documentary. 376
Spaulcfing, Ellicott. 8 p.m. 5ponaored by Women's
SbJdiooCOIIoge.
lAC FilM'
Chinatown. O&amp;ment Lounge. 9

FOREIQN STUDENT 1'\IITlON WAIVEII
APPLICATIONS
F...,;gn
Tuition -IIIPfjcations for
summer and tal, 1978, . .
al
..the Office of
Aid , Annax B,

o.m. Free to

-t

IRC ~; S.50 forotheni.
Jack Nicholoan. Faye-DI.fwway. Great detective

--~- - i 1 M o y 5.
Only
those 8&amp;Jdents who . . on ~ F or J
..... eigible 10 IR&gt;fy. Tho~ Aid Office
Mondoy tlwough F-f from 9 ,30 a.m.
to5p.m.

WEDNESDAY -19

iS open

IIEN'SBASEIIAU •
U/B n. U"'-ally ofl'lt1oburgh 121. Peelle
Ftekt. 1p.m.

I.D.CARDS

MEETING.•
2465q&lt;W~ . 1 : 30p. m .

mus=:'::0:':.:.!:':01~ .

GEOLOGICAL SCtENC£S SEIIINAIII/
P.-aloglc lntorinlollon
of Dopoaltlon and .,_., ~- of llortne

T....,.._

PoOce H . _ bel- coming to lho 10
Center.
·
..

Boolna16holo,l, Or. '*'-R. · Oopert·
. . - ol Goologlcol Sciences, SUNY /llnglwnton.
Aoom 18, 4240 Ridge Leo. 3 :30 p.m. Coffee

NEWYORK STATE FOUNDATIONS OF
EDUCATION ASSOCIATION MEET1NO
Aprt 14. 15, 18, Bald)l Hal. 9 , Lm.·5 p.m.

at3.

~c .

.

A Role far C.'H-In tile Piclge«&lt;

c- Ph-

Afric!ln
events
c

-mology. london,
· Geoffrey
...-.245cary.
OphthalEngland.
4ofp.m.

CHEIIICAI.
ENGIIEERIHG
-and
·
Praducllon
of EJww, Food,
0U Sparing'

=":"C:~: = .
O'll!i"". 4

of Pemoytvonla. 107
monts at 3 :30.

p.m.

Re-.

COLLOQUIUM I
U.S. n. Nla011: The -llonalllp of Judicial

_..., ...-..,_,, Piofesaorw.~ . U / BL.awSchoot .

""'* folotcodan, ..,..__

TheS1rugglalorw-·a~..._....

n.o~

Cqlege.

COLL.ECIE OF UIIIIAN STUDIES SYMPOSIUM'
and
of Buffalo. 167

.,.,..__t

by 5oc1o1og1ca1
· 127 lloldy. 4:20 p.m.

F-

The por11t:£onts wll be: Paul Barrick. directOr

~c:~:u.!; :·=c
Society of Archileclural Historians: and Jack Ran·

Planning .

lAC FilM'
China-.. Dewey Lounge, Governors Resi·
denoe Hal. 8 and 10 p.m. Free to a1 IRC

feepayers; S . 50 ~olhonl.

.. t&gt;e-.ofwanon'aStldes

. THURSDAY- 20

'

FUil'

EIOH1H AHNUAL JAMES A. ENGUSII

·-(--.1 9651 . 148~.

7 p.m. Sponoonod ~ lho Center for Media
Sludy.
~TlOIW.COLL.ECIE lECTURE'

.

- ~
Dllllcufl ~:
........,....
In
Afgha-..,
,.._
Gnham Kerr. ~ of SOclok&gt;gy. Second
Floor Lounge, · Red . - .. Elicofl 7:30 p.m .

Health Sclonce Center. Hospital. 12noon.
•

Room, Chllctn!n's

MFACC. Elioot1. 8 p.m.

doll,

7080'Brilwl . 4p.m.

PANEI.IIISCUI&amp;IOII'

of -

-Y

1.0. Carda . - In 161 Harml8n on:
April 17-11,
&amp; T.-y 3 p.tn-:;7 p .m.;
April 24-U. Mondoy &amp; T.-y 3 p.m.•7 p.m.;
lloy 1·2, Mondoy&amp;Tuesday3p.m.·7 p.m.

GRAY PANnERs ORGANIZATIONAL

In
-

now_.....

F'-

stQ!Y.

BIOPHYSICS~It

SYWOAMf
0..1 . . . , _ _ on Bona Biology. AI day.
Sheraton lnn-&amp;at. By reoeMltion.
Ccntact lho School of Dentisb:y for more
Information.

PEDIATRICS RESEARCH ~ARI!
- • Functlonll Significance of the PolromiMo, Dr. Clwal Romert, li!Werslty ol Oklohoma

SEMINAR FOR WESTERN NEW YORK'S
ltrGHER EDUCATORS II
Uaa of Educational Technology: Mini/ Micro/
-IMago. Gerald L O'Grady, · Educa·
ticxlal Convnunications Center, U I B. 2nd floor
dining araa, Moot Hal, State Unlv«si1y COllege
at Buffafo. 2:30p.m.
BUFFALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUM I(
Eatendfng N . . - $yatema: Pedagogical
and Laglcal Ralloctlona, SleYen Brown. SUNY / B.
684 Baldy. 3 p.m.
PHARMACEUTICS SEMINAR I!
-Aspeclacftlle-ofJ'and Related Oruga, AlfrBd T. EIYin. grnate
sbJdent. C508 C9of&lt;e. 4 p.m. Ref!eshments at
3 :50.
'
·PHYSIOLOGY SPECIAL SEMINAR f ·
Some ~tiona on Naturalfy-()ccurrlng
Nophroloxlna, wtth PaiUc:ular Rei...,.. to llycOIOxloa, Dr. Wl5am 0 . Berndt, Oepor1ment of
Phannacology and Toldcology, UnMnity of Mis·
slsslppi Medical Center. 5108 Shennan. 4:15
p .m. Coffee at 4 .

Ukrainian week
~. April

tlb~eold~!f~~~ra':::?ca ~:tf'~

t.a!l::..vcz~~c:fem~at~e ~~

::;'lun will demonstrate the dlller-

11 - "Ukrainian
Pyunky" - Center Lounge, Squire
Hall, 11 noon.
of mllkfng Ukrainian Easter eggs.
Faclllflea wm be available lor all to
fNike pyaanky. The award winning
film "Pyunka" by Marco Pereyma
will be eJ&gt;own.
•
T,_.,, April 11 - "Ukrainian
Food" - center Lounge, Squire, 1
p.m.
A display, arranged by Krts
Pldkameriy, of facets or Ukrainian
cookery.
A
Ukrainian
dish
h:r.r'...r!'.y") will be lleMid In Squire
• ..........,.

April 11 "The
Bllndura"- Center. Lounge, Squire
12noon.
The mualc of thla unique
Instrument will be Interpreted by
Natalia Dmytljuk She will demonstrate how thla 30 - 60 stringed
lnatru,_. Ia played, to produce
the gentle emphatic sound , lor
Whlcli It Ia famous.
"Ukrainian
The many modeS o tills craft will
be explained and demonstrated .
Participants will have the opportun!!Y to try their skills .
~. 6Prll 20 " Ukrainian
Ceramics aiW WOOdcuts" - Center
Lounge, 12 noon .

Embnllcleo(

.-

oniJ, lho office ... be open '"' Saturday, April 22 and 29, and May 6 and 13 from
9 S:,m. to 4 p.m.
·

presented by Zlna Dmytrljuk. An

:ro,.~;od~lca~.'n"3 afs~

woodcuts.
Friday, Aprll21 - " Ukrainian Folk
Dancfng"- 233 Squire, 12 noon.

-H~~:~:.~~~~i:~~ ~~~~~ simple and not-so-simple, from a
-"'!y of Ukrainian Dances lnclud-

_!¥~'lfan;;,.",'.1'-'!;;~ ·~~=ti;

"Hopak." All will have a-&lt;:hance to
try their ''loot" at these Intricate' and
lively dances.
Sunday, Aprll23- "E~s of the
Ukraine" Katharine Cornell
Theatre, 3and Bp.m.
The .Ukrainian Studant Club
presents the~ward-wlnnlng dance
group "Cheremshyna" In a concert
of folk songs and dances. Also

~':;"~~~~. ~~anl~tu'teld ~:~:~ ..v

. . ~r~~~:t;~:~=k~;~~~~~~"
dancer Laryssa Sharvan.
1

8

an~ C:::ror ~u~!;,~ ~~s8t6':~~~i

admission.
·
See " Easter In the Ukraine,"
Sunday, Apri123, 8 a.m. WKBW-TV,
Channel7 .

FILM'.
The Mack (1973) . t 48 Oiofendorf. 7 p.m.
Sponsored by Black Studies.

LECTURE'
.luat Women Ooaoiplng: • - Copilot and
t11e tn-tlonat • - t o r - cani-

pofvn. Phone 831.U05 for lo6atloit. 7:30p.m.
Sponoonod by Women's - COllege ~

•.

The African Student Association
Is planning a weekend of 8Y8flts as
follows ;
.~
.
S:.f&lt;~~~~ p~~i/ 14•. ~ FWm, -232

A~'::Jor~~~ : = e r;
on " lnter; Airlcan Diplomacy" 2'::8
Squire. 1 p.m.
Saturday, Af{/1 15 - Film, 2nd

~~~.~~~~l'oo,. ~u~:~&amp;cs~~:

9p.m .
Everyone Is -lcome.

further--·

ForOr. Gol t&lt;aty,
or

·

contact Dr.
~
~

Gone-

~andHislorfcoiFour-...

Sociof, Phlo838·2475.

REOISTIIATION DATES FOR FALL. 1178
Regis- bagm Aprt 24 for 81 D U E and .)unions; Aprt 25, for DUE 1\pri 26 , for DUE frwohmon. (AI grad ... be regia-atlho . . . . tlmo).
AI activities tsl&lt;o place In Hayes B.

-SESIICHIIIECifi'IRATION

s..m.or 1978 Aogiolralfon bagm '"'
Mondoy, Aprt 17, In Hayes B.

A-

TAX INFONIATION FOR FOREICINAND SCHOLARS
through Aprl 15, 1978. !rom Con-

sultant 10 Foreign

su..ts -

-

· 402

-

Ltnry,

=~~==:·~~a:::~
lhoi'1977tunt\JmaandW2foma.

ANi. TOMICAL SCIENCES DIST1NOUISHED
LECTUAESEAESII
The GOp Junction: A llJnH!Ic Cryalaf -

IeUng l - I a r Camonunlcaflan, Or. Don1ot
Goodenougfl, Oepor1ment of Anatomy,
Western~ . G-28 Farber. 8 p.m.

c...

- IRCALM'

China-.. 2nd floor looogo, Rictwnond. 8 and
11&gt;-p.m.

Fiee 10 eiiRC feopi,yera; $ .50 for ofhera.

cOuEGE OF UAIIAN STUDE811YIII'Oa.'
The Future of - l o . 167 MFACC, Ellcott. .
8p.m.

..

IIUSICI.alARY.,_
April Fooll IIi Bolrd,
through Aprl30.

U.NGERIIWC SHOw-

Hal.-·-.. . .

Prlnlaand~br.llna.._.

Becl&lt;

Apri3-Aprl21 . Thio

is~bylhoM~and-

Sdonceo aalho fir8t In -

. . be a con1fnuing

-cfahowsln Beci&lt;Hal.

PUT US ON YOUR LIST
The R~rtw "Calendar" hopM . to provide the campua w1tt1 a
compn!Hinalft WMkly fitting of and ac:tiYitlea, from fllma and
.. .JI!MIInga to aclentlflc colloquia. We'll print both your no11cea and your
publicity photoa
apece permlta) II you aupply ua with glony prlnta. The
..-rice Ia
To r.cord Information, call JeM Shrader, 113&amp;-2126, by
Monday noon, lor lnclualon In the' following Thlnday'a
Or, mall
Information to R_tt., "Calendar," 138 Crolta Hall, AmlleBt. We nMd your
assistance In making the "Calendar" as complete as possible.
Key: IOpen only to thoaa with a prolesslonallnt-t In tha subject; •open
to th~ public; "open to members of the University. Unless otherwlaa
specified, tickets lor ..,ents charting admission can be purchased at the
Squire Hall Ticket Office.

rr.e.

·••• '

•'• o I " '

\o '

' 4o •

I••

1-.

~ •o

'•

.. ~ , ._,

,.._ ,,, , _..., ._, o

�•

" "'11 13, 1171

-,

enuo-;ng--

I( Kaul. Department of ~ Sclar1ce.
Ae&lt;oopace

~--

148Pwl&lt;er. 3p.m. COttee " 2:30. •

PBIIATNCMRARCH-...R I

_&amp;at_,.____....,.

SEMINARI

_.,,_.tobe-•t

- - . . - -: Do-. Emanuell.eb....... Dr. Adtyi Kaul. Do-. Mario Ral1azzi.

opacta.

'

Robert~ . Department

of Slalll,

KinCh-·

fo r m e r . - .. Oobr. 325 WFNX. Elicotl

~~EDUCATION

Studies .

-·
----IJISTIIIGUt&amp;HEI
--·

Cllildrwn'sli&lt;&gt;IIIJHOI.1 2 nooo.

3 p.m. Sponsored by lhe Council on tntemational

COMPUTER SCIENCE COUOOIM*II

- - - . . . , . Technlq-ln

Some-on-lllainm ·t&gt;rowtng
In ..._ . . . . Prof....- w. w. · Deport·
ment of CotrclUt9r Science. Cernogie-Metlon Unl·

~--lno-l!ullaloEast.

- . . - - .. enc:o.nged . F.orltn1!1er

- . -~- E&lt;llcallon.
83t-5112e.

venlily. Room 41 , 4228 Ridge..l.j!a. 3 :30 p.m.
R- t a at31nRoom61 .

w-

.._.....,_ t480iolendorf. 1 p.m.

GEOLOOK:ALSCIEHCESSEIIINARf

~Ill'--·

o...
0eper1men1 o1 Geok&gt;gical
Sciencea. Unlvar8ify of - .....~ Room 18,
4240
Lea. 3 :30p.m.
at 3 .

-Singor.

· lJiw School, UrWersity of Pemsytvania.
708 o - - .. 3 :30-5:30 p.m. Facotty .....-s
and s.-ts lntereo!Sd In the WOf1&lt;shol&gt; should.

MFFALO LOGIC COUOOI*Mt

Nel ~­

send names end dlmPUS mailing addresses to ,

Professor G. L. Priest, Law'School. 418 O'Brian . •

-~ . 684Baldy. 3p. m .

....

,._,.__,.,

PHILOSOPHY SEIIINAR I

_ol......._.,lnRatsF.,._

l'lw

a .oi.ECUI.NIIIOI.OGY SEMINAR 8
.......,.,-..,.,ndSactetOQ'Giyco-

CELl.

Jams-

T~ "l'nlfesoor-~PolticatSdence

[)epartmenl. IJ'/ e . 684 Baldy. 3 :30 p.m.

- FOSTER LECruRE.SERIES II
. Mechllntatlc OrOanic Photochemistry; Tllene

l n t e r c - VIa stnetat'and Trtpt8Atn,

Department of
lkWeroily

Do-. W;ltiam G. Dauben, University ot Calilomia
at Berl&lt;eley. 70Acheson. 4 : 15 p.m.

SChool o f -. 114Hochsletlor. 4 :15 p .m.
&lt;;olfee at 4 .

WATER RESOURCES&amp; ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGlNEERING SEMINAR I
WatorQaallty Rng of Mine Acid S- mt ,
Akirll UChida, C ivil E~ . U / 8 . Room 27. '
4232 Ridge Loa. 4: 20-p.m., preceded by refresh.
ments. ·

F08J8I LECTURE-I
-

o~...

o.,onJo - l r y : TN

- . . _ . , o.-. -

~. ~

G.
of Callomlo at Bert&lt;eley. 70

~~5~.

cal OorolllytRCALM•
TNGrealaaL 150Fart&gt;er. 7:30and9:30.p.m.

at 831-3020.

-In
..
AI...,.._

CSEA~ . ,.
•
Tho · ~ of Loall 602F«LeyCUf Moin Shel. "'5:30p.m.
TNa . . . . ~"':"lod- _lings_
CCinct 102) ... _
_.. _ Ill' lhe
_Aap-eoontaiMos
-IM!

,.. -

qo-.o on -

action, oq&gt;loyeo -

· political

. grievonceo. wot1cing

- lhe-conlrllct. For mote information.
•cal831-3040.
.

UUMfUI•
-IEnglond, t974). Conlotence Theatre.
Scan. Cal836'291.9 tor &amp;OOw tmos. ~ts
S1 ; - S 1 .50.

J1lll it . . l*lgrlphy of -

pramlore of Ken -

··
· ....
.. lost of the

-

-_..,~

IICfll.ll•

Phlloaq&gt;hy and Poflttca: _ . . _ , . . •• " Tho

.

--..Gooy-.
~-­
. C508Coc*.e.
4p.m. Retrastwnentset3~50.
..-..., Do-. Lennar:r..
~ a-.y,

•

1. 2nd Floor- U&gt;unge, Aichrnond.
8S.50Jor
onct _tO p .m.
_ Free to Ill lAC t-ors;

Free to al lRC feepeyers: 51 for others.
• S1lmng who else, but?
CACFIUI•

V -170 WFNX, aoou. 8

_

Olooallrlll _ _ _ _
PBIIATIIC---1

IWolph ~- ·c.ooridge City

....,..._
11a.m. IQocll -

· Chllclnln=a -

-

l!lllllltDI-ITAL._CBITER

COI.UICMUr

y)n•..:tl~=

- 1 2 -.

••
CGI- .... Qr. Femando
~-·
- · -l.lnlvonlly. 178 F.....-.
I p.m. ~ blf .... Bullalo Chaplar of

. .8oclolrlor-.

lntolhlstilm.

__
____

--

s

lla-(Engtand, 1 974 ~ COOter. _ Theatre.
SquWe. Call 636·2919 tor show times. Students
$1 ; Qlhets $1.50.
.
UUAII-GHT,FiLM•
A Bar and Hit Dog 1.1975). conterenco Theatre,
Squ;,.,. MldNghl. Studen~ $ 1 ; others $1 .50.
The year is 2024 . This is the story of Vte
and his canine , Blood, and their effDfts to ~e
WOOd populated by rovinO packs of voune
bQys atte&lt; World V!/w lll.

a

- .. - ........... -..Or.-

Ood;.--of-. 127~ .

·===-.
. . .-...-~
-----llr.AI!l
2:.45pJII.

0

.~ ...

r-

CONTINuiNG MEIHCAL EDUCATIO.N
SEIIINARit
.
.
Leut&lt;amla: A Second L_, Cllnleat tnd · .
~ojochoaoclal " ~oriom. Resewch Slu&lt;fies Center, - - PBII&lt; Memorial
Institute. PreregiStration suogested. For more

H'.._

inl&lt;&gt;rmltion, contact

con~

Medical Eilucallon,

2211 - -· 831-5526.
5porwMid Ill' The leU&lt;8mia Society of America,
tnc.. and . . f'l'ogtam in Contioulno Medical
Education .

TEACHING OF PSYCHOLOGY WORKSHOPI:
An EJu:hanga.of 8ucCNaful Around
liMo T........ af l'aychology. Room 8·24,..4230
Ridge Lea. 9 :30
-4 :30 p.m. Reg;stnition
lojimitod-llletee Ia $1 .50.
Sponaoredby Social Psychology.

a.m.

~TIONSIN THE ARTS

inii!!:\18W8- ~no. tor·

- COurier c-

mOrty
ofllle
IC!Bwlol8). 12:30 p.m. .

.

.- - In-

and 10:30 p.m. Free to afl IRC feePayers;
$1 for others.

c"CFILM'

.

-

-

&amp;RCFIIJI• .
Tho -

-

Blncttr _,Gonion Snell.

•

NIGHT OF !!LAC~ LOVE'

con.- Ma, presented by·ftle-Biack Students
be diama, song and an art
show, a!)d a oemi~ormal diSCQ. Kalharjne Comet\
Theatre, Elticott. 8 p:-m. Tlckets on Sale at
Squnt r.cket Office.

at U I 6 . Included will

UUABFILM' •

1-PI'&lt;IIniMII You A A-Garden (1977).
eortterence The8tre, Squ;,.,. Call 838·2919 for

=ea Ka- a

show-. ~ts$1 ; """'"'$1.50.
.
T N s - adaptBIIonof.Joonle ~··

-best part
trylngto

-

t

Quinlan
In rwoo;nan
e. m a t t &lt; •
. . . 11)01\tally
disll.rt&gt;ed
wayback·toh!otit)i.
• ,-

•

A· aa,·onc~ lk OogJ1975). COnference~.

Squft. Midnight. Studenlll $1 ; 0~1 . 50 .

~

AIIHEIISTF-IIEETINGCQuak...)••
157 M!'-.c:C; Elicotl 10 .a.m. Everyone• is

. - 11.-etcon,e.

170 MFAOC , Elicott. 7, 30
Nun·Profit O(g.

267C&amp;pOn. 2:30p.m..
SUNY I B COUNCIL MEETING f
,
- · Contenlnce Room. 5th Fbor, Capon,
3 : 15p.m,

.
c~~~~oa:,
~

Fiiedrnan, Computer Sclence ·Doportinent, fn9iana
Univefsjly. Room 19, 4226 Ridge Lea. - 3 :30
'p.m.Re-tsat31nRoom61 .
PHARIIACOLOGY &amp; 1liEIW'EIIT1CS
SEIIINARI
&gt;

..:,:::;"~ty==~ .

tee on Clinical Plamaootogy, ~of-Ctic:agcj.
10:( Shennan. 4 p.m. Retreslvlfenia at 3 :45 .
CONVERSATIONS IN THE JUITS
Eathar Swar1z Interviews British

,

wrttano and

broadcasters l!lncttr and Snell.
International Cable TV (Channel 1 O).J[p.n!:,,

- " ' Ill'· Hangtne !Oshima. 11168). ·146
Diefendorf. 7 p.m. Sponsored ·by the Center
tor Media Study.
~

&gt;.

• .

UUAB-FIIJI•
•
· - - Y o u " - -11977).
contorence n-tre, SQun. Cal 638-2919, (or
&amp;OOwtmeo. Studentstt : """'"'s1 :so.

U.S. PosUJC
PhiD
Kuffalu, N.Y.
Pcrnrit No. 311

_

•

FILM•

Brttiah wrt- and

tntemo11ona1~1Vt~ 10). 6p.m.

TN ·o...~opment of Stat•Wide Llbnlry Se&lt;·
vleet, Joseph Shubert, deputy corrvniasiOner of

Vetentlno. 150 Farber. 8 CWld 9 :45 p.m. TICkets

$ 1.

CONVEIIUTlONS IN 1ltE "RTS
-

to reopen the Robert KeO"nedy
assassination case to prove that
Sirhan Sirhan was framed and a ·
"second assassin" existed . . · -::
Bugllosl Is also co-author of t he
best-SBIIer Hel/er.Skelter, a caSB
study ol the " Manson mentality" •
w!&gt;ich revealed Jasclnatlng facls
about the family's background,
their bizarre philosophy, • and
mollves for the savage murders.
Prior to the Manson- case,
Bugliosl enl oyed a. career_ as a
criminal prosecutor for Los. Angeles
and complied a record of 105
criminal- convictions out of 106
felony jury trials. His career served
as a model for the TV series "The
D.A." starring Robert Conrad .
·

education. Albany. and New YO&lt;i&lt; State libnoian.

uui.a-' ALM· -

U /B ... Canlalua Cciltege (2). Achoaon Footd.

tp.m.

T~:lbl:,'o~~rutl~~~~~~ttom~~ari:S

~son and four oL hYs "family': '
behind
bars
for the brutal
Tate/LaBianca slaylngs _will appear
at UI B April 19 at 8 p.m . In tlie
Fillmore Room.
· The appearance of Vincent
Bugllost· Is sponsored by the
Speakers' Bureau of the Undergraduate Student Association .. Ad·
mission. Is free.
Currently, Bugllosi Is In private
law practice In Los Angeles. Based
on new evidence, he I~ attempting

UUAIIFIUI•

"-1 ..,.._ .... .,_ "'

....... of ... Nllgora ~ - - . ; ; for Fle-QIImna. Fnt-bolgo.O-. 2p.m.
~Ill' ... ~.--.

Mansons and a Robert Kennedy
conspiracy theory.

•

_..........,.....,z...,,-.. . - -rtzere.e ....... .,...,...._
,
-··aoFTIAll·
~·

Get ready for tales of the

Philips, !lite of the Mamas and Papas. Soine say
Nureyey's career as an actor ended two nmutes

SATURDAY ....:..15
~-

'Helter-Skelter' author

""! Jl:45 p.m.

Tk;k;!,~,; plays tbe ~~ lovOf, wttli ~

FRIDAY-14

•ng -

Colle:&gt;

LAW AND ECONOMICS WORKSHOP I
. TN of N-"1!11 En._.., Henly B.

-~-Axon A Gila,
Dr.
-ofAnoiOmy,
case_ _ _18QF-.
3p.m.

OnlalaiiJ--..-.

A.-.,

Rid!!-

MONDAY-17

TUESDAY -18
-IIIOCHEM~Y NUlllmON NOON

SEIIIN"RI

Dietary Fiber, Do-. David Kiitchevsky. asaocleto

director of--the Wistar Institute, professor of biochemistry, UnM!nilly of Pennsylvania. 26 Farber.

• 12noon.

SCHOOL OF INFORII"TlON &amp; LIBRARY·
- STUOIES COLLOQUIUII•

•See'Calendar, ' page 7, col. 1

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!; .J

I

I
~

I Ill

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 9 NO. 25 APRIL 6, 1978

I

Lab
a-n lnlals
Repeal of MetcalfHatch Ac_t,could
cost taxpayers

..,..,
...........
-..-.
,_,__

.

C~mputlng

.·Repeal of a ·atale • - which now
allows ~ at the Slate ~
Un'-alty at 11utt.1o to·buy uncl.,med,
t•
1IMdopttod strays fnlm poutiCit' tor-- - experlmerital pu~ · would curtail
·
lncr.M
medlclll r - a t hens taxpayer ooat by forcing U/B to buy
..- . at conaklerlobly tolgtw
prices from commM:lal cleeleB or
bnoedera, U/B olflclala report •
• A ..-rewa pa8ed month In
the Stale Au.nbly to repMI the
MeiC811-Hatch Act which l*ft\lla the
Slate HMith Commlaalon.- to requlaltlon uncl8lmed. unadoptad animals
from pounds and humane eocletiM tor
r - a t. If almlla- .:t1on Ia ~ In the
Senate, with the ao-nor'a algnat~
po!entlally valulible ..-cto at U/ts
could be feoperdlzed.

~ Public

meetlnga to dlocuaa 8C8iMmlc computing
- · are ·for. TUNd8y. April 11 - 322
Acheaon. 2 p.m.; and Wed.-day. April12 - Ridge Lee (Rm. 281, 1 p.m.; and '212 Capen
1Amheiat1.3:30p.m. S..•rtlcleonpeg.!&amp;.

·repeal of
estimate

live.

_,

Although mice lind rata account for
more than 90 per &lt;l80t of all U/B
.-cto animate, some medical nssearcto, especially that Involving aurgl-

rm'p.:::\!,~ues01 ":~d~~

• requires animals the size of doge and

cats.

Valaeco notes that the artificial '-1
~.which has saved thouaanda
of 11.,. Md was devaloj)ed by U/B
- faculty, was flrat tested on~ before

p==~
l';l'~~=~~ lor
If opponents ot the act suoceed In

repeal atforta, Valaeco aaya twice as

•See'Ub_'_Z._2

Alumni to honor congreSSflleD
w.am N• YC1111'1 ~ ConglwaIMIIau~wH 1Ab!llumhonoreclnl
•• _,..'!!..lheatlonUn'l'!'!"!'oty:~
,..,0
...........,
"" u•

' Henry J, ··Nowak and Jack Kemp .are
· slated fo 1alk abdot: how1ax cuts can
r&amp;-enerQize t~e economy; .pu~llc works
.undlng_ ..w:e to the IX'!!'munlty" on ·
as a atlmulus to capital projectt, and
Alumntvey, Saturday, fllril &amp;,Jn capen
small bualnest.asslstance.
""-~'•·
·Ph....,. M.~. ;,...ldent of .
They wlil · be- iolned . during - the

· HaJJ;._
the AuoCi8t11!7. ·-;m

make

the

...-rt&amp;tlone to-the Congo_,_ who
will aleo be cited lor "exemplifying the
highest ideals Ol American IMdershlp,"
for being ' "public offlclala whom all
ages cenlook up to and be proUd of."
RepiBeentatlves · John J. LaFalce,

-=~,. ~~~ ~~~~ltr. l::~e~~l

the School' of Architecture and
Environmental Desjgn; U/&amp; President
Robert - L. Ketter; and Dean John
Naughll:m, of the School of Medicine.
Each will discuss topics of _I nterest to
the University and the comn;ounlty.

no magnet;

Ms. Joan E . ·Loring, commisSioner,
Department
of
Environment
and

~~,to::;•ng;~~ th~~;::'~~~~f·ec:.:ll t~~
Alford a Better One?"_
Alumni Association planners are
expecting . 500 . people to attend.
·Aiiglstratlon baglns at 9 a.m., In Callen
Hall Lobby. Rep. Kemp Is the first
speaker at 9:30, followed by Prof.
Cohen and Dr. Ketter. After luncn, Ms.

~~~a~ l~s ~~al~.llo,:~ ~:11 :e:i
•See ' Alumni,' pigeS,col.1

Handicapped mod'lflc-a~lons to begin
By this summer several changes will
be made to the Interior and exterior of
Unl-elty buildings Which will make
them more accessible to and functional
lor the handicapped.
According to E.W. Doty, vice
president lor finance and. management,

~om~~~~~~ as ~~~t'~~~~~~ilutl~~
Self:Study on Accessibility which
zeroed-In on short-range accessibility
goals. ll;oe modlllcatlons are conSidered '\hort range" because they
require no major engineering or
construction feats and
can
be
completed In a relatively short period of

11

"t~~s~~~~~':~W'1'~:!s were
given priority ranklngs two weeks ago
by an ad hoc committee charged by
Doty. The· committee, chaired by John
Warren of Facilities Planning, Included
representatives of the Independents (a
group representing handicapped students) , Operation Access trainees and
personnel from the Office of Service lor

·

~';::, ~~~!';,"P~~ou~~~rmDa:~o~~~t

and several other University departments and agencies.
Squire ramp und-ay
Construction began this week on a

ramp to :&gt;quire Hall, the first of the top
ten priorities. Access to the Personnel
Department at Crofts and Hayes
Annexes A, B and C will also be made
easier through ramp construction.
, Five push button automatic door
openers are also on order; one tor
Amherst and lour lor the Main Street
Campus. The door openers will be used
, on an experimental basis and,
depending on how they work out, may
be installed on all campus doors.
Doty said that decreasing the
pressure bolts on campus doors to the
eight pound limit recommended by
•See 'Handappec~,• PIG•10, cot 1

Jots of CAiegdu .
ma~,

the monthly
publ,catlon of the Office
of Cultural Affairs, usually
published the first Thursday
of each month, has been
delayed because of spring
re~ess. An issue of naasnet
highlighting and listing
cultural events for the
remainder of the semester
will be published next week.
Meanwhile, because many
events fall during the next
week, this week's C.lendu
is expanded so we could
gf'oup together as many of
the activities notices and
highlights as possible. See
the centerspread first.
That's where·today's
C.lendu begins.

,.

�iIi

I

PSS ·p lans· workshops
to upgrade_staff skill~
The seminar will stress: 1) aasessment of skills, aptitudes • and job
preferenoss; 2) ldentillcaJion ot the fit
between pll&lt;liOIIal values and jobrelated values; 3) updating resumes;
and 4) the exploration of avanu1111 for job
enrichment .
The laad6rs/presentars will be: Dr.
Stanley Cremer, acting aaaoclate vice
preeldant for acedemlc affairs and
professor In the Department of
Counseling
Psychology;
Eugene
Martell, director of University Placement and ear- Guldanoe; Margaret
Nevin, dlracl!&gt;r of the Adult Advisement
Canter; and Mary Ann Stegmaier,
asaoclatt director "of Placement and
ear- Guidance.
·•
.Attendance will be limited to 20.

1

en= ~he ~~skng;~ ..,:~

productlvltT of the University's professional stal will begin this month .
. Tile 1nas workshops and seminars are
part of a. Professional ·Staff · earDevelopment Program sponsored by the
Professional Steff Senate In conjunction with the Affirmative Action and
Human Resources Development Office.
According to the program's stat&amp;mant of principle, recently approved by
President Robert L. Ketter, Its
objectiveS" are to: 1) train the lndlvfdual
to perform assigned _tasks better and to
undertake supplemental tasks; 2)
provide the University with a pool of
personnel with Improved laiRts and
Increased · allglbllty lor promotion; 3)
provide learning experiences which will
aid In btosdenlng Individual Interests
and abilities through new learning
experiences; and 4) foster esp/r/1 de

lchw.ndlng•r

Radtcal.criminologists
speaking h~re Friday
Two f i g - In the field of "radical
Cl1mi!IOIOGY" wHI give this Friday's
Mlndat LAOtiiRI In 101 Baldy (the Kiva)
•

~

~of

~ •

asaoclete
eacloloav, lll8le University

Schw.KIInger,

Paltz, end Alphonao
I'IIIIIMJ, pro'- oiiOCiology, Hunter
Oolll!lle. W(lllpelk on "Crrme, Violence
New

IIIII_CiipiUIIIIm. •

•
...-,Wilhelm
of the U/B Sociology
wltl be the dlacuuant

~

f!I!!!MIPO_ the two ,_atlona. Dr.
'MIIIlnt 18 ~ pertieul8rty for his

,_,_..uona end r.clam In the
u.s. IIIII 18 althor« "Who Needs the
wmt1 on

~

...=

::r;li•IMt

to Bene ar.llkw of the

or- Soclll,

Plllto.oohlc:.l

~~ofllduca­

tlon, 11110 ~- iif the orgllllmra of tiM!
Mlndlt WorbhoD Plnlcney
·-·
I!Wtll. Drs.
ap. . . . "MMH)"' from a fr8me of
whlcll cion8ldenl antl-aoclal

rw-

~

.m

activity

•

crime.

This

lnoiUdle, Dr. ClrJIIIn.- lricllcatad, ~
ten1111c Jndultrial IIIOiance agalnat
--...(!Miming end lnJUI!Itg thilm aa
a .-It of unlife on-the-fOb condl·

110M) ~urlng C0118111'1181"1 through
.,......
poor quality control and
piaduDtloft, • a .-uti of Incidents
IUIIh • the _ , deNIImenta of tank

-~toxic chemicals.
"--la.. crkillnology considers r.clam, a.lllll, lmf*lallam and all forms
of lllqllclbllon • both major analytical
= : : . o f Clime end • crlrMa In

hi81M11w'e

=ern·==-·~::

c:rlmlnologleta hold, Onlblner eays, that

If IOCial oOndltlona produce criminality,
then the poaalbiHtlea lor ending crime
· He In putting an end to criminogenic
IOCial OonciHTona.
Tlloaa WOtldng In the field also offer
1181'111M11lvea on ieform •on What to do
• Unllf the doctor COlMa,~ G111biner aaya. .

coq:,~ first wor1&lt;shop, divided Into three

lectures with seminars following, will
discuss the topic of "Admlnlstretlve
Liability." Dr. Ronjlld Stein will speak
on the Stata's,Publlc Officers Law. Dr.
Patricia Hollander will lecture on
"Liabilities of Employees In Hlgla"
Education;" and Dr.· Thomas SantOfll
will discuss "Peraonal and/or Institutional liability In Hiring Practices."
Stein Is .an assistant to President
Ketter and has published on the topic of

::;e~~~~~~on~e:r::: ~ec~~redh.'Pil:

, •Lab animals

~esfcl':n~~~r'1lri.%e i;,v.;'·rp~~8m~';:: ~ ::rit'l'~&amp; ii:.'t'.r¥fi,:~~it:m ~W~
Is scheduled Jor April 28.
This wofkshop will consider selforganization and Its problem areas,
methods of effective delegation, . and
communication. Participants should
read The Management of Tima
by

9 a.m.-5 p.m. ln the Talbert Banquet
Room. Attendance Is limited to 50.
A workshop exploring "Management
by Objectives" will be held Juna~ from
1-5 p;m. at 210 O'Brian Hall.
The theory and prectlet' of setting

prepare questions end observations
regarding the book.
'
\he April 28 workshop will be held
.from 2-5 p.m. at 517 Capen. Attendance
Is limited IQ. 15.
'
A "Car- Development" seminar
designed to prepare individuals for •
lateral, upward or spiral OCCUpt!tlonai
moves, will be held May 5, from 9 a: Al .
to 5 p.m. at the Adult Advisement
Canter at 2 Allenhurst Road.

of desired outcomes, the relationship
between management by objectives and
the larger organization, performance
standards, and supervisory obllgallons.
Thomas Schillo, vice president of
Merchants Insurance Grou11 and Ioomer
· lec~rer In the School of Management, .
will lead the session.
•
For sddltlonal lnlormatlon on the
seminars and wo{kshops, call Patrick
Young at ~2268.

1

~- ~~~d P~":'me ~1 t:::=l:rn~

hoe= While In quarantine, the
animals receive distemper; hepatitis,
leptoaplrosla and rabies vaccines as
well aa treatment for _parasites or other
dl....,.., If present. The animals are
well-fed; allowed, when weather permits, to exercise In outdoor runs on the
FMber roof, and housed ln..:lean cages
In well-ventilated, alr-ecindltloned kennels.

~~ are
1

licensed by
the U.S. Deoartment of Agrlc;ulture ·and
the New '1'011&lt; State Department of
Health, both of which sand Inspectors ·
two to four times annually. The
Facllltlea are also accredited by the
American Aeaoclatlon for Aocredltatlon
of l.abolatory Animal caie, whose

~'::I'V:,.ityM~~Vsto~!T~'ka.:'~fra Ha!n) .!n~

"To be accredited, must follow
strict« guldeiiMS for housing, _care, .
sanitation prectlcea, veterinary care, •
Including diagnosis, control · and
treatment of d l - of animals," saY$_

r:=

-

,

-at

projects llilbmiHed by U/JI
=~
~ -latea. Such
IOoll • all IIPIICia of animal
·
.
IncludinG
-.llwy c.s andl'iou81ng,
humane feeding,
use, to
dll8nnlne that uniformity In the
anlniala, ..mtonment and methods

....................
alata..

.

..

While ~lone are taken to
pruMct MIDI- 1rom d r canled by Mfmala, the Mlmala . . also
similarly lli'OIIIOied from human dl·
whlcll c:ould be tnanamltted to

~::CO~ta

out the Facility's
empl_ . . anlmalto-.. Most have
peta at home, end they are lnllned to
pnMda excellent care to all species
used In fi'!W'I ..-ell or teaching
~- .·

-

llmothy Mahoney Isn't yet sure
whether or not he'll go Into the
sdvartlslng business when _he's older,
but h.e's got a lot of•brlght Ideas and for
now he's giving them sway.
Tim-othy, ol West Seneca, Is 14. One
of his favorite pastimes (s thinking up
advertising slogans, ansi he ri!CI!ntiy
thought up one he passed on to the
Office of Public Affairs at U1B:
"UIB for You and Me."
"U/B Isn't just a self-cantered school
for a taw who oan alford 11." Timothy

uldallnae also spell out high
hygl-..nd health standards
ployeea who work directlY. with
the anlm81a. Guldellnea also d"lctata
that anlmala muet ~ve proper and
""""- care, 11e ..-hetlzed prior to
any prooedurea, meet standards of
lftollld poat-aurglcal care and be put toliMp J*nleaaly.

v=.~=~~-r..::~rtant, ~
.tiona who rule on appllcat~ for

¥~: ~7~ ~j~~:~.w~~ ~!'fiil:!t~ri

14-year-old sloganeer says
'UlB's for-you ·and me',

s=:.m.ar::two~~~~~t lh~.

Velaaco.

.

~~~~~ :,-: fli~Jnc:.'::ptaa;a •

eeler
This aassion will explore various
perspectives of the employee review
process ancfdlacuss examples of useful
reviews. AHeri'danca Is limited to 70:
Dlacuaalon leaders will be: Barbara
Burke, personnel aaaoclate at U/B; Dr.
Thomas Gutterldga, director of th.f
Kuman Resources Institute and ~;
ate professor In .the Department of
Oraantz:atlon and Human Resources,
Scfiool·of"ManagllflHIIll; ~d Josephina
Wlee, United Unt....lty Prolesalonals
U/B Law School and Is currently
representative and assistant · to the
director ofthe.L.aw and Soclai ,Sclence
chairman, Department of Comp~ter
Program In the Survey R-.cl\ Canter.
Sciences.
.- A seminar on' "Creative ProblemSantora, who formerly served as an
Assistant State Attorney -General, ft9W
Solving," May 18, will consider
represents SUNY In the area of State
obstacles to problem-solving, enhanceand Federal.clvll rights law.
ment of observational skills, problem
The wor1&lt;shap will be held Friday,
definition and ' Idea production and
April 21 , at 1:30 .P.m . In the Banquet
evaluation . Partlclpents will be able to
Room, Talbert Hall.
_ apply wor1&lt;shop techniques to Individual wor1&lt; settings.
Time management
Thl workshop will be conducted by
A "Time Management" workshop to
Delores Young, a former U/B faculty

Studies In Intergroup Relations. sarles .•
He haa written several bOOks: The
Comm/Hed: White Activists In th'a Civil
Rights Movement; ~laclc , Americans:
Poverty end Politics In Harlem; The .
American Way of Vlolanos; and Red,
Blaclc and Green: Black .Nationalism In
the United States.
Pinkney has taught courses In
Af~Amerlcan studies, criminology,
aoclal problems and ethnic aild race
relations among . other areas. The
reclpifnt of aeveiil spacial awards, he
received a Ford Foundetion fellowahlp
ln1971 .
(lraa-1,0Cti.-41
many animals will be llacrlllced In New
Vorl&lt; State IInce those now purchased
for ..-ch are designated to be put to
sleeP whet'- U I B buys them or not.
Under repeat,. not only would these
animals die but so 11(0Uid an equal
number which would have to be
• purchased from commercial sources.
Animals purchased from area pounds
. . quarantined .8lld condl)lon'ld at
FMber Hall lor at leaat lhnas 'Weeks

Performance appralaal
• "Performance Program and Appraisal" will be the topic of a worksHo~ May

··

0

~A:re~~t'!v!~~s ~~~- t~ar! \h~:
anybody Clln go to."

May be far him aomeday
·
·
Timothy, an el~hth Jlreder at St. John

:r;r ~h;:~a~'!.t.~w~ ait:."d

U/B, although
thinks he might go
'-a himself someday. His family Is
ratla" new to the area and haa enjoyed
becoming ·involved In community
- t a and visiting area attrectlons .
How did Timothy develop his slogan?
. He .-ms to h - Inherited his
sloganaertng talent from his grandlalla", Frank Smith, of Sliyare,
Penneylvanla. According to Timothy's

- ~~':rcir~'';:,:.
':;'r':~~ca~~u~·
Brewery there. One day Mr. Smith
mentioned to the man's son an Idea he
hed for an edvertlslng campaign, "UC
forMa."
The Idea was so well-liked, Mrs.
....; •

., .. ....

-' · '~ ' i

•

•

r-

Mahoney says, that It W81! used for a
major campaign. However, as those
Involved In the business of edvartlslng
know, orlgln!liOr~.ol id.eas are often lost
In the shuffle, and Mr: Smith received
no credit remuneration.
·

or

Just 'popped In'
·
"I was thinking about that story,"
Timothy says, "and I got the Idea for
the sl~an for U I B. It just sort of

PDf.'~~~u:'~ h::'f ~~lied
0

a local bank
with an- edvartlslng Idea he came up
with after seeing the bank's commercials on television.
"I'm not sure II I'll go Into edvartlslng
whan ·l'm older," he aays. "It's not as
easy as It looks. They have to wor1&lt; wit~
a lot _of different people and do more
things than just think up Ideas.
"If I don't go Into advertising, maybe
I'll be a car IJlachanlc."
. Timothy's father_Is controller at the
Manulaotu[ers Hano- Trust Company
office on Main Street In Buffalo. The
family moved- to Wait Seneca three
years ago from Olean .
Timothy collects posters and kay
chains. He has about 105 different key
chains of-every shape, color and s~a.
He enjoys putting t.ogethar models
and, of course, watching television. ·
~;~~~~~Pal~~ doesn't Jl.ke_ Is "dumb"
" I like the educational ones," he
sniffs .
·

�Apolll,1t71

j

Social Security
System is out-of-date and unfair,
Law prof Grace Blumberg contends;
singles and working couples suffer: most
By Steplwnle Weisman
PubllcAIIIIralntem

Nobel Laureate
will give

~~~f~~e!~!sua~!~

the 1977 Nobel Prize In Chemistry for
his central role In the advances made In
the stud~ of lrreven~lble thermodynamics over the
30 years, will
Pf8Mflt a series of ectures here, April
2
4-:tltled, " From Being to Becoming,"
thea.leswlll beheld In 147 Dlefendorl.
Each lecture will begin at 8 p.m. and Is
free and open to the public.
The lectures are sponsored by U I B's
Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics as Its John W. Cowper
Distinguished VIsiting Lecture Series
for Spring, 1978.
. '
lndiYidual .lecture topics will be: "The
Physics of Being (Time In Classical and
Quantum Mechanics)," Monda_y, April
~24; "The Physics of Becoming (Thermodynamics and Dlaalpatlve Struc1ures),"
Tuesday, A!lfll 25; and " The Brl~
-· ~ 881ng "'l"'' Becarnlng _(
· Microscopic TheOry of lrreven~lble
ProceaMa),"Wedneaday,.Aprll"26.
While the atudy of thermodynamics
Involves rules that gov.n the relation-.
ship betwMn '-1 and other forms of
anergy, Prlgoglne has stressed the
phUoaoplilcal Implications of his
studies, allowing their applicability In
flelda SUCh as economics, ecology,
chemlatry and biology.
In explaining his ilnalyses of various
systems, he comJ*W the Milorganization of chemical and biological
systems to the equilibrium attelneil by
urban centers. A -big city can survive
only as long as food, fuel and other vital
commodities flow In while products and
wastei flow out .
7he general conclusion of Prlgoglne's w0f1t," an article In Science
notes, "Is that there Is only one type of
physical law, but different thermodynamic situations: near and far from
equilibrium. . " A system near equilibrium cannot
evolve spontaneously to new and
!ntereatlng struc1ures. As the system Is
driven far from equilibrium, It may
become unstable and then evolve
lipontaneoualy to new structures
ahowlngcohetent behavior."
·•
Pr1gogine refers to the equilibrium
and near-.qulllbrlum states as - the
thermodynamic branch, and the new
atruc1ui'IIS es dlaalpatlve struc;turaa.

r,aot

w!&lt;""ed~,::rc; ~~19~~'J..Z!.'r.t~

Bruasets, Belgium. He Is now professor
of physical chemistry and theoretical
physics at the Fr88 Unl-slty of
Brussels and · professor of physics and
chemical engl..-lng at the University
of Texas, Austin .
He servee u director for the Solvay
Institute of Physics and Chemistry In
Brusaels and the Center for Statistical
Mechanics and Thermodynamics In
Austin.
He Is author of several books,
Including Introduction to Thermodyn•mlcs of 1,-,.-s/b/e Processes . His
rr.uat recent publication, with G.
Nicolls, Is Self-Oiflenizat/on In Nonequllfbrlum Systems - From Dissipative Structures to Order Through
Fluctuations, which was published last

~warded the Franqol Prize In 1955
and the E.J. Solvay Prize In 1965, Prlgoglne hae been the recipient ol
numerous honors. He Ia credited with
eatabll$1ng a school of thermodynamlel tnat has Influenced scientists
i n many fields of study all o- the
world .

Singles, couples with two earners,
and dlvorced.-wornen are being tnsated
unequally by the Social Security
system. The one wage earner family Is
preferred by the system and receives
better benefits, Grace Blumberg,
professor of law at U/ B, contends.
Ms. Blumbera aired her views , in a
talk on " Adult llependency In Social
Security Leglslat111n" at Women' s
St udies College recently.
The current Social Security scheme,
set up In 1938, was based on the
assumption that most fam ilies are
composed of one wage earner and one
dependant housewife, and that mar-

rla~%a:.!~~~~erilons are Increasingly
not a reality," Bfumberg said . "In fact ,
the nonn by a sllg_
h t margin Is now the
two earner couple and the chance of
:"::C:nl~~:sg~!o'!:,fe'Y~~~u~ n~wt~
system's

underlying

assumptions

P.;'~~ ':x~~~~~.e ~o'h.::~l~~r;n ~~a'lfi.;

those who depart from· these false
assumptions, but It does penal ize them
severely," she1:harged .

Social Security, a fedeflll program ,
Is designed to partially replace a wage
earner's Income when that Income Is
lost because of retirement, permanent
disability or death. Its basic preml88 Is
to maintain an Individual's standard of
living. Benefits are fi nanced by people
presently working who now pay 6.05 per
cent of their annual Income, up to
$17,770.

Does the worker ~Y It all?
" Mexlmum tax will be $1 ,075 In
1978," said Blumberg . That means that
even If you make $50,000 a year, you

· fl'Hfo.mo~ethan~~~~=ln~
matching contribution . But, Blum~
noted, some ..economist s say, how. _, that the employer's con tributi on In
the form of a payroll tax Is generally
passed right beck to the employee In
the form of reduced wages, suggesting
that the entire contribution of $2,150 Is
actually paid by the"employee."
' There Is a disparity between the
amount of Social Security tax one

:;:~ :~~~~::t:lll:'&amp;S~y~~
the laic Is only S.r.075. However, If a two

earner family makes $36;000 a year,
their tax Is twice that - or $2,150.
"S.S.'s benefit program Is designed
to. provide replacement I ncome for
those person~ considered likely to have
relied on the Insured worl&lt;er for
support. A dependent spouse's benefit
Is, thus, 50 per cent of the Insured.
worker's SS payment . ThIs causes
another disparity between one and two
earner families. The two earner couple,
now In tile maJorl.t y, f.requently r8ceiv!lll
substantially leas than the worl&lt;er/
housewife combination, even though
both lla!l'·th&amp; S8J118in20me."
S..fltawary
Blumberg gave the following Illustration:
Imagine that husband A (HA) and

~~~g~~M~~r::o~=: ~~~~~

B (HB)" haa AME of $500 and wife B
does not qualify for benefits ·on her own
account. In line with ~ 978 benefit rates,
families A and B would receive monthly
benefits as follows:
Family A
HA (AME ~)
$236.40
WA (AME $250)
$236.40
Total
FamllyB
HB (-AME $500)
'$364.50
WB's spouse's
benefit (50%)
$182.25
Total
S548.75
"The unfalmeaa continues after the
death of one of the spouses," Blumberg
saki. If "HA dies, the wldoW:s benefit
collected by hls worl&lt;lng wife would be
100 per cent of her PIA (Primary
Insurance Amount the amount
payilble to the Insured worl&lt;er) or 100%
of his PIA, whichever Is larger. In the
illustration above, that amount would
be$236.40. Wife B who has not worl&lt;ed
or paid Into the system would receive

$364.50 monthly.
Blumberg explained that the ayatem
was set up around male wOf1tera 111d

=m~~=~~n=a

original dreftera said, 'Single People.'"

'-= . ·w=~ ~~-r..t/:.'1'- =J:...-.:

niaentment towllrda the 11138 drafters,
calculated by averaging monthly, · theY made a conacloua Choice to
subsidize families at alngle paople's•
earnings after age 21, not Including the
'
·.
expenee.''
lo-t five years.
These calculations don't take Into
The ·lrMil'l*rt of divofced women
account a woman's child-bearing and
"shows how Inflexible llld ~
rearing years. If aha Ia absent -en
the ~ ayatem Ia," In Bl~'a
years from the work fon;e because of
vtew. In 111115, Congtwa .,.._. a
children, two years of "0" Income Is
measun1 dealgned to treat certeln
averaged In .and will effect the benefits
ex-w1- u though they . . still wlwa,
she later receives.
.If they "had been rnerrled at · - 20
" Even more devastating for women
years. If the hu-.cl namanlea, the who temporarily drop out of the labor
88COOd wife Is atao entitled to collect ·
force Ia the disability Insurance '
S.S. as tho~ there w. . no first wife.
A Iiiii was pau.j In 1977 cottlng ·the
~~u~:;:nt,~f~:~Y "VS,~I~f '": required
number of years to 10.
·
disability," said Blum~. .9Any
"lt may _,., very Illiberal of me to
woman dlsablf!d within 5 years of her
balk at this proYislon since our aoctety
~=~~ the worl&lt; force Ia totally
The 50 per c~nt of the husband's PIA
berg admitted. But, she uld, It Is
given to dependant wives In one difficult to ltiatlfy auch a prowllllon. Tha
famiUes also has the "effect of-denying
vtew that a husband ' - • duty to
single people socially adequate- benesupport his ex-wife for her entlno
fits; that Is, -with a 50 per cent
II!ell me Ia " largely repudiated today by
Increment for couples, at any given
moat people," she said.
1
"I'm not saying that the House'a
Impulse to do something for dlvoroed
previous standards of living than do
women
was wrong; rsther, tha Social
married couples," Blumberg explained.
Security system, u PI'IIS8IItly. cor&gt;Single J*lplti pay
atructed, was Incapable of y!81qlng a
"This leads us Into another basic
resultfalr to divorced women as wetlu ·
problem of S.S. l eglslatl.on," she
to the contributors supporting the
Indicated. "It was never clear who
system, and to thoee other bene! lei- ,
would foot the bill.'' When presaed with
aries whoM benelilsJnay be reduced to
t he questi on of who Is going to pey, the
accornme&gt;&lt;!atethla n'!W coat."

.

\~~:':~ d~ c:eor:=... '~~u~~

=:~!m .:t::·be~~Hl: ~o t~~:

,,..

PSS lambasts report of
Ketter's registration task force
tile Professional Staff Senate has
lambasted the report of the President's
Task Force on Registration (Reporter,

= ';'l: ·~t'e;~?~s':~~~~~~~e:J~
~~traJr;:~m~e:! lt~ 11 ~tt~an'1ul~';g:

blems."
The response, written by PSS Area I
Senators (representatives of those
areas most closely connected with
registration), was forwarded To President Ketter. The PSS hopes It will be
issued along with the Task Force's
'
report to Interested parties.
The PSS response objected to the
"tone" of the report. Senators felt It
Implied that most of the problems

~~~~~:~f a::3~~~~~~~~ts .:~:~ &amp;I~

~~ln~o'::ld m~~v::fehedc':!~!tch~l~~~

registration lnfonnatlon . lnstllll.d , the
PSS suggested that· the whole
advance registration
process
be
thoroughly analyzed .
"Pr&amp;-reglstration now generates classes and partial classes of phantom
students, many of whom, In the lengthy
Pfl'lod between pr&amp;-reglstratlon and
actual b~lnn l~ of classes, have left

f~~~~diln~.~~~led :~= ~r:~~~~~~:,"~~
1

In

the

meantime,

students

who

~~~~~~'flnd t~:~~~~:.;oc~~~ro~~ a
0

If pr&amp;-reglstratlon must continue, the
PSS suggested · that a supplementary
class schedule be provided
to ·
Incorporate changes. They strongly
urged, however; that pr&amp;-reglstratlon for
fall semester b.&amp; discarded altogether.
The response also took exception to
the notion of a "single offlcee' In charge
of the whole registration process which
th.e Task Force championed . The
Senators felt . this move was simply
. "another step In further dlvor.clng
registration from the students for Whom
it was designed, and the academic
departments, for- Whom reglatiatlon In
their courses Is their very existence."
The response -nt on to say that
exparlenca dictates that " one single
officer In charge-of anything Ia almost
always unreachable and thenofore
unable to solve an
Immediate
difficulty."
Senators stressed that "eX1enslve
Input" regarding registration should be
elicited from representatives of academic units, Including the assistants to
chairpersons.
The· responSe gave several sug-

geatlons of A,_ I Sena!Q!S r:eg8rdlng
reglatratlou._ ~hlch tl&gt;ey felt lihciuld be
explored. 'ne Task Force on Registration, PSS n8Pf8Mfllatlvea urged,
should: 1) examine other large
universities which succesafully handle·
registration, (I.e., Un'-tlltyofWiaconsln, University of Michigan), and

~~.~':"; ~~~,.r. ~=-~=

between departments and students at

=..~~~n.;.Jp.:~a: :~

standby lists and automatically registers them If openings develop In
requested cou.-; 4) uee the reaources
of the Computer Science [)apartment to
help with problems In the ~t_

~~;"~ ~1'!f1': ;~wSC:::.~ for .~~

University.
Item five had the most support from
Area I people.
Chairperson Ellen McNamara announced to Senators at the late March
PSS meatlng ,hat President Ketter'guaranteed the group. a $1 ,000 budget
to deYiee career~~ progrwns~
She also said Ketter supports t~
statement of principle of the PSSHuman Reaoun:ea DIMtlopment Committee regarding establishment of
carear development effcirta.
McNamare reported that the PSS
Executive Commltt88 Ia now exploring
the possibility of Initiating lnternshlpa
for profeaalonal staff membera. She
requested that Senators or Interested
parties who have suggestions about an
Internship program, contact a member
of the Executi'(8 Committee. McNamara
said such problems u ret- time .and
funding will have to be tackled by the
Executive Committee before any program can be established.
McNamara also asked Senators for
suggestions on ways the PSS can w0f1t
toward, and show support for,
completion of const~ctlon at Amherst.

Wisconsin to test
writing skills
Beginning this spring 1'"1 writing
ability of all freshmen who enter the
University of Wisconsin-Madison will
be tested. The essays will be used for
advising, program development and

rurs~:r ='!oP!~~

::'.:Sa

student quallflu to attend lhe
university. Students with the most
-lous problems will be required to
take a basic English course.

�April a, ~ 1171

4

Logic
More than 20 logicians are scattered from math to competing;
this traditional field is 'still of use'
. , Jolin Ccrccnn

--"'~­
Cochllrollle- Logic
~

Two llundNd Y.... ago It was
poalble lor lnteiPgent encl lnformed
men to 1111..,.., lhllt logic was a
~ eublect encl th8t tha only
role -'t\1110 for the loalclan was the
llln8mlaalon ill the f88Uilll obtained .by
Ar181otle. It 18 now cl- that thla view
doubly wrong; not only wwe thera
- ' - - of logic yet to be dewlopad
but ...., there Mel alrMdy been
lrnportlint d~ea mede In logic by
. - . of Aristotle In late
Antiquity, In the Middle Aga, and In
the Renal~. H-u.elese thent are
81111 lntellfljlnt men who .,. not aa
• 11ieJ oould be of the feet that
~·not en -tlally closed fleld .-

Traditional logic of '*'ignond
Surprising aa It may-.,, .tha three.
courses mentiOned first can be
pursued, and often ere pursued, with
almost no retarenoe to traditional logic.
Symbolic logic haa often been
compwed to a game played with
abstract symbols and It Ia poaelble to
leech It from that point of view. The
reuon that tr.:lltlonal logic can be
neglected In mathernatlcelloglc Is 'the
_ same reason that physics can be
neglected In pure mathematics, viz.
beCause the tnathamatlcal properties of

:e=~n~~=:~~:~w:~r:.~
have nothing to do with
the

· "appllcetlona" from Which It was
~stracted.
likewise, It Is not
necessary to
undwstand -' logical

~~~:'r:.':1c~n o;0 ~1c 1~o ~~ro~~

_Wang-'s gr.o upJooks
·at h~rnessing the sun
Bio-En-ergetics, tha use of energy to
maintain llfe, will. become a very
Important """' of study In the years
ahead, the holder of tha Albert Einstein
Chair here believes.
'
• Dr. Jul H. Wang directs · U/ B'e
Bio-Energetics Laboratory, an lnterdla-

~~::Z. r=~; fg:;"'l~eWh~~ec~~

mechanisms that convert sunlight Into

~~~~~=lm~~~~because

of photosynthesis," l2ang says. "Our

ultimate source of enwgy Is tha sun,
bUt we don't yet understand completely
tha molecular mechanism of solar
energy."
PhotOsynthesis haa been studied for
over two centuries, ' ha adds, but
scientists have not learned enough

:0~~.~: ~~~~~.~~t~~~~/;,v~\=

efficient forms of energy.
.
''Y'/e're not using this bOuntiful
source of enwgy - the sun_
. It Is
walling tor human Ingenuity to tap it.
The knowledge gained by our studies In
the Bio-Energetics l.ab will - be of

'o~.~~S~i"lrn.~~.;,y resource we
machines.
have thai Is not limited. .loll natural
Negleci of .traditional · logtc. In the
other courses Ia . partly due to lnlense . reserves of fuel such as petroleum and
coal will eventually be depleted," Wang
specializatiOn, the academic counter88
Ita , _ . , _ , , offapAng, and to
• part of division of labor, which has
fossil fuels are themselves tha
known benefits of course. Neverlhelndlclile why tr.:lltlonal loglc can 111111
products of photosynthaals, he points
be of ... to all atuclenta reaerdleaa of • leas, an &amp;!!preclatlon of tradi tional logic
out. We have to learn to harness tha
IMior 1-.t. In .sdltlon It Ta my hope
C8R enrich the learning '*Perlence In
process for our own purpoaes.
thli IIIIa .tlcle will aa a sort of. the other logic courses.
There are many logicians who have
Introduction of the logic group here at
Studying 110w lt'a done
_
U/B to the ,.., of the Unl-elty
managed to combine Intense s~lall­
In plant cells, chloroplasts convert
oommunlty.
zatlon with an equally Intense cOncern
sunlight Into energy which Is then used
Here at U/B there are more than
with tradlllonal .logic and especially
to reduce carbon dioxide to sugar.
with the contributions that symbolic
~ IOglclena, '"*' and women
lnilneCI In logic .nd -doing advanoed
and mathematical methods can make to
Wprecanp.;: g:o~ecpluslartrylmngecthoandelstemrms lnlneatlhdee
- a . In Ifill field, Four are In my the traditional prol!lem areas 'In logic.
dlpert,_t, Phllollophy; q)her four
~~:'o ~~~;;"f.'asts that convert ~unllght
For example, the grand old men of
are In Computw ~ce; abOUt ten are
logic, Allred Tarskl (UC Berkeley) and
Using spinach , research _group
In Mathemallca encl tha naat are In
Alonzo ChurCh (UC Los ~Angelea) , are
members
remove_the plant cells and
Statistical ~.and In Linguistics.
both well--.ed In traditional logic as
break down the cell walls In order to
well as In matheinatlcel logic . Tarskl 's
se;;arate
the
chloroplasts from other
riluterful Introduction to Logic (Oxsubcell particles and also to separate .
~. who leech eome logic In - ford, 1941, still In print) and Church's
and break down various plant proteins
lhlllr oour.a and who usa technical
claaalc Introduction lo Mathematical
and minerals. •
•·
_
,
logic In their-a..
LciQ/c (Princeton, 1956, still ' In print I'
Somewhat the same process Is usild
bofh contribute significantly toward
with
animal
cells
obtained
from
beef
ehowlng how mathematical logic
hearts. Hera, the U/B reaearchers.study
The beginning loalc couf888 (thoae
relates to the cOntent ol traditional
Mvlng no poaqqulafteal can be neatly
how mitochondria, oxidizing agents In
logic In much the 'S81TlO way that
animal cells, oxidize food and trap the
claaalfled Into tour catagorlaa: applied - mathematical physics relates
to
energy released .
logic, lllllthemallcal logic, symbolic
physics.
' Artificial models simulating tha
logic and lllldltlonal logic. Applied
natural conditions for photosynthesis
Iogie Ia mainly the uee of mathematical
ng mlaled
,
have been .constructed In the . Bloloalc In oomputere and In oomputwIn tha preface to the first edition of
Energetics Lab. Analytical work with
relidad .-tlvltlee. Mathematical logic Ia
Tarskl's bOOk one can read :
·
a tnnch of pure mathwnatlca which
". .. by making the meanings of
amino 11Cids,. the study of proton
atudiM lila mathematical atructuree
concepts precise and uniform In Its own
translocetlon tn chloroplasts, and the
whlcll ' - been llbatracted from
field and by stressing the necessity of
Isolation of a manganese-bearing
symbolic logic and especially from
such preclalon .. . In any other domain,
protein are among a variety of other'
in-'lgllllone of symbolic axiOmatlzalogic leads to. the poaelblllty of better
~esearch projects also underway there.
tlona Of vwtoue deductive sciences.
und«atandlng among those who have
Researoo .Jn the Bio-Energetics lab
Symbolic logic lnvol- tha reduct.lon to
tha wjll for II. And ... by pertectlng and
transcends any one discipline. UnderPNCiee .ymbollzatlon of Ideas which . sharpening the tools of thought, It
graduate and g[llduate students work.,...,n traditional logic·.
.
makes men more critical - ana thus
fng under Wang s -dlrectlon come from a
-variety _o l backgrounds In biology,
In ... Ideal traditional logic COUI'lle tha
makes ·leas likely their being misled by
student leeme preclee uee of standard
all the peeudo-reaaonlnga to which they
are lncee181Jtly expoSed .... "
.
logical teona whlcll pwvade much
Church would agree with Tarskl's
lnfonned . _ , =~lon, lnfw1'111118ri&lt;,
and
for
elthw
man
It
would
be
· ~.aquence.
lon, contra- .
diction,
oon8latency. tautOlogy.
lndefar from emptr, rhetoric. Each of them
Total U/B enrollment for the spring
pendenoe, li8CIIIIurY ~Ilion~ aufflsemester Is 22,714, the Office of
a.nt condition, lrgllll*&gt;t - !
=_
salons and R&amp;!'OrdS reported this_
such tr.:lltlonal Ideas as truth versus
-l.dlmonantlon,andao orth.lt
Ia . benl IQ lqJirglne a cltlan of a· knowledge, Implication v8f8us InThe count Is down 4.86 per cent from
.__.whO would not benefit from
ference, propoaltloo -eua sentence,
fall and Is some one and one-half per
a clarlfiOiflon tlf SUCh Ierma. In addition extanalon veraus Intension, meaning cent
below the spring of 19n, A &amp; R
-.ua criterion, Invalidity -•us lnthe atlldent leMia tile bale mathodfigures lndlceted.
form -.-sus matter,
Daytime under_graduate enrollment Is
:r:~~~.v:J1!C:.,~ dwnonatrablllty,
deacrlptlon wraua definition and
12,414, off 2.41 per cent from last
grar11matlcal structure -eua loglcel
~~~ :::,~,:r ~~}l_ per cent from
.
structure. ~ .
to IIIIJ'
or opinion l8ll8l'd
either
· ¥llld or~.t that In ord« to lmow - • Aa "*''ioned above, the study of
Tha 12,414 figure Jncludes 11 048
of aghlen- ~that H Ia ¥811&lt;1
tr.:lltlonal logic Introduces tha student
full-11me and t ;336 part-time students
to the bale ooncepts and modes of
(thoee cerrylng leas than 12 hours). The
-oontalnl
IIIUit '-~leal
deduction
Ill II
at
the
reaaonlng common to much Informed
numbers of part-time day undergreds
lone
link
dlecourae and provldtia a background
have lumped sharply from 993 last fall.
OOIICiullcin
lila PfWII'- (cf.
for symbolic logic, mathernatlcel logic
Full-t me day unoergred enrollment Is
&amp;ualldl., til that Ia ord« to /mow of a and applied logiC. It also provides tools
off by about 1,000 from last fall and Is
gJ-. lnwillll ~ that It Ia lnwdld
ueefulln the analyala·and Interpretation
about 700 leas than last spring.
_m.~..... ~h.an
of dlacourea, v~ recently It has been ·
Graduate enrollment for spring Is
ueed by peyciiOioglste studying tha role
lqtlllllnt Iii . . . . _lo(JlOal Iorin 5,253 up about -one-half ol a
ltlii!Mn ......... but~ IJIWIII- of PNSUPPDaltlon In communication
percentage point from last year but 11
IInclilln to . . ..... 1M • CDnllluaiDn
and by Ungulata In comp.tng tha
per cent under the fall total ol 5,921 .
vwto11a waya that different natural
Then! are about 300 feww full-time grad
Ill
Of - · •
languages IIIICOde Information. Ad- : students than In the fall (2,506 enrolled
v.~cee In aymbollc logic -.nd mathethis spring), and some 90 leas than last
llliiJioda for . CIIIMiruOtlna _,_,_
matical logic sometimes force recon•
spring.
•
alderatlon of distinctions anct doctrlnea
- . , . aucll a courae
Enrollment In profeaelonal schools Is
..........
-vl~but
of tr.:lltlonal logic and, con-eely,
down 3 per cent from fall. The total of
...,.
....-. of ttw El\gllah
aymbollc logic and mathematical logic
1,845 In Dentletry, lAw, Medicine and
1141· thil "'Il WI not
' - relied on traditiOnal logic as a
tha Pharm.D. program Is 10 less than In
~. that "'ata ' eource of Ideas and problema.
tha spring of 19n.
Total dey division enrollment lhls
PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW
- • Ia. 19,312, one and one-half
Caltaae II Art Gallery, , _ Quad, · per cent .undw last year. The figure
Bllcolt. The ahow Will run far two
~:J:":':~~.3 g;~.~~t dip from the
II a lOgical ~aeq.-ce of
,......, from Aprll12to April 211.
•
tlfi
.
Spr~ totals are traditionally well
lve

C

u:=-~ ~~~~~~Yare~

of the lntrlnalcally dynamic nature

, ~~~~ ~~~~ t~n:'mi~

fl:8se

~:'In':::-..::. ;f., -~{1:

,_......,...of __

s-. ....

chemistry, physics, biochemistry and

~~c~em~~- people of different
backgrounds cooperating to aolve
probfems," Dr. Wang says. "'The lab Is
not just for research but also for
educational functions. We hope to

g:v~~ b~rd':Jt:u:le~:s~~~- ~~~~

others of different back~rounas to solve
major probtems."

Ca(laolar -vY compete with nuclMr'?
Determln lng - where future energy
supplies will be obtained Is a major
~°:-!:r"Jh~a;,!~~d~lentlsts and leaders
'Whether solar energy can compete
wllh nuclear energy depends on tha
Ingenuity of th_e people working on the
problems," Wang notes.
. At this time, problems associated
with nuclear. energy have ~l)ot &lt;beenJ
resolved • successfully enough for
nuclear power to be uSfld as .a major
energy source, he feels.
"Nuclear .flaelon reactors create tha
problem of nuclear waste. Fusion Is
cleaner, but thaproblem there is how to
control II. Walla of lmmen~ ·strength
would be needed around 'the reactor,
and there Is a danger of a chain reaction
becoming uncontrolled." '
-Some scientists have suggested
launching fusion reactors Into outer
space, where they would be Isolated
and the danger of monstrous exploalons would be diminished These
reactors would produce energy which
would be transmitted back to Earth
But, asks Dr. Wang, why not simply
utilize the naturaUuslon reactor that Is
already there; the sun.

1

22, !14 enrolled for spring

~trl~~ns ~~=~~ c=:n,ce't'Fo~"o~

~5- ~thout

1

below fall figures.
Millard Fillmore College (evening)
enrollment remains relatrvelr, steedy.
MFC has 3,402 students th a spring
compared to 3,454 last fall and 3 481
laatapring.
'
The Unl-slty-wlde enrollment total
Includes 13,284 men and 9 430 women
A&amp;R's figures Indicated. '
'
Credit-free registrations thla spring .
(not Included In reported Unl-elty
totalal are 1, 792, That's off by 20.2 per
cent from last sprlnH and down by 36.75
per cenl from the fa total of 2,833.

wh~

;;=I.
u..

=.:
r.aaa..
-=:rcofo:.r:o
.:-=:

.. =:.J:::'.! '::..-=

~

T~~~

IB

.........

pompus community MWSpoper published each Thun;doy by tiM Oivls lon of
Public Afloirs, State Unl~ l ty ol Hew
York of Buflolo. Edif«lo l offices ore lo-

A

cated In 136 Crofts Hall, AmMrsf. Telephone 636-2626.
OlrKfor of Public Aflolrt

• JAMES R. ~SANTIS

Edffor-in·Chief

llOBERT T. MARtffi
Ar1 ond Production
JOHN A , GOUTIER

An fs tont Ed/fot'
JOVCE BUCHNOWSKI

We~kly Con')lnu"'que Edilor .
JEAN SHRADER

�Atllfll, 1171

-Telfer
He's reassigned
to SUNY-wide
facilities study
John D. Teller, Ylce praaldent lor.

~=I~ =nl~~~lalberS:~~~~~

18

Ilea on Aorll
to allow him to conduct
a Stata 1/nl-.lty-wlde facilities study,
the University administration announced Monday.
Or. Oecar E. Lanford, vice chancellor

-~~~=r:!i't: ~~~~ :::u::f~

0

Teller's aerYicea to conduct an
erdlltecturel evaluation of jlelected
aapecta of SUNY construction on a
alate-wide baala, the announcement
lndlcatad.
'
Or. John A. Neal, assistant vice
p18111denl for fllcHitlea planning , has
bean appointed acting vice president by
Robert L. Ketter.
The brief announcement· set off
of speculation about the

...__,t

·-klnment."

Jo kine Armao In · the Couri¥Expreaa Jl()lad that In reaponee to h!lf
questioning everyone concerned had
lrfdlcated there was nothing unusual
about the move.
Mr. Teller · was unavailable for
comment.

COrnputl~g-

Directory will be
published earlier
I

Present hardware.called 'inferior;'
the question 'is: should-the eent~al
or satellite facilities be upgraded?

•

Next year's University Directory may
be .·ready lor campus .distribution In
September, rather than In November,
U/B officials hope. . •
University Publications Services next
week will beain circulating order forms
tor the new ilirectory to administrative
and acadomlc officers. campus units
will also receive forms for updating
departmental llatlngs ·and other "frontof-the-book" Information.
Meanwhile, the ,!'ef'sonnel Department Ia preparing to send department

/

By Walter M. Mat;lntyre
orector' Un;veroity
Como&gt;uting Services

Most modem computers, Including
appropriate configurations of mini·
computers, can be operated In a
time-sharing or multl-programmlng
way. This means that the central

~~8fon~ fnuJ~d~~~

=so~r.,g:~~ ~cu~~~ ~m~~

nfi:fnr.::::.":\~~!.~:rUally collected

~~~~o 1 ~'!.,=~a'::u:"' t~!r~u~

1

=e
and faculty members. Individual list~ constitute the major portion of .the
during the summer, but earlier
deadlines have been set this year.
September delivery of the 1978-79
directory will depend on cooperation
from campus units In meeting various
Publications
Services
deadlines,
spokeapereons Indicate.
University Publications .also plans to
Issue a supplement to the directory next
Febnla)y. 11 will 'include names of
second semester arrivals and departmental address changes.
.
'

Pay waiver
forms availabJe
en~g~~d~~~~f~ v:!~~e ~~~~y~~~~~ •

- receive compensatory time off for
holidays worked are available through
each · employee's deper1ment, the
Payroll Department Indicates. These
forms need nor be completed, Payroll
says, "If you desire pay for any holidays
you ere required to work. The election
to receive compensatory time Is binding
for all holidays worlled during the entire
fiscal year- from April 1, 1977 through
March 31 , 1978."
Fol" those employees
electing
compensatory time In lieu of holiday
pay, the original form should bt&gt;
forwarded to the Payroll· Office and a
copy retained In the department's files.
Ihe deadline for electing qompensatory
tlmtrfor holld~ys you may be required
ro work Is May 75, 1978.
Season~ employees cannot opt for
compensatory time and must be paid
for any holidays worked .

•Alumni
(fnlm -~ . cal3)

moderate the morning session ana
Judge M. Dolores Denman of the State
Supreme Court, Appellate Division , will
moderate the afternoon part . Aud ience
participation will be enj:Ouraged ••
A social hour at 4 p.m. wfll end the
day.
Regl.atlon Is $10 for dues-paying
member7 of the Alumni Association ;

s ~~~~~~e"l~fb~matlo•. call 831-4121.
'
1

program .being allocated the full
resources of the processor In tum . The
amount of · central processor time

alwaY.s an upper limit , set by the
Installation mana~ement , to give each

·~~=

Ia~~ st;~·..~~er~~~

W'me':'l",.
system operates In such a way that the
user Is unaware that his program Is In
competition with other programs for the
system's resources.
A computer may be used In three
well-defined modes: (1) Batch mode,
(2) lnterac11ve mode, and (3) Real-time
mode. It Is Important to recognize that a
computer may be used In any pf these
three modes regardless of whether It Is
being operated ln a time-sharing way.
In balch mode, a series of ]obs Is
Input to the computer by the computer
operator, or by the user. Once thej ob
has been entered Into the batch stream ,
the user has no way of Influencing the
course of the computation . When the

~~?u~!/:g't~~:~rn~i~R;, ~h:S~~~ut Is
In Interactive m;;:{.., the user Is in
continuous communication with the
compute• from a terminal of some kind.
When writing a program for interactive
use, one will often arrange for

process Is producing data laster· than a
human being can record them. ,
Computing neede et SUNYAB
The computing system provided for
Academic Computing .here Is a CDC
Cyber 173. This Is a time-sharing
system and provides batch mode and
limited Interactive mode service to the
University community. Given the olh!'f
loads on the system, It Is not possible
to offer a real-time computing service
on the Cyber 173; the required response
time cannot be guaranteed . Thus, the

l'ifl:"~~:~c,:,e~;e:,~f :~-~r~~e:::~:

computing:
•
Real-time computing Is probably best
handled by a dedicated computer. As
minicomputers and microprocessors
continue to Improve their price/performance ratio, real-lime control of
processes by dedicated processors will
become Increasingly cost-&lt;&gt;ffectlve provided always that expensive peripheral equipment, such as magnetic
disk storage, Is not added to the
real-time processor. Several minicomputers are currently Installed on the
campus operating real-time devices. In
the absence of access to central storage
facilities ; many of these are being
expensively lilted out with various
1

:l'~~~:~lc T~~o~~:,p:t7~n ~fufl;,"aU,:g,~l
resources represented by

~he

prolllera-

~r7o~~ th~~r~~h~ ! r'll'ri~:~lty·~
1

resources.
The interactive mode access to the
Cyber 173 Is limited In a number of
ways . The most dramatic Indicator Is
the number of terminals available on the
campus and the number of ports on the
11
computer for which the terminals are
- competing . At present (March 1978)
the course of the computation, Interrupt
there are some 200 terminals on
campus. In its present configuration the
Cyber 173 has only 60 ports.
pathways through the program's logic.
Furthermore, the vast majority of
Modern mach ines have a number of
terminals ere not public terminals. They
highly sophisticated sub-$ystems that
· are terminals bought by Individuals or
take advantage ·.of the Interaction
groups for their own use.
A rough rule of thumb gives the
between user and computer. One Is the
minimum ·number of public terminals
EDITOR which enables one to enter
required by a modern university as 1
data:, program statements and the like
Into a disk file directly (thus eliminating
terminal for each 100 students In the
· the need for punched cards). Another Is
student body. Thus, SUNYAB, with a
the Interpretive language processor
student enrollment of 25,000 ahbuld
have available, as a minimum, 250
8
public terminals. SUNYAB has 17.
carries out syntax checking and even
Why ihe fun?
permits execution of the program when
Why the luis about terminals?
all the statements have been typed ln.
Computers are used Interactively
Computer-aided Instruction programs
are usually executed In Interactive mode
:~~OUJ.';.I:r"l~a:~eSO~~"':.~~.=.~:
with the progr_,•s response depending
on the student's answer to the previous
0
question .
tn real-time mode the computer Is . access penults more efficient use of
used to control an experiment or
manufacturing process where the
process either (a) requires a decision
the flexibility characteristic of programs
within a time that Is too short for a
designed to be run In Interactive mode.
human operator to react or (b) the
With access to a good Interactive mode

m~er~~!f \~st~ i : ~~y~n~~~~l~o~

~l:.r.:':t~~~~~~t~f o~ec:!l':c7• dr,~~~~~~

~\;"m=~; in°~e ~D1"t'JW. r.,~=

rn~~~~!ea~~e~ ~=:1~ '::,~:

~~~:n~~~rr':c':l~~hor~fs'. l~~~~~-

computing ay;atem atudentalearn more
and they learn It laster; faculty anr
graduate atudenla dO their computln1
more efficiently arii1 ·complete thel
reaeerch Pf6jacta sooner. Our student'
and faculty have ·to _compete will
students and faculty"1rom unlveraHie:
comparable to ours, the one for jobs
the other for research grants. Thel
compete under a grave llandlcap II wt ·
cannot proflde access to a gOO(
interactive mode computing system .
Campue~

There -Is - anatfler factor with 81
Important bearing on the level o
computing service at SUNYAB, namel!
8

;:::;;£~~~,f"'t,~Y·in~'l"ruct~a'l ~~~::

have moved to the Amh- camJ.u'

~\~p':"{orw~l:e~~~utu~

The Computing Center Ia located lr

:'~ =.,~r:nn!J~r..:..~Th~
l~~s ~~It'~~ ~~~~~~J.o~:.

campus geography Into account.
In summary then, the hardware
presently available to the acadenilc

~=l!r sta'N~~~vrss~r...c::'l~.::.~

In two ansss:
1. Access to an Interactive computIng system Is woefully lnedequattf, and
"Utterly denied to undergraduate stu·
dents.
2. There is a total lack of centrally
provided sharable disk storage lor
real-time applications .

m:..~Y ~~n~~utf~an ~",i \~ d~~~

campus must prov~de for these two
areas, and must take account of
campus geography also.

Altematlv..
There are two alternatives open to us
In selecting hardware to meet the needs
outlined above,. These are:

m~\..~~~~.:,~:n~ ~l~teme ~~:~

equ~rnent .
(b Upgrade of the satellite sites Into
sma I, stand-alone computing centers,
with communications to the Cyber. A
modest enhancement of the Cyber

ml¥~ ~n~:r:;:;.tivea will be
dlscuaaed at meetings on each campus
scheduled as follows:
April 11th, Tuesday, Room 322
Acheson Hall , 2 p.m.
April 121':/ Wednesday, Room 29,
80

81

~~~-,:~. ~':fn:J.~:

Room 282

Capen, Amheret campus, 3:30p.m .

Faculty members who have computIng. needs that currently are not being
met are urged to attend one of these
meetings, or drop a line to the
Director's Office, 4250 Ridge Lea Rd.
An RFP Is being drafted and this Is an
~gr,~oprlate lime to make a contribution

�~1,1871

bass pedals l!lld." YQCiila; Paul
Wilcox on bass· -gUitar, electric
12-attlng, baas pecla)a.'B!fd vocals;

The mhclllf'B of j2-string guitar,
vibes, 'tlmpartl, acoustical pjano
, and other 11trlng and percussion
l[!_str:uments ylelas the progressive
-rock sounds f "Masque," a
four-memb8r band which- will take
the stage on Seturday, April 8, at 8
p.m.ln the 'Cotnell Theatre.

Support Masque;
make 'em rich

8

·~~·ue~~ t.8a ~doing

wh~ ut\~~ltv:.'~~ca~c&amp;

era aitd p&lt;irforms all original
• numbers, consists ,of Davlll Kane
on keyboards; Carl Sino on guitar_,

aftBI·-ill-t

cr.C:::...,-;.,t•::_"""::::'v~~~

.--·
a:=::: ol-- ·
- - -.. --.Or.-

::.on-:-'~.

-.--.-. .,_.
a--o1o~.

-MDUICIII:COI LOGI••t .

n . - - ....... -

-FIUIS·
'*"'

~-·
Tlle ......... ei--T~

FRIDAY-?

Gotd.

llullcllng t h e - Zoo, Peter
123 yr,_
12
aon Quod, Ellcolt.
noon.
DEIIONSTIIATIONIUCTVREf
Tile PlATO Syolom, Dr. Donald L BitzO&lt;,
Computer BMed Educalion ~ Llboralory,

llaiLECTUIIEI
- - - A j n o - ( t n F n n c h}.

-----\llolllniiProl· __,_-on-

--ofelectrlcol~ . ~
2

~lli,;'l"; ~~ ~~~ Lea. llamonstra· .

-.--.--- XCILL&amp;IIOLECUI.AIIIIOI.OGY - ·

. . ~ole

•

A1i11 Moyer -

. . (1878}. An

.p.m

the

CIVILENOINEERiiloSEIIINARI

I(IMIIIgtlr...., will ~ • . , _ . .
tiDnon"'Mao TM-tutla'aiAManlllp
In Olllna:
at 8 p.m.,
ftldlr, ADrll 7. ICI...IIQII' le the
. . . . . . . ~ofthe
U.S..QIIna .._... FrlendlhJp·
to•aa..IDR Md ilulttor or .nlclee
on Qllna'a fONian
end Ita
....... tD ........

,.._twr

41et·=J:.::-s1m-::r=

=

lllgiHiniltiQ Clfflclala

B::u:r

encl~ .~t

- NOple'a

I 8,

THIRD 1\NNUAL CoNFERENcE ON
ELEMENTARY SC/IOOL IIATMEIIIATlCSI
- Bash: Sktua In Methematk:a: A Focua on
Elomontary and Middle Sc- lnattuctlon.
Presentee! by the Centar lor Basic Skills ,
Mathematics. -Moot Court. O'Brian Halt. 7:30·
9 p.m. Sponsored tiy the FBC&lt;ljty .ol Educational
Studies.
CI\CFILM'
Lonny. 110 MFAOC, Elicott. 7:45and 10 p.m.
Tockets$1.
.
The Lenny Bruce atory: downbeat portrait ol
8 bkJe comk:.

UUABfllll"
Upl 11976}. Conlereoce ThOatra, Sq&lt;Jlre. ~
636·2.9 19 for show times, S1udenta $1 : others
$1 .50.

DANCE I MUSIC'
''"' W1nd end Do.-a. U I B Wond
Erls&lt;mM, ~ Piitamonia. Zodiaque Donee
. ~y. Cornel J11oeft, Elticott,
8 p.m. Tlcl&lt;ela: $1.50 ~: . $1 loculty /

· ·~,::;~oiMUalc.
COfFEEHOUSE•

ltlroltaiiDut 1111...-.cl.
Mllil ..,._ wUI be ca.k

,

•

COMPUTER SCIENCE COU.OoutUM I
HOw Similar Are the NP Campleto Sets?,
Proi03S0r Juris H8f1manis. ~I of Compu1er Science. Cornel ~- Room 41 .
, 4226 Ridge Lea. 3:30 p.m. Refreshments at
3tnf'!&lt;&gt;gll&gt;61 .
•

='!..t

Tile U.S.-Chlna ~le'a Friendlldp "-~don (USCPFAI will be
•A Look at QIIM" on
a.npua,_ Apnl 7 end I. This
_...of J!R1111W118 on QIIM today
will lnotude . _ , . . . , WOflclllopa
Md a tllm. LlleNhn end .na and
cnfta fnlm China wiU be ..... fable

~tha

lAC ALII'
· Tho Spy Who~- 150 Farbel. ~:30
and 10 p.m. Free to. al ~ ~ : $1
forothera. ~
...
Nobody does H better thari.Jomes ~-

He~:--=:::-~~
n:; tut1on
Loocl-==-~=~:~
~ o1 the .-.. dlop4oy "'""" which
Control ormm. Indiana state of
100 /\WOld tn - Healtn. Aoooi27 , 4232~t..ea.-~p.m.
•.
. -the_.,.-

~

i1al' of

KeVin Ollrien, Clvi ~.
Ridge Lea. 4 :20 p.m..

RoOm 27 , 4232

~by~ts .

.-

.....

WORKSHOP IN MARXIST STUDIES LECTURE'
Crime, Vfolence and Capttallam. Herman
Schwend&lt;lger, SUC I New Paltz, and Alphonso
• ~. Pirlkney, Huntar College, CUNY. 101 Baldy. 3·5

A look at China

r"J

Aemmenl -

Beotncat

-2 :45p.m.T -. 1J81i1&gt;18.studonl 127 COO...

::.:.=..on~=~·

..._. 1 1 4 -

-.4:15p.m.~ll4 .

oQP.nm.nt Ql

Dr. Bilz«'a oor1y contrllu1ions ~ on the

....... _ •• _.,.._,Dr.al-lliamgy. -

the

PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR II
Mucocttllry Transport In the Atrwoya and the
ol c:oheront ,_lor CI'MIIng ""ge6rl)thetic
- . Dr. Manltn A. Soclcner, Division ot Put·
tn
detl!ctlon ofamal · _ • rnclNI')' DiSeases, MI. Slna Medical CentO&lt;. S108
ligrWa - - tn . - , . .. Since 1960, his
Sherman. 4:15p.m. COIIee at 4 .

-aiFroncii,UIB. 102aon-. tp.m.

mont
... Simple"'-o,.v__ ll!ofhod.
Robert

U- 1 B.

SuKonyt ActiYOUon In Orgontc Syntheata,

Colch22. Aictmond 2nd~ l..ol.rlgo, e.con.
8 I 0 . p.m. F&lt;ee to all lAC leepayers;
$ .50 lor othera.

EIMR-AL STUDIES CEifi"EII

E.. Dompotd. Slap &amp;
-4-pJII. - 1 1'3:50.
- - -· C508 Cool&lt;e.

by

.MEDICINAL CllEIIISTRY SEIIINARt

COLLOQUIUII•

·~·-Doolp--1-.
Dr.-

............ -

Sponsored
~-

1IIC FILII'

.

T_.._ n.

.

Miami Valley_Comp,ller ' Assoclation lor achli!vo&gt;ment i'l, deYebpment of, Of' advances to jhe 'data
processing field.

based on wori&lt;s by Chekhov,
In · with English sut&gt;tilles. 930 Clemens.
&amp;p.m. Free.
~ by the Depo111nent ol Mod&lt;!"'
~&amp;Utemures:
•

Four short

ApPlied

llty.8114~.3p.m.

· ENOINEERING-.vll

::.::·
=~'"~ ~
- y c. Connely Memorial ...WOld from the

the

-r.

· w"ATERRESOUACEliANoEIMIIONIIEHTAL

In 1973, he n!Ceived the -Vladimir K. Zwotyl&lt;ln
...wan! Of the National -.ny of ~

for"'-limos.~tsS1 , othenoSt . 50.

Galogeol ~- Ul8 - · C o r n e l.
-27.4232111dg0ta. 1·2p.m.

R llmlc, _ _ _ ,

1966.

(lleyond the Volley ol_the Dolla, s....., vtxona}
thid you through a fan1asy W&lt;ll1d of sexual
llrlCCel&amp;. See you there!
Conference Theetra, Squn. Cal 636-2919

pre-recordings with Unl Stage, Inc.
of Buffalohilxpectj· to have-Ita !frat
LP out wit In the I!JXI few.months.
lhe April 8 c:Oncert Will be complete
with an 110.000 Watt Hllbt allow and
fog machines. Generaf edmlsslon Is
$1 .50; $1 for students. Proceeds go
toward the group's qettlng rich.

four

be=· The !kat

will begin at 10:30 a.m. anll will
COIIOMI "Working In Qllna." The
...,_ will be Fred Engat, an
Amerlclln, born and raised In Qllna.
He participated In the Cultural
Revolution aa a student and aa a
f.alofy worker. He moved to the
U.S. In 1974 and vlaJted Qllna again
In 1m. He ' Ia .,_uy on tbe
National St-'ng Comlnlttee of the
USCPFA.
The ~ WOfkellop will begin

~In
~1ni~~ng~f
v1a1tor to Ina In 1&amp;711 end 1111other

member of the National Steering
Committee of the USCPFA, will be
the .......
A1:30 p.m. works~~® on "Taiwan·
.nd Normalization o( U.S.-Chlna
Flllallona• will be led by Ll-du
l&lt;llntl.lll'l ~ Qllneee bom In
Talwiil, wflo. Ia a -ber of the
*tonal Nonnallzatlon Committee
ofU8CPFA.
The final wor1lahop will bellln at 4
...t will be on "Art and Culture:

Hu-Shlen Peasant Paintings MovIe." A dlscuaalon will follow on the
film and other aspects of art and
culture. ·
Saturday evening at 8, the movie
•The Red Detachment of Women"
will be shown . This Ia a modem
f8YOiutlonary ball&lt;jt pro:duced as a
model art wort&lt; during the Cultural
· Revolution. It ' Ia the story of the
liberation of Halnan Island In the·
South Qllna Sfia In 1950, and the
lmpOrtanl rote pi~ by a women's
ttnlt of the l!eople·a Army. It will be
Pr8C8ded by a brief slide p,_,ta!ion on the role of cuiiUfe In Qllna.
All - • • will be held In 240
SQuire.
·
•
The U.S.-Chlne People's Friend·

:lrd "-=::~~ =.

Ia t~~
American and. ChlneM people
through sponsoring educational
programs, d-'oplng educational
matertals.a.and offerlng tours to the
People's ""public of China.
~~ The public Ia welco~ .

··Wayne
~.
with apecla!
Dick
KoNeaSlopproo:
car--.guests,
118, Squi-e.
8 :30p.m. ~ts $1 ; laaJity and- $1.25;
olhenl $1 ,50.

UUAIIIIIDNIOKT A\.MS' (Goofeo Kuchar
W-.nd}

Comrptlon ol the Damned IBrootdyn, 1965}:
Hold 110 While I'm - . . (1968}; EdlpM of,
' the Sun VIrgin (1967}; Knoctume.
ConiO&lt;ence Theetra; Squirp. 12 midnight. Stu·
denltl St' othera$1 .50.
ComrptiOn Ia a 55-minute litn described as
orgy.-.~.~-. -­
and - . .. UUI\8 ilescri&gt;es Its
'100

-

.as

much wqman for even a mob to fonc:le.. and
a '1op-heavy medium a bult·ln eel ol crystal

balls. "
.
.
~The other three films ore s1&gt;or1s-e trilogy on
batllroorna, perversity and "nocturnal rituals ...

SATURDAY- 8 CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCAT10I!.
SYIIPOSIUMI
ttyport~ u~ Dllenoola, ,.,enUon and
Sheraton lnn.&amp;Jtlalo East.
Advance registration Is encouraged. Cal 831 .
5526 !of IOddltio!1al tnlormation.
Sponsored by School ol Medicine, U I B. and
The Hewt Association ol Waatern New Vorl&lt;.

llo-"

�Aptlll,1171

7

THIRD - A L CONFaWICE ON
El.EIIEIITAIIYIICIIOOLIIATHEIIAncsl
Book In
A Focus on

Me-

-Ilea:

El-'"'Y lncl .. School lno1Nctlon.
l'ret811ed by the Centor lor Basic Skllla •
t 70 MFACC, Eljtott, 9 a.m.·3

p,m.

Spanaar8d by . . F8cUiy ol ~ -

CONYEIISATIONS IN THE ARTS
&amp;thef aw.rtz. inteMews Jayne Freem~n ,
hoSt of ClloMel H 'o " Artoceno." CouOer Cable
(ChaMOI S). 1 2:30p.m.
DELTA- PIIIEETINGII
- - - - · - " 1 1 121\d
Pledg0Elcam). 232Squire. 10a.m.·1 p,ro .
CONVERSATIONS IN THE AR'IJI

a~Mr_,.tnienliewspootllli:Hommond.

tntemational Cable (Chan!lel 10). 6i).m.

IRCFILII"
ThiSpyWho'--III.HOMFACC, EJilcott.
7:30 end 10:30 p.m.. Free to a1 lAC foepayers;
$1 forothOI&lt;J.
•·
CAC FILII"
Lonny. f50 F -. 7:45 end 10 p.m. Tlcl&lt;ets
$1.

M'!:'~UE,

a

..,iQUe .8-.,.~

rooslcal fusion . Kdatne.coiniilllJ&gt;eaira: 6 p.m.
Spoosorod by COioge B. Admi&amp;Siol).

UUABFILII"

&lt;:&lt;•.,_... ~. 1917). Conlenlnce Theatre, SQure. Col 636·2919 for show times.
51.-.ts S1; ·-

$ 1.50.

•

Harmonylll-lnlhl--

• glflod - - -

~

(Ctaig

~=)end I~ girf'~~COFFEEHOUIIE"

~

.

Ensemble (left), lhe U,.._.lty
Phll~nnonie. end the Zodleque De.- Compeny,
directed, .by U~tda . Swiniuch lrlghtl. wll 1&gt;fW«1t a

The

s.-m

w-a -to

Zoda.oue·a Swlnluch

Wind ensemble

.

~. wHh _.,.. ~. Dicit
Kol'le&amp;IOld WI!)IM~ . Caleteria I 18, SQUre.
8 :30p.m.
$1: facully ~still Sl .25;

Winds and Dancers

othenl$1.50.

u~ 111.

eonf"""""' -

program entitled ··Music fof' 1 Wenda And Dancers...

·

Squtre. 12
S1 ; othera $1 .50.
"With W8Mer GAnln and a lot of women
few elephents." .

SUNDAY-9
AloWiERSTFRIEN08-IIEETINQ(QuoklrO)""
157 MFACC, Elioott. 10 a.m. Everyone ;s
welcome.

BRUNCH WITH BACH"
lluolc for Wind 1nc1

-

oe-. u 1 a

Wind

· ~ ,..,.._,.,., ZodiaQue Ooiioe

BFA RECITAL"

Filley,_.., violoncello. BeO:d Recital Halt.
3 p.m. ~ by the llitponmont of Mu!lC·

-n,

FACULTY RECITAL •
Squire
organist. Fnt Presbyterian
Ch&lt;A'ch, One Symphony Circle. 5 p.m. T1cl&lt;ets
$1 .50 ~ · Sl for facully, ataH,
alu!llnll- cltizons, $ .50 for students.
UUABFILII"
~ (c..a.

1 977), Conh!rence Theatre, SQure. Col 638-2919 for show times.
S t . - S t ; olhon$1.50.

-·

MONDAY-10

Evans, dtrecfor ol ho8l&gt;ital
SOCial . E. J . Moyer Mamortol Hoapltal;
Dr. FlctwdJU. -p&lt;-.orof~.
U I B; Angell ~ . ho8l&gt;ital ooclol worl&lt;er,
Moyer Mamortol; end Or. Theodore ~ .
clinical pll&gt;feoaor of gyneeotooy end
obstetrics. 1..-Forber. 12noon.
MUSICOLOCIY LECTURE"
-Kraft. 106 BeO:d. 4 p.m.
ARCHITECTURE LECTURE"
stmo - · "The TNrti06 Revival in Fin·

Antldplllon ol ' lhl Night (1958) ; NOI-

CONCERT"
Traditional Folk Musk:, Jackson Braider and
The Buffalo Muslcotogicel Ensemble. Bakd Recital •
Hal. 8 p.m. Admtssion free.
Guest artiSt wilt be Bll Maraschk!lto, tenor,
12-string guitar, Irish prpes and melodian .
Mr. Btakler is an English-music maier who has
combined his with his performance .
sbi;ty to produCe .... program.

(Menksn, 1963t 146 Ok!f..-t. 7 p .m.
Spoosorod by the Center for Media Study.

POETRY READING"

CONVERSAnONS IN THE ARTS
Eather Swartz intervtews poet Mac Hammond.
tntornetional Cable (Channel 10) . 6 p.m.

FILMS"

.

Elicott. 7 ~.m .
Weird goings-on wHh
Robert Mitchum.

a backwoOds ~­

LAW SCHOOL-I-CAREER DAY I
OnllborL.ow. 1070'8riln. 7:30p.m.
SeeAprit10tisltng.

lAC FILII"
Goclfi!Mr I. Clement Lounge. 9 p.m. Ffoe to
.. lAC feepeyera; $ .50 for others.
Brando sounds like he's hod a llryngectomy,
• butthe&amp;ntsstillanific.

Wllll•m Heyen and four students. GaAery 219 ,

TUESDAY-11

I'm No Angel(1933) . 8 :35p.m. Stenl Mae
West and Cety Grmt. A hOarioos courtroom
scene.hightights the film , wHh Mae acti{lg as her
own attorney end inviting the male jurors to ' 'Come
up and aee me some tine."
170 MFACC, Elicotl Free.

SEIIJNARI

-c... --

Splcllt Ell01'18 for ~Ill Chlldron In Elrly
Preoented by Early Childhood
Resea-ch Center end ,_,_.,. of the Eleme&lt;ltsry
omRemediaiEdJcalicnEar1yintenlention-.
15 Baldy. 7 p.m.

LECTURE"

Social , ~..,

H;storical

FoundationS of Education. Second Floor Lounge,
Red Jacket, Ellicott. 7:30p.m. Sponsored by the
Faculty of Educationsl S1u&lt;j;es and intornation8t
Colege.

LAW SCHOOL-I-CAREER DAYI
On Corponte and Secvrttt. Law. 107
O'Brien. 7:30 ~.m .
A panel of atlomeya wll participate to on various asoects of the .....-.g·s tcplc, folowed

PUT US ON YOUR LIST
provide the cempue with a
81111 IICIIYIII•, from JUme and
..-Jnga to eclentlflc cot!oqule. We'll print both your notices end your
publicity pholol(ll lpec8 perlJIIII) If you eupply Ul with gloaay prlnll. The
_ , . Ia tree. To..-.! lnl~tlon, . cell " - Shreder, 838-2826, by
ftlondey noon lor Inclusion In the following ThUNdey'e ieaue. Or, mall
lnfonMtlon to
"Calenct.r," 131/ Crolla Hall, Amherlt. We need your
....._In makitll the "Calendar" aa complete •• po..lble.
K.,: 10pen only- thole with • prof••lonal 'lnt.-t In the eubJIICI; •open
to 1M public; ••open to member• of the Unlftrslty. Unl... otherwise
specified, tlcketa lor ....,to cherglng edmlnlon cen be purchased at the
Squire Haii"Tlcket Office.

·

featuring Y8rious solo .., ..,.·.

TAKE A BREAK •

semble groups. -cafeteria. Amherst. 11 :30

Tom Bur-a presents Fttneu for Today. Lee·
ture I demo, pkJs a chance to test yo~~ own fit·
ness. 1 0 Capen. 12 noon. Bring yoor lunch.
Buyea is program director of the North·East

a .m.-1 :30 p .m.

Arta~by uu_AB CtA.nt end ~

YMCA.

DRAIIA"

FILII"
Thl lonv Goodbye (Altman , 1973). 150 F•·
bar. 3 end 9 p.m. Spoosorod by Oeps1n)ent

Loo ~t~-.o;
a c-.
SQure.
1 p .m. ~$1.50.

Feu One-Ad Ploya: u . - -·L M -

ecnr.r.r- - ·

~bytheU/B~­

of engt;sh .

Clrgallzation of~.- end"""'-·

PHILOSOPHY LECTURE~
Thl Right to Ole, l'folessor Bertram 118ndman,
Lonv Island Unive&lt;&gt;lty. 684 Baldy. 3 :30p.m.

WOllEN '&amp;~·

FOSTER LECTURE SERIES•
Synthlllc Sludles Rellted to

_

Educetlon and Modernization, Dr. Gall KeAy.

12

~RECITAL"

Weeldy -

taste.

Oeps1n)ent of

WEDNESDAY

Squire . Cel1636·2919 for times.

UUAB FILIIS"
Red Dut1 (1 932) . 7 p.m. [l;rectod by VIctor
Fleming, wHh Jean Henow end CleO&lt; Gable. this
tropicaf mekJdrsna iS an eXfl'llP&amp;e of Holywoocfs
ability to project the repressed oexuetity of bour·
geois fantask!s onto the SCfeen with humor and

The 11epottet " C.Ierlc*" hopes to
~ ..... weekly lilting of - I I

,_rt.,

by a question and answer petiod and Wl ilformal
get·togethef.

land ." 335 Hayes. 5 :30p.m.
Sponsorjld by the School of Archltech.&lt;e end
ErMronmental _Design.
•

The Way to Shedow Garden (1955) ; Flesh
Of -"11 ~ 1956) : Rellectlono on Bllc:k (1955);

Compa-ly. Elioott SQu.:e Buicling, downtown
Butfato. 11 :1 ~ a.m., -and 1'2:30 p.m. AanlssiOn
charge foibrunch.., cOncert.

Wind

Friday. April 7, at 8 p .m . ill the Katharine-&lt;Comal
Theatre. The program- will be ..._md M_.rvnclt with
Bach on Sunday, Apr119, at 11:16 a.m. and 12:30 p.m . In
the Ellicott Square Building.

U U A B - FILII" (ci-v-Kuc:hlr
-midnight.

U/B

~I

Antf.

U IBn. Nlegln ~ c-nfty c.,._
(2) . Acheoon Field. 2 p .m.
·
A new vonlly sport debuts.

LECTURE"

,

~~~lldc:n::·atDr~~ 7~· =:

Thl Phlnlllnllgorll 1ncl , _ . . , _ . . , _
....,. In Spoln: A -

-4l 15p.m.
·
Frst in a series. For further Jnfonnation,
call Oorothy Kramer et 83 1'·3020.

of London , Engtond.

4 p.m. Free.

~

....,._to ..,.._

J.e. v-.
Conference-·
Squre.

-~SO-),

by the U / B

~

~

Sll-.t

son. Courier Cable (Channel 8 ). 6 :30p.m.

Orgonlbd;on
of end
~.
· end " "
' -·
For inf~
tid&lt;et...vollono,
cal"6382191 .
.

.N-GSEMNAII"
Thl NurM'a Role In Po-la' Rlghta, Drs.
E1e111 Ben&lt;lomon, ~ of nursing , Hunter

MUSICOLOGY LECTURE"
The Ancient T - ollhl Chorll
PMimody, Terrance Baley. 106 Baird, 4 p.m. •

~ol
plllG-26 Forber.

~by the Depnnentof Muoic.
.!Jr•.JialeY Is ~ of the Ospom&gt;ant of
Mualc Hiotc&lt;y, Talbot COioge, urn-.ity of West·

CONVERSAnONS IN THE ARTS
Eather Swartz interviews pelnter Don Robert·

Cologe, e n d - ooophy, Long - . ,

·

~-

7 :30p.m.
~by t h e - Yoilt Stole Council on
the ~ · The School of Nl.ntng end the
Oeporlmenlof~.·

• FILII"
Cleo from 5 to 7 (Verda). I 50 Forber. 5 p.m.;
5 Acheaon, 8 : I 5 p.m.
~byOeporlmentofModeml.an ·

guages end Utarslure8.

One ot·Agnes Verde's best.

COLLEGE B FILII"
Nlgh1 ol thl Hu- (1955) . 170 MFACC.

em Ontario.
FOSTER LECTURE SERIES"
.,.,._Qogonlc~I!High­

Or. - . , G . . . - ,, - ~ o1 California
at Betl&lt;eley. 70Acheoon. 4 :15p.m.
For turUw tnformetion, cal Oorothy Kraner at
831·3020.

PANEL DISCUSSION I
Thl Sttvggle for Elhnlc, Minority oncl Thlt&lt;I•S.. 'C.Iendar,' ~oe 12, col. 1

�April1,1171

Pta·nts
Maybe they can De tampered with
In order to produce hardier strains
.to feed
population
. a. growing
.

Merit funds can wait:
base pay m~re urgent
l!diMr:
It labelnQ fWIIOI'Ied that peqona who

By!-=~oball

um..1tJ

~u~u=u~, ';g~ ~:;:~

IIUIIIOrtlng to alate a UUP
DOaltlon nilmlve to merit •- ·
Thla ..._ Ia Intended to get the record
atr.lg!Mned a bit.
We all know of the wide dlwralty of
pointe of ¥1ewiiii8UN to meriJ. There Ia
aiiUbalantlll body or •....,re
for
lnat8noa, Blloft Jiilu., Worlr, CreativIty, Social
lhlll 119k!ta to the
need -for lin DqUala llid fair baalc
aalarY atructure •
• -..y
oonclltlon far • ~tarY merit
llructUIW. We..,~ not now· h - an

that lay dormantt~rouSh winter months

~~~me: ho~~och~J:~at ~
th=~~':~~~~t;,:,n.:;'~·before

&lt;-.

J,.,.,

_The problem Ia further aggravated
when the baelc salaries are Inadequate
and all too often unfair. It Is further
contended that allocallo~ of mertt
money should be located at the
depllrtment level where performllll!)8
and expertise can be observed and
judged more adequately. Again, the ·
method and criteria of assessment

!idaquale
-- maintains
atrucl1118.
Thla Ia what
WPbaalc:
_ .and
!hilt ularlea ehould be II.Nen llrat '
priority.
Merit, then, needa to walt upoh fair

!o~ ·

:;:. ':T."m:'31-=:.=i
ii*i!ltallf. Faw that I kriOw, If any,
. challenge the fact • that there . .

:.":nc:.~m:~~J

~ thoee dl"-'cee .,. of
~lonlible Vllldlty and reliability.

lildaed the appllcldiOn of auch methods
• . . uaed . . liMn by many ae
dageneratlng Into a part~ly hidden
political prooiiR. ' " - queatiOna
~ credibility of any
merit

..-.

= l d ~...:'J:'d:o ~~n~r~n~
academic community.
Thle position Is not one of mere
con!!Bftlence and mindless uniformity; .
rather It Ia one that rests upon
conceptions of social justice and
· nasponalble profasalonal judgment.
Sincerely,
-R. Of._ Glbeon, President
Buffalo Center Chapter, UUP

Cdmmunity awards

The Unl~aCom~~nlty Advisory Co4nc11 (UCAC) will again honor
luii-Huatee this spring through Ita annual COMMUNITYSTUDENT AWA DS Program.
.
·
Thasa awardl . . ~led In recognition of the countless hours and
~lon to aervtca by atudenta of the Institution In association wllh various
~In Weatem- Vorl&lt;.
1 " - dlract your attention to the nomlnailon form below. The
form hae been designed to Include brief, but exact descriptive Informati on to
sufficiently detail a candidate. All nominations must be returned by Apr/112,

1878.

.

=

Rather th8n popplng~ut of the ·

. . liCit membeni of thla Chepler have
ClnlUIII!Id . . _ , . In parte of this

.

•

Each Community-student Award naclplent will be presented a certificate
from the UCAC, plus a $25 honorarl9m, by William Godin , 1978 chairman of
the United Way. In eddltlon, a $25 contribution 1rom the UCAC wlll .be
lonnnled lj) .the agency which the awardee repnssents, or to a specific area
the~ dealg-.
The eelactlon committee will be comprised of stUdents, staff, and faculty
of the Unlweralty, • wellae membara of the Communltr Advisory Council.'
The - s luroa- will bi hel4 on Wednesday, Aprl 26, at noon I~ the
Goodr-·10 banquet room on the Main Street Campus.
Unclerg!Wiuate student recognition Is a very vital concern of the UCAC.
Your oooperatlon and nasponae would be most kindly appreciated.
Sincerely,
-Uta K. Stathacos
1

.·

Community

Stu~n~ C~

FOR FULL-TIIlE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
AT BUFFALO UNDERGRADUATES MAKING OUTSTANDING
CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE COIIIIUNI'I;Y.

CAMPUS ADDRESS
HOME
(Attach eddltlonal p.gea.of the following If desired) ·
1. What Iaiiie na1un1 oflhe volun._. service?
2. How Ia this.,.._ Involved?
3. Why In
judgement lsthlslnvolvementlcontrlbulton Important?
-~~
=~':::b'!!:r?houra per week during the current academic year

rmur

NOII~TING IDENlJFICATION•

Name'------------------~-----

Student Awards Committee
Community Advlaory Council
.
518 Cepen Hall
State University of New Yorl&lt; at Buffalo
Amherst; New Vorl&lt; -t4260
836-2925

~~. lf~~~~~'l': a~~~% ~~~r. '=~

~~~breeders to Introduce to other

Why develop a high-salt resistant
plant strain?
·· -

In ~~~~~~~~.f~~~~!Z,:;:'1~!~~
~~=: !;'::~~~~~g"11:1~~~~~~~

all the snows have-malted, don't require
arid r~nsls a high salt content In the
high temperatures lor their .flowers to
• alfle 1darisd
. arleaasls.awseverehlchcornproprib~ '.'l neart1 Y
1
bloom, whereas tha briQht, Jlowertng
- n 10 V..
plants of summer never blooll) In cold
of all the arable land ·Jn the worid."
Some bean plants are very sensitive
weather.
The. seeds of still other plants, such · to salt, wheraaa others, like the sugar
as birch or beech trees, actually requlm - bean, are more tolerant.
a period of cold before they Degln tb
The development of . salt..-ealatant
strains would allow greater utilization
germinate.
"There are a numb_!~( ollactora which
ooll ~dwlandater'toanrldrrpegarhtioapna.~even the use •
plants . use to control their time of
lm
germination ," Dr. VIncent Santilli , ··
prolasaor of biology, explains. "All
these factors .are designed to Insure ,
~~:::~~~ll_?n oocura u~er favorable
Santilli Is COI)ductlng ~h to

=:lt~~~s.:lt: r:::,~;o~r~~

Increase the world food supply.
_ 'ijle proper tJme of germination ls
Important. 11 It occurs too soon In the
season, late frosts may klll tha
seedling. lilt occurs too late, the plant

=

p•Inn WI'"II
'take over
QS •
A 1n May

'
Joyce A. Plnn, a doctoral student In
the Social and Philosophical Faundatlons of Education, will become
president of · the G!Wiuate Student

::?'
~~~e~ng~?r~.:':e{&gt;~::'~~=- As=.'~[~~n~:S~~~ ~~~~i&gt;ost atop
seeds.
"'
a "consensus•• slate of officers

Two controlling fiiCiora
•
Santllll ·notes t hat two major factors
cont rol the time of germination : the
g:,ant•s seed coat and Its hormonal
!f~seed coat surrounds the plant
, embryo and protects It duri ng the time
II is being dispersed ," he explains. ''The

:='e~~\ a~~o.,:a~~~ ':.3 ~~~r :g :~:

embryo. As t he seed coat dries,
however, water and other geses are able
to reach the embryo. When t he correct
temperature occurs and the' plant gets '
~g~~~- mol sture, the embryo begins to
The other contro lling factor Is the
seed's hormonal balance. The two most
common hormones are absclslc acid, a
germ inati on Inhibitor, and gibberellic
ac!!k fo~-:,'f~f!lfsn ::!'::-~':f,':Jv.,n, .. says
Santilli , " but In general, li the absclslc
acid level Is· too high , no germination
occurs; this, however, can be overcome
by the production of gibberellic acid ." ·
One function of a long winter, he
notes, Is that II provides enough time
l or the absclslc acid to -gradually l,each
out of the seed . The gibberellic acid
promotes the breakdown of stored
starch In the seed. This produces
sugars which the embryo utilizes for
energy to build new structures, such as
cell walls.
· ·
Modltylng Nature's balance
· Dr. Santllll Is attempting to modify
~aetnut'se'shedelllscacteondbuaclat•~ncge wlnlthexpeoorid·
plants. f04
In some areas of the world, high
temperatures limit crop production.
Certalr species of plants, such as ,
apples, beans and strawberries, won 't
grow if the temperature Is too high .
'We're looking into this problem ," he
explains, . " using beans to see what
kinds of temperatures bean leaves can
tolerate; and to determine If there Is any
way to modify the response of plants to
damaging temperatures."

confirmed by the G~ Senate at Its
meeting In late March .
She wlll be joined on the executive
~~c't:~?C:y, by w~oell':\ A~ . ~~~f.s
administrative vice president; Zenebe
Kille, Management and Chemical
Engln-ln~
student affairs vice

1

~~~~~~~y. ud~~~ms:f''o:it~suns:11~

president; and Joe Basler, Cell and
Molecular Biology, treasurer. All will
serve one-year terms.
r

Se~at!, ~l;'!e;i~~~ •:.~":ed'~h!~saCf~ ·-

10 "continuing the progresalv8 program

which has been · developed and
act ualized to some extent In the past
several years, to expanding the
objectives-of GSA and Its responsibility
~~lv!:;: lr,eduate students of !his
They stood lor election on this
platform:
•To make GSA a strong , lndepen-.
dent, and viable organization fully
committed to the protection and
expansion of th·e Interests of the
greduate students.
•Toelevatethestatusoflhegraduate
students from that of beggars In a
bureaucratic tangle . to that of coocopemramtulnngtyp. ariners In ' the academic
11
•To create a conslructive and
prQgresslve GSA, one which Is capable

11

~~or:l~~g f~~~~~Pfh:''\!::::m~~se~.':~

munlty at large
•To make GSA sensitive to the needs
of all students.
•To Incite full commitment and
participation on the pari of all Senators
and Alternates.
•To Improve and further GSA's
relationship with other unlversl ty
organ izations, other U/ B student assoelations and other statewide student
orgaSnAizasthloonusld. work to Insure that all
G
graduate students have the possibility

~Yt!n'i:~~~7nc;.'r:~u11~; ~~c~~~ .. ~~~rm1 ~:.C~=~~~~l~ngg pr~es~h~n ~.7'r:::~
~~~e~~~~~~~~n~~a~r!~~~~~:~~~l~e.;:;-' ~~~. ~~:~~:J'~~Itl~~s' :!'a~err:'e~~e~l:f.
in

injurious.
'We're , now

In

the

stage

of

~:~J~~ngb~\"~! o:11~~:s•;:.~~cei~

"We will work to create an atmosphere
In GSA In which all graduates feel the
need to be Involved ."

To the nationals

learn."
S.lt-reslstarice will b1 atudled, too
U /B's women bowlers placed first In
Another project still In the planning
the Associated College Unions lntersctuagesltu_!s dto-lopeclnlg llhelnesuseool f ptllssanuets
' national Sectional QualifYing Touma·salt
men! last weekend and will edvance to
resistant to specific factors - In this
the National lntercolleglat~ Bowling
casa, high levels of sail. Und!'r sterile
Tournament to be held ln Milwaukee,
April 26-29.
conditions, Santilli Is Inducing plant
cells to multiply . By gradually
U/B won the sectlonal1n Pittsburgh
Increasing the salt concentration , he . _wllh a total score·ol 771!11. West Vll'!llnla
. was second wllh 7491 and Penn State
hopes certain cells , will d""'lop a
1olerence to the sail.
third wllh 7073.
/
''The tolerance will come about
Patti Schafer topped I he U/ B bowlers
through mutation, which occurs either
with t682. Sue Fullon had 1561 ahd
spontaneously or through mutagenic
Cindy Coburn 1554. Schafer's 226 high
agents, which we can select . II may be
single and nine-game total took top
honors In the tournament.
possible to Induce shoots from the

�Apri11,1t71

&lt;

i

~

I

i

Students are what-it's all about, GSA reminds
President Ketter· ha8 spoken before '
the Faculty Senate of what he views as
problema afflicting thle Unl..alty and

:rr~t ':-~ :h~:! ~~on~~~=

bodies dealing with academic Issues
end related questions of resource
aliocetlon/reallocetlon, the GSA has

T&gt; ~~~.II

raduate student repre-

;~=~~~/":~~~~~~~ ':s~~~~~ ~\~rJ" on tRe"Presldent's Acedemlc

from the different problems, there was
no &amp;«&lt;out proposal made In his report
as to how ft could be OV8r!J!XII8. More
significantly,
by liadlng his

(b) formal Inclusion of graduate
s\udentsln the periodic meetlnge of the
Vlce President lor Acedernlc Affairs with the Deans of various faculties;

ing Ia made poeal_b le by the aignlflcent
role played by the atudents.
Some of the problema mentioned In

(existing In each faculty) ;
(d) adequate representation In the
Unl-alty-wlde standing committee on
teaching assistants end graduate

mere!{
;~~tie~=~ty~-~~~: ~~~~
population,· and that ita ven- function-

1 ~c) ~~~:te !ll'J!~:!''":"~~W::!

m:,:=:edan'3 ~~C:,.-=~:.r g~
factors external to the UniVM~ity . To
mention a few, tbey ere irwjequate
physical facilities, underfunding for .
capital equipment and operating coats,
etc. Thaae problema cennot . be

~f~~~:~':iu~~f.!.,~s

Itself as a coha8ive_entlty vis 11 vis the
State. Other problema mentioned are
the need to Identify a eat of priorities for

prl)motion, tenure
etc.
·
Of the above, GSA views aa crucial
the role of students In their respective

~t'=\ryad!=:,,~d d=:,v.r!~

~~1/rJi \~~~~fx'ta;,~~~~~~f~

In t~e process of
(e) formalized student participation In
eny end every departmental committee
that deals with Issues such as curricular
requirements, organization of academic
programs, support services for stu·

~~~es'u~1Jns, 8of .,atude~:;.t'~ca~,~~:

of~lty,

=:~~t h~~'l'~~!iua~:r~pa~~~

as a whole, etc. These are de\ermined
largely by factors Internal to the
University, namely by the nature ot
interactive relations ·.among students,
faculty and administration. in order for
the University community to emerge aa
a serious, cohesive entity In defense of
public higher education, and tn order to

them are being made. Without en
effective role In their own departments,
the students cen hardly expej:t eny
result from their representative roles In
largwer Unl-thselrty·w, 1daetedbodies . ua• are
81
185 0
T 0
formulation of the academic plan of the
Uni-slty and the periodic academic

tratlon • It Is necessary that students
and faculty begin to be Involved In the
running of this 1Jnl-slty.

students and facultr In each of the
academic programs should) be asked
lor their exr,lielt response to the draft

What GSA wenta
During the J'&gt;ast year, tfie Graduate
Student Association has SC?Ught, on
behalf of the graduate students at large,
what It believes to be a minimal role In
the functioning of the University.
Speciflcaliv. In relation to University

and Health Sciences; and that the
academic plan adopted by the Unlverslty reflect these responses.
As for the periodic academic program
reviews, much controversy has be&lt;_&gt;n

~~·~~~~~~~de!.~:. ::;~,r~t~d ~~~~~~

B~~./ev~~'? ~r:.:..C.'"'tha~n ~i~

=e{I;~~~~!~t~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~Y,~~:

ralead concern lng the review of the
Mathematical Sclenceti Dlvtalon . Pnlal·
dent Ketter and Vice President Bunn
have expreaad the view that the
Unl..alty's wllllngneea to conduct
these reviews 18 baaed on .Its
confidence In the alnlngtll of the
programs. GSA believes that a periodic
academic program revl- - - the
necessary purpoee of -ldentltylng the
strengths and wiNII&lt;MsMs of the

rueyr:,~S.:o:'.~-~r:/=~.:gr_:~

and faculty at large have a great stake In
being Jnvolved In this review PfOC88S.
As a matter of fact, every revt,w
committee d!MIIjlll a significant part of
its time and effort• to ltlfllljing wlth the
students and the faculty. However, until
recently, In many departments, only the
departmental chairpersons had access
to the review committee's · report and
had the formal responsibility to respond
to the-same.

tmg;-,:t"~• that the .following
actions are lmparettve In relation to
acedemlc r,rogram reviews con!lucted
either regu arty by the graduate school
office or occaaionally by the vice
president's office (aa In the case of
Math . Sciences/:
a/ The rev ew report be made
ava Iable to ell the faculty rnembera and
graduate- students within the concerned program .
•
b) The graduate school office or the
vice president's office (as the case may
be) , seek a formal response to the
review report from the g~uate student
association of the concerned department , In addition to responses from the
chairperson and the faculty .
.
c) Formal graduate student representation be Included In the vice
president's committee that will decide
on .any course of action for the future
development of the department, In light
of the review report .
d) A formal procedure be established
to follow up on a time scale, the

Implementation of lhe ·revi- commit·
tee recommendations consldenld necessary aa In (c); and graduate students
be Involved In any aull8ble mechanism
that would be establi8hed for thltl
purpoee.
We have railed theee auggestlona on
a number of occasions wftfl President · ·
Ketter, Vice Praaklent Bunn .00
Foaef of the Graduate Sc:llool. We . .
wafting to -how thoee who prof- a
conc:em about students' of noninvoivMient would act to remedy the
situation. Some admlni-Qra have
_ questioned whether atudenta at 1111118.
Indeed, h - any li'lt.-1 to play lhe
role that GSA Ia eeeklng for them. They
cite the "reality" of student apathy 1111
"8Yidence" of atudenta' non-lnteraet.
GSA bell- that students'~­
day apatl\y is a product of their f - of

ee..

~~ud:"of~t1M. ':':::;.,.:;~

TIICOgnlzlng students aa an Important
entity and a aenae of hell)leaarwu
concerning the possibility of Changes
necessary for the futura growth 'Of lhe
University_, But given lhe opport)lnity,
and w'""'- they -have been taken 1111
serloua components of the University,
the atudenta heve demonatrated their
concern for the different problema that
lace 1hern, their ability to deal with.
them and their willingness to work for
their resolution. • - -t.
The question Is hOw the administration Intends to make students and
faculty feel thet they . . a part of this

~~!~IW it 1:.ng~ ·~:'.~~~":::.!

students and the lacullr that tbey ere - •

~~;":,=Y~~I1J~!~~
such,

they cen 7ay
a· role. Fear,
cynicism and heiplean8811 are only
temporary characteristics. It would .be
frustration and anger that nsplace them,
if the present situation II prolonged any
further.
-GriiCI...,te Student AMoclatlon

Ex-.tlleComml~

Failed Italian universities offer us some lessons
EDITOR'S NOTE:

a rwlaW - of

..,_,and
fhl,_,
s,a.._ "'-l·

Thla M

A _ , _ l c - ln_lllllr:

Ollgarclor In a , _

by

Burton R. Clart (U. ol
Philip G. ~. Ia ,of U /ll'o
~- c-tar. A climate of
,....,. ~ ilttlmldatlon hat -....... lho
troubled ltell8n In . - t
montllo.

S-la - ' with a
rnollunctlonl~~g--.cylhey . . - loooto~.

The dramatic failure of the Italian
university to _adapt to the Twentieth
Century has many useful lessons.
Professor Burton Clark, the Yale
sociologist who is also director of the
Program for Comparative and Historical
Studies in Higll,er Education , has
written a thoughtful analysis of the
modern Italian university. His book is
mercifully free of sociological fargon
and will be of interest not only to
comparative specialists, but to anyone
concerned with the future of higher
education. The Italian case Is a classic
of non--adaptation and the current state
of higher education In Italy is the logical
result of the Inability or unwillingness
to change In the light of altered
circumstances.

The Italian academic system is one of
the oldest In the world, stemming from
the medieval period. The historical
herita9,9 Includes most dramatically the
"chair ' system, or the elmost tot"
domination of the acedemic system by
a small number of full professors, who
control their Institutes or departments.
Modern Italian history haa provided the
other key verlable In the academic
equation : a centralized bureaucratic
structure In which the Ministry of
Education has legal control over
academic appointments , budgets, and
even the curriculum. This bureaucracy
stems from Napoleonic Influence and is
similar to the French administrative
structure. Clark argues that the faculty
oligarchy on the one hand and the
national government bureaucracy on
' he other are in a stalemate, making
change .virtuelly impossible. Pressi~g
on this baaic conflict Is the dramatiC
expansion o~he past decade. Between
1960 and 1 0 student enrollments
more than do ied with the University
of Rome,
the ' nation's
largest

institution , Increasing from 45 ,000 to
89,000 students In a decade-with very
little expansion of facilities and only
limited growth in stall.
Acedemic 'barons'
The implications for the underfinanced , organizationally unworkable
academic system of recent enrollment
growth are considerable. The full
professors, or "academic barons" as
they are called in Italy, are able to lillie
more than supervise their subordinates,
lecture to large classes. and serve on a

myriad of committees. Little research is
done because of lack of both time and
f~cllities . The quality of instruction In
many fields has deteriorated . And the
government bureaucratic structures
responsible for academic adminlstra;
tlon have broken down .in many areas .

The key element In the Italian
academic equation is the full profes·
sor-untll recently all other stall were
without any power and most stili are.
The "barons" hold immense power, and
have been successful In maintaining
their domination over the system
despile student unrest , qovernment

r:~~~~~e~h~?e ~~oew~~~,~~~~·;; ·~~~~~·

other European countries , such as West
Germany , Sweden and France, have
lost much of their former authority as
the result of recent reforms , lhe ilalian
academics still hold out. According to
Clark, the academic system functions
as a kind of medieval guild , wilh access
to academic jobs basically In the hands
of those already holding key academic
P,?Sitions, and with a closed system of
'sponsorship" determining who gets
jobs. And because the number of
professorships Is very limited-they
must be sanctioned by t~e Ministry of

~g~~~~~~a~~~~~~~:.~~~·~:e:

highly bureaucratic in its structure. with
many decisions being made in Rome by

Ministry officials rather than locally by
university faculty or administrators .
Yet , t his seeming public " input" has not
meant that t he universities have been
respons ive to social demands, since
the barons have maintained an effective

veto over academic policy. Clearly, the
professoriate has suffered because it is
now very difficult to carry on normal
academic work because of seriously
deteriorated faci lities and poor working
conditions. For example, a trallitlonal ·
academic requirement Is that each
student take an oral examination with a
professor for the awarding of any
academic degree. The increase In
student numbers has meant that many
examinations are given by assistants,
and students are sometimes limited to a
ten-m inute oral inquiry.
Students are not well served by this
academiC environment. Many have
called the Italian univerSltrc system an

:~~xr.:::'i~:~~~;a~f.~' ffr~~ d~~~,..;~'VJ:tr

employment. Tuition is low and small

~:~d".:'n~~- F:~ ta::~~!/:':ca~~~ic ~~~

seriously-which is good for the
system since if all enrolled students
showed up for class , there would
literally not be sufficient seats for theni .
In a very perverse way , the Italian
academic system serves the society In
- which it functions .'The barons maintain
their power, their influence , and their
ability to place their friends and
students in key academic jobs. They are
also powerful individuals In the society
and are generally held in high esteem .
The government supports a university
system which absorbs -the increasing
numbers wishing to obtain academic
degrees, but It does not have to provide

=

unwlllinq to permit any meaningful
change on the academic system , and
through their domination ql the internal

governance of the universities and their

Influence in the Ministry of Education
and in the parliament , they have been
able to prevent change .
'Worst of all worlds'
.
In a sens~ the Italian university
system has the worst of all worlds . ills

1

. ~~~~~~~; are ~~~~ci~ggatn°~:~'i~'r~.;
system and In many cases modest
financial support from the universities ,
even If the quality of instruction Is low
and the usefulness of academic degrees
Is coming Into question .
The lesson for us

We are Indebted to Burton Cl'!rk for

providing this analysis of a university
system in considerably greater crisis

~~ ~~,t~ns~~~~~~~oh~~~a~

student reaction to the academic mess,
one wants to know something about the
quality of teaching, the nature -of the
curric~ium and its change over time,
and many other things about a
fascinating , If somewhat depressing,
academic system . Yet , the book is
clearly 'written, and Clark's theme of the'
interplay-and eventual stalematebetween government bureaucracy and
academic; oligarchy is effectively
presented .
·
What does it all mean lor us? Clearly,
il an academic system does not adapt
1

/~o~~f~.g ~eBft!r,~ ~~!!:~lli~~ ~~~
unable to prevent increaa&amp;d enrollments

~~str:~vet~h:d~r~~'f~~~::,w~

The government could not Impose its
will on the universities, and the
professoriate maintained Its power and
1ts image of an elitist academic system
despite radically altered circumstances.
What Is In a sense surprising is that the
system does function without dramatic
cataclysm. Universities, after all, are
old established social Institutions
which cen withstand considerable
pressure. There Ia, no doubt, a limit to
the accumuiat8d i:rlses, but
In
Italy, the system goes on despite
widespread agreement that It does not
function adequately.
• -PhHip G. Altbaclt

even

Book published
A practical reference and teaching
resource dealing with
datection,
diagnosis end treatment of respiratory
diseases hes been . written by a
pulmonary physician here.
.
Dr. Sattar Farzan, U/B associate
clinical professor of medicine and
attending physician and medial director
of respiratory therapy at E.J. Meyer
Memorial, Is author of A Conc1se
Handbook · gf ResplretPry Diseases,
published recently by Reston Publish·
ing Co. The book Is written primarily lor
nurses, respiratory therapists and
tachnlclans and students In various
allied health fields .

�•

·~

Med faculty _will shift el~ctio~ ~ate~;~
Counc~•l told fewe~· grads s•ayiJ1g-l;lere

(INM-t.-1)

HEW was considered, but that the
wind factor at Amhenlt and Main Sti'MI
.,.the idea Impractical. ·
Updated visible alarm systems will be
lnllbllled In donnllorles for hearing ·
- Impaired students. Hopefully, the
~ will be completed by fall

Under n - bylaws approved by the
Medical Fw;uity Council, election of
offlcen1 will t • place In June J&amp;ther
than' September and election of the
Council 1'8Preaentetives will be held In

~wllrbe ~s~':"~·48 r.:-~~

: ,In each University building.

M%., date changes will hopefully
enable the body to tllke quicker action
on matters that previously could not be
fully Investigated ·and brought to vote
untllmld-y-.
.
·
To legally alter the bylaws, the
change must now be ratified by all
medical faculty via mall ballot.

.

~.....

0111« ch.nges the Unlvwslty hopes
to complete - : 1.Jinstallatlon of more

=.,~e~~c~'!t~~.!;,.\~
mehls In 1-'ory mirrors, towel racks
end slnka; 8) Installation of wheelchair
-.Jble shower systems In dormi-

A=a7!n~ =~o~~ti'~~pdh~~i
decrease

tories oo the Main Street and Amh.-st
c.mpu-; 4) Installation of right angle
door handles on emergency doors; 5)
!Mklng all food
service areas
-lbte.
Ooty said In the near futtire
modifications will ~In on bathroom

week's Medical Council meeting that a
marked
has occurred In the
number of medical students staying In
Buffalo for poatgraduate training . This
year, 36 graduates have elected to train
In area hospitals as opposed to §9 last
y8111"and 66 1n 1976.
·
Katz said uncertainty over the .future
of Mey~r Memorial Hospital, . the
lnfan)ous "Blizzard of
and st'9ng
competition for U I B medical graduates
from high caliber hospitals have all
contributed to the decrease. ,
The request of the Medical School 'for
$3 million dollar~ In the ~tate's

==t=~:::~::~~f!'l;~
IIIUt one bathroom facility will be

- l b l e to each sex In every
Untwratty building.
Making shower facilities In dormitories more accessible to the handicapped Ia more difficult since a system
must lie devised to . prevent hallway
flooding. Et-lons which normally
keep -er Inside a restricted area will
have to be modified to still accomplish .
this task while not posing barriers to
wheetclialr llntrance.

lunnnliaolllf*llon
~

predicted

'

that,

with~

=::,;.,::P!:.~th':~ho~ :.0~
11

raoommendatlona by the end of
eummer.
JO'
The UnMinlltrhes hired a· Buffal~r
bued ..-chllectural firm &lt;to help plan
more expenalve "tong-fange• chWiges.
. Although the'budget 'haS not yet tieen
:~=y approved, W&amp;mlll aald the
can "pfobmly" count on
thla _ . ·for tehebllltatlon
work on the M.tn Street e.mpus and
S250,000fOr Amhenlt.
_
aald ·eurveys of . all campua
buildings have ~ -completed Identifying berrlera to the handicapped.
Among thoae who completed surveys
_.the lndependenta, members of the
l'liYalcal Thenlpy Oepartmerit, .and

-.aao

w.....

oulelde -aenclea.

CPMseeks
candidates for
director's post
Cora P. Maloney -college (CPM) Ia
8elldng candidates for the position of
dlrectar.
Cotlegit offers • a reetdentlal
~and., academic progfam to
~uate students 1rom dMinle
~.Ita major academiC focua

n.,.

In addition, the Cotlege attempts to
IJIIIta. U. Un'-lty end eurroundlng
- l t l e l l In a -ch for eoluflona
to the l)l1)bleme
bea8l theee

which

UIICMrpltwlleged wgmenta of America. _
'--eel In F.rgo Quadrangle, the
llllldenUII II'!III'MI ..__ a gtOWing
IICIIPIMIIOn of atudenta who wlah to
..-nine, thlougll a v.tety of norM:nldlt
IIIMnO IDikimiC pt0gfam8, thelr
.--...
~:-":.education
and
to ......,. their
to the wider

=..=.. ,"

CP_M

spokesIIPPIICationa
' - • JIIIIIU._ r.cuilY mernbera or
indMduali of equlvafent -ua
-.my holcf. ~ ..,lntment
- -.lcbcne. 8peclflc arr.~ta for
, . . _ time Md/or ~tal
~ c.n be madlr• requln!d. •
If
-"""-tad or lf)'OU Wlah to

·etude the hiring of a permanent dlnector
for the facility at a salary comparable to
that of other educational Institutions.
Nakeeb said U I B Ia offering $23,000 fpr
the position, bul that a survey of some
two dozen other schools reveal"!~ that
an average salary Ia approximately
$35,000.
According tp Nekeeb, the low salary
eca1e of caretakers creates problema of
~ ~over In staff pereon'"'l - He

supplemental budget will ba uaad to
support faculty lin"'!, Katz reported. If

received, the money will bring the ratio
of medical etuderita to faculty cl()!181' In
line with other SUNY medical achools.
Cooentiy. the U I B ratio Ia 2.5 students
per faculty member. Money from the
supplemental budget should brinG the,
ratio down to 2.0 atudentil per facufty.
" Dr. Pater Vied, who repn~&amp;e~~ts the
medical faculty In UUP labor-manage' ment nagotlatlona, told the Council that
..a final text of the Private Practice Plan

l:~~~ac~~:~~~ ~~B~,W1 ~o':~~~

and sent to !'lbany for final rstlffcation, ,

Vlad · said. he was "surprised"
negotiations have been so len~thy but

~~(eec.!,!~~n\':ti?t';;~~~3m'%~s::'.:

lion, " overseeing capability,"
faculty the capacity to "govem"
plan.
'
Vlad said he expects the plan
need "constant • modification

and
the
will
and

re~~~':::.'::,~ ~~;~~~~gJ.~im of the

~~~;~:of ~~\"mm~,'~ult\~~~~~~~

that. committee recommendations In-

Ml~·=:.~s:'~~

w: =y~~~

$6,000. Nakeeb said the Committee

.

t~..=n~~ a~~~~:J k=-go~
employees . .

'

~In ·addition, ttie: Committee recommend~- that dna supel)llaor, lab
technician and caretaker bli hired and
that a per diem Increase be given- to
Investigators.
Next month Council members -will
vote on · a mechanism for joint
appointments. According to COuncil
President Dr. John Wright, the new ·
guidelines "greatly simplify'' the
procedure and stress Justification of the
appointment rather thaA the ecedemlc
rank.

.P~etry ~r-ze winne~s sche~ule

English

Pll.~.

Wlnnera . in'.tlhe 11178 Acedemy of
American Poets prize competition at
U/B will give a reeding !II the
Tralfamedore· Cafe, 2810 1/ 2 .Main
SII'MI, Mond_ay, April 10, at 8:30 p.m.
as Part oflhe Outriders Poetry aeries.
Winner of lhla yeal'a $100 first prize
Ia M~ W. Hendereon , a graduate
studenl In English who Ia now In her
!11.-tallony-.
. Honorable Mentions were accorded
to -An ale Baird, Bllrbara';QlpleYl and
Gall Fischer. In eddltlon, the third
annual Arthur Axlerod Memorial Prize
for · "dieUngulahed achievement In
·poetry by an undergraduate" was given
to Art Couchman.
Award winners were announced this
week by Dr• •Max W!!:kert, professor of
English coordinator of the competllion
'
·
· Ms. Hendereon'IS prize winning
poem, "After All the Gestures," Is the
l::..-~- m'':.n~racenpt
. .tiy:cc'mpleted
of McLean, Virginia.A
Henderson holds a B,A. from Goucher
and an M.A. from tha Writing Seminars

=

wh~~t=··;g'
- a AmeriCa's
mlnorftte. 8lld art.~ poor. •

.. :.::.tbe
lnluatlr&gt;e end - ' Y

,

·m

the

~~on of modifications to shower

''

.

.

•Handicapped

=

reading;
student takes 1-st place

at Johns Hopkins. She ts'·the winner. of
from where she.retumed to.study ·ln the
a prior Honorable Mention in the focal
M.A. In h.umanltles program. This
competition, has publlshell wort&lt; In
year's Honorable' Mention ls.her' thlrd In
several little magazines, and has been
local competitions. She received the
anthologized In No More Masks!, a ·
same distinction In 1974 (UUAB
collection of women poets Issued 'by
. Community-Wide Poetry Prim Contest)
Doubleday In 1973.
and 1975 (Academy of American Poets).
Ansle Baird Is a natlvs .of Buffalo · Shelaatralnednurae.
..
working towards an M.A. In the
Art Couchman Is a junior Engllah
humanities. She-received her B.A. from
major here.
· -• Vassar and has condllcled poetry
·
wOf!&lt;shops at the Buffalo Semlnary. Her
rna Academy- l&gt;f~ Amertean . Poets -j
woi'k has been published In Buffalo
competition has been conducted on
Soree, Niagara Magazine, and Deda/us.
campuses tbrougfloUI the nation since
. She Is the daughter of the late- Oscar·
1955~ It was ·'eatabllshed here In 19'75
Silverman.
through a gift from ttie Fflends of the
Barbara Copley was also bom In
Lockwood Memorial Library. The
Buffalo and received her B .A. 'In English
Axlerod Prize was endowed liocally In
and Psychology here In 1973. She, too,
1976 In memory of a glfted young poet,
Is .a graduate student In the Englls/1
Arthur Axlerod, who · died tragically
doctoral program , writing a dlseertatlon
while an undergraduate at U/B.
on William Blake.
J~es In this year's competition
Gall Fisc
· her Is a native of Western
~h ~~ella8a ~a fhrom Uthel Office
o
e
nector o t e
n varsity

-·

~~~u~~t ;::;:gJ,?"~,J"~reeA~~::- ~"'?".=~ =..tbh~og~ ~1

entri.es I~ the competltlon ,comprlelng a
to spending a year at Johns Hoj:&gt;klns, · _total of over 200 poems.
•

Review. She was·t£student at U/B prior

Reverse culture shock is workshop focus
By now moat Individuals are familiar
with the concept of "culture shock." It
became !I' household term durin&amp;the.

::'Jn,: ·~rro"~u= ex~~

ence -extreme anxiety, Clepresalon, and
dlaortentation during the first few
=i'l:o:,~.':;u~:~~ In cultures far
Much research' was done on It ahd' 11
was found that Intensive orientation
progi'MI8 are the cure Programs which
familiarize volunt..a' with the langu-

e=•

=n~ltu~f~ cr.:~me~ 1 ~he r~~~

=~~~

:::r

~rr!:f~n~f

.At U/B,.some 1700 foreign ·students
ere enrolled, many of whom h8v8 gone

=~; t~ t.ft~,~~ ~O:m:.=

there seems to be a "reverse culture
shock" whion the student arrives and
realizes I hat his· or her values and

=u:s,~:veS1~:::~~itJ'rri~~~e~g

reasslmllate to his/her own culture. It
has been said that "those who adapt
beat to the new culture have the h&amp;fdeat
~~~~ ':::-fo'~n~~o '~fd~dac~~;'.J~ "for
exploring the varrous 'Problems and .
experiences an International student
may encounter upon returning home,

~~ F~l~~~~~t~~ H~:f:mlt;;:ra~

~ro•~. ha:" l?fR:'~~ fo'T~~~~~,;

orkshop," lha first of 7ts kind to be
Asante, chairman ·of the

he~ ~~lefi

~::l~n~=~~~~~S:'\~l::·

changes made. while In the , ·unltoid
States.
The program will be held Sunday,
from 10 a.m. to approximately 3 p.m. In
167 MFACC (Ellicott). lunch will be
provided free. Enrollment Ia limited,

~~~!"'.,t::,r:.,: ~r~~:;::~

Stevens or Kathy Ilardi at the Foreign
w.::~es'l:s-~~~ltant Office, 402 Capen

Trustees okay "
Dean Lee
The State Unl-slty Board of
Trustees at- Jhejr March meeting
apprQved the appointment of . Dr.
~e C. Lee as daan of the Faculty of
Eoglneertng aod Applied Sciences.
Lee had bMn serving ea acting-dean
since his recommendation to the
Trustees by President Robert L. Ketter
In October, 19n.. A faculty member here since 1961,
Lee 88Mid ea chairman of the
Department of Civil Engineering from
19711o 19n. Last year, he WIUM)n leave
to· serve as head of the National Science

tlon ~f _..._effacta from a different
extensively In third world countries and
educaloonal wtd political system, '- le.an expert In 'the field of Intercultural
HollyWOOd atereotypee of American
communication.
!!!~r lack of a-·ral-.ca group, and the
A panel of foreign studen)s who .have
.-_d !*» Of ~lfe here can often be
undergone llHtntry will share some of
overwhelming. Tnadltlonaily, the first
their personal experiences Small group
yell' Ia the moat difficult; In the second
discussions will exam.lne various
_ . In tha U.S., the foreign student
persone,l and proteaalonal aspects of
1181111811y ~to a batter underetandretumlng home.
· •
·
~IYldc:'·&amp;.'~~7~~'.'~~"as~ ~glr:,~.~ . Mechanics
lilg of the eocllll- and educational
Some objectives of this workshop
~oflhlacountry.
,
. .:
·
-.nltlle. Dr.~ o -1 _235 Farber
"lee specializes
structural analysis
Hill, 1114145. ~ ror appttca-·
Recently, another phenomenon hea
1. to evaluate - the United States
and deal11,n, nonlinear structural me=or-lnatloNieFrlday, Aprli14,
been the aubject of dlacuaaion. For · educational experience In relation to Its
m.ny foreign IIWdenta rstumlng ho"J&amp;,
applleeblllty to new situations and
. ::''ct~' es't:~~,'; f m!~~z:J~;ureg; ·
future activities,
. . . . . . . .&amp;:.
2. to help the foreign student deal
bl~~~~~~~u~~~u~~na, Lee ' ls a
11111117. . . ::7
with potential probtems he/she may
graduate of the National . Taiwan
have upon llHintry to the home country
Unl-slty and Lehigh Unl-slty. Hels
3. to explore altuatlona with otllef
autlforof a numbei of research papers,
the Emeritus Center will meet at 1 p.ln.,
~~P,: 3~~:~h~aye encountered . has co-authored several textbOoks In
Harrim.n Lltnry, A pi .no recital by Adrian
his field, end Ia the raclplent of a
Ia invited.
4. to reflect on and examine personal
number of research grants.
Nominations

C.

;;:"

of,

or

who

ec::.n"'=

1

rn

1

�Aptlf,1t7f

Jl

Central offices -move into 'State U Plaza'
Some 730 employees of S.tate
Unlvwslty· of New Yor1&lt; and- two
affiliated agencies have begun the move

~q'::rt~w ~tat:w~nl=w.';'~

0 1

In North America.

"-ntton

Complete Interior renovation, which
began wlth taktnp, the bulldl~a back

~~~g~ ~~:\~u~t~~n~~mP:u~

Albany.
•
The move Ia. taking place over five New Jersey, general contractors. Specl·
March and April w8ekenda. Sixteen
ll.catlons have required that the
structures be as energy-efficient 88
office 11roups began the process on· St.
Patrick s Day.
.
possible. Some new leature11. Include
The following weekend the remainder
computerized monitoring of
fuel
of 1he State University offices at Twin __ !"'nsumptlon
and use of. heat
Towera, 99 Washington
Avenue,
onc1dentally generated by mach1nery to
moved. The State University Research

~

1

f~~~~~·~vere:/.~ ~':k'!nd!sof :'~~
~n':.7~~ro'~1 ~un~'!..t~ta~eo~n~~~~~
_ ~ ~ends beginning Apr11 14 and April
1

-

warm the complex.
Wor1&lt; on the ahrubblng and landseeping of the Plaza Park, an en~

==

f:.e:"s:t:'~.:J:':'~t::!~ou~

~it~ 7:W,Of ~~lez:1 ~~~
0

Completion of the par1&lt; ~. expected by
early summer.
_

The aichttect for the totat prefect Is
William A . Hall Aaaoclatas of New Yotk
City.

Dr. Radley.heads Oswego;
she's SUNY's tst woman president

The move Into the University Plaza
cul'mlnates more than live years of

Dr. ·v_irglnla l. Radley has becom~
president of the State University

Ernest Boyer and the University
Trustees announced that the University
would acquire the Delaware andHu&lt;laon Railroad - Albany Journal
Building complex as the permanent
headquarters of the three SUNY
entitles.

the SUNY system.
The State University

1

~:~~~.~37i~~:l'r~~.. ~;:~~~~~ . ~!~:n~ o?!~~~~:a:~~~~~;:u~~

Wurlitzer chief
-is joining Ma!lagement

The chalnMn ot me bomd of the
Wurtlt&gt;W Com~ will join the U/B

M~J"'=!.m

~

":
named
aseoclate prolaaor. of menagement
systems, effective September 1978, by
Dr. Joeeilh A. Alutto, ~ of the
School ofM~t.
Mt. Arsem wm be t.atiJ:aln the area

:::r,egy

~~~·
u dlr=~tngl
~te T8latlona ~r the School.

fortunate~bu~oab~':, :.f;~~~~ ~

• Individual of Araem's broad experience
and achlavemenls: "His scholarly
JIJ..Weats ~ jtlanageriat accom;&gt;llshments 'should . be rellii:ted ~ In more
effective classroom experiences for
students. 'His partiCIP!ltiOn should
enhance the effeCtiveneSs of School
of Management programs addressed to

=~~Hvest.~.~lu~:':td. of

corporate
Arsem'a appointment, Alutto Indicated, Ia one of a ~«tea of actions
baing taken by the School In an attempt
to locus efforts on the graduate and
undergraduate education of future
managers.
•
Arsem, 54, will retire from Wurl(tzer _
following the . annual shareholders
meeting In July, 1978. He will continue
as a director.
~
. Arsem became chief executive officer
In 1974, and was responsible lor
bringing the Company from a ma/or
loss status Into a period of record sa es
ilnd earnings and a st'9ng financial
condition within four years._
Wurtltz« recently opened a new
corporate heedquartera complex at
DeKalb, Illinois, and has three plano
and electronic organ manufacturing
plants In the U.S. , and two vending
equipment plants In West Genmany, as
well u several other subsidiaries,
.wortdwlde.
,
·
~
Arsem joined Wur11tzer In 1858 and
was first named vice president In 1960.
He was elected execu11ve vice president
In 1968 and became a director of the
1

comPTf:r"yt!:" ~:68. ~!· had served as
manager of advanced product davelopment at the General Electrto Electronics
Laboratory In Syracuse and u manager
of engineering In the Electronics
Division of the Stewart-Warner Corporation.
A native of Schenectady, Arsem ·
received his bachelot's from M.t.T. lu
~~--A~~~!%. completing an
Hla Drolaalonal memberships Include the New Yotk Academy of
Sc*-, the Scientific R.-ch So-

f:Yr=;:· we~:-:Jtllr~

· Economic Club of CIIICIIQO.
He Ia: 1 founder and peat president of
the Nlllawa Frontier Asaoclatlon of
ReaeM:Ii end Dlwelopment Directors,
chelnMn of the VIsiting Committee on
Electr1cal Engineering for ClltkaOn
College, and active on various
unlveralty and college Industry committees.
of the Technical
He Is a mem
Advleory Board of Erie County and
holds a variety of U.S. and foreign
patents.

Fedenlt building acqulrad, too
Four years later, when extedor
renovation hed been completed and
Interior reconstruc11011 was well under

~~r~~~y t~u=blrhe coo~'·~~

Bullcjlng, aometlmas •catled the U.S.
Customs House and Post Office, as the
third structure In the Plaza. Located just
35 feet from the D&amp;H complex, the Old
Federal Building was acqulrad as
surplus U.S. property at no cost to the
State. Interior reconstruction of that
building, provided ' under Federal JOBS
Project funding, has just beQun and has
a target completion date of May 1980.
When the Old Federal Building
ren~JVa\lons are complete, an addltlonal
~185 cGIItral A"dmh11sli'atlcin empro'yees

~:'alf~ral~~~~h!~:ft~~~~~~l dfs~onnet

Th~ decision to renovate and restore ·
the three buildings rather than to build

r::;:•nto~~.;:tlo~nw~erafJ":r:~~~;
0
~~~d Jta~~e61~; :,:~rs :s~

step In promoting "the genuine
physical, economic and aesthetic
revitalization of the state's capital city."
'"The move Into our new facilities
represents unmistakable physical_proof
of State University's Intimate Involvement In the urban ravltallzatlon of the
City of Albany, " Chancellor Clifton fl .
Wharton, Jr., stated . "A person has
only to drive or walk by our new
headquarters to experience a sense of
the rich legacy. which these buildings

0

former provost for undergraduate
education for the State Unlveraltv
system, to the presidency at Its March
meatlng.
While the SUNY system has a woman
chief edmlnlstrator at one of Its
statutory colleges at Cornell (Dean Jean
Falling at the College ,of Hurnarr
Ecology) and has on occasion had
acting women presidents, Radley
becomas ltlt~ first femate edmlnlatrator
In the University's 30-year history to
dlract an entire SUNY campus under
permanent appointment.
Mrs. Maurice T. Moore, chairman of .
the SUNY Trustees, said the Radley
appointment gave her special satisfaction .

D,'_'Th~a~rfy'?!ntr::~~~~~~ta ~~~~ra~~~

coming as she does from within our
own State University sr.stem, Is further
.-proof-ol ·the Unlverslt~ s genuine Intent

~~(";.~?,"~~d ~:0~~:~ ',:~u~n~~~~

1

the competence of
women
as
administrators and managers, as well
as educators," Mrs. ·Moore said.
Chancellor Clifton R. Wharton, Jr.,

l~~~.!hl~ ~~~o~~;~e~Pt~!~C:,:~,ft~g

employ more women at all lavels.
The OsweQci president,
whose
appoln.tment took effect Immediately,
has served as the college's acting
president for one year since former
President James E. Perdue resigned to
become associate chancellor for special
projects In SUNY's Central Admlnlstra-

~~~ld;~e ,:,a~ca~:ritc !~:P,~'s.an~C:.
0

professor of English since 1974.

~g~~~:.; ::.-::, ~.~~rr~:r..:,~a~~~~

decl&amp;lon was reached to use and
pTIH!erve these buildings,. rather than
watch them be destroyed or deteriorate."
The Chancellor noted other encouragIng signs of the "rebirth of Downtown
Albany." Town house reconstruction Is
taking place In the Center Square area
just west of the Plaza; he said.
Wh81on will liveth. .
Wharton and his family have made
their own personal commitment to the
future of the Downtown area, choosing
to make their official residence In an
apartment In the Tower_of the Journal
Building. 'The decision was prompted In
large part by their desire to participate
Jn Downtown's fe]uvenatlon . .
The D&amp;H &amp;flil Journal . Buildings,
among the moat d istinctive In America
and officially designated 88 part of the
Natlonat Hlstor1c Trust, are steeped In
lbre and have been an Inseparable part
of the City's history since 1913, SUNY
apokeaperaOns Indicate. Designed by

Board ·of

T:~.s::fn~np~~~d e~~~~tag~~~~~

»n

Radley Joined State·Unlveralty In 1973
when
she bacanle provost
for
und~~&lt;Qraduate education. She came. to
SUNY from Nazareth College In
Rochester, where she was Ita dean. She
- was also chairman and profesaor of
English at Russell Sage College, where
she held the posts of associate dean of
the college and dean of freShmen. She
served on the feculty of Goucher
College In Maryland, serving alao 88
assistant dean of students.
Radley Is the author of two books and
a number of articles In scholarly
journals and has served on R~ts'
and Governor's task forces on facilities
planning and
women
In · State
government. Among awards she has
earned Is the Distinguished Administrator's Citation of the New Yor1&lt; State
Association of Foreign Languege
Teachers.
.
The Os_wego presidency carries a
salary of $47;322. The college, which
enrolled 8,272 students last fall, Is the
third largest of the 13 arts 8iill sciences
colleges In the 84-campus State
University system.
.-

Sunday brunch·. The Faculty Club Is sponsoring a Sunday BrunCh on April 30, from H a.m.
to 2 p.m . In the Talbar1 Dining Room, Amherst Campus. Adults will pay $3.50
per person; children under '16, $2.75. Infants will be admJtled free.
The menu Includes: Bloody Marys, orange juice, scrambled eggs, glazed
ham, link sausages, chicken a Ia king over home-style blscults, P&lt;&gt;tato
::;'~;:,~, f~hs.arre:r.sauce , molded jellO saled, aaaorted relishes, pastr1es,
Reservations may be made, Checks should be payable to: The Faculty
Club and sent to 265 Harriman Hall, 3435 Main Street, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214,
with the reservation form , no later than Monday, Aprl/17. (Present your name·
~ ~~~~r- - no tickets will be sent). Fqr further Information, phone

1

To: F;;u.jyCiub,-&amp;IJNYAB
216 HIIITfm811 H811
3435 Main Strat
Buffalo, N.Y. 14214

NO SALES AT THE DOOR

Pleaso! reserve:

~~ol.tf'il'Jl:i'ngM~t!.Ti~,-:.::~8

_ _ _ _ ,.dull for Sunday Brunch at $3.50

Total Adult _ _ __

'='P b~~

_ _ _ _ Chlld(under16yr.)at$_2.75each

TotaJCIIIId _ _ _..&lt;..

Cloth Guild Hallin Ypres, Belgium. The

l:'w:'tl~~,r ~uc~~~

13-story central tower of the D&amp;H

Check for total amount $._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Is enclosed .

1

!!~~~~~~N° f~\Yn'u'H"~~~~u%~~

hlatortc ship "~all Cfoon," 18 feet tall
and weighing two tons. Manufactured
by the Albin~firm of James Akr:'J{d and

il:'enss~1fl:'son~~n Mt':i's~,;~tf~~ 1~ng t~~
large~!

worl&lt;lng ,weath~ane. ~emalnlng

DEADLINE:
. NAME
APAIL17, 1878
. ADDRESS·------------~---_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
.

~HONE

�u
•Calendar

·-Dr. ..................
...__7.-4)
o.- - ·

--.

69J*lloCIIcol
f&lt;lun9otiono
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•
UUAII FIJII'
-(England, 1974) .•c0nterence

_.., Col ~2919 f o r - lines.
Tlio 1o .,. 11ut1o1o prem1oro or Ken
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- · _ . . , . ol Clllomlo ..
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a.-v. 70 .

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_.

-Comol-.

AI employees reptea«&gt;ted by lhe - ·~
On.......,., pollical action,

Conlnlci'(02) lftlnllilod lo -

wt ........r""'"""""

l!l1)lltJyee 'bonetiiB, golo\alcoo, working oondliiona
and ~ -oontract. For more Wttonnatlon, caD
831-3040.
•

-Y

LD. CARDii
.
I. D. Corda o . . - 1n ·161 - o n: April
I from 3 p.m.·7 p.m.; ,&lt;lpfU 111-11, MOnday. &amp;

T~ 3 p.m.·7 _p.m.; Apll tHe.
a
Tueldoy 3 p.m.·7 p.m.; Apo1l 24-25, Mondlly &amp;
T.-toy' 3 p.m.·7 p.m.
·
·

8ES8ION REGISTRATION
Summer Sooelon 1978 Raglalrallon l&gt;&lt;lg!M.on
, ....,. 17 , ln'HoYea B;
'
·.
·

rutHER EDUCAnDN
·
ln-od In .- . g
~18

ochool -

.,

or

409Baldy, 836·2481 .
llpplicoliona for lhe ... '1978 '0, 1978..

'*'II occepled

---oruoedboollalnWealam
Yorl&lt;. Aprt 1C&gt;-14, !Uie 208 on lhe moz·
&amp;Adng, lrom 10 8.!!1.
lo 4:30 p.m. MoncloY ha!n ... lrom 10 a.m.
lo 1 p.m.. wllh o S 1 ......., cllorge. ll&lt;*nisaion
Is IJee T.-toy lhrough~.
-orllle- ptOYide funds fO&lt;r""""""
~ Oludy b y - schola'a here and
· • .. for communlly projeciB by

Studio.

· $3; St.50, U/ B com-

IIUII!r
... - -.
...,._by-~.

CSUIEETING
The t:omnitlee of Local 6()2 will

unll....,.

- ...

- ""'Anr&amp;choolgecl
- . , . c1 ~Room B-24
• 4230
Ridge~ - Aprt 15, 9:00,Lm.·4:30 p.m. R8gi&amp;-

lnltionilllmlod-lhe18ei&amp;-f1 .50. .
8pcnaotJid "" lhe Social Poychology Oel*l·

NONoCOiiPEm1vE CIVL ~
.Eloctrlclon : so-u u• .. •••l)-f'hyoicol
Planl, ~-IJne No. 344~ 2 .
1104 (...._.,y II 4/26178 tholi PI&lt;·

~~· !!::'·&lt;!s.:,;...,

1104
(l..._y11'41191781honpail8 .. ~
PlanL
NO. 40355.

-

EXHIBITS

·Uno

PROFESSIONAL SJ'AFF

•

Teclinlcol ........... ( - Solely Monl-

lorl. PR-1-Rodioft~Cin !'n&gt;lection, B-8007 .

,._,tarT-~(-of

5erioiB ~Section) , PR, I-cTS-- Qe.
-

uniYensily l..lbnoios~ B-8008.

Tochftlc:a! SpeciOIIot (lnalnmonl Shop &amp;Jpor-.

visor) , PR- 2~. B-8009.
FACULTY

MUIIC IJIIWIY EXIt8IT .'·
.
April I'Ool! HUmor In Jluolc. Milalc Library,
Bolnl, lh'ough ~ 30.

OALLERY 21 t EXIt8IT
.,._tioniExhlblllon. Jane Tabachnlcher.
Allril3·14 .

/

'

;:JOBS

COIIPElmVE CIVIL SERVICE
Typlol SG-3-Univenllty Counseling Se&lt;vice
(2); UrWerslty Placement Surge,y; L.ow Library,

PAID

s..no SQ.S-Psychdogy; Preventive Medl·
cine; Medicinal Owmisby; Computer Services:
Pura-ing ; Medical School BusinesS Office;
EdocaliOnol Sludios ll*l·lime); Slatistical
Science ll*l·lime); School or Architecture &amp;

Buffalo: N.Y.
Permit No. 3J 1

Environrnonllll Ooalgn ; Oral Biology. •
c.- SG-3-0enliatry; Sciences l.lbrwy; '--Ubrwy; -&amp;~ . .

Noo-Profit O&lt;g.
U.S. Postage

....

&amp;e&lt;:c&gt;r.-y

muol be .admilfitd

-

education
program
• ...
prior1o enrolling
In ..,Y
liB couraos.
l\l&gt;llliCBiiona
- . ~n~ormo~~qo may be obiBinod from lhe CUr·
· rlculum./ T -· Educa,lloli Ooportmenl office,

The--orUniYenlly... . - 11o 23«1 --lono or lhe 1&gt;1ggeot

-·. . . . . L-.-- --

four

n.o.r.ci.v,

AAUWBO&lt;*IIAL£'

-"' ... -s..-

- - , _ - (lozzof'OCI&lt;). Kalh·
8p.m. ~byCologe

ap.m.

~-

Aorl 13, 1n . lhe fRI or
..-,gs, The "'"*'II lOll be 'held .
o1, ~ - Facui!Y Club, Main :&gt;nelc 01. 6 :30 p.m.

-

mont

IICRr
L 2nd Floor Lounge, Rk:twnond.
8 .,.. 10 p.m. FfM 1o II IRC ~;
S.50fer-.

-

~il:':'!t:~~~uire

TEA~ OF PSYC,HOLOGY WORKsHoP
IIECIISTIIA'IQI OATES FOR FAI.L, 1871
~ boglno Aprt 24-fer II OUE aan1cro
~: Apjl 25, Ia&lt; DUE aophomoreo;
...
.....
Aprtber.glollnd
26, fer DUE
- __
· (AI, _tpd - 1 8

11831-3020.

B.

p~~us
' .

moa1 ·

-

NOTICES

,.,...,..,,-8:30 Lm.·7 p.m.; Apo1117-208 :30 o.m.-8:30 p.111.; Aprtl 21-8:30 o.m.·4:30
p.m. ; Aprl t.t-17-8:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m.; ,Apo11
ll-e:30a.m.-4:30.p.m: _
-··- _"',. ...~
Farllo_'ol_for..,...._
....,,lho Qlllc8.,. be open on SoU·
doy.-Aprt22, .,..Aprt 291rom9.Lm. lo4o.m.

·o a

g'~

~

-~---.........._
. . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ..
Cillo, !

---·
-·..--·

~icj(eta'n -'S3

•

....... .

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

88

Ka.k,~~Morgan.

. _ , . . , _ , , . . _ _ 1 p.m.

~.-~. 3

Rlmera

directs i he play, which:for .ihe
pull!ic; .
focuses on ·'the i:ouples' -.ttempt to . $1 .50 for the -u.t e com":u.:::%i, iind
define their Individual worth will! In . senior citizens. Tltay-C81Lbe.Hali .Tilled ·
1
In
plays

831-e6211.

- - - b y - - -.

,.

Two married couplaa a.rchlng tor · like The Hot I Banlmpre aiid The
new meaning In their relationships ·are · of Eldrl.ch, has experlmel'!ted with oew
portrayed J n award-winning playwnght . theatrical · styfaa. M.-oy j)ell- hla
Lanfoid Wilson's Serenading Louie, - approach has made him one.of the tnOSt .
which will be staged here April 13-18 consistently exciting A,merlcan playand 20-23
wrig!tts.
- · ·
•
Curtain' time ·will be. il'- p.m. In the
serenading Loulll disPlaY-a h(a "c6n- .
Harriman Theater Studio, Main Straat.
tlnull\g effort to combine 1B8IIelll: and
The production filatures four U/B abaurdlst ·.-techniques · to captUAI a
acting majora: Vickie Harris, Annette. partlcularmodem w ·e.ocattw. picture
Maslowski, Keith Watts · and Paul . of lite," lheatre pepartrt18!1t , IOU(C81

IActuror (Cooch/Aaol. ProiMS0i')-Ra&lt;:o118 ,
Alhlelics &amp; Reloledln&amp;lrucllon , F·8021 .
, . _ n t, Ubrorlon (infofmollcln : Sorvicesl
lnlor·libnlf'y .__,~~Sciences 1.1&gt;&lt;8/Y. F·8022.
.
Aoolotont Librarian (Science &amp; E!igineoring
Reference Ubnlrian~ &amp; Engnoomg Llbrary, F-8023 .
Vllltlng Aoolo18nt Prot....,._ American SbJd.
ies/Biack Studios, F-8024.Loclurw, o-t·lirn&amp;-Counselor Educollon, :f.

8025.
Vloltlog Aoolstanl
Aslronomy, F-8028.

•
Proi-;:;Physics

&amp;

Lecturer, part- ~ Department
(OeV&lt;IIopmenlal Pre-School), F-8027.
Aooiotonl
Philosophical &amp;

Proi"--Social.

Hislorical Foundations , F·8028.
Aaala.. nt

Of Aa~late

Profnaor-Archltec·

lure , F•8029.

Anlatant or Auoclet• Prof.. aor-Dentistry,

F·8030.

•

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL 9 NO. 24 MARCl;f 23, 1978

' Spare us'
That's what SUNY wants lawmakers
- -- to do in terms of a bill that
c~uld put research in a straitjacket
SUNY wants to be exempted from · some time used to Inhibit the lrae flow
of reaewch Ideas and lntetlactual
pending State legislation which th..-Investigation."·
- ens to Impose even more rad ' - ori
In recent yew.. he polnta out, there
~h funding and will undoubtedly
haa been subetantlal reduction In the
jangiJI faculty nervas.
amOimt of money available for~.
- State University repreaentatlvaa are
and competition for It haa ~*:orne
meeting with the Legislature's Finance
lnt.-lfled. "To subject this procea t o
Cornmitt"" this week In an effort to
an additional Stale approval ptOCedure
hava SUNY excluded from provisions of
which can retuae to accept granta or ·
the bill which would put all federal and
negate ongoing .-d1 activttles ·
noll-stale lunda under control q_f the
through the allilual r8VIew process may Legislature (see Reporter, February 23).
In · essen c.,- the bill would require
=~Yh~~:"btal~::rf.!' the efforts
consent of the bureaucracy before any
State agency can apply lor or undertake
any projecl funded by outside grants, or
Why not -raue .--i:h? evan use federal funds tor student ald.
On the other hand, GO-rdon says, "the
It ' would make use of 'such funds
encouragement of r - c h actlvltlea
.subject to annual leglslatlve review and
offers the potential for posltlva results
not only to the University but to the ·
State as well, both In terms of enhanced
and would have to be reappropriated by
lawmakers each year. •
W.":t~~en.~:~~e~~~~~=~~tsi~ .
SUNY has already been given a waiver
spend over $28 billion on .._-ch and
from provisions of the act which call lor
development In the next fiscal year, he
the Director of the Budgat to approve
aays. "'n the basis of past
applications but, according to Herb
perlormance, less than 6 per cent of
Gordon, deputy to the chancellor for
these monies will come to all
governll)ental relations, this "does not
Institutions In New . York State, while
exempt either the acceptance of those
over 25 per cent will go to Cellfornla."
proposed _revlew and .--oprla~~l!sor ~r:~ ~~ex=:ur:.:'J This
tlon process Will present aerloua
obstacles
to effo.rta to radreaa New
~r~:~ t~g~~~~e ,~f:P~J::u~~

·fg'l:"~v:,~ Pnraa"~;~r~r~e~~~~~ ~~~~

1

Unaccusto,med as we are to public
successes, we're tops in wrestling
~1'1~t,,there's no negative side to it, unless ...

: - -='1
•

·-

U/&amp; len:t.comfortable with success,
~~· t~ be ':'lden_tltled -wit!!_ ' It;

ow.- Ia

a llellyaclllng, dOomedily

legal aid
The faculty-staff representation bal-

lleC~· York Educator~ Aasoclatlon
(NYEA) laat week received a temporery
1'81111ainlng order granting that organizat i o n - . rights to SUNY campuses.
The Albany Special Term Court
signed the order effectlva. until March
21. On that dete1 _~he Court will hear
arv-ta .nd 11111ermlne-- whether or
not It will be-l*"'anent.
NYEA recruiters, trying to line up
algnature carda In order to mount a

=-~~~~~~~~~~':
by the Office of Emplqyea Relations
until May 1.

,,:cg;;::n~N~e~;..;~~_'m~~ ~!
1881~

the right of all faculty members
and professionals to discuss the laauea
with anyone they chooae. Second, It
wiU bring to an end weeks of
cooperative efforts between the State,
lila SUNY peraonnel ofl!cea, loj::aJ UUP
._,.. and Campus security guards.
All o"hoae elforta hava been aimed at
-"ling a succeaslul election

challenge."

~~~·~del~~!!,-· ~:X:f~;

out~ facu)ty who
view rese.ch as fundamental to their
some o'7 our

Serious philosophiCal quaatlona
proc1::~~nalse'f.r ~~fi C:.., d also
Gordon says this proposed "prOC!ISS
lmpoee employment policy P!QIIIema.
raises serious and fundamental philoIndividuals on the~ Foundation
"No, no, NO! " Michael Insists. " Let's
sor,hlcal questions about the relation-~!can be termlflalad a.lly when
~..talk-ourJoio-~.tallm-"
·---~ It
I
-Ajlliala IJI!.~t.
0
811(1 the -rlgtita Of ~ Hai'cllock
p~m~unesearch In .an lndellendent .and
He applies a flying headlock and we
creatlva manner." Too, Gorilon lndldo - talk about his 19n-78 team,
cates In an assessment of the bill now
which:
~
being circulated to SUNY presidents
Studanta -lei be affectad ·
•had an overall season record of 13-3
and to staff of the legislative fiscal
Leglalatlva fiddling with atudent
In dual meet competition;
comrtrlttees, multiple year projects
financial aids, Gord9fl argues, would be
•won the NCAA Division Ill National
could not be planned or conducted
qulnteg-~loonuasl: ap"propriFinalatappllonarovf..Sora at?~
Wrestling Championship at Wheaton
because annual review could terminate
Co · ~
College, Illinois last week;
them before completion.
dent aid are often completed vary late In
•Is the bast team he's ever coached
Research Is sometimes directed
tha year and Impose time
toward the "controversial ," Gordon
restraints on our ability to Inform
(In 10 years) and U/B's first national
champion In any sport;
notes. There Is a " vary real fear af the
atudents of the available aid and to
•opened the season at the RIT
campus level that monetlll)' conslderacomplete the necessery proceaalng.
Invitational Tournament, where , It
lions, regard leas of the goOd Intentions
Under current conditions, we haYS
finished first- ahead of Big 10 Power,
of the framers of this bill, might be at
·-·-rCIIIIlniHjocbl,'-2,ool2
Ohio State, and In front of Kent State
(which went on to be 19n-7s champs
of the Mid-America Conference);
•won the New York State Collegiate
Wrestling Championship In competition
with 17 other teams, llnlshlng 20 points
ahead of second-place St . Lawrence;
and
•held Its own (3-2) In the big-time
Eastern Wrestling League (against the
Dr. John Hubbard
likes of Pittstiurgh,- Penn State, Lock
Havan, Bl6omsburg, Clevaland State
wants us to think
and West Virginia), but Is retiring from
that way. See
that level of competition In the future. .
. ThE&gt; squad was " periectly balanced"
page 10.
between the seasoned experience of Its
seniors and the "lnfactlous enttwslasm
of a couple of freshmen" [the Jacoutot
brothers, Tom and Mike), Michael says.
Not to be outdone
Co-eaotalns Bruce Hadsell and Kirk
Anderson displayed ·~remendous leadby last week's China
.ershlp,~· ·complemented each other
Night, many of the
. "basu_tlfully," helped the equed "weath·_er'' the Inevitable ·crises that "every
rest of. the U/B
t_eam experiences."
•
8

·-=

approach to the world. eaaa..draia the
patron saint of our cult ol-gloom.
Ueually, our athletic teams don't do
any more than anyone else to shake the
peaatmlam.
NoW, though, here's wrestling coach
Ed MlchMI, one linger ralaed, not the
_middle one In umbrage or defiance, but'
the Index linger, apTnnlng wildly In a
circle.
"We're No.1," Michaelis saying.
"No I lin the nation."
We don't wantto know.
,
• Surely It's only because we used to
be Dlvtslon I (big-time) In Intercollegiate wrestling, and then stepped down to
Division 111:
•
That's what we'1e No.1 in, by lhl! way
- Dlvlal6n Ill. It's like Notre Dame
~=\ry~~~C::I;;J~,againat Bob Jones .
So let's do the usual story. Let's talk
about how the Inadequate facilities at
Clark Hall sap morale and really are
actionable under the Human Rights Act
of ....

NYEA gets

approval will be conducted on an annual
=~~~spite the length of the grant

8

1

i-a"?

r--------------.,...-----.. . -;__.;_;_.;......,.
Inside ...
Big

nesta

'Tough'
The group was mentally end
phyalcally "tough," each member ready
and willl~ to com~te, despite Injury
or Illness. 'You don t train tor four years

~~:., ~fTrJ::C::u~~~~~~d[g~ ~~!

- gtl)ls at their Olymplca, the national
championships .
Six of the men were named to the
NCAA's All-American Wrestling team:
Mike Jacoutot, who.was ranked-&lt;IBCOnd
nationally In the 126-pound class; Kirk
An.deraon, listed third at 150 pounds;
Bruce Hadsell, Y9tad fifth at 158; Dave
Mitchell, fourth at tn pounds; Jeff
Wheeler, fourtb at190 pounds; and Paul
~~~~ ,r.lcked third In the heavyweight

_

0

Dropping to. Division Ill from Division
I had nothing to do with this success,
•See 'No.1 ,' page 2, col. 1

' Birdies were flying as
UIB's badminton club
celebrated its fifth
birthday with a
tournament: See
page '9.

Flak
That's what Jeff
Lessoff has for Rich
Mottand the
Spectrum. See his
views on page 4.

international
community had a
fiesta this week. See
pages 6 and 7 .

�.....
llorch23, 1171

1

JOb offers
.·tor grads up
31 per -cent ,
Job· offers for bachelor's degree
candidates are up 31 per cent from last
year, according to a recent survey of the
College Placement Council (CPC).
The CPC survey Is besed on offArs
made to college students ln a .broad
range of occupations, except teaching.
The data come from 158 colleges and
universities throughout the country.
At toe ·bachelor's level, engineering
majors have experienced the " Jargest
· Increase with 44 per cent more lob
offers than last year at this time. Job
seekers In sclenUflc dlscll&gt;lln&amp;s have
enjoyed a 35 per cent Increase. Offers to
those In business-related disciplines
are up by 16 per cent; offMI In
liumanltles and social sciences·, by 8
percent.
The outlook, unfortunately, Is not as
rosy for job candidates with greduete
degrees. -Master's candidates have
racelved 5 per cent fewtN job offers this
year to-dele while doctpral candidates
hBWI received approximately the same

nu~~,:~%'J;e:fe-y flveTob offers
sllll go to men, offers to women are up
· 37 per cent compared to a "29 per cenL
· lncnsaae for men . At the master's level , ·
ihere has.been a one per cent decrease
In offers to women and a seven per cent
decniMe In those to men; Women's
·offera account for only 19 per cent of all
blichelor's offers and 17 per cent of job
offere to those with the mester's.

Hmm. Not much controveray there.
•
comparable to 90;o0o In the LA
MlchMIInalata. At Dtvislon I , - had no
ct&gt;llseum.
OK. OK. All that's fine. Let's try one
utenal¥8 qrants-ln-alda, couldn't really
more time: what about all · these dirty
"-bbd lana ·
.
Oolnpilte IIIOIIelerlly with others at tnat
swest sox. hanging ~und Clarl&lt; Hall.
Besides, the fans we d&lt;f have are · ..Surely the situation Is worse here than
level. he says. All our 'guys came here
rabid,
Michael
boasts.
"The
teams
from
without acllolarahlpa, just like the rules
elsewhere. It · has to constitute an
M~~acr'=R!1'd~~~f:rlf~~m~:::
Pennsylvania hate to come In here.
tor Division Ill dictate. So - waten't
environmental
pollution • hazartl.
Shouldn't a committee be formed to
They've made 39 per cent more job
. ~/:~'!Po~!::. " little" guys; we're • They call It the Bulls' Den." Our fans
give 'em fits.
lnves~ate that .... ?
offers, accounting lor 68 per cent of all
Yes, bot will the fans love to hate our
Well where'a thp "real" story? Surely
Some observers say It was a cobra . offers at the bachelor's level. The
new SUNY rivals (we're entering the
haYing to step down the program raises
federal government shows _the greatest
hold. Others think It was just a swift
SUNY conference next year) like they
the coach's h8ckles.
percentage increase; federal job offers
kick.
·
did the Pennsylvanians? Surely this Is
"No. I told you we had no
are up 59 per cent oven lest year. Job
Whatever, the · Reporter Is out the - offers from business have Increased 12
grounds for discontent.
acllolarehlpa. Were not changing
door, the interview concluded.
.
"Well, we've always wrestled Cortanything. We're still committed to
percent.
Ed Michael can be heard Inside, .
land, Brockport and Binghamton and
excelleDCe."
Only three of 15 employer categories
greetlna a potential recru it.
But It's bound to hurt recruiting, . we're going .to continue to schedule as
In ·the private sector -show reduced
many sCH:alled big-lime opponents es
"HI: " he says. "Welcome to U/B .
11ght? Who wants 'to settle for turkey
activity: chemical and drugs, metals
We'reNo. 1."
•
we can ."
competition when he can have the !&gt;Ia
and metal products , and tire and
tJIM, Y.Mibl
rubber.
•
&lt;
r.1
Wrong, = n, Michael says. DIVIsion
At the master's level, decreases ln. job
001
offers have come In areas which are
p,enerally most active: business adr:nlnnational championships. And a kid who
(ln!m pog. , ,.col. 41
wlna on thla so-called lo_. plane Ia
~%e~ ~y~~nt~~n~~~~tm.~~\Ty
ellalble to _ . e for the _ov.ill
recognizes and accepts the Impropriety
and metallurgical sciences fle~ds are up
nallcinal title In hla weight claaa. Thl&amp;
of using. non-State funds-to circumvent
administrative burdens, New York State
1
_ ... f34-pouncl Division Ill winner Is
sl'!led legislative Intent." ;;
~~:.!~~~~ 1:.1atWs~~~~/:;e. but
lhe Division I winner at hla weight, too.
In
terms
of average stertlrig salaries
T"- .cMnge In ~atua mey 8Y8II wQrk
But
SUNY
does
not
believe
that
these
allowed to uea the maximum .federal
·at the becl\elor's level, petroleum
tor.:.!~lcheet isaya.
problems exist 'w ith regard to funds
funds for other reasons, It Is simply
engineering Is at the top with $1,845 a
reallocated
to
ll!lother
state.
and
tile
month . The runner up Is chemical
Si:it'A kid who's a tough ~ltor.
·fl:'.:gh
people of this state, parficularty
engineering at $1,506. One of the
wltllb18ereon Dlvlalol&gt; 1 glory probably
bill which Is Intended to address these
students and their parents, will simply
largest percent11ge l ncrea~aln salaries
wouiCIII, ,._ come hens anyway. If he
will
''seriously
Testrlct
and
'problems
loal that additional ald."
-.,..mly ~In the "big time," have
jeopardize - and In some cases totally . has been .noted In computer sclencse, a
Income
reimbursable
accounts,
10 per cent gain to $1,240' ll month.
the~JICIWI!r8 with acllo'-tahlpa, Big 8 ~ Which now provide a flexible means of
eliminate a wide range of basic
Lowest startfng averages· are being
or Blii 10 sChool&amp;, .would more than · PW~ormlng functions acknowledged to
offered to those with the b8chelor'a In
llkeiV"-wooed and won him.
W~!~'!~rc~ndh~ver~l!~;l~~rv ~ humanities
be appropriate public policy actfvltles,
($829) and social SCiet)e&amp;S
On the other hand, a good athlete
supported
by
the
Stele
of
New
York
or
would haye their flexibility lesaeoed
($838).
almlnQ for Dlvtalon Ill might have
under the proposal, Gordon says.
contr:tbuted to Its well being .. ··llt,wlll]
pnwloualy ahlad away from us.
88
Faculty..Student Asaoclatlbn serv
_
Ices
"I'll let you know how It tuma oul In
~::~ft~ne~~m~':f~::n~~~~~ntt~e ~~~~~
could be ad-sely affected, too •.
three v-a." Mlcheet grtna.
month' to start. ~n MBA grad with a
distinguished faculty .... "
technical undergraduate &lt;legree Is
Coulcl ..............lcaa
.
!lmong the local. sponsor~ of the bill
commanding an average $1 ;659, while
are: Senators McFarland, Present, and
11tat has to I1IMII that next year's
an
Individual with a master's In
tl~~~~~
ar~~':d~ii1::;
Taurlello,
and
Assemblymen
Fremgoing to be a d/-ter. Becauea all but
mlng, Gorski, Greco, Hoyt, Kesne, and
non..stete funds should be carefully
two on thla yeW's squad .-. leaving?
::'~:~~~1~~n::;;~~th'fo' sr~t an
administered and evaluated In the
Walsh.
Now
got the crlala story:
At the doctoral level, chemistry and
IIOmlndoua Y.,.. lllead; rabulldlng.
Maybe he'll talk about hOW the
a . . - t of Cllrk Gym napela
prl)lpeCI&amp;?
, ~gh;~~~lna'::~g ~
~~~
w.t a minute, MlchMI soothes:
respectl""ly.
_ '·
"Any ooech who writes off a whole
- . . . . he'a 'Nbulldlng' Ia
.
CORREcnON ·
ualngtMI•acrutch. YOUCMI win with
..._blyman G . " - Frem,i,lng,
the Inclusion of the'Xudubon ~ay
·n. lllecllcal School's thlnl an1111111
a~ team. And you CMI loea With
Buawell Day Ia ~ lor April 4
·
llinlorl. .,...... me,JW-Il'-l.
~ who 'beg off' ~·their
. thla.
A aclaftHflc ~ will
begin at 2 p.m. In G-28 Farber Hall with
...., 11 '¥ouna' don't 1wtn too much."-.
ll'nd MlahMT cloel win; a Ollila the· Audubon Plrkway Bftdge; will north of the campus.
~ .
. • · ai'!C!pllon and dinner lol!owlna.
be ,_..., tw the Slate
~~~~~~~·
* ' - cMbrlltad officially
D1partJRent or Tranaportatlon (DOT} on _
h1a 10Qih *'lillY •"aooech).
Mlcllall II Iiilo full-time .-ultlng
~In Albany.
·up with the beat poalble
(. Three W_!IStern N!IW "york Congresslty and Dr. Harold. L. COhen, dean of the
c::!.,~ tor nat fall - with only
utend 1.8 mllea from Maple Road
men are among speakers who will
School of Architecture and Environ~ • wfllniiiG .........
northeaatal1y to about 700 fast north of
address • the UIB "Alumni Day," .• mental Design, will talk about "brain
North F.on111t Road,
In the Town of
Saturday, Aprll8, at Amherst.
power'' as a prlmat'f resource In
M -~;
Ia waiting In
.._IIII.M
--.rlaoftto
Amherat.
Entitled •outlook: The Next D!loade,"
revitalizing Buffalo.
... . . . .
up and ileltvw
It was noted by Aaeamblyinan
the day-long forum will ' exsmlne the
Dr. John Naughton , desn of the
iiitJi1ifii
. !lllllllllr. 1llere Ia
Frammlng that the lmpro-.emente will
.fut)IRI and howe-to 111"MJ8111for it.
School of Mealclne, and , Joan E.
InClude . . . , . _ , of tha p111881111~
Representatives John J . LaFalce,
~~ine~~mm~rslo~~·lro~~~ntCou.:'~a
... eupport?
Henry J. Nowak and .Jack Kemp will
Ptannlng, are also scheduled to speak.
U/B support for
Qlllllll from A to B •
discuss lsaues such as re-energizing
Open to the public, the forum will be
, _ alignment to the of the
the looal economy lhroull!:&gt; tax cuts,
held In Capen Hall from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m .
_ l h o i l l d _tum 111m Into a
exlatlng route.
and will be moderated by the Hon. M.
Part of the preeent Millereport route · small business assistance and public
works _esa,atlmulus to capital projects.
Delores Denman, New York State
will be I~ Into a two lane
"'n the land of the
man Ia ldng," he
eamce road ad~t to the new
.President Robert L. Ketler will speak
Supreme Court Justice. 1 •
1M! attandanCe Ia
lour'- facility.
on U/B es the key to Intellectual and
Registration Information Is available
Frammlng made specific reference to
~ ........ 1,000 and at UIB that's
economic development in the communat the Alumni -Association (831-4121) .
,_,...1,col.2)

818

~~ ~~~~~r .:flo

at= ":"' ~~~-

•Research straitjacket

~N::~07n e;JI6::::"'~~Pen"~.~~~·.~i

::?:.l~f?l=:r~ ':;r':9.:~~":

~~t' ~r' ~~~ ~~~':: ~· .~0~~

b~o~linS.,~,~~~~- ~~:J:n'Za: ~~~=

dl~~=~'';.';~ ~~~:"~'We~ \'1~can~

......... .......,
-w

due_

Millersport bids
at DOT by next week

~'fo,'*,:!;,u~:Ct~no~ ~. ~:""~';'8 ~~~s er:J' ~
~~~~~~~":'d ~":~~t ~":C::i;;~X~~~re''!r~
~te ~by~~hec:8'-r.:lli

an

--~---c.-t~one.
~~

=:::::~~·~.::'a

~':l:'~~~:r~~n.;:h:':.~t:'!~~~~~

";!,at'f

v-:

·'Alumni Day' wilr·took at future

�March 23, 1171

at ,.,wart&lt; State Col• • In S~uae,
In Hew Vorl&lt; CitY, and In e tnriellng
exhlbltlolr mo!Mied by the NatiOMI
Mueeum of Men, Ottawa. He Ia a

tyon$

co-founder and board member of the
International Native Amerlcen · Council
of the Arta, an .:Maor to a ~
exhibit on "The "*'Pte of the
Longhouae" of the Buffalo and £r1e
County Historical Society, and the
organlzw of • - - of axlllbltlona of .

He heads
Native American
Studies here

~-=~r~~~~~o~

John Mohawk, a Native AmericarJ
graduate student here a few years ago,
had the Idea of using land on his
.-vatlon to plant a garden ·~he way It
used to be done." ·
He wanted to cultivate perhaps up to
20 varieties of Indian beans, traditional
, foods of his people, now fallen Into
disuse. He hoped to revive an almost
forgotten Indian potato st,..ln which
once yielded e hearty, s!11aller potato
that could be stored for up to two years
without losing quality.
Under U/B's unique Native American
Studies program, Mohawk was able to .
attempt the prct]ect- tor 12 hours of
academic credit. ·
'·
When the harvest came that fall , his.
tarm (which also produced conventional
truck-farming crops) yielded tour tons
ot Hubbard squash, five to six tons of
Indian corn ; tour tons of ordinary
~tatoes , and tour to live tons of rad

National Council on the Me.
Lyons daatgned and provklad text lor
the "Madallle Hlatory of the Amark:8n
Indian," acommemoratlwt-*1-..d
by the Franklin Mint laat ~- Aa an
encore, he Ia now at WOI1t on • - ' depleting outatandlng Indian chlefa.
A Turtle Clan ~ In the
Onondaga nation, he haa beWI a
resource peraon to the Indian Polley
Review Commlaalon In W88hlngton,
was a member of the Arnenc.t Indian ·
·lnatltute Planning Commmee, and to.
served ""'a repntSMtatlve of hla people
at lnt81J11itlonal and .regional meetings
of Indian orgjlntzatlona, such 'aa the
National Congress of American Indiana.
He has been Involved In negotiating
treaties and reservation disputes under
auspices of the American Arbitration
Association. He met with former
President Gerald Ford on Indian affairs,
sat tor a term as Indian reprelljlll_tlltlve
on the board • of .the Corpo..ucin lor .
Public Broadcasting, was a consultant '
to the Smithsonian, and, mori1"1'1icently,
declined an Invitation to ·awe the
Carter-Mondale administration,,
That's only·a sketchy outline.

v~~~Yesb~,a~sdia~te~~~~~~\ ~~s;.~g~!

successfuJ.wlth the Indian potato . He
also organized his community to come
Into Buffalo and sell its produce. Mon~y
went tciouv equipment tor the farm . H1s
group ' disttlbuted tree food all over
~oe troqudl s Six N.ation league.
The .elW'iPie of this "educated"
young m•r· retumlnp home to help his
commlinlty, displayong Interest In old
traditions, did not go unnoticed by his
elders, · many of whom seriously
mistrust the white man's educetlonal
programs as disruptive influences on
Indian wa~s.
,

Ta.;;~~':::!s~en

Illustrates a major
thrust of the·'Natlve American ·Studies
Program hera: to tum young Indians
back to their traditions, back to the
service of their communities.
Heal! of the Program Is Orsn Lyons
(Jo-Ag-Quls-Ho to the Onondaga) who
Is himself both a modern and trlldltional
Indian, active in Native American aff~urs _
while also - a tenured assocoate
protesaor in American Studies, an
accomplished artist and a sportsman of
wide reputation.
Lyons can tell many success stories
about graduates of his program which
have never been repqrted In the
ctaasnotes section of the UIB Alumnf
News.
Mohawk Is now, among other things, ·
editor of the awarli-wlnning ·newspaper, .
Al!wesasn.ll Notes, the official publication of the Mohawk Nation. This tabloid
whoae official publisher Is U/B ,
won a Robert F. Kennejlv Memorial
Foundation Journalism Award Special
Citation In 1973. It received a grant from
the World Council of Churches: Special
Fund to Combat Racism ln&gt;1975, and Is
considered by many, Lyons says, to be

~':llt~~~':,~d N~~~~la~~nertgm~"':',;

maintained on the Mohawk Nation at
Akwesaane, near Hogansburg, N.Y.
Two women graduates of the Native
American
Studies
Program
have
assumed high ceremonial positions in
their nations: one now serves as a Clan
mother; another Is a faith keeper.
' Still another student, a nursing major
who discovered the Program In her
senior year, decided not to nurse In a
Buffalo hospital aa she had planned but
to return to a reservation and aid her
people.
As a nisult of Lyons' wide-ranging
~i~lpation In Indian affairs, the LI/B
proitram has an " entree" to lnd1an
· cutfufe does not simply look at it from
the outside as some similar programs at
other universities do. Many Indian students are able to do field work on
proJects ranging from the likes of
Mbhawk's garden to studying and
masteflng ancient ritual trad_l~lons .
White men interested , too
For many white American students,
also Indian history and culture hold
partt'cular Interest. Even though Indian
tradition prohibits these students from
doing extensive fieldwork, they "!'e
nonelheless attracted to the program on

lari~~~~~g':-Brown ,

who wrote Bury
My Heart at Wounded Knee, Indicates
that tbe white man's fascination ~lth
Indian culture has been a long-standong
one. Rese h at western unlver~itles ,
he notes, ~as uncoverec/ literally
hundreds o documented cases of
European settlers In the early West

1

What needs lmprowtng?
language Is the soul. of a culture."
ru~nlng away to become pari 'ot the
The U/B program seeks to ·maintain
Indigenous Indian culture. Interestingly
the
native languages, too; to prove that
enough, Brown reports , there are few
education need not be a divisive lind
documented cases of Indians voluntardisruptive influence.
ily embracing the white man's world .
In
Native
Those concentrating
The Native American P.rOfjram at U/B
American Studies design their own
began In the late 1960s, Lyons reports,
Is
true
throughout
programs.
This
when two undergraduates. Barry White
American Studies, of which, to be
and Mohawk. determi ned that there was
p~eclse, Native American Studies Is a
no haven tonhelr Interests In the U/B
subprogram .
.
currlculum. Instructional mainstays at
the
Since Buffalo has historically been a
graduate level are Independent study,
~~~~r~o~~~u'~g~:,n"i:i'r~ei&gt;r;~~a".;: directed research , and fleldworl&lt;. On the
latter iron!, Lyons makes sure to go
of Indian Studies here wou ld be a
slowly and cautiously so as not to tread
natural. They approached American
on the tolerance of wary Indian elders
Studies and were invited to come In
of whom have been burned by
(some
under the wing o f that agency-under
overly snoopy, high-handed anth~
whose auspices other strong minorities
pologlcal researchers from within th1s
efforts (Puerto Rican and Women 's
very Institution). On the undergraduate
Studies) have also developed.
level, courses such· as "Contempo~
Needing a professor to set-up and
Problems of the _American Indians, '
oversee the effort, t~e 1\NO approached
"Natural World vs. ·Legal World,''
Lyo'ns at a meeting of the Six Nations In
"Savage
Women ,'' " Native American
nearby Canada. His background .was
Aesthetics ,'' and the " Native American
not In teaching, he protested. He had
Legal Situation" are also on the books.
been working for 11 years at Norcross
Greeting Cards, . most recently as that
Lyons has hfa feet In both worlds
firm's director of seasonal lines,
Lyons himself has become sort of an
.responsible tor the work of approxl·
International spokesman both for
mately 300 artists. He had never
Indians and tor "the natural world,''
having just last fall attended the
International Conference on Discrimina. Mohawk and
White
prevailed,
tion against Indigenous People of the
however. Lyons came to campus to talk
Americas held in Geneva. There he
held forth on the concern American
a~~~h~s now. been on the U/B faculty
Indians have about energy resources
since 1971 . He Is the faculty In Native
located on Indian lands and about the
American Studies, handling the work _of
environment .
approximately 20 or so graduate
That TV spot showing an American
students, and teaching a two-semester
Indian from another era crying over the
undergraduate course In Native Ameridesecrati on ol the landscape wasn't all
can History, a course he hopes to
Madison Avenue fancy , apparently.
expand to tour semesters in the near
" Someone has to speak tor the natural
future . "There's so much to cover, that I
world, " Lyons says, "for the forests, the
rarely repeat much of the material from
water
the animals, our natural
resources. I spoke In behalf of them ."
semester to semester." That course
Lyons Is a unique figure, at home and
enrolls between 50 and 60.
.
Four· grad assistants, one teachmg
respected In two cultures.
In the white man's world, he· has
assistant and a lecturer round out the
instructional staff at the undergrad
served In the U.S. Army, cfone
free-lance art and illustration work, and
lev-f'~ere's a Qeed tor teachers for a been a visiting lecturer and professor at
growing riumt5ef of Native American
Cazenovia College, SUC/Oswego and
Studies Programs around the nation,
.Hamilton . Holding the B.A. from the
Lyons say·s. So ·that's an iJnporlant
Syracuse College of Fine Arts, he Is
aspect of the local program , one which
working toward the M.A. in history and
could .be- significantly enpance&lt;l , he
museum technology at Oneonta and Is
·noted , if American Studies were
a consulting reviewer to the Syracuse
permitted
to
offer
doctoral
work.
University
Press.
.....
.
Lyons was an all-American lacrosse
Education used to separate
goalie while an undergraduate and is a
Education has been traditionally used
member of the National Indian Athletic
by the white man to separate young
Hall of Fame. A major lacrosse award in
Indians from their culture , Lyons says .
his honor, the "Oren Lyons Cup,'' Is
Because of this, the very Idea of
presented annually to the outstanding
sehoollng has unpleasant connotations
goalie In the North American Lacrosse
tor Indian adut1s-. -on· the Onondaga
Association. He was elected to the
. reservation , tor example, a kindergarten
National Indian Athletic Hall of Fame In
through sixth grade school has stood •
1970, and was C&lt;&gt;"founder, arl director
tor years as an allen presence . Children
and publisher of International Lacrosse
enter as Indians but emerge speaki ng "a
Magazine In the 1960's.
foreign language,'' spouting off Ideas
His artwork represents another whole
which totalfy -alienate their elders .
facet of his career. " I'm basically an
Indian children are punished If they
artist," Lyons says .
speak their own language in school,
His paintings have been shown on the
Lyons says . T he Idea Is to separate
Onondaga Reservation, In Binghamton,
them from that language. " Because

=:

~=~~~~~ f~at ~r'!'~r~ !'i ,r~~~essor,

Lyons Is openly critical of the
way recent U.S. laglslatlon affecting
Indian education (Title IV laglslatlonlls
being Implemented. Restrictions mposed by government ~utatlons
(asking tor pled!les of open access and
non-dlscrimlnahon) have made Indian
leaders reluctant to accept funds tor
programs on their reservations. ''Too

m~~Yt~l~n:; i'r:':f'~ ~":.ts:'.:· of

Native American lite, he Indicates, the
Bureau ot Indian · Affairs wants to
control things.
Where educat- _ . , . . . .
administered ott the reservations, such
as in and around Syral:use, fli8 lunda
aren't being used for reat -::-;:Native
Americans, Lyons feels. The Syracuae
program defines aa an ellglbli! Native
American anyone with at leaSt 1/16

.blood
~~:.f ~!~·a:n~=~a~,:;:~~.J"a!:
'
•. ,

All · of American educetiOii,' could

·~':::!t:f.ro=m~h ~~t:lt'Tri.

knowledge," he says, taking a Slow .P.uff
on his ever-present pipe;'
But
education Is relative. Hitler's. youth
were probably the best educettd In the
world, but wfrat did they lawn?" The
pressing neilds of the U.S. require
Individuals with Ingenuity, people who
can thlrik creatively and Independently,
Lyons believes. "We're turning out too.
many specialists; we need more
'general practitioners.'
"You know," he continues, "Indian
people have a lot ot11ood Idees about
education . The American education
system lacks human motlvatf9n. Those
responsible tor It aren't listening to
human needs; they're orily serving

tecJ:~~:og~":,:l~~~~~tes at u/B
needs, In Lyons view, Is a victory In Its
five-year batUe tor authorization for a
Ph .D. pr~rsm. 'We lose many serious
students,' he laments' 'We also need a
line so a director for the total American

~~~~~~!_P.r~;S:~ ~_:r~g~•M=

faculty member in Native Am"!lcan
Studies.
'We've get to • break through the
political barriers to. get the kind of
funding this vital , alive and different
program deserves,'' he says.
U/B has about 60 Native American

~~g~n~~e ~·:.w!~~;,..'rr:'~ st~~'t~:,~e~i

restricted to them (or them to It,
obviously), they are a primary concern
to ~yons . " A lot oft hem , we don't see at
all, of course. About 35 we see off 11nd
on . Maybe f?etween 15 and 20 ar~ active
in the program."
He'd like to see them all open their
eyes to their heritage, go horne and get
Involved .
•
The greatest satisfaction in his work
is In seeing Oraduates back on their
reservations, working closely with their
elders 1n the traditional minner, feet
firmly entangled in their roots , proud,
as he Is, to be Indian.
"It makes the old people smile,"
Lyons beams .

�Bunuel

Lessoff

His new film has a richness,
is doing good business, .a nd
the theatre deserves campus support

Ousted Sub Board
-official blasts
Mott, Spectrum-

Director of Cultural AttaR

Filmmaker Luis Bunuel is now In his
late 70s, and never was his hand surer
than in his r-nt masteplece, · "That
Obscure Objact of Desire.' It is !' wise
. and witty II m, and, like all great art,
hasihe effortless look that comes when
the artist has complete command of his
material .
'
The plot , revolves . around the
obsessive· desire of wealthy, middleBlled Mathieu (played by Fernando Rey)
for a young woman, Conchita,· whose

==. c::a'..::nLt~~=

llaliona.
Leaaoff .,._ his claim on the fact
'IMI h e - U..-.ri)Onloualy- and, he
contends, lllegelly - removed from his
position as a Sub Board officer one
month prior to the &amp;lid of his term, for
"purely political niUO!lS ."
•
The eltuatlon Ia a complex one to
graap for thoee not steeped in the
In~• of etudent politics.
L.eeeolf, to begin with, was last year's
elected iiA vice Pf811dent for •Sub
ao.rd. Hfa term axplred Mwch 15 as did
the tenM of all other elected SA
officials for 11177-78.
,
The SA vice Pf811dent for Sub Board
Ia ona of five undergraduate repreaentat i - to that atudenl corporation (which
, _ . _ and dl"*'" lunda from
- . 1 U/B etudent .aeeoclatlona and
hel on Ita boenl repreaentatl- from
.-:11 group proportional to the atudent
populiltlon of .-:11). The other four SA
repa on Slab ao.rd ere eppolnted by the
SA ~t for terms ordinarily
expiring AjJrll 15. That Aprtl date Ia the
uauel ona for chenoeo- in SA

T~~~i11

follooring; Leaaoff as
ona of the fhe SA repreeentatlvea to
Sub ao.rd was eliGible to hold office
within the corporatron. He was elected
vice cllelnnen of the corporaUoo for a

~~~b TOS: ~~~rs

::
election)..

v'f:t"e:m.r, a vague

~~T.,~:b'.,~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~!~sn~~

---

B1111m wented him out, he aaya

ha':~o':t~":,·h~~j.;'i,' o'::'~ =~~ntly

'When I asked Molt for reasons, "
Lesaoff indicates, "he asld he'd Just
have to trust Jane and take her word for
it. • Lesaoff thinks Baum Is upset
only because he didn't support her. She
has told others "she can't wort&lt; with
him,".Lesaofl reports.

theta.:::'
.!': ::.~~~~~:''dfd~~
aood Job. She won't give me any

4o a

.
speciflca, though, Lesao_lf says.
That's because she can't substantiate
such '- chll{ge, he feels. "I've attended

Sub Board
byl- enacted making
possible ~~.\.'::s ~~ r;,~ tl:l~~':Pci'n:.'~h~:;~
for MY ··udenl government" to remove
)o"b~ay anyone can_say I didn't do my
at MY time, and without giving reasons, .
Too, ' Leaaoll said, The Spectrum ,
whose endorsement helped elect the
1
nof ,.... when that P98ed. but
eaya 111081 people thought · It would . rr:.,aenS:,::ru0.:: T:'"&amp;tt!an~~. h'res~li
contends, because he has been an
be liNd, except under the moll
..touaofcl~.
. outspoken 1:f.ltlc of its " shoddy
reporting" and "slanting" of the news.
He has been a champion of funding an
LAI8off. as a Sub
officer.
alternative student paper, aomethinP.
which he claims The Spectrum doesn t

11

=':,r::=.'":.~w::

-~~.:.!'::::C*'!'~-=

"ll::J

l:'::~-==~~~~ ::~~t:"ao'lt~~i.J:.el~~~ =!!'s"p!ft
e1noe hla tenn as en officer of the
corporation extends to Aprtl 15, Lesaoff
conlenda he should have
to atay on for a month.

~

allowed

1'he Identical eltuation OCCUtnld laat
y.-. helllkl; the 1M"-:! he rapteced ..
BA vice praeldlnt for Sub ao.rd was
..., • Sub a-d offl-. When that
lndlvkluel'a tenn as the elected SA
...,._.tatlve
expired, he etlll functioned as .,
the oorporatlon
o~

of

du::a.:r:.::::::::.-.::~- beer\"

.nowed to do the - - He chara81 he
OU8ted ~ prtmwlly lie did
nof " ' - ' the - l u i cendldate
forhlaOidSApoeltlon, J-Baum, but
- ' * I for her opponents.

. .I&amp;Jd
A eompvs community MW~paper puO·
Jls'-1 eoth 1hutsdoy br
Division of
l'ublk Afloln. sro•• ~~ty of N~
Ycri 01 ....,.., Edltorlol offiCes ore locoted ln •• Crofh: Holl. Amherst. , ....

,.._.,..__

t'-

.,._....oi.....,.,A"'*'
JNIItSI lloSAHTI$

....-eNol
IIOEIT
T M.Utffi

MOIWII'rGducflon
JOHif A. aouro

easily be a private joke of Bunuel's,
even maliciously contrived to fire up
avid symbol hunters.

By Eather Swartz

Jeff LMeoff, recently removed as vice
. cllelrmen of Su Board I by SA
Preelclent Rlehwd Mott, charged this
week that the new SA edmiNetratlon,
despite the hoopla .aoclated with its
CIIIIJ*gn,.:f':ta no ~e in the

my name wrong, cut ·my name out of
articles, and put my letters off the main
edltortal/oplnlon page when they print
them ." A recent headline on one of his
letters, ~&lt;More of Lessoft;" and a remark
by Jay Rosen in his column particularly _
"steam" him. Rosen wrote that "Mr.
Jeflray lesaQrl" (ale) was ending his
term as "Sub Board's Antilla (sic) the
Hun .• "He knows how to spell II)Y
name," Leaaoff asld . " It's a typical
thing they do when they're out for you:•
Ia The Spectrum out for "Antilla" also?"

N-tohl'm
Leaaofl asys the first he heard of his
dismissal was when he returned to
campus earty. last week after a long
weekend. "I got this phone call from
Rich Mott, telling me l'rrr through. " ·
Leaaoff says he ~~rgued with Molt,
asked quaatlonallbout why, until finally
Mott agreed to reconsider. Leier, there
was -a aecond call. Molt had
reconeldered: Leaaoff was still out.
· Then, Leaaoff received this -letter
from Mott:
"As per our convensalion of March
14th, I have reconsidered -my decision
to r8nlove you from the Boertt of
Dlractora of Sub Board I, Inc. Alter
giving the subject much thought 1 11111
feet that -igltlng all considerallcina I
have made the correct decision.
"Wblle I etHI eland on the correctness
of my decielon to remove you from the
Boertt, I believe I have~ unjust in my
handling of thla affair. It Ia for this
raeaon thet 1 would like to apologize to
you at this time."
What do8l that mean? Laaedff asks.
That Mott Ia embllmlaaed because of a
hlgh-handllcf political action,
he
.... ~ff,' page 5, col. 4

trying to get rid of him; on th·e contrary,
she Ia in the same relentless pursuit of
him as he of her. His need is to possess
her, hera is to torment him. Her
repertoire is endless an~ Inspired. She
is Indignant that he thinks his money
will buy her;' she claims to-be offended
that he would sully her alleged virginity;
she is tired; she Ia frightened; she
objects tha_t he is t[Ying to own her, to
deprive her of her . sovereignty as a

~~e h~h:::'.st~::s. ~':sres~~se l~

Mathieu's feverishly joyful " Today?" is
a capricious, "No. The day alter

tomorrow."

..

Alter she moves into his country
house in France, his anguish increases.
Now tllere are even greater possibilities
for her to frustrate his desire. She
sleeps with him occasionally- back to

de~i~~0'lo~~ut;o~~coc~5u~::'ed~o~!

claustrophobic, but Bunuel's perspective prevents that. There is a sizeable
cast of minor characters, each role
beautifully acted : Conchita's greedy
and exploitative moth81', murmuring her
hypocritical pieties, Mathieu's companions in the train compartment who
listen to and comment on his tall', his
sympathetic
cousin,
an
upperbourgeois like himself. The relationship
between Mathieu and his very civilized
valet, Martin, Ia well established in a
lew choice scenes. We are q1ede aware
of their mutual respect - lor each other
and for the unspoken class system
which separates them.
Bunuel'a added touch81
Bunuel opens the film further with
the warmth and lushness .of the
photqgraphy, and with the continuous
undercurrent of political terrorist
dlsturbancas. There is a smattering of
the inevitable Bunuel surrealism Mathieu incongruously slinging a
tramp's sack of belongings over the
shoulder· of his impeccably tailored
suit; two Spanish women tenderly
carrying a pig wrapped, like a baby, in a
shawl ; a woman sitting in a fashionable
shop window in Paris (we have seen her
in another small part earlier in the film) ,

~~~~~ul~u~\Ythye~~~~id~~st!~w.:'n~

~~-. ~~~~ !r3,~~~~~:~~~ 1:~~a~~m hr~ mud . And grotesquerJes, amusingly,
ingenious ways. Finally, Mathieu·, at
not repulsively, -presented - the rat
the end of his rope, throws her out . But · caught in a .trap in Mathieu's &lt;f!legant
they reunile in Seville, and his torture is
study, at a delicate moment; the fly
resumed, this time with the added pain
discovered floating in Mathieu's martini
of Jealousy.
at the posh restaurant he frequents; the
Mathieu's otherwise peerless urbanamiable dwarf,
a professor of
ity and civility are marred by the endless
re~"c:'n°~~p~~."'~f ~~~:s·to':.~fie~·p~~t=
humiliations he allows Conchita to
inflict on him. His passion ; his
~ichness of texture to the film.
foolishness and his suffering are fully
I was happy to have to hunt lor a
realized· in a Millantly restrained
parking space, to stand in line lor a
performance by Rey, that arouses ·our
ticket, even to forego buttered popcorn
- amusement and our compassion .
because there was too big a crowd. The
· Vaiu Cinema tried to bring first-run,
Two Conchltaa: -joke or aymbol
undubbed foreign films of high caliber
Bunuel has cast two women in the
to Buffalo. When they showed "The
role of Conchita; they literally alternate
Discreet Charms of the Bourgeoisie"
from scene to scene. Conchita I is
(another Bunuei masterpiece in. a
played by carole Bouquet , Who~
similar mode), a handful of&lt;~s sat in the
sensuality is calculating , composed,
thaatre, fearing, correctly, that ~he
occasl.onaily leering. Her alter ego,
Valu'a experiment would fail. It may
1
bean the location, which was ·a bit
~~~~~~~eM3~~f· bsn: ~~-~~i:'·o~ ·- have
off the beaten track. But the
the reasons for Bunuel's dual casting. It
Maple-Forest Theatre is close enough
could be that he wants to emphasize
to be considered an amenity of the
that the nature of desire is what is being
Amherst Campus. II "That Obscure
examined. The objects of desire are
Object of Desire'' is the kind' of movie
-. irrelevant (obscure), and the interthat the Maple-Forest plans to make
changeability of the two - women
available, the theatre certainly deserves
underscores this. Or it might just as _university support .
'

'Texas studen·ts vote to
~bolish their ~ove~nment
There'll be no in-fighting over student
¥ovemmen t-power at the. University of

·~yr~~:won:t

gov9n)ment.

be· any

stud~nt

st~enr&amp; :-m-fe~r:;.wi~~ A~;~r~ndhua'!'e

.
government for a V(hile."
Meanwhile, she added, the Students'
Association continues to function

=~= ,::ea=n.0~:.~':'~s

n'::r!J
that "the regents can still decPde that
students need a student_government."

decided to do away with their student
government. The measure passed by a
~gin of approximately 200 votes, out
of 5,000 cast , according to · the
Chronicle of Higher Education .
The Chronicle said the campaign
against student government was
'Editor:
spearheaded by en organization called
It has recently bean brought to my
the Coalition to Retire Aspiring .attention that the Reporter has only twoPolitlcoa. David Haug, a founder of the- full-time staff reporters. Therelore, In
coelltion. aaid afudenflfovernment had - tha interest of fairness. 1 wish to
been a "cruel joke" since 1971, when
acknowledge that fact. Apparently, the
· the :ro;:ts assumed authority for the
Irregular coverage of the Worl&lt;shop In
Marxist Studies is not the fault -of the
~OC:.:,~~n~f :,u~~~":erSl~"rc~h~.; Reporter's
"stall as I had previously
Students' Asaocletlon has control has
assumed.
This, of course, points to the
dropped from $700,000 to $45,000 per- larger problem
of general understaffing
year.
and concomitant overwo'rl&lt;lng of preThereas Strain, secretary of the
senti~ available University personnel.
Students' Association ; conceded , "It's
Sincerely,
possible there won 't be a student
-G-Grabliler

He didn't know
how few we are

�M1rch 23, 1171

Psychic
flunks· test,
Kurtz .sc;tys
By Milt Carlin

•Lessoff
u.--4.col.2)

Interprets.
•
Baum, L9880ff says, "doean'l know

Support the ACLU,
Ralston recommends

Editor:
Like John Corcoran, I am dls91ayed
Susie Cottrell, a 20-yeer-old selfby the recent support of the American
described psychic, carne to the U/B
Civil Liberties Union for the prop&lt;:&gt;sed
Ridge Lea campus to have her powers
march of the American Nazi Party
checked out last Thursday and returned
through Skokie, Illinois. In this
to her farm home in Kansas, branded a
Instance, It seems to me, the ACLU has
talented cardshark.
.
- Interpreted First Amendment guaranFor Susie, who voluntarily underwem
tees more absolutely than Is desirable
a series of day-lOng tests In the newly
or traditionaL But, unlike Prof.
established Laboratory •or the Scien~~~ran , I continue to support the
tific Investigation of Claims of th~
Par11normalln the Psychology Building ,
The ACLU position In the American
It appeared to have been a traumatic
Nazi Party matter represents a serious
experience. Her father, William Cottrell
mlsludgement, not a change In policy
of Meade, Kan., who requested the
or direction. Withdrawal of support Is,
,
tests, said It was a raw deal .
Indeed, a way of sending a message to
For Dr. Paul Kurtz, who set up the lab
the ACLU about such mlsjudgements
as an edlunct to his well public ized ,
but only by putting at risk the work of
world-wide Committee for the Inves1
0
tigation of Claims ef the Paranormal , It
was a day of Infamy as far as Susie was liberties In th is country has been too
concerned. ~e stated firmly that Susie
1
1
felled to show any signs of occull
power.
how serious.
The testing was witnessed by Kurtz, a
Prof. Corcoran calls It "absurd" for
U/B philosophy professor and committhe ACLU to defend the civil liberties of
tee chairman , other U/B faculty
members, at least three.maglclans and
Daniel Moseley of New York City, a
business associate · of Mr. CottrelL
Members of the press were barred.
Editor:
Whlot....O?
I have been moved to write this letter
For openers, Kurtz related, Susie was
because of the recent vicious terrorist
permitted to do " her thing ," namely to
attacks In illrael. While In general It
correctly tell what card Is selected from .
might be possible to attempt to justify
a deck. The University of Kansas
cartaln terrorist attacks against profreshman did It successfully on the
11
Johnny Carson TV show.
In the tests, she called the right card
~~~c~ i!~~~~~~:;',.:' c:;~e: t~~o'r7~to~::~
three out of four times, Kurtz related .
However, eccordlng to Kurtz, a
1
~~~~~ tgod"%~ ~~~ wa;~~ehl~?sh!
oan
cares nolf:tng for the life (or l ives) of a
occsslons "she could see the top card"
single (or a dozen) uninvolved human
on the-deck.
.
belng(s)?
At •;that point, Kurtz and --his
Terrorists who truly cared for
committee members '1ook control " of
humanity would follow an ethic that
the testing. The score In this sequence, reveres life.
•
/
Kurtz reported, was 104 tries and 104
~up,g~\~~a·\~ri'o~~~~~l~er~~~~:.1
failures.
•

NewsBu,_,Statf

:~~n ~~~[~e A~t"J'f~ ~~e ~~seco~t"~~~j

~ u'.": ~fa ~~gJ~ !;:,~~!~:,u;~ ~~~~e~

~~~~ng;; a ~~lt;~bbuta:::'8.1~ .
out."

organizations as abhorrent as the
American Nazi Party and the Ku Klux
Klan when there are other csus which
It must decline to support due to lack of
resources. But this misses a crucial
0

tf~1es~~~ Ag'L't, hC::'!\'!: s ~~~~

and properly so that the civil ~bertles of
all of us are sefe only when the civil
liberties of those In least favor In
society are lletended. To fall to support
such people Is to allow lines to be
drawn between those with rights to civil
liberties and those without, a danger far
greater than any posed by the American
.Nazi Party or the KKK. Thus, the ACLU
has teken cases Involving the KKK for
many years. Thus, also, the ACLU
would be right , In rrlnclple, to defend
the civil liberties o the American Nazi
Party even If It Is wrong to have seen the
SkoKie esse as a vlofatlon of the civil
liberties of the Nazis. Sincerely,
-Anthony.Relllton
Chairman , Computer ~lance

'Humane terrorism' preferred

ft"~Y;,!~:']u~~~!l~ f~ ~:!'eert~!~~~~:

~:'r~nl~'rio':~ ~~~~

~~~,:' of ~1:

ae:~:;'y'1~~fe' ofd l~ll~t~e~dw~

he attempted to duplfcate what Susie
said she could do. Fichtner agreed she
was right.
,
•
"Both Susie and Ed Fichtner do the
· same rrlck," said Kurtz. "The only
~~e~ce '\'!'~\ ~~ ,PBims the key card
He edJ:l' that Susie Is an "excellent"
dealer.
The Investigators then switched the
testing from selecting Individual cards
to Identifying suits. In this phase,
according to Kurtz, Susie called the
correct suit 22 times In 104 tries.
Kurtz noted that '26 correct calls
could be expected In keeping with the
law of averages.
·
Mr. Cottrell and Moseley both said
the tests were marked by lack of
opportunity for Susie to concentrate.

'Let'a move along•

by';;~~~ ~g:,:~o:;,~~~!J~~::,d~:,~t~~~

an air of confusion r~ned during the

~~~s, .~~~esu~~:~!" pu~~~~;~~~t ~~~

proceedings.
Mr. Cottrell, a Kansas-West Texas
farmer and farmland developer who
owns his own airplane, describes
himself as a skeptic.
" I asked for the testing ," he said,

~:~~~:Ssi~!r;e~~\~ln~~~3so~

she does. She has even amazed the best
of magicians and I thought this (the
testing) would be an opportunity to find
out what power she might have."

1

:~~~~f~~:t t~0 ~G~~lg~t~n:,c~~~ Tc;;\~

destructive acts only against the
property of vivisection laboratories In
Gr~at Britain . In doln~ so this group has
consistently malntamed a ''reverence
for life" ethic. The members of this
group (who are now In jail) have
successfully
taken great pelns to
Insure that not a single sentient being
(human or otherwise) has ever been
harmed by their actions even at great
personal risk to their own safety.
Now It Is not my purpose to attempt
to justify any form of terrprlsm In this
letter. My point Is merely thai there

~~~an:u~~rr~rfs~~PAn~~~~n/l.u~~

better this world would be If only those
other terrorists who wanted to truly care
about people could learn how to truly
express their concern .
Sincerely,
-Stephen Kn•oter

anti-vivisectionist group has committed

Sharpe -clarifies Town's
position on ·highway
Editor:
Some clarlfre-&amp;tlon Is In order
regarding lhe proposed reconstruction
of Grover Cleveland Highway and the
redeslfl[' of the Main-Bailey lntersec-

~gr.idT rh~i"c~0~~ is'B'~~~i~h~ R"cfe~~r;

commissioner of the State 'i:ioT, said
the project had been .temporarily
shelved due to lack of community
support . That Is his position and most
assuredly not .that of the Town of
Amherst.
As recently as last week , I met with
officials of the State DOT . and the
project Is most definitely not shelved :
In fact, we expect to hear momentarily
from the State as to when their

~J~~~~ Yguub~;y ~:~~~'berw~~ch ~

hearing was under way many months
ago but had to be stopped w_hen a
citizen in attendance died of a heart
attack In the Council Chambers.
The confusion arises from' Mr.
Downing's statement , that the Town
Board of ·Amherst must edopt a
resolutloJI In favor of the proJect before
that hearing is resumed . The Town

refuses to accept this attitude and In
fact has the support of the Regional

~g:lftgnE~~~~~~fs

:,y ~~~~\~~··.W~ ~!

not going to adopt any resolutions
either for or against any project before
we hear from tne people most directly
affected." The State would have us
make up our minds before we hear
anyone, which I guess is typical of
State government.
The project was ori ginally requested
by the Town at the behest of area
residents . The adjourned hearing was
scheduled without any resolutions or
such req•J ired and there would be no
need for any further hearing If the
aforementioned
tragedy
had
not
occurred . To now require additional
conditions before that hearing is
resumed Is unacceptable to Amherst.
Since the project was requested by
the Town , the Town was In favor of it
then and unless the Board takes a new
vote and changes Its mind, It Is still In
favor of the project. '
Slncefely,
-John R. Shllrpe
Supervisor

UT President says let the musicians pay
Let he who Is paid to pipe pay the
royalties on what he plays, the
president of the University of Tepnessee said this week.
President Edward J. Bollng , lnaletter
circulated among the heads of "major
colleges and universities" across the
United States, has proposed that the
burden of royalty payments for playing

~~t~h::::Sm "l~~icin~~lt.:W6"/."~~s I~
Pfl(formers .
'11JCh a policy could lead to a
showdown between universit ies and the
musicians' union , the Chronicle of
Higher Education reported .
"We will never agree to that ," Ted

Dreher, assistant to the president of 1he
American Federation .of Musicians
(A.F.L.-C.I.O.), told the Chronicle.

- Boling said In his letter that he was
aware of the musicians' union's
opposition to the payment of royalty

lost their earlier general exemption from

formers

Several higher-education organlzalions, headed by the American Council
on Education and Including the
National Association of COllege and
University Business Officers, have been
negotiating with the organ izations that
license the performance of copyrighted
music to arrive at a model licensing
agreement.

we doubt it, especially If the
universities , A.C.E., and N.A.C.u.B·.o.
stand united to force the performers to
accept primary liability as mandated by
Congress
·
"The campus concert market Is
substantial , with over $60-mllllon being
paid by Institutions of higher education ·
last year," he said .

eft~?~~~- nt~,g~~~~~~~~a~nl~!:sl~~~
1

~~£~Y;::.:.,o~~t~~ i,e~~pc,:&gt;~;~ghted

fe&lt;;~~Y ~=~t::S~·
would ,

advised that
rin all probabtftl'y.
1

~Y;~~~!. ~en~".:i~.'\!f~a~~f~ ~ tr~~~hbu~

Three SA appointees.. from last ~
remain as SA reps until Aprtl 15 their ter.ms expire: Turner RObinson, a
m lnorlty student representative; Dennis
Black, who Is also Sub Board's elected
treasurer; and Dennis Della. Molt ha8

~:'~"'v!~.~=~~ president,

If Molt hed wanted lo rarnowt eorne
representative to Sub Board to make
room for Beum for the next month
(which Lessoff claims he didn't have to
do anyway), why didn't he remove only
the student whom Schwartz Is replacing
(that student didn't attend meetings,
Lessoff says). Or whA not can Dennis
0

1

~:~·~!': = ~~~: of~~,e; a-:;':\:

until lust after the votes were ln.
Lesso f thinks Mott and Della havemade a deal for Delia to remain on Sub

Board.
Dell• did him In
Why else, Lessoff asks, did Della do
him In at the last Student s.nate
meeting under the olil administration?
At that meeting, Lessoff clallns, a
group of his supporters hed planned to
Introduce a resolution to the effea thai
no Sub Boerd officer from SA covld be
removed without just cause as
determined by an absolute majority of
the Student Senate.
Della, using a lame duck prerogative
that hed been outlawed by an
amendmen't to SA's Constitution which
was not yet In effect, vetoed
consideration of the motion.
.
Lessoff says this hurt him because he
has been a supporter of· Della's, to the
point of stepping In and taking o- the
duties of SA executive vice president
early this semester when Andy Lalone
resigned . "I could have walked out then,
too. Dennis was a dictator, but I elected
to 'Slay on and help hold things ·
t'1:!her."

votln~·~=~l~~-" aaya, by
.::

Unflnlahed busiMH
Lessoff, who is greduatlnQ &lt;this
sprlnp. says he's . upset about the
principle Involved - and becaUse he
has a full agenda of unfinished
business at Sub Boerd, business hlp hed
planned to "!ind-up between now and
April 15. Before stepping
he
~
wanted to:
'

down:

ho~-rsM~~=~~~~g to~- ~~

.

physician Is available at the Amherst Student Health Office. ["I was the one
=~~ .9~ :S~tor ou~ there to begin

i~~~~~~t:r,~'i!:::Ao~~~ !r=

In
Human Sexuality Clinic. [''We have to
get the clinic out there pert-time," he
contends, •'because we've got 4,000
students living at Amherst" who need
the services. Only 1200 live at Main
Street where it is now located.)
3. Complete a 10-questlon telephone
survey of a random sample of 1,000
students on what they would like to
have Sub Board do to fulfill their needs.
[The survey would also be a means of

:~~fc'~~~~~:o1lf~~l~exnpe;.fe~~.f:!'t~!.

similar Sub Board questionnaire last
yeer and has worked with " the Gallup
Poll" and "Market Research.")
4. Work to have the mandatory health
Insurance requirement abolished . [His
plan Is to remove Sub Board's name
from the policy. He Is sure thet In that
event " the administration won1 pick It
up" even though they have pressured
Sub Board teo keep the policy.]
5. Meke sure funds are Included In
· next year's Sub Board bud9,e1 for an:
"alternative to The Spectrum. •
Now, Lessoff says he doubts any of .
this will get done - l@rtlcularly point
five.
He doesn't just Intend to let the
matter drop. Early this week, he said he
planned to go to the Student Judiciary
with a suit to have the Sub Board bylaw
under which he was axed declared
unconstitutional.
That wouldn't re_a.!Jy change anything
for him, he concedes. But It would be a
moral victory.
Meanwhile, he laments, nobody
knows th is Is going on .
" The Spectrum won't print It
. accurately. And the Reporter Isn't
sufficiently orientated to the campus,"
In his view.
That 's why he wants an alternative
paper to come out on Tuesday s.

�: -.c~o

2S, 1t7S

Conference at'· a glance
Thursday, March 23, 1978-Talbert Conference R~

That's what a major U/B conference
on universities is taking as ·
it considers t_
h e new order of things

...... b-*m' ....
s.ver.1 U/ B faculty and edmlnlstta-

!*flclpetlng In a
marathon
conference on "Un'-altles and the
New fetemational Ordao" at Jalbert
Hall, tiiilay t~h Saturday .
lrviiiJ SpitZbefll, dean of the
Collegia, one of the 001P()nsors of the
_,t, ~ things oH this morning with
•a conceptual analysis" of the
con~ theme. Spitzbetg argued
thai
certain el8fTMints of most
conceptions of the uni-.lty are
lnconai_,t with the principles of
social JUstice" whiCh are central lo the
new lnt.,.atlonai order. .Nonetheless,
he aakl, "the tension between justice
and equality, on the one hand, and
unl-.ltles on the o.ther, may be
cralll¥a as -las disruptive."
Philip Altbach, DeDartment of SoCial
Foundations, U/B, follows this momng with a dlacuaalon of the unlveralty
as both "Center 811d Periphery" In the
\OtiAI World . At the center of their own
lilM:Ietlee, Altbacll eeya, Thlrd World
Institutions 111111 "depend on unlveral111111 In the Industrialized world lor new

~~u.:='.= ~':-.!.ct""?C::::
the lnduetrlallzed world lor ac8demlc
modele and - l c training.• Un!llerelt._ In India and Kuwait are Cl888 In
point.

'

Pollllc8l ....

w1~t ~i: :ci"\;rl,C:~~·~g:,s•~~

Unlwraltlal In the Development of the
Third World Socletlal."
~n tills Million, Abdo 1. Baakllnl and
J - HeiiPheY ot the comparative
DIMI!opment Studies Center, SUNY I Albllny, will 8llllllllne thai Institution's
8lCDerlenoe In political develOpment
wllto a number of countries. Their
experience Ia uniQue, they will say,

~Al!:.t::,S ~~ ~~

~t· with whloh It has
liwOived, but with the leglal811ve
1'1le
· - IICIIolwa
wHI lll!llgell
........
®0f1818110n
betWeen

been

arm.
11181
the ·
" ' - " - ' unlveralty and develOping
_..,... Ia -"In to cooperation
the Unlveralty and -the
~ ........ and priorities.
aMIIiDl be dedlcJild upon UQIIateratly,
~ . - d l lntMat has to be
......... to public policy needa;
tail MOIInlelll ~ has to be

.-...n

-

ln"..,~ol

and t.-porari-...
lunlitl, IChlcel laaues will
l W Mlatlasl J. Flack, Graduale
fll' f'Wibi!C and International

,,E
_........,..d__

_,.,~h

.. -

N~~=en,:r:~ty

director
John Fobes will present a peper on
fulure relationships between universities and International or~an lzatl ons ,

ln1roducllon (IMng J . Spiiiberg, Jr.)

8 :30 · 9:00a.m.

UNIVERSITIES ANO THE NEW llifT!jiN.\T10NAI.
ORDER-AN INTROOUCTION
Tho- .........- . . Order •nd !he Un'-"'ly: A COnc:epuol

9 :00 • 10:00 a.m.

Anolyolo

! 0 :00 ·. 11 :00a.m.

(Presenter: Pl\lip Altbach;"Commenlotor: Albert Somlt)
~

11 :00-11 :1$a.m.

~\:'~\0~~~:.'::~n'-g~o~e's S.V,{'!,~~

that university structures do not lend
themselves to .the Interdisciplinary
studies requ ired lor exploration of
alternative world futures. " Universities

~~~ri!~::J :'~~arst,!'a'j:C,H~~: =~~

money are available," Fobes will say. ·
" They have sought knowledge lor its
own sake. They have produced social
technology which served their 'patrons,'
most recently national sovereigns and

rn~~..:~ ;-;:'"'g'l'oe;.:r p~gl':."m~~~~g
0

and advocates of world order were not
attracted by and have not oHered much
to universities. Universities do not
know much about the UN . .. . [they] '
have not thought of themselves as
transnational actors, as part of a
sub-system of world order."
· .
At a dinner · In the Tiffin Room,

ln~~~~r.:er~:~h~un~~~~~~~do~: ~~~

summarize the day's deliberations.
After .din-. Gerald O'Grady, Center
for Media Studies, U I B, will prese11t a
paper on "Universities and r the
Communication System," uaRobi!rt
Amove, School of Education , Indiana

~~'¥,a.,:l!·~~~~ng~ 1 J~~~dations

F":lc:::lr~arwitz- and Abnlham Haspel, Department of Econom lcs,
U 1B, will open Friday's discussions
with an 8:30 a.m . paper on · "The
Economics of Transferring Knowledge
and the Political Economy of Unlversitlal.'' •
At 9:30 a:-m. Friday, Don Peretz, of
the Program In Southwest
and
North African Studlal, SUNY /Binghamton, wJII cornpera developments In
higher education In Turkey, Iran, Israel
enil Eaypt and ask llow, If at all , such
eclucaflon contributes to n81lonal
development. .
Friday 81ternoon , "Trading Bloca and
lntern81lonat .l&lt;nowledae Translera,"
will be dlacuaaad by EOward T. Sliva,
~t of Sociology, Erlndale
College, Unlveraltr of Toronto; Budd
Hell, lotematlone Council lor Adult
Education, will consider "Milltan9: and
lnequltlea of Knowledge Creation; ' and
Thomas Eleemon, Sociology of Science, McGill -llnlveralty, will consi®r
."the lmpllcatlona of Collective Setl•8ee.'Wodcl ,...., ........DOl. 1

-'alan

•

(Presenter: IMngJ. Spilzbe&lt;g. Jr.,; Commentator: Ward -.rouse)
~~-Centeraf!dPeripMry:~aon~ .
.t

11 :20 · 12:30 p.m.

-

T-••--

•

TlE POUTICAL ROLE OF UNIVERSITIES-IN TlE
DEVB.OPIIEHT OF THIRD WORLD SOCIETIES
' Tho UnhoofWity •nd PallllcollletolopiMnt

ai~Uortlnlhe-1-..tlon.IIOnloJ

(Presenter: Abdo J . Baaklini; Commentator: John E. F-.)
12:30 •

1:55 R,.m.

2;00 • 3 :00 p.m.

Lunch- Oenerll Conwersatton: Talbert Conference Room
-·Community •nd Socloty:'"'somo Ethicoll-lor
"Politico, Un'-"Hiea. •nd !he -lnt.,..tlon.ll Order
(Presenter. Michael J .
Commentator: Thomas E. Headrick)

Rae:!"

3 :00 · 4 :00p .m.

Rolotionohlpo-----

4:00 · 4:15p.m.

R-to

ALTERNATIVE MEANS OF KNOWLEDGE-TRANSFER
IN.THE NEW INTERNATIONAL ORDER
.

Orgonballons
In !he EJ&lt;plorotlon al AHomo- F - l o r Woo1d Order
(Presenter. John E. F - .; Commentator: V&lt;ginla t.o.y)

4 :15 • 5 :15p.m.
8 :30 · 8 :00 p.m.
8:00 · 9 :00P.m .
9 :00 . 1o' oo p.m.

RoundblbM '

Dinner. Summerj: Tiffin Room
(Aiclwd Griffiths. lnter-lJnlYeniityCouncil, London. Eng!Md)
Un-loo •nd lhe Communlco- Sptem
(Presenter. Gen!ld O'Grady; Commentator:GraNm K81T)
Foundotlono •nd the Tron- cl K.-.clge
(Presenter: Robert Amove ; Commentator: Lee Preaton)

Friday, March 24; 1978-Talbert qonfetence Room
nlE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF TlE UN1VER&amp;ITYTHE ECONOMICS OF INTERNATIONAL KNOwu;oQE TRANSFER
8 :30 · 9:30a.m.
Tho Economleo al Tron-.tng K.-.clge•nd !he Pclltlclll
· Economyallln-loo
(Presenter. MltdleiiHarwitz. Abnoham Haspel; Comtneiltator. Austin

.

~~

9:30 · 10:30 a.m .
10 :-45 • 11 :00

a.m.

11 :00 · 12:00 'p.m,
12JOO · 1:00 p.m.
1:00 · 2 :00 p.m.

Un~ and Economic Drrleiopment The Track Record
(Presenter: Doo Peretz; Commentator: Egbert de Vries)

R-to

WotUJ&gt;Op, GoOJs 1 . 2, and 3
Luneh- Gonorol C o n - : Talbert Conference Room ·
Trading Btoc:s and International Knowledge Tr-nlf--.: Some
Functions of Higher EdUC8tlon In Canadian Economic Oeftlop-11)0ftt

2:00 · 3:00p.m.
3 :00 · 4 :00 p.m.
4:00 • 4:15p.m.
4:15 • 5:15p.m.

8 :30 · 7:3Crp:m.
7 :30 • ~ : 15 p.m.
11:30 • 10:00 p.m.
10:00 • 11 :00 p.m.

(Presenter: Edward T. Sitva; Commentator: Roger Woock)
TlE INEQUITY OF KNOWLEDGE:
IIEDtSTR18UTING INTELLECTUAL WD.LTH
Militancy •nd the lnoquHioo a1 Kn~ c,_tlon
(Presenter. Budd Hall; Commentator: ShellliMcVey)
The lmpllc:lltlono al Collect!M Sell "-'!once lor Sci..,HIIc
Ex-ngo "-'9 Third Woo1d"Un'-"IU.. ·

=.::....,

Thomas~semon: ~tator: Budd Hall)

Roundblblo
Dinner: Tlff10 Room.
w-....., Gools 4 , 5 , and 6 Talbert Conlerence Room
~by-Blue

Dloc-

Satur4ay, March 25, 1978-T-al~rt Conference Room
8:30 · 8 :45a.m.
RefrMhftients
CASE STUOIES OF THE UNIVERSITY AND THE RELATIONSHIP
IIElWEEN POST..-,STRIAL ANO DEVEi.OPING COUNTRIES
' 8 :-45 • 11 : 15 a.m.
c... Studies of FOI"algn Unlwerafties

-

'

~

�.I
llorch2a, 1171

&lt;.

i

i

International Fiesta
ReprnentatlvH of a range of foreign atUdenta attending U/8

.. participated In the annual International Reata Saturday, There was
both food-taatlng and a 'cultural progr8m• In Goodyear Cafeteria.

Fewer netlona were represented thla year. one who attended
-rtecl. The ..vent oeemed mo"' polltll:lzed and the"' wao a long
walt for food which ran out. But thooa who attended enjoyed:

-

.

Chile

Michaels says leftists pushed
too fast for university reform,
heightened middle class insecuriti~s

as

~~~~~g~~e~~~l:;'nea~,t ~~efo.,"~~~~

A month after his Inauguration
1 Prealdent of ' Chile, Salvador Allende
, stood beneath a huge picture of Che
• ~lo~~=t/ convocation at
Chile Is not Cuba, he told the extreme
left among his listeners: In Cuba, Fidel
and Che had carried out an armed

r~~.::.~:~:.s ~J~~~ct~tg~~~~;
:~.::.~~~~8e~~~:,~~~~~t!

made "legally In accordance with the
wishes of the people." He quoted Lenin
that "revolutionary extremism~ Is
treason to socialism," referred to the
· r~eichstag ""' and warned students to
watch for double agents and provocateurs.
He called for a granlte-llke·unlty and a unllled conception of the tactics to be
pursued.

L. 'tl',:,O,::~:t~r,:g:o~~Vn37s:~rc.,~';:l
on International Studies, concludes in a

caae study to be presented Saturday

morning at the Conference on
"Universities and the new International
Onder," the Chilean university did not
heed his call for unlty. The political

~~f~t~ tt',:' ~er%ft'tersoc~~erw~ru~~
within the unlveralty - over appointment of professors. granting of
scholarships, control of the National
University's TV channel , and curriculum
- over the role the university wo.uld
have In relation to the Chilean
government and the Allende program .

Too much, too soon

It was too much, too soon. Michaels

su~gests.

In the mld-1960s, Michaels begins,
Marxists and Christian Democrats alike
agreed: that Chile's universities did not

! :V~ ~~:'s'!~~~~\~tfor0f:~dr~~n~~.::J

P.rofessors linked to the traditional right
exercised too much control in university ·
governments; that there was a greater
need for teacher training and vocational
education; that educational centers
should be moved away from large urban
areas.

h:~~~:~~~~Fosnd~e~b!h~3~h~~

the future should hold:
Ttoe Christian Democrats blamed
feudal, anironlstic, Inefficient traditions lor k
lng Chile semi-developed,
wanted to c nge things peacefully and
looked to a future of class cooperation
In a pluralistic, democratic society.
Mlntlate blamed capitalism for

Into a classless, ·egalitarian society
without
foreign
Investment.
The
university. too, was to be completely
~~?s':'lma~o~~lly renovated In the
Clvlatian Democrat reforms
In 1964, Eduardo Frel , ·a Christian
De.mocrat, was overwhelmingly elected
president cf Chile; he turned the
Education Ministry over to young
planners schooled In the U.S. They set
out to abolish "feudal anachronisms,"
Michael says.
A five-year plan · was proposed in
1966. Chile's traditionally difficult
university entrance exam was ellmin·
ated. Oversil funding for education rose
from 12.6 per cent of the national
budget to 21 . per cent In 1970.
Scholarships were expanded; more aid
went to the poor. Government
resources available to the National
University Increased 90 per cent.
Within the university, the traditional
emphasis on law and philosophy gave
way to the natural sciences, englneer-

\~7. tea;~:~,:'d of~'/led~~~;.;,..~~

students were
provinces.

studying

In

the

Nonetheless, Michaels continues,
student politics began a shift to the
' left . Where Christian Democrats wanted
to modernize university gCIY8ming
systems to allow greater ) nput from
younger, non-tenured faculty , leftists
wanted full student part\clpation In
both university elections and administration. There were strikes. troubles;
most university rectors were forced to
resign .
In August 1966, a compromise was
reached. Elections of Chilean university
administrators would In the future be
open to the entire university population ,
faculty, students and staff. The
governing councils were now to be.

~~~:':"and~~""~t'::ff. ~~~ !Y8ct~:Y
1

their own constituency. In addition, the
old faculties were abolished and the
universities were reorganized into
depar1ments on the Nor1h American
model. The council, rather than the
ractor, would decide all major policy ·

issues.

Unlor- problema
The Christian Democrats achlevj!d
their aim of modernizing , Prof.
Michaels says , but set In motion a
process which created a numb4!r of

.

f~~:.::;,~

8"'06

they

had

not

originally

th~h::,:;;:!~~~~agf'·f~u~~~~~·sr~

=;

made the universities a haven

~u::~crf~~ a:::J~\~fes~~~~,"'

of

entrenched In a system which Marxists
desired to use for societal transformation .
Second , the flocking of technical
personnel to universities decreased the
pool of skilled technicians available to

in~~:2; ~~~ ~~~~n~~~~nl of Chilean
state and foreign aid which poured into
the university system created favored
Institutes, centers and departments
which were now dependent on the
continuance of such aid at high levels.
Fou·rth , a rigid class system
developed around
these
favored
departments , Institutes and centers.
Fifth , the 1966 university electoral
reform brought national politics Into the
university at a more Intense level.
Sixth, and possibly most critical in
Michaels' view, the university system
had taken In thousands of new
students. Most were clustered In low·
status areas and lacked critical
technical skills. The Chilean economy
continued to stagnate.
Allende
,
Now came Allende.
He had campaigned on a Marxist
platform to radically transform even this

~r~~r~~n~Y~~:mwo~~~~·~;:~e a~uite

work place, to combine theory and
action . Universities were to address
national problems, expand adult
classes and give priority to worker's

~~~~~~a~·~~ns~\:~~o g:,o~[~ed ~;

the Chilean Congress after a close
popular vote, though, Allende hed to
compromise, to agree to respect
university autonomy and Ideological
pluralism .
Marxist students were not persuaded.

~~~~cl~:~u;;:~""t~tro;t~f -~~=!'Y.

When Christian Democrats resisted,
there were marches, riots that spreed
from campus to campus.
·
. The National University was paralyzed. Both Its Christian Democrat
rector and Its Marxist-controlled
council resigned . In the election which
foli_owed , Christian Democrats reelected the same rector and took
control. of . the Co.uncU . .University.,-

opposition to. Allende graw_ s\ronger
and the university ramalneH" quiet.
Rector Edgardo Boenlnger Uld the
govemment did not bother h!"'; -only
!he left within the university- was trying
to seize power.
Leftist students took &lt;iVer the
National University's TV station In May,

~T~~ta~ll~~=~~~nfn~~ tn~Yat.:::'d!c:"·
"':l~~~=des:
I

"In September 1973, the Chilean
military over1hr- Allende. They purged
Marxist professors and students ·
wherever ttley could be found. ~­
Boenlnger resigned ·his reclorahlp in
protest and went to the · U.S.. The
military appolnted a retired air lonoa

j

R~ert~ ~~.:'~g~t~t::=r~

l

least In par1, played the role o~ the
sorcerer's apprentice. The Christian
Democrats had reformed and modernIzed the university aystem. The Allende
suppor1ers In the uni-ty, by

i

lh~l'i"ufllll= =~~· ::·hs:r~t 1

0

~=ti;!S ~~als~~-ct~~h~f t :
class struggle raging In Chilean society
Into the university campus."
Michaels recalls that "In 1966,
Rayond Aron warned the French
student radicals that they could n•.t
expect the bourgeoise state to creal
the Cuban university. The same wa:;
true In Chile. The left did not control the
state nor did they control the economy.

~e':.~n~:&amp;~'rh~~'f~~~~~y t!?'~::.g t~~

Allende government was solidly In
control of the state, only added to the

1

I
I
1

~~~~s'~:Sd c:r•o~lf::!Y ~~~.tin~~

~~r=~e ~~',g~}~o~~.=:'sn"s'!lrr

staffed most public agenclas.
" I believe; Michaels says, " that the
Christian Democrats had carried

I

~~~:rs'/~e re~:'atW..gfarsy"s':~ss~: I

Unldad. Popular's 'Basic Plan' (1970)
and !student) agitation only heightened
the nsecurlties of many. llllddle class
stud~nts and professors. The university
Inevitably reflected the turmoil present
within the entire society. In the end, the
university conflict could only be
resolved by Un ldad Popular's total

vlc~~l o~t~~a!~:fe:111" dellver

his case
study on Saturday mornJng at 8:30a.m.

-

�Flex time ·probably not
wave of the .future here
s!~~:~W~ti~~~V:,S~~ ~~~~::~~~~

of their work, some departments within
the University (such as Food Service or
Security) would be prohibited from
establishing a four-day work week with
th~ same three pays off for all ~s
employees.
·
doubt that flex time for U I B employees
In aider to officially institute a
· four-day woik week, Personnel Assocan be Instituted on a mass scale.
Las) week, Governor Carey signed an
ciate Michael Lewandowski said. the
contract would have to be;x:~l!~e ~rd:st.:ll'a~uraH~~~bleSta:: CSEA
changed. However, no revision Is
necessary to allow employees to begin
aPtemate worl&lt; schedules fqr employ·
ees. The purpose of flex time Is to • or end their work days at different
·times, provided they work an eight-hour
Increase productivity and , according to
the Governor's office, to "provide more
dar.r.,aently, Pearson said, he Is not
op~~g~~~~~o~~~~~ ·:~!;'\~at flex aware of any orchestrated attempt by
the University to establish flex time. He
time can be most .easily ~nstltuted for
said he believes each request , a\ least
clerical workers who do not haye much
lor the time being, will be handled on an
public contact. In other "'ords, for
ad hoc basis. He suggests that
~~~onsn~her~:ees~l~!~!e· o~.::1rabm~ . Interested parties speak with their
supervisors to see if flex time can be
during usual business hours.
Currently, some employees are
initiated.
working on fl'ex time schedules, · but
~
Pearson noted such arrangements . are . CSEA'a walling to see
June Boyle, U/B CSEA represent&amp;·
"Informal" and Involve an agreement
live. said that 1he union is assuming a
between the individual employee and
"walt and see attitude" regarding
hi s or her supervisor.
•
Carey's Executive Order. She said
Flex time does have drawback~ which
nothing will be decided for SUNY until
should be cOnsidered by P.,ten)lal
"reasonable consultation" has occurred
users. For example, employees who
between CSEA and Chancellor Wharreceive cheaper Insurance rates beton. A meeting will likely take place
within the next month, she said .
What might be viewed as a variant of
~e;:J·:ke A'~~e;g tr~~~~rtf~~~~rsa~~ flex time - · half-time - js being ·
implemented as 'a pilot project through
must be dealt with ""e the possible ~ ack
of supervision for the employee who.
the Division of Finance and Managewants to work at "~ff-hours" and the
ment. •
Poppey, who Is coordlna\ing the
need to establish 'a time-recording
system to monitor employee hours.
~roject, thinks hiring personnel for 20

accessible to the public,
both
Personnel Director Robert Pearson and

~ci~froli=~~r: ~~~:a~~~~~~~

1

:~r31b~:~ha:f: d~~~~~s ~n~ ro~~

Housecleaning?
lllo. tt.,'re -

........... the IIUige for the next perfonnance at
....._1'11'-lllthe~. ~ m,_.Marle Ulttlhujuot
\e~--···.
• who Mel bMn watching TV on IIUige. Is
•_.,...,.,_on the vacuum ciMnar. It was part of a night of

... _.......,topltoy.De...,..

-IIUiged by Yvar MlkhMhoff last week.

-

... .

F.our-day'WWeek?
•
As far as four-day worl&lt; weeks are
concerned, some businesses have
found their employees become exhausted after working four HI-hour
d·ays. Not, only aoes this keep them
from · performing effectively, It also
leaves them too tlr.!ld to enjoy their long
weill&lt;enda. If eatab11shed for a whole
department, four-day worl&lt; weeks could
also create communication problems .
between that department and units with
normal work schedules. Bv the nat~re

1

dls~r.l~cti~~P:1jl':x:.,~~a~ith ~a'lf-tl~~

~alj(licapped f•ce att~tudinal bars .
....

Phy~ obstructions are not the
only prolltf!ns encountered by handl·
C8J11)8!18\I)ilenta on campuses throughout tfle. country; thev also run up
111111111111 riiore subtle attitudinal barrlera
Which Inhibit them from freely
eXII8tlenclng m~nlngful social Inter- ·

action.

'"

Gary A. Llvent, • dean "of student
alf8lra at N~ County Community
College, offered this comment Frida/.

at

.-n,:: ot~~..:;lon~
ft::
=..
~ecu8Md
a

which
"Higher
Education for the Handicapped," wes

held at NCCC.
u..ent

Introduced

a

vkleGtape

produced b)' the community college

which laatured a dllllogue bel-. two
of Ita students who ·are Confined to
vm.lehalra • .
Asked how fellow students react to
them, the lnt~ noted that,
often, Individuals 111 their college
· community fall to understand their need
to "do things for ourselves." One
student ll*!fioned he feela as If hla
Clallmates think he Ia acting like a "big
shot" wt*l he ntlusea help. Both
atuc1ent11 emphasized that offera of
-lllanee .., genulnel)' appreciated,
bill both. wish students and faculty
could better understand their capablllltl!e and Hmltatlona.

Don'l noel .... If,... Clon'l uncleral8nd'
The atudents, who also haw speech
l~ts, 11JC11A11198C1 frustration at

1111 t.ndency of claalmatea and faculty

=

to noel their hems Wl*l they converse
wllli them, 111 If to lndk:ate they
undiiWt8nd whal Ia being said when In

......., they don't. People should feel
... OOIIIPunctlona lllllout allklng handl·
lrldlvlduala With speech lrl ... to18P881.~ If auntence

:rcn::::::at:d=
tl~,:y
a

~
dealre for Individuals -to
.,._. - v : · ·to become acquainted
speech
patterns
so
can be facllltated .
U. atudenta also complained about
-~~ot what they tenned
"'i8iiiiHHIIY" ntlallonshlpa.
One student

will! t1
Cllliililun

suggested that this "just hello" type of
communication results from fear or
appt&amp;henslon about Interacting with the
handicapped. The two want to
experience meaningful relationships
with their classmates and added tlley
are now less ·Inhibited about making .
initial overtures to establish friendships.
·
·
Flnall)', the two students objected to
always being seated In the front of a
Cl888f00m . They feel the location
Inhibits social Interaction with classmates and makes others assume they
suffer from visual handicaps.
The videotape with the students'
comments can be loaned. to Interested
parties by contacting Llvent atNCCC.
CUNY consultant
Architect Lucille H. Murawski. a
member of the Mayor's Office for the
Handicapped In New York City and an
architectural consultant to City Univer- ·
slty, outlined what Is required by
institutions of higher education in order
to comply with the Rehabilitation Act of
t973 and Its amendments.
Murawski said the Federal legislation, as It applies to higher education.
aeeka to make not only physical
facilities but also edUGatlonal programs
!!CC"S&amp;Ible to handicapped Individuals

who want to continue their educations.

~h~~~:~~!~~~~d~ar Pu~a.r~~u.~~~~
-r;~fc':,';~Yw~~vracft~le~~.fs~a~ aft=

1

to make them accessible, Murawski
said . In addition, a list of priorities for
renovations needed ior accessibility
has to be compiled, along with cos!
estimates. According to Murawski, the
plans, priorities and cost ~estimates
indicate to the Federal government that
a "good• will effort" Is being mede \o
accommodate tile handicapped.
Also, a mechanism must be
established . to Identify architectural
barriers, preferably a committee which
includes handicapped stud~nts or
faculty. Murawski said failure to
consult with the handicapped themselves about architectural obstructions
has resulted In some facilities being
less accessible after qoslly modifications. '
.
She suggested that both public and
private coUeges mak!' use o! Community Development and Public Works
funds to assist In financing renovation
needed for accessibility. This year,
Murawski said, CUNY received about
$200,000 from Community Development ·
Funds and expects to get approximately
$300,000 next year.

U/8 feat'ured· in "Smiles'
"Smiles" lathe appropriate name of a
new public aervtce film explaining the
role of proper brushing and flossing In
the prevention of p.erlodontal disease.
When released later this year, the film Is
expected 19 appear on more than 200
u.S. TV stations.
The five-minute production, underwritten by Eastman CMmleal Products,

Inc., as a 'public service vehicle, was
filmed at the IJ/B Dental Clinics and at
Flsher..Prlce'Toya In~~ Aurora.
Dr. James A. McMullen, clinical
associate professor of periodontics
here,. and 14-yeer-old J.osh Sprowl, son
of Dr. Harvey Sprowl, an associate
. professor at the School of Dentistry, are
featured In one segment.

-..ews-

~~hrs,rer !'~~~~~~~~v:~pPo":~ ~~

noted that half-flme posltJons would be
Ideal for students, retirees and mothers
with school-age children.
Poppey said an equivalent hourly rate .
of pay would be' given to half-time
employees alon9 with •• t~adltlonllf
benefits like vaeatoon and sick leave: In
addition, half-time worl&lt;ers coula •
receive almost a nine per cent bonus in
their pay checks since they would ~ot
be required to join the Employee
Retirement Service and would not have
to ~ay Social Security .

AprilE.
I
The March Event at Emeritus Ce(ller Is a piano concert I?Y Adrian Karr. April
11, 197'8, T~ay, at.2:jlll p.IJl,.• ,. .. . .. . c~.,. .. " ...... . ..... . , ..... .

personnel. Productivity s~ould In·
crease, too, he said, since employees
are less likely · to experience boredom
and fatigue working four hours.
Supervisors, on the other hand, would
benefit from Increased production snd
also would have additional staff to
·cover peak business hours.

Bobinski edits

DALB volunie

George s. Boblnskl, dean of the
School of Information and l:.lbrary
Studies here, Is one of a three-member
editorial board wh lch has recently ,
published what Is being called a
milestone in American library history.
The publication of the Dictionary of
American Library Biography look five
years of planning, research, wr1tlng,
and editorial work by the editorial
board, over 200 contributors throughout
1

0

11

'::'bll.'~~ryThe" ~~.:'.~ b:.br!'l:s ·~~~

ftmned, Inc., describes the work as a
landmark In library historical writing
and
publishing-one which
was
successfully concluded without benefit
of grants or other outside financial
support.
·
The Dictionary-the . flr_!lt scholarly
dictionary of past American library
leaders-contains res$8rched, .original
biographical sketches of 302 men and
women who, In large measure, founded
and built the natlon:s libraries, _vs
professional associations, and library ...

.

~~~o:~:ti, ,.'l~og~\l'.;'gra~~?c ,:~

:r::1

Information networks.
Selected for Inclusion are those who
made contributions of national significance to American library development, whose writings Influenced library
trends and activities, who held
positions of national Importance , who
madp major achievements In special
fields of llbrarianship, or who af(ected
American
libraries through
their
scholarly, philanthropic, legislative, or
governmental support of activity. To
Insure proper historical perspective, the
publishers say , only people who had
died as of June 30, 1976, are inclUded .
''-

�••
•World VIew
(from pogo e. col. 2) •

Reliance lor Scientific Exchange
Among Third World Universities."
Workshops and films round out the ·
Frl d~y program alter dinner.
Saturday case studies
case studies of universities and the
relationship between post-Industrial
and developing countries will be heard
on Saturday, starting at 8:30a.m. Albert
L. Michaels, Council on International
Studies, U / B, will discuss the
" Breakdown of the Ch ilean University
System , 1970-73;" Gall Kelly, Department of Social Foundations of
Education, U/B, will look at the " Myth

..

Birdies!

f~e~~~~~fnn:~'0~~:~~s~~ :~~'r38~.!

and Egbert de Vries, Graduate School of
Public and International Affairs, University of Pittsburgh, will locus on "The
Dutch Universities."
Most conference events are being
held In the Talbert Hall first floor
conference room .
'
Proceedings of the conference will be
used as source materials lor radio
programs to be broadcast by WBFO,
and will qe m&amp;de available to National
Public Radio.
Conference sponsors Include the
U1B Colleges, the Council on
International Studies, the Center for
Comparative · Education , and
the
International College.
Further lnlonmation Is available at
636-2316.
The Conference Is partially sponsorsd under the SUNY "Conversations
in the Disciplines," and Is a major event
of the Sprtog Semester conference
lineup.

Dunnett invited
to visit .USSR
Dr. Stephen C. Dunnett, director of
the Intensive English Language Instituter has been Invited by the Soviet
Ministry of HllJher end Secondary
Education to spend two weeks visiting

th~~·if~·~j,~(Ji, l&gt;ilnnett will· lecture on.
the U/ B Institute's method of teaching
English as a foreign language and will
observe Soviet methods lor teaching
English and other languages. Duhnett
Is especially Interested In Soviet
methods of teaching .scientific and

Birdies were flying at U/B's 4th
Annual Badminton Tournament, March
11 In Clark Gym. Teams from Buff
Stall, C.nlslus, Ryerson (Toronto),
Brockport, Niagara University at Wetland, Cortland, Coming, and Nlag~r~
County Community Collage were
pr-1, along with approximately 25
studenta from U/B.' In all, 100 p8ople
partlclpatad as U/B'a Badminton Club
cetebrotad Its filth annlverury.
.
In mlxad doublea, U/B's Ravl Prakash
and Dee Dee Flaher cleleatad Toronto's

~:"~~:1 ,~n~s~::rc:d~~~c~v'r~st~~

area.

Upon Dunnett's return, the U.S.S.R.'
will send the director of Its Russian
language Institute which receives
American teachers of Ru'sslan to tour
the U.S. This Is the first time such an
exchange of single lariguage ·experts
has been made.
.
The exchange Is being administered
by the International Research end
Exchanges Board (IREX) which handiel&gt;
State Department exchanges with the
U.S.S.R. and Eastern Europe.
IREX has administered visits of
groups of Soviet teachers to the U.S. ,
including the six-week stay of 37
scholars at U/B last summer. About 40
teachers from the Soviet Union are
expected to arrive here In late June to
study American methods o1 teaching
English as a foreign language.

&gt;apers. He has taught at U/B since

Weber Is a member of and has held
flices In the American Society for
:nglneerlng Education, and the Anierl:an Institute of Chemical Engineers .

:~!.-::~n :~.::'.l''~~a

:r Rtt~~

scor.S. Jimmy Irani of U/B foal to Tak
Aokl of Ryerson In the Mml-flnal round
of tha men's sing I•; Aokl later won the
IIIIa.
novice catogory. allrtld at laat

Doubles team of Dee Dee Fisher and thla In that dlvlslort.

Dr. Thomas W. Weber, associate
&gt;rolessor · of chemical engln-lng, Is
:he recipient of this y,ear's "Professional
\chlevement Award • from the Western
~ew Vorl&lt; Section of the American
nstitute of Chemical Engineers.
The award, usually presented to
:hemlcal engineers working In area
ndustrles, Is given to recognize
&gt;utstendlng service to the profession
lnd community.
Weber has received a number of
twards and grants. A graduate of
~ewark College of Engineering and

:;~·k he.).~ a'!:h~~:n 0~ng:~=~~

:.T~S.:.It~nd~.!,~ " : : . : f ~
Prakash and Hun Kua 'of U/B were

nw
~~.r.·n::~r:~~~o:'.:'l ~
~l~~ C:~~J.~ ''\1,~~~ b~o=: ::,~y~.:~:!t'!'= :.:!!~ sr.~.-.:

Weber honored
by engineer:s group ""

1963.

Lee Moly went clefealld In the finals by
Buff State's Barb McCoy IIICI Val

.

•

LATE ENTRY
'Short·Term Memory .. a Diagnostic In
' St_COnd Lanauage," will be the topic
or~~ D. 'Iocher. San Diego Stole,
~ a Llngulatlcs ColloQuium, Frklly,
~I 3, 4 p.m .. Llngulotlca Lounge,
IJieufd~'!"~:
, I .... ,

..

�•

.......

Merch 23. 1178

.

__

Shod people get
a lift from Dr.
·M cCauley
.
.
.
...,
. , . . c.tln
~~~~~~';'all~¥.

................ _be_·
..........

~.=..-=:~rr~
:.C.Uiey out there to -

McCauley notes that parents and
t8111Chen1 aomellmes IMdvwtenlly

- t i l e eqnealon- ghle you a
lift.
McCalley

deale

mainly

add to the pmblems of sliort

chi~

by being OVIIIniOIIcltous.
"ChHckan with stunted growth
problema," she explained, ''often
look -younger than they really are
and • a result get preferential
tnlelrnent that they don't need. But .;
they're actually bright and as
competent as biller children."

with

c1t11c1r-.- WIIO " - IIIUWth problema
In
cllnbl DaYCholoalat
1n t11e Depert"*'f
Cfind
Pm:hletrY and Behavioral Science
.. t:hl~·· Hoioltal. The depart-

'*role ...

-

People."
As the song goes:
''They got little baby. legs and
they stand IP low, you've got to
pick them upluat to say, hello."
McC&amp;uley teaches her patients to
~lzethat taunts are "meaningless'
and come from "less
sophisticated people."
She encourages "role playing" In
responding to thosa who t -.
One approach Is to Ignore the
teaser completely, "taking the tun"
outpf1easlng.
,
Another approach Is for a patient
to pe(sonally create a reply and
practice ft . Then when the time
comes, the patient Is ready.

little teeth. They platform
lhOea on t""r nsaty lillie feet ."

Short people, . . . ' - ' ·

ot

Ia llfflltated with tile U/B

School of Medicine.

"Short people 110t oo raaaon to
lhle .... • ..ya ~ Newman's
con~ recording. But what
ftWIY.crlttca cwerlook, or choose to
cwerlook, Ia that the song was
written with good Intentions - a
emt of satire on discrimination . Or
110 N~ says now.
But be that ea II may, diminutive
McCauley - she says she's 5 feet ,
4~
lnc:Ms tall
tackles
paychotogk*l problems related to
short -ure. .
WIMn does "short" begin?
says
speaking,
, women consider themshort If they're under 4 feet ,
nc:Ms; men, under 5 feet , 2

.

McCauley pointed out that for
many people, being short Is no
problem. They juat shrug off the
launta.
· "They got little hands and Utile
eyw,• aayafl.ndy Newman's song,
"and they walk around telling greet
big I...
"'Tiler got little and tiny

1

M=e~, 1~

::::em=:s

-sometimes become o--ptotectlve
and t8111Chen1 give the youngsters •
extra help, such as buttoning their

~r=~r.g ~~fnWor;.:r~- to

make the chUd feel less competent ·
tnan he or she really Is," Mccauley,,

::::eu~!sthi,"k th':'~l.udf.:P.J:

-

Intellectually Incompetent.
" It makes such children 1~1
they're different from others and
they tiegln to withdraw from their
•
•
peergr'?,up." ·
Thiili there's teasing and namecalling, especially i n adolescence.
The answer In fllese casas, says
Mccaulev lies rl\ "assertiveness
· training •
Through' tndlvtdu~l or group
'COunseling , patients are given
" psycholoolcal support" to help
develop a··Tposlllve self-Image."
They learn to cope with the
taunts, such as those In· " Short

'How come fOU'rw atupld'

In one onstance, a tormenter

Grade?'
•
.
The.YOU'1QSter's prepared reply: .
~~':dif.!"e yOu're so .stupid In
::. • Mccauley, whoae duties Include teaching child psychology to UiB
grad students, emphasized that her
, basic mission In the Child '
Psychology Cllnlc at .the hosplt!;l Is
to make her patients feel good.
SomJLpatlents ao:e referred to her
by lhe, EndO?r!ne · Clinic at
Children s Hospotal. This branch "
deals In glandular prob.lems and
determines whether medical help Is .

a friend who worked In the edmlnlstrallon of former Mayor Stanley Makowski
that Makowski's office wanted' to
ororn!)te Oean Naughton's merger plan ..

. . . . workii!CI l..t tall
flop_lng lor 'bipartisan support tor a
State takeover of the new faelllty and
having a working knowledge of the
.-rch c:apabiHtles of the catspan
Corp. (with which he Is famlllarl ,
, Hubbard last fall, began working on hfs
concept. Basically, It entails U/B's
ualog .the n - County hospital facility
.ea a Unl-..lty hGspltal and the
development of a bio-medical-engineer·
lng , _ a , complex which would ~
aaeoclated with an expanded School of
Enalneertng. For the most P8i1,
Hubbard's gnand scheme wOrks within
=:'.!l~{.:~lsting etructures and

Hubbard
Has he got
a plan for
U/8 and Buffato

ar-==:,a•....

ar•-

admlaelan, he Is not a

In admlnlatratt.. matllllltlllr Ia ~lea ills particular
.
Altllouah he now flnde
hi .
Ill the mtdit of • polltk*l - ·
.
111M , _ _ . . .

wlllra..:r, ~~
~~~ ~
-m

gqat unlwliwlty
center wllh
.._...., -oom1c l*leflts lor the
ent1n1 community.
But unllka-eorne men with a vision,
tile ~Jooklng professor with
lily, almoa\ owerty polite speech, has
~xle to try to tum his dt-.n Into a .

·

=
e

H~.

an

aaeoclate .PIIlfessor of

IIIIIIOioaY .... hal prop088d what he
IInne oil Mal._e concept" to the

~

hoapltal

consolldatlon

an acquaintance and quite
t, Hubberd found thet two
County Executive Regan had

..._ the Govwrlor's office about the
~of ullng the new Erie County
~JolaallhC&amp;refaclllty as a

..... teadllng unit. He also knew from

By October, Russell Smith, Hubbard's friend In Clty .Hall, he~
..-.nge a ""11!_at.lng of the · minds at
Cal...,cttus Preparatory School . The
-ion Included rep,._,tatiws of
· County and Siate government as well as
· a pmmlnent locar banker, Dr. Kenneth
Eckhart, president of the Health
Systems Agency of Western New ,York
and Mr. Robert S. Scheu, former
president of the Board of Trustees at
Buffalo General Hospital.
&gt;
Thep!MI
•
The aitamallw concept presented at
this meeting was In January unanImously adopted as an ailamatlve

~·~~~~~:~~~~~~,:m~= sth

5

n~ed.

Growth hormone Is sometimes
- prescribed," she sat:!.

can look forward to
The song says "short paople got
nobody to low. n
McCauley notaa thet the Weatam
-New York Chapter of the Human
Growth Foundation recognizee the
problem o,f short stature and
supports both the Psychology and . •
Endocrine Clinics at Children's.
1-lospltal.
The foundation consists mainly
cit parents with children who are
short.
Mccauley, who resldaa In
Snyder, assumed her present
position last August, but has been
associated with the U/B School of
. Medicine-for the past four years as
a clinical assistant prolassor. She
eameij her doctorate from U/ B In
t973.
Sh' and her 5-fool, 11-lnch
husband, Emer.y, are the parents of
a 9-month-old son who presantiy
measures a normal 27 Inches. ·
Tootall
·
· Mccauley counsels adults as well as children and even r !lnds
among her patients those who need
psychological help because they're
too tall.
They get the same type of
- counseling as short people::' But
there's little that
be done · to
make them-shorter.
" Randy
For the retord
Newman's record - let It be said
that the song, both popular 'and
unpo~ular, proclaims that "shOrt

0

ch\~~~e:.r~st'::"un~"i;;' ~ ~~,;

.

bloomers"

nd "we can truthfully

.

some space vacated by the Medical and
Dental Schools. 10) Establishment by
the State Oepartment of Commerce of a
nssearch and C:evelopment Industrial
facility In conjunction with the Schoof ·
of Englneerlrtg. The proposed facility
would hopefully be located at calopan,
which Is up for sale, and would also
occupy some space at the Main Street
Campus.
Far fetched? Politically unfeasible, 1~·

~~~~.:;;~·~~ .r~~~".:~~ h~

concept and Is " willing to taklt the
knocks" from thosa wl)o doubt Its
workability.
Hubbard believes his Idea can not
only help promote accreditation of the
School of Medicine, which ls In dire
need of edd lllonal space, but can also
develop new ' Industries which In tum
will create 'jobe for Western New
Yorker~. More jobs, of course,. mean·
Increased local revenues and a sorely
needed boost for local m~ .
Influx of mUIIona
With the creation of the bio-medical- ·
engineering comrlex, and the expanalpn oftheSchoo of E~l~ng which

~~g~w'1ee/~ =~t t':.atwlt~.::S

nurtured by students, • faculty and
research personnel could be developed
Into lnduJStries that would l'(lean an
Influx -of millions of dollars Into the

area.

calsran Corp. and Its predecessor,
Cornel Aeronautical Laboratories, for
.
example,
are responsible for --the
lncludaa the tollowlng:
.transfer
emergence of at leaSt nine local
of the new Health Care facility and all
companies
which , ac'cordlng to a
the former Meyer campus to State
December article In the Buffalo Evening
ownership. 2) Transfer of ownership of
News, have had sales of more than $90
the partially-occupied and financiallymnllon a year and employ 2,500
draining ·Kensington Heights Apartworkers. Thesa spin off companies
ments to the Stlile. 3) Assignment of
Include
Moog, Inc. Blrdalr, Astronlcs
the apartmenta to U/B to house
Corp., Sci par Inc., Comptek · Research
'-Pital ataff and personnel lor a
and
others.
Inc
.,
Unlveralty hospital. 4) Asalgnment of
Hubbard said that when he explains
the Grldlir street campus to U/B and
his plan to groups or Individuals, one
development of a UniYerlllty hoepltal In
aspect they find difficult to comprehend
the Health Cere facility. 5) Expansion of
Is the Idea that new technology
PGIII~naduate and graduate programs at
unheard of today, can be developed for
U/B's School of Engll*rlng. 6)
future profit. Hopefully, the University
Transformation of the School of
could provide an environment for the
Engf._-tng by SUNY Into a tachnlcal
cnsatlon of ll(IW Ideas which could then
lnalltute ol mtematlonal Importance
be developed and transferred In a pilot .
comparable to Cal Tach and M.I.T. 7)
r:mt/tege to the State research
Oevelopment by SUNY of programs In
gnaduate and postgraduate education
Hubbard pointed out tbat only a
and
In lbe physical and
decade ago, nQ. ·one could have
biological sclencea which would be
Imagined the potential growth possibll-Placed In the n - Institute. 8) Shifts of
Illes of the pocket calculator or of
basic science departments of the
cornputerlzed axial tomography (CAT)
School of Medicine and clinical
scanning units. The first CAT units
departments of the Dental Schoo·! Into
which detect pathological conditions ai
,_..ad apace. In the old Meyer
earlier stages of development than
Hospital. G) Establishment of a. city
other diagnostic techniques can, came
campus for Erie Community College In
on the market In t972. Only two short

~g;:" ~t~~~~~ Heali!Ja~.'!'.mlli

';f1r'tl8

-a.

can

r.&lt;'ln~ ~~u~~~·r-:,:;:::n:,;s .r::,~.,a:,~

until the day they die."
Mccauley couldn't agree more.
~slater,
1

the business. volume totaled

Suiii~~ .'Y~. ~~~~XTt~ev!n~~~s~,t

soar to $500 million per year by 1985.
Hubbard Is pushlnll hard for ·
bipartisan support for his concept
-because,,fn a-nutshell, he beii11Y8a time
Is ripe for ' action. Such · con-glng
factors as completion of the County
Health Care facility (which makes for an
easlert transfer of management) and a
''for sale" sign on Calspan underscore
the plan's timeliness.

Calspen and Cornell

•
·
Cornell University's association with
calspan was not as successful as
anticipated says Hubbard, because of ·
distance. COnversely, Its proximity to
U/B would enhance the . research
capabilities of both. Also, Hubbard
noted, It Is much easier to expand an
ongoing concern of national . promInence than to start a new company .
from ground zero .
Sometime this year, the stockholders
at cai!SI&gt;&amp;n may daclde to sell to Arvin
Industries, Inc. But Ccimell University,
which owns 68 per. cent of the stock
claims It won't sell If a !Njorlty ol
minority stockholders oppose the deal.
.. Hubbard admits thai some people
may look with a jaundiced eye on his _
scheme since contro-sy surround,lng
biomedical research will likely Increase
In time to come. Others, he says, may
feel anxious about" the "potential
hegemony the University may exercise." Local private educational lnslltu•
lions may also not react favorably to an
ever-expanding public unl-slty that
would have the necessary belt to snatch
most of the potential student clientele.
For the most part, however, Hubbard
considers thesa minor Issues.
AI his own expense, Hubbard Is
trawling back and forth to AI bally trying
to muster backing with " Carey's
bralntrust. He Is also , approaching
candidates In the State's gubernatorial
race. Once the concept Is endorsed by
any one, he feels, It would be politically
disadvantageous for others wooing
Western New York voters to discredit 8

r~~;;, tt~:·fl~~~~1ath~b'ldr~~~a~ ~~

put It on the map for more than Its
snow.
The University has 'taken a position of
neutrality on who should operate the
new County Health Care facility, a
stance Hubbafd considers wise. He
feels "adversary politics" might result
from any other position .
Although he has received no official
support from the University, many of
his colleagues have privately endorsed
his Idea. But like State and County
officials, they can't help but wonder if
Hul!_bard can solve· the political
equation that could turn his vi sion Into
a reality.

�. . .aata
F-uller, Hook, Jackson w~ll highlight FES summer
Morch23, 1171

salected films will be pr'esented and
analyzed. Tentative bookings Include
"The 400 Blows," " Biackboaid Jungle,''
"Strawberry Statii(Tlent ,'' and "II." The
film series will also be available to the
general University community and to
students In other Social Foundations
coursas. The Department lnten~s to

Distinguished visitors, special work- · research' from - neurosclence-blo!ogy,
shops, and naw coursas will enrich
medlclna and education, which promthe usual academic offerings of the
Ises to have Impact on the rethinking
Faculty of Educational Studies this '
and reorganization of educational

summer.

·

· Guest ape~~k'
Buckmlnster Full~r (August 2) and
Sidney Hook (July 12) are among
speakers who have been scheduled so
far,.FES spokespersons said this week.
Every Wednesday during the second
sasslon - June 26 to August 4 - will
be sat aside for lectures, discussion&amp;
and Informal talks bv these and other
Invited auests. All talks will be open to
the unrverslty community and to the
public.
Rev. Jelfse Jackson, national director
of PUSH, whohasgalned recognition for
his efforts In human rights, has also
been Invited as a guest ~peaker.

I

Middle O,.._lnatltut.

;,::;&amp;;r;~~n~duO:.tlo~:r Ra~~::H:c?~;

Middle Gntdes In Education Is )he title
of a summer Institute of Interest not
only to those concerned with educatlon
In the middle grades but also to
students of medicine, nursing, psychology and the sciences. Off&amp;Md by

~~-:'~s~=~~~~=~lor.;

cooperation with . the National Middle
School Aaeoclatlon, the Institute will be
led by Connlll F. Toepfer, Jr. (asaoclate
profeuor, Depertment of Curriculum
Development and Instructional Media),
and will feature Herman T. Ef!'!~!~ and
Donald H. Eichhorn. Dr. ~n, a

!:,'":, ort!.=•l: a~ Nat?~.:!i

Science, Guggenheim and Commonwealth Fellow. His recent work on
naurosclentlflc Implications of brain
growth lor middle grades reorganization
rs having national and International
Impact, FES spokespersons Indicate.
Or. Eichhorn, assistant superintendent
for Instruction, Upper St. Clair,
Pennsylvania, who has served as
middle school consultant to the
governments ol Japan and Indonesia, Is
recognized ail the leading theoretlcfanpractltloner In the mlddleJ&lt;;hool area.

·~rr:1~S:~=~~n~~~~~~

credit hours) and two-week (JuDe 26
·~uly 7 - ·3 credit hours) sessions. The
first week's program will focus on

8

~.:'. Th~~!,!'~ wl~f~~~~

Implications of the data In terms of
reorganizing existing middle grades
programs In responsa to educational
needs defined from this research.
Workallops
The Department of Elementary and
Remedial Education will offer two

:'~k-}reg j~::if1;,!· :r,~e ~~~~~fs c~::~

Spec/sf Needs, as well as a series of
reading workshops. William Eller,
president of the lntetliBIIonal Reading
Association this year, Ia organizing the
first two workshops: Beginning Reading Instruction (Juna 26 - 30) and
Testing and Evaluation In Reading (Jul/
3 - 7) . Sam Weintraub, editor of the
Reading Research ..Quarterly, Is organIzing the next two,. The Disabled RIHidBr
jJuly 10- 14) and Issues and Problems
7

1

g,:.~nX,l,7:,~'/:,~tl3,~?;s~~; wi;f ~:,

be , offered by DayAnn McClenathan
(asaoclate professor, Department of
Elementary. and Remedial Education)
from June26-July 14.
Infant
toddler and pre-school
chlldren1s groups will be In sasslon
also, sponsored by the Departments of
Educational Psychology and Elemen.tary and Remedial Education. Graduate
students will be englllll'!'f In activities
related to thesa groups lfl a number of
courses.
Arta Ecluc8tlon

Teaching Apftreclstlon of the Per-

,f~~11t~"~:~~': o~:reg~"6:ht.m:

.:J~e~t~~~~~1n ~~~ud~~sp~cu~~~~

film, theatre, dance, and opera.
Participants will attend performances In
Buffalo, Artpark, and Nlagara.on-theLake.
Education and 111m
The Department of Social, Philosophical and Historical Foundations will
be offering another new course:
Education and Film . -A sarles of

r

While the majority, 407, or 68 per
cent, are engaged In teaching, 18 per
cent are counSiilora or edmlnlatrators or
are In other degrae-retattlllslots.
The study sliowed that, In addition to
traditional jobs In public schools, FES
master's students graduated In the last
two yeara are employed . In nursery
SChools, day care centers, private
'elernentlll)' and high schools, four-year
and community colleges, In universities
In various counseling and edmlnlstra-

Spring break
The University is on midsemester recess beginning
Saturday, March 25,
thrQ_ugh Sunday, April 2.
Cla!ises resume Monday, .
April 3 _The Reporter will
not be published March 30.

-

THURSDAY-6
BIJFFALO LOGIC COUOOUIUMI
The Qiatlnctlon Pure and Applied
Molhemitle., MlchaoiRadner. McMaster University. 684 Baldy. 3 p.m.

live roles, In hospitals, counseling
centers, and private and community
agencies. At the college level, some
hold administrative posts In language
centers, reading clinics, continuing
~,~;:!ion programs and media 1~ ·
Jobs are not limited to school and
counsallng sailings, thougl&gt;. One
Educational Psychology alumnus Is.
employed by the Educational Testing.
Service in Princeton. A graduate of the
program In Instructional Communications serves as senior editor of
educiitltmal films In a private Industry;
another Is the producer/host of an
afternoon TV show. Two .graduates of

~~~~~~p :V~~~~s"f~r eg;r~ ~n~~

0

Court. A number of students hold Jobs
In foreign ministries of eduoatlon .
The survey revealed that 8 per cent
oft he group surveyed went on to further
study. Students are enrolled In doctoral

~~':smTn a~~~:rsfll~ss:~::ru:~~· I~

country.
Three per cent of thosa polled
/indicated they do not wish to work at
thls lime; child care responsibility was
the most lrlllluently.offered reason why
not.
Of the remaining graduates, 2 per
_ cent are employed ln jobs that are not
related to their deg.--a; only 1 per cent
are seeking employment now.
1
The survey, a spokesperson for the
Dean's Office said , "confirms that FES
alumni are faring very well . It Is fell that
the study provides important educational Information since data collected by
state agencies are often confined to
public school sailings within one

~~r~~ar ~:,ate:ell~~~r~~:~wh~o~t~Yo:::

outside the state, In private Institutions, or In universities towards

=~~:ed ~~~~a:;'.~;. p~ld~\~ th~:

• agencies." -

kif--

PHARMACEUTlCS SEIIIHARI.
The Appllca- d Solid Solution Tac:hnology
I n - - F""" Doalgn
lto&lt;l, Or. Robert E. Dempei&lt;J. · Shoop '
Dohme ~· l.abormOOeo. C508
4p.m.

~tsat3: 50 .

Cooke:

SUDEI LECTURE I

~. ~Ajna-fnFnlnch) .

Michel Son:luliot. ~ ProfOOS«oiFnonch.UIB. 102Ciorriona. 4p.m.

Pro!OS.O.

IACRUI•
c.tcll 22. 2nd Floor i.DU1go. Elfcolt.
8 ..s 10 · p.m. Free to al lAC 1 - :
$ .50 for others.
UUABFIUI•
Upl (1976). AA X-nded Mo)oer mcM8
(lleyond the ValleJ ol the - . . _ Vlll-.j
that yOu through • , . , _ WOI1d ol ......
excess. See you there!
Confarunce - · SQun. Cal 636-2919
times. Admission charge.

'"'show

(associate professor, Department of
Instruction). The course is designed to
help elementary and secondary teach-

Education ·grads .find jobs in
diversity of-fields, survey shows
Modern education Is more ~han Just
teaching school, and alumni of the
Faculty of Educ;:atlonal Studies (FES)
are proving It by the diV«Sity of
professional positions they occupy, a ·
recent placement etudy of the Faculty's
graduatealndlcatea.
Despite a national downturn In
teacher placement, FES graduates have
found education-related lobs In this
region as well as In 28 other states In
the U.S. ' and In 14 countries. The
statistics speak well for the quality of t
FES graduates and for the Ingenuity of
Ed .M. and "M.S. degree holders In
finding professional positions, a
spokesperson for the Faculty said.
A recent placement study conducted
by the Dean's Office, which surveyed
·master's c~!~Qree recipients of 1975-76
and 197&amp;-7'1, found that 84 per cent of
the 602 graduates on whom data were
availllble are serving as educational
~net or are In other degree-related

•Calendar
(from p.oga 12, c:Gt. 41

NOTICES
ADMISSIONS. RECORDS AHNOIINCBENTS

Office Houts-Ha,..

a .m .~4 : 30

B: -.:11 27-31-!1:30
p.m.; Aprl 2 &amp;3--8:30 a .m.· 7 p.m.;

Integrate the -films Into 4he work of
many of Its courses;
Details about FES summer courses
are avallllble through Individual departments. More Information about 11~
lecturers can be obtained ·througn the
Dean's Office.
'

For-...-.-Tho-...

Recordo .,. be open from 8 :30 a.m.-11:30 p.m.
April 24-Ailril 21.
be opon Fttclay.
Al&gt;fl 28 from 8 :30 a.m.-4:30p.m. In! Sollunlal'.
Aprl29. !rom 9 a.m.-4 p.m.

SENATE OFFICE HOURS

31 .
---~~-­

... be dosed from- 21 through -

TAX INF~110N FOR -ITUIIEIITS

Foreign---·
.,_-.;--bring
AND 8CHOUUifl

·A - through Aprl

16. 1978. from Con-

t o . by~ only. Cal838-2271
402~
~Hal
eoploa ol .

111----

!hW19ntoxnotumo..sW2-

WOM-FORHI'IIIIICAPPBISY.-rs
Free
for~
cologos-.
~lhec:redwproceoaln

=:.::"c..~~~~~
Aprl4- c:onlirUig to . . d ..·
T- II 3-5 p.m. ~ Dione Ill
941.ee80 to amnge- In! rwglal&lt;•. I . . . . .
• ~ cal ... Oftlce for
Servlceofor·lha~.631-3126.

EXHIBITS
ClAI.I.EAY 21t EX.-r
lnatJollallonl.,.,_, JlolO Tal&gt;ec:hnlchor.
Apr13-14.

MUSIC
'--AllY
ElOBT
An'a _
_ ,____
Ubnwy. Baird Hal. through.-

31 .

April4-6-8:30 am.·4:30 p.m.
s..mm. ~- - , , Apt117:
April 17·2Q-a:30 a.m.-8 :30 p.m.: April 21-

6 :30 a.m .·4 :30 p.m...
•.
1.0 . Corda anllable In 111 Hamman: March
23-12noon-8 p .m .; Man:::h 24-12 noon-S p .m.;
Aj)rll3-6-3p.m.·7p.m.

- - . oii- ID cardo: The l.lniY«oiiy l..lnrieo
wll requn the 10 card for .. activities
effective 26, 1978. Dole ol .birth wll
be added to the card SW1ing on Aprl 3 o1tar
the --IIC&gt;PfO\IIII.from~Secuty.
This IIC&gt;PfOIIIII must b e - - . ! h e Ill card
lsJssued,

.

..

COIFET1TIVECIVL SERVICE

,...,.(2).

Un=~Ccu-

-~·Oftlce.~.
--[p111-); ~- (l*l·-).- -. . . . . a-.

---OIIIce.
(!~try.

-

~-

CornpuW - ·
Clort ~. camw r~s.--

-Clark----

vtcoo (pll1-tme).

'

Fllea.t~-&amp;llacit!llo.

BUS SERVICE
AegtAw bus service will tennlnato on Satur25. 1978 at ~II AegiAw bus
resume on Slwlday. · April 2.. 1978

day. -

service w11

according to !he posted Slwlday -

·
I n - b - ... poalsdln alb&lt;tilgs
..Salbusslopo.
•

CAPEN LOBBY COUNTER
•
The Capor(l.obby Courter wll be dosed during
the spring rocoss from 27 through 31.

Accaliillo. Cloicll·
Free PlogrwM. Payroll.-~·

~.
- a . t . - I I H - . ;.

- - fiG.8-Sc:hOol ol

Muaic.Arto&amp;~~aOflcal .

-12---

-Ciort&lt;Paynlll-7~.

-lftllatiG-7--I..M-.

"::'*

"F•II&lt;.Lab _
Lf'b T
,I
__
_ Fdllloo.
II&lt;.

-a.t.---.cer..-.

-~Opar-..IG-1~

INTERNATlONAL COLLEGE LECTURES
The lnlomatlonal ~Is pleooed to a series of lectlns on intemationlll issues in April,
1978. Alllecll.ns wll begin ol 7:30 p .m. In the
seoond ttoor iculgo.
Ellcott. ments wll be setVed. The schedule Is:
W - y. April 5 . Combing the Woold
Unlwwula of L.anvuqe. Professor David Hays,
Doporlment of I.Jnguisllcs.
Monday. April 10. and -..~

so.-, ~ IG-17--Phyo·

k:aiPIIolt.

kif ---OIIIce.

Rod.-.

w-.

Services.
Principal

Supontolng .Ia- 804 (3·11 p.m. shlli-

SqunHal.

1D~tNSI-'-POSITIONS

-

SCK-(111 178-10 / 31/78) -

zallon, ProfesaorGal Kelly. Doportmenlol Sociol.

--TEACMNCI PROFESIIONAL

~Ed.
-. .-I&amp;. Soclat-llnder

..-.,.Pfi.2~-IHI008 .

Historical -

ol

T----(T-Co-

o.n,

PR-6--f'8CU!Iy ol -

Sclonooa •

Ollltcuh ~ &amp;un.,lng In
Alg-Profaaaor-Korr. ~I I
of Sociology.

~~8-8005.

RE018111A110NDATESFORFAU, 1171 \
Aeglsntion bogino Aprl24 for al DUEIOld Juni&lt;n: Aprl 25. for DUE OOjJhornonla;

""""m~.- Hal, 1..1ne No. 30048.

April 2.8. for D U E -· (HI

wil be nogiolored a l t h a - - ) .

~

ur-I-

~CIVL~

L--,-~-~·
L--,-~-~
No. 30043.
-V-OperoaiG-7-AidwaiCom-

unii8/30/78~--Hal.l.lne

pus. Line No. 32263.

PUT US ON YOUR UST
The Reportar "Calendar" hopM to pn1¥1c1e the CMnpua with a
ClllllpnMnal.. weeldy llatlng of - t • and IICIIY!tlea, from lllma and
mMtlnga to aclentlflc colloquia. We'll print both JOUf nou- and , _
publicity photoa (n apace permlta) II you auppiJ ua with glouy prtnta. The•
MrYice Ia lnoe. To ..-d Information, call Jean Shnder, 83&amp;-2128, by
Monday noon lor lnclualon In the following Thund8(a luue. Or, !Mil
lniJ&gt;rmatlon to RfPOrter "Calendar,fl 1~ Crolla Hall, Amherst. We nMCI , _
asalatance In making the "Calendar" aacomplete •• poaalble.
Key: IOpen only to thoae with • profeuloftalln-t In tha aublect; •open
to tha public; ••open to members of the Unlv-lty- UniMa otharwlae
apklflecl, tlckata lor - t • charging admlaaton can be purchued at the
Squire Hall Ticket Office.

�11·.,

FJUI•

Tile Slarchen (Ford, 1956). 150 F -.

THURSDAY-23

3 · and 9 Pcm . Sponsored by _lhe Department

'Of English . •

_ _ . . _ _ IOnlor.
~-llnEIIISCFUNEStr

FJLIIII•

T- · Tllnlugll
oQ'ylor- ~6 . Seb.wdoy.

• HlroMhna mon amour (Resnaist. 150 Farber,
5 p.m.; 5 Acheoon. 8:15 p.m. Sponsored by

See -

- - by lhe Cologoo, lhe Councl on

the Department of Modem

for~

COLLEGE 8 FILM'
lmulon o1 the. llodJ Snatchoro (1955).
170 MFI,CC, Eltk:ott. 7 p.m;

PaiiAlNCMRMCII-f

(T-• ... ---~·
---~

D,..Syndromo). ~ .
~. Ph.D.• Poychialry. Room,.CM-

_

'

ART LECTURE*
Art 10 the 8 a -: A -

-·altool&gt;llal.12._...

~- 1817-11121,

fiLM•

..-ncaCOLL~I

.._....,._-La- DolaJ

BUFFALO ~OMMijHITY STUDtES..l)ROUP'
CETA- Bullalo,.,.._- Drescher•
- o e Fordham, "Labor Arcl1ives Project;" lydia
Fish.· " Ethnic AellgiQus Ritual cl'roject;" Kelttl
Baird. Ma-y Twining, ''Buffalo Black Comrrun"y
ProjeCt." I 23 Jewett Parl&lt;wey (Frank ·Uoyd Wrlgl1t
Hoose). 8 p.m.
Reports by several colleagues from Buffalo
State who are tiiklng advantage of CETA fundS
to document iong-neQiected aspects of Buffalo's

Dr. Lyn R. - _, Cen1er fOf V1ouo1

_. __

au.d,
I :30
p.nl.
-l.ol.&lt;lge.·SpUdlng
u.w.alty
.of Ellooll.
· I.Jnguistics

__ .,...,...,T_-..,

PIIYIIDLOGY- I

.

.

a.llon~Zoology llepnnont, ~­

Dr. -

ally ofT-. I 08 Sllonnon. 2 p.m.

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

diverse convnuni'r.

CIYL- EBS G~f

tRCFIUI•
Catch 22. Ctement Lounge. 9 p..m. Free to
f!IIIRCfeepoyors; $ .5010fo!h&lt;n.
·
A _.,...,biting bookl&gt;ecomes a so-so film .

-.SI.nrGaK. - . - p r o -ttlclvl~.--ol
T~. 100-. 2:30p.m.

'

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WEDNESDAY- 5

SUC/Broc:lcport. 884

~. 3: 30p.m .

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE•
B i l l - . &amp;Inger/ songwriter. -Haas Lounge.
5Quli'e. 12 noon. Free. •

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E - t ·C.ncer, Dr. Frad Boc1&lt;.
of lhe On:hatd Pari&lt; Laboratories. Bu1ler
::'; ~· &amp; North Streets. 7 :30p.m. Admis·

-

Roswei

Sponsored by lhe
~ Institute .

Pari&lt; Memorial

Pro-

FRIDAY-31

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SATURDAY - .25

- __
. . _..dlr8clod
by Soul Eldn.
_
8p.m
'l&gt;\&gt;eMon:h23llollng

FfiDAY-24

p.m.

SATURDAY-1 •
CONVERSATIONSiN ntE ARTS ~
e.u. -.z Interviews wr1ter and attic,
LHIIe Fieclle&lt;, Courier Cable (ChannelS). 12:30
p.m. {,..,U,)
.

SUNDAY-26
--~(QuoUnl••

........

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•
Et h e - NurMry.

14 .. F -. 12 noon.
Sponaored by lhe School of Modk:ine:s Human

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Bufflllo, N.Y.

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' ·
BIOCI~Y NUTRriloNNOON

FRENCH DEPART1IEIIT LECTURE I
Dodo "' Our Time (In English), Micho1 sencx.et,
Jones V"!Siting Proleaaor of French. A!brightKnox Art Gallary Auditcflurn. 8 , p:m. To be
folowed by . ~ ·given by lhe Cerde
Colttnde de l.algue, F""""'!S de Bullalo In lhe
M: s.onou.et held lhe Jones Chair hera lh
lhe Spring of'l987 when he do1lvored a oeiiO's
ol public lectures oil ·~ Apolina!re 1m! -

TAKE A - . •

-

senior cttiiens $1 ; students $ .60.
Sponaoredby~toiMusic.

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Hl57) . 14111llel-. 7p.m.
Sponaored by Center f()( Madia Stud)o.

137 UFACp, Elioall. 10 a.m. e.v.yone Is
'

FACULTY RECITAL •
, ~ t..l, mezzo-soprano;
slon

v,._ - - Ethlca Commftlee.

f o r -.

A p!WMII of attorneys will ~ to apeok
on vomua aapocta of 1he topic . _ by a
~ and period and lr1forma1 get·
together,

HeinZ ReMu..,
bwitone.aain!"Recital)iall. 8 p.m. GenoraiadrnlsSt.so. lJIB faculty. atalf. alt.mrii With to,

_ _ ........_ _ _ _ FOC&lt;My
c:otMRaAlinE ARTS
ol At\11 l.etlenl. Ccx.rier Coble
(ehnlol8). I 2:30p.m.

,,

• .LAWSCHOOI.~DAY
.._. Aldf~-. 108 O'BrWI. 7:30

. . _ _ _ by Saul Eldn.
· 8 p.m: See Mon:h 23 11at01g

•

U.Aophoi!Jungle(1950). 7. p.m.
Directed bY John Huston. with Ster1in0 Hayden,
--..,-Mo~woe , Jean Hogen and olhenl. Th1a
- " A chma 01 colec1IYe delaat hos - .
caled Huston's best lim. Monroe ahlnes In- her
brief role, as 'does Hayden aslhe th1e1 and Hogen
aahlsQirl.
Mold! Girl (1968). 9 :05p.m.
This short . . - lhe j e t - fairy
tale of • lonely young modal In lhe of New York.
.r·
'
Dan'tBolllortoK.-1&lt;(1952). 9:30p.m. ·
hlnld as..a baby a1tblr in a 1a-ga hotel, Is 88Y9d
from killng- !Old her chage.
Squire Conloronce n-ue. Free admission.

Eng~M«a,

Bullalo.
Roam 27. ..232 Ridge Lea. 4:20 p.m..
. . - b y -.

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'

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'"-.1•

' R-..:h
- i Eftluatlon -'ot
the Graduate Lewf, Or: Frederic 0 . Burg,
Bowd ol M!dcol Exawlhn, ~
Children's Hospital. 12 noon.

...... al--.y . . . . _ , -

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~SCIEidCES~'t &lt;f"-.- .

RESEARCH SEIIINARf

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dorf. 1 p.m.
Sl&gt;c&gt;r..-.cl b y - -·

In~

Languages an81

Uteratures.

~
. _...·
lnlemoillonal
COllege.
""'Cenler

du -~ Doda and of mllrlY book
length studlea and articles 'on '*led topics.
He taught at tho IJrii-.Hy ol Toronto from 1949
to 196_.8. lr1 .t989he--tedtolhe Untver&amp;ity oiRelrna (France). Since 1971 he has - .
direct« of lhe Centre f« XXIh Century Studies
at lhe Univenoity of Nice.

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lAC FILII•
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Hal. 8 and 10 p.m. Free"'ID 81 IRC . I~ ;
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�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                    <text>This·week, read ·about-

Chlnanlght

Mott
A former-defensive

Gardner

The campus Chinese
commtmity had its
annual talent show
arid dinner Saturday.
A group of singing
children stole the
show. See page 5.

end for the Bulls has
eased into the
president's chair at
SA. He's not going
to be a pushover.
See page 3.

Events

Women

He doesn't like the
.filmmakers and
writers were 'among
· campus much, but
he still hasn't made - those celebrating
International
up his m1nd about
Women's Day on
U!B. He has lots of
campus. See page 9.
firm notions about
other things, though.
: See page-6.

This-week's Calendar
is overflowing with
hundreds of things
to do before the
Spring break. For one
thing you might go
hear the Shepherd
Quartet on
·
Wednesday. See
page 12.

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 9 NO. 23 MARCH 16, 1978

Psychic
They're testing
one today
at RldgeLea .
Todw'e lha IIIeY ia.t
"psycllfc." They being: Paul Kurtz,
Biederman, The " Amazing Rand!," an
astrology critiC from California, and a
magazine editor. Each Is a professed
non-believer.

or~~eu~~t~nBreog~,:~~Y ~:Orls.'::.

and founder of the world-wide
Committee lor 1he Investigation of
Claims of the Paranormal, e 61Hnember
panel devolad to challenging boasts of
unusual powers.

Kurtz said

Suzie Cottrell

~

is' · the

rhs:c,~;ts s~ :::~- :Jl=.t~re~,u~~·\~~-

commlttee's newly organ ized Laboratory for the Scientific Investigation of
Claims of the Paranormal. Miss
Cottrell , who hails from Kansas, has
been featured on Johnny Carson as a
pertormer who seemingly Influences a
person to select a given card from an
untouched deck.
Teats are being conducted In the
Psychology Department Building at
Ridge Lea as pert of an Informal
three-day meeting of about eight
committee members~ The sessions
began last night .
~Ill!
eats ant designed to
dllteriril
Mlaa Cottrell does In
fact fJiw
( xtra aensory percep- ·
tiOnl ~ - The teetlng, he explained,
will ~ wtth her · abilities In
precogntiiOn, or clalrvoy&amp;J~Cf, and In
paychoklneals, or mlnlklwr-matter In
the rnov.nent of objects without
touching them.
Or.' living Biederman, a _psyc11ology
p r o f - INn; Mwtlo Cllr!lner, a
contrtbutlng editor to S!:lel!llflt: AmerIca; l.awnlnce Jerome of calllomla, the
astrology criUc; and James Rand!, also
known as the "Amazing Randl ," a
magician who duplicates claimed
olalrvoyant feats through Illusion, will
be there to vi-things.
Also ·;nvl(lld Is Wendy Slernberg of
Rochester, a 1975 graduate of Buffalo
State, who plana to bring with her, for
Investigation, a college ID picture of her
that mysteriously includes a profile of
what appears to be an elderly Indian

g':,'l'.,t!.e27 ,'~8~1- ~~~!~~~;ud~'!~:/f~;

has defied explanalion.
Kurtz, editor of The Humanist and a
sponsor of "The Zetetlc" (skeptlcl, a
Journal published by the commUtee,
invited Carol Ann Llaros, a local
lc who "teaches the blind to see,"
to
iclpale (Reporter, March 2, 1978).
She apparently Isn't coming .

~

U/BandWNY

'

I

Spokesmen for business, labor. University
send the word to State government: ·
a·rea's ec(;&gt;nomy depends on completing Amher~t
byJoyceB~
Ropol1lor SWf

Representatives of business, labor,
State government and the University
Joined forces at a public hearing Friday
calling for the completion of the
Amherst Campus.
Although each speaker emphasized
how a particular constituency could
untqely benefit from resumed construction, a unified meaaage rang loud : the
economic development . of the entire
area Is Intrinsically tied Into the fate of
the University, mons specifically, to Its
build-out program.
The public hearing was held In
O'Brian Hall, under auspices of the
State Assembly Subcommittee on
Economic Growth , a subcommittee of
the Assembly's Standing Committee on
Commerce, Industry and Economic
Development . Area Assemblyman G.
James Fnsmmlng was chaimlan.
Fremmlng began .by pointing to an
obtrusively empty chair with a black

~:. ~~.;n= ~~~~~

the no-show of Commerce Commissioner John DYson who carne under fins
llist week for attempting to' addnsas a
legislative hearing wearing a mask.
Ovson was proteelllljl the elfmlnation of
hfs picture from State business- advertisements.
Fnsmmlng told the audience, which
-consisted primarily of speakers and
media nspreeentatives, the! the Com·
missioner's office Informed him that his
10 minute appearance did not warrant
"fulfilling his commitment to be hera."
Fremmlng said Dyson attended a
meeting In New York City Instead.
"I consider this cavalier attitude
about broken promises mode to
Western New Yorkers as Indicative of
why U/B stands only little more than &lt;CO _
per cent complete to this day."
Fnsmmlng· said U/B Is now the
second largest employer In WNY and
that mons jobs could emerge through
private sector lryvestments .once th~ .

~~"r.!lty Is ''completed and

tunc-

He pi8dged to "wOrk to oorrect the
Inequities whiCh have allowed our U/B
campus to languish for eo long like an
unwanted child of the Stele bureau-

cracy."

The TOM! hu h a d Reginald Owens, head- of

the ·

~::=~':,1~~~~:=~~~~'w~g:;

had In attracting new business and

~~~ller!::!'~~~~e 'ft.t~'fo'~~~"":\':
Program (JIPiand Business Investment
Exemption Program .
Owens said Amherst Is the only
community In Western New York that

~~~Y~~~ln~":C::~~~~h~~~~~

new businesses have agreed to locate In
the Audubon Industrial Park complex •
not far from campus.
·
Owens spoke of the pending plans of
, .•S.. 'Amh«&lt;!Cimpua, ' Pl.g e10,col. 2

�~····

March 18, 1171 •

Council hears hows &amp;·whys of ·professional admissions
The~ of Medicine..-~... ~ci
. , . _ . . 4!000 applications ..,nually
belen decld ng on ~ entering e1aa of

lllldlclne---ve-e.

down
o.n Jolin Naughton
reported that In

'-1

the

three

U/8

has

=~~~d~~~=erl~g'=;~

to 4,2118 (for 1977's).
TMre . . two IMIIO!Ia: Numbers of
-'ICMt• nationally have declined .by
abOut 10 per oent ~ the period. And
U/8 hu Instituted ~ application lee of
125, which ellmlnatee casual appll- · (It alao goes to support the
OfleNIIona of the Medical Admissions
which lost linea In budget c-uts
two v-a ego. Dr. H.-ry Metcalf, an
family physician, Ia the
l*t-411M dlnlctor of the Office.)
T ' - Who apply to U/8 Medicine
muet do eo through a centralized
..,pllcatlona a.v1oa bMed In Wuhlngton (soma 80 per oent of U.S. med
echoola uaa this 8MYioa, Dean
N8ughton Mid).
"
Lcllllilly, •~ Medical Admlselonl Committee (both fiiCUity and
8llldenta appolntad by the dean from
. . _ Gt-~u- provided by their

omc:.

.....,._end

~)11C18811aiiPPIIcenta.

==

Tlle'flrllt -=r--.lng Ia ~academic

winnowing. From aptitude teet

SCOteS

.,r::n,:'.r.rt.o:'fn
:::
• cto.. look.

toll hilt The top 20 per oent . . given ~
lntalvlft wlthollt futther l1l¥leW.
Two committee rnembenl . . assigned to the . _ . of eact1 of the rest of
tile toll hilt. The ~*~&amp;~lata lndepenCIIIItly mlew the academic recorda, the
the lettera of recommendation ..., a lllqulrad biographical
atltamlnt. II both rev'-a say no,
IIIII -uc..t 18 ou.t aleo. II both say

till-·

,_, 1M IIPPIIcaoot gets .,. Interview.

In

- o f a,.._ apllt, a third committee
~ lnllkee a determination which
~CIIcleM.

CiDIIImltMe "**Ibera for 3-yaar
.._end may be 181PPP1nted once.

~-~to dewola Wednesday
. , . . . _ end e.tv -lnga to the

- - . Naughton uld.

_..._....._

=

.........,._
bytwo
...... allllllnta_
- _ for
their

~ - - . . MediCal atudents

lOin for them. Each of the
lwaa Ia then '-!I by the full

.....
wote1"no."
on e.ct1
-·
The . ."'*"
. maythen
be -v-."
or "hood
••

Students In the "hold" group are on a
waiting list In the event an opening
occurs. "Holds" are rank-ordered
through 200 at the end of jl8ch year.
The admissions committee pro-rates
Its actions across six separete periods
of the year. Those who automatically
qualify lor Interviews (t~e top 20 per
c:ent) are evenly divided Into each of
these periods so there Ia no Imbalance.
So far this year, Dean Naughton
reported, 3500 students have applied;
484 have been Interviewed. Acceptances have been of~ to 157 and 88
have lndlceted they Will enroll. One
hundred ninety-seven have been put on
the "hold" list.
· The screening Is continuing.
Each year, Medicine Issues 2 to 21-!.
acceptances for each ollta 135 places.
Some come, some don't. It usually
--.a out. laSt year, though, when
Upstate Medical was able to edd places
at the last minute, we lost a number of

r~~~e~~~~- ~lo~~~~~~~~~~;~

on the hold list,q' Naug~ton said-but
that was unusual.
In 1977, the ratio of men to women In
the Medical entering class was less
~ 2 to 1: 88 men and &lt;46 women. For
the three years preceding, It was around
3-1.

,.._.H

~000

Tllla
for busing; $125,000 lor utilities lor new buildings
Clpllllllg !alar lbl8 yar, $242,000 for telephone "multiplexing" (to
lollaiOWIIICA 0011111u1. . on the - . 1 campu-); $380,000 lor renovations; _
-.aDO for mowing; end 1383,000 for nantala. (Ridge Lea Ia the location of

...

~:~~~~ =~:n:h= ~:~:nraep:l~

0

-

ed becauae of .., Impending restructuring of the local hospital

:w~::,~.~~~~rt'!:f.P.\~~=. 'r~~

·situation Is not the same." Applications
lor 188 slots In the 1972 entering class
totaled 2,S07; there were just 2,122
apused
_pllcantotaktsleoonrzry open.3perlngscenlnt1o9f77th. owsee
22.3'
who
appaplpcanlleds' buweretlasacceptt
year,ed42.•6 per cent
01
lc 1
In terms ot quality, median LSAT
scores have gone down slightly-from
6321n 1972 to 620 In 1977; median grade
point average Ia up, from 3.22 to 3.52.
Headrick noted that the latter can
possibly be attributed to undergraduate
grade Inflation.
·
"We may be In slight trouble" In the
next few years, he predicted. unless we:
step up nscrultment efforts ("we've Hone
practically none up to now" ), launch a
campaign to Inform people about the
changln3 nature of the school (through

W•twn N- York. .~
While there are no quotas tor
enrollment In any category of students,
Naughton Indicated, applicants from
Western New York usually number
between SO and 60 In any given entering
class. They receive a bonus of so points
on admissions ranking scores.• the dean
said , because "U/ 8 has always been a
regional school" and "because Western

-~nn~e th~r~!'t'~~~n~\ac!'~":l· ell~~

percentage of those from WNY
admitted here has dropped sharply from

developed In recent years.
Eighty-live per cent of last year's
~rada have found joba In the field,

~~~-:,y~~~~~~ej~l~ ~~=:~~~~~~
~~~lg:f~~l ~~~ P{'o';~tle ~~~~ug~~~~

th':l~f~ ~~~it~~":~: ~~=~

per cent passed the Stale bar exam.
While approximately hall of each
entering law class Is from Western New
York, seventy-lour per cent of the
graduates of 1977 went to wOrk outside
the area, the dean reported.
Our greds may possibly not be taking
advantage of afl the job opportunities

:E,~~r~pF.,~~i£:sm::;· ::a~:

Average starting salaries lor U/8 law
grads hired by large firms In New York
City run between $25,000 and $26,000,
the dean said. Cierkshlps there pay .
between $20,000 and $25,000. Major
firms In Rochester-Buffalo offer from
$17,000-$20,000 to start. The federal
government, around $18,000; district
;~~~·s offloea, betwee~ $15,000 and

~~~.:='~,~~,!~'!~~

...,,ooo.•

. . . _ -·UIIIIIIIon.

18 'dipping...,_.
Law Dean Thomas Headric-k painted a
picture of decreasing numbers , of

::,".,~~~d ~ttl:~!'o~f&amp;s'!~a g,o~~~ 1~
~~!'d'~&amp;,'fu~~ia~;~i. ~o7v«&gt;g~:. !:d

The Unhoarai!Y'a SuDPiementaJ Budget lllquellt to State University contains
a plaa for 1100,1100 hir "Waakway encloauree" lor lour Am~ Campus
ll&amp;lldna tots end aeka for ptennlng lunda for rehabilitating Main Street space
far ~. -E..:uthe Vice Prwldent Albert Somlt told the U/8 Council
Mondiy.
~ walks from lm~t perking lots heve become safety hazards In
winter, I'Neklent Robirt L Ketter aaTd In a letter of justification to SUNY
CllalallorQifton Wlwrton which wu diltrlbuted to the Council.
"TTie~ ~ hu - t i y had~ ecct8dltatlon visit ~d Its
cllnloopeqllon rMieda addltlonalinvoi.._,t with the Oniveralty community
end Ia to be l8localad to the Main Slneet.Campua," Ketter told Wharton. "The
01111 ollllla JWbabllllallon to SIXllpl the department and animal facilities Ia
He&amp;lkad .SO,OOOforplannlng lt.
The two llama . . l*t ol a oapltallllqll8llt of $17,668,000 lor 13 major
._., Including: a ~ end c:Mmber hall, an lnatructional
ca• 1niolllonaoent.,
of the Clllllecl Water Plant, PhaM II of the
Clrwii'.,.../SIIerman _..,.,, re1oca11on of Neurophyalo)ogy and the
Hlillli.._SIIop to Main SllMt from Ridge Lea, Me.
_.
Olblr~oltheeupplemental
IWQIMBI-:
.
'

-aalaand~lona.)

years ago."
Law

schools In cities .with large minority
populations, as a stepping-off point lor ·
leadership.
U/8 Medicine Is not without
accomplishments In minority enrollment, however. Our total minority
enrollment o~ 78 out of 551 med achool
students ranks 12th among all U.S. med
schools In the percentage of suCh
enrollment, Naughton said.

remained cOnstant.
The 1977 entering class hed 52 from
'Minority' atudenta
this region; 11 more from other ·upstate
_ Numbers of "minorities" have remainareas; 11 from downstate and 6 from
ed about tha same since 1974-23 that
out-of-state. Thirty-six undergraduate
year; 25 In 1977. But the "definition" cit
jo
ted 1
1
minority has shifted to Include what ·
Naughton termed "socioeconomic white · :;::n,:.."::\~~~:"oraJu:t~n ~~
The 135 enrollees attended 65 df!lerent
minorities" as well as Blacks and
Puerto Ricans. The potential of the
Bakke Case has prompted this, he said,
8
to the consternation of some blacks,"
but it makes certain that all minorities
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 4
get Included."
each; Hunter, Hofstra, Northwestern,
Under this new Interpretation of
Notre Dame, St. Lawrence, SUNY 1
minorities, blacks among the entering
Albany and Union, 3 each. Such
class have dipped from 221n 1974 to 12
schools as Duke, Johns Hopkins,
Harvard, Yale and MIT were amongthose providing 2 each.
economic" minority students were
The edmlaalons process of the Med
among the tan ctass. While blacks
School, Naughton said, has become so
who enroll nowadays may · be fewer,
relined
that attrition among the l977
they era more likely to graduate,
entering class will almost be ''zilch."
Naughton said.
NO minority applicant gets ~Y extra
~ml..k.na
points lor being a member of a,
Actl
~--oan1e1 Murray ' 0 1
•
L
ng ..,_.,
Phe,rmacy noted that his school's

The supplemental

......._

minority, but "every minority folder Is
Interviewed," Naughton said.
In any event, he suggested, Buffalo Is
not an attractiVe place lor minority
medical students. We have a high

~:':~, ~ ~=g:a·co':.,",~,·W~

handlee the process ·for Law (six
faculty, lour students, and one
administrative penson).
This panel, Headric-k said, automatlcally accepts those abcWe a certain
8
teoet of combined LSAT/GPA 'SCOteS,
reached the saturation point early In the · :?ow'*! ~~Jf'-o~ln~~os_: .
19708, he said. With Pharmacy now
mlddle-ranga group nequlnsa dellberaoccupylng Cooke Tower at Amherst,
tiona.
~~~~~.'lf'~!d,S~~'n~~~ ~.U.'he Fall _
'Special'--. Applications lor the B.S.P. program,
In theory, law's admlaalona policies
Murray said, havegonefrom 402in 1976
make It possible lor the school to edmlt
to an estimated 320 so far this year.
20 per c:ent of eech c l - from a pool of
Some ninety-one are . ailmitted each
Individuals with certain special charr:;"M~rra~ro~t.!?. women tor next acteristics (their overall scores may be
lower than some others who have been
Apptlcanta lor this only school of
rejected but they are still above the
pharmacy within SUNY are screened by
automatic
rejection level). Factors
a three-person panel appointed by the
dean. They .,.. judged on cumulathe • which allow an individual to be
considered
lor · .acceptance In this
grade - - In science lor tha flrat
manner lnciucle: raoa, physical and
two years or collage (60% of the total
admiUiona S&lt;:Onl) and scores on the
PCAT axam (weighted at 40%). Those
education, etc. In practice, Headrick
ao:cepted lor fallt977 had science GPAs
lndlceted, only about 12 per cent of
ol3:43 and ranked bel- the BOth and
each class Is admitted this way.
90th percentile on !hePCAT.
Law has been admitting an lncreesU/B'a Pharmacy School used to be
lngly high percentage ol women In
tops In the nation In terms of outside
recent years, HeadricK said - primarily ·
because of an Increased number of
=lcMu:;:x,
women In the aprlicant pool. Women
the dearia o, 72 p~armacy schools In the • were
32 per cent o the entering class of
U.S. rated us sixth. 'We may have
260 In 1977, he said.
The-percentage of minority students
admitted to Law has declined from
arbitrarily cut live faculty lines, a few

=~~m~~~v;:.~~~e~t~ '\~l/"i~

•

1

~~ ~~~~~ ''l:"~r. ~~r'~:

sa':c;:dn~~ ~~rv~7~~-

?ri~l:. ~:;:, ~'Jf'1~ ll:nw•;Sdo~

• •See 'Councll.'.oaqe3. cot. 4

�Bunnsets
guidelines
·tor merit pay

He's one of
six new faces
'with programs'

.

Academic Affalra units must -have
supporting Information on I'IICOIYI, mendallons lot d~ ......
Into the Offlca of the Vlellf'nleldlntctly
divisions t h i s - -

di!:t:or:!:
~~e~:s1~~~r ·
tor faculty and profoaalonal staff (0.5
per cent of the baalc annual aalarlell of
ellgibleemploysoe).
The President~ Office Is ratalnlng 10
per cent to raw.-.:1 Unlvoraity-wlcte
service (as Ia lhe caaa with the totals
available to all U/8 units).
In addition to calling attention to
guidelines lsaued !IV "SUNY

'

anJ.7~:;esN~ s!.~~~-

"","

-i-er.~·· r~~~

He lsu't yet exactly wturt-yotl'd~a
household word, but Richard Moll
today Is prJ~sldent Of the undergradua\e
Student Association .
Richard who?
Richard Moll , a big defensive--end
who was sixth In total tackles with the
U/B Bulls last fall, has eased into the
chair hell! by Dennis Qella lor the· past
t2 months. beating out his closest rival, ·
Bob Slnkewicz by 500.Y~tes or so:
Some 2700 undergraduates' (o.ut of
about 15,000) vote;d in the elections
which were held week before last.
About the same proportion that usually
turns out to pick student leaders.
Molt ran at the head of a ticket known
"The
Party,"
which
offered
as
candidates lor six SA positions and saw
all six elected. The ticket carried the
Spectrum endorsement; winners In SA
elections usually do. Does the student
paper "create" winners or just pick
them? Molt's not sure but as a political
· sciJlnce major, he thinks it would make

CentraiJ

:U~~e,.::id'r~it~~u~li

heads to obaerve u - collald-lons
about maleffemate salary lnel!ultiea
and other matters:
· "I soe lhoae funds aa pr0¥ldlng us
an opportunity, llmltod though lt Is by
the amount available, to (a) con-act or to
contribute to a correctiOn of any

~{~~:::;~~~~~~="!h:g

males of the same rank end same
department (faculty) or of .t11a same
'classification (professional staff); and
(b) provicte recognition to ea~ly
mO&lt;itortous Individuals. In adcl...tln~

Part "

t()Qethar,
besides a bond of frlends~lp, was that
they are not "student government
hacks," Molt says, _

'~t 'l~~~~:,~,~~ l~atea~~

Ahacklaahack
Wtwt"s a hack?
Mott defines the term . It describes
someohe who' s been i n and around SA
since he or she was a freshman,
carefully working up from , say, SASU .
representative. Someone whose approach to student · government has
probably become hld&amp;-bound and noncreative after three years or so.
Someone with an "In-brad, clone
menlallty."
~
.
'
"The Party" _ , "six new faces with
a naw perspective," r,romlslng. " pr.ograms not plpedreams. '
•
The six were, In adctltlon to Moll
him:!
. Kart Schwllllz lor executive
·"'vice
sidon!; Jane Baum, lor vice
t Sull Board I; Fred
preal
Wawrzonelt. trossunsr· Lori Pasternak,
director of student altalrs; and Vinny
Fuerst, SASU delegate.
A lao elected to ..:.the naw student
government wore: Sheldon Gopateln as
director of acactemlc affairs; Barry
Rubin, director of stUdent activities and '
\
servlces; and Marcia Edel&amp;ll!in and
James Ostrowslli, SASU delegates. All
but Rubin ware members of ,the EPIC
' party, comprl9ad mostly · of tl:lose
alreadY In SA.
"The Party" did not contest these

Yemales within y.our school, faculty, or
program by comparing their salaries
with their male colleagues within -the
same rank· (or classification) and
department and through this comperi-

~~r:~em'.:~8aJ:~:,.~.:.,erew~~l:

cannot be justifiably accounted lor.
Every club and organization funded
education program lor unctergraduates. This analysis should be forwarded to
SA will be well-represented on panels
lth
mart 1ng 1
by SA - and they are legion - comes
0 111
In with a request for a share of a: pie that
looklng at both, he promises. Noting ::'lch ;:,..,w yo~~ C:::.,"l..~ ~
conlalns $850,000. A lew years back,
that undergrads are uRalterably op- recommendation. IHhere 1e louad to be
these requests amounted
to
a
pose&lt;! to the &amp;&lt;rcalled Springer an unjustified dlseNpaney that C81\f101
hair-raising $4 million, It takes gigantic
~~~1:,~l~ati~0~ sa~:nt~~i~~~ve ~~~ • be corrected entirely from a portiOn ot
paring and disputes of a magnitude to
adopt the same stance. Implementing ~~f':'~:1~~nd ~
match to get It all resolved. SA also
comA!Ita larg&amp;-scale appropriations to
.
er
Indicate a plan lor ru:)'y COMC:tlng .by
Sub-Board (arourid $300,000),' to
-"
Sept11f11ber, 1978 the diiiCIJ!PORCy.
athletics (sOme $200,000) , and to other
money lor the lor.,er; ~o rooms lor'lhe
" In conslcterlng faculty lor merit
areas. Various elected SA officials and
latter· More classes mean more Increases l must ask you to be
a financial assembly have to okay the
busing , too, Moll says. Where's the extraordinarily rigorous In your judgfln.at tedlously-&lt;levtllopad spanctlng
ment, recpgnizing that while most
plan. II agreement by a)l Isn't reached _ m~~ll:om~~i~if~~m ff~~Z!I? academic
concerns, Is Molt (like his r.reoacessor,
faculty peiform well In ltle vwlety of
by the ond of the Spring semester, the
SA exai:utlve committee - a smaller
Delia) interested in ath etics as a ~=~~:\'~~~~~Ys ~ f:'d
group - can hammer It out ovar the
rallying poi nt, too? " How can you ask the most axceptlonai lndMduats wflo
me the! question? You know what my through a combination of leK!IIng,
r~;u;;:ie~'tleM~~~n=-~ g~
answer's going to be." he says.
research , and cnsatlve ectivity dl8play
the larger assembly before the end of ·
Anything that gets 6,000 people from
qualitiesthat_,.asmoclelsforueal!.
the year. Altar all, It's not just the
th is campus together In one spot has to M o - . becauae of the lltnlted
executive committee's budget. It's fO[ •
be a plus, he feels .. The last time It amount available to us, .1 would oxpect
all of SA. That's another way of'
happened, he recalls , " was when they you to concentrate your ~
stating ' the basic Molt theme of
marched on Hayes ·Hall in t970&lt;" His oncreases at the higher range of 1t1e
=d~~~:to~1 u~.:. ~':/!cl?ne':!~orse rationality, competence, and accountfather, who teaches at Buffalo State, $7,50 maximums. In cases Where the
ability In stuctent government ..
Now that he's won, Moll Is not as
was teaching hare at the - lim&amp; and achievament and mortt CQmpol you to
hard on the "hacks" as he appeared
brought home tales of \he unrest. (For recommend an lnci'MM in BXC&amp;lJII of
Poaalble projects
durtrill the campaign. Soma of t/lal was
those Reporrer read&amp;(&amp; wlto think that $750, plaase accompany that recomOne of "The Party:a" campaign
just rhetoric. A lot of people In stuctant
was only yesterday, Molt was bul12 at mendation with a conctsa summary of
government have bMn very helpful in . slinger&amp; outlined several projects
tha time.)
·
the justification.
through which this guiding philosophy
Richard Molt began his under"Although criteria uaad In - . l n g
t~a~c:o!:.~~tally, was a. m"(hebe ~:~~-piece tall&lt;ad ·. about
graduate carear on a football acholal- marlt of prolltaslonai staff differ; in a
ship at Ithaca College; he then dropped sense, from those applied to faculty,
,:uo,::g
o=.a"'~
';,~
establishing an advocacy (fact-finding)
11
out for a .year, working in a steel milt corresponding 1o the ell'*- In
committee within SA; a group. of
. ~ing together.
•
·•
and atten'ding Fredonia Rights. He- their 0'88plmsl0illtles lind ~ •
students, wori&lt;ing under a~
811
advl80f; who would ·and.
~~~~n~t~ ~~~ io be taw ' the IWII'"*&gt;t 10 be -..k&gt;Jed "'
e~~- · ...., ,....... end bec:aual! his
in-'1(181e. any ~ saue niiaed· by an SA • school. " Harvard, 1-y. 'MOre realis- ~~~i.:.::~ ::_~
f
·~·oomes tr.om8boul8.pec cent
orgiiilalion. :rto&amp; PUfiiO• WOIIICr be to
Ocally, maybe Geo&lt;getown or· Penn." pocted to be no .... ..,.__.
•' : ollloeatudent ~.Molt Ia gOing slow.
give MAdani riiPfU*llatlv&amp;s a wort&lt;ing
(Molt cBI'Iies a w.ry respectableBilnn nolad ,. cnMitlg a
Alltlt now, he's ~ with "'I ltle knowledge ol ·i - IIIey ere dealing.. · unctergrad average, to help with the Facultyl-wlclecliel:,.t'~ pool:
• _ , . . . ot 111e , _ ~ lo
with Colnparable to IIIII enjo1'8(1 by
admissions ,_,age,)· '
·
"AakM IIOftl .,. »per of tile .
tiMeiDp a atat.,.,.t of prtoritlelllor1he
he traditionally better-infoirlneij llidmi~
For now, he •iews.ihe $A presidency hinds reiAinad by tile PreMdilnt. ltlie.,.... "'Sii we"Jt- a - o f leng..._ge. lslratlon'
• •.. •
as a lull-time commitment, and plans te&gt; office ia MY~nlng $10,100 ~H ..,r ~~
·
1101 juel rMct -10 llllnp..., ,a• •· '''l'ha Pwty" 8180
.
Mid lt'w.....,.·lo do
be visible; act1110 ,and, hopefully, lamlllftpi'Jyklg tbls prt~t• .....,....
beals.".
•
•
.
• ITIOfe lor ocin!M11~ ,.,.
ellect(Wt.
·
our olfice the opportunll\f ID - go-aiOw ..,;..ch 1e alia ...went · per- or all u~. lldelleoinQ
~
lud~ lit' tclentlt¥lng ..,.,....,
' qoin~ ~-do~ of ' ~ · ~ .. ~fY.IIl;M ~or ·, lhloi, :·as·
Are
we
'In
lor
a'
lrlvoio'ls,
jock
(AOI'itodous reqiloela, .....,.... of'
111 (I'*IY with· S~l wh~c;tt-,lhe
~. c.Thetf'OIHI~jle!IIIUo
lidmlnlstrat1011, timidly accepting each Faculty or SChool, · tMuP It! .
SA PrMideol c:ari-1111. In 11\e
r...mMitshlll; · • · .......,."""". Offand
every
-iolat(81ive
dictum?
honorln1J.....,.---"'
we _... 11M
pelit moat of IMIIIj! Mole
U.,
~ Howlling · 01flell; to wO&lt;Iting '
lilotao)IOI(dnoticelt.
. ,
··'
straight.-. . . . . ~ ~·
,..;.IOeleotleOe llorougl&gt;·a-~ •
wi4hJkRtljle TMI&lt; I'Or*,OA&lt;gelt!llg a &lt;
"The
~paigA nyer·spoke of lion by st:liool .,d F~ -., 1fle Mllnl ·
,_..... ~ ~- ~ . Mot\;"la ~--~9flll\e,ftound'
.admlnle
"lftaenslilvlty to..O 11114. amourtt. HIWite·)lll)u to, l'llllke ~ .
hli¥i'9..0,.otof..
. . • (~ly,aelo ... pl~wWo
disregnof
1t1e
quelltyof education at'
AoPo""-ts --~ , _ lo be ..... ·'IIIOU!d be .......... to he - - lo lllld .
until ADrll15, he uya. So he pleris.,
lr0111 c,mpua end - · ~ In the\
this unr-.~ty . " · tt hit the Mathvlc.l nltF of· Main Slr!lill); ..tl to. lomllng•
ad .!fi lfooe Speclnl"! aeling. IndividUals
Sclences report herd', said adJTiinlstra"""
liOn "is not&amp;~~~Dpalhetlc to real needs of
' interested in the vtri&lt;M!S openings . to· a Wastern New Y~ coall~r~lhln the
the. student -Y, " Ulgad "a broadlyapply lor them •ttNW 'wCMIId lillY- ~- . Stucleftt Aasociatilcftol Stl!;ia Wil-ty
Afler ~tng, _..,... .,ct "'-~
(SA&amp;Ut. The coaHtlon WOuld to
11\;1 Interviews he'll pick the "moat
brlng •tooetl!.er U/t\,
Brock110t afraid to iltancf up to or pressure the
let -'1, ~sitklf&gt;.
port, BUffalo Sttte . ll!'d FIIIGOnla "ao
cornpMehl"
admlnlalral!on...
'
. ,c:
118 uye This ···~ CQM~~Ja$ 1011
Mad&amp; of schools""·* - " NeiW .Vorl&lt;
priority the neo&amp;t • wailll&amp;
.'. C!"l -be voiced mor811ffadlllllly."
·
~J:.endlurv: ;
~
••-~•1111i10t•
lf!JI&amp;Ift...W.IItst
- NpOI1
' •'
'
·
,
_ - •1ft
.
of'lllllnf ~
. u~~~lochallengell\l"'_a-clon't
~.;..::: r~ puzi;lit. •.
Indicates he Ia . eepiielally
Just how will llle cheUengtng be ·
)l9tlrdoo8111 bilglll untU fall,
co
about ~on ollhe.
done?
'
·
'
but 88 oa the ease w1111 the SUNY _Sprlllger "Report ,_,rn11111dilllons (on
II anel when "push comes to shove, I
budget It takes time to put all the credit hour-contact hour equivalency)
wouldn 't rule out anything," Moll say,s .
pieces iogether.
'
and posslbl~ establ~shment of a genera)

111
~')tmg_ ~f:s's"es~'\:'eerth~~~~ ~~~ :;6

..t:.J"ro

1

=

= ,:e.

....,....,_,t.....,...

---50

bOat!·""""

... ...wo.-?

.

'i.:a"

against:tf*-lvllcl .... "

•C-·-il

in

'*-

a.-,

~by~=~=ip,":~1\';.

·

. .:

�.

I I·
.

March 11,1871

Late grade ~problems
not caused.by size

Dentists ar•
researching
cryosurgery

Prolllema with late gnades aren't

·set period (72. flours or one week) is •
relatively easy. In those departments
where many faculty deliver their own
grades A &amp; A could be asked to call the

Lec-ture set
on French
elections

On March 12 arid 19, socialists and
communists will have a cbance to come
France possibly
into power jn
·ompensaun·
•
c a rpersonorfl\Diii oijjjlltmentrto
with the election of Valery Glscard
which all course gradn all! not reported
tldue, aocnatl)lng wtolell could reault tn departments.
•
D'Estalng.
These
are
the
days
of
the
ontime.
. . . -.tng end dla!lgurernent for
Administration should ask departFrench elections to the National
patlen".
ment heeds to follow-up on grades end • ''2. Some time the Faculty Se['Bte
Assembly; 4,268 candidates for 491
should review the 72 hour guideline. It
erv-.rgary Is tha technique by
to authorize a continuing study of
seats. The majority of candidates come
would be helpful to get recOrds from A
~dl8eased tlasua Ia killed by
grading practices. •
from three parties, the Gaulllsts led by
&amp; A on the degree to which departments
ng aupercold gaseous liquids
Th- are among findings end
Jacques Chlrac, the socialists led by
(
a nitrogen or nitrous oxide) at recommendations of a report submitted are able to get their records to Main
Francois Mltterand, and tha communStreet on tlmeeven when thay try., For
tempersturee ranging from 80 to 196
tO the Faculty Senate Executive
Ists led by GeoriJes Marchal a.
the present I would suggest thet
clagr.a below· zero. A probe may be
Committee last week by Dr. Edward
Thursday, Marell16, at 12 noon In 108chairpersons be asked to follow up on
Ul8d wtolch dOGa not release the
HoYOrl&lt;a.
associ ate professor of
'Norton. (Amhent), theta will be a panel
those courses lor which grades are one
eupen:old agenll directly upon the
psychology. The Executive Committee
discussion
entitled Conteat tor Power:
tlsaue, or tha agents may be released
approved end forwarded the report to
w~:.lat~he administration should France Todav. SI&gt;O!).SOred by the French
directly ualng a apnsy. The frozen tluue
the President with a request for a
Undergraduate
Student Association,
authorize
a
contlnulnp
study
of
o~r
dlee 8lld sloughs with minimal
response.
bringing together members of the
' grading practices. Periodic reports. to
all-Ions of surrounding normal
·departments ' of French,
History,
Threa findings
the University community which
tleeua. •
Economics end .Political Science, .who
Three findings seem worth emphaslz:
include an analysis of late grades would
Although cryosurgary Ia not now
will analyze the results of the Initial
widely u8ed In treating oral dlseaae, Its
elections. make predictions l.or the
uae ha lncraaaed among dermatolo- _ In'!.; ~~:.Or::,~i~g of grades (2 or he~: legitimize the chairperson 's
secondary, and Interpret tl1e conmore weeks after the -examination
attempt at getting grades , reported
gists for combetling certain types of
seguences of the f!Qpuler vote.
period)
d6es
not
seem
to
,be
forced
on
within's
reasonable
tlme
ikln leelona and warts. Gynecologists.
This election .wlli have lnternatfonal
too, are using the process 1or removal
In
, as well as national Impact, panel
of atyplaal cervical lesions or tr&amp;lltment
organizer
Anna Probnlllk Indicates. "In
are
very
small
.
Hall
(58)
of
the
109
liote
c.
prQ.Vide
the
facts
which
would·
be
of cervlellia and other Inflammations.
France, 1'1 Is the first time that
reports In undergraduate courses have
needed if the ...senate Is ever to ·
~ au~~V&amp;St~ that the technique
16-year-olds
will have the right to vote,
10
or
fewer
students.
Ninety-&lt;~ight
of
reconsider
the
University
grading
,..-potential lor treatment of certain
a factor expected to give more power to
116 graduate courses which were
regulation . There well may be areas.
conditione of the oral cavity - with
the left. It Is Jhe first time In 30 years
reported have 10 or fewer students.
such as in the School of Law &amp;
~fy no rlak to tha patient, little
that a major Western European nation
"2. The pattern of grade reporting
Jurisprudence, where a 72 hour
ill-mort, and reduction of hemor1
does not warrant a l;harge of wanton
regulation Is unrealistic.
Irresponsibility
or
Indifference.
Without
~ three-yew
ministries. Since President Carter's
downiJradlng the difficulties , and
"4. There probably are some stude.nt
1184,0110 IIIW1I from the National
visit to Franca In January, there11as
lnatltu18 ofll!IAial ~. a group of importance of possible horror stories victims. Vat each February, the battle Is
been speculatloOJ.as-to whom tha United
resulting from even .a lew late reports,
fought In the press with phrases such
, U/B m-tk*cn hopee to find out
States would back: the Gaulllsts
as 'culpabiLity, irresponsibility,' end
approximately 96 per -pent of ""'e
mcnaboutlf.
.
,presently In power, or_ a coalition of
exaggerated numbers distract ng us
One of only a few
groups ·, courses are reported within 2 weet&lt;s of
socialists and communists. Carter
atudrlllll the ~. theJ'If also the last final examination. II one. applies from the problem,11elplng to maintain ·outraged
both factions when he met
the Illusions tfiat everything Is out of .-nine llla - llfflaaCr of the proba- the more stringent criterion (data for
wlih Gaulllst Preeldant D'Eetalng ·and
IIP!IIIelllon JMihod -aua the Sj)tay which are not available) of 72 hours control end solutions are not possible
after each examination, then some
and strengthening the myth of faculty
later socialist Ieeder Mltterand." ·
8lld wll att.mpt to eatabU8h
Major Issues to be decided, Ms. 1
other conclusion might be justUied.
Jnsensltlvlty ...Jt would be most useful II
dlllnltM doug~[~ for V8rioua -types of
Drobnlak says, ~ with unemploy(The 96 per C!!flt figure Is based on -the
careful records were kept by the Office
Uelue.
ment, the natlon81lzatlon of key
total number of courses-offered.)
of Student Affairs which would help us
Aoconllng to Dr. Joeeph Natlella;
Industries (the wedge separating
"3.-The late grades are not randomly
evaluate the frequency end_SI!Yerlty of
~ ill cal pathology hera,
socialists and communists),
the
distributed over all the courses offered
whatever Injuries occur.
jqwloua U/B 1t11c1* Indicate that
minimum wage, the trade deficit en&lt;k
"5. There unlloubtedly _exist many
* ' - . _ of tlsaue reapond by the University but are clustered. This
J/le depreciation of tha franc. Tha party
means that a relatively small number of
proQ/ems In the Office of ,t.dmlsslons
t dm.Nntlyto~.
In power will aleo. determine France's
telephone calls by chairpersons :pt the
and Records. Hundreds of thousands of
trade relations 'lll!ith Ita neighbors and
• erring departments after the end-of the
records must be processed. Small
lts_j)artlclpatlon In NATO.
examination period would probably
delays In a few critical parts of the
aUirouncllng" ~~-• ..-tlng that
may -rn fact be
allevlat~ mo!t of the problems.'
precess may well r&amp;Sult In very long
" Americana 8hould be very aware of
these electoral confrontations In
delays In the eventual output, trans1111!.111 lila rilelhod, without
WIIoot
ha
recommended
crlpts,
grade
reports,
etc.
A
revie!"
.of
Thay Show the new trends In
France.
1111 thll J*alyale which
Hovorka recommended that:
the Internal problems as seen by •the
European political sympathlee and mar.
Often ~- -tiona! aurca-y. Blood -.... also ehOw extra"1. The aolmlnlstratlon should ask the
staff of A &amp;·A would be most useful."
be en Indication of su'l!_rlses to come, •
chairperson of each department to
The Executive Committee commend- · she emphasizes.
Ordlfti!IY ~to tr.zlng.
N.allilla
once cs.llnltlve follow up on grades. In some
ed Hovorka for the thoroughness ot tl'ie
Panelists for the discussion .will be:
dllpartments
grades
are
now
delivered
report-,
the speed'· wlttrWhlch It was
Pierre Aubery, French; Pierre Mamler,
~ for In Oflll leelons and
to A &amp; A by the dep-artment staff. In . completed end the excellence of the
lnftlllllllllltoo r oon11111ona of 111a mouth
FrenCh; Paul Zarambke, economics;
thoee departments a follow-up after any
recommendations.
end Leo Loub8re, hl_story.
- eatllbllalied, lila procedUIW wHI gain
mora
~ ollnlclalle. He
.....
...,...._... 8lld clinical
- " ,..ronned ao far auggeate many
leatoM, hlcl!ldlnll owtaln ·malignant
-· el*thialy be llated Using lila~• - In tha ayoeurgerj
~ underWay at tha SclloOI of

caused by the alze of the University,
don't _ . ·Awanton irresponsibility
l----11-cti!IIB....lllid&gt;lep-ILLJ81~&gt;f-&lt;l:fl'-ll-o-&lt;&gt;l' lodllf-ce on the Dart of faculty ,
liMY for trMtment of d
oral
end _,. to be clustered In a lew

pave the way for more

o.ntlatry

m

~u~;&gt;;,!~~; -~~~~ ~u~e~m~~?~!J

ap~r:fJ~ea~~~=~a':::f?n~esSU('!

~m~~~str~ =s

a _u,

ot go::.S~:,O:,~

-a.

more

;~.:=·io·~~

=

u-

......._that

-=::1101

E

..

Greek Corner-

Orw. Ruaaell Besaelte,

~

prof.-,

and

--·· ~
pro!ee- o f 01111
~AIIO
eollllbonii-

-Dra.
~~-~

~of
Of MedlclDe;

;;rR"Jc: Cklnalofi,IUIII 01111 ~at
the 8ulfJio VF. Hoeclhal.

·

Nurslrig_group . ,

tor. .lve _

national-charter
The U/8 Nlnlng
Society Will
Honor

NCelftlll ~a the a.mma Kappa

Clllil*r of Sigma Theta Tau, 118110na1
IIIA!t!gllonoriloclety, In - l e e at
tflt MOot Courtrooril.z. O'Brian Hell, -7
p.m •• ~.Man:h1r.
8olllt 1i0 faoultr, atudlnte and

theBcmol of N . _ wHI be

E

the w.hlnalon,
a..pw - Slatw
'f lido
Donlev.
D.C.,
ttiiiOIIIIInllclent of Slgl_na Tlllla ,..,_

.=

.:--~
=~.:
at 111a IJnMrdr. oc~ 1n
baa .311/1»

ly.Melwbn-~

and

li!ti-f:CSS
~oftha
-

::Cn~
YiGe prealdent;

~.

ri

u:-a.-ua. ___,;

•~

Hope

Sharon s.
A .-ptlon will be held at the
Ccu1roon'l following the ceremonies.
8lld

.-

"'fhe Greeks are back on camR_u s; .
'IGC' is the govern_
i ng a-ssoci~Jtiqn
The Greeks l&gt;ave returned to this

.

down guidelines for estBbliahment and eetabllshlng a cllaJ)ier at U/8, 'a
Uni,..U,. .
,
functioning of Soclai/Frat8f!Ull orgenl- financial - - t Including the
And to betler educate the SUNYAB , zatlona. These guidelines _Jnclude amount of tha lnltlatioplee and 1 copy
c:Ommunlty ·about !ratemal 111e, the 'policies for responsibilities of the of the propoeied constitution bylaws or
lnter-G..-k Council (IGC) .has been organizations. For ei&lt;Brllple, each articles of governtnce
'
org8ftlzatiM Is solely responsible lor Its
•
·
.
_ ....
formed. t._
The"' 1'"'1_ Is 'ClOr!'posed of t)llo own_ financial end legal &lt;?bllgatlona.
Permlaelon te- gnlllled~.
memberll !r.,m Bll recognized sorority Aleo,
fratemal organizatiOn'S are Je111allN..et.111111181W\t - - - - JJy
or fraternity on campus. These prohibited • from Including In their the vice prealdantfor studelllatlalrs.
•
members are either the president of the pledge program hazing or any other
Tentatlw rliCOgllltlon laglveo lor one
group and/or an appointed delegate. practice that mll)'. "!'Use mental or calender y -. GrOupe dan1ed tenWive
Tha IGC has close ties with ...the physical discomfort, embarrassment, recognition may re-apply M a later date.
administration through Dr. Khalry Kawl, haraaament or ridicule. Each fraternity
llsaletant vice pnssldent for student or sorority Is required to adopt a code of IGC offtc.s
llffalra.
•
nssponalble social conduct end a
The IGC has two otllcera a
~tly, the IGC has eight mamba!. tloualngpollcy.
coordinator and aeecratary. £luring last
groupe - 2 I«&lt;rrtlas: Alpha Sigma
to I'IIC8lve tentative recognition, an week'a· meeting, Nan Selden of TKE
Alpha and Chi Omega, and 6 Individual gro':'p must submit to the fraternity was elected coordinator. Pal
rr.temltles: Tau Kappa EPalton, Sigma Otllce of the Voce President lor Student Lovejoy of Chi Om~~ga sorority was
PI, Sigma Alpha Mu, Sigma Phi AHeirs the following :
elected - . r y Bilaldee thli coEpsilon, Sigma Tau a.mma, and Theta
1 . A statement Jndicatlng Its ordlnator aod s8cretary, there are
Chi.
·
.
purposes end goals.
•
chairpersons for the following commitTha pu~ of the IGC are to &amp;Salst
2. A statement .explaining why It tees: Public Aelati0fl8, Sheri Lieberman
lnciiYiclual hatemal groupe In becoming bellevee Ita fraternal organization Is of ASA; Activities, Brian Harrison of (
vllblll Clllllpue organizations and to .act both needed and desired.
SPE; Athletics, David Lisman of Sigma
• a ~mon _..lor the discussion
3. Tl)e names of all officers.
PI ; Philanthropies, Barbera Braun of
91 quMtlone of lntereat to the lr-..al
4. A - statement written by the Chi Omega, and Freshman Qrlentatlon,
and llntvwwltY world.
president of the group stating they will Jeff Van Horne of Theta Chi F.tOm
To ba atlglllle lor a.nber8hlp In the eblde bv University rules and regula- -these committees come the lllisls lor
IGC, a lraltmlly or sorority muet have tiona. Also, members must commit the IGC's activities-.
._18ntatlveorpermanent U(llvers!ty themselves to retrain from any
The Greek system at U/8 Is just
..-anltlon. A group-wldl no Unlvenuty discrimination on the basis of race, getting underway again alter being
recognitiOn may ~~~tedJ~ytlhets creed, national origin, egeordlsablllty. banned on State University campuses.
JW-.t or hla · - .....,nee.
To become permanently recognized A malor factor In the future success of
llfiiUIIIa dMaled eliGible by the voting • lra~ernity or sorority must follow the· the G"nset&lt;s lies with tl)e IGC. With the
iilemberahlp of theiGc and approved by ":"""' guldallnee lor tentative recogni- maturity and apparent leadership of all
tha Dlvtelon.ol Btudant Affairs. ·
toon, plus the NatJonal Headquarters of the delegates, there is no doubt that the
,
the group must submit a letter to the Greeks will IIJllW and become a viable
StudMI Aftalra GuldaiiMa
Division of Student Affairs. This letter gro&lt;·p In the University end University
Tha Djl'lalon of ·Stodent · AffaJn • set-·musr · t:tmtaln · 'Written·· reasons •· fru: · &lt;:ommunlty. ~ 9t1ert Uebennan ••

1

�llolan:h11,1t71

China Night, the ...,,.1 cel.tntlon of the CllfiiPUS ChlnMe community, Ia
always one of the moat colorful of the , - . lit UIB. 1171 no
excaptloll. Af* a dlmw laat' Satunlay
In Fargo Cal-.ta featuring autllentlc
Chi- food ..-.c1 by atudanta, It
waa on to the K8tfwtna COrnell n-tr.
lor an -lng of tclflll8, . _ , mualc,
martial
- · Thewho gust J - . .
a group
of cllllchn
with oest- ....,lnlac:ent of the
Anc!Nw Slatwa. Tbe Ch'- Stullant
Aaaoclatlofl'apon-..1 It all.

and

------~-·----------- •• - t - - --~ ·- ·. · . ·.-. -. ·.·.·. ·. · . •••• · . ·. · - · -· • •••• ·-·----~:-: - ':"

'::'::~

.._a':\?:: -

�Novelist John Gardner,
here last week to case the
English Department as it
cased hfm, met the press
Friday afternoon at Crofts
Hall.
He rambled on amiably
about the novel, taste,
Hollywood, and ''.Coming
home." Here's some of
what he said:

.On being a novelist:
The biggest frusttatlon with being a
ncMIIIst Ia that you have all thase Ideas
lhat woukl IMke a wonderful novel. It
~ 110 long to writa a aood novel that
you'nl coonat.nlly gattlng a . circuit
OWI'Ioed. You Just can't hurry. You take
....,.. fhle to ten .,_. on a noWll and
kMip going _ . .ncl It 110 It'll be
aoocl
ll'a clone. And, meanwhile,
30 icte. . . pounding on your head that
you think . . lietter than the one
you're warldna on. I lc8ep notebooks to
lc8ep II8Gk ollhem all.
I U8UIIIIy WOitt 011 four or f,lve novels at
a tm.. I WOitt on.- until 1 get bonad
wltll II or jlllt Olh't stand to look at It

""'*'

: _ ~~ ~ tllen...!.S::~~~so:.':."J
boxea and Cll~e and all that sort of
thing. E~loee.

On Whom you
write for:
-

You alweye wrlle to please yourself
becauae you're the one finally whose

~~;' ~,!'-~~ke~f ~~~~!: .

dl~ustlng .

But It's also true that If
you rewriting a children'• story for your
daughter or your son for a Qulstmas
..-1 which you !mer publish, you're
obvloualy thlnklng about what that kid
UIICMratanda and le intereated ln. You
- t h a t ther8 . . thousands oUdds
lllcll her or him. Sometimes when you
write a noWll!t:! have a . specific
8Udt.noe In ml . When I wrote Nickle
tlountaln one the main things In my
mind wae: I knew some· people from
New York City who didn't like Upstate
New Yorkers. Sort of had a prejudice
egelnat tham .ncl didn't like Republicane and all that kind of stutf. I was very
fond of thele New York City people and
-also fond of Upstate New Yorkers. I ·
W811ted to make Cleer what Up~ate New
Yorkers . . like. I took some more or
1 - typQI onae and put tham In a book
and lied tiMm deal one after another
with all the greet I - of tha moment
In a eort of country way.
And alwave when I was writing that
book I thinking: will a New York
SODhlstlollled Aled4ii' understand thase
thfnga? H the New York City reader- a
New York City Jew, for Instance doeen't know a lot about Western New
York Protaetantlsm. then I would have

" --- _

...,. ......_,. put.-

u...-...,-

. , . . , . . . , _ . . , . , .... ~o(

W'aat...,.,.,,HI
......
AIIMo. - _ _ _ ....

,.._.....__

"""' ...... CNoffo Hoi/, ~ , ...

-

D*wdor ol ,.,... A Hoi"
JAMESI. Do5ANTJS

_,_,

Manti-

JOHN A. aouta
Aulstont Editor

JOra 1UCHN0WSK1
W..Wiy Communique Editor
JEAN SHIAOER

to explain a Jot of things that I would
otherwise take for g11111ted. And so I
modify what I wrtte for the audltlfiCll.
You always write for someone pretty ·
specific, either yourself, your own
standards or your own Ideas of what a
good novel Is, or for some friend, or a
wife, or a child whom you know well. So
you know what you have to explain and
what you can lake for granted.

On fantasy
vs. ReaUsm:
Fantasy has been the main kind of
fiction that human beings have written
since lhe beginning . Homer Is fantasy .
Virgil Is fantasy . , Dante. Chaucer.
Shakespeare. You can't think of any
great old writers who didn't write
fantasy .
It's true that In the 18th century
period of the rise of the middle class,
realistic novels about the mldiUe class
came to be popul•. They are still
popular because there's still a middle
class. There are those of us who work In .
factories , or universities, or farms who
like to read about ourselves. So there
will always be a certain kind of realistic
fiction .
There are also certain kinds of
protilems you can't treat In a fantasy
way. Whereas you can talk about love or
death In a fantasy or a realistic piece of
fiction , you can't really talk systematically about the breakdown of a marriage
or the building up of a good marriage In
fantasy terms because what's lnterest-

~~~~sf.:fts-;.~ sg~~~s,f~~~~~

writers write for the same sltuBtlon
com~les over and over and over! and
sometimes use the same gags. Cop
shows are all identical. The onlr, thin9,
that . makes you sit through ' Kolak '
week after week is you like felly
Savalas: You like his brother and you
like all those minor characters you get
to know, even though they always say
and do the same things.
• I think that that fascination with
people holds your Interest. And I think
that's true of every writer from the most
non-realistic like Jack Barth to the most
realistic like John Updike. What
Interests you In Barth des~lle all the

~i\~'-~;,::r:,,~~ f! .1 ~:1 f~ i~~a:~~;~
11

are Interesting . They're fun . When he

~~;~ ~~~~npa;,ha~~~rC.:rt~~~7v ~~~~

stronger. Certain materials are traated
f'!!BIIStically and always have been
treated that way.

true about Updike. When he's talking
about real people, I don't care how silly
the story may be.

On public .t aste:

On hype and
Haldeman:

I don't tlllnk there's been a shift In
tastes. I think that what happens is that
there's a shift In advertising . In ·

~~:!~n~IY:\~~~t -:~e~!;' :rf:.J~~

won't explain what that means, but' It
has·to do with female anatomy. That's a
fad, Just like the cop show. And It's
goklg to go because 1t's just as boring
as the cop show. Female anatomy Is
nothing unless you happen to love the
female and that's not what you love the
female for- or the male.
I think it Is true that taste changes
somewhat because of current events ....
But basically, people always want the
same thing . Whether .or not they know

:~ ~p:=.~.'l:,~rr:~:: ;,~·

You don't really read Agatha Christie,
as oppoled to John LeCama or Stephen
Becker or some other entertain lng
writer, becauae you're expecting a
wonderful, Interesting mystery. As a
matter of . fact, Agatha Christie's
mysteries are easily solved. I've never
reed one to the end where I didn't know
who did II. The thing you read It for Is
she's got wonderful characters. That
funny old lady and that silly French
detactlve. You're feeclnated by these
people. Every Ume you pick up a book, I
think, you hope you'll find some
charecter that you really enjoy. That
yriu'll laugh at, or be worried about, or
1111n10us for, or euspena&amp;ofllled because
of. We think we're after a good plot, but
If a herd of stampeding elephants Is
going to run Olf!ll' the baby, we don 'I
c.a, unless the baby has been made
vivid for ue, and Wll really care about the
baby,_ and tha mother and the father and
the big brother and so on.
Plot I think I'NIIy exists so the
chara:ter can demonatrate himself or
henlelf.l think~ only exists so we
can fuRy ~and characters. People

r::m=•;~he~fCCW:/ro~,;:"''~~

=-=: =

Virginia or whatevw ....
Human
beings are

above

ail

r.~:J:io~"a:~dwz~

many movies. It's a weird thing. If you
think about It, television programs are
-'1 Identical . SUuatlon comedies are
Incredibly almllllr. ·In fact, the same

I'm all for hype'. Publishers are In
the business of selling books and I'm in
the business of writing books and all of
us who write are grateful to all of them
who push. It's true.
John Dean Is interesting. They really
have to hype those books beciuse
between the time of Watergate and
now, Interest has gone· dOwn, down,
down . Nobody knows for sure who Jed
Magruder Is. Nobody knows for sure
whether his name Is Jed or Jeb - 1
don't know. I don't care about John
D.ean . I think he has a kind of
Interesting face and I like to see him on
television once in a while.
·; don't give a hoot what Haldeman
says. He lied, as far as we can tell ,
every time he opened his mouth. He
didn't reallr. lie so much as he forgot
He couldn t remember. Why should 1
believe what he had to say about that
boring incident anyway? With that kind
of book, a publisher really has to push
to make his money. And I'm really glad
. he does push because In making a great
deal of money on that kl nd of book
which a great many people will read, the
publisher can·afford to publish serious,
artistic novels of a kind only a few
readers will love. And since I write the
;:'g::~t~~!·~:s~~~e~he schlock to get

On novels and
the movies: I think every work of art Is Its own
self. The greatest movies are the ones
made from the beginning as movies.
Things· like " Network" and " Hospital"
could never have been novels. From the
very moment, Pioddy Chayefsky sat
d01111n with a piece of paper, he was
thinking clnemagraphically. He's a
11reat movie writer. I think " Marty" and
~~~ &lt;,;;'~:f~. Affair'' are just stunningly
Bergman's movies couldn 't be
novels. They're fundamentally movlng
picture~ . A novel Isn't that A novelist
does '&gt;Yerylhing a movie writer does.
!~~n'." to say, he describes ~es and
But the main thing he focuses on Is
time. Your mind aoes bsr.k tn yesterday. ·

and thinks forward to what will happen
to Aunt Sandy or whoever tomorrow.
You're constantly moving In a flux of
time, which a movie can't do. A movie Is
a flat surface and If you do a flashback,
you look sort of silly, Jerky. It looks like
an Imitation noveL So, If you take a
well-made noWll and try to translate .it
Into film, you're going to get a bad film.
On the other hand, II you take a fairly
bad novel and recast It terrifically, like
" Rosemary's Baby,"
you get a
r
wonderful fjlm .. : . .
After I leave Buffalo, I'm going out to
Hollywood to talk about the possibility
of doing some writing there. I would

~~~!~;r~~:~~;;,~· :;-:,em~~a:/: -~u~~.;

only reason for writing a screenplay
from someone else's novel would be ,If
there's a novelist that you really hate
and want to get Wllllam Faufknllr aiid
Ernest Hemingway were goOd friends,
in a way, ,b ut also very jealous of each
other. And Faulkner was capable of
being pretty nasty about Hemingway.
So he got great pleasure out of writing
film scripts for novels by Hemingway
that he didn't like. But Faulkner would
never write a film script tor "Absalom ,
Absalom. " ...
i don't e~pect anything of Hollywood ....
.
I expect to be able to create fairly

~~:r=:nP.o~~t.':'~~;.,PrO:.On"!t-i~~~~~

Hollywood people, which I thlnkis what
lhay want me to write for them. I expect
that a staff of wrltera will sort of flesh
out those characters and make. up a
plot The' whole thing will be like a
football game. Somebody will be the
coach and I will never be Introduced to
him.

I was asked to write a movie about
Helen of Troy. I said that was the
stupidest Idea I .._ heard In my life,
and the director said, you know, maybe
you're right He said come out, anyway.
Helen of Troy would be a terrific novel ,
but how are you going to taka;a picture
of the most beautiful woman In the

-~~dtet~r:J~~e..:';::·~ t!:'a~ti?u~

woman is selling Ivory soap. There's no
way of proving this woman Is more
beautiful than that woman. But, of
a novel, where everyone gets
course,
to 'imagine his own love, It's a snap. •

tr

On coming to WB:
I was set on coming here. But I'm very
much taken aback by the new campus.
And I really am upset by that. I know
everyone is and I know It's nobody's
fault But it's just unbelievably ugly.
And. the thing Is that one doesn't want
to spend one's life In ugliness - so
that's a real problem. There are things
very much In favor ot It, too. So I just
haven't decided.
·
I'm going to have to talk with my lady
and we're gonna have to decide what it
all comes to .. ..
I love the kind of students that
Buffalo has . A lot of people In the
English Department are old , old friends
of mine and I would love to be teaching
with th·em . J. have great admiration for
the Department And I want to start a
magazine which I hope would be a
nationally famous, first-rate fiction

�lUrch 11, 1171

7

'Mr;' Marlett didn't
write it properly!
Edhor:
Although I waa not present at
Professor Elizabeth Kennedy's lecture
on the "Origins of Sexual Oppresalon"
(I was attending a conference In
Chicago where I delivered
paper) , I
have had occasion tQ listen to the
tapesofhertalk. Consequently, I must
object to the Reporter's coverage of
last week's Workshop in Marxist
Studies lecture.
·
The dynarn lcs of construction
(welghtlrig of the facts , strategic
location of statements or events) can
dlreclthe reader of a news story to sea
a ~ality significantly different from
the actual events themselves. While

a

~~;res~e~rtr;;~e~:"?.l':,ff,!~ ~~Y!~

magazine, and I think Buffalo could
handle it. Those are very strong
considerations.
I know It seems rather snobby and
silly to say I don't like It, that the place
Is ugly, especially when it's nobody's
fault, and It sounds like I'm
condemning someone.
Built Is true, you know. I don't have
to teach. I can write movies and I can
write novels, and so on. And one
chooses garden spots, like the
Rochester Campus, ).or Instance, Is
kind of pretty. And there are places like
Washington University which Is beautlc
lui. J And In Its own cold way,
Connecticut Collage . ... I know that
what really counts Is people, and I'm
happier with people In Western· New
' York than I am with anybody else
because they're my people and my

o,fll.~~':J~ry' lriipdrtant

a

(or
novelist to
stay In touch with the people he knows
' deeply. Otherwise, you'd . have the
problem Arnold Bennett had . He grew
up in the-Industrial towr.s In England
and then got rich enough to get away
from those dirty places and he found
out he couldn 't write about real people
very well anymore .. ..
I don't want to become a bad novelist.
So that's a very ilftl!brtant consideration.

w~ec:,n~.:\~l~a~~~~l~ rilk~l.to teach
two creative writing courses and an
Introductory course In poetry. I don't
know what they would suggest I teach.
I'm sure I would teach creative writing.
I'd very much like to-teach at the same
time, just for reasons of my own
personality, a greduate or grownup
group .§lld younger ·people. For some
reason, It works very well for me to keep
in mind what the beginners are doing
when I'm judging tfie older people.
Often the results make the older people
work hard. And I'd also like to teach
something far away from fiction, like
poetry. And I don't write poetry much; I
don't wrtte It seriously. I'( love to teach
a little Shekespeere, too . .

On that fldlon
magazine:
.J• I said I thought Buffalo University

could handle a magazine that publishes
fiction and ultimately means to be sold
on newsstands in big cities. It's ;n
expensive proposition . At least to start.
Anybody can tum out a little college
·magazine. That's not expensive,
$15,000. But to turn out a magazine that
goes all around the country, that
advertises enough lo get good
writing ....
I'm not Interested in publishing
well-known writers like John Updike
because they already hafe plenty of
places to publish. But I've been around
the country talking to creative writing
workshops, visiting people and listenIng. Theta's a whole new wave of fiction
waiting to break In In this country. It's
as exciting as what happened at the
b&amp;glnnl~g of the 60s when a whole new
generation suddenly burst on the
scen-.1 was one of them , although 1
didn'flt&gt;urst on the scene. Nobody
published me. But Bill Gass and Joyce
Carol Oates and Stanley Elkin and John

Hawkes - ali those people came al the
same time, and II was unlike anything
that had hapP,Bned before. The fiction
that's out there - the fiction that I see
going from college to college when 1
sort of casualty help tham set up small
literary magazines - Is very strange, ·
very exciting stuff. I'd like to help It get
the kind of above-the-ground airtng that
it deserves.
Buffalo Is a good place for two
·~~~nt~i! .think . I may be proven wrong
I think the administration here is
willing to rtsk the big Investment (H's
only a year Investment) which would
start a magazine, and which then could
be picked up by foundations and grants
and subscriptions and so on .
The other thing Is that Buffalo is a
printing city. New York magazine, for
instance, Is printed In Buffalo. A lot of

~~~e~~~~ ,;;;~~~~n~:a_.a;~, g~~~~

Is able to do It cheaply. I don't know maybe they use child labor, or sheep, or
something. But anywar, If you pnnt a
magazine In the town o the printer, you
obviously cut $5,000 right off the top. If
the University would be willing to truck
magazines from the printing office to
the editorial office, thai's already half
the mailing cost. And one of the biggest
costs for magazines Is warehousing and
mailing . So there's an enormous
advantage to being In Buffalo.
Buffalo Is the best place for printing
on the East coast. It's the best place for
printing in America, except that It costs
so much to get it to the West coast, and
it takes so long . So that would be a very
strong feature.

On going home
ag~ln: .
I don't meari to meke so much of the
campus. But when I was a kid , growing
up in little Batavia, I came to. Buffalo,
and, boy, It was beautiful. Buffalo was
the beautiful city in the area. 11 was
more beautiful than Rochester. Rochester had its glories, too, of course, but
Buffalo had the big stores downtown.
They're gone now. It was an Incredible
thing - you thought you were in
heaven, especially if you were 12 or 13.
It had those trees everywhere. 11 had
that incredible park which - I can 't tell
what II looks like in the middle of winter
- but it "don'l" look like It used to
look.

m~~~ ~~~e~~b~h:n~~m~~~~Yv~sw\'i~~~i

that. It's tr"e that chamber music In
Buffalo is as rich as it Is anywhere, and
. I can't live without that. It's true that the
AJbrightls a wonderful museum .. ..
But it used to · be such a beautiful
place, and I've been away 'a long lime.
And when you come back: First, it hits
you t~at urban removal has taken away
some of those beautiful parts of the
city. Second, It hits you that the elms
are all dead . And third , it hits yo.u that
lhey've built the campus on the moon .
That's a little startling . I guess what I'm
saying is I wasn 't quite prepared for
this. I have to think aboullt .
Sometimes, when you try to go home
again, you find home has been turned
Into a kind of concrele something or
other, and you decide not to go. It's too
depressing .

Marlett apparently prefers to lead with
the penis . Here, I refer to Mr. Marlett's
· opening paragr.aph about the Waunan
Pe?.ple of Colombia. This reference, in
the actual context of Professor
Kennedy's presentation, was an
anecdote presented after the lecture
had already developed to· some
degree. Nevertheless, consistent with
the rather snide coverage given by the
Reporter, Mr. Marlett saw fit to
present this as a central and Initial
point. Jhls would seem to cater more .
to a sense of sensationalism than to
accur.ate journalism.
The ~orter, In a -backhanded
attempt to overcome sexist references
(which actually functioned to preserve
them) referred to Professor Kennedy

~~nt;~~ ~enn:;:r~~ l~erth~oc~a'1
dissertation was mentioned . /.&lt;pparently, the Reporter's concern aboul
sexism Is selective, since, in an article

g~o~~e ~~~ P!2~s\',to:~~ ~~l:',!~~
coordinator Is correctly referred to as
Dr. Julia Brun-Zejmls.
For the Information of readers and
Robert Marlett alike, Elizabeth Kennedy - is an Associate Professor In
American Studies and Women's
Studies and she Is the holder of the
MA and Ph.D. Women who have
Ph .D's are a/so doctors and should be
referred to as such , or by their

aprJ~~i:;,~:~~~~~~~g~·also attempts

to deny the scho/my quality of
Professor Kennedy's ~tatlon . He
notes that, In ProfeAor Kennedy's o
studY- of the Waunan, "she's sure
they re classless and ahe knows that
men partlclpete In chlldcare after the
young have reached a certain age (my
emphasis)". He nagfects to point out
that her-conclusions baaed both
upon het own fieldwork (a major
methodological approach In the field
of anthropology) and referencea to
work done by scholars In lhe field .
Professor Kennedy was extremely
thorough and judicious In providing
references and citations wherever,;
necessary. Marlett also Inaccurately
ref&gt;&lt;!rted on ·three possibilities pertaming to sexism that were covered in

f~~:et~"e"~~n~~(~!~'~sH:;,:r~p~~:

dominance Is simply the nature of
things". However, from my listening
to the tape, it became apparent that
Professor Kennedy had suggested that
male dominance may simply be the
result of the hlstortcal development of
social organization and not some
natural law of women's lnferlortty to
men! ·
As exemplified by hls choice of •
quotes toward the end of the article
(e.g., "that's shit"), Mr. Marlett's
penchant for sensationalism extends
to the scatological aa wall.
With the exception of the lectures of
Professor Paul Nyden and Professor
Elizabeth Kennedy, the Reporter has
systematically Ignored the · spring,
1978 lecture series of the Workshop In
Marxist Studies. As I've . Indicated
above, in· 1\s second major article on
the series (devoted to Professor
Kennedy's lecture), ~'· the Reporter's
coverage was rather less than straightforward . Additionally, Mr. Marlett

':'~t;,~~r:a~=~~:~et~:;'~~e than

Sincerely,
-Gene Gtllblneo;,
Assistant Professor
and Member, Coondlnatlng Committee
for the Workshop In Marxist Studies
Apparently, Mr. M8rlett should heYe
stayed at home!-RTM_

Don't-support the ACLU!
Editor:
As a result of Its defense of the civil
liberties of certain Amertcan Nazi Party
members and certain Ku Klux Klan
members, the American Civil Liberties
Union (ACLU) has suffered significant

~:~o~:=~rt~:~~L~:~ =~t~~·uThe

Its members to "keep the faith" In ~
principle that devotion to civil liberties
must be full and complete or else It
becomes advocacy of specific causes
and not devotion to civil liberties per se.
I do not believe that the ACLU actions
are justifiable and I would like to set
forth my reasons . .
In the first place, acceptance of the
principle of the unity and completeness
of civil liberties must be tempered with
the recognition that the resources of the
ACLU are limited and that It cannot teke
all cases. Given this, support of a given
case cannot be based solely on the
grounds that It Involves a violation of
civil liberties . Otherwise, one would, by
logic, be committed to teklng .every
such case, and this Is Impossible.
In the second place, given that only
some cases can be supported, It Is
absurd to defend the civil liberties of
persons or groups whose avowed

purpose Includes the subversion of civil
liberties. I, for one, do not relish the
idea of paying the legal bllls for the Ku
Klux Klan and the American Nazi Party
and thereby releasing their own funds .
for use In the causes of suppression of · mlnortties and spreading of vicious
propaganda.
.
In the thlnd place, If the ACLU .Ieadars
were themselves suflertng the consequences of their support of racist Bl'd
fascist cases, than one could admke
their spirt! of self"sacrtflce. But they are
not. They are lancing Blacks and Jews
to suffer In order for the ACLU to have
the luxury of blind adherence to
prtnclple.
I therefore suggest to all supporters
of civil liberties that they do the
following . (1) Refuse to support tt&gt;e
national ACLU until It comes to Its
senses. (2) Refuse to support any local
ACLU chapters that ere following the
national ACLU policies, (3) Shift
financial and other support
to
organizations defending civil liberties In
a sensible way, e.g . the Southern
Poverty Law Fund.
Sincerely,
-Jalln Corconin
Professor of Phlloaophy

Gardner's bio
John Gardner's latest work, On Moral
Fiction: A Polemic on Modttrn Fiction
Is beinQ published th is week . It Is
another m a long and Impressive line of
novels, short stories, children's books,

f:~~i~~ and,,~:zn~h:~:'n~iur~~~~

In Batav~ New YorX , the young
Gardner grew up on a farm and attended
local schools. In 1955, he earned his
B.A. at Washington University , St.
Lou is , and the next year received a
master's from the State University of
Iowa. Two years later he was awardect a
Ph .D., also et Iowa.
·
Now a professor at ~eorge Mason

~~':!tzo.:r.~~ax.;,lt~"o a.,;"':'-h~
St~-·~thtm

State, San Francisco
flllnols, the University of'~. and
Northwestern.
His first novel, Reauf'1'WICtloll, was
published by New Amari.,.,. Library In
· 1966. Following that , hla fiction
catalogue grew to .-.... The
Wrecbge of Agathon (18J:Oj, Grendel
_(t972), The Sunlight Ololoil- (t972),
Jason and Medea (t 973), Nickel
Mountain (1973) , Tho Klng'o Indian
(1974) and his most recent novel,
October Light, a featured 8ook~f·theMonth selection .
·

�Mordl11,1t71

Jobs. said not the an$wer to buil~ing a better Buffalo ·
Byl.MterW.IIIIInth
~. U/8 Erwtronmonloi-Center

environment

H hu become apparent to all that
Buffalo IOf8ly needs rajuvenatlon.
Buffalo Ia losfng population, Industry
and Jobs. Fundamentally, people ara
lellvii1Q because they believe they will
find mon1 satisfactory places to live
el.whera.
, Most hasty diagnoses ot the problem
twget on loss of jobs 88 the major
difficulty. Spokesmen for both the
public and the private sector speak
shrilly, eoen frantically , !hal the

of security of the kind that must be
provided by law enforcement agencies.

=u~:~~~~~~':Jslt 1~~

private sactor play upon this great
concern for jobs to extract concession s
from the community In the form of
lower taxes, ralaxed air and water
pollution atarfdanls, and other special
concesalons. The belief Is widely held
that the community must grow
economically, at all costs, or It will
dactlne and die.
·

Is

of

poor

aesthetic

1

qu~ \reople perceive fairly weak level~
p,:s~~~·w=p:~::nen\~~ n:~:

come under their own dirac! control
such as family life and the besuty,

~~fert ,;~d m~~~acr.,s~f ,f~~~ ~gm:,;

satlsfiacl with quality of life elements
that must be provided by concerted
action of the who le community such as
freedom from pollution, job· opportunities, good government, and security
from theft and ln/ury. This is not a
condemnation of a I collective action In
the community; certain collective
features such as fire protection and
educational opportunities were perceived to be well provided here.

M~~~mrm;:~~hca,n j'::ls focusing . on
quality of life rather than simply on jobs
is attested to by a . recent economic
study conducted
by the
Rand
le tia~a edequ.lta?
But Ia tllat an adequate diagnosis of
Corporation in California. The~ show:
t~at "measures.affecting the residential _
our problem? Is It raallstlc to expect
attractiveness of an area appear to be of
1hat Buffalo will once more . grow
economically and In population? The
far mora importance in the production
_ _ . to both questions Is no. The
of jobs than local programs to reduce
economic buts for Buffalo historically
taxes or to allow excepti on to
hu been traneportallon and manufacenvironmental restrictions ... • The sun
1
belt and the suburbs have cteveloped
•=.ont.!J.,:e.::' ~rapidly _because people want to live in
-tern terminus of the Erie Canal W88
them .. .. Households are attracted by
Its original reason for. beln~ . The .St.
cities that also offer a comfortable
climate,and pleasant physical surroundings and there ia&lt;&gt;VIdence that j obs may
become a major goods transfer point.
follow people to such areas, contrary to
The dacline In manufacturing jobs that
the old.maxim [th_at people foll ow jobs]
we ant experiencing here Is lett by all
.... Policies that improve the environparts of the Northeastern United States.
' mental quality of older declining .areas
Mora Importantly, manufacturing jobs
may arrest the longterm trends of
ara declining wor:ldl!flde; It Is Increaseconomic decline more effectively than
Ingly the cese ln ·alt deveiopacl countries
mea$ures aimed at attracting footloose
thit the majority ol jobs are In the
Industries .. .. Thus, from the loc_al
1
perspective, economic development
J
'
strategies must be related to efforts to
. turing lnduatry to Buffalo are not likely
~~:O~s.t.~e qualil}&gt; cit lite to; ,ll~t~ ,...
&lt;to be successful and would not
contribute much to the solution of our
May I suggest tllat· Buffaio relaX its
community problems even If they ·
frantic efforts to attract jojls,here at any
should meet moileS! success.
cost and concentrate lhstead on .do1ng
· What then Is our problem? I submll
everything it can to make this
the! we 88 a community have had our
community a marvelous exciting place
eye on the wrong ball. People have left
to live. Ach ieving that will not be easy
Buffalo not simply because there wera

l!':n't.!":,S'f,;:

~=ce~~~~::s"~ a~~~. "':~

~~'!':e !~.!n~ts fo ,.:.cema~l~~:

~~:~~.bl~f..~~t~~'!:"t!

desirable place to Jive by fewer and
f - people. The ball we should have
our 8yit on Is qUIII/ty of""· We ought to
be examining In what raspacts people
find quality In living In Buffalo and In
.,_ JWIII)eCts their community Is

=

~ ~~~'Wt.:lt':ty~l!e . .!:::
- ' ! y conducted a 118111ple survey
study of 1021 rasldants of Erie and
c;:-,..:tf.:o"'oftheB'.:=

e.-tanoed lower quality of life than ·.

did peoRie living In the auburbs and
I'IAI ...-. This generalization holds .
IICIOU a wide varlety of apilclflc life
quality components as well as for an
0¥811111- of quality of life.
·

WMI'agDIIIlliiiN?
.
- .
H Ia lnatnletlve for thlnkJng about the

but, I submit, that as a community we
really have not given It muCh thought.
Every community · needs a central
project; people need to feel that they
ara part of some larger Important
endeavor reaching beyond their mundane dally routines. I believe that the
central project sllould be the rajuvenation and rebuilding of this community.
Plans for rejuvenation ara not likely to
be effective If they ere promulgated
from on high by an outside consultant.
Thera ere literally hundreds of
thoughtful and concerned people In this
community who would be glad to
contribute their Insight and their
wisdom to a community redevel opment
plan. They are crying ou.t for a leader
who will speak their concerns and who
will orchestrate their efforts so that they
can work together In harmo~y Instead
of at cross purposes. Let's see If we
can't uncover the indigenous leadership
that Is needed to make and carry out a
rejuvenation plan ~r Buffalo.

Where'a tbe money?
But where Is all the money to come
from? Some of It may be available from
the federal and.state governments but I
would argue that the job can be done
without even those funds . Much of what
needs to be done requires labor and
Buffalo has a surplus of labor. Once a
plan has been developed and accepted
the owners of private property will begin
to ·see that It Is In their own selfinterest to repair, renew and beautify
their property. People need to feel that
they have a stake In the rejuvenation
and vitality of th~ i r neighborhoods. As
it becomes apparent that the city 1s
rebuilding and· coming to life again
people will want to live in Buffalo. That
fact alone will enhance property values
and make it worthwhile for private
Individuals to invest in rebuilding and
property improvement.
May I urge ·that, throughout th is
common ~tort, const ant attention
should~ ~ven to excellence.il'! design. !
We shoOid pre·serve the 'best rrom the
past ana rebuild that which is not of
high quality to make It as pleasing and
satisfying- as we possibly can. We
should work with neighborhood groups
to aid them to come to agreement on
the ki nd of neighborhood they wish to

have and then work with them to
bri ng about the physical and social
changes that ara most likely to rasult In
thedeslred kind of neighborhood.
Allelaa will follow
If Buffalo can be successful In once .
more making this city a desirable place
to live, Its other maJor problems will fall
in place. Jobs wfll be generaJed by
thrivi ng . commercial
and
service
activities. Tax dollars will follow from
Increased proparty values anti new
development. Vibrant, thriving neighborhoods are lnh!&gt;spltable to crime. The
81

;::~ ~:~e h~an~g;::g,:m~~~ th':::!
r~fe~~~':'san~:..~;:,ot~~bt:.,,:d th~,;;

flow readily from the people.
.
Finally, I believe it Important that
Buffalo find a new identity. Buffalo Is
down on Itself and the rest of the
countr.y laughs at our -own dejection.
. What have we got that uniquely
enhances' our qual ity of life? Our

~:~:.~;:s~~;~~ ~~~"e'a~~~~·:ff; ~=~=

plenty of water for Industries that
require clean fresh water (water is
becoming an Increasingly scarce
resource worldwide) . We must be sure
that we clean up ·and main!ain the.water
resource that we have. Perhaps some
new Identity can be formulated out of
our water abundance. But an Identity
need not . be dependent on some
physical environmental aspect . It can
come irom the spirit of a people
working together to build quality of life,
working together to find out how we can
find joy and satisfaction w1th each
other, working together to find new
heights of achievement . In matters. of
brotherhood and human spirit.
·
The mass media· can do a great deal
to help us show each other what we
have and what we can achieve. L'et us
begin with what we have that is of high
quallty~uch as oul cultural ,I nstitutions
and our sports teams. Let us identify
many other aspects of our lives which
could be brought up to a high quality
and set forth ·the joint efforts ·to bring
that about. The med ia can help nurture
and sustain -that community spirit. Are
we as a people ready for It?

Text of OER'S letter to the NYEA
EDITOR'S NOTE: The following latter
from the Office of 'Employ• Relations
to the New Yortt Educators Aaaoclatlon
Ia baing printed hare at the request of
the U,......lty Center. Chept• of United
UnMnlty " " " - ' - · lt'a a further
of offlclel Sl8te ·policy on
who CM do whet wt.1 In Ierma ol the ·
c:o11act1n bqelnlng . ..,..entation

..-.

three years and have been applied
uniformly to other unions seeking to
:7r,~~lze empl_oyees In other bergalnlng
I have reason to believe that official
1

't§~':,!~/:~~~~ci~!Jon ~:.e ~::, a~~~

of these rules for more than 8 year. Be

.,_Mr.
Domen:
Pages 12.2•12.5 of the Guidelines for

=

~.;%n ~~ ~.:s~f ~~:&amp;~~~~':~~~~
apJ:r'aWie Yo~~~ ;h'!':

!:,\ ~ ~~~A'e: &lt;f.'¥ro"t!.-~e~~~Y'3.t

approximately 40 per cent of the
members of the bargaining unit will

on November 4, 1977 In rasponse to his
1
81
r"'b'::'
' Mr: Trobridge
requeste&amp; names, eddresses, work
location and other Information con-

carefully, taking Into account the views ,
of the Incumbent union, United "

~~v~~V::;be;,

Mr. John N. Doman·
Dirllctor of Communi cations
New Yoik Educators Aaaoclation

rule so that the 90-day period would
begi n to run Immediately, the j)erlod to
ena sometime batween the middle of

1

1

~7. n8n'"r:o:':n"be~~5~ft ~pl~:~n~f.

Trobrldge and
stated
that
the
Orgjli\lzatlon81 i Activities and Cam'
bargaining unit lnfoiinatlon he sought
palgna, Issued by OER In May, 197.5,
l8)wlnaiJon of Buffalo to reflect on
would be available, pursuant to our
specify u follows:
thOu aapecta of llfa which people find
ractli:e, on February 1, 1978. ln my
"When an employee organization hu
of high quality In this noglon and,
etter to Mr. Trobrldge I pointed out that
been racognlzed or certified 88 the
COIIINriWIIB, to reflect on the noglon'a
the releese of this Information six
~tatlVB' of the employees In a
orut• deflclenclee. People In this
negotiating unit, the campaign period
months befora the challenge date of
. nogkln wera moat pl-.cl with their
shall bealn no-earlier than 90 days prior
August 1, 19781n no sense represented
• · hOine and !emily life; theY also wera
to the date upon which the Incumbent · a ralaxatlon of the 9!klay' campaign
quiW llfaMI!d with their houalng and
rule. I also staled that the Information
lzatlon'a rapraaentatlon status Is
their neighbbrhooda, although this W88
.yvould not be made available unless I
to challen~e under Sactlon 208
leu true In Buffalo than It was In tbe
Taylor Law. ' (page 12.3)
·
=~~edw'/:.~":.seS:,!~f::c:, ~~~A ~~
The challenge perlocf In the cese of
auburtla
and nnl - · People were
: llfao pleased with the good human
the State University-of New York and Its
NYEA 's agreement that:
rwlalkina ~ neighbors and
bergalnlng unit of professional staff
"3. The release of this Information in
. ~ In the community Including a
employees begins August I . Accordno sense represents a retaxetlon ol the
. ~ high level of community
Ingly. the campaign period begins to
pride. People 81ao wera quite pleased
run on May 1. It Is on this date that
with the -.y _ . to lovely natura
peraona who ara not members of the
~elations Mapual referred to abc&gt;l'e."
and OUI1IOor recreation In the raglon.
By letter dated November 22, 1977
bergalnlng unit ara permitted acceaa to
• f'laopM dlapl-.cl about the
blrgalnlng unit members "for the
Mr. Trobl'ldge accepted this condition
quality of the water In the noglon. Water
purpose of soliciting memberships,
and the Information w88 mede available
Ill the
natural resource
dlllributlng llteratura, obtaining sigto NYEA on or about February 1. I am
. 8lld .-y
fall It ahould be mainnatures on authorization cards, and
Informed that your staff organiZers have
_..,
quality.
utilized this lnformailon to gain accass
other organizational
activities
In
. 11le
oommunlly liabilities on
to unit members and that your
rnt~p,,j,o~s,n:n:~~t':n:~g~~gg; employee auJ&gt;portars In the u'n lt ha_ve
the N!liilara Frontier ant:
• 1) A.._~. eapeclalty poor
the public are admitted, provided that
been engaged In organtzatlon;;l act1•·
such actl•itles. do not Inhibit the
JDIIOIIIIOI'Iunltlea.
'
Illes, both on and off campus, activities
moWHrlanl of people or 118hlcles, impair
which are In no way lnhlbltad by OER
2) ....,.,.,... -v low Waluatlona of
the aafe end efficient conduct of the
rules.
U. Jail ·blillla dOne by all levels of
. operation, or Interfere with worlc duties
On Wednesday, February 15, you and
IICJIIIIIIIII*I,
other rapraaentatlvto!l of NY fA met with
or worlc performance."
.
c 3l11te oom
_ mun1ty has high pollution
me
and urged that I emend '*he IICHiay
,T.hf•• 'f'llt(l :h•.., b-. ~~lve for. - .••
mfDUCh. ot the ~ ~J

r.

~

~~~~~~~ ~::Sm,:~r~i1~
Ju:"' ~! Ju~nslderad y~ur request

~~:::::~. ~~~:s~'i.'clu~ ~~~ s::~~

request should be dflnled end that- the
rule at Issue sliould remain unchanged
and should be enforced accordingly.
This conclusion Ia baaed upon my
judgment that It would be unfair and
administratively Inappropriate- to make
changes alter the commencement of
oerrg anlzaf; tomnalhacetflvaclt tesh. atTheheunsefalmrueaatesJ
f•888 , 0 1
11
1
have been railed upon by the other
parties In lnterast In making their plans
~lvi~.fs':oprlate raaponses to your
The administrative Inappropriateness
arises from the fact that the guidelines
have a potential Impact on 180,000

~!fini:·":~a~ggf {g~e o~1J lg,~~oy:_ _:;:'J'~s'::ft;~~!n~c'!'tt~~s:C:~~~~~~=

sraeteat

tv·

..

,~· · o;~·r

_.,

.-~-.;

.t.·r ,.... , ,....'"'

r~

'

. ...

, '~J

,·

·; ·.'·'

,•.·

, .......,

sla!e; that a multiplicity of agencies,
&lt;iep&amp;rtments and other employee
organizations are affected by those
guidelines; and that they should not be
changed· tn a hurried , ad hoc rasponse .
to a claimed Inequity Involving a
particular operation.
I am a/so troubled by the moral
posi tion of an organization which,
having received the names and
addresses of unit members, now seeks
to set aside a rule to which It agreed In
ord~ to obtain ihat information.
Sincerely,
-Donald W. Wollatt
Director, Office of Employee Relations
·. •, · .·; ,. - ,-4 ; , ',·, •· • '•'• r,•rt~ .

1 : ...

•

�Morch 18, 1t78

-Writing workshop
means that
women write

Women's
·D ay

When/sing
I breathe deep
and sing the spirit

Filmmakers
use powerful tool
to smash stereotyp:s

When/dance
my lettt barrily touch the floor
my srms, a whlrlwlf1d of motion
and they tell me shh!
you sing too loud
you dance too strong

--lntam

By SMphlftle Welaman
Film is a powerful tool In our
society, Wanda Edwards feels . A tool
that rarely portrays the realities of oil ~
IIvas. Remember the fun loVIng flapper
of the 208, the gun fnoi!S and good
girls of the 308, lhfl liberated women
.of current films. The fictlcn Is more

/tell them no
I will dance wittrall my power
sing with the strrHigth that /o rFY own
-

~~en~o:l:.,:,"•_st~:,t':': ~~~~~

From the days when t~e under
male pseudonyms or published their
works anonymously, women writ. .
have had difficulty being published and
accepted by inale literary establishments.
·
·
Now, the for women to have a
sup~lve etmoaphwe where their

the fiery Latin, and the passivemysterious_ Asian wom.en of Suzy
Wong. _
.
.
Edwards, a graduate student In
American Studies/Media, was open-

~IPm~ ~ ~~~~~,:'n:op~ ~

r'n° :a:fe 1~~h':."'i~~Z~·sbei~.:l'n~

International Women's · Day observ·ances last week, Films by and about
women were · shown throughout
Wednesday, March 8 . That night ,
filmmakers discussed their worl&lt;s and

Workshop et U/ B.
As a couree offered · by Women's
Studies College, the workshop haa met
on Thureday nlahta alnoe 1971 . Ita
members are both community women
and students and 1'W1Q8 from beginning
to published
- ·Pamela
·
poets
Andree
Abbott and
Gray,
lnstructora, feel that the claas reSponds
to women's poeniS' on lntellactual and
emotional ltM!IS. Women . . aleo
encouraged to bring In wortca of other
women authora.
,-.
.
'We try to encourage more women to
Write more and more often, rather than
weeding out and encouraging only a
small elite," Ms. Abbott said.
No hlenn:fly
"The workshop . Ia I!On4llerarchlcal
and 4Weryone shares irf -the reeponslbillty for claas running smOQthly," Ms.
Abbott added.
The lnstructo,.. believe that wlthoUt
hierarchy, women can develop their
own style, tree from pOMSure to Imitate
thoseontbp.
~
" lnatructora have been past members
of tha workshop and provide continuity
by setting and encouraging the tone
of the class. It glvas the class a
history ,~ Ms. Abbott said.
The workehop eeerna to have a life of
Its own. A real spirit and enthualeam
pervades it.
One reading a semiiter for Women's
Studies College and at 1-t cine public
reading outside of the college are held.
Past readings have been preeented at
"ttle- TraJfamadore Cafe, Emma Bookstore, WBFO, Women's Coffeehouae
and College B's Art G,allery.

ex~e~~~hat ~pie don't recognize

these Images as false, " Edwards
continue!! , "It's that women who are
not portrayed ' In films don't have
access to materials to produce
different Images."
In the 80s, she went on ,
oppressed peoples began to challenge
the "structure enforcing their oppression." Non-whlte· people ~ld n9 to
racism; women dernan&lt;led more

~\'':/."~.~&lt;;,~~~~~g~:~:s~t::~

War. In the m!llst of the._turbulence,
avenues lor change were opened,
Including ones lor change In media.
. Universities that taught film were
opefled lor the first tlme In manr,
Instances ''Jo · oppressed peoples, '
E,clwarda..~ld.. l'eople who otherwise
,., would riot'hiive met each other (like
middle class kids and working class

ft!,r'ft'::.•

~~a~C..Tt~'\'!,~.C:::,~
got a
Organizations and IndiVIduals carry
on this work, Edwards said. An agency ,
known as Newsreel In New York
attempts to make film lind tools for
filmmaking available to people 'Who
wouldn't ordinarily have access to
them. Women who want to reject
Wonder Woman and Chartle'e Angels
now have recourse. They"Can begin to
-rnake th&lt;!ir own Images:
'
The three filmmakers on the panel
were:

;r

•

-

•Bonnie- Friedman who started In
film at Newsreel In t970. She made
"Chris and Bernie" in t975, and
"Fiashettes" In 19n an.ll Is now
working &lt;&gt;n a film on women, mental
health and alcohol;
·_
whoHel,:. ~~~u~":di~:raB':J~
coming to the U.S., where she made
• "Doubleday" In 1975 and "Emerging
Woman" In 19n; and
•Christine Choy, who started · In
1971 at Newsreel , was editor lor
"Teach our Children" In 1971 , directed
"Spl"-~ Spindles" In 19n, and Is
working on two films, one on AslanAmericena and another on New• Yon&lt;
dockworkers.
'

Yas, I will sing and I will dance
· -Stephanie Weisman

.._..planned
SUb-Board I, a. student
_Ms. Gravtteft) and Ms.. Abbottof~wortuftop . ••

advised potential filmmakers. And you
can't expect to accomplish everything

at once.
Nothing but wMtemoJn Brazil
In Brazil, Ms. Ladd said, "we always
saw_ American western · films. There
never were any Brazilian. films, and
when we finally did see some of our
own, we were embarrassed . There was
something ·wrong, we weren't blond
enoug~. or1all enough: We looked too
poor. It was a process of being
alienated from oursalves."
She was Involved with filmmakers at
the Univ.erslty, she said, so one day,
she started making films . " I never ·
decided to be a filmmaker. U wasn't
until I had made a number of films that
1
r~ I.. ~~~:,;Y isa film about

The exciting fiOs
ene of the exciting things about the
eos, Friedman said, Is that different
klnda of films were developl':'l!. Filma
were being made that dldn t dlrect themselvas to a passive audience; but ·
which challenged assumptions of
society .and stimulated people to
action.
, " I was politically active in the late
:r,C:,'~o~~~n d~t ~~~~ ~~~~~ 1f~~
80s and Y8ed films to start
being distributed _ throughout Latin
dlacl.oaaions. I saw that It worked and I
America. She had to sobdue c9rlain
began to get Interested In making
elements in It to avoid censoring, but
films."
_ there are stUI countries it can't be
She also ~anted to do something
distributed through.
positive about
single mothers,
Friedman said. She interviewed
to ~:.~"fa v;;:::tf~r~~: •m::,~oJ:t r:gi:J~
women from New York to Boston but
"the women were eager to talk to us,
they were so isolated, "it was
depnlaalng ." Then she found Chris
::m"'ee:'n~:~:~t:l~:'c/."J. asked;- the
and Bernie.
Ruaolen films In Chine
She thought the resulting film
lhowed women taking control over
So~~nf\r.;::~saa~~-~~~h~.~~:wc~~~~~
their lives by finding an alternative
film industry was very underllfeatyl~ ~by setting up a household
developed. There were no films that
where TY would share responsibilirelated to the Chinese."
ties .
When she came to the u.s. , she felt
" You have to be really clear what
a need for exoresslon : " I couldn:t
you want your film 10 be about," she

.

write;. English . wasn 't- my r.rimary
language. I got interested in sc enlists
trying to convert theoretical concepts
into visual films . I started doing these
'•
kinds offiiMs.

N~-:.=1. 't sa:\~9' dia~·n!::.Y

1

fundlr.lj

:17f'~b=~·al~= ;:rc;he
workshop to enable . the writers to

produce a magazine contalnlng · aelec&gt;tlons from_ their work. The magazine,
called Room ol Our Own, Ia. expected to
8Pf!'!!! this serneater.
·
Women 11M been historically
under...-epr8Mnted aa writ. . and It has

":':

~~~~r:hedt;.n .:~~·&amp;".:.~ ~~n:.

wl3: '
minority groups. The minorities dldn~
an -enormous amount of lltlllllture thai
know how1o speak out, especially th
quiet Chinese. I felt I could portray the · Is luat now being tapped."
Women have not been encour.ged to
Chinese."
- teke
their writing aertously. It Is looked
Chqy feels being a minority woman
upon
more as a hobby. to be fit Into an
In the film. Industry Is difficult; that
already beetle family/job lifestyle.
there are too lew Third World Women
Hence, a lack of 8nC0Uf111181Tl811l to eet
working in films.
time aside for developing writing skills,
"I'm now working on a TV script
the lnatructo~ agree.
about the Chinese. Ther - (the
"I think -llo a good job at whatproducers) didn't ~ like that
didn't
do. The workshop Ia a remarkable
Include religion . I told them that we
Institution and I have a real feeling of
don't have · religion, - we: have
gratitude for It; It provides a place
philosophies. They then told me to
where people sincerely want to help me
Include gangs, gambling and prostiwrite," Ms. Abbott noted.
tution."
In a sentence, Ms. Abbott summed It
Choy said there Is a continuous
up. "The workshop means that I wrltel"
misunderstanding In America about
Asian-Americans. " UnlortunJ!ely, As' ians don't raise their voices to tell ·
Americans that's not who they are."
The Puerto Rican student · OrganizaDiscussing women filmmakers,
tion for Di9n1ty, -Elevation and
Choy related a story about the time
she was the only woman among ten
~ males.
•
"Wherever we went, even though I - ~~f~~~·~~:r~~':fortMarch 17, at 7:30
waJI the director, I was Ignored and
Guest speakers will be Or. "'Manuel
Isolated . The men I worked with
Maldonado-Denis and Jose Garcia
mistrusted. my directing. They all
· bolh from Puerto Rico. MaldonadO:
wanted to sleep with me and when 1
Denis will review the history of the great
dfdn't let them, I was badmouthed.
Puerto Rican migration: Garcia will
presenl : :tlis l atest• lllm, " Manifest....
Destiny ,., ilbo\Jl the !SpaniSh-American '
humane and less competitive."
War.

Puerto-Rican fest

~r~~r~~~~~t~~~~:~\~n~"J' ~~~i~

wi;~~at~~?~~e ~~';;~ ~~W:~P ~·~~

-

�MedSChool
plans primary
care course
A month primary ambulatory
-.course to begin this .July, was
IIPPfOWd by the Macllcal Faculty
CouM:H at Its - l n g Man:h 7.
n. OOUfW, which will ba
..........., for fourth-yMr medical
atucMrlta, waa strongly endorsed by
b':rrtcu~:::~m~~il and the
1
One-month rotations for 18 students
will be offered- a 10-month period
• In 111e departments of Internal
MediCine, Pedtatrtcs, OB/GYN and
F81ftfty Medicine. Students will ba able
to choole the · department In which
they would pre!• to complete a

-j

rolatlon.

.

During the rotation period , 75 per
cent of a student's time must ba spent
In ..-ulatory or out~lent care. In
onler to gain ax
ence with a
oontinuum Of care, st dents will tie
pernlltted to follow patients . II
~I '-Pitatlzatlon qccurs.
~.no mon~than 25 percentot.a
~ time can ba spent ' ln
ill-llcMPbllrallllng.
COurle' Will ba ~lied after the
· ftrat , _ to - e how well It has
INCIIed Hs stated objectives. Evalua.
lion 01 stuclent8 and faculty Is also
pi....S.
•
Tha Faculty Council agreed In
principia to accept a new student
~ ptOCedure which will be
forwwded to laaal authorttles for
paruelll and finally to Dean John
NalllldOn for final approval. The.

n.

'

:~r1:=~:C:,:;:'~=tig~

o8ler graduate students here and
contelna a mechanism for faculty

_•The Amherst Campus and the economy
(lrompoget.-41

the Marriott Corp. to build a hotel near
the Amherst Campus and said the
" abeyance of Unlversfty construction"
has hindered his negotiations with
them .ll'ie hotel's executives have put a
hold on the proposed multi-million
dollar, 350 room unit , until !hay are
convinced sufficient activitY" exists althe University to WIIITBilt such an
Investment.
Besides hassles with Marriott,
Owens said that the construction halt
has caused a "credlbiUty gap. " He said
It Is difficult to persuade Investors tb.at
"West..n New York Is a good place to
do business and that they shoutct
complete projects they ,begin."
The Unl-.alty wHI become more
valu.bla to _the community once It Is
completed, Owens predicted, since It
will 11k81y attract -ch-«lented
flnM which can ck.w from Ita resources
and tldent.

have to be removed. Downing said only
six trees would have been affected by
the rehabilitation effort. The proJect will
not proceed, he said, until DOT gets
support and a commitment from the ·
Town of Amherst and Its officials.
Tile l.ocl&lt;port Expnsssway, scheduled
for construction late next year, will ba
one of the last DOT pr-'!.[ects In Western
New Vorl&lt;. Downing said the "dsy of the
maJor lnterst;ote or expressway Is
coming to a close." lhste&amp;d, the State
will concentrate on rehabilitating
existing roads.

Budget cuts, accordlnll to Decker,
were designed to produce 'broad-baaed
tax relief" for state residents and certain
target g·roups whose taxes were "out of
line" with those of other states. Tax
reductloJ'S for business were created
with the lntentl!)n- of raising ihe rate of
return on Investments and "restoring
New York to . a competitive state In
which to live and -work. "
Decker called State taxes only the
"tip of the iceberg" In public spending .

~:i,:!'~~~c'l.ov:am~:"~t:fe"~~Jh;:

twice as much.lf New York Is to remain
Too muc!Ytima on tiMi buHS
economically vital &amp;r)d competitive,
Prealdent Ketter told the panel that
Decker said. local taxes must also be
split campuses have caused students to
decreased.
I
spend approximately 11 hours a week - . In response to audience questions,
commuting on buses. Such a situation,
Decker said:
said Ketter, "does not augur well for
1) The Stale C!ecidecl'agalnst a higher
efficiency, the emotional. stability of
percentage neductlon In personal
students, the enthusiasm of the faculty
Income tax because It was felt that
or the development of research and
money gained through stretching a tax
coincident Industry associated with
bracket would only wind up Jn Feda'al
coffers. Also, the elimination 'lf lOP
..!:toaJ.:.::".!.::~hel~.f~ research."
_
would benefit _on~ a llmllll;
to the 81$ In 118f*W, a loWa"lng of
som~.loOoear~ag~~~er,:J~s~:~ brackets
wealthy segment of residents. Decker..said he realized U\at !'lese top lex
bracket Individuals are generally the
decision-makers In a company, but said
~ch
~ totaxkaeredp usc~~~
also pointed out that about $21 million
..,,
_,..
of approved and . fully-designed conthe matter was one of "equity."
struction projects could (almost lmes from sh.tng In tax breaks.
2) The governor and DOB ·Brll
sensitive to the bonding needs of the
c;..trucllon ...... W811f . . t
mediately) go to market If funds wer.e
University; however, Decker .aeld he was
8oth Donald Blair .-:utl¥e director
released by the State. Ketter said plans
unable to give a timetable for future
OlllleConetructtonl'radeaCouncll,and
scheduled for complellon this tall will
bonding of campus projects. Decl\er
.'-11 KellaMr, bualnW8 1!118f!t for the lncnsase the nsedy-to-bulld total to $34
AIIIIMoa WofMra, lamenlid 'the poor ·million. If construction on tne.
said notes iltlll exist that " - to ba
funded for \JIB's build-out program.
~~~ ettwtlon In WNY. Blair
begin&amp;, he estimated that approxlalll
per -.t of 111e area's building
matety 2,000 people would find work.
~ . . c:urrentty out of wort&lt;;' '
"I think we are part and I*CBI of the
Afacultywlew
Professor John Naylor of the U I B
..t urged the c.ey 8dmlnlatratlon to qnomlc deYelopment of Western New
by -.nwldng funds In
Yoit&lt;," Kelt• said. "But tha'a Is a n-'
faculty told the panel that his main
111e aupp"'"-taa buclaet for U/B
to convey to DOB that the University of
obfectlve In sptl!lklng was to convey the
-vuctton. He uUd ihe Aaaembly- Buffalo Is tied Intimately to the faculty's "oneness with the,edmlnlstra.
,_~to "get our message back
-11-belng of the area."
' lion" on the Importance of ·completing
to 1M a-nor "
Responding to questions from the_ the Amherst Campus. Naylor aatcr---.
~said ·tNt for the past several
panel and audience, Ketter report~!&lt;~
faculty and students have been able to
ve-e his constlt-.cy has auppo{ted that; 1) About S30 million to $35-mllllon "bear the burden" of split campuses "as
111e cornp1etton -01 constructiOI' at
In construction must occur on Amherst
long as they could the liGht at the
Alnherat, but thllt 1-. Ia "dlshewtened"
before any significant renovation can
end of the tunnel." Now, he Tndicated,
"there Is no longer .,Y -..nee that
~ =:tU:~!cy" end 111.~ ~~~t~tlo~,alnF~~d""'in~d~:S S~f:a1 , things are going to get bella'." •
a.thMted that 8bcJut 8,000
student tuition throughout SUNY be
jolla will be qwated when
finlt uaed for relief of capital construeIt,, fii!IY.,. hmctiQI)at. He Ia
lion bonds. Any surplus goes to the
lilt lalif, tl'llll many mlnoil:'iY
State Traaswry •• CllfT&amp;nlly, ,.ov• 51®
wori*B who W8l8 tralne6 by local million In tuition money Is being
atc~ntenciWftent
WIIOna, . . fon:ed to '-the ar6a
dlwfted to Ito&amp; State's general purpose
tollnd~tt. "Thlelaa.hetlofen , fund. 3) The Division of Budget (DOB) ,
SUNY's nh( cl\8ncallor, Clifton Fl.
illilloltlon of wttetle 1M11Ja ~ iolthe
Ia tile "ali)Sular prassure POint"· In
Wharton, Jr., lbr.-Jy president of
New Yen • he uld.
_ A~y reapenstble for Amherat's
!'~!.'..'!."!.' St_a~.-.,w 1!! be .,~ ~nc::l
'
. • conatructto~&gt;-taa. 008 has aultlorlty to
..,_.
"
~
... D
deal~ whiCh construction projects
G:ontmenc'elrient exercises, IICIWcluled
wilt be bon!led. 4) Froin 1982-1a70, no
for Sunday, May 21, at 3 p.m. Ill
· COnetructioll . occurred at J·utB: so
M-lat A.uclitOrlvm. .
.
~tuition was diVa"ted to building
· These thl~icnl wHI ,be

=-~~ml=:n ~~ =t!or.:'~g~:~.!!ft~,\~~~~: \!:!

=ton

_....,...things

E

Wharton to speak ·

_.of

81

8

1

=r

=~~ts.oiKe~~ . =~lp&amp;f!'"i~ of ,.;:. :;~
Alllhenlt CM!pus co111d h - ~Men built _ (excluding ~IMctQre atld ~
wl1lt thla clll!erte&amp; tuition money fiom
mental lleStoa); the FK~i!fy of'
U/8 etudenta. - t
. •· Educatlolllll ,$taellaa; the F~ of
\
.
- •
Social' !&gt;c:tenC&amp;s. &amp;riG r Adit\ln~Mratien:
DOB
the Dlvlsl~ 91 Graduate -.6 Profes~a . Decker,
008,
atonal Edooation- OnchldlfiO -~
aald t11at the-Swab
thle ,..--· Park "'"".'O&lt;i!lf lhstitute, bul not.1h01111 ·
de¥1.-cl on three prl plee: 1). That 110. . recalvlng ~In diYISiona IW&gt;Idlna,
budlllll growth be provided fOJ State , separate ' COrl'lmBnf*nentsl; ilnd·' the
Operallons but that funds be PfC!VIded . Division .PI ·,\lt'!.rgraduate&lt; Educat~
for cttllcel buman . iler¥1-. 2) That
(special majors and essoctalildagteea).
11\oney be altottad for ' taraeled capital
~ Gradual.,. JlhQ ~lved ctaa- 111 ·
tn-tmenJa Which woUld 1118111miZII
Septeir)ber tfn~ Febr"*Y lW8 ...
F....,. dolwa and ,n,. In~, , "'"'"" to P~ . In
1&amp;.:·
31 "Rial IIIMeeld .. atwen to IOCIIIIIIa8 to
·~
who . ~ to conoplete .
provide for ..tuct1on or slaDitlzatlon of
requln!me:nts II)' tile enct Qf this
taxes.
881Mater. .
'
.• , :,
This ve-. Declcer said, the 9tate hu
Caps and gowne-wlil ba worn.
52110 million In di!ICretlonllfY funds and
Units not partJcipatlng n General
most likely the same amount will ba
Commencement will hold their own
available next year.
indlviquat exl!fl!ises.

:;."/;.dat

=lng

':'-lallw .........,..

·

..,'*"

�........

March 16,18 71

-.calendar·-.
(from poge 121 cot 4)

'

SUNDAY-19

AMHERST FRIENDS MEEnNG"; •
157 MFACC. Elicott. 10 a .m. Everyone is

-·-n -'-"·
welcome.

IIUSIC"
Bile 8chulta, pianist. MFA Recital . Baird
Aecitllf Hal. 8 p.m. F""'.
Ms. ScnAta. a student of FririB Arschanska
Boldt. wll be aosiated by Ms. Boldt, pjano;
ThomOS Halpin, violin; Andrew Walker Scholtze.
baritone: L.uca DiCecco and John Cloer, cello;
j,d
BeiO;llom

K-

IIUSIC"

e-tngo tor lluolc. Albright·Knox Art
GaflefY. 8 :30 p .m. Gonenll admiSSion $2 .50:
s~ts. U/ B locUty / atall and gallery members
$1 .
Sponsored by Center ol 1he Creative and

Pertomilng Arts.
Featuring Toronto guest composer-pianist
8 perfonnMce of Rlok Nino
by Tom ~- · f!1U8Ic crt11c of lhe Vilage
Voice. The "rilk" is that· the muslcian6 never
see lhe muolc untllhe octuaf """"""""·

UUABFILII"
Clio! (SIJii&gt;, 1977). Conlonlnc:e -

•

· ~­
c;,tt838-29191orohow-. Admisaioncharge .

MONDAY-20

BUFFALO LOGIC COUOOutuM IIEETING II
U.to&lt;ottty and Eplotornology ol Goomotricol
and Ungu ..Uc Cognition. Kenneth Abrams., Lin·
gulstics Deportment, U/ B. 884 Baldy. 4 p.m.

tana.

Tho en- ol M. U.nge ( - ). 150 Farber. 5p.m.: 5Acheson. 8:15p.m.
Sponsored by ~~ of Modem lan·
guages and ~es .

CON VERSATlONS IN THE ARTS

~~

seuca-

ElwebapfaJlllolagk::al

4

of en Unuaual

~oc1o, ~,;, M.A. &lt;liM&gt;. Smith ~ -~48
Spor-..ct by 1he lliYI8Ion ol Enwonmental
Biology.

•

LECTURE"

Tho Building ol tho T.V.A., George Palo.
335 Hayes. 5 :30p.m. Free.
Spon80&lt;od by 1he School ol ArcMecture
and Environmental Oe&amp;lgn.

CONVERSATlONS IN THE ARTS

COUEGE B RLM"
From two to E..,.,lty (1953) . 170 ~FACC,
Blicott. 7 p.m.
B&lt;.rt Lancaster told Deborah Kerr mode love
on a ~swept beach and a nation trembled.
Frank Sinatra rejuvenated his career piayilg the
1 -fated ~lo . Montgomery Clift wea sUllen
as ever in this powerhouse movte about life in
the U.S. Army at the time ol Pealf Hart&gt;or.

"One Man's Ceiling ... " Ia another fftlln'l

1-.

1.-. such _....,, house sense a&amp;
le~. U/ Bifterentalagencles, end hOw
to buid good landlord-tenant retaticxlshipa. 35~ ·
MFACC, EllicoH. 7:3o-9 p.m.
For intoonation on registration , contact 110

Ubrary and Student Affairs.

CONCERT" .
The We-.rty Coniott. directed by Michael
Jaffee. Ten briliant young singers and players
with more than 50 unusual! Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque instruments. Rare and beautiful music of the 1 2th through 18th centuries.
taeinhans' Mary Seaton Room. 8 :30p.m. TICkets

IIUSIC"
I I - PugtiMe, percussionist. BFA recital.
Baird Recital Hal. 8 p . m . ~ -

8-

.-,.tte

Directed by with John Wayne
and Reel Buttona. This &lt;:omec1y oc!verrtiXe set
in Africa has WOyne lurtlng wid .......... _ , . ,

Au--

atyle.
170 1/FNX, Elicott. F,....

FIUI"

(llreAon, 1988). 148
•

~byCenterfof'-Siudy.

TUESDAY-21

~- : : ·Hatha Y-. ........,.;.._Bring

--mat and -

o - .:

eot

later. &lt;lboeMon

wetcomo.10~ . 12noon . ~ .
~ by C&lt;.ftunol Allan, Sub

Board and

_,'

~

Drugo oncl Dlot, Or. Woliam J .
proleaaor of pharmaceUtics.
. , _ , Hoepllal. 26 Farber. 12 noon.

Juol&lt;o, FJUI•

T o - oncl- Not (.-a, 1944). 150
Flrbw. 3 .-Mt 8 p.m.
-'
~by-totEnglilh .

Bogart told Bacol make lhe ~ cracld&amp;or is that a worn-out aoundtrack7

FOUIIlll OCCUPA TIONA!. EDUC.lTIONAL

~-·
·
_ , . ,.. Doololopmont,
Tho -

Dr. Cart J .

&lt;lnodl-. -

E::§.:tlonol Educotton In lion-

, professor of eduCation ,

of Educetion. Rutgers Unive&lt;oity.

Hearthstone Manor, Cheektowaga. 4 p.m.

and EnvWonmental Design.

· GEOlOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR II
•
~ tn.Mtlgatlonoal-....
In - . _ Or. Wonthrop Moons, SUNY/Albany.
Room 18, 4240 Ridge Leo. 3:30 p.m. Coffee
at3.

BIOPHYSICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR II
Colclum ond - . Muaclo Function, Dr.
David J . Triggle, orofesaor olblochemical pharmacology, U/ B. 245 Cory. 4 p.m.

CHEIIICAL ENGINEERINO SEMINAR~
Cotolytlc ~tton ol Nltrogor&gt;Contolning Compou- Found In CGot-Oomod
Uquldo. Or. '*'- A. Ketze&lt;, Deportment ol
Chemical Engineering. Unlverslty of Detawsre.
1 07 O'Brian. 4 p.m. Refreshments at 3 :30.
Cluny -

for details.

IRCFILM"
Wind and tho Uon. Dewey Lounge, Governors Residence Hal. 8 a-ld 10 p .m . Free to al
lAC f~yers : $ ..50 for others.

THURSDAY- 23
CONVERSAnONS IN THE DfSCIPIJNES II
Un-oaoncltho-lnWNtlonof~.

Munlo&lt;My-(1944). 7 p.m,
Based on the Raymond Chandl9r novel. Far.wotl My '--Y• this film. allmng Dick Powel .
Claire TrO'oiOr told Otto ~- Involves the hard·
boied . Pl1illip Marlowe In 8 tale ot homicide
t o l d -.
-RKkoning(1947) .a :45p.m.
Humphrey Bogart ploys 1he port of a World
W« II vet attempting alngle-hondedy to solve
1he......,... of his --buddy.
Conference-· Squre. F,....

WATER SKICLUB MEETING II
26of SquOe Hal. 7 p.m.
IIUSIC"
Visiting Artist Series IV: The Shepherd String
' Quertet. BaWd Recital Hall. 8 p .m. Generat admlssion $3: U/ B faculty, s tafl, ,alum&lt;)i Yjith tO. -"""lor

Pottery, JewWy. Enomels. .__..., graphy, We:r.'ing, Ba!J&lt;. Mactwne, etc. -.:11 20.
21. 120 MFAq;, Elicott. 12-4 p.m .
FIGURE IIIOD£UNO WORKSHOP
Onlw, paint, or sculpt from 1he ligon. U /B Art
Depel1ment. Bethune Hal, 4th lloor. 2917 Moin.
w~. 6-10p.m.; -.aays..a&amp;n~oys.
1-3p.m. Opentolhep!Allic.
For f..uw intonnBtion, cal 831-5261 .

HOU CEI.EIIRATlONS

lndia---youtoholi .

T.-.Hall. Through.Saturday.

.
Sponaored by the ~. 1he Councl on
lntemallonal Studies, 1he.Center tor~
Educa)lon Mdlhe lntemationaiColege.

8t Buff Slate on Sunday, -.:11 19
at3p..m.
For fio1her lnlonnation, ooniiK:t Sooldohr, 838·
4319 or Miind at 834-4194.
.

PEDIATRIC RESEARCH SEMINAR M
Spoco-lorm Agnoolo In P - with Gonodol

10 CARD CIIAHGE
10 Carti&amp;-There w11 be no CfATent IO..c.d&amp;, A &amp; A now says. The.

In ChUdren, Dr. Lyn R. Haber, Center for Vesual
Science, University of Rochester. linguistics
lounge, Spa:Jidiog Quad, Ellk::ott 1 :30 p .m.

-

RLM"
Night of the Ltring Dood (1959). 146 [l;efendort. 1 p.m.
Sponsored by Black Studies.

PHILOSOPHY SEMINAR II
ReUgJoua end Scientific Waya,of Knowledge.
Professor Ted Clements, SUC / Brocl&lt;port. 684
~ . 3 : 30p . m .

SEMINAR II
OttnM of the Murine T1. {Thymu..UU.kemlll
Antigen) Gonotlc Region. Tho Qa Lymphocyte Antfgena.l..orraine Flaherty, Ph.D., New York
StateOeportn- of Health, OMslon ol Labonltor'oes
and Research . Albany . 223 Shennan . 4 p.m.

PHARIIACEUnc&amp; SEMINARJ!
Degrodotton ol Cophoiolllln Cotofyzod by
lletol CholotH, Jeffrey E. Sussman, ~
student C508 Cooke. 4 p .m. Refreshments at
3:50 . •

PSST: PROGRAM FOR STUDENT
SUCCESS TRAINING I
~~ lntervlewlng: npa end T•ctlca.
Leader. Mary AM Stegmaier. associate director
of University Placement &amp; Career Guidance. 232
Squire. 4-6 p .m.

CELL &amp; MOLECULAR BIOLOGY SEMINAR II

·

Tho Role of tho Golgl Apponotvs In tho
Control al Glycoprotein Syninoals, Or. Harry
Schachter, director, Division of Biochemisby,
Research Institute, Hospital for Sick Chidren ,
Toronto. 114 Hochstetler. 4:15p.m. Coffee at
4.

DRAMA"

Booomon ond lAM, directed by SaiJf Elkln .
Pfeifer Theatre. 8 p.m. See March 16 listing fof'
detais.

Nq UUAB WEEKEND FILMS ON MARCH 23-21
or IIARCH 30-APRIL 2.

-.alon5

-:

of

.new,

10 Cord wll be - I n 161 - ·
starting March 20, according to 1he 1 - . g

• 3 / 20, Monday, 12 noon-8 pm.. DUE. s.nons·
,3 / 21,
12"noon-8 pm ., DUE. .~tnn•
3 / 22, Wednesday, 12 noon-8 p .m., DUE,
Sophomores"
3 / 23, lluaday, 12 noon-8 pm. DUE. Ftesl&gt;men•
3 / 24, Friday. 12 noon-5 p .m., Nl "Note: MFC, ~told Prolesalonof Slu·
dents may SOCU"O ID' Cards on '"'I' day told
ot ony limo during 1he of -.:11 20,
while the 10 center is open.

T-.

LOCKWOOD STORAGE MATERIAL

Effective~. -.:11 13, 1978, alliflrary
materials that_, lorrnertY- from 1he Bel
Ubray, OS wei 88 lhe - . . told East Colectiona , are relrievabfe In "old" t..ocl&lt;wood
!Abbott) Ubray on Main StreeL
PUBUC ACCESS TO U.C.S. TERMINALS
Beceuae ol 1he derna&gt;d fof' p!Allic during lhe day OS wei 88 evaWlgs, U.C.S.
has just recently lilted 1he .-.:tions on 1he use

:;:;: =-:-:.:, ·=-~ ':":.~-~~ .
now makirig these . . . , _ lor ._ by both
staff and the ~- on a first come,_first serve
basis. weekdays from 9 a.m.·11 :45 p .m., a'KJ
weekends from 9 a.m.-4:30p.m.

SENATE Of1'1CE HOURS
Tlle Professional Staff/Faculty office
wil be closed from _.,., 27 through March 31 .
UNDERGRADUATE
MANAGEIIENT ASSOCIATION
u~..._tAaoociallonetec­

tions lor 1976-79 officers.., being held -.:11
16, Crosby 151 , 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Nl )Unlonl end
seniors arlfl.l'ged to vote.

EXHIBITS

AR~~IIIliiollo-end
Jorge - . Agontinlool-bom end ~
educated .-chitec:ts. Hayes Hal Lollby, through
-.:1117.
~ by School of Arcl1ltect1.no end
EnvW"onmental Oe&amp;lgn.

IRCRLM"

GALLEIIV211

Wind .... '"" Uon. Richmond 2nd Floor
t.ounge, Elicott. 8 and tO p .m. F""' to aiiiRC
feepay~; $.50 for olhera.

Wood ~ oncl Drowlngo by ....
............ Squn Hal. Golery Holn: Monday,
~- Friday 11 o.m.-5 p.m. -.:11 13-24.
-byUUABV-ArtaCon-...eSUbBoardl.

(Ubltsch. 1948). 148 Dief..-1.

UUAB WEDNESDAY NIGKTFIUIS"

You 1ft invited to one hour ol quiet
prayer and ~ each Salu'doy ~of_

:::.::"by':&gt;;~.:.-~ lhe c..~ Chapel

NOTICES

7p.m.

Sponsored by the Center for Media Study.
They're really reaching back into obscurity for
thiS one. Chal1es Boyer and Jennifer Jones star.

CATltOUC L£IITEH &amp;ERVICES(IIoln ..,_.,
Deily- Noon and 5 p.m. at l h e Center, 15 Univel5ty A-..e.

CRAFT CENTER EXteiT I SALE

FILII"
a

o1so

~y NUTRil)ONNOON

~

BROWN BAG LUNCH THEATRE"
Tom WIIUema. jazz piano: "Ragtime to AventGarde." 335 Hayee. 12 noon. Free.
Sponsored by Friends of of Archltect\R ·

and Career Guidlolce.

Booomon and ' - - , directed by. Saul Ell&lt;ln.
Pfeif..- ~e. 8 p.f1J. See M«ch 18 listing

SPOTUGHT CONCERT"
Feeturing various solo and ensemble groups.
Norton cateteris, Amherst. 12 noon. Sponsored by
UUAS Cuttural Md Perfooning Arts commntee.

S.nFroncloco(t936). 7p.m.
Stars Clort&lt; Gable, - . . ~ and
of love that climaxes
in
"re-enoclment" oflhe great San
Franci8co ~- "I never shal forget Jean·
none MacOonald." Judy Gortond used to below
in the introduction to her ytlfsion of the pop
ltMle "Son Fnn:laco." "I never shal Iorge! ,
how that brave
just stocicf there in lhe
ruins and ung--«1d SANGI"
.
Hotorl(1982). 9 :06p.m.

~. 7p.m .

WEDNESDAY- 22

to .. _ . ._5pon&amp;orad by I J r w . o l y -

DRAMA"

LINGUISnCS COUOOUfUIIII
Unguage lmpeirment end Lenguage· Delay

IRCRLM"
Wind •nd the Uon. Clement Loooge . 9 p.m.
FreetoaiiAC feepayers; $.50 for others.

St&gt;encor. T..:y. A tale

Untv.-ettY.

DRAMA•
Boaman and Len1, directed by Saul S kin .
Pfeifer Theatre. 8 p.m. See March 16 listng
for details.

$5; students $2 .
Sponsored by the Buffalo Chamber Music
Society.

UUAB MONDAY NIOIIT FllJIS•

Tlle O&lt;wlef, In ~ at 1he Shepherd
School of Muoic, Rice
Is cornpooecl
of 1he four prtncipol string pla)wo of The Houston
Sympllooy: Ronald Patteraon, rnt violin; Raphael
Fliegel, violin; Wayne Crouse, viola; told Shirley
Trepel,..celo. - - _
_. _ _-

Norton. 636-2808.

Avant Le Soiree, 16 7 MFACC, Elicott. 8 and
9p.m. Free!
,Modem dlrlce, jazz dance, balet, dlrlce,
and techniQueS. Sponsored by lhe Browsing

facUiy,--

These programs, -led1rojn lhe I)Of8pOC&gt;
practlllanon, ... open

.... ol
and Sme-

Dyogenools (Turner's Syndrome). Eliz8beth
McCauley, Ph.D .. Paychlaby. Boord Room, Chi·
dren's HospitaL 12 noon .

Esther Swwtz Interviews Don Robertson, prolessor ot art. lntemallonal ~ TV (ct&gt;annel
10j. &amp;p.m.
·

Pugliese, • ·~· of Jan Wiliams, wil be
assisted by Roger Co!emiW1 told Elaine Moiee,
111WT1110&lt;8; Kathy Kayne, piolo, Folger,
Greg Ketclun. T o n y - Robert Mahoney
and twold Stetter, percussion . One of his own
cornpoaltiona, Juno 22, w11 be Included.

program Includes Mozart. -

-

Eatt.-inteMewso\&lt;JhnSutllwon. ~

Cable (Channel&amp;). 8 :30p.m.

DANCSUi WORKSHOP•

BIOLOOY-M

and~-

cltizenaS2; ..._,ts$1 .
Sponaored by Deportmenl of Music.

LIFE WORKSHOPS•

J..,.. T - ..a
~

Presented by the Deportment of Cutriculum
Development and Instructional Media.

FILM"

directed by -Saul.E!Qn.
Pfeifer-- 8 p.m. See Maret&gt; 16 listing
for de-.

n

BUS SERVICE
Regular bus"""'""' will terminate on Saturday,
March 25, 1978 at mldnigh~ Regular bus service
...._ wilt resume on Sooday, Apri 2, 1978 according
to the posted S u n d a y -lntertnBusSchecUes..-epoaledinal~

and at bus stops.

CAREERGUIOANCESEMNARS

Corne and educate yourself about 1he vortety ot
career opporbJnitles and -~~~~ o~
and rOQUirelneJlts In 1he following fields:
Tlusdoy , Ma-oh 16. - - . 337 Squi"e,
3 ·4:30p.m.
lhursday, March 16. CommunicetiOM and
Library, 330 Squire, 3--4 :30 p.m.

JOBS
FACULTY
_,,_
F·8012 .

-te

Mathaooatica~

-Po---•·ilitk:s~. .
F-8013.
Aoolotant,
0&lt; FuH (8
positions avalallle)-Paychology Deportment, F·
'8014 thru F-8019.
Aoolstont - - P i l y s i c s &amp; Asfronomy,
F-8020.

NOM-COMPET1TIVE CIVIL SERVICE
Goounds Wool&lt;or SIHI (pennanent)-Physicaf
PSant.- Main St .. Une No. 32,0 86.

Key; .Open onll to those with a professional l~t. . .t In the subject; •open

to the public; • open to members of the Unl. . .lty. Unless othenwlse
spet:lfled, tlcketa'for """"t• charging admission can be purchased at the
Squire Hall Ticket Office.

-

·

�11

-te,1t71 '

Pfeifer Theatre. 8 p.m. Sea Mort:h 16 listir]g

THURSDAY- 16

for de~.

SCHOOl OF INFOIIIIATION AND

COFFEEHOUSE•

~y 111UDESCOU~·

Bill Stalnea, "The BooiOn Y _, .. _singer/
songwriter. Cafeteria, 118 SQui'e. 8 :30 p .m.
Sludenls S I ; lacultytolaff $1. 25; others St..SO~
Sponll&lt;l&lt;8d by UUAB Coffeehoose Committee.

TIMI-~ oiDAUI. 0... George Babin·
- . - o f lho 'lliCIIOniWY-"' _ _ , .lib&lt;wy
lliognlphy :· w11 tel of lho IIYe v--s of planriing
eclllng this blogrophlcel dictiOnary. 337 Bell.

11 :30a.m.

UUABFILM"

Everyone lo imllted.

Butah llomo. Conference Th...;.., , Squire. Cal
636-2919forshowttmes. - c h l l r g e.

FIIEIICII POU11CS PANEL •
C..... ,_ Power. France Today, Pierre
lob«y, French; Pi.:re · Ffanchl Pall
E&lt;:onolrico; -Leo~. History.

FILM"
Electro. 147 lllelendort. 9:30 p.m. Adri!lssion
t . T'ockels evalable 1n Squire roe~&lt;er Ollice
Sponsored by
GSA.

--111--

s

108-(~ . 12nocn .

~by

lho Rench ~e Stu-

-

-ollloglonoiiiJocanlRoom, a.a.n·s ' -·

"'"""-bree&lt;ing

-..

CIVIL._,_l.aedllog
&amp;Me- - •.
_....,_,_AienJ.IEIFIIG-1

-

. , . , .lno
_ -

fiLII•
c . o l - ( -. 1963). 1480iefendort.

SATURDAY-18
WAI.KABOUT~t

eom&amp;,s

--·

SIIIHIOARO BOARD OF DIRECTORS .

AIIATIII.c:ALSCIENCESDIS-..e&gt;

-·-

Mlchlgon. 303 Shermon. 3 p.m.

..,_T_IIojoctlan- by Vooicular

--....IIY.-Tn • ..,...,
......,
a.-.

Spoclllc
Anllgon,
Huet.
Ph.D••
~of Calfomlo .. Diego Biology De·Rod Room, FocdlyCiub. 4 p.m.

-

ART~--·

- -....-Muoeum.Altlol....-

--

- - 367
e..yor;e-...

L Corteo, by

MFACC, Elioo!t. 4 p.m.

PaT: PIIOIIIAIIFOII81UDIEKT

........... --.._,Tony

Nigro,
)'OUih wtlh Erie County Coldwnen [l;slltcl
232 Squn. 4-8 p.m.

rv.

-camca-•

~In'---. Or. Anloinette
IIOOidOClonll , __C508 ~e. 4
p.m. - t o l l l 3:50.
Mmgione.

CEU. AICIIIOI.ECUI..AR IIOLOGY LECTURE II
-

Slruclurol
~Or. George-- ~· of
~ . -Pat!&lt; . 114 Hochslelter. 4 :15
p.m. CofiM at 4 p .m.

., -

.
CURRICIMIIMDEYB....____ _
a RI

________

. . . . _ O r. - T I U I ' k &gt; r . - - o f
. . _ _ Cdloge. - - Mono&lt;,
~ H p.m. f'armoro ....,_on
.......-......-o-. A. L -oflhof'eculty

--..-y---..
'IIIII ........ liolog -

~~

·

by the

~­

. .0111.1._ _ ,

U/B~Bond, chctedby

Frw*C/IX*.

Wick Cenler, Ooemen COllege. 8 p.m. Free.
Sponsored by~· of Music.
DRAMA•

BoMman •nd Lene, directed by SaU ElkWl.
· Lafayette &amp; Hoyt. 8 p .m. - $ 3; slu8rtsand--....S1 .50.
Pteifer -

Tickels
evalable at - - - C&lt;JItunuiCenler.
Soonll&lt;l&lt;8d by Center for Thea1re Research. •
Written by Athol FUQII'd , a ~e South' Alrican
playwrighl of ex1nic&lt;dina'y gllta, t1onman ond
!.-. Is IUbout • displaced " colored" couple
whose tivea are a series of forcect--~s .
The production s!ln Ed Smith, veleron luct6o- and
director, _, proleaaor In lho Thelutr8 Department; and Lorna HI, dilK:tor and co-foooder
of The Women's Theatre Colective and assistant
chairman of Theatre.

li:30p.-.

-----~ln-.;
·-·, .... -"""'*'" lobe

~ Lounge. 8 'end

10 p.m. Free to ..- lAC feepayers ; $ .50 for

_..

~

n,._.nStrMI.

pice •

Amllerat

Ocullr RefleiC Boluariorol ond Neu~yslo­
loglcal Oba«nttono, Or. Fr-..:k A. Mles,
LaboraiOfY of Neurophysiology, National lnsli!uJie
of MentaUieatth. 108 Sherman . 1 :30 P -~ -

FRIDAY-17
LAW~·

.-.....,.----e

Four dioUlguiohod facUty members wilf;;...;.,..
pe(1lp8CtiYea on 8wtft ws. Tpon, which deals with

goWm.
mont. 209 0 . _. 10:30 a.m. The UniY8oity

oulthedoy.

-

r:Jioa-.o w1 """'*""' lhzlo.V&gt;-

nuo ~cu ..: ~ Kannody, _ , - ·

-~.-NKolz.
- I n . . socii! ocionooa, ~- ' lind 11111 of - ·· LaW School 4&gt;oi&lt;espe:sons
lrdcolo.

lmpon~u-lor

Benldng."

Grootor ..........,. ond Sub-

Philip Rutledge, president oflhe National Institute
for P\tllic ~1. Wasl*lgtoo Room, Slatlei-

Hilton Hole!. 2 :30p.m.
Sponsored by the studenl Association of the
Program In Applied Public Affairs StuOes.

MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY SEMINAR I

Plasm. Membrlne aa a Target feK C~
thoropy, Or. Walter Korytnyk, Roswell Pat!&lt; Memorjallnslitute. 12 7 Cooke. 2:45p.m.
MARXIST LECTURE SERIES"

u..,;,;,y·

"'-'Y

Non-Prof'ut Oq:.
U.S. Postag&lt;
PAID

Buffalo, N . Y.
Pe-rmit No. 3ll

R_,_,

"" CONVERSAnONS IN THE ARTS
EIIIMr Swortz lnleMews Don
prolessor ol art. lnlemstlonal ~ TV (Channel
10). 6p.m.
~
INTERNAnONALFIESTA '71"
Food tasting _, cultural prognwn. Goodyear
Coteteria. 6 p .m. Admission $1 .50.
For more infonnation, call Abed Musalam,
638-295Ctor~Brown , 831-4630.
Sponsored by Student Association, lntemalional
Affairs.
CACFILM"

A

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR I

flrldve

,

Too For. 150

Faroer.

7 and 10

p .m. rtCkets $1 .

M. Sa'liuddln, Industry Systems Division, Westing-

house Electric Corporation. 337 Bell. 3 p .m.

IRCFILM•

Refreshments at 4 in 308 BeU.

_Bluing Soddleo. 170 MF.ACC, Elicon. 7:-30
aihd 10 p .m. Free to IRC feepeyers; $1 for

ENGifi£ERING SEMINAR/ll
TIMI Compreoalble Ella- In Throe 01....,.
- O r. John ~loo . Engineering Science
and Civ1 Engineering. 148 Patl&lt;er. 3 p.m. Coffee
at2:30 .

CIVIL---·

--lnCIIIII~ot.

c.s.
Oeooi, Wginla l'ofytec:Mic lnslltu1e.
_ _ .:J:30p.m. - o l 3. ,

112

ECOIIOIIICS- I

TIMI Coot ol _ , - - , ...,_ VerlrMs, Depor1mont of E&lt;:onolrico, Uni\IOI'olty of
Calfomlo II Borfceloy. 210 O'Brian. 3 :30 p.m.
Collee .. 31n 1!08 0 -.
~Tro-lnttuolaolotWRobblt

The purpose of "Activities Line"
Ia to provide a special aervlce to
handlcllppad members of the
Unl-alty Community who might
not have an opportunity to pick up
campus publications which list the
ewnts.

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
EIIIMr s-rtz lnleMews wrlt8f and crillc,
LNIIe (rerun) . Cour1er' Coble (Channel
8). 12:30 p.m.

atlnce In ttum.n •RMourcH Admlniatnltlon,

..PHYIIOLOGY-

Each f11omlng, a new racordlng Is ·
made to co- 8WII1ts for that day
and IM!nlng. On Friday afternoon a
w.lulnd listing Ia placecl on the
line.

DELTA SIGMA PI MEETINOW
BusinesS and Prolesslonal Meeting (1SI pledge
exan). 232 Squire. -10 a.m.-1 p.m. LUlch to
follow. Kilnnelh KOrber will on "P"""""'

COLLOQUIUM I

RNIConln&gt;ISystomaln-nglndustrles,

Old "Blood-and-Guts" rides again .

Compefency In T lng Uing.._ Arts. 101 Saldy. 9 am.-1 p,f!l.
Presenled by ~~ of BemenlllfY and
Remedal Educallon .

HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY SEMINAR#·
.._....., Adoplhe~ ln1hoV-

IRCFILM"

Richmond; 2nd

--Hio-tocl

FOURTH A-..AL U/8 CONFERENCE ON
LANGUAGE ARTS EOUCATION I

12noon.
~by ll1e Envlnnnental Studies Cen!«-

- Co-sponsored by 111e 08plo1ment of
and the Marxist Studies Worksbop.

Pauton.

by ~· of Instruction, Phi
Delta Keppo, Tifft Farm. Natu-e Pr.,_, NYS
Outdoor Education AssoCiation.

·

Marxism and Democracy, Professor Frank
Conningham,
of Toronto. 101 Baldy
(Kiva). 3 p.m.
·

Activities line
tiel ... That's lhB meeaage.
1138-2277 ... n.t'alhB number. Tlla Dlvlelon of Public AHatra has
ectlvllled "Acll¥1tlel Line," a
~ ..vice for the tlandla.ppad 1M! geNII! Into operation
~ C11ulcllly. Mardi 18).
OJjeratad by the Un'-alty News
. . - . . the ~ ayatem
IIIIIWidla a -act list of
ilducldlonal, cultonl .wid athletic

a.m.

UUAJIFJUI•
Buoll llomo (1976). Conference Theatre,
Squn. Cal B36-2919for show tlnleS. Ac&gt;nisslon
cha"ge.
.
8et In Watts, this is the story of a strong
•
black woman fOf'ced to discover her identity.

. , . - II -

W::::t:.' ,J' ;,.,:~"":;...oa.::

11

Open;- PI-tch, Steve Walti, Rachel
Cereon COllege. 123 Wikeson Ouad, Elicott.

MUSIC"

others.

. . . . _ _ . , . _ . _ _ _ of

...

-ad

Chi-.

PED1ATRtC GRANO ROUNOSii •
Dentall'nllilerno In
Char1es Boyers,

BROWN BAG LUNCH COLLOQUIUM•

IIEET1NO337 Squn. 7 p.m.
.........
•• -,...pity.
a... Oilllolon of Sclenceo, -

-

presentation dlsoJsslon lo 8 high
school "Welkol&gt;out" CIJITictJUn will place.
l.ojncheon wll be port ol lho con'-'&lt;:8, but
is not m..clolory.

Jr. .O.M.O. Kinch Audilorbn, CN!dren's Hospilel.

~byBiod&lt;Studieo.

TIMI -

Baldy Hal. AI day.
.
The movie Wa!Ubout wtll be shown _, a

Robert R~ord has a cameo Ptlrt ln 'A Bridge Too flir.' fridlly and Seturday.
used In lho oow Amherat
llnrieo.
~by School of Information _,lib&lt;wy

tp.m.

D'. c.1

.

- - - to •

.._ ~- Room 27, 4232 Rij!ge
Lea.1 p.m.

~of

t\

Coged - • (1974). Conference Thelllre;
Squn. 12midnlghl.-chou'ge.
The "Cage" io ·· Prison. U.S.A. and
lho .._... Is lho
tynunny found

I'BIIA'IJIICS IIEIIEAIICH- I
12noan.

-lc

UUAB MIDNIGHT·f1U1•

- r t , Or. John A. .l&lt;llnoo," 0epor1ment of
Pllysiology, ~ of Mlnneeola School of
- . 8108~ . 4: 15p .m.Colloeot4 .

--·

WATER RESOUIICEIAEHYIIIONMEHTAL

~

-Do
-elCierlalon
Bruce
YOtO&gt;Q,

OldeProblema,
-lar
·S
a Gnonl
5enlice, Fredonia. Room 27 . 4232
Ridge Lee. 4 :20p.m .. preceded by relreohments.
~

CACFLM•
A Bridge Too For. 170 MFACC, Elicott.
7 _, 10 p .m. Tlclceta S 1.
Sta-~WOI1d Werll epic lhol drew mixed
noflces.
IRC flUII•
llllzlng 150 Farber. 7:30 and 9 :30
p.m. FreetoiACfeepeyers: $1 tor others. ,.
Without a doubt. the funnies1 of the ~
BrooOslims. TheWestwill....,erbethe.....,_

llfWIIA•
- · ond Una, direcled by Saul tlkin.

others..~

Can 8 black sheriff bring law _, ~ to
8 frontier !own? This movie OOeon'l the
sligl!*lldea. •

_.
c _ _ , ~e--. directed
by Y- -

-

Free.

BMd-

~- 8 p.m.

------freely
-eomp.,y- --y
Sponoorod by Ouu!Jor1n;en1 o f -

Theprogromlo-'"1'--T-of lho T -." _, Dor1uo

-

··"Farm Ma:hlnory" (1919,_., •a llill&lt;8d

.._

lhe

from

~

AQr1aAnl

~~ 11uyenu Guido 1ar 111p of the - ·

Agrk:ommunicoti for the
notional

EMt CentrW _

_..

Orso..-. ~-heveuobelevel

DRAMA"
- · ond Lena, directed by Saul Bkln.
Pfeifer Theatre. 8 p.m. Sea -.:t&gt; 16 listing
fordetals.
COFFEEHOUSE•

·8111 Star-, "The BoSton v - :· Cotoleria,
118 Squire. 8 :30p.m. Sea Ma-ch 17 isting.
UUABALM"
Criol (Spain, 1 977) Corlerenoe · 5&lt;J.*e
Cal636-2919 lor show tlnles Adml.-. cha"ge
Oirected and
by Canos Seora. Wllh
Geraldine
and Ana Torrent, tt;;s film
ls an unusual look at chidhood. its d8ril side,
as seen through the eyes .of a nine·year·ofd
pir! who lhlni&lt;s she's murder"'~.her I a -.

wr1tten

a-.

UUAII MIDNIGHT FILM"
Cogod - . (1974) . Conference Theatre

Squire. 12 midnight Admlsslcn charge.

.

'

•See 'CIIendar,' PIQe11. col. 1

�</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text> Newspapers</text>
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today;·y_o u!ll find.• •••

Rosen

Baird

Housing-

He's from Tonawanda, writes a
mean column, and
thinks the Spectrum
is pretty damn
good.
Seepage 3.

Wi-lliam C. Baird, a
UIB booster for 40
years, was honored
at a testimonial
dinner here this
week. Part of the
tribute was jn t~
form of a bust by
faculty sculptor,
Tony Paterson.
See pages _
B-9.

A psychoTogist.in
the-School of Architecture has a plan
to get the elderly
out of 'play pens'
and ilito a better
k-ind of housing.
Seepage 7.··

Doodling

a.seball

Creative Craft
Cel'ltetDirector Jee
Fischer has added a
new twist to the
name game. He
doodles names.
·see page 1o.

Bill Monkarsh and
his Baseball Bulls
are burning up the
basepaths in the
Bubble, prepar:_ing
for a flight to
Florida soon. Tough
life these athletes
lead.
Seepage 5.

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 9 NO. 22 MARCH 9, 1978

·Raises

•

Those in UUP bargaining unit
are in line for $250 or $300: ·
there's discretionary money, too
All eligible U/ 8 employees includ'ed
In the negotiating unit represented 'by
United University Professions (UUP)
will receive a general salary Increase
and may receive a discretionary salary
hike In April , according to t~e contract

Two separate lunds have ~
Indicated for each unit, one for faculty
and one for professional ataff. It Ia
inlj&gt;nded, Pearson said, · that these
funds be administered and distributed
separately to eligible faculty and

distributed to campus administrators
an explanation of both types of raises
prepared by Robert Pearson, assistant
vice president, Finance and Manage-ment , and personnel director.

the total

uu:,e~Pd~';,'! 'R~~~\~·~:J:mr:rweek

S~ciolo_gy

.

InternatiOnally known spec1ah~t 1s
one of four scholars joining department
next fall, .Chairman Yeracaris announces
An Internationally-known specialist
In the sociology of law Is one of four •
distinguished scholars who. will join the
U/8 Soc' 1 y Department next year
Or. Consl~':Pne Yeracaris, chairperson
of the depaitment, announced this _

week.

"In meklng these new !'Ppolntments,
the department Is confident about Its
future and Its service• to our society,"
Yeracarls said, adding, "The appoint·ments, effective Sept . 1, were made In
order to strengthen training In
· methodology for our graduate students
and teaching services to our underraduat "
g Tile-n~~ faeulty will add expertise In
areas such as society and law, medical
sociology, social psychol~y, the
sociology of business, an
social
gerontology, he said.
H. L:aurence Rosa

1

· H.T~= ~g~!~·:~· ~ll\hi~t~ Ptie

I

.•,

Department lis a full professor with
tenure and as adjunct professor In the
Law School .
Currently director of the National
Science Foundation's Program In Law
and Social Sciences, Ross' five books
and numerous research papers have
established him as "one of the three
best sp~iallsts In the nation in, the

sociology of law;" Yer~rls Indicated.
Ross' most notable book Is Settled
Out of Coun: A Sociological Study of ·
Insurance Claims AdJustment. Veraearls cited his study of the Road Safety

~~~~r~~t~r ~~~df.!s t~!,~~~lltn;r.~

automotive

traffic

laws

and

lis~Dr.tsAoof :slc:~.:i~~~u;:'tt~ 01'l;e
~

legal
most

advanced quan.tltatlve approaches and
the most rigorous theoretical schemes
In dealing wlth a variety of areas Tel ale&lt;!
to law and society," Yeracarls said . "He
Is exceedingly Interested In developing
a very ·strong law and sociology
program at the undergra&lt;!uate ~well as
the graduate level."
H:V&amp;rOJ."'t..~~~ Is ~~~:~:~~f"~r~om"::
of awards and fellowshl~s. In 1976, he

'tt,'!" ~~:nPo~l~~~~~~p ~~~~~ ::

Oxford University, England .
John N. FuttJoining the Sociology faculty as
assistant professor of sociology Will be
·Dr. John N. Feather.
•
Ye'r'aDcra. riFseastahled~ !~H:I~shl~eit~~~~ntj~
methodology, evaluation research and
other applied . and policy-oriented
•Soe ' Soclotogy.' pogo2, col.1

General increase
Pearson outlined the general Increase
as follows:
A. All full-time employees in payroll
status or on approved leave on June 30,
1977, will receive a basic annual salary
Increase of:
.
1. $250 for PR-1, PR-2, Instructor,
lecturer, assistant professor, assistant
librarian, and senior asslstant librarian,
or
.
2. $300 · for PR-3, PR-4, associate
professor, professor, associate ilbrar·
ian , librarian .
B. The amount of this Increase Is
determined by the rank held by the
employee on March 31 , 1978. For

pr~\:':~~~~r~.~~r,:gr.:"i: ~rc~ g.:\'fc,,

basic annual salaries of
the negotiating
Discretionary Increases, Pearson
said:
•may be granted only to employees
who were entitled to . the general
increase of July 1, 1977;
•will be ·applied after the general
·
($250 or $300) lncnsase;
•may no) cause a salary to exeeed the '
maximum of the faculty rank or the

~~R~~~ J~~.,"!:l,~fg~.n

;~:~r~~~n'!'!"='rm~ ~e.n:','l:;
1

Aprll1);
••
•for full-time
employees shall
ordinarily be not less than $250 nor
more than $750.
•
A discretionary Increase greater than
$750 may be recommended with full
justification In writing to the President

-~~~~~':fo:..:.e ~~":;;

llmlted funds, he Indicated "It Is highly
unlikely that such an exception will be
grallted."
A discretionary increase less than
Jncrease.
~
$250 may be recomll\8l'lded only If a
C. Part-time employees will receive , greater amount would cause the
employee's satery to . exceed the
the general Increase in proportion to
their FTE rate.
. • maximum or the - extraordinary maximum ofthe rank . .
Q. The-application of the $250 or $300
For part-time employees, dlscretionery Increases must be proportlon_af to
an increase is permissible, Pearson
the FTE of the rsltion; for emplo)4es
·
said .
1
E. Employees paid from Income
or
Reimbursable Funds or Endowment
the raise must be in proportion to the
,
FTE split.
Funds in whole or In part are State
All recommendations for discretionemployees, Pearson explained, and as
ary Increases. require approval by the
such will receive the S259 or $300
general Increase. If they are paid only
President, and are to be accompanied
pllrtlally through these funds, those
by Individual letters of justification,
funds will supply only the appropriately
Pearson outlined. Recommendations
prorated portl~n of the Increase.
for discretionary lncre8aes gnsater than
$750 also require approval by the
The Discretionary lncnue
Chancaflor. Separate letters are necesThe money pool available :tor
sary to justify consideration under the
dlsctetlonary Increases In a.:h UnlverPnnlldential Discretionary Fund, he
. slty area, Pearson said, is based on the
indicated.
total of the State-supported salaries of
Materials are due In the President's
employees in that area on June 30,
Office not later than Monday, March 15.
1977 (Including· employees on aut~or­
Both general and dlscretlonery
lzed leave), less 10 per cent retained by
Increases will be effective April 13, and
the President's Office (to be awarded
will
first
appear
In
paychecks
for service of a'Unlverslty·l"',ide nature) .
distributed April 28.

:::~~~e p~ote~~ ~r !'~~~~~ Ju~~
0

30, 1977, and holding that .rank on
March 31, 1978, will receive the $300

~~eed"':~~em~tn:'~~~(~~~~~.,u~.~

lf.,']~~ur:~~~~ sG~~o~::!:;t ~=~

�l
•Sociology

Faculty Senate okays
general education plan

~~

A aqduate of IM University of Texas,
Auatln, end the Unl-.lty of MlchlgM,
Ann Arbor, FeMher haa ~ted •
number of papers In organiU!Ional
llllalyala.-

Dr. Gloria D. Heinemann, cummtly a

1--=tl aaaoc:lale for the National
lluner of the Aged of the oap.tment of
I!OOIOIDQ)' at 1M Un'-lllty of Illinois Qllcllgo Cllcle, haa j*tlclpated In a ·
numiMr of 1--=tl 8Ctlvltlee nationally
..s lntemattonally. Her doctOtal
~ion on the "Social _lnt&amp;Qratlon
..S Social f&gt;aycholoqlcal Adaptation to
Lola of Ohlcllgo Area Widowed

:;n~~-~~=gt~~'i:~~

elgrilnc.nt .-rch In that area,
Yer-taaald.
•
Heinemann Ia a registered nurse and
haa IIP8Cial expertise In !!--' survey
metllodOiogy, social gerontology and
medical eoclology.

=~:= :g ~r;:~ b;~~~~~:

JallnA.s-tanb

Dr. John A. Smetanka w!ll join
Sociology aa aaslstMI profsssor. · A
graduate of the Unlwrslty of Chicago
end H..-.1, he Ia currently completing
a major study on tha International and
national orientation of a ·managerial
elite.
·
Y.-Js said, "he has a firm grasp .
on
Important
Issues
In
social
118YCho10ay, ..,thropology, economics
ilnd polltfcal Issues." He has considerlillie leeching experience In a variety of
roles at HIDI8rd end Northeastern,
where he baa been leeching · on a
l*t·tlme buls.

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

-

the~~~rm.~=~:/l~~n?~o~

unclerll..cluate eoclology majora and
llboutll7graduate studente.
Y.-ta -pl)aalzed the Depart- · . oommlt-' to both providing
etudente with a general, liberal
education end .aurtng them of training
In akllla - t t . l l n toilay'ajob ma(ket •.
"We . . now 111181yzlng o - 300
NIIJOI'I- from-' graduates to find
0111..,_ tJ&gt;ay . . doing and what skills
!My . _ found .-ury," he said.
'We hope to eel up a conferance with
Western New York employers, IncludIng Stat• end federal officials, to llowthelrmanpower- ~be filled
~nlng our students In special
Y.-ta the moat Important
emerging requirement for sociology
methodology training,
..._..ly In atatlatlca ..,d other

gr.a aa strong

1--=tl-.

Audience size
not everything
·In public radio
lluii!Hae M ......_
:::2-.cep!
of radio,

--=--~

111!!!!11
=~

'

not be
WBFO

81nFnncleco last

- - .. . . . WOnt a oonf..ance
, • gaMIW m--aar of a
. . . . iillllh ~~~ dMirae pro- •

. -- Clliilcll
~~-':.c-lh ~-.
. Plalnmml Non-'
Olaalll*'111111c. Olllir P1111A1"t-t~c~-

~~=--.::

.,.leoftlnuJd

M .......

youGM1buiiCI

Ill'

ftltoua

tMilltlciM of lilualc togatbei' on the
tMI ~ muat . _ a
of
claDic*, or Jazz, or
Ofloak .......... whloll':::-.:. ......
011
a - - aud*-,"
.............. ., doii1 lcnow If that

=:.--:'11.

of

:."':..,~~'!'rat" I a - true

"

~~~fn~)~':/o~~':~-~~~~

~~,:~bls '~!',Pg"n".:: ~~:~~~~~

Workshop for·
women·slated

~c;,een,: ~~~;r:o;::~'l:m 1~~::,~ ~~!Rital

are

"'trl.llldllnoa
.
.

- . ..":i.!c:
·=
.
..
_,
E
~:!.!!.........

-=· .:

pullllo

only-

brll~l-=

..s oontlnllllly
radio

---~

aill..... pullllo radio Mlwork

a-==.."r;.":ti.
~-::.
...::.of=~ 101

=:n:."r.the

I

New faculty·bylaws are in proces$ .'. ·
Come Aprll, Fac~ Senators will statement• of the "powers dulles .and
the President is one of them and with
likely hear the first •
lng of a revision responsibilities" · of · the ' faculty · 2) . them. " Half-joking~, he liken-• 1·he
of their bylaws which differs d~tlcaily recognition of the autonomy' of
""
from currant go-ning rules.
Individual faculty units· 3) enumeration
situation to King ohn's signing the
A
According to Senator and resident . of "bottom line" items on wh.ich faculty-' Magna Carta.
attorney William Greiner who headed reseM! the right of veio. Such Items
· HOpefully, he said, Ketter's endorsethe rev1111on commiltee, the present. include: aporoval and revision of
ment would help facuily view him as a
bylaws, written in 1970, needed ·curriculum; Initiation, approval and
colleague as well as an a4minlstrator
massive reworking since they are amending of educational programs· _ and lil&lt;ewise would make Ketter think of
reflective of a different ''time and tide" policies and procedures governing • his merging roles as a faculty member
at U/B and no longer are suitable tor promotions appointments and tenure
and President.
•
the Uniwrsity'a Slr)ICIUre and il)iaalon.
and rights of speech and assembly on
I
These bylaws, for !'JC811'ple, contain campus.
·
No 'gulling'
•
no provision for. representation of the
Greiner offered that the · new
On tfie other hand, Greiner said the
c:ollaaea,_tha DepartmenJ.of Recteation, · document can be viewed as both a ., Senate has-no Intention of "gutting the
AIIISchoolllillca ..,d Related Instruction, thi! ."fundamental statement of rights " and
bylaws" to secure an administrative
of M81111g8m81Jl and other units - a "stetement of res1J9nslbility." '
• endorsement. "This has to · be our
.not lncl~ within faculties.
•
· ·
.
,statement to the world, at least in part,
. " Bealde8 this problem of diaenfianch- A clul!rter for the SeNti' 1
of what a unl-.lty Is as lar as faculty
Under these new facility ~bylaws, a . gp-nance is concerned. And It may bs
. IH11181}J~ Grainer !laid the byfa,wl! also
fall to clearly define the ; purpose., charter ·wlli be given the Senate which 1 11\at some . items that should be
P'!'QUIS[~ ~·lives of;I! faculty .• will enable it to establish and amana lis . ' included here are more Important than
having total'agreeinent."
' ·
at a i'i10i1eii1 univerillty." They are own ·operating rules and bylaws. The
cumbersome ; .00 unworkable, too, new clfarter -will seek to maka the . Other men)bera ofthe bylaws revision .
since one document contains bylaws Senate more manageable by decreasing
committee are Professor Richard Hull,
for the whole faculty along with the number of representatives from 90
philosophy; Prole~ Barbara Bunker,
efaboratSene operating rules for the to 75 and by providing a mechanism tor
I'SychOiogy; James Blackhurst, director
of Summer Sessions· and Professor
ale.
occasional reapportionment.
The
the bylaws are now
Also, the charter intentionally does
Donald Rennie,_ph,yaiology. .
_ colhltruct , If the Senate needs · to not specify -each · and every Senate·
I.e
officially change .., Operating rule, It . committee, except tor an Elections
810
$n
has to INike an amendment to tha Committee: Greiner sees this as an
Ch
1
·
bylaws 9' the whole faculty wt&gt;lch then attempt to guard against the proliferaques~~~~::.:re P"811f'S::.f 0rd~ Y, ff
entails balloting by ali
f"!'ulty lion of non-functional standing com- : is incomprehensi~?e~ e
on 1 s
mamb&amp;ra.
mitt- which hopefully can bs ,. Buffalo Aaseml)lyman ~ 1 [ll::;r B~H~
Uti1Da11811D11~
replal:ed with short-term panels or task
has anrrounced his co-sponsorship of
In eddltlon, Greiner relayed that the f=~~Cf.' deal with current issues,
Aaaern=l Speaker Stanley Steingut's
do not --n•1 •-~1
u
der h
pro
"plain English" law.
....._
w••
· - • ~ un on~ on,
n
t e charter, the Senate will be
bill would require election ballot
anda~~·andlon"
~~~~lyle
charged
to
act
as
a
watchdog
on
questions
'*-ndlvld"-'
1o be wrItt en 1n"non-technical
-......
.......,.,.
pollclea, general standards and proce1
units. "Tile larger body Ia . rfot
diiAIII affecting und~reduate currilanguage using words with common
~ly the sum of Ita...,.. • said
1
1 111
~•
an~ everyday meanings," Hoyt said .
Greiner. He added that thlii~'lvldual
cu um; t w also be called upon , to
The people who-ao to the polls want
unite ' - d If
provide owrslght for specific programs
to vote, or they wouldn't be there at all.
18QUI-'• ~~~~
;:'.;:'~~for graduate and profeaaional
But the wording on ballot questions Is
80 confusing that m....y peofrle are
,.._ . . not llkelv
UIP t
1
G-'
t:;!,._
• , to vlald
,
u o a arger
...ner said his committee, along
atra
.. ld to vote- either for or -a nst.
· - · • body.
with-Faculty Senate Chairman Jonathan
F
...
lniiiMd of one document go~lng -' 1\eichert, wauld lika to 888 President
or example, 40 Per cent of the
both the F.:ulty Senate and the faculty
Ketter endor811 the new facuily bylaws
people who voted in last year's general
aa a whole, GNiner end his oommlttee to show a "symbolic oneness with the election didn't answer the Job
plan to submit aiNII of byl- for the
f.:ulty."
This move
would
be
~opment Authority proposition
votlnB...':"Ity ....,.,.. from lhoee of
significant, Greiner feels, because the
Buffa;~&amp;,:'~~~ !!y~~~~;· ~~~!h:
the
. a. They . will Include: 1) a
"fSI;Uity et this Unl-.lty want to feel
figure like that simply on voter apathy."

=- =
=
=
1!1\1111-----;::.=-well
·--radio
.

~ld

public:

'

Senate, VP for Academic Affairs and VP
While Senatore offered what ~
like ~ andleee atrMm of editorial
Puerto Rican and black students ars
con-.ctlona to propoaala on general
seeking donations ·for the family of a
education, the propoaala w.,. accepted
U/B student stabbed to · death In his
=
t
~,trtnyl~
ap~an~~~l[fm"t'~~
with little debate at T.-da)''a F.:ulty
room in Richmond Qued Sunday
Administration ensure that the commit- afl8{11oon .
Senate meeting. Thera was only .one
eddltlonal major item, setting a - tee will have adequate assistance and
He was David Cordero of l'lew Vorl&lt;
time to do Ita task. ,8) That the ·
September.,..llne for tha Initial report
a speech lh4!18PY..major from New
committee ~~ Ita flrwt progress City,
from' the aoon-tcHie-formed General
Vorl&lt;
report at the September meeting ot the today.City, who would have been 22
Education Commlltee.
Faculty Senate.
The Senate voted to recommend that:
Cordero was stabbed at approximate1) A broadly rep&lt;eaentative standing
ly 3:35p.m. and died in Millard !'Ill more
Nomination for PIIIIAI
oommlttee on aenersl education,
Suburban hospital at 5:06 p.m. of
Senate Chairman Jonathan Reichert
charged with devefoping a program or
told Senators that he expects the ·mulliple chest and abdominal wounds.
programs In aeners1 education, be
Arrested in the case was Domingo
General Education Committee- will be
appointed bv jolnt 8CIIon of the Faculty
Rivera, 21, of queens, majoring in
constituted by the end of Spring recess
Senate, and the offices of the Vice
englnMring. He Ia charged
electrical
President for Acedemlc Affairs, and the · but Ia still accepting nominations and
with second' d&amp;Qree· murder and
would like to hear-, from faculty
Vice President for Hellith Sciences; the
possession of a weapon.
·
membera Interested in serving on the
0
panel. He also rep&lt;&gt;rted that he plans to
wa~1m~~~~~~ or'~;c;e.;~.ort~.
ask the edmlnistratlon for summer
Aaaocletlon. 2~That the specific charge
Rivera was arraigned Sunday nlght in
to this commftt~ be defined by joint
!~~ ~~~s~~! '':;'~Z.,.whoed~~~~ Amherst Town . Court and sent to the
8CIIon of the Faculty Senate and the
Erie County HoldiQg Center. No bail
program(s).
•
offices of the VPAA and VPHS. 3) That
was seLand no plea entered pending
1
the charge to this committee include at
ex:~n~lce ~st'd.:ld:~t!art K~,:i - appearance of counsel.
least responslblll:f. to consider _and
A psychiatrle exam for Rivera was
said that the • edministration, In a
heidlilonday.
supplemental .budget, has requested $2
million for operations of split campuses
program , or programs, In ij&amp;ner&amp;l
al.;';,~co~~in~i~~ t~rt~iooc:'~:,Om w~~
and $2.6 milliOI\ for hospital services to
Richmond when he received a visitor.
institutions affiliated with the u I B
An· unidenlified female student told
c) a timetable for Implementation of the
MedicafSchool. Under capital expendi·
the Courier-Express she heard screams
program(s); d) the type and extent of
lures, the University wants an
•
shortly after the visitor:s arrival.
research and evaltlllllori which should
addltion81 $18 million . Funds are being
Two students living across the hall
sought tor rehabilitation and restoration
-be established to aaaess the Impact of
rushed to the door, dragged Cordero's
the program(s); el whether or not the
of 88(Yices {library and food 881Vices) to
program(s) shou d be voluntary or
th,!'fll~ge t.ea Campus.
~~~~ ::::'~:fg\': !~~:.oom, then shut
mandatory; f) modifications to currant
When Campus Pollee arrived, they
dlatribLJiion, maj or arid elective requirements which will be required If the
(ound Rivera in the room. He ~&gt;egan
throwing things - around and
we
program(s) ars 1o bs Implemented; gl
methods of Interfacing the program(s
decided JNe hed ·to go ·;n there and
·with tha existing curricula; h) the
subdue him," one of four responding
operational and cultural environment'
The President's Office has recently
officers said.
which should be provided to support
received an announcement of the third
The officers armed themselves with
this program; I) student advisement; J)
annual Summer Institute for Women In
pillows " in case he went for us," then
Implementation of this program -should
Higher Educalion Administration sponrushed into lhe room, knocking Rivera
It be approved; k) rewards or amenities
soradii\olntly by Bryn Mawr College and
down, and handcuffing him .
for faculty engaged in the program of
~~s. ~:t'At~~j'.;'~f~sl~~~~urce Ser- ' The victim was given first aid ·at the
general education and FTE credits for
1
.The program Is designed to provide
their units.
Remaining recommendations are
w~Tcsn flacu,lllynaningd adlnminfllsntanratceors, wanl!dh
Reports
conflictlng.as to whether
that: •4) The standing committee will
P
ral1
or not lhe two men-l&lt;new each other
further be charged to monitor any
budgeling; aCjltlemlc governance, mari- ·· casually or were -close friends. At
program(a) In general education that are
agement skills· .and computer usage. . Reporter deadline, no motive tor the
approved and make recommendations
slaying .had been determined. DonaFor further informalion, faculty and
_tor any subsequent amendments that .staff are Invited to contact Dr. M
tlonsforthevlctim'sfamilymay be sent
are deemed desirable, to the Faculty Carl~ta Baca, 636-2901 .
·
to PODER, 333 Squire.

1~ ~.:'~~:Sw11~)ha~~~ft~

' QiadeD.~

•.

Students seek
funds for
. victim's fa~ily

w:f

PI • Eng II

bill

1°

-

�llorclol,1171

Rosen~
All over
campus, they're
readtng him

Editor:
I have a good idea for a feature story
in the Reporter. I lhink you should do a
profile on Jay Rosen, Spectrum
J11anaging editor and one of the finest
columnlsls I've read anywhere. I think
the campus community is very
interested in whal kind of person he is
and reading his column is not enough.
Of course, it would not be appropriale
for the Spectrum to wrile an article on its own employee.
·My friends all agree with this Jdea. 1
hoRe ypu will also.

"

.

To the great majority of undergraduates, Jay Rosen wrote in his
column in the Spectrum Monday, "SA
elections are as exciting as Merv ·
Griffin."
You had to laugh.
You have to laugh most Mondays
when Rosen 's bright bitchlness is
.

~~~.~~edM~Yn ~~~r:!¥·~~~~~~~~..~~mh~
alter a Stones album , but poinledly

Now""

"I've . been nard

on

Amherst

-

ap8=~~~!ily, "Exile" can steain you. ~~~ibt~~el~;s~e!~i~~e ~':Jt t~ft ~~~~~

Particularly ·11 you or one of yours is a didn' t mention it for a long time, went
targel that day. Even· so, it's something out of my way to avoid the word ."
lo look for.
Aitheugh once he co\lldii't avoid the
Where else can you read that "the temptation of P."intin~ ~ ut that he
Buffalo Bills have been signed oil to a hadn't use&lt;!. tha~ 'w?rd t at TYIJleS with
•
- • • ·
collection agency," tllat the Sabres · dam ):ours!.
The columrr jusl sort ·of emerges.
again "did their traditional imitation of
Mama Cass." Who else would think· of Rosen writes it on .l!(eekends, when
Mr. Sound-off for Man of the Year, or there's tim~ to think. ~!ist .often, he has
0
observe that "the University Is doing its ~~t:?: .:\'~:~~'; t~ J~~t:~n~~ew~~~:
part to ease the energy crisis. Not one ss-7q lines or less.
·
;g;:'o":;lu:d~g~ditdi':,'~h~~~e[~~~~~~~
"lt'_;; .uot to be shtirt en9ugh to be
lots "
- read ,
he Insists . "Most students
Rosen's news stories don't lack co~sider long chu~~ of prose in the
puhch either.
same league with Merv Griffin, too.
· Through that medium he lei us know
Excepl. one monsler of a column on
this fall- thai a fou18d-up "Student
stude_nt "powerlessness·~ which ran lo
Misdirectory" was here; he informed the ~ 25Q.Iines (comman_ding a large chunk of
Cl!lllpus, too, that "Ethos, the magazine page on~ .llnd a whole page insi~e) drew
of student life, appears to be dead."
a response in direct proportion to its
Then there was his three-part series on
length . Y,ou neyer know.
.
Rosen s seroes on the local press
the war between the Courier and the
· News which Cl!llle to be tacked up 'On
prompted an executive at one of the
papers to brush ~im aside as one of
press room bulletin boards downtown
with the notice "do not talk to .Jhis those people who zap in here from New
person."
'
~ YorJ&lt; tor a fell! years and ma,ke a: career
Rosen's acid conclusion that the,; o~ putting do"!n Buffa,l o. He s a native
Amherst Campus 'was purposely
New ,Yorker' _ali. right from
frailmented to prevent student riots was
Tonawanda. A graduate of Kenmore
assumed unquestioned into campus - East, he S\111 lives in the house he was.
folklore as soon as he Cl!llle out with it.
born in.
Ask the next passer-by. if you don't A drlHer ..
believe it.
. 1
Rosen has drifted. He's- attended·
•
•
People might not always like what he' three.·universities, had five different·
says. (His airing of the Math Sciences maJors.
·
report · didn't get him voted "Sweet- ·_ ··'· As a freshman, he entered Carnegie-·
heart of Capen.Hall," for example.). But Mellon as an architecture major.
they'll usually admit he says it well. Second semesier, he look on the
While others are mixing their' met.-·- "hoimanities," before foraakinjj Pittsphors, dangling their participles or just .burgh altogether for , the study of
not getting their act together, one advertising at Buff State.
~ has said. ROsen's tailing
· Next .CI!IIle a switch to U/B and
it clearly, intelligently and interestingly. inanaaement. ~ere. Elwin PoWell and
"The guy's a real'plseer," a membilr the S'pectrum changed his life and,
of the Unl-slty's Public Affairs once·agaln, his majo( (the fifth and final
editorial team has beMI heard to yell at one is a l:I/B· -' special major in
no one in particUlar as .she l'lll!l!s his journalhirll);n ', . ·
atuif
morning coffee. All owr ·
In the fall of 1976, Rosen enrolled In
campus, we're to)d, others are doing SOciology 101 Under Poweii •Who, to his
t!lesame.
. •
• ··- ·
:ll/e.~:· : ~st.!::fot1: prop~dlzing In

o-

'Not me'

.

0

"I went to the

~pectrum to ask them

R~i:,e dfs1:~~:;,~ ;;,o~~h~~t~r.~ ":/i~ l~o~ t~m~W~~~~~!tl"s~~g~t'!!l":
~~rt.!"t.0~cet~~~ri;~ ~~~:ft : ~~~~~ 0~%0"a1':.C R~s..f a ":~rt~n~o

put-on, then? No. It's just a ''tone, I inves!~e. The result: that semester's
assume sarcastic, metaphorical, biggest flood of letters
bitchy. Like 1 know it ail." He grins,
In January of
Rosen · needed
tai.~Esxa mejle-sa-fmarinaunted -awwaityh w.!thseturemso.st : Spectrum's
fo.ur hours, so he enro)led )n the
writing course. His first
enjoyable thing," he· does, he says. "Its article landed on page 1 accompanied
" purpose is to initiate thinking in the by a graphic he did himself.
student body in ways that ordinary Architecture never had a tang like that.
articles. and editorials can't . Not to He 'wrote 16 arlicles instead of the
sway readers, but to starl them thinking required eight. A star was born .
At the starl of last summer (when
about the kinds of mailers I'm' ·
concerned about, to get students lo Brett Kline took over as. Spectrum
look at things in the University In a editor) , Rosen was · named special
different light. Sludents labor under a fealures editor; at summ&amp;r's en.d. he
whole series of myths. They even think was one of two managing editors
faculty are here to teecto."
(second ln command). Is the name Jay
A successful column Is one thai is - F'losen or J. Pierpont I" l och? As one of theSpeclrum's ".!!· 2's, he
read; a critical leiter, a badge of· honor. ·
" You don'l crlticize things that are • .wriles a lot, does mosl of the actual
borhig or that you don't even J11ailce at." editing, coordinates' copy aM photos,
e columns have had ' no point," dreams up an editorial or two; has his
he
nowiildges. "I wrote lhem just to linaer in most "everything" cOnnected
rna
people laugh. Olhers have been with the paper . A triumvirate " collectively" keeps things \joing over there:
very serious.

11 1

i

19n;·

~~rs"s. t~d0 ~1'iris'::W"9J~~t ~~t~ro;~~~

o.ther does at deadline for a given issue
. depends on :'who's got the load."
The three also teach the 'Spectrum
news writing course (in .Cora P.
·~aloney College) .

He~~~':,- :~orA:!f.":',1 be back next
year, but expect tp concenlrate on
academic work. While tlley'll keep in
touch at 355 Squire, the mantle of
leadership will. probably fall to !losen,
who in September will be a fitth year
senior. (The 'Spectrum board will vote
on the next editor in late April.
Theoretically, anyone. can ,apply, but
Rosen seems sure to succeed.)
"I'll be ju~t one.. more in a series
long
of Spectrum editora with
transcripls,'' Rosen says about his
five-year undergrad career. There's no
way ¥OU can devote full time to both
school and the paper, he points out.
l Rosen is taking 8 credits this
semester and putting in about 58· hours
·
a week on the paper.
"My theory is thai no matter how
large a staff you can boast of (there are
. some 60 or so at the Spectrum il you
·count everyone who wanders In and
out), no more than half a dozen people
can be.counled on to. do the real work.
The speci!'l .Blizzard section in January

blood . The President · after all " :
merely [ilported to the Felllty Senate
on what's going on in 8IMii'al araas of
University-wide concern. lole'd done 1\
before with little fanfare.
"I saw that speech - coming when It
did alter a period PI ha-sh critlcism by
faculty- as a promising-response-to a
stimulust Rosen says. •
. •
But, the President still should face ·
down a student assembly, he thinks, as
the Spectrum editorial accompanying
the article pointed - out. Rosen wrote
that, too.
Not lndapandaut enough
.
Rosen is concerned that the peper is
not independent en~h . The 20-25%

~~s ~uu~~~~fs a ·~)t~a~l:::
binds. If you'll notice, he says, the
. Spectrum gets very mlld; mannered and
sedate towllfd atudent goYMT~ment in
late spring and summer.lt has to; that's
.
budget time:
Sludent leaders, he submits, are no
more lay-back when It cornea ·to the

r.r:.~s\~hea;r~~~-r~ -~':l:e~-::o;::

bad, you shouldn't print a story, no
maHer what. It's distressing." .
Students at U/B get a bargain aach
time the SP.fJCirum .hits the street,
Rosen feels. What they spend ·0!1 It
(some 3Yz cents per student per Issue)
is "the best money they spend" by far.
was a case in t&gt;9int:{'
-·
They get more pages per week than at,
Besides, he has "a 1endency to. want
most Cl!lllPU-. and ~ and the
to do everything myself. It's a
level of Wl111ng Ml "supilrlor; • hi
deficiency," he admits. Not to .mention
thinks.
a ball-:t&gt;uster when people lei you· have
your way.
How is the pape(a eclltorlal atanos
decided? B,r tha Nrdeat. There Is no
PolItlee?
"automatic
Spectrum view. The
. What about his politics?
editorial board decldas toplo-by-toplc.
"Cautiously liberal" on national and
SometiiTHI!' they fall to ra.:h ag,._
world affairs, Rosen oCcuplea a middle
men!.
·
ground In t8rma of ,"The Spectrum
Is crlals tha sole critelion for page
Three," to the right of Brett Kline's
one placement? ''That tends to be tfiB
most OV!If\lsed word In the office," ha
avowedly "leftist" outlook, but left of
John Reiss.- He's " really a pragmatist" - says. Still, . _ gei- 8ICCited llbout
who judges issues on a cas&amp;-by-case
lnstiiACeS where It Is epplf8Rt that tha
bll.sls.
administration ha mlaMnclled 110111&amp;Withi.n the Univer8ity, · he's "a ·, .thing. If 1 ' - a r e - --'lmee. ·
It goes with the territory." Forth&amp; moat
cOnservative,''. an advocate of working
with the &amp;Qminlstration (wrong-minded
~· though, what gets on page one Ia
:::' ht'l.!.hi':~J! o~rn ~:X be).~~~~:;
traditions which are "racking ~ere."
Rosen a rah-fllh? No, "a· realist,'' he
corrects. "You just ge~ more from
working the system than from breaking
windows. "
The Spectrum has the reputation of

~~ ad~W~tral:on

,a; e::.,~~,;

acknowledges. ''We report from th9
student viewpoint and sometim~s that
blas creeps Into news stories. That's
~~~~~te enough. But It can get out
On the flip side, "we can't always find
out what the administration's stand is."·
. Rosen worries about the Spectrum's
objectivity image, realizes that some on

=ey·sw:~\o ~~e ~P:~~r.":Z ~~~

people forgttt past inaccUral:ies. But, he
feels, it should still .pour 'kerosene
where kerosen~ is due.
Some people last week thought the
paper moght be waffling. A headline
announcing thai Ketter had "finallY.

~~e t~ g~~~~~;iti~u~~:~~sitro~s~~~~

'w~!,;." ~'c:..":!:·"~ on aach
week? There'a "a limited emount of
student input," but mostly "our own
intuition" about ll'h8t students are
interested I~ (wlth a dose of. what thay
ought to be Interested In). "Somellma,
· though, sitting., up In Squire Hall, ~?sn'ld'/m~~~: :~:~~s=~:
Maybe It Is Merv Griffln.

'Consumed by tha Spectrum' ·
And what about ·Jay Rosen? What
does he do when he's "off?"

t~~~.:."=li; ~~- ~r~~

the pressures of deadlines. "I'm not

a

·f:''~l ~:Ct1;;.h~~i~:n~,:t ~~.,:

reeder, he subacrlbes to-six magazlnM
but is behind in all of them. He readS
James Reston In the Times, Mike Healy
in the Courier, tod (although he feels
~ealy is lorcedlo ''write down" to his
audience).
'Mostly, though, the Spectmm "consumes" his life and he's ''willing to be
consumed ."
....-

�4

Women's oppression:scholars se·e k its roots
No men among IIIII primitive Waunan

people of Colombia will admit to having

a large penis, Elizabeth Kennedy said In

lui Friday's Mwxlat lecture In Baldy
Hall.
The AIUOI1 : they think tha ali-too1ftV&amp;Ienl "civilized"- phanomenon of
rape (a notion totally fOftllgn to tham)
haa to mean tbat the penises of more
civilized males are so large they Can not
be controlled. They w.nt no part of that.

~w:n~ ~~er bdoct~

111-'&amp;lion work, ...., a "classless,"
~ly sexually egaliti!flllfl society
of Natlve Americans living In the
Oololnblan rain forest , Sfie's sure
tMy'n1 Claaaleaa, and she knows that
men pertlclpate In chUdcare after the
young have l'llllched a certain age.
N11lth8r rape nor wifiH&gt;eating exists.
But Whether or not, tha Waunan are
actually sexually ~lterian was not the
,_.. of KenMdY a work with them .
- - n o t a lemlnlat than.
.
~y outlined currant research on
the "Urlglna of Sexual Oppression,"
not1na that
question Is not trivial.
'11,"lor
11, egalitarian sexuality
haa IKillllld
past, It than becomes
much
lll'lvislon It In tha future,"

...

H,

on

othar

hand ,

male

=~~nat~:u~
=at~
COII8Icler elthar extermination of tha

offending sex or the uee of eugenics to .
modify Ita chaAictenatlcs.

.

.

'""-Plllllllllllea

•

cun.ntly, there Ia "excltln!l" acholaron thnl8 possibilities,
aid:
~Thill women '-not always bean
oppnlaad, th8l ewty hunting and
gat'*lng eOcletlea, early IQricultural

lr..:::W

aoc:1et1ea _., Indeed; egatlta1en;
b) Tllet not only liiMt ...,_ not

been oppAiaad alwaya, they have, In
18ct, been dominant flguAIS In social
malrlan:llleS; or
c) 'That male dominance Is simply tha
natunlofthlnga.
·
....... - ' - I Engoq ended the
clllbllle a century -ago when ha
concluded t11at men gained · control of
they tOOk control of the

·=.when

=--dar

"lt'a ~· to think It ends

,:'t·~~:larl~:l

IQrlcultule" whiCh praclatad harding.
"Why didn't wocn.~,
get control
flr8t end lraep It?"
A modem oommentator haa gone
EnQela one betlar by ~lng that It
-the "'-lion" the h - u a l
-'k!nth81g.-mencontrol. With
'*--uallty, men could deal with
-=tl oilier in tenna of w~. Or so
lhlalnterpMatton goes.
lt'a • complex w-, Kennedy said;
IIIII data . . not ~- The "right"
lnl8tpnltatton Ia r-t to emtll]l8.
still.._
hYf:.c~C: first
~ by
("a

"*'·

of

IOWW.Ihll
a.nor.

:::':.c._..~~

pMielcwy-'"ao!NMmt.m. Ill these

- . .....
-Mil-..

=,_,u:.clc~=
oNidlwn'~
to
t111n

--n:of•
tor:l.
IIOC

..,._IC:IIIIy

far
~
-IIICIIIpllndent,
tied to men.

~,.....,lrwtnll

lt

flilople • ffr11Ciaulll*l off this
IIOCiilli, KenMdy ealcl. They "bloelead"

... Alllt..,lhll oountar-ftlllloning ..,,,
..,.....,,,..~~.

not·eQIMIS ln the
"ttrttiiiiM........, -'-Ilea !bat attn
_ . 'Wily 11llnk ~-In onealbat
True, but IIIII 110-Callad

~ .'" ~
=....:

........... acicletlee, Ken"stratified,

_ ~ -:Dill tMt _ , In the flrat
"ttiiiiiiDDIW' CUIIunle found In North.
~ there no sexual
~'Y'CivJut before the

...

the-=-"~

....... . . . ,.... trld~goodr,
........
-::...=,.• loet..:::

1;111e..n.tMutt-.
...... lbat 11111 ·flrel

tounda-um-

=

lhenltMe.

•

_..to
..._..,
lt8rlen !lOtion
~-our own
lhe,_lhltmoetof
- been cotlectad by

' men .
The Idea that matrlllrchles once
. exlatad Is harder for har to accept,

~~:!~=ith:l'W:!'~tn~

8

c=

on Crete was run by women and that
women - had power among the early
Iroquois.
.
"What would It be like II women hoid
power?" she asked. 'Would It simply be
the fllpside of patriarchy?" She said
that because of her own "emotional ~'
response to th l ~. she has dlscou"'l!ad
two of her grad students from pursumg
research on matriarchies.
•
The Simone de Beauvolrs and Kate
Millets opt for the theory that .women
have always bean oppressed, Kennedy
said . 'But these women have not done
firsthand work. Theirs Is a dogma
dependent on other sources.
Women ue all over tha place
_.
Women of all political stripes are on
all sides of these arguments, Kennedy
reported. "You have Marxists, Radical
Feminists, and Lesbian Feminists
everyWhere" . across the ' spectrum of
debate, she said.
Whether biology, economics, or the
sexual system Itself Is found ultimately
to hold the key to women's oppression
Is less Important, Kennedy suggested,
than tha fact that Its origins are being
seriously pursued
Only since "'to~ Women's Movement · ·
has this search been possible," she
said.
Is there .room In the debate for the
possibility that the existence of rape
may Indicate that men, too, are victims
of saxual oppresslon j drlven to prove
something, to certify their mascullnlty).?ha man In the audience asked.
'T at's shit," a woman spectator
thundered.
_
·
•
It m•y be that men feel some
pressures; Kennedy allowed more
softly.
_
•
But, lllte·sald, It remains obvious that
"wofQen ·ant opp(its~
~xlsm l n~a
way that men ar~ not.
•. •·

py

Research total
at $16 million
fora months
The University has received juat
under $16 million In Al888rch grants
and contracta during the eight months

"'1~~~.:~~;!;,

OWr

hike
tha t oial "
lor this lime iaat year, Robert c.
Atzpatrick, acting vice .Pf'll&amp;ident for
,_a,, said thla week.
In February, Atzpatrlck reported, 36
awards and contrects amounting to
$1,511,306 were received, brl';j,lng the

:='J~~ ~~~~o'm~~~l

beglll'

Li~guist·s

study how
you ·' hear' nationality
'

People often
make subliminal
judg1T18111S about one another by
~.::,SCn!:'.:'~~sp~conacloualy noting
·Because · Buffalonians lor the most
part are strongly ethnic and Intensely

~~~~ =~~ou~~~ 1 ~a:S11~~u=- ~

the city, they have become uniquely
adept at Identifying each other's ethnic
extraction through hearing certain vocal
cues.
.

c.J~k. ~ul:foct~':!fln:f~entEII1~~~

l inguistics Department, so abe decided
to research three
large ethnic
groups-the Polish , Italian 8nd German
- to discover exactly how Bu!falonlans
can pinpoint the·ethnic origins of these
people. •
preliminary work..tor her research
was conducted by Professor Wolfgang

The

~~·m~~t~~ r~~o~~eadl~R~~~~1~

substitution of T and D · for the TH
!::~nd fa :."!~~~ut~n sY~~~~~rc_~,:~ ~~~
consonant clusters , devolclng of the
final consonant, and melodic Intonelions.
-

0

s~:!:~ss;:'h ~~9e~seld.,&lt;;n~~':1 ~~
_ flat A's. Germans, oddly enough, were
pinpointed by thalr lack of a Buffalo
accent. Buffalonians could spot tham
however by their slightly exaggerated
articulation, respy S's, sometimes
~0 ~i~t_ s~h and use of media
~haae llngalstlc signals are to some
extent stereotypes, so Carlock will now
attempt to eliminate the usual
diagnostics by altering the tapes. This
will assist her to uncover more
l!nconaclously-percelved Indicators.
Doi::S linguistic ..,._ch In Buffalo

·1

~lck.· ~;: 88ai-e ~W,.~~ ~~ ' '; T

language variation . Wolck composed
manageable because of 11 fairly- steady - " "
community profiles of various ethnic
Immigration Stf88nl and stability In ansa ;!
groups· in Buffalo that ellcltad social
Slllllements and migration patterns.
&lt;;llaracterlstlca whlch' coula be usad to
Also, elhnlcs ~n Buffalo are not apt to
li'rterpret linguistic variations.
• move as readily as residents of other
Whan Wolck came to U/BJn 1970, he
cities. Buffalo neighborhoods contain
also became Intrigued by the ethnic and .· 'their ·own internal stratification and

~ra~::;:~~~~~':'~on.:::J,~ff~; ~~~
188

1

~s~~~l~ eo~3 ;~'!r,~;~t~l1 ~~:

·,; 1'6'~

1

~h~n "Ct'h;.o~='l:J .~~~"h
~~rc~'~!:~:,S:·unusual It Is t~r

German accent.
•
"
- residents of a city with an ethnic mix
like Buffalo to manage to coexist so
When she let har study group listen
to tapes of the three ethnic groups;
well. There are few Incidents of gang
Carlock found that within 10 seconds,
war or social ostracism, he says. This
even third or fourth . ge..-lon
may be because relatively f - ethnic .
Buffalonians could Identify the national
groups occupy tha city, meaning that In
origin of the various speakers.
~
order lor one ·group to effectively
. Among the diagnostiC "cues" usad
function , communication with those of
~uJ ul~lo~~~~ ~xt=~'~e~"'l~
:,'I:J'.Ional .origins Is frequent and

8

Polish~conferel)ce ·broke down walls

The University's first' conference on
Pollan culture tn recent years has
already succeadad In "breaking down
_walla" and In solidifying . cooperation
and friendly relations between U/B and
the Polish con)munlty In Buffalo, says
~rdt~!\':.r Brun-Zejmls, -conference

The four-Part evenlf which started
February 17, linda tomorrow with 11
concert· featurina Polish classical .ana
modem music. It Ia aponaonld by the

Department of Modern Languages and ·
Literatures through a grant given
Brun-z.)mla b)l. the University's Conver..aatlona In tha Dlaclpllnes program.
Brun-Zejll)la said she is "o-:
whalmad" wltll attendance so far at the
aeaaiOna which have dra!llll between eo
to 100 PIIOIIIe each. She nolad that tha
Poll.., · Caltlnl Foundation Mid tha
Polish Arts Club turned out In full force
with alrnoat - 100 ~I of· ttielr rnernbeq attending IIIII firat -ion.
.
. The Unlvwal~~ to have this
con
Brun-Z8jmia
kind
Claimed, beoauae
"harsh feelings"
towards U/B 8J1!0111 IIIII Buffalo Polllh

of

of

oommuniiY. "The -munlty . felt
llbandoned," ahe eJqllefned, and saw

tha Unl-.lly aaiii*Mflc to Ita neecls.
Also, 1M fall 1'ollah atudents on
campus needed a vehicle through which
thay could bettar underatand and
appreciate their cultural hariiiQ8.

pi &amp;tlon
Biun-Z8jmis aaid

Unique DD

:ne

conference

sparked " unique cooperation" among

~~~~~h1zi!W~~:

:d tt~: ~~~:~s"eu~~;a~

Foundation, Polish Arts Club, Polish

¢;:',f.'~;,~"B~ 0~o~s~st~:,.~~

Association, Polish COmmunity Center
and, last but not least, the UIB Polish
Stu~eots C~ltural Club,_ali participated
1n some way to make the event a

success.

oriented presentations would be toO'
scholarly for the community or students
to en )or,. But believing that "underestimating ' the Polish community Is a
cause of Its image problem, she
decided the scholarly agenda was, t.n·deed, in order. Brun-Z.jmls Is also glad
she decided to hold one sesslon at the
Polish Community Center on Buffalo's
_ East Side, since this could be vi-ed as

~~~~¥~~=P~~rd~~~.~niverslty to
For example, the· Polish Cultural
Foundation sponsored a dinner (or
" Now, no one can say that the
visiting lecturers on Polish theatre· the
University does not ·care about the
Polish Art_s _Giub,arrangad for buses to ·Polish community," she said .
transport community residents to
Another one soon?
tomorrow night's concert; and the Polish
Union .sponsored a dinner and reception
The Polish Ar.ts Club and the Polish
following last week's presentation on
Cultural · Foundation, both- of · which
"The Pollsh-Amerl(:&amp;n Experience."
donated $125 to help offset cos1s, are
Members . of tha Polish Students
scheduled to discuss tha conferencs's
Cultural Club got Into the spirit of
impact at their coming rneelings.
lhlnlla 11Y llecoratlng a room In
Possibly, they'll make plans for a
Dlelendoif Jiall where two presentasimilar venture In the future. Bruntions were held; they also organized
Zelmla Is a member of both groups.
·
some receptions .
1"he last session · of the Polish
conference series , a concerl of Polish
Brun-Zejmls deacribad"'lhe series of
classical and modern music, will be •
events as ·:warm" but "scholarly" In
held tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. at the
atmosPhere and far from dull
Queatlon-and-anawer periods and dla: . Katharine Cornell Theatre, Ellicott .
Admission is free . Commentary on
cosslons which followed the formal
musical selections will be presented by
presentations often sparked interesting
visiting Slee scholar Wlodzlmlerz
comments and "harsh criticisms" from
Kotonskl, a noted Polish composer,
audiences.
and by Professor Paul Schmidt "from .the
ln!llalty, Brun-zejmli said thare was
University of Texas at Austin who will
concern that the more abstractlyalso glv~ a recitation of Polish poetry.

,.

�s.
~DC

still
investigating
Legion disease

Although the still unnamed gram
negative bacterium which causes
Legionnaires' Disease has been Identified by scientists at the Center for
Disease Control (CDC) In Atlanta,
they've not slackened their efforts to
learn more about the organism,
according to Dr: Aibert Balows, director
of CDC's llacteriology Division.
· "Our scientists are now concerned
with .learning about distribution and
preventloh aspects as well as about
better dlegnosls," he reported last week
in a Harrington Lecture at the School of

M•~m~~~h

the · fitness and deaths
' which struck the Legionnaires Convention In Philadelphia In 1976 attracted

~~e[h':tlona~n~~~~~~ea~~b~rc~~~t:~~

sclentifl::""communlty, Balows pointed
out that Bimllar episodes had been
reported earlier. As far back .as 1948,
articles In professional literature
pointed to puzzling cases which bore a

~UI~In,qm~s't..';:,bl~?;~_..'h~,:;ru;:.do"~

recent outbreaks In Pontiac, Mlch ., and
Washington, D.C., look suspiciously
similar to symptoms reported in
Philadelphia.
·
"The CDC, while actively engaged In
research concerned with the bacterium,
Is also service-oriented . We can help

r~g;~~~~:~~~~s:~:n~ ~~y~l~~an~

~Ts~~~n'g~~:.:s ~?d~reatments

of the
Balows praised the work of scientists
at CDC credited with finally Isolating
1

ll'h~t.,t:.1~'1ii ~m d~~=- c~!rJ~st In '~

remember the wild rumors prevalent at
the time the Legionnaires' deaths and
severe illness were reported.'' he
recalled. The deaths were blamed
Initially on swine Influenza, germ
·warfare and other egents. All theories
were based upon pure speculation until
the bacterium's osolation In January,
ten. he said.
While the Legionnaires' Disease has
perhaps captured more public attention

Spring training _~B-stylel

~~~:;r:rd~rmyr~:r~~tdl~~

I

~~,~~et~r..!~~~~
~f~y =J::Pihs:~~~~ws.

ro'r !.~ ~o~~~~~~~~~e ~~:!r~~ ~h.!~~!
1

term "Legionnaires' Disease" when
referring to the malady. It unduly
besmirches the American Legion, the
great minds of Albany reasoned .
Not so fast, thank you, Legion
officials responded. They like the name
as 11 memorial to those of their
members who died from the disease.

u.s. research

'funds analyzed
Analysis of the record budge\
President Carter has submitted lor
Fiscal Year 1979 yields ~

~~~~~'::~~~:~~~nl~~ Jt.~S::h
~fotr:,'e!':cg~b1t~~~t~of 1 ~t 1~~s 3:!:~
Issue:

~~r ":!td~h ,n ~~f:J.~

1

discounting Inflationary factors, still
shapes up as a "real" dollar Increase of
approximately one-third of a billion.

tar~~n:~:'en;,r~~S: :I~~~ 1~~~t~
:::'Jh!!~!,o~~~t~~JI-:~'fr9~~B:~~~~

mining, anti climate studies (Including
earthquake prediction).

1 n = r:.~

00

~C:J":~~ n~m~¥~~

research, especially the egrlcultural
,
aspects.
· •In the health field, a major Initiative
will be launched In behavioral and
biomedical research In reproduction
and family planning. The two giants Net and NHLBI - realized no gain, but
will continue to emphasize cancer,
diabetes, and cardlovli8cular dJaesse.
•In energy research, concentratiori
will be on continued development of
fossil fuel, conservation strategies, and
photovoltslc technology.
•An 18 1&gt;'!1 cent Increase was
ted for the Education Dlvlslon of
which Includes funds for a new
ong learning program and basl~­
.-.-ch Increases In the NIE.

Z

. ' " '.

.... , . -···'1 . - ·

-,

Some baseball teams go to Florida or
Arizona for spring training, but Bill
Monkersh's l1/B nine goes to the
Bubble or Clark Gym. DOn't feel eorry
for them, though. They era '*!dad to
Florida on March 20 for their 11th

cases o - the years has probably been
' just as dramatic although not as widely
reported.
' On another front this week, one
house of the New York . State
Legislature, busybodylng as usual ,
8

1
-~~

·.·.·.\'.··'·'

.

..•.

,.

~

�llorclll, 11711

On Gibson's .e xcessively modest plan
In the March 2 Repgrter, it was
NPQrted that the. UUP and SUNY
Centr8l haft 8QRied to prohibit the

Allllgelll at-"?
•
I testify here from personal
experience. Last Friday I apled a

they were unsuccessful.

prove inadequate, and we may have to consider the erection of an·

pem.p.?
electrlflad fence around the entire
r-lr-ii;l~~N~Y;,:EAt:;0~~y· fl'r~~~an•"IZ8F.wO;;tlh'iiac--"'person~wl\o-ap~..,:lllt:llto:omoga,..wllir"llltllt~--~IJltll!s:uu!'gg:ll..!ell)st,JI!t~htl!atll!lls::'uclL!h~r~cas~u!!1 a~'~-..J~!I!~i'!':'::~e ang ~~uftuyarg~~~ ~~~
chal*'lle t the uuP further
·...-- •v - ·:
•
=~~~e~:.!"C:n~o:':e~Y'l,~~~~
t anwrm-

~etter's o~ICJ

I'Neldeilt
wlli
~eln enforcing this prohibitlon by "IICtivatlng Sec;urlty ." I
'-tllyapplaud this action, wh ich
1

~. ~Y':.-= ~: 0~

edminl-..lon's undlntanding of
the....,,. of un'-alty and their
, ......Wngdedlcallontoacadernlc

'

=~~~ .:'n,r:,sg~~:T., ~~~~~

My suspicions were fll{ther aroused
when the faculty rfletnber was
handedwhatapparentlywasaptece

~~h!r ~~~ur~·,:,:~,n~

The State Pollee,

Institution, a part of the local
community. and the State ot New
York, and as such bound by their

t must lodge a vigorous
the completely
inlodequMa -•that will be used
to ~ the faculty from the
NEA/IfYEA. The guidelines and
~ promulgated by Profes8ar R. 01._ Gibson, president of
the 8ufllllo WP chapter, are
cert.lnly a alep In the right
direction, but unfortunately they

·at
Indicating what to do In the event of
such emergencies, so I promptly
called Dr. Ronald. Stein ' of the
President's office and Professor
Gibson at the UUP oHice. I am sorry
to report that the three Unl-slty
pollee squad cars-did not arrive on
the scene for a full two minutes, by
which !line the agent ~ad slip~

pi'e-May 1 appearances of known or
suspected agents of NEA/NYEA
' should lead to Immediate calls not
merely to Dr. stein or even
Professcir Gibson himself for
they simply do not have sufficient·
experience, at least not yet, In
" ah'ans d t tn gesBecuu ratt y atnhdreaSttaste_po.llbceut. •
11 10
" 0 10 1th

~anlveralty. .

area and nearby countryside, bu

m:::..,,llbout
pro!elt

=·::""~=~~h~~~~

F~7ur,~:'l· \~:0~~

:-~ci~~~~~~~~h~~~s~f~~r

~~~~h~~~'1~iu~::,e;~r:1;.,:

~~~~':~~lyon

the .9t1 emergency
Perhaps even these measures will

Psych student says.write to Wharton
...,
.

I am writing to encourllll8 your
. . . . . who . . ooncemed about the
ble lou of American PsychotogANoclallon Accnldltatlon of our
nlcal Paychology Deoartment (due to
ow IMdeejume facUlties) to write to
c:t.lcellor ~
In
Albany,·
S.U.N .Y.-Buffalo edmlnlstrators and
• their atale senators lll!d assemblymen . I
am enclosing a copy of the tetter that 1
sent to Chancellor Wharton, expressing
my concern and urging him to act to
-lha0apartmant'a8CC111dltatlon . l
would appreciate your printing this.
letter to provide Information to your
. - . . . end to seMI as a model tor
letters they might chooae to write.
.
.
Yours truly,
-11. c:tw,lllutanslty
Clinical Psychology Greduate Student

~

...-.

Dr. CUlton Wharton

Office of the Chancellor
Stale Un'-alty of New York

811w.to~A-ue
A~!My, New York 1~0

0.. a...uor ....,_,

-

lamafllurth,_Ciinlcal PsYChology

G..su.te 81udenl enrolled Ill the SUNY
at Buffalo. Aa I am SUI1I you 8111 8W8111,
011' llllnlelol program Ia th1'11ataned with.
the . _ of Ita American f'a)lctlologlcal
~lon (A.P.A.) acc111dltatlon. If
IUDit 111 ~ to ocaur, the
~- would be.. vr-. for
atlllllilt.!r_ t.culty, and the IIIIJvera!IY at
lalge. • - · I am writing both to

noted our Insufficient research , clinic
and studen't work apace, lack o f an
on..:ampus library. and Inadequate
tranaportatlon services to the· campus
for ourselves, potential subjects and
clients. The committee has indicated

accreditation were revoked. our department'~ reputation for excellence would
certainly decline; and, this regression
· In tum , would damage the academic

cr~~~~~~mo~~~~t~n~re~~:f.;,~sp~e~~~:rv

~~~~:ec:i:~~.l'~'::uYJI~u~1~~~

benefits from services provided by our
department . The students ;md faculty of

:::;'~::J,~~.in i~~~ h::~gl:,nder::on;,~

services to numerous Western New

While

adapting

to

the

limited

accreditation of our program consti-

~"d.':~er~7n ~~-:nmn~r~rar~~~:.;o~~:
carry less weight when J am: In

competition Jor Internship and nj ob
positions. When I first chose to enter
this program, I certainly did not
anticipate this possible decrement In
professional status. If I were to have
known that the accreditation of the

~~':.::

:=

~ ~n~e"l:~~!; I~ 'f;t~~

would ne- have applied for admission.
Additionally, the toss of accreditation
would have a severely negative impact
on the Unl-alty and the community,
as well . High quality students will not

~~lfty ~~u~~~:,s~111 ~e ~~~

department for positions at Psychology .
Departments where accredited status Is
secure. Moreo-. this dapartment was
recently .ranked among the top - 20
psychology prog~s. nationally.

'!

~~~~~c~f~g~~:::m~~rrY ':."rfd"~on :~~~:r~.;
1

:~~~- ~~~';;~~;, ~:~':u,~~7~~~~~ ;i~~

will suffer from the loss of quality
service If our department loses its
accreditation, and subsequently its
greatest resources; Its superior faculty
and stu&lt;;jents.
·
I cannot express strongly e'JPugh my
request to have you do whatever Is
within your power to assure the
.accredited status of our Clinical
Psychology Graduate Program , by the
allocation of funds necessary to provide
ad'!'luate space and facilities situated
withon the SUNY-Buffalo academic
communi!Y· I would greatly apPreciate .
your concern and eHorts 1o ameliorate
•
.-.
th is situation.

-: .

- . ..::M. CheriJ~~~j

·cllnlcai .Psycho1ogy Graduate. Student
Henry Woodburn Fellow
Intern, University Counseling Center
·
SUNY-Buffalo

- · to , _ . lhe ..-clndlng of

New cnnN.r.a
_tjon
pledged betwee
· -.n
~1"".
·aculty
PSS
exec
·
F'
u1lYe groups . .

...._. acc111dltatlon
etaiVa Ia due to ':.=n~lon from the

:r!~~e ~l='e:'~

...-my~-111g81dlng
to !IIIII ~ 19 tiM

. !.'!!!..._IIIIIIW and

~

laraer ~ ac8dj
community
ana to .the lnadequale facilities of the
Oeplr1mant at the Ridge

f:r'=r.m

CM~pUa.

The

-.dltallon t..n, In I

A.P.A:

YWI!ber, 11177,

. . ILim
J' compw contmunr~tr rtewspoplH pub·
,.,._ eocfl• rhwsdar br "- Oltrlsion of
ftullllc All8ks. sta,. Uni~ l'r o1 ,_.,

, .. ,

hflolo~ ~tonal

oHkft

0,..

""*' '" ,,. Crofts._..,,, Aml)erst,

-P-o--·
-

-afl'ulollcAHoor.

-

....clllof

,.,.,.,,_ion

Bgl1l8(l to hold joint rn.IIAga at laast

:,.r,..=.;r
..:;:,ut~-: exchange
of the new cooperation.

~

Chat
F
• :,~ttypss 8;::1'~."!
Ellert McNamenr; Ia to proVIde a vehicle
- ~or Interaction bet_, faculty
_,_ __,
pro1- - ataff and to create a .
setting for deliberations on Unl-slty
....,.. oflnter,at to both grou~.
RelcMrt eeld Input from the pSs can
8Miat thi F
ny Senat 1
~lng po~ and ~ngn
so'::'~~
~ 1 lhel ~
• or
r
-to-day
l:ft*-'llltlon. In -'dillon,
chert
~the PSS can provide valuable

l.!: .
:::::=..:.~~'\:'"::,
~~.....~·F..:l~

1

:::..-:"

- ·· DeSANTIS

-rMAtiEll'

lo.

, .....

For the first time, exe.cutllie com-

.

JOHNA aouna
Aaslslran1 Editor

paeucHHowsKo
· ~c:.nrnun,qu. Eduor
JfAN-AOE/I

8enlta may alao supply ll'l8lllber1l for
PS8 liUb-ocimmittaM.
The COCiplnllon, 11 Ia hoped, will
maU Ute a little euler
for DtOfMalonal
11affan1 w11o11e
'hen entail

joba o en entail
of . Faculty Senate
com'munt··•lon,
..,.....
- · - • lh!nka the bugs !*' .!M'
, __..,._
"'"'
tatlon

.-lutlona.
••~~

....;;.

worked out of p,roposats so tnat tne

~~f~':;:." '

ean be more easily
on a related matter, Reichert told the
Reporter that the Faculty Senate
Executive Committee has refused to
send a representative to a new
unt-stty-Wide Committee on Regis!ration chaired by Richard Dremuk , the
newly assigned coordinator of reglstralion. Reichert claimed 1hat sending a
representative would have 1111\0unted 10
agreeing , 10 ·~okenlsm" since the
San 111
f
a was no 1nvo1Ved In writing the
committee's charge and also was not
consulted on the problem.
Also, Reichert maintained 11 ts
"Inappropriate" for the administration
10 appoint Drernuk to head a committee
charged to evaluate procedures he Is

al~~=!{':·satd
.!!'.~h•

the Pss Executive

m=-~,:~~

we
applying to the Department of
Defense for technical assistance,
particularly In the use of verlous

:ftt::" tv~ry p~~~~~b:.'c!aV:ubWc

an agent of the NEA/NYEA" wOI'k,
but In matters of this moment It Is
besttoerronthesldeofcautlon.

a

~ir~:~~i~eiy~

insu«lcient resources of Uni-slty
Security, particularlY so long as
they remain unarmad.- It Is also·
necessary to remind oursei\'9S that _

r~ii::~;~c;!;-8 ·;~~':if~:r::;

0

-1hat were developed In the late
war In ln!fochlna. Ol course, these
devices were designed to locate

~~~J'/:::~i~u:tt':!~1~ 1 Y they

Of course I recognize 4hat · there
will be the usual hue and cry from
students and perhaps even some
uunre~o. rblduly wfac
' fm eas-r •
• huoltuyt ahtemaucPhro
~
1 11
1
8880
Gibson's modast proposal Is
cjopmed to failure. Let us remember
th~t the price of liberty Is eternal _
vigilance. _
·
.
-JwomaSiater
Professor, Political Science

Raven objects
to letfer from
Churchill
Editor:
As a member of the Graduate Scllool
Executive Committee I felt that I was

~~r,~'~:~\f,~~ ,'!ea~~~'l'~~\r,nDgn~;

jour-year rule. Part of this mar, be due
to the·fact that I b&lt;!aan my pro esslonal
career as a ·publlc' liealth chemist. Bu)
although my feelings were In support ot
the Chqmlstry Department, J vote!i ~9.
delay Judgment. The petltlon lo'f"IVie
extenslon of assistantship support toY
one year will be reconsidered· next yeS/:
The reason for doing this Is that at the'
present time, there have been only
seven petitions forti me extension .
The Graduate School Executive
Committee suspended Its judgment for
one year until ·it could examine the
nature and &lt;~,uallty of the problem In
light of addollonal petitions. I don't
believe that my colleagues would wish
me to chl!nge the fo.ur-year rule on the
basis of seven RSIIIIons. I have faith
that the Graduate School will consider
this matter very carefully next year and
t_hat It will makell judgment that will be
~u~~~~st Interest of the graduate
But the tone of Professor Churchill's
letter belles the credibility he seeks
through staling his asaoclatlons with
Harvard arid Illinois. Inflammatory

:'~!:!'a~ a:,~.t~~~~~~~:~'n:~

Or. Bruckensteln and Dean Fogel
. admirably presented the case of the
Chemistry Department . I would not call
either of them bu1118ucrats, even though
they are caught up In the bu1118ucratic

~r:'FV:~iy~rh F~ ~~~~~ ~~~

htn tsegservritycestha_t he will newr be repaid for
1
1
The Graduate School Executive
Committee has not and will not place

~~~~t.ar~:-~ 1 ~~~r;.:sha~~ ~~

assOciated with lnslltutlbns that require
extended periods of time for study. My
experience as a- professor at the
Unlversltyo!Callfornlaat ~eley , the
University of Iowa, the Federal
University at Minas Gerais In Bresil, and

:~=~~~Pv=~~~~tfsTJ'oro~veo sd~WI,'i:~~~s~~
the expectations that they have for
length of student study. As a practicing
behavioral scientist (part of my work Is

~~rs~ed~fo~3u~~~ro:;:th3r;~l~l

~~~~T~7r~ r1~~~ casesresultsqd~an~~ ~J

eodm mlltee
at their next meattng
10 1acu.. w•nn er or not 10 reconsider
requires ari extension of ilme. Furth~r
the composition of the Committee on '
lud
I
If
Registration, In order to ensure faculty
s
Y o this matter wilt Indicate
representation .
·these time ext01nslons are best
Both Reichert and McNamara hopesupported through petition or through a
that, In the future, the edmlnlstratlon
change In the general rule. •.
wlll use the two executive committees
-RONtld J. Raven
as "11180urce bodies" whose members
Professor of-Science Education ,
can assist In t kll
bl
Research and Evaluation Program ,
the University. ac ng pro em~ facing
Department oflnstrucllon

�7·

Marcl\ 8, 1871

Women's Club ~
pl.ans night
of dess~rts
Members of the UIB Women's Club·
will be treated to an array of "Desserts
from Around the World" at their annual
-.electl.on meeting to be held Thursday,
March 16, al 7:30 p.m. In the
Community Room of the Buffalo
Savings Bank, Sheridan near Harlem .
Mrs. Robert Fitzpatrick, nominating
committee chairman, will present the
following alate of officers to the
member&amp;:
'
Mrs. Arthur Chan, vlce-pnssldent and
prealdiHit-elect, will succeed ·Mrs.

{:~:.~=~; ~::~;r::,~~

SecriiiiJI}':
Mrs. Edward · Jenkins;
Recordlflfl... Secretlll)': Mrs. Michael
Ryan; neaunsr: Mrs. Francis Sullivan.
Mrs. Enrico Mlhlch and the following ·
member&amp; of the club's Evenllf!n Gourmet
Actlvltletl Group ans pns
ng International ~which w II be. served:
Mrs. Peter D'Arrlgo, - Mrs.
Vita
Mlllaauaka, Mrs."Cheater De Luca, Mrs.
Juno Mlnowada, Mrs. Floyd Gnsen,
Mril. Yorltoshl Mlschlna, Mrs. Nelson
By Milt Cerlln lseda, Mrs. John Piscopo, Mrs. J.P.
NewsEUeauS1alf
Jones, Mrs. Francia Sullivan, and Mrs.
Housing that offers able-bodied
Jacky Knopp Jr.
senior citizens an "unchained" lifestyle
The committee members, who come
has been devised by a team of U I B
from various paris of the world, have
students.
selected deaaerts nspresentatlve of
Aptly dubbed the "Prometheus
Project" In refensnce to the unchaining
of the god Prometheus by Hercules In
famf.fes and friends . Each dessert will
Greek mythology, til&lt;! ]lousing plan
be topped by a replica of the flag of the
goes far beyond lheol'ai\Cal '&lt;"ncepts.
country It repnasenta.
It'~ a package reedy for ciellvery.
The menu of deaaerts which will be
Guided by Dr. G. Scott Danford, an
sampled Includes: Mont Blanc - a
associate professor In the School of
chestnut purell · and whipped cream,
Arcliltecture and Environmental Design ,
nspresenttng the Alpine mountain
students built a model showing a
between France, Italy and Switzerland;
housing plan tailored to a site in Buffalo
Paskha
the Russian
Easter
that contains an unoccupied, two-story
cheesecake; Kransekake - . a tower
of nineteen rings of almond cake made
br'fl:eschg~~~~~~~dln~iself would be
In Scandinavia for weddings and
converted Into apartments for the

.U/8 gr~up has plan

~at~ =n~:S ~m =boo;kst~~

~h~~e 'l";,""~~ ~~n~la~tfh'":

B'!

chocolate filling; Torta
CestanhaDo-Para - a Brazil nut torte with a
coffee filling; Kunafa· - an Egyptian
&lt;111~ made with ahredded wheat and
·~ · light cnsamy filling;
Austrian
Chocolate Rolls ..,.. filled with a butter- l:hocOiate-rum cnsam; Coconut Ceke fw,m Burma; Miniature Krumkaker Nl!rweglan cones filled with whipped
cream and topped with a strawberry;
Light Swiss Meringues; Tarle Aux
Abrlcots ,.... an apricot tart mede

~~~ :r:,crckw:~ff'~~~ns;.::,~a~:'e~~.
Aroosa -

an almond and orange paste

rr::"~·~ f~~otg~u~~J~~= "~~~~~

Central European Hazel Nut Torte.

ch~~an.M.!n~r.. R~n"r''co ~ll,~g~ta!r~

be accepting reservations. A snow date t&gt;as been set for A!&gt;rll. 6,
7:30 p.m. at the l!uffalo Savings !lank, ·
Eastern Hills Mall, In case of
postponement due to bed weather.

New master's pogram
Beginning Fall 1978/ UIB's EnvlronIT\8Illal Studlea Center ESCl will offer a
new lntardleclpllniJI}' maater's degree
program In environmental studies. The
new program, s~kesmen for the ESC
1

l~~:~~a1 ~.:~ ~~s~J!~~:'Jnl~::J

In solving problems stemming from the
ecologic81 crisis.
This Maater of Science Jn Environmental Studies.- an interdisciplinary
program, will allow students to
concentrate In either the natural or the
social sciences.
In addition, a student can also
choose to take a graduate degree
(M .... or Ph.D) In a tredlllonal
dapartment and .then select courses
sponsored by the ESC to "enrich" that
0

tr"f'~ ~slr~~.,e

awarding several
research aaalstantshlps, which also
tuition remission. Brochures and

ca.;:x

~ l:t~t&gt;':~~~~~:~~ ~dn{;~d;~

Wilkeson Quad, Ellicott.

UBRARYID

The Unlwwslty Llbrer!M will continue to
'-or the r.gul• claM IIChadule cerda
and conllnlllngldentlflcatlon auch as •
om.t'a LlcenM, 'Sherilfa Card, wte.,
until Ilardi 21 e1tw which elate only the
, _ pennaiWit ID cerd'a will be
aceepted lor bonowlng 1~ mat•·
lala. Thla extended uM of elaaa
can1a Ia -aary becauM
trlbutlon of the penNinent ID
atudenta will not be completed
bel- Mwch 24.

~e.::fd.::'~o" =:~:~ ';:~~e.;t:o~~

el.derly residents of the neighborhood .

Out of tha playpens
.
The next step Is to find a developer to
make It happen . Danford alnsady has
begun a series of preseijtatlons . The
end result would be to unchain the
elderlY. from Institutional dullness and
the 'giant playpens" that society
creates "to keep them happy and
occupied ."
The theory behind the project, as
0

r;~:~~~s'lr.::;ee~'.i~~~~~t ~~~: 6?,;,~~

the . elderly an
opportunity
for
"meaningful , contributing roles.'
.
The school building became Idle a
few years ago after serving as Buffalo's
Public School No. 83 for 47 years. It Is
situated In the University Heights
section near U I B Main Street.
The building, which now contains a
dozel) rooms once used for classrooms
and offices , would be remodeled to
provide 21 aparlments. Of these, 17
would be 15 by 30-foot , one-bedroom
un ts. The other four, comer apartments, would be 25 by 30-foot,
two-bedroom units. Each apartment
would have -Its own kitchen and
bathroom .
- •
Remodeling plans call for lowering
present 12-foot ceilings to eight lee),
Installation o~ l!l.~c.heallng and air, conditioning units above the new
ceilings for. each apartment, and
construction of all-glass, dormer-type
windows to S8fV8 as " greenhouses."
Each floor would have laundry facilities.

N..owecl, decorated corridors
Present corridors w.ould be narrowed
to allow more sP-ace for apartments.
Each apartment s front along the
corridors would ' be Individualized to
make the dwelling units look like a row
of Individual homes. The same corridor
'walls also would contain windows for a
view of passers-by .
Inside the apartments, dividing walls
would be lacking· except around the
bathrooms. Portable wardrobe units
would be used to partition apartments
to suit each tenant's fancy.
· The wardrobe units woula be four feet
' wide, two feet deep and about six f811t
tall, with a wall-like surface on the
beck. They could be used for storage or
closet space and shelving as well as for
room dividers.
All apartments would have wall-towall carpeting, but It would be up to the
tenants to supply furnlture. There's a

reason . ·

It's a matter of helping the elderly
cope with a new environment by
"bringing a little bit of home with
them ." said Danford .

to 'u~chain' elderly ·

"The-objective Is to have the SJII'CEI
adapt to th~ people Instead of vice
versa, " hesald.
Courtyard, too
The lawn In front of the building
would serve as a fenced-In courtyard for
residents and their visitors. The
community center would be constructed at the rear as part of a single
complex. Here again, liberal use would

:=c~!!~J g; t~!".::,~l ~~1781~~~ne~~

floors so apartment dwellers could view
activities In the community center.
The front entrance area of the
building would be a lounge. An
"Information desk" attendant at the rear
of the lounge would control entrance to
and exit from the community center as a

~;:~~de~'i!:e!.~ls ~~u~~k~r~-~~

buildings.
·
' Behind the community center would
, be parking spaces for 90 cars, with 30 of
the spaces reserved for tenants.
•
The community center Itself would
contain an ·office and library space,
public restrooms, a ldtchen, a general
store and a number of meeting rooms
that could be made larger or smaller,
depending on need.
· ·
Hot lunches and bingo

1

co~m~~R~ c~~!', ~~ t&gt;': t~~ \~~

community functions such as ban9~~nu~~Y,I~~ogd~':.s, plays, bingo or
A single elevator would - serve the
entire complex. The elevator, as

~fJ~e'd1n ~~e ~{:dl:t~~~~;,,t3~ ~
11
~:tftc~ig!~ ~~~mA'~;~~t~~
?r~~~t~l~~d !'t"evS..~~rn~o~~no!fn~~~~~

ltu~h~ 0~~~~u~~entealls

for ramp
entrances at the front .and rear of the
complex as an ald to the handicapped.
Side entrances would nstaln conventional staircases In keeping with the
concept that those who occupy the
apartments would generally be persons

In~~ h:~ment would b8 assigned
certain chores, such as maintenance
and · .cleaning duties. Manning the
"Information desk" coul!l be a rotated,
assigned task, also. A crafts and shop
~~~Y ~~n:~~sl~~~d ~dp,Jlr~ui~~

sale. Another possibility woul:f be
"sheltered workshops" for piece-work

under contract to loeallnduatrles.
This Income, Danford aaye, could
a.ve to reduce the amount of rant

tenants pey. They would also be
nswarded with ''token" money to-apend
in the general atons: .

~~rlbut~~hthe?r~~

· Houslr.~

Ch~~t~~p;e·nce Is the second ·In a
t"~:~~~i~~~~~~~i~n~~~~r~e blt~~~

ot Aging, In cooperation with the Erie

County Office for the Aging .
Speakers will explore current trends
In housing for the elderly and evaluate
environmental factors such as lighting,
plumbing, h~atin(! and safety.
Featured will be: Leon 11.. Pastalan,
professor of architecture at the
Unlvenrity of Michigan and director of
nssearch for that university's Deparlment of Gerontology; Sidney Specter, a
partner In Senior Housing Associates,
Cleveland ; and _Joan F.. Dusek of

"

a In

th!::
spend their dectlnlng y...s In "fun and
games." In fact, he'COR!ends, the aen11e
of responsibility emplleslzed In the
"Prometheus Project" might well delay,
or even reverse, "behavioral decline."
Staffing would be minimal : two
professional managers, one for the
residence and the other for the
community center, and two maintenance chiefs, similarly aaalgned. They
would work with a management council
mede up of senior citizens Involved In

~';:ru~=~':Jf:ft~~s~hey

would set
Social agencies, both governmental
and private, would use the center to
provide satellite services, such aa
health screenlng_s and Immunization
clinics.
·
.
Public School No. 83 Is structurally
sound. It was selected for the pilot
project because of Its potential
ava lability and because it Is near
transportation, cultural and social ·
events, and commercial outlets.
Fedwal funding

gr:n~~~itf.rior:.~ru:"t~~.' ~

of Health, Education and Welfare
thro'gih the Multldlaci'W,nary Center for

t~po~ o~Y Ag:~· ~.J::t ~

r..vlronmental Design and Planning of
the School of Architecture and
Environmental Design.
- Danford said the City Is aaklna
$125,000 for Public School No. 83, bUi
that a finn ~op"*'t offer could
poaslbly bring the price down to $1 . He
estimated · cost of remodeling and
==Sol,~ community &lt;:*"er at
It Is hoped that the City or private
developers will unclerteka the pro)el:t u
a ..-,ue-proc:tuclng enterprise. Another poaalblllty, Danford said, would
be for the UniVWIIlty to aaaume the role
of d!MIIoper with t.deral fWidlng.
Danford Is an environmental psychologist, not an wchltect. He .-lved his
doctorate In psycholOgy from the
University of Houston In 1973 and haa
'*'!' at U I Bever since.

Conference set on housing
A day-long conference on
and Independent Living for the Aged '
begins at 9 a.m., Thurslfay, March 16,
at the Executive Motor Inn In

=

They ...nt to contilbut.
Danford believes senior cl)

workJ

Syracuse, a pubUc health social
In the Onondaga County Department'el
Health .
Workshop coordinators are Dr. G.

:;,c~tLf:n~~~oo\'"~~:~~=::0~~
;~:;,r~~_:::endf:ec~~~~g~i ~:~"4'n-~~~e

Support Services Corp. of Weatem New
York; Robert Illig, administrator of the
Episcopal Church Home In Buffalo; and.
Eva Umholtz, a housing specialist with
the Erie County Division of Planning .
Further Information may be obtained
by calling the UIB Center for the Stully
o Aging at 831-1729.
The third conference In the U/B
series, dealing with " Physical Fitness
for the Elderly," Is scheduled for
Thursday, April 27, also .at the
Executl9e Motor Inn.

�Wharton plans to push
help for the economy ·
SUNY Chancellor Clifton R. WhartPn,
Jr. propoaed Monday night thaf ·the·

114-cempua SUNY system expand Its

-

~IC ..vice programs In a ..major
help reJuvenate the State's
eoilnOmy end lmP!0¥8 Its human

8llart to

.

"I liMe dec:ldecl that one of the top
p1alfttee during my flrllt year In office
wtllllethe atrwialhenlng and expanding
of the s.te unr-.tty's public ewvlce
ect~ lor the State," Wharton said.
"During the coming year you ehould
expect to numerous actions and
~.all designed to bring to bear
the enonnoua resources of all of SUNY
... on the revttaltz.atlon of N- York
State."
Chencellor Wharton, a specialist In

="~:.o:~ae.v~~ak:

the expertlee of the Unlvwslty's
conaldeNble -a., acholarly, and
proleealoMI raeoun:es directly available and .-lui to Industry, commerce,
cltx and State goWimment.

an:,.:: =!~ly~rn,:~ant~!

0

s'i~t'!t~

publlo julowladge centers and Industry_
and .,_,.ment when the State

:=:::rc ·~,:,~~'"ls s~~~s =d~~~~

grounded Inn- knowledge, he stated.
abllglltlon
Addnlulng the New York State
Publlllhenl Association meeting in
Sytacuae, the Chencellor emphasized
that a public 11nlvwslty, supported In
large part by public dollars has a
special obligation to .respond to the
moat urvent public needs. The address
to the publlehera was one of the first
policy statements he has made since he
assumed Unlvwslty leadership jate In
January.
"Public higher ed~tlon owes
eomethlng apeolel to the public,

A._...

=-"~~~hilttrJ=.al~~

past and current public service
contributions of the Unlvwslly and Its
campuaea, Including:
·
•N- York's S8a Grant program,
operated jolnlly•llh Cornell Unlvwslty,
which brings In $1.6 million In Federal
funds to stimulate research and provide
advice for fishermen, coastal planners,

an~~i~:!:'C::,~n ~~~··varieties

of
grapes, wheat, apples, and potatoes by
the State College of Agriculture and Life
Sciences at Cornell.
· •The cooperation of lha 30 SUNY
community colleges with the State
Commerce Department in a joint effort
to restore the health of business and
Industry throughout the State.
•
'We must do mora'

m:n~;m~::'v':,s''t:,,so~~!.C:mp~~:

SUNY's public service efforts must be
expanded and strengthened.
"What I shall try to do - and I knqw
our presidents and most faculty will try .
too - Is harness the resources of this
University for the rapid · and vigorous
economic and human development of
New York State."
Wharton Indicated that public higher
education Is uniquely suited for the role
of Increased public se!VIce to New
York's citizens.
·
'While all education, private
well
as public, constitutes a serv.il;e to
society, the kind of public service 1have
described is for the most par1 a unique
mission of · the public ·colleges and
universities.

pu~~~~· ".:'nl~.:r~;f!spertasof lrnee!l""td~

, scendants of the first lancklrant
colleg"&amp;s. It Is an Integral par1 of the
pre"!'n1 because the state Institutions
are pald for In significant par1 by

f~~~e:'a'l·~~f \Jl~~=·st~~:u:~. ~ _:"'

A new directory compiled by StQte
UniversitY. to be shared with tile
The bust presented to William c.
Industria , business and governmental
Baird, chairman emeritus of the U/B
community, Includes an Inventory of
approximately 1 ,000 c,lnpus examples Council , at his testimonial dinner last
of public SMVIce. Called "Thfl 'Third Thursday was executed by Anthony R.
Paterson, an associate professor of ar1
Dimension" In recognition of the j)\Jbllc
aervlce role as equally Important to the . here.
The work. was commissioned by the
Unlvwslty's teaching and research
functions, the new pubiJcatlon profiles U/B Foundation In commemoration of
SUNY's current public service ectlvltlas Baird's retirement from the Council .
And Professor Paterson was Intrigued
regionally and statewide.
·
Wharlon'a speech to the New York with the Job:
~· 1 love working from the human
State publlehera was given In between
figure," he saysh contending that all
visits to two SUNY campuses - the
Agricultural arid Technlcal College at good . sculpture as as Its basis the
•
Morrisville and
the College of humanform.
Carrying out the Baird work was not
Environmental Science and Forestry In
without some humorous footnotes. Mr.
Syracuse - pert of his plan to visit
Baird hed to sit for- eight three-hour·
about half of the University's 64
:':'teet~ ~~:_.o~ unk.:=ui~
campuses In his first six months as sessions, essentially Immobile. And to
Paterson's mild astonishment, his
Chencetlor. )n late January, he visited
- · of the Statt Unlvenstty
unflappable subject submitted to the
eyatem and recounted CIOITlt! Important
six Western New York campuses.
" life mask" treatment.
_
The process required Baird's face to
be , completely encased In plaster,
which, Paterson Imagines, •:must really
be terrible, perllcularly If you have
claust'9phoblal "
.
The erllst mused. aboo:ll other
' ·
million anntiBtly, Is riot a one-way
consequences of the silting: "With all
atraet. ·
'
U/B pays about $1.5 million of the the dust ancf wet plaster to which Mr.
aal.-les for the physicians In ,question Baird was exposed , I had visions of
him getting Into his automobile with
and also underwrites a number of
this all o~ him, and then cwalklng Into
_ . . . a n d technicians at Meyer.
his house tlfat way."
"
Aaa public hoapltal, Naughton- said,
the Meyer would need a substantial M8Jor _.. markadly dltt..nt
number of full-time physicians, whet~er
While the Baird project
was
or not !hera waa a medical school repr8aentatlonal,
Paterson's major work
a markedly different direction .
~~~~=th~e. the proposed is AIn current
masterwork entitled "Erotic
takeo- affects U/B.
Landscape" Is a bronze receptacle of
Under Ita proposal to lease the new enigmatic
figures, suggestive of female
county facility, Buftaio General re- Imagery, In various configurations.
quests that the County Immediately
E8c1i of the nine plec88 Is removable .
convert to patient care anaaa the filth
floor of the building, now designated. r~~:::.:::J~~~~d_l"'y were expressly.
lor teaching apace.
Their highly lustrous surfaces, !he
Nl!ughton said he has dlsc"uased the results ot-p&amp;inataklng buffing, aeem "to
resufllng relocation of the offices of reflect the positive statement the erllst
Medical School faculty with the wishes to make.
,
prealclent of Buffalo General.
"It Ia crucial to recognize the very
"Thera . . options on the Meyer lmpor1ant role of women," says
grounds In Ierma of buildings which Paterson, referring to the work's
can lie renovMed for offloaa for the obviously feminine motif. "Wpmen have
full-time ataff and that's an acceptable been Jaken advantage . of for many
option to ua, n .... aald.
y-..
He told the fNwa !hera -has been no
Hla favorite sculptor Ia a woman:
J8rmelne Richter, a French artist he
deecrlbes u "the best in thla century."
the teaching progrema, an alternative
When compleled, "Erotic~"
that has had · support In nscent will have ~led llbou1 alx monfha'
y....
work. It Is being cut In bronze In two
Bolh 8omlt and N8UQhlon expressed -•Ions - In miniature and monuconi..,_ that the Blale will make the mentally llfealze.
~ money avalleble to maintain
U/B ~lona In the event of the A hltoll
.
Buff81oOellerW...._.
Thera's a hitch, h o -.

Instruction and pure-~.· Wtwton said.
.I
"I aubrnlt to you thllt the State
I Unhenllty of N- York offera the
j ar-teat single OOJIC"'Itrallon of
lilttlltectual talent and pooblem-aotvtng
i ~ In this State. This talent Ia
liotll centniiiZIId and yet distributed
_,_lclllly through .-y region,
! iinlffecf yet COI'IIpAihenalve."
Herd II,_, the former Michigan
Stale Un-.Hy llfWidcWrt said, cell for
, _ nmeo:tlee. But he recomrn.K~ed
looking upon N- York's current
~ltlon not as an "-''ability but as a
lllllnulua to ...... • a-t leap forward,
-which would lead to a better future.
Jllllwt...Tn: spoke of "maaalve and

•
I

-Paterson-used life mask
for Baird sc~lptu~e

Buffalo General takeover plan
will cost U/B &amp; State millions _,_

=w:="..: ~.:::r...~~"Y.o~~

The found,Y at Bethune Hall, •
completed last year as a major"'"'
commitment on the pert of tlfiL I
Unl-slty, Is devoid of an essentlatait.
Ingredient for fulf-acale metal caatl::#' '~ '

~~~~~htyr:,~;r:~~ha~t'~ :

fire
of a large be8hlve kiln.
i'·
Without this, Pat&amp;niOn says, the .. ,.
casting of llfeslze figures Is Impossible.
Wlth "no money available Jn the budget,
he Is hoping s.omeone- anyone - will
be able to assist the deperlment In
procuring this Important resource.
Paterson Is a man obsessed with ·his
craft: ''The· ve~ Idea of sculpture
l~:J'~~~ me - I e form, the line, the

.

Hec:Oulcln'tcommunlcate As a child, growing up In Albany, he _
recalls! he hed difficulty expressing
hlmsel "verbally.
He turned to art.
By the lima he was a second-grader,
he was already enrplled In the Albany
History and Art Institute. From those
early years of exploration and
discovery, he's emerged as a supedor
sculptor, recognized lntematlonally as
a gifted craft~an . The demands of
teaching have also led him to become
• equally gifted In the once troublesome
area of verbal expression.
Paterson's formal training Includes
work at the School of the Museum of
Fine Arts in Boston \which permanently
dl~lays some of h a acutgtura); MIT;
~exl~~a University of
uedalajara,
An enduring lesson was learned at La
Grande Charnler, School of Drawing In
Paris. "Drawing," Insists Paterson, '"Ia
the core of all ar1. If someone were
shipwrecked, I'd encourage him to draw
above all else."
·
Paterson, 44, recently received a
$1 ,400 grant-In-aid through the Urllverslty Awards aeries, to help delray
expenaea that would be prohibitive
Without a financial boost. When he Is
not working at Bethune Hall, hla studio
Is a converted three-ear garage at his
home on Norwood Avenue. ·
He Is
to give pleasure to those
w_ho buy nla works . or just cast a
passing glance their way.
What does he think about professional critics?
"They have no lasting Influence on
me," he explains, admitting In thit same
bnleth that "a good ravl- Is always
welcomed." To be sure, ha has gotten
many of the tell«.
"Any a t - . reectlon to my work, "
Tony Pateraon ooneludes "mak&amp;e! me
feel good." , ,
'
_ ,·

eager

�..

- 1 . 1171

WiiUamBalrd

an

The name Baird has been
honored
one In this community for almost a
· century.
Frank Burkett Baird:
•arrived here In 1888;
•built the Tonawanda Iron Company;
developed Hanna Furnace Co., and
organized the Buffalo Onion Furnace
Company (one of the 10 major firms In
the area by the 19308);
•served on the board of directors of
the Pan-American Exposition which
brought world attention to the city In
1901;
•heeded the Chamber of Commerce
~~1~
•
•was the prime mover In building the

~~~!:l?~·t~dtr\~ ~l\~~~~t:~~

BrltlstFiPrlme Minister and AI Smith In ·
atten-.ce.- ·,·. · ~··· . •· .... t' ·n~: ....
He .was elected to the Council of the
UniVI!Ielty In 1920, serving until his
death In 1939. Here, he played an
Important role
on
the
Special
Subscriptions committees for two
major endowment drives In the 1920s.
ln-1927, the Council of the University
honored him with the Chancellor's

=~IUonuo',~l's~R\:'~rn'!~~:.

- in The Baird connection with the
University continued through two of his
sons.

Cameron Baird
·eamaron Baird was · appointed
chairman of the Unl-slty Music
Department In 1952. He organized that
department, laboring hard and effectively to build Ita reputation as a
nationally known fine arts center. fils
Inspiration and dedrcation achieved
~~~rfo~y s~=t~n ~u:Me~ew short
Baird Hall, the home of the
Department of Music on the Main Street
Campus, was dedicated during that era
to the memory of Frank Baird and has
also served as a constant reminder of

0

1

UIB honors long-time
friend and benefactor
at testimonial dinner

the contributions of Cameron Baird .
William C. Baird
William Cameron Baird, w~ the
University honored with a Testimonial
1

~~~:d~~. sg;:l~!n~h~ 1~Yrff.:.lai:::':
forward today. He has dedicated his
own career to University and community service for more than 40 years.
He joined Buffalo Pipe and Foundry,
a family business, In 1930, as treasurer.

~~~~~ orf~e ~=-~~ l~n~o~h~~

~~~a_rmJ~; ~:X.?~~"; :r~~r~~nt~'l'~~

Buffalo Chamber of Commerce, the
youngest person e- to lead that

orgf,~lz~~~~· Th~~ye,:r~as~~-closely

.associated ,with .the Peace Bridge, the"
symbolic, open link between the U.S.
and canada. He was chairman of the
bridge commission from 1939 to 1960.
During the 1930s he helped organize
the Butler· Mitchell Boys Clubs for
underprivileged youn~sters . That club

~~~~o~ ~h~h'. ~:or: c~ub~~l

president.
He has been a vital force In the
Episcopal Church of Western New York,
serving as senior warden at St. Paul's
Cathedral, and as president of a church-

~~heaM'ra~t ::~';,~~~~~e~~: ~~~

the elderly.
"Billyacres," his 75-acre. summer
home at Point Ablno, Ontario, was for

:l'a~~;~~ ~:'Jr:.'d~ ~le~!Ja~~~J

Ame.rican clllldren, . and has been
available to community groups and
organizations, Including the University
and Its alumni.
'
.
On the Councllalmotll 40 yews
Baird attended and remains a staunch
loyalist tof Wlllla"'~. Ppljfllle, but has
become even more closely associated

wlth U/B. He foljowed his father to the
Council of the University In ~939 . He
stepped down from that 1/odY just this ·
past December, having served as both
vice chairman and chairman . Today he
holds the title of chairman emeritus.
In 1962 when the University of Buffalo
became a state Institution and a new
group was created to oversee a program
of prlvat"ijlvlng, he took a place on that
panel, too - the Board of Trustees of
the U/B Foundatlon,lnc.
He has been a vital link between the
University present and past , between
town and gown .
Today's new University, Baird has
told the community, " is one of our

bi~:~~~~':tt~~·new campus will attrect
new ctimpanles and new activities,
helpiniiW..itallze tjle .entire area.
-

Award wl nner
The U/B Alumni Association honored Baird In 1967 with Its Walter P.

~~:war~3've~n~~~e per~~~~~~~~

individuals" who have provided major,
selfless services to the University.
And -ln ·1970 he was- the -second
non-alumnus ever named to the U/B

~~~~t::; ~~I g.:.,~~a~r s1~p~~r~m~

sports- programs for several decades;
for his particular activities In raising
athletic scholarship funds; and for the
many personal ways Jn which he helped
a number of athletes with little public
recognition .
·
A charter member of the University's
Presidents Associates, he has been
generous with the U/B Foundation:
donating land just acJoss from the
Amherst Campus (at Sweet Home and
Chestnut Ridge) for possible future

'
"
~~~~ ~~ ~ 0~~~~~

Corporation which Is Investigating
pro\:::sed commercial taclltles at the

~~~~~~u~ "l'd, ~';' =~~

Cameron Baird Fou::a::lon - wbleh
will enable construction of an outdoor
amphitheatre for use by the campus
community.

Today, Bill Baird remains active as a
member of the Executive Board of the
U I B-Foundatlon .

1"IM sPotlight IIOUIIht him out

He Is a man who does not

-'&lt;

the

~1'8!'~~ut~~ has done much and said

so~\ T~1":,sd~~i ~~~u~a/~t ~=~
ap~~~~~ ar;,1 ~1:9:\'e':ida tram ttie

campus and the community turned out
to honor him. Telegrams and tatters ·
were read 4rom even more well-wishers
unable to attend:
President Robert L. Ketter PIBiaed his
accompllshments. -A bust of Baird, .by
U/B sculptor Anthony Patenoon was
un~lled; It will be placed In the Council
meeting room on the fifth floor of
Capen Hall. H!! was designated - an .
" honorary alumnus," U/B's first-·
T!Je conclusion to a slide show whiCh
_traced Baird's career on campus and In
the community summed up what
a-yone was saying: "Buffalo and Its
university are ... proud of Bill Baird. His
civic patriotism, his dedication to
improving .the hul)'lan condition, · his
ready assistance -wmw- there Is a
need, his thousands of good works,

~~ ~~;ra'::,al~::~.a!r.rdo~!

greatest assets."

=

Fremming s~bcornm·ittee
plans he.arings_ here Friday . .
• The New York State Assembly.
Subcommltfee on Economic GroWth for
Western New York, chaired by
Assemblyman G. James Fremmlng, wilt
conduct a public hearing on the
possibilities for economic development

t,e,;'W~~.l\ ~~~~r~ ~m8}e~lo~~~e:~~~

Friday, March 10, · at 11 a.m. In 108
.
. .
O'Brian Hall.
The Subcommittee, a part of the
Assembly Standing Commlt'ee on
Commerce, Industry and Econornlc
Development, will focus not only on
possibilities for employment dlri!CIIY
resulting from new construction, but
also on peripheral economic development that a completed State Un~rsity
Center could create In Western New
York.
State Commerce Commissioner John
Dyson Is scheduled, to make an
appearance, Fremmlng·s office said late
Tuesday.
Among topics to be discussed will
be:
- •The acceleration of thfi S.U.N.Y.
Buffalo construcllon program and
attraction of new industw related to
academic programs of the University.
•Full utilization of the Job Incentive
Program and Job Development . Author-

lty and poSSlble future Improvement of
these programs.
•Attracting Industry to Audubon
lnduatrilll Pai1&lt;.
•Full development of the Audubon
New Community.

-~~~:,t8ot1 ~;~:~ S:olea,;1
dern81;1d

craated by a completed
University- shop_plng_oenters', hotels.
•Comparison of S.U.N.Y.-Buifalo
prospects tor peripheral ~lopment
with the experience of other unlversities· e Comell Wisconsin
•Fui · Integration of ·University
resources with the economy of Western
New Yoik '-- econometric. models.
regional economic d.evelopment oent8(,
•Proposed Audubon Parkway Bridge.
•Construction of U.D.C. senior
citizens housing proJects at Audubon
and'PepperTree Heights.
•Relocation and widening of Millersport High~ay .
.•

p

Author!
Last w8ek•s page one article on Paul .
Kurtz's challenge of Carol Ann Llaros
was written by Public Affairs Intern
Stephanie Weisman. Her byline should
have been Included with the story.

�•

j

J

I

j

David'Smart is new
UlB biohazards officer
The Un'-alty has a new "llklhc8nls" offl!*, David smart. a recent
!ll*luata of the University of Minnesota
Sclloot of ~lc Health.
Smlrt. -who Joined the Office ot-c
EJwlronmental Health and Safety last
IIIII, has t.en charged by Robert E. _
Hunt. that office's dlractor, with
-.,onllblllt,y for:
•safety In biological laboratories,
InCluding thoae where reaaarch with

=:~~n~~~8f'.f.ll~\~~~~
hlmaelf will no\ be

~nlcally - competent" microbiologists and other scientists are sure to be
appointed, he said , along with pemaps
one member of the off-campus
community.
Recombinant .DNA research which
tinkers With transfer of genetic traits
from one species to another has crested
a furor because of the spectre some see

~,;:e:~~g~~~e~~s:"r,"a':~~.. ,g~:~
and natureYet, Sman Indicates, the research
has a posltlve side, because of the
potential for useful new organisms.
One has already been developed, he
says, which can produce Insulin, ...: a
major breakthrough for diabetics. As a
funher safeguard against. deleterious '
results, he notes, scientists are
specifically prohibited ftqm toying with
the whole question of resistance to
antibiotics _
.
Basically, Sman points out, Environmental Health and Safety Is the campus
health depanment- _
-Its concerns are divided Into physical
hazards, looked after by Michael
Syracuse, and biohazards (which Sman
defines as those posed by microorganisms/. BloiiiiUirds Include possible ill e feels from such things as
Infectious dlsellse research, cancer
resea,rch, and iml&gt;roper sanitation, In
addition .t o more dramatic DNA
considerations. For example, Sman Js
checking laminar-flow cabinets In
campus biological labs to make sure
they filter out . micro-organisms as
they're supposed to. He keeps an eye
on food service kitchens and Is also
checking dorm rooms for such
violations as pets, cooking In rooms,
1
etc.
With · a degree In Institutional
environmental health, Smart says he
could have gone Into either a hpspltal or
- a ·university setting . He opTfild for a
university because of the · greater
~"",!;':l and larger scale of Interests

_,blnarit DNA molecules may be
conducted, and
oenvlronmental matters pertl!fnlng to
residence halls, food aarvlce faciiJtles
- and the general environment.
Does tl)ls charge mean that
recombinant DNA l'liS8Wch Is either
on-going~ projected_at U/B?
By no means, Smart Indicates, Such
-.:11 Is oot permitted on campus at
this time, he says: Federal guidelines
mendale .that an Institutional blohuards committee must first be set-up

::.=-of~~ta-:!.::!. ~~~~~.!\
ta functioning ,

proposals

It

appro- still have to go to the National
lnatltutea of Haelth for final okay.
A "working committee" ts

a member, he said,

J)t,,~ ..':~e==~~lo:,'!~

-"

~

:/

looking Into who should be asked to

1

now

Fischer doodles
a new name game
By Paul Chlmara

-

'

·

NewaB\riauStaff

What's In a name?
,.
If you ask Joe Fischer, director of
U/B's Creative Craft Center, don't
exr,:;';t~~-~~:~e,;;ri~:"r:~g;h of a pen~ll.
pen , crayon or magic marker, he'll be
gl~~~ !h~;;,~o~wa'::'~'~!':n~ n_:m:nd the
red-bearded caricaturist will create a
pl5t;,e ~f~!~~,:orr.rc~r vJ6r.~re~~- More
precisely, a creative doodler. ·
·

im·~~~a':,r's~oal ~~~~n,'~~! ~~~- '!~:·

~r;r~~~-e~~~~~~e~.o/.''s first check on

The multi-talented craftsman adheres
faithfully to the fact that the word
"Idea'' derives from the Greek 111dein":
to see_
And Joe sees tM;yond the obvious.
Any name wlli'do
The result Is a· penchant for add ing a
new twist 10 the name game, and
anyone's name -from Bob or Carol to
Ebmezer ang Natha - Is grist for the
canoon mill .
While he admits to an obsession for
transforming words Into pictures, his
motives ~o dearer than _that. The

r:~l'a~s,g .;;~~unae·!h~~~~7g~~~ltsa~C:~

antst.
Fischer, uses doodling exercises In
his basic d~s l gn classes and In

canoonlng workshops he conducts
P.erlodlcally- " Doodling ," he obsenles,
'Is the begmning1or a lot of people_"
If an history Is any Indicator, doodler
Fi~~~e~.,'~~h~e filled with an~dotes
about
Aenalssahce masters
and
contemporary painters whose early
exercises In draftsmanship clearly
reveal a predilection for doodling .
DaVIncl, Dell and Picasso
leonardo DaVIncl himself Is famous
for his timeless advice that any serious
artist -sHould be able to see a world of
Images In the mere cracks of paint on a
wall.
In more recent times, the fi81Jlboyant
Spanish surrealist Salvador Dali Is
renowned for taking the chance
juxtapositions of every day objects and
~~~~\~ma~~~ , them extraordinary
And, depending on one's aesthetic
tastes, some of the works of Picasso the tltan_of 20th century an - seem not
too far removed from doodling, albeit

hi'Wh~~\;~ndO,,O~~e? The answer Is
limited only by one's Imagination,
Fischer believes.
·
So, If you want to develop your own
talents at drip-drool and spatter~~ ::-

~;o~~~kat~~;~ft' ~~~:7i~~~e-~ti

Complex _Ask for Joseph Fl.scherBut If you're in a hunry, don't tell him
your name.
JO:&gt; .

International conference
scheduled tiere this month
Bcllol8ra eel offlclala ol International
llgenCiee, 10glllher with a group of U/B
fliculty - - . . will explore the
l'lllllllcinahlpa Of un.....wea In dllfensnt
l*tll Of the wcx;ld, during a th,._...y
~. u.n:tl 23-25, at Alnhem.
11la CCIII'-, entitled ''Un'-alttes
In the New lntarMI~ Order," will
'-on "'*-111111 have occurred In
unlwraltlea With - - ' to the oil
Clllla. .... rlee
Third World
nllllelnllllm,
othar
-*=
8IICI- - "....
' r.ctora.
11la lntanlllclpllnery - ' le being
ClllllftiB!d "' t!ft'lg J. Spltzbfrg, Jr.,
diiln Of 1M Col..._ n
aMoclllla
ot- educlll1ciMI atudlel. n ••
tundad "' file . . . Unlwer8
New
... Of ....
In .... ~ JII'OOIWII.

of

'""*' of

of
"Cammee~

Qtt~•

I lt.-1

Ainong speakers will be John Forbes,
former deputy.(!lractor of UNESCO,
- United Nations Educational, Scientific,
and Cultural -Qrganliatlon_ He will '
apMk on alternative means
of
knowledge transfer In the International
. order.
'
Michael J . Flack of the Graduate
School of Public and International
Affairs, Un'-alty of Pittsburgh, will
~t a paper entitled, "Between
-community and Society: Some Ethical ·
~sa&amp;.- for PoUtlos, Unlv.~~ltles , and the
New lntematlonlll Order."
'

Ia

.,.... n n

da
-

ncers ·

The~~ o~Ed~l~=

Unherelty, 180&amp;-19311," wtll be covered
by Gall Kelly of the U/B o.p.rtment of
~ Foundallona and by Thomas

El-.- of McGIIf UniYilralty, Mon-

'-1.

•

.

A hoet or ~!her dlscuaaanta from

~.:::'.t,~d:.~~~~~~i

Call issued for papers
.
.::n.~ maof,_""...=r':: ~e::.~~ s;'~..tg~ ~ on foreign student transition
;Jr.' l*forlnlng
r11etorlc Of
new
the
mons
~.:
~~:s~.,..:f~
:J:J:
0~~~~
~:::
ro:.~~t~~~,~he~~~~~~l
Dr.
b8lons'
IIIOUfl
K.onl, the

win axcel..-.ce JW8rd
the~

by

)'1011

!'!!!l...~.:!!...andualA~q...,uet'
- u• _ . _,,
da a.nG
llltlle81111Jtrtfllton,ftlbril8ry25.
illlnOa group organized In
~ Of 1177, ~--' by the -

n.

~:n.:u:r.J.n:·.!:t:"J

Giller 001'- and hlgtiiiChoola

=

TJWiii

In the

proarMI8 hllltUIII lhely,

fOlk dancea

of the Ulcralne,
Of which . . perfonned to the'
llllent of the folk tnatrument,
. ......_

. l'llTWa

wa al10 scheduled.

ex~ for

for

~

Education

=-~!~~'f.'~~

Wfllahther,.tarmoneOftlleUknllne'•
-~dances,

the spirited
. . _ . . . , _ , l!Opal&lt;, sharing the • ' -

"1111111 otiW Uknilnlan partormera. Tfie
'
llllllw, ~ "s.ter In the Ukraine," will

the

International order

poat-induatrllil and third worlds ..
"The guldlna_ precept of the ao-ealle&lt;l
new lntematlor\al order," he contloued,
"Ia to deYtae mechanisms for
,...locating reeources In ~rder to
enhancJiill justloe In the dlstrlbutlon of '
goods betwaal North and South,Jhil
~Jf.':!J· tlie poat-lnduatrlal
Coneequent)y, the major aim of the
~'-"ce, he Indicated, Ia to examine
the rote
un'-altlea In this process,
with JWtlcular nsl.ance to these
lnstlllltlona as Important points for the

=:rm-::g
of

dl=:'.;:!~e-~h.nsnca w1111Mi

uaed • wurw roaterlals for radio
progl'lllna to be broadc8at by WBFO and
wtll aiiO be made available to National
Public RediOFurther Information Ia available 'at

----~~~1~' - -- - · -·--·- ---· - ··':, .. .~~1.1!·.--- --· ·-·- - ---------

A call for~ for a May conference

Settings" has been lsaued by the
several campus-sponsors of the avant.
T1ie symposium, according to
&amp;tephen C. Dunnett, dlractorolthe U/B
Intensive English language institute,
one of Ita sponsors, wm axplore a
-lety ol r.ctora affecting foreign
students. Student background, lllnguage, attitudes toward the hoat
country, the effect- of orientation
programs,
academic
achievement,
ahori-term va. Immigrant status, and re-entry ·transition ·problems will be
among the toplca to be conaldenld .
The eVent will be held Mat&lt;Y -4-5 on

ln=at~naJ ~ter :::;~:

:::
qroup Relatio!IS, Paris, and professor
keynote
emeritus, _ Columbia, as
speaker.
,
Individuals wlshlf\g tq have papers

considered for
program a11ou11
submit abetracta of not
than twc
Ounnatt
April 1.
honorarium (In lieu of travel ancllodglnt
expen-) will be granted all wh
pages to

1.1

~.,.accepted

Papers submittild to the c o n a
will be considered for lmmedlat
Publication In the - Special Studt
Series of the Council on lntematlornl
Studies. It Is expected, Duncwtt eald
that the papers will also be -mbl
Into a volume and published by
commercial pnsaa.
·
Abstracts should be dlracte&lt;l 11
Dunnett, 117 Richmond Quadrangle
Amherat 142160.
For additional Information,_ contac
Dunnett at 636-~ or Mrs. t-rance J
Pruitt, 831-3724.
.
Other U I B
sponsors of
th
conference Include the Council 01
International Studies, and the Oepan
ments of Anthropology, Communlca
lion, Psychology and Sociology.

�...u ..

n

-•calendar
Forlll0(8informollon, cal831-5526.
Sponaored by Continuing Education
Cancer Society of Er1o Cou&gt;ty.

(ftom-12,caU)
J-ote-e&lt;lofthe..,...mon.
170 MFACC. Ellcott. Free.

and The -

SponaoredbyDopartmentoiMI;*.

CoFFEatouiE·

-·

K.aly·12
COiftyand~.
._
Loonge, Squn.
noon. Free.
Sponaored by UUAB Colfeehouaa CormliUM.

TUESDAY-14
_/

~y

NOONNUTIIITIOH

MMz, C~Wmon , Nutrition

BROWN BAQ LUNCII LEClVRE'
- . muolc--critlc for the Ylltogev - . " " " - and Yloltlng . . . . . - of the

· -d. 26F.-.
Agr1cul1ure
RO-.:t1 Center.
-.M
12noon.

CreetiYe
· with
335 Hoyea.
12 noon.
- audience porticlpotlon;

N-. w-

---..nd-~-.......,.__in

- - T-

Dr.

F-

-·

SponiOAid by
of the School of An:hiloctlnand En~ design .

TAKE A IIREAK"
,
...... - - - n g•• drwnalizod study
o! ' -· Lorna Hll and Joonne .._.1mm
the Woolon'a ThM1n&gt;Coloctive. 10 ~ - Free .

NATVIIAL SCIENCES AND IIAntEII.\nc&amp;

12noon.

Polynclogy'o

Sponaorod by CUturol Atfaira.

H - . Ia CIOll be -

BIOPHYSICAl. SCIENCES SEMINAR I
R-ng -no-~~ ol Oiont Axon
6yotemo, Or. V.S. Ylld1ywlothan, aaaociate pro-

about

fesaor,
4p.m.

~

Sciences, UI B. 245

c.y,

UUAB FtLIIS•
Rolgn ol T.,., (al&lt;a The Black_, (1949).

BUfFAlO LOGIC COLLOQUIUM I
Problema In Definition ~ ArM,
aem.dGolbaum,Methematica
t,U/B.
207 Dielendort. 4 p.m.

7p.m.

.

stetter. 4 : 15p.m. Coffeeat-4.

Aobesplen-e's diary, which alegodly fi$ted aD
his CIO!didatoa for the chopping block, becomes
the object ol deaOl. lor two competing factions
in this dnma on the French Revolution.
The Naked Spur (1 953). 8 :40p.m.
This re~ tough western beotmes a
study of ·a hulled 'man and his reward-seeking

FlU/:'

captora.
Conference Theatre, Squirei. frM .

CELL • .MOLECULAR BIOLOGY SEIIINARII
Flm Stopo T_,.s the Conltnoction ol a
~-....,._,Dr. lillie Kosbno.
Chemic:aii.Jibonltooy, Yale Unlvenllty. 114 Hoell·

Clfwnd llluolon (Renoi'). 1 50 Ferber, 5 p.m.;
5 Acheoon, 6 :15p.m.
Sponaored by Depoo1ment of Lan·
g-and UtondureS.
.
Gf1nd flm. Which haa been calod ""the most
toling ol the myotery of why . . ,
ll.lbn'Mt to _. ever put on he aaeen." Written
by ...., and llolgilo1 IIC«Wiss, Chor1es
s.-_ H tooks clooely ot the ~ interlocked ~ uood to
and )uatify - the -..sion that Wlff8re ' is glortous_ ald serves
a nol&gt;le couoe. the myth tllot "*"&lt;lnd Ia civlded
,. into inYiploblo nations. v.1'lat- Ia. the flm-aays,
· ,iS nothing more then an extension of IIOCial

FILII'·
Voyogo In Holy (Rossellini, 1 954) . 148 !lief· •
dendor1. 7 p.m.
Sponsored by Center for Media Study.
ANATOMtCALSCIENCESLECTUREII
Aoldng on Anlinol . _ ~ UoM Ho lluocloo,
Dr. Car1 Gens, Division of Biological Sciences,
UnivereHy of Michigan. G26 FIW1&gt;or. 6 p.m.

-t

ORAliA'
IoMmen end Len•, drected by Saul Bkin.
Pfeifer Theatre, 8 p .m. See March 14 listing

~ in whiCh a rUing claM · - to manlth"'~~ ~:-- through llusklns and

IRC FILII'

tfll h '

Potkln. Dewey lounge. Governors. 8 and 1 o
p .m. Free to aiiRC feepayers_; $ .50 for others.

fordetais .

:::

COLLEGE 8 FILII"
H'o a W - t LHa (1946). 170 MFACC,

Ellicott. 7 p .m.

JarMs- in a FnlnkCajn 11m of optimism

and faith In man tllot Mor1o Thomas remade
and l\lined aaa TV apeclallastChriotmes.

POETRY READINO'

636-3346 aa aoon aa poeaiblo. Sponaored by
Browolng l.l&gt;rwy and 81.-.t Atfaira.
·DIWIIA'

-

ond ' - - · di-ected by Soui · Elkin.
- UllayeHe &amp; Hoyt. 8 p.m. General

$3; _ , . a n d - - $1 .50.
o1oo . . - ot Alrlcan·Amorican CulturoiCenter. •
•

r-

Sponaorod byCenterforThM1no -

-

- b y MIOI ~- a wl1ite South African
playwright ol oxnordinory gifts, - · ond

about.----- -

~ Ia
CO&lt;JI)Ie
whose lies .., a of fort:od upiootings.
The production . . . . Ed Smith, octor and
· andLome
profeooor
in the -and co-toooder
Depoo1. -mont; and
Hil, director
of The Woolon'a- "Coltective and aaals,..,t

--a.manor-.
IIIJSIC•

_

T-

.

11-.HyPhlhonnonlo,JtrneaKaaprowicz,

, _ . . . , Cllonoo. -

rector; and
- St.

8p.m. Frw.

.-·a

smona. .,;.

Choir, Rlctwd ~­
R.C. Church , 3269 Main.

Sponaorod by Depoo1ment ol Mualc and New·
man Center for Can1pue Ministry.

CREATIVE CRAFT WORKSHOP'
"

lor-.

, ~;~.=i:i"ffwaLrnni

of the Cnlative C&lt;aft
-.tlop on cartooning
and~ Doocllng. 8 p.m.
Sponaorod by Cologo B.

..... " - · Center, w11 give a -

IIC FILII•
Oomont Main Loonge, 9 p.m. Free
to IRC '-Yero; $ .50 l o r - ..
Goddonrnlt, hen! comoa 'George C. 5&lt;:otl as
that two-floled. no-ohlt; ccmmandor of WOOd
I . "'*-&gt;g c:on1nlat to ""Grand lluslon""
being-~ oloo.

THURSDAY- 16
PEDIATRICS RESEARCH SEMINAR II
_ , eon.lotoo ol Roglonot ..
llo&lt;wd Room, Chia'en's Hoepital.

;_rd-

.., t-.
12noon.

·

SP.OTUGKT CONCERT'
Faotumg var1ooS solo and ons8mb1e groups.
- - . -......_ 12 noon. Sponoore&lt;f by
_UUAB Cult\nland Pertorming Arts committee .

.......

r ·

ANATOIItCAI. 8CENCES OISnNQUISHED
SEMINAR SERIES.
In Eloc1rorny011rophy,
Or. Car1 Gens. Division of Anatomical ' Sciences.
Un~ of Michigan. 303 Shennan. 3 p.m.

w-......., -

PSST: PftOCIRAIIt FOR STUOENT
SUCCESS TRAINWO
Slnlggtlng Wltll - . Leoder: Tony Nigro,
youth coonsetor with Erie County Cotchmen District rv. 232 Squn. 4-6 p"m.
PHARMACEUTICS SEMINAR II
Theophylline tn UMr DiMIM, Or. Antoinette
Mangione. poatdoctonll IaGow. C508 ~·- 4
_ p.m. Refrelt!mentsat 3 :50.

Sc-.

2
636- 38-4LOCKWOOOSTOIWIIEIIATEIIIAL
1

78

&amp;11-In

Squn. Cal1136-29191or____
clwgo.

l.l&gt;rwy,--- ... .,......and
1..-wood(-)utnryon
~. . . . . . . . . . _ _ _ ""old"

IRCFILII'

Richmond •• 2nd Floor Loonge. 8 and
10 p.m. Froo to IIIRC loapojoora; $ .50 lor.,._,._
Otd'"Btood-~- ,_.., _

NOTICES

IIUICULM~
DANCE-~

Cin:le K and lie Ccmnu1lly Adlon Corpo w11
=--·~~--,
the ol Apt 14-18, f\ftllng 30 ahfghl

holnhl--end.

r

.-.-.-ln~&lt;U-­

CAREER4UtDANCECorna and educalo yo&lt;.rMf about the YW18ty of
~ opportunltiea and doYetopmentll offer1nga '

a n d _ , . l n t h e f - . g -:
Monday. March 13, Fino Arlo, 330 Squn, 34:30p.m.
_
Tuesday. March 14, ~-. 337
Squn, 3-4:30 p.m.
Tuesday. March 14. Soclof Wartond ~
lng, 330 SquO-e, 3-4:30 p.m.
~. M..-ch 1 6 , - - 3 3 7 &amp;P'e.
3-4:30p.m.
~- -.:11 16, Commun.._o ond

u~~·=.!;"',;.,..the

ponrpective of facaJity. _ , . a n d -· ... open

to .. - Sponoore&lt;f
and car.... Guidance.

by~ Ptacement

Nogal and Konon COr1or ol CAC and Cin:1e
K 111 the CAC Olfice, 344 Squn, or col 831 •

5552. -

... -

--..-

CO&lt;JI)Iea. anyone - I n hofplng.

OAROFFICE-

...!::2::.,t=.:::~~-~

"9
~ and T~Modoys onty are in Million. The office QPIInl 8t noon on
Tuoodaya and 'T'tu'adaya, and _ _ _ . t1wou1;1
Fr1doy K dooeo at 4 :30p.m.

PUIUC ACCEBB TO U.C.S. 1-.&amp;.11
ol the lor pubic during the doy • • -*'cia. u.e.s.
ha just .-.tty lifted the .-tctiana on the ..e
ol the &amp;ne-u.!ng - i n 49. 4250
Ridge Lea. to aWl onty · during the doy and Ia

C4JMOUC LENTEN SERVICES (llaln _ ,
Dally ..._ Noon and 5 p.m. ot the Center, 15 JJnlvereHy Avenue.

how
mol&lt;ing
-on a tnt for
- tnt
by ..,.,.
bolh
staff tn:t
the pubic,
come,
beaia, ~from 9 a.m.-11 :45 p .m .. and
You are iWtted to spend one hou' of quiet · . weekendl from 9 a.m.-4:30p.m.
pmyer and sharing each Saturday Evening ol
SENATEOFFICEHOIMS
Ulrlt from 1D-H p.m. at the
~
folowedby 11 p.m. Mass.
The Slotf/ 27
FacUty
- 31 .
. wil be cloaed from tlwolql FORBGN ST1JDEHTS R~ HOME
VOLUNTEER
AT
C111S1S
SB1V1CES
The Institute gf International Education announces the 22nd year o1 ''Surnr.- Croesroods""
You"'"'
probtama 1n tMng by
training ae a phone criels . , . . __ 2.__+
to be held Jt.ne 4 tlwolql 1
1978. The
day CrialsSeMceo ~-In-·
"""""" Is intended to offer 8 ,..,-,.,.y exper1ance
to
th'oogh ~ - wort&lt;ahops,
of ,.and
_ peraona
and aaxuof
·
depreseed
withlife .
. -...
. RogioAor
etc. Two klcations we offered: Co6orado Springs,
for tn1in1c1Q prognma now!
Cal
838-5980 l o r -

can-

you--

hotp--

o.

:~3';;!'2~;.-ts ~Scholars,

402

~-

FREEDOM OF INFORMATION LAW
A new Freedom of Information Law coverr.g the
UWersity at Buffalo and other _.,;as of the State
of New York has been in effect since January 1 ,
1978. The revised State taw indUdes a new
definition _of " recordS." tt also declares that aa
records are accessit:M except for records or portions of recon:ts whk:h tal within a number of
categories of exemptions- or .-e covered lWldef
otherlaws.
•
Copies of the ,_-law may be obtained from
UnlvereHy Publications -

- 136 Crofts Hal,

- -- Fr-.. oflnlormation-- maybe submitted to the Ulliv&lt;Qty'a Records Access
Officer, W. Engelhard!, ot the aame location . Records may be Inspected either ot 136
Crofts or at the tocation at whiCh they ere kept.
When peraona . . denied IICC088 to " ' - " '
lk"MiraltV docunonts, they wit be lnfcnnod oi8UC11
decisions in wrtting by the Records OIIIOer.
~ ol F r - . of
may
b e - wttl*l.30 cloys by writing or~
WoHer J . Aelihan,
tJnMorai1y c:cx.wl&amp;Oiand vice
chaneellor for legalatfaino, s- Unlveralty of New
Vorl&lt;, 99 WashlngJon Avo., Albfo&gt;y, Vorl&lt;
12246.

lnlormotion--

s ..

CooiW_(W....,.,, 1963). 1460iefendorf.
1 p.m.
SponiOAid by Black

tD CARD CHANOE
10 Clnlo-There will be no wollclo- of
current Ill Cen:ls, A &amp; A , _ aays. The new,
-

tD Card ... b e - in 161 - ·
starting ~ 20, according to the folowing
~=
3/20, Monday, 12

noon-e.,...__ DUE.-·

3 121, T~. 12noon-8p.m.. 0UE.Jlnors'
3 122, WedMsdey, 12 noon-8 p.m., OUE,
Sophomores'

3 123, lhlnday, 12 noon-8 p.m. OUE. Fresh·

moo•

3124, Friday, 12 noon-5 p.m., AI 81.-.ts.
'Note: MFC, Gradc*e and Pl'ofessionel Slu· •
dents 'may IIOCIR 10 Cen:ls on any doy and
ot any during the of -.:11 20,
the 10 center Is open.

Crisis-·

- and 8 training~ -

EXHIBITS

w-

GALLERY21t

.

~ ond 0mo1ngo.., . Naploroto. SQure Hal. Golery Hcxn: - -·

We&lt;*lesday, Friday 11 a.m.-5p.m.
Preeentod by UUAB ViouiiMo Commit1ae anct..
Subl!oordl .
•
ARCHITECTURE~

-..."--ngaby~-­

.lar90-.
edo-.od

~17 .

~.-..and~­

~- Hoyea -

t.obbv.

tlwolql

Sponaorod by School ol ~ and

Environmenta!Oaaign.

JOBS
FACULTY
' - - (~ o l - T-=l*lg)-

Cun1c:Uum
F-80011.

~ &amp; ,__ -.

,_,._,.,,

-u ......... &amp;

~~.F-8010 .

-

(pori--)

1-....ca c-ain·

-~Center.F-8011 .
~CMLIIEIMCE

--,~811·~
Ptont (""'-!. LlnoNo. 344811.
~CMLIIEIMCE

~Equfp~Mn~Opoo.-SCM(--

porw'y untl6 / 21 1781hon ~
Ptont, St., Llno No. 32083.
Plant,
---Line No. 40201
(Bectrlcian)--l'hyotcol
. -

. ...--~~­
(Main,~) .

Line No. 34308.

-~-ICHZ~
nent)--l'l1yoicol Ptont, Main St.. Line No. 34688.

CELLa MOLECUlAR IIIOt.OGY - ·
Or. ltorfy
director. Division of
lliochemiatry, ~ lnatitute, Hoopitallor Sick
Chidren, Toronto. 114 Ho;chltetter. 4 : 15 p.m.

CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT a

INSTRUCTIONAL MEDIA 8E111NAR II

F-.

- t Phllooophloa

-

-ndo

ol

Dr. -Taylor, formei tnaldo!nt of

co--

lawnlnce Cologo. Manor,
~- 5-9 p.m. For more information on
registration, contact Or. A. L Kaioorol the Faculty
-

of EOOcationaiStudies, 836-2464.
This -

PUT US ON YOUR (1ST

hopes to provide the campua with a
....,.1, llatlng of _ , . and Kllwlt._, 1ram lllma and
mMtlnga to acl.,tlllc COlloquia. We'll print both rour notJc. and ,our
publlci!J photos (aa apace permlta) If ,au aupply ua with g1oay prtnta. The1
...tee Ia ftM. To 1-.1 lniCimllltlon, call , _ t:lnder, aa.21121, bJ
M-.or , _ tor Inclusion In the following ThuredeJ'a • - - Or, 111811
ln'-atlon to R-ttw "Caaend8r," 1311 Crolta Hell, Amller8t. We need ,our
~In meldng the "Ceeandr.'• -.plate .. poalble.
Ke,:~onlrto"-ewltha...,........ ""-1 In the aubjecl; •open'
·to the public; ••open to - - . of the u...._._,. un.... .,.,..... .
apecllled, tlcketa lor _ , . c:t1arg1ng admlealon _, be puJCtlaMd at the
The R.,..,., "Calend8r"

~mprWMnalft.

Co"eeet4.

the

WEDNESDAY:-- 15

voithto and,senior citizens

Sponsored by Oe{&gt;ertmenl of Music .

~CENTER--

The'--'*'!~ Cen1or l.l&gt;rwyllllb. 3114 Boldy,
1o oow _,lor study a n c f - o l - .
-.-,.., ~and~-*'llo.li-9
p.m. DoytfrM holn, -.-,.. ewo.q, ~.
.., g L'!l.-5 p .m.; Frldoy, 9 o.m.-3 p.m. " ' -

-w:!,.:;:A;-::..,.:;·;;;;;;-,(1iii9ri78Ai)&gt;.ICOi&lt;;;;;;&amp;,_;;;.;n&amp;.r11"'--•e,---rrli_.;B;;,_;;_;
_tfiil~=- :-: • .;.:-'.:::

=-~.;:_~::ntt!~

FACULTY RECITAL'
Rowe Quartet and Ynr Mlkheahoff, 1)8lo.
Music of Mozllrt. Bartol&lt; and_Shostakovitch. BaKd
Recl1al Hal. 8 p.m. Geileral admlsslon $1 .50;

t67 MFACC, Ellcott. 7:30-10 p.m.
Anyone I n - In ~ - contact Rick
Retrooi ot 692-3627 or May -ton ot

-

ond ' - - dAclod by SoU Eldn .

- - 6 p.m.- -.:11 14 tilting

T"""""""· - . ond " - ' " ·

author whose """"' just
to flm. Mason !Ibn
in ,..
to • movie
the
old mon
and -the n)'1111lhel

-n

-

S1rotlgraplly; -

9p.m.
·
Sponaorod by Depoo1ment of English .

-

DIIAIIA'
-

Cclntrlbu1lon
ID Quotomory
.

Dr. Jon
Dopal1ment of Goological
Sciencea, Brock UnMoraity. Room 18, 4240
Ridge Lea. 3:30p.m. Coffee end dougllnuta ot 3 .

AUI"
IAII1o (Kubrick, 1 960) . 1 50 FIW1&gt;or. 3 and

-

IIIUIIC'
UII.,...._-.~byFr-*Cipole.
WdleCentor, Ooomon Cologo. 8 p.m. Free.

Ia being

by the

Woatam Now Yor1&lt;-lor~and

Curriculum OOvelopmont.

Squire HaU llcket Office.

·

.#

�u

-·.1171

INTERHATIONAL WOIIEH'S DAY 1178'
Tile F . - o l - - . a pley presented
by the Little F1oga Thoalre Coflective of Boston.
North West Buffalo CommunHy Center. 155
Lawn Ave. 8 p.m . Tickets $2 .

Ffl.M'
Anckzaf Wirth, Frele -Unive!oity, Be111n. w~
present hiS experimental video ~ and discuss
"Bertholt Brecht's Fratzer Lehratueck as roleP'aylng: Reconstruction of Brecht's Fretzer materials." 339 Squire . 8 p.m.
.
Co-sponsored by Circle for Vrsuel Semiotics,
Graduate Gennan ~ram . UI B, Undefgraduate
Gennan Club, and HallwaAs Gallery.

.PEDIAliUCIIIESEARCH- I

-·----~·~

- D r. L - · HlmanGenetic:s.
Rooni, Chlchn"a Hoapltol. 12 noon.
FILII'

-..... ... a .....

1p.m.

MUSIC'
(1863). 146 ();of _

.

Tho Engllah Baroque: Muolc and lnfluencao.
1iistrumental Collegium Mus;cum 6lld Oboe Banet.
Nora Posl, direc:tof. Baird Recital Hal. 8 p.m.

_

•

~by--.

Free.

-camcs-.ut

Sponsored by Oapartment of Muslc.

....... csc1uu

tluo&amp; Co~np~u-. Dr.
~ J . llargaron, prof...... of
"'*'**Y. urwo,oll)l ol Mlr)4ond. C5011 c-a.
4 p.m . .........,.,. .. 3 :50p.m.

. ..--·

DANCE'
Footuring Paul Fanta. Uve Band wHh the
"Modem Sound of Steel ... Fillmore Room, SquW-e.
9 p.m. St\Jdents $1 .50; $2forothera.
Sp6nsored by West tr-. Student--

---FORSTUDENT

,._,. .,.

.........

-.,.

UU~~~19TT). Conferanoa, Theatre, ~­

~ payctdogy, who - - t h e UniYerally~CenW. 232~ . 4-6p.m.

Cal636-2919forahowlimes. Admlosloncharge.
Statilng Paul Newmao. Slrolher and
JennWer Wamon, this original mix of oomedy end
drama docl.ments the lives of pleyor.o on a thirdrate. minor leoguo hockoyte.n.
The~ w11 bliateryour..s.

_, O'Mn,

Ph .D.

~by

_.

~

In

clnlcol·-

DMolon o l - 1 Alloir$ S1u-

-.t~Program Olfice.

-~·

-~--

UUAB MIDNIGHT ALM'

A-.,lllyln
- Bllrd. ·4 -p.m. Ree.
· U/8 -lloplwtment.
1 oe

LedfM •nd Gentlemen, The Rolling Stan•
(1 974). Conferanoa Theatre , ~- 12 midnight.
Admission charge.

CELLAIIDLECULAII BIOLOGY - . u t
. . . . . Clalgl ~tuo In lila Con-

,..,. -

lnllaf~av.-.Dr. ~-­

SUNDAY-12

- u w . . l y. 1 1 4 -. 4:15p.m.

-

~-4 -

AMHERST FRIENDS MEETING (Qualcoro)''
157 MFACC, EJUcott. 10 a.m. Everyone is

CHESS CLUB TOUIIiWIENT•
244 ~ - T p.m . The loumament .... be
- b y the U.S. 0 . .
prizes.
Everyane~ .
,....

-

INTBIIIA11011AL WOllEN'S DAY 1171'

------

Open Paoioy - . g ..cl a display of wor1&lt;
by the Art - . . Women's Cenler, Room
'"376, S1**1nQ &amp;-.g 4, Elicott. 7-9 p .m.

-

-PUNCH PARTY'
Rum Punch Pony, wflh a filnl from the Carib- .. Jocket Second " - l..ot.wlge, Elicott.

--

T:30p.m. Ffwe.

Slloniored by the -

Indian -

Assoc-

-&amp;TUDEa~·
Daalglo .................. - . . .... 1871/E'ACC, Elicott. 8 p.m.

lnc:Uio: George
.....
U/8; Dr.
. -. - o
Sodal
· - -.r ·.llo!*1mont
of f
An:hHec- ; fflrok Cenobone. of HUD; ·

-·
---·
--

George Wyalt,
oaecutiYe - ·
,..,.,.-.a
Aufhor1ty.-

-

welcome .

-Cash

ORAL BIOLOGY SEIIINAR41
T - , - . and Scalal of tba Uwlng
Coalocan1h (La._ Cholumnaa~ Wlliam A..
Miler, 8 .D.S., M.S., prof""""' of orai ·.\&gt;IOiogy,
Ul !'· Room 107, 4510Maln Slreet. 12noon.

HORIZONS IN NEUROIIIOLDGY LECTURE I
"-te~allou af lila Superior Canfcol Gonll'
llon T......,.._ to a Carebnol Vantricla, Dr.
Mlton B&lt;ighlrnlol, Natlonol lnalitlJtes of 108Shomwl. 1:30p" m.

-.........,_..,
and ...............

-

LlNOUISTICS LECTURE I

~

lor La._
Cognlllan, An fnlroduelorf
~ af 0\cqulolllon a F- ~

Cornel-.

ol a -

lor lndlwlduals, G;oupa, and

--y-··
mont, U/8. C28. 4230 Ridge loa. 2 p.m.
AI . . welcqrnato at!Ond .

Direct Act-.

1"1 ......... AgaiiW. David Goldmon, grad

- - -Col11311-28181or
( 1 8 7 1 1 ).
Conloronoo-.
8qln.
_
__-

thaoglng
~- _ _ _ _ _ _

.

-.v Hollbum ..

~byoep.1montoj£nglloh .

IICI'IUI"
,.... -

Chac:k- fRC lor 8ld ploca. Ffwe as II IRC .._,....; $ .50 for

c:.ta_ .. _ _ _ ... _ _
_..

....-byCclago8.

. 127c-e. 2:45p.m.

-

" - S . Trivedi,
far CIOMJI
Qooaulng
Nat--.Dr.
l&lt;lohor
!loponnont
of Com·
- - - · DUce ~- Room 41 , 4226
Afdgo Loa. 3 :30 p .m. Coffee In Room 61
LAWAIID~-IHOPI

F.wty---ln-ln
- ·Law-.

poo1lcipoling In the Wotkahop 8l1ould

- G.L

contact

4180'Brlan.

PIIYacJLOGY
........
_,·
FatlgUa, Dr. A. Cla1es
Bryan, llo!*1mont of lleat*afory Pliyalology,
Hoapllllor Sick O*lnon, Toronto. S1 08 Shormon.
4:15p,m. COifaaal4.

UUAB~ILM'

- a n d - (1976).-ccntenrce Theatre,
SquW-e. Cal638-2919 for 500w limes . ~

(;~:-c.:..::=.~~~-=
Actnlasloncharge.

SA'rURDAY -11
UIB~OHTOIIRNAMEHT'

Clar1&lt; (jy!n . 9 a.m. Open to lll U / 8 - I S
and facUty . Entry foe is St. for two .... IS.
S'ld i'M:Iudee lunch. For more Information. contact
MO. Diebold on the third floor of ciiW1&lt; Hall,
or ell Ooacleo Flohor, 839·3049.

- . 5 :30 p.m.,
~-·

T___....F-.,af .... ~by- .

Fargb Caletllria, Elicott,

ChlnMe · v~

Saoond Floor I..OiolgO, -

Noa-Prof'at O'J.

U.S. Po~
PAID
Bu!falo, N.Y .

PennitN 0 . Hl

-""
p.m. In
1-.tng a three-

..,... ... -a....-ofvoriely~,
Clar'lc:era 1 etc. T1c:keta $3.50 for both events,
-·tho~ Hal Tic:M!OIIIca.
SponacndbythaCI*ae--.
FfUI'

~

-·

-t- -

11811 ......... *'lnD ........ K/wn-.1 Ashe

·

-

- 147 - . - .. 7:30p.m. English sub-

Sponaored by !he lndfa

fRCFIUI'

oa..

170 MFACC, Ellloott. 7:30 and
10:30p.m. FreeloliiiACfoopeyers; $1 for others.
Tho

FILMS'
Tho Blua Angel. Tha Pawn Shop (Chapfin) .
1 TO MFACC, Ellicott . 6 p.m. Admission is free
toVtCOmembers; $1 for others.
- Sponsoted by Voco College.

MUSK:'
UIB Percuulon EnMn'lble, Jan Wiliams, di·
rector. Baird Recital HaM. 8 p.m. Free.
Sponsorecl by Department of Music.

UUABFILM'
Slap Shot (1 977). Conferonoa · Squire .
Call838-2919 for500wtimeo. Admloslon charge .
See March 1 1 listing for detais.

MONDAY-13
COMPUT1N(l&amp;ERVICES SHORT COURSE''
Univenllty Computing Services' - · non-aed;t
shor1 COI..I'8e off8rs IWI overview of UCS Computing l..ibla18s. Eleglns Monday. Ma-ch 13, end
continues through March 20. Monday end Wednesday, 3·5 p.m. Room "28, 4248 Ridge Lea.
For more information, cal..kNwl Smith , 831 - 1761 .

-

Clarence Oya, coordlnato&lt;, .......,. allan,
U / B. Red RoOm, FIICtJity C l u b , -- 3 p .m.
Sponsoted by the Canter for f'olicy -

UIB COUNCIL MEET1NQ
5th floor conference room, Cilpen. 3 : 15 p.rf!.

LECTURE'

A-.

Tho Coneaptlon ol -pbyolca In A.-.na
and
Rogllr Amoidoz, of
philosophy at the · Unlverol!y of Pwia.
684 Baldy. 3 :30p.m. Free.
·
Sponsored by The Councl on International
-East

Department
of of
Phllooophy,
The s· Aaloclation
North America.

-

ARCHITECTURE LECTURE'

Cornel - ..- . -·a

=.a~~4==~
4:20p.m .•

INTalNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY 1e78'
Tile Wlnda of tha-I'_... Presented by the
Uttte Flags Theatre Colktctive of Boston. Filmore
Room . Squire. 7:30p.m. rockets $2.

POLICYSTUOtES-·
~-1
In .... Polley Pro-

UUAB MIDNIGHT FfUI'

1-.rtng by ChlnMe the

.......ca . . . .•

T_.,_,._

Coflacllng In Yanazuafa-Qrclotdj, lnaacto,
ButtariN" and - . by Moly and Harold
Cohen. 335 Hayes. 8 p.m. Free. Reception
to follow.
~by - o f School or Ntnlecture
and Envircninental DeSign-

This f i l n l - the Stones' 1972lhrough the u.s.

WATBIIIEIIOUIICOAIIDEIMII~AL

FRIDAY-tO

Sponsored by the Wesl Indian Student Assoc-

~-

~~COU.OCIIM*l

In ,. Wlnahlp: A c - t on llufdo!no of
- I n ~ . ea-.- J . Alen.
'-- · UIB. 708 O'Brian. ~30-5:30 p .m.

p.m. Ffwe.

Cflllga 8 Olllca, 451 - · 8-.allp.IIL

-

at3.

.

- - . - o f l l l a .......... . _ . . ... al. Mlllght-Knoi- Art cw.y. 8 :30

ALL DAY CRAFT DISPLAY"
' Ceqler Lounge, Squire.
C!ftlutlll Show. ~ Room, Squire. 8 p.m.
Free.
_
latk&gt;n.

.,__-.,_and

~byOificeofCUbniAIIon .

CACFILM •
Enforcer. 170 MFACC, Bicott. 8 and 10 p.m.
Tickets $1 .
Clint Eastwood, super hero.

SLIDE LECTURE'

S o c - , , _ Ted Mila, Soclology Depart·

c:-, ..........

~sotedbyCollege8 .

IRCFfLM•
The Deep. 150 Farber. 7;30 and 10 p .m. Free.
to au lAC feepeyers: $1 tor others.

SOCIAL
~UfUM'.
a,_PSYCHOLOGY
,._ _ and.,._
Chango:..,._
-

_ , 1 .5 0 ! - 1 1 .

Bulding 5, ElicotL4:30 p.m.

=t=~~t:" ~-

Buffolo

Booft . 8p.m.--S2 ; ~ /

- - Ccn*Y-

J)Mce ton~ht Jn th• Cornell ThH'trW "it 8, with the Buffelo Com .ely Wotbhop .

CAC FILII' ..• - •
,
.
,
- 150'Farber. 8Md 10p.m. llcl&lt;els$ 1.

8lyla: Pllologroplllc 8lyta, Conlin
-.on.
335 Hayoa. 5 :30p.m. Free.

~by t h e - of Atchltac11ftEnWonmontal Doolgn .

FILM'

~ (Ford, 1939). 148

7p.m.

liM.t..-t.

~byContor lor Media Study.

w.stem daek:.

•

UIIAB MONDAY NIGHT FILMS'
Tho eonMctlon (1881), 7 p.m.
A of lmproYfaational clnerna In -which
eigh )unklos walt for a fix In a Greenwich
~loft.

.

.

Sunday, Bloody Sunday (1 97 1). 8 :55p.m.
Stan&gt; Peter Anch. Glenda Jacluoon , and Murray
14ead. An unconventional loVe story. FlOCh and
•' ;S..•C.iandar.'-11 ,col.1

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1388580">
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            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1388566">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
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                    <text>I

STATE UNIVERSITY ·A1' BI:JFFALO
VOL 9 NO. 21 MARCH 2, 1978

Unions
NYEA has to
stay off campus,
State&amp;.. UUP say

The friendly women who may ~
been in your office this week, Mklng for
your signature on a CIWd sUIIIIOrttna .the
NEAINYEA challenge to UUP -there
In violatiOI) of .State policy.
· R. Ol'- Gibson, president -of ·the
Buffalo Center Cliapter of United .
Unlveralt~ Profeaalons (the ~ty

~-=~0~ "::11:1~'f.::l'lt ...

that woman or any of her cOhorts showa
upagaln.
•
And Jerofne B. Komisar, SI!INY vice
chancellor for faculty ..cl staff
Rl!atlons, concurs.
Not- '

•

pr:l;.,;t~a~~:::l";i:.:!~t::.J~

Black ste.r eotypes
~

'Blacks in Film' course attempts to explore
how the 'Toms.: · 'Mammies' and worse .
reflected a deeply-embedded cultural b_ias

- By ""'c:e BUC
.- h - k l
•

n

-~-Staff

.

•...,.._
"DOn~ beat me, Mlz Scarlett."
• "Feels, do\&lt;ourduty."
"Laawdy,lawdy, lawdyl "
•
Burlng what might be considered the

;;\'~~0~~ o~1 = ~rru::'J~

'

.:

~ relegated

to articulating such one
liners; words which hardly deplc1 an
· lntellecfual ~or a character worth
· bl=

~::J:::In~ias,
~an,,~~~~~~
=~n..:;:..~.:~ot~l=

!

experience.
• "Blacks In Film,~ a coursa curnently
taught by Jernes Pappas through Black
Stuillee. attempts to explore how
-et811101YJ)lc ftlm · lm80!18 cen shape
' man'e ¥lew of hlmeetf: . Developed by
Pappas, the c:ounte discusses and ·
analYzes black Images prevalent Jn film
untif the early 1970s. Much of the
lntormatlon comes from .a book '
authored by Donald Bogelln 1973.
According to Pappas, the sliver
scraan, even before the advent of
"talkies " portrawwl blacks as either
. "Uncle 'roms," 4eoons," " mammies,"
"mulattoes," or "super buck hero"

•
types- The Uncle Toms, who supposedly personified black· attitudes, were
wishy-washy characters who Invariably
suppOrted the prevailing · system.
Somehow, they · were Incapable of
independent tho'lght ·and spent their
11-..reacllng too ers.,
·
Juat allufflln'
_ Then there were the "coons," blacks

=~~ ~~e~~~~u;;;:..g~~t".ro elt~sm~~~

and

bu~nble as If they had none at aiL

~'lt!:~'·~~t~~;.!'ta~~9J~~~~

lawdy!
Ot course, no one can forget obese
- but kindly "Mammy" who was always
·~aklng care of business" as well •as the
kids-of rich whltefolkli, or the mulatto,
the an:hetypal vlc11m of lndeollty crisis,
caught between two worlds and wading
througli the problems and complicalions of both. The 1959 film version of
"Imitation · o( Life" epitomizes the
mulatto stereotype.
Lastly, cornea the super buck hero
who was generally virile, strong and
able to rec11fy all wrongs by use of force
or through his cunning -and objectlon~le shenanigans. _
'

'The Birth ol a Nation'
The portrayal of blacks as stereotypE!s was merely a reflection of the way
In which they were depicted in the art
and literature of the day, said Pappas.
The cultural bias was so deeply
embedded In IndiViduals t!lat the
celebrated American filmmaker D.W.
Griffith did not think his " The Birth of a
Nation" was reels! , even though It
showed blacks as Inept, feet-up ,
watermelon eaters and was used by the
KKK to bolster membership.
After the film was released In 1915,
Pappas said blacks began for the first
lime to articulate their concern about
such "counterproductive" ~ISU!'i images. Once· the NAACP voiced strong
protest over such charac1erlzatlons, the
film was banned In severe! American
cities, Including New York, ,
Although Pappas views such movies
as "Sounder" and "The Learning Tree"

:.;with~~~~:.'~flft?~l.~·~~~;~.~~:f:
the black experience, for the most

part, he feels blacks are still portrayed
In 'stereotyplc roles; only now, the
images have changed to dopers, pimps
and prostitutes. America's raised
• See 'Black Stereotype,' Plue s, cot 1

J(urtz challenges Liaros _
Paul Kurtz, a eelf~polnted defender

1 of the rational faltn egalnat claims of

the paranormal, has challeoged Carol
Ann Lt~s. a DBychlc w:ho teechas the
blind ''to see.r.·to submit "her alleged
powers of ESP psychometry and
precognition to the test."
-Ms. Llaros said she Is Interested , but
she doeSn't o think an experiment
comrolled by Kurtz would be Impartial.
Too, she wants It to be 1181 up "by
IICientlsts, not phlloaophers."
A U/8 agency, the Center tor the
Study of Social PeCUliarities, has
offered Ita "Jiuman Groups Laboratory"
a a neutral environment for the tests,
but nobody's taken them up on the

blind to use ESP, or PSI as It Is nowcalled, as an alternative method of
"sight.''
·
There is no question that PSI exists,
Ms. Llaros said; the guestion Is how are

we~~~"Pe!,~~~ly It ~;~~ui~'vr~Zorporate

~ abllltt into their
·=:~~~~~e ;~Jl':a~~.:'spY~;rs~ at
their "normal"

· l.n a project celled "Blind .Aware._.," she claims to have helped
groups of blind pitople since 1973. She
teache8 them to "see" as they run their
.hands over photographs. They show

....e:c:,x .~ .J~lblng

=::t"i~~

~

The neX1 step Is "mind travel.'' Here,
developments are outgrowths · you give the blind person your address
of a symposium on "Parapsychology · and he or she can tell you- minute
~ .the Occult," held laet week under
details about your home - "where the
epon-.shlp of the Division of Student
furniture Is placed and so on.''
Aflalr8 with som!! help from the Center
"I have seen It work for 13 years and
.for P8cutiarltles.
have seen others do It," Llaros said. "I
just don't believe It works, I know · it
Alllmate melhod of .siGht
does.'' Those who "want to be
Kurtz, a professor of philosophy
convinced," she Invited to "come down
here, editor of The Humanlst·magazlne,
IP the Blind Association and see what
..c1 co-&lt;:halrman of the International
weare doing.''
Committee lor the Sdlllntlflc Investigation of Claims of "tle Paranormal,
Hla
not hera
challenged Lleros after she had given a
· Kurtz prefers that she come to his
preeentatlon on how she hes led the

pt-.

place. His committee on Investigating
paranormal claims, foundl!d at U I B In
1976, Is made up of 60-70 skeptics,

~~~~so~~\~ ':,~d ~=~lil~~in~;,lu~l-~.

Skinner; and Carl Sagan. According to
T-ime magazine, "what the committee
members want most is to see claims of
paranormal phenomena subJected' to
the same standards of proof-that would
be required for any other scientific
discovery."
Kurtz says "the public has uncritically heard many claims that can't be
supported by any evldl!nce. These
claims Intensify weekly. We are now
estalltishtng a laboratory to conduct
experiments on panonormal phenomena.'' A well-known psychic Is alnsady
taking part, he contlnuad. "We Invited
Ms. Llaros to join us. ABC Is doing a
documentary on our committee and will
be fllmlnp parts of the experiment.~
The Center tor P8cullarlttea .

~~~ w.:c~ll~~.::: .J::,i~~·~ler.::l

Its fecllltles for the Llaros - Kurtz
confrontation is a gro"p of people
consisting of faculty, graduate students

~~t~~d;!r~:~u,~~~a~~~~o~~J: s~~~
•See 'Kurtz &amp; Uaros,' Plte 2, col.

~

campuses, Komlsai aatd that "prior to
May 1, employees of the New York
Educators Aaaoclatlon (NYEAI are not
entitled to be preset)! on University
premises for organlzailonal purpoees.
Should representatl- of NYEA
· attempt to _enjl898 In such activities
during· the ~&lt;?&lt;'_prior to May 1," he
Instructed, they should be Immediately Informed that they are violating
Office of Employee Aetatlons (OER)
guidelines , and asked to cease
organizational ac11'!1tles on Unlwralty
premises.''
Dr. Ronald H. Stein, assistant to the
president, Indicates he has been
designated as '1he person on our
campus to serve as a focal point for the
dlspe,saJ- of Information and · thehandling of questions and complaints
relating to organizational activities." As
UUP's Gibson put It, Stein will call
Security.
-..
Vice Chancellor Komisar explained

~;;;;!~ T=~ La:Jt~ld.:lc':

challenging

·employee

: '
DQ1811izatlon

mayc=~l:'~~~~~ c:,",=.:~CC::

ru'/iy petition the 'Public Employment
Relations -Board (PERB) to hold a
representational elecflon.
Ctuoltenga period begtna August 1
. "The challenge period In the case of
. the State Unl-slty C)f N- York ..cl its
bargaining unit ot- Jlrolasslonal ·staff
employees begins August ~ and
extends to the end of that month."
Because the challenge period and the
regulations governing the conduct of
bargaining unit elections 'are controlled
by Taylor Law provisions and the
regulatlons of PER8, Komisar aald,
"pre-petition organizational drt- are

·

·-·u-.·-2,c:a~. c

Upheld
U/B's denial of
crccess to report
backed by Relihan
-A State University vice chancellor has
upheld U I B's denial of access to an
Internal report which was requested by
a Buffalo Courier-Express education
~ro'~O:u~~~:'w~he State's F~m of
The reporter, Jo-Ann Armso, flied the
appeal after She was denied access
early last month to a Mathematical
Sciences Revi- Committee report. The
document was prepared by a group ot
outside , consultants after a brief
.
campus visit last fell.
In ..denying the ·appeal; . Walter J.
Rellhan, Jr. , SUNY's vice chancellor for
Legal . Affairs, reaffirmed the Ul8
administration's contention. that the
Freedom of Information Law gives them
the discretion to refuse requests for
such "Internal agency documents" as
academic program revl-s .
UIB has had a long.standlng policy
of not releasing the contents of
academic reviews to the public,
although they are made available to
faculty members of departments being
evaluated.
President Robert L. Ketter told the .
Faculty Sanate last week that this •
policy would be continued.

�Man:lt2,1111

•Kurtz &amp; Llaros

•Unions

etr- - !. col. 3)

(lrom po~o1, col . 4)

110rta . - e l l on unusual and unique
lopiea, accon:ti~&gt;Q to aract student David
~- "We ant lnteteated In subjects

the subject of policies established by
OER."
Under OER's "Guidelines l or Organizational Activities. and Campaigns"
Issued In 1975, a 90-&lt;lay campaign
period l or organizational activities Is
prescribed. That begins on May 1,
Komisar Indicated .
Recently, ·he reported, " the NYEA
requested of OER that the 90-&lt;lay rule
be Interpreted to permit access during
the perfod In advance of May 1. OER
has denied this request."
· Donald Woltett, director of OER, In a·
letter eddressed to John N. Doman,
director of communications lor NYEA,
dated February 22, 1978, reaffirmed the
May 1 starting date: "It Ia on this date
that parsons who are not members of
the barg'atntng unit ant permitted
access to bargaining unit members lor
the purpo89 ol sollcttfng memberships,
distributing literature, obtaining signatures on authorization cards, and other
organizational activities In~tng tots,

::::'Soctat~.=!'~~r::II:::W~!~
' - hawlt.en oonsidered trivial .
"It would be lnteteatlng to see how
people from both perspectives can
:orne t = and agrea on how to

~o-=:rec;:::&gt;~reo::~~~~:i
~

that reject the scientific
pilndlgm," he oonllnued. "Our oon-

. . 1eea directed to the truths of
lhe -a-t. but more to understandIng wliy Mil liOw people participale In
~ogy. Parapsychology has
~tons regardless of Ita validity.
tt'elllce religion. Whether we believe In
God or not, no one can deny It has real

001

~tch:-;arretl of SociOlogy w as

rnocleMlor of the symposium. Other
penellata were Or. Marvjn Zimmerman

01 PhlloeoPhy and Dr. Clarence Dye of ·

0

. . . at~~e~at

Zimmerman l'll8d .an article of his
Thinking," relating
to traditional religious

or vehicles, Impair the sale and efltctent
conduct of the oparstton, or Interfere
with work dulles or work performance,"

"SubfectMI

~ogy

.

~~:.arcP.u::n: f~f:O:S
~ the exletence of God . He

spoke •

"a Humanlet, a believer ln' lhe

eclentlflc method, and an atheist."

A huge .mount of fraud Ia going on In
~ogy . Zimmerman aald. Take
Uri Gliller arid the prominent paraIIQdlologlat whoae ~ asalstini-IOuncl to~en .
In fraud

for= ~h the literature. There
. . holell In the methodology so I~

3 '"'/8 grou s plan
concert at St. Joseph's

Threa UIB musical groups will
pre89nt a Lenten concert at St. Joseph's
Roman Catholic Church , Immediately
8111 ESP atata h a a - - replicated
adjacent to the Main Street Campus,
_..... of the pel'llp8yCholog com- ~neaday, March 1'tJ,at 8 p.m.
munity, he ch8rged.
"''NMM need Ia evidence. •

C:.~":'n.S:~~'!Y~:':"~va

and no one can give us a straight ·
answer on when there will be one on toe
new Amherst Campus ... . It's a
shameful situation l or a -major urban
university ... ."
-

="~ ':.:'!n'r:::!'r.'l~~89 ll

then.;~=o'Z:':nd t~st'f~~~~e
f::J'.',~ ~~en~o~~~':,":,:lnb~t.!!:.~

IIIII RIIIOflln."

Campus Newman Canter.
•
It will mark the third con secutive year
that the University Chorus has
presented a program for Lent at St.
Joaeph'a
"
.J ·

Beasley, pastor of St. Joseph's, and
the Newman Canter's Rev. John
Chandler for the Invitations to perform
at the Church.
Father Cfla'ndler. said these· cob para-

In
Simona recalls. " It was the-day of ~the
early March tee etorm, but the church
waa overflowing with people."
Last year, there was a concert with
the University Phttharmonla.
Simona likes the Involvement with St,
Jo89Ph'a and the Newman Canter l or ·
two reasons. The church provides a
magnificent 89ttlng_ lor concerts,
something which Is lacking on campus.
And the concerts help make the St.
Joeeph'a congregation aware of a s ide
of UI B students they may not be
familiar with. That congregation Is
mede up largely of neighbors of the
University, many of whom, luatlftabty or
not, used to be frightened s 111ply by the'
" Idea of students." Many of .them .•._.

the attention of t he wider Catholic
university community.
"This Is a tremendous opportunity .lor
us to be responsive to University
mustdal groDj)s"lnd l or these groups to
gain an Insight Into the liturgical role of
musical classics which have -been part ·
of · the ·Catholic tradition over the
centuries."
He noted that more t han 1,000 people
have come to St. Joseph's l or each of
the previous two programs and that thi s
year, " the concert should be evan more
of a success ."
Admi ssion Is free .

""
....._..
o::;;~,.m:!,~ J'c:'.mo~~
~ - that man Ia a rational
animal Ia more aaaumptlon than fact ,"
fla - t e d . Traditional .-etlglon Ia
,.ling, he aatd, "becau89lt has become

-mttonat."

With the · Aga of Enlightenment ,
began to throw miracles

~

chanta and beautiful language out ol
their religion, Dye aaJd.. Aa a result,
~no longer deal a with the
IC, that Ia, the extraratlonal

.-.raotpeople.
Moden\ eclence Ia lllso falling to
the needs of people In this
eoclely In Dye's view. People ant
becanilng euaplcloue of It beceu89
"'onnldn\ee Ita CUI'll811111 worse than the
maa.dlea. ~ The atomiC bomb Ia II!'
-.nple. Modem ICience Ia becoming
IIIYiholloellc, he feels. "The tabe ant not
11M Mil the t.ooratory models ant not

~• the lathn of reltaton

~ neecll

to

meei

and lila failure of
aclanoa to meal rational naeda, people
. . turning to the oocutt, para-

~~-=-"~~
___,_ '
About

Dlpaln~-ch'lolol&lt;ogoay
·y, rhe Ia

but hlghlf~tc8J

"open

..Ther. ·Ia a wealth

:!.-::r'C:.'t knOw-:~ ::."?!li

Cllllol halln't dllvalopad techntquea to

...~i.ood

IIIII.., ~. • he aalcl. "Wa can't' put
It In a ~lc aquatlon and find out
tlhy It le good or..,, yet -can't deny
IIIIi tlwni Ia ~ul poetry."
Tile IIYIIID08Ium organized by
• Mllcncl 8llika IIIII RoweM Adams of
1111*111 Affln.

.

~·::r:~ ~.':;:=g~l ':"he ~~~ft~
11
~~~le:'nhr~~v:~:'n!~~~~~r o'f ~~~~

Sludent Aftalis.
.

'

Thanks for the Invitation

gr:;!';~si.;"h~~ut~~!.ag~o:::~· ~~

'"1;7~ ~~~ ~~nf:a&gt;H~~ _. a:!r:lfg:t~h~~e=
me~~
Department" and wanted to bri ng It to

p
='~o\~~~~~~~:::,.~~~.:'ri~~~~- a communications
Tha'pn18f8111

This year's concert will feature
Maaalno's "Canzon Trtgeatmaterza per
Otto Trombonl,w performed by· ' the
'TrombQfle Choir under the direction of
Rtchanf Myers; a Bach chorale: "Etn
feate .Burg tst un- Gott;" 8!¥)h's
"Brandenburg Concerto No. 4," played
by the University Phllharmonla, James
Kasprowicz, conductor; 8lld a· VIvaldi
• "Gloria," to be perlom!ed liy both the
Chorus and the Phttharmonta.
Threa student vocal soloists will be
featured : Mlnlyn Smith, Lori NOO&lt;IY,
and Cerol Ann Slrmay.
More than 100 etudents wttt be
participating . • The Untvarally Chorus
ha a membership of 93; there are 20
members · of the . Phllharmonta', and
eight In the Trombone Choir. The

~~~"=ud~~~ g~~r.='

ft

community, Director Simona says.
maete twice weetdy lor rehMnlals.
Lut y&amp;We concert at St. Jo89ph's,
with MOm'l'a eotemn Requiem aa the
major work, drew rave reviews from
"*'"-" Trotter In the Buflelo Evanlng
Who noted the difference the

N-•·

.

==:recr~':;y o~s·~~h·:

~'lf:~a1a not lucky enough

001

to P«torm In off-Qlmpua churches and
hafts, It facee what News critic John ,
Dwyer haa dascrlbed aa " the musical
equivalent o,l holding a convention In a
telephone booth."
Dwyer has noted : 1here Is no large
auditorium on the Main Street Campus

•n~n~UO _
revieW

A . University-wide Committee on
Adm issions Communications Is to be

~~~~~~~ ~Ja~~e!,~~~:;l'r~~~u~~

!director of the Office of Admissions and
Recor.ds, President Robert L. Ketter
announced this week.
Ketter said he Is naming the
committee becliuse he has " become

• ::!';,u'~r tn:,~r~~~~~~he ,~r~~~~~
dts::'lbuted from this campus to
prospective students and the general
•
public."
Meeting enrollment goats ts " probably our htghest priority because of the
potent 1at Impact on the quality and
future of our University," Ketter
Indicated·. The purpose of
the
committee Is "to assist the Office of
Admissions and Records and the Office of Public Affairs In developing and
coordlnattn:~ an effective admissions
communications program."
·
Ketter said he wants "edequate multifaceted programs to attract quality
applicants." While the Immediate
concern Is tor materials lor undergraduates, he said he envisions "the
panel extending its scope to graduate
and professional-related admissions
Information."
Ketter also wants the panel to
formulate guidelines to assist academic
end adm tnlatratlva units In developing
and coordtnatl ng their Individual
admissions Information . An Important
Item l or consideration, he said " Is the
general and divisional catalogs which
89rY8 as primary sources of Informati on
for prospective students."

PI.Ytng 'footsie'?
NYEA charges that the State's refusal
to allow a signature drive until May 1 Is
a case of Governor Carey playing
etactton footsie with Albert Shanker and
the powerful New York State United
Teachera with which UUP Ia affiliated.
.The 90-&lt;lay period beginning May 1 Is
the worst time of the year to attempt 'to .
get the attention of faculty and
professional staff, NYEA claims .
Exams, commencements, vacations all
get In the way, the organization
contends.
An NEAINYEA letter to faculty and
staff this week aaks Interested
Individuals to disregard the " Carey
Interpretation" of when the ! ipnature
drive can begin and to "Invite' NYEA
representall yea to their olltces, to
departmental m,..ttngs, etc.
NYEA doesn't Intend to all beck unlit
May 1, that tetter says. The organization
ctal ms It has ~ right to be active now.

Offtheorgan'-e, UUPsays
President Gibson of U I B's UUP
Issued this statement on the matter this
week:
·
"Currently agents of NEAINYEA are
comlhg on campus In violation of
regulations of the Office of Employee
Relations. It Is part of the challenge
effort of that organization . They may
not be on campus until May 1 .... •
"The rules were set up several years
ago In order to avoid unregulated

I~'W:;:t~c•:lU~~~~.~.!~~t of'uL~u!:d
the University 118911.
.
" Any person (academic or · professional). who Is contacted by such a
parson should do the following:
' 'Get the name of the person and the
telephone number Including area code.
" Report Immediately the person's
0

1

~=1'! o8fc. ~~~1i ~h~ ~'Ill
.~ettvate

Security

lor

the

person's

re~~~~~~l:'e~~uC:titce, 636-2013 (on

..

~~X:~ : 688-2912 (off campus), or

Credit-free sets
health course
Credit-f'ree Programs Ia offering an
.eight 89sston C01Jr89 this Mmester
designed to give a baslo understanding
of the health care planning process and
of how more efficient programs and
89rvlces can be achieved. The cour89, which begins March 7, Is
being offered In con/unction witli the
U/8 Medical Schoo , the School of
Management and' the Health Systems
Agency of Western New York.
The program will be geared towards
the health professional , community
leader or concerned citizen and wtft
cover the . following topics: current
status of the health care system and the
myths surrounding • It ; _ Information
sources needed to &lt;feline problem areas
and Identify remedial action; selling
objectives aa part of the planning
procesa; ,planning models; strateg ies
lor Implementation ; techniques for
assessing effectiveness, and
the

po~~:;a~~n~~·:~: ~':;~~s

$48. 11 ts
scheduled to meet on Tuesdays from
7:30p.m. to 9:30p.m.

�llorch2, 1t71

Stu grades
ba-nned in
major courses
Under a new grading policy to be

~err::~~etr~sel~i ~u~ret~:cl~ :'o~

coui'M8 In their major or In courses
prerequisite to ~dmlsslon Into their _
maJor. This revl.lon In SIU grading
poilcy was recommended by the
Faculty Senate almost two years ago.
In announcing Ita- Imminent Implementation, Walter Kunz, acting desn of
the Dl¥1alon of Undergraduate Education, offered theae guidelines on other
aa~a of the re¥1aed SIU pollc~:
_

.:J

fror:,~~~~~! ":,~u~~~an oPn:~:
drop-and-add period , generally .about
thnae weeks into the semester.
A twO.:part request fohn, which will
be proceaaed manually until It Is
computerized, will be made available at
A&amp;R, the DUE Advisement Office, the

Magic
show
\

"lll1111ionary Vlolono - An Ev'!f'lng of
Mime. Magic. end llluolon.'' oponoorad
by the Student. Aoo...,.Uon IMt.
weekend. featured the otage act.
" Abator and Mlochlef.'' coml!riHd of
undergraduate atudlnta Abe S1:eler ttnd
Lealie Yudeloon . lllual9nlot David DaJec
and five aniA:anta etao performed
61elght of hanll feeto. There wao lots of
flreaowell .

lfl~:'!~~n~e0~\'i?~n~~.,:O~~~~~~f~

Office.
Instructors must sign the form and
. retain one part of II es well as keap a
record of the latter grade the student
would have received If SIU had not
been opted for. Students will also keap
ons part of the form.
In a statement to appear on the
request form, students will be advised
that an SIU grade Is given at their own
risk and that It may not be r,osslble later
to change It Into a etter grade.
However, where letter grades cannot
later be obtained on courses needed for
the maJor, students can petition the
respective . deP~~rtments for a policy
wal- which may or may not be
granted.
Enforcement of the new pollqy Is the
responsibility · · of
each
aqademlc
department, Kunz said.
A _grade of "U"·or. unsatisfactory does
not ceunt against a student's grade
polnt average.

HEW can't act.

.o":
. "J.~ing J]ia~ ~A U.S. District Court fudge ln' Silattle

bas ruled that-HEW dfd not have the
authority to approve and enforce
employment ragulatlons based o_n Title
IX of the Education Amendments of
-1972 which bl!ns sex dlscrhlllnatlon In
education programs receiving federal
hinds.
Seattle Unl-slty reported that Judge Morell E. Sharp's ruling prohibits HEW
from further IIMIStlgatlng a sex dlacrlmlnatlon complaint flied In 1975 by,
_members of the . universitY:a nursing
, school faculty, claiming salary lhequltles.
·
·
· •
Thti university sought an Injunction
against any further Investigation by
HEW after an eastern Michigan judge
ruled In April t9n that Title IX

;::;'lu'~~on:,:r~~!'!'Y 1~ st!j'~6',!f,~

Institutions receiving · federal asslstsnoa. T-he Michigan case Involved a
pragnancy leave In 1he Romeo

~~~n::!ld ~t00!;t1o~u1'lf1 otf~

regulations must be read to protect
from sex dlacrlmlnatlon only those
persons for whom the federally asslstlid
programs .,., eatabllahed, and that this·
~ qn~~-t~ ~hool, chJld~n I~

88

In the Seattle case, Judge Sharp held
that HEWs attempts to extsnd Its
ragulatory authority under Title IX to
employment practices were."Invalid and
unauthorized," and that the sanction of
aid termination " Is unresaonable and
unjustified In cases of employment
'discrimination ."

·University will fete
William C. Baird
A black tie .)estlmonlal dinner for
William C. Bafrd will be held In the
Spaulding Dining Room at Ellicott,
T.huraday, March 2, the U I B Foundation has announced.
"Few men In the history of the
University have made the Impact on this
' lnstltutloft that has been made" by
Baird, Daniel A. Roblin, Jr., chairman
oftheevent, says.
Although he has reached mandatory
retirement age after 38 years on the U I B
Council , Baird Is still active in the
affairs of the University and the
Foundation .

as~~~~tedre;,~r~'1f&gt;e

~~::,~?;t~~~:

Wafrd
money for an 0\Jtdoor amphitheatre at
Amherst.

-

Physicists·adapt their -lasers to biology
By &gt;~enturing Into the realm of
biology, two I:IIB physicists hope to
techniques
enrich concepts and

coro:r~n

!0 bo~rr::;;;,a.a::,~ ~~·~~al

research : using a laser beam to ac&amp;tter
off the Pllrtlcles and then measurlna the
fluctuations In light Intensity emlttBa
under various conditions.

_Institutes of'flealth-, Professors John"T.
Ho and Edmund P. Day are using tools

Measuring the size of molecules ;;r
atomic P~~rtlcles using this dynamic

lion of . significance to biological and
medical raaearch .
The U I B physicists are studying the
rOle which phospholipids (phosphatebearing molecules found In all cells)

not In the biological sciences.
Generally, biologists measure mole~ules with the use of an electron
scanning microscope, a slow, difficult
process. which usually destroys tbe

cells.
· To determine that role, they are
measuring changes In size experienced
by P.hospf\ollplds near phase transition.
• Phase transition Is a familiar

fast , Ho said.

0

:;:1~\ w~~l~'~=~·J)~~r:n,~~~~

0

r~:r ~::.n~:rra~eat!:'n"~ ~int':ur~~~

l:."::~~ee"~7.:.'1J'~Y:~~~s:'1~ ~:::~~~~

cal and phyalologlcal contexts," Dr. Ho
said. Phase transition Is the process
an'f substance undergoes when it Is
changing Its state; for example, a liquid
heated to become a ges, or Ice melted
to become liquid.
"A lipid membrane can exist In one of
two states, either solid and rigid or
fluid," Ho exr,lalned . " II exists In either

·necessary
~~~=~r~~t"Ps~~~ts t~:~tu.;~tJ~~
for life.
·

·
lntereallng things hiJ'I*'
'We feel that onteresting things
happen when the substance Is al tile '

~~~~e~r. tf.;'~~0nti~~~ - ~R: th~~a~~lnt~

the system becomes unstable. We think
that this Instability Is lnduclve to the
fusion phenomenon ."
.

ph~~P~~~~~t:f: ca~an9r~~er~~~erfe~~e:'f-

tures, the two physicists are I mplementing a techniQue new to biological

l:2:~~~~fn'~?h;~=. ~oan~;,mbou';

or~~~ar,::,p~ethod

Is accurate ·

aM

happen. The -lclea joln. When -they

~Y::S:.'::ltt:;:'/~~o":X big; ~gee In

Ro'-olthe._ .
With the laaera, the .--chen~ can
measure changes In the Intensity of
light- acattered -off the -lclea aa they
move about In the liquid. , _
changes In acattered -light allow how
fusion Ia affected by changes In
temperatura and the amount of calcium
Introduced.
"Our preliminary reaulta 1n1 -v
lnt8(88tlng," Ho atated ..'We '-found
-v dramatic changes oc:currlng with
changee In temperatUAIS."
Results of the study may ~ soma
benefits In the field of cheinotti~

In their experiment, Ho and Or. Day
use vesicles made of the same
:ncir~~s Bleil ""1~~?on un': most
phospholipid materials found In cells
which they then place In a salt solution.
favorable, rasearc11era can develop
TQ simulate cell fusion by the vesicles, ·
~rt~~~~&lt;;::c!~Vf~cl~~~ ~artous
the researchers Introduce varying
amounts of calcium, which seems to
."Tile study may also aid In screntlsts'
trigger fusion In cells. TemP.Brature.Js
.appreciation of the role calcium plays In
. ·
also ragulated.
ragulatlng many membrane fusion
1
1
processes, such as nerve transition and
enzyme secretion, In cellular and
lion of calcium, remarllable things
subcellular activities," Ho lndlcaled.

:J:

ve~l~~;.&gt;~6°!.~~-a~~:h ~h: t~t~~'6':

_Kennedy t~_give Marxist lecture
-'A;,:~~ ?;~~~ns o~n':Y~~;:..o~me~l~;~
topic of Prof. Elizabeth Kennedy's
contribution to the Marxist Lecture
Series this Friday at 3 p.m . In the Kiva
(101 Baldy Hall) .
Or. Kennedy, a'l associate professor

~fm~~~~~t ~1~s ,ne!~~J~~':1,~~.'-t~:
1

1

a dls98rtation on "The Daunan," a
1

~!~~fes~'!'~\~f~ rn"~.f~r~~~Van ~al~

forest.

Lately she· has done wor1&lt; on the
topic o her lecture. The talk will review
and evaluate the recent scholarly debate
on the origins of women 's oppression
" In an effort to assess the political
implications of these Intellectual
Inquiries."
LEGISLATIVE SUPPORT
In a meeting In Albany late Tueaday, the
entire Western New York laglalatlve
delagatlon voiced support for funds for
U I B construction.

,

�-~rel!2, 1178

Boycott" the Moscow State exctiange, -Ral~t~n- urge$
8t

Ylolations of , ecedemlc freedom and
SUNY
Buffalo and at -oilier SUNY
Institutions not to partlclpale In or
simple human decency tha~ &amp;Yeryone OCIOPimewtt)lthlaptOgl'lll!l.
_
"
but we academics partlculai1y - should
do everything possible to help
Alt-=tled to this letter hi en ~~PilMI to Weatem acJenttats tor help from Dr.
colleagues like Irina BralloYSky. By
Irina . Brallovaky, a SOviet refusenik
engaging In exchange programs with a
sciMtlet ..,..d wile of VIctor BralloYsky,
onlversltX which allows such outrages ..
currently the of the Moscow
-mow of refusenik sclenUsta. for :~chsl~~vl~~r.ri:JIII~g.\'o~~ ~~~~g~;~
your COI1ftlllence and for others who
seem to be condoning II. Experience
will ,._, this laltet but not the attached
1
appeal,. let me summarize the salient
me that our wllllngness to engage In
.,,.
v~
'"
~-.,..
~lnts,J::Icularty as they relate to the
such programs &amp;Yen when the Soviet
-Antllon~':::~
UNY- ?scow State excha~o•; . ·
·Union flaunts Its vlblatlon of values we
Chairman, Computer Science
1. trtna BraiiOYSky was formerly an
hold most dear Ill Wes1ern academe Is
employee of \he Computer Center · at
viewed as weakness by the SoYiets.
Moscow State. When she applied for an
Conversely, I am convlnc!'d that
emigration Yisa In 1972., ~he was
nothing Is so likely to help Soviet
dismissed from her position by Prof. V. . ·refusenik scientists as the refusal of
Dr. Loren a.rttz
VO&amp;Yidln .
' organizations like SUNY to engage In
Proootl, State University of New York
2. She has been Informed.., by tile
such exchanges until universities like
QIIWallhlngtonAvenue
rector of Moscow State, Academician
Moscbw State are willing to abide by
Albany, N-York 1~
R. Chochlov, that she .may not be
minimum standards of academic
O..Dr. e.ttz:
•
grartted permission to leave- for many
freedom ar.J human d&amp;CI'ncy. Certainly
1
0
there Is no question but that the Soviet
m!n:'-,~,0 'Su~'-::ld~t~ ~f = t 1
refusen
iks led by Andrei Sekharov
JanuaiY 5, 1D78, on the S~NY-Moscow· · general SoYiet procedure Qf registering
would applaud a SUNY sus~nslon of
State .\Jm-alty exchenp,e program .every Instance when somebody has
the exchange program .
access to secret Information, no· such

Edllor.
·
I hope you will prtnt the 1lltached
leiW t 118ft)uat sent to SUNY l'ro'foat
Loren 81rttz. Wlth publication of 'this
lettw In the Reporter, I wot!ld like to
leql!88t contact IJol'n thoee faculty end
a*f~~ a1 SUNY at Buffalo Who ·
11QA1!1 wltlllhe sentiments expnl88ed In _
my te\t8r to_Provoet kltz end who
WOUld ttl!ato ueoclale themaet- with.
me tn an eppeat to colleagues at other
~SU,..NY!:f~wnost'~eepertx""!~.• In

~'!'ielh~.fu:~l~h':t/n~s ~o~:~~~~

'·

~:=~ s6~~c:e:g

~~r~;· ait~~u~Ses~\i:n t~!

~~~11~~. ·~!rat'0~u?ho,.,~,o;::~o:!~

, ·any lllllverslty with
· whtcll f t ·ant• Into .such a program
should meal cMaln minimum standania of ~. Aa I shall Indicate

only that she may have overheard
aecretsl
,

minimum elandarda. I wiSh, theralote,
to urge you to work to au~ this
~until~ State UniWW~~Ity
llaelf to be an Institution of

tolerance and no understanding for our
Ideological enemles."

~,.;.1\yta

m.r=lel~ ~w ~:~

=
•fr:'*'

feelnlng

-:"~ sB~Y~~

lrl~ ~~!\',~!;~; !':~rJ'~ ~~~h~!:~~i • ::lrud:~~~':. e~~rle~!S: w.:l'~~:!
8
0
g'r~ ~~a'!~~~~~f~t~ ~~~~ ~a;~~~~ 0 corroborated again and again by the

Groaa Ylolettont of academic ~m
Such actions by any unl•erslty are, I
think you will agree, such gross

lllla'-1-:r:, by wha- means
IMitalil8 to me. urge colleagues here'at

You may ask how I can tMi sure of ttie
assertions In this letter and the
authenticity of the attached documents.
I cannot be certain of every detail.· But

leading organs of the world press,
convinces me not only that the picture I
have drawn for you Is essentially coJTOOt
but als6 that Irina BralloYsky's case Is
0

fart~.:!' o'r ~~~~~ve In helping
ref usenl ~s

Soviet
sometimes hear arguments

to the effect that, even accepting the
truth of cases like tbat of Irina
Brallovsky, It Is better to wntinue

':.ft~~~~CJ~g=s ~ o~e~or~~~g~

becauSe the lot of the refuseniks would
be made worse If such programs were
cancelled . Let me assure you that there
Is not an Iota of evidence to support this
viewpoint and that the strongest
opponents of It are the refuseniks
themselves. As the world famouS"
physical chemist, BenJamin Levlch, has
noted: "Those who adhere to the nonInterference doctrine become a party to
the game, no matter whether they wish
It or not. Non-Interference turns out to
be collaboration _with the political
bureaucrats Jn their confrontation with
scientists."
Argument lor appeasement
Finally, It Is sometimes argued that
In a world threaten!'d · by nuclear
holocaust, we must maintain whatever
contacts we can with the Russians,
even If this means Ignoring the plight of
the refuseniks. I hoJ)!I you understand
this argument as the ..sophistry It Is.
Indeed, It Is nothing more than an
argument for appeasement. Which is
why the Russians are so: ready to
applaud those who make this argument.
Sadly, It has been shown again and
again that .strength and resolution are
the only postures really understood by
the"Sovlets. Resolution ·tn defense of
human rights can only serve to enhance
:ru~~o!lm~ ~:':s!~~d 1~· which our
"Sincerely,
-Anthony Ralston
Chairman, Computer Sclel\ce

Ketter·responds to administrative review report
Dr.JQniiiMR!Wiih.t.~ _;..

polnt-of-vl~w. not very satlstactl'r y..:.
handled within Allade~lc 'Affairs 1111d .. students. A charg~ tc:..agroupwho. wlll
, as I ha'(e stated publicly on a number of
Health Sciences . Vlce ,Presld&lt;!!lt ' Bunn
undertake a systematic and comprehenoccasions. A great deal of discussion
belleYeS that reallocations are necessl ye study of the operational processes
Amherat Cmnpus
and debate ·-occurred •about · whether •· sary and appropriate In Academic
In a number of crltlcal areas within the
. .,.,...._..
reductlbns should be limited to vacant
Affairs, at least until there Is a better
Institution has ' be8n drafted arid
&amp;rlter thl,; academic • , _ . you
lines, regardless .of- where they were
inatch than currenlly_ exists ' between .. discussed With the Vi&amp;·· Presidents .
. ~ .to ine on behalf, of the located, or whether {h'! reductions
reS?urces and responsibilities of ' the ·. Persons who could' form this group, arid
the report of the
should be targetl!d tor·speclf•c,areas. I
&gt;Yanous units·- He~lso believes that1he
-who will have the resources to· draw
~\s Admlnlaltatlile ReVIew Comam sure that this added co.nl uslon to
use of reallocation .•1JI&amp;oes a· heayY n upo,...,xperllse beyond the,Unlve•sl!y, if
mtttee Subeeauently Dr lra• Collen
:i the process.
, · ,.
premium • oo the ·gene!lltlon , and · ·necessary. are bel(lg ldentlf)ed. 1expect
of tfle eommltfee· end or'
·· ·
··
periodic rev.lew, of a set o~ criteria and
to have this grour at work fn the very
Mttoe Mllallilrf, a COmmittee' member:·.- lnfonnatlon llowcan·l;&gt;etmproyed
.• guidelines cond!tloning Its use an9
near future, and. am hppehil.th'a! its
WW8Invtted to mealllfllll the Academic
In both the Senate and the Cabinet,
providing a means
of
holding
efforts.will be of benefit to us all .
, c.titnet 111 dl8cuw the report. Thla was
- some discussion .!lPJU.rred • about
accountable those who finally have to
FlnaJ.l y, 1 want to 'thank !he nieinpers
a frank 8IICI lengthy dlacueelon which
whether the Committee's Slimple was
engage In Its use. I fully support him In
of the Senate Comm'lttee, · and
ueeful 10 4111 who were present .
adequate and whether the "sample's
these beliefs.
especially Dr. Cohen, forlhe manner In
Thereaft• 1 llllked for any Individual
perceptions of the situation could be
You will recall that at the Department·
which they responded to their charge. 1
comment ' on ihe report lila\ the
equated with the facts of the situation . I
Chairmen's meeting this year, I stated
believe the reporl has been helpful and
members of the Cabinet might like 10
fll!lleve the two may not necessarily
that th~ bureaucratic processes of this
productive.
·
stale In writing
The following
correspond; but neither would I want to
University ha~ to be more. respo11.slve to
_SAion~Liy. yoetutrers,
stalementa are baaed upon the
quibble about these points. The .budget
the research~ teaching, and -: publlc
...,, K
CDINI*IIa 1 · receiVed and my own
ll:w'~r~m~1~ :::::v!h:O~nf~'\'6'!;' serYice activit as of fiiCUity , staff, and
President
.,._.lona ·of the dlacusalona In the
• can be lmprOYed.
·
'
~~c Cllblnet and the Facult9
Last year, v1ce President 'Bunn
polnta should tie made
at the outeet. Firat, I believe It Ia
annually In some detail to the Deans
genaralty agreed thai the budget
and Provoeta. He has suggested that It
- process Ia not -r well underatood
mlaht be useful to ex1end this pracflce,
Editor:
represent a significant amount of
~the ~,'!t:&lt;'· Indeed,- by
In Jhe fonn of a day-long workshop, to
While agreeing with Dr. Margolis'
energy. Organic wes1es can be used for
·.
- . f8culty
anini
who moat often
....
......_.men!
Chairmen. I ~
ld eas abo ut conserYat Ion (Reporter,
"*''bera• therneel-.
This
.,_ ,....,...
•
·~·,
both primary source energy and high
grade ferllllzers (ferllllzer production In
1n ttaelf w f l l - t tor- degree of
'-'AI-,IIrbelconcul-r wsholth utlhdatbesugg
ncuesmtbenlon .
Feb. - 16) , 1 must . differ wlt)l his
11
1
1
the 'drYing ~tons of the proceas
prediction of nuclear energy powerthg
the United States consumes a
W111cf1 the COmmittee noted. Additionupon the Chairmen to. be quite open • the future . It will only be one of a
substantial amount of fossil fuels) .
tllr. the Committee choee ta.mvlew the
'llith their faculty members
In
r..·mber of energy sources. Energy
Most of the real of the garbage can be
~ process at a time ·when the
dfacuaalng the process.
demand Is Increasing . According to the
recycled, lowering the fuel needs In the
llnhiilrelty- attempting to cope with
Currently, I meet on-alternate weeks
US Department' of Commerce, the
production of new resources such as
and paper.
·the CI4*IJon of rej)looallon ot
~~ J.:,;...~:'~~~'!.tl~ ~~~':d~r~ern"~~~ ~~~sofl~c;~~= metals
Now I ask you . Isn't that a better Idea
- · This llltempt was, from my
monthly with tile Deena end ProYoatsln
of energy consumption, not an actual
than building nuclear power plan1s?
Academic A"-'ra and Health Sciences. . decrease In consumption. For nuclear
~ -Cherln s, Schwartz
l hopalt
....::;,.,ta!tth•e mealflow lngo 'lneefopecrmalatlollyn, • power IP ever meet this demand we•
wl
of
would-need a great push In the number
'
wlthln the ayatem. As y6u know,
of nuclear .flants being built. Whether
~~''t:":
~~~e:Jon•~
::':Cul';il~.
ever occur Is highly
llohocl - " rhundoy Ill' .... Olvl•ion ol
llltem&amp;lllng to dictate a particular style;
What about other energy tachnolol'ulllk .._., SlafW Uni-.Jty ol New
Editor:
but I Will cMalnly oonllnue to
gtes? Perhaps Dr. Margolis Ia right
On page 1 of your 2/16 Issue you
~-~
about the unleaslblllty of large· scale
.. t• C#offo Hall. Anoloont. Tolo·
spelled buses Incorrectly.
--.,..,_t Bunn ..___ been
wind ener~y ·use, but he has totally
I know because I once wrote to the
VI~---·
,,_
Ignored alf other energy sources. The
heeds of five school districts asklno for
worklngwtth the
and Provosts to
use of nuclear power Is a continuation
the use of their "busses."
a CleW - t of
of our following the road of hard
-Anne Hunt
Sincerely,
prtori!Hehasfee wlthbeenln ~ln~c ·
tachnotogy (by hard technology 1 mean
--h&gt;Oolol
. Grad . siudent
Affaire.
,.._
one which usually Is exploltive of
T. MAII.f7T
-.fully and conac..,.tloualy, and
people and natura resources, highly
Webster's Tltltd New lntemallonal
agn~e with the Senale:Commlttee thalli
techniC!ll and centralized). I'm not
Dictionary (p. 301) gl"" .,.,_. •• a
JOHNA. QOUJffll
Ia Important to bring thla work to
trying to get down on technology. But
~. but ecceptabte plurel. But
fruition end to 11M It- clearly.
maybe we ahoul!l change our tactics.·
SIIICIII alao deftnn 1 "bu.." •• • klas,
understood by the fliculty.
For example. I am often amazed by
"• I1IIIQad lbu-..lled boat formertr,
the way our society deals with Its solid
uaacl lii .herrfng llahery" and 1 "bush '
8_.1--'t
1
Scot), wa can appraclote the
As the.Committee report stales, there
~S:.':. ~o:~~~;~n~ Pte~~;~~~~~~M~~ (chiefly
confualon.
are dlffensnces In the way resources are
Is amazing Is that these waste~
.
-ATM.
Faculty Senate

405 c.pen Hall

.

_

."-ltv Senate
Chal...;.,

~~ot

.......
___

=~~~fl=~~y:.:m,~a;~~Ya,~~

Burning garb
"d b tt
age Sal e er
than bu1"ld1"ng nuclear plants

.

We spelled
it wrong

.. _..-........,..,.__..pub.

...... ...,_
,__

___

---/on

.,.

=:mJ::'::'

=

o.ns

dewtlol'c;

,

'

...

-

�a publication of
The Offiee of Cultural Affairtl
EotMt- Swartz, writer/edll..-

To keep track of
U/B's eulturill
·events through
AprilS, save
this 17U1fPUitl

HAt First You
Don't ••.
This is the second "try, try again" for the

om.e of Cultural Affain whose present&amp;·

tion ·of the Buffalo Comedy Workshop's
"The Attaclt of the Leisure Suits" wss a
casualty of the storms of January 20 (the
original date for the group's appearance}
and Januiry 26 (the rescheduled·beeause,
of-blizzard date}. Fans will be glad to bear
that the il!trepid band will appear on
Thursday, Mm:b 9, same place, same hour,
aame tickets. "Same tickets" means tliat so
many optimiatic Buffalo Comedy Workshop
aficionados held onto their tickets from last
time(s}, that the Office of Cultural Affain is
honoring them for the March performance.
We suggest, therefore, that if you plan to
attend, you pick up what's left at Squire
Box Office as soon as poss1ble.
And pray for sun.

The Collectors
We vime&lt;lMary and Harold (Dean of the
School of Arehitecture and Environmental
Design} Cohen recently for a sneak preview
of the slide/talk about their November
expedition to the Venezuelan jungles,
wbieb they'll give on Friday, March 10 at 8
PM in Hayes H~ . A sereen and projector
were set up in their study, a oozy room that
bouaes an imposing cabinet, given to them
by Washington's Smithsonian" ~tution
for their eoUeetion of thousands of
specimens of motbs, butterflies and beetles.
The Cohens are clearly . not merely closet
entomologist.s; • the Smithsonian bas a
"Harold and Mary Coben CoUeetion" of
m.eeta, motha and beetlea, and Mary Cohen
;, io 'earNtltij' ~~ t.osethet- with
Herbert CbUnley, curator of invertebrate
molos7 at the Buffalo Muoeum of Sc:ienee,
an exhibit for next September.
epithet, "Feb!" He skips quickly to 1967,
To fiDCi out bow ~ wben and why these
when, inviteil to give ._talk in Brazil, be
two extzom.dinarily buoy _ . with ao
decided
to uae the opportunity to do some
many ~ and penoaa1 commit·
oerious eoUeeting.
hagan tbla riprous and time·
·
Mary's
first "real trip" was Eeuador,
C1011111111iag avocatloo - the , parouit of
m.eeta (and· ore!Dda} in the juDgle - is 1971. Sbe was friglltened: scorpions in the
dlfliealt. The CobeDa are modest and not underwear, snakes winding thrOugh the
denoe vineS, the always present danger of
gjven to talking antobiognphkally. When
inseet biteJ and disease. Her explanation
did the eolleetiDg paaaioa begin? Aa • kid in
for sticking it out: "I alway• hlte to try
llrooklyD. B...ald reeallo, be brougbt home
jan of gruo~. praying mantioes and · everything once." Now the self-described
"Kokomo
Killer" has jungle-trekked with
beetlea - which bia mother promptly
her husband in Puerto Rico, Mexico,
threw out, muttering that Brooklyn

Guatemala. Costa Rica. Brazil, Peru.

~10-l{"nm,ea&amp;c:ll,nm_, ..........

Ecuador, Venezuela and the Amherst
Campus (it happens that the latter offers
good bunting grounda, unlike the Main
Street braneh, which doesn't have OJJOUgh
wildllowers to attract the bugs}.

waleb, - . · uMuy......._l&amp;l,pilllliag and daoolfylur uti!' (lt'a tGO loot to
bUilt), further eal&lt;biDc ~ "' ........
m-. The ........ lo ....., .. potato, ri&lt;e, .....,, beano. fruit. A fow atller
iteml ol ~ are ......... lloe
oettiDg the alarm tar 2 AM to ea&amp;c:ll a
partic:alar kind ol · math, (It rilillc bolore
dawn to fiDCi what m.eeta are loft ~ tloe
1ut Dlsbt'a fliPta -and get to U... bolore
the birdo do. (ODe balr·niliDg ....... tluit
the Cohen&amp; dellcribed quite -...J.~actq
was their mugle with bat&amp;, who kept
swooping down to srab the !reobly eaagbt
motbs out of their banda.}Harold invariably
gets bit with dietary upsets,~ humdrum
affairs eompared to his parasitic infeetions,
which American doet.ors cherish as
esoteri&lt;:a. "They can't wait for Harold t.O get
back," Mary ..~.
.
After .an evening of good conversation
with the infeetioualy !'Dthusiaatic Cobeas,
and seeing their beautilul slides of the
Venexuelan trip - views of the Andea
taken !roin the plane, shots of Angel Falla
(the highest in the world}, wonderful
orchids, surreal arrays of beetles, motiis
and butterflies, "family album" shots,
including one of the dean wielding bia
macllete- we st.ilJ didn't have the anawers
to "wben7" and "bow?" but pooaibly bad
""'\'eto"wby?"
·•

AaAvenaeDay
An average day in the juDgle goea
something like this. Breaklasl at 6 AM,
specimen-pinning for the next S boun until
the m.eeta start Qying at 10 AM. eoUeeting

Sarvivinc
Mary Cohen linda that surviving in the
jungle touches off important reeuminations of their survival in the "real world."
The jungle can be a respite too: "The
behavior of animals and the varieties of
terrain ·ean ,be ehaUenging, but they are
predletable, - unlike the ehallengea of
people's behavior," sbe says. Harold Cohen,
as a behavioral psychologist, enjoys
For complete details on ticket prices, times,
et.e. of events, see magnet dlreetory.
The Katharine CorneD Theatre, site of
many of the events listed in magnet, is
located in the Joseph . Ellieott Complex,
Amherst Campus.

_

-

�one might surmise before seeing it, a
depressing play. It transeendo depression,
as great tragie pia1s do, and has that aame
mixture of deapair and humor. Lena is the
niore sympathetic figure of the two; she is
expressive, compassionate, amusing and
unassumingly beroie. Boeaman brutaliJ:es
her, but it is a brutality borne of fear and
frustration. The eatalyst fOt t.lie aetion in
the play is an old Kaffir tribesman, whose
osteuaibl)' mioor role is brilliaDtl)' uaed by
the playwright to eteb the portraits of
Boeaman and Lena, and to show their
relationship to eaeb other and to their
world. "Boesman and Lena" is an eloquent
and l)'rieal tragedy that makea us eare very
deeply about ita central charaetera.
On Marc:h 14, the Bulr.lo premiere of the
at the Center for Theatre
P!eifer Theatre. The production
stars veteran aetor and clireetor (and
Theatre Department profeaaor), Edward
Smith, and Lorna Hill, aetreas, diredDr,
eo-founder of The Women's Theatre
Colleet.ive, and assistant to the ehairman of
the Theaire Depattment. The latter is Saul
• Elkin, and be. will direct the play. (This is_
Smith's and Elkin's _ , d eol1aboratioD on
a play by. Athol Fugard: ·last year they
performed his tivo-eharactA!r "The Blooil
Koot.") George Freeman playa the part of
the old Kaffir. Performances are Marc:h 14
through 26 (except for Marc:h 2Q).

showings on Wednesday, Marc:h 8, of films
by and about women: "The Double Day," a
doeumentary on working women in Latin
America; "Emerging Woman," an awardwioning documentary of the history of
women in the United States, told through
the use of old engravings, photographs and
newsreels; "Spikes to Spindles, • a film that
: destroys the myth of docile Chinatown" in
its look at immigrant Cbinet10 women in
New York; "Chris and Bernie," about two
divorced women who set up a collective
household; and "Flasbettes," a film about a
group of blaclt girls from Brooklyn who
organize their own tracl&lt; team.
The women who made these films,
Christine Cboy, Helena Solberg Ladd, and
Deborah Shaefer, will give a panel
c!iseuasion in Squire Hall that evenipg, 7:30
to 10, and be gueats at the reeeption to
follow.
Thursday, Marth 9, is an open poetry
reading for women at ·the Amherst
Women's center (Eilieott Complex); women
are invited to eome and share their poetry.
The Little Flags Theater Colleetive of
Boston will preoent two playa . on the
weekend: "The Furies of Mother Jonee" on
Saturday - a portrayal of the lives of
mioing people in AppaJaehi&amp;. and "Windo of
the People" on Sundoy. The latter is
deaeribed as "a musieal cantata of people's
strugglea throughout the world." Lucy
Campbell of Women's Stucliea bas full
information andean be~ at$31-3405.

Yvar Mikbasheff is a member of the
Musie Department's pisno faeulty, · and is
eVident))' ineJI!.austible, both as a

performer and as a concert programmer.

Tomorrow at 8 PM !n 1laird Hall, be joins
with eellist Frances-Marie Uitti in a recital
of new muaie: works by Earle Brown,
Morton · Feldman, William Henerinan,
lannis Xenakis, Henri Pousseur, MarioDavidovsky and John Cage. On Marc:h 8,
agaio in Baird, Mikhasbofr will produce, as
well as perform in • An Evening of Music&amp;

Theater: Two premieres of mUsical events,
eombining Theater, Drama and Dance." On
Wednesday, Marc:h 15, Mikhasbolf is guest
piani.at with the Rowe String Quartet in
Shostakovieh's Quifttet:-and 3 nights later,
the C&lt;&gt;ntemporary Chamber Ensemble,
directed by Mr. Mikhasholf, willoffermusie
of the twenties. It's a safe guess that the
title of that program, "Traeton and
Tangos," is Mr. Mikhashoffs baby.
If _you prefer your music: older, go on
Marc:h 11 to an evening of 17th and 13th
eentuey English music, performed by the
Instfumelil.al Collegium Musieum and T'ne
Oboe Band, directed by Nora Post (who, as
oboi.St with the Creative Aasoelates, is also
an exponent of"""' musie). The Oboe Band,
more ·simp))' named than its 13th centuey
model, Le1 Douze GraM. HmuboU do&lt; Roi,
will be making its eoncert debut on this
~IDn.
'
The fourth of thiS season's "Evenuigs for
New Musie" will be given Sunday, Marth
~ 19, at the Albright-Knox Art .Gallery. The
first h"' of the eoneert will be devoted to
works by eomposers under 30, and will
. feat\.·-e Toronto guest eol"poser·pianist,
Jamea Tenney, who will open the program
with his Three Piecu for Drum Qouzrtet.
The aeeondnalf of the eveoing is' called Ruk
NiM. This has no eonneetion with Kurt
Vonnegut's ehilling substance in Cat'•
Crodle, ..iee~nine." but is one of New York
eompc;.ae~-Gitic Tom Johnson's RUk series.
The risk lS that the musicians never see the

musie untn the actual P!'rformance; it will
taken by Mr. Tenney, piano; Robert
Dick, Oute; and Jan Williams, pereussion.

1M;

International
Women's Day 1978
Inlemational ~omen's Day is
four dan. OrganiJied by Women's Studi..Colles_e . and. Third World Student
Aaociation. the events include continuous

.d.ualiY.

.

2

'

Watch For ...
... Aa butallatloa/~ by Jaae
Tabadudeher in Squire Hall's Gallery 219.
Call 831-3541 for viewing houn of this
installation; the dates are April 3 through
14.
... A eoOabOratia.. by the Zeclia&lt;pe Daace
Co., the UIB WiDd Ea.mble aad the
Coetemporuy Chamber Mule E..mble .
This as yet untitled event, sponaored by the
Theatre and Music Departments, will be
performed twice - Friday, April 7, in the
Cornell Theatre, ' and .Sunday morning,
April 9, in the Ellieott Square Building
(that's Ellicott Square, not Ellieott
Complex), as part of the "Brunch With
Bach" series.
-... Midlael c-ey, who is unassumingly
known as a one·man folk festival..
performiog April 7 and 8 in Cafeteria 118,
Squire Hall.
... Wonla oa "The Next Decade,• to be
given by Dean Harold Cohen (Sehool of
Arehiteeture &amp; Environmental Design),
Commissioner J.e an Loring (Erie County
Environment &amp; Planning), Qongressmen
Jack Kemp, Henry Nowak and John
LaFalee. Tbe U/B Alumni Association
whieh,_. in eooperation with Credit-Free
l'rogT~. is planning this all-day event -

mcludmg a luncheon with ..a nationally

REPORTER I mognOI I Mlrch 2, 1978

�known speaker" -

can be reached for

clet.aila nf registration and further informa.

~n at88I:U2lo

... A c:alloqalum oa "Tbe JUpt To Die,"
with Profeaor Bertram Bandman or Long_
Island University. The Deportment of
Philosophy is sponeoring tlds free event on
Aprllll at Baldy HaD.
... A ,..e-tstW ol atadeat ..-rda on
"Communicative Behavior" in &amp; weekend
conference-April14 and .15-in the Keeler

Room, EWcott Complex. Katbleen Cress lit
831-1144 is the eonf....,oce organizer.
... Britlolt peot ud playwrlcla Dauie
AIMe, who will read here April 17. Next
month's"""""'t will LeU you more about it.
••. Lcmc:llllqr .. w--.ya tO the
aceompaniment of cluaical, jazz and rock
music. 1:00 PM ilr Norton Cafeteria,
c:ourt.esy UUAB Perlonning Arts Commit-

.

~-

A~ of&gt;the grotto ofthit Machado/SUvetd Fountain HouM.

ArchiteetUral
Drawmp: A New
Wave
• These days, when areblteeture, at least
u the layman perceives it, seeJl!l to have
more to do with. systems analyaio than with
moauments, it's oomething of a paradox to
find a new surge nf interest in architectural
drawings. There · are several ' major
exhibitlona curTeDtly on view: the Museum
of Modern Art in New York is exhibiting 85
drawings by one ol the giants nf modern
architecture,- Le Corbulier; "The Travel
Sketches of Louio K.hn," at tbe
Pennsylvanio Aeademy of the Fine Arts,
shows a little-known ..-.d of that famous
Pbiladelpbio an:biteet; allo in Philadelphia,
the Institute of Contemporary ~ bu a
dioplay of df!wings by seven prominent
. living architects; and at the Otis Art
Institute in Los 'Angeles there io a show
entitled "Drawing Toward a More Modern
Arebitecture." About ·to be launched on
national tour by Florida's Jacksonville Art
Museum is "200 Years of American
~ural Drawing," mounted by the
Arebitectural League of New York aod the
American Federation of Arts.
Two of the arcbitecta represented in the
Los Angeles show are the Argentiniaoborn, Buenos Aires and Berkeley....Jucated
architects, RodoHo Machado .and Jorge
Silvetti. Original drawings'Ol their recent
works will be on display in Hayes HaD
Lobby through March 17, in an exhibit
organized by School of Arebitecture uul
Envieonmental Design profeuor, William
Huff. Machado and Silvetti, who present.ly
Leach architecture· at the Rhode Island
School of Design and at the Harvard
Graduste School of Design, reapeetlvely,
have eoUaborated in the past: they jointly
won the Progre11ive .ArcAitect!U'e Annual
Award in-1975 for their "Fountain House,"

11CKETS
Tiekets,_where required, are available at the Squire
HaD Ticket Olliee (in advanee); remaining tickets at the
door one hour before event. l.D. card&amp; must be presented
in order to purchase tickets at Student/Facljlty/Staff
Alumni rate.

Z
THUII8DAY

Winners of Baird Sow Competition, with
University Philharmonia. Baird Recital
HaD. 8 PM. Free. Sponsor: Department of

Music.

DRAMA

w.,..,.·,Sisters"
7lM!re Coll£ctive: "Shakes- .
in
the

peare's

Behind

1'&gt;-om Mad:neu to Renewal. aod ·"AU
Female Cut" in Some Endanted

DRAMA
WOIM!I'I

neotre Collective.

are

MUSIC
.An Eve7ting of Mruical Theat.,.O: Two
premieres of musical events eombining
theater, drama and danee. Produeed by
Yvar Mikh.uboff. (With Frances-Marie
Uitti, W'alliam Kirkpatrick., James Kasprowicz, Michael Pugliese, Paul Sebmidt,
Thomas IJalpin, Gary Hatt, · Stephen
Bradley, Yvar Mikbaaboff.) Baird Recital
HaD. 8 PM. General admission $1.50, U/B
Faculty/ Stall/Alumni with ID/Senior
Citieens ll.OO, Students $.50. Sponoor:
Deportment of Music.
·

MUSIC

Hal Gc/per, featuring the Breeker Bros.
- jazz. Fillmore Room, Squire Hall. 8
PM. General admission $5·, Students $3.
Sponsor: UUAB Musie Committee.

6

See March 2

listing.

LECTURE
David Pearron, Professor of Architectural
History, CCNY: "Aalto's Sanatorium at
Paimio." 885 Hayes. 5:80 PM. Free.

Sponsor: School of Arcl.itecture and
Environmental Design.

9
THURSDAY

MUSIC
Yuar Mikluuloff, piano, and FranceB·
MarU Uitt~ cello. • Contemporary Musie
recital. Baird HaD. 8 PM. General
admission $1.50, Faculty/Staff/ Alumni/
Senior Citieens $1, Student.s $.50.
..-'

• COFFEEHOUSE

M(IT(}&lt;lnt Mac.Art.Wr, with guest Daniel
MacArthur: Traditionals of Verniont and
the Ozarks on dulcimer and Irish lap harp.
Cafeteria, '118 Squire HaD. 8:80 PM.
Student.s $1, faeulty/ Rtaff $1.25, others
$1.50. Sponsor: UUAB Coffeehouse

Coau!&gt;ittee- .

4
SA'IURDAY

~HOUSE

M(IT(}&lt;lnt Mac.Ardur, with, guest Daniel
Mac.Artbr. See March 3listing.
DRAMA
Womea'1
listing.

5
SONDAY

7
TUESDAY

TAKE A BREAK .
Kurzdor[er and Cady1 folk / rock. Cello,
guitar and voice. 10 Capen HaD (near the
Tiffin Room) . Free. Bring your lunch.
Sponsors: Cultural AHairs, Sub-Board ,
St udent Affairs Programs .

World

Student

BROWN BAG LUNCH THEATRE

Peter Towmend, solo mime. 335 Hayes.
NooQ . Free. Sponsor: Friends of School of
Architecture and EnyironmentaJ Design.

neotre CoUeclive. See March 2

DRAMA

w.....,.·, Theatre Collective. See Mareh 2

listing.

REPORT£R/mognet/Marc~2, 1878

DRAMA/REVUE
Bv.ffolb Comedy Worblaop•. CorneU
Theatre, 8 PM. Students $1, Faculty/
Staff $1.50, General Admission $2.
Sponsor: Office of Cultural Aflsirs. Note:
This is rescheduled from blizurded-out
earlier dates, and is not the Tralfamadore
Cafe show.

Hall. 9 AM. Free. Sponsor: Women's
7:80PM. Free. Sponsor: Women's Studies
Third

AFTERNOON COFFEEHOUSE
Kim Cady &amp; Peter K urzdor[er: guitar and
ceUo . Haas Lounge, Squire Hall.. Noon .
Free. Sponsor: UUAB Coffeehouse
Committee.

LEC'ruR.E
Wtlliam 7TI&lt;muow, chairman of Music
Deportment: "Functional Ambiguity in
Musical Structures." (Musicology Lecture
Series). 106 Baird HaD. 4 PM. Free.
Sponsor: Deportment of Music.
INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY•
Open ]'oet'll Re4ding. Amherst Wom~n·s
· Center, Spaulding Building 4, Room 371!,
Ellicott Complex. 7 - 9 PM. Free.
Sponsors: Women·~ Studies College and
Third World Student Association.

INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY•
8
WEDNESDAY Filml; by and about women. 238 Squire
College and
Association.

weD.

Adrienne

tor: James Kasprowicz.

MONDAY

3
FRIDAY

winners

Tworek-Gryta;
soprano;
George
Kroetsch , trombone; Miehael Pugliese,
pereussion; Elfie Sehults, piano. Condue-

M'lfTOf':

.I!Juenirtg. The Collective&gt; co-foundid by
Lorno Hill and Julia Pardee, creates
- performanee pieces to explore and
exprea the female experience. Harriman
Studio Theatre. 8 PM. $3 general
. admission; $1.50 students and senior
citieena, Sponsor: Deportment of Theatre.

The

At the end of tbio month, Levine,
managing director of the Center ol the
Creative and Performing Arts ("Creative
Asoociatea"), leaves U/B to _ , . her
new post as director of admioolons at the
Californio Institute of the Arts. Her
'inlluenee at the Center over the put 14
yean eannot be overeotlmated. Sbe bu
been adminiotntor. COIIC:ert and tour
~. fund-raioer and ambuoador-atlarge for the Center. Her CODClOI'Il for tbe
needs of each year's new ·Creative
Asoociatea - many of them uriving from
abrood - bu been expreuod in her
pereonal attention to matters dl their
arclimetj . . tioD and adju.ltmeat that tiave
far exceeded allidal duties. WbUe planning bu been the ._.;billty ol tbe
various cliatinguiohed IDUtlie clirect.on ol tbe
Center, Ms. Levine's ideu, imqinatioD uul
flair have always been reOerted in their
artist.ie decisions. Her energy and her
commitment to the Center have helped it to
thrive. We will miss her; and we wioh her

POE'I'RY READING
Robert Ani/crt, author nf Sodrlu• &lt;DOd
Happineu and professor of Englioh at
Wellesley College. Faeulty Club, Blue
Room. 8 PM. Free. Sponaors: Abbott
Reading Fund and Poets aod w~ Inc.

MUSIC

"

And A Sad Note •••

INTERNA110NAL WOMEN'S DAY•
PaM! LNcu.trimo &lt;DOd Receptiorl, with
Christine Choy, Helena Solberg Lade!,
I)eboroh Shaefer, filmmakers nf Interll'ational Women's Day Filma (see a!Sove
listing). 339 Squire HaD. Diseussion, 7:80.
10 PM. Reception 10 PM - 12 Midnight . .
Free; ~ Women's Studies CoBege
and Third WOrld Student As8ociation.

MUSlC/EXHIBI'I' OPENING
"The Printmakers Three," intaglios,
drawings and reliels by Ronna Gilbert,
Kelly Hut&lt;:binson, Suzanne ~h
music improvised to the artworkS fiY~
Robert Dick, OIJ\.ist, and Greg Ketehum ,
pereussiontst. 2 PM to 5 PM (eoneert - 8
to 4 PM)l'Free. ~ : AAO Gallery &amp; ·
Center of the Creative &amp; Performing
Arts. CaD 856-6580 for more information.

1-

a villa whose roof'o surface, ' Profeaor
HuH'o worda, io stepped to distribute
cueading waters; and Jorge Silvetti hu
just won another P.A. Award, t his time for
his Tunioian villa, "A Cube and a Stair," a
drawing of whieh io featured in the Hayes
. HaD show.
As to the · sudden popularity of
architectural drawings as subjeets for art
exhibits: one of the euratora of the Los
Angeles show thinks that, in part., it may be
the result of the 70'• building receooion
wbirh has foreed much or the new
architecture to eaist only on paper, More
positively, it may be the_....- that
their drawings, like ~ buildinga, are
aoother valid e:q&gt;rellion of the artiotie
ereativity or great arclliteeta.

10
FRIDAY

SLIDE LECTURE
Collecting in• Venuvela Or-chido,
Insect.., Butterflies and Beetle•• by Mary
and Harold Cohen. Reception to follow .
885 Hayes. 8 PM. Free. Sponsor: Friends
of School of Architecture and Environmental Design .

3

�19

MUSIC
Iut....-iuai Colkgit&lt;m ~ and
Oboe Bad•, Non Post, d - : "The
' Eagtiab Baroque: Music 3Dd InllueDc:e."
lloird Recital Hall. 8 PM. Free. SJ&gt;oo-:
DepartmentofMuaie.

•

S~AY

Studies CoUege, 108 Winspear Ave. 2 PM.
Free. Sponsor: Women's Studies College.

/

MUSIC

~~for Now Mtuic. • A1brigbt-Kn~x
Art Galler,t. 8:30PM. General Admioeion
$2.50, Students, U/B Fatuity/Staff, and
gallery members $1. Sponsor: Center of
the Creative and Performing Arts.

IN'IDNA110NAL WOMEN'S DAY•
Utile 1'1Dg1 n...ter Colkctivc of Boltoto
"'l'be Furies of Motbei- JODeO."
Coli 8!11-8406 for place, time and tiebt.
lnbmation. S~: Women's Studies
College and Third World , Student
AaoociatioD.

...-nta

•
12

81JNDAY

LEC'IURE/IDSCUSSION
Graco Blumb8t"g: "Spotisal Dependency in
Social Seeurity Legislation." Women's

DRAMA
"Boesman and Lena." direeted by Saul
Elkin. • See March 14listing.

IN'I'ERNA110NAL WOMEN'S DAY•

Little F'lt!9• n.ot.rr 'Colleetit&gt;e of Bo1ton
..,._..ts "W"mdo of the People." F'i1lmo.e

20
MONDAY

Boom, Squire Hall. 7:30 PM. Admioeion
dwp. ~: Women's Studies
~~d Third World Student

LF:CTURE
George Polo: "The Building of the T.V.A."
335 Hayes. 5:30 PM. Free. Sponsor:
Sebool of Architecture and Environmental
Design.

\

21

MUSIC
UB ~ Eruembls, Jan Williams,

TUESDAY

dired.or. Works by C. Jaue Willdnsou,
John Bergamo, Jo Koodo, Lou Harri.oon,
Boat l..JIIol. lloird Recital Hall. 8 PM.
Free.~

LllC'I'UIIE

LllC'I'UIIE
c..,;. Robiut11C "ArebitAoetural Style:
l'botagrapbic Strle. • 335 Hayes. 5:30 PM.
Free. ~ Sebool of ArebitAoeture and
Eaviroomeotal Deoign.

MUSIC

Rowe Quartet and Yvar Milclotulwff,
piano. The music of Mozart. Bartok and
Shostskoviteh. (Faculty Recital). B8ird
Recital Hall. 8 PM. General Admission
$1.50; UB FacultJ, Staff, Alumni with ID,
Senior Citizens $1.00, Students $.50.
Sponsor: Department of Music•.
16
111UBSDAY

w-··

TAU A IIREAK
lAnt4 Hill and J - Loomer from tho
n.e.tre Collective: "Some
Eaebonted Eveaiag," • dramatized study
of rape. 10 ·Capen Hall (near the Tiffin
Boom). Free. Bring your lunch. SpoDSOra:
Cn1tural Affairs, Sub Board, .Student
Affairs Pr&lt;&gt;grams.

·

17
FRIDAY

•

D&amp;UIA

and .:-... directed by Saul •
Elkla.. Ploilor n.e.tre. Lata,- "
BoJt. s PM. ~ AdmiooioD sa.oo.
Stadeata " 8eDlor atmeDa suo. Tickets
aloo uailalllo a Afriean-Amerio:an
Cn1tural &lt;:eater. ~ Ceater for
, _ . . RMNrd!.

DRAMA

Coffeehouse Committee.

IS
lliiAIIA
WEDNESDAY "s-oan and .:-.,• directed by Saul
Elkin.- See March 14listing.

v-..J..._

..owN IIAG LUNCH THEATRE

:n...

Millie Critie for the VtDage
c..p.er mctViliting Member of
the Creative ~: "LeeWre" with
audieDoe putic:lpatloG. 885 Hayes. Noon.
Free.
FrieDdo of Sebool of
Ardlll.eeture and Eaviroomeotal Deoip.

a.--:

COfii'EEIIOUSE
Jlillor: 1111101,

~

eountry

and

. .............,. a- Lounge, Squiretbll.
NoaG. Free. Spoa.r: UUAB ColfeehcMao
CaaalliUee.

BROWN BAG LUNCH THEATRE

"Boesman and Lena," direeted by Saul
Elkiri. • See March 14 listing.

OOFI'EEIIOUSE
Boll Stairou, "The Booton Yodeler"
singer/oongwriter. Cafeteria, 118 Squire
Hall. 8:80PM. Students $1, faculty/staff
$1.25, Others $1.50. Spo!l!IOr. UUAB
18
SAnJRDAY

OOFI'EEIIOUSE
Bill Staine8, "The Boston Yodeler". See
March 171isting.

DRAMA
• "Boesman and Lena." aireeted by Saul
. Elkin.• See March 141isting.
INTERNA110NALF1ESTA '78
Food · tasting and cultural program.
Goodyear -Hall
Cafeteria. 6 PM.
Admission $1.50. Note: Time aud location
are au6jeet to ebange. Call Abed
Musallam, - 536-2950, or Mary Brown,
831-4630, for definite in!OTDJation. Sponsor: Student Aaaociation (International
Affairs).

MUSIC

.

Colllemporary CAamber. E,..;..,u,u,, • directed by Yvar Milthsshoff: ''Trsc:tors and
Tangos ... Muaie of the Twenties.".Compositiono by Revueltss, HIDDI Eisler,
William Walton,' Roussel, Virgil Tbonl·
11011, Milbaud. Guest speal&lt;er, Jeremy
· Noble. Guest Conductor, Jamea Kaspro·
wiel. lloird Recital Hall. 8 PM. Free..
Sponsor: Department of Music.
Nun·t7tlfitJ.)f")t.

u.s.

PU.'i&gt;lOI~C

PAll&gt;

'Kuffalu. N.Y .
1•crmit Nu. 311

DRAMA

Tom Williaml, Jazz Piano: ·~e to
Avant-Garde." 835 Hayes. Noon. · Free.
Sponsor: Friends of Sebool of Arebitec·
ture and Eavironmental Design.

MUSIC
Viritiftg Artilt Seriu IV: The Shepherd
String Quartet (Ronald Patterson, violin;
Raphael Norton Fliegel, violin; Wayne
Crouse, viola; Shirley Trepel, eello). Baird
Recital,JWI. 8.PM; General Admisaion $11,
U/B Faculty, Staff, Alumni with ID,
Senior Citizens $2, Students $1. Sponsor:
Department of Music.

COLLOQUIUM

~

wiel, dlreetor: ~ Cloru, Harriet
llimaaa, dlreetor: 71-oto&amp;botoe eMir,
Rlobani Myers, direc:tor. Worka by
Muaaino, J .S. Bach and Vivaldi. St.
Joaepb'o R.C. Cbureh,' 321111 Main St. 8
PM. Free. ~: Department of
Mualc and Newman Center for Campus
Ministry.

Z2

WEDNESDAY "Boesman and Lena," direeted by Saul
Elkin.• See March 141isting.

Mar.J:irn&amp; &amp; Democracy by Professor
-Frank Cunningham, University of Toron·
10. Cobunentaton: Professor Dale Riepe;
Department of Pbilooophy, Professor
Boger Wooek, Department of Social,
Philooopbieal and Historieal Foundations
(Ednestion). Kiva (101 Baldy Hall). S PM.
Free; Sponsors: Department of Pbilooophy and Monist Studieo Workshop.

OPEN POETRY BEADING
Bid&lt; a.t.'ClOi (892-3627) if you
woald lib to ~- Refreabmenta
wiD be ......t. 18'1 MFACC, ElllooU. 7
PM. Free. ~: Tbe Browsing
Lillnr7 and Stadeat Mbin.
.

IRI8IC

served. 167'MFACC, Ellicott. 8 PM aud 9
PM. Free. Sponsors: The Browsing
Library ~d Student Activities.

UB Sympl&amp;tm11 Bond, directed by Frank
Cipolla. Wicke Center, Daemen College. 8
PM. Free. Sponsor: Department of Music.

c.u..t

u.Mnitr ~ James Kupro-

DANCE EXBIBmON
Dancer'• Workllwp. Refreshments will be

DRAMA
"BoesiJl!Ul and Lens," direeted by Ssut
Elkin.• See March 141isting.

MUSIC
1(
roESDAY

_

TAU A BREAK
With Debby Katz, Hatha Yoga instructor.
Bring a mat and take a class (eat later).
Observers wek:ome, too. 12 noon . 10
Capen Hall (near the Tiffin Room) . Free.
Sponsors: Cultural Affairs, Sub Board,
Student Affairs.
'

Department of Music.

&amp;g.r Anlllldu, Professor of Philosophy
at the Sorbomle, Uni~eroicy'of Paris: "The
Coaeoptioo of Metaphyllic:s in Avieenna
and AV1111"001." 684 Baldy Hall. 3:30 PM.
Free. Spoa.ers: Tbe Council oo Inter·
D&amp;tiooal Studies, Deportment of PhiJooo.
pby, The Middle Ei.st Studies Aaoociation
of North Amerio:a.

DRAMA

"Boesman and Lena." djreeted by Ssu)
Elkin. • See Marth 14listing.

23
THURSDAY

"Boesman aud Lena," direeted. by Saul
Elkin .• See March 14listing.
"

APRIL

TAU A BREAK
W~h M~l SMJ!W14. singer/eong·
wnter. Orfgin.al and claasie pop. 12 noon.
Bring your luneb. 10 Capen Hall (near the
Tiffin ROom) . Free. Sponsors: Cultural
Affairs, Sub Board, Student Allairs.

26
SUNDAY
~

DRAMA

tlaroaP

4
TUESDAY

5

COFFEEHOUSE

WEDNESDAY Bill Steek, ainger/songwriter. Haas
Lounge, Squire· Hall. Noon. Free.
Sponsor: UUAB Coffeehouse Committee .

MUSIC

Suze Leal, mezzo-soprano; Heinz Relr.fou•.
baritone (Faculty Recital). lloird Recital
Hall. 8 PM. General Admission $1.50, U/B
Faculty, Staff, Alumni with ID, Senior
Citizens $1, Students $.50. Sponsor:
Department of Musie.

Exhibits
Mcu:lwdo/Silvetti:O OrigintJI df"'lWingr of tl&amp;e receftt
work&amp; -of Rodfllfo Moelwdo and Jorg• Silvetti,
Argentinian-born aud Berkeley-eduested arehitoets.
Hayes Hall Lobby through March 17. Sponsor: Sebool of
Architecture and Environmental Design.

Bi/! Henrich and Scott R1U:ker, Photographs (M.F.A .
Tbesis.Sbow). Kenan Center, Loekport. March 17 - April
9.
Colkg~ B Sttukftt Ezhil&gt;it; drawings, pnintings, c:olJages,
waterColors. Porter building 6, 261 aeeood level, Ellieott
Complex. 8-10 PM Mondo1 - Thursday, 1-3 PM Sundoy.
Through March 9.

Jame&lt; NapknJ/4, sculpture. Gallery 219. Mareh 13-24.
Coli 831-3541 for galfery- l!Oilrs. Sponsor: UUAB Visual
Arts Committee.

Cat"""""

Koenig, leeturer iit art, Millard Fillmore
College: reeent works. More-Rubin Gallery, 450 Franklin
St. Through March 4.

REPORTER I magnet fllor&lt;:h 2, 1878

�Morch2. 1171

~-

B~in·g competent. said

vital to good.self-• mage

Fo(!r-year grad rule .·.~
said academic violatit;»n
Editor:
It has recently been brDught to my
attention that the Graduate School has
decided to enforce an existing (but
previously unenforced) rule
that
appointment of a graduate student as a
Teaching Assistant, Graduate Assistant
or Reseen:h Assistant be limited to

- • ln_st)tutions. of- higher edUcation fall
to . enhance atu&lt;fenta' self-Images
teach
bilcause • they neglect to
competencies 1hrough which students
can cope, wlth "demanding, valuable

lead to a severe diminution In - the

a~=~~~~ ~~~~~~11,;~7~~n~el~am:

that a research project might now have

~e~t,s,~::r:d~ff~.fg::t~::,eP,~~'?~~~~

years, rather then It be en Important
contribution to knowledge. If the "four
year support rule" Is not to be .

1

~~~&lt;t~-h~1Pe !:'x~pY:'o~ ~ay e:

~~;;~~~ :~'~"l::ly ~:~~~~~fa" 1t '!:1

made upon petition ; It Is clear that the
bureaucrats of the Graduate School
have agnsed, In some befuddled
fashion, that all students should be
able to fulllll course regutrements and
complete their Ph .0 . theses In the
· space of four years. My e!(llerfence as a

presently yet another factor In lowering .
lhe morale of our graduate students.
· Furthermore, since It Is my contention'
that most of our graduate students will

~::1Joe~euu~ 7 ~~r~~~~~~ ~~~~ri~

~:'~h ":r'~~a~~~~rf~Tv~~~,v~~

fin d ltsefl""ln essentially the same
situation as Mayor Griffin of Buffalo,
when he discovered how many
notifications of potential utility disconnections were sent out each month !

~~~:~~~z~:r7g;, 4cil.l~fc!l&lt;n:~~:~

~~~~~r r~"i'h!u~~~u~~~e·~h~r~'~~~

1971), the University of Illinois
(1971-1975) and at SUNY /Buffalo
(1975-present) suggests that this
assessment Is erroneous. The average
time taken..to complete a Ph .D.·degree

One should not take the attitude that

statistic) end I suspect that tills figure
Js equalled, II not surpassed, In the
other physical sciences and In the
humsn)tles.
It Is unfortunate (end, In the long run,
disastrous) that the Graduate School Is
presently headed by two administrators
{Acting Dean Fogel end Associate Dean
Holt) who, while responsible for
Implementing policy, are Inexpert In

Chemistry Department (while academlcally one of the most proficient at
SUNY/Buffalo) Is In competitlon ).wi~h
many other universities In attract(ng
graduate students . If It becomes known
that the Graduate ~ hool takes
sanctions agl'inst gr'aduate students
alter their fourth year, then , Inevitably,
the desire of first-&lt;:lass students to
attend Graduate School here will wane

~-'6~=~~~~~9 ~~:e se':!:.il~ft~ ,"~
~at~'='~~~- m!~~ e~u~~~

~r~de~~; ~N,a if'eclf~e. th~ln~co:;;'!~
f~~~~~~s ,~st~e 'i!a~t.[~~u~?'i':::!,l:;~
11

Executive Committee of the Graduate
School h8lt8 taken an Irresponsible and
unrealistic attitude In confirming the
"lour-year support rule." The only
Interpretation of their action Is that they

sections and laboratory sections , it is
clear tnat undergraduate education will
also be adversely affected .
Finally, a plea for reason . This
university Is Inundated with red tape at

r~~~~~,9.~,'~f~~;:::. ~dvantage for their
The, )'four year. support nile:

r~=~x\~~r~g lne~n~!~~=pa"ns3 ~~~ s~~? ~~

Is

ahead and manufacture more.

~c:,:r.·~~~g·~~~~~~~g,~~~'::~"
It,.;.;, poge 1' col. 3) •
.
corlaclousnesa has produced basiAA!!Y
only ~sroetlc changes, thinks Pappas,
a type ·o f"fii!:e'nftlllg." •' ' ;·" ''!"., '·
What Pappas would· like to' see are •
more black producers and directors
making films "artistically cqncelv~ apd
serlsitfvely developed" which deal wtth '
blacks as "tluman- billngs riot social
problems."

'Shalt' end 'Superfly:
.
Several years back, when blacks were
starved for Identity Images, films like
"Siialt" or "Superfly" which starred a
typ&amp; of black James Bond figure, were
box office h\ts with black audiences. "II
was llk:JIIvlng water to a thirsty horse,"

0

8

~rs':'~r~t'~h:e;~cna~\~~~~ ~h~~ ~?:r~~

macrocosm."

~~~,;~~d'~lred'?~s':f~W~,';~'·;·~~~

is, they fall to confer solid , Jdent?fiable,
humanly essential competencies which
permit men and women to live and act
effectively. "

It's too Isolated
There's too little connection between
the classroom and life outside It, Averill
said . He suggested , for example, that
-stuctents taking economic courses be
taught how to read and Interpret the
, Wall Street Journal, that art history

=

~~:ssFnr~~~~ P:~bl!m~ol~tlon to a
uni~n:'m'!'~ty~~~~~!~dtl'o
t~!:!:

~':;~::\~~~~~:Jt',~~~telllgent awareness
Averill wamed against the pitfall of
teaching disciplines merely as "subquestloos the use of blacks It'\ ~ltuatlon . jects .of study" Instead of as "forms of
.behavior." When faculty .relegate
~g~~~~s· :11,1~g "~~"i¥~f(!~~~~s".. ~., human
themselves to teaching only .wbat .
humorous context makes It much easiec
others have written and analyzed · •·
to laugh at, rather than deal" with
Important soci al Issues.
·
'
With amusement , Pappas noted that
knqwledge" occurs, which, Averill
no blacks appeared In "Star Wars. " He
feels , u!tlmately leads to " medlocnty In
wonders If the film could be viewed as
" a visual threat to the Iabrie of society''
since It conveniently eliminates blacf&lt;s
from . the future computerized era.
Pappas claimed, however, th&amp;t some
~:~~~~~~'fbr~~ t~~~~~~arth Vader as the
Pappas hopes his students can
ultlmatelv learn to view lllms more
analytically and In a contextual
That · "super" senior citizen- who
0

1

~~~~t ~~~rhc~,::~~Y!~~- ~~~~=~J~~~

.

Students should also be able to
demonstrate· mastery of a complex set
of ideas, he feels . Through meeting this
requirement, they would discover how
one. "gets Into a system and ~reaps
complex relationships. " Once students
"'""ier this skill, Averill says, "th~
may be awed but will never be cowed '
by complex Issues.
In addition, he said , students should
demonstrate r,roflclency In the practice
of a dlsclpl ne of their choice and
should contribute to the design and
effective completion of collaborative
projects.
exlpenrt'eordnceer thtoe , hamelp guu nder
eag, rada uantlesea
b1 111
00
and satisfactions of a real world choice
wAvehe,re dwoeculsolphnasvehahvles. cograndsequatuesenceposse
,"
111
1d

· failure_ to teach the vocational In a
humanistic manner Is not so much a
result of Incompatibility as of a ''failure
of nerve."
The major fault of the liberal arts and
sciences. Averill said, "Is that they do

''uncomlortabla with their respective
provincialisms," he would have his
students successfully complete a
cross-&lt;:ultural "Immersion."
, l}efore graduation, they would also
. be ,r.i!sP&lt;&gt;nsibJe' lor,. l earn-teaching _a
·

:~'~!~~~":~ffi~.!!Qu ~sm~~":.~~ •
skills that Averlll believes "design end
execution merge.''

Ancient ·yogurt-eaters
may not be so old

[,':::'::!' hev:'!~~f,:_~~~at ~erJ~!!e:~~

:~mn":w d'1~i~~r~:'f~~ \~~~rt~~~~~~,lg

crave more substantive film material.
Pappas haa mixed feelings about the
manner In which blacks are daplcted on
TV as well . He Is concerned about the
effects of blatant commercialism on
dramatic presentations (who could
forget O.J . In "Roots" ). Pappas also

message Interpretation . He feels that

~~~~~~ts h~!.: al~g~i.:alu~~ s.,;~'~1

their perspectives and have gained a
better understanding of themselves and
the black experience.

Beyer urges common-curriculum
U.S. Education Commlsslonerl:mest
L. Boyer has urged that colleges and
universities adopt a riew core curriculum
built on the proposition that Americans
have common experiences that can end
must be shared .
.
Speaking at the 285th Charter Day
convocation at the College of William

~~::1~~· ;;r~~t;t~~hl,l,~~~~~~d~

morn watches approvingly may not be
as old as he claims, says an
Internationally-known geneticist and
gerontologist who recently visited
U/ 6 's Department of Anatomical
Sciences .
Dr. Ellzabe\11 Russell, who presented

~~~~~s~:,':,~sn;,:,p~:'~g~'"8.."ga~~~",it~

said then!'s no doubt the gentlemen end
· his mother are In the ranks of the
elderly, but whether they're as old as

must move beyond themselves, must
gain social perspectives, must see
themselves In relation to other people
th~rnc\~: ~~:~~?~~- wasn't unusual
end times, mOst understand how their
origins and wants and needs are tied to
lor a young man to successfully avoid
draft Into the military by taking his
the origins and wants and needs of
father's name and age. And In one area
others . Such perspectives are also
of Ecuador, where records were poorly
centra] to the academic Quest.
kept, one researcher discovered two
"My point Is this: A college
curriculum that suggests that students - years following an Initial visit that some
citizens claimed they'd aged live years
have nothing In common Is just as
in the interim," she noted .

~~~Jc~~· th~~ot Pb*\':'~ks~atcfh:

heritage we share, end not only reflects
on fundamental common experiences
of the pnssent, but also focuses on
those alternatives for the future thet In a
thousand -separate end unsuspected

~fu~::.,:!r~~~k~~~n~~~~~ :~:: o~:

search for a common core curriculum
should be built on the central
proposition that we do have common
experiences which can and must be

w~eare~~s:l':.\'!" ~~Y;~oday

we
seem mons confident of the length of a
college education then we do about Its
sub!slance," and that " on the vast
majority of campuses, required courses
have been dropped, and the ones which
remain reveal a staggering Incoherence
of purpose."
.
B&lt;wer said he believes students must
bs frill to follow their own Interests,· to
develop their own aptitudes, and to
pursue their own goals. " But," he
added , "truly educaled persons also

a

-Mt~~Ye"s~~~nc~~~fs~~- -,, ~k~/f:/1 ~/~~~~~~o d:m~~f~~~e ~~~~--

,,

•Black Stereotypes_.

Intellectual life ....
" First-hand asking ' and testing are
forms of action In the neal world,"
Averill said ; "they matter In the human
eq~JBtlon In a way thet the study of
someone else's asking and testing can
tasks"
never matter."
or.' Lloyd' J. Averill offered this
Averill contends this approach to the
assessment last week as he addressed
teaching of a discipline. will result In a
~,?!g~Pon°~he"'!·~= of~h~~"a~ • decreased need on the ~ of feculty to
ask If they are eng~ad In a ull8ful form
Arts - A Brief look at Threats to their
of adult activity.' They will, than,
Integrity." Averill, prealdent of the
become "practltlonera ol
discipline
Kansas City Regional Council for
rather than Its advanced students."
Higher Education, sr.oke at a seminar
Wo~:'k~u~~ ~/B s Oepartm~nt of
Nlnegreclu.ote~
._
Tomlng to a discussion of his "dnsam
~verill noted he Is In total agreement
college," Averill outlined nine requlrewith author Edgar Friedenberg who
once wrote that "a person who does not
m~~~0't~= word Is -men's
know what he Is good at may not know
"primary tool for reshaping the world, "
what he Is good for. "
It Is through the acquisition of
his first requirement - -would be that
competencies, Averill claimed, that an
students rnust demonstrate en approindividual Is Identified by others as a
~~~e ::el ~ ~::'.,~~1st:~ C:~~
valuable, slgnlllcant person; It's also
the means through which one develops
development; t~ey should also be able
to rud with ease fn a second language.
his or her own sense of worth.
Writing an autobiOQfBI!hY would be
Calling competence "an absolut9ly
Indispensable human value," Averill
~ ~7:w'!1u~reT~n~ll~~~r8e~n f:\~: '
urged colleges which preach that their
understanding. It Is a microcosm by
mlsslon ·Is to "enhanc11 the human and
which we can learn about the

s~ared."

· LAW LIBRARY AMNESTY
In observance of the anniversary of tha
hlstorlcel Dred Scott Decision, the law

-

~~~'.r.~~~:r:~',::de:~L:'ci:e:.'t::

books and law relat':f materials will
have to be returned to the law library
Circulation Desk on that day between
the hours of 8 o.m. and 11 p.m .

and nervous system . It msy provide
Insight into senile dementia end other
conditions associated with the elderty,
she said .
"I'm encouraged," Russell said, "by
the fact that wlfhln the ~~ live years,

:,c;:'
mc;,o~':""l'su~:~."'J:~ w~:
now Involved wit!:"studies dealing with
mechanisms of aging ." lnterestlng.:r,.
1

1

~=~~~n on~ ':Pun~~~e ~f ~

years - despite people's centuries-&lt;&gt;ld
Interest In eternal youth.

A long WilY from a n 'We're still a distance from the
answers ' today," Russell conceded,
"especially as to how genetics helps
determine the aging rate of Individuals.
Human genetics Is complex and
intertwined with environmental Influences." It Is easier, she noted, to

~:g~~~~f

n:;-: enJI:.~~~~~ 1:!'~l
1

extent genetics or other variables, 'such
Envlronm1111t and gt111etlcslntertwlned
as diet , affect their aging.
Although she doubts people of the
Russell, who believes that an
Individual's attitude Is a factor In how
~re~~~~ful~ne~u1~:.~l!'s 1 ~in~er11,~~
"well " he or she will age, says she also
environment and genetics sre Inter- watches her diet and exercises regularly
twined to determine how "well " each of
through participation In outdoor sports.
us will age.
These are Ideal preventive measures
against diseases assoclllled with aging,
"The aim of current research ," she
she said.
pointed out, "Is not to Increase
•
But, Russell lamented, "even II we
maximum age, but to concentrate on
could each be analyzed genetically to
improving the quality of life as aging
determine which dlseaee of aging we're
occurs.'' She cited work at U/B by Dr.
most apt to have l a t ¥ e would be
Harold Brody, chairman of the
many people who
~ follow the
Department of Anatomical Sciences, on
preventive measur•
sled - just
changes In the cells of the aging brain
as they don't todav."

�~1,1171

June2now
deadline for .$1 ,000 awar-da

~ho

dumps -and ·who,s in trouble?
Steel p~nelists ditln't seem to ag·ree

l:tg~ ~9~~:Ure~~~~"''!.t;;

lmporls accounted lor som-here
I&gt;Mr_ 1 20 per cent of total steel •
consumption In the U.S. In 1977,
panelists et en International conference
egr:eed bemJast Friday.
But that wu about as far aa
&amp;gteement went during the 1dlacusslon
of "Imported Steel: Buffalo Raacts."
Elaewh818 there were: charges- and
counterCharges al!out what nation's
steel Industry Is rN//y In trouble;
accusations and denials of "dumping"
(selling steel at below manufacturing
costs) . on the part of foreign
prodUC8Itl, and praise lor and protest
agelnst what the U.S. government Is or
Is not doing to shore up the domestic
~teal Industry. In the finest academic
tredltlon, arguments were liberally
peppered with hundreds of statistics
and appeals to this study or that.

:'vt~ ~~~=~ .}."3't.~ sfag

A minor disruption
"This Is not an ecadem/c debate,"
though, a spokesman lor the National
United Worl&lt;ers Organization screamed
early In the evening as he and nine
others from that group paraded Into

November. At the same time, lmpOits
hit almost 22 per cent of consumption
In late 19n. This faltering U.S. Industry
also faces a need to make ataggerln~ .
Investments (aome $10 billion by 198
In order to meet new environment
standards.
~·
The Carter Administration, Gadbsw ·
said, Instituted the TPM to help sat
things straight again. Essentially, he
explained, ltla an attempt to Insure that
foreign steel Is not sold hera below. Its
lull coat. For each category ot lmporled
steel mill product, the government has.arrived at an acospted production cost
(baaed on Japarutae costa). To this, .will
be added whet It costa to . get that
product to ·each of lour regions of the
U.S. (freight costs, . handling arid
Insurance lees) . (Again, Japan Is the
bese lor measurlpg freight costs,
regardless of country of origin.]
·
The product · In question cannot be
sold In the U.S. below these combined
costs (the government will monitor
pricing using riew customs Invoicing
forms). II a product appears to be priced
under this "trigger cost," Treasury will

this worl&lt;er
protested,
1

~a'lr:,;· ~~~,:' S:'d;~lo~~~~~~~l~g

Deedllne for nornlllldlona for the

~1/:fO~~~~:'o~.:'l'~ ~=~~

cleaelfi«&lt; employ-. has been extended to June 2, t~oe Reporter· I~ this

week.
Acconllng to John M. Carter,
pqaident of the tJ I B Foundation, Inc.,
which Ia providing funding for up to ten·
such prizes annually, the deadline Ia
bel~ delayed (It hed been announced
• l'8tlrUIIry 1) because of confusion
.,_ the awards. Thera was also a
con...aus among the screening
committee for the program that• the
original deadline date lor nominations
came too Cloee on the heels of the
Initial announcement. Awards will still

than originally projected.
_
The orlalnal nominations due date,
Cert8r exPlained, overlapped the dates
lor pooceaslng nominations lor a
similar, SUNY-wide program of recogmembers . . These SUNY Chancellor's
· awards CllrTY a $500 prize and are
decided on by the Chancellor on
recommendations of a state-wide
panel. The -tJ I B awards will be decided
on by President Roberl L. Ketter -on
advice from a live-member campus
panel . They Involve a $1,000 prize and
recognition at a special campus

~le".e':n~o10~'!'1P/~~~~~hewlt~~=

~~"i'l,~~~~!'~a~u="J;.;Jh~1r~~

· heard
?~~.f.' t!Yo~~~~~tsa
"
-

momentarily
"~~~~ ~ tt::

a

st I t
,au e.
A two-edged sword
The TPM Is a two-edged sword, the
Treasury representative explained . Not
obnyly dreoel sn lmt agnuuarcllacatugrealrsns,t tualndsoersseeUrvlnegs
1
lc0 ••g
. . to warcf off inflation by keeping U.S:

AH.ir shouting down representative
of European steel who was at the
microphone at that moment, the
ceramony.
protestor Illes offered the podium. His
thesis waa that jobs have been "stolen"
People had confused the two, Carter
, by automation, while the U.S.
said.
Under the new deed line scheme, the
f~:":,';,.ak~~':.'~~~ 1fh~al~~:;.,,~::::,~~
SUNY-wide competition will be out of
wthane·yt canrestriraet selonsprolcnesl,mpoerttshuonndleyredso.
the tny before. U/B nominations are
he
1
due. Anyone on campus can nominate
" The steelworl&lt;ers union doesn't
.,.,_lor a UIB excellence award,
Cert8r aakl. S....tlally the nominator· represent us. We Intend to light lor
every job." Then, waving placards and
has to write e letter about the person
chanting, he an&lt;i the other members of
being nominated and must enlist three
this embittered ·color guard of the
IIUIIIIOrth:lg leltera. The. lattenl, together
.unemployed
withdrew. The scheduled
, wlfli the nominee's naaume, are lo be
presentation continued .
fCXWII'ded . to the · 'Office of · the
Pl8elct.nt.
·.
Opening-the evening, moderator Bhal
Bhatt, heed. of. the International careers
CrUerla for. the ' aw8rde • wereof
. pUbll8lled ln the Ffeportw December 1· • option In the UIB School
Management, call.;.rthe sleet situation /
1 :;:.,=)~9 (111111 wllrbe naprlnted In
an"economlcpiJzzle." ,
c.ter aakllhe rtwe-m.nber eelectlon
~ aakl most itfldent
(one 1'8111-•tatlwl ec11 from
It's botH economic and emotiQilal,"
Cliarlea Butler, director of the &lt;Japan
...
Steel Information Bureau,_offered, even
lion) ~has a dMdllne of July. 28 lor
before the disruption. "• ne American
C!CiftiPitil
1he aelection proceea.
steel Industry Is In trouble," , he
Wlnnera I be notHiad 11y August c:
announced (a.posltlon disputed by the .
Certer-.k! the lntentloil ta t o p American . steel repreaen"tatlve). Japanlhe...-da lila camp-Ide C818mony
steel Is competitive In the u.s:;
.tv In Septamber. "We -uld like to
nllilir tbla tile ldctloolf for the
: : , a::ded~~it~~::S,.co~~~ls~
acMemlt 1!!!.,." he aakl, featuring a
because Japan "can produce a ton of
~ of
State .of the Unl~lty"
steel $70 or $100 ~." Why? Japan
~by l'raldent Kett!~r.
.
.
has apant$20 bllllon·ln the lest 20 yeanr
to expand-and modernize Its plants. The
J~ "are the world's most efficient
steelmakers," Butlarcontended. ·
·

J:::v

~=-=-lhema;Bt=

1

Jepane~." Collins boaattid For ae-.1
years billore last, he said, the Japanese
were "In the red "where the Europt~~~na
have been " lor .Ometlme."
.
'We n..- sald cthat Amerfcan steel
could or should be cOmpetitive" on the
International market Collins noted "In
Spain, the Japanese· can undarseli us
every11me. ·
'Whet we have said Is that the
American Industry should be com pall·
tlve In our own market." Japan may
have the coat adYiintage In terms· of
production, he edmltted, but other
factors (transportation duties lnsurance) reduce ·that five p8r cent .KJHe. :·rr
the competition adheres to lu ..::ost
pricing, we've got to be the most
competitive producer lor the u.s.
market."
The American steel representative
answenad those who ask, "II · the
Europeans end Japanese want to make
the U.S. a gilt of Cheap steel., why not?"
flemember, he cautioned, that the
Arabs "gsve" us $2-a--berrel. oil lor so
long that we stopped developing new
petroleum sources of our own. Then

A. ,.~L~teelworl&lt;ers

look what haP,paned.
view the

~[r:,~:.. th~1~ 1 1:1sP~~: ; d~~':J:-

01

John J. Sheehan said . All steelproducing nations are attempting to
produce at or near capacity; Europe and
Japeh hope to manage that by
"dumping " excess production Into the
U.S. But Qle worl&lt;ers of just one country·

eJ~~~~g o ~1yc~:.!'.; t~ ~.l'~~iar~gt~etaC~~~
1

gj'~~s ~a:x~~~edw~~e~~soh~veall~~

Industry against foreign prices , he
explained. The TPM, by allowing fair
pnce competition from abroad , helps
keep U.S. prices honest.
other facets ofthe Carter aid program
as outlined by Gadbaw are:
More favorable rules lor deprecla- tlon to assist the Industry lrf
modernization efforts.
·
Loan guarantees . to underwrite
modernization.
Loans up t6 $20 million lor
communities which are losing .Jobs

doing, he charged). "II unemployment
Is Inevitable because of too much
c:apaclly · wor1d-wlde, let's· share lt."
There's a need lor. a "lull employment
economy" In the U.S., Sheehan said.
"That may mean Inflation, but the other
extreme Is unemployment." To the.
steelwortcers, th!l latter Is worse.
'
The,steelworl&lt;ers embiace the trigger
price mechanism and other governmenL
aids to Industry. and to areas hit by
unemployment, But, Sheehan aeld,
these -.re "mllasuras lor ·now.'" What '

~~:ort~d"us~;r~~~=iudles of
alternate U'!"S of obsolete plants.
Studies of Improved transportation
methods; and
Moves toward "rationalization" of
environmental requirements for the
l";_dustry.
.
•

rr:fJ:~~~at~eso?~on~~

trade

Clube IIIIU tn' the cloMI·

Representatives of Senator ·Jacotr
Jevlte and Congressman Henry Nowak
aiSCi participated In the forum which
was sponsored by the Buffalo Council '
on World Affairs and the 1:11 B Council
Why -ldn't J8p8nllkelt?
·
on International Studies. Speaking for·
0
Javlts, John Phelan aald that· u ·
..
lmporiant as the American steel
Larnesch, · vice president of , the · Industry undoubtedly Is, the jobs of one
American lnstltuteior Imported Steel [a
of every six Americana are nonetheless
group repr:e..,tlng European manufacdependent on lmporls. The problem Is
not a simple one, Phelan said.
. ·
turers!. It gives · the Japanese an
advan age, he suggested. Since shlpJemee J! Schmldt, from the office of
~lpg costs are figured from Japan.
Congressman Henry Nowak who
Europeen manufacturers who C8(l ship
rapreeents the Lackawanna distriCt,
at cheaper rates to the U.S. aut coast
was more emphatic. Nowak rs ICtlve In
lose that ed¥811tilge. This could mean a
a 170-member steel CaUCIIS In· the
virtual embargo on foreign steel In the
Congress which has been puahlng the
U.S. lmporled aome 14 million tons of
Great Lakes region. · 1t might put
government ''to· do something." If the
steel; Japan shipped ' little under 8
steelwortcers back on. the job In the
TPM and other nsstralnts against unfair
million tons ollf. In 1977, Imports rose
norlheast,
but
·
"It
will
only
shift
don't worl&lt;, Schmidt said, "the
trade
to
19
million
tcina
but,
Butler
aeld,
~ Hllllh L. Carey hu signed
unemployment~· around, . he .claimed.
protactlonlst clubs are still In the
Japanese shipments declined sllghUy:1111 Eucutlve · Order. lhlil encourages
Congressional closet."
.
State llgiiiiCiea lo eatabllah flexible
There Ia no dumping or countercyflc4!
Moderator Bhatt, who directed the
wwklng ilclledut•lor employwa.
Pricing -of Japanes&amp; steel In the lJ.s.,
close.
flow of argument during the evening lor
"'w aoiil Ia to provide .more· · Butler Insisted. A U.S. steel Industry
Steel Imports rose rapidly In 19n,
the banellt of aome 150 spactatore In
opportunftlea tor public 88Mce and to · "white paper'' claiming this has been
said, not because · of an
the hall end lor a redlo end TV audience
mcx- pnlductlvlty," 1he ao-nor proved wrong In both govemment- Larneach
IrreverSible trend caused by underpric!WEBR
end WNEOI, noted that ive may
Mid. "Fiex-tl- 111111 other forma of
aponaonad
and
other
prlvatelyIng
but
because
of
·'hedge-buying"
at
a
be "ahorlalghtad" fn our concern. Alter
....,.lwi_wort&lt; echedulee r..e prD!I8I1
commluloned studies, lle said. The
time when contracts were due to expire.
all, he aald, the ao-ealled "global" steel
~ In prt- buill,_. and
hard truth Is that U.S. Industry must
Buyers were also trying to beat the · problem affacts about only onB'thlrd of
lndwtry, and w expect thla experience
modernize to be competitive. " Lack· · Impending TPM. There'll be a
the world's population. "What ~ut the
to be All)elllad In Illata ~t."
awanne, lor example, -Ia not efficient ."
significant decline In 1978, . heconcerns or fhe other two-thirds?" he
&amp;ell agency will del8rmlna how the
Japan, Butler aald, Ia upset about
predicted.
aaked.
lillllmltlvi work echedul• will be
charg8e of dumping' has 11hown
European Interests aupporl ''free
The largest applauae of the eveolng
..wiiii81Md, 111111 will report to the
restraint, and pledges fu I cooperation
steel trade," Larnesch said. He also • waa generated not by that expression of
In
he~g
establish
he
goVernment's
noted
that Eur.ope has mills just as
universal concern, but rather by a more ·
==~s::.1.::J:.how (:';M). rigger • price mechanism" pl8f!
viewpoint: Despite all the talk
Under 811ematlve work echedules In
~':'~~ .:l..'naJ':r.:'~b!-h~r~g~~rr.:: Jingoistic
you may have heard to the contf'llal,
priY8Ie buel,_., employeee oould
mills thet should have been tom down
U.S. stee! 1 1nduatry spokesmen JanreS
a - to stall eertler 111111 th818IORI The trtaa. price mec:Nnlam •
years ago."
Collins rrumpated, "the American
t.Y8 eertler !fl the day, wortc Wllakenda
A. r.}fchael Gadbsw, legal counsel.
-steetwortcer Is the moat productive
In exchante"lOr a mid-Week br88k; 111111
U.S.
Tnaesury,
Is the attorney
wortcer In the woridl"
- " lour 1Q.flour day&amp; lnat..S of five
W.orld
In
troubl'!
responsible lor the TPM. Ills, he said,
&amp;-hour day&amp;.
The wor1d steel Industry Is what's In
t~~::l'sf~S:,. ole~;'.ult:~acet.:'ve~.: trouble,
"LLeuteiiant
Mary Anne
James Collins, senler vice
Ktupeek studied the concept end
econ"Omlc problems of the steel
prasldent of the American Iron and
- i d e d Ita uaa In State
Industry and the fallout from these
Steel Institute, grumbled . "The JapanDr. Wolfgang Wolck and .EIIzaoeth
~t."Careysald.
problems which affect communities . ese are In trouble as much as anyone/'
Carlook .. f&lt;om the Department of
"Studlee " - found that' alternative
end Individuals.
he charged . "They achieved
a
Linguistics will discuss a "Socio- " echedulea lncreaaed &lt;norale,
Despite ,an afl-tlme high In national
linguistic Survey bl Buffalo: Some
naduoad abeenteeiM'l 111111 tardiness and
~:na~':le~. C~s!nors.fx~:Ys~nN~! Methodological
steel consumption, "Gadbsw said, U.S.
Aspects" on March 7 at
ICtually Improved production."
steelmakers heve experienced declining
they have a horrendous situation:
8 p.m . at the Frank Lloyd Wright House
GcMimoi CenSy said alternative
production, Increased unemployment
enormous furnaces must have a high
at
123
Jewett
Pkwy.
.
-'dng echedulell may provide more
and low capacity utilization rates.
level of production In order to bs cost
The presentation Is sponsored by the
: = r - ' t opporiunltlell lor women,
Domaatlc production was down by lour efficient. But the rest of the world has
Buffalo Coll)munlty Studies Group, an
lea, the elderly and the disabled.
million tons' In 19n; mills were
Interdisciplinary organization of area
8llile agenclee may establish the
;:;:c~~ut.V'h~lrE~~"rrefsn!reh:h~n~ll~~~ faculty,
operating at only 70 per cent of
students and community
8Ciheclulee within 30 days alter filing a
capacity. Employment dropped · rrom
As a result, the U.S. steel Industry
members
Interested In social and
plan with the State budget director.
472,000 In June 19n to 439,000 In
"made more money laat year than the 'historical perspectives on Buffalo.

Carey signs
order urging
flex time

~v:::'at~heh~.:."~J::"rn

=·

~=e ~ft~h~h~ Tft, ~~~gF..::J

~~~

=:rg~ c~~~r.::.. !v.~·:~fcad~

l

ao-nor

Wolck to lecture

�........
- Hail will
be reserved
for studying

"'

•Calendar
(from poge t , col. 4)

/

THURSDAY-9

TUESDAY-?

According to Saktldaa Roy, director
of Unlwralty Llbrar.les, about 500 study
spaces will be-made available this fall In
Hall Library at the Amherst camr,us.
The ag,_.,ent by University offlcla s to
provide additional space comes on the
heels. of, peralstent complaints by
students this semester that Amherst
-has Inadequate study_facilities.
Roy also told a gathering of .!'tudent
representatives and library administrators Monday that Vice President for
Flnanoe and Management E.W. Ooty
has Indicated that no extended bus
service can be provided between
campusas for students who want to
stay at the UGL unlillts 1 a.m. closing.
Bus service nowands at midnight .
On complaints frorn law students
about overcrowded conditions at the
Law Library caused by an Influx of
non-law majora, Roy said he anticipates
tha problem will be rectified ·;n
September whan students will be able
to uee the other library facilities at
Amherst.
·
'John Vaal, assistant to the director of
University Libraries, told students that
little can be done by library officials to
acquire additional and better quality
copy machines since authority for such
purchaaas or rentals rests with the
Faculty-Student Association . Although
IBM and Xerox have Indicated a desfre
to Install and maintain · coin-operated
copy machines In the libraries, Vasl
said FSA will not grant them
permission since this would "rilduce
their operation." Vasl explained,
how.-, that there Is " a lot of give and
take" Involved In the situation since
FSA supplies machines In unprofitable
areas In the libraries where outside
firms would not be willing to locate
tht:Jlih 1911ne cuts and a pared budget
to boot1 Roy told students not to expect
library noura to. be extanded In the near

~u~ut~t~~~~~~= hS,::~~~~?c1

his office Is now In process of
determining If any peraonnel can· be
relocated. wltl\ln the llbrarl"!' to 88§8
operational burdens.
Since new 10 cards will not be ready
for use uritll mid-or late March, Roy
also announced that class schedules
"1'111 continue to·be honored as adequate
Identification for library check outs.
.
Yoram Szekely, head of tha Undergraduate Library, complained that
student repreaantatlyes have shown

~t~lntaf~r:n d~rslo~~e whrJ."taff~;

the libraries. He asked that some
mechanism be established to foster
communication between his office and
elected officers of the Student
AssoclatJon.
SA representative Bob Slnkewlcz

~~~~~~ ~':j t~cl Sz';'r:!:~u~;:'t~~
:=.:.!::r~:xge~~~~~ .t~r~

promised that In the future he would
personally keep In touch with the UGL
office negardlng decisions which may
affect the student body.

General ed not
in Bunn's plan
Faculty Senate recommendations on
general education will not be Incorporated In the Academic Affairs academic

~~~lchRo~ ~. s":.,Tt~ed thl~

semester, Vice President for Acedeml.c
Affairs Ronald F. Bunn said last week.
Bunn said the plan will, nonetheless, be
"supportive of the .purposes of general
education."
- •
Bunn told Senators that he views the
general edUcation recommendations
(which will be voted on at the March 7
Senate meeting) as "standing eeparstely but relatedly. 'Bunn said his office Is
not just "spinning wheels" and Is
~ to give adequate staf.l support
and some sacretarlal assistance to the
forthcoming committee which will
devise a general education curriculum.
Release time for faculty serving on
the committee will depend uP.on Its
"size and mode of oper11.t1on,' Bunn

:~tie'!:r~t~~~n\'~7~~~~r~:~

forces "The most critical thing Is that
some
minds be put to work," he
aaid. '
.
•dents will be represented on the
corftl!llttee and Bunn said he may

good

:r,:~':,~~cecr~~~~;rtl~~ wo~rkglvlng
I

BIOCHEMISTRY NUTRIT10N NOON SEMINAR*
U.S. Dietary Polley, Or. Maflt Hegsted. profes·
of nutrition. Harvard School of Public Health.
26FIItbor. 12noon.
This la the second in a lecture series made
pooaible by a grant from Ti&gt;po Supermarkets.
SO&lt;

DRAWINQ DEIIONITRATION"
~ng; Ponralts; o.lgnlng by Acddont;
cr...,_ling, demonatnlted by Joe F"oscher.
-oftheCnoatlveQaf!Center. 167 MFACC.
Ellk::ott. 3·5p.m.
Sponsor_ed by Oivislon of Student Affaks.

ALM•

The Wclfkf of Apu fRay. t 9591 . 150 Fat!&gt;e&lt;.
3and9p.m.
Sponsored by Oepar:!ment of English.
Final pert of the Apu Trilogy. canyinQ the hero
fo&lt;wardlnto melancholy manhood .
~RTS AND LETTERS L£CTURE •
.
Tho p,..ntatlon of tho Self In Dogver-1
y.,.. (a tectlse on Jonathan Swift), Professor
Robert Elliott. Un!Yerslly of California at San
Diego. 322 ctemeos. 3 :30p.m.
-presentation is pert of the standng....,....
In Elghteenth Cen~.studies .
· Professor Elliott wil also tdd ·a seminar on
March 8 at 3 :30p.m. In 640 Clemens.

*

BUFFALO LOGIC COUOQUIUM
The Logk: of Structul'llllnterpretltlon, Jona·
than Broklo, University of Rochester. 207 otefen·
dorl. 4 p.m.
CURRICULUM LEADERSHIP SEMINAR I
Dr. Harold Taylor, 1,..- president of Sarah
l..awn!nca ~. fiear1t!jlone Mow1or. Cheel&lt;·
tqwaga. 4 :30p.m.
Presented by !lepar1ment of CYrricalum Dovel·
opmentandlnstructionalMedla.
'

CONVERSATIONS IN Tl1E ARTS
Esthw Swartz 4-rt&amp;fViews John SuUivan, facUty
profes'"" of Arts and Leben;. Courier Cable
!Channel 8). 6 :30p.m.
FILM"
A Day In tho Country (Reno;,) . 150 Fat!&gt;e&lt;.
5p.m.; 5Acheson, 8 : 15p.m.
Sponsored by the Departnent of Modem
Languages and Ulof"atures.

PENnDmAI. SERVICE"
Cantaficllln
7 p.m.
. Sponsored by the Newman Center.

c -.

COLLEGE BALM"
KlaaMeO..dly (1955) . 170MFACC. EIK:ob.
7p.m.
BUFFALO COMMUNITY STUDIES
GROUP MEETING•
Soclollngulatlc Suney of lkllfalo: Soma _ ...
odologlcal Aopects, .Wolfgang Wolck and Eliza·
beth Catlock. Unguistics !lepar1ment. U / B. 123
Jewett. 8 p.m.
IRCFILM•

,._ -ir!Mrs. Rictmond 2nd Floor l.&lt;ulge.
8 an&amp; 10 p.m. Free to all IRC feepeyers:
$.50 for others .
.
They didn't tefl us W'hich one. tf it} · ~
Richard Lester version, it"s hilarious.

WEDNESDAY- 8
BIOPHYSICAl. SCIENCES SEMINAR#
SUmulatlon ol Lymphocytao by Bac:tarlal
Upopolyucchorldea, Or. Diane ~ . 245
Caty. 4p.m.

FILM•
NoJh)ng But a Man (1963) . 146 Diefendorf.
1p.m.
Sponsored byBiaci&lt;S~ .
PHARMACEUTICS SEM!NAR11

s . _ on Cyctoamyk&gt;M

Cc&gt;rnpla•aa. Dr.

Raymond J . Bergeron. asaistant profesaor of
~. Un!Yerslly of Mary!Md. C508 COO!&lt;e.

4 p.m. Refreshments at 3 :50p.m.

to-

PSST: PROGRAM FOR STUDEHT
SUCCESS TRAINING•
Wlnnlpg Waya
People. Leader: MaJreen O'Mara, Ph.D.
candidate in dilicaleotniT"IJflity psychology. who wOrl&lt;s al the Unlversl1y Counseling Center. 232.Squh. 4·6 p.m.
Sponsored by OM¥Jn of Student Affainl Slu·
dent OeYelopnjent Program Office.
CEU..&amp; MOLECULAR BIOLOGY &amp;EMINARt
Tho Role of the Golgf Apparotua In tho Cof&gt;.
trol o1 G.,_,....n Synlhaala. Dr. G&lt;Ml1er Blobel.
Rockefeler l..lniv6rsily. 114 Hochstener. 4: 15p.m.
Coffeeat4 .
URBAN STUDIES SYMPOSIUM"
Design lmpUcatlons crl Mixed Income Hou ...
lng. 167 MFACC. Elicoh- 8 p.m.
Panel member&amp;: inClude: Professor George
Ansefevicius. chairman. Department of Architec·
llKe. 11 / B: Or. Arthur Butler. provost of Social
Sciences; Frank cerabone, director of HUO;
and George Wyatt, executive Ctirector, Buffak)
MunCipel Housing "'!thortty.
IRCALM"

1 1 n a - Clement Moin l.&lt;ulge. 9
FreetoaiiRCfeepayers; $ .50 for others.

uuAIALM•

p.m.

.

Rcbln and Marian (1976). Conference Thea!"&gt;.
SQuire. Cal636·2919 tor show limOs. Admisskr.

charQe.

Slar8 Sean Connery and Audrey Hepburn
the aoino Rot&gt;if1 Hooo and Maid Marian.

as

NOTICES
CATliOUC LENTEN SERVICES (Main S1rMt)
Dally Meu: Noon and 5 p .m. at the Newman
Center. 15 University Avenue.
Bible Study: The P•reblet: of Jesus. March 8,
7:30-8 :30 p.m.--Newman Center.
You are Invited to spend one hour of quiet
1
prayer ahcl sharing each Sa.b.Jrday Evening of
Lent from 10 · 11 p.m. at the CantaMcian Chapel
folowed by 11 p.m. Mass.
It you are flterested in a 36-hour retreat
experience at the Newman Center on Friday
evenino. March 3 lhrough 4 . please call the
NOWJMilCenter. 834·2297 .
COMPUTING SERVICES SHORT COURSE
Unlvl!&lt;$lly Computing SOMces" tree. non-credH
short course, ''Nature and Use of Permanent
f"lles and Magnetic Tapes;· begins Tuesday;
March 7, and continues thru March ie, Tuesdays
ind rt.Jrsdays. 3·5 p.m.. Room 29. 4248
Ridge Lea. Fprmore,intormation, cal831-1761 .
FOREIGN STUDENTS RETURNING HOME
The lnstnute of lntema.tional Education announces the 22nd year of ''Sunvner Crossroads"
to be held June 4 through 1o. 1978. The
program is i1tended to offer a 8U"T'fT18f"Y e)cpertence
to 'fOU" education tmJugh sightseeing. wotl&lt;shops,
etc. Two ~tions are offered: COk:lrado Spmgs,
CotoraOO. and Los Angeles. California. For lnfor·
mation. please oontact the Clffice "' the ConSIAtloll
to Foreign Students and Scholarll. 402 c_,
(636·2271 ).

CHEMICAL ENQIN£ERING SEMINAR I
,
Flow OeciUattona In Cryogenic Ewaporatora,
Or. J . c. Friocly. - o f Ctoen*3 ~·
ing . Univenllty of Rochester. 107 O"Brtan. 4 p.m.
Refreshments at 3 :30.

ID CARll CHANIOE
10 CardS-There .wftl be no valklatloM of
Cl.n'eflt 10 Cards , A &amp; A now says. The new,
revised 10 Card wiU be issued in 161 Hlwrirnan
starting March 20. according to the following
schedule:
3 / 20. Monday. 12 r&lt;&gt;OI&gt;8 p.m .• OUEc- ·
3 / 21 • Tuesday. 12 noon-8 ~.m .. DUE. Jlri:Jrs •
3 / 22 , WedneSday, 12 noon-8 p.m., DUE,

FILM"

Sophomores.
3 / 23, Thursdays,

La Terra Tremt (V.sconti, 1948). 146 otefen·
dorf. 7p.m.
~ed by Center for Media Study.

UUAB WEDNESDAY NIGHT ALMS"
~mingo Reed (1949f . Conference ThMtre.
Squire. 7 p.m. Free.
Directed by Michael Curttz with . - , Crawford.
Zaclwy Soott. and Sydney Greooslreet. " young
carnival dancer finds - - In • bar·
barous southern town and eventualy becomeS
the mlstr... and wife of a political cNeftaln.
On Dangeroua Ground (1952). 6 :45p.m. •
· A stoel·springed detective. relieved of his
city duties Is assigned a case kw~vlng a farmer's
child who has been brutaly murde&lt;ed .
UVE RADIO RECITAL
Carol P.. nt.mura, soprano, in solo performance, and with the FM Centurtel Enaembfe.
WBFO rea.7 FMI. 7 :30p.m.
IRCALM"
ThrM Musketeers. Dewey L...ounge. Governors
Residence Hall . 8 and 10 p.m. Free to all
lAC teepayers: $ .50 for others.

12 noon-8 p.m., DUE,
Freshmen•
3 / 24 , Friday, 12noon·5 p .m., All Students.
• Note: MFC. Graduate and •Professional Stu·
dents may secure 10 Cards on any day and
et 1ny time during the week of March 20,
while the 10 Center is open.

LeARNING CENTER EVENING HOURS
The LOM&gt;ing Center t..lnry / l.ab. 364 Baldy.

is row open for study and circulation of - ·
Monday. WeOOesday and ThUrsday evenings, 6·9
p.m. Daytime hou&lt;s. Monday lhrough " " " " - ·
are 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Friday, 9 a .m.-3 p.m. Phone
636-2394.
LIFE WORKSHOPS
~y. Match 2--llope and -uol will present an opportunity fa'· men and women
to discus8 an loaJe previoully kepi ""beNne~ cloee
door$."" Meets ~untl Aprl13. Hl:30
p.m .• 377 MFACC. Ellcott.
Wednesdoy. -.:11 -~ ... onlyze
various diets (such as tooR cort&gt;ohydrolo. liquid

~. and'
la&amp;J"lg~ and7-9p.m
- tohesHh.
Meets-.:118.
.• 233.Squft.
IIUSCUlAR DYS"niOPifY

DAHCEIIARA,._

cn:te K lind the Conwnunlly Corpo ...
- . MuacUor [)yA'optov
the of Aprl 14·18. "'"'*'CC 30 ohight
hounlthat--end.
Nryor;o- in~
conloct
Brian Nagel and Karen COr18r of CAC and cn:te
K at the CAC Office. 34.4 Squire. or call 831 -

llln:e_-

.

out-

cornrmtee - · dance
.,_.,.,_ted
in helpOlg.
•

5552. Needed are
couples •

OAR OFFICE HOURS
0\mg the month of -.:11. the. Office of
Aanissions and Records w1 be open until 7 p.m.
on Mondays and Tuesdays only whle classes
are a session . The office opens et noon on
Tuesdays and - y s. and~ ttwough
Friday it doses at 4:30p .m.
PUBUC A~ TO U.C.S. TEll-...ul.
Because of the demand for Plblic dOOng the day as aa """'*'oa. U.C.S.
has )us! ,_,tty ifted the raotrictlons on the . _
of the time-sharing In ,_, .49. 4250
Ridge Lea. to stall only clJring lho- day and ;,
now making theoe for uao by both
staff ::.-..;i the public, on a fist come, ht ...-ve
_basis, weekdays from 9 a.m.-1 1:45 p .m., and
weekends~ 9a.m.·4:30 p.m.
SENATE OFFICE HOURS
•
The Professional Staff / Fac:Uty Senate office
be closed from Match 27 !trough 31 .

JOBS
PROFESSIONAl. STAFF
!loan (Asaodole V.P./o-&gt;) . llMIIIon

of~·

graduate Educaticn, B-8003. PR-8.

Dean (o-&gt; / Continuing Education). DMalon of
Continuing Education . ~ . PR·5.
FACULTY

Aulstant
&amp; Policy.
F-8002.

· -

Analyalo

A-nt (Oireclor of
Laboratories). ~tar Science. F-8003.
Aulotant P - , School of Social Walt.
F-8004 and F-8005.
Aulatant Prof-, Biochemistry. F.SOOii.
F-8007. F·6008.
COMPET1TIVE CIVIL SBIVICE
Typlal ~- &amp; flaool:ds;
Ulllv&lt;nity Counseling SeMce (2):
ning .
St.no&amp;G-6-Law School ;~ o;o.
..-a; Chemistry: Physical PW&gt;t (......._; Un·

F - _,_

---Oifioe.

guistlcs; - - rP-t-); ~
Sci8noe (pert.-): Psyctlalry. v - Hoopltsl:
' " Medicinal Chemistry; Compuler. SOrvices: . Pur·

-Ciort--0..

chasll1o:
c- ~: Cenlnll Tochnlcol Ser·
vices.l.l&gt;r** (.-1--).
f'lle Clark

SCH--

&amp; Reccrdo.

Free Prognono; Payrol; -~·
Eugi-og -.cton.

--SOl

S...Ciarll-110-7~ .

Sr. Clartt Payniiii0-7--Payrol.
Sr. TyplaiSCH-I.Jiw School.
-leal Lab T - - n I 110-12-Anlrnal
Faclltles.
Sr. Lab - 1 Ca-SQ.4-Anlrnal Fac:lities.
Sr. St&lt;naCiartt~Stcno .

- c-

~lor Qporalor II0-1G-CornputingSOrvice8.
10~(NS)~

(111 176· 10/ 31 / 78) . Cenlnll

Stores.
'
St.no &amp;G-6 (111 / 78·10 / 31178,_.._.
SchooiBuslnMaOffoce.
NOIH:OMP£TmVE CIVIl. SERVICE
M a l - - Aulotant I~) SG-6. PhyslcaiPW&gt;t. Main St.
Equ~
SG-12. Uno No.
34686f-!)-f'hysica!PW&gt;t.

-ntc

PUT US ON YOUR liST
The Reporter "C.-.r" hopes to provide the campua with a
comprehensive ~eakly lilting of events and activities, from films and
meetings to sclentlllc colloquia. We'll print· both your notices and your
publicity photos (as 111&gt;11"!' permit!') If you supply us with glossy prlnta. The.
service Is free. To record Information, call Jean Shrader, 636-2626, by
Monday noon lor Inclusion In the following Thuraday'a ' luua. Or, mall
Information to Reporter "Calendar," 136 Crofts Hall , Amherst, We nead your
asslstance' ln making the "Calendar" aa complete aa possible.
Key: IOpen only to ihose with a professional interest In the subject; •open
to the public; ••open to members of the University. Unless otherwlsa
' specified, tickets lor events charging admission can be purchesed at the
Squire Hall 'Ticket Office.

�•

• Mirch2, 1171

)orlhlo
_
lnlhe_
_ cl
NOT
E_
: - ,_
-cu
l t l n l -...
-lo

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

THURSDA't.- 2

A unique artistic collaboration,
entitled Arttorms, will be ptesented
Saturday (March 4), at 8 p.m.,ln the
Katharine Cornell Theatte.
.
Conceived and directed by John
Pletruszka, - the facility's technical
-director, Artforms involves dance
Improvisation based on the sculpture of Ellezer Schwarzberg, a U/B
electrician with an artistic avocation (Reporter, Dec . 1).
.
The program Is set to electronic
arrangements of Debussy and
Stravlll.Sky. ·
Pietruszka says the Idea. was
Inspired by thfl works of Schwarz-

FUI'
T-lloby. ~Diefendort. l p.m.
~by Block Studies.
HISTORY LEClURE &amp;EIIIES' ·
W-ond~llloiWmottho

Tum

:.~·~~~~

.....,.. 320MFACC.EIIicott.4 p.m.
tMt,ln o oeriea ol foor loctures en the general
lopic ol Tllo -.:11 for ~ In

-·
--t

Loto-ComuryA-.

P i l l : - FOA SlVDENT SUCCESS

·-t

::'J'ih~1a:ci'tb\:'Jn t~ c~'l:'es\~: ;~~~~~

llllodont s.-o.l..eoda--.. - - I01d of the
deYelopInter-..ce Center, U/ 8 . 232

~...._,far

or: ~

meat coneultant lnd coordinator

!qft. 4-6 p.m.
.836-2810 . .

~tration

Dream/nightmare
Artlorms opens with a dream/
nightmare sequence, where demons "fl!fcically, tauntingly relate
to the sculptute," the director
notes. It Is choreographed by Carol
Kaminsky, a member of the . U/B
dance faculty, who herself appears ·
In the performance. Jean Goddard
of Binghamton interact~ through
dance with the sculptute, and Is
Joined by U I B dance students Fred
Faller, Elissa Buchman , :&gt;nd Harvey
R!flltn berg .
•
A second phase of the production
featutes dancers veiled enigmatically In sheets, engaging In "a

requO-ad. Cal

PHARMAcSmcs~f .
cl Hoporln an lhe - n Binding Gl
. . - ; Dr. un w_ WlegMd. pos._loral fel·
bw. CS08 Cooke. 4 p.m. Refreshments at 3 :50.
CHESSCI.UBIIEETINQ'
244 .!qft. 7;30 p.m. Open to the University ·
community.

-TONLEClVRE'
~-.Dr. Albert)!alows. di·
o1 bacleriology;Conter for Disease Control
InA-. G-28 F -. 8p.m.
Tlio - . . . .. OC&gt;1IJ)OI100r8d by the Deportments

~~~~'ruo~ho~t':.ce':.'at~Ric~o h~~:

"'~· -· end Immunology.
WMFUI' '

since been removed . from the
stage." This Is set to music by
Bizet.
There will also be a three-part

COni...,;.,.

· - . . - ( f i l l y, 1977i.
, _ , !qft. Cel .638·2919 for show limes.
--chqo.
Oovlno ~·· eutoblogr1iphy about his ascent
from on ohephord to a profeaaor of
11ngu1ot1co In filly. Adop!ad 1« the screen by
lie T- ,_,.. Only 11m to ever win both
tho &lt;iiond Prize .., Crltica' Prize at the Cannes

:~~~~~i~tl~~a~us~";,Sbeb~~~~~r~

which dancers break out of an
"'embtyo" and search for their
Identities - which are masks on
stage.

-F-.

Music Is the allrac1lon
· Next, music becomes the main
· attraction as Gary Zusman, a
classical guitarist, performs three
or~lna~~~tmpg~ttloR!intnsky and
Goddard, accompanied by guitarist
Zusman, caps the evenIng.

IRCFUI'
Dr. ~ Clement Main l.oonge. 9 p.m.
FrM to .. fiC '-Y&lt;n· $ .50"" othenl.
- e n theoloppes.

._..,Uri:

UVERADIOCONi:arr .
Milar' ond WBFO
(88.- 7 FM). Greg
9 :30p.m.

This will be ·Pietruszka's first
production since he joined. UJB .
The 30-year-old technical director
has been affiliated with a number of
musical and ~ heatrlcal associations, .Including the lns.tltute of

!JI,~~~efsT.:'~~~~ ~~~~oM';i.etes,
Production costs

_

UNGUISTICS COlLOQUIUM'

-no

FRJDAY-3

Tllo Nuctoor
'W-IolonM-.
EnWcnmontaiS\Jdies

UNDEIIGIIADU.f.TE MANAGEMeNT

Conlor, 123-CMd,~ 12noori. '

ASSOCIATION
~no 'ond C - Porty. Room 40C Crosby. .
3 :30p.m. AlA faculty and students of UMA.Invlted

-...
·_
- - O_
GY
41
clllloSplnol-

to attend.

-Dodge.- -

-

Dr.
Deport·
~ -.:11 Cenle&lt;, ·IBM.
1 0 8 - . 1:30p.m... .

mont.

.,...._ Ooool.........,"-ttoo Gl Amino
-~-·
Allololl c l . . , . _ Dooxr-

ond-

aa:

2

I

.--E'
. . . --..-.·
-·

... .......,

.

EI.EC'IM:AL ENCIIIIEBIIiG -.-wl I

--~

-~rill­

Doportmonl"' Mech·
-~~oi-11J!

-

-

•

PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR.
Eloctrlcolond Ct.nlcollnhlbttlono

-ted

by lhe Somo v-.to C.OtroiNeurons: Func~tlc&gt;no,

Dr. Donald Faber. 8106
· Sherman.-...:15 p.m. Coffee at 4.

-1

_

Or. AIWJullil. VIII UnNeraly.
121Coalot. 2:45p.m.
7

•

. 3 p . m . - o t 4.

- - I I I I I SAPPUEIIICIENCES

._.,..__,,Dr.

_ , .. 8hngtlltO....
.....- DlfiDII
Pu &amp;;&amp;eL 1' Nelllt crl an
Jolon u.dlge,-

IRCFIUol'

The Doop. 150 F . -. 7:30 and fO p.m.
FroetooiiACf._yers; $1 forothenl.
Nlcl&lt; Nolle and Joquolino Sissel In a Jaws-llke
.quest for SU'1ken treasure. A giant squkf and mean
bloclca replooa the sharl&lt;sas vllaina.-So-so.

en;
t~~\:':ra:::l!eo;;'~:~l:o ~a~!'f.
My primary aim Is .. . an evening of

1

entertainment."

-lth.

INTERDISCIPultAAY SYIIPO_M.
The Fomlly In
DiaMso end~­
Hmeboe Auditotium, Aoowell Part&lt; Memo11a1 In·
~titute. 9 li.IQ. Preregistration requncf. This
symposium Is assisted by _Conllnuing l\ledlcel
Education in
with members of the
Oei)IWiments of Family Medick1e 111\d Pedial!1cs,
School of Medicine, U/8. -"

_,lion

DB.TA SIOIIA PI BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL MEETING #
Porocnol Bo'*lng, Kannoth Kiort&gt;or. 232 !qft.
10a.m.-1 p:m. Lunch tofolow.
·
CONVERSATIONS IN.JHE ARTS
Eothor Swortz Interviews pool Golwoy Klnnoll.
12:30 p.m.

Courier~ (ChannelS).

CONVERSATIONS IN THE AATS
Eolhor Swortz lntervlews.Q8inler, Don R-.tocn. international Cable lV (Channell 0).

~p. m .

UUABFILII'
,
The IAIO Show ( 1976). Conference Theatre,
Squn.. Call638·29191or show limes. AdrriissiOO
charge.

MONDAY-6
SPECIAL SILS CONTIHUINO EDUCAnON.
PROCIRAII
•
LOCiang lntarmotJoii llll"'i
- . Dr. Judith ~ - 339 Bel . .
9 a.m.- 1 p .m. Regiatration timited to 25. Fee
$15.
.
~ by the School "' lnlormoticn ond
l..lb&lt;wy Studies. For more Information, can 636·
2412 .

u.s._,

CONVERSATIONS IN THE ARTS
Swortz lnlsr\llewo painter,

ol A-uo. 170 MFACC ,
Ellico!L8ond tO p.m. Tlckets$1.
Ann Banaof! and Jad&lt; Lemnon lry to cope lfe in a Manhaltlln aparbnent tower-not altogetheroocoooafuly. Funny.
., .

IRCFILII'
. The

~.

10:-30

p.m. Free to

170 MFACC, Eftlcott. 7 :30 and
all IRC '"feepayera; $1 for

others.
UUABFILII'
The-IAto .Show (1976) . Conference Theatre,
Squire. Call636·2919.1« show limes. Admission
charge.
•
A Womer Broot lim 'with Lily Tomlin and Art
Carner.
Csney Is the dow!H&gt;n-liHJck. aging detectiYe.
Lily Tomlin ..- . craey 1o&lt;1y- cot heo-.
~cumlghtCoiH'TheMolle&amp;eCol. "

FILII' •
0 ~ tho Town (Kelly &amp; Oonen, 1949). 146

_

""'

Sponsored by Center f o r - Studies. "New York, New YorX. tre 8 HeluY8 Town."
as three solonl en 2~-hou- shora IOaYe In the
Big Apple dlocover-wi111 the help c1 8 L Bemstein ocore. Prime e"'"""J)e of the MGM
musical..
.,
UUAIIMONDAY ~FJUIS•

aJcott,7 p.m.
with -

~.---"'~-.ca.

n:.....~.:.~=:~~:~t=•
- - c h q o.

~-IIAIIXIIT.-

W A a - F U I'

o-.-t~-·o ~ - J ( a l ....,, Ute. Tllo-. AoclntOt Bddr. 3-5 p.m:

-

U U A I I - FILII' '
- - " ' t h o - (1974). Confenlnce

-·

-~ ~- :ekio ~.

- · ScloJR. 12 mldnlghL- charge.

.--F-.

-~ond-~.
U/8. 148-. 3p.m. ~at 2:30.
l8C111111-

~---.c--. .
~···-··~~-·

- T - - . 1 1 2 -. 3 :30p.m.

8ee-.:112.-.gf«de-. .

•

.

_ . , . - ' o - t t 9 7 4 ). COnforence
••$ql.b.12midnlghl-c:harge.
Dnclod bV- d e - with Pall Wlllomo
..i . - · Ycu Mod not !'eYe_.
- - "' ... ()pota to or*&gt;Y thlo ..... bul
0 ~ l&lt;nowlodge cl Psycho _ , hurt.

_SUNDAY-S
-..-.~(Ouokoro)''

Non-Profit OreU.S. Postage

PAID
Buffolo, N.Y.

Permit No. 311

157 MFAC;C. Ellcolt. 10 a.m. Ell8r}'008 1o
welcorno.

BFA RECITAL'
_R...,., boos_.._. Boird Recital Hall.
3p.m. Free.

..

~by o.p.tmontof Muoic .

Dan-

oon. lntema1lonal Cable lV (Channell 0). 6 p.m.

Diefendorf. 7 p.m.

CACFLII'

l)uAB f;JIJI'

Immaterial'

Whet do .all the swirling sheets
and the sculptute symbolize?
Pietruszka says "I have' gained.
my own message from - my
lnt~retatlon of Aitforms.

...... _

SATURDAY-4

L.angvage Origins. Chanes Hockett, ComeU

IROWN BAG LUNCH COLLOQUIUII '

0

$2.50; $2 1or students. Tickets can

CletiL

University. Ungulstlj:s Lounile. SPaulding Quad .
Elficott. 3030 p ..m.
. Sponsored by the Department of Ungu;stics.

are being met,

~~~~SZ· B~h~~~~al a aJI~~Io~ ~

~t·s

F!~ (1950). 170 MFACC,

Dlnlcled by Ida Luplno
Pooiono
and Tod Andrews. An - l i n g look &lt;II tho
altitude toward&amp; , _ in 50o Hollywdod: Doring

lni!Bdoy.
Hord, Foot ond ao.dllut (1951 ). 170 11/FNX,

ollrrlng
Trevor ond Soly ForToot Story of • and her~ with 8 """*-'ng mother.

C!oft
.ployer

FUI' ·~

Center, 2501 N. Foroot. 6 p.m.

JeWish Student

IIFA RECITAL •
Elolno·. soprano. WOII&lt;s by'Monteverdl,
Hugo, - · Do&lt;V.elt!, Rous&amp;el, Musoorgsky. Boird
Recital/iol. 8 p.m. Free.
5pon!l&lt;ln!d by Department of Music.

- •S.. 'Calendar,' page 7,eol. 2

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1388557">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451392">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388534">
                <text>Reporter, 1978-03-02</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388535">
                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388536">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388537">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388538">
                <text>Insert: "Magnet"</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388539">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388540">
                <text>1978-03-02</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="46">
            <name>Relation</name>
            <description>A related resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388542">
                <text>"Magnet"</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388543">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388544">
                <text>en-US</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388545">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388546">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388547">
                <text>LIB-UA043_Reporter_v09n21_19780302</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="91">
            <name>Date Created</name>
            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388548">
                <text>2017-07-11</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="109">
            <name>Is Version Of</name>
            <description>A related resource of which the described resource is a version, edition, or adaptation. Changes in version imply substantive changes in content rather than differences in format.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388551">
                <text>v09n21</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="113">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388552">
                <text>12 p.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="116">
            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
            <description>Spatial characteristics of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388553">
                <text>United States</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388554">
                <text> New York</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388555">
                <text> Erie County</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1388556">
                <text> Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="105">
            <name>Is Part Of</name>
            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1392008">
                <text>Reporter</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1392474">
                <text>LIB-UA043</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1907424">
                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use.  This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;.  If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
